HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-11 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Mesa Teen Talhed Out DAILY PILOT
01 Murder by Ollicer * * * 1oc * * *
THURSDAY AFTERNOON , JANUARY 11, 1973
Force's First
Black Killed
HURTSBORO, Ala. (UPI) -A
policeman, the first black hired on
the force here, and a black janitor.
warming himself in city hall, were
shot to death early tod•Y in this
east-eentral Alabama town, om-
· alniald,
ue 11 green c y po ce car re-
covered severaJ houra later behind
a motel in Columbus, Ga .. Police
Chief Johnny Turner said.
Turner said officer Algie Long ,
33, and Robert Jimbo Threet, 60,
were shol four times each with a
.38-<:aliber weapon .
Coast Officer
Urges Teen
Not to Kill
By L PETER KRIEG
Of tM O.llY .. llol It.if
A Newport Beach policeman talked a
lf..year-old Costa Mesa youth out of
shooting a man in a tense, beachfront
confronlatkln late Wednesday night.
But Officer Michael Sullivan said he
had lo threaten to shoot the youth to get
hlm to drop his own gun.
Sullivan said he was in an upstairs
room at the Balboa Inn investigating an
attempted rape there about midnight
when he heard a commotion a bout a
block away.
He said he ran to the scene, where he
ame upon a youth. who he said was
holding a man at gunpoint.
The youth was sa ying "I'm gonna blow
your brains out. \Ve're going to go do"-11
to the beach and you'"' going to get
yours for finking on me," O(ficer
Sullivan related.
Sullivan said he got the drop on the
youth with his service revolver, but the
boy refused to drop the .32 automatic heo
was holding in the man's face and con·
tinued shouting at the man that he would
shoot him,
• "I'm going to kill you first." Sullivan
said be warned the youth, who finally
turned away and dropped his weapon.
Officer SulUvan lllid the •youth ap-
peared to be under the Influence of
a'lcohol. as did two companions, one 16
and a 19-year-old man identified as David
Wyman, of 1034 Linden Place, Costa
l-Jesa.
Wyman was arrested and ~ked on
Mpick>n of being drunk 1n public.
Police identiried the victim of the ln-·~ident as Victor J, Kubick, :13, but declin-
ed to reJease his addtess because he
feared further reprisals. .
1be officer said he. did not know where
the juvtnllt OOlained the wea ....
although he claimtd to have lound I~
Tbe -boy was bcld o....rugb~ with ad-
mission sd>edultd todoy at Orqe Colm-
ty Juvenile I-tall on a char1e of assault
with h1tetll to ooonnlt--murd<r.
Nixon Ends
Pay, Price
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on today abolished mandatory wage-price
controls except in the food and health In·
dwitries. In their place, he established a
system or voluntary wage and price
guidelines -backed by the threat of
government enforcement.
nte surprise move -far more s'Ao·eep-
lng than bad been eipected -came as
Nixon asked Ciongress for a one-year ex·
tension of his authority to control wages
an~ prices.
The President abolished the Pay Board
and the Price Commission but retained
the Cost of Uving Council to manage his
Phase 3 economic system.
The program, which immediately
replaces the Phase 2 system established
in Novem!J!er .1'711 "is self-administering
and based on · voluntary rompliiince," the
Whl!e 'Hollse· said,
No kmger w i 11 large businesses and
labor unions have to get prior govern-
ment approval for wage or price llj.kes -
except in "special problem areas'' which
Nixon listed .as !ood processing and
retailing. and the heahh industry.
The President also continued the
present system of looser mandatory con-
trols over construction wage increases
and said the present voluntary effort to
keep interest rates down would slay in
effect.
But for those industries and unions
freed today from mandatory controls, the
government retains the right to move in
with stiff action to roll back
unreasonable increases.
Nixon said in a meM&ge to Congress
that his goal is to reduce the tnnation
rate to 2.5 percent or less by the end of
1'73. He said his 9().day Ptwe l wag~
price freeze and his Phase 2 mandatory
controls cut the 1nnation rate by nearly
half -to about 3.5 percent.
Nixon's new program abolishes rent
controls and is intended to "allow
reasonable nexlbility" in wage and price
increases. Secretary of the Treasury
George Jhultz told newsmen .
ShuJtz said the government would keep
close tabl on the new system and those
who don't comply "are going to get clob-
bered.".• He alsO said while the Phase Ill pro-
gram goes into effect immediately, there
will be a 90-daY transition period to cl~ar
up a backlog of cases pending before the
Pay Board and Price Comhli~ion.
All new actibos, however, will go
before the Cost of Living Council and its
(See CONTROLS, Page I)
WIFE'S WORK
WORTH $6.72
GENOA, Italy (UPI) -A boulewllt ..
work la worth '6.'11 a day, a court rultd
today In a landmark d«llion, ·
The eourt ord<rtd' an Insurance C<Jm-
pa!\Y to rtpllY Annunziata Fard at that
rate lor tralllc inJurlt1 thal COlllinOd btr
to bed lor throe months,
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VOL. M, HO. 11, t SECTIONl, a rAl)ll
ers arr
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The Making of a iGirn!'
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OAIL '( .. ILOT """"" .., JtilMI lalW
FOUNTAIN 'VALLEY'S'GRANDMA SAYERS DISPLATS'HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
With • Littl• Practice~ Norm1I Face (left) Becomes a Ticket to Stardom
Grandma Has No. 1 'Girn'
By JOHN ZALLER
Of Jiit DM1Y l'ltft Staff
Frances Sayers clearly has a face that
makes others look ordinary by com·
parison.
But until last month, this fact \li'as not
appreciated by the 71-year-old Fountain
Valley gtandmother.
"Maybe 1 was just used to it." she
says, "but I really didn't see anything
unusual about it before the conte st. Of
course. now I see it difierenlly ."
The thing that opened her eyes to the
potential of her face was .a 'cGirn Con-
test" sponsored by radio station K.\1PC.
IA gim, according to \\'ebster's, 1s a
contortion of the face.J
Mrs. Sayers was the hands-dou'TI win-
ner of the coolest
"We had hundreds of fine entries,''
reports KMPC disc jockey Gary Owens.
"But no one could do anything close lo
what she did ."
Mrs. Sayers' trick is really a .simple
one -for her. She juts her jaw forward
as far as it will go, and then ertends her
k>wer lip ovtt lhe tip of her nose, seem-
iqgly swallowing it .
The overall appearance is al once
No College Degree
Court Nominee Admits
He Did Not Graduate
LOS ANGELES (AP) -William Clark
Jr., nominee .to the C;allfornia SUpreme
Coor!, bas coofirmed "'ports he never
finished undergraduate education and
failed law school.
. Cl>rk Aid Wednesdiy he was •~rking
11111-timt during bis colleje yeera. Ht Jd.
dtd he never l'<Jll'....,ttd hirmelf as
boldinl "1Y ,
Loyola Unlvmlty oald Wtdnesday
Clark was d!tqualilltd from lurther
counes during b I 1 third year at the
~ Law School evening divlsioo in
1951. Ula petition for rtacfmission ,.,,
denl<d. can: alao left· Slanford University
before groduating, the univ.ntty ulcL
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• Clark. 41 , is a state appellate judge in
Los Angeles. He is fonner Cabinet
secretary for Gov. Ronald Reagan, who
nominated him to take the supreme
Coun seat of Justice Raymond Peters,
who died last week .
"While I was never 1 membe.r of the
John Bln:h Society, I had clienta who
wert," Clark said.
He 1Bid he "agreed with some ol the
g(OUp'• concepts" during the early 60s,
but not all of them . He descri~ his feel ·
Inga BJ "llOlhina more than sympatbx."
Clar1c Aid the rusoo he Wt stanford
se•eral IOlllOllerl after entering In llMI
w•s to •P'f"I a year at an Augustllllan
!S.. NOMINEE, Pll(t ll
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hilariously funny and thoroughly un-
natural. It is as if her mouth 'Acre con·
su n1ing her fa ce.
.. I saw it once in Ripley's Believe It Or
Not. and I thought there must be some
trick to it,'' says Owens. "But she did it
for us here in the studios and it's for
real.''
Owens was so impressed that he's
trying to get her on Ro\\•an and Martin's
Laugh-In. However, l\.trs. Sayers 1s think-
ing bigger.
"J've seen the man "·h<i·~ the 'A'Orld
tSec GIRN. Page 2J
AF Cadets Face
Ouster on Drugs
AIR FORCE ACADE~tY , Coto. IU PI!
-SLt cadets at the Air Force Academy
.,.,·ill be dismissed for use of drugs, and at
least 4o others are being investigated, of-
ficials ha ve reported. · ·•one cadet admlltcd using dru"gs dur-
. Ing Christmas vacation while away from
the academy," Capt. Jl L. Rothgeb,
academy information officer. said
Wednesday. "He implicated other cadeti.
1be academy is investigating the aUega-
tions."
The public informatioi ofrict did not go
into details of the incident and no names
were released.
No Europe Trip Set
WASHINGTON I UPI) -Pruldellt
Nixon hu no pla ns to vL,lt Europe this
spring. Tbe Whitt -made \he !tate-
ment Wodntlday.
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Newsma11's
Appeals
Pe~ding_
William 0 .
reporter \Villiam T. farr freed from jail
wh1le1iCYll51>e·a1s-a-eonlempt--@nvictlon
for a story about the 1970 ~1anson trial.
! See related stories, Page 3, and
editorial. Page 6).
F'arr. 38, has been in jail 46 days.
Douglas' order that the Los Angeles
Times reporter be -freed "in hi! own
recognizance " wa s to be followed later in
the day wllh an opinion by the justlct.
Farr was held in contempt by Superior
Court Judge Charles H. Older of Los
Angeles for writing a story about a pro-
spective witness' statement lhat the
Manson "family" planned to murder
several movie stars. Farr was then
working for the lferald-Examiner.
Older held Farr in contempt for refus--
ing to divulge the names of the lawyers
who supplied him with the statement.
During !he trial, the judge Imposed an
order barring lawyers -and other trial
, participanll from disclosing any J.n.
formation about the case.
Farr asked Douglas 10 days ago to
order him released until the U.S. Circuil
Court in San Francisco rules on an ap-
peal. The justice held up action until the
Los Ang eles County counsel office
replied. <See earlier story, Page 5).
John D. A-taharg, the county counsel.
and \\'illiam F'. Stewart, his deputy, told
the justice that most or Farr's legal
_argument h~d be€n made by the reporter
1n an earhcr appeal rejl'<'led by thc-
SupremC Court in · November. Douglas
'A'as the sole dissenter.
··The real issue in th.is case is the con·
tinued viabillly of the judiciary lo
preserve the constitutional guarantee of
a fai r trial ," they said. "There is no
question present In this case concerning
government.al interference with the ex-
pression of private beliefs or attempts to
invade the privacy or opinions. usocia-
tions or intellectual viewpoints."
Orange Coast
Weather
The u·eatherlady predicts the ()r.
ange Coast will experience variable
clouds and cootinued fair weather
oo Friday. 'T'hc high is expected lo
be 58, the low 48.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Tlie 2.50-tnembcr Brotherhood
of Spirit in NorthfU!ld-. Afa..• ..
ha.• learnPd t 11 a I brnthr.rhood
111on't fill 1tomfl~hs and pay rent,
a,ld adult member1 are being
rtq1ortd to fake jobs. Story on
Page 14
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1 ,z,,___DAl~L-Y_P_IL_D_T ____ s ___ _..;T_hund_;_:,:~~~'~JM~IWl'......:_1_1~,-19~7l
.State Refund of · $850. Million ,.,.,.P .. el
CON'l'ROLS .•••
new poy lllld price dlflsloDI, eUectl,.
lmmedl1t.17. >
.. In Taxes Proposed by Reagan u'nder P!We III, a ,;.;.. labor-manqi'
ment advlaory committee -with
mern1>eo1 lncludbl( top lndustriallala and
Sijeb libpr leaden as the AFL-CJO's
George Meany -will decide wbetller the
current 5.S percent ceiling on wage m.
SACllAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reasan proposed an $850-million state
tax refund for Californians today. tSee
related stories, Page 11.)
A bulglng budget surplus will make the
one-Ume cut possible, Reagan told the
Lqlstature In his seventh "State of lhe
State" address.
Tbe Republican governor didn 't specify
how the money would be returned, leav·
ing that to negotiation with the
DemocraUc-controlled Legislature.
But Reagan said, "l am sure there ls
no disagreement lhat it should be
returned" to taxpayers rather than spent
for new state programs.
That declaration is certain to trigger a
fight with aome Democratic leadm tn
the Legislature who say the ruplus
should be eannarked lor educatjon.
'Ille anoual addresa, Rt-'• vexl-to-
last as governor, skimmed ICJ'Oll a
brold range of toples lncllldlnC:
-Rtvlval ol the death penally In
Cal1fomla,. particularly for murder of creases should be modified.
poUcemen. Voters amended the 11tate That standard remains in effect until
Constitutloo in November to restore the panel meets and the Colt of Uving
capital puoisbment. Council decides whetbft to accept its
-A new attack on crime and creation recommendations. ·
of a unJque center for ~ study of violent M a 1eneral guide for Phase m, the
behavior at UCLA "to rid society ol lhja White Kouse said price Increases should
cancer of violence." not exceed increases in costs.
-~1tabllshment o( J)().{ault auto ln-"Even where costs hove increased," a
surance for Callfomla'a lJ.S million White House s11Jnmary said, 0 prices d--"moto~"ris~•·:._~~,----.-~~--....;sbould not be increased iLthe firm's prof·
In December, Reagan said he was r tnl(l'(tlrel'NMrthrt&J•s-t>aser-pert
committed to u!iing the budget surplus, profit margin.
then estimated at $883 mlllioo, to cut in· "Altematlvely." the summary added,
come taxea. He said m!ddle·lncome "a firm may increase prices to reflect
Cillfornians, In particular, are bearing Increased cost Without regard to its prof.
too much of the tax load. it margin if the firm'!i average priCe in-
But there was no mention today of how creases would not exceed 1.5 percent in a "ear.'f he would . propose the bi>natl"1 be ,
distributed and no way of estimating how Nlmn told Congress the mandatory
jt would affect the ·average Californian. wage and price control system would be
The State Finance Department said the continued "with special vigor for finns ·
surplus swelled to S8SO miJlion with a ~~~lio~ ... in food processing and food
buslneu uRBwliig in tbe last haU of 1m and because of Reagan economies. He sald be was establishing a govern·
ln the environmental field, Reagan . m~t commHtee to review federal policies
called for legislation to require auto affecting food prices and a nongovem·
tuneups to guarantee that a vehicle's men1 advisory group to examine other
smog control devices are working prop-"'ays of stabilizing food prices.
erly. Thia: proposal \\'Ould go into effect These steps will be coupled, he said.
first i nthe smog . laden Los Angeles '"'ilh concentrated efforts to hold down food prices by increasing food suppl y .
Jury G;et,s
Gig Peters.
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Sanity Case
By TOM BARLEY
Ot ~ Ollty ,!Ml '""
An Orange County Superior Court jury
tll81 bas alr<ady convicted Gig Peter> ot
Huntington Beach on two counts of first
degree murder wen1 into the jury room
tod ay to detennlne Jf the crippled former
lifeguard was sane when he kjlled his
parents.
. Jud e KeMeth Williams sent the jury
into seques ra IOfl er orectel!very-br
final argumenls by prosecutor Pat Brian
and defense attorney Barry Tarlow and
the ,jurist's rea.dlng or instructions
S:J)t!Cifically geared to the sanity issue-.
(Related story Page 3).
Brian and Peters himself insist that
tho former HuntingtOQ Beach High
School student was aane when he stabbed
Charle! Peters, 55, lhrolljh the heart and
strangled 'Flora Pete11, 54, on April 21,
1971. Tarlow argued that his client's sanity
and judgment bad been Impaired by his
Jong use of drugs. He said.Peters' three
days of unrestricted testimony was ade·
quate proof of the defeodant's insanity.
The jury's ruling will end the second
Superior Court trial of Peters, 24.
-· ar:~t Reagan said man's needs must be The efforts to bolster supply include moves to increase grain acreage, expand
His first trial ended dramatically and
prematurely when be was shot in the
back by a bailiff as he tried to escape
from custody during the noon rectss.
U'I Tti.!Pflor.
TWO SOLID GOLD $350,000 CROWNS STOLEN FROM ROMAN CATHOLIC SHRINE IN NEW YORK
Monsignor Angelo Cioffi Di1play1 Missi ng Treasures in 1952 Photo
2 $350,000 Gold
Crowns Stolen
From NY Shrine
Watergate Trial
Ex-White House AUle
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considered as a part of the ecology, too. livestock production and move com·
"There'is an urgent need to construct modities to market mo1e rapidly.
environmentally protected nuclear power Present mandatory controls on the
plants. The alternative -within a few health industry also will be continued Un·
short years -is a massive' shortage of ti! modified on recommendation ol a Cost
the energy and electric power we must of Living Council on Health, the White
have to beat and light our schools, House said.
hospitals, and homes; to. fuel industry." In addition, Nixon established a Health
Reagan proposed expansion of tbe state Industry Advisory Committee to recom-.
Ecology Co.rps where young men work on mend changes in government programs
forest and recreation projects and fight to curb the rise ln health costs.
fires : Th e President told Congress his
And Reagan declared 'again the revamped economic policies "can mean
Legislature should remain in the 102· ever.. greater price stability with less
year-<ild slate Capitol rather than build a restrictive bureaucracy."
proposed highrise building. But he said their success depends "on
The Governor said he and the a firm spirit of self-restraint both within the federal government and among the Legislature had been able to put aside general public." And he said Congress
political differences in the past two years should act "with a high sense of fiscal
and reap "the mosl significant legislative respomibility" in acting on federal spend·
achievements of the past quarter century
in California." . ing.
He referred to the Welfare Reform Act
or 11171 lllld the $1.l·billloo acbool fmance-
property tu relief program be signed in-
to Jaw last month.
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Vietna111
Doctors believe he may be
permanently paralyzed from the vl'aist
down as the ttsUlt of the spinal Injuries.
Irvine Patrol Unit
Kills Company Cow .
A vehicle-pedestrian accident at a
darkened . Irvine intersection left a four·
wheeled vehicle demolished and a four-
Jegged stroller dead at the scene early
today.
The wrecked poli~ car driven by
Irvine Patrolman Harry Ehrlich was
identified as Unit 4415 following the 4:23
a.m. tragedy at Campus Drive and Zee
Street.
The dead cow was owned by the Irvine
Company.
as One
From POfJe I S y U.S . .fleadjes N:.eiv Attack .. -" " Re •
t----~iiollsto~l~enifiifr-o~miiritiibei~aliiijtai;,,r::.o:_f .:•::.Ro;:;:m.:.an_House consultant E. Howard HWlt Jr.;_~N~.C;,··~>;.w~111~d~es~"'1'~ted~Jo~lead~i!the~ln~ulryig-..·~<:h&~on~~ .. ys,.!!and 1 don'
Catbo c s -pleaded-'guitty-today-10-all-cbarges -acce -p1.., U.S. thin~ he's so great I t"-• I could beat
The crowns, fashioned from the melted against him In the Watergate bugging District Judge John J. Sirica ordered him." · •l.l.IU.
(= 'L"rhe''Communist VICUiamese id today at the weekly
ad• pe•ce_ ..tb.at..tbey~would.ne:v.er._atei!pt_tbe_pcnnanen1.Jlli'.isiro of 'liet--
nam and accused the United States of preparing for new attacks in Indochina
with the help of So~th Korean troops#
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wedding bands of World War Il widows trial. 1be judge accepted the plea after Hunt held under $100,000 bond tmUl a De 'te b rejecting Hunt's effort to plead guilty to preaentenclng lnvesUgatlon Is completed. sp1 er limited public exposure to and other jewels and blessed by Pope only three counts. date, Mrs. Sayers' confidence is un·
Pius XII, were in a glass case and adorn· In another development Senate Demo. Hunt ln!tially tried to plead guilty to derstandable. She's been making fuMy
ed Ufe-slzed murals of the infant Jesus crits voted today for a full investigation conspiracy to break into Democratic na-faces ever since she was old enough to and tile Virgin M•~ in the Votlve Shrine ot tional beadquartera, actually brealiog fn. stand in front of a mirror. She has en· -, the Wal<lrgate bugging case and r.. to the Watergate building olfice, and to tertained children in the bomb shelters of
o! lleglna Pacls. ' b lated allegaUoos of &publican efforts listening via bugging devicea to telephone World War , II London, en"-' her 1bey were stolen in 1952 -ut 1 bota the 1-Dem · · U\.'l:U 111Jsteriously returned eight years later. 0 sa ge '""' ocratic pres1· conversations of 90rDe Democntic offi· grandchildren into giggles whenever they
Gambino, the 72·year-old reputed cials. were unhappy, and served as
"Boss of Bosses" ol the New York FrcHn p l After Sirica refused to accept that plea "Neighborhood NAMY with the Funny
underworld, worships at the shrine. · age -omitting reference to three other Faces" for countless other youngsters.
WBll.E THE CHARGES WERE being made at the weekly talks at the
Hotel Majestic, presidential aide Henry A. KiSsinger and North Vietnamese
negotiator Le Due Tho met for six hours and five minutes several miles away
in more substantive negotiations on the same vital questions.
There was no indication of any progress at the longest and biggest meeting
of the current round of talks between the negotiators. They met from 10 a.m.
until 4:0> p.m.
THE TWO SIDES AGREED to meet again Friday.
For the first time this week, Kissinger and Tho w('re joined by technical
experts wbo have been working out the precise language of agreements that
might accompany a possible cea5eofire accord. Police at tile time speculated that the NOMINEE charges relating lo actually placing bug-"Cbll\)ren wbo know about me are crowns were returned because Gambino , • • .... gbtg devices In the offices -Hunt plead· always asking me to make funny faces,
let it be known that be wanted them ed gullly to all six counla of tile Indict-I ~and;;;l;don;;;';t ;m;ln;d;a;t all;;,';;' she;;;;;;aa;;y;'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~= back. No arrests were made. seminary in New York state. ment again.st him. 11
Tbe church closed at . about J p.m. While attending Lt>yola Irr the •arly _ HUJ!t's attorney, WWJam 0. Billman, WedDesday and a sexton, Dominic Sau& 9 Cl pleaded wilh Sirlca to lower the '1001000 llrt,'''discovered 'the trfa~ ·ease· s"rnliti~ , .l 50s,, . ark sald, .. he worked, run, lime .borid, 5ayfng ''l don 't believe he will be " during the day as an insurance claims aod the crowns and jewels missing at adjuster. He started 10 raise 8 family able to meet" the amount. He asked' that
about &:30 p.m. and, he said, "l got into a little grade it be lowered to '25,000 or, at most,
The larger of the crowns measured trouble." $50,000.
about nine inches in diameter, the He left school after talking with a Sirica said, "I deny your repuest and smaller about six inches. Both were hoot rr· · 1 Cl k you can take 1·1 to the -·~ of appeals If
hi sc o 1c1a. ar said, adding, "I ""uw'
about four iDches 'gh, don't think I was on the dismissal list." you want."
Designers took more than two years to He used his law school credits to Hunt's plea was not beard by the jury
complete the diamond studded crowns quality to take the California bar ex· which has been absent from the court·
which were donated by the 12•000 am ination and passed, he said, on his room since Wednesday when he offered parishloners of St. Rosalie's, the mother ' I ad iJ · church several blocks away, during and second attempt. to Pe gu· ly. After Sirica accepted the
after World War II when the shrine \Vas lie practiced Jaw in Oxnard for 10 new plea to all charges -which he was
planned as a monument to the ideals of years before being chosen by Reagan as required to dG under federal court rules-
peace. a Superior Court judge for San Luis the jury was called back and the pmJeeu·
Obispo County . lion began calling its f j r s t witnesses
DAILY PILOT
Tfll °"""' a.t DAILY PILOT, wllh _.,letl
.. ~ "" ~rm. It pUIJl!Wd by ... °"'"" ONlt P\llllW'llnt COl'notnY .....
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a.td!. lrvlM/S.ddleNck .rid Sfn C~lr/
JM '"" C1plslr..,.. I>. altlglt r1191oNJ
Hltloft b publtslled S.h.irdt'(I. ind $w!08y$.
1"ht prll'IC1-I pi.iblh.lltno pllnt II ., 3)(1 Wed
ht $trttt, cost• Jt\9111, c11orwni1, ,,,,.,
Rob1rt N. W11d
'rMlde!!I 1nd P11bllsllet
J1ek R. C 11rl1y Vk:t Pl'ftillllt ind Genar11 Mll'lfQlf
11'om•• Kee•il Editor
Tlto11111 A. Murphine
M•ftlOlflf l"dllol'
Chttlt1 H. loo• Ric:h1rl ,, Nill
Mllllf!ll ""-9'"9 Edllott
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At that time, the county bar associa· against the six remaining defendants.
lion adopted a resolution of censure. ac-"Ladies and gentJemen of the jury, yau
cusing Reagan with the "political &J>" are no longer to be <.UJ.cemed with the
pointment" of a nonrEtsident of the coun-case of the United States against E.
ty. Howard Hunt," Sirlca told the jurors,
However, the bar supported Clark later giving them no explanation.
~n his election campaign for the The possibility the case would be ex·
Judgeship. and he won by a large margin. panded beyond the simple criminal
A past president of the group said this counts involved in the break-in last June
\\'eek that Clark was held in "very high 17 apparently vanished when Hunt's at·
regard'' \\'hen he left to take the Los torney, with agreement of tbe pros.
Angeles posl. ecutor, successfully argued ag&Wt
Raised in Ventura County, Clark's Sirica 's suggestion that for Hunt to have
family has betn associated \vith the his guilty pleas accepted . he explain
Democratic party for four gen('rations. "ho\\' you got into this conspiracy ."
llis mother, Mrs. Bernice Clark, was on llunt did admit under Sirica's ques-
lhe Ventura County Democralic Central tioning that he was guilty of each count
Committee. and committed the violations "know·
ingly. and intentionally and unlawfully."
Countians Held .
On Drug Charges
From Wire Servtcet
ST. LOUIS, Mo. -A pair ot Orange
County men pulled over by police for ex-
pired license plates were subseq\lenUy
jailed Wednesday for allegedly carrying
$50.IXIO \\"Orth of illegal drug pills.
James E. Henry, 30, and Edward D.
er;dges, :ro, both of Fullerton. were book-
ed on suspicion or viOlating htissouri's
controlled wbsta-nces·Jaw. ,
lnvestiptor.s claim to have confiscated
more thrui 107,000 dex\t031Dphctaminc
diet pills contained In thm 'llilcasea in
the &USpecls' car.
Henry WU charged additlMally with
carrJine· a concealed weapon:"
•
•
Bittman argi;ed against Hunt's answer·
ing the question of .bow he became in·
volved in the conspiracy on grounds the
governmen"Plana to reoPen a grand jury
investigation of the political espionage.
Bittman said Hunt's answers might
prejudice his position in that in-
vesUgaUon and that his anawen might
prejudice tbe judge's own view regarding
the olh<r six defendanla still standing
trial.
Jfunt was led out of the courtroom by a
marshal 45 minutes . after the trial
resumt'd, prtsumably to be Jocked up un--
tll the bond WU posted.
Si rica Indicated he -was aettlni the
bond 1muaualif ~ beCluso-'llm1Hled -
government Investigators shortly lifter
!be ·breal·ln, bad friend.> and ac-
quaintances ln foreign countries and was
not employtd. Bittman argued lhal Hunt
. ..., employed as a writer and hid wri~
ten 46 boolm.
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1115 NEWPOIJ 8lVD. Da-'wntw.9*1 Costa Mesa -Ph_ene Ma-7788
'
-
s DAILY PILOT :J
Prisoner Bill Farr-He 9s One of a Kind
It's No Place to Visjt
But Farr Lives There
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of .. a.fr "" .....
SIGNS ADVERTISING ball bonds bang like gaudy ltfloYer Cbriltmas tree
ornaments on squatly, raln-wet &bops SWTOWldine tbe sreat, grlm, iray, con·
Creje fortr"8 Of Loo Anltiea Cllunty Jail
Not even ooffee from the catering tn>Ck permaoenUy parted out&lde on
Vignes Street can warm this colorless scene.
This Is my first visit to ""°"""" In jail and the first thing I dld when J
got up at $ a.m. was to shine my boota, just llU In the
Army.
·~, ... ,.,
•
. l.J
And then I woodettd: Wby?
JAIL IS NOT• plea.ant place to visit and It b doubt-
ful any of thoee scores of ptOple waiting In the visitors'
lobby would have noticed U my boota were unshlned.
A <00.<tant parade ol pathos pours through those doon1 .
We are late -·we left Costa Mesa at 7:40 a.m. and
arrived at 9:4-0, to see jailed newsman Bill Farr, due to
heavy traffic, heavy rain and a few accidents that sklw '---• VINS•L lraf£k:.
Roughly 100 human beings of various ages watt in tht priJoner visitors'
area, seated in hard, oaken pews like those of a church, waiting for 1 specific
name of someone behind bars to be broadcast over the PA system.
mE Al\.1PlJFIED names tend toward ethnic origins, primarily blacks and
chicanos. So do the colors and features of waiting visitors, few of them dreMed
in what one might call high fashion.
One old lady in particular has had varicose vtins and ¥.'ears only cotton
house s.lippen on the cold, concrete floor, making my legs ache just looking
at hers.
Hammers pouad in the background, due to new jail constructk>n to make
room for more prisoners.
Some visitors appear to have hangovers and the hammering doesn't help .
NO ONE UNDER 18 is permitted beyond the lobby area and so one little
black girl enters with a package of gum in one hand and a bag of Frltos in
the other. They are doubtless temporary diversions bought by her Mom.
"Where's Daddy? Where's Daddy?'' asks the little girl, peering around the
crowded lobby. too young to really understand.
Registration precedes the Jong..-.·ait, to see a loved one , a relative a friend
or a client who has somehow run afoul of the law. '
Finally !he bailiff broadcasts a string of names including that of prisoner
Number 2215819, newsman Bill Farr, announcing they are now available to see
their visitors.
FARR COULD GO free within hours if be clMl8e to compromise his prin-
ciples in protecting a news source. but he chooses to honor his professional
ethics as a journalist and the First Amendment of his country's constitution
that gives him that right.
My o""·n backside is sore after sitting and waiting for only 40 minutes to
see him.
Bill Farr has been here 46 days.
EDITOR'S NCYTE -T1u foUowl•p
•1°'11 and IM """°"'"°"l/hlg lo(lbook toere writt11J prior to the ttfcGJt o/
WUUam '4" Wa mon1tno on ordcn
of Supmn< COt<rl J"'ti" WUUam 0 .
f>ouglm.
By All'llllJll R. VINSEL
Prboner Number DINlt lits opposite
the thJck glasa In vlsttlng booth At, mo-
tloolnc to IOme unaeen aulhority at a
1wh.cbboard down the tine to open up our
telephone communlcatlona.
1-iJb-halttd now, on his 4ltb day
beblnd ban, Prtaonor Number lldllt b
one of a kind.
He II tba only pri!onor 111D001 S,500 In
torAnpl~JaU"1leld orran"11f
detennlnate 1tnte:nce as 1 clvil crlm.l.nal,
a contradictory term In ltaeU.
No one knows bow long Los Angelts
Times reporter Bill Fm may remain
behind ban !Related story Paga$).
A rultll/I b upected by Ftlday from
U.S. Supreme C<Jart Jlllllce Wlnlam 0 .
Douglas on whether Farr 1bould be rreec1
pending appeal hearliip oo bis U counta
of contempt of court.
Farr's attorney, Mart flurwitz or
Orange, flew back from Washington
Tu<5day after filing the petition ror
rreec1om, which b Of'PO'ed by the Los
Angeles County Counsel's office.
"I'd be better off if I'd tried to strangle
the judge," quipped Farr. "Then I could
get a pardon."
Los Angeles County Superior Court
Judge Charles H. Older ordered Farr
jailed Nov. %7 for repeated refu.sal to
disclose who among the defense at-
torneys, gave him court rteord.s
regarding the Manson Family murder
trial.
His story in the Herald • Examiner,
FINALLY FREED
Reporter Farr
where he then worked, of a purported
plot to massacre other Hollywood
celebrities infuriated Judge Older,
because the defense had violated the gag
order.
Refusing continually to reveal his
source, Farr was cited 13 times for con·
tempt of court. a difficult charge to
legally challenge.
His jail term is thus indefinite and he
Is kept in virtually total isolation fr om
other prisoners.
He eats alone .
He rellds alone
He bathes ak>nr.
lie has no window
lie occasionally rubs shoulders with
fellow inmates in the cold. concrete cor·
ridors when newsmen friends or at·
torneys appear In the crowded vi!litorl'i'
area to fill out the customary (orm and
Prisoner Number 2215819 is brought •
down from his tiny cell .
"One th lng that's intertstlng here is
running into Pl'Ople you 've wrnttn
abou t," says Farr over the lnterco1n
setup that makes a !lix·inch St'paratlon
seem as close as a &.000 mile telephone
call. ,
He mentions meeting recently released
Baldo Kri.s1ov1ch, former Los Angeles
county public administrator. chargt.>d
1~1Hh embezzleme:nt and misappropriation
of items from estales of the dead.
And the other day in the attornevs'
visitation room he sat beside a youth 3c·
cused of the thrill-killing of a itawaiian
Garde.tu girl. 4, shotgunned down in her
own front yard.
Farr. 38, a fonner local newsman and
Orange; County Press Club presi dent
covered both slories and -after brleny
joining the Los Angeles County District
Attorney's staff -helped investigate the
Kristovich case.
"They just see m like ordinary people.''
Farr remarks, of such fellow prisoners
he has met .
1-~arr, however. is an extraordinary
prisoner in that his jailing for contem pt
of court carries no time limit. v.·hile men
jailed on theft or murder charges ha1•e
!heir lime spelled out and may post bail.
"""hich Farr cannot do.
"Judge Older is or the opinion it could
be forc\•er." says Farr of his own in·
dl•finit(' te rm.
would coun.wl kids against getting ~lO
tile newspaptr business.
Pr1sontr Number 2215819 has now
Sp<>nt more jail tinle as a result of hi.,
btlicf 111 the f'1r!it An1endmen1 or tbe U.S.
Constitution than nny other neMJmen ln
histo~', except for John J>tter Zenger.
,,_,,ho served se:ven montM t,,_,'O centuries
ago for the same principle,
"I've adapted as well as (think t can.''
he: remarkl;.'d over the visiting booth
t1>lt>phonc
Starchy Jail foo<l put lhrtt' exlra
pound~ 1ln Farr until he began a dally
routine of 30 pushups and 60 sltup!11n his
lT:lRlpt'd cell th:it has no~· trimt11c.'CI
se1 en pound5 off his fronll'.
"A ilnle more ti111(' 111 here <ind I'll be
:inothi.>r George Jackson," ht !'jmf'lrked.
111 rtfef~'t' la the nlU80\lillt,-Wack
Soh"<tad Rrmher killed by guards 1n a San
Qurnt1n prison escape <illempt las! year.
V1s1talion and reading restriction!\ have
been relaxed for Farr, ,,_,.ho may no"'°'
rt'<:eive four vi.sits fk r day and so far h.is
gotten aboul l.iOO letters af'ld cards,
mostly supporting his stand.
Prisoner ~umber 2215819 ls at location
6029, P.O. Box 54320. Los Angeles . 90054,
his identity literally reduced lo numbers.
"l 'l'i> been trying to ansu•er !he C1:1r·
respondence and the way things are
going I may"Jihve lime to nns"'cr it all .''
joked the denim.clad ne1vsman. whose
reddish hair now hangs do""'" over his
collar.
"!'tty hair's getting a\vfully long for an
'Es tablishment Dude.' and I could prob-
ably arrange for a trip to the barber
shop, but I dOl,.t know if I could get a de-
cent h.1ircut here." hc '}ok.cd.
Heturning to the occagional cootacls
1o;ith fello""' jail inmates. Farr said they
S('em un iformly sympathetic. some on
his avo""·ed constitu tional rights grounds
nnd others simply as fellou• jailbirds.
Gol,den S tnte Theater
!tumors circu lating that he could he
released in a maximum of three years
arc based on distorted ronjecture. he ex·
plained, assuming one of the Manson
raqiily defense attorneys did supply the
reco rds.
Ttwy often recognize him from
lcll'V1sion in tervie,,_,·s about hiu plight, in
fact. conducted since he was imprisoned
on Judge Olders'a orders.
Prisoner Number 2115819, one ol a kind
among 3,500 inmates, however. doesn 't
know ho,,_,, those interviews came out on
the sc reen. Closes Ancient Doors
1\ll hal'e denied under oat h being the
source of Farr's story and the statute of
limitations for perjury by an attorney Is
three years . he explained.
lie is not allowed to watch tele vision,
unlike the rest.
RIVERSIDE (APl -The Golden State
Theater, where many renowned actors
performed in the 18909 before the advent
of movies, has been closed.
Jts pttSent operator. the National
General Corp., Ls unable to operate the
theater profitably. said Riverside
manager David Lackie.
A sparse audience attended the last
features -a pair of X-rated se1 films -
Tuesday night, said Lackie.
Formerly the Loring Opera House. the
lheatet -was-4esigned by James M. "Wood
Someone is lying .
If, after three yea rs, Farr did name
of Chicago and opened in 1890. 1hc sou rce of his story allC'gi ng the
Among the stars of that day who ~tanson family planned to murder other
played there were Sarah Bemhard!. personalities, the altornev or attorneys
James O'Neil , Helena flfodjeska and Otis could not then be punished .
Skinner. ··r m kind -0f opl1mist1c," Farr says of
Men to Receive
Paternity Leave
The landmark movie by D. W. Griffith , his 0"11 current chances for release, pend-
"Birth of a Nation." had its first publ ic 1ng case appeals from several angles. BERk.C:LEY (UPI 1 -City employes
showing at the theater on Jan. 1, 1915, Los Angeles County Supervisors have "·hose ,,_,·ives give birth may now obtain a
under the title "The KJansman."' also suggested he be freed on a da ily five-day "palernity leave."
"Not enough pictures are being made "·ork furlough program . 11·hich 11t·ould The City Council \'Otte! to grant
nowadays lo supply all the available allow him to return to ne"·spaper the unpaid leaves for husbands in ad·
thecrters , '' said Lackey. "This is a _n~:. r~rt1ng Vl"tui.e. calling tho Jail home at · dttton·· to·· the -s1t-rnon1tl unpaid· ·1caves
ticnwtde 'J)l'Oblenf.'"lt m-aKeiine-sia~0 ni~ht. previously allowed expectant mothers.
He said he believed National General ;.But I've heard rumors l might bf> The council struck do""'n a provision re.
might be willing lo sublease the theater assigned to juvenile hall as some kind of quiring u·omen to obtain a doctor's
I
' 'Jil D 'T' th 1'_ • ' to an operator who might be able to rounselor.'' h(' addcc.. certificat e that they were fit before e l ue +oge er t~alll'--r'oope~ra;..t.;.e.;.it;.mo;...;.r;..e_eco;;;.;;no~m;,;ic;.;a;..llY:.;· ______ F_a_rc.,.:.ju_s_t ..:;g;..ri_nn_.o __ w_he_n_as_k_cd_if_h_e_r_e_tu_r_ni..;ng::...to_t_he_J:.;·o_b_n_rt;..er_h_a_v_in"g-•-ba-b=y'=.----t
Gig Peters ' Girlfriend Defe1ids Slayer's Actions
By TOM BARLEY
Of lllt D•llY f'lltf lltff "weekend hippie" addiction. "but drug "They know t love Gig and they don't
use with a use in mind."' AMe agrees. cri:t:-;~e me." she added "That's roll l°Vl'
"I love Gig. I always did and l always "His testimony and his book speak for asked for up to this point and I'll deal
will. And it doesn't matter how long it themselves," she said . "'ith everything else as it comes along."
takes before we 're togther again, I'll be Anne Bartholomew has lived in Jlun-Anne Bartholomew believes that the
there. I have his little girl to help me and lington Beach with friends throughout most significant and totally une xpected
I have the memory of nine months that the long v.·eeks of the Gig Peters trial. aspect of the trial no""' ended is lhe lac!
v.•ere the most wonderful period of my She now plans 10 move with little that Gitt Peters \\'as allo"·ro. for more life." " Jamaica Bartholomew -one year old than three days, to give the jury an
Anne Bartholomew. 24. ran her hand Sunday _ "to the point that I can be uninterrupted analysis of the life styles
through her ash-blonde hair. smiled at nearest Gig wberl ~r Ibey send him." and philosophies that led him to kill bis
the memory of the idyll she and Gig parents.
Peters shared in a Sa.n Diego County Anne is dittcting the art work on Gig b "'ill
desert retreat and insisted : Pet~. a' book. She said the volume, which Jodge Kennet · lams and pros-
"I believe in Gig. I believe that one day W111 be ready for distribution soon. will ecutor Pat Brian made no attempt to in·
we, all of us, will come to understand be printed with -colored inks on black terrup . as Peters, only asx:asionally
much better the meaning behind what paper. prompted by defense lawyer Tarlow, Jee.
Gig told lhe (Orange County Superior '"Gig thought it was the ideal way to lured the jury from his wheelcha ir via
Court) jury. I am working on his book handle his lbougbts and I agree," she charts, bulky tomes of obscure religions
·nght now and I believe that the book said. "I'm going to be busy on that for a and an eloquence that never deserted
("Making Life. Easy"), combined with 1001; time to come. but I don't bank on II him .
what he said in court, will help us to fL. n:y future support." "I never thought it rould happen, bu!
understand. She believes her degree in art will I'm glad ii did," she said. ''His thoughts
"I also believe, and always have stand her in gc-:d stead in the community and beliefs are right there in the record
believed, that (;ig was sane when be kill-nearest to Gig Peters' future place of just as they are in the book he wrote."' '
ed his parents as he ~·as sane before and residence. "l know that J can support She bas accepted many lhlngs during
af ter." us." stY.> ~r ... cJ. the long months of trial. among them 'he
Her blue-gray eyes clouded as she Ti::! ' .~ £; ~~ '·r: .,,·hose first contact fact that Gig Peters ,,_,-111 almost certainly
recalled the deaths on Aptil 21, 1971, of w -• .h-C'· his sister, never walk again.
Charles Peters, 55, and Flora Peters, 54. C. I l'na -they \' _ room1.:~1es at The paralysis ~*'!'"IOnsible for that
Gib stabbed his father through the. heart : 11:1..11 sittwation was produced by a bullet wound
and then strangled bis mother in what J. he · fan1ii\ n· :· '1y in t. · future. In the spine, received u be tried lo
defense attorney Barry Tarlow insisted "l saw them all, my parenta, my two escape from the courtroom during his
throughout two trials was a drug-induced brothers and my two sisters, al flrst trial. It almost cost him bis life.
act of insanity. Christrna! and Gig just wasn't mentioned She doesn't consider the obvious quts-
"Mr. and ~fl'!, Peters didn't die at all," she said. "The jury verdict may tion worth an answer,
because Gig was insane," Anne said. change all that but I just don't know at "Gig and I bave a love that, like his
·•They died for reasons that be told the this point actions. defies common analysis," she
jury for the past three days and for said. "It certainly doesn't depend oo hrs
reasons that are made very cleaa in bis physical fonn and. anyway. be. needs me
book. p tal F l now more than ever." "As I say, it is going to take time for OS OU up ror all that, she sald, "Gig has told me
people to understand those reasons," the lo go my own way and make a new life
Scripps College art major munnured. p A ""'ithout him ."
"Sometimes I think that I don't fully rompts rrest Sh<! makes it clear that that will never
uodersland myself and I pray every day happen . "Sex? That isn't imJ>Ortant. it
for the insight that will help me to 0 H J • / R hasn't been for the two years that he's
understand." Jl US tlS f, <IP been locke<J up and I don 't think It's a
Anne Bartholomew bellevts that the factor now.
drug issue tn the Gig Peten trial W3S un-MORGANTOWN, W.Va . (UPI) _ Add "Our love •part. I've put off ma ny
necessarily belabored to the point that ft Rohen Allen Skldmore to the J!Jt of thing1 for furtbtr study onct the verdict
a.ssurned a much grtat.er importance Amencans unhappy wtl.b the U.S. PoNI was in," Anne Bartholomew aaid. "t in·
than as nccc"8ry to the jurv's f'-..1. tend to take things as tbey eome. Sure, w -# ;)'t'J"Ylct. lone'" ~-I •• G detenninatloo. PoU!>e aaid u tDVelopa wltb Slti<I-it's going to be .,, w• -ve i&'•
"t believe. ja!t as Gig told the jury, l'Mtt''I name 00 It wu delivered to the child, I have his love, and that'1 a lot to
that lhe use of drugs is an individual wrong lddma receaUy. lnstde..,. tbe start a new life with."
thing and, If some way could be round to unsuspedio( ,..;pleat f.....i haablsh. ._A juror called Anne Bartholomew "the
put it into legal terms, the decilkln AutboritieS uJd , tbey watched two girl wbo ntvt.r stops 1miling."
should be left to the Individual. other !tttm arrive w-1 at Skid-Sbo makH It dear that ~ .,.,.
"Marijuana shoUld be le1allztd," she mo"''' addr111 '!'Ith tba aame c:ontentJ, many oa:ulons durin• the put two
said. ''Tbere is no proof that tt is and promptly atTeOled the ....vlOll!Wl )'tar1 wben a amn. wu YUJ hanS to
bannful or ha• long range trfects. LSD is on a . narootlcs <Me. Ont:.
a very dlfrerenl thlll/I. of.,..,.,,., but then Poll<e said SklM>n, 21. pmuadecl a Bui lbe lilao mado tt dear tbat
Gig pointed out that LSD could send ..., !riend during hil army tour U.·c.rm..., ~whet ever Gli · ~-~ _..-ith· ~fo·<
man ben1erk while It gave anolher a look to mall tba.ltttm to bJm ""°" bis retum lit lie_ ~ ~· -
at· nte 11c-.,,.,1d nover ha•• had.!' --1ronr Eiifopeo • -PP1 ~· fmn lht Jlrl
Anr.:l B•rtholomeW oloesn't lilde the When one. arr!Ved 81 an locorrect acl-, lhar<d bis !lie fol' jaat nlne ...,ths, A
ract that sb! and 1h< crippled 1...,.1rom d~. dty .and 11ale Po1Jce Aid" they oine--91 Jciyn 'tlllll eod<d wf1h What · •
wbom •he I• now parted uaed ~ llak<d out tlie 1U1ped'1 home and walled prolocutor BrlaO eollld the "plaaned, ,.. toc•ther In 't!IC Idyll that eoded when Gtg for tba mA11 to be cltll......S. cold blooded klllq el bis pomib.''""· '
Pe!m ..., charged with the murder of Slddmort, unable to meet a Sl.000 baU, "That...., ii;• illt Aid. "All l ltnow
his parents. ....w..4 In custod1 fOIJowtnl"a heartna todq lltbaMlley.wert U. bapplat nine
ll.--J'ita[l.Jj:stifl<d..ID.J""'Ltbal-lt-PH DO IM/.,.._.---.....-,te.--"---~·-.tu-llll!ldantol~·ah,1ty-1Ullfe:h!."-----
.J.J.J. (Jarrell
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INiAJOl DISl&N£U n..,._ & Fri.£;•~ COSTA MESA, CALIF.
•
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'
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I DAil v PllOT
H It's Quiet,
~It's Sunday
TIPTOE & SHUSH DEPI'.
Munldpol people in San Juan C.ptatrano.
our M!Mlon ctty, have apparently looked
w!th some envy in recent times al
another On.nge COast comnnmity at the
other end of our county.
'11111 would be the city of Fountain
Valley. long noted for bein& a quiet
place.
I'm 1Ure you've all bun! of Fountain
Va1ley'1 rtputatk>n for peace and qWet.
The city Is so silent that vlsltlog
llbrarlam have been known to get
twltcby.
The Uuntlngtl>n Beach High School
Band once struck up some elgbt miles
away and Fountain Valley filed an im-
n>edlale complaint witb the noiJe abate-
ment officer.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY bu what you
miibl..Pill Quiet 7.allng. They talk about
It In a whisper. l!oDel thnlushoot the city
roquJre different 1e .. i. of ·•il<Dee. The
blcJ>eot and best zone ii Dead Quiet. Th<
loudest zone Is called Uttle "nnldes.
I beard a rumor ooet: that a mushroom
farmer got rousted from Fountain Valley
for growing a noisy crop. Another
housewife allegedly drew a stem warning
beca.Ull her mufflnl made a racket wben
they roae in the oven.
Anyway, it ts obvk>w: that the
munic:lpl) shakers and movers of San
Juan Caplstranc>· have viewed Fountain
Valley from lfar with considerable eovy.
Now tbey'ro golq to do something about
il
•
T
Cold and Beautifnl~Fro111 Afar
Large chunks of ice are piled up on llinois si de of
Mississippi River as heavy ke !lows past St. Louis
skyline. Olflctals predict heavy ice in the Mi ssissippi
u,,,. ........
above St. Louis would cause big drop in river down
stream and warned boat ownen to take precautions.
Sun reflecting off ice givea scene added beauty on bitter cold day
along Chicago's lake front. Chicago is settled under biting winds and
seven-degree temperatures. Some ,,,..;dents of Northern Illinois have
been evacuated because of flooding threats.
Hughes Pleased
By TWA Ruling,
Aide Announces
Sandy W eds
He r Doctor Sniper Search Continues
CARSON CITY. Nev. <UPI)
Television star Sandy Duncan, 26.
o( Newport Beach. who klst the Police Not Convinced Hotel Gunman Acted Alone
sight of her left eye after surgery NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Autboritie.s: knew whites, he went to school with October to "think about the injustices a LOS ANGELES (AP) -An aide lo for a benign tumor, has been mar-Howard Hughes says the industrialist Is rled to Dr. Thomas C. Calcattera, focused today on a key question : did whites, be dated a white girl and then he black man receives in the service." She 1---~ bout Su Court 1· Mark J . Essex act alone when be entered tol.d me that he didn't know Why blacks said be was harassed with petty an· p ~ a a preme ru ing 35, the physician who performed a downtown hotel and --' -··•-on -~· dismissing Trans World Airlines' $145.4 the operation. .,,.,,.,.,.. 5 ...... u.. ~ted ... wte girls because they're no dif· noyances and "racist m1streatment.''
m1Woo judgment against his company in Justice of the Peace Tom Davis guests, police and passersby! erent than black girls and they're not as Sbe said the youth and his friends were
a lawsuit flied 12 years ago. performed the civil ceremony Sil sniping vlcllms died and 17 were in-beautlful." stopped repeatedly by Navy police, fore·
Hughes is in London, where he has Wednesday MW Dunc it» jurtd in the shooting last Sunday at the She described her son as a good boy. a ed to sbow Identification and even
----1'IUS 1?-ts-tblt-Sl:n-Juan11·Glty-Goun------beeniYing~fnee ~--M!!:nagua-in the amerwent_._Uii~a::t -~a11 --. Downtown Hawanl Jolmon'.s_ ~ gentle man, always helpful. searcbed at times. He took a part.time
ell bu introduced a new law calllrlg for wake of the Nicaraguan earthquake. November, was divorced In october Police gunfire from a hovering helicopter 'fler·son's trwbles staf'ted--in the---Ne vy;----job in-& Navy-club end was forced to ask
tbi.op to be quiet 00 Sundays In a 6-2 decision Wednesday, the court from actor Bruce Scott Zahariades killed Essex, a 2J..year.old black from which, she said, "brainwashed" him. pennission to do part of his job that
ObviouJJ tbe San J Ct Coaocil UJ>6et the judgment, whicb had grown to after four years of marriage. They Emporia, Kan., as he zig-zagged across She uid her SOD returned heme last white sailors did freely , she said.
y, uan Y aJmoSt $175 million with interest. 1 _;had;:_no;.;chll~~dre~n.~Cal';:"ca~tter~a~a~he~ad}-~-_'.'.thei,;botd~~roo~f.,..,...,,iiiii.,ih.u;;;-.o-:=---------:~--=~--------------1-ll to e.ue · ' )ority.,-JU&tke-f-surgeon a u ce weren sure ether at
and not attack it on a week-long basis William 0. Douglas said the Hughes Tool Medical Center, also was married least one additional mlper escaped . R · r ffl f) • F d
a--Uke__f:ctltlllaln-Yallty. ~<lion. duolJenged by TWA 11-bef-. "Tliere'a ·--ev iii a conspiracy ~qu-·es . 'P-a~i-ry nn S antitrust violations were immune from ""'""Cl L \...; .I. · ----San Juan's law would prohibit com· antitrust action since they were approved by other people," Police Supt. ttlarence
merclal use of equipment "which makes by the Civil Aeronaulics Board. Giarrusso told newsmen Tuesday. But be
loud noises" in the city on Sundays. One Hughes Tool had been accused of using added , "I cannot poaiUvely tell you yet." B N • L T Id
exsmple cited was that of soil testing. its control illegally while owning 78 per· Tr iS tar .Loses Police said Wednesday they had ob-y IXO n awyer 0 You may have harbored the notkm that cent of TWA to estabtish It.self as a SU!>" tained the hotel registry and were check· • plier to other airlines and falling to ac-ing guests -raising the question
djgging a hole in the ground isn't very quire an adequate jet fleet for TWA. p f E • whether EMex might have bad someone
noisy. ApparenUy it can be irritating in The suit was never tried in court since art 0 ltgine, with him who bad taken a room at the
Capistrano. TWA was granted a default judgment in hotel.
May 1963 after Hughes nfused to appear L nds S f l The regl.stry check wasn't complete,
SAN .JUAN lllAVOR Jim Thorpe ex·
plained the whole Issue this way: "What
we're really trying to assure here is at
least one relatively peaceful day in the
city each week.."
for a pretrial deposition. a a e y police said.
A New Yort federal judge appoint«i a Police and FBf agents questioned
special master who said TWA should be Rodney Frank, one of Essex' former
awarded $45.3 million for profits it would LAS VEGAS (AP) -Federal invesli-New Orleans roommates , Wednesday,
have realized without mis.management gators ~re attempting today to deter-But a police spokesman said, "It appears
by Hughes Tool. The amount was tripied mine what caused part of a TrUlS World that Frank has no connection with the in·
because of the treble-damages section of Airlines jumbo jet engine to drop oa cident." W!P, lhat ma~ be. But 1 never really lhe Clayton Act and attorneys' fees and The spokesman also said nothlng Md
constpered Capistrano a cacophony of court costs brought · the total judgment Vi1tile in flight. changed since Giarrusso declared Tues-
IOUDd. It always struck me as a peactful ... to $145.f million. The LlOll Lockheed TriStar was forced day that he wasn't "aatlsfled" there Was
sort of village that only had to deal with down here Wednesday when it lost the. any t'CIMectlOI\ ~tween the sniping and
the press of civilization when tourists Paper Executive Dies fan portion over southwestern Colorado. the Sunday morning shooting ol a New
came io watch the swallows return or None of the. plane's 70 passengers or 12 Orlearui grocer. ~dent N. h ed b f t NAPA tAPl -Ira King \Vilkin, a ere\' members was hurt. A police source close to the in-r 1 t:a1 1xon appen Y or a aco vestigation had said that the g-r Wa! former prMidenl and board chainnan of p d board he ~· ·~· or two. h Zell b h assengers an c;rew a t ""11· shot by som-e who fe·-• t•· victim t e er ac Paper Co. is dead at 69. ....,._, an::u 1n:
Apparenlly two San Juan councilmen Wllldn, who died Tuesday, rose 10 the caco to Los Angeles fiigbt remained might ldenUfy him as the slayer of a
agree. They voted against the Quiet Sun-firm 's chief executive from a 1936 start calm dUJin& the incident, an airlines policeman on New Year's Eve.
day Law. Jn fact, Councilman Josh Gam-as the company 's training director. spokesman said. "The pilot was happy The same penon who shot the grocer,
mell wu reported as sun-nesting the pro-•th t~ the . line bandied " ..__ the source said, drove a stolen car to the _ "' . ·~ way lll" r · ·~ hotel and began the snlplng.
pmed ordinance i.s little more Uwi one of DAILY PILOT said. 'In Emporia, E.s.wx' mother says aocie--
the old Blue Laws that used to prohibit DELIVERY SERVICE A spokesman at MCC.mn fntcrnatm· ty was responsible for the death of her
everything but sleeping in church on Sun-al Mrport here said crews equipped with son.
days.. Dflivtry of tlw! D.1il1 Pilot fire-retarding foam were standlnc by dur· The shooting wu a "clear signal for
I~ guaranlttd jrwr the }n....tl .... but the cbemlcaJ W3.S not White America to get off lbe lelt of its
REGARD~, SAN JUAN has moved
a step closer to Fountain Valley in the
quiet business.
Now, however, It has come lo my at·
tenUon that Fountain Valley bas a new
and novel attraction. They have a '
grandmother named Frances Sayers who
makes funny face1 and bas performed
for teevee. You wonder if San Juan
C.plstrano will try to top that?
It is ttported she does the funny faces
very quietly.
MtM....,.,. ... ," " .,.., ,. "" .. ,.,. ,_. ·oe &INMJ6 pants and do somethinL/~Mr!. Mark
-·.., ,,,. , ..... c•11 .... """' c...., .111 used. "It was a normal landing.'~ he sald. Essex told uewana:J Wednesday. M ~I It ,..... Cll4 ... , llkfll ..,, .. ,,,. """ Passengers were placed aboard an-"If thls terrible thing will awaken '*""• .,... ~· 11 '"' • 11tt ,_1.,. other plane here and flown to Lo!! An-while America to the injustices that r--c.,r .., • "·"'· :i...-.,, "' I '·"'· el s-11,. c•M -• c.,., -.... ....,., ,. g es. blacks suffer, then IOme good will come
,..., C•lls ... IN:fll -~•;i 1• '·"'· A TrtSt.ar crashed in the Florida Ever-or it." she sakl.
T tltptmnts
~I Or•l!CI~ (O\lllly Arffs · · '42•4S21 No(lllW1!lll H1H1ll1t9IOt1 lt•t~
•nd Wtttm1<11i.r • . $'0·1220
S..n Cl-le, C1p!1lr•oo euc.11,
Sin Jv•11 Capi.rr1no. O.n1 Point,
So\l!h LtOvn•, Lal!Vtlil Hlllllfl 4'2·4421
glades last Dec. 29 near Miami, kl.lUng "We must cease prOvoklng people to
100 penooo;. the point that they must 1eek remige to
lnvesUgators ror the National Trans-get even with society," Essex' faUier
portation Safety Board and other federal said aa he and bis wife spoke with
agencies began the tnvestla:atlon here to newsmen for the fl.r5t Ume since their son
determine the eztent or damage and a Y:as Identified as the slain sniper.
possible cause. "I blame society," he said.
South Gripped by Freeze
Mrs. Essex aald her son did not hate
white men, "be bated what the. white
man stood for, the white system. He
Wlclca
-
• '
I
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pmidenl Nls·
on's personal attorney, Herbert
!Wmhach, requested campaign con-
trlbutlons from a dairy group WOO...
earlier cootributlons are being questioned
in a lawsuit filed here, according to ln-
formalioo provided by a witness In the
suit.
But the witness, George Mehren,
general manager o1 Alooclsl<d Milk
Producers, Inc., u1d Kalmbach, of
Newport Beach, filter withdrew the(1e-
quest for additional fmida.
"The totality of the disc~ion was his
statement that for reaaons be did not
specify. • • there would not be any further
d1scussion or request for political
assistance," Mehren aaid in a deposition
filed in the case.
Details of the deposition were reported
In Th< Washington Post today.
The suit was brought by consumer ad-
vocate Ralph Nader and several con-
sumer groups agains the Agriculture
Department. They charge that the NiJon
Administration raised milk price sup-
ports in March of 1971 in return for more
than $400,000 in political contributions
from three d'airy cooperative groups.
M~. who was an a.Wstant
agriculture secretary In the Johnson
Administration, said Kalmbach made the
request for more funds at the Los
Angeles meeting, but preceded it Wilh a
disclaimer that it would in aoy way
result In benefits for the dairy industry.
Mehren said he told Kalmbach he
would comkier the request. However, he
said he later was called to a second
meet.ing in Washington at which time
Kalmbach withdrew the request for ad-
ditional funds without giving any reason11 .
Crop _ Controh. Lifted
In Farm Price Battle
soon it ~'OUld decide the question,
althOugh FCC OJainnan Dean Bun:h said
be hoped it could be done as i!IOOl'l a1
possible. e Cleme11t• Supported WASHl~GTON (AP ) -The Securities
and Exchange Qinl\nlssJon says a com-
pany headed by President Nixon'•
nominee for deputy secretary of defeme
(_r_N_s_H_OR_T_ .. _. __,)
•
Thursday, J1nuW)' 11, 1~73 DAILY PILOT o.i_.
Son· Ends . ' Missions. Families Near LA Airport Win Suit
•
852 ·commander Terms }ob 'Fooliih'
choice ·-..... lnlo the ml!ltary m Ibo tint p1aca. But be lelt Amedcan pis In Vlei·
nun .. do not justify the mus
cleltNctloo ~ tllll ...
' ' 'LOs ANGELES (APl -
Foft1-n!ne !amilkl living neor
Loo Anc•I" lntamlloMI Air-
port have been awarded
1365,700 !or darnagtJ1 caua<d
by noise from planes using the
two new north nmw1ys.
to be pUy affected.
'Ibo nillng ended • aix-lllOllth
trill orliJnally brought by 10
families who said the noise
damaged their property , do-
valued It a n d harmed their
heollh.
1ou or value from noise.
CHULA VISTA (AP) -'!lio
B!I e<1nmander who nlUstd
to fly further bornblnc mi.
alonl "'"' Nor1h Vietnam Ill a deoply ..uatoos 111111 who "did
In 1* "" -there ...... &00<! c!Jance he woold be draft-
ed, and be saw offlcet'a ~ dl!lote ICbool aa • way ol awldlnr the infantry ...
"II WU llOI specilleally the
bamblng of t be North," he
said, dllnf the ....... 1 ... bis dodslon. .. ,,,.,. Ill enough
IUl!eril!g Just In South Vietnam
towamnladlooonUnuanceof
the war. But the m&slive
bombing ol lhe -milbl
A SUperior Olurt jury delib-· ------
During the ooune ol t h e
court r<COl'dlng!, lhe city
•&reed to buy 39 of the homa
and Superior Olurt Judg•
William H. Levit ruled that six
of the properties were too far
from tbt runways to suffer any
SWJ to be tried on F't>b. 14
~ the claims or 11 familiet
that airport noise. fumes and
vibrations havr caused them
serious personal inj ury a u d
annoyance.
not like any perl" Iii Ille -· ,bis fathtr and brotlJor Ay.
"He aald what be .... ~'
WU just !Junlty, just foolllb,"
aald Tim Keck ol bis »yw--
old brother, C.pl Mldl8<1 J.
Keck, I
Rocle IOld bis brotbrs ao-
tkrll -. "pretly drutlc, ob-
'riously, but not surpriainc. t
dcn'I eudly lo»w what will
happen to him, but my wile
and I .,pport him 100 pt<·
cml." THE CAPTAIN told bis ..,.
perion Dec. 28 thal be would
ny ..,.,_-.,"'-""''-.~ REGK-Aid-hfs ""' _._ his had married nearly two years nown 175 mlsalono ,.~ to ago but had """111Y been wed
declaration. for dJvorce.
"lie dldnl mind il too mud> ffeck aatd In Vlelnam lhat "~en be was flying Cl!Os, but
~~~~i:i~
l,y pushed ""' .... the brinll ...
A sradJ!ato ol l'lftldenl Nix.
on'rilmtnttt<t, Wliltflff0\1.-
leg>, Heck coold be aentenced
lo two years In a military
prison U convicted of falling
to obey a general order.
erated for 13 days before de-
ciding that seven other fami-
lies were not entitled to any
payment because their homes
were too lar from the airport
Citrus Crop
Damage&-
By Freeze
when be went into the IWs,
h~ whole attitude cballged,"
the younger Heck, fl, a Max·
well.· C.li!., high S<hool teach·
er, soid In a (tlephooe inler·
view early today.
"He knew he had a duty,
Uiero'• no doubl about that.
But he didn't lhlnk bis duty
coold match up to his .,..,.
science."
Farr's Release Gets
Opposed by Counsel
SACRA,'dENTO !AP)
About 20 per«nt of the 1972
Calllornia orange crop wu
damaged by last month's
heavy freeze in northern and
central California, state of·
flcials say.
Charles B. Christensen,
state agrlcullure director, aald
the state's cl~ growen
were beading !or a bumper
crop unlil a five-day cold map
Dec. 8-12 which caused a total
crop 1 ... of $51 million in the
state. Of that, $42. 7 million was
in citrus, be aaid.
Heek's father, Jotm W. Reck,
a 62-year-old real estate brok-
er in this San Diego suburb.
said his son bad quettioned
the U.S. role In Vlelnam dur-
ing the past four yean. ·
"HE'S BEEN very, v e r y
mudl against it ever since they
put him in B51s about four
years ago," the elder Heck
said. "He did not like any
part, of il
"I am wilh him 100 percent.
So is his mother. 1 've been
very antiwar -especially
this war."
Tim Heck said his brollier
"didn't have a complete
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
county COl.mSel ls OPPosing an
appeal to U.S. Supreme Court
Justice Wllliam 0 . Douglas to
free newsman William T. Farr
pending appeal of bis case in-
volving a news source.
Farr, 37, was jailed more
than six weeks ago when he
refused to name the source of
a story during the Charles
Manson murder trial
FABR'S ATl'Omkv. Mark
Hurwilz, applied to Douglas
last week for Farr's re!east,
claiming tbal Superior Court
Judge Cllaries ff. Older, the
man who ordered Farr jailed
for contempt, was so
personally embroiled in the
Closing Arguments
Corona Mass Murder
Trial Drawing to End
FAIRFIELD (AP) -A named to lhe State Board o!
udeath ledger" and a plle of F.c:tucation by Gov. Ronald
bloody clothes, weapons and Reagan and two present board
other-objeds-·emerged -as~tbe-members · ·haYe~ been re&f>'
· tey issues as the Juan Corona pointed.
mass murder trial neared its Dent's a intment s
. e uptotsull
In rebuttal to the closing streqgth,of 10 members.
defense·argurnentthat-there;s-Dl'f"John Fml;"i"San"'Iliego
"no substantial evidence" physician who serves as the
against the 38-year-old farm board's vice president, and
labor contractor, special pros-Marlon R. Drinker o! Saratoga
ecutor Ronald Fahey pulled . were named to new four-year
out piles of clothing and other terms. Mrs. Drinker has serv·
bloodstained objects found in ed since March 1972: when
Corona's home, car and ranch Reagan appointed her to serve
office to illustrate his closing out an unexpired tenn and
argument. Ford has been a member
"There's human blood on since Reagan appointed him in
every one of these objects," 1968.
Fahey said. "I submit to you
there's only one explanation. e Nun Attacked
This is the evidence you would LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
expect to find if you had the nun was repgrted in Sati.sfac-
right man - a man who back· tory cmdition today after he-
ed and stabbed 25 men," ing beaten by a hammer-
Fahey said. wielding youlh she found
• Pop-• Trial wandering in a convent here. ~• Authorities said S~ Anna
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Anesi , 38, !ul!ered cull! on her
key question being asked in head and bruises on her ann
the Pentagon Papers trial jury and back in the attack Tues.-
select.ion -"Do you have any day night. -
opinions about the United -• The youth escaped but not
States in v o 1 v em en t in "before Sister Anesi "bit the
rascal real hard" when he put
( BRIE E''S J his hand over her moulh, In· ~ r 1 _ vestigators said.
Southeast Asia?" _ has pro-e Guitarist Held
duced varying responses but a FAIRFAX (AP) -Philip
consensL1;5 thjl.the war shouJd Lesh. bass guitarist for the
end: · Grateful Dead rock music
The sixth day or questioning group, has been arrested and
Wednesday in the search for a booked for investlgatk>n of
jury to judge Daniel Ellsberg marijuana and dangerous
and Anthony Russo brought drugs, police say.
opinions from housewives, an OffiCi!rs said Wednesday
American Legion post com· they went to Lesh's home here
mander and a Vietnam war on a warrant based on in-
veteran who was 40 percent formation from a young
disabled by war wounds. womin who said she was of·
!et'ed drug• al lhe house Moo-.-Appointment day.
SACRAMENTO (AP) However, the informant said
Retired Assemblyman James someone other than Lesh
Dent of Concord bas been made the offer, police saJd.
~~================:::;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;
HAVE YOU
SHOPPED
OUR
SALE
YET?
•
IOll lrvl,,. • Now!:' Buch Wntcllff Pua
case be could not give Farr an
impartial bearing.
Douglas is the justice
responsible for emergency ap-
peals from the 9th Circuit
where Farr's case has been
taken. He could free the
newsman on his ow n recognizance.
Uttl Ttitttll ...
Distaff Pilot
Miss Joellen M. Drag,
22, o! Castro Va I le y,
DEPIJ'.fY COUNTY Counsel di.splays the shape of
WiUiam F . stewart said things to come in the
Wednesda)'hehad filed a brief U.S. Navy. She is being
stressing that the application trained k> b e c o m e a
for Farr's release should be Navy pilot.
denied since "no new federal --~-----
constitutional questions were
raised" in an appeal of the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
Farr's attorney also has
taken the appeal to a state ap-
pellate oourt.
Stewart said Older was not
biased in the case and added,
"No analysis of the judge's
Nude Photo
Stirs Town
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -
state of mind is necessary or Gail Jensen said residents of
r e I e v a n t i n t h e s e her rural hometo ..... 11 of Parlier
circumstances, for all that were so shocked at finding her
petitioner Farr has to do to nude picture in Knight dissolve the sentence is to
obey the law and answer the Magazine, she couldn't get an
questions." appointment at the
Stewart said he mailed his hairdressers.
answer to Hurwitz' application The 22-year-old model said
for release Tuesday night. photographer Jay Arnold sold
'I'b.ere was no indicatioh the picture from her portfolio
_when Doug~~!_ rule. _ ______!!!_bout her permission.
Olrlstensen said c r o p
damage figures did not include
harm done to rees, vines or
equipment. The dollar figures,
he said. were based on pre-
fr~ price5.
Before the freeze, state of-
ficials were predicting a 20
percent Increase in the tm
orange crop over 1971"s record
$12.8 million harve.st. Of-
ficials now predict the 1972
orange crop will be about 42
million boxes; a drop of 1.3
rnillioo lr<:<n 1971. Grapefnilt,
lemons and tangerines also
suffered losses but still are ex.
pected to show increases over
the 1971 harvest.
In addition to citrus,
Christensen said flowers and
nursery stock losses totaled
$6.4 million. Heaviest losses
were along the central coast
counties. Flower damage in-
cluded heather, daisies, lilies
and other flowers. The total
flower damage reportedly is
$3.2 ml!Uon with hei_vlest
IC>SSe! in Marin and Sa~ateo
cowrt1 ....
, RION HARDWARE
•
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Aho .. ~ .. Hin••• Dwf AncHe •······ ·· • ·••••·· ·· ···· ·· ········• 9.95
Gladiolus in Delectable Colors
Plant Bulbt every 2-3 wMk1 for lonv--lastlng color.
Even th.Ir names are Tempting Delights , .•
Strawberry ;N Cream Cherry Flip
Plum Pudding Orange Juice
lemor.-lfme Apricot Delight
.............................. ' .
AIM TINY TOT •1111 .. ve. rt.kM, T., C"9, etc. ................................
1
KIDS .,_ ... ......
SHADE
TREE
It's FREEi
LILY OF THE NILE e.....,..,, •• ,..... •
.................. h-
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I .. I. I ... J.JS
SPECIAL .98
S,.W '"4 tln WM. Hly
1.29 ....
2.29 .. L
rs.wttMMM ... $•11 ••• AITICHOKt e Chet"ry IHUIAJll
Mery Woshl1t9toJ1 ASP'All:AGUS
Tltorfllou IOYSENltlRY
GRAPE VINES
""' ..... rw.rty wfll .. ,.,
' , • , • • "'"' ,,_ ,.. .1 .... ,,,...... ........ 119 ...., lw.cli) • .,.. 0 ...
Halli~t?S
SPECIAL
LMf-St111 :111, ••Df••wf '
· CARNATIONS
1.98 doz.
'Rn .... o.ty
.. •. ~ •
e USPllRllES
P'IG11t .. •P'8'. Tt..y'r• rooted, 98
....., •• pi.11t. • -·
FLOWER SHOP
TERRARIUMS
a...tthl "-cnry °'"'" M1111y to clte"9 ffoN wlld tt..y're Hiii
PllFECT "N .. •r•" GIFT.
•oiNIPTRS" ...i
UDDID CUIU "'-• 14.95
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• •
• " ere Are ~ e Going?
Newsman William Farr, today ordered released
from prison after spehding 46 days in a windowless,
8-by·l2-foot cell IQ the Lot, Angeles County JaU, estab-
lished a new record for Incarceration of a reporter who
refused to idenU!y confidential news sources.
Other reporters involved in the current rash of
judicial strikes against the news medli have betn locked
up for anywhere Crom a few hours to 21 days.
Farr's release, pendlng appeal of hi• case, finally
was ordered by Supreme Court Justice Wlllllm 0.
Douglas, who is responsible for handling emergency
appeals from the 9th Circuit, which incl udes California.
Wblle-the-questton-oMhe-ne...S.n'rduty1oinfo•mt--
the public, and the public's right to know Is the para· '
mouat issue, the Farr case is beginning to generate
some even graver concerns. . •
This U.S. citizen, who Is not accused of breaking
any law and therefore is not entiUed to a normal trial,
was kept in what amounted to solitary confinement
for going on two months.
He was handed an "indefinite" sentence on the
personal whim of ~ chagrined judge who resorted to
legallstic trickery to get him behind bars.
Determined to obtain the inforI!lation he desired,
Judge Charles Older waited patiently until Farr tempor-
arily left his newspaper job. Then, finding him retrg.
actively guilty of contempt of court, he left the prison
sentence open, thereby making It possible to "re-sen·
tence " the hapless reporter every time be refused to ~
spond to questioning,
Such judicial platitudes as "innocent until proven.
guilty," "fair and speedy trial," "cruel and unusual pun·
lshmen~" apparentlr. aren't deemed worthy of consider·
aUon In Judge Older s courtroom.
So where does that leave the rest of us -not just
reporters, but any; citizen who may llnd himself before
the bench on one charge or another? ls thJs sort of thing
now the acceptable version of "justice" in the United
States? . . The prestigious Criminal Courts Bar Asoociation, an
organization of more than 700 judges, deferuoe attorneys
and pros!Jcutori bas voiced suppoJ'I for the jailed new .. '
man, 10 apparently they ~gree with Older.
Could ll he that the Illness of the judge Is open
to question? H IO, when and where will the question be
answet..df Older's fellow Judges, It appears, are reluo-
tant to take any oHiclal steps that might cast doubt upon
his authority.
The Indefinite lmpNolllnent of a citizen without
trial on the aole whim of a single oflJclal, Is the sl<lck
in trade ol dictatoiJ_hl__p,_ ___ ~ •==-------+-Ji1filiei y 9M1ntlii1Jjjitec! St !
Caution Advisable
Appropriate words of caution were voiced Tuesday
when the board of supervisors approved a ,99,209 grant
to study a proposal for handling mental health programs
in Orange County. 1
Tbe federal grant wu ap~roved by a S-1 vote, but
it was obvious that the majontr of the board !"IS not
giving Dr. E. W. Klatte, county director of mental health,
carte blanche approval nf his plan to establish a non-
profit corporation to administer what ultimately will he
a '10 to '20 milllon spending Jtem in the county.
Board Chairman Ronald Caspers warned that the
study should "'proceed on a cautious and wary basis."
Supervisor Ralph Clark admonished that approval of the
initial grant did not constitute approval of Klatte's over·
all proposal to funnel the entire mental health expendi-
tures through the non-profit corporation.
ll could he that Dr. Klatte's proposal will provide
the best method of pulling together all o! the funding
and program directing Involved in mental health pro-
cedures, But it Is such an ambitious, far-reaching pro-
gram with such vast power over public and private
health care that a cautious approach certainly is in order.
-.
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•
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Some Laws Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Congress VnsBmpathetic to Draft Evaders
'
Contribute
To Freedom
No . Real Chance Seen for Amnesty
' (smNEYJ.HAlUU~
How come newspapers run women's
Pages but no men'a pagea? Ain't
nobody going to get liberated that
way.
-A.J.D,
\VASHINGTON -There isn't a chance
of amnesty being voted by the incoming
Congress for draft dodgers, deserters
and defectors.
Despite intensifying agitation. and noisy
clamor for such leg-
islation by leftists.
........... ...._ .t • -: ""' --. ......,.. ,..._, wtew1o .., doves and other mil--,-..-.._. • .,. ............... ef .. -· fl ' IW ltant •••-•M•, the
ts [-· to ~u. ,.., ,.. ....... ...., ... Dlttr ...... c..:;u.;:u.,;, The aeilish perlClll w'= ~ ve , barriers are over-thal all people are aecreUy like hlmlell; wbelminclY against
for it would be Intolerable to admit that It For esample:
otben are moUvated by a genen>lity of they are. (1°¥· herd-inltlnct will be< the Alf tbe cbairmen
. ' . ' o-----"~ =~~~~-==
(ROBERT S.AILEN)
against amnesty.
mE SIGNIFICANCE o[ these
backstage factors ls -they virtually
foreck>se any possibility of an amnesty
bill being reported to the House or Senate
£or consideration and vote. In other
words, from the very start tbe door ls
with no loss lo anyone. except taxpayers that dropped out of sight without a trace.
who foot the bill for printing and clerical It never got beyond Kennedy's Sub-
work involved. Committee, and after tbe hearings
FEW ARE AWARE oI it, but early in nothing more ever was beard of it.
h1arch of this year Senator Edward Ken-INTERESTINGLY, at the very time
nedy, D-Ma.ss., as ~of the Kennedy was clangorously denouncing
Administntive Practice and Pi'ocedure meddling in Vietnam, he was stridently
Subcommittee, made a ~ived stab at advocating U.S. intervention in civil war-
trying to promote amnesty legislation-wracked North Ireland. Clearly,
only to drop it like a bot poker when it · whatever else the Massachusetts senator
backfired. is, he is agilely "flexible." .
'lbe ICheme was patently politically He doesn 't let consistency keep him
rnotinted. At that Ume w " · · t-aboV4I pi:h1ciple ..
ee g-orth-on wbetber • • • with immediate jU;---li--iliiN[lne'G'io.:i,~I of su • ; a p• ce where a i•r.1a.-~;:-1~u:re nv"atty'--'o"p"'pos-ed.,-,-to"'l;.t.::....._
"research" is not di-can'.,! team u mucb as he could ln the They are _ Sens. James Eastland, 0-
It's almply not in the cardl-in the 93rd
COngrcss -notwUnstaiiilin"'Tf ra iCal,
pacifist and emotional ltoopish !or it
run.for Presldcn~ Addendum: ·nie U.S. bas never
A"'90dt.,,,U!"Vle1Mm"'"'·"dOV=e,•!ie.r.Ji;;;iillclied=:.--iv.inrM-"complete IUlll tl>tal "1!!ll8tf."
a series of amnesty hearings for the Claims there are precedents for that in
•
•
•
rected toward a COD· city,!or have as much fun as he could in Miss., head of the Judiciary Committee,
clu.slon but toward !be ,country; rather• It combines the and John Stennis, D-Miss., chairman of
provlding justiflca-vices of bolh without providing the the Senate Anned Services Committee; tion for further re-virhies of ellber. Ed rd H be n • " b. and Reps. F. wa ~ rt, V"UCI·• searc.,. • • ': • · " • ' • • head of the House Armed Services Com-
"Freedom" and "law" are not .op. ASKING a writer how he gets till Ideas mittee, and Edward Hutclllnson, Mich.,
_,,_ u-·-_ .. think,, but com-, is u futile u aEDi a cenUpede whicb ranking Republican on tbe House ~..., ._, """""' I .. he mov.s first; il he had to think Ju"""'·-Committee, plementarias:, a busy interaection With a -ll'·-• __ , atop.lllht provides !reedom In .just about It, be'd be lmmOb ~. Also, a poll ol these committees
meuse to motorbts and pedestrians • • • showed a deci.!ive bipartisan majority
alike; wltbout i~ tbere Is ooly anarc!Jy No~ agas one so !ast as being put
Undoubtedly, amnest)t bills of various
kinds will be Introduced; that was dODe
in the last Congress. They were mean-
lngless gestures as will be the new ones.
In ilsel!, aponaoring a measure is of no
real consequence -other than pro-
viding publicity for the author.
Literally thousands are introduced
every session, and nothing more is ever
heard of them. They are 11referred to
commlttee," and !bat'• the end" them -
obvious PJlrpo5e of promoting his can· U.S. history are unfounded. That's the
didacy. Ardent pro-amnesty name categoric assertion of Rep. William Bray,
\Vltnesses were given a chance to sound Ind.; ranking Republican member of the
off under the Subcommittee's auspices. Hoi~~ Armed Services Committee. Silver
But the hoped-for headline publicity Star-decorated veteran of World War 11
and tidal wave of favorable public reac-and the Korean conflict, a Quaker, and
tion didn't materialize. vigorous foe of amnesty. Says Bray:
In fact , exactly the opposite occurred. "Never in our history has there tieen
There was little publicity, and public complete and total amnesty. Always
response was either sour or indifferent. there have been cond.Jtions and qualifica-
Tbe plan was a complete bust ; a flop Uons."
and rule of the strongest, but no real on ''bold 1 by a switchboard operator and
then 1efl dangling there; and nothing
freedom. • • • makes one so pathetically grateful u an
IT 1,11 , NOT until we finally rellnqulsb operator who returns frequently to let
the Ulusio"D that we can Change our you know there's still intelligent life at How HUD Created Its Own Disaster
bu.sb.aJ!<b: ~or_ Wives . that we c~~ ac-the other end of the wire.
coounodate ourselves to the reahlle! of • • • be of H · Agne 1 t IDarriagllj all that we can Sl!ccessfully Possibly so many young cooples live In t . wake urricane s as
change is our .scale of exped.ationa. together today wl~ benefll of clergy June, the profiteers descended like
• • • · not so much becallSe they reject the ban-vu1ture9 on tbe disaster area, preyed on
Most people are sWl tribal, on their dicaps of Jlll)dem marriage as becaw;e -the -battered victtm.and hauled ol! their
way to being human; il you take away they have .been ·repelled by the ugJjneu ,. qoick .profits in suilCaseJ. •
their giioup-tdentity, they don't know who of :moc1em 'dfVorce. o Not far behind
swanned the bu--
Tito-Communist King
In the past decade it has become
fashionable to call Tito the Communist
king . The description is apt partly
because or the marshal's love of pomp
and ceremony, his resplendent uniforms
and palatial mansions, but mostly
because of the way the simple people
look up to him. lie is .!;'Carded
throughout Yugoslavia as a sort of
Hapsburg monarch, presiding over the
motley natk:lnatities and, somehow,
mysterioosiy binding them togetber
through his own person.
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
closer resemblance to anarchy. Although
?.1arxism-Leninism remains the official
doctrine, tbe S<>Ca!led Yugoslav road to
socialism see.m.s like a search by trial
and error for a viable altemattvt to
either Western capitalism or Communist
state ownership.
reaucrats who were
supposed to admin-
. ister the emergency
pro g r,a ms. They
quickly got entan-
gled In their own red
tape and, in des·
peration, hired lbe ·
Boeing Corporation
as management consultants to straighten
oot the snarl.
When we asked bow much Boeing was
costing the taxpayers, government
spokesmen gave ua several different
figores, all under II million, Boeing
finally acknowledged to _OJ that the true
figure was IL177 million.
HOUSING an<l-UtbilrDevelOJ>lilefit of-
flclala, meanwblle, contracted for more
,,
.( JA<;:K ~EBSO~)
'
mobile home parks than were needed·to
house the homeless. More than 11
million, urgenUy needed elsewhere, was
wasted on three sites that have never
' had a trailer on them.
One site, called Moon Lake, was 50
percent finisbed before the authorities
reallzed they couldn't use it. '"l'be
penally clause for cancelling the contract
equalled tbe cost ol lis completion,"
ackoowledged Jack McGraw, the disaster
housing directol!" Another unneeded !Ile
went uncompleted, but tbe contractor
had to be paid anyw1y.
HUD ALSO ordered hundreds d trailer
homes that were left empty, One prea
release boasted about the arrival qi 50
uniis ol prefab housing, just like !bat
used to house the Olympic athletes in
Munich. It made a great headline, which
ts 'all tbe tarpayers have to show for the
$350,000 the 50 units =t
When we.asked McGraw about this, he
, cbnced~ Uiat no one has been,plal(ed in
the botiaini· yet, He thought It "might" be
used as a community center.
Another whopping 16911,000 has been set
aside as "legal aid" for the hurricane
victim in Wyoming Valley, '!'be real
beneficiaries, however, appear more to
be the local attQrneys. They .have been
paid $225,000 so rar for doing little more
than helping about 200 people mt oot their
government appllcatloos.
WHEN THE government began laying
out emergency !uncts and loans, the rus-
tle of the' green attracted private con-
tractors who rushed around setting up
trailer sites and signing up hurricane vic-
tlma for home repairs,
'l1le contractors bunied Crom one job
to the next, pausing only to colleot their
money. '!'bey , did such shoddy and
overpriced work that many borne
owners have put off repain for fear the
contractors will cause more damage lban
programs. Pleaded memos from Jack
McGraw :
"Employees' conduct In the building
111ust be 11liio~ at a pl")lfesslonal
level at all times. We have received com-
plaints flOin other' tenanis iii ihe building
about loud and unprofessional conduct
being exemplified by our employees .•••
"There will be no oonsumption of
alcoholic beverages 00 or In the federal
premises. No pe™m will report to work
under lhe influence of" any drugs {;l'
alcohol . . . . Under previous working
conditions, lhe Door was used in place ol trash cans and ash trays. Please use lbe
proper receptacles ."
Later, McGraw learned that some
government employees were helping
themselves to furniture intended for the
flood victims. ''lt ha8 cxme to my at-
tention," be wrote. "that there may be
employees who have borrowed and are
utilizing surplus furaiture from vacant
HUD mobile homes ••. To avoid advene
criticism and · .,Ubliclty, all employees
are hereby dlm:ted · to return all turni-
ture to Central Maintenance."
BUT WH.\T happcnt after Tito, now 80
years old, leaves the &cene? That ques-
tion has been asked for years now, and
all the while Tito has remained, scomlng
the speculation. "What hav' I been doing '
with you If everything is lo fall apart
a!ter the departure of one man1'' Tito
asked last June. If ever one man has bad
Du111ping Grobnds for Aged
they will correcl
In Coal Brook trailer park, for ex-
ample, a sewer line was installed running
uphill. The raw e:ew1ge, of coUrse, began
backing up. At Miner's Hill park, an
As the director ' noted in another
memo : "The term HUD, for many
residents of Pennsylvania, has become a
lerm with negaUve connotations •••• A
great deal or this image fact.or could have
been avoided with a little common
courtesy, patience, understanding and
concern for human suffering." By ROBERT BADHAM
Autmblyman, 'ltat Dlltrtd
an opportunity to mold a CGmtry in his 1be Joint Legislative Committee on
image. it bas been Tito. Aging , whose interim 1tudie1 have been
Be came to Power in 19'5 JOOn after cooducted over the State, has Jed 10me of
(GUEST REPORT)
the cloee of World Jlar IL .Ro JJatiooal tbe lqlslatin-to believe that perhaps the "lovdess'1!umprlonhe1nfii'ii11Ues-o[ old
hero risen ltom tbe leadershJp of a O>m· ,overnrnent'1 ireatest mistake was mat-age," ~ been blgb11&bted...:bY these re-
munilt-ted band o1 -um. liiflhe l!W'rilg borne .. ,. !or tbe aged • cent Calilomla studies.
partlsam. HaYlog 1'bul!ed Stalin In !Ha, "Jl"'Dl·maklni lndlllltY" Instead o1 a rt oee(l1S WICONCionable this coodllion
Tito towor<d over all Communist rivals health program. Ill fact, many of those should penisl rt Is one d the wol'lll In-
in hit homcla6d and went on 'to _. who tesUfted at the thlnl d lour hearings dlctmeotl of modeni IOC:lelY'• attitude
solldete his 1rlP on party and govun-hcld little ll)'lllJ)lthY toward tb< 11 toward hutnan dilnity In geoersl -the
ment in YugosJavJ1. On Jan. 14, 195.S -bllllon lnduslry. The consensus was that valu. of • person -whatever that
two decades ago -he became President the elderly wm being "dumped" into pe-'1,condltioo or handicap,
ol the Republic under • n<wly revamped nuralng and coovefescent bomea and Perhaps the most strikini obacrvaUoa
CClllllltuUon.· Marshal :nto has been In received only marginal care from of the tut bearinf , of the committee
power Jonpr than tie leader ol 1ny other e m p Io ye 1 who wtrt "undertrained, came from a Cltbollc Sister wlien obe
Communill ~ -If Y"IOSlaYla 41 · u!lderpald;llftl .,eroOl-.i," tesUOed on "government's 8'l'al
• indeed a Communlit country. · " . . -. mlatan" ln..tbe lllrinl 00-indllllfl" ·--Ti>Miii1i'Oiw;et;f.l!~iibiiii{JIOif'.!.' ~~;,i~ for tbt conUn\Jln1 an4..-For-t11etthr llos1-prtnctpat couae of TO MOST , I e ow· oppolling diflr&CO of out ca,. •nd l"'•t· ' society'• coottnulng tnablllty to !ddrass
eigbt·incb water main was installed in care lacks adequate plaming, stalling place of a half-inch Une. When a trailer
and money, He pointed out that Medi-Cal resident ,would tum 00 his tap, the
pays only 83.83"' day for a patient in ~ pmsure ...wd bunt his pipes. nursing home, whereas the home's •
nominal COii Is $21. 'II. The committee MEANWHILE, tbe burea~1ucra~~ts~~wbo~-f---~'•ANGI COAST also heard-charget-of' over&edatioo--1>f po--.~. tt-lellt-to-1.hll!-cHs:aster area beanng
tients, unsanitary cooditklls' and food government gills more often than not
wasted becaute the aides do hot take have·been more hindrance than help, One DAI LY PILOT
· time to !eed patients. These human Insider told us tbey kept careful watch on
beings are regarde4. In the main, as just their liles during our visit so_we wouldn't Rob<rt N, Wetd, PubliJher
so many bodies to be housed and fed and flnd out what a poor job they rrt doing. Tltomtu Kt~vil, Editor
kept quietly tucked 1way, where in reali-We oblllned aa:ess to the m.,
IY the majority reprasentl a heolth pro!> •llYWIY· Taken tocetber, the Internal Borllam Kreiblch
I.em -pbplcal, mental and emotional. docume;nts ~t a picture of utter Editorial Page Editor
lt tvtr the health preteription of cblol tftr'olllbOUt tbt eovernment's rellnl ~ t'dltorlal ~e of the O.Uy
"tender lavlQa Cite,' WU ~ie$le aod_ rtllot gee~ to Inform And ~tlmu•
lmperaUw, It ls In the tpbit •t bring to ~Oles , late tt11.dcrs by 11rcl(·n11n1: thl• the problema of the atlDC· .ncvospapcr'• Qfllnioru1 and rom·
t feel ture that the ?ePor( of. lbls com-mental') 11n to1)1CI (If INel"Cllt and.
, mlt•-at •L-~~ J ,.:..,._ .._.a..i-_ --~. n...1-, 0 F, 11e· a-I•'-, -. , __ 'lanlflce.net, bf l'lf'O' ltJlnK a rnruin -u.. ....,......_,..111 ..._ _ .. ,.. .._$ r...-.im q. -.......... tor th cxpf'Cl!llon l)f our rtedcrs•
will ruult Jn IDftl9 type of JepdaUoa. C181'* Rtttllp: Coaldl -"Tbett. ls . nPlnlons. •od by presl'nllna )he .
Jfowevcr, l ·realb don't btOevt.. Iba u -llDtltiMw-to 1*IOle and cities that -~l~-erse v~trttror-Informed ot). -· ~ .,_1 _,o<o~a~be~'ooad~:."ln:--..,~~!-'.."':~~lla:""'°IUM~ltod!"''•~::)wit~CUl'hibllll•L'!'hi;w ... 1~~· '-1:-;;,.;:.";,;~;:";.•;;nd;;;..:•:::po::k::"::m::o<n:::.:on::;__•::•""'::=~:....~C. meat or ~ bat ~ 1111 1111 milloolt d cltil:li"' ...,.lo& up In i
• or ~I .. perlll!tfllltlon In Yugo.i.v11 ment d the lled may well stem from · ititlt to the )lrOl>lem o[ the lallrm .,..i k--~--=~ ~ pr11r11 t11o..1-.wpnp1r11 cle!inl Ila · · l••••llnc and kallkloacogk: pictllre. W1lat ~ term. 'lbe ~of the natloo'• nursing '
.Y-1an. llloe lo -" • l!!f·' -. -fl wblcl! are rlchtt, ONI NUllSING HOME diredor
.......... --lo bmr a la lludy after ll"'1y II !eltlfied the tntll'I problem ol gorllt?fc
'1 t I I
•
la· Ibo -to Ibo _ .. _ Ill I t •' totr ...... ..,, -Ollllllf tO Thumai.Jattu.U; U, 1971 "Jlclomo lb1 ... • ... ....ntJ ...
• -
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NEW U.S. CITIZENS WAVE THEIR COUNTRY'S FLAG FOLLOWING NATURALIZATION CEREMONIES
For the
Record
They're Americans
County Welcomes 99 New U.S. Citizens
SANTA ANA -Nearly 100
green alien cards hit the trash
cans Wednesday as Orange
COunty's newest Americans
FRA..~CE -Annie Roux
Spear, 2M9 Europa Drive,
Costa ~iesa .
Births
01 t 11, 1m
__pledged· allegiance-I<> their
.... Flag in tho first Superior
Court naturalization
ceremonies of 1973. Mr. •nd Mn! $--M. .TltnlY. 116U
Ovnnh• &!Nit, Slnll F• Sprl""., glrl
GREAT BRITAIN -Lynne
Elizabeth and John Atkinson ,
3002% Bell<>, Laguna Niguel :
Alan Haworth, 16073 Mt. Hicks
SL, Fountain Valley; Cive
William Laurent, 1668 Tustin
Ave., Costa Mesa. Mr. •r>d Mrs. Albert H, J•mes. 14'01
Grovi.w L•ne, lrvll'lt, 11lri Mr. 1f111 Mrt. l.ft 6. kttl, JNl Europt, co.1.1 Mtl. olrl
Dec.....,. IL 1'71
Mr. Ind Mrt. Ger•ld IMtc.nltl, 19111 Bkldlt Orlwi, lrtlnt, bcry
Mr. Ind Mn. VlcltV Rllblrtl, 111'tlll·
Ar11H, Fovn111n V11eY, fll"I Mr. •flll Mr1. Clll.lde J , IMkln, •11
Lori Ann LI/Ill, ltvlN , bD¥
Mr. •flll Mn. MllH ""°'""'"-•Ill llry1n1, Huntllllllon !lffCh, bcrV.
Mr, 1nd Mt1. Ao...ld G. Tr1¥l1, llll
Pennington Ori..-, Hunlll!lllon BH<n, gift
Thirty-eight midenb of 10
Orange Coast communities
were among the 99 for whom
annual alien registration
became a thing of the past as
they ·w e r e welcomed to
America by three judges and
representatives or f i v e
patriotic and civic organiza-
tions. ORANGE COUNTY
Presiding Judge Bruce Sum-"--------"'
Also from Britain: David
Cecil Brian Rochman, 17402
Whetmore Lane, Huntington
Beach; Agnes McFedries and
Thomas Robertson Ralph, 866
CapitaJ Ave., Costa Mesa and
~1arian Millicent Pearson, 9'202
Strathcona Drive, Huntington
Beach. ~1t,1m
IN. •lld Mn. DeM11 oeci.r11. ao ner of Laguna, Beach was
K•IM't'lnt, .a.p1. 2-a. O•••· 01r1 backed by Judge A1ark Soden IRELAND Kathleen
Mr &11111 Mr1. on..., Cr1ry, :111
s.110C.utt1 Drive, '-• dei !Nr, of Newport Beach and Judge the.St.an and Stripes handed M~.1·~ Mrs. K-.ltt Gt..,, 17'3 Ntw Walter E. Smith in colorful to them by representatives of
H•mplM"' Ori ... , c.11 Meu, DCIOJ' ceremonies that attracted a the Daughters of the American
Butler. 6762 Warner Ave .,
Huntington Beach.
ITALY -Aotonio Nadal ,
24112 Landisview Ave., El
Toro and Pasquale Cacace,
3642 Provincetown A v e • ,
Irvine.
Mr • .,.. Mn. Paul J-at Pl_, udi Judg CCIII• Mewo. girl capacity a · ence to e Revolution. M~.:':r.~."~~~•'=: =: SCVtt1 Sumner's courtroom. Canada, another traditional
IN. and MrL ll:kMrd Getty. lllm AU three judges later joined provider or new Americans, u1nnor11. s.n11 "'"'· elrl the new Americans in the ~ •· 1m was close behind with six. The
-._New'llllf1..-B-.ct1~..., __ ...... e r s was-e. na 1ve---m:ad7.a"deh=Kb·ay-a:rfname to be
Mr. '"" M,... P'1u1 """""''· 1m s.nt~ equ Y co 1• land of three more while Mex-cha ed. to t 9411 '*"~~.c°:-':V.""':~.=~. mn tjonal . grouki Jl--Phol<>sd.d not caph.-ico,-ctitn ll'tfllMhrtT,"""lb ires! e Drive, Huntington
s11111w11111, Apt. 1, G1rt1e11 Grovt , bo1' Lowenng s es 1 appear fonner British colony, each Beach.
Death Notiees
ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY -
·Cl E. 17111 SI., Colla Mesa
IH 1111
BALTZ-B~GERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona Hl Mar 17SMSO
Costa Mesa •UZ• • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UO Broadway, Cost. Mesa u W43S • Mc<lORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY. n• Lopu eu,.. RAL
ltUlll • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAi.. PARK
Cemetery Mortoary
CUpet
3511 Pocille VleW D<1ve
-Ne...,...i Bue•. C.llf•m•
l«-fl• • • PEEK FAMILY
• cOUINLU. ll'IJNEllAt.. HOME .
to dampe.n the ardor of !he gave this natlon two new LITHUANIA -So11Ja Mary
former aliens as they carried Americans. Beideman 16331 Woodstock
their mini-Flags toahe Plaza. South Korea, West Gennany LanE;, Hu~tington Beach.
Costa ~esa was tops wilh 13 and Italy also w e r e f\.tAJT A -Louis and Em-an~ Hunhn~n Beach had 12 represented with two new manuela Aquilina, 1 5 4 0 I
residents m the table . , of Americans each at the Norwich Circle, Hwttington
_Orange Coast commuruties naturalization proett<tings. Beach.
represented at the ceremony· Nine nations each had one MEXICO - R I c a rd o
Four .ne.w Americans live in represent at i v e at the Gardenas Godinez., 34628 Via F~ V ~ 11 e Y· LagWla ceremony: Argentina , Catalina, capistrano Beach N1~l, Irvine and Los Barbados, Bolivia, Burma, and Luisa Saragosa Leon, M5
Alamitos had two each and Iran and Lithuania . w. Wilson st .. Costa Mesa .
Seal Beach, El Toro and The Orange Coast's 40 new TR E NETHERLANDS -
Capistraoo Beach each sent Americans, in order of coo-Frans George Van der Aa , 438
one resltlent to the county tributing nations, include: Esther St., Costa Mesa; Jent;e
courthouse. , . ARGENl'INA -Dora Lilia Laubach, 2947 Mendoza Drive ,
. Great -Brlta~ . topped , the Ster, 2130 Doctors Circle, Apt. Apt. B, Costa Mesa and
list of oontrlbUllng nations o, Costa Mesa. Herman Francois Waller,
with eight forme: BrltoM ex· BARBAOOS Frances 163S2 Magellan Lane, Hun-
changing the Uruoo Jack for Theonie Gruenthal, 3 1 5 tington Beach.
Services-
Scheduled
SANTA ANA -Deceased
members of the Orange Coun-
ty ShriJ!e. Club will be
remembered in an annual
worship service Friday.
