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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-19 - Orange Coast PilotI 17 • .. ' . J IJ_rug · G~ru -Jets to. Jail. ..... ·1 • • t I ' AgneW···to. De~art For· V.iet Talks? Oificiats ·nu1i1 n Emergency Derliiced In Obispo From Wire Services • al"i' ,, I Flooded Obispo ~ounty De~lared E·1nergen~y Area eserves • r1a uror • \ \ Tr1p--to Saigon ' - Seen for _'Agnew From Wire Services "I will not have any comment on that. The White House today declined to coo-I am not going to comment one way or firm or deny a broadcast report that another on any speculation -whether it Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will go to is right or wrong." ,Judge Sets , Hearing (On Motion FAIRFIELD (AP) ....: The juror who cast the fmal vote convicting Juan Corona of murdering 25 farm laborers says she doubts that she made the right decision and feels Corona deserves another trial., The 38-year-old farm labor contractor " I I \ j r SAN LUIS OBISPO -j • state of emergency was. declared throughout San Luis Obispo County. as the worst rainstorm in foor)'ears sent flood waters -pouring--into-downiown:"8ti:eets-here, ~t. ting off, communications out of the city and forcing schools· to close. Saigon Jan. 28 -presumably t? conduc_t Ziegler liken.ed his no-comment to re-post•peace-agreem~t-tajks-Wllh-Prest--~en1-stmllar-responserhe1n-a'de-10 dent Nguyen Van Thieu. reports of developments in peace was fotmd guilt)'. Thursday of 25 ooun;ots;;;•;,.f --"-I first=degree murder by a jury or~ men and two women after 46 hours of deliberation stretched over eight days. ..-, MA.'t~ ,....,. "fl!'W ~ ..... <'HE'$ BI AUTIPUL. MI'S 'A KING" SAYS LIAIY PlllND Joann• 1.4.,cdurt-Smltlt ~lod bl•ll"'!lhlp ·~ "'4 l.pvo" · · With a prediction of more rain today. the state office of Einergency Services said it was keeping a close watch on ttM; cowity as well as Santa Barbara coumy to. the south which bas "fe!1Ched a ~int of almost oomplete saturation." The storm, which spread throughout Sou them California early Thursday, dwiiped more 1han three incOO of raln over coastal areas and brought a tot.al of 6.3 inches to the area since TUesday. Some streets in San Luis Obispo were four feet deep in water Thursday mom- fug but the deluge receded by midaf· temoon. More than 100 cars in the city were damaged by the storm but no serious in- juries Were reported, police said. Fklodwaters closed off roads at both the !IOUtbem and northern ends of the ci- ty for a time. ~ Thousands of'bomeowners in ~s Osos and .Baywood Park, immediately south of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of the day. In nearby Laguna La~e, a (See OBISPO, Page II · The Columbia Broadcasting Company negotiations. s;1id from ,Saigon _that a vis 1 i 1 f.. by ~gn~w The White House spokesman said apparently" wu mtended to co1nc1de President Nixon conferred for more than cl_o~ly with the signing or at l~st the in-an hour this morning with Henrj A. Kiss- il1ahng of a Vietnam cease-fire agree-inger, chief U.S. peace negotiator. Kiss- ment." inger will leave for Par iii Monday to Asked ~bdut the report, White House resume private talks with Hanoi's Le press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said : Due Tho. "J Man Kills Wi fe, Lover, Himself; N ote Tells All BRUSSELS (AP) -The police today gave this account of the last day in the life of Marcel Potargent, a 54-year-old real estate man: At 4 a,.m. Thursday, be strangled bis wife in their luxury apartment. 1 While in Washington the past _t~ays, Ziegler said, Kissinger conferred In person or by telephone with Secretary of State William P. Rogers, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird, Adm. Thomits H. Moorer, chainnan of the Joint Chiers of Staff, and others. · Don Webster, acting CBS bureau chief in Saigon, said President Thieu received the letter from President Nixon on Thursday Informing him of Agnew's plans. . r The letter was delivered by U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Btmker, the network reported, and contained the following passage from Nil:on to Thieu : ·•we have been together ln war, let's be together in peace." . She. Vows :~~ · Fr~e .. Leary At 7 a.m., he-'entenid Room 629 in the downtown Hotel Plaza. When he left an hour. later, Danielle .ScJlepers-Haegel- "' stecn, his 31-year-olcLmistress and the wife of h1s partner, was dead, killed by two bullets. . _ Pot.argent drove 11 mlles to Danielle's suburban borne and fired eight times at her husband, Roger Hacgelsteen, and her Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said today there tr no way to assure lasting peace In Southeast Asia but declared that Administration policies Will end Amerlc_an involvement in the fighting there. The secretary called the outlook for peace in Southeast Asia and the rest of the world "better" at the prese~t time. · But he recalled that the war in Vietnam· 'fl'm Timothy's Jove. I've.traveled with him for two months and I've come wltb him to Los Angeles to rree him.-I've come to speak to Presidenl Nixon," the petite mousy-hatred British subject ac· ,compMtying Dr. Timothy Leary to Los Angeles said Thursday. Identifying herae:lf as Joanna Harcourt· Smith ·and as e "resident-of the-U:S.,". tbe mystery wonian-<ltdined to give any but her o\aiden name and refused to comment on the present 1tatus of her marriage to an unidentified Washington ..... . "I'd be!n .. looking for Timothy all my file. 1-fouod..him two mcritM ago. It was oqly natµral we sbOwd meet sinCe t wrote a book that sold 100,000 cop~ in Europe. It was about freedom,". Miss Harcourt-Smith said. . , "l'irnOthy's , wr\tlen"\I book. lt1!ill be, · publlStled "'by Bantam," she 111d' ex- plaining bow the convicted dope advocate was lioanciog the recent ~ of hij a.-U. eJ!le abroad, U.S. ..-ities. . ·escorted him to Los Angeles via father, LOuis Schepers. The latter was Frankfurt, Paris and London. tilled, Haegelsteeo woWlded serioasly. ............... It--re&11y wasn't 'll!1y elegant the way 1ben..-.Potargent rei~ ~ his lu x- ·lbey snatched his passport 1romhis urloo.s apartment ln Brussels, sOOt his i-11•. called the police, lay down oo hands. They said it wasn't valid . But we the bed beside bis wile's body and shot used it in five different countries and it himself In the head. si11f it wu gOOd until 1974," Miss He dJed. soon after the: P9lice arrived, H&rootJrt.Siillth said. leavq llehind. note 'that wd: After Afghanistan authmit.its deported "My wife sUffered from chronic Lewy, and without his pusport. Leary depresalon. Moreover accusations have acoompanied the officers wllllngfy, Ille beon brought 1gainst me by the Ilic!, Schepep. Looil Schepen and hil family "1\-erybody Was very nice to us all the PY l 8l]'l a crook, but I maintain they WIY here. We could bave ...,.ped qaln ir<." In Frankfurt. Tben he U.ted bil vfctlmJ. The U.t io- "Four days ago he said lie wu oo hap. eluded two peraot11 the police "!I~ tJiey py lo be going home -eYeJ1 14 priJon. have not YJ1 tnle<d, but were believed to He's mastered freedom ., completely he have be<:n In the Canary hhmds, where (See AGNEW, Page I) CAPTAIN EDDIE OUT OF HOSPITAL MlAMI , Fla. tAP) -Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker. the World War t nying ace and former chairman of Ea3:tem Air Lines, bas been dilclwged from the hopsital where he apmt three months rtcelvlng treatment for a stroke. Rickenbacker, 82, was admitted to the ho.1pit.al in October. He· was released Thursday and retl.lllltd to ti.ii borne near Corona was accused of the murder of 25 transient workers whose hacked and stabbed bodies were discovered In 1971 in makeshift orchard graves 100 miles northeast of San Francisco along the banks of the Feather River. It was the biggest mass murder charge in the nation's history. Corona's attorney, Richard Hawk, Im- mediately moved for a new trial, and a hearing on his motion was scheduled Jan. 29. Judge Richard E. Patton delayed sentencing Corona until _after the hear-- ing. Under California law, Corona could receive a maximum sentence of 25 t'Oll- seculive life tenns. Special prosecutor Ronald Fahey said (See CORONA, Page II Orange Ceut Weather It'll be sunny and warmer on Saturday. wltb highs in the 80s and lower 70s along the Orange Coast. Lows tooight, Irom lhe hlgb-ltls to the low 40s. INSIDE TODAY lVhy. would two civic light opera companits 15 miler apart u.'011t to revive a shqw IUte "KU· rnet" at the .ramt time~ Tom Titiu tells wh11 ift. his lnttrniir· sion column m todat1'a Wttk· tndtr. urm a citizen of Lhe world. My mother was Polish, my father British. I waa born In.Switzerland and I ha,,... a ·IOI! born in Greece and another born in Ammca,I' the.•t•ll old\ lelf·procfalmed auillo,... ·or·ruaol on "P'n!edotil" litd. · • Rid Ille joined Illa Ill -land, midi • film wltb ~ In Alltrill traveled with him to Blinll, Lebotton "where we were treated like klrCi" and .... It his •id< In Kabul, ~ when U.S. ortfcl1l1 cougllt up With hlm1 took away bls 1malidllted'PlllPG't ana IS.. LIWIY,.l'lgo .11 \ • .~•r11t11t ~done busi..,.. nearb)' Key BllCayne. ~-"~..;..,.~~~~~~~~--'-~"'-~~~~~~~~~~ ·' • I I • STILL SMILING, OR. TIMOTHY LEARY IS HUSTLED TO JAIL World Trip Ended at l;.01 Angeles·~ Qipper_:'Red .Jacket" Landed .,,.. - • FronlPagel ' LEARY RETURNS TO U.S. • • • can be free MY.Where~" she said. She deplored Leary's arrest and legal janu "£or smo'king only two butts" and vowed. "He know s 1 love hlm and am going to free hlm. We're all going to free him." from the . downtown central jail where Leary y,·as housed. Authorities I ~nd 'Trip' Of Dr.Leary By GEORGE LEIDAL OI 1111 0.UY rlMlt ·~ • Dr. Timothy Leary's ~month world trip ended Thursday at Los Angeles International Airport when the Pan Am Clipper "Red Jacket" landed and U.S. Bureau Qf Dangerous Drugs officers ar- rested and manacled tlle smiling drug culture guru. Leary lett tlle country with bis wile, Rosemary, after escaping f r o m California ~1en's c.otony, San Lu.ls Obispo where he was serving 1 one to 10 year sent~ for possessiOI! of marijuana. Leary was busted in Laguna Beach the day after Christmas. 1968 along with his wife and son, John, then 20. On the day after Christmas four years later, the former Ha"ard lecturer and his new found "perfect lovt" -Joanna Harcourt-Smith -began their four-coun- lry trip which led to Leary's deportation by Afghanistan authorities. The faithful of Leary's flock restrained by SO Los Angeles Polic~ Departn1ent o.f· ricers caught only glimpses of theU' "king" as he was Jed to a waiting Sher· ifrs hippie-type van. M a n y wondered aloud, "Wbert's Rosemary!" Miss Harcourt-Smith, suffering from what she s:ild was serum hepatitis, gave no clues as to Lbe whereabouts of Mrs. Leary. However, the British subject who said she had a husband living in Washington, D.C .. lold newsmen she had -in tbe--past -two montb:s---Mfound ~ect love" with ''Timothy." . "He's put down drugs. We're both against addiction. Addiction to heroin; addiction to cocaine, television, cars. We're against addiction to anything." When asked if the former advocate of LSD and twice C<>nvicted marijuana user now objected to use of pot, Miss Harcourt-Smft.b replied , "People are free to do anything they like." Despite her illness evidenced by a jaundiced coloring of her skin. the 21- year old "citizen of the world" remained cheery in her 20-minute meeting with the press. · _ _:_ "I believe-.iLis. all perfect be... should have come back to the United Stales," she added. She left the airport Thursday evening concerned Jecause her British passport had not been returned to her. Pam Am officials said they did not know where her passpor:t was, but suggested ii might be returned to her when she registered -with-lmmlgration officlals as an a-Uen resident. "He's beautiful. He's a king," she pro- claimed as she bounced from the customs clearing room used by all passengers on the fllg!!l lromJ.<>11do1u~- cept Leary. . . Her composure only slipped and tears formed In her eyes as she described the moments an arrival in Los Angeles when the 52-year old Leary was arrested. ' "He was so happy when he saw ~ -Pacific Ocean again," she said recalling his mood as the jumbo jet "Clipper Red . Jacket" turned to make its approach to Los Angeles International Airport about 4:30 p.m. Thursday. ' While. her "perfect love" was removed from the plane in handcu[fs and under guard of both federal and Los Angeles authorities, Miss Hareourt..stnilh, againsi,.,. wbom police said nb charges were pend-- ing, left the airplao~ v i a the routine customs check. She said a doctor confirmed that she had serum hepatitis -"it's not con- tagious'' -when the plane landed. The illness she said led Leary to begin his fi ve-couotry flight which resulted in his being spotted by U.S. officiab in Afghanistan. Despile the lack or an ex- tr<idition treaty \l:ith the U.S .. Algbanistan authorities a p p a re n t I y cooperated in the turnover. . The woman , believed to be the daughter of a Brit~h publisher. said she contracted bepatitia while the pair were in Vienna making the anti-addiction film. "On my birthday, Jan. 13,.J became ill. Tim promised to take me 10D1ewbere I've never been-and get me--to----a htispital." she said. That trip led to what she claimed was the "illegal" removal or Leary'! passport and the pair's "free ride" to Los Angeles. "I've never been here before. It was a lovely flight at the U.S. government's ex- pense." She first said she planned to go to a hospital, before finding a place "near to him. near the jail so I can free him ." Later, the hitchhiking jet set socialite, admitted she would be staying at the Beverl y-Wilshire Hotel -some 12 miles " DAILY PILOT TM~ c..t Dol.ILY 'ILOT, wffil lllNdl Is c°"""'"9ll the N"""'1'111. h ._, ..... by tloe ~ OM! P'vblbtilre °""'*"'· ~ l'ilfl! t!llHDlll ~ DUlll"""'-MWRf lllPOWQft Fridll'f, fOt O.le Mese, N....... l ektl. Hun11!wMt IAdl/~111 v11i.,, ~ a--., IMne/~ Wiii Sen C"'-!tf ~ J..n C..~ A 1lnolll ...-i-1 fdlllon 11 ~tWllll S.tvrdl'fS ar'lll s..s..,._ The oprtnd•I J1U11!1l11t111 pi.111 II at 2JO WU. a.r $1t'Mt, COllt M•• C.nlOl'n&I, 9262'. Rob1rl N. We~ Pruld111t and Pultlllll• J,clc R. C11rl•v Vici p,..,.111.,,1 Mid Gtntr•1 ~ Tho11111 Kt-ii fidtlor 1'11011111 A. M11rphi11• NiaMgll!g Editor Ch1rl11 H. loq Richer4 P. Nell AlllS11111 Mtnttlna Edi,.,_ ce.ta Mew: JJO w-:::~ "'"' .......,..,, et.ocfl: JlXI H hvlfWN • .....,..,. 1 .. dl: m ,,_, A\ttf\Ut "-lillltor\ kid!: 17115 I MC!I IOll~ Sift ~'9: lltS Hori!! El Cllmlnt h.i Tll•ll•• 1714, 641-4111 0•1&4 A'-'h.l.t 641·1171 ........ C1Nt1i1 Al"IM .... II U.-1.oi 492-4420 frlWIW Mtrltl Orttfltl c-tf Ct~ f40.1Z21 ~Jlftt. 1t12, °'Miff C-1 "*' ....... Clo'l'lpln.,, No -11orln, llMlr•tlonl. ldltwllt "'41tltr ., ........ ,1._., """'"' ""'' .. ~·'""""'"* ........ .......... " """""'' "'*'· StClllNf claM Mt ... Nilf •I C•la ...... Clllllllnlll. Sllllkrl11t!M lW ctrrtw U.d MOflthly1 tw 111111 "·" lllOl'llll1¥1 ntlllTerf outlNllOl\I SJ.ti MOnfllf'f, • .. ' From Pagel AGNEW ..• has continued for 30 years and could never assure that the shooting will stOp no ma.Her wbzit p e a c e .agreement is signed. In an tiour·long ne\vs conference, hls final one before leaving office, Laird said the South Vietnamese are capable of handling their own defenses without· American military help. "I can say that as far as American In- volvement in the fighting we have applied the Nixon doctrine ... and we are no lopger m· a position where the United slates will have to be the cop on the beat all over the.world," Laird said. In another development, the Saigon newspaper Tin Song, which often reflects the viewS of President Trueu, said today the fighting in South Vietna~ come to an end as early as Feb. l-1'_ -· Prime Minister Tbanom KitUkachom of Thailand abo said a ~asefire could be extended to Laos and Cambodia 10 days .after the tn•ce.Jn.Yietnam.- Thanom said after talks in Bangkok with Gen. Alexander Haig, President Nixon's envoy to Southeast Asia, that he expected the }ietnam cease-fire In the "near future and that Haig would return to Saigon for more talks with Thieu "because there are some questions sUll lo be worked out." South Vietnamese Foreign .!Minister Tran Van Lam said in Saigon the United States and South Vietnam are "very close" to reaching a cease-fire agree- ment. But asked if it could come by Feb. 3, the date of the Tet Chinese New Year, be said, "I do not went to be a prophet." Another prediction of an early cease- fire came from Chinese Premier Chou En-lai who told Japanese newsmen with a visiting delegation in Peking that be._ expected the. fighting to end soon. But the war continued. U.S. warplanes and offsfiOre ships join- ed South Vietnamese marines in fighting today that twiled back four assaults by Comri'lunlst troops and tanks on the nortberD Quang nl !root, field reports 'said. Miss Harcourt-8mith said agents ap- proached Leary in the first claM cabin and said, "You're under arrest." "What's your name?" Leary was said to have replied. "Tum around ; you It now the pr0; cedure," she said tae agent told him. "Then they handcalfed him ·rmc1 pull!l<f him away down the' llt.ilrs," stie sobbed:' Leary grinned and laughed for tlle cameras as be was le<( to the van whlch, trailed by four other unmarked cars, took him to Lo8 Angeles County Central Jail for boolting. Bail was set at $5 million by Orange County courts when the hlppie high priest was touring Europe following his escape. Charges now lodged against hlm in- clude : -Felony escape for having fled the minimum security prison in San Luis Obispo in 1970. -He is charged with 19 counts of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle dangerous drugs as a suspected leader of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love -an intematiooal drog trafficking organiza.. lion believed --to---bave been-founded by Leary In Laguna Beach in 19116. -He faces charges of i n c om e tu evasion filed by the state against the Brotherhood in the amount of $78 million. , . tax lien has been brought against two ranch properties owned by the Brotherhood in Riverside County. Police officers at the airport Thursday said Leary would be housed in the IA>s Angeles C.Ounty Jail until bis court a~ pearance in Orange County. A plan to transport him via helicopter to Parker Center aborted when a driving rain began moments before the· Jumbo jet pulled up to the international arrival sattellite. Ex-congressman Dies TULARE (AP) -F o rm e r Rep. Alfred J. Elliott, the "Fathlr or the Cen- tral CalUomla P«ject," died Wedneoday at a Tulare hospital. Elliott, 771 . represented the fonner 19th con- gressional district, consisting of TU!are, Kings end Kem counties, for si.J: two-year lerms beginning In 1936. Evil S p irits . H yswria at Electric Plant SINGAPORE !UPI) -Th< G<neral Electric company Slid loday a witch doctor, an Indian mystic and a BuddbJst monk fought what It hoped to be the final battle with the evil spirits blamed for an outbreak of mus ~Mia among women at a GE plant. ELEVEN G!Rl.S WERE SEEN .. rly today being~ out of tlle plant and into company vehicles to be taken borne alter collapsln& from hysteria induced by tbeit beliel In evU spirits. The .l~evision and appliance plant has been closed three Umts siDce Satur- day by sfmllar out.break.! of hysteria. .. GE CALLED IN BOMORS (Maloy witch doctonil who bUmed lncenlcf and sprinkled ftlagfc Wiier, a Buddhist mon~ and an Indian myt1lc lo light the spirits. The Bomoh w" called in Thuradoy bul failed lo ball the mau hysleria then. The company said things appeared quiet locfay and tlle uortlsta w1111 home. I _, • . -' •· SHE WASN'T QUITE SURE Juror N.oml Underwood F,._.P-.el OBISPO ... ...... r..._i tORONA ••. ... 11 PalloD cbote lo Mll\et>Oe OolUll lo _ cmw.iitive; niber t.bM c.'CIDCUl'f'tl! nt.- 1erml It ...,.]d hl¥t .. ellect ol deley- htc Corona'• ellJlbllllY for lmM· A penon IOlllonctd lo lll• In prioae la Cllllomla wtlhout p,ior .... .ie11oa la lilllllbl& for polOle oltiir .,.., yura. · the II Juron each lndlv!dually al· llnned tlle IUlllY nnll~ In a dranllllc <OO<IUaloo lo tlle fouNkaolll trial. N .. parale .,,adlng, afflrmalloo and tte0nllog of the ~ lndlvldual "gu!llY of murder or tht ftrst degree" verdicts •\felcbed is mlnutoS In lhe croWded, bushed courtroom. But juror Naomi Underwood oald lo •• lnlervlew at her home tiler the lrlal dial "f tio feel Juan Corona deserves another trial." lll have doubta yet,'' Wei Mrs. Underwood, a ll·yeAN>ld wtdow. "I don~ think they had •ll<IUllh evidence. I ll11l clollbt I made the right decision," Ille ad· <led. Mn. •Underwood abo aid "the rnssure was pretty great" on~ 1n jury deliberations. The jury s1ood a1,u.1 for CGDviction for two day1 before Mrs. Under-cblnied her -Tbonday momln&. Jury fOftlllllll Em<st PbllUpo, 53, said tlle lint ballot lbe jury look eight day• ap s1ood 7-S for acqultW. He said about 15 secret ballots were eventually liken by the Jury before the guilty verdict was reached. Onna sat sllenUy throUlh the monotonous repeating of the guilty verdicts without an outwud sign of en» lion except lo grip UgbUy the edge of tlle table before him. The bu.sky Meiican .national glanced occaslOllally al the jury during the Ion( number of homes were flooded. , l'ecitaUon of the VtTd.lct, but most of the Homes and bulldln•• were also flooded time he looked stralgbt ahead, appwtng ~ lo l1are at a point below I be Ju!f&<'• lo the south In the San Fernando Valley. heneh. • Up to 7.5 inches of rain fell at San Corona's wife, Gloria , and about zo Marcos Pass near Santa Barbara, and in relatives including biJ four small Ventura County, nood waters ripped up d..ugbters, sat silently through the long, sldewalb, exposing utility pipes in some m~ recitation of the guilty areu. verdicts. . Clearing skies greeted Northern Mrs. Corona restralntd tean unW the Californians today as they continued to lSth guilty verdict was read, and then recover from ·a procession of Pacific sobbed quietly throuP the reading of the slorm.s. .-.maln1ng vt<dlcta. One of Qnoa'a The NaUCJllal Weather Service Prom-dallihien WU bospilallzed alter the ised m 0. n y fair woather· lhroup seulon for lrellment of shock. Saturday except for some cJoudinesa In Judge Pattoa ordered all apeciators the extreme northern mountains and in ~. I n c 1 u d I n g about some patchy rnomln~ fog In the 20 members of the Corona famllJ and Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. about ._. newsmen, to be Jocked In the ''There are still some fronts lying off room throughout the 11e11lon Ml\ until all the coast, bul the hlgb prwure !)'slem m.-rs of tlle jury left tlle bWldlna. inland wW hold them off, probabiz Tre doors ...,._not 1llllocted until 11 throushoul the--weeiei><f;' a .,..!her ~.";-lll<r the lut--venlla liiil"liiiii service spokesman said. . rco.wva..i. The optimlsUc uuUoot abo wu Only Corona's es-year-old mother, Can- quallfied by gusty wl.od.s of 20 to 35 miles dida, was allowed to leave early. The per hour that continued to buffet the elderly woman, who speab no English, coast where small craft warnings re-restrained tears throuibout the lengthy mained In effect re>ding of the v~. bul IObhed aollly But that sboU1d hardly .,,..,.,,. local during the long wall for tlle doors lo be residents who endured winds up to 80 u~. ~ wu then tlCOda:I out by mile! per hour-and pcundlng .rain on bailiff.I lhrilup t11e empty Jml' room. Tuesday and again '111ursday. Tuesday's .... c.orom., wbo bu lllffend two heart at~ storm, however, was ~ Il\O!t severe. tacts aJnce bis anwt May •. 1971, wu The waters of Novak> <net In Malin eIIJDioeMI by JU1 ~ be:tcre-._..., County, hardest hll by ~. ~ lo.Jhe ~.--of ..llale receded rapidly alter Tburoday'i lllarm, prison al owby Vacavtlle, where he has allowing more than 50 laniwes lo relurn ' been bouaed dlJl'ioi 1hi Ilia!. Thero wu to their homes where water had risen to no repart of any new symptoms. depths of four feet, Novato p:>lice said. Pbilllps, a retWd Air Feret 1e11eant Flood waters also crept up over U.S. who spent two yean as I prlaontt of 101 and locaJ • flooding was reported on war, entered the courtroom with 25 other Marin roads 1bursday, ~t they all sheets of paper in his hand, which be aald remained open. were the written verdicts on each count. 40ilTanks ' .Opened Up By Vandal~ OAKLAND (AP ) -Vandall opened valves to foor oil tanks and sent about !ll0,000'$allon• ol oil gushing iolo lhe OaklauCI est~ry of Sin FraTicltco Bay today, author1ties aaJd. A -inile allct. was roporl«I oozing toward the Ea3t BQ communlUes or Al1meda and San Lelodro threo miles away on tbe inland atde ot the atuary. But Oout Guard LI. ~amea Bo)'l1 said booms "should contain tt In the .. tuary." ·'l'llm was no lnuDedlale roport of any wUdlile death from tlle• oil. Slale Fish and Game agents were on the scene. The oil gusbed from tanks owned by Port Petroleum of Oakland through a hole In a IOW'loot concrete n!talnlog wall, splashed across Eighth Avenue In the pori of Oaklan<Hnd_ slipped inlo the estuary through the underground storm drain, Oaklrmd Assl. Flro Chief James .Powen said. . Powen said an Oakland police car reported oil pouring out of the tanks at about 12:30 a.m. and that 20 minutes later be discovered the open valves and closed them. He said they had been dellberai.ly opened. Firemen originally esUmated that 10,000 gallom escaped from the tanks, but Coast Guard investigators liter revised the estimate to 100,000. Oakland Police Capt. John Haubner aa.ld lnyestlptorl were at the scene in an - effort to determine ''who was responsible for opening the valves and for what reason." ; He added, ''We have to go on the assumption that this was a malicious act. thal ii might have Involved a dl!grunUed employe or person." • A small portion of the oil, described u "w~ oµ," remained within the re- talnlng wall where city crews ailempled lo plug tlle bole wtth sandbags, firemen said. Powers said It did nol appear that the bole In the relalnlng wall was tlle wort of vandals. 'Fear of Sex' -- Wins $85,000 NEW YORK (UPI) -A 3il-year· old woman bas woo an $85,000 set~ tlemeot from a tax.I company after c!aimiog lhll injuries sulleled In an accident left her wtth an overw:belmln1 fear of 1U. · Judie Edward J, Gnenlleld of V.nbett•n Supreme c o u r t T1mnday 1 a Id Shella Wyle "ap- . peats ~ have.a morbid fear ol .,. and Is '*'vtno<d ~would bo lotally .....,.. to perform In lllal'- rlage as a wile 'or mother." 'Jbe perfume company es:ecutlve was hurt JUDI!! 30, 117Q, when a cab she WI! rldln/l lh leU inlo a 11).foot. deep excavation on 'Jbird Ave. CLEARANCE SA ~E · CONTINUES_ • • F•eturing m1ny fln1 coll1ctions from sur;h will known lin•s •• HENREDON, HERITA6E, DREXEL, MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOOOMARK, •nd othtrs , •. all sub1tenfitlly rtcluced. The l1rg11t selection of qutlity upholst•ry is now on dbplay •nd reedy fO« immtditft delivery. StYI now. Htnrtdon Alv1r1do (shown) On Sale Now OllEClt-liERITA&i-HENR!DOll-WOODMARJC-lCAltASTAH -------- • 'INTERIORS WlllDAn • SATUIDAn "" .... .,, NIDAY . '111. , ... NEWPORT BEACH e 17!7 WESTCUFF Dl.. '42·2011 LAGUNA BEACH e 141 NOllTH COAST HWY. 49t.lllf . TORRANCE e 11'49 HAwtHot.Nl ILYD. 2fl·l17't ,._..) I 1 ( ~ I; p< H di C( ... ' dj nc lo "' "' w: of of " Cl ' ~ I I II w Q w bl ' w of M la a cl I; R R a1 Cl a• fi• bl .. "' .. ' II Ir L C1 c .. go nl ~ " di ri T u g· a: u b / ' ., • I DAIL V PILOT Pan~I Threat BuilCling Freeze • ·-Looms Ill Dana? . He Got a Real -t lose Look UPI T......._. Denver fireman Robert J\.faes helps free David Zubn, 5, alter the boy got his head stuck between bars of a display pen wflile trying to get a better look at a gra nd champion steer at the National Western Stock Show. At right, David tries on the fireman's hat. I' His Irreverence Gets Off ender T·wo Jail Terms Ll'ITLE RocK, Ark. (UPI) -Terry Lee Alvis, 22, was arrested for cursing a policeman and stood before Judge Hack Holt Sr. "Kiss my -," Alv~ told Holt, Thurs- dsy. ")Vhat did you say? Did you tell the court to kiss your·-?" Judge Holt asked. "That will be $54.50 and 30 days with no dys suspended." "Cram It!" said Alvis. "That will be. $54.50 and 60 days with no days suspended," said the' judge:·- Bailil'f Charles Goodwin hU!tled the Jong-haired man out of the courtroom saying, "I'd better get you out of here before you get yourself in trouble." Policeman Robert Reynolds said Alvis was arrested Wednesday night while the officer was writing a ticket to a traffic offender. Reynolds said A1vis walked up, sat a soft drink bottle on the hood of the squad car and "caUed me a flllhy pig." ' • Pilot Newsman Sizes Up ·Integration in Alabama As editors shape up the Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT, here are some of the features which loom as candidates for "Sunday's Best" offerings for retders: . Some shocklng statistics on the war no one wants are revealed by author Max Gunther in Family Weekly. Atrl'O RECALL.5 -It was a bad year for car factories. In 1972, coonting im- JNTEGRATION IN ALABAMA -Just ports, manufacturers recalled more cars down the road a piece from Selma (140 than they sold. Christian Science Monitor miles, to be exact), Decatur, Ala., is News Service offers an in-depth look at light years away from the civil rights the problem in YOU Secti9n feature. A companion article breaks down costs of ( Sunday's Best) _ operating an automobile. _ _ KUNG E'.U=SUjleciiero.of !be.current generation of teenagers is the anti-hero, Jlke the charac'"r Caine played in new marches of 19~. Staff Writer George Leidal reports on his vacation findings. Decatur schools are integrated .... Sun- day Special. CAUGHT NAPPING? ~The impact or mandatory environmental Impact reports on development procedures along the Orange Coast are . just beginning lO be · felt. NeW rules seem to have caught some public agencies (and private ·•developen) oappingt accordibg to YOU Si!ction stOry by. StaltWriter John Zaller. TV series by David Carradine. Cover story In TV WEEK reveals fact that the young ador is much like the character he plays. NO CAMPUS REVOLT? -Whatever happened to the student revolution?· The impending "civil war" that seemed so imminent ill 1969 hasn't occurred. Colum- nist S. J. Ha.Yakawa, who was in the midst bf It allom San Francisco, offers bLs vJen .1n$Uoday's column . ·~ The asserted poor quality of treated sewage at the Dana Point ouUall once again bas sparked !hreats from state an- tipollutlor. agencies of a freeze on new construction in the South · Coast com· munlty. And this latest crisis (.'(Imes only a month away from the opening of a new waste treatment plant in the srea which could solve the entire issue. The one hitch is that Dana Point Casp ers Hits Billboard Ban Exceptions Supervioor Ronald W. Caspers of NewPort Beach reacted bitterly to Wednesday's decision or the board ex- cluding lndustrial zones from highway billboard prohibition. Calling the 3.2· ~ote "one of the gre.atest disappointments of my two yean in office" caspers Tbursday-con- tinued, "l believe the county took· a great slep backward in our battle lO save tfte environ'ment Wednesday when the board succumbed to tbe presS'llres of the billboard industry. " 'Billboard Alley' along the Santa Ana-San Diego freeways north of Laguna Hills Leisure World Is a disgraceful ex- ample of pennitted misuse of open space," he charged. "I worked hard over a year and a half · ago to get the board to adopt an ordinance that would remove the billboards from alongside freeways in · three years time," he continued. "The clock was ticking away and soon those unsightly, bUghlful billboards would have been coming down. However, Wednesday that progressive action was J'e'olersed when the board changed the ordinance to exclude industrial areas from the law. That land along the freeway~ above El Toro Road .is a manufacturing zone," he continued. Ca!pen said the people of hiS fifth district had long expressed their desire for some dramatic action to clean up the blight along freeways. "It is very disap- pointing to work so hard on a project and then, a year and a half later, to have your efforts reversed," he charged. He said Orange County is known as one of the most advanced areas in California for leadership in the field of eo- vlloQmeotal protection. "It is shameful to reve~l}OW' efforts to do our sbar.e of the cleanup/' he ooncluded. Sanitary District directors thus far have refused to sign docwnenl s giving the district the right to tie into the new plant. A stiffly worded letter was sent to the district this week by officials for the San Diego Area Regional \\'ater Quality Con- trol Board threatening to impose cease- and-<iesist. orders on Dana Jloint. Those orders would efiectively bait all develo~ ment until the crisis is solved. The board claims th at Dana Poi nt's ef- fluent is getting worse arxl odors in the plant area lndicfte a poor level of treat· ment. ' . About a year ago the Dana Point district found itself in a similar situation, but its escape route was its proposed share in the regiooal waste plant to be operated by several member agencies of the South East Regional Reclamation Authority (SERRA ). .... Everything 'A'ent well until · late last year \~1hen the final documents for the joint use were ready for signing. · Officials plan,ned a signing ceremony and party, but had to cancel at the last minute when the Dana district's board vote;1._not to sign the agreement. some sources said the refusal stem! from attetnpts by Dana Point to receive commitments of more money "from other SERRA members which pliln to use the Dana Point outfall in coming; years. Separate negotiations have been un- der way for many m o n t h s over the amount which lhe member agencies will pay Dana Point for the use of the outfall. That pipe will be used for a period of a few years while yet another out- fal project is completed. The agencies which have pooled together thu s far to share crpacities In the Sao Juan plant are the city of San . Juaii, the Moulton Niguel Water District and the Rancho Margarita Water District. All the entltleS have ~n eager to tie into the refurbished plant because of whOpping growth in construction in their areas. · 1 Moulton Niguel, especially, Is bard pressed for new waste treabnent capaci-ty. ,. But Dana Point, besieged in recent years by critics asserting the quality of its effluent is poor, now finds itself faced with strict enforcement by the state and as yet no route for improvement. District 1'-1anager Hugh Kimball bas been unavaliable for comment on the latest state demands. Water Quality Board Executlve Dennis O'Leary, who has waft!heJ the South Coast area treatment hassles, with keen interest, this week charged, µi.at . the quality of Dana Point's effluent dWJlPed near the harbor baa deteriorated. NY Man Arrested For Harboring Heist Suspects GIRL ON POLE -The questions are sure lO flow when Chris Sala.ii scales a telephone pole, but ahe's read.Y for them now -even has figured out that the'y in- volve six basic queries -since having had lo answer· thein over and over as Pacific Telephone Co's first female phone installer. Feature and photos by DAILY PILOT Staffer Alll5on Deerr. MERCURY • • • '73 ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -A Rochester apartment-house .owner is under arrest for allegedly harboring two California brothers indicted in connection with a $3-million Laguna Niguel bank burglary, the FBI reported. Agents said B.ruce F. Ruckdeschel, 33, was arrested Wednesday. ·$1 M£LL£0N AN HOUR -Just in dollars, the Vietnam War bas been cos- ting $1 million an hour, around the clock. Legal Brothels _ Urged in NY One of the brothers, Ronald Barber, 29, of South Gate was arrested in Rochester Monday. His brother, Harry, 31, is still at large, the FBI said. The Barber brothers were indicted by NEW YORK (UPl)-A resolution ask- a federal grand jury on baDk larceny ing the Mate legislature to allow New charges arising from a $3 million theft in York City to legalize prosUtution was in- Laguna Niguel last P.1arch. · troduced today in the City Council. BUILT -BEITER TO RIDE BEITER Mercm·y . MARQUIS -The look of Luxury and richness in a medium Priced Car • • • UfllT ......... Played l11sa11e Dr. David Rosenhan, a Stanford professor, tells how he 1eigned insanity to get into a mental hospital. He said the hospital staffs never recognized him or the other seven researchers as sane, but said the patients in · the 12 hospitals caught on. Death PE'.nalty For Mu.rdeP~g Officers Urged SACRA.\i:ENTO (AP) -Persons coo-~~ted of murdering on-duty police of- ficen would nceive an automatic death penalty under a bill which h8J been in- troduced in the Assembly. Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R- Fullerton), introduced the bill Thursday. It aJso would provide an automatic death penalty for prison inmates convicted of. murdering other inmates. "The past Year has been a year of violence and death in our prisons," Briggs saJd. wniil situation is Intolearble in our society. Without lhe death penalty, the hard core criminal has absolutely nothing to fear." Briggs said prison lnmatis often threaten to kill other inmates in an effort to get them to conform. "The fact that the criminals use the death penalty as a threat on their fellow. inmates certainly indk:ates that there is a del!rrent value in the dealh penilJty," he said. 'l1!e bill is AB 109. ~--Mercury MONTEGO Agents here claimed they saw Councilman Alvin F : a n ten b e r g Ruckdesche l and Harry Barber leave. sponsored the measure calling for the Ruckdeschel's building together in an establishment of "red light" districts in automobile but said they were unable to industrial areas with prositutes receiving catch the pair at the time. regular medical check-ups. According to the bureau, the Barbers He said that legalizing prostitution are accused of being part or a group of would cut crime, reduce the spread of five men who blasted a hole into the venereal disease, curb Police corruption bank's vault and made off with cash, and relieve court overcrowdint. securities and jewelry. "It is sornethlug that has been going on Three other men, all from Ohio, haVe since the beginning of time," be tofd a been convicted on burglary charges and news conference. "At this date, you're are serving ~year prisOn term!. not going to outlaw prostitution." Fruit of ~0111 He Does Different Kind of Go-go OETR0£T (UPll -lloo~ mess with ·~he topless go-go dancer at the Camelot . Inn. He does his thing in Fruit of the Loom undersbr.l'ts. Not that the average go-go bar customer would care to mess with Dick cumn. The new camelot dancer . in suburban Walled Lake may be tbe big- gest se11saUoo since Charles AUas. CUrrtn was mostly happy 'being the night bartender at the Camel~t. He could practice being a comedian with his ca~ tive audience. If they didn't laugh, lhey might get stuck with a watered-down drink. ugh But the libe.ralloo movement ca t up With him. , "£! all started with a dsre , ' said Qu>. rln today as be tended the juke--box bar. Two· ladies came into the bar a~ said they wanted to see aome men danct. So l grabbed a bAr towel and started goojng around. "Everybody liked it so much they said tbey wanted •to koep It going. £ told !he boss £or IS an hour I'd do 11-just joking -end he Sfld, 'Slut.' "I s""1 noxt Wednctday ntgbt - unless l _. down with a strange Sickness like the runaways or .. something." . CWTin, 20, think.t he measures something like 4().32..36 -at leaat that's what the bannilld' etllmated. At ljI feet till Uil 180 pounds,. be ssid he played iOJne lootball and !Ont• basketball "but it was too rough. I'm more of a politician -or a lover,'' be laugb5. The whole thing comes oU like an elbow·IJ>.tbe-ribs, slsp-on-tbe-bacl: sl!Ua- lloo that Cllrrin hopes will be abo\>e board. Re shuns all we1nlos hoping to llnd an act akin to r.msi. lmpepooatloo. "II should just be a lot ol lun," he Aid. "I gol a ~ !tom Western Mld!lgan University, where £ 'll be rr.lurnlng IOOll, and he'll be doing this, too. We hope we can fmd abolll three mor< guys. We Jl!lt -I to have a lot ol gvbd.looldi>i llraight, colltge lllY' "!> there in blklnl undentear. Tbc reacjjon we've gotten from.people solar Is lbat It'll be a lot o1 run. · "I'm not an ape. Bdt I have hair on my chest. And U tbe ladies want more, f'U bu;y I toupee." . . • -Mercury MONTEREY-- Mercury's lowest priced, high value, ftill size car. Steel· Belted radial tires now sta nd· ard on Monter ey's. SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE lbnt Of The N.,. Car • , , "Qel•ea T._..,, • . - • • • • . . • the better idea personal size car with the big Car Ride BUY ONE! &me or ·'!be New car ~r_.;.·· • .. • I ~I 4 · DAll.Y l'ILOT Regional Rule Loses a Round OFF AND l\VNNING DEPT. -You may recall lhlt this space _.,11y pindertd -the Orang< County Grand Jlll'fs tm ..,,.rt roally dinged the dties ol our region ror "provincialism, chauvinism and home rule." Remember:' 'Ibey really Oayed our cities good. This section of the Grand Jury report w14 devoted to explaining that if we had Some p>d.. 90lid regional government in- stead of :ill thece dll<s doing their own thing, we'd be a lot better off. " BHu·nted • 'n Capital Executions • WASHfNGTON (UPI) -Eight meo, possi!ily memben of a rival MUIUin. group, were &OUgbt by Wasbingtoo polll:e today in connection with Thursday's melhodlcal slaying of seven peroons, In· cluding five children. at a Moslmn center established by basketball superstar Kareem Abduhfabbar. Two women were wounded in the at- t•tk. and i>olke were r<p<>rted qU01· tioning one of them today for possible leads in the case. Fearing additiooal violence. police staked out seftral other WehiDgton locatiOM after sc:me witnesses charged the murders were lbe result of friction between opposing ?ttoslem groups. 11lE WORDS Mom.EM and M11Slim are used interchangeably •moog adherents of the Ialam religion. It was repcJrted lhat ON! of persons In the Moslem sect occupying· the house bad written letters critical of Elijah Muham- med, leader of the mack Muslims and that the ki.lllngs -.,ere "revenge." . --- • • ----·-- • • l•a111111"!' Eete. lt~s Party Time ef -~ In -washiiigton ~ . WASlll!IG'l'O)I " (AP) -An "ethnic AIL '1111 POOD will balaltC tn ll!t · coC\talfpertJ" fQUoweil b)' thrw ovetitnl-lllitoi'OOlilOlr-111) -..i illatu -, ---thla· -clay ol to ...... 'lllal!IOb+>clY0111tobiODDllM:li I est I• l 11 e s"!or ~ budpl<Pd to JI -. Naakbtl-anti plullo -· -.1e Pnlidool )I-·· -Jo. wW carry tho ollldll lnaopral ... ol &lllUl"alion. approval. '!'be coctt&U Mri1 aod-....,.,.. are Tbe 001Det ..i -.. o1 Qoa1n11 prellmlnarlM leo!llnf up to Solllrday will -a .-iat VIP roe II tlllj !eej 1'beo Nlam will tal:e the oath ol -the -10 .... po t1to ..... for Ult -time. "It wU1 be a lypleol Wllblltllml A number ol 1">\11>1 pn>latllial tlto nr eocktaU party -!Gr llA" Mid one tn -plin ~ Ca-. • --. ewn tho<!lh the Wblle Tbe cultural oppellle will be llJletl by Houle 1111 -it will IUrt ~·on mu.le ud art fJom aniimd Ult -~ 111-t to end the...,_ -Afltti-tlle mass r-. -wb1cb ls ·llJ Olct. tnvllatloa Clllly but lllll -flO a head Tbe Justko Department said procau--three neorly slmul,_ emcerts tiopory ........, are ¥nK taken In we will keep the party poet &OlnC mtptJly any ol lbo demonslntloal turn vlolenL throughout the e...in,, thJa time ti the ABOOT 1,111 military ..in!ommenti John F. Kennedy Center fir the have been called In, but the ad-Perlormlng Arts. · ) minlstraflon said no vlolegce M: expected. WASHINGTON CHEF DISPLAYS RACKS OF COLONfAL ROAST OUCKS It Costs $500 foi Privilege of Dining on These Delicac_ies Buffet tables at tbla aftenmon's "salute to America's heritage" at the Corooran Gallery of Art abound with hundreda of culinary delicacies from more than 100 elhnlc and minority gmips In the United States. SCHEDULED ARE A youth concert, a tymphonlc concerl and ·an -'-lean music show. These, too, ... fnvltltlonal and Uckels range from l20 to lllOO for the more sophisticated entertainment to 110 for the youth event. • To quote Page 107 or the rep o r t. "~ite such · cllches J as 'big govemment' and 'local control ' used to resist all constructive attempts to coordinate plans for unified action. the Jury believes that, provided with ef- fective leadership by the Board of Supervisors, the cltiuns of Orange Coun- ty will "'"''"'d prompt and united action to improve the quality of life in (Oranie) county." ___ NOW,.IllE VERY NED' section of the Jury report gives another eumple. This involves sign laws. The Jury noted that 18 ol our cities and the county have sign laws. But all of tbem are diffemit. Thus the Jury again raised its banner for regional-type govemcnent cmtrol. '"!be Board of Supervilon (sbould) iake leadership necessary to encourqe the adoption of a unifonn sip ordJnance by all cities within the county," the Jul')' report urged. A Bl.ad< Mwlim spokesman deoied this, saying: "The Nation of Islam, under the guidance of the Hon. Elijah Muham- med, does not tolerate such acts. We are peaceful and.laugh'-<>nly to attaclt when our pe:.ace is broken." Jabbar also 11id be did llOI belive the killings were the ttsult ol religious rivalry. POUCE SAID TWO black men in their 20s and two young children were shot to death and ·three other children aJ> parenUy were drowned by as many as eight intruders who broke into the $71,cm northwest Washington borne Thursday artemoon. Kissinger; P~t "fYixon Star in Opening Show Spon>ors promi!ed l,llOO pounds of cheese, 360 pints ol strawberries, Irish ilOU~-Cbtnese meatbalJa, Spanioh em- panadas, German bratwurat and among other foods. l ,OllO stuffed grape and cab- bage. ·ieaves_ DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DflimJ of tht D~ilot • The Prtsldent returned to the ll&Pltal from Key Biscayne, Fla., Thursday night b!IJ iliJf_ "'11~ ~ firs! two .o!llcJal funclioos of the Inaugural ,...tend, a rec!>ptjon l!o!!orlng Vice Pmldenl Spiro J. ~ ano!hor lg lbo nation's governors . * * * t;alendar M a matteu.f fact, the entire Grand Jury treatise plugging for ngiooal government o er city government seem-.a to be mln'Dl'ing the tbougbls and words of Chairman Roolld Caspers of the Board of supervisors. ~·11US, SINCE l'tn ooe of the Wlt!lg ~rs around these parts, I took the opportunity to point out that county 1ovemment b! bardJy without sin in the business of sign controls. All you have to do is look at the. placards displayed in county territory along lbe San Diego or Santa Aoa freeways or through oUr coastal region in spots like Dena Point. . .. But lo, what's this'? · The county l!UJ)<nilon appear to be lollowlag the Grud Jury's lead. Only 7estenla7, they tool< up a proposed Jaw to bu uclY billboards in the county'~ industrial or manufacturing zones. , AND TRUE TO what coold be ex· pected., Supervisors Chainn"ah Caspers One of the two wounded women, who was identified as Bibi Khaalis. "6, the daughter of Charlotte, N.C. dent~t and civil rights leader. Or. Reginald Hawkins, was in critical condition follow· ing surgery for a number of bead wounds. · One of the chilren was a 10.yea"M>ld boy. The other four, two boys and two girls. were under three yean of age. Police did not release the names 'ot any of the dead because o( mnfu!ion created by their use of lslamic names. But Dr. Hawkins said in Charlotte he bad been informed thst three ol the dead cbildreo belonged to ~ daqhter. Police issued an alert for "eight Negro males in their -all. armed with handgum. One has • -ba1ri:ut and ·one is wearing a larp brown bat." Banker Slaying -Clues Elusive was right in there plugging for adoption GRANDIN, Mo. (AP) _ The in· of the billboard ban. _ vestigation of the killing or Grandin bank Indeed, here would be a·prime es:ample president Robert R. Kittennan. hls wife of county government grasping the ~ins and daughter in connection with an ex·, and leading us down the path toward a tortioo plot Wednesday, continues but better quality or life. , authorities say today they have oo new Trruble was, a cropte of prob)ems leads. • developed. A billboard k>bbyist showed Two young men who were arrested on up to oomplain that the ban would put a dnlg cbarges were questioned in the case ~fd1:!!\~~\:, :=.:.: ~~·;:•i:i!nbe= ~1 ~n~~~; like blllboanla. Patrol . • Soperrisor Ralph Clarlt suggested thlt Two .32 caliber llhells thought to be these big placards often hide thinp thst from an automaUc pistol were recovered are ugly. David Bake:r and Bobby Battin Thursday in the wooded area where the agreed. Clearly, we have a lot of ugline$s bodies were found, about five miles west thst needs to be bidden behin<I billboards. of Grandin. IN THE END, our Supervisors voted-3-=TlieliOOiei oflGH:erman, 43'~1'-frs. to 2 to allow billboards to remain in our Bertha Kitterman, 38, and their daught er Roberta, 17, were found tied lo trees. industrial or manufacturing zones. These Each had been shot once in the bead. areas embrace some 20,000 feet or 1.250 There are two surviving daughters, acres along freeways in the El To~ Kathy, 15, and Patricia, 14. Laguna Hills·Leisure World area alone. So much ror county govemme•t leadenbip. Board Chairman Caspers saw op- portunity slip through his fingers with onJy freshman Supervisor Ralph Diedrich giving him support. WAS CASPERS ANGRY! You dang betcha be waS. He stomped around plen· ty after lhe voting. You have to feel a bit sorry for him. Regional control looks great on paper. It's the ..cing thtt sometlmal gives you trouble. Girl, 12, Has Twins RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI.) -Television and· radio newsmen reported today that a 12-year~ld girl gave birth Thursday to twin girls. Doctors, they said, aaid mothen mothers of that age are not rare, but that twin birtba in such cases are. The newsmen said the girl, whose name wu not disclosed, named her babies Cristina and Cristiana. WASHINGTON !AP) -Pat Nixon said her husband was ''working as usual" on peace, "praying.as. well as working." Flenry Kissinger said the Vietnam peace negotiation.s are going ''all right .•· And Kissinger's mother said the extra pounds her son has gained while in Wa$hington are considerable, but bow much is "a military secret." Mrs. Nixon and the Kisslngers were iµnong,tbe more notable VIPs at Thurs-- day nteht's "salute to the states " the first in a ·series of concerts built ~ound Presieient Nixon's second inauguration. Tbe salute honored the states and their governors. N'lXOD, llying back rrom Florida, miss- ed the show. • KISSINGER ARRIVED ~ith his parent.. Mr. and Mn. Louis Kissinger ol New Yark. and ooe of bis frequent com- panliins, Nancy McGirtnis:'Jtissiij(ir and his date. whispered and laughed throughout the three-hour perfonnam;e. "He'• got the only two Secret Service men With neOn signs," said one newly ap- pointed ambassador who appel!fed ml/fed at all the attention Kissinger, Nixoo's chier Vietnam negotiator, drew. Well-wlshen gathered around Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace win arrived in a wheelchair, accompanied ~ his wife, Co~lia, and his mother·ifi:-law, Ruby Austin. ''YF.S, l'~t JUST hot to rattle," laugh- ed Mrs. Austin when asked if she planned to attend an inaugural ball. M the entertainment began, pictures -·~ ~· ... ,. 'Peacs is st hand ••• a_qain!' Raindrops Fall on Midwest S1iow · Blankets North; Season's First Tornadoes 'Hit • ·~~--.,~,; """~ .... ,.r..;;--..111Lio<., ...... "-...i~t.al --;;· ';ci;;i '" mm ''" ~ , SO•i•f!~~~-~,.,:-~ dlfai da&i opp«ar todo11 on ..,.,. '=: ·-I r ;,"*,;Jn. . I . . . l. Paae l l ) ' · Ski• .,.. _, "' .._"" clMr ' of astronauts On the moon, stars, color sunsets, skyscrapers and pa.tfiotic memorabilia flashed on a screen behind the performers. Emcees Bob Hope and Frank Sinatra alternated telling jokes. Perhaps because of the beCtic switch- )ng from One hall to another, perfonners often muffed lines and ap- peared ()Ut of breath. The bands' sound equipment was often tOO loud. And. crackling microphones prompted one perfonner to ask the audience, "Did you·- pay money to hear this!" i1\uari1111tttO ..._..,~I If -• Ml ~ .,.., ..... 9T 11» ....... ull .. ,._,-Giit' Wiii .. .......... ,..,'*_..__. , .... .. """*" ... ,_..,, • ,.. -......... ywr (#'r 9T ' L" ~' W I ·-s-Jy, , • ._ 111111 1 ~n WOI '-......... " l'M· Gel~.,. .... wlll 11 ...... We've done it again! ... SuitJ, ·two (~r Jhe price of ·one · Every 9ne of our Fash ion Pork, and Worsted-lex · suits is being offered ot two, for the pric e of one! .Here's absolutely top quality cloth ing, first das· tailoring, and all suits are fine 2-ply worsteds. A golden opportunity to get two great suits for the, pri~e Qf on e. If you ·~on't need_ two , bring sorii' one to share your savings. LOS ANGELES HOILICHln • wn.w-. a, ........ HIMo- 12111 627 .. JSt PASADENA HOIUCHll'I • Famous Maker 2 Ply Worsteds • $145. Fashion Park Stilts 2 FOR $145. $128. Worsted-Tex Suits 2 EOR .$128. • ....... cff!llt ••••• 1:•1t11. • I I' e.._, & M_,.. .. a..:p. • DE.LSCHEKS 3333 Bristol St. South Coast Plou c .. t.-. ''' ... c.111• ....._ GL!NDALE HOIUCHll'I .,..., 111....,. lls1~1I• .t.-. "ALHAMBRA ..- ' • an 241 __ _ ••••••• I 11 JI 7tMUI J """'"" -IJIJJ 241·1171 ........ 11111 ...... M COSTA MESA HOILSCHD'S IJJI trh'91 St. -ANAHEIM ORANGE HOll.ICHln Y f : 1111 MOit.iCM_.. 441'N_,.._. llMN.-M .. s .... c ........ . HUNTINGTON BEACH HOIUCHR'S Y••dc:wh 11 ... .....,, .. c.... ..... .. ...... . -~"a.¢t....tt24J74 --~t•J-1 .. ,, ... + ...... ·~ Ant :ts c:.:hr. ~---uf ~·---... "'1 ____...--. .. "-h'ltr-m;mr- , • "' ' I' ' ' I , ' ;,( ' . ' I I ' ' I I ' I I ' ' I ''I I. ' I ' I , I . I • I I ., . - Wavt1 Road "'IT ........ A road to the King Salmon fishing.area on Humboldt Bay near Eureka is lash- ed by waves that tossed l:R>ulders on the route. · ' . Stones .. Roll . in LA . 18,600 Fans Se~. Benefit for Managua INGLEWOOD (AP~ -~ .. t cooduct and a handful of gate or the old lngfedleiils were era.shits; one might -never there: rock guitar, blaring have known it was a stones' drums, scre~lng f~ and..J_CO~-· vibrating Mick Jagger. But something. was missing Bt.rr THE crowd of 10,600 Thursday as the Rolling Stones played a benefit con- cert at the Forum for Nicaraguan earthquake vic- tims. Gone was the mob of hopeful gate crashers, the police with riot sticks, the f l g h t s 811d mass arrests that have cbaracteri7.ed past Stone con- certs. Except for a few fans who were ejected for disorderly Pentagon Documents 'Aid Hanoi' * * * Japl!':l ~ars Mick Jagger -TOKYO (AP). -:rite' pro- moters of a"five-day TokYo ap- pearance by the Rolling Stones rock m~ic group announced today the) have cancele.11 the engagement because lead singer Mick Jagger has been barred from Japan due to a fine he received for possession of narcollo in Britain last year. Udo Music said all 55,ln'.I tickets for the Stones' perfonnances beginning Jan. 23 had been sold. It will refund never mlsaed any of Jt_ The Stones played 11Brown Sugai," "It's All Over Now" and other hits. The fans, who had paid between $10 and $100 a ticket, cheered, some youths standing and swaying to the music. Jagger, the Stones' nam- boyant lead sing<r. ~ lri turquoil&eoklred v e I v e t pants and wearing a 1ilver headband, thanked the au- dieoce for '1sbe.lling ~ so much bread " ' . ~ He then led the group In a nearly two-hour .perfonnance of their songs, mixing newer hits with vintage renditions like "Route M," which the stones recorded in ltM. · ! "They were goad, but It wasn't worth $15," said Jan Johnson, 28, of Van Nuys. . • Pruning Expeeted Bu~et Astounds GOP -·Legislator · SACRAMENTO (AP) -A leading Reoubllcao lawmaker says be Is ''astounded" 1t the size of Gov. Ronald ~an'a '9.3 bllfloo hudgeTior tliO lliica! year starting July 1. As!emblymao John Stull, a candidate for a vacant 'San Diego 1tate Senate seat, added Thunday, "I ezpect the legJ>. lature lo do some pnming." Stull joined Democratic critics in saying, "I cannot see the reaJOnS for such a ihassive increase ln our state budget . _ . I think the people coptlnue to want riSCil economy, not budgetary upansk>n ... The budget ls II.& billion larger than the current state spending pl8n and would ...,,ult Navy Hunts For Gigi · By Radio SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The Navy ~ .@gain looking for Gigi the whale, boping the AWOL leviathan will check • in by radio .anc!l'eassure hei lihS. So far, there i.a only silence frOm the Pacific, where Gigi -If $.e is !Ull ali!r'e -should now be migrating southwarc;l with other gray whales to Ba- ja California. Gigi attracted nationwide attention last Mardi, when she became known . u ''the ap- prentice whale." Captured _.ahortly after birth, she was raised th a tank at Sea World by Navy ·anct other marine research scientist9. tn a $1.1 billion surplus at the end of the co'ining fi9Clll year. A BA nt.E IJ_expected over disposition of the surplus. Assembly . Speaker Bob Moretti s a I d the one-cent · sales ta1: increase c'an be delayed for a year and a hall -until January, 1975 -by us- ing the surplus. Unless the Legislature acts ln the meantime, the sales tax increase from five to slx centa per dollar In most of California takes effect· June 1. "We have been able to pr&- vide homeowner property tu re11ef, provide new money for schools, and at the same time, to accumulate 1 sutplus without the necessity or im- posing new taxes on the average Californian," Moietti said. * * * UC Chief Dismayed LOS ANGELES (AP) Despite some good news for the University of California in Gov.· Rooald Reagan's pro- posed 19n-74 spending pr. l""l· UC Presldeot Oiarles J. Hitch oays he Is -ppointed ~ the operating bud~et for the nme-campus system. . In a statement to the Board ~ ARGUMENT developed of Regents finance cOmmittee between Navy and other scien-Thursday, filch said: tlsts Over whether Gig could "This waa to be the year survive when released In the when he would shake off the ocean since she had been austerity of the last aix d~ved of a normaJ whale budgeta, tht year when we childhOod. · would get the university Gigi · appeared lo give moving again, the y ea r ol. grounds for such fears for a renewed commitment and the while. She hung around. the meana of fulfilling it. I'm Southern California coast for a afraid these hopes look pretty LOS ANGELES (UPI) -couple of months. empty now.," The Pentagon Papin includedl--------------------------------'-'----'----~-- "Here we are, a couple of adults, waiting to see the stones," said Judy Jones, a %2 year-old Redondo B ea ch secretary. "But we11 probably be here when we're 55." the money. · a secret analysia of the 'J;'et or~ fensive that could have show- ed Hanoi planners how close they came to success :and.hl>w lo improve their al~~lbo -time, according tO a lilgh ranking general _ . "To them, this might be the :r __ BRI_E_F_s _) . ;. . • ' NOJjJCETOWLEeHONE CUSTOMERS The. American 'Thlepbon!t...!l'_d 'Thlegraph Company has filed a new sclieaule of Intel" state rates with the Federal CommunlcaUoiis Commission whJCb lI!creases charges for some customer-dialed calls during weekday .busi- ess_ho.lUS. for__s.ome_o_p.er.a.t.nr=.as_sisted · calls, for some·person-to--persoD. calls, and for WATS(WfdeArea'ThlecommunlcatfonsServlce). All rates for Interstate Long Distance calls y~u dial yomseH wltbbut oj,er,ator assll~ce hi the evenings, at night, and~ weekends will remain unchanged. The new rates for Long Distance calls b&- come effective on January 22, 1073. The new rates for WATS become effective on March 13, 1973, unless suspended by the fCC. Here are the provisions of the new Interstate rates: 1. Some. of the rates for station-to-station calls yoq dial yourself without o!ierator assistance from 8 a.m. to'5 p.m., Monday through Friday. will be lncr~sed five cents or10 centsforthe Jirst three minutes. 2. Some of the rates In all-time periods for operator-assisted station-to-station calls_, (that Jncludes-credlt-<:ard, collect. lhlrd- number. botel11uast, and colii telephone. calls) 'will be Increased five cents for the flrst three minutes. 3. Some rates for person-to-person call• In all time perlo'<ls will be increased f lvacento or 10 cents for the first three minutes. 4. The rates for each additional minute on snme calls in all . tlme periods will be raised in a range from one cent to five C'9bta. 5, Interstate WATS. rate• will be Increased about two percent. , 6. ftales for statlon·t<H1tatlon calls yon dial yourielf without operator asslatanpe dui-- ing eveninl•· nlahta. or w oekondJ wUl .remain the ~ame. Interim nit es and supporting data have been filed with the Federal Communications Com- inlsslon. The Increases for Long Distance calls have been euthorned by the FCC on an Interim basts to be effective January 22, 1973. The FCC will conduct additional hprtngs_on theJawfcllli·-jl-I ness of the rates, and FCC rules pennlt any In- terested persons to .appeai and participate. This Wtu be only the second general Increase In interstate, Long Distance rate ·levels·. tn al- most 20 years. During this period, ln spite of jnflatlon,· interstate Long Distance rates have been reduced repeatedly .. Even with this In- crease, the level of the new rates will still be below the 1~53 level. Yet In those 20 interven- ing years, the cost of living has gone up more than 50 percent. The new rates are designed to increase total revenues froni Interstate service by aboul'two peroent. s~ 'I .... --...... . . 11.111.lo . lip.II.Sit.· "' Sl . .tO l3.5S . -llldl1.11 ... ... ,_ .. ,_ .. ,_ 5p.111.S1111, ~ p.11.lo . "' Sl.«I " 13.55 ·-llp.111.S.. 11\ti ...... liflt 3 llli!Mel WJMtes ' 111-· ... "f1t II p.11.to-' ' --s ...... w.n -... _ -... ·-a1 ••.•. OlilJ' _ ... '(l ..... ) (l llil«n) . ........ .... 51.15 "·" -ip.•MM.. ... ,_ •Ifill...., .. ,_ ........ . ....... l•it·~--.. -llotfs ........ Waew. .... lllt17"S of ... ""'°"' ..... 111111 of ........... ..., ...... lllSl,ofODUl'lt.'OllOlkl ... Clll lol' ...,,.,4illMca . Dill-lt•JOVMI '*' applr fll II IMnUk c:lll (lll:Wille KIRI llld Mlsb> • ............................ """" ....... ~ ........ call .., ... .,...., "" • "'*-"., ...... ..... ............ fdlla .. _, ......... ~._ ... ..,II ......,.., -........ ~ er Cllld calls, • II call .............................. a.. ...,. ..... llilli.--......... Ill ..................... ........ zoi:-.-·--. @Ai&I f•, ' 'I"' :--. ---,--~------'-'-. ---- • - • \ Friday, January 19, 1973 'I DAILY PILOT HOW WOIJID 1'011 llKI IO HAW NO MIAIN'llNANCI ~o· 11111111 Getrid of yourlawnmowerandpalntbrush and W 1 check out the carefree lifestyle at Walnut Square. ~Relax on weekends wblle professionals take care of all.landsc aping and exterior maintenance. From Sl9.9§0 ::::::::J ! $1,QOO Down, _No Closiog Costs. ••• on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and Component Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and Monochrome TV, Radios, Tape Recorders, and Portable Phonographs. Shown below is just one of our many Ma~navox Annual Sale Vcilues . See them·all-and 'savel Mediterranean atyf!ng- model 7546, Simulated TV pi~ This lfnleomaticEye ••• makes M1gn1vox T J.C. the mast tatllly 1utamltic color system you can buy! Th• only color set that automatically adjusts its picture to chang ... ing light conditiona l Maii!navox T.A.C. (Total Automatic ColOf) not only automatically cornpansates'for alt those things from outside tlte house that tan mess up your picture; now Magnavox T.A.C. with Videomatic automatically compensates for the one thing inside the house that can fne" up your picture: changing room light I The Videomatic Eye actually "sees': the changing light in your room and automatically adjusts the color. brightness and contrast-to give you the best possible color-right picture -day Of night I And the chassis is Modular 100% Solid-State-with plug~in circuit panels, modules and transistors.. 26ff diagonal screen. fief!} Contlmpot"lry model 7542. (righ1) Early American model 7544. Your c;fxlice, SAVE '30 I NOW '629 2 BIG LOCATIONS • UNITED GOLDENwEST 401 MAIN STREET ' , .& WARNER HUNTINGTON BEACH Sales o.ly 142-5596 , STORES HUNTINGTON IEACH -I 1.9 Service & Sales 536-7561 ~ • t I I --·~..,......._ ___ ---_,_ •.z::._,._. --~-----'----~~"' • DAD,Y PILOT EDITO City• n Critics of a city-run ambulance service, primarily operators of a private ambulance service who had ab3n· doned San Cle1nente, had vowed the city plan ~.rould never succeed. -A city service. they charged, "'as a poor substitute, and the city stall rould never undertake Ule job. - The critics \Vere wrong. Since the project began "1th a second-band ambu· lance more than a year ago. the service has handled more - than 500 calls. . The single unit, backed up by station wagons as- s.ig ned to the fire ind Wegtiard departments. is staffed by police officers acting as driv~rs and firemen perform- ing as attendants. Letters from satisfied customers are abundant. The greatest advantage bas been an extremely swift mponse time. Patrons are charged a fee of $25 per call. City officials flatly state Ule project is here to stay. And \Vhy not':' The entire program was launched \\'ith an expense o( only about $5,000. \Vith the apparent acceptance it has received from the citizens it serves, it was a fine investment. Festival of Parking? The board of directors of Ule Laguna Beach Festival of Arts finally has taken a more .active interest in deter- mining if the Festival itseif can do something to ease Laguna Beach's parking pains. _ ,, PAGE ' Ambulance • feasibilily for a structure between Ule Festival erounds and Ule Moulton Playhouse. It may be just one step, but• after long waiting for action ·orLCDnstruction of additional park!J>g, ll 11 ..,.. tainly a welcome one. The F<!!ltival normally diJburs., substantial suma to · various deserving cultural croups in town. Although Ule auto culture may be deboti!Jle, the harused motortrt seeking a parking place, especially ·during ,festival sea·· son. is also deserving. · A Dedicated Educator ' Dr. WillJam Ullom, the man who h1S sat at Ule helm ot the !.aguna Beach Unified School District for Ule past 81> years. wlll clear his desk Tuesday and begin the search for a new job. He bu been lnvolm In a series of pblloso~hlcal differenc.es with tbe board majority bloc since 1t .... sumed office in 1971 . During his term as superintenden~ Dr. Ullom hu held one goal in mind: his most Important task 'lias been to build a fine educational program for the young peer pie of La~na Beach. And he succeeded. He IS, by all standards, a professional, dedicated educator. . The personal frustrations of his job in recent times have been secondary considerations . ...- Be it a new program, money to upgrade el<isting projects or requests for salary increases, Dr. Ullom was the leader who-supported the staff. Next week Ulat will end. Laguna Beach will loao a fine educator .and a fine leadel\ • The Festival board, acting on a recommendation by Treasurer Stuart Durkee, bas decided to find out what costs would be involved in preliminary study of the We trust his capabilities can be appreciated else- where--as they once were in Laguna Beach., 'On your mark. Get set. Go/' Can Energy Match P ace Of Growth? ~~NEY J.HARRI~ I read a frightening riddle the other day . It was propounded by Dr. Peter E. Glaser at a scie ntific conference on Energy and ·Humanity in London last Dear Gloomy Gos If Governor Reagan signs the bill to put contraceptive,, in catfood, but not one to give them to teenage girls, will not that cttate an awk- ward temptation for the teenage girls? M.P.D. fall. It goes like this: A farmer has a pond with a water lily non-renewable resources, we will con- in tl Tbe lily is doubling in size every day. tinu : not only to deplete~ these rt90Ufces In 31) days it will cover the entire pond, at an alarming rate, but also to throw killing all the crca-the whole system of nature drastically· tures living in it. out of kilter. Tbe farmer doom'! WE M.1.Y NOT yet be al U., 29th day, want this t.o happen, but it is approaching Jar faster than the but be is busy with layman imagines. And if we are to other chores and de-deflect Ulii catastrophe ln time, it is im- cldt!\'I to postpone peraUve that the nations of the world cutting back the unite for a common purpose: to protect plant ,until it co\'efs: the survival ·of this cloled planetary half the pond. system of the earth, and to auure that The riddle is: on everyone will have at least enough. what day will the lily cover half the pond? Instead, as Arnold Toynbee observed And the answer is: on the 29th day -not long ago, since the end of World War leaving the farmer just one day to save 11 , there are twice as many nations and ~ pond ! sovereignties with half as much space as This is what is meant by the chilly 'before. Nationalism and separatism ba~e mathematical phrase "exponentiaJ proliferated everywhere on the globe; the growth." Our technological society Is .great powers may find a mod11 growing at an exponential rate -and vivendi, but t h e smaller nations wUI along with it our need for energy to feed soon possess the capacity to make this growth. We are nearing the 29th day, nuclear bombs and enter the arena of when we must either find new sources of political and mlli4'1'Y combat. energy that-will not threaten our-ptaner.------JUstat-thTtime when-We SfiOuld be or cut back drastically in our rate of pro-subordinating our provincial differences duction, population, and conswnption. to our common global plight, we are These are the only alternatives open to drawing away from each other, in · us; anything else is · inere polltica~ smaller and more fiercely ttibal units. rhetoric. Jwt when we need to pool our re1ources Unless we -by which I mean the for the salvation of the species, we seem whole world -can ot;italn enough solar bent on seizing more of the spoils. It is energy to replace our dwindling stock of not merely evil; it is madness. . Profitable I ntiugural? , Presidential Inaugurals are curious events, combinlng pomp. pompousness and pageantry in almost equal measure. This year something new has been ad- ded. Against all odds, the 1973 Inaugural Commhtee hopes to make the event pro- fitable. TO Tlll8 end, the c9mmittee is cutting down on overhead and charging hefty fees for almolt all activities. The in- augural balla of reetnt memory have been held In such horels as the Shor-eham, Sheraton Park a n d Mayflower. On Jan. lt-20, 1973, however, the various balls and concerts will be held in government buildings, including the Kennedy Center, Smithsonian lnstllu· tion, Natkl1al Gallery of Art, and Na· tional Portrait Gallery: Cost to the in- augural COIMllttee: nothing. Inaugura1·parade spect.ntors who want to sit In the bleachers a I o n g Pennsylvania Avenue can do so for. pricu ranging u high as IM. Tickets 10 the three concerts scheduled for Jan. 19 are scaled from $20 to $00. On the oth~r band~ ad.mission to an informal reception at tbe -Smithsonlan for VJce President Agnew is a ..:omparatlve steal at SIO. EDITORIAL RESEARCH Until 1817, all Inaugurals in the nation's capital were held ia either the Senate or~ the House. But that year the two chambers of Congress became locked in controversy over whether to use the "fine red chairs'' of .the Senate or the "plain democratic chairs'' of the Houae. M a result, James Madison ·took lhe oath outside a temporary "Brick Ca pitol." The British had burned lhc old Co.pltol. In 1814. BAD WEATHER occasionally dlma the luster of inaugural ceremonies. For e1- nmplc, It was snowing when William Henry Harrison wos sworn in on the East Portico of the Capitol in 1841. 'lbe new President, 88 years old, nevertheless refused to wear a hat ot coat. lf the day. was windy, 80 was HarrllOR; It took him nearly two hours to read his Inaugural address, the longest ever made. Re caught cold after the ceremony and dled a month later. AT THE FIRST inaugural, George THE CENTERPIECE of any inauF,"' Washington took the oath of office on the tion Da)' Is, of course, the Presldent a in· balcony of Federal Hall In New York augural addresa. 111 .. , have tan1ed tn City. Tbue wu a ball afterwards and length from Harrison's 8,5QO.word yawn- the first President danced the minuet. provoker to the 13$ words Washington The first ln1t.urural ball In Washington spoke after being sworn in for his second F---~-~i!!S!_MWlison.JiQme_9( lhe term. ThuY_mitul_afxila,MI!!! \\'Ord!, s Pren dent Must Be Immu n e ~Critfelsm Measured Pace of Nixon Game Plan W ASIDNGTON -The measured pace of the Nixon administration never ceases to surprise and startle. So many of Presi- dent Nixon's decisions nm contrary to accepted wisdom, such u lifting man- datory wage-price controls al a time when Inflation tends to resume its up- ward course. Or, tile predictab- ly unpopular re- sumption of bombln( In Hanoi ·Haiphong area, which might be resumed again if the peace talks In Parla fall again . Ni.Ion goes by a measured pace and thla ts what l,s least.understood about bim. In the fall of 1971 when Phase II of eeonomic controls bad barely replaced Phase I, Nixon's economic planners began to chart Phase III, lbe lifting of controls. 11te plan has now advanced .by measured stages into Phase ill, volun- larism, which was Intended In the flnt place, and is consistent with Nlxoo'' loag-ttnn oppiosition to compulsOry wage: price controls. HE WILL CLAIM the same con- sistency In tenninating the Vietnam war, , which once again appears possible. Hire ·'again there is evidence of lht measured pace. Early in 1972 Nixon accepted with amazing equanlmlty the advance of Com· munist regular forces acr<>Ss tbe DMZ to establish a foothold In tbt northern pro- vinces of South Vietnam. To prevent that advance from going too far the President onlered tbe mlnlna and -bing of il!Ulol·llaipllonc,, and tbe Soulh Vlei· namese army was able to an-est the ad- vance with the loss of ooly one major capital. still, · the North Vietnamese recular forces did, in fact, establish themselves in the northern provinces of South Viet· nam. This fact underlies the present shape of the peace negotlaUons. Nixon's tacit acceptance of the presence of the North Vletnamete rqular forces In South Vietnam WU the Jmcluctble prl<e of peace for Hanoi -tbe r.cocnJtion of two armle1 In Soolh Vietnam u ..ii.o. tlni the realltin of tbe bltUelllld. FROM THIS single point Cowed the • events wblch made Jt conceivable for Hanol to agree to a ce1se-flre in place. So there was 1 perce.pUbJe pattern, if not a Pf'COllCelved design, all tbftlUih 11'72 baaed llPoOD the creation of real mllltary c:ondltlona which Hanoi could oonsldtr acceptable,~ 1t leait for -an interim period. Phase I then moved on toward Phase n, tbe heavy bombln( to convln<:e Hanoi that It must now moVe along toward the actual e1ecutlon of a cease-ft.rt which did not require an overt commltment to withdraw Its regular troops . Phase III, the resumption of bombing when Communllt delay 1114 treachery sabotaged lhe peace negotlaUons, could not be considered 1 preconceived plan but Hoory A. Kilaln(er evidently left the Communlota In little doubt ~t further delay and captious cb!nges would result in a renewal of the bombing. TIDS RES1:1MPT10N was a bitch in the proceedings and matters were not going at NiHo's mtasured pace. That pace has nevtrtheless ruumed, and while at a slower rate than once appeared possible, lltlJ: W1a within a Nlaonlan 1ame plan. He may yet be able to say tblt 1 plan- ned cowwe of events, from the first withdrawal of troops onward, led, despite delays and mishaps , to conditions in. which Hanoi would agee to a cease-fire wblle Saigon still controlled most of the · country. In other matters a measured pace can.' be perceived. Nixon must have known - certalDJ.y his associates did know -tha~ there was virtually no prospect that Coogress •'OUld embrace his massivo governmental reorganization p I an . From the beginning, it was: implicit that, at what was deemed the proper stace. the President would put this plan into effect by hia own devices. He has done .so, not perfectly but he has, ln ef- fect, combined the ftmetions of several departmenta u n d e r super Cabinet ' members with wtllte House status. IT rs the same with his commitment to cut government spending. congress w!JJ not help him in this, so he is doing It ·· anyway by stage.· and phases, in effect impoundJng and refusing to spend money appropriated by Congess. It 1$ typical of the game plan approach , that many 0£ Nixon's actions are tem- porarily tmpopular or misunderstood so 1 hCI has to be endowed with foresight of a good outcome and Immunity: to criticism. He takes second place to no one in these endo~·ments. Response to Senator on Toler~nce To the Editor : _____ _.:.;---=:---;.,_.;;. _____ _. __ ~-in our society art less gun dealers and in regard to State Senator H. C. le88. guns. Nixon, the Laguna Beach School Board and many others. , Richardson's article about Intolerance' MAILBOX WARREN 1. HENNlNGSGARO (Jan. 15), I must agree that there are a OVer the years that I worked for various public service groups, when leaden made secret decisions and gave arbitrary · orders , 1 was unable to cooperate. I may not be much of a leader, but I can't be a blind follower either: lot of lhlngs which we should no longer Dlctatortfalp2' , tolerate. To the Editor: HERE IS a brief list of a few of thMe thin.11: narrow-mindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy, unwillingness to change for the better, and all those things which violate the laws and principles laid down by our Constitution. There are some things that deserve our utmost attention. For eiample, w~n we hear tbe banshee screams of the women llbentioniSts, perhaps we should take notice. They are only exercising their freedom of speech, which they were granted along with full citizenship back In 1111. U they speak the truth, lhen maybe we should adjust our views. AS FAR AS lhe youth of America goes, It ls my opinion that they ate not u ud a crop of kid• as suggested-by tbe State - senator. They may have their shortcom- tnp, but at least they have the guts to 11y what's on their minds. ll lhe)" 1peak the truth, lhen we .should know It for what It la. In reopecl to lhe patrtoUsm of young Americans, I believe it l.J 11 atrong u ever. I belltve there at• plenty ot them willing to defend and even die for tbe principles eatabllahed tn oar Coo· 1titut1on. You may have a.bar.I time llnd-ini IOllleOlle willillg to f l g h t for a aovemment as corrupt as the one ln SOUth Vietnam, bowtver. Tho educatlonll 1ystem may leave 10111elhing to be ddlired, but when you .--Btt6-l'fe-- De11r George : Down et the saloon J'Ve met some guys who say you have NEVER followed your own advice. Lett.rs from readn1 art t0Jlcom1. Normollt1 teritn1 shOtild conve11 lhcir mtuag" in 300 IDOT'do or t.u. Thi right to cOflde!IH UIU,, to fll -or eliminatt libel ii nrtnied. AU letters muat include donature and mailing addrt11, but nafMt-mau be withh<ld on req110al If aufllclcnt Yta.ton U appart1lt. Pottrv toUI Mt b1 publi!hed. see Americans: walking on the moon it lsn'I because they're bl1 and 1tro111 lt la be<1uoe they are ~ lntelllgent and ·educated. • .. M. FAULKNER We are being duped . · T)le two leadtn In tile Senate, Scott and Manafleld, and the 1 .. der In lhe HOUJe, Ford, all three admit that they can do abtolutely nolhinl to •top tbia war. Any laws they pw can be vetoed by Pr.,ldent Nixon, and they do not have sufficient votes to ovetrlde bJs veto. What llre we paying out tbest hand.oome 11larle1 forT N01111NGI We Ill voted for r rw:ptesentatlve govmunent, but what doei tbli above llat.ment aoen out very clearly to you. DICTATORSHIP. Is lbla what you voted forT May the OOOd lord blew and lletp us. llAZZN P. AIKEN Gu.lt11tlotel119 To the EdllOr: To tbe Editor: Tho SPA'• IU ratloaln( p-il This hu refennce to the letter •boll! ahould rinC Wltb tlt6 nnll Qd rue. After guns from Mlcbael D. Grant, eucuUve all, one ptne tn AnoWbtad 11 worib mort vice pmldtnt of the Grant Boys. than '11 !ht 11j1Gnobilt1 tn tbe I.A Ba11n. • But, what of that chlld In LA'• Glletto JUST TO ll't tbe facts sll'aigbt suns oulterlnli ftoill emp117Mm1 It !ht ... of are manufactured for profit an4 the 111? followlng ...-: •. Tbe LA Chunber of Commerce, the L To ~ • hllmans. Auto Club and Port1t Lawn coo be e•· n•~ pecied to talk "modeat" .._ .... &lit, 2. To KILL anlm~a. w•--w•-•••y .~ ••-bet"· for 3. To KILL fowl. . • ·-· ~· ""' ..,, "'" .. 4. For '*10\ practice to bell or the aim l'lollolltlen· No .. a wa1 feqbt !oar '"" tn -to till llllmalll, 1a kill laitnlla, .,.1 .\lid what naUy bavo they cJv<n to "ll I 1 tliemselvea to ovet \hi 7"" bllt 00!' ~ ow . . ref! and the ........ of Ille The Mm -·MM, la ID lnslrumtnt"' porltl P la _,.,, ·-d -y •-· dead? dealb an lhla 14 lts ultllna\e purpoot,. JA~ w. DILLEY Waliltng on an uncertaln path In the dark is likely to be precarious -for one could easily Jose one's sense of direction. So ple:ase,' leaders -let's ba\ie light, all the way. RUTH QUINN Diner In D•rk To the Editor : I The food Ii ezcellent bul wouldn't ll be great U you could see what you're eating -'a chop or lprl1'e ribs, water cress or broccoU. Whf la It that you have to grope for yoor food In most Laguna B<ach rutaunnts, 'the table ~being' lit l>y one candle power? And If you want a little romance, look out. You may grab the wrong girl! . -So !eta, have tome light on the oubject thlt w're eatlng and who 13 eating with . us! . BERNARD BARTON GaANOI COAiT DAILY PILOT Robtr' N. Wetd, Publblter Th°""" KttvU, Editor ' Batbara' Krtibich ONE" CAMIOT plek UP a newspaper II>-T-/tlett Edi1orl<Jt ·Page Editor day wllbout readiftl 1blu1 1<1me praclOUf , Jlfe betng taken by I gun, lhtollgh ac. Ti the Edi The editorial r•~c nf the Dtlly cldent or on purpose. We don't be&ln to 0 tor: Pilot tetkl to Inform •nd •tlm11° know how llfe ls crtated bul we &un1J ~rto Clemente died btlplfta un-l•tt ttadtrt by prc11cnt1n1 \hit kno how' to dest IL fortunate peoplt. Wbtn Mlnl&'JI WU hlt new-PIJIH'• oplniona and com· CYNIC w t'01. bf the earthquake, Howird ffU1bta wu -moi'ltaf) on tor>ict of lnten'lt and Dear Cynic: Mr. Grant stlt~s that 111t ~ ~ terrified and flew to safety in England. tlltnlllcinoo. by 11rovldln{t a forum RightT Well, I dob't know. Some years.. ls rigidly controlled. O:mle on r. Grll\i, Money can't bvy a man 's toul, can it? fflr tht ••preu1un or O\lr retdtl'I' ago I advised myself to quit honest . anybody can buy a gun lt be hU \be GWEN PATON opln loM. And by prusc-nUng th" work aJid start writing an advice money. All bumlh bebtp J09e their dlvene vif""l)Oll'lt• nf Informed ob- oelllmn.-Jlul 11-,.. mean fpllow!ng _ _LtJJ!per _a UIJMl. ~~ thla wUll_ !ht 0 .aitu hU.-""''" and •pokotmtn o• topl" • , " ' V/Qlllen gucstt-ctirl1To11" 10 iliel'iWOeiitwh1alls &rmosCjirecllelylne Tenith of and addttl5ed hlll wire, Do1ley, a1 each of OW.ght D. Ei&enbower'a Id-• ''lllodar~t . --' --. -- "'---.. the "adv! .. " given In thla calumo, avaUobll ty Of a gun !'nil 1111 P~::'.~ , . -...._,-"''· '· •-,.. -• -,., · 1 hawn'L tboUWlda of needless ·dellltifjacll b .. ro Ji\e Editor: , •ndaj', 11nuarflu, ~ - --... ~-a.:-·~-'l"-::1"=--~ _...a ·-~'ffitiwt8titiVriiU"Wfffl~ . ~iddreliiiftoF!l:laiifil=t:;.:i"'" ~ -~~~~=~t.,,-==~ • I ) • . .. ·) Hus band Des per aie, Mari Loves Sick Wife , Divorci1ig Her ST. PETERSBURG , Fla. (AP) -steelworker Howard 'ThMw' 1oves his wlrc QI. 32 yean, ?bt,it la suing h'r ror divorce in an effort to reg11in lost wetrare benefits. "'There Is no other answer ," Thomas salcNn-"an Interview Thunday . "I'm going to get a divorce In order to help my wife. I love her but. I'm at the end of my rope." the ~inonth it costs to else l could do," he said. "I keep hls lfe in the.. nursing just thank God ahe won't have home. • to know about It. She's nothlna but a vegetable any more. She T!I0~1AS SAID the divorce, can't talk and 8he can't which beoomes final In about understand. She's just dwlndl· 10 days, will allow hls wife to ing away." qualify for benefit$ because Since the aid was cut off, she wltl then be without any '11lomas said, he has amassed means of support a $2,000 bill with' the nursing "J cari't helpDut-feel guilty liirne and (loesn't have ihe about it, but there was nothing money to pay it. THOMAS' ORDEAL began l===:::=====~==========I In November when !he state Dlvlsk>n or Family Services, which administers the federal medlcaid program in Florida, cut off the $117 a month he had been receiving for his wife Ruth, 45, who is confined to a nursini home sul!erln,; from the advanced stagea of multi· pie sclerosis. The ""Uple have six chlldrei· vn or whom live at home. 1 'las said his grown children Uun't have the money to help support their r:nother. STATE OFFICIALS ex- plained, Thomas said , that they made a mistake 17 months earlier in ruling him eligible for the program. · Thomas said he was told that his monthly lllCilme or $S50 was $123 above the maximum amount a person can make and still quality ror Mefficaid bene!IJS. "They said lhey1 were sorry but there was nothing they could.do," Thomas said . Without the welfare aid , Thomas said. he c nnot afford 100 WAYS TQ FIN~CE .YOUR CAR ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Ba ... levcird · of Carll · LOOK FOi THI IMILIM AT CONNELL I JOHNSON & SON CHEVROLET Lincolft..Mercury. -2821 2626 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. h'-Hlr, c •• ......,, hll.W. ',l)RJ\SllC. '\°'f':' ' • REDl:IG'tloJIS 30f-50f OFI' , • ,710 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA (C01tNER HARBOR & ADAMI) OP lolONDA Y-U!RtLSATVJlllA.Y:..19'9. Ji!._ s o .;7337 :.; -..,,,.~. lr'tll . . • Sitturday is the 1-ast day of ou.r ·/ , January white sale! ~ '· Cotton mus/In, 133 count• flat or fitted sheets Twin size, Reg. 1.99, Sale 1s1 Full size sheets, Reg. 2.29 ••••.•• , ... Sale 1.79 Pillow ca.Ses, Reg. 2 for 1.09 .......•......... Sile 2 for 88c 'Bleached and finished. P1M1Prnt white perc1~. ~o cotton/50% polye:ster flat or fitted sheets Twin size, Reg. 2.99, Sale 221 Full size sheeta, Reg. 3.99 •••••.•••••. Sale3.27 Pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 2.09 ................. S.le2for 1.19 Queen size sheets, Reg. 6.99 ••••••.• -S11e5.17 Queen pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 3.09 ................ : .S.I• 2for 2.17 King size sheets, Reg. 8.99 •••........ Sala 7 st King pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 3.39 ................. .S.le 2 for 2.17 Checl<: your linen closet. Then ch_eck the great savings on our entir.e line of sheets • ~ ~· .\lr -#- .. t ''t'-),_ ' .. ~ '*-.( • • -r.v ~ f _ .... ~~ • ,._,. I .We k~~!~~~~¥ng for . ' DAILV PILOT \_..- I I ,. • ' '~ . ~ ~-Sbo~ S~~Y noon ~o 5 P.M.:..~U~e following stores ~ FASHION ISLANli, N~O:: ·:i, f114f 644-2313. HUNTINGTON CEN'r~R. Huntihcjlon 8 .. cJ.. (Tl'4) 992.1ti1: ~ "= ~~ '"~-"''"""'\lli!HARBOR '(;!E;tTER;=e--cm. r (7+4)-<.I&· _ -...,.~--,,. -• I '/ t DAIL ~1PILOT I QUEENIE "Antiques li.te lhat, I'd coiled." L. Jtl. Boyd A 'Revenge ' Horn, For Pedestrians Pollsters talked to a batch ~ divorced women. Two out of IO said they had planned all their children. Five out of 10 said they'd planned none of their youngsters. Almost but not qiute three out of IO said they bad conceived their fll"St baby before the wedding. ODDS YOUR TEETH, il any, bite ei<l1ctzy the same im- print as anybody else's teeth run onl Y one in 60 mil- lioo ... AGE t and age IO, that's when youngstmi: tend to be most susceptible to nightmares, according to the sleep researchers . • • JUST ABOtrr one out of e v e r y 10 Americans never but never catches cold, the fortunate soul. I JUST INVENTED a pedestrian horn and would like to kmw what yoo think ol the notloo. About the si7.e of a nashlight. Woris something like an , Aerosol can. Say you're romping °aero&'! an intersectioo when some irate driver leans en his him. Y<Xnip ouHh!s device, jluSh the biillOii,aiiiflfliiiiks back, even )ouder. Go oo, laugh. They laughed at tbe hula hoop, too. QUICK QUERl&'i -Q. "How many movies bas Henry Fonda made?" A. Figure about 70. Q. "EVER ANY traffic jams in Russia?" A. Not yet. • Q. "AS TO HEIGHT, wheno does Niagara Falls· nnl: amoog the 'A·OJid 's waterfalls?" A. It's No. 68. Q. •·WHATS a bandicoot?" A. A marsupial. Loob lit.• rabbll Q. "BOW ow was Paul Rov..,, when he made that ride?" . A. Just 4-0. Q. "CAN a cat catch cold?" A. Certainly can. Vet_, call it pneumonitis. Not thought dangerou.s. Nor is it transmittable to people. FACIAL CBARAcrEBISTICS -Those various claims that yoor racial characterist.k:s show something. aboQt your personality doo't usually hold up. I meon men -jutting chins are not ~ily stubborn, and women witb close- set eyes are not necessarily frigid . But it bas been noted by researchers that girls with mouth,, slightly larger than average do indeed tend to be good-natured, affectionate, sympathet.k: and sincere. Why? It's a mystery. The Con- tention is that such girls also generally require exceed- ingly stroog ~ine partnen. Address mail to L. i\1. Boyd, P. D. Box 1815, New- port Beacll, Calif. 92660. •Most Uptight' Yale Frosh Get Treat NEW HAVEN, Coon. (AP) -About 900 Yale freshmen, bleary-eyed and book-ridden on tbe last day of final exams, got a special treat - breakfast in bed. complete wiUt cigars for the men and red carnations for the women. Dining hall workers and some 60 student volunteers teamed Thursday to deliver juice, scrambled eggs, home fries, sausage, bagels , cream cheese and coffee to the freshman rooms. "IT'S PRETTY nice or them to do this," sald Tomas Flores, a freshman from Sa n Diego. He and his roorpmate, Jeffrey Green of Tucson, Ariz., had just rolled over In bed and accepted breakfast 'in ·, insulated trays from a volunteer server. Freshman John Andrews or Concord, Mass. said he originated the idea while mull- ing over the question: "Who're the most uptight people around here?" THE ANSWER, he said, was evident: freshmen at e1.am time. William J. Hlckey Jr., an assis tant ~irector of dining halls, said the idea was welcomed by the Yale ad- ministration because "we're interested in this monotony- breaking tiling." Moot of the students ap. peared happy with the service, although some left "Do Not Disturb" signs on their doors. • . IN ·S~l1 (Jltl~ Ul~ll S1lf~J~ IAST 3 DAYS FRIDAY-SATURDAY-SUNDAY Prices effective thni Su•Ry, Jaauary 21 \. SAVE If ... MEN'S CH - SllETCll. NYLON, ASS1. CllllS OUI llG. DISCOUNT PRICE 61c PR. 2 MGst wanted crew style ho~e 1n a macti•ne WiSh· a{lle blend of h1·1!11fA Orlon acrylic & strekh ~Jlon. Big color selection. Stretch his 10.13. PR . s1 FOR SAVE !!C ... DAl-llVll-CIBIS - IN Ml-lilON Pl.YESIBl!COTTII ( OUI llG. DISCOUNT PRICE 99c YD. A4/45" width. Bnght a1ngllam checks, easy-care polyester & canon blend, to sew p1etty spnng dresses, ctuldien's clothes, crisp curtaiJIS. 77~. SAVE •3 ••• CllNILE PATENT-- 11111 Tl fASllON BOOTS • OUR llG. DISCOUNT PRICE S.99 Slttk crinkle patent boot with knob toe. straight heel. curved zipper. Ass't colors. Women's sizes to .10, Girls' sizes 8lh to 3. tougher' nan var 29& OUR IEG. DISCOUNT PRICE 10.tt Start an interesting hobby w~h this set of: 5 gJI. lank & reflector hood, filter ki~ pu"l', liob- ing, !lass', cllarcoal. SAVE lfC ••• MATGl-IOX CAii WITH AUTBTIC DETAILING OUR RIG. DISCOUNT PllCI 64c. IA. 3 81 Hours of fun 'Wt1h these sturdt mtlal c.s and trucks, 1ut/lentic IR every c!etJil; !Qny different FOR models to clloost fr0111. SAVE • llXll ITATllllY IN MANY ADIW DOIGNS -. W)flTI FRONT'S SPECIAL PRICE 2 ~ lovely writing paper in assorted pastel shade~. Many designs. 15 sheets with BOXES ma!chtng envelopes. ' SAVE 74c ••• flmKE fl.TBS RI -BftCTllrllA• r OUlllG.01$(0UNTPllC154clA. 3 BBC Filtm dust & din from 1ir for better heat· 1ng. A¥ailable in sizes: 14120xl 14~2511, FOR 16125.1 ~ 2012S1 h Stock up a.'ICI save. . c.lflI IAllRIAll IT RI All-MlllCAI PIAY ~ts of luit with this delw:e set tllat includes official size & weight basketball, hiiop, net, plus 24"x36" backboard. -• Tl~COLOI IAHITIAU, 4" •no• WOUMD ...... 6.97 ••••• WHITE FRONT'S SPECIAL PllCE Add a little fun lo lour lighting witll these mod~ ernistic cubes, tire es, Saturn & li!Uipop shades. Fun for kids' rooms. 699 •SBILD CHEMICAL AIDS at. extra discount savings yaur·chai~e c 'r><-..-.-c="'1 I: •": llQUI Lysel Spray Disilf~ oz .•..... RIG. 1.38 Lltii~ Pl.-, 64 ' DZ •••••••.•••••• RIG. 1.49 SCltt Liq1id .Gold, 10 IZ .........•. RIG. 1.59 I\ I : DRAI I i OPENER d:= 3 !. 6.-~ ~ ·=-ti. SAVE so· Fmr fl11itn Palish, 12 oz. ' ... :'. ' RIG. 1.26 Fllllrt Fl• .Wu .............. RIG. 1.27 , Easy Oii ,Dnl Clq11r, 16 DZ •••••••• RIG. 1.29 . I YOU CAN AFFOho THE THll\l6§ YOU WANT WHEl\I YOU §HOP.AT WHITE FROl\IT . ·-STiii •ts: MlflllAY•fllUY """TO' • SAT. l Slllt. II All·J ,Ill • wmm "'.,UST u. --MIS. IMIS*. '"''' rmcmt -_., • __ , ...... ' --~ •• -~~ E!<'!l = l:."J ~ :l":' -~ """' -!:::! eat! sis 5 1¥1 I r.i: ·-""' . ·-~ ~ .~: '"" -i::ii gfyc -' l'Gl ~rt ..... "' iJ:il ""' ~ B ~ $" .. , ~ a l • . --Eor the •• ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFP, MORTUARY U7 E. 171h St., COsta Me!la 146 4883· ' BAL'fZ.B,RGERON ) FUNERAL HOME , c.ro .. de! Mar ~. CMta Mesa -.UU . \ " ' BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY llt Broadway, Costa Mesa LI~ • • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 17'5 Lagoa Canyon Rd. 41U115 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARJC \ Cemetery Morta9ry Oapel SIM PacUlc View Drive Newport Beac•. CallforDla -• PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 Boll~ Ave. W~-DW5%5 • SMJTllS' MORTUARY , I Star Show Scheduled SANTA ANA The possibility of stars traversing from our universe to neighbor· ing universes will be explored in an hour-long planitarium show here. The show, enUUed "The Mysterious Black Hole" will ' ' be presented at 7:15 p.m. each Tuesday and Wednesday through Jan. 30 at Tessmann Planetarium, Seventeenth and Bristol Streets, on the Santa Ana College campus. • Call fQr free tickets: 547- 9561. Attorney Set For' Placentia ' 'PLACENTIA -Santa Ana City Councilman Jerry Pat- ter-son has been appointed city . attorney for the city of PlaCentia. The counCllman served as from 196614> 1970 .. He ftplaces Howard Block. illll pay will be ..,is!ont ·dty attorney here 11,000 per month .• Housing Tract Replaces Cows ' GARDEN GROVE -• An lll·home subdivision will be constructed on the 20 acres us- ed slnce 1936 as the Souza Dairy on Trask Avenue between Galway Street and Ontario Avenue here. The last 400 Holstein cows were sold to other dairies be<ause dairyman Leopold Souza has re£1ted. Conltru~ tron will begin in late January. School Delay ORANGE -The new, !2,l«,000 Santiago Junior High School Is scneduled 'Io Mammoth Effect Vut · . Rul.~ng 'Landmark' ORANGE COUNTY An Open Invitation ••• Foun-ca1n vaue H mec1cal.. eu1Lc1nG You, your f.imily and friends are most cordially invited to ~e ~fficial opening of the FounWn Valley Medial Building on Sundil.y, Janu1ry 21, 1973 between noon ""d four o'clock. · A• Phm u of Fount.in )'.ill•Y Medi~ Pvk, you will to~r one of the 1~t up-to-date prof~ The~tUites of physidans, represe~· ·J.)ng general practice and~ Mr;-Riedi~ ~ialization,"wl~ tie opefl!d. for your viewing. T"' computerized Pllannacy, located on the ground floor, is unique: · · • The fountain V.llley Medical Building is another forward, step rn the provision of excellent.health are facilities. The _101~bed special care bed expansion of Fountain Valley Community Hosp1h.l1 now underway, con- tinues to further our concept of growth with the mediar a~ nee.Jls of the area,: faithfully servins .pitients since its opening In November, 1971. There will aJ50 be an interesting tour of the out·patient section of The Hospital and graphic displays showing patient care throughout the en~ire f~cility. Refreshments will be served. ..... • rt is an opportunity lo see first hand _the growth of Fountain V~lley · Medical Park, dediated to providing tM ultimate in h~lth care services. It will be time well spenL PleaSe jOin us. 1 r ~ ~ ra::::u...1-=----1r~ MU M TIM.TON •••e .. FOUnl:illln vaL.L.e.!:I mec1cal. ParH 11100 WARNER AT EUC(IO, FOUNTAIN VALLEY,'CALIFORNIA 92708 In Mila SL --....-open Feb. 8, one week late due :..J .. ~~~-=c-'-r~~~ --to tast·minute construcUon, accordi"g Io Orange Uollled ~'°""I h f1t..lrt nlJiu,;o!O ,.,_,,.~=~=-=-=====,;.=--~ ~.)1·., "~ '"'""""'-~ .. • \' Friday, January 19, 1973 DAILY PILOT f . THE ·UNDERDOGS CAN'·T-AFFORIHO LOSE-1 .. CDSTOMER COMPLETE UNDERDOG SYSTEM C1<>M4AJ 10_0QfiltM l§'i<e:)i R EX 50 watt AM/FM Stereo Rece i~ei witll blackout dial, dual speakers selec11on-5w11ch, rape monitor. tuning meter, and magnetic phono input lor the Garrard Model 408 Deluxe Automatic Record Changer with damped cueing, base and Empi re Magne!1c Diamond Cartridge. 1 wo lull 1~nge dj namic Jeac speakers comp!ete lh1s Underdog Giant Value Stslem. MFG's LIST $338.00$1 7 7 " PIONEER SX-424-5-0 WATT AM/FM STEREO R~CEIVER (Continuous powt'r output 12 w.atl.s .and 12 w.atts both ch.i nnel driven) GJrr.Ard Mod4!!I 408 deluxe ;,utomJlic ch.1nger with d.imped cueing, brand n.ari1c n1Jgnetic diounon~ c<1rtridge, base-and lwo TEAC lull r.ange )pe.ikcrs in ~·JI nut c.1bine1~. $2. 19 95 . · MFG's LIST $340.30 8.Bq,,1 I.I ka1dOt1 I q~· §J'iiil RCX SOUND ONE · MFG's LIST $419.40 $267 Harmon Kardon's best seller' model 330A, 100 wall AM/FM Stereo Re r.eiver, Garrard Oelu~e Model 408 Automatic Record Changer with base and Empire Magnetic Diamond Cartridge, Two Sound One S·l4, with 12 inch woofers and tweeters and electronic crossover. ' HARMON KARDOti'"l,fi\MOUS" MOdel 930 Twin Powered AM/FM Sle1eo Receiver· lover 100 wa tts. peak power per channel) -GARRARD'S finest, Zero 100 Automatic Reco1d Changer, zero track ing error, damped cueing, anti-skating, base, du st co~er. and a SHUR£ M91E Elliptical Diamond .Mag- nel1I: Cartrid'"ge -two PIONEER CSE -~00 -3-Way 3-Speaktr Syslem, Koss PRO 4M Profess10nal Oyoamic Steieophooes. MFG's LIST $1,024.95 $ 7 4 7 (will adapt to any receiver or amp) MFG's UST $99.95 THE HEAD SET features: • Automatic level control • Mlkln1 facility • Putb hutton operation • Separate volume controls for each cha~nel • Dlfital counter • 2 rari:• vu meters • Walnut case Put you r head together between these two full ran111·dynamlc spe&~ers and find out where fCJJt hea d'• at! MFG's LIST $19.95 • lndlddwal Yolilm1 Clnlr1ts. ~ • t•i"d Cord. • Pad•• Ht1dbtnf. ,. WE GUARANTEE IND SERVH:E WHAT WE·SEll • Wf.CIEDIT • TERMS ARRANGED • LIYIWIY IA!l DIDU: WrlU P.O. IJa MIC2, U . IOOJ&, S50lffdlnifin191. IH & tll~ I I •I • / / / Economy . p 8.5% at Year's En~ W ASl:UNGTON {AP) -The GNP, t market value of nation's econcnny closed out the na n's output ot goods and se k'cs, climbed by $31.8 1971 on a strong note, growing billlo during the quarter. at a sharp a.5 pe«."ent rate \Vi the eUect or 1nna1lon duril}g the final three months . _,._ ______ , of lhe year while the rftte or ' itillalioo acceW:rated slightly, the government said tOday. IN SHORT ... The Commerce De'partment reported that prices. ttS 1neasured by the broad Eig_hl other vtsse!s Wert! lJ'he aettlement s i 1 n e d :~~i~ n~~~Yu:: ,:r · ~~~ ~~woAr&!rraa:J The fishing vessels 1m:st.ed 2~ afflUated Bell System 111ursday w9re \dentlfied as telephone companies to open the Cape Cod, v o y 1 g e r. up Its hl&hel-P<ld cyan jobs to Atnerican Q u e e n • Con· w~men and member'$ of quistadol. Jeanette C, Nei>-minority g'roups. tune. Balboa and . .Pacific • Death PetialtH Queen. e AT&T AeC!O.rd yardstick of the Gross Na· tional Product. rose by 2.7 percent during the October- De<:ember quarter, up from 2." percent in the previous quarter. re1novedo the deparlu1ent figures the economy increnscxt Nt an nnnunl rate or 8.5 per-cent co1npared v.·ith 6.3 per· \VASHINGTON (UPI) -In ce nt in tht! 1hin::I quarter. the largest setUement ever RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) - The State Supremo Court has ruled lhat any persOn who commit.! first degree murder. first degree burglary, rape or arson In North Cai:ollna Is sub- ject to a mandatory death sentence upon ronviction. 01ade in a civil· rights case. e 8 BonU lleld the American Telephone and Ll~tA. Peru (AP I -The Telegraph Co. has agreed to Pt"ru vian govenunent was ~pay up to $15 million to 13,000 Face lnj1ared holding eight U.S. tuna boal.s y.·omen and 2.000 men who Lhe 1odav for fi shing inside the go,·emment claims ~·ere ii· 200-il1iie lim it Peru claims legally denied chances for pro- over offshore fishing . mot.ion. The ruling Thursday, in el· feet, did away with a 1H9 amendment to the state capital punishment statute and Dorothy Lamo.ur Given Surgery from Wire Services Actress Dorolby La mour un· del"\\•ent plastic surgery on her lip and nose following an ac- cident in which Los Angeles police said her car went out of control and hit a lamp post. Officials at Hol l ywood Presbyterian Hospital said the 55-vea.r-0\d star suffered a badly cut lip and a broken nose. Hospital officials said 1'Jiss San Jose Jiospit.'ll artcr surgery for a bullet Yt"Ound in her stomach. Police said the assailant. about 19, escaped but got no money. * A former topless dancer has been moved (rom San Rafael County Jail to a stale prison -al her own request. •ncia Bertie Stephenson, 22. was moved to the women's Correctional Facility at Corona ( ) to finish serving a nine-month PEOPLE county jail tenn. She pleaded guilty to fraud and perjury ._ _______ ~ charges in collecting $3,500 in ~ Lamour \\·as in good condition and \\'Ollld be released soon. * Chess champion Bobby Fischer's mother plans to sue the U.S. secretary of the Armv because of• ihe treat- ment. she allegedly received from American military police during an anti.war demonstra· ti on in Heidelberg. Germany. Dr. Regina Fisc:her·Pntsan, 59, 'said military police at an Army base dragged her by the arms and legs and threw her onto a sidewalk as she was distributing antiwar leaflets to American soldiers. A U.S. military spokesman at Army h,eadquarters in 1-leidelbcrg said he was unaware of any \ncklent in· ,·olving Dr. Fischer · Putsan. who has staged 11 series of protests in front of U.S. military facilities in various West German towns. * . Ann Harpole y.·as tending the desk or a do\vntown hotel in San Jose when a young man walked through the door, pull- ed a gun and demanded mon- ey. • •·Go to hell." she said. "I'm going to count to t"·o and then I'm going to shoot you:· he said. And he did. The Sl·year..old clerk "''as reported in fair condition at !\farin County we I fa re payments. She· asked Superior Court Judge David ]\lenary for the prison time because other \\'elfare fraud cases pending against her in· San Francisco and Alameda counties could also result in prison sentences, and she w'ants to put in her lime now. * Julio Valentin, a zealous parking enforcement officer. slapped a $25 ticket for illegal parking on a bus in downtown !