'Ille service will follow the
regular weelr:ly luncheon
meeting at noon at the Moose
Hall, 717 S. Lyon St. Shriner
Gerald B. Slrieklee, a
philosophy professor at Cal
State Long Beach, will conduct
the service.
For more lnformatkKt or
transportation aid, call Arthur
Fowler-at 551-MDA or -or.
E!deo Brao<lt at S38-1545.
Blind Youths
Hanover Drive, Costa Mesa. S01!11\ KOREA -Sue Choe
BURMA -ma Ngwe Tin, Hussein, 129 Dolphin, Seal
931 W. 19th St., Apt. 31, Costa ·Beach, and"' 'I' a e Ir:· Hoon
l\lesa. . . MalSeyalna, .. 1111127 .Briar. St.,
BOLIVIA -Carlos Atilio Fountain Valley.
Herrera, &161 Kiner Ave., WEST GERMANY -Edith
Huntington Beach. Emilie . Ward, 14931 Duck,
CANADA -Ame Beatrice Irvine and Manuela Elenore
Laurent, 1668 Twitin Ave., Rohrbeck, 3091 YelloWstone,
Oosta Mesa; Jeannette Pauline Costa Mesa.
Langham, 11152 Wallingsford
Road, Apt. 8Q, Los Alamil<>s:
Floyd Ernest Ellis, lll52 Wall-
lngsford Road, Apt. BQ, Los
Alamitos.
Also from Canada : Ross
William Cook, m 16th St.,
Israel's U.N.
Aide to Talk
Apt . 6, Huntington Bead!; ANAHEIM -Jacob
Francine Leslie Freedman, Barmort of the Israeli delega-
6401 Warner Ave., Apt. 580 and lion to the United Natkms will
Jessie A1lJ.Jon: McKeating, speak here Jan. Zl at the an-
14601 Zane Circle, both of nual convention of the United·
Huntington Bead!. _ Jewish Welfare Fund _of
CHINA -Sltu.Jeo Lee aod Orange County.
Grace Hue! Lee, both of 10734 Opening sessions of the clay-
El Paao Ave., Fountain long convention will begin at
Valley. 11 :30 a.m. at the Graod Hotel.
COLOMBIA camllio The event will launch a 1973
Husted, 2020 Aliso Ave., Costa fund drive throughout Orange To Make Visit Mesa. County.
Thirty-five 0blind youths will
visit fighter plants, eat in tho
mess ball with Marines and
vlsit the radio itu·
dio daring a tour Saturday
of tho El Toro Marine Corps
Air Station.
The youths, from the Or'ange
County Branch of the Braille Institute o1 -AmerJca. will -
spend.au clay al the ba!e aod
at the Santa Ana Marine
Corps Air Station (Helicop.
ter).
THERE ARE OVER ·21
ACRES OF NEW AND USED
CARS FOR SALE
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baullrvard
af Car•
LOOl-l'OI THI IMlll:M A'T
. DAVE ROSS · 1 HAL G REEN1S PONTIAC Mlr•cle MaM-.. 2480 . 2150
•
I
D.\!LY PILOT l
Panasonic stereo phono, AM-FM-FM-
stereo radio, Quadruplex ' cirmiitry
(Model *SE-2075)
309.95 .-..
\
Panasonic AM-FM-FM stereo radio,
built-in 8-track stereo tape
player. (Model #RE-7820)
129.95 ~
SOUND ~LUES ON
FAVORITE MAKE
G.E. 3-speed
automatic stereo
phono, AM·FM-FM
stereo radio, 8-track
STEREOS
Soundesign 8-track stereo
tape cartridge player with
amplifier. (Model *4840-608)
69.95 ~tr:~=
tape player. fl---'.._--~=.,...~
(Model *SC-3205)
229.97~
Soundesign 4-speed .
automatic stereo
phono, AM-FM-FM
stereo rad io, 8-track .
tape player.
··(Model *4717-622) · '
169.95~
Lloyd's AM-FM-FM stereo
radio, 8-track stereo
tape player. (Model *M601)
99.95 ......
-· . ••
.••.U i\4-<'• •
Lloyd 's stereo phono, AM-FM-FM
stereo radio, 8-track tape
recorder and player. (Mod el *M134)
279.95-
J _M _M _M _ _ •
71tt a.tsa Ave. w-•1111
e !mlAB
11! MUo SI.
~·-11171.,1 ...... lt.
_...__ HARBOR Bl VO. HARBOR BLVD. _ 9..IUWADA M~W 18000 CM-tswArtll St • WOODUMD MllU 21»3 't'fctlfy .Blw. • llYltSIDI 3520 Tyler • SAllT4 AKA St.CMS! f'lln.
~-t--.T-AICl'3l;JI'• .. ll•h • • Wtwttl·'-• 5l • Pe11 :cu t M e MttttA_,Atl 8 11~h llli .... etl.AMI ~_... ...... ...._ .... , .... ,_ ___ ~ otM ...... ,, , •• t• ,,,., s. ... ,, 11 .. ,
""1n41 n .. -
• I . '
•
. .
I
1
~LY ,.II.OT ThlfrSd..l:1, Janulf'Y l l, 1'173
Ftltldlag 1Not Comlag Arthritis Fouadatlon
Delays Hampering Post,er :Child Smi"les ·-.Despiw Pain
Sanitation Plans
Bv JOHN ZAI.LER
0t ,... o.wr ,...., '''"
sanitation plant constructloo.
Federal economies in ad· CONGRESS H A S a~
ministering water quality proort11ted SS blUirm to 1oend
funds may cripple efforts of on water quality, H'atper said, bul the executive branch will E
the Orange Counly Sanitation spend only 12 bllllon of It, thus r.
Distrlct to conform to new holding up projects across the
ocean outfall requlrementa., country.
according to dlstrici officials. Pre!ident Nixon has ex-Gener~ Manager Fred A. ___plained that so large an ex-Harporuld-~dtstrlct nearly peOOl!ure would a~d10 the na-
lost a $20 million expansion tional debt and promote in.
project from this yetr'!I na tion ~dget. and may yet lose 8 $3l ''It'~ nice to have the million project from nel'l . year's hid.get. federal government pa)'.111g 75
. . percent on these proJects."
The problem, he said, iS' a Harper said "but It doesn't do
starclty of federal funds. By any good if 1the money doesn't
law, ·the federal government oom.! lhrough."
must pay 75 ·peretnt, the state News ttiat the district J~,S percent, and local agen· might lose ·e $20 mllllan ex·
CIC! 12.S percent of any major pension project at the Foun-
tain Volley oewer work! came ii :!" •
last wetk. Harper said ho had ,.~'.' d,JtJP
corllidered the project sewed •::;;..Jfa~):)
up for funding In the 1972-73
fiscal year unUI he suddenly POSTER GIRL MEETS LION COUNTRY CUB
ANAHEIM -She wean leg
c:asU and finger tpllnll al
night. She has to take two
a1plrln1 every t1x hours, gold
injection& and • a hot balh
every morning. And she Is to
near constant pain from
swollen joints. Yet alr·year .. 1d
Carolyn Lee Fulmer can
manage a IDllle moet of Ille
lime.
CAROLYN HAS been oeJect,.
ed u the 1m poa.r clilld for
tho Orange Counly Branch ol
The Arthritl.s Foundalloo be-
cauae ol ber coorage, her ha!>
PY outloat-'and-4t<r-Jru.-.
deeke to "help other kids who
hurt like I do."
In Sept.mber, 11111, It was
dis<t>Vered that Carolyn hsr
rheumatoid arthritis -a crip-
pling d~ue for which no
cure bas yel been found.
'lbere are, b()Wever,
treatments which can prtteat
its apread and reduce its
debilitating effects.
Carolyn spent lhn< weeks
in Chlldrena Hospital of
Orange County In Orange. She
was placed in total traction
and a cast was made of her
tbe splintl bu ltlumld mucll Wblt tbe l\mn wUl bold b'
o1 1be mobWly ol tile flnlen. Caro11n is 1lllOlflaln. But bor
And sbe is given cold In-permts .... &rtf.e!Ul for lbe
jectfons lwlco 0 WeUJ --tlJe fia& made.
Darlene, al111 IU!fero from
meumaloid lrthriti. but to a
much nailer utent than does
her Ol>ly child.
· In N ... mber 11?2, Carolyn CABOLYN WAS born Feb. l°:..~ ~ =~ It, Itel, to Mt. ID d !In.
At lx>mt, Carolyn pll)'& with
the family'• Une cat.I, one
dog and five aoldllsh. end Is
attmpllng to master the art
of bicycle riding. In btlw..,,
tlmtt, she Utes to watch ''11\e
Flintstones" and .. Lucy" on
television.
hove her calll a1•~ •• , Lo......., 0. Fulmer, 2115 N. ~--Blrdw Sl, Ana1111m. Her undergo further tosla. lather, SI, Is a lracl maa at Ille
She eot.t<d ldnderpr1m at DeJco.Reny p1aat In Aaabelm,
Mel Gower Elementary School matlD( Nbber molds of .car
In SepWnber 'lt72. She •as battery casinp. Her -·
beld back • year 00 -· -~~~;ii;-;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;-~' orders because Ille bad beea ,
afraid of fa!Ung prior to hsv·
ing treatmenls.
ETc1r,r . ,.,
mother wakes her at s a.m.
and gives her two aspirin to
ease Ille pain. FolloWin; a ball
hour o1 rest, the lillle girl bas
a hot bath to limber up joints
stUfened during the nlgbt'1
sleep. 'lben she Is able to go to
school and be almost Wte
other childien.
Cancer Unit
Reveals Goal '
Poaclled Sole Yfrth a French flair
• ,. ....... toll
t T. """9W
• -·--°"""' -
It 7 Miltl• dto9..S Mf t11i.ty ..... .
llfo C:. wtlltl •IN 1 .. lllllK.S ,........,
M.. Mtfrw i. t llrfl ... ..., ..... ... _,,,.., 19 If "'-
..._ ..., f fll .. ._ •• .. .-. S"11*1e thll wt111 .. " ......... ..,..... .. ,.. ....... _..., ...... .,,.....
• _. Mall,_,,• ftlr tfM, W lfM ...... NII •WI .. --· C:---......... I ,.. f/f Wlf ,.,_.. Qt ... fM liltlih ............. _._. ..... , ....... ., .... ..,.., ..... __ ........, .... ..,.. ..... _ ... ,.. Niii ctlllt
'II .. 11 ........ Wla I ....... rMll'N llM ... " ....... ... _.....,.._.__ ......... .......
fresh Petrale SOLE $1.79 lb.
I
SA College
Set.s Talks
On Defect.s
received word that the state wa.s not getting enough federal __ Ge_1_1_A_•_•u_r_on_c_e_F_r_o_m_P_r•_N_rv_•_'_•_L_l_nd_a_z_1_m_•_r_in_
money and woold probably
have to cancel it. Child Beater Jailed
legs. She still wean the wt TUSTIN -The 1!17'2-73 fund·
every night to keep her legs raising goal of the Orange
straight during sleep. County unit or the American
~ Im. r1ecu• .. n•1 "L• Olomlllt9 C.ltt.mla utr1 .,., QIRl.1 .. 1 '¥ ... ,._... .. i.. HUftllll&IY tM. IMll.
M .... 'TH 1·1 .. 7J
SANTA ANA -A 12-week
course about birth defects will
begin Thursday at Santa · Ana
College with a lecturt by Dr.
Allen Lauderback of Hyland
Laboratories, Costa Mesa.
The course will meet from 7
p.m. to 10 p.m. Tburadsy•
throuCb March = 1n BuUdlnc R, Room 111. #
Tbe ......., ,.m emJlfiaii•
serri<el avallsble In the coun-
ty for ~on,.,.of birth
delecta. Speakers Will Include '
Kemielh ,Duman, Jr . ,
auodile profeuor at the UC
lrvtne School of Medicine and
Dr. 'Wilhelm de NI j a ,
paycbolacill at the Services
for tho BUod.
Registratlcio for Ille class Is
sltll open.
For more information, call
adult education oHlces at the
col14e, 147-9561.
I
HARPER AND Robert Fin·
nell, chairman of the joi'1t
sanitation board s , Im-SANTA ANA -Charles
mediately began an intense Edward Helton of Santa Ana
SPRING STEEL splints were Cancer Society has been set al
made for her ringers, which $532,000, 11.2 percent above
had become gnarled as those the previous fiscal year. laoo L•f•y•tt• -Newport Be•ch
Jur;:es could have been in-of an aged woman. Both ring The state organization h<>pe! tJJ.J4SO • 141-1217 o,..: ,., Me•.-s.t_..:'t·t :lt ~
lobbying campaign, which has now restored priority fund.Ing has been sent to state prison
from the .state, ,Harper aald. for a term of one lo 15 years
flicted only by a sustai ned and fingers were being forced back ~~··~a_Ju~"".:~~~~~h~~~~_J_:~~~~~====::'.:=:=:=:=::=:=~~=~~ h be t. t h im D Ii f w r '"~' year. eavy a 1ng. o er pa s. a y wear o
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
"But no one .has any idea for the killing of his girl * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~~.~~l=to,:i:•.\1: ~~. i?·mont h·old * MERCURY SAVINGS
could easUy lose It." Orange County Superior *
Both projects involve con-Court Judge James Turner
alrvct.ion of secopdary iewige lmt)08ed· tbe · ·terni after
treatment plants. Plans for HeltOn, 191 pleaded guilty to
the Fountain Valley project reduced charges of voluntary
are already being prepared, mansllughter. '
Rnd lhe district stood to lose Helton was accused of
$330,000 if' It bad been can-murder on his arrest last July
ctlled. 29, shortly after t.felanie Lynn
and loan association * *
Plans for the second ex-Will iams died in Orange Coun·
pansion, to be built in Hun-,ty Medical Center from multi· IU. WPARKM1rcurySa.vlng1BIOQ.,ValleyVlewatUncoln *
fin.rt .... n---"' t the th f pie injuries . .,....,., ~ 1 mou 0 Doctors said the child 's in-* HUlfTINGTOlf IEACff Mercury Savings Bldg., Eding11r 11 Btacfl * the Santa Ana River, have not ·_ ------------I yet' bcgwi. Harper said the ' -* TUmN Mercury Sav!rigs Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Aw. *
cost ts · 90 grea~ that the Kid L"•·-T * LAKAIRA·FUIJ,.EITDNMercurySavlngsBldg.,lmper1alHwy.atHarbor *
di.Wfc! might not go ahead . S · lnoe 0 * CA•SO• M•"'IY-• • .,, Awlon '""·''San rnogo 11wy. * bn~v~J;"" federal funding Ask Aady * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
•
' • •
nr 11c•l•fl•&L 'lllCllS
HUlldrt~f ol 1973 Motlll'
'~"IC"'u" Mo...nt1 -SI• 1 /"'1, YI" Col'rol"liOllS, ftllli•t
C1"'1H1r1, 't• W11t1l1 T1ntl T11ll1r1
ua1u1ma
IU¥t Y• ,;c;1 .. T1•1 .toiTY~ 111.nt
'•ll111t.1hliu
QUALITY GAF FILM
Ot26 canridgecolo• print lllm. ONLY 73<
035mmcolorallde tllm Q
Pricolncludes proceuing. NLY 2.94
0 Su~r 8 color movie tllm.
Prlce lncludea proce11lng. ONLY 3.17 •
• . --• .. -the reasury -.
.... ; .... , ram1 y ~a~d supar/ti~lier •. . . . I •R_.,. -o•;•o
......... •w llOOO Chltswwttl SL • WOOOUWtl MW 2l~Vict.., atvd .• llVllSiDI 3$20 1r~r • SAIJTA AJllA Sn C111,.tPl•11 • • • • o,,,. wfttlayi t :JO ftTiJO: S.11M'! to tf 1---------------· • -· ' '
,.
{
• •
---..
~ . ... ~ .. .
3 Manson Girls Isolated
De8pite Pl.em, They Remai1i in Death Row Cells
Abortions
Curtai'-ed
By Beliefs
SOLOTHURN, Switzerland
(AP ) -Women in this Swiss
canton cannot get legal abor·
Uons because most of the
nurses are Roman Catholic
nuns. And the area's top
health official says there is
nothing he can do about it.
Health Director Rudoll
predominantly
--&>lothum.
•'NOT 01\'L Y a large part of
the nurses but also quite a few
doctors have declined to assist
in legal abortions, citing
religious or ethical reasons,"
he said. "I am lOld this also
frequentl y happens in other
Swiss cantons.
"No one can be forced to
perfonn an abortion even lf it
is medically indicated."
SWISS LAW authorlm abor·
lion if a medical specialist
certifies it is to "avert danger
to the life or great danger of
permanent serlouJ damage to
th• health, or • pregnant
woman."
Bachmann said he knew of
no case in which refusal or an
abortion endangered a patient.
1be women go to hospila1s
in nearby Protestant cantons.
REFLECTIONS
~,
Reyn
Sheffer
"'Chlldr.n, In• oM enotMr,
eM tf th•t It n•t poul-.1• ..... -.,, .. ,. ...
with Mt.,......,. ...
J.ttilftn W .. f'pnt YOn 0-fhe nu. may be a clulic tt·
ample of the triumph of the
pnu:tlcal over the ideaJ.
Most of the world's great
religions offer love of our
fellow men u the key to
bl.sic goodneu.
FranklY. we all know quite
a nwnber of our fellow men
•bo are downrflht dittlcult
to ln•I The phUotpher's
compromise ..• "put up wtth
one: another'' ... m\y be the
pracUcaJ IOlution. Ftnt. tol-
et'll.D(e, then undcntandlng
and r1na11y pemapo, Jove
rm,y_follow.
You can apue you r IOYed
onn a hfevy burden by
aped.fytng your own dNlrtl
wtth our pre--necd aranp..
mnt plan. Let us explain
the advantages to you ln our
otftot' or your own home.
luat pbon<.
-oS~,ttBR
LACiUNA IU.CH
t76 SOUTH COAST Hl6HWAY .. , .. ,,,.
·SAN CWIENTI
6.00.1' •15.. 7.5°"11 ... "28 ..
6.70.15 •19.. l.00.lU .. •34u
.. 1.00.11 •22u us.tu .. "36"'
7.ob16 "24" 10.00.16.5. •44•·•
12.00a 16.S 8 4991
Vnlro"al
Orig. Equip.
'73Cars $1895
.t11113
... d ·-·"" f..akf•
CT .. 14 22"
ETl·14 ;?:J•.J ,, .. ,,, 24•J.
~Tl·14 %5" ., .. ,,, 26"
~T .. IS
#T .. IS
z5•s 2.10
26" :!. :s l
2r• ., ... -··'·
1.61}
1.IJl
2.iH
3.01
DAILY PILOT 9
• Burglai· Crackdo~·Urged
• ' ,,, ,O,,IJflt Coto
• 11111"' flfAO 01,fH
• WIA, AIOU#O TffAO
OIJIC" 1595
..... flf.471°13) -•·••\llol .. "11(1 '"" ,.,
,Sf.fl 17N 20•• ---22•3 ,, .. ,. J~S
n1.1• 19" zz.. ,, .. , 2~J" 2411 .... , s f7iii 20··
11.1s I 22'"-:i
71·TS 2 1•' 2 -1'"
11.rs 2.,.1 2rs .... , 29'"'
public "contributes 10 many
crimes through carelwneu
such a3 leaving doors or win·
do~·5 open ·'
llOWEYER, THE altomey
DOM•StlC-•X .. 1/U /fl
SWISS CHEESE
OUll OWN Dl!LICIOU' HOMf IAl(lD
BROWNIES
ll•G. lk IACH
"INNS'l'lVAIUA ST'l'LI£
general said, !.:..lll•e're not going
10 make every home a Fort
Knox."
The commission will submit
i1s final report to the
Legislature in January, 1974.
•IG. $1 .SO $1 .19
CHOPPED, CHIPPED HAM
ITALIAN Dl!L1
lll"TAUllANT
NEW 1973 MODELS * 1st Quality Ualroyal * Prove• S•tl1factloft * Super Barg•i• Price1
REGULAR Drum Typ
$ 88*
All
Fol Sir•
U.S. Con
1, l•tl•ll •t• r...4H •· ~''"'' •r•li• , • ._ n.i., ... •II • wllffh •-'••II I•••.,,;.,.
2. ••-ill •II 4 .... I & lio•ttt
CflilM!l"" 7. "'' t'i•I 1111 ~-·· J. •..-cti fn•I wt.tfl • t ktt _ 60 & 70 SERIES w.,1.,. 1.1 •• ,,,, ti. •• ,,, .. ,.
4. T.ni & -..; ..... 1H tMh
4 .... t . ''" M j111t-..t1 fw
S. 1Mt4 I fl111lio 1-. i 11-, 11f h..., .......... , • ..,. 1 t. l•-4 ,,,, ,.,. .... .,. -·-·
410 N. TllStlll Aft. 171 4) ,,, ... ,11 IUI HOITH IL CAMINO aw
4t2.e100 EST . 1924 · · · OP.EN__l DAYS A WEEK •.. OPEN DAl!Y 8:30 9 ••• ~ATUllDAr 11:30 TO i ... SUHOllY 9-6 ·.:~ •• °"''""""' • Tll>LHttJW
..
--
'
JO OAIL'I PILOT Th"""1, Jao"'1 11, 1973
Midwife Makes Comeback
Service Operat.es for Motliers . Who Stay Home
SANTA CRUZ IAP I -Despite a
California law barring the practlet,
seven local women operate a midwife
service ror expectant mothers who want
10 give birth at home "no matter wbal."
"We want lo help people who want to
ha ve babies at home like me." Dor
Cruver said ln an Interview. "It used lo
be that people were sea~ to do It
because there was no one to help them.
Now, they realize they can have "'hat
they "'ant."
Mrs. Gruver. %2. said she "doesn't feel
like a criminal" although she knoy,·s
mit!wilery J!Jllcial in+aJilornia, ·
"TllE AUTJIORITlES llAVE lert us
alone and the doctors hate us but leave
us alone ," she said. "\Ve're 1101 hurling
anyone. It's a satisrying experience for
me and for the people l'm doing it for."
Santa Cruz County Dist. Atty. Peter
Chang sakl officials are concerned about
lhe practice but it Is hard to prove a case
because most people 1vho use midy,•ives
will not take them to court.
The midwives educate the woman and
her husband about pregnancy and give
training in natural childbirth, Mrs.
Gruver said.
''We're not one sided," said P.lrs.
Gruver. who runs a local seed store with
Wicks
)
IQ u
•
[
'I still say we mads too many
White House staff cuts/'
Downto·wn
her husband. "We tell some women
they·d be better off in a hoapital.
"BUT SOME WOMEN ARE going lo
have them at home no matter what.
While I feel it is in a sense unsafe, J'd
rather have me there with a little bit of
knowledge than have them do it withou t
any." _
She said since the group founded Birtb
Center 1 n years ago. its midwives have
delivered more than 100 babies. She said
only one infant y,·as stillborn, and seven
1vomen needing medical attention were
~omorgcncy \•ards...\1<1-
recovered.
However. she said only one of· the
midwives is a registered nurse. and local
doctors will not come to a woman's home
to assist if there is a complication .
"For doc.1ors it's jusl a job,'' said Mrs.
Grover. "Mwit of the women here bave
l\ild cbildren and can empbathize with
y,·omtin in labor better. We don't feel a
woman should have to figbt to have her
baby the way ~he wants."
MRS. GRUVER CHARACTERIZED
the woman who seeks a midwife as a
young person usually between' 19 and 24
"who is into earthy lhings'' and is often
poor.
While hospital deliveries cost several
hundred dollars. Birth Center midw ives
charge $35. The fee. Mrs. Gruver said,
covers the cost of sterile gloves, unbilical
clamps. scissors and otbcr equip1nent us-
ed during home delivery. /
5 Suits Filed
In Miami Crash
MIAMI. Fla. (AP) -Five more
damage suits totaling at least $Z8 mUUon
have been filed against Eastern Airlines
in the Everglades crash of an Easterri iet
Dec. 29.
The latest suits, filed in Dade County
Circuit Court Monday by four survivors
and the father of a girl killed in thfl
crash, charged Eastern with negligence
In the disaster which killed 100.
Four suits totaling $28 million .were fil-
ed against Eastern last week .
"Having YoW' baby at home mates it 1
whole family thing," abe said. ~re's
nothing like )'OUT own bed and what a
thrill (Gr a bm~ to help .deliver his
own ct\ild." _ ·
Rose111ary M°aM, 'tho helped organize
the Northern C&Ufomla chapter o( the
American College of Nurse Midwives Jn
San Francisco, u,rged a study ol lay
midwives.
"1 CAN'T SAY NURSE midwives are
better than the other, but I tbink we
should see what lay midwives know," she
said. "The important thing Is the demand
they...Ie.prcst;f)t on ~___wbti!:'_
for more personalized 8J\i humanized
maternity care."
She said nurse midwifery is Ucensed
and commonly practiced in many states,
but since a 1949 law still prohibits it In
California her organization ii working to
get the la"w changed.
"I think where a woman delivers a
Qaby is her deClslon ," said MID Mann,
who says she delivered about 180 babies
as a midwife in New York City.
"In a home birth, a"woman is In a
familiar atmosphere and can have emo-
tional support from her mate. No one is
discounting the problems of infection, but
tbat's not the \.\1hole picture. You have to
look at why women want it and see how
hospital care can be changed to better
suit the woman of today's needs and not
the needs of doctors and nurses."
Cranston. Asks
Sliield Law "
WA SH IN GTO N !AP)
Democratic Sen. Alan Cranston,
whose state of California recently
enacted a newsman sbield law, pro-
posed again today a federal law IO
do the same Wng.
Cranston 's proposed bill was filed
in behalf of the American
Newspaper Publishers Assn.
It would ''prohibit any federal or
state proceeding from compe'lling
·newsmen to disclose their sources
o( any information they obtain
while gathering news but do not
use," a statement said.
Casilios
11---~eore-B"
-.
CARSOl'~<w:-(UPI ) ---
- A report issued by the state
Gaming Cont rol Board shows
that the net operating Income
for the 18 glamorow hotel·
casinos of tbe Las Vegas strip
in 1971 was 14.2 percent before
federal taxes and ex-
traordinary expenses.
Downtown casinos.
meanwhile, enjoyed a 31.4 per-
cent rate or return in 1971 and
clubs In Reno and South Lake
Tahoe aJ.90 surpassed the Strip
percentage figures.
ALBIN J. DAJO.., professor
or ecommics at tbe University
of Nevada, said the Strip pro-
fits dropped from 58.5 percent
two years earller.
He blamed this on the
slowdown in the national
economy, higher prices, and
increased competition from
new clubs.
l.ET'S BE FRIENDLY
ff you ha\le Ile\\" nclghbo~
or know of anyone' mo\li ni::
to our ar'f'll. please tell us 1
so that y,·e m•y extend a
friendly y,•elcollW! and h<'lp
t~m to tx-ropte acquainted
In their rw-,., 1urroundlngii.
So. Coast Visitor
Harbor Y'ISitor
646-0174
Torrence
Cerritos
• "'""'il.1''"''
• li.,,•t•d to Oft• ponrool
per 1ub1•cl."""" port•o•h
P•' lo.,.1ly
• it.ddit•oftol
P"ft" o•o•lobl• ot
••o•G~obl• P"'"'
So111foclion G11o<On!Hd
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•
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HOURS: Ooity 11 A.M. to I P.M.
Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. • Sundoy 12 Noon to 4:30 P.M.
FRIDAY, Jan. 12 thru SUNDAY, Jan .. 21
Inglewood
Cosio Mesa
Posodeno
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Sonto Monico
Glendo le
Ca~paign
Inspired
By Nurse
SAN FRANCISCO tAP) -A
scholanhlp !und in hooor or a
nune wbo wu ~hoked and
stabbed to death laal month I!
being raised by colleagues at
Too Taxing
Hubert H. McGovern?
WASHINGTON (Al') -The head cX lho lntmi•l R<v·
eDOO Service ,.YI he regrets that someone in hlJ aaency.
Invented and used I.he mythlcal name ct Hubert H. Af~
Govern In a sample income tax return.
The mythical citiun bas as hl.s myth.lea! address, l•
Pennsylvania Ave., Washington, D.C., which would be in
Lafayette Park. which is the Whlle Hoose.
•
the UC Hruipltal here. THE NAME AND ADDRESS showed in an IRS publi·
Mrs. Rosemary l\tcLane, pP:n called "Fundcimentals of Tax Prepar&tioo" in a ~ It
head nurse in the kidney · 'tidii that deal!: with income averaging. 1be agency wd
transplant unit where Diane I.he publication Is designed for college and adult education
Sy ester worked sajd the ~ course In ~ ~1~~00· .. _ 'RS ___ ;...,Uvulr ....... L ... _ < .--=--"""' Johnnie-M. "a M:l"-tric-1 \.VUU•-~.--... _._,....
dead woman "exemplified all ol apology IO Sen. George A.tcGovern, the Democratic
Ul'IT .........
f/ueen Colto11
Debra Ann Ploch of
Dallas, Tex., has been
named ?l-1aid of Cotton.
The brown·eyed bru·
nette beat out 19 other
finalists in h1emphis,
Tenn., to become cotton
representative.
the good and wholesome presidential candidate, aOO Sen .. H~rt H. Humphrey ' ~
contested l\1cGovem for the nonunatton. tbings in life for the rest of
"ORDINARILY" WALTER WROTE, "-A'e use non--
.. identifiable· names '.in our published . . . material. Un-•
SHE SAID Miss Sylvester, fortunately, t.bis time, oor t'OUrse writer, apparently hop-
us.··
killed in her apartment Dec. ~ to enliven the text, used !IOmC well-lmown names aDd
22 h d I •---· 1h· some name combinatioos . . . We dearly _regret the use ' a on Y ~· in ts area of, the name and address whicil some individuals may as-!
three month!. "
She was a native of Win-
throp, Me. and atlended the 1
Deaconess Hospital ot Boston.
sociate with you in an uncomplimentary way.
Walters said "it is safe to say" that I.he mythical name
of Hubert H. McGovern has been removed from the pub--1
lication.
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.._._....-----.~lUNDS _OF THE;· HARBO-.~
• '
' .
(
~a"1J Oat iUandtde'
Restoring Death
Sentence Urged
SACRAMENTO (AP)-< Gov. must strengthen law en-
forcement. Public oplnion Is
!Inn on the subject and far
ahead of some courts. In
November, the people of
. --
CALIFORNIA
Ronald Reagan urged lhe
Legislature today to carry out
a mandate of the voters and
m toro lhe deatll penalty In
C&lifomla. CalUomia gave us a mandate '--------" to restore capital punlshment.
THE REPUBLICAN
governor specif1C11ly Wed
that the first de~ murder of
a law officer be punished with
a mandatorL dr,. J!Mlty.
CiITTOrn a vorer-s
overwhelmingly a p pr o v e d
Prop. 17 last November, a
petition initiative which
restortd the death penalty In
the state. The State Supreme
Court ruled last February that
capital punishment violated
the state Coastitutlon's ban on
cruel and um..Ual pu!lishment.
Prop. 17 wrote language into
the Constitution stipulating
that capital puni!liment coold tie decroed by the Legislature
for specified crimes.
REAGAN, A sµpporter of
Prop. 17. said in "iis Slate of
~State address , ~ay: "We
"We shall ask you to pass
laws to carry out this man-
date, lnclu~ ooe to make
the killing of a law orflcer
mani!atory first d e g r e e
murder." -sen. lf.c. l!lcliaidsoO. CR·
Arcadia), and Assemblyman
Mike Antonovich, (R-Los
AngtJes), said they would in-
troduce legislaUon today to
implement Reagan's request
dealing with the death of on-
duty police officers.
LASl' JULY lhe U.S.
supreme Court Issued a -
troversial split decision which
C.lifomia Atty. Gen. Evelle J.
Younger has said bans capital
punishment except in cases
where execution is mandatory
for a specified crime and the
jury has no discretion to
substitute !He imprisonment.
.
Governor's
Excerpts
Recorded
SACRAMENTO. (AP\
Here are exl'et'pls of Gov.
Ronald Reag~'s seventh
"State ol lhe Stal•" address to
the 1973 Califor'nla
Legi>lature:
* We seek new horizons of
greatness for a great state
and a great people .
Working together we can
reach those horizons and we
have shown v.·e can work
together. There is no other
way to serve our people wisely
and. well.
Mental
Hospitals
To Close
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Th<!
Reagan administration plans
to gradually phase out f
CaJifornia's ti remaining
hospitals for the m<ntally lll
and the mentally retarded, the
Los Angeles Times said today.
'Jbe administration, the
Times said, has drawn
preliminary plans that would
transfer patients in the state
faci.IJil.jes to community-based
m~n&r--heli :i~men a
retarda tion racilities with in 10
years.
TWO STATE facilities -
one in the Mrt.h and one in the
south -would tben be con-
verted into hospitals for the . Ul"I ,..._...
criminally insane, the FIRST TRYOUT-Gov. newspaper said. R Reagan aides will ask the onald Reagan steps
Legislature to endorse the fron1 state's new jet air-
plan, the Times said and will plane after his first of·
also ask the State Health and ficial f 1 i g h L He re-
Welfare Agency to give local turned to Sacramento
programs strict supervision. front holidays at Pacific
Although local facilities Pal isades home.
have been criticized for pro-------
viding too little patient care. a
Quake-safe
Daughter
Sends Gift
To State
SACI\AME~'TO (,\P i -A
grateful 'l'i'Or.nan sent Gov
Ronald Reagan $001 66 th is
past year and urged hint "to
use this In some of the other
needy places In this great
state of ours," be related to-
day.
REAGAN QUOTED the
woman's letter in his State of
the Stlfte address as hl'
assured-"'taUtomia lawnlt1 k·
ers: "In alT th at 11·1' do
here. \\'C are building tht· ki11d
or state, the better ltfe \\'('
want for our l'hildren.
, C .I L'I' PJL.0 1 JJ
Highlights
Reagan Remarks Tokl
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -IUgbllgbt.o ol Gov. Ronald Rea·
can's "State ol the Sta1e'1 addros.'I at a glance:
TAXES
Pl'opooe$ return of an !850 mlllioQ slate budget SW]>lus
to the people 1brou.ch ooetime and permaotnt tax cull.
DEA1!1 PENALTY
Aaks le(lsl-o to lmplem"1I .........,., o1 the death
penalty ., approytd by vwn i...t Nov. 7.
VIOLENCE r..,-. tstabli.slunent ol a ~ter fer the study ol
violent behavior at UC.l..A.
NO.FAULT
Propoees enactment « ni>fn.uJt outo jisuranee 1eg~la-
tion . , , -
CRIM E
Tougher probation and pa.role policies. Streamlining oC
the state·s l'QITCClion agencies.
·~o tho~ who become •-~~~~~----~----~-~~~
cynkal, I v•ould li ke to share a
letter I received a few months
ago. It was from the daughter
of an 8S-year--0ld-Californian
who was assisted by the state
in heT final illness.
"This lady told me her
mother h.:1d worked hard and
saved enough for her burial.
The letter said :
•lf LOOKEO after her
finanrts these many years and
1 rit'rl to keep her money intact
\\'1thout nt•glecting her needs."
Elected J nstices Pushed
SACRAMENTO (AP I -A
Southern Cal i f o rn i a
asse mblyman has propost'd a
state constitutional aml~nd
ment which V.'Ould make
California Supreme Court
justices elected 1Mloe'ad of air
poin ted .
Th measurl'. AC A 7 bv
Asst blyrnan Floyd 1:.
\~'a field, ~R·South C.ate 1,
would also cut Supren1c Court
term s in half, to six years
from the present 12.
"California bas become a
state \\·here r a p is t s .
1nurderers and traitors are
coddled whl le laW·abidlng
citizens rear lo v.·a\k the
slrtets," \V;i krficld said, ex-
p!a1n1ng hi s proposal.
Increased State Aid ' *
'
C ll U d Instead of a massive deficit
top administration offici al
reportedly told the Times thE'
Health and Welrarc. Agency
supervision will improve local
program s. Capitol Eyed --
or 0 eges rge ~~r~ig~~~ ~:si:v:r~ llt~!"!o~~h~~ ~~~~vi:!~~ SACfu\MENTO jAJ)J
surplus this year in the in the hospitals now,'' he was Gov. Ronald Reagan told
SACRAMENTO (AP) - A Lanterman (R-La C8nada), in-neighborhood of $850 millton quoted as saying. legislators today he wants
bill to increase ~te aid to troduced the bill, AB 47, after ... While there are possible The Reagan plan follows a lhcm to stay in California's
commµnity ~ -nearly his annual review of the phllosophlcal dlfrerences as trend :set earlier. 'Mlree mm-historic 103-year-old Capitol.
klentica1 to a bill vet~ by atate's mental bea1th laws, an bow best to return this money tal hospitals already have "The building in whicb we
Gov. Ronald R~ last to the people who paid it in the been closed. are meeting has been called
month -has beeh introduced aide said Wednesday. first place, I am sure there is In 1969, the Legi!llature potentially unsafe.·· th e
in the Assembly. · • Le d hi no disagreement that it should passed the Lanterman-Petris-governor sald in his State of
A s s e m b I y m a n John a era P no disagreement that it should Short Act. which transferred the State address.
Vasconcellos (D-San Jose), in-SACRAMENTO (AP) -The be returned. much of th e responsibility for But he added, .. Rather than
troduced the measure, AB 46, California Senate should turn I look. forward to working care of the mentally ill and aba ndon this historic struc·
over to one man the important v.·ith you to achieve this end . mentally retarded to local ture, J believe v.·c should maY.c
(
""P TOL ) lcade~ship powers now held ~y In addition to this one time re-facilities. Under the act, the the Capitol building eartl1· C4 J the five-man Rules Commit-fund. I anticipate working with state pays 90 percent of patient quake-safe. suitable for the
1 tee, says a toP Democratic you on a program for costs and the counties 10 per-uses it has ser.•cd for a cen-
w • ..Jesda Id elimina. senator. permanent tax reduction. cent. tury."
iC\111 y.Itwou te1-iii"";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;im;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I ( a/ classification 'of students ll
&¥.°~1f~ b ·alsam's Store Wide Clearance SALE
-<>ategory-by-takin&-18 unila. __ -· ~theV~bill,
tbe colleges would'rec.'e!Vi -state , j!:
Slod~ts as for tbOse
a tull class load.
e No-fault
SACRAMENTO (AP\
Less than a week into the new
legislitive year. there are -1ready two no-fault auto in-
Slll1l00e proposa]s before the
Jegwature.
~blyman Jack R. Fen-ton (D-Montebello), introduced
the second bill Wedn<sday. Jt.
Was virtually identical to the
bill introduced in tile Senalej
earlier this week by Sen.
Alfred H. Song (0-Monterey
Park ). I
e War C11toff 1 SACRAMENTO (AP) f-1 A
resolution calling for a cutoff
ol money for the Vietnam war
lfter U.S. prisoners of War are
>eturned was lnlfO<luced
Wedn<sday In the Assembly.
,AssemJ>lyman ~ohn llwjoo
(D-San Francisco ), said bis
measure has 38 coauthors -
21 assembl ymen and 8
91D8tors.
11te resolution u r g e s
Q>ngress to cut off war funds
ifter "the release of American
p(lsoners or war and an ac-
C6unting of American
tervicemen missing in ac-
tion."
.Lobotomy •• ~ACRAMENTO (AP\ -One el the legislature's leading ex-
ports on mental beallh has U..
m.duced a bill giving portents ID, state and coonty mental
i.<h facilities ~ ri ght to N!use to have Iobjltomy brain
~ions.
Assemblyman Frank D.
RJdio 40 »
I
.• open Sunday 12-5
-l~O's of Values!
entire inventory
reduced!
Orange County 's Largest Selection
of Contemporary Furniture l
; .. -~ •
New Year's Specials
Reg . ... ,.,.parary tables and betldln
lamlnated tops -6 only····-··----up to $129
96" sofa
wood trim,. choose colors, h1rculon .
fabric,, 10011 cushions . -·········· ···--··---$429
10'x8' L sllapo sofa
choose colors , htrculon
fabrics or velv1t -···························-··· $749
9'171/a' plusll 1ec:tlOttC1I
luxurious imported velvets -·-···-·-·····-· $889
:~::~ ~~T:in~i~~i cs ····-··-······-···-···-$259
brown & sal,,... bedroom Ht
Sale
$25
$299
$549
$595
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oiled walnut -··--··········--·-·-·--·----····-····-····"""' reduced glenn of cofff.
oil1d walnut bedroom sets -··---···-----···-··9rwtfy NChleM
wllltt 1-.. ootdaor -·"' 48" round tables with 4 ch1irs
m•d• by l•nd•1 ·······-·····-··-····-·-······ $-449 $289 kop•••n• wal llaits floor samplas . __ greatly redvced 8' sofa & 5' ....,_
wood trim -"Pfeid herc:ulon ··········----·· $689
coatemporary
oil paintings
3'14' -4°14"
\'lfUtl up to $289
ptce" m.911in1
st1nd1 __ reg. $49 $16
$429
Reg .
1 pc. brown .& IOltmafl pecan dlnhNJ set
6 upholst ered high back cheirs, 66x40
dini ng +•ble opens to 106" w~th 2 fils $1489
2 pc:s. sec:tlonof 1 O 1 5
white lin1 n tuxedo style ---~·-············· $879
k .. ny, brown cof!H tables
o'ilid W•lnut ·l"lxl>O -·-··-·····-······ ·····-·-· $2 19
burke game Ht
white, blue cushions, table 48" rd.,
4 chairs ············-··--···· ... $589
102" sofa
loo'' cushions -orange and
brown fur 'tripe .................................... $1 99
9' sofa
lo ose cushions -black, brown & wh ite
herc:ulon ,tripe -extra d11p seat ...... $599
brown &: Mitman
pecan coff11 t1bles with c:ebinet l0x60 $120
pecan c:ommod11 with doors lOxlO -·--$252
pecan hexagon tables with doors ........ $210
walnut corner tables w/smoke glass tops $259
twlYll rocker, tufted with ottoman
antique brown naughahyde ................ $289
•
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$829
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$189
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I
• ! ' (
JI DAILY PILOT ~lv>day, J'"""' II, 197l
QUEENIE By Phit lnlerlandl
1-/I
...... 1 .... lt7J. ... w . .. •--'-
"I don 't mind being put on 'hold','but TThinl: fhey've
1ot me on 'lgnore 'I"
L. M. Boyd
Mirror Twins
Not Too Common
Those prognosticators who tell u.s what it's all goirtg lo
cost in the year A.D. 2000 say an overnight stay ir. ·a seml-
private room in the hospital then will run abol,a· $630, if in-
aeases keep up at their present rate. WP..it,' that's oot ao
remote. If you're in your mid-twenties bOw, you'll be just
about of retirement age then, sir, when hospital costs get
slgnlflcant, Jll>? .
HALF THE COEDS get married within 19 months arter
they leave cQllege ..• ONLY A
FOURTIJ o( all identical twins are
mirror twins, the rarest k i n d . . .
THOS& · t:ITIZENS BLIND in one eye
onl~ t>utnumber those citizerui blind in ~n eyes by four to one , . . l\1EN
• SUFFER f! percent more injuries than ;41 women ... AND PLEASE NOTE, too,
---;-East St. Louis isn't in Missouri, East
Chicago isn't in Illinois.
BUils ON TREES .-So yoo thought the buds on 1r .. ,
were.. bom in the spring, did you! 'Not at all. Not even in
the winter are they born. They just lie dormant then. It's ~ the previous summer they get their start. Tree buds-
like numerous works of art and bus~ uaually born
almost a year before )'OU see them bloom.
Q ... JUUE ANDREWS, is that her real name?"
1----J---A~--She«arle<Hut.-u.Julia-Wells•~-------
twice as many people in New York as in Texas blow thcfr
noeeHn-any-glven-hour,--thatJs-known;-too. ------•
AMONG OUR Love and War man's mentors was the
great Arnold BeMett who observed: "Make love lo very
woman you meet; If you get five percent on your outlay ,
It's a good investment."
A NURSE TOLD me the other night her doctor had
decided to forego surgery, psychiatry, gynecology, so on,
to specialize in the "hmmm." Interesting. "In examining
an X-ray," said sbe, "He can deliver a hmmm in such a
manner that it will give a patient hope, satisfy any linger-
ing doubts about the seriousness of lhe ailment , and assure
prompt payment ol the bill."
RE WAS a thrice-married attorney in Dllnois. And when
be died. in accordance with the instruction! in bis Last Will
and Testament, his tombstone listed the names of his three
wives followed by the simple sentence: "The defense resl3.''
THERE WAS a time when not just a few circus horses ,
bl.ft all ·weD=tralned riding horses dropped to their knees,
like camels, to receive their riders. That was before A.O.
f20 ~ the stinitp was invented. • ·
WAS NONE other' than old Henry Ford himself who
sold the first ~&I car in Ul:is country. For' $1.000. He bad
driven it about 1,cm true mJJ~s. ·
Address maii to l . i\1. Boitct. P. o·. 'BO:r 1!15, Ntw·
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
ORDER ;~]'
YOURS ·~-
TODAY!
1000
~eaurifvl
Stic:k-on
LABELS
Personalized • Stylish • Effic:l41nt
Order For Yourself or a Fri•nd
May b• us•d on envelopes 1s return 1ddretS
11.bels, Also v•ry handy as identificeticin
l•bels fo r m1rking personel items such •s
1Maok1, r.cords, photos, etc. Lab•ls 1ticf on
gl.11 •nd may b• us•d for m•rking home
c1nn.d •focd it•ms. All libels •r• printed
wi.th stylish Vo9u• typ• on fin• qtHliij whit•
"'"''""paper.
.-----------------------, I fllM Ill lflk ,..,.., cllf •"' lftMI wllfl II.JS fe1, I I Htt ~!Wflllt 1.a .. 1 Olv .. ~.o, •f'll lwt I I CHI• M-. c1111. n'14
I I I I I , . . I
"' ~ .. l ,.. . •-}~ .~, · ·I · I-'""' I . · I ·L-~~tL~!-~!~!!~~----J
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Seientists Triek Male Moths •
FRESNO (AP ) A
chemical "perfume" that se1·
u.ally e1cltes and then con-
tuses pink bollworm moths
could signal doom for ~ pest
that has scouraed tbe cotton
lnduslry, says a researcher.
"The Idea is that the male sme111 females everywhere.
and the poor guy (moth ) is
lost," Dr. Harry Shorey, a UC
.Riverside lnsect expert, said.
TUE "PERFUME," called
hexalure, affects male moths
much the sa me way as and as
yel unidentified chemical
secreted by the females,
Shoey l&ld. aradwtlly llJl'•ad ~ the
The onlomologllt l&ld Ille Wut from Tex.u, cauatd an
odor 11 the only way a ntlmaltd fl-mllllon dam.op boUworm moth can ldentUy 1 female and koow sbe's ready Wt year to'Calltomla's cono.n
to mate. 'to hunt1na, U1e crop, the natJon's second
chemical bat only 1 faint odor, largest.
he said. Shorey explained h i s
~ hexalure wu placed rueareh to the California eot-
in test fleldl tut year, the ton Peat Control Board
males became co.nfllsed and meethl.g here. Seven mem·
were unable. to conceive and bers. most or them co.tton
produce the three-quarter inch farmers, au~ about
wonns that eat away at the · $50.000 to help Shorey conUnue
rotton plant, Shoey said. Tbe research.
wonru: mature into moths. Shorey said the money ls a
· little les.s than half the total he
TB.£ AtOTBS, w b I c h elJ>e<)tl lo spend on the pn>
Ject llila year. Shorey boptl to
apply !)le beblwo IQ ataket
plactd aroomd COiton Oddi In the-Coachella Valley. In u:·
perlmenta lut year, he aald
the molh JJOl'Ul1Uon WU
"drastically reduced."
1'JT ts NOT a finished
technique, It's still a system
being researched," Sho~y e1-
plalned.
Among other problems, he
said, ls the cost ol tw.xalurt.
At $40 an ounct, it ls more ex-
pensive than most perfumes
used by humans.
HQwever. Shorey said, the
price COllld drop about JO
times lf a dtmand txisted for
hexallltt, wbleh n!portedly hU
no use other than cotton pest
research.
Other methods of bOllwonn
elimination include rtleasing
moths sterilized by cobalt intQ
fields. The females mate with
their sterile counterparts. but
no olrspr!nii ls produced. ThiJ
graduaU~ causes the insects to
die out. agriculture experts
have said.
A PEST CONTROL board
apokesman ,aid 90 milflon
sterile moths were introduced
Into Cllllomll ndda last y ....
but thtlr tflects are ltlll
uncertain .
·William COwllll. chief deputy
director of tht 1 t 1 t e.
Agriculture Department, told
the board It might b<
desirable for Callfomla to
build IU: own moth ster~
racillty.
He aald bteakdowns la$t
year bt the nation's only
plant, a federal facility near
Phoenix, reduced suppUet to
California.
A PLANT eould be built for
about 11 mllli<¥t, he said.
It's , Kerm To The Rescue
WJth -Greett Home Values ·!
Well' Designed, Sturdy
18" Black Fireplace Grate
iro11
e Sh1p1d to
hold 1091
ilCUr1ly
New Hoover
Convertible
a lnll111t Ru9 Adjutt1T11nt
low Pili To D11p Sh19 a Ewtre l 1r91 C1p1cily
Tl.row.Awev 819 e Two -Sp11d Motor -
50 'f, Mor e Suction Witli
Cl•111i"9 Tooh a F1rriou1 Moo~•r
Ou11itv $4995
Black & Decker .
3/8 Inch Drill
e E•fr•-c•ptcity
low coil drill
a Ooubl1 reduction ·
911r1 lor full
lorqu1
Modtl 7100
999
e Hold1 1/4" ot
)/9" clrill1 tnd
• Spill-proof
dr•wt'1
High.·lrrip1ct
poly1tyr111•
No. 09-170
J88
'
Manzanita
Stump Set
e l11clucl11 14-i11ch P•" '"d bur"''•
''"'· tll'lbtr kit, co11111ctor ind
1t111rri p
0
.
New! r1orentine
Ceiling Light • Sertw• i11to tlly
1oek1t, just
lik1 1 li9htbulb a El19•"tly li1j1hh
l"Y f OOPrl a A11tiq111 whitt
with whitt,
t111g1ri111 or
turq11oi11 e Grttl id11I
179
Ekco Flint 1 qt
• Covered Saucepan
e Alw•y• bright •11d •hiey tlti11ltt•
•••• 1
e Tripi• ply e Vepor 1tt1 rifl'l1 kMp ¥iftrni1u
t11d jwlct1 in 4.88
' ' u
ln-Sink-Erator Waste Disposal
e Quickly and efficiently d i1poses
'of 9arbege and food
waste
e Installs easily
e U.l. Approved
e Model lll
Prket 9"41 ""' Wech1ncMy, .I••· 17tti
25 88
Colored Crystal
Cylinder Swag
a Cyli"d1r i11 4 lo¥tly -,
color1 a lrti• fl"i1h chein
•..d +Tirri a El19111f in HtU or
'"tryway • Mocltl 170
888
Glidden latex-
Wall Paint
e Fl•t v1lv•t
fini1h dri•1
quic•lv e W1t1r iole•n•11p e Cov•r1 111 but
Ctr• color1 in
I co•t
Con'tfni,ntly locoted .•. Eosy To ~eochl
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
I
-IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7010
HOUlSiWEfKDAV~9·T09 .
$ATUlDAY AND SUNDAY 9 ro ''M
' .
• E·•rvthi1l9 YO!f
"'•' •• p1l11t e 9" rotl1r, frtm•
•ncl co•tr e lnctvcl11 Mtf•I ., . .,
59' .
"Tite-Squeze"
Ratchet Wrench Set
• 6 wr•ncli•1 in
The Grabber Claw
Pick Up Too, So Handy
• M1 "y cliff1r•11t UHi for
ttii1 l<t i11cli tool e R11chti wh•11 you c•11'! e IR tli1 homt, 1liop, it'1 juit
i11di1p11111bl1
88'
Popular Hooded
Porch Light
• Blick Fini1h • E11y to ln1t1ll • For 011hid1 •
nt•r 111y
clOOf'OllY • Pro•id11 ,,.,,
liglit
188
Drai~ Cleaner
e Elrlre 1tr1111tli
cl11111r unclog1
1r•••• frtp1 incl
clrt in1 qulckly
e Also "''" b• v1M to 11ncl-t 1.,tlc
t1nk1 •!Id c111pool1
1~
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YOU'LL
.SAYE
SAVE
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AND
SAV.E
• ••
I
\
. ALL THE NEEDS FOR YOUR FAMILY
AND YOUR HOME ARE ON SALE. SHOP
NOW AND YOU'LL ·FJND THE GREATEST
SAYINGS! HURRY! ·HURRY!
l
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, . ' DA ILY PILOT . .
. . . -. ~ . . .
Thu'rllday, January H, 1973
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J l\All Y PILOT
Commune In Debt
• • Brothers Out Seeking Jobs
NORTHFIELD, Mau. iAPl
1 -The BtothetOOod or 1he
Spirit, a 250-member com-
, mune with en1pbasis on shar-
ing lhe wealth, Is racing the
reality of lwnk mortgages and
food bills with a demand that
its adults get jobs or get out.
'nte commune'!S 200 adult
1nen1bers -half ot whom are
employed -are being asked
by their leaders lo sign con-
tracts stipulRling that they
will have jobs by Feb. I, work
at least six months and ~arn
nol less than $50 a v.·etk.
IN ITS FIVE years, the
co1nmune has accumulated
$l20.000 in debts. and a com-
mune spokesman said the
55,000 or so exlra brought In
eitch week by the v.·ork pro-
grnn1 v.•111 be used to pay that
off.
The debts incluJe loans us-
ed to pay for fl>ur holl.'les.
Tvpical Is their Northfield
rrsidc nce. an old-fashioned
t .... ·o-story wooden hoose set
out in the country in a grove
of trett.
In front, a atgn 11y1: "AU
people welccme. No dru11. no
alcohol allowed. PleaM uoe
parking lot."
BJO'SIDES nlE Northfield
building, the cOmmWJe bu
houses ln Warwick and Turner
Falls -all rural communltlet
tA·here recent news that 80 of
the commune members were
on welfare was met with less
than enthusiasm.
Area residents al~ v•ere
Indian's'
Campsite
Found·
SACRAMENTO (APl -
A~lleologista say an old Io--.
dial\ campsite r e c e n t I y
dlleovered In a remote area of
Anza·Borngo Desert State
Pari: has oot been di sturbed J.
since tht Indians used It t
several hundred yean ago.
An eight-man archeoluglcal
crew assembled from several
uni versities visited the site
•
Gal Asks Spa~e Job
Ll. (j.a.) Jldl.lil Ana Ntuffer
became the Navy 's Ont
woman fllgbl cadet and said :
"I'd like to be considered" for
astronaut duty "If the op-
portunity came lllong."
Secretary of the Navy John
W. Warner sakt promptly : "I
would llO recommend."
This happened in o
Hollywood-llkt. ceremony In
Waslrlngton pub I i c i z I n g
Warner's anmuncement that
Bronston Produttlona and
affiliated companies produced
between 1959 and· 1964 such
films as ''El Cld," "Cin:us
World" and ''The Fall ol the
Roman En1ptre." * . •Recording artist Gladys
K.Wght received an un·
contested di\'orce from her
husband of 11 years in Wayne
Coun ty 1 J.lich.) Circuit Court.
The 23-year"ld lead singer
of Gladys Knight and the Pips
P'.,.OPLE from James G. Newman JI,
( )
suid she wanted a divorce
.._ __ L ______ 3t, because of ~recon6l•bl"
Atiss Knl&ht W J I alto
granted custody of the couple's
children . James G. III. 10. and
Kenya Marie, S.
Judge Named
SACRAMENTO !AP) -
Gov, Ronald Reagan has ap-
pointed Carmel City Atty.
William L. Burleigh to the
A1anterey -Cannel MwliclpaJ
Court . Burleigh , 37, is a
Republican . A1unicipal Court
judges are paid $33,431 an-
nually.
jljllurbed wbeo the •IAl.Lljrnp-_ _ x
ped olf 3,000 poonds ol turplll! ( )
eight women had been chosen
,__ to.begw_tralnittg to bellilots..ol
Navy transport plllnes or
helicopters. I •
e DRESSES
• PANTS
• COATS
• BLOUSES
• PANT SUITS
a a erta
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
1044 Irvine -Newport B•ach
548-8365
....... c .....
foods at the commune. suu-ECOLOGY
pil es that a school official in ~ •
nearby Greenfield complained
he was not able to get for
ochool chlldrtn.
But the commun e'•
bwllness mana1er, John
Pollard, said tho job program
is not meant to IOOthe public
opinion.
11IE COMMUNE 11want1 to
clean out Ill outatandtn1
debit," n ld Pollard. "We juat
want to &et It out of the way
once and for all. Just Ute
anyone elae, we want to pay
our bllll."
Among lhe unemployed,
about a dozen women wUI stay
at horrwt, cleaning, cook.in( and
watchiZJI the commune'• SO
children. he uld. A few of Jhe
men wUl drive others back
and forth to work In tbe
brothtrhood11 van1.
1be contract, Pollard uMI,
11!pelll out 1peclfically what
debts each commune member
b lnc:unlng, like food, their
share of the operating com,
t a 1 e 1, vtlUUea, telephone-,
gasoline, the mort(age -
things or thal natuft."
THE COMMUNE 11 In
recently to photograph and
map It, tho state Paro and
Ret:teaUon Department an-
nounced. ·
The announcement di4 not
say when or bow the site wa1
dlllCOV'{ed.
No predse location for the
llte wu released. Anza-Bor·
rqo Deteri State Park ls in
San Olea• County.
e IAltc Sklrtell'l'
LOS ANGELES (AP"1 -City
councilmen have appr<>ved
an applfcaUon to exclude areas
of ~ Angeles Harbor opera-
tlOf\li from oermlt re-
quirement. 1tlpulated by the
cout1int conservation act.
Councilman ?.!arvin Braude
argued · agalnlt the rMVe,
aaying the city "11 attempting
to 1et around the law. It Is
1o1Jtg lbead with projects It
wantll without control of the ncwaUon."
f'lag Lowered
Indian soldiers lower
the Indian standard re-
cently before complet-
ing withdrawal from
the Pakistani area they
captured a year ago
December.
Man Named
Hearuuaste1· .
It is pert of the Navy's cam·
paign to show it is giving
recognition to women.
Actor Ene,s~IJM, who
hBI been married l1l)C<
November, made no public an-
L nouncement . because o I
pubUcltf over hiJ four prtvlous marriages, h I 1
publlclst 1ay1.
Spokesman Joe Sleeman
confirmed columnlsla' report•
that Borfllllne, 54, and Tove
Newman bad been married at
Niagara Falls, N.Y .
Of the bride, he would aay
only that &he is not an actress .
* Molra Shearer. former
ballerina who starred in the
film. "The Red Shoes,'' was
injured with her three children
in a multi-vehicle crash 34
miles south of Edinburgh,
Scotland.
Police said Miss Shearer,
wife of television journalist
Ludovic Kennedy, was in
satisfactory condition at Edin-
burgh·s Royal Infirmary.
* In an opinion clarifying the
reach oC the federal perjury
statute. the U.S. Supreme
Court set aside the 1971 con-
viction of motion picture
SALE!
GREAT REDUCTIONS
20°/o. 50°/o 'off
ON
SUITS-SPORT COATS
KNIT SLACKS-DRESS SHllTS
SPORT SHIRTS
WASH SLACKS
ALL DRESS SHIRTS 400/. Off
& TIES 70
)467 Via Lido, Ntwport l•11ch
673-4510
Franklin County, which ltu
about t percent unemploy·
ment. Chamber of Commerce
President David Fi\Ch aald it
may be ha.rd for commune
members to find work with.in
the deadline. ~======::=::::~===========~;;:::;: 'YTT
COund1man John Ferraro,
chatrman of a council com-
mittee whlch' backed the re-q-frclm the Harbor Com-
mtaslon, uld he did nob think
the city wu trying to 1k1n th~
law. Instead. he added, it
would be In the city's interest
to e1empt 90me harbor areas
from jurisdiction of the act to
avoid delll}'I In projecu.
SIMSBURG, Conn. !AP ) -magnate Samuel Brohfiton in a
Ri chard C. Pierce, 37, of Palos New York federal court.
Verdes Peninsula, has been Chief Justice Warren E.
appointed the first male head-Burger ruled for a unanimous
'
T-IRRIFIC
NOW
IN '
PROGRESS
Savings in all Departments. Save! Save!
LONG & SHORT
DRESSES e PANT SUITS e
COATS e ROBES e BOOTS e
REG. TO $ 20.00
REG. TO $ 30~0f)"
REG. TO $ 48.00
"REG. TO $ 80.00
REG . TO $100.00
LONG &
SHORT
PANTS
Reg . to 12.00
Reg. to 17.00
Reg. to 23.00
SKIRTS,
VESTS
NOW $12.00 -·
MOW .$.17.00
NOW $21.00
NOW $41.00
NOW $10.00
SWIATIRS
NOW 7.00
NOW 9.00
NOW 11.00
BLOUSES & KNIT TOPS
REG. TO 9.00
REG. TO l 2.06'
NOW I.°'
NOW 7.00
COME IN AND SEE FOR YOURSfLFI
USE A WINDSOR CHARGE ACCOUNT
No lnt•r•tt-No Carrylne"Char,.
'
master of the Ethle court that .while Bronston's
• V _ _._ .... ,__ \Vali:er School . answers to questions before a _
_ _....... Pierce, wbo becomes the bankruptcy referee may not
SACRAMENTO <UPI) ninth head of the private have been responsive and
U.S. Re&k>na1 Forester Doug preparatory IChool for girls is "arguably misleading.·· the
R. Lela: 11)'1 vandalism in assistant neadmaster at q u est ion er had the
Callfomla'I 17 national fortsts Chadwlch SChool , a coed responsibility for getting the
COit tbe llale'I ta1payer11 secondary day school. information he wnntcd. llOO,IOO lut year 11J1<1 tbe ___ o__:_ _______ _
amount ii expec~ t.o in-
''Tbe tol dollars used to ftPllr the public facllltle1 In
natlonaJ forests would have
bu i lt three SO-u nit
campgrounds last year." Leist
.. Id.
He uJd the areas hardest
hit .,. campground, plcill~
areas, roadside vista pctnts,
beachea, nature trails and
bolt !lunching ramps.
e Forestry Law
SACllAMEN'l'O I AP l
Callfomla'1 forestry laws and
State Board of Forestry woul d
be replaced with new rules
and a ntw board under leg:llla-
tion introduced by state_ Sen.
John Nejedly.
'nie Walnut Crtek
Rtpubllcan's bill would pro-
vide for timber operations
permits and timber harvesting
plans Jor the mte's '2-1-
•. ,iillJ!oi),tltJ>bet lzltlllfley. -
1000 PAIR
WOMEN'S
SHOES
V•ll•y
P•nal jo
!--ady Florthelm
Vitality
D•liso
Hiii & Dalo
Enn• Jettick1
e Fredricks by,
· Howard Fox
SEMI-ANNUAL
He 'llOllld r.qulre tho lllate
hoard to set up fore1t
dlatrlctl, eACh With technical
advllory committee•.
.-----MEN'S-----·
Nejedly is chairman of the
Senate Committee on Natural
RelOW'Ctl and Conservatlon.
e 1'11us E11ell
BERKELEY (AP) -A
coaliU... of envlornmentolllt
poupe ha• made • dll<ct a1>
peal to the Nlllon ad-
ministration to cut off funds
for tht proposed Auburn Dam
on the American River near
sacramento.
The Ehvlronm<':ntal Defense
l"tnd (EDA ), joined by the
Sltrn Club, Save the
American River Association
(SARA) and Natural Resouces
Defense Council (NRDC)
charged the Auburn project
would be "an envlronmentaJ
dlsaater, without any offset.
ting economic benefit."
'lbt letter asked the dlrec·
tor of the o£f icial P.fanage--
ment and Budget1 casp&r
Weinberger, lo review the pro-
posed dam and, in the mean-
time, withhold funds for pro-
ject coilalrltetlon.
10 SPIEDS
50% OVER
COST
• tlteM • v.i.cw. e AltC. e 1111.-.
lttrf CIOtll'llt-StlUnt Ollt .. ,.,., WIUt
'"' i nt• .-1ooi..1• •Mt ,.,... l 1crc1M
11411 8-" IMt. HllftlJf'IO~ l8Kfl •
141 .. 741
OFF
Values To $38
MEN'S
E.T. WRIGHT
T:~. 29.80
••-=
FLORSHEIMS WINTHROP
17.80 TO 27.80 14.90
Valu•s to 42.9S Values to 22.00
WOMEN'S
1 GROUP WOMEN'S I GROUP
CANVAS SHOES BOOTS
e Red Ball 0 Keds 0 Sporry
e Valley e Lady Florsheim
V1lu•s
to $11.00
• Sbicca • Hush Puppy
s400 1/3 OFF
Values to $45.00
ChUdren's
LAzr-Boms TRIDERITE .............. ~ ..... ., ____ ... ._ ..
• SHOE
GIRLS
SJ90
BOYS
Values to $17 .OO
'8'o
' DISCONTINUED STYLES. BROKEN SIZES . ALL SALES FINAL
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
I '
•0t-phan~ Aid
Raptor Sclwol Graduates
14BIG BIRDS NEED TO fly, to soar. Even in the best
ZOO. there is no room for them to Oy ••. they deteriorate ,
they weaken, they are literally too weak to fly.·· said
Caughlan.
"If they ·were to be turned free at this stage. they
would be too '"eak to hunt. And they would starve."
And ro lhe raptores go ttvoogh a program similar
to that of Geronimo and Orphan, who trained for six
1 montm before qualifying for freedom.
Wearing heavy gauntlets as protection against talons
ind beaD, Caughlan fU"St force.fed the nine-pound eagles,
tbtn allowed them to retrieve food piaced nearby.
NEXT, THE EAGLES WERE taken outside the too,
tdhered and taught lo find a dilld's fuuy toy rabbit with
food attached and hidden in fields and meadows.
"Then, we mounted wheels on the rabbit" said Caugh-
lan.
~ "I "''OUld run as rast as l could across the field, pulling
11. the rabbit \Vilh the food on it."
1'te survival program entered its next st.age when live
' rabbits and rodents were Sllbmitted for the toy rabbit. i For their fina1 lesson. the eagles "'ere taken to an un-'.J Inhabited atta in the Big Sur mountains and tethered to
I a 200-foot..fong nylon cord from which they scanned the
4: hills and valleys searching out prey over a two-week period. ti "Finally, we cut their bracelets and let them go," i said Caug!Jlan . "They took off immediately."
~~ , \ll. ~t.! ..
Alcolwl Center:
Bastion for Men
''In San Diego .•. there is no
olace where they (women) can be taken to dry out, so to
speak ," says Dr. Anthony Rip.
po. "No place but county jail"
THE COUNTY'S ll·month-
old. 100-bed Alcoholic Detox-
tcation Center admits men on-
ly.
A combination of politics
and economics has deJayed
funding of a center for women,
The v ~ s I b I e
drunk is the male
drunk, so tllfrt is
ICllu!re -the f>res-
.. •ure is.'
and attempts by Rippo and
others to persuade the county
to let women use a section of
the men's center have been
unsuccessrul , even though the
center is never more than half
f\Jll.
"Our facility is an open
ward designed for men only,''
says the center's supervisor,
"''alter Kimsey. "Redesign of
the plant wouJd be un-
desirable."
'-rBE uClSPrrW won 't
to warn ofrdelifit.ini tremens,
v10 en wt awa rcac·
tion of the alcoholic that may
be accompanied by hallucina-
tions, seizures, or even death,
THE PA11ENTS are gi ven
special diets to correc~
n1alnourishment. and after
staying several days many are
referred to long-term pro-
grams such as halfway houses
and group counseling. Kimsey
says nearly all or the patients
refe1Tecl to such programs
have shown up.
Despite such treatment or
alcoholism as .! clisease - a
view now publicly eodorsed by
the American Me d i c a I
Association -Rippo says it is
abnost impo$ible to get local
hospitals to admit detox-
ification patients.
His group persuaded one
.private cr~is ~ter to open .
its facilities to women
aJcoMlics· and one bospital to
treat emergency detoxification
patients during the Christmas
holidays. but the day-to-day
problem continues.
RlPPO SAYS as many as
five women a day call the
county center asking for ad-
mittance but arc refused .
"Society is finally looking at
alcoholism 11t the disease it
is," he says. "In the past it
was viewed as a crime. But
the female alcoholic is still
branded.• 1 •1•
•
On the Set
' ) • •
·'""""'
Actress Ki1n N o v a k
(above) came out of
three years of semire-
tirement to replace Rita
fJayworlh in the psych·
ologicaI thriller "TaJes
That Witnes.s l\1ad·
ness," filming in Lon-
don.
Fresliman,
Wins Toss,
Maybe Post
WASf~INGTON (API
Freshman Rep. Fortney II
Slark I [).Calif.) has ~·on a
coi n toss and sold $5.5 1nill ion
worth or stock in a California
bank to get · a spot on the
llouse Banking and Currency
Comm ittee.
Stark . of Walnut Creek near
Oakland, is still not assured of
a spot on the committee,
headed by Rep. Wright Pat-
man \0-Tex .)
Btrr UIS COIN-TO~ vic-
tory over Caliromia Rep. Leo
Ryan was their \\'ay of
deciding who would ![el fi.,;(
chance at the committee slot
1 a a 1orn1an gets 1, w JC
is widely expected.
"I ca lled tails and it ,,.,·as
heRds," Ryan. anothe r first·
term Democrat. said Wed-
nesday.
"On thus does !he rate of na-
tions N!SI. or so mething like
thl'l t." Ryan said. "You've got
lo be philisophical about these
things."
STARK'S AD~1JNISTRA·
'MVE assist a n t Jim
Co peland sa k:I the cnn-
f,!ressman ls selling all of his
interest -$5.5 million worth
-in the Security National
Bank of \Yalnut Creek that he
founded JO years ago.
Stark's brother, T om. is
assuming the presidency of
the firm. The brother's
shareholding-s were described
by Copeland as "small ."
Copefand said Stark sold his
$5.5, million worth of stock to ~
a,·oid any charges of conCl ict
nr interests in connection with
the banking and currency
comn1i ttee.
2 Heappointecl
SACRAMENTO I AP I
Vernon L. Sturgeon and
\\l illiam Symons Jr. were
reappointed to six-year tenns
on the State Public Utilities
Commission by Gov. Ronald
Reagan.
take them," says Cheney
Mayfield, women's counselor
at the Alcoholism Counseling
and Education Center. "About
all you can do without medical
help b to offer them another
drink to stave orr the
symploms or withdrawal."
1973
Stock Reduction She says three women
alcoholics on her caseload died
in the pa!rt year.
Kimsey says he proposed a
separate county center for
w.omeo. But the plan _ was in-
corporated by · c o u n t y
supervllo" into a proposal for
• federally funded health
e<nter, which has yol to be ap-
proved by U.S. health o!nclals
and could fall victim to
domestk budget cuts.
·~ WOMAN alcoholic
may in fact ha~ greater
need," Kimsey says. "She pro-
bably has a more protective
family environment, and it
SALE
500/o to 800/o
OFF!
wor1:s toward her c1etr1ment Hodson when lhe really needs help.
'1But the visible drunk ts the
male drunk, 10 that Is where ~lcbtltu! lloo~ ..:~·in volunt.nly 1510 NEWPORT .BL~
.... 4'. brought 1• by pnllce to at lndumlal Woy
Ille doto<lflcatlon center, c .. 1. Mesa ~1 -lmlqU!Jizers •re used,,.. ________________ _
'
,
I lht;r\'11, J.Jriuary 11 1Q7J OAIL Y PILOT I 5 ----
Government Halts P1·0-aho1·tio11 Film
WASHINGTON (Ul,ll -
1be government has tem-
porarily halted plans to
distribute to public schools
and colleges a controversi;.11
population film advoca ting
legal abortion. the Ad·
ministration's h>p population
experts say.
··IT JS SOT a tochniea l
decision OO"'-, it 's u politic-at
dl'l'IS1on."
ll1tltman said both ht' a11rl
Sidne v P. Marl flnd Jr , llE\\'
ussislanl secrt>lurv (111· edur:1-
tion . dttidl'<I to s?t·nd 170.000
10 bu) :ind d1str1butl' cop1t•s ur
rhe ofric1a! flhn or lhr C0111·
1111ssion oo Popu lation Gro\\·th
nnd the American Future nnd
related written popula1111n
111atcrial to sc hools requesuni.:
IL
riJngs and rt'l..'om1n(•11rl,1!1t•:1•
l'\o~. 29 O\ er nutn' u! 11
educal10MI t('h'\'L,JOll S1d~'""
Tiit; r11 ,,1 rr .. ,,.,,i. .. t 1 .. 1,
\Jc"~ of ;1h1•rt· .. 11 r.u·i,:111
from :ibortion ;1<1 11111nt1-r ot-111 ..
frrus lo >1t1o!'lu111 ;1, ,\ 111.111, r
bt•t"1•('11 ,, "0111,111 .11hl h1·r
dorlur
ll al,1• Jil't ,,·nl• d 111,. p;1111 I
l'.'11octu,1nn l;1h·r n•f1"1'l1•d 11•
Prt•sitlt'11 I \'1,u11 11111 abnrll»11
should I~· lei.;;1hz1'(! 111 .ill 1h1
statt•~
' I 11.i nnt "'llP"l'1
u n r ("st r 1r'1 l' <t 11hor11u \
tit: At•rot~'TF:u 20 nr rtu·
1·c1n1rn1,~1011 1n~'lll11·r~ .in+.!
l ••f1J.:r1·:-"• lht· 0!111 r !Hur
ltnlhn11n ' ;, 1 <I 11•· :i nd
\l.1r].,.,tl t!.'I 1d•'l'I !h1• d1~1rih11
1 "It ot 1h4.' , "11\/111,,1r1n s f1l n1
t d n·pur! 11 ,1-.; '';1 ).'.•Ind l'tli11•.:i
111111,11··11d1·;11\1r"111,1nd;tll·1! t,\
( llfli.!f•''' UI I t' I -, I ;l 1 \ u 11
1J,·,1i.:1t;111n·~ llE\\'~ llt[u,• 1,f
f'1>p1Jl,11 1Hll \II.Ill' ,., ,1
l"•w1rd'!l;d1ui.: ;1 ··r1··· r" r
l"'Jll!l:1!1011 ,. \! 11 c· .1 I 1111 :1<
!1 ll!t''
Ht•! ll1·!1111a11 ';1ul '''!'I• a11
11;1lx)rftnn ~rnu11, 1111·lud111;.:
l•!/'.ll 1!1~hl Ti• I.II• "n.:.11111 .. 1
THINK SALE
Think
WESTCLll'f PLA.lA
11th & 1,,,,.., N•wport ""-Iii
"Pressure was applied to
the White House and inquiries
made to the While House and.
therefore, the decision is bci n~
reviewed by the secretary."
Dr. Louis ~1 . Hellman. as!HS-
tant secretary for populal ion
affairs in the Department of
Health, E<f\lcatlon a n d
W{'lfatt. said Wednesd3y .
After being spurnt-'d by the
three m a j o r ttlcv1sio11
networks, the ronun1ssio11
turned lo the no~n1nt>rl'!ill
Pubhr Broadl·astin~ St·r\ Ll'l'
"'-hlth sho~'ed tht• f1!m('d fin·
polu.:Jt"S ' \J\Pll •,1Hi \1o11 ,, 111
a 'tat• •111·11t r.11 llH· r"11
n11:-:,1nn 11·1)1 r'
Ii •11' ht ,·,111 .1 1 .1111p;1r1.'ll 11f ~---------~
OR!HO. •ATT•ll••
\ 111!1• P't •hllr•· l 11101·~ l!lt
lol•ll il1,!11bU!h•ll
anuary Clearance Extra ,___o.~___,'f!!?
KING SIZE
Ortho Tension l\ s a beauty! CIArflOfOUS ftOl'al
print ScroJl-qu1Jted cover. Augq1.'CI l empc1~Stf.lol
1nnon;pJing. Jttias thick Couon Felt padd1nq.
The larYIOUS Crown Flt!x cl'fl!Pr lor l'lcld('rl 5.Uppor1 to
back & hips. A f;<!)olous. m:1111c1ss"1 And now
;'I Sf'nS,,!IO!lal IC'H p11< "' Low1Co'!1ni:lud• •, M:'!tllr
PLUS 2 Boi:; Sp•onc_is. PLU5 Onno P.lk PL I IS
OouOI·~ Bonu~'
...
~·
OrthlN!ak
•
$ f"1••!dtr"<;I No· Iron Konq or Quec>n size Top Sheet ..
A gt'MI buy! Scroll-Ou1lled Covtt1 .. _
and inoni! Cornoiete w•lh Manross. 2
Boa Springs. Otlf\o.Pak &
~"°""'I
•
•
IN SCOTCHGARD PRINT
( h.iim•n<J r ltly r.ro •
,lyl<' tr•f!V•·il<l•ll• • ,!,,
-5-..... f1.r1 A1 .. n1nf•1H·.,n•&L ,.,
•t''l'OIW ~ "'~ :.~r M;ilr,htll<J rt• 111 .1v . .,I U t
... Always FREE DELIVERY
ORTH()
MATTRESS
• f •t<ldr rpr I N0-1!0'1 K111q or Queen SIZO Fitted •• :
Aol!C·lfl St><'Pt . :> F1ctdrf1~1 No-lroo K1nq C)I' Oueetl
'-/" P1llvwr il<,l'S • ;! 1(11111 Of' Quern size BolSlef'
p.rio~s • K+n1 c-.1 Queen s•lC Mc.ttress Pad • King w
Ou<'t'n S•/" t-l<'lat F1Jmc on Easy-Roll Caster.i.
Double Bonus King or Queen: Padded V"1y4
HPac#';oard AND Ouoltocl Bedspread
.
t • • • • • ~
Twin or Full: Headboard AND Metal f rainaon
f:.as1-RoU Casters. ' ' , • • •
~ ' • . • ' .
i: •
THE CROWN
,. "'' "' ' ..11'' v.'
"'" • 't• •
·~·. /'. .... II rl <' • •! <,-.. r l ,., •
You Can Only Buy
Ortho Pr oducts at
Ortho Stores ......
' 4 •• .. • -: ·. \)~e \ ;. -{O\)~ ·~ e ~ c,~0() ~ •• ~ THE NATIC>N°S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS ~
ORANGE SANTA ANA and NAH.EIM · LAKEWOOD 10
5~e~:,~:u :I
A fantulic bar09inl Wilh Orltio s
famou. Crown Flex cent« ~pan
Comple1e wt1tl Mlit1res1, Bo)( Siit•nQ
6 Double Bonus'
2+45 N. fostin Ave. FOUNTAIN VALLEY 18 1 West Lincoln Ave. 4433 Ca ndlewood Ave.
1'131 H b Blv.J B~t'"'"'" t11c:l!d •11'4 8roo~~ur1t Co!lnd lf!:wood Shop$ · (•c.•ottfr.mOta"t•M•jl.j ,.,., • 1J ar or c.,, • · A"•nllt\ f•tr~11'1,,,.., t~i,w aod Cenltrl
l'h,!.1t• 6lf·OSll ••••Mr af Edll'l9er) N1•t to Zody'• J1,1il ~tit! ol f.,d Merl Pllone: 614·41 )4
"'•"'' 119•4170 P+oo11t; 716·1S•O
" I
'
LOS AHG£ll:S
SAN Fll .. HC:ISCO
OAkL.AHO
S•N JOSI S•CllAMl'HTO
STOCICTOfol
;1•
I -.
DIJLV PILOT Thursday, January ll, 1973
SF Trolleys Here to Stay .. BUKe•11e State Aid Increased
-
.
<;able Car Buffs Celebrate 100 Years iii Bay City
SAN FRANCISCO (AP J -San Fran·
clsco's tipsy little cable cars are having
\ lheir tOOth birthday celebralion all this
I year.
Beloved by riders \\'ho dellght to hang
on for dear Hfe as the rolling antiques
lurch over hair-raising grades, the relics
have been at it since Aug. l, 1873.
car barn -was certified a national
landmark.
Jast In case, however, anybody gets an
idea to sUU the brass bells or Sen Fran·
cl!lco's six-ton rolling landmarks, he
should be adviK'd that Mrs. Hans
Klussmann stands in the way.
'·They are the most m.arvelooa asset we
have," said l\1rs. Klussmann, who has
fought since 1947 to keep the cable mut·
tering beneath the pavements.
Occasionally, when attempts are made
to cut back cable car service. "word gets
out and every San Franciscan is alerted,
binge, and in a rew years eight com·
panies ~·ere operating 600 cars over 110
miles of track.
Cable car systems, many using patenl3
flrst put to the tut in San Francisco,
sprouted in Los Angeles, Oakland.
Kansas City, St. Paul, Omaha, New
York, Melbourne, Australia, Great Bri·
tnin and elsewhert.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. RMald iwaan has tign.
6d ltlJ&l•tlon lnmulni lhe 1lale'I ...,trlbullaa to counlJ-
1ctmlnlal•red' IOlter ..,. Jl'O'
grame from llO to $JJO per
month per child.
'Ibo lqlslalloo wtll help ....
Ibo local ...-IY Ill borden
bY trullfml~ .. eoUmatlcl fl~ mlllloo a year In ..u
from the counties to the lllle,
lletll114 .. Id.
Asaembtywoman Y v o o o e
Bradiwall• Burke, a Loi An-
gei.t Domo!'ral elected to ~ NOY-7, Is autbor ct
the bill
JAHUARYCLEARANCI
B.ALD"WIN PIAllOS _. OHMS
Cemented in the folklore of the. city,
cable cars have endured virtually urt·
changed for a century , racketing along at
a steady nine miles an hour -the speed
or an endless steel cable t:M:neath the
avement.
lT TAKES TUE CITY six months to
build one of the brightly painted wooden
cars, a $35,000 item complete with run·
ning boards, fancy joinery and lots of
shiny brass.
-. .. -1i·ord~yers-uur-u1ul
et,er11 Sf1Ja f~r1111t•is(•or1 is
aler1e1I, 011d tltere Is a
general 01<tery tl1at goes
clear aeross the eonntry'
TODAY, WITH SAN FRANCISCO'S
l\1unicipal Railway operating 28 c~ on
lhree lines, reportedly the only other
cable car companie eft are in Hong K1!11lLfil1lLJll<W'~~j}-;;;;:;;-;;;-;;;;.;;;~--:::-~~t:or::.~ .... ;;;;;;:;:;;;:~;;:..~ The oldest of the 26 cars in service
here is 75. But the cables that power "Know what, Mammy? You should've given me a.
them are of Uic most modem design, bigger glou.. H
formed by six strands of 19 wires each.
They stagger up and down some JO
lmiJes of track over three lines, toting 10
1million passengers a year at 25 cents a
head. Some rid erS' ge\ thrown off on
·sharp curves, while bug-eyed survivors
~risk getting plastered by cars as they sit
·in outside, exposed sections.
· The trolleys regularly get into spec-
.tacular and somelimes deadly crashes.
piling up doums of vehicles, smashing in·
to each other, or sliding majestically
•backwards down a hill as vintage brakes
refuse to hold. Last year, cable cars
were involved in 496 accidents, costing
:the city $253,000 in injury and property
claims.
1 But they have survived despite , the
~reat 1906 earthquake, the alarming
crash rate, an annual deficit or near $3
'million, and periodic assaults by critics
who blast the ancient clattertraps as a
nuclear-age anomaly.
NINE YEARS AGO, -THE entire
system -carS, track!, turntables and
and thel'e is a general outcry that goes
clear across the country," she said in an
interview,
P.1RS. KLUSSMAN, CHAIRP.1AN of the
centennial observances, said meetings
and assorted celebrations Will mark the
cable cars' first century all year. u•ith
most activities to be concentrated in the
first half of August. They'll include as·
sorted speechmaking, partying, ~a big
c_ivic luncheon and mu ch eulogizing. A
special medallion will be minted.
The old rustic cable car has clattered
through the years nearly unchanged from
what was presented to the unbelieving
people of San Francisco at 5 o'clock in
the foggy morning of a day nc<tl'1y " ct<••· tury ago.
From a seven-block start between
Kearny and Leavenworth streets,
San Francisco plunged into a cable car
The cable costs 70 cents a foot, and the
system uses at least double the 10 miles
served.
The entire system amounts to a livil!g
comic strip, like the time everybody bUt
the victim got a laugh as the car went
careening around a hairpin turn.
"Hold on tight' " warned the conductor
-just before he flew off into the street.
ONE COIJ.EGE COED BROUGHT the
cable car system to a halt most of an
afternoon in 1965 when she refused to
budge from the outside running board,
assaulting tradition that only men could
ride there. Finally tradition bowed, and
women got the right to ride outside.
A city charter amend ment guarantees
that the cable (:ars will never come to
1he "end of the line" in San Francisco,
no matter how advanced and streamlined
life becomes. As the Municipal Railway
historian put it:
"It is through operations of the cabte
cars that we are able to remember and
preserve· the ·wonderful age that is gone
except In fond memory:"
I See by Today's
Want Ads
He's a Radieal
Superviso r Fights System
•
State May: Nix .
Ratification Bid
LINCOLN. Neb, (AP) -
Nebraska, one of the first
stoleJ to ntUy the equal rights
for women amendment, may
change its mind and withdraw
its approval.
A reaolution reversing last
year's action was introduced
in the legislature Wednesday,
and was promptly denounced
by the body's only female
member, Sen. Shirley fl.1arsh
of Lincoln.
DEBATE ON the resolution
was deferred.
Sen. Richard Proud of
Omaha, chief sponsor of the
resolution, told a newsman the
Constitution already provides
adequate guarantees against
female discrimination.
•(Discrimination does exist.
but not because of the
Constitution, but because of
''IT'S NOT ONLY
superf1uOUJ but createa no end
of conlroversy. It raises que s·
lions (lf women being forced
to serve in the military and
things like shari,ng restrooms
with men.
"I thinlt women are alreody
1guaranteed equal protectloo.
States have passed many laws
on the .ubject and they've not
been held unconstitutional.
"Whether I'm r i g b t (lJ'
wroog, the whole lhin8 ahould
be reconsidered."
MARSH SAID suggestions
women will be drafted, Une up
with men for physical ex-
aminations and s b a r e
bathrooms "are scare tac·
tics."
FURTHER REDUCTIONS
tSALE! ' 25-50% OFF
& MORE!
SOME MERCHANDISE
BELOW COST.
SWEATERS! PANTS!
MAXIS! BLOUSES!
HANDBAGS! ACCESSORIES!
JEWELRY
50"/. OFF • . . & MORE!
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -munity," he said. people," Proud said. "The
Nobody paid much a'.tention to Wlth hair near ~boulder amendment Just n1uddies the
Nebraska's unicameral on&-
house legislllture ratified
the women 's rights amend·
ment March 23, the second
state, alter Hawaii, to do so.
I .
-I SOfl.fETHtNG 0 L 0 .
SOMETHING NE\V in
this ad. Old Majesllc 6
burner wood lltove, $125.
P erteet for a cabin. Nl'\v
5 foot fiberglass bathtub &
splash $75.
J . Patrick Liteky's candidacy length, the 32-year~ld teacber1_w_a_ter_s.
until he wa s arrested ht a used a bicycle and a motorcy·
highway. blocking, antiwar cle and spent only $3,000 to
protest and walked like a Pied convey his message to con-
Piper 35 miles along the San stituents scattered throughout
Lorenzo River pointing out mountainous redwood forests
-/ STUDENT SPECIAL: 1 pollution. around Santa Cruz. His s1dary
----~,~~t,\l.dio. _witb....pcil;ate. But no.w: lek)o,.__;1...Jon:ncr-as..-!-s~rvisoLiLl10...4l6_a
enrranee in Comna del
Mar. $90 a month.
Catholic religion teacher and year.
conscientious objector, has DURING THE CAl\tPAlGN,
he got married, published a
\\'ORI\: right on 2 n{'ar·
new 3 drawer desks, \1•al·
nut, 2 swivel chairs, Inn,
OllvetU Undrr1vood t>l<'<'·
tric: typ(!\\•rltcr, niodt•I
Edi1or 2 for $250.
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
taken olflce as a Santa Cruz
HE SAYS llE is ready :o do
"'ar \Vith developers and to
phase out the Miss California
beauty pageant -one of this
coastal area's claims to fame.
"\Vhen I started cam·
paigning, nobody t<Y.>k me
seriously, not even the six
other candidates." Litcky
recalls .
•·r-.1ost people had the !'llage
of me as a hippie and it ~as a
negative factor until I talked
with lhem. My message was
one of vlta~concern for the en·
vironment1 and I gave it to all
levels or people in the com·
JANUARY CLEARANCE
· FABRICS
PRICES GOOD THURS. THRU SAT.
DOUBLE KNITS
1oo r. POLYESTER 60" WIDE DESIGNER LENGTHS
JACQUARDS-MULTI-TONES-PRINTS & SOLIDS
WIDE VARIETY OF BEAUTIFUL COLORS
YD.
ROBE FLEECE DRAPERY
SNUGGLY & COMFY ASSORTED WEAVES & COLORS
<5" WIDE FASHION LENGTHS 45" WIDE FASHION LENGTHS
77' YD. 39' YD.
BONDED KNITS
ON BOLTS 60 " WIDE-IDEAL FOR
PANTSUITS, COATS. JACKETS AND MANY OTHERS
• 99'vD.
BRUSHED DUCK JERSEY
DENIM PRINTS PRINTS
~,.-.s" Wid• On Bolts I 00 ~. Cotton, 45" Vivid Colors, 45"
G ivt1w•y Prices Wide, On Bolt.\ Wide, On Bolts
$1~~ $1.~~ $1~~
.fabrifie · Now in Costa Mesa
841 W. 19rh at Placentia -
Cosla Mt,. ·• PhQoo 645-7832 ·
Optn Sunday 12 'Ill 5 FABRIC-CENTERS
o p:>e , en
silkscreened his own car
bumper strips when he went
broke .
Liteky even applied for food
\\'elfare to find out first-hand
whether the food is :lUtrilional.
He says it isn't.
He was jailed after obstruc-
ting State Highway 1 W.th 132
others protesting the Haiphong
harbor mining in Vietnam. But
he also donned a suit to give
his views al election teas.
The November e\ectior. tally
showed him beating SO.year-
old incumbent George' "Hout"
Cress by 1,500 votes, .1ut of
15,000 cast.
COMMUNITY
for environmental protection
and strong support from UC
students at the Santa (:ruz
branch is rated the winning
mixture in Liteky's can1paign.
He figures his victor l brlngs
to three the number of liberals
on the five-member board that
governs the county on PAon-
terey Bay south of San Fran·
cisco.
"The people in Saitl3 Cruz
as a whole are ready for
change .'' said Liteky. fornier
religion department head at
Archbishop rititty High School
near Sen Jose .
The first change came wt.en
Liteky requested, and receiv·
ed. a jeep to better reach his
constituents, instead of an air
conditioned sedan like the ones
his fellow supervison: drive.
THERE WAS A board battle
over the jeep request, 1:-ut
Liteky said his fulute fighta
wUI revolve around "the quali·
ty of life here."
High on "ils ~ ~f roes, he
said, are the Pacific Gas &
Electric Co., seeking to build a
nuclear power plant five miles
on the coast at Davenport: the
Hilton Jfotel chain which plans
a 28-story hotel in an
oceanside cypress stand, and
the Santa Cruz City Council,
which Liteky said Is "hell·
bent'' on all-0ut progress .
• •
SALE
• with
Think
us
JEa,n •tnhl
WISTCLIH Pl..UA
171'11 & ,,.. .... "...,... .....
W , d • • I _ lLve_' one __ it_agmn. __
Every one of our Fashio n Pork, and Worsted-Tex suits is being offered at two,
for the price of one! Here's absolutely top quality clothing, first dos tailoring,
and all suih ore fine 2-ply worsteds. A golden opportunity to get two great suits
for the price of one. If you don't need two, bring some one to share your savings.
LOS ANGELES
HOILSCHll'S
WIWifte & ,.,_.,. ..
HllM H ... t
fJIJ, '17..0JSt
HUNTINGTON 8EAOi
HOILSCHll'S .... ,..._.,
17 'H-C.....
... • 141..pr
(7141 ltt.3174
Famous Maker
2 Ply .Worsteds
$145. Fashion Part Suits
2 FOR $145.
$128. Worsted·1'•x Suits
12 FOR $128.
....... CN4lt ............. 11 ........ ·-·-lllwN ' --...
m3 Bristol St.
South Coost Plou
Coate Mes•
HOIUCHO'S
GLENDALE
HOILSCHll'S lht'•
ALHAMBRA
HOILSCHll'S ....... 111 a. c ............. tll ...... 11 ........ . 241 ....... lfNet .........
COSTA M&SA
HOIUCHO'I
.JJ)J ....... It,
S.m CH1t"9H
1714} MMt40
--. tllll 'Mt.1171
. ...... .
111•1 m.u"
,. · ANAHllM
HOIUCHll"I Y11•1 _,, .. ,_._.
, ...... .c.e.
17141 17....,.1
· OllAflO'E ' "•111VIRSIDI•
HOIUCttn'S Mt ..... <MIM
llM M. OfMp M.11 · ·lUI M• -M .. .,....,. D1wa1m
17141 ftWlil 17141 ..... 11.
..
...
'Aid Agency Dying?
Administration Seeks Big EDA Cutbacks
WASHINGTON IAP) -The r--------... l°"t coQfldcnce in his ageocy.
Nlxon administration will But he said it has been sur-
recommend drastic cutback$ cessful in r e J i e v i n g
in the fiscal 1974 budget of the economically diatressed areas
Economic O eve Io pm en t of the country.
Ac:tm.inhtration, one or the government'• more prominent THE EDA HAS made hun-
grant-b14.id programs, souroes dreds of grants to local com-
aaid Wednesday, munilles, with the assistaoee
If lhe administration has Its going for such things as water
way, aources said, the seven.: and sewage facilities, iJl..
i year-old agency would be dustrlal park development, an·
•-·' <0$ eliminated In favor of the Upollution equipment, streets
" DAIL y PILOT ,..,. ....,. special revenue-sharing pro-and roads, regional airports , gram and health and community Big Athen• €ontract IN ~~G cuts in various racilitieo.
<hl.-.O~y Jill\U~ry }l }(j/J DAILY PILOT
ANNUAL JANUARY 1
REDUCTIONS
TO
11
e.i~-.a. r-.a . . . Hou.s~ and Urban Develop-FINANCE Last October, Ni xon vetoed
-~.,..,,,,.._ustri .. ;-lno:-oHJostrMesa hdi>eerrawa:n!eli-$32.5;0000fa Wntratt---menOprogram.-r~Uy,-u;e o-blll-which would hav" <OA-WI~ an e~ated v.alue of some $6.5 million for engineenng, planning and administration has also c.ited '--------~ tinued EDA's participation in 60% eqwpment 1nstallatien of the Athena launch site on \Vake Island. revenue sharing as an an expanded public works pnr alternative. JXlpular with c o n g r cs 5 . gram calling for public service
1be EDA was created in Originally established to pour jobs in areas or high
Finance
Briefs
Taxable Saws Show
1965 as a successor to the old federal money into financially unemployment. In t ha I
Area Rede v e I 0 pm en t pjnched rural areas of the na-message. Nixon said that the
Administration, which was lion , it received authority agency had shown to be in·
establiahed UJd!r·the Kennedy recently/ to help alleviate,-;:;e=rr=ec=ti=ve=.======;ll
Increase in County 8dmlnistration in 1961 to help economic 'problems in urban1"
eeonomically distressed artas areas.
of the country. Its budget In the current
Robert Podesta, head of the fiscal year is about $300
agency, said he could not com-million, part of which went to
ment on proposed budget cut5 help areas damaged by
THE Sale
Is Now -
enco1ea11?
POR'!1.AND, 0 r e .
Georgia-Pacific Corp. h a s
reported that the Federal
Trade C.Ommisaioo gaVe pro-
visional approval for forma-
tion of a new company from 20
percent or its assets.
Plans to form the new com-
pany were announced in July
after Georgia-Pacific and the
cominission made an agree-
ment in principle following fil-
ing of monopoly charges in
June. e Strike Losses
, SAN FRANCISCO -Pacific
Far East Lines Inc. has an-
nouoced it expects a fourth
quarter loss of more than $3
million because of t h e
Masters, Mates and Pilots
Union strike which began Oct.
25.
President Leo C. Roes said
the loss could go higher if the
strike is not settled promptly.
The companp already had
reported losses or $8211,345
Taxable sales in Orange
County reflected a I a r g e
statewide increase and rose
.22.2 percent from July to
September, 1972. according to
the State Board of Equali:w.-
tion.
THE RISE throughout
California occurred, the board
Food Price
Inflation
Predicted
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Consumer hopes for a
slowdown ln food price in·
nation in l973 have been dim·
med by a new government
forecast lhat prices in the first
six months of the year will
· rise 50 pereent faster than
predicted earlier.
through Sept. 30. AS R E C E N TL Y as e Steel Bike November. the Agriculture
OAKLAND -Kaiser Steel Department had been predic-
C.Orp. has announced price in-ting that Januarr.June, 1973
creaes on its plate, structural supermarket prices would
has reported, due to these eon-
d I t I o n s : • ' Californians'
per90MI income rose during
the first six months of the
year to an annual rate of
$J00.8 billion and by the end of
September was well over $102
for EDA. tropical storm Agnes.
But other soorces said that The EDA's approach, direct
the administration Probably grants and loans to areas. is
will not recommend an ex· opposed by the White House,
tension of the EDA after next which favors -block grants for
June, when legislation that economic development, with
"As conswners express created it expires. If any virtually no string attached.
billion.
Think
.1«»iyc
SHOETREE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA
UPPER LEVEL -546-4791
their confidence in the money is put h;! the budget for The administration believes ~-
economy they are spending EDA, these sources said, it that the EDA approach is too JC II -~ L I\ • OP" S111tdoy, Noo• to 5 P·'"· •
more of their income, making would probably be a token narrow and has too many \.I.All I \Alf\X 10-t, Moltdoy 111r1 Frldcrr.
more purchases on credit and amount. stnngP'odsestat~hed. rted ha WISTCLIFF PL.AV. 10.4 Scrtwrckiy IAJIKA»l•IWI
saving less," the board states a JS repo to ve 17tll a ll"fl N
in its quarterly publication, __ BUT __ T_RE __ P_R_OGc.:..:.RAM__:::.....:i.:.s _:sa:::id.:...::lh.:.at.:.l:::he::...:.Whi='le:..::Ho:::use::_:::has~===='"'==-==-==~========.,...---::=======~
Taxable Sales in California. -----
ORANGE COUNTY record·
ed $1.33 billion in taxable sales
for the . three-month period.
California overall recorded
$13.9 billion, an increase of
17.5 percent, or $2 billion . over
1971 figures for the same
period.
Orange Coast c i t i e s
establi.shed these taxable sales
records : Costa Me:sa : $M.3
million; Fountain Valley: $15
million ; Huntington Beach:
$66.5 million ; Laguna Beach:
$13.1 million; Newport Beach:
$51.2 million; San Clemente:
$10.7 million, and Seal Beach:
$6.7 millioil.
bar and semi finished products average only a~.ut 3 percent 1:' •
· -errective -Jan:..--a)ld-orrtll!-~,..,_.atliec. --~:xeent1ves--
milt products effective Feb Tuesday, however. the
. -. -..
16 • department's director or
Kaiser said the increases et?00.mics, . Don. Paarlberg,,, Meet Slated
nounced by other domestic
producers and are within
limits authoriZed earlier by
the Price Commission to meet
increased cost! since Kasier's
last price hiek more~ than a
year ago ...... e Height Suit
SAN DIEGO -The San
Diego Building Contractors
Association has filed suit
against the city's new 30-foot
height limit on coastal con·
struction.
The measure ·was approved
by 70 percent of the city's
voters on Nov. 7.
perts now believe the jncre~
will be about·4.5 percent. '11lis
means an increase as great as
the one that brought loud con-
sumer protests in the first half
of 1972.
P AARLBERG SAID the
earlier 3 percent prediction
was made before economists
knew of the impact of ·poor
harvest season w.~agier, which
sent prices for grains and
livestock soaring. That boom
was reOected in a December
raw fann product price report
showing prices jumped 5 per-
cent for the month.