\lanhattan and got praised by !\1ayor John V. Undsay for his action. The mayor, emerging from a luncheon in the 1'terril-Lyncb building in the Wall Street, took the ticket oft the bus he chartered to cart press ex· ecutives on a tour o! the cit}' and said, "I think it's great. I wish he was here so I could congratulate him." * Cincinnati Symph o ny Orchestra director Thomas Schippers will miss two con· Certs this weekend and ~ bably part of a three-week 16- city East C',oast tour next week because his doctor advised him to rest. Symphony officials s a i d Schippers was in F1orida. JflS wife. Nonie. died of cancer in New York Jan. 6. I _ ... ~-.. a . • ' . . reinstated the statute a'S It hud stOOd smce Uielat. 171161• - requmni-executlon !or tho !'.ow' crimes. e TNop Tatlu MOSCOW (UPI) -The Sovlet Union annoonced today that It lw lirttd to join American-iponsored talka on the rtductlon of troops based in Europe, but said' it does not w•nt participants llmited to the NATO and Warsaw Pact blocs. The Kremlin response to the two-month-old Western In- vitation was reported by the official news agency Tass and came 12 days before the West said it wanted the talks lo begin in ~va. / OIANADA Hllll 18000 C•tswort St.I TOllANC1$epulv• Md llaw1M111e WOODLAND HILLS21SOO Yktory Bhd LAklWOODC.$Oll St. IN PalllllOllnt Bht llVllSM>IM Jrter $l IUINA PAlllllw:li Ind lbnaetmipe SANTA ANAl900 Sou~ 8ri$\ol St OIANOICardel 611ro1 BIYll."'lftd lbDcbtsl• • • .. .. SUPER SALE -! SUITS-SPORT C04TS- KNIT SL4CKS ALL GREATLY REDUCED Come to the Nation's Largest Fede~ for 16 Free Services. ' Pre-cuffed KNIT SLACKS ................. .All Now $10.00 Reg. $1 7-$1 8. ALL DRESS SHIRTS & TIES ... _. .. ....................... 40% OFF Plus an •ssortment of other bar9•ins. 3467 Vie Lido, Newport B••ch 673-4510 Nearly Evetyon.e ....__._~-~ Jii.stCn.s.:Jn ,l.MJ1clR.rs- ' I ... Plus 5%,. 5.75% or 6% Interest._ . . California Federal Savings gives you All interest is compounded daily: free services and the nation's highest Free Services: Leave $1,000 or more interest rates on insured savings and in your account and we'll give you free and loan accounts~ > travelers checks, money orders, notary 6% Certifioate Account: . Depos it service and trust deed'note collection. $5,000 or more. Tenns: 2 to 5 years. Other free services fo r accoun ts of 5.75% Certificate Account: Deposit any size includ~: save·ey-mail postage, $1,000 or more. Tenn: 1 year or more. · \lavjngs banks, Monthly Money Plan, 5% Passbook Account: Deposit any gift check holders and many rmre. amount Add or withdraw any time. Say, "California Federal, here I .5% current annual rate. come!" OF THI HA•IOI AllA PRISENTS A DISPLAY Of AITS & CIAFTS Co-'ffi11t Of Jewelry, Acceuory ot»Jects Of Art, Weed C..l"fl -4 l.eoth9r Wert Werr ~llHully Do11e. I - .. _ • \. -. CALIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LD4N ·A88DCIATIDN ' ~ . . . . . . Costa Mesa Office: 2700 Harbor Boulevard 546-2300 - Anaheim Office: 600 N. Ellelld- 776-:!222 Orange Office: o4050 MelropOllten Dl1Ye tn City Center 539-3033 • . - • • .f . •• • • -. • ' j • • ~ p p " ~ w el s: ti ., • " •: 8' SI rn Cl J ' ' AJ h• ch El ar ~ Rf 1111 Mi Je El Wl ' "' Ta Ali OW Th gk d~ ag• I fro di & tlu An tin ye• CO\ ly l v Far a COii acr the ~ hOr bul! rn I H who tha she ani 1 -M pile Jun II ""' "lb slat .. .. the Mn T soot -(; v. .., ... -..... .... .... ""' ... .... .... .... ""' .... .... ·~ -ad E: Th ' ' Hobie's Hobie Moves Into HONOLULU -Hobie Alter 15 to IS.knot northeast tndes and John Roa-Duggan of Following are the top ten of Ci:plltrano Beaih put a()d a heavy sea ihlt was Newport Beach hr 'tenth. after the first two races: together a third and · MCOnd breaking just short oL the race Wayne Schaefer or Caplltrano 1. Hobie Alter, five points. plac:e Thurtday to take a slim ....,. off Walklkl !leach and Beach finished In 11th place. I. Jeff Canepa, 8% points. point lead after the ftrst two , l)la_.t Head,, ~ The first race today wu to 3. Capp~ Sbeeiey, 10% ncet ot the Hobie Cat 14 The sporty Hobie Its were have been f't'om Walklkl to ··points. World Championship. surfing on the orr wind lep of Keehi Lagoon where two n f.-es 4. Denni.I Wilcol'., Lakeland, Jeff Canepa ot santa Cruz the course. Two ·boats were were to follow In the smoother Fl.a., 13 points. was second wltb flnilhes of CIJllli.z.ed and dismasted. waters of the lagoon. 5. Ne.Ison Piccola, Hoholulu, . , First lace 8. Keith Baxter, Honolulu, 9 points. points. 10. John Ross-Duggan, 22 9. Mlke Holmes, llonol u, :ti polnls. "l·Mlot" -1/1 Price e11 DMlop M...-r 4 We-41, t· 1r...-., R • $111.00 •••••••• , •.•.• NOW Slit.SO Ma ..... f ,ts -AIY '71 .......... lq•lpt. ts% Off ~ • Golfers Discount Center E:B 1'11dv), January 19. 1973 OAILY PILOT jj Af'1NOUNCING 1 NEW OFFICES OF Palisades Chiropractic , DENNIS L. THOMPSON D.C. 2232 S.E, Bristol St, s.tai A .. fZ107 NIXT lllCNI Al'rT. TO (TI4 1 f7t46t1 "IMNT$ 1714) f7f.J•f2 121W.1Mlt ........... CMhl .... II':~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ eighth and lint, and Cappy Other Onu>ge O!,_uoty ski!>' On Saturday the U.boat 13 ,points. Sheeley of Honolulu, 1971 na-pers who finl.il)ed amone the fleet will sail two races at 6. Harold Hutchtng1 , T•1e,;.-MNQ6 for......,rm1,v1.r1 Kids Lt"ke To Ask Andy· lo ~ ha 1A _ fl_..... first ten were Richard Loulek Keehl and a third INldt to Honolulu, 17 points. M-. " 111. 1,.7, s ... ,, " 4 JAC• s.u-"°· M,.. t na c mpruu, pla~ lU11\ of Costa Mesa tn seventh place · headquarters at Waikiki. 7. Richard Loufet, 19 points. • .., "..., ~ncl oth fur a third place,-".'..:'.'.~~~.."'.'.~~~~_'.'.'.~c:'..~..'.'.:.:'.'.'.::'.:'.:~~__:::_::'.:'.'.'.'.::.'.~~'.:.!'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__:~- A tw c.tter's P.a.A. ProfnlloMI l"ltO Lltlt-H•W AND US•l).-..4..t.llOl STOCK !!!!!!! IJ LOWltT l"lllCIS LOCALLY-Oft AHYWMlllE .... reco . • · Un er the reverse scoring system Alter has five points to 8'6 for Canepa and 1~ for Sheeley, In the Orst two races of ,the International regatta it was a case of coping with the strons Miamians Sail Round The World PORT ELIZABETH, South Africa (AP) -Coincidence has put three American world· circling yachts In Port Elizabeth harbor. The latest to arrive In this Indian Ocean port and southernmost city In Africa ls the Miami yacht Rlgadoon. Owner Carl Moesly, a boat manufacturing plant owner in Miami, is sailing with h1a wife Jean. They put Into Port Elizabeth because of bad w.eather. Already in port were Mark Hassall, owner of the trimaran Talofiagaoe and f e 11 ow - American John Williams , owner of the ketch Fara wily. 'Ibey left California on their globe-circling voyages within days gf each other three years ago. , , BASSALI., WHO set sail from San Diego, only discovered in Port Elizabeth that he and Williams bad left America • b o u t the same time. Sailing with his wife and 14- year-old son, Hassall en- countered Mr. and Mrs. Mose- ly at a South Pacific island. Williams, who ls sailing in Faraway, with his molher and a dog and cat, charted a course similar to Hassall's across the · Picific Ocean to the South Seas. ,MRS. BELEN W111Wm said her son 1pepi· eeven ~ building Faiaway .al bis home in Beaudion~ cal1r. HassaU. a former teecber wbo built Taloflagaoe, said that In the put three years she bas traveled 11,000 miles and weathered lllree cyclones. Talofiagaoe ls a 8amoan word rnealning "I love you." Mosely, a former airline pilot, sailed from Amtrlca in June 1970. HE AND lflS wife are not sure if they will go back to · "the higb density living ol the . states." "Perhaps we wlll find a ~ we like on our cruise. "So far we ban both liked the Fiji l1lands belt of all," Mrs. Mosely said. The three yachts will sail SOOD for Cape Town. Coastal Weather V•rf•OI• eloudlnnl tock~. Hl9ll 1o- dly S!I to 60. CO.sfll tff'n1Mf'•lvre1 ...... fnim JI fO sa. l~l•nd It,,,... .. tW91 ranv-lr«n 511 to '°' W•M Mm- p1r1tvrw 5f, S•n, 11f_, Tides •lllDAY $ICOnd high ......... J:I' P,ITL 1.7 i«.n.t ,_ . . . . . . . . t:CI p.m. •.• SATUllDAY First hlllh .. • . .. . .. • 2:d a.f!'I. 1Jl .... ,.. low ... .. . •.. . .. • l :ll '·'"' ... StC01M1 high ........•. 1:56 p.m. ·IJI Slcond low .......... 10:11 p.m. 4.t IUNOAY First llloh . •. .. .. .. . 2:'7 1.f!'I. 1,4 First low . .. .. ••• .. t :40 1.m. 6.) S«ond hllll •..•.....• 4:31 p.m. ·I.I 5-ld low .......... ll:ff P,f!'I. 4.1 S\11'1 lllM1 t:57 1.m. s.tl 5:11 p.m. Moot! ftlM1 t :2' p.m. ..._ 7:2' 1.m. Think ~bob · M lyman's MEN'S · SHOP NEW ARRIVALS for Sprl119 • -·-Levi Knlt1 A·l Cuff Flairs LOCAL EDITORIALS . The DAILY PILOT . Quite. O~en Rghh City Hall • ... :· - 'THERE l"l\JS1" 8E" CAlti.\ 'TO IT we. ="if= 2'' lli'l•m> Qokl<Mcdta .. botb. ot Jor apot ----004 .... 24' IGI IPPBOVED GISLOG BET 1187 AUTO CC>mE ··-911 ' ' l"DRllCE FD.TERI 33~ 10fUUlll sm:a ·co11. 77~0 • • • 1'' Uiiat J¥1W C'ILEI 77° -':J.'%. i..i .. ............... .... ...... I • I 2 DAILY PILOT GARAGE SALE PRICES FROM 15. Friday, January 19, 1973 . .-.. Beautiful Decorator Lamps · \Ve've gol such a huge selection of decor1tot Jamps on sale that you're ture to find ex.11.cUy what you've w anted ... and al a price far less than you would expect to pay! Colors and styles for any decor! I \ • ' .. SAVE ~~ SO°lo & MORE! . ' When you think of. a 11.eighborhood Gjll'age Sale, you think of a chance to pick up an EXT.RA ORDINARY VALUE! The only difference you'll find in our Garage Sale is that it's being held right in your nearby Mansfield Ftn·niture store and with oh so much more to choose from! We are clea1ing inventories, ha lancing stocks and closing out discontinued·ite~s to get ready for our new 1973 line up. We have a huge sel~tion of ipeMandise at prices that will blow your mind ••• not your pocket book! Bring ·yo~ll' cars and pickups! Because of the unusually low, prices a small delivery .c~e ·will·hct added for ·delivery. Come in now! ••• for full .selection. You won't be disappointed! Ees-t pan lop tlbles with aold finished, wrought iron b .... will be sold at lhJ1 fabuloaprice during our Gar~ge Sale. Choice indud• a W cocktail table, round or square n• t1bles..Don't mlt1 this value! GARAGE SALE PRICE ·11~s · GARAGE · SALE -:7.. PRICE . • • Decorattve,,Ruslic ·Wtought Iron Handsome wrought Iron ..• lo lend the ·perfect decorator ati:~t to any room in lhe house. Al thlt.lo\'I price you can afl'Ord <' to use th.em here, there, and everywhere! Don't miss this oppor- tunity, Take your choice! . ,,. -GARAGE SALE :· PRICE -. Bold, Button Tufted Velvet Sofa and Loveseat plus Accessories ON SALE! Master Bedroom ••. Value, Savings, Brand Name Quality. !l's h~rd lo believe we can. oiler lhis complete _room COMPLETE 5 PIECE GROUPING grouping for such a low price! You'll Jove the b11cuit The cocktail table and two end tables with genuine • Mlltchlng Love S.•I SALE 3 MAJOR PIECES • Matching Mirror • Full or Queen tufted. vel,ret sofa and love seat \Yith wood arm posts. •I Foot Sofa GARAGE 2·e'l formir:a top~ lv~rc ski.ll!ully sele~ted to bring out the :;Er:ita:=, PftJCE • • character of lh1s exc1t1ng grouping. Here is a grouping that would be a great value even If sold for hundreds of dollars more. The 70'', nine drawer triple dre11er bas ·elegantly molded drawer fronts with dra'wer1 flllly dust proofed and cenler guided. Molded lieadltoard and plate glass .mirror are expertly matched. Nigh( stands and chest available. • 70" Triple Dresser 18 8 Size Head board. • Size Headboard. You \Vouldn't 1.."o\v it to look at lt but this beautiful aof~ conver11 inlo a comfortable full·slae sleepert The stylish arms ncct!nled by pillow 1rm•rtJll1 ire cove~d In today's miuu;le fabric: Vectr1. Opehl 'wllh eue to 1cc~mmoda1e your overnight gues,11. • BOTH PJECES 299 .. . . 9' of Cozy Comfort. Covered in Lusb, Diamond Tutted Orlon Fabric. ThlJ delightful nine foot" 1ofa and matching love oeat feature low sloped, pillow-like arms. Deep diamond tu!tl111 add all lmport1111t ityre and layer upon layer of 1o/t, durable foam prov)de unusual seating comfort. Tbey1.re coveied In eoft, fur-like Orlon fabric for yean ef wear. You'll feel like you're sitting OD a beu rql All opportllllity •to Hve many dollars! · ft1'1 durable, 0 praclle1l, leather-like vinyl al a practical price , .. made for the fun lovin3 way you llvel Great family room fare that can take rouxh treatment yet good looking enough for the Uvlng room, A ma1terpiece of Mediterranean styling. FULLERTON . · · 225N.Harblrllvd. !downtown! 17141 871-5720 HUNTINGTON ilACH 11582 leach llvd. 1714'1 962-4477 ORANGI • Sl'ORE HOURS: Op~ 9"to 9 P·~· every week ni~ Sat. 9 to 5:~0 OP£N SUND'AY 11 to 5 p.m. • 1131 N. Tustin Ava. 17141 637°8420 I •/2 mna So. ,t Orange 'Mall I . . . . • Creative Interior Planning At 'No Charge . . J I -. ' • • ' • ' • Spring -Benefi'ts Pred.icted . . • -. Wbaiev<t' the weatho!" cooditionl, the tprlng fll!ul-nlslng ...,.. Is ta..t apptQOChl"i" llld Ls 1..-st to '-projects ol .... ral • Orange Col!ol organJzatlOO'.i. An estlmal<d 125,000 Orange Coonty resi· dent. suffering rrom ,l\l:!b<lllt •e [••(>l'oci to ·be among lbose benefiting wh<n t!Je Orange County ·Women's Arthrills Auxiliary gets Ute seam o/J to a speedy start' With 'a N1Bht at Ute Race. 81 Los Alamitoo -y. Jan. 25. The evenlng's festivities include a bullet din· ncr., be&lMlng at 6:30 p.m.1 followed by qllar- ter horse racing. A Shower ol Flowers is promised when the YW Wives '1 Che Santa Ant-Orange Couoty YWCA present their seventh 81Ulual luncheon fashion allow in lbe Airport« Inn, Friday, Feb. 2, at 11 a.m. Spring and summer fashions by Mr. Black· wen will be shoWn by charm and modeling students ol tbe oommentalOr, Florence Smales. Olltirmen ror the event, the Mmes. Andrew Schell and William Karehes, say the proceeds will insure continued supp()l't for the new child care and women's ceoter at the YWCA. Reservatlons and arrangements for child care may be m a d e by calling the YW at 542-35Tl be{ore Tuesday, Jan. 30. The gaiety or Mardi Gras will be enjoyed by persons attending the second annual dinner dance ~ by the LIMie Mermaid Guild d Huntinglon Beach. The affair is slated for the Airporter Inn SaWlday,.FelL3, at..1,31Lp .. m...~----- The dJnner dance is the guild's major fund. raising project to !llpport the out-petlenl clin- ic ol O!lldren's Hospital ol Orange Qiunty. lle9ervallons may be made tlrougb Mrs. Leo Fomr ol Huntington Beach. Mrs. Jack Conlogue Is g...,..I chainnan. Sbe . is being asslJted by the Mmeo. Doon Brooks, aiaa.. Kristic.k and James Rl~our. ESP Patterns . . Path ·to By LAURIE K.SPER Of tlle Dllll'I' l"llot Stt.!:f where she was going ... what direction be for a leadership &raining course. "The in life she should take. In her un-purpose is to provide a commlDlity pro. The next time you read a story or watch a \elevision program about the "sixth sense," remember, ~ powers are not llllusual. You and I and everyone else are JllYchiC. At least, we all possess the psychic •gifb which can eazily be developed, ac- cording to two who claim to use their gilts in daily ure and are promoting l}\e technique to others through t b e Inner Peace Movement. 1 Janet Siere and Dave Morin appear to be nonnal. "down to earth'' type people. Their explanation of the girts lacks the dramatic navor of science fiction, althou&J:! .some of it Is difficult to un- dentlrid and, so. to believe. But a part of what they say is that peo- ple over-inteUectuallze, believing only wb.at the "experts'.' say or wbal tradition has dlctaled M true. SIMPLE LIFE "Ufe ls really very simple but we've made It very complicated," Miss Slere uplained. "I can leam what is true for me by being aware of Inner l~ptrations o.nd e1pertenoe." No one, she Admits, could have provC!d ESP CE-SeMoey Perception I to her. Ju.st like eating a steak, being In love or appreclaOng flowers: it's something that nteds to be oxperlenocd to be ICC<pled as true. ''To mo," Iba uplalned, "le<Ung1 are where expert...,., •i:e·" Jnd lht does uperlence ESP. · . Now 281 she uld, "I had been ··Mirchlng since I WR$• yOUng teenager." She -led to know who she was • . . certainty, she ttied many different -gram through which persons may religiaos. detennine their potential resources for "I moved to Oklahoma on a hunch.". personal develi>pment and effective lfv· And the oati~e of Washington laughed a ing." , · little when she explained, "Intellectually, And it daes, according to Miss Siere, I never wuu1d have moved to make a per900. a leader ... jn hil 0"1! Oklahoma." life. It helps a person rel4"1·and li!ten to But ·1 · Till boot l his fee.lings, something which she COii· 1 was m · sa , a our years tends is overlooked in his ~normal ·n -ago, where she heard an intrOductory lecture on the Inner Peace Movement. tionalizations. Siie liked what sbe beard and took as "ll'NEJ\ TURMOIL . niany of lheir classes as she could, in· "I have found people have inner eluding a leadership lraining cou rse in turmoil. 'I11ey're trying to be something Osceola, Iowa, where the'JPM has a col· they don't feel,'' she said. "If a person lege. really understands hbnself, he'll be at.. REAL FEELINGS peace with himself at all times," Most other prqgr:ams, she said, deal in There are four different "spiritual gifts the intellectual lire. She thinks it would or inner gifts" which everyone posseue.s. take 20 years in those to develop the One,~ however, is predominant in each skills which only took her a week to le.am person and serves as his ·'key to inner with the JJ?M, a program which gets into communl cadon. "the real !eeling.s of what we want In lile. There Is the person who communicates "l<o ooe thing has all the ll\lth," she by feeling. He might walk Into a room admitted. "but for m~ the TPM had K and notice a mood change or pick up a more organi7.ed and ·available for me to headache after beillg around -.omeone' experience." who Q: tense. She was going to be a college language 1-tiss Siere is this type of person. She. and literature teacher but now. Jnstead, used io be up and down all lbe t!tne but she trivels around the country promoting thl'OUlh ESP she found out why. "A lot of and lecturing for the movement. · thlnp I was being sensitive to weren't -Mm-in, a Colla Mesa resident, 11Jo was even mine." coplused and ''looking to make sense or Such a person also has a highly mr, life. developed sense of touch. She cited one 'J wu hungry, enough to try man who can hold an article belonging to anything," he uplained. So be went to a • a lost child Rnd tell where he is. They lecture In Portland and found ''what they . also claim to haviJJg .Orne bealin& had to say made sense." llr:'s been In It powers. ... f.or two years now end claiml1 1•1•ve Morio'• chief gift is that of vision. He le•m«i moro Utan in tbe la&l :13." wlll Interpret lite by w~~t he ,.., In ~n IPM broclnlre aoundt like It might phy1i<;al !'ch< ., wdl as lnaer oigbt. - Peace U'1 11fipcJIUnl Utat t()ing1 look right to hlm. AJ a mechanical engineer, be ex· plains . tJilngs by drawtng pictures on a thalk board, When be has a problem, he said, "I'll be Inspired through a flash or a plcture;'' And as a supervisor at work, hf'll watch people because, even a change of position meant a<>ml'tJting .to flim, · "lf you blindfold me,· 1rd really' be up a creek," he Aafd. tS.. PATH TO PEACE, P11e Ill " The Mmes. Calvin Hetrick and Gerald ~andison (above, left to ri9ht l are ready for the YW's Shower_ of Flowers, while I far left l the Mme•. Jack Baillie and Denny l'readway whoop . ii . up for the Arthritis "Auxlliary's Night et . t I , ;:i;the '.Races and · ' . I left l Mr5. John Bower -9et.5 in the Mardi Gros •pirit. ( Janet Siere and Dave Morin , IPM members, . ' claim their psychic 9ifts .have simplified life. I BEA ANDERSON, Editor (Irk!•.,, J•11111r~ It, 1'11 f'l ff II Biting Advice Disputed DEAR ANN LANDERS: A IJ.year-old 1 asked what to do about his four-year-old brother who bit people. He said hi~ parents had tried withholding desserts. severe scoldings and so on. Nothing worked. He bit the cleaning lady, the TV repairman and every kid he ever played with. You v.•ere the boy's last resort. You told him that your 0\\71 daughter bit you when she was tv.·0 years old and you bit her back. Your final line was, "She-never bit me or anyone else after that." • Please say you were joking. I can'! believe Ann Landers wou1d do such ~ thing. -LET OOWN DEAR L.D.: I wasn'~ A n n Landers f wllen I bit my daughter, bm I' worked. aad that's what counts. It may aoc bave been according to "The Book'' bat ttiere art Ume1 when a mother's lnstbtct 11 better than any book. CIUldreQ's responses vary, no maUtr bow severely you punish some kids, tbey won't ba& an eyelash. Other youag1ten dfslOlve lnto teun when you look at ~m Cl'Ollseyed. A mother knows ber ktdt bet· --tor lhaa u y-psy,cbologlst-1111d l'IDfo< dobtg what comes iia1ura11y. DEAR ANN LANDERS: !\1y husband and I moved from our home town 25 years ago. My parents are in their 70s, and while there is no ill will. we are not close. ~y we re born in Europe and made no attempt to Americanize. Yesterday I received a letter inl:onning me that a cousin (my aunt's daug~r) is coming 1rom another country 10 visit in ! our home. I do not koow thi s woman's age (it wasn't mentioned). I cannot speak her language and she cannot speak mine. I didn't know she existed until this letter arrived. I phoned my mother and asked how this person got our address. She said, "I gave it to her. Be nice and put a rool over her head." My husband and I v.·ork six days a week. we don't need a houseguest especially one who doesn 't speak English'. My husband said he has never heard of such gall and has urged me to say we can 't accommodate her. What would you do? -WAITING TO HEAR DEAR WAITING: I'd tell my mother tbat I would be glad to have the .cousin for • weekend but after tbat 1be would have to take over. P .s: Make Art lbe cousin g o e 11 10 your Motber11 bou.se (from tbe boat) and Is bued THERE. ~lore lo tbe polllt, in-- 1traet your mother to tend her wlch an evenalgbt bag. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been sil· ling here for 20 millutes trying lo put my ·problem into language you c3n print. Now I've decided to tell it like it is. ' My husband is 42. nlce-lookinn. a good father and he bas no bad habill' "·1r bills are pUI and be doesn't chase 1. 1cn. He .is a construction worker and t.v11rt!S homt! at S every evening, which is plenty of time to shower and change clothes for supper. But this man refuses to clean himself up. He showers about once every two weeks. He also ignores the freM underwear and llOCkS I put out for him ~very morning. I have talked to hlm until I am blue in the face. He calls me a nag and says 1 a.m exaggerating. This problem bas ltd 10 ianolher problem. When he wants 10 make love I dread it. Do l have a right to say no unle~ ht tales a shower? - N.N.N.A. DEAR N.N.: Yoe di ud you 1Muld. Yllr ~-Md lte6I CMIHllal ud I llope J'N w1U IMlll lllot loe (et It. 1'1111 It llMlft tlail 1'luy" -It's sick. Aad, I mipt 9dd, more ctntmH tan yod ~tu. -, clay I set ·w. same comJlla111 ,,... at le.11 • dolet9 1'0mta. Hud ~m tbb col.,.. RY°" 111111k ~ wllt iltlp. Discover hOw to be dnte bait without falling hook, line and Sinker. Ann J..anden' boOklet. "0.Ung Duo and llon'ts," Wiii help you be moni poloed and sure of yourself on dates. Send· 36 cents In ooln along' wl1h 1 1""1, lllAmJi<d, self,iddttt.ted envelope and yOur request to tbe DAILY PILOT. 1-1 O.t,11.Y PILOT Friday, J11nllary l'I, 147:3 ' L Hour Class Perks By AURIE KASPElt En,rgy and enthusiasm ..... o.u, ""'-' '"" sectn to now nilturally from hy Strauss. an English this woman. the wltc al lnSlructor at Golden West former school board rntmber College, has J:-iunehed an nil-Donald Strauss. She talU easi- out campai~n to ~ring won)tn I~ and .~apidlv , ~.b o u I from the c<lmmunitv on to the liternturt', fl\Y 1hing, and ca1npus and 11110 ·her llf'W • "'hut ~ti~· intends to do I~· her class. clnss, l.re:at Ideas in L1tera,. 1 She's talkl'<I with the collrize tun.· Pn1rons. spoken before tht' ~!rs. Strauss is promoting 11unllngton Beach Coordinating lht• class because she con- Counci l. S<'nt information to cri,·('(! t h e Idea for it,_sug· U>isurl' \\'orld, put posters in ,l!:eSll'<i il through the college libraries. N1nlaclt'Ct parent-ch;inncls, structured it and teacher gr(lups and "'omen's then received approval but clubs and she may even buy a "as told she would have to news1>:1per advertisement. have enough students. The col· She also Rsks for advice on ll'gl' hkes to have 25 to l5 "'hat else she can do. students in a class. ,' . Book Breakfast Beckons .. 1 want it to go." she said. ·•1 really went to teach it" But she al10 -pulls from. personal experience to explain ~·by she believes It wUI be • good course for tbe non-stu- dent "·oman to ti.kc. The mother of ttu'te cltlldr.en, aged 25, t3 and 14, and graduate of the University of CaUfornia, Berkeley return- ed to school to work on a masters degree in English literature when her younger son was seven. At UCI, where she received her graduate degree, she was told that she was a gamble because she had been out of , Science Fiction Ln the Llbary: Libraries of the Future '~ill be the topic of author Ray Bradbury, who \\'ill be the guest speaker at the Orange Co unty School Library Association's Book Breakfast at 9 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 3, in the Balbo.a Bay Club. Displaying a poster advertising his talk are Mrs. Craig Weight- man (left), breakfast ro-c hairman, and Mrs. Nancy Roozen. For Every Woman OCC Conference Set Basile. associate of Economics at participant on the school for so lon1. Her ac~­ ing, too, lhe lald, pNved to be hard an tht entire ram.Uy. 8\lt It answered a .. va~. un'pokon need" which she !tit at t h e Um• and whleh she reels mos1 women experience ...,,.time. Sho dacrlbeo It u a "restless, J n t e 11 e c t u a 1 energy.'' Mrs. Strauss hoptJ htr ell,. will provlde a bridge for women, who may have bad some or no college educ•Uon before marriage and child rearing, to continue in co11ege. She hopes her studenll will gain confidence in their academlc abilities ss wen as find it "e1citlng to learn.·• The course, however, is open to rtlUIAr students u Wf:ll as men. But ah< hopea H wttl be mostly new women students. Her coune ts not a transfer course (for pe"°"' wllhlng to f!nllh • !Olll'-nor ll<l>llT•mJ but It will count toward the M dqree Golden West oilers. There wUI be no papen or quints In her claas allboug~ students may take a final lf they wanl to get a grade. It will be a course, shl! ex. plained, where the students will be reading, discussing and e.1.changtng Ide.as and learning Crom one another. And, she poinll out, she will be learning Million Dollar Club Plaque Househunter By JO OLSON Of ... ~ ........... When Arlene Gallagher was • child in New York, she would spend many winter evenings putting p u z z I es together while the snow ~II In- to a white blanket outside . Today, the Huntington Beach resident i! a reaJ estate broker and she's still putting punles together. These, however, are the punle plec.s of finding the right property for tbe right people at the riglit price 8Jjd on the right tenns. · Arlene's expertise in solving these puzzles bas earned for her the first membership in the Huntington Beach.Foun- tain Valley Board of Realtors' Million Dollar Club, an es:· elusive organization for those who have completed a mill.ion dollars' worth of e.scrows in a year. Afrs. .Gallagber's---sales career began eigbf'years ago- Dr. Salk Speaks when she was helping her hus- band 'Ibomas study for his broker's license. "I found it lnlertsting and thought I'd get • license too," she said. llOl\ED HOUSEWIFE - When the,ir two children were 8 and 11, she started sell· lng because "I was a Utile bored, and I can't stand to sit and do nothing. When chlldJ:en quit being babies they don't require as much care." Meeting people Ls one of the iftractJons .or tbe job for Arlene, who says, "I lovt peo- ple. In an average life you can't begin to meet as many people as I meet." One of the drawbacks of her job Is the unusual, lrrqular hours. Calls may comt in as late a.s late as midnight when there ts an offer pending, keys lo be transferred or docu- menl.s lo be ai&ned. "My f~ understand• the cr8zj "}\ours," she noted. Geri·, MOD Hosts Fete NQted doctors, scientist! and Institute for Biological Stud.ia celebrities were among guests ·,in •San Diego. • at the National Volunteer Two othu new boo.ks were Leadership C on re r e • n c e previewed, "ls My Bab)' All Right," by Virginia Apgar, spomored by the National MO, vice president for Foundation-March of Dimes in medical a!fatn, NF-MOD, and New York, which wu at· Joan Beet, Chicago joumalisl, tended by three Orange Coast and "COoklng for Dimes," a rMidents. collection of recipes from Mrs. Norman Wat.on of Mothers' March volunteers. Newport Beach, chairman of Editing the cookbook were the California Council of Mrs. James W, Rutledge of Volunteer Advisors for tbe Dallas and Julie Benell, Dallas March of Dimes: Mrs. Harold food editor .. Boyvey of Balboa1 council member, and Fred .Owens of ew thlnas from her students 8S well. 111roU&h Uterature used in the class, !be intends to draw a parallel between tba upti~ht J7th century man and the ali&nated 20th century man, both ot whom le.It or ft'fll the e!Cectl of a science ahead of them. There Is much diicussion about mm today bring allenated·-rrom God and the fe<llng that "we are atlppable into computers," she said. "We tend to think that we're the only ones and that's oot ao." The 17th century man, too, had felt tbe effects of a • Appetite ' seitnc~ic:h to;d him msn Uve and "feelln1 of .,,:_• Was not the center of the earth pOrtagce aealn ol each pen;on and the earth was uot, at-In the contlnuum of history." ter all. t h e cenle< <If t h e Md, •he hopeo et tho ot>d ol unlverae. --. the course her 1tudents wlll ''All the bl& .,daddies or soy, "Oh. nlfty ." literature grappled with ques· 1'he clau Is achedultd ror tlons at'OWld tltlJ.'' sho said. Mondays, Wednesday• and But she admits that !he hlll fl'rldays from noon to I p.m., a rchosen only wor~ which she Ume when the thinia. the ·feels altlrm man even though younger womM will be able to they delllt with negative hnve finished htt work. eat things. Jun~ and return home befoH Among the authors who will the school buJ but also when be lncludcd in the course are older per$00S are more oom· Shakespeare, Camus, h1ilton, [ortable. Hemingway, Faulkner and Registration for the new hfill1r. j seme.1ter, which begins Mon- She thinks her class ·11 of· day, Feb. s. ls xheduled from fer students a better s~ Jan. 27 to Feb. 2. · Bags Biggest Trophy 16, a junior at Fountaln Valley High School, and Tom, 191>, a s~ud.ent at Chapmar. College, are.n*t annoyed a. bit if their mother suddenly~ leaves the dinner table to solve a client's problem. ,, DISLIXED JOB Mrs. Gallagher attended a business college before going to real estate school and work- ed as a calcu1ator operator priOr to her marriage. "I hated it.'' she said of her or- fice job. "I couldn't stand being confined." \.. Now, her hours are her own, though she works seven days a week and is on call at all limes. V"JI Important Jo her is staying with her cllenta un-- tlt "lh<T'Te In the "°""' and everything ls the way it is sup-1·. posed to be." When customers a r e : , satisfied, the purchase is a good ~rience for them.. and they refer more potential customers. Selling homes is "almost a disease with me," 1-trs. Gallagher said. "The more I get involved the faster I run and the more. I throw myself into it." She added that "anyone can do It -it's just taking the time and making the prepara· lion, with the right amount of each thrown in." A TYPICAL FAMll.Y Mrs. Gallagher and her hu~ band are not typical clients, since they have owned only two houses since their mar- riage a little over 20 years ago. They lived in the first house 10 ye8rs and have own· ed their current house 10 years. She admitted she does see many houses that are at· tractive, but she learned long "'·· ago not .. to be tempted to put has sponsored -~ -~ her own up for sale each time , teams the past two • ..,.., · she finds an appealing one. the Corsairs this ytar and the When they are all able to get Buccaneers last year. away, they take their 40' "The game teaches respect sailboat. the Mygalene, to and responsibility," ahe said. ·ca1.alina or Mexioo. "We feel it· helped our sOn The Gallaghers also are ~tly. It's an age ~ their quite jnvplved in Junior All· h\_'.es when they need gu1da~ American football. having frGm someone besides theit started the program in Hun· parents {the boys are t-13 ). tington Beach 10 years ago as "It's fulfillment for some a Pop Wanier league. boys who don't have a dad at Mrs. Gallagher perSflnally home." _, "'Something for E very \\'oman" is promised during a workshop -co nference sponsored by Orange Coast Evening College in ·cooperation with the Amcric11n Association of University \Vomen, l-iun- tington Beach and Newport- Mesa branches. Phillis professor OCC and Great Consumer Contest a Woman's Life. Women in Political Action, \Vomen in \Vriting and Ecology Begins at Home. Other topics are The Great Consumer Contest, Woman as a Single Parent, Women in the ~1cdia. \Vomcn and the HunUngl9nBeach,~mberof1----------~~~----~~~~~~~~~~---~~~~~~~-~~- the executive committee of the · Orange County Chapter and ch3irman of the annual cou nty Walk ·a ·thon , represented the chapter. television coursl'. is scheduled to speak Saturday. Under the general title of New Directions for \Vomen, fOUr separate panels dealing with looking for a job. return· ing to school. finding volunteer Liberation f\.1ovement \Vhat's !I All About and \Vomen 's Opportunities jn !\ledical and Health Servi<:.es. opportunities and having a There is a $1 registration fuller life at home also will be fee. presented both days. Speaking on "The Creation of Knowledge" and iD-- troducing his new book, "Man Unfolding," wa.. Dr. Jonas Salk, director of the Salk Willi Its promise as the theme. the "'orkshop is scheduled for Friday. Feb. 2. from 9: 15 a.m. to noon and Saturday, Feb. 3. from 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. in the college student center. Community I ea de rs willi-=-=-=-=--===:==:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::====::I participate In these A different int roductory speaker will be featured al the beginning of both days. Jan Dunlap, director of a manage- meilt Consultant firn1 and author of Personal and Professional Success for Women. will SpeRk on Friday. disrt1ssions which are designed to fit the individual needs of each "·oman "'ho attends the ' "·orkshop. Nine s1na!ler, more specific panels will be presented Satur- day afternoon. These will cover The Changing Phiises of :!· · REDUCTIONS ALL SALE JEWELRY •12 OFF & MORE 25 -50°/o OFF ON PANT SUITS-DRESSES-- SWEA nRS-ILOUSES MAXl-DRESSl~ANTS • ( • • • REGIST.ER NOW Oasses Start January .29 NEWPORT ( INVITES YOU TO ... ONE+ ONE: THE WEDDING OF '73 SEE NEW BRIDAL FASHIONS.•· PRE5£NTED BY ROBIHSON1;5 A.ND SEVENTEEN MAGAZINE. 51\TUROAY • JANUARY 27 • 2:0-0 P,M • BILTMORE 90W\., IULTMOftE HOTEL , LOS ANGELES, SATURDAY, FEBftUARY 3 1 1:00 ijM ... DESIGNER SALON, ROBIHSON1s,s:rTA BA.RBA.RA , MONDAY', FEatt.IARY 5, 7:00 P.M'I. ~.EslGHER SALON, ROBIN90N1s, SAN ort:oo, COMPLIMKNTAflY TICKETS IN OUR BRIDAL SALONS . WIN A HONEYMOON.,, TO BE AWARDED AT EACH Or:' 3 BRIDAL. SHOWS, GRAND PRIZE! HONEYMOON FLIG, FOR TWO VIA MEXICAHA AIRLINES TO.J'UIERTO Vf-L.LARTA, PLUS A WED< AT 'THE POSADA VALLA..,. HOTEL.. SSCOHD PPUZE: BRIDAL POR'TMIT, WORTH $ 1'750 FROM OUR CAMEO POMTRAfT STuDto. THIRD PRIZE: BRIDAL GOWN. VALUFJ:>>.T $t40, PROM OUR ' 8RIDM.. SALOH. PLUS MANY OTHIR f ~ I • FASHtON ISLAND . ' • • '. • , I • I I J • / - J~nuar~ OAll.. Y PILOT 5 HoroS'cope: Scorpi10 : Go Slow, Watch for Detail S~ TU!oA Y you can deliver. Conllde In J'AN''ARY 120 family memb<r. Don't run U away from apparent con- Y 9U may not be as free as a bird -but you will gain ap. preciaUon for efforts. Don't erpect free-an<kasy accell!I. There are block!'-restrictions. However. older individual ls willlng to provide you with necessary material. l.ro (July 23-Aug. 22): You fH:I vital, alive. Creative juJces fiow • and you oeed them. Tbls ls not a time wben everything falls Into pl~ce. Indeed, problema confront you, challenges face you and members of opposite ser con- fow1d you. base move 'On logic. Strlve_..for greater 'balall<.'i!. Partoership, special relallonship is tested. If married, be especially l.'011· s.iderate .toward male. lloJd o!.f on signing of legal documents. 18): Obtain hint , from Capricorn message. Don't be ln too much or a hurry. Ap- plies especially w he r e partnerships, joint effort,s are coocemed. 'Ilme is on your side. You can profitably play waltlng game. Pi.sees is in pie-- lure. improvement. L'tilize lessons learned in recent past. <.. COLUMNIST Jaek Smith Focus '73 Talks Set Los Angeles Times col. umnlst Jack Smith will present the first of four "Focus ,Seventy-three" lec- tures on Thursday, Feb. 8, for the Queen of Hearts Guild of Children's Hoapital of Orange Couoty. By SYDNEY OMARR Leo loves 14 &amble but Sagittarius ls1!lOll likely to win where mattm of specula- tion are concerned. Leo ls romantic but Gemini takes the cake when It comes to fltrtlna: .. Leo Is a good judge ol character but Pi.sees lB psychlc when it comes to detecting what people are mo.st likely to do and when they are going to do It. ARIES (March 11-April 19): Avoid promising more than From Page 13 f.rontatlon. Relatives, cblldren are confused, po s a I b I e arawntntallve. Ride out the storm. Remain cl~ to home -· TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): Obtain hint fro1n Aries me8118ge. Emphasis· now is on holding together possessions. Hll!hllght 11<Curily. Don't give up something of value tor mere promise. You will know who b stating facts and otherwise. Heed inner voice. GEMINI (May 2t.June 20): CANCm (June 11.July 22): What was hidden or ap- parenUy settled Js due to be shaken. Not good for .at- tempting to keep secrets. Don't throw good money alter bad -tmow when to call a halt. Aries is in picture. Complete rather than initiate projects. • • • Path to Peace Then , there.is the prophetic person. "A prophet wlll know. He doesn't know bow be knows," Miss Siere explained, "he just knows. 11 His dreams will come true and be ls a gOQd manager of people because be h ll s an inner knowledge of how things work besL • will just come to these people who are creative, mentally quick and enjoy n e w challenges, Miss Siere said. truth in it." And every person is like a radiQ sender and receiver, able to interpret t.hele messages. The movement was begun in 1964 by Francisco Coll, its president, and bas grown since then from seven to .75,000 peo-- ple "at least" with only a volunteer staff. VIRGO (Aug. 23·S.pt. 22): Above all, avoid extravagance. Key now Is to hold some check on emotions. Give love but be sure of di~lon. Member of opposite sex may· be unable t.o reciprocate. You are walking along rme line. Don't press your luck. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Fnend1y advice may lack base of factual Information. Know It and act accordingly. Sagt&- t.ariaa could prove helpful. Ask 1n that, direction and you pro- bably will receive. Forces tend to be scattered. Relu! SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Go slow enough to be aware of subtle nuances. Path that seemed clear is laden with ex~ penses. Don't fall into fman- clal trap. Those who should know better are scheming to get something for nothing. Protect yourself. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. :!:- Dec, 21): Avoid being ruled by impulse. Welcome change but PISCES (Feb. IH!arch 20)' Activity indicated in con- nection with Aquarlan. Accent is on clearing up detiills. Get down to the basics. Insist on IF TODA'\' JS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have knack or knowing what public desires. You usually are one step ahead or your time. This year feature-s ,Intensified rela- tionships, with Atarch and December indicated a s outstanding months of 1973. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19): Much of what you ate in- volved in ol'.lw is apt to be low key, obscured, pc r hp as deliberately hidden. Know it and be patient. One who offers gift may have ulterior motive. Be diplomatic but know what is really taking place. AQUARIUS (Jan. W.Feb. facts coMected with buildingi----------- June Date A June 2.1 wedding in St. Andrew's Pres byte r i an Church. Newport Beach is being planned by Melinda Ann Rainey and Thomas Courtney Lutz of U>s Angeles . News of the forthcoming event has been announced by costs, land development, home Selected Mrs. Scott T. Lutz or Shell Knob, ~lo., attended the American Acad emy of Dramatic Arts, New York Ci· ty . lie is a TV writer with Youngstreet Productions, a Hollywood. firm. ! @!.!r!!! .!!Ni WoMClll A,._,..t lly e Norman Wiatt e Bleyl• .t.110 Coif WMr 2711 f•it c-t Hwy. Coro .. del M• 67l-47d her pa.rents, Mr. and Mrs. __________ ___!_ ___ _:"'~~~':_ __ _ William 0 . Rainey or Sant.f1- Ana. former Harbor Area , residents. Miss Rainey is a graduate of Newport Harbor High School and now attends California State University, Fullerton. Her fiance', son of Mr. and The informal 11 ~.m. series in the Riviera Room or the Hotel Laguna start. wtth the 80UDds of humor and appeals lo the other senses once a This person, Morin added, has the "combination of all the other gifts all rolled into one." ''None of thia is to be afraid of," ahe said. "Our true nature J1 mental. Our true nature Is feelings." So.me peo-- ple call the psychic gifts "in- ner guidance," ' ' G o d , ' ' "angels," ''cosmic con· sclousness" or "a moment of inspiration." Miss Slere's explanation of '"°=-----===========---o-:=-•= the growth is simple. "It helps people to the paint they've learned so much, they want to "A•IAKI" It .altMd for 11"""'9 w1Mr Ill t'"-111 """'' (Ut to. 100 .. u. ts"cltlty -Wiit! 11111111111 Wllltr 11111 lllf'lds 10 llQlltlll. II clt ... I ,., llOUrllllts gl\llllt 1llt!ldlnt i x.,... IOI' llf!Cl-llet IHt. W1ttr llf'I lf•Mllnt. --,..,,1, llMlh bid viii Mc:tlTlll bilcllttnlciltl'f' QH, FU!tf' MK~ Wlllf' wtlll "AltlAKI!~ Ind l'OUI' POllll 1Uy1 ei.n 1nd IP'tlll Wl!Mwf cOllt"'-"'"'lltt tt -Wlllr • , • Ooll'f' month. Vision will be the target on March 8 when waler colorist Ru Brandt demonstrates the And finally, there ls the in- tuitive person whQ com- mwtlcates through ideas or thoughts. Words, for example, She describes it as "a level of high energy, llke a universal consciousness that has a tremendous amount of share it too." An introductory lecture is scheduled for the Afrporter Inn at 2 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 21. talentthatearnsplacesfurhls,o;;~:;";;;;;;;;;;;;";"";~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~-::~~""'.~~=:---:::~~~~~ artwork in major exhlbltionsll F A c NOT JUST A JOB 1n the United States, Europe OT areer • • • . and 'Mexko. The feel of fine J<welry will BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE" be dJscussed by designer Gugllemo Cini on April 12 and gourmet chef Mlke Roy will tempt the taste buds on May JO. Tickets for the series may Beco~ a Mtdical or Dtnlal A11Utan.1 in 4 or 7 mont.V., ~~ NEW CLASSU STAITINO J•n. 22 • Feb. 5 Lifetime Pl•c1ment A11i1tanc1 be purchased through guild mtm.bers. Mrs. John Newton, -and means chairman, • -_,,,,_ may be contacted for further ~ information. ~..1.. 623 W. 17th, SANT A ANA 541-4461 vmlAN's llNEflTS .AYAll.AllE 19.97 89.95 59.95 Hoover Hoover Hoover "Handivac" Ughtwelght noor "Oial-a-Matic" upright custom convertible upright deanel" for quick clean ups. vacuufn cleaner, converts to cleaner, 2 speed molor. (Model #2910). canister with optional Attachmeiits extra attachments. (Model #1 136). (Mode< #593). 0 0 . v. E " I'! ('>' '• ~: ~ • BOLOGIA T•Y ou• DILICIOUS t LAYE• CtfOCOLAT•-MAltlLI D• WtUTI UYER CAKE REO. II.» Rl!O. lfc: Ll. •eo. n.tt "' lTALIAN OSLI ltlSTAU•ANT l .l.Kllt'l'....O•otllt'I' llEltt-WINI! -~ric,. hM Ullfll Cllll"'f. 1/1 .. 7J 8911 Actllm1 at Megnolii, Huntlneton Be•ch, ON .. "" 111'1111 DIN Operlllwtl In Cllifentll, IR Gll"ISMI ..,., 21 'f'Un. Ntw Nl'll' .... HVflllllll• llldl, l'-ll lR \lllle'f', COlfl MeN, N...,.n & 111 tt Or_,. C-ly' IEW HOURS 29.95 ·Eureka floor polisher, waxer, scrubber and rug shampooer. (Model t8A). DAILY 104:30-Fii. 10..t SUNDAY 1M CLOSID MONDAY 59.95 Eureka deluxe upright vacuum cleaner. 6-w~ "Dial-a-Nap" rug adjuslmenl (Model 2612Al, $159.95 ~ $109.95 500 Gal, FANCY KOi 4" to 18" ORANOA GOLDFISH 79c to $39. 95 KOi FOOD 42% PROTllN latlk.A.rntrlcord Welcome Pacific Goldfish Farm 14700 GOLOENWEST, WESTMl"STER Clllltlll "rteiUY" (Ntttll tt tllt Sin Df..-l'-l'f') 0,.n Dilly 10-5 PhoM 0,.,, SurM11y 12-& 71' 44.95 Eureka upright vacuum cleaner, adjl.$table handle, toe S'Mtch. (Model #238f). 39.95 Eureka New "Princess" canister vacuum cleaner, litt out tool carrier, lighM'eighl, compact. (Model #755) Need "Home Care" vacuum bags? Fit almost any cleaner. 49( pl<g. ©R95'• .. o~ or ute ow Time P1y Pl1n e llAaADA HllLS·~~~~Chl:.:.:o<t~h~S~l:e:W;O;O~O;lA;N;,O~N;t;,W;;1~1500;V;ICl;~:I ;81od;.~•~l;l;Yl;.1;1;10;1~3520;1;ylt;r~e;IA;N;T;A~A~l;l~So;,;Co;as~t ;~l~U;;;e TOllAJICI Stovlvtda and Htwll1omt i LAllWOOD C11so11 St and P111mou11t 81'111. e IUIMA PAii Bead! lfld 0..A&etiofpt • OIAMGI Glrdtn Cr~8 Blwd. llld M~ttr 01te w1tk4il'rl t :30 It t 1J01 S.•il•'r• 10 t• 1 • • • J fl OAJL Y PILOT Faces Big Ob stacle ST. LOUIS (APl-Don Coryell. of quiet but intense demeanor, was hired Thursday · from the college ranks to put otr~ back lnto the game for the National Football League's beleaguered St. Louis Cardinals as the club's 22nd bead coach. -.. I believe in winning the games by going out and scoring touchdowns," said Coryell, 48.. ~·hose teams during 12 seasons at San Diego State set 18 National Collegiate AthJeHc Association records. "l y,·anted someone who could put the offense back into tbe Cardinals.'' said owner William V. '·Bill': Bidwill, who introduced Coryell at a news conference. "He (Coryell) has always had this. He comes to us very highly recommended from many sources. He has a •consistent record of win· ning seasons." . The slim Coryell, whose preducts have included NFL quarterbacks Dennis Shaw of the Buflalo Bills and Don Hom of the Denver Bron· cos, succeeds Bob Hollway, who was fired Dec. 18. At San Diego State, which joined the NCAA 's Wliversity division in 1969, he compiled a record of L24- 1~2 that included Lhree unbeaten seasons and a 10-l mark last faU. He inherits a club which fini shed 4-9-1 in 1971 and '72 under Hollway and was last in National Con- ference offense the past season. Al'though not alluding directly to Hollway's conservatism, Coryell did allow that "I believe in at- tacking a d efense. I'm not a counter-puncher. I believe in the passing game. "Like many coaches I've come from the ball control. I-formation type of football ." he said. "I've gradually come about to a vl'i de-, open style of ball." A n a t i v e ol Seattle, Correll schooled for a 15-year college coaching career in California wi~h a season at Punabou Academy 1n Hooolulu in 1951 and a year at a Honolulu high school. , He coached l\\'O seasons at British Columl:!ia University begin- ning in 1953, v.'as at Wenatchee (Y.'ash.) Junior College a year later and served as athletic director and head foMball coach at Ft. Ord in 1956. A three-season term at Whittier College produced a record of 23-S..L making bis overall collegiate mark for 15 seasons a glittering 121-!4-3. "For Ute past two years I've been interested in professional football," Coryell noted. "I've gone as far as I can in the situation I'm ln." Cards' owner Bidwill, who bought sole control from his brother in Aug ust, said the blue. eyed , sandy·haired Coryell was the only candidate interviewed among 25 to 30 prospects considefed to become the fifth head coac~ since the club was moved to St. Louis from Chicago in 1960. BidwiH said Coryell contacted personnel director Abe Stuber after Christmas during East-West Shrine Game drills in the San Francisco area about the job. Bruins Gun For No. 58 Against USF .. . ' Wow! Cd No ~ ·1) ·Duels Bar.ons ... (No~ 2_) . . . ' ' . I ·*· * * Sunset Loop Co-leaders CQflide in -HB County's Best Risk Streaks In Showdown \lndisputed leadership in the Irvine Leaiue basketball race, a stranglehold , on the No. l spot in Orange County prep ratings and the continuation of a Jong winning streak are but three of the ma- jor items at stake tonight as Coro11a del ~far's Sea Kin'gs pl,. host to Fountain Valley. Tipoff is slated for 8 o'clock and an overflOw -crowd is expected to view the action. Coach Tandy Gillis' sea Kings are rated NO. I in Orange County and thlrd in CJF circles with their flossy lU record. ·: The Sea Kings are considered narrow favorites to dump the tall Barons of Fountain Valley •. who have rolled lo JS· straight victories and a 15-1 record. Both 1<""15 sport ~ Irvine Lolague marks. Fountain Valley is No. 2 in Orange County, seventh in the C1F. Corona de! Mar's big weapon is lbe three-pronged scoring attack of Casey Jones. Jeff Wharton and Matt Keoqgh. All are capable of hitting coosiStenttx from outside and that's what it takes to defeat the far·reaching Folintain Valley zone de£ense. ····"-The Baror..s feature &.11 Scott Reider inside \\'ith forwa.i-ds Dan Malane (6-4) and Titn ·Hill (6-5). Even•the guards are good siie with 6-3 Chris Adams teaming up with 6-3 Tim Adams. But Corona also baS considerable size to co mbine with its shooting eye. The Sea Kings boast 6--6 Bob Clark at the post and Gillis is inserting 6-3 Marc Attlesey to go along with Wharton (6-4), Jones (6-3) and Keough (6-2). The latter's height is deceiving due to his jumping ability. He usually jumps the opening tip. Despite Corona's ability to hit from outside, Gillis is wary of the Fountain Valley zone. "We haven't played well against the zone. but we have the shooters to ·beat it," says Gillis. And although the-Barons possess overwhelming ·lieigbt ·inside with the 6-11 Reider station~ at the post, Gillis feels his team. can attack the in- terior of the Barons' setµp. "We'll tr-y k> press and run and up the tempo oo Fountain Valley," Says Gillis, "alttl!)ugb they Seem to be able to handle pressure fairly well, especially wtth·belp from Ma lane at forward." Fountain Valley coach Dave Brown opines his· team must handle the Olrona del Mar man-to-man pressure if it is to succeed. "We'll have to handle their pressure and get our offense into motion. Sometimes they take you out of your of- fense ... they make it tough for you to pass where you want to pass," says Brown. "'We know they can hit well from outside, but we have to go with what we do best and hope ou r l-2·2 zone is good enough to beat them," adds the Barons boss. "We've been building for this for three years," says Brown. "and it's been good so far ... bul we've still got a long way to go." Feun111,, v111tw (1 5-ll Cof"Oft.11 del M•r (U-01 SI lo.trl 'l S2 LB Mllllka11 "9 6J Los Aml901 11 70 Marina 68 55 W•rTen S6 l>6 Troy 61 41 S1v1nn11 SJ 67 Vfll• 1"ark .u n S.1>!11 Anl •.S 39 Arcaola •S 6--1 Santa MonlCI S6 55 NtwPOrt S2 Sl Rl!!Mttl » 61 W11cen a 66 Satna M.lrl1 3'I 69 Hu~!lng!on SI •l S1nt• B•rbar1 :n 62 NewPOrl 39 •9 Boise Grinde 31 60 LB Jcrd1n 59 61 Kenned~ ,3 Sl E1tanel1 /cl) 51 59 Tu<rln .SI S6 LOX Al1m1to1 52 61 Edi50l'I •C 66 SA. Valle, Sol Jl E•!ancil loll :19 67 Edison $1 61 Los Al1mllc1 49 ~ M11vnoU1 .cf DAVE BROWN TANDY GILLIS Sea Kin-gs Tahb.ed Co1nmon Foes Unanimous Corona del Mar High's Unbeaten Sea· Kings are favored to capture their 15th straight basketball victory tonight against Fountain Valley High's visiting Barons. In an effort to find a favorite betw~ the Irvine League titans, the DAD.. Y PILOT polled four other coaches who have sent their teams against Fountain Valley and Corona del Mar. And Corona del Mar gleaned the . favorite's nod from each or four opin ions. Here's what each coa,c.~ has to say: Wan-en High coach Jay Young "t think Corona de! M3.r will win and that's based mosUy on my confidence in · Corona 's coach, Tandy Gillis. He bas a fine control over his team's offense and frankly our kids were awed by Corona's personnel: "But ·we also feel the best defense we've seen all year baS been Fountain Valley's. It was really something. We beat Fountain Valley (56-55) by setting up a pretty good combination on defense. "We stopped their. big, ·man •ll (Scott Reider) by fronting 'and rearirigbim and left one of their wingmen a e. I'll pick Corona, 48!46. ' ' Sports in Brief EdiHll c9lleb Dave Malla -"I think Corona bas·the lldge with lbe home court advantage. Both clubs are good defens'ively ·and Corona "'has a better ovenlll: isbooting a_billty, It's a bard game 'to figure." LoJ ~ caacli Weaddl'WIU -"I like Olrona deJ Mar m any tight game. TheY. nevel" seem to lose-in the-close games. ·:u Corona de1 Mar can hit from outside and run, they should beat F(!Ul}o tain Valley. But if they aren't hitting con- sistently from outside they could have reat prob\emS. Fountain Valley's defense is so tall at every·puint." Eslancia coaclli Da•e carllsle - "Corona del Mar's experience and personnel are better right dowft the line. There's no better player in the It.ague then Corona's Jeff Wbarton-and""Witb M·at,t Keough and Gasey Jones, lbat',s just too much to beat. "Fountain Valley's got , tilt\ edge in height, but Corona bas tbatuphrience.in pressure. That's why ~y win _tbe close ones. I'll pick Corona, ~.. : Lakers, Knicks · Tangle; Texan Grabs Golf .Lead ' INGLEWOOD -T~ Los Angeles Lakers have lost all of 11 games and they're unsettled by injury but there's no panic evident in t~ camp of the Natidnal Basketball Association champions. After all, going into tonight's game w:ith the New York Knicks at the Forum. coach Bill Shannan's Lakers have won 33 games and l~d the NBA 's Pacific Division by 31h games over Golden State. And, Sharman said Thursday, they 're adjusting to compensate" for the loss of forw ard Happy Hairston to knee surgery. "We have to run to be good and we 're not running," said all-pro guard Jerry West before the team's practice in which assistant coach John Barnhill had to participate for a IO-man scrimmage. To run with the ball, a team must have possession of it, and Hairtton was the league's best rebounding forward last season. Veteran Bill Bridges, acquired from Philadelphia, is helping, said West, anJI "now we!re starting to get more re- bounds." ./ ' two weeks ago. , Trevino was tied at 70 with six others, including George Archer, D~ve Hill and Australian Bruce Crampton, the Phoenix Open winner. Asher Second LAS VEGAS -Costa Mesa's Barry Asher, the hottest bowler on the touma· ment trail, is in second place just SO pins behind the leader going into tonight's semifinals of the tn,777 Showboat Invita- tional. Asher, who went &.2--0· in match play Thursday, trails Don Johnson •of Akron who started the day in the No. 1~ posi· ti on. Two more eight-game match roun$ are set for tonight wii_b the top five ad· vancing into Saturday's finals and a shot at the $11,ltl first P;l'ize money. GloYe r · Honored HOUS'IQN -Nebraska .iln-American middle,guaftl RithiG~er,.a bridesmaid here last 1 ~r. was named • Thursday night aS ..,µWe r ., ~third· annual Vince Lombardi award' as ·dle·outstanding col· legiate lineman in the oatJon. Runnersup were 'rOin Brahaney or Oklahoma, John Hannah or" Alabaqia afld Jercy Sisemore of Texas. Rentzel Indicted " ELMER COMBS S G. axons . am Coaches' Nod As Favorites Loara High's got the better personnel, Hµntington Beach has the home couft ad~ vantage and poise. That's the general consensus in a poll taken by the DAILY PILOT just prior to Huntington Beach Hig b's Sunset League basketball titanic with invading Loara Jooighl. Four SUnset League coaches and Angelus League coach Jerry Tardie were polled and. in the final analysis it's Loara's Saxons who prevail as a slight favorite. Each has met both teams and Loara gains a 3-2 edg'e in opinions. Here's bow each coaCh summed up tooigbl's claob: • Maler Del coadl Jerry Tardie -"The homy ~ advantage will do l~ I'll pick lfuntfu&"I" Beach, 6H4. I remember playing them both. Wow! Loara bit> nine of ita first 11 &boll. from :Ill !eet. . . "I think Loara bas a helter team, hlll I think Hllntlnii\oi> tleaih Will win'." Marina coach Jlm stePbens -"l.Oara '- is the best club in the league. Loara will win. I think Loara has better balance, aggressiveness, rebounding strength, and quickness. _ "Loara does a good job, delensiVj!ly and hasn't any super stars you can con- centrate on. But they don't have depth. I think it will be a higb scor_ing ga~e with both teams in the 70s." Anaheim coach Em.U Neeme -"I'll take Loara, 55-50, because cit balance, shoOting and momentum. "Huritington will have to keep the pr~re on ~ . Loara s~ters -because they can really shoot if you give them-any air at all. "Huntington ,Beach has tremendous ~ise. Jt doesn't get rattled." Newport llarlJor ...U Dale llaiey -•;ru say Loa.ta, 62-65, somewhere in that vicinity. Loara has better shooters and is quicker. But of course Huntington has Raul Conreras and he plays super basl<etball." Wcstmiaster coaeb ·Doog Stockham - "I'd have to give Huntington Beach the edge because they're playing at home. Huntington just doesn 't beat itself. Loata has the edge on the boards, but Hun· tingt~I has the poise. They don't make mls!akta at key 'llJnes. I'll pick JWn. tington, 61-59." At VC ll"J'ine Saxons (No. 3), ' . Oilers (No. 4) Lock Horns Two of Orange County's foremost high "'hool basketball powers collide ton!Jtht at Huntington Beach High wllh the Wln- rier gaining a highly desirable-posiUon in the run for the Sunset League cham- pionship. Matched in the 8 o'clock showdown are Huntington Beach's Oilers and the Saxons of Loara. Huntington ateama in with a flossy 13-4 record and No. 4 rank· Ing In Orange Counly circles for the ratings released today. Loara Is No. S In the eeunty. Loara, one of ~surprises of the loop, rolls Into the OU City with a I~I record, Including vlclorles over such blghly regarded foes as Mater Dei (Angelus League 'leader }, Orange (l!-3 thus far) and ·Marlrul (defending Sunstl champ and i:tre-season cbolce to win this year'• loop crown). Loara and the host Oilers a"""ch 5-0 ln league circl~ -the only unbeaten fives left in the Sumet League. Coach Tom Voight's Salons are sllgflt favorites to hand the Oilers their first circuit aelback before an eipected full house. It's a match between two well-balanc.. ed, high-scoring, running outfits wbq can also play excellent def~ - The Saxons have a slight edge in height and experience as Loara boasts four returnlng starters in Its lineup. Coach Elmer Comb's ·Oilers-have no returning starters In the f~ld but Combs bas blended a .band of junion inlo a blgbly-reijlecIJl)le Oilllll. - Huntington bas come on strong with a well.qlled unit and be been especially impressive since league hostilities began. "We've come along pretty well, but r don't feel we've completely jelled yet," says Combs. "We're still a bit erratic and haven1t blown anyone out. But' we have played well enough to win most games." · kJ for the problemi Loora poses, Combo stales: They're a g'6od teamt tbey busUe, wort hard, are well-bhlanced, experienced and they shoot well. "Bui the thing tliat bothers me most t.. that you can't overplay anyone." Combs will slarl 1enlon Scott C&rlson '(l>!I guard) and 1\ln ~ (~>Iowan!) aloog with junlOn RHl •Coolreras (~9 guard, Doug <labe (6'2 forward) and 6-4 center Jim Weir. Loara's Kirk Parge (6-3 forward) might be lost for the game after 1lam- ming to the floor in tbe Marina conquest Wednesday. - "Kirk missed school Thursday. He's got a pretty sore back and had a shot for a muscle spasm," says Voight. If Parge can not perform he'll be replaced by 6-2 Curt Kondrac.k. The rest of tbe Saxons aUack features 6-3 center Kevin Flynn, ~10 forward Dave Walker, 6-1-guard Jeff Jones and~ 9 guard Steve Peterson. "Peterson's probably l.oara's best asset," says Combs, "be makes their at- tack go." Huntington's defense ls a 1·2-2 74f!e and that's a problem .Voigt doesn't like. "A zone tends to slow us down. We like to fast break and run. I think our kids will be a llttl~ tired alt.er Maripa, but the momen tum is here. We've been waiting for a long time and I think we're reaching our Potential,'' says the Saxons coach. All.:Cal '.Hoop Tourney . . · Gets ·l.Jrt4erWay Tonight Four members of the Unlv~lty of California · family ·'Wil( converg;on UC Irvine's Crawford 1Hall tonight do bat· Ue Jn the a n n u a I All-Oal • ketball tounwntnt with UC Rl""11do,.!avored lo win Ila lhinl atraight llUe. ' Acilon gets· under waiy 1t 7 when ·Rlvenide (11·2) J.angles with UC Davis (t!l· rMinOclia~ lollowlng at t lbe host Alll01lers (10-7) meet UC San Oltgo CM I wlih the 0willoen I Saturday ~ at t !or the champlonshtp. µc San Diego dfleelOd UC Sanll Cruz In a challenge game ~ night In Crawford Hall, 8M'I, oiler trallilig. aJ halftime. Santa Cruz will ;... u intra- mural llktar Ioa.m !""" ua IGofght at 5:30., . Coach Freddi<! Go;. hlS the RIYf11ide team off to Its beil lltrt in Jilst.Orj iancf the Illgblanden hav. ""'1 nnlted 15th in the NCAA college division polls. this sea sop. Lee McDougal (11-5) is the loam's leading scorer with a 12 point average and a 12.S rebounding mark. Stu Kops (6- S) Is acorlng 11.t per g~e and Jobn 1 Griffith t.. bitting 11.9. • UC Davis will be oul lo avenge an earlier 67-!0 1 ... to .the HigblOden. The Aggies are plCed IJr.tbrmer UCI merve Gary. Foz who Is bitting at on 18.I clip Pl!f pme. llAI ls;ointd in the boc.kcourt by another ex-ua lreshmM pla)'Or, Andy Hwen, 1be boot Anlealm are eemlng off a tlu..-g"'"I' losing 1troal! on the road but have an elg~amo home vlc1«y Nein mlact, UCI coach Tim 11/t may 1111M several changH In bis openl11g lineup io bobter the offense and give the 'I.SD) moro speed, .. j • ' • ' o ... u. v PILOT J 7"' Musta.ngs Bat~le Vikings, Lagunans Face Vni Tritons, MV ·CM Gymnastics Meet Set ·. , ! • •• ~ -~ Lions, Tars In Key·. League Tilt Resume Play . Rugged Griffins San Clemente and ~fisslon In A, ' • Wllh the Orange League University In its first year o! •Viejo high schools, a pair of Ctlon , baakttball race beginning lo baskelbaU, has faltered In tailenders in lbe Creslview WbUe Irvine League ljlg •ho\! fOIPll~in VJ!)ley aQd Cqrona· dol Mar play for \It• league Jead, a couple of otlif!' teams who think tMy're con~ tenders wlll be ln ectlon tonlght. Costa Mesa will be at Im Alamltot, Edison will.piny 1t Babashoff League basketball race, will Sant.A Aqa Valltt an'c:J Estan-tighten up, Laguna Beach's each of Its league games and try to elevate their places In cla will host /~goolia. At Marina High School will try . Artl!ts will try ta stay In the has an 0-5 record. lhe standings tonight. - games will begin at 8 . ....-.....-__,___to Jteep ftlfiit;fii'iilii(Siinjijt-tlilClfOf161DjS~t;vliltlng Saddleliack lW -not won San Clemente's Tritons have Costa M.~'1 Ml!!langs 'are League bukotball oopos aJlve · a, WJ>l'ilini University team since beating Urilverslty In.tis the eaJier task as bolh teams a surprlsing'S-1 tn league play,_ tonight, hosting an ~ifn that ls only a game behind the second Orange Wgue contest play at 8 o'clock. but may flnd the going tough team that has proved itself the ArUsts and dropped an overtime tilt The Tritons. 1-4 in league at. Los Alamitos. • ~rest in ~league. •ln the only other contest in· t 8 a Tu sday and 4--11 overall, travel to Villa ;nie Griffins, while only l·-1, rn ~ area games, _ 0 • re e . · Park to play a team that has are bard to beat ln tbfilr 9wn WfstmJ.nSter ~ ~ W~@~ -.v!lvm.g an Or®ge Coast area Laguna_ ~Sh. 'Yas_ ~bbed I managed onl~.!>ne win all gymnasium and baye. an all· .and Newport• Harbor!t Tars l:e~. nana Bills wW host for second behind Ya.lencla in , season whilij1.ission Viejo league call!>ff g.,rd ln 5-10 wUJ tacl<le•vbltlng Santa Ana. S!iddlebac~ In quest of·its first pre-lesgue ·polis;, but tbe Art-vtslts Tustin. sparkplug Oien Myers. All ~irbegin1at 8. , , , · ~gue win. lilts Jost a 59-58 game to El Villa Park has lost 11 in a Costa M~ gotched its third Marina fell 3'2 in league "ll'ipoff for all games ls 8 Dorado in overtime and then · i-ow, ,tru;ludl~ ~ heart-breaker league win Wednesday with a play a!teri.oara·blew-t'be V(k· o'cloCk. fell V 1 . 52-S'l to M1s,,1on V1eJo Tuesday, 45-c 41~ vie~ •XII' Edison whUe-ings out; 'n-55, 'Wed\l~Y. Wllh fronlrunners Sonora to a encm, · , · 43. ompetes Santa Ana "Vlilley was domg and now ·rmds Itself in tllfrd -.and 1Et .. Jlbrado bolh losing lflhe.Artists!>t~t Unlversl-San Clemenle's rocnrd isn'l the same to~Lbs Alamitos, 68-pl~ce be~'Loara1and'H~t-.~'l'Yesday, paguna Beach, at a. !Y they W®ld fiilil U~emselves ' the glossiest in Orange C.oun· • 62. initon ee.th, botbr 5'-0. 2,ois a gunl! behind those two m a two-way ·Ue with either 'ty, but at 4-11 its considerably. Shirley Babashoff, Fountain The F~ns tied fort~ '1'b:ose I tw~ teams' ~ teams and Valencia, all4--1. SOnora or El Dorado ror &ee·' better than· Villa Park's. Valley's Olympit gold medal wlUi Q>sta -Mesa, will be tonigbt..'and U Marina should · ·But University with a ond place, Thpse -two tevins TheTritDns lost a 7l·55 con· winner, heads a list of h~avy favorites over Edison ln win· against an Anaheim team surprising· 2'3 lea~e mark, is play each other tonight. tesf to Orange Tuesday, and The Costa ~1esa High School· physical education department will sponsor a girls' gym· nasties meet Saturday in the school gymnasium beginning NO HOMf TV at 10~15 a.n1. The event is free and witf• feature contestants 14 a~ older frorp nine high schoo ls' and seve.ral gyinastics clubs. NO RADIO ,. • Soothern. PacUic AAU swim-their peculla!: gymnasium. that is 0-5 and star.ts -~ -11~ onlY· a· notch behind the Univer·sity and Dana · Hills ' have yet to win since trim· mers who wiU compete Edison bias yet ~ w!n a'.league junior lineup, the, V~s • Artl!ts. ·Tuesday Laguna fought to a 45-45 ·standoff in ming Foothill in the league's ANAHllM· CONVENTION CINTElt against a Northern California game and playing m the lUU'· would be.jw:t a game out1of SUrprised.Sonora, 66-$9, while regulation play.Tuesday, but first game. At1111.s10.oo.s1.00A11 H m,...,.,H contingent at the Culver City row confmes_ol Uie Sant~ f.na &eCOOd -place and , a playoff : UrilVerslty edged Dana Hills the Trojans wrapped up the _Mission Viejo, s.& overall For tklet hlfort!Hltlo111 * n . 611·5000 Natatorium Saturday af· Valley gym 1ls'dlfQcult. ' berth. . . 4M7 in overtime. game in overtime · on Paul · but 2-3 (fifth place ) in league, ternoon at 1 o'clock. Valley \ms a Co"'ple of fl~sb,Y. W~!er, after a ~~ ~ : Dana Hills, expected to Simon's free throw and Jeff faces a tan Tustin squad that A PROMOTION Of NATIONAL SPORTS LIMITfD, KINGSTON, JAMAICA, W.L Mias Ba)>ashoJf will swim players !f(R. Jt. Ja~son .and pointing ~Jeague campaign, finish above Brea ~indi.·iStyieirsi'ibai'i~i\ii' iiiiiiiiiiiiiihasi;ioinli,y,ja;i55-ii50iiloissiitiioiOiiraiinigeiiiiiiiiiiiiliNiASSOCiiiilATilOiNiWil1HiiiViiilDiEOi liiECiHiNIQiUiESi.<iNCi. iiii·iii., the 100 and 200 free in the ZS. Mike BM:Oikj:, while .F.dison has won t~o of Its five &met -=-ili-iiiiliijiii -~-yard pool and anchor the has a goocJ'sbooter in guard games and finds Itself a game "" medley relay team. Dirk Zirbe~ who hit for 18' behind 'Western in the stan- M. · y· j • Val · Lee against Ceroaa· .Ciel Mar dings, ' 1ss1on te o 8 ene Wednesday' ,f. Edison Jost that Westminster continued to is rated sixth, in the U.S .. and lath in the world in the 20(). game, 67-58. ,get good per!Ormances fro~ meter butterfly where she bas MagnQlia shares the Irvine junior Dave Walsh and senior 8 time of 2:07.3. She· also balemen't with Edison and will Gary Andrews. Walsh, who · h 5oo free nd medle be an wlderdog against Estan-had 17 against Newport, is srs t e .. a y cia. 'Ibe Sentinels were up for averagh;1g 17.2 in league play re ;~imv-tendlfig-member-l!:ounlalll \'alle)L \\'edne><lay~whilb\ndre.ws hasJbot ~ of the team is Susie Whitaker bUt'lost, 55-49. 14·2 clip. in the 200 individual medley: All three are members of Flip Darr's Huntington Beach Aquatic Club. Other area swimmers com· peting include Karen Hanssen In lhe 200 free, butlerfly and freestyle relay; Wit Davis in the 200 'breamtroke; and Bruce Furniss In the 200 IM. Monarchs Host Saints their victims is a' highly· regarded Long Beach Poly team. . ~ea swimmers In the lS.14 age bracket include Debbie Holt, Kelly Hamill, Stacey Pletz, Bill BabasboU, Byron _Sims, Mike Kelly and Tracey Mater Dei High School puts its unbeaten A n g e l u s League record on tbe line tonight, hosting a St. Anthony basketball team that was the league's pre-season favorite. It's an 8 o'clock encounter. Mater Dei is 2--0 in leag~e Jl'lay while St. AntQ9ny is l·l after dropping a surprising 47· 45_game to Bl.shop Amat. Mater Dei Won easily Tues- day, beatilig Bishop Amat 54- 43, but forward Greg Green is still operating below par with a bad ankle. Green was averaging zs· points pei' game be(!)l'e suffer~ the injury five games ago. Cook. In the 11·12 group are Allison Grant, J a m ·e s Bergeson and Bymie Miller. eak SPORTING HoDS . SINCE 1924 But ·the Saints are 10.5 overall and included. among Forward George ij:erold is the leading scorer on the team, averaging 20.7 points. -·------- Selling Pro Sports for 47 Years. A SKIERS PRO SHOP ' - We know skiin~we know why skis turn-"'we ·know. why some skis don't turn-we know the latest trends iri ski clothing-vie know good ski_b~o1i ilri.d' h~l'f !o fiJ them-we ~nc>W h~w to mount bindings right-we know how to foam boots the right woy.' ' ' . ' (Lots of People Claim those things) BUT WE KRoW!., • All new Kn lessl short skis 'in rental TENNIS SPECIALS • froin HIAD Th ........ ,, of ftl•lr roc::k•h Tho ~RI Sp.cial 1ntrod11Ctory price factory authori1ed. Nylo" Std"g ....... $3600 Got S1.;,9 ......... t39ts " • PRO 1 00 Alum Racket Strvn1 "It~ nrloft. l•t-$1,.fl • • Tretorn Tennis Trainer 1 ... s•.tS ""' ........ 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Sim: 52Dx1 :I r. tGOxl S·L71115 CAMPERS & TRUCKS IOOl16·S t5h16·S 701117 . 12·16·5 SIZIS: 700116 70011 5 171•16·1 750117 10·16·5 Compact Cars $1-4· 95* 6.5Q.t3 ··--------. s1gso* Intermediate Cars 1.7s.H.-1.75-1s Stand!!rd Cars s22~2,: ... .25-1S Large Cars '23~~: "Ttlbllesa w1111ew1ll prices pllll tl.75 to s:z..e Fed. Ex. Tax per ti,., Wpetldlng (X\ tiU: General Calibrated• DUAL•S I EEL AAl)IA~· •Radial body plies of Poly- ester Cord absorb shock Snd impact for a comfort- able ride. •Strong Steel Belts hold tread firm for long mile· age, and provide armored protecti9n for you and your fami ly against pene-' 1ratiorLand road hazards. , ........ ' HI · SPEED "ON YOUR TRUCK" WHEEL BALANCE for CAMPER TRUCKS HIAYY DUTY RAIN COATS ind RAIN SUITS ....... ., W•IMll ONLY TIRES FOR SMAL.L CARS PINTOS-DATSUNS $4 .,. TOYOTAS-fALCONS F · _ and' OTHERS . 0 . · 600 x·13 ··~~=11 • , " ·oo 11.1' ... F.E.T~ General Tjre SAFE STOP SPECIAL Complete BRAKE OVERHAUL 1. Int.II NEW llH¥y d11ty 11"1'' 011 oll 4 wheels! 2. lM•Ud tM cylllldet's 011 oll wheels! J, llfttl k.k• -histoll 1ieot"f d11ty broke fl11ld . 4. llllpftt Mab Nhlni .,rl"t'· 5. T•nt elld tnte ell 4 broil• dr111111. 6. l.,.a. "'"' whffl Marlftts. 7, Atlj• 1iN1ies nd d9ectl o_,..llCY li11kog•, ........... , .. , ......... , .. • ALL $ FOR ONLY. •• 95 MOST U.S.CAAS (Oi1c bfl kH 11ottnclud,11.d} Only ... -- FRONT END: ALIGNMENT We correct Caster, Camber, Toe·l n, Toe-out to 'your car manufa cturer's apecificatlona ., .Safety~9_heck anr1 adjust your steerin9! $850 Oi:lrnpacl American C•rs !Cliri wl!ll Air Cond. and/or IOf'slon lhlfl COii ••tr•.) DTU "llJJMCl CltNCll fOll CA1S WITH All COHOlllOl'OllC OR 'IOllSIOW IAll :~ATTERY SALE S•ve 20% off the everydty low price of any Delco or Wfllanl Bat· tery In s1ock. Exchange required. fREE INiTAL.1.ATION FREE BATTERY TEST Not 1ur• 1boutyC>11r batttrycondillon? We'll tell It lrH! Don Swedlund COMPLITI CAR ,CARE SINCE ' 1959 .. eOA-ST 'GENERAL TIRE 646.5033 .. HOURS: 7:30 to 6:00 Dilly .540-5710 . . ' , . .. . .. .. ___ _...__,_ __ ,...-....... J DAILY PILOT Frid~, January lq, 1~73 . ' T ~ I·• .. •, t• . ' ' . South Coae h olleybaU Tourney Set Holland Calls Ru stlers Face Cubs National S ki Week Se t ·to B egin Today Drags le rs AJOCill -'l'be Orange Co u n t y Volleyball As90Clatlon, and Volleyball Club wW host a most contastanta will be In the · girls volleyball tournament lf.1$ ycor old 1.-nctel 'Ille S.turday at Marina HJgb tournament Is open to the LOS ANGELES -Back in By M. R. SNOW All areas are Involved In The second n>W1d of clng SChool. public wllb lldlnlaslon r .... the th1C'k of th<' Southen1 0t 1t1e o.uw "'llM '1'" celebrating the week with in the Oranae County ntmia. The tournament , which will Among the ,members of the CaHfornia Conlerence baskel· Skiers are beautltul people. special programs tbat includes tional Raeeway' AH-pro be hdd from 9 1.m. lo 5 p.m. Orange County Club team are Selection Th .rill bttll race, G()lden W~st COiiege purtlcularly for the pext IO numerO_µs competlttve evenb:, .erte11 leli \lnder 8Y Sunday, wlei•l!._~~--11118 orllletbe "1!~ .. ~~ ,... .. .,... Cllrlt, Anna Hooker, days, starting today through ,_____ d Ith ,..,. 9 and .. ~ u v ......., " """" b.ids for its third straight Jan. 28. \I/by! Because lhe 9th reduced prices for ~i.a an w · qua ... ,. mg a.m. Clllfotnla atta. Toni Picard, Bar b a r • By ROGER CAR!.WN 01 .... 01i1Y Piiot lta" satisfied with. his overall slate circuit \'ictory tonight at Los annual Natiooal Ski Week is lifts and olher attractive ellmln1tlon r from M:30 1be AA rankfug b the ae-Brebrict and Ann Goldenlon, after an initial 1•7•1 baptisn1 in Angeles City Co llege. u ~s an 8 being celebrated with the come-c:m. Snow Summit, one 1 p.m. cond b!ahest of the U.S. all from Hwitinatoo Beach. A 4-f.I season is somewhat less than a 7-3 cam paign that includes a league cham· plonship, bot corona del Mar Hll:h football coach D1tvc Holland "'as not to be overlooked as coach of the South sQuad in this year's 14th aMual Orange County AU·star football game. 1967 is a respectable 23-22·1. o'clock game. theme of "Safer Skiing ls No of the 1nore popular &JCal Leaders after the ftrst oc1.;~;,;;;;,;;;;o;;.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;.;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; "I tOOught I might have a The Rustlers. aJter losing Aecident." areas, for ins~ is ho.rtlng four races ln the $50,000 event p f 5 rf shot at this game as an Primarily. "the week" is a F taln V II ' To GrGftl0Uft po I ''1brilled and surprised," are two comments from Holland that just about sum up his reaction to being named the Rebels coach. And although last year·s .500 mark isn't a record Holland is assistant, so it cert&ioly is a lh<lr first Jwo gal)les to LA the Ski Writers of Southern . are oun a ey s m real thrill for 1ne," adds the Harbor and Santa · f\1 onica, campaign to introduce new· California on the weekend. McEwen in the tunny car l:, '/ii ch comers to the sport, with · Do ~-·~-In I Corona del J\1ar coa . have posted wins over Cypress Jo Alexander, who -tes diviston, n r-1 1.Nl~ume "'•'J ·~g. i'n everybody doing his bit to wln .....--... . ,. Hjs teams have led the &nd LA Southwest. new devotees, nationwide. In Snow summit, has arranged a top fuel and Butch Leal in pro Irvine League in fewest points Coach Dick S t r I c k 11 n ' s boosting safely, the Nitionol busy agenda, kicking of f stock. c-J .allowed the past two years Rustlers trail unbeaten Harbor Ski Patrol System takes the tonight and aetelerating McEwen ls actually tied for J..•nnid and the Corona del Mar men· and Santa f\fonica by two lead and desires to get across through Sunday. The Summit pl Ith Da u eb PIATVIJ ........ '°' RANDS tor says he'll be employing his games, but the two leaders the ronowing points: bas night skline from Wed· first ace w ve 'i ara. ,.7'aa.ui defensi\'e system in the have tougb games tonight. Know the 'Rules of the nesday through Saturday. McEwen narrowly defeated 1111w DV""'°" .t.uSTULlAN August affair. Harbor visits East LA (3+1) Road' before you take off Nastar racing is held once a hlm in the semifinaJs of the nNNIS IALLS "Right now I'd like to find and Santa f\1onica hosts Rio down the slopes. Select the week. opening race, a It b o u I h Sl 11 ,~ ~ J.. aff' assistant who is vecy Hondo (3-1 ). Thus, victories by proper equipment and give it Much of the action for Uyehara had the top speed _,._., strong in the ofieruiive side of East LA and Rio Hondo would the cart it deserves. Tpke a California will involve the and low elapsed time in the OT1t•• ,...,. , ... "1• c•N lhe game. When we decide creale a four-way tie lor the ski le.sson -you'd be surpris· Ti.hoe _complex of Squaw dlvlalon. TV~':wi:~:.:. ~· :,.,,, ,.:,L ' what we'll be running then ronlerence lead and put ed. at the difference it can Valley, Heavenly Valley. Beer The wins by McEwen and IUMDAY "TO t we 'll take • good look at Golden West just one game make. Ski in control -use Valley, Ski Incline, Alpine Pnidhomme were surprlffs. 333 E. 17fll St., Costa M- e\'eryone and see if we can get back. release bindings. It's the Meadows and two "rookies", McEwen bad nevtf won a fun-{Behind The Intematlona.l Houae ot Pancaket) the right people to run it." LACC's Cubs come into skier's responsibility to take Northstar and Kirkwood, ny car Tace at OCIR while 'HONE 642-6116 Spikefest Lures Top Area _1~ces His team's defensive pf"(r tonight's game with an <H: care of his own bindings and which made their debut this Prudhomme was wlnltss alnce e IXPllT ITllNOING & PIOMPT 11,All blem begins with containing ire~cio~td~. :_::.__:.__ ____ _!h~a~ve:._:tth~em~a~d~jus~t~ed~pro~per~Jy::_. -"'~'~'°"'.":..· _ _,_ _____ ~la~ol~Jan~ua".!n'!·:__ ____ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the \Vestem High triple option 1- LOS ANGELES -Lasse VireJl of Finland. Frank Shorter. the 0 Lym pi c marathon champion and Sullivan Award wiMer, Steve Prefontaine of Oregon and , A-1arfy Liquori of New York headline the field for !he twa;- mile run in the Sunkist Indoor Invltational track and field meet Saturday 11t the Los Angeles Sports Arena. In the mile it will be Kip- choge KeirlQ of Kenya ·"·ho_ won the steeplechase at the '°tunich Olympics against capwearing David \Vottle of Bowling Green, who captured the Olympic 880-meters run. But for Orange Qlunty prep track and field enthusiasts, this is only a part of the show for the afternoon indoor m~t that begins at I o'clock. There are area athletes competing in 10 prep and junior college events including three in the high school shot put. Judd Binley of Laguna 'Beach High. Joe Tosti of Corona dell ~tar and Jim Neidhart of Newport Harbor ~·ill be vying in tbe l2·pound shot event . Tom Distanis\ao of Newport will compete in the pole vault ·while Joe. Dengar of Corona del ri.1ar is listed as a partici· pant in the high jump. On the running track, Scott Kioers of Mission ViejQ is ·entered in the 600, Robert Bradford of University High is · in one heat of the 1.000 and Preston Qmpbelt of Marina in another heat. Ken Martyn of Marina is the ·Jone area participant in the mile run while Robert Angel of Huntington Beach is en· ' tered in the prep two mile. • Golden West College will . have a team competing ip.,,the second sectiqn of the junior college mile relay with Bob Schenk . Gary Petry, Ray Har- ris and Phil ttaas named ot the team. Mary Decker will run in the women's mile run. represen· • 1ing the Blue Angels of • Hwitington Beach. The Orange Coast Girls Oub will be among the participants in the junior girls 640--relay with Tanya Willis, Pat f\fcFall. Gemma Dodson. Kathy Anno and Raedeen Rona listed as · possible runners. auack with perhaps All.ClF A.~AA player of the year Bob Acosta at the controls. Acosta's appearance is speculative, since the Los Angeles Shrine Game is ex· peeled to be played at nearly the same time -forcing Acosta to mak,e a decision as to which game to play in. Should he stick with bis coach and the North Orange County area it's a certainty he 'll be the No. 1 offensive threat that Holland must find a way to stop. "NobOOy really stops him completely," says Holland , "we'll have to figure out something to stop the triple and of course he's a heckuva threat. "More than anything we'll be recruiting for personnel to fit our particular offense and defense," says Holland, who was named coach of the year in the lrvirie League following the Sea Kings' 1971 ,season-. , The game is expected to be held either Aug. 9 or 16. The' North leads in the series, 10-3. Title Fight Carried Live In Anaheim World heavyweight boxing champion Joe Fraz.ler's tiUe fight with George Foreman will be carried live over closed circuit televisio n at the Anahe im Convention Center Monday night. The scheduled t~rounder will begin at 6:30 with the Convention Center doors open· ing at 5:50. The bout will be telecast from King ston, Jamaica. Frazier, who has defended his title twice against lightly regarded opponents since the monumental bout w i t h Muhammad Ali on March 8, 1971, . ls expected to get a much stiffer challenge. from Foreman, the former Olympic heavyweight king. ~ Since the Ali fight, Frazier has stopped Terry Daniels in five rounds and knocked out Ron Stander in four rounds on May 2.5 of last year. Tickets are on sale at the Convention Center box office and most ticket agencies. All seats are reserved with prices at $10 and $8. ' ~ Now ..• You Too Can Lease a Lincoln-Continental ) Call us today for the exciting new Full Mai ntenance Lease a-t Joh nson & Son on the Lincoln or Mercury of your choice. The trouble free wa y to enjoy that new car you want . • 540-5630 ASK FO R YOUR FREE LE ASE BOOK LET Ou.,., ''"""I• •F•it,.Jr:;,,, c.,,,.• hnson&son 1~--1 • IRIMD PRll ,.,,.,_ lltllfll.IU ~ . .,. GR AN D PRIX OIL FILTER 99~,, BLAC K TIRE AIR PUMP Gt~t Fat 8 ic:yt.le lnlforobJ. Toy• & Arhletic Equipi.ari a-@ .. il;ill HAVOLINE MOTOR OIL "' & 30 WEIGHTS GALVANIZED OIL DRAIN PAN 3~Gall1111 Capacity Great Fot Washing Porta GREASE GUN MOOEL 110 Refillcili'- E••y To 0p.,g,. F..-H-, for111, Sllap 299 88' 14" LUG WRENCH 99~ SA VE 30%. • 50tX. . GUM OUT CARBURETOR CLEANER THERMOSTATS CHECKER ANTl·FREEZE ProtmY_. Car Afol.11st W~F,.-1~? KAR CHECK. PERFORMA!ICE TU!IED ENGINE TUNE-UP EQUIPJaNT SPECIALS SftOf' CllUCXER Al/TO PAKn AND SA.¥8 JOI' TOJ'O% A. IGNITION POWERED TIMINGUGHT B. VACUUM& "PRESSURE TESTER C. COMPRESSION TESTER ,. D. REMOTE STARTER SWITCH 1?! PRICES IHICTIVI THRU JAN,UAIY 23, 1'73 TREWAX SPECIAL 4 SEASONS CAR WAX & CAR CLEANER OrNt For ! u .. 0n a.- And Fil*t'-•• Boott T1ol U .. ln SW! Or · """ O.ter,.,.t R"lliant "'''""" ~ .. ........ Slull 10.124 14 ..... 2!2.. LICENSE FRAMES With MettlMI Or Plai• .,_ CHECKER LIFETIME !!_TJERY 1999 Fw The LIJ.ti.. P.A. OIY_P,._... c .. HERCULES HEAVY DUTY LIFETIME GUARANTEE SHOCK ABSORBERS 5~. WATER PUMPS HORN Kl TS 5!2. 1 AMP BATTERY CHARGER . '°" 12 Yoo S,•fftl• R.•1• '·" 3" HERCULES LEVEL ' LIFTS K..,.y_ RIO. s-1h ...... y_ Load Lev.t c_,..,,,,. At PriC«• li1 To 121.00B.q 1111.,.,,.,. 10~t ...... ~· ...... . STORI HOUIS: "Ii , Dodly ' .. ' Suade)' t te 6 ' ,. : BAN~AMERllWID ,.1 '· .• ·········· . ... Alamitos Racing ted ~A~f!,~ Checking Ou-t Prep .. © ... ~:~: •• rt« ~ ICCC Tourney I -~ 11 ~ley Etiglehorn, Sendra follow<d by He I en Bunla " ' PalinC!r, PllD HlUlnt and I (:!$\\) Ind Allee Qel(er <•r. , \' .. "'"' ~ boll or ~ members or Ille ~1roe11.a crandall ci>ooed.C -J!!!•-1 ll"OlllClll:O PiU'"mkm! Goll fll(hl with 15 wllb . ClorJa ll: -~,.., l 11~ wlD parjlclpata In Bowland l8COlld at 17\\. OM ~ ) t tbe thfrd IDD\ZAJ Lad)' Pfo. --:;--.JCll,.... I -ml1ed Amateur lourol-t •t El J\'lpel ' "" ~J. J111. 111 women's dub member11toged " ;:;., .... n ...... ~. lrVlnt Coul Country Club El Niguel COClnlry CIUb ~· • w•11 ;r' The female 'pro otara will a better nine, ball haM!"'ll ,;:-, I ,., partldpate In nveaomeo !hat tournament lhi1 week. I -•llOW • ft ........ to -"" · 1 will Include two member• of In A Hight, Betty Pine w11 Mind ~ ..... • Jl1Cll. Thia 1811• the women'• club and two the winner with Sf\\ followed -111 i., fl'l1 _., -...,. II from the men'• club at ltYlne by Eiieen Sclluhmann (M), llllnk flOllllolly. Ill ~ ir> .,,,. m a~-~··-Coast CC. Scorinl will be on a Sue Foley (17), Ne 11 For ....,,..... IUllPOM J011 .. f-.it ..., 811 two net low acorea of the Townlend, Jackla Wallon ad llPP.-11 shot 11181 -fly CMr • -tnp nvesoma bull. Fran Hille (II). (UlullQolloa #1). If JOU .-.... ,...rMlf dUllllllnm g=I Ill Tile publJc Is inViled to A tie resulted for flnt • Ill• shot Into .the .......,, JOU p.-..., wtll do ·Jiiii wltnm tbe action with a in B Dll!>t -.i Edith 11111. m. ~:;mr.,.. Iii lbotgun atart gettlni tbe COCll-carpenter and Ginny Peden at ",_,., ____ ·., I -....... lll8t the ....... ii petition under way at 11. 31. Dom llandscbucb ad nolllt the ,,_ end lll8t the llrpr-ii ....., ...,. 1 _.., ,-. , _ Mia Higgins wu tbe In-Gene Oln'icll Ued for the nut Ancf (~ #2). -I muof olmply llrl!e ""' -a.-cllvldual -list yw wbtn place at 171> with three the bill IOlidlJ end flm"1 _.,, to -the ll'~! the fired• course roconl 16. players at 11 including ·Joan .. ....,... burillor." Thot'a Ille ~ tlllnkJns Other mem1>er1 or the 1our Short, Ruth Cohen ad i..e r .. -lllklna oboul. ... .-...;. ... - expecled to play In ·the event Ginder. ~;:;~:;;;:;;;~;;:;:~;=;~;:;;:;;::;;,1 Include Marilyn Smith, Boony In 'the c rughi, C8rolyn r -.. --·---... -.... Beyont, _,,, Wilder, Diane SWartiey wu the winner with ..... -- -JOO lo Ml -"T-11, Pattertoo. Jane Blalock. " followed by Marty 1'1rner ....... ,. A toPr .. ,..,. flt 20i ....... " =; ... UJ Shlrley Spark, Betty Bur--and Carol Peep (31th); HeJea :::~~·•• u&, w&•AllllM Nllill,1!1 .. tf .... felndt, Clara Glaagow and Bertaon (Ill\\); Edlth Wray,~...;.;.;.. _____________ _, 'l" uc!i.T ~ "J~ •di&~ Sharon Moran. Corette Reaaon and . Abbey • ,.i!.li':,,,, . '• I! M--~-·-i.rJc . Coltrin !39\\) .. ;:;, -In D fllahl It wu Maude r!r,• ~ ' · 11 MelDbers olthe Meadowlark Weidman (Ill>) with Nancy ' 1:t::'Jl(o I · 1j ""'·•~· Club women's club Daugherty (311>), MaEM o.0:~/:, rll ,_, 1t ., a O.N.E.lj. toumaintnt Jolley and Martha Urquhart I ...,, -,. -. 1 "" this week. (17) and Marvis Linn and ~ 'l!l..-...., -· In FUghi A, Helen Moulton Billie MacKenzle (311). '. ..;;;r, -"1t ,,.. IJ!o~1MI.; ., 5 j{ Mable Cllristenseu 1 n d Rt111elao SI ' I 1 fl Dorothy Mulligan tied for • Sally Onley won low net '"'"'°'" 1 ::I 11~ cond at :!$\\ wllh Floftnce bonon ID A Olght In ·tourna-T11t c-t 1 11 Baker nezt at 36. ment action at Rancho San ·HV~NTM uc9-!JI.,,._ iv-In B fllght it was Corinne Joaquin Ulil week with a 73 li~#i · ji! IUchard!oo on top with I> ~i'/:;~ by Margeret IleBach t~FZif.l-~· '1111 Gals a h ~.s (~~·~I= ~ ~> • 38 .McDaniel nezt at IO. r;r;.., ' t"'"'"'" . 11: 'Marjorie 'llultcher -'tbe -. alkll 1.Ji~l1 111 C tiUe with 75 followed' by VI· -In F tball vlln Troutmao with 71. .J.'\'ll: :.~~.,.~'1l;ol. '-!:: 00 JO)U Roberts copped the D ~~~~. , m Twin Bill ~~~::·:er: HNJk Alamitos , I Racipg Results ,, Super Bowl VIi has eome and gone -DOW it'I. Ume for oome real grid thrills. S&turday nlghl at ·Newport Harber High is the time and ICelle for tbe annual Powder Puff football game doobleheader Involving junlon and oenlon from Estand.I and Costa Meo,a Hlgb·Sdlooli And U put , performances an aay liidlcatlon ll WOU!d'ap. pear tbe dlalaf! · '!id• <1.' gld win 111"1 qutdo anytblq tbe Natlooal Football League had lo ottor llt-terma d.·tlirtllo and udlmielltT The opener at 1:30 features the junlora and ....... oY Costa Mal and Estancia'• two clUSta will vie at a. Memben of the Mesa Verde Country .club women's club !!aged a low grosa, low net tournament this we\et. . in A Olght, LllclJJe Paddock copped gross honon with an 87. Emy Buretle WU the net winner with 75 followed by three players In 1 tie !or ,.. cood at 77 and lncludJn& Lupi Sutton, Verda Shirley and Barbora Malick. In the B flight, Joole Tipping W83 the gross -with IOL Arlene Verfurtll and Mary Singer Ued !or net with 71 followed by Phyllll Kalllher with 'II .. Ba.rt>ara Peu llnisbed her round with a birdie on Ille 18th bole to break 11111 for the lint lime In her golfing · career. Barbara posted a proud • alter her •Iron& llnlsh. .JV, Fros•, Sop• Hoop Summaries -. For Coast Area .... ,., (S1J c.-.. Mer lJo'f O•> I' ltll Tucker bnoM (f) I" (21 sr-IIWI l'OfMlt (6) c (2A) hltt Twtir fl) G (4) OdmrlNn W'"9n (Ill G (') .._. korlno eubl: l!dl-.Mt.........,. (61, ltMMll (')I C:-.. Mir- ._.., (4). •11'1 (2). HttnlrN ~ tor.. dll Met', f1. ... The winners ol -two games will fetum to the ume scene Feb.. 3 for. Ille c:l>am- pion s bl p .. in . another doublebeader thal-jWlll. also decide third. place. Proceeds from the girls' battles ire · earmarked for Costa Me11 High studeat Pete Ricbardsoo. For Boes, GWC ! I ' 'lbe Mesa athlete was seriously injured In an ao- cldenl at the beach ill shallow water and is now a quadropeleglc. His progresnif this time is promising, however, with slight movement In both rtghl and left arms. He was chosen. most valuable lineman on Costa Mesa Hlih'• freshman lootball team end was a tract and wresUing atbleie, ·too, before the accident. Members of the two school's varalty football ~ams are handling the roacblnc duties and on paper both oenlor claues are narrow favorites lo dump lhelr )'OU!liet loes saturday. Ticket& for the pmts ere $1 for adult& and otudenll without A.SB cards, 75 cents for -with ASB cardl and 00 oeots' . for diildren under b1gb achool lf!e. nckete cal! be purchased at either high · achoo1 or it the gate and the donallons are tu deductable. Collegiate, Pro Scores . . . Mat Summaries HYY -llN!Mr (F) WOl'I b'( 11Drt9fl, Ctf"'* "" llQ ~ .. 1M ~ Hlll'llMkfr (Cl ftC. .:....... (0),M. .. 12'-......,. (0) -. :r.wp (Cl. ... lU-VtuOhln (OJ fllc. LOlfftW IC), ••• o. IG-IUCllll CGI die.•· Z9r'I' !Cl, t- 1Jt-MaM11 CCI die. Jt.., (GI. .. I. ISi -llupt (C) dee. W,.1 (Gj, II ... 1'7 -M....,. (01 Mc. 1cM11 CCI, .... 17' -W1ti;lflllcl {Cl WC. •ot11M CO), •• 190-aort.Mo {C) Ac.. CMudlil11 IGJ. ... HW -svtw (GI dttw -'"' ..... r IC), 7.7, ·Coast Rangers Trip Foe, 2-0 Wrestling Results U2 -AtMer•r Ill dK. ca.rt (Cl l 1. •n-l!'J!! I~~<;\\'_'!' 'll '"'· l:i :]m'!'. \ ~ ffi':l1 .¥' ~-•Miiit 1~.Y~1s112-1. 1•7-l"tttn CCI o.c. an.-IS! .. 1. n -SlilldMn:I (SI Ocie._ kl-CGI •1w· -~"' tCI w_c111 ~=It. VY -o.t'rlff (Cl Alim.An 1 ~ . " Ctl'Me ., J,::W(4Jrtrl> IA V1Hey •1-S-• (Cl Wlll'l .... ~11. I" -, ...... "! ""' .. "'"'I 1• -Ven111t11 I l OK, Foslw ~) S· '· ,n -ChaWI {$) OK . .:,_uer (Cl "I· ?t -lllVlt ($) olllnllt ThllmlllOI' fCI l :tt. l!S -J-1 tCI dee:. Wllllem1 ($) ,, • Ml -0...., ~I dK. WrlQtlt ':11. 1.iJ -Hlltl1rd o!Mld o.tort !:O'J. IM -ltuottw I die. F"lon IS 12· lf7 -Dktt m!i' ~ IS! _1!-_t, In -ICl oll!MO '"'*"'ld!M ( S: Its -T\lck ... ICl dtc. G1llow1v CS) 11·2. Hw-~~ c--.. Mir IDI UJ)IA V1ll1'f t1 -lllct>rnen !Cl dee. TMnl•• CSI 'ij· -W•bon I tl'f' fort.It. ,l _ •w~ }fl ~ ""' "' ••· 1p -H1lm1 )$ ';f'M.d SAdlllf' <Cl t:~,; _ ltfnbrl'IO !SI dee:. Craw IC! 7- S.13S -kl'll•-ICJ dee:. Thatcllw IS! '1-. -MOOl'I IC) dee:. c11tro (S) 2''\'iJ -Millan (CJ -b'f forfeit. lM -~--II !Cl dee. McGowll'I II I'"· " -"""' l'I -" ""'"'· 1n -Demlll• C plnnH A"frlm {$) l:\\, _ •ac1t1t11n fCl won b'f forlllr. Hw -Hotfmll'I 15) -11\1 forf•ll. Vlrwlt'f • ~ C14) U7l LNrl '7 -Ollll" fl) ditC lt"fl (N) 1-4 • 105 -Ellon (LI cilnMd McNIUllldOl'I IN! l :llt. 11• -Ewlllll Ill plnlllld Gr11'11t10 INl 1:.W. ltt -fry Ill won by dlllult. 12t -O.vlcllan ILi cit< Kov1lel'lk1 INI H. 11:5 M Otlrlngwhlctt Il l dee Tll II:._. (Nl M . 1• -~11 tNJ olnntd Litlll'lll (LI l:n. 10 -Mutlllo 00 PINMCI Strlc~ll'ld Ill O:JL 15' -Menlfll CNI pl!VIM 'N'f Ill 1:11. • 167 -~ (LI dee Cha-• (NI M. 171-••k"' !LI dee Thome (Nl S.I. 1n -~nth !LI dee Gwl CNI ]..O Hwl -NlwberfY (NJ ol!Wlld Hutton fl ) ''"· J-.,. V.nlty N..,.rt t•I c•l L.-8 '7 -AndwlOl'I 00 Ole ~ (L) ••• 1QI-killlll" CLI pinned Mlllu (NI 11•. IU -Todd Il l Mc. tlolllr &-1, ltt -MlfldM (l) dee. lpmrb (N) 1-1. Ut -Grtnl (l! Ilk. S.lll!Otr1 Oil ••• 11!11 -l"rlc:1 (LI plrtllld UOtf'llOtDVI INI 4:e. t• -lln0l11'911 (LI dee:. Mullen !NI 2-41. • • • U1 -Avret (NI dk'. l1k1r (LI s ... 15' -~. ~,.11111 fNI dk. L• Ill J.. 167 -Sutton tNJ plMld Hedi Ill <1:52. In -'11(1 (NJ plMld Gr1nl CLI 1:11. 1n -Norri• (NI l!!C· llUM'lltt (LI .. I .. HY'f -Nllfltl (NI DCMfd llikl tll l:M. Fl\daf, J....,., 19, 1971 110 -WitlM IS) '#Dl'I bV kw .. 11. ·~ -m;'' -ltY IOtlllT. Ul -(J) ir. 11¥ lt)hll!. 1~ = " c °1t1 tUfJ,J.,1~11 !·~-... -J..-'ll WOl'I bv JOrlllt. 171 -A-I WOii. ll'f' lori1lf, It.! -01bon1 -b'I' fllMll. Hwl -HlrtllfW I) -tl'f' fll"fllt. v ...... ,_,,,. Val..., 111) Cit) "" Allmlll1 •1 -Young IFV) _., b'f' 1ori.11. 105 -~1 (Ill doc.,,.,,.,.., fll "' .. 11' -SIHll (LI fie. St ... t (ll'l l ·t IU -Flook (l) plllMO C.11 ..... 1'9~ Ill 2:«2. 12t -Klw !Fl p!Med Wl\llUll' ll) t:10 !JS -H1rclm.-ri CFI DllWlld Htllofd (ll 1:11. 110 -Mor1ft (F) dice. SMllll Ill t-0. U7 -H1t.1eitll If') plfllllid tOW'fff' (LI t:C. 15' -Kl'llllll (LI dice. l"rtdtrkltt Clll '"S. ' •• IQ -Birt.I {l) die. .uclgel'I (ll'l ,, •• In -F<ittw !ll Ille. FIM:IM ll'J 1· lts -ktler (F) plnM!I H1llowly tl l .. ,.,. H¥Y -Llrkln (I") pll'lnld Wnco {LI l :l5. , ..... 't1nlty '"-!tl11 '11 ...... !•I CO l• AIMnltt. 91 -$tl~1ll (Fl plllllld EVtM (LI '"· 105 -M1ttb~ (Fl plmllcl Ouoll'll.-ri (LI :21. 114 -YUTltllll (F J pll'llllCI Lt.mm {LI 1:112. 1?2 -01vl1 (II') plnMd Hlf"l'll (lJ :a. 12' -Smith (Fl won by fort.It. 135 -loullO (F) OK •rendll /LI , .•. uo -Dit11n11 Cll'l dee:. McCormick (l) <l·l. U1 -H~I (Fl Olnned Do\lln10 Ill l :JJ. 15' -Hofl111d (II') p!fll'llll PrlMmWll (l) ''"· 161 -&itlll'ICI ... tF I pinned lulffl Il l 1:24.. 117 -Wiiie (l) WOii by forfeit. It) -Ool.lbl1 lorf9tt. Hvy -Kuhl'lt (F) WOl'I by loflllt. ·-~·-V .. Ny lb) 17) W AlatftltM '7 -Sll9P (II') pl!Wlld SI~ Il l :n. 105 -Smf!ll lF) DC""'4 0.¥11 ILi 1 :l1 • 114 -OrNrah (ll dK. Cha9' (Fl i-7. IZJ -G1rda (Fl dr9w wltll Lt1totl' (l) l·l. 12' -Cftllftblr't (11'1 JI/Mid lllil(Q'-fl) ;G. 1l5 -,Ith IF) c1et. McCer1trf 11"'11 140 -Ml~ (I") dtc x.m-(L) 1·$. U7 -l)ol.lt (I") plMed Mttdlell (L) 1:30. 15' -Mclnlalll (II') dee. Nert Ill 4- 0. 167 -W-CF I plllllld VIII' Ill <U. 1n -Hottl'lll« fll'I -w tom11. ltl -Klkll (II')••-wftll IC.%. Ill ... H"'f -M1tlpl11 (I") -lrf tarfllt. ·-Ml..,.. 'll.ie CM) tlJI Vllll ,.,. 91 -FtlnMll IM) oll'lnld Alltn (VJ ):S1. 1115 -S.mll1n IMI plnntc1 Hunltm1n (VJ 1:21. IU -Garcl1 IMI plnri.i u ... (VI :Jt . 122 -Wool-v I'll OIMld HCll!ll (M) S:'l2. Ut -~""11:lowl!1 (M) won lrf lllli•ull. 1l5 -S~.,. CMI plnntd 'ICIUltt• (!/) l :JO. - 11~¥J -LDWI (M) Mc. ArcNblld (VI UJ -Marrvw IMI ~l'lllild .. onc:o 1111 2:2'. l~ -H\111 (Ml plllllld N11ty CV) l !13. 161 -Hiii IMI dee. <MlllllM (V) '°'"'· In -Wtllff CV) pll'lnld """"411 (Ml 3:)5. :si~l -Ale• IMI ~ Hll"Mtt CVI H...., -llllwltlo IVI doc. kietntl• IMI 1·3. , ...... Vanny Ml..._ VIiie l41 1111 VI .. , .... ff -Glrutyn lMI -.., lor1itll. 105-Tlll (V) die. K-(M) •1. 11• -Drapw {Ml plrlMll ,...., ... IV) :st. n2 -•uwie (Ml -. Turntr (V) 1.0. 12' -Jpm:ifoW IMI pll'Wl9d Mllchitll (VI :JI. 115 -0,...,. (M) -1w twt.lt, 1•·-M4lrwrn IM) die, Uwl1 (VJ ... 10 -f'illull !Ml doc. GClldby IVI "" • lM -A"*ldat1 CM) WOfl W .,...,,..,, ,Jt'i:'L_ l"wtltl CMl Ill"'* WltU...,, 117-Mdrldt (Y)-.C. T.,..,_ (M) 2:'9. !ti -J1$11:1 (VI die. MOllrf IMI ll·7 HYV -Andw-(VJ WOii .., fllrflll. HY'f -•wMll IW) dee. SM1tt1 (Ml .. I. ·-•l!Mdt IMJ CNI .._ ts -1ct11mtn1,., M. CEdl lllrwiM Gooa.rtlM (() ,, ... 165 -SCHrnftllrw. N, l'fl'lllld CMJ1tl'nln IE ) l !ll. "' -Miiier (() ...,... lltlllnff IEll) •:IS. 122-M.auy HU ,.._ w.iw 1••• 1:1• 12' -l ltlll C•dl 1'1-*' DiMll'llMll IEI 2:». 135 -•lln!lr CIJ doc. • ........., ( .. I lt-1. ll/J -Mol .. Ill Dinned OUflfll (lldl ,: .. J. IU -llltnn !Edi die. Gorllllto 1!1 .. IM -,NII (l•l l'illl'ltlll CdlltM IEJ 1:12 • IU -Mlf11! (Ell) pllWllll ,MIOn1 IEJ •iSI. In -MWTIV (() .,_. wlltl f'll11i.o, (Edi 4' I • 191 -H1f'l'llnOlld II!)_, lrf '°'1111 H"'Y -11: .... (al WM lrf lofftlt. • Jllllll" Y•l"lltv atf_.. (G) ltl) .... t7 -lllVM (I!) dec. MlllOl'I Cid),_ 105 -W11tw llcl) •· lwl ... ll!t 10-t. 114 -llorlck Ill doc. Nlriet Clcl) ,_ .. I~~ i; l<oM Cl) Ille. Mlrd111tll• Ut -'"trtM (II dec. O~ (Edi IM. • 13$-Olowr ll!I -.., b'fllt. 140 -Oriti Ill plllllld lte,_ (fd) : ... ID -Cetlll'lt (II -tl'f' lorfotll, 1Jf -J-IEdl r· " ,.,,_,. IEI 2;.U. 1'1 -•11n11 !Edi plMICI Hieb (l, .... In -Ltrte CEcl) Dlllllld krlUlflldl IEJ 1:-. 191 -W1Mt..-C•I -..,. farftft, HYV -Wiii 111 ""'*i MeHl!io,. 1£d) :JI. ·-·--.. (It) 1111 ··-l. n -MMll !Edi die. 9..-fl' !El 1o II• -S. Wll-!II "f!'I.., fllrflll ••• 114 -Sl'nl1ll (E) -.:, ...... (l!dl J.:t.' 122 -Mlbff lll fr'-Wlfll Ht'Ylu llcll 1·1. "' -J-tll -M..-c1rttn (Edi .... 1'5 -S~o 11!1 pinned Hllfctllntl ( ... 1•-~ (r1r:rwi.Jc..-11111; l•T-Gtl-II dllc: •• ,,.... !lei\ .. •• 15' -ltotlln-(!di -b'f' forltC I. lU -COllOl1 forttll, 1n -1111....i IEdl pll!Nd McGiii•• (lJ. Ir> -"'°"'" II die, '•trick !E4J ... HY'f -0.... "'1111, sec Wrestling DAILY PILOT I • ' - • I ' i ___ ... Itlfiltet1's lforth I Phase 3 to Hike THERE ARE OVER WOO USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Hcarbar Boulevard af Car• ROB INS FORD OLDSMOBILE LOOll FOR THI IMILlM AT THEODORE I UNIVERSITY 2060 2850 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. DAILY Pll.qT l 7J f ' ' . • -• • • OVER THE COUNTER COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST I r. ' , • I i l ·1 I I • ' • • . • ' ' -------~ I l c;73 .TBUl'S«Lay's Closing P.riCiS*c.dmplet~ New · York Stock Exchange List Market Prices Don't Advance NEW YORK (AP! -Sf<l<k market prices con· Unu.ct to ldnnc• a bit Thurlday, tutled by reports ot pro.,..11 toward a Vltlnam cea•flre and more avldtnct of an Upandlnf economr. . The Comma,.. Oepartmen announced th•t personal lh<omt had grown by ,7.7 billion in De- cembef to a se-.ally al\jUJttd an n u a I rai. of $988.4 billion. Tht DtWI from Vietnam WU food, too. Tbe W)llt• Hclou1t llid ptealdenUal aide Henry A. Kilslng· er wouJ 10 to P&rit nut wetk to complete the te<t ot a ce ... 11re •cr•ement ) j • ·-~y PllOT .. • I - I • J ,,;...,, Ja....., 19, 1973 1j) = - I) ,_:1_ 2520 NO. GRAND..,~ • .. _ SANTA ANA ',~·~;.~ t--------1 PHONE 639-0504 1 •"~:,~;:M . 17th ST. <-GRAND GARDEN GROVE FW'f'. f8J ~GLASSEL!. INAUGURAL SAVES TIME SAVES YJTAMINS R09. $4.95 • '2.95 Hot Sandwiches TO GO PASTRAMI-BEEF DIP-HAM DIP 1s~. FRESH SEAFOOD DAILY BAR MALL MEAT WIENERS 6·9~ Je.. 1 M tltr9 27tt. o.ty. CORNISH 11 ... GAME 69 HENS -! LIMIT 3 PER COUPON GORDON'S OR WOLFSCHMIDT VODKA Your Choice! FULL HALF GAlLON TU BORG BEER 12 OUNCE CANS OR BOTTtES 6 PACK $139 DENMARK'S FINEST SCORESBY SCOTCH FULL 9UART f"!~~ :------~ ·= POPULAR BRAND CIGARETTES · Carnation ~ LIGHT • CttU.NK .. Sir JAX Meats 20982 BROOKHURST AT AlLANTA 968·5355 • ...., t :JIA.M. t• 7:JI P.M. -Soll•*t A s.Mr·t:tll A.M. f9 l ·P,M. FEATURING MANNINGS BEEF AND BAR M PRODUCTS CUSTOM COOKERY & CATERING P!CEEIUEAllfi!IJ . lVElU'llWV! BONELESS··· FULLY COOKED WHOLE Or HALF - . GIVE THE FAMll Y A REAL TREAT -·- . LA PAZ Margueri!a MixFULL QUART -5-9c . COLLECTOR'S BOnLES Beam's Choice :i~;~ 16 PROOF FULL QUART PASSPORT 599 L.99 . S·cotch $ -· ·FIFTH $UoUAR; . HALF $11" GALLON WINIJSOR SAVI $1:00 Canadian FUU $ --$499 59 ·-::--wh· k QUART -IS. y · I . • ' i ~ l ~E : "~ .·.2 ~-= ~ .. ~ IOllTOL ~ COMT g :S: " PLA%A BAR '. M SLICED BACON , ICIHTUCIY SERG~NT ll:END FIFTH · e CREME de MENTHE e TRIPLE SEC . e CREME do CACO QUART ~3" $2!! -~~ . FIFTH TARNOFF ' VODKA FULL FIFTH :$26? • • •• l6 OUNCE PLUS ·DEPOSIT : I . . '· ' ' ' ' • • -.. Friday, January 19 1973 OAIL.Y PILOT . · • , • f •• • Zuhin Mehta Returns to Orange Coast ' ~-.. - • . I , . , • • The w11m1 facts of the highly ·acclaimed 'KorHn Children's Choir radiate 'the melsage pf. !Mir concert program,. ·""To the World, 'Wjfft,_l0¥e.'1 1 for 8 p.m: 1T uesd.y in Ille Anaheim C911venti0ft' c...+et!. . . • I I • • I • . ft . ~-,. Hal 'O'Neal and Nilsa Ross will be join;, by the Contemporary BaUet Ensemble when it perfonns an or iginal dance conCert in 1 the Ne'l')>Ort Harbor · Art Muse~m al 8:30 p.m. ' Thursday. Tickets, · $1.50; members, $1 . I ' • Zubin Mehta brings the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra to Orange County Saturday, Jan. 27. The third concert Jn a series sponsored by the Orange ·county Philharmonic Society will be played at 8:30 p.n1. in the Orange Coasl College auditorium, 2701 Fairview-Road, Costa Mesa. No one will be seated during the first movement. according to J. Donald Ferguson, society president. Mehta will open., the program with Stravinsky's Four Norwegian Moods: lntrada, Song, Wedding Dance, Cortege. It will be followed by I . Mozart's Symphony No. 39 in E flat, K. 543 and after jnt_ern1ission, f Nielsen's 'Symphony No. 4, "The Inextinguishable," Op , 29. During November, Mehta and the orchestra toured Japan for the U1ird. time. buring the triumphant twtrweek tour they received. a nwn- ber of invitations to return to Japan for a fourth tour and decided to accept one for· the Spring of 1976J which is the earliest they are able to. schedule another tour of the Far East. The Asahi Shimbun, one of Japan's leading ne\vspapers, corriments on both Mehia aild the orcheStra, "The relationship between Mehta and the Los Angeles Philharmonic is that of a tr u I y 'matching' pair, a fabulous combination .. _ This combination has now come to a perfec· lion, or in another way, it has reached the highest pinnacle." ' And "Hans E. Pringsh"eim in the Asahi Evening News reports, "l lost count of the number of ~ Mr. Mehta was called back to the_ stage to acknowledge with the Orchestra the enthusiastic applause of the audience, until "they finally p I aye d one of Dvorak's "Slavonic Dances" as a brilliant encore-so brilliant that another encore had to follow. Concert' tickets are on sal~ at $5 at the Philharmonic office, 201 · W. Coast Highway, Newport each, 646-6411. I Hungary's Bartok String Quartet performs Thursday al 8:30 p.m. in the -- Laguno Beach High School auditorium, sponsored by the Laguna eeach C~mber Music Society. Tickets, adults, $5, an4 students, $3 , avoaable at doOr. I • .. . · • I , • . . • ( • • . ~ • • ! • t t • . • l . ' . • • DAil '( PILOT Poet F'riday Januar) l~. 1~7) Laureate ~ Loves His Archie, I .... • . -f'"' LONOON (UP ll -Sir John verse written by 19th Centtlry • Betjeman•a PQetry, too is Be1jtman, the ne w Poet cl~riea. He is convlnced bell a deceptive. Ila language' ts r !J1urca1e 1n Ordinary to Her fa1!ure 1 00 . 't think 1 simple and plaln. ltl lmages ~l11Jesty Qut.'t'n Eliz11beth, is • n am any 1 ... 1 .. "".1.. tht ~rood eossessor of many good." .be saicLJusLfrter his are a .. .,...uorward. lt lookJ envhlble 1 h Ing s : -hlS a pp ointment as Poet -itght, nul!y, lnccii\Sequ~ntlat. knightl\oocl, heups of honors, a. Laurole. "And lf t ~bt t There la, fGr in&tanoe, hit hupp_v marriage. ~ vast and wa1 any good t wouldn't be best-known alna:le poem, a ran- afft't'llonate folklwmg. And a any good." tasy romance wilb 1 waltrtss li!ddy bt'ar. • But behind the smokescreen he spatted ln a suburban can- The t<'ddy bear Is named Betjeman ls an intense, teen· . Areh1~. Beljen1.1n hus cherish-passionate, honest and com-· pJ It Id tak "Miss J. Hunter Dunne·, l'd il since childhood. It gQes ex man.. WQU e a "h\'rt'VC'r Bct1e111an is going to novelist to describe him, and a Aflss J . Hunter Dunne, s!)l•1Kl some ti1ne. except great novelist to do it prop-"Furnished and burnished abroad. _ erly. by Aldorshot sun ... " .. I darcn't lake him through He looks a litUe like Arch.le. lncooaequenuaJ! ll W. custun1s lest he be ripped open A rowxl, cuddly man ; mound-Auden, a doyen of intellectual ln !ht•1r St'.'.lrch for drugs," Sir cd Pekinese face-under a poets, professes h"'I. m s e J f John 1old an intervie14•er white-haloed deme. He seems "violently jealous" of his old l'('('enllv. someone's kindly but dod-0 x r or d classmate. Auden In 1tloit men of 66. such dering uncle, a bit bumbling dismisses with contempt "any de\'olion to a cuddly toy would and inept. kiloUc criUc who may think •.. be very pt'('utiar. In Sir John Then he says something. Betjeman's poems are Betjcman it seems natural About his predeceason as trivial." and right. Poet Laureate, for lnstanct: Hi.s poems have won ·him ~~or Archie is part of a "I am.pleased to be the sue-~ honon. a poet can win. smoke screen. He is one or the ces5QI" or 't e n n Y so n , Toe laureateship .Ls t b e pe<'Uhar eccentricities which W~rih and Bridge, but supreme accolade, though It's becloud th is man. Seine like not quite 80 pleased. to be the merely an -bonQrary post Archie nr(' perfectly genuine; ·successor Of Alfred Austin. I salary 70 pounds (tl&S) 8 year son1t• are affected. All tend to am sure he wrote some gOQd plua27 pounds ($81 ) "in lieu of obscure what Betjeman really poetry. I have been reading' a butt of sack." It more or is. his work looking for it." Im requires writing an ode on He dresses terribly. lie con-Zap. Some doddering tmcle. public occasions. stanlly predic ts disaster, This genUe, kindly man ls BRITISH POET: SIR JOHN ·BETJEMAN personal and general. He about as sort as carboo steel, delights in anything obscure, and rpugbJy as inept as Bobby such as single volumes or Fischer ls at chess. Live Theater Sailor Band Heads North • ' • The Newport Harbor High School's Sailor Band is • heading for San Francisco_ or bust. The Sailor Band is deeply fn. . volved in a fund-raising cam- paign to rai the expenses for pcoming tour which has been labeled, "The Golden State - A-Patriotic Pilgrimage." The 150 ywng people plan to leave Newport Beach on ~eb . ~!--I , a=mpanied by 25 adult Charlie Brown Now • In ~esa Playhouse "Yta're A Good Man CllarUe Brow." 1be Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse will present this popular musical revue Ulis weekend only with perfonnances tonight, Satur- day and Sunday at 8:30 p.m. and mali,nees Saturday and Sunday at 2:30 p.m. In the Community Center auditorium on the Orange County Falrgrounds. .,.Lut of tile Red Rot Loverl" p.m. through Feb. 3. Reserva- tions 494-0'143 . "Play Strindberg" A marital comedy , plays Fridays through Sundays ·at 8 o'clock at South· Coast Repertory, while "Moon- children" is the Wednesday and Thursday fare in the Third Step Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-1363 . "Heaven Can WaJt" A comedy revival about a boxer who goes to his rewa rd ""too early is+on the stage of-the Huntington Beach Playhouse, 2110 t.1ain St.. HW1tington Beach, with pefiormances at 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays through Feb. 10. Rese rvations 536-4446. , I ., I Gilbert Price, as the Celebrent, strikes a pose in Leonard Bernstein's "Mas111 now playing al the Mark Top.er Forum through Feb. 18. Tickets, $3.50-$8. XEROX •• perooes. 1be trip itinerary includes a tour of Sacramento where the · students will perform on the steps of the state Capitol; participatlng in the Chinese New Year's Parade in Chinatown, San Francisco; visiting Hearst Castle, San Simeon; touring of the Gold Country and an overnight stay in San Simeon, Sacramento and Treasure Island Navy Base. Opening this weekend is the San Clemente Community Theater~., production of the Neil Simon comedy . Performances are g i v e n Thursdays, Fridays and and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. through Feb. 3 at the Cabrillo Playhouse, :m A v e n i d a CabriUo, San C l eme nt e . Reservation,, 492-0465. "Dear Friend.sf" 1----------~------- The tour, which should l'OSt $20,000,. will be paid for by donations and from individuals and businessmen in Orange County. The students are rai~ ing money through Blue Chip stamp collection, selling raffle tick.eta and sales. A rummage and bake sale is taking place Jan. fl. If you need further information or have any items to be donated, call Mrs. Fran MacMillan, ~. or Mrs. Elaine England, 646-2628., for pickup. 'The Newport Harbor Sailor Band Tour Fund, a tax ex- "llow the Other Half Loves" Now on the stage at the Laguna Mou.lion Playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Lagwia Beach, is this new comedy, playing Tuesdays through Saturdays ot 8030 Returning for a single "en- core" performance on Satur-. day, Jan. 'll, is this drama by the Irvine Community Theater . The 8:30 performance will be given in the Humanities -Hall Playhouse on the UC Irvine SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH aj!IJJ;!IM,<•lil¢•l~i ':TROP ICAL FISH F TH~ WEEK .. BLACK MOLLIES 1 ·7~. . Reog. "' empt corporJtion, bas beeni ~~~!11!11~!11!11!11!11~~~~~~!11!11!11!11~~~~1 organi7.ed to accept con-1 ~ tributk>ns in behalf of the NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SAILOR SAND band. The Story Of TICKETS NOWI MU6!C CENTER PRiSENTATIONS ~Ancer,s ~.Q?Ali "" ~ and GAMEi.AN ORCHESTRA !HRH PERFORMANCES ONLY! JAN. 29, 30, 31 at &30 pm. $6.5015.50/ 4.50/3.50/1.50 MUS!CCTNTER O PAViltON 11c1ns llDW H Mlftit C1nt1•; •II Mutual A11nc1H; 5. C. MM•ic Co. at 6!1 s. Hill; WllllC~I & lib1111. 1111: (lU) i21·1J11. ' l . 4 Ml Ci\Si\ i F-\\llLY :l f1IEXICA1'1 REST,\UR,\Nl " ~ ""fll'R 1/fAfS,t RI 11 /"RIP 1f},ll/."\'ll VI '" • COCKT1\ILS • IN TIIE BURRO ROOM 1'1\t.17TllS1 111111.Hl~'!J. l'05rAM~~A • ~i t4!1>J•i~:~ ~ I I· _··\ Good Deed Peo le make the scene Sundays in the l1tji\j;11t11 I ,.:.. • ,!]lo.. It ;;, -: --.;::_ •••iiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I We Do Almost Everybody's Flowers lncludinCJ The • SUMMER WHITE HOUSE We Decked The Swimmin9 P0:0I With lOOO's Of Flowers, Adorned Their Fabulous Buffet With The Finest Flowers Grown! Come See The Pictures! · WE'RE CELEBRATING THIS ACCOMPLISHMENT WITH THISI Sl'llCIALS ··········~··················· • ALWAYS LESS HERE GOOD SIZE • DOUILI HIADll • a • SNOW-WHITf. • MIX 'IM UP • • CARNATIONS • CAULIFLOWER • SMALL CILllY .. • • 25 51 49 • • ICDEaG LITTUCE • • For • • 25C Each • 6 ,_'1.00 • • l lmlt-25 • Llmlt--4 • Limit 6 .t lath • • With Thl1 Coupon • With Thi• Coupon • With Thlt Cttupen I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • ·FOR HIAL TH • LAST OF THE YEAR • U.S. #1 RIAL NICI • • oua FAMOUS • • • • fllSH SQUEO.ED SMALL-TASTY 0000 llZI • ORANGE • • UD TIXAI • • JUICE : TANGERINES : GRAPEFRUIT : : 49C Cj)uart : 10C LI. : 10 Fot $1.00: • Ill l/r GaRo• O•ly • Llmlt-10 Lt.1. • · Lhfllt-tt • Limit Va Go.. With Thl1 Cov.... W1~ -•--• Wiik Dk C..,... • • Jn • nll -._... a •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COU~ONS EXPIRE JAN. 24, 1 f7J .---HOrat~c Count.,'.t ~toil Popu lar Produce and Fl.ov1er HOM1e,_"---. NEWPORT PRODUCE -I '1J..1711 Ope• 7 Days a Wttlc 8 o.m. to I p.nt. 61M711 2616 Newport ilotllovord Oft th PoohnoM '1M2tl "35 Year.1 of Product IONOED FRUIT SHIPPER "Wh.1rt QuolUg" tM Know flow" FOlt 11 YEA~! Ord.tr of tM Hout• ' • • • . WINE SEMINAR At Winery Beginning in February in Costa Mesa A Y1rnilyTraititlon11f Fine WlnNSinc. !Pl J • Your famil\' l~ invitM lo tllllt" our lioe win~ aud 1•njo\I our fttm SANO\VIClll•:.'\. ft.1 EATS&CH EE~ES. ' Newnort /Costa Mesa "'1100 Newport Blvd. · (714) 845-8940 10th • anmversary celebration SAtE ---·'---JAN. 15 to JAN. 31 ---·--- •nagnificent selections ~f imported ftanaiture and accessories from Italy France & Spain • 25% off Lydia 's, Inc. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 400 W. Coa st Hwy. ~ewport Beach 548-2350 I I - British •ctor Michael C.i,na looks to the future alter f)nidi1n9 "the mqst challenging part I ever hed" in the film version of 11Sleuth." .. • Caine Ponders Next Move . NEW YORK CAP) -What's it all about, Alfie? titude l.ov.·rird his work, natural to a celebrity who has made it the hard way. T\1aurice Joseph T\Ucklewhite's dad was a Billingsgate fish rt1arket porler. his rnum a charwoman. later we'd dr1 romantic scenes and I'd get kissed." "On my 29th birthday 1 had 79 cents in my pocket," he recalls. "On my 31st, I v.·as a dollar inillionaire .'' Without true love we jusl exist, Alfie. Which brings us to the crux: The a1\C.lenl Turks had o word for it - kismet. .Wi!bster rll•l111l"~ th<' l<'rlll as "late,'' or. 111 thf' 1norc contemix:irnry vcrnocular. "that's the v.ay the ball bount-es " Whlt•h 1!5 about the way. the area's two top musical theater groups tift' fethng these days. It seems th;1t the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Com1>any 1s opening its production or ''Klsmcl" on the 16th of February. It ulso Sl!crns thnl the Long Beach Civlc Light Oper11 Association is opening its 0"'11 production of "Kismet" on the 23rd of Feb1-u<1ry -one week later. They'll be ,t1aying tv.·o v.·eC'k~nds simultaneously. On the face of it, this would appear a bit strange -si nce the desert n1usical is not c:rcal·tly lhl' newest show off the Broad\\ay bonrds. no~ hns it been pro- duced locally in man)! seasons. But this has happened before in · community 1heatC'r, most notably two years ago 11'h1tn three groups in Orange County l't'Surrccn.-d "The ~1an Who Came to Din- ner" within a C<>uple mnnths. ANO SINCE Fullerton and Long Beach are only about 15 freeway milfS apart , )oil n11ght ask why their civic light O\}l·ras v.·ould schedule the same sho11· in the sa me season. much less in the same tin1c slot. \Veil, ~1acy's doesn't tell Gin1bcl's and by the san1e token. bong Beach and Fullerton don 't coflsult each otl:t•r v.1icn they make up their schedules. All hough 1-"ullerton \\'ill put its ---- ' TOM TITU , Intermission "Kismet" on the boards first, Long Beach has the cushion al 23 years in business (lo Fullerton 's one1 and the at- lraclive presence of Howard Keel , v.•ho starred in lhc movie version many years back, in the central role. 1-lowever, neither group sccrns overly concerned about the effect or duplication on the box office. • "\\''e basically don't · p u 11 the same 11 u die n c es," explains Jan Duncan, who with her husband Crin founded the Fullerton CLO last spring. "What it really affects is the talent. performers who are interested in doing lhis particular show. But we had over 60 a~ auditions, so there wasn't n1uch of a problem.'' "WE ANNOUNCED our season last February and we v.•ere surprised when Long Beach picked the same shov.•," Mrs. Duncan continues. "But we expected !hem to do their 'Kismet' in June. They had to change it to February because thcv couldn't get Howard Keet for June." Harvey Waggoner. general manager of the Long Beach CLO, confinned the schedule change. "We had originally plan- ned tei~ do 'The Student Prince' next DAILY PILOT 25 mooth and close with 'Kismet.' bu! tllen v.e \\OUldn't have gouen Keel. "lrs possi ble that some people in lhl' Fuller1on area will see their 'Kismet' and not out!:i, but I don 't view !he situation 11ith any alarm. \Ylth Ho\vard Keel in our 8how, we shouldn't have any :1pprec1ublc drop ln <1ltendance. \Ye 've nverage'd 8tJ percent capacity !or our productions." Fullertl)fl's Jnn Duncan docsn"t expe<:t 11\•r gro up's "Kismet'' lo suffer 1nueh either. "We're doing a brisk business in advance sales in the local area and ,.,.e should have good houses. Many people don't want to fight the traf- fic to get intu the Los Angeles area and will see a local sho111 instead." "BUT," SHE ADDS, "if we don't do well, we'll kno1\' it \\'as because Howard Keel v.·as doing another 'Kismet' up the road. That the Fullerton CLO even presents a measure of compelilion is in itself t1 c.·redit to the new group, sti ll shy or its first anniversary. Led by the multi- talented Dunc:ins. FCLO presenled "Fid- dler on the Roof." "T\tan of La Mancha" and "1776" as its first three productions. gaining in artistic st rengt h w1!h each. It is clearlv the best Orange County has to offer in ·its fil•ld . After both "Kismets" have had their hour on the stage. the Long Beach grou1) \Viii look ahead to "Student Prince" "'hllc Fullerton will make ready for "Oliver." No con1petition there. "I feel an era of lightweight film stardom has gone by," answers the man who made it famous, Michael Caine. East End London's cinema playboy Is girding for another of those career shills that somehow oc- cur for him with clockwork regularity each p a s s i n g decade. "The big surprise is that people are still discovering I can act. No t ·that It apnoys me, because I've made $5 million along the way. So what am I going to do, . shoot myself." challenging part I ivCr had'' is not without certain irony, For ''Sleuth" began as a great stage hit, sWI running on Broadway, and years ago Caine permanently t o o k himself o!r those boards. AJso, Olivier epitomizes a type ot artistry which Caine regards as the opposite of his own, un- tutored talent. "I really can't do bombastic stage acting," he asserts -a circumstance that, however, doesn't decrease his ad- miration o! England s theatrical lord. "l 'll act for nothing in a film ," he says, "but I insist on a percentage of the gross. I don't want any profits or any acc:ountants fooling around. "That goes back eight pic- tures. or cause behind all the Caine ' planning. Gossip's favorite Lothario is forsaking all the birds with which his name has been linked and setlling, he He & Me & Them, popula r quartet, have returned to the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. The The cause of mildly com- bative Caine euphoria is "Sleuth," a j U s t -released suspense film made in stellar tandem with Lord Olivier, who picked him for an emotive sparring partner although they had never met. "This is the first time a pic- ture has come out that I didn 't have another two made. waiting for release. I've none made, none irr-rrund . "When I couldn 't really find anything to top this, I did nothing." C3iqe, who can cause epidemic female palpitations at the quiver or · an eyelash, maintajns an ultrapractical at- The fact that the red-haired actor regards it as "the most '"" TIAR I ARIA'S llST • • , . In Secluded Aliso Canyon THt BLACK KNIGHT RESTAURANT INTIM ATE DI NI NG COCKTAILS • DANCI NG SEAFOOD BAR ENTERTAIN MENT Open Daily 10 A.M. to 2 A.M. Lunch 11 :30 to 3 Popul~;·~.~1nd jERRY LAMBUTH 330 EAST 17TH STREET COST A MESA · 642-2304 ................................................... IH@OHMM'3i ~ Fabulous Vegas ~ 1 SUNDAY BUFFET ~ : Servl d from 9 a.m.·8 p.m. ! • • • • • • • • • ! I • i • • • t . • . • . ·-• • • • • • • • I • I • • • • • FRESH FRUITS , FISH ENTRIES MEAT ENTRIES -SA LADS Gourmet Specialties PASTRIES BEVERAGES "CHAMPAGNE TREAT" ADULTS $3.SO . ID IESEIYATJDI $ Children (Under 12) $2.SO o1r 11111• 1111 1t Mert Thi . • . • • • • • • • • ~ . . • • • • • • • . . . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • · 108 lt1s Is Aullablt : I J 421 Easr 171h s1ree1' Cosio Mna, Callf. l • • .................................................... .- . "I think eventually the cinema. as a building where one goes and sits, \viii be defunct . So yqu must have a percentage. of whatever they can do with that picture until 1 he film is melted down - hotel juke boxes, airplanes. television , t'3SSetles whatever.'' Puberty and the lure of greasepaint occurred almost simultaneously. Shy 1\-lichac! got into a youth club drama class because he wa!'i the only boy "and I figured sooner or Now App.,rli«J RON SHr- Rl·lnx1'CI And Ca •unl J nt 1n1ur:• EntC'rtainmcnt \:1..;htly Corner of P•rk •nd Marine Balbo.11 l1l•nd 673-'1!:30 s w e 11 r s, into monagamous matrimony. Once before, at 21.}be took a bride, an ex:~ J>ttience that still rankles traumatically. The objl'Ct of his affection is Shakira Bakhst. a 25-year-old model of East Indian heritage. They met 18 n1onths ago after he saw her on a coffee com- mercial on the tube. "\Ve've been In love a long time," he declares. They mnr- ried recently because, as Caine put it succinctly, "she got pregnant." ~ ... , ......... ~.,, I-"".•• "" ' ., r.,. •.... , _ •• .-.,... r ... •·• ~~·i--~It~:-: l~"CM .. ~"'' ...................... _ .......... , . .---.. .... - Q~' '~__,,RESTAURANT LUNCH e DINNER COCKTAILS SEA FCOD-STEAKS-PRIME RI B INTERNATIOl>IAL ENTREES FROM $2.15 ,_ BANQUET FACILITIES ENJOY A MEAL WITH CLAUDE AND JIU Prime Rib • Lunch $2.25 -Diuer $3.95 Poul Buavon C1t•$5.95 LIVE ENTERTAINMENT DA NCING NIGHTLY . Lun_c.tt-Mon. thru Fri. 11 ¥· to 2:30 p.m. Dinner-MOR. thtv Sot. S to 10•p.rn: Complime11tery Beke<f Aledi:e for ell Blrtlu:fllyl l Anni.,.•r1•rits · 2645 Ha•bor Blvd., Casio Mna 545·'471 COCKTAILS ENTERTAINMENT MR. MIK~'S HOUSE OF PRIME RIB Special Coupon Offer PRIME RIB DINNER • :1 • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • • a Complete with soup or salad. • Choice of potatoes or rice. 52 ~95 :1 Week D•'tl: 11 :lO A. M. to 12:30 Fri. c111d Sot. l l:lO A.M. to l :lO Sundays: 4:00-12 MIDNIGHT Vic Garc ia Duo Starting Tuelday January 23rd 9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 • • • • (Regul11r $3.95) 1 ·, 11•1111 F•ld1y thru Tllul'W•'f, J•nu1ry lt "'"' lS • ,.:::.::.:;;.::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I wilh thlJ coup0n, goot "r your 1n1lt1 ,ir1y. '-.......------ 0 209 Palm, Balboa 675 -5774 • • /II 1111 IUlllO.il f fl'T'\I L•Mll!tl • •••••••••••••••••••••• I ' • ' Have you heard about DINNER AT filu~a lift:ftfrn SER VED FROM 4 P.M. TO 9 P.M. -includ~s salad from the ul.11d b.11r .. nd .i, gl .. si of lz;i:y's house wint • RI BS, 1.95 CHICKEN and SPAGHITTI, 1.95 CHICKEN and RI B, 1.95 SPACHETII and TWO RI BS, 1.95 PIZZA and SPAGHITT I, 1.95 PIUA, 1.40 . ' • 333 BAYSIDE DRIVE -NEWPORT BEACH • ' • LlnLE BIG "O" _1943 rla ... 11.;: c~;. M..-642-B361 presents CHARLIE RAY VICKIE HISCOTT NASHV ILLE PLUS 499-2626 FRESH LOCAL LO ISTEa Co1nplet1 Dl•Hr SS.95 BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T ..... s.1 . ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR " 4 to 7 p.m. Mon. thru Fri . ,._,.1011 Sllow by Mwlel'1. 12:15, Tlrlor&dcry. Ope1 S.... Day1 • 3180~ COASY HWY. Iii Crown V11i.y ..... Wl'f) ' •NA NIGUEL TO INTRODUCE ' theNew ~o L"f"-" """'"""'" -----I I I I I I I I .._ _ _,..,.I I I I I I I I ' I • f======~~~==========-1 :t6 iWLY PILOT F•~ . .iao"'I 19, 1973 ~~~~~~~~----'=::...==.c..:..::...::= WHAT TO ··DO Real Cantonese Food eat here or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 2ht Pl., Newport Beoch ORkllll·S.9560 0,.. , .. ..., .. "'Deity 1l·1J -frl .... s. . .,. J ..... 2 FOR 1 PRI• RIB THRO JAN. r -,---Chm;; Cuis"in7 I I /,Jr;... o'E" OAILY 11 AM-11 PM e a.osED MOHOAY I B.,._,., C0'11'INATION I !AJIUMf LUKCHEON PLATES I •D11B•~ from $1 .25 ... ~............... COl\!PLETE DlNNERS I X.. 1 from $2.95 I ·1\...... /'./i-Oriental Cocktail Lounge I I J Fl·n 1ur1ng Tropical Drinks I I -JI) -11 .. .._-. I ;. PHONE •••• 645-SSS• THE NU-TWO P .. I O'BriH & Woll ~ Wed. thru Sun. SUNDAY BRUNCH 10 A.M. to 2 P.M. BANQUET FACILITIES 31 7 PACIFIC COAST HWY. HUNTINGoTON HA.CH 536-2555 HOUSE OF SEAFOOD NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH 11 :30 to 2:30 T11L ..... Fri. Nightly Dinner-Coc.kt1ils 4 to 11 p.m. Sundey 2 to 9:30 p~losed Mondays Voices Chime JAN. ti . CHORAL CONCEllT -0CC Olorale llld. Cl!anWx S&lpn pre1<11t a midwinter conctrt dlr<cled by lUc:hanl Iii-Raub al I p.m. in the auditorium. Eighty voices ain&lttl ·oelocticm by Brahamt, Lupo, Ban<hlerl, Woll and ~7" Admt u !Oa free. • JAN.13 LECTURE SE~ -Social Science Lecl\ll't Hall, UC! Campus. UCl community lec:tW'O ser1 .. enUtled "'Jbe Qlal.. Ieng• of Racial and Ethnlc Diiie....-An>und llie World." Kendall E. Balles, Phd. assl$anl profesaor of hlltory, will speak oo "Ethnic Tensiooa In Solvtt Society: M y I b llld Reolity" on Jan. 23. K""'11-l'd, Pbd. wialant prol- pl comparative culture wW comment on "lnd.11: ProbJtm.11 ol Natural lnlegraUoo'' oo Jan. 30. Lectww start et 8 p.rn. Fr.. admi>sloo. FEB. 11 WIND ENSEMBLE -Qincert by ·Unlversity Wind En1emb1e spoosored by Scbool ol Fine Arts. Village Qincert Hall, I p.m. Friday. Feb. 16. Admission I!. JAN. II . LA TRAVIATA--Orange Coast College audllnrium, J'IGI Fair- view Hoed, Gest.a Mesa. San i'raDclsco Opera's tourq com- pany will present "La Travlal.a" by Guiseppe \'enfi at 1:15 p.m. Complete _. will be sung in Engllsh. Tickets, 12 lor adults, $1 for students. WonnaUon, call 8*$80S. JAN. II CONCERT -Orange Coast College Dance Departmel11 pre- sents Joee Limon Duce COmprany in concert on Jan. *>, at •UHAllllll OP IUP TUIDlllOIN '°nmn1 -·-•1111 ~SU--. .... ~ ... , .. _ AMON• It SILICT DINNll INTlm VINA HARMER DUO E11ttrt111i11i119 IMEU lt!&TAUMHI' Conti nental Cubine Codct1ll1 s.,,,;ng LuncMon and Dinner llonda~ lhrough Sahmf4V. Closed Sundays We •r• locettd "ext to th• Mey Co. in South Coast Pleu. JIJJS. ...... c...... -...., ... .. . • in ChOral . Concert l :IO p.m .. II 1-.J -at Qr-. COM Oollfce Audllorlum. • -~ . JAN. IS , C\.. STRING QUARTET -Lqwla 'Bild> lllcb. Sdlool -tum, as Pan Avo., Lquna Beach. 'Jbe Bartolt Slrtnk _. • tel f.rom HWlllllY• 1_...t bf lllo-1'..oauna -Qlam. ber Cot Soclell', will J>O!l«m at • p.m.. Program lad- Hiey<ln Quartet In D !Qlor, Opus 7815 llld two quat1etl bl' lleetlloven. Tickets, 111\Jdents, II, and adulll, $0, aiallable at cloof . .ewuMI or ~751:1. 1 FEB. II • .ORGAN CONCICRT -Orpn1sl Tom lllM!)1l1l ..-llDI Jll'Oll'llll Wldtr llpOlllOrlllip of SCbool of Fine Arts CommillM for Arts. Villlle Ooocert Hall, I p.m. Feb. II. AdmlulM .I. JAN.- DANCE CONCERT -l'roCrllD produced by (iaduate lllf. dents In dlnce .. Fine Arts Vllllp Studio 'lbeatro, I p.m. Fri- day and Sltwday, Jan. It and Ill. Admlu!oo II. FEB. II· !I DIWIA-"Look Homewal'd, Anlel" bf KelU Frinp. adapta. Uoo ol Thomas Wolle boot, preaenled bf UC Irvine SCbool ol Fine Arts under db«lioo ol Ashley Carr, wlalant pro-'""°' of drama. Vlllage 'lbelttt. I p.m. ~y.Satunlay, Feb. llt).24. Th:kets, II. For lnfonnltloo .~ UC! Fine Arts Box OfflCe ~17. JAN •. !Wt EXPERIMEN?AL THEATER -Two producllons llld. work· shop -led by Spece Re(v)actlon Company, ItalWI avant garde theater group under dlrec:tioo of Giancarlo Nanni, sponsored by School of Fine Arts Committee lot Arts. "A Is lor Alice," Jan. 13 at I p.m. In Fine Arts Village Theatre. "Spring's Awalrening," Jan. 24 at a p.m. in Village Theatre. Admbsioo each productlon, IS. Free -kshop directed by Nanni, Vllllp 'lbeltro, 1-4 p.m. Jan. 24. For lnlonnatioo call UC! Fine Arts Box Office ~17. · JAN. ZS DANCE CONCERT -Main Gallery, Newport -Art Museum, 1311 W. Ball>oo Blvd., Newport Beacll. Hal O'Neal's cootemporary billet ememble will pe.f«1n an orlglna! dance at l :IO p.m. Jan. 25. Umiled seating. Tkkels 11.50 for DOI> members, II lor ~ JAN. l'l JUNIOR CONCERTS -Bua leav" -. Musewn, lll02 N. Main SL, Santa Alli for tbe Loo Ani!eles Music Center w11e .. tbe Loo Ang .... PtJilhumollic will present a youth concert. Program will be '"nle Musical Time Machine" In- cluding worb ol Debuasy, Stnvtnsl:y and Scbumnn. Bua leaves at 1:30 a.m. and rtblms at 11:45 p.m. Oilldren m>der' I must be accomponled by an iduJI. Tickets, 1175 for mem- ben, 11 fur mmnemben. JAN. It "MUSEUM Wl'l'80UT WA!ll" second program in I aeries ol films on art at UC Irvine will be pre-.it each Friday through Feb. 2. The aeries, surveying art from_ clasaic to modem, will be preoented In the S<ience Lecl1U't llllil at 8 p.m. under the tpOlllOrSblp ol the UC! CommJllee for Arla. n-,,....,. c..bllNl <:eefcurib 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY 673-8267 open o.nv-s ,.m. iO 2 ...... CLOSED MONDAY \ •' 1814 N. Coast Hwy.' !El Camino Reali SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571 SUNDAY AFTERNOON JA~t~z~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ll JAM SESSION -2 P.M. -SUPER DUO 'Theo' Ai Ancho r -Also Featured Tun. Thru Sun. MONDAY -VINCE CHENTE -DRUMS JIM MAHONEY -GUITA R Unbeatable .Atmosphere "Under The Dome" With All The P81nuts You Can Eat! HAPPY HOUR ' -4 • 7 P.M. MON. Thru SAT. THE GALLEY PENl~~u~E 810 E. BALBOA BLVD. --673-9980 PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's moblle ovens speed delieioU5 pipina:·hot pizzas to your door In minutes. For prompt service phone 646-7136 (Newport Beach/Costa Meu-17th and Tustin) or 847·1214 (Huntington Budl-&ach and Hie!). pleasure? A delicious luncheon. your favorite cockta il, a delectable .dinner, dancing ta live music. Whatever your choice. it's all at 1107 J1mboree Aoed. Newport Beach I Phone : 714-644-1700 • • TH E MAlllN[ RESTAURANT I THE UDO LOUNGE /TIIE WINE CEU.Alt /THE BISTltO /THE CHELSEA BAii I I . ERNESTO'S ITALIAN VILLA FEATURIN G HOME-COOKED ITALIAN DINNERS WEEKEND SPECIALS e COCKTAILS -OPEN 7 DAYS - Sundey-Thwrsd1 y-4 to 11-Fri.-S•t 4 to 12 lBJZ N. EL CAMINO IEAL SAN CLEM!NTE 4'2·3012 TEMPLE GARDENS · ~N6:S:SRe1tc11rant RICKSHA COCKTAIL ~:~:.~E l uncheon & inne r O.ily IUfflT LUNCH 11~ .. 1 ~1 M--- Featuring Exotic Tropical Drinks 1111 ADAMI I• ...,._I cotT• llllA 540-ltu M0-1m MEADOWLARK COUNTIY CWI Lark Room DINNER SPICIAli.5 Choice of So11, or 111141 l1kM '•tote ot l l•o l'll•f e 81rho lnM .. ".'''' • o....ft WIDNISDAY -Top Sirloin St11k $2.tl THUUDAT -Primo Rib --$JM fllDAY -8111 St.09anoff -----·---$2.H SATURDAY -Tou,...do• of 8111 $1.21 SUNDA'I' -2 lob•lor Tail•-· ---$1.11 Or• .. e Colllltf'' '.f'ep Ba~ JOE LIGGINS Tht OfitlNI 11 ... yOrl,,., w"'- WIU Y JACKSO" 1•1141 .. t f•dllff•1 11p M 4l0 ,..,,, 1671J •UH.AM AYINUI IAt ._, • HUNnN•TON IUCH (7141 .... 11N f1111 ltt·ltM l r &T~!lillI' IDTAUIAMT Dt1 n ST COAST Ml0..WAY NawPOllT llACM '4Wtl1 °'nnest Mexican Food in Orange Co." Ch11bt.ll11 Fo1d to Go Open 7 Divs "' -Cockt1ll• C11IJ 'p01 t ii• ---SUNDAY IRUNCH • Saturday Morning JANUARY 20 ~'GI Cl)lYI - . I • • ' 'l Vt ·~ ... Cori ""' '1l fe , alnt Cal WOI B mu a l ~ •• • .. • • I • • I I ., 4 . I -~ DAILY PILOT • Friday, Janu..-y 19, 1973 / Judge Bean: ~t1w the West Wasn't 1 SINGS "DUKE" Frederick Winthrop 'Rigoletto' By TOM PALMER Of .. DlllY ,.... ..... U you like your blstory out of textbookl and your western movies trad1Uonal, wllh.Aood and bad dlstlnttfy divided, you and ~•<II• Roy Deso probably w~kl not get on-too well. The seU·rigbleous bangin' Judge from Vinegaroon COUn· ty , Te.x:., does not seem to know wbere. he's going in llle, and unfortunately the latest John Huston film with Paul Newman in the Bean role rur- fers the same malady. Early on In ''The Life and Times of Judge Roy Bean," in bold, attractive W e s t e r n history-book script, we learn. Dancers Do 'Sylphide' "La Sytphide," the ballet that heralded the Romantic era in daoce, is the lntema· Ope-.;p Season Opens tional Performance p:-eseo- tatlon on KOCE-TV Otannel, 50, Orange County Television .at 7 p.m. Tuesday. Verdi's "Rigoletto" will open tbe £0\IJ'tb repertory sea.Son of the Lyric Opera Company of Orange County when It is presented Saturday. The five-week s e r I e s f e a t u r e s award-winning lingers from Southern California -cast in si:r major works. Baritone Roger Ardrey, a music professor at Califi!ornia State University at Long Beach and featured aolOJ.sl with the . Roger wi.gner Chorale, will sing the tiUe role. Fredrick Wlntrop, a lead singer in numerous Los Angeles productions, plays the Duke. European audiences hailed Perfonnances will be held the 1832 Paris premiere of the on Saturdays at 8 p.m. with enchanting tale of a Scots Sundau matinees at 2:30 p.m. peasant and his love affair 1 with an ethereal creture -the at the Festival of ArtS Forum Sylpblde. Theater, 6r;c> LagWl& Canyon Philippe Taglioni Road. choreosrapbed the first pro- "Rigoletto" w i 11 be duction of "La · Sylphkle" presented this weekend and especially for his daughter Marla who danced the liUe plays again on Feb. 3-4. Puc-1 roe. cini's "Suor Angelica" and Fournier of the Ballets de fa "Gianni Sch.ice!" is scheduled Tour Eiffel and former first for Jan. 27-28 and Feb. 1~11. dancer of the Paris Opera, we are about to see "if notz ount of atmospheric, amoky, way the West was, at least t contrasty, vlvld visuals can way It should have been." make ue. for what Newman Jt's a cute line, but s r lacks. klad to take on, and ~ en in Moreover, be enwiciates like this long comedy-))ecom• he's just learned English. tragedy, neither the true West Indeed there are moments nor anyone's perfe;et vision .of when s®ces., comes shining It is delivered. through like the sun o!f the Jt all beglns when Bean judge's. gun at high noon. saunters into a one-sak>on Several cameo. performances (and that's about all) town by talented actOrs live or die and is mistreated by townfolk : with as much regularity as the They rob and try to kill him. gunfighters. Following a wlld and bloody 1n a particularly successful scene, the good judge has scene, Stacy Keach, as the al· the ,town to nm his -and blno gunslinger Bad Bob, flow. Gods-way. . ing white hair contra.sting bis In following segments, black and silver getup and countless creep~ miscreants blacker heart, rides into town crawl and drawl mto town and to shoot 'im a horse and in· ei!her conform or . are dealt sult the honor or 8 New Jersey with by way of a thick rope. dance ho happens to be one "Judge Roy Bean" is an al· ~ w , . tempt at parody of the West cl the Judge s fa:'°~te persons. a.qd westerns as generally con-· Ant~y Perkms lS the over- cocted In our mlnda. But just dramahc preacher. Tab Hun- as Newman stretches his ter, who can't even stutter character stereotype to lhe properly: the outlaw. We even snapping point 90 does the get a glunpse of Huston and film as a whole only ex· crusty voice. pl.aying an ltin- aggerale, while missing the erant bum. heart of that which Is funny But most episodes provided and sad about history and our only cliche on cliche, taking conception ot It. no character and no viewer to Bean is a pinnacle of lm· any discernible end. pertinent illogic, and no am· The narrator, who talks a lot ., ................. .., .. ,.... SUM 1"1UllAT10NAI. ~ - like Cal Wortblngton, £ails to tie these unrelated vignettes lotlether. If "Bean" rt>ntalns some dramatic and touching scenes toward the end it abo degenerates to out-of-posture slapstick and poor taste. It appears Huston ~ trying to squeer.e something mean· ingful, even just a tear, out of his audience. But it's too late. Long studies of expressions eome off only as tedious direc- tion, ~not lnsight into un- complicated minds. In one gallant attempt at touching his audience, Huston has a lovable pet bear die. And indeed ~re is reason for stillness in the audience, as the dialogue comes close to re lating to the true human struggle. It is near the end of Bean's life in the movie when Huston's target perhaps be- fuma evident. His pride hurt . the judge had vanished from town. And during that tithe, a generation of vipers - oil inen -moved in and women got the vote. As the narrator put It: Things juat went to beU. But Bean comes back to make a last. stand against a W<>rld that didn 't go bis way. Together with his daughter (Jacqueline Bisset ), who has ~ since grown up and idolized ~ .her lather through his legend, ' j and some resurrected ex-/ deputy drunks, Bean torches * the town -preventing the ~ birthplace of law lllld order l from be<.'Omi.ng just a gas sta- tion . j The Texas desert reelaimed , its own, making justice happy. 1~ And Bean's only mortal idol, ' though they never met, Llly I Langtry (Ava GardnerJ, came back to pay her respects to her lifelong admirer. In her I nowing pink gown she read the judge's last sentiments to her, making him happy, -' whe rever he was spending -s eternity, and tr ea tine the au-I dicnce at least to one scene , with some emotion. f LAD~,S~IN~GS~ THE BLUES' - i J • A RED HOT SMASH!'' -Gene Shalit, NBC-TV SINGl lHE BLUES ********* Sopranos Barba r a Wilkinson, a Metropolj.tan Opera finalist ln '1971, and Lor- ·caine Kamin!, ~ has ap- peared on radio and televisiQn as well as on various concert lours, will share the spotlight as Gilda. A program of three one-act Pierre Lacotte bas contemporary A m er i c a n choreographed the present operas, "The Telephone," "La version preciSely as it was Divina" and "Sweet Betsy that night in 19th century ' ' Ol\YE-IN SUPll IWAP MlllS FOi FUNI PIOFITI IAUAlltl GALOlll UTUIDAY I SUftDAY AU.DAY IAJl.T04P.M. ATOIA .. 111112 AND NAllOl llYD. PACIFIC DRIVE-INS • from Pike" concludes the 1973 Paris. Opera Season on Feb. 17-18. The standard ballet cos- Compooer Mark Bucci will tume, the frilly tutu, and toe l(""'Dlol direct. dancing as we know it today l!.111 The Insight (){ music dJrec-were introduced at the ballet's tor Michael Kurkjian, ·stage debut performance .. director Robert Rogers and Michael Denard stars as HELD OYER set and costume designer ~ James and Gblslaine Thesmar port-~ La S•lphide m· a Pettey guarantees a vital in-... 1.. 1 ~ terpntation of these works. typical plot of the period -.Matthau Seuon tickets are sUll the juxtaposition of the mortal available with single~ a~ and the 8upematura[ • ~.elt. . mission seats at $3. Since The production is part of a SOUTH COAlT PLAZA #I-Costa Mesa-546.271 I FOl( TWIN •l-Cov;n,a -332-1122 1 . "WE 10rt1 lliYE • s"ltfii1c1 llllYIE TlllS SEASON, ANO THE SPECIAL EfFECTS OS- CArtS llUST ltlEAOY 8£ ACCOUMTEO fOR. l!ARD TO BUI."' seating Is limited, early PBS series funded by a grant EL MONTI -El Monie -448.8422 _.__in_ ....... -· · 1· from the' General Electric ~ ... ~i!!-" reserva ions are recom-sf An-P•s11den11 -792 -7 139 ~ •• &1.1.UOC' ll_~m~end~ed~b~y~c~a~lli~ng~4~9!-07~~~~·-l.~Co~mpan!"'~Y~·~~~~~__!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _.,....,.__,_..,.,.__ II _"""' .. """'' ........ ,.......~ c.r. ht .• s-.. ,._ 2 ~I • . HnD OYER 3RD WEEK MESA-tnUI M~lUI VILU.-On1111 ,,,_... CilROVE-Gtlrftll G""~"'°' I ROOKNURST-Afllll11M-71W4W ALSO l"LAYINGI 1 WlllC ONLY TUSTIN-Tntlft-..444-1"4 WllKOAYS-+7.f SAT. A SUM.-1~1.f SORRY-MO PASSES -·--- I NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRJ:S L Ir s: ... 1•1•111 NOW -IXClUSIYl OllNGl COUNTY I GEME HAC ii:MAH ERNlST -• ttlO llJTlQl!I WQl LYllY 12 PERFS. ONLY I FF.8.12tbrii 21 ''"· 12, 8:30 pin LES snPHIDU I PlllAR Of FIRE f GRANO l'AS CLASSIQUE / ll"AOUATION IALL .... 11. 11, 1!, ,,,, •• SW.lll'WEIFULL LDllTHJ Feb. 14,,1:!0 •• G~UlElfULL llJtQTHJ Fe•. 16, 1:30 •m SEAi:HlMI[ I YAllATIONS FO" FOUR I INTRMQZO I IRADUATIOM Ull Fe•. 17, 2:30 ,m, Feb. 20, 1:30 pM COl'Pll.lA !FULL LlNllTKJ Ftb. 17, 1:30 P11 SEHRAMllE I DON QUIXOTE PAS DE OEUI I MONUMENT FOi A DWI IOY / RODEO Feb. 21.1:30 ,. WSYLIKTDES I UNFINIS HED SYMPHONY I PIUAl Of fllE / 1001:0 r1c1tm1 n.oo, 7.~.i.!,001 s.0014.oo IOlt OFFICE OPEii llUWI ft ..... e ttnter, •II MulMll A1111cltt1 s. c. Mq•lc ca •. .Ml.JSlC CTNTER downtown; W1lllcht -CM-.111.' ll~trlJ. 0 ""'ILION IHfORM-TIOH: 1·n.v 12.13)621-7211 'Is ii u po• u'Tlia Borlfalhar'? Tha ...... _ .. , it.ilf.lliltm.' •I. ~·fY'f~J ~ Va1adli rPapdrs ___ ..... -........ _ CO.Mlf "THE BURGLARS" • •WI ~ ---- , .. " "THl WILD IUJICH" BAllQAIS. llATrND llllOllf.U. .. SAT. ,, ... -.... AJ.LSSATSa1.oo WHaZ-BANG WHi1ARl>rlWH1MSY! ' ' The most fabulously funny cartoon characters ever to come to Ille! ·n.eii'Wms UlltlU Tllf • SU" I . t. • ~ t *.'. ~'~~·-~----------~~~-.. ·~ lllTllCTO ..... 11,...ltw~ R ,.,. ... Alllllt IMl11M 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .... m!l-111------------ "HARROllllG, TllROll·ClUTCHING, SOME· TIMES FUNff, SOllETlfllES lllSPIRING 111 l SEllTilff.JTll WAT, ANO CRANO EIHEA· TllNllEllT EYEIY MlllUTE IT IS 011 IHE SCIEll." <O·lllfl .... DIYILS ""SllELllY l lNTEIS IS DELICIOut lf IHE OSCARS COllt Ul Ill· TtRS 8[ fAI IEMlllO?" ~-· ik .. , ... -1.-..:1 ... 1 ... ...... 1 •• 11 "'w:;:,o: '11'-.N,..Y ''IIP the Sandbox is a joy..! Barbra Streisand's sixth film is her sixth hit!''.:..-;,;,,.r- "Th e shar pest, gentl est, funn iest film of the yea r-the .___ ·ultimate woman's picture!" __,_ .... _ "Don't miss Barbra Streisand's most mov- ing per- fonnance to' date." -t•10, -- ')!. touching, funny, mature, exhilarating and important "Bar bra Streisand gives the best performance of her career in Up the Sandbox, a story of a houso- wife who fan- tasizes herself in all sorts of wonder- ful adventures." · -..otTH~•.--- "Li vely and fu nn y! Barbra Streisand is excellent! F I'' our can1era eyes .... ~-~-~·· . "One.of the year's ten best! The most outspoken, · oUtrageous, ima ge-shattering film in years." -H1t111-r .... -.o.-irffr,tr1 A~ ,..,..~,~~~·41Qi """""''1 fUo ·~~-Wl'°"(A~ . ~~,.,.."""._... (l()a"IJlllll(l°""'ll.l.91' ·'°'°"""•~•-.. ?H"t.I illl!fr r11~1l'llt1 .,,..,..~'O"'f: IJP[CT{rtlfPo9<111{......,. ~ ...... ,,. ...... (A ..... ~~~· ~NM~OC'«..""'-~ ... ~lof~l•9'• l(Llii-=tJ Hl" .. 1·1111 .... .... ,_ Wtllfntlllll ......... • _} ·-... ' .. --.. -.. .. ~ .. t 1 f ~.J J ' ' I I I ~ ' ~ ,. · ..... • '• --~ 28 ·DAI LY PILOT IRo:s Hagen, plays AN AllSURD LOOK AT MAIUllAOE "PLAY STRINDBERG" llV Durr~nn•rt NOW l11r111 JANUARY 21 -8 P'.M. IN REPERTOR Y -WEO., THURS. "MOONCHILDJIEN " ~-~.-M~,~"~.-.. -, -.. ~All Aq--s~nl.ir;-1n J~·~"""·~oc-,;c.n"°"•".M"". ---. ======·=·'="=' ='"=NDAY FUNNIES•• '@ Jbuth ·Coast Repertory FOR RESERVATIONs--44'-13'3 ONE WEEK ONLY ---Pacific Yibfotio.v . COLQR .. -.... ... ~..,----·· It• lIJ.Gl'ltJS-GITDS 10< magical mirth and musicl , ... ···~f.~ .... ~ .... ~ ·\ ~· . '<'ij:,,-. tfifil ".""' ~1'~ ·~ ~ N' q~ ~ ' ; """ b . .· -..{~, WAIJ DISNEYS '· " 2nd All WALT DISNEY HIT AT BOTH CINEMAS t-#D:.~-~-E-li-.s~DC3wD""~~0·" :'fl\\.IJ OOG OF THE NORT!i MONDAY thru FR IDAY FROM 3:30 P.M. SAT RDAY and S Y FROM 1:00 M. NOW PLAYING · AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS '"TH£ w t:St!llltMS,.l!R Cl!,.Tl!'t IN HARBOR SHOPPING CEN'TtR ::(92 Wf.$T ...... sn!"' •T GO•Oll!'.H wo;ST B£TW£EN ~:!0o~:or:,•~::,.: 119°2~••93 c 1nem1 "'· l :30 " :OOP.m. Sl .00 UA CITY CINEMA e SAT & SUN • 11'30 & 2:30 P.M. "lEIRA IN r .. e ICITCHEN" IG) COLOR Elvis Prtll•Y Ch1rl.-l Brin.on "THE VALACMI PAPERS" -Pl.n- ICim D1rhy "GRISSOM GANG" (Il l Born In ColOr! Dl1n1 Rou "ELVIS ON TOUR" (G) "GANG COULDN'T SHOOT STRAIGHT" &olh ;~Color !PGJ • "LADY SINGS THE BLUES" J1me1 Jonas "THE MAN" Bot~ In Color! fR) ~ M,Q,,~ ... " • ,..,,,. ""'"'' I•" I '~~•ti. an escaped convict who meets an ex-girlfriend, Les lie Parrish, in ''The Devil's Eight" al 11 :30 p.m. tonight, Channel 2. --i:::::i . -:..cc. $FAD/UM •3 "'.'. ·~ . ~ ..... ._.,, .... ''"' "'"' '"~' ro· ~e• '""" '• l,,,1 • ""'" ,,1,, a•,. • JCJINYOlf...., ~lllC~NCll.~ ldllrellw ;cDI WfS•••H•lo:tt •• (,oo O• .. w• '" 1rr•ffM:::0.:.:o':.~!:~: e~? •••l £.OWAROS HARBOR t!.':":. l •AlltOfl k¥0 Al ••UO• U c.01i. .,,. ~·· °''' J ••l t 509 • W OolGO r•i 1 •«lu' hJlly 4'•~<vt•'tl If '..u~ p.,,.,.,. :·"' ,.,.,,.~ ··~u '"''"~"' STEVE IVlc:lllJl:l:l'I (PG) PREMIERE ORANGE C'OU NTY ENGAGEMENT ... • co1i'.1 "'" u 11:.c:.-.·,",.111 •l•G • N(WPOllT BF ACH. • fi•• 0760 . UP 1 BARBRA THE STREISAND 1R> ~ox . PLUS · llf MAPV!N G£N( HA(!(MAN .. PRIME CUT .. • . ~ ~.~ .. ~•~T~H~.~.~.?. .. ~~- •• •" &4 6 ·.1102 •••• H•••o• •• •!)••• co•'" •••A • I ~ctric ~ompany Starts Week I l\10NDAY 6:00 KDow Your AJtique1 perso1J1Uties. Feat u r e..s--"i>o t;ltiytrlc Compnny Ralph and ferry Kave! established trOsts, authon, Entertainment. music, nnd · discus.s the de.slgns or poel11 and playwrl(l;hi$. humqr to tench' reading Carnival Olw and the tac-8:00 M11terpl~ Tbeatre - skills .. produced by the torie:i from which it came. •'Tom Brown's Sciliooldays" Cbll<lrcn's TV \York.shop. Ralpb traces the history and Part 1-followed by "Odct· 4:30 l\1lstt.r Rogers• idcntlfic of \Vlndsor ta". A drarnatl.zatlon of , Ndg~rbood . -Variety 1:hal . Terry then tr.aces the. TJl9~ ltl;'g'he1' cl~ic. tn . pro gr nm comrnunic11Ung h Y. ot \Vor ce s t er the cwrte of Ton1's with youns children, hosted porceltun with examples of (Anthony Murphy ) struggles by Fred Rogers. each period. ·,.., lhrougb Rugby School, he is 5:00 Sesanie Street -lioPr· 6:30 To Be Announ1.-ed. publicly flogged, tossed tn a long progran1 fur pre-school 7 : o o l aJ e r a 8 l I, 0 u a I blanket, a\ld roasted beCore <'hildren, produced b y Performunct • ' L a an open fire. Children's TV Nel\'IOrk. Sy Ip hid e ' ' Ghislaine 9:00 AdvO(.ates -Courtrootn· 6:00 l\1oggie Aod The Thesmar and 1'{ I c h a e t style debates on important Beautiful l\tachJne -"A Llt· Denard. two of Frances's national t.ssues. (60 rntns.) tie Bit ~1ore Pregnant'' This foremost ballet dance.rs, muRSDAY show is des.ign"ed to hnprovc star in this charming tale 4:00 Electrlc Company vour circulation and keep to about James, a Scots 4:30 MI 1 le r Roger 1 1 li minimum stretch marks. peasant who falls in love Nelgbborhood broken veins, aching backs with an ethereal creature. 5:00 Sesame Street and legs. However, being merely a 6:00 Ar11t is In America " - 6:30 Focus Orange County -n1ortal. James cannot_ keep "Mary Pritchard'' . .. Airport Noise Dispute . . up with the Sylphide, and 6:30 The Just Generation - Orange County Airport'' she cannot bear lo be con· "Or\i.ft Law". Host Howard Host Jim Cooper and special fined. The sprightly Sylphide Miller asks, what right has guests: Robert Cllfford, dies in dames' arms when the goverririlent to compel President of Air Califomla; he attempts to capture her. an individual to fight or to [)aniel Emory, Cha irman of 8:00 Black Joumal -Foru1n kill? And the A~ Truckirig the Airport Noise Abatement !or · black expression on a Company gives the Army Committee; and Robert wide range of subjects. some tips on recruiting. HELD OYER "ILYlltA MADHiAN" Also HELD OVER THIRD WEEK "VANISHING ' WILDERNESS" ..... tli~ Fri. l=ot. 7:00. 9100 Sot • ..ct , .... 1.3.5.7.9 Bresnehan. Director of 8:30 Book Bea& -"Theatre of 7:00 l\lasterplece Tbealre - Orange County Airport -War" Eric Bentley, essayist, . "Tom Brown's School Days" o. H. liw.-.n,•'i discuss the Pf?S and cons of teacher, poet, playwright, Part I -followed by "Odet-''THI YllGIN & ''::tt~~24 convenient a1; trayet . to social critic and leading ta ". See listing January 24th THI •YPSY" ''SNOWBALL nlany, but noise ob]ections commentator on drama will at 8 p.m. Both Color !R) EXPRESS'' for nearby residents. discuss his new book ' with 8:00 Focus Orange County -,1 l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~iiiii~ 7:00 Special Of The Week -host Robert Cromie. "Airport Noise Dispute ... "Full Circle: Cat Stevens--9:00 Spetlal -"Puppets and Orange CoUnty Airport". See SHOWING' NOW! Leon Russell" British artist the Poet". See listing !\ton· listing 'Jan. 22nd at 6:30 Cat Stevens leads off with day at 8:30 P.M. (60 min.) P.M. eight of his best known tunes WEDNESDAY 8: 30 Eye to Eye 10% - followed by a rollicking, 4:00 Electric Company "Dreams Money Can Buy". uninhibited assortment of :30 Mis t er Rogers · Art in advertising music from s i n g e r • Neighborhood sometimes the business of "* * i II ••• SHEER AND UNEXPECTED TERRORI A TOUGH, BITTER LITTLE SLEEPER OF A MOVIE ABOUT FOUR TIMES AS GOOD AS YOU'D EXPECT! son~iter Leon Russell and 5:00 Sesame street1 aft is "business." Those are his friends~ 6:oo'Tbe. -Fam.Uy Game -•ro the dreams·money can buy, - 8:30 Special -"Puppets and Men! O Women!" Real peer maybe. -LUNBEARABlf TENSION!" -Chicago Sun Times the Poe~" Lady Macbeth pie -not actors -in role-9:00 Firing Lioe Z16 -William and other Shakespearean playing situations will ex· F. Buckley, Jr. (00 min.) characters live again with plore differing views and at. FRIDAY . the help of the National titudes about masculinity 4:00 Electric Company TheatreofPuppetArts. and femininity. Hosted by 4:30 Mister Ro ge r 's. 9:30 Thirty Minutes With -Charles Hauck. Neighborhood Newswoman Elizabeth Drew 6:30 French Chef -"Puff 5:00 Sesame Street interviews important Pastry". Cooking techniques 6:00 Book Beat '109 "Theatre newsmakers on the national explained and1demonstrated of War". See listing Jan. 23 scene. by Julia Child . at 8:30 p.m. TUESDAY 7:00 Soul -Hour Jong en-6:30 Making Things Grow - 4:00 Electric Company tertainment show, all-blai;k __ "The Q>ol Window ''. 4:30 M is i er Roger • s•. ~:;;::::;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:::;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;::::::::::;:;;;;;;ij~j Neighborhood l 5:00 Sesame Street Exclos1v1 EIJ!la91ment Ntw NI RHtrved Solt W~r If J AC..S.111, AWl "lll "FIDDLER DN TME ROOF'" ~It DllMY'1o "'SMDWIALL EXPRESS" • ''TME 91SCUIT E.t.TER" (G) "ELVIS ON TOUR" • "SICYJ.t.CICEO" {PG) -"JUDGE aoy IE.t.N"' ... ''THE REVEMGERS" "PETE 'N TILLIE" . ... "PLAY IT AGAIN, S.f.M" , RATED (PG) NOW El(lUSIVllT EXCLUS1V~ OflANGE CO RESE RVEO Sf AT ENGAGE ME N11 ' ,. peter Sophia and James OToote. I.Oren Coco dream Tue Impossible Dreiinr in an Arthur Hiller Alm • ..Manofi: ,_l1Mancb3= . • • ... SMOWlllO ~*~ll 'll!rt~. ........... ,, .................. ,.. •-r'"''°"-·-llilll..,. !all """ ....... "*-111 lio•• ... .. .... -""'"'! .... ..... "I lnl! lfllOld ""* .. rt .... oon ~ , .. -I !Ml uet.n .u1,.trtta..i. • ::::,';,:! . . . . . .... . ..... 111 .~:~:.:•·L~o·::~tL·L~ •.. ••• r.o.-•• .. ...,.. • ••'* .... o , ...... II, <t~l'>lt • HlllfYI tl'I"" o-&r. r • MARI, SEVENTEEN , IS DYING. EVEN FOR. HER THE WORST IS YET TO COMEI ••• IT'S JUST ACROSS THE SECOND FEATURE! YOU MAT NOT WALK AWAY FROM THIS ONI ! twitch .... death nerve ~ ,.~ , I • BNch BouteY1rd South of G•rd1n GrD'ltl Frwy. Westminster• 534'"6282 M1RTHFUl l MAGICAL I MUSICAL I SHOWING NOW! WAIT DISNEYS .,::.g TICflllCll.OIS WALT DISNEY'S ~~~ MOW AT 80111 CINEMAS EXCCUSIVEORANGE - COUNTY ENGAGEMENT! Mon •. fri. o,e11 6:00 P.M. Sot. & Su11. Ope• 5:30 P.M. flRST SHOW 6:30 P.M. ·~· U~I llllAUD "MllMl+..lltlM!e ............ lllo .... •11'1 'tlUnlUICI' II • *"""' MTl./tll , •• ti -~·ell.ill. 1• Cll llllJ .. 1 .. ._,. ..... ~IQb.ftll•- .., .... 1 ..... -.-"'""'"'""'_"' __ --....-~.J..t.1. .. ~-i " .1 . NOW ATIOTM EDWAIDS CINlMA$,. DIANA ROSS /5 BIWEHOUDAY 2nd AT BOTH Alon Art.:in • .Soll~ Ktlltrmon n. "TH HAST OF THE Rf~ HOT LOVEH", :~ EDWARDS Cl'iE \! \ ('f 'iTf R ' H.t.1~011 •' •U•M, l • '~ 41 . ' .. • _, I • t I ' I ) • ' I r I I t c l ] ] '11 pr "' II ur or SC Vl tu ar m m· .. ad AE "" pr ~ er ,be le< be . l Se ·,w, an de COl th< "" gr• ft" . I ... pU !!!, . ' °"' me \'Jr °" me ch• wll it . ) I I f rei Iha ... the 1 Sia Hu ov• (th wh~ lo• .. ah vie· ma see inv H res hac mo ed cos .. -rec ".n. eigl equ yea A tool ~ T wet car pro sch .... and pro L s. Loe ~ -:io l .... .~ .... I - Wlwopee, A Drink SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Anybocty ooldi111 alack c:ertlfical.. In the San l'nmclaco National Banlt can get a free drink" Mon- day al a. tavem owned by Investor Rog. Zimmerman. Tho stock Is virtuaUy worlhleu now since the bank collapsed severfl yean ago. Z!mmerman, wbo lOBt a bundle on lls downfall, plans a party to mark tba eighth '"' nlversary of the bank's failure, and will give a. free drink to anyone who turns ln their stock certlllcat.s. l Frida~. January 19, l9n Jl(TfnOlll llltlftlll •ICTITIOUI IUSINall I,._ JICTrnout IUtlN•IS NAMI l 'ATIMINT Big Three P\JBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE PUBUC N011CE PKTITIOUI I UllNllS D~tails of Auto Meets Revealed NAMI ITAT•MINT MAMA ITATIMINT PKTITIOUI I USINISS NAM.I ITATIMINT. Tilt lolloOllllllQ pi1rt0n If oolno M\ft1~1 T"9, MlllM.... l*'IOM lf't ...... TM ~.. ,.._ .,. '°'flt ltAM9 ITATQUllT Tiie ~ ,..,_ .,.. llOI"' u : . ......... ff! ~ u :_ n. tottowi,.. ,.,_ la .... -.i-Ml-•··~ 'AV'• TAH IC .intVICI ANO SUI"· VM.l'.NTINIS HAIN. HOUSI. nt ltETlltl!.MINT HOMES INVEn0111. •1 ••OMAN ltU>un•1E1. 11J4i k 'LY. IMf ..........,. A.,.,..., .... Ill, ....... fl,. ...... C.I• MMt. c.llftnll• 11f1 ~ ·~ ""'"'· ~ ADACHI NIJl;ll•Y (OM,ANY. ''" H1tMW•1 St .. kttl• Mt. Clllflrlll• COii• -... Ctllforfll1 mn. ~ INdl, C•llflonll1 lolM A......_ W'*"1111'4or, C..Hfor!lll IVOf Jl'f o.rr.H ~. IMS Attftlm Irle: 1"•111 H•-· 41·C.I• ........ St., .... ,.f'IClll., 1151 l'Ol1 lttnwlck Mld!MI J. Calb'f, ,,. Gol!llC, Clltford GIOt.. llMdlflt, 1210 w. Av-..... 141 COUI MtM. C..lltor1111 C•I• MIN, GIHf«nll tH21 ,..ct;. Ntwl*'"I hlch. Cllllotrdl ............... C.Atornll Edll\W, Ullll Alie, !=1IH0tnl1 tlJ~ n.21 M111111r.1 L. Hanton, a c .. 11 MllH <;,ww A. swmv1n, 2'71 cr .. tvl-11111 ~ I• ~ Dl' 111 111· Oorqmy JNn RM!lll'lll. non w, TM' t>utlMM I• MlnQI condllcitd 01 111 St .. COi/i Melot, (1U~1 '2621 0!'!¥91 Newpcwt -...C:ll dlvldual ~di*-'• s.n11 .-.n,: C1lltornl1 flJOol lnolvldutl. Tllll w.;11t11 II 1Mlll9 c:anduc!ld rt{ • Tllll DVtlntH ll llllnt,. CClllQ;/(1tc:I b'f I MktiMt J, Collrf 'fllll IMl$lt\MI II Wing c:Oflll\1Clf4 llV I J1V O. l"tW 1111'1111ni(11P 11tnll44 Wttttrshlo Tlll1 ti•""*'' w.1 flltd with If-.. c-llm!1" P41flMflfll11 . TMi •l•l"'*lt fli-1 wltll lhl c-1v MMpm L. "'-RMOlt ,_ ty CloOlk ti' °'Mitt ,_ly .... DRembef Clifford G. ll:..Oh111 Cl"t Of 0r-. c_,-, Oii~ J1nv.rv u. DETROIT (UPI) -,,,.,.. was nolhlng Ulegal 1n secret meetlQI~ between top automotive executives to plan bargainlng 11trategy with the United Aulq Workers In 1970. Bui public knowledge of those eetlnp Ii proving to bo • !"'Y'-.._J-":~~­t. I THE j!OV ER·NMENT Wednesday revealed in a 240- page document details of the meetings between the senior executives of General Motors, Ford and Chrysler. They were tryJ.na:, but failed, to w ork out a nl.utual aulstance pact to share the costs of any strikes b~the UAW against any of the companies, the government contends. , Lawyers for GM and Ford sought to suppress the in- Tllll 111'-"1 lllM Wiit! .,_ C-"' Tf!l1 111,_I 111«1 '#1111 tllt C-ly &. ttn. Owolhy ,, RMdlnt \t13, WILLIAM E. fT JOHN, C0UN1 V a.rt; ., Or..,.. Cllllllty '" JM. '· "" Clill' ol or ..... c-·., '" '.nt.IMY '· Im ... ., ... °"'' TIU 11<1*'-I 111111 ....,.. ttw C-ty Ct..£a1t. •v TIW ... M. w.r.. °"""'V· government's charges the w1wAM 1. sT JOHN. c-ty c""' w rw r.,_ ,,., ward, °"'*"' c:-tw .,..,_.,. • u. ci.r. eit °'"'" c-iy .... J_., '· ''" ,..nm companies bad conspired to T ........ M. Wwd. °""""· CWtr. "" A-., "" ''-, ... • WILLIAM •· ST .10•0•1.. COi!"" CL••11 ~,..,.. °'.,.. C&ittt o.itv · •11ot. "9UI •nm ~ .......,. "'""'* _, i,y '""-M. w.,_, ~· J-ry 11, s. Mid ~ 1, ,, bring pressure ov Chrysler 1n ~...,. °"""" c-• o.uv ••11t. PWtWwcl 0r..,.,. cot11 o.11y ••· T..._. ~ "'1 ~ 1m 1.0.73 an automotive fleet sales price J_,.., 12. "·"'.,. ~ry i. '~ .. J-v ii. It, u .,.. l'l"WUMV .!: l"vtlfl•tlM °'_.. cotu o1u., ,,::, l"ubllllltd or.,. CN•t o.uy •riot. PUBLIC N011CE t •• ltl1 7\ •• J f IL It M lt7l l9·1l J-.ry 11, It, .U I OG FtOt\llt., ~''---===~,;,.,:,;,;;~--Wlr, ~ ' ' ' ltlJ H·lll FICTl'flOUS IUSIMISf PUBJJC NOTICE PUBlJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE HAMI ITATl'MINT U.S. DlSTRICT Court Judge PUBUC NOTICE ..J.i":.u '::'."'"1"" person& •r• llCI"" John Fellens ordered the in-~:~:':: ~::.:r .. ~== ,~~~A:~i:::· • m11 U+SA aoNITA DALY CITY, 1*"5 TM tlffvwlng ~ •r• dolflll MOTtcl TO calDIT'Olt • 4t11t JAmlk1 • ....,. (Oii• M .... t.iltlnl&lo rormation contained in the TMI CO\IWTY OP OtlANO• MllllN ••; SU•••H)t. cou•T o• ,..., "OTICI TO calotTO•• UWl'•llC• w. Midi-'. '* ~ document made p u bl l c NOTtCI o• 14~-.:;:J"oP l"ITITlott MALCOM EN1Eltl"tll1£S. 1.,.1 JTATI OP CALIPORlllA !'Oil SU•l•IOI: COUltT Ofl TNI R~ ca:,'.1 =~ .. : .. ~~ ... although lawyers contended ~:=~Ai:.~:1:.."{.'ii'TAMD ~· =~.s~o. 3' Hllflt!lllJIOl't llt(ll, TM• co~i:.~:.:..0UH• ·::~·c:::;1::-c::i:Ni::' Drive, "-' 8~. C .. lfllnlll the ca would be tried In the .. WILLI••• t • "MOE•T OOMt I . klltll, Hffl Golllard It.. lrllt. Of MAllEL C LAU S E N .... A • MDI I Tllb Mlrieu 11 1111,. COflClvC.'tM by • • se Et1•19 ,.... . ~ ' No J, Hun!1119ton llffell, C1U!ornl1 MMC.AlllTNE't, O.C.1i.ed, •11111 of LILA F. SHANNON, •IO lltnolt«I Plrtftlrllllp press. ~or"lti: •• Ml!'llEIV GIVEN 11\al AOA n.11 NOTICE IS HERE8V GIVEN to "" k110wn •• MllS. l..H.A F. SHANNO;, L•WtlllCI w Mldltlld • LAMIEllT Ml Ill.cl 1111'1111 I petl!IOl't Malcol'" H. COC*. 101'2 tmoerl•I ewe c,..,ltorl Of IM lllo~• nllMd dlc:tldtftl ~~~v =..:· M•S. LILA 'er~· o:'•~mtnl ~ltd Wiit! "" c-tv While the automakers main-.... ,rabl .. of Wiil •!'Id for l&llllllC9 of UM, Huntlnt!(lll 811(11, C•lllOrttl• ltltt Ill Ol•IOlll r..vlno ci.lmt lftlllll tN NOTICE. IS HERi::llY GIVEN IO IM 1';; ti"!' The •llQ• M. °WnfY on J_...., t. lained a "no comment" the Ll'ft9n T11t11'1\tf1t1ry 10 Pllltlotltr ~ MN! Otold«lt •r• ,..quired lo flit tiwm. crldlror1 Of nw •lllMI 1111m111 dloldln! Citrit rew Ard, Olp,lt'f C-ty U . ed A W k f r....-.ot to """lc:ll 11 mM1 tor hlrtllotr Thh llullns11 11 bllfllll cOftdvttM 119" • Wiit! IM ttecnwrv ,,_lltn. Ill IN offln !NI 111 per-I Mvlng d t l"" 10111111 llll l"DllJ nit uto or en o wtlc~. 1rld 111111 r111 11 .... •rid ~ PfflnW""41 Of "-cMrt Of 1,,. •lllMI .....,,... ciowt. " Mid ~' 1r• NiQ1.1lr111 10 1111 ltl9fft, PWH1111<:1 er.._ Cont o.u., PllM A'merica UAW seiud the on.. t..r1N tM .. ,,,.. "" ....,. "' ... Oorllll 8• khlll .. ,,,_, """" w1ni IN _.,. "'11h lhl.....,.., ~ In"" office J11>111,.., 1i. 11 x tnc1 F-·~ 2' • y J-ry •• 1'7), II t;OO •• m .. Ill "" 11llt ... ..,,,.,.,, llltd wltll IN c-PI' ~ .. "" ~ et • OW>-of "" cltrt Of .... *""' .ntlltld CO¥f1 " Im ' --·' ' porturuty to chide the com-c-rfnMI of ~rt,......, No. 1 of 11ld Clllk Of or.,. c-tr on Jtn. t , ""MV,.. ''""'·Sul•• "G", L.--..cti. "' .,_., "*" w11t1 lhl ~ n.n panies ror ''working under the ctvrl. II 700 Clvk Clll!er Ori .... Wfll, Ill WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, C:-tr Clllt ~ callfaml• tti.51 wNc:fl It tht .. ti' -""" 10 ttw ~, .... ,, 1111 ltfln PUBLIC NOTICE tfM Cl!'/' Of S1nl1 An1. C1iltor11l1. Tl'llrHI M. W11d, Oeoufl' lllutlnet1 d IN tl!IOtnlllntd In tit fM"rttrt Of 1111 •ltonMy, G&OROf: GAROME••1---... ==,,-===---table and tn back rooms to un-'011.d Jtnu.ry 11, 1'1'l. PzMfl riert•ln!na '° tlll .. ,.,, ol Nld -....m. l»-Q VII Alhlrnllrl. L.-tlllho, PICTITIOIJS 1us1 .. 11s f irl In· k nd •'-Wll..LIAM £, II JOHN, Publlillld Or1nat Co.M OlllV l"llol, wllllln fOl.N' rnorttht •fflf ttw fll'll P\lllllCI-C•111ofttll Whlcll Is ttw pjl(f .i 1Ml111u "AM• STAT•MDT 8 Y Jure WOr er!ll a 1.ue County CIOlk J1nu••Y 12, 1', U •net FtOflllf""/' 1, tlon Of !hit notltt. o1 the ui:o.rilgnlll In •II ~llart I*'" TM followll'tCI Ptl'Mln• ltf'I doing consuming public " •av •· '"'"' 1m .,..,, o.ted Jflftllarv 2, 1tn 111n1111111 "' tile •'•'• o1 .. Id 11eceHn1. 11ua1._. •• , "It "1s t"un t •· ·--d .......... AltwMY ., ~ -.•o•EllT ••· .. "'"w.11'• RSOM wit~! .. +our ..-1m •• , ... Ille fin! !MIDI!~ CASA IONITA VILL.AJ, nos J1m.ic1 e 0 UIUI on ~•r 1• #Mfll• A-PUBLIC NOTICE J Executor llOl't Of 11111 nollc1. ROid , C•I• Miii, Celll«nl• spiracy and start playing fair ClllJ• MIU. CMl"'"'11 Of t111 •boV• lllmtd dlc:ld.,., o.ltd J1M11ry 11. 1tn. L•wrenc• w. Mkll1rld, 1w Jall'lllk.i T1h 11141 ~ •AlltD •. co•••N VIRGINIA McDONALD Ro.tel, Coal• Mew, CllllOrTlfl Programs In Space Periled / formation coll\llned in the , documtnt which b part of the wHh workers and the public," An.r.v tw1 Petln-• 41741' • oi-rn sltWt1 • .,,.,.. .. .,. Eu<utrlx G.,,, A. su111v111, w 1 cruMr. the union 'd . Iii Jal l"lltlllthlll er-. Cot•t 0t11r Piiot. IUPl•IOR cou•T D' TM• UffN t.Ktll. c~"'""' 1 o1 n. wm.,"" 11,1~1• N1WPOtr a11e:11 Ml In an 0 IC JtnUOf'I' 12, ll, It, Im 121·n STAT• OP CALIPORNlA ~ Tel..,_, (JI') ......n ltMMI n1mtd oMc«llnl. Th/1 btlslneu 11 Dl(ftll cond ucted b'f 1 Statement THI COUlfTY CW OIU.No1 AltwMr ... IPClllw OaDltGI GAllOIU!R llmlttd ~rtnerllllo ' PUBUC NOTlCE Ht. A·lPl4 Plilblllhld Ori/IOI CN.. Delly l"llol, DMI VII A! ... "*"' L&w•lflt"• w. Midland ' BEVERLY BIW, (AP) .., The head of America'• 1paoe program has warned that because or budget cutbacks any project that starts to show uncontrollable cosl overnms or begins falling behind schedule will be extremely vulnerable io cancellation. ' "WE ARE IN a new genera- tion of space ac~vtty when we are caUed upon to do much more with eomiderably Jess money. and we can do It," said Dr. James A. Fletcher, administrator of the National Aeronautics and S pa c e Administration. Jn the future, he said, private/Industry along with other1 iountries and other gov- ernment users will have to ·help develop Bnd pay for NASA technology rrom which they benefit. Fletcher told the Netlonal Security lndllllrW Association ·w~yaptthatasan ~. amplft, NA.SA no longer ·Would. develop Improvements tor conunertial satellites. ' 1-------------INOTICI OP' 141'.MUIO 0111 PITITIOfll J.nllllty $,I?, It, 1', lt7l 11·11 L..-. HUii. Ct11"'91.1 tUSI Tiiis 1t1l1mtn! lllfd wllh !ht Caunl"!' 'Oil l"ROeATI 6fr WIU AND ,Olt Tefi (714) 1114611 Cltrll. ol Or1rioe County an J1n. t, 1'1J 1tJ "OTte• 0, MARSNAL't IALa l•TT•U .. '"',"""o ..... !" .... ,!.. 5'.LOTTE PUBIJC N011.CE ~ .., 1•'""'1• Ther1w M, W1rd, [)fpUly County Cl«t Sw1m .. RICQWI Club, I Corp., l"i.lnllfl, E•l•l• ... ..... ri P'Wlllnld Orenae C0911 0.11'1' Piiot. PtMM Oil. l llty D. Prlde!1!ol'I. Offtnlhlnl. No. l2' McMAHO-• ....... , ••• '1"'.,,''°•"•v""-1 J-v u. lt. x. Ind Fetlr\llry 2, Put>lllhed o....,.. C.11 0.lly l>ttol. w McMA • .. .. """' • tlnt 1m 111.n J11>111ry n, "· » .rid F*"trr 2. 1tn JUOGMENT CATE: J~ I, ltn di CMARLOTTE ICl!GEJlE11. ~. MOT1CI TO (llll0f1'0ltl ft.ll Clemente Station •v WM ol 1n ••Kl,lllon l11Wd Oii NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN """' IUPlltlOR COUllT °' TMI DiK'lfftDOf 21. 1m br ti. Munlc:IPll Courl, HAlEL e. KLIHKE• lw• filed hlrwill • ITATI' ~ CAL.IPOl:NIA POil (lfllf"•I Ortl!OI c_,., Jloldlclll Olllfkl, Olllllon tor ,robllt ti' WIH ~ for TNa COUNTY Ofl oaAIMI Co11111<f ot Orll'Gll Sl•N Of C..lfomla. llP' I-ol lllttrt Tnl•lnlflllry to tlll .... A-1#11 I tint 'ICTtTlovt SUlllfllSS on 1.ludQm111I enilfed In llVOI'" ol Swim~ Pill~ rlflNnc;e to wlllch Is ml<H for Etlllt Of ACHILLE I , CANNIMG, 1t1 llOTIC• TO CltlDITOltl 111.t.Ma STATIMINT r.cQllll Club, 1 Corp. •I ludgmeftl cr«lll· lllrthtr Plrllail•ri, •nd ti.I tht time •nd ACHILLE IOTRIUNE CANNING, lltt IUPalUOll COURT 0, THI TM folfowlng llll'IOn It doing butlMH or 1nd 1a1ln1t lilly D. Pfldemott u PllCI of 11Hrl1>9 lhl M,,,. II.ti llHfl Ml A. I . CANNING, o-tld. ITATI OP CALJl'OllNIA POil •I! To Do Money Show PUBUC N011CE PUBUC N011CE Radio Station KAPX In San Clemente h8! initiated-a new business show specializing in money news from around the world, it was annouoeed by President Kirk Munroe. THE SHOW, "Money Talks" airs every weekday at 5:15 p.m . and will be conducted by Harold Schwartz, director of Rockwell Earnings 'Increase ' Operatl·ons for Wes•-.m Sil ludQmtnl dtblor, *'-1"9. nit bll•nc• ol for Fet>ru•rv '· nn, 11 9:oo l.m .. In ,... NOTICE IS HliREIY GIVIN to ""' nt• COUlfTY Ofl Olt.UIOI ~w ..... 11: 1!11"'111"1-. lftll Pl-tl• ~ Ver 1157,lD IC!Ulll"!' ...... ..ici lllll9mlnf c.i ~room Of ~flmenl Ho. 3 ol Nld C'l'ldll°" of f111 ..,,,,,. n./Tlld oec.dlfll ltl. o\4'tnt A"""'1t, Cotti M.u, C.Uf, tuU' Exchange Beverly Hills; ........ o1111e-.-.. ..UtafCUllM,I ~. •1 7tl Cl C..llr DdW ....... 11111 ... ,.,... ~ cllllftt "9111Mf ttw EllhM of M.u:Y R. COWI NG, 1k1 Rodolfo All•-111'1 ""1nov!IW Calllorma .. ' 111 .... levlld llJIOll .U • "9111, tlttl MCI.,. ""City of s.ftil AM, Cllllilft'IM. Mid ~I -l"IQlllrlll lo flll INrn. MOLLY CO'lllflNG, 111• MAllY ELLIN Orlvt, W'Ntller, C1ltt. 91*4 ll<nl of Mid lucltl'l'lll'd diWoi' llt 1111 _. Oetld J_,y l6, "Im w1111 lfll _., VOllCIMr"t. Ill llw oflke COWING ~ "Ylllt llWI-If 11111111 C01119ucto11 !tr H Schwartz iS a reeo-"-...1 ,..,..., In tN c_,., of Or .......... ol ~~~ tT JOHN, Of 1he d'"-of"" ............. -1,., MOTICi IS HEREIY OIVEN I• IM lftlllvldull. ~ 6""""' Cellfor1!11, d9$Crlbld • ftllilon: NClllt1'0ll 1."MOl:TOlt tv 11ttMftf I'*"-wllll "" __,, ct'ldtton. Ill tlle •11o¥1 1111/Tlld dec.sem Afldoll'O AtH- authorily on m 0 net a r y L.111 l2 Of T1K1 ,,.,, •• "' "'"' _,. ..,._ llVll hlto • _...,.,,to ""~ .. IN offlct ti.t .. 1 ,.,_ lllYlna ci.1m1 ~1"'1 IM Tiits 11•'-t 111tc:1 Wlltl t11t COIM'Y rKOfded In I«* DS ff .-..11 to t7 ...... .,.... C..ll ;,.,, ol his •ltol'MYI. GlllOtl, DUNN • Mid _...., Ml f"flQl,iirN lo flll I'*"-Cllrlt Of 0rl!!QI County Oft: Dtt-lo'nblr 27, developments and gold and lflC:lllllve Of ........ ,.,.. Mept, R .. 'hft cntl aNlll . CRUTCHER. s• N.wpGf1 c""" on .... Wltll "" ~ voudllrl. ltt 1119 offlc. Im. WILLIAM •. " JOHN, COUlfTY 'I ke M 'd corM Of Of'Mlll c-iy, C•ll"""' ....,...,. "" ,...,lolltr Htwporl leectl. c.llfrwftl•· ~ ,. ""' Ill"" clertl.,"" .oove lftlllllcl ,.., .... ,., CLllltt. Dy TllOllH M. W1rcl, 09$iv!Y. SI Ver marSU tS,ExchanUnroe ~~1~ Mf1'!'i"~~ ~io::~ iW02 Gr9!Wl1, l"ublllh«I 0r"'ltl Co.ti! 0.llY Piiot, =tr~ =~~1: 1'!"~ 111.,:: ~to :::-"~.I =-=~ Publllhed OrlnVt CNtl Ollly ~ Western ver ge K.Ua NOTICE IS Hl•EllY GlVEH thtt '" J.,..;,ry "· 1'· 15. 1t'1 ,,,.,, oec-1. wlll'llll four ll'IOlltrlt lltler tlll of"'-•""1111. •C>aERT V, Gl8iOH, '50 Dlolmber ?t, 1m •!'Id J._,., s. ,,. lt, $1000 face value bags of pre-Frk!ly, FebnMV 2. 1m. at 10:00 .,cl«ll PUBUC ·NOTICE tint put>11c1tron Of 11111 llO!ke. SOvth 0 ,..._ 1u111-. La""""'· CA im J.S0.12 ~· ·1 . t I --A.M. It Mlll"ltilt'I Ol'llol. CowfllollM, 011.i JltKllf'V t, lt7J tOOIJ, wltlctl II ""' pllct ol blllln.t el }..,.., SI ver C{)LJlS o nv-w1011110 C10W11 v.._ .. .....,. 'Cll'I' Of RICHARD G, CANNING ttw t,11111tn1gntd ltt .11 ,,,..n•• Ptrltlnlllg PUBLIC NOTICE throu ghout the United States. ~ Nllllltl. c-itv ., er...-, ttat1 1 41741 Exeonor Of """ wlN of '°"" •l•M o1 .. Id~. w11Ntt 1our'---==_,,-,.,,-.,,-o----- Of Call~. i ....... putlllc -· SUPlltlOll coun OP TNli "" •hove ,,.,,... decedlllt --.... tint _ ... lct!IGll Of tllhl' •1-1T ovs •u '"" The program appeals to ~"Oft 10 1111 ~ Mdltll'. tor cetll 111 nATI Of' CA&.IPORNIA "°" 01asott. DllNM a CRUTC"lll llOllce. ..-NM-~ sTATli,!IMT 1 v~ who. seek the capital ~~a~• ~tfle~of ~:'iU: THI co:'lf:.. OUHI :~· :.:=; ~-~ Dllld ;;;;t7c_J· J~owlNG. ·~· Th• 1o11ow1no P1r10n 11 OoillQ _,._, gains potential of silver, yet ,...,., deblor Ill tile lbovl clttcrlbld Pl''> "OTICI 0' MIAltl"O o• PITITIOH N_,.,.. .. Kii, C.iHonlla.... FOAO v. COWING ••: NEWPORT Ml!SA •EALTY, -E. W~ want to ~eserve •L.,,;., 1111'1'1'· Of ICI muc:h lher90f II m1y bl POii l"ROIAT• °' WILL AHO f'Oll Ttl: 1714) "4-1171 E•«UIOf Of tile Wiii 17111 SI .• SI•. 110, Colt• /MM, C..ll. ,., y• 1.1.1 ...... necenlry lo Mlll!y Mid ueclolllon, Wllti LITTllll CW AOMINllTRATION A"-" ftr llKlllW o1 1111 1bovl l'llmld d«ldml '2621 capital by investing in K C!Vl(I l11!1trlll •1111 com. WITM·TH .. WIU. AfllHIXl:D l"ut>lhMd Ot•llOI CNtl O.llY l"lklt •OllRT v, •••ION ThorMI E. Cu, ,.,, llJNllNlll Pt .. • • • tlla Dlltd J1nuery t , lt1l. E1t111 of DAISY .\. HAYSl.I,, •Ito JlnvtfY I!, It, lf •!'Id Ptllnllry 2• "',_... 9f'IM. s.19'11 -C01!1 MtM, C•lll. t'W7 nunusmatic-quallty colns t OlvllklR: Soutli OrMOt COUnty --II DAISY •ELLIE HAYSLIP , "" IOl·Tl ~CA,.,, "Tiii• bvllllHl 11 Deina cOl'WNctld ~ "" havea-"·atefloorwellabove OILl.AllO o. WILICIRSOM DecuMd Ttll JI dMln llllll'ild1,11I. ~·· . • Mllnllll, Orango1 Count'/' NOTtcE IS HEREllY GIVEN ni.t PUBUC N011.CE A lw ,_.., Tr.on-E. Co• the !ace value of the C{)inJ. • ., M. L 11.-.. No. 20. Olpl,l!y CHLOE .... STALONS 111$ Ill.cl htr1ln • hlllhhld Or.ncll Con! Diiiy !"Hell, TN• "'·'-' ftlod w1111 .... County W Sil E ha · Swim & ·~ c-. • C-.. pellt!Oll fGI' PrOblte Of Wiii 1rld tor -· JMW>iry II, lt, 2' •lld Flbr111ry 2, Cllrt Of Orlftl19 County on: o.c.m-'J1. estern ver i:c nge IS cJ• Ml......,..... Slnlot ce. 1nu.nc1 of Letters o1 Adml11htr•llOl't • •1n1 1rn 10lon tm. WILLIAM 1 IT '°""• c_,., di-... of w t" Co' Ex 2N w.i...,.. Stnll . Wll!i-ll'llow!ll -•td lo the .,.1111-r lllOTICI TO CRIOITOlll' 1------:~.,..-,,.,==c----:· CIOlll, t>V T,.., ... M. W1rd, o.puty. a vu,on es em lD • IMI• ....... c.ufwlll<I ... ~ to wti1c11 11 m.c11 tor 1ur111tr su•R11:10• cou•T o, ntl PUBUC NOTICE nm:s chanae one of the biggest Publllhld Or.noe Co.tll 0111'1' Piiot, pertlcul1rt, •nd 11111 !I'll time Ind pllCI ITATI. o• CAU.ol:ll&A"" l"ut11llhld °''"" COiii 0.\ly Piiot, EL SEGUNDO tAP) -I ' . r J•rw•f"I' 12, lt, 26, 1'1l 11.).n of hffrlna "" ....... IY• been Ml tor THI COUNTY OP OllAMI ·--·n1 0.Clfl'tblr 2', ltn Ind J•-l'Y '· 12, It, ' who esalers and importers o F•bru•ry '· 1m, 11 t :oo 1.m .• 1n 111e 1i1 .. ""'" 0.., ~71 North American Rockwell Id d il col . ••e UBUC N011CE courtroom Of Olc>lrltnenl No. l of Mid Eil•I• ol LEWll eMIL tu.WK. ... PICTtTI us USlllllSI 1'" go an II ver ns ID ..,_. p tllllrl. ,, 10D Civic Clllltr Orf .... Wn!, In k-11 ... LEWIS I . HAWK. ~ ...... STA1'llilllllfT PUBUC N011CE COrp., earnings jumped to 88 United States As such they lhl 01'( Of Stntl Anl. Ctflflorftl•. NOTICE IS HbllY GIVl!!M" ,. """ ..,TM flollolflf!N --.,.. doing "[ BELIEVE we we have · 1 1 MOTtc1 °' SALi o' 1tlAL °'"" J_,.., "· 1rn crei111or1 Of ttM ..,_. Mm111 ~ ,,,.., •-= .1---=====-===c---cents a share during the first often get ear y news 0 PAOP•RTT AT l'RIVATS: SALi. WILLIAM E. ST JotlN, 11111 •II PlfSOlll,....... .._ llllM' n. DQRAOO VILLAGe APAATMENTS, PICTITK>Ut IUSllllSS the elements for a balanced monet"''"" developments In N• A·1DU c-'Y c1trt. 1tld cllcll:*I 1,. ,...._ ,. "" ....,.., t.TC.. nn wn1 c.o.11 Mlghw..,, NAM• sTATIMENT and pmd ti QUatter ended Jast Dec. 31, ..... .: . ' tn tN S1,lplrtor, Court Of thl Slit. of JACK M. PAUCITT Wiit! lhl _., VOUdllrt. ltt 11W of1kti N...,.,, 8-ch, CtlHOrlll• t"HtO. TM foll-1"'1 1111r11011 11 00!1111 M1nlu UC ve space pro-addition, they receive the C1Ufor11l1, tor !hi Caunty of OrlllOI UMM ... T-1.. of llw dirt Of tlll •bo't9 .ntln.d court, or TH E GllEEHW ICH GROUP. IN· II: gram" despite the budget mainly due to increased ac-. nAute-Money Report which tn !I'll M1tler Of IM IEll•le Of PAUL 1111• .... u .... """· lo pt'fMllll lhtm. wUll ttw _,., Cl>'ll'OAATEO. Oii,-, ~~.· corpo-rlllon. CAL·PARK OISTlllllUTIHG co. tin B nc -' I LA HCHARO FISCHER, DtcNMd. T....-. c.Mf, ...., vouctwn. ti t111 undertltlntd •I .ill North :Dll Wnt Co.tit Qn .. 1V• DuPOlll Orl~e. Suire lB7, 11"'111111, reductions, Fletcher said. tivity on North American's 1 is edited in London from up-to-Notlc• 1, hlreb't a1wn tNt ttw .....-AtllnMr tori ...nu-arlftd •IVd .. WM•. Gll!ICNI•, CA 91203, &11e,0.,• '•'u'1","'o7~G~PORA"YtON • C•"'"'"'' t26U E 'arlier, Fletcher told a bomber, officials say. u.A -inute news reports of dtnigf\ld win w11 tt Prlvm a.11, lo !ht T•h IPIJ u.1m w111c11 11 tM ~ of t>u1lnns Of 1111 ..,. -11o11 431 Mori11 Gold Co.11 Enler1N'lNI. Ill(,. " Ule"ULI lllahl'll •rid tint blddff, wlllect lo'*"" PWllthtd or ..... CNtl tl•llf l"llot, 111idlnlfllNICll Ill .... m.t19t'I ...... A .. to "" ---' C•llforttl• corpw1tto11. 1'127 OUCllM news conference that the Net earnings fDf the quarter Reul.era_-f 1 nan c i a I and 11rm111on of 1tld s...,.nor Cctutt. on or J.-rv 11. ''·is. 1m 1n.n ,,.. ., ... of .... -...m, w1111111 louf ::;:-: •";"·: '•:J::.:i bf • Ofi.,.., su11e 201. 1r'llt11t, c.111on111 tM6' public ii now more inteteSted totaled" i!Z.3 mWon, Company economic cotte8p0odtntl ID ::=, ttw J1ll ~.J'":~ •I~ PUBlJC NOTICE ::::" ..,.,. tM ""' Pfilblklfloll ., tllh Umltld ,;;:;:..J.iP. na co!:..=.-I• tieina..,, ~ "" • jp~logy_tb,an space. official• _ _. Wedooaday.. ev•l'V ..i.major commercial DI-. a Eut.11'tl s1r .. 1. :kl1t1 111. • o.~ Jinultry t. tm • ™~ ..... o!!~~i'" 01tou•. SltOMtt e. L•lnr ... l ~ .... ...,.......... --• City of C.I• ,...,._ C-ly of Or.not. CON.ALO R, PIECIC IH(;..,..rv-11111 1111"""11 lllld wltll tllt teurltY • "That's wny we mr.;shllttng Earnings for tbe same quarter center of the world. 51•1• ol C•Htornlt .... lhl rlgnt. 11111 •1111 EHVIRottMINTAI.. IMPACT •1,oan Encvfor" ttw wm Tllb '"'-' lllld Wltll tM Caunty Ctert of Ot•nat ~ .... I o-Tlber' '/t, f the vlowl tota.l $15 7 kt'-1 ti' Mid ~ 11 "" 1111'11 OI HOtk:f ii Nrelrf 11~ "li llw of flll ...... '*'*' ...... Ci.ti ti' Or~ c= .. Die. ,., 1t11 ltn •v Thlrll• M. w.r.11. Otp\rlV C-tv our interest to sate ' which o Pte year · KAPX, which, at 108 me ls c11it11 .,.. .n ttit r1a111. tt111 •rid llllerlft ~:'i::!.c:.t ::-:iow1:!:' ;::. DONALD • ,.1c11: ~ n.r-w °"""' c-tv c11rt. mtM measure changes ln the en-millim or 58 ·cents a share. at the top of FM dial, gets "'1:.C. ""b'I' ";::.:i:c.. RIO: =:,-:i~:;; vll'"Oll"*lt•t Exlfl'!Jltlon o.d•••tlOll , .. :::=:, ~.,:"" hlte • l'm1J l'ut>ll•hld Or•nae ~' Diiiy "'°'' vlronment ," he said. Officials also c it e d in-c I e a r s t e r e o r e cep-::;,.... 1111111 or 111 ..x1111on 10 11111 Of w111 C ~m'!"'•11v11v ipprovtd on T•h csuJ u 141,, CAL'"'i CAIJI~.:,. WIL4.IAMS Decttnlllf 2t, 1rn •rid J1111M1ry &. 1t. ''· AA--.:1 d Ii . f tru k d t' thro gho t Or ..,__ d«NHd 41 "" "me of dNlh. Ill •nd to •Ill.IVY '· ' llnatt f ,.,...,. An_., It! .. ,.. ,., ..,, •• ..... lt7J U0.12 "We have got to set "Cr~ e ver1es o c an ion; u u ange ........... r •It 1111 ~'''" pniper1y 11tU1ttc1 in "" •:,.:ir-s• ~i. ~~ .... °'1"• _ Pl>t>llMlld Ot•• c-1 o1uy '"°'· 1144 .....,. ':., - ourselves a concrete.goal and automobile components and ty, m most of Los Angeles and citv tt s.111• NY, covn!Y Of Dt'•"f· st~ IMdl "L..,... llT" ~IWIMI c-rr. co. J•l'llMll'Y 12. "· • •nd "*UlrY 2. •=.::.;1-c,....... eot1t 0•1,., 1'11ot, PUBLIC NOTICE m eet that goal," said Flet-other commercial products as ruverside Counties and in por-" c:.ntornl•,. per11cu1ir1v dllef 111c1 • ID 1M4 z-cl\lnol czc 73-21 trem lm l02on J1-Y ''-''• • IN .._,,..,., 1.J---;;:;:;;:;;:;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;--- 1 · in-, · followa. to.wit. llrtntwood $QUI A•l to C·2 111 ""'"" coristructlon of 1m IOl-13 ,tCTtTICH.11 IVSlllllS cher. "We haven'.t done that rea!Kn'I or the earning hons of San Bernardino and Lot ~ alocK t!: • • ,..., rec:or::o rtt .. 1 f\rnllvf• 1tor• loUl• •I •1 PUBIJC NO'J'lCE llAMI UATIM•n with the environment. We did crease. San Diego Counties. ~rK111oo11. 11~1 P. w of M.-i--~ ArtT"'111'7'1 R:U.::.i?o.. ~ PlJBIJC NOl'ICE TM .. ~ ,.._ .... •na •· It WI.th Apollo." . =========================:;;! M•lll'· Recorcb fl OrlllOI c-itf, dwellll'ICll • 4 ..,.... ...., ..,_. SCP·D .... ,.,·,.. WOST ..,,, ._ Airwest Reports Profit Ir Ctllkirtllt i a,._.... ort SUl"lltlOll COURT CW TMI Kl"... .. • morl eorn..-1., krlown It: llalc~~ ~ '*"' w JTATI. o• C ..... ll'OllNIA '°ll SUPSRMHI: COUlt'T °'TM• CIPl•lr ...... ~~ ~·"'""i.':.. the Viking says ..• ' ' Your 18rvice needs receiv1 my per- 1onal attentio n ... wa know you're importantr• J:N a.vertv ll'llet. S1nt1 AM. .:1Mt1 (CC:, T.....,.,,.. ..,..I THICOUlfTY,Ol'OllAllMI• ITATIOIJC ..... l,ORllllA'°• 11:'?. c.1 ..... , •• r.Allldllll. ~="!: Mii uslt Ill _,.,.. _,, of .... .., lo(.lhlcl '" N....i.nct s~....i -r NOTICI OIJ " ...... :,:"OP ,ll'TITIOH TH• co:",,::,, ORAN•• Callfornl1, tlOOI !ht Un!tld s111ei Oii connrmetlon of ule, Hllfllllon AVlfllll by Cl!'( of l,IAll~ POil PltDM.TI Ofl LOIT OR NOTtCI o" ..... , .. OP PITITlott Thi• llutlMtl 11 bllllG COlldtKIM ~ or ...... cl'lll .,.., bll•lltt! "'~ .~ llMc:ll pert!"' .. _...,. DllTllOVID WIU. .UD ..ol: LIT· PO• ••oeATW °" WULL AND PO• ll'ICllvldu:'~"'p T~~ll. riote IKVftd b'f Mor10l99 or Tnn1 cemplflllll Jtcllltlft *-'lld Mtltellll I'll TlllS TUTAMlllTAll't LITTllS TltT~•MfAllT ,:. i ~ on tllt Jl'(lfllft"I' IO told. T9fl ,.,.an! of IM l"ecltk Cllll Hlihwl'f ti\' City Of Elll•le Of CHAltLES J, IAltMES, Jll., E1!1M ol WINIFlt EO llENNEOV, Thi I :r-'t ftlld wltll tht C_,.., •mounl bid lo be depol.lled with bid. I ludl Dlc:Mi.ed DlcetMd I I I mtn lllds or offtrl lo bl In writ~ tnd wlll ~~!:':'I~ reportl I• -ui. "1tll ~OTICE ts HEllE•V GIVEN !NII NOTICE IS HEltEllY GIVEN ""' ;J:a,~ °i-''1~ ~Mfr c~~~ kt1f.t 1M rllCllved 11 tht tlorn.i.il off I 11 1ny tile City Clri, Clfl' of H""'lft91on 9Mcl\, f'ltAHCES 80UllHE BARNES IMJ ...... HOW.UD S:, l.AllNARO Ill• 1111111 herein ThlAU ·M. W d 0.,,.,ty time *""' ttw ,.,,, puDtlClllOl't lltnof .,.. m Pec111. Huntington ktch. C.ithnll•. llfnln I pttltlefl for ,,.. .. " loll " • ""'"°" ,., PrablM ol wm 11111 tor • ., If • Pnat bit!Ofl cltle Of MIM AftV Oll'"licWt W'llltllla lo --' .. lllll *'h'oylll wlll 11111 tor ~ .. Lelflf1 l1Wl't'!Ce Of Lltl•rs T"t11n111l•1Y to Plltl• °''" thl1 "" ell"!' of J•llU•f'f· 1m. rlPOf'I ,,,.., do IO wllllln 10 clt'fl ot tlll• Tnllmtnl•ry to !I'll ptllUOlltf' ~ "-,,...,._ lo wlllch II mlllt tor •ut>ll111td O•lnat Cotll D•llr 2,'*'A PAUL 11. FISCHElt noua Ill wrillfll "" ~dJ"' • COPY to .. wllldl h .,..,. for Mllllr HrtklMrlJ f\lrltlll ,.,llclM,,.. .no !ht! 11'141 time •1111 ,_., lt, 26 •nd FilbfUll"/' t. iJ!ecutor of !Ill Elltl'll the Director of EnYlrOlll'l"llll•I R-rcet. •rid 11'1•1 tlll lllM •lllf ,itc• Of ht.rlllf t111 JllK• ol ....,lfll ttw -llel bltl'I Ml 1'7> ISWJ --JI of Mid ~1 111 ,.,. ot 1111 CJ!y Cllt'tt. H no commtlll -hM .,..,. 1111 tor FtbolWT '· ""' for "*"'"' •. lfn, ., t :OO .. tr\., 111 "" • ;:]I UlllllN. "'I' -wl ~ If llltd wllhltt "" 10 .., parlm ttw •I t :OO ,,,.,., Ill ""~ ., Dtp9ft. QIUftreorll of ~I N .. I Of Miki PUBUC N011CE Hughes A i r west has Attwal\'S 11 Ltw ktrd'• Ktton 111111 w n...i. 11 1 ~-' N., s of Ntd cGWt, .i 1'D Civic: c011rt, •t 1111 Clvk c.iter Ori" Wt11, ln'-----,o=:-:::--:::::-:::c:-----, / , ( ltl 1111 lmt JI., llllfe Ill men! fl !fled. fM Boltll wlll c:onlldlr !ht Cfflllr Ori" Wiii, In tl'lt Clly M klltl ttie City ot IM!ll Alli, ClllfDml1, I" lllOTI<• M SAL.I reported a net profit of more CMI• 111 .... c•H=,:"27 lttlormlt!Oft 11 Mr ""' r"t!Mtr IMlllna AN, c1111onN 0.11111 J-ry "· 1m Nolle• 1, ...,., 11_ llll"Ull'tt 1e tte· than $1.9 million for l!m. It "' c ' l '-.. '".·~ .. .. followllllll p;plr•tton of tlM posltng .,.,lad. Dllld··-,L,;J,, I~ 1;.p JOHN WILLIAM E. ST JOHN. llont JDn ... JDn " 1111 CMI c•" llw featuring apri_ Mark V, Comet ·-• ·---··••"'"" 1 • • '-"'"' •••. """"'' .. --was the first annual profit in ... ·~=1~11110r~.,1 o.u., Piiot, Publls~v1r:11 c':..~-0:;rc1,iw ,. .. OM...iO:~ i:Y~ ... Ja. :~.:WJ.SCMMUn =:>:ut1~1:1111~E~~~ ;'~:'iv!! the airlines' history. Maru:·, Montego, Cougar & Jll'IUl'Y IJ, 13. It, Im 11a.n Janu1ry lt, ltn 1 ... n ................ MD DAVIDIOM, llllC. WIU.IAM v. ICMMIDT "N9WJl'Ort 811dt. Cllltornl•. •110 •. m on The , financial tumeround """ 1111 MIWfll MM''"" * '" Mftllll DftWI! wi. * w~ • .,., '"-"" c11., Of F'°""1,..,. im. PUBIJC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE UCI 1111:!"!..i.W.. Ill .......,. lltdl. CM.._.. fMft It'll tollowl1>9 .-.Crlbtd prOPtrty, IQ.WI!: started in April lflO when Monterey 1 ---::::::;-;:;-:~;;;;;;;;---J----~~====--I~~' ~.:..,. ~=-'~ y"' °' '"'· 1m1 Mdl"' ioti. Hughes management took STAT• Of' CALll"Ol:llllA llOTICI TG ClllDJTOltl Put>llWd er.,.. c-t °'"" ,,..,., l'Vtllhfttcl Or111119 (Mii 0111'/' l'llol lnip; Hull Ho., IC'1I0'21i uc-Ho. fi '• ldd rrJ CWPICa Df' ARCMIT•CTUltl SUPlltlOa COUaT M TNI J-V h, It, ts. 1m 111-n Jtl'IUl'Y ll. It, U, 1971 IT7 i1 ISll!tl, Cl'" -CT. over the de ot-r en ca er .uro cOHSTituc:Tlott sTATI 0111 CAU..o.••A '°" · s.ld Ml• 1,.., 11w ,_,...Of Mt11ty111t (then called Air West Inc.) MOTtc• To cotrTUCTOtt• tM• coufllTY o• 04t»!Ort PUBUC NOTI--~"c N011CE u.,, o1n.1111C11n11111111 ,... Mtrlnt • .,.., ! SEAl..ED PltOPO$AU Wiil be"""'* 9"f' ..... ,..,, ....., rv&n.1 I~ !I'll •-' 11 Ull..41 toottner Wltll which reported a $21 million Offlt• II N clll19Clvr• •nd C-lnlctlon. Elt•I• Of l<tu.NK CROCKER. c•ti ol ld,,.,,111"9...., .. ,._of~ , ___ th • °""""*"' ol Generll S«vtcet. "°""" l>tcastd 1unato11 CCMntT °" ""'' lllOTICI TO CRIDITOltl 011" 11111 l!lh city of JlllUlfY, 1tn. ~ e previous year. J016, 101 SOUlh llnlMIW•'f· L• A""'"-NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN to ttw STA1'10, CAl..llJDIJUA POil ' .... A-14111 ANCHOR MAJllHE llEPAI• "We've dug ourselves Out of C..llfOt11l1, unlit 1:00 11.m., ~i cr'ldllor• of 1111 IOO.,.. r111med dectdlfll TH• COUWTY 0111 OAMMe SllDtflor court-., n. 111t. of c1111orn11 1111 aect .,., Dr1v1 T T FtllfutlY 1, ltJ3, 11 wlllcll tlTM tlttV w I !hit 111 Oll"IOM Mvlna ctell'!lt 90111111 the lff. A-11161 for' t11t COIMtY o1 0rlftfl. Newport lffCll, C .. ltor11t1 a hole," said Irving . ague, be pubHctv Dpllllcl 11111 r•ld In llOOITI 1101 11ld tllc:ldlnl ,,.. rt1111llWI to Ill• ttwm. MO'f'tCI o" NIAlllJM DP PS1'rTIOfl ,.,.,. ot HAT'1'11 & a.t.ILEV. o.c.... ,.,, •. c. Jtnv Vice ~esldent and general •I Mid llldf'fts '°'' · wJlll t11t n«---vouclltrt. 111 "" ottiu •oa ,.OUTI o' .WIM. MD HIJl 111. l"vbll1hed er..,.. Cotll o.uy •ne• r-· AOCllTIONAL OUTOOOlt LIGHT ING, of n. dlr1c ~-· IOO\'l ltlllllld caurt, or LaTTPS Tlt1'.....,.MIT Holle• I• lllrtb'/' QIWl't to c1tdllllf'1 ot J11W1ry It, lt1' UJ.n m anager, "but wt're still 01\llSION OF FA11lS AND IXllOSI•"' '"""' """' wllll Ille .......,.,, ....... JOHN I . •u•1t1. IU JOHN"" ....... ..,.. ...,...., 11\tl 1111----,.,=,,-,--===--- -ldog a reasonable return on Tt<>NS, 1lHD 01nRJCT AGll:tCU LTUll· 'fOlilCMn, to 1tt1W.,.,llQnMt1 1111 offlC4 .EDWtN 1ua11:1. '" JOHN EDMUND ,..... hrllfll' ~ ... 1111, n. 11111 PUBUC ·l'roTICE '""" AL ASSOCIATI°"', COSTA MESA. of f\11 AllOPM'i' llobert L. i'l\lmJAW" ...... IUll:lll, OtcMMd. dlailMt -,.....,_to t1M 111M1, wllflo _____ -:-=::------ fnvestmenl." 1;~;;;~:;;;,;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;,;;;;:;;;;:;;;,;;;;;;;~ ORANGE COUlfTY", CA.LIJfOfltNIA ISOO A4tml A¥91W&. ~It ...,... .. NOTtCE IS ME•E•Y OIVIJI .. "" ,......,., ~ In .... otllc• IJll" .,. ,,_ --U finaDCl·ar and traffic (W, o. AQI ODS C·ll) Coll• MIMI, ClllPornll t24Jf.. ... Cll 11 !ht JEAN lllCKAADS IUllJtl ... -...... ,...... "" Cltrt. of IM .... tflllflltd ~. or l"IC'Tm:U. IMlllNISt ru: aaJU 111 ~ wltll 1)1.-1rld IC*llk• P'fa of llwl-Of tM llfldllrllifl*f lft •N • pttl!IOl't !Or Protlllt ti' wtN W tor I'll ,.,._, t1'11m wllh Ille '*"""I' M..t.Ma ITATIMllfT results would have betn better flOM "'9rlf0t, •lld ludl lddMICte nwr.io ,,,.r1en Plrl•llllnt '° ti. "'•" Of Mkl ll.Wll'ICI " "'""" T•IM*li.r i. ,. .... ~ • tM ~ •' 1111 llfflc. TM follow! ,..._ •r• '°',. had It not ~n for •1 z-..-u m.,, o. l•sved prior I'll t>ld """'"' ~t, wlltlltt ,_ "'°""" .n., nw 11-~ to 'Wllkfrl I• ~ fOr o1 wn_, •I , Quint. :uti w11111111 llvd., lluslritu 11, "' -·-· e s h I e Al•. . . fin! llllblietttOl't .. !lllt PIOllC.. l'UrtlW jloll1ICl,llart, .... .._., ,. ftllW Mii SUIM ... WI ,.,......, C•llloml• fOOIO. M 0 H LE R 0. r G G A" 0 month labor diapu te that end· , c 1 0 tn "'*'''· 11111 ~Itel QllT!Pfl-..,.,. oetld Jlftllll"f 1•. 1tn ~of 11Nf'11111 llll' .. "" M4.,... wt tot Wiiiett 11 111e ~ " 111111,,,.., "' 11ie ssoci1.TES • H""" p,~1 vkllna llldlllontl MdOOI' llOflllng, In-JAMES w CROCKER Jlflll•'T ..... l tm ., t i• ·-· tn 1111 111 ... , ...... In ... "'""" ptrltll!lna "' :1111c11rw ~.-1,., -..... MIWll Dd¥1 ed in AprU and high start·l.lj) dudtng eiulldtl'IO mouroltd llQM'l. new in. E•«ltll« · COUf"lr-~ ,.., 1 " Mk! ttM n 111w " 111d 6ICMtflt, w1111111 •-.,.;:,;.p,;i ._,., C.ittwMI .,... • .......... that followed. Ind "'' -.inlrtd 111111t. o1 tti. Wfll of 1111 ~. •' ,. CMc c ..... °'""' w.1, 1n ..-tM lftlf ""' ""' p.lb41u11111 111 11111 lloWt 11.., °'911. 0 ,, ,..,. ._, ._._Ml •1doerti IN'f -pilftl Ind ~ 1IMMI NIYltcl dec*tfnt "" 0tY ., '-II Mt, Ctlltor'W. notlc:f. A-Stt1 OlltO CA. "Once , normal operatiOM f h b "-•I -l llllOtfT Ell'Clllftfit Olllcet •o•••T I,. NllMl"Hltl.TS °'*..J~ '~· :7}-0HN. Dllld __..., .. Ifft 0-,:. w ~. ""' El v.ic.n --restored, We had a quick or ome uyers ... ConlrKI ~I otllt•. uoo '"' ,. ,.._ A.-IL c.-~ Jfllftnltte IClllNI P1Ke HKltl'lcll Helglllt, CA. wg., llrllt, $Kr9mtn!O. Mid Oftlct fll ,_. ........_ 2N ..._..c::.: NOXOfil llXM.utrl., Ill tllt Wiii TMI bu.I-It~ lrt 1 ........ recovuy of trafHc," he l!llld. A•c11111C1vte _.... C.ll'Wlllll. '" 1ou111 c'"' Me&. et11t1nt11 "'" .. ...., oi..., Dloldllll. ,,,.r1,.,.,1111,. d · th I st l f'Oldwrl, 1.o1 A~. T•u 1no Mt..,. Alllnl'f'I . , ... 17'!! 1to1Mrt • .., Ort0e \ "Revenues unng fl a •1ctc1en c•tt obttln pi.n. Ind 111«111c .. ,.,..,,..., ..,. • ....., ~ c:..Aw ,..,.. TW wi1~111 ,.,,,,.,. • l"'"t ths of 1972 almost llont. Pl'OPONI forms. Ind llddlr'• llOnd 'llllllllltd Ort1111 CO.I Qally Piiot. .... ... ,.. ...... UH• .. TM1 '''"""""' -1111111 wttl'I lhl COUf>. ea-• mon .. e e e e e ftrfYI "" rMWttl"I ''*" ltt ""''"" "°"' J_,y 1t, K 1nd ,..,.ry t, '· 1• MM-Arl!M' W"-~ ......._ c.....,,... •11 1y crerk Of °'lflGI eountv on J.n. i.1m . am•ated all of the prev, ious Learn how and -t.v contrtcl ~I Office ,,,o. ~ 1'1J 1'1·12 I'*' c A__, ... ....,.. ..... CllOUC:tl • ..., .. ' "''J 1 .. 1, s.u-to, Calltomll tM01), W ltt A""'-"""......... htill.._. 0-..... QM! Diiiy Piiot, ~Am a ......... y~ ~~:ighe~· m anagement e e f:C.=~ ~=21~ PUBLIC NOTICE J::!,.,~ :~ im '-' °'"" r:1i =----"· im ..., ,.,,_,.rv s. ~h :~i:ru'~T~• ..... ·-· I I ••• • • • • before you buy -... -"""..... --·c N011CE ....... UN& over, asses were s asuw tffNd w1111w1d'lll9tw.,,.1111 '°tit su••R• ~T °" TN• PVmJC HO'l1CI rv-.. ~CA. tltfl to Sit.I million hi 1970 and ''tn: w111, ._. ~ 11111.u 11 i. ~~~=-C::,..":' 1 -no wonce TO c•eD1TORs then to $3.S million in 1971. On nl•ht 3 hovr ·-lnar mN11 Oii • ~ 1or111 Mn1111111 .,., -. ~ ... tu•n• COURT o, TN• T "d ' -"nls e .. 1 _.,. C«ltrflCI ~I Ottlcr afld 11 f'tllldt MOTKS 011 MIARllM OJ ,ITITIOll lt01'tCa TO CllDITORS nAnl Of' CALl,OIUUA 'Olt 1gue S81 improve .. "' b E• ~---bl ~ il«Oflllll'ICt '""' "lfll.trucli-.. ...,. poa; Dll'TlllMl.U.T~ TMA.T l"lllOllS SUHRNM COW:T °"' TNI ,.... COUfffY °'MA .... were achieved by more y 'I" ~ en. ... ... EICll lllddlr ..,.,., .. llcltnelf, DllO UMD•R c,. cu •• TA. ( •• nATI Of' CALlf'OflMIA..POll .. ~n k Un P,.......Ulalllon of blcldlrs I• flOI ,. '#MIRI TMaltl IS MO tllP,tClllt'J Tiii COUltTY fW ......... 111• .. 'AUL CIRACl1 Olf;Mlld, careMly tailored m:ir I! g .,..,...., av1D1MCI TKAT T'MIT DllD .... ~ MOTtCI ,. MlRllY OIVIN "' tllt I ftJM ..-ams, finer tuning of ~....,. tNlf futfthtl '8'frMllf OTMl•Wltl '""" llMULfAfllllOUll.T •• ,.,. of tfOoolitOW w. llltlMl(li.I •• Cttllll"'" " "" ... Mmtd .-...nt "ICTIT*'I '""'"" ··~· red ,__ r 7 to . 10 p .m. Tvetday 1ncVrhunday. '*" •• ~.., ..... • lill•M ., FRliOli•ICK I.. I I~ !Ml ....... lwWlng CS.I'"' f!MIMI"" ...... nAftMINT ICbedullng, uelwu 0 Dlpel1IMnt .. o--.i Str""'-WADSWORTH. .... Ir" ... " .. NOTtCI IS HIRl lT CNVl:N .. "" ...... .,....._ .... ....,.,... .. Iii. ""'"' ,.,. .. .._ ,.,... -'°"" - t-1,.., uons ,__ l'19'lf '° ,.... .,,., ........ P:1t1011t1c1: L. wAOSWOJtTH. "'° crM1tor1 °' .,. ..,. fllfMll ......,.. "'* .. ,.....,., VOlldtoWto "' 1111 tlfkt "'1f. "' Oft IUl::llu'9 opera • W to w.lw _, """""'ly lfl .,,, IAll' kMW11 M '· Lil WAOSWOl1'H, .... *ti tll ~ ill¥lflO dMiM ... !Mt 1111 tt W. dwk fl ltll IOO¥e .nim.. ~. If S NCH ln.lft; MANOR. #b &Qd .. ~ ...... ts in inislrAUYt No ·"I fJon L-nett..... • 11/IOWll • t.•.I WAOSWOllTH, ~ . ..W ~ .. ,.....,... Ill flit rl'lllft. to 1f-.t """'· wlltl t11t _....., C-1 H..,...,, Ill"'°" ~ "'~'& UIH ,. or CfM'rge. ... W'lll lllf *'"'""'*'-" ........ NOTICI II MIREIY GIVEN 11111 wttl'I ... ......,., ........... In""~~""" ............ ti Tiii «tlel c:.i11ott11t,... procedures._ 11111'11 bMll. It'"" LAI W~ Ml llMd h11'1111 • ol 11'11 d.-tl fl tltt ............ '*"· W fl ..... 9"""""" 1,.·1PPot.tl, HIJ.1• Tl!i Or--'dl (kwp, ~-I ' ftllnl.llftt IO Std\on 1711 If lhl ~ .,rllcifl fiOt ~ tllll ,..._ to Pf-I ..... _.. ltW _....,,. OIU()llf 111111 DINSMQOft, Attorllll'f1 tl Oii_,.. .....,.tllak. ml Wtll c..f ~ ltw ~Nil •.c.rtMlllll 1111 llllll VIW dl'Cl.llMI""'* ........ ..,_II YOlld'llrl. to tlM Wldlr ..... •I"" tlfkl ~. -.... , 11!11 SltMI, Mle 111, CUii 141f11WI'(,-. .....,_. ._,., ~ Thlt lt In •xcelfent opportunity ....... ..,......i11n1 ,."" .......... lM .. Mflc.teM ~ Hitt =ltd ol lllr .itorftlr, MllO J , '!ftlTlllUM. -..... Glifl~ nw wtllOi II "" pl.a nMO T,1•mi"t c.:..ught 1 by ccMltY 1tt wNdi,.. ... , ..... dOlll. " ....... """""..,..,..., .... Mllulo!L. A_,., --~ ., ....... -' "" ......... ,,..., ltt .i1 """' •. c ...... IM ... N~• "" .......... -~---~ off*1ecl to the ,... c .... '"'*'kt! Ille ....... 11 of flUllftc .. 'Wlllcll "~ "" ....... ,.,, c.11"'"""' ~ ... ,...11 IMI,... "",.,..i .... 1111 .. "" ...... " .... .,.. "'IUI ......... 1.44 v..-. ......... WOrlCt, DI~ (II tjltlttWW'Jlf ....... -tl'lll ltllt 1tw lltM tnd _.ti~ tlll fl .. IMIOll NIIMI• If! Iii -'"" ,.,.. ~ ~INll '-' lllOfltM lfllf tl'll fltlll Tlllt IM1ftitt4 It 11111111 CllldWctM W e ....... 1.,...,...,. """"' .._ .,.. ..,.... Mt -.. Ml for .....,_,., 1, ltn, ~ ft 1111 llftlto If Mllil .....,.,,. t1011 11 1t1M i.tlot. Lll'rllllf ,......,.,.,_ SACRAME .. """" (AP) -o-..t ,.,...au,.. w..,. • ...., •• M ,,. 1.fll., 111 n. cwnr-ti' °"""' .,.,.., W l"lntlll tftlr t111 flrtt ~ DI• J_,-s, ma THI 011:1rNW1CH MOUi". , 'J'U ' b" I I Est tMN ...... -WllklltloN. c..,.."""",... , ...... aw'!, .i ... Chk "°"............. tAMIC Oil' MIRICA IMCO!t'ORATIO Local f1Vem11tnt #clslQnl 00 Kasa Ill ea ate ............. .,. "' ....... ,. Jiii CMlw °""' w.t. hi""'°"".... ~ JlttllM'I' ,, ...,, MAltONAL TRUST ANO Tllb 11•'-'I fl1W wllfl ""' ~ _,..,.1~~--WouJd ba'IO (0 be -· -.,,,., .. -... "' ----TIOI! W .. IH.!i!oD $AVINO< ASIOCIAT'°" '""'•" 0.T -~ .. -·-~_1!: ~· .. ~ ..,..J ..... Ill .,,,,, ................... • ,. o.llld J....,., 12, tfn I ., .. ,.. hlQllW ti' flll Wiit ~m. T ...,.... M. W1 , ._...., chlDenged jil UM ClCIUl'b within I .,..,, WILLIAM •. It JOHM " tl'lt ...... '*""" ....... .. "" '""" ,....,.. ••ttt C'*11. M dl;.,,'Tri:• ~•--lllJ ••:i;: For ,. .. ~. CG °"'*fttlllll .r~ ..W. C-IY a... MIL.0 J, WUTlllM Ll"'°"D. tfl"HltOlt CAUAI.!. CMlti I WIWW .,., ,. w:.-.1 ""' Q1fk1 • Ndil~ ...aT L. WWllPMUYt .. l.i ·~.::.:.._.. _, 01111.-oott "'' I ........ W"*lll uoder 1 b I introduced In ,.,,,, ~"'°" 1• .._ A..-,........... ,... • •~ 11111 ••· s.i.. 111 ..,. .,..,._ 11~ Irv 9 6 2 • 6 6 4 4 '" -,,... """"""" Lii. A. I.#. o.19 ...... C...... ...... Tth (ftJJ 9'N.!!!.....t..... C" ... MtM; CA nu1 S1Mt MMika, C ....... Sellllte. Sen. Dooald <J:ruMiy, 111i. Ndlltitct Tiii Q'Ul..... ""'""' W 1.._.....~ T•1 (11U ~ Plllll • (nV/ •--•n-j •'L--.a t&f o. T ....... m•f JD.nM ~ AttiiWr'...,., ,...,._, ......... Grlfllll C..t DIOY PMol, .....,.. ,_ '"""" ,,.....,_ ar.,.. C...t °""' ,_ ""'" lloWUlll'LlllC , IUllllJl"'lllll ........ °"""' CNitl Dth Pltal .......... or.,. """ o.iir Pllol, ,__., 12, "· » ... """"' t. hMllM9 °' .... CNV o.n. ,I .... ,..,.,., lt. u •• -~ t. measure, I"""'""' ..................... ,,. ........................................ J1M91'T lt, • ... .......,. t. tm 1n,n ""-Y It,.,,, 14. tm l6Wll tm *"1 J_, I, It. lt, 111.1971 IWI tm ~ PUBLIC NOnCE • I I I : I " . . __ __._ ' • 110 DAILY PILOf . 1973 DUSTER Ser. No. VL29-ClB-248486 1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE · • . 2 DOOT C:OIJPE $ S•r. No. RL21-CJG-104llt JANUARY RED TAG USED CAR SPECIALS 7 0 PLYMOUTH FURY II 4 Dr. S"'•n. V-&, A.T., r~, ....;,_ tr. P.S .. W/S/W, Alr. ft1MI $1295 1973 ,GRAN SEDAN 4 DOOR HOT. . ' DISCOUNTED LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED s1400.- OFF MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED LIST PRIC~- '69 OLDS WAGON' ,,_. , i..;. ~STA · c1urs11 ,..... .._;,,!_ltttrri.tJc. ,._ ~ ' _ ......... ---• h' ....... ., ... .,,, '""'•' . ,,, $1795 . . . . • . . " .. 1,973 11z TON INTERNATIONAL PICK-UP POWER PACKED- BEAUTIFULl.Y EQUIPPED OFF MANUFAOTUltElt'S -STICKER PRICE . . . ! . G~· '™ U.P SCOUT IN . THIS RUGGED 1972 SCOUT S•r, No..Alll10GSl571l ~P ' \ - \ - • ' . ,. ' ' . • • • \ ' • f ' ' • • ' ' ~ • . ' , ~ • • ' • ~ 16.7 MUSTANG . \/t, 11u·11orJ11c, p0wer slMl'lllll, (TSP7\I) ~69 ~~:~;,~~!.~~·~ $_)0.98 i68 ~OP~E PICKU~ . $fDS 8•(oots.wepi1cll icettHNo 117()41r • I <•. ! , ' ' SALl'PRICE · .. . ··, : ', -........ .. , • GALA IE.500 , . · . · '69 ......... ,... . $1285 V·8, outo Irani., loclory air condifionin;, ' powtr1lHr~~wm.teag1.No 132879 . SALi PRICE · . C,AMARO Cl! 1319 t .,, ..... ,. .. , .. .,-......... ~-- • ifig,rodio heol•·JrMt:.}.4_4427_ -----.... ~ _ _ . . . .slu PRICE ', 71 ~~~."~~•,. , .. ,~. ..... $18·76' ... , .. poww 11-11'18. (22$CFH) All NEW 1973PINTO . <I Spffd, '"'bump... guotdt, yinyl ill""' rior. buoc~et M<>15, iOKed o ir heottr, •k. 311 10W131:19& • IMMEDIATE DEUVE~( , • -~::t::::19~73 PIN~~d~~~~!~~! II All NEW V-8 Cruise·o-motic trons .. power sleering, front disc brokes, rodio, htot· er, Tinted gloss, wheel covers, deLuxe 1>u!r4><r. SerM>I No. 3A30f 173322 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . I air heat. bucket sea ts, fully carpeted, (3R\1 W'139744) $. I TAKE YOUR ' CHOICE '69 OPEL KADETIE . ~ (YXF-152) -.. ' 69 TOY.OTA 4 DOOR (XRX-144) '69 VW 'SQUAREBACK . (YEK,906) '70'SIMCA WAGON l(310522F). • . '69 TOYOTA ·2 DOOR (9980114) ' . -s· . ;O~R -~ -· ClfOICE .. > · MAVERtCK · '71 ""· "~·-"'"~ ,;, .......... """ $1 s 8 8 51HrinG, rod'ro, heor11. Licenst I 2l2DMH - SALlPll(l '·710~ ~~ 200~M~iDT.. $2~9-5· · · v.3, auJo. Irons .. power stee<ing. power · · brakes. radio-, h,ater, whittwoll tires. _ wheel COYtrS. l!ClftSI 209-llOH SAll Pll(I Friday, January 19, 1973 DAILY PILOT :JJ '70 ~.~~-~-~.~~toll-..l11tHI $791 SALi PllCE $]08 9 TORINO 1·1·0· V-B. Aoto. t~o<. o< """· '°'''· ""'"· $12 8 7 .(OH31Fl•S097). • SAU PRICE Pl • uster ~i~~-~·-~"""'"~ ... $1479 DODGE WAGON . '69 .... '"" .. ~!~ •. ~,.~~~ ..... ., .. , $148·6 • 5tetr1ng No to.491 4 .• . ·SAU PRICE . ECONO VAN '69 ,, .... , ... ,. $1690' ' A;;:o;::ns., radio, heoltr. licens• Ho. 1 SAU PRICE 1--7· ·o~~ER,!!~.. $2875 Foclory air conditioning, full powtr Dnd 1111 lht dttuxe ••tros. t~. No. 705AZO . . ·SALE PRICE . 170. GALAXIE 500 , $ PONTIA $ ......... ,.. 1 96 '69 ....... ,, 1788 Auto truns foclofy oir tofldi!ioning. power V-8, oulo. !J!Wls~ kictory oir toi.lllirioning, , slffring, radio. hloter. (782-AQl.J .-' • powlll' steering. power brokes. radio. heo!tr, whitl'#Oll tires. T· 123) j& .. ,9 ~.~~G!R .. ~,. ~,.,.,.~ '$15;.....::o8....:::· 6'"'-+_'_ ..,....,7=-. 1=--,~~-,I~~~~~=~~~!.'--., , .. :.-,,..,~.-$3_2_,...:;· a;;;;...,;· 7· ::....m. ~~'illlg. rGlf111, hloter, Yinyl mlJ 1 (U8CTD) . . . 1973 ESCAPADE-MOTOR HOME COMPtETEL~f'SEIJ CONTAINEQ • PLUS: e PUSH.BUTTON RADIO e FRONT 0 1\llOER e TINTED GLASS e FRONT BUNK e AU<X lllARY BATTERY e MEOICINE CABINET e STAINLESS STEEL RANGE COYER AND MUCH MORE. \8-480668) IMMEDIATE DELIV.ERY BRAND NEW . FORD MINI MOTOR HOME RED-E-KAMP CONVERSION ~ CJIUISE-0-MATIC TRANS .. POWER STEERING. POWER.BRAKES. v.e. [NGIN( 800-. lS JO Ply TIRES, 70 AMP . BAT TERY. 1 TON CHASSIS. EXTRA COOLING RADIATOR SLIDING CARGO DOORS. flXED TYPE PASSENGER SEAT. RADIO, OUTSIDE MIRRORS. TINTED WINDSHIELD ' ' (E-34GH8481931 $ IMMEDJATE DELIVERY l t 'FORD COURIER ' 1 /2 TON PICKUP WITH A NIW LIT~ LINE CAMPER SHELL Complete Package $ 'l"!IMEDIATE DELIVERY A BRAND NEW 1973 LTD .~ •••••• 5121 3! COURIER • • • • 5596! PINTO • • • • • • 5589~ Gran Torino 5 1038~. MAVERICK • • 57T~ SQUIRE • • • • 5127'! -F-250 PU . 61 .... \ - OPll lll>lf.U! A51fOI llll srtlllNG 01 PIT vu. .... .,, ' • $2•19.l5 is !ht kllol ca~ pnc1111C!, lo~ & l.c De· ltn tdprict S3032.llO incl. ta • lie & all !•nonce chorgt11111 •8 mon1hs on opp•o•td cr1di1 APR 1 2.78 ~ WEEKEND RENTAL SPECIAL RENT A FORD PINTO FROM 2 PM FRIDAY TO 10 AM MONDAY PLEASECAU FOR RESERVATIONS PLUS Sc MIU t 0 I I , ; •• 0"'-LL • 1'11 .. 0 I AMILER TUMBLEWEEDS (6ASr~~F<ARlES LONI! LISE'SA SECUlll1Y fl.AHKer~! J OOPS. l tllP I SAY l· "THAT? j A., .-.~It. I~ MUTI AND JEFF .. ·--- by Tom K. Ryan PP.'.lMISE ME '1tX1iJ.. Ni:VER RM:A1.. rf 10 A SINGU: _~L, OUlSIPf, OF CCUISE,, 'IOUR FAMILY, FRIENDS ANP ACQOAIN11\NCES P!'.OMISE! .. .. "*A. by Al Smith WELL, WHAT ARE YOU DOING? FIGMENTS Krf .•• BRJN6 ~~C.\Rt) IN lHf UVIN6RO:ll\ 50 WE CM/ SEE If! NANCY I HEAR YOU'RE TAKING LESSONS IN VENTRILOQUISM .---1 HOW FAR CAN YOU THROW YOUR VOICE? TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 1oorn5 II Ver11e1I pole 10 H11r!t'' 14 Monueal'' Forum. e 1:1· lS Dull p;un 16 Seaport ol W Samoa 17 Enticement 50 Animlll pouch 5.2 Plumlike huit 53 Greek lener 54 MlcilW 57 ,.11n·1 nickn1me 59 Edible mu1hroom 61 St1ugg!es for 19 Disembark vfc\ory 20 Susme5smln 64 leud 21 Trembled 67 Ve1y ihort skirt 23 Requirements 68 Treaty party: 25 Leiter 2 words 26 Erideavor 70 C1u1mg; 27 Fedor• Sulfi~ 29 A. trocrid 71 Asian m-.. -country 31 Male animll 72 Turgenev 33 F110Jnd:, herOll'l8 fronch 73 Take heed 34 Disd;unful 74 Notch .,, 75 Splits 36 l ribMmen ol DOWN Mo1occo 40 Negali\11 1 Oec1ete v.ord 2 Engli.tl 42 Out on a compo1er lotl'lb 3 Silk l1br11:: 44 Sc::andal: 4 Old \nfor!fla\ womani&h 45 Clean ers end 6 F1brocs 6 floor 47 Qppofit• of c::oveong d~lflb piec::e 49 Rec::ent tvp11: 7 Nitric·-· Preh~. 8 Plenl pert Ye•Oird1y'1 Puzzle SolYe~ 9 Easily G•uShltd 10 Large bul'>Olt 11 Separated 12 Cru.se ship 13 -··-· Warbucks 18 Fervent 22 Wo1din a le1te1 24 Prophets 27 Human body lea1u1e 28 Cl\1nese seolpOrt 30 Cons•deri 32 Hallway: Preli• 35 Kingdom 37 Irish e'port! 2 word1 38 Worry 39 Greok portico 41 Hesitation svllables 43 Sags 46 WiM 48 Canine SI M olar's neighbor 54 Entertairler SS Way ~ Caoer &a F1~ed g11e 60 Bird 62 legendary friar 63 Read 65 Caused to depilrt 66 Epochs 69 E ~ploswe by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller --~ ... 'ff IS THIS FAR ENOUGH? PEANUTS MISS PEACH I f f ' DICK TRACY · -I _.,........ ..... -- .. .. ~MAJll / ~e.u.: ~~ ~-! ~::t,,. !JO A IW "'°" J SAL!Y BANANAS - GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS by M.U Niil MIOR WUllSl!LWS OUTSI~. l'LL STAV IN Hllltl!. OM, llOYI • . ..... -. ... . ... ........ --.. -· ---.. ... I r j J I by Roger Bradfield -CAN SA~ .,,,.,. "1A/H . . " by Gus Arriola by Ferd JohnsOn ....---..,, by Roger BoRen ,, ~EVe"1 HeAl?D OF Mtt!H~ e.::oseg. WflAT Alli! 4\00 •" W,IE ~Ille>'~ -lr~Dlll~. .. . Ii ff l I f J ' THE GIRLS .. ' ''Iii fl~ 71 1-19 '11 lmow I lave doceu el. dreuel: bat tllty're not m wear, IMy're Jiii to keep hr my clab members to ,.. when I open my clolets .. " DENNIS THE MENACE ~ • ' 1 Brr I YOICEO NNlll6R 6{1TI( axa! 1V 1HAH ' lME 61f MIQIMISm'O IT r• . . "' -·· l>AILY PILOT :J3 Eve ryone Has Something That Someone Else Wa nts DAILY Pl•OI CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a W.ant Ad 'The Bi~gest Mark«!place oo the Orange Coast-Dial 642-567~ for Fast Results 1~~~5 -..... l~L~·--l~I -.... l~I _ .... I~ I -· .. 1~1 -_ .... ~I -· .. J~I -.... 1~1 -w .. I~ Gen tr al Gentrel * * ·* * * * TAYLOR CO. BRAND NEW l-LINDA ISLE Luxurious t Long view of lagoon. Contemp. Mediterranean home with 5 bedrooms, den, huge billiard room, formal dining room &. 4lh baths. Rich plush carpeting, expensive wall papers, marble baths & Del Piso tile entry. Superb quality thruout. $2.85,000. LIDO ISLE FAMILY HOME Spacioult 4lf.i bedroOm 3 bath home with gate to storage area for your boat. Immaculate throughout. Lovely private patio for family fun. 40' Lot, street to strada.-Near good beach. Owner will help finance. $79,500. BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB Beautiful near-new 4 bedroom residence in this exclusive area surrounded by elite B.C. Country Club. Sunken convers~n tfjea in living rm. Lge dining rm, t,m_ -~~!th fr- place & many extra features. View of area & golf course. Priced right at $119,000. #'Our 28th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton 2111 San Joaqul~ Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-1910 Gener ii Gentra1 A RARE AND A real CdM charmer, on the ocean side of Hwy., yet walking distance to all shopping. This 3 bdrm., I 'h bath home has additional sleeping roon1 in 2 car garage; we have the key -give us a call. Offered at $64,500 NEW LISTING Eastside Co.sta ~1esa 3 BR-$31,000 CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 Gentr1I Gener1I Gentr1I $27 ,25~ • 3 Bdrm 2 baths. Patio, shake roof. Dining rm., dishwaaher. Firep!ace. New paint in1.lcle &: out. Close to schools & sllopping. Shade !fees. Brk. 540-1720. 3 Bdrm • Family Gen•r•I • 4 Bdnn • $30,900 2 baths. Patio, dlnlng room. Built·ins. Custom drapes, in- direct lightin&. Extra stor-. age space, Uke-new home with wall-to-wall carpetin1. Brk. 540·1720. . 3 Baths + 4 Bclnn ~tner1I General General WINT'°;ER;;-;G~A:;;R~DE;;N~l;;;;;;;;:l;;RV;;;;IN::E=:;;TE;;;;R;;;;RA;;;C;;;E=-=v1;;;;EW=:;;;;;;:, f>. I (J /) kOO.t Lovely, im1nacul ate home just listed, in ex- General Gentrel eJ..inda J~{e Julns an l:.:x.t..:l'l'lNG ISl..AND elusive Irvine 'ferrace, with 3 bedrooms, 21h. PRESTIGE WATERfRONT HOM ES ~~~~~;a:=·~~~ baths, forinal dining room & nicely land- 11's1aW'anc conuuners. J\1a1<~ scaped yard. All new carpets, view of the SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT {;1lf1 t!~ _'-in~eJl~~~u\\J~~ bay. $85,000. 31 Linda Isle Drive U.u\J'<~R and oolid wal''"' TRANSFERRED -LIDO ISLE bUr-.r( ·li~! Meet new Long water view irom fine st & last 50 ft . Jnends in nearby club, Impressive Cypress lined entrance leads you Main charinel lot · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $150,000 playgroWKi and pools. YuU into this lovely 2-story home, recently re-uw t. I'f TO YUUH.SEL.F: Linda Isle Waterfront sec your 2 STOH.Y, 4 modeled, but theri, U1e owner was trans. Beautiful, new 4 bdrm., 4'11. ba. home on Bedroom + Dlning room, ferred! Great location, close to private com- lagoon, with living rm., family rm., lge. game ~iic~th ~~~~·~; 1nunily beach. 3 Bedrooms & den , spacious, rm. or 5th bdrm ................... $255,000 n1ay LEASE-OPTION. Call enclosed patio, beautiful parquet floors in anytime, ~. living room & for1nal dining area. An ex- 53 Linda Isle Drive VALUE PACK cellenl value al $76,500. Elegant 5 bdrm., 41h baths ; on lagoon. New Cozy 2 Bedroom Home wiih carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lge. attic Countcy...i.. Kitoben and CAMEO SHORES -VIEW storage area. 4 frplaces. Lovely garden & tt1aasive Fireplace. Extra Green Thumbers! You must see the magnifi- 1 11 $212 000 Large Front 'lard for Play arge s p. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • or Privacy or possibly build cently landscaped yard that goes with this .101 Lind• Isl• Drive Additional I.ncome Home. lovely 2 bedroom VIE\V home in fashionable Lovely 5 BR., 4 ba. home with downstairs ~~. ~:000• Call Cameo Shores. Family room & formal dining warerfront mstr. suire & lge. game rm. or LOTS'A VALUE room. $98.SOO , studf. Mexican We floors, beam ceilings, Must see this Hoge-Huge HARBOR quality construction, slip ........... $155,000 Back Yard. 11odel Home, 4 Bedroo1ns, F11mlly Kifchefl': . For Complete Information 2 Baths, Fireplace, Alr-$32,SOO. Pool, pe.tk>. Dining On All Homff & Lots, Pe.i1111 C.11 : Conditioning w\th $32,950. 2 baths. Patio, dining rm., built-Ins, dishwasher. 2 fireplaces. Cheery home, carpeting, drapes. Nicely landscaped. Brk. 546-172n. Rm., built-lm, dlshwasher. de-hwnidlfler. Shake Roof, Fll'eplaoe in tamil,y room. BILL GRUNDY, _REALTOR Sprinklen ''"""and R.eor. Rear llvlng room. Conirm· ONLY $35,000. Call .,....,;, home with .,lariwn. 341 Boysldo Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 67W161 Anytlmo, 'i'· .. · - Bri<. ""'""· I iGoniiiii.,.iii1iii1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiGeniiiiioriiii11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil I l*4il 2955 HARBOR BLVD. ,.,..,.,.., .. '"' "''"""• COSTA MESA ENTERTAINMENT £NTHUS1ASTS COMPANY aEALTORS 2141 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar .,Sell ing Rul Est1te in Newport H1 rbor Since 1944" 673-4400 540-1720 • Gtntr1I Gent rel Sharp, Sharp! La r g el~Go;:•:e;r1;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:G:•;;•;e:r1;;I;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; i graciout entry lo a beautiful ~'<:' ... /~-St.I.ti,. ~ •ISl)IMTB REALTORS 21211 EAST'CXMSTHIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CAl.W. 644·7Z70 THE MOST, FOR LEASEI Really now; this 4 bedroom, family home is located in one o fthe wotld's most beautiful spots--Overlooking Bjg Corooa Beach. And it's big! It's clean! And it's almost like new! In old Corona de! Mar at $800/mo. OPIN TODAY, JI04 OCU.N IOULIYAlD, CDlll UNIOUI HOMH Of COlONA DIL MAI, 67MOOO AllstilttefJe..C. ' Th• Area's Top Profe11lona l1 Since 1949 IDEAL SECOND HOME...:.. $28, 900 · Bicycling distance t.o beach, nearly new 4: bdrm., 3 ba . condo. Frplc. Brick patio. 2 Car garage. Furniture incl., if desired, at only $28,900 Elegance awaits you Mi~llifili~~I in the Bluffs Ul'li!ICJUI: ti()Ml:S hooie. Separate family room, formal dining room, .1Unken llvin~ room with in- direct lighting and custom drapes. Mll8ter bedroom has dressing area. Large bQght kitchen with many cabinets. Low mainterw>ee yard be au tif'Ully landscaped. Sprinklers tront and ttar. ~tached garage with boat entrance. This 3 bedroom home is well built and UJ in a neighborhood of higher priced homes. Has great uswnable loan of 6 percent. A prestige home priced under market at $37 ,900. HURRY! Call 842-2535. CHINA COYE-VIEW 3 9drms., 3 ba. home on fee lot (not lease-- hold ); just JOO rt from beach. $98,000 * Open .JJou.6s:J · Sunda'I 1-Sp.m. * ... 17562 Sequoia Tree Ln. .. .. .. .. .. $37,900. 8 Linda Isle Dr. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $195,000 54 Linda Isle Dr. .. 5 BR/Fam/Waterfront 3927 Sandune .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $76,900 1~7 Pt. Margate .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . $69,000 * * * * * 3 BEDROMS-$37,900 The very BEST BUY in University Park; nicely upgraded garden home-come SEE SUNDAY I TO 5; you be the judge. 17562 Sequoia Tree Ln. "Chuck" Lewis OPEN SUN. l·S-16702 WANDERER LN. \Vant a truly dramatic home w/massive beams, cathedral ceilings & Spanish tile floors? See this 4 BR. beauty 1n' Huntington Harbour. Lge. dock. Margie Allen YOU'RE INVITED To •8 LINDA ISLE, SUN. 1-5. You'll enjoy every minute in this lovely 4 bdrm., Slh bath bayfront home of conservative ele- gance. Jim Atluller CAPISTRANO RANCH HOME 4 l-lorses O.K. 5 Bedrm. family home, pri- vate road. Country atmosphere. View. 36' Pool . 20 Min. to Newport Center. $78,950. Call George Grupe. COUNTRY LIVING IN THE C ~TY Charming 5 BR., 3 ba. home. Large lam. rm. w/wet bar & form . dining. Lavish land- scaping in spacious yard for entertaining. Fee land. Harriett Davies PANORAMA VIEW-$87,500 Large & livable 4800 sq. It. 4 BR. beauty. Luxurious family rm., billiard rm., music rm. plus oversize pool. Harbor Estate, H.B. Mary Lou Marion HARBOR VIEW CHARM Plush carpet & VanLul\ wall cover.; beau- tiful lndscpg., large patio with serv. bar. 4 ·BR.. 2 ba., w/lorm. din. nn. $79.500. Fee. Gary Knox LIDO BAYFRON'l'. 