The Or:mge County chapter
of the Planning Executives ln-
stittde will host a ladies night
at its monthly dinner meeting
in the Holiday Inn in Anaheim,
tonight at 6 p.m.
Mrs. Helen Lotos, member·
ship coordinator of the Nation-
al Organization for W001en,
(NOW) will speak about the
women's movement and di-
rection,, of NOW in 1973.
For further information re-
garding PEI or the program,
contact Mr. William Krebs
at 543-6569.
JANUARY CLEARANCE
~ OFF SALE
• DRESSES
• FORMALS
•
•
•
•
COATS
AT-HOME.WEAR
COCKTAILS
CAPRIS & COATS
Chorge Card• Wei._ • ...
""".
3424 Via 'Lido e -Newpo_rt Beach
COLOR TILE'S
80 STORE BUYING POWER
SAVES YOU MONEY·ON VANITIES
We agreed.not to mention. lt.e famous brand name, but these
beautiful, first quality vanities represent the full produclion
of a leading manufacturer. Color Tile bought them all at fan-
tastic savings to give you the lowest price po5'iblel
BIG STORAGE
VANITY
A. ·fcnyto c'i.on Oii~ ocryfk top ond
Whai boie.frim~ in gotd. :i:;x 19 inch sir9.
' SPACE SAVER
VANITY ~ On•·pl•c• M1rbl• fol' ind 90ld-hi111lft.d
whit. 11111. H1ndy 2lirl7 i11,'1i11 flh ;-nywh1rt! " •
ALSO IN COLOR TILE'S
VANITY SHOWROOM •••
e a.autiful ~colon! • Simukrt.d 1ne1rble tops,! •
VINYL ASBESTOS
PLOORTIU
°'"""' -1h12 lit. tin ,. · 1 """' .. .,_.... ~.,.
':: .,.:;t-W SG.'.n .
SELF ST(CK SCRUB!IABLE SURFACE
SHAGCARPDTIU · WALLPAPER
ThKt ..,.ioit .. A hug. ~ of ""1yt, pri111
..._ .._, lb 5 9 ~ ond flodi ~ wi• _.,. P'9'
12 A tift ._. . ,. cut-ms! .
Mlit, withovt . SPECIAL LOW PRICES
_,..lk~ SO.:'r· THIS WEEK QNLYf
Just Say "Charge It!"
DOIT
YOURSELF!
1r1 htn. ....., and eMft1
'with the hetp yw ........
CjOlOlTUI
FREE
LOAN OF PROftS.
SIONAL TOOLSI
INSTRUCTION
BOOKLETS
HELPFUL ADVla
COL.01 ·o· .. ,-TIU ...,.
'-.
COSTA MUA-2221 Harbor Blvd.
645-1126
' I
STORE HOURS
Ol'IN SUNDAY -11 o.rn. -S p.rn.
MONDAY, FRIDAY ....o 8 o.rn.-9 p.m.
TUESOAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY ;-I . o.m •• S:JO p.rn.
· · 2L£N1Y. Of .FREE:-PARIClNG.I •• ,. < .. "_., .. " •
. • • '
I
I
I
' • • • > I
-
J D.lll Y ~llOT S T>undl)', ..._, 11, 1973
Monep'• Worth
Small Investor:
Need a Broker?·
8y SYLVIA PORTER
Let'• say you aro a small in-.
vestor lured by today'.s stock
market Into yearnl.r,g to put
some of your nestegg into
stock.s ror capital gains and
protection against inflation.
Btrr LET'S say you don't
have a brok·
er, you don't
JOlftll
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &
Smith -and you don't know
where else to tum .
Q. What do you do?
A. You send a postcard with
your name and address on It
to "Diret.tory,.. New Yor'k
Stock. Exchange. P .0 . Box
1971, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019.
You will receive by return
malt and without charge a
pamphlet giving you the
names or 39'2 New York-Stock
Exchanje member firms
. which aay they are willing and
able to band.le your small ac-
count -and listing what
minimum requiraments aod
criteria that each firm may
have, \
These 392 firms have 3,115
branch offices in 8111 cities in
All iiO slll>~ of •blch 1,111 or
36 perc<nt are l<>caled In 2t
major U.S. cities.
MORE mAN nine out of 10
o( them llY they do not have a
minlmwD dollar requirement
for tbe size of any buy or sell
111• CHR.11 llSISTANT
CONTAINllS -
· CHILD IDISTANT
medJdnes 1.n w t are
"cbUd resistant" conta.tnen:
ll to-1ubltantlall,y cut down
and try to prevent the ever
lncreellng number of acd·
dent.a involving chlldl"E!1' and
drul!I> But.-tllJa purpooe .. ddeeted when a child 11
1lven u empty medldne
'tOntal:ner with wbicb to
play.
It does not take a c::hlld
too long a time ot expert·
mentaitkm to figure out how
10 ~ an empty o:>ntalntr
open. 'l"he next time It could
be one that is tun. GI~
your ch11dren a break and
,blly that extra time a child·
proof container 1tiveK Yo~
when tMy haven't had a
chance to find out how It
Worlu.
YOU OR YOUR OOCl'OR 'CAN PRONE US when you
'fteed a delivery. We wtll d.-
);ver~ptly without ex·
tra A J'e&t m&J\)'
"peopk_ re y on us for their
health needs. We welcome
requtsta fOf' dellvny service
.and cllaf1l;e accounts.
PARK LiDO PHARMACY
U1 Hotpftal ll:Md
NNMtwn ... -rt &w:h '42·1SIO ,,.. Dtllv•ry
1111•-UllU
• IF Ull *
THERE IS A FACTORY
AUTMORIZED DEALER
FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevard
af .. Car•
LOOl POI T .. I IMILIM AT
THEODORE I COSTA MESA ROBINS FORD DATSUN .
2060 2145
HARBOR BL VD. HARBOR BL.Vo.-..
'
1---..--.-•---.-i-
OVER THE ·COUNTEit
" MUTUAL FUNDS
~
I •
I . ' ) . • " •
1•: ' • . .
. '
'
•
' '· • "
• .. ' • • , • • •
I
'" ' i
..
I•
•
.1
.-F
Yor
the
nar
ver:
.. ..
•
W edQesday's qosing Pri~mplete New York Stock Exchange List
: Trading Active,
Prices Steady
· NEW YORK (AP) -l'r!ets were nearly even In
the 1t0<.k market Wednt>day, Wied slightly to the
downside. Trading Wilf 1cilve.
Advancing and declining ilsu" on the Ne•
York Stock Elcch1nge were virtually in balance at
the llart ol trading, but the decllntra pulled Into' a narrow ltad.
-.... -----------M--.J ... '-Ulf~
·1
,, • l. ",ILY lllLOT
•
•
ff DAILY PILOT T""""'1, Ja._ 11, 1973
•
'
--
I
1·
•
-..
·-. -..:------. .. --·-- -
-~-----_.L. ____ __:!!'!!!!!!!!!~ --. ------·-----·
ese.
t----------il~y~ouuccKieecc:KeiCJCiamnvyoonneeooftffiee~a~b~o¥ivee.,1b~e~tt~e~rdch1Ee~c~k-~,--:---r----~~ ~-----~
your cigarett~; too. W~aJike to offer.an alternative. Namely,
· .. a switch-to~t'h~refreshing,taste-ofSalem.:---. .. . . . . . -..
I
.
. l
' ,. ' -' r • . • . -~
I . -
•
-· .1•.• r,
I
Salem$ Natural Menthol Blend refreshes ~
your taste nGt.urally·from : the first puff of the day .
.
to the last.
We insist on using only natural men·
thol, not the kind made in laboratories. Since
our golden tobaccos are naturally grown,
it's only natyral our menthol should be, too .
It ls this blend of naturally grown in·,
gradients that turns ft-le taSfe of coolness into .
a taste that's "naturally ·refreshing:'
A taste that's not scratchy, harsh or hot.
A taste that refreshes like Sprjngtime ...
t. yt• I every 1me ... an. 1me.
----
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
King or Super King.
Salem's .Natural Menthol Blend_
means naturalfy-refreshing taste.·
• •
'
KING. SUPER KING, 20 mg. "tar", 14 ~g. nicotine, av. pet cigareu~ FTC R8pon AUG. ·n.
".· ' . -• ' . .... . -,,. ·~' •,; ' __ ..,... ...... .. -. .,
•
• /
I
' l ' . .
, ---
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tllvr..:llY, Juury II, lt7ll PIM 11
Newspaper Family
S eeds Deliver
Delivering-newspapers is a joint proj-
ect for the Byron Stalons family of
Costa Mesa.
Byron jr .. 15. has a DAILY P0:.01'
route. Dennis , ft, has one· Mid CaTol, 17,
has one ... kevin~ almost !r. helps fold
papers a?d ~~ l~af!:!ing the tricks of the
trade to make his debut at 10.
A bright future for all the young
Stalonses seems to be '·in the bag"
because they've learned the route that
goes. to success.
!See l!llOTO, Page %%1 -·-. ,~
••
Girls
STORIES by JO OIM>N
Of ... Dtolly .... llilff
II you thouiht your paper boy's hair
was getting a llllle longer than nonnal.
take another look. He may be a paper
g)rl lnstad.
Some 40 girls now are under contract
for DAILY PILOT routes, an historic
fil!Uf< !or the Orange Coast where
be!°"', only a (ew girls might lie aeen
substituting for their brothers on an in-
formal -and illegal -basis.
Girls. traditionally, have been barred
from paper routertn CilifornJa ~by
state labor code that prob.iblted females
under the age of 18 from delivering
newspapers in cities with a Population of
more than 23.000.
This was the case, explained Jack
Curley, DAILY PILOT general manager,
because girls were being protected from
molestation and other dancers while
traveling in urban areas by themselves
at nighC. ·
Diane Reeves shows
how to deliver good
service (left), and
is joined by fellow
carriers Gayle
Shields (below, left)
and Donna Veddor
(center) in folding .
Collect on Rule
Coast Carriers Help Write the News
ln June of la~t yeAr, ll Mission Vie;O
resident, t2-yeer-<:1hf'Wtndy Baldwin, ap-
plied for a DAILY PILOT paper route.
was denied because of the statute, and
then filed a complaint with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission.
selected on the basis of their attitude and
capability. then must put up a cash
"performance bond" equivalent to one
month's paper bill, "'ilh a $10 deposit.
Paper routes return an average of $35
per month profits, said ~11\ao Leavill.
DAlLY PJLDT circulation director, and EEOC RULING• . the 965 paper carr iers have on de(,>Oslt
A ruling of the federal EEOC against with the DAILY PILOT $50.137 in savings
-ser discrtminatlon had recently --in---which eams-interttt. semt-annuelly~at
validated -state laws discriminatittg bank rates.
agall)st minors because or sex, so the Girls nnist meet the same work stan-
DAILY PILOT, In the spirit oC the law, dards as boys : papers must be delivered
began on Oct. 19 to offer routes to girls by 5:30 p.m. "'eekdays and at 8 a.111. Sun·
on the same bu.is as boys. Curley said. days in the way subscribers \\'ant them,
Research in the industry showed that and collections must be made in the n1id-
.. a number of newspapers in the midwest die of the month.
had commenced employing girls and in
Canada. 25 percent of the carriers .are O\VN BUSINESS
girls," Curley added. Carriers are in business for
At an annual circulation managers' themselves, Leavitt stressed. "They buy
meeting in Scottsdale in October, reports all their supplies and purchase their
from other newspapers showed that girl papers at a "'holesale rate."
carriers were better bookkeepers and Now that girls have their feet in the .
had fewer distractions, Curley said. door. how do they measurc up as
The potential dangers still ex ist, businesswomen?
however, and these are taken into ac· The opinion of the 26 DAILY PILOT
count when girls arc intervie,ved and district managers is unanimous:
engaged for routes. "They're doing a great job! ..
"We always speak of the possible pro--"Efficiency is the £1rst thing you note,"
blems a girl might encounter:· Curley said Richard Backstro1n.
said. ;'and at least one parent's sir,nature "The service and lollou··through. too.·•
is required." added Gene 1-'uller.
PERSONAL CONCERN
Califon1ia Labor Commissiont'r Albert
J. Rtyff. "'ho reluctantly gave the order
to s1JBpend stale la\rs, told the Associated
Pres.s that he "'personally would be
gravely concerned j f my own daughter
were working as a neu·spapcr carrier on
these dark rtl<lrnings. regardless of a
neighborhood's reputation.·•
To become a DAILY PILOT carrier, a
boy or girl must be at JeaSt 10 years of
age and have the support of parents or
guardians. They are inltrvie"·ed and
"They're more meticulous.'" said Ed
Biller.
liaving girl carriers on the staff
already has brought moments or humor
to the district managers. too.
Backstrom reported that son1e of the
girts became giggly at the slang terms
used by carriers while a group was
soliciting subscriptions -''bird dog" and
"Punch 'em hard" -and had to be given
chewy candy bars to keep them quiet.
GIRLS OR BOYS?
One girl asked her brothers, whose hair
\\'as longer than hers. to substitute when
she was sick. and her customers thought
the new carrici"s were her sisters.
Costa Mesa's Lori Howard reports that
she gets a candy bar every day from one
of her customers.
Tbe crucial test for girl! as carriers
.,,. ill come when they have to st.art ac·
cepting routes thal are a distance fJ'Olll3
he1rnome,-l..c"TVitfs:ala~w-----
deliver in their own neighborhoods. Some
or 1hc routes in Laguna are more dlf·
fiC'UJt because of the steep hills, so tbcse
will present another chAllenge for the
gals.
Mcan\.\·hile, glrl carriers are winning
acclaim for themselves, as customers
such as those on Diane Reeves' Hun-
tington Beach route will testify:
"You can't get a be t.t er one
than Diane,'' said J . F. Johnson. "Sht'a
the best y.·e ever had. You can't beat her
-I'll be honest with you."
"She's been superb,'" agreed Mrs. Win-
nie Sopha . "She even puts the papers by
the door ."
GOOD WORK
The girls" bosses are happy with their
"·ork loo, as evidenced by Gene Fuller's
!'Omment : "I'm for the girls, 1'11 say
that."
Backstrom is looking ahead, however ,
to problems that might occur in the
future : "\Vhat "'iii "'e do \\1th the girls
when they start showing up in lheir
bikinis in the summer?"
All kidd ing aside, the gi rls have made
a good showing for themselves now that
they 've gotten the chance to deliver on
their promise of good work.
All except Wendy Baldwin, that is. The
irony of the whole story is that she's still
"'ailing for a route to open up in her
neighborhood.
•
Mom and Dad help fold papers \\"hen
they're home and drive the routes when
ifs raining or someone's sick. Stalons
also works for the DAILY PILOT on Sun·
days.
The family also is united in its efforts
to help Carol finish a correspondence
course for the airlines and to help the
boys build ~ nest egg for their education .
A Smile 13i:id Thanks Her Pay
Carol, slightly embarrassed lo~ found
delivering papers at such an ".e(d" 'age,
is a fla g twirler and A stu~l at Costa
Mesa l~igh School. She geeded extra
money to pay for her corre~etfee
course and the paper route fi( her time
schedule well. ,
Bvron and ·Dennis also are helping-pay
for "the course, but Carol aSsures them
that they \\"ill be repaid whon" she goes to
work next fall. After her gradualion from
CMHS she will attend a special airlints
school in Inglewood, then work· "on the
ground " as a teletype operator, ticket
agent or hoste~. "'
Carol usually delivers her papers on a
bicycle but sometimes asks her boyfriend
to take her in his car.
"You guys give me the pokiest bike,"
she told her brothers, whose bicycles she
borrows.
She admits she wiU be glad when
Kevin ls old enough to lake her route:
a.trs. Stalons is glad for Ute routes
--be<au...-11-keep!d1erllOllS-tlllsy !Ind o!!
the street. They also are actl'ie ln,:sport.1.
so their schedules are Jul1.
Byron and Vi Stalons, former Missouri_
residents, admitted they are very proud
or their crew or paper carritrs because
of their achievements during the pas!
two years . Byron has l>een on tbe llonor
Roll for 25 months and Dennis has
chalked up bis 12th mooth oo. the hon-Or
list
(Carriers can make".1.hc hor,or roll b)
-signing up four or more·-new customers
d'uring the month. holding ~ustomer com-
plaints to one or none durmg the month
and paying their paper bllls by the n"1
of the month.) ..
Trailer courts can 'be a 1problem when
it Comes to newspaper delivery.
They may be i.sola~· from housing
develoPments anct too. fir for a paperboy
t<{ service, or too mnalJ .. to wamnt a
~eparale route.
Harbor Mobile Homelj', a park on the
edge Of Costa Mesa overlookin'1'NeWport • Beach. had this problem until Gladys
Healy volunl#.red to take the route with
just a ''thank.you" as her salary. t
A retired government \lo'Orker, Mrs.
Healy folds the 14 COP.ies of the DAILY
PlLoT she receives each day from Gene
~"Uller, her district manager, tben walks
afound the park delivering t.he.m to her
neighbors' doorsteps.
"This little end was getting le(t out,"
she explained. "And I enjoy the walk."
The Conner reside~t o(' Mojave Desert
says her "customen" are friendly and
talk with her aa she dellven the papers.
ltls a good chance !or Mn. Healy, a
widow Who lives alone. to talk to her
nelgbbon and meet new. residents of the
park.
"Maybe l can get a new subscriptton
or two/' she added. '11 didn't ask ?<tir.
FuUer if there are reimbursements."
Costa-?wtesa 's oldest 1'papet bOy" may
build her route into an official one if
' those neW' "staru"' do came through •.
. Then sbe"ll have to come ®!'Of retire-
ment for sure.
And by the way, Mrs. Healy. you 111JJ1
rest assured. There are reimbuflemenLI.
Though not en
offieial .carrier,
Gladys Healy delivers
the Daily Pilot in
her mobile. home perk.
It's a 9ood chance
to say hello to
neighbors, she says.
.... •
. 1
'
•
I DAILY PILOT
~·· .G
·, Daily Newspaper Deliveries : A Family Affair 1 Whoever happens to be around when the papen; are delivettd Jels carriers and are ass!sted by tbelr father, Byron, a Sunday news-
! in on the fun of folding and paeking them for the routes setviced paper employe. 1 '
• by the Stalonses. Byron, Carol and Dennis Oeft to right) are all • •.
I
'Secret' Mislabeled
, Her Hidden Jreasures
•
Aren't Worth So Much
' By ERMA BO~ "Say it. !l's • beat·•P old
' )'ve always been taught that model with the bottom rusted
to have a SIJCCOlslal a!irrtaae. AT ou t. And thJs 'f\lmil ure, I aup-
you and your husbml bad to pose It has a story to tell you.
keep back !Orne little secretl WIT'S Just take olI the slipcovers
from one aoother .• Just to END and Wldemeath you'll find a keep tt lntere!tlng. very insecure woman coming
I've.managed to bold bade a unglued. I saw you looking at
fetr aoodJes •• lib I bit the the garbage the otlltr day.
head oH a goldfish wber'I l was ·traits and drives can be found What were )'OU thinking?'~
three and was rm fh>m my in the foods you eat, and that "That we were the only tjobJOLw.adlli-dim...u~body...gpeak&-a..Jansuaga..-.l•mil¥1 oo lh~JLl!'l!Q has_
die shoes. all. ill own. (If you cross your eight garbage cans ancr-a
But, frankl y. !l's gettlng lep~t.uie ankles, you~e Jone. disposer."
tougher and tougher to keep . ly a.nl! iat coltage cheese for "It's gone, isn't it ?" I said
alive the aura of mystery breakfd.) dt;jectedly, m~ shoulders
-~ me. . Ev e.r y s e-1 !-respecting slumping, "The mystery ..
A psychologist in Mlcbfgan magazine and newspaj5er car· the intrigue that once held our
, bas sald the way you decorate rJes a daily horoscope and one marriage together.''
your house can reveil your guy in New York was even ''Not quite,'' he said ~ge, marital status, aelf-asser· going around" sifting through "There's ,still the secret of
tion ~staJus ~ho garbage of celebrities · to your age. Are you somewhere
h A~ a ·~~, ..... ~ ~.1 detennine wbat kind of people between birth and death?"
as J wn 8 00 5 tiley really were. (I think 811 "Who finked?" I said angri-Y~.r Volkswagen a ~ Sym-be discovered was that M3yor I
bol con~ds your choice of a Lindsay bated b r us s e I s y.
car CllJI Up off your oecret Ille sproulJ.)
and self-unage. 'k Other researchers have "ls there anything you'd h e
discovered your personallty to know about me?" I coyly
asked my husband lhe other
Soft Looks
day. t~ ,.
$ Seminar · Planned
't . •j The fifth annual secretarial
1 seminar sponsored by the l :Bahl& Chapter of the National
··Secretaries Association in ~ cooperation with Orange Coast
the Science Hall at OCC. Pets' Traits Mastere.d "No," be said. shuffling
through the paper.
"You think you know
everything about me, don't
you?"
Long blunt "Cllt hair hois ii
sort look when ii is center·
parted and 1 waved on each
side. To do it, section wet hair
into one-and ·a-balf in c h
squares and blow dry, tu ming
it under.
t
Evening College will begin at
8:30 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 27, in
• ~BRASS Rl8' ~DhtfM .... S..rt . W•••~111y
• Norm•ft Wiatt e Bleyl•
Al.a Golt W"r
2711 E•t Coelt HWf.
C°'"414-'lil• I
671-4741
Dr . Rita Huff, professor of
accounting at Sam ttoUston
S(ate Uriivers ity, will open the
seminar with a talk on New
Horizons for the Certified
Professional Secretary.
Next on-the agenda will· be
Jan Dunlap. director of the
SeU Management lnstltute in
Santa Monica, discussing The
Exceptional Woman. Sarah
Engle, a graphoanalyst, will
demonstrate handwriting an-
alysis during lunch.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell me
~
"' . '
" ' ·~ /
"l didn't say that."
"What has my car been
saying about me ?"
"Don't be ridiculous."
Shorter chin-level hair on
either side of the part is 'dried
last, held with a comb behind
each ear.
lfG SALE
NOW
should stand OD Mldltpa Aveaae la Wbat you ab>llld bave suggested was ttrlbaamlae.
IN PROGRESS ! Your Horoscope Tomorrow
225 E. 17th St. -COSTA MESA
541-2771
e l •llllAIMl"IC•f1t • • M111Hit Qwfe •
Capricorn: Meditation Helpful
I . •
I
JANUARY
CHILDREN'S
WEAR
SAVE TO -50°/o
GIRLS : Dresses, Sports Wear
Sweaters
BOYS: , ..... T·Shlrts
Knit & Raanel Shirts
1058 lrwlne-Nt wport IHch
Wettcllff l'losa
..
BOXED
CHRISTMAS
CARDS
Amt!'lc-.i •l'Wllfttt
HC ClllffnlMI Artl1fl , , ,
112-PRICE
'I '..., .. • CANDL!
'HOLDERS
e 6-rc. c ... m Seti e CoteMlc NII fNfl •••• ,,..,....... • .,.,, he.,..... Atif'""
~.PRICE , ___ _
ALL CANDLE
RINGS NOW 99~
.... ....... U.11 lldft.nqfo
WINDOW 1/.
STICKIRS 72 PRICt
. e M1tN,. Ctrll ...
als
PRESCRIPTIONS & PATENT MEDICINES
YES.!
WE (j)UOTE PRICES
ON THE TELEPHONE
call: ~ 642·4104
~.~·-I
MEDICIHI SHOP
ltO L 17ft' ST. AT TUSTIN AVE.
. Nnt le ....... Mkt.-Coita M.,. -.,.,.. rrt. t ~6-Stl. 9 to L
I.fl!!!!• s1relch·s1i1ch se'Winq machine. Select
s1ra1ght , tl,g·t ag and 1tretch-sUtch patlerns.
Blindslilch pauern. EicchJaive §i!IW front
drop· in bobbin. Model 41 3.
SALE 139°0 11ea-1411"
Carrying case extra.
' .. .
Touch A S.w• sewing machine. lh•s lrulv
supert> zig.zag sew1nQ mactune otters a full
ninige of stretch and rashion s11:ches. Exclu-
•i¥e .§LnQ§!' push-bunon. lront d1op·in bobbin.
Many other fe11.1uuts. Model 756
SALE 269°0 Reg.299"
Carrying case ex11a.
SINGER
'A T.-.d•m11~ of
THE. SINGER COMP A NV
Sewing C e nte r•
and par1lclpatln9 ~pproved d eal41 rs
A Cr$0il Plan to flt your budga1 is ava1!ablo et Sirlger Sewing Cenlers
M1ny approved dea!e1s also otrer anract1ve cred1t 1erms
For addre'a ol atore or dealer nearest you, see the yellow pa~es under SEWING M.ACHINES
conA MllA ....,. . ., .. . • .......... ,... ltrlllol • aurtfltWW ......... 5olllll CcHIU P .. Ui HVNTINOTOH 11.ACN 11 $1'1.nnon l•ll
.......,., E.lllnttl' t i t ..cn "'*"' ~~'"""
COSTA MllA H11r1tl119loll hid! ttn~
' ' .
•
WJI Oil riiln, C:li1119i COili'ITY P
JJMflt
'
•
AMIUR
TUMBLEWEEDS
~A YfSt.Jrrr~~~T'P~ Jj
9 M.•llNOCKOVEI\ Mt«.12 NOON: l
'HEIST MAIL S11\11E.2 P.I(: RIP·OFF 1 j ·
GEt4'RAL S!ORE (SWIPE HORSE 10 ;
-""'K-uJO'fMl!M.+iJelNE'(·HeME1 ")---
WHILST ruJslUN' CA1'fLES EN POOTE! I
I
1-11
MUTT AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
ACROSS 48 Addison's
1 W•terlront partnl!f
struc1ure 50 Pressi ng
5 Fnend. in appliances
tll1tb S!--M-.de-9
10 Cov&r with study of
concrete 54 Rockl1sh
14 Surface 55 Col'lditior'!al
measurement clituse5
unit 59 Ma1culine,
lS Acuess for one
Lesiie-63 .4sian monk
16 Consumer -64 Mens.: 2
17 Make holy words
19 A'Clor 85 Ran~
Fi';,nco-SflCtton
20 Gu11rantee: fi7 lilSMI
Vir. fe11ture
21 Small floral 68 Crv of
bunches revelry
23 Doctors: 69 Oep1rted 18 Builds 47 Allowed 10
Informal 70 Small 22 Mu1tcal note have
25 Rrve1 of Quantity 24 Trappirog 49 Corsage·s
Africa 71 Valley device re!ati~
2ti Improper DOWN 26 Steel 51 College
30 Entenainflt 1 Stiide girders i;1uden1'1
34 B11g 2 Image
3S River of 3 Birds
V Nine·pie<:e quest
compotitlon S3 Sorrow
Yorkshire 4 Star1 s anew 28 Italian 55 Fanniog
37 Narrative 5 Give in •utl'lor implement
38 •· Margret: 6 Blemi-&h
At lrl SS 7 A1ian nation
29 Rows 56 S~k
31 City of Afrlc,m fmli:itdly
8 Made pro-32 Miu l 9""1 57 Pomnt
I
\'MAT '>t>UR
SOUND SNORING I BAAlllER?
PEANUTS
.,,
by l>OllCJ Wllcley
by Tom K. Rffn
YallLYt~! lilW11Wf 115 VA WUW:> <J Ill\ OLP
SAW:'PA 'esTT'INGS IN LIFE IS Fm'! .
by Al Smith
I DON'T
SNORE!
by Dale Hale
1l • I !
~i
by Emit Bushmiller I
·JUDGE PARKER
'
DOOLEY'S WORLD ,
\WIO
M E' UP,
Wlt.L VA,
OOOUil'?
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MUWNS
,
...
. ,.,,_, .. _ ... ---
ANIMAL CRACKERS
.. ~----...
by Harold La Doux
39 Oleo, butter,
etc. gress: 2 33 lakH r... 58 GrMk portico MISS PEACH 42 F1MCh WOfdS
f!!Of'OUn 9 Partial
36 AirPort 60-. Bifd
J\ecessity 61 Chemical
AJ. Soak.1 hemp 10 Biting 40 Game bird compound
45 Group of
animals
<46 Heron
I '
"
17
N
!'li. i'l· '!'::
" ,, " " " • ..
t , .
" " " '
" ..
'
2l
11 On a cruise
12 E.1tceed1ngly
13 God of love
II' 6 '
" II
•>IM
"
41 CommercilC 62 Fetldiny
fishing ge&r 65 Bladder:
44 Maid Prefix
• ' IO II 11 " " It
" " 2'l 30 ll .. " .~u "5!i ~Jt «i 41 a
44~ ~ (/
49 l'iit'° 51
" " ' " " ••
" ~ " .. .. " "' " w I: ' ,,.
•
j
I
i
I •
1~.X™INI< rr'S IN'IE01TNO-"TWAT'leQ An
A~WAY~ SM'JNGr ~I' NCt<& TM.IN 'llX-( <IN £H'W1 Nf0
P\IT'TlMG Y~F INTO A ~TION IN WNf()4 ~ -~MD 'fl) l'A/1-.
:..-:~ I~ l'1' TM.lT You.
llN.IOY FA~~r ?
DICK TRACJ
BANGED UP.A BIT, 8UT TME
MOTOR seEMs Ot<AV.,
I
\
by Mell
by Chester Gould
•
-· J....,,. 11, 197)
IT' OtDN'r
~.CE MUCH
,.,.,~'I: "l"'M IS 11"°''"
r-
DAILY PIL OT 23
by R119er Brocffltlcl ' ~
l :t v-..... I .)CJ..,._
~> U'P /fl\'( • WAAltANT'f f, 1tJ erF£cr !
I
I
!
by Gus Arriola
.A ,.)./.llJV5
CAsl!f rr
APF'f!A/1!!5 ,,, MV
MM11.v //IS~ S>JTJ!;
SV
()JSTA/VT
COUSl/tl !
.A J.ITTLE ooe,
~
by Ferd Johnson
,): · .
.I
THE GIRLS
"Oh, I don't bother with coasters auy more -no matter
t.ow many you put ou&.. poople alway5 Id dlelr glal8el
~next to them."
DENNIS THE MENACE
t
• ~. J....,., 11, 1973
mid·season
•
• •
•
Crash
Poodle
Has Home
4 days only ' take your ehoiee:
·MIAMI, Fla. (APl -Tina,
a tJQY white poodle which was
among the lint passe11&en
rescued . from the Everglades
crub of a jumbo jetliner
re(eDl)y, has a new home tn
Key BllCayne.
~lcla SUMez, a niece of
1lzla's owner who was killed In
tlie crash, says her family will
keep the dog as a pet.
nna. the constant com·
panion of Mrs. Evelyn De
Salazar of New Yott, was
traveling under a seat ·in a
( ANIMALS )
amall bo• when the Eaatern
Air Lines jet plunged inlD the
SW1U!>P· Ninety-nine pel'SOlll died in the crub. "
ibltmg ·ud covmd wltb
jet fuel, tbe q ·wu carried lo
a Miami hoepltal aboanl a
Cout Guanf helicopter.
from tbe -Embassy w turned up al bl& farm last
month.,
.. Apparently word bad gone
round ID Greek embassiea that
Mrs. Orulslls wanted a fn~
class 1 pointer and t.tus
gtntleman offered me 11,000
knlner in cub.'' Nielsen said.
''It11 more than I would have
asked for but money is not
everything."
e Horse Laws
•
eeniora
\
~
I •• l ·'
ii
'59.95-64.95 vOlue~ 44.00
•
Twin or Full Each Piece
Settle down, get comfortable and
save! C entura@, our own quality
brand of mattresses and box.
springs are on sale now for a
lim ited limo. Starting Thursday
you'll save on every size from twin
to king. Fea turing extra-1irm
support +nanks to synchronized
coil on coil construction, torsion
bar side and edge supports for sag
prevention and handso me Co.ver
quilted to fo,om for add_ed_,,,,
comfort. 69.95 volue, twin extro
long ea ch piece 49.00
179.95 val ue, queen set, 132.00
249.95 value, king set, 192.00
Sleep Shop, 69
.. l
1
,
' .'
" j:
•
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
govemment bas proposed
~ fer putting into ,;.
feet a d law pwed by
1--~-!ollll---....... from ~. capture and otber
'
~.-.. -·····
"l1ie 'iqulllfonl were
pub!!-by tbio Deplrlm
of 1alerlor and Agricultme
IJl'!ll'!d -lUllllb!g looee ~ Puiillc llDdl, I _....., algned ... \:. r. l~;Pl-~esldent N)"°" .
unilel'·thi ·l'UI.,, open for
pubUc: eomment unUI Feb. '· penaW.. of up to 12,000 In
fines: and one year in jail could
be levied against anyone who
wtUfully captures, removes,
kil1I «sells horses and burros
romJq free In national f...-, parl:s and otber
federal land.'l.
e Shelters Ellftl
LOS ANGELES (AP) -CllY
COllldlmen have tentativelv
approved a bond meUtn for
the Aprll S primary dection
ballot which would provide for
the eipenC!lture or $10.33
million to replace four of the
city's animal shelters and add
ID a fifth.
The action was taken on a
unanimous vote.
ePet Drunk
WEST ARDSLEY, England
(UPI) -Mrs. Patricia
Wheeler said she is giving up
making home-brewed wine
liecauoe her pet t.rrier Suzy
bu developed a taste for It.
When Mrt. Wheeler brought
allin_S Suzy lo a vet.rin•Man,
he dlapooed the dog's mnesa
u alcollollc pol!onlng.
J\We .. flt9 Tale
·SINGAPORE (AP )
Slnppora'a Guppy Club and
et Fann .-cl an elephant Iii<· Ille tm Carnival Trade
Fili', so they orranied for •• ,.,...,,.. Bala lo walk clown _..,.... .
..
•
' t!rpDlms uld Ille elephant • . NEWPORT HUNTINGTON IEACH OkANGE, MAL~OF Ok,\NGE
mlde lbe 11e1 .lfoot!!!!!i--...i!ULn"°"..l.ll~,,...,.,__---"-'-""". U.aaklu. '"'" 111•1 644 t21a 1m..f1Uft~"""n.:=:f11~-t:.ttt!l.H1 NtWr:trt•fflt'JJt1
trailer Um. flilii oa.t $HO; 10 A.M. t• t :JO P.M, MO_NDAY. ™~OU;;; F91DAY.-SATUllDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 .NOON to 5 ,.M,
'
•
collector's cabinets ••• each
features lots of room for your
curiosities, hidden storage behind
simulated carved doors and an
overhead light. Choose a fruitwood
finished mirror back style or a
Mediterranean beauty with 2
adjustable glass shelves.
c ass1c wing c air ••• e egant y
turned ouf in cane with fri.titwo od ·
lrim .. .Perfectly suited to the
provincials, French or Italian.
Golden rayon-velvet seat cushion.
Pairthem up for
comfortable comfort!
Furniture, 38
.. '
.mw ...... . ...... -' --.. ,....
_ ---· __cu11TOS,-oc-,-~o--~---~-sao Lot c.rtito• ·Mell 121)) 160-04.11
--")--
Sermons'
Reward·
Offered
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
woman bas offered a reward
for the return of her father's
sennons. stolen from her car
the day before his death.
The 28 sermons belonged to
the Rev. Harry K. Zeller, the
daQghter Marie ZeUer said.
She sai~ that he had given her
the papers, representing his
( RELIGION.)
thoughts over 15 years, to edit
pli_or to publication.
They were stolen from her
cooVertible ater that day in
San Francisco, she said .
Mr. Zeller, 57, died at his
home in Claremont. He had
been minister of the Church of
the Brethren a n d ad-
,
1nid·season
plastic
hip1gers
l.'09
Reg. 1.25. Set of B pla st;c dress or
set of 4 plastic suit hangers in cleor
yellow, green or p;nk. By J. W. Scott.
Notio ns, '4-
clearance of
great books
1.00-5.99
Or•g. 2.75-22.50.
A huge selection of fiction and non-
fi ction books on ort, trovel, home-
making, refe rence, etc.
Books, I B
save 20.00
s tereo combo
129.99
Reg. 149.99. Lloyd 's Fm /Am and
Fm stereo rddio, buil t in BSR outo-
matic record c hanger, se parate
t'l 'r suspen~io n ~peokers.
Stereos, Radios, 88
•
..
keystone
everflas h I 0
31.99
DAILY PILOT ;$
Reg. 39.95. Built-in electronic strobe
... never needs fla shcub es. Uses
cartridge film . Triplet lens.
Camera, Shavers, 13
minlstralor ol Pilgrim Place,1••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ~•-••••••••••••"'4;.•••••••••••••••a southern California com-1-
m unity for re t ired
miuionaries.
era: Credits
WASHINGTON (AP I
Legislation to provide tax
credits for parents of pupils in
parochial and other private
·nonprofit schools has been
reintroduced in the House.
The bill was approved last
)'ear by the House Ways and
Means -committee, . ·ba --
laking further 11dion 00 It.
Sponsors of the reintrod1.1ced
measure are the House ma-
jority leader, Rep. Gerald R.
Ford of Michigan, and Rep.
Herman T. Scbneebeli of
Penn syl v a nl a, senior
Republican member or the
Ways and Means Committee.
e Nbon Hailed
HoNoLULu <APl _The mlssy mod IO-speed 8-track famous maker
!~ =~t ~i:;'o~nt .. :~~ doll clothes racing bike stereo c onsole eolor portable
greatest peacemaker in I 00 79.99 238 88 277.88 hl.slory." 2 for • 59c each. • Peale, who stopped here en 1---...mn.;,,..,,.,.king1ouN!Hhe•---.1v~ly young wardr~bes In 1·2-Hib"eol!lor----•--5trirmmnrro-.:dleen' eii!;llleon;eerr.-cen+erpul1t---9-'*"rn--"J1ti5'.->'<iot;-f~l--ffi"'l'irv"1ue:-i!rrgifntHldme.,arlf"r mr-.--------1
Orient, said be deplored the b '· b h · I L ' k d d II ' f d I renewed bombing of North tiful styles including fa shions for ro,,es, com ination c 01n oc,., ,;ic r.eceiver, Ga~rar recor changer, we -Known avorite. 16." io gona
Vietnam; li\Jt said it was Borb;e ... any 1 li/i" doll. s!and: 27" ;n bold 1;me. buil t.in a.track tape player. screen. Sl;de lever controls.
necessary to win the peace. T 28 Sporting Goods, 43 . T erevls lO ns. 72 T elevi:.i-ons. 72 When the peace is won, oys,
Peale added, "Our job is to
get in there and rebuild as we 1••••••••••••••••-always do. We have always1•
rebuilt the world after every
''ar-''
e Bombing H it
SAN FRANCISCO !AP! •
The official newspa per of the
Roman Catholic Archdiocese
of San Francisco has con-
demned the renewed bombing
of North Vietnam, saying the
"Christmas message of peace
and g""!I will has been lg·
nored" by U.S. leaders.
The Monitor said in an
editorial that Its opposition
was shared by 0 every civilized
leader who seeks a just end to
the Southeast Asia conflict.
"If this ls the price to save
face for the rnigbUest nation
on earth, then God help us,"
the paper said.
e Tles Rapped
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) -
An African religious leader
asked Pope Paul VI to aban-
don the Roman Catholic
Church's traditional alliance
'!Ith Portugal. canon ·llurgw Carr ,
~-secretary of the
Nllit\\bl-bal!Od All A Ir I c a
Conlertnee ol Clturc:hu, a!Jo llJ'Ked the Porlugu... t 0
negotiate with leAders ol 1 ..
dependence movements l n
Portugal's A fr t ca n ter-
rilorle1. Carr's l!"'UP includes ~ than 30 "'feligio u s
dOminatlons In A.Crlca.
Carr said lie ,.., making the
a-1 to Pope Paul on behalf ot . 149 million Cltrlstlan.s In
Africa. .
hoover
canister vacuum
34.95
No pulling or tugg;ng ... follows
you on a carpet of air. Tool rock with
set of attachments.
Mojor Appl;ances, BO
c..f'AJd be WU "distmMl!
by the lmprl90ll!DeOl wtthout
trial 1lnce June or SI leaders ---
westlnghouse
2·speed washer
179.95
Save 20.00! Heavy-duty capacity.
Permanent press cycle. Water level
and temperature controls.
Major Appl;ances. BO
•
,
' ii i :
) :
I i ~ ~
' I ; · j
I : ' '
frlgldaire
side-by -side
4-jD;,95
Save 20.00 1 246 lb. frost-proof
freezer. Meo+ keeper, adjustt'lble
shelves and gl;d;ng rollers.
Major Appl;on ces: 80
unltrex adding
inachlne
54.99
Reg. 59.99. Standard I O·key des;gn.
Continuous sub-total, paper tope.
We;ghs only B poun ds.
Stationery, 15 ,
mem-. of I h • OAAl<&E.'lJl>:tl OF ORANGE. 1-~-·~p,.:.,&Yii~nii'""'icllirnnr;Hf---•1100.,;.;.;;:. t;,.,,;,.,;,;,...;,tn.,t-t1+•H-ff..._, 11
Moumblque.• ..
MAHEU" •NEWPORT
444 N. Euc:lid t,, .. , stt>t-n-1 F•1•1to11 hl•11d (7141 6lf:rrrr HUNTINGTON IEACH CER.llTOS
1111 td1119•r ,. ... ,1111• r1ii1 "rr1 'i1r.•2'-'.1rrrr3r-~<1!lfl:,o.,~.,c.i,,T.,,O', 'ir.i, .=iimrrr11r.11111~-----1
SHOP to A.M. tir 9:10 P.M. MONDAY THR.OUGH FR.IDAY. SATUR.OAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 11 NOON to S P.M_
I
•
•
OAIL't PU.Of flWf'SUJ, JanlllfY 11, 1973
TODAY'S
TV IDGffi,JGHTS
l01J G 7::W -'"111e Purple Plain." Gregory
Pock stars In Ulla drama of actloo in lbe Korean
War.
ABC D 8:00 -The Undersea World of Jacques
Costeau. Costeau and •his <livers study effects of
pollution on marine Ute in the Pacific near New
Caledonia en route to a rendezvous with a living
fossil, .the nautilus.
CBS D 9:00 -"The G)'PIY Moths." Barnstonn·.
Ing sky divers disrupt lbe liveo of a family in a small
Kansas town. Burt Lancaster, Deborah Kerr, Gene
Hackman, William Windom, Bonnie Bedelia.
NBC 0 9:00 -Ironside. Chief Ironside investi·
gates...a murder-atlempLwhich. OCCW'S during a
swinging party on the estate of a girlie magazine
editor (Sandy Baron). Barry Sullivan guests as the
, magazine publisher.
• KCET ID 9:00 -An American Family. Camera ,
crews spent seven months recording the day·tCHiay t
lives of a Santa Barbara family for thj.s focus on
a real family problem and joys, as they occur. r-----------------
TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
JANUARY 11
1:11ItDDllJll!l11!1 Ill -
CDlll -
llliop --~ ... n . l'llllldtlpfll1 Altrs. (JJ .. _ ...........
mn.-.,...,, ...
(dr•) 'lJ-..ld'lll11d Iii. Robinson, l<ly
'"""'-
"""B -tcl "'"1 ~"'"''" ..-(drt) '70 -St111rt Whllll'llft, Elkl ........ m""'"""'-m-
t:OO D (JJ cas """"" """' tel (2ir) "'Till ,,,., lllltfll" (dt•) '6:9
-Burt Uncuter, Glne H1duT11n,
Detlorlh Kin, ~UH1m Windom. Bon·
111t Btdtll1. The story ol b111tstorm·
int skydiwrs whose lives 1r1 11ndtr·
scored by even 11e1ter uclt1ment
when they perform owr 1 sm1ll
•
Shaky Botnecoming OCC Sets
NY Digs Paar, But ~ot LA Concert
By JA V SHARBUIT
NEW YORK (AP) -Jack
Paar, the aby, retlrlng lord of
the lato llout, beat hls old NBC
.. Tonight" show lu lhe rafiilgs
here, but lost In Los Angeles
during his debut Oil lhe ABC
Television network.
The Angelenos apparently
preferred Johnny canon by a
Let tho SONllol•o
1.1
Watch Channel
30
ma
SD BLOWS!
Whale Watch
Gruis es
Beginninq Jan.S
Leaving From the
MLllM PAVILIDJI
Weekends. 9 am and I pm
Adults $3, Children $2
CALL 673·5245
wide margin Monday night ,
despite the big publicity
buildup ABC gave Paar1a n~
one-wetk·a·monlh "Tonlte "
ihow •
However, lhe statistical tale
of the two cities, compiled by
the A.C. Nielsen ratings peo-
ple, aren't the last word. They
don't necesurily Indicate the
way things will go from here
on in.
The real corporate sweats
will begin when NBC and ABC
executives sift through the na-
tional ratings and share-<ir-au-
dience samples for all this
week to see how the Paar-
Carson battle is shaping up.
But here is how the New
York and Los Angeles ratings.
supplied by NBC sources.
looked after Paar's return to
the tube Monday night :
-New York, Paar and his
cohost, Peggy Cass, logged an
overall rating of 9.8, which
meant their efforts were seen
in an estimated 600,000 homes;
Carson got a 6.4 rating, which
meant he was seen in an
estimated 390,000 homes.
-Jn less densely populated
Los Angeles, Carson logged a
10.3 rating -350.000 homes -
and Paar a 5.2 rating , which
put him in an estimaled
175,000 homes.
'Godfatl1er,'
'Sleuth' Top
Globe Picks
Paar was vlslbly nervous
when he w11lked on the stage
of ABC's 181h street lllldlo
here to pick up wbtte be left
off ;ifter dcpartlng NBC&
"Tonight" show in 1002.
"WeU . you're very kind," be
told the audlence as it a~
plaudcd his openlng gags
entbusiastlcally. "rm so
scared. But 111 get aver that
quick. But here voe all are on
the great ship Titanic. •1
He noted that "there's a lot
of tal k in the industry about
competition WiJL~<~"';Tl~'!'-+'"" is pretty foolish. You'd ·nk
!hat in a country of 210 million
people. surely there's room for
t~·o or us -me and F.d
Mcri.1ahon.''
For younger viewers who
may know him only vaguely,
he explained : "I'm the gu y
who used to entertain your
fathers and mothers and keep
them up ar night -obviously,
not too well, or you wouldn't
be here."
War111ing Vp
DAILY l'ILOT S!1tf f'lltl9
But he wasn't the Paar of
aid. llis timing was off and his
fans undoubtedly bled for the
guy as his opening monologue
fell down and died. Carson
fans tuning in out or curiosity
may have cheered.
Bill Williams I a·c es the gloves of Tim Adams in
preparation for the big fight in a scene fr<!m "Heav·
en Can \Vait," opening Friday for five weekends at
the lluntington Beach l>Jayhouse.
It wasn't an auspic ious
start. Bui ii takes time to gel
used to new surroundings and
the rh ythm of a new regular Kids Like To Ask Andy·
show. It'll get better. It has lo. __ _
EXclfthle Ori ... C-ty
lltftln'Wt Seit E119111trft10!f.
hlff O'T ... -Se""l.I LI""'
"MAit Of' LA MMCMA''
Exclllllw E11....-.it
N•w HI lllft<lrvM S.•11
Wlfllt9r tf * Ac1...,mr Aw1ntt
"FIDDLE• OH THli lltOOf'"
On Organ
~· CoaJt COUeg• music
pro(eS!Or Dr. JusUn P. CQl.yar
will pmeot a -on
OCC'1 new $12,000 Allen Com·
puter System 300 organ Friday
at 8 p.nl. In the OCC
Auditorium. The loaugural
concert 1s rree 1o 1he public.
The new organ, a product ol
the Allen Orgao Company of
Macungie, Pa.. looU much
like any conveoUonal in--
stniment but i& radically dif.
ferent internally. There arena
pipes, no ranks of oscillators,
no reeds. no spinning disks.
When Colyar plays the keys
Cir pedals he "tells" the com·
puter what notes, chords and
melodies are to come forth.
By dep~ssing different stops
or combination of atops he
draws upon the memory banks
of the computer where
varieties or tone have ~
stored. The result b authentic
organ sound coupled with tm-
precendented tonal variety.
Engineers who built the
organ taped sounds of some oJ
the world's great organs and
fed them into a computer. Jt
rseponded by absorbing
sounds and giving back
numbers which represeDted
the exact electrical wave
shape the computer must
remember.
W1n Dl-V'I
"5HOWIALL EXPRESS"
~ND] ·
• "THE IAREl'OOT EXECUTIVE" ··--m-....... kanus town. 1------------
LOS ANGELES (UPll -
"The Godfather" and "Sleuth"
led the nominees for Golden
Globe awards announced
Tuesday by the lfollywood
Foreign Press Association. "'50UNDE•" ...
lllklnlrd H1rrll 1,..
~.a:cwattli)isney World
W11k1itt1 •:45 · S.S 11115 ··--f:JO (I) ............... ·-(C)l10)_,...
.... (Wn) ..................
Jfl!ICJ Gltn.
Cll ca ..,. Waitw CnMita. ill ""'--.... -m ""==• 1-c*6n, r ----m-
·8 ill., , ...... "A Speel1I Ptr·
son"' Cltltf lronsid1 1n .... stl11tn 1
lllllnftr 1tt1mpt which ot.CtJrs d11tln1
1 SW1nrln1 party an ttlt p1lltl1I
estate of 1 1irlit·b'Pe 111111tl111 tdi·
tot. S.n~ 8.lrcm rueru n th1 lditot
111d Blny Sll!li\0111 IS the OW!Mr·
•llbllshlr. a ww m1mc141 fllkW.
~ ..... ......,., Qmc lie A loot
btJor14 tM ftol ol orrki11 Chln1 faf
• 'firif atlldy ol tht tlllrNn aldl ol
Ille h1 thl woMt tllOSt poplllous 0...-----4t---lllliDG.:-MldltlNplo-AAtonitlli-.111 ...at.. ..... ' ...... -
(j)Tnrll • C.11~111C111
(JJ--
CJ WW'a MJ UM? m, .... ..., ..... " ..... ·--fl!••CllQ'-
II) D --... ;, Mujor f!mT•JlllllllM.ial ·--
I.I'll ....... ,..., Tbl focus il
on tM ,,Wilma and m •• thq
ad111llJ otatr, of 1 nil f1111llJ In
rtlll tiluttlons.kL In attempt to 111-•wu some of thl l1119r questions
•bout mod1m Amirian soclel}'. P'ro-
d1.1C11/dlredof Crai1 Giibert ind Ills
c.1m111 crm iptnt MW1n montlls
rtcordin1 tht dt)'·lo·d•r 11ws of 1111
llVlfl mtmblrs of thl Wi1111111 C.
lovd ftmily of Slnta Bltb1r1, C.11·
foml•.
1"1111 D 0 D Ill !llfill -
CIJ (JJ @J -0 ............ .
(I) ... ,... Ollloll
O Merit: "Thi Hu•111 Jun&'t•
1:00 II (I) n. W1ltlu L111i1 1acomb (mp) 'S4-G1ry M1rrlll, .lln Ster·
11;CUJ1S the W1lton'1 Mount1111 lint Chuck Conno11.
IChool of l11c:hiill lthlltnl md m TmtJ tr Clcueli111rica
th111fms lo c.111st lroubll faf Miu IE) r.rry MUOI!
Hunter, IM tlKhlr. Ht plrtiatllrfr fJ)ltfwr Ttll ~I
tbjlcts lo llllst H11tlll't tNdlln1 -1.-i
lft!l'lrupDlolJ, Wflll ht INrM tlllt 'WI
11tr ms c1o 1111t monw 1o "' m a.c1: ,..,.... Show
lnltrprtlltiont o1 tM MM. Ire 11b tl·l5 II Cilt• J4 fl11 to Ult IChool with honffylft1 '
mulb. ll:JO. (I) ca latl ..... (CJ .. ..
0 111111"' -_..., ....... < ... 1 ·11--· .. ..
Grtffitti, R03C041 lit 8rDWlll 11111 111r, Dilne B1ttr.
Cortis Ml)'IM!d art F11"1 IUISlL fi1 9l fD )tknwf C.l'IOll D1w
D (])@(l)ll9C!lll n..... D""'
... W"14 If ..... c.taM
"500 1111111on Y••rs a1ne11h '"' s..~ D rn rn m *' "'' 11111pt
Clpt. .JKqun Cmt11111nd his dlwrs ID Te Till tile Tnrtll
studp 1flKI! of pollullon on m1rln1 12:00 0 n. ,.,..
Ille in th1 P1cillc ne1r New Cale· m Alfrllf Hltci..l PTIMl!b
donll, tn roult to I lhrillinl rtndtl· Q) S.f1rl 11 Adfttltfrt ,
YOllS with I IMn1 louil. rt11 111uli· •
hrs, l1s 11tc1funr ch1mbe1ed sll11I 12:30 m Mni.: "J1cta11 111111" (wn) '42
r.cnsenlln1 millions of y11rt ol en· -W1ll1e1 8.lrry, J. ClfTol H1fsh.
1111ttrin1 IHlrfKhon.. m '"'*' 111u1e
m ""'''' ""• m""'' ,,.. ,.. _ l:OO CIJ OD (JJ -m ..... 111 .. c.r.11 1:1011 NI• !111\o-m ,.,..... 111n1e 1:00 m u .. 1"" Slllr. .,,.. Su" 11!1__ .. _ • ...,, ........... ..,., m .... = (2ht>., LM4 . w..... lldJ • Dll llftdlt"
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
111 ........ '••••a,
at l•"'"" SI. S2r..J526
Sa.,D!og~f,..~.
•I l rookn""' !So ! 961·2411
IAltlA ITlllSAllD
UP THI SANDBOX (R)
+WAI BUWllN
MIN & WO=M=l=N :::::::;'
Har-lht<I.
hnpet1,........,."n ...... •1·•· & Hatllor ll•<I. • 1·1162
JO• YO Hi Ill 1 IUIT llTllOlDI
DlllVl.ANCI l•l
+McCAil &
MRS.Mlllll
l•""°'" •••.
-~el·~· 527·7273
JOll YotllT •l•tT UfllOl.Ol
DlllVIRANCI (I)
t McCABE &
MRS. M;:IL;:Ll::A ::;:::°:::'
s .... " ... . f•••*•• .... . Cl>fpm~n .l•f,
~s.1oi2
Both films were nominated
for best drama of 1972, and
both had two stars nominated
for best dramatic actor -
Marlon Brando and Al Pacino
in "The Godfather" and Sir
Laurence Olivier and Michael
CDine in "Sleuth.''
Other pictures nominated
- -' -:..;.;L~ $FAD/UM •3 !,:
-~~
--. -=-.:-· $FAD/UM ·I :.~
-~~
"A MAN CALLED HOISi!"
"JUDGE ROY IEAH" ...
"THE lltEYEHGERS"
"PETE 'H TILLIE" ...
"PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM"
for best drama we r e1------------------~-----1
"Deliv_erance," "Frenzy" and
"~ .P.9SCidQn Adventure...:
'Ille other nominee for best
dramatic actor was Jon
" l'ver' nee :•
.............
ll!aAU.t:li
"GREAT lllEW WILD
UfE FILM FDR 1973"
HELD OVER
ME5A-C111.-~1112
VILLA-Or1n.....-.JMOU
OROYE-G1nl1tn g,.,,_ll74'00
lllOOkMUltST-AMhtl_..m., ...
NIGUEL-SI. ut•lll-4t .. IUJ
SU It F-th,1t1fi"9I011 l..-cl'l-J)6-tJ'l6
CINEMA YIEJO-Mlu.iltn Vltlt .........
WEEKDAYS-J: ... 7,00.t:OO
SAT & SUH-1; ... J:•S:• ,, .. ,,.
SO•RY HO f'ASSES __ ,. ___ _
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEATRES
I Alltttolly 9•"'• I · Yopi.t Kono
I ')Across 110th St."
211d hohro
"Hickey & Boggs"
/( 1 3 70 ·~"" 1·10-.lS \\ NOW . IXCLUSIVI
ORANG! COUNTY
•
1;9UHACKMAM
ERNEST
BORGNINE meunONS
CARQl
lTN{T
,....,,., -·
UA CITT CINEMA e SAT & SUH e IJ:1f & J:JI PM.
~Qll.~J9l:,CO~C~•~---t
"HIT ;\AN " Clin!E ,,_
"MA1'10 'EM H1GH"
l olll In Ctl9•1 (II)
i CNtrll1 Ch1plll'I Hll\I
""CITY LIGHTS"
o,,111:r:•5 ------..c FOUNTAIN Yllll [Y
'°O CINEMA I
BARGAIN
MATINEE
MO,.l~•~!i.lT
"TU.• '>fll'ltll J AI J.!il'AT!>lll>O
NOW TOGETHER! AT THE EDWARDS
HARBOR #2 COSTA MESA
He aims
to please.
[!!] G ....
All NEW!
SHOWING
NOW!
.~ -..vtr~r~~-7·11,,.ru.
TroffXlo:··.i ...,,n • ..,,l •..f'.I ~; r:.i-~~Fl:LC~
•
• DAIL V PILOT %7
Laguna, Ful"lerf;on
Holding Tryouts
Oratage Coast Co n~ert
Chorale Hits Peak
The Laguna ,\l u u I t o n
·Playhouse will be looking tor
Jean Brodie !his weekeOd.
'i''hile lhe Fullerton
Footlighters have lheir eye out
for Billie Dawn.
The pair of famous heroine~.
both of whom inspir1..>d Oscar-
wlMing movie perfom,anct'S
.(from Maggie Smith and Judy
( CA.LLBOARD)
JiQl~y. respccthtelyJ...ar.e lhu
centers of the next pro<luclt11ns
at the Laguna and F11llrrtou
theaters.
Laguna •.rill hr.1·1 uudili"ll'
Sunday fnr "'The Prtntt' of
Miss Jean Hrodit:'.'. \\'hilc
Fullerton has sel tr,\tlUt:) '.\Ion·
.day and Tuesday for its
re\·ival of "'Born Yesterday."
r Bertram TanS\\'e\1 is step-'pmg in to (Jirect the Laguna
production and \\1ill be seeking a cast of four women in the 3U
to 50 age range, four men and
four ~o-qe girls. Sunday's
ttadlrlgs are scheduled for
I p.m. In the ployhouse, 606
lJJguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach.
''The. Prime or P.tiss Jean
Brodie'' will opel) Feb. 27 for a
lhtet.'-week rw1. Tuetd.ays
through Saturda_ys, following
tf1e upcoming Laguna pro-
duction "How lhe Other Half
Loves.··
"&l'n Yesterday" \\'ill be
direclt:'d bv Orange County
t!r;ima cri'tit Hen11an Bood·
rnan. wha will hold-ltyOOlS flt
tl o'rlock '-londny and Tuesday,
;•t till· ~luckenthaler Center.
I 1!1 Buena Vista Drive,
r~u!l"1·1on
.\ t'.!lSt n[ 12 men and three
11omen is required for Ure
I.arson Kanin comedy of a
Wt't11thv junk dealer who hires
a nt•wspapernmn to iniprove
lu~ !nistress' mentalitv.
The production 1vill open
Feb. 23 at the center, running
fur thrte wePkends on Fridays
and Saturdays.
'Cha rlie Brown' Set
For Mesa Playliouse
The Costa !\ft•sa Civi(· Pla.r·
house v•ill bring the J•ca:iuts
comic charactrrs to life llus
month with a '·bonus" prO£t uc·
lion oC "You're a (;ood ~Ian.
Charlie Br0\\'11."
A single. "'eekend of fi•.rc
performances is scheduled for
the musical revue -Jan. 19 at
8:30 and Jan. 20 and 21 1:1t 2 :in
anil 8:30 both da ys. Pali
Tainbellini, pla yhouse resk:tent
diiector, is staging the pro-
l'l av1n~ th(' li!lt• riile nt
Ch;irhl' P,ro\\11 \\ill bt~ ll;ivid
Pigmon. 1\·i th Barbara Bien·
dorf as Lury and Sco:t
'.:i11t>nso11 as Linus. ~lark
~1iller plays tne canine com·
p2ni,,n Snoopy, \\'hi!e ·roni
Bergman is east as Patty and
Stephan Hiechle as Schri>edtr.
duction . ...:...,~~~~~~~~
Heservatinns are currt'ntly
heing takerr by the Costa !Aesa
Recreation Department from 8
a.m. 10 5 pm. at 834-5300.
DA ILY PILOT SUH PllOIO
'Ha1ad It Over' •
1-lal Landon Jr. !standing) deman~s p~yment. of embezzled money from ~on
Tuc:he while Cherie Patch gloats 1n triumph tn this scene from "Play Strind-
berg,,,· on stage Friday through Sunday at South Coast Repertory in Costa
~lesa. __ _
GWC Sets Co11cert Sm1clay
I Cunccrto in D Major " 'A'1lh The final ""rk on the pro· The Golden \\'i·st Col ege arani 11,ill ht' ··simphoni• No .. 2 ·11 r m :i John \Valz as solotsL ,., Sy1nphony wi per or '., in B 11inor" b.,.· the Russian Con r th• Ne"' y, .• , 11···'··. ,,ho has earned ac· · Bo
00
· '' cert or .. .. " "L.L coniposer Ale.'Cander r in. d I • p '" rentt•r•n " ··la'''' a• cello soloist \\'ilh h Sun ;:n a ., · .. "' ~ " a late romantic composer w O tnusic. by Strauss. Hydn. and \'rnturn, San Gabrifl ::ind USC also wrote ''Prince Igor." " oo· lsomata C ha m be r sym.
oor in. r,·ckets for the concert nre d d b n a • ,· d pho•1ies, \\.'ill be rnaking his Con ucte Y • $1. and mav. be purehased in h II Pl'o lv W,11 European debut thL~ summer. Ant ony. ie sy n1 1 • d advance at the college · h m He appeared vtith the Gol e.n open the progrmn 1.n t e co · 1 bookstore or et the theater the •-th Johan n \\'est Symphony ast year in munity ai.cr Wl c box office the afternoon oI the Strauss' ''Perpetual Motion.·· Schumann·s ''Cello oncerto
followed by Ha ydn ·s; -"~C:'.'e'.':llo"_..'02p'.'.'.":'..s ..'.l.'.:29'.:..'_' _______ _:P~r_o::gr_a_m_. ____ _
IN
THEATRE #J
CMNA ROSS§
BIWE HOUCl'.Y
"ARED
Ry 1'0~1 fi,\ft L"~V
01 tllt Otllv 11'1191 Sl•tt
Cooductor Hichard )laub
reminded those of us 'A'ho
needed our 111en1ory jogged
!aSt weekend lh:ll Vivaldi's
"Beatus Ylr" anti Bach's
.. Magnificat" are essentia!l~·
joyful works and lhen call.ed
on his Coast Community
Synlphonic Chorale to show us
just ho\V joyful tht>y can be in
the right hands .
It has lO be said im·
mediately that thls
performance of t.pese t~·o
<felnandfng Bflroqut~or~ ts-
by far this choral organiza·
lion's most successful orfering
in this critic's presence.
Led by f o u r splendid
soloists. Raub's singer.~
d'lighled an Orange Coast
College auditorium 8:udlcnc;e
and hit a new high 1r1 their
climb from a level of choral
offerini?s that have been far
below the fluency and balance
t1chieved in last \\'eekend"s
concert.
BOTJI \\'ORKS \\'ere very
rD!lD!of~
lf(Wl>OllT l[ACH • OltJ·IJ50
WORLD PREMIERE
ENGAGEMENT
eo.t. s.t .• kit. froflll J
. ---..,.....------flO-T!--M-c
r-' SMASH!"
•
l
The Jovful.
Songful
WONDERFUL
S!ory Of The
life And Mus.c
Of
Johaon Strauss!
All NEW!
Hon.I Buthol1,
MOff(OstG,
RosSGl'lo
~Jilli
/
EXCLUSIVE
'
·---·· -··-PtUS -Al AN tiRKIN IN
"THI lASlOf TIU llD HOT l OVllS"
"IOWl•S" !llOW ~\Ill. t11•u. Tllu•I. Olflf
IN THEATRE 1'!2
MAX VON svoor~
LI V UllMANN
RATIO (PG }
'
NOW
SHOWING
·'As smooth and entertaining as 'Butch Cassi dy',
what with Newman providing dandy bmura per-
formance. It's all very movie -movie with even
that happy ending we schmaltz lovers Jove so
well .'' Jvd,fh (ri11 NBC Todoy Show
··1 truly topnotch comic performance by Paul I . h t ·11 h """'"" """''· Newman. A good time 1s w a you ~1 ave, ~w Yon:"""' I _~ ~~woo
JN THE LIFE AND
TIMES OF
I
9 . '-,--.. ~ANA'JIS0\'9. TECHNICOLOO';-' A N11t0"1al G...,ernl Pio:.1lll'~ Release
Starring: Jacqueline Bi sset -Jo hn Huston·
. Stacy Keach . Rod dy McDowa ll-Ava
Gardner
CAU THEATRES FOR 2nd FEATURE INFORMATION
'
DEAN NANCY HARRY
JONES • OLSON • MORGAN
PLUS WAI. I OISM:r~
"AF RICAN LION "
Jtcl IONlli fUTllll •o!Ao• [.,.,, S!f<M-'~
_....( ... ~
"KIDNAPPEO'(G1
"THt CITAWAY"
is 'Bonnie and Clyde' brought up lo dale and en-
livened with lhe speclacula1 action sequences
lrom 'Bullill'. !cutely suspenselul and inlensely
e1ciling slam-bang movie. McOueen and ·Mac.
Graw generate as much electricity as any of the
fabled screen teams of the past." Kfv .. n<iMAs, L~<A..,..it•I-~
•
c11pablv handk<tl but if this
critic v.·erc c:.illc'tl on to tak~
htS p1ek l{ "'OU!d be the
"Beatus V1r."' a classit l'X·
ample of Vh·aldi In hls prlmt
and a "'Ork 1hat. Unllc-
rounlab\y, rarely finds 1~ 11•ay
to !he concer:t hall.
The slirring \1lvaldi bl'ought
especially con1n1cndable cf.
forts fron1 the soprano·alto
section of Jlaub's choir arid
tenor Gregory \V a1t was heard
to splendid effeet in the ··Pe~·
cator \'idebit" -for this
critlC at least. tht p1('('c de
rest~tqnce of the \'rvald i
\Vail "'as j<Jined by S(IJlrano
_ art rcnected in almost
l'.'\'erly line or t~ i\1agnlficat
and those qualltfes were
reflected very clearly io I~
chorale's rendltioo of this
fre sh. engaging offering.
R.aub was a command~g
fi~urt" !hroughout in this
praisc"·orthy performance of
t\\'O works that place very
high demands on any choral
organization.
He also had the splendid
support of an orchestr~! ~
uon that 'A'as not iden11f1ed tn
our program. \Vbo('ver you
,\~rt. frttnd musicians, you
did your j<>b well.
Bernice BrlJ,?h!bill. rne7.ZO· ,~,.u· nes Si!!ll8 aoprano Christine Wait and '-' ._..
t>ass HOElCI' Linjbt'ck 111 the
B;ich "Magnificat'' for a team HOLLYWOOD (UPI J -
effort that brough! the ov,111on Gary Grin1es has ~n added
or 1hc evening from un ob-to ihe casl of ··\\1edntsday
\'iously enraptured OCC au· r.lo(ning" starring John
dicnce. i,;.~~'a:y~ne::,;. ;;;;.;;;;;;.;;;;;;.;;;;;;
JOV AND enthusiasm -1
Bach penned the work for the
Feast Day of Christ1nas, 1723!
Tho
Orl9h1ol U"-c•t
Y.nlo11
.. ,~ltopt "'° "'"' beauttf11I -•I•
111 hbtory" -
N-Yorliw
At,o
D. H. l1wrenc1'1
"THE YlaGIN •
THI GYPSY"
loth Color ( R)
(7f\'I• ., .. ., .. " ~-~.~!;.~. ~ COJllONA OIL MA•
Showri,.. 7:00 o4 10:11 ..... o--..... ._
"THE BURGLARS"
1:50
C.ll~fefS.itdoy ......
UP
BARBRA THE STREISAND
(R) BO>L
PLUS· L~E MARVIN
GENE HACKMAN
''PRIM( CUT"
""N"\!Sil JEOjMCQlQP•
Ph''' CMARLU llOMSON IM
"llD SUN" URSULA AMDRlSS ................. ... :··•,,, EEOWAftDS •••' •: . . . • •
• •• THIEATft.: ''•• : •••• 5"'8:·_31102 ·~:..
K A"ll"SOW ltT"'Jto~•~:--::. •••
' ..
NEW
ATAU5
THEATRES ' . . ' "It the levij,of brute phylical acti on-John Boor.
m1n's 'DELIY(R IHCE' is an absolutely J1rsHale
piece of movie-m aking. You can taste lhe fear
and hear the hammering hea rts. II is an uncom -
monly admirable undertaking ...
(HAIUfS CHAMPl IN, lei A~n fimt1
WbatdJdhappenonJ t . ')0 theCahu.law ...... Rl.ver7
'
Dr:liu1ranc1
A JOHN I OOlillilAH ,11 M {R)
1._1 .. , JOll 'IO"MI olW•' lfflOlOI o ••llA'llllOlf Il l
TECHNl(OLOll: IR\ fmm W~r 8ro1. A Womer Commun.to!'°1ll (OlfClmY
'
l1t1P9011I btt ... n
Be.ch 8i HtthO• 8ou'-"•nk
l_...!l!..•~b·•·811 .t 6
I
' -
.. .
•
,
DAILY PILOT s
Gonorrhea
Drop Seen
In State
JC Penney
NEWPORT
BEACH
ONLY LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Ca!Jfom11 lr the only state 1n
whicll the number of cases of
1onorrhea dropped for two
conaecutlve years, says a
stat• public beallh ol!lclal. TREMENDOUS SAVINGS ' IN EV.ERV .DEPT. at J~C. P-ENNEYN:':g:1
Or. Warren Ketterer,
rnedlcal director or the
Department ol Public Heallh's
VD section. said much of the
credit must go to county
• ( MEt>IetNEj
health departments whkh are
spending aboot $5 million a
year on gonorrhea alone -
twice as much as local health
d~partments spend in all other
states put toa:etber.
And although the totals have
not been tallied, the number of
~ cases for 1972 a)1pears to have
dropped, making It three
years in a row, Ketterer told
the Junior League of Los
Angeles.
... Ketterer also credited (1) a
60 percent increase in the sale
of coodoms and (2) improved
public and school education
~ for the drop In ......
e Be•ltfa P•ct
SUNNYVALE (AP ) -The
National -Aeronautics and
Space Administration hal
awarded a $4.9-million coo-
tnct to design and test 1
system to monitor the health
of a paUent far from 1
hospital.
Lockheed Missiles and
CANDY DEPT.-NEWPORT HACH
40 Yerd of Cheese. Orig. 4.50 ······-···········-··-········NOW 2,88
36 Christmes Stocking . Ori9 .. 59 .......................... NOW .30
HIP Lb1. Bulk XmH C•ndl. O•ig .. 59 lb ............. NOW -:99 lb.
ro·olbs.-Btilliinf~iV.-Or1g-:-:2r lb7: ................ ::":NOW-:l"t lb.
SHOE DEPT.-NEWPORT llEACH
20 Only. Men'• C•sual Shoes. Orig. 10.99 ······-····NOW: 4.00
75 Only. Women'1 Boot1. Orig. 9.99 -15.99 •.... -.NOW 5.00
75 Only. Girl•' Boots. Odg. b.99-9.99 .................. NOW 4.00
3.0 Only. Women's C•suel Shoes ............................ ~-.. -·-.88
'20 O~y. Women's & Girl1 1 Tennis Shoes
·o.;g, · l .99-5.99 .................................................. NOW 1.88
75 Only. Girls' & lnfents' Slippers. Orig. 1.99 ...... NOW .18
250 Only. Wome.n's & Girls' Plush Scuffs ......................... 1.44
WOMEN'S SLEEPWEAR & LOUNGEWEAR-
NEWPORT IEACH
11 Only. Women's Better Hostess Rob••·
Orig. «.OO ...........•............................................ NOW 28.88
lJ Only. Hostess length Quilt loungeweer.
Orig. I 5.80 . ·······-···························· . ... . .... NOW 12.88
21 Only. lightweight Robes. Orig. 14.00 . _ ...... NOW 10.88
17 Only. Dres1 length ·Robes . Orig. 12 .00 ............ NOW 8.88
17 Only. Ho,tess loungeweer. Orig. 20.00 ........... NOW 14.88
11 Only. Host111 Length Robes. Orig. 26.00 ....... NOW 18.'8
14 Only. Lt. Wt. Sh;fh. Orig. b.75 ........................ NOW 2.88
15 o,ly. Body Shirts. Orig. 7.00 ............................ NOW 4.88
11 Only. Body Shirh. Orig. 5.00 ........................... NOW 3.88
46 Only. Nylon Body Shirts (Asst. Colors I ..... .......... 3.99
86 Only. Women's Bru1h1d Sleepwear. ............................ 3.66
WOMEN'S ACCESSORIES-NEWPORT llEACH Space Co. ls the prime con-
tractor, ln participation with
Kaiser Foondatloo, N A SA 'Ibey will produce com· 10J Only. ledies' Wigs Orig. 19 .00 ................ NOW 3.88
municatlon llnks for transmit· 67 Only. Scerve1. Orig. 2.00 ............................ NOW .88
ting 8 profile of 8 patient'• 42 Only. Women's Hendbegs. Orig. l .00-7.00 NOW 1.88-4.88
health to a central bos;>ital. 84 Only. Women's Hendbags. Orig. 8.00-14.00 NOW 6.88-8.88
270 Only. Selected Jewelry--e•rrings , pins,
"Applying thunle tysystem toartha br•celets. Orig. 1.00-3 .00 ........................ NOW .22-.88 remote comm on e
will have the twofold purpose
1 1 of proving its potenlial for WOMEN'S & JUNIOR SPORTSWEAR-NEWPORT BEACH space use and Its worth to . .
communilieJ at a distance
[ IOTS' DEPT-NIWl'ORT llEACH WOMIN'S OUTHwu.a-NIWP,OllT llACH
120 Only. Boys' Jec•ets l8-18).0ri9• 17.50 _,.NOW 9.44 25 O,,ly. Genl'ine L.1th•r Bile• Jeckets.
42 Only. Boy•' J•ckets 18-18 1. Orig. 13.98 NOW 1M O.l9. 2'.00 --···························-·············NOW 15.11
u .ea 79 On~re-Sc:.hool lo 1• Jec..kets (2-81 1D Only. G~uin• le1ther Boot L•ngth Co1ts. 5~~;~:;~;.~8shi~9: Ti~set.o;i·; ... 3:9;·.:.1.98 N<&~~--2.-11-3~7.-.eart,-,.-.;o"nt~~~~~:~e.ii;;,-c.,~;~: ····· ······ ow.
100 Only. Boy•' Soch. Odg .. 79 ·········--···-·NOW .ll 7 gnr. Tl0.0~-3 5~~ c···1;;·c;;···········-· ..... NOW
52 g~ilgy. P;~-~~h;;I Coordin•t11. NOW 11-l II ~;. =·-~~--.. ·--·~~~--------~~-·-~ .............. NOW
22.11
' ' -' -'-··························-··········· ' · 6 Only. Fake Fu• P.nt Co•ts. Orig. 39.00 NOW 27 Only. Short Sleeve Knit Sporf Shirts.
Orig. 4.98 .1 ..... -........... -.............................. NOW 2.11 25 Only. Corduroy Pant Coit~ ---............ -......... -..
24.88
24.81
14.H-U.H
150 Only. Boy1' leether Gloves.
Or;9. l.00-4.00 ·················'···············-·······NOW 1.IWM 171 Only. Boys'. Knit Gloves & Mittens.
Orig. 1 .20.1.50 .............. : ................•• -...... .NOW .ea
56 Only. W•terproof Ski Mitten. Ori9. 2.50 ~OW 1.81
154 Only. Knit Hockey C1ps. Orig. 1.00 ........ NOW .6'
TOT DEPT.-NEWPORT HACH
100 Only. Ac."tion J•ckty.n Dolls & Accessories.
Orig. 1.99 ··············-··· ............. _ .................... NOW .88
4 Only. Hi Dottle Doll. Orig. I I .99 .................... NOW 5.88
15 Only. Bing-Beng-Bong Geme. Orig. 6.99 ........ NOW 5.44
5 Only. Skittle Horse-shoe,, Orig. 7.88 . . ..... NOW 3.88
2 Only. Wiggle Wagon. Orig. 11 .88 -··---····--·-.... NOW 5.88
4 Only . Fat Treck Control Set. Orig. 15.88 ·--..... NOW 7.18
Men 's 10 Speed Bik•'· Orig. 69.98 ................ NOW S4.h
Men's l Speed Bi•es. Orig. 55.08 .................. NOW 39.11
CUR1AINS & DRAPES DEPT-NEWPORT IEACH I
60 Pr. Cafe Curtains !Capri), Ori g. 4.49-6.99 NOW M·l.ll
60 Pr. Novelty Tier. Orig. 2.69-4.49 .................... NOW .U•l.ll
Pom Pom Rod. 28"-48". Orig. 4.40 ............ NOW 2.22
Pom Pom Rod. 48 "-8b ", Orig. 7.49 .............. NOW 3.75
1 Only. Met•I T rever'e Rod, welnut fini,h.
I l0"-240". Orig. ll.95 .............................. NOW 16.88
1 Only. Wooden Trever•• Rod, walnut finish. 10'.
Odg. 2b.99 .................................................... NOW 13.88
36 Only. Austrian String Curtain. l0"xl6".
Orig. 5.99-b.99 ............................................. NOW 1.22
FASHION FABRICS-NEWPORT IEACH
MAJOR Al'l'l.IANCES DEPT .-HEWPORT llACH
1 Only. 6 Progr1m Elec. Dry9r-Avocedo.
O•ig. I 58.95 -·········-········-·--··················-·········NOW 131.00 •
1 Only. 8 Progrem W•sher. Gold. Orig. 253.95 .. NOW 209.00
1 Only 14 lb. W•she" Copp•" Orig. 219.95 ........ NOW 118.00
1 Only. 4 Progr•m Ges Dryer. Copper.
O•;g, 189.95 -·-········-·•-···•······-················ ..... NOW 151.00
5 Only. 16.7 Cu. Ft. Deluxe Refrigerator.
O.;g. 349.95 ···········-···········································NOW 2H.OO
SEW MACHINES & YACUUM5--NEWPORT llEACH I
5 Only. 42 Des ign Lt. W9ht. Sew M•chine.
Odg. I 59.95 ........................................ .. . . . NOW 129.00
2 Only. Custom 8 Pc. C•nnister V•cuum.
Orig. 44.95 ................................................... NOW 34.88
FURNITURE DEPT-NEWPORT BEACH I '
1 Only. 7 Pc:. Oc:t•gon1I Spanish Dinette Set................. 99.00
1 Only. 5 Pc. Round Chrome Dinette Set. .................... 99.00
5 Only. Vinyl Been B•g Fun Cheir, Purple. .................... 24.88
1 Only. Record G•binet w/vinyl seat. Orig. 70.00 NOW 56.00
1 Only. Heeter Vibr•tor Recliner. Tan Vinyl.
Orig. I 09.00 ···············-·······································NOW 99.88 1 Only. _.2" Round Gl1s1 Cocktail Table.
Or;g. 2b0.00 ........................................................ NOW 222.00
1 Only. Vinyl Sol•. Bleck Vinyl. Orig. 219.00 ...... NOW 99.95
1 Only. Ple1tic: Gem• Tlble. Orig. 119.00 .. -......... NOW 69.00
1 Only. Velvet Ch•ir. Gold Stripe. Orig. 159.00 NOW 1.39.00
7 Only. Hollfwood Bed Fr•m•. Orig. I o.oo ........ NOW 5.00
1 Only. Viny love. Seat. Olive. Orig. 189.00 ... -.. NOW 166.00
1 On ly. ltelien Conso le. Light Green. Orig. 95.00 NOW 77.00
I Only. Corduroy loun9e Chair. Yellow
O•ig. 179.00 . ............................ NOW 99.88
I Only. Single Sit.• Box Spring·. Orig. 30.00 NOW 10.00 from central ho s p It a I Women's Blouse,, Group I. Orig. 4.00-11 .00 NOW 2.88
l-----laeiiitiH,'..!....an-ennouncemen~11---""WOl'l'len'.• Blou1et• Grou~l....Ghg-!"5.00·9.00-NGw--a.&M.88
said. Women's Blouses. Group Ill. Orig. 9.00 -1 0.00 NOW 5.88--6.88
1000 Yds. Sin le Knit Polmt.tr..S.o.lid.1----~-Y-ch._l~OO_
400 Y s. Double Knit Polyester F•ncies _ _ .. 2.77 yd.
300 Yds. Cotton & Cotton Type Prints.
-Only...l--Seat-.S.Ctton.J..5ofa:--81ec:k \Gnyl-. ----~---..
Orig. I 89 .00 . . . ... .. ................ ........ . . NOW 109.00
ec•re OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Meifcan parents of a
meningitis-stricken l n f an t
have been granted two month.!
grace from an expulsion order
so the child can be treated
here.
Women's P•nts. Group I. Orig. 8.00-16.00 NOW 4.""'4..18
· Wo_,,·~·· Pents.~Grou 1.1. Ori9. 10.00-15.00 NOW 7.88-9.18
................
20 .. Sweeter Knit Smoclr1: Orig. 11 .00 ............ NOW 8.88
42 IOO Y. Polyester Pent Tops. Orig. 7.00 .... NOW J .81
26 Women'• Vesf•. Orig. 10.00-)2.00 ............ NOW 7.88.f.18
MEN'S CLOTHING-NEWPORT BEACH
Sl.t·month•old Julian Martinez waa born in 130 Only. lined Corduroy R1nch•r Jacket,.
Calllomla of parent. who ii· O<ig. 19.98 ·················-·······~····---··········NOW 12.H
legally entered the United 51 Only. Split Cowhide Rancher J1cket1.
States in 1969, immigratif)•1 Orig. 48.00 ........................................................ NOW 29.99
Orig .. 98 .J.29 ............. ... . . ..... NOW .66 yd.
100 Yd1. Knit Penne Prints. Orig. -4 .99 ............ NOW 1.8i cl.
p o s ery we c ••·
Orig. l.99-5.99 yd .............. NOW 1.00 aod 2/1.00 ea.
DINNERWARE aftd IAR SHOP-NEWPORT IEACH
8 S"•ck Tr•y•. Orig. 7.00.10.00 .................. NOW 2.11-4.18
100 English Ironstone piece setting. .......................... 1.31
HOUSEWARES DEPT-NEWPORT IEACH
authorities said. They had 30 Only. Pile l ined Quilted Jackets. Orig. 14.98 NOW 9.9'
been ordered to leave lh~ 8 Only. Men 's Suits ............................................ _ ......... 22.00 12 Ch . V I t 0 . 22 99 36 99 NOW 7 IS.21 18
country by Dec. 26. 5 Only. Men '1 Sportcoat, ....................... -..................... 24.00 35 5 1f18 :-e '·R r•~· S · Q. ··99 ·····-.. ·Now · 'u
The paren•· of Mr a:l<l li-irs 341 Only. C•suel Sl•cks. ........................................ ............ 2.50 2• D• •Fos 'ilngR o,~• ingp •go .. rig9.,; ........ NOW ,66
16 • • ~ ••p 1 oas 1ng en. rig .. T ............ •
FJ:OOR COY!RING DEPT-NEWPORT llEACH •
70 Only. 27x48" Bro•dloom Cerpet s•mples .............. ..
35 Only. _.x6' Bro•dloom C•rpet Remnents ............... .
5 On ly. J'6"x6' Imported Woven Rug. Avoc•do.
Odg. I 9.00 ........ : ............................................... NOW
1 Only. 9xl 2' Nylon Hi.lo Rug. Avoc•do.
Orig. 44.88 ·····-············-···································NOW
1 Only. 6'6"xl 2' Polyester Sh•g Rug. Blue.
Odg. b0 .b5 ........................................................ NOW
1 Only. 12xl5' Nylon Sheg~ug . Blue Green.
Orig. I 22.00 .......................................•........... NOW
1 g~il~: 6~~l;~:~~.~ .. ~.~.~-~~.~ .. ~~-~:~~~:·.1~'.~~: ....... NOW
2 Only. 6'xl9'6" Spenish Tile Linoleum.
Burnt Orenge. Orig. 123.00 ........... -_ ........... NOW
2.22
8.88
9.88
29.88
44.88
77.00
sa.so
61.50
-'
,
c
• •
.B
. b
: I<
:B
,0 • SJ :c
• I> .
:·st
: sr
• 01 •E
.. ... .
: rr.
: 1,
"
N
3
: 0)
• le
II
F
"'
• It
u
Francisco Martine• of Dixo,, '\ ~-------------------. 7 9 Cup AJ,minwn Percolotor. Orig. 7.99 NOW 5.88 SPORTING GOODS DEPT.-NEWPORT BEACH t-----nne~ar.,,Sallll!lcr~adm~eldntoren,~w-ho __ ha_v_ef--t:::::~~f~N~~~E~U~l~N~lSHl~~~~~~~~~~H~::::t-t-~7~P~in~t~S~i,:•~V•:•:u:u:m:B~o~t~tl=e•:·~O~r~ig~.~l~.4~4~ .. =.=···~N~O~W~:=:=:'~B8~~.f'6:~=t;;j~;"if;;:;t;~~;;;'~~~~~'j~'if"~:io-,~--ft--~
Tbe-U.S. district d;rector of L
1
2 Only. Rewlings B•seb•ll Glove. Ori9. 12.95 .... NOW 5.00
. .... . '.
•
•
immigrations, R. L. \ViUiams 70 Only. Men's Better Knit Dress Shirts. • LUGG:AGE DEP'T.-NEWPOR~ BEACH 10 Only. Hunting Hat. Orig. l .49 ··-··· -· ...... NOW .99
f •~ -. I id "h Or•'g JO 98 J J 98 NOW 7 88 _ 3 Only. Gun Reck. Orig. 9.99 ··-·····----········· ...... NOW 3.00 fen~~q· ~a"s<; 5;~~~ ~ e~[ 30 Only: Sp~rt.hi~.-G;;~-;-·i:-9;i9:··i:99-l.98 ~:-~:~NOW 1:aa 1 Only. 20 g•uge Shotgun_. Ori9. 99.oo ............... NOW. 49.00
"common sense and sym-18 Only. Sportshirts. Group JI. Orig. 5.00-6.98 ........ NOW 3.18 Samsonite Luggage <;!o,eout. Oise. Col"or,, · . 10 Onl.y1 Asst. Fisbln9 line. Orig. 2.29 ............. NOW .99
pat.by." 20 Only. Corduroy Shirts. Orig. 7.98 ..... NOW 5.88 Orig. 35.00-60.00 .. ____ ,.:_ .. _ ........ NOW 25.99-45.H 4 OnJy. Bowling B•ll Cleener. Orig. lo59 ......... ·.NOW .50 -
20 Only. Pullover Sweaters. Orig. 11 .98 . ... . ..... NOW 9.88 l inen Tote, end Luggege Sets. 1 Only. Women'1 Golf Set. Orig. 119.99 .... .-.~.NO'!' 59.00 ... · e /lfetfaed Cited
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
method of delivering babies
widely used in Europe could
dimlnate the need for
anesthesia and recuce the rl!k
ol injury to babies and
mothers, a hospital study
-loses.
Dr. Richard H. Paul said
that a study at the Coon-
ty-USC Women's Jloopltal
here indicate that use of a
vaoJum extractor may be
pttferable to forceps In IOme
deliveries.
Extractors are widely used
in Europe and hBYe -virtualJy
replaCi!d forceps deliveries ln
some countries, Paul said.
But he added that nlOSt U.S.
obstetricians reel little need tJ
use the extractor because all
their training and experience
has been with forcej)6.
e Claim Bit
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
San Fra:ncltc0 city prison of.
flclall have refuted 1 clatm in
a medical buUetln that an
elderly dlabeUc wu denied
medical care while In custody.
ln an article entitled "Prson
Medidne, San Francllco" in
the S.n Francill<O Medical
Soc!tty bulleiln's December issue., Dr. Jack Liebman iden-
Ufie1 a patient rs "Frank 'P ..
-a cheerful, benign, white·
btankld fellow" who Is a
diabetic. tias cataracts and
ha1 14 use crutcheJ becau1e of
an ulcer on hla foot ...
Then he delall1 • purporte'd
llC!CO<lnt of what happened
when the mao w1s arrested
15 O,ly. Fuhion Belh.·-O•;g, 3.SO .• ~.Op ··········"•···--NOW 2.88 O•ig. 9.98-I 7.09 '.. ... . ... . .......... NOW 4.99-7.'9. .~ Ool,y. P•.ck l'<•mbe. O•ig. I 1.99 ..................... NOW l.00,
8 Only. Boys ' Fool ell Uhiform,. Orig. 11 .25 ...... NOW 7.88
INFANTS DEPT.-NEWPORT IEACH
60 Infant Robes. Orig. 4.98-5.98 ............... NOW 1.88
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WE KNOW WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR
24 .FASHION ISLAND
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THE NATION'S NEWSMEN AT WORK IN THE MONTE CARLO ROOM 0 F THE NEWPORTER INN, TURNING OUT COPY ON SUPER BOWL VII .
~Super Bowl Nerve Center Marijuana Rap
Puts Reutzel
Nation's Press Invade s New port Beach. Back in Jail
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of ,... o.llY ,,,..., ltttf
. ne datelines may read Anaheim, Long
. Beach or Los Angeles but the work ls
: being done and the prose ls being writ-
: ten at the Newporter Inn in Newport
; Beach this week as the nation's press
continues to gather for Super Bowl VII
: Sunday in the Los Angeles Memorial
. Coliseum.
' California writers will surpass, in num-
. hers, any other state in the union but ror
periodically on the public address system
in the Monte Carlo press working head·
quarters.
This is also the nerve center for room-
ing arrangements, airplane reservations
for the trip home, signup for·the golf and
teMis tournaments and other recrea·
tlonal activities available for out-Of-town
press representatives.
Kay O'Reilly Is the first person one en·
counters upon entering the room. She is
in charge of room reservations and for
, __ ;._\'iait.inr_MWllllezt ooverin_g__!)le gaqtc.•·;r.the~-,~~~
:·state of New York r8iillnlglies[ BOUi SM90ti
: major wire '"1ce5 have several writers ~ in Brief
: on hand, as many as five, from the
.. Eaatern aeeboard. Both__... Ibo have
· 1be New York Post reportedly bas five
: and the New York Times three staff
. writers here. The list goes on and on.
the other 50 weeks of the year. \\'Orks in
the NFL office in New York City.
Joan Brick. a Newport Beach resident.
has been taking reservations for the golf
tournament at Irvine Coast Country
Club.
So, it isn't entirely an out-0r-town show
that is being staged at the Newporter
Inn. It's a well-coordinated production
that rivals any sporting event in the
world with full cooperation of all con-
cerned.
LOS ANGELES !AP ) -Los Angeles
Rams \vide receiver Lance Rent.zel \vas
arrested Wednesday and booked for in-
vestigation or possession of marijuana ror
sale, a West Los Angeles jXllice spokes-
man said.
Rentzel, 30. was taken into custody at
his Hollywood home after narcotics of·
ficers, armed with a search warrant,
raided his home, the spokesman said. He
ie:a ors confiscated a hall-
pound of marljuana ·
"paraphernalia."
The JtJ..year-0ld professiona1 football
Angeles jail. Bail or $5,000 and pGSted for
him a few hours later.
. Credentials, inculding NBC's mam-
: moth television crew, will .be issued to
· 1,soo with 800 or 900 of these being
neW!lmen from across the nation.
Kings on Television
Conviction on a charge of possession of
marijuana for sale carries a sentence of
2 to 10 years in prison, the spokesman
said.
Rentzel pleaded guilty on April 8, 1971
in Dallas to a charge or exposing himself The Monte Carlo Room at the
· Newport.er Inn is supplied with 100 The Russian water polt team, Olympic
typewriters and at peak time, most of champion iii Munich, is coming to
them have been in dally use. Newport Beach for two games, Feb. 10 nus is the nerve center of the news and 11 with action slated in the Newport-
:· operaticln and r<gardle&'I of the dateline Mesa D~tiict pool.
. for stones of the two competing teams The Russians will play five games on
from Washington, D.C. and Miami, the West Coast, the first on Feb. 9 at
from Joe Frazier. to a IO.year-old girl. He was sentenced to
Foreman and Frazier box for the title five years' probation with the un-
J 22 derstanding that he receive regular an. .
The Beehive Boxing Club wired Dick medical and psychological treatment. At
Sadler, Foreman's manager, Wednesday the lime Rentzel was playing for the
to offer the guarantee if Foreman would Dallas Cowboys.
defend the title against Ali in Salt Lake Six weeks later Rentzel was traded to
!hul'Wiy, Ja.nu.wy ll, 1~7:3 DA!L i l"ILOr 29
Kiick Living
With Violence -
LOS ANGELF.S -l•J Jike to wake up
Monday morning feeling had," conlesse•
Jim Klick. "I like to hlut. J like to ache
all over. U I'm not sore, I know l didn't
do my job,"
The mustachioed, 214-pound haltering
ram of the Mlaml Dolphins ls a man who
lives on violence and pain -and, in ~
cent months, on fNStratlon and anxiety.
"I don't know whether I'll start the
super Bowl or oot -or whether it'll be
Mercury."_ he aififOO. "Neither of us prob-
ably will know unW just before tho
game.
"Sure, I'd like to start. I'd like to play
a lot. I want to wake up ~fonday morn-
ing, hurting. I've got pride. But I'm no
longer bitter. The important thing now is
the team. We've got to win and be cham·
pions."
Kiic.k is a principal in the prllllle llttle
_ drama going on behind the scenl'!: in the
liofiami camp as the Dolphins prepare for
their second straight shot at the National
Football League tlUe against the
Washington Redskins Sunday in the
Super Bowl.
The other principal Is Mercury Morris,
the 100.powid speedball from West Texas
State who beat Klick out of his job and
broke up the reared "Butch Cassidy-Sun·
dance Kid" combination that also in-
Klick said now he is subordinating bis
personal interests for the good of the
team and will decide later whether M'd
rather be a secondary cog with a cham·
pionship or a full-time regular with a los-
ing team, such as Burfalo.
"J have six months to think about it,"
be said.
Morris, sitting cloae by In a turtle-oeck
shirt and voool lam, and peering throUgh
lavender cob¥' granny glasses, said it was
Immaterial to him whether he started.
••Jf--the team is-successful;-I'm sue-
ctsslul," he aaid. "If the Redskins lltOP
me cold and Csonka or Klick nm up 200
yards and \\'e win l will be happy.
"I Just wish they'd quit calling me
''Atercury.' It's a silly name. 1 never ask-
ed ror it. Somebody just gave it to me. I
don't dig lt." .
Call him Eugene -but , softly, please.
76ers Bombed
But Laker
Lauds Rubin
cluded 237-pound Larry Csonka. •
"!don't feel I lost my job," Kuck said. PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Bill Bridges
"l just never got an opportunity. I'm pulled a fast break on the calendar and
satisfied with tbe way l played. But I gave a valentine lo 76ers coach Roy
didn't play enough to-tnake a good record Rubin Wednesday nighl
statistically. Everybody's judged on And the escapee rrom the '78erl fn.
statistics." sisted it wasn't a comic valentine, even
Kiick, who carried the ball 162 times though he 8COf'ed 11 points to set the Los _
for 738 yards in 1971, fell off to 521 yards Angeles Lakers up to a 55-38 halftime
in 137 attempts during the past season. lead on their way to a 120-98 vJctory .over
doing s p o t duty largely when Morris the hapless Phlladelpbians. •
wasn't on the field. Morris rushed for Bridges, who was traded for Leroy
l,!XKI yards, caught passes for 168 more Ellis and John Q. Trapp earlier in the
and added 334 more yards on kick-ofr season, had nothing but klnd words ror
returns. Rubin, a man who seldom hears an en-·
Miami coach Don Shula refuses to couraging word.
regard Kiick as a substitute, saying, ''I "J, happen to be a Roy Rubin fan,"
play them according to the situation. I Brktges: said. "l can't understand lhe
keep the man in there who has a hot criticism that's been directed at him.
hand." What did people expect?"
Kiick is disappointed that Shula hasn't Bridges said he can see improvement
felt he had a hot hand ror much of the . in the 76ers since he departed for greener
year. pastures but it's doubtrul if his point ot
"I could tell," the powerful Wyoming view would be backed by the majority in
graduate rrom Boonton, N.J., said. "A lot the 9ea.90n's largest home crowd at the
of Mondays I woke up feeling good, as if Spectrum, 8,391.
1 hadn't been touched; I knew then I ""' "-'"0 112;1
hadn't contributed much to the team." ''"*" ' w
KHck said he never was told outright ~.:::.t.in ~ t~
that he was being benched so that Morris ="Ch : ~
COuld la . Counb ' 0..7
Miami Reeelver
l'tlllMlffot!MI (Kl T
II 91«11
22 LN~l
t Eltl'
:ti Carl.,.
It G•"" . '"'
G ' T 1 .,._, ,.,
1 " 14 ' 1·2 • s 0.0 10
' 1·1 lJ ' .. ' . ,. .
0 0.(1 0
Tot1'1 Cl 1 .. 20 ff
:la .)S 39 26-120
112020•-•
Warfield's Deception
Is His Biggest .Asset
Florida. the stories are written and filed Belmont Plaza Olympic Pool in lAJng
in Newport Beach. Beach with CBS televising the game na·
Among the newsmen known across1 thehe uonally.
City this year. ' the Rams in a three-team swap which in-
5 I eluded the Rams' tight end Billy Truax By CRAIG SHEFF Frazier a t . and the San Diego Chargers' Lance Of'" D•ll'f ""-' '""
nation are Will Grimsley o t Huntington Beach's Monte Nitzkowski,
f----As,..'ill,ted-Prew,-Milt-Riclmla HelJ:S:"""01YffiP1c en, wtll dlfeCt, Alworth. 11..,...--;;,;;S:;!ta::;ti~str.;icalral~PS:a':':u:'il ,;:W;;;ai;';,'li i"!;~~::-i;as;.---, IAS VEGAS._Ne.v. -Oddsmabr-liJl' >--":;;;;,:.::;:,.-.,,m'"a""'rtlR!\O actren-;J succ this past rootball season as
my "The Greek" Snyder Wednesda y Heatherton but the couple is separated. was a year ago. United Press International; Arthu r U.S. team in four of the five games.
Daley, Dick Young, Shirley Povich, Mor-On the second night at Newport, UC
: rie Seigel and many others. Irvine coach Ed Newland will send his
made world heavyweight champion Joe This season for the Rams, Rentzel Rated as one of lhe better pass Frazier a S..1 favorite to beat George I ~-d Foreman in their scheduled lf>-round title caught just 27 passes or 365 yaru:i an receivers in pro rootball, Warfield caught Friday it will be interview time at the CINA squad against the Russians. : Newporter Inn with Don Sbu1a at. 10, • one touchdown. But the Rams' long bomb just 29 passes this past season for 606 fight Jan. 22 in Jamaica. potential was wiped out by Roman yards and only three touchdowns .
• Ge<qe Allen at 11 and commissioner Kings Play Flyers
Pete Roielle at 1 :30. All will be in town . . -. NCAA Convention Gabriel's arthritic arm. That's qillte a drop from the '71 cam·
paigit when the Miami Dolphins star led _ and many ol the datelin~ from these •. ,PHjLADELPlllA -. The Los Angeles
conferences will be Newpoct Beach. Kings could better their 2().wm record or
1be NaUooal Football Hall of~ Fame last season with a victory here tonight
will bold its annual ipeeting Saturday over the Philadelphia Flyers.
morning at Ule Inn to select the class: of The game will be televised: over Chan-
1973. Six to etgbt names will be net 5 in Los Angeles at 6:~ tonight.
nominated fOr enshrinement. Los Angeles has won 19 of 41 games
Press conferences are announced but last season they won onJy 20 of 78.
: Miami Works Out
. At Orange Coast
The Miami Dolpllins --Uy practiced
at Onnse Coast College Wednesday.
. ~'1be Dolph!M, !or<ed out ol their Loog
• Beach training site because of wet
-g1'>unds, ~out uncle< Ught seourity
from 3-4 : 15 at OCC's LeBard Stadium
Wedneoday.
• The seourity was so tight that the Doi·
· phins parked their Imes In front ol the
• entrance to the stadium and no one could
.... through.