67' or prime !rontag&-<>utstandlng 5 bdrm. bomet formal dining room. His & lier mas- ter suile-<lockage !or 120' yacbL $275,000. Fee. Bill Bents CORONA DEL MAR Ne\v listing on beautiful street. 3 BR. & gst.-nearly new decor. Filled with the glow of gdod life. $89,950. For app't. call Paul Quick --w .... IU-0700 -2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. CONDO -IN THE NEW SECTION -This beautilully decorated (completely upgraded) 3 bedroom, forlnal dining room, a fireplaee, 21h baths, 2 patios plus a solarium, on the REALTORS gorgeous greenbelt ................ , . $62,500 * . AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & AsSOCIATES REAL TORS '44-n70 General FOUR LEVEL FOUR BEDROOM Fanta!tic Spanish style Hun- t tlngton Crest home, 2830 sq General General ft of gracious living, 4 l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j·bedroom, 2~ balli, large open living room with fireplace, lonna1 d ir\lng, separate laundry room, 20'x40' patio plus spacious ba:Aement family I rumpm room with Jlreplace. This i!I a home you must see to believe. Just reduced to $51,995. • We A,.. P'-6.J :Jo kounc• NELDA GIBSON Is Now Associated With Our Office RUTH SEillY, ReaHor 1306 Park Avenue Balboa Island 673-476( General Gener•I THE IRWIN COMPANY REALTORS "EXCltlSIVEl Y YOURS" Btc.wst we list only I lew llltct properties P ele B~rretl Jea/t'I pmenb _ Est~te Li~g In Ne wport Beach 2 Acres overlooking Upper Bay. 5 Bedroom hacienda built around1pool, courtyard and cabana.~. Stables & corrals. Never ending view, rolling landscaping. Secluded den, large dlnlng room and can. Done with elegaot simplicity. $395,000. · Office 0pon s1turdays a •Sundlys PETE BARRETI REALTY 1605 WMl<:liff Dr., N.B. 642-5200 • COATS wAt°LAet lllALTOlll Opon Evonlnvs • 962-4154 • 3 BDRM HOME 3 BDRM home, enclo9ed patio, large pool. AU freal.1· ly painted, new carpets and tile, Move in today! $26,500. E-Z tenns. * * * • * BACK BAY AREA Custom built ~ BDRM borne; 3 full baths, family room, otfice or den, 2 fireplaces + indoor B-B-Q, large pool A: wading pool. Many more 1plendld features. Priced tiaht at $87,500. * * * • * 4 lldrm., 2 Both New carpeta thruoot, 2 car &&rage. Ealtside C o 1 l a Mesa. $28,950. Roy McCi1rdle Re•ltor 1810 NN"poi,1_ Blvd., C.M. 541'7729 4-U FANTASTIC TUSTIN '4,000 F.P. '400 DOWN Near McFadden A Newport Frff'Way terrlftc k>eaUon. 611 ,.., tteoh. Grau Income $7860 based upon 3 bedroom ($2lD), 2 bedroom ($1601, after fix~ txpentt1 and loan paymenttl $868. Schedult.'tl ca.ab spendable wbldt la U.3T oub plu.o 8.34 equt~ bulldup. Total mum 21. n. All lhla and • swim-- ming pool tool Contact Richard Van Wert -Elmore Comp&l'\y R/E Dtv. EXECUTIVE sum1 ExeeuUve Wntclltf 3 bed., t bath on manteured corntt lot Pllllh ......... .... ..... bulltins, dining rooM • private yard wttb htat.ed pool! Prtced by t'l.gtt OWMt at $ln.950 -SubmJt your ttnns!! IOlll\I I. Ol\O\ ; < ' T ) /, ........ ...., .... , .. , ............ ·· ····-,.. .............. Al .......... """ ... .. .. •11 1 •1• .. ,,...... ................ ..... .._. ........ , DAILY PILOT WAn ML ........ ....... ........... ,_, ................. .. ............................. ......,,s. -·-· HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bodrooms ) 714 Marigold Ave, Corona del Mar 675-85113 640-0030 (Sat & Suo 1-5) (2 B.droom1 fi1mlly rm or den ) 2024 Port Provence Pl. (HVHomes) NB !l4H249 $54,500 (Daily 1-5) (3 Bodroom) 17562 Sequoia Tree Ln. (Univ. Pk.) Irvine 644-2430 $37,900 (Sunday 1-5) (3 Bodroom f1mlly rm or don I 3927 Sandune (H.V. Hills) CdM 644-2430 $76,900 (Sunday 1·5) 1647 Pt. Margate (H.V. Homes) N.B. 644-2430 $69,000 (Sunday 1-5) (4 BHroom f•mlly room or den) lli33 CasUc Cove (Spyglass Hill) CdM 640-1858 (Fri, Sat, Sun) 214 Dahlia, Corooa dcl ~lar ' 673-9403 (Sa t & Sun ) **8 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) N.B . 614-2430 $195,000 (Sunday 1-5) 23522 Lipari (New World) Laguna Hills 580-2389 $31,600 (Daily) (S Bed room family rm or den) **54 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) N.B. 84+2430 (Sunday 1·5) ..... ** ··---· .. ·--••• w.....,...., ... 675-300 MACNAB IRVINE FINER HOMES CAMEO .SHORES-OCEAN VI EW I 2 BR, den-perfect for couple! RecenUy redecorated. $99,500. Tom Queen ~200. (Yll) TOWNHOUSE -FIRST OFFERING 3 BR, 2 bath split level. Mirrored fireplace. Dining area, breakfast area in kitchen- ·new dishwasher. Dbl. garage + 3rd car- port area. Faces pool & greenbelt. $35,000. Gloden Fay 642-8235. '(Yl2) SHORECLI FFS-BY THE SEA View from 6 rooms! Sun decks. Gate to private beach next door. Huge LR. Enjoy the Nelvport Beach way of life. Elaine Sve- deen 642-8235. (Yl3) BAYCREST 4 BR -perfect family floor p!Bn. Pool. Barbara Gothard 642-8235. (Yl4) LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT 5000 sq. ft. Indoor pool & garden. The use of glass-brlck-trellage & mellow walnut floors-create a spectacular & never to be forgotten home. Pier & slip. 2 BR's. $375,000. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (Y15). DOVER SHORES-VIEW LOT One of Dover Shores largest lots ! 72' on view side -over 170' deep. This Galaxy Drive• site offered at $69,500. (Yl6) FURNISHED BAYFRONT MODEL Elegant Interior by Von Hemert Interiors creates a dramatic new 2-story Bayfrllnt. EntrY level fea· tures fonnal living area & master suite. Downstairs, 3 BR's, complete bar & dra· matic FR open to cantilevered deck . 50 • 100 lot, 45' slip privilege. $236,350, OPEN Dally-1653 Bayside Drive. (Y42). LEASE-SPYG LASS HIL L-VIEWI Brand new. 180 degree vie!'L of harbor & coastline. 4 BR. I story, 25.17 sq. n. ·Lux- urious carpellng & custonl drapes. Triple car garage. Joyce Edlund 64U23$. (Y43) '¢' [ Irvine , _ .. ,m .. """'r-.. ., I 101 Do\>er Dfl"• 142~5 llU Mec:Atttwr "'•1200 .......,.!, ... ,h,C.11\pmta 121 .. "• I • • :W-DAILY !'!LOI frldor, JooolQ I', ::n ,t 5 5 ; I I 7 7 a 3 7 rs;;;: 1 1[._ -~· ;;,.. .. ~]~~1--~--.. .;l~[!J~~t;;;-;;*~ .. ~l~~;j~I ;;;;;-~-~ .. ;;l~;;e I _,.... ......-;"';;;;;·;;:;;l~;;I ·._,[ ----~I~ _[ --· .. _ .. __.I~ i-. . 5 I;.· iiiiiiiiiiiii~~ .. , J!llll I ,Geo~.;;.,.-;;.ll'------G.nff--•l _____ -11.G_-_..,._•1 _____ 1100..~-'°'-el--z· ____ 11G!!•~W!!2!!ol~----1";,;;;.,;=,;;,.,c;;__~ ~-;1~M~11~1;~~~ l ~H~-~lfl~•~t ~l~11<~h :: l;l;:;"';:;';;;;;;:;:';;;:;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;lj ,_ I • OIARMINO 2 BR 011 .. Old ••••••••••••••••••• NE)VPORT NEWPORT "Rellt 3·Uve frff" 1100" on W/S /1o11: 2 UNITS JUST LISTED ll · ' HflGUT<t HEIGHTS 4p1ox.'bdnM,•111,.,_ S..I """'""" r•modeled kltdlen Ii.SIDI COSTA ,.,,,. NUD CASH? * * FOR SALE* * .. ,,. .,.. w~ ~. MrlL b•abl~thw/q~bbltl·lao,,," OIW.but-,12'l,SIG e llHOURSERVICE e COZY-SHARP V V v v Hard """ •• .:,;;:-.,;;._ !50.000 ~ w 0 • ! • ~..i Firm """'· 'l'llk ,..,.... cw. ... -2 We wW Olli T!>I• •Pie 'n .... I hdrnL Former model homes at "THE RANCH" lfY •ry ery lfY Millot prloo. ,.._ Call ,..... --. Ylo>I. NO'NJ)OrJ -n.w """~"' ....,.,,. -w -~ h1 Hard to_~ to get wall-• ._ --'1IO f>)IJJ> St. Cll \. u 1Y btJift mtWIDc •out S.. _,,At "'1>j 3 -. 2 ""°' 1 l Dedn>om, I I bllll. 1 et<. Wl!nlted -bllitlot 6IHl!t 1 1 1 E\'Oo ~ • lor'lnuned1 UPL 129.11111. -cko. -""""""· d<ll. -............... "1cl-... Aak ... Tom°"' I ed h in lhe City of tr.1ine ll:itdwn. 1 c.v P"-"' oll kllthtn. :? car pnp oU llNlton ti6-M91 proyed pl.ans tor larp • 48R BltAtn'Y· Moel. Jdtchtn. , r .,, •ri••" a11ey. v.,,. """ -· alley: v..,. ...., 0 _ !:>.... ..... ..... ...-, ,., dbl: ,...; ll<tted pool. -I Plan ~~ionterrey, $52,900 6 Bedrooms, 4 bnlhs, 3.(JOO sq: n. 1Cboo1 dJstrict Oo!y $18 IOO. -dbtrlcL OolY $11,000. ~· lf.%1 I & 8. 5 0 O. ru tin>J)laol. 1o1u1y cxtru. Nr REALTY' Plan ~1 Miguel $47,400 4 Bedrooms. 3 balhs, 22.lO SQ: ft ~ ~-~T~~°j >~~~ft!~~~;:~:~~ A Cornpo.11¥ \\'ltll V!1Jon Univ. P~~ C~nl r, In·ine all Anytime. MJ-1500 om~e how-. 8 Ao\1 \o 6 P~l These bonles have upgraded shag carpets thruout, drape . '' allpae.er. '!all panelling, air ronditioning. Good fina.DC1ng available. If ...__ Nai111ie iiliL.--=;00011ruca11y; priced •t aha& cryt'g, open be1m ""1-lnd!cpd. 152,000: -1: '"" . lnat. ~A heal. ek"e prqe BACK BAY-$299'IO of The Game BAYSHORES Grundy, Rul1<>r :'..::;_ ~P.I ~ ~Br-°"~ 3 BR,'wl~: b UVING. """" ..... 1n uu. BA YsHoRes 125 s.,,~r.r• "'.''ch eoro..; Cooaldu -; Call ~~ •'""' • pabo. PAik HUNTINGTON lrvlnt Ttrr1ct 54.(-8012 charm"-< 3 ""1room ,2 bath BAYSHORES 613-13ll, Bkr: -OI' 6*-0l2T Catalina hlodol 4 and lamlly =b ~ .~~Owmirw. 1-:-z care, $29,950. CAMEO HIGHLAND$ 8~.·0~~~: =pl:om~~~ple: Quick occupancy. AYRES REAL TY park, ('Oflwnient to lidlools flttplace. ~\'ff.. ~ EASTSIDE -Country skc ENCHANTING rm. wJfr»lc. NewlY painted prowd. Quick PoSltl&ion. 3 BR., 2 BA, Ira:. ft>nct<t yard, plUI boat atorqe yrd, "''lk to Balboa l•lo..t'CI, Some Vu, M\at stll. ABklrw 159.lOO: 6771Ql9: and Shoppinc. A&5U.me bl.· beach pr1\~s and fflOtt, yard, dttp shag crpta, cor-Can)'On a OCND viewl b\lln JG A out $34.000. ~ Priced at only '52.950. Call G.n.r•I interest -no. Joan. Tota.I A must to ~ in lhls xlnl · ner st<W ~. bfaut Olli spaclow: J bdnn. 6 deft COLLEGE PARK Cl. ... -9flH8Sl. L•iuna ... c'h ••••••••••••••••••• General Lovely· To· Look· At! lmmaeula\C' · 2 s'!Or), t bc\tJuom holnl' in J p..•aC'l'ful $t'llllq;:. 71,. b.1th~. bt'8Ul1!uJ separate sunk. n tamtly roon1 v.ith tlttpl;1C't' and "'t'I har. ln1pl"l'SSl\t' t>nlf). Sep:ll"ll.te duan~ room. E,'(- IX'nsh·l' w/1\ C' a r p e Is !hnlout. \\°rlt landscaped ~ llnl.. Roco m for boat. too. 1\.sking $71.DXL F'tn.t tin1e ollered. Call 67".r..'(;j(l. 5 ei~-------I p$nrnts ~01•:00 -r .......... nJce ""'"'a. Only •0 t300. decor. 1:c .... ~lln• bltns 4 POOl ...... _, 1-~.. tax 1 -• 4i -84110101 ·= ~ -~ ~ 11s:1121 ••• ; doubl• d;i,;;,.,.. ... ,....; brrak: -cd fur'd•talb: lBt, 2 !IA. Tani Rm. lri>lc. In Foreclos11re! twN1ll••ITSf\Mf08fHU1 Thereisattuon H&rd-to-f'iDd 3 BR, 2 BA, l$74.500}. 29.1 &WU.Q&' Grffn Dr, ilDY.lr" Open s.t./Sun. l0-4 ~ I home at this price 5'>842-1 Uniwralty R••lty $34..500: kw.> dwo. &t6.-Ul68 ff ! 161 l18l'91 l(URFR,U,:~~FOSR;?.CEO~~!!. r,; ~ l~ftli~I ts ,,..,. """" locallon 3 ~~NREALCp~Rts. ~ ;c~; ~~.;"~; ~~~.~~ ~ zlll!OIClllS•lill•IHC.lim l 8:~~~~~:k38:;~~~114 ~ -=== __ ""'t----le ..... owner Ternu 5f&-mi ~--~llllly r... or SI, dtn, fan1ity rm .. \·,~~-R ~n_fedDR\1!'~.l'nO .. · ~: WESTCUFf :.iW:W:.Jn ~ ~ ~~ oetan V""'!'· EASlsmE : CLOSE m r'V!' ..... ~n lrplc. E)(quisitt carpet; al tr. """''r. ....., r.. '"' ~ Du. ~r. 5t0-=· crpt r. 3 bdrm, 1 bath. new .... 1 .. t. 5 Bedroom1, steii-l!J> living 2-sty. \>lew A: new. f&l,000. REFRIG: INCLUDED ' EXECUTIVE SUITE! '"umhl!>I:. llanl•""" Doon: u, •·-lot 371 M,._o;;o:-nn:, hli lamily nn _WOods Coyo Duplex Suunlt's.5 1tttl li:i!chcn °"'ilh Two blocks from ICbcol K· BY ~'net, Old CDM 4BR .l s.:~ 541Hs91. 4~ w/tll't'pl, ccram1c · bencll, \\'atctl 1he 5 uh 1 el bctii.nd bu!lt·ln blender. DI n in g Exf'('Uti\-e WtstclW l bed .. 2 WOULD YOU 8th grade. CUI-de-sac. FHA play Rm home. C>a>an le -• •ho.,\'ers. Sep. utll. rm, Catalln-Jsliwcl 1 3 room. Pri\'ale gardPn patio! bath on mankund corner or Conv. $26,500. Call for Harbor \'U i~ bl.k to water, BY O\\'NER., 3BR, Fam Rm. "'"atersoflenet·. Wt\lk to bdnn '2 bL '&-l -BR ror;i ha 5.lorage lock en. I:\lMACT. loL Plu.sb carptts, drapes. BEU EVE m app't ID !ff, 557-1861.. R-2 lol,. Cul.rm., 673-9-103, 2 patbi potential Plus. F .P. beach, schla. $4.J,Gl(l. CALL quail~ torullroctior'I:· deck~ 1-\TE townhouse . POOL. hli:11lins, dining . room -2 8EDROO tS 2 baths. WANT TO ltU ILD Zl4 Oahha. = Auwne fllA Lou B4Ue. trplc., bricktd palio A plans I•~.>! BL'\' IBIS RARE BAR-pnvate yard with heated tire·•·-bu. iltin kllchen. Ideal !dte far your C'UStom COZY l Br cott .. e in 001. for 3rd wtit, on !ilbl'~ ft: GAL" TODA Yl Call 645-0003. pOO!! Pri«'d by ea,eer owner ~. .___ 00 ~~:. •-•~-~-1 4 b< • •· -~ C»'EJIJX.11 • rrs RJN roar t«:E1 at $61,950 _ Submit your carpets, drapes, double ~~ .. 'm:-OS:n~ On R-2 lot. $38.~. 8)' ruu "' ..,. ~ fp!c, lot. Cafl't match It for I ~I terms•, garage and a POOL. ALL Slf...45ID eV'l'S k "·eekends. 0.:ner. Prine. only. 673-1169. Jr~!~:.~• open dally. $73,000. IJlJ,l:f ' . . TlllS for-$23,JOO. Cost• Mew ~·....-., ownr 6t2-83.IO f&l_i$1 ii~N•J ~ ~ rc;,,,,., COATS ~..:l":::.~..C.2 Assume 60/o Founteln Valley tO<ll N: Cat Hwy:, t.aruna f , , ;')' ( "'J"' ) I OIO \I I 111\11\ EASTSIDE PRIDE OF &mm ~R~I~~~ ?Wi.!i~~~~: u~ !~ ;!::.anc1. c:.:~~k ~ 7'. ---546 4141 OWNER must sell. 3 bdrms., fa.rnily room k want a din-TDW exterior malntenance, FOR sa.le by oM>er -W SffARP * t" c),I.{' r h • ~ , • $2 '950. OWNERSHIP BA YCREST ;-2 balbL """ A pat»: ... room, but only ""'' lo total eloctrlc builtina and ~ ,t;t;un~·~,1~;,; ' Bdn:.. 2 balh horn< Tl .i<> c-111£' '.: bedroom homt ! TRIPLEX \\'ells built, 4 BR .. 3 ba.. (~n Ewnt"ll) P:£~ ..,.rm·~~~Fl~ P8h.Y $27.9501~ . yoU .!.!?'Id ~ a~lr-oo,;"kod:po2·~~aln"""'°"Fromms. rn1 , kitchen ea1-i ..... area, 1-\\'/de<:ka:. & patio. Ofl.ly 3 yn can be ~oJr key 10 future-fam ily nn., pool.. Spotless! JJ. .... ..,,,;,.u .......-·-t tS new Y listed v.r.>ta Mesa ~,. VA/"'°"'°~ ·,.,,.., W [aniiJy rm w.;:.! .... ~ old. Priced for lnuritdlate pro111: DOI\! RENT any fantaJ:tic triple..x, pride of Q\·eniJed lo!. "peacdu! 4-U Fantestic Twt5n OWNER d rs per at t . 3 propeny. Close to all ,:JW, .. n... .rJtJ. e paneP-& -.i~~'t'ftlud sale. $38.0CIO. !"nt:er, \\hen only Sl-IOO. \\tll ownership. 008e 10 all stn:oe!'· Reduct'd 10 189,500. M.000 F.P . 6400 DOWN bedims. 2 baths. Pool & schools and slmppinJ:'. Hu = ~~ ~because-we lot, "~1er"1"sottener A • MODERN • ~r·! \'Oll ir.tl'J 1~~ bt-auty. NO 1 schools, shoppini;-and ~. Near ~"tcFadden & Newport patio. Dining rm .. built·ins, alltomalic garage door I • e lty J purifier. A1an.y uwaded 3 ~·· 2 bath.<i; hljh beam 001.1:-; Tl) \'ETS~ You'll ~>ays. A n1u.st 10 see. ;'1-\\f.I... 1-·ree\l.ay terrific location. dishwasher. Family rm. brll: 01iener and a patio wtth •rw•n r, a nc. features.. f aist ~Ion cells., lots of etass. 3 1!.'~'C' 1h~ h::trrh1 ood aoor:ii. \°aC'rulC)' Jaclor a I n1 o s t & -~ 61: year fresh. Grou $21.500 ~Iral Bar-b-q. Lo\-ely wood bum-rn4i 968-4405 pouibll!:. $47,550. Open ~~ Compare this at buJ11n di,,.hv.a.!<ht'r custom nothing. L<>w ma1n1enanct. ,·~t ~-~··.i:: I W' lncome 7'!J9J based upon l 2 BEDR.~t 4-PUX Elside i~ fireplace. ~ tt IOOllo OWNER despet1'le. 3 balh9. dally. 3XOl BJ& Bend UL ..,..* INV•-1ESTOR1S ·-·N * C"abUJPts and 1o ... e1Y carpets. Price S47.500. Pleue phone " :: :'f, bedroom ($2101, 2 bedroom c.M. 1.ncome $580/~io. &l6-n7l 4 bedrooms. Patio, dining 96J..500l ...._,' \\'HY \\AIT~ for appointment to see 1$1001. after fued ~nva $52,0XI. CWNnll •rTSFlll108E~I rm. built-ins, dlahwasber, • Medical blilg. downtov.·n COATS ;H6-2313. . tft:} reall)!: and loan payments S86!J. WE TAKE TP.ADES I I family rm \vilh fireplace. VACANT location, adjacont to lge. ~ ' "'"" .. ~""'°~""' 21av~ .. 10'° ~~i~,f:~·~~ Bob OlaooReaJ•y ~' ftVlllf o~:;~~''.:::'.: ·~;~E~i~=;:i W£1'~'°~.~~~ l46R4~1.~;t~i~ ~ · ,1, ft11'1~1 :.:·x;~~Wl'.~E E~y ~;1;::;*oi-;J.~ =i;:1t;41ir~~ ~~~~~~~~-~~~ df»hred r'lO· ~~ ~~~ki~:~ ENGLUND --5'16-4 ! ---··="" ~khard Van W•rl: 64H><>. S.lboa lal•nd US"' vo~UR Y.A.• _n-i... tn _=· w a~; '6.i; lhil,., .. k. ~"51L8Klt: -REAl,s ESTATE (Open E;vonongs) • I HOME + F:imoO? C.mpnny R/E Div: I·· __ _..._.____ ~-1 ·" ) Yes, e-.-en in CdM it ls .poui. de sac. ~ $36, • 80-2561. BY Ov.'Dtt, Fnncl9can 318 THALIA 49-h'lm GUEST HOUSE CORONA BAYFRONT DUPLEX ble to """"" V:A: beoenta BY 0...0_!. 3 BR. >I> ba, er'pun, talm' BA' 2. ""1·-•il',~· "room' 4 SPACIOUSNESS Sell Your 1n I r-5·"· DEL MAR t.rm.E 1SLAND and buy lor -down '"" oom•. big-; Blllns, _,, 21 P~ ~e location. 3,!Dl Sq. ft. 40 n Slip \\ith iotl!f'est at 7%. We are frplc, xtrQ. $29.500. 11S18 w/catbed.ral clog &: Parquet . . unlimited for· )'OUI' fam· Lawnmower ~ Beautiful little country N Listi• Allo 2 New Dupleii:es the largest V.A. llKU1n# Santa Cristobal 842-7815 noon, Sha& crpt, pt'OI. ily, in this large. but com - Take \Vee ken d s olr. ho! n\e with lovely yards on ew hCJ On lnlide l.D~. COtnPILDY in Callfomia., let H ti I a~r h , landscaped. $41,500. 10% fo11ab!e; 4 bdrm. + home. ' arge 150 ft. deep lot. Better 2 Bedroom: lx'ach con•-. R: >t.G. l:'I,' ·~. ···'tor ,,_ •·z"• both the s••r~~T '"' "' on -c do'4·n~O n house Sat le: I E\ierythln:g; · taken care o_I -see loda On! MO:..,..... -..-............. v, • .n.cai ..., •W;LJ.allC ~· "'" Quiel. friendly neighbor- ! lud la I ~ .... -•-Y· Y ._........ 2 lot. 40xll8. ""-Iodation. :ll1 Marini!: Ave. ..,..._,,.~,,~ of >'OW" home a.nd the tinan-""n. · hood 1 1 ,ss••r \l'IC l1\g "11, to0, uuo.al,_, .-~~-VI"'""" s i al s i . /nmll CU .Qjt' ...... OWK:8P- I painting: pool: recreaoooal I Mesa Verde 145la·1'f"1 Huny ""' won;t OWNER transl•-; 3 BR:, dng: Call --pr ta rcase Doll Houae ily Ownor Ing: """'"'"'; relreshlng J pori; and ~n rnlhn11: hills.! Lo 1 ~ st. 11! BA. Newly decorated. g,.,...,.wo:io Hard-to-come-by! You bet! Prof, redecorated. 3 BR. 2 view of canyon & ocean. Tht~ IO\'C'ly ~'On<lominium .,\·~)Ci 0 1 •~ .. •~011 on cul-rl£'1· Realton &1&-T711 ~-I ~ Loui of charm. $TI.,500. .~.,,Ill~~ ii "Fnutclscan Fountalna by BA, frplc, slw.g· crpts, Nr CRH Al An11br1.1ster or Rosie ! ~~~ ca=:n_, ei!il;~ ~1~·pl~ vn;:;1:~raa~e 204&~~~:£nlf~Pr;ve &T.T1488. · _ Iii'~ I~ 'theSea"5BednnkfamlJ.y ~FHA"~.oi24.) RoOC·r~i.s.SM,500. f bath!. one BR ~'Tl can be Qrl'a. 645-i221 l"'"!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. I N S.lboe Penimul• ~ ~ ;. l.t; ~~led3 ~L~thst.~~pa~liO; .. ; mo, incl. all ~ or o· I ,;y -~~~ri. for $34,fm. Call li33 \Vcstcl.ifi Dr .. N.B. Mini Estate• MILLION$$$ VIEW ~·:-: 5•.... ™ .._....,. ~~a. "*"~ • OCEANFRONT 1oc, Pen!n: '""'°'~' .. "'"°'""'CO: ~;~ ~·; m:t'. t -R~E-..... o-~s .. ~-B-.-C:-11\_N_S REAL ESTATE BIG 5 •GOVERNMENT Point: 3 BDRM;, 2 na. home Pr!« only $53,!m with only '""!' 1190 Glenneyre St I REPOSSESSION overlooktng -a> _ GREAT _ -dowu: cw. !6U85L For: lnlm:mabon and loealxm 49<9413 549:@16 tranre, with Catalina on the ol th.,. rnA • VA home" STEP UP TO -·; ~ ~~~oi!~ 1111lllt :~~KE~t~!BIA"~~ f~1¥,~~~~f,~~ RF.Al.TY JM! e~. BROKERS INC. Lge. dining & fan1Uy mu. Spacious comer Jot + 4 Bd- rm., sepatatl!: dt'n, formal dining art'll in desired "MeM Verde." Submit on $48.500. ·'·UNIT APARTMENT IN GINNY ~IORRISON OOSTA J\IESA -Just re--*** -RF.ALTOR:S-leased and priced only .'* *• ~Mesa. $4.T,000. A good tax shelter •CiM•Verde Dr. Ea.st, _opJ!Ortunity! ftVE -2 bedroom homes, five gan.ges, 5 separate ien- ('ed ya r d.s , on big slreet-t01treet lot Income $740. per inonth. 1\sking 169:500: .>io-U51 CULVERDALE Open E"": ESt-If e PRESTIGE Beam "'"';•! Load• of . 4 SEASONS charm, plus 1-bdnn. gUest. IN IRVINE (714)173-8210 -4 BEDROOM, <ten, 3 baths, ap1. Beautlfuijy Jndscpd., on •--* Costa ~fesa 546-5880 \Open EvesJ '*••** SS7-413G _,; "!~ HERITAGE 8843 ADAMS, HB: SPECIAL 3 car gar a g" carpets, lg ,_ ~ Prival c park with pool. tr-n-2001 w . ....._._ 962-2456 557-3403 -dra......, builtins. r "-e kit . e. wl. S89,:iuu, nil! courts, playground and """'°'1 D ll c 11 1illtHCIO .... .., ._. 5 * 49'3-2800 * !Open Evenings) REALTORS •• ~ 5 HERITAGE ' • REALTORS du bho""': Oll•ri"" thi. -I •!!!!!~~~!!!'!""'""'""'I aeTlfE & NEAT 4 Bednn1 ; 4 Bath1 2 Slory: BROKER. 842-1418: fe!>!io!ll\lly decorated 4 INCOME , • l~===~===sm: 11 L91' from bay, 2 Br., view, f 1 di I 2800 '"" .-~ r-51 Eastside . family rm. wtlirepl. Very ' -~!!:-'Sf\:wNl. ~· 2' ~th 1th Bedroom h I u e away •1: .. nu. Dupl $19 500 1 J Bedroom orma 1n1ng rm., sq. FOR sale by owner. Will sell .,.,.,room. ~ "" ", -"Eastside Cos -' .....,,oou. ex ' ft P f Incl pd formal dinlng room and COSTA MESA J:L! bath, ~-~·with ''INCOME -CORNER" ~IAijSHALLRealty 675.4QX1 .. approx. roes . sc · GI or FHA or go con-~so.~KW'I: separiue family room total-~ wvuu Doors Across ·ihl-street from chan-C del Ma Fllmily room, 2 bath, bW' All tenru. Call 9684456. ventional. Buy below ap-S0111?1 "'°""""CM# ing 2100 sq. It. for only 9 Unita, gross over $13,000 and flttplace. HUl'Ty, only nel, nr. park & ocean, New-orona r maintaioance yard. Owner praiaa.I. 3 Br, 2 Ba, lrplc, l ---'~"'"=-=-~=-~- $40,900. Oioosc your finan· Y".· Try IOC,.O do¥.·n, owner Call33l.~,;.1151 Ope E port Island. 2 Bdrm., trplc., OPEN D" 'LY l S anxiow and ready to move. ' crpll, Ir. drps. Glll'8ge con-* OCEAN VIEW * clng. Please call. will carry 2nd. Make money O#"JAr n ves. 1% baths, 2-aty. & l·bdnn. All • J ust 12 yea~ old. Painted verted to lge den. $28.000. 2 BR. & den or 3 BR. 2-sty. 2 on this one. Asking $96,500. Apt. S66,fl'.IO. 4'20 WAYNE RD. Inside and ou Just a year 84&-4739. Frplcs., Uv. rm. & din. area Call· 673-36&3 673-8086 Eves Custom 4 BR. 3 Ba, Fonnal ago .. $31 .000. For further "'/ocean vie111'. Bltn range, Realtors ~ -. . dlnlnr rm., family rm., brk-details call 64&-TI71. COME AND SEE dbl oven, dish11o'Shr. CUst. I #o'IAI~ A !st. areL Many extra fea· oPfN71la •ITTFUH10BENiCEI drapes. carp, thruout 2 JU;• ~;~~D Mesa Verde-CORONA ~ 1 ~ I 11~$1tl ... .,."'v"'A"'CiiiiAiiNTiiiiiiii..., 5~~:::; !B~t~?::~~ =\VALKER &'•LEE -Mesa Verde.-No Down G I DEL MAR .... I . == ' -• BR, ' BA, 8 yn new: PAm WALKER R K Small, deon and charmlng: s:~k~~-; r~:~c~~ _0~11~ !I Qualili~ vets attc.ntion. New Listing NEWPORT BEACH DOH Y. raAJ(IQ.JX PRICE REDUCED ~!1~1;;1'8 ~t~ e JJ 1 z;~ OWNER must sett 4 ~f:' ~~~~~.°Ji$, in countrv kitchPn eomplcte 1: ~6eour,.chance8 to .wie2 btdroom, beach .cottage, Duplex . 3 mos. old. 3 Bd· ~Ul.T~JI 226 EAST 19TH ST.. many, many )rg trees, lrg bedrooms, 3 bath + pool. Coast Hwy . 494-S833. with huiitins. t-;e\,. carpel· ~ ~· 1 pac:ih R-2 lot, ~118, prime loc•· nns., ~ beth1: bit-Ins, Ir--c-Spacious 3 BR. 2 full bath !Iv nn, plenty of cupboanfs J':atio. Di.ninr .rm. built-in&, ing quiet rul-de-sac street. h , h f . • ~ , tlon. $4a,OOO. Hurry this pl.e»., m each. Block to c-. .. ._ custom home on 70x125 IL and storage, w/w crpll & ~washer. Ftreplace, rear UNIQUE home. S~. 2 · . ome . "1 ~ 1 r e P a c: e • won't last! water. S85 ooo "'-•n·1Ul lot. Copper plwnblng, frplc:., drps, trg orJVd patio, gd hvlng rm, brk $38,900, Br. yard trees, qUiel area + Owner anxious. $34,900; _ buJJt-1n 1ur~en _and. cnclos-~ 3 UNIT; S-FURN · ......... d. patio, t ro p 1 ca I nbrhood. :842-2f@. 2 sep. lnconie unlll In rear. lilock \l.'all fenced wltn With Ocean vi~w. Near pil!l'. * NICE * I a n ds ca PI n g. Choice If ·~ OWNER transfered. 4 ' · -CALL &l:l-1Hl ct.I lront lana1 \\'llh hl'e ring. -• .....,. -$69500 497 1064. Ontu 1wm !or the <.+iildren to ":.. Good rentals! 162,500 2 B Eutside locaUon. for •• 1 .. Bedrms + pool. 2 baths, Lagun• Hills ORJI home on R-2 lot, t33 600 IUneaa show b - -Uo Dlnin& ii -~-------1 21 C ""'"FL e.Cner lhurry .. Artht.508. ~~ l~I Gib Walker Realty No .. 'b Hwy. 2 Baths. app'•t..'...i.. , n Y , __ , Ill d~"w;·s•-1"",1,.:.1~~ Un1n" ByOwnr 'Bd-lam ~1c 0 -wo y -3.155-G Via Lido N'pt Bell.Ch f.t-.. "rnkltchen1 •2 aUt1 uaed "'"""'' , "'""' _,ia, II""-"' -. ''"• .... " • ~ • • ""~ · ......, oc MR. ROBINSON family m1. Bric $35,900, New \.\'orld $31,600. ~. ~ 11 Rt.:ALTORS HARD TO FIND * 67S-5200 * brlck rtplc. OUered for Davia Realt.v &12-7000 OPiN HOUSE ~ !lb'2·1373. 23S22 Lipari, Lai;::una Hills. VETERANS! Are you eligible'? Can you Qualify for VA linancing? Is your previous\y.ullled loan .l'rein!<lahle! GIVE US A CALL. l ;INN\' f.lORHlSON *** -REALTORS- 1'+ •.. 15ffi Mesa •CaM-v't•rdc Dr. Eut. • --• Co.sta t.fcsa '*•••* 557-4130 (Open Ewningsl Three Wishes U peace. comlort and loca- tion are lmportanl to you, belter k>ok thlll owr! Quiet cul-de-&ac street, 3 extra large bedrooms, Jilus large F/R. Locatef\ near g!i)p- ptng. schools and park. Prlco $35,000: 847-<010: 0Pf/l 71l • • 1rs FUN 70 11£ NU/ [ ~ 9 UNITS! 9 UnltJ, ~ over SU,000 yr. Try 10% down, t)Wfltt ""'"'fl' 2rltl: Mal<e'""""' on this one. Alklrw: S96.500. &»-oo2D · · · du11lex on Penlnsula PL * * $l2,9S0 * * ~~GAN REAL TY MESA DEL MAR 5 Br, 3 Ba Sal & SUn 1-Spm LO'°"VEL'=°°"yC:3BR,=~2BA.~-ba-r~ad-L•guna Nlgutl VIEW HOME ~~·c':':h~~t~'iJ~~: i! ~~ 4r:k)"+ ~~~r=~ 673-6642 675-6459 ~· & occu~. Allee=. L~:,ns~~~°c~J:: 4 H:; ~~ w/'t;lc.~~ 00:,: 1 -~0-P_E_N~H-OU--S-E __ , A J)l!:r, lo1vcr leased $265 month t.fost outstanding buy in FOR SALE By Owner -CdM landscaped. Huge yard, nr Fonnal din. nn, l car comp. decorated, lt'e to ap. SAT & SUN 1-S p .M. R $72.roo. N'pt Ht&. Better hurry! House with Apt. $58,500. 1ehools. !otany extra 1. garage. $14,000. of spec-predate. Own:!r, No ~ntJ. 22292: Telfair Call : 673-lfi63 675--8886 Eves. BALBOA BAY PROP, CaU 675--1502. $45,900. By owner, 5f&-D6. raculor interior & Landscap. J'W,,500. 54tHl9.12 or 847-5410 Tpp-oI-the-hill, large vitw 4 Bedroom and family room * 642-7491 * Classified Ml , .. 642-5678 Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! ing. 19442 Summer Breeu! BY . owner, 4BR 3 BA 101. Sharp 3 bedroom & fatn.· built by Lusk and better .I.A H.B. '-'le•-!: 2 ~1·,, ,_ lam n:: ~ d•• -•? !ban new, Ocean view 1rom D Id •-~ R ..,__ u·.-... "'t' ,.." ~ room. a .. ,um, ,..,w ..... , family room, formal dining av uuul"•• Nmw rm wtwet bar, form, din tlec bltlns, CU3tm wet bar. room, maater bedroo1n, s(/ll~~lA ~~f!Q.• * 54fi '9SO * nn. Many xlraa, cul-de.sa.c. 2~ \'rs new. !\tally xtra.s. kitchen and bl'eak!a!t ~-~ J." . -p \) "MERIDITH GARD-Nr Marina &: ~t Bonaven-Access to private beach, $85,500 and you O\\'JI the ENS'' Extr . ture. $46.::.00. Ph. M&--40'lt. tennis rourt It pool, new 1 \J2\'K~o,s.:~1f1~0~Jc~; HOME; + The Puule with the Built./n Cit.die 4 bedrm tri~i:e~ct': FOR Sale By owner,< br ~1~~~,J,o;::/~';~·:: · 'I II p I I 21 -1 lo-: 123.490: $500 ~ «.:o \\.~ roperuea. nc. GUEST HOUSE o ~.arro~ &ettm of tti. r~~ try hall and formrudin-under FHA approvaJ .. SWlm-m.,. •. pou, For appointment :::6::;1"c,mi"='o; ~~==~ I .. fOllt" a:1a,,iblN words be-ing sL, warm panelled pool, tennis ere, baskctb&.11 Call JOllN READ REALTY\ OCEAN VIEW n p11ml' Easl~ldc location. low to rorm fOl.ll' lirnpM words. de ~ 500 &: park. 962-51'.MO Aft 6. 846-8129, or cal)• collect: In N~"'!:i' lleo1ght1: Ru•llc Bel!..utUul little country nL1 E""A"'ERS1 HIP OWNER anxious. 3'bath• 4 968-ll9l anytime. ""' home "'·ithlovclyyardson 'IBAI LIBEl'O I I " hd I ti Di ~I \VEST NINE CON· Cape oo 3 smry-with .J large 150 ft. deep Jot. Better . -. - . . 142"4466 nna, poo. pa '°· n ne l'8r garage, large lot & see today. Only $25.500. rm, bu.llt~inl. dlshwasher, ~MINil.1~1. 2 BR.1 2 BA. fruit lrt'('I!' witll '"""'al ocean S & S TRANSFER fi~ce ln family rm. Brk ecora!Or furnish nga op- -' u-r--I h • • ·~ lW'<1 _,,. tlonal Eves I Wknds. 1 and harbor view. A story· IW-•~ .-8CJ t, uge "o..a ....,, • ~ book hOm@ ..-.i th that charm J-~::cl_E,_D.,..R_E,_-;, ~ Mer"· model. Wiodlre stair· OWNER lea\lina. 4 bedrms, 2 "49&-=29<=9,-1 77-c~co--".:I that's so hard ti> find. Own-Rcallors 646-mt . ol CIR le11d.s to master Juite baths, patio, dinirtl' rm, PACIFtC llland VWqe. 2 er will tak(I JO'iii down pay. 2043 Westc:olf Drive 1 • I I I 1 A: exeocutive entertainment buUt..tna, d I • h w a ah er , BR. 2 BA, ocean A mtD 111unt. Open '1111 9 PM _ . _ _ room. Formal dining room., l'treplace, family nn. Bl'k, vlew, overlooldnt. _pool: NEW ON THE f:--.--r.-r;..;:,-il ! ltled luml!y mom, al:hom< 136,500, !J6i:81165; clubhouse & outu,,. R""D: 1 Ti i ottldt. WU1 te4l leu lbatl OMiER sacritk.'e. 4 bedtm1, ~ & ~·!rend. 493-2175. MARKET! O y O 8 """ model B~ 9624\ll. l b<tha: Qn.>omt patio, lido lslo Rcll.ltoNC 64;-7TII Weg••iill t•-4 ~ 4 ·1 • I I 0eti...ning gitv1IO: "'I'm PRESTIGE HOME built-ins, dt1hwa1her,l---"--,..----2043 Wc1rc.llff Drive "" -,~.,¥ .......,. ... '¥ •-n la •1 1 -"· 3 BR o D&N o ·uu 9 P~i beth -dining mom and -Oh wor•rng on a labor-sovlng 2 1101')1 . Anthony Pool res> ce u\ a .. .....,. rm. • • pen Y@.11! Pool! °"''n& tra.tl!lfr---:-:i~,,-.,.-:::--.d . I" ... ..L .. 5 Bdrm, 2 Ba11o ra-n .. kit --~--4~ :btk_S36.:0W.+z-""''"l fAm•,., .... --:tr PRIME •? r I evtee. 1 s o rtui --... ......., e..-JJKJ. 1~ F lot~ 119_ red: 139,000 Hu">! O I M Y A W It ch<!•,· ~le, bll-1111, u-d· I ~ oot · .~ 1--T'-1'-;"-r'-'T.F-.:-f A ~-h.doudi< 1;,;.;...i ed -cri>ts A drpa_ Shake $2;0DO: Down. Sharp 3 LOWEST PRICED. , • Corona del Mar tf!i~rifi I ,. J I' I' v by ml ... ~ tho ., .. ,,. -root -· wall: • bloc:b bedn>om, ""' drapes A lleme .. Udo: 2 BR: +: 'I Tri le · . . ] . . . YOAJ d,1M1iop frOM..,. No. ·3 I*-· to Marina lliih I: SI. Sona· carpe\I. SZ2,750. mm.: batha. Quiet end of thti if. p x · I r venture Ottttth. By ~r. 842--lilS l•ni:I. ~.500. Ju51 reduced to 11?1:000: All 2 L 8 PllNT Nt:MIU!O L!TT!H 144.90J, ~ 16lll Wood-WAAll-. 11ne ntlal>bon. LIDO REAL TY bedroom units, each with ill VACANT LOT IN THESE SOU":;:•;•;!!:::::;;=:i=*= MOdc Ln, H.B. H.B. nr tch. bch, 4 + 2. 3377 Via Udo, N'pt Btach own 2 car carport and ":" 17•7-priwte balcony. Tho Jgru;t SEE thl!! 518 nctf 'ruinln E UT1lR$ NEAR THE BEACH $34,500. Otmrr, "° qt. .-- expcn1lve trip!~ in l(IWJ\ area hon1c11lh.i. Price mily fOt ANSWll VAC 2 BR. 11,1 BA, defP l-t6 2322 Put a Ultle ''loot" in yoor 1 with a nt!tt "si'ull" -tB.SV Sl7,450. Low dcm·n. ~1,v &nar crptt. $19,750. Call any· BY OWNER! Br, 2 BA. new Lev~ tho9e. b...ublet for ~=-----i ~~;c.-s. .. h: _::'_::"~ .. _1no_•_··-~_4_8 _-0_1_•1t __ S_C_RA_M_·LETS ___ AN_S_W_E_H __ IN_C_LA_SS_IFl __ c_A_no __ N_7_oo __ g:\u_sron R&ALTv =..,,cp~.:'~:1' r0~~-=·o.·:_c.n ____ 1 • • N A B 1 N Wa 2:: c 0 3 G Ja hi 2 .. ; ... w ·ex ., d• 'ri 67 ' \pt I ~ I I D b ~ s B • r ,. • Frld.11. Jinuary 19, 1973 p -.,_._ .. 0 DAILY PILOT ,15 dd"m •eE j 5-Ca 0 rid 5 i t~-~-w.~~~~-~--~~~iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'r:i~1 ;.~-iiiiiiiiiiiiii~l~~-I ~l ---"'--~'"•1 ~~-~ .. ~--ilil~~I ~! A,_ ... -_ ... , .. ~··"';::;l ~~I [ ....,_ ... ~ !lt]I ..... _ ... , ...... I~ -LI .. Isle lo Homos 1 -PNl'!..."J "' Mott919n, ,..Ho ~="'":.:":::.-U;:.nc,;f..;;u;c'""-'-'"'-'30=5 HouM1 Unfurn. 305 Aph. Furn. I OPEN SAT/SUN 12-4 ,_ ...... ..;;.;;..;,..._'_..;1"-'151 COCTA MESA 1 -.:..Trvotc,;;~D;;.;•;.;.•d;;,;•_-'2;;.;60.;;1 co1t1 Mow Newport Beech Coron• dol Mor 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfur n , General 365 121 VIA HAVRE 12 U lt"f '1"' ,.. • BR. t mald'• nu .• balh. Mater Home Rentals 4 u nl • "" .... = ..... ooo 1:.:,-:.i ~~ ""-"::; .... HURRY On T I Bacho-EASTBLUFF llACllELOR Al"I'. Crp ... J'am, rm, Upttalrw pl!Q'· n ti ''''''' . .,.., · San Juan -CTpl1 tr an o, !or, fW'tl., S80 utll. pd. Separate bou.1;e, Ulll.WW. drpi. $125/P.tO. UW tn. room. SUndeclc. IO Ft. ltrett 4 Uh lto • • • • • • · $41,000 payable ms per lllOIUh. ALA Rontol e 64$.3900 i..,.. I bedroom or 3 A lk'n. duded. Call 4>1-7463. to tll'ffl. $12$,lxxt. lnc:ld 9% &11 due ln 3 yean. F'11mily room plut la:rt:e Costa Meta LAWSOH RIAL TY <h\•net l\W'IJ'lle6 oon-• WON.,... 11! t Br. Slv/ ronnal dining r 0 0 tn . ;;,;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; * 615-4562 • 1 I r u c t Io n tlilii year cpt/drp. f.ro. Sml. pet ok. Com11lt"!te privacy with • Mo .. v.,. 531-6800 67M900 w/W,ooo bank depooteo. 1135 uliL pd. eru:i....<l , .. , aud tront LIVE LIKE A KING 15% dl.ICOUnl. Broker, ALA Rent•l1 e 64>3900 , ya.rt.ls. Lovely gari!en. No 714/493--1154. $250-BRAND NEW 3 BR., 2 ' pets. $475 per 1nonth. ) ELE . -8x40 Starlleht, 1 BR. tum. w· NEAR OCC 201% OlSC. lat 1'.D. SeasoOOd Bath double. a: a rug e Call 673--6563 or M&-3688 , GANT bath. lOxJO CabUla ~ be FOUJ'-plex bufld1ng11 from well teeured. Pay• $160. nlO. Townhowie. Crptl, drps, bit-$22.S-2 Sr. Channelfront, gar, --At Budget Pricosl F'URNISHED • UNr'URNlSHED CUSTOM BR. New Cp~t· dtp8 " bedJ s~.500 to S56,5'W). 4 -3'1 or 10% due 1977. Box 3, .Apple Ina. KiWi " Pool. Aval!. bott t slip avail. Child ok. I thruout. Ji"an .put prlv. 4 . 2'1, adu\f: only or lam· Va11ey, 242"3144 now. OaY• (213) 531...Q80 or $215-2 Sr. 2 Ba. OdO -rste. *POOLS Cloi;e lo Mcaa Verde Countl); beach, bout •av&!!. Ail< Uy unlll yotir choice. Belt Eves (1141 84M5.18. Frplc. New crpta, drpe. * ENCLOSED Club -l..a.rge ex&:utlve ~· $4.000. S p ace rtnt $65, areu.. ,~· vac.ancles. J MESA Verde 38R aBA. $200 'Gar. GARAGES bed:roon1 with 34' den, pooJ. Newport lkh., ~or Oave Muruol •'red Pnttt l -~-llfl!i l SBR, new carpeting. ~ $300-New 2 Br. 2 S.. Frplc. *CONVENIENT tabl~: wet bar, rtfrl&., etc. 586-5652. COLDWELL, BANKER ,.. 3BR. ma., trg. bk. yd. $22;5 Over 3 car gar. CdM. General VILLA MARSEILLES SPACIOUS I l i BEDROOM APT. Furnilhed & Unfurnished Adult Liv ing Dishwasher color coordinated appliances • Plush shag carpet • mirrored wardrobe doors· Indirect lighting in kitchen . breakfast bar • huge private fenced patio • plush landscarr ing • brick Bartll-Ques -large heated pools & lanai. Air conditioning. 3101 So. B;lotol St., Sant• Ana 557-l200 COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. MANAGING AGENT N~·I~ dt!i..'O r11;ted wit h. lux· KIT-Trojan :itbcro', LivR.m, Realtors Ml-5221 L------' CENTURY 21 M&-9521 NU-VIEW RENTALS TO ALL BEAClfF.S IU101!8 &hag c 8 r Pe 11 n a. Otn Rn1 Kitch, 2Br 2& ;..H:.:•.;;"'";;";;:_F;..u;;crn..;;,;,iohed::.:;:.:......;3;..00;.; CLEAN, aml 1 er Duplex, m4030 er 494-3~ FROM $140 MONTH Apt1. Furn. 360 Apt. Unfurn. SP8''kllngd """cl ""'!c~'°:.':!/' fully crp'ted, Incl kitch & ESTATE BUILDER Prlv yanl ,. __ • -lrig 3 BR., N'pt llghlL """· ADULTS PLEASE l·L-"---D---h---C K ro u n "• a.LI .....,...._,. bath rm. many blUM, Units can be upgraded I: Gener1I · ' "'"'" ·~ · ~hildren OJt $27S Month, 1gun• U19K osta Meu 365 HERITAGE REALTORS. clceeta. drawe't'I, utu nn A rtonll incn!ued. .:.;;;.:.:;.;.;;.._____ 2BSUSR /modrpe. 548-66808 crp•· -....:~ avail. Feb. lBl.: l.€e. 2 BR. VILLA POMONA "ACfl nr. •-a•h. "-lo• tv. e--1--.. -". "'-'" u--'er $49,000 557-f930 $171).Ulll Pd. Nice Redec. 1 • • ''" ..... ~. 2 •-CdM H" h n ""' .. ....., • w ~B '"""""" .,..... ... , ....,, ,.._. at--gu y-~ -pe'" u.. apt nr. • 11 " PHONE "2 2015 11'" ·~ k Util I .....,,......,_ Y Owner 1: new lnlinlrer.tor, S.746t Br. w/garage. Laguna. v""'• • wu, ,.., ~. $265 month Hal Pidefli.n, -• .., mo up . .,.... w up. Oust oU MulUp.le 4BR. 2% MOBILE Ho J.2x60 2 BR. $181).l.rg 1 Br. CW\t. 1 blk baby ok. 174 Monte Vista Rltr. 675-1392. I !!~ll~7;60~Po<;;no;;na;,;A;v;•~->..,,.i t""r.t· ~-ti""'~'-'o"r-'494-==2061=·-Ba, dtn. form ·din rm, nu 7 LR me, pk beach. Carage. LOVELY Yu h o m f! , I! Lido Isle I •baa p1·p11, \ lot. 2024 ,w Be~~· r. ••• + u~li.....faJ1!::o:M $25().2 Br. Ocewtf_ ront. Ne\\'• 4BR,28.A. elect k.itch, crr:lS· NEW ntREE BEDROOM Casa de Oro •·•· Dr 7 •••3 ,.. ................. ......,. -"--k. w ,..,,_ •-.,..., """" '°-"" 1"~ CONDO -with own boat slip, L'URN 1 bdrm Iii pd 4XUC:artC • -J.>'I or finn $2500 down Priv Pt,y port.~ -mter. ...6""•• ......,, ~ • ......,... U" carpets., drapes, deluxe r , ' u ' 1 38Rleave2BA.message al 545-4571. 213°1696-858°1 da)'li 8 Immac ~tyle adult ~~,.:,YfEW RENT!~~ .. e UNBELlEVABLE!-lfouse, xrras.· OPEN Sat. & Sun. Co~par~~N~?u~t f~"g~~ 1yr1S:~ pets. , 3 yrs youni, 11uper TI4/4•1491 aft 6. units, E-slde CM . .2 BR, l 'Ai 00~ or "'"""' stove, retrig. $35 per wee.k . BKR at ffll West Coast Custom dcsia:ned., fealw·ing: · · · roomy_ at bl'lo\f merket. BAYF'RONT NE w PORT ba,. patio. On cW-<Je-.lac-iiL. PALM SPRINGS ALA: Rentals e 645-3900 _ H\V)'. e Spacio116 kitchen with in· Newport BHch $37,$00. BKR 64&-8811. BEACH $18,500, 46 Clbrillo, $128.(XX). 548-9695. Lovely 3 bdnn, heated """I. · 2 Ba l'ri direct Jig" h"·• """ • KIDS&Pet1we!Comc! 2 3 BR, •tudy, · v. ...'6 1 BR. Apt. w/garage. Year- 1 Newport Buch ~m 714-fil3-.4511 or BY ~~~r•~n-pll~, o'ld~ Wknd, week, mo, 644-4285. Br. hse., stvlref., CID, encl. patio, gar. it dock for 301' .• lSeloparame-u'•.,d1,n,·~ .... "",a ly $175 per mo. ll6¥.i: 36th • ea . ......_ __ ..... · Y• · B1lbo1 Peninnla rd S175 lloa.t. $550 n10. Yearly. Inc· ""' St. N.B. Shown Jan ~h & LIDO PENINSULA EQg).and St., Huntln~tcn AYLA. R . t I e 6411 -utU , Avail. April. Call: a Pl'ivate patios 2lst. \Vee.kdays .Call (2131 2 Br 2 Ba 934 Sq Ft Beauty Beach. Call 53&-9453. TOP LOCATION • Cozy 3 en • s "~7"" &T:r-0469 after 6 PM. • Closed garage w/storage S49-64lG; weekend call (TI4l Gorze<>wl, vw of bay A area 1 bedroom new paint in and NICE 3 BR home, dbl car 2 BLKS to beach-2 BR,. 2 ba, • Marble pullnian 675-8516. CONDOS $.IJCXX) Cash req'd 540-367'J Loh for s.1. 170 cut, tirePlace, family room. garage, fenced yard. Pet.s fam rm, trpcl. Club • King.sz Bdrms $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2 Cartlree living In 1artt 3 an 1972, 2t:ht43, 2 Br, 1 Ba, 5 Star '{2)'1Wo vacant loll 315 & Yearly lease $400 per I _,o,,_k.:.cl!!225::..;m,,o:::·..:91%1o.::::""'19o.---n1e1nbershlp w/yr round • ~~d~ ~fu~ -1!~ BR & Bachelors. Color TV• 4 bedroom homes. Excell Adul~k:.. pet ck. Must 31.9 Canal St, Lido Shores, nlOnth. PETE BARRE'M' D1n1 Point heated pool, tenrilia court. scaping. maid 1i1erv., pool. The 11.lesa 11\'.'a, priced from S32.9fi0. to aell. 796,;. Newport Beach, $25,cn>. ,!REAL'!"!'!:!TY!:,. !'_&IH200~~!._ __ I :::'.:::":-~":'"'":'"'-:----'13=25=·=1mo~-~&1="5--'loo65SC=-~~-Adult liviiig at ils best 415 N. Newport Blvd., NB. BACK BAY * * * SPARKLING NEW BAY SHADOWS Apartments Sf).'.lt lOUS, Light & Cheery! ADULT LIVING I BR's FROM $U7 2 BR's FROM $177 Beautiful appointments in· elude Decoratcr Fireplaces. Shag Carpeting. Private Patios. Pool -Jacuu.i · Volleyball courts • Gas BBQ·s. $33,950. Bia kltch, fmJ din, 3 BR, 2 BA Otobile Mme in each lot. John E. Burkett, L19un1 BHch OCEAN k ha1'bor viP"''. llC\Y 4 BR F"/R, DIR, 2 ba. LARGE 1 BP. $100 646-~l. (rOnl rm w/firepl, 2 car ocean-front park, Laguna 7006 C.Orregldor Rd, Van-4 BR, 3 BA, fn1 rm, ~415./ WAI. 3 Br, D/R, 2 ba. No Petii l~B~LK=~to-.,,.-,-.-. -N-.._--. 409 BAY St, Costa MliN laf, hog rec area, cocktall Beach. $22.~. 494-8239. couver, Wash. 98664, phone 2 BR, 1 BA, walk to beach, mo, Executive hom e· $3~. Both in Harbor Vw 365 \V. Wilson '642-1971 Kid&-pets ok. 1 Br $175, 2 Br Manag•r Bldg E-103 bwge, bUllard rm, Olympk Owner tnuvafe~ 1972 Xix <206)695-2957 Feb. 1 to June 15. S285 mo. 675-i414. honles w/pool privl. Owner, $195 _ Until July 1st. * 646-3317 * pool. lil% ON. West Ude cf 54. s Stu Adult Pane. Com. LOT in Boulder City, Nev. Wkend 4M-«>89, or wkday Fountain \'alley 833-3894. Unbeli•vably Beautiful 642--9955. . I ,...,;;,....,..,..,..,,;;,..,,.I ~-Bay, Sama Isabelle l plete. 496-4886. Lake 'load ·"ew Im-·213: 360--625.1. I :,.:.;:.c.:,:.:;,:...;..;;;;::.!-___ OCE AN FRONT-NE\V 4 VAL O'ISERE Garden Apts. u••~ " " do I •-3 R ,.._ Adults no pets flowers 2 BR, ()JI the beach/Pier, KIDS LOVE OUR FUN IW ' SPACIOUS 24x60' 2BR, 2BA. provements in my equity ~ 1,L::;:::i :.:..;;•;;.~:..,_____ B · 2 BA ...... .,ts, drps, bdrn1. Beams, \\'Ood, '"rock, everywl;ere. slteam ' W/D. Yearly or winter $250 t, Lndry rm. Adlt park. Prime uswne loan. Easy Terms. FOUR BEDROOM 3•L ~." tb~~~·pd $2601 I I~· glass. Spectacular&: HUGE. Waterfall, 45' pool. Rec. R1n. mo., prlcg & ~ 536-5006 M, OMS LOVE NEW heh toe. $17,<XXI. o .. Owner (n4) 839-,S514 bath NI 1 •·-'-hed. ln-nt na er, i""'" . s, as , S500 'mo. Yrly. o ave 1 2 0 ' ee y ·~~ dep 11310 n-<~1·n1um '°' -15 Sauna. Sg s J. Bdrm., Oceanfront 2 BR, d----l:p:J·~51=11~(:=:.:)~Q=l-~51=U~X67S--O'l9l~~~· ~fi!~:;;;-~ WATERFRONT. 30' ~t sli p cludina: piano. $450. per 213:. 378·1739 aft 6..,., . 64<>-1972• ...,.._ Furn-Unlurn. fl-om $138 tum. Avail on wtnte"r'""i;·~~ -CARPETS, DRAPES A1TRACTJVE l2x55 in adult ln Balboa. Lot 7 Collins I&!· month Iii June 30th. O• -n $375. 3 BR'! on Kings Rd. SEE IT: 2000 ParliOns mo t 2131•••7= ' ..... 4 BR 21' BA Frpl d Call · 0 n}(). ...,..... u.,.,. Get more out of living this VALENTINE'S DAY ~t = S.:~ Shag and, 67J.mo. ·~ 2 ~~· ~ Dshwtir.' Brtins.· S285J~. J\~.u~r~':cits213~&ro-3549 6<12.JJG'iO. $185 CANAL FRONT-1 BR. 2 year by choosing the family SPECIAL • !i!~'iii!i!!i!!!l~!!!i!!!!I --..,_., Call 968-3635 aft 6 pm. i :30 to 11 AM weekday•. El p .. arta ._ .. _ ... _ hlk11 to beach, dock. 3400 'section al The Ven-Real E•t•t• REALTY 642-5200 -lftWHI Fl l -·-do J -·~-1 WPst N'pt Beachrftidenoe.2 llil E ch 1-Huntinnton Buch NE\\IPORT SHORES 2 BR, I BR's $130&UP ney.u1~1. me-ust one ai"A' ......... n BR. I '-'-ba + s··-···· lrpl. I .... Estate, x •nee o,; Newport Beach ll -left. Pool, play yard plus 731 ... =.. ,. __ ,, den, 2 BA, pool & club privL Unfurn. & Furn. Apt u I 365 -~ u··•tt---II• Only 18 mos. aid. A real -M l E L--FOR LEASE: ~story, 3 Nr. beach. $300. 646-Zll8. • n urn. ne .... uy ac ~· .... ,.,.-i "heart throb." $37,950. . • XC:nutlCJe VAC -2 Br, $175, clean. Al.so Br, 2~2 ha, Formal dining, All Utilities Paid ;,;,:.;,;...::.;;.c.:;.c,;.;.c,;. __ = kids. 1500 square feet of Uv-$4B,OOO ~~~to Wtr 2 Br Hse, CdM, large family room with 3 BR., 3 Ba., carp/drapes. Pool & Recreation CAPISTRANO Villas new ing y,ith 3 bedrooms, JON~ Business Property 1.54 140xl40 -?.1-1 -Prime Rent-kHOtJ•• 979-8430 ~~~h1:~}()1~a~oc:~;:,:, ~fi·Mi:::~. ~~~1xipd. ·= =:rg~· ~! ~~~e, :OOrR. w~~ cp~: firefHE tVESN[)OME REALTY IM!' TWf?x209!.oTSCllOICTEO TLOCAA L : ~63~d1 ~n!;a ~rn~o~ THE BluHs. Beautiful Vie.w. beach and s h o p p i n g . 3 BEACH houses. 3 A 4 BR. * $32.50 WE EK & UP ~~t3.ffit oou_ple Pr e f · 1845 Anaheun EStl!N6 104 . • Mesa_ rcr exchanf{e _ intc Secluded. Fu11y turnished·2 Available 1 Feb '73. fpl , palio; $Z75-400 Yearly. e Studh & 1 Bit Apts. 2 Call 11.frs. Phillips M0-<1781 ( TION, Huntington BeatjJ., oommerck>.I or indutrial in-BR, 2 BA. Yearly lease, $325/mo. including water & ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 e TV & Maid ScrviL~:.Avail. OC: .. ~~ :~ns~P~~m ai>11~ $l SO & UP 714)073-6210 ZONED BUS I NES S , come propel'ty Land Is free $fi00/mo or will rent gardener. 1st &: last me. HARBOR Vu llomes, 3BR, a Pbone Service-fitd. Pool 6...,_3786 o'I' ~for info. :tOOt W.e.lbcMllNd. PROFESSIONAL OR OF-and clear_ call 546-J600. Winier. Adults only. 644-7007 rent & deposit. Owner -lan1 rm, Jiving & dllling, e Children & Pet Section GIGANTIC 2 BDR~l'S ................ c.lbnl.t2MO FICES $17.SOO ea. TERMS OPfH NL'. IT'S FUN 10 BE Hal Agent, 96HllB or 963-2633. 2BA, lrg yrd. 644-5035 ... .. Z376 Newport Blvd., C~J Balbo. l1l•nd You Bet 11:1 underprlced! R write: KANPAK, 1993 Klhel I ~ San Clemente NO FEE, VACANT. 548-9755 er ~3967 That's why this apt. won't 332 CATALINA D • Rd. Kibel Maul, Hawaii. • , . . N H · ht ELEGANT 2 Br apt w/gar. •--· 1 c ,_ OPEN SAT/SUN. l.S • I 2 BR Ir. Den, partly $237 per month, firs~ & •wport ••SI I -1 BR, Furn, 2 lrg. cicsets, Steps tc 1hop'g &: bch. Yrly. ....... ong. pll., u.lt"'·o stove Newly decor 4 bdrm maid's CLEAN income prop, ~~ ' furnished. Lease. 407 Santa last. Near new City· 3 "BR Lge yard. Children & queen size bed, priv dress-Bl:r3437 Days; 548-7398 ~o~~-g~~~~~l~y,·::i; ' study. °Forn1al" dining. ,c.t.r.1!~ ~· ~;~_,,,, -Barbara. Call 213: 424-3452. Park. 3 BRS, builtins , ~. k Avail Feb 6th ing rm. xtra lrg rooms, encl Eve&/Wknds, 1 ~ F'·ll _ A 11 Brkft area $54 500 rmL U'tJ"l!IAI or V"l#"UiJCU, .,..... 0 · · · gar w/~torage. Adults only, pe s, ...,_ · u c, .on ve., __:_GEM · Commercial RHI Estate Wanted 114 i:.::::::.:...:::;;::.:;:::.:;, _ _;:30.I::. BKR/OWNER 962-5511 S275. 675-3053. 00 Pt"ls. Balboa Ponlnsul1 Blk. E. of Newport Blvd. It Pr-rty 151 • k C h * EXTREMELY luxurious S Cl t 2035 Fullerton, C.M, 3 BR, 2 BA. Deluxe Apt. 1 '<r ~ .. 28~00· So. of Bay, C.M.J 1610 \V. ColUt lhvy., NB -r-* Qu1c as 4BR 2BA· fml din rm, tn:i: en emen e ~ c~=·:.-·v=------- REALTORS 642·"623 START YOUR . Will buy _ ... prope-. All tam nn w/ fpl. Nr schl, GO' .. ~ ....,.,...,.. •n•, beau• 3 C H ARMING 1 BR. lhnea:e incl.Clofrplc. Din nn. 3 Parle-Like Surround'-,,..... • ,,, shopping &: be11;ch. Rent or ...,. .. ..,.. • .,._ ... .. DUPLE.X. $135. Lovely conies. M! to both Bay DELUXE ""W BLUFFS C Plan o/2500 &Q BUSINESS HERE Cllh "'!thin 72. hrs. Call lease. 962-8847 or 968-00ll Br, 2 ba. hse. Fam. rm., ga r den s u rmuOOlngs. l Ocean. QUll~:r ft, of livabilicy .. 4 BR, 1\v Good investment at 1914 New-~ ,.,., enclosed atrium, step dwn. Mature adults on I Y 1==6750:~~2300~'-"or,_,tm-""'81~48'-. ~ I, 2 & 3 BR APTS nn, le Form din RM. a11 port Bl-~. C.'I. For inlo. eves. ,.,,... 4""-N\"" . Pvt Patios * !ltd Pool w/deep off v,:ht shag crpt_ It ~u' " i 4BR, 2BA, full · crpt &: llv rm. $295 mo. "~~ ~. BETWEEN Bay &: Beach 2 Nr. ~p·, * Adults only crpted Kitcti. dinette, lam Call -•1 f Y.I~ Hllllln * Altta. drps, sealed gar, Cle an. Condominiums NEW 1 BR's from $180-$7.05. BJ\. 2 BA. Gangl'. Also 1'Urn Bach. Apts ·~;;b~ u~~~ 4IOL•7• • FOIJM1 IR' * ~·ltn * :!:.ne~~~~ver:;1_....:U:;:nhl:::.::.;m::;. __ ;......;32:::;0 t~ultsE.Nr:::ch;,,l@e,P~: Coron~:,~· Martinique Apts. =~$62.JOO~'Zit~~. Vu C.~_....--, ··--\ IROKERSINC. '-.J. .. W.fllflCOITAMllA 84&-3722. VIE\\",I Few 11eps to beach. "54,,,,_8--0_,,1J7::c· _____ ~ l ~~iii;i;ii;.;iiiii;;iiiiiiii Im Santa Ana Ave., CM ~ ~::, These Are Juat A Few Of DUPLEX. 38R, or 2BR le Spac, 2 BR, 2 BA, aep. din SHARP! Saj:helor, uW pd. I 1 Mgr Apt 113 646-5.542 RES --\Vant to Buy From Owner -Our MANY RENTALS •• , Den 2 BA, new, fenced yrd, rm., frplc,, elevator. ~· $145 mo, $50 cleaning fee. ~ -New·DapleX- NEWPORT SHO Cl n Level Period Home Jn N.E._ ~sta. P.resa. * $250 me. Slfi-2914, 548-3446 530 Cliff Dr. Lag. Bu1. Nr. occ & UCI, 5.57-7768 ~ ea ' 1 Tc $28,<XXI. Principala only. $95-IOEAL for student. Furn. or 494-6364 644-lSlS. NICELY furn. lrg. l BR. ~ ~ e 3 Bdrm, 2 BA .•••• , $295. Walle lo beach. Lge. 3 BR. 3 acres • C-1, ~ta IM" 5.fo.-0456 or 546-4220 vet. 244. Bachelor w/kttchen:-Avl. $325-4..::..=.:c:B::,.:::,,:_Ba_F_l_R_. -Cl"p-,.-, .lr . .,;v.;cln,;;•:_ ______ , encl gar. Quiet. Adults, no ~ Teenager or Infant OK. 2·sty. 21;1 baths. Bit-Ins. On Baker off B,!~sto. :al Feb. 1. .1 ....... , drpa. Patio. 5 moo old. -pets. 2452 Elden 64&-2768. • 2 Bdrm. 1 BA •..•.. $195. t.WST SELJ..! $42,500 per sq.. ft. ..... mmerci . ..... .,.. 2 BR 111 Ba N Bltns ON TEN ACRES Beaut., ~pacious apt. • CAYWOOD REAL TY Oept., &15-40.\0, Rllr. + Bushard/Adanu. 968-1'J)2 1' ~ ' ew. ' NICE 1 BR dplx. QuleL Rtlpr. Apts. furn./unfurn. Lease Fe~ yards, patios and I · J-~ $140-'"PRIVATE'°.Br.-B~ow FRrnlLY Palnted-2Br l15t! poo · 642-2657 by garage.s. l adult over 30. Fireplace / prlv. paUos. quiet pti vacy. Adults, no * 541-1290 * Condominiums f'!Nndll ~ Lrg. g11;r, Fncd. for kids/ wl w/w c:rpt. $175/mo. 1st I '12"1"0'-''"'°"·-~--== No pets. 5*-1021. Poolfl Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. pets. 642-4837. HOT JACUZZI j _!fo<!!':__!u~l•~------~l60~1;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;i~j pet. * "&last mo's rent. 842-3418. LagurM Nigwl 1 BR. S140 &: Sl35. ~e. 91'.kl Sea Lan, CdM 64f.261J 2040 Fullerton Sl. cat Bayl ~~d~~~· ::::· EVERYBODY'S Business $175-SlNGLEs OK! 2 Br. Be;~. t$135~~~dsi~~: 2 Br, 3 BDRM., 2 Baths, new, ~J;.1 ~ ~!~~~·~~ (lifacArthur nr Cout Hwy) in ~:!~~t 2=~ltJn.. 3 Bdrms., easy yard care DOING ITI I 200 home, stove, refrig. Fncd. Ront-•Houff 9794430 beaut. view, on golf course. I ca-ts & dr ....... Walk to H · "--·o 1 n...-.rtun ty lo• ,;.,/pet -Seit clng oven, &hag crpt, JMMAC. Beaut. 2 BR. Poo. PREFERRED ~ • Prtv., • .,... ....-.-uge patio ~1 e poo Why not save money today in -"'"" ' · dshwshr. 528-2171. Quiet atmosphere & blt·tnL theater and all ahoppina". Great schools &: lots mere Green Valley? New on TRAVEL AGENCIES * Irvine Sl55. Adult. 646-6974 lovc!ty 2 Br., 2 Ba. crpta, Adults only. Sl.50 mo. Call J.•· Yo~~.L,! SS8ru'1""r. "'"-1976 mbeda.rket., lonndeenrdomodwn and•'-21 h'O fully approved, in $180-HugRARe Y~_!indKi!"'3/Bper.,.Alowneel, ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j Newport BHc:h 18• lurn crmta .. _ bl•···, ~ :!w': ~~rt~.· MrCOAST.BlaeltREAL545-'424TORSSOUTll \;!\ '"' '"' U'U room or . Orange County. !lave been """· · YES W ha Re als ., ' .,. ' ... .,., ""'" · OCEAN VIEW bedrooms up, wet bar. Pric· est in bu&lneu 1958· awn. come. May We be :r_e iie~ce in BLUF~BAYFRONT 3 BR, Pool. $135. U6 Monte Vista, 613--0937. 2 BR-. 1 ba single atry, Modern Duplex 4 Bdrm. up. eel to sell. $30,<XXI. · ~..... ' LANDLORDS I sol·.1-yoUr i.,.. ... ; ..... needs? 2ini BA, cust. ~N" lrplc1, Mil' No. 5. 646-&153. 2 bedrooms each. Bltlna, &arden unit. "'--~ _ V W1:: l1rwln realty Inc. ers re ..... ,.., FREE RENTAL SERVICE ""'6 ,..,.._.16 drps, ~pa......... r . poo · $138. Lovely 1 BR. Furn. carpets It. drapes, cMice .,.._ ............ 2 18dnr'" tf?n· ~%, e, (7141 968-4405 BEACON DENTALS l..se. /roo. Owner. Near 1tore1. Quirt adult&. location. Lease nil pr. dt'p8be ...'.._ .. d•hwabru ' 1 tna1 1 pat, pt me cca ion. . TY. n... . _64H'l_~48~-~~~--= 1985 Pomona, CM m -. month. Call 67J.8550 ru:_r R. a111C\.1 ce ' rp c, __ SU'· HORVATH REAL JONES * 64s.Ol11 * 350 ~·~ Adi... $1'15. );50 Elden. Ask for Dave Duplexes/Units LANDLORDS! DuplexH Unfum. LRG clean Bach. Utll pd. ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, S37-3125. 6'15-1972 494-06~ sile 162 REALTY INC. BatbM PenlMutl Pool. SllO. Adult over 35. ground noor. $350 pr. month QUIET n e 1 g h b 0 ,. b 0 0 d ., BLUFFS X-Plan, 3 BR, EStflM6 We · Specla.lize in 'Newport 548-2407, 645--3394. next to park le tennis, call overlookinr Back Ba)', 2 BR. -fam rm, dining rm, 2 frplcs. NO MORE R-11 (714) 873~10 . Beach • Corona del Mo.r a 2 BR, den, 2 ba, * bile bch & BWlcy 673-SS!:D Agt. Heated pool, wlw crpt'g, Jmmac. _Upgraded. $58,003. IN BALBOA? & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-"SINCE J940'" bay. $325 mo. yrly, 1359 E. D1n1 .:Po_:::ln:;:l;.c,;.____ * GREAT VJE\V -2 BR. * d r p 1, water pa Id . 644-806'1 or 646-8824 Buy your new duplex now. ......!to:!;.:..,.,., vice ls FREE to You! Try llit We•tem Bank Bldg. Balboa Blvd.. Apt A F~lc, bltns, 1undecka, pool Reasonable; 2456 Irvine, Duplexes near the ocea.a 83>, S'l2 & 824 W, Balboa Bl. Nu-View! . University Park, Irvine (dwnstn), 536-3518 or L~1 in ~'!~; ne; ~ :1'-,-,,lO~up='.-'6'C75-'c35.15i="-".,.,--~ Mgr Apt H. SG-7476. 1 Miles Lanion, Realtor' Luxury 2 & 3 br units. NEWPORT BEACH NU-VIEW RENTALS Days 522-~ Nights ~2l:o3'.!./86l-=_,,1008=·~--~-beautitul P.larlna Inn Motel. 2 BR. Pool. 2 park'g stalls. 2 BR, small den, trplc, la. i * 673·8563 * $96,500-$99,500. O~n House Marine C.Ontractlng Finn 6734030 er 494-3248 LARGE deluxe 2 Br, l % Ba. 34002 Del Obl1po St. $2W mo lncld'g water. pvt. patio, aCT'Oll from ma· HARBOR View Homes - 2 sun 1·5· L. W, Bnggs Real-Finest equip men I &: CO'M'AGE $35 mo. Alsc 1 Br Open House Sat &: &m U-4. (496-235.1J. Kitchens, ef· * 642-Jml * jor shops, tchool. One child ~ ~. ~~b~.~n~~ ~;~=~~e duplex, 2 Br, :te=~~::ce 3!v~: ;~~2 !e ~:i. ~en! ; :~: 1~ ::: Air Cond: ;: H~~i'~o:ves= , ~l~~~lesP<YJt ~~med:!i 5gple~f 1ie~p!t:,n-AU~~: ~1~. N~ :~~ ~ .. 11Ai Ba each apt. 3J.2.312% for boat sales&: repairs. Ranch on acreage $210. All 3 BR. 2 ba. · ..... "" ·' $37S ;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I phones, television, sauna lndry rm. $235/mo. 644-5859 1 ..:"".c":::..· ;;Sa=:tccA"-'Su"n"'.----t Newport Heights E. Bay Ave, Balboa Penin. BILL GRUNDY RLTR. Vac. i)red h·.11 · bath, laundry facilities, BRAND Nu 2BR, apt. un-BACH. 1, 2, 3 BR · Open hoo~ Sat le Sun 12 to 675-6161 Rent~M 979-8430 IMMED, OCCUPANCY meeting room, cloae to San rum. $250 dih/wsh, retrlg, f'rp.tc, pools, security &'Uards. f * A WIN~:~t 14. 8J8..4~ ty 166 • Beauty Salen - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath. new. of· NeO'b13 :,:;• J:!s:::o· =nteeomean:lay 1:': 2~ hlks to beach. 67S-4l34 HARB~l(lREENS Lovely 3 bdnn1 ·• N l,y ~on ncCMM roper Typewriter Sales It Serv fer $300 mo. ~.-331 o.wtio. HA ~haroof 1 urf1 n g, 2 Br, cpts, drp, ref &: range .u... A9" 'extra lge. ot. f!W ee-Furnltutt Stott, anxk>wa 3 bedroom, 2 bath •. near tl'n· REALTY 3' 360 lpcrtafiahing, shopping and S190 lease no pet/child _, • orated In I out! Carpets I: TRIPLEX Glass l Screen business nls and pool $260. DlO. Brk. A Company With Vision 51 restaurants.. S50 week and 431~ lrit; utll-pd M+-OtQ DELUXE 2 Br., tMi Ba. drapes. Dbl. garage. A ter-2-:bdrm. units iD HOLLAND Bus.Siles 6T:>-72'l5. Univ. Park Center, Irvine up. Bring this ad and 2 BR, frplc. new cpta &: drps. Studio on dead-end street. 1 rilic famii home for $44,SOO llk~new condition. Nice 1716 Ora.nae. CM 64.>4170 IMMAC 2BR duplex. Newly CaU Anytime, 552.7500 -!!!!port 8Hch reteive S5 cU on lint Pool. Let.le $250. Near crpts, dfP9", JKM?I. bltr11, MORG N REAL_,1:'!.,, ~. bit-in range A (Salt'IJllan Needed) redecorated. o s h I w 1 h, Office hours 8 Altf lo 6 Pltl NE\V Duplex. 3 br, 2 bA 1 _,wee~k!.'!.' .!."'~""'''-----everythln&. 673·3850. prtv. patk>I. S15.S. I child ok. 673-6642 67~ retrig. in each. Upper !ffiit SPO. RTSWEAR _,_,, ,•-patio, La.und, 54Hill23, $165 No pets. M&--TI54. $3 950 DOWN has view cl hills It rught ,.....,. &;;j pllll depoalt. 3 BDRM, 2~ BA'nl. Bonus 1'"'rom $2M-$310 Yrly. Walk Huntl_._ Belch DELUXE all elect, bltins VERY NICE Se 1 llgbta. On James st. Cbsta men & womens. Estab Bllbol I IMC! room, $300 mo. Villai.i:e 111. le> bch. Encl gar. M2..3188 or I ;;~:;;:;·,.~·-:.:.:.·..::;:::.::.;..,__ Incl dsh/wah, dbl pr, ocean $159.50 , p. 'Plus oonnal -.>. will MoaL Over 80% Jorui at 7% 8 "''" Balboo laland. • Call ..i;,;19, ,642-~191~4.'-~~~--. $33 WEEKL y ,,,_vu:..,::l350~.1!!!='·...:~=:=·--hoo,., 2 Br, I Ba, crpi., ' move you In tomorrow! Spk med •••~ ,_,,613-M3l'-"'"""-----~ 1 .... •~-;_ ., __ H 1 .... t "c t ...____ drps, adults only, nq pet.s. It span 3 bdrm., 2 bathJ am be auu . .....,,.....,, •· . 3 BR. 2 ba, dbl car garage, ~uni -ch . .-nta """' • •• ' Executive Suit•a OI • ,..... Refs. 2354 Santa Ana AW!, 419 IRVINE CALL"~ '''·1414 OONVAL. Hosp. 99 Lae/Sale. FA heat, dlahwasher. etc. 727 ·Yorktown Blvd, 673-0395 ~ ~ Dept of Menlal HY&tene lie. Lease 134.5 Incl util Feb. Isl $157-1 BR. over gar. -1 BORM DUPLEX. DELUXE 0pon1 s..1tyn.RP.M1ty........ 30. Lorre Roul•tone 645-7505 ,6'13-=243l=.'------.~ud/pet Pdok. w2alk ~o '°s."' Adutt1 ~mo. Boaeh Bl~ :.i1v1orl<town .APARTMENTS EXTRA.::'~.!~!!:_ 1.:::;· Un vers .. a'"IAL TY Bkr. BalbCWI PenlMul1 ~Utll . ..r. . ~~~~~~~~~ .,_...... Air Cond • Frplc'1 -3 Swim· new P8J. • -.. ....,.. , 3001 E. Cat. Hwy. 673--6510 Ne•r N•,..,•rl Pett orrfee SAN Clemente Beauty Salon ::::;::=..:...:;::::::~--~ Gar. Yard. Deck. : STUDIOS I I BR's. mlna Pools • Health Spa . =~"i ~a!:~~·0~;: 38~~ t:icA & ~~~nl. INCOME UNITS: . ~=,J°~~a..!or toe~ New ~ ~. A3~rms.. ~ ~n ;:::;i Rm. Laguna -"'""""" ,.,....,. J(') : ~~t~t::~ ~~UC!~~~-· Game and ,!;;l.29::;-c.6'&-=.=25:.;T>_,_ ____ , $42950 by owner, 645--1+1$. :1-FOR $47.SOO. Deluxe un11J. 49.1-3302 aft 6pm. 2~fa bi.~ IO bay;'"3 blJai Niguel. Frplc. OJUU. Gar. , , , • Laundry tacllltlea 1 BR. rrom $l60 E.."\.'TRA NICE 2 BR. 2 ba, ' . Good C:M. locll\on. ICE CREAM Pnrkn-Good to beach. Yilrd. Vu t e Free utll!Ue1 J mt. &: Den Froo1 $185 new paint, ctpts, drpL Pool, S.n C-6-.FOR $75,000. North C.M., 1 I.lo 17000 Wilt bandl< DAVIS REALTY &IMOOO !IU·VIEW RENTALS e rr.e llne"' MEDITERRANEAN Bar-IHI 4 lndry "'" Nr down, Can ll terrific At "*'· mo fn. oca 118' ' io-2'280. · 6734(l3() or 494-3248 Apts. Furn. 360 • T.V. &: maid terv. avail. shop'g, beaef'I. Adult. only. 4. Bl\. 2 BA~-6%% $250 come. • Lucas, Agent CoroM .. Mir MONARCH BAY -41;e 3 • Ba.r-8-Quc VILLAGE nf9. &l&-2513. take ever Submit 10-wmt $1660 mo Income Money to LHn 240 BR. de .i" 1 SS.SO 8-lbN PenlnwJ. • Phone aerviee $140 up spac, 2 bl'/3 br 1 % ba ~~ti~onwiot?~~~ 11 TD Lo 'Brtt.lhi:G~A~OctG. lncl~ene;~~I~ S2SWkAUOnOce&n e J MUe toocean 2400~*';s~~C.M. =,cpttdrp,bltn.~ by• 2931 y;. "'San jadn.,, Ill-A at. ' P" st ans Bay ~ City ~~ 6 BR, 499-211'!4 or 6#-G81T. i!.ty Bach .~ BR-Roomo $145 • $165 ru:i-'TAL omCE Coll<ge, No. 5 , Leave m~e 642-1403, ext. fa: about 143 at 2 mllliOGT 3% ha, Fam Rm, Dlri Rm, UguM Hiiis Maid Servkie ~Pool • Utll Pd BA.CIELOR A: 1 BR, paU.. OPEN 9;J'.> AM to 5::.:> PM l996 Maple, No. l •· .&0--38'13 4. CALL BKR 646-ml 6'!4'.11\ INTEREST 3 "" gar, l yr "" lncl e Call ~8740 e ~ ~;;; ~ i:i NEW VILLA PAULA E-Sld•. lnunac. 2 BR, Ill ba s.nt• AM 1 FAITASTIC BUY! 2nd TD Loans ,:,~w6;';11:~ 1 BA. ~.'e.":....,"~~~ ~~~c.r:.~t ~J:··!".Ji.~U:. ~:;;~~~!:: ~:..,.~· ~ '! BY Owner, 3 BR. patio, frfl c. f'rolc. Frcshb JNtinted. p&uu. $299 mo. m-8)36. ~ana:e. Call m-5332 See for younelf. JT.111 Suptr for 2 work's gals. c-::::.:=::·-~---~ Nu pain!, nu roof, block Call on tbls ~cit~ Ueti,_! Lowest mtu <>ralWt" Co. "''"" crpt'a, rdr'--'· No Laf1UM Nlgue1 Corone del /Mr Kttl80ll Ln. (1 blk w. of SUa& cpt/drpe,., P8lio, bMm 2Sf.C l6lb Pl.. Adults only, / wall, $11.SOO. 545-131> 38 Unli. Colla Meta. Elc-Sattler MJI. C.. chlld'ren, no pets. S2IJ Der o.;;.:.;.;; Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). ctllif\il:s. ~eJ. no peta, I BR., I~ b&'"· _l__ UniverailY1 •rk cellmt .cOndtt~ · ~~-ID JJ5.1611 mo. 6"75-«57. N 3 ~~~ ~· trr. furn .. c~f,"'to 8C-1N8 BrrlloffiiltOO:-Of. ·!>llloioorl-~ ~· ~ , Pr\ced to .etl! Serving Harbor area 2l yrs. WOW. new Spanish 3 BR., 3 ew • ve Pe cotnpl ahop'g area. $175. Em L-Beech See tl1rr. P.lr. &-Mrs. Hobin Owrw Apt A 38-t1 e 5 BR home w/crptl I. ff.G .. R0$ MortlllM, Ba., nr. ll!& Corona Beach. ~ 8l'CUoo of See Tcr--H~liotl'opc!. 331.1300. -•--NEW l BR'i from nm LOVELY I · Ur Apt .. Ntar drpt BNut Ind• c Pd • , T o.dl 260 .5400 Mo. mmr/1g1 613-6$10. :~~-I~~ Month 2 blks to Bla ComnA. Blilch. OCEANFRONT Nr beat.-b. I lhop'r, Adults, OCC • UCJ. No pees. $135 Gr ;.,.bolt w/swlmmlnl LIDO lllEAL TY nnt 2 BR, l BA. <:r,u. -. Tl~ SHORES SltlO. 4 1175, UtU pd. Yrly. ...... I yr. °" '"°"'· lll E. i>th St., C.M. """'=· _,Call=.:::"""=1::;3'-:...,_ __ pools, tennis A volleyball 3371 Via Udo, N'JI( 8facil $40 ooo ht TDt ,.M 4hra to stow I: rtfrhr. htll: Multa. ,.., 1 adult, no pet. 66-1624 J°'\T' lal'lt exec. 3 BR. 54&-0137. 2 l'Ul. Adults, no pets. BAY ........ Nr UCI. $40,000. • .. -.:::i:.--~-·-··· u . no poi.. p!Slmo. • ,... 3 BORM 2 BATH -A ·-~ Good M:F."IX)W~ APT. 311 •• _.._ nMr:. ..,.,,,..,. ~ ~••·• ·-· ~ - -$«lO. MO' 496-M'n 1.ae 2 BR ·apt. Jmn\aC' cond. . •um. a · "' .~IN~"ING 2 'Br. ' - -· INVESTORS acn conunsdAI PIDIMt1 C"• Meta 1--=::....::=·..:-==-Good bc:llllon Call 615-2663 get'UMI)', pool, tor to Bil. Carden AptS. Pool. Rec. "c'c....;."';:;·..:™=·-=;..=:=.---1 '"Weed ft I: ~ap" ~~-......a.. • -SM JUM Cap4at:ratD; vlhiei:I Vacandm <ml mone)'! ftenf 0.; ..... · btru'h1 swetsm. v I e w nn. 110 w. 18th S1. C.M. 2 on. untum. 01*. ...., ---ID tnah > """---· ~ •t jj~, ~ Int Olly LOVELY ! BR home . ti ,_ -· ape., ..... " = couUme. Adu!" only, Lu"' • ninge/own, teM1: 14D ... mn them b*> cutl ~~r ~l-~ ~ quarter , Alt due tn 5 )Tl. ~·d A; drD'4. Bla\tt l]Jcl&'., etc. thru a Dt.Uy PUot WElJ...F\lrn. bach, WfJ1YI uriowl llvlnR at tht bl~ * 2 BR. t BA. MMa Vcrdt. S140/mo. _.HI( CALL OAlLY PrLOT mediate Slit u "8.000· 10% d 1 Bro ker, Call 148-4:113 '* OU.lfted Ad. &11klle11t'll'I• entrance Ir. paUo. Mahn 1•1.nc. mo mo. harti tJ~ttln. lA~~is. rmdtl W4il j<,:~~~~·;:";:";:"~-~!!!I ~ 714-193-IUt. ........, ?ony or ---• Call f1Mt18 Howl • ,,.,...,.,,. adult. m.l304 · """'l· e-m. II No ..... 9/oni Id •.• - I F"rickJ, ~ 19, 197' Apt. Un um. Nowporl BNch WHY PARK NIWPORTERS I •·· ......... ST A y HOME ON ~ .. Unfum. 370 "'r." ..... or Unlvm, 370 WEEKENDS. WOULDN'T YOU? II'• all he,_ for ~ w en)Oy Saturdays and Sundays.,.and all weel<'lon!' too. S?S0,000 beallb spa, 7 swimming pools, 7 light- ed 1ennis cowu. blcycle trolls, pulling green, sbullleboard, croquet. Spacious junior l's trom SIH.50 monthly, plus I or 2-bedroom plans and 2--story town houses with 2 or 3 ~ rooms. All v.'ltb electric k itchens, private baJ. cony or patio, carpetlng. draperies. s.ubter- ranean parking, elevalO.rs, optional maid ser· '·ice. Gourmet food mark!t, dry cltaner, beautv salon on grounds. See beaulilUUy IU1' nisbed models todav. 9 """1. lo~ p.m. Olbtt times by appointmint. Ju.st nor1b of Fashion Island at Jamboree and Sall Joaquin Hills Road. PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS Cost•- • -...-I ,._ I~ 1 ;~= ~ ... ~ 11'0 Olfkoo t•1 440 ............ "° COii DEL MAR c.ptoiflt Car c...i • \JOO iq. ft. otrJrto ~· • ..-ub • WU c.'00'.lipiet~. BRAND NEW ~ to )'OW *" c:ultOm I d&iJ v;t•r•. \\e QUO VADIS lit NI _,.,., lllde· ""*""' • d<lh-.r • .....,. ',. __ r.~ ~ th ...... '*"""· -O< '6-1'"1 lW ftio --~ ._._ "* • Cllnltuw ftllml•. L """F""'•a$:J5 'a. YD IU!!ALTORS m.mlp ,;.ALM~;;;_.;:;,,CARO=~=="':fi''*lCS"' Hid ~eami..S..U \\'l:"RE &nO\q, \\'e need 'Mb Put, A R.!:.l"l&baa RotQ ._ lk:irt:! mare lflatt· llUlt aa1> }"'\tttrn! till) •U50 ~ Matts .Jmbt • No Pet& -.. • ~,. sm. ··ill Uc. l ""EDIATE ............... 3"ll oq ft 1A ·-L~ro~H-o~u-cs~~ ..... -.,_--" ,_,. --ll6ad> , .. ,, """" >0-m1 .. ·-OCCUPANCY '6-33116. r.o. BM im °""' >1-. ('Ai 1f::' ~ ~ SPACE NOW AVAll..ABLE ~rviClNC ~C~ and 8Md!i Bl'id.) \\fttdltf IMW• Call Jim )-f 'PM. =""'::,,;""'=-;:="'--I°'""' w....ua Oriw ~ m.= HUNJ'[NGTCIN G•rdeea tn.'inr Bl\'d, ~eoiti'J)Ott 8eM"h COUPLES pAR'ftES Apts. &-ii at Balsa Qka. Mr. U.,..'U'd M5-61GJ Call Phll l to' p~ !:f;'OU.~~-~ DE,g( 1P6Ce avaallbW S:iO ~ ~ me. Will -tun>J-l ·Soc--,_-1 -C-I_-----~ •t SS mo.. A!Wwttinc ll!fVkt ,. -DELUXE. A.pt.. pm., 519iDo. •\'&ikbie, m FCll"tllt Ave., 1--'rn<--D-\'OURSEIE ____ _ Music.5poob•--....,_.......,.,.._, SUI. Spadous PoobJ1k> HUN1"1NCTO.'l BEACH 3SO J. 9:>MD>NE ELSE -$150. SllH!258. • 900 oq. n .. <1>''d, ""'· DISCOVER t BR. Adu!IL l bit "......,_ talh. -utiJ pd., ..u, DISCOVERY Hunt.,._ - • uy a Border to .. Border ,.,.. ,.,..., drpo. No -P.O. l9o»J.!O. Mr ........ 71': nU35<1111:1 2IWIT.m! = ....... SI •• -.... 13(11 i ~~~~~~~~ B . Nowporl -h DESK ..,... .,.,,.... "° I; Live N~~~_::_-~1~ . arga1n on the bcry felephon1 1714) 6+'-1900 fo.. ronUI ;nfonnotion. Apt. Un furn. 365 f Laguna 8Mcll ,. ,.. LW w 10 IT'S w. ... <'ad• MaA t~1QUE lAcuna castle o.w•...__.,. _ _... • .....,...._,wooc ............ --.. """' --... ,.. -"*"°"' 1\;>15. '\\ldc ocean vk'wt.. 1 • ., , ... _..,......,. , , ,.._ -..·..-m 91111 M- A<'ft'I of gardem.. Clo9I" to '*'*-s-.11,_ a ,-,_ f1Cl. ~ ........_ lllodM CIJlllll I.AP.CE 2 BR, CTJIU, drps. r.r. ~ Hi JCbool.. Oldn' pr'l"rd. S1l5. 673-SIU. :\'.£\\', q\llet 2 Br .. cpl, drps. L'lCd ri:.u yrd,. pr. ll'6. 2D3-B GarQen Ln. 54-376.'3. be-acb & shopping. 2 BR. l •:00 • .. 1:at nDD ,..,..... M 111 c.o.t. ....._ ""'-: ~- ha., lg!:. rooms. custom.1------------------1 ,._, a UpaPf'l"S. chandelletot, Apn.. ,.,~t•., mosaic tile, shutters. U50 Furn. °' UMum. m Furn. or Unfum. 271 Yo. partially f\lnl. Aho -----~------------' a\'llil, llOOO, otbe' a.pts. $250 Huntingion hkh HuntiDgton 8eKh restaurants. Obc.. ipaoe. im- b • med. occupancy, w..ui 2 Dop: cboc-brown mak"; lg ~~"!.... Z11'1 Du P o n I, bkmtibb brown ima)e. New -~ York doi tags ·n -12. NEWPORT CENTER == ~~~ 3 BR. 2 BA. m Pf'ts, Sr2S mo. SlOO drep., 1016 El Ca.mim SL CY j.ii -6'7 10 MiSO ~loolh. 4!M-46i5.1. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.; Subleue l or 2 dlx \1".· N"'PQl1 ~"'1.1-P\ee.» offiees. sectttarlal UH, call if )'OU ha\-e info.. OCEA.~ \'WW leue . 2 A 3 BP.., 2 BA. Ntw. BUi: to bcb.. HllTllGTON BEACH'S FltEST Spatisb Coantly Estate. LiYq from $140 XPrOX le puking. 6"-0023 979-53&L 3 Br •• 2 ba _ape. CJllt:/drps. " $2G up. 494-Im. 494-2139. ~'5t.> "'"-· ""°· I Lido Ilk 1617 W&STCLIFF FNDo s m a u fo<na\e 1 Br. crpts. drps, bh.nt. Pnol. n.u Avail U31. l2i Moote Vi.sta. ~lli:T So. S. ~. Quiet l BR. I BA.. Older --.;_..:,.;;. _____ I UPSTAIRS 2 BR. l BA. crpts, drps. ftp&c, Adlts, no peU, $715 ie.... m-:m<.-\ Oakwood Is $1 mftlion .in 1200 aq. ft. Cpt. air rond. strawberry blcnt. 'I'tnier. recreation. Swi mmin g Ample pkg, utit janitor. Vic. Golhanl I: WJmtr - "Cols. Health c lubs. Bau.mganjner •lo.t.S.U~ ended up Main & GartieJd ,.. H.B. Found in Dec. 5.16-7863 Saunas. Te nnis couns. 2 ADJOINING omo::s. Can't Kttp. work'i penoo only Mou Verde 2 Acres. Beautiful park-lite surroundings. Sunken PooL Sparkling Spanish Fountains. • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining Biiiiards. Indoor golf dnv. busy intcnection C.M. S90. ="'--..,7..,..,,...,.-=..,..,-. Sa d V u .._~11 Util's inc. 64:Hi560. 2 dogJ. whlie 1ernaie Pointer tng range. n ° ey._ . PROFESSIONAL-Suite ready mix-beige •!'Ob-.-botm8;) P.f'ftno~ mi'd. S.U-2Sl3. DEJ..UXE 2 &: 3 Br, 2 8&, S16.>2 BR. 2 ba. encl pr, tnci r;ar. ll9l up. Rental b!tns. :-\r So Coast Plaza. Of.c, l'.!6 Mace Ave. • Walk in Close\5 • Hom .. li.te Kitchens & Cabinets Whirl pool Baths. Ano lots to IQ. Hl!U at Pdsa Chka. blk male -Lab mb: -Vic: more. A resident tennis H.B. $275/mo. IJ4&.132l. Bnlokbunt .l Bu.mard, H.B. 961-3466 aft ~ ~ Jahn 54,j...Sl9J. 546--11134. ~~""-------\ 2 i. 3 BR-$1.50 I.: $16..i. S35 Newport BrNch dep. r-.:~·\y redec. Aval! I I BDRM. Unfurn. $165. Furn. 1185. 2 BDRM. Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l\OBa., 1400 sq. ft. pro and activities director DESK OR omCE SPACE "'°~~~~-,..,....,.­ who plans free Sunday in best Nt"WpOrt Beach k>c. SML golden wavy bak fem brunches and barbecues. Perteet for ~. &t&-4414. dog w lchoke ctWn I Oea tq. Vk: Redlanm. Dr. le: 2/l. r;i ShaHmar. ~ OCEAN md Unfurnished $200. Stal'ting es low as s1•0. Business Rental 445 M~. &MHJ800 tdll.)'S) Singles, one a nd two-. 54S-4.1.fl Ceves.l ALL UTILITIES FREE "TIIE Faclm'y" bu -=':-=.,_,."'='~_,,_,,...,. D•na Point HARIOR VIEW bedrooms, furnished and aftll. in tbe mal ranging BLACK I: Brown shorthair Walk to Huntington Center unfurnished. Sorry no tmm. $3(1/MO. ldral for dog w/)oog tail. 1 blue ey~ SPECI'ACULAR Wh ite · ''Where C-iality Adults, No pets ch!ldren or pets. Models book &ti:!tt, apeci&lity ca.nl: l: l ''"hi~ l'Y"· Appears 10 \&l ater Ocmufront vu· 2 ~....-·· have ;lst had pups. 543-5«J2 BR 2 BA. SZ3S. c.:... · P,...1ils" LA QlmlJA ffEJDUllSA , open daily 10 to 7. ~~~St. or 831H;<JD. oPts. drps mtve rt.fri&. Elegant api.nments ~ Vlft ---AlllU "-kwood LADlES Wristwatch & 2 tawxiry Cl~ ' ' •1th a Ma.sl:er't loudl. su-VII 500 Sq ft. Oil 17th St in Costa rings. vie Atlantic Music . . perb """"' """""· """"' 16211 Parlulde L.,,. H B Ga~--•-rtment• ......_ Buxy Int......-, p-~-lot •• 1'11h St. .,,. NE\\', l~ 2 hr, 2 ba. apt. slve Venalllea Cub and "' • • •"91t ....-ample partdng. Call 548-4438 .... _ ..... ~ ... w.,.lfil'·~,..'::: pool.,.,,. unique........,, 714· 847 5441 Newport Beach or 6<2-5150. ~moCa!I '" Identify, ;,.:t9-l00. 496-2.m. fountains and formal Pl'· • . • Irvine and 16th '' COlt~tERCIAL . Industrial "'-~o:'--,-:---,-- dens. Ail pan Of the Soud1 MS-0550. &42-8170 Mop or storage ~ lo n,o LARGE put Si.ame'a tom. NEW 2 BR -."ith Y\eW. Sl'Q. Coo..!it's Jinest apartment (4 blks. So. ot S3n Oi~o Frwy. OD Beach, 1 -~" Sa cat. blue eyes. Oei Ciillar. '"'-"-~· U ' 5 ' ~. to .....,., n Gentle d' ·Uo so-&7 ~~ community. dio --nOI!:. 1 bllt. W. on Holt to 1 ll Parkside Lane). Oementt', 496--1840 15pog1. n. Huntington Beach I Bedroom1s1u s .... u ... ~ I I~ Industrial Rental 450 """"'=~s_P_.M_._,-~~~ ~1cl~ ~ ~ dU!!k Aph.. Apti., ._... ,. S..\LW.. puppy, black & vr---Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 3"/0 READY FEB. 1st, 1973 ~ .. ly. STuelL ~-l/l1a''M1'0 E. LAGUNA NIGUEL ...., .. , ' ...us es a' g~~rR~1D?jj? Newpon Buch Newport llHdi R_,, 400 M-1 ::.::· bl>ck cat. - 1600 SQ. l'T · ' UP· Siamese \'icinity Vit:tcr SOCIAL SECURITY ?? ON THE BLUFFS BEACH UYING ROOMS $18 wk Up w/lcit. On San Di'"° Fneway H•i«>•, """'na S..ch PENSION ??? AT NEWPORT $.12.511 wk "I> apt>. Children Cati lm-1600 <ot-42l2. ' VILLA YORBA !Now You Can Afford) ~!l' "'&".'"' ,1TI!',~ FOR LEASE M-1 ""'"·mi MALE "°' black • ian. 842-9622 From'""""' Blvd., turn at BACHELOR (Furn) . From $195 64>-3967 • ""' "l ft. Santa Ana •mall .......... found vie ln-H"'P;1a1 Rood Cl -1 D"•~ ............ Fr •181) I"'""'-·,--,-.,.-,--,-°"""" TI<r,ID-3196. dlanapolb A Newland, H.B. 1 BR .. $123 above Pacitic Coast Hwy) to .uauvvm '..... . . ''.''. ' .. '. om ., PRIV. room & bath for ffiVINE Industrial Atta. 536-7351 i ::i: ~:: entrane:e. ~Cagney Lane, 2 BedroOFmULL .. ·s·E .. C·u· Rl·TY· ... S .. Y·S·T·EFrMom $2l) ~ ~t~be.o pri;t;~ 10·~ sq rt, dock bi&b.u .-'°G"°HT'°""''°""""=,..,...,..,.,..,,-w-/'"d'"ark-. AIL t.mLITIES PAID ~=u:--~~4>~· HEATED POOL or the BEACH •,c~~J50'1"-7~.._-, ___ ~ ['~-~~.,.,~~-~-~·~ rings on tail. B1k rtripes on "ROOM hare Id chen · facl", wht color. Vic. Capo OVE IN TODAY • Elevator Annual Lease · 8 t • pnv. Bch -·~o * M $139 A MO. Yurly-Bayfront Adults Only, Sorry No Pets entrance. Costa ...,.._ Ii iii'] . -~· 3 IAvely new unfurn. apl5. LAS B IS S Ulfweek. 548--2759. Ai• o ,.., BEAUT. greay ma I e Spac. 2 & 3 Br. in +plex.. R A . Persian-type kitten,. appra:i( Several avail. ALL EX· 3 & 2 BR., 2 ba. ~. Pier UPSTAIRS furn, liv nn, BR 4 mo old found In N'pt nw;. Pool, rec bldg. Kids & slip. Maey extras. tmmed. 5.115 RIVER A VE ., NEWPORT BEACH & BA., sep entry, no cook-Shores are&. 646-6610 11.·elcome. I-Torn Sl39. See oct:upam:y. (The New Place ln Newport} ing. $85/mo. 839-3489. Announcements 500 ~tgr. 17371 Keel.~n "B" 1 Call: 673-3663 67J.a8i Eves. Res. Mgr. Diane &\Vm. Sbarbaugh 64.2--2566 COMFORTABLE room, ---------ICOCKER Spiiniel puppy blk v.'. ol Beach Blvd. oH l:i:;i~f,;j~;:""""""~~r.i~"",,;;,"""""""""i.Jpn;'.·va;t~e~on;tranc~['1"';'~w~°':k· OLD FURNITURE found viclnil.y Seacliff. Hun-stdler. 968-7510 or 847...(26(), 365 A I tng man over 30. 646-5Q9. Doa't throw it away yeL It ~~ Beach Dec. 11th. Apt. Unfurn. p s., ~ eves BONU~ uo ll Jan -nt ''""-------'-"' Uni 1 "0 '"""' ciinnv room, pn·vale it's ....... eworthy, the Uv\no -7.-=C'-'-"C~-,--,,..-,, ...., 0 · ... i-• Furn. or um. 370 ~bath & =~-. Nr wa-.. _ fuUND small fml German with this ad. 2 bdnn, tam. Newport Be.ch <.llUCU~"' ..... ""'. Community Theater will ~erd Millam v· units, Crpu, d~. bltns, Colt• MeSll .r. Beacb.Sl.S. \\ii:. 842-4649. take it oU )'OW' hand5. We Irvine T or wUh b~· ti ic. patio. playgrounct. no pets. * 2 WEEKS FREE * lD CHOICE beach apts, 2. 3, 4 ,;;;;;;~;;~;f.~f;;;;;I G~uo;st~H~o<no;;;;;;;;;;;;;~4~15 need eouches, chairs, tables, 833-oin an pe. Childnon \\lelcome BR. $275 to $650 yearly rugs, etc. Call Toni Titus at 1-larbor Brttl.le Apts. Vista del ·Mesa ABBEY REALTY 642-38.'.() CONVENIENT 557·7'297 after 5 o'clock. FND Black & white puppy. 4SU Heil Ave., Hunl Sch. ADULT GARDEN HOMES EASTBLUFF . 1 BR. c.;pPf"'. LOCATION Monday 15th, vie. 1st It tTI4) 846-7815 IRVINE AVE. AT MESA All f'lectri<'. $180. Call Quiel & comfortable adult * Private Room * Fairview S.A. ~3)19 Alter 2 BR. Luxuriowl Apu. Furn trlove in w/depos1ta only S40-<l."A9 for appt. luxury apartments for ,,,, 8:JJ pm or Unfurn. 2 BR + Den. 1 Br. SlSO 2 Br. UXl Only two available Ambulatory Lady or Man ""'°"* FND -adult male cat - Wet bar, trpJc. Sauna. Pool. Day & Night Security, Pool, San Clemente 2 Bedrooms Ii: 2 baths Good. nutritious Food. I :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~~ altered. Dark, gray tiger Jacuzzi. Full recreation. Fountaina. Rt'C. Bldg. wt Shag cazi>ets. built-ins Nice, chr!erlul atmosphere~ l!triped. Meca del Mar facilities. From UD. exercise rm billiards col· WE care at Casa Contents.. Gas & water fumiabed • Call ~ * PerlONlll 530 Track. 546-5392 HARBOR LIGHTS APTS. or 1V .. Ea. 'ApL has • dlah· Gracioua living 1n quiet Pool, garages and POINTER _ Id~ & pay 16700 Saybrook Ulne, HB. washer, re'""~. ri..0~ cpt, A area v.i lh ocean vu, 2 BR, 2 many more fine features *HINDU~-,..,-* I V bill H •~ ·~ -BA I Rentals to Shi-'30 · .x-uw.•u~' or et • un...., .... n 846-3341 prt patio or deck. 56-4850 co or co ·ord Residen1 Mgr, 645-51S> •• ~ Let this ad chaqte )'OW' Beach area. 536-1946. SH AIR <P"ld .... ld""'"' & _.,. 2311 ELDEN AVENUE ho'-t!oo" "" f ·~ * FRE lee din an."a, open beam $215 Unfurnished or SINGLE v.-'Ol'king girl •'OUld w a:-ou • on wic: or Ull:" BLACK & Kilver shaggy J;;P· FOR LEASE il' · ba1 ~•o F .. -:....... like to sh ...... nice: apt in better Profes&ional advice t~h & ~·-ti J th Walk 3 blocks to Beach ce mg, pnv cony, rec & ....., ... ,u.:>UCU "'" Ill LI n. ,,_ d U "' .... n. an. . N l d Lu>..ury Bayfmnt ApU. -laundry. Adults, no nots, Cd..\J w/same, 21 to 25 yrs. on e, C . ...,a~-a y. 834--5326. Lrg 3 BR. Apts. ew Y ecor· l & 2 BRs. $350 10 ~ ,... HARBOR $100 util incl 67J...f79L 10 AM·IO PM 492-9136 ="'""c-:;,-=~=-,,-, ated, w;v.· crpls, drps, httns. G Will' 492-2259, 4~. · · · 492-9034, 312 No.. El CamJ.nO PUPPY, Vic. Del Mar, San except refrig. S2401mo. No eorge ••mson .'/EAR beacti & l<M'n 2 BR, R 0 0 M A1 ATE needed, Real, San Oemente. Clemente 49'J--0733 ~ngles. no pel"I. 536-lill. Re•ltor Ind"'-•. ""'· storage, "-b\o female, on ~ch. yr round, WHITE & __ alt -• ... «70 ·~ ....-. $1.25. mo. 66-3538 btwn 5-8 Attention "Swap-Meeten" ~·-'b~ ea~ ~ mi. north of Huntington * ___,., * TV, S160., 310 Del f\lar, SC, eve. Will the penon who had a c~L Meu."'~~ Beach. $140. 2 BR. Bltns, I ----~=~=~1-"..c..'co13cc19c.· ------lit!. Henry McKenna jug for J'l;:r-;w.x> Crplg, drps. pool, play yard. \'}.:S!! WE TAKE PETS!! FEMALE 23 JoOkh~· for ll&le for $3.50 at the Costa WHITE & brown dog viclnH:y Lndry facil & carports. Cpl. 2 Weeks Free Rent IOO! Santa An• female roommate at Meaa Swaf Meet. Sun. 1n4. Costa Mesa Park. M!r2749. !'_l:. ~: =~ ok. _No Poo2 B\,RR~BldlgB, R.dsh~60hr, 1 BR $1U So SA Adults i~833~pts, Newport. 9plePueM ca!Prl&U-3589 bet. 6 It MAN'S 1().speed bike found ,... · _,.,. •~ N " · · · · · · ( v, party wants on Balboa }!;Jand, Call to WALK TO BEACH VISTA DEL P.1ESA M5-4855 ew paint, carpett & LA MANCHA 3 BR. lxlu.<1e, share wll or 2 to buy) Identify •-~~ Ma 1 drapes. Phone 548-1351, 5 to Brand New Deluxe Urutt male or lemales. Call =i=.=-"'7'-~~-=---, Nev.• 1 & 2 br., cpt/<trp., SEACLIIT nor Apt&. 7 PM. Rent now for YoW" con-642-tl.79 aft 5 PM. ~:BLEl\f Pregnancy. Con-PUPPY found at comer of ~;:l9;7:' frpl. 316 lGth. ~. ~~~sa/::~sp~ Stanton s~ction allowance of l MAN, straight, to share 3 BR ~·~~A~ 18th I P.fonrovia, C.M. NE'\V 1.2 &. 3 BR. Beach PlaCC!ntbl Ave. A.'\k about mos fre<' ttnt. 1 BR, l BA dplx nr ocean. Bal Pellin. lion & adoptions ref AP· i.,,,642-rn2=-=..,.,,====-o-our discount. 548-2682. 2 BR, 2 BA In •~p\•x It den, 2 BR'1 I.: 3 BR's $125 to June 15. ~ CARE. 642-4436. . You'll find It in Clualfled Apl'I. From Slfil/per mo. 4 u ,-.. From $155 Dishwasher blks from wster. Mgr. EXCLUSIVE WeatclUf 2 BR, Children & pets ok. Newly G bag · ' I all 1' 2 Girls will 11hare 3 Br apt Wanled. Tobin Realty, 21,; ha rondo. WMIM!r/ decorated. $155 893-7634. E:rl :;:.'.s~~·g uni~: v.•f same. 2 blka to beach, 84fr337l. df")l'r, 1)atJo, pool, sauna, Furn. or Unfum. 370 BBQ's Pets acceptable. Cd~f. Call 675-T7S7. 2 BR, gas & water pd. I child ret· •Tll, ell!(: g11.r, adlts. Apta.. 642-2007 778 Scott Pl., C.1-r. G1r1ge1 for Rent 435 ok. No pets. From $140. s375. 64&1.23l. --,;U;:ndo::;::r;--.N;:•=w:-'---1~:.::.~:o.,;.:;;..,,;,;;=-= Trader's Paradise 17622 Cameron St. or 0 CE AN FRONT·NE\V 4 B•lboa Peninsul• MAnanament GA RAGE For ~nl, 3100 W~ 842-1652. bdnn. Beams, v.'OOll, rock, CA -•;.....,.. Coe.st Hwy, N.B. Facinli; glass. Spectauclar &: HUGE. FOR rent yearly, lrg sunny SA .VI ... 1vRIA IJdo lsle. $30 per mo. Ex· 2 BDMf duplex, crpl.s, drps, $500t mo. Yrly. u ave, apt for mature lady. Ose to I &2 Br. I' um ll Unfum. ccllent for stortna boat garbage-di.spl, stove, yard. 67~972, 494-0015 shopping &: bay. 673-0345 Carpets, drapes, D/W, TV gear. 642-9400 Oo9e' to ocean. 7'26 Owen. 1 -'=~~~~~~-ant. Pool etc. Come By & NEW storage ~ 3 H.B. ~145. 53&-7917. ~DUL TS ONLY Coron1 del Mar Inquire about our Mow-in sitts. ror mobile ~ SPACIOUS ne\\' l BR DELUXE 2 BR. $115 Allowance. 525 Vktoria. St. boats Ir. mi.at:. 5f3r97f16: ~• .. -•-1 1 1 d ~-.. ~-. ~le, s11.•lm 1 ....... 1. :Z · 2BR apts, Unfum annual, at Harbor, CM. 6'12-8970. 11>~'--IOGl ..,,..,..,..,u, rp c, crps, rps, .,,..,,wru "I' ""'' turn. until June 15. <>'t"F'" ~ror ~~~· ro3.t2 Santa Ana Ave. 673-l l21.. 1 Br. unfurn Sll'l.50, Futn.'a'~ARA..,.~G~E-l~or-,.-,-,~$2S~.-..,- Subl1e Pk Newport C u... $132.50 mo. ~ &: ~der. Nr. month. 'Huntington Beach. 2 WEEKS FREE RENT-1 2 br 2 aa. unfum top llool' ost• '"""' Newpot1k19th St., NeM' all Near Ocean. (21.3)m.'46l.9 Br. Frplc, shag crpt, S~. bt·1tut ba.y \'lew, •near "Ila TIIE EXCITING shop g. R97--0l9G aft 6 pm. CLOSED gaJ'llgi!' for rent, '72 . 30' . 5th whe-et trlr. '72 5.'$-l66l, 9-5 PAt oo clng dep. 644·24'2 x47. PALM MESA_APTS. Huntington 8-ch Q>/mo. Sl"e Mir. 130-A Chev. 1·T. lnK'k. Power 2 BR. 2 BA. Dix Poll -side. DELUXE J Br, 2 Ba, CID, lifINUTES TO Nf\'T. BCH. Broadway, C.M. plant, dtluxe modtls, like Near Bcb. St~. Can be furn bltn1, Jrpl, encl pr. 2 FURN. OR UNFURN. GARAGE FOR RENT -3100 nu $14,/Dl eq. Trade for 5J6..5882. 2320 Florida. patioa, Adil&, no pets. Lee Cnbclievably la.re:e 11.pt11, CASA MONTERREY \Y. Coe.st Hwy, N.B. property or 'l'? 5.'16-:el. 2 BDRM deluxe apt, poolside $240. MS-31U8. huge pool, Jacur-1 e.lt'ci bll· 642-9f00. WILL trade t bf'autlful ,nrdert bungalow wffrplc. NEW deluxe oceanfront apt.a. Ins, 11\aa crpts, drps, sauna 1--~------acre view Jof, Whittler Adu.Ha. S210. ~ 2-3 or 4 Br, frplc'1, cpl, ~~~G~~t.s, no ~~ Sl50 1 & l BR, 2 BATHS Offitt RMttA1 440 area on 6-8 unlti; in New· Irvine bltns'. Yrly or monthly. 1 1.lEORM fTtl m $IGO "port Beach &rea....:.eolloclt, 6lii-49ll Bkr. 2 BEDRi\f: -F~ $l!KJ )'1mlahl"d ' Unf\lmiahtd OFnCE -20'x40'. panefed, A.rent, -(714) $21·~. 2 BR, Ji,4 Ba. NEW. Blt·iM. 3 BR, 2 BA Duplex. O!thwhr, Unturn Apts A.Tail From $10 All UUJiliet Pakl window trflntage, wfw ~ TRADE $8000 eqt)I iD 4i ~1 10 -•n. from UC! ~1 ·"-~ • ~--·1 r 1-.•-cvpet, ~.. beth, bdnn horn Col. •-~~ ........ . nu . .. ...11 c, ()(.~An ..... w • ..-.. per to S15 LESS. ... rwnn nr .. ~,, ... ctt pl enty of parld~ $175. peio e, ... 6e ......... $210/mO. &G-~. mo. 204~ 33rd St. 642-2020 You're right, thcy'rt! under· • Speckx.11 Roomt I Closets mo. Shtrwood Shopping Ventuta, Cllh' for stml.lar Laguna 8Nch Days : &MH114 rvea. Dril'f'd! 1561 1.Jesa Dr. e Cym, BllllanJs, Paola. Ctnter, rn So. Btookhurst, eqty in hou9e or condO, OCEAl\'TRONT -2 BR. £5 blks !tom Newport Blvd. I e Pullin&' Grttru .... _r J SWte 9 <Brooktturat a: BAJ.II Costa Mta. StUW. LUXURIOUS ocean apt, 2 Garaac. Sl'lSlmo. Yearly. ~ Call Mt. McNamee, 90-+tn Z3' AU p,. S1oop Sa.ilor nr, 2 Ba. Sf25, or w/lum. ~or Unturn. Call EXJ1lA LAJiGE-l Br ... New 6.SSl Warner, Hnt9 Bch or ~03. 'lad OB enc, JWJ.y equ.i~, ~l070. i::rpt, 1>1lnt, ht:!11ed pool. 147-1526 AP-tor 5 ore suite. s.ns. Of. M&.t:m. value. WIU tradt 2 BDRM. n e 1 t bf' 1 ch , 3 BR. 2 BA, frpl c, blt·lra, 1 From $1~. Mature a(!ul!s, fk.'f $1'0. Deak lf*C'I $40. <or Atlf<ontalned camper lines times dollars ARROWHEAD Ch a let, Hemet Units. S Oif'IQ acn, Bev Hls vu lot, tor Jae bo&t, Inc, mtr hm or ? Box 00, ian Dfeeo 92100, 222.2923, 2 Adjoin\... lo!o, !ft Sall Jacinto JW, Clar, Va.Jue S'1tXXI. Want to trade for • '-plex. In. COlt&-Mf'M:.-No aicnts. 646-439l I IA VE JO acres in 1Tffno Co. Value Sl,000 pu ac. Want 1ncotnc-Pl'OPtl't7 In o.....,. Co. Lee """"" Rltt, f99.17ll or 833-1355. Like lo IJ'&det Our Trwdet'• Paradlle column ls tor you! su ... 5 days .... _ ~· Matim adult.I. No YT old, blk from beach -infant ok. No pets. 1.381 .,,, I le I l (! h I b 1 t b. CM. Qf town boutc. «n-u+&. pets;, fl~. mo. M+-t139 11hop'c, Call l.ynn, ~ Monrovia. SB-217.C, Slll lrfle t11•m1 .. li42·M'78 ~9'11>-~lSf!S=·------'••••••m••mi••••••- I . Every cl.nilled want ad in the DAILY !LOT •appears in every edition ••'tr( day. That mHn' your ad wiU be seen in papers .delivered lo homes end sold from newsrach from border · to border oR alo119 the Ora09e Coast , .• all the way from Seal Beach • to San Clemente You Get It All Huntington Be-.ch Fountain Valley Costa ~esa Newport Beach r Lagirna Beach Irvine Saddlehack San Clemente Capistrano (Plus the daily newsrack edition) For One Price With A I Classifted Ad _Phone 642-567L YOU CAii CHARGE IT, TOO •• I • • • • ' l ! I l l • l I l • • . ' l t • • ! JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRClE17 WE'RE · SAVING SPACE , FOR YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ I ~· If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the hard way. The Service Directory (classifications 600-699 in the clanifi,d ad section daily) gives you an advantage you get through no other advertising medium. It reaches customers who are ready-to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sel~. If your service isn't listed, we 'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone right now and reserve your ' space in the "Sellers Circle" •.. Your Direct Lin ·e to Directory Results M2.s67a ., DAILY PILOT CLASSIPllD AD DEPARTMENT ' FrldQ, J1nuary 19, }q]) DAILY PILOT :J1 ;;; ... ;.;; .... ;;;_;;;][SJ;;. 1(~ Ult~ ... ~-~·1ai~1 1E!-~,,..~1 ~~1~..:1~f ~·-~-~l[Il]~IJ ~[ ~-;;;-~][R~··, ~' iiiiiiii-~llll1;;1JI Lost SSS Loil SSS Genof•I $ervlce1 Holp Wented, M I. F 710 Hole Wonted, M 1. F 710 Help Wanted, M 1. F 710 LOST• vie. Bulhan! & '"· PllPPY Ioal, vl' 18th & HANDYMAN -oil khtd. ol • • ADVERTISING SALES ·-dla.napolll, H.B. 1mall lq Pomona ~ ~ Germo.n lliOrir, small jobl a spedall-0 ENT Al. Recepllonl.'11 , haired white fem. l\1alt"»e Shepherd, ''' Malemut4t. ty. 979-4639. $46.9723. TRAINEE Mnture, E.'Xp'd. Salacy open. dot.33l1T2. Reward $1£IO. \Yh1, bl.le ' arey. R~1trdj Hauling y , th , . 546-2418: l::n-4:30 only. 96l--. ~: 64$-&UO; t."'9: ou re e O?e we need if you tiave ambition -- FEM. CDCkapoo, 4hi.IKY 3!113 YARD, &l!ta.Ce cleU11.1P1. andddon't mtnd working. The DAILY P1L01' DeJpartmWent SRtor~b' bela:e color named S.00;'. SMALL tan dOg "·ear\114: Remove treei, dirt, Ivy. nee s a sales trainee ta: learn the newspaper • • o 1nson Y~~:,.£;d.M., ti 7 5-t> 9.S..~. Rhllntone oollar "Sadie", Drivewyi, &J'llding. 847-2666· advertising business and eventually call on U'IQ"'-;l.AAJ, r ~w-~rntD'f'n H.B. area. HAULING I. clff.nup by exp automotive, real estate and other accounts. LOST small black & white !ernale cat, no tall. no col- lar. Vic. Beacon Bay, N.B. Stl--7032 or 67J..2183. RALPHS, CM, prkg lot Jan S, Charter \V o m e n a orp.nlzaUon 1951. Reward. PO Bo" ln-t Npt Bch. 1 ~ yr old Sealpoinl male Siamese w/blue je1ve\ed col- lar loat in N'pt Shores. Reward. 548-6488 LARGE white long·halred cat w/blk, 2Ta)' tall & marlr\fii:I. "Boot&y". Childs .pet. 646-2ai6, CM SHAGGY silver M toy poodle vie. 223rd &: Santa Ana, C.M. ~m& days, 548-&118 ~ .... ~~ya 534-7373, ~~ !~'2i64.1ge ttk. Great opportuni ty for right pe~on. Good REWARD-Wallet lost at GEN. Haullng. Tree/lhrub companr em~loyee progra1n. II you are en- f'irehoute Bar &t. nlle. trlm. Gar &: yd cleanup. thus1aslic, reliable, dependable and capa ble, Keep money, retun1 con-F..L ~2303. fl67"'91>t. apply: tents. Sentimental value, SKIPLOADER •dump truck Personnel Dept. 546-9723. \lo'Ork. Concrete, aspha!t LOST male lrlah Sett", oo ,.w;og, broaking. 8<&-ntO. THE DAILY PILOT collor, Moo , l /15, vk:. So. Hou1oclun1~ 330 W. Bay St., C-ta M~- Laiul'lll. Loved very much.1 -;:;:;:;;::-:;::''":;":-;:::;:;-·l;:I'W.:::;:r-.:=:i::"'~ii-,.:=;;;v;:.:•;....:.;:;•:;:-;.-=I Reward. 97H971; eves HOUSE OF CLEAN Job W1nted, Female 702 Help Wented, M & F 710 ~2855. THE PROJo"ESSlONAL Nt'v.·port Beach JlalJ Opcnlfli:: For PBX Exper. 552 Multiple P tunl' Including Sats ~f.1on & Fri N1tes . Apply in person 10.5 pm • 2 Fashton Isl.. NB Equal Oppor. E1nployer LOST male Doberman. black CLEAN ING SERVICE LOCAL EXEC. SECTY. AVON CALLING I wJone fioppy ear, vie 10% D\1co11nt w/thls ad desire• chqe In poaition. To hel11 with th06e aftl'r·the· DISPLAY Gret"n Valley Home In 642-6824 or 646-2527 Typing Is 80 wpm, ~100 holld.ays ·bill~. A splendid CABINET BUILDER Fountain Valley 968-9505 OF"ICE CLEANING, TOO•. wpm shortharxl. Composes e1:1m•n" or>portunl!y "' """' evl'I. ~ · own le!ter1, desires position w -.... -f\1 in. 1 year exp. in display F.lr P IC Cl n• with re1porudhlllty, y.-. 0 n neighborhood. bulldinD'. Able to take i"ob LOST; "Binky" S""'"'"' r • ea in9 ""3 540-7041 .... ·~ C l t H Cl ln dependable. Reaun\e fron1 start lo tinlsh. charcoe.I ....... u ·'at & pen.. omp e e ome ea.n g !" 111 l '""""¥ .,.. ..--Fl w •-· Wlndo available, plus letters ar BABYSI1TER, mature for 18 n n1 n r with al -,, mlnla. Schnauier. Ears oor 8.'<u'6 -WI ood ~..: ~'-· eve. .,... R Sh w l'-recommendation. Write mo aid boy. "''ed & Fri JO w \1'01""ng ma,,,.1nery. not cUp.....i. Vic. M·"'~~ ug ampoo a.... T A · LOST , ....... white male .t.... ~ ........ F t u 'd I _ _, clauilled ad No. 5.91 c/o am-<lpm. Own transp. op wages. ppo1ntment ~ .. ~ "'15 u1~ .. 846-9027 ree es ., c ., MU·~ 714 ''" ~"l with brown spoti, brown I ,.!!!!~!!·!!!!!' 536-1114 968-0951 Daily Piiot Newspaper, 640--1TI6 -"-''-'~~"°~"'-;;:::::;,·=----I leather collar, Balboe.11 P.O. Box 1560, Co.sta Mesa BABYSJrrER u r 1 en t I y DRAFTSMAN Penin. urea. 675-5792 LADY wants housecleaning 92627. needed. ~1ature &: depend-Sc11ne E-."<p necessary. Cablne' IMtructlon \\'Orie. Exper ienced, own CO bl • · bl d · nd BEAGLE fem, Vic 19th & transportation. LLEGE student . (Q.C.C.) a e, .. Ion·~'ri. own trans. asscm y ra\l~ngs a Whittier, CM, Blk collar, 847_3637 seeks part time 0U1ce work, HB area, 842-1976 furnllw-e drawings. Jl.1ust ans Pumpkin. 646-9532 aft 1. clerical, P.B.X. etc. Costa B A B y SIITER/OOU3ekeen... see portfolio and I o r School. " Dedicated Cle1ning !\lesa area. Available aft er-. r sarnples. Appointment (TI<IJ REWARD. white !email:! cal, er 2 days !\ton & Frt ~·" ,.,,,, * WE DO EVERYnflNG * noons 1 pm -on and Satur- ' ' · ., .,...,..:iuul. with flea collar. 811.n Instructions 575 ,_ d Cal . 9:30 to 5:30. $25 \Vk. Pc1·n1. ~'-"'"""o===~=~I Clemente. 492-5424. Re1-11. Free est. 646-2839 ays. l Linda 546-4478. 54Hl97. ESCR. W TRAINEE CHIHUAHUA, fem , tan, gray DOES your dog need Xlnt HoU!eCleaning NEED help at home?' We BABYSIITER. my home, J~in 01'.'e~ the fas tcHt gro11·- face, "Peeper," Lag Niguel. tralnln&. School for pups & By Day. Own Transportation haw Aides, Nurses, Own transportation, Costa 1ng f1r rtis !n r~ area. ~r Reward. 495-4486, 499-1331 adlt dogs, Martlncreat Ken-* 836-0648 * l:iousekeepen, Companions, J\:lesa area. 5:19-0230. YO\! ha~·r good figure apt1-·~D "•• female white ,.,.... nela, 546--0989. Prof. Carn.t Cleininn ~o7~kers, UP Jo hn, I ;o===-~~'7"'-----tude this could start you on '""' .,...... ""5 ,,.-• ...., ... ,,.,,u BA~ritAID wan!~, \'llflO~S n real carl'f'r. Great IOl!t Vic Talbert & Warner. AlllO windows & floor care .. 'CC=-:-· -===-=== I shitts open. Little John s \\'Orkers. S!art $'150. Call Fountain Valley. 96&-5700 I I~ Call Dutcb 537-1508 liAVE a carefree vacation Inn , 20072 Santa .Ana Ave, Jan Pago, ;io.;;os.;, Coastal ·~ .,. _ , Confident loving care for in-s A A I l LOST since Dec. I. I..rg Red -·....-CLEANING Houses , Apart-rant·xlnt back gr 0 u n d . · · PP Y n person Personnel Ak:fi'ncy, 27!1(1 Har· Male .frish Setter. . . ments. Good ~fereoces. 847-5754 llam-2pm. bor Blvd., Crwl. Call 549+3612 Call alter 6 PM. 642-2958. BILLING CLERK v.'e.nred by Income T•x COLLEGE Student ne:eds motorcycle dLs1ributor. Exec. Sec'y "?.1ktng LOST, U9<> IJI!; . ..Female cat. grey tiger striped. 673·4063 675-1782 S550 Beby1lttln9 p/tlme Mon-1')'1. Gen'I ofc, f\.lusl be accur. & fast Sec'y, Bkkpr AL\ -~-~~----;;~;;~~;::;~;;~;I keypunch & retail exper. typist. Oppor. to operate in ReceptJTypist BABYSITTING in my home. e INCOME TAX e 644-1311aft12. house computer after a teiv A+P Construction h ~eeklyd ~:_. ~.&..~ rates. Wt>Stem PART time .secretarial job, 1nonths. Sa I a r y L'Om· Acclng Clrk. \Val nut T e ence y .... u . .....,..~w..>. Management Services exper., H.B. area, 84&-3265. n\cnsurate w/ex~. 1714) qeneral O,Hice B1thtub ren.a1'r 979-1550. Exec. Sec Y to pres r-Professional Staff HelpW•ntec:l,M & F 710 n====------lf"JC Bookk~per to ~MO $500 ss.;o ~;I() ... S450 $100 !150 & refinishing · Reasonable Rates1 -~-------Bookkeeper Secretaries 646-0771 ACT NO\V -Represent Sarah A U T 0 M 0 T I V E BOOK-Clerk Tvpio;t ""' $<25 DA I Ly REFINISH in white or color ·~ ... :""~~~'!'::'~~I Covenlf)' In your area. No KEEPER NEWPORT in your home or business. $4. min, Open 9 A.\J-8 PM investmt. No collect. No With REY N 0 L D ~ & P•rsonn•l Agonc' 50-5470 ~. Inc. 438 N. El Camino Real dellv. Xln't ~ment to RE \'NOLDS experience. C b kl dd '" """ !amll I Cootact MARIAN PAR· 133 Dover Dr., N •• - • inttme ng San Clemente, 492-ti786 a "' , ....... r Y ncome. OT J It I I Phone 892-5333 or 836-7826 RISH. DUNTON FORD, 642-3870 PI L CUSTOM woodwork , •n or • or 4346--0882. 2240 S Main Santa Ana cabinets, P8"'1lng, geo'l JEFF'S CLEANING ADVERTISING SALES BOYS .i. GIRLS . , ""EXP'D MOLDE.RS- repain;. Vince Lenhoff, SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL, Former Yellow Page or mag-Wanted for Newspaper routes 940 \V. 17th Street. 673-1851, after 6, 536-8475 COMMERCIAL. 646-6384. azlne apace exper. Male or in Corona del Mar Area. Costa Mesa. 642-054.2. ORANGE -..arpenter M female. Comm. only. $200-·Call Dally P!lot st2·4lZ:l. ~ual Opportunity Employer I--'-------_•_•_on_ry._ _____ • I $300 wkly avg. Call for appt. Keith Crofts F I B E R G LAS S Hand Carpentry & Plumbint REPAIRS, planters, brtck, 64&-0536. BOYS, alter school &: Sa.ts., Laminaton. piece v.mk, Call John or Bijl block, stone, Quality-work.ljiiiiiiiiiiiii..,iiiiiiiiiiii_,. pltime. Hand bills. Pina Helmet m~g. apply 1711 COAST-'S 549-2683 • 557-6928 Ken, Ph. resid. 642-1770. JI.tan. 642-9452 aft 4 pm Placentia, M A-1 Carpenter, no job too Brick-Block-Stone /J BOYS, after achoo! & Sala., FISHI NG rod wrappers, exp small. 645-8266 _.,A!irporfer p/tlme. Hand bills. Piz.za General ta ctory hctp. Apply Ca ll Gordon, 531)..3454 Man, 642-!Mi52 art 4 pm Fenwick Products'. 14799 I d Pelntlng & Ches1nut St. Westmwter. ea l"ng * ~~~;.;;~ * P1porhongl119 j JJ. / Bua Boy Needed FOREMAN "be'"'""· ex-. lg. & sm. ~1648 l Apply In Person, monis pi~·. c:d pny. Gd future. CUSTOM PAINTING nn O e ExPf'r. pref'd. •. H!.'lmct Jo.fanur. App I y I Carpet Service Inler/Exter. Unfum. inter. Alley West Reste.ur.j,l{l Trnbaca Products, 837-W. Ma ket ace spec. price. Free colOt' con-2l06 W. Oceantront, NB 18th Sl. CM r p J~HN~S~~t ~1:!P~te. ryh suiting & eit. Uc. Ins. Oppas:.-BUSY . Medical 0 ff ice •• ~osrER·s Freeze, woman ..,,, . .,. ..... upoo ... ..,,, """"c • Won't be underbid. &lZ-Qm. 11v Inaurance biller I.or In-p/time. Apply, 899 w. 19th. guanI <So" RetardanUJ. N Oran-County ternbt. ""'· in M~ "°'"' Meaa. ~aaen: & all color * WAoLLWPutIAPngER * '2-& Meda-e.l, private ·1-e1ue•t ~~'---oF~R~Y~C~OO~~K~--1 ! · . ] brighteners & 10 minute • . Airport Crou. Back oflict helpful. ~.._,~ blt'aeh tor white carpet&. When you call "Mac" Alao receptionist. Exp. only. OvC'r 21 .. l\lu111( be cleaii &: .._ .. _ .. -~ 111.JC.A Save your money by saving 548-1444 646-lffi Hadley System. ( 21 3) neat. Apply Jn per!IOn, Surf me extra trips. Will clean PAINTING & PAPERING, HOSTESS 943-7~. & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast living rm., dining mi. & 21 yrs. in Harbor area. Lie CAFETERIA ,_H_wy~ .. _N_.B_. ___ ~--1 I HMettors11e fJ 11! J ~~~h 'Pro. ~ W' lf>$7:S'. &: bonded. ners furn. <Gourmet Dining Room l PERSONNEL FRY coo1c. EXPER. . . exp. la what counts, not ,64~'~·~2356~·~-~--~· 1 Short order, cuhlerin& & • BLUE D~LPHIN • Cl•ssific•tion IQO.l2 4 method. I do work 'mygeU. PROF. Paint.tr, honest work, Apply In Person &en'! 1etup &: se'rvlce. Ex· 3355 Via Lido, N.B. ~ Good rel. 531--0).01. reas, lic'd' I Ins. Int I ext. per. only need apply . ruu. time work In unique ..... ~ f llllil ,_c_..,,. __ n_t_.,_c_o_nc_r_•_I•_..__ free est Re!s.. 548-2T"9. lB700 MacArthur Blvd. 833-8691. Rote Releareh Nunery: . ,. PROF. Painting, aim roob, Irvine, Csllf. CARPENTER Foreman, w. Call 838-886_ ='""I".==== PATIOS-PLANTERS ·•="'· cell. lnter/exter. Conllructloo Co, Do oot GELC-DAT TOUCHUP All Concrete work. Brick, Llc/lnl. Free est. 645-5191. Equal Oppor. Employer contact San JOM or Seattle Experienced i!umpstone wk. 894-3533. EXT SPECIAL $1'9 olfice. (4081 722-6914. 84H>542 ,, CUS"I'Ol\f CEMENT WORK 3 Br. Uc/Ina. 776-{788 ANCIENT CASHIERS Equal Oppor. Employer Drives, WALKS1_. [>!tlOA. PAPERHANGERS l'Ull/p/tlme pos!Uort1. Gd Glrl ... Women Pool deckl. Don. ti4Hi:ll4. Reduced rates for the off P;aY· Growth co. 5 Loca-Full or p/tlme doing pleas-· PATIOS, walkl, drlve'I. Saw, season. 9-5, 646-2449. MARINER tiona. METRO CAR WASH, ant phone work in our or- break, remove & replace EXPER. painter Exler and 2950 Harbor Blvd, CM. flee. Guam. salary + gen- concrete. 548-8668 for esL inte"r. Reu. · i-a.tes. Call CLERK erous bonus. Apply, 7908 Child Cere Dick, 968-4065 eves. Now Hlrln&: Peraonable Receptionist for \Vestmlnsler, Suite B, busy construction firm. \Vestm. Or call 897-5300. Cl•••ific•tiori 125-149 I it..i Est1le, llil ....... Classific•tion 1so.11~ I """"" I~ Cl•11ificetion 200-260 COSTA Meaa Pre-&hool BIG DIM:. -W.P. & labor, S SHE S Typing & lit< bookk,.plng, GIRL Friday, g<!ne<al office corner 18th &: Monrovia, CM =e~m:t. est., The DJ HWA R Good Salary for shary work for 3 mo. 219 Marine ()pe'rl ti:J0-8. Ages z_.a Pl~ Daytime, Are 18-21 per10n. Nloe office 10 Upper, Balboa Wand. ned program, Uc'd. &U-4050, Pl1~ler, Pitch, Repair Irvine. Hra 8-5 weekdays. 673-5940 '-----··_-___,llii&I Eves 838-5237. Apply 1n Pl'J'IOn Call Miu Jones for apptloiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•iiii•I * PATCH PLASI'ERING 3 pm-5 pm, Mon-F'1'f afternoons 557·7533 Cl•11ific1tlon JOO·l~S , .... ·-'-I[!] l.JCENSED, good rt!f., hot All types. Free estimates ~ W Cout H meaJ.!.t lots of attention. Calt 540-6825 Jk wy. C.O.D. Messengers c1.11ific•tion 360.370 968-wii7. 'P~I mi~bjjl ;g------· l!!N!."'~'°i!!"~!a!chi!!!!'!'!646.o20~;,;;1 1 Full or p/tlme. Make up to C~h~l~ld~C~.-,.-----r" um ng ARCHITECTURAL ~:s:ar~~~~·~~~~ PUMBING REPAIR DRAFTSMAN minster, Sult"e -B. Westm . WANTED No Job 1<>o ""Ill "'1abl~ed tnter1'>< de1'-Or call 897.'IJOO, * * 642--3128 • .. .. I ·~ I~ Cla1sific1tion 400--465 Babysitting. Tender Loving Care. My home night& Re- liable. lntant -2 yn. S.A. 543-3691 . 14•-~••m 11 •1 I ·1· . 00 I DA y care, ln!oota 1<> 3 yn, C •••• :c1t1on 5 ·5 0 $18 per wttk. Call 646-5788 11'l or 645-4302. ROOM I.or worklni mother • ~-----~ chlld, alao care of child. hnonll1 Cle11ific•tion s25.53a, 894-3813 ~-----~--C., n tractor firm In N'pt Beach atta COLLECTIONS f Alsiltant DRAINS uncloaed -$7.50 now ln planned expen.tion, Bookkeeper w/t,ood AJR • Sewer line to 100' -$15. aeeka expcrtenced dntfta. collection be.cktround. Min * 549-2502 * man in Interior archltectur-4-5 yn ex~. N.B. ttnanc.1111 Sewing/Alterati->nr al detailing. 540o28ti0. 250 orp.nlzaUon. Xln't co. ot- F'ischer, C.M. ferlna; oppor. for ad· Altoretlono-442-5145 ARCHITECTURAL · "'''""""'· &<4-<360. Neat, atturat~ 21 years exp. MODEL BUILDER COOK CtryJ, exp'd only, All Signs Min. 1 year exp. Mutt be shifts. Start S 2 . 5 O I h r . -''--------1 neat ln wottc. Wiii be dona: <llance for advancement. INCREASE bulineu wtth a all typet ol aca.le ~ls, The Cottage CoUee Shop, HOSTESSES FRY COOKS & DELI MEN Experienced, Full Time Apply In Person HOCHMAN'S DELICATESSEN I. RESTAURANT 428 E. 17th Street Costa Mesa Equal Oppor. Employer ][SJ m•goel. M-tic S..,,. $10 plot plans, grapblco A 562 W. 19th St .. C.M. HOSTESS "-:::: .... -,, ... ,_-,,...-.,,::-! ROOM ADDITIONS to S25 a pair. 64.S-2449. dis~. Mlllt tee Mmplet. COOKS, f/tlme, J yr exper. Apply In Peraon, moms: ~ . PATIOS Televl1lon Rep11lr Appolntment n4: 5*-8601. U50-m5. Park Lido Conv. Alley Wet1t Cl•11lfic•tion 550.!155 894-3S33 A!SEMBLE'RS-Orowth op-Hosp., 466 F1qahlp, N.B. 7106 \V. Ot-eanfront, NB l ~Financing KEY TV Service All price!. portunlty far~ with DEWVERY of DAILY HOSTESS, MATURE • ..,.._ .. _, _____ _,f ts JACK Taul811e -Rt1*1r Quoted in advance. No 1trong mechank:al aptitude. PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to I/time. M4-24M be.I. noon . ,......-remod., addlt. 20 yrs. exp. tr1dca or (immlekt. C&ll for .ANembly A shop exp. re-newspaper carriers. Re-.,::..:;:::=,,:;:,:,o;:;-'C=cc~~I Lic'd. My Way O>. 547-<XJ36. elttmate 5&-U8J. quired. Colt! lnatrUment qulres the ute of a Stalk>n HOUSEKEEPER. Lido Isle. Clat1lficatlon 575-510 Additions Remodellna file corp, 2034 Pl.cehtia, C.M. Wa,on or Van. Contact Mr. (5l hAlf days. Local reil. I l~ Gerwlck & Son, Uc'd 642-«)80. Harey Seeley 3:1> We:rt Bay $50 wit. 873-9189. ~ """*' ' ti'13-«H1 • SG-2170 CERAMIC TILE NEW &: Equal Opportunity Employer St., eo.ta Me... HousekHper, f/time · · iJrifting r.!model. Free E'lt Sm&U ASSEMBLY &: Inspection. DELIVERY men w/CAr, For Conv. Jlos p. 549-:1161 Cl•11ific•tion 600°699 Jobe welcome. 53&-2426. Small electronic. parts. Wll over U. p/time. Call Plua HOUSEKEEPING AIDE.1 I lrifl PLAN!rHOUlel, Remo d, train. Good C<lncb Nan, 60-t452 aft 4pm DcJX!ndable. N.8. area. ~n•itll!J Room AddltloM. $50 Uf· lllJJ be~Hm. su-1m. DENTAL RECXPTIONISI' Call 642-2-110 557-oo2!1 56 -9695 L:qdqii• A11lst1nt Man ... r '-'11'-Mawture Woman w/ICYtt'alo!., INSPECI'OR· p , e c I s Ion Cla1tlfic•tion 700·710 Garchnlnt . Womerw aDP&l"cl. Need M an full front uce PAl'U It rotary switches. out So. OMut Plaza *"· mponaibllity lncld. tlnan-Cole lnltrument Corp, nw I ~; ft.... PROFESSIONAL Gudener, MUii have Did llln exper. cial UT~t' 1ebfdul· Placentia, C.M. &0-8)80 ~ trwt' work, pr u n I n e , Job W1ntecl, Mlle 700 Pleue write fnfDrina.I lna"· Pleuant t nvlronment. F.qual Opportunity Employer ~-.,,,.~--=-~-~ sprinklers, cleanup jobs, reswM to llubbub, 2)(1. No. GOod opportunity tw 10me·l ;-:i;i;;-::;;~;;~~;;;1 Cl•11ific•tion 800·1l& l::JSl:PLDa:. Ge or ae, SCRAM-LETS Oranae Mall, Orange, Ca. OM dmrtna: rt1ponalblllty.I~ n ..,... "'4 • l .... _.._. ll'L.I G~ING ""1ce, oom· ANSW-ERS :=o~: :::~.tun ~~n'f'~~.area. Full IZYINE PERSONNB. . . 1' plete cleaMlp work by ex-or p/time to manage mn.aU OENTALReccptlon lst <"i:D\nrcc ,,,~ ... .,,....., Cle "fl t• tSO ISi pe rl e nced, reliable Real Eltatt ofc io N.B. Newport Beach OrthOOontlc .JU\J~·~"'-' ••• c• ion • · ~ner. ~ eiUmats n.bb1e _ Eldcr _Booty_ •fY&.-~. Off1ce, ~ 11.lary. Liberal ee I: Fl't'f' Po.ilioM-- 1: ~. 1~ I ~1ui:.::.,~_,,... M~::,, ... 0~11,1:'Y 'Tm AutoSALESMAN. =...c 'li!'.1::':. t,"'p.}ti:.'r,~., ~I: L ~ O>mp)ete prdern lf'l'V, woridna: on ,-1abot·Mvtna :S.. z-35. No amokina-Oert'I fns . Clerk • to SS50 Clttslfic•tion 900-91 % Ka.malanl, f 4 t-4 6 7 6 , dfv\~. It'1 a rich OLD BMC, Lotut. JeMen A Ftrra· U. .,&_, Sec')' (lite lhJ to seoo ..,_ll3t, LAD¥.'' rl, Good W-Coodltlolw, DENTAL ~ ,.-.....,.. R4ccp<J'l)plR Io Sllll l .,._..._ ll•J General Strvlcet Job Wanted, f9fMle 702 F'rte Demo. Medical lfllllfl. Exper. or colltat, Call Rtctpt '10 key addrr IO $C!O . i---------I ----~---ance. Ask Jor Mr. Bud st&-llXO. Jr. Draft.Iman/Ork $03 - Cl111lflc•llon 915-949 C1pt1ln1 Cir C1rel P.1EDICAL aaa.istant trained, fb'dlWtr.PORT IMPORTS 08:\~>t~~;m:: .~::~Contri ~ ~ We wash &. wax completely, •ul1t you In bl.ck ottln! NI -.,. _,., l I~ L11!fom A. detaU work. W• palient care, Mme tront. 3100 W. Coast Hwy., Newport U fl62..1343. 438 ,£, 17th (at 11'Ylne) CM ,........ r::3. pick-up A deUvtr. Phone 4!12.. BellCh, 642-&e. lt't a breeze, ttU )'OUJ' ittml '4J..1410 ~ MW63J or 645-1191 tor rtte with eue, u1e Dell¥ PDot'I:'.~~~~~~~~ e1lhnale. - -Want ad rmtltr .• , 642-6619 Need a "Part'1t·Plaee an ad! ClusUled. ~ I Cl1nlllcelion 960..990 ' . ' • .. , ~ fridor; -I•,"" 1 ~~~~~~:~11~~~~"~~~~-~~~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~~~1 ·-------. .1 ... , I ~mJ~[~L~ .... ~ ..... ~](fi1~• ~, ~. ,~,, ~, ~,rm~•1 I , "1 , .1rm ;;;I _ ...... _. •·;;;;][;;IJJ•• 1~·--_ ... ~11~.;-r.-1 ................ ;;l~~-· '1~1 ..... a_ ..... ~J~~·-· 1;1 ~ ... iiiiiii-~l~~· .1 Holp WlfttM, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & P '11 1fo1p w--. .. a p 711 Help Wint .... M a F 7IO Help W-. M 'a ,P 710 FUf'tllture 1)0 Mlscollinoous 111 Planos/Orpns 126 TV, bdlo, HIFl, JANITORS >IAN wllh a• to ni o t I•• l'llOTO LAB Tmt r.:rp. ~ WArTllESSES , O<'tt II ~!'l'CA!t ~re din ..J..,. * AUCTION * ORr;N HOBBY ' ·Shreo ~ 136 Full Tin1c 5 AM.·1:30 PM Apply Pcr80llll('\ lrd Ylr, Oail.y 2 P~l--1 P~t BROADWAY Newpm"l Beach No. 47 t'ashion Island JOBS URGENTL \' NEEDED • Secret1trle11 e KeyPUnch Opt>rators • Soldet"f'rs/11·ire "T&P • Billing Oerk Typist I Nine 5MH45Q Anahein1 5.:Jl.2322 NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Temp Temporary Hdp Journeyrnan LlnolyPt" Ma· chinist. l\'lghl position. "5 hr. \\·k. Xlnt Company Ben- enm. Paid h1erlical, l.iJe, Uniforms, Cttdil Union, etc. DAILY PILOT Ask for I.any Jl.lil ler • &t24321 • JIDo.'lOR SalK1T1en: 10-JS. Earn sa:>-UJ per y,•eek get· ting 11('"' r:ustom!'n for the DAILY PILOT. TI-i1 Is not a ney,i;paJ)(>r route and doe• nol inclu~ colltttlng or dt>livering. Tnnsportation is provided. \Ve \\'Ol.ir: four hours after sthool and 8 on Saturday. \Ye ha\'e Of>£1nlngs for Fountain \'alley'& Sooth Hun1ins:ton Beach areas on- ly. Yoo mUbl be. out of school by 3 ~f t o panicipate, Experience-J boYS given priori ty . 968-9641. KEYPUNCH OPERATOR CITY. OF NEWPORT BEACH 2nd SJuft t4 pm-12:30 am\ SJ.33 Per Hout Temporary position until June 30th, I9n. Req'1 6 'mo's exper on IBM 026. Contact Personnel Office, 3300 Ne..,,·port BlYd., New· port Besch. Calif. 67J..6633, KITCHEN Aide-various hrs ,t;i; days. Full & p/time. Park Lido Conv. Hosp., 400 Flap;hip, N .B. L119al Secret1ry Good Skills·Locnl Call l.orratne Wel1clill _p~'Agency 1651 E.Edlngt't, S.A. (Mark III Centerl S42-la6 LEGAL SEC'Y TRNE fNewport Center). Send resume to Clusified ad no. 559 c/o Daily Pilnt. P.O. Box 1560, Costa ?tlesa. CalU, 92626. \mo1.i.·~ to .,wk, put req. Stnd ....,.,. to , Y• r . Nexk:u fOod 1,,eot:lctal.11. uque dJn rm tlx\unt f!Ot'fter l:.iA . January Clear•nee tune. Uarn.f.J>m. 81 __ .. O•nl~Ad.No.. 610, Dally ~l-~..m~~ ~l1 :.u: 10:Sliunll:*1nA: 4:30pnl-chlhl cUlnt.1, ~desk. FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. Carrant Ster«> S"'"ttma 3'99 lW'bor ~. Pilot, ~pl Booe ll60, 0.11 "'--r-· rua. Apply dolly, llj:~ .,. . .,,., Vlc1otian chaloe, Span HI· · JANUARY 19 Oon't buy any ' ""1 until AM >"VSTEREO'Mrx / at MacArthur Maa. Wt..... "'all pleuant ~ arn .l 4:«) pl)l'..$:30 pm. Ml Boy, mlJ)le BR .et, oedu Bedroom tea. Chettl or You can ~I Not1·~rs MAJikET .rea_e.u_c..h m., PWMBING lt .......... ~""(.'{;·:otb-d. Cua M~xkan Rl'lt&unui1, cbeaf. -2 irv·a, 'rnU.C Drawtl'l. D\ne'ttea, om111 welt'Ometo-.ttftid-freework ~~~•'l~t ~~~~m! tetvie"'ut ~ No 1tlJ... ~ o 01 _....... · r to ~ t. 17th St., C.M. ~tor pea. 436161.h Pl, & Lovt1 Seats, Vtlvet aboga. For lnformaUon Sl9T.40. On<ler $.9 Monthly. ln&. OO'd. Pte'ue .call ~ Mfd t.l1fll¥'1 ln ,;;.. ~:]~for 1~.::: WAJTRESS. exper, o\IC!l' 21. CM. CluLlra, Cott11e tablN. Com· O>ntact: Tam tlteterlcb tJSA • Sttn.oo Ft'l!liht u. 213/556--12.M ..... Re t ere a ct •• Tm ii 1n An Ae p&yroll. Appl.y 111 pel"IOll alter 10.m., MOVING: .... bdrm. tum., 1node1, Color TV't, Fr'tlleh '42-1111 quldaton, 119 E. f7th St., MASSEUSE \\1 e • t ml o•t er A\~. ~ p.m Mn. Maloof at Me .. Vm'de TV, Roovtr vac 11.tagnaYOX Ptm-. St~reo. LA.inpe, Pie-Colitt Music Servi« CM &15--2'42. \\!Ill Trftin-6G.(lG60 W•«mlNftr. ' "'-l:t to '$45.0 Country C I u b • 3000 nicord "DleYef=-1Jlse. Set" tureio, R.l'frlg's, Stow, Newporr: Blvd. al IJa:rbor l9T3 ZENITH & RCA ,11 l\l Dy POSITION open JJ*>TD for Good klok• ,,. sharp ·r1. ·~ilf ClubhOu.te Rd. CM b&t. 10 Al'it'&. IS Pll.1Jan19, f°N'eiera, \\ltLJ)~rs. :t Otflcci Coata J.'lesa tremcntlou~ llllVlr\ilf at MATURE LA aerv. atatkln nwchulc. be pleu:"wtlb.li. 'i).pe 50 WAITRESS. e.icpcr. oot under ~~21: ~ Sandbwit 'Vny, ~~;-lters A A1UCll *PIANOS.ORGANS Orange County'& Jarge11t BOOKKEEPER :::.,.~ .,._, ~ w.p.ru. FW,... pootlna, '""· ~n Pt,_Um:'..,,i~••t.t~ WINDY'S AUCTION Going Out F'or a.,1 "" denl.c. Priced 1.,, th•n the \\'!' nffd a full dlaf'ie book· tool&. ---~a. °:run·• serv., PBX relk!t. Solid $.A, Kn.me.r's Colonial KJtcben, ~ 64<t-~ Best quality • prl~1 ~ serv. dl11COUntcr11 "·Ith 3 yr plo- k_, 10 ·-~our New· i~-pd·-. .. ._-"'li..-. ~· '°' Gdl lc .. ocfipi.. I .,. W. •~• •• ~... Natural Ttak · Capl!Ul KawllJiSteinway·Baldwla etr. tun tuOO, 1 yr parts ofG 1 yr ~~r-UI uq,, .--.:.... y w. I k 1rsonne ..... ....u.-. -clWn. Brand M'W special COME BRO\VSE AROlll'\P Pll.Ytr Planol • RDU. M!rvlce. Caih 00 Plan nt port Center Ottice. You. •'ill OleYron Stal fiOC So. I Waltttsa wanted btwn 10 am order rwver u 1 e d ,.,_ N Bl·M' n. .. ..... l:!all tcnn1 to 36 nlOnthl. ABO h 1 ~tun ~~ H 1.. ...... Ser.Ices & •--y R~-tt-•:or. A .. .,..18· ""1"1., ewport vu. nvtilala .••..• \Ve 8....,-._. &\'e 0 y ~ cbarl:e "''Y· ""'"!'™'la. ....--ll 3 pm, No SUn. Arpy'a Col-A·_-,,,El~'"'·" -M• 7,;,_e1'!.';!:· w Beblnd Tol'\)''s BldJ» Mal'la. Dall.11().8 SUn U-5 O>lor TV, 9021 Atlanta, ~ :e~~~.asan~~ POWER Se'4i1w Mach. ()prL :::.. Ek.a £.dirwer, Sui~?~ ft.-e Shop, 5019 \V. Edinger, • · .,........ ,,,...., Coata Afeli8 "'= M1H69S FCEl.D'S PIANOS HunUna:ton Bea.ch, 968-3329. Ing condHiool & wual~ Exper. lftf'd. Good~• 544-78?9 E\'ell'\\'knda .~F.,..V".=""'c,-;=~== HERIT~ Ven~ peacn Fair Weather Friends Colt• M.-. ITI4) 6'5-3:1i0 I••-•••••• ~:=~ ~:b,to ~~ ~~ .,g: ~iJ.,~· R ~--Op~. ~~ -'l~ ~~:n: ~~i.:~ 1~~u;· ~~ Anybody. can be friendly *PlANOS.ORGANS* ' ... .,,_ ... 11 .. -·perienced. P ,RESS OPERATORS ~-=r~ Cl"""'u.bhouiie: Or, l..aauna mlltchina ~rm ch at .r • 'Ahen )'OU are alvlna; them Hammond, Wuruucr, many I JI I --.. ,....., _,, ~ N a\•allable.. Ga-9333 hu~ss. But voice a coni· othen. Jahuary clearance F• to Yw Please phone Joan at "'omm. to worit for plutk L... T T $700 ·""'"'==·.,-..,,,.,,..,,,-,.-..,.--' plllll1t • afld that's anouuy on nowt The best deals are ~-----~ ™ ror appointm611. moldinc fW1ts. 546-3370. This very r:9~ve firm ~ANTED ~clive ~ng t, H~~ dJn sofa f n1llt1('t. Pot:teneq dl.uolves always at 3 LlnM, 2 Times, $2.DO ~:,:~~~ ~ ~t: ~=a.~ ~v~c".~~ 23~dubbouse ~f.au~ ld~set!d. also 5ctove \:1:r ~.::!1es~~eto :J:;::: : Wallichs Minic City household ~ f>16-S580 abop. 5«M&1. . above avg _...,; .. _ At· Lo0Ni.ue!-'='""==,.--==== 80.fa A: loveseat. Must sell. so1netlmes. At AL'S CAR· South Coast Plata• MG-2830 LOVlNC Mlnl. Poodle, s..,..i, 3 yn old. Prelor tiome w/adu.ll botn:e days. 646-ll(i6. ?ilECHA.."IJC. Class A Smoe Production Helper tomey1 here ~~&i' ®Us. WEE k: END R ECEP· Pvt. p()I. 536-6&U. PE:T, we like to be b:iend.s ffAMMONO M-111 -WW the lie. l'Un@-Up •Ute duty.~ Pan time to uaist In dNn-Fa.bWous oppor! Call Debby TlONtsr -Real Estate Of· PA..tR. iQld chain.-maple end wllh our customers., evco .party lhll' purchaw:I w. ply 990 E. (:oast H\\'Y, N.B. • • -.. .. ol all Dupn 833-2700 Dennis & tlce. 9AM--6PM Sat. It &In. ta b.I.es, baby crib; bean bag in "~ y,·~ather." ls oraan from R. Koch plenae in& JIU••'"'• sm Dennis' J>enonnd Agebcy ol Q.50 per hr. Aae 25-35, at-Chall', stereo, sewing son1eUUng Wf9ns:! Tell 'wl! rontact him Imme d , LOVING A gentle Pomera- MODELS \\'1lnled. part time elfctrl>mech. de v I ce •· lrvil 3:62 Mich ban Or tractve. t:;AIJ.. Mr. Barllen machine. 548..:ssG7 aft S. \\'e'll make It rl&}ll • wlthoul 96H904 or 642-Jlll. nlan male dot. 6 yl'il old. e\'es. 'Vill train. Call Please apply, It', e · 846-1361. • ' a UgbL • !las sboia '!i lie. 644-42811 SJ9..6498 GULTON lNDUSl1!JES SECRETARIES WHO WANTS TO "'ORK• BUFFE:r, Ethan Allen, AL'S CARPET "'ANTED: P.RIVATE PAR· 1644 Whittie A CM la _..,1_,, " . truilwood, xlnt cond. $125. TY 'fO BUY PIANO FOR PET ROOSTER, 4 yrs. Mov· r ve., ~ Santa Ana w firm'""" ...... "'·" DRIVE A CAB• . Captain's chair, $10. &.RUG .WORKS CASH ed to apt, can't keep. * BUSBOYS -HOSTESS Over 21 642·2400 xlnt typists f'Ull &: part time, OiOOSE yoor hours' work University_ Park · 552·7992 293 S. Maln St., Orange • 8.l'J.-2:218 536-7035 Equal Oppor. Employer legal exp not necessaryi. for yoursell, be yoi.ir own G1r-• Sito 812 542-6400 • 542-~ PIANO FOR Sale -19'111 ~~=-----~ MT~ & shorthand boas. Men or women. Can -• ~ FREE GREYHOUND TO RHI Esteh S.t.1 desirable. Please . send be ~htly handicapped. _ . 2 DESKS · and • BOOK· Yaniaha COl1$Qle, Spanish LOVING 1'~Af.ID..Y. fR([ resume and salary ft'-Vb, refireO. Ai;e 21 lo 70. ANTIQUE guns, couis, old SH.ELVES . SU 1 TAB t. E Medlt. Special tcatues. $850. 962-<m& Llcmnao Trolnlng llmli.d TI,_ Only Famous Ucense course now avallabk thnl Tarbell Com· p&IQ'. Appllcanta fuUy tt- imbuned upon qualification. New or experienced· Wes people. Openings availahle. Complete trainiQI( pnieram. Future manaaement oppor- . tunitiea. Call Mr. Sloan at -· TARBELL REALTORS quirements to P . O. Box ~ement your inconie. ~les :ii ... ~te?. Oak FOR Clill..DREN or eLse1 "675-<i589=.'=-'-"=' ,--,,.---=......., F REE tq irood home_ 1~1 yr 4.182. Santa Ana 92702. Drive a cab 6 hes or more a piano, w ........ ne gram&· would be Ideal for extra ANTIQUE Squan: Grand old white male Cockapoo. SECRETARY _ bookkeeper, day. Apply in penon, phorie. ~hsh clocks & storat:;e spa'"! In your aar· Piano, xln't cond. $500. Good w/chldrn. 642-714! l gtrl office g 0 0 d Yellow cab ·Cu .. 186 E. 16th rorlo cablnet, Brass cash age. PRICED !-'OR IM· Call M+-0-191. • 18 mo. old ""'"n , ••• healthy seeretaria1 akilis. book· St .. Costa ?tieaa. reg., cream aeperator, lard l\IEDIATE SALE. 1212 S. l;;,=-,,:--"7"-==c-;".' ,... = keeping tiJnl P&L. able to Woman to sit ln my home 4 Pr'C.S.'\, corn. & coUee R0&'5 St1, Santa Ana, WIU. pay up lo $1,CWXI: for female Doxie to at-home ._..-ort 'Nitb>ut su.pervision. hn/d~, M~Fri. 1. child grindei'!i. Tools I.: much 5-12-3120. Steinway Grand PUUlO. companion 642"167 cood salary to "right" ap-age 7. Costa Mesa, Mesa more. Fri-$at-Sun. Cash S'l'I-.:.REO 1973 G arr a rd (2U) 8'14-335.5. GREY male kitten, 2 n10 old, plicanL Call 4 9-4--7 8 1-5 Verde area. References. Only! laf2 Indus st._ bfhind model. 'S)'slem11ed-a u l"o GULBRANSEN Spinet piano. ._Striped male cat, 2 yrs. Lquna Bea.ch. After 6 pm 540-4730 Santa Ana C.OUntry Club. changer, 200 watt amJfm Xlnt cond. old. 645-3780 1 e Sec'ys. variety to $800 WORK at home-phone Mies. H 0 USE H 0 L D ite~ receiver. Jensen air 5C5-6302 e Clerk Typists to $'50 Exper. prefd. Call Colle-ct furn.lrure. slerl~ silver & suspe.nsio!J speakers A tape Grand Piano _ parlor si2.e. e Sec'y, Spanish S100 tU-1) m-3438. sliver plate, sml. oriental d~. Still braud new ln Excellent C.Ondition? * 1 OO O'o FREE * XLN'T""op-. w.,. ........... rugs, fishing tack1t>, OOat oo. ... Was left unclaimed OU rroo. 644-4355 t• ...,. .r~-h-.... b ·. I la,yaway. Now, $134.. Credlt:l;:=;o;:;""°"'""'=..,.,,,,..,., ~·-~uware, Icy c es' dept. <n<l °""-llUI' CHICKERING Cpncert grand Llz R.elndu's Ageocy OV.'Jl ,., ... .., name your own b1nocula.rs, many other .....,"""""'-L 9 Ft A 1 nd'uo· · t 4500 Campus Dr pay. Not door to door .ell-Items, all low priced. Sat & Attt.ntion "Swap.Meeten" · -co 1 n pnva e 5«i-.2ll8 Newport. 0Beach lng. Public Relations, but Sun on1y, 4208 River Ave., \Vill the penon who had a party. <213l 660-0069. F'REE Adora ble ~ ter- rlerlhalf m,y1tery. To good homes. 53&-7437 -~-~-~-3 PUPPIES, small mixed breed. Very smru1. Call f>is-9439. . middle must be sales minded. N.B. cor. 43:rd & River. lge. Henry A1cKenna jug for USED Bungalow Spinet REAL ESTATE • SEMI ambulatory 536-ID4, Helen Hyatt 61>1355. sale for $.l.50 at the Colla piano. "'A I ~'-""IEN _ UJhu not \\'Ork llge .. "Olna.n DE;eds bel., , -~-yl' CI!l'E 12-A·k old brown .\ white puppy looking: for good home. 835-0010 ~· '"V LI ' t """""" II•··------· RECLINING cha·,,, RCA Mesa S\li·ap Meet, Sun. tn.a,,,-='-· ---'~"-'~='~c-=°"='=me Plea.Se A-.lv In the hottest area Hun-ve m or ou · =VG t all 64" ·3589 be 6 & " _.,, B/W combo, ~pewritl'r, P case c . ,,-t. Betwo 8 & U am ,a: 2·&. 5 pm t i n g l o n Beach/Fountain SERVICE Sta. Attendant, [§] ~ 9 p M (Pr• ~ u Sportl-Goods know I I l archery equip paperbacks · · v. Plll'•.:r wan .... , Valley·aod let u.. train you! Utime. Lite mech. .' . •d 111 . ·. "b 1 " ' to buyJ J8.5t2 !.facAl'tbur Call Phil P.t c Name e, 2 Yn min. Bonus tor lic'd., • •• c.-, · m sc household ltenis •~~.,_~~,--=~= SKIS K-2 Com t zio c ri.t {Acrou from o .c. Airport) VILLAGE REAL ESfATE, {not req'd) Neat in aW!l'al'. . & craft mater la I s, O'Ket'l'e !: Merritt bullt71ll Salomon ei!tings &ood 830 7 MO ol d Springer Spaniel mix, fem. spayed, free to good hon1e. 1·532-1976 2 Adorable Tenipoo pup11les fre<> lo good home. N~-port Beach 962-447L • Apply 2500 Newport JBJ.vd, Fri/Sat/Son 10 to 5. 19642 ust'd dishwasher. Good work. cond $75 su-m2 ' 545-3518 CM. \Valcrbury La. H n t g n. ing condition, Avocado. $35. ' · · Equal Oppar • .EJ:;lployer RE CE PT TRAINEE . Antiques 800 Bea.ch. Portable Singer s ~wt n & Like to. trade? Ou: Trader's Don't give up the ship! :....r. NO FEE SERV I CE St at 1 0 n VERY unU.5ual ha:n<k:arvcd SATURDAY· l:: Su nd a Y l\fachine with Attachments Parad1.1e Column lll for you! ''List" it ln claulried, Sh.Ip N~~~~ EnJOr-~-long prt'Sti~ • Salesmen-Top pay --; fringe antique church chest Sfjl(l.. Garage Sale, 3spd girls S60. Phone 633-9~ altcf 5 llnes, 5 days for 5 buiooiii.ijjiiiitojSimljrj•illcsuiillli'il''jj'il642il'-li567811ii. ScMOI Bus Drivers heavy public contact in-beMtits. E;qler pre1 d. Full 17th century enuavings & bike, Elect-heater, belly 4:30 p.ni. .. $3.32 per hr ... Apply Newport plush SWTOU.ndinp in our It pt dme avail, Apply Shell I lo boa.rd ... _ "-.. _Ak-ld. IVALNUT Mesa unWed .. A ........ 1 Dist· __. .. ; __ . • M~i-•---• .. Station.,17tb It Irvine, N.B. other antique tema at w • ,,..,,,. 1..x:1L1 items. crib Si mattress, .,.......,.... --"'"'' ·~"" prices. Gulight Gallet')', 130 Blond shag wig, hair dryer, Youts bed & mattress, IUre rict, Tramportation Dept., the nicest boa. Call Kim SERVICE Sta. Attendant, Agate, Balboa Island. Open drapes & lamp. Misc items. nu, side rail for childs bed, 9li Baker St., C.1\.1. SS7.s320. Clark, 833-2700. A.180 Fee female. 40 Hr wk. Apply, Fri. ll..JPM &: Sal l-4PP.1 Zlrd & Sourh Pacific, Sunset domestic oric.'Dtal rug & Newspaper Carrien Jobs. Denni.a'-Dennis Per--Mis.Don Viejo l!ifob~ie~ only. · Bcb. paddi,ng, 9xl2, exhaust tan. BOYS & GIRLS mnnel >.,ency of Irvine, La Paz Rd, Mission JO. S?a:lAl.J... P.lahogany side SUPER FACTORY euckoo r:lock wall minor 10 yrs and older. 3l8'l ~ Dr. SERVICE St'i-3 la1a.nd board, $45. Butler tncy cof· GARAGE SALE ~40• 64oHim. W. Newport Be.acb area. Rll:EPTIONIST salesmen needed. Appb f ta.bl mahg $35 6 t2l 10 ........d. thiJi LEGAL Secret ;;r.·d Good Mr ~ Receptionist for Arco ·Station at 17th i: ee e, · · New &. used ltetns-F111tutic 8tJ"=Uo> at garage , •-"ne lndus .... ~Coro eU: <'&-.. , ~ Dn~~.L ' i......... constructiob firm. 1Jvine Cocta Mesa. Sberatoo chain., mahg. $00. bargains. Fri. & Sat., Jan. sale. Family !ea~ for uv• .,_ .,.;cy ..,..,...~ £ ...... ...... ~ China cabinet, walnut $140. 19 &. 20 9 am·2 pm al Europe, everything in house 833-3622 e 6G-4321 e ' Typing A lite ~... SERVICE Sta. Attend. full &: Brau wood box, $40. llferry M'aid Co. ISio ~ton. &. garage must go! Frl, Sal . LYN\., Relief Supervisor for 1 --1i-hii:~~N~1i0sd-~d·~-Good aa1~ for shary P/time. Apply 604 So. Coast 640-1809. rovia, C.M. 642-5320 & Sun. Beach ·Blvd Ir: smau nursing home. ·eeach 11 .. 7 & Other Shifts person. -Nwe offltt 10 Hwy,J.ag. Bch. 1910 Simmons full ail.e hlgh :c==~~~~~~ Taylor, H.B. area. Call TI4J"94-8075 for "Top pYt. clufY INY• ~~l:--J~ w,:~ SEWING MACH I NE back brass bed, perfect GA~~~t .. ,;. ~~~:"M"'°E~N"·s"'s"'l,-e~l'°Ol>-~U""'Ku,.-,ttng,..--er appt. Immed. pay 1or noor duty. afternoons 5r57·Ta33. OPERATOR wanted. oond w/orlginal casters, Chinook camper, radio, ~cl<.le ski boots $10. ~ MACHINIST-Excel. Op-County.wide. Need RN • RECEPTIONIST _ Call 646-6634 $400 firm. Also Oak table. heater air oond spare gas 1ng~l Stralo 21 0 s portunlty. Prect!ion parts· LVN • Aides. lotel'Viev.·11 YACHT BROKERAGE SITTER wanted tor baby, 3 WJ-3421. tank, 'pwr brk~ & strg, ",;/marker toes, good cond. m _;r,_,. _;ilf 1 lll' 7338 tools & dies. Good shop Mon-Fri, 9-5. Lesco u Ii e WEEKENDS ONLY days week 8-5, SOLID Ulick Mahogany S.~.fiOO at'8h. 92'1 Park Ave., $!ill G111Tar~ tumtable, ~ .. ~""' background req'd. Cole Nurses Registry, ~1 Hos· Greet our customen, amwer ~1803 Dining Room Set. 3 pcs, 6 Laguna Beach barely u~ $45. &12-9401 ~ · \ "-Y:"'J. ·;:w, ~~tru~.entC 111 C.O~ 2034 pital Rd., N.B. (i:mlby Park phohes lite typlflg U you T E LEPllONE answering uphol. chairs. Bargain at Dbl Door ref.rig Bed divan 4 NU Goodyear tires, sz 7, lft • ~, !r~ r-... ' "';:..~/ ce'l"'lla, • • Lido mdg.) 642-9955 or are' attraCtive, service.Partorf/time.Ex· $600.673-1387. s 1n....:i1 t•·-· &l't 14.5,nylon,8plyrating,for .. ~ · ,;.:_· .' Equa.I Opportunity Employer g "'""' ma ..., .. ps ix mobile homes $100. Bumper f1Tl\ ·4 ., ,,-,·.'--rl' i ' · . .:. MAIDS WANTED ~~3~1T1~3-:r:. ~E~~~f~=~( per.Wllltraizt66-T;£5. ~~~~~~~~~f ~:~=~t~~~r~ -~'",~"'s.,~"~"''.b","'S"'IDc:-cal;,--l-5411--==-'"".,. w ~ : ~ -.~ -:-.. · !~ ,.~ .. :~f ·f4,~ !. ~lature, Exper. Pref'd. Full "''6 TELLER 1=0 COLLE:CI'OR'S Ite El 1 t...i.:• .:!il'i' ,-~·· Time. See Per!IOnnel ?>.tan· Utime. Parle Lido Conv. RECEPI'IONisr: Variety of ANTIQUE CLOCKS J.JI> Port U>cksleigh, N.B. m.. g n . ager, Hosp, 468 Flagsbip, N.B. dutiea for publiahill& co. Sal. NCR PROOF OPR Vood selecoon. ~l GARAGE sale Sal only 1 pocket w~tch, 21 J , 8 adj, 10 ~. ~ ~:1_ • 0 • ifl1 ~-,,..,, it j C b NURSJN. G .. u..:.. ...__ ~ w/J>d voe P<nn pos. pm Bid i-~·•· 2 dbl carat, mmt cond, $125; 12 ~1. ~~ ~ ,_. Balboa Bay lu n.ouoa.· ...,.pm. _.., · · Commercial bank ex.per. min. ·nics 1 g ma ~141>1: . 1 gauge db.I L. c. Smith ll&1 ~ .r.·.r.o. / : '' · ,.... ..:::iilf..' ...: lZll \V. Coai;t H"'Y·· NB dabl.e, up. helpful· but not Phone for appt. 833-3362.. 6 , 'd N Be h Appli1nces 802 St , new, I Wied singe S85 GT;;i-£278 • •S>.~ .,.)'1'~1 ,_. / -.. ..., , ':I MAINTENANCE MAN nee. Ms. Valdez, &a--2410. RECEPTIONIST-Law omce. moa ~ · ewport ac -plnk sink, formica sheets,,"'=·,...-,,--·.,.--,-,,..--0 '• • 1e:)'' i; .'Ji t · 7 ;i Typing oecea.w.ry. Phone area. • OVER 200 wasben: dr,yen, frequency oscelator & more. LADY Kenmore wsh.r/dryer ·,~~·~· ••• :.,; 1 ~ .. ~.. • •• A P a r t m e n I Complex.. I·--------• 6tG-OllX> refrigerators from J39.95. 963 Victoria St, C.M. combo, gd cond. SI.25. er< ThoroUghly experienced in OFFICE (714) ~7121 56--0'nl>. GARAGE Sale, Furniture, Cus_lom blk Walnut Hi·Fi electrical & plumbing:. Own RESIDENT mgr., ret. couple Mrs Rt-acb1net w/tambour doors ,..,.. • • o • to -·--s ap-/<'--1 • """' LATE inodel auto. washer & appliances, lawn tools, w 0 •n-. • o tools. Salary $600/month. Experienced ·---..,. """' $125 673-7208. nl! u.< o Phon• 546-0371 CI em en t e , 4 9 2-0046 elee. dryer (~) A-1 cond. VW, motorcycle. Jan. 19 & =,,·="""--.,.----1 '" • C" • • • ' 1 837-il012. F.quaJ. Oppor. Employer $45 ea. 64&-5848. al. 20412 Craimer Lane, Hun-CARPET Layer has acces.s ;' ~ 0°@0 0 '<J> t ~ Maint•n1nc•Floor1 10 Key TOlch RESI'AURANT I ~ $8'.l 1 YR. guarn, del & in-tington Beach, 9624202. to 100 rolls of carpeting .o-• 8 • ·!'>.: H ....... ·n "''" ""-"• I ~ =""'=--='o---c="· -below wholesale prices, also ~ !§>. • (;J ~ ouseman, ext"-'• I ..... -,...raton BUS MEN Wanted. Prefer TRAl·EES stall. Late mod. all cycle STEREO $100. Vanous remnants & shapes at dis-........ iao ••• a , ._ shampooing & Ooor care. F/ over 21. See Miss l\fcLeod n Kenmore washer. 839-1718. clothing:, .Couch $40. Toys & count prices. 979-781.0. y ' 0@, o ~ • ~ lime, day shift. Small acute alter 4. REFRIGERATOR. GOOD many items reasonable ~ "' • care hosp. Pacifica HOlp., Needed for inventocy BEN BROWN'S CONDITION, priced. 184.5 Anaheim Ave. AUTO body work & custom J ~ ~o ;::-O 18792 Delaware, H.B. Short term assign. lo HB. RESTAURANT Full & Part Tim. $35. Call 536-9908 Apt.10C, C.M. motorcycle painting .done I' ~ ~ . 842-0611, ext. 248. GARAGE Sale, 2415 Tutsin ,~,',I~ & reasonable. 6'1:>-6261 .~ (;'\~ -1/f) . ' 0 ' MA 1 NT EN A N CE Mall "VICTOR 3ll06 S. Coast Hwy. • DISHWASJ.IERS, washers, .. l.7 I TEMPORAR'IES South baguna. 2nd Shift dryen, reblt, guarn & Ave., Costa Mesa, 642-1182 .• T.:=· :;-==,,,.-""'==ell' ~ o o 0 .. ~:anted, 40 hrs per wk, us-~AURANT Bookk_...,,. Workers NMded delv'd, 83&-763J; 546-5218. Upholstered chairs, Kitchen Nln1rod Camper. H~milt~n o@0 ,;~, ~.: , ... ·.a, . Salary open. Contact'George 1360 So. AnWlm Bl. ...._,~ ~~....... · -tbl/4 chn toys clothing Beach t!lectric rotlSBene. "Cl' , ·-· .. Smith GU Lido Parle Dr, Arwiheirri ~1 wantQlf, 5 days•wk. Apply in No Exper. Nece11ary NEW O'KEEFE & MEJ!r 1 books. Satisun. i0-4. ' 673-o261. Bayside Village, e & -; 0 N.B. or call after 5 pm, pel'90n aft 2 pm, The Five RITT DIS1!WASHER, $4:>. SAT • SUN U ,,,,, S NB No. 275 • o. r, , , •. 548-1608 CrownB Restaurant, 3lk>l E. Trelnlng Proviffd Call &»-1935 • · "" " 0 · ....,...., pc. l:n .::=o,=:::::,~=~=-c~ OFF1CE He!p, lite bkkpt1g·1r; Coe.st Hwy, CdM. No phone f A dinette set, trinkets, dishes CRI~ & mattress $30. High .::..>• ""'""' MAINTENANCE work. P.tan 1yping. Must have Calif. alls led I ccepted I Hoover rug & floor sham-lBt Hsc, S.E. corner Bolsa chair, $7. Stroller, $8. lo 0 0 C '-I for p It i me. Apply drivers lie. 9 •amG pm. 443 c accepRN. 'S pooer & l lank vacuum. Chica & warner 8464022 Dressing table, $7. A1l xlnt '!) ~0 ....C Silverwoods, 4a Faihion W: Bay St, CM. IH.'HlWO. FULL TIME Jake Neufeld, 548-1050. GARAGE Sale: rnnette, c~ cond. 586-1398. o a 0 /W.nl Island. NB OFFICE Nun~LVN or OR-F/tlml! 9.lperv!Jor. $451 .640 Per Mo WASHER-.t:-Gas Dryer, Ear-tbls,) small refRg, ski 2 WARDROBE beds, 6 drws, ~, ~~ medical auistanl. Starting OR-3-11. RN • 7.3 Tecb. ly American braided rug e q Uo1 p . , e t c . 1 9 8 7 2 Sturdy $100 All xlnt. ·n , 19 1 ~!:~ MANAGER salary $500 mo. Moo--Fri. ICU-3-11 A: ll-7 RN A: LVN PART· TIME 9x12. S3fr2158 after 6 PM Gloucester, H.B. 963-2'125 Honda SL 100, $710. \ Exper. Not Nece11 979-5680. (NI Time&: P/time) $JD0.$410 P•r Mo REFRIGERATOR, 5 yean ANTIQU E CLOCKS ~789. Joln growing chain of sue· OPERATORS, s1llgle need).e lnservk:e Director old very clean PRIVATE PARTY ' T~o"w""L"'Ec:---;s"1,-e"'r"'1"'1-n-g 9047 .LJ... Give rooms a new "coun.. celliful car washes. Must overlock. Zippenetter. Top Pacifica Hospital, l8'19'l SUPERVISORS 893-0060 962-6351 ' (Craftsman) 8 settings. xtra ) JI ( try look" with puff pillows! ha.r,f ... mechanicallaea~i$tudi pay, exper. oob'. fr,olrs Oelaware,·H:B. $'20 & Up f.10VING sale: G.E. dryer Household Goods 814 pieces, 35% on . 644-8806. SIZES 6-14 .J 1 NEW! Add zing with a -.r to superv 1.Ug., 865 Production Pl, Call &t2-0llll, ext 225 $65. Kenmore wuher $lK). I=-.:--=-'--;,,;_ f_. 41' "'fl'T • PUFF PILLO\VS! J oin 6 x handle cU.5!omers. w ing NB. ' RN SuPen"ilor for amaJJ G. 8. lndustri•• DQlh good cond. 979-6635 SELLING everything-super USED BICYCLES "l ll~Mi""41 1114-.T ...... 6" scraps or uac solid fabric. to work long hn. $185-$250 PAINT Sprayer & Bell nunine borne 1n beach atta. stereo. MclntOSh MXllO & All types * 642-JZr.I _Pleat, then stuU. Pattern wk to 8l8J1 de{it>nding on Sand'' Wanted •-~-Call. n.c: 4!M-8J75 for ap"". Call (714) n....SSI USED Culligan Mark 5 water M~-11 ' In t be ..-at 17338: printc.'1:1 tissue pattern background. Rapid advance· Wl" ..,.~ !: aoflene:r, xlnl cond. Call "-"'""'· JBL, spkr system WROUGHT !roll Jenee, 7 1 go g 0 .a •·-pieces Jor 12" square and menl Fringe belle., xln't County Fumlture ..-&.>5. RUBBER prea operator -To Make Appointment 545'-0W. S-7. Pror. turntbl & tp pie<.>es, S'x.5', & posts, alJ f(r spring, for panlswtallo and round pillo'w, future. Call for appt, Gr.at future • cortQtany \YI~ b'l.U» Steady' work; Wlth C~--~&-----· I recorder. Some good antiqs. $65. 962-2112. dreacs in pretly, wer-benelita.Oomlno 'hlduatriesc, be fits wuu..... lo _........ Personnel Director 1mer11 Chrs couches Ibis old fresh prints! sew this EASY SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS 842-4453. 17672 Arrnstrq;tc, Irvine. ne • ... ,. -'l"' Call 10 AM.fi PP.1 Equipment 808 desk' chime Clock. 'Misc SPECIAL shag carpet sale. quartet In dunk-dcy·go cotton tor each pattern -add 25 MAN AG E R Tr a In e e 557..fi0.52. · = ~ter training. Call hsc~ld Items Sat & Sun. From $2.85 yd, Can Install. knits Dacron and nylon cents for each pa Item for Sales.man lDr fnst growing PART'•tME , -=~=~===-I '"'""'"'!!~~~'l!""!'I'""'" EXAKTA VXIIa, 50 mm 487 M0...,;,_ 'ea Rd· Reas. Guar. 642-7101 eve. blends. Air Mail l\nd Speclnl Handl· Tile " ••·me Jmp-vement " SALES CAREER * TRAINEE L '"''· 13."i mm len11, Wes ton •• ..,.,& nyon ·• N Be • T ,, ~ ed 11 9047 ir,,'f; otherwise third-class = '" COUNTER GIRL' Apt Ji: CdM (Comer of Cst cwport a.c,. enn~ Club 1.·11lll pa. em • : d 1 1 Venter. Nal.ionWlde ex· . ' Be ' your own boss. $850 PlastiC Manufacturing . light meter, flash, exten. Hwyl.' family membenhip tor aale. NEW Glrls' Si:tea 6, s, 10, J!, e very-wl. I take three . pam:ion program OOen xlnt Over 21. AppJ.y i.:; peraon guaranteed to 1tart.. Free ees for l..t\yup & Molding . .a tubes. tripod, waiat-level ' I SIS 49!J-4200 . , t4,., S\te 10 takes 21A yard& -6 weeks or mo~. Send to opportunity tor advarn;emtn,_ only after 2 pm.. DelJ Jib~, trailllng In mulUple lirie in-day, 40 hr, work week. viewfinder It heavy lc.'8.ther ewe ry ** WATER CONDITION· Inch. ~~~ Broo105ks, UieN_p1 All.altY Eal'Tllrllt!I over $10,lm ltf deJfcate11St.n ·Rt 1 t a urant. surance while )'OU work cut-Appl,y in peraon Edler In· ClllT)'l.ng cue. $ 1 3 5 • FIVE CENTS UAJ l , • •··•=11 ecr year. Ph &4>1133 or 8J)Ply ~unt &: Adams, flu.nl · rt(ll job. Call. Mr. Wet.ton, dUllrles Inc 2101 Dove 536-990!I. INDIAN Jewelcy, silver &: EaldR. Evers6ft, new S700, 1 SEVE;.Tpaf· ttern add 25 .Dept., Box 163, Old Chel11ea at 2221 Harbor, Colla Mesa lncfOW .BQ.cil, near ~v-On or Mr. Stu 'Boorh, 542.2527 Nrwport Bea~b. ' NIKON FTN·f i.4,.SJOO fl.rm. ~· Just returned1 a n.g $350. 64-4-4355. • :nJ8 for each pa.Hern lot Statton, New York, N.Y'. MANAGER. mature female t>tup, • or 544-1989. T NOffflMll Much more Nikon gear incl reservatton. Al new Ho1poin1 refrlg., left hitnd Air Mail and Spe<:lal Handl· l001J . 'Print Nl\rne. A.ddtellt, wanted. Womem l!Wimwear. Pt/time: htlp ddiVl"t'ina · &: i.ALES OPPORTUNITY p n_yrti•t/GdP ,_,Un r Jena. 5@--8034 ~i:iirJ.:.,,~b~C:Jel~· door. 4 14" ti.res. 642-6391 lNr: ofbe.rW\te tlilrd<iAM Z~~E ~~"LE ~1;7· '?2! Appty 390 E. 17th SL, CM. plcldne up ,evs. fl.tUJt haiw • AVAILABLE .... ..,tlme. '1r".'" iessen. Fumltu-110 · ' """ ' : · Pool. Tables 'VHOLESALE delivery wW t~ thrw Croctll!t k t Free 54&-«JOL -drivtt1 Uc. ~ 1643 for a.areulW... :ro9nK man. Apply In. pe~ Penny· •• dtan jeweh'y l't'p.a.ired, SLATE & NON.SLATE kl dr motti Send to ' n t, etc. . ~--CM M ·-"'-_.-.....__ aaver 1545 N........-Blvd Navajo Ttad1•"•, 2432 .,•~-33.13 ...... ,. •• __.._ ~..t& ...... -:-~ ... na.nv directions, S()c. MAN -•ted to ~-110• r~~•.tia. • op-oat h&\le Uo:cilllff lype ' ..... _., ., EVERYTHING $10. SALE .. '5 .n.1.-vc <l'Tr"V'ftJll auu ... , mao·UUt lUllil &N'Oli,t..I._ ~ .... bw.ines.. 'p;~nt portunity mip!Oyer. A&leJ ability. Imrnedlate Of. Bird Aviary, mattress, bar ~= Blvd.. C · M · , PILOT, 442. P1tttem ~t., :::'1 fa,:.r.rsk:ti. 8:_~ · wotk., full lime.. Beach Sta· P......-.. =~valla~. -~ UU~~~ T~ RES .,.._,I 11001.s, ant~ chair, cheat, OJA Sol , a l ct S350 Miscell1neou1 ~cll'k W~ y 18tb10Jt-• ~ tt"nlL $1.00. •lA-Inc., 1807 N--c-H1~-Tr11-~~ w, :.6;,,rvJOl ...,._ ... , ttf.n:, ......... p drapes, m-:3794. . . pprox. . . W11nted 120 . . . . ... ln"·nt ~-··· ..... jih;d''C,M .... .....,... ....-..._ ulc for Mr. Whiles. pref for ~ County A qua!: Sol. eanings l ct. NAME. ADDRESS;;;!.!.--,... ..,,.,.-no: - --• • U )W'l"t ~. en-SAUi' l!IOple wa~ted Fumlture Mf&. Creat fbture ***Sofa A: loveaeat, never $295. t.eblure World Wb.NIED_:_u.s.~n...i· ZIP, lQU and Learn b&, y lcturttl Pal· Qu.ICJ( CiIISff lhut1utk A WlhL.to make OlitCt ~ work J~ .t~cotflpany-b~·n e H-t-1.. med, ~.fuf $160, uauaJJy (2J!)--431·192f-Hl'1Tl-dons &: 11.ccummulaUons. 'N'OMBn: t CM;~«i i~tan; Olh ~ '"~ money, advance on your Flexlble hn. ·Nrirpoft Oomlno industries. 17672 home, o. Machinery 116 Pr1Vate out-of·WWD bu.)w. SEF. MORE Q u 1 t k -mora than 100 a;ln.i -. :;t~wo;!.;:~~~ :V··S\'il &etch o!lice. Armatrq.li'Ylne.557..flm ~~ture~vtk111 uno~m Write. Cl~ Ad No. n:s ~ 0::-: $1 .00: JHROUIH A ~ ~ t:.: ·=:"~:1 ~~ ~t~W:h ~~.<•:. f#td. 892-t61~ e o er, , nt ~O!::f tr=:,~, wleder on ~. = ~:!'. ~~ s:~~mmi: Cal!1k,.. All $1~plete Afchaa Book - ll , evaluaUJW p0ttntfal ~:oro. per only. 23700 Clubhouse BED I: Stereo, comer 11e1 &G-1517 * Office Furniture/ :9sr~ srivrNG BOOK 11 .Jur, nui-Book• • SOc. DAI Ly PILOT t.mPlo.Yen for. local nat'l • $ALis o.:metiCa Indulltry. Dr, lAauJ». N\rUtl. . "'/am/Im radio, sn. Call ""l•r."ll"MOUI 118 Equip. 82' aew today, wear tomorrow. Boo.\ or lJ rr1.,, .lf11wb.. !nt'I "1-· Call Pat Cln ,au w6rii with women. WAl)'R.ESS. t>p .... OYd -· -• $1. 50c. A I ' Beran. 833.-2100, Detutis & Coi:n~ •let. 'trairMc 21. M\lllt 1 be mature I: BR6WN Couch. Good con-LAWNMOWER $10: ltalt SEC. chn $8·$23, wood desk.I INSTANT · FA S ll l ON Q11lll Boot 1 -16 111.tternl. WANT ~~~,~~-or ~~·fn:~u ~ ~~~Dl~3:! dltJon.$4~28 m,"~f~.£1~c edger ~CM~'';1:.!.~~~V. ~~.f;ct •. H~~s ol ~~!letlm 'Qultt Book I -~Jl't ~ lt•a a breele. ~· •• ldl your Ming at 544-3("1. bristol .. Costa.Mesa W1-ll't1; T aofa. 2 green, tRVIN'E CO.st Co\Jntry Cl ub ROYAL Elect t,ypowrlter Need a "Pad"f Place an ftd l ~Uh for T., .. u.,,. .. .. L-WI I &wnll ............ .J\Mil!' Dally StU Idle ltaru nowl Cll1I icll t8' old llWZ ~ the new blue. lounge h&lrl, gqollne ~ri.rahtp for Mle. $110. Xlnt eond. Call "2·5678. J!i buutlhtl pattmia. SOc. PDot C!Wfled. ~ 6G-661t llOWI tMt. • · edl;t'r. Xlnl cond. 549-0941 . CaJJ 642-U!llS 5&-3612 I ' For "lln 1d in Woman's World C1ll Mory Both 642-5678, •><!· 330- Pontsuit or Dress New! Puff Pillows - t . ' '!". , l I ( ; a I l. .• I I c ' 1 I ·• -p I 0 0 I -D t ! l ' M j • . -N I ) I B { -• ., • I f B t ' A II ( J L• l M i ' ' ' H BC 2 I a \ I • [ • 8 '1 \ < I • • ( l • t l , ' ' ' \ I < . D 14 ' I l e L. < ' ' s 11' ' ' B 31 • ' ~ ! 31 ' ' ' i ii ( ' J B -Sc I I a I 1 e D I \ a I • l l t - ][E [ ~ .• [i[ J[il . l§J I .-..... ..... l§J 1. • ---.......... .. , Par11 949 Vans t3 Aulot, lmport.d 9l 0 Autoo, lmpor1od =...;;.;.;F :.:.;...'-· -r-------1---'-'-----'~--= Pets, G1nera1 ISO C•mpert, Sale/R1nt 920 GROOM It BOARD, 11 yn 1969 VW Camper. Low all bl"l.'fdl. Fret pickup! mUe&Je. 1973 Uc:. Hl¥b "Shrrry'1," Poodle puJ>I ioor. ~ll 01 ltoraa;!!. CUnvt. ••,,. i ll.\/all. S46-2:M&. CQIJCh bed. Elec butane Cah IS2 ref.ria. Sink " Stow, Aux. heatrr. AM /1'"M radkl. 968- • FR.FJ:':! Needed detpenlf!-. ly, '&fltld home for Leo, our gentle Marnialadti Tom Cat, ,from Hawaii. 6'73-t732 PERSIAN klttel\f, CFA reg., ah0t1, xlnt. I ines. $75. 9745 «It. 6 pm. ATTENTION IMPORT OWNERS New custom lhcllll, . $\19. Overhead sleegera le campers at wry, Vtt:'f lo prices. Financlnli:; avail. D PARTS SS2 ena;tne, intake · Id 6 carb .. head~ w/ valve job. ({~buUd­ a e blOiek "1r-1966 Ford 390. Stn"""1t axle. ·"' e Mf..:MlT • -------·· --.. l§l 893--0513. Antlquas/Classlcs ?S3 Dogs 854 CAMPER Shell for 6' P\ckup ' • 892-2970 • !--"--------$120. Lumber rack alto420 'SS Cl.ASSJC T·Blrd, ad OBEDIENCE c1a.u to atart &JG..92"9 cOnd. Betit oiler. Orfg. \Vt:-d. Jan. 31. 7:30 pn1, ln * NEW 8, CAMPER Owner. Call 642-9577 the Newport Beuch/lrviOO SHEU.S $119. Recrution1I 1:1.l'ea. Open to all doi• ov1•r 893--0573 Vehlclu 5 mo. old. 5-46-4928. 9S6 Cycles, Bikes DOG School lnstrucUon New Scooters 925 Claase11 starting T u e 1 ---'------9:~10: 30am, Wed 8-9pm I: Sat 9:3G-10:30am. Ma.rtln- cre11t Rennels, MG--0989. r.11NJATURE Dachshunds, AKC Golden brn., females. 8 Wks. Shots. Papen. $50. BICYCLES Bicycle Shop going OU! O buslneu. All bikes 5'7o over cost. Everything: muat go! 17412 Beach Blvd., H.B. (ne1r Slater). '64 Honda 50, 1tl'eet bike, NEED aentle depend, ~ a._uto. clulch, $7$. Schwinn tecdonT Buy an l\KC Gn!at Conl'J 10 spd boys bike, $30. Dane. Black•. & blucz. Xlnt : San1, 846-0975 aft" 8 or temp. It. quality, &48-6957. • \V _ 5-16-7515 \ BEAUT AKC reg. pure '69 450 CC DUCAT! S~ German Shcphenl pupi, 7 Scrambler. Only 1400 mi. wks. $50 & $15. Some black. Never used in dirt. Xlnt '67 FORD CAMPER-VAN Corr\lersion, lee-box, Bink, double bunk, n1ag1, big lirea,929ASJ $1S95 * Dune Buggy * for sand or di rt $125. 494-4747 or 494-8457 008-8185. "'""· 1<so. s.,,,,.,, eew VW DUNE BUGGY f.1ALAMUTE/Shepherd pup-213:592-3035. pie11 7 . wks. 3 males, 3 RI°'CK'='M°'A=N:::, :::.,,250-~CC~. -$6-9'. temalc11. $35. Huntington Konis, liltron, bassani pipe, Bch, ~292 skid plate, new chain, tires AKC registen.>d German & more. n 4: 893--0135 S h e ph e rd Puppies . HONDA 890, new top end, Rin-Tin-Tln b Io o d I i n e · $100/ best offer. Taco 44, 5 837-5487. HP. good suspension. $65. TOY FOX TERRIERS 545-21'.!5. • • Rt>asonabl l' 250 cc BULTACO, real good. M>-'T~KE Silver Manx Body, I-house engine \vith all ew part1, Wide wheels. Tire1, New Con- vertible Top. Street Legal, "'9C!E $1195 1965 CHEVY SUPERVAN AUSllN H&ALEY 'ff SPRITE • fm.5214-• DATSUN 1964 Nluan Pall'OI ~I drive jeep. New brakeK, valve1. Good cond. &!S--3050. MERCEDES BENZ 50 USED PORSC S AT MERCEDES BEAC!'f .-'IMPORTS M......, will> contrutio• Blk ON DISPLAY ..... '71 cou~a 911 914 lnt~rior092.FYV. 1---------' ,.... ' ' ' $966 Good sclccUon of 1---------5-si>et'lls, some m~. some BMW FIAT Wk.'d BMW's • 1970 850 flAT SPIDER ... Sharp New Car air, l\YIJ 2S9). l'.rom ... Good oond. :e,soo mi. $1000. Trade-Ins $1895 , See~· It • You11 t""' i; .t'\ •H-1~PNDA ;;km~~~~ ~Ji'i.?;Je Fr~JJtitporlBl yofr '1tl/I ·11 HONDA u.ec1 Me;~":." L.... . . ..:."='ll.::!.-1 CREVIER BMW CLEAN, Low Mll<.'S, 816 ONO House of Imports Porsch e •65 ;,c.: cM. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ~e~.-~~.eian~aski~ $895 6$2 Manc~ester, Bue1~ Park 4 Sp EE D·CH ROM E '61 CHEV. VAN ll>3lJI -... ~ on the Santa Ana fN.·y WHEELS . V8, standard {2$437B} RY[ ea.cl} lntpnrts 523-nsD Af.1 /F'a.1 radio, heater, Jug. HOWARD Chevrolet . M ...oe_ 280 SE mint condition & priced 10 Bo h T A ....... seU today . .(TroEIEJ ONLY $1695 Vblt °"'Ghom~r -'"". "-·-. -'71 Mercede1 Bent. gage rack, leath!r interior. Newport Beach t ops, uto. ',-ans.. $299"' ft1acAnhur Blvd & Jamboree Power St~ring, AM, flt T 8»-0SSS JAGUAR Radio. 00\v ll."10 mu... Nabers Cadillac ·11 DODGE .,. TON vAN ROY CARVER, lnc:.1-------.... $8595 . •urnonIZED DEALER V8, automatic special paint. 234 E. 17th SL J aguar '71 V12 NEWPORT IMPORTS 2600 Harbor Bl., Costa 1'1esa fX37307l $2999 DAVE ROSS Costa Mesa f>t6.4#t 2+2 Cpe. 3100 \V. Coast fl\ey., Ne"•port 540-9!00 Open Sunday PONTIAC, 2480 Harbor LFSS THAN 7000 ?.!ILES Bead1. 642-MOS. 1971 PORSCHE 911.S, special Blvd., Costa Mesa M6-81ll7 '69 Bl\tw 1600 Radio, Heater, 1'~ACl'ORY 1964 J.fERCEDES l!IO-C, 4-dr palnt, leather int, air, Effective thru 1/21/73. 4 Spd, Approx 27 M.P.G. Affi CONDITIONING sedan, whlte/--i Int. Auto, stereo, _Reca.ro Sport Seats. with great rood handling Power steering, 4 s--1 '"'"' lo"' miles showroom new '67 DODGE Van, \18/318 1''''"' R&H. Ve.ry good oond, new ' ~ auto, \'-•/tadio, htr, Custom qual~ties, 61f>.tlM4. !'rans., fUJl leather \nte-rior, tires $895 642-9'l54 COnd. Priced $500. beJO'o\" '69 BMW am, wht w/blue radial tires, absolute mint · · Blue Book. Call Joe, intf:'t'. Nw shock, brak~!' in ter New Michelin XAS condltlon in every ""aY· 'TI 1.1ercedes 250. Full power, 645-{i644 or 846-3445 mags, fat tires. Xlnt C0111,1. • ·,,A,, .l:ON\ (671.EAE) air cond. $5800. Call '67 912 5 pd XI I nd ll350. 66-7234 """ -· SALE PRICED 644-7706 . -• ' •• " 00 •• '68 Ford s Super Vau Camp-CITDOEN · AM-FM, radials, coco mats. I' NaL-rs Cado"llac MG ft'blt eng. $3349 or make of. et , E-300, refri~. stove, gw r d "'" ·<181 ·1 pop--top, tollet. 545-3215 a.ff: CITROEN-~IASER.AT( s .M. AUTHORIZED DEALER 1----------1 er. ays U't<r • mes 5 pm. ORANGE CO. HEAD-2liOO ""fo' BL . C..ta """' BR.&NJ) NEW 642-""7R.ENAULT '62 FORD Rancheto, top run-QUARTERS 5-10-9lOO Open Sunday '72 ,MG nlng condition. Near new IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '70 JAGUAR tires. Doesn't bum oil. 24 . J im Slemons Imports MPG. $.1511 • ......,... 120 W. Waroe•, Saota Aoa XKE COUPE HISS Dodge AlOO, Van, 225/6 Std trans, radio, htr, xlnl cond. Best offer, 6734395. Autos Wented 968 ----=",."c:-1."54&-=;;lll;-4.----Immaculate, air ' oond ., DATSUN p o w e r s tee ri ng, ;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;,I AJ\11 "FM 'SW radio, 403BN N Closing Out NOT DEMOS Save $600 Renault 168 4-door LESS TH.AN 25,000 MILF.S R-10, Al\1/FM, vinyl In- terior, fui!y equipped & shows, Impeccable care to Inside & oot. l\fust be ser-n fi~?~= after 12, 492-41"3 $~. ••AKC, Silky Torrl•n, • 5'!1-17'6 * NEW_ 1973 males, 6 "'k~. ~ '70 SUZUKI 50, xlnl cotld, INT'L Travelall '66, 4x4, REWARD o[J sticker price le drivl"n to fully 11pprecia1e. NOW ONLY IX!R13B! $3300 1 Nabe!9la~illac 11110. ·548--0008. lo" of e<lraa. PIS, P/B, M"'t .. u. Xlot DATSUN e Purebred Bloodhound pup. • • 646-354,1 * corxi. $1695. 494-5225 200 pi... ' wlu. $50 .. ,.. 1970 Yamaha·"" 01', lmmao "vw~'"'B"'A"'J"'A7CB=cUC:-:GccG=Y WILL PA y OVER 1 &t5-0307. wfhelmet.,,.!;f ~eage ' OR BEAUTIFUL Boxer, 2 f.! ~~w s u N R o o F A M 1 F M , Kelly Blue Book old, spayed, wanis to pay 10.Spd racing bike. Allegro ~~~~ ~;;r;;neTire~net For late model, clNn, NEW 1972 . w/chlldren. s;.o. 968-8.120. S~ia1._,110a~~~pa.nello Wheels, 639CIH. low mlleege domes. 510 ALASKAN Malamule Pup, 4 equip. ... · ......--=uo $1895 tics, imports, trucks or months old, AKC, shots, 1968 KAWASAKI 90 campers. OR wormod.11110. 54s.<113 Good rood .. 11110. 640-1935. jr_~ 71.;;;·0· ,..,;1 c.11 and •"' !or Beytt NEW 1973 !RISH Sctt<r, SatTl.fl" 145 1971 HONDA SLlOO !1!11 .21 •• .,. 1Wl DAVE ROSS 642-3632 or 646-5337 Moving ~ ! °"""" ,.1.. Good, oond. $3'5. 540-1J46 ~ .,:::,'"e:::" ~; -PICKUP LGE 6 mo AKC Ala-068 KAWASAKI ~ DIRT --PONTIAC NO Malen1utt'. blk & wht, li-1. BIKE. $l50. $100 or Do~r. pup. 5.10--5417 MS-3533 Trucks 962 '69 JAG UAR XKE Silver, auto., wi.re wheels, air cond. <412EOM) ~ -· DAVE ROSS ,. PONTIAC, 2-1lKI Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 546-8017 Effective thru 1/21/73. '67 Jag 420 Sedan Classic. AM/FM, wire whls, 4-spd w/o'drive. Must sacrif. for $2400. 968-1009. 1956 XK140 Jaguar Roadster Con1pletely restored. Xlnt cond. 6YJ....5342/49+-2071. MAZDA I BOYS 3 Spd Schwinn bike, 2408 Herbor Blvd. DOWN l\1ALE Afghan, 2'~ yrs, w th $35. Girls Stingray $25. · '71 DATSUN Coste Mesa 54IMI017 . papers. $100. ftf e I I ow ! 53&-0911_ Xlo't 548-3692. 548-7036. PICK-UP WE PAY TOP *Mazda '73 Rotary * (~GJ AtrrHORIZE£> DEALER NEWPORT IMPORTS 2.600 Harbor Bf Costa Mesa 3100 w. Coast 1~wy., Newport 540-9100 'Open Sunday Beach 642-9405. NEW '67 MG'S ,AT. RENAULT R12 ~E!:~ ... 1~~~~~~ s'2'095 with overdrive, all with \Vires ·oPEL '70 OPEL° GT ANDERSON ,'')IMPORTS .. I -··-557·5242 _.-... SUNBEAM · · '65 SUNIEAM 4 Adorable pups ~~ Cocker will be small, $10 to good hOme, 494-4Tl'9. afl 5. SCHWINN Sopo" Sport 11!-PAYMENT $66 MONTH spd, brown, perfect cond. Radio, Fog lights. new 6-CASH 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE 4-speecl, Red with black ONE owner. low miles No. $95. 67l--Ol9-I plys, lo m5t~7fs 415CA..X, Will accept lt'ade-ins interior, radio, radials . 839, ' TANDOI Bike. SchwiM 5 O. A.C. CALL MR. FRY 842-6666 099BNP $595 Boy or Lease AU Models. ff h $1595 Horses 8S6 BOARDED-Top location, $65. 20'l71 Acacia , Santa · Ana Hgts. 6#-5.107 or 644-6216 CHILDS Hun ter Pro trained. Very gentle. Attractive $](XX)~ speed w/&addle baskets, !or used cars &: trucks, just IM?i-1ED1ATE OEUVERY unt. Beac ·:' :.'=. •. 360c.c $400 oa1GR 1 "o'T 10H' ""'cHEV"0 ROm•LET'"· !il,mri)Jiiilp ~"f~ e 66-1517 • N.r!llll'll":l iutmnt MAZO L~_ ~w.=:r~J._l.il_'IS'_.-_-_~_._-_ .... __ ... _-_· LADIES 3 SPEED p· k Mk'°' Sal" Manag,.. j .I& ..:."=:t.:'&, --·-, 26", new $40. 96Ui002 Chev' '72 Luv IC up 18211 Beach Blvd. !$'« LoM than 71.Xll. mil" 17331 Beach BL ,,~..,., 1968 OPEL Sta. Wgo. Bir TOYOJA -35Q H_ond11, l.1l mi's 4 speed tran&. ''B.1$ tires". Huntington Beaeh '69 DATSUN "°'=="'~~=-~=='"= ·engi ne, 4 speed stick, dlsc1---·.,.---,_-.,. 548-Mrl aft 5 &: wkn& F'ull__y [actgry equipped & 847-6087 Kl 9-333l 'MERCEDES BENZ brakes, radials. Clean, very '70 Toyota, Marie II. ~-<tr., '71 \1 • HUSQVARNA .360, a"'°lotely •howroom "°"h. Cash For Clean 5-DR. WAGON good oood. 1 ow"'"· !095. aoto, di.c'"brl", R/H. Jim. DAILY PILOT 39 _ ..... §] TOYOTA'S '73's 970 Now at '72 Pric:es! MANY MODELS & COLORS Immediate Delivery AT Sell It • You'll Buy It .,,Pw. LfADi& W TOYOTA l!."66 llar bor. C.AI. '70 TOYOTA Crown 4 Or. sedan. 6 cy l i n de r , automatic. alr 1:ond., vlnyl top, lo 1nilcagc. (239810) Kl'lll'y suggested retail $1980 Sale price $1499. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC. 200 J-Iarlxn· Blvd.. Costa ltfesa, 546-8017. EUectlw Uu"U. 1/21/73. 1972 Cc!ica S.T Coupe . $2999. l 01\·n~. 3500 mile11. 4 speed, R tlI. Radial Tires. Blac:k landau top. Prr rty \1ellow Car~ Llc. 58LF1'G. Toyota of Ornage, Inc. Tustin at KalellB, Orahge 639-6750 1972 TOYOTA Landcruiser \VAGON like new. Worn hubs, radio LIKE NE\V! ! Green .l 'A'hile. Only 3300 n1iles. 282FWQ $4066 See It -You'U Buy It ~w.ltADi& • TOYOTA 1966 Harbor. C.f.f. 646-9303 TOYOTA '68, 4 whefJI drl.Yt! Landcruiser, rct:ent Gate tires, duot gas tanks, 283 Chevy eng .. Borg \Varner • O'drlve & Pac. Very good corxi. $2200 or begt olfcr, call Zl3: 37~271. '70 ToyotaJ.tKII 4 Dr Sedan, Heater, Factory Air Cond. New Tires, Beautiful light green finish, excellent n1e<"hanical condition. Below Whol .. sale $129'j. 645-6644. 1970 Toyota Corona Marlt .Il 2-<ir lastbnck. Beaut cood. $1~50. Call all 5: 54.l-6588 or 531-5289. 1969 Cordla !la wgn-Xlnt cond. New tires. R/H. SUpcr sharp! $. 60-0879 '70 TOYOTA Corona, 24,IXKI (.door, yellow, xlnt cond::' auto. $1 ,495. 494-4618. Jllf ) c;;,"•"~-"~="'.::00:::77_,,· ._M_aire~·--•!fe_'· (<2SFJCI $1999 Used Cars & sr..:;.~-...:;~:,., ~~ ./=. MERCEDES 6'2-r;ORSCHE ,;;~o:!a'°!a wen . Xln; '72 Yamaha 3"' Endoro, 3 Nabers Cadillac Truc:ks YNW7<1 $ll9S 1972 oond. Now tlres,1 R/H. TRIUMPH rail trier. Both $850. Must AUTHORIZE!O DEALER Howard Chevrolet DEMO & EXECUTIVE l,-71-PO-R.SCH--E-9-14-, ""'.xl_ot_oo_od_,I Super ~harp! $875. 642--0879 -------- Bo_at_•o..• _G_e_n_er_a_1 __ 900_· ;~It~~!,~~ 6pm. ~~~bor Bl.~~lll~~!~ Newport S.ach . _-...,-.-=-,i.-.:l""""i...-.. -,. ... --.~. CL1972EAR250ANSECED'S!,-SL:E ~'\oo.tras. Make olfer.1970 TOYOTA Sta00a~6. ~!R!!r. wift "72 • 18~ii' E nterpri.ke. 6 cy\. 940 -ftlacArthur Blvd & Jamboree -'"""'f ..0&&'¥41lW. .ru~ "" . Volvo l'enta, 170 hrl, Chry; Sale/Rent HUU.fAN (1962 CfOMMER) 833-0555 a GOO w. co.t .__,. ! 3 to choose. F ully Eqpt. '70 Porsche 911 T, 5 spd, M·K 11 wheels, a nlce ca r out drive w/power tu~. PANEL TRUCK Equipped V ~ B1Kt1 w:-..oe ; 1972 280SE SEDANS ~.cm ml , Service records. (~0 ")L.Y $1295 Auto biij(e pump & blower. '73 Pace Arrow with Overhead Rack -\VE PAY TOP DOLLAR Only one left! lofust see! $5595. 830-4270 ON 20 gal fuel tank, full COVf':S, 181/2. ft.Motor Home Interior I i n e d with .E'OR TOP USED CARS '72 DATSUN • Wagon, exclnt Tremendous <·v1·ng. ·n Porsche 914, xln't con-s TA T I 0 N • w AG 0 N Coast Guard equip. Com-· SHELVES • PRICED FOR If your car is exira clean, corxi, take over payments. .,a ditlon. automatic trarui, &fr cond. pass, guui.;es, convert. top, $6795. QUICK SALE. see us first. New $3300., Sell $2300. AM-Call 642-8601 hea.ter1 __ metallic, exterior, HOWARD Chevrolet MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree Newport Beech -skis, to\v rope, ladder. hol-1212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana BAUER BUICK FM 8 track stereo. 540-4349 "Priced Too Low To Quote" 914 Po-ohe 'Tl. Low ml. •matchmg Interior. 67398E tom pa.int !01· salt "'alc-1". '73 Ti'og• ~Jra> 29'l5 Harbor Blvd. or m-7320 also ... $1966 VOLKSWAGEN gold lc11! name In llC'A' .,, Cost ~t 979-2500 All-American racing mags, cond. Slip goes \\;ilh boat. 2 11¥2 ft.Motor Home '72 Ford Pick-up, FIOO, 4 a esa '71 DATSUN New Car Trade.ins all extras. 642-3472. Yr. warranl y on boat, l ~·r Off Season -Sale Pro"ce mon old, 4,200 mi, P.S., U.lPORTS WM'TED 24().Z 1970 280 EL .... $5850 ~ SC 16110 "-·I y 'll B It '66 VW BUG $lDJ or best ol II d PB A"lo •= VS "-"-O-"°O Co""~·a Air '63 Porsche, """'• . . . ""'°" l • OU U)' • • On •""· '<ost se ue to · ·· • """' • '"'"""'· ·-'6 ..... J Full Pow Aoto. f N ·-Good -·~ • $6795 645-4033. ' ~ TOP I BUYER . Runs perfect, nood1 paint. er. ew eng1'""' .....,.,.. moving. Ski Catalina hoat. Qri<rinal Inside &. Out, air condition" g. d! fJ.23. 11150 493-m76 aft 4. nw. tf.wiA· ditlon 49&-3884 U ORDER Now 18881 Bo b Bl · cond ... radio , new mags & 1964 •·~ 4 hl d. b't ·n VW •··od'al eam-\Vill take $3800 or o er. engine. ~ T. P/S, P/B ac v -· 'al 29!K::F'V 1971 $6895 olJ<J\... w lSCS, re 1 ..,.. 1 ..--· Seats 10. Sold OC\V $54Tl. • 1969 FORD F'250 Pickup, 390 BILL ~1AXF.Y TOYOTA .,. BQR) ·• • · -. . Private pty. 551-3955 & SAVE disc, $1550. Hodaka 100 B, H. Beach Ph. 847-8555 radi 1• $4. 19s' Mt. , ~yl top, eng &: trans. $2600. T12-35J.O J,.OYOJA 13,""500 ~e1•038. Pop-1 T5op. Xlnt * * ·~ Call 4"" t>=i><> ____ , _ _, or 4!»-7375 ask for Bob co · "'"' aft · * * * Crevi'er Motor5 ..... u. ~. $ For J unked or w1-.:i,.;.ac1,1 auto tran!l.: a ir cond. P{)l,\•er /M · M · T PIU to H--' dow 1392AEP '68 Targa 911, 5 •"""'· ·~ Harbo•. C.>J. i:.tl:-Q'lflJ Classified Ada . . 642-56TII SKIPPER a1nt an BMW '65 Chev. 1.-11 on au s. -~ .-,,n 6 ) . r:..'"~ J.01UO • ,,_---~ .. Desires full time employ· ,,,,,,3171 w/camper shell. R/H. 1 ~""'4"-!>l-'-"1003.7"~""~608=,,24_hn--;.;; 4 1970 250C ....•... $569~ ~-Fm. $3500 or oiler. Call Autos, Nft 980 Autos, New 980 ment. PoY"er boat only. 208 \V. lst, Santa Ana -Stereo. lmmac! $ 9 9 5 • Autos, Imported 970 1200 w co.t ...,_, Auto trans., air conditiofting l-:l25-2615. _ .. ·--~·-· ·-----~-· 714, 963-4<88. PACE ARROW ='.,._=='l58'CTC-cc=cc--:--7:01 -...,, ,..~ & priood to """ ooow? 1798· * '63 PORSCHE. Good"'""· '&l _F'ord \~T.V-8, auto, reblt ALFA ROMEO OLK) Runs well $1400. 536-4£00 or OUR HUGE EXPANSION 14 it. Boot. Fis!\ or Ski. Ml'reury 35 horsepower. Fiberglass over wood. Trailer. $300. 5:"17-5692. TIOGA ooglooe. Cl•••· Cab high 1972 Oat'"" 1200 Coupe, Xlot 1972 220 Sedan .. $5895 531H1240 · ' VOLKSWAGEN shell. $895. 962-21J4. Alf• '69 Spider cone!, ph aft 6pm 10,<m miles, aulo. trans., 1968 PORSCllE 911, 4 spd. 1962 Ford FGOO, flatbed VELOCE ROADSTER 646-5996 AM/FM, show room fresh. xlnt cond. Mags, lo mileage, Bo11ts/ Marine Equip. · B1~~T~~~~~Nc truck. ~~'H'". LEss ":f'~~ MILES 1911. DATSUN .;:~~W~ cpo ... $84•s 1~"':;~"~: ':!.!: AND CAMPERS l963 DODGE Pickup, good AIR CO NDITIONING ALL MODELS Classical Model! ML Silver wheels~ $3450. ZWF931. 904 LATE model gray marine engine, 280 J-lP, complete wfvelvet -. drive transm. Xlnt cond. Never been in salt wa!l...>r. TI4/52fHl557. INFLATABLE utillty boat w/1973 Aferc. o.b. + extras. 5.lH344 Al San1dJoaSan CaDJJ:istr~"""' cond. $49S. 5 speed trans., stereo tape&, IN STOCK .w(Bladok.TZUW~1end s a I e 673--lll.9 ongs e n iego ... J . 548-3842 vinyl interior, many xtras Immediate Delivery price · 1 ""J WILL Buy your Porsche or 493-4511 e 499-2261 e 837-4800 absolute mint condition. ~ JIM SL EMONS vw paid •-·oc~. Call_ 1963 GMC P.U. Orig owner. CYYK389) e1\f ______ »-•-· IMPORTS u.or 20 .. ",.,··"oco'rkNTINRA:/,;COFRENTRALS N•"" """" oommet"cially. $3222 :i;,rµiport !llUWllll 120 WEST WARNER . D~; ~~~ ='~ M• have 20• PRIDE & JOYS vC::: shape. $995. S46-M~ N11bers Cadillec ·~ ...::,w~~ Sente Ane (714) 546-4114 bargains galore. VAN CONVERSI:JNS AllTHORIZED DEALER ,.,.. DATSUN~ ... z , 4 ,~.Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmpor'ed' :-a.Jes e Service e Rentals 1966 VW Camper Van, Xlnt 2600 Harbor Bl., Costa Mr!S& ,... -"IV .,..~ .. * D I * Cond. Many Extras! Make 540-9100 Open Sunday mags, amftm. S«XJJ. Pvt. anmar nc. orrer. Ph: 675-5675. pd pty. Perfect. 49Hll3 Boats, Power 906 1380.1 Harbor Blvd., G.G. .72 GMC Varxhµ·a '6 ton ·~:~ 105~~ ~: '6'9 DATSUN 510 2 door, @ 31· CABIN CRUISER 1965 531~ heavy duty 350 V-8, auto 4gz.:.oo11 after 6 P~f. radials R.&H wfw, sharp! • w/M.any Extras. Recent Next to G:G. Datsun trans., 546-5525 bet. 5:30 pm. Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! Wl79Sant. aCald' ~,"",,,~· .67H698 .. "~·-TH I' N KING ' haul & survey. Xlnt cond. Rent A Motor Home ~N;,:ttd;;;•;;·;·p:;•;:d;,":'::Pla:::;::":::::;"":::;"d:;:?~;:Cal;:;l ,;642-56711;;:;:::::· ====:::..!.==="==~==-=~='"! Slps 6. Priv. Pty. $7,.500. for your Vac1tion ~ 642-2'138 . * -· * 3!'ha~,;~bin,':.ioo~d~t, WlNNEBAOO~;.ii "'"by™:,""1 STAR GA'ZEE~.W. • OF A NE·W OR USED VW? stereo, depth firxier, full luxury unit for rent ay "LA!f--.,-r -;;::;•;--'-•-1 galley. m1U.1Y xtras, sleeps 6 week or month. For appt. Br CLAY I. pO.., In coinforl. $8975. 67S-8577. caD 545-6083 after 2pm. . M Yow Dolly AdMtr Cvlff M · '72 Pace Arrow 24' V J,ccorJ/1t9 fo llt• Slo"-Y 1970 Sk.":iPJACK 20• open alr, gen, $20 a. day & Sc n1i To d.wlcp messoge for Soturdoy, crus, 1$•hp OMC. 2 wy rnd, , "'~-4239 reodwerclsc:oo........,ldlng to...,_ -mpa••, xtr·•, xlnt oond. Frtoe insurance . ......., -...-._u <><> ·""' S of)'O'rZodior;binhsign. $5400. 675-3773 Trailers, Travel 94 · 1Tlnl 31 For-61 y- Boets, Sail 909 14~· TRAVEL Trailer, ~ ~~ H~ :J;;:... Sabot-prof. Fiberglass mold. Porta-Poll!, stove, icebox. :~~ ~~ ~~ Al!IO 1 hull sails hardware, ,161111""°::.· .::Call;:::.::.546-51168"°'"-"'". -.-..... ,....,. 36s.t-'6Mcn $225. 6§.1534 Auto Service, Pa~.949 :~ ~=:., g~ COR~AOO 27, l Yl' old, de-ci.Dll.LAC P ARTS • t!tOO 1~:~ ~~ ~= 711ux,1•6821~!!,:.;... '17ftOOR····· n"kl"•l~ -Model • RA VE GOOD 11 0.:.-'t ... .,. 71 P..tonw t.>.»' TR AN S MlSSION, AJR ll Moklna · A2Col#ltlo11t nF,_ 16' HOBIE CAT COtlDmONING UNIT, l!:r"" !!I.oWr ;~~ $1l00. 673-1387 RADIO and RADIATOR. lSll'I "SlW... 75°"""" ~<>HI<!< Rosi St. $anla Alla 16~ 46~ 76~ 8oet1,Sfipo/Dacks --910 I~-:;;~;:~~·~:::;:~·~-"""""' "11.-\< 77..Y~:--Jfi'\';f,Ci,~ I. II~ "'Yeu 71Hordli ooa< space avail, prime '69 VW HOJ, variant eng. ~~ ;:~ ~t.'i':', Ioc.. Sm1 bot\ll $L75 It lrg .rue! injected, $350. 21 ~kwl SI le 11 ......... botlll UP to .U' $2,50 ft &l&-3814 22 We!NCI "2Coftduct 12.Y..-tf JAN. 'If Mi·USO M/F -8:30-$:30. 4 m19 whffla & t1.._1 ~~ ~~ ~l'r'' .~.I ,,;. '' BOAT 1Up -2-t' to II'. Sall w $150 * 25Di,r S5To a titw,.~ l-Jm pref. Btost raClllly in NB. n1 414-4747 or 494~7 ~=:It it ~ ~ ~ l!!i~--~~ Lldo Park Dr. 675-'472. -.-66~,-, .. -VW PARTS ''To ~ "°"" .. ,.,...._ -n V _,J---0 I ftA"I 29hd "~ ·~ n-: ~ acar""><=11 _., monay • ™' ' ~ JO O'I '° c..---. to Serwk• .,Alt, • JI~~ hoole, &pt.1 ll()rt N job ® 1/20 "" -· •'<· Lhru a D•llY Pllol CUSTOM paioting • o (lM ""--(}Kma! 2-,_ Clauitlcd Ad. Sell Idle l1cm1 too complex tor us. J'r'ee ~! Cao 642-5678 Now! estim3tf!I. 893--0v""lS. ,. I Let Bill Yates Volkswage n Prove To You 'fh at We Appreciate Your Busine§s OVER 150 NEW & USED VW'S TO CHOOSE FROM. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. BRING YOUR TRADE. OPEN stll'fIV. 'l BUY, RENT, OR LEASE VOLKSWAGENS -PORSCHES AUDIS -'VW CAMPERS' & MOTDRHOMES • IS DUE TO OUR CUSTOMER RELATIONS PACKAGE •••• and QUALITY is part of the package ••• Cers , Trucks, Motor Hom••• Camp•rs, ...,hat· •"•r your motorin9 n••d• •rt. And t hey 1rt btcked bY qualltr f1ctory furnished p•rls. Quality mt c!\anic1 tquipmtnt to sft to it your s•nict is th• bast at Sun.stt Fonl. "TRANK YOU ORANGE COUNTY" Suns•t For d sold 6 197 ca,; in 1972 ----..Y:htr; Must B• a Rteso;.' -1 I I I .I • . ' . ......... • . . . . . ·""'. . ' " ., ,. . ·, ' . ----------~Frid_,, -J~Ji9. 1•73 '. !!!!!!!!!!~~1~~~~1 ~~~1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ .. -.. 5 §1 [ -..... 1~1-----_"'_ .. __,§J I ..... "'.. 1§11 .. ~"'.. 1§1 1 :.1 ---·-· -~l§iiii· ~1~1;;;;;·""•"'• .... ..;:;l§J;:.l;..· ..... ·"·-"'·~l§J~1 , f.0 DAJl Y PILOT • Avlot, Imported 970 Autos, Im rtod 970 Autos, lmpori.t 970 Auto., Imported 970 AulOt, UMd 990 Autos, UMd 990 A!ltot. ~ 990 Autos, Nt w 1--;..__,_ ___ _ 980Au.tot, Mew VOLKSWAGEN VOL SWAGEN . VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN BU ICK CADILLAC CADILLAC I =:;BO;:;;B::;TI;:;RR;:;;:;Y:;;;'S;::=:: I L-;~:::"";-ruo-;;?Js;-;~~I A;;::°:':::o't:;:o-p Cadillac 1-------MUST .. u . '69 I'll'"""""" :(o vw GHIA '68 vw BUG cust lntt>r. ~!6;X\. Cull S.W I C:ill ~ 4 5~, ndlo, tK"atcr. ,\ 499--1208 uft ;..p~ _ _ 1 '69 VW SUNDIAL CAMPER cleen good running car 1968 vw CPE. '71 \'\\' &111ar1•\M. '" 1.i .1.n1!L:"1o LolldOO w/extraa (ZRT831) BUICK.j)PR LESS ~9m MILES JANUARY CLEARANCE AIR C'ONDITIONING DISCOUNT BtautLM carnation red with v"~ c""!' u_•:" 11995. ca11 968-2560 ONLY $695 6-k>-1,,,<1 '61'1 V\\' Sus Camper 1600 CC. 1-'ASTBACK all' t:on<l. radl.l,. -vw=,-R~ebuilt Engine • Rt•bUil! tran!I, Chevy rims. HOWARD CMvrolet 4 11ix.'IM1 Blue e.xterior, blacit RE:-.l i)F~'F'.R' ! 645-00:~ ~IOOl SJ2....1!569. N ewport Beach Interior No. 318169833 . white vinyl <op A rlcb Nd SALE ~ .• ~ M--'-MacArthur-Blvd 4: Jan1bofoee $866 '70 \'\\' Squarebae~. prunl' 196S V\V olllr""...•mptor, cu• 8J3.0555 c'Ond. Ch1'lll'r lransfd abrOlld . IC'(lOd, new paint. Call leather lnt..rtor. F\dl power, CENTER tilt & telescoplc stetorlng, stereo multiple" with t.ape, atooee froni O'l'Ulle Count)''• ..._, Quality SIOck of PrwtoU.a Owned cadlllaca JUST A FEW EXAMPLES THERE IS A FACTORY AU THORIZED DEAL ER FOR EVERY POPULAR B1•lo1v BJur Book. 493-19'.19. ~ or 54~5325. '72 VW BUS Stt It · You'll Buy It • Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Radiafl, Am->m "•'"'" Low -t\l•M l••.:• n\l. . Days 66-Xl6'1, Eves lUUIA WW ~U! '69 Bug, rebuilt TOYOTA only 9000 mi. Ex.lint BRAN~,,73'• · Sln:..w Off "·iudow sticker price. door lockl, crulee control, llK:bt sentlntl, mo1t every dlx. xtra Cadlllac makts. Tl'Uf elegance! t922FBZ) SALE PRICED Nabers Ca<llllac Atrm:ORJZEO DEALER ~ llarbor BL, Costa Mesa ,,.....100 Open SUnday 1973 Sed. DaYdle LESS THAN 7,000 J4ILES ~·ACTORY AIR t;QNDITIONlNG Cadillac executive car with nremi.t ftnlah ii every Cad· Ulac xtra mode.I. (Sor. •103951) MAKE CAR IN THE WDRLO ON COSTA MESA'S Sctvings fo r you n DATSUN 510 '70 DATSUN S10 , Door Sede11. 4 1peed, • OoOr, Ii•• ,.. euto redio, "•·"'" Yinvl roof only 19,000 mile1. H11rry 1eh olf ltte be1utv of if'1 on thi1 one -only O•enge body, jv1t 17,000 mil11. tttt-St'.Zl $1 595 $2095 71 MAZDA RX2 70 Toyota Hi-L ux PU A SilYtr b.euty. like new concl. Only 9100 miles. With <:tmper i hel!, r1 dio, You'll lo•• thi1 one . 1799. ht t ier. Side m\rrot1 & DlHl 1!1p bumper, only 30,000 mile1. !Ca6 110 1. o,;.,.. $2395 out fo, jy1! -71 DATSUN 240Z $1595 a,;9ht ariti1h A: a c i 11 9 DATSUN' PU Gr•oll. Hat magt, bump· 71 •• 9ua,d1, radjo, h••tar. A 1.,,,;1 lo find 8' fla tbad 17,000 mil11. 1611 CZCJ witl! o•arti1a mi,,ors, ra-$3895 dio, healer. Fin• for "••"Y duh work. (6'112~H ) '71 DATSUN $1995 WAGON '70 VW CAMPER Auto. '''"'·· radio '"' heater - A fina c•r f, Fullv aquippad -"" "'· f1mil v ..... nead1 9•••'· Got r •Id V '" rool'!I. Lo mila1 -Or1n9e ••c1tion trip1 in tlii1 on• in color. -011lv $2099 $1999 '72 DATSUN '63 OATSON PICK.UP WAGON Har•'t' 1 littla rff ba1irty Auto. Irani., r1dio, ~11!-with • whit. tonnau COY• ar. roof raek, Canarv val· '" ..... c:l1a11 -run1 low -J ui! ! 1,000 mil•1 91••1-• ela11ic: for onlv $2399 $795 75 more fine used cars, campers, P .U.'"s & station wagons to choose from Garden Grove Datsun 13801 Harbor Blvd., Garden Grovt * 534-1255 * thru--out. chrome wheel5. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-91).ll) Bal ls. 67l--CM39. '62 V\V Camper tact reblt 1968 V\V Sqbk-Xlnt cond 1600 eng. &-t r a n s . White • \\'/n.-d int. Lusi ~~~ing Y.'Orics, $695, I F., su~. •~· . rack. air, M I .. . ..,,, 644-6465 '69 VW Camper Po~Top 1969 VW B V ry good Xlnl cond, new tires. C!Qnd. Se-e ':' m~ offer. Sl!:l95. &15-511-I Newport Be.,h. 64(H164, VOLVO · 640-1765. '70 VW BUS 8 passenger 4 speed, radio, heater. Priced to se:ll (i119CQR) VOLVO '73's ONLY $1595 .HERE NOW! HOWARD Ch•vrolat Come in test Drive Nawport BHeh MaoArthu~Js Jamboree TODAY! '73 ELECTRA 225 HARDTOP SEDAN l 4V39T31l4619'Jil I Sl000.66 Off \\'indov.• sticker price. YOUR ONLY FACTORY AUTHORIZED CADILLAC DEALER Largest selection ot CadU· lacs in Onuige County. Sales-Lea.tin&. -=-Nabers !!iii Cadillac 2600 HARBOR BL. COSTA MESA 541).!1100 Open Sunday '73 ESTATE WAGON '68 COUPE DE VllJ..E. '68 V\V, auro., sunroof, low See It · You'll Buy lt t4R45T3Cl05157) Full poW'f:'l", factory &Ir, · · $900 Al '69 p0Y:er windows & aeall, ~~=~·$2.:xi~ ~~ ~WtYOlLYOtali& $877.24 f':6~15) K:~~ suue~ retail $2900 Sale price $2299 '10 V\V Camper, rebuilt ort •indow "ck rl DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, engine. Xlnt oond. $2600 or \\ sti er P ce. 2480 Harbof Blvd., Co&ta best oUer. 673--8635. 1966 Harbor, C.M, 646-9303 ._ Mesa, 546-8017 EUective '71 Super Bug, mags, radials, •69 Wgn. l8,900 mi, Clean. thru 1/21/73. A!\1/FM stereo, SlSOO. auto air ~lichelin X tires · '70 ELDORADO Coue_e . &14-07f8. lug fac1t.' best oft-. 8.17-9534. · ll>idea., "Miners gtild-with ·11 Westphalia ~per. Xl~'t •70 Volvo 144 S, am/fm, --a black vinyl top, (ll.8BBK) $7777 1972 Breugham Factory air,. tull power, atereoru1d~ cotnlort seats, etc. ( Cl. $6999 1971 El Dorado FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full power, atei:eo. cruise COfltrol, all leather Inter, (3J304). $5999 1972 Cpe. DeYiDe FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full p:::rwer, leather interior, loaded with dlx. xtraa. (556-539). $5999 l'Qrld Bed sink retrig ·ck $11'95 $4799. DAVE ROSS PON· J2500. 675-18n. ' . ~. or best otter. 73 LeSABRE CUSTOM TIAC, 2580 Harbor Blvd., · ~tJ~ xi:i" 00:c.~ Autos, Usetl 990 HA~~~~~~~AN f~~!e ~int~~7 Et· 1970 El Dorado. $900. 968--0419 BARRAClJDA Im Cad. Coup<.,do Ville. FACTORY. '65 VW Bus-Camper. Reblt 1 ------~-.ONLY Take over commitment of AIR CONDITIONING cond S625 673-5547 ' ' Full ...-··-... al( leather interior. l567- Harbar Boulevard af Car•· LOOI FOi YHI IMILIM Al DAVE ROSS lCOSTA MESA PONTIAC DATSUN 24'0 2845 HARBOR BLVD. ARBOR BLVD. CHEVROLET 1964 CHEV Be1 Air Station Wascon.. automatic trans, VS, radio, heat er~ beautiful blUe metallic. PDB'030. $466 See It · t ou'll Buy It .Pw. ltali& • TOYOTA . 1966 Harbor, C.r.t. 646-930'.l 1000/o ·Warranty '70 MONTE CARLO Continent•! '69 Mark 111 ·Factory Air Condlllonlng Full power, vinyl top, tilt steering, door locks, loaded with all the deluxe xtrae. (YCN69I) . $3999 Nabers Cedlllac AUTHOR.lZED. DEALER 2600 Harbor Bl., Cosla l'flesa 540-9100 Open Sunday ·71 CONT Sedan. Perf oond. Loaded ·w/everythlng. Only ll,000 mi. $4750. 642-4100. COUGAR '69 COUGAR Air oood, AM/FM Stereo, low miles, super clean, 230AGV. eng w/lo mi's. Gd meclL '67 BARRACUDA new tires S2977.33 flco88nd. paymeU ~-. MXlnuj FuU power, vinyl top, stereo. . · · R&fl, good mech. cond. move immediately. 9'19-1252 72 VW BUS-7 P 6&-5857 M_fN). Cpe. V8, automaUc, ps, air. •n. 1~~~===--'73 CENTURY * '69 Eldorado, d k $4333 bucket ""t" vinyl roof, $2095 MAKE OFFER. &l4"'85j BUICK greenJbel... air, am/Im CZYK105) VW 'TI, Beetle, Xlnt cond.1--------~~ stereo, tull pwr, loaded. 1970 C DeYill ONLY $2695 P,/Ptj, AM/FM ste..O, Buick '70 Riviera Cpe. Xlnt cond. 644-0018. pe. I e $1289 aft 6 pm, call 962-2348. LESS TIIAN 3G,OOO MILES .69 EL DORADO 37 CO:> HOWARD Chevrolet '67 VW BUG, sunroof, radio, FACTORY • " mi's. Radio tin!S. siJoo FACJ'ORY Newport Beach 1969 COUGAR XR-7 heater, swaybar. $725 or Affi CONDITIONING firm. 546-8020, 8:30-5. Am CO~DITTONING MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree Air, radials, Xlnt cond. Call be5t offer. 497-1643. Full power, vinyl toJl,, tilt ORDER YOURS TODAY CHEVROLET Full power, stereo, etc. (TI7· 133-0555 --~~·~~~=- '65 VW, new tires, must 11!11, steering, vinyl strattl'"'"t'lenc::h AOL). ·n (GMC .Sprint). Exact de· **'68 COUGAR "'XR7, air moving. seat, auto. tnln$., R&H, WHILE THEY LASr '65 El Camino, 411 eng, 4 $39}9 sign of El Camino. Pvt. pty. cond., stereo, rad i a 11, * 536-3982 * WSW. Absolutely beautiful. BRAND NEW '73 OPELS spd. Heavyyduty susp. & Like new. Used only tor pb/ps, $1350. 673-1342 ~~vw~"--.. '°~"'."'""R.ruo"Good"_-.~be-~-;:~,":1 <'Sri'.E PRICED oE.3'.k~~61cE J;:· co~'.\.:'~0011~~~: ·F-~9PB ... Sed 00 • nd •. DFeuUY~--E~"'=1~ ~;:0;~ DODGE · 557-3688 Nabers Cadill•c TERRY BUICK 5.16-4588. _{,,., ~--dty suop. New canopy. By '67 DODGE Vao, VS/318 , Xlnt cond. Reblt 90 2600AUTIIH ORIZEOCoDEALER 1966 Impala Super Sport FuU l••th-Inter. (VDP· appt. only, 979-6136 9-5 pm ~uto. W/radio, htr, cu.Jtom HP ngine. 1.fw. New arbor Bl., sta i\1esa convt. Elect top, 4-tipd .... "~ Mon-Fri. 637-1926 7-9 pm mter. New ~hocks, brakes, tires, i::lutch. $650. m-5128 540-9100 Open SuDday INC. trans, fUll instrumentation. 877), eve/wknds. $3400. Please mags, fat tire, xlnt cond. 5th & WAUWI' 644-5987 aft 6 pm. $2111 don't call unless yoll care to $1350. 645--mt · =-°""'~536-6~~581~,----1968 Chev. Caprice. 2-dr, pay a good price for a near-19n 'DODGE Challenger, 4 •61 RIVIERA. Air ..,.. P/s, air, P/wndws, P/b, 1969 Cpe. DeYiRe ly new auto-Pick Up. speed, Jactory stereo, low diHoning, custom interior, AM/FM stereo. Top cond. 1 1971 EL CAMINO-Oun, low mil, Ex. clean, new $4795 vi.nyl top. (985FBM) $1599 owner. 545-3466 alt 5 mi. 454 eng, C.Owl Ind., asklng $2600, call 842-9570 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, '64 Chevy 9 passenger FACI'ORY post-traction, .hydro, steel before 4 p.m. 2480 Harbor Blvd ., wagon. Interior A-tires AIRCONDITlQNJNG whlil, AM/FM. Make otter. '69 . CHARGER, cream Costa Mesa. 54&-8017 El· good, Ideal for camping & Full power, vinyl fO'p, stereo, m-8918. w/White vib;'l top A/C fectlve thru 1/21/73 Oeach. SZXI, call 49&-ml. a1! leather interior. (034-CHRYSLER A/T, Power. New tires. '63 Riviera, Mmt sell now! 1970 caprice. uxi below blu BOM ). . Very clean. Prlv. party. $375 or best offer. This is a bk. At $1950. All pwr, $3333 .68 Chrysler New Yorker 4 $1525. !J63.2225. bargain. 557-3469. stereo, Must sell. 968-3371. Dr llT. Extra Nice with DOOGE ·n D~cyl, CADILLAC ~:h.'':,~ai;". ~,;. -=~ 1968 Cpe. OeYiRe ~,'~"j; ~· f;~iln!';"s.:.: ~~· f16SQ. °' CAD '61 Cpe DeVille, full ,ol700==:·,;64l-o=:l6'19~~=...,........, FACJ'ORY AM/FM Radio, Cruise Con· 1968 DODGE Coronet fOO, pwr, air cond, gd tires. '55 CHEVY, bit 327, 4 spd, AIR CONDITIONING t:rol, Premium Parelli Rad· auto trans. P/S, air, ht Owner roust sell. Allee, Hurst, all new, s:Dl. cheap. iaJ Tires, $1.S95. MUST SELL $500, takes. 963-4904 496-mB. m--4Jl8 aft 6. Vinyl top, full leather Inter-645--6644. 'GS DODGE Dart, air cond, LOWEST PRICES 962 * '65 CADULAC * very ·gooc1 condition $800 • 54&-7834 150. 6 1 3 pd !or, all power, door locks, p S k S300 '63 Chev!'} "'·ryth'· . etc. (XENl94). CONTINENTAL I • run\?. ·~4 . R/H. 4 •" ti..... E"" IDg $2222 ~· works 1)45..6396. Trucks 962 Trucks 962 1967 El Dorado CONT'L, '70 Mark 11. A very meticulously kept car. Low mileage, au xtras. Sacrifice., only 14895 (Ser '65 DART sedan·6 cyl, auto. $385. Xlnt cond. Pvt pty. .645-1219. IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ON NEW AND USED CARS SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE SAVE 4 Speed, Power Steering. '68 PONTIAC FIRE BIRD C912FFll $1165 ,72 DATSUN PICK UP $1865 4 Speed, Pri ced Righi. C903EXTI ---..,.-,-=-:-c=~'"'""cc-.,.-,..,-,~cc----,------:,---' 70 DATS UN PICKUP & CAMPER $1535 4 Speed, Real Sharp. ' (2· 1282) -,69 DATS UN 510 $735 2 Door, 4 Speed, R•dio. . 124SAFVI ----------------------'68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT Auto. Trans., Air Cond., Power Wfndows, Must Be Sun. $1035 • 120 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM 30 EXECUTIVE DEMOS IT'S TRUE! WE REALLY DO HAVE 1003 FINANCING AVAILABLE! No Gimmicks-No Free El ephant Rides -No FrH Balloons . . . , JUST HONEST TO GOODNESS SAVINGS -e-, fOl .... • u ... C. W.. • L...111t • D.tty ........ S... ...... SALIS HO UIS lllYICI HOUIS M ... • S.. t •.M. to 9 p.11t. M ... • M. 71JO e.a. to I P••· ....... t ...... ' , • .., lcrtwrMr 7~• ....... CALL 493.3375 or 831-1375 I • BRANI) NEW 1973 GMC 1/J TON PICKUPS • li9 150 •n9ine, 1p ar• tir•, 9•u91s, padded da1h, tinted 9111•, wood floor, fully f1ctory 1 •quipped. · • PLUS TAX I LICENSE IMMIDIAR DIUYllY OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY GMC TRUCKS, Y2 TON TO 3 TONS, SPRINTS, SUBURBAN, CREW CABS, JIMMYS, VANS, RENTALS, LEASING Also full line of Vant • C1mper1 • Motor Homes Mini HolMI • Conversions At Big Discount Prices. Nobody Beats Our Flnanc· Ing I I I USED .TRUCK *SPECIALS* '69 WEEKENDER CAB OVER c;-· i5;·5· Cttd~~ '69 CHEVY 1;2 TON l'ICIC0 UP Y·I, SMtp MAT ... (l04t071 . 51995 FALCON FACTORY 7450). Dir. Call (n4) 1---------1 AIR CONDITIONING 546-4114. 'fi6 Falcon. 4 door V-8 Auto, F.~1)p:::rwer, all xtras. (TYU· 'G8, 4 dr, vinyl top, fu11 py,.T, PIB, PIS, $400 ~ ck !ltl0-2'181 · $l 999 all', tpe d , I owner. $1700. I ~~~==o....,== . pr! pty. 644-4464. · Se ll Idle Items ... 642·567" Autos, New 980 Aut,i>s, New 980 1967 Cpe. DeVllle 1;;;-;;;.;;;;===;;;;:;;;;===il FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING Full power, leather inter. {TFB.149). $1777 " 1966 Brougham ~ LUXURIOUS FLEETWOOD , . FACTORY AIR CONDmONING Vinyl top, radial ti.res, stett0 multipjex. Most every dlx. opUon made. (RVM743). · $1555 OVIR 70 CADILLACS & Olher fine cars to choole from NABERS ' CADILLAC FACTORY AUTHORIZEP 2600 HARBOR BL. , Costa Mesa 540-!flOO CHEVROLET' '68 CAMARO OUR HUGE EXPANSIOJ IS DUE TO OUR CUSTOMER RELATIONS ,PACKAGE •••• and . .,,, -ABILITY is part of the packate ••• '66 GMC Cpe V8, automatic, pa, air, bucket teats, vinyl l'OQI. '70 FORD 38,00J · mUeo, """' clean. IVCK953l Complete Service Fec ilitie1 end Mtch1 nl~1I Equipment to See That When Your New Ford 11 Delivered to You 'It Will Be Ready for t he Road. Ability end Know -How Goe1 Hand In Hand Here et Sunset ford. l/2 TON PICK-UP Y ... , ._.._ c-1. IUJ921JJ '14 TON PICK-UP SAVE $ $ $ ,.,, -..., """ ·-· HOWARD Chavrolot ••• S..... At • ..._ Newport Be•ch -~1--~~4',lii:--<=,,--ff-""'=•C::;A,,;11::.::hur Blvd & Jamboree £~ 1934 Che~M, Im· 5995 maculate. Runs beAuttlul, completely n:>ttoml. Ste to aPPNCtate. Dem otter. Ge.nfen Grove. St eve 638-95211 . "THANK YOU ORANGE COUNTY" Sunset--Ford-told 6\897-i:ars In 1972·---l l "There Must Be e R••toi'I" • • ... . ' ' ' I • • ·~ • : Friday, January 19, 1q73 DAILY PILOT lfJ ---------. .. I = ... ~ ..... ~ .. iiiii.:il§l~~ .... i! .... ~ .. ~§1~1 !!!i ..... i!!,.,~ ... ~--1 -...... l§ll .......... l§l k,, .......... l§l I ~ .. ,,,.. 1§1 11 ,,.,,,,,,.,, J§l [ .......... IZ:A.. 9181 ..... L nox ..... N!W " ~-----~~:1:.-----~~~ ~-----~ I ~----~;;;;! . i:r;;;:;;;;;;;:;:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;=:;;;1~A~u~to.;:, ~U~-~===· !990~ Autos, UMd 990 Autos, U~ 990 Autos, Used 990 I Autos, Us9d 990 Autos, Used 990 ]§) I FORD 7 _ _.M_U-'S-TA_N_G __ , MUSTANG 1 MUSTANG I MUSTANG FIREBIRD . BAUER BUICK '· Orange County's ·Largest Buick-Opel Dealer.' l1a 1972 And Here's Why ••• • • • 1973 REGAL HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!! Autom1tlc tr1n1., power Disc brakes, power steering, AM radio, white wall tires, tinted gl1ss, wire wheel covers, vinyl top. Burgundy with white top. # 1738. OR For 42 inonth1, c•1h prie• includ•1 I•• & lie. $4269.75. D•f•rr•d p•vin•nl pric• $49112 .]4. Ann11•l p•tc•11t•11• r•I• i1 9.74 '!. 011 epproved er•dit with $499 dow11 peymt11I. 1973 OPEL ,.GT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! ! 4 speed tr•n1mis1ion, tinted 9l•1s, AM radio, special Sport wheels, reclining te•tt, conculed headlamps. Opel's be1t. Drive one today. s3399 OR s39s2 PER MONTH , For 42 mo11th1. Ca1h prir;t l11el11d i119 la• & lie. $3610.95 . D•f•rred p•vm•nt pric• i1 f4222.44. A111111•I p•rc•ntag• i1 9.74 ~ on approv•d er•dit with $<150 dow11 P•Ylll•11I. ,. , JOIN US IAIMrka• Motors Gro11pl .. p:oa THE _ WINSTON. \'VESTE RN 500 MILE STOCK CAR RACE Riv•rside Raceway, Jan. 21 FREE REFRESHMENTS I Het Doft, lfff, Cokel SPEC IAL RESERVED "ESSES" GRANDSTANb SEATS S.. U1 For Tkk.ts BUYER PROTECTION PLAN 24 Month s or '24,000 Mile Guarantee Available WHAT'S A MAT AD.QR WI GOT 'EM. ALL MdDIU. H...,._ led-. Stati" W09on. We WMI -Now Ye• Wl11 N• Im• CIHm)e FOi' M .. WNek eM E70117 .............. ,.,. $AYE BIG SAVINGS ON TRADE • INS ! '71 FORD '70 HORNET '70 GREMLIN .,., MA.CH f MUSTANG A I t co11dltio11i119, • 11 d Mt9 wh••l1, 1 011 th.• V•ry law Mil••· R•ey .Bl11• r.ow•r 1t.•rh19. An tJ<C•I· floor. l lG 6, jolly gr••n ll11l1h. M•t wha•lf. 1791· tnt buy. 1661 AFWl fi11i1h. A "M111t s ••.. to FLWI ~595 appr•clet•. (541 I EW) 52695 51795 '69 CHRYSLER '61 FORD '63 RAMBLER PICKUP Fltt •lltlnt 1.d fi11l1h and SEDAN 111 ••r;1/l111t condition. E•e•ll•nf Tr•n1port•tio11. 111612) I IEG 5921 '68 f' IR E 8 IR 0 400, 1966 '65 Mustang Fastback, very l -970--.-,-U-ST_A_N_G_fu_Sl_ba-ck-'li5 tlfURT V.jj, auto,--:; I l!ki7 MUST;\.~C: l,0:11. :1U1" showroom lookll. cu11101n, nice, Auto lran11. P/S, Nu 2'2,{XX) n'I. Air oond. $2DOO. deck, r/h, l)Wr !ill'!{, 11t•w . !run~. PfS. /\-1 '"1ndltlori. RUio, xlnt oond $13&1/offer paint SfM fin.DX!. Call 8.'J0-9.131 tl.ft'S, rn.11.g!, 1ur 11hockll, xlnt l\lusl lli"ll $-tOO ,"<t U1k1• l)\'('r 675-0075 • MUSTANG J rood. $750 fir1n. 61·l-4·t37 J•;i~rnJ'lllS. ~17ll-l'i~ft A good \vant ad ls a good in· 1 Sell idle iten1s 110...,•! Dill --FORD \teSlmcnl. 642-5618 Now! I Classified Ad!I ... &t!-5fi7~ I ~tl tdt1• lh·rns 1; l!-.'>to7" 11---------Au1omatlc trans, radio . healer, ei..--omy 6 cyl. v•hitc Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 54<Ml G11rden Grove Blvd. Wcsln1ins1er · Take Vai~W off ramp 10 '68 CountrY Squire wgn. Air. PIS, lug rack, Pwr rear wind. Just tuned, Nu brlcs, HI Ml but good shape. $750, 645-2037 ex 5.1 aft 6. 66 FORD WAGON lt}.passengcr. V-8, auto, R/H, Z.way tall gate, good tires. * 543-3691 or ..544-3417 • '72 COUNTRY Squire, 3 seat, MUST SELL! ll,CXX> mi. like nu. $3775for best offer. 54&-9222 or 545-4354 ·n Country Squire 10 Pass. Wagon. Low mileage. All extras. $3.49;';. Call Eves & Weekt!nds. 586-4869. '67 FORD truck % ton, camper special. Ranger P11..ckagc. good shape 6~ '72 Lm lil'OIJ&'ham., coupe. AIC, stereo, 9(kXl n1i. Ukc new. $3900 or assume lease. 673-8766 '69 LID, 390CC, 2dr., white, blk vinyl top, deluxe int, stereo. Ml pwr. air, nu tires. $1350. 540-8843 '62 Ford Gal. auto. alr, heater, pwr 1trng, bucket seats, hard top. Runs great. Gd. trans! $250. 673-9440. '68 Torino. Excel. condition. $795. New tire!'!. l owner. <M-7813 • '68 Torino. 390 eng, Rod Sha<p! $890. GU:f!Kl'I aft. 5 FORD 'roRINO GT '68. Auto, P/1, P/h. $850. 644-2693 c>xlerior, blue inl.('rior.1 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ses&"i !I $866 &c It · You'll Buy It /liw.Loo W -YOLYO LOWEST PRICES In Orange Cou nty Need A Second Car? BRAND NEW 1973 VEGA HATCHBACI( FOR ONLY THRU OUR BANK WITH JUST $300 Down + 35 Pa y me~!s PER MONTH WITH AUTOMATIC TRANS. of Jui~. $5.2,7l & on• fin al paymut of $150. A-111 fi11ac.d $2695.55. Def.,,ecl pay-11t prlu ef 52995.55 A.r .lt. 11 .00• •. We wlij..eiM btiy Mc.a. fM tM ""'°'"of lite llHI pay1H11t! 11Y77• .UU225llll. Brand New 1973 Y2 TON CHEVY PICKUP 8 Ft. Bed FOR JUST V-8, HD SPRINGS, TUTONE $400 , & $64 ~27 PER MONTH DO\YN IN 3S MONTHL Y PA YME NTS & .011• fl11ol poy111•11t of 51450. A111a1111t $3699.<15. Deferr•d poyme11t price 5<186<!.00. A.r.R. 11.50•0. Serial :ltCCXT43Z126529. ~ WE WI LL ALSO BUY BACK FOR THE AMOUNT OF THE FINAL PAYMENT I The Dealer W.lth The Low Overhead * * SALEBRATIO I** BUY YOUR NEW V.W. NOW-BEFORE THE PRICE INCREASE-MAfiY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM-OVER 250 NEW & USED CARS IN STOCK! GREAT USE·D CARS '68 VW BUG ...........•........ $1049 4 14'"11. ¥l11YI lnltr., l'91FWA '67 VW BUG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $995 '66 VW BUG $895 '65 VW BUG . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . .... . $795 4 sllffd. M8Gl17 '63 VW BUG. ..................... $649 4 WMld FfW4'f '69 VW BUG .................... $1095 GOOCI S,,.rp C~r. WYBOI• '67 FORD MUSTANG ............. $1l95 '71V.W.4114 DOOR ............. $2195 Lew m1IH, r..ilo. WSW lir•1 llMte!' IOOEO!. A r•I blry ti '70 FORD MAVERICK ............. $1395 't)'I' Ilk, "''"· liuy th is PllPlll•r , ••. imAUC '69 CADILLAC CNVT •............. $AVE VI. IUIO. trlM .• la<:. •lr, -tlrn, ..,.... CV'I . •.cllo, ""'''· hllled ;la.1, Pwr. slNrino;r. P'*'" br•n. pwr. wlndowi. pwr, tN l1. lmn'l9c11i.t1 C-1tiOll. '70 TOYOTA MK 11 C:PE •........... $1695 '70 914 PORSCHE ............... $2995 Auto. lr•nt. Yellow wlln ble<k ~,;.ior. '6o\8QH 5 1~. AA..1FM ~•e.fO, trim ;roup, dirk 9rtffl. l'01CF J Hurrv on 1~., -- '72 V.W. DELUXE BUS ............ $2795 ·1 '68 VW FASTBACK ............... $995 RHWI, r.ctllol II••·-~ •Ir cond .. linmtc:lll•lt. :lllEVZ recloe, ,,.. ... _ l(Ev•u '71 VW BUG ..................... $AVE '61 v.w ......................... $495 EaC9ilaflt .. -k:•I. 4'1CIO Frft/I INll'll. Wiw fir11, !lllllo .. ~ulwr, 'Tre.,._terlon 'Pfl"l•I ,.,FEH '70 VW IUG .................... $1395 '72 V.W. BUG ................... $1795 linmtc:vlele Cl,. "1AG8 LOw mil.-.. lac10r, ~r1111ft, redlo M\IEME I t 5695 -___!J9.5 -----•1--- • \ . .. ' .. ' \- • F rldal, J1nUNY 19, 197) 9 DAILY PILOT -- 1 .._-;;.:. .. ~~~l ~ .. ~·""';;;"";;,l§l;;;.-1~! ;;;; ..... ;;;; .. s.~/§J~ +-11.=--.... -.· .::;§J~jt~~1j~~;;;;:-.. __ ,~~ 1--·.._ ][~].:;;I ;;;;-"';;;""~!§]~.., {-....... I-) -) . . I :A::.:'"°":.::::::..U:::Md=---"°:..:.: A-. UMd 990 'ilutot, UMd '90 A-, UIOd 990 Aulol, UM!1 '9Q Alilo1, Used 99!1 Autos, Ntw / 980Autos, Ne.w 1980Autos, N.,. 980 OLDSMOBILE _ _.... __ __._.....,. 1§1 MUSTANG PINTO PONTIAC PONTIAC T·BIRD / Olds '71 T~ 1 '70 MUST AN~ .CHOICE OF COLORS I!) '72 Wat. AJr. Pit, P/b, 1910 Pootlac Fln!blrd 400 ·10 BONNEVILl.E 4 Dr. '68 THUNDERBIRD,' FUii · Air t'ondltlomd. Autwn11.11c. FAC'roRY I ~'"· 1''lnt $2,400 Taket! Cbupe. $2999. Alr I t'Ond. Sedan. l'o'A·Cr •tecri114:, power, factory air COi> Po\\-er Slee.rll'le; Rll.dto. New AtR CONOJTIONINC Prl puty 61$..8644. Auto. P/i, lac. stereo. Very power ""'lndows, air co1\(!., dltlonlnc: (1191\St) $1599 Bdled__Drfl$"1·J!LBSU • f)Allpo~r,___yjnyl to.p, stereo._ PWJ9 -·ni oa. ~·-' kn.,!. mln•u'cow2~~~,!!!!11 °"!· vinyl top, l':XctptJonaUy lo PAVE ROSS PONTIAC, n~ All loaded. Cbolee or vinyl apd. Low ml. ~ '"""' Xlnt· T ::_.· -1. Or~o. • 1 " ntllci.gc. C743A0El K~Uey ~;l80 llar""""bcir Blva.. Colt& lnlerk>t or tai.ioalry IDtt rior. corrd. $1000. 80-122$. o, ••• vr ••, nc. auggeated retail $2815. Sale M~. 546--8011 £tfectlve. ~ loimmw .,•culate. (OSOXCO) • PLYMOUTH Tullln at ~""~•. O.ange price 12<!9 DAVE •ltOSS tn ··;:,"':-=11;.:21;'-/13::;:.-· c-:=--::-=I nA ~"'"' r· PONTIAC, 2481.1 J1w.•bor .::59 T-Blrd R ~ Good $ Blvd., Costa Mosa, 546-8011. · W\8 5""""' 3ff9 P.L YMOUTH -. "l\l GRAND PRIX. Green Efl<otive·thru lt21ffl. -'"'$~ ~Ul2 . - Nibert Cedlll1c Great bu,)' on )Ow CUJeaa:e with black vinyl top. Power 't..! FUtEBIRD De rt be! .67 'IUST 'NG V8. '"nt ,--•, AUTHORIZED DEALER 1968 PlYmouth VIP ~ -'-. wtdJ•~";.!• fa(~~Olllr) ..:!!; · : se. ge *'70 T-81RD, 2 dr, 11ereo. ,. <:> ...,.. ""-ll.I ilth v " "'-............. cri2A\J ~ with matchu1g mterlor, full Power, seat/tlll whl. / BRAND NEW 1913 BUICK CENTURY LUXUS .,.=;' JMI \/4, t SIL C•te, ltl111e 111~,. m~lk:. AM , ... ;., Mr c.M .. ~ ~lfilMJ, rtmolt 111lrl9r, """°lfltlt, nti-lom IH!llt<I d•lll•t WllHI coven, powtr dlK llraitn, ,1, "5W, linlt<I ~i.u. Sr«k -J1J ONL y s4349 ""' ·'" I Lie . Alt. ridk>. pwr. Servtced-~IHOOarbor Bl.,o~'~·~ndesa H.!;,ltlow t,~ ... vlnydllorool. Air DAVE ROs.S -PONTAIC, economy 6 cyli!'der, power Veey clean! S'll75. 6'73-1342 reg b)' WOpljln driver, ,1250 . .,.....--., P:CU -ft)' COuu n .... ra • heater. 2480 Harbor mvd.. Coal• 1toorlng, a u t 0 mat I e. 5'1-1'13, ~1' wk , n d '68 OLDS 98 Exce11ent condition. Private Mesa, 54Hll!T Effective i061EKR} 13299 DAVE &12-4•113 party , •• price $999 837.fDI lhru 1121/73. ROSS PONTlAC, 2480 l.u.'CUty sedan VS, automatic, 'L'" PLYMOUTH v • auto. ="-'==-----Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. OLDSM. OBILE ps, air, AM/FM stereo "" · -o, ·n CATALINA 4 • Doot· !)46-8017 Etfectiv~ thru '73 VEGA Panel Expre~Sell VEGA radio, vinyl roof, elcctrtc matic, power steering, hue-hardtop, Full power, air 1/21/73. or trade fol' van + cash. windows + seats, Low ket seats, good transport&· cond., vinyl top. (316EKSl 646-3372 '73 OPEL GT'S READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! Olds. '72 Cutl111 ''S'' DL.\'.. HARDTOP CPE. mUruoo-e & clean. (XEM07i} Hon. ('154F'ZN). $499. DAVE ~ DAVE ROSS PON· '69 CUSTOM S-.Auto., Pis, 250 .::::=::--~~--,-,-I ~-ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 Har-.-..J oVt!rhead cam. 6 new tires. A good want ad ls a &ood ln- CLOSE OUT SALE ON 1972 IUICKS- OPEl.$-GMC TRUCKS NE_W-DEMONSTRATOR5-EXECUTIYE CAllS OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY ' FACTORY Am· CONDITIONING Po\\1!r steer, brakes, Y.i.n- dows, vinyl top & f\lll vinyl Interior. AM/Fri! stereo, multiplex, tilt \\'heeel, sport wheels, elc. etc. Lmv, low local miles. (lnX){)) S'AVE $ $ $ bor Blvd., eo.ta M .... 546-TIAC, 2'80 liar,... Blvd., $1100. Pvt, 492-5096ve> ·='m"e"ni01. ___ _,= 8017 """ Costa Mesa 54&-8017 Ef. -:-HOWARD ChevrOltt · """-'ectlve -thru 1·21·13. feetive lhru 1/21/'13 Autos, Ntw 980 'Autos, Ntw 980 Ntwpori BHch '12 PLYMOUTH w....,, 91..:::=;:...;:===--I ;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;::;:~/ M •-• Blvd • J ....._~ pass. Auto trans, PIS. '.68 CATALINA 4Dr. H.T. I 1 RCn..iu•\lf « ain ....... ""' P/8, air. Xlnt cond. $3350. Full po""1!r, factory air. l:IU555 979-8459. · (683CCGl U499 DAVE '72 OLDS 98 Cpe, Loaded. ROSS PONTIAC. 24lK> MIKE McCARTHY BUICK SALE PRICED Nabtrs Cadillac AUTHORIZED DEALER :j(IQ Harbor 81., C01Sta i\.lesa 54<Hll00 Open Sunday 1966 OLDS Full Power, factory air; PONTIAC Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa, ClOODTLJ $4199 DAVE 1---------M6-8tll1' Effectlv~ thru 1·21· ROSS PONTIAC, 2480 'TI GRANO Prix, brwn 73. · Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. w/tan landau top, PIS. '69 GTO. 4 speed, radio and BUICK·OPEL·GMC TRUCKS 15550 Beach Boulevard, Westmi nst er M6-llll7 Effective tbru P/B, P/Wlndows, tilt steer beater. CZDY562) $1'l99 1121/73. whl, air, Michelin X tires. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC, '66 OLDS Toronado Dix h.t. _4_9t<J322~~------2480 Harbor Blvd., ,Costa PIS. PIB, air, $995. '62' 'QJ BONNEVUJ..E 4-dr H.T., Mesa, 546-8011' Effective 1600 cc Mark II MGA, $450. Plw. Pis, P/b, tilt whl, ,thru='-"l/21=m"O-~~-~ 894-3341 1 Bloc!.. North ot Son D·ego Free,.,,1y On Beach Blvd at ~\cfaddi:r. 53 1-2450 NEEDS SOME TRANS \VORK. SlOO . .f9.1-4747 or 494-8457 '68 DELTA 88 Olds, 1 O\\'net, top condition. s1r:i0. Both very clean. ,.Must sell. vinyl to~ra.dlala. AM/FM, '69. Bo Ule 2 •-· •"'<""" nnev , w , v1n. ,,.,. ·~ eves. clcc14"700'.===,,==~ hrdtp. Tilt whl, tp dsk, air 64&8148 '69 TORONAOO. Like lle\V. Any dB,)' ls the BEST DAY to mod., plw, p/s, p/b: '73 All factory ex 'P-1-s. An1·1'llt. run an ad! Don't delay. , Uc. Exceptionally clean. Sacrifice $25.'15. 644-8189. .can today 642-5618. $1650. 968-7225. ''I ' ' '•I ' 990 Autos, iJMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Aulol, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 ohnson &~son All Marks and Continentals Are Now Being O~fered at APPRECIABLE SAVINGS L1·._,t~. Step Up {To LUXURY Excellent Se lection Of Owned Mark Ill"s and ( PreVIously Mark IV's . -· . 1969 CONTINENTAL MAR.I( ID Beautiful han:noi:iy. of color. Si)otless finish with contrasting leather interior and landau roof. EqUipment-the finest. Full power, climate control air, 6 \vay power ind1v1dual seats, A~l·FM stereo, power door locks, tilt wheel·and much more. See and drive Today. (XHW493) . . . . . . . '71 Mercury COLONY PARK WAGON 10 Pass('n_~er. Actually pl'iC'ed undt!r cutTent Kelley Blue Book. This ellr has e\·l:'ry conceiva ble accessory including full f)O\\·er, iactory air cond., ~\:-.-1 /Fl\1 stereo, 6 way j)()\\"f'r i:"r•t. i•o.-ir r'IH'k and n1uch more. Driven only 2(j,()()() n11lcs. !93-!BSX I $2975 'il Continental COUPE SALE PRICED SPAru..;LJ\'G l·xtenor finish \\'ith imm'a.t'!ulate lnterior. Landau .. Lux11r.\' l'l")ll1ppf'd thru-out. · Full power, auto. tcn_1p. a!r .• \:'ll-F:'ll s1<·r,.n, lil t \vheer, power door Joc ks. Drives J1k» 1 .. ·\\". 1S(l.-):.!J01 $4 575 "ill_ fu;ouo line 300 , " . . CRUISARE VAN CAMPE.,R l~J .'' .B. \•·8, aul ... 1rans .. P<nvr r steering, air oond., \\fl!f't tank. hutanr-. rani::r-11 ith O\'f'll, s1•:ivet front seats, mftny other catt1[1l·l' IH'Cl·;;~oriPs lo\v n1ileage one owner (813DVD J ' ' $4775 $4475 '68 Cadillac SIOAN DE VILLI! A TI'RACI'IVE thruout, full power equipped with factory air, 6-\v&y seat, door locks, tilt & t.ele wheel, landau rooL Excellent tires. (XTA354). $2175 '69 Continental HARDTOP COUPE BEAUTIFULLY maintained inside and out F..quipment with landau, power steering, J>O"'er brakes, power win- dows, power seats, radio, heater, factory air cond (641FYV) $2775 '69 Marquis Brougham HARDTOP COl'P~ -SALE PRICED EQUIPPED with the finest equipment including full pow- er, 6 way lndlvldual tront seats, factory air cond., AM- FM stereo radio, tilt wheel,_landau root. (323DRB). $2375 '72 Vega COUPJ Like new, 6000 miles. Equipped with auto. trans., radio, heater. This beautiful car is not even broken in, See and drive this one today. (107ELV) $2175 '72 Plymouth SllRING Like new, 15,000 miles, nicely equipped with V-8, au119. trans., radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, ~r conditloning, Landau roof. See it today (400ELB) $3275 · '70 Mercury COLONY PARK WAGON 10 passenger. Beautifully maintained. Full,y. equipped in· eluding factory air oond., power steering, power braket, Juggage rack. (982 BIM) $2975 " SEE ONE •.•• TRY ONE •••• BUY ONE ••.. TODAY! • ' r " ,_- OUR HUGE EXPANSION IS DUE TO OUR CUSTOMER RELATIONS PACKAGE •••• and -,- ECONOMY is part of the package •.• A higher trede-in allowance on your present car e lower price tag on your new car all adds up to t rue economy ..• and it's all.part. 1 .. of the package wfien you talk to the . fol~s at Sun.set' Ford . "THANK YOU ORANGE COUNTY " Sunset Ford sold~8-9"7CiiSiii-l 972 Aulol,. Imported * 970 Aulol, lmpomcf 970 Start The NEW YEAR -; Off RIGHT In A ..• -.. D·OT e DATSUN BRAND NEW '73 DATSUN 1200 2-DR. SEDAN Around 3cf"1iles per gallon, reclining bucktt seats, 4 speed trans., s a f e t y front disc brakes, full vinYI int., white walls, wh..a covers and much more all standard. S.r. #488843 NO DOWN And Only ••• $58 s2 . 0 .MO. FOR 48 MOS. ON APPROVED CREDIT Otferrtd p•yment price including t•X, lie ., i11ttre1t $2808.96. Annu•I p•rcentege r•te 12 .67 ~. USED CAR · ' * , SPECIALS * ·~& DATSUN PICKUP RMlt, ,.....,, Lic.tM Ht. Tl'A lff. 5599 '72 VEGA WA.ON 4·•PMCI. •Ir ttfllllllonlftt. 111'1 ......... ... "'"' WKll 1111. l•CtPIMMllf cleall, Llutlsl ... si'nci '68 DATSUN 510 I U.l•I SlllCTlotf OP CLIAN USID • DATSUN PICKUPS "M'1 • 'H'I LOW AS 5799 '68 DATSUN 510 WAGON t-Speed, "r8111t, -...r, Wlllff' wl111 blft lllltrltt. L~ ~ t!t ISM. 51099 - ·10 DATSUN 1600 \ ·-· • ·····-- -I • • • . • • • .. ' • . • IF 1111 • : •' " .. Don't Miss The ''GRAND OPENING OF THE HARBOR BOULEVARD OF CARS'' Dealers Nex~ Week .:: , -Tues.-Wedg~Thur.•Fri., .January 23rd-24th .. 2Sth·26th. · --.... ------------------------------~..-----------------.... --------l!!!ml--------!! ALL NEW 1973 OMEGA WITH BRAND 197 NEW ·AIR CONDITI ONING ~ i l2 B27 Dll108233 1 DELTA 88 TAKE YOUR-. 1IHOICE ·TAKE ' 1971 . - Aut~roatic, Radio and '*": Heater. lno ·EKS J ' . . -~ f ' ' ~- .1970 196 Full Po;er, Tilt Wheel, Air, Vinyl Top. IZNU 24 11 1971 ' PINTO White Walls, Carpet, Radio, 1-jeat.,. 1012 GQR I s 666 ' $6()00 DN. $3900 ~E~- 36 payments of $39.1 1 on approved credit. Deferred paymenl $1473.96 Incl. tax, license and aU finance char9es. ANNUAL PERCENTAGF. RATE 11.08 %. 1967 1968 ,. ' ~ .. YOu.-Maverick ~1 CH.01-CE Heater, Wheel Covers, Nice One. 1147436 ) Orange· County'$ No. 1 Honda Ce1r Dealer 1972 HONDA COUPE 1024 EOHI 51266- EXCELLENT CONDITION " L.S. Radio, Huie•: A"to. • Ai•, Radio And FULL PRICE Air, Vinyl Top. !TTT 118) Heater. (649 BNP I '66 ~~~Th~•~•~ v~. ,t, •~tom•-$366 tic. IZNM 549) . . -'6· 8: f ~~~~~~o, heater, air, $866 · P. steering. IVVP 393) '69 ~L!~: :.~:?..~tic, P.S., $866 radio, heater. (715 EIM ) '68 ~~~.5st~;~~:. radio, hHter, $866 vinyl top. IYDZ 9181 , '69 ~;~,L~! !.?.~~~m1tic. $1166 1271 FBD) · . , '69 .DODGE POLARA $116 . Auto., full power, air condl· tloning. (YQB #1) '7 0 ~.~!u~o~~i';!.wor 1teerln~, $1266 r1dio, he1ter. (562 BFE) · ! SERV ICE·· PARTS·· BODY SHOP OPEN EVERY SATURDAY 7:30 'TIL 5:30 ' .. " .. ,. •I :1 •• ' :· . .. ·: ' • " ' .I • ' • • " • ' • J . .. " I •, t ' "' • ' I . . • e; on't Want to Be Tlie BIGGEST Chevrolet Dealer In So. California The · Best In Values ·Like These NEW ·CARS! ! ! Brand New CHEVROLET 34 Ton Brand New MALIBU : .. ~·PICKUP · 8 foot bed, va en- 9 ine, ,fic:k shift, hea- vy duty c: o o I i n 9 , camper mirrors. lll5 184 ) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ' Brand.New Monte Carlo Sunroof LOADED LARGE SELECTION OF CAMAROS Air conditioning, electric sunroof, ___ B_RA_N_D-NE_W ___ vinyl top, tilt steering wheel, bucket $45 .. 9920 . . seats, rally wheels. 1410723) LUV Pl(KU_P_ =--IMM---=-EDIA~TE-DELl_VERY ____ _ Brand New~~1973 VEGA WITH CAB OVER "King Of The Road Camper" . . The BeSt In Blfgains Dke These-usED CIRS! !-! ~!O Ca~~rb~ k~~~oe :~"~~m!~~~fa.~~~.1!s'.. BARGAIN CORNER :1~.FHo:.~s~9~I~~:~.~~ ~~,~~:.!;~~~~; .. ~;,~~~ p 5 °~:~;• ai: 'con d c Su e~ nic:~· air cond. Sharp car. IXSP624 ) Vinyl roof, air, 4?0 cu. 1n. ys, P.S., P.S., radio, b cyl. Sure is nice. Si999 s.1399 '61 ~;;~;~~~. s2299 :~3 1q9· 'Sj '599 , .. '67 Caprice Coupe '71 ~A.~~~~~~;:~~;, ,0 ,d. 51599 , , Save Money!! 69 Mahbu Wagon ;!;d .:oi::~k;;;":::i:·. :~::· ,:~'. lb91ezM 1 wow. 69 MUSTANG Cpe. 72 Chevy Carryall b P'"· VS , .P.S., '"to mot", l"g· IUZFI Obl , 71 OLDS Delta 88 '2699 b <yJi,der, '"tomoti<, redio, le<-ll fo". l ueh, P.S., eufo:, eir, gage rt1ck , nice. !XVK63 81 . . , t f h IYPNJOSI ~ radio, 15,000 miles. Custom trim, '69 Camaro Coupe '67 Nova 4 Door ;:~i:·t~~s~60'1"10·• ,;,yr ,70 Ford Torino '68 Mercedes Benz . . VS oir <ooditiooiog rod ·o 1· k '6 7 IHC C (I '699 250 SE Ol "e gree" 4 D,. Sod. 4 dv~. p~w er dsteer1ng ,_auto,mat1c, ra-sh ift. nice. !VEH11s i I Is IC arrya Cpe. va, euto., radio, P.S., air s~eed floor sh ift, air •. P.S., elec. io, <t ir co n ., sure nice. I 86ABA l . w1ndow\.., AM-FM rad io careful V8, stick shift. Extra good. '6R C C Hear Th"1s" iv914b0 ' · ,. amaro oupe •• · · · . '68 Cougar Coupe '71 Chevrolet Wgn VS , yollow, whito ,;,,1 'oof p s '72 c t M k IV '68 CHM Yi-Ton Prckup s1199 -. . 1 1· · s . ' .. , On ar 28 000 miles White car/black in. K1ngswood Estate 9 pass. wagon. au oma IC, .i tr. uperior c . r • ve 4 d radio new I • Th b I A. p s p B (VW R9 14) . • spee . • . terior. P.S., air, auto., va, has '73 •.very es one .. Ir, .... ~-., -Co~ e. This gorgeous gold car w/ . camper sh ell. {399011'111 license paid. IXDB72 ll (~~1 ~CxN.:o. Superior cond1t1on, '1999 ~:::~h:::;',;~:~.;;;,:,~·~~p:'~,:~: 17·2 CHEVY Yi· Ton Pickup '2799 '1999 s3599 er, good miles a nd we Will ' V8, P.S., euto., radio, Su-- .. TR ADE. _ p•r!or. ( 13b08KI , , • 7 -, _ . -. -.. I 1. ' . ' • J \ ----__ .,,__ _____ _ ---,------.' i • '72 DODGE MONOCO ' 50RADIOS TO BE GIVEN AWAY . EACH DAY . $199 DOWN $J3 MONTH For 36 MONTHS ONE PEil CUSTOMER FIRST COME· FIRST SERVED Auto. trans ., power steering, power brakes, electric windows, air conditioning, speed control, radio, heater . (5850ZK) $199 DOWN $88 MONTH FOR 36 MONTHS $2288 'FULL . PRICE ll"i•-.io....11Jilltlal "'"· 1rm1 • ...i. 11., llunM I Ill .. ,., .............. _.mdtl !0< J& -L l>tl1'11i ""''· ,,~, Ultl incl '°' t. lie ..... ANllllAL 'IRCiNTAGI a.t.J! IGSJ._ BRAND NEW '73DODGE VAN- 109" wheelbose plus lull fac tory equipment. · • (811A83V022751) l•melllate · .Delivery' $2 .... ,. 88 ~~~E . . PLUS TAX I LICINSI I TAKE --y--2~~lS!»~oP ' . YOUR CHOIR-. ' '72YIGA HATCHBACK '69 MUSTANG · '66 FORD 2Dr.Hardtop ._ $788 YAN $268. 8 FULL . PRICE BRAND NEW l ltt ia 101e1ldft. ppm I Ill i1 •o ... ""' Pl""· ... I. to•. I~°"" & .. '"'IOI; <hot~··'"-· "'dol lo• lb_, O•lotr•~ .,.,, '"<' ~ll•'•"''·"' • !.<°""· WIJAl PlRU~!•Gt ~•1110.0-. 2 DOOR HARDTOP Fully factory Equipped . OrdJr Yours Now ~199 DOWN $84 A MONTH · ~~:r~; $25-88 _ ~~~~E . 11••i•1tt .. ln "'"' U lit ---... 1 .... 1c. .... l all <O••J"'I ,._. ..... -· <0 04,t tor Ji ~·· llol01ro' Pl'"'·''"" IJlJJ •Ml, 11•& "' ..... AINJAI ru:{(NIAG( -._.,ll !I.Ji..._. • '72DODGE CHALLINGER 5 1388·~~~~E ' . ' ....-.... s199DOWN s42AMONTH FOR 31 llOMIHS --~ ---~-1 19' ;, total •~""":1•1fl1o!Ol lftlll:p.,m. kl. m.·tnnw I-Ill e.ry--2--Door Hardtop. Fully foctory e(fu ipped. Low r. dlorgu .... cippr. cntfrt 1ar 16111111. o.rerr..:lp)"flll.priu $171 1 ind. mileage. ( l 96FFH) -~I IW:llllt. ANltJAl ,£RCEHTAG£ RAU 9,.0'0 '72-DODGE ~2188 CHARGER ' ' V-8, oulo. trans .• oir condilioniog, power steering, vinyl roof. (240FBE). PULLPRICI • '70 CHEY • 5488 51188 ' ' SPORT YAN V-8, ooro. lfons .. radio and htoltr. (1654SF). FULL PRICE PULLPRICI '71 P,INTO V-8;ROdio, heater ond bucket seats. (XIH7'29) Auto. trons., rodio ond heater. (404F01) , PULLP l~Cl;....1-___ . _____ _,;_...-.,;;,;--..-f-....... ~~~~~-----.,._- fJI. FORD 2 DR.Hardtop '67 YOLKS ' 5488 5988 2DOOR ' ' auto. Irons .. radio ond heater. (804CJJ). !~ ... ~.~~;~,;,~~!D 511 '88 BUG rod10, heoter & wsw. 4 Speed trons., rodio, heater. (237FF J) PULL PRICI PULL PRICE . '70FORD·· ____________ P ...,. __________ ......, ____ _..,_.....,_~---------- ' 67 COUGAR 2·DOOR '69 FIAT $ 588 . 850 RDSTR. V·8, outo. tr«1s .• power steering, rodio, h14:1t- er, (903£A£). '67CAMARO 2 DR. H.T. • V-8, 0ttto. trans.. power steering. CUV098n. PULLPRICI • I 4 spied trnns., radio ond heoter. (YXW550). .,69DODGE CHARGER' V-9, 11.1to. nns.. powtr steering. rodio. Mot· tt,oircond .. vinylroof (XS29L9G162466) . ,-· , . 5288 PULL PRICE 5288 PULLPRICI · 51188 -' YAN·3/4TON ' - V-8, outp. ti-ons,, rad~ end htqttr. (64+90F). PULLPRICI '.~!;!~~~~c $1188 '"" ...,, 17!30J8~ ' I .) '' ' "' 1 J. , • • 4C DAILY PILDI DON'T MISS THE GRAND , OPENING . OJ= JIARBOR BOJILEV ARD/Of .CARii TUE·WED·TMUR·FRI JAN. 23-24-25·26 -' COME IN TODAY' AND REGISTER FREE TO WIN A 1o.;SPEED ·BIKE! -· . '• 4 · BIG D•Yi. :Of fUN,.JIRl;EIS AND . SUPIR . IAVlll•ll W•TCM MR. FUU DllAILI IN JiUT' .~UK'S WE WILL AWARD A 10 SPEED·BlKI TO SOME LUCK'( WINNER ON EACH . OF THE FOUR 'BIG DAYS LISTED I ' 'NEWSPAPIR .. *·* * OVER $1,000,000 WORTH OF NEW & USED CARS & TR·UCKS . SLASHED TO BELOW '72 P-RICiS. FORD BRAND NlW COURIER PICKUP TRUCKS •2122°0 I; SGTAMC22573 2. SGTAMA08353 3. SG TAMC22560 4. SGTAMGl8396 5. SGTAMBOl729 , + 2944 2102 2901 2499 2824 COURIER CAMPER SHEW MASTER CRAFT SALE PRICED $232..,.00 Stock #TC B70 G.M. '66 GALAXIE 500 '67 PONTIAC HARDTOP $773 4 Or. H.T. VI , •uto.~ radio, heater, Tempest Cust. VI, R&H , auto., full power, air cond. (2989641 P.S., air, good miles. 1IAOG9tM I s973 '67 CHEVY CAMARO LAST CHANCE Brand New 19.72 F250 Plck•ups . ' 5 LEn <CAMPER _SPECIAL-360,VB, Factory Air, Cru~c •. · Power StffrillCJ & Mally · Ottier Options. WAS $4783.68 DISCOUNT $1108.68 SALE ~RICE $3675.00 Stock •T276T ~otor ·•9881 ,, .1.mpo_rts '67 V.W. Slj). BACK Rad io, heater~ 4 speed, low miles. 11 ./.N56 ll . ' NEW .. " EL -~UDO . CAMPERS .... 7 LEFT (3) 11' SHAWNEE <21 11'. "NAVAJO <1) 11~ SOIOIA , Ill 101/2' MOHAWK '300°'a•LOW DEALERS INVOICE- ·TRUC:K-S .-_ ·VANS '+4 FOID P.U. i VI, autometic, radio, heater. IL269711 • 5973 --..... ~~~~~~'."!"""''~~-1~ ..... ~~-"!'"~~~~~~- '67 FORD WAGON · Sf73 VI , radio, heater, •utomatic, pow· H.T. V-8, radiO, heater, 4 spd .. er steering, good miles. (UJC220) Good miles. IVCK42 I} '68 OPEL STATION WAGON '67 FOlb F-100 $1073 Rad;o, hHle<, 4 •poed, good m;le" sn7.3 oXRP91l l 0 Pickup. VI, redioo h•eter, iuto- metic. I U90368) 51373 '67 MUSTAN~ 2 + 2 V8 , radio, heater, eutomi1tic, P.S., air cone!., good miles. I UNU080 I '71 PINTO Fully equ ipped. 4 speed, thro1"1fi ldm. l950CEK I '70 MAVERICK $107.3 '67 CAMARO S.S. 2 Or. H.T. Radio, hei1ter, automat- ic, power steering, vinyl roof, a ir. ITYGl94 1 '68 MALIBU HARDTOP Radio, heater, automatic, .power steering , VS, air cond., good miles. IXBH494 1 '69 TOYOTA HARDTOP Rad io, heater, 4 speed, good miles. IYPS0261 • '70 .DATSUN PICKUP sn73 4 •peed, good mHes, n:w pe;nt, $147.3 ·7 · new tires. ( 500BQG I . ' '68 FORD lf2 TON PICKUP I $41·73 VB, .radio, hHter, eulomat;c, Good $1573 I . mn ... 1nBs4a1 ~~~~~~~~~~~ '.70 V.W. Slj). BACK ' ' '69 OLDS CUTLASS '67 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER ~:.t··,.~·~~l~.~hlzor6;~j· .;,yl 51373 ;:;:;";,::;.~~.h:~:·~.~·;i'_~m;;~~ ~673 :.;:~.i.·~.::~:•iih;;;i~1 10w mH••· ~373 4 x 4. 4 who•I ddvo, good m;1.,, $467' ~ --------------l-m'-'•-"_1z_N_v_90.,.i1 __________ 1 ______________ new 'painl. 1674DZK I I ~ '70 TORINO 4 DR. H.T. '70 PONTIAC . LE .MANS VS, auto., P.S., air, AM -FM, vinyl $1873 2 Or. H.T. VI, redio, heater, au- ro of, pwr. se•t & windows. 1025-. tometic, power steering,· good. _o_w_1 ________ .,.... ___ ;.· mH•!· l 85JBEN I '70 GALAXIE 500 1 Dr. H.T~ V8, automatic, radio, heater, P.S., air , fact. warr. avail. IB5JACDI '70 MALIBU 2 DR. H. T. Rad io, heater, auto., power steer- ing , air cond., chrome rims. l 879- BIM 1 5177.3 ~973 '72 TORINO 2 DR. H.T. '69 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX Radio, heater, automatic, power $2773 · $2173 steering , vinyl rool, low miles. . Radio: heater, eut~metic, full pow-. (9850011 . er, e1r cond., vinyl roof, good - ------------·-~ -~-;i._ .. _1_H_IB_1_s1 _________ _ '71 MUSTANG HARDTOP VB, rad;o, heator, •utom•fa, P.S., $27·73 vinyl roof, good miles. f950CIDJ , \ '69 CADILLAC EL DORADO Full power .od laclory .;, co"· $367.3 dition in9. I 1'42ETB J -: '71 DATSUN WAGON ' Radio, h .. i>r, 4 •peed,.red .. Good , ~473 miles . l'f71CID I " · .... , '69 V.W. 9 PASSENGER Wagon. 4 speed, radio, heater, good miles. tZDTl29 1 '71 DATSUN WAGON Air cond., radio, heat er, good miles. I 369DLHJ '70 OPEL GT 102 H.P., rad io, heater, 4 speed, yellow. Good miles. I 932AOM l 51673 $1773 $1873 'IMIODOU IOllNS SI. '69 CHEV. 112 TON Pickup. V8, automatic, P.S., heat- er, new p•ii nt. Good miles. I 284- ;oc1 · ·. - '69 DODGE-YAN Sportsmen van. VS, R&H, auto- metic;:, I 08" whl. base, good miles. IYPP4371 '69 CHEV. 1 TON Cab & ch1ssi1. 4 speed, good miles, new tire1. 195191C) New p1 int. • .. '69 FORD f..100 Pickup. VS, eutometic, radio, heat. er, custom cab, lo miles. (3t075CI -...... ----· __ ..,. ' ' ---- IALll WT. HOUU PAlll •WJCJ llOlllS , . 51673 $17.73 $1973 ~973 . ' ·-.,. ...... ,_ ,,. ..... -L•-'-,_ W .. -·~~-·,_ r..-hL ~· -----11-.',. .... • \ ' . • .. I • I • ' • ' I .....,._ ....._... • ... •.• 114! ! -. " ""I •• ' -r• \[ San Clemente . " Capistrano EDITI O N Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 19, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES OlfA GE COUNTY', CALIFORNIA . FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1973 TEN CENTS •Tinaothy~s Lore~··Conaes to Free Hina ~-U~,\,L; ~E'S· A. Kl~~ft~r.~~ Joonn1 Hor-·Smith Coli.I P, ufw,hct " •. l • • 'JJ, f'Ji \~·'" ,.,. f ... "' • !-'¥ ,<I.. ~-l"'~i. .. ,,. .• (., .. ,.,... •. ,. f ~pr.y' s· A;f rest , irt( J;ft :· ~ fitt4s :28~month Q<Jyssey • ·\ "I'm ~y's love. I've tr,aveled with him for two months and I've come with him to 'Los Angelt!s to free him. I've come to speak to President Nixon," the petite, mousy-haired British subject ac- companying Dr. Tiniothy Leary to Los ,\ngeles Said. Thursday. Identifying herself as ~oanna Harcourt.- Smith and as a "resident of the U.S .. " the pt~tery woman. declined to give any but her maiden name and refused to comment on tbe present status of her marriage to an unidentified Washington mon. "I'm a citizen of the world. My mother was Palish, my father British. I was born in Switzerland and I have a son born in Greece and another born 'in America," the 2&-year old, self-proclaimed authoress or a book on "Freedom" said. "I'd been looking for Timothy all my life. I found him two.months ago. It was only natural we should meet since I wrote a book that sold 100,IKM> copies in Europe. It was about freedom," 1t1iss Harcourt-&nilh said. ''Timothy's written a book. It will be published by Bantam," she said e:1- plainin1 how the convicted dope advocate was financing the recent portions of his 8-month eJ:lle abroad, fleeing U.S. authorities. She said she joined him in Switzerland, made a film with Leary in Austria traveled with him to Beirut, Lebanon ''where we wer~ treated like kings" and was ai his side in Kabul, Afghanistan 1+1len U.S. oflfcials caught up.with him, took away his invalidated pas.sport and escorted him to Los Angeles via Frankfurt, Paris and London. "It really wasn't very elegant the way they snatched his passport from his ~ds. They said it wasn't valid. But we used it In five different countries and it said it was good until 1974," Miss (See LEARY, Page I) Juror Says Juan _Corona -Bes-erves Another· Trial j Clemente Dust-proof PZa:nt .Open Evil Spirits Hysteria at Electric Plant • Judge Sets Hearing 011 Motion Oraa11e .. ' -' • . . . Emergency Declared • Ftlday, Januar1 1~. 1973 / Aid.es M•• Backers Trip --- -• ) to Saigon ' ' , fn .ObU;po -Startf'ush--Seen fo -Agnew From WU. S<nlcu SAN LUlS OBISPO -··A state ol euiergeocy wu doc:l...-.d lhrougbout San LWs Obispo Coonty as the wont ralnstonn tn four yurs sent Dood waters pouring lnto downtown streell bere. cut· ting off «immunicaUons out of tbe city and forcing schools to dole. With a predicUoa of more ra.1n today, the state Ofl'ice of Emergency Strvlces said it wu keeping a close watch oo the county as well as Santi Barban: c.ounty to the 90Uth wWcb bas "rtacbed a poi.DI of almost complete saturtUon." 'Ibe stonn. which spread throughout Southern California early 1bursday, dumped more than three ·inches of rain ovu coastal areu and brought 1 total of 6.3 lncbe.s to the area since Tuesday. Some 1treets in San Luis Obispo wett four feet deep in water Thursday morn- ing but the deluge receded b)' mldaf· temoon. r More than 100 cars in lhe city ">ere damaged by the storm but no serious in- juries were reported, police said. Fkloclwaters closed off roads nt both the soutbem &id northern eod.s of the ci· ty for a time. 'lbousauds ol homeuwuen in Los Osus and Baywood Park, Immediately soulh of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of the day. In nearby Laguna Lake, a number of homes were Oooded. Ul"IT ......... Homes and buildings were abo flooded to the south i..D the San Fernando Valley. Joe's Joke Backfires Up to 7 .5 iocbes of rain fell at San ?ttarcos Pass near Santa Barban, and in Ventura County, flood waters riwed up sidewalks, exposing utility pipes in some areas. Clearing skies greeted Northern Californians today as. they cxmtlnued to recover from a procession of Pacific storrm. Heavyweight champion Joe Frazier comforts dancer Debra Young· blood after what started as a practical joke backfired. Joe playfully tossed Debra into a hotel pool in Kingston, Jamaica, but ber screams convinced him she couldn't swim, whereupon be fished her out. She quickly dried off and all was forgiven . The National w .. ther Service prom- ised m o s t I y fair weather through Saturday except for some cloudiness in the utreme northern mountains ancl some patchy mom~ fog In the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. Beach Man Takes Children "There are still some fronts lying off the coast, but the high pressure system inland will hold them off, probably To Meet 'l{ing of Acid' =~k!:i::~·" -a weather l'rotlt Pep 1 RAINFALL ..• ing oot the hardest • bit Oood areas. There was aome mud runoff in parts of the city but ne roads were cloled with --lhe-eiception of-1 ahort ·ltretdl on MacArthur Boulevard. Traffic was; 1~ terrup!A!d until s p.m. to Inapect !he !ridge. IN LAGUNA BEACH, Rainwater cucading down Park avenue caused flooding along Forest Avenue and minor damage to !Orne downtown stores. Es:· actly 1.3 inches of rain aoai:ed the. city during the stonn. Water rose up to the aldewalk: level on Forest Avenue and seeped into FaircbUd Stamps, 310 Gleruieytt and New Dlnc- tions, 26S Forest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in front of their stores. IN THE SOIJTll COASI' .,.., Rainfall amounted to more than one lncb and caused cars to stall and 14.:ver•l to spin out on freeways in Mi.ulon Viejo and Lagima Hills. 'The latest storm brought tbe month's rainfall to a hefty 2.9 inches in Sao Clemente and about the same for San - A 30-year-old Huntington Beach father who said LSD YW for him "the begin- ning of We" brought two of his four cbildn!u wi!h him to Loo Angeles International Airport Thursday to greet the returning "king" of the acid culture. The employed tool and die maker with long blond ha'ir and mustache said, "I'm here to see Dr. Tim. I'm glad he has come home but I'm sorry the king has to come home this w8y." ''.Three.years_agoLwas""'P"'"Stralg)lt. Then l dropped um and look at me~. l 'm·happy." The man said he had never met Dr. nmothy Leary -"at least not physically."· The Huntington Beach man was among a group of some 100 camp followers of the drug culture advocate who strained to get a glimpse of Leary as he walked the 30 yards from the airport tenninal to a waiting Los Angeles Sile.riff's camper van. <>Ulen said they came from Laguna Beach -the Orange Coast city whef'e Leary's arrest and subsequent conviction for marijuana "°"""'""1 launched his world travels following his escape from California Meo's Colony, San Luis Obispo, in 1'10. Cadres or unifonned Los Angeles From Page 1 Juan Capistrano, mating January RETURN already an unusually wet month. • • , In the central county area : The stonn brought .73 inches of rain to Santi Ana mak.ing the total for the year 8.17 lnchel, mote than double the 4. • .\1 Inches of last year. Villa Park Dam recorded .95 lnche9 Tbunday for an 8.89 inch seasonal total. Saddleback peal< had .9 incheJ and the Irvine Ranch .75 lnches. IC DAILY PILOT lM Orlllil9 o-t IWLY PW)!, .. Miid! 11 ~ "" Naw;.CI',_,, i. ,....,.. ., "" Or ... c .. N '"'*"""" ~. S.... , ... lldltior. ,,, ........... ..,...., ......... Frlffy, fw COilt ·-· JrlfWJ*t ~ """'""""" IMCfl/,._ttlfl ~tlJlf't, U..-1.ecfl, l,..,IMIJ.1 .. ::IMll·IM C...,..,.., kn J\1111 c.,llW-A .... ,...._, lfllltn 11 putt!.._. ~ ........ ,__ The l'flnclpal ~ .... flt Ii •I DJ W.., liY StrMI, Colli Mw. Clll*tllt. f1oQI. keltert H. W114 l"r11llttftl t.W ...._.lll!tr Jac.k It Cwrley Vka PmldWll • °"""'' M9Mllf lliem11 kff•ll ..... following his escape. Charges now lodged against him in· elude: -Felony escape for having fled the mini.mum security prison in San Luis Ob~po in 1970. -He is charged with 19 counts of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle dangerous drugs as a sus:pected leader of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love -an international drug trafficking organiia· Uon believed to have been founded by Leary in Laguna Beach In 1966. -He faces charges of i n c om e ta'i evasion flied by the state against the Brotherhood In the amount of f'16 million . • . tax lien has been brought against two ranch properties' owned by the Brotherhood In Riverside County .• Police oUJcers at the airport Thursday said Leary would be housed in the Los Angeles County Jail until his court a~ pearance ln Orange County. A plan to transport him via helicopter to Parker Center aOOrted when a driving rain began moments before the jumbo jet pulled up to the international arrival aaltellite. TlieM11 A. M_,,t.111e Clo.In H. :':::"" "': .... '·Non No Obj' ections i'6M:IMI ,,_..1111 .. ..... S.C ....... OM.. '" N .... "c .• , ....... '"" To Zone Chan!!e ..... _ v c.:11 M ... ; m w:,.:;r s....,.. ::W~ ':.~,J. l.adl = Ora.nee County Airport Land Use Com· ___ 1 __ ..:·~-~·~-;;~·~·~·~·~"~' ·~·~-F---t-imlssloneniiffil Thursday voted to interpose '"••••• 1n41 '4MJJ1 no o i)iCllljD~~--zune-c:har'ISe c.....,... ....,., .... 6U.f611 from qrtcultural ·to aingle-famlly residenUal OD Del Obispo ln Capistrano I S.. C111 •••• •• De,almlfl:t Beach after decklino It will not be unduly , ......... 4tJ-442'1 .... CltlYrflM, tm. ~ c ... i """'"'Ille noise-impacted by nearby Capistrano COtrlH...,. Ml -1i.r1tt 111111tr111aria. Airport. "'!Witt IN"*' If .,_.,IMl'flitlllt "'""' ~A .. -l ••• bat t ~1 II t m•f • 1'ft'llllM• .,1"*" Nlldtl "'. 