: Even OCC coach Dick Tucker wasn't
• allowed lo.
College ol!icials were nol allowed to
• tell IDYOlle ol the ~ -and
lllOll ol the ......... ~ daAM .
didn't evtn know lL Tlio Dolpillnl ...,.. t!peded to resume
~ training In Long -today.
Ash er in 17th
ARCADIA -St. Louis' Dick Weber has
taken over the lead in the $10,000 Don
Carter Bowling Classic after 11 games
with a t\\--o--pin margin over Don McCune
or Muncie, Ind.
Costa Mesa's Barry Asher Is 11th In
the standings with a %,622 pin!all.
Miarrii's Dave Davis, who led arter six
games, dropped to fifth in the 60-man
tourney.
Nissalke Fired
SEATTLE -Tom Nissalke was reliev-
ed of his duties as coach of the Seattle
Super-Sonics of the National Basketball
Association Wednesday and rcplac.d
temporari!y by assistant coach Morris
"Bucfy" Buckwalter.
Foreman Guarantee
SALT LAKE CITY -Heavyweight
l>Mtr George Foreman hu been offered a guarantee ol $U million, or 4ll per<ent
of the net proceeds, to fight Muhammad
All bst, .if Foreman wins the crown
CHICAGO ...... 'Mle · N'atianal Collegfate
Athletic ~lation lauoche<I ·today one
of the most unportant annual conventions
in its 67 year history after punishing four
members for infractions or the NCAA
code.
The group's governing council Wednes-
day placed Centenary College of
Shreveport, La., on indefinite probation
and Western Kentucky and New Mexico
State on two-year probation -all three
for basketball program violations -and
meted a on&year probation to Howard
University while automatically vacating
the Washington, 0. C. scbool's 1971
NCAA soccer championship.
1be sanctions barred the basketball
teams of Western 'Kentucky, New Mexico
State and Centenary from all post-season
tournament play.
Ex-Yankee Dead
DOWNEY -Lynn Lary, a shortstop In
the American League for 12 years, has
died at Downey Community Hospital of
an apparent heart ailment. He was 67.
Lary, who played for the Yankees, Red
Sox. Senators, Browns and Indians, had a
batting average of .269 and was involved
in one of ba9eball's largest trades. In
1934, be was traded rrom the Red Sox to
the Senators ror Joe Cronin and $150,000.
Rosary will he said today and burial
will be Friday in Downey. He leaves a
wife and~·
Postel~ Blakeley Drafted
LANCE RENTZEL
Anteaters Test
Idaho State Five
POCATELLO. Idaho -UC Irvine wUI
be seeking its 11th victory of the season
here tonight against a team made up
basically of Californians when the
,11,1-.1 wni., ,..,1 K-c11Y _ ~"';"' '"~· Anteaters face Idaho Stale University. Oost.a Mtsa'I Jim Postel and West-selected by Cleveland. He's now at Qr. p11c111r, u M~r s1, L~li -lMtv S10r11, "'°"" Seven of the 11 members of the Idaho
• minster'• Gotdc:n Blakeley were among ange O>ast. after pta.ytng last season at .__"'' u.11ewooc11 Mi--. -Jot HON: .. °""' team tmil from Callfornla including
the ..1,.-telected In the regular phaae Eataocia Hl&IL ! I I/? rl.idfr, 1'~· w. V•. former Golden West College standou\ ,.-,-• • dral! N.-Yonc Mm -Jll'l'I JOflftSOl'I, olltNr, LOllOQt, • ol bueblll'I winter free 8&e!lt *" _,. lllt ~,, --... ~ ... _ .. .J!"ftr.1111 A'11..; """' YOO'll Y•"*--O~ne, ,g,1c11er, Jim Al\der$00, the Bengals' leading · W...t.-1 .. v W~ •...,... I~ -~ l A~r • Clllct!llO CubS -WWIM ""~' I h 5 .. _...........,. Piil~ -~it" 1e..,;;•· l.llOrtt~ 1111T1 , ~L.1tlo. t•.1_ ~· _=-.,1~.zt .• !!!!: scorer wt a 1 .1 average. 81aUffiy, an-ouUJtlder -Infielder,.,. r~~,:['t_."!· o.T~_.,.,.; . ;kf::' I.~ -~ Ccich Ttm Tift wUI go with the same
drded ... ""ti•."'· He"'·--' 1oi:.W11k • • ur. M, ..... ,. -. M....,. ,. .. -.~ · .-starting lineup including D•ve Baker and
Jq ..,. ~~ ~ ... !!!:!!!'..-~'!."'\ ~· t: ~-'!:! ~--It ...... ~l.tU<'!j mln*t-Rllb tat J"lll' and is mw • = __..,~,, ~;·C:."'J:i .,.-.. ~:., L~oi '•; ~-"'1 Wi:.:a'-=: Jerry . A:faru at . fo00nraHaros1: ~ teDdlnc Gcfilm. w-. . . ~· -1"""" Ford, p1td!W, V..iW!t!, -t,,,,.. Ytl\tef'lllM. • w1 __ H.c.1 MagnU90ft at center; a ran r~ h.~-~ll!!<-!•...!'!~!!!!l!!!!Li!~~-.... !!!!!.__Jll..~""~·~1.~~==~·~.=r,:; :;:~~~~n~!lflilll.JiJIY!ll!!.I~-~
' I
the NFL with 11 touchdown receptions _..;.
catching a total of 43 passes for 9136 ylirds
and a 23.2 yards-per-eatcb average (tops
in the Americ.an Football Conference).
So why the big drop?
"It was mostly a matter or tlming,"
says the &-0. 188-poWlder. "I've worked
with Bob Griese (Miami quarterback)
ror 2% years and our lines of com-
munications are very good. So when he
got injured it took about six weeks before
Earl Morrall (backup QB) and J were
really smooth."
But Griese and Warfield will be back
together Sunday in the Super Bowl VII
spectacular at the Coliseum and that's
enough to keep Washington coach G<orge
Allen awake nights.
Warfield is, of course, a very deceptive
receiver.
His lightning-quick speed and great
rl'l:tves after he catches the ball are just
two reaSOO.!I why he usually rankg very
high in the yards-per-catch category each
season.
He was a 9.7 sprinter and a 23·9 long
jumper at Warren (Ohio) High and
earned added honors at Ohio State, plac-
ing second In both the NCAA and Nation·
al AAU long jump events. His best jump
is 26-2.
But football earns Warfield his bread
and butter.
He alarred on both offense and def..,.
at Obfo State, earning All·America
honon in 1963.
Warfield played six years with the
Cleveland Browns and It was there that
he devtloped' a repotation as one of the
mO!f. deceptive receivers In pro rootball.
IJe was all·NFL three of those years.
When he was traded to the Dolphins in "11\6 key to any team's passing attack January of 1970 he was an Instant suc-cess _ catching 28 passes the ro\Jowing ls a balance of running and passlng,Afld
sea900 for 7~ yards and six touthdowns. throwing the ball when ttams lea.at u ·
But his deceptiveness will get a big test pect it.·•
Sunday against a Washington defensive 1/ar!ield aaya he thinks he knows ho•
crew rated one of Lhe best in pro football. to beat Washington's zone defente -but
Wartield feels that his deceptJve moves ht Isn't giving away any secrets,
are'le&'I important against zone def!naes "Yeah, I think I IQlow, but I can~ lell
(employed by Wa.sbingtoo ) than man-to-you what they are •tbday. Other pi.yuj
man .. ..,.,.. ~-~~~.J!!!! . .:,_ ___ , ------
)
•
Se DAllV PILOT
Tee~~·
Subdue
Newport
By GLENN WIIITE
Of ,.._ QM!y l>ftet SI ...
..
Jim Teel lrade(f ~ &ft . 0(
goat's horns for a hero'a
medal Wednesday night alt,..
coming through '¥1th three key
points in the final 11 seconds
of ovt!:rlime to give the Hun-
tington Beach !Dgh OiJert I
5&-5$ victory over host
Newport Harbor.
The triumph keeps the
Oilers tied for rtrst place in
the Su .... t League ba•ketblll
der!!y. _ _
Teel bad a chance lo win lt
at the buner in !'flgUlatlon
when he stepped to tilt f~
th<ow line alter being fooled.
But he missed the shot and the
Jssue went to overtime.
However, he made up for it
In eztra time .. Newport bad
tied It at 5$ with 2t st<OJ)ds
left In overtime on Jact Altman., shot lroo> tbe l<>p or
lbe key.
Huntington set up Ila of.._
for that last shot and It was
Teel who drove the base line,
stopped four feet from the
basket and unloaded a
bullseye to make it 57-55.
Newport called Ume witll
nine secoods left, then moved
for Its last-ditch attempt to .
· tie· The effort m(ssed aod Teel I.a"• came up with the rebound
with ooe second showing on
tlle:docl:. Re was fouled on the play,
mode a t... \brow and It was over.
It wu a bitter defeat for
O>ldl Dale llagey's Sallon, 1!l» pll)'<d biopirod _baD the llnA1 10 m!Dlltes. 'Ibey bad
fallen behind fl-38 with 7:11
lelt in rqulation and they op-
peared out of IL I• ,
Bui Ibey got behind the of.
fensive ezcellence of Jaime
Holmet·and Altmu to steldl-
ly narrow the gsp aod finally
Ji.e it It M wl!h_ I :ll!i Jo go
when Albnan atole a pus at
mld<Ollrt and drove in for the
tyingbuetel.
·Jfnim then tu overtime elCb
aide was ltustrated by of·
fk:WlDc. However, the JJlOll damag·
ing call WU aulf<red by
Newport in the atra period.
Altman was lhootiog one-
ll!ICkme lrom the gratis llllipe
with 1:26 left and be bit the
llnt sho~ But offldalJ said a
N rt crxnmltted a
vio at.ion, po
Ibo ball out ol bounds.
Seconds later Jim Rabe gun-
ned ooe In from 16 feet to give
the Oilers a M-M lead.
HUlltlngton got sparkling
performances from Ratil Con-
treras, who ripped the :ti: 2~-polala, ud ._.
SC.ti cui-, wllii<cime up
with key ........... points and
steals.
)lrlan O'FlabetV, J
!ilrici. Altnfan and--,llohnea
were stan for the Tars.
DAil '( PILOT ........ 11'1 RkMrll .........
BARONS TIM Hill (541, SCOTT REIDER (45) JOCKEY FOR A REBOUNDING POSITION.
CdM Still
Unbeaten,
Tops Rival
By DENNIS CAMPBELL
Of ... D•llr l"I ... lltff
Corona del Mar and Los
Alamitos high schools have
bad some memorable basket&
ball games in the past, aod u.I
Sea Kings have never found lt
easy to win on LM Al's home
court.
Wednesday night proved no
except.ion as the No. 1 rated
the Grf ns, 56-52, before a
noisy, partisan crowd.
The win was the 12th in a so
far perfect season for Corona
del Mar as the Sea KingS
notched their second straight
Irvine Leagu~ win.
~ Alamitos, 7-6 for the
season but riding the momen-
tum of a five-game win strtak,
fought the favored Sea Kings
from whistle to whistle.
With C&sey Jones' usually
reliable jump shot malfunc-
tioning and sharpshooting Jeff
Wharton and his 18-point
average on the bench with the
Barons Top Eagles
In Overtime, 31-29
~ BJ ROG£ll CAIWION bock' In the pmo With two
.... ---floe tltrow~with 1:15 lelt. Fountain Vllller Hiib'• No. I Tltat sel the llage for the
rated basbfball qUlnlot In oVC'tllllo. Fountain Vlllley
°"'11• County 1 u r Y I v o d controlled !be Up tool< 1 qulck
'fednosdO¥ nlghl II Ell•nd• obo1 tba1 ;;;J,Md, reboundod,
lflCh u Tint Adami (llltDed In • then -for tlte last obol and
I II-looter witlt four -Adams did lite hoocn With I
mn•lning in 0YertJme to &iVt nllbet. 1 the Baroni • Sl·ll trlumplt. It -• gallant bid by the
The victory keepi -smaller Ea&Jes. w!to snulled Dave Brown's Fountain Valley
Sloe@
crew In a tie I~ llrat place In
the ~ ~-'""' alter-on-·•· two sta ana ups the overa11 ·ia; -.;;i
nicord to Iii-I and 11 llrllght,
But It wuo't easy ... u ju1t
about everyone it findlng out
when they find, themaelves
faced with the toogb bind of
El(les from Estancia.
Cooch Dave Carllale's boots
had Fountain Valley aweating
bullets as the Eagles l<>ok a
surprtslnc 2!-1' lead at the
ball and then proceaded I<> go
lnlo stall tacllca with hopet of
pullinc oil a slw:kfng upoel.
Bui turnovers proved a
tbom tn Estancia'• side in Jts
lltempl and Dnally the Berot~
gained a tie at 2$ on Tim HJll'•
Inside shot with 7: 42 ltll in
regulation.
A minute later it was Tim
Pirtle allpplng Inside to put
Estancia ahead by two, then
Hill drove the baseline and
~ed It al 27 with 5,45 re-
maining.
Scott Robuck of Fountain
Valley connected on a 20-
footer with 3: 19 to go and
Mille Magner got Estancia
* * * ColUM l'llllKJI cm ' " ~ 1l = ·i!11 Plr"-2 G1v,..r I 0 4 Tot1lt 10 t 10 2t
l"-1•111 YflllY (JI l ". 'l Hiii I 3 ~~,,,. : I ' ,.tmi ~ : i i H.~~;'' ; o i ~ A~k 2f0 4 olel1 k*ll ~ Qter'len U t Jl
[1tlflci1 14 ' 2 ' 0-!t Fm. Vlllt-y 56 \0 1 ' J..-;l
Why Did SoCal
Not Make Bid?
By M. R. SNOW
CM "" Dll'f "" IMfll
Aller Colorado voten turned
down the 1171 Winter Olympic
Games. there were: al least
foar legitlma:te American sites
lll!lk!ng a bid I<> host the big
international competition, not
to mentlop St. Moritz aod
Vancouver.
The American legU included
north and south Lake Tahoe,
Lake Placid and salt Lake
City, last to climb on the
baodwsgoo. Rlght off the bat.
the two Tahoes, which would
have included Squaw Valley,
scene of the 19!0 Winter Olym·
pica, found dUlereoce of oPl·
-because of polltical reasona. They killed their
chances when their bids were
studied by the American
Olympic Committee, which
selected Sall LaJce City as the
U.S. entry before the Interna-
tional Olympic Committee.
While the American locales
were campaigning either
honestly or in day-dreaming
fashion, it was a wonder why
Southern Calllomla .._
dido~ g.t into the ad. Aller
all, the Southland bas been •
stroog bidder for 'the lltllMltr
games, always pointing out
the ucellent facilities Jn LM
Angeles with the huge
Coliseum and the SIJCCeSI of
the 193Z games there.
Indeed a wag, who shalt re--
main nameless, suggested the
Sierra Madres for the '78
winter games. "'J'lle men's
downhill could be held at
Rebel Ridge," he started out.
"'Ibe women's downhill could
he held at Groen Valley. Table
Mountain coold be the site Of
the men's giant slalom.
Yikes Unimpressive
In 55-52 Triumph
Snow Forest could be utlliz-
ed for the women's glant
slalom. The men 's slalom
could go on at Mt. Waterman
and the women 's slalom at
Kratkl Rldge. Cross country
races could be s~read between
Snow Summit • and Snow
Valley. The biathlon could be
held in the Rose Bowl on
crushed ice. Skate events
could be divided between the
Sports Arena, the Forum and
the Burbank Ice Palace..
"F1nally," be concluded.
"all contestants, officials and
press could he houaed in tents
in the Disneyland parking lot
and be fed by Col. Sanden!"
Of course the wag was kid-
By DAN HAYES
Of ttll Dlll't .. llet Sllff
luckless Wemninster, but
finalJy came out wltb a ~
win in Sun.>et l<ague basket·
ball actioo Wednesday night.
"Our performance was
pathetic, slmpty pathetic, ..
commented dissatisfied
Marina coach, Jim Stephens.
The Lions' Gary Andrews
drove skilUully to the basket,
pulling Westminster to within
two points, 28-26, with five
minutes left in the third period
to put a mild scare into the
heavily favored Vikings.
Marina, however , quickly
closer than it really was. ding. Southern California's
After both teams got off_ to a slopes are far from adequate for the Winter Olympic. •
.. ~ed, MIDU.Lll"Ol:flllA MU
fJrst quarter, wlt.h "'· w.~ _ 00en dall11 w1111
, Westminster taking a surprlS.. ~-'~: .. ~f,r.=,,~1,:':C:
Ing 14-12 "'..ad. The Uoos Were d'i'tk.U from •OP t e(, i1lr '""" in. -·~ paced by a bot hand from crotttl'" Rldoe -dOMd. Junior forward Dave Walsh, Q1'· ''~ti;" ~ NRv '"
who scored eight points in the ~11=1 't"':!.n~:.!"~·t:' .. ~ -•ing period. TlbM MOl,illlltlft -~ ffttMt fl/ .._.. -~---'°........, Because of the Llons' 1roc~~ i.... ,,.,.., w~v
performance, Stephens was t11 ~'~ OPMt MilY w11t1 1t1rN
forced to insert into the lineup I~,_.~~ .. .:.J:m '-',V:
sophomore sensation Bob :=. c.m1·~~ """'· bUI "'°'' -In Losller, who still •-· 1 badJy ~ YtHl\I -TWo I'll ,_ ll'dlft ol
llO.!I r-w _. -CIWf" i-i .... "'7:."2 -afned ankle. Stepheru: said lroctl lc¥ b9N. Skllno rlMd /•lr la
.. ... , Ol'I ~ l\l>t"" -· Chi M ,_, before lhe game that Losner's .nG~ ~u':v _ Good 1o .~ .... ,
ankle wasn't in I.op shape and 11111111 -s.1u~vs Md $o.mdln on
that he wouldn't use him ,_,,... '0 t1a~~";:;=""~ec:1 09.._
unless he had to. • Gold MJ,,. -oow•t1n1 dlllv o....,.
Stephens felt the situation ' 1o '-TV-ll1l lnd'I 111... 11a1i.n1
'
nu. the Sea Kings turned to tamed th:e Lions. by scoring 12
Matt Keough and the senior consecutive pomts to. . pull ~.....,lngmmrnspomt~&wa)<, ~i 11\0 1l1kmg1'
1 best night of the season. burst was spar,ked by Mark
Keough hit from the outside, Ford and ~ark Adams, who
Inside and backside and ran up each ~ m two baskets. 1
a game-high 27 points, and lt The Ll_ons sco.red four quiCk
was his shooting that kept baskets 1n the final 42 seconds
Corona det Mar in the basket. or play to make the game
:!\::'M lfic:hft ol -wef ~ _,
·~ "' CIO!dltton.. -met 111 con. warranted-, 90-(mn,.,.,.r-eneft.;.-<11;;:. •iii•·~!ffi~;:;::;':;;:~;;;-;:;:;--+----·I
tered the game and quickly 1,:,_ o1 \: ~ ov:1!Tx "';~"'"=
d hi ! I ""-lncft blM wltll 1hAl'l\I wrteee. MdlllCll
Boes Nab'
·Opener
ball game. ·
Scoring his points when the
Sea Kings needed them most,
Keough popped in eight points
in-the-·secOnd period ind to in·
the third as the game entered
lhe final quarter With Corona
Collegiate,
Pro Scores
de! Mar on top by a Point. coo•
A basket by Bob Clark and NC s1.,, ''I Ou-• a1
! N«rll C•rol n1 t2. Clefl'llO'I 51 ree throws by Jones and v111en1v• " Ale~ ''
K h W•kt f'(W"i U, Nilfltr• 11
ma e s presence et. 111e 6-··~:W.Tor:i'~·T.,.o to'°""" llltllff"'
5 forward put in six polnb as $',;.,.,.. -'1'111W. -..., to '-"'
0 en n 1. °'*' Setvnl•v •II<! y. the Marina II .. functioned ll'ldl o. ... s.tllnl ··~ ~
Well .. '--'•• the "--· t• S-Sllll'Wlllt -Ooell d&llV th W ' ......,. .. ~ ~. u-to lour lndlel of --· e II I ..., 6, and going into balltime with =-~'1~.~ ~'"r0~C..:: a za.20 advantagt.. nigh! .-llflll l"rld.IY ltld Sl!Uf'dV,
Losrter, who played the rest IMrMnottl ~';'.~ Tr,: ... "t...!'
of the game, led all 9COW'S :. ~ '::"~1..,. lldl~ with 18 points. Oii Ill lll9f!WIYI, Dave Walsh Jed Lion scorersl~~i~~5~~;~~ by throwing -o:in 14 points,
foltOwed by center Andrews
with 13.
Ford contributed 15 points
for Marina, which is now 2-1 in
league play. eoug pushed the Sea Kings 111n ... 11. u, sMv ts
in front 43-l'J , and two more ~~ft: f1~'i'r. l.out, ,, MenM 1su W Al.NUT -Orange Coast
College received a balanced
scoring attack In not<'Jling a
6M2 victory over host &It. San
Anl<>nlo College In the Sooth
Coast Conference basketball
opener, be,.., Wedneoclay
nlgilL
ESTANCIA'$ MIKE MAGNER 1311 GRABS A REBOUND IN 31-29 LOSS. S. Colo. SI. 12. Molll•rt.'° S,.,.lllY I buckets by Keough, a basket Ho..ent ,.,"" M, 1 •••1 At.M ss lllouer ~ "1 "! 1
by Clark and a pair of free POll'IOlll st, ~kltfi11 ~ Ae1•m1 l o
throws by 5-9 Mike Williams ~!\l:iJi. .. ~~' "'*"tt.. Fore1 ,I 1 U
It WU the first time sin<e
the 111&7~ ...... that orange
CouUIOd opened a CIX1ference
campaign with a victory.
~· ..-.. ,.,,-;.;;i;..,..,.. ~ r::.,_ ! j .I kept the frantic Los AJamltos kOlron il!. Hwston IM. ~ J J il Orgill's Layup Earns Saddlehack teamatbay. mlr .. ~·11""-'" " -·---.. w '
Rustlers 70 -68 W·i·n Cagers Fall ~~~l~a:?;.~ ~~i~:~-~4:--111 ~
The winning Pirates led
nearly atl the way and receiv-By CRAIG SHEFF
•
ec1 1• 1 t flort r t ot --o.u., "11111 ''•" .,po n e s rom cen er Gary Orgill hit a lnyup with
Dean Bogdan and guard John 36 seconds lo go. giving
Seymour, a spark1ing 14-Point Goldrn West College a four-performance Crom guard Broce Miller aDd got 10 points Polnt lead and preserving a 70-
out of forward Rod Snook. 68 victory over vis iting occ, dlsplaytog COD!istency Cypress in Southern Calilomla
on offense and Jacking critical Conference . basketball play ,._ had Wednesday night, tornovera ~ plagued It Orgill'• bucket came after ~ ""':.::r.g;, 1~ ~ the winning Rus~en had stall·
go. ed for nearly I Ii minutes. '111~
,,,. Mounlltl cut " to ...,.. sophomore guard found an
a cauple of minutes later, but open lane and although fouled· made the layup,
the l!ucs soomed allNd by 10 His rr .. throw attempt was and theo held 00. . E1....,. for two brief no good but tesmmalt Jell St. ........ Clair gra.bl>ed the rebound.
moments In the first half, the The Rustlers then held on to
PJr1te1 of coach Herb Li vsey the ball for another 15 seconds
led all the way. OCC enjoyed a before a threo-second violation
3$.U halftime advantage. turned it over.
!he Rusllers coul d never shake
Cypress -due mainly lo the
h1 ct that Golden \Vest did not
sink a free throw while the
Chargers hit 16 of 19, Including
12 of 15 in the opening half.
The Rustlers were limited to
four free throw attempts but
oulsc1lttd Cypress, 3$-26, IM>m
the <ield.
The Rustlers were led by the
oollllde sbool1ng of OrgUI and
,Jell BUil and the Inside play
of Jell St. Ctatr.
Butt hit eight of ll field goal
attempts with most of lhem in
the 22·foot renge. Orgill can·
ned eight of II with moot of
his twe>-pointers coming from
the comers. And St. Clair h1td
s One first half, scoring 12
poinu and playing well on the
Attlesey chipped in five ~ '· New York '""""" 1 'rofr. ,: 1! sl
RIVERSIDE -Defending baskets to comp 11 men t .l'iln·,;;~ !'· tl:k~ 1 ""r= •cere ~ fM:"'1, lt:fl
Mission eoorerence basketball Keough's scoring"6nd take up r-'-"-•~rn:·~··:'~"~'~' ~· ~~~~!w"~~~M~·~~L: .. :·-·~· -;-~'-champion Ri verside Cit y the slack.
College handed Saddleback its ,....,., -.. M•r 1,.1 thirj straighl loop defeat . 64· hr" tt ''
d w.ui./'1'!1 r j ' , 60. here \Yednes ay night. J~, i i i
Riverside's Tige rs Olll· ~~•°!!v l o ! "
muscled the Gaur.hos on the ~~~ '0 1 tr
boRrds nnd repeatedly scored s'f:',~~ ,: f 1J J
rmm close range to gain com-Lii Al•"'''" 1n)
nland in the opening minutes 1}" ~ of play. 1-~or the game the i~~ I :
Tigers hit on better than 50 ~ fl ~~~~ !~~s~t ~hi~ ~i:.1. ._ ., ~: , ,I J
percent clip. C I I
SetHltkdl J_M) ~~.:"" 11 tt a 1~
Mulilnlx 1 ~ -; '1,lfii;;i;;;;;;;;i;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;i;;i;o;;~j
A&11Cr1!1 l j > ~ ('l/11\llV l 4 J ,. i::~: l · I · "el»IJ(). 11
:11 " ~li::-i.-' . . i I i LL ~i.::~-i ! I .! BIG -n-TA
THERB ARE OVER
100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR
C"AR ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbor Baulnard
af Cara
LOOI l'OI THI IMIUlll A1'
01111119 c..tt c .. , Cypress' Tom Laube hit a _,. tt .. .,
..,.. 4 ' ' •• bast)Jne jumper with nine ..,... w .. , 1111
=..,_ 11auec1 out· the ... malning • I
board!.
CONNELL ' BAUER CHEVROLET BUICK
2111 1'25
HARBOR ILVD. HAlllOR-BLVD.
Ml~ "-"" t' .: " .. BIG SALE
1 ~~ • ~1 ·1 :1 P:g~E: I
:14 mt~... i 1• Uf L 1M If .. C... ....
C.. ' : I : : u~ ahootllli &u per-"" ! l
--------·---l'UIS DlM!I
oumAMDOOi Ami
! ..., • ...,..;..,.. :
: •CMTNOll..... :
I Rimi
! ':it:' ara& ... : : .... ...,
:~·'a -, : .. --: \ -·-= ............... . .................... . :r.
~
~~ ' .:,: .!.' ·.:.' :!:~ =~ ~~ u~ courr~ ,. i ·11
.,.. •· ·• ' ' "' cent for the trame (3S_for M • :as-• '' ~~~~~-' ..... -""'J .... ~~~~ • -~~~~-..............,
i;.. j t .. f J -~~ ":::.· ~~ "_m_ .-.1 •t .,...U <__!'.ll,..:;-:;;:::;;,;;;;,;-;,;•;•;0:;• .;""':;:"";,.,__,,,,,,,o;;,;;.,,,,,,,,,,,,,;,;;;;;;;o;,;;;;;;;;;
•
, I •
•
•
·:---
DAILY .. ILOT PllllM ., LM l"IYM
LOOSE BALL ELUDES EDISON'S DAN WINCHELL AND MESA'S JOHN CUMMINS 1531.
Mustangs
In 44-36
Trimnph
8\' llANK WESCH
Of ll>e D•Uv ~ii.I 11•11
Costa l\.1esa manhandled a
troobled Edison basketball .
team to take a 44-36 Irvine
mgue ViClory WCdnes:<Jay
night on the v.•inners' court.
The winning Mustangs, play-
ing aggressive man-tcrman de-
fense all the way. overcame a
brief Edison lead in the sec-
ond quarter and then put the
game away by outscoring !he
Chargers 13-2 in the third per·
iod.
It V.'as Edison·s second
straight league loss.
Costa t.1esa evened its
at 1-1 in loop play.
Edison suffered through a
miserable shooting ajgbt. scot·
ing only 17 points in the first
three quarters and hitting only
26 percent of its shots in that
lime.
\Vith starting guard Dirk
Zirbel sidelined aftef the first
few minutes wittf an illness
the Chargers failed to solve
Costa Mesa's defense and
turned lhe ball over 15 times
in the first three periods.
Costa Mesa wasn't much
better through the first two
stanzas but when forward Phil
Salazar h.it a free thro\Y to
give it a 16-15 lead with SJ
seconds remaining in the Cirst
half the Mustangs didn't look
back.
•
Mike Berry. a S.5 senior MESA'S MIKE BERRY 155) BATTLES EDISON'S DIRK ZIRBEL FOR THE BALL.
forward, hit three quick buck-----------------
els lo get the t.1ustangs start-
ed in the third quarter. and
when John CUmmins tut a free
throw with 2:51 left in the
period Costa Mesa had a 27-
17 lead which was never jeop-
ardized.
F.cli80fl finally loosened up in
the rourth quarter to score
two more points than it had
in the first three periods com-
bined, but it "'as too little loo
late.
From the first quarter on
the game was hampered by
numerou s foul calls and it was
at the free throw line that
Costa P.1esa actually earned
the win.
The P..1ustangs v.·erc out-
scored from the noor 14-13
but hil 18 of 28 free throws.
Edison v.·as as cold from the
line as it was from Ille field.
ho'vcver. and hit only eight of
20 charity attempts.
• ._ IMI
Basketball Standings
SOUTH COAST C0NfElt£.NCE"
WLrfPA 0•1noe COl•I 1 0 6t 62 l1nt1 Ana I ! " " en DI-Mtll I 103 It F11ner1on O 1 II 100 C..-rllol 0 1 1$ M Ml. S•n Antonio 0 1 62 6t WNM•T'I Sc••tl
Or1flQ<" Co111 69, Ml. S•ft An!onio 62 San Oi"'IO Mtlll 103. F~ll•rron ••
S1nt1 An• 16, Cerritos 75
5•11~y'1 Glll'ltl
F11llerron at 0!'11~ Co.s• S•nt• An• .. Sin DINO Mn• Ml. S... A1'~1o 1! Ct!'rltot
Wanted: Refs
For Soccer
" ,. , .. ,.
'" "' ~~ '"
Free clinics for those ln-
terelled tn becoming M>cc'et'-
referees arc being planned by
Bernie Harris of the Pacific
Soccer Lea111c_ Rdtcil<'S
Auoclalion. •re can be reach·
ed •153!-0387.
Area Hoop
Summaries
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
. " . '~
/
:.:"::":.:'"::':!:' ·c.J='="'="l:;___:_ll::•_:l:.:9.:.H:_ ______ _:_DAIL Y PILOT 31
Chargers Sock FV , 4-3
t
By RON EVA~'S In the !PeOnd lutlr hair :ind !hen m~ on
ot Ille 0•11' 1"1 ... '''" The Chargers pirked up a stveral ~ring opporluniliu
A fiedgllng Edison lt1gh goal by Carlos Posso in the la te In the col\,lest.
School soccer learn stun!l<'d 1 ~~ b kl ~lark \Vennecomb headed ln host Fountain Valley wilh ir.;;t quarter. Bnu t en quie y
three goals in the fint quarter ad1ied tallies b)' Jim Bro~·n on a shot Jn the top right corner
THuAsDAT and the n survlvlod 8 lat~ n head shot after an a11sist of 11lc {:oal after a picture·
.:l1•tT ~·.c~i.Tm1~. wi·:~ 1,r:to": charge by the Baron~ to notch fl"Oln Pos~ and by John Stirl· pt:•rfecl pass from the 100ef1Scco•· k/;.;'~'?,.:::"• (~\ 11, its 1ourth u•in uf 1he season ing off Brian House 's assist n{'r by Harry Yot
1
1.ng. a rd "tit
'~"",,'.','I m,"l~1~.•,,, ,',',' liri>l" the Barons 10 within a ~•• st111 IR1...,'d•l in Wed'oesdn)' Fountain Valley. slynued of-Vnu ng kicked a ive-ya er o
-Ed>SO>J ·,n ·,1, l>rsl 1•car of l••s>1•c l.v nearly the entire ., "" •Wier [W••d 111 ' ~ -'-" j
DIC• NO'-( 111...,mi 111 SOC('er, is now 4--0-l on the first haU b.~' the quicker goa · ti•• lC1rC1o11l 111 d
Dolls-. 1w4toon1 iu season and J-0 Jn Oran~e Chnr~ers, SC'orcd 111 the second Both of the ''oungs ha nar·
RN n MHl6C• cor1¥1rl 11' h Sc ' row m'•••cs in the fourth ..,!!°"°" cv•1::,>~1ei.i. 111 County League play while period w en ort \oung got ~
'"'""' At Htk"f.• 11 •1• Fountain Valll'\'. in its second 11round to-:chson fullback Dave quarter. llarry missing on a ~!-:::''~~t~11W~n:1Gdl """'1 lJ year. is 3·4-1 uild O·t. Giron for an ea')}, 12·yard head shot !hat barely cleared
k-• ~1 P<nlOll > 111 Edison rolled 10 8 4.1 shot. 1hc top of the gall.I and Scott
SRCONO •ACR -.00 ¥l•dl. l re.• halftime Jt'ad and th{>n held off The Barons lll'lltly turnf'd 11f'ilrly connecting On 8 short ~-.ifi~'°r}<r,=1;1a. p~, .. '3:. _:•.:l~u:.n~o~u~s~f.:·o~u~n~•·~·~nc_V:a~l~i•0y~ra~l~h:_· -•~h~<·_g~·a~m::::•c•~r~oo~nd~i~nct~h~e~"""~~nd:::_·c"~'~"c"1P~lcs"tr~aci0gchc• =•c•c•ch=•,Se°':::.:1.:-. c-CM llllc,_ftl 1101· T1>1 [vnuc" (A1$1•rl 110
Wl\ll• •ttu•" ($a1 .... 1 no
Lo>d• J•ffV Win J$mltn1 1U
T1»'• Gil (MYIK 'H Ee"" Toa (Aoi>in-\ l ~ of Drt•MI \P1qel 11 ~Ill.II 81• \W"d llS
a.I RIKI Y.:r..:Li=~ l'f
•1111 llOOOY I ..., !Dr•y1d
l11DW (1lft IC.1ri11 Au!ltn 11Hd¥ fP~I
Good f'•kl•Y G!rl !AUl'°11 1
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•le'"'' CicHI Gold flol1"ud1 I
Trl>lv Ptuum (WriQ11'1 Gold (OOY 1(tOtbYI
k_. Al1lwli tll~m ! Dewrl S-110rm (Ad•!•I
Alamitos
Results
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SECOND •AC£ -150 ¥1'<11 1 ve•r old m11l<ltl'' Cl~l..,lnQ Pvr~ $1)(1(1
Ouflllc•tt ~ (Sm•tf\J lf ()(I I 00 • 90 HI'-" !Ward) 1 eo l ,211
C••f\ Cit !J!kh11ro•l • 20 'Time -1f00
All<l r•n -M IU¥ Mio~! Go Mr Don J~I P•l'1 Cu•e 81•. c111dtro Too.
(o" • 511• !••. Mcni.l'n•. G•¥ Num""r Sc•11rr1>e11 -Ec~o Too Cfl••oe COClv. R!l¥11 l llUIH. 0.vllU•I Time
THl•O lllACC -0 0 vara• l vtJr old & uo Cl1lmlfll Pu•ll 11100
l!ov1!'t R-11 4H1rH 11.IO l olO /" Sl)Ul"'1 11:"'"""1 (llol\1ml 2.60 20 Mklw1v 0.ndv (J!oolnoonl l .l'O Time -1l.1J. Alto r1ft -Moll-Moo!!. 011mtu11. Go Ooutll1 Go No ..;r11tl'ltl.
---DODGE RIDGE
SKI PACKAGE
Fhhtr Silve1 Gltst Sliis, Gtull"'
M.t Sttp·i• l i11ili1MJ1, 1M Alli.,•
Slii Polts • l famous names 1111h1
,1r; e~uipmt11t yt11 111e4, now 11 1
ltit '?S.00 11vifl!111 l & G! 9 ft95 .
°7WAS T24"
Elltift ste<k 11 ladies'
alld men's ski ,01k1s.
famous tWmes su1h as,
Writ Wi!MI, l11<1 anr1r,
Nrw10, Rainier rt1w at
1ililittg SOYilll)t!
MUNARI "FOAM"
SKI BOOTS
H11MkM1e S .. 11ddo, bl1<k plaili< bnts , .. <t.ttlom
1111•11~ lo fit y111r !eel whik yo11 wail! Huriy lo yovr
11nr01t l l G aiwl '''°e • big' I 5.00 thrt.t ljt.111. )111. 14, 1•11 .
REG. 19"
.1595
SA\11 't.to IA(ll TMtU SUN. JAN. 1'1M, 1t1a .-~1;,
• ' I -~~~~~;;;-;:;;;;;::-;;~~~::~~~~~~~~~~ '·~ ~~~· -~··~' ~,-~~·= TOMIC METAL , 4 I ,, SKI POL"'S ttG.uort. 4 9 C SAYE 2S• .. -.. . . ''· LADIES' _
-~
AFTER SKI BOOTS ........... '.~~',':::.',1: ....... 93~
MEN'S CORTINA
AFTER s~ Boors ...... ~~.~~.~l!':;i::.~ _9JJ..
NYLON WIND ······· 1us
PANTS .... ········· lADtfS•, MIN'S (HllDlfH'S JJ 95 •.•••••••. fUlt l' l/NfO SAVf '4.00 RIG.
WEATHER VANE , •110•1o•cto•:. .. . .. ts.ts
QUILTED U ors. ••1111 uvr •1.oo 295 NDERWEAR ••••• ••••• ,,, ••. "" REG.
····· · l ts SAIE PRIC[S rrr1cr1v1 THltU SUN JA" I •
. "· 4, lf1J
• •
STORE HOUll5: MON . THRU FRI, 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
ljAf . l ljU N. 10 A .•. TO' ,,M.
LA MIRADA ORANGE TUSTIN SANTA ANA
SMOP,ING C(N 1£111
,.,....;.,. ,.1 ..... D1""'"" l ••·0ol
f'l'loM 12111?11'"
''s" N TU$TIN
Ptton.-631-1910
NlwrORT AVE .
11 /llll.J1 $TRlET.
Pnone bl·-'111
Jl&7 S 8A15l0L 51.
i 1 M>t<:Al'ITHUA
P"O!~ '.&J.J)11
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.JI DAILY PILOT 1....,..,., ......., u. 1971
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fi•rk tur.Cllng II •pprovtd. TM •Plll'llllfliolloll for to11tl-lloll of PEP Stello!! S Tr..,.;:lllng MKlllM, Htlld Propelltof ... .. .. . .. S.J:5S S.JOJ 6.1£5 '!"h.I ll'M. ""' • ..,,.,,. .,,.., .. .. ..... .. .. ... 1.d 7 n 10 J-y U,, lt7J II •PPfOWd. Ytull'I Dly In Or~ Cwnr, b orotieh'l'lld. T ... U""'9rMN L...,,..,, lntludlng C•I-~' ... S.US &.US UlJ T-(r-...... .._ fl'M. ..... lo an.e. s,ny, Swifll , .......... 7.M i11
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hi!#, Wlllltm '· l'lint1pa, llllpl ii. °"" tl'tCI IN Clerlt. • • "" 11'1'•11111-ltflll ,_,.., ,, .. •M bt P'kl .,, •JI 111111 .. """" tftlft -.. baW• o.tlltw Cl-. ...... •IW JwiM .. Uft .._.._ •. ~ II ..... ,..~1y'";, ... o!..!' :::·"t~. iu:--~,;u·:::::,~ ';':' = 5~~~;-~::?""" •lllW .... llw-1 ,~~1:.~~ M«tllM °'*""" w ,,, II> =;.ntiW ":::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::~: ::
Point AllCflor !\Wini, w1111 60 Uy1 •ltowtd flH' pr-lttloll ot tt1 KC..,... Jfttn 111111 lllm .-.... ~ 'tr o,.m.r :tiir.:.=:C..S"(C:e;;iMliiC'tA.i'i· ..... · · .. ·" · ~1:"n
...... ni.~MIW'Md. W.E.ST -~. ..ldl ~nt ~ ..................................... n k-fl p .11 !!'!'-""" •• '!!!' ... ""-'-,,-nt ...:...._, ... , ..__ -......, .--........, -• (C.WltKlleft) •• ., • "" . ., ............ 11.11 ci... Df ...... ,,.of~ •1t1.ter, Drl!llW, ~ ........................... a.• "-" r.o a.-w.'flrlll lmll MwMI , ............. OMNW 1-"'Pil _..,..., IC»l•wcftlll'IJ ................ , .. , s.u
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ION 1 OllrfY Pk*'flNfl ................................ ., ........ 1.a 0 -, ··1• N -.,._.Will llK1liafl -•oNJ0,-... -10,,0 'I'' --Jo O A lllOl..llTIOl'1 Of' TM• CITY CCHINCIL Of' TM• Cm' Oii' (Ol'tA NIA, Clludt""*', (lblltlillllr ... ., . .. ...... . .. ... .. .. .. •.U •.I) 7.• llCIOt!'· r.a kr•ll'll" Optt•tor -lliUlfllno -·~ ,.1111'1 C.t, SIM ,.A""1iil "... ' ...... ,.,. '"" "' • ._ ·•• Ii....-rra. "
CALll'OllNIA. ll'lfllOIN• AND OHSRM1MIM• ., ... ••••••L l'R•llAILUIO COllu"9M ,,.... lflCludtl .................................. "'" t.rJ 7,11 PWl·li'i.r1I 190c,., llM' ..,.llllNif lo l:ltM , ... , CCOMM••CLU. DICMAT'Olll ... ,..,.. .. 1 .. n -t·lf.h u'.!tr.::,·:~,.,·=1:",,T':.~~"·":'c'::C:.:".l'U•L~ .. • .... ~ OtM!Ond-Orn1tr ................. " ................... ti· ~f, ~~ ~:=~~~:"Q',.~;~':~.i;,.~l~flypt) '-"""""'...... .. .. .. .. .... .. ...... N.00 N.SO "·'° nd "" mi.. ' ,...., ' """ ... """ ........... ·" ··" ....... ··" .. · ·.. ... · i T-i Mo" aor11111 Mo<ll_IM OptrtiW -'Nl01fl"9 · · ··" • .. " ..... " .. • · .:io !n11 ,..,:._.":=•I=•:: r•t• of..., d!MI ..... for lh4i' OC1111truc:1101i ~~~ .. ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.:::~:·::: t: t:: J'.~ OllO~,., ......................................................... r.n •.n ~tn "'.":".".'.'.''"'.":.'."'.'.".":.".'.'.".'.'.'.''.".' .. .': i~o
WHlltlAI, I ... (ll'I' C-.11 Of ttie City of Gott. M-tciinV •• tflt Gl'Olll MlllWINfl .............................. ·· ... &.• '-" 7,.Q ~ LM' 0.WllW (fl01,_.1Mll, .,......,_.l (IMfllOr, ..... PAIWT'lll C0VT ... AOQltTDnlO) '
...,.....ll,,.. "'""""'"' ... Cott. M.st P•rk.,,,, ll~llofl 00.trlC:I, lll•rllly Grovt """""""*' .............................. .. ...... ... .... 7.0 c..:!'rtw.llNr~-~°**-..... ""'1 .. 1.72 'It IM 0.'-"'trld ll1Mc:'I' lo!' HClptlllf w ... --for the .....,,,._. of ... le M1 ...... for SIMI ,...,.,,. •11~.1. •nd k!Nr .... ... .. .. 6.» .. u ,_. -'1"'""" ..... (..._. .... ,~~!'!"I,_-.,~ Al'tltf ~ fol' .. 111 Oltl'l'ldl l>lld (NoN: Helper llN' llNI '""" lilt'* Md Slntr PNY -·by lilll ..,__,... ·--....... " .. ., ... "" '" """ ..... " ... '•" $1.M
WHf•t:AS, "'-City o1 Cosl• Mal, by Joint "'-" Afr""*'ll Mt Ille 1M unO on 1 __.._ Miit wllll rhlP H .. ._,., PllM 1"" hlfitw ................................ · ... 1.U =.:r·:ntrll -~rvl~19111M..:;i~ .:,,.~ c:.;_ ':: ... S.~"'Z ~ JKkllg :,:~,I'~.~~~~~-~ .. ~~:~ .................. ,. 6.4 t .N J'.O ~=:::.:F. ·~~__. 0.-Nr IM -: ~:~::::-::·:·:·::::::-:::-:·:·:·:·:·::·: .. ·:: ~·r: ~:.. .;;:z#f iil:r-~1!·£l~L~ s.w-~r.i7.7ii ~ ~_s:;.~;~tt::t.~?: <;;;::~ ~; ~e !~ ..57=.:~::· .:~.:: =~· · ~~:.:;;;;;·~; ~ : .. ;~:::::.,,.., ....
OI¥ IUILOING AHO COHST•UCTIOH TllAot!S Uflll(ltilS, ..,...rtd 1fW1 ll.tbltllt'«I N""'"' ...................................................... 6,U U) 7.21 ~·r.:.~ .... -...~tr•IMe aN 2 "-YV = . lllMdll,_. ,....._ .. ........ ... lK •tiov.tr .... JM"llf'I'"'*' ''" by .. •i.11c11nt1 •nll C1111tlnlcllon Trlldn c-11 of OfMGI County c.111orr1i. ~ ........................................ ........ ••• .... 7.0 -.... ....... -.... 11 ............................................ SI.•
Mid._._ M ino illtduil twrllo •nll by .... '*"'~..._.. ' .____.' o,w.t"" Ill T.-.ffne 1ndfor Grwtfl'lu Mtdllnes .... •A ,,,. 7..U rare lf.t1MI..., •....,. .. 11t1tll1hcJ cl ,._ ... • .... -....,·w._:·::::::::::::::::::::·.·.·.·.·.-.. --.-.-....... !-?'! •nll • Plrt --1 1'1:11 TwidW -U11W. l'l'lllile or o""' tN"'"'-1. tor 11• .,., · · · · .....,
WH.E .. EAS. Tllll c-it dfftUll fl tit ti. "' ·lh4i Mlt ...... .,.1 el liot Cltr ........ (M llOI by _., of llmll•tlllll, IMrk,...._ Ofk, ,, •.» •AJ 1.2' ~T~ IQiief t l -9c .::= ... ltltiltt MM1tll W Wtltere •• · · • ·· · · · ·· •· • · · ·•· .. ··..• '°"' f//f 1rms ... ..,....,
•!Id w1IMn lh4i ,....,,,...._., 9' Ille UbCN' COG• Ill fflt SllN Df ......... , .. ,· ,, idci~ -""'"*' Houll "· .... '"" ..... "" ..... " 1·• 6.N J'.Q T-"-.. "" _-.!!C "'~ ... ,,_ :-~ .~ ..... """ ""." .... , .. '... "' of ""'11 pty...it Mid ..,,... ~ 1111 ..,......, .., rllennur ..... "'""" liU!I .... " ............ · ................ · •• ....... • •A •·" 1·4 -· ..... "',_,,. tel .,.. ....... · • ·" ·• .... · .. · .. ... l,,_ ti ,,.. M'l'f"ll
MOW, lHlftl!l'OA:E, IE IT R£SOLVEO • .., ... City COurlc:LI ..... en Stnl*W• .................................. , .......... Lii .... 7.4 i.?:tHol~~ . ..!::'T~~JtlCIMt ..,,.. .,.,.,,lk. & ~ 'tr•ll'lllltl ...... •. l'!'lo
OI Cftll Ml:ll, lhel Nld WAGE SCALES "011 THI! SIX BASIC TitAOES 1tJ Slllft Md bM WWll .................................. , t.1J&• J.ll l.61 IA ,.:;;;. Mf H ; )I(~ wtiMlillllltlll Utlllly Pl .... ll!e ~ .. 1~7~~l
..... sua-'tlU.0£1 HOU•LY WAGI! •ATE S Of' IUILOING ANO cotlSTII ; ~· MWI ............................... .. ........ ~ ..... J.O .. • twwy ... IOUlffF l .., eldl UlfOty "ltlllN JOunllylM11 ........ .. Lu.o.s UNtOHl,npr•r• byll'le8ltllidlril..,.C-tru<tt. Tr.-.~Mtll f'll'frl.....,,. ... s....r ..... .:.:;.~·w;rt;·:: ui t·:: ;::: "=·=·~"::.::~?:C,...'*:"':f..::~: .. '*:,....1....,...,"-'"' w w....re ....... :.:.:·::.· ..... :'. 1~
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of "8llr: -*1 for fht Cit'!' Of COste ,..., 1111 Cotti Mew f'lfll; •nll lttcrMlton •Ti. cl-'11Utloii "3Nft ........ Wirt" 111111 Ill notkllM "'•II ... frwt'I S/ltn-JOc ""lllaW "...., .. '" 111 illurty .... ,...,,..... .......................................... "'
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WAG• KAL•I ll'Oll: TM• 11X a.t.SIC T•ADM Of'lllAT"1• ... 1M•••s HMHll. Wttfll'9 -UC..,..,, . A/C .... """""" °"*91 .. _II ...... ·'·" 11111 _. r•l1t lltl«I below .,.. ill t«:Ol'lllnc:• wltll th• 111.-Of Tiie '°"1tllrrt ...._.111 , Wtff.,.• _ 60cl 1k. _ 111111 P-IOll -Sk ..., '*" AIC • • .,,...,.._ 'lttw '-•• · • · • · •• · '·11
C•ffferrtll Mftt.. L1tior AQr-t lor IN COnstructllHI inctUJtry •nd "°"" Ille ,._..., _ ,1,001 ,1,20 _ 1/lnt Vtc•llOll a, Mtlldly "UN!_ 7Jc..,""""' AIC • lltfr.....,.... f'llttr .................... L• '°''"""' -ri.1 Lot. Allgtt., Or8fll9, •1wr1ldt, S•" lltrN1rdioll, 111'1Ptt111. V1Ulloll _ HOlld•Y F\11'111-lOC fHtfTllrli Willll • CMl!Ncter 1ifftt110ri M tllil""""" J 91' MON TM .............. "9citlll W W....,_ ..................... ,...... .D v--. ...... lll'fltr•, 11111 Lull ObllCIO, Kttn, Inyo, •nd M-. ;E ~1r1tk:•lfllp _ 2c 1ftt ...,._. uMlc' 1119 kWWlcfllfl el ,._ T......,.. PdVlllfil Ml'!' ....._ ................ " .. • • ... • ... .. ... .. ...... l:JO Aoon:~ eon n•MS1 ,., ......... w .......... llC., Tr ... ....,.. W¥ill Tl'l'ftl ,_,.,. .. : )Oc; "' fiOUI' -"'-,.,. "' 1111 II~ Plllf l1111Mor """" Ills .. ,,,_,. ... tiltll ... ,.... _, ,.....,.._ .............. ;;;. Vtcllt1M .... • ... . • .. .. •. .. •. . . ... • . .. .. .. . ...... 1.00 ~·-""1Allct. 0""1llM,. ~ ....... "' CM111k11'ill$, '""' ,.,._.ltMI WPWVllloll, ff"Klw Will M)fM!e llfMi .,..,....... .. C1lfl ~ ........ ifiii ~ ....................................... .OJ
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c1.••ic. by Thwn.1 M. Ward, Dlputy. Dt i.d rllll fl1'I 4-Y ot J._,.,, m.
PUIH H1r~ Ed'lnr4 Mllltf
l"Wll.ri.d Or-. Co.rt 0.lly "''°'• llm B.iot Or. Dectn!Ow 21, lf'12 .m J.-y 4 ll, 11, 0.roHn Grove, C11tf. Im UJl.72 l"lilbllllMd 0rtll9' C0att Deity l"llot J.....u.rv 11, 12, 11. 1m · H-n PUBUCNOTICE P\IBUC NOTICE
ll'ICTITHKIS IUflNftS
NAMI ITATI MllrfT •rCTITIOUI IUSU•ll S
Tiie follow! .... ~ 11 lloinl bwl-ltAMI ITATIMl.NT
••: Tiie follOWrlltlf ...,..._ 11 dOll'lt bufll11ttt MlltAGE IMl"OllT1, T IM E t. E I$ 11:
PfOMADK CllAns. 1m Sooltl'I , .. ,, CONCEPTS. 1QS s...nor "-· Hwy .. U!rvN I Ndl, (6111. Unlf $, CO.I• Mfft, C.ilfonlla nU1
Rolpll lf"ttlnf, 1'22 IGutlt Coel'I Hwy., Oen L. Morrison, I~ TJlomH w..,, 1..atlilM IMdl, C1lll. De!aN. C11lforftla '3211
Tlll1 bvilMM la being condvded by 111 Tlll1 tllnlnnl 11 btlnt t'ONluCfwd lly 1n
ll'ldlvldual. INflv!Owl.
ll:1lptl llolend Don l. Mol'Tltafl
Tllh ti.'-! llMd wtftl It. C-'V This 1111-1 IUllO wlrfl n. c-tv
C'9r\ of Or .... Counl'y G'I : 0ec .... tiw 26, Ckrlt Of 0r1._ COUflty Oii: O.C1mbff 2'.
1t12. ly Thtrtw M. '#..-d, [)wpvty County 1tn. WILLIAM I:. ST JOHM, COUMTT
Clerk.. CLl lUC. by Therww M. W1rd. eeou ....
'JJ\fS . l'ltltt l"llbllltled Oranoe (Mii 0.lty Piiot l"lrbllshtod 0rl"4t (091! Diiiy .. lltll,
o.ttf'\Mr n . ''n.,... J.-...., ~. 11. 11. DKemtlel' a . 1tn and JaM1ary "-11, u ,
1rn lUt-12 1rn USS-12
··:; '
;•"' ., ...
kl . .',
••
I
P\IBLIC NqnCZ
PUBIJC NOTICE ......
MOTtC• TO CltlOITOfn
1Ul'••IOI COUI T 01' TMl
STATl OJI' C4Ull'OlJllllA POii:
TM• COUllTT OJI' OIU.lll•I
.... A.-1•1 Ettat. of MTlA l!. FltlEND. O.C..Md.
NOTKl! 1$ HE•EllY Gr't'EN to tt1e
Cfadllors .. Illa atle¥a ,..,,... dk ...... f tr\al ... ,..._ hav4rlg dllmt. ....,..., 11111
Mid ~I -raqutrad IO flle lflern,
""" .... ........,.., ¥Wtllln. 11'1 the ol'flOll of Illa dw1l ol lhe at1ow tfltln.1 ~. 0t
to ~ lllam, wllll "" MCftMl'y ~ .... 11M11.r111• at lfl4I otrlots
of lllt attwMys. •ICHMOfilD AND SMITH, nJ ,,,.., Wnlanl ..... Bklll ..
"4.a .. llutl-. _, ft. VNNnlOl'IN I~ all
IN!t.n Pllff•ll'llnf to tlla Hfala ol Mid
daaldlonl. w1tllh1 four -""' •ft• .... flrJI pvllllcatkln fll till$ ~.
0.1911 ~ ,., 1'11
DEL.MAI It. IUCHMOHO
EKacvlar of IM wlll
ot Illa ......... ~ --.nt ltlCNMONO AlilO SMITM 71t Jl'~I ......,,. ......... ,....._, CA t11fl
Tlih (n l) 1'Mf.lt An.,.,. ...... _...
"1.lbll"*I Or... C•t1 0.Uy Piiot, DKemllaf"-. 1m an11 J_,,., ., 11, 11, 1tn W1·12
PUB IJC NOTICE
PUBIJC NOTICE
I 41111
$UP'lltotl: COVllT OJI' TM•
ITATI OJI' ULl ... NIA JIOl
TMl COUMTY Ofl OIU.lll•l ..... .m ..
NDTIC• OJI' MU..1 ... OP HliilC*
l"Ollt '•NAT• OJI' WILL MIO fl'Otl LITT•1t1 TUTAMSWTACT
1E.tt•t1 If """"'y ALtcli JOHNSON, ._. ....
NOTICE IS HilEIT GtVfM "'-f
Jl'ltlO o. WlllOHT hM fllaol 1MrW1 a
"""'" for l"l"llblfe of Wiit and f'llr 1-. of llftert T.i"""'"'ary ta Illa
jlatltlMlr ...._ .. whktl .. """" tor
M1llar ~ ..... afMll tllat ,,. """' Mii
plam °' ..... '"' Illa -"'' IMffl Mt flDr J...,Y 211, mi. '' ·~ ··"'· lfl ... ~ of °'""'""""" .... I "' Mid ceurt. 11 no c1vk c.m ... °"" w .. 1. 111 Illa City o1 s.nla ,.,,., Caltfrl:lml1,
Der.I J-.-y '· 1m . WILLIAM L SI Jttt•, c-.1y Cltrll
CU.lll NCl "· LOflf'AA9lLI 1'7 Vlctwy P"""'Hlllllil ..... 1 .. H Vlctery l lWI.
Vafl """" (tmw.11• fl•I Alt9rwr WI "9flit1M1"
PllOthllall Or..... CM11 [).Illy .-11e1 J1.,.,.ry 10. n. 11. 1m n.n
PUBUC NOTICE
PIJBIJC N<mCZ
PUBUC NOTICE
PKTfTIOVI •vs1J1a 11
JIAM• ITATaM•NT
..
,,... ""'-"'-' ""'"-.,. ..,.,. N lroau n :
$AMTA ANA OOCTCMtS LU.SIN\)
cOM.-AMY, 1M1 co1119a, S...11 Alla,
Calllonll• t2l'Oll
1. A;ullat. J-IE .• M.D .• 111 M0ttl'I l rt11o1, lanta AM, Ca!llonlola n7a
t. Ml-ltl, Jol'lll A., M.O .• 1tcnl
Laaf'wolld L-, Stfof1 Ana. C..llton\la. ""' .S. IMl!ldirll, Jldl S., M.D., 11101 NOr"i
• .._....,,. S...tt AN, C1Htoml1 '219'
• 9-. AO'f' A .. M.O,. 221 Wail
WntllfWfllfl,, ianla AM, Call...,flia
""' S. C-, H. A .• 12 .. Ealt Qvlncy,
Orwoe. Calltornle nM7
•· Cleytoft. OM""-lUlll (Ht Whit· ...... ..,.. .. ~. Calltwllla tolOJ
1, C""°' .J-. M., M.0., 1• !:111
l1'lrl Slnlt, s-.ta Me; c.H..,. '1191
I. Dlor\ltol, Ooftald J ., M.O., l MJ 1111
Cl'laclm9n. 1111'9 Ml, Or ...... CMI..,,..., .....
f . Gil,._, Gr"*"• M,O .. ,,0, an m. °'411'911· eai1..,.,,.. ,... 10. H~. Jadl L. M.O.. 1'ZI ,....,. , Colla #itw, Cel~• f'HU
11. ~. Sfaf ... , M.O .. ltol> W•1I i..
V"•• Orat!Of, Callfom/1 ..,...
1t. Hat!--. J°"" (., M.0., '"" 1011ttri lrlttal. Santa AM. call~ t2JCM IJ. Man. VIM91!t A., M.O., IJll ....,,,.
Grand, Sant• AM, C..Hforrlla h 101
, .. Maw1and • .l'ltWI 1 .. M.O., nu 1 a11
ll'tfrl StrMI, San11 ,,.,.,., Cailtonlla '17'01
U. Oull-, Octtv(a I .. M.0., l:JOI
E••I Utll StrM!, lanl• AN, eau1or .. 1. ""' l'-It-, I Uly I ., M.0 ,. lltt
Eu! t1'!tl ltr9", 5Mll• ,_, Calllonlla
"~' 17. Stflt~na. F~ M.D~ 25U
MOl"'lll Mlll'I, Santa Anl. C.Uf'Omla '21111 II. T~ hltJ, 11'1 s.itt1 Oall.u, AM""'"" Calltorflia ,.,.
If. TlfllMY, • ..,._..., E .. M.0 .• 1'20 Eatt K•lotl..,, Or..,.., Callftrflla ,.,..,
:ID, Ullman. At1tu' , M.D .. "*21-A 1Ea1t c~. °',....· Ca.FlfDml• f'M1 11. w.n .. •~ M.. M.O., m ,..,..,.,
Cotta lrMW, C.HlorTlla ntil lt. blloawl, AIN'I, M.O., 11:1$ IHI ''"' s1rta1, """• ,.,,., ean......,.. nro1 23. Z.W-ate, AIPr.OO. M.O., '* Eall t11ti S'"91, Saflta ~ Callhmla '71111
Tllh "'1llMM b mMuc11111 1Pt a ........ perfnal'Mlp,
I UCHAA. TEl, NEMIE.l.
,,,,., m«
"1.lblllhlld Oranoa c-1 Deity 1'1101.
J-ry 4, 11, II, 2S. Im j..7J
PUBIJC NOTICE . "'" IUPll lOll COi.l•T OJI' CALIJl'OIMIA.
COUNTT Oft OllAMI
M W..t CMc C---Dnft. °' .... call ..... CASI MUMl lll I MU t .. _,
EMEULO ESCltOW COtl:l'Oll:ATI~.
A C..i!ton.la C..., Platfltltt~ V'lo.
cu•TMElt ENTIEll:NlllES. I N c . I
GEOllGE CUltTNElll J •KKAltD I. MAlllUTAMA; MEW..0.T NATIONAL
IAMI(; UNITIEO STATIEI 01' AMIEltlU.1
INTIEltllAL RIEVIENUE $ E •VI C I! ;
STATIE OF CALll"OltJlllAJ IT ATE
10.U:D OF ECIUALllATION; Fiii.AMi(
l"OZGAU dllot WEST!:lllN SH EET MET AL CO., a IOl9 pitipriakllatllp; ILIEGAHT
_.Nl&•llJ;'IEI, IM 11..UML.....L_ EGIEll.M.AfilJ SAN·VAL •ESTA.VllAHT
l!OUI.-. CO. • c..llhlnll• CM-11.1 F'H ILU.-
0 . SHATZi STANLEY F. ~SIM. M.0.1
JOHN DOI! I TH•trX1 MAIT •ot AHO
~~~~I". A, Ctllto1]119 t.yp«atlp!I,
Ta Illa ~ti; A dvll com"4alnf
i'llt blotfl fllacl 1'J Illa pil..ir1!1fft, ... l ... t yov. II rt1111 with to dfltnd tlllt lawwl1,
'!'*" P!IWI f'lle rn · rllh ceur1 • Wl'lllal'I ,....Ill kl rn.ooriM to Illa ~nt ,.,
• Wl'llt4'1' "' aral plMdt,., 11 a J1111k1
C-1) <Mtllln JO lNYI tl't>tr tlllt -It Mn'td 111 fO'I. OftlerwlM, ..,_ defavll
Will -4111'11•.0 Ol'I ~·"'9r! "' ""' plalr1"tf& and Illa cwrt may l'fllw 111 1....,.
IMlll ao1111t1 '°" 1o1 111a ..,,...,. ar t111ar ral~ 1'9qW1190 11'1 fill comf[lllll'I.
.. Y'I' wl.ai N .......... a If M a'I• ......, I• tllfa _...., Y'I' lllMI• .. M
""""""' • ftla'I .,_ ...... H Mf, _, .. " ... ·"-041'4 J\ll'f 21, 1'7'1.
WILLIAM E. ST JOHN,
"''' fly OOrwlol Gllltlon1. ISUJ.~
U Y L. MATl'llLO
-L11111 l uc:ll IN ...... sa.tll ..... C-'ffilnlla ,_
Teti (HJIM.J:l11 ..._..,,.,.._
l"vblltllM Or.,.,,. Cont o.41r .-1101 ~ 21, 21, lf'1 ..... J_.ry 4, 11,
1tn uo...n
PUBIJC NOTI CE
TtiurWly, Jlnuary 11, 1971 DAILY PILOT :)3
Y PILOT CLASSIFIED
--
General General
~ "°"1'""4tt,,t -S•it4-
~ 1111 woams
REALTORS
282a EAST COolST HICHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR. CAUi".
644-7270
Investors *
take interest
VACANT lot, C·2 Commercial zoned. 100' x
70', near Knott's Berry Farm. Submit all
oilers Including trade. $45,000.
* AUSTI N-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCI ATES
644-7270
General
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
AT LAST!
FREEDOM FROM
HOUSE-HUNTING
Jlen!"1 just a sample. of
our illl'l'e inventcry of
Rl"fl\der.lial '1 Income
Properties. 1.fort> than
llkf!ly .,.,.e have what you
wan I.
MESA VERDE
3 BR, 2 BA
3 yn ~. suP"r roomy at
beiow markel $37,500. w .. 1 s1c1o : B .. u1;1u11y
carpel~ 2 BR on xtra largt>
!()( at a mm $23,750.
College Pa rk: Several
3 Ir 4 BR goodies at around
thl'l S..'2.000. !"an\tf!.
MONTICELLO.
3 BR, 2 BA.
beauty at a down·!o-f!arth
122.400
INCOME UNITS
&-FOR $7!1,000. Eutside is
lerrific at $980. mo income.
11).\\'ITH $1660 mo income
going for $14.5,000.
28-AT S350,00l. penc1ls out
IP"•l
WOULD \'OU LIKE 14.l at
2 million!
Newport ..
F1jnllw
646.all
""71intol
MOVE IN
CONDmON
Sharp 3 Bedl'l'lOTT1 Home, now
unoecupit'd. l 'i Batha, Ftre.-
pla~. B/I Kitchen with
DUhwuher. EJtcellent
.............. wi1I> -· lers and Covered Patio.
Fountain Valley. Ottered for
$33,950. Ca 11 Anytime, ........
TIP TOE VIEW
General
WANT ROOM
FOR
A POOL TABLE?
Her<''11 room ror M.'\'eral! La
Cut•s1a "El Dorado"
model
0
fC'a!Url's 3 lx>drooms,
lorrnal <l1n1rl£', C'harrnlng
k1teh(!n and r.tmlly 1uon1
I\ 1th 1rsrd bri,..k fin-place
and a 1300 sq. ft. rompll.'!M
rumpu<1 room. AH \'f'rv
neatlaha.rl> lhmughoot, 11i-
uated on a C\ll-Oe-aac N>ar
k"hools, bt-M..ti and Wop.
ping. Priced we.II bf-lo....·
n1Arket v&I~ and replaee·
ment ro«t at $47,500. For
addilionaJ info, plt'ase. phont'
:>46-2313.
Newport Beoch
Furnished
Beach House!
8.1 STEPS TO S ANDY
BF.ACll! CoQ_ knotly plnl.'
k.11<•hf'n. i''A~tn..Y ROOM!
l bNfl'f'W)ms. 2 ha.Hu. ALL
FURNISll!::D! NEW SllAG!
Boat-trailer B<'Ct'11.!1. Outdoor
800.....·f'r. l:Z cart' yard.
LtQUJD,\TION! LOW . LOW
PRICE~ Ca.II fut -645-0.103.
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Low:ly 3 b@droom home
ill a beautltul• tettlna: with k>ta of tree..,
privacy A a m&&nHlctnt
yard. Tutefu).bl" decorated.
Conve.rt.lble den, large.
lotchm ii: spa.ck>us
living room.
$69,!;00
HAl"!llO"
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
CURCl 'S CASTLE
A UN IQUE 4 BEDROOM HOME that goes
on-and on-and on ! The master bedroom
suite is spacious. The living room-dinlng
room-kitchen is scrun1ptious and the front
elevation is the finest, "'it.h ~texlcan We,
grape ivy and a n1eticulously manicured
lawn. See this one if it's space, .storage
satisfaction you want. (In beautiful Bay~'
crest!) $79.500.
UNl9 UI MOMIS OP NIW'°IT llACM, .'4MIOO
A lhtllit trf LY'-" .....
U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S
REAL TO RS
General Ge neral
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
Bes t buy in area. Immac. 4 bdrm., 2 bath
single story home. Large patio, room for
pool. Newly redecorated. View ol bay &
ocean. Low lease. $65,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bay1ld1 Dr., Su lta I, N.B. 67""6161
A LAUGHING
PLACE
Thl'rl' Is a place where
t'Veryone and his family can
ht> happ)o. IA'eivl' just lltted
this profl!'llSionally aC'('f>1lt('(I
4 bedroom home .... ·1th a
latgl" family room and
Country kitchMl featuring 3
eatlng Brt'fl.s, Ol'le' formal,
11.nd fantim.ic rolor coordin.
a\1fij!. Takr t.he time Jo !lff
tl11s lovely home and you'll
~anJ to move in instantly.
PriN'd at S-t7,990. Call 110\lo'
842-233.5.
<JnN 1/L t • rr'S f U# JO tJE MCEI
In Foreclosure!
$15,750
FULL PRICE!
HURRY! FORCED SALE!
Freshly painted Interior.
WASHER and DRYER lN·
CLUDEO! Stalnless steel
kil chen with bullt-in blender.
Dining room. Private gar-
den patio! Storage lockers.
IMMACULATE townhouse •
POOL. too! BUY THIS
RARt~ BARGAIN TODAY~
Call &6-0303.
SOMETHING
SPECIAL
A big family home for the
growirw famUy. 4 Ovrnbtd
bed'rooinA, 2 bQthg and f.am.
Lly room, local~ on cul-de--
sac atrttl just a block from
elPment.ary !!Chool. NN car-
pets I: drapes. Full piice
$33,950. with VA no down
trrms avaJ.Wilt. .
540-USl Open EvH.
-· • HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
SSH!
Yi't-have a WESTCLIFF
OOmr! 3 Bedroom, Family,
Dlnlne nn. lots of extra
goodiet1! Assume 5% pct
loan. Heated Pool, and ewn
more! Shown by appt, Price
onl,v $59,500. llurry • the
Jut \Vestcliff Hating M>ld
within 3 days!
-· 646 4067 ..... 1liere bi a reuon
18 yean 1&me Jocation
Lachenmyer
R:e .1ltor
73 4400
$45,700
'ltltllt"3-tm-frH,"-11---l
4 piex, 4 bdrma, 4 bill.hi. Beal
INVEST YOUR
TAX DOLLARS!
Income tax dol:lars give you
nolhlng in return! Why not
diven them to a &ood. re.al
estate lnvtament? This
. Eutcidc Costa , Mesa pro~
erty Is always rented. Fea-
tuns 4, 2 bMroom units and
ha.a ht-en refurnished and
UPKTaded throughout. Full
priC'e ia $66,900, with ex-
ctUent lirwx:lng available.
Pleue phone ~2313 for
additional information.
"SHOW PLACE"
2 yrt. new-and better than
.. Show Room" oond.l Uon! 4
specious bt'droonu. dining
room. all electric '"Awa.rd"
bull!jn kitchen, dWiwa.sher,
famUy room boal!!s a hand.
some fittplace. One level
home y,·\lh bTCakrast bar.
\\'alk' In pantry. Electric
garagl.' door opef'\('r -all
thl11 & biit llUrprise -a
hearl'd & filtered pool. Brk,
~lTj).
TARBELL
li.nfioi c;;;~-
c!: ~~":a, I I f .ij fl 21
s.. 1or ,.....n an<1 com· EVERYTHING FOR
pare !he view. S.e lor )'OW'· $39 950 Aelt ' compa.re the featiJre'!I;, ' '
EAmlDE
BARGAIN
Hard to tJnd large 3 Jx.d.
mom 2 bath In Eutalde
Cos1a M<'!l"a. Huge mllllter
1ulte1 oversized 62' x 125'
!Ot with "garaite on alley.
Th!s del!ght!ul home 1s
MmC'thlng l'IPf'CiaJ and
pnC'f'CI at $32,950. Hurry!
~1151 Opt>n Evra.
• HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
POOi:
$37,9501
BN'R \\' /sl~ Cotrta Mesa.
$590,-per mo. Income. $50,000
lll'lllng price. Term.a. Call
Rl'alton: ~9491
·Open Eves.
CAPRI STRANO
RANCH HOM E
Room for 4 ho1"51'S: 5
txvlroom, f1tn1. home.
Pr1vntc l'Olld. Country at-
mosphere -vll.'v.·s. Y,' Pool.
15 l\lln. to airport $78,!fJO.
Call Gecir·1p Grupe
COLDWEU., BANKER
Realto~ 644-ZCO, 833-0700
550 Newport Center Dr.
TWO HOUSES
BY OWNER
BOTH ON L y m.ooo
Xln't re ntals, 2 BR e1ch
Private yards & !lepar&IC!
dnw:a. Auuml' loan of
$24,000 wt.II carry 2nd T.D.
642-1060.
Oleck fDr yourself &: com-3 BR & tam rm, on cul-d e·
pare the pritt. Bf'lvedere sac In top arta. Dbl flrepl.
4 ~. home $85,000. &: you dsh .... ·shr, bltln11, flagS1one
own the land. O....·ner ay,·ay entry, lush landSC'pg. Be81
put excluJ>iVl' agent wrl-tcrmii avail.
3 OVl'rsized bedrooms, large
family room , 2 eleganl fire.
places, all rlectrlc bulltins.
Dellghtful pe.Uo with arees~
to bath, Extra Slor~ room.
Del Pi90 enlry haU, Elcc·
Irle p,ara~e opener . All this
plus loads or dt>eking and a
fabulous pool ' Brk, 54().1720. I·--------•
TARBELL
rome for pre\i!ewing. Opc>n PllONE: 642.1771 2955 Harbor, Co"lt'\ Mt"IJI
1 to 5 F'Ti, Sat & Sun. 1327 "!~!!::!' : ~I Drive lol'f Inlet Drivel. Ii I Choice Waterfronts
A mutt on your schedule. P ENINSULA POINT L1nd11. !sir La~n -5 BR ..
Sun. may be too late. DUPLEX fan1ily, 2 11.·1·1 bars -new.
Colwell Prop Inc 2 B<lrm• .. 1 ba1h "'" ""''· 1289.SOO. uoo Noni • BR •• C<>mplmly """"''· 1'•\d<: '••· lamily rm.: apace lo' 615-'1'225 Live in upp("r·lowt.r lcued larie boat. $265.000. Both
Sa>o month. Hard 10 tlod very sptelal properties!
du p I e it , thia loca:lon. Eileen HudM>n.
Si'l.500. COLD\VEU..., BANKER
Call : 673-3663 675-..8886 Ews. ReaHon &U.UXI. 833..mtlO
associated
560 Newport C.enttr Dr.
EASTSIDE--::--$29)50
Coan!J')' Sil(' )'Ard, det'p shag
PLAN AHEAD
G<-t in the swim lhl11 Suni·
mer 11·1th a \\'inter Sp!'C'l11.1.
BargAln prirf'd 3 bf'f1roon1
pool. homr large nreplacr.
dinlnl{ room, 2 btlth11, all
~hC&l'lJ f..· C'l<'lln. Pool 1~
hC'at1'ti and f1lfC'f'f'(J, ~tr111
-'Wlmmlng ~·! Value price
of S31.9%.
540-Wl Open ~
-· $.,. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
** $32,950 '** 4 BR + t.l11ikf1 or gue11 rm. Mesci Verde Pc<'ky p111~11n«. 1Ntg carp. crptg, corner g,onc flrtpt .1 ?oio111 ou11l11ndil'IJI; buy Ln
Lovely l bt-droom oo cul-de-1 ht'Aut deoor. Sparkltns bltn' ~·nt Hl!I. lkltl'r hurry!
BR OKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W lolboa 61)-)66]
sac. Cozy family room &nd A-dnoblto dttl'lc~rti rr11.rcc . BALBOA BAY PROP fl<eplace. v~"' dtsirable I Jlan:l-1.o..find l BR 2 BA. I . .,.,, -TH INKING home a: lhls •"''" ·M>M2<. * 642-7491 *
667221 OF BUILD ING? SOlmt COAS't REALTORS O\\'NER ltllns., 4 bcdrm11,
l'rll WHtelltt Dr., N.B. Ideal 1lle tor •JW1.ciou1 & NE\V BEACH DUFLEXES dlning rm rntry hall
OWNER must tell. 3 bfttmu, elea1tnt hOme In BIK C11· 1 ALL ntw dtluxe 4 br A l br butlt-ins, ~111om Cff'amiC
uaume ~ loM, dining rm, nyon. OverlOOb f11.irw1.YI" It each. BllboA Ptnln. N.B.. kitchrn tllt', brk, $30,900. fl~lact. built-ins, brk, ~ Al1ractlwly priced Bal.,tale & 1~ br It ~ llr on ~tm.
'1!.,25lk 5«)..1"""'. ttl~Ll>u 'w°"~· Bo~£~'R· ~itnfront. 646-7414 or ,:.::...:='------~ .,., ''"" ... v _ DIU"rv.. Vacanc:I" ro.t money! Rent
Any day II the BEST DAY to R'N.lton ~ 833-0TOO ~ Don 7bom!)Mn your hmlMI. apt., 1toN
nm an adl t>oh't dtll.y. ~ NC!WpDl'l ecni6 Dr. kr. Nd11 .• elc. thn1 • o..u,y PUot
.call !o!ll,y 60-567l. \\'•nt ad results .•• ~TB n=''"'"Ul=•d-'"Ad."'------
I I \ -
The ArN11
Top Prof-Jonak
Aro ti Your Sorvko
CAMEO .SHORES
' A RARE FIND
A real CdM charmer, on the ocean side of
Hwy., yet walking distance to all sbop~ing.
'!'his 3 bdrm., 1.1> bath home bas additional
sleeping room ir\ 2 car garage; we have the
key -give us a call. Offered at ,64,500
CORBIN ·MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
General
CHARM!NG START THE
BA y FRONT NEW YEAR RIGHT 1 PIER TAKES ·1WO JUST LISTED _ BeautlJul 2
j -LARGE-BOA TS _ ...!''!"l' 3 ~m "'.~· d•~ Thi ,, 1 klhd ,, with a faniiistlc 36' x lB a ·a one o a • pool on a great cul.<fe-sac
, water fn?nt home with all street in Eastslde Costa
the nautical appointmenla. Mesa. It's ln "move-ill"
the View is unequaled and condition with new paint
the location excl~ve. 3 thruoot H .. ,..,.., on this one'• bedrooms plus separate · .... "' · · guest tudlo Perfect ho Another new COATS &
for the1 d!scMminatlna t!.~ W ~LL.ACE exclwilve listing
owner or water worshipper. price at $45,000.
can 673~ tor details. I Priced at only $135,<MXJ.
l OPfN Tl(. 9 • tT'S F~ ft) IE NICE/
r
I ~TTHE REAi1
L~~·:l _~STATE~ 1 1~=~;
I
I
I
Macnah -lrvine -°"" CAIMO SHSR"ES
IXTRAO/lDINARY
The "1tlma• ~-ct mag.
nifi~. ' muter~'•,
arden i!tlln
room, u
new pool on t&wimi side tor warm sunny bathing.
Elaine Svedeen 00-8235.
(Wl4)
Macnab-Irvine
NEWPORT'ISLAND
~1..-e corner lr!oomt-~r. fy} acrou the street ftom
Channel, nr. Plrlc &: ocean.
2 Bdrm.:; frplC., l'iS baths,
~•I>: " 1-b<jnn, aPl. 166,500 CaU: m.3$63 673-8086 Evel.
associated
!;!It('' r t>!; DI,; At Tl)t>S
JUJ'> ¥o-~ol!:ica O]J.Jot.J
. COATS
& . WALLACE
REALTORS
--546-4141-
(0pon Evtnl"l•I
MARINA &
Rl!CREA TIONAL
LAND
TOmales Bay in M&.rin Coun-
ty, Calif. 363 acres with ~ -.,
llips.. '$985,COJ.
Contact ED. CHAP.MAN
PETE BARRETI
....::_REALTOR-
~-stoo
· Macnab-Irvine ..
FROM
APARTMENT
TO HOME?
The best value in Mesa
Verde complete with 4 BR,
formal dining, den, 3 ha!,
dinette area and beautiful
20x30 ft Pool, M'any neat
feature& like new · ankle
deep carpet,'Jae pt'hPate 1un
deck, etc. New on the mark·
et '-.won't last Jone. can
· :. HERITAGE
REA LTORS
~HOV · VOIJ t'Oll lllll
·10 HA~ AN l•(lllNCi
NEW UflllWlll
rra aH happening at'Walnot Square. Here's yourtlcketto the good lile
where you•n meet new fl'lends, and enjoy the rec. center with Its l!M'IY
heale<I pool. Sogettton .•• over to ourfUmlshed models today,
•
From Sl9,9Jt) ~ r-:Z,,...--y---,,...,
$1,000 Down , No Closing Costs.
. , I ii -.l1lll·i·
2 &3 Bedroom Townhomea
(1'1 ~) 551-4041
Tucked Away View
Unw;Wll Lusk location • cot·
tage setting -rose garden
or add-a-pool. Extra value.
4 BR. $74,500. For app't,
Call Paul Quick
COLDWEW.. BANKER Realtors 644-2430, 833-0700
550 Newport Center Dr. * DUPLEX * • Just about ready . older 2 It
den, In :lint cQnd. I a brand
new 2 bdnn. tood b?adon
I: terms. Offtred fqr_$'11,500.
MORGAN REAL TY
67:1-6641 67s.6459
TRl·PLEX
Mint Condition, fi'plc, dsh·
wshr, crpt/drps. OWners
unlt ready to move in.
$79,950. C. It. Robel'tlOn,
ReaJior, 67J..38!iO,
SPYGLASS HIU. 4 BR home
on pool n lot w /tenitlc
ocean vu. By owner betnc transr. Lived tn 2 mo.
646-18l8.
&Y Owner • SV ISOOQ. OU!ltandlnf ....,. vw. LuaJc
312\t/fM'l "1). tor qulclc ----------·1 ..i.. ,$19Jm. -1330 tit S...wkndl.
•
0 Reom:ange letters of the
t "\~ITT®!~~slmllS ~ I' r I' r· I' r I
1~~~r 11m11 I I I I I I I
.-
SCRAM-LEI'S ANSWERS IN CWSIRCATION 800
• \ '
FOR Ille b)' ownr, 3 Br, 2
BA, 6% trans loan, $3000. 8 UN1TS, > BR., 1 ba. M
........ 133.000. 32611 C8m! -$89,000. • ... .<;;! Tern., 493.5218. JORTIN, Realtor: ~
--~-----Loh for Salo 11'
--11••1 ~~~~ j~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:.m;; ~South La I u n a 1
"";.;,lrti;!t WATERFRONT, lO' bllat ~Ip 152 !n Bal..._ Lot T O>lllno 111' . and. m-mo. "II. lO .. 43' f\d1 • ...._
llidrts, lbc2<' pol<h. J..and-Mountain. °"""'' , , acpd., adult t*. Pot OliC. SA R_, 17•
$9,500. 546>l1'4 °' !15T·1'48. BRIAN tt.od old lol,
U.42 GENTRY 1 bdmt fun1. "" 10 IDille A Cllol<. Sot .. tn low .... eo... l3000, -~t Pvtc-• 567.uio Ra....._, l'i,,..., I
IS!2, l0x43, 2 Br, 1111, S ttar ~-• c:.1'ih.-;,;s, ""1llna duo ~:'!lr'--· 11 ~
Put • llltle .. _. tn -..... -~Lovl-U U-b.u~ !or 29~ ,._ IO ";;,i f;" .-;
"bockl". Call °'"'CW C.aO ~ Pl1mt.
64 --™-'
I,
• •
-
•
~ ... --,-.,,
•
DAILY PILOT
I -I
~!. ---iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiil
!~I.__..-........... _·-~]~ I ............ -Jltl ---
CondomWunla 1'1 for .... 111 Houw1 Unlvm.
c .. 1.-. -Unlvm. 305 ~oxo• U1tfurn. 150 AplLc...;.F~u;.;"";;._ __ ...:;360:; Apt. Unlurn. 365~. Unlvm. :165 Apt. Unfutn.
WALNUT SQUARE
CLOSEOUT SPECIAL
• LAST CONDOMINIUMS
PHASE THREE
• No c1os1., Coll• • ,,... u,,... .... C.rpot
• Immediate "->Ion e SlOOO Mo... You In
-
e BRIGHT .. 0.-,.1 Spoc
£/aide:. 1 pa-son. Sml ptL
Udl lncl $.1.l5. •
~A Rontol• • 64$-3900
e &% Doe• It! 2 Br hse,
pr, encl yrd. KJda/pm ..
St~.
ALA Rentals e 64$-3900
3 Bdrm, l Bath. Carpet •
t1rapo1. a.,... • 1>ocet1 ~ w.... i;t· 1210.
Fountain Valley
-No-' loach Hunt1.,1on S..Ch Costa Mow Gol\or•I General
J160 n.u. 2 br hM, Nwpl N~EW;;;;~l~B;R~.;, ; .... ;;;;;;~Slll;l!G-~sali:ii;;.: l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiii
1-(&bll, •tv, retna, cttM. IMMED. OCCUPANCY Adults, Nr brach A lh:lp'a.
pr., yd. Nl!'w 3 Br ap(f $%!11). nw. 114 E. 20tb ~.. C.M.
~I 2 br, 2 ba U00 ltlc.o, Obi p.1"9p, dUl"'lhr 548--0137.
lJll'lc, M-W cti>u. clrJ>I. aar. 331 o"'~· 11.e. -VN"·"'c="'--.-•• ---.--_ $375. l'lllw 3 + den, !tpk, 536 1360 · n1an ..... re neat • ™"• w of ocean, lido Ii , ll(une w/same. $UO/mo.
11\c"I utll. •2568 days.. uk
-VIEW RENTALS ~port &.och ,:1;::°'_.:Ro="·'------1
61J..4000 or ~ NE\V Ou,plex, 3 br, 2 ba SHARP! Bachelor, utiI pd.
Fhml $285--$310 Yrly. \Valk $14.5 mo, SSO cleani.na f~. 3 ~·pj ba.. CArp/dtpt. 10 bch. Encl gar. 642....lJgS or Nr. OCC & UCI, S5-'7-TIS8 .-• .,._. v. beD.Cb; ul.U,pd. ~791t. e TROPICAL POOL e
Fl'1Jt. Pfiv, bfach; Util. pd. '-'C'-'t.a1y 2 } 8r fl.am $1~ Cu I-wtr pd, 1525· mo. Alt· ~. ~ ~ ' nr ocn.n, BR. 1 145 E. 18th No. ' 5-18-lt61f.
VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS I & 2 BEDROOM APT.
Furnished & Unfvrn!dttd
Adult Llvl"t
Dishwasher color coordinated appliances .
Plush shag carpet. mirrored "ardrobe doors·
indirect lfghtlng In kitchen . breaklas1 bar •
huge prlvale fenced paUo . plush landscap-
ing • brick. Bar-B-Ques -large heated pools
& lanai. Air condltlontns.
JIOI So. Brl1tol St., Santo Alto ID-l200
BEAUT vu golf r:ne, 2:JOO sq. BA, fplc. fllS. mo. Rell
4 BR. 2\ii Ba. Frplc, ft. 3 Br, 3 Ba model. Leue ~-lmmed. occupy. NICfLY f~i-lrg. 1 BP.. COLDWELL, aANKER & CO.
MANAGING AGENT dshwthr. bUl'4. S285/mo. $495. 897·130S, »i·9409. ......~. eoc gar. _.-t. Adultt, no
Sant.I An• Fwy. to Culver, right about 14 Call """163S BR FIR 01 D•-loxH, pm. 2<5% Elden &t&-2768.
mil to W·•· t (1 H I 4 • , R, 2 Bai Poo.t -r NICE 1 BR d-'-Qu'· ~ e llillU st road on left~ left 1 mile unt nston BtNch prt\I., Harbor Vu Homes Fum. or Unfvm. 355 ...-. ..:I ..... -vr. Apt. Unfum. 365 A;,t. Unfvm.
----~----~
4-'!"-"Wilnut Squar~-0£-San--Diego--Fwyrto II ;.;.;;;.;;_°"''°'-;...;::;.:;:;;._,.l .. 'A ~Alm,.a.1-&. Newport ha ch ~ {e~:f~J:..30 Corona del Mar Co•t• Mell
Culver, left about 3 miles to Walnut, right to ht w/v.• crpt• &:: drps dbl 2 &: 3 BR. -S2'15!$300 --U.L'\tAC. eai.ui. 2 BR. Poo1. li;ii;ii;ii;;iiiii;;ii;iiiii;;;iiiiiiii "-'=...:.:.='--~~.-11Walnut Square" or call 714/551-4041. Pr. fncd. lndtcpd. Xlni loc. Ye~. \Valk to beach l Bdr + den, $~\$}\ Quiet atmo.r;pb~l't' & blt·Ul:oo.11 Time To s~p Up
$2.15 mo. ACT: !162-44n or Ca.ywooct ~alty 548-1290 firep!ace. 1i,. beth, s.m. $\SS. 64G--6974. • r•
Huntln!!on -
• l.wntry 1 hr •tM-
• Adult e Dllhwuhtn
• ~ of 2 cotor 8Chemea
• t'Ultom cari*lftl e Jaroni
• Heattd pool • Ot&d·bolt loclta: e O_!\ly Sit) per hliQ..
BAHIA PUERTO
2110 m• s~._ '!~ "1H!15 or......,.
OVER 62 ???
RETIRED???
SOCIAL SECURITY n
PENSION???
VILLA YORBA
-· 142-Mb
1 BR. • fl23
2 BR. · $144
3 BR. • S164
ALL UT!UTIES PAID
546-81(,XJ.. • BLUf1-~S 4 B'R, Z1., ba, mo. Yearly 67l-2912 l BDlt.\I. nss. mo plLU: ulil, ft~-YDUJ' lp&rtment in a F'l"ench
2 BR, elec bhin RJO, 1-'A ht, nr pools, .:boob;, shopping caJI 6""161' •ft-wm ... Counlt)' Garden • ~I near * F·-H AIR
fie1 I • -dbl t"l!ntu $395. 644-51.M •.r " ... shopping a n d activllin. lllii~ _,,,_ 1 ..... r ~crp.ll, .. ndscrt. ~· · · I ](9'} \\·kdays or anytime\\' . ~mptteably m•n·•-~d . \\'11lk 3 blocks to Beech
11CJ t a 8 • •• 1 N rt H • h ~fwlt9fll l BR $140 &-Sll5 La personal ;iri\ta\t'. ·rwo 1 -2 It 3 BR.. A N ly J•••••••••• I liiiiiiiiiii 1oc. ~mo. GT : ewpo erg t• . 11 ai f Ba . rge. ON TEN ACRES bedroom d ..... pta. tw illiiiill 962-44n1or MG-3103. ----·------t (:'ly 1lr chelors. Adults Apts. furn./unturn. Lease 1, en. 2 Mtlu. rtecora1ed, w/w crpt.t1 clrpl,
R .. I !1t.te Wented lM Hou ... Fumish.d 300 LEASE, 3BR, 2'iiiba, condo, 3 BR Lee ya.rd. Chlldttn il on . 1993 Oiurcll Sr. 548·9§33 fl.replace I priv. patioa. ~~ .. • a%ctll~:boo01h'!.rk!.'.,ctw""',.~: bHM, ~xcept refria:. $lSl '-1-~-------~ 1----------1 cloae to beach, ~ per mo, pets ok. Avail }"eb. 6th. Aptl. Furn. 360 2 BR apt. turn. $150. No Pools Tenni1 Conlnt'I Bkf1t. ... ....... $%la. No atna:les. DO petJ. -$Zl5. ~3053 ltlld 900 "-From $195, 11du1t &4'<'11on . 5.,..lnl. .L "--lck Cash * Colt1 MeN .wants to continue to be lov· • " l't'n, no pe1.s. 2261 ...,a Lan, Cd~t 6"'~-2611 THE VENDO"E
wtllJf' Y'!' -ed. 536-1173. Sen Clemente Gener1I "'~'"~pfl•~A';:. C~'i,'~· ~~"-fiit' -;;;;:l~t!!'ii'"!ieAt1hii!!!!!!!"'!!!"'!i!Cou!!!1 !H!!wy~) M L•9une IHch ~ )'OUr propert,y. All $85 Small 1 BR Cottage 2 BR M bile ho fam.ll J?9 50 S'.\IL furn 1 BR rot 18<b Anahelm Avenue
cuh "1~88512.1 hl'll. Call suitable for qulel ~ park a!osa r:~· beac~ GOU~ course vu. beaut. 3 Jl7,500 2nd TD, on com-1a&e, tiu1 P:t. adits, no pets~ 2 bedrooms each. Blliflll Call Pi!r!I. f>HUips 54G-0'781 UN IQUE l..alUna CUtki ~ Cilhen. No pets. C\oee tn, $l"5. utll Incl. &.16.-S539. Br, 2 ha. hse. Fam. rm., mereial property dwntwn 5#-1539, carpets It drape., chol~ Apls. Wide OCtli\11 v~ws. Costa Mesa MS-5227 encloaed atrium, slep dwn. San Juan Cap I~ tr an o, loc k> Le _ BACH. 1, 2, 3 BR Acre• of 1udltna. Oole 10
ttilSlt • · Irvine liv rm. $300 nlO. 492.203.1 payable $17j per month. I B~. furn. Crpts, pri\late at n. ue _...,., pr. Frple, poola, se<"urlt)' auard1. beach A ihopp\ni:. 2 BR, 2
Huntington Belch 2 BR. sep dinina, newly lncld 9% aH due In 3 years. .. .. ,t_~.~ SL35/mo. Ca 11 nW>nth. Call 67J.SSQO RL1 R. No pt'lfl. bft,. 119. room•. eut:tOrn
d-.. 1~. l bloc·~ •. rrom Owfl(!r guarantees con-..,.,"~~'°·=~~--~ c .. ta Mo,. HARBOR GREENS ,.. a Upepen, chanclelien:, 3 BR, 2 BA Home .. Rent for 2 2 BR. •ea. A!r/-nd , . ...,,.,,,, "'-v ni I "BACHEUJR Pri •-U"-b tl2 u~ 3 A il £ '-V .,......, beach, ideal for couple $225. 1 tr u ct o n this ~ · vacy plus ..... :;;:,:..:c;:;:::._____ .546-0371 mo&an: K, • u tL ,...., llROKERS INC. or mos. va J an. 15. 4 BR. 2~ ba Turtle.rock $425 {2131 285--26S3. w/$20,cm bank deposits. Utll pd. 1 _penon only. S12:> APARTMENTS Mo. pattlally tum. Alao
EVM 9S2-326S. 3 BR.. 2 ha .............. SJ;i Santa A--15':• dillC\lunt. Broker, mo. 5-18-825. 1, 5-~1405. Air Cond. ,._1 ... 1 . l g ... ,·m· e TROPICAL POOL e avail, moo, other apt1. fljO e WANTED e Lagun1 11--ch 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths. New. -----------11'-l°'ll" D ,..,.. .. 2 Br &tudio, 1\-i Ba, 1~1. 1prl to •.!Cl\ Month. MU. .1...:1:~. -" xr-..... •rwi Point ml"" Pools . ll••lth Spa . .... -., _.......... Prtnte party wants from -~-------·I TurUerock ............ $375 B Ibo p I ... 1trtase. C~ &. \\-tr.pd. 1"5 OCEAN view le~ . 2 a 3
private party, duplex or $115 Ulil pd, ntcf' baC"h nr 3 BR. 2 ba. Sharp~ ...... JJ&,; ** ROOMY It: PLUSH ** 1 1 •nlnsu I LIVE . lhl> all O Tennb Couns · Grune and E. 18th No. 9, ~U68. BR, 2 BA. Nt"w. Biie to bch..
i¥>u.1e + apt in Cdltt, So. of Oak St bch, full kit. 2 BR.. Top kleBtion •••••• $285 4 BR. 2 be, ftpJc:, bllnl, BR AN D Ne·-• .. -.~-·•I" ~· t m H ~-11('\v ana Billiard Room. LOVELY 2 BR 2 BA "' ••« ... -• .... ~-Hwy. Also intE:'n!sted in $160 Util pd, 1 br So. Laguna, dsh"•shr, tully crpt'd & .. LA<.A\LI......., 1 2'1n .!Ul "'t ~· at lhe l BR. F'rom $160 llChl.s ho ;.,,, •-.__ .. ' ... ........, up. ~. 6.MJ· l-~.. ·1uai· W . . _ ____. . ~. Nice ne•'gh~-•-•. furn i & he d Bay v I e w ..... ,11uu J\ anna Inn Pito1el 1 BR. • ~n ~m ll'5 • 1 pp ...... • """''YS, no Lido l•I• -.nuwn s1 ton. nte pat.io, ~UUl.lsy aen1._. .....,... .,....,..._..... Bacllt'lor. Prl\•ate Be11.eh. 3490'2 Del Obispo si: ....., r•v pell $165 per mo. call -_;_-"--------I
Clualfted ad No. 447, Dally $225 1 br, irpl.c, patio, gar, Avail rmw. 557-ll44. Dock avaU. J2()5. Yearly t<&96-mll. Kilchens, ef· MEDITERRANEAN ""-::79--0'-"134::.::,· =~----UPSTAIRS 2 BR, 2 BA. ~..,Pc.a_°·~.15a>, C>sta beN"u":v· ""'1EWan vuRE•NlocTA,LS HSE 1or renl, 4BR, 2BA, Lease. 673-2162. ficienC"ies &: apartmenls, VILLAGE SltiOmo, 2BR, 1 bn, C'll>ts, crpll, drp1, frplc. Adltt., no
W/\Y CJ'Pl, drps, S265 n}(). sz hf'ated pool, direct dial drps I bltlm, 2-451 Eldm i. $275 J, 673-lGt
OOMKERCIAL Propnties 6 673-4030 or 494-3248 ~~~w &: 1'-tcFadden. ~\lt'ly ~c: .Ur~-~: phonl's, telf'vi110n, uuna 2«Xl Harbor Blvd., C.M. Ave Ot, call for appl, ;,..~ Ver::· •
Servlpe staUorm, LEASED Lido Isle ''SINCE 1'-16" liiaid Servi<:.t". Pool. Util Pd bath, laundry faciUlics, 47l41 557~ ."-""~"'"':7·-,.-,,-~~~
-Mlm Mum. 8i;i:% net, net, lat Western Bank Bldg. 1 Housis Furn, or • Cal l 6'5-87-40 e me...ung room, close to San RENTAL OFFICE LOVELY l Br Apt. Near DELUXE 2 & 3 Br. 2 Ba,
Ml. Mwit be good. Have CONTEMPORARY 4 BR, 3 University Parle, Irvine __ u_n_fu_m_. _____ 3_10 Corona dol ~-r Clemente and Laguna OPEN 9:30 AM 10 ;;:30 Pt.t DCC & UC!. No pets. Sl35 encl aar, $160 up. Rental ~era lo $250,000. Call BA, comp! furn. OW, Days 552-7000 Night• m11 Beach. Come play in_ our DELUXE n10. Call 979-0134. Ole, ms Mace Aw.
Wheeler, SafWster R.E. washer/dryer, $A85 mo.1 -:=zzzzzzzz=: Newport S.1ch harbor • • u r f Ing ' $.U--2200. A\lail 2-12 to ~12. 6T;r-5677,t-2 bib to Big Corona. Bach. sportsfishing, Mopping and $135. 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY 54&-1034. 6~4--TI09. 3 BR. 2 ba. bonus rm ... $400 LIDO Sands, 3 Bd. 2 BA, $160. &: $175. Uhl pd. Yriy. rl'SlaUBra,nt11. $! .. ~ week nnd GIGANTIC I BDR:-.t. ~~EASDO• 'cv~, ~A~ M13387 w. Newport •-ach
1 1 1 • ....i I adult, no pet. 66-1624 up. nlll: 1s ad and y B · c'~7.;Y"·""'· =;c":c· ::.~~='-:--J :.:.:~::;.;...:-:;;~~.--.J ~ 2 BR. I~ l>a.. , $225 rp c, rg "'"• nu crplll, r{'(_~i\'e SS olf on first ou l'l 1ra u.ntlerpri1"E'd~ ,.,. -I • Newport Beech 2 BR. I'i ba. Air Cond . S265 drps, dshwa&h, $340 yrly 1 Room Studio w/prl\lale en-Wttk'll rent. Thllrs \\'hy this apt won·1 2 BR, unfurn, Crpta, drps, l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·~-· _R_E_AR~-.-t -,.-1-<0t_h_S_l_.,-for 3 BR. 2 ba. . . $310 !O $375 ~a86~ River Ave, NB, ~lZio; ~i 5~~~. pn1. 2 BR, 2 BA, $Zl5. ~f~~~·,2'~; ;;::~ !~~~~ ~.w~:~~~('~~~· No pela.