1..oVW1 y· nol."'lllll a ernen s"" .. a s fl'tlli.llfl " .,,..11n1 -· Norm Ewtn aald while the area Is sub--,.., :;:i •• .. c.tt ....., ject to some airplane noise, It Is not a ~,..,.,..,. •~ .., ''""' "·" serlout ... -t..iem. """""""' .. -" .,,,. """""' """-" .,..,.,. MllMI ... GM """'"""· 1be matttr was referred to land UH t I coriimlsslonert for advl~ by the counl.y planning department. Police officers parted the crowd Crom their Idol but many waited in the in· tematiooal arrivals tenninal for more. than an hour to see bis latest love, J~ na Hareourt-Smitb. Some were vocally disappointed when the mystery woman did oot tum out to be Leary 's wife, Rosemary. She had been said to be with him during bis stay in Algiers with the Black Panthers and later in Switzerland. No word of her was spoken by her 1'perfect_love'' stand.in and-traveling companion, the petite, long·balred woman who said she was a British sub-_ ject and 26 years old. *. LEARY ... Harcourt-Smith said. After Afghanistan authorities deported Leary, and without bis paJSport, Leary accompanied the officers willingly, she said. "Everybody was very nice to us all the. way here. We could have escaped again in Frankfurt. "Four days ago be said he was so·ha~ py to be ,going home. -even to piison. He's mastered freedom so completely he can be Cree anywhere," she said. She deplored Leary's arrest and legal jams "for smoking only two butts" and vowed, "He knows 1 love him and am going to free him . We're all going to free him." "l believe It Is all perfect he should have come back to the United States," she added. "He w11s so happy when be saw the Pacific Ocean again," she said recalling his mood as the jumbo )et "Clipper Red Jacket'' tw-ned to make It! approach to Los Angeles lntemalioaal Alrport aboul ;,90 p.m. Thursday. While her •'perfect love'' was removed from !he pll!DO In baudcuffs and Wider guard of both federaJ and Los Angeles authorities, MW Harcourt.Smith, against whom police said no charges were pend- ing, left the airplane v l a the routine customs check. She said a doctor '®firmed that she had serum hepatitis -"lt't not con· taglOUJ" -when the plane landed. The Illness she said led Leary to begin I.ls five-country fight which resulted In his being spatted by U.S. officiab in Afghanistan. Despite the lack of an ex· tradition treaty with the U.S., Afghanistan authorities a p p a r e n t l y cooperated In the turnover . The woman, believed to be the daughter of a British publl.sber, said abe contracted hepa.UtlJ whlle the pair were in VieMa making the anti-addiction film. "On my birthday, Jan. 1.1. I became ill. Tim promised to take me tomewbere T've never been and get me to a hospital." she said. That lflp led to what sh!. claimed was the "lllegal" removal of Leai'y'a puspm1 ••d -i1t<-p11r• '!n!e ride'''-'<io-'boo'4 Ar.geles. "I've never been here before. It wu a JoVely Olght at the U.S. govanment'1 ex· pcnse." She first said she planned to go to a ho!l!pltal, before flndinc a place "near to him. near the j.dl so 1 Cati tree him." Later. the hllchhlklna Jal ael ooclallte, admltled she ..OOld be stayl111 al tbe Beverly-Wilshire ltot.e.1 ..: some 12 miles fi'i',m tile i!Ownlli\i]n<ntrtr-Jall where Leary was housed. The cl.Usen'• committee working for pass11e ol the '2$-m!Wuu school bond Issue Feb. 20 in lhtSIPlstrano V!!l!!oL Schoof District thls week announced a get..out·the-vote cam,paip led by, cbalnnen from individulll school al• tendMce areas. The Rev. Allan Vt1110ft, cbalrman ol Arvy's Friends ("~Arvy'' ls derived from "Area Residents Vote Yes") said chairroeo for each l.n!I. ol the tarae district already ba .. hetn appointed. Judy Davin ol Mbslon Viejo will serve as coordinator for the area chairmen, be said. lo !he Viejo mo, Belay Parker and Pat Schubert wW lead the effort. , Other chainnfn and their ..... ... Dearuie Laupl1111 and Janet Regelbrugge in San Juan; Do,.!hy Salonen in the Pali.sades section; Joe Lovullo, Ole HaMOD ; Joan Holden and Connie LaParl for Las Pal.mas; Sherri Cross and KaUrle Walfield, Dana School and Eleanor 1\-torau and . Helen Kester in Crown Valley. Supt. Truman Benedict, assisted by Capistrano Beach area civic leader and accountant Vaughn CUrtiss, will bead the group's speaker's bureau. The major pol.at which the group will try to impress upoo district voters is the need for new schools to cope with tbe heavy growth in the area. Besides the thousands of residential dwelling wtlts posing a problem, lhe pro- JX)sed opening of the North American Roekwe.ll Plant after a government takeover also is ez:pected to add to the sudden surge in pupil populations. Bond fund!!, say school administrators, are nearly depleted because of com- mitments for a portion of a new el~ tary school in San Juan Capistrano and a junior high campus in Laguna Niguel; l'romPGfJel CRESTLITE water used in a scrubbing apparatus located ln the ez:haust area of the crest11te kilos. The scrubber ls w"1 to trap dusl In !he kiln exhaust but because water was used over and over again, it began absorbing contaminants, the study showed. The discovery meant that water in two storage ponds would have to be replaced with 1 fresh supply. New moaitoring pro- cedures are expected to prevent a recur· rence of the problem. Other tmprovemehts, Teel said, in- volvtd a l1W't emetent-extnlder whlcb takes ral'e abale mined on the lite and squ..,., ti.. mineral into pelltla. Changes alao bave hetn effected in !he kiln exhaust l)'ltem and dust seals in- stalled, Teel said. The dust has been the source of· friction between the plant management and bun· dreds ci residents in the area inland of the Sao Diego Freeway near Sborecliff.s. From Wlre Servtct1 no matter what p e 1 c e 1pment ls 1'be While House today declined to coo-•illnid· flnn or deny 1 bro&dCast report lhit ln an-hour-long newa-oonfertn0e, h1s Viet President Spiro T. Asnew will K• to flrul\. ... before lcavin& offlct, Laird said Sa!(on Jon. Ill -presumobly to conducl !he Soulh Vlelnl,_ lire capable or pool·peoce qr<emMI ta1b wllb· PrtsI-baadll"i their -<>wu def•""' without deul NKUYto Van '11i!eu. Ametlcln military help. The Columblo Brooclcastins O>mpany "r can• •Y· tbal •• far os Am•rlcan In· said from Saison !hat 1 vlsll by Agnew volv"'!""l in the fighllos we have applied a~Uy was lntended "to col.nclde the Nu:oo doctrlne ... and v.-e are. no clOlely with !he llcnlill or ol lellt !he In-Inncer In • pOllUon whett !he Vru!A!d ttlal!nc ol 1 Vletnom i:tAS6-!lre _. . Stalea wW ba .. to be Ibo cop oo tho beat men1" all over tlie WQ(ld," i.lrd ial4. Asked 1bout the rt~, Wblte House In another development, the Sata:on newspeper 11n Soos, wbldl olten ron.cta PIOll ~ Rooa1 L. ZJecler said; !he views of Protlc!enl '11ileu, ,said todoy "I will not bave any comment on lhal. the flgblln( Ill Soulh Vlelrllm l'Ollld come I am not aolna to comment one way or to an end 11 early as Feb. 3: aoolher on any speculaUon -wbether H Prime -'l'hlDom Klltllu1cborn is ljgbt Qr~." of 1'lallandai.ulda ct1aeflricould be. Ziealtr llktned his lll><Omment to re-ealellded to Laos and Cambodia 10 deys cent olmll.v rt1po111<1 he made to after tlie tnlCO in Vlelnam. ' ' reporll o1 developmeutl Ill peace Thanom &aid alter talks In BaJJpok negotlaUoos. with Gen. Alu:ander Hals, Preaident 'Ibe White Hollie spokesman said Nixon's envoy to Southeast Aala, that be President Nixon conferred for more than expected the Vietnam cease-fire in the an bour this morning with Henry A. JG. "near future" and that Haig would in&er, chief U.S. peace negotiator. Kiss--rttum to Saigon for more taltl with Thieu inger will leave for Parili Mooday to. "because there are some questlonl 1UU resume private talks with Hanoi's Le to be worked out." Due Tho. Soulh Vlelnam... Forelp l\linllter Wblle in Washinlton the pasl two days, Tran Van Lam said in Salp the Unl!A!d Ziegler said, Kisaloger conferred ln States and South Vietnam are "V!IY penon or by telephone with Secrttary ot close'' to reaching a cease-fire ~ State Wiiiiam P. Rogers, Secretary of meut. · Defeme Melvin R Laird, Adm. Tbomaa But uked if ll could come by Feb. s, H. Moorer, cha.lrman of the Joint aitefs the date of the Tet Chinese New Year, be o1 Stafl,,and othen. said, "l do not wanrto·be a p,.phet. • Don Webster, acting C8S bureeu chief Anotber pr.dlctloo of au early ...,.. in Saigon, said Pruldent Thleu received firt came from Chinese Premier Chou the letter from President Nlmn on En-lai who told Japanese newsmen with Thunday inlormin( him of AIJlew'o a visilln( delogatioll in Peking lhat he plaus. eapected !he flgbUng to end ooon. The Jetter was delivered by U.S. But the war continued. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, the U.S. warplanes and offshore ahipa join- network reported, and ... contained the ed So,uth Vietnamese marines ln fighting following pasaage from Nlsou to Thieu: today lhal turned bact four ..... u11s by "We have been lCJ1ether in war, let.'a be Commwlist troopa and tanks on the togelher in peace." norlhem Quang Tri !root, field reporll Meanwhile, Secretary of Defense said. Melvin R Laird aald todoy !here Is no way to assure 1uting peace ln 5outbeut Asia but declared !hat Admlnlstrotion policies will end American involvement in tbe flghlln( tbere. • The secretary called the ouUook for peace in Sollt1leul Asia and the rest ol ~ world "better" at the present time. But be recalled that the war ln Vietnam has continued for 30 years and cou.ld never assure that the ahooeing will stop Learner New Chief Of Water District" - Richard M. Leamer, a San Clemente resident since 1948, bas been elected chainnan of the board for the Trl Cities Municipal Water District for a tenn to last all of 1973. Leamer, active in local water board affairs since the late 1950s, bas been on the Tri Cities board since 1962. The president, a resident or 501 Avenlda Del Mar., is retired. Grady McCelvey Last Rites Held Funeral services were held · e a r 1 y this aftemooo in S a n Clemente for Grady C. McCelvey, 72. ol D A..nlda Esplanade. Mr. McCel,..y died Wednes- day at Sao Clemente General Hospital. Hospital. The tites were conducted 1n Lesneski Mortuary with the Rev. Frederic G. Ap- _pleton__pf Son.. Cl.roem. Jipl!A!d PresliX!erlan Church offict1Uu1. Mr: McCelvty leaves his widow, Marium Marie; a son, Jact Dalton McCelvey of Auburn; a daughter, Marilyn Dahlstrom of San Clemente; four brothers, Sloan, Clayton, Wordlaw and James McCelvey, all of Lubbock, Tu. and five grandchUdren. Burial follow~ the chapel services in El Toro Cemetery. CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES Featuring m•ny fin e collections from 1uch well known lines as HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL. MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL. WOODMARK, •nd other1 , •• •II sub1tenfielly reduced. Th e ler9e1t selection of quality uphol1tery is now on display and "ady fO( immedi•te delivery. Sa~a now. Henredon Alvarado l1hownl On Sele Now DRM~ERITA&Jl,...ffENREDOH-WOODMAIUC-ICAAAST~ -------- ., I ' .. NEWPORT !EACH e JJlJ WESTCUFI Dl.. '42·1011 LAGUNA !EACH e 14S NOITH COA5l HWY. •••• ,111 TORRANCE e IJM' HAWJHO•Nl lt'f'D, ,, .. ,," ' I • DAIL V PILOT JI) Alamito s Raci ng Entries PaltUc IaVtted j' Women Golf Pros1 .~~L~ Checking Ol!t .f;rep ' lnICCC _Tourney IMAGINE THE RMl1lC& Ill Tiil IUIWlr Wrestling Results CD @ "•rll•t "'shirtey Englthorn. Sandra [ollowed by H e I en Burda "~~=••C114J-1 :!. ':;"~:." Palmer, Pam 111a nh1.t and~a (S5\t) and Alice Gelger (38). 1os-sntno tM1 •· Wornmec1r 1w1 ...... flhe u er u ~c '·11• host of ol.be...-members o Maree a anda cop n4"44omn cw1 won tw 1om1t. Wamen's Frofeaional Coli fllaht with 35 with lorla.. l=-cWi1;::: :=:: At11oclation will J)Vtlclpate Jn Bowland aecond at 37 "1. 1ss-~111 1M1 dK. Md.tfl'I cw1 .. ,. the third aMual Lady J>rc>. 1.....,.ldtttt IM) dtc, Ytcllr IWI ).J. mixed Amateur tournament at El 1\'lpe& ~~:~~~ J:, 7,,. ~11• Ji'vlne Co1.4t Country Club El Nlgutl Country Club 1°';k~Mltt (WI won .., torttlt. Jan. 21. women'• club members 1t1ged 1'7-$1""' 1w1 plftMd Ha..ib9kh The female pro •tan wUI a better nine, hllf handicap 1~~k.r 1w1 -. ... ,d• IMJ 1 ..... partlclpate bl fttretoma that tournament this week. I never alloW I MPtfvre thouaht to eritw my 14~.,.,_uijri. lMl "" L.,W111 1w1 wW Include two members of In A flight, Betty Pino w11 mind when prepo rtna to rntke •. ahot. Thia uk• the women's club and two the winner with 34'n followed mtntll condltionlnc. but *"' Pf• can &Iara to Mlffq ~:"'c~)'w;:_.;,,• ""iNMt••"'' trom the·men's'club-at Irvtne by ·Eneen SChuhnwm (38), think Pos;Jtfvely. · n-c11ewi (W)"" LM"•"Dll (M1 Coast CC. Scoring wlll be on a Sue F°"Y (3'7), Ne 11 For ...,n'*' 1Uppol9 )'Oii are ftctd with In 1'i70s-a..wi CMI plt'IMd 1,.,. 1w1. two net low &00res of the · Townsend, Jack.le W1taon and 1pproleh shot that must fly over a 11nd trip 11._.°"',_ 1w1 ,.,... ApodA(• flvet0me basis. FYan Rlate (SS). (llluatrltion fl). If you vlsualtze~!.Mlf dumpinc: 1"":~~MokhoUN 1w1 p1Mtd •••rNr 'Ille public I! Invited to A tie mulled for first place tho shot into the bunker, JOU p.-a!y wUI do Just 1M1 '"" wltnest the action with a • In B OJgbt between Edith th1t. . 17~1.lllb 1w1 *f· Andtoft1 IMI lhotpn •tart gettlq the com-carpenter and GIMy Peden II Ptnorially,. I -.Id ...... 11191 ""' bunllar Is ............ IMI ·-c-IWI peUtJon UOOer way at 11. SS. Doril Handichuch and natty the ar ... and thlt the &araer ,....., • r11lly 3'l~111.,. IMI -.. Dll'llHlrra MIU Higgins wu the In-C.ne Garrick tied for the next &Ind (llluatrotlon 12). Now I muat simply atrlko 1w > •" !!Uvidual wlnoer last yeer wbm place at S7~ with Uwe the bi ll solidly and firmly enoulf1 to cl•r the ::r=:~':'1~f~::d ~~'°':.'1,'Ml ihe tlred a course record 85. players at 38 locludlng Joan ••inw1lnld bunker.'' Thlfa th• Poaftive thlnkinc s:::;,-ti•llllV iwi won bV forlttt. other members of the toUr Short, Ruth Cohen and tee I've been talk Ina· about. •• .• Mn...;...__ 1n -Mt:Ge111r 1w1 won DV fwflll. upected to play ln the event Ginder. lf3-li•nttv cw1 pl11Nd Tlldm•n CMI IDclude Marilyn Smlth,"Boony In the C flight, C&rolyn Scote ltt 11>itt of ttao1.,.a.nkwt, rOUlh lftd dOWfthJI I• .wa i:so. • Vlt'lllr Bryant, Sherry Wilde~ Diane" Swartley was the winner with ttt• Mlp Atnokl Pllmer efftn YoU In ,. .. booldll. "'Tl'Ollllll _i= 1•l '!~ D1111t ""'' Patterton, Jane 1tlaloci, fl followed by u ........ ""·-A-BMll." A oopy I• 10",. for 20t ·~ whh • .. ,...,. ...,_ 1,~=.'m· pr~Jt~~ cs1 Be B ....... :r """''~-Md,.....11\Wope1111t•Al"lllM.....,............... -Shirley· SpGrk, tty ur-and Carol Petp (37'n); Helen ,.,.,, • 11+-Mllkh 1s1 plllllMd v 1niw1 101 felnd~ Clara Olaagow and Berkson (isl>); Edlth Wray, 'bl;.:m:.i.!l ""' ., ""'"· I"~ I:,....!:.;,::,,", ~ 'sllljl!,' Sharon Moran. Cotetto Reason and Abbey ;i;:: 111 "''"' "-" ~'Z~ Coltrin (39i,;), {~J l ! 'llllltoH !SJ OIC. Buck !DJ l0- Jlffl8'otclflrfc In n flight 11 was Maude IV, l'ro11a, Sopla •.,.....,,,,. m ....., .. m_ 1D1 I Members of tbie Meadowlark Weidman (35~) with Nancy --21lh-e:bl:left 111 •tnnM ww-101 I 1 t Country Club women's club Daugherty (38'n), Mu1ne '1l~ • ., 1b1 cs.c. ii1rm1t11.,. 111 ,. ~ 111) Cl"DMV) staged a O.N.E.S. tournament Jolley and Martha Urquhart Hoop Summan· es ~lt~-f'al'MY 1•1 MMtd "711111 4DI -·r --.. s YW th.II weet. -<f7) and Marvis ttnn: and ffi-+t•tr 111 _ by tamll. ' '"" = In F!lght A, HeJen Moulton Billie MacKenzie (18). !~"""" m •-c•llN 1D> I "' ·w:.~1 r~ :i;. the =~ ~~~ R•nclao SJ 1;~ttnltY IS) ptl'lftld AYHttll ID) '1 I "--•'-· Mulll tied L c.n .. Ow I I F c Ar .......Jr.ircri*t:!Z. "n" I ) uuro...., gan . liur le-.,.....,. S eY. WOD OW net st ea tz..-<,tr;r (DI 1'°'1 l'Ji ~~ wlltl ~f""", ::! Ii cond at 1$1> with Florene<! honors in A rllght In touma· or . oa "<1~11,11~,. 110 • ,, •• Baker nest at 18. ment action at Rancho San 118;;;.;;ris\" 11 ,.~...,,. _ '!I.xi,.,, 1 ;.., In B fllgbl it· was Corinne Joaquin lh1' week wi th a '13 lrJl~i:' "':i;I I r~~~'f.rp:=~m,;;r''!,' '!J Richardson OD top With S5 followed by Margaret DeBacb .iwni. Yanlly ••• l•I UJJ c..-. Mt Mi r l r u IMl!Nd~!.., •1 ,~ t'tJ With 74. W•lmlMI«' (44) (d) NIWllO't Hartllr Lloy (161 I' (t1)'T11Cktl' 14 tr ttl DlllM4 'iil'l'1111_.1t1 Di 1~"' I In B flight it was LUllan WltlOll 111 F !•l c11r11 Ri~ I•) " cu SNrineri '11 -Gl.ltllrldol 1., •'""" o.Ha1t1 • "•'' !ll-,-l Gals Cla h . I .. an.NOii ,,, F '" Olblo!t p''""' l•l c 1241 R•ll't' (0 • 'lWM'/i Dobbs (78) first and Betty .llr'Vff 1141 c cu Lou\lltl' ,.uur ftl G 1'1 Odtrm.n l · ·D11c Il l ~111V 1or111t.lorftlt I~ I• s McDaniel next at 1111. ACCOfl'lllldO Ill G {•) I Pll\tllf' Wtlfar• (111 G (41 •••• reok-rtl'I I WOii DV I • • ~ ld!Ml1J 1~· Marj cw. lctllt ..... (4) G (!) Ytn!MrA1 k«11111 IWlll! l!'dl--.Mc:itti.ffilll H~ I}~ bV forfi !, iii'Y11 orie Thatcher won the--Scor111t wbt: w1Jtm\"•'.,._.,....,., ,,,, Rfdallt 10 1 COl'ol'll c111 Mar-, .. ~ nri n•i IC•t•H• .u. 1Nctc < ~ ~ 111 In Football C tille with 75 followed by VI-" SaN 111 a..rten ·~;"'~ !:~/'~ c111Mir,11_ ,. _Cl* ... <si dee. 1,1m1ow oo. U'TM •AC:• ,.a,.,.i:iJkl vm VJ8n Troutman With 78, Wfftml1111« 10 t ti 1........ .. 7~0s _ f'rld•Y (IC; ~. U h«U (I), ~ ~ Allowt Joyce Robert!, copped the D NIWpOrl Hll'flDr 16 10 11 ........., DIN Hiii• (tt) l!IJ U"""""tr .. 2 a;;lw;. l~I 11: tiUe with 72 with Ann Heslk ''· vttt1, , .. ., (W MelMtle 0 ,111 • ., noJ ,. 1,1 Mll'IOld 1i , -TlwMijlt 1s1 pl!WIM 1 1c1nc1 ~ 'W'.I',;. J I! next at 77. L.ldel'lltlll'I (•I F tl•l H•rt Rtll!IM {ii F Ill) O.Y11 (~)n 1.:.11~ Ill dK l artll fl()'"°· ra~.1.~!::~· ,r=n,r', ll· Twm' Bill °'""" c., r: c•1 wa111e• 0-cu i c nJ Ymir in_ Mollfll 1K1 cs.c MeK•-r 111. "'"' M ., d Jl tf JolllY (fl c (6) lMMl'I ICOU (Sl G UI Rood M . e9G 'P er f! Ctrvitr ($} G 0 2) Mliltltf · O,...,_I•" (') G I·) l"kUt'd 115 -Rculn (I I CllC. Wv1/T\IOUdlO ~cing Results ! JlfTY Joi!.-, (') G (II ~ toor11111 Mllll: 0 -Hlltt-ll'VW!I Ill, (I(}, J-0, Members of the Meaa Verde 1cor1na ~Favnt.ir+ v.u..,: H.in1r1111 D.nll wrn1. 1 .. 11. 1.i -Hal.,. t11 cite. MllCVolllll uo. Coun'""" Club women's club IPllMMll'lllf' '· M1111r 7. ''"*" 1, M1i.r Dll ,.,, con ,,.. """' 061 1-11.,, _ ••--n ''' ~ .• ,. •• ,, 1,, ... ., Llldl-2. OIMt •: M"""'la: ,.IM'f· Murm111 fl) rt f•l ScCllemtll _,,. ...,.. ., ~n~~j:r::t.1°" -~t ~.:m:.~~I~'=.'-!~li~') ~ n,·\~=~ S-Oi5'-RllMtll {Kl clte.V•119ht(I),., In l1lgh H•U 10 G t ) lAtW!oll: t .16' -£111\19 (Kl cite. Goww !Sl.1-0. A t, Lucille Paddock ,.:"-~ 114~ ca:1?':;r...,1 M•M Dl4 sc:w1111 t*: 0..11 •· in_ •wlOM't tl l oll'lfll!S MCL1..,.111 -""""' O'Pr'W• .. _A_ -'th Ill R•m•tk ll t . (IC), J:1I., -~ _.....,. UVUUI• "' Ditto 1141 F l•J P•ltllCll'I Hal'"rnit Klllni ""'"" Otl .V. 1'3 _ hQr (Sl .. ldlpr 110 , .. , 17. Erny ~kJe WU the net Roblrta (SJ G 1111 Clartr.• ~"" INJ Jji H--••lllV (IC) cite. Cl\wll,lf ,,), Dodd !Ill c 1111 l urdl lladl ., wJnner with 75 followed: by ~ (11 G 1•1 D)'W •• I 11 1 -'"i. ,.,,,. v...,, three players ,fn 1. tie tor ae-&M ~ ecor1111 '*1 Hunt 1. f$~'ll•1 § ' , .. c:....... fl4J 111J>ac.t1111 cood at .,, and 1-"··11-._~Lu~>--HMlllll'lll 161\ ~ ..... v~ {Ill •. ,. • :~.,.pc,,-~~l·J-~IL(ICI •-•=n •=e~~le-y AR~ ..,._ "' aiiJ ....,. LHVM .. .ell tCW1111 ~·.,bu ,.... l05 -Mint• CICJ die. Htrr11 1s1 "' 0UUU1 I Y~rtMI OIW'. .ulU l n.111'11111 (15) F 14) Ur1ilfl 'r Qiil11n L A.AIM 1. ... 10. ftlltftlo 0, B arbara Mallek. J.,.,,. ~•1 r: 111> 1m1tt1 c11 1 11, "' 1,1 ~ ... -111 • ICotlllf' ltl c (2) M1rtlt1 H1lt11r1111 SOrlort, O lt, -ll'lllff ,._,, ,,.., ' In the B flight, JOiie Tipplnl UrvJ• (4) G en O'OorlMll M"-*t Ylllt cn1 YNI ,.,. t ''122 ._ DomlnQllft Ill ffc. HCll'torl WIS the gk'OSI winner with 101. H•rl!•r co G l•l fllrolllll'lf O'•l'I" /"71 "' ,,, Allcltt:! (IC), w. l MlrlM kM111 111t11: ieo.lct 12, Zorn ... ..,., " , '{u c.,_.. Ut -ICllll (IC) cite. Wtlcfl (II. t.O. Ar ene VerfUrth I nd Mary 2. HllUlll!IW'l'llf' '-5kodl .. 0 111111'1 I, Romlnll 11•1 c <•! G-ek 135 -Mfllonlv IS) die. Rlla (10 t· Slnger tied for net wUh 7t •=l'n!'1 ",::;!, ai.15• l.~:· n1ll & 11~ '=': '· 140 _ M•l•t'dr"f 111 ctitc •• Jc..._,. followed by Phyllis Kalllber Scorlroo tub•: MltUM Ylt lo-Cvrtr1 oo. S.2. With 79, •1tMldl ( .. ) {•I Clef• MIMI k~)l::r.' Noga01,IJ), 01111 Ill, VIII• '•rk-o.·~7. -Atdr1 (Kl cl«, Zerilllf' !SI, •vtt.11119 UOJ F (111 H1rtlg fl ... Barbara Pegg flnjsbed her ""~ <•1 F (Iii camc.o "1 t11r1111 Minion Ylllo tt.n. 15' -••llrf 1K1 ,tMtd Wood est. round with a birdie on the 18th Ol'oltktl 1'1 c Clfl JICObl ""*'"'• • ....,.... :50. J('"to. (tl G (') aV111111 MtrtM {DJ 141) w..tMlllllMI' "' -J-(I) cMc, 'ri)'ll Cl(J •·I. hole to break 100 for the first Uw Ill G (I) klkll Alb1lldlf' (61 "' (1Sl ,.r11.,. 1n -RWllW (IC) dlC. R1rrm (SI time i her golllng career korlne 111111: 111anc1-win1ame '--""'c:• c•> " 101 .ioim-n-o. • n • ll•). lAOK't' cu, .l'"'-l!ko (II. C111ta wn-I•) c (Ill A,fyt~ 1t3 -OrtbVrrl (S) plMld .. rkt IKI. Barbara pogted I proud 98 M"t JOMlll'l•• l•I, W1...-mt11 121, Wllldlll !\!) G fl') M.lclll!lffi :':tw -~·) pllll'IM WllYmtn after her stronr finish. ":m!~)~ Mlll.t, Sl·l" Tlle111 {4) G C•I ·-(I(), 1:"5. M•rt1111 ICOrtllf M.1111: lutt I, OeoOOf V~ty For Dues, GWC Mat Summaries . ' Hvy -Hrllt!llr !Pl WCICI b¥ frorfttt, c:.mi. 11n 1111 ~ ..... 111 -HINYlltlulr (Cl 4k• ICtllllt (0),M. l:U -Aumoto {G) di(, •• ZM9 CCI, "' l)f -V111911M (0 ) ffC, L.tllnlf' CCl, ••• t. 14-lllOllO (GI cite.•· Zlr, CC), to ISO -~ IC) dK. ~ IOI, iJ.1, 1$1 -11:\llll (Cl '*°· loflti IGJ, 11.._ ,,, -""'""" (0) dlC, kMtt (Cl, 11-2. 177 -Wllllfllld (Cl •1 llolMllfi IOI, ... lfO L.. lotttllo, ICI 411c. Chwdoln (0 1, ... Hvy -l4lt9r 10.l drN '111111 kOMf' ICI, 1-1. Coast Rangers Trip Foe, 2-0 • f, l tlllw-.on 2. LICU 1. Wld1!1111sh1" C-Mll<I (1'1) (If) MMMl1• 9t0rt!'lf WOii: C-.o !. t i -U,,. {CJ die. Curry-(Ml, N. Halftll,111 w .. trt111111tw 21·M. IDS -SIW«t IC! cite. Soto IMI • .,3, MartM un 1•> hilt• Au 114 -c-1,... tci c11c. McIMeol• Altxandlr (fl P' (12) LIOl'I (Ml. 6'0. L1~ fU F 131 w1111...,. ltt -F•N CM) pll'lllld Hlill'f CC), W'lllOft CO! C 1'1 COtft1 JlU. Wll!Cltll fi ll O ft l Smllri lzt -Garrttt IMl dK. •1111'11 IC), l lltt IU 0 1101 JlllllllOl'I 11j~ -LMt CCI O.C. Hall (Ml, 1-0. SCOrl!'lf IVbl M1rl1111 Tlllf'lt '• OI· 140 -Crfmp (Ml die, C.n-lco (Cl .. OOOd t, ltnlw..., 4 SlllMllw 2, Miio 4. llr 2. lC -Tod'llkUbo ((;! die. l rOClllltt" HMnll!W IC«tt hflll AM, IJ.22. (Ml, 14. . ' IN -Fll'IOll (Cl fie, AralM IM), lo ), "' -D1vl• {C) O.C, MHIMckl (Ml. .. IT! -Wlb91.... (C} pll\llld Mllllr IMJ, S..27. lt'l -Stock IM ) cllc, AftnlOll (Cl, i- 0. Hvy -'"" lCI dtc:. a11D1rt11111 (M), 174. I 1?2 -Acwl1r1r (Sl <»c. Clark {Cl ) O. lg -w.· o ''i cite. Chlv11 Cij H I -11r I l dK. D11111r \ 1-0. -H'I I l Ille. p, re1 S £..]. I• _ ,r,,,., ic1 "'· ,,,, ,!, ••. $6 -B1nc1tl (C) cite:. Ti.c:klr ISi n-'· 'I' -P•l•r• le) dtc. Gn.it11,r ISJ "''· l 7 --Slo<l!Mrd ($) dee, kh1"'1 (() •1· t3 -Gart1 (CJ WOii IW forltll. H'f\I -G•rr1ft tCI oll'lnld Al1m1t1 l :tf. Jfll~l .... Va,~ C.,.,.. iMI M•r 101 111 IA VllllY ti -Sowll IC! WOii Dv tort1ll, \0$ -Tll'TIGl1 ICJ WOii br_ for!1ll. 114 -\ltl'INll• ISJ cit<:, FOltlr (C ) S-1. 1n -Cllev.1 (SJ die. Kr0111illl' !Cl .,. 1' -Jllv11 (SJ plnnld T~ "11 :32. l:~s -JOMI (C) die. W11 Uam1 ISl 1lb -G ...... ~ I'\ di(. WrlQhl ':11. 10 -Hllltl/'d :C Dllll'lld Plforl 1:03. 15' -Rllll1r (C l die. FfltDll II U-1. 161 -o i.11 ~I ry· Mldrld ISl 12·1, 1n -" lC) IMlll'lf<I '•ltltrtlrldol (S S: . 193 -Tiit.klt' CCI cit<:. O..t1aw1¥ (11 11-2. Hvv -llO\lblt lorfftt. """"'""' c_. Ml M•r nu nus" ¥1111r ti -Rk llm1n (CJ OK. Thom.II jS} '';tj -W1!""" {{l _, bv !omit 11 -RUii•• I die. kill CS/ 1.~. ip -Helm1 11lnnld S.dl Ir (Cl t:11'f -Z1mbrt10 451 CIK. CrDlll (CJ 7· 1'135 -Schl•Mr (Cl dee. T!l1IC"'1' (S) "tr -Moor1 (C t dK, Cl atro CS\ 11,,7 _ NtolHll eel WO!'I b'f 1or1111. l!i, -M••wtll CCl dtc:. MCGow11\ IS tt =~· ..... 1w11 l'I -DY "1'1111. 1\'. -Dlmlll1 C pl....-1 At1lrim IS! 11\;; _ a oc11111m IC! "'°" D'/ forltlt. Hvy -Haltmln IS) won bv twt .. t. v~~ NIWPlrf 1141 !171 Lii,. t7 -0.1.,. ILi dt<: l(t'fl HO 7 ..... 105 -EalDll !LI plntltll ~HflJOl'llDll (N) l:Oll. 114 -EWll'ICI (Ll plt1111d Gr11'1fllo (NJ 1:4'. ltt -l'ry (L) W0!1 Dy 1111'11111. 11' -O•vldSOl'I Ill -l(ov•ltl'lkO (HI Ml, UJ M ODrlflOWtllctl IL) OIC Tk IC1w-1 CNI s-4. 140 -H1mmv1s OU pl"flld LM1r.d Ill l ::t2. 10 -Mwhllg (10 plrinld 51r1ckl•r.d lL> O:S4. U6 -Mlr1lr11 !NJ plnolld 'avfY IL) 1:17. 1'1 -SPlllll'lllOlo (l) dK Cllembllr• IHI Ml. 177 -llakll' (LJ die T!I01'111 IN) 5-1. ln -M.9"11' Ill dlc Gijll (N) ]..(! Hwt ~ Nft'blrrY (N) plnMCI Hutf'llll Il l ,,,., no -Wirhll 15 > ""'°" bv fOl'lllt. 1l6 -MllONV 1$) _, Dy !Odolt. 'ii -Mirl..-.lfl~(S) WGn bY lorltll. I -ZIMtr !$ '!c M•-!01 !1·01 1S -l llfl'IQWOI' DJ 111d Wood (5 ,_, l'u -JONt 'll W()ll Oy lor~!' 111-ll•MOI 1-DY I. U4 -0.llOI'" \111111 b~ lor I I, Hwt -H1rd!l'OQ II ~ b~ !Orlfll, v ..... ,., ,_., .. VtllfY Hl) Cltl Ut AlllllllK ,, _ .,.,,,,.... 111'\ll -ll't' fOrfllt. IQS -Moor1 (111) die, J"'"ll&I IL) ._ •• 11' -51•11 (LI die. 11'9111 (l'l 7.i. l:zt -l'look !Ll plnMCI Ctv•t11vgtl Ill 2:G . l'lt -Kl•.,. {l'I plllllld 'Mlll•kw CLI 2:20 lM -k1rdm111 {I") plMld Halford ILi 1'31. 140 -Mori" 11'1 llt<:. Smtlll (L) t.O. 147 -H•lk•ll (f'I olllllllll towytr !LI !:47. 15' -KMllll CLI OIC. f'l'9dlrid.• (Fl 16·1.. • 141 -S.rfall !LI die, l i1111111t Cl'I t• •• 177 -F•llf' (L) dlC. l'lt\ltl .. (F) 1. •• ltl -l t<:htr ll"J plnllld Hailany (L) .. 20. k'o"f -L•rliln {I") plllllld W•ICO CLI 2:15. JliHlt.,. V•nlty P-i.lft \l"llY (II) i'I L" AIMlllOs 17 -Stlrtw1ll (Fl Oll\llld Ev1111 CLJ :2t. lOS-M1lfDv .!Fl plnNd Qulnl1t1 ILi :21 . 114 -Vu1kln1 (F) pln!lld Lumm (LI 1:02. ltt -O.vl1 (I') pl11Md H1m1 tLI :,7, 11' -Smllll !Fl WOii bV fiorf1ll. 13$ -LOUllO {F) dlC llranclll !Ll ·~· UO -DtlarlO IF) CS.C. MCCwmkk (Ll •·1. 1•1 -Hugtlt• (F) olnntd DoY1t1IO (l) l:H. 15' -Holllnd (l'J pfnl'llCI J"rl•l"""'f tLJ •:14. IQ -8111notr IFI (llllnld Lvlln ILi 1:24. In -Wlll1 Il l _, try lor'ftll. 1n -~ tort.it. H'o"f -ICUhll.I (P') Wllll Dy larftll. -... _ .... ,._.1111 ¥.i11r IUI 171 1M Alt mUos t7 -Sl~t Cl'I pllll*I Slfl!l»Dll ILi :tJ. 10S -Smllh (Fl pi!Vlld 01¥1• (L) I :17. J. 114 -Om1rall CLI die. Cl!-IFI ,,_ l:zt -Gird• IF) dr9W wllll Llllv {l ) 2-2. 12t -~ (Fl plf!Mod l lKltlt-fl) :0. llS ;-Plfh IF) cMc. McC•rlll't' (14-ll 1'0 -M1rQ1111 ff') cMc JohtllOtl ILi ... 141 -Dow !l'l pltlfllll Mlkfllll (LI JllfilCI!' "'"'" 1::.0. HIWPll't UU !IU Lnr1 15' -MclntOlll (Fl dt<:. Nit'\ (Ll 4-'7 -AllderlOtl (NJ 4K Sl"'fltDll (Ll 0 . 1-1. 1'7 -WH'ltl' (F) plt11\td UJ1r (L) 10$-l on!ll•r ILJ plnMCI Mlllt r (NJ :U . 1 :•. • tn -Hosltfllff' {I') won 11y twftll. 114 -Todd ILi die. OOll1r IJol, • In -H1lct1 (l'I Clrlw wUll It. L (L) l:zt -Mlndln !LI dt<:. SP1rk1 (N J l· W . I. Hvy -M.9!1gor!" (I') WDll by forftlt, 11' -Gr1t1I ILi OK. S1ul'ldlf'1 !Nl I lw-2. lU -Pr1c1 (L) 11!fltlld Upllllgro.,.. (NJ 4:a . UO -111'1910l';lo (L) dt<:. NIUlleri (NI ••• ' ur -AYrtt 00 die ... ".,. (L) S-•. 15' -J". ,,.,.,111'19 (N) dtc. lff (L) 2· 1'7 -SultO!'I (Nl pl~ HICk Cl) •:51. In -.. IKI (N) pln!lld Grt<1! Cl) 1:11 . 1n -Norrlt. (N) dK. lijll'lltt Ill .. " HvY -Nunt1 IN ) plllf'lld l udd 11.l 1:5'. \ • I '"""" "'""' MIAllll Vlf .. (41) Ill) VII• .. .rt!: t7 -O..ru1y11 (Ml Wll!I IW forltll, 105 -Tiii IV) die. Kel!IMI (Ml 2·1. 114 -Ottp1r IM) pfftfMld .. tQUlllf (\I) :J2. 122 -•-(Ml Ille, Tur....,. (\I) 14. lzt -"*'°kw• CM) pll'llllCI Mlktltll •IV) :11. 134: -Dr•w fMI _, iw '°"""''· UO -Mll'W'fll lMI die, LIWll (V) S.I. - 0. 147 -~kllf• !M) d«. 004olrJ 1\1) .t. 1.M -""""6ola (Ml _, by frtrlllt. 1'1 -1"1#1111 (MJ pil'IMlll W11U1m1 tVJ 114'. 117 -Mclr'ldl (VI lhc. Tll"Nfl• (Ml 2~•· ), 193..-J..U (Y) die, Mollly (M) 11·7 Hvy -~ !VI -by fiorlllt. H"'t' -•wnllt IW) 4*. lmtll\ IM! .. v....., ••t-.dt CM) (U) N • t5 -lcllll'l'lnWrw. M. (IOI plrwlld Goe\t<1llrl (II •:411, IOS -kllllMlllW, N, 11111'11'1111 Cllr11hNll (I ) Silt, 11• -Mlltw C•I plfll'lld ll--.o. (Ed) •:U. lU-MIJ!ll' 111 plllllld Wa!W (ldl 1:14 12t -11m. l•dl plM111 Dlf'lllllorl IE I 2:•. llS -IY,.,.. CE) die, 1........., !Edl 12·2. 140 -MollO (I) pil'lnld Dvfe" !Edi S:JO. •• 145 -Riii" (Edi die. Or1n1t1 Il l a. 1.M -.. ,\ltl f&dl pllWlld Colli'°" (I! !lit. 1•7 -Mllrall (Id) ..rMM .. araon1 {f) (;$1, 11'7 -Milffay II) W.W Wllll l'l•nlt'f (EOI 44 1'3 -HMWl'llrld (I t ...._,tw ...,..t. Hvv -ICIHt (I ) .._ 11¥ flrlett. ,,..., y"""' E1l•llC(a ltl) 1111 .... t7 -tt1w111 Ill •·,..,_ (l•J io. " . 1115 -l'lllttt (IEdl 4k. ZWI\,_• 1•1 10-2. ..... • 114 -a"ll: (Ill fie, HI.,_ 11•) ,S • • (~~ M .. _ Ill -· NMcl-.1111.t 12' -.....,_ Cl l 9k. Oruwm1 (Ed i IN , IU -0'-11) "'-.-, frlrlllt. 140 -GrlM Il l '4MICI -..,.. !fell :... ' 1'1' -CoHlrit (I) WM 11Y tort.It, IN -.I-lldJ r ,-o .. ,.,_,. (I ) t:.._ , 1'1-"°"* lldl ,!MtO Hlck1 UH :O. ; 1Jri:0s. Lll'tl Clcll ..r11111c1 ICtMlllc~ 1n -w"wlf•1 WOl'I by fol''91t, • H'l"f -Wtll fl ) '1Mld McNtll~ IEdJ :.U. -. ........ (ltl 117) ··-: I fl' -Mladil IEOI CS.C. 1...,.,. lEI 1~ '111 -S. WlllOll tEJ WOii Dy IOl'r.11 1 114 -lmlltl Cll flC. Piltl (Elll ).;, j 1tl -Mttulf Il l .,._ Wlltl HIYla ,,., 1•1. • sJ_JJ -JOl'lff (II dlC Mlrutl!U tti!tl~ UI -1"""*'*° fE J p 1 n" • 4i Hllkfllrlll <• t 1'0 -~" IEI tWlld Cfft111 !EoJi 147 -o.ivtt1 1•1 ci.e."'""' tEdl fl L - IM -ll:OWlllOll llcll -tty lorllllt.! 1., -Doulifl fol'fitlt, • 177 -......_ !l ell llll'lnld McGulr• tll. • ltl -N«t•ll 11 --'"'"* CEd( ... HvY -Doubll flrftlt, .. SCC-W-l"e Llin:fl'+-·- ' ll • • 0 DAil Y PILOT SC Friday, J111uary 19, 1971 Ifl.011ey's 1t' orth Pl1a se 3 to Hike By SYL\rlA PORTER Q. \\'hut will be th e kl'y • l•:eapon v.•1lh \11hich the U.S. tA•ill lry to fight the danger of acrelera1111g inrlatk>n in 1h1s nt-w µha~ of drastit·ally ~uced price-wage eontrols? A. 1'1ghtt'r credit and hi1ther Interest rates -the weapon v.·hich has been lops Ul the antl-lnna· lion arsenal alJ along. This met1n s that you v.·ill find ii harder and more ex· ~pensive to get l'Otl:TE• lhe loans you need and want to finance all the things you v.•ant to do, buy all the products and services yC)U want to buy, build all the projecis you want to build. Q. BL'T DON'T highe r bor· rowing costs add to the CQSl of Jiving~ A. Certainly, they do. This classic-anti-inflation weapon is in itself a contributing factor to. inflation . Higher mortgage rates on a home mortgage or stiffer interest rates en a perscnal or business Joan are as much a part of living costs- as high£'r prices or1 a pound of steak (and they last a lot longer. too l. Q. Thal doesn·t make sense. A. In the traditional economics textbooks. it does. In simplest, pe r ha p s oversimplified language. this Is the basic tale and theory. There ;ire l\l'O types of in- flation. One is the type in \\'hich rising costs (primarily labor costs1 push up · pric'.!s and it is cal!ed cost.push in- flation. This i:'! the inflation ..... e·ve been battling for years. THE SECOl<li'D is the type in "'"hlch rapidly rising demands for goods and services pull up prices an~ it is called demand- pull inflation. This demand-pull inflation is what we are threatened v;itb new -as the ecooorttic upsv.•- ing gains power and the cushions cf idle manpov>'er. machine5 and materials which have Leen restraining demand pressures shrink to very thin proportions. To figh t de mand pressures, the theory holds that it is im· pe rative to cut your capacity and willingness to borrcw money -wbich means that the Federal Reserve System must curb the supply of credit 111111-UI ...... • • THERE ARE OVER 2000 USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S _,,_1-tarbar BaulllVlilr-tl af Car• LOOI FO• THI IMIUM AT THEODORE I UNIVERSITY ROBIN S FORD OLDSMOBILE 20!0 2850 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BL VD. OVER THE COUNTER ' • • • \ • • • • ' '1 I I • A • • • ... ' • • Inter.estRates ·-Worry, Market 7 NEW YORK (AP) -Stoot marktt prlcts drifted down· Wan! tod.,-, hit by ln-W ,..m .. over s-Jble bl'her lai«wt 1118 llld ·-of tnlllllon. n..n • .,. -u..1 tara• ...... ..i.1 banu would IOOll be lor<td to rUle thtjr prime l<ndlng ratea from I lo IY• _.I, Procluclnc'a tlaJ>t l!IOll'I' market. And • filblUly Ulot looMr .. ,..pr1ce "°"trots under -· P 3 would crate a frioh bdlatlonary spurt also lllQOd •I W Slrett ·~-, .. L . ' ) • ' I , ' I DAll.Y 1'11.DT 2L • . ' • . .. ' • • • . . . .. ,. . . --- • Fridal, January 19, 1973 •• .. ·A'11\E'f _: EI . _UQ _ ' l(EY . 1 . ,. ' ' ~'-·· ~ . 2520 .NO. "GkAND'"'" • ._ 20972 •OOKHUUT SANTA-·ANA "'~ -',t~io'" t-------tHUNTINGT6il BIACH !!HONE 639-0504' ,.~:,r.:M. _____ 7...,..._.._,,_,,M. · hw.,&_l4llc;"9J1JIA.M ... 1JP.M. • PHONE 962·55'3 17th ST .-GRAND GARDEN GROVE FWY. 18.l . lt'GLASSEL L : ~ l ~i = ~ > l! .. .. .. "'t-....-t .. .. . ~-~ ~Rl&TOL ~ coA.i1 g i • PLAZA . SPECIALS • . INAUGURAL ' FOOD TASTES llETTER WITH ,/:-_ _,,.....~~ S!eaMa:~~ •• 1;1y " St1inleu "SIMI SAVES TIME. SAVES VITAMINS 'Rog. $6.95 '2.95 ... ,, I • Carnation LIGHT • CHIJ~K : POPULAR 111,AND CIGARET-TES ' . Sir JAx·-Meats · 20982 BROOKHURST AT ATLANTA 968-5355 . hUy t :JI A.M. t. 7:JI P.M. -s.tw•1 & Swley t :ll A..M. twi 6 P.M. ·[~-~~-~-. 16 OUNCE · . ' PLUS DEPOSIT $] . a·ru 4,9c Hot Sandwiches TO GO 1s~. FEATURING MANNINGS' BEEF AND BAR M PRODUCTS LIMIT "2' PACKS. .• Void 'A""" J1i1. l7, 1973 . . . . . ·\ PASTRAMI-BEEF DIP-HAM DIP FRESH SEAFOOD DAILY . CUSTOM COOKERY & CATERING BAR M ALL MEAT WIENERS 69~ ~ 1 M tltn 27~ o.ty-. CORNISH 18 OL GAME 69C HENS ·· LIMIT 3 PER COUPON . GORDON'S OR WOLFSCHMIDT VODKA Your Choice! FULL HALF GALLON TU BORG . BEER 12 DUNCE CANS DR BOTTLES ~ -BONELESS··· - FULLY COOKED WHOLE Or HALF - • GIVE THE FAMILY A REAL TREAT LA PAZ Marguerita Mix . FULL QUART COLLECTOR'S BOnLES Beam's Choice :.~i~ ~·------.~~~VE~~,o~,-....... -~-- ~ Old-Grand Dad $699 16 PROOF ~ QUART _ 6· ~~CK $139 DEN~lK'S FINEST PASSPORT 599 699 Scot.ch $_ · F~TH $ QUART I • ' · ScORESBY SC()tCH . ~~9,A. $4~ ' • )· HALF s11 ·99 GALLON ' ' ,I 59 -. )' • i lAR·M SLICED BACON 98~ ._. _, .... _.,,..u...·" J.OBSTEi tj ~-• " • tAILS -· ·1 .• 98t..~ . . 6 :ro a oz. : , . llNTUCIY SERGEANT BLEND FIFTH ASSORTED CORDIALS e CREME de MENTHE e TRIPLE SEC . - . e CREME de CACO • ' ~99 • QUART $ ·. $3'~ '~L· ·Pl , H • • • TARNOFF ·VODKA- I • . - .. , , '• --• --• • Lago••a EDITIOM Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ·VOL. 66, NO. 19, 4 ~ECTIONS, 46' PAGES ! ORAN?E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUAR.Y 19, 1973 TEN CENTS --•Tinaot y~B_ Lo0e~ Conies to Fre~ Hina By GEORGE LEIDAL Of .... DI/tr l'lltt Slaff urm nmothy'a Jove . I've traveled with him for two months and I've come with him to Los Angeles to free blm. I'vf'l come to speak to President NiJ:on," the petite; mousy-haired British subject a~­ companying Dr. Timothy Leary to Los Angeles said 11:tursday. Identifying herself as Joann..~ Harcourt· Smith.and as a "resident of the U.S.," the mystery wtirilan declined to give any but her maiden name and refused to comment on the present status of her marriage to an un1dentified Washington man. "I'm a citizen of the world. My mother was Polish, my father British. I was born in Switzerland and I .have a son born in Greece and another born in America." the 26--year old, self·proclaimed authoress ot a book on "Freedom" said. ''I'd been looking !or Timothy all my life. I found him t\\·o months ago. lt was only natural we should meet since J wrote a book that sold 100,000 copies in Europe. It was about freedom," Atiss Ha.rcourt..smtth said. _ "Timothy's written a book. It will be published by Bantam," she said ex- plaining how the convicted dope advocate was financing lhe recent portions of his 8·month exile abroad, fleeing U.S. aulhorities. She said she joined him in Switzerland. made a film wilh Leary in Austria traveled with him to Beirut, Lebanon "\li'here we were treated like kings" and was at his side in Kabul, Afghanistan when U.S. ofifcials caught up with him. took away his invalidated passport and escorted him to Los Angeles via Frankfurt, Paris and Wndon. ''It really wasn't very elegant the way they snatched his passport from his hands. They said it wasn't Valid. But we !See LEARY, Page%) Juror _ Says Juan Corona -Des-erves Another Trial j ' • ' I ' • . • ' ' . MILV PILOT' ..... ~ ..... r<· "HE'S l!IAOT\f!UI.; HFS A KllW'1 ~YJ ~y PIUIND Joonoio ""'-'t-Snlltt. C.lled-RJafldMhljt ~ .~ ' --. . . . Who GetS'Tinljtthy Leary?- Officers Await De.cision Orange ~deputies were standing in line at Los Angelea: Coonty jail th1' mornlng awaiting al!!ermlna· Uoo m w h i c b of several jurisdictions w<dd be fll'St to get custody of Dr. Tuno!hl' Leary. - A stierifl's Oftiet spokesman said a contingent of Orange County officials was oD hand at the Los Angeles jail at 10:30• a.m. today awaiting a final decision. Leary, who,... brought into the jail by U.S. Bureau of Dangerowi Drugs agents who accompanied . him from Europ;e to Los Angeles Thursday, bas yet-to face a federal judge. • . Meanwhile a "5 million bench warrant, Issued ,~r by Orange County jurbtf while u:acy remained in Europe, is the count\"• t., on ·the ~ped ·!lruf •culUlll. The -...rrant Is rt{ated to 19 coup\I of lil?lugllng and conspiracy to:_ ......,.le J~ aptnst Leary for bis alleg9d in--• volVement in the Brotherhood of Etetnal Love. 1'bat Lquna Beach-based organiutloo is suspected of fronting a mlllion dollar lnternatiocuol drug ring_ ' A '75 inillion tax lien against two Riverside ranch J.iroperties owned by the organization also has been filed . 1be f75 million figure representing unpaid taJes on the profits from sale of illegal drugs is Meanwhile, Leary ' '1.1so fa c I! s pros-. ecution · on felony charges for having as many as 200. · : Meanwhile , Leary • also. f~ces : Pl1>" Ucution OJI felony .Charges for· havi,ng escaped from Califorhi8 Men's'COJoily ih San Luis flbispo. · .At· noon today, It was no't known which of ·the , charges brought egaiilst Leary wooJd>be .tried !irsL ~es in Santa Ana believed, bo.w,t'Yer, 1Leary ~ight be being brought h)..""'9rahge County sometime tpday. Emergency Declared In Obispo FNlm Wirt Servkii · SAN LUIS OBISPO -A slate of emergency was declared throughout San Luis Obispo County: as the worst rainstOrm in four years sent flood waters pouring into <lowntown streets here, cut- ting off commmiicalkms out' or the city and forcing acboots to close. .With a predictioo "!,more rain ,toc!oy, the llate Olljce <It Biilergency 5*vk.s said It was Jijepine 1 close w1tc11 m the OOlllffJ' as web -as :Baota Barbara County to the -south' ltlilcl. &as "reaCbed a point of almoSt complete aaturaUon." The stonn, which spread throughout Southern California early· Thursday, dumped more than three inches of rain over coastal areas and brought a total of 6.3 inches to the area since Tuesday. Some streets In San Luis Obispo were four feet deep in water Thursday morn- ing but the deluge receded by midaf- temoon. More than 100 can In tbe city were damaged by the stonn but no serious in- juries were reported, police said. Floodwaters closed off roatb at both the southern and northern ends of the ci· ty for a time. · Thousands or homeowners in Los Osos and liaywood Park,. immediately south of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of !he day. In nearby Laguna Lake, a number of homes were flooded. Homes and buildings were also fiooded to the south in the San Fernando Valley. • Evil Spirits Hysteria at Electr ic Plant SINGAPORE (UPI ) -The General Electric Company said today a witch d.octor, an ln~ian mys~ic 8!'~ a Buddhist monk fought what It hoped to be the final battle with the evil spirits blamed for an outbreak of mass hysteria among women at a GE plant. ' -~EVEN G~ \\'.ERE SEEN early today being escorted out of the plant and -mto company vehtcles to be taken home after collapsing from hysteria induced by their belief in evil spirits. The ielevision and appliance plant has been closed three times since Satu~ day by similar outbreaks of hysteria. GE CALLED IN BOMOHS (Malay witch doctors) who burned incense and s_i>r~ed magic water, a. Buddbist monk and an Indian mystic to fight the splritl. The Bomoh waa-called ill Tbunday but failed to halt the mass hyaterta then. """"'-The compeny said things appeared . quiet today and the e.orcists w"!'t Laguna· Principals Look Into 3 Problem Areas By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of .. !Miiiy Piiot Slfff Spelling, language mechanics and math computation are three areas now being reviewed by elementary principals in· the Laguna Beach Unified School District. Concern over the three subject areas came in the wake of sixth grade test results showing lower than expected performance in the three areas, the Board of Education l~rned this ?:eek. In other areas, including reading com- prehension, language exprusion and arithmetic concepts, Laguna Beach sixth graders are scoring in the upper two per· percentile, according to scores on the Cooperative Primary Reading Test. Sixth grade students this year are reading on the 74th percentile, based on scores ori the Comprehensive Test of Basic Skills. Reeves said the low high school reading score ls a concern but Is not as signlllcant as it may appear. He e1- plained that the intelligence quotient (See TESTS, Page %) S • d cent of the state. ... llPCfllllCll Cttt "We are right on," said Dr. Robert Reeves, assistant superintendent of in- M • SJ OO structlon. "But I'm not Inferring we rest I ee ting at on our laurels. We still need to work on those three areas." New Rainstorm Dumps Anotlier Inch on Co ast * * * *. * . * Reeves added !hat an principals have Le ' A LA By Laguna Board been alerted to the troub;e spots "and By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI ary S rrest l•n are striving to improve on those areas." ot 111t oeiry l'llft 111tt · · His comments came during presen· Ra· d nched Or ' I.aguna Beach Unified School District talion of a 12_page historical review of '" re ange County cities lrus~ will bold a secret meeting Satur· the performance of Laguna Beach again Thtll'Xlay night, dun1plng more • -6 day morning with four prospective con-students on standardized tests over the than an inch of waler In some coastal ~nds. '28-month :o .;J_' -y.·ssey "'1tsats on procedures for selecting a past 3 years. regions and creating flood conditions that (:I. new mperinteodenL The data shows that last year's first created more of a nubance tban posing a Tl)e meeting will begin at I a.m. in the rrrade students are reading in the 9151 real threat. • E<iacatloo Center, l60 Blumont St. •· f Tbe 9e111on bas been called sO the Today's re tum of fa ir skies .is expected Dr. Timothy Le1rys .a.month world Washington, D.C., told newsmen she bad' board CID interview the men and hire H • J Tide W 1 toT"'"hurtsdinue 'atl leat st thlroul gh toSatu~ayUo. trip ended 'l'llmlday It Loi AngeleJ in the put two months "found perfect one of tbem to lel'Ve U an advt.er in the ig S as f. ay I 8 e arr V ng S rm, "'Jo W• International Airport when the Pon Am love" with "Tlmolby." proceu of replacing Superintendent t ing on the heels of a heavy downpour Clipper "Red Jacket" landed •and tf.S. one's put ~ •dnap. We're · both William Ullom, who leaves. his desk Tuesday! raised the precipitation totals Bure111 of Dangerous Drugs offlcen ar-agiinst addiction. Addiction -to heroin, Tuesday. Into Dow1•town Jof taa · cl !es to new highs, well ahead of rested and manaCled the milling dnii addiction. to cocaine, televilJon, ~· Scheduled to appear before the board is " as year· culture guru. • We're agatnst addiction to anythlrut.'' Dr. Emelt Lake~ professor of educa· IN HUNTINGTON BEACll: Rain . Judge Sets Hearing On Motion FAIRFIELD IAP) -The juror who cast the final vote con\'icting Juan Corona of murdering 25 !arm laborers says she doubts that she made tbe right decision and feels Corona deserves another trial. The 38-year-old fann labor contractor was found guilty Thllrsday of 25 counts or first-degree murder by a jury of 10 men and two lVOmeo after .f6. houri 'or deliberation stretched over eight days. Corona was accused of the murder or 25 transient workers whose hacked and stabbed bodles were discovered ln.1971 in makeshift orchard graves 100 miles northeast of San Francisco along the banks of the Fealher River. It was the biggest mass murder charge in the nation 's history. Corona's .. atlome:f, Richard Hawk Im· mediately moved for a new trial, ~ a hearing on his motion was scheduled Jan. 29. Judge Richard E. PaUon delayed sentencing Corona until after the hear· ing. Under California law, Corona could -receive a maxlnium sentence of 25 con· secutive life terms. Special prosecutor Ronald Fahey said if Patton chose to sentence Corona to comecutive, rather tbao concurrent, life terms it would have lbe effect of delay· ing Corona's eligibility for parole. A person sentenced to life In prison in California without prior oonvlcUon Is eligible fot parole after seven years. . The 12 jurors each individually af. firmed the guilty verdicts in a dramaUc conclusion to lhe four-montfi trial 11le separate reading, affirmation and recon;ling of the 25 Individual "guilty of murdc. _of the (irst degree" verdicts stretched 28 minutes in the crowded hushed courtroom. ' · But juror Naomi Underwood said in an Interview ·at her home after the trial-that "I do reet Juan Corona deserves another lrial." "I have doubt!! yet," said Mn. Underwood, a 11-year~d widow. "I don't think they had enough evidence. I still doubt 1-made the right deciskm," she ad· aed. Oruge Cout ., Weadier r.•.v left the "couniry with his wffe, When askeil if.the former advocate of Ilona! oMbnlnllllratlon'at California Stale Area ;1, Laguiia watchers reported that the new ._,., LSD and.twice convicted_ mmJlllJ'IB user u_ niversity, FuJJertoo ·, Leland Doughiy, " " downpour created several minor traffic Rosemary, aftl'r eacaping ~r r om 'd Is bu< 1 d The lt'IJ be sunny and war--00 now objected to use of pot, Miss director of personnel len'ices, Orange acc1 en · no ser ous am1oge. ..._ California Men's c&lony, Sani.uiJ Obi!po Jiarcourt.Smitb replied, "People ar~ free County Department of Education ; Dr. High tides and westerly five to eight same held true for the neighboring com· Saturday, with highs in the 60s and where .he was ~in(4i oPe to 10 year to do anything they like." Kenneth Bailey, director of teacher foot swells today battered Laguna's Vic-munity of Fountain Valley. lower 70s along lhe Orqe Coast. sen~ £or piogesslon of marijuana. Despite her UJness~ evidenced by a e<!ucation, UC, Irvine and Or. Robert torla Beach smashing a seawall and Rainfall in both cities Thursday was Lows toni&ht, from the high 309 Lu.iy was busted in Laguna Beach the jaundiced coloring of her skin, the~ 2'-Reeves. assistant Superintendent of breaking a gas line there while at Main .67 inches and raises the season total to to lhe low 40e. day .r'ter CJ!ristmas, Itel along with ~ year old "cltiten of the world" remalr¥!d lmtructiod. · Beach water sprayed over ·.he board 8.04 inches. That compare to ~.20 inches INSIDE TOD~ y wife and son, John, then.JO. . cheery' in ber..2Q:mlnute meeting wtth the Just how much of the meeting can be walk and flowed Into Broadway. at thla Ume last year and a tealOn total On IM day alter Christmas four years press. ~..... handJed in secret seuioiu depends on a The broken gu line, a two inch feeder of 5.79 lnches for the entire 1971-72 rain op~~'J C::po"!:'fs ~l':; ~paigl~~ ·later, the fonncr 'Harvard lectllrer and "He's 'beautiful. He's a 1o1-.r, ab<! ---"'"" f-m the Orange "-··ty r ...... J, 1·ust above the surfline, was ripped :ipart season. •• r .·-•"""6 •v \,(1,1\UJ vuw~ want to rtVivt ll lhoto likt "KU. his ..,. found .. _,..ect love" -Joanna claimed u she bounced born the requet'~ by Trustee Jane Boyd, that alter sand eroded away around it. IN COSTA MESA: Neither the fire nor r-L·. .a-___ lCU met" at Che t0mt timt? Tom u.r.ourt.sntith -began their ·~~ cu11om1 clearing room ....r by all will be deijyered late today. Laguna Beach poilOOftell eva""'ted the police department reported any TilU! telfa Whl/ In hll lntenou- ll'y lrip wlllch lod to Laary:1 ~ _.., oo tlie 'Dilbt !:om 'Lohdon ez. · Mri. Boyd requested the formal Ot>inon nearby houses and tife~anl Jim Stauffer stgnilicant problems as a result of the lion colwmn 111 todail'• W"k· t~~-by'll>Af&r'fshanldtbls~tanhlf'al~~~-~-~~~·clr-~~-.ilrn.ni~~~cei~!'.::1.eary~=fil ............. ~-~llfo~ySlljiijiijiJ"iiiifldr>-!~:;:i~•~l~C01r,•~Mel~~~~n~""":":~~~·~·~....i:;~ing:r--:,.:.i p1_lhe1nto'~urJthe~t~w~i<e.._~to,__,,dl-i~·~v.,_,a,___~tasal~k~d·~!.~do.~_w_~n~pq~u~r~.Po~-~ll~ctln"o--\'Ltr~t.;.Afi~u~11~1~~ .. Sm~-'"-lth¥18L..f--<1lrier~.~~~~~~~~--l ~r.~·oocx •-NKi Het w • ......., .. only of the boanl, at wulcb a mmber of en ug pope. ~ was a rue a c ••~n by 5iO Loi AnP.Jes Pol~ Department of· formed ln her eyes as ahe described the pmons spoke Jn favor of scrapping-the The stawalls of home• along OCean but I.hat there were nu lnjurle$. No rain· LM. a.rt • ltWIMf ,.. ,. flcen cadgbt 'mdy gllmp1e5 of their 1!\0ments-Cll arrtvat tn Los Anples wben secret tessioD and opening the interview• Fro:.t were hit by the.heavy seas and the fall figure was available. ~~ 1: ::= c: 4. •: "_..."as he wu Jed,, to a walUnc Sher-lbe SS.year old Leary wu 1rrated. to 0ie public. overhanging porch rf the Jack Stanland IN NEWPORT &EAOI: Driving rain c ... Hi.. ..... • ... _.. .,. Hf's hippie-type van.. M an Y wondered MiD ~ aid ...-. ap--• ...!Gird Presklent William 'Iflomas tW'ni-home at 2846 Ocean Front was un--triggered wide.rpread nuisance l'JOoding ~ !:• = .......,. .... :; aloud. 1'Wben'1 Rosem1ry?" proached Leary· In the ftnt .etw C81bln ed down those requests. dermlftfd. in Jow-lylng areas of UM? city and rears :::..,.~,: ! ~::~.,_.. .,: Mia llarcourt.sra.lth, suffering-: from and said, "You're under IMWt.'' While the board may ICfaUy discuss Tbe orange County •Jarbor District were renewed that the onrush of water ,.._.. •tt. *' ,......... v.a what lhe said wu lltNm bepaUtiJ1 gave "What'• yodr ..namet1' 1.eary was aaid qualifications of pen-OnneY' Jn secret reported the 6.1 foot high Ude to have down San Diego Creek might carry aw1y ::.::.:...,.._.,: ' = ....,. ,,.,: oo clues u to the whereabout.s Ol Mrs. to have replied. • t seuklns, matters such as procedures to been.at t :&6 a.m. today with decrtUing the old brldae on MacAJ;thur Boulevard. •• ~ 11 ..,.. ,.... 4r " Leary. However1 the BrfUsh 1Ubjtct who "Tum aniundi ~ t n • • the pro-be used ln the ~tlon process aboul4 be tldel tQ occur ovtr t~ weekend. Orew1 worlted for several houn pump-.=::-• .,.a: • ' 1 ft• ..,. :---· _. had I ·-nd ll'1iltl-lll---lloo _llml!INI ..... tt-. -. --:dl!eu....i-in-the-epen,-11f1Ued Mrs. Boyd;--Hlgh tide 'l'hUrsdlJ wn 7 t-.--------i:S.. IWNFALL,1'age 11 --'----'--t=:;:=======:J • • ' ... • . . • ~ DAILY PILOT Go s Urged Traffic Interim goals and policies for guiding -impnwrement of L!guna Beach Traffic circulation ha\'e been presented this week to both the City Council and the ' Planuiitg Comml!sion by the citizen Tra£fic Circulation Committee. The goals not only call for easing or 1rafiic Oows. parking impro\."ement. and pedestrian safely, but also for the avoidance ot encouraging of additiona1 vehicle traffic, and development of an in- novative i n t e g r a I e d transportation system. The goals also state that any lransportaUon or circulation system that might be adopted by the city should be "sympathetic to both the physical and social environnleflt of the city." The commillee is headed by Larry Hunt, president of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce, and the report was presented. by Michael Shley of the Citizens Town Planning Aasociatkm. Goals were explained as "the deslres of the citizens of Laguna" and a general statement of wants and needs. Policies, a further interpretation of the goals, "·ere also spelled out in the report , and included the development of suf· ficlent parking to eliminate congestion and overcro ... ·ding in the central business district. The report also requested that in cases of a project requiring an environmental impact report. six questions regarding traffic circulation should be answered. Those six questions ask if the project \\·ill ~ the land u.ws and dem.ity pat- terns for•tbe areas as established by the city general plan, if it will meet estbetic standards or the area, and if it has the flexibility to adapt to lechaoLogic8.1 im- provements for new transportation systems. It is also suggested that a cOst benefit analysis be devek>ped for the projects to determine all the costs and the an- ticipated direct and indirect financial and nonfinancial benefits, as well as "''ho will bear the costs of the improvements. Niguel Building Office Approved I.we ol offlCO spaoe In Laguna Niguel for the Orange County Depmment ol Building aod Safety bu been approved by the -of Supervison. Supervisor Rooald Caspen, who had held· up approval for two weeb said the lease was necessary as appointment Of a third judge had crowded building and salety out of the South County Civic Center buildl.Qg. The new offices will be at 26052 Getty Drive. The five-year lease calls fer 4,600 square feet al office apace at $1,840 a month. County Administrative Officer Robeft Thomas sald an addiliooal court building would be ready in three years. Discuss ion Slated On Main Beach Park A round table discussicn of the Main Beach Park develcpment will be held at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 3 at Laguna !!each City Hall Sponsored by the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council, the forum will featW'e speakers from the city staff, Main Beach Park Commltte.. and en· vironmental groups as well as the public at large. Reconsideration cf "1ain Beach Park Develcpment is Wlder way because bids were substantially more than ex- pected far the estimated $000,000 project. 011.MH COAST u DAILY PILOT Ttle or..., C..' °"ILY ,.llOT, wlW. "41"' It '*""'-tM N1111•1'rw. h llVlllWIN "' fM Or-.. Cent Pub!Wllnl °""411111". s..., ,.,. tdlltoM M'I' .... ~ Mlfdt11 .,.,..... f"r1Mf, ,_. C.'8 M .. 1, Ntwpw1 IMCA,. H~ 8"dl/,._.llft V11i.,, Uf\1111 •llldl; 1rme!~.ir.dt ... S111 ~I 5a1t J""" ca.ilh"-A 1ingl• r"l9klMI 9dt1• 11 M lllhld Sltvnltys and S11n111,.._ TIMI pr!M.lpll PINlllllnl ~nt II 11 JXI Wnt l1y Srrwet, CO.la Mtll, ClllflWlll1, ~2'.. Jl•ktt N. Wi-•4 l'relcltN ..... P\lbl""- J1ck It. Curl1y vie. ... lflnt ..... Ckrwwol ~. n.,.. •• ic ... n .. ,,. TliOM•• A. MllfPhl•• M1M811w Edi• 01rl" H. Looi Jlic••f'4 t. Nill ...... _.,...,...,, .. ---121 Fo,.,. A""•• N•m111 M4t•Ht P.O. hx ..... t161J --Oretl -..: n w.. a.y s,... •=a..ctir nn .. ....,,.... .......,.N Hlrlt hK!rr1 11'7S a.ell........,.... IM le: 3U HwW1 &I C....W. lMI 1---1--._.-m~1 u~m-­ c-."'" ,..,,,,, ... , '42.u11 a.,...._.AI .. ,,.. iec , •••••••• 4f4.94U • ~ 1'12, 0r.,. °*' Mlht.1nc '*'""""'· fff _, ,--., lllwtrwrlllll. •ttwW INtltt II" .......,IMnMflll; l'llAlll ""' ... ,..,..,..,... ..... ...... ,.... ..... " cepjlt'llM ...... . .._. ......... Mlf tit CMtt MM. ~ ~ltfl IW u"lw GM f _,..,,., ... ,,_II .U.11. fMlllll~I Mllhn> -MINf• UM m11111lltr. • --- Capo Boru! ·T~~1:~ei ~ . ... · B k · le-.1 ol lltudenl• leods to drop ., the UJld ll ln Oft dlftereDt countries and It ac e1rs studeota move from primary to !e<.'On· said II •u rood unUl 1974," Miss -'=-. '-' dary levell. An IQ of 105 in the nrst ~ltll said. 1 grade, be 141d, la in the top five per<enl. After Alllbeoi.tlD 1ut!IDl1tlet de!>O!led I By J1'lde U, It la lo tbe lop• percent. !Aoly, ui without Iii passport, Leary s f,a t p h 'l'l>dJlh grade studea!• tlJfJ year are -pen!<d tbe ol!lctrl willingly. she f US readlnj: •l tbo 5lrd perctGUlo acoordlng uJd. to' sct>res on the Jowa Tests er Educa- , ,.,._ rep 1 LE~RY ..• ••J!:vtrybody was very nice ta us all the tional Developm~t. " here w -"d ha ...,. • Jn arllhn!eUc, the ""1"•9sllow, ailth way · e '"v.u V, esair"" again The eltlzens' committee working ' f o t grade students are performing at the In Frankfurt. Pl"IP -of the ~ml!Uoo school hood 70tll percenWe, 1jhlle grade 12 aludenll "Four days 1go he said °he ''as iP hap. Issue ll'eb. 20 in the Capistrano Unified are perfcrmlng at the :.&th eercentile. PY to be &olng home -even to prison. School District this week announced a On tests of languaae· usage aYcth grad~ lJe:a mastered freedom 5() completely be gl!t-out.-thtovote campaign led by studeots ,are per.forming at the Qnd can be free aeywbett," J.be said. chairmen from ~lvldual scbOol at-pereenille, while 12 1rade students are She deplored Leary's arrest aiui legal .. tendance-arta1. · scaring at the 'lst percentile. The Rev. Alla.o Vemon, ch;linnan or Tbe pereentllt score Is commonly used jams "for SIMking onJy two butts" and Arvy's Friends ('11Arvy" is derived from to rank a group's pcrfcrmance on cduca- vowed, "He knows I loye him and am "Area Residents Vote Yes") said Ucoal tests. For example, :i 15th percen- going to free him. We're all going to free cba1rmen fw each area of llMI large tUe score means the. group's median district aJmdy have been appointed. (mlddle) score II above 75 ~ of JuclJ Dovln ol Mlalon Viejo wU1 ......, those who took the test. , ' him." • . STILL SMILING, DR. TIMOTHY LEARY IS HUSTLED TO JAIL World Trip Ended at Los Angeles as Clipper "Red Jacket" Landed Beach Man Takes Children To Meet 'l(ing of Acid' A 30-year-old Huntington Beach father who said LSD was for him ''the begin- ning of life" brought lwo of his foor chj.ldren with him le Los Angeles International Airport Thursday to greet the returning "king" of the acid culture. The employed l®l and die maker with long blond hair and mustache said, "l'm here to see Dr. Tim. I'm glad he has com< home bot I'm sorry the king-has lo come home this way." "Three years ago I was super-straight. Then I dropped LSD and look at me now. I'm happy." The man said be had never met Dr. Timothy Leary -"ar least not physically." The Huntington Beach man was among a group of some 100 camp followers of the drug culture advocate who strained to gel a glimpse of Leary as he \\'alkcd the 30 yards from the airport terminal to a waiting Los Angeles Sheriff's camper van. From Page I RETURN ... cedure," she said the agent told him. "Then they handcufied him and pulled him away down the stairs," she sobbed. Leary grinned and laughed for the cameras as he was led fo the va n which, trailed by four other unn1arked cars. took him to Los Angeles County Central Jail fer booking. Ball was set at $5 million by Orange County courts when the hippie hig~riest was touring Europe following his escape. Charges now lodged against him in- clude: -Felcny escape for having fled the minimum security prison in San Lu is Obispo in 1970. -He is charged with l& counts of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle dangerous drugs as a suspected leader of the Brotherhood cf Eternal Love -an international drug trafficking organiza- tion believed to have been fnunded by Leary in Laguna Beach in 1966. -He faces charges of i n c a m e tax evasion filed by the state against the Brotherhood ln the amount of $76 million. , tax lien has been brooght against two ranch properties owned by the Brolherhood in River!lide County. Police officers at the airport Thursday said Leary wculd be housed in the Los Angeles County Jail until his cou ap- pear<ince in Orange County. A plan to transpqrt him via hclicopte to Parker Center aborted when a driving rain began moments before the jumbo jet pulled up to the international arrival aattellite. Dog Obedience Class Scheduled in Laguna A JO.week class in cbedlence for dogs And their owners will be held starting at J_p.m.._\\'edncsday_aL.Blddle_Rield. Reg1stration should be mode at the Laguna Beach ~realkJn Department, 175 N. Coast lllghway prior · to class start. The one-hour a wt'Ck class is deslgntd t<' demonstrate the usefulne!I! of a well- tralned dog as guardian and companion . Training II ba>ed on the standardized Amertcan Kenntl Club exercises and cwners tratn their own does. Fee for the .class Is J20 l - ' Others said they came from Laguna Beach -the Orange Coast city where Leary's arrest and subsequent conviction for marijuana possession launched his world travels following hi!! escape from California Men's Colony, San Luis Obispo, in 1970. Cadres of uniformed Los Angeles Police officers parted tbe crowd from their Idol but many waited in the in- ternational arrivals tenninal fer more than an hour ta see hi9 latest ~. Joan- na Harcourt-Smith. Some were vocaUy disappointed when the myslery woman did not turn out to be Leary's wife, Rosemary. Sbe had been s~id ""8 be witb him during his stay in Algiers with the Black Paolhers and later in Switzerland. No word cf her was spoken by her "perfect love" stand-in and traveling companion, the petite, Ieng-haired woman who said she was a British sub- ject and 26 years old. From Pagel RAINFALL ... ing out the hardest -bit Oood areas. There was .some mud runoff in parts of the city but no roads were closed with the exception of a short stretch on MacArthur Boulevard. Traffic was in- terrupt~ until 6 p.m. to inspect the bridge. IN LAGUNA BEACH: Rainwater cascading down Park avenue caused flooding along Fcrest Avenue and minor damage ta some d-0wntown stores. Ex· acUy 1.3 inches of raih soaked the city during the stcnn. Water rose up to the sidewalk level on Forest Avenue and s~ into Fairchild Stamps, 310 Glenneyre and New Direc- ti ons, 265 Fcrest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in front of their stares. IN TUE SO!JTll COAST area : Rainfall amounted ta more than one inch and caused car! to stall and ~Vet?l to spin out on freeways in Mission Vieja and Laguna Hills. , The latest st.ann brought the month's rainfall to a hefty 2.9 inches In San Clemente and abou£ the same fer San J u a n Capistranc, making January already an unusually wet month. Jn the central county area: The stcrm brought .73 inches of rain to Santa Ana 1naking the total for the year 8.87 inches, more than double the 4.43 inches of last year. VIiia Park Dam recorded .95 in ches Thursday tor an 8.89 Ir.ch seasonal tctal. Saddleback peak had .9 inches and the Irvine Ranch . 75 inches . Crime . Victims Have Rights, Too AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -A hill Intro- duced In the Texas LegWatur< would ---require crlmlnal.s to gm lbelrliitenerea victims 24 hours' notice, either in writing or orally, telling the tlme, place and nature cf the crime ta be committed. Th e blll. by Rep. Jim Kaster cf El Paso, would ~lso require criminals ta in· form Intended vlctlm.t of t.helr rights. "If it 's fair enough for the criminal, It's fa ir eoougb for the victim,'' Kaster said Thursday, "I belleve tt II all perle<I he lhould have come bact to the United Stares," she added. "He was so happy when he saw the Pacific 0ceon again," she aald reca11inr his mood as the lwnbo jet "O!pper Rea Jacket" lumed to make its approach to Los Angeles lnlemat!Qruil Airport about 4:l0 p.m. Tbunday. While her "perfect Jove" was removed from the plane in handcuffs and under guard of both federal and Los Angeles authorities, Miss Hareourt-Smith, against whom police said no charges were pend- ing, lelt the airplane v i a the routine customs check. She sald a doctor confirmed that she had serum hepatitis -"it's not con- tagious" -when the plane landed. The illness sbe said led Leary to begin JJs five-eountry flight which resulted ia bis being spotted by U.S. officials in Afghanistan. Despite the lack of an ex- tradiUon treaty with the U.S., Afghanistan authorities a p p a r e n t I y cooperated in the turnover. The woman, believed to be tbe daughter of a British publisher, said she contracted hepatitis while the pair were in Vienna matlng the antt-addiction film. "On my hlrtMay, Jan. IJ, I became ill. Tim promJsed to take me somewhere · I've never been and get me to a hospital," ahe said. That trip led to what she claimed was the ''illegal" remnval o( Leary's passport and the pair's "free ride" to Los Ar.geles. "I've never been here befcre. It was a lovely night at the U.S. govunment's ei:- pense." She first said she planned to go to a hos pital, before finding a place "near to him, near the jail S(l J can free him.'' Women's Fitness Class Organized An informal fitness class for women now meets frora 10 to 11:30 1.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at the Laguna Main Beach. 1 S!>c>iWred by the Recrealion Depart· me!!lr class activitiea Include jogging, vclleyball, exercises and bicycle riding. Activities are directed by ·Kim Stewart, and partici pants may Wklertake all or any of the activities. There Is no fee, however, the recrea- tion department 494-1124 should be notilitd it attendance la planned. u ooordlnalllr for the are. chairmen, be 'All ol lhe p<rcentlle compoilsons ,..,. aald. mode aplnsl the "J>Qhlilbers "'"'1.:'. In the Vltjo aru, Bei.y Pal'Ur and which are l)le atandanb cmi<d by the Pal Sdlubert will lead the effort. person who"'"'" the test. It ll generally Other c&olnneo and their .,.., aro lower than the dlsi,t<t nonn, but higher Deume ,_.and J ... t llqelbrupe lhan the •Ille norm. in San 'JlllD; llorotlly Salooen in lhe While the per<enWe 11CQre1 generally Palisades rteeUoo; Joe Lowllo, Ole .have risen over the past eight years In HIUoo; JOIJl Holden and Connie LaParl all subject areas-, both Reeves 11fld fer Lis Palma.s; Sherri C1oM and Kathie tesUng consult.ant Ted Donlguian cau- Walfield, Dana School and Eleancr tioned against making direct com- Mcf11tt and Helen Kester in Crown parisozis. Valley. "There.are a Jot or reUO(lS that could Supt. Truman Benedict, assisted by account for the Increase," said Capistrano Beach area civic leade.r and Doniguiao. · accoontant Vaughn CUrtlsa, wW head the · Relerring to Reeves• commenta about 1roup'• apeabr'a bureau. lhe alxth l!J"lde test scores, lloolgulnn The major point which the group will aald that ,alxlh grade aoore.o tend to be try to Impress upon district volen Is the high. The reason, be added, may have to need for new IChoob to cope with the do wltb aomething other than learning. heavy growth in the area. ''When yau use the state nonn, you fall Besides the lhoosandl of mldential Into a high area," sald Doniguian .. "and dwdllng uo.IL9 posing a problem, the pro-any changes in the district are hard to ~ opening of the North American evaluate." Rockwell Plan~ alter a gcvem_!!lent llleow 8lso is expecled to add to the sudden surge in pupil populations. Bond hmd,,, .;say school admlnJstratcrs, are nearly depleted became of com- mitments for 1 porUoa cf 1 new elemen- tary IChool In San Juan Capbtrano and a junior hl&h c:ampua lo Laguna Niguel. Still No Takers For Three Open Board Positions Three poslt!Q111 on the Laguna Beach school hoanl up for election In April sWl have no fomWly filed caod.idates as of mld<lay today. • The Orange Counly Registrar of Voters office spokesman sakl the PoSitions now held by William Thomas, Jane Boyd and Only Mrs. Boyd bu publicly an- nounced candidates since filings opened Jan. 2. : Only Mrs. Boyd has publlcally an- nounced that &be will seek re-election to the board. : Deadline for filing fer the board posts Is 5 :>.m. Feb. 16 at the Registrar's of- fice. There is no charge fer filing as a candidate although the fee for the op- ticnal statement of qualifications ls $250. Candidates must file In person at the Registrar's o[fice 1119 E. Chestnut, Santa Ana. The election i!: April 17. Laguna Spiritual Group to Meet At Women's Club Laguna Beach SplrituaJ Research Associates will present Stewart· Robb. researcher experimenting with capturing voices of deceased persons on ·tape, dur- in a meeting at 8 tonight.at the Women's Club, 286 St. Ann's Drfve. Robb, who beads a research of elec- trical engineers, recently played one of bis tapes on a Los Angeles radio station and unaccounlably, the 50,000 watt sta- tions output dropped to 5,000 watta. His lapes will be played during lht Associates meeting. Second. speaker of the evening Is Howard Britton, vice president of SRA, LJ an electm.inechaoical enaineer and lee--, ' ~· lurer for Silva Mind Control Method. He will speak on mind eipansion through use of alpha and theta brain waves. According to Britton, people who have learned ~ conlrol these brain waves, have bten known to demonstrate clairvoyant and mediumistic abilities. 11:tere is a· $2 donatiOh requested for at~ tendance at the meeting. .CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUEt Featuring many fin• c0Hecfion1 from 1uch w•ll known lin•s a1 HEN REDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL, MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOOOMARK, and oth•rs .•• •ll substentially reduced. The largest selection of quality upholstery is now on display and r•ady for. immediate deliv•ry. Save now. Henr•don Alvarado lshownl' On Sale Now DROOt.-HERITAwll-HENREDON-WodbMARK-KARASTAN INTERIORS wmDAlS I IAtvlDAlS f:GO It l:JO NIDAY 'T1L f:GO - NEWPORT !EACH e J727 WISTCLIFI Dl.. '42·2011 • LAGUNA !EACH e 14S NORTH COAST HWY. ....... , ·TORRANCE e IJ64t HAWTHOlNI I LVD • Jflollrf 7 I t 7 I ' ) f // Saddlehaek: 7 VOL. 66, NO. 19, 4 SECTiONS, 46 PAGES · •• / -. , . • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1973 TEN CENTS •Tiniothy!s Lo.f'e ~ Conaes to Fre~ Hina By GEORGE LEIDAL Of rN O.ltr ,Mtl' ,,.,, "I'm Timothy's love. I've traveled wilh h1m for twO months and I've come with him~ to Los Angeles to free him. I've come to speak l'? President Ni.J:on,1• the petite, mousy-hafred British subject ac- companyin¥: Dr. Timothy Leary to Los Angeles said 'Mlursday. ldeptifying hersell as Joann.'.! Harcourt- Smilh and as a "resident of the U.S.," the mystery woman declined to give any ., but her maiden name and refused to comment on the present status of her marriage to an unidentified Washington mlin. "I'm a citizen of the world. My mother was Polish, my rather British. I was born in s.,.,•itzerland and I have a son born in Greece and another born in America," the 26-yeir old, selr-proclaimed authoress of a book on "Freedom" said "l'd been looking ror Timothy all my , life. I found him two months ago. It was only natural we should meet since I wrote a book that sold 100,000 co pies in Europe. It was about freedom ," Miss Harcou rt.Smith said. '·Timothy's writt en a book. It \Viii be published by Bantam," she said ex- plaining how the convicted dope adyocate was financing the recent portk>ns or his S-1nonth exile abroad, neeing U.S. authorities. . She said she joined him In Switzerland. made a film with Leary in Austria traveled Yl'ith him to Beirut, Lebanon ''"'here '"e Yoere treated like king!" and was at his side in KabuJ, Afghanistan .,.,·hen U.S. ofifcials caught up With him, took away his Invalidated passport and esco rted 'him to Los Angeles ·via Flankfurt, Paris and London. "It reall y wasn't very elegant the way they snatched ·his passport from his han ds. They said it wasn 't valid. But we (See LEARY, Page %) Gets Cold Feet Corona Panelist Tells Doubts on Conviction I• ' • ' ' • : , llMLY lttLOT ,.... W tat """" •'"HI'S llL\UTIPUl.1 HI'S A KPl9"' IA¥.'S LIARY l'RllND Joanno Horwurt-Smlth Coiled Roletlonohip 'Porfoc:t Love' . ,,, : - . ..--,. ~ ' ~o .Gets Timothy Leary? .. · Officers A lfait Decision Orange County Sheriff's deputies were standing in line a~ Los Angeles County jail this morning awaiting determlna· lion on w h l c b of several jurisdictions would be flrst to get custody of Dr. Timotby Leary. A ·Sheriff's Office spokesman 1aid a contingent or Orange Coonty officiala was on hand at tbe ~ Angeles jail at 10:30 a.m. today awaitfng a jinal . decision. Leary, who was brought into the jail'by U.S. Bureau ol Dangerous Drup agents who a~panied him ' from Europe to Loi Angeles ~sdayr has yet .to face a· federal .judge. MeanWhile a $5 million bench warrant, issued last'year by Orange County jurists while Leary remained in Eur0Pe1 is the) cowity's tag on the escaped drug cultist. The warrant Js related to 19 counts of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle lodged• against Leary for bi5 alleged in- votvement in lhe Brotherhood o! Eternal Love. ~ That Lagur.a Beach-based organization, is susP.Eded of ff9nting a million dollar interna°tiana.1 drug ring. - A f75 million tax llen against two Rivet-side ranch lJroperties owned by the organization also has been ru~, 'I'be·f75 million fi e represeittmg ·u?ipa,td taxes OJI~ . fi rom sale of illegal{drugs is Meanw · , <!ls<> f e. s pros- ecution fel charges · g as many 200. Meanwhile, so face's pro- secu,tion on felony charges for having esca.ped from California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. At·noon today, it was not known which ol the charges brought against Leary would•be tried first. Sources in Santa Ana believed, however, Leary might be being brought to Orange Cowlty sometime today. * * * * * * Leary's Arrest in LA • Ends 28-month Odyssey FAIR~!ELD fAP)--The juror who cast the final vote convicting Juan Corona of murdering 25 fann Laborer! says ~he doubts that she i;nade the right decision and feels Corona deserves another trial. Tl)e 38-year-<1ld fann labor contractor was found guilty Thurscjay of 2.5 counts of first-degree murder by a jury of 10 men and ' two women after 46 hours of deliberation stretched over eight days. Corona was accused of the murder or 25 transient workers whose hacked -and stabbed bodies were discovered in 1971 in makeshift orchard graves 100 miles northeast or .San Francisco along the banks of the Feather River. · It was the biggest mass murder charge in the nation's hi.story. Corona's attorney, Richard Hawk, im- mediately moved for a new trial , and a Crack Viewell 1 n Reservoir •. . - -'No Danger' Independent consultants from the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power have ~termined that a 250-loot long crack in a wall of the San Joaquin Reservoir in Irvine pases no hazard to Ufe and prdperty in nearby develop- ments, William . Hurst, manager of the Irvine Ranch Water District (ffiWD), • said' today. mwo Is the owner of the m million gallotH:apacity reservoir, which-is still shut doWn pending study and repair of the crack in the south wall It can be fully repaired, Hurst em- phasized. An official from the Metropolitan Water District (MWD) which supplies water to the reservoir conlinned today Lbat there fs, no dangt!r to residents. The crack was discovered last October when the reservoir was drained to allow for its first cleaning in about · seven years. When the water pressure in tM reservoir.. went down, the balance between that and the pressure behind the clay and asphalt surface was destroyed. As a resul t, Hurst explai,fled today, the · clay liner pushed through and cracked the as,phalt surface. An t!ogineer's report on how much the repairs will cost and bow long they will take was due at the mwo office this afternoon. UntU be studies that, Hurst said, he can 't say how much longer the reservoir will be shut down. Bu.t the general manager estimated a two to three month Ptriocl. Durin& that time, mwo customers in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Irvine will be served with CoJorado River water Dr. Timothy Leary"s ~month world Washington, D.C., told newsmen she had through the MWD's regular pipeline trip ended Thursday at Los Angeles in the past two monthp "found perfect capacil;y. Intern1tional Airport when the Pan Am love" with "Timqthy." The MWD apGkesman said this was not Clipper "Red Jacket" landed and U.S. "He's put down drugs. We're both an Id.ell situation, but the pipelines have Burea u of· Dangerous Drugs officers ar· against addict:lpn. Addiction to heroin, enoUJh water to sufficiently serve the re!~ and manai;led the smil_Jng ·drug addiction 1to Cocaine, television, cars. arels. · culture guru. We're against addiction to fll1)1.bing." The San Joaqilin reservoir, Hurst said. Lear}t left the coontry with hls wile, When asKed If the fbnner advocate of has mainly been used to supplement the hearing on his motion 111as scheduled Jan. 29. Judge Richard E. Patton delayed sentencing Corona until after the bear· ing. Under California law, Corona could receive a maximum sentence of 25 con- secutive life tenns. Special prosecutor Ronald Fahey said if Patton chose to sentence Corona to consecutive, rather than concurrent, life terms it would have the effect of delay- ing Corona's ellgibillty for parole. A person sentenced to life in prison in California wjthout prior conviction is eligible for parole after seven years . The 12 jurors each individually af· firmed the guilty verdicts in a dramatic conclusion to the four-month trial. The separate reading, affinnation and recording of the ZS individual "guilty of murc! of the first degree" verdicts stretched 28 minutes in the crowded, bushed courtroom. But juror Naomi Underwood said in an interview at her home after the trial that "I <lo feel Juan Corona deserves another trial." ~ "I have doullts yet." said Mrs. Underwood, a 6l·year-<1Jd widow. ''I don't think they had enough evidence. l still doubt I made the right decision," she ad· dCd. 'Mrs. Underwood also said "the pressure was pretty great" on her in jury deliberal.ions. The jury stood at 11·1 for conviction for two days before Mrs. Underwood changed her vote Thursday morning. Jury foreman Ernest Phillips , 53, said the first ballot the jury took eight days Evil Spiri•s H ysre,.ia at Electric Pl.ant • SINGAPORE (UPI) -'!'be General Electric COmpany said lodloy a witch doctor, an Ind.Jan mystic and a Buddhist monk fougbl What It hoped to be the final baltle with the evil spirits blamed for an outbreak of mass hysteria among women at a GE plant. .. ELEVEN GIRLS WERE SEEN early today being escorted out or the plant i-and into company vehicles to be taken home after collapsing from hysteria induced by their belief in evil spirits. The television and appliance plant has been closed three times since Satur- day by similar outbreaks of hysteria. GE CALLED IN BOMORS (Malay witch doctors) who burned incense and sprinkled magic water, a Buddhist monk and an Indian mystic lo light the spirits. The Bomoh was called in Thursday but failed to halt the mass hysteria then. The company said things appeared quld. today and the exorcists went · home. Obispo and Santa Barbara Dig Out From Savage Rai11 Fro m Wire Services SAN LUIS OBISPO -A state of emereency was declared throughout San Luis Ob~ County as the y,·orst rainstonn in four years sent flood waters pouring into ~wntown street! tiere, cut· .ting off communlcaUons out of the city and forcing !COOols to close, (Related picture, Page 5). With a pN!diction or more rain today, the state Office of Emergency Services said it was keeping a close watch on the eowity as well as Santa Barbara County to the .!IOUlb which has "reached a· point of almost complete saturation." The storm, which spread throughout Southern California early Thursday, dumped more than th;ee inches of rain over coastal areas and brought a total of 6.3 Inches to the area since Tuesday. Some streets in San Luis Obispo were four feet deep in water Thursday morn· ing but the deluge receded by midaf· temoon . More than 100 cars in the city 1\lerc {See OBISPO, Pace %) 'Night at Races' Tickets Benefit Uni High Chorus • Tickets for the "lrvine Night at the Races" at Los Alamitos Race Course Jan. 30 to benefit the University High School chorus trip to Geneva, Switzerland, next summer are available now from members of the chorus' parent boosters group. • Costs are $3 for R:eneral admission and $10 for admission and dinner before the ~· after esca ping fr 0 m LSD· and tWk:e convicted marijuana user ·pipelines during times of peak use during caiµomia Men's Colony, San Luis Obispo now objtcted to .use · ol pol, Miss t.be day. ~ • N • W • r~. chorus has been Invited to -.&..-... .. _ • --to 10 ..... 111. Harcourt.Smith replied, '"Pedple arl free On Christmas Day ' residents in one Oise armng n~:uJu;" was aervmg a uu... J._. to do..art;thini they1 like." 1 south Irvine Ranch were without water participate in lhe first Geneva Youth senteace for po!!eSSion or marijuana. Despite her Illness eviCle~ 'Dy a for about a half hour. 1be San Joaquin Musicale. 'Ibe support group is trying to Leary was bWlted In Laguna Beach the jaunaked <!oloring or her akin the 26-reservoJr was shut down and the pipes U ed b B d raise enoup funds to pay the way for day ~Christmas, INI !llone with bis -year old "citizen of. the world'' ;.,.ained couldn't supply enough water pressure rg y Oar about SO otudents. wife and son, John, then 20. cheery in her 20-minute meeUng with the alone to accommodate all the early "lrvine Niiht at the Races" will begin On the day after Christmas four yeata pres!. · • morning demands, the MWD spokesman Prospective buyen of homes in a tract wltb 1rvtne City Councilman E. Ray later,' the former Harvard lecturer and "He's beautiful. He's a king/' she pro-said. proposed near Geronimo Lane and Quigley 1tnaing "The Star-spangled Ban· his Dew found "perfect love" -Joa.Ma Clafined as she bounced from the To guard against a repeat of that in-Clnada Road In Lake Forest should be otr" and will feature two "Jrvl~" ago stood 7.5 for acquittal. He said about 15 secret ballots were eventually taken by the jury before the guilty verdict was reached. Corona sat silently through the monotonous repeating or the guilty verdicts without an outward sign or emo- tion ..except to grip tightly the edge of the table before him. . The husky Mexican national glanced occa.sionally at the jury during the long reci tation of the verdict, but most of the time he looked straig ht ahead, appearing to stare al a point below the Judge 's bench. Corona's .,.,·ife. Gloria, and about 20 relatives including · his four small d~ughters. sat silently through the long, monotonous recitation of the guilty verdicts. Another Inch Of Rain Falls; r · Damage Light By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of 1111 0.lly ,1191 Sl•H Rain drenched Orange Counly cilie.!I again Thursday night , dun1ping more than an inch or water in some coastal regions and creating nood conditions that created more of a nuisance than posing a real threat. -Today's return or fair skies is expected · to continlje , at least through Saturq&y. Thursday s late an:iving storm, follow· ing on the heels of a heavy dow:npour Tuesday, rai sed the precipitation. totals of ai.: cities to new highs, well ahead of last year. IN HUNTINGTON BEACH: Rain watchers reported that the new downpour created several minor traffic accidents but no serious dam1:1ge. Thi same bekt true for the neighboring com· munity Of Fountain Valley. Rainfall ln both cities Thursday w a 1 .67 inches and raises the season total to 8.04 Inches. That compare to 5.20 Inches at this time last year and a season total of 5.79 inches for the entire 1V71·72 rain season. IN COSTA MESA: Neither the flre nor the police department reported any significant problems as a result of the latest downpour . Police Lt. AusUn Smith said there was a rise in traffic accidents but that there were nu lnjuries. No rain- fall figure was available. IN NEWPORT BEAQI: Driving rain triggered widespread nuisance Ooodlng in !-Ow-lying areas of the city and fears were tenewed that the onrush of water down San Diego Creek might carry away (S.. RAINFAI,.L, Pap Ii Ceut Weather It'll be sunny and warmer on Satw-day, with hfshs in lhe 60s and lower 70s along the Orange Coast. Lows tonlgb~ from the hlgb 30s to tbe low tell. Hareom.smith -began their f~ customs cleating raom USf.d by all cldent, tbe IRWD 1s ,JltdUng in two warned before buying .• ahou;;;;;t;.,\je;itvino;,;iiei;:.---.,;q;,,uamr;;:;;;_·_ho:.,.r_,.:._r_ace.;;,;_._P<>fl,:...._1ime __ ;_,_1_:_30_t-f;;1'~~;;7;,5;::.,;T,;;f;;ii"1J~'f.-+--~-1.,,-1r1p-wbk:ll led to.JAacy~deporUlloa__.,. on tbe-flilbt-fronH>0ndon-u-eng1"6<1tlvtn water ,......., booste rom..flNrby-EH..,,-M• · · ·by Alghanlstan authorities. · cept Leary. Hurst said today. Slatlon, Orange County Airport Land Uae Tlcl<ets can be obtained from any ol The falthM of Leary's Dock restrained Iler ClOmposure only slipped and leart Ont wlU be In the Bonita Clnjon area. Commiuloom aald Thunday. the following persons: • by 50 Loo Angtla Polle<! llepartruent ol· formect la her ~ as sbe i!H<rlbed the '!'ht .....,d will be on~ver Drive to Commlulonera were discussing a ""' "'-Mn. Charles Ferguton, -· flcen caught only glimpses of their D'.Omentl on amval ln Los Aneeles when lfJ'Ve the T\lrtle Rock ar a of Irvine. permit to allow construction of a model -Mr. aod Mrs. A. C. Menedier, 552· "klnfl" as he -led to • waltlng Sher-the sa.~ old Leary was arrated. Thty will lltfY6 .... wdllary gas home complex in the El Toro planned 7463. ' Ill's hlPPie-1.Yl>e van. Many wondered Miss Hmourt.sntith said agents a1> <nglnel to boOtt waler pmsura to higher community, '!'bey Interposed no ob--Mr. and Mrs. John Bedford, Slt·3933. aloud, '•Wlttre•1 'Rosemary!" proacbed Leary in the ijrll closs cabin elevation ,,.... during times of blgb ""'· jectlons to the propooed uae permit. -Mr. and Mrs. Bud Clites, 132'9695. Mils Harcourt.smith, suffertng froom and 1ald, "You're under arrest." '!'be -Ir• to !he crack lll'Y cost as referr<d to them by the 00\JDty pl&Mlng -Dr. and Mrs. Robert Cox. ~ll-\'9117. what lbe sakl .w~ 1Crum ,hepaUUs, gave "What's your name?'' Le1ty,l'as·aald much u fl00,000, Hurst estiniated. He depirtment. • -Mrs. JaoeiQ>urlney, 551·7600. ' no clues sa to the wheruboull of Mn. to have replied. added that it b not • oeriout problem But lh<y were concerned that future -Mr, end Mrs. Richard Quinn, 832-klry.Jfowmr...U..llrltlah.lllbJect..llbo " ...-!; You loo w the pr<> .aafol1·-.lnd-<hat1cterludJ Lmalnly -homo beyvs ID tho-oreo...mlgb;..DOI 1---U6ll . - INid she had a husband living in IS.. Rrl;IJRN, Pqw) . u an "•XJ><'l~" nulan<t." aware of nolJO ln\pocts. -Mr. and Mrs. Sims Paluika, !3M.ISO. ' ' (, f • ---~ • Z DAILY PILOT IS ' Capo Bo~ .. IBackers , :Start Push . ~ • i 1be citizens' co1nnullec ~·orking f o r .J>8S$1&e; of the $2S-mil\ion school bond issue Feb. 20 i.n the Capistrano Unified School Districl this ~·eek announced a ge1-0ut-the-\'ote campaign led by chairmen from individual school al· tendance areas. The Rev. Allan Vernon, chairman of Arvy's Friends l .. 'Arvy" is derived from "Area Residents Vote Yes") said chairmen for each area of the large district a1~ady h...'lve been appointed. Judy Davin of htission Viejo wUJ SttVe as coordinator for the area chairmen, he said. In the Viejo area. Betsy Park.er and Pat Schuben ~'ill lead the effort. Olber chainnen and their areas are DeaMe Langman and Janet Regelbrugge in San Juan : Dorothy Salonen in the Palisades section : Joe Lovullo, Ole Hat.son: Joan Holden and Connie LaParl for Las Pailnas; Sherri Cross and Kathie Walfield , Dana School and Eleanor 11.iofatt and Helen Kester in Crown \'alley. Supl. Truman Benedict. assisted by Capistrano Beach area civk leader and accountant Vaughn Curtiss, v.·W bead the group's speaker's bureau. The major point which the group will try to impress upon district voters is the need for new .schools to cope v.•ittr the heavy grov.1h in the area. Besides the thousands of residential dwelling units posing a problem, the p~ posed opening of the North American Rocl-."Well Plant after a government takeover also i.s expected to add to the sudden surge in pupil population!. Bond funds, say school administrators, are nearly depleted because oI com- mitments for a portion of a new elemen- tary school in San Juan Capistrano and a junior high campus in Lagtm!l Niguel. Saddlehack Area Bowling Alley Bein g Built Construction has just started on t,he Saddlebaclt Valley's first bowling alley which is scheduled to open in mld-May and already more than 1,200 J>ttSOns have made reservations for summer leagues. The idea of reserving a bowling lane for June in Jam.rary may seem odd to some, but not to die-bard bowlen, ac- cording to Dwayne Hicks, owner and manager of the Saddleback Lanes. The 30,000 square foot, 32-lane facility is being built at the Jntersection of Marguerite Parkway and La Pai Road in Mission Viejo. It is the first structure to go up in the new Village Shopping Center. lt will include a coffee shop and cocktail lounge, ~illiard room and a supervised children~-JWrsery. The closest bowling alleys now to the Saddleback: and Capiltrano Valleys are in Costa Mesa, Santa Ana and Oceanside in San Diego County. That's a long way for even the mmt devoted followers of the indoor sport to drive, said Hicks, although many have been doing so. He estimaled thal aboot 1,200 lo 1,500 persons have already aigned up for Um.es in the summer leagues. They know that to get a "prime Ume, they have to call now," he said. Not all of those were individual c1lls. Many :were whole already establi!hed teams or leagues with up to 100 bowlers who want to change to the more con- venient location. Practically the only way to bowl at night anymore is to belong to a league team, Hicks said, and the most desirable nights and starting times go fast. For reservations in s~er leagues, call Hick.! at 837-1508. OIANGI COAST is DAILY PILOT TIM Qf8llll COMt 0.-.llJ PILOT, w,_ ...._ "~ ""' ,..._..,.., b ....... .., llMI on,.. c..,1 PllDIWilnl ~ • .._. ,.. .. ..ui-.. .,.. 1*11~. Mordey ""-JI'! fr1cSty, tar Coslt Mew, ~ lludl, H11ntl"""" 8t1cll/F-t1'" V1l11y, L...,.,.. IMm. l"'IM/S.odltbllck and s.n °""9nte/ S.!I JINn C1pl:ttf-. A 1r11111e ...,ion., M ;Uon Is pUlllil!IH Slturd•n •1111d Sund•'($. 11>1 prlnclPfl ll'Jblitlllnt pL~nl I• 11 UO w .. 11 lley S!rMI, (OSlf Ma.I, C11'""'"1f, Q)l. ll:oil'tr.f N. Wotd f'rulOttll •ftd ~lsher J1c~ It. C11rt1y Yke ,.,.,idtnl '""' C0.-11 ~ l1'omt1 Koo.ii Editor Tllo""•• A. M 11tphino M-1111111 EdlW o..les H. loot Rlchtr4 P. Nell AulattM Mlntllnl r.11ron Offkoo c.stt M-: Qt Wdl 8tt SlfMt Newport lffchi nu """"°" lovltwtf'll lA1~ S..dli m ""•' Awnw HV1,llr10IOll l•Kll1 17'1S lffdl ..._...,.,. 5AA Qll!'l!llle; JIU Norlfl ~I C.,....,. ~Ml T .. .,.... 171•1 MMIJI C'-'lflM AMrt1.J .. Hl•ll71 Sn C.._.. Al Depelwltl.: Tt..,.._ 4t2-442t (911"19111, 1'12, °'""" Cotti """"1Mllt eem..nr. Ho -tt«lli, l!lwtf•t*"" .. ltorMI '"'''°' or ..rwrti.-11 llerfln ""' M ,..,,...,__. wlftiovt .,.._. ,.,. .,.... .. """""' -· '-Id <!Mt ,....,. ..,. M c.te Ml5a, allfwwtl. ~ by ainlitr P..s __,.,,~.,,_.!!!Ill »._1$ ,...,,,.,,,, ........... .. ._._ GM f!IOllilllr. • ' FrhUy, Janiwy lCJ, 1CJ7l , Aides M11n1 I Tri to Saigon Seen for Agnew Frtm Wire Strvk:cs The White Houst today declined to con- firm or deny a broadcast ttport th&t Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will go to Saigon Jan. 28 -presumably to conduct post-peace agreement talks with Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. The Columbia Broadcasting Company said from Saigon that a visit by Agnew apparently was intended "to coincide closely with the signing or at least lbe in- itialing of a Vietnam .cease-fire agree- ment." Asked about the report. \Vhite House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler.said: "I will oot have any comment on.that. J am not goin& to comment ()ne way or another on any speculation -whether it is right or wrong." Ziegler likened his no-comment to re- cenl similar responses be made to reports of developments in peace negotiations. The White House spokesman said President Ni.ion conferred for more than an hour this motning \llilh Henry A. Kiss- OBISPO ... damaged by the storm but no serious in· juries were reported, police said. Flood'A·aters closed off roads at both the southern and northern ends of the ci· ty for a time. Thousand! of homeownen in Los Osos and Baywood Park, immediately south of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of the day. In nearby Laguna Lake, a number oJ homes were flooded. Homes and buildings were also flooded to the south in the San Fernando Valley. Up to 7.5 inCbes of rain fell at San Marcos Pa.u near Santa Barbara, and in Veatura County, flood waters ripped up sidewalli, exposing utility pipes in some areas. Clearing skies greeted Northern Califomiatl.!I today as they continued to recover from a procession of Pacific storms. The National Weather Service prom- ised m o s t I y fair weather through Saturday except £or some cloudiness in the el'lreme northern mountains and some patchy momin1', fog in the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. "There are still some fronts lying o(f the coast, but the high pressure system inland will hold lhem off, probably throughout the weekend," a weather service spokesman aaid. Tbe stat~ Office f'; Emergency Servicel estimated storm-re I ate d damage caused by the two storms in Marin County alone at $4 million. Flooding also receded Thursday in the Sacramento River delta of Contra Costa County where water bolstered by an ex· tra high tide briefly rose "an inch or two" above sandbagged levees at Brad- ford, Jersey and Webb Islands, said Rooald Nelson, assistant director of the county's emergency services. "It looks like everyone is over the hump," NeOOn said. inger, chief U.S. peace negotiator. KiD- ing:cr will Jeave_ for Parh, 11100.day Lo rcsun1e private talks with Hanoi's Le Due Tho. \Yh!le Ill \Vashi.ngton the pa.st t\\'O days, Ziegler said, Kissinger conferred ln person or by telephone with Secretary of Slate \\1illiam P. Rogers, Secretary of Defense' llfelvin R. Laird, Adm. Thomas H. t.foorer, chainnan of the Joint Cllefs of Staff, and others. Don Webster, acting CBS bureau chief in Saigon, said President Thieu received lhe letter from President Nixon on 'Mlursday informing him of Agnew's plans. The letter was delivered by U.S. AmbassadOr Ellsworth Bunker, the network reported, and contained the following passage from Ni.ion to 11iieu: ''We have been together in war, let's be together In peace." t.1.eanwhile, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird said today there is no \vay to assure lasting peace In Southeast Asia but declared that Administration policies will end American involvement in the fighting there. The secretary called the outlook for peace in Southeast Asia and the rest or the v.'orld "better" at the present time. But be recaUed that the war ln Vietnam has continued for 30 years and could never assure that the shooting will stop no matter what peace agreement is signed. Water District Will Shut Area Feeder Lines A llklay shutdown of the ll1etropolltan Water District's (MWD) Lower Feeder lipes between Lake Mathews and Yorba Linda which help bring water to the Sad· dleback Valley and Oeveland National Forest will begin Saturday. The shutdown was originally scheduled to begin Feb. 6 but was moved up at the request or officials in lhe State Depart- ment of Water Resources to facilitate their delivery of water. During the 10 days, MWD officials will make repairs on the Lake Mathews outlet facilltieli. Most Orange County areas affected by the operation will be supplied by state project water from the Caslaic Reservoir northeast of Los Angela. Resident& in Mission Viejo and other Saddleback Valley are.as will get Colorado River water which the Municipal Water District of Orange County has stored in Irvine Lake. YMCA Flin Ouh Set' in El Toro DAILY PILOT PMlill 1W Lio .,.,._ STILL SMILING, DR. TIMOTHY LEARY IS HUSTLID TO JAIL World Trip Ended at Los Angeles as Cllpper 'Red Jacktt' L1ndtd Beach Man Takes Children To Meet 'King of Ac\d' A JO.year-old Huntington Beach father \\'ho said LSD was for him .. the begin- ning of life" brought two of his four children with him to Los Angeles International Airport Thursday to greet the returning "king" of the acid culture. The employed tool and die maker with long blond hair and mustache said, "I'm here to see Dr. Tim. I'm glad he has oome home but l'm sorry the king haJ to come borne this way." .. Three years ago I was supel"-6traight. Then I dropped LSD aod look atcme now. I'm happy." The mans.aid be had never met Or, Timothy Leary -"at least not pbys\cally." 'l'he Huntington Beach man was among a group of some 100 camp followers or the drug culture 8.dvocate who strained to get a glimpse of Leary as he walked the 30 yards from the airport terminal to a waiting Los Angeles Sheriff's camper van. Others said they came from Laguna Beach -the Orange Coast dty where Leary 's arrest and subsequent conviction for marijuana posses1Ji01:1 launch~ his world travels foJlowing bis C!5cape from California Men's Colony, San Luis Obispo, in 1970. Cadres of unifofmed Los Ange1es Police ofticers parted the crowd from their Idol but many waited in the ln- tematlonal arrivals terminal for more than an hour to see his latest 1ove, Joan- na HarcoU:rt.Smith. Some Wet'e vocally disappointed when the mystery woman did not tum out to be Learf's wife, Rosemary. She had been said to be with him during his stay in Algiers with the Black Panthers and later in Switzerland. No word of her was spoken by her "perfect love " stand-in and traveling oompanion, the petite, long·haired woman who said she was a British sub- jkt and 26 years old. • tl .. Pagel \ . . 1411•&,¥ ..... ft In nve different COWtlries ond ll d it WU good untll 1114," MlH mow-t-&nlth 1114. Alltt Alahlnlllu 1ulhorlU. deported Leuy. and without his oaisl>ort, teary accompanied the olflceri wllflngly, sh• said. "Everybody was very nice to us all lhe \¥111 here. We could have eteaped asain ln Frankf\lrl. -~ "Four: days ago be said he was so ha~ PY to ~ coin& home -even to prlaon. tie's mastered ~eedom ao completely he can be irte &n)'wbere, • she said. Site c1tJ>l<!1td Leary'o errest and legal jams "tor smoking only two butts" and vowed, "ffe knows 1 love him and am going to ft~e him. w~·re all gOin,g't.o free blnl.." "I belieff U ds all perfect he ahould have· <Orne baolt lo the Unllod Stala," she added.. "He WU .. hoppy wben he ... the Pacilic Ocean apln," Ille aid recalllllg bis mood .. lbe Jumbo jet "Cllpper lied Jackel" tumeCI lo lllUe lta approach lo Los Angelea lnlmlatkmll Airport lboul 4::30 p.m. 'I'bundtly. .. While her "perfect Jove" was removed • from lhe plane In handcuffs •lid under guaro of both federal and Los Angeles aulhortlles, MIU Hal'COW'l-Smlth, a1alnst whom Police said no charges w.ere pend- ing, left. the airplane v I a the routine customs cbect. She said a doclo< confirmed thal alt• had serum hepatitis -"jt's not con- tagious" -wben the plane landed. The illness she said led Leary lo begin I.is five-country flight which resulted in bis being spoiled by U.S. officials In Afghanistan. i>JPue the lack of an ex- tradition ~ treaty with the U;:S .. Afghanistan a,uthoritie!5 a pp a re n t I y cooperated in \he turnover. Tbe woman, believed to be the daughter of a Brltiab publisher, said she contracted hepatitis while the pair were in Vienna makin( tbe anU-addlctloo film. F.....,.P .. el RETURN •.• cedure," she aald tbe agent told him. "Then Ibey bandcuHed bim and pulled him away·dOwrf the stain," she sobbed. Leary grinned and laughed f..-lhe cameras as he was led to the van which, trailed by four other unmarked cars, look him lo Los Angeles County Cenlral Jail for booking.-Ball was aet al $5 million by Orange County courta wben lhe hippie higb priest waa touring Europe following his escape. Charges now lodged against him Jn. elude: -Felony escape for having Oed the minimum security prison In San Luis Obispo In 1970. -He is ctiarged with 19 counts of smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle dangtrous drdia.a.s a suspected leader of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love -au international drug trafficking organiza- tion believed to have been founded by Leary in Laguna Beach in 1966. -He faces charges of i n c o m e tax evasion filed by the state against the Brotherhood ln the amount of '78 million. , tax lien has been brought against two ranch properties owned by the Brotherhood in Riverside County. El Toro Church Suit Settled A fun club, featuring arts and crafts, games, tumbling and movies, will be of· fered for children ages 8 to U every Saturday morning from 10:30 a.m. to noon beginning Feb. 3 at the Saddleback Y~1CA in El Toro. CLEARANCE SA LE CONTINUES By Supervisors The Orange County Board or Supervison has saved $2,000 by agreeing to an out-of-court settlement for that amount in an inverse condemnation suit by the El Toro Abiding Savior Lutheran Church. An appraisal of the damage church of- ficials said they suffered would have cost $4,000. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said today. Church officials, represented by at- torney William Dannemeyer, offered to settle their case for the price of the ap- praisal, but Kuyper was against any pay- ment. He didn'l lhink lhe churcll had suffered any real damage as its suJt alleged because, where it had had access in two directions on El Toro Road, It now had oijy .... 'When El Toro RGad was realigned, a bridge was built by the county over the Santa 1Fe Railroad tracks, placing the church on a frontage road. Dannemeyer argued that this action impaired access to the ehurch. Kuyper agreed today that a col!rt might have awarded some damages to the church. Exchange St\ldent \/ Family Sought The Mission Viejo Chapler of tho American Field Suvlct (AFS) is looking for a host family for an AFS foreign ex- change student ln the lf1S..74 school year. AFS trie9 to pmmote:-lnternational friendship by giving scholarships lo American students for study in other countrlts and sponsoring fol'!.lgn studMits Jn the U.S., a chapter spokesman said. There are no 1peclal qUnllficatlons for a host "mllY. The .AFS atudent Is usually between t6 and 11 years old . For more tnformatlon, contact Mrs. Richan! Sprnul, chairman of lhe AFS home s<ltclloll commltl .. , at &17~1: or Mrs. Clifford Boehmer, AFS chapler pmldent, al 137-tOOI. Periodic field trips to the beach, O'Neil Park, Disneyland and other points of in- terest will be scheduled. Participation is limited to Saddleback Valley Y members. A year's membership fee is $6. The fee include's all materials, equip- ment and insurance. For · further information on the fun club, contact the Th1CA at 830-9622 or at 2.3121 01ange Ave., El Toro. From Page I RAINFALL ..• the old bridge on MacArthYJ' Boulevard. Crews worked for sevetal hours pump- ing out the hardest -hit flood areas. There was 90tne mud runoff ln pan.. ot the city buf no roads were closed with the e1:ception of a 1rhort &lretch on MacArthur Boulevard. Traffic was in- terrupted until 6 p.m. to inspect 'the bridge. • · IN LAGUNA BEACH: Rainwater cascading down Park avenue caused flooding along Forest Avenue and mlnor damage Lo some downtown stores. Ex- actly ~.3 Inches of rain soaked the city dut~g the stonn. Water rose up to the sldewalk level on Forest Avenue and seeped Into Fairchild Stamps, 310 Glenneyre and New Direc- tions, 265 Forest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in front of their stores. IN THE SOIJTll COAST ma: Rainfall amounted to more than one lnch and c1used car1 to 1tall and 11.;verl"I. to spin out on freeways ln Mission Viejo and Laguna HiU.. The l11e!l-11orm-brollght-tht! monlh's 1-- r1lnfall to 1 hefty 2.1 inches In San Clemente and abOUt the samt for San J u 1 n Clpls:trano, making JM~ary e.lready an unusually wet month. In the ctnlral county aru: The stonn brought . 73 lnchf!I of rain to Santa Ana making the total .for the year 8.87 lncMs, more than double the 4.0 lncbe1 of last year. Villa Park Dam recorded .95 Indios 'l'hul'lday for an a.at Inch 10uonal total. Saddleback peak hod .I fncll<.s and lilt Irvine Ranch .71 lDcht•. · Fe1turing m1ny fin• coll•ctions from such w•ll ~nown lin•s 11 HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL. MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOODMARK, ind other1 ..• 111 1ub1t1nti11/y r•duc•d. The l1rg•st sel•ction of qu1lity upholstery is now on di1pl11y ind re1dy for: imm•di1te de livery. S1ve now. H•nr•don Alv1r1do I shown l On Sil• Now NEWPORT IEACH • J-127 WISTCLIFF Dl.. Ml·2GSe LAGUNA BEACH • 145 NOktH COAST Hw\'. ........ , TORRANCE • 11149 HAWTHOlNI: ILVD. 11'·111' \ • Wav" Road "'''~ Prualtlfl Expected Brrdg-et Astounds (;(lP-~gislator • SACRAMENTO (AP) -A in a 11.1 billion surplus at the leading Republican-lawmaker end of the coming fiscal year. say1 be· ls ''ptounded" et the aize ot:COV-•. Ronald !Reagan's A "IJATl'LE Is expected over 19.S bUllon budget for the fucal dbpoaitlon of the surplus. year starting July I. AaembJyman John Stull, a "'8embly Speaker Bob candidate for a vacant San Moretti s a 1 d the one-0ent Diego state Senate seat, added sales tax lncrtase can be Thursday, "I expect the legis-delayed for a year and a halt lature to do some pruning." -until January, 197$-by us- . Stull joined Democratic ing the surplus. critics in saying, "I cannot see the reasons for such a massive Unless the Legislature acts lnctease in our state budgel in the meantime, the sales tax I think the I --•1-increase from five to six cents . . . peop e o..vu.uuue to want fiscal economy, not per dollar in most of budgelary expansion." California takes effect June t The budget is Sl.6 billion "We have been able to pro- A rood to the King Salmon fishing area on Humboldt Bay near Eureka is lash- ed by waves that tossed boulders on the route. larger than the current state vkle homeowner property tu spending plan and would nsuit relief, provide new money for scboob, and at the same time, to accumulate p. surplus without the necesSl:ty or Im- posing ntlw taxes on the average Callfontian," Moretti said. Stones Roll in ·LA Navy Hun,ts For Gigi By Radio 18,600 Fans See Benefit for Jt.!anagua INGLEWOOD (AP) -Most of the old ingredients were there: rock guitar, blaring drums, screaming fans and a vibrating Mick Jagger. But something was missing Thursday as the Rolling Stones played a benefit coo- cert at the Forum for Nicaraguan earthquake vic- tims. Gone -the mob ol hopelul gate crashers, the police with riot sticks, the f I g h ts and mass arrests that have characterized past Stone co~ certs. Except for a few fans who were ejected for disorderly Pentagon Documents 'Aid Hanoi' conduct and a handful of gate crashers, one tnight never have known it was a Stones' l'OOCel't. eur THE crowd of 10,600 SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The never missed any of lt. The Navy is agail) looking for Gigi Stones· played "Brown Sugar," the whale, hoping the AWOL "It's AU Over Now" and other leviathan will check in by hits. The fans, who bad paid radio and reassutt her fans. So far, thert is only silence between '10 and $100 a ticket, from the Pacific, where Gigi cheered, aome youth! standing _if •he ~ stm alive -should Dismayed * * _ ;{;I_.. and swaying to the music. now be migrating southward Jagger, the stones• nam-with other gray whaJes to Ba-Japan Bars bo t lead · •--~ ja California. LOS ANGELES (AP) - ' yan smger, w~ Gigi attracted nationwide Despite some good news for in turquoise-colored v e 1 v e t attention last March, when she the University of California in Mi k J g pants and wearing a silver became known as "the ap-Gov. Ronald Reagan's pro-C . a ger -headband, t!umked the au-prentice whale." captured posed 1m14 spending pro- ruence for "shelling out so shortly after birth, she was gram, UCPresidentCllarlesJ. TOKYO (AP·) -'Mie -pro-much bread." raised in a tank at Sea World Hitch says he ls disappointed moters of a five.day Tokyo ap-He then led the group in a by ~avy and_ oth~r mci.rine in the operating budget £or the pearance·bytbe Rolling stones nearly two.hour perfonnance research scientists. nine-campus system. rock music group announced of their songs, mixing newer In a statement to the Board today they have canceled the hits with vintage renditions AN ARGUMENT developed of Regents finance committee engagement bec.au.se lead like "Route 66," w h' i c b the between Navy and other scien. Thursday, Hitch said: singer Mick Jagger ha5 been Stones recorded in J.964_ lists over whether Gig could "This was to be the year barred from Japan due to a ';They were good, but it survive when released in the when he would shake off the fine he received for po.!SeSSion wasn't worth $15," said Jan ocean since she bad been austerity of _ the lut. sll: of narcotics in Britain last Johnson, 26, of Van Nuys. deprived of a normal whaJe budgets, the year when we year. "Here we are, a couple of childhood. would get the univtrsity Udo Music said all 55,000 adults, waiting to see the Gigi appeared to give moving again, the y ea r of. tickets for I.be Stones' Stones," said Judy Jooes, 1 21 ground! for such fears for a renewed commitment and the performances ~ing Jan. year-old Redondo B e a c h while. She hung around the means of fulfilling it. I'm 28 bad been sold. It will reftmd secretary. "But we'll probably Southern California coast for a afraid these hopes look pretty LOS ANGELES (UPI) __ the_mon __ ec_y. _______ be_be_re_w_hen __ w_e_'r_e_55_. "---''--ooi--'p-Ie_of_m_oo_ths_. __; ____ em..,;pt:..;_y_no:.,w_._" ____ _:, The Pentagon Papers Included , a secret analysis of the Tet of· J, feMive that could have abow· i ed Hanoi planners Jnf:dojle I they came to success ft bOw 1. to improve lheir atiact the : ne:rt time, according to a high ' ranking g~neral ( • r -• f .• : NOTICETO!ELEPHQNE CUSTOMERS ''.To them, this might be the ( BRIEFS J best piece of military in- telligence they ever had." U . Gen. William DcPuy told the Pentagon Papers trial. wen PIN•ni• illereases in Iha rates a some ... or-state call& e Ash Pa11s Off LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three founders of Lill<ln Industries -one of them Roy L. Ash, newly &PPolnted direc-- tor of the federal Office of Management aDd Budget - have agreed:. to pay $2.4 million to the estate of a man who said he helped fowtd Lil- ton but was kept from receiv· ing stock at advantageous prices. Superior Court Judge Arthur K. Marshall agreed Thursday to dismiss a 1'4-year~Jd civil suit filed against Litton by the lale Emmett T. Steele once the payment is made- • Seale Flies OAKLAND (UPI) -Black Panther Chairman Bobby Tho American 'Jblepbone and Tulograph Company has filed a new schedule of Inter- state rates with the Federal Communications Commission which Increases charges for some customer-dialed calls during weekday busj. ness hours, for some operator·asslsted calls, for some·person·t~person calls, and for WATS(WideAreaTulecommunJcatlonsServJce). -All rat89 for Interstate Long Distance calla you dial yoUl'Belf without operator uslatance In the evenings, at night, iand on Weekends will remain unchanged. The new rate's for Long Distance calls be- come effective on January 2Z. 19'73, The new rates for WATS become effective on March 13, 1973, unless suspended by the FCC. Seale entered the mayoral H · th rovlsf ofth election race Thursday, called ere are e p 008 e new !or a "slw;h fund" to proviile Interstate rates: jobs for minorities and predicted a 0 landslide" vie-1. Some. ol the rates for statloi:i~t<H1ta'tton tory . calls you dial yourself withoul operator Seale, 35, paid his $200 filing f d fee and presented 8 petition assistance rom 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Moo ay •;with a required number ol through Friday, will be Increased five signatures by r e g I s t e r e d cents or10 cents foi'the first three minutes. ' voters. · 2. Somo of tbo rates in all time periods for e Re9cn Pleads operator-assisted atatlon-to-statlon calls. SANTA BARBARA (AP) -(thet Includes · credit-card. collect. thlrd- Former slnger·actor Phil number, hotel-guest, and colft telephone · Regan has pleaded innocent to charges he tried to bri~ a calls) will be increased five Cents for the county supervisor in a r.oniog ·first three minutes. decision. 3. Some rates for person·t<>person calls in Regan , 68, entered his plea Q.1.ltimeperiodswillbetncreasedfivecents Thursday in Municipal c.ourt or 10 cents for the fltst three minutes. alter being charged with of-!eri~ 11,000 to in!lllence the 4. The rates ,for each. additional D)lnuto on lntertm nites and supporting data have been flied with tho Federal Communication• Com- mission. The increases for Long Distance ·calls have been authorized by tho FCC on an Interim basis to be effective January 22, 1973. Tho FCC will conduct additional bearings on the lawful- ness of the rates, and FCC rules ponnlt any in' terested persons to app8ar ao_d participate. This will be only the second general increase In interstate Long Distance rate leveJs · tn aJ. most 20 years. During this period, In spite ·of lnflation,·interstate.Long Distance rates have been reduced repeatedly, Even with this In- crease, the level of the new rates wUI still be below tho 1953 level. Yet In those 20 Interven- ing years. the cost of Uving has gone up more thaDSQpertent. ne new rates are deslgned to tncreaie total re"V6nue~ from interstate service by abounwo percent. Examples of Loew Distance rates for coast to coast calls $111ioH>$!Mloll ...... ...... -.. -Asksled ··-el.M.IO ....... 11, .•. s.t,. "' 11.eo $1.55 ......... ... _ Intl ..... .. ._. 5p.M.Sff. "'·"'·lo ... 11.40 Sl.~5 1...-.. llp.111.s-. .. ,_ itltllinutes irsl J llillvles ... --"fri. II p.•. lo ... ... w u." -lt.aaifr .. _ -"' ...... QI -· .,] ......... ) (3 llliflutnJ 11.alo '"' "" ll.~5 ......,. s, ...... ~fit .... _ , ... , ...... trstl..-..n wte .. a ""°""" proJJOlll] some. calls In all . Ume periods will be that lnvo1ved a n1.wllt hous-ratsedinarangefromonecenttofivecents. !:"eot':"~~:.-:,-;::::.':' .. "':.::.=:,-:=· ing devtlopment west of here. 5. Inierstate WKfS ratBS wlll be increased ltu.oCo:M11&,•"'.._.* .. ,...,.._.. • B •-·t Probell ow-it10tl'Mlf • • • t1 '*"* Clll I~.._..., Mtslll _. abouttwopen:ent: -""·-·-----·'"' DELANO (AP) -Federal 6.Rat-f I U t t U alls ~·-• ..,...., • ...,_ .... _.,.,_,. __ Investigators say dynamite es or s a on· o-s a og..c you unu ...... dlflCI .._ ...... • ......_ *"*' '*' • • ..., • was 0 an _, ___ .yourself without operetot' assrstance du.-.~-~~~~~~!!!':---"--....._._._-.. •--ed r fno "Is-k :=:Ji-= --~' dillfllllltl..._...._ ............. _lllallt11MCllC1111. uplosloo that -nag a ...., even s, 8 • or wee en ... ww ..., __ .... _..,_., __ .. _ bulldlng at lbe United Farms .rema.lnthe~e. ...... ... 20t-.cotte•C011t.· · worms complea: here. Alcohol;' Tobacco a n d Firearms Investigators said it appeartd thal at jeast two stlckJ o! dynomite were used In ·o.. blast that ripped open an lll·inch thick st<cl-reln· foroed waU of Ole UFW 0Jop aervlce station Wodneoday --night. @Ai&f7 . - Friday, Janlllr)' 19, 1973 DAIL V PILOT $ BOW WOIJID l'OIJ lllll 1'0 BA'ft NO MAINl'INAN(I ~011111111 Gel rid of your lawnmower and paintbrush and W' . check out Ihe carefree lttestyle at Walnut Square. Relax on weeKends while professionals take care of all landscaping.and exterior maintenance. · From S.19.9§0 ::::::::J $1,000 Down, No Closing Cos1s. 2 &3 BedroomTownhomes (714) 551-4041 ••• on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and Component Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and Monochrome TV, Radios, Tape Recorders, and Portable Phonographs. Shown below is just one of our many Magnavox 'Annual Sale Values . See them all-and save I Simui.ud TV pictllr9 This rldeomaticEye ••• makes M1gn1va1 T.l.C. the matJotllly automltic color system you can hy! Th• onty coloreet th•t automatically 1dju1U iU picture to cheng.- ir1g light condltlon1f Magnavox T.A.C. (Total Automatic Color) not onty automatically compensates to< all those things from outside the ho UM that can meas up your picture; now MagnaVox T .A.C. with Vtdiomatlc automaticalty compensates fOf the one thing insid• the house that can rnns up your picture: changing room light I The Vtdeomatic Eye actu1llr "sees .. the changiilg light In your room and aytomaticalty adjusts the color. brightness end contr1at-to give you the best possible colot'·right pfcture ~ay °'night I And the chassis is Modular 100% Solld·State-with p{ug·in circuit panels, modules and transist011. 25'" ditQOMI ICrM.n. • (le~} CorrtampofM'f model 7642. (right) br1y Alnericatl modtl 76'.44. Yourc:hOict. SAVE '30 I NOW '629 2 BIG LOCATIONS UNITED GOLDENWEST & WARNER HUNTINGTON BEACH STORES 842-5~ -- 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON -BEACH Service & Sales 536-7561 Try Saturday's News Quiz ·We Dare-¥ ou I ' 1/ • ' , • . ' • I C DARY PIJ.,OT EDITORIAL PAGE ' / - l ,,School Funding Issue The Irvine J>lanning Commission's concerns :1bout U1e LrvY1e Co1npany's proposed Village of Valley Vie"'- particu'iarly high densities and insuCficlenl roads-ap- peir justified. • The ron1ntissio11 recently postponed action indef· lnitely on the 484-acre, 4.600-resident planned com1nu· nlty in north Irvine. It featured densities as high as 25 d\velling units per arre ib one apartm ent complex and up to 12 unit s per acre for some homes. These. if approved, would be the highest yet in a citv "'here funds aren't readily available to build the raids necessary to support such a development in the s1ill semi-rural area. These issues. of course. require study. Unfortunate- ly. this is not just the problen1 of delaying lov.··prlced housing . U action is delayed too long, Irvine may lose fund· ing for a murh·needed school in that area. The San Joaqujn School District can:'lot proceed \Yith design plans on an elementary school in ,the area until it has street alignments. If those designs go to the state allocation board in March or April, the district nlay be able to get state funding for the school be_fore June. "·hen t.he San Joaquin district goes out of business. It is the only identified school site in the nort hern area. No other sch o o I design in Irvine is ~ar enough along to be completed in time for state ~eadlines. If the city does not act soon enough, San Joaquin "'ill divert the state's approval for the Irvine school to a site in ~fission Viejo, far enough along in planning. North Irvine needs a lot of things, including roads and planned densities. But it also needs a school. New Irvine School District trustees have asked the planning commission to do what it can to work out the Can Energy Match Pace Of Growth? FNEYJ.HARRI~ t read a frightening riddle the other day. It was propounded by Dr. Peter E. Glaser al a scientific conference on Energy and Humanity in London last fall. It goes like this: A fanner has a pond with a water lily in jt. 'Ibe Wy i.s doubling in size every day. In .'lt days it Y.'if/ cover the entire pond, killing all the crca· tures living in ii. nae farmer doesn 't want Uti.s to happen. but be is busy with other chores arid de- cides to postpone cutting back the plant until it covers half the pond. The riddle is : on what day will the lily cover half the pond? And the ansv.·er is: on the 29th day - leaving the farmer just one day to save his pond! This is y,·hat is meant by the chilly mathemallcal p h r a s e "exponential growth." Our technological society is growing at an exponential rate -and along with it our need for ene rgy to feed this growth. \\'e are nearing the 2ith day, when we must either find new sources of energy that will not threaten our planet, or cut back drastically in our rate of pro- duction, population. and consumption. These are the only altematives oPen to us; anything else is mere political rhetoric. Unless y,·e -by which I mean the y,•hole world -can obtain enough solar energy to replace our dwindling stock of Dear Gloomy Gus lt'f ntce to leam l,500 1'1ission Yi· ejo residents are panting in ex· pectation of the opening of the Saddleback Valley's first bowling emporium, while folk in Irvine con· tinue to await their first theater. G.A.P. T!ilt fMtww r.ft4ctl ............ .,.... Ml MC...,vy ......... -· SHMI J'M' ""' -.. G ....... J Gii .. Dllltf Pllll. oOn-renewable resources, y,•e will con· tinu ~ not only to deplete thest resources al an alarming rate, but also to throw the whole system of nature drastically out of kilter. WE MAY NOT yet be at tht 29th day, but it is approaching far faster than the layman imagiOO!I. And ii we are to deflect this catastrophe in time, it is im· peratlve that the nations of the world unite for a common purpose: to protect the survival of this closed planetary system of the earth, and to assure that everyone will have at least enough. Instead, as Arnold Toynbee observed not long ago. since the end of World \\'a r 11. there are twice as many nations and sovereignties with half as much space as before. Nationalism and separatism have proliferated everywhere on the globe; the great powers may f i n d a modu1 vivendi, but t h e smaller nations will soon possess the capacity to make nuclear bombs and enter the arena of political and military combat. Just at the time when we should be subordinating our provincial differences to our CQmmon global plight, we are drawing away from each other, in smaller and more fiercely tribal units. Just when we neal to pool our resources for the salvation of the species, we seem bent on seizing more of the spoils. It Is not merely evil : it is madness. Profitable _Inaugural? Presidential inaugurals "a?e curious events, combining pomp, pompousness and pageantry in almost equal measure. This year something new has been ad- ded. Against all odds. the 1973 Inaugural Committee hopes to make the event pro- fitable . TO TlllS end, the commiUee is cutting down on overhead and charging hefty fees for almost all activities. The In· augural balls of recent memory have been held in such hotels as the. Shoreham, She raton Park a n d Maynower. On Jan. 19-20, 1973, however, the various balls and concerts wlll be held in government blllldings, Including the Kennedy Center. Smithsonian lnstitu· tion, National Gallery of Art , and Na· tional Portrait Gallery. Cost to the in· augural convnittee: nothing. lnaucural·parade. spectators who want to . si t In the bleachers a I o n I Pennsylvania Avenue can do so for prices ranging as high as $50. Tickets to the three concerts schl'duled for Jan. 19 are scaled from $20 to $00. On the other hand, admission lo an lnfonn•I reception at the Smltbsonlan for Vice President Agnew is a .:omparatlve steal at $10. AT 111.E f1RST inaugural, George Washlna:ton took the oath or ornce on the bal""1)' of Federal Hall In New York City. There was a ball afterwards and the first Pre.5tdent danced the minuet. The Orst Inaugural b:ill In Washington was that of Jamea Madison. Some of !be women guests curt!led to the Prelident and 1ddreaed his wUe, Dolley, •• ''tn1d1me presidentess." EDITORIAL RESEARCH Until 1817, all inaugurals In the nation 's capital were held in either the 5en11te or the House. But that year the two chambers of Congress became locked In · C-Ontroversy over whether to use the "fine red chairs'• of the Senate or the "plain democratic chairs'' of the House. As a result, James Madison took the oath outside a temparary "Brick Capitol." Thl' British had burned the old Capitol in 181t BAD WEATHER oceasionally dim!I the luster of inaugural ct>remonics. For ex· ample, it was snowing when William Henry Harrison was sworn in on the Ea.st Portico of the Capitol in 1841. 'I1lt new President, 68 years old, nevertheless refused to wear a hat or coat. lf the: day was windy, 80 was Harrlaon : it took him nearly two hours to read his inaugural add.re.u, the tongesl evtr made. lie caught cold arter the ceremony and died a month h11ter. THE CENTERPIECE of any lnaugura· tion Day Is, of course, the President's ln· augural address. These have ranged In letllllh from Harrl.t0n's 81500-word yawn- provoker to tht 13S words Wathlnglon spoke after being sworn In !or his second term.. .the. averag1 ls about 2,400 "'-'4>rds, which Is almost precisely the length ol each ol Dw:1ht D. Elsenhowe.r's ad· d,..,,.., VU!agc of Va!Jey View so it rneets community approval and the school can be buUt . The nc\v district \von't inherit San Joaquin's enro~J­ ment eligibility for the sc;bool, planned for about 7'30 students. 'J'he planning co.mmissi.011 has said it wants advice · from the school district. 1'Jow that it has this will it act? The matter demands the commission's immediate at · tention. Price of S&f ety \Vhat price traffic safety in the city of Irvine? About $40.000 per intersection, if ultimate traffic signalization and intersection street lighting are to be provided to protect both pedestrians and motorists using busy Irvine streets. city councilmen recently discovered. Councilmen wisely responded to increases in acci- dent rates and traffic at both the Afoulton Parkway and \Valnut Avenue intersections with the city's n1ain north· south artery - Culver Drive. Councilmen voted to spend the remainder of this year's Irvine share of state gasoline tax funds -$77,000 -to install complete signal packages at each intersee· tion. Since ~the Walnut ~hopping center opened, t.here have been four collisions. t"'O of then1 nearly fatal. Further, increased cross traffic on A'loulton bv mo· torists going .to and from the Santa Ana Alarine Corps .i\ir Station resulted in tU'O accidents within the 30 days prior to installation of stop signs. Stop signs are only a temporary solution. By fully lighting and signalizing the two intersections, the city is prepared for future demands oa these street crossings. 'On your mark. Get set. Go!' SB President !tfust Be lmmu~ to Criticism Measured Pace of Nixon Game Plan \\'ASHINGTON -The measured pace o! the Nixon administration never ceases lo surprise and startle. So many of Plesi· dent Nixon's decisions run contrary to accepted" \\:isdom. such as lifting man- datory wage-price controls at a lime when inflation tends to n;rume its uir ward course. Or, the predictab- ly unpopular re- sumption of bombing in Hanoi · Haiphong area, \\'hich might be resumed again if the peace talks io Paris fall agaiii. Nixon goes by a measured pace and this is what is least understoOO about him . In the fall of 1971 when Phase JI of economic controls had barely replaced Phase I, Nixon's economic planners began to chart Phase III. the lifting of controls. The plan has now advanced by measured stages into Phase III. volun· tarism, y,·hich was intended in the first place, and is consistent with Nixon's long-term opPQSition to compulsory wage- price controls. HE WILL CLA.Irit the same con· sistency in terminating the Vietnam war, (rucHARD WILSO~ y,·hich once again appears possjble. Here again there is evidence of the measured pace. Early fn 1972 Nixon accepted with amazing equanimity the advance of Com- munist regular forces across I.be DMZ to establish a foothold in the northern pro- vinces of South Vietnam. To prevent that advance from going too far the President ordered lhe mining and bombing of Hanoi.Haiphong, and the South Viet· namese army was able to arrest the ad-· vance Y.'i!h the Joss of only one major capital. · Still, the North Vietnamese regular forces did. in, fact , establish themselves in the northern provinces of South Viet· nam. This fact underlies the present shape of the peace negotiations. Nixon's tacit acce ptance of the presence of the North Vietnamese regular forces in South Vietnam was the irreducible price of peace for Hanoi -the recognition of l\\'o annies in South Vietnam as reflec- ting the realities of' the battlefield. FRO~I THIS single point fl owed the events which made it conceivable for Hanoi to agree to a cea.se-firt in place. So there was a perceptible pattern, if not a preconceived design, all through 1972 based upoon the crtation of real milital}' conditions which Hanoi could consider a~ptable, at least for an interim period. Phase I then moved on toward Phase II, the heavy bombing to convince Hanoi that it must now move along towahi the actual execution of a cease-Ore which did not require an overt commitment to withdraw its reguJar troops. Phase 111, the resumption of bombing when Cqnm-deliy and tr~ sabotaged the peace negotiations, cou1d' not be considered a preconceived plan but Henry A. Kissinger evidently left the Communlsts in little doubt that further delay and captious changes would result in a renewal of the bombing. THIS RESm;tPTION was a hitch in the proCeedings 8rld matters were not going at Nixon's measurtd pace. 'lb.at pace has nevertheless reMUDed,. and while at a slower rate than once appeared possible, stit: 1a1Js within a Nixonian game plan. He may yet be able to say that a plan- ned course of events, from tbe first withdrawal of troops onward, led, despite delays and mishaps, to conditions in which Hanoi would agree to a cease-fire while Saigon still controlled most of the country. lD ot.her matters a measured pace can be perceived. Ni.xon must have knoY..TI - certainly his associates did know -that there was virtually no prospect that Coogress would embrace his massive governmental reorganization p l an . From the beginning, it was implicit that. at what was deemed the proper stage, the President would put this plan into effect by his own devices. He has done so, ~ perfectly but he has, In ef- fect, cxqµb~ the functions of several departtnen~u n d e-r super Cabinet members with White House ·status. IT IS the same with his commitment to cut govemment·spending. Congress will not help him in this, so he is doing it anyway by stages and phases, in e[fect impounding and refusing to spend money appropriated by Congress. It is typical of the game plan approach that many o!'Nlxon's actions are tem- porarily unpopular or misunderstood so he has to be endowed with foresight of a good outcome and imrilunily to criticism. He takes secoad place to no one in these endowments. r-Response to Senator on Tolerance To the Editor: In regard to State Senator H. L. Richardson's article about Intolerance (Jan. 15), I must agree that there are a lot of things which we should no longer tolerate. HERE lS a brief list of a few of those things: narrow-mindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy, unwillingness to change for the better, and all those things which violate the laws and principles laid down by our Constitution. 1bere are some things thal deserve our utmost attention. For example, y,·hen \~e hear the banshee screams of the women liberationists, perhaps we should take notice. They are only exercising their freedom of speech, which they were granted along with full citizenship back in 1918. If they speak the truth, then maybe we should adjust our views. AS FAR AS the youth of America goes, i\ is my opinion that !hey are not as sad a crop of kids as suggested by the State Senator. They may have their shortcom- ings, but at least they have the guts to say what's on their minds. If they speak the truth. then we should know it for what lt Is. In respect to the patrlotimn of, young Americans, I believe it is as strong as ever. I believe there are plenty of them willing to defend and even die for the principles established ln our Con- stitution. You may have a hard Ume Und· lng someone y,·illlng to fight ror a government as corrupt as the one in South Vietnam , however. The educational sy!!lem may leave: . something to be des ired, but when you ,---B11 George Dear George : Down at lhe saloon I've met some guys who say you have NEVER foll owed your own advice. Right? CYNIC Dear Cynic : Well, I don't ltnow. Same yean ago I advised myself to quit hones1 work and start writing an advice cOlumn. But If you mean followfng the ''advlctH giYen In this column, of course, I haven 't. [ MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are wetCQ1.1te. Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or Less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All letters musr include signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on request if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pt,bli.shed. see Americans walking on the moon It. isn't because they're big and strong it ts because they are intelligent and educated M. FAULKNER H'h11 Guns? To the Editor: This has reference to the letter about guns from Michael D. Grant, e.1ecutlve vice president of the Grant Boys. JUST TO get the facts straight guns are ""manufactured for prnfit and the following reasons : l. To KILL human!!. 2. To KILL animals. 3. To·KlLL fowl. 4. For tara:et pracUce to better the aim In order to ldU humans, to kill enimals, to kill fowl. The guu, any gun., is an instrument of death 1utd this Ls ill ultimate purpose.. ONE CANNOT pick up I newspaper to- day without reading about some preciout life being taken by a gun, tl\rough ac- cident or on purpose, We don't begin to know how life is created but we surely know how lo destroy It. Mr. Grant states that the gun buslneu is rigidly controlled. Come on Mr .. GrJRt.- nnybody c;in buy :i gun If he has the money. All human beings lose their temper ot Umts. Combine this with the avallnbillty of n gun and we produce thousands of needless deaths each fear In the United StateJ. What we really need in our society are less gun dealers and less gurni. WARREN I. HENNINGSGARD Dletator•hlp? To the Editor: We are being duped. The two leaders in the Senate, Scott and Manslleld, and the leader in the House. Ford, all three admit that they can do absolutely nothing to stop this "'3r. Any laws they pass can .. be vetoed by President Nixon, and they do oot have sufficient votes to override his veto. What are we paying out these handsome salaries for? NOTHING! We all voted for a repre3elltative government, but what does the above statement spell out very clearly to you. DICTATORSHIP. 11 this what you voted for? Moy the Good Lord bless and teep us. HAZEN P. AIKEN No BH11d flollotcer To the Editor: This Is a plea, addrestect to Richard Nixon, the Laguna Beach School Board and many others. Over the years that I worked for various public service grouPs, when leaders made secret decisions and gave arbitrary orders, I was unable to tQOPUate. 1 may not be much or a leader, but I can't be a blind follower either. W1Udng on an un,.rtaln path In. the dark ls likely to be precartou.s -for one t'OOld wily lose one '• 11tn1e of dlrectton. So please, leaders -let'• bave -11.&bt, all the. way. RUTH QUINN GuR•tlo1dlif To the Editor: The EPA'• g•s rationing proposal should ring with the rank and rilt. After all , one pine In Anowhet1d Is worth more than •II the automobiles In the LA Basin. But, what of that child In LA's Ghetto suffering from emphysema at the age of six? The LA Cb1mber of Commem!, !ht! Auto CJub and Forest Llwn c:an be .,, .. peeled to talk "rnodm" meuu .... But, wbcrt were they When the battle for Proposition No. 18 was fought four years ago? And what really have they given themselves to over the years but cor· porate profits and the burying of the dead? JAMES W. DILLEY Ttc'° Jtlen To the Editor: Roberto Clemente died helping un- fortunate people. When Managua was hit by the earthquake, Howard Hughes was terrified and flew to safety in England. Money can't buy 1 man's soul, can it? GWEN PATON Bike Trail flan To the Editor: 1 am a student at Corona de! ~far High School and It has been brought to my at- tention, as I am a CWTeDt rider of the new bike trails, that you have received several letters of complaint regarding the dips in the trails. This is no letter of complaint, but merely a letter of appreciation and thanks to tho."le who petitioned and sup- ported CXlllStrucUon of the bike trails. Dips or no dips, we .are all most thankful. TRACY WESTERWELL OltAfrftJI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N~ \Vced, Publilher ThomcJ Kccvil. Editor Barbaro. Krciblch Editorial Pog1 Editor ~ fdltorlal l.o8~e •if lhe 0.llY Pilot ~t't-ks to 1nfonn arid t tlmu- IAll'. n•a<Wr.-by 1u·t11tntin11 thlir ntw11!)Aptr'11 opi nions and rom· mcntar)' 11n t111Jlr11 of lntel'C!lt and •ii:niflcancl'., by 11N1\'ldlni.: a fn1"Urn f11r thf' exprnslon 1if our l'f"lidrn' <Y1ilnlont. And by rn'lt·nllng lhl' divtt.r"lll' vlt\\>polnla: or lntonned l)b· M1A'tr1 and apokeJmcn -on topl~ nt lhl" day. Friday, January 19, 11173 7 • 7 I • \ • . Huniin1t'8n-.Be•~h- ~ouniain , Valley VOL. 66, NO. 1.9, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1973 By GEORGE LEJDAL Of ... 0.llY ,lift S .. tt "I'm Timothy's love. I've traveled with bim for two months and I've come with him to Los Angeles to free him. I've come to speak to President Nixon," the petite, mousy-haired British subject ac- companying Or. Timothy Leary to Los Angeles said Thursday, (See stories, pictures, Page 3.) _ Identifying herself as Joann:: Harcourt- Smith and as a ''resident of the U.S.," ' the mystery woman decUoed to give any but her maiden name and rerused to oomment on the present . status of her n1arriage to an unidentified Washington man. "I'm a citizen of the world. My mother was Polish, my rather British. I was born in Switzerland and I have a son born in Greece and another bom in Amerlca," the 26-yea r old, self-proclaimed.autbore5.$ or a book on ''Freedom-" said. "I'd been looking for Timothy all my lire. I found him h\'O months ago. It was only natural we should meet since I \vrote a book that sold 100,000 copies in Europe. It \\"as about freedom ," ~1iss llarcourt-Sm.ith said .. •'Timothy's written a book. It \Vill be published by Bantam," she said ex- plaining how the convicted dope advocate was financing the recent portions of his S.1nonth exile abroad, fleeing U.S. authorities. She said she joined him in Switzerland, ' Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks TEN CENTS made a film with Leary in Austria traveled with hir.1 to Beirut, Lebanon .. ,\'here we were treated like kings" and was at his si de in Kabul, Afghanistan "''hen U.S. ofi!cials caught up with him. took a"'ay his invalidated passport and escorted him to Los Angeles via Frankfurt, Paris and l<lndon. "It really wasn 't very elegant the way they snatched his passport from his hands. They said lt wasn't valid. But we tSee LEARY, Page !) Airport Plans ·Bucked • • DAILY PILOT ...... W 1M p-"Hi"$ llUUTIPUL; .. HE'.S I\ KING"' SAYS J.EAflY fRl~ND · Joanna..._Harwvrt4mit1' Called R1l1tionshlp 'Perfect Love' Pea.ce~Talksf ' W·hite House Officials • Silent on Agnew Trip From Wire Services The \Vhite House today declined to con- firm or deny a broadcast report that Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will go to S.igon Jan. 28 -presumably to conduct pOst·peace agreement talks with Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. The Columbia Broadcasting Company said from Saigon that a visit by Agnew a'f>par.ently was intended "to coincide closely With the signi ng or at least the ln- iU'allng of a Vle'tnaro cease-fire agree-ment." 1' · . ¥Asked about the report, White House press secretary Ronald L, Ziegler said: "I will not have any comment on that. I am not going to comment one way or another on aey speculation' -whether it b right or wrong." • ·:Ziegler likened his 11().COtnment to ·re- !WimeS.s: Tried To Wa:t1·n .OtheJ"S In Bugging Case cen~ simila r responses he made tO reports of developments in · peace negotiations. The "'bite House spokesman said President Nixon conferted for more than an hour this morning v!'ith Henry A. Kiss- inger, chief U.S. peace' negotiator. Kiss- inE;er will leave for Parii. Afonday to resume private talks Wlth Hanoi 's Le Due Tho. \Vhile iu Washington lhe past two days, Ziegler said, Kissinger conferred in person or by telephone with Secretary of State-Wi~Uam P. Rogers, Secrelary ol Defensei-MeJvln R. Laird, Adm. Thomas H. MOOrer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 18.nd others. oOn .Webster, acting CBS bureau chief in Saigon, aaid Presiden t Thieu received the letter 'from Presldenl Nixon on · Thursday informing him of Agnew's plans: · The letter was deliVered by U.S. Arn~dor EUswortli Bunker, the network report~ and contained the following passage fr6m Nixon to Thieu : "We have been loge!her in war, let's be tot ether in. peace."_ , Aiean~hil~. Secl'f!tary of Defense Melvin R-. ·Laird, said' tOdai there is no way to assure lasting peace in Southeast Asia but declared that Administration policies will end American involvement !See AGIWw, Page f ) Hunting_ton Opponents Form Unit By TERRY COVILLE Of ti'!• O.Uy Pli.t Stilt Oppositi-On is mounting in Huntington Beach to the proposed creation of an airport-recreation-industrial comp I ex around Meadowlark Airport. Homeowners who live near the tiny, private airfield met Wednesday night to form a homeowners association and ex· press their _distrust of the plan. "They fear it \!.'ill become a com· mercial ai11>0rt in the future . They don 't think it will be limited ~~t pleasure craft,'' says Bri.m-Parldlrison , president of the HOME Council, an association of the city's separate·bQmeowner grou~. Parkinson atterM\ed the meeting of tbe fledgling Meadowlarl:: Homeowners Association. lfe~said..:..abQUt fO.SO of the airpclrt's neigflliors joined. · "They are ... coi•~ opjlOleci . to anything which will expand the airport .'' he said tOday. "T~ey feel Lhe county is looking at Meadowlark as a metroport, a feeder to the regional airports ." In a study of county airport facility ~See MEADOWLARK, Page !) Top College Monopolist No Economist You don 't have to know about business and economics to win ii ' Monopoly tournament. According to the results lrom the first annual Monopoly tournament held this week at Golden West College, you have a better chance • of winning ii you're recreation • minded. After two one.hour' sessions held Tuesday and Thursday, the biigest wheeler-dealer was Jim Wolfe who had managed to accumulate $3,763 in ca!!h and real estate. Second place went to Mar"k Berglas whose holdings totaled $2,,143. Both Wolfe and Berglas are recreatkln majors. • Third place finisher was Elaine Kahler, a business major Who had managed to ~mpile $~,900 worth of money andJiOjierty. Last plae.e went to Tom Buccola who only had rm worth of real es~e . and currency. He's an economics major. ' ' DAILY PILOT ..... M '' P11'1idi O'~ MODERN BEACHCOMBER SEARCHES FOR TREASURE ALONG WIND AND TIDE·LASHED SHOR! In Huntington Bt•ch, A BJustery D•y Follows Thurtd1y'1 Night of Rain Obispo and Santa Barbara Dig Out From Savage R~in From Wire Services SAN LUIS OBISPO -A state of emergency was decl8(ed throughout .San Luis Obispo County as the worst rainstorm in four years sent Dood waters Pouring into "downtown streets here, cut· ting off communications out of the city and forcing schools to close. (Related picture, Page SJ. With a prediction of more rain today, the state Office of Emergency Serv ices said it was keeping a close watch on the cowity as well as Santa Barbara County to the south which has "reached a point of almost complete saturation." The storm, which spread throughout Southern California early Thursday. dumped more than thl'ee inc;hes of rain over coastal areas and brought a total of 6.3 inches lo the area since Tuesday. Some streets in San Luis Obispo were four feet deep in water Thursday morn· ing but the deluge. receded by midaf· tcrnoon. ?.fore than 100 ca rs in the city were damaged by the storm but no serious in· juries "·ere reported, police said. Floodwaters closed off roads 81 both the southern and northern ends of the cl· ty for a time. Thousands of homeowners in Los Osos and Baywooct Park;-immedlately south of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of the day. ln nearby Laguna Lake, a · number of homes were flooded. Homes and buildings were also flooded to the south in the San Fernando Valley. Up to 7.5 inches of rain fe!I at San Marcos Pass near Santa Barbara, and in Ventura County, flood waters ripped up sidewalks, exposing utility pipes in some areas. Clearing skies greeted Northern (S.. OBISPO, Page tJ U.S. Postpones r ,, Skylab Launch Ne ·w Rai1istorm Vurnps Another Inch on Coast By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of !Ill Dilly Pli.t lt•ff Rain drenched Orange County cities again Thursday night, dun1ping more than an inch of water in some ooast.11 · regions and creating flood conditions that created more ot a nuiSance than posing a real threat. · Today's return of fair skies is expected to continue at least through Saturday .. Thursday's late arriving stonn, follow· ing on the heels of a heavy downpour Tuesday, raised the precipitation totals of a;: cities to nt:w highs, well ahead of last year. IN HUNTINGTON BEACH: Rain watchers reported that the new downpour created several minor traffic accidents but no seriou.s dauuige. The same held tnte 101 tilt! neJ&hborlng com· n1unily of.Fountain Valley. Rainfall in both cities Thursday w a s .67 inches and raises the seuon tolal 10 (Ste RAINFAU.., Pase I) Orange Cout WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The pros- ecution's atar witness in the Watergate bugging trial teotified today he watched helplessly . from , a nearby balcony as police swa~ into Democratic Party headquairters arld caught five men trying to p18nt~00gs. 1 Alfred C. Baldwin 111, an ex-FBI agent who said he had been hired to lnonitor the tapped tclephoneJ of hlgl>lev,el Democrlts, tesUfied that he tried to alert colleagues by walkle·talkle radio, but failed . Valley to Study .,.Scores Until Mid-May CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The launch of America's Skylab space station was delayed today for at least two weekJ, from April 30 to sometime In May, because of lagging testing operalions. Weatber 6 Sclioo l's By JOAN~E REYNOLDS Ot h ' O.lty 11'11" Stitt 6tli Graders Rate Below 50% in, State The ~pact agency said a new launch date for the nation's first manned orbiting laboratory will not be detcrmlo· ed until additional tests are completed. It'll be sunny and warmer on Saturday, with highs in the 60s and lower 70s along the Orange Coast. UJWS tonight, from the high 30! to the low 40s. INSIDE TODAY Baldwin resumed testimony as a three· judge appeals court ruled, 2 to 1, that be would not be allowed to testify as to the substanee-of t~}epbone conversatk>ns ~ among to~nin"king Democrats on which he eaveodrnpped. Baldwin'•. testimony .... intemtpted Fountain V&lley sChool otnclals..will try lo find out what went wrong at six schools in their district that scored in the lower half on state math te1sts given to sirtb graders in.1972. The previous year's percentile for Fountain Valley School was 79, which means that In 1971 only 21 percent or the schools in the state did better than Foun- tain Valley. Fountain Valley's drop from 7i to 36 was the la rgest in the district. Trustees also received the district's scores In the reading tests administered in .J972 to the first, second and lbird grade students. Those scores showed that five schools -Bushard, Moiola, Oka, Tamura and Wardlow ._ finished in the lower haU among state schools. Skylab is a 94-ton space stallon dcsig.n- ed lo be occupied J>y lhret crews of three men each for a total of five months over an elghtrmorith period to see how well men can live and work in space for weeks at a time. \\'11y would two cit>ic ligltt opera companies 15 mileo1 opart too11t to ret:ive a Shoto like "Kf,.. met" at the iameo time? The reason is t!rpltdncd in the Inter· mission column tn today's Wetk· ender. $when a group of Democratic worken ol>jt&d to admlsa""1 of t of buued eonversatloaa. , 11le devel0pme01s came on lbe 10th ~1 of Ibo Watergate trial, In which only two of the seven men orlginally indicted lo the ~une QI break-In aod bugging are tteJng tried. The othen entuod guilty pleas. Tealllylng as lo wbat bappentd on the Right In ~Ion. Baldwin ,.;d : • "I called, 'Bue to unit one: Base to ISet ll'ATERGATE, Pqe fl Test ...Wis ehown to distrlcl trustee. Thursdat ni&hl showed that ~ounlain VaUey, Plavan, Oka, Harper, Gisler and Lamb sdlooil an finished 1>e1ow the 50th percet\tilt In the teotlng. • A pii/Cen°" .ranking al)owl ~ l!Cbool'a •tahdlng relative to an the ~her !Chools In the state. _ For ins~, Fountain Valley School • Wiii rated In the 36th perwitil• for 1972. which means 64 percent ol tht~ elenlen· tary sCboots ·in CaUtomla bad better math__.... · • The lowest percentile ranking in the district was at Gisler which was ranked 22nd, meaning that 78 perctnt of the schools statewkte had better math r<ores. Bui Superintendent Mike Brick noted ·that 1he scores in the six schools wh ich were below the 50th perccntlle were offset" by hlg~ scores in the district's olher u l!Cbooil. As a district In 1971. Fountain Valley ploced in the S2nd percentile and in 1972 thtir ranking was up to4.he &7th petctn- tile. I . Brick SIUd the test results have been returned to each school for careful analysis as to whtch sections ol the test the atudentl dkl nol do well. "The cbanse 1n ""'res and the fact that some •re below the 50 percent mark is not unusual In that It happens many times," Brick said. "One of the biggest problems faced by school districts is that we've never had a syst<":m capable of producing a success year alter yea r." He noted that the district has been ""' IS.. SCORES, Pap tJ 'Ille 11-bUlion project w.., 9Cheduied to bt ciinple~ by Christmas this year, but the.launch delay means,fhe prorram will uterl!f Into early 1'14. Astro:iauu Charles "Pete" Conrad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weil& wUI he the lint lo oooupy the house-sized laboratory. They were scheduled f01 leunch May I, but th,lr night will be delayed until· oae day aft er Skylab is launched unmanned Into a 270-mile hlgll orbit. L.M. "" t • .. ._, II C.11'9rwlll t Cll•lfltil .... """" .. CNM_. II blollll N.ilcet t e....,i.1 ,.... • ,,_. !M1," •w -. ll«tN ' ""'-IJ AIWt L•-IJ Mll'"1: • ...... .,.,. ., ........... . Mltlaal ..... .. ti 0r-.. c...,. • .................. f't'Mlo .,.,,., • '"'" ... ,. Sffc.11 •rtithl ..,, T-. T""*" ».a ... """ 4 •-'• MN.I 1•11 WWM ........ It ·------~ • , % ""41L T ru.U I n 10 Bunni AU.year Foe irt Ocean Vi v Race By JOHN ZALi.EH OI ffl• Olollt Pli.1 'l•tt Henry Lyday, a lender of the p;irent movenient aguil\St nll-~f'l'lr schoo l:;, h11s dt'clared his ca11d1dal'v f11r a St•at on the Ocean View Srhool Uu.ard in 1his spr1ng's elections. He Is one or 10 ne\\' cnndidates to an- nounce they arc running for 18 vacanci"t on six \\rest Orange County .schol.il boards In the spring elect ions, act'Ordlng to the county Registrar of Voters. 1'he new list or candidate.ii Includes four lncu1nbents : Ralph Cauer. \l'ho 1\·1Jl run again for the Huntington Beach Union High School Bo.ard: K. Dale Bush and Steven Holden who will seek re-elec..'- tion to the Huntington Beach City (elementary) SchooJ Board: r.nd Marion Aguirre who will run a g a i n for the Westminster School Boanf. The new additions to the candidatt list mean that the Huntington Beach Union High, Huntington Beach City elementary. \Vestminster elementary, and Ocean View elementary school districts-now have enough candidates to fill all ''acan- c1es coming up in the spring. The Founta in Valley srhool boa rd still has only one candidate for three seats, and Seal Beach board has '"'o candidates for three seats. The new candidates are: Ocean Vie"': Laird Anderson, 16821 Green St., Huntington Beach. an ac- coantan t: Henry ~1. Lyday Jr.., 17421 Breda Lane. Huntington Beaci. a school counselor: and Christoffe l Driessen, 16061 Craig ~. lfunllllgton Be.tch, a service ttehnlclan. H1t.1~'Bucll t.lemt.ntary: Rlchnrd Stl'vens, 9J~1 \'en.le !\lar Drive. Jtui1· li nJlttJll ~t"a('h , torrec1ionnl prograrn s1:.eo.·i!!l i!;I: K. 0:1le Bush, 1220 1'faln St .. Huntington Bench, nttomcr: and Stc\·en llolden. !'M9 10th SI • l~lmtington Beach. an insurance agt'nl. HuollogU1n Be:11·h hlgb: Jt•ffrt•y Gilmore. 21702 S. Brookhurst St , Hun· ling loo Beach, a marketing rtpres&n- tali\'e; and Ralph lluuer, U591l B<-dford Lane. Hun11ng1on Beach. l'hemisl "'estmlnster elementary: IJewey L. \\"lies, 16421 Van Buren St., \Vestminstt.r. law enforcement officer: Ma r lo n Aguirre, 776 16th SI., \Vesun.inster. So far. the most interesting race seems to be shaping up in the Ocean View district. L~. who has been battling trustees since last spring o\·er all-year schools, ·will be shooting for one of lhree openings on the board. At least one Ocean Vie-w incumbenl. board president James Shaffer. has said he "'ill not run again. The other two in- cumbents. Robert Knox and C'reorge Logan. have not yet anoounccd their in- lentsions. Lyday is one of five rand1da ges \olo'ho have declare(! for the Ocean \'1ew board. There art seven candidates running for the high school board so far. Fountain Valley elementary is the district ""·itb re"·esl candidates. \\lith three openings, only irn:un1bent Roger Belgen has said he is runnu1g. Who Gets Timothy Leary? Officers A 'vait Decision Orange County Sheriff's deputies were standing in line a: Los Angeles County jail this morning awaiting determina- tion on w h i c b or several jurisdletkrls \\·ould be first lo get custody of Dr. Timot hy Leary. A Sheriff's Office spokesman said a contingent of Orange County officials \\"a.9 on hand at the Las Angeles Jail at 10:30 a.m. today awaiting a final decision. Leary, who was brought Into the jail by u .s. Bureau or Dangerous Drugs agents Fro111PqeJ WATERGATE • • any Wlit' "when he saw casually dressed men with guns drawn on the balcony of lhY-Democratic NatJona.I Commlttee at the Wslergate complex across the street. "A voice answered and said, 'What have you got!' t asked him 'How are our people dressed!' '1be voice asked me, 'Wby?' I said, 'Well , we've got some trouble. There are some people there in casual clothes and they 've got their weapons drawn .' " Baldwin, promised immunity from pros- ecution in evchange for testimony, said he shouted his warning to the unnamed person at the other end or the walkie- talkie as he sa w a number or uniformed police arrive at the Watergate. Baldwin said he watched the scent from a hotel where he had been installed by James W. l\icCord, then security chief for the Nixon re-election campaign, to monitor calls on the telephone of R. Spencer Oli ver, a Democratic Party of- ficial. McCord is one of the men on trial; the other is G. Cordon Liddy, one-time White House aide and fin ancial counsel for the re-election campaign. McCord and five of the other original defendants were arrested at the Watergate. Baldwin resumed testimony nfter the U.S. Court of Appeals said that while evidence could be admitted as to which telephones in Democratic headquarters may have been tapped and as to the persons who used them, the contents of the conversations overheard could not be di sclosed . ' • OIAHGI COAST Ml DAILY PILOT The 0.-.,.. C••I DAIL'( ~llOT wtft. •!di Is cornbiftd The ~'""'-. It: ~"'" .,.. tt>e Onnge c .. u Pul>ll&hlllQ ~. ~ r•te cdftloni 1r1 P\lblbl\td, ,,,,_.., throvgli Frid•W, IOI" C0\1• M~, Mewoor1 Beach. Hllnlinglon BNdl1l'ounlllit V•llly, UOUIWI Budl, lrv1ne/~ltMdt end s.n Clemtnll/ S...n Jwn C•pillr•no. A •!ngl1 ftD!on1I 1dlUon Is Plltlllshld S."'111.,, •ncl Sllnd1yi;. Th• pr!nc1P&I Plllll!&Pllng pltnl b II llO W~t a•'f $1rt11 r, eo.11 Meu, C•lltomi., t?t2', Robert N. Wied Prn~1nl 1nct Pll&lls~er J1clc R. Curley Vkt Pns~1 -Gw!lr•I Mt11t91t Thom •• K11•il Edltot Tnom11 A. Murphine ,,,.....Dlfllll EclllM" Ch•rlts H. L..01 Rich•nl f'. Hell Anl1t1"t MINQlfllll Eolton. T1rry CoYill• Wbt Or•tlff Covilty Edl!OI' H..tt..-lffcll Offlq 17175 leech l o11le,,•rd M•llin1 Addr•IH r.o. l o• 790, •2641 OtW Offic" LttvM BHtn• m Forni ,1~ C..11 MIM: J30 Wnt S•"t StrHI M""'*"t ll1Kft: JJD Newport 8PU'.,,1N" 5-1'1 C"""9nt1; JOS HPrltl fil Clmll'oO II.Ml 111., ..... 17141 642-4121 0-HW A~ 642·5671 ll"'1t! H"111 Or .... C..., ~-ltlel 140.1Jlt ~'• ttn,. or.,.. Cn•t PVllllllllnQI C....nw. He -,.., ... , '""""•tlona. ""' ..... , ""'"'" .. ... ...... IMINnt• ~--_., M r9PfOlhlnd Wllf'IOlll &1*111 ,.,-. ,,. ... 1111 ., corrrltltt •-r. S.C-W dell _, ... P9fll •I Cwt• M-, c.ni.m1.. ~"" ..., <•mtr n..u rnMlht'/'/ tr.-m•ll IJ.lf IMl!illl~I mlllttn> --; llNllMtleM 'Ml INllllllV. . ' who accompanied him from Europe to Lo,, Angeles Thursday, bas yet to fa ce a federal judge. Meanwhile a $5 million bench warrant, issued last year by Orange County jurists while Leary remained in Europe, is the cowity's tag on the escaped drug cultist The warrant is related to 19. counts or smuggling and conspiracy to smuggle lodged against Leary for his alleged in- volvement in tbe Brotherhood of Eternal Love. That Laguna Beach-based organization is suspected of £rooting a million dollar intematiooal drug ring. A $7S million tax lien against two Riverside ranch properties owned by tbe organiutioo also bas been fl.led. The m nill1ion figure representi.ag unpaid t.ues on tbe profits from sale of illegal drugs ls Meanwhile, Leary also f a e e s pros- ecutian oo ftlony charges for having as many as 200. Meanwhile, Leary also feces pro- secution on felony charges for having escaped from California Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. At noon today, it was not known which of the charges brought against Leary 1 would be tried firsl. Sources in Santa Ana believed, however. Leary might be being brought to Orange County sometime today. Fro111 Page 1 LEARY ... used it in live different countries and it said it was good until 1974," Miss Harcourt-Smith said. . Alter Afghanistan authorities deported Leary, and wil.hout his passpor,, Leary accompanied the officers willingly, she said. ··Everybody was very nice to us all the way here. We could have escaped again in Frankfurt. ~. "Four days ago he said he was so hap- py to be going home -even to prlson. He's mastered freedom so compl etely he can be free anywhere." she said. She deplored Leary's arrest and legal jams "for smoking only t"'O butts" and \'Owed, "He knows I love him and am going to free him. We're all going to fr ee hin " I. "I believe it is all perfect he should have cnme back to the United States." she added. "He was so happy Yo'hen he saw the Pacific Ocean again,'' she'sald recalling his mood as the jumbo jet "Clipper Red Jackel" turned to make its approach to Los Angeles International Airport about 4:30 p.m. Thursday. While her "perfect Jove" was removed Jnfm the plane in handcuffs and under guard of both federal and_ Los Angeles 1n1thoritie:s, Miss Harcourt.Smith, against whom pollce said no charges we.re pend- ing, left the airplane v i a the routine customs check. She said a doctor conflnned that she had serum hepatitis -"it's not con· tagious'' -when the plane landed. The illness she. said led Leary to begin I.is fivKOUntry flight which resulted in his being spotted by U.S. of(iclals In Afghanistan. Despite the lack or an ex- tradition treaty with the U.S .. Afghanistan authorities a pp a re n t I y cooperated in the turnover. The woman. believed to be the daughter or a British publisher, said !he contracted hepatitis while the pair were In Vienna making the anti-addictkm film . "On my birthflay, Jan. 13. I btcame ill. Tim promised)to lake me somewhere! I've never been and get me to a hospital." she .said. That trip led to what !!he. claimed was the "illegal" removal of Leary 's passport and the pair's "free ride'' to Los Ar.geles. "l've never been here before. 11 was a lovtly fiight nt the U.S. govMnment's ex- pense.'• ,. ' \ ' ' ':i..•>!:.--"""'L..l'--~-=:o,.,~~~~~:...;...~J WAANER OAJL't •II.OT ....._, MAP INDICATES WHAT SHAPE OF MEADOWLARK AIRPORT MIGHT IE IN FUTURE Runw•y Would Be Shifted, Goll Courso S.lv•flod and Industry o. .. 1opoc1 Undor Propos0l 'Aides Plan Stunt - 2 Huntington Leaders to Be Gorillas 1\1'tl Huntington Beach civic leaders ~·iL don gorilla suits Sa!urday mor11ing. climb aboard a bicycle bu ilt for-two and circ!e Huntington Cente r for 30 minutes. City Councilman Jerry lofatney and school board Trustee Ralph Bauer will carry out the stunt to publicize the Hun- 11ngtoo Beach Union High School District's $27 million bond election. Matney and Bauer will start their apt adventure at 10 a.m. at lbe main en- trance to the shopping center mall. They pla11 to ride the bicycle inside and outside t~ cmter. Bauer will also wear a top hat while Matney plans to sport a tu-tu (ballet skir t) around his hairy e<>stume. 1be stunt is part of a "political payo1r• From P .. e J RAINFALL ... 8.04 inches. That compare to S.20 inches at this time la st year and a season total of 5.79 inclH!s for the :mtire 1971-72 raln season, IN COSTA ft.fESA: Neither the fire nor the police department reported any significant problems' as a result of the latest downpour. Police LL Austin Smith said there was a rise in traffic accidents but that there were nu injuries. No rain- fall figure was available. IN NEWPORT BEACH: Driving rain triggered widespread nuisance flooding in Jow-lying areas of the city aod ftiars were renewed that the oarusb or water down San Diego Creek might carry away the old bridge on MacArthur Boulevard. Crews worked for several hours pump- ing out the hardest • hit flood areas. There was some mud runoff in parts of the city but no roads were closed with the exception of a short stretch on MacArthur Boulevard. Traffic was in- terrupted until 6 p.m. to inspect the bridge . Matney " promised after his electiori last April to a second term on the council Following that election , Matney discovered he did not have enough money to pay for his campaign so he sponsored a raffle. Ht was the toppritt. "Win a counctlman for a day -any reasonable task ," he boasted. Bauer won the raffit and proposed the monkey suit gambil Bauer and l.fatney failed to disclose ~·hat the gorilla sui ts have to do with the school bonds beyond being attention get- tcrs. The two men plao to pass out lite.·ature erplalnlng the ballot measure d'!flng their trip lhrougb the shopping center. Tbe 127 mllflOd, il approved by wtus, coold build two new high acbcol cam· puses to serve the 52--!quare-mUe district. It lakes a two-thirds voter approval to • pass school con.mucUon bonds. After Saturday, the monkeysbint.1 will continue as the bond campaign steps up. Matoey bas proml!ed to put In • special appearance at Tuesday's school board meeting dressed In hi> monkey suit. f're111P .. eJ AGNEW TO SAIGON . • • in lhe flghting 'the.re. The secretary called the outlook for peace in Southea.St Asia and the rest of the "11rld "better" at the present time. But he recalled that the war in Vietnam has continued for 30 years and. could never assure that the shooting will stop no matter what p e a c e agreemen! is signed. Jn an hour-long news conference, his final one before leaving office, Laird said the South Vietnamese are capable or handling their own defenses Without American military help. "I can say that as [ar as American Ur \'olvement in .the fighting we have applied the Ni.ion doclrlAe . • . and we are no longer in a posiUOn where the United States will have tO be the Cop on the belit all over the world,'' Laird said. Jn another development, the Saigon newspaper Tin Song, which often reflects th e views ol President Thieu, said today the fighting In South Vietnam could come to an end as early as Feb. 3. Prime Minister Tbanom Klttlkachom of Thailand also said a eecisefire could be ~xtended to Laos and Cambodia 10 days after the truce lo Vietnam. Tbanoin aald after talu In Beoekot with Gen. Alexander Haig, President Nlron'• envoy to Southeast Asia, that be expected the Vietnam cease-Ore In the "near future" and that Haig would retwn to Saigon for more talU with nrleu ' "because there are some questk>lls still to be worked out." FrelllPqeJ SCORES •.• ing a special reading program ror the last three years and in that ·ti~ ''the ~ding scores have been high !or the district." He said a similar system for teaching math is being developed and should be in use by this spring. Trustees did not express anxiety over the socre1. Fred Voss esplained: "I'm not too awfully concerned. I wonder how much reliance can tie put .on a single test. I think there are other indications of quality education." • • • ,,.....P ... J MEADOWLARK • needs, architect William Pereira had recommended lbe eventual use GI Meadowlark u a metotport. The current propo...al -for " joint county-city purcpase of Meadowlark Air port and Gail eoo ... -does oot oall for commercia l use. but even city coun· cilmen have east a wary eye on the plan. They met Monday night with Orange County Administrator Robert Thomas und County Aviation Dlrector JWbert Bresnahan to discuss the aJ.rport com. pt ... 'lbomas, • Bresnaban and other membtts of a special study committee urgM the city to authorize funds for an economic !eas.lbUity study or the pro- posal. The twlc propoaif Is for the county and city to lluy the 11).acre a1rport, 111- acre goU course and an additional 3115 acres of surrounding laod. • 1be CWTent runway, which brings planes ln over HeU Avenue, would be shifted ln a more east-west direction, forcing planes to Dy over the 11"11 courae. One objection bomeownen bavo Is that the proposal calls for eipenslon of the runway from ils current 1,900 feet to " 2,500 or 3,000 feet. Bresnahan told councllmen Monday night the· longer runway is neceuary to meet Federal Aviation Agency (FMJ standards and to secure federal funds for the project. The number of planes based at the airport would also be iJ1cr<ued from Its current 144 to about 200 or 250. · County oUicials aafd there woold be no commtreial air trafllc and the city could place its own llmlt on _ the use of the airport, -Stanley Krause. the county's dlroctor of real property ICl'Yices, told tbe city It might cost the two agencies as much as $8.5 million to buy all the property. Some of that could be offset by federal funds. City councilmen took no action Monday to further the study, saying they would consider It at lheir Jan. 29 meeting . In separate interviews this week, most councilmen indicated they would prob- ably oppose further study of the airport proposal, though' several remained Oex· ible on the issue. Jerry Matney ls the only ·councilman contacted who strongly supports the airport Idea. "I support it. I don't Oy an airplane, but I feel that element hu to be preserv. ed. It would save open space, aJr transportation and a g o I f coune," be said. "ll we don't save it, it will just become ·another lXIO home s for the city," Matney eiplained. "But I don't think the majority of the council will supPort the study." ' Councilwoman Norma Gibbs said she opposes any further study on it. "The idea woukl be marVelom if we didn't have all those home around it." Councilman Henry Duke saJd he also opposes the ajrport comPlex, but added if most councilmen wanted to study the idea further, be would go along wUb the study. ... · - "Personally, t don't think there is any true need for an airport in Huntington Beach," Duke observed. "But I don't like to close the door on anything." "This could create two to three times as much air traffic," commented Mayor Al CQen. "I'd probably oppose expansion to the extent in the proposal" IN LAGUNA BEACH: Rainwater cascading down Park avenue caused flooding along Forest Avenue and minor damage to some down town stores. Ex- actly 1.3 inches or rain soaked the city during the stonn. .CLEARANCE SA LE CONTINUES . . Water rose up to the sldewalk level on Forest Avenue and seeped into Fairchild Stamps, 310 Glenneyre and New Direc- tions, 265 Forest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in iront of their stores. · IN TUE SOVTB COAST area: Rainfall amoun ted to more than one in~h and caused cars to stall and s1.verP I to spin out on freeways in Mission Viejo and Laguna Hills. The latest storm brought the month's rainfall to a hefty 2.9 inches in San Clemente and about the same. for San J u a n Capistrano, making January already an unusually wet month. Jn the central county area: Tbe storm brought ~73 inches or rain to Santa Ana making the total for the Year 8.87 inches, more than double the 4.Q inches of Jasl year. Villa Park Dam recorded .95 inches Thursday for an 8.89 ir.ch seasonal total. Saddleback peak had .9 inches and the Irvine Ranch .75 inches. From Page 1 OBISPO ... Californians today as they continued to recover from a procession of Pacific storms. The National Weather Se.rvlce prom- ised m o s t I y fair weather through Saturday e1cept for some cloudine.s!I in the extreme northern mountains and some patchy morning fog in the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. '"Mlere are still some fron~ lying ort the coast, but the high pressure srste.1n inland wUI hold them off, prObably throughout the weekend," a weather service spoktsman said. The stale Office <'; Emergency Servlet.:: eslimated s : o r m -r e I a t e d damag~ caused by the two storms in Marin county alone at $4 million. F'loodlng .~Jso receded Thursday in the Sacramento River delta of Contra Costa County where water bolstered by an ei- tra high Ude briefly rose "an inch or two" above sandbagged 1evees at Brad- ford , Jersey and Webb Islands, said Ronald Nelson, assis1',nt director of the county's emergcocy serv1cet . "ll loob like everyone ill o~ lht hump," Nelson said . F•1turing mtny fi n• coll1ctiont from such well known lines as HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXE L, MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOODMARK, and othen , .. all subst1 nti1lly reduced. The largest s•lection of qu1lity uphol5-tery is now on display tnd re1dy for. irnme.diete deliv•ry. Stve now. • H1nr•clon AIY1r1do l1hown) On S•l• Now DREXU'.4i ERITAGF>-HENREDON-WOODt.4ARIC-ICARASTAN fNTEl I 0 RS WIUllAn • SATVlDAn t:OO .. l:H .. IOAT '"': t;Ot ~--mll• NEWPORT IEACH e J711 wEnetlH Olt., "41·1011 LAGUNA !EACH e 141 HORTH COASt HWY, 494-6111 TORRANCE e 11649 HAWTHORNE ILYO, 1n~11n ! I -I ' • frld~y, Jariuary 19, 1973 H ' DAILY PILOT ; Corona Juror Has Doubts Ctalt Leader in LA W orl~wide ,Trip For Leary Ends ·, Dr. Timothy Leary·s ~month world lrii; tnded Thursday at Los Angeles International A1rport when the Pan Am Clipper "Red Jack.et" landed and U.S. Bureau of Dangerous Dn1gs officers ar- rested and manacled the smiling drug culture guru. Leary ~efl the country with his wife, RosemarY.. after · escaping f r o m C'dlifornia l\1en's Colony, San Luis Obispo where he was serving a one to 10 year * * * County Man Hails Leary: 'Acid King' A 30-year-old Huntington Beach father who said LSD was for him "the begin- ning of life" brought two of his four children with him to Los Angeles International Airport Thursday lo greet the returning "king" of the acid culture. The em ployed tool and die maker with long blond hair and mustache said, "I'm here to see P r. Tim. I'm glad he has come home but I'm sorry the king has to come home this way ." '_'Three years ago I was super-straight. Then.I dropped LSD and look at me now. I'm happy." The man said he had never met Dr. Timothy Leary -"al least not physically." The Huntington Beach man was among a group of some 100 camp_ foUowers of the drug culture advocate who strained to get a glimpse of Leary as he walked the 30 yards from the airport lermiµal to a "'ailing Los Angeles Sheriff's camper van. · Cadres or unilonned Los Angeles Poi.ice officers parted the crowd irom their Idol but many waited in the in- ternational arrivals terminal for more than an hour to see his latest love, Joan- na Harcourt-Smith. ..i • Some were vocally disappolnted wbeD the mystery woman did not tum .out to · be Leary's wife , Rosemary. She bad been said to be with him during his stay in Algiers with the Black Panthers and later In Switzerland. 'Fear of Sex' Wins $85,000 NEW YORK (UP() -A 3().Y<ar- old woman has won an $85,000 set- tlement from a laxi company after claiming that injuries suffered in an accident left her with an overwhelming fear of sex. Judge Edward J. Greenfield of fi.1anhattan Supreme Co u r t Thursday s a I d Sheila Wyle "ap- pears to have a morbid fear of sex and is convinced she w o u 1 d be totally unable to perform in mar- riage as a wife or mother." The perfume company .expUve '~as hurt June 30, 1970, w~_a-cab she was riding in fell into a 10-foot- decp excavation on Third Ave. ... sentence for possession of marijuana. Leary was busted In Laguna Beach the day after Christmas, 1965 along' with his wire and son, John, then zo. On the day after Christmas four }1!ars later, the former · Harvard lecturer and his new follnd "perfect love" -Joanna Harcourt-Smith -began their four~oun­ try trip which led to Leary's depbrtation by Afghanistan au~rlties. The faithful of Leary's flock restrained by SO Los Angeles Police Departn1ent or- flcers caught only glimpses of their "king'' as he-wllio! led to a waiting Sher· iff's h.ipple-type van. M a n y woltdered' aloud, "Where's Rosemary?" Miss Harcourt-Smith, suffering from what she said was serum hepatitis, gave w clues as to the whereabouts of Mrs. Leary. However, the British subject who said she · had a husband living in Washington, D.C., told newsmen she had in the past two months "found perfect love" with "Timothy." ''He's put down drugs. We're both ag8inst addiction. Addiction to' heroin, addiction to cocaine, television, cars. We 're against addiction to ::;nything." Wheh &!ked if the former advocate or LSD and twice convicted marijuana user now objected to use of pot, Miss Harcourt-Smith replied, ''People-are £ree to do anything they like." Despite her illness evidenced by a jaundiced-coloring of her skin, the 25- yea r old "citizen of the world" remained cheery in her 20-minute meeting with the press. "He's beautiful. He's a king," she pro- claimed as she bounced from the customs clearing room used by all passengers on the fiight lrom London CJ:· cept Leary. • Her composure onJy slipped and tears formed in her eyes as she described the moments on arrival in Los Angeles whea the 52-year old Leary was arrested. Miss Harcourt-Smith said. agents ap- proached Leary in the first class cabin and said, "You're under arrest." "What's your name?" Leary was said to have replied. "Turn around ; you know the pro- cedure," slle saJd the agent told him. · '"!lieil'tbey handcuffed him and pulled him raway down the stairs,"~ lobbed. Leary grinned and laughed for the caniet&S as he was led to the van which, trailed by four other unmarked cars, took him to Los Angeles County Central Jail for booking. Bail was set at $5 million by Orange County courts when the hippie high priest was Couring Europe following his escape. Charges now l()f:tged against_ him in- clude: -He is charged with 19 counts of smuggling and conspiracy to sm1,.1ggle dangerous drugs as a suspected leader or the Bivtherhood of Eternal l.4ve -an international drug trafficking organiza- tion believed to have been founded by Leary in Laguna Beach In 1966. . -He faces charges of i n co m e tax evasion filed by the state against the Brotherhood in'the amount or $76 million. : tax lien has been brought against two ranch properties owned by the Brotherhood in Riverside County. Police officers at the airport Thursday said Leary would be housed in the Los Angeles County Jail uritil his court ap- pearance in Orange County. A plan to transport him via helicopter to Parker Center aborted when a driving r.ain began moments' before the jumbo jet pulled up to the international arrival sattellite. Pilot Newsman. Sizes Up •. Integration .in ~labama As editors shape up the Sunday edition of the DAILY PfLOT, here are some ol the features which loom as candidates. for "Sunday·s Best" offerings for reE.ders: INTEGRATION IN ALABAMA -Just do\vn the road a piece from $Cima (140 miles, to be exact ), Decatur, Ala., is llght years away from the civil rights ( Sunday's Best) marches or 1954. Staff Writer George Leidel reports on his vacation findings . Decatur schools are integrated ... Sun- day Special. CAUGHT NAPPING? -The Impact ol mandatory environmcntlll lmpact rtporb on development procec:tures along the OrMge Coast are ju>! begiMlng to be felt. New ru1es see.m to have caught some public aiencles (and private developr:n) nappln.g, according to YOU Section story by sarr Writer Jolm Zaller. GIRL ON POLE -The ·questions are sure to now when Chri1 Salais scales a telephone pole, but she's ready for I.hem now -e\1en hu figured out. lhal they lrt- volve....six basic querle1 -since-having had to answer them over and over as ' Pacific Telephone Co's first female phone installer. Feature and photos by DAILY PILOT Staffer Allison Deerr. ' . $1 MILLION AN HOUR -Just in dollars. the Vietnam War has been cos-- ting $1 milUon an hour, around the clock. Some shocking .statistics on the war no one wants are revealed by author A.tax Gunther in Family Weekly. -, Atrro RECALLS -It wa.s a bad year . for car factorjes. In 1972, counUng Im- ports, manufacturera recalled more cars than they sold. Chrl.!tJan Science Monitor News Service otters an in-depth look at the problem in YOU Seetkio featuN!. A companion article breakJ down costs of operating an automobile. KUNG Flt-Super hero ol the cumnt genention or teeDagen Is the anti-hero, likt the clwacter Caine played ln new TV oerltl by David Carro~. Cover story In TV WEEK rev .. 1s foc:t thal the )'OUlll octor Is mucll like the character he play>. NO CAMPUS REVOLT! -Wlutt.ver happened to the student revolution! The impending uclvU war" that aeemed so Imminent In 19Ji9 ham't occurred. Colum- nist S. I. llayakaWB, who was Jn the mid&t .Ut.all la-San Entocilco, orr.n his •lews In Sunday's column. ' DAIL.Y ,IL.OT '"°'-.,-LM PIYM STILL SMILING, OR. TIMOTHY LEARY IS HUSTLED TO JAIL World Trip Ended at Los Angeles as Clipper 'Red Jacket' Landed Vandals Drain Oil Tanks OAKLAND (AP) -Vandal s opened ' valves to four oil tanks and sent about 100,lXM> gallons of oil gushing into the Oakland estuary of San Francisco Bay today, authorities said. A one-mile slick was reported oozing toward the East B~y communilies of Alameda and San Leandro three miles a.,ay qn the JnlAnd sJde ot the estuary. But Coast duard Lt. James Boyd said booms ".should contain it in the estuary ." There was no immediate report or any wildlife death from the oil. State Fish anCI Game agents were on the scene. The oil gushed from tanks owned by Port Petroleum of Oaklandl thi.'oogh a hole In a [our-foot concrete retaining wall, splashed across Eighth Avenue in the port of Oakland and slipped into the e~tuary through tbe underground storm drain. Oakland Asst. Fire Chief James Po\\'ers said. ME.RCURY • • BUILT B~TTER TO RIDE BEITER Mercur y MARQUIS The look of Luxu1·y and in a medinm Priced Car richness • • • Deserves Second Trial, She ,Says FAJRFLELD (AP) -The juror who cast the final vote convicting Juan Corona of murdering 25 farm laborers says she doubts t.tiat she made the right decision and feels Corona deserves another trial. The 38-yea r-old farm labor c:ontractor "'as found guilty Thursday of 25 counts of first-degree murder by a jury of 10 men and two women after 46 hours of deliberation stretched over eight days. Co rona was accused of the murder of 2.5 transient workers whose hacked an d stabbed bodies were discovered in 1971 in makeshift orchard graves 100 miles northeast of San Francisco along the banks of the Feather River. It was.the bigges t mass murder charge in the nation's history. Corona's attorney, Richard Hawk, im· mediately moved for a new trial, and a hearing on his motion was scheduled Jan. 29. Judge Ric.hard E. Patton delayed sentencing Corona until after the hear· in g. Under California law, Corona could receive a maximum sentence of 25 con· seculive life terms. Special prosecutor Ronald Fahey said if Patton cbose to sentence Corona to consecutive, rather than concurrent. life terms it would have the effect of delay- ing Corona's eligibility for parole. A person sentenced to life in prison in California without prior conviction is eligible for parole after seven years. The 12 jurors each individually af· firmed the guilty verdicl s in a dramatic conclusion to the four-month trial. The separate reading, affirmation and recording of the 2.5 individual "gullty of murc' of the fi rst degree'' verdicts stretched 28 minutes in the crowded, hushed cou,rtroom. But juror Naomi Undenvood said in an interview at her home after the trial that .. f do feel Juan Corona deserves another trial." ··1 have doubts yet," said Mrs. Underwood, a 61-year-old widow. "I don 't think they had enough evidence. I still doubl l made the right decision," she ad- ded . Mrs. Underwood also said "the pressure was pretty great" on her in jury deliberations. The jury stood at 11·1 for conviction for two days before ~trs. Underwood changed her vote Thursday mornwln~i'---~--,=-~ Jury foreman Emert Phllllps, SS, said the first ballot the jury took eigh t days . • '73 SHE WASN'T QUITE SURE Juror Naomi Underwood ago stood 7-S ror acquittal. He said about 15 secret ballots were eventually taken by the jury before the guilty verdict was reached. Corona sa\ silentlf through. the monotonous repeating of the guilty . verdict s y,1thout an outward sign of emo- tion except to grip tightiy !he edge of the table before him. The husky ~1exican nat ional glanced occasionally at the jury during the long recitation of the ve rdict , but most of the time he looked straight ahead. appearing to stare at a point below the judge'• bench. Corona's wife, Gloria, and about 20 relaUYes including his four small d..UJhten, slit sllently lbroujh vae ,Jong, monotono"' recltaUon ot the (ldlly verdicts. - Mercur y MONTEGO • • • the 'be tter idea personal size car with the big Car Ride -Mercury MONTEREY--~, MercU{y's lowest priced, ll ig h value., full size car. Steel· Belted r adial tires now sta nd· a rd on Monter ey's. SEE ONE • • . TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE! Uarne ot The New Car ••• "GeUea 'l'eada" -' • l · .i' Ii I -,~llARIOR BLVD. COSTA MESA-• ll40a30 Rome Of The 11.,, Car • , • "GeUQ .,.....,.. .. l • .f OAJLV PILOT r riday, Janu.vy 19, 197) • 8 Hunt.ed -1 1 -1....,..,..1 Fetp • • -·It's Party Time ., Regional Rule Loses a Round OFF AND RUNNING DEPT. -You may recaU that this space recently pondered )J>w the Orange County Grnnd Jury's 1'72 report really dinged the cities of our region for "provincialism, chauvinism and home rule." Remember? 'Ibey really flayed our cities good. This section of the Grand Jury report \\'as devoted to explaining that if we bad some good, solid regional government ifl.. stead of 3Jl lhe:.e cities doing their own thing, we'd be a lot better off. To quote Page 107 of the r " p o r t. ''Despite such clicbes as 'big government' and 'local cootrol' used to resist all constructive attempts to coordinate plans for unified action, the Jury belie~es that, provided with ef· fective le.ldership by the Board of Supervisors. the citizens of Orange Coun· . ty will demand prompt and united action to improve the quality of life In (Orange) county." NOW, THE VERY NEXT section ol the Jury report gives anotbtr eiample. 11lls in\'Olves siJI:I laws. The Jury ooted. that 18 of our cities and tbe county have sign laws. But aU of them are different Thus the Jury again raised its banner for regional-type government control. ··The Board of SUperviJors (should) take leadership necessary to encourage the adoption of a unifonn sign ordinance by all cities "'ii.bin the county,'' the JurY report urged. As a matter of fact . the entire Grand Jury treatise plugging for regional government over city government seem-- ed to be mirroring the thougbt. and y,·ords of Chairman Ronald Caspers of the Board of Supervisors. DESPITE Tl:US, SINCE I'm one of lbe Wl'QDI_ Thinkers around these ~' I took the opportunity to point out that county government is hardly without sin in the business of sign controls. All you have to do is look at the placards cfuplayed in coonty territory aloog the Sao Diego or Santa Ana freeways or through our coastal regioo in spols like Dana Poinl But lo, what's this! 1be couaty supervi.!Jors appear to be following the . / In Capital Executions WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Eighl mon,1 possi bly members of a riNal ~1us11m group, were oougbl by Washlngtoo pollc< todiiy in eooneclton with Thunday's methodical slaying or seven persoos, In-_ duding five children, pt a J.1o&em center established by basketball superstar Kareem Abdul.Jabbar. Two v.-omen were wmmded In the at- tack. and police were reported QlI<O- tioning one or them today for possible leads in the case. Fearing additional violen<e. police staked out several other Wll!bington locations after some witoeaee charged the murders Wett the result of friction between opposing Moslem groups. THE WORDS MOSLEM and Muslim are used interchangeably among adherent. o! tbe Islam religion. 1t Wit! reported that one of persons _ln the Moslem sect occupying the house bad written letters critical of Elijah Muham- med , leader of the Black Muslims and that the tillings were 0 revenge." A Black Muslim spokesman denied this, saying: "The Nation of Islam, UDder the guidance of tlie Hoo. Elijah Muham- med. does DOt tolerate such acts. We are pea<elul and taught only to attack when our peace is broken..'' Jabbar al».said Ile did not belive the killings were the r<Sull ol religious rivalry. POLICE SAID TWO black men in their 20s and two young children 'i\'ere shot to death and three other children ap- parently were drowned by as many as eigbl intruders """ bn>te Into tbe m :ooo northwest Washingtoo borne Thursday afternoon. One of the two wounded women, who was identified as Bibi Kbaalis, 26, the daugbler o! Olarlotte1 N.C. deotl>I and dvil rfgbls leader, Dr. R<!ginald Hawkins, wss In critical condition follow- ing surgery for a number of head wounds. One ol. the chilren was a IO.year-old boy. The other four. two boys and ll\"O girls, were under three f'Brs of age. Police did oot release the names of any o( the dead·~~?i confusion created by their use of names. But Dr. Hawkins d in Charlotte be bad been informed that three <i the dead children belonged to hi! daughter. Police issued an alert for "eight Negro males ·in their 20s, an armed wilh bandgunl. One ba$ a bush balrcul and one is wearing I Jarae brown bal" Grand Jury's lead. Only )'eSluday, they et 2 • ioot up •.proposed 1a:r 11 I/Im. UllY .-Baiiier Slaving billboards m the county s ~ or ~ ~ _ ~ . _ J - manufacturing zones. --.... - AND TRUE TO what l'Ollld be ex-Clues Elusive pected, Supervisors Chainnan C'.aspers was right in there plugging for adoption of the billboard ban. Indeed, here would-be a prime example of county government grasping the reins and leading us down the path toward a better quality of life. Trouble v.·as, a couple of problem! developed. A billboard lobbyist •bowed up to complain that the ban would put a lot of billboard people out of work. He even cited figures showing th.at motorists like bJJlboard!. Supervisor Ralph Clark suggested that these big placards often hide things that are ugly. David Baker and Bobby Battin agreed. Clearly, we have a lot of ugliness that needs to be hidden behind billboards. IN TIJE END, our Supervisors voted J to 2 to allow billboards to remain in our industrial or manufacturing zones. These areas embrace some 2Q,OOO feel or 1,250 acres aloog freeways in the El Toro- Laguna Hllls-Leisure \Vorld area alone. So much for county govemmet t · 1eadmhip. Board Chairman Caspers saw op- portunity slip through his fingers \\"ith only freshm an Supervisor Ralph Diedrich giving him support. WAS CASPERS AfliGRY? You dang betcha he was. He stomped around plen- ty art.er the voti ng. You have to feel a bit sorry for him. Region al control looks gll!at on paper. It's the voting .hat sometimes gives you lrouble. GRANDIN, Mo. (AP) -The in- vestigation of the killing of Grandin bank president Robert R.· Kitterman, his wire and daughter in connection with an ex- t.art.ion plot Wednesday, contmues but authorities say today they have no new leads. Two young men who were arrested on di'ug cbargea were questioned in the case but ''were not believed to be involved," Wd 881. 1!obert Koool% of the lllibway Patrol Two .31 caliber sbells tboqbt to be from an automatic pi.stol were recovered Thursday in the wooded attl _,. the bodies were loond, about five miles west of Grandin. 'The bodiet ot Kitterman, 43, Mrs. Bertha Kitterman, 38, and their daughter Roberta, 17, were fowid tied to trees. Each had been shot once in the head. There are two surviving daughters, Kathy, 15, and Patricia, 14. Girl, 12, Has Twins RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Television and radio newsmen reported today that a 12-yeaM>ld girl gave birth Thursday to twin girls. Doctors, they said, . aid mothers mothers of that age are not rare, but that twin births in such cues are. The newsmen said the girl, whose name was not disclosed. named ~her babies Cristina and Cristiana. • In Washington .... . WASIUNGTON (AP) -An "ethnic cocl:taU p&rly" followed by three~ coo.com:. herald lhll aecond day of f es Ii v I Ii es for lho6e handpicked to celebrate President Nlxon't second in. auguraUon. . The cocttall party Ind concerta ate preUmloarlos loading up -to Saturday wbeo Nba>o will take the oalb o! o!llce for tbe """'"'1 tlme. A number of ~I!' protesting tbe wa• In Vletnlm plan coontel'-lnaugural demomUotlon!, even tbouiJ1 the White House saya wort will start Tuesday on completing an agreement to end the con- fllct. The JusUce Deparlrnenl said precau- tionary measures are being taken In case · any of the demonstrations turn violent. ABOUT Z,• mllltary relnforcem.ents have been called tn, but the ad· mlnlstraUon said no violence is expected. ALL TllE FOOD will belong In the flnior category -no forts aod plates - to.ensure thalnobody can take too muoh at . once. Napkins and r,1astlc stemware wlR carry the official nauaural Hal of approval. The C&bqt and l!ltlllben or c:oqr... wlll hive 1 lpeclal VIP room U Ibey feel the need to escape tbe crush. "It will be a typical Wuhlngton cocktail parly -!or 15,000," said one caterer. . T!ie cultural appetite wW he filled by music and art from around Lbe world. After the mw feeding -which ta by invitation only but still costs •10 a bead -lhretl nearly simultaneous concerts wW Jie<p the party pace going mlgbWy throughout the evening, this time at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Mis. WASHINGTON CHEF DISPLAYS· RACKS DF.CDLONIAL ROAST DUCKS It Costs $500 for Privilege of Dlnlnt on TheM Dellc1cl11 Buffet tables at this afternoon's "salute to America's heritage" at the Corcoran Gallery of Ari abound with hundreds of culinary delicacies from more than 100 ethnic and nilnority groups In the United States. Sponsors promlRd 1,500 poundJ of ch ..... !!60 plnta <i strawberries, Irish stout, Chinese meatballs, Spanish em- panadu, German bratwurst and among other foodls, 8,000 stuffed grape and cab- bage leaves. SCHEDULED ARE A youth concert, a symphonic concert and an Arnerlcan music show. These, too, are invitational and tickets range from $20 to $500 for the n10re sophlsUc.ated entertainment to $10 fer the youth event. The President returned to the capital Crom Key Biscayne, Fla,, Thursday fli&ht but dld not attend the flrsl lwo olllctal funcUons of the inaugural weekend: a r.ception honoring Vice Presideot Spiro T. Agnew and another feting the nation's governors. KiSsinger,. Pat Nixon Star in Opening Show * * * Calendar WASHINGTON (AP) -Pat Nixon said her husband was "working as usu.al" on peace, "pray\ng as well as working." Henry Kissinger said the Vietnam peace,negotiations are going "all right" And Klssinger's mother said the extra pounds her son bas gained while in Washington <ire colisidefable, but how much is "a military secret." Mrs. Ni.ion and the Kissingers were among the more notable VIPs at Thurs- day night's "salute to the states," the first in a series of concerts built around President Nixon's second inauguration. 'lbe salate honored the states and their governors. Nixon, flying back from Florida, ~ ed the show. KlWNGER ARRIVED wilb bis paren~ Mr. and Mrs. Louis Kissinger or New York, and one of bis frequent com- panions, Nancy McGinnis. Kissinger _and bis dale ~-.... -Jall8tieci ~ the three-bour performance. Hffe's got the only two Secret Service men wttll neon signs," said one newly ap- pointed ambassador who appeared miffed at all !the attention Kissinger, Ni..xoo's chief Vietnam negotiator, drew. Well-wishers gathered around Alabama Gov. George>C. Wallace wbo arrived in a wheelchair, accompanied by bis wife, Cornelia, a.nd his mother-in-law, Ruby Austin. "YES, l'~f JUST hot to rattle," laugh- ed Mrs. Austin when asked if she planned to attend an inaugural be.IL A! the entertainment began, pictures . .,J;.~· 'PNcs is at hand ••• a11ain!' .. We've done it again! · ~Su.its, two-for the price of ·one ' ~ Every one of our Fashion Park, and Worsted.Tex suits is being offered at two, fo r the price of one! Here's absolutely top quality clothing , fast dos tailoring, and all suits are fine 2-ply worsteds. A golden opportunity lo gel two great suits fo r the pri.fe of one. If you ·don 't need two, bring some one' to sliare your saving s. Famous Maker 2 Ply Worsteds $145. Fashion Park Suits 2 FOR $145. $128. Worsted-Tex Suits 2 FOR 1128. Raindrops Fall on .Midwest s,.cw UMlt 9CC9nts ....... .._, ., ....... , ...... --Snow Blankets North; Season's Fir,t: Tornadoes Hit Ten1pernl11re1 Hleh L-l"t, )) 31 0 ·!~ 61 .. .u " . . .. ' .. t i! :flt." ~ il u .. 01' g ~ .01 ~ " ' "'" ... , ... '°'°""' • : LOS ANGELES lfOILICllll'S w......a .. , .... ""'"-lllJI ,~ .. lit HUNTINGTON BEACH HOIUCHll"I Y•••r• ... n " .. ...,... c..r -·-ffi41 ltW174 HOIUCHD'S 611 ... c ••• , ........... ........ (llJ) 1ff.OJ6J OE'LSCHEltS "33 Bristo! St. Soutfi c .. st Ploza Costa Mesa GLENDALE NOGSCHll'I 111\'1 211 ...... tt11l1t1 A,.. -c-CJIJJ 141~1171 ANAHllM ALHAMBRA -1.SCHH'J , ... , .•. 241 .... "'-......... 11111 ,., ...... HOILlatll'S Y1111,_t1 441N ......... ORANGE HOIUCMll'S 2104 N. 0..,. Mull _ .. _ RIVIRSIDI Mc._OllM , ............ Aa tit C.. cn•J JH.at1 (7141 ftN:U1 ......... 11141 lll.f1H • W tivy R9fld A road to the King Salmon fishing area on Humboldt Bay near Eureka is lash· ed by wavll!' that tossed bolllders on the route. .. • _.,,,., 0 P Legislator ---'-. ·, SACRAMENTO (AP) -A leading ReJNbllcan lawmaker says be is ''astoUnded'•-at the slie of Gov. Ronald Reagan's $t.3 blllloo budget for the flacal Y"" slartlng July 1. · Assemb!yuwi John Stull, a candidate for a vacant San Diego state Senate seat, added Thursday, "I expect the legl5- lature to do aome pruning." Stull joined Democratic critics in saying, "I cannot aee the re&300S for such a masslfe increase in our state budget ..• I think the people continue to want fiscal economy, not budgetary~ .. The budget ls 11.6 billion larger than the current state spending plan and would result Navy Hun:_ts • • in a. IU billl<lll surplua 1l the end of the coming flacal year. A BAm..E Is expected over disposition of the surplus. Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti said ~ ~t sales tax increase can be del~yed Wr a year and a half -until Jlnuary, 1975 -by us-- ing the surplus. Unless the Legislature acts in the m·eantime, the sales tax increase frotn five to six cents· - per dollar in most of California takes effect June t. "We have been able to pro- vide homeowner propei'ty tar relief,Lprovide new money for schools, and at the same time, to accumulate a surplus without the oecesslty of Jm. posing new taxe.s on the average Californian," Moretti said. . F'rlday, January Jq, iq73 DAll Y PILOT G • HOV ,VOIJID.l'Oll llKl '10 HAft -NO MIAINl-INANC:l -..,..11111111 Get rid of yoyrlawnmower and paintbrush and ....... . check oot the carefree lifeetyle at Walnut Square. Relax QI\ weekends While professionals take care of all landscaping and exterior . maintenance. F~om Sl9.9§C) :::N $1,000 Down, No Cl0$lng Costs. < Stones Roll MORE1Tl'said delaying the 2&3BedroomTownhomes I~"'!'!!!!' sales tu Increase was a bet· (714) 551-4041 - :V1:;•Y ru! ~~y~ HIOI. aws-------------11 ID LA 18,600 Fans See Benefit for Managua For Gigi By Radio than through an income tax 1 __ _;:_.:c;:__::._:__:::...::._:_:=--_:""---=...:.... _____________ _ SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The cut as proposed by Reagan. I INGLEWOOD (AP) -Most of the old ~enta were there ' rock gw1ar, bloring drums, screaming fans and a vibrating Mick Jagger. But something was missing Thursday .. the Rolling Stones played a benefit corr cert at the Forum for Nicaraguan earthquake vic· ilm... Gooe ""' the mob of ~peful gate crashers, the police with riot sticks, the if l g p t s arid mass arrests th.&t have characterized pa.st St.one corr certs. Euept for a few fans who were ejected for di.sOrderly Pentagon. conduct and a bandlul of gate crashers. one mJght never have known it wu 1 Stones' coocert. BUT THE crowd of 10,600 * * * Japan Ba1;s Mick Jagger never missed any of it. The Navy is again looking for Gigi Stone5 played "Brown Sugar," the whale. hoping the AWOL * * -k "It's All Over Now" and other leviathan will check in by hits. The fans, who had paid radio and reassure her fans . UC Ch; nf So lar, tbere ls only silence """ between $10 and flOO a ticket,.. from the Pacific, where Gigi cheP.red, some youths standing -ii she is still alive -!llould n: ~ mayl'>d and swaying to the music. now be migrating southward WJ ic;.• Jagger, the · Stones' Oam-with other gray whales to Bf· boyard leod singer. -ja californla. LOS ANGELES (AP) Gigi attracted nationwide Despite some good news for in turquolse-colored V e Iv et attention last March, when she the University of California in pants and wearing a silver became known as "the a~ Gov. Ronald Reagan's pnr headband, thanked the au· prentice whale." Captured posed 1973-74 spending pro- dience for "shelling out so shortly after birth, she was gram, UC President Qlarle.s J . TOKYO (AP) -The pro-much bread." raised in a tank at Sea World Hit.cit saYs he is disappointed moters of a five-day Tokyo ap-He then led the group in a by Navy and other marine in the operating budget for the pearance by the Rolli.ng StQnes nearly two-hour performance research sdesltists. · rune.campUs system. · - rock music group announced o1 their songs, mixing newer In a statement to the Board today they have canceled the bits with vintage renditions AN ARGUMENT developed of Regents finance committee engagement because lead like "Route M," w bi c b the between Navy and other scten-Thursday, Hitch said: · singer Mick Jagger bas been Stones recorded in 1964. tisl! over whether Gig could "11tls ,was to be the year barred from Japan due to a "They were good, but it survive when released in the when he would shake off the fine he received for possession wasn't worth $15," said Jan ocean since she had been austerity of the }a,t sh ·n · ·--of --narcottcs--m Brttatn·last Ji'.>hhsOD,28';0fViilW-uys. -deprived of a normal whale budgets, the year when ·we OCUments year. "Here we are, a couple of cbildhood. would get the university Udo Music said all 55,IXW;l adults, waiting to see the Gigi appeared to give moving again, the y e a r of 'Aid Hanoi' ti ckets for the Stones' Stones," .said Judy Jones, a 22 grounds for such fean for a retiewed commltment and the performances beginning Jan. year-old Redondo Be a c b while. She bung around the means of fulfilling it. I'm 28 had been sold. It will refl.md secretary. "But we11 probably Southern California coast for a afraid these hopes look pretty LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ the money. be here when ye're 55." couple of months. empty now." TbePenlagooPaperslncluded!-------------,.-~-----------------'-'-------..., a secret analysis of the Tet of· 1 fensive that could have abow· ed Iranol planners 00w ~ they came to sucoeu ~·11!'4! to improve their. attack the oert time, occordlog to a high ranking general "To them, this might be the ( BRIEFS ) best piece of military in- telligence they ever had," U . Gen. William IlePuy told the Pentagon Papers trial. e Ash Pays Off LOS ANGELES (AP! - Thref! founders of Litton Industries -one of them Roy L. Ash, newly awointed direc- tor of the federal O!ftce of Management and Budget - have agreed to pay $2.4 mllllon to the estate of a man wbo said be helped found Lit· ton but was kept from receiv· ing stock at advantageous prices. Superior Court Judge Arthur K. Marshall agreed Thursday to dismiss a 14-ye•r-old civil suit filed against Litton by the late Emmett T. Steele once the payment is made. e Seale -li'Ues OAKLAND (UPI) -Black -Panther Chairman Bobby Seale entered the mayoral election race Thursday, called for a "slush fund" to provide jobs for minorlt!es _ gd predicted • 0 landsltde" l vic- tory. Seale, 35. paid lilis l200 llling fee and presented a petition wilh a required number of signatures by r eg istered voters. e Re!Jtl" Plea'ds SANTA BAR!IARA (AP) - Fonner singer-actor Phil Reg•n bas pleaded lnoocent to charges he tried to bribe a county supervisor In a :iOnlng declskm. Reg&n, M, entered his plea Thur8day In Municipal Court alter being charged with of· '' fer!,. 11,llOll to 'lnflllence the vote on a rezoning -1 that Involved a 711·unit hous- ing development west of here. e Bi .. t Prol>ecl DELANO (AP) -Federal lnvestlf!>tors say dynamlte was lhe probable cauae of an •IJ>losioo that damaged a building at the United Farms Workers com~ex here. AlcohoJ,·, Tobaeco I ft d Flreanm Inve1tigator1 said It appeared that . at lwt two stlcu ol dynamite were uaed In the blast that ripped open an 11-lncb thick 1teel·ffin. forced wall of ·the UFW Coop aerv!ce slalion Wedne5day -~•ig!>l,, ___ _ '· . . ~ I • I NOTICEIO!ELEPHQNE CUSIOMERS wen-increaS8Sillbe rates b ••• •-of-state calS. The American Tulephone and Thlegraph Company has filed a ·new schedule of Inter- state rates with the Federal Communlcattoiis Commission which increases charges for some customer-dialed calls during weekday busl· ness hours, for some operator·asststed- calls, for some·pen1on-to-pefson calls, and for WATS(WldeArea Tulecommunlcallons Service~ ( All rates for lotentate Long Distance calls yotr ~ youneH without operator assistance in the eyenlnss, at nlgbt, and on weekends wlll remain unchanged. · The new rates for Long Distance calls be-- come eff~ve on January 22. 1973. The new rates for WATS become effective on March·13, 1973. unless suspended by the F.CC." Here are the provlslom of the new Interstate rates: · 1. Some. of the rates for slat108-t1H1tatton calls you dial yourself without operator assistance from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m .. Monday through Friday, will be Increased five . cents orlOcentBfortheflrst three minutes. 2. Some of the rates In all !Imo Jferiods for ·operator--asslsted statlon·to-statlon calls. (that includea·credlt-<:ard. collect. thlrd- number, hotel-guest, and coin telephone calls) will be Increased five.cents for the · i1rst three minutes. 3. Some rates for pel'80n·lo-person calls ln allt!meperiodswlllbeincreasedflvecent• or 10 cents for the first three minutes. 4. The rales for each additional minute on some. calls In all time periods will be raised lna range from oneceutto fl\l:e cents. 5. loterstata WATS ralB9 will be Increased about two percent: Jl~j!ates for stallol>'to-statlon calls you dial younelf without operator asalstanlle dui-· Ing evening•. nights. or weekenda will .remain the ~ma.. · · Interim nitB9 and supporting ilata have been filed wllh the Federal Communlcallons -Com- mission. Thalncreaaea for Long Distance calls hav&been authotjzed by the FCC on an lnterlni basis to be affective January 22.1973. The FCC will conduct additional .hearings on the lawful- ness of the rates, and FCC rules pe"l'll·BDY in' terested persons to app<!llf lll!d parllclpate. This will be'only the second general Increase tn inten1tate Long Distance rate levels in al· most 20 years.·Durtng thls period. In splle of lnflatfon, lnterstate Long Distance rates have been reduced repeatedly •. Even with this In· crease. !he level of the new rates will sun be below 'lhe 1953 level. Ya! in those 20 lnlerven· Ing years, the cost of living has gone up more than SQ percent. The new r~les are designed lo -mcreue total revenu~rom"brterstate service by aboullwo percent. " Eump1es <if LOl1I Distance mes for coast to coast calls : '5illloltoi.SUlioll ·-.... --.. -...... """"' ··-··· "' ..... Jlp.•.W.· 11.«l "·" ....... ... ,_ ... ,_ 1r111--. !lp .•. s-. ) , .•. lo ... "·'° "·" ( ...... llp ... s-. ... ,_ Int l lllliUtl fnfllliMtes ~-rn. 11 ...... ... -SLw . ---..... .., -... ·--ell -· .. ·,3~ IJllliiMMsl . ..... ..... SI.IS "" .....,. 5 , .... Motl •• ..;;.......Fri. .. ,_ ....,,_ hl-- .@Ai&I ••• on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and Companent Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and Monochrome·lV, Radios, Tape Recorders, and Portable Phonographs. ~howi\ below is just one of our many Magnavox Annual Sal~ Values. See them all-and save I MMTMmlnMn ltylfng- model 7541. Simulated TV,._.. This \rldeomaticEye ••• 111ka J811111nx T .lC. tM mast tlllllly 1lltlmlllc colol'system yn e1n lllly! Th• onty color Ht thlt 1utom1itlcalfy adjust• It• plctu,. to cheng .. Ing light conditions I Magnavox T .A.C. (Total Automttio Color) not onty automldc:atty compensates for all those thihgs from outM/tthe ~ that cab mHI up your picture; now Magnavox T .A.C. whh Vldeomadc automaticafty compensates fOC' the one thing iMid• the house that can mes. up your pic:t\n: changing room Ilg ht I The Vldeomatlo Eye actui11y ..... H tht changing light In your room aod automatically adjusts the cok>r, bightnea ind contrast-to give you the best possible cofor.right picture -day or nightl And the chassis is Modular 100" SoUd·State-wlth plug-in circuit~ modules and transis.ton. 25H dt.go,nal 1crMC1. • • • . ~ SIVE'30/NOW '629. UYBU . 2 BIG LOCATIONS GOLDENWE5T & WARNER HUNTINGTON BEACH Sales Oaly 842·5596 UNITED STOUS - 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON BEACH S.rYice & Wes 536-7561 • ' 'T~y Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You -----~~-- , ' ,. • D AILY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE .. A. Chance ·to , Se Wit h the deadline for filing !or school trustee candi· dates less than a month away, the turnout of appllcanls for the 18 seats on school bo.ards in west Orange County bu been meager. Jn sonle of the six distriets \Vithin lhe lluntington Beach Union High School Distri ct, the incumbents have not yet indicated ,,·hether they ''>is:h to be returned to office. Those incumbe nts "·hose seats \\1i1l be filled in th e April 17 election are Ralph Ba uer, John Bentley and Ra y Schmitt of the high school district: \Vllliam Crane. Sh eila !deyers and Roger Belge n of the Fountain Valley School District; and Dale Bush , Jack Clapp and Steve Holden of the Huntington Beach City School District. Trustees whose terms will expire also include F James Shaffer, Robert Knox and George Logan of the Ocean View School Di5tricl; Jack Cairn., Ruth Dully and Gordon Powers of the Seal Beach School District and lifarion Aguirre, Ray Schmitt and Neomia \Villmore or the Westminster School District. ' Residents voho "'ant to Jlave a hand in the future of their community should take this opportunity to consider a role on the school board. The-schools can only benefit from an active constructive campaign in which a variety of ideas and personalities are introduced. • Bike Trails at Last Following the 1 ea d of neighboring Huntin~on Beach, Fountain V 3lley at last has a bicycle trails plan down on paper and ready for discus.sion. The proposal, which has passed the city Park and Recreation C<lmmission and is set for public bearing next week, includes nearly 20 miles of bille p1th.s. Most of the . trails will be simply an extra lane painted ·onto emting roadways. But s o m e of the trails will require laying asphalt strips beside existing street& The possible hangup at thi5 point appears to be financing . The traUs will cost at least $30.000, and il would "'easier to spend 1nuch more than that. With a $1 .3 mllli~ttr recreation center now near- ly ready to begin ~nltruction. city Mlicialll will have· to scrape to coa1e Up with even the minimum mo n e y needed for the.