JI emply man, utll free, nice i ... -red h1·11 OCEANFRONT 2 BR. Costa Mew Ava!~~J!!,, 1.'>th Cover'd garagrs. Adulls, no LARGE 2 BR, crpts, drps, Butlnftl patio. $12'5. See wkends. S300Jrno. Yearly. * ~ * pets, 2020 Fullerton A\le, {l nr. Estar.c.a HI school.
Op i 200 Call 66-8!ll8 Casa de Oro Huntington Beach Blk !::. of NPwport BJ\ld. & Olde-r pref'd. $135. 6T3-8145.
P!rtun ty San Clemente Condomlnlum1 I Blk So. of Bay, c.~1.) * DELlfXE 1 & 2 BR. CI08e
NEWPORT BEACH R.EALTY Unfurn. ALL uTILITIES PAID Sl45 -S165 ="cc'c.·ll690c="· ~~----1 gar. Bltns. Shag crpt. Nr. Marine C.Ontractina Firm 21 BR ~deSann, partl.l..s..~' A Compony \\'ilh Vision 320 Compare. before you renl BAOIELOR & 1 BR, patio!!, P•rk-Lik• Surroundint So. Coast Plaza. ~5-2321.
. F'tnelt e q u 1p1;;:e n t & ease, ''"". ta ocuuu-11, Univ. Park Center, Ir\tine SPACIOUS 2 BR , l% BA. Custom designed, featuring: frpl c's, pri\I. garages -QUIET DELUXE 2 BR, crpts. <I.rps, bltna, nr
waterfront loca.Uon. 35 Yr. 492-4927, ~. Cali Anytime, 5.il·'l!:iOO frp • Spacious kilchen wilh in· Dh'idNI bath & lots of l, 2 &: 3 BR APTS FA\rvtew &: Baker. Adultt
old oompany. Space avall. Hous•1 Unfum. 305 Office hours 8 Mt to 6 Pl\t ~: ~tion lc.:oo!!_t-~~ direct lighting ~~-b~· hall, ~ .... ~ Pvt Patk>s * iltd Pool only. No pelA. 545-l882.
for boat sales i: cepaln.. children under 15. Avail • Separete din'g area I""" a ~. sauna. .,..u~. Nr. Shop'g * Adulta only
BILL GRUNDY RLTR Gener1I 3 Bedroom•, 1% baths, Ji\lino e llome-1\ke storage See for )"l)Unell. 17301 A'--1· Ba-• A H • • ----------1 room, famii)' r 0 0 ~""; naw. E. Costa P.!esa. $210 • Private patios Kf'oel90n U-1. !1 blk W. of ""' um "''· phi unt1ngton Beech
· ~ 675-6161 fireplace and dc"ll. Kitchen mo. lat & last. 963-Zf8'1. e Clotied gara.ge "'/storage Beach, 1 blk N. ol Slater). Martinique Apts. * MOVE IN TODAY •
with buillim, dishwasher, Huntinfton Beach • Marble pullman 842-1848 Im Santa amt Ave., CM $139 A MO, Typewriter Se:t'\I.
GlUI A acreen bus.
FUndture atore . arudous
HOLLAND Bu1. S.IH
tSalesmM Needed>
;:;:~ ~,ei;:: 1t~~~~~ 3 BR. 1% BA. Refrlg, panrl-: ~-~ ~~s . sur-La;un• &Heh Mgr Apt ll3 646.!XA2 Spac. 2 .l 3 Br. in 4-pleic .
Managemt'nt co. 557-4493. ling $225. 1st & last; pet, cl, rounded "'llh plush land· STUD10 ap1., v.'B.lk to_ beach. -New Duplexes-several avail. AU.. EX-sec. de 962-2936. sea · TRAS. Pool rec b •·
I 2 A ull 1 ng at Hs best 497 2237 3 Bd wr oomP. F'rom $139. See townhou6e. 1'"'rplc, w/w l BR. Frpc. car enclosed ~~-=-·------1 • nn. 2 BA ...... J29S. J\fgr. 173n Keelson "B". 1
crpt, dshwhr, garage, garage. Walk to beach & LARGN~ ~~~ Sl.90 Newport 8e1ch Beaut., ipaclous apts • blk \\'. of Beach Blvd. oU
landscaped back yard. Pool stO"'°ll· $170. 962-7265. 1''cnccd yard!!, patios and Sla1er. 968-7510 or &47-1260. HEALTH Food Store, Oe.an, ~. 1 .1.. IJOO 365 W. WWon 6--12-1971 2 BR lo\\·er d"pl-• l blk to quit'! prlv11cy. Adults, no
N'.I Good b"'I""' n..---r 'These Are Jwt A Few Of ... rec. ac1 11Jes. . mo. Irvin• • ""' BONUS •,. u hal 'other /nterestS. vM'~t OUr MANY RENTALS ... 1st & last + SlOO.-security. ---------WEEKLY-MONTHLY beach. Yrly or winter $2%i pets. 642-4837. with this~. 0
2 bdJan. re1nt
a.ell. La dwn pe.ymnt. 12855 * , 1 ~55-·>-0_u_2~------2 BR, l '.4 Ba, New. Bltns, i:xecu1ive Suites or $250 mo. 130 46lh St. Stt :rl40 Fullcrlon St. (at Bay) a · nn, am.
Pt Bet H-..i....~ • IVW'>\ Nov 24-26 or p h o n e FOR SINGLE LADY units. Crpts, drpt1. bltM, E. pman. . a.iuv• $k10 • PARTt;Y Fum 1 BR. On M""'r ....--n belt, .,..... · 2080 Newport Blvd pat-pla·-.. ~ •-
1 =Q ,...,A., ~ '"-JV ... -~ 1210 l\;f "'A".2651 • 2t'l/28.S-4215. Sparkli-2BR d"pl-, -"'• .rs• ........... no pe .... ' B vd. I-latter . ...........,""4. Encl gai'. Bllns. Cb.lid ok. Haoovw mode.I, 3 br, 1% =c=.cc.c•cc·_~--::.~=::::: Coste Mei• .,. ..... ,,. Children Welcome. rrALtAN Deli pizza * ba. Cathedral ceil. For L•gun• Nlguef 642•261 l OCEANFRO~"T furn 2 Br, Hllgren Sq, .& W~stcliff Cen-Harbor Bree'if!: Apts.
Spachetti Parlors. Estb. SlSO • SUPER 2 Br. Bltns. lease until Sept. BUs. --=----=--'----STUDIOS & I BR't frpl c. dining area. bar. trs. l blk. from Ralpha. 4841 He.U Ave., HunL Bch.
nlOrll!!!)' make.rs. prime Joe. Crpts, kld/pet~/sin&les. s;_D-1010 ask for R._ Pif. Can-3 BDRM., 2 Baths, nev." ..., dhswshr, rlispl , carport, $300 Ideal~~. safe, com-tTI 41 8£7805
OCEAN and
HARBOR VIEW
"Whore c...;.nl•llty
Prev•il1''
Elegant ap&rttnent• deliped
"'Ith • Mult r'• touch, IU·
perb·hou.R leCW'tty, exclu·
&Ive Versailles Club and
pool with unique .Aqua.bu,
fountains and formal aar·
dens. AU part Of the South
Coast's t\nest apartment
communl~.
1 Sedromn/ studM>I from S195
2 Bedroom from J:m
Models open 9 A.M. tll du.sk
ON THE BLUFFS
AT NEWPORT
FTom Newport BJ.vd.l lllm al
Hosptlal Rood ( blodr
abo\le Pacific Cout Hwy) to
enlrance. 900 Cacney Lane,
Newport B ~ach, Ca. 92660.
TelephOne: (TI4) '6-006()
Luef,11 & Al.Soc. Rlty * · non. Reakl. 552-7835. beauL view, on golf course. • •~REE LI.rims rno. 67r5-149; 675---0543. pltte pnv~. Elec. gar. dr. ,-~,...:.=:,.::::;,:::;::~-
&U-2290. S165 . \VON'T LAST~ 3 Br. 4~~ BR, 2 ba, Univ Park off Sell clng oven, shag crpt, : ~~~i~~~l:es 1 Blk to 0ttan. Newport. ~;~~ 0~1cti·ik1~$iso ~: 1k~~h. if~. ~ ~~~~ -=p"'A""'R"K7'"'N=f.W==p'"'Q="=l"T='
SPORTSWEAR retail store, 2 Ba. Bltns. Patio. Kids ok. Culver Dr. Avail Jan. l cd_lh_wsbr __ . _S>S-~21-17-· ---l~~<S.·P<6112s ~~.J br ll75. 2 br plus dcp. 310 Rochester crpts, drps, pool, play ya.rd. APARTMENTS
men i: womens. £AtablisMd * 633-9393 ext 195 wkdys; Newport Belch • Heated Pool U.,} .....,,,.. 642-1.264 l.ndry facil I: C8Jll0rts. Cpl.
8 >'1:5· Balboa Island. $210 . 3 BR. Alone on Lot! 5.52-9314 Sat le-Sun. --''-------e Laundry facil!U~i. I BR. rurnished w/utilitie.1 More Room-L•ss Money & 2 sml children ok. No Oft f'he bay
673--8420. Stove. Gar. Kids / peU I ON Hopkinl near UP ctr. 2 BLUFFS -Bayfront. outside • TV'-maid urv a\latl I.: attached garage. pet:i.. Call 8424664.
!or sil\ltles. PiiBR'1, Den, 2 BA. 1'~P. gar, unii. 3ct!!. 2•d~ BA. trpl, • Phone Service $190/mo. 603 Irvine A\le. COl\!Euk""i·-~ rea.11 gardho en 2 BR, ga_, & water pd., 1 Luxury apartment UWv <IY·
LANDLORDS! fe nced. lifonthly $325 J an li cus. r, rps, crpt"I, E I Pl!· ~ apt. e ,,..,ng n a me hild k eriooklng the water. E'njoy ST:i--0305 appl. patio. Nr. pool. IM. I Puerto Mesa · . · for $140/mo. 2 BR, 11, BA. c o • no pets. from Jl40 $750,000 health spa, 7 m m.
FREE RENTAL SERVICE · SQ25/mo. write Boie 255 I BR'i-ll 0CEANfRONT3Br+conv. 2prkgplaces,privpatiolol · 17622 Cameron SL or min TU h ten-
\¥anted 230 * · 64S.011l -* -. s J c •st · 'l uro. & Fu.rn. bltns, ~. mo. 675-~ on \vti::·s~.il:•or'Har;~~ .... ;.tN~EW~B<~h-::,,,,,=:..,.:;=,~,::hr=. ;2 ::hrf~b~.•!!lcl\;; trail Pm ':;";loit----l 1-------~--n35 1 br, sto\le, relrig, crpt/ ...!'! uan •p1 rano All Utilities P1ld eves 646-2846 . . & I bts:FrO:m itS5 per mo. n~~. ~~~~ ..
SMAU. vendini roule
sale, reuonable.
'62-281.8
'
$500 "' to '""" 1n o.c. _ LANDLOltDS! ;!::;d «I. "'"· MalW'• GOLFERS, '°' """"'""' , Pool • Ree .... 11on OCEANFRONT. 3 BR. 2 BA. •••.na' li.BllU ~a !~ n.33711 _St. H.B. ~ o< 1rom.111<.so mot>thly; ..., , lM.ustrtal Blding, WINNN \Ve Specialize in Newport Sl95 2 · br 2 ha apt gar BR, 3 BA home w/swim 1959 Ma:ptc Ave .. Cl\t fpl c. Ca.11·4 Bing, d a Y & ~ l!m "" and 2-btdroom p1ana and le•~·. Anchor lnve!Jtmenta Beach e Corona del Mw-e balcony. 'Beaut. oce'an & pool and prlv. putting green. Also garages for rent 838-1491 and t\les. 675--2949 TWO . '2 Bdrm. , , ... , $185. WALK TO BEACH 2-story town bouae•. Elec·
LTD. Realton, 833-3747. Ii: Laguna. Our Reutal Ser-city vu Unlimited goU on regulation *30 WEE-K&lJP NICE 2 BR Oceanfront apt. Beautiful apll. w/prlvate New .1 & 2 Br, cpt/drpc, Irle kitchens, private pa:'.)11
Money to to.n 240 vice .11 f'REE to You! Try $400 4 .• ; bonus rm 2 frplc's 18 hole course incl. ~3421 e Sludio &: 1 BR Apts: for rent. • p&tios, prag~. pool, spa. dwhr, frpl. 316 16 tll. o~ba.lconiea. carpetiq-. dra·
Nu-View · ~3 ba: ·gar d j1 · , ·' lor appt.tn ..aee. e 'IV'& ~faid Service Avail. 642-4500 · Lush garden sttOng. Adults, 847-3957. ~rte1. Subtttn.nean puk. ., ·nst TD Loa'ns· Nu v1Ew· RENT. ALs .. • ~ • .. 0
· YU. D 1 Unf 2 c I llh I I o ,.,_ ..
670 ,;..
0
.. AnA ~.,A,, NU-VIEW RENTALS ~up •xes um. 350 • Phone Service-Hid. Pool BACH. $110, Ul June 28th, no pets. l5I E. 111, .M. 2 BDfQ;f duplex, crpll, drpa, ng w e tva on. pt ,,.. ~~==~~·~---__ 16734030 _ or 494-3248 • Children & Pet Section UHi. incl . 4 BR. $300. • 646·8666 * garbage displ, stove. yard. maid Rrvl~. Ju1t ~ o1
HARBOR Balbo. Pentnsul• 2376 NN·port Bl\ld., Clit ABBEY REALTY Sl.2-3850 3 B ltL B ** Close to ocean. 726 ~--n. Fuhion lJlland at Jamboree 6!4 % INTEREST View Hil~, CdM-3 2 BR, fr-pie, sleps to bearh. 1----------548.9755 or &15-3967 ** r ., ~-. •· v"'"' and San Joaquin Hiiis Road. 8:ft, fam -nn., ww. Lge:. J250 mo. Avail. 216/73. 1935 2 BR, den, 2 ba, i"' blk bch &r I ~~=="-'::..:=='--Apt. Unfurn. 365 l...ar):c, nc\\·ly d{'(..'01'. l:::ncl !f.B. $143. ft36-7917. Telephone (n4) 644-1900
BALBO....., loAt. •~-~o3. BR 2 Ba Gletm(')'te. ztJ: 392-2920. bay. $325 mo. yrly. 1359 :i::. 1 BR, Jo".um ... _2_. I!'&. closet!!, Corona ,_1 Mar patio, bll1111;, crpt!I, drps. 2 Br, 4-plex, nr paric/~an, for l'!'nlal In.formation
.......,,.., , · Balboa Bl\ld., Apt A quttn size uni, priv dtts.11· u. Close lo everything . $170 bllns, gar, quiet. No pett.
Lowtll ntes Orange Co, 2 Car gar. S3'7S Mo. L•guna Niguel <d""·nstrsl, 535.3518 or ing nn. xtra lrg rooms, PIK'l I ~.;_;.._;.,,;..;.;.._;;c::...___ mo. 868 C(:'n1er SL Apt. 1. $150 n1o. 536-t935, 84&-Zl>S. * 2 WEEKS FREE * "WE BUY TC'S" D. Franklin Rltr. 673-2'222 THE SHORES lll/863-JOOS. gill' w/storage. Adults only, R00'-1Y 3 lkdl'l')Om, 2 bath, c~t or call ~IK-8179. Vista del U--
2nd TD Loans
2 BR ~lob S87 3 BR fncd no pels. groond noor. $350 pr. nlOnlh . , 2 BDR.\1 delu.~e apt, poolskle lftWMI
So. ttler Mt". Co. Slli_.2.Br~,s~pooi Jl65. 31400BD/•,"'10'.· ,2,..,~TI171. New 2 Br.J 2 Ba. frplc 2035 Fullerton, C.M. 1K'Xt to park & lenrus can 2 BR. Q\.uet (;enter St. loca· &anlen bungalow "''/frplc. ADULT GARDEN 1-lOMES • R A Hou 9J9-M30 " """""' $250 )'early. 21~21st St. Ba.il!'y 673-8.XiO \gt . lion. Near park &: shop'g, Adulta, J2).0. 846--<1J59, IRVINE AVE. AT MESA 642·2171 545-0611 ent--" M Lido Isle * 962-0349 • LARGE I BR $145/mo. + -'-'-'-'...c.=...:..:' =· --Crpu, drps, bltna. 1 :i.tory J140-nice 2 Br In 4-plex, sngl !\-love In w/de-poslta onl,y ~ Harbor area 21 yrs. CC:io"p~i10ttifraanoMl&.~a;cch:h--1~~~~------Coron• del Mar dep. CarpoM & I au n dry VlCTORJAN charm -4:e 1 bldg. $145/mo. 6T.r1573. sty, cpl/drp, RIO, pr. No I Br. $160 2 Br. S:axl W•nted 2.SO -TOWNHOUSE • 3 Br il _ __;,...;....;.;......;;,;___ facil. Nr. frv;y &: shop'g. 998 BR. \Valk to beach. $225, Bkr. peta. 962-4522. Day le. Night SK'urlty, Pool,
NEW 3 B,!;
1
; .. ~:" doubie 1tudy, 2~ Ba. Yrly-3 BR, den, 2 BA, 2 levels, ~ ~ino, Apt 1, C.M. ~~~nc!r ~uremleal. QUIET n e I g h b or hood 2 BDRM deluxe apt -~ Foun~lns. Ree. Bid&. w/
INCREASE yoµr biterest In-garaee:, a~ I-great $450/mo. Responsible Miits. each itep. mtranc:e. $300. J"flnl'W_,_, • overlooking Back Bay, lBR, ' ,...... ~ertlM nn, billiards, col·
comt: Rave three i.t Truat ~c~~~,W~J~12SO~,~·o~-·T'l•i""~·i2719~;1.l~67H844.~P!~~~~=== 497-2575, 494-6045. roRN. 2 BR. Apt. Pool. 2BRio IBA. tittf'· dl.sposa.l, hea1ect pool , w w crp11, ~:. s~~/lrpk. or TV. Ea. Ap1. has dish· Dee.di, approx. flS,OCO each, Alt& Yf"'ta, Capo Bch. Newport BHch Dana POlnt Close 10 shops. Adultt, no pat • gar, yr Y. Xlnt k>c. drpa, reasonable 2455 Irvine 2 BDRM d le W&Jlher, re:trlg, aha& cpt, I:
on atn&Je family t.xne1 ln NEW 3 BR, 2 BA home. · ;;..;,....;_.;______ pets. S160/mo. 705 Acacia. 548-5:ll6. Ata.nager Apt. II ~7476 carpets,· m-:~sx A ~~nO prt patio or dttk. S4S--4855
Oilllnt.~. ~~.:_7% -~ 8 I~.: c:pCd, w~ 496-1025, THE BLUFFS AITRACTIVE 3 BR. 2% Ba.. 1941 Pomona. C.M. * GREAT VIEW -2 BR. * NEW 1 BR 's from $170-SOO JW'll. $150 per mo. 536-.l507. m. I Pu Mo. 3 Br new
•
,-,,_.,...uca .. ....anc......., wkdys 6-9 Pli!·or wknds.. Cathedral ceiling $250. Don'! give up the ahlp! l"'rplc, bltns. sundecka, pool Nr beach&. ~hop'g, Adult11, ttpll'X, 2 ba. 1 Blk to bch.
WM NEW 3 BR, 2 BA home Condominium Homes Children wekome. e-\lt"5, ··ust" it In cLa.ulficd, Ship PO up. 67S-3535. 114 E. 201h St., C.Z.1. 2 Br, apt, untum, $165. No Yrl.Y rental 673-5<t7.
t Rey McCercf .. , RHltor cptd, w-bltins. .f96-102'j: * 3 Bft., 2 BA. l·!lt)' •• $.150 213-5.92-2417. to Shore Retu.lts! 842-5678. Cla.s!!ified Ads . . 642-5678 548--0137. ~7'9 Oilldretl ok. C&ll 1 BR. 1tv Ir ~frig. Ut1l pd.
1810 Newport Bh·d., C.M. y,'kdys g.9 pm or "Wknds. • 3 BR., 21,ii ha, Z.1ty · • 1375 $140 up spac. 2 b1· ~ br l li, ba ci""-"~ .. "--,~----GaJ't&t'. No chlkh'en or pets.
541-7729 Co d 1 ._.. • 4 BR. 21;-i ba. tam/kit $415 pool. cptJdrp, bltn, plygrnd.c ;~l"';:;":;ed:;;~A~•·;;;;·~·;;·;;;:;642-;;:56;;78;,_:.;;t;:UO;::":;mo:;;;·~675~>-;29>1;:;;;.;:;;;:;;;:;;;.I ron1 e m.r * 3 BR. 2 ba. VIEW . $500 • 'W 2 Coll ' • SI.rt Thi. N.w Y.ar STAR GAZER:•,,-!' 221 ege. No.; .. tHl>-4m
1250 "rly 2 Br ,.._, OTHERS AVAILABLE r--r •nnL' 1 N l 64~ ....., Th RI hi Foot -~ .. .,., .,.,,,., Map e., o. . . . £-38L1 ...., O 9 •tv/-f., :...., .~. Please t'all ua for •:C~'-!.Ll-',.,----B CLAY L POLLAN CONSOLIDATE BILLS NO\V patJo''. l s'"ik ..,,"":,,l"' .. prprk'. your l't!f'ltal needs t r~ .u1u 1 * 2 BR, 1 BA, liiesa Verde. \vrnt A 200 TRUST DEED ~ • ..-.-~. ll t< v-Ooily .Am~ify Guide l'1: Nr 1hop'~/frwy.ldcal fvr Pltfv~~DS 26T~~~ BA. Crpts, drpg. & ·~·t~~~ · ~.IP ~~~;":::,~:~:·:~; .. Frid:;, ~~~.ro~4.r. Sljl).
CAJ.J,.. TI~ BKR. stoYe £ ret:rtg. f'tpl Adults. ( t'\ :¢. s.lW nodwordscon-apondingtorunbrers O.EA.i.'11 2 BR, crpts. drps,
'. u I no pet&. J275/mo. 962-lf.49. i:S ,_: of )QK ZocUoc bfrth sign. 1110w le. re trig. No children nllOllll8~ ·~ l1°"1 'IWl!t-i •-$160 "" -T ~-~· 260 Costa -I 2 Y "V or pc... . .,...._£ .. ~""' ...,_. . .rt"\ rea y ---''And -. y l ~ :»Could 6J 1. 3 Br., 2 be. apt. crpt/cfli>s. 4 ~~~ ~~,.,E~ ~~~ H?:r lit... ~~ ~"'15 nm.... $200.
Mft oonunmial propert;y ' 644-llll ANYTIME lt:n. ~,_ 61 ~ 2BR, crpll, .tve, d&hlwsh,
san1uanCtpiltra11:>.vaJurd ro=WNHO~~·u,.,SE="'i~~-~,1--=,:;:;;..,..5,;T::;B~;;F;;F:;:...-,,,,,_ ,.~ ::-ri..,,-1 703 Shalimar. eo.ia Mesa, at 000. 9'!'i Int Oft1J Da 2 Bdnn...G bell~ EA LU IOT• .4(1A. 10 bat<ote J160. CaJI ~. y, an due tn s yn. &-, OU"~. rftll . 1 Separate hamr:, WTWIU&I t1v-•• llcdAd 11 o.~
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
.,,,. • 4ilmi&nt Broker , Pool. nr So c.t Plua. Yrly llrle• bedroomorlltden. 110,... "1 10-nLM * S'MJNNING 2 I-3 Br. 2
11. 1-.l.154. teue. &nu. . Famllr n>om plus large r...... .Q Ci:olld 1l Not'Clld B&. Gardf!n Apt.. Pool. Rec. HA VE 1972 (24x61)) MobUe 2 Br Mt.Keon Cbndo. Palm ~~~~~~~~~~!•Ocean VU,' BR. 2BA. fQrrna dinll'll room . 1~C' !;tPllCl9d ~~~ nn.now.18thSt.C.Pif. <lomt 2BR.den,2BA.5 ~.«fHW)'tllonHwJ U dect kltch. tam rm, $390 Com.plote privacy v.ith lt '°"""' ·~Mn ''You LOVELY 2 BR. Cf'l)tl, drps, Star Adult parlt. \Vt.m du· 74. Vi~·. Dfflrt.~ top le.. ""'--~--,.... l ~ J 96J..8604 or HJ...31&4. e.ndor8ed mir and tront f~-;:;~"'9 ~~~ fa ~ blUTill, pr,.cJownstn. laund pl:ex, bi~. 111tftJ? rnd unit. Trsde J3000 eq for
._ "'°/MO. 3 BR. II'", mictd yards. l.oYl'.ly garden. No 1•~ _..~"' na. fac .. nr •howlr'1£. S«HJ729. 963-3010 local prop. "4·17¥33. l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;~1 yard. !llrw cptL Good klc. petl. "4n per month-20v-'°X-...mo IOLil• 3 BR, 2 BA, no pe!A, S175 mo. ORANGE Co. Sil,•-do 2.84 Ac. nt l'"l·I-. ---.. II So ftt. Aaf., 831Mi100. Call m-6S6I or ~36!8 ~~1""" ~~ ~~""' $100 ~ .• 1016 El Camino nncti &: •cnt•· Jtte.J~ ' ~lei!:". 1r1,.d .... ;;~ta "Crtr.
j Htu1•1 Pvmflhld 300 e STEPS to Beach • H,,.,., LU>..'URY Oceanft'ont-New It 2.JC.. &JJl.nlu IJOM-, St. CZ.1. ~-dlcallon, church, tpa, ecol· Value $10,500. \VUl lake car rum Ba.ch pee ok utD °Pd OramaUc 4 80,R.M. D1nlnit l~l!lJ~!i!] ~~ ~~""'P'mc:;=. $1U/nl0. 1 Br. dbl 1lnk, ogy group.. C«l•kt exec hrn, or lmprovM prop. ln HB CeNN def Mar SlIO ' • RM. $600/MO. Y~•rl)'. P _,.~ ~~ dbpoAI, park'g, area. 917 detf.rt, boat <ti' 1, SJS.et. al'C!a. ~
-"""'1l'sfl(Jcls 2 'Br ·+ ALA Rentals• '4S-3900 N~:'::i~ ~ ~!:" ~= 110-. ' • "'· l!lth St., 111Hn9. . 2 BR+ 2 Studio-. Palm ill_e_to_l_n_de_!_Otl_r~,.,.._.---,1 -· ~Rm' t lt1 sm Fncd/ e SPREADING .R6oM -l den. 2 BA. p:JOl I: dYb prM. =~ =~ ==:n 1 N~j,e~ util pakl, Slli/rno. $Qr1n~a. nr ilhoJll A .achl•. P&rAdbt column 11: l:lr )'11111
,l!lt1• 4 H -.. -Br, 'Ira ""11 yd, ltldl/peL Nr. beod>. Piil IMW2U. , Or .. • ®"-'()·"". Call 846-<386 Sl'l..500. 'l'RADE llM <qty & u..., R~*'ri!-~~~~~·~·~ ... ~~··~,.....~~~Pl0~.~~~~~~~~Dally~~~~~.,.;;;Ads~~11aw~~======~~~~~~Vll~~~~~-~~~~"'"""~~~~~~~::::-::::-::::-::::-::::-:::-!Dii:ii!i5i;;;;~~~ii::i~~4.11"'!!>.31""sia.·j"':..<i ... ~';·mo....,.4'<":!'u°'ii...L.~-...;.'·~~ !! • • .. __ _
' ' i
•
OAILY PILOT T""1d.11 • ._ U. 1973
I ......... ~-JltJ I ,._-~J!!J l .__ ---1~ I .... • I• I ·--l!Sl 1---1~ I --...... I~ I
A#A. . Apts. -··· -· • 410 c.ni o1 n...b/111 "°"""' ,,_ . ...., uo c.nt•-1 :,,~ .... ~,.~-~R~r~~,~~"!'!~~w~-~,..,~M~&~P~n~t~11~·~111~w~ .. g·•~•~M~"~'~m~I Furn. OI' Unfum. 370 l'um. or Unlum. 370 ROOMS $11 wf< up w/ klL Momorlum SIS ' mo. ol4 lllodc Gtn'Dul JACK 'l'u1uo • ...,_... l~LOR -1'1.50. Ant. ·--111 l'llll $32.~ wk up apta, Children ntE Fa.mlly of Elbma Shephttd. V\c, Ne.r,port remod., lddtt. 2> )1'L exp. lMIUed D>. up, J\1.1'• TV Aw.uuR 111111 WoU1ft
Pl .. lCllilR UVll UP TO n l llAlll •• , -J.
0-'°° 1-...... 10 '"""'"' c,..,, • ~ ..ntng, Wood
O.CU, iWO ,.._ IN'lllO Ill• Hlgll Sien .. 11110 )'Ollt 11\f'W •tl-
1. Ot 2-Mdtoom prdt!\ "''""''rit. Pool, -.·j.le\IU! tlld bll-
ll•ta. &n•ll pt1' 0-. f')Ofll SHI&. ,u,nllllN ..... u.bl•. Modeta op.11
t;OO to 7;00. 2300 F•lrvlft 11hl. In Cot\t MM&. l"fl-: 44W300,
Apts., Apt•.,
Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn.
Huntington Beech Huntington BNCh
HUNTINGTON 1EACH'S FINEST
Spanish CountJy Estate Living
370
2 Acres. Beauutul park-like surroundings.
Sunken Pool. Sparkling Si>anlsh Fountains.
• Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining
• Walk In Closets
• Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets
1 BDRM. Unfum. $165. Furn. $165.
2 BDRM. Unfum. $185. Furn. $215.
TOWNHO USE 2 BR, l~Ba., 1400 sq. IL
Unfurnished $200.
ALL UTILITIES FREE
Walk to Huntington Center
Adults, No pets
IA QU TA HERMOSA
ark1lde L•ne, H.B.
14: 847-5441
(4 blks. So. ol San Diego Frwy. on Beach,
1 blk. W. on Bolt to 16211 Parkside Lane).
Apl. Unfum. 365 Apts.,
j, NN;ow=pot;;rt:t"i&i;.;;;.~ch;---Furn. or Unlum. 370
Y Hrly·Boyfront
S Lovdy DCW unfum. apt&.
l It 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier
A slip. !fany extru. Immed. """""""'· Call' 673-36&1 61340fl6 Eves.
Coat• Melli
'M{E EXCITING
PALM MESA APTS.
MINUTES ro NPT. BCH.
F1.JRN. OR UNFURN.
A: pet aection. 2316 Newport Cleveland wbhN to thank l!tJ&bla. Call 6G-31'93. lJc'd. Ill W9 Ch 5C'l-«136. 181&3 No. 14 Newport BIN.
Blvd. CM. ..,.mo, -· """ many frl<ndAI tor tltelr f"OUNl>Adull mu. mi. AddltloN Remodelktr &IS--8!13. Guest Home 415 l)'mpothy It http. Mr. It alt.,,..,, dul< pey ttcer Gcrwldt l SOo, IJc'd TrM Service
Mn. Lumbley <MotbC!r A striped. 54H392:. 673-«M.I * SG-2110 1---------1
1' .. athcrl. GERMAN Shephud, tern. Draftlna TREE TRIMMING
* Penonalt 530 Vic: Euclld A bolaa, J1111. 3. ---·~~-----Removal Ornamental work.
83H97;. PLAN~~~S-~-~~:R~e~m~o~d~1~.1 ~~CllJ~~O.~w~m.~11~66~~1 * P rlvote Room
!or
Ambul.Eitory Lady or Man
Good, nutrltk>ua }~ood.
Nice, ehttrful atmosphere.
• Call 548-475.1 •
• HJNDU SPUUTUALlllT * Lost 5SS Room Add!._ l50 up.
Let this ad cha.nee your 567-0626 5.;7-9695 [II]
whOlc outlook on Ute for the LOST: v1't. BUSffARD
04
&; G.~--1,. ,,, I 2 11 t
bettrr Profeuiona.I adYlce l N D J A NAPOUS. H.B. 1--·-~--=------0 J . f'
TEMPORARY, FULL TIME
Mlllt be eiperlenced In use of 10 key addlni
machine and typewriter. Knowledge of key-
punch helpful bUt not esseoUal.
HOURS 8 A.M. • 5 P.M.
PoslUon available Immediately and will be
needed "f proximately 2 to 3 monlbs.
Call DA LY PILOT-Morgorot Gr-•n
on llfe. Lie. Readinp dally. SMAIL LONG llAIRED STORM DAMAGE ~iii--~-~il!!! 10 AM·lO PM. ~9136. WHl'TE 1' .. £M. MALTESE Profetaional Gardener, Tree '!' & p
492-9034, 312 No. El Camino DOG. 1213!172. REWARD Pruning, BneU>a. Oeanupo. Joi> Wonted, f..,..lo 702 1 p Wontod, M & F 710 Holp Wontod, M 710
Voutlon R1ntol1 425 Real. San Oemente. flilO, !J6W222, 1'nlnt !Nit._ now. ,_ PROFESSIONAL MEN BOAT BUILDERS ESCROW SEC'Y
642-lttl
BIO &ar • ti.l~. C•pt•ln1 C•r C•,..I YR Old Minlatun! Schnamer, dormant &pray. Geor(re, Attention . Do you wanl to be Ex-r only in mill worit • Growlnr nnn ~ gt! w/
betut. home. Sips 8. We Wti.M & wax completely, Salt pepper coklr, ana 646-5893. tree from detail wort tbul •-· al ,arne racrow ~per. Salary
l .. am.U.lea onJy. 552-7262 Cllltom le det.ail work. We "Rutua" Reward! Hun. GARDENING tet'Yfce, com-entib!lna you to do your carpentry. N("eded f(lf' qu · 10 $515. can Helen Jlqn.
pick-up le delivtt. Call tina;ton Bc:b ~a. l4$-{u686 plete clean.up "-'Ol'lr: by u;. chmc!.n prolnalon fttllne lty u.illmt m~und. wemau ~. Cbutal Penormel ~·~ar21try2fpl, 28A, ~~ ~1791 for days,att5.M&-n6'. P~:;.ce~re~ ~~~'!!rth~:i ~ l~J'lacmUa Ave.1 Ageocy, 1i'901farbor mva .. P!f nn. Nr ~ ltt. Lr or PROBLEM ~. Con-~:~~mt:~= 96.l-lO'l"l or 9&Hl832.. office expt"Mence ranging BOOKKEEPERS. full & part "'CM'"=.c=-=-=:-::::-"=';:: 1 i[tOU.p. 871 TI4S lldent, s y m Pat bet I c Flea collar Injured tail EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. from alartlng new buslneu tlmf!. Expandlne Oran&e Co. EXP'D P\uA Maker. Malt,
Rentals to Sh•f'9 430 preanancy ~Ung. Abor· reward. &t~. ' C»mplrle garden 1 er.,.. to goine public on stock CPA finn has openings for 21. Apply 440 SOUth Coui
Uon It 11;doplK>n1 rel. AP-SMALL black poodle, ana to Kam a I an i' 6 4 6-4616, l'l'\a.l'kel. Salary negotiable bookJleepen v.•/1 to 2 yr1 lhwy., Laguna Beach.
WOR KIN G med I cell CARE. 642-4436. . "J~~ ..... , ·•-Paclllc 6 60-U17. baaed on ex p e r ie n ce. pubUc accounting~· oecretary' Will Iha.re beaut ..... _ ~"'-nA~A· _ .... _.._ Send -·-· fum. 2 bt, 2 ba apt BE a more dynamic penon. Hemlock, S.A. Reward. MtKE'S Gardenini Servloe. T'""'U-..u"tD. ,...a·l't',"""'' ........... "
ivf9o'Ol'k1ng -."Oman. Rel&. Learn to dance qu1cldy & S«>-<8)1, Complete lawn Md yard NEED ':ls. at home'!' We ~nce;:u~=:r~ A~ FACTORY
"""• ,'d ... '~ ~ w .. ~!:...! ;:uy. ~::.ey1 ~ 2~ 3~ RE!~ ;:_Male ,yetlow ~U:~t'ttmates 5U-8251 ~:.C-·, c:n~: No. ~ ~1,y Meuot..,!E·
o ... --..uv; e.--ca, .,..._,,_, 431-7921. ~ OtLt ~th J ~G N' 1 H<mlt'm&kft's. UP John ' Box.-.., """'ta ea_,_ 4nnouncing
ROOMMATE wanted, PALM A CARD READINGS 7pm. • ~ aprlnldera, ~ twrer.:f 547-am, BOOKKt.EPER • } .. u JI ~'BR,21~.8~ ~ T~~)~ir:~nJ,,Au~tun! ~ Reward tor return of ~clean-Qp,m.6894. ~::~~~·Me::i ~~ n~ :~~ ~fz;a~n~j ***
erton, P · • · · ALCOHOLICS Amnymou.a papera o1f Gwenl'o Zellnler ~t ener•I Strvlott Daya only. 642-2389. statements t aod
1
ouJU' c .e
1 2 workin&' girls 24 le 25, need Phone "A" -1 or' wr:1te ~~ n Dana t. ~l.l: managt"men o m -uni 3rd to share 3 BR. apt, 1 blk o.ru-•w .. , .. --C•pt•lnt Cir Carel ff 0 USE KEEPER &./ar c.ar wash operation, head-
from beach. SlOOJmo. + P.O. Box 1223• Costa Mesa. We wash A wax completely, O>mpardon. Good plain quartered In Huntington
UUI. Ph: 642-3924 CVt'I. COUPLES 2PAR8Tl>'SPM ~iu~,J!!.. ri,,-M::~ custom &: detail work. We cooking. Full ltme. 644-1954. Beach. Hours flexible.
Call Phil to ("-•'-pldl:·up • dellwr. Call Salary o~n. 842-4453. ~~~ :ud~~ ~~~ 5,19.3344 r!:~ ~~) MHut"') 646-3632 or 64>1791 for Help Wanted, M & F 710 Boo:C-Ckkc'ee~po~r~=----
Pets ok. 83J...M89 aft 5. SWINGING SINGLES ARD ~ r--•-h"ff estimate. A U T 0 M 0 TI VE BOOK· ="'"-'"'-''i-~-'-c:'---,43=5 Call Jim, 2 to 8 p.m. ~ ta': wAik ;; Haullns KEEPER
Gonget for Ront 530-3122 ean,oo' "' .,.., CM'. Accounting Clerk With RE y No Los •
NEW storage earagea. 3 Socl•I Clubs $ll 64)-2320 YARD cleanup ,tree sbaplna REYNOLDS experience.
alzea, for mobUe homt1, 1.:.;.;.;"'-.;;...;.;;;_ ____ ;..l;;;'.;;;,c;;;';;,---;:;=:::;c:--:: or removal. Weeding, tn.ah Contact MARIAN PAR-=-~oot misc. 548-9766, IN~~~E n;w:!Bl~~~~en: ;::~~trimmed, ~HS.r!~ta~RD,
New Ute lndu1triaJ
Diviak>n For \\'omen
e ~tany auignmenta In thf!
NC\\'J)Ort Beach, Irvine, San-
la Ana I.: Costa Mesa areu.
e Experil'nced .l. trainee Po-
1ltion1. Excellent earnlrwa.
\\'eddy paychec.ka.
GARAGE, •toraae only, S25
mo. E.ut aJde.
642.21:57
DISCOVER male caL Vic; l.o&1ln& 8ch. SKIPUlADER & dump tnlclt // /iii /? Ji EKKEEPING • Moola
DISCOVERY ~2856:m.u white male =,, =:: ~~· .J\s{{'J ':::Jirl6 ~~-M: ha~~~ 2061 Bu1lne11 Ctr. Dr. n4-8:J$.6885 2J.3.38T·l393 pooc11'•. Vic. 17th I. Santa "" .. __ day Call •••1~1 * • Sl.nale car prage. $20
month. Huntinaton Beach,
call 6&-87.
YARD, 1~ cleanup&. e.xp. ., ""'"-. · I rvlne ...,. -
Trove! 540 Ana. CM. 64S-f!U, """'°"" .....,, dlrt, 1vy, _54&-4500 __ ·===---I ,~===~~=====I SMAIL au;.nnu Puppy Dr!vewya, grading. 1141-'2916. BUSBOY I ____
black I brown. Mesa Verde HAUUNG " deanup by exp A/Payable. A/Receivable, Full or part time. Apply in e Fi'-Clerk XTRA lrJ", doubl" garage on SET SAIL arft. 56-1427: college student, lie trlt. P~U Any or all expe:r. per90R mominga 9-ll, or IS
Bay St., C.M. 1:11 per mo. TAHITI LOST, U'r Blk Labndcr, vie. 534-1846 or 534-2164. '°"'"'.,''d. Scme typing evenings • Clerk Typist
_545-_7361 __ . -----,.,.I ' of 16th & Tustin. REWARD! GEN. Haullng. Tree11hnlb prefd. Xlnt eamlnl:s. Short wooOv·s WHARF • s Typi t
Office Rentil 440 Grand 3 h1a1ted Scl)l)()ner. 642-8680. trim. Gar A yd cleanup. term tcmporsry assign-2318 West Newport Blvd. r, 5
crew A: guert &h. costs.LO .-~sr~~M~.,~~Siame--,.-'-cbm,-~& Est. 839-2303. 557-6904. mmeen"',·. In1medlate plaL>e-Newport Beach e T-h. Typist OFFICE • 3>'x40', paneled, (213) 371-123' be~. Vlc.eMesa Vefde, CM •~
window ......... w/w new 545-7403. HousoclHnl"I Apply In Person BUSBOYS OR • Repro Typist
carpet, all'<'Ond., bath, 1:~~~~~~~~1UJST·~="'=,-mo-. -,ol-cd-mal<-,.. 2061 8'11ln111 Ctr. Dr. BUS GIRLS e Ac:c:nt c•-.L-plenty of parking. 5175. per blk/wht kitten. An& "Moe" HOUSE OF CLEAN Irvine ....-u
mo. ShetwOO<I Shopping v •-Woodl nd Sehl 1(10 THE PRO>'ESSIONAL ""1""1 • BookkHpe-& Center, 821 So. Brookhunt, 1 l[SJ 64~ n!,ard '• · CLEANING SERVICE -..--Full Time ••
suue 9 <Brookhun:t & Ball) Liit _.,... · 103 Discount ~·/thla ad Day le Nit~ Shifts e Secretaries
Call Mr. McN...,.., !l&Hm . LQSf, CdM ""'· 8"'nde 6424'24 or 646-2527 ADMINISTRATOR VOLT
or 546-8103. Greyhound, female. omCE ~ N ··~G TOQ1 Home Owne~ Aaaodadon, Apply in Penon
CORONA DEL MAR Call m-4312 ... ~•u• ' . Orange Co. Reponaibl.e for lnat•nt Personnel
1200 ft UJee Found (frM Mt) 550 SIAMESE Sea1point Cat, MESA Clearuna-, carptts, organizing & coordinating HOCHMAN'$ Temporary Service =·tallomt~~ ~de-.... H al male, name "Pharoh." One ~·con!i.ra. 557~~U: ~e~ ~~vi=: DELICATESSEN & 3848 CampUS Dr., Suite 106 ,;gn. Full aecuri"" bl"". 2 rnoa. old Puppy •. uo.w m e, white toe. 846-6247. r:.-~••• ad ... ..i..... RESTAURANT Newport Beach 546-4741
with ample~-whi•· !eet & ~•--.. .......... naAJcotod C'··nl"I ly business. Must bave • •
1
"4 Germ Sbep/C:Ol.He mlx,r,~;~~~~~~ ~. tracts & minis~ .. .., dai-Equal Oppor. Employtt
BOYD,,..REALTOfor Chn.tlneRS _, .,.....,. B1tth St./Pallsad:" S;rt., * ~DO EVERY'iitmG * ~reviowll exper. or educa-428 E. 17th Slrret ~
..... ' ' ~ ~ Rets. Free est. 64&-2839 u.me. Please forward Equal Oppor. Employer flSHING rod wn.ppera, exp "'..........,., Ana u<Fhu ~8925 [ I~ Oona background tor Costa Mesa NEAR O.C. Airport, hotel,
restaurants. Dlx. apace, im-
med. occupancy, Lowest
n tes. ll82 DuPont, 833-2840.
FOUND female puppy, abouti:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~ HouMwork By Diy JftlUnt' including salary General factory help. A~ 10 wks, looka part lab. 1 St c.....,..,,..,. ......... 1 .... menta 10 18226 San-CASHIER I SEX.:RETARY Fenwick Products, 14799 Vk:lnlty Volp Dr., Hun. ory. .....,...,.,... ~'t'Ade1a Cr, Fountain Part-Thne, Sales OK-ltnut St, Westminster.
tington Beach (ott Sher Ln>, Schools & WINDOW CLEANING Valley, Ca 92'1U8. Call 54M153 FOSTER'S Freew. Woman, 847~ after 6 pm. lnstructloni Ask for Glen 24 hn 494-0137
associated I J --•el bl mo. Will -Ide tumfture HOUSF.CLEANING Mual pouess a bul.c CLERk St., CM. ugepoo, aeu~ ~ t-al$S"""'.~erin&aervlce approx. 2 months old, *LEARN TO DRIVE • S20 Per Unit knowledge of electronica ·SERVING KITCHEN FOREMAN.sai lb oat
OP IJ~ IR•; RI Il l "ORS
101'> W Bclboa t7J•J6tiJ
FOR LEASE
Lwcur..i Bayfront Apts.
1 A: 2 BRs. $350 to S550 0.0..,. Wllllomton
RHllor * 54MS70 *
lnii, shag crpls, dr])!, sauna •i•v vicinity Be a ch w a I k Lic'd, bonded, Insured. Lag * 646-5.504 * assembly practices & ....,,_ a• .... mbly, 2nd 1 h If t. etc. Adults, no ....... avalla~e. 222 Fomt Ave., ··-k...·-· H •--· Hills Drtv•-•-•1 •~ ~· •·~ -
.,....... 1 .......... • .... .....,... To .. , .. ......,...,, un ... '6""'' u,. "'-Tl · ~ EXPERIENCED Hou ........ lean. cedures. ft1in. 2 yn recent OCEAN VIEW Previous asaem. 11 n e SINGLES Fl'om $150 --e--Beach, _,.lrlQU. Beach 536-7157 ""' ...
t BEDRM. From $160 ESK Uabl HI\ • • Ing, S2.50. Full timl'. Ov•n t'Xp . Day shift. App\y ln SCHOOL DISTRICT superviJOrY t'xper. ~ 2 BEDRM. From $180 D spact' ava " ......, FEMALE puppy, reddish ]~ transportaUon. 673-2918. penon -See Jerry Whitson, datory, Earning potential ln
Unfum AptJ A'lail From $10 :!':°$5 ~ =~~': Color, about 4 mos., ln Pot· [ S... ... ""*9 LITE HOUSEKEEPING Vega Electronics, 300'.I \Veit $l.16 Per Hour excess ot $1500 a mo. 1bru
10 $15 LESS. avallabl~. l78'75'8cech Blvd. tery Shack, Laguna, Dee. . _ S3 an hour Warner, Santa Ana. prod. bonus plan. U )1N att
You're right, they're under-Huntington BeaCh. 6G-4321. 30. 4M-29U. • 642-3148 • AlJTOMOTrvE Lot boy Substitutes Needed . p/time ~ to~~~~';, =
priced! 1561 r.tt'sa. Dr. 1617 WESTCLIFF FOUND n'U!.111 watch in B b I . Xlnt Housecln<ll-1-needed. Experience preferi-• caft'teria or sa.1ea clerk "'--'pllned .. ..M, ..,.tern. (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) Hwitington Beach. In-• ya ttl"f "' ....... 05 red but not nece.uary. SeE' p ~ resum[';; aj;pi). ln 546-98GJ 1200 sq. ft. Cptt .. ~ cond. d'·-·pollo •-HunH-t .. 11 By Day. Own Transportation Don Crevier TilEOOORE expe;:~1~ ... ~~ enon
1972
.
Ample Pk&. uru, janitor. .;;'ta, ~. ...,6 ..., LlcenHd Babysitter * 83&-0648 * ROBINS ri>RD, 2 o 6 0 nel 1..Umll'l .......,., Ou.ice. penon w/resume t o
Huntington S..Ch Baumgardner •tG4. 541·5032 FOUND shaggy dog small Day care for 1 chUd. Infant • LADY wants howecleantna: Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa WarMr Ave., Hunt. Bch. be-lti.acGre&<>r Yacht Corp.,
BRAND NEW AP 4 or 5 ofc suites $315. Of. tap on collar ~ta ~ 4 yn, FlJU time. Ftneed work, exp ' d, own 642-«110. fore 4 pm, Ja.n 19th. Equal 1631 Pla~ntia, CM 0.ta
QUO VADIS Ill 1iOI! S70. Deak irpaoe $40. "area. tn.:u til"-13525 or C21.1l yard & 2 playmates. !°i01 transportation. 847-36.17. AVON CALLING! Oppor. Employer. Mega, CalU. 40~'E.~ ~LY Luxury Garden AptA. w I k 11 ch J bath, CM. 698-8655. ='i s=~I. VJ~. V}: _l_ron_l_"11:...------To help "-'ith tt>Ofle after-the-COMMERCIAL Art Is t . FORMAN-Ftbergla.u, E:icp'd
BachelorOMl A 2 BR's. ~3988· BLACK Labrador Retriewr 10Uth of Edlna:er oU Mag-holiday• bills. A splendid p / t Im f!. Pr Im a r I I y ~et~~~~~· DELUXE 2 BR. $185 FR $135 2 ADJOINING omCES, vie Se bury u-H B Profeuional Ironing.. •arnlng ~~unlty in ycur ~•te-up. o-•·-· o-n. · a nuu--. • • nolia. Nr. San Diego Frwy. call anytime ¥,.,..... ,...... G -..a...~ ..-ply Trabaca Products.
LARGE 1 BR. $160 llld Pool·Jaeuzzl-Saunu ~~ ~ter;=~c.M. $90. ll-7-73J very triendly male. 567-4861. *** 645-8875 *** own neigti.S:O,.rhood11.=:::=;t;ic~a~1~-~r;;a;:p=b=lc=;1;:Preu==::=:-'tfw~.~1"•ijth1;S~t~.,~CM'5.a;;;;;:--;;iiiiJI---.... Dsbwbr, Irplc, swUn pool, Re reaboo Room If More! 1 nc. · 536-1144. = FRY COOK, EXPER. with
lt---t 3>342 Sanla -Bl¥d prp.IChool qe, lnlanta. ttorfl" BABYSJTTER for 1 child, 6 (.'()()KS, Exper. Bayview f H 6 ~ 00
new Oceanfront OCIMMCUPDAIANTCEY center Costa Mesa. Can>et wtwhlte chin found nr F I time. exp. w ; J'E'f. JEFF'S CLEANING mo old, 8am·l :30pm, Mon· O:>nva1eacent Hospital. Call ~.&~~~J3£~t H~.:
Qwton\lntwn 2 Bt. 2 Ba. & AIC. 642-t230. Bol&a Ch1ca A ~-96J..2411. SERVICE. RESID.E;NTIAL. Fri. Xlnt child, aood pay. 642-3505. Lquna Beach.
BJtts." QptJ. drpl. Wuhe!' 18992 li~klncta St. fiiiC>FESSJONAL SWte.ready 892-4169. , · BABYsrrrtNG my home. COMMERCIAL. 646-6384. Pref older, mature woman. lco:=UNTER==-::.,,.,;:;-, -=-=-:;lhnc-ce, '•'°Fc;R'-Y"'C°'OO""K;;----1
1; dr)1ir hoolnlp. Year (}1 blk. w. 01 ;arne1d to eo-Hell at Bolaa Ch!ca. FOUND young fml. calico Mesa Vmle Area. Palntl"I & Must have own transport&· exp'd preferred. Mun do • WAITRESS• Leue. $400. month l y. and Beach Dlvd.l H.B. $275/mo. 846-1323. cat vk:. Mieblas School, Call m-t06T tlon. 646-8535 aft 3::.J. minor aewtng. Apply tn L~615-;Sj7691.'il;m'2Bii:'Vi\lo:\: HUNTINGTON Garden11 Bu1lnt11 Renta1 445 FountalnValleyonFriday.WILL BABYsrr IN MY Paperh•nglng BABYSITI'ER,refine!d,over penon.FMPolatOeanen, eOISSHWASi-IER&
11 2 BR, 11> BA. Apu. Heil at Bclsa Chica. Call 673-24&1. OME EWPO CUSTOM PAINTING >I exp'd 2 yr <irl 10 yr 18641 Main St. Huntington e BU BOY ' TownhouBe. Bltn!, pvt 846-l.32l. Compare'~· ·See "nIE Factory" bu 11¥>ps D mat Siam H • VIC. N RT & ~. 7::1> 1to 5:30~M0n .. thru Beach. Must be clean & neat. Over patios, adulta only', no pf.ita. wha t you're mlaaing. Ft: avall, in the mall ranging· ~shard e& ~ ne~ BRISTOL. 567-8451. · lnter/t:xte.r. Unfum. tnter. Wed. $}..O Ql)' to start. Own OEUVERY ot DA IL y 18. Apply in pet'S>fl, ,8wf
172! Bed.font Ln. $225 per $130 • $260. ' -from $80/mo, kleal for wfwht ·Rhinestone collar BabywJ.tting In My Home spee.-price ... Free 'cott oon-trans; Liie hsl<Pe. 362 ·Pnm, SUNDAY.ONLY, to A Sirloin, S930 W. Cout
mo. S411-'l53.1. DELUXE A t ri tio smoke shop, troplca1 fish 962--2254. Weekly or Hourly Rates l'Ultlng & est. Uc. Ins. Esther St., C.M. 64&-0616. newspaper carriers. Re-Hwy, N.B.
YES?! WE TAKE PETS!! MLudc, 6°~ ~':u:: t':nrn~ shop, etc. 425 30th St., FND on Hamilkln between 645-:ms \\'on't be underbid.~-BABYSmER to alt ln my qu.ires tht Use of a Station
2 Weeb Free Rent too! Sl30. Spacious Poolside Newport Beach. 673-9606. Harbor .l Thurln. f'lt-5, 73. B•thtub re,,.ir No Wutlng CdM home IOI' 15 mo. old Wagon or Van. Contact Mr.
Pool, Rec. Bldg, dshwh•. Bungalow 11.50. 846..ll259. OF\ICE STORE s m1 taoilh brwn puppy. a roflnllhl-* WALLPAPER * child. 1 or' dayo week. Pb. Ha<Ty Seeley, 330 West Bay 2 BR. S200. l BR. S160 New ........ & nn .. Center 2002 1:.Aa _ _... "• \\'hen vnn call "Mac" ~-St., Cofta Mesa.. 1 BR. Adults. 1 bUt to beach. t'V"• '-J .,,.,,....'""' .,--
VISTA DEL MESA 545-485.'i Shag crptg., drps, No pets. Npdcwrkng" Bl .. vd .. ,.2s2cti.1. l/lil. ?.1ALE grey Coclc-a-Poo, vie. ~FINISH in white nr _color 548-1444 646-lnl BABYSITIER, Vic. of Del DELIVERY boy wanted. Ca-
SEACLIFF Manor Apts. 2 S135. 202 14th St., ~. · · · Btookhursr & Victorin., m ~our home ar bu!tness. * PAINTING & Cerro homes or Bear St. nyon Auto, 843 BroadM,y,
BR $164. Pool, Ctpta, drps, Newport Bei ch OFFICE I Sl'ORE nr. N'pt. Hntg. Bch-C.lt.1. are a . 5'3·5470 'l'rl!. lnc. PAPERHANGING School. H~ beflw & alt Laguna Beach.
bltna, garb. dl1pl. 1525 PCdt otfiCe. 450 sq. ft. G&>d MS-«>70. Inter & E:icter. Uc'd, Ina. sch!. Call 557-148,; aft 5. DENTAL SECTY.
Plact'ntia Ave. Ask about NEW 2 Bdrm unfurn. apt parking. SJ.20 Month. GREY/Black toy poodle, C1rpenter Guam. Call Harris. 642-4553 BABYSITTER. r e 11 ab It'' IN LAGUNA NIGUEl.., our di1COUnt. S48-J382. Graham Realty &16-2414 $250 mo., 2 Bdrm furnished tl"lnale. Tustin & Santa EX-Painter • Now School. mature, for 2 giria. my betwn 22 le (Syn. AT )eut SEACLJFF Manor Apts. 1 apt. S350 mo. annual lease. NR.. Airport l2!Kl aq. fl. store. babel. (Poodle cut), CARPENTRY, Painting, Teachfor. Inside A OuWde-homt'. Huntington Bch, U. 2 yrs. exp. 673-&t95.
BR. nc.50 Pool, f7J2s 511 W. Bay -Newport Good location for IPfta. It&-5'&-fiQ34. Haulin&, Bob 557-4866 or Acoustic . Ceiling. Free Eat. S:ll, Mon-Fri. 842-1055 DENTAL RECEPTIONIST
FRY Cook & Di&hwuher.
Apply in person, 512 W.19th
St., C.M.
FUU. OIARGE BOOK-
KEEPER for F.&g Process-
ing Co. in Fountain Valley.
Salary to $700 per mo. Send
ft!sume to P. 0. Box 8325.
Fountaln Valley, Ca. 92708.
GELCOAT repairmen, exp«.
Dty/nite sbl.ft openi.,
Appl)' in pert0n. MacGregw
Yacht Corp., 16.11 Placent.1a, ~. bltrui, garb. dlspl. Beach. Call 88&-4832 days Ooners. 1peclalltle1. Call BEAUT. Siamese Bluep:>lnl Mike S«>-7090. '46-4519. BABYSITIER wanted Mon, MAture Woman w/aeveral P~jlia ~v~~ about ~~ :e:~) or Tom Andrews, 54&-9556. cat w/wht collar. vie. Civic WOODWORK, pane 11 n I• INT I EXT paintinc, paper Wed , FM. My home. Own years full froot offtce
our scoun · ' · lndustrl11 Rental 450 Center. San Clemente, cablheta. patlos. Gen 'I hanalna, natural Wo od trana. Call at 6 pm, responsibility incld. finan· GIRL needed for alter actmol 3 BR, 2 BA Duplex. Oshwhr, * STEPS TO OCEAN * 492-2654. ft!pain. Duke DaDurka, tinish.Ulg. 548-79m 548-7592. cia.I an-angement I IK'hetlu1-babysitting for 4 yr old. Own mol'l:p~c ..... ~an33rdvlewsi. $.125642-~ YbaE~L ... Y: 2 J;J loB~;,..!pta. 2 13001 "'1 ft M-1 dooSpace.$1w10·fmnt Sml R:lbl::it -&f&-7598. TIIE HANGMEN, we sell BABYSli l ER o e e de d' tneGood. Pl~ ... ~~t. traN "'· jrtdayBewl<,hacme .....
C.M.
_..r.11 MJW a., m -..,..,.,. o c, ge rear r. mo. Balboa Ialand too, IOOO's ol vhlyl samples. Newport Elem. Sehl ~a. .._.. ....... ..,. '"r _90Me-e\\'J>O ac ar•a •
Daya; 64Hll4 eves. Winter: oceanfront 2 BR., l 179.l Whittler St., CMta 613-6732 A~l ~~R~ to For home appt. 54?"'5846. 2:30-5:30 daily. 8:».S:J). ;: desirlna: ~1pons1b~ =6-='15-;;-;->i.1<=7'•,.""~· ,-,--,._,,,.
1 Nt:wl.Y decorated 2 Br. 6~1~10 (Furn.l Agt.675-4073 ~~~~~hll!~r'1:/~· ~: FOUND 2 Sllm"yed dogs, I 53<>--3454 PROF. Painter. honest work, 645-3940, aft 6:30, 613-9015. arynois>e~ area. GrRL Friday, typing & lib!
beach &l"Qt!Sgc!.
0
1""1 7to 646-503.1 D•vs, 646-0681 Eve. male t 1en11tlc Beach & C ir:~ • reas, lic'd ; ins. Int I ext. BABYSmER. my home time. 4-· bkkpng. P/time
ocean bay. Year 'I· 1 5· _,, G~rlield, H.B. ~ lrpet -rvice free est. Refs. 548-2759. Costa Mesa, 5 d•v wk, ii DENTAL A Is I 1 t , ant, ' Call 675-8960 675-1917 Bk I~ READY FEB. ht, 1973 ~ halnld ml 6
NE\V Otluxc Oct•llll front Rent1t& ""' LAGUNA NIGUEL f'ND -Oral"lgl!' C.oast College JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery EXT SPECIAL $199 ~~1~m , own trans nee. ~r. &;men. Sat~ 1 c:ii llEl..P~an:~~~P:; ~~
Apts. 2.3 or 4 BR's. :Frplc'a, . M "'·hite dog, 1\pricot 1pot.s -Dri·Shampoo free Scotch-3 Br. Uctlns. 776-67U · 893-50331~ pm. 410 Ea.st l7th St. CM
Crpt.s, bllrt'!. Yearly or -1 mrdium l'ize. 642-1:>82. KUard (Soil Retardants ). PAPERHA.~GERS BABYSfrrER for working ' penon ·
monthly. 6/.>-4911 Bkr. 1600 SQ. }"t'. &: UP. VIC o.C.C. m~ml whlte Dea-reasers &: all color mother, my home, Cd.:.\f. DENTAL assistant, exp. HIRINC now. Good pay and
Rooms 400 On San Diego F'roeway '"/opn'co t pat~·o, ,~ft-· brtghleflE'ra & 10 minute Reduced rates for the oU Ref's. 640--0365 alt 4::1>. cha!nkle, x-n.y. Call only good benefits. Apply at OCEANFRONT IJ.:c 3 BR, 2 Call 8.11-1600 " "'"" ,..._,. bl h 1 hi.._ aeuon. ~S. &.tfr-2449. bet'Neen 6 to 8 wknigbts or }~atoma• 4S8-J650 ba f I .,~ ICE ki type dog. Call 642-7582. eec or w "' cn.rpel.8. t""VnER ... 1 ,_.__ BABYSrrrER wanted. Mon-12 ID 5 wke--'-645-1"""' " • , rp c, bltns. ..,....,Jmo, N room for "-'Or ng man FOR LEASE M-l unit.I, UlO ~;;-~=c--;-;:;. :--;;-:;:: Save )Wr money by AVlng £J\.r • ,_..nter, "'"''-r Fri Mature prerd Call aft ,.....,.. """ HOUSECLEANER needed 4
yrly. 673-.5124. "'llh kitchen prtv. Non &: ~ tq ft. Santa Ana FND: Near Udo, &ti me extra trips, Will clean decor. Elrter It lruer. Rea&. S. 97s-7223, C.M. ' DENTAL Sec'y-Bookkee~ or 5 hrs. d&il)i, s ~•wk.
BEACH area; 2-3 &c 4 BR's ~~.tr/amokcr. C.~1. Owner 714/98l-3196. ~73 cockl·poo. Ca 1 living rm., dining mt. & ratet. 968-406S ei.'l?s. BABYSI1TER needed 1 da¥ Exptr. or colleze. Penn. poa. No cookini·'°'"'
Yrly. Al!IO hou11e. No Fee Sto 455 . hall b ~n ChAl\Y ~· t $7.50, Pl•r.ter, Patch, RtfMifr wk In Dl1 borfie 2 chudttn. =-===· .,-,,.-,..,.-.,-,..,-~ trana. Write cl•s1'fied ad ABBEY REALTY &t)-3850 2 ROOMS, $92.~ mo prlv. ,.,. LAOfES ring • Vicinity of cooc •-· air ...,. ~ yra. Pt ,_1tio ·96S-137'9 DENTISl' I Oerrtal Asa1.stant No. 500 De.l\y PUot P .O. Box
Fur n . or Unfu rn. 370 mt ' ba . Sl5 wkly IM"mi· STORAGE building tor ttnt. Harbor & Fair. Call to idt~ exp. ll ,,,.hat couna. not * PATCH PLASTERING rm. _. IL for chainide A: X·"'"-Ex· 1560 Costa Mesa, Calli.
Apta., ~-m:_o. CM. Adulta. S30 mo, 275 Flower St. Coat.a tify. 545-6797. method. I do work mysell. All typs. Free estimates BARAWD-Nl or put time. per. c .M. 6.f&..?tKl9. 921S28. M~. 646-9136. f'ND. U'K. pt-Slamt'at mak! Good ref. s.1t-ot0l. Call 54().'825 ~n::r2p30n,,W~~~ DISHWASml, Apply ln ~H=o~uSEKEEP===ER=--. -:Q>=lld
Costa MeN FOR Rent, furn. room In ~~~~~~~~~~I CAt, vie. Tw1.lerock Irvine, Cement, Concrete Plumbi"I ,~ N-Blvd C.M ~ Mesa Verde O>nv. care CostA M~. Nice &: qulct ~ 833-0191. ._,,, "'-....,.. ' ' , 961 Centtt St, CM. Uve-ln. Mu.st love chUdn!n. 2
Under New hof'IM'. For 11.'0rk'g mAn. ll tflJ FOUND: Blk & 'lttlt poodle PATIOS-PLANTERS PUMBrNG REPAIR Bakery Help Wanted . 8o)l1, 1ll4. Rf.fen!nca nq.
Man....,..•nt G4M'194. Amaulscsi';"ltl _ mix male. Vi c Wamer, & All Concrt'!e work. Bride:, No job too unall N~m"k ELDERLY iaey to l1Vf' ln do $300 Month to •tan
CASA VlC"IURIA t.RG. BR, kitch ptivl. Newland, F.V. 836-432-1. slumpslotlc? y,·k. 89f..35.'D. * * 60--Sl28 * Jlte wort tn IUNt hame. Newport lk!iach '1S-TTIJ
1 & 2 Br. Fum &bUnfurn Modt>rn all t'lt'ct pri home. CUSTOM CEMENT WORK DRAINS u.ncJoaed • $7.50 BEAUTY OPERATOR (213) SM-tm. HOUSEKEEPER I Cook tor
Carpeta:, drapn, 1:>/W, TV E~1,!-wkc.nds. 646-2042 or Announcements 500 QUICK CASH Dr!vts, WALKS, . patiol. Sf:wl!l' line to 100' . $15. Part time evtt, buay shop. EUX.'TRONIC Lab Tech. co 11p1 e . Unencumbmtd. IJIL Pool etc. Come By & ,,.r wL I '----------1 Pool d4-(kl. Doa. &Q...M14. * !>49-2502 • No followin& nee. ~1050. Must hive w 0 rItIn 1 Uve-ln, Pvt rm A be. Good
Inquire about our Move·ln WANT lady 63 or ovr for OLD FURNITURE ... THROUGH A PATIO~ walk•, drtvft. Saw, S•wlng/A1teratl1ftl 81LLING cleC'lc to ~" knowlfdp of .oUd Ila~ ~alar7~-MHD. ... Atiowa.nce. 525" V1dorll St. lovelY"'N.a hm. PVf1ii., kit bon't throw It "wfUI yet. If bre.tc. rtmovt A: ttplace Bur1"0Ulhl account I h 1 deVlces. (JC's OP amps I: HOUSEKEEPER. cook Moo
at Harbor, CM. 64U970. prlviL m mo. 543-C288. It'• atqeworth.y, the Irvine concrete:. 548-8668 for tst. Vicki's Origlnal1 machine J...'1000. Machlllt tn.twllton) ~ standard Lab tbru Fri. Noon-'J'pm. $il ft.
•
~ pa~~f;~t!· ~ R~~ ~n~' dr1m:.::. f:1:~1W:ff ~~~~ •. ~~ lV ANT AD Ch!kt c;•~tc.o~M-~· ~~~ • ~~~ adt;e0a~~: ~JI~~ ~~d ~t = ~~~""':.·.es I,
·From $141t. Ma.,.. adUltJ, . c.in..n1tnt toe:. MHO!fl.. .-""'°""· ch<ln, tablot, nu; YOW111"t School, -Altwroi1on-...:,2 5845 49HS!I. ~-··• ,,!1312 EmGJIJe~~S.A. v....,.1o -mot!O)'I .._,. =:,.:·~~,,.. 18n ·~~=-~!private m-~f.'~c&n~'~~~~Qat 642.5671 , ~ :.,!.~,j30~: Neat,atturtl:;"~exp .. TMW1fftdrawlntlwWett. ,;;;.;:~~~ad ,tl~i---
1/ant ad l'flml(a , • , 642.5678 ,M~ W.Ul ad, IJIUlt& • ~ ., .. ~ or f&1G57, CaU '4J..M78, ~· M. ~ ... ._
. I, (·
-
-··~--·•..,.,,. -------..
' •
llffndQ, J.riniwr 11, 11i7l OAiLV PllOT 6 ..,
J[i] ~( _ ..... _,-~j~[Il]~1~1 ~., ....... ,,-~ J[Il] I ->=• l[fi] I '"""
1 J[Il] ;;ml -·d•-•n~I;:;;~-, ;I ;;;;;;Mw-da •-• ;;l~;;j,l~~-d•-•n~I~~ I -~ lit!
-Wontod, M & I' 710 H•lttWo ..... , M & Pl 710 Holp Wonted, M & P 7!0 Hele Wanted, M & Pl 710 H•lp Wonted, M & F 71 o Applla°'" 102 Mlscellanoous 811 TV, Radio, HIFI, & .. h , Sall 909
(&...,, ..
ff OUS~pan-JVNIOR Salnmen: !G-JS. MEDICAL ~/Girt f'r1.. RL\LE'STATE -SERVICE Statloa Altt!ndf.nt PINK wuhtt .._ ORJENTAL o .. ,. Sale. lO'H-Stereo 836
IOn wallled, M\llt drive. &.rn $»~'"".,. .,,.k •et· day. Mwt know inPlra.nef. 0 ,..1 ..... ..,. ... .,...., \\'.,·· noc "'"e0. tu1l,t...!~tlme1. «I or13ow:r, 11 __ ~ • ..,.,.,,. ~"" .. ch. ·-Part timf' Gr liw in. 11.... -Good aalary 6U-.2:S91 '-':'~'i..c.o'" • ,.,. . '" .-:nuq ........ w llttV, 1 . ex-"","'" ""'' .. -.... -oU Umt J anuary. We have SAN~lJl Tuner 11.nip. & 2 pr. sa-mie • .. ._ new customers for the • • in the bo1tetrt an:1 Hununv· peor Apply Chevron Slatkin 673-3336. lhe larcest 11ock ln Oran&'(' ,p1<ri1. Tf'Ac 111.~" Kl'n...,·ood
• DAILY PILOT, n-11 11 not a M 0 TOR CYCLE puu ton Beach/FountAl,n V&Ucy. 604 ' So Cout Hwy Lai Rent Woahert/0,_r1 Couniy. Exptrt clewlln; •, "-''"::;'";:·..:Oo::::;;ug~ • .,;~:;,~l:... --Hovi.keeper, f/tlmt newspaper route and does counter btlp male or and let us train YoU! Call Bch. • " • 1-~pa.iring ol the aamt'. 500$>.i·
For Conv. HOllip. ~9-3061 ncit ~uclt ooUecti!tn or fitmalit. Awa;(/ Motor$, 16.'IO Ph!l McNamee, YIU.A.GE SERVICE Sta . Sale $2. Wk. Fu.II maint. "'n1part them and aave at Saiu~I ~~~pe~ers
!Nllt_E D. Opt.,i,_, for 10-15 ~~i:ind.•· ,.,....11·. ~l , ... ~ .... ~ ~vd., C.M. REAL ESTATE. 962-Wn, t/tbne eve ~ Must"::e F It* 639-1202 .. 110 ;;-,~, '!'._,.Shah • .:D ~1 125?.; ~1S·6X.1
TlK-Ma.tnff1«~111 19'il
* CONTEST 31 fr
\\'llJ be Opl'J\ fOt' lngptt•llOfl
JM. 13 I 14 at Sllp lA
NC'\\'Pl)r' Arches llitll.rlna
tbehU11! Cl'.'1\llncla 1)11.nkl.
$21,390 SAIL.A WAY
s.t .. Earn ..,,,...... auu ""' Needed lmmedi t I lirtod cot.t I t 5 v•rc.-.. m '-""' llol.Jan<I i'111•hta 'Nl'WpOrt ladtet tull or p/time. Paid hounKR'alt.,. ~--1 _•_. ,..,,:: --~ !~ENT Manaa:er · RE'-Ute mectt. kflowlcdp. Neat urn ure ~",~ru-~-~~~~·-~·~··7~1·.:.~~~-;,~;1:~~~~~~~:= w"'..7. Xtra money or Sat~. \Ye h&w openings a 1 Y . p e o manage-appearance. Apply All 2:190 SAl.LM WPLE round '1 D !:: SK S and BOOK· [I t71 4) 6'4-0139
start a pt.mt. Cl.m!r. For fOI' Fountain Valley a: South 3 F~penenct'd apt,c Ill S&n CI e I.fl en I e. Ne\\'))011 B!Yd., C.M. pt"<l~aJ dining table, 4 ca~ I I s
lntf!!lVW call, 89:2--5333 or Hwllingt<>n Beadl attas on-RUBBER PRESS 49'1-0646 or 837-8012. SERVICE Station 53.lellman-tau\8 l'hain, 4 bar stool!i.. SliELVi.1; ·S U 11' /1.131. 1-: r,.. to You 26' J,;1,1ders 16. Xlnl alls I.:
836--'l8216. ly_. You mua1 be out or OPERATORS R. E . TRAINEE Top pe,y _ """' .. -bene.tlt,. vinyl wtnab&ek sofa , llke 1'"0R ClllL.Dru:N ot cJSC" equip. Xlnt no:-11:11 rocord,
INSPD:T'ORS. IChool by 3 PM to •• "'*" C t \\'OUld be ~ti fOI' xtni fie.., t·hiu1t11. SIH-<$'4. moldl a a 11 boa I p&rticipate Expertenc , Saturdays Only It. E. Broker .l DevrklPtr. Exper pttf'd. Full &:. pt tlnie ~ikr•tor. 0 V t~in::bi; siorilgt>-gpace 10 your .i:nr· 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 SABOT.=~--I
l'C " Ult?'mbly In-boys 2tvfn pr 1 0 rt t ew 3 Shl!I.$ Availa.bte \\'ill train & sporuor for avail. Apply Shell Station, Ph. ~ l'lgt'. l'ftICEO fo'OR I~I· ·--------· spec6on. Some prev. i11· ~. Y • VOLT llcer\Sf'. Call betwn IO am le 17th • lrvlnre, N.B. · · ~IEDIATE SALE. 1212 s . Fftt-;£ Au:<lrn.liun Shrµ.
1
~.1~ ":· ',':. D,1ane, 6T:>-698S
tpeetlon eX}IC!T hr.lpful but LEG. •L SEC'Y Instant Personnel 3 pm, 56-lllt. TELEPHONE SALES r.tOVING Soon, dl.'ak , R.os& .st., Santa Ana, 1..ow11 t'hildttn minds we.IL SAcR1,1ct-.-\1c1ory 21, top ;:.,,.. man:.'.'2· App~ In Corp ""':_, need& ah Tc-rnporacy Scrvlt'(' REC E PT ION'Jsr · Typist Pt-rm.anent or part lime ~ ~· i:r~, 542-3\M. Eve~: 5-16-:612: DayJ: tolw~ S..'\00. No l'f,U. offer
r-'t63t p•-~~ acht gal· 1•·--., ba llJ1l 3848 Clllnpus. Dr.; So1tt! 106 Must be aC"cutatt". Start at work, mornJncs & eves Sl\'f', r~-_...?'..1e ' · STEREO, 1913 Garr a rd 549-1174 rt'fu!tf'<I. 642-79&~ or 832'·8291 """Y"• ~ntia, C.M. w aome pro le exper. Ne\.\• ......... nh""h "~•-•• ·~ ul-1l28 G & F · Very cht'ap. ;).)(I"'""• ~~~ (if'('at be!'lf'fita . + profll -,.,,.. • .....,..... .,.....,. I .,..._,, '" UW:· Wll,it"! <'Onlnl. or ="'"'=,--'--~---~ niodel. Syiitemlt.E'd au t 0 Afo~FECl'lONATE llr\\I mall" COROXAOO 71, I yr old, de· --,,,~""· '"'·-· 10 $~. c -•i Equal OP'P(lr. Employer RECEPT/TYPIST c:Wtail.w cal t.oi1 ~ ..... ele!I DIVORCE Salt' • \\'1tlnut ca.n ....... r ~ ~·att am/fni 1 s~ alt • .,. ... ., p~~:X..INRJ ,.,, .... ._.....¥ '"" w Tim ~~"I ·~"' bdrm .!let, 6 ~ lllC'I. kin" ._.,.., • . blk & \\'h11~ l"al C"an't kt'f"I" IL'(' fnl r.. '·""'· a -'"-Yll"'ll: ..,,. -Jan Pag,, S40-GIXi6 ,.._ __ la! ~ :0.1llllt t>nJo" d1•al!n ... w'thf' t'!I, ~ · hdbd ~ .. -~·;o..,L--t·, x111"1 rt"t't.'l\'l'r. J (' n i; t' 11 nlt 1 tn All ·,.._' MeM ~I 7J4~;3a9 1R1wrakf.-~. ' " ..., ~~ NEED I '/, " " ........,-.._,~ Aispt.>nsfon s~akl'l'!I & lapt• ·-t ... ,,. -.--~·AGENC:"t' Ptt!ionncl Agl'ncy, •r.11!111al'· 1 rvl t e e Ph kn e tn· Ptrfilk:-r.rrfo fypiiij:. £.\pt't . T • t rond. . w-i:m dt'l·k. SLL.U bru.nd 1lt'w in i\l1tr, 9TI'Hl6ll. Bo•I• Sl1ps/Oock1 910
bor Blvd., CM. e e"·en:, v:or . rom "'' 'busy -1 itn._. plv!n('. Co. yp1S * * * Sofa & loveseai. ~wr bo.11". \Vas le, ft Un('lain1~·rl on PilPPIES to .i:ooc:t honl('S -1., 1 --.-'--'-------! FEE PAID home, hours to suit )'Our bo·nl•fi!~. Apply 111 P••rson, usM bolh lor SIOO usually I luyaway. NO\\·, S\34. C1'\'{!lt C.e1,,11u1 ~ht'Ph•·rd. 12 t DOCK FOR RENT
Exec • Legal Trne to $500 schedule. No sel1ing. Call Penn,)•saver, 1545 !'-;+•\iport NEEDED horn~. 968-1'9lO. ' •lt'pl. 1'i14) 893--0:iOI. l.Hbrador. J\11 bl~(·k f,'1111tl(·' C;,dl Gi:.-?;UO ·Secretary to S800 XI , !JliS..63&1 bctwn ll & 2 I Bl., C~f. Secretary $6SO • n t 1y1>in_g, no sh. beach ·"'==-.,--;,-,---,--·I NF.\V \t'alnut Btlnn set. (TEAK rti!Ling t11ble, i\faple 7 ~·ks: Ph. 673-829:'1. 55• Slip, x lnt loc.
Sec'y/Publ!!1hing to SSM Call l.orra.ine N9.\' . °"''™'r. stt"k:! a~-!?OBERT J . G r ah D m IMMEDIATELY: Dinette sci, rof(ee & end :;h<'st. l\lirror. Breakr:l.'t lbl, PUPPY. Gc·rman Shcpht'rfl Nt•wport Harbor 6'i3-7334
Oft Typist/purcha.s $4fiO \Vestclltf ~!Ve n1gr., for 9'' f ASSOC'lale!I hu Opt'ning for tu bles. et(' .• 5fil-8.J..12. " likf'-llU ~fa.ttri·~~ &-ts, mix, ftm<a.lt', 3 mOI!, old. PBXIR~pe $450 Personnel Agency ~n.·i<.'t f~lian Restaurant. young artractiw i;:"irl fo'ri· T h • I II · nd n ad~ Q\1111 Red 1 v I bl 540--0254 B~t• Sp..d & Ski 911
Dictaphone Typist to $500 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Sc'""ii }:!.,, ~Good salary. day. f\fu11t have ~·n c.u. Rec nic• PROV. Sofa, coffee table, 1a'~1e ~t. £xe~ll1i ~. L~R•E'YE °'1' '1· · --·~------
Girl Fri/Bkkpng $600+ -(Mark III Centerl a .... ~. For appt. Call Mr. Cowger, epro lamp table, Best offrr. All Book. Plants & Cont!lint!rs. r r1na e puppy, P.~rt 16' SI\! l:iWt ~· tr:u!rr WI·
Aoctng Clerk/EDP $455 542,8836 NewspaPtT Carriers . 492-9600. Sto1tistical good cond. 979-9119. ~tis{'. &12--·89119. i:.f'8~r Spanlt>I. 0 111 Johng}n 7'.l. XlrJ t buy at
Fr-ee & Fee Positions Legal Secretary BOYS & GIRLS Genero1 I Offiu QUEEi~SIZE box sprtngs T\\'IN beds, ch(>st. night ~. J.16--IU7S.
488 E. 17th (at llvine) Of Mat~. exper. to function as HI vr11 & nlder SALES-MENS DEPT mattress & frame, very I !!land, 2 strato loungl't 1 Bc:ixer. 1 f.1ixed brt\--d, frtt
642-1470 sec'y to attorney who is also DAILY PILOT Xlnl earnings . Lona: .l short good cond. $40 53&.7846. l'i!<'lintt':\, • rornt"I' table. IG good c:.Jl~20'36
1
l[iJ ~........, sett'l"tary treas. o( Nat'! F'ull lime, f!XTICt. term tr-mporary usign· SELIG oiled teak el'.l!fet' df'.~k. rtuurs. Golf cart, Transportation rjh
1 NDEPENDENT Finance corp. Xln't oppor. All fringl' :\In'! ~ary, t.'Omm & bcne.-i1nents · ... ~aried .. ~..1~terest-table $55. 6' rontl"!Tlp. \O.'ood \\'csri1nghoust' Eie('trie, 4 SHEPHERD Coll.1" kn111':. JO
1
~------~~--~~I benefits. Call !fr9..5580. Rout•s Open fl nx \YO'" • c'""""' the frame 90fa ~. 536-633.~. \O.'hee. good ("Ondition, fM!1, All shot.s. ~ 1111 y, Ilk<''\
Co. opening up new office tn :-C'c'-'o"""~=="'--~ San Clemente ts. day, hour ,(.; locat10n most OOUBLE BED 49J-34n. • rhlldrrn. S.!S-1.!Wll , ~~t :e~er ~s~~'7~~ Ls:~ ~~~ngSu=~soBell~ Call Mr. Busby Call for Appointment ~;~~'!ek~t for you. \\'et>kly GOOD f\tATTRES:S. $2'0. HOUSE denlOlition sale -ADORABLE 1i. LAB. malf'. II Camper;t, Sa le/R ent t20
med. Call collect an'&.. C.a.11 714/494-8073 for 5W-5050, e->.130 546-7S56 e\f{·!I. S1ove, refrig., bf'dS. wks, sho!s. Good children·~ ,69 '"\'Po~ appl. •• 492-4420 • • Apply in Pt>rson ('(IUChf'<i:, rti~ht-$, !'tr. Sl\i It· pct. 67:!-7363. f\IUST Sf.l.L! w' I"
12ll)340-8TU. K II G• I s "10 v A --I Top; tt"nl; new engfne'. J~tTORIAL f.faids, perm. , C I N 13 673 8(& J !An>s. camping t<Xlra&. ,,....,.t MACHINIST JOSEPH MAGNIN e y ., Garage Sale 812 ·,''"· "·' 1 · ~""Im"' CUTE pup1w, •, Lnb & ' · · u-~time, 8 am-12 noon on · c\\·spaJ)l'r arriers Equal Oppor. En1plc>yer I : · · · -· "1nll'. 6 \\'k!l l)lrl orrrr OCfon" Fri. 1112.
6 lo 'l th General·5 Yt::!' exp. BOYS & GIRLS f.,\P.1~GE Sale-Fn until sold. f.fUST S{'IJ 1962 F'orrl f'alcon :{17~~190 I 96,(1-2176 Th~. ~.,J.m i• on iu ADVANCED KINETICS JO yr s and olrtt·r. * SALES CAREER * 2061 Bus1·ness Ctr. Dr All items , low pr1C'ed & in "'/nt·1~· rng-. 2 full si:re beds liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ''--='--------I
JOBS 1231 Victoria St. \V. Ne\\·po11. Beach nl'l"a. · i::ood cond. Boat harth\'lln.'. \\'/11111!1rf'Ss & fraf'n{'s 111
1
C I B'k
Cos'. M_, ""116' Good pi'OIJ!s. Contal't •Ir. llO yr. old .fit111.ncial f!nn is Irvine 833-1441 f1~hif1J: chrs., m1ll'lin tacklt>, youth l'x><l, n a u g ah,· <le c-------~ ye es, 1 es,
"""' V'tD" tak1ni:: apphcatiom for Sale!I t 1--" [ I ~ Scooter5 925 URGENTLY NEEDED Eq. Oppty Employ•r Seay, Daily Pilol, C.11. I' I Sal OU ngger.1. C" ,, • 1ul(:n11r rouch, 493.-9582. ..._ _ ___. -,-os1t1ons. i~n tnve. 11"" -· I ~ 11 i J -:c=7"C-C=-=~~· ~~ -•Secretaries • 6424321 e "J 1V Tech Ex""r On! SOS \\'In<' 1· i.u .. • ro er, 1 e •·'!UST •-11 • Keypunch n-ators ?ttACliL~Isr Journeyman + comm. Sl2,000 possible, TV Bal;_ 1~land· J,"""" jackets, life rings, h«•ll " """ • freeu"t S-1(1, Colorl'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim.;;;;;iiiiii '70 Jf.EP \VAGONEER
e Solderers/~ wrap only, alllO helper machine NURSING ~tust havt' 2 yrs. coll<>ie & , · uua s • v•.ro;iw, tanks, ht'ad, rubbt"I' •lock TV, nppllanc~ .. br hu:n .. 11 C'ulltorn \O.' fl go n. V8. e Billing Clerk Typist shop. Trorun Co., l9fKI Lake RN, nitc shUt, full or sales background. E\ICS. 646-lOlT. moldings & comer wheeL<1. component lu·h,, sev.·1ng P•ts, General 850 au1on1cA1ie, power ~teering,
Irvine 540-4450 St., H.B. 536-JS'lO. p/tlme. r.tR exper. no1 Call Ron Gill WAITRESSES Chrysler 3.~outbrd motor. ~ach. etc. Also, &4 OM.!V. alt rond .. 4 wheel dri\'f',
Anaheim 5.U-2322 MACHINIST Journeyman req'd. 835-4545, ext. 263 Pleasant expt>r. waitresses Remington 12 g u age \\B.g. S250 or bst ofr. &16-8673 GROOM & BOARD, 11 yn Super JX'rfecl. (762BQI)
NF;VER A FEE AT TEMPQ only, al!o helper machine NURSES AIDES EquaJ Opp:ir. Em_ployer req'd for prtime dutiei at shotgun, metal work tfEJRLOCM Class Box~ all breeds. Fl'('(' pickup! S.1699 DAVE ROSS PON·
Tempo Temporary Help !hop. Trurun Co., 1980 Lake Day or nlte shift. on call to m/f \O.'ell known yacht club. Gd benctlt'S .l shel~. rnols, ~ mfg to you. Made to order. "Sht-n-y'11," Poodlt' pups TIAC, 2.i80 llarbor Blvd.,
Journeyman Linotype ?.1a·
chlnist. Night position. 35
hr. wk. Xlnt Company Ben·
ef!ts. Paid ~le<lical, Llfl',
Uniforms, Credit Union, etc.
St., H.B. 536-3620. start. Exper. not req'd. SALES people wanted for TV pay Ir working conds. yrs of Nat'I Geographic, Lo\\-est Prices. "1t'SI Coast avail. ~2848. ~e~~>e ~~~· 11~,;';;~17 Ef-
Hylond Honie tor 1':x. Dlrec! Sales work. Good Phone: ~Ir. Thatcher, for metal file cab. & ofc desk, \Vood Specialties, 893-1512. Cits 852
DAILY PILOT
A!:k for Larry Miller
• 6-12-4321 •
MAID work In exC"hange for
apt. 2376 Newport BlvrJ.,
Cl\.1. 548--9155.
~1AID \Vanted, Don Quixote
l\fotel, 2100 Nev:port Bh·d,
C!\l. &42-2670.
l\1ENS \Vear Salesmen.
The fastest draw in the West. P/time mornings, Sail's exp
... a Daily Pilot Classified helpful, call l\1r. Olson.
I~ &t2-567s. -iiiii-iilliii64ii2i-"ii11iii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'fll~q#~
~ .... e A C0HVENr£Nr SHOf'PTNC ANO
....:::f. SEWING GUIDE FOR THE
CA.L ON THE GO.
. --"""""'
ceptionaJ Children, 9861 \V. pay, F1eltible hrs. Newport appt. Drexel b,r furn .. lam~ 8' G. E. fl'ost.guard refng S95; !.;.;..;.;. _______ _
ll!h St., S.A. 1 n f I or seal Beach ollire. • 673-inO • i;t\ell urut. ~· tablr!I, flt>IJ Siar hclmrt. !\Z 7 318, PERSIAN k11tens, CFA n•g.,
R r 0 0 k h u r s t , So. of Telept?mpter-An equal op.. WAITRESSES, h0\l9e'1.iws old cowr. boiler, old larldrr S25: Ruger .22 L.R. carhifl(> shots, xlnt. HMs. S73.
\\'C's1mins1er Ave .) ?;'r_un1ty emplo;-er. Call nnoded to v.'Ork 10 to 15 hn hack l'hair.s, old mirrnr:i;, s:r.;. S.19-3612. e 892-2970 e
N N d tH..< 3260. weekly in dining room. No $TT!. h11tch, la\\'l\mo\0.1'r. urses ee ed patio fum, indoor & outdoor , OLD ?-lajeslic 6 burnt'r "l>Od Dogs 854 11 -7 & Other Shifts exp. necess.'lry. $2.25 hr. plan!s, garden tools. 161nn1 stove Sl25; fX'\Y 5' fiberglass .. .~
Top pvt. duty P•Y· Secretary Santa Ana Country Club. mo\'ie ran1rra, v.·atf'r lok1s. balh!ub & splash $75. 2 Nt'~·fl(>W ;,-dra\O.'t'r cf~k~. For inlt'rview, ~5--ll61. 421 Kin<>s Road, Ne\\'JXll1 &15--0790. 30x-12 . \\'l:tlnut \\ _matctun~
Immed. II:!)' for Uoor duty. WANTEO . Experienced food Bot.ch .. .., f'onnlca top, S65 ea. 2
CounLy-widr. Nl"l'.'d RN ·
1 K II G" I & {."OCktail waitress-must be. MlKell•noous S\\'IVl'I secrrtary chairs, tan L\'N Aides. lntervit·ws e y 1r s OV('r 2l. Neat. Steer Inn MOVING, must sell chest of Wont-• &20 $25 eiL Oli~ttl-Ui)del"WOOd
Mon-Fri, 9-5. Lesc o u I i e 1170 Baker tPantry sooV: rtrawers. ~blc bed, chalnl, .u electric typcwrilcr, model
NUMM"S Registry, 351 Hos· ping Center) C.M. No Phone lamps, anuque copper kettle \VANTED: U.S. Coin Collee-Editor 2, $250. 640-1477 or ~~ R~id~.'~' ~~Pa~ calls! ~~~ina~ds ~. end!IB c ~: tiom & a<'cummulatloll!I. "642--~~""""'·===~"'°"= 54!J.99&t Nef'fls your sk:il11! Work 1!»-3376. Private out~(-town buyer. DOG OBF.DIENCE CLASS
6 horsepo"·cr chnln sa~:
engine. n1o unt e d f'ln
f\li nibike frame S40. Runs
.';"!'eat! 63S __ -'lcc'2ll=----~
llONDA 50, xira top end.
S100. Rt'al fa st. Gcn1Jnl 2
f'ngs 50 & Slkc Sl95. Bolh
trophy h1kr1. S.f>-7395.
'69 K;1\\'l1saki 1!1> Ct', good
condiUon, 8·speed $190. or
trndl': For M'lllller bike,
call 97!l-~14.
1966 • f4:'C Y AMAflA
with large trail A)>fOCket
$73. 544-34-17
NURSES Aidt'S 7-3 exper.
prcfd, LVN 3-11. nll'dlCI ,
!tons. Mesa Verde Conv .
Hosp., fi61 Center, CM, 54g...ooss,
\\·here you're appreciated on WANTED • NOW! \Vrite, ClllMified Ad No. STARTING SAT. JA.lli. l3TH.
long or short term fem, • e CAMERAS. slide holden, 6(l(I, Daily Ptlot. P.O. Box ENROLL NOW. a.ASS PUSH 1963 25.5 cc, xlnt cond.
porary assignments. \Vork 4 Expenenced irons. picture frame, 1J60, Costa Mega, CaJ. 92626. SIZE LfMITED, PIC·A· $1.25. M7-M14 "'the top companies in Sal Q ly dh1.he11, intercom, skid Y..'ANTED: V\V body 61"4. or PET. 10009BAEDAACHMS962. 1-1~ """"'==,--..,~----! Orange Co. Choose the days, esmen ft chai~, v~11;. toaster, complclc VW, _ _.,;"" or TINGTON """"'"" 1970 llONOA 4.50, great con-
h • I · G d 11 silverware, fishinli:" poles, ...... u.. ·1 ,,:;;;:~'S~=;c":--;;C':'=:: 1·n· 5000 ·1 •·k ours ocation nl<lll ron-rou.n oor opportunity tor odds & ends, 6"5--0llG. not. ;,.i4-J4l7. 10BEDIENCE cla!I! to start f 1 on, . m1 es. ns 1ng
ven1ent for )'Oil. Excellent the tight men. Company Wed. Jan. 31, 7:30 p111, in S675. 544,1209,
I
I
•
Nurses Aides l'arninR;s. weekly paycheck . .r benffits a: tree dC'mo plan * GIGANTIC Garage Sale. H~DMADE goods ~n ~n-the Newport Beach/lrvinr '70 T"'I'" ~
Ex""rit'nced • !!·'!"' I.Rt ••K rtK-• ·~ · • • • '' OVf'" !·.-,,.,,,.,, conrl1l··n'--l---I 1~ Jxot 9 &: IO nn.a. vpl'n . 10 1.'~~-~ , , '" O~"'C. Manager/1'-U,1! chg. ......st foot rorn·ard. _, taking applications. Sat/Sun. 400 Snug Harbor wttn am. 5 mo. old. 54&-4928. ~ $.~~' • 5.~3())
~ .f!or •n •d In Woman's wOrld
r.11 u--· n-~L ..... -·-" .......
Instant Refresher
1
Fun With Felt! Bo 0 k k eeper. Boat 2061 Business Ctr. Dr. GUSTAFSON Rtl. N.B. Musical Instruments 822 LABJtAOOR n.e!Jie\"cr pup!I
Dealership on Ba y. Irvine 833-1441 U I M GARAGE Sale r Lusk 6 \\'ks. A.KC, X l n 1 • '* '6-1 llnnda trail 90, '6j
Suzuki SO, $125 each.
5'16-2200
l '
'
•
Yachting Assoc. Corp. nco ft• ercury Homes). Sat. 1().4, 3 KIMBERL y Sho\\)pct/Malt' & fern.
6-l&--0'55l. SECRETARY position avail 16800 Beach at \Varner Familielil. I'" urn i I u r <', BASS Atlorahle. 830--47!'»
OPERATORS, single needll.' J\lus! know a<' co u n ~ s Huntington Beach Household !term, etc. 1aJO . SOiNAUZER pups. hsebrkn,
ovcrlock. Zippersetter. Top I receivable & payable. 1 gi rl 842·&%1. * (ZIJJ 59'1·5544 &:'a.crest. CdM. Excell{'nt rondition, profC!I· sho!s. Stud serviC'f.', groom·
pay, ~r, only. Roll's offll'e · Apply 3001 Redhill "Home of the Viking" GARAGE Estate Sale, Must slona.I model, new siring~. ing, term• CTI4l 522-8.166. ~~·· Production Pl, ~1~. k.~\e ~~· 10°'.: WAREHOUSE ~~n~~g ~ M~I~ S.:~: ::i !!0;·~~~ f~~~:~ ~c. Chihuahua,, 1how qual·
12 Lt'arn shipping & r{'('('Jv1ng. 10-3. li6U Seuhott Dr, NB standard t-leetric guitar. ity, 6 \O.'ks old. Immcd. dc-
-SUZUKI 00 \.\'llh kit, oompl
reblt \O.'ilh custom paint.
645-102.1 or 673-3183
•I HP, Puma, mini cycle.
Like Nu. Xtrn.,, Sl50.
:l49-Z·tOS ORDER PR 0 CE SS ING . Co. "'iii train on forkllfl , Call 54.l~t l!vl'ry, 494-1742. CLERK with inventory con-. SECRETARY Srart S500+. Call Bob Stn""-MISC Baby items AU. _ Pood'--•· 8 Motor Homes
trol exp. wanted by Gt't in on the ground floor "'-"'=. C-·•·"' Pi·-.· run•el, XLNT COND! P\a)'p("n,
1
LUDWIG double bass drum BLACKk AKC tt:, m~· •. .., Sale/Rent 940
motorcycle distributor. of fk:'w branch ban~. Be ;1.:;', :ni':IJ!arbor'"iii~d., crih, etc. Sat only. 2631 Alta !WI, Rogers ch ro mt' ":'tt .1· • pape.,,, _..,. ----'--------1
1t1usl be good & accurate right hand to loan 0U1cer & CJ\1. Vista Dr., 644--5395. dyria30nic snare, 3 Tom J36-5094. 2i' THAVCO
lypist. Sa I a r y enn1· pres. Start $600. Call Sally , . , '•Wt)ry ll.5 ! Toms, 5 Zildjian cymbals S!\1ALI. BREED. MALTESE 25' DISCOVERER
mensurate w/ex p. lil I) !Ian 5'l0-ti055 Coastal P«r· \\ ELCO:-OIE Wagon Int I. in-! $52:'. or best oUer. 49-t-8&51. PUPPIES S35.00 20'·22' CONTINFNTALS 9i~l550. SQfln~l AgencY. 2790 Harbor tervlewing reprC'sentatives TNDIAN Jewell')', sil.,.'1!r & 1-'LUTE-Sterllng s i 1 v t' r 963-2763 2tl' PRIDE A .JOYS
ORTI-IODONTIC }~R ON T Blvd., C~T. ?;a~~~I Cnty .. Jdn. 16· 17 & turquo!AC. Just !"('turned • Artley French model. N<'wlY ~IALA~llITE/Shephctd pup. VAN CONVERSIONS OF}~ICE Exp nee. SECRETARY K · lhle ~7 ri~~foo car. I fro1n reservalion. All new r ~·con d 11 ion ed . $.IZ'i rks li\\•ki;, 4f('TI1, 3ma!f."S, CS :.a!e~~ Se~~ •. Rental~ "' ,
962-24Q'5 1 ,,:h -~-a <'en e' · M'\.\'t'l~· ri"'-bra1.-clc1s 1 644-2.ilJ. '-VVllMCIF-.-lftC..-"Jlf!----1
.c.. h r r.. DI T 0 R . ~:-.~-:-Full or part lime po~i· '~iiiWS.:,~~T··"" · di~sro, 5CfU~J oiOSllOms: 1~· I Office Furniture/ PEDIGREED Labrador 1380' !!arbor Blvd., G.G.
Previous exp. in automotL\'e t~on. , Architects pJann('rs CHOOSE y~ hours.' work ~=~njo .>Cfi.ar;fing, ~~n; 2: E,ulp. 824 Retriever pupp!C"s, 6 \O.'k!!: ,. 5.11-AAOO
or .motorcycle parts ~ept. rum in Newport Be a ch. for YQW'Self. be yoor own Nc"'POrt Blvd., C . ~1 . .. .. old. $25. 962-4()()1) Next lo G.G. Ontrun
deSlJ'able but not rcqw.rcd. 557-73J6. hosa. Men or women. Can &42-7251 10 ~EAR nN', 48 x30 Sl'.'CI 2 DARLING Cockapo:x sro. 1972 Ext'cu!i\'t" 28'. Perfect
Sa I a r y rommensurate SECRETARY be sl!t;.htly handiC"apped. · offJce desks. 4. drw., fonn1ca F'emales 642--4818 AFIER rondllk:ln. Radial ply tiftl.
w/exp. (TI4)979--1550. . . Vts, retired. Age 21 to 70. DIA. Sol. approx. 1 ct. $350. lOps, S75 t'a. 5:30 pm '534-3885. ' All Extrai! Better than new
PART Time Fl Sho Of Beau11fuJ modem ofc tn Supplenient your iflCOme A qual; Sol. earrtnga 1 ct. 645-3934, \Veekday!I dit' St!! 500 644 l6.l) " fl . 1 ~ owertyp. P· & rashion Island. Work wi the Drive a eab 6 hn: or more~· $295. Ll!'llure Worid TifERMAFAX ·copy ·machine TINY toy .poodle puppy, ron t0n6n-· · · -
ce J~ " mh mr creative people In adver1 is-day, Apply in pcnon (1J.3) 431-1924 6-8 pm • rn ~Ek 8 wits. $50. &12--4818 t'VPS or ' 1636 days.
n:i;o .. i=pmg. P no nee ing dept Start $525. Fee Yellow Cab Co 186 E. 16th · · Ill 494-Sms · 49-H092 5: 30 pm. 534.:.1885. Rent A Motor Ho"me but pref. lnter:"irws bet 2 & Paid/Also Ftt Jobs. Call St. Costn ?11e~·. . M lscello1neous , or 856 fo V ti 4-Rlchards 1' Jo\O.'er Shop. Sal 1 1 540-8)55 Coastal ' SEC. chn SS-$23 'NOOd desks Horses r your ac• on
34i\3 Via Lido, Ne"'' 11or1 e~:m~l · en Zr.lo Har· WOMAN over 65 Yf.S· No ex-Fair Weather Friends $2£l-50. stor cab' $40. 867 w. 1 _ * 839-4301 *
Beach. ~ Bl ·d Agt>-e. ~· , per., nccess. PftJ1!1e ·hrs. AnfQody Cfµ!. be friendly l9th CM Pierce 642-34D8. EXCELLENT BUY. 1 \\'L~NE8AGO-ll t · .. ~_. ~ r \ ·· "" lifUBt Include days, some ¥.'hen you arc giving them . ' ' ' GPn!lr but~ :qrir!ted S:im-1, 1 ' · iC con ai.~ ' !'i' PBX Answering service • Sec'ys variety to $800 niles & wk:nd11. Min '~·age. business. But volcf' a com-P11nos/Organs 826 quarter & thorobred ni11 r.-.. luxu? unit for rent by day
"ll...J . * 1 QQO/o FREE * Hosp. Call 642-9955 Bcl\.\'n matt<'r. PolilPrM><;s rlisMl\'Ni ~l! 546-9Ti·I nr 64!><-82!W. . ~~·---. a r r m.
;;,
,j
~
k' .¥::,~~ sltf1&i full & Pan • Clerk Typista to $450 Jnterstlng ~'Ork:. Nr. •loag plaint . and that'11 another ORGAN HOBBY Tack & ~dd!c incluik'l'i. 11 \::"1~ 54~·i°n~:1· ~r appt.
~ "-' ~ PIZZA Cooks & Drivers, 21 & L . R . d , A 8A-8P. . snules drop to trov.:ns BOARDED-Top Joca_t\on $6.'l Trailers, Travel 945 Jr! •.• , • ])86 over. Full & part Lime Help. 11 e1n It S gency WQ:-.1AN to r 2 rrt be hoot , · !\a 'A . ·•.. 16.'i.~2 Beach Blvd., HB. 4500 Ca pus Dr . • en.re or young \\'O s, comr A s · 1 Don t buy any ' gan until 20171 Acaetn, . nt.a na CADILLAC f'ARTS -1'1">9
f,y f\n '!".) PLANT MANAGE-R 546-Zll8 l!:ewport ·&ad1 girls ages 11 & 12 at ~Y s;>metime~. AT AL 'S CAR-you can playl Non-playP.r.I Hgts. 644-5307 or ~6 r.lorlt'I • HAvF. c;o{)r) Htlc.t o~ home. Room & board. O\er I ET, \\'r. \lkf' tn be fnrnds "'·elcome to attrnd free work \ T n .. \ ~ S J\11SSION. i\IR
9088
SIZES 10Y2-20~
#;)! \VE W;\NT YOU -Scc'y/Retept, sh $5j(l 40. 894-1669. :\·Hh" our cu.stomers, .~v1•n &hops. For lnfc.rmation ~ CONOJTIONJNG UN IT.
. l! you are an &ggrt'ssive, Recepl/Medlcal $425 \VORKING manager for rof· in stormy we~ther. I~ C.Ontact: Tom Dle!ertch [ 8oets and I • ~ rtADIO and RADIATOR. INSTANT fun In fell! shirt sleeve type manutac, $650 fee shop. Exper. Plen11e ~~cthing ~-Tc~l us. 642-2851 . ..,..~ . 1'.. 1212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana
Delight younptera with turina: supervisor ~·/5-10 yrs PayrolltConstr •<'=ti send resume P. o. Box 1623, \\e. ll make it nght . \0.'1thou1 Coast Mu1lc 11!'-rvlce ~J42-31m .
"" 1Tf ,,.; .... 1Tf c..1" ...
REFRESH ,,,.,. everyday
llfl wilh an easy, quickie
wrap! ~ DAcron-qitton
print or polye11ter knit that
dripe dry, is ready to ao.
Printed Pattern 9088: NEW
llalf Sizes 10~. 12"l. 14'1a.
16'A!, 18~. i(li,.t. S1_t.e 141.,
(bUst 37) takes 2 1/-4 yards
9).tnch,
S£\l!Jft't'•TIVE CENTS
tor each pattern -add 25
cents lot each pattern tor
Air Mall Md Special llantfl.
Jnr. otJ>erwlM UrlnkWa deliwr:Y will take three v.-eekl OT nun. Send tn
M&rtan Martin. the DAILY
PILOT, 412, Pat1'"'-Dept., m Wtlt Uth-8t., N'tw
YOlil, N.Y. !Oll. Print
NAME. ADDU811 wllh
ZIP, SIZE and STYLE
N1JMllEL SE& MORE Q uick
!'uhlonl and ci-. one
'pattern b'ee from our
SDtlna.SUmmtr Cat•IQI. All s!z<st O"'Y 50c. INST ANT SEWING' BOOK
atW tQday, MIU' tomcrrow.
-'lNsrANT-F 4 S RTO'N
BOOK -H11Mredl o f
!uhlot. ™'"· 11.
these. exp with a she-et metal, BkkprtConstr !'.:""00 Newport Beach, 92660 a fight. .,.
NEW! Ft-It-Happy Fa~ case goods, manuiacturtng F/C Bookkeeper "'' · AL'S CARPET Newport Blvd. at lfarbor 900
and htar1 make appealing finn. Our growin&: sheet Asst. Bookkeeper ~1 & RUG \VORKS Costa Mesa. &o.ts, Gener•1 1 l§J ~oo:n'~ror Joi:es.Ol' ~ mt'tal fabricating firm ~~~~~Ofe $4.'ll '[ •d-11~] 293 s. Main s r.. Orange *PIANOS.ORGANS SLIP & 17' fbrgla O.B.1 AvtotforSlle Q
atltchery! Pattem nss: ten ~s a lop,,flight line IU(r RE!Cept/Gen ore., G.G. ~I . v 542-6400 . 50-9909 .. _Going o, ut For Business w/trlr, 7S HP $1250 & 8' I L------~-
motlla a.bout l1i; to 2%" wide ~•v•!IOl' to rt'Ct manufac· Secretary • $550 * AUCTION * P<1St qua lly • prices • lle?V. Mllboat $25(), Make ofr. by 2 to 3 .. tall. . turing operations Including Clerk Typist $4.25 tca11.r11l-Stelnway.Baldwtnj etl'. 213/231-1128 or 2131277-SSSO T k 962 sr;VENT\'·FIVE CENTS ~lhods improvements, CO!lt Exec. SE'cretarY $700 Antiques 800 FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. r. P!~yer Pianos~ Rois 25' Owens bo11t slP<'ps 6, ne\v I _ru_<_•-------1 u~tlOfl. scheduling, pur-Legal Secretary S800 JANUARY 12 ,l'ntn 5 ....... \\c Ruy.Sell cushions canva~ fioor '70 Cliev o/• ton p ic kup
for each palt~ H add f2S cha:ung & shlppln~. Sal~· FIC Bkkpr $~ SCRAM LETS &'<I room sets, f)l\·1111..:, n1n. natlyFllOE-SLO·s Pi•NQS\$111 12,5 Ne\O. I;: ricC01ral•'d .. ~lu ~t ~ \'I, 111Hnn1f1lir. P~. air, radio. cent.I for eac Pl em or lo ht' commensurnf{' \VJth 1 Arctng Clerks 10 S;},'j(} • . """ 1 St ,_ 1 1 I "'" to hl'hrvr S.12-JlS.'13. Air Mall and Special Hl'lndl· t':Kpcrttnce Send resume to I J f S650 in~ ,,,.,n, !IC'· in.. )4'< ~. CMta ~tesa 1714) 645-l2JO _ _ · _ ___ ~ pl ;.. 111 ··, p1·u~··! f11r 11uK·k
Mtg; otherwise thin:l-claas Box No. 576. c/o Dail)' PUo1, r. Drt1N'-'Emw""PORT ANSWERS ~rin1n11)fh'~. C n 1 .. r n·. *PIANOS*ORGANS* 12' ~BERGl_.ASS outbr<I 114J ... !91;)"-l·.1 ONLY dell.,......., will take three p o Bo N !""-" ,,._ :-ter('Oll, Lnmr~. l'K·turt·s, l \\'/tnulrr. $12.;. or bc~t of· $2395 -~·J . . x ! o. """"· ...... sta p I Ag R Jll nd \\' l! \\'ffks or more. Send to M~. Calif. 92.626. ersonne 1ncy
8
~·1t'f'1.l'~, Slo\'t'. .cfn~cra. a~o J' UJ' tz.cr1. many f<"'. 64&--09:17. HOWARD Ch 1 t
Alice Brook.•, the DAll..Y !~==-~--~--833 Dover Dr., N . , RadiS.h _Tepid_ Capon_ 1~rs, \\'allhP~. Dr)·1.·rs, J).11',h· ot en. 1 anunry c ~aranrr 28• Di~l Chl\NIClfT tu;c hoftt evro •
PILO'l', lCG, Needlecraft PO\\~ Mnchlnc OperatQt 642-3870 Eyelid_ LOADED. \\llllhl'r;, MUCH, .\IUC!l l on now. Tl)e beitt d<>t1!s are $21XlO. Call \O.'r e k day,, Newport Beach
Dept .. Box 163, Old O\el~a ~hOu:~. ~~ }lillbilly's lament; "I was MORE .. ! lll\\'R)'ll 111 ~ 16..i990 .\l:H·i\r1hur Blvt! & Jambtlfflt' ~·~e;..!.,~~ PRESSMEN'"""· Hamada SECRETARY part --tricked Into that marriag•. WINDY'S AUCTION w.llichs Music City ,:ANTEOo ,. AVON n.... 833-0555 2:i Patten Nwnbet. ~. Itek. MIU'llli' amall hours lZ:J0.5:30 pm, SalJJ')' I let.t1100 that the gUn WMll'I ~th CoaJI Pla.w s.40-Z'OO crctt llfenfl; ullt'd. HILLMAN f1962 C0l\G1ER)
E£0LEC'RAFT '72! lhop.54<Hl681. open. SbOSui:"mlandt A typlnf:_ LOADED." COME BROWS£ AROUND Sport1ng Goods 130 ~ PANEL TitUCK F...qitippai
croc:het. knit, etc. Free phone. ... resume w ~lances 802 J:l~IAI NeWJXlf'l Blvd. &o.ts Power 906 1\'llh . ()\'l'rh<•arl Rack -
dftetlons:, 50c, Real E1to1te So1le1 18562 MacArthur Blvd., Behind Tony's Sidi. Mat'b. SKTIS A15 Metfl . l!J'S cin. ' Intrnor l 1 n e tl _ wjth n~ ,_~ "°°'--fRE£ FSanta Ana, Attn! Donna OVB' 2rx> WUhen. dryen:, Cott.-Mtu * 648-8686 Miikel'bindlnp SS(l. T'ttp-31' OIR.lS Cabin Cruiser. top l SHELVES • PRICED FOR
otUiC, _,""' ..,..,(&, pat. ox. re1nl'lf'lton from 139.95. USED B YCLES puer boots J01JM sz;, Spr-llhape, t~<in eng. rellio, QUIO< S,\LE.
tft'ns. Sl.00.
1
S EC RETA R Y·reoordlns M5-07ll. IC lngtif:ld 22 Seml·auto rUlt steft'O, depth finder. full 1212 S. ROM St., Santa Ana
ln8iallt Qoclhet 8°'* -license Tro1lnlna studio. Good ' ofc lkillt, sh L.ATE model auto. wuhtt a: All types • 642·1272 SM. &i6-4Sl9. 11::11.llc)', many xtn.~. llllPf'fttl 6 :..12-31~:11---,~-
U:trn % pieturul P•t· Limited Time Only hc'lpful. SbJppln;:, lnvolch\f el~. drytt 12al) A-1 cond. MINK COAT, Ranch. l'IE'Y'er TV, R~to, HIFI, 1n romfort. S8975. 675-c'Gi'i. Hl67 f'Oftf) f'1rk-11J', i,i, Inn
t;-J,!to iMWtt Girl Boolr f ttmn111 Uce.1:1111 rourse no"' intemationally. ~lex u..e. $45 ea. 64&-5MS. worn, a 10, clrculu pelts, Stereo 836 26. falrllncr, 1\\'n Ctuy"I~. trurk, ~·\v h"""· stOCKI conrl.
_ men than 100 gifb _ availat:1h: thru Tarbell Com· G~ phone ma.noor. r.tr. ~YR. ilJArn, del k in· Top quality 644-0325. C'.otid ~nr! S.'\Cffl rir tr.,,de !ii:.,..7102.
$].00. Fm~~~)~~~~~al~~~1i!:: \\·alllck. 97!r2600. stall. Lall! mew!. 1111 (')'Cle UM.E Green &: Powder Blue ZE7'1Tll &r RCA Tt'le\'\~ton1 AIM l~hp Johnson. Xlnl. 1 '•.f.l~ . ..,0ott'""' .. -.-,,,<,-..,,T"'Tn,--1"'rk-c"='ill
OOmp&etie Affban Book -Nf.'\\' or expcrieiicrd sail'& SECRETARY. good 1kllls. Kenmore wuher. SJS-1118. pile carpets, bnlh 10x.l2 111 rtrn~tlr prl('f' rr'f!uctl<ln~. ttn . 6«~ 1rnrl~ nr r.rH for automaUe
$'1.00. ~pll'. Ope.nlnp aval111bh1 J\lust be df!'IAlled orient('(f. • DISII\\'ASHERS w11!her!I w/p.11d, m each fin.-1\')6 All model• prlet'd to cle.11.t CLASSIC 18' RAi' LA1JNCll .. a1-ali 1'.!. ~l.~J:.llO.
lf lltty ••-Boolt:• • SOc. Complete tralntna-program. Call 714L&M-l?tl'.I, ext 533· ~· reblt, luam & l\.UNUn: Muter mtcrn ... a~ f durina our end of )'tat Ml~. Beautiful, price io· ft'll, 'li ln!etnnut'!n:tl i..T PLckUp_, ~ °' u ..,.._ •rataam. ~1\~~ mCa'iF~~~JU:r~ QUICK. CASH 'ctt!AYTA·G~~~~.·-· -·~. :ilnio~ = ~d $450. f i~~~~~.%~~1:·.Y¢111:r~ s"'"t376.1Sa11 -',~~~ sh1~. J-~~ ~lit 9ook 1 -1S oattet111. 8J2.S4.l0. THROUGH A :·"'her &";;;r:' 6ti\n A.NXlOUS ,. to • SdU-.tW'--,~-rt ~~~or ,.,!.~"u 10 se~: ~· s, "V7 Vans il63 ~
Vacant"9 cOit moneyl 1Wtrt MDllOllm qdt 1Snct I -TARBELL , DAIL y PILOT optnted. $S0 tach Of both .Beach TMnl ·~1 uh Antennu totd nr ·lnlt!i\Jlf'd 111 ~ Pl!A~n"Trlpcrn. mit!r! or ---------1
1 J'9':U" boll#, apt.,_ ltmt. SOc. ~ for $90. f94..'12k Membmh!p. f;4,~ · COit wtth •ny' co'8t tef ,..c., wtl1 equipped, t10,SOO. 'Tl ·C}fC Vu, V-8, p«be'«I,.
1 --~l>kll-··Ui•iOil<.i-AilhnlS.::.:•:.:lltllt=:_:_Pllot="·HI-lar "'6!1''w U '1•1 • ___llEAl.JOR' WANT AD 'Ille !uJael .,,,,. tn th@ \Vnt. SlMMONS dbl tnnenprtng pur<;hued. ABC ColoT iv, Prl pty. •ft 6 pm ~3. c-rpted, """'' mlllt _, r -••tllltl-oottimwdiJ•·-===::=~~:====-i--~64D'<r'fel51:1t'J'lr-~·-t-.H .. M, .o·~ -bou----, !»••• 1'. """"'Cat r..; , , I••••!!_••···········--Netd I\ "_Pad"t 'P1aee an ad! ... Ad. &ft..&61l and htfttf'boRrd. m .. 494-.310'.) lh1nllt1gto"n Beach, B--3329. si n. G46--0a).1, or 67J.-871J, ::rr,t a "Pnd":' PIM.'(' an .cu
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'WLV PILOT
---l§J ! ---1§1 r .......... J§l I -·-· I~ I ---~§11 -·-I~ I ---I~ -·-~ I -·-I~ !
-. Now 91DA-Now 910 A-. Imported 970 Aulel, 1-rteol .f10 A-l"'f"'~ 970 Aulel, U1011 '901A:;;; ...... ;;;;;;;;;UIOll;;;;;;;;;;;~t90~A!• ...... ~~UIOll~-~;'90~1;A~-~~Uootl~~.:~"°=1 ,
,-~j~~~~~~~=--J;;;;;;;;D;:;;A;:;;TS;;;,;;U;;;;N;;;;;:;;;;;;;r-~;;;!;;Rnoii;C;;Esii~~~~oulU1iP!E~NZ-'11 Tri:~':!. mu c~~~! 13 =-= Cpo. '" =~TD ... :':;::'!. I NEW 197°' C1auic .-i. full ..,.,.,. =._ -r"...'.!:,~~ ::'"y. Sedan De VW. Lna .,.. 1.000 mflot. 4 dt ltT, \II, ~de. po, t Pa w..., ~ alr cond (136AQMJ JI.-...,__ LESS 111AN 7000 MILES a.r,,w.ty with blad< ~ air, ek<. ~I n>OI. \11, automalle, po, air, ndr.
THERE ARE OVER
2.0 ACRES OF NEW
ANO USED CARS
FOR SALE
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbor Boulevard ·
al Cara Loo~I THI IMIUM AT
Johnson & Son I HAL GREEN'S
Lincoln-Mercury Mir•cle Maul1
2626 2150
HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVO.
DATSUN 1
du"" to <91-12!6,Jlm. AIR:ri;JNING ::"::':~,~= !XVPITT)$0NLIHYS ~~~L: clnmla. $7995 VOLKSWAGEN ,,_.,t Ft11b!1 -•••llabl•. $1295 1200 JIM SLEMONS V .... 1-. 8 way dual ,eom· !Ul51HlK4117101l SA·LE HOWAllD Chevrolet .
IMPORT.S, INC. BEST IEETU («t -~ AM/FM Stereo. PRICED. DAVE RalS _...,, leach lfOWARD thovrolol
OR 120 w. """'"'-Sama Ana BARGAIN Ml power. Cnllle a>nlrol. PONTIAC, S4IO lluW Ma,,.._ Blvd• Jambo,.. _...,, Beach NEW 1972 SIMU4 radial tlrn,..., -~!!"'::,.~Stf.«111 messs r.i.cArrl>urHIYd•Jam-
50 USED Rattly Stopo for Gu 19611 .. Coc&er. .,..,, _.,vable '11 FO __ __..:l~U45~~5S!._ __
510 v.w. ~ Youn For Only xtra Cadlllac mal<esl A '61 Chev Imp W-~~2£,~~top. ..
MERCEDES 1<89-NOW !ZNZ!nJ. mua .... A muat buy! vs automatic -air -~ ,_, --PLYMOl,ITH GUSTAFSON CadlU&C Facloly Excicutlve ' · ,..., ' l\1nl peel. Set to appredatt. t2llO
OR ON DISPLAY car. (Ser. lll3911J ~°m'.y''>eclal price. <•llm) --A .. , CM. #m _....;.;:.;.~-'---! NEW · 1973 s -c Uncoln·Mercury $7777 57 95 UNCOLN -PLYMOUTH halJ) New ar 16800 Beach at Wamtt Grul 111.0' on low mllelae PICKUP Trad&-ins HwiUrctoo Beacll Na~ eag~ HOWARD Chevrolat 1987 Unc ConL ' dr -1'611 ~Ill VIP .....
I od• ~-I I Coming In Every Day 842-8844 • !2131 -~Unlt•·~Bl .. ~-M.,. Newport leach Jood<d. Good cond SlCi). Ji.T. w h vrn,1 """-Air
mm ••te ~ vary '69 280S!. !069GF1'1 _148SO " ome..o!Jho Vlldne" ;;,,DO'-op:--M&cArlbui._1!';.$-,Shm-5U-G269~10'4. =~= =:[;
EXEC. DRIVE
1972
510
~~~El~ '70 VW BUS t PASS YOUR ONLY 1971 ~"=.: No ~ MERCUR_ Y party ••• --831-i642CRZ> S677S 4 speed, radio, heater cm """"""·~ -.
A k Abo 0 U · CQRJ ONLY FACTORY auto. air oondltlon. radio for u--& "\.ONflAC s . ut ur mque AUTHORIZED beater W/~ :10.000 mi!H. ........ r . Usod Mtrcoda1 L .. ,. $1695 12.800 841-'389
Plans HOWARD Chevrolet CADILLAC ·66 (,,.. ~ Camino. The Kids '12 t'U\EB!RD. ~.~
House of Imports Newport Beach DEALER Alrloond, 11 ......, nu.._ Also The Dog ~·~~
6862 ~1anchester, Buena Park MacArthur lilvd & Jamboree l..ara:Ht. seleoctkm ot Cadll· A ~· PIS. alt 6pm 1910 COLONY PARK WAG-lteerine, • 111 tomal1 c.
4 Dr., Auto. Trans., Alr on tbe Santa Ana Frwy 133-0555 lacs in Ora.Qge_ County. 546-L ON f\l1ly Automatic CNite ((16ll;KR) $3299 DAVE I,,~~==~;!;;~~;;~~~;,,,=~~ Cond., Radio, Facio[')' War· 523-725(1 Sales-Leuln&. BY Qwntt, sharp 1968 Control, thr works. Now Get ROSS PONTlAC, Jt10 I; ranty. ----.,, :=---MUST SELL 19 6 6 Impala with ail:, 8*-2112 Thill . $2319 (231.ANK) WW Harbor Blvd., <?oat.a Yeu, Vans 963 1 Autos W1ntM 968 '72-22.0D . V 0 L KS WAGE N. JUS1 ii -.... ......-_ u~. •--• 1:'11 ..... 1 ,,__, ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 52199 ~.~ N ..... -n ... .. --·-·• ...... ·~ -:;o;.ain ~·"" -· 1---------Air"""'· uu.u "'"'·AMI ~"' new oar and In. _.-541.....,. GUSTAFSON l/U/13.
I REWARD • t"M. low mu,.., !!l50FL'<I. 1t""~ ~~ I:,~.~~ . Cadillac cAMXliD '68, e cyl, lllclc U _.._ u-.~69=.::Ex=-ec-.-~Sll~,-.,-,-1--.-1 * WANTED * + 'a' & lk. WILL TRADE Poncho back windows & 2600 HARBOR BL. ahUL Orig • .....,.. Mint nc....,....,....ury w/wooo......, • -Jo.a"
JIM SLEMONS aunroot Good shape • COSI'A MESA cond. $1SOO. SIHiM7. 16800 Beach at Warner xtraa. $17'>. $-0921'=-. __ 1
... -·57 Ford or Dodge Vao. WILL PAY OVER [~-• latsntt] IMPORTS, INC. ll<>8"'oably pri"" · 54!1-2625 540-9100 Opeo Sunday IMPALA ·n, orla, OWMritijOalr -~)'"tlngton ~ n., ·70 BONNEVILLE 4 Or. XI •. , ---·-__ , • ··-· 111•11•r1 oond e·-ptlonal sa-• c.~1 -~ Sedan. ~·-~ .... u • .,"' '""'"'· u-.: --t--•J_ 120 W. \\-11.rner, Sanut Ana ·n VW Van, 7 pau. AM '67 Cad FLEETWOOD ' -.... ' . ''L1--of th Vik'-'' cvw.::r
Important Pleue ,a11 be· Ke Uy Blue Boole la.\. -•--SIMU4 hdlo "" bed under Ci> 1'!1ely ~. ~ e "'" po.., w!ndowo, air "' .,
twffl'I 7:00 & 9:1)) p.m. For l•t1 model, clun,1~·,,,..,,,,,,,-,,,•,,"',,-::;;:=:' -===~J •71 250 COUPE w~~i:t 'reu' otter. r=G=~ ~udin&: '63 JmplllA;a,goodtires, '72 MARQUIS ~top, excepUonalb' lo
"'1!!!548-!!!!!!!"81!!!!!!. !!'Prt!!!!!/pt!J!yl!.'1'!1!!'!!!!!1 J I II dome · J· Metal le silver, black vinyl 6'14-<m! i.ctocyt -~alr000°!_~...: J1~~ very clean. • BROUGHAM 1,,.._.arb!d <:e~~ ~
1• ow m Hge ,_ FIAT top, lully """"' <:!So'EQl!l '63 vw. New; '"'· """'· " ~. -.. _ -. FUU power, tactocy air • ....,, p;;.;,· M•99 DAVE ROSS '68 CHEV. VAN tks. lmportt, trucks or 56695 oluteh, urea, pa 1 n t. new. Phone 546-9306. $1985. 1968 <;J1EVY t.lallbu, top of top, tape1try interior. dual roNTIAC, 2411> Harbor
VS, std. (284378) ONLY c1mper1. 1970 Fiat 850 Spyder, Good Am/fm. $.525. ~t. •70 Cad epe DeVl1, gold the hne. $1100. comfort seats, AM-nf Blvd ' Cotta Meaa. 548-«ll? $1695 Call and uk 10< Buyer "'™'· 35,000 mi, $1000 JIM SLEMONS .TI VIV SUPER BEETLE. w/blk t .. lhr Inter. Bl1r lop. 96>-1394 •ter.o ndlo, Wt wbeol. low EU.ctl"" ""'1 1/14113. DAYE ROSS 6#-J.;64 IMPORTS, INC. /lm radio pxt OMd. l.oadod. Lo mfs. 1 Owner. '66 Chev.lie. 321. Low mllff. !6&3EAF1. =7.o, O':~-,-'::-,:.,~,.,--HOWARD ChtYrolet m w. Warner. Santa Ana :! . ~ ' lmmac. $4500 firm. 545-8240 mileage. Like N!'W, 6RI Vic· NABERS CADILLAC 62~m~ 3 i!::4
N•wport Beech PONTIAC JAGUAR SIMU4 .~~ ~ flru.. or 54&-4895. torla No. B, a.ta Mesa. 3600 -Blvd. ~
MacArthur Blvd " Jambotte --'65 CAD Coupe: DeVllle. 1962 (bevy IJ Station Waaon. Colt& Mesa ~9100 --~=-.:::o=--,-~
133-4555 JAGUAR '71 v12 MG "6~"i" P~~1 """"'· white vmyt top, .u nso. X!nt ~lion ·12 roLONY PARK w._ ·~ro •t=E. 1~S;
·n DODGE " TON VAN. 2408 Harbor 81Yd. 2+2 COUPE ·n MGB Y1 .. t cond., leas ,65 VW Kornbl ...._. oond. ~· air, "13 license. car. 194 Scott Pl, C. . Lo mlle&&f. Full power, $1999 DAVE ROSS PON-V8, automatic sp@dal paint. Coat• Mes• 546-8017 ~ THAN 7000 MILES ~~'. • ....... ' "-'ean. $S88. 673-73)) ask for 'TI OM!v. Townaman . factory air, roof rack, ex-c 2480 Harbor BM!
001lJ7) $2999 PAVE.RO$$ FACTORY than l yr,~ l3,tn> miles, ~~Shrike Ave, F.V. Mr. Reed. aft 5, &U-7947• Full pv.T +air cond. ~t cellent condition. (028FSD) '&:ta' Mesa, 54HO?'t f:i:
-PONTIAC. 24*1 Harbor \YE p~y 1UP DOU.AR AIR CONOmONING smJ, 871~ • ~=~-~--=-J '65 DeVllle, new tires, full oond. Lo mi's. m-1010. S4699 DAVE ROSS L~N· fecti9e thru 1/l4/T.\,
Blvd .. Coda Mev. 546-8017 If FOR l'OP ~SED CARScl Power steering 4 speed MGB '60 VW Kannan Ghia $100 u p<M-er, Am-Fm ltereo. * '63 n.-. ... lm'"'1a. ""'-' TIAC, 248'.> Harbor Blvd.,
Effectfw thru 1/14173. M?~ ri::i lS utra ean, traM., full leather Interior: 1--------ls. '60 Olds, &ood trans. Make Otter. 96)-8717. runrun;·;~. $325' or .;;>; Costa Meu, 546-8017 Ef. '64 Pontiac Catalina. Gd
J.970 Ford Van F.cooollne 100. BAUE.R BUICK radial tires, abeolule m In I '70 MGB/GT, tape deck, $125. 301 E. BaJboa Blvd., C De ill r~ ~873!1 fectlw thnt 1/14/73. . meeb c:ond, Gd b'ansporta·
oond<tJo 1 671 ~-ui In _, 12 000 apt 1. AD. '68 Cpe. V e o ..,r. v•.r • ,67 MUST·ANG Uon. $300. 642--0762 aft-!l' 6 Map, erpt 'd, ORneled, new 292a Harbor Blvd. EAE n n every way.r l . •1.1~ a, x l co..... ' . "WRECKE"'==-==--=--,,=--F·-RY 1971 vi .. ~-·--' ""-ta•-PM. drn & brakes. Xlol "'""-l Eue• & wl<n<b. 6J7893L D '6:! vw. pxt -•v ·-~·~ ~ ~. ex-SILVER GRAY GTA 644-4419. Coii.a Mc< 979-2500 SALE PRICED ,70 MGB Convertible. Ex· eng., & trans. Urea. etc. AIR OONDmONING tru, xlnt oond. Lo ml. Pvt n-·" eeri d' '69 GRAND PRIX, VS, power
'Tl Chevy Van, set-up lor
camping. Cuo;loM p11ln!.
stereo, map, big Um. Xlnt
oond. 831J.-9522.
JhfPORTS \\'ANTED $200. s.16-4018. ·vtnyl top. Full leather inter· pl)', $3500. 96l-8263. •u.uM>, Power II ng, ISC steering, air c:ondiUonina;,
Or:inge County's Nabers Cadillac cellent condition. $1,795 .. -i=-='"""--'-7---:-:=---,--lor. Stereo, door locks. Till '6J Chevy wag V-8 Orig brakes, aulOmatic, air con-tilt wheel, vinyl top,
TOP S BUYER AUTHURIZ.EIJ DEALER Phone : 67J.-248L ·~725VW. Good cond. Prt ply. &: telet1t.'Opic steering, loaded clean int. Stick lhlfi. A/C: dltiorUng, new radial _tires (XW'l.050) Kelley lllgpSted
BlU. MAX};y TOYOTA 2600 Harbor Bl., Colia Mesa PORSCHE · ~~9358 * wlxtra.. (XEU194). Xlnt oond. $395. 644-4.184. US Mags, New throughout. retail $2)70 Sale price $1999
18881 Beach Blv .. 540-9100 Open Sunday. $2222 Immaculate. Must aee to ap.. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC,
A L I
'
,, H.Beaob Ph.841-8555 •59 JAGUAR =ES"-r--.,.P.-0-RS--,C.-H-ES--1·70 vw. New paln1, llro~ '59 Imp. 2 dt. hrdtp, V-8. prec~te.536-85520<536-9652. "'°Harbor Blvd .• °"''" uto ffl nt '" IU\ un:T, brake•. shocka, 38.000 mileL Nabers Cadillac auto, air, p/1. Xlnt body, '11 Capri -tom Mesa, 54fHI017 EHectlve J;;;;~:if:;:;:=;;:;;;;;;;; 1 ~~~~~~......:~I auto, wire wMda, air oond. I m--4452. AuntORIZEO DEALER runs beaut. $195. 536-8400. • ~ cc, au .. thru U14i/1l. I' AY•ll•bl1 For Autos, Imported 970 (4llEOMl $!999 DAVE '61 C~~.S~~R. C:s.' S. e n;-;~Uow VW. Xlnt c:ond. 2600 Harbor Bl., Costa Meu 1963 Chevy Impala, Good =fm brU~ ~~ coo~'=Pon=lla:cc~ca~tallno.-,,---,Alr.,-, ALfA ROMEO ROSS PONTIAC. 2480 Only 9:100 mlla 540-9100 Opeo SUnday oond. Good --$2195. 0-1899 ar -Immediate Delivery --"'-------1 =7 Bl1a~ M~ ~s1Js~ Cond. WIJ289. MAKE OFFER 673-7482 '12 Eldo Cad, lib! new, fully JD). 673-7507. aft 6 pm. ~.~ Jmmaculat.e .
'67 Alfa Romeo, Spydtt 1/14/73. • '66 VW SUnroof -Xlnt equip. 18,CDI mi's. $1300. 197U CAPRICE. all power, 1961 y·f.,.::=:-.-:eo1ooy==0Pri<::;:-;;;:Sta ~'1l~'=PonUa-""~,=-;Le,_..,,Mans,.--,Sta.,.-p model. Red o:invertat>U, ·72 Maz.da RX-2. AM/FM, ~ £::=~ cood. Low mi. New timl. 646-9163 aft 6. atereo, 4 ~top. Wqon. One owne-, $1550. Wag. 3 seats. P/S. air,
_ _ new motor, xlnt cood. chrome wire whlL Ex-.2JIUl.pUI' Radio. $795. Call 6f4..6767. 17 TO CHOOSE FROM * * SC.~ I ~1044. 25,000 mi's. $3495. ~
11100 -"'U.nt "'™'· Mal<• oiler jL...::,~ ·n VW Bua • 1100 "' '"'· '67 to '72 EL DORA.DOS CHRYSLER ·TI MONTEREY 4 Or. H.T. 111 GRAND PRIX. Green 675-5290 aft 6 P~t ---radiala, Koni'a. Muat 1el1, All haw tun power, factory Automatic, VB, poWer win-with black vinyl top.~ AUSTIN HEALEY •66 XK£ 2+2. AM/FM •. TI PORSCHE 914• xlnt "'™'· "best""""'o'"'Ue;;;r,,. 675-;--::-:-:3354=. ;---== air oondltlonlng. I with el«. 1955 °"Y'ler 45 000 actual dow>. our oond., Y!nyl top. windows, loctory air oon-
OIROME WIRE MtLS. wlJi ·--"l·"e oil '67 VW BUG, "11nroof, radio, sunroof, convertible and miles xint' c0nd .--(l56COJJ PiS9 DAVE ROSS dltlonlng. (842AU0) $2199
w'73
MONTE CARLO
'66 A.H. Needa some work. Excellent c:ond. Make offer. ex ....... """ er. heater.~ hatdto . O.:,lce of interiors 1:.1:.7 ~o • ........... PONTIAC. 2480 Harbor DAVE ROSS PONTIAC,
Ottero. 2125 · 673-25'0. ~ ~~ r,.,!1~1!:74---~Ll!~~J.!.i!;.i::;:.c;;"l&l~--1--
CLASSIC .61150 O>upe, X!nt 911 T, air. gd ,72 vw s..., 1 ....,., air NABERS CADILLAC C M Eilectl"'
CORT FOX LEASING
2516 Nawport Blvd.
Cost1 Mes•
66-3661
1972 CAD Coupe de Ville .
Brand new eond. 979-125.2.
A-Wanted 968
WE PAY TOP CASH
for uaed can A trnCka, just
cil.ll 111 for free nllmate·a.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask fQ,r Sales Manaa:er
l82ll Beach Blvd.
HuntlnKton Beach
847-61117 Kl 9-3331
Cash For Clean
Used Cars &
.MW a>nd. 1:JOOO. Days 673-""1. """"or _,~(~7IS250.6 Eves oond., amtfm rsdlo. 8eM 2600 Hubor Bl~;.~ ·n Oololty Parlt w._ 9 .::-'°'-:~=~=,....~ eves. m.=. c.i--:"c=N~7"~~""·,....,.--ou.r. Pvt. PIY· 64HOU. O>ata ..... ~·oo 1962 roaa:r, reblt ~ Pua. Jltll __ • Fwc Alf. '12 GRAND PRIX. low
--::v-:"i.1-:"1 -...,.-C._-,, .. --.... -,,-·1 .':~~M~A~IZ~~D~A,....--I ·66 ~be 912. Good 000-,65 VW SUI pxl CAD ,67 C:DV iran.. New rubber. ...,_ New , ..... f!400. -mil• .. !, lully loaded. PriY
dltion. BEST OFFER. 64.5-5428 ciJ Ea.s cond, $800 • 541-8365 aftu 6 pm. .O'Pl~Yc..·~ 8414452~'=·-~~-G '64 * Call 541.()1201bl* n.bl Sp. 41 , ~ta Me!.~6th SI., ': Pwr. Air, Landau, UNC· '62 Ccmet Super Sport·Aulo. ~ere P1J M ~u u~ 19b'9 CATALINA. 4 door,
* AT * Pol'1Cbe convert e-nr:: t • • 6, air. Mint oond. Pvt. -.., "--'-power & air, )o mlliHle. •:L s,ooo m1. XJnt cond. VOLVO $1595 """· 64>-1.219. ~ -841._ $1300. ss1-""2. · .:i ~~4, xrn·t oon. -------IH=1 CONTINENTAL I---'==-.._--'~ar""O~!nlC.uC!e:il3'; ROY CAR~ER, In~. LAST dlUon. YOLYO MUSTAN.. _ 591,..,388 a11 s pm.
234 E. 1111> st. Call 64H601 --•-70 CONTINENTAL "68 CATALINA 4 Dr. Ji.T.
eo.ta Mesa -1'10 Poncho 114, i2100 ar oJ. ']J'S ~ MK 11 ·66 Mua~ GTJ lo ml. Xlot FUll """"''· 1act«y air.
Good telectkln of fu. Hu all xtras! F'ull power, 1 owner, Jaw : ena. wo:_p = (Q3CCG) $1499 DAVE
used BMW'a • • • 646-!806 '68 COUPE DE VILLE. Full mileage car 17450). eves. -ROSS PONTIAC, 24ll>
AUTOMATIC ·53 Poncb<. 356. SC woo. HERE NOW! ~ ta~i:,"·..= $4795 MUsr s.iJ 111 Mustan& =1 811ff~: M:i:;
ROTARYS ~e<J: ..... pain~ Come In test Drive ~:;:;. ~~ 1~~o5iis~?:~. ~·;,,:%.· 0r;::, ~:, =11.:.14173.='------i
IMMEDIATE ~""=R'°E~N"'A""U~L-::T,.---TODAY! $2900 Sale Pri<o 12499 DAVE ~ W. Wun•"· Santa Ana l"PYt~pO"ty":-. 64!>-':"':'l:=;644.:=::,=-;; RA .. ILER
ROSS PO!iTIAC, 2480 546-014 •67 MUIWW Futbacll V8
. .
CREl.'IER BMW See 11 -Yoo·u Buy 11 ., ' ·n CONT . • -
Sales· Servi<e • Leuing HUNTINGTON BEACH RENA.ULT Rl2 546-8011 Eilective ""'1 Loaded wleve'Ylhlnl· Only ty ·61, low ml., xlnt "'™'··
:l(>f "-"'' St. Sanl> Ana MAZDA •2384 "'··· lfAllU 1114113. U.000 ml. $4150. 642-ilDO. ~ radla1a. 1995. '*= 83S-Jl71 $2095 . lU~ '70 SEDAN DE VILLE CORVETTE '68 MUstailif. X!nl """'· T ·BIRD CAPRI . YOLYQ Vinyl top, leather interior, $900tbeat otter. 64&-8358 or --------1
17331 BEACH BLVD. tilt wheel, AM·FM "'""" • SIH353 uk lor_Denois _ THE BIG BIRD
A RARE FIND """--••• _ '8dio, -.doot locka. .69 aJRVETrE. Blue. Orig. "67 lliu.tant r.tbk 289 3 sod. Check --•-~-Fino! 1969 -Va M• 1fft11 ., w... 1966 Harbor, C.M. \nV"iNUoJ (098AGC). " owner. Xlnt mDd. A/C, li"M body dam M:i(l""&t ~·-vu•: •
1972 CAPRI aulQmatlc bu , ... 142""'6 '66-122 Volvo. xlnt rood --~555 . P/W, P/B, PIS: AM/FM. besl 613--0834 or~~ •"ord Thunderbird 4 Door
im '7l M zd RX 2 4-llJ)d 2-dr R/H. Make otter. New ~~ , New radial tirea. 300/5.50. · Landau Model Loaded •WI -0eco~.us1~UcteFSe~~~ Whit:. 8xint . Cenci. ·DUI· ral'llitli. SU:-7246 eve/ l>ay NABERS CADILLAC Autom&He. $.1,800. m-ISU '65 Muetang-1.ow mileage. ~act Option Incl. Air A Mu.
Get Dad on this One. $2"189. Musi seU. Call early, 486-4748 2600 Harbor Blvd. Aft. 5. R/H, Automatic-new tires-aic • Thia One ls Oflllft.
(707DQI). 673-ro13. SUBARU A U Costa Mesa 54()..9100 COUGAR lood condition. Mu.st tell IXSS245) sn\9. GUSTAFSON :n Maula RX·2. AM/FM utos, led • 990 '62 Cad. Air, belluUJul a>nd. l500-,>4&-0316• $iUSTAFSON .
• air, 1™· Mlchen ... $3000. -.TI-SIJBAR ___ u_;_ti,_Uon-,,...,...--.-. • AMERICAN Recently o·hau!ed. New '•69 COUGAR COUPE " MUSTANG Lincoln-Mercury Lincoln-Mercury 586--4931 am; 837--0008 pm. 23.000 paJno, •hocb. 5 new tu... l400 Call m.649:! _ speed, radio, heater, Rea.90nable. 847--11275. VS, au~atle, p&, air, bucket OLDSMOllLE 16800 Beat.it at Warner
16800 Beach at Wamu MERCEDES BENZ miles. (219COU) 1599 DAVE •72 GREMUN. new hdlaJ ,10 ELDORADO ~·-seat•. vinyl roo!. sharp"''· HwitU..ooo Beach lfunt1ng1on Beach ROSS PONTIAC, 24BO tires, kl ml, auto trans, aood ~· klw mileage. (444AVB) 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
842-!l844 * 12131 592--MERCEDES -Blvd .. ea.ta Mesa. "'""· 11675. 1!3H!31. Loaded. 111!nen aold with ONLY ·12 Qt.OS C\111.ASS .. s .. "H-I th Viki " "Home of the Vlkklt" ~7 EUecti"" """ black "'°"' lop. Ul8BBK1 $2095 Coupe V-utYl top, "'°"' fn. •• ,.• 0 1 ng
·~·
·12 eap,;. Blue ext/wbt 1n1 .• CHOOSE FROM S 1114173. BUICK ~"E. ~VE~ t::.: HOWARD Chevrolet ~:...\11,=~ . T·BIRD '66 Trucks 2 IXXJ auto 8 000 mi. very 61 to n, Sedans, Coupes, OTA C'.oata Meu 546-fm7 Et ....... """-.. • • • Air Full ?wr Landau svz. . .. ...... -2368. AirCond USOll8from$2295 TOY 'TI Rivie ... You ...,.., r-··-1~-·111·~ . Newport Beach tacUy air. AM·FM at ..... 874. ' ' How•rd CheYrolet e.ea.n . .,.,ow. °'""" · bel;ew IU But It's true • ""u.... "'"' "',... MacArthur Blvd A Jamborft wt.th tape, IJIOl1 ~ ex· $995 Newport Beadt DATSUN ~ Jn=i TOYOTA'S ...... _...., ..,. . u.ooo l9r>6 Cadlllilc b<arse. mso. nusss -.1ow , '""... <191-u--·-"··-Blvd • Jambo"" mllea -~eel ~~ .. ..._ G.W. Singletary, Inc., FYR). ~"'in.oW 1971 Detauo 2'0-.Z. Qranae. jt-•~ 40,000 • .:;n.; .=t;j Rlwn!d<,683-:450. FALCON NABERS-CADILLAC ~,.... __ ,,, __ _
The ~ ~· .:Jl!f.· ~; - -']J'S !"~~ -"':"'1& CAMARO 1"5 FALCON eoata 2:' .. -81~9wo Ir!!~
83>-1420: Eue" 641)-1219. '70 no SEL nlght. m.-064!; day. G •. Girls Station wagon. vs. alr ....... ow. ti Luxury....... -~ ~
• · ~ TI Det"'n Pick Op. 8,350 t.uxmy ...,an; 11>1iy-""""'· Now at· .!o7i··Pric • MH6117. ") uys .. dltlon!ng, radio. automat!c. vs full .....,. air looiil<d
miles. VERY CLEAN! (323BQRI Priced this week· MANY MODELS •70 RIVIERA Custom Full You'll Lav~ this ooe! 1967 Needs e~ A body work. ;Ith extnlL' cXE;Mo7s) '68 111\JNOERBJRD LAN· DA I Ly 548-300.. end & COLORS power, air condlUonme. Camaro, brl.&bt purple wilh Asklne $m Call 1*'n. ONLY · DAU O:M..tpe. ~ powtt,
DATSUN '71 240Z $5895 u!nyl lop, •t"IO IOats. 4 on lhe lloor. !YPV848J. 12,30 & 2,:.i p.m. $1495 JactO<f alr, tilt -Am-Immediate (54QAEPJ 13399 DAVE Hurry now! Only 11189. • 557.s&l2 • ,..,. stereo ndlo, """ than
A;r, SJerro, Mags. Lo Mn... JIM SLEMONS D II ROSS ·PONTIAC -2480 GUSTAFSON FORD HOWARD Chevrolet 14,000 mlles. 0<PP120). 564FVF. IMPORTS, INC. e Very H.rbor Blvd.. a Me,.. • Newport Beach NABERS CADILLAC
Pl LOT l.r.~----=--..,1120 \v. \Vi~1~1a Ana See It. Y~~.11 Buy It m:J7 EUe thru Lincoln-Mercury .65 Countr:y Squire. Alr, MaeArthur1!1~5A5 Jamboree Costa =arbcrBl1i..m.oo
· 16SOO Beach at Warner powft', tra.Uer hJteh. near~ .
'72 220 SEDAN '68 BUICK El I owner, Huntington Beach new tires It bnka $550. ,72 OLDS 98 Cpe Loade<:I 68 THUNDERBI~ Full
':'.'.:::======'!Auto Inna, AMJ)'M, low fl••• L • full power, air cond. Good 842·8844 * (%131 S92·5544 675-4870. FUll pGWel' {.dory air. ~~~) eon-• mileage !&<Ill Sale prlc<d WA fAIJi& cooo. e..t oiler. Call alt,.. 5 "Home of the Viking" '10 Cowlin' Sed. Xln't oond. ClSOln'Ll '14199 DAvE DAVE Jioss ~
COAST'S
·~n~~i~t~~n! d~ ~=; $5495 JDYOJA pm, ~. '68 Camaro 39i Racing equip· Lo ml'L $2300. Call 511$.3174 P.OSS PONTIAC,~ ·mt MM> Harbor Blvd., o.t&
perfect oond. 46,000 ml. New JIM $LEMONS 1968 BUICK G.S. Veey clean. Air "'°""'· ...... .,..; all 6pm. Harbor Blvd., O>ata 1ll<aa. M-!MHOIT Ellect1w
U.$ S""" t ._ """· •-,,...... H 1>u........ Xlnt mecb. c:ond. JU11, paJnt. fii:r-7630. 1910 L-"-111-nu ~7 Ettectfyt thrulhru ·;;::,,.:IJl:,:_=4113.~----. · '"'" map•~•~• IMPORTS, INC, ~-a.bor, CM. --PIS. 2 oew titts. -w ~ ···~ 1114/73. ~ radial1. ~omole w/3 pi a;, W. Warner, Santa Ana ·70 TOYOTA Crown 4 Or. Sl350. 963-WS er f7l.0701. 1968 CAMARO. Xlnt c:oo:!., ndlal tlfts, :dnt cond, 1971 T-Btrd '2 dr Landau. All
cluster Alt' cond. Radio. 546-4114 teetan. 6 ~ Y lJ.JLd.f' r • ·-new tifta. $1195. 11& ~. ' :J>ELTA M.Olda...1 owner, <JPdonl incl MaarOOf. $3800.
wtthoul map.• t!tta.« = • '·· YinYl -'°""· G.S. 54,000 ml, Far 6'!Hl221 "' 61J.0166 •63 F...s llond>ero a . top c:ondltlon. 11150. >:z !!nan. S17-4111. • wtth. Pvt &· 544-7613. 'S8 Mercedes. lSlA. <hlleoco-&uiomauc. air oond23smol Out for beach • IChl. No nauw ~ I '4M148
DATSUN '72 ton Item, Mechanloally w .. -~0 mlleqe. ( tall) p1lot lie .... RSVP-· CHEVROLET e • 541Hlill9 '63 Olda Stdu>AuOo, -· VEGA
...... xrnt """"· l800toau. "~' _.... ,. CADILLAC . X!nt
SEDAN lll3-3S24 $198!l Sale price 114911. '73 Monte Carlo Cpe. FORD •n LTD Coupe ~ ':J.i:i: '111 · VEGAmll P~ • -·
ORANGE
'70 250 CPE DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. V8 rosr JO 000 MILES = 0 .. <-·Jl blllt Ex Car A A ... F • 248:> Harbor Blvd., Costa Cad. '71 El Dorado Cpe. 'automatte, ps, air. stereo FA,:.,...RY '67 Oldl CU.llass. 400 .C.LD. DAVE ROSS. PO-•c, I d «. .. . ir, u,v, ac-f'u.11 pow"· auto trana, air M ~11 Ell__...... rad\o Ir tape, lilt whcf:I, ""'"' All ~-Good -~ ... ~ ea Ieng lory \111T. 298FTD. Btkwl cond <1'98DLK> 0,~·1114/n"' · C'l;Un:: FACTORY electric ""~'!.. \li.eyl"l'OOI', AIR mNomoNINo .. u-. · o..vo.... iur> no.rbor BIYd.. Coda
Invoice. 55850 AIR CONDmONING all vlnyl lnlfflor. (63SEIC) Full JllCW.'tr, \rfeyl top 11""°, Reuonlble otter. 8f7-1514. Mtaa. 546--IOl.7. Effecfu"C
'10 TO)o'Ota MArll: n Wagon. 4 V\nyl top, twl leather Inter. ONLY luxurious tipestry \ntmor. 71 TORONADOS ~tlttu~,-'l/l:;.;4173.~~==~I
Nr•ttt111t<f inteun JIM SLEMONS .... alr. Sacritice. -· Jor, ""'°· ""'" a>ntrol. $3595 Tiit ~-"I wh«l, etc .. «c. ! to chooN flom. NI -BELOW BLUEBOOK .~~:. c... ...... IMPORTS, INC.· 499-l1'Jf !11
1tty& 1•1~!~.-~~~rinfc. HO Look9 A Nnl Uk• the ~ lador>' air, AlLFM atereo: • * 'n Vrta Kamb.ck, ma Ma k t lac ,,.. --..,_ !20 w. w ....... Sama""" r111• IMPH 0•uUl""' ~· ~1. IJ3l. WARD Chevrolet It came off._...,.. lloor. Yioyl ""!. O>olc. ol colon. lltts. low mlleage. 675-;JJ9 r e P e Newport Beach 15.t\AWJ Cloth or •illYI Interior. ;.,
.. W,,.,., It & Reep.. • 516-Cll< 69 Whl TR-6 $6222 MacArfbw-Blvd A Jaml>o,... $3999 low aa (ll50CXI}). .-'TI Vep. IUJY1 llD hp, &OO<J
Fron• treuwu to lraalt Vaoanclea <Olt monayl R<>nt * . " 833-0SSS • 53099 OMd., ...x. w'l5 "'bMt of.
turn U..m-..,., ~.~-:.•pt., ~ !!f~lln ,_._ -.-· Nabers Cadillac Nabers Cadillac u• ~ Cm-, f61-9113.
Ha .. .....U.l<w )'OU ... nt to bl4 ·~ ••• Dall1 r~ ~· $IHOn AUTIIOR!ZED DE:Ai£1\ 1972 ltJYa, V-1, "l m, AUn!OklZED DEALER .... Bl!RS ~ILLAC 1971·""'"'v"',..~~m~wp.A--,,tr,.-.,,.-... ~1
..Ut '"••W ltds do It CAIL DAILY PILOT ClAalllled Ad. Sell Idle ltemt A .... """'ad Is a aood Jn. 2600 -BL, a.ta ""' aulllmalic, PS, ll3llJ mL 2600 Rubor Bl:°':!""" :lliOO ~Div<!. 4-tod ""'11 lo mJ. '21115.
ftU ·call NOW '4Hm. 0.ASSU1ED ••• · · •• ...,t call SIW67I Nowt _....._ $40-ilOO ()pon &mday GHllO. 540.Slot ~ O>ata -' 51M!OO !!&1--0929. •
'· I
( i ..
. .
\
•
San (;lemenie
• • Capistrano EDITION
Today's Flnal
.
N.Y. Stooks
>
vet ~. NO. 11', 4 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES ORA NGE COUNTY, CA LI FOR NIA · THURSDAY, :JANUARY ·1 (, ·1973 TEN CENTS
.
' Alieps' Death Credited to Smugglers'' Error
Last weekend'• unprecedented Oood of
illegal aliens in lhe San Ooof~ area -1
deluge lhat caultd the death of thrtt
persow -apparenUy was the result of
gross mi.scalculaUon by alien smuglen,
a top Border Patrol olflcial said today.
"The only theory that bolds "lnY
"'ater," said patrol spokesman Dale
Swanout' "is that for some reaaoo the
smugglers got carele9$ Sunday and ctidn 't
do their nonna) amount of scoutng and
intelligence work."
The Phantom
Strikes Agai1i
Ace, Ajax and United may oot be
very zippy names for a company,
but they're common nonetheless.
Every once in a while something
better in a name comes along.
Take the repossession outfit that
bagged a car in San Clemente
Wednesday night.
The firm, ope-rating out of Long
Beach, is ''Phantom
Reposse~s."
Its employes took the car shortly
before midnight
LAFC Deletes
23-acre Annex
To San Oemente
An action or l~'O weeks ago was rescm.
ded by the Loca1 Agel_)CY FormaUon
Commission \\1ednesday. The commission
deleted 23 acres of a 103-acre ann9ation
to San Clemente at the request of the ci·
ly.
On Dec. 27 lhe LAFC had added the 23
Jcres to round out an annexation of 80
acres south of the San Diego Freeway
and west or the city boundaries In the
P.:.::::!des.
Nine property owners in the 23 acres
~rotested lhe move and had the backing
What occunod lhnlu&bout Sunday was
an almo5t endless string of aliens balling
out of smugglen' can u tbe vehicles ap-
proached the active cbt<:kpolnt.
lq, two of lhose bailouts, alltnS beading
norlh tritd to cross the busy freeway at
dusk.
Three were killed by fast-moving cars.
Another woman suffered major injurie!.
Swancutt said qearly 400 Ulegal aliens
were arrested Sonday and' Monday.
What went wrong for I.be smugglers?
•
"They all maintain holding how<.! in
OCtansldt, Carlsbad, Vista ••• all over
lhe north <OWll)'.
"Every few days, when LMre are
enough all~ OJllected In lhese places.
tho smuggle'' send out scouts to aee Jf
the checkpoint's working . U it isn't, then
they head north on the freeway," Swan-
cutt explained . .
'Ibey probably got so stacked up last
weekend that they decided to ta.kc a
ctt.ance vdthout checking up on the
roadblocks."
On Slmday the migrations started
without the usuaJ precautions.
"It was an incredible amount ot ac-
tion." he saJd.
"One car after anotht':r would stop:
('veryone would nm out and scatter. The
people Yl'ho tried to cross the freeway to
1tie ocean took lbe greatest risk! and It
'vas a siclening thing that happened to
those people," Swancutt said.
Sco!"f's .(!f aliens made it around tht
patrol checkpoint only to be arrested by
Atarines or police in San Clemente.
But for two of those detained , Ille trip
beck will not be a roulillt' deportallon.
One or the women killed last SWl<lay
died before her husband's eyes. Another
IS.year-old girl was run over repeattdly
as her father wa1cbed, horrified and
hel pless.
Swancutt said the Border Patrol h;is
issued the two 1nen special paJSCS aliov.·
rice
Douglas
Orders
Farr Freed
WASHlNGTON 'IAP) .Ju stice
\Villlam 0. Douglas today ordered
reP,Orler Willili.m T. Farr freed from jail
while he a ppeals a contempt conviction
for a story about the 1970 Manson trial.
(See related stories, Page 3, and
editorial, Page 6).
_f art, 38, bas been in jail 46 days.
Dougtaa• order that the Los Angeles
rter be f ''in his own
recogniaance' wu o be fo low er
the day with an oplnioo by the justice.
FUT'1 attorney, l\fark Hurwitz, said
Douglas' clerk told him he sent a tele--
gram notifying Los Angeles County Sher·
iff Peter Pltcliess or the order releasing
the newsman .
Hurwitz said he assumed the telegram
would arriVe "within two or three hours"
and that Farr would be. re.leased then .
He expected the newsman to be rf6
leased this artemoon.
Farr was held in contempt by Superior
Court Judge Charles H. Older of Los
Angeles for writi ng a story about a pro-
spective witness' stalement that the
Manson ••family'' planned to murder
several movie stars. Farr was then
working for the H~rald-Examiner.
DAIL T PILOT ......... ll'r JtfiR l tffw
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S GRANOMA SAYERS DISPLAYS HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
With • Littl• Practice, Normal F1c1 (lift) Becomes 1 Ticket to Stardom
Hard to Fa~e •
F ounmin Valley Grandin otlier Win.s Girn, Conte st
c
ing them to stay in the United Statts long
enough to arrange for funeral11.
The costs, obviously, \1111 have to be
borne by th(' SUr\'l\'OrS.
But for two men "ho each paid smug·
glers about 1400 for 1hc. trip to Aha
Ca.lifoml:1, funeral money will be difficulL
10 find .
s~·ancult said thal if the men can not
find the cash, the ir loved on~s will be
buried in paupers' gra ... cs .
~ e
Move Comes
As Surprise
\VASHINGTON (APl -President N1x·
on today abollshed mandatory v.·age.price
controls exctpt in the food and health in-
dus1ries. Jn their place. he established 1
system· of voluntary wage and price
guidelines -nacked by the threat o[
government enforcement.
The surprise move -far more sweep-
ing than bad been expected -carne as
Nixon a1ked Congress for a one-year ex·
tension of his authority to control wages
and rice.!!.
The Presidenl abolis tile Pay r
and the Price Commission but retained
the Cost of Llving Council to manage his
Phase 3 economic system.
The program. y:hich lmmedifltcly
replaces the Phase 2 system established
in November 1971. "is self-administering
and based on \"oluntary compliance," the
White llouse said.
No longer w i !'I large busineMea and
labor unions have to get prior govern-
ment approval for wage or price hikes -
except in "special problem areas" which
Nixon listed as food processing and
retniling. and the health industry.
The President .also continued the
present system of Jooser mandatory con-
trols over construction wage increases
~ Cly.
fus· .. By JOHN ZALLER the way they used to. But I know I've got O'i''n verskln of Girn and Bear It. and said the present voluntary effort to
Ing to divulge the naml.'.'3 of the lawyers ~':"'"'--:--:-::-:-.. ro lele .. ,.il-14lihilllllll-l .. .,,.'l8~1!<...i..ia...i.HI-"''-' ----.!:"Jl-l~eaJ..mad-a~juM-kttp-Tnterest rat~tay-in-----1
who supplied him with the statement. Frances Sayers clearly has a face that Mrs. Sayers first became serious about make a funny face instead of spouting clfecl. The 80-acre annexation was approved
Dec. rt at a request from developer
Robert H. Grant Corporation which plW
to build. 213 unill on 30 acres at once.
Annexatloohad been oppoied by Dana
'Point and Capistrano· Beach organiza· :Jons. ~ .
A 21.acre annexation to, San Juan
:'.;aplstrano was delayed Wednesday for
10 days at the request of the proponents.
•. •. -·4'he merger 1ppUcation-.was fi led · by
:hristiamen and Associates for the pro~
my on the w e s t side of Del Obispo
itreet north of Camino de! Avion.
* * * Developer Wins
Annexation,
Cancels Hearing
A bearing acheduled before plaoolng
:ommissioners Wednesday in San Oe-
nente on proposals to build more than 200
!Ondominlums ln the Palisades area was
~ancelled at the last minute by the
Jf!:veloper wbo earller in the day won an-
1eution into the city. .
Planning department akles said they
:..,.Jved a 5 p.m. phone call Wednesday
1y aides for the Gi'ant Company of
'naheim asklng for delays ln the hear·
Inga.
Earlier in the day the 80-acrt parcel
Which the finn owm ln the Estates area
>( the Palisades was approved ror an-
aexation to San Clemomte.
The firm plans to btlild a plarmed com·
munity in the area and the initial tract
map for the project shows a 30-acre sec-
tion between \he Freeway and Camino
caplstrano as I.bf! first aegment o( con-
struoUon.
Some sections of the ~ tie within
the t.000.yard permit 1rea aet up by tlle
coutal lni!laUve,
But city PlaMlng Dittctor Gene
Scaulle said the nnn IJ tey1Jlg'1o launcll
the proje<t In advlllCO olfeb..Lwhen ti»
1tllf pmnlt rultl taU effect.
The lallle of tllo tract map, dty pt..,. OU. aides llld, \till )XOboblp ...,,.
before the plaonlnc conmri••lon In two
• week&.
I
During the trla l, the judge imposed an makes others look ordinary by rom4 funny faces during World War JI. off. That causes them to laugh, and then But for those industries and unions
Orde ba-lng la~ Ml a d th t 1·a1 parison. "l would imitate Hitler and Goering v.·hen lhey laugh I'm not so mad." freed today frotn mandatory controls, the r •• ~Je n ° er r But until last month, th1's ract was not part'c'pants from disc! · g a ·...... and Goebbels and the kids would just Mrs. Sayers, who lives .with _ her _government retains the ri ght to move in 1 1 OSln ny lu-appreciated _b"-the 7l·Y""'"Old Ftw•nta '• ··= d "" Ionnation about tbe case. J ...... .,.., u• squeal wiui laughter." she recalls. "It at au61.ter at 11080 Tilton C'arcle, hopes .to · with stiff action to roll back
.. Farr asked Douglas 10 cta;s ago to Valley grandmother. least look their minds off the bomb!." make money girnin&. so that she cao ".isl t unrea&0nable increases.
order him released Wltil the U.S. Circuit "l\1aybe I was just. u~ to ·it"· she · ·since that time . !ihe'.s "had less pressure graridChilditn in New· Zealand site 's Nixon said in a message to Congress
Court in San Francisco rules on an al>' says, "but I r~aUy didn 't see anything to practice. But she bas developed her never seen. that his goal is to reduce t~ inflation
peal. The justice held up action until the unusual about it ~f~re the ~?t.est. Of rate to 2.5 percent or less by the end of
Los Angeles County counsel office course, ~w I see it differently. 1973. lie ~id flis .91J.day Phase 1 wagtt-
.Jeplied. (~earlier SlOl'y, Page·S).. • •• Tti~.thinc Ula~ opelled her<~· to tbe Re'· agan· 'As ks Huge . Tax' price freeZ< and hi• Pha"" 2 mandalory Jcihii D. ?,faharg, the coUnty counsel , pot~~t1al of her face ~as a . Gtrn Con4 controls cut the inflation rate by nearly
and William F Stewart bis deputy told test sponsored by radio sta!Jon K..\fPC. half -to about 3.5 percent.
the justlce t~( most 'of Farr's '1egal (A gim, according lo Webster'i, is a Nixon's new program abolishes rent
argument had been made by the reporter oontortion of the fact.) controls and is intended to "allow
in an earlier appeal rejected by the MMI. Saye,. WU the hands.down Win· Return to Cali.forn; nns reasonable fl exibility" in wage and price Supreme Court in November. Douglas ner of the contest. ........_. increases. Secretary or the Treasury
was the sole dissenter. "We had hundreds or fine entries " George .;hultz told newsmen .
. "The real ~ue in this ca~ i.s .the con-reports K~IPC disc jockey Gary Owen~. Shultz said the government would keep
tinued viability of the 1udic1ary to ''But no one could do anything close to close tabs on the new system and those
preserve the constitutional guarantee of what she did." SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald But Rea gan said, "T am sure there is v.·ho don 't comply "are going to get clob-
a f~ trial," they said. "There is .no Mrs. Sayers' trick is really a simple Reagan proposed an $850-milHon state no disagreement that ll should be bered."
quesUon present in this case .conctrn1ng one_ for her. She juts her ;aw forward tax refund for Cali(omians today. tSee returned" to taxpayers rather than spent He also said while the Phase Tri pro-
gover:imental . interfer~nct with the ex·· as far as it will go, and then extends her related stories, Page IL ) for new state programs., • gram goes Into effect immediately, there
press1on or pnvate betiefs. o_r attempts.to IOwer lip over the tip of her nose, seem· A bulging budget surplus will make the That declaration is certain to trigger a will be a 90-<lay transition period to clear
u:ivade t~1 privacy o~ op1~1ons1,, assoc1a· ingly swallowing it. one-lime . cut possible, Reagan told the fight with aome Democratic leaders in up a backlog of cases pending be.fore the
lions or 10.eUedual VJewpo1nt.s. The overall appearance 15 at ontt Legi slature in hil seventh "State of the the Legislature_awho say the surplus (See f:ONTROLS, Page 2)
hilariously funny and thoroughly un-Slate" address. should be earman:ed for education.
Casli in Sw.lled
Truck Stole1i
As U being stalled Oii tbe freeway
wasn 't bad eoougb, truck driver John
Eland Jr. of Vista dlscovered Wednesday
that &Orne people like to hlt a man when
he's down.
The driver told poUee his truck stalled
on the Sjn Diego Freeway at about 6:30
p.m. and he set out on foot to call for
he lp.
When he returned a metal file cabinet
containing about S333 in collectlons had
been stolen.
The truck beloogs ta Roco Distributing
of Vista.
Theater Auctioned
FRESNO (AP) -Frano'1 1>,e&r-old
Wa.rner Theater, Lmajar 90p on the old
vaudeville clrculf, wu aotd Wednuday
for '14%,IOO. The vacant theater wu auo-•
tlaned and went to the hJ&h bidder,
W"tllilm <na, a Fram equlpmeol com· ---·
natural. It is as if her mouth were con-The Republican governor didn 't specify Tbe annual address, Reagan's' nerl·to-
suming her face. how the money would be returned, leav · last as govz;, skimmed across a
ing that to negotiaUon with the broad r•••e of pies 1·nc1ud1'ng· "I saw it once in Ripley's Believe It Or ... "& • Not, and J thought there must be some Democralic-cootrolled Legislature. -Revival of the death penalty in
trick to it,'' says Owens. "But she dkl it California, particularly for murder of
for us he.re in the studios and it's for policemen. Voters amended the It.ate
rea1.·· Officials Back ~;:~u~r;ovember to restore
Owens was so impressed that he's -A new attack on crime and crtalion
trying to get her on Rowa n and Martin's Liberal Beach of a unique renter for th .! study of violent
Laugh-In. However, Mrs. Slyers ls think· behavior at UCLA "to rid society of this
Ing bigger. cancer of violence .''
"I've seen the man who's the world D • k • L -Eslablishment of no-fault auto in·
champion girner," she says, "and 1 don't nn 1ng 3\VS i;urance for Ce.lifomia·s 12.s million
think be'1 so greaL I think 1 could beat motorists.
him." ' strong support for·Ubere.lized drinking In Dece mber. Rea1an said he was
. Despite her Jimited public expQ$W'e to laws at Orange CoWl ty beaches and committed to using the budget 1ur.plus,
date, Mn. Sayers' confidence is un· ·parks has come from three counly then estimated At $683 million, to cut in·
derst.a ndable. She's been making funny harbors, beaches and parks com4 come taxes. •le said mlddlt·lncome
facts ever since she was old enough to missioners. . Californians, In partlcul&r, are bearing
stand tn front 0£ a mirror. She. has ~ While commlssionen Tuesday dclayed too much of the taJ load.
tertCJed children ln the bomb shelters of action on makins any rte0mmendation to But there was no mention today of bow
World War ll London, enticed her county supervbors, tbrte b oa rd he would propose the bonanza be ~ldttn Into glcgJea wh<never they members said tbey would favor al"'°'' distributed and no way of esUmaUng how
were unhappy, and served 111 total a!lolishment or all Dquor restric-lt would artect fhe average Californian.
"Neighborhood Nlllll)' wltb tile Funny UM.I. The State Finance OeJ!llrlm<nl said tbe
Faees'' for countleu other youngsters. Liquor Is prohibited at alt parb and surplus 1wttled to S850 mflllon wjth a
"Oilldren wbo know about me ar1 beaches now. . busineu upsl'lng in tht: las\ haV of 1972
always Mimi me lo .make funny facea, "We .should have N little 1e&islatlon and because of Reagan ecoriornles.
·and l don' mind at all,'' lbe says. and regulation u possible wtn 1 sped.fie In the en'honmental Hekl, Req:an-
"Th• only problem Is that I'm getting probl<m develops," ... gaes1ed Com-called for leglslalion to roqulrt auto
aid DOii' IDd can'I ~el ID1 lllllOCleS lo1JUO .UQtroR, Pie• 2) (S<e llEAGAN, P•ae i) .
• .J
j
Orange
Weather
Coast
I '
The l''C<llherlady predicts the Or~
ange Coast will expcMence variable
clouds and continued fair weather
oo Friday, The high i.s expected to
be 58. the lov.' 48.
INSIDE TODA l:'
Th e 250..nitmber 81'oth~rhood
of Spirit tn Norlhfie«l, ftlcui ..
lw.t learned t 11 at bTo thtThood
won't fill stomachs and J>OL' rent,
and adult members art being
required to takt jobs. Story 01~
PO{lt 14.
L.M. ....... 1t · ,,,_... tt-11
CtM,.._. I. 11 Mlltw .. """"" ..
CMuil... JWt N .. ltfttl ...... • C-k• tJ o.......-~ M ,,._. » '~ .... • °"""' fMtktt J '""-...,, ....... flitH ' ll'lcll M•rtllh lf.tt ll~ ,.._11 T~ 111
,.....,.. JJ•t9 TillM"" """ ............ '....... .
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•
•
• '
·100 Att~nd l\ir Study FrontP .. eJ
CONTROLS ...
Pay Board and Price Commls$1on.
Regional Airport Hearing Held in County
All new actions, bowever. wW Co
belon! the Cost ol IJvinfl Council aod .Its
ll<W Pl1 IGd price di.W-, effecli ..
lmmedlai.Iy.
lhMltr Phase Ill, a oeW Wior-manage..
ment adVisory committee -with
member• includlng top industrialists and
such labor Jeadc.t!I. a.s the AFlrCl<Ys
George Meany -will decide whether the
current 5.5 perccn\ ceiling on wage Jn.
mases should be modified. •
By JACK BROBACK
OI !lit DMlr Pl"" llfrf
Airports are alright in their place -
some otbtr place.
This, at least, seemed the cuncensus
.Wednesday in Santa Ana. The occasion
was a citizen hearing board of lhe
Southern CaHfomia Association of
Govemmenu (SCAG J taking soundings
Watergate Trial
In Slnto Ana oo 1 rqiaoal airport study.
A second meeting by the group will be
held in Los Alamitos March 11.
Tho!ie from El Toro-Mission Vlejo
thought Chino ltillit in the northern part
of the county an Ideal site for an 11lrp0rt.
Srea or Yorba Linda residents think
joi nt use of El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station is a great idea.
Ex-White House Aide
Guilty in Bugging Case
WASlUNGTON (UPI) -Fonner White
House conslli~t E. Howard Hunt Jr.
pleaded. guilty today to all charges
against him In the Watergate bugging
-trial The judge accepted the plea after
re)ecting Hunt's effort to plead guilty t~
only three COllO!s.
-
McCutchen Case
Goes to Jury;
1st Degree Asked
In another development Senate Demo-
crats voted today for a full investigation
oC the Watergate bugging case and re-
lated allegations of Republican efforts
to sabotage the 1972 Democratic presl·
dential campaign. Sen. Sam Ervin (D-
N.C.,) was designated to lead tb~ inquiry.
A!rer accepting the 8"CODd pleo, U.S.
District Jud&e John J. Slrica ordered
Hunt held under $100,000 bond unW a
presentenctng tnvestlcaUon ia completed.
Hunt Initially tried to plead guilty to
conspiracy to break into Democratic na-
tiooal headquarters, actually breaking In-
to the Watergate building ollice, and to
listening via bugging devices to telepbooe
cmversations of !Oltle Democratic offi-
cials. A hard-hitting prosecutor today asked
an Orange County Superior Court jury to After Sirlca refused to accept that plea
convict 1bomas Bradford McCutchen of -omltling reference to t h r e e other
Dana Point ol first degree murder in the charges relating to actually placlng bog-
slaying Sept. 5 of a Laguna Beach ging devices in the offices -Hunt plead-
"WOman who had broken off their rela-ed guilty to all six counts of the indict-
tionship. ment again.st him.
Judge Walter Charamza instructed tbe Hunt's attorney, WlllJam O. Bittman,
jwy Immediately after II listened to the pleaded with Sirica to lower the $100,000
final argument o! Deputy District At-bond; saying "I don't believe be will be
tomey Al Novick and sent the panel to able to meet" the amotmt. He aabd that
the jury room for deliberation. it be lowered to $26,000 or, at most,
The prosecuUoo m.ssed during the $50,000. montb-toor trial of McCutchen, 50, of Slrtc 'd "I d 33llZl Olinda St., that he had repeatedly a "'" • '"Y your r<puesl and ·~-·-~Mrs. Vir"'"'" Hammett, 45, of you can take It to the court of appeals tt Ulll:4il1.oe:.1n:u ........ YoU want." 121B Wave St., in the mcmths before she \vu gunned down OI) a neighbor'• lawn. Hunt's plea was not beard by the jury
· It wu argued for the delenae that wblch bas been aboent !run the court-
McCutcben was uoder the inOueoce of a room since Wednesdoy when be offered .Coosldenble quantity of sleeping pills at to pleld guilty. After Sirica accepted the
the time of the aboollng and was not tn new plea to all charges -wblcb be wu
fUll _.slon or 111' mental faculUes. required to do lllder federal court ruleo-
Bot Novlct orpod before the. jury that the jury WU called blcl: and the -Mcoitcbm wu "comllle1tly coherent" Uon bec>n cal1!ng lta fl r u wi-
at the time or orrest and .... able to give against the m mnamm, delendanll.
the ' tto .. t---~IAflUDI!:'.:!!!:" . · · are no Jonaer to be ..........i with the
The prooecutar ~Uer alleged that case of the Uftlted Stalts agaimt E
Mn. llammelt'I prior lllllli of mlllllclpal • Howon! Hunt " Sirico told the jurors·
court charges against McCutchen had a giving them .;. explanaHon. '
lot to do with her suboequent slaying. Th lbll flovlck said Mn. Hammett had sued e 11""' lty the c8'e would be u-
McCutcben for making threatening phone panded . beyond the sunpl~ criminal calli counts 1nvolved in the break·m last June
He. said the defendant also contacted 17 appare~tly vanished when Hunt's at·
Mrs. Hammett's ex-husband on several . tomey • wt th agreement of the pl'Ol-
occasions ln a bid to have him persuade ~tor,. SU~ully a r I u e d a1• her to drop the allegations. S~nca s. suggestion that for ltunt to have
his guilty pleas accepted, he explain
Rotary Engine
Training Set
Free training on operation and
maintenance of the Wsnkel (rotary)
tDlfne Is available through Capistran0-
1.qunl Regional Occupational Program
cl~. , ~---~
lnstnlction is gtven from 9 a.m. to noon Saturdays at the instntcUonal
garage 127B Calle del los Molinas, San
Clemente aod class entry L! allowed at
-, any time. Tbe instnlClor Is Irwin
Scblaack. ·
A SOuthem Calllomla survey indicates
the program Is the only one of its kind of-
fering free instructioo in this engine of
the future, Jerry Copeland, program
coordinator said.
Fwther information is available by
calling · 49&-IZU.
OlafflCOAST WC
DAILY PILOT
TN~ C..t O,lill'I' l"ILOr. wl'lrl ~
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$I'll JUM C.11lslr-. A •"'91-.... _.
tdll"" II "'9111Mcf s.tf\Kdl)'t Ind SunNya.
the prlfltlpal llUDlflhJnv plinl h 11 »0 W1•I
a.,. $trMI, C0111 ~. C.hlOrnlfi, m:i..
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"how you got into this conspiracy."
HWlt di.d admit under Sirica's ques-
tioning that he was· guilty of each count ·
and committed the violations "know·
ingly, and intentionally aod unJawfully."
fife
REAGAN .••
~ . , ,. ··" ~ tuneups to guarantee that a vehicle's
smog control devices are working prop.
erly. This proposal would gu into effect
first i nthe smog -laden Los Angeles
area.
But Reagail said man•S needs must be
considered as a part of the ecology, too.
"There is an urgent need to construct
environmentally protected nuclear power
plants. The alternative -within a few
short years -is a massive shortage of
the energy and electric' power we must
have to heat and light our schools,
hospitals. and homes: to fuel industry."
Reagan proposed expansion of the state
Ecology Corps where young men work on
forest and recreation projects and fight
fires.
And Reagan declared again the
Legi!Jature should remain ln the lOZ..
year~ld state Capitol rather than build a
proposed high rile< building. •
The Governor said he and the
Legislature had been able to put aside
Political differences ln the pas! two years
and reap '"the most significant legislative
achievements of the past quar1er century
in California.·~
He referred to the Welfart Reform Act
of 1971 and the SI. I-billion school finance·
property tu relief program be signed in·
to law last month.
Oilton Miller
New LAFC Chief
Oirton MUJtr, a mtmber of the Local
Agency Formation C«nmlaloo (l.AFCI
for one year, W11 elevated lo ch.alnnan .
Wedneoday.
Mille<, msyor ol T\slin, •~
former aupervilor wmi.m Phillipa as
chairman. 11... ~ member
SUpervilot Ralph Jlledtlcb of Pllllerton
-wa.a named vk.-e chaltm1n. He "'' 1 1
anolber Pllllerton resident, Louia ••!Ud"
Rolfihan!~ in the post.
Other LAFC me.mber1 are Supervisor
Robert Battin and Jor;ner San Clemente
mayor Starile Norlhru . ·
' •
Newport Belch ,..,dents ........i to
think on)'Wbere else bot Oranp County
Airport Is ftne. ,
Bart Spendlove of the Saddlehacl< Nt•
CoonlinaUng Cowlcll; Wa)'Dt Moody of
Laguna Beach; Edward L. Olaen of
Laguna HWs Leisure World Follndatloo
nnd Max Schachner of Irvine all favored
Chino HUis.
\Vayne Wedin, city manager of Brea,
and a Yorba Unda qiuncllwoman were
violently opposed to any north COWlty
airport and especially Chino Jlills.
Col. John Lowman was ror Chino Hilla.
He's one--0( tbe promoten of tbe facWty.
Gordon Jones, director Planning
Engineering for the Irvine COmpany op-•
posed El Toro use and supported
restricted use ol Orange County Airport.
He said the Marine air station there
shou ld be abandoned.
Col. Pifwny Staples of El Toro
Marines vigorously repeated the Corps'
opposition to joln\ use of t.be·facility.
KeMeth Carr. San Clemente Cily
manager opposed Camp Pendleton as a
site.
Newport Beach Mayor Donald McGin·
nis argued that Orange County Airport
should revert to commuter and private
flying use. He accused county govern-
ment of dragging its feet.
Dale Rummel, chairman of the Costa
Mesa Airport Study Committee, rccom·
mended strict controls on land tae
around airport!. larger aircraft · u.se if
quieter and uniform standards of noise
control. ,,.
fie said the committee oppoSed an
offshore airport and called the SCAG
report unrealistic in regard to private
aviatioo.
He was for study of Chino Hills, El
Toro, Pendletoo -anytblng bot the
preaent site.
Brian Douglass,-general manager of
the Fullerton Airport reminded listeners
tha~ noise was not the on1y problem. "We
have relatively quiet planes · but people
object to any increase in overflights," he
revealed. ..
Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport
Noise Abatement Committee of Newport
Beoch did 111' compartaoo of the needs of
75,000 people wbo Oy planes to the 20,000
who are disturbed. "Quiet planes are a
dream," be argued. "Flights .will double
in 1Z years with increasing QOISI!."
Air California President Robert W.
Clllford reminded that bis firm mw:t
serve the pubtlc: but still wants to be a
good neig)lbor. · . "We have eliminated smoking engmes
and follow all sound reducing pro-
cedures," be staled. "1be new larger
planes will -be quieter and carry more
passengers reducing the namber of
fllgbta."
2 $350,0ffO Gold
Crowns Stolen
From NY Shrine
Cmatroversial Site
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, south of San Clemente, has a
,.generating capacity of 450.000 kilowatts and has been in operation
since January 1968. Dotted Un~ sho\v area where Southern Cali·
fornia Edison Co mpany and San Diego Gas and Electric Company
hope to place two additional twin reactors, representing a five-fold in-
crease in power capability. Atomic Energy Commission hearings on
the matter begin in San Diego Tuesday.
~~~~~~~~~~~-
Tustin Trustees Deny
Grievance by Teacher
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 1tw OOltJ l"!lof Sltff
Tustin Union High School District
trustees have decided that a Mission Vie-
jo High School teacher does not have a
grievance agalnst a letter of reprimand
placed in his personnel file which accuses
him of "epereive" actkms.
'Mle teacher, Jim Wehan of Dana
Point., said Wednesday be is deliberating
on whether to take the matter to court.
tionery was distributed at ~1ission Vie40
High.
It said that teachers at the school who
had participated in supervising ex·
lr.acurricular student activities "met and
established the fall minimum schedule of
rales to I}(' charged for supervision in
1972·73 lerm -
That standard rt.mains In effect unlit
the panel meets and the Cost ot Uving
<:ouncil decides whether to accept its
recommendations.
As a general guide for Phase Ill, th<'
White House said prict Increases should
not exceed increase!_ in costs.
"Even where costs have increased " a
White House summary said, "pdces
~d 1?0t be increased i! the finn's prof·
1t margm exceeds the [inn's base-period
profit margin.
"Alternatively," the summary added,
"a firm may increase pri<.-es to refleci
increased cost wit.bout regard to its prof-
it margin If .the flnn's average price ip-
creases would not exceed 1.5 percent in a
year."
Nixon told Congress the mandatory
wage and price control system would be
continued "with special vigor 'tor firms
involved in food processing and food
retailing:''
He said he was establishing a govern-
ment committee to review federal policies
affecting food prices and a noogovem-
ment advisory group lo examine other
ways ol stabilizing food prices.
.These steps will be .coupled . he said,
with concentrated effons to hold down
food prices by increasing food supply.
The efforts to bolster Siip'ply include
moves to increase grain acreage, e.1pand
livestock production and move com-
modities lo market more rapidly.
Present mand3tory controls on the
health industry also will be continued un-
ti! modified on recommendation of a Cost
of Living Council on Health, the White
llouse said.
In addition, Nixon established a Health
lnduslry Advisory Committee to recom-
mend changes in government programs
to curb the rise in health costs.
The President told Corlgress his
revamped economic policies "can mean
ever. greater price stability with less
restrictive bureaucracy.''
But he said their success depends "on
a finn spirit of self-restraint both within
the federal government and among 1he
general public." And he said Congress
should act "W\th a high sense of fiscal
~esponsibiUty" in acting on federal spend-
mg.
on Sale
:nie qu•ton of the let written by
Bosllllrco • li>ae arii)> 'itt113cLl..an.B<lintbothe,;cL-,aj!!.!J.tcJi!"e,.Jo,_J. UQ.bt.,cdla'•'1lel~1v"'e.l&"taln.,lhellolliWetoiter.._,~~M,,
district lieartng ~. ScOOol officials plaCed Iil Wehan's file, Bosanko ca~ Menibers of the Dana Hills High School
"All member! of· the prof.essional
associ.ation at Mission Viejo High School
\viii be expected to abjde. by this
schedule," the memo said.
said. tioned the teacher to "conduct himself in horticlliture club will. sell quart·sized
Wehan, a malh teacher and president a more ethical manner in the future." plants on the campus Friday afternoon in
of the Tustin Secondary Teachers As· Teachers at that time were •pai(l $3.50 an ~ffort t~ malle enough money to fi-
sociation, filed for A grievlmce hearing in Rn hour to' supervise dances. football nance a greenhouse and lathhouse at the
an effort to have the letter removed from games and other extra events. The new campus.
his personnel file. memo asked for $5 an hour, which The plants, which will go on sale at the
A three-member hearing panel -com-\Vetian · says was comparable with what school sciel'iee wing at ·r2:45J>.m. Wii i sell
NEW YORK (U PI ) _ Two solid-gold. posed of one administrator. one teacher was being paid at other schools in the for 25 tc SO cents each, said spokesmen
and one allegedly neutral third party -same district. for the club. diamond-studded Hl:/\,000 crown!, blessed d ed f h · h W h 'd Wed _,., coo uct a our· our sesston a mont e an sa1 nesday he is coosulting The specimens offered to the general
by the pope and unofficially protected by ago and decided the letter should stand. with the Califomia Teachers Association public all were raised by club members
Mafia chieftain Carlo G~bino, have Wehan appealed to the school board, ICTA ) and lhe National Secondary and are indoor and outdoor species.
been stolen from the altar of a Roman which this week upheld the hearing Educators Association lo see if they will Among the plants being offered for sale
Catholic shrine in Brooklyn. psnel 's ruling , denying the grievance. expend legal funds for a civil case . will be coleus, ageratum, calendula,
The incident In question took place in He contends that Bosanko should have Sf:veral varieties of marguerites, Creep-
The crowns, fasb.ioned from the melted April 1972 when a memo bearing Wehan's shdWD him the letter and allowed him to ing Charley, trailing lotus, agave and
wed · bands of World War 11 widows signature on Teacher 's Association sta· respond before placing it in the file.· other succulents.
and other jew an esse Y ·1-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;::;:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;;~~~
Pius XU, were in a glass case and adOrn-
ed lll .. 11:ed murj]1 of the Infant Je~
and the Virgin Mary In the Votive Sbrine
of Regina Pacis.
They were stolen in 1952 -but
mysteriously returned ~·ight years later.
Gambino, the 72-year-old reputed
'"Boss of BolsesY of the New York
underworld, wot!hips at the shrine.
Police at the time speculated that the
crowns were returned because Gambino
let it be known that he wanteti them
back. No arrests were made.
The churth closed at about 5 p.m.
Wednesday and a sexton, Dominic Sazzo.
liri, discovered the glass case smashed
and the crowns and jewels missing at
about 6:X> p.m.
The larger or the croWll!I meuured
about nine inches In diameter, the
smaller about six inches. Both were
about four in~ bigb.
Designers took more than two years to
complete .__ di.amend studded crowns
which were donated by the J2,000
parishioners of St. Rosalie's, the riilSther
church several blocks away, during and
after Vi'otld War n when the shrine was
planned as a monument to the ideals or
peace.
From Pagel
LIQUOR .•.
missioner Thomas O'Keefe.
lie noted that the state bas expecienced
no great problem at Oobeny State Bea.ch
where liquor is allowed.
Commission Chainnan Th o m a s
Baldwin , voho said Ile' wanted a Utlle
more con.c;ervalive approach to the Issue:,
noted that not too many people are
aware that drinking is legal at Doheny.
But two other rommt!.'liontrs, Frank
Robin1011 and c. c. "Jack" \Yooley,
echoed O'Keeft'!I feelings that the cu,..
rent ban should be lifted ttcept in &rea!I
such u Irvine Park where deed restrlc-
t!OM proll~ ' . -,'?> -•
"It's a hlgbly personal thlna,"
Robl11""1 Slid, .,,.t I •!!fee wtlh TOm
{O'Kere.feJ . 0 u r Information shon a
conC<m about whit might hap . rather
than 1talitlC9 t w · · "
• I
NO ONE SELLS G.E, ·
FOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
•
NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE . . •
['.~!~ I~~(
.• '
17.6 Cw. It. NO FROST
REFRIGERATOR
• fre•I.,. hold• UC! lo llil II&.
• l a<i1u•t~ble ,~~~s. -~· • COiiet~. 11 .. Je-<l\.I\ n>fM ,,_ '5'§...cL__, • l .. ,. ve0191abl<-Lin! hold 2/l bullhel.
o S.~ .. JI• """"'~!Ill' rew>!rol•.
•· ioll& CIWl OIO .,...,eelt. lot ... ,~'
31CJ95
~ .. c:.,;: ---
SOFT fOOO WAST! DtSPOSll . r•wtr fie Mttholli.-
• 2 l•~•I T1"rt·Wo1li
• A•tfflttic Otltr9tllf Oi1pt111Cf'
• Str1119 hW1I 0Mf • SIW1·0vt 1.c•1
SD ... N 1SCJ95
WWA JUI•
• UPRIC:llT
CON\ LP.:1~:~cr.
• Po1111ve Sa.fc1y Door i£kli
• F•~tirr.c1.in1
• Ooof Lock
17IJ95
• Ql't ,....,. ,__,_
WtotllAdlMl-W ....... ,.... ........ • ,.,,__.21u ...
.T ... 1 .....
• l .... C.,..-NOPINIC. ........ ",_..., .... ......
• u.ctiofl"' J ._ ....
19995
'LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE -••• RAISED ELSEWHERE"
. 90 DAY
Mombor of
California'• Lartott CASH
Cooperative Buying WITH ·Al'f'IOm
Group With Tho , CHDIJ ' Volum1 Buying m· • I., AtHCtA1W Powtr oi 1 io Sto;; -...... m . ............. ,__ mi
1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Downtown Casta Mesa -Ph111 548-7788
•
• ' I
OAll Y ,.llOT lllH .....,.
-Big AtlmnlltfJfttl"ac
' Aid Agency Dying? 1
-
' Administration, Seeks Big EDA Cutbacks
WASIIDJGTON (AP) -The ,--------lost confidence in his agency.
But he said It has been suc·
cessful in re l ieving
eeonorilically distressed areas
of the country.
Nixon administration wUI
recommend drastic cutbacks
In the fiscal 1974 budget of the
Economic Development
Administration, one of the
government's more prominent
grant-in-aid programs, sources
,.Id Wedn""1ay.
If the ~istraUon has its
way, sources said, U1e seven--
year-Old agency would be
eliminated in favor of the
special revenue-sharing pro.
grant
IN l\tAKING cuts in various
111E EDA HAS made hun-
dreds of grants to local com-
munities, with the assistance
going for such'th.ings as water
and sewage facllities, in-
dustrial park development, an-
tipollution equ.ipment, stree ts
and roads, regional airports
and health and community
---racllitie~r:
'C<!lesco1nd.ustfies, Irie. of Costa Mesa h.as been awarded $325,000 of a contract wi~ an es~ated v.alue of some $6.5 million for engineering, planning and
eqwpment mstallation of the Alhena launch site on Wake Island.
Housing and Urban Develop-FINANCE Last October, Nixon vetoed
ment programs·-recently, the a bill \l"hich would have con·
administration has also cited '----------' tinued EDA's participation in
revenue sharing as an • an expanded public works pf1>.
alternative. popular ~Ith Congress . ~am c~lling for public serv.ice
Finance
Briefs
Taxable Sales Show
Increase in County
Taxable sales in Orange
The EDA was created in Originally establlshe{I to pour Jobs in areas or high
1965 as a successor to the oJd federal money into financially unemploym~nl. ~ t.n t hat
Area Rede v e I 0 pm e 0 t pinched rural areas of the 08. message, Nixon said that t~e
Administration, which was lion, it received authority agen cy had shown to be 1n-
established under the Kennedy recently lo help alleviate effective.
administration In 19&1 to help economic problems in urban,1•-'--------"'""-'='-·'-~'I
economically distressed areas areas. THE Sale
or the country. Its budget . in the current
Robert Podesta, head or the fiscal year is about $300 Is Now
•
enco1<a11?
...: County reflected a I a r g e
has reported, due to these coo-agency, said he could not com-million. part of which v•ent to
di ti on s: ••Californians' ment on proposed budget cuts help areas damaged by1
1
personal income rose during for EDA. tropical storm Agnes.
PORTLAND, Ore.
Geo{gia-Pacific Corp. h a s
reported that the Federal
Trade Commission gave pro-
visional approval for forma-
tion of a new company from 20
percent of its assets.
statewide increase and rose
22.2 percent from July to
September, 1972. according to
the State Board of Equaliza.
ti on.
THE RISE throughout
California occurred, the board
the first six months of the But other soorces said .that The EDA's approach. direct
year to an annual rate of the administration probably grants and loans to areas. is
$100.8 billion and by the end of will not recommend an ex-opposed by the White !loose,
September was well over $102 tension of the EDA alter next which favors block grants for
billion. June, when legislation that economic development, with
Think
"As consumers express created it expires. If any 'Thvlrtually no string attached.
the.ii' confidence in the money is put in the budget for e admini stration believes
economy they are spending EDA. these sources said, it that the EDA approach is too
more of their income, making would probably be a token narrow and has too many
more purchases on credit and · amount. strings attached. WESTCLlfF PLAZA
DAILY PILOT IT
ANNUAL JANUARY
-
REDUCTIONS
TO
60%
.1«»9:11c•
SHOETREE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA
UPP ER LEV EL -546-4791
• 0 ..-11 Sulldey, Noo11 to 5 p.1'11.
10-9, Mo116ey thr11 frld..,,
10-6 Sot11rd o.,
l
Plans to form the new com-
pllny were announced in July
after Georgia-Pacific and the
commission made an agree-
ment in principle following fil-
ing of monopoly charges -in
June.
Food Price
"Inflation
Predicted
saving less." the board states Podesta Is reported to have 17til I I
in its quarterly publication, _·_B_UT __ T_H_E_P_R_OG_R_A_~_l _is_sa:.::_cid:..t:..h::•t:...::.the~W::hi::'t::•::f::lo::u:.:sc._I::"'::':==='=~= .. =·-"-'-"',,',,.",,.'"-="'-= '==-=-=---'---------~==='
Taxable Sales in California. ----- -----
e Strike Losses-
SAN FRANCISCO -Pacific
Far East Lines Inc. has an-
nounced it expects a Courth
quarter loss of more than $3
million because of t h e
Masters. ~1ates and Pilots
Union strike which began Oct.
25.
President ~ C. Ross said
the loss cou1d go higher if the
strike is not settled promptly.
The companp aJready had
reported losses of $82Q,345
through Sept. 30.
esteelHlke
OAKLAND -Kaiser Steel
Corp. has announced price in-
creaes on its plate. ~tructural
bar and semi finished products
effective Jan. 1, atid on tin .
mill oducts effective Feb.
I .
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Cooswner h o p e s for a
slowdown in food price in-
flation in 1973 have been dim-
med by a new government
forecast that prices in the first
six months of the year will
rise 50 percent faster than
predicted earlier.
AS R ECEN T LY as
November, the Agriculture
Department had been predic-
ting that January-June, 1973
supermarket prices 'o\'.'OPld
average onJy about 3 ~t
above a year earlier.
Tuesday, however, the
Kaiser said the r increases economics, Don Paarlberg,
approximately tho se an-said in an interview that ex-
ORANGE COUNTY record-
ed $1.33 billion in taxable sales
for the three-month period .
California overall recorded
$13.9 billion, an increase of
17.5 percent, or S2 billion. over
1971 figures for the same
period.
Orange Coast c i t i e s
establjshed these taxable sales
records: Costa t.fesa: $84.3
million; Fountain Valley: $15
million ; Huntington Beach:
$66.5 million; Laguna Beach:
$13.1 million; Newport Beach :
SSL2 million; San Clemente :
$10.7 million, and Seal Beach :
· $6.7 million.
Executives
Meet Slated
nounced by th d t. perts now believe the increase o er omes 1c ibe Orange County chapter producers and are within will be about 4.5 perc.ent. This
limits authorized earlier by means an increase as.great as of the Planning Executives ln-
the Price Commission to meet the one that brought loud con-stitute will host a ladies night
increased costs since Kasier's sumer protests Jn lhe first half at its monthly dinner meeting
_____k$LJU:ice hjek n'!or.e__lhan_a1 _ _::0:,f _::19::7~2. ________ .u· Llhell<lidayJnnJn.Anaheim. _
year ago. PAARLBERG SAJD the tonight at 6 p.m. e Height Suit earlier 3 percent prediction f\.trs. Helen Lotos, member-
SAN DIEGO -The San was made before economists ship coordinator of the Natioo-
Diego Building Contraetors knew of the impact of poor al Organization for Women,
Association has filed suit harvest season weather, which (NOWJ will speak about the
against the city's new :ID-foot sent prices for grains and women's movement and di-
height limit on coastal con-livestock soaring. That boom rectiorm of NOW in 1973.
struction. was refletted in a December For further infonnation re-
The measure was approved raw farm product price report garding PEI or the program,
by 70 percent of the city's showing prices ·um 5 r-contact Mr. William Krebs
ov. 7. l'enl !or 1 e mon at
.. 6'"".iS. " •
JANUARY CLEARANCE -•
~:.QFF SALE
• DRESSES
• FORMALS
• COATS
• AT-HOME· WEAR
• COCKTAILS
• CAPRIS & COATS
Ch1r9e C1rd1 Welcome
COLOR TILE'S
80'STOltE11UYING"POWER
SAVES YOU MONEY ON VANITIES
We agreed not to mention the famous brand name, but these
beautiful,. tirst quality \lonities represent the full productton
of a leading manufacturer. Color lile bought them all at .fa,,.
tastic savings to give you the lowest price possible!
BIG STORAGE
A. · fosy to clean 00.:-piece ocry1ic toP end
Wniti biise"fri mmed in gold. ::t:>xl9 indi size .
SPACE SAVER
.. ---VANl'.tY -' &" . O.r>•·Pi•e• rn1,bl• top ind gold-trirnm1d
whit. b1t1. H1ndv 23•17 in. 1i11 fih 1n.,wh1r1 !
ALSO IN COLOR TILE'S
VANITY SHOWROOM ••• • •
VINYL ASB ESTOS
FLOOR TILE
DMply •• L I'd
12-12 111.tlllis.-..1 ~ ............ _,6,T '::.:;.'*-hi so:.n.
SELFSTl_CK 'SCRUBBAB'LE SURFACE
SHAGCARPETTILE WALLPAPER
Thick ~ pa. A. .... wlKtion of ......,., prifrt
Ndtl -i 12ii . 5 9 and flock. dfto• ... _,,,.. 12&tillt .._. 4 nit-I .
.. illy wlthowt SPECIAL LOW PRICES
_...llfit~l SG.;ft. T HISWEEKONLYI
DOIT
YOURSELF!
lt'1 t...n, ftl•'t oitd tfirifty
'with lhe help y-911 '-
t;OIOl ml! --";)
FREE
LOAN OF PROFES-
SIONAL TOOLS!
INST_RUCTION
BOO KLUS
HELPFUL ADYla
Just Say "Charge It!"
: COSTA MESA-2221 Harbor Blvd.
645-1126
STORE. HOURS
OPEN SUNDAY -.11 a.m .. 5 p.m.
MONDAY, fR IDAY -I •.m. • 9 p.m.
TUE$DAY, WIDNISDAY, THURSDAY, SATURDAY -8 a.m •• 5:30 p.m.
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING I
•
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""' *'"P
l ----_.,.,, _.
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,18 DAILY PllOl SC Tfllnday, J1nuary 11, 1973
''Money's Worih
Small Investor:
MORE TIJAN nine out of 10
of them say they do not have a
minimum ·doll ar requiremtnt
for the .sim of anY buy or sell
·, KEEP CHILD RESISTANT
CONTAINIRS -
CHll.ll RESISTANT
I'
lllDll•UllD * .• , 1111 *
;
THERE IS A FACTORY
AUTHORIZED DEALER
FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Boulevard
af Cars
l.001 FOi THI IMIUM AT
THEODORE . 'I COSTA f>\ESA ROBINS F9RD DATSUN . 2060 2145
HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD.
• 11
OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST
7
I
7
SC
Tliursday's -CIOSing Prief;!.COmplete New Y ork Stock Exchange List
Market Climbs
On Announcement
I
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market re1c:ted
quietly Th ursday to the Adminlslrat1on s announce-
ment of 113 Phase UI economic proiram by pus hmg
prices into a steep climb
There was a surge or heavy trading, but the
pace slowed, and many gains \\ere \Vh1tUed
Gaining issues, .Y.hicb had held a big lead over
losers on the New York Stock Exch1nge, grabbed
a 2 to l advantage
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial! )Umped
from a plus of I 50 poinl3 at 9 a m PST to a ylus
or 15:3S at 10 a m then seltlod back Dunng the
surge 1t was well above the all time closing bigb of
1047 86, sel Monday -... ' a CW ti Mitt! U. Wit CM.
•
/
Complete .Oosing Prices-An1erica11 Stock Exchange List
't
•
' DAil Y PILOT J 9
7 . 7 ·-u . 11• ' : := : ". "o-1 • •1 ~' 7 • • .......
•
.. . -I ., . • .
.19 DAILY PtL11T
J
.,
II ---
i • -< .
• •
. If you checked any one of th~qbove, better check
.... ~ .. ·· ., ·· · · -· · ·· yqurcigarette;too:We.'d1Jketooffer'an·alternative. Namely; ·
a switch to the refreshing taste of Salem'.
·~·. . . .. . .· · . . · . . '"' .. . -SOlems -NeturalMenthol' Blend refreshes
your taste naturally from the first puff of the day
to the last.
We insist on using only natural men-
thol, not the kind made in laboratories. Since
our golden tobaccos are naturally grown,
it's only natural our menthol should be, too.··
~·-ltis-1his blendof'iiaturcilty grown n---
gredients that turns the ta·ste of.coolness Into
a taste that's "naturally refreshing:'
A taste that's not scratchy, harsh or hot.
A taste that refreshes like Springtime •.•
_everytime~ •• anytime!
•
ese.
l
King or Super King.
t
. ... ~ • • ' '
1
. ~ ~
1
•
5!
. . . . . . .
....... .. ... ~ ..
" 8 " ~ • • ~ . . • -' ' • •
Salem~ Natural Menthol Blend
Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
Tha!.Ciqarette Smo'9 ls Dangerous to Yo~r He.alth .. -. .
• -· .
•
-
I
· means ·naturally refreshing taste.·
-· • KING. SUPER KING, 20 mg. 'tal", 1.4 mg. nicotine. av. per cigarette, FTC Repon AUG. '72. ---. . ~ ... -·-. . . -.. ...... . ........ p----... -~
... ... ' .,. . . . .. ,..__. -· ·-.. . . .. ---~,-. .,_,...,.
•
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7
.Lagu11a Beaeh
. • ED ITlON
Today's Final
N.Y. St.eeks
VOL. 66, NO. 11, ~ SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1973 TEN CENTS
Reagan Proposes $850 Million Tax Refund
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Gov. Ronald
Reqan proposed an $850-mlllion state
tax refund for Californian.. today. (See
related llories, Page ti.)
A bulglng budget surplus will make the
one-lime cut possible, Reagan told the
Legislature in his sevenlh "State of the
State" address.
The Republican governor didn't specify
how the money would be returned, leav-
ing that to negotlatiQri with the
Democratlo-cQ11lrolled ~gislature.
But Reagin said, ''I am slire there is
no disagreement that it should be
returned" to ta1payers rather than spent
• ror pew atate prosrams.
That declaration Is certain to trigger a
fight with aome Democratic leaders ln
the Legislature who s1y the surp!UJ
should be earmarked for education.
The annual address, Reagan's next-to-
Jast as governor, skimmed across a
broacl range of topics including:
-Revival of the d~th penalty in
California, particularly for murder or
policemen. Voters amerxled 'the atate
C.Onstitutlon in November to restore
capital punishment.
-A new attack on 'Time and creation
or a unique center for th.! study of violent
•
behavior at UCLA -·"to rid 50Ciety of lh.i~ State Finance Department said the.
cance:r of violenct." surplus swe.Lled: to saso million ·with a
-Establishment or no-f!ult auto in-bu!lneu-upswin& lo the. las~ half of 1m
surance for California's 12.5 million and becal.LR: of Reagan economies.
motorists. In the environmental field , Reagan
ln December. Reagan said he ~·as called for legislation to require auto
committed to uslng ~ budget surplus, tunellpl to guarantee that a vehicle's
then estimated at '683 million, to cut in· smoc control devices are working prop-
come ta1es.. He said middle-iocome erly. Thll proposal would gu into effect
Cal.ifornians, ln particular, are bearing fil'$l l nthe smog -laden Los Angeles
too much of the tu load. area .
But there was no mention today of how But Reagan said man's needs must be
he would propose the bonanz.a be considered as a part of the ecology, too.
distribut~ and no way of estimating how "There is an urgent need to construct
it would affect lhe average Californian. en vironmentally protec ted nuclear power
rice
Pending Appeal
Douglas Orders
Farr Released
WASHINGTON (AP) Justice
WWiao'l O. Douglas today ordered
reporter William T. Farr freed from jail
while he appeals a contempt conviction
for a ~tory abgut the 1970 Manson trial.
(See related stories, Page 3, and
editorial, Page fi). .
Farr, 311, bas bee.I in JaD 46 clays.
Douglas' order that the ~ Angeks
Times reporter be freed • oo. hil own
recogniJ.a.nce" was to be follawed later in
the day with an opinion by the justice.
Farr's attorney, Mark Hurwitz, said
Douglas' clerk told him he sent a tele·
gram notifying Los Angeles County Sher·
ift Peter Pitchess of the order releasing
the newsman.
Council OKs
Arch Beach
Tlie Pliaritom
Strikes Again
Ace. Ajax and UnllA!d may DOI be
very tippy nam~ for a company,
but they're common nonetheless.
Every once In a wb.Ue sometbing
beUer in a name comes ak>ng.
Take the reflO"OISlon outfit that
bogged a c:or In San Cleniente
Wedneoday nfibL
The firm, O(>e1'Bilnf OU! of I.Ong
Beach , ls ' Phantom
~:~ took diC .,., sliOitlY
before mldnlaht.
-· •
'
plants. The 1dternative -within a few
short yea rs -i! a massiv__r shortage of
the energy and electric power we must
have to heat and light our schools,
hospitals , and homes: to fuel industr)·."
Reag an proposed expansion of the sta te
Eco logy Corps where young men work on
forest and.,.ecreation projects and fight
fires .
And Rea gan declared again ·the
Legislature should re1nain in the I~
yea r-old slate Capitol rather than build a
pro posed high rise building.
The Governor sa id he and the
Legislature h<1d been able to put aside
..
poluical diff<>rcnces in the past two 1rears
and rtap "the roost s1gnif1cant leglslstlvc
achievements of the past quarter century
m Californi11 "
lie rcrerred lo the \\'cUare Reform Act
of 1!171 and the SI l·billlon school finance·
prol)('rly tax relier progra1n he sig ned ln·
to law last month .
\\'ith the 1972 education fi nance
mca31.1rc. schools ha\·e ~ financial
capacity 10 provide a quality education
for every child. 111.•:igan said.
A 1najor share of !ht• funds y,·iJI come
fr om a one rent pe r dollar hike In the
sta te sales tax b<'ginning June I.
P1'esident's
MoveC01nes
Orange Coast
Weather
The ~·eatherlady predict~ the Or-
ange Coast will expcrtencc varlablc
clouds 3lld continued hur weather
on Friday. The high ls expected to
be 58. the low 48.
INSIDE TODA 1'
Tiie 25().n1ernber Brotherl1ood
of Spirit 111 Nortl1fleld, Mats ..
J1as ltan1ed t ll a t brol herhood
rron 't fill 1tornoch.t and Poll re11t,
and adult mtrnbtrs art btinQ
required to take Jobs . Storu o"
Paye 14.
i..M. ...,, n
C111iw.i. J. 11
Cl-..IMtf •·• CwMc:1 U ,_ "
D1ett1 ... nc.. ' •4lfWVI ,... • • ••tert.1.......,.1 •r1 ~~ lP•lt
,., ,.. ·--1 , ... _ 11
,... L.efl!Hn "
'
..
. .
I , I
1·
I I
•
% OAILV PILOT UI ThurtdlJ, .U0""1 11, 1973
~Capitol G~in
Aliso Students to Take Ttip ·
• Thirty sixth-grade students at Aliso
Elementary Scllool in South Laguno have
tbeir fingers crossed this week.
Each is boplng the sergeant·at...arms or
the California Legis.lalure is in a good
mood Wednesday.
Laguna Death
~
Thal't u., day Ille students ... w be
flying I<> Sacrameof<> ror a llrSI bond loot
into the workinp of state goveromenl
Un!orlunalcly for the atudentJ, tM
wes t wing of the capitol building has
been closed lo minor!! since it was con-
demned as unsafe.
Each student , however, will brlng with
hin1 a pcr1nisslon slip signed by his
parents, in hopes of admission to the
"'•ing in wblch the legislature meets.
,.,.. .. P .. eJ
CONTROLS. • •
up a backlog of c...S pending belo"' !he
Pay lloml and Price Commlssloo.
AU , new actloos, bawever. will So
-1111 Coll ., Ll"1ltl CounclJ IDd Ill
new P.,, and price divisions. effective
immedl>Iely.
Under Phase m , a oew labor .. manage--
meul advisory commlttee -with
members Including top lndustrial!JU and
such labor lea.de.rs as tbe AFL-CIO'S
George Meany -will dcclde whether the
current 5.5 percent celllnc on wage In·
ere.,.. llbould be modified.
__8us_pect Fate .
1'hc final decision will rest with the
sergean t-at-arms, according to instructor
Barbara Mudge, one or four adults ~
con1panylng the class on tb.e unique field
trip.
Thal ~ remalna In ellect until
the panel meet. and the Cost of Uving
Council decides whether to a~pt Its
recommendations.
As___a__genera) g.i1ldeJcr..Pbue_JJ1, the...
In Jury Hands
A hard·hitting prosecutor today asked
an Orange. Cotmty Superior Court jury to
eonvict Thomas Bradford McCutchen o!
Dana Point of first degree murder in the
slaying Sept. 5 of a Laguna Beach
woman who bad broken off their rela·
lic.nsbip.
· Judge Walter Cbaramza Instructed the
jury immediately after it listened to the
final argwnent of Deputy District Al·
tomey Al Novick and sent the panel to
the jury room for deliberation.
The prosecution stressed during the
month-long trial of M~tchen, 50, of
33321 OlliRla St., that he had repeatedly
threatened Mn. Virginia Hammett, 45, of
1218 Wave St, In the montbl helm sbe
was gurmed down on a neighbor's lawn.
It -argued ror the defense that
McCutcben was under the influence of a
tonslderable quantity of sleeping pills at
the time of the shooting and was nOt in
full possession of his mental faculties.
1 But NoVlci argued before the jury that
M~t~ben ~~ _ "~_pletely coherent"
at the time of arrest and was able to give in accurate account of the incident to
taguna Beach police.
Tbe prosecutor earlier a1leged that
Mrs. Hammett's prior filing of municipal
court charges against McCuleben had a
lot to do with her subsequent slaying.
Novick said Mrs, Hammett bad sued
McCutcben for making threatening pbooe
calls. .
He said the defendant also contacted
Mrs. Hammett's ex-husband on several
occasions in a bid to have him persuade
her to drop the allegations.
l'1'0llt Ptlffe J
ADVISE •••
During the one-day visit, the students
also hope to meet with Aasemblyman
Robert Badham (R-Newport BeacbJ,
state Senator Dennis Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach) and Superir.tendenl of
JJublic Instruction Wilson Riles.
The grpup of students will depart from
Orange County Airport aboard an Air
California 737 jet at 7: 10 a.m. Wednesday.
They will take a charttr bus to the
capitol . spend the mornini; there and
visit Sutler's Fort and the Port of
Sacramento in the afternoon. The class
will return to Orange County at 5 p.m.
Each student, sai d Mrs. Mudge, is
paying $27.60 to make the trip. The ma·
jority of that amount, $22, is a special
student tour rate offered by Air
California. It is half the ~ormal round
trip Care to the capital city.
'ftle trip, she added, culminates studies
in cjvics and government given studenU
in the fow1h, fifth and sixth grades.
During the flight, Mrs. Mudge added,
students will be asked to study
g~graplly from the air by trying to iden·
tify points along the California coastline ,
the San Andreas fault and other
landmarks. ·
Joining f\-1rs. Mudge and the students
on the trip will be school Trustee Jane
Boyd, Billie Sumners, an Aliso s ta f f
1nember, and Marian Brotzman, director
of volunteer programs.
U~IT ........
TWO SOLID GOLD $350,000 CROWNS STOLEN FROM ROMAN CATHOLIC SHRINE IN NEW YORK
Monsignor Angelo Cioffi Oispl1y1 Missing Treasures in 1952 Ptioto
U.S. Accuses ·Electi.on 2 $3 50,000 Gold
Crowns Stolen
From NY Shrine Group of V i.olations
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice
Department today accused the Finance
Committee to Re-el ect the President and
three defeated congrsesional candidates
of violations of federal election laws.
The four criminal actions were filed in
U.S. District Court here.
NEW YORK IUPJ ) -Tv.'o solid-go ld, The eight-count criminal information filed aga inst President Nixon's finance diamond-studded $350,000 crov.'Tls, bl essed
C<Jmmittee charged the committee, by the pope and unofficially protected by
through its treasurer, Hugh P. Sloan, Mafia chiefta in Carlo Gambino, have
gave G. Gordon Liddy, a legal adviser to been stolen from the altar of a Roman
the pane), cash sums in the amount of $12,000, $!2,000 and $5,300, without receiv· Catholic shrine in Brooklyn.
in~ 8 receipt. The crowns, fashioned from the melt ed
Rites at Laguna Library
Complete Stormy Saga
Tbe committee was charged in three Y.'edding bands of World War 11 widows
counts with falling to report these and other jewels and blessed by Pope
expenditures to the General Accounting Pius XII , were in a glass case and adorn·
Office and with failing to obtain a receipt ed life-sized murals of the infant Jesus for and make a GAO report on an ad· ditjonal $2,000 Liddy spent. . and the Virgin Mary in the Votive Shrine
Maximum penalty upon conviction on of Regina Pacis.
each count is one year in prison and They were stolen in 1952 -but
$1.000 fine. mysteriously returned ei ght years later.
Others charged were: Gambino, the 72-year-old reputed
The fmal page to the long and stormy
history of the $293,000 Laguna Beach
County Branch Library will be written at
10 a.m. Friday with it& dedication at
Park Avenue and Glenneyre Street. -Fritzjof P. Thygeson, a Peace and "Boss or Bosses" or the New York
Filth District Supervisor Ronald 1-~reedom party candidate for the House underworld, worships at the shrine. oi Representatives from the 40th District Caspers will be the guest speaker at the of California who won tbe June 6 primary Police at the time speculated that the
dedication. 'Ibe Laguna Beach High but was defeated in the general election. crowns were returned because Gambino
White House said price tnmases should
nor exceed increases In costs.
"Even.. where costs have increased," a
White House summary said, "prices
should not be increased if the firm 's prof.
it margin exceeds the firm's base-period
profit margin.
,"Alternatively," the summary added,
"a .firm may increase prices to reflect
increased coot without regard lo lt.s pror.
it margin if the firm'• avqage price in-
creases would not exceed l.S percent i"n a
year."
Nixon told Congreu the ~tory
wage and price control system wou!d be
continued "with special vigor foi firms
involved in food processing and food
retailing.''
He said he was establishing a govem.
ment committee to review federal policies
affecting food prices and a nongovern-
ment advisory group to examine other
ways of stabilizing food prices.
These ateps will be coupled, he said ,
with concentrated efforts to hold down
food prices by increasing food supply.
The efforts to bolster supply include
moves to increase grain acreage, expand
livestock production and move com·
modities to market more rapidly ,
Present mandatory controls on the
health industry also will be continued Un·
.I Iii modified on recommendation of a Cost
of Living Council on Health, the White
House said.
In addition, Nixon estab1ished a Health
Industry Advisory Committee to recom-
mend changes in gover;nment programs
to curb the rise in health costs.
The President told Congre53 his
revamped economic policies "can mean
evec greater price stability with less
restrictive bureaucracy,"
But he said their succe'ss depends "on
a firm spirit of self.restraint .both with in
the federal government and among the
general public.'' And he said Congress
should act "with a high sense of flSCal
responsibility" in acting on federal spend·
ing,
before-any screening committee is a~ School band -wut perform in concert -Charles w. Johnlon. Democratic can--let it be known that he wanted them ~~tocr111e,.ri:.=bybe J::. ~w.:i~ Rabi· es ·shots Set beginning at 9:90 a.m. at lhe library. didate for the House In lhe 17th district back. No arrests were made. Th T h M
.... ---Local I •·• lo th Ir "-~ or Ohio who lost In the May 2 primary. The church closed at -•-·t s p.m. Tee ll 00 en tbat a "'criteria committee" be establlab-egw.ia rs ~r e re,.. ......... -_...., ed. · .._.t41tit-_._, taUves are expected to .attend the -William C. Haden, Democratic can-W~ay and a sex::, Dominic Sazzo.. 4 °'f:m~~~d~ ~·cr1,:iJ In l?g~1na Bea~h ;;:.°'".:;::;,:~1":00~~~gor ~l:if:.Y:e,.:~r;~·~'~:~~ ~:J :T~r;t'.:l'Je!.~:'"mi:';~' Nabb~d With LS.D
should get an advller to help clirtfy the ' The ~uai'i.i;guna Beach 'rabie~ clinic The new buiJdiDg' '1U ~lude 1 a COi· about 6:30 p.m. TAHOE CITY (AP) -Three men were
enUre wperintendent selection process. will be held from 7 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday lectlon of SS,000 votutnes within 8,000 The larger of the crowns measured held here following the seizure of an Such 8 proctdure; said Browne, is at the main fire station, next to City Fro1n Page l. b recolllmended by the Msoclatlon · of square feet or space. about nine inc es in diameter, the estimated $500,000 worth of L.5D, the
cau/omla Sc:bool Administrators and the fJ.all. The old library branch, located in same ARRESTS smaller about six inches. Both were Placer County sheriff's department has Ca:llfomla School Boards Association, . The shots, required every two yeais for general spot, had 2,200 square feet and
d 'II be g·v n by vete~arians n-• • • about four inches high. reported. Guidelines issued by the two """""'•, he ogs WI ' e i·ui u• "' had been Inadequate since the 1930s, ac· De · k b &""fr> • Douglas Tignor M V Loge and E G R d. lo ti be! th ~ . signers too more t an two years to Sheriff's captain Max Bennett-said added, caution school districts against • · · · -· cor tng tes mony ore e ln9 city "dope parties:• and Laguna Beach complete the diamond studded crowns
appointing loca1 citizens to screening Ekeberg. The fee ls $2. The clinic is co-council search for a library location. narcotics officers were called in . which were donated by the 12,000 \Vednesday the men were arrested in a
committees, since it opens the way to sponsored by the Lions Club and the The new building will be complete with One arrest included the daughter of a parishloners of SI. Rosalie's, t~e mother raid late Tuesday nn a building disguised
special interest group control of the Orange County Veterinary Medic a 1 the exception of a few minor details at Los Angeles Municipal court judge, church several blocks away, during and as a photography Jab.
seJection process. Association. the dedication . One detail, an 8 foot by 8 Purcell sa1·d. rt W Id W II b the hr' [ [ L ,. a er or ar w en s me was Held for investigation of manufacture Also to be present at the momlng Dog licenses or lhe city o aguna foot window, has been either smashed by The issue of marshal warrant servi'ce plann d a a moown t lo lh ·c1e·•· of
B h I ·11 I be ·1 bl r $3 50 d I bl t b t·rr · d e s en e 1 c.1ll and possess1'on or 1·111·ci·t drugs were meeting is Dr. Robert Reeves, assistant eac on Y w1 a so ava1 a e or . van a. s _or own ~u Y s i wm s. in Laguna Beach has provoked some peace.
superintendent of instn&tion and person· for spayed animals and $7 for all others. A sun1lar pane in the Laguna Beach disagreement between members of the Other jewels stolen Included five gold Albert E. Graham, 39, Joseph W. Darst,
neJ. Reeves wrote his doctoral thesis on County licenses for non(residethnts of the ~2f.1bber of Commerc: .~~ices below in city council and law enforcement of· stars, a diamond earring, a diamond 36, and Stephen A. Arthur, 30, all o( t----~,,.,...,llmlll!:~~j~,"tauine~d~n>~m._~..,,.ewoeo~WJ""'IY'--'l"!"'"'~'"aucy,_.s~toi...,.ct~w:coe...,Du _ _we.parkjog level_f~~·~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~a~ee~ond~~·~di~·~.,~,,~"'id~~~bra~~ee~l~et~.;;;;;;;~·~-~~·~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~:---tion and tenninatlon of C8tifomia school animal control department, in Orange. also wa s smashed .
superintendents."
Death Stand Softens
Fro111 Page J
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nixon
,, ~ M$in.istration bas rerre:tte'd ' from a
·' · ~llon,•endo<slng ir·mandatory•"1eatb
sentence for crime such as airplane hi·
jaCiings, saying the death sentence
should be limited to "certain well-defined
situations." "Punishment that is too
severe or too flexible may interfere with,
rather than enhance, Jaw enforcement .''
Assl Atty. Gen. Roger C. Ctamton told
the Senate aviation subcommittee
Wednesday.
SEWER ASSESSMENT • • •
claihi"M"'they were being for ced to pay
extra-dUe;to the length of "the system: a
factor of the combined front footages.
Owners of one house on multiple lots
(there are many in Arch Beach Heights
where Jots were commonly filed as 25 by
100 loot parcels/ claimed that since only
one house was lnvo!Ved, and use of the
system would likely be the same as that
of single houses on smaller lots, it was
unfair to charge more based on front
footage,
to use," Leak said. ·Loud applause fiom
· lhe'Tesidtnts followed:"~··""-,--
Laguna Beach Mayor ChartlOn Boyd
explained that the assessment district
formation was a past issue, having been
determined at previous sessions, and a
city-wide tax was not possible as total
fees already incurred amounl to $100,000,
almost exactly the total of the cily
reserve fund .
•
. -.
NO ONE SEW G.t
FOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE .. .
17.6 C1. Ft. NO FROST
REFRIGERATOR
•UPRICHT CONVENIENCE
, .
• Posill~Safcty Door[Mcb
•Fut frccainc
•Doorl..ock OIAllGI COAST LA
DAILY PILOT Ca rlson, who spread the assessment.
said that if either of the two methods
TM ar.,. Colst ~IL v PILOT, w11t1 _.m were used alone, someone would be un·
,. ecwnl>IMI "" N...,.Pr-. I• pub!~ 1"f fairly assess ed .
,,,, cir.noe CNst PublT.tillll CPm~riy, Stpa. Prior to final reductions due to the
n te td111ont •r• Pllblklled, MtwJj'f r?1niu1111 lowered bids. figures were about Sl ,390
Frlcl1y, fOI' CO.It Mesi, Ntwport lie.di,
Hun11119111n 8ttch/Fount•ln V••ttv, L•i vn• for a single lot; $2,240 for a double lot
Bud!. trvlM/s.ooi.e.ct Md SJ1t °"'*"'" and $3,090 for a tri ple lot, using the com·
S11t J1,19ri C.pr~1r1110. A slf'Ol9 revlon11 bination formula .
.tukm 1, Pllb11s1>to1 h~•Y• •nd SuM•'fl. If building ~He alone were used, the
TM pr1nc;1p.11 P\lb!llhllll ~,,, 11 '' "° Wl!!r.1 single lot asseSsmenl would jump about
a.y Strttt, '°''' M..., C..lltofl'llt, flm. $300, whil e multiple lot owners would
Ro~•rt N. w,,d receive a reduction, he said.
Praldent end Pllblbher If front footage Were the determining
Jtc:li It. Cvrl•v factor, the price for a single lot would be \lice ,...lcltllt ... c.n.n.1 Mt"'fW'
Th•M•• K''"" $1,250; a double lot, '2,500 and a triple lot
h ilW $3.750, he sai d.
•
1\0111•• A. Murph:n, "1 cannot in all good conscience spread
.111-.ing Editor this assessment on the building site
Ch•rl•• H. loe1 IUch•"" P. N•ll alone : lot size has to be considered," Assl•i.M M""9i.. Ed1ton i., ... .._. OtRc. Carlson said.
J2l f-er•it Av.nu• Allen1pt s to fi nance the district on a ci·
Mtilh•t A44res•: P.O ..... ,,, ,2,52 ty vdde tax were rebuffed by the council.
Richard L. !<Bye suggested that a 15-
0... Off'-:1 cent increase in cUy property tax could
c.t. Mtt11 m w"' 11tY '"""' • Id d h •=ff<fli mi "--' '°"""'"' pny for the district. and wou sprea t e """' ••dli rms ••t.11 "°"'4ft•"' cost or the project across the entire city. a.n I•: al fttlrtll El CMllM It.Ml Kaye pointed out that there were Income
T"••••11• «71 41 '41-4121 t.ax benefits to payment or property tax· c ... ..w "'"" ... '42.U71 es, but not to payment of assessments .
......._ .._. Al ••• • zltfJ1 Bill Leak told the councll that since an-
T••••• 4M-t4" nexation in 1965, the height! residents =: ~':" ~~ 111== had been paying property taxes to the ci·
M!Mrill fl"lftttr ~ ~,. ~ ty. some (){ which went to fund the city =-~-11t •'= ,";::::' .,. .. , ,.. sewage plant, which they had no use or.
,._ ._ ,...... •Id ,, c..11 Mnt. "I think this should be ta.ken Into con-• ~ w-=r':.ls. ':.n::" ""'';!':: ' sideration by the council to give all thf>.se:
...,_ .,... -· people credlt for all the Jlloney they'v•
1---1.======------''-·IPlll!lt.I J,IRll<le,_~,, hw& hliven'& be8. able
"You would wipe us ou t.'' Mayor Boyd
exclaimed.
"This is not a black and white situa·
lion. The ·neighborhood has to _ ..
recognize that some or the steps taken in
the past require understanding, that
some of the horse of the past is dead and
kicking it won 't bring it to life," Boyd
said. • ~
"We did a good bit of that at the last
fl.lee ling," he added.
Residents also questioned the use of ci·
ty equipment and manpower to fill the
unused septic tanks, required by law.
The average cost was pegged at about
13511 r<j pumping slurry mixture Into the
priv~ disposal systems.
The council declined to 11uthorize city
participation there, but will consider
amending a sewer connection fee
ordinance to remove that charge for
residents or established residences .
That is scheduled for the council
session of Feb. 7.
The package of" resolutions necessary
to briog about constructi on of the system
all passed with unanimous votes.
Residents will have 12 months to hook up
to the system once it is finished.
Hero Due Discharge
HONOLULU (UPT) -Tho Army Is
!!pttding up the discharge of a decorated
Green Beret paratrooper who has called
the Vietnam war "insane and brutal."
Anny ol!icials said Wednesday lhty
started the process ing for the "ex·
peditlous discharge" of Sgl Ernest R.
Pouoder, 28, on grouwfs be Is a con• !!Cientr '
• F••eif!f holdl Ill) to 1 ~ ltu .
• J ad;111tllble shel.-e:s.
• ea-H. •llc!Hout mtat I*\. PJ"-',L.,-, • Torlol vegelllble bins holcl 1/l bwshel.
• s.tp.&,.lt t-•~ture eonttOls. •. aou. iu:"" wheel& lot .. ,~
) 31CJ9~
---SOIT FOOO WAin DISPOSQ '•wtr Pt. Mtth•Nni • 2 ...... n.r •. w.,~
•All1•Mtk Otttr111t DI,,..,.,
• 1'""9 Dtw Offf • SIWt·Owt •-'•
SD U ON 15 CJ95
17CJ95
•Gl'll.......,,...,..
,.... ActlrM--'i.1 ...... ....... • :sw. ... 2iu..
.T ... ••• tJW•C,...-...._.. ,._,,... ....
AdilJ .... So* .......... , ._ ....
19995
"LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE"
'
Metnbtrol 90 DAY
C•llfornl1'1 """"' CASH
Cooporollvo luyt111 wriH "'"°'°
G,...,p Wilh Tho CID~
Volume Buylnt -m
"•••• •s·irt•Ja Power of 110 Stores ....... ~ ...... ,...... ~
1115 NEWPORT BLVD. Dawatawn Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788
•• ,
• . .. -.... • . .
•
.
Saddlehaek Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 11, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1973 TEN CENTS
Reagan Pro $850 Million Tax Refund
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov . Ronald
Reagan proposed an $MO-million slate
tai: rtlund for Californians toda)'. (See
related stories, Page 11.)
A bulging budget surplu.s will make the
one-time C\lt JXlS&ible, Reagan told the
Legislature in his seventh "State of the
State" address.
The RepUblican governor didn't specify
how the money would be returned, leav·
ing that to negotiation with the
DemocraUCX'Ontrolled Legislature.
But Reagan said, "I am sure theie is
no disagreement that lt should be
returnee!'' to taxpayers rather than spent
tor new state programs.
That dedaraUon is certaJr. to trigger a
fight witQ some Democratic leaders in
the Ltgialature who say the surplus
should be earmarked for-educatkm.
The annual address, Reagan's next·to-
last as governor, skimmed across a
broad' range of top!~ including:
-Re:vtval of tbe death penalty in
CaUfomla, parUcularlY for murder of
policemen. Voters •amende<! the 1tate
Constltutioo In November to restore
capital punishment.
-A new attack "On 'Time and creation
or a unique center for th.:: study of violent
•
behavior at UCLA "to rid society or this
cancer of v)olence."
-Establishment of no-fault auto in·
surance for California's 12.5 million
motori!ts.
ln December. Reagan said he was
committed to using ~be budget surplus,
then estimated at $683 million, to cut in-
come ta1es. He said middle-income
Californians, In particular, are bearing
too much of the tax load.
Bui there was no mention today of how
he would propose the bonanza . be _
distributed and no way of estimating how
it would aUect the avirai;e Callfomian.
•
The State Finance Department said the
surplus swelled to $850 million "''ith a
business upswing in the las~ half of 1972
and because of Reagan economies.
In the environmental field, Reagan
called for legislation to require auto
tuneups to guarantee that a vehicle 's
smog control devices are working prop-
erly. Thi~ proposal woold C'-' into effect
first i nthe smog -laden Los Angeles
area .
But Reagan said man's need s must be
considered as a part of the ecology, too.
"There is an urgent need to construct
environmentally protected nuclear po\1'cr
plants The :iltern ative -v.•ithin a fcv,.
~horl years -is a massil'e shortage of
the energy and eleclric po~·er '>'·e must
have to heat and light our SC'hools,
hnspitals.~and homes: to fuel industry "
rteagan proposed expansion of the state
Erology Corps where young men work on
forest and recreation projects and fig:1t
fires.
1\nd Reaian declared again the
Legislature should remain in the IO'l-
ycar-old state Capitol rather than build a
proposed bigh rise building.
The Governor said he and the
Legislature had been able to put asJdc
J
rice
Move IJnexputed •
Joaquin Board
Drops 2 Off ices
San Joaquin School District trustees
Wednesday night abolished the district's
two Lop administrative positions in
charge of the school building program ef-
fc;:ctive Feb. 10.
Farr Ordered
Released
By Dougla~
WASHINGTO N (AP) Justice
Wlllian1 0 . Douglas today ordered
reporter William T. Farr freed from jail
while he appeals a contempt conviction
fo r a story about the 1970 Manson trial.
(See related stortes, Page 3, and
editorial. Page 6).
Trustees gave no reason for the unex-
pected actions, which in effect fired Dave
King , director of facil ities planning, and
Dave Brown, his assistant.
King, who came to the still-growing
district more than two years ago, charg-
ed today that it was an act of "political
viJldictjveness and their (the board's)
political hatchet man ."
The board's unanimous action after ex-
ecutive .ression may have also eliminated
the guarantee of two-year jobs in one of
the new unified districts for both King
and Brown.
Under terms or a unification election
last June, all administrative personnel in
outgoing districts must be given com-
parable jobs for two yea rs in one of three
new districts, Irvine, Saddleback and
Tustin.
King said he would be consulting an at-
torney to find out how the board's action
affects his job future .
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S GRANDMA SAYERS DISPLAYS HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
With a Little Practice, Norm•I Face (left) Becomes a Ticket to Stardom
She~s Hard to Fa~e
Farr, 38, has been in jail 46 days.
Dou las' order that the Los Angeles
mes repo er •on-rrts own
"The San Joaquin Building program
ceases," King said. hinting that he mighl
not even stay around· until 1',eb. IO. "I "'F IJUllla;ll V c1llP.v {; haoe euoogll stet teaoe. I 11rt111' .. ,.1'1m11.,Lv"l"'ll-~--'L.JCL.LloUc1LM.,~L"-J.'-""'"'"'"-;r+-LL'-'&, r
recognizance" was to be followed later in
the day with an opinion by the justice.
Farr's attorney, Mark Hurwitz, said
Douglas' clerk told him he sent a tele-
gram notifying lA>s Angeles County Sher-
.ill Peter Pitchess of the order releasing
the newsman. .. ·
• RUrWi& · sii.ld he· a's.Stimed' the tfle'gr8ni
would arrive "within two or three hours" ~Q th&t Farr would be 'te'JeaSed thil.
He expected the newsman to be re-
leased this aft~moon.
Told of the decision, Farr told news-
men in the jail before his release: "f'm
very pleased to hear it''
He said he ptanned to return to his
work as a reporter for .the Los Angeles
Times.
Farr was held in contempt by Superior
Court Judge Charles H. Older of Los
Angeles for writing a story about a p~
Spective. witness' statement that the
Manson "family" planned to murder
several movie stars. Farr was then
working for the Herald-Examiner.
' Older held Farr in contempt for refus-
ing to divulge Jhe names of the lawyers
Who supplied \fi1m With the statement.
During the trial, the judge imposed an
order barring lawyers and"' other trial
participanta from disclosing any In·
formation about tbe case.
"I'm very pleased," Hurwitz sald.
"It's been a long battle."
He added, "The battle ls not yet over."
Hurwitz said the action by Douglas
means "at least one justice believes In
our cause ... it gives Us great hope for
lhe future ...
· Tlte Phantom
.Strikes Again,
ing down with the London flu ."
San Joaquin has been the most active
of the soon·to-be-defunct school districts,
with a number or schools under con-
struction or in design plallning stages in
both Irvine and tbe ~~i~n Viejo-El Toro
.afea., .. , .,, .. ,.
There has been open conflict between
. the_ .boant @nd King in the . past. .Board
chairtnan Robert Damerolf·has told King,
at times when contractors are late com-
(See FAC!L!TIES, Page 2)
Flu Absences
Running 15-20%,
But No 'Epidemic'
By JOHN ZALLER
ot 111• D<lll'I' '11•1 Sllff
Frances Sayers clea!ly has a face that
makes others look ordinary by com-
parison.
Bijk,, until last. month, this fact was-noi.
appreciated by the 71-year-old Founta in
Valley grandmother. · ...
"Maybe I was just used to it,'· she
says, "but I really didn't see anything
unusual about it before the contest. Of
course, now I See it differently."
The thing that opened her eyes to the
potential of her face was a "Girn Con-
test'' sponsored by radio station KMPC.
(A girn, according to Webster's, is a
contortion of the face .)
Mrs. Sayers was the hands-dov•n \\'in·
ner of the contest.
"We had hundreds of fine entries,"
reports KMPC disc jockey Gary Owens.
"But no one could do anything close to Although pupil absences are running what she did."
between ' 15 and 20 percent at Mission Mrs. Sayers' trick is really a simple
Viejo High School this '>''eek and about 10 OQf _ for her. She juts her jaw forward
percent at Univerflit.y High'School, Tustin as far as it will go. and then exlends her
Union High School officials see no JO'i\'er lip over the tip of her nose, seem·
"epidemic' 'of nu in the district. ingly swallowing it.
Acting S up er i n tend en t Jack The overall appearance is at once
Schumacher said today absences at the hilariously funny aod thoroughly un-
lrvine high school are waning from Mon-natural. It is as it her mouth were con·
day's peak of 12 percent of students caU. suming her (ace .
ing in sick. · n· I • Bell I O Teacher absences d is t r i c t w i d e , "I saw it once tn IP ey s eve I r
Schumacher said, •·are about double Not, and I thought there must be some
what we usually erN>rience at this time trick to It." says Owens. "But she did it -,...~ ror us here in Lhe studios and it's ror of fear. There are 36 teachers absent to-· 1 he ·d real." diu'. Of these 30 are ti ·" sai · Owens was so impre.ssed that he's 'lb.at number represents seven percent of the district teaching staff. The winter trying to get her on Rowan .and Martin's
colds season nonnally fells only from Laugh-In. However. Mrs. Sa~ is think-
three to four pettent of teachers on any ln~r~~~n the man whl''s the wor\d given day, SCbwbacbcr noted. The hlJl:h studtnt absence rate at champiol'! glmer,'' she says, "and I don't
Mission Viejo High School today i!I not thini. he 's so great. 1 think I could beat
"al&n!ficaJillf grealu lban would l>e ex-blm."
Ace, Ajax an,d United may not be pecttd qurln.g the win ter months, Despite ber limited public expo.4;ure to
very-iippy names for a company. sahumacber add. "'It's not unusual to hit date, Mrs. Sayers' conCidence is un-
but they're common oonelheless. 15 percent In the winter mcnlbs... derstandable. Sbe'.s been DU1king funny
'Every once in a while M>methlng At present. Jbe acting district ex· raca ever slnce ahe was old enough to
better In a name comes along. ecuUve said there .are no plans to clOle stand in fronL or a mlm>r. She bas en-
Take tll6 repossession ouUit that any ICbools. "I don't see thit as an tertaioed children in the bomb sbclten of
bagged a ear in San Clemente epidemic. World W•r U London, entlced her
Wednesd>Y night. · '"It's j1131 the Ume or year wllen people gnmdcblldreo Into giggles wlimevtr the1
·-The flnn, op.era~ out oJ Lone.. colcluohl&.1'... ' were llllbappy, •Jl\l . lel'.Ved • as B e a c b , I s • P h a n lo m Scbumlcher noled there I• no '"N<lgltborbood Nanny w!lb the Funny ~t:S!OC'S." . part\cular cuto« J)olrit at which percen-hoes" for countless other youngsters.
"'!;he onl y problem is that I'm getting
old nOw and can't.get my musc:les to pull
the way they used'"to. But l know I've got
a. least that one good fa ce left."
f\1rs. Sayers-ftrst became serious about
funny faces during \\1irld -War IL -
"I would imitate littler and Goering
arid' .Goebbels. and Ul(' kids would just
sq ueal with laughter," she recalls. "It at
least took their minds off the bombs ."
Since that time. she 's had Jess pressu re
to practice. But she has developed her
o'A·n version of Girn and Bear It.
"If I get real mad at someone, ru just
make a funny face instead of spouting
,,off. that cause's them to laugh-, and then
when they laugh I'm noL so mad."
f\1rs. Sayers. who" lives with her
daughter at IJ080 Tilton Circle. hopes Jo
niake money g1rning so that she can vis'it
grandchildren in New Zealand she's
ncv-~ seen.
Tustin Trustees Deny
Grievance by Teacher
By CANDA CE PEARSON
ot ,,.. DtllY ,ilM , • .,,
Tustin Union High Schotl District
trusttts have decided that a Mission Vie-
jo High School teacher does not have a
grievance against a letter of reprimand
Irvine Pla1mers
Eye Town Center
-
Ir\'inc ci1y planning commissioners
tonight wiU study four architects' con-
ceptions of the ru1ure development of
Town Center, the· residential, commercial
and civic building comple.1 adjacent to
UC lrvine. .
Commiutoners meet at 7:30 in city
hall , 4201 camptls {)rive.
.
placed in his personnel file which accuses
him of ··coercive" actions.
The teacher, Jim Wehart"' of Dana
Point. said \Vednesday he is de liberating
on "''hethcr to take the matter to court.
The question of the letter 'vruten by
Mission Viejo High principal Rubert
Bosanko has gone as far as it C'an in the
district hearing process. school oflicials
sa id.
Wt>han, a math tc~chcr and pl"('Sident
or the Tustin Secondary Teachers As-
sociation, filed for a grievance hearing in
an effort to have the letter remov ed from
his personnel fil e.
A three.member hearing panel -CO!ll·
(Set GRIEVANCt:, Page: f )
Irvine Patrol Unit
Kills Company Cow No action on the Proposals is expected
but Irvine Company officials will unveil ··• the I of the f • A vehicle-pedestrian aC'<'ldcnt at ti as promilR'U resu ts •rm 5 dilrkctied Irvine interSCcUon left a four-
architectural design competition. whee.led vehicle demollshl!d and a four-One of the four proposal s may win the
design contract for the unusual blend of ~ged stroller dead at the scene early
·"partmentJ, single family homes, shops ay. -
and govemmenl.al buildings city and 1be wrecked police car driven by
tr'1ine ~Companf oCtk:lals have agreed lrv~ne Patrolman Harry Ehrlich was
should make up lht Town Center area. identified as Unil 4415 following the 4:23
The l.'OmplCll Wiii be built on land a.m. tragedy al campus Drive and Ze<
hetwetn Unlvmtty Regional Park •nd St,..,L
the UCI CilillXI.! be~verrcu·~·VRC'l'f.,,lln!Jdl--'l'lt'l'bioO..:dt:ad U>W Will ow1itd br the I
Uruversily tlflvu.. · Company.
Iii employes l<>Ok the w abortlt tagea ol sludenta absent would requir< "Oilldteo. wbo know abou\ me ,re
1----1--litlorwnildiiil' 1111-....-.,----=+:-.tlle-oclo!ll!tg:-ol'inlCll"1it1eto, .. !Jprir-. u-~at,rayr1sting me""tolt"lakre f'llnn, f~es, n.....iiy by counly beallh aulborllies. and I don't mind al II~" tk .. ys. •
) r • •
( ·1
polltital dlHcn.~nct's in the past two years
and reap "the most significant legislative
achievemen1s of the past quarter century
1n Catif'ITrnin "
He referred to the \Velfare Rerorm Act
of 1971 and th(• $1.l-billion school finance--
property tax relief program he signtd ln-
lo law last month.
\Vith the 1972 education finan ce
measure. schools have the financial
capacity to provide a quality education
for every child, Reagan sa id .
A major shart' of the funds .,.,·ill romr
rrom a one cent per dollar hike in the
state sales tax beginning June L
President's
Move Comes
As Si1rp1·ise
\\'1\StlJNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on today abolii;hed mandatory ~·age-price
control s except in the food and bealtb in-
dustries. Jn their place. he established a
system of voluntary wage and pri ce
guidelines -t>acked by the threal of,
government enforcement.
The surprise move -far more sweep-
ing than had been . expected -came as
Nixon asked Congress for a one-year ex-
tension of hi s authority to control wages
and prices.
The Prc·sident aboli shed the Pay Board
and the Price Commission but retained
the Cost of Li\'ing Cou,ncil to manaaa hit
Phase 3 economic system .
The program, \lo'hich immediately
replaces the Phase 2 system established
ir: Novembe r 1971. "is sel£-adminlstering
and based on voluntary compliance," the
\\'hite House sa id.
No longer w i 11 large businesses and
labor unions have to get prior govern-
men t appro,.al for wage or price hlltes -
rxcept in "special problem areas" which
Nixon listed as food process.iQi aad
retailin g, and the health Industry.
The President also continued the
present system of looser mandatory eon·
trols over t.-onstruction wa e increases
fin sa1 t e presen vo un ary e ort to
keep iiiterest rates do.,.,·n would slay in
effect.
But for those industries and unions
freed today from mandatory controls, the
government retains the right to mo'o'."e in
with ~tiff action to roll back
unreasonable increases.
Nixon said in a message to Congress
that hi s goa l is to reduce the innation
rate to 2.5 percent or less by the end of
1973. He said his oo-day Phase 1 wage·
price freeze and his Phase 2 mandatory
cont rols cut the inflation rate by nea rly
half -to about 3.5 percent.
Nixon's new program abolishes rent
controls and is intended to "allow
reasonable flexibility" in wage and price
increases. Secretary of the Treasury
George ...:huhz told ne .... ·smen.
Shultz said the government \o;ould keep
close tabs on the new system and those
"'·ho don't comply ''are going to get clob-
bered."
He also said while the Phase III pro-
gram goes into effect immediately, thfre
i''Jli be a 90-day transition period to clear
"' !Su CONTROLS, Page Z) 0
Orange Coast
Weather
The weatherlady predicts the Qr.
ange Coast \\'ill experience variable
clouds and continued lair weath('r
on Friday. The h.igh is expected to
be 58, the low 48.
INSIDE TODAY
TIU! 250-member Brotherhood
fJf Sptrit In Northfield, flta.ss.,
ha.s lenrncd t '1 a t brotlierhood
u1011'! fill stomachs and pay rtnt,
nnd adult me,nbtrt art being
requirerJ to take Jobt. S!ory o-ri
Page 14 .
L.M. hY• n IM'f!M U.11
C.Nfwlli. S, 11 M11hlll "llflft ,. ci.. .. n. ,,.,. ... ,,.,_, ,.,.. •
C-ln tJ °"'lllH C-'1 t.f c,__., ,, ''""' ,..,_, t• O.ltl fllttlcft 1 ,_.. .. fl
•flffrill ,_ ' $ftldl Martldt 1•1t
l:llwtllMMftl ~27 Ttl9\'h.IM M ,IMllc:t O·tt -n..ttr. »47
...... lllt It...-. 1 '#Mfll9t f
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•
2 DAlLY PILOT IS
Canapaip ,...,.. Eorce'• FitAt
Black Kilkd
HURTSBORO, Ala. (UPI) -A
polk<min, Ille lll'ilt black hired on
the r .... here, and a black janitor,
warming hlm!clf In clty hall, were
shot to death early today in this
east«ntraJ Alabama town, oUJ-
cials said.
Charges Hurled
Qpponents
Bominme
-At 'Nixon' Group Hearin g
Th• slayer eocaped with the po-
liceman'> .SS.Caliber plstol in a
blue and green city police car re-
covered several hours later behind
a motel in Columbus, Ga .• Pol.lee
Cblet Jobmy Turner aaid.
Turner said officer Alglc Long,
33, and Robert Jimbo Threet, 60,
\\.'ml shot rour times each with a
. 38-caJiber \.\'f_fil)On. ~
From P age 1
FACILITIES. ••
pleUng schools, "That will come out of
)'Otlr salary."
King, a planner !or 20 yean, has work-
ed , as dl.!trlct liaison with the state on
funding for schools, with architects on
designs and with developers on the
dedication of sites.
He was not called into executive
session or told the reasons for the
board'! action at th.is time. Neither was
Brown.
Trustee Gratian u Bidart moved to
abolish the two positions. Trustee Joe
Peterson seconded the motion,
Who ls taking over direcUoo of the re--
mainder of the buildlng program was
uncertain today.
District Superintendent Richard Welle
could not l;le reached this morning to ex-
plain wbat the new administrative setup
would be.
One achool district official saict the
reorganization of duties was "under con-
sideration" and the building program
might be moved to the business depart·
ment, under Assistant Superintendent
Rex Nerison.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Justice
Department today accused the Flnance
Committee to Re-elect the Preaident and
three deteated congressional candidates
or violations of federal election laws.
The four criminal actions were filed in
U.S. District Court here.
The eight-count criminal information
fil ed against President Nixon's finance
committtc charged the committee,
through. its treasUJer, .Hugh P. Sloan,
gave C. Gordon Liddy, a leg~I adviser to
the panel, cash sums in the amount of
$12.000, $12,000 and .$5,300, without receiv·
ing a receipt.
Liddy. once a White House aide, is one
of six persons charged with polltical es-
pionage and currently on trial for aHeg-
edly breaking into Democratic national
headquarters last summer.
He was fired from the c.ommittee to
Re-elect the President when he re'fused
to answer questions about the break-in.
The committee was charged ln three
counts with failing to report these
expendltures to the General Accounting
Office and with failing to obtain a receipt
for and make a GAO report on an ad-
ditional $2,000 Liddy spent.
Maximum penalty-upon conviction on
each count Is one year in prison and
11,000 fine.
Others charged were:
-Frltzjor P. Thygeson, a Peace and
Freedom party candidate for the House oi Representatives from :he 40th District
of caufornia who won the June 6 primary
Voluntary Price
Control Ne ws
Se nds Market Up
bUt wu defeated in the general election.
The 40lh district includes the we.st.cen-
tral area q( San Diego County, a~ two-
thirds ol the city ol San Diego, Corooado,
North island and part$ or El CajM and santee.
-Olarles W. Johnson, Democratic can-
didate for the House in the 17th district
of Ohio who lost in tlM! May_2 primary ..
.;:.WillianlC. 11aden, Democratic can·
didate for the House in the 14th district
of Pennsylvania who lost in the April
prim&ry,
Co~t Offic~r
Urges Teen
' Not to Kill
By JACK 81\0BACK
.... .,.,., P4i.t , ....
Airports are alright in their place -
some other place. .
'lbls, at least, seemed the conceoaus
Wednesday in 8anta Ana. The occasion
WU a citizen Marin( board ol the
Southern Clll/omla Association ol
ooverl>menta (SCAO) taking llOUlldlnp
in Santa Ana 'M a regiOJJal ali:port study.
-Asecoridmeetlng by the group will be
held in Los Alamitos MBrch 21.
1'bo6e from El Toro-Mission ·Viejo
thought Chino Hills in the northern part
ol the county an ideal site for an airport.
Brea or Yorba Linda residents think
joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station is a great idea.
Newport Beach residents· seemed to
think anywhere else but Orange County
Airport Is fine. •
Bart Spendlove of the saddlebocl: Area
Coordinating Councll; Wayne Moody ol
Laguna Beach; Edward L. Olsen of
Laguna Hllls Leisure World FoundsUon
and Mu Scbachner of Irvine afl favored
Chino Hilll.
By L. PETER KRIEG Wayne Wedin . city manager of Brea,
01 lh• D•llY ';'°' s1.tH and a Yorba Linda councilwoman were
A Newport Beach policeman talked 8 flt violently opposed to aoy .north county t, :#!.. airport and especially Chino Hills. 14-year-old Costa Mesa youth out ol Col. John Lowman was for Chino Hills ..
shooting a man in a tense, beachfront Controve rsial Site He's one of the promoters ot the facility.
confrontation late Wednesday night. Gordon Jones, director Planning
But Officer Michael Sullivan said he San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, south of San Clemente, has a Engineering for the Irvine Company op--
ha c! to threaten to shoot the youth to get generating capacity of 450,000 kilowatts and has been in operation posed El Toro use and supported j
him to drop his own gun. since Janu ary 1968 . Dotted lines show area where Southern Cali· restricted use of Orange County Airport .. \
Sullivan said he was in an upstairs fornia r:dison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company He said lhe Marine air station there
room at the Balboa inn investigating an hope to place two additional twin reactors, representing a five-fold in-should be abandoned.
attempted rape there about midnight crease in power capability. Atomic Energy Commission hearings on Col. Murray Staples of El Toro
when he heard. a commotion about a the matter begin.in S.an Diego Tuesday. Marines vigorously repeated the Corps'
block away. opposition to joint~ of the facility.
He saJd be nn to the scene, where he Kenneth Carr, San Clemente City
came upon a youth, who he said was manager opposed camp Pendleton as a
holding a man at gunpaint. ... Court Nom:nee Adm;ts site. · The youth was saying "I'm goMa blow . . , ., . ., Newport Beach Mayor Donald McGin-
your brains out. We're going to go down nis argued that Orange County Airport
to the beach and you're going to get should revert to commuter and private ''It is not really known at this point,"
another Jistrict official said. "Dr. Welte\
is the only one who can shed light on it."
A few months ago, the board promoted
Dr. Welte to the position of Superin-
tendent and named long·time . ad·
') ~strative chief Ralph Gates as
~pe.rintendent emeritus.
yours for finking . on me," Officer flying me. He accused county govcm-
NEW YORK {UPI) -The stock Sullivan related. · H D •d N t G d t ment of dragtlng its feet. market soared on President Nixon's an· Sullivan said he got the drop on the e l 0 ra ua e Dale Rumme\. chairman of the Costa
nouncement today that Phase Ill controls youth with his service revolver, but the Mesa Airport Study Committee. recom·
will be largely voluntary except for food, boy refused to drop the .32 automatic he mended strict controls on land use
health and construction. Trading on the boldi . •• d · •· J · alt ·r New York Stock Exchange was active. was ng in uie man's face and con-LOS ANGELES (AP) -William Clark \1·as to spend a year at an Augustinian aroun airpori.:i . arger _airer use 1
The closely watched Dow Jones linued shouting at the m8n that he would Jr., nominee to the California Supreme seminary in New York state. quieter and unifonn standards of noise
hotll Pqe l
average of 30 blue chip industrials ran up shoot him. Court, has con!inned reports he never \Vhi!e attending Loyola in the early coHntroJ. ·d th 'ti sed more than 12 points in the first 40 "I'm going lo kil11ou first," Sullivan finished undergraduatt education and e sa1 e comm1 ee oppa an
minutes of trading after the an-said he warned the youth, who finally failed Jaw school. 1950s. Clark said, he worked full time offshore airport and called the SCAG
-uncement. turned away and dropped his weapan. during the day as an insurance claims report unrealistic in regard to private GRIEVANCE ·-Off! sun· 'd the th Clark said Wednesday he was working aVl·au'on.
At 10 a.m. PST the average we up peared cerio beiv:d::• the .J~ a~ full-time during bis college years. He ad; adjuster. He started to raise a family He was for study of Chino Hills, EJ • • • 15.35 points to 1,061,41. But it fell later alcohol, as did two companions, one 16 dcd -he never represented himself as and, he said, "I. got into a little grade Toro, Pendleton _ anything but the
P>tecl of one administrator, one teacbe:r and closed up 5.64. and a 19-year~ld man identified as David holding any degree. trouble." present site.
and eoe allegedly tteulral third part,y -The market had been cautiously wwman, of 1n•4 Linden Place, r •• ta Loyola University said Wednesday He left school alter talking \vith a Brian Douglass, general manager or ~~~ I hour ssl th aw'aiUng· details of the new guidelines , ... w ~ Clark dlsq a1·1·ed fr f the IWQIW\;leU a our-se on 8 moo d · Mesa. was u 1 1 om ur r school official. Clark said,' ... addlng, "I the F\Jllerton A~-rt reminded listeners d •-Jded th let•· ·•···'d land an pr1cea were ranging slightly higher, d In h · thiit. t th -" """ ago an ~ e "'l'r 1WUU1 s • o,e Wyman was arrested and ~ked on courses ur g 1 s year a e don't think ~was on the dismiSSt!-1 list." .., Iha~ noise w.m nOt the only prob!~. "We Weban awealed to the school boii'd, with Dow up lem than 2 points at 9 suspicion ol being drunk in..publio. Loyola Law &citool eve .division Jn ije used hiJ Ja9' IJ~l credits t0 :.brtvet-.felativtjy . uiet planes ,.but people
which this week upheld the bearing '·Mine wan Street has shown its con-Police Identified th~,1victhp of the in· !956.tilri Petiltoit M 1r niilslon WU quMify th ~ th«C31tfornJ81>ar ex: ' ob]ect to any increase iii overflights," he
panel's ruling. den,yi.Qg lM" grle.vance. cern "Over the. threat of inflation this cldent as ·Victor J . Kuruck'121, but declin· denied. amination and pas~, he said, on his revealed.
1be incident in question look place in year, the lifting of price controls was ed to release his add.re$5 because he Clark also left Stanford University second attempt. Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport
April 1972 when a memo bearing Wehan 's viewed as constructive for corporate feared fu.rther reprisals. before graduating, the university said. He practiced .Jaw in Oxnard for 10 Noise Aba~men~ Commjttee of Newport
signature on Teacher's Associiition sta-profits: The offiCer said he did not know where Clark, 41 , is a state appellate judge in years before being chosen by Reagan as Beach did bis comparison of the needs of
tlcnety was distributed at Missi6n VieJo the juvenile obtained the weapon , Los Angeles. He is former Cabinet a Superior Court judge for San Luis 75,000 people who fly planes to the 20,000
High. although he claimed~ have foun(l it. secretary for Gov . Ronald Reagan. 'vho Obispo County, who are disturbed. "Quiet planes are a
ltJsaid that teachers at lbe school who Frotn Page 1 The boy was held overnJgbt, witli a·d· nominated him to take the Supreme At that time, the county bar associa· dream," he argued. "Flights will double
had participated. in supervising ex-mission scheduled today at Orange Coun-Court seat of Justice Raymond Peters, tioQ.adopted a resolution of censure, ac-in 12 years with increasing noise."
tracyrric:ular student activities "met and CONTROLS, • ty Jcvenile Hall on a charge of assault "'ho died last week . cusing Reagan with the "political ap-Air California President Robert W. esta'1liJhed, the fall minimum schedule of • • with intent to commit murder. "While I was never a member of the pointment" of a nonre·sident of the coun-CliHord reminded that hls firm must
rates to be charged for supervision in John . Birch Society, I had clients who ty . serve the public but still wants to be a
1972-73 term. up a backlog of cases pending before the were," Clark said. However, the bar supported Clark later good neighbor.
"All members of tbe professional Pay Board and Price Commission. 'Sil t A ti• ' He said he "agreed \~ith some of the in his election campaign for the "We have eliminated smoking engines
association at Mission Viejo High School All new actions, however, will go en UC on group's concepts" during the early 605 , judgeship, and he won by a large margin. and follow all sound reducing pro-
will be expected to abide by this before the Cost of Living Council and its but not all of them. He described his feel-A past president of the group said this cedllres." he stated. "The new larger
schedule," the memo sald. !1ew p~y and price divisions, effective • .L ings as "nothing more than sympathy.'' week that Clark was held in "very hlgh planes will be quieter and carry more
I --~i.I~t·~wa~s~lhe~~l~at~te~r~~a~a~h~Bo~~e-.J.[~~~~;.;;7,:::;!;~~~;:::--..!)ft_-1.0~~l,.4~. lll.o:-11 ...... ---'.;i&"'-&aid...the-leasoR he left .Statlfor•d-...,,gal'dl!-when-he ieft--to-take-the-l-..os'-passenge1 s 1 educing the uumbe I-.$Ill · oun coercive. In letter Under Phase III, a new labor-manage--" several se1nesters after entering in_ 1949 Angeles past. flights."
plaCed in Weban's file. Bosanko cau-ment advisory committee -with
tioned the teacher to "conduct bimsell in members including top industrialists and
a more eQµcal manner: in the future."-such labor leaders as the AFlrCIO's
Teachers at that time were paid p.so George Meany -wW decide whether the
an hour .to supervise dances, football · current 5.S percent ·ceiling on wage in-
games and other extra events. The creases should be modified.
memo asked for $5 an hour, which That standard remains in effect until
Weban says was comparable With what the panel meets and the Cost of Living
wu being paid ac other schools in the Council decides whether to accept its
same district. • ' recommendations.
Wehan said Wednesday be is consu!Ung As a general guide for Phase Ill, the
wltb the California Teachers Associatlon White House said price increases should
(CI'A) and the National Secondary not exceed increases in costs.
Educators Association to see if they will ''Even \Y.here costs have increased." a
expend legal fund$ for a civil case. \Vhite House summary said. "prices
He contends that Bosanko should have should not be increased il the firm's prof·
shown him the letter and allowed him to il margin exceeds the firm 's base-period
respond before placing it in the file . profit margin.
"Alternatively." the summary added,
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
.. "a firm may Increase prices to reflect
increased cost without regard to its prof-
it n1argin if the firm's average price in-
creases n•ould not exceed 1.5 percent in a
yea r:· ,,. °'"'" eo.it DA1Lv P1Lor, ~ 'Mllttl Nixon told Congress the mandatory
" combllWd tflt N-'"'"" 1s Ml~ 1111 wage and price control system would be
,.,. Ot•nvt '"* Pullllihi..., eorni-v. $fta· continued "with special vigor for firms NII edtttor. ... OUlll1111«1, MMd•Y lhrolf':ih F'ic11y, !Of' c°'r' Mtw, ,.,_, Bcitn, involved in food processing and food
th1ntl1'1Qleoi 8'.t<ll 'FOVnl.til! V.tllN. l 4<1una re tailing."
B•W!. 1rv1nt1s~'"1~UJV< ••d s~n c1e,.._1,, He said he was establishing a govern-
s. .. J111n C•1>""'~"· >-s1no1e ·~1on11 ment committee to review federal policies
..ii•iori " ""'°11\l>td S•tvrd.tl'\ •M sv00•~~. affecting food ~rices and a nongovern·
'"" pr~lpal ll<.ollhll'l•M cr.1111 •I al JlO W•\I
ea1 s1ree1, c~i. Ml\•. c~i.u>rni~. ,,,16• ment advisory roup to examine other
Robeit N. w •• d \\'DYS of stabilizing food pric es.
r rr11den1 •nd p11011111~, These steps will be coupled, he said,
1\ith concentrated errorts to bold do..Vn J .. e ~ It Curlev v,,, r11Jioeri• t nd c,_.,~1 M...,., food prices by increasing food supply.
Thom•• Keovil The eftorts to bolster supply include
earior m<1ves to increase grain acreage, expand
Thoflll•• A. Murpll;11, hvestock production and move; com·
A silent auclion of artworks donated by
members of the Mission Viejo Associa-
tion of Artists and Cr:lftsmen wilJ high-
light ,the associ!llion's meeting ~t 7:3()
o'clock tonight at the home of Bob and
Jane Jennings, 25661 Santo Drive, Mission
Viejo.
The meeting will also feature a repre-
sentative of the .Saddl~ck Valley Uni-
fieQ School District bonds campaign. The
district is holding a $28 million bond-$18
million state apportionment election Feb.
6.
The public is invited. Profits from the
auction viill go to the association's schol·
arship fund .
Ethel F. Doty
Services Fridav . J
Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday in Santa Ana for Ethel F. Doty,
who represented Santa Ana tn the 1907
Pasadena Rose Parade. She died Monday
at age 83.
Mrs. Doty, of 2414 N. Park Blvd .. Santa
Ana. went to Satna Ana High School and
later taught piano in Los Angeles.
-Services and buMal are al Fairhaven
~lemorlal Park in Orange.
Mrs. Doty, whose parents came to the
area in 1875, is survived by a niece, r.trs.
Ruth Gavett of Santa Ana. and two
nephews, Edward and Arthur Van-
denberg of santa Ana.
,,__,Int Eo1tcr modities to market more rapidly{
a..1 .. H. lo" '"''" P. Noll Present mandatory controls on the 'lrv:ne ls' U1• :t
""'"9111 Mtneolnl E4u'" health industry also will be continued un· " ""
Offlc• 11! modified on recommendation of a Colt
H•a~a~JE7 ·="° ~o~;;i~id~uncil on HeaJth, the White Meets T oniglit
Hlill'ltlflt,.,. a.oc11: 1ms ••~" •DVl..,••• In addition, Nixon' esUblishcd a Health . left 0.-19! )O;S Hortfl e.1 C.lfll.rlo. Reil Industry Advisory C:OmmJtttt to rccom-Oi'ganlRn of the "Irvine ts "
, .. ., ..... '7141 MMJJl mend changes in government programs citywide arta festival planned in May will
Cf.WW Afrn.rtlt.111 '42·1171 lo curb the rise in health costs. meet tonight at 7:45 in Rancho Sin Joa-s.. t .... •ts All 0.,•rt!Mlltt: The President told C:Ongrtss his quin IJntennediate School, 4861 Mtchelson
1 • ..,_. 4t2-4"4JO revamped economic policies "can mean .Drive, University Park.
~\ 1,,,, Of•• to.it f'vtlll.till'!t ever. greater price stability with less • George Knowles and Loo Frldhandler ~,. .. -,.,.,.., m1111r•t!wtl. restrictive bureaucracy.'' will dla.cuu the statl.ll of the non-profit . !::''::. :uc'!t:'!T'~"'::.1~ .. _ But he sald;thetrluccess depe-nds "on corJ>(l'atfon belng considered as a com·
-...... "' ...,....,.. ._. a firm spirit of. self-restraint both .within munity vehicle for arts and cuJtij[al .in·
....,. tl~ff ., C0tt• MttL the federaJ rovemment and among the ttrests. =a~~t.,, !Mii ..,,1, ~~-ffllM~ general public." And he Sllld C.Ongress Alao schtdaled for dlscu.!sfon are stand-1---~~-~-:·:'""::,...:::-:::•~:·===~~1-~•;\IO~ul~d~act "with a high sense of fiscal ardl ror entrltt In lhe Town Ce n t e r I it'lipoualbtttt:y'"irractfng-on-federat 1pc1ld· tcrt11 eihtbttlon.., May--lt -to-2&-end-tbe
Ing. question ol entry !co&
I
NO ONE SEW G.E.
FOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE
lllflllJlll
17.6 Cu. Ft. NO FROST
REFRIGERATOR
• rr~ff ho'~' VII IQ !65 lbe..
• 3 ldjut1able •"91~es.
• r.o..e..t.i, ,1.ot.ouf men P9' ""1.,c1=:-, • t""" W11et,1ble bl11• hol4 2(3 ~.
• S•pata!e t~rr>Pe••!ur11 CGtl(tQIJ •
•" lloLLJ (II.if (Ill ..... '°' -r c.1..-..
31CJ96
------• • QUIET BUILT-IN DISHWASHER
rc ...:-IUl-
!OfT 1000 WAin lltl1010 re-r fie MttlttlriJl9
• 2 li•tl Tltor•·Wr\ili
, A1ttflfftic DtltfJlll ~
·:~~7 15996' .. '
•UPflTCHT
CONVENIENCE
•Positive s.r~tyDoart.lda
•Fut free-zU.1
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• ),,_Mi12Rilllt .T•....,._ • .a fWI CYlllt-NonMI. ,. _ _. ,_""' ---• $Mtio!t•f) ._ ...
"LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • , • RAISED ELSEWHERE"
Membtr of 90 DAY
C11ilornl1'1 i.."'"t CASH
I] Cooporatlvo Buying WriM UNOYD
Group With Tho CllOIT • Vol~"''-BuyJng mi· " •••••••••a.a• Power of 11 0 511ra • ..._. m
---r;;:x:2J ·•--~115..JlmORT~-tma-Mesa w Phone 54li181 ·
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f.
'
._uniiogion Beaeh
Founiaio Valley
. .,.. .
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
voi:. 1>6, NO. 11, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1973 TEN CENTS
Valley Says 'No' to Lat~ Rep~rt on Flood Wall
Fountain Valley has rejected a late en·
vironmental lmpact statement on a flood
wall already built by the Orange County
Sanitation Districts.
'Ibe san1tation district began building
the wall ln November to protect its Foun-
tain Valley sewage treatment pl.ant from
a pouible break in the Santa Ana River
levees ..
The clty Planning Comm ission rejected
the environmental impact stalement on
P~ing Appeal
that wall Wednesda y after city officials
pointed out lhat the statement did not
say where the diverted water would go.
Olf.ci.als fear It '-'Otlld be funneled down
Enis Avenue and into a housing tract at
the intersection of Elli.s and Ward Street.
"We're not sure that would happen."
explained City Engineer Ben Minamlde.
"But the water would be diverted in that
direction and jl would ha\•e to go
somewhere.··
•
Ci ty ofJtcial! were also conctmed
because it a.ppeartd tht aanltation
district may have violated the law by not
1ubmitting the impact statement btfurc
lbe wall was built.
"lt's unfortunate lhe district didn't
follow proper procedure," said Planning
Dlrector Clint Sherrod.
Sherrod added that he did not view tht
problem as serious because "the diBtrtat
has always been very cooperative with us
rice
and I'm sure we'll be able to resol\'e thi~
problem."
lie said .. the first I knew about that
wall was when I saw 1t being built.·•
The wall, valued at $84,000, runs
several hundred feet along Ellis Avenue
and abuts tbe Santa Ana ruver levee. It
was authorized by the directors of . tbe
county· Joint Sanitation Districts 1n
October as an emergency project to be
ready for this \\'inler's flood dongcr
S<:ilSOll •
.. .
''It y.·as 1ndu::atcd lo me thnt thlS \.\'all statements and whal do not''
should be designed and bt.ult as rapidly Preble also said he could not say "oft
as po~ible ." said Doug Preble. an the top of my head" whether or not
associate enginetr for lhe sanitaUon homes might be endangered by the walk.
dL!ltrlct. "This i11 "''hat was done." ..._··One of the big reasons for environ~
Prehle admiHed that "lhe wall was mental impact statements is lhat you
built first and !he report filed later. but would bring an outside point of vifw to
there was no intent to do it that way." consider :a project," explained Planning
He explained that "nl the point when . Director Sherrod . "In this case,. the
"'t' began "'Ork 11 "''as not clear. and still sanitatiOn d1slrlc1 might have profited by
IS not clear. "'hnt projects need 1n1pact tonsideru1g lhe city's 1>01nt of view,"
Pres.ident's
Douglas Orders
Farr Released t
Move Comes
As Surp1·ise
\\'ASHl~C.TON <AP ) -Presidelil Nix·
on today :ibolished mandatory wagt-price
controls except in the food and health irr
dustries. In their place. he established a
system or voluntary v.•age and price
guidelines -oacked by the threat of
government enforcement.
WASHINGTO N (AP) Justice
William O. Douglas today ordered
reporter William T. Farr freed from jail
while he appeals a contempt conviction
for a story about the 1970 Man.5011 trial.
(See editorial, Page 6).
Jury Ponders
Peters' Sa11iity
. I
In 2 Killin gs
By TOM BARLEY
01 HM Ollly ,llet Stiff
Farr. 38. has been in jail 46 days.
Douglas' order that the Los Angeles
Times reporter be freed "on his OY.'TI
recognizance" was to be followed taler in
the day with an opinM>n b~the justice.
Farr's attorney, Mark .HUrwitz, said
Douglas' clerk told him he sent a tele-
gram notifying I,os "'1geles County Sher·
iff Peter Pitcbe.ss of the order releastn&'
the newsman.
Hurwitz said he assumed the telegram
would arrive "within two or three hours ''
and that Farr woUld be rele&ed then.
He-expected the ne1A•sman to be re-
leased this aft ernoon.
Told of the decision, Farr told nel-'.'S·
men in the jail before his release: "I'm
very pleased to hear It."
He said he planned to return to his
\\'Ork as a reporter for the Los Angeles
Times.
OAIL Y ,.ILOT •Jtllet• bJ """ Ulltr
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S GRANDMA SAYERS DISPLAYS HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
Wlth a little Practice, No rmal Fae• (left) Becomes a Ticket to Stardom
Grandma Has No. 1 'Girn' Farr was held in contempt by Superior
Court Judge Charles I-I. Older or Los
Angeles for writing a story about a pro-
spective witness' statement that the By JOHN ZALLER potential of her fa ce Y.'as a "G1rn Con-loy,·er hp over the tip of her nose. seem·
Mamon "family" planned to murder oi nM oa11, 1"1i.t stttt tesl" sponsored by radio station KltlPC 1n~ly swallowing it.
several movie stars. Farr was then Frances Sayers c:learly has a face that (A gim. according to Webster's, is a The overall appearance is at once
. The surprise move -far more swee~
ing than had been expected -came as
Nixon asked Congress for a ooe-yeaT ex4
tension o( his authority to control wages
and prices.
The President abolished the Pay Board
and the Price Commission but retained
the Cost of Living Council to manage his
PhMe 3 econontic: syatem.
The program. V."hich Immedia tely
ri:-places the Phase 2 system established
ir. November 1971 , "ls self.administering
und based on voluntary compliance," th e
\\'hile House said.
No longer w I I I large businesses and
labor union s have to ge-t prior govern·
mcnt ~PP•'O'a l for wage or price hikes -
except in "special problem areas" which
Xixon listed as food processing and
rrtailing, and tbe health industry.
An Orange County Superior Court jury
that has already convicted Gig Peler5: of
Huntington Beach on t"'·o counts of first
degree murder went into the jury room
today to determine if the crippled fonner
lifeguard was sane "'hen he killed his
a rents. +.-_:~Na~e..JtamaU1 \l.filliarils wot the juey
into sequestration after the delivery of
final arguments by prooecutor Pat Brian
and defense attorney Barry Tai'low and
the jurist's read~g of jnstructions
spttifically geared to the sanity issue.
(Related &tory Page 3).
working for the Herald·Examiner. makes others look ordinary by rom-contortion of the face.) h1lar1ously funny and tho roughly un·
01der hetd FmT in contempt for refut>>--•p"3"ri"!O"'n.;-------~-~----M""rs" . .,saorny.;;;rs""'w'"a"'s,.,,t!i<'"'h"a"n"'i!S4l""'o"'wn;;n;;,;;;,'";;:.--;na""'tlI"l"'51ri. In! as 1 er mo e con-
ing to divulge the names of the lawyers But until last month, this fact was not ncr or the contest suming her fa ce.
who supplied him with the ·statrment. appreciated by tlie 7i-year-old Fountain "We had hundreds or fine entries.·· "I saw it once in Ripley's Believe tt Or
During the trial. the judge imposed an Valley grandmother. p ~ re.ports KMPC disc jockey Gary Owens . Not . and I thought there must be some
order barring-lawyers and other 'r!al .. ,.faybe I was just used to it." she "But no on~ could do anything close to trick to it,·• s«ys Owens. "But she did it
participants from disclosing any in-says, "but I really didn't see anylhillg what she did." for us here 1n the studios and it's for
formation about the case. unusual about it before the contest. Of !\1rs. Sayers' trick is realty a simple rcnl.''
The President also continued the
present system or looser mandatory con·
trols o\1er oonstruction wage Increases
and said the present volwttary effort to
keep interest rates down would stay in
But for those Industries and uniOns
freed today from mandatory controls, the
government retains the right to move in
"''ilh stiff action to roll back
unreasonabfe increases.
Nixon said in a message to Congress
th,1 1 his goal is to reduce the inflation
ratr to 2.5 percent or less by the end or
19iJ. lie s;iid his 90-day Phase I wage·
price freezr and his Phase 2 mandatory
controls cut the inflation rate by nearly
hal f -to aboul J.5 percent.
Brian and Peters himself insist that
the fonner 1-luntington Beach High
SChool student was sane when he stabbed
Charles Peters, 55. through the heart and
s trangled Flora Peters •. 54. on April 21,
1971.
"I'm very pl••sed," Hurwitz said. -oourse, now J see it differently." one -for her. She juts he r jaw forward OY.'Cn~ ~·as so impressed that he 's "It's been a Jo~ battle."
Tarlow argued that his client's sanity
and Jud8Jnent had been impaired by his
long use of drup. He said Peters' three
days of wtrestricted testimony was ade-
quate proof of the defendant's insanity.
The jury's ruling will end the second
Superior Court trial of Peters, 24.
He added," e battle is not yet over."
Hµrwitz said the action by Douglas
means "at least one justice believes in
our c:ause . , , it gives us great hope for
the future." '
Farr asked Douglas 10 days ago to
order him released until the U.S. Cireuit
Court in San Francisco ru1e1 on an ap-
peal. 1be justice held up action until the
Los Angeles County counsel office
replied. (See earlier story, Page S).
For Beaches, Parks
Lib_fralize~ Drinking
Laws Receive Backing
Strong support for liberalized drinking echoed O'Keele's feelings that the cur·
laws at Orange County beaches and rent ban should be lifted except in areas
parks has come rrom three couoty IUCb as lrvine Park where deed ttStrlc-
harbors. beaches and parks com~ lions prohibit IL
missioners. "It's a h 1 .. h1.. ,....rsonal thing," Wblle commissioners Tuesday delayed ....,......, -
action on making any recommendation to Robinson said, "'but l agree with Tom
c:ounty supenisors, three b o a rd (O'Keefe). 0 u t information shows a
members uld they would fnor almost concern about whit might happen, rather
total a!>oU.hment of all liquor rmric-than statitlcl !hat sllow It did happen."
ti.ODI. RobinsCSI nlerftd to a JtaCf recom-
Llquor Is prohibited at all parts and mellllaliml !hat llllB"t<d lilti"8 the ban
beaches now. ln only a few areas, such u Dan• Point
"We should have as littl'-ltglslation Harbor, Fe1tbtrly Regional Park, O'Neill
and regulation as po!Sible until a specific Park aod Swllet Aquatic Pllrk.
problem develops," !llggested Com· ••we11. look at AllJ0,1• Wooley said.
missioner Thomas O'Keele. "Lots of peopla ., fishing and like ta
II• noted that the state has experienced take a ail·pack along with tllem. NtW',
no groat problem at Doheny.Stale Bea<b they're broaldng the law If~ do.
1'here liquor la allowed. "I'm for llberallilng u much Is. possl-
Commlssloa. O\alnnan Thom a 1 hie." Wooley said, "If people abuse the
Baldwin, who said he want<d a llUle privl!Of!e, there are 1a.., agaliMlt · being
more conaervaUve approach to tbe'iSsut. 'drunk ln public to talte osre of thtm.."
noted that not too many people are Comm!lsloaers delayed any action /or
awore that drinking ts I I at DoberlY. llO dB)'I ta allow tho commlsatoo'a two
But two other co Froolt:.;;:.-;neii,•;;;; PaUI Simons n
6»t;i.
•
• I
The thing.Jhat opened her eyes to the as far as ii \.\'i ll go. and then extends her jSee GIR N, l'age ZI
Co111puters Spew Dispute
Controversy Brenks Out in H untingwn Bench
By TERRY COVILLE
OI .. ~ly 'iW SI.ti
A controversy has erupted in Hun-
tington Beach over the city's $500,000
eomputet system and whelhcr or not ii
should be expanded.
The city coWM!il has ordered City
Administrator David Ro\\'lands to hire an
outside e.:i:pcrt to ev3luate the city's en-
tire computer operation.
The council also has refu~ to approve
a $196.000 expansion of the computer
system until the outside study Is com·
plete. 1be expansion was proposed last
11.·eek to add a police address file.
"l have serious debuts about this whole
thing (computers) at this time," 'stormed
Councilman Jade Green. "We wert sold
on this some years ago, but very little of
it has been done."
Beacli Parkin.g
Pass Available
Residenlt of Huntington Beach
can buy an aMUal parking pass lo
the city's oceanfront parking lot.
The pass to1ts llG and Is
available at the harbors and
beaches department, 1111 Paelfl~
Coast lllgbway. '
Families wiut a second ear c:an
buy • aecond piss for 1$. The I'll~
la good for parking on a spoe<
available basis at the be8cll park·
lot for an ol 1173.
t.Ia)·or Al Coen complained that the
computer operations never were ade-
quately explained to the oouncil. "I'd feel
a lot better if t coold reaUy understand
\1·hat the devi l you're talking about. I
don't."
frank "Ben" Arguello. the city's fi.
nance director and the man taking the
t'ntic1sm over the romputers. defends hi'i
operation.
"I feel the council ls completely right
fn looking at the system. If it can't stand
up under scrutiny. maybe we shouldn 't
have it," he said.
Ro"•lands has not yet hired lhe outside
expert. but he has spent the week in·
terviey,'ing candidates.
The computer controversy developed
primarily because of the cost of com-
puters. and their failure to do v.·hat coun-
cilmen expect o( them.
For llOffie lime,+city officials have talk·
ed about putting most ctty functions on
compute.rs. A land data bank is one func-
tion proposed.
The land data bank would c:ategorizc
every parctl of proptrty in tht city,
listing all possible information such as
Ol-'.'rler. type or building oo It and Its loc:a-
tlon.
So far , the data bank hasn't been
r!il.ablished, and C\)Uncllmen are angry
about that.
. Argu.cllo de.icDds the computer opern·
tlon, saying the land data bank and other
expanded uses are not far a\¥8y ,
The city has a Burroughs 8-2502 c:om-
putcr. Arguello calls It a third genera-
tion. m~lum system. lie says It Is c:ur-
rently used to capacity.
Uuntln&tonJl<ac.11'.s comP11tcrs handle
accounting, wale.r bllllng •. payroll. -
~··
business licenses and traffic records.
Last April. Huntington Beach became
the first city in Orange County, and only
the se(Ond in Southern California, to hold
a cOmputerized election.
"\lie we.re the only city to have a video
hookup (flashing precinct-by·precint't
results on a screen f and that amazed
ISt!t CO)tPUTERS. Page %1·
Huntington Bo )'
Falls to Rocks,
''·
Seriously Hurt
An 18-year-olrt Huntington Beach youdl was c.ritlcally Injured \fednH(lay wnen
he fell more than 40 feet onto the rocks
at Corona de! Mar State Beach.
Poll~ said Joseph Ray Castleman of
9902 Moor Circle. had climbed a c:liff
near the }elty "'ith a friend and a~
parently lost his footing when he started
lo climb down abo1.11 2:30 p.m.
The friend. Joseph Gib."°11, 9591
Innsbruck St.. Huntington · Beat'h, said
Castleman struck his head during the fall
a.nd then landed in wai~l.<fctp wattr.
Police said Gibson hurried down to
help Castleman and pulled him from the
water btfore running to gtt help.
Ca!tle.man was taken 10 Hoag
Menidl'l•I llospltat ..i,.,,. he i• under In·
tensive care for se:vcro head rnjurles.
Polk:e aald there are signs in the arta
clearl Matin that climbi the cliffs is proliib1 -· -.
Nixon's new program abolishes rent
controls and is intended to "allow
reasona!:lle flexibility" in wage and price
increases. Secretary of the Treasury
George ...:hullZ told newsmen.
Shullz said the government \\'Ould keep
close tabs on the new system and those
who don't comply "are going to get clob-
bertd."
He also said while the Phase J pro-
gram goes Into eff~ immediately, there
will be a !IQ.day transition period to clear
up a backlog of cases pending before the
Pay Board ar.d Price Commission.
AH new actions. however. will go
t6ee CO/loiiROLS, Pagr: !t ·
Orange Coast
Weather
Tht weathcrlady predicts the Qr.
ange Coast will experience variable
clouds and continued fair w£>athe.r
on Friday. The high is expected to
be 58, the low 48.
INSIDE TODAY
The 250471tmbtr Brotli.erhood
of Spirit In Northfield, Jfo.ta.,
luu Leorntd t /1 a 1 brotherhood
won't fill atomacha and pay rtnt.
and adult members are belt1Q
rtq1'.irtd to take jobs . Stt>r11 on
Paae 14.
•
t
•
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I
Z DAIL V PILOT ii
Sea Sanetuary
Bolsa Chica Marsli Study 011. Tap
Tiii! P-' -Bobo Cblcl alt
water manh sanctuuy wlll be studied
•'rtday by the C.lllomla Fish and Game
C.Ommlsaion. •
State Fish and Game o!Ucials hope to
win approval for the re-creation of a 4oo.
acre "natural" marsh In Bol.sa Bay. ™-8r
Huntington Beach. The plan also calls fOr
a tSO-acre public marina. ne fish and game plan is tied to ii
land swap with Signal Gas and Oil Corp.,
owner of nearly 2,000 acrts o! land ln
Bolaa Bay.
If allowed, the swap would give lhc
state 530 acres of prime land along the
mtana: side of Pacific Coast ffighy.·ay,
south of Warner Avenue.
In return, the state ~ould relinquish its
waterway rights inland. freeing that
acreage for private development. Siana! will actually give the state 300
acres. 'nle other 130 acres will be loaned
for 14 years, If, during the 14 yean ~=state Open.1 an ocean passage to tsa Bay, the extra 230 acres ~es
anent state property.
Kidnap Suspect
''Arranged Pla11"
To~ Family
him Wire Stmces
SAN OTEGO - A wealthy Sao Diego
industrialist who accuses a former
customer or kidnaplng him for $186,500
ransom l<slifled Wednesday lhe suspect
claimed lo have alr<ldy onanged lhe
wipeout of his entirt family.
Jamer-T. Hawthorne managed to es.
capo after being bound to a bed ill a beacl.
house be owns near San Diego with
neckties. He called tbe FBI to rcport the
alle ed abduction.
yron . Haridy, 4f,C)-r Westminster;-is
on trial in San 'Diego County Superior
Cotlrt stemming from the Oct. 6 incident
leading to placement of ransom money
which police staked out.
Handy was taken into custody near the
rtnsom pickup scene, after allegedly ab-
ducting Hawthorne at gunpoint earlier
following a meeUng to arrange some
lype ol bull,.... deal
"lie told me that be had a contract for
$25,000 ••. to take care of. me and my
family H I ever ldenlflled him or II the
plans fell lhn>uP . ' ." Hawthorne -· Tho 9lcllm bad arranged to withdraw
the, buge llUlll by telei>IJooo from bi.a bank
.. lawmen set • trai> for lhe alleged 'iid--·
Shooting Victim
Sues Policeman
Girl's Body Found
UKIAH (AP) -The body of a Willits
gtrl m.Jssing since Sunday has been found
in a rleld by a Mendocino County reserve
deputy on a routine patrol. The sheriff's
office said the body of Barbara Stroud,
18, was found sprawled Wednesday more
than a mlle from where her abandoned
car was discovered Monday. ..
DAILY PILOT
1'tle °""le~ DAILY PILOT wt1'i Mlk:h
la ~ 1tle N--.Prta. 11 llUblbtted b'i'
~or • .,.. Goiut..~llhlEll tompiiny, ~
Alt n 11i.n. •r• -'ltftlllr~-WY thni!IDft 'l
l'rilMy, Por Cot!• Me., Mewpol"I Bt 1ch,
ttvntlnl!Ol'I 8ff(n/F11<.m11ln v 111.y, L~une
8ffdt, lrvlne/SHldlr!Mck Mld Sin t i.menla/
Slln Juen C•llltff'lno. "" tlngte revion•I
"l!lon It put>ll\llecl S.l\INIYJ el'd SUfld.JYS.
The prlnclp1I publb,tlT119 plant l• 111 3.JO w~••
!l•W StrttT, CDtte Mew. C•1l111r"le, tlt1t.
Rel.art N. WeM
...... ldlftl end f>ullllll'>el'
Jeck R. Curley
Vb '"81diert! end OMull MllllOW
Tilom •• JCHota ·-.,..,.. •• A. Mvrplli11• MeMtlnl ldltor
a.rMI K. w.. llch•rd '· N.n HabtMt MIMClll'lt ~
fMfY c..111.
state alllda1I ..,. the manb propooaI
wW be i lao<lmart. to lhlt no C1110 bu
........... toe!. altmanb boltn.
Once eslabllabed, tbe manb win
become a natural preserve, open to lhe
public for view from the perimeters.
Fish and Game L'Ommissioncrs rneet
f'rlday morning in S&n Francisco. They
\\'ill be Uw first official state agency to
rule on the project, though the land S\l.'3P
must still be approved by the state Lands
Commission.
' Fron& Page 1
GIRN •..
trying to get btt on Rowan and Martln'a
Laugh-In. However, ~trs. Sayers la think~
ing bigger.
"I've· 1ee11 the man wbr-'1 the tr0rld
champion &lrner," ahe 1ay1, "and I don't
think he's so great. 1 think J could beat
him."
Despite her llmltta public eXJJ06ure to
date, Mrs. Sayers' confidence is un·
derstandable. She's been making funny
faces ever since she was old enough to
stand in front or a mirror. She has en·
tcrtained children in the bomb shelters of
World War II London, enticed her
grandchildren into giggles whenever they
were unhappy, aod served as
"Neighborhood Nanny with the Funny
Faces" for countless other youngsters.
"Children who know about me are
always asking me to make fUMy faces,
and I don 't mind at all," she says.
"The only problem is that I'm getting
old now and can 't get my muscles to pull
the way they used to. But I know I've got
lh least that ooe good face left."
Mrs. Sayers first became wtous about
fUMy facea during World War IL
"I would tmltate lllUer and Goertq
and Goebbels and the k!dJ would just
squeal with laughter," she recallJ. "It at
least took thelr minds off the bombs."
Slnce lh!l tnne,slfe'a had less pressure--
to practice. But she has developed her
own vei'sion Qf Glm and Bear It. •
"Ir I get real mad at someone, I'll just
make a funny face instead of 1poutlng
off. That causes them to laugh, and tben
when they laugh I'm not so mad."
Mrs. Sayers, who lives with her
daughter at 11080 Tilton Circle, hopes to
make money glrnlng 110 that abe can visit
grandchildren ill New ~and lht'a
nevr" seen.
Ff'Olll P,..e 1
CONTROLS . • •
Little Leaguers
Slate Signups WW Onlnie CIM!ty Hnot
............. OMc.
17175 •••c.h '°"'···"' M•Ui"t .-..u,.1,1 ,,0, ••• 790, 92"41 The Octan View American Uttle o... otnus 1.cague will conduct regbtr11tlon for sum-,
~ 1-.ctt· m ...,.., ..,__,.. mer baseball from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Jan .
C..te M .. 1 l:lll ww .. ., '""' 13, 14. 20 and 21, 11t the leamwo field, N""*1 ... CIU 1m H~ kl.ti-rd _,_,,.
kn c:~: •s "°'"' 11 ,,.,,.,,. 11.-..1 Stach Boulevard Rnd Warner Avenue.
Tel•11••1t• 17141 642-4)J1 All Huntingtnn Beach boys aces eight c,_..., A'"'91N"' '42·1•71 lhrough 12, who live in the area bound'ed ,,.... ,..,. °""" ee.t"r ~ttte by Edinger and Ellis AvtnUC!I, and
140·IZZO Edw11rds and Magnolia Streets, are tllg1·
~'· 1m. Ortnte c..11 "'*""'" ble to play. The league also covers a tiny =:T· ... ~ ... "':' ~-.!"::":~ por!ion of Westminster in those boun·
""' • ~ Whflol.ll .._.., 11«· darles . ..... -~..,... . ._. c.. ......... "" .. c.11• ~ A parent or guardian must accompany ~ ...,.._ .., u"""' a..s boys to the !lgnupJ, and a copy of the
MMINrL '-'·Mill a .11 """"'"'' ,..,u..,. 1 birth "I t -~"'d be ...,. ...... t1•q1111~#llfc --4....J..,,.!-etnu. Cle ~IU\N avaHable.
I •
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Opponents
Dominat,e
Hearin~
Preschool Class
At Valley High
Set in Fehmary
From Page 1
COMPUTERS • • •
w.ie..,.c ..
Pl~a of Guilty
Offered Twice
NO ONE SELLS G.E.
FOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
. NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE -•. -
17.6 (1. Ft. llO llOST
REfllGERATOI
SCIT IOOD WAIR lllStoSll
'""""' •d . •tle9tl ........... •Aid•-* hMrtlll .,, •••
•S..-.DrtmDMr .......... ID-159'6
•
D~ad Pair's . ' ' T echni,q_ues
Cr'iticized
saddened by the \ragedy bol '°berly
facing fact,, Los Aogetes COUnty Sheriff
Peter J, Pltchess says lwo or his men
murdered in AJidway City one week aao
try~g to , trap a homicide suspect did
everytbing wrong.
The men were gunned down at tht
(ronl and rear ol a ho~ at 8151 Flight.)
Ave., as they sought to 11rrest Carl
Eckstrom, 23, a Cit State Long Beach
philooopby student
Ectst.rom -wanted in conDeCUoo wilh
a shooting spree that killed two other
persons and attlcally '""'"'1ed a thrtd
earlier at a ~!IOI shopping center -
Wll armed and waittna:.
"! don't know why they did what they
did ,'' Sheriff Pitches& says.
Parking ill front of the moC!eot lrame
house, Detective S g I. Carl Wilson and
his partner, Detective Donald W.
Schneider, both 40, approached the front
door.
No rmal procedure would have been lo
wait for followup units bringing enough
law men to cover each escape route, then
order the suspect to come out 9'ith hi~
hands up .
Instead, Sheriff Pitchess said, the two
detectives who had already been warned
to use extreme caution with Eckstrom
approached directly .
A bum of IUbmacbine gun fire <..i.1t
down Detective Schneider when he called
Ecblrom outside.
Policeman Free
On Bail in Bar
Shooting Death
~ •UPRJCHT
CONVENIENCE
•Positive Safety Dolr~
•Futfrtt~
• """ Lo<I<
179'6
• Ql'eE...,.,.,,_,. w•Anr--tw ..............
., ...... 1 ......
.T 0 *• ., .. c.,.._........_
hl••1t"-• --. ..... ., . _ ...
.
90 DAY
I
I
Thunday, January 11. 1'17) H DAILY Pit.OT 3
Re~gan .Asks • $850· Refund Million
Vietnam as One
Reds Say U.S. Readies New Attack
PARIS (U PI} -The communist Vietnamese said today at the weekly ,
Paris peace talks that the.y would never accept I.be permanent divisk>n of Viet·
nam and accused the United States of preparing for new attacks in l.Odochina
with the help of South Korean lJ'OOP'.
WHILE THE CHARGES WERE belng made at the w .. kly talks at the
Jlotcl...M.aje.!tic._presldeati1l_aidLHenry-A.-K!aslngcr.....azu:L..Nor Vietnamese
negotiator Le Due Tho met for six hours and five minutes sev~les away
in more subatantive negotiations on the same vital questions.
There was no indicatioa ol any progress at the longest and biggest meeting
of ~he eumat round of talks between the negotiators. 'Ibey met from 10 a.m.
until 4:0$ p.m.
THE TWO SIDES AGREED lo meet again Friday.
For the first time this week, Kissinger aod Tho were joined by technical
experts who have been working out the precise language of agreements that
might accompany a possible cease-fire accord.
Court Nominee Admits
He Di,d Not Graduate
' • j ,
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UPI T.....,..I_,
\
Su1·plus Use
P1·oposed
h1 Aclcl1·ess
• SACRA!'.!E;\1 0 ! AP I -Go\· Ronald
Reagan propostd :'ln ~million state
tax rrfund for Calilurnuu1s today. (Set
related stones. P:ige 11 1
A bulging budgel surplu s vo'ilt mak e the
011e·lime cut pos:nble, Reagen told lhe
L~g islature in his seventh ··state of the
Siate'' addrrss,
The Republican J!ove rnor didn 't specify
ho..,.,· !he mo11cy ..,.,,01dd ~ returned, leav·
1ng that IJJ negotiation with the
Democrat IC-Control led Leg1 srat utt':.
But Ken~an said, ··1 am sure there is
oo d1s<1i,::rc·en1ent that 11 should be
rrturnt'C" tn taxpayf'rs rather than spent
fo r nC'w stnte programs
That drcliiration is certa1n to trigger a
fight with son1e Democratic leaders 1n
th.: Le..:is!i:iturr v.•ho say the surplus
~hnuld be e;innarkrd for educatiol\.
The annual address. Rea gan 's ncxt·lo--
l:is! as governor. skimmed across a
broa~ ran!!,e of topics including :
LOS ANGELES ~APJ -William Clark
Jr., nominee to the California Supreme
Court, has ronfirmed reports he never
finished undergraduate education and
failed Jaw school.
Los Angeles. He is fonner Cablnet
secretary for Gov. Ronald ReagaR , who
nominated him to take the Supreme
Court seat of Justice Raymond Peters,
who died last week.
TWO SOLID GOLD $350.000 CROWNS STOLEN FROM ROMAN CATHOLIC SHRINE IN NEW YORK
Monsignor Angelo Cioffi Displays Missing Treasures in 1952 Photo ~~~~~~~~~-=-~
-Revival of the death penally in
California, particularly for murder of
pollC<'men . Voters amendeC the state
Constitution 1n November to restore
capital punishinent.
Election Group Clark said Wednesday he was working "While I wu never a member of the
full-time during his college years. He ad· John Birch Society, I had clients who
dcd he never represented himself as were," Clark said.
holding any degree. He said be "agreed with some of the A d b u s
Loyola University said Wednesday group's roncepts" during t~e ear.ly 60s, CCll8e y , ,
Clark ·was -disqualified from further but oot all of them. He described his feel·
rourses during his third year at the ings as "nothing more than sympathy ." Of
-Loyola-haw S.hool--.vening--<liv;,;on-in~Glarkai<Hhe ,...'°" he left-Stanford -· · Violations-
1956. His petition for readmis~ion was several semesters after entering in 1949
denied. was lo spend a year at an Augustinian
Clark also left Stanford 1.Jniversity semi~ary in Ne.w York state.
before graduating, the university said. While a1tend1~g Loyola in the e~rly
Clark. 41 is a slate appellate judge in 1 9~. Clark said. he ~orked full t~me ' during the day as an insurance claims
Irvine Patrol Unit
Kills Company Cow
A vehicle-pedestrian accident at a
darkened Irvine intersection left a four·
wheeled vehicle demolished and a four·
legged stroller dead at the scene early
today.
The wrecked police car driven by
Irvine Patrolman Harcy Ehr,lich ~·as
identified as Unit 4415 following the 4:23
a.m. tragedy at campus Drive and Zee
Street.
The dead cow was o"'lled by the Irvine
Company.
'
adjuster. He started· to raise a family
and. he said , "I got into a little grade
trouble."
He left school after talking ""ith a
school official, Clark said. adding, "I
don't think I was on the dismissal list.''
He used his law ·school credits to
qualify to take the California bar ex·
amination and passed. he said, on his
second attempt.
He practiced law in Oxnard for IO
years before being chosen by Reagan as
a SUper)or Court judge for San Luis
Obispo County .
Al that time, the county bar associa·
tloo adopted a resolution of censure, ac·
cusing Reagan with the "political ap-
pointment" of a nonresident of the coun·
ty.
\V1\SHINGTON fAP\ -The Justice
Depart1nenl today accused the Finance
CommiUee to Re-elect the President and
1hrre defeated congressional candidates
of violations of lederat elect.ion laws..
The four criminal actions \\:ere flied in
U.S. District Court here.
The eight-count criminal information
filed against President Nixon 's finance
committee charged the committee,
through its treasurer. Hugh P. Sloan.
gave G. Gordon Liddy, a legal adviser to
!he panel. cash sums in the amount of
$12.000, $12,000 and $5,300, without receiv-
ing a receipt.
Liddy, once a White House aide, Is one
of si:ir. persons charged with political es-
pionage and currently on trial for alleg·
cdly breaking into Democratic national
headquarters last summer.
He "'as fired from the Committee to
Re-ele<'t the President "'hen he refused
to answer questions about the break-in.
'We'll Be Together Again'
Gig Peters' Girlfriend Defends Slayer's Actions
By TOM BARLEY a very dif'~:ent thing. of course. but then °' •• D*l•1<-•i._.,.... ____ _ Gigp(itn"1ea our f?ilrt CSD could sehd one
" [•love Gig. J always did and I always man berserk hil ·t the I k ""' e 1 gave ano r a oo
will. And it doesn't matter how long il at life he "'ould never have had ."
takes before we're togther again. I'll be J\n.r.~ Barth<!lo,.m~\i.' does1ft. hide the
there. I havetus little girl to help me antt fact that she and the crippled lover from I have the memory of nine months that
"'ere the most wonderful ·period of my whom she is now parted used drugs .
life.'' together in the idyll that ended when Gig
Anne Bartholomew. 24, ran her hand Peters was charged with the murder of
through her ash-blonde hair. smiled at his parents.
the memory of the idyll sbe and Gig Peters testified in court that it was no Peters shared in a San Diego County de,sert retreat and insisted: ,;\veekend hlppie" addiction. "but drug_
''I believe in Gig. I believe that QDe day use with a use in mind.'' Anne agrees.
Y.'e, all of us, will come to understand "His testimony and his book speak for
much better the meaning behind what themselves," she said. Gig loid lhe (Orange County Superior Court) jury. J am working on his book Anne Bartholomew has lived in Hun·
right now and I believe that lhe: book tington Beach with friends througbOut
("Making Life Easy"), combiDed with the k;ng weeks of the Gig Peters trial .
what he said in court, will help us to She now plans to move with little
understand. Jamaica Bartholomew -one year old
"I also believe, and always have Sun~y -"to the point that I can be
believed, that Gig was sane when he kill· nearest Gig where :r they send him.''
eel his parents as he was sane before and Anne is directing the art work on Gig
after." Pet~s· book. She said the volume . "'hic h
Her blue-gray eyes clouded as she v.ill be ready ror distribution soon, \\'iii
recalled the deaths on At1ril 21, 1911 , ot be printed with rolored inks <Jn black
Charles Peters. 55, and Flora Peters. 54.
Gib stabbed his father th(oogh the heart paper.
and then strangled his mother in what "Gig thought it was the ideal way to
defense attorney Barry Tarlow insisted handle his lbougbts and l agree." she
throughout two trials was a drug-induced said. "I'm going to be busy on that for l:I
act ol insanity. loo& time to come. -but I don't bank on it
"?-.fr. and ~frs. Peters didn't die f1.. my future support."
because Gig was insane," Anne said. She believes ber degree in art v.•ill
"They died for reasom that be told the stand her in gc ~d stead in the community
jury for the past three days and for nearut to Gig Peters' future place or
• reasoos that are made very clear in bis residence. "l know that I can support
book. us " ~I. -. -'"·
"As I say, it is going to take time for The San Diego girl whose first contact
people to understand those reasons," the with Gig Peters came through bis sister,
SCrlpps College art major murmured. Catalina -they were roommates at
··Sometimes I think that I don't fully Scripps College -doesn't yet know what
understand myself and J pray every day part her family may play in her future.
for tbe insight that will help me to "I saw tbem all, my parents. my two
understand." brothers and my two sl!:ters, at
Anne Bartholomew believet that the Chr'l!bnas and Gig Just wasn't mentkmed
drug issue in the GJg Peters trial wa.s un-nt all," she said. "The ju -:~ verdict may
nece.~sarlly belabored to ·the poiln that it change all that tiut 1 just don 't know at
assumed a much greater Importance this point.
than was nectssary to the jury's "Tbty know I love Gig and they don't
detennlnallon. c: · . me." 1'he Pdded. '"That'• all l've
"I believe, jusl as Gig told the jury, aske<I for up to thi< point ~nd 111 deal
that the uu of drugs is an individual with eYerylhlng else as It comes along.•·
thing and, If some WAJ could be found to Anne Bartholomew believes that the
put it Into legal terms, tbe Cfeclilon m0$t signif1C1nt and totally unexpected
should be left lo the Individual upecl of the trial DOW ended is .the fact
"Marijuana should be legalized," she thal Gig Ptten w111 allowed, lor more
said. 11There Is no proof that It ls than three days, to give the jury an
harmful or has Jong range elletts. LSD is unlnlerrupled aoal)11s of the lire styles
,
and philosophies that led him to kill his
parent3.
Judge Kenneth Williams and pros-
ecutor Pat Brian made no attempt to in·
terrup as Peters. only occasionally
. prompled by-defense lawyer Tarlow. lee·
lured the jury from his wheelchair via
charts. bulky tomes of obscure religion s
and an eloquence that never deserted
him .
"I never thought it could happen. but
I'm glad it did." she said. "His thoughts
and beliefs are right there in the record
just as they are in the book he wrole."
She has accepted many things during
the long months of trial, among them 'he
fac.t that Gig Peters will almost certainly
n~ver walk again.
The paralysis .... <'"Ylnsible for that
sitt.aUon was produced by a bullet v.'OUnd
in the spine, received as be tried to
escape from the a>urtroom during his
first trial. It almost a>st him his life.
She doesn't ronsider the obvious ques-
tion Vi'Orth an ans Yi er.
;.Gig and I have a love that, like his
actions, defies c.ommon analysis." she
said. "II certainly doesn't depend on his
physical form and. anyway, he needs me
now more than e\'er."
I-or a~l that, she said. "Gi~ has told me
to go my own "·ay and make a new life
without him.''
She makes il clear that tha't will never
l1appen. "Sex? That isn't important. it
hasn't been for the t\1:0 years that he's
been locked up and I don't think it's a
factor now .
··0ur Jove apart, I've put off many
things for further study once the verdict
"·as in," Anne Bartholomew said. "I in·
tend ·to take thin"s as they come. Sun!,
it's going to be lonely, butt bave Gig's
child. I have his Jove, and that's a lot to
start a new life with."
A juror called Anne Banbolomew "the
girl who never stops smllir:;."
She makes it clear that there wert
many occasions ti"..;"" the past two
years when a smile was very bard to
fin• . .
·But she al!IO made It clear that
whtrever Gig Peters aoes and for
however long he can ~t on one thing :
;A luippy smile Crom ll>e girl who
shared hi! Ure! for just. nine months. A
n1n .. mon0t idyll that ended wilh wluil
pnile<:ulor !lrlan called the "planned.
ccld blooded killing ol his palt!llts."
1·That may bt," she 11kt 11AU I know
today is that they were tbe happiest nine
rDonths of my life."
Two $350,000 Crowns
Stolen Fro1n NY Shrine
-A new au.ack on ,.rime and creation
of a unique center for th -! study of violent
be havior at UCLA .. to rid society of th.is
cancer o( violence."
-Establi shment of no-fault auto in·
suran ce for California's 12.S million
rnotorisls,
Jn December. Reagan saicl he was
Committ ed to using 'f\e budget surp1Us,
then esti mated at $68.l million. to cut in·
rome taxC's. lie said middle -income
NE\V YORK IUP!l -T1-1·0 sohd-gold. Gambino. the 72-yenr-old re puted Cahfornians. in particular. are bearing
diamond-studded $350.000 cro"ns. b\C'ssed "Bo~s of Bosses"' of thC' !'\cw )'ork too mt1C'h of the tax load. Bu, there "'as no mention today of how by the pope and unofficially protected by undtr\\'O rld. worships at the shrine. he v.·ould propose the bonanza be
?o.tafia chieftain Carlo Gamb ino. ha\·e Police at the lirne speculated thal the dis tributed and no v.·ay of estimating how
been stolen from the al1ar of a Roman crowns 1-1·ere rctumrd because-Gamb ino 1t \Yould affect the avera&e Californian.
Catholic shrine in Brooklyn. 1~1 1t be knov.l\ that he "·anted thcn1 The State Finance Department said the
The cro"TIS, fashioned from the melted back. No arrests were made_ surplu s SY•elled to $850 million with a
v.·edding bands of World War 11 'A'ido1-1·s The ch urch closed al about a p.m. busi ness upsl\·ing in the las' half of 197Z \\'cdnesday and a sexton . Dominic Saizcr and because of Reagan ecooomies.
and other jewels and blessed by Pope liri . discovered the glass case smashL1'.i \n the environmental field, Reagan
Pius XII. were in a glass case and adorn· and the crowns and Jewels missi ng at called for legislation to require auto
ed life-sized murals of !he infant Jesus about 6:30 p.m. tuneups to gua rantee ·that a vehicle's
and the Virgin Jt1ary in the Votive Shrine The larger of the crO\\'_nS measured smog control de vices are ...,·orking prop-
of Regina Pac.is. about nine inches in diameter. the ,:.rly. This proposal v.·ould gv into effect
They were stolen in 1952 -but smaller about six inches. Bolh were fir st in the smog -ladden Los Angeles
mysteriously returned eight years later. about (our inches high . area. ~~~~~~~~=---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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on several DREXEL• HERITAGE
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on all Floor Sample
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• \
'
• ..
' '
' f DAil V PllOT T-.,, ~r 11, 197)
Cold ~ and Beaotiful-FroJD -Afar
. (
"
H It's Quiet,
• .
It's-Sunday •
11PTOE & SHUSH DEPT.
Municipal people In San Juan Coplltrano,
oar Mission City. have _,..Uy looked
with &OOle envy in recent times at
aioather Orange coast community 1t the
olber end of our COUDty.
'1'1111 WllUld be the city of Fountain
Valley, long noted for being a quiet
plae<. .
I'm sure you've all beard of Fountain
Vslley'a reputaUoo for -and quiet
'!be dly ii ao silent that visiting
librarians have been known to gi!t
lwltcby.
Tbe Hunllngtoo Beach Hl&h School
Band ooce llluck up -el&hl miles
away and Fountain Valley flied an im-
medlote oompl&lnt with lht DOilo abate-
ment olllctr.
UP'ITt ........ FOUNTAIN VAU.EY haa what )'Oil
mJcb1 coll Quiet Zoning. '!'bey lalk about
lt In • wbllper. Zooos lhrGugbavt the dty
~ cliHerenl levels of alleooe. 'lbe
1J1ibea1 aud beat zooe ii Dead Quiet. The
loudest tone Is called tJtUe Tlntles.
Large chunks oI ice are piled up on Ilinois side of
Mississippi River as heavy ice flowa post St. Louis
skyline. Oflldals predict heavy l<e in Ibo Mluiesippi
above St Louis would cause big drop in river down
stream and warned boat ownen to take precautions.
Sun reflecting of1 ice gives ocene added bewty on bitter cold day
along Chicago's !Ake front. Chicago is oettled under biting winda and
seven-degree temperatures. Some residents of Northern Illinois have
been evacuated becauae of flooding tllreats. •
..,_ ___ -1lubN_nf.,_a_rwnor ooc::e that a mm.broom
Canner got rousted from Fountain Valley
for growing a noisy crop. Anotber
hou5ew1Ce allegedly drew a stem wanting
because her muffins made a racket w~n
they rose In the oven.
Hughes Pleased
By TWA Rulin g,
Aide Announces
Sandy .Weds
Her Doctor
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI)
Televillon star Sandy Duncan, 26,
of Newport Beach, who, lost the
sight Of her left eye after IUl'gery
for a benign tumor, bu been mar·
rled to Dr. Thoma.! c. Calaoltera.
35. the physld>n who performed
the opention.
J
'··
AJJyw1y, ll ii obvious that the
munietpal sbake,s: and movers of San
J.uan Coplltrano iiave l'iewed Fountain
Valley from llar with Cllllllderable eavy.
Now lhey'r< "'°" lo clo oomelhinc abool
it.
THIJ8 IT IS !hit San Juan's City c..n-
dl haa lntnxluced a new law cal1lng for
tblnp to be quiet Oii 8unday1.
Obvloully, the San JUID City Council
figures to ease Into the quiet buaineal
and not attack it on a week-Jong basis
lllte Founlalb Volley. •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An aide to
Howard Hughes aaya the induatrlallal 15
pleased about a Supreme Court ruling
dismissing Trana World Airllne1' $H5.4
mi=J~dgment agalMt his company In a I DJecl IZ yean qo.
Hagl)es is In London, when! he has
been lfvlng sine< leoving Manlgul In the
wake of the Nicaraguan earthquake.
In a &-2 decision Wedneaby, the coart
upset the judgntert, which bad grown to
almost $17! millloo with -Writing for the majority, Jmtlco
W'llltom 0. Douglas sold the H"""5 Tool
Co. transldiool challonged by, TWA 11
antitrust Violations were immune from
antitrust acUon since they were approved
by the Civil Aeronautics Board.
Juallce of the Pooce Tom Dov!a
perfonned the dvll cmmoay
Wednesday. Mils Duncan, who
underwent the operation last
November, WU divorced In OcfDber
from actor Bruce Scott Zoharildea
after f"'!i~ of mmtage. '!'bey
bad DO Cl\c'¢tera, & bead
aud neck aurgeon at the UCLA
Medical Center, a1Jo waa manied
before.
San Juan's Jaw would prohibit com·
merdaJ use of equipment "which makes
loud-noises" in the city on SUndays. One
example cited was that of sou testing.
You may bave harbored the notico that
digging a hole In the ground ilo't very
noisy. Apparently it can be irritating in
Cap!atnmo.
llugbes Tool had been accused of .Sing
ii! control illegally while owning '711 per· T iS. *~ Lo cent of TWA to establish itself u a SUi>' , r r-ur ses
plier to other alrllnea and faillng to •<>
quire on adequate jet fleet for TWA.
'nie suit was never tried in court since
TWA was granted a defaul• judgment in
May 1963 after Hughes refused to appear
SAN JUAN ~YOR Jim 'l'ho!l< ei· f°'.;.aN~d=ia;Ucrge 1Pl>Ointed a
plained the whole issue tills way: 11Wbat sped.al master who said TWA shoo.Id be
Part of Engine,
Lands Safely
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Fed<nl investi· we're rea11y trying to assure here is at awarded MS.3 million for profits it would
I one relatively peaceful day in the have realized without nl.lsmanagement pt.on were attempUng today to deter-
c1ty each week." by Hughes Tool. The llDOUOI was tripled mine whal Clused port of a Trana World
,.....,,..,.,,,~.ober"""'"11se.._,o._,f ~e~-Aiftine& ,, .............. ,,. .... ...c .. ,. to-d-.. J may · un e 11Y the Clayton Act and attorneys• fees and . . ,...__,_....._oe-•vr-
comide...S Capistnmo a cacophony of court costs brought the total judgment while in flight.
sound. It always struck me a·s a peaceful to $145.4 million. The LIOll Lockhe;ed TriSt.ar was £arced
sort of village that only h3d to deal with down here Wednesday when it Jost the
the press oi c1V.11z11lo0 when tolirlat• · Pape· r Executive Dies fan P.Ortlon .Ver southwestern Ccilorad•.
came to watch the swallows return or None ot the plimE{s 'Tb j>G.sSeri:gen oi' 12
President Nixon happened by for a taco NAPA {AP ) -Ira King Wilkin, a crew members was hm1.
or two. former president and board chairman of Passengers and crew aboard the Clii-the Zellerbach Paper C.O, Is dead at 69. Apparently two San Juan councilmen Wilkin. who died Tuesday, rose to the cago to Uis Angeles filght remaJned
agrte. They voted againat the Quiet Sun-firm 's chief executive from a 1938 start. calm during the incklent, an aJrUnes
day Law. In fact, Councilman Josh Garn. as the company's training direct.or. spokesman Mid. "'lbe pilot wu happy
mell w~ reported as suggesting the pro-with the way the airliner handled.'' he
poled ordlnanct is little more than one of DAILY PILOT. said.
the old Blue Laws that wed to prohibit DELIVERY SERVICE A spol<esman at McCarran 1nt.rna11on-
everything bul sleeping In cburch oo Sun· II Airport bere aald Cl'OWll equipped wtth
d Dtllvtty of \ht DlllJ Piiot aya. •~·""'""foam...,..~ • ...._ by dur· is ~lttd ... ...,_...,. •--.
REGi.RDLESS, SAN JUAN bas moved
a step closer to Fountain Valley in the
quiet business.
Now, however, it has come to my at-
tention that Fownain Valley has a new
and novel attraction. They ha ve a
grandmother named Frances Sayers who
makes funn y faces and has performed
for leevee. You wonder if San Juan
Capistrano will try to top that ?
It is repo rted she does the fu nny face s
very quietly. ·
.......,._,......,, II "" • Ml ._.... .-
,.,.~ "" J:llt ,. ..... Ull .... .,.... An g!fl .. ......... .. ,..., <* -...... ~ ,,. J.111,,
........,. a.,.i StMuf• II ,_ ct. "' ... 11 ..
.,.... ,.,,. lly' f ...,., &.!WIN,, f<t' I '·"'• s:..tl•~· tlll , ... ' All¥ ... lie ..,....., .. 1••· C•l"-••1 l•k"' 9flfll lt •·""·
T tltphont~
M~l 0.111111 C-1'1 ArNt · · j4J.4J21 N<t•!ll~! li1,mtlrioton Betdo and Wttt..,lrui.r . 540·1210
5111 ( .. ..,...,,_, C•!lhtrlllCI llNt ll,
$.ff! Ju1n (1pf1tr1110, 0..111 Point,
Soutl\ L&V""'· Ll'W"I H~u.I 4•2·4420
.. the ilndinc bul !be dllmlcal .... not
used. "It wu a aormal landing," be 11id.
Passengers ...re placed aboard .,.
other plane here and flown to Loo Al>
geleo.
A TriSlar crashed In the Fioridl Ever-
glades last Dec. 29 near Miami, killing
100 penom, •
ln...U,.tors for'llie~tiOl!al-'l'rans
port.atlon Safety lloani and other federal
agencies began the ln~atiOll here to
determine the eitent of .(iamage and a
possible cause.
South Gripped by Freeze
Sniper Search Continues
Police Not Con vinced Ho tel Gunm an Acted Alone
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Authorities
focused today oo a key question : did
Mark J. Essex act alone when he entered
1 downtown hotel and sprayed gunfire on
guesla, police and pasoenby?
Sl1 m!ptng victiml died and 17 were in-
ju...S In the abootlng laal 'Sunday at the
Downtown Howard Jolnlon's hotel
Poilce gunfltt from a hovering helicopter
kjQed Essex, a 23-yeaMld black from
Emporia, Kan., as he zig-zagged actoss
the hotel roof.
But police weren't sure whether at
le131 one additional sniper escaped.
'"There's some evidence or a cOnspiracy
by other people,'' Poli<e Supt. Clarence
Glamwo told newsmen Tuesday. But he
added. "I cannot poslUvely teII you yet.''
Police said Wednesday they had o~
tained the hotel registry and were check·
inc guest.I -raising the question
whether F.uex might have bad someooe
with him who had taken a room at lhe:
hotel.
The registry check wasn't complete.
police said.
Police and FBI agents questioned
Rodney Frank. one of Essex' fonner
New Orleans roommates, Wednesday.
But a police spokesman said, "lt appears
that Frank bu no connection with the in-. "
Tbe spokesman llso said nothing had
changed aln<e Gilrru5'0 declared Tues·
day tblt be wun't "atisfied" there was
any coonectlon between. the sniping and
the Sunday morning shooting of a New
Orleans grocer.
A police source close · to the' in-
vestigation had said that the grocer was
shot by someone who feared the victim
might identify him as the slayer of a
polloeman on New Year's Eve.
The same peraon wbo shot the grocer,
the source sakl. drove a stolen car to the
hotel and began the sniping.
'ID Emporia, Esau' mother says soci.,.
ty was responsible for the death of her ....
The shooting was a "clear signal for
White America to get off the seat of its
panis and do somelhinc.'' Mrs, Mark
Esses told uewaneu Wednesday.
"ff lhil terrible thing will awal<en
white America to the injustices that
blacks suffer, then some good will come
of it," she said.
"We must cease provoking people to
the point that l~y mwit seek revenge to
get even with society," Essex' father
said as he and his wife spoke with
newsmen for the first time since their son
was identified. as the slain sniper.
"I blame society.'' he said.
Mrs. Essex said her son did not hate
white men, "he hated what the white
man stood for, the white system. He
---
'lt'a gel lo' g.r
bltck to worlc!'
knew whites, he went to school with
whites, be dated a white girl and then be
told me "that he didn 'I koow why blacks
dated white girls because they're no dif-
ferent than black girls and they 're not as
beaullful."
She described her son as a good boy, a
gentle man, always helpful
Her son's troubles slarted in the Navy,
which, she said, "brainwashed'' him.
Sbe said her 100 returned home lasl
October to '·think about the Injustices a
black man receives in the service." She
said he was harassed with petty an-
noyances and "racist mistreatment."
Sbe said lhe youth and his frlenda wm
stopped repeatedly by Navy police, fore-
ed to show identification and even
searched at times . He took a part-lime
job in a Navy club and was fon:ed to uk
permission to do part of his job !hit
white sailors did freely, she said.
Request for Dairy Funds
By Nixo11 Lawyer Told
WASHINGTON (API -President Nii·
on's personal attorney , Herb e rt
Kalmbach, reque«ted campaign con-
tributions from a dairy group whose
earlier contributions are being quesUoned.
in a lawsuit fik!d here, according to ~
formaUon provided by a witness in the
suit.
But the witness, George Mehrer.,
al mana er of Alsociated Milk
Producers, Inc., aaid Kalmbach, of
Newport Beach, later withdrew lhe( re-
quest for additional funds . ·
''The totality or the discussion was his
statement that fc.-reasons he did not
specify ... there would not be any further
di9CUS8lon ·or• t'l!C)uesl fur political
assistance," Mehren said in a dePoSition
filed in the case.
Details or the dei)osition were reptirted
in The Washington Pose today.
The suit was brought by consumer ad-
vocate Ralph Nader and several con-
sumer groups agains the Agriculture
Department. They charge that the Nl.i:on
Adminislratioo raised milk price sup-
ports in Mareh r:I. 1971 in return for more
than $400,000 in political contri~
from three dairy cooperative grpd"ps.
Mehren. who was an assistant
ag;cic11!!11re secretacy jn tbe-Jolutaoa---
AdmJnistration , said Kalmbach made the
request for more funds at the Los
Angelea meeting, but preceded ll with a
disclaimer that it would in any way
result in benefits for the dairy indumy.
Mehren aaid he told Kalmbach ha
would consider the request. However •. he
said he later was called to a• second
meeting In Washington at wblch tlme
Kalmba ch withdrew the request for ad-
ditional funds without giving any reuons.
Crop. Controls Lift,ed
In Farm Price Battfu
WASHINGTON (AP) -Stunned by the
sharp rise in fann prices, the Nixon
Administration has canceled a re-
quirement lhat farmers must hold land
from wheat production-. ,,; M 1on ts in-
tended to boost grain and livestock pro-
duction, thus cutting prices.
~ Agriculture Department an·
nooncement Wed.ne9day also includes
removal of a ban against allowing
livestock to graze on aetu "set aside"
under government control programs for
wheat and feed sraln.
"The decWon to permit grazing on set-
asid<; acreage was l!llde In onfer to pre.
vent or alleviate a shortage In the supply
ol liveatoct feed,'' lht dtpartmeot said.
eP-pWetsfa.Rud.
M05(X)W (AP) -Pn!aideat Goon!ts
Pompldou of Frlnoe lrrived In the Sov1et
Union today for two doya of IUllllD!t !alb
with the head of the Sol'iet ~
party, Leonid !. Bmbnev.
The French president landed al a snow.
m pt military 11rpott near Mlnlk, 425
mil es east of MotCCrW, where tbt two
leaders are to confer wilh ceremony
...Suced lo lhe minimum. e Tow .R1tll119 Atealted
WASIUNGTON (UPI ) -After two
years of study and a stack Of testlmony,
the Federaf Commu11lcauons Com·
llllsslon has roncluded Ill public Inquiry
ln1o a 'c<>ntroverrl1i propooai to ban "°"" m•rclal1 on chiitlren'I telev!alon shows.
In ending 111 heulnp W-17 tile
tGmn1 lsal<M1 =offti'!lt ft!W CtUd Ii to how
soon it would decide the que:ation,
although FCC Chainnan Dean Burch said
he hoped it could be done as soon as
possible. e Clemenis S11pporte ll
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Securities
and Exchange Comm ission says a com.
pany headed by President NlJ:on'11
nominee for deputy secretary of defeMt
( IN SHORT ••• )
did not violate SEC rules by lalllnf to
report lnvolvemenl In a civil suit alJqlns
conspiracy aIMI fraud.
Tbe SEC findllJI irlued Wedoetdq II>
pamtUy opened tbe way for= ed s.mc.s Cornm!Uee cons to-
day of the nominltlon of Dollas
William P. Cementa Jr. 10< the No. S
Pentagon job. e 1u9e Okay• Safes
PHOENIX (AP ) -Superior Court
Judge lrwln Canion has paved the way
for what may bt the largest 11r1ce aJe
here In history.
The judge told aucUon""n Wedoadly
they could ltll the penonai propar\y of
the late, milllllllltre recluse Wolter McCune ..
The suburban community or Panld!U
l'•lley liod asked Canton for 1 temporary
reslnlinlng order to llOp the sale wbictl
Sllrlll Saturda SI )!tL\!!UllClila __ _
wou ate zoninC.
1
I
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~ange Coast
ED IT I 0 N
,
VOL 66, NO. 11, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1973
• rice
Jffesa Youth Gives llp
Newport · Officer
Prevents Killing
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of fM DIJ6iY .... Steff
A Newport Beach policeman Wked a
14-year-old Costa · Meaa yooth out of
ahooUng a man in a tense, beacbtront
conhoolallon late Wedne!day night.
But Officer Michael SUllivan said he
hac! to threaten to shoot !he youth to get
him lo drop his own gun.
Sullivan said he w a s in an upstairs
room at the Balboa Inn lnvestigaLing an
attempted rape there about midnight
when he heard a co mmotion about a
block away.
I
Sullivan said he got the'drop on the
youth with his service revolver, but the
boy refused to drop Ute .32 automatic be
was holding in the man's lace and con-
tinued shouting at the man that he would
stioot him.
''I'm going to kill fOU flrst," Sullivan
said he warned the youth, who finally
turned away and dropped his weapon. .
Of Heer , Sullivan said the youlh a1>
peared to be under the Influence of
alcohol. as did two companions. one 16
and a 19-year.old man identified as David
Wyman. of 1034 Linden Place, Costa
· ~te5a.
ro
CAll.Y P ILOT PMI'"' llJ JOl'lft t•llt< He said he ran to the scene. "''here he
came upon a youth , who he said was
holding a man at gunpoint.
\Vv1nan v.·as arrested and booked on
sus1ilcion of being drun k in ~ubl ic.
Pohce identified the victim of the in-
(See OFt'ICER. Page ti
FOUNTAIN VALLEY 'S GRANOMA SAYERS DISPLAYS HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
With a Little Practice, Normal Face (left) Becomes a Ticket to Stardom
The youth was saying "I'm gonna blow
your brains out. We're going to go dO\\'tl
to the beach and you're going to get
yours for finking on me." Officer
Sullivan related. Hunt Guilty
On All Counts;
Plea Accepted
Grandma Has No. 1 'Girn'
" W ASl!INGTON (UPI) -Fonner Whlte
House comultant E. Heward Hunt Jr.
pleaded guilty today 10 all charges
Qgainst bim in the Watergate bugging
trial. The judge accepted the plea after.
rejecting Hunt's effort to plead guilty to
only t.bree counts.
By JOHN ZALLER
Of 11111 DMtr P.i.t St.it
Frances Sayers clearly has a face lhat
makes others look ordinary tfy com·
parison.
But un1iJ last.-tb, this fad !fU not
appreciated bi 9\e' 1t-1eor-old Jl'ountalD
Valley grandmother.
"~iaybe l was just used to It," she
says, "but I really didn't see anything
unusuaJ about it before the contest. or
· rourse, now I see it differently."
The thing that o~ned her eyes to the .
potential of her face was a "Girn Con·
test" sponsored by radio station KMPC.
(A gim, according to Webster's. is a
contortion of the face. I
J.frs. Sayers was the hands-down win·
ner of Ille CC11teot. -·•we bid. 'hundreds or nne entries,"
reporta KMPC disc j-OCkeJ Gary Owens.
"But no one could do anything close to
what she did."
Mrs. Sayers' trick is really a simpti~
one -for her. She juts her jaw forward
as. fa r as it will go, and then extends her
For Beaches, -Parks In another development Senate Demo-
crats voted today for a full investil{ation
of Lbe Watergate bugging case and re·
lated allegations of Republican efforts
to sabotage the 197% Democratic presi· L .b z · d D . k . ~~".i'w::;~i:,;:i~,:~~r;i~~ui~ i era ize rin ing
After accepting !he second plea, U.S.
Di!trict Judge John J. Sirica ordered
Htmt held under SI00,000 bond until a L R • B k •
lol'i·er lip over the tip of her nose , seem·
1ngly swallowing it.
The overall appearance is at once
hilariously funny and thoroughly un--
natural. It is as if her mouth were con·
siuning her face. .
"I saw it once in Ripley's Believe It Or
Nol, and I thought there must. be some
Irick to It," says Owens. ''But she did it
fvr us here in the studios and it's for
real .. ,
Q1,1·cns 1,1·as so i1nprcsscd lhnl he 's
j~C <;II\\', Page 21
Policeman Free
On Bail in Bar
Shooting Death
Today's Final
N.Y. St.eeks
N TEN CENTS
President's
Move Comes
As Su1·1lrise
\\'ASlllXGT01\ j,\PI -President Nlx·
on today nbol1shc·d mand:itory wage-price
controls exCC'pl in the food and health in·
dustries. In their place. he established a
system of \'O\untary wage and price
guJdelines -tiacked by the thrtat of
government enforcement.
Tht' surprise move -far more sweep-
ing than had been expected -came as
t\ixon asked Congress for a one--yea r eJC·
tension of his authority to control wages
and_ prices.
The Prfsidcn~ abolished the Pay Board
;ind the PrH'C Commission but retained
the Cost or Living Council to manage his
Phase 3 cconon11c systc1n.
The program. \\'hich unmediatcly
n•places the Phase 2 srstc1n cslablished
ir: .\o\'Crnbl.·r 1971 , "is sclf·:idn1inistcring
:ind IJasl!d on voluntar~· compli;ince. ·• the
\\"hill' I louse said .
No longer w i 11 litrge busines.5e5 and
l:1bor unions have to gel prior govern·
ment opp1'0Jat for \l:a"ge or price hikes -
except 1n "special problem areas'' which
r\ixon listed as food processing and
retailing. and the health industry.
The President also continued the
present system of looser mandatory con·
trols Over construction wage increases
and said the present voluhtar'y effort to
keep interest rates down would slay in
eUect.
But for lhose industries and unions
freed today from mandatory controls, the
governn1cnt retains the right lo move in
1,1·ith stiff action to roll back
unreasonable increases.
Nixon said in a 1ncssagc to Congress
th:it his goal is lo reduce the inflation
r:itc to 2.5 percent or less by the end or
1973. l~e said his 00-day Phase t wage·
price freeze and his Phase 2 mandatory
con!rols cut the innation rate by nearly
half -to about 3.5 percent.
t'-;ixon's new program abolishes rent
controls and is Intended lo "allow rcasona~e flexibility" in wage and price
increases. Secretary of the Treasury
George .;hultz told OC\\'Smen.
Shultz said the government "'ould keep
close tabs on the new system and those
u·ho don't comply "are going to get clo~
bered."
•
pmentenc:Ing IDvesligatioo iJ completed. aws eceive ac ing Santa ~na Municopal Court Judge
Henry B. Rothblalt, lawyer for four of \\1illiam Thomson changed his m ind
-I;llete-<clolol<fendlll<laiaio,;111,,_,,..,,;.idl.>lpt:t<tn"m"e'l¥lsJm."3Jl.sU' '---------------------------=----\\'cdnesda)' ;ind allowed bail for a Q,·press.
remaining defendants asked for a mis. police sergeant charged 1,1·ith murder
triaJ during a private meeting v•ith Sirica Strong surport for liberalized drinking members said they would favor almost after the slayin~ Jan. 4 of a ~lar.ine
He also.saicLlr.··hiluha-.Jll,...>-lCJ>ro---~
gram goes Into effect immediately, re
FINALL y' FREED
Reporter Farr
Justice Dou glas_
Orders Newsman
Farr Released
WA8111NGTON (AP) Justice
William O. Douglas today order<d
r<porter William T. Farr fr.ed f~ Jail
while he appeall a tontempt conviction
for a story about the 1970 Manson trial.
(See editorial, Page 61.
Farr, 31, has been in jail 46 days.
Doug.las' order that the Los Angeles
Times reporter be freed "on his O\\'ll
•recogniunce" was to be followed later ln
the day with an opinion by the justice.
Farr's attorney, Mark Hurwitz, said
Douglas' clerk told hlm he sent a tele--
gram notifying Los Angeles1:ounty Sher·
iff Peter Pitchess of the order releasing
the newsman.
Hurwitz aaid he ISIUJned the Ielegram
would arrive "wtlhtn two or three houri"
and that Farr would be roleased then.
He ez-pect.ed the newsman to be re-
leued this alternoon. ~ of !he dedsloo, FMI' told ...,..
men In Ibo jail belo..., hiS me-: "I'm
>ery pleued lo IJear It." •
and that the judge denied it. laws at Orange County beaches and total aJolishmcnt of all liquor restric· Cnrps helicopter pilot in a Tustin bar.
Hunl initially tried to plead guilty to parks has come from three cowny lions. Si:t Thom:-is Baro!d1. 26, t>Osted his
k · lo Dem · harbors. beaches and parks com· conspiracy to brea ~~·-• ocraktlnic ~a· m issioners. Liquor is proh.ibitcd at all parks and SI00,000 bond irnmechatcly after Judge
tional headquarters. acluculy brea gin-beaches now. Thomson revoked his earlier decision to
to tile Watergate building office., and to \Vhile commissioners Tuesday dC'layed allow no hail for the officer pending
Jtstening via bugging devjces to t~l~phone action on makirig any r~comme!idatiolf lo ··w.e should have as liule legislation preliminary hearing in the s,cme couri.
cooversatiom of !iOme Democratic of fl· county _ supervlsors, ,three boa rd and regulation as possible uu1il a spcc1lic Jan, l8.
cials. probl<'m develops," suggested Corn· The s:imc preliminary hearing date has
After Sirtca refused to accept that plea missioner Thomas O'Keefc. lx'en srt for Garden Grove police officer
-omitting reference to three other Tl"' P/iai•tom He noted that th<:> slate has experienced Jerry Gray, 28. lie is accused of assault
charges relating to actually placing bug· .,..-:;.. " with a de11dly weapon following thl! no great problem at Doheny State Beach .... I t Sa c ging devices tn the offices -Hunt plead-wou11uing n pa ron m ampise, 35.
eel guilty to all six counts of the indict-S •k A'• • where liquor is allowed. Tustin , 1n the same fracas at the
ment against him. trl es gatJl Commission Chairman Thom as Bachelors Ill bar.
HWlt's attorney, William o. Bittman, Baldvo'in, who said he \\'anted a little Gray is free on S2.000 bail.
pleaCled with Sirica to k>wtr the $100.oo:t Ace, Ajax and United may not be more conservative approach to the issue. The prosecution plans to obtain the in·
•-•, savina "! don't bel'-ve he wi'll be · f noted that not too many people arc di ctment of both officers from the new ..-.u ,,-oe n:: very uppy names or a company, tha d · k' · I I 0o•--
l ••-to --t" !he amount. He asked thal b t the , lhel aware t nn 1ng is ega at 1icuy. 1973 Grand Jury. Both men were off duly
l
.t-be lo,~wered lo M•,ooo or, al most. u y re common none ess. But two other commissioners, Frank at the time of the incident. ...., Every once in a while something Rob. d c c k w t 'sso.ooo. better in a name comes along. ec~so~.~~fe's. feeiing"~a~~; theooc~~: th"t ~1as .testcified aStt an eaRrliber hett ari25ng
Siric:a said, ·~t deny your repuest and Take the repossession outfit that a ,. ar1nc apt. even o 1ne c. .
you can take it to the court of appeals if bagged a car in San Clemente rent ban should be lifted f'xcept in areas of PhoentY, Ari7.ona , told firemen as he
you want." Wednesday night. such as lr\'inc Park l'ihere deed rcstr1c-l:iy dying in the bar that he \vas actually
Later. Hunt posted bail . The firm. operating out or Long lions prohibit 1l. Ir) ing In come 10 the aid of both offict!rs
Hunt's plea ·was not heard by the jury Be a ch,, i.s ''.Wh an tom ··11'.s a highly pc.rsooal ,..thing," \~·hen ht: l'ias al!(•grdly i.hot ~ Bar~ldi
which has been absent from the court· ReposseSsors:· Robinson said. "but I agree w11h Tom
room since Wednesday when be offered Its employes took the car shortly jQ'Keefel. Ou r info rmation shO'ol.'S a
to plead guilty. After Sirlca accepted the before midnight. concern aboul 1,1·hat might happen, rather
(See WATERGATE. Pase Z~ than stat11ics that show it did happen."
Islanders Against Bike~
Belich Tee1iager
Falls on Rocks;
Injury Critical
An 18--year-old Huntington Beach ybllt~
ftS critically Injured Wednesoay wneo
he fell more than 40 feet onto the rocks
at Corona del Mar state Beach. "" said he plaMed lo ftlum "' biS. wori< is • "porter for the L<>s Angelea Tbe Balboa I.sland Improvement Franklin said there are already enough 'fir.:; was held In cootempt by superior AMO<lalloo (BJIA) hat formally dedar· poople on Iwo wheels riding around the
Pollet sa:ld Joseph Ray Castleman of
lraUs on &lboa Perlln'sula has creattd 9902 ~toor Ci rcle. had climbed a cliff
problems tbat tsland residents don't want
Court Judge autrlu ft Olde' o1 Loo ed wbat mldeota ol the illaod have been Island. Bicycle ndil)i on the bayfront
Angeln for writing a "°" 1bout a pro-saying for yuoi -Ibey don'! want bi-lidewlok Is currently outlawed bu! still a
apectlve witMu' statement that the cycles on their blylront ildcwalk. popular sport.
' Manson "famUy.. planned to murder In a letter to the Cilluns' Bicycle "The board believes that the bicyclists
1everat movie llara. Farr wis then Tra..111 Committee, Hming S. Franklin, a who already toow aboul the ,lll&nd elm·
to contend with. nc:ir the jetty with a friend and aJ>-
"We beUeve that when the city steps in pnrently lost his footlng when he started
and de.donates a bl....,...le trail, that loo to climb down about 2:30 p.m. ~..,-· .. ,.. The frif'nd, Jo!JCph Gibson. 9591
qrten the cyclisll. realizing that fhe city lnnsbruck St., lluntlngton Beach, said
tel it a~rt and maintains it for them, Castleman struck his head during the (all
~·ill be a 9<k:lay transition period to clear
up a backlog of cases pending before the
Pay Board ar.d Price Com mission.
All new actions. however, will go
hcforc the CoSI of Li\'ing Council and its
new pay and price divisions, effective
1mmCdiately.
Linder Pha.~c lll, a new la bor·mMage·
men! ad\'isor:f committee -with
members inelu1hng top industrialists and
such labor leaders as 1hc AFU10's
c:('{)rge :\fcany -will decide whether the
current 5.5 percent ceiling on wage in·
crrases should be modified.
That standard remains in cfftct until
the panel meets and the Cost or Living
Council decides whether to accept its
recommendations.
A.s a general guide for Phase Ill. the
\Vh1te flouiie said price increases should
not exceed increases in costs.
"Even where cosls have increased." ~
\\'h1tc House su mmary said. ··prices
should ~ot bt-increased if the firm"s prof.
JI margin cxcreds the firm 's base-period
tStt CO~'TROL.S. Page !J •
Orange Coast
Weather
The weathcrlacly predicts the Or.
ange Coast will experience variable
clouds and continued fair weather
on Friday. The hlgh is expected to
be ~. tbe low 48.
INSIDE TODAY
T//t 250-member Brot11erllood
oj Sp1rlf 1n Nor1l1field. J\fass ..
h<llJ learntd t /1 a I brnll1rrhood
won't fill .•t.tn·nachll and pny rent.
a,ul adult members nrf' bting
rtqlnrr.rl. to 'take 1abl1. Storv on
Pao" J 4 worldng for the Heralcl-Eumine<. mtmber of BUA board, said tbe wocl•-prise a aufflclent probleni w 11 ho u I
Older held Farr In contempt for refua-lion vote was 1111anlmous In opposition publlclziQg and ldvtr1islng ft on bic7cl~ feel In complete control of such and lht"n landed In w3ist~eep water.
deilinated area. whttbe.r In the street, Police said Gibson hun:ied down to L.M ••• ,. u 1t1ttvi.. .,..,,
00 {fie 51de.Wilka Or 11ieyS. help Calltleman 8""~(~ f-the (.a~ t, 1I MW"'•I ,..,.,.. ll Ing to dlvulp the namtl of the law)'ers aod °'me ofter "IDt-11U4Y, ._ .. be pie •
-..ho supplled him with the llaltmellt. -.mh and <Olllide.-llon." -Frullin. aald the board -· there'•
During ·lite trial, Ibo judge lmlJooed""ln "Tbe board beU.Ves tbero Is tnoUgh no w~ to proliiblt .bikes on Balboa
order blrrina Jawym and other .trial • ~eatioo, Jra,111~. and Jleoslty OQ JlllbQi . IJ)lnd, liut jJld Ibo d..ttt of [l.<idcnis lo
partldpantl !nm dllcloslng any Ill-Isl1itd as II Is wltbollt adding blcyclllla, INll<e Ille Island a ,...,-round residential
formation •bout the c--bicyde groupa and bicycle clubl from a~a reqolm "ii JllU<h qulcl and
,,_ bo ~I I •-i-..... ~.. c11...i1i.ii U·• tta•..,.., ,..., t
111e fl<" s a so aware that city of· water before running fo ge p. · c-iu n Orl!!M C-t7 '"
flcials have stated their inability to en· Caatlen1an was taken to Hoag ~~ ~ :=: ,...,.,. ,.:
forte bicycle ri~rs to stay'on...the traib:' Memorial Hoepltal where he ls under in-••111k'W11 '* ' T'"'-' M .. •~~"••" h id •mn•111111t11r •n e "3 . tensive cnre for !ltvere htad Injuries. ,.,.."'' U·lf TI!Httn~ ...,
Frinklin said the use of federal funds Police said there are signs in the area '"' ..,. •-n1 ' • ..,.. •
,,
.. I'm VUJ pleHOd," eitwlll alil. nealt>y and lar •••Y lo -.into the ~IS pooailile.~ -
,----"lt'a bem I Iona batlle{' • ' ibe-'fftltieft of biey<le
on bike trails alSQ conctms him. polnting dearty stating thtt climbing the cllff1 is · =~""'" : :::f• • "4:
... ~,t-ld 1 ..... 1oea1 ... lltorlll}T---'""'1blt<d . --~-----11====-;;:.;=======l--1
;i
1 I
•
•
'
DAILY PILOT N Thutsdij, JaRl,l.MJ ll, 1973
Jury Get,s
Gig Peters
Sanity Case
100 Attend Air Study
Regiong,l Airport Hearing Held in County
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ifie Dlll't' l'lllt fl.tf
Jtr JACll -CK -iLkDllf ,_ IMH
Airport. are alright In their place -
some other place.
reprosentbt,, the Airport -Assoc! .. lion Aid, ' 'lliere am 00 air tnmporta-
tloo needs, just WIDls. People fiylng the
planes should be willing to pay $10 a
ticket to be Uled lo bu1 up bomel al·
fected!' .
Mrs. Theodore H. Cooper representing
the Rancho Mi&alon Viejo Woman's Club
urge UP&radlng of Orange County Airport
willl the nmweys moved oorthward.
JOID lllorm and Mrs. B.O. Brummels
qi the Eutblull aru of Newport Beach
told of -on patio lurnlture and noi.se
too loud to telephone or list.en to
telOYisloo.
ClUf Fraizer, airport flying school
operator, suggested that the county
airport be put on San aemeote lalaDd.
An Orange Co1mty Superior Court jury
that bas already convicted Gig Peters or
Huntington Beach on 1wo counts or flrst
degree murder went into the Jury room
today lO detennine if the crippled former
lifeguard WM san e when be 'killed his
parent.a. ...A J...._..a.!::;uage ennelb WiDiams sent me JUt'Y
Into sequestration after the delivery or
final argumeoll by prosecutor Pat Brian
and delense attorney Barry Tarlow and
the jurilt's readln1 of instructions
specllically gean>d lo the sanity Issue.
(Related story Page 3).
This, at leas~. ,..med, J1!Q. ~
Wednesday in Santa Ana. The occasion
was a citizen hearing board of the
Southern Call!omia Association or
Governments (SCAG) taking soundings
In Santa Ana on a regional airport study.
A second meellng by the group will be
Id In Los Alomi~ Mai;b 21. •
Those from El T~ Vle}O • Sea ,~anetuary
thought Chino HJU. in the northero part
ol the county an ideal site for an airport.
Brea or Yorba Linda residents think
Joint use of El T0n> Marine Co'!'" Air
Bolsa Chica Marsh Study on Tap
Brtan and Peters himself insist that
the fonner Huntington Beach lilgh
School student was 11aoe when he stabbed
Charles Peters, ~. through the heart aod
strangled Flora Peters, 54, on April 21,
1971.
'.farlow argued that his client's sanity
and judgment had been impaired by his
long use of drugs. He said Peters' three
days of unr'estricted testimony was ade-
quate proof of the defendant's insanity.
The jury's ruling will end the second
Superior Court trial of Peters, 24.
His first trial ended dramatically and
prematurely when he was shot in the
back by a bailiff as be tried to escape
from custody during the noon recess.
· Doctors beli"'e be may be
permanently paralyied from the waist
down u the result of the spiDal Injuries.
......_r.,..1 ,
GffiN •.•
Controversial .Site
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, south of San Clemente. has a
generating capacity of 450,000 kilowatts and bas been in operation
since January, 1968. Dotted lines show area where Southern Cali-
fornia Edison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company
hope to place two additional twin reactors, representing a fiv~fold in-
crease in power capability, Atomic Energy Commission hearings on
the matter begin in San Diego Tuesday.
Station 11 1 great Idea.
Newport Bead> ttSldeslls ...mea to
thin\: 1111Wbere el!e but Orange County
Airport. "' One. Bart Spendlove of .the Saddlebact Area
Coordinating Council; W1yne Moody of
. Laguna llel<h; Edwanl L. Oben o/.
Laguno llll1s Lellure World Foundation
end MU Scbachner of Irvine all favored
Chino HU11:
Wayne Wedin, city manager of Brea.
and a Yorba Unda councilwoman were
violently opposed to any north county
airport and especlally Chino Hiiis.
Col. John Lowman was for Chino H11ls.
He's one of the promoters of the facility.
Gordon Jones, director Planning
Engineering !or the ltvlne Company op-
posed El Toro use aod supported
r..trlcted use of Orange County Airport.
He said the Msrloe air slstkm there
should be abaDdoned.
'!be proposed IOl).acre Bolsl Chica salt
waler J11l1'h sanctuary will be -ed
Friday by the Calllorols FIBll and Gome
Commlsslon.
· State FIJh and Game olflclals hope to
win approval for the re-creation of a -400-
acre "natural" marsh in Bolsa Bay, near
Huntington Be&ch. 1'le plan also calls for
a 130-acre public marina.
The fish and game plan is tied lo a
land swap with Signal Gas and OIJ Corp.,
owner of nearly 2,000 acies of land in
Bolss ea Y,j
Frot11P .. eJ
CONTROLS. ••
Col Murray Stople1 of El Toro
Marlnel vlgorouslY repeatod the Corps' profit Dllll'llin.
opposition lo joint'liae ol the facility. "Allematively," the lummary added,
Kenneth Carr, San Clemente City "a firm may incrteae prices lo r"1ect
mSDBger oppoaed Camp Pendleton as a Increased cost without regord lo lls prof.
site. LA C Sh ·rr Admi Newport Beach Mayor Donald McGln· II margin u the firm's average price in-
. trying lo gel her on Rowan and Martin's -0 unty er1 ts nis argued that Orange County Airport creases would not exceed 1.5 percent in a
Laugh-In. However, Mts. Sayers is think-should revert to commuter and private year."
ing bigger. fl yin g use. He accused-county govern-Nixon told Congress tht mandatory
"I've seen the man whC''s the world n1enl of dragging its feet . wage and price control system would be
championglrner,"shesays,"andfdon't M d d D 1. E d Dale Rummel. chairman of the Costa thlnlt he's so great. I think I could beat ur. ere epu I es rre Mesa Airport Study Committee, recom-continued "with special vigor !or firms
him." mended strict cont rols on land use Involved in food processing and food
Despite her limited public exposure to arou nd airports. larger aircraft use j f retailing."
l! allowed, the 1SWap would give the
stole ii30 lcn!S of prime land along th<
Inland &Ide ol Padllc 0Jast llJibway,
I south of Warner Aw:nue-.
In return, the state would relinquish jt~
waterway rights inland, freeing triat
acreage for private development. ·
Signal will actually give, the slate 300
acres. 1be other 230 acres will be loaned
for 14 years, If, during the 14 yea rs
the state opens an ocean passage to
Bois'} Bay". the extra 230 acres becomes
permanent state property.
State officials sv the marsh proposal
"''iii be a• landmark,,n that no one has
ever re-ereated a sa\ marsh before.
Once established, the marsh will
become a natural preserve, open to the
ptlbUc for view Crom the perimeters.
Fiab and Game oornmiskmers meet
Friday momlng in San Francisco. They
will be the first official stale agency to
ntle on the project. though the land swap
must still be approved by the stole Landi
Commission.
Jean D. Plumb,
Doctor's Wife,
Succumbs at 51
date, Mrs. Sayers' confidence is un-quieter and uniform standards of noise He said' he was establishing a govem-dentandable. She's been making fUMy Saddened by the tragedy but soberly hands up. control . liotrs. Jean Dowds Plumb, 51, wife of
f10e1 ever atnce she wu old ernJgb to facing facts, Los Angeles C:Ounty Sheriff Instead , Sheriff Pitchess id, the two He said the committee opposed an ment committee to review federal policies prominent Harbor Area pediatrician Dr.
· stand in front of a minor. She baa en-Peter J . Pitchess says two of his men detecHves who had already been warned offshore airport and called the SCAG affecting food prices and a nongovem-Hugh J. Plumb Jr., died Tuesday night in
tertaJned cblldrm Jn the bomb sbeltera of murdered in Midwa y City one week ago to use extreme caution th Eckstrom report unrealistic in regard to private ment advisory group to examine other
World War II Lendon, enticed her aviation. : Wlfl of ltabillzlng food prices. Hoag Memorial flospital. gmddtlldren lnlo giggles whenever they trying lo trap a homicide suspect did approached direclly. He was !or study of Chino Hills, El Tbe5e steps will be coupled, he aald, A memorial service will be beld Frldly
were anbappy, and aerved as everything wrong. A burst of submachine gun fir cut Toro, Pendleton -anything but the with concentrated efforts to Mid down at 2 p.m. at st. Andrew's Presbyterian ''Nf:fchbor-Nlllll)' with the Fumty The men were gunned down at the down Delectlve Schneider wben be called p~t site. food pri«s by increasing lood ,..pp1y. Church In Newport Beach. Private burial
Flcol" l<r eottDt1ea other 1""11P1en· front and rear of 8 home at 8251 Flight Eckstrom outside. Brlao Douglass, general manager of The effort. to bolster aupply Include services will follow at F-ven
"Qildren who -about me are Hi.! partner, Sgt. Wilson beaded !or the the Fullerton Airport rerolnded u.teners moves to 1Jt<nase -•· -·•e, ·-·"" ... M..... ,A _ .... ,,......, I Ave .• as they sought to arrest Carl ..r.;~, .. _.. -"-&" ....... --...... .-...... Memorial Park in Santa Ana. · 11wa71 -. me .... ~·......., aces, rear yard and was ma~~"""" tba~ noise was oot the QQ)y problem. "We livestock production and move com-
attd I don~ mind at all," she "Y'· · Eckstrom. 23, •~.State Long Beach there, then Eckstrom bimlel! wu4elled have ralaUvely qu;.t plane1 but people mod!Ues lo market more ropldly. '!'be Plumbs w<re residents o1 Newport
"The onlJ problem Is that I'm getting philosophy student. . by OrSDge County Sherlll'a Deputy object to any increase.in over!ligbls," he Pment mandatory cootrols on the Beach 21 years and Mno. Plumb,,.. ao-
oJd DOW and can't 1ei my muxJes. to pull ~~-.. wanted in connecJ.ion w)Jh Andrew Romero's shotg,un Jire as he revealed. , health industry also will be oonUnued un. tift in muy1civlc affair!.
the wv·UteJ' used to. But~[ ·kuoW'i've got a shooting spree that killed two other returiied, -4 """'....,1 ll .1. Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport tit modif1ed on ieconunendatloa of a Cost 1 She wu a member of the Hoag
m. ledt"'"that one good face left." Deputy Romero~ the fo Owup in· Noise Abatement committee of Newport of lJvlng Council on Health, the White MemoriaJ Hospital Medical Auxiliary, St. Mrs. Sayers first became serious about persons and critically wounded a thrid vestigation that he tokl the slain delec-Beach did his comparison of the needs of House aaJd. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, the
funny faces during World War II. earlier at a Cerritos shopping center -tives reinforcement3 were on the way but 75,000 people who Oy planes to the 20,000 In addiUon, Nlxon fl!tablished a Health As.1istanee League of Newport Beach, the
"I woUfd Imitate HlUer and GOerlilg was armed and waiting. they went arter Eckstrom without \vho are disturbed. •(Quiet planes are a Industry Advisory COmmittee to recom-Lido Isle Women's Club, the UCJ Medical
and Goebbeh and the kids would just :;I don't know why they did ·what they waiting. dre&m," he argued. "Flights will doable mend changes in government programs Faculty Wives, and three different
squeal with l1ughter," she reCalls. ''It at did," Sheriff Pitchess says. A license plate noted by a witness trac-in 12 years wiUt increasing noise." to curb the rise in health costs. Parent-Teacher associations.
least toot their minds off the bombs.'' cd Eckstrom to the Midway City address Air California President Robert W. The President told Congress his Survivors, in addition to her husband ,
Since that time, she's had Jess pressure Parking in front of the mod est fr am e after the inurder of a Bell Gardens girl Clifford reminded that his firm must revamped economic policies "can mean are two sons, David Pluml of Ml Baldy
to practice. But she has developed her house, Detective S g l. Csrl Wilson and and a bys tander who went to her aid. serve the public but still wants to be a even greater price stability with leas and Steven, a student at UC Santa Cruz;
own version of Glrn and Bear It. his partner, Det ective Donald \V . The younger sister of ~ woman good neighbor. restrictive bureaucracy." at daughter, Mrs. Diane Glassey of San
"If I get real mad at someone, I'll just Schneider, both 40, approachCC: the front fatally wounded by two pistol shots in the ''We have eliminated smoking enginls But he said their success depends "on Diego; and a brother, Phillip Dowds of
mate a funny face lnsteaC:I of s,pc_>Uting door. stomach was hit four times but survived. and follow all sound reducing pro-a finn spirit of self-restraint both within Long Beach.
off. '11lat causes them to laugh, aDd then Normal procedure would have been ·to Following the pistol spree. in the shop-cedures," he stated. "The new larger the federal goTemment and among.the M~ of the family have auggested
when they laugh I'm not so mad ." wait for followup units bringing enoug h ping center parking lot. Cal state Long planes will be quieter and carry more general public." And be said Congress donatiooa be made elther to the Jean
Mra. Slyers, who lives with her law men to cover each escape route, then Beach author!Ues disclosed-an ironic passengers reducing the number of ahould act "with a· high sense of fiscal Plumb Memorial Patient! Aid Fund at
daughter at 11080 nlton CJrcle, hopes to order the suspect to coroo out with his fi nal lwist. ~;O~ig~h~ls~.'~' ~~~i~~~~~~~~r-es~~pc~J~ts~lb~ll~lty'~' ln~actlng~~on~lederal~~~spend~~·~~H~oag~~M~emo~lral~~H~osp~ital~o~r~the~~Americl!l~~=---l---'IDllWlllllJ"'l'.&il:Joi"~IQJ!wJ'"'1)'Uj!lLl!iJ.s;j!itL..'.'.'.:'.:'....::::...::~::::.:::._.:.::::_.:.::---::_.:_:_.:.::q;_hey-!1ttd-SekBWm-«MJeRtly--gave-.a---in"""-. .... .-.,r-'N•e"'Wpo""'rlr-8each, b1
grandchildren In New 1 Zealand she's classroom speech urging stronger gun
nev<''" seen. Intended Victim ~::!~ to prevent senseless, violent
Front Page .I
OFFICER ...
cident as Vlctor ·J . Kubick, 23, but declin· -
ed to release his address because he
feared further reprisals.
The officer said he did not know where
the juvenile obtained the weapon.
although he claimed ~ have found it.
The boy was held overnight, with ad-
mission scheduled today al Orange Coun-
ty Jcvenile Hall on a charge of assault
w1th intent to commit murder.
OIAMGI COAST a
DAILY PILOT
TM or.... C....I DAILY PILOT, wt!h whlcll
h cmrMfnfd Ille .. -.Pra'-II pubfblltd &y ""'°"""" c....i flllDllllllng (Ofn!»"-'t'. ~
nf• edlllunt "rl Pf,lbtllllecl, Mond•Y llll'O\l'jh
F rld.ty, for Co.I• M•s•. Newf!llrl Be~ch,
.,....,,11119ton flt.t<ll/FO\H'lta1n lratley, lAQll""
...,._ lrv1nt1~te11ac~ and San Cllmen!(f
S•n J11•n Oi>l•lf•na A srnQ'lt rl!Q•Q<>~I
e<l!llOn ~ pvotisll«I Saturllay, M>d Sll'llJ•V~.
Tiit prlnctp..11 PllblltllillQ pltn1 •\ .i JXl W~\I
lt'f Slntel. Cotlt Mnt, Ctldom1•, tl~16. • Rob.Ii N. Wied ...... i...t Mii l''Vllh)fm"
J•cl R. c,,1.y \'Jc:I ............ ~........,..
Tlto11H11 K....;I ·-1\oMa• A. M_,.11;,.. -.....u1.
L P•t+r Kri•t tl-...rt9"d!Clty ii:dflw "--"""" lJJJ N_,.n a..1,,.,,d
M..m.,"'4ru1: r.o. 1011 1175, t266J
°"'°' °""°' C. .. ~: m Wttt ..., StrNt Utunt 9-fl: m LKtrl'lf .t.'tMW ............... ludl: IFWS ~ lo..I~
SM C..._lt : JDS Hortll El C.1t1lno !t..i
Tel.,.._ 171 41 MMJn Qm.,._. .MtMI .. MN671 . ' ~ "11. OrlllOI C.KI ~tlltnt °"""""· "' """' llOl'ltt. lllwtr•lllM, .... ,.. """" ., .. Vfl'llMfNnh '*"'" ::.... .. ~-.,.... .,_:Ill ,.,,. rtl cllpy'rWI I ewnitf" • ---"'"""'"-°"""""" ....,.,. w un-Jw ad .........,, .. fMlt 11..IJ .....,,., ~ . .... ......
• k
The young student -who li ved with
E R • his pa rents -is recovering in Orange scapeS apISt; , County Medica l Ceoter's prison ward,
cha rged .,.,•ith four coun ts of mu~er and y outli Arrested one ,1 assault with a deadly weapon.
A 27-year-Old woman who told Newport
Beach police she had just moved to tb~
city escaped an 11ttempted rape altempt
in Balboa Wednesday night by locking
herself in a bathroom and tben cl imbing
out a window -the same window her al·
tacker had entered.
Police said they later apprehended a
t&-year-old juvenile in the viclnlt~ of the
hotel where the woman was staying and
have charged him with the crimt.
Officer Mike Sullivan said the woman
had been sleeping when the yoll,lh en·
terec!. flashed a 'knife, and tried to attack
her.
She e·scaped onto !he roof and dO\l.'Tl an
l'levator ,.,Ith no cloth~ on a• ren to a
nearby restaurant for help. Sullivan said
"some good samaritan" had given her a
raincoat to cover herself .
Ile sai d the woman was hystericnl but
nftt'r she was cahned at police head-
quarters she gave h\m a description of
1he vouth v•ho Sullivan sa id he found two
hours later hanging around near the
hotel .
Andrew Spatzier
Services Friday
Fro11& Page 1
WATERGATE. ••
new plea to all charges -which he w11s
required lo do under federal court rules-
the jury was called back and tbe prosecu-
tion began calling its f i r s t witnesses
against the sit remBining defendant:!.
"Ladies arid gentlemen of the jury, you
are oo longer to be concerned with the
case of the United States ag,ainst E .
Howard Hunt," Si.rica told the jurors,
giving them no explanation.
The possibility the case would be ex-
panded beyond the simple criminal
counts involved in the bre~in last June
17 apparently vanished when Hunt's at-
torney, with agreement of the pro&-
cculor. successfull y 11 r g u e d against
Sirira's suggestion th<1t for Hunt to ha\.'C
hi s guiHy picas :icceptcd. he cxpl:un
"hO\V you got into tqis conspiracy ."
ll unt did admit under Siric11's qlles-
t1oning that he "'as guilty .of each count
11nd committed the violations ''know·
ingly._and intentionall~ and unl~wfully."
Bittman argl.:ed against Hunt 1 answ~r
ing the question of bow he became in-
volved ln the conspiracy on grounds the
government plans to re<ipen a grand jury
invcstigatkm or Ute poliUcal espionage.
Bittman said Hunt's answers mil:ht
pn:judice his position In that h> Private funeral services will be held vestigation and that bl.a azmren mlgbt
l'lt 10 a.m. Friday in Sllnta Ana for An· prejud ice the judgeis own view regarding
drew F'. Spat7.ier of Newport Beach. 8 lhe other six defendants still . standing 23-year resident of Orange County, v.•ho trial.
died Saturday. He was 65. Jlunt was led out of the courtroom by a Mr. Spetzler. of 1850 16th St.. Newport murshal 45 minutes after the trial
Beach. was a certified public accountant. -· .. med. presumably to be locked up 'un· Service,, and buri'l will be at Fair· '"""'
haven Memorial Park In Orange . tll the bo:td was poslld. ·
Mr . Spatl.ier Is survived by two da ugh-Slr1e1. lndlcated he was letting the
ters, Mrs. Suuinnc Pnutsen of Hacie:nrl a bond Uddsually hiSh because flunt fled
HeightS and Stephanie Spatiier of Soulh governm ent inytStlgaton ~hortJy after
LAl(Ul1a, and one gnm<ldaugh .. r. the break-in. had ~ lri<ind• -aod "·"
The family suggests memortal contrl· quaint.anct.S in forelgn cotmtrles and was
butlons 1er f r the StudY:l'~o!!!f-·~no".!t:-'em~e:;Jom~ed::,;.· ;;Bt;:;·u~m'";;:m•;.o:;f[!lltd;.:;-thiiiiiatriH;ifiunt mocratic Jnstitut s, 80i1$W, Santa was emplOjta aa a Wi"iler'"W naa \fflt-
Barbara. ten 46 books .
NO ONE $EW G.E.
FOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
. NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE··· •
17.6 CL ft. NO llOST
IBllGIUTOI
• ,_ ldM 141 to , ....
_.,~ ....... .
•co..rM.~ .... ...
• 1'Mll """*' tin hold 2" .......
• $tf)lof•ll ........... CWlll'Olot. .................... ..., .....
319'6
sen IOOO WAST! llllfOSll ................
•tt.wtln. .. .... ·~Dalt ..... M; 7
•S.-.DNIO.W ......... .... SD-159"
.
FREEZER
•UPRtCHT
CONVENIENCE
•Positive S.leiy Dos~ ..............
•DoKl.odo
17C)96
• Of'sE-..111111".f• w•Acti.-• . ..... ........
•J ........ 2Amm .ls; 1w • , ... ey..,._,..._., ...... , ..... --........... ---
"LOW PRICES ARE IORN HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE" m -..., of 90 DAY U C1llfornl1'1 Largoat CASH m .c .. ~~~11 .. auy1., W1TM .....,m
Gro"I' With Tho Clllllf
Volume luyl"I -' ;=·;•tll!!!!A-Powor of 110 SI---.~ 40 :,_,_.~. -·~
-"--~ll~ltVD. 111 .. ~. CIStl Im -,.. 541-7711--
..
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Orang~ Coast
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
--VOL 66, NO. II, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1973 c TEN CENTS
Meany Hails Controls~ Demise, Promises .Help
!IY Viiiled Pr<sl IDl<nullloaal
AJL.CIO Pmldent George Meaoy,
who led tile labor walkout from the
J>raldml'• Pay Board, today hailed tu
de:Ql1le u ... step ln the right dlrec:tkm''
and inmll<d organized labor's COOjltr>
Uoo In tile large1y -tary wage and
price controla of PhaSe 3.
lb O:iogress, reaction to the elimination
of tile Pay ~rd an<!, Price Commission
ran on predictable party lines.
. ·--R<publlcans generally supported NiI-
00'1 proposals for tile oext stage of biJ
<CODOllllc stablliZltioa program and
Oemocrau eyed It warily. '
8'p. Wright Patman (D-Te1.), whose
House BanlciDg Committee will handle
tbe Pres.ldent'1 request for authority to
continue curtroh alter April 30, said tile
proposed relaxatJon is "a premature
move to pemlissiveness."
Sen. Wallace F. Bennett <R-Utah),
•
ranking minority member of the Senate
Ftnance Committee, bailed the plan as
"testimony lo tile . success of the
, AdminiJtraUon's ecooomic policies."
Executive Vic< President Ard> llo01b
of the U.S. Chamber of Coriunerce prais-
ed Ni.zoo's order as a "Ont step toward
Oie orderly withdrawal of t'Olltrols."
James Burnham. chief s e-n i o r
economist at Mellon National Bank Trust
Co. in Pittsburgh, said 'lth:l!'goes a little
larther in the direction of liberalization
than we bad anticipated, but basically
you can cbaracteme my position as quite
C.vorable."
Meany said ln a statement ; "The AFlr
CIO Is deeply coocerned •bout the con-
trol of inflation. 1be President's ex·
ecuUve order of Loday is a step in the
right direction toward eliminating in-
equities in the present control system."
He promised that the federation "is * {{ i:?
prepared to cooperate and parlicipate in
the stabil11ation structure.."
lifeaoy had led the. five labor mtmbe.rs
off the Pay Board last year, complaining
its five public and five business membtrs
constituted a )>ody stacked against labor deman~, He y charged the Pay
Boa age1 do'A-'j;iwhile the Price
Commission alloY.l-ed price increases on a
wide' scale.
It ~lso "'as announced today that
fl1eany and other big -labo r leaden would
take part in a new !~member advisory
board to the Cost of Living Council.
United Auto Workers president
Leonard \Voodrock said ''voluntary
restraiiit on prices and wages has long
been a goal of the UA\V through lls P*
posals for a wage.price review boa rd."
The automobile industry withheld com·
ment whll~ it studied the propos11ls.
* ·'. ,., t: r . rice e
Mesa Youth Gives llp
Newport Officer
Prevents lqlling
By L. PIITER KRIEG
Of flll DlllY l"ltft lld
A Newport Beach policeman talked a
14-year-old Costa Mesa youth out of
&hooting a man in a· t.ense, beachfront
coofmitatloo late Wednesday nlgbl
,Bpt ,Offic;er Micbael Sulllv~ said be
bad to threaten lo shoot the youth lo get
bim' JO· <Iii> bla own guii. ·
Sullivan aaJd bl w a 1 In an upstairs room at the Balboa Inn tnvestlgating an
attempted rape there about' midnight
. wben"he heard a commetion about a
block Away. ·
He 11Jd be ran to-the acene, where he
came upon a youth. who be said was
holding a man at gunpoint.
' •
FINALLY FREED
Seporter Farr
Justice Do11glas
Orders Newsman
•
Farr Released
The youth was saying ''I'm gonna blow
your brains out. We're going to go down
to the beach and you're going to get
yours for finking on me," ()(ficer
Sullivan related.'
Sullivan said he got the drop on the
youth with his service }'tVOlver, but the
boy refused to drop the .32 automatic he
was holding in the inan'a face and oon--
tinued shouting at tLe =·that be would
sboo~blm. .
"I'm IOing to kill too first," 9Jllivan
said he warned the youth, wbo finally
tumid aw1iy and dropped his weapon.
Officer Sullivan aald the youth ap-
peared to be und!r the influence of
alcohol, as did two companions, one 16
and a 19-year-old man l.clentiried as David
Wym an, of 1034 Linden Place, Costa
Mesa.·
Wyman was arrested and booked on
suspicion o.f being drunk in "'-'blic. .
Police identified the victim of the in·
(See OFFICER, Page II
Suit on Mental
Health Facilities
Hits Count)· Court
A long standing dispute about Orange.
County's use of private facilities in its
care of mental heaJth patients has hit ·the
courtroom With the filing ol a lawsuit by
a Fullerton psychologist.
'Df. Warren · D. p Roberft is seellng
Orange County Superior Court action
that will prevent county supervisors and
officlala of the county's mental health
• ~ "1>m utilizing recently authoriz..
ed county programs in lils area.
Roberti claims his own Hillcrest
Psychology Center can provide those
servlces. He further alleges that the
county. is committed to take that action
in view of Its long time acceptance of the
federal Short·Doyle act containing that
provision.
RoberU states In the lawsuit that be
will seek an injuncUoa against the coon·
ty's use via a thr~year lease of ad·
jacent Fullerton facilities that will · cost
the county $2,325 a month in rent
tloberts also attack,s. what he claims is
thP county 's fiv~year plan leading to the
proposed establishment of a nonprofit
Orange County Mental Health D>rpora·
Uon.
The psychologist contends that the
board acted unlawfUUy and violated the
state's Welfare and Institutions Code
when it 1uthorlzed t b e Fullerton ex· pamm wltboul first contacting operators
ol private mental health ladlltla.
' WASlllNGTON (AP) Juatice
Wllllam o. Douglas today ordered
._ier Wlll1am T. Farr -from Jail
'whlle be appeals a cont.,.pt conv1cllon
for I al«)r 'aboat the• tl'llJ Mam lrilL
tsee edltoiW. Pa&<•>· The Pha Farr. 31, llu been In Jail ti elm. nto m
DAILY PILOT ....._ "' .-. ta!•
FOUNTAIN VALLEY'S GRANDMA SAYERS DISPLAYS HER GIRNING TALENTS FOR CAMERA
With a Little Pr1ctlce, Normal Face (left) Becomes 1 Ticket to Stardom
Grandma Has No. 1 'Girn'
By JOHN ZALLER
Of .. bllllY ... l»H
Frances Sayers clearly has a face that
makes othen look ordinary by com·
parison.
appreciated by tbe 71-year-old Fountain
Valley grandmother.
..
"Maybe I was just used to it," she
says, "but I really ,didn't see anything
unusual about it before the contest. Of
course, now I see It differently.''
The thing that o~ her eyes to the
potential of her face was a "Girn Con·
test,. sponsored by radio station K~1PC.
(A gim, according to Webster 's, is a
contortion of the face .)
Mn. Sayers was the hands-down win·
''We had hundreds or fine entries,·•
reports KMPC disc jockey Gary Owens.
"But no one could do anything -close to
what she did."
Mrs. Sayers' trick is really a simple
one -for her. She juts her jaw forward
as far as it will go. and then extends her.
•
lower lip over the tip of her nose, seem-
ingly swallowing it.
The overall appearance is at once
hilariously funny and thoroughly un--
natural. It is as if her mouth were con--
"I saw it once in Ripley's Believe It Or
Not, and I thought there must be some
trick to it ~' says Owens. "But she did it
for us here in the stadios and It's for
real.·•
Owens ti\'a' so impressed that he's
tSee GIRN. P.age Zt
Beaeh Booze Baeked
3 Commissioners Suppo~t Liberal Dri1iki11 g La:ws
Strong support for liberalized drinking
laws at Orange County beaches and
parks has come from th ree county
harbors, beaches and park.s com·
missioners.
While ~mmissioners Tuesday delayed
action on making any recommendation to
county supervisors, three boa r d
members said they would favor almost
total aJolishment of all liquor restric·
lions. ,
Liquor is prohjbited at all parks and
beaches now •
"\\'e s Id bave as little legislation
..
Watergate Case
and regulation as possible until a specific
problem develops,'' suggested Com·
missioner 1bomas O'Kcefe.
He noted that the state has experienced
no great problem at Doheny State Beach
where liquor is allowed.
Commission Chairman T h o m a s
Ba\d\11in. who said -he wanted a Jillie
more conservative approach to the issue.
noted that not too many people arc
ay,·are that drinking Is legal at Doheny.
But t'A-'O other commissioners. Frank
Robinson and C. C. "Jack" Wooley,
echoed O'Kecfe 's feelings that the cur·
rent ban" should be lilted except in areas
such as Irvine Park wbel"! deed restric·
lions prohibit It.
"It's a highly personal thing,"
Robinson said, ''but I agree with Tom
IO'Keefe). 0 u r information shows a
concern about what might happen, rather
than stalitics that show it did happen ."
RobltiS6n referred to a staff recom-
mendations that suggested lifting the ban
in only a few areas. such as Dana Point
Harbor, Fcatherly Regional Park. O'Neill
Park and Sunset Aquatic Park.
Hunt Pleads Guilty Twice
President's
Move Comes
As Surprise-
\\'ASHlr\GTON IAPl -President Ni l·
on today abolished mandatory wage-price
controls except in the food and health lrt-
dustries. In their place, he established •
system of voluntary wage and price
guidelines -backed by the threat of
government enforcement
'lbe surprise move -far more swee~
ing than bad been expected -came as
Nix:oo asked Congress for a one-year e1·
tension o( his authority to control wages
and prices.
The Pnosident abolished the Pay Board
and the Price Commission but retained
the Cost of Living Council to manage his
Phase 3 economic system .
1be program. which immediately
!'('places 1he Phase 2 system established
ir. November 1971. "is self·administering
:ind based on voluntary compliance," the
White House said. ,
No longer w i 11 large businesses and
labor unions have to get prior govern-
ment app1i> .. al for wage or price hikes -
except in "special problem areas" which
Nixon listed as food processing and
retailing, and the health industry.
The President also continued the
present system of looser mandatory con·
trols over construction wage increase!
and said the present voluntary effort to
keep Interest rates dov.n would stay in
effect
ut or t se industries and unions
freed today from mandatory controls, the
government retains the right to move in
\Vilh stiff action to roll back
unreasonable increases.
Nixon said in a message to Congress
that his goal is to reduce lhe inflation
rate to 2.5 percent or less by the end of
.~ 1973: He said his 90-day Phase l wage-.
price freeze and his Phase 2 mandatory
controls cut the inflation rate by nearly
half -to about 3.S percent .
Nixon's new program abolishes rent
controls and is intended to "allow
reasonable flexibility " in wage and price
increases. Secretary of the Treasury
George .;huttz told newsmen.
Shultz said the government y;ould keep
close tabs on the new system and those
who don't comply "are going to get clob-
bered."
He also said while the Phase ! pro-
gram goes Into effect immediately. there
will be a 90-day transition period to clear
up a backlog of cases pendini;i: before the
Pay &ard and Price Commission.
All new actions, nov.·ever. will go
(See..CO:\'TROlS, Page ZJ
Orange Coast
Weather
The wealherlady predicts the Qr.
ange Coast will experience variable
clouds and continued fair ~·eather
on Friday. The high is expected to
be M, the low 48.
< llouilaa' onler that the Loa Angeles
1 ---..;l""''"·-reporlet-be-ll'eed-''on bla-own -S •J_ :-A-• WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Fonner Whit<
recopJzance" wu to be followed later in trin:es ga1.1t House conaultant E. Howard Hunt Jr.
the day wttb .. optnloa by the jtlslice. pleaded guilty today to all charget
presentenclng invesU11t100 is completed. ed guilty to all sl1 counts of the indict·
Henry B. Rothblatt, lawyer for four· of ment against him.
the defendants, said attomeys for all six Hunt's attorney, William 0 . Bittman,
INSIDE TODAY
Tht 2SG-member Brotherhot>d
o/ Spirit in Northfield, i\1cw .•
l1a1 learned th a t brotl1erhood
won't jiti atomachs and pay rent,
ond ad ult mtmDtr.s ore bti11g
required to take job&. Srory Ur&
Page 14 .
rcmainin' defendants asked for 11 mis--pleaded with Sirica to tower the $100,000
trial during a private meeting with Slrica bond, saying "I don't believe he will be
and that the judge denied it able to meet" the amount. He asked that
Hunt iniUally ttied to plead guilty to it be low~red to $25,00l or, at most, ·•
conspiracy to break into Democratic na· $50.000. •
tlonal headquarters. actually breaking in· Sirlca said, "I deny your repuest and
to the .... Waterpte building office. and to Y&J can lake It to the court or appeals if
ll!leolng via bugging devices lo telephone you wanl"
convenatlcnl or .. IQtne DemocraUc offi-Later, Hunt posted ball. · •
clals. . Hunt'8'-plea-waa not beard by tile Jury
AlleJ 'Sirica ttflll<d to acce!'l that plea w\llcll. has Ileen abo<nt,lrom the court·
"'-omltling r<fereftce lo th r et other -...Oni lince Wedoeaday when be offered
cbaricurllllu 19 octual!l p\adDa bug-to plead guilty. Alter Slrlca accepted tile
ging ifevm In the«noea-llU!itPleia--,-~t---t:=========-.J---
Farr's atlomey Mllrl< Hurwitz, said Ace Ajai and Vnlted may oot be agalnat biJn, in the Watergate bugging'
'Douglas' clerk totd him be aent a i.1.. very7zippy names IOI' 1 company, trial The Judi aa:epted tile plea after
~ notilying Loa Angelea County Sher-but they're.-nonelh<ltsa, rejecting 11uiit'1 effort lo plead guilty lo
lfl Peter Pitcheaa of the order rtleulng Evttv once lo 1 wtriJe oometblng only three counta,
'tho oowsman. betrtt' fn 1 name comet1 along. In anotber development Senate Demo-
, Hurwitz said be' assumed the telegram Taite tile ~ eutllt that crai. voted today for a fUII Investigation
_,Id arrive "within two or lb...., how's" bagged a car In San Cltmente o1 tile Watereto buiJing cue and , ..
and that Farr -1d be "lea!od tJteo. w~--'ay -'•bl lated 1U-1•'-' o1 i..-·'"-· efforu ~ --He -.peeled the -to be "" --. --......... ~. leaaed tblJ afternoon. • The firm, oporalll)f out or Long to -.. Ille 1171 -•tic prat·
-Told ot the -. Farr told ne.w> B e 1 c b , h ' P b 1 n t 0111 dentlal ~ ~· r.m ErYlh cP. · · m..-=.,~an belott hb ttleaae: ·~·m . Jlepoaaeaora.• N.C.,>.-~lil-tbe~.-
-•• TC!l' ·•" be~~bnr11.faii"lo -!!lLJ2Jl!l-1~:t!>ltl~ .. .....,._!~~-!!:-:..-tbe-~~sllOfll--'-1.~· !!!Jkr~ occopthc the aecond pita, V.S. Ha _ ___ _ before ~--JJ!!m J , SlrQ an!rnd
Hont bold llDder $100,080 -tmlll a
' ....
l •
' • · . •
..
2 DAIL V PILOT c ~. JanUOl'J 11, 197J L
Ak"' Sounding~· . \raken
Regional Airport Hearing Hel,d in County
'BJ UOl JlllOliACK • Din Emory, dla1rman (Jf the Alrpori TONIGHT
COSTA MESI. W,1.TER DfSTRICl' -
Rqu1ar meeting, 77 Fllr Drive, 7::JO
p.m.
LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Movies
for the family, "Below Zero" nod ·'Coral
Jungle," 7:30 p.m.
UCI LECTURE S E R I E S
~·Geo&rapby and People," first of series
oo The race and M1nd of Ireland, 101
Pbysical ScifAcel ?·10 p.m. Admission
$4.50. "The Polynoslan Hawaiians -
Cultural Backgrounds," part of series on
,__~·. ~ Jn t'alililles • .socw_
Scleoce Lecture HaU, 7·9:45 p.m.
Adml-$4.'IJ.
"MOONCJULDREN" -Soutb Coast
Repa1ory '!'beater, 111'1 Newport mvd .. I
p"m.
• t" ~ -'"" ! No!Je ,l. .. te!nent Committee ol Newport
AlrportJ anl lllllgbt In !htir place -Beach dfd bla compari90n of the needs of
10me other plice, ~,000 people Who ny planel to the 20,000
who are disturbed. "Quiet planet are a This, at le'!'t, oeemed the concensll' ctw.m;" he •rguid. "Fllghtl, wW double
Wtdnesdey In Santa Ana. The oceaslon In 12 years with lncrtu lng noise."
wu a citizen bearing board of the Ai r Callfomla Ptealdent Robert W.
Soutbtrn California Auoclation o( Cllfford' reminded that bis firm must
Governments (SCAG) takto g eoundlngs serve the publlc but at ill wants to be a
. Sa A . 1 ·•-ud good netahbor. m nta na on a regwna _..,.,rt st y. ''We have ellminlted smo~ eoaines
A second meeting by the group will be tand follow all tound rtducmg pro-
lK!d in Los Alamitos-March 21. C!fdures," he stiled. "The new larger
Those from E t To~Misslon Viejo planes wtn be quieter ind ~
thooi)>t Cllno HiJ1J In the northem part ~·"' reducing the number of
o1 the county an Ideal llile for an ailp>rt. A11aa Beet of Newport Beach.
Brea or Yorba Linda residents think I
1epree>Ung the IJrporl Action "5socf•·
Uoa aald, "There an no •lr lran!porta-
Uon needa, full wanta. l'alple Dying the
"'-llbould be wUllnl to pay $JO a
ilcbt to be used to buy up bomes af·
fected/'
Mrs. 1beodore H.. Cooper represe.Qting
the Rancho Mission Viejo Woman's Club
urge upgrading of Orange County Airport
with tbe nutwayt moved northward.
Jean Morrll and Mn. B.O. Bntmmels
ol the Eaatb1ull area of Newport Beach
told of aoot on patio furniture and noise
too loud to telephone or »5ten 10
tettvtalon.
Clilf Fralur, airpG!I flying llCbo!ll.
operator, 111ggeated that the COllll~·
airport be put on san Cl<mente lllond.
Sl'ORTS AND VACATION SHOW -
Anaheim Conveolioo Center, through
Jan. H,
joint u.. of El Toro Marine COrps A.ir
. Statloo Ill a great ldeL
Ne"t'Ort Beach residenlll seemed to
thinlt IQ1Wbere et.. but Orange COunty
Police Officer ·in Bar
FJtlDAY, JAN. 11
BASKETllAIL -Estanda at Edison,
~· I p.m. a.ta Mesa vs. Macnolia at Mesa a p.m. Newpon Harbor at Western, 8
p.m.
OCC FILM SERIES -"The Devils"
Forum. 7 p.m. Admission $1.
Airport ts line.
" Bart Spendlove of the Saddleback Mea
Coordinating Council ; Wayne Moody <lf
Laguna Beach; EdtA·ard L. Olsen of
Laguna Hills Leisu re World Founda tion
and Max Schachner of Irvine all favored
Shooting Free on Bail
UCI VOCAL CONCERT -concert by
vocal majors in School of Fine Arts.
Village Concert Hall , I p.m.
'"PLAY STRINDBERG" -South Goast
Repertory Theater, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, 8 p.m.
f'ront Pqe I
CONTROLS. • •
Controversial Site
Chino HUis.
Wayne Wedin, city manager of Brea,
end a Yorba Linda councilwoman were
violently opposed lo any north county
airport and especially Chino Hills.
Col. John Lowman was for Olino Hills.
!~e's one of the promoters of the facility.
San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station , south of San Clemente, has a Gordoo Jones, director Planning
genetating capacity of 450,000 kilowatts and has been in operation Engineering for the Irvine Company op-
since January, 1968. Dotted lines show area where Southern Call· posed El Toro use and supported
fornia Edison Company and San Diego Gas and Electric Company restrlded UR of Orange Cotmty Airport.
hope to place t wo additional twin reactors, representing a five-fold in· He said the Marine air station there
beloro ·the Ooot ol Llvlllg OOundl and its crease in power capability. Atomic Energy Commission bearings on should be abandoned.
new pay and price divisions, effective the matter begin In San Diego Tuesday. Col. Mumy Staples of El Toro
Santa Ana Municipal Court Judge
\Villiam Thomson changed his m i n d
\Vednesday and allowed bail for a Cypress
poUce sergeant charged with murder
after the slaying Jan. 4 of a P.tarine
Corps helicopter pilot In a Tustin bar.
Sgt. Thomas Baroid!, 26, posted bis
$100,000 bond immediately after Judge
f'roaP .. eJ
FARR ••. lmniodlalely, M-vigorously r.peated the Corps'
Uoder -··· m a -.. la'--···~-o-'tton to joint ... of tiler-~-. ..-,~ • ..... uur-• ._... ... .,........ ...... OJ' -rk as a "-porter !or·~ Los Angeles ment advisory committee -th Kenneth Carr, san Clemente City "" " -
members tneludillg top tndustri1lists and J B • p nde • manager oppoeed C&mp Pendleton as a Times.
such labor leaders as the AFL-CIO's ury egins 0 ring site. Farr was held In contempt by SUperior G<!Orge Meany -wiU decide whether the Newport Beach Mayor Donald McGin· court Judge Charles H. Older of Los current 5 5 percent cellln . nis argued that Orange County A.irport Angeles for writing a story about a pro-~ . · ng on wage m· spec tive witness' statement that the creues abou!d be modified. --. should revert to com.muter. and private
S . f G p n . H used t r.1an son "family" planned to murder
That standard remains In eflect wilil anity 0 i"g_ eters ymg ""· e ace coun y govern· several movie atars. Farr was then the panel meets and the Cost of Livi ng menl of dragging its feet. working for the Herald-Ellminer.
Council decides whether to accept its DaJe Rummel, chairman df the Costa Older held Fa~ In contempt for refus·
recommendations. Mesa Airport Study Committee, recom· ing to divulge the names of the lawyers
>t A.a a gmeral ~ for Phase Ill, the By TO'I B'RLEY mended strict controls on land use who suppl1"ed him w1"th the statement. ~~ u--aat pr1 •·-· ·'··"d n ,,, days .of unrestricted testimony wae ade· around airports larger aircraft use U "unc .,_ ct UK;ll:ase! ~ °'""' Dall'f ~'"" 11111 ' • Dur'""' the trial, the judge im~ an mt aceed toc:ruaes In costs. quate prooC of the defendant 's insanity. quieter and unifonn standards of noise .. '6
"Even where COiia bave lncrealed,., a An Orange County Superior COUrt jury The jury's ruling wW end the leCOlld controt onler barring lawyen and o trial
Wblta -summary aatd. "prices U18t baa already ''""lcted Gig Peter> of Superior Court trial ol Peters, ~-He said the i:ommlttee opposed an ::1&':.':~~ ::'"osln& MY in-
sboald DOI be lnc:ruled II the firm's prof· Huntington Beach on two counts ol fi rst His !Int trial ended dramaUcally and ollsbore airport and called the SCAG '"I'm very pleased," Hunria said.
it margin exceeds the firm'• base-period .t--murder went into the "..., room prematurely when be wu shot in the rtavlapo~ .... W1l'f:alistic in regard to private "It's been a !~battle." -. -·-'• .... ~ ,_, back by a bailiff as be tried to escape _ '".-••• ·=.!'"'ftly," .~ lltllllllWY "added. today to dM·-•·· 11 the crippled former r -•M..... He added," battle Ill not yet over." ~--u _ __ ·~-~ rom -~~,during the nooo recess.• He wu !or study of Cllno llllh, El Hurwitz aatd the M•-b n..-1
Thomson revoked his earlier decision to
aUow no ball for the officer pending
preliminary hearing in the sllrne court
Jan. 18.
The same preliminary hearing date has
been set for Garden Grove police o[fTcer
Jerry Gray , 28. He is accused of assault
with a dead.Jy weapon following the
wounding of patron Sam Csmplse, SS,
TUstin. in the same fracas at the
Blcbelon m bar.
Gray ts lree on $2,000 hall.
The prosocutton plans to obtain U.. ln-
cUctment of both offioen from the new
1'13 Grand Jury. Both men were olf duty
at the time of the tncldent.
It was testified at an earlier hearing
that Marine Capt. Steven Robinette, 25,
(lf PhoenlT, Arizona, told firemen as he
lay dying in the bar thal he was actuall y
trying to come to the aid of both officers
when be was allegedly !!hot by Baroldi.
Investigators at the bar shortly after
the shootings said the incident indirectl y
stemmed from Gray's questioning or
several patrons about a narcotics probe
he was working on.
f'rotnP .. eJ
WATERGATE ••• "a firm-•• •-·-_._· to -••M lifeguard wu sane when be killed his Doctors believe be may be Toro, Pendleton -anything bul the means '"at least ooe al. ~ 'l! ~ """'__. ~-R:.Uao.• 1'\lllw.1.t.s. permanently paralyzed from the waist present site.
j
'
ed -~~• __. tot•· prof ~-d the ··' I the . al 1n· . oor c&ll'O ••• It gives .., great bope !or ocr 11 .. __ , "~' ""'&""'"' ,.. -Judge Kenneth Williams sent the Jury own a.s resi.ul o spm _ Junes. Brian Dou&lass, genenl m_aiµager of the future.•' new plea to all cbargea -which be was
1 11 margin If tbe llm't averqe price In-into seque>traUoo after the delivery or the Fullerton Airport reminded listeners Farr wed Douglas 10 clayw qo to required to do Wlder federal court rules-
c:reues would not oiceed 1.5 percent In a final !lfiWil'llla by proeecutor Pat Brian tha\ noise was not the only problem. '"We order him released unW the U.S. Circuit the jury wu callid back and the prosecu-
year." and defense attorney Barry Tarlow and Disneyl_an, d Hotel have relattvety quiet phmes but people CoiJrt 1n San Francisco rui.s on an ap-Uon. began calling Its lira t witnesses
· Nl.ron told -~ the miiiidaiDry" t!Je jurtsCs_ reading of lnstructlom object to any Increase m"overfllghts," be peal. The justice held up action unW the . agilnst )be~ remaining defendanla.
wage irl'3 price control system would be specifically geared to the sanity issue. · ' ~ f · · reveo led. Los Angeles County counsel office ."Ladles .and centlemen of the Jury, you
condnued '"with special vigor !or flrlllS (Related story Page 31. T 0 Ch_ anu•~ Hands replied. !See earlier story, Page 5). are no longer tO be concerned with the
Jnvofvtd In food~ processing and food ....Brian and Peters himself insi$l tha t ~ John D. Malgrg, the county coUJl3el, case of the United States against E.
retailing." the fo rmer Huntington Beach High From Page .I and WUllam F. Stewart, his deputy, told Howard Hunt," Sirlca told the jurors.
He said he ~as establishing a .ovem-School student was sane when he stabbed Wall Disney Productions of Burbank the justice that most of_ ~Farr's legal giving them no explanation.
ment committee 40review federal pOllcles Charles Peters, 55, through the heart and will take over the ownership of 0 FFJ CER . argument had been made by the reportei" The possibil ity the case would be ex·
affed.inl food prices and a nonaovem-strangled Flora Peters, &4 , on April 21, Disneyland Hotel in Anaheim from ' • ' in an earlier appeal rejected by the panded beyond the simple criminal
ment advisory &r'OOP to exam.int other 1971. \\'rather Corporation of Beverly Hills 'd v· J. Supreme COUrt in November. Douglas counts involved in the break·in tan June ways of stablllzing food prices. Tarlow argued thal his client's sanily d t f ci ent as ictor ·Kubick, 23, but declin· was the 90Je dissenter. 17 apparenUy vanished when Hunt's at-
Tbese steps will be coupled, be said, and judgment bad been impaired by his uy er erms o an agreement In principle ed to release his address because he "The real bs\le In Ulla case ts the con-tomey, with ag:reemeat of the pn»-
wlth concentrated efforts to bold down Jong use of drugs. He said Peters' three on a stock exchange :Jnnounced today. fea red further reprisals . linued viability of the judiciary to ecutor, auccessfully argued against
food prices by lncreuing food supply. Disney wiU purchase the hotel adjacent The officer said he did not know where preserve the consUtu Uonal guarantee of Sirica's wggestioo. that for Hunt to have
The effort.I to bolster supply include lo Disneyland for 187 Jl61 shares o( the juvenUe obtaioed the weapon, a fair trial," tbey said. "'lbere Ls no bis guilty pleas accepted, be explain
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s =~ ~ .:'"~eU::. Jean D. P1umh, Disney common stock and lltl0,000 in al;':'~ he:!:i~1.i ~v=:i~~ ad· i~!'.::.':.:""~~:,.,. ""'!.1~ .. ~~r ~t~~~~~· qu ... mmtt1es to market more rapidly. cash. A $24,860,000 ~rtgage remains on miMion scheduled today at Orange Coun-pression of private beliefs or attempts to tkm1ng that be was guilty of each count p 1-~~-1,,.,1m1i-.nandatory-,,on11iots-'-o.-ti..~f'1r.:;:-,..o-;;:;;!""-'l~~l'-;;:~~~-the-Jiot<Lail<ii......i."".'~ple....-mw-~~~-~-~l~H~al~l~on~a~cb~ar~e~o~r~as:s~a:ul~t;;~-~v~~~~~~~~~~•:saocl~~~~~and~~co~mmltted~~~the~~vio~~~tloos~~~"kno~;w-~~~~~~~ti
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health indu.!ltry also will be continued un-I e, owned and operated by the Beverly Hills with intent to commit m lions Or intelledual viewpoints.
tll modified on recommendation of a Cost fi rm. "
of Living CouncU on Health, the White S h 51 t House aatd. UCCUID S at The deal awa its approvals by the l
In addition, Nizm established a Health boards of both companies, a final sale
Ind ........ Advi·-Committee to recom-... Ir J Dowd Pl .1 agreement, adoption of a plan or com· ....... z ""''Z 1• s_. ean s umb,_ SJ._ w_ 1 e of .plete liquidation by the \Vrather mend changes in government programs t H bo " ped to cur.b the rise in health costs.· • p_ro~en ar r rea 1atr1c1an Dr. shareholders. rulings from the Internal
The President told Congress his Hugh J. Plumb Jr., died Tuesday nig ht in Revenue Service and registration or the
revamped economic policies "can mean Hoag l\.1emorlal Hospital. '· ·n isncy shares ·with the Securities and
even greater price stability with less A memorial service will be held Friday Exchange <;ommission, a Disney
tri l. bu " , spokesman said. res c tve realtCT'acy . al 2 p.m . at St. Andrew' Presbyterian
But be said their success depends "on Ch urch in Newport Beach. Private buri al a firm sptrlt of sell-restraint both within the federaJ government and among the services will follow at Fairhaven
general publJc." And be said COngr~ Memorial Part in Santa Ana .
should act .. with a high sense of fiacat The Plumbs were residents or Newport
ttepia4!Ll!lbilltJ" tn acting on federal spend-Beach 21 years and Mrs. Plum b tA'as ac-
q. tive in many civic affairs. --...
DAILY PILOT
'TM°""""' C:.t DAll.Y rll.aT, wnlt wtlldl
It ~ IM N._..,._, 11 plltllllhllll ..... .... °"""" ~ ,...._ ~. ""'"
nts MlttoM tr. Plltlli.Md, MCl"Cl1y lhl'ollol'I
!lrw.y, -.,. CO.II Miilo, N"'*1 tlettcft,
Huntt1191 .. l t«ll/F"""t1ln V1lley L.aounA
lkadl, lnlM/l11ldl-..(k .,,. Sin C:.._,11/
kn J\latl C•~itr...... A •lllO!it •etkw11I
• t'!dl11on I• M H11'1td S.h11•111y1 1r>e1 Sund~y•.
TN prlrKICHll llU'ltlilfll!IO pl1nt It 11 3XI Weit
l•y $1rfff, OllN M-. CIUlornlf, tW..
•111.,rt N. W1,d
..,..IHl'W Ml '*lllMr
J1c:k l . Curl.y Ya ,,.......,. ..,. Oel'l>nl ~
nom111 K.rdl .....
Tltotiilff A. .... , .. --a.rt .. H. t-t ltlu...I '· Htll Aath:ltnt ~ Mtln .,_ __
,,, w.tt ''' s+r •• t
MtltJtif Mtf,.11: ,,o. ks 1160, t2626 --,....,... llldll mi .........,, '"1f¥1t4 t....-1Mctt1 m ,........,._
H.htlnl• IMO!: lltll t.-dl ....,.._d 1"111 Otrnlftt91 ., ........ l[I CttnlM 11 .. 1
Ttl.,.._ f71"1 '41..t)ll
C ...... A4N1tt .. '4! ... 71
~ 1'71. O..... C-t M lllllllll ~. Ht """' ......... lllwtrlltlClftl, mlltrllf mitltl' ... .._,~ Mnll't ..... ·---·· ,.... ........ .,.,,..... .......
aGlllll t• "*""' .. w .. c.... Ill--. c.~-. ..,..."" w cerrllt .,., =.•--•II-~..., --• AM ..-..V. '
She was a member or the Hoag
Memorial Hospital Medical Auxiliary, St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church, the
Assistance League of Newport Beach, the
Lido Isle Women's Club, the UCJ Medical
Faculty Wives , and three different
Parent-Teacher associations.
SLirYivQM;, in add ition to her husband.
are l'A'O sons, David Plum~ of ~it. Bald v
and Steven, a student at UC Santa Crui ;
o daughter. ~1rs. Diane Glassey of San
Diego: and a brother. Phillip Dowds or
Long Beach.
~1e1nbcrs of lhc family havr suggested
dona tions be n1adc either to the Jean
Plum b Memorial Patien ts Aid Fund at
Hoag ~temoiral Jlospital or the American
C3ncer Society.
Andrew ·Spatzier
Services Friday
Private funeral services will be bt!:ld
at 10 a.m. Friday in Santa Ana for An·
drew F. Spatiier of Newport Beach, a
23-year re5ident of Orange County, who
died Saturday. lle was 6$,
~1r. Spatt lcr. of 1850 16th St., Newport
Btnch, wns a C\'rtified public acoountant.
Servi ces and burial will be at Fair·
ha ven Memorial Park In Orangt.
Mr. Spalz.lt r Is survived by two daugh·
ters. Mrs. Suianne Paulsen of Haciendll
Heights and Stephanie SpatzJer of South
LIJU!'A, and one granddaughter.
'lb8 famny 1uggestt: memorial conlrl·
butlons to " thCC.nter foe th¢ itudy ol
Democntic lnstltutlona. Doz 4$46, &inta
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f'ro111 Poge l
GIRN ...
trying to get her on Rowan and Martin's
Laugh.In. Hor ever, Mrs. Sayers Ls think-
ing bigger. .
''I've seen' the man wf>c\'s the world
cha mpion girner," she says, "and I don't
think he's so great. I think I could beat
him ,"
Despite her limited public exposure to
date, ~rs. Sayers.' confidence-is un-
derstandable. She 's been making funny
faces ever since she was old eoough· to
stand in front o( a mirror. She has en-
tertained children in the bomb shelters 'of
World War 1r London, enticed her
grandchi ldreo into giggles when ever they .
were unhappy. . and , served as
"Ne ighborhood Nanny with the Funny
Faces" for countless other youngsters.
''Children who know about me are
always ask1flg me to make funny faces,
aod 1 don't mind at all," she says .
'"The only problem ts that rm [ll!ttlng
old now and can't.get my muscles lo pull
the way they used to. But I know I've got
a~ least that ooe good fa ce lcfl." ·
~·-Sayers first became serlowi about
funny faces during World War 11.
'"! would imitate HiUer and Goerlhg
and Goebbels and the ldds would just
sque:'ll with laughter." she recalls. "ll at
least took their minds off the bomb.s."
Since that time, she's had less pressure
to prectlcc . But she has developed l)er
own version of Gim and Bear It.
"If l get real mad at someooo, I'll ju11t.
make a runny face instead of apoutlng
off. Thot causes them to laugh, and then
when they°"'ugh I'm not so mad ."
Mrs. Sayer4, who Uves , with her
daughter at 11080 Tilton arcle, bopcs · to.
make money gtrning tQ,Jjlat tlhe ca n vtstt
grandcblldren In ilew· Zealand she's
ne\•r"' seen.
•
NO ONE SELLS G.E.
fOR LESS THAN DUNLAP
NEW ICE 'N EASY SERVICE
..
17.6 C1. Ft. llO FIOST
REFllGWTOI
• f fff1tf hold• "" kt 16$ ....
I J ldjlmlbll aheives.
• Cowwed. 1l>de-ctu!: melt PM. ""'..'-:L= • r...., Ye9111t11e bOr'tl hold 213 bulhtl.
• Stip¥1te t~ltln contftll1.
•"Role Oltf (!If~ .... ...,~.
-. 919'5
,._... n. M«• ohm
• I Lt.ti ft.r..w..it
....... it DtftflNlt "'····· . 5"9 hwt OMI' • SU..o.t ....
SDUON 15'6 --·
•UPRICHT
C:ONVENIDfCI
• hslUYtl SafetJ>Doarlali
• Fut i'tt:nins
•DolXLock
179'5
• GE'• E~ltinht ,..,to
WI.it Ac"--tor ·1111 ...... .......
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19CJ86
"LOW PRICES ARE BORN, HERE • • • RAISED ELSEWHERE" .
Momlior of tO DAY
C•lllornla'• Lor'°'t CASH
C-rotlvo luylnt WITH -
Group With Tllo CHD!r ' Volumo luyl!'f m
r tarAW1'9 POllNr of 110 Slorn •• .. ~ .._ .. ,.... m
1115 llEWPORT Bl YD. . llownllWn CISla Mesa '-PhOll 548-7711 ..
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