<e tfails. But the effort will be worthwhile. The city badly needs sale bikeways !Or tbe thousands of residents t1il· ready using bikes. and tor the many more who would like to use them if safer travel Janes were provided. Greenbelt Op.portunity Huntington Beach an~ Southern Calilor~i5on Company apparently have reached a reasonable agree- ment on what to do with the company's po"•er line right· of-way lands. Edison controls 125 casement acres in Huntington Beach , The city currently leases 31 of those acres at an annual rate of $50 per acre. City officials are now askin g a reduction in the lease rate to. $1 per acre, in return for city approval for the construction of new power trans- mi ssion ~le.s . The city also wants to use all of the 'Edison ease- ment for some type of greenbelt, if not fully-improved parks. but not at company expense. · Edison officials have given verbal approval to the idea,. iod.icating the greenbelt system might even help them lower some 0£ their maintenance costs. The lower rates '''on'l be instigated until the power poles are built, \Vhich hinges on expansion of the Hun· tington Beach power plant. The earliest any action is likely is mid-1974, according to one Edison o[ficial. But at least in the talking stages, the two sometime foes have reached a reasonable agreement which could bene- fit everyone. / -' ...... 'On your mark. Get set. Go/' H Can Energy Match Pace Of Growth? Dear Gloon1 y Gus President Must Be lmnaune to Criticism ~YDNEY J.HARRI~ 1 read a frightening ridd1e the other day. It wa! propounded by Dr. Peter E. Gluer a\ a scientific conference on Energy and Humanity in London last fall. It goes like Ulis: A farme r has a pond with a water lily in 1L 1be lily is doubUng in sill!! every day. ln 3'.I days it wilJ cover the entire pond, killlni all the crea· tures living in it. 1be tanner doesn 't WBlll this to happen, but he is busy with other chores and de- cides to postpone cutting back the plant witil it covers hall .the pond. The riddle is: on what day will the lily cover hall the pond? And the ans...,·er is: on the 29th day - leaving the fanner just one day to save his ?>nd! This is what is meant by the chilly mathematical p hr a s e "exponential growth ." Our technological society Is growing al an exponential rate -and along with it our need for energy to feed this growth. We are nearing the 29th day, when we must either find new sources of energy that will not threaten our planet, or cut back drastically in our rate of pro- duction, population, and consumption. These are the only alternatives open to u.s; anything else is mere political rhetoric. Unlesa we -by which 1 mean the whole world -can obtain enough solar energy to replace ou r dwindling stock of If Governor Reagan signs the bill to put contraceptives -in catfood, but not one to give them to teenage girls, will not that create an awk- ward temptation for the teenage (iris? M.P.D. 1llb '-""" "'*" .......... ...... .. , -...ri!Y ..... .i ...... -. ~ -"' "'" .. ~· Gws. O.lff ,1111. non-renewable resources, we will con· tinu ~ oot only to deplete tJtese resources at an alarming rate, but also to throw the whole aystem of nafw'e drastically Ol,lt of kilter. WE MAY NOT ~et be at th< 29th day. . but it is approaching far faster than the , layman imagines. And if we are lo deflect this catastrophe in time, it is im- peraUve that the nations of lhe world unite for a common purpose: to protect the survival of this closed · planetary . system of the earth, and to as,,ure that everyone will have at least enough. Instead, as Arnold Toynbee observed not long ago , since the end of World War II , there are twice as many nations and sovereignties with half as much space as before. Nationalism and separatism have proliferated everywhere on the glqbe; the great powers may f i n d a motfa1 vivendi, but t h e smaller nations will soon possess the capacity to make nuclear bombs and enter the arena of Political and Dlllitary combat. Jllllt at the time when we should be subordinating our provincial differences . to our common global plight, we are drawing away from each other, in smaller and more fiercely tribal units. Just when we need to pool our resources fo; the salvaUon or the spec!~. we seem bent on seizing more of the spoils. It is not merely evil ; it i.s madness. Meas·ured Pace of Nixon Game Plan WASHINGTON -The measured pace of the Nlxon administration never ceases to surprise and startle. So many of Presi· dent Nixon's deeisions run contrary to accepted wisdom, sucb. as lifting man- datory wage-price l'Ofltrols at a time (rucHARD WILSO~ when inOation tends which once again appears possible. Here lO resume its up. again there is evidence of the measured ward course. . pace. Early in im Nixon accepted with Or, the pred'ictab--amazing equanimity the advance of Com· Jy unpopular re-munist regular forces across the DMZ to swnption of bombin1i: establish a foothold in the northern pro- in Hanoi . Haiphong vinces of South Vietnam. To prevent lbat area, which might advance from going too far the PreSldent be resumed again if ordered the mining and bombing of lhe-peace talks in Raooi·Haipbong, and the South Viet· Paris fail again . namese ~rmy wa.s able to arrest the ~d- Nixon goes by a measured pace and van~ with the loss of only one maJOr lhil is what is least understood about him. _ capttaJ. In the faU of 1971 when Phase ll of Still, the North Vietnamese regular economic controls had barely replaced forces did , in fact, establish lhermelves Phase I, Nixon 's economic planners in the northern provinces of South Viet· began to chart Phase Ill. the lifting of nam. This fact underlies the present controls. The plan has now advanced by shape or the peace negotiations. Nixon's measured stages into Phase ill, volun-tacit ;tcceptance of the presence of the tarism, which was intended in the first North Vietnamese regular forces in place, and is consistent with Nixon's South Vietnam was the irreducible price Jong-term opposition to COOJpulsory wage-of peace for Hanoi -the recognition or price controls. two armies in South Vietnam as refleC- HE WILL CLAU.1 the same con- sistency in terminating the Vietnam war , ling the realities of the battlefield. FR0!\1 Tms single point flowed the events which _made it conceivable for Hanoi lo agree to a cease-fire in place. So there was a perceptible pattern, if not a preconceived design, all through 19'12 based upoon the creation of real military condillons which -Hanoi could consider acceptable, at least for an interim peri~ V Phase I then moved on toward Phase II, the heavy bombing to convince Hanoi that it must oow move along toward the actual e1.ecutlon of a cease-fire which did not require an overt commitment. to withdraw its regular troops. Pha511 lll, the ~ptlon of bombing when Commun!A del-r nd· -•Y sabotaged the peace negotialibns,1 could not be COO!idered a preconceived plan but Henry A. Klsoinger evidently l•n the Communists ln little doubt that further delay and captious ch,anges would..result in a renewal of the bombing. TRIS RESUM PTION wa.s a hitch In the proceeding! and matters were not going at Nixon's measured pace. 'lb.It pace has nevertheless resumed, and wblle at a !slower rate then once appeared possible, sUt: falls within a Nlxooian game.plan. He may yet be able to say that a plan- ned course. ·ot events, from the firit withdrawal of troops 1nward, led, despile dt.lays and mishaps. lo condition' in which Hanoi would agree to a cease-fire while Saigon still controlled most of the country. In other matters a measured pac:e can be perceived. Nixon must have known - certainly his associates did know -that there Was virtually no prospect that Congress would embrace his massive governmental reorganization p I a n . From the beginning, ii was: implicit that. at ·what was deemed the proper stage, the President would pul this plan into 'effect by bis own devices. He has done •,_not perfectly but he has , in ef· feet, com6ine(l Uie fU11CUons of several departments u n d e r super cabinet mtmben: with White House status. IT IS the same with his commitment to cut ,gpvernment spending. C'.ongress will not T\elp him in thi.s, so he is doing it anyway by stages and phases, in effect impounding and refusing to spend money appropriated by Congress. It is typical of the game plan approach that many of Nixon's actions are tern~ porartly ·unpopular or misunderstood ao he has to be endowed with foresight of a good outcome and Immunity to criticism. He takes second place to no one in these ~dowments. Response to Senator on Tolerance To the Editor: In regard to State Senator H. L. Richardson's article about Intolerance (JIJI. 15), I musl agree 'that there are a lot of things which we 'should no longer tolerate. ( MAILBOX ) in our society are Jess gun dealers and less gun.s. WARREN I. HENNINGSGARD Dictatorship:> To the Editor: We are being duped. Nixon , the Laguna Beach School Board and many others. Over the years that I worked for various public service groups, when leaders made secret decisions and gave arbitrary orders, I was unable to cooperate. I may not be much of a leader, but I can't be a blind follower either. Profitable Inaugural? HERE IS a brief list of a few of those things: narrow-mindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy, unwlllingnesis to change for the better, and all those things winch violate the laws and principles laid down by our C:Onslltution. There are some thlngs that deserve our · utmost attention. For example, when V.'e hear the banshee screams of the women liberaUonlsts, perhaps wc should take not.Ice. They are only eiercising their freedom of speech, which they were granted along with full citizenship back in J.911. If they speak the trulh, then maybe we should adjust our views. Letter• frcwn readers are welcome , Normalltf writera ahould convey their messagea in 300 words or less. The right to condeme letters to fit apace or eliminate libel is reserved. All lftttr.r must include signature and mailing addresa, but names mau be ioithheld on reque1t if .sufficient reason is apparent. Poetrv will not be pu~lished. . The two leaden in the Senate, Scott and Mansfield, and the leader in the House, Ford, all three admlt that they can do absolutely not.bing to stop this war. Any laws they pau can be vetoed by President Nixon, and Ibey do not have sufficient votes to override his veto. What are we paying out these handoome salariea for? NO'IHINGI We all voted for a representallve governmerit, but what does the above statement spell out very clearly to you. DJCTATORSWP. Is th!J what you voted for? Walking on an uncertain path in the dark is likely to be precarious -for one could easily lose one's sense of direction . So please , leaders -let's have light , all the way. RUTH QUINN Ditter h1 Dark Presidential Inaugurals are curious events, CQmbining pomp. pompousness and pageantry in alm ost equal measure. This year something new has ~n ad- ded. Against all odds, the 1973 Inaugural Committ~ hopes to make the event pro- fitable . · TO THIS end , the committee is cutting down on overhead and charging hefty fees for almost all actlvi.tle.s. The in- augural balls of recent memory have been held In such hotels as the Shoreham, Sheraton Park and Mayflower. On Jan. 19-20, 1973, however, the various balls and concerts will he held in government buildings, il\cluding the Kennedy Center, Smithsonian lnstitu· lion , Naijonal Callery of Art, and Na· tional Portrait Gallery. Cost to the in- augural convnillee: noth ing lnaugural·parade spectator~ who want to sit In the bleachers a I o n g Pennsylvania Avenue can do so for prices raoilng as high all ISO. Ticket$ to the thrte concerts schoduled for Jan. 19 are scaled from $20 10 too. On the other band. admission to an infonnal reception at the Smithsonian for Vice President Agnew is a t.'Omparative steal at $10. AT THE FIRST Inaugural, G<.iorge WllShington took the ooth of offlct on th< bakony of Federal Hall In New York CitJ. There wu a ball afterwards and the rlrst President danced the minuet. Tbe fJnt inauautal ball in Washington ''"" lhat of J arncs Madison. Some of tOO wom•n guesll curt~ed to lbe !'resident and -hi.I wlr•. Dolley, •• "madlme prealdentess." EDITORIAL RESEARCH ' Until 1817, all inaugurals in the nation's AS FAR AS the youth of America goes, capital were held· in either the Senate or it Is my opinion that they are not as sad the House. But that year the lwo a crop, of kids as suggested ~y the State Senator. They may have thetr sbortcom· chambers of Congre.u became locked ln inp, but at least they have the guts to controversy over whether lo use the say what's on their minds. If they 'Speak "fine red chairs" of the Senate or the the truth, then we should know it for "plain democratic chai~s" of the Beuse. what it ii. In respect to the patriotism of As a. result, James Mad11~n ,took the .oal~ roung Americans, I believe it Is as outside. _a temporary Brick ca~1tol: stroog as ever. I believe there are plenty The British ha.t ~med the old C8p1tol 1n 1 ,0f them wlt.¥ng to defend and eveo die 1814. for lbe prlnciplea establiah<d in our Con- BAD WEATHER occasionally dimi; the Jusler of Inaugural ceremonies. For ex- ample, it wes snowing when William Henry Harrison was sworn in on the East Portico of the Capltol In 184J. The new President, 88 years old, nevertheless refused to wear a hat or coat lf the day was windy, so was Harrison ; It took him nearly two hours to read his Jnau.guraJ address, the longest evtr made. He caught cold after the ceremony and died a month Isler. THK CENTERPIECE of any Jnaugura- lion Day is, of course, the President~, In. augunl addrtst. These have ranged In length trom Harrison's 1.500-word yawn- provoker to lhe 135 words Washington spoke after being sworn ln for hls second tenn. ne average is about 2.400 words, which is almost preclself the length of each of Dwii ht D. Eisenhower's ed- dresseft. /. stltulloo. You may ban • bani time find Ing someone willing > f I & h t for • govemmtnt all COn'U!ll as the one it South Vietnam. however. The educational system may leave sornethlng to be desired, bot when you ---B11 George Dear G<arge; Down at the satoon I've met some guys who say you have NEVER followed your ov.11 advice. Right! CYNIC Dear Cynic: Well , I don 't know. Some years ago t advised myself to qult honest work and .start writing an advlce column. But lf you mea-q oJJowing t~"advtce~gt.m in tllil column, or cou~. 1. haven'I, see Americans w:iking on the m~ it isn't because they're big and strong it is because they are intelligent and educated. M. FAULKNER W lay Gutt•~ To the E'.ditor: This has ~rence io· the letter about guns from Michael D. Grant, eseculive vlce president of the Grant Boys. JUST TO get the faci. sttaight iUD' are manufactured f9r profit and the followlhl reasons: l. To KILL humans. 't To Kll.L animals. ' 'fo KJLL fowl , "hr target practice to better tbe aim 11 JtUr to kill humans, to kill anlmala, to kill fowl. · ,,,. cun. any ""'· is an lnltrwnent of death and this is Ill ulUmalc purpoie .. ONE CANNOT plcl< up 1 ne"'J>lper le> day withoul reading about 1eme precious life being t•ktn by 1 flD', through ao- cldcot or on purpose. We don't berln to know how life Is created but we •ureb' know how to d~stroy it. Mr. Grant states thll lbe: gun busJness Is rigidly controlled. Come on Afr. Grant, anybody can buy a gun If be has the money. All human beings lose their temper 111t times. Combine1 this wlth the avallabUlty of a gwi and we. pnidU.ce- thousaod.s of needless deaths each year Jn the United Stutes, What •·e really need May the Good Lord bless and keep us. HAZEN P. AIKEN G .. Ratiowl119 Tq. tbe Editor: the EPA'a gas ratlon lng proposal should ring witll the rank IDd file. Alter all, one pine In Arrowhead Is worlh mot< than all lbe automobiles in lbe LA Basin. Bui, wbat of lbal child In LA'• Gbclto suffering from emJ>l>1aema at the ai• o! ,_, . ·~· The LA Chamber of Commerce, the Auto Club and Forest Lawn can be ex- pected to talk 0 modest" measures. But, where were ttiey when the battle for PropoeHlon No. 11 was fought four ytan ago? And what really have they given 1hern1elttes lo over the )'t8rS but cor- porate profill and lbe burying of the dud? JAMES W. DILLEY "-llf- To the Editor: Roberto Clemente died helt>lnl un· fortunate people. When Maiiagua wu,hlt by the earthquake, Howud Hughes was terrified and new to safety In England. Money an't btly a man '• soul, can It? ·.GWEN PATON "No Bll"ll f'.ilo-' -To thil Editor; Thi• Is 1 pleo, addressed to Richard To the EdJtor; The food IS excellent but wouldn't it be great lf you coUld see what you're eating - a chop or spare rlhl, water cress or broccoli. Why Is it Uiat you have to grope for your food In ~t Laguna Beach restaurants, the table being lit by dne candle power? And if you want a little romance, look out. YQu may grab the ""'"' gin! So lets have some llgbt on the subject that we're eat1J11 and who is eating with us! ' BERNARD BARTON O•AHOI COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. \Vted, P1'bltali t r 'fhoma.t Ki t uil, Editor Barbara Krtibic.J1 Editorial Pagt Edilor The tdilnrlal 1:.a~c or the Diiiy Piiot .t1¥tk.11 to tnrorm •nd 1tlmu- h1te tt11dm 1 by 1>re'llc·nlln.(I: this MW1paper'1 oplniom 11nd com- ment,_r) on tn11IC'I of lnl<>rcst and 1ll(nlflcanCf'. by p1"11vkllng IL fnrum for thl' ex]')relll11n or (ltlt rt'ttdt'MI' optnk>nl, and by ('lf'Htnllnic thr' dlwrat viewvnlnl1 of Informed ol).. JCM.'trt a rtd tpuke1mM on 1oplct1 ,1( thl' day. Frfcb,y-;January 19, 19'13 ' • ' . .-- • . " range ·coast · EDIJION -Today's Final N.Y. Stocks - VOL 60, NO. 19, 4 SECTIONS, 46 P~ES . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • FRIDAY, JANUARY 19, 1973 N TEN CENTS greemen on Versailles Unveiled By ll'ILLIAAI SCHREIBER Of .. o.lty ,. ... ,..., Newport Beach-city ofllclals today unvelled the latest draft of a settlement ' agreement between lhe city and developers of the contr.wersial Versailles on the Bluffs condominiums. _Newp_ort Council Will Get New Package Monday developer has agreed to several major res trictions on the second phase of Versailles. Wynn said he thjnks the most im- portant new item in tenns of overall reductiOIJ.S in population density, traffic impacts and school use is a deed restric- tion that permits nobody under 16 years of age to liv e in Versailles. City Manager Robert L. Wynn and developer DbnaJd Scholz will take the new package before councilmen MOnday night in hopes flna1 roadblocks can be removed and the long-dela)ied.. second phase of the project can get under way. The new agreement proposalj'ls the , result of two months of revision work made necessary whe'n the council re- jected the first 'agreement last November. "We believe this agreement represents a t'Ompromise lhat the city and the developer can live wiU.," WYDD said. The settlement agreement is the latest in a chain ot event.s stretching back into ~ I ~ .... 0 DA.IL y tttLOT .... ,W Lii ...... "HE'S BEAUTIFUL; ;tiE'S A KIN~SAYS LEARY FRIEND . Jo1nn1 Harcourt-Smith C1lled R.r.ilonlhip 'Perfect Love' '' 'Timothy's Love' ~clares Sh·e's Come to ·Free Him • By GEORGE LF;IDAL Of fflt 10.llr ,lltl Stiff "I'm TimothY.'t love. I've traveled with him for two montM and I'Ve come with him to Los Angefes to fret him. I've come to speak to President Nixon," the petite, mousy-haired British subject ac- compallfing Dr, ~lmotby Leary to Loa Aligeles said 'lburrday. (Set storles, pictures,; P8ge 3.) ' · Ideotifylng beneU 'I" JOlllllO Harcourt· Sftilth and u a ''resklent of the U:S.,"· the my,tery WOlllltl dedJned lo lf'vo lllY but her maiden name and' refued to commeiit-OD the prelibt statWJf of her marriage to an ip!ldenUfied Washington man. I ~ "I'm a citizen of the world.' My mother was Polish, my father BrlUsh. I, \'M born in Switzerland and I have a son born fn Greece and another born in America," the 2$-year old, self-proclaimed .authoress of a book on "Freedom" said. · "l'.d been looking for Timothy all my life. 1 found him two months ago. It was only natural we should meet since ~ wrote a book that sold 100,000 copies in . Europe. It was about freedom," Miss Harcourt.Smith said. "Timothy 's written a book. It will be · published by Bantam," she said ex- plainiq ~ the convicted dope advocate was fl.D8ncing the recent portions of his 8-month ei.ile abroad., fleeing U.S. authorities. - stie said she joined him in Switzerland, made a · film with .Leary, in Austria traveled w!lh him. to Beirllt, [,ebinon 1,.1.-S..-.-• -• .._..-.1 1a. ~·~and wucn:: we.were--"-uat-.....- was at his sldt in ~. Al~ when U.S. olllcials caug\11 up<)Vilb him, took away bis blvalldilted paOlpOi'I and escort"'1 ' him to Loa AJlleles-via Frankfurt, .Paris and London. "It really wasn't very elegant the way they snatched hta passport from his. hands. They said lt wasn't valid. But we She deplored Leary's arrest and legal jams "for smoking onJy two butts" and vowed "He knows I love him and am go~, io free bim. We're all going to free hir11. Leary Back In County • "I bOiieve tt Is alt perfect be should have oome back to the United States," _i.-;;;.:; lt in five different countries and it 11id tt was good until 1974," M"w Harcourt-Smith said. 1DPPY higb priest Dr. Timo Lelli')' came home to Orange Coun- ty today, Sherilrs u . Richan! Timboe...,. firmed Dr. Leary'• l p.m. arrival at Orange County Jall where be'D await court action on bis 19 cowitl of smuggling and COOSplracy to smllggle dangerous drugs, for his alleged ~le In tile Brolherbood ol Eternal LoVe. Leary, 52 formerly ol Lltluna Beaeh and ·later CllUoroia !leo'1 Colony, SU Luis Obispo, { r o m which be eocaped In 1970,·ls belni held In n.u of 15 mWlol> boll . After. Afghanistan autboritfes deported Le;.ry, and ..litbout his pa-rt. Leary ac:companied the officers willingly, she said. "Everybody was very nice to us all the way here. We could have escaped again In Frankfurt. uFour ct.Ys ago he said be was 10 hap- py to be ping lane -even to Prloon· He11 muterW•fttedom ao completely he can be fret ..;wtien," sbt Slld. she ldded. .iee ,,.. '° happy when he saw the · Pacillc Oceon qain," she oaid rtealllng hia -.. tllo ~-ho jet "Clipper Red (See LE.ul'i', Page II • last summer, when the second phase of the blulf condominiums ln West Newport was rejected by ·the p!SMing commiJsion during a stonny public-hearing. · Following the _rejection, Versailles developer Donald Scholz appealed the decision to the council but was rebuffed due to p. growing public outcry over the density and bulk of the buildings already Aides constructed as part of Phase l. In response, Scholz leveled a $12,700,000 claim against the city for prohibiting him from developing a project that had already been zoned and half built. A series of legal wrangling-Yesulted in the first setUement agreement, which stipulated Scholz would revise his plans and lower densities in exchange for an elimination of all bullding excise taxes- then about $70,000 -and other con- cessions. The latest agreement represents a substantial change in the project com- pared to its original form and Wynn said he hopes it is enough to satisfy disgrunll· ed homeo"'flers. Under Ofe tenns of the new draft, the "This" is the key to the whole agree- ment," Wynn said, "because it affects almost all the areas of concern." Wynn said the project is still at a (See VERSAILLES, Page %) • Mum on Agnew Trip Vice Preside11t to Saigon? White House Not Saying From Wire Services The White House today declined to con- firm .or deny a broadcast report tbal Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will go lo Saigon Jan. 28 -presumably to conduct post-peace agreement talks with Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. The Colwnbia Broadcasting Company said !tom Saigon that a visit by Agnew apparently was intended ''lo coincide closely wlth the signing or· at least the in- itialing of a Vietnam cease-fire agree--'-. Another lnc1i Of Rain Falls; Damage Liglit By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of ltle Diiiy Pii.t StlH Rain drenched Oradgo County oiti.S again Thurllday ni&bt, duniping more than an tneb of wa'ter in IOme coastal , regjonl and croatillg flood c:oodlli<lls that created more of a-nuisance than posing a real tbreal Today's return of fair skies is expected to cOntinue at least lhrough Saturday. Thursday's late arriving stonn, foUow- ing on the heels of a heavy downpour Tuesday, raised the precipitation totaJs , of ail cities to new highs, well ahead of last year. IN HVNTINGTON BEACH : Rain Watchers reported 'that the new downpour created se11eral minor traffic accidents but no serioUs dam1:1ge. The same held true for the neighboring com· munity of Fountain Valley. Rainfall in bolh cities Thursday w a s .67 inches and raises the season total to 8.M inches. That c6mpare to 5.20 inches at this time last year and a season total of 5.7!1 inches for the entire 1971-72 rain season. IN COSTA MESA: Neither the fire nor the police department reported any signlficil.nt problems as a result of the latest downpour. Police Lt. Austin Smilh sa id there was a rise in traffic accidents but tha,t there were nu injuries. ?jo rain- fall figure was available. JN NEWPORT BEACll : Driving rain triggered widespread nuisance flooding in low-lying areas of lhe city and fears were renewed that the onrush of water down San Diego Creek might carry away the old bridge on Ma.cArthur Boulevard. mcnt ." Asked about the report , White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said : "I will not have any comment on that. I am not goyig to comment one way or another on any speculation -whether it is right or wrong." Ziegler likened his no-comment to re- cen. similar responses hn made to reports of developments in peace negotiations. _, Th.e White Jiouse spokesman said President Nixon conferred for more than an hour this morning with Henry A. Kiss- inger, chief U.S. peace negotiator. Kiss- inge r will leav.e for Pari~ Monday fo · r1.<sume private talks with Hanoi 's Le Due Tho. While hi \Vashington the past two days, Ziegler said, Kissinger c<mferred in person or by telephooe with Secretary of State William P. Rogers, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird, Adm. Thomas Ii. Moorer, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. and others. Don \Vebster, acting CBS bureau .chief Jn Saigon, said President Thieu received the letter from President Nlxon on Thursday informing him of Agnew's plans. The letter u•as delivered · by U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, the network reportea , and contained the following passage from Nixon to Thieu : "We have been together in war, Jet's be together in peace.'' Receptionist Finds Jewelrv • Taken at Home Newport Beach polict today art ln- vettigating three dayliaht burglar'°8 in Westclirr in which nearly 14,300 worth of jewelry, appliances and other valuables were tabn. Two apartments on Sberlngton P!ace were btqlarlzect while .their occupants were at work, police said. Joan E. Turner,· a receptionist who lives at 1705 Sherington, told police she returned from work in Tustin at about 7 p.m. Wednesday and discovered large quantities of jeweJry and other valuables missing from her apartment. Police have no Idea how the thief or thieves gained entry into Miss Turner's apartment. They described the thieves as "very neat and meticulous." Miss Turner told investigator& lhe burglars mad/ off with her color television set and many pieces of jewelry kept in a drawer in her bedroom. The stolen jewelry Included a number of charms, gold pins, rings, necklaces and other Items, including many studded with pearls and diamonds, police said. Total value of the loss was ptacm . at • ' ·~~ • DAILY P1L011ltW.-.. FIREMEN BATTLE BLAZE AT PARK LIDO APARTMENTS ' · .E•rly Morning Fire Attributed to Bu·rning c•ndl~ . 12.600, Burglars also broke into the home of John E. Henslin, 1755 Sherington, during daylight hours Wednesday while the Westcliff electrician was at work . Man Burned in Fighting - Fire at ·Condominium ...,.,.. Henslin told police he discovered a sliding glass door pried open and stereo equipment, a television set and a shotgwi missing. The total value of the items was ~t at '900. The third daylight burg]ary took place at a house several blocks away. Clark C. Westcolt, a chemist who lives Crews worlted for several hours pump- ing out the hafdest -hit flood areas. There wu some mud runoff in parts of the city but no roads were closed w~ (See RAJNF~ Page ZI \ 'A Newport Beach man was injured at 1'127 Paloma Drive. told police his wife left the house i!:arly Wedne9day, leaving the front door unlocked so their children could get in after school. · early this morning a,,: he fought to put Airport Board Extends Impact Zohe to Heights Orange County Airport Land Use Com- missioners 11lursday voted to extend the boundaries or the noise impact zone under their jurisdiction to include the area of Santa Ana Heights at the bead of Upper Newport Bay. The land use oommlssion lJ required , by law to.develop a plan of areas around the airport affected by airport nobe. • Tbe boundaries of the Orange County Airport. plan have been Barranca Road on the north; Jamboree Road on the east; Palisades Road on the toutb ; and Uk Newport Freeway on the west. eommlsslonel'I Thursday drew the new boundarie1 as Barranca Jtoad atlll on the north: Orchid Avenue oo ihe eut: Monte Vista Avenue extended on the toutb; and Santa Ana A•enue extended on the wt!t. 'Ibo action will allow tile commisoiool an odvl,.ry body to the Board o Supervilon, to make """"'1let1datloo.s -oo -lbly ~ developmenta proposed 1n the ellended orea. f •• out a $12,500 fire raging through his COO· ,dominlum near J;loag Memorial Hospital. Chris Cummins of 402 Orion Way received second degree bums to his hands 'and face as he and several other people struggled for 15 minutes to put out the lire before someone [inally called the fire department, according to Fire Cap- tain James Topping. "This was a real long-delayed alarm," Topping said. "They tried to beat out the Ore wllh blankets, pillows and anything else they could lay their hands on." Topping said the fire apparently started at about 5 a.m., triggered by a candle left burning on a . table in the bedroom. ''By the time someone called us, the fire was well involved," he said. "We had ll men fighting it for almost a half-hour before It was oontrolled. •· Cumminl was taken to Hoag for treat- 'Lemon' Advertised GREEN RIVER, Wyo. (AP ) - A sign on the back of a truck here reads : ''This may be the biggest lemon )'OU'll ever see. 'lbe factory won't admit ll 'lbe dealer WIWl't dlscusl it. All l can do Is sit and CUA It.'' I· . .. -· ment and was released later this morn- ing. Topping said. "The fire gutted the one upstairs bedroom, the hall and one bathroom and caused heat and smoke damage to the res t of the upstairs," Topping said. Fire department damage estimates place the loss at $9,000 to the building and abou t $3,500 to the contents. Harbor Summer Dates Revealed Summer classes at elementary and in- tennediate schools In the Newport-Mesa Unlfied School District will run f r o m June 25 to July 30 and at high .schools from June 251 to· Aug. 13, Superintendent John Nicoll said Thursday. An earlier story reported that Newport· Mm trustees established Jone 18 to Aug. 31 as the summer school period. Dr. Nicoll explained that those dates were ollly boundarkll within wblch the cluses aiuld be aet, not the a c t u a l idJedule. Twelve elementary and six In· tennedllte schools will oCfer cl...., for the'\Jlve-week period and four hl&h ICboola will be open for the saven-weell: summer 1e11lon. • ' -.. . . . ., . . Orange C:out Weatlaer It'll be sunny and warmer on Saturday, with highs In the IOI and lo'i\·er 70s along the Orange Coast. Lows tonight, from tile high JOs to the low 40a. INSIDE TODAY Wh11 would two civic _ light opera companies 15 miltJ apart want to revive a ah.ow likt "KU. met" at th~ 1anw time1 Tht rtaion is tzplaintd in tht lnttr· misJi01' column tn todav'1 Wttk· ende-r. L.M....... I • .. ".. 11 C.ltftl'11lt ' Clbl!IW IM4 ,_ . ,,,,_. . °""' ...... . ......... .... • 1 ,.._. ~.,. ,.., .. .... . -.. ,._ .. ......,. II -. -- • -. . ) '2_·DAILV PiIOf • ' San Luis 1 1 -0hispo Hit- Emergency D(l{"lared Aft.er Heavy Rai~ From \\'ire Sen·ll'es SAN LUIS OBISPO - A state of emergenc)' was declared throughout San Lu.is Obispo County as the \\'Orsi rainstorm in four years sent flood waters pouring into dov.ntov.'Il Sl rttl.S here. cul· ling oft cammimlcltloos aut ol lite dty nnd !on:lna schoob lo clo>e. (Relattd picture, Pagt I). ' \\'ilh a prtd.lcUon of more rain today. the state Offltt of .Emergency ~rvltes !>Aid it "'BS keeplng a close v.·atch on the 1:ounty as well rui Santa Barbara County Versailles Area W ate1· \ Service Prompts Battle , A battle between the Costa l\lesa Coun· ty Waler District and the cJty of New- port Beach over water sales rights in the Versailles a"'a is beaded for Su- perior Court. H. Rodger ,Howell, attorney for the water district, said he expects to file a suit against Newport Beach by mid-week asking the return of. "improperly taken" territory. !J'be disputed area involves about 2:4 acres in the Versailles apartment area on the Cagney property .. The land. silua- ted on a bluff off Superior Avenue near Hoag Hospital. \\'as unincorporated terri· tory until annexed by Newport Beach two years ago. Alvin Pink.lev. ·a director or the water district, said Costa !\lesa did not object to annexation of the property by Nell.·· port Beach e\·en though the area lies \\'ithin the ll.'9ter district boundaries. * But "'ale r district officials be c nm e angry \\'hen lhe City of Newport Beach began sen'ing the area \\'ith \\'at er. Al· though the a r e a is part of Newport Beach. it is being contended by t h e Cosla ~1esa y,•aterrnen that they · still have the right to sell water there. ··This means an estimated $25,000 a year in estimated gross revenue t h a l \1·e're losing," said Pinkley "We're the ones that should be servicing that area." The jurisdktiooal question bas been under negotiation between officials from Newport Beach and the Costa Mesa Coun- ty Water District and hope bas been ex· pressed for an out-0f-rourt settlement.' ··1 think Newport Beach is interested in some kind of settlement;" Hoiw·ell said this morning. "But up to the point the negotiations have not exactly been en- couraging. They're tbe kind that could go on and on like those in Paris." Fro111 Page I VERSAILLES AGREEMENT • • • density hi gher than the 15-18 units per acre deemed acceptable by city planners but the deed restriction helps lo offset the difference. The ne<,\' agreement calls for a density of 21.8 units per acre, down from 35 in the original plan and 24 in the first agreement. The deed restriction will 1ower pro- jected population in the condominiums from 1,197 originally to 763. The first set· tlement, which did not contain the deed restriction, would have allowed 926 peo- ple to live there. "In terms of the upcoming general pl1µ1. their real detlsity figure is still high for the ideal in that area/' Wynn said. "But the deed restriction will help offset that problem." The second majar change in the set- tlement agreement is the fact that Scholz has agreed to pay the excise tares alter all. "That figure bas been readjusted to $98,000 now," Wynn said. Former Newport Carpenter" Dies; Services Slated Funeral services are schedu1ed satur- day for George Gilbert "Gil" Millikin, former carpenter for the city of Newport Beach for 13 years and former O:>sta ~1esa resident, who died Tuesday. He was 74. l\.tr. l\.1illikin moved to Desert Hat Springs after retiring in 1963. He had liv- ed in Cosla Mesa for 17 years and was a member and treasurer of the Newport Harbor Elks Lodge 1767 and a past master <>f the Laguna Beach Masonic Lodge No. 6?1, F&M1. He was native of Buena Park . He leaves his v•ife . Ruth . of the family home; t~·o sons, George and Harold, bolh of Costa ~tesa: 13 grandchildren, and two great-grandchildren. Se rvices will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at • \Vinbigler P.1ortuary, Santa Ana, with the Laguna Beach Masonic L-Odge officiating. Burial will follow at El Toro Cemetery . OUN~E COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiii or.,.. Cont DAILY PILOT, Wllll w11k11 II cambllltd ttle N"""PrftS, 1, Pllbl~ try 1tM 011111ge tout PWllUUng c.ntpiiriy_ s..,. nit tdll• Ir• publlU!ecl, ~ • ., ~ Friday, fW Costa Mr..a, Newport lekh, Hfolftflngtelrl llHCl'l/F®"111" V1l1ty, ~ aet0. ln'fna/Sadd~U 111111 S.n Cl9mtlllt/ San J11an C.lllstrlM A 1!11911 •'1!1onil edition k Pllblf1Md S.twda'fl M>!1 SUl!Oil.,._ Tllt princip91 pUbllilllng Pia~! 11 ii llO Wn l .. ., Str"1, Cosl• """'· C.iilomia, t:it.2'. Rob.rt N. W1•d PrHIOet\I ltlll PllOlfi~ Jack R. Curl1y Via! Pnskhnl Ind Ge°fltl'll MlllNIW Thom•• k ... .,a Edllor Thom•1 A. Murphi111 ~lnt EdllW L. P•t•r Kri•t Ntwporj aNdl Ct!'( Editor ........... Offfot lJll H1wport hvl•'t•rd Mallb19 Acf4rc11 1 P.O. lo• 1175, 9266J °""' ....... Coltl Mtw: JJO Wtt1 a.y $tr"' LI"""" ketll: m FOl'Ut ~"911.,. H\lrt!lnqttll lffdl: 1"15 llMdl IOl,llMf'd $111 Cle"*ll•: »5 Horlt\ El Ctlftlno ... I Tll.,.... (71 4J 641-4121 Cl-"W Alftnh"'t 641-5671 ~. ltn,. Orll'Dt CNtl ~I ..... Cemp1tt1'(. No -ttorlts, 11111111,.tllnl. lfllOr .. I rNl!tr ., 911¥1rt1Hfnlnta '*'-In _., ... ~ wlltllvt ..... ,.. fJllUion el ~ OWMr. ._.. c:l9• .... 111td "' COii• Mf'llr, (<lllforlllf.. ~Ion tr( ~ a.ti "'°""'"' .., _ .. Q,l.f ~' """'-" ............. llM ""'"""'· 1be new agreement also calls for a considerable change in the .appearance of Phase Il which bad originally been designed in such· a way that the ap- pearance from Pacific Coast Highway v.'001.d have been a three-stpry wall oo the bluffs. Changes in· the project that the developer feels will considerably soften the appearance of the project include : -Redesip;ned roof structures bringing the heigh! down to 37 feet '!'Id thus within the city's height limitation zone. -A new grading plan for lbe eDtire project that lowen the erade con- siderably along the bluff-and increases the grade slightly in the center and in the canyon adjacent to Hoag Hospital. -A rearrangement of building loca· tioos and positions aJoog the bluffs to make the view from below more, open and pleasing to the eye. -A reduction of building toVeraRe from 31 percent in the original · agree- ment to 24 percent in the current aeree- roent. -A decrease ln the number of buildiogs from seven to ·five. In addition to the changes Scholz bas agreed to make in lhe buildings themselves and in population and unit densities, Wynn said he bas agreed to participate fully in public works improvements and install a bicycle trail albhg the bluffs. Public worts sUpulations in the agree- ment include: -Complete Improvements to Superior A venue frontage. . -Contribution of an $18,000 water con- necti!>n fee less credit of $10,400 for a 16- lncb waler line that will be JnValled by the developer. -Qintrlbullon of ball the costs, up to $18,000, for comtruction of a traffic signal at Hoae Drive and Superior. The bicycle trail portion Of the igree- ment 11 one that Wynu sees as especially in.portaot. "In the original p1an, they were going t,. try and work out some Mickey Mouse arnngement for a path on ~tate-owned property on the bluffs," he said. "This is much bttter."' The agreement calls for the developer to improve a strip of land across the bluffs no less than 10 feet wide as a bike trail and scenic paseo. The developer ha s agreed to put in paved walks, grass, flowers, shrubs, a sprinkler system and sealing facilities that would be maintained by the city once the strip is dedicated. Chet Stare, senior vice president for the Donald Scholz company, said Thurs- day. he is glad the agreement was reach- ed but be "naturally wished it would have been more favorable to the developer." County Appraiser Daniel Pattison Rites Sanu·day Funeral services will be held Saturday for . Daniel M. Pattison, Newport Beach resident and appraiser with the Real Property Division of the Orange County Assessor's office, who died Wednesday . He waa 72. ~fr. Pattison was employed by the county for 10 years until his retirement in 1964. A native of New York, he was a Newport Beach resident for 23 years. He leaves his wife. Ruth, of the famil y home at 2711 Seaview Ave.: two brothers, E. H. Pattison of Naples, Florida and Irwin Pattim of Tucson, Ariz. Funeral services will be at l l a.m. at SL Michaels and All An ge l s Episcopal Churcll In Corona del Mar. Burin! will follow at Pacific Vlcw Memorial Park. The family ha1 sug· gested contributions to 1Ioag Memorial Hospital or I.he Heart Association of Or· angc County. lo lM aGUth ~ bu "rucbed I point Of almo:i:t-complete llb.u'IUoo. II The storm, wblch spread throughout Soutbcrn Cllll!brnla •arty Thursday, dumped more than. thl'ee lncbel of nln over ~ areas and b~bt a total or 6.3 inches to the area slnce Tuesdny. some stretll in San Luia Obispo wtre four fLiet deep in water Thursday morn- ing but the deluge reoeded by mlda!· terrioon. • More than 100 can in the city v.·ere damaged by tbe stonn but no seriowl in· juries were reported, police said. Floodv.·aters closed off roods at both the 1J01Jthem and northern ends of the ci- ty for a time. Thousands of homeowners in Los Osos and Baywood Park, immediately 80lllh of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for part of the day. In nearby Laguna Lake, a number of homes were flooded . Homes aod buildings were also flooded to the south in the San Fernando Valley. Up to 7.5 iDcbes of rain fell at San Marcos Pass near Santa Barbara, and in "'.entura County, Oood waters ripped up s1dewalb. es:posing utility pipes in some areas. Clearing skies greeted Northern Californians today as they continued to recover from a procession of Paclfic storms. 'lbe National ·weather Service prom- ised m o s t I y fair weather through Salurday except for some cloudiness in the extreme northern mountains and some patchy momin5 fog ··m the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. "There are still some fron ts lying off the coast. but the high pre~ure system inland· will bold them off, probably throughout the weekend," a weather service spokes man said. Th~ stat~ Office <'~ Emergency Service:; estimated s t or m -r e I a t e d damage caused by the two storms in ~farin County alone at M million. From Page I LEARY ... Jacket" turned to make its approach to Los Angeles International Airport about 4:30 p.m. Thursday. While her "perfect love" was.removed from the plane in handcuffs and under guanl of both federal aod Los Aogeles · aultxlrilies, fl,liss Harcourt-Smith, against whom police said no charges were pend- ing, lert the airplane v i a the routine customs check. •She said a doctor confirmed that she had serum hepatitis -"it's not con- tagious" -when the plane landed. The illntss she said led Leary to begin IJs five-country Olgbt wh1cb resulted in his being spotted by U.S. orficials in Afghanistan. Despite the fact of an e.z. tradition treaty with the U.S. . Afghanistan authorities a pp a r e n t I y- cooperated in the turnover. The woman, believed to be the daughter or a British publisher, said she contracted hepatitis while the pair were in Vienna making the anti-addiction film. "On my birthday, Jan. 13, I became ill. Tim promised to take me somewhere I've never been and get me to a hospital," she said. That trip led to what she claimed was the "illegal" removal or Leary's passport and tbe pair's "free ride" to Los Ar..geles. "I've never been here before. It was a lovely fi.ight at the U.S. govmunenl's e.i- pense." She first said she planned to go to a hospital, before finding a place "near to him, near Lbe jail so I can free him." Later, the bllcblliklng jet set socialite admitted !he would be staying at ~ Beverly-Wilshire Hotel -80me 12 miles from the downtown central jail where Leary was housed. She Iert the airport Thursday evening copcemed ~~use her British passport had not been returned to her. Pam Am officia la said they did not know where her passport was, but suggested it might be returned to her when she registered wilh immigration officials as an alien resident. Frona Page I RA INFALL ..• the exception of a short stretch on MacArthur Boulevard. Traffic was Ur terrupted untll 6 p.m. to inspect the bridge. tN LAGUNA BEACH: Rainwater cascading down Park avenue caused flooding along Forest Avenue and minor damage to some downtown stores. Ex· acUy 1.3 inches of rain soaked the city during the storm. Wate r rose up to the sidewalk level on Forest Ave11Ue and seeped into Fairchild Stamps, 310 Glenneyre and New Dlrec· tions, 265 Forest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in front of their stores. · IN THE sot.rm COAST area: Rainfall amounted to more than one. inch and caused cars to stall and s"'ver11l t.o spi n out on freeways in Mission Viejo and Laguna Hills. The lateat storm brought the month's rainfall to a hefty 2.9 inches In San Clemente and about the snmt for San J u a n C4plstrano, making January already an unusually wet month·. In the central coonly area: The slonn brought .73 Inches of rain to Santa Ana msk ing the total for the yc•r 8.87 Inches, more lhan double lhe 4.43 lnches of last year. Villa Park Dam reconled .!15 Inches Thursday for an a.at inch ausonal tOJal. S.ddleback ptak had .9 inchet and the lrvtne Ranch .71 Inches . • • OAll.Y Pll.OT 11•ft Plltt9 THIS IS THE C0RACK IN. WALL OF SEVEN·YEAR.OLO SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR Fl1w Forces Closure of Facility Above NeWport Beach; Officials Bl1me Subsidence ' Country Club Puts Flag Back To Full Swff Consultants Assert Crack In Reservoir No Peril Some Harbor Area residents passing the Irvine Coast Country club In Newport Beach rerently have noted with interest that the huge U.S. flag is flying at full staff despite the :JG.day mourning period for the late President l:larry Truman. A few have gone so far as to suggest that the club, a bastion of Republicanism with pictures of President Nixon prom· inenlly displayed in the men'S locker room, isn't honoring Truman because he \\'as a Democrat. Not so, says the club's p r o shap operator. who is responsible for raising and lowering lhe Flag eaCh day. "That JO.day period was only for government offices," said Gene Davis. "We observed it for two weeks and then raised the Flag back .. to-fur staff:" Davis said there is no political reason for the action. He said it was simply a decision he made in regard to bis Flag duties. "After all ," Davis observed, "they didn't have the Flags at the Super Bowl at half staff." Rinker Corporation Of Newport Merges • Rlnker Corporation of Newport Beach has been merged into the W. R. Grace Land Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary of W. R. Grace Company, in exchange for an undisclosed amount of Grace stock, according to the New York firm. Independent consultants from the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power have detennined that a 25().foot long crack in a wall of. the San Joaquin Reservoir in Irvine poses no hazard to life and property in nearby develop- ments, William Hurst, manager of the Irvine Ranch Water District (lRWD), said today. IRWD is the owner of the 9TI million· gallon-eapacity reServoir, which is still shut down pending study and repair Of the crack in the soulh wall. I~ can be fully repaired, Hurst em· pliasized. An official from the Metropolitan Water District (MWD) which supplies water to lhe reservoir coofinned today that there Ls no danger to residents. 'The crack was discovered last October when the reservoir was drained to allow for its first clean_!PC.ln about seven years. When the water pressUfe in the reservoir went down, the · balance between that and tbe pressure behind!he clay and asphalt surface was d~twfei:t: •As a·reiol~ Hurst txpl~~·toaay.;the clay liner push"ed through and cracked the asphalt surfaoe. An engineer's report on bow much the rephlrs will cost and i.>w long they will take was due at the lRw'o office this afternoon. UntU he studies that, Hurst said, be can't say how much longer the reservoir will be shut down. But the genera] manager estimated a two to three month period. Caspers 'Bitter' OE_i:_Sllp_errisOr Billboard Vote SoptTVisor Ronald W. Caspers of Newport Beach reected bfllerly lo Wednesday's decision of the board ex.- eluding industrial zones from higbw17 billboard prohibition. Calling the 3-Z vote "one of tht greatest disappointments of my two yean in office" Caspers Thursday ~ tinued, "l believe the cyunty took a great step backward in our battle to save the environment WedneSday when the board sucoumbed lo U,e pressures of the billboard industry. · " 'Billboard Alley' 1Jcmg lhe Slnta Ana-San j}ifCO rree_way1 north of Laguda Hills LelJure World' Ls a disgraceful tr· ample of permitted misu.!e of open space," he charged. "I worked hard over a year and a hl1f ago to get the board to 'dopt an ordinance that would remove the billboards from alongside freeways In ~years time,~· be ~tinued. CLEARANCE SA LE C.ONTINUES ' . . . Featuring many line collections from such well known lines as HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL, MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOOOMARK, •nd others , •• t i! subitentially reduced. The largest 11lection of quality upholstary is now on display and ready for. immediate delivery. Save now. Henredon Alv1r1do !shown) On Sil• Now DREXEC-HERITAGS-JilNREDOi'l-WOODMARK STAN -------- INTER IO RS WDOAn • SATUIDAYS t:OO to 1:30 NIDA T 'TIL t:OO NEWPORT BEACH e :1727 WESTCLI~, Dl.. '42·20Jt LAGUNA BEACH e · 145 NOlTH COAST HW't'. ., ... ,,. TORRANCE e IJ&4' HAWTHOlHE ILVO. ,,,,12n l 1 ' • "'G1'fl Road j Pt••lng Eqeeeted . Budget Astounds GOP Legislator SACRAMElll'O (AP)· -!, leading Republican lawmaker says he ii 11astounded~~ "me of Gov.-RooaJd 's 'II.I blllloo Wdget for the ll!lca! year starting July I. Aslen>b!yman Jolm Stull. a -candidate far a vacant San Diego •tale Senate ..... ad4ed ThundOy, "I upect the legls. lature to do some pruning." &ull joined Democratic critics in BA"ylng, "I cannot lee the reasons for such a massive increase in our state budget ... I think the people continue to want fiscal econru;ny, not budgetary expansion." In a 11.1 billion aurplUJ at Ille end or lhe coming fiscal year. A BA'n'LE ls expected ovu disposition of the surplus. A"ombly Speaker Bob MMttl 1ald the on&<:ent sales tax increase can be delayed for a year and a half -Wll11Jaouary, 1m-by us- ing the surplus. Unless the Legislature acts in the meantime, the sales tax increase from five to six cents per dollar in most of California take!: effect June 1. A 'road to the King Salmon fishing area on Humboldt Bay near Eureka is lash· ed by waves that tossed ~'!lders on_ the route. The budget ls •u billion larger than the current state 1pinding plan and would result "We have been able top~ vkle homeowner property tu: relief, provide new money for schools, and at the stme"time, to accumulate a surplus Without the necessity of Im- posing new taxes on the average Californian," Moretti said. ,_ Stones Roll • ID LA --· . _/, -- 18,600 Fans See Benefit for Managua Navy Hunts For Gigi' By Radio ' SAN DIEGO (UPI) .'.. The INGLEWOOD (AP) -Most conduct and a handful of ga\e never missed any of it. The Navy is again looking for Gigi of the old ingredients were · crashers, one might -pever StOnes played "Brown Sugar,'' the whale, boplng the AWOL there: rock guitar, blaring have known it was a Stones' "It's All Over Now" and other leviathan will check in by drums, screaming fans and a concert h' The f ho ha radio and reas.sure her fans. vibrating Mick Jagger. its. ans, w d paid So far,"there is Only silence But something was missing BUT THE crowd of 10,600 between $10 and $i00 a ticket, from the Pacific, where Gigi Thursday as the Rolling cheered, some youths standing _ if she is still alive -should Stones played a benelit con-1:r: -(:: 1:r: and swaying to the music. now be migrating soothward Dismayed cert at the Forum for Jagger, the stones' fiam. with other gray whales to Ba-;fl~~n earthquake vie-Japan Bars boyanl leod singer, -ja Calilomla. LOS ANGELES (AP) .....,..,. ,___ Gigi attracted naUoriwide Despite some good news for Gooe WB!I the mob of hopeful in \W"'IUOis&cokJred v e Ive t attention Jast March, when she the University of California tn gate crashers, the police with Mi k J g pants .and wearing a silver became known as "the a~ Gov. Ronald Reagan's riol lllicll, the flgh ts and C ag er headband, thanked the au-prentice whale." Captured posed 1973-74 spending pro- mass arrests that have dience for "shelling out 80 shortly after birth, she was gram, UC PrEsid<nt Clwles J. charactmaed past S!Dne con-TOKYO (AP) -1be pro-much bread." raised in a tank at Sea World llit<h 18!'1 he ls disappointed certs. moten: of a five-day Tokyo ap.. Be then led the group io a by Navy and other marine in the operating budget for the Except for a few fans who pearance by the Rolling Stones nearly two-hour performance research scientists. nine-campw1 system. were ejected for disorderly rock music group announced of their songs., mixing newer In a statement to the Board ---today they have canceled· the hits with vintage rendition.! AN ARGUMENT developed of Regents flnance committee engagement because .Jead like "Route 56," w bi c b the between Navy and other sclen-Thursday, Hitch said: · Pentagon - Documents 'Aid Hanoi' singer Mick Jagger bas. been Stones recorded in 1964. lists over whether Gig could "This was to be the year barred from Japan due to a ~ '"Ibey were good. but It survive when released in the when he wou1d shake off the fine he received for possession wasn't worth $15," said Jan ocean since she had been austerity of the last six of narcotics in Britain last Johnson, 28, of Van Nuys. deprived d. a normal whale budgets, the year when we year. "Here we an, a couple of childhood. · would get the wtlversity Udo Music said all s:;,ooo adults, waiting to see the Gigi appeared to give ....mg again, the y ear of ticketa for the stones' stones," sak! Judy Jones, a 22 grounda for such fears for a renewed commltment and the perlonnances beginning Jan. yeaN>ld Redondo B each while. She hung aroand the means of hiilllling it. rm 28 had been sold. It will rtlund se<ntary. "But we'll pn>bably Southern California coast for a afraid these hope> look pretty LOS ANGELES (UPI) __ the_m_one--'-y_. ______ be_benl __ w_hen_w~e~'re_s:;_." ___ cou-'-pl_e_of_mon-'.'-tha-. _____ em-'pt'-y:......_now_.'_' ----- The Pentagon Papers included a secret analysis of the Tet of- fensive that could have show- ed Hanoi planners bow-clo,. th~y came to su~s arid bow to impro've their attack fbe next Ume, according to a high ranking general ''To them, this might be the ( BRIEFS ) best piece of military In- telligence they ever bad," U. Gen. WilliaRl DePuy told the Pentagon Papers trial • e Ash Paff• Oii LOS ANGELES (AP) • - Three founders of Litton Indll!tries -one of them Roy L. Ash, newly appointed direc- tor of the federal Office of ·M&nagement and Budget - have agreed to pay $2.4 million to the estate of a man who said be'belped found Lit- ton but was kept from receiv- ing stock at advantageous prices. Superior Court Judge Arthur K. Marshall agreed Thursday to dismiss a 14-year-old civil fiuit filed against Litton by tht late Emmett T. Steele once the payment is made. e Setde FUea OAKLAND (.JJPI) -Blaclc Panther Chalnnan Bobby Seale entered the mayura1 election race Thursday, called for a "slush fund" to provide jobs for • minorities and predkted a ''landslide" vic- tory. Seale, 35, paid his llGO ll1lng fee and presented a petition • with a required number of signatures by register e·d voters. ··~..-i-u SANTA BARBARA (AP) - Former singer.actor Phil Regan bas pleaded innocent to charges he tried tO b<ibe a county supervisor in a r.onlng decision . Regan_. 661 entered his plea Thurlday In Mwtlcipal Court after being charged With of- fering 11,000 to lnllueoce the vote on a rezoning ll'OOOAi that lllvolved a 'lll<1Dlt hous- ing development .... ol bore. , • Blut ProlH!el DELANO (AP) -Federal lnvestigaton say dynamite was the probable cause of an aplosioo that damaged • building at the United Farms Workers complex here. Alcohol; Tobacco a n d Flrearms Investigators said ll appeared that at least t'!O stlclts of dynamite were used In lhe ·blut that ripped -an l~inch thlclc ·•teek<!ln- forced wall of the Ul"W Coop service ataUon Wedne!<laY night. • . ~ NOTICE TO TELEPHONE CUSTOMERS wen Plmlllilll i1C11J1• ii Iha. rates•Slme·ml·of-stale cans. The American Thlephone and Thlegraph Company has filed a new schedule of lnt~z.. state rates with the Federal CommunJcatlons Commission which increases charges for .some customel'dlaled ~alla during Wilek.day bus~ ness ho_urs. for some operator·asststed · calls, for some'person·ti>person calls, and for WATS(WldeAreaTulecommunlcatlonsServlce~ AD rat81 for lntentate Long Distance calla you 41al jounelf Without o,9ntor aniltance In the evenlnp, al night, and OD weekends wlll remain unchanged. · The new rahisfor Long Distance ca.Us he- come effective on January' 2;!. 1073. The new rates for WATS become effective on March 13, 1973, unless suspended by the !'CC. , Heru &re the provisions of the-new lntet!ltlite rates: 1. Some. of the rateti for statloil-to-statlon p calla you dial y0Un1eH without operator , assistance from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, will be Increased five cents orlO centifortheflrst three minutes. 2. Some of the rates In all time periods for operator-assisted statlon·t(Htatlon calls. (that tncludos·credlt-card, collect, tlµrd- number, hotel.guest, and coin telephone calls) will be Increased five cients ior the first three mlnbtes. 3. Some rates fo!' person·t~person calls in all time periods will be Increased five cent• or 10 cents for the first three minutes' 4. The rates for each additional minute on some. calls In all . time periods will be ral!l<ld In a range from orie cent to five cents. 5. Interstate WATS ratea will be lnc:raUed about two percent~ 6. Rates for staUon·to-stallon calla JOll dW 'yourleH without operator aaslatance dW-. lng,evenlngs, nights. or w..,kend1 wlll .rema.ln the same.. Interim nit ea and supporting ileta have been filed with the Federal. Communications Com- mlsslon,The Increases for Long Dlstancecalla have been authorized by the FCC on an Interim basis to be effective January 22, 1973. The FCC will conduct additional hearings on the lawful· nesa of the rates, and FCC rules permit.any ln' tereated.persons to appear and participate, This will be only the second general Increase in Interstate Long Distance rate levels In al- most 20'years, During tbta period, In spite of inflatton,·lnterstate'Long Distance rates have been reduced n1peatedly., Even with this In· crea:se, 1he level of the new rates will still be below lhe 1953 level. Yet In those 20 Interven- ing. years·, the coot of lfvlng has gone up more than 50percent. The new rates are designed to lncrea.se total reVenuea: lrom Jnterstate service by abounwo percent. Eilll!llllles cil LQric Distance rates for COISt to COISt calls -. SlliDIM~ ...... .... -.. -Alsisted ·-•••••• IJ.55· ....... Up.a.W.· "' .... ........ ... _ .. ,_ tntlMll!n 5p.a.S.. ,,, ..• ... SI.• SJ.SS ·-11 p ... s.. .. ,_ Intl lllillltn hJriMtfs tltT ..... Fri. lip ... to ·-l l.4U ... ,. -IL&dlilJ .. _ .... al ·-"' -"" '(3 ...... ) (llllilllles) ...... n" Sl.1$ SJ.55 ......,. ,, ......... .. ,_ ·111t1-.... Intl ...... ....-.Fri. I L---@Al&I • • ' , , . Friday, Janu~ 19. iq73 DAILY PILOT $ HOW WOIJID WOIJ llKI JO H&ft NO Ml&INllNAN(I ..UOlllllll J Gel rid of your lawnmower and paint brush and W' check out the carefree lifestyle at Walnut Squ818. Relax on weekends whlle professionals lake care of all landscaping and exterior malnt~nance. From s1g.9§C) ~ $1,000 Down, No Closing Costs. •.. on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and Component Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and Monochrome TV, Radios, Tape Recorders, and Port8ble Phonographs. Shown below is just one of our many Magnavox Annual Sale Values . See them all-and save! Medltwl 1a1t1• .tJlnt- rnodet 7548. 8knlltatadTYpiotm9 ·Eye ••• makes M1gn1vo1 T J.C. the most totllly 111ta1111tic color system you can bay! Th• only color Ht that 11utomatie1Uy adjutU It• plctlire to c:Mng. Ing Ught condltlonal .Mag'havox. T .A.C. (Total Automatic Colof) not onty autorrtlticaUy compensites for 111 those things from OUtlidfJ the hot... that can meu up yow picture; now Magnavox T .A.C. with Vkfeomedc automlticalty ~nsatn for tM on• thing inside the houSI thft c.n rneu up 'fOtJ' picture: changing room light! The Vkleomatic Ev-actually .. ,... thechanglng light In your room end automatically adjusts the color. brightnels and contraat-to giv9 you the best possible color-right pk:tuN -day ot night I And the cha:sail ts Modular 100% Salld-Stllte-wlth plug-in circuit 'pane11, moduln and tr1nsist0fl• 25• cU1gonal actMn. · (Wt}Con..,..._., model 7$.42, (righl) Ellfy American modi( 7544, VowchoicL SAVE '30 I NOW '6l9 UYAllA 2 BIG LOCATIONS · ' GOLDENWEST &"WARNER HUNTINGTON BEACH Sales oiily 842-5596 \ UNITED STORES ~ 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON BEACH Service & Sales 536-7561 Try Saturday's News Quiz We Dare You • • " ' -. ' I • ' • / --• D ARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE A 'New ' Ve sailles • Alter more th•n two months o! reworking, Newport Beach councllfnen Mondiy will ?Weive the Jates.t revision of an agreement between the city and the devdloper s or the controversial Versailles on the Bluffs condomfnlu1ns. The original agreement permitting the second phase or the project to be built was scrapped by the council in November after stormy public hearings. The project then ·'vent back into limbo where it has remained since being rejected by planning commlsaioners last summer due to it.s bulk ·and densi ty. . · City Manager Robert L. Wynn !eels sure the revised settlement "'·ill be agreeable not only to councilmen but w the IV e s t Newport residents who are batWng the project. He says he is pleased with tbe revised agreement and he will support it as a fair compromise to a sticky problem. Among other things. the terms of the new agree- ment call for the developer to pay all building excise taxes -somewhere in the vicinity of $70,000. The original agreement stipulated that Versailles de· veloper Donald Scholz would drop his lawsuit against the city if no taxes were req\lired. The lawsuit was filed after lhe planners' original rejectipn.oLthe project. _ ~- Another key element of the. new agreement, and·one = that V.'3.S not in the original draft, is a deed restriction limiting occupancy of the apartments to persons 16 years old or older. 'f' 1 \Vynn said the restriction is a key element in the agreement and ~rill les!en density and soften impact on school s and traffic. . In addition, the developer has agreed to develop a bike trail a I o n g the bl ufis, alter the appearance and heigbt.s ol the buildings. lower gradieots to make the ap- pearance ol the buildings more palatable and p~cipate fully in such things as sewers, streets and water lines. Other terms·of the new agreement include a reduc· lion In dens ity 21.8 dwelling units per acre, dOwn rrom 2~ in 'the nr1ginal agreement and 35 in the original plan. The figure Is 51111 hfgher than the 18 units per acre sought by planners. In addition, tbe pre<li<led total l"'Pula{lon of 'the project will be 768 as opposed to 926 in the ltrst agree- ment and 1,197 in the original plan. The new agreemeni is complex and shows that both sides have been working bard to reach s'l_me kind o! mid· die ground acceptable to all slCles-orthe controversy. · Despite the opUmistic ouUook .pl the negotiators, the counCJI. rrundtfll of the turmoil the project has aroused. can be expected to be extra cauttous in evaluat· Ing the new agreement Monday night. • An Excellent Choice T-~:;rt Harbor Chamber of Commerce was astute ~ce of Philco-Ford executive John. Law- s<Jn as Man of the Year. Lawson, who is retiring this year. was honored by the Chamber at the 66th annual installation banquet Tuesday. ln his selection, the Chamber honors a man -who has done fine things for his community both in terms of im· mediate. and 1ong·range assistance. Lawson .has made many contributions lo young peo- ple. economics, education and especially inter-eommu- nity relations. . He was the originator and guiding light of Project 21 , which is dedicated to creating a program of orderly planning for the entire countv. In short, Lawson has typified ihe involved citizen. He bas stepped in to fill a community need for guidance and direction from within . He is certainly a deserving choice as h1an of the Year. -. , 'On your mark. Get set. Got' N I !-·--· I ·- Can Energy Match P ace Of.Grow th? Dear Gloomy Gus P r esident Must Be lmmane to Criticlnn (SYDNEY J.HARRI~ '1 read a frightening riddle the other day. It was propounded by Dr. Peter E. Glaser at a scientific conference on Energy and Humanity in U:indon last fall. It goes like this : A farmer has a pond with a water lily In it.' The lily is doubling In aize every day. In 30 days It will cover the entire pond, killing all the crea- tures living in it. The farmer doesn 't want this to happen, but be i! busy with other chores and de- cides to postpone cutting back the plant until lt cover.i hall the pood. 1be riddle is: on what day will the lily cover half the pond ~ And the answer is: on the 29th day - leaving the fanner jwt one day to save hiJ pond! 1'h1! is v.•hat ls meant by the chilly matMmalical p hr a s e "exponential growth." Our technological society is growing at an exponential rate -and along with it our need for ebergy to feed thi! growth. We are nearing the 29th day, when we must either find new sourees of energy that will not threaten our planet, or cut back drastically in our rate of pro- duction, population, and consumption. These are the only alternatives open to ua; anything else is mere political rhetoric. Unless we -by which I mean the whole world -can obtain enou.gh solar energy to replace our dwindling stock of lf Governor Reagan signs the blll to put rontrace;ptive.s in catfood. but not one to give them to teenage girts, will not that create an awk- ward temptalion for the teenage girlsl M.P.D. T1ah ........ ,....,. """"" .,..... .. , -,.. ............ ., •. ""' ,_ .... ,.._ .. .....,. .... °""' ........ non-renewable resources, we will COD· tinu ; uot only to deplete these resources at an alarming rate, but also to throw the whole system of nature drastically out of kilter. WE MAY NOT yet be at tht 29th day, but it Is approaching far faster than the layman imagine.!. And If we are to deflect this catastrophe in time, It is lm- peiatfv'i that the nations of the world unite for a common purpose : to protect the survival of thi5 closed planetary system of the earth, and to assure that e\"\?ryooe WUl have at least enough. ' Instead, u Arnold Toynbee observed not long ago, since the end of World War IJ, there are twice as many nations and sovereignties with half as much space as before. N4lionalism and separatism have proliferated everywhere on the globe; the great powers may f i n d a modot vtvtndl, but t h e smaller nations will 1 soon possess the capacity to make nuclear bombs and enter the ar ena of political and military combat. Just at the time when we should be subordinating our provincial differences to our common global pllgbt, we are drawing away from each other, In smaller and more fiercely tribal unlU. Just when we need to pool our resources for the salvation or the speciea, we seem bent on seizing more of the spoils. It is not merely evil ; it is madness. Profita ble Inaugural? PrHidenllal Inaugurals are curious Ft'ents, combining pomp, pompousness and pageantry in almost equal measure. 1'hil year something new bas been ad- ded. Against all odds. the 1973 Inaugural Committet hopes to make the event pro- filable. TO TIDS end, the committee l! cutting down on overhead and charging hefty fees for almost all. activities. The in- augural ball! of recent memory have Men held In such hotels as the • Shoreham , Sheraton Park and Mayflower. On Jan. 19-20, 1973, however, lhe various balls and conce rts will be held in government bulldings, including the Kennedy Center, Smlthsonion lnstitu· lion, National GaUery of Art, and NR· lional Portra it Gallery. Cost lo the in- augural convnittee: oothlna:. Inaugural-parade 5J>'dator.i who want 10 sit \ft the bleachers a 1 o n g Pennay~v la Avtnue can do so for prices r ing as high as $50. Tickets to the \COneerts sctleduled for Jan. 19 are scaled from $20 to too. On the other hand, admission to an infonnaJ reception at the Smithsonian for Vice President Agnew ls a .:omparaUve steal at $10, AT THE FIRST Inaugural. George Washlngton took the oath of office on the balcony of Federal Hall In New York City. There was a ball aftenfltrds and the Cint President danced the minuet. The first Inaugural ball In Wa•hiJ1810n wu that of JalTl(!f Madison. Some of the women guest• curtsltd to Ille Prtsldent and oddressed his wife, Dolley, •• ''madame presldentess.'' EDITORIAL RESEARCH Until 1817, all inaugurals In the nation's capital v.·ere held in either the Senate or · the House. But that year t~ two chambers of Congress became locked In controversy over whether to UM!: the "fine red chairs" of the Senate or the "plain democratic chairs" of the House. As a result, James Madison took the o&th outside a temporary "Bric'k C&pltol ." The British had burned the old Capitol In 1814. BA.0 WEA.ntER occasionally dims the luster of inaugural ceremonlel. For ex- ample, it was snowing when WUllam Htnry Harrison was sworn in on the East Portico of the Capitol in 1&41. The new President, 68 years old, nevertheless refused to .wear a hat or coat. lf the day Wll wb>cil, so was HJrr1son: It took him nearly two bour!I to read hls Inaugural addrtss, the longest ever made. lie caught cold after' the ~eremony and died a1 month later. THE CENTERPIECE o! any lnaufura· tlon Day ls, of course, the President 1 In- augural addreu. These have ra nged In length frorn Harrison 's 8,5l'Q.word yawn- provoker to the 135 words Washington spoke .after being sworn In for his second tenn. The average 11 about 2,400 word s, which Is almoll preclaely !he lenglh of each of Dw!eht D. El5enhower's ad- drtsses. Measured Pace of Nixon Game Plan WASHINGTON -The measured pace of the Nixon administralion never ceases to surprise and startle. So many of Presi- dent Nixon's decisions run contrary to accepted wisdom, such as lifting man- datory wage-price cootrols at a time when inflation lends to resume its 'Up-- ward course. Or, the predictai> lY wpopu1ar re- sumption of bombing in Hanoi -Haiphong area, which might be resumed again if the peace talks in Paris !ail again. Nixon goes by a measured pace and thi! is wflat Ls least understood about him . · In the fatl of 1971 when Phase rr of economic CQJltrols had barely replaced Phase I. Nixon's economic planners began to chart Phase Ill, ttre lifting of controls. The plan has now advanced by measured stages into Phase m, volun- tarism, which was int.ended in the first place, and is consistent with Nixon's loog-term opposition to compulsory wage- price cootrqts. HE WILL CLAJ!\1 the same con- sistency in te{lllina ting the Vietnam war, (rucHARD WILSO~ which once again appears PQSSible. Here again there is evidence of the measured pace. Early in 1972 Nixon accepted with amazing equanimity the advance of Com- munist regular forces across the DMZ to establish a foothold in the nortbem pro- vinces of South Vietnam. To prevent lbat advance from going too far the President ordered the mining and bombing or HllDQi.Haipbong, and the South Viet- namese army \YBS able to arre§t the ad: vance Y:ith the loss of only one major capital. SUII, the North Vietnamese regular forces did, in fact, establish themselves in the northern provinces of South Viet- nam. This fact widerlies the present shape of the peace negotialions. Nixon's tacit acceptance of tbe presence of the North Vietnamese regular forces in South Vietnam was Ille irreducible price of peace for Hanoi -the recognition of two armies in South Vietnam as reOeC- Ung the realities ol the battlefield. FRO!\t TlilS single point flowed the events which made it conceivable for delays and mishaps, to conditions In Hanoi to agfee to a cuse-fire in place. which Hanoi would agree to a ~ase-flre So there was a perceptible pattern, if not while Saigon still controlled most of the a preconceived design, all through 1972 country. based upqon the creation of real military • ln other matters a measured pace can conditions which Hanoi could consider be perceived. Nixon must have known - acceptable, 8t least for an interim' cettalhly hls~assoclates ·d.Jd know -that period. there was virtually no prospect that Phase I then moved on toward Phase Congress would embrace his massive n, the heavy bombing to coovince Haooi governmentil reorganizatk>n p l a. n .. that it must oow move along tov.:ard the From the beginning, It was implicit actual execution of a cease-fire which did that, <What was deemed the proper not require an overt oommitment to stage, 'tbe President would put this plan withdraw its regnlar troops. into effect by hJs own devices. He has Phase lli, the resumption of bombing done SO, not perfectly but he ha&, in e!- wben Conudlll!lilt delay and treachery feet, combined the functiOllll of several 5abotaged the peace negotiations, could departments u n d e r super Cabinet not be consii:iered a preconceived plan members with Wh!te House status. but Henry A. Killinger evidently left the ~ . . . . Commun1Jt.s In little doubt that further lT IS the same with ~is commitment ~o · would ult cut government spendmg. Congress will ~elay and caphous chan~es res not help him In this, so he ls doing it m a renewal of the bombmg. anyway by stages and phases, ln effect nns ~UMPJ'ION was a hitch in the impounding and refusing to spend money proceedings and matten were oot going appropriated by Congress. at Nixon's measured pace. Thal pace bas It is typical ol the game plan approach nevertheless reeumed, and while at a that many _of Nixon's actions are tem- slower rate than once appeared possible, porarily unpcpular or misunderstood so stiC ran. within a Nixonian game plan. he bas to be endowed with foresight of a He may yet be. able to say that a plan· good outcome and immunity to criticism. ned course of events, from the first He takes second place to no one in these withdrawal of troops onward, led, despite endowments. ·Response to S·enator on Tolerance To I.be EdiLor : In regard to State Senator H. L. Rlchardson's article about Intolerance (Jan. 15), I must agree that there are a lot of things which we should no longer toterate. HERE IS a hiiel list of a few of those things: narrow·Jnindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy, llnwillingness to change for the better, and all those things which violate the Jaws and principles laid down by our Constitution. There are some things that deserve our utmost attention. For example, when we hear the banshee screams of the wom en liberationists, perhaps we should take notice. They are only exercising their freedom of speech, which they were granted along ~with full citizenship back in 1918. U they speak the truth, then maybe we should adjust our views. AS FAR AS the youth ol America goes, it ls my opinion that they are not as 1ad a crop of kids as suggested by the State Stnator. They may have their shortcom- ings, tiUt at least they have the guts to say what's on their minds. If they speak the truth. then we should know It for what it is. In respect to the patriotism af young Amei'icans. I believe It Is as strong aa ever. I believe there are plenty of them willing to defend and even die tor the principles established in our C.On- sUtution. You may have a hard time find· Ing '°meone willing to f I g h l for a iovemment as corrupt as the 011e In south Vietnam, however. The educational. system ma y leave ,....thing to be desired, but when you . ' ~--By George --- Dear Gtarge: Down at the saloon 1'11e met some guys who sa.y )'OU have NEVER followed your own advil't . Rlaht! CYNIC Dear Cynic: Well. I don't know. Some ycur~ ago t advised myself to quit honsst work and !tart writing an advlce column. But if you mean following lhe "advlce"""Jfven fu Olis -eommn. of course, I ~vtn't. MAILBOX Letter1 from readers are welcome. Normally wriUrs ahould convey their tnl1sage1 in 300 word.! or less. Tiu right to condense letters to fit apace or eliminate libel is reserved. AU letters must fnclude signature and mailing address, but names may be withheld on f'equeit if sufficient re a.son i3 apparent. POE!try will not be published. see Arliericans walking on the moon it isn't becawie they're big and strong it is because they are intelligent and educated. M. FAULKNER . Why Gun s? To the Editor: This has reference to the letter about guns from 1.1lchaeJ D. Grant, executive vice president of the Grant .Boys. . JUST TO get the fact& straight guns are manufactured for profit. and the following reason!J: 1. To KIU. humans. 2. To KIU. animal!. 3. To KILL fowl. <. For target practice to better the aim In oroer to kill humanl, to kill animals, to kill fowl. The gun, any gun. is an instrument ol death and thi! is Its ultimate purpose .. ONE CANNOT plct up a newspaper to- d.iy without reading about some precious life being token by a -cun~ lhrough ac- cident or on purpose. We don't bqfn to k110w how life ls created but we surely kflow how to destroy tt. Mr. Grant states that the gun bus:lness ia: rlgldly controlled. Come on Mr. Orant. anybody can buy a gµ11 if he has the money. All buman • helnfl! lose their ttmper at ttrncS': Comb\M-this with the RV&il~blllty of a gun and "·e produce 1nousand, of needless deaths each year , in the United States. What we really need in our society are less CUD dealers and less guns. WARREN I. HENNINGSGARD Where Wu 'Copter'! To the Edl,tor: A3 to the report that our small CGm· munity of Balboa is no longer safe from such infamous crimes as bank robbery, possibly it .ls time we address ounelves to the cred ibility of our controversial new police tactics. Wai the palict helicopter really any coMOlatton for the poor, helpless bankteller, Miss Margaret Alford! ·Was the helicopter in Uae area to usl!t In the apprehension or WU It -1b!Y patrolling aome other area of town? And why would a rtsldent of Bolboa, fully aware · of the helicopter's capabUIUes, not be deterred fnm even the thougbt o! such o crimeT MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM MATISON Sehool Coneerou To the Editor: Ma reply to your editorial, Jan. 11, we would like to clarify some points discussed • MOST EDUCATORS support year- round school as a aolutkln to crowded ocbooix orgbetto p!Oblems. Not one of them cialm.s, 'f Ills prnol, thlt a student's scbolutlc achievement Im· proves from the ochedule chonae· llul, lhe stall at Harper School In Clllto MMa is trying to tell the parents on all-year school u an educatlonal advanlqt without 1boWfnl any lt.ltislkl or studies to bacl< up its claiml. Tbe SlJl>trlnlmdont 11)'9 ,.IHOlllld ocbooi will be opUonaL Wbal ii optlooal about having to cbonge schools! PorUcularly !or parenls with six grtders. parent!. ask why bav' so many districts found all-year school infeasible? Why did our own district show no interest alter paying for studies on four all-year plans? AS PARENTS of childtt.n at Harper SCbool we protest the use of our children for e d u c a ti on a I experimentation, meanwhile disrupting our family life because our older chlldren tn Junior and senior highs are on a regular schedule .. We ask the Khoo! board lo indeed, p~ ceed with caution before committing Harper School to aU·year school by Sept., Im. I COMMJTI'EE Of' CONCERNED PARENTS Bike T-rall Fan To the Editor: I am a atudent at Corona del Mar H)gh School and It bas been brought to my at· tention, as I am a current rider of the new bib traUs, that you have received several letters of complaint regarding lbe dlpo In the trails. This is no letter of complaint, bot merely a letter of apprectaUon and thanks to U-who pelltioned and sup- ported construct\on of the bike traUs. Dips or no dips, we are all most thankful. I THACY WESTERWELL OU.NGI COAIT DAILY PILOT Robtrl N. \Vtrd., Publbhtr Tltumat Ketoll, Editor Barbcta Krtlbich Edltorlld Pa gt £dilor The edltnrtal l"'S:::C •lf 1he Dally Pilot tttk' t,e lnrnrm 11.nd 1tlmu· !alt ~11.dcrs by J1tt1tn1lnl{ \hi• rkwapaptt'a OJ)lnlont •nd mm• mentary on to11lct of \nttrc11t 11.nd .~li.-nlflcantl', by !)M)\1dlnic a forum -f'!lr -tM-t":~ton nf our 1"dcn° opl nlons, and by 11rt'9<tnlinJt 1hr dl\'tnc vl~1JO\nl11 of lnfonncd ob· ttrvcin and 1poketmrn Qn loplcs YOU APPROVE or the way the lloard Is approaching all-year school cautJC)\.lSly. Harper school wants to put our children ori all·year school by next fall. We m aakln& !or mo111 lnvest!iallon before the change Is made. Many--distficts 11o.. wined all·)'t•r- school. It Is not • new t..00. ll bu been around at lee.st 10 years. We, 11 involved cf_the di)+,__ .... Friday, January 19, 1973 / • -~~~~ge . Coa~t -="· . -.. EDIT.ION . , L. 66, NO. 19, 4 SECTIONS, '16 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDA'(, JANUARY 19, 1973 By GEORGE LEIDAL ... Of tllt Dallr Pll9t '"" 1'l'm Timothy'1 love. I've traveled with him for two months and I've come with hlm to Los Angeles to free him. I've come-M>-&peak-to-P-r.uident-Nixoo,!!...tbe petite, mou:iy-haired British subject ac- companying · Or. Timothy Leary to Los Angeles said Thursday. , (See stories, picture, Pitge 3.) Identifying herself as Joann~ Harcourl- Smith and as a "resident of the U.S.," the mystery woman declined to give any but her maiden name and refused to ' comment on the present status of her marriage to an 1Y1identified Washington man. . ·"I'm ia cj~n of the world. My mother was Polish, my°'ldtber~ritish. t was born in Switzerland and~I haVe a· son born In Greece and linother born ln America," the 26-year old, self-proclaimed authoress or a book on "Freedom" said. . "I'd been looking for Timothy ' all my life. I found him two months ago. Jt was onJy natural we should meet sin~ I wrote a boo't that sold 100,000 copies in Europe. It was al>out freedom," Miss Harcourt-Smith said. "Timothy's written a book. lt will be published by Bantam," she said ex· plaining how the convicted dope advocate was financing the recent portions of his 8-1nont.h exile abroad, fleeing U.S. authorities. · She said she joined him in Switzerland, al .cks c TEN CENTS made a [ilm with Leary i~ Austria traveled with him to Beirut, Lebanon ''whef~ we were treated like kings" and was at his side in Kabul, Afghanistan when U.S. ofifclals caught up with him, took away his Invalidated passport and escorted him to Los Angeles via Frankfurt, Paris and London. "It really wasn't very elegant the way they snatched his passport from his hands. They said It wasn't valid. But we (See LEARY, Page%) Agnew Off Vietnam? White House Mum"on Vice President's Trip From Wire Services i'he White House today declined to con· . firm or deny a broadcast report that Vice President Spiro T. Agnew will go to Saigon Jan. 28 -presumably to conduct post-peace agreement talks ¥.i.th Presi- dent Nguyen Van Thieu. · itialing of a Vietnam cease-fire agree- ment." . Asked about the repprt, White Hou se press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said: "I will not have any comment on that. I a~ not going ta..tomment one way or' another on anY' speculation -whether it is right or wrong." ' The White House spokesman said President Nixon conferred for more than an hour this morning with Henry A. Kiss-• inger, chief U.S. peace.negotiator. Kiss- inber will leave for · ParllJ Monday to rE:sume private talks with Hanoi's Le· Due TIJo. fl. 1'-loorer, chairman of tbe Joint Cltie{s of Staff, and otners. Don Webster, acting CBS bureau chier in Saigon, said President Thieu rece.lved the letter from President Nixon on '11lursday .. Informing him of Agnew's plans. The Jetter \\•as delivered by U.S. Am bassador Ellsworth Bunker, the The Columbia Broadcasting Company said from SaigOn that a visit by Agriew appa rently was intended "to coincide closely with the signing or at least the in· Ziegler likened his no-cilmment tq .re· cen~ similar responses he made to reports of developments in peace negotiations. While i11 Washingtcin the past two days, Ziegler · said, Kissinger conferred in person or by telephone with Secretary of State William. P. Rogers, Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird, Adm. Thomas • network reportea, ~ contained the following passage from Nixon to Thieu : (See AGNEW, Page Z) . . I . , . . ' DAILY ,.ILOT ...... ., Lie""" 'HE'.S B.EAUTIFUl:;•A-!E'S "!.KING' SAY$ l;EARY FRIEND . ~ ' .loon'?" HOrco\orf.~1.th i;,\f"d Rela~hip. 'Perle~ ~ov•' , bhispo;id Satitii Barliarli ~ ~ .. ' ' .• , I . PiQ.ut from Savage Rain • • c I ' ... ' . ' ' · From · Wire Services <sAN LOIS OBISPO -A state ol eillergency was declared lhiouahout San tilis 'Obispo County as the worst rainstorm in four years sen~ nOod wafers ~g 'into ddwntown 11treets· here; 'Cl.It· ti;ig oft communications, out of the city a@il fcfrclng scboola . to close. (Related p.ltture, Page 5 J. · :.With a prediction of more rain today, • tlil! stale ·,Office of Emergency Sei'vlces ..i.i It was ke<pbig a clo;e watch-on lhe coonly u well as l!tmta Barbara County '°'1he mlh which has "reached a polnl of··aI.rDalt ComRiete saturation." · :The storm. Which spread throughout SoutberD caruorrua W1y Thursday, dumped! more than tJµ:ee in~ or rain over coastal•areas and brought.a. total of 6,3 inches lo the area since Tuesday. Som< stieeli In SID 1<Ws Obispo W<1" four feet deep rn ,water ~ay mom-i1!J but U.. _ d<luge recOded by ml<!af: tei'nooll. . ' • ··More .than 100 cars in the city were damaled by the stonn but no ~ iD- jurieS ..... roported, police said. Floodwaters closed off road! at bolh tfli southern and northern endo .of Ille cl- tj for J1Ume. ' • ' ..,,.._ of bomeo!men In Loi Qoos "!"1 Bay.wood Park, lmmedla!Oly IOOlh of San Luis Obispo, were isolated for par.t of the day. In nearby Laguna Lake, a number of homes were flooded. H.omes and buildings were also flooded to the S4).ltb in the San Fernando Valley. Up lo 7.5 inohes 9f ratn fell al San MarcOs Pass near S:anta Barbara, and in Ventura County, flood waters ripped up sidewalks, exposing utility pipes in .some areas. CJearing skies greeted Northem JJalifon:iians today as they cootinued to (See OBISPO, Page %) Harbor Summer ' Dates-Revealed Summer classes at elementary and in-· ten:Decuate schools in the Newport-Mesa Unified· School District will -run from J~e·25·tb July 30 and at high" schools from June 2S to Aug. 13, Superintend~nt J~ ~icoll said Thursday. An eatlier story reported 1.bat .Newport· Men trus~s established, June 18' to , Aug. 11 as the SUJll!llef school 'period. br .. Nicoll leiq>lalned Iba~ those dates were ·onlY bomularJea wiUUn which~ the classes could be \&et; Dot the a c tu a I schedWe. J ; • • • Twelve elementary and six in· terme.diate scboo'ls wifl ofrer classes for the. five-week perjod and four high schools will be open for the seven-week summer session. ... / Water ·Clash On V e~sailles Facing Court, A battle between the Costa Mesa Coun· ty Water District aDd the city of New- port Beach over• water sales rigbll In the Versailles area ~ beaded for Su- ·periol"-eourl. H. Rodier HQWe'll. attomey foc t h e ~ water diSUiCt, said be expects tO file a suit against Newpart Beach by mid-week asking ttie return of .. improperly taken" lerritory .. The disputed area involves about 24 acres in the Versailles apartment .. area ~ on the Gagney property. The land, situa- ted on a bluff off Superior Avenue near Hoag Hospital, was unincorporated terri- tory until aMexed by Newport Beach two years ago. · Alvin Pinkley, a director of the water district, said Costa Mesa did not object to annexation of the property by New- port Beach even though the area lies within the water district boundaries. But water district officials be c a m e angry when the city of Newport Beach began serving the area with water. Al· though the a r e a is part of Newport Beach, it is being contended by t h e Costa Mesa watennm that they still . ·haVe the right to ·~ water there. "This means an estimated $25.000 a year Jn estimated gross revenue th a t we're losing," sa id Pink1ey "We're the ones that should be servicing that area." The jurisdictional question bas been under negotiation between officials from Newport.Beach and the Costa Mesa Coun- ty Water District and hope has been ex- pressed for an out~f-court settlement. "I think Newport Beach is interested . in some kind of setUement," Howell said this rooming. "But up to the point the negotiations have not exactly been en· couraging. They're the kind that could go on and on like those. in Paris." - Stare said the changes in the Phase. II plan, in addition to the long delay, have co.st his firm "millions of dollars." "I persoo.ally think we have arrived at something' that will change the minds of the peopfe who have opposed the proj- ect," Stare said, "We ha ve certainly worked hard to do so." Stare said he thinks developers are changing moods of people and governments in regard le. development and the ecology. Thieves Ransack Two: Adjoining Mesa Bµildings Soutla ·f:oast Pla:a ... . ..... , . ,""' , ' DAILY ,.,_., lt¥f hllt POLICE AID MOTORIST AS RAINS FLOOD COSTA MESA Some'Aui1t1nce Wu Needed 1t An1heim and 19th Straet Another · Inch of Rafufall Drenches Coastal · Cities . '. By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of IM 'o.Uy ,Utt S\1H • Rain ·drenched.. Orange c.o..inty citie! again Thursday night , durhping more than an inch of water in som-e coastal regions and creating flood conditions that created more of a nuisance than posing a real threat. Today's return of fair skies is expected to continue at least through Saturday. Thursday 's late arriving storm, follow- ing on the heels of a heavy downpour Tuesday. raised the precipitation totals of a:: cities to new highs, well ahead of last year. IN HUNTINGTON BEACH: Rain watchers reported that the • new downpour created several minor traffic accidents but no serious damo.ge. The same held tru~ for the neighboring com· munity of Fountain Valley. Rainfall in both cities Thursday w a s .67 inches and raJses the season total to (See RAINFALL, Page %) City Will Make Survey on Mesa Sign Ordinance How do you eos·ta Mesa? feel about the signs in · Jf you're a businessman or one or 1,425 people selected by the planning depart· ment for its sign survey, you'll get a chance to 90Wld off next week. B•ralars killed two biroJ • wtib )one sloDe early Thunday by ransacking two adjaCeat Coota Mesa buslnesaes -a b11T and a MOlican r..taufant. Oflloail said the borglars amaslJ!d In he l!Ull window of'"The Place," a beer- ber al 2515 Newport Boulevard where Tr~(fic · Experiment · Set Planning Director William L. Dunn says the survey will he.Ip Ilia staff draw up 1 new ordinance for Costa Mesa designed to reduce the sign poUutioo in commercial areas of the city. The survey being sent to residenll con- siflts of m:ily four multiple choice qut,._ lions. Surveys received by the ap- proximately IOO Costa Mesa businessmen will be a bit more detailed, according to Dunn. u.ty mno't'ed a color TV aet valued at· Traffic engineers.. next Monday will p . launch an experiment on C<d:ta Mesa's Then they moved through a hallway Bristo.I Slreel to determine !'lH:ili<r clog- abd Jn• the Margarita restaurant and " •--·lb ,. Pl took ,1 camera, stereo equipment, and an ged · condi~iaoJ near .-JU\! ·....,.a.st au eiectl-lc oddlng machine. The Items taken can be improved. · from the restaurant were valued at f4.3b . The.f hope lo do, this by providing a The owners or both businesses reported free Oowing oUramp on Bristol Street to Jn.-tptors !bat Ibey bad been for !raffle eastbound on the San Diteo vlsited by "nspidow>" per1ons the day Freeway. That means persons using the before lhe burglary. Bristol S1reot ollramp lo .. , lo !be $001>' One ol lhe rmaur.,it worten uld sbo ping -.,. wW 'IQ, loager be r:«iulred to bad 1-1 cqotacted; by an unldentll!ed • .top beftlro Ibey metge= wiib Brlllol female caller wbo claimed she was with &reel ~ a -burglar alarrn fiim and illquiml Colla M-Tralllc El1glneer Mike Bow wlictlier 111e M.,-i.a.ift.aiannl n -.uld durin& blgl1 sbopplng period• there didn't. frequently la a line backed from the · .. . • • I Br~tol intersection onto lbe eastbound relieving the congestion created by the offramp. The problem Is created becatJSe problem of .accommodating eastbbund Id traffic into the plaza will be ooughl" of vehiclei either stopping or yle. lng By Monday plans are to merge Bristol when exiting the ramp on Bristol. from f.hrtt Janes into two lanes by put. Bow added that the noo-ttop offramp ting up a large lane merging sign, In· will require the State Division of stalling diagonal striping and arrows, Highways to close one or lht three north· and removing the existing lane mar~g1 _bound lanes on Bristol as it approache. several huhdre.d reet in advance ot (be South Coast Plata. two lane section. "Tiie • tl])<rlmfnl will dclermlnc lndicaUons are UiaL there will be min- whether fhe dlmnce from the offramp to Imai Inconvenience to the public because lhe entranc:a of the pliu la sufficient to of llii lane m!ucllon, ac<e>rdlni lo Bow. allow vehicles to weavo froru lhe right Obaervationl 'indlcato U.t lllere are lane lo the lefl lane to make the entrance 1ignllicanUy feWft' motorists> Uling the inlo the plaza," Bow said. _ rlghl-hand No. 3 lane lhan th Jell and "U It's UDSUCC"811i.1~-=-;a!_mlddlLJioJ.and..No..l;m ..... _ • • ~· .... Questions in the survey ask whether signs have a positive or a negative effect on city appearance, Whetbe.r certain typet should be regulated more or less .llutn Ibey are currenlly, whether the •I>' pearance of sij;na: in specific d.istrlcta ts attractive or unattr..ctive, and what type of sign mlrictiooa Coota Mesa should adopt, Coate Mesa Is curr<nlly In lhe opening days of a llt<Olld IO-<lay moratorlwn on all new •l&nln&· Members of the city c:ouncll uealed tho mcr>lorium. to ~nlop I ol a 1trictU ' \....... _ __, ' r· • B·ugging Case Arrests Told By Witness WASHINGTON (UPI) -The pros· eCution's star witness in the Wate1'gate bugging trial testified today he· walcbed helplessly from a nearby balcony as polfee. '11P8nned into Derriocratlc Party ~ and caught nve men tprlng to plant bllP. · AUred C. Baldwin III, an ex-FBI lgent who said be. had been hired to monJtor the tapped telephones of higb-le:vel Democrata, testified that he tried to alert colleagues by walkie-talkie radio, but failed. Baldwin resumed testimony as a three· judge appeals court ruled, 2 to .1, that he would not be allowed to testify as to·the substance of telephone conversations among top-ranking Democrats on which he eavesdropped . Baldwin's testimony was interrupted Thursday when a group of Democratic Party workers objected to admisskJll of the content of bugged convenatklll. The develoPments came on the 10th day of tbe Watergate trial, in which. only two of tbe seven men originally indicted in the June 18 break-in and bugging are being lried. The olhen entered-luflty pleas. . Testifying_ as to what happened on. the night in question, Baldwin said : "I called, 'Base to unit one; Bue~to any wiit' " when he saw casuaOy dressed men with guns drawn on the balcony of t~ ) Democratic National Committee at lhe Wat ergate complex across the street. "A voice answered and said, 'What have you got?' I uked him .:'How are our people dressed?' The-voice asked me, ·w~y?' I said, 'Well, we've got some trouble . There are .some people: there tn casual clo~ and they've got their \l.'eapons drawn.' " Baldwin, promised immunity from pros· ecutlon In evchange for 'teltlmony, aakl he shouted hb warning lo the unnamed penon Bl the other end of the watki .. talkie u he saw a number of uniformed police arrive at the Watergate'. Oraage C:Out Weather It'll be sunny and warmer on Saturday, with blgha In the tlOa and lower 70s along the Onmge Coasl. Lows tonlgh~ from the blgb lOa to the low :tos. " INSmE TODAY \Vhu would l1Do tlt>ic lighl Opdra compcnU1 15 mile1 apart wont to revive a show llkt "KU· ?Mt" at U1e aame timet The remon i1 txplaintd in the Inter· mi$.tion column bt todov's Week· ender. . ' - • ' , I 1, . , -....... -· ~ ... B•• E~eptioas I . . 1 Caspers Attacks aillboafd . l!olicy \ . Leary Back In Courity lllpplo ~snlr."Timolh)' . Leary.<tlfii hoine to Orlnfl• Caun· ly today. Shtrirrs Lt. Richard Tbn.boe c.'On- tlnned Dr: Uary'• I p.m. arrival al OrlUJie County JaJI where he'll await court action on hJs 19 count& of smuglloa and conspiracy to Supervisor Rona1d W. CtS2Crs of step' backward In ow-battle lo aave the inlUggle dangerous druga, (or his Newport Beach reacted bitterly to environment Wednesday when the board alleged.role In tl)e Brotherhood of Wedne:Kiay't dec:l.slon ·of the board ex-succumbed lo the prtSSures Of the .Etemal Love. eluding lndumlal ""'" from hlghw•y billboard Industry. Leary, 5%, formerly oJ Lagun,• ' billboard problblUoa. .. 'Biiiboard Alley' along the San(a Beach and later C.lllomlo Mens CaJllDg the s.; vole "one of \he Ao..S.o Diep freeways north or Laguna -,. 'l\~//'t,., 8:"~ ~1:fo'· 1,1 f.:1n~ grea~t dlsappolatmenl! Of my '"°~ls Lilsure World I! a disgraceful ... beld In lieu or IS million 'ball. years 1n ollice" Caspers Thursday coo-ample of pe.nnitted misuse or open Unued, "J believe tbt county took a great space," be charged. Country Club Puts Flag Back To Full Staff "1 worted hard over a year and a half ago to J<l l!1e board to adopt an o~ that · would remove the ~ billboards from alonpkle freeways In three years lime," he cooUnued. ---·~nu Ucktaa away and soon tho<e WIS!gbtly, bllg6tfUI billboards would have been com.Ing down. However, Wednesday that progressive ac::Uon was revtrSed when the board chanaed the ordlnan<e to exclude lndUltrlaf areas from the law. Th1t land aJong the freeway above El Toro Road ls a manufacturing zone," he contJnued. l'rotllPllfle l LEARY ... She c1ep1ore<1 Leary's meat anc1 1<11r jams "for smokinf only two butts" and' vowed, "He ktiows I love him aDd am going to free hlm. We're all goln1 to tree:" blm." THIS IS THE CRACK IN WALL OF SEVEN.YEAR-OLD SAN JOAQUIN RESERVOIR Flaw Forcti Closure of Facility Abovt Newport Be1ch; Offici1l1 Blamt Subsidtnce Some Harbor Area residents passing the Irvine Coast Country club in Newport Beach recently have noted with interest that lhe huge U.S. flag is llying at tull stall desplle the 3lkl•y mourning period for the late Presldeot l!lllT)' Truman. Caspers aald the people al bis filth district hid 1ooa upresaed their desire for JOrne dramatic acdon to cl.ean up the blight along fr<ewaya. "It la very disap. polnUn1.to wort,. hard on a project and then, a year and a half later, to have your efforts reverted," be charged. "I believe It Is all perfect be sboold< have. come back to the United States,"· used It in five different countries and 1t· said it was good Wltll 1974," Mias Harcourt-Smith said. From Page 1 OBISPO ... recover from a proceSsion of Pac ific stonns. The National \\'e.atber Service prom· ised most I y fair weather through Saturday except for some cloudtnd's in lhe extreme northern mountains and some patchy momin1; fog int. the Sacramento and San Joaquin valleys. "There are still some fronts lying off the coast, but the high pressure system inland will hold them off. probably throughout the w_eekend," ~ weather --servtcc spokesman safd. The state Ofnce {'; Emergency Service:; estimated s ~or m ·re I ate d damage caused by the two stonns in h-farin County alone at $4 million. From Page 1 AGNEW ... "We have been together in "'ar, let's be together in peace." 11eanwlille, Secretary or Defense ~1.elvin R. Laird said today there is no ·way to assure lasting peace in Soo~t Asia but declared that Administration policies will end American involvement .. in the fighting there. The secretary called the ouUook for peace in Southeast Asia and the rest of lhe world "better" al the present lime. But he recalled that the war in Vietnam · has continued for l? years and could never assure that tbe )lhoQting wilt stop . . no matter what p e a c e agreemen. JS signed. Former Newport Carpenter Dies; Services Slated FWleral services are scheduled Satur· day for George Gilbert "Gil" Millikin, former carpenter for the city of Newport Beach for 13 years and former Costa f\-tesa resident, who died Tuesday. He "·as 74. Mr. Millikin moved to Desert Bot Springs after retiring in 1963. i-le had liv- ed in Costa ~lesa for 17 years and was a member and treasurer of the Newport Harbor Elks Lodge 1767 and a past master of the Laguna Beach Masonic Lodge No. fin , F&AM. He was native of ·Buena Park. He leaves his wife, Ruth. of the family home: two sons. George and Harold oth of Costa Mesa: 13 and · , and great· 1 • Services \\'ill be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Winbigler Mortuary. Santa Ana . with the Laguna Beach Masonic Lodge officiating. Burial will follow at El Toro Cemetery. OIA.N~E. eoAST CM DAILY PILOT ' "TM cnn.. Caei1t DAIL'f PILOT, 'fflnl Wlllcll h cornbk>ed the H._,,..._ 11 l!Vblill!N llf Ille Ol>•nge Coad Pllbl~lrig Comptriy. S.., ratt fd!Hclnl •l"I PV11lls11'4, Mll"ld1y ~ Frld1y, Tor c~. M1'$1, NltWPOrt lllKtl, HuntfftttOn lffdl/Fount1hl Vt!ley, U9'ol\9 lu.:h, lrvl!MfSaddic.d: ..... SM! Clemtntt/ Sin Ju111 C1pblr-. A 1h19!e rt19lon1I . ftll!'°'1 11 puoJls,.td Sllunltys Ind Sundin. The prlndPll puflllilllntl pltnt Is •I )JO we-11 81Y $1rNt, CMl1 Mest, C1U'°"'T1, fl'lf. R.oberl N. W11d f'rnld~t •nd Publ11Mr J1c:k R. C1.1rl1y VII:• ffttklsil tnd ~ ... I Mllll ... Tltom11 Ktt'llil Editor Tiiom11 A. Murplii"' Mtntlll!'lll Edilor Ch1rt11 H. L..ot lic:h1N '· Hill Aulltartt M11111t1nt MllDn c..... ..... OM&. JJO W11t l1y Street Maili•t Adir.11; ,,0, lox li~O, 92626 0....0ffluo """'°"' IHc:ll! l)U Hewporl llllllMrd Lt11-INdl: m ,_, lli- HU1111"91911 BtKll: 1111J lucll eou1..-1n1 :Jen Ck!'Mftt.: llH Horii\ EL CtmlM lt .. I Tel ..... (7141 642·4lJt CtetllRH A ......... HJ·f671 ' Coorrlll!t, Tf72, 0,..,. CNtl Pullllllllnl C"""ny. Ht ~ 1tol"tn, Uhltlr1tlon1, edllorlll N""' Oil" H"""'-'-tlll"I. ~' bf ·~-•llfllut tpKlll ,.... m1'lloll of COf!Yrlpit ...,., SfC'Ollf C:llM MlltOI Niii If Celle Nitti, c.111on1r1. Milllcr•111111 • un-w n .u ll'IOll!ftlr1 b.-mill U .l.f rnanlltll'; mlllfwY ctt1tll'lli1lon1 Sl.6$ ,,_.,,,.,, A few have gone so far as to suggest Co11sultants Assert Crack that the club, a bast.Ion of Republicanism \.\'ith pictures of President Nixon prom- inently displayed in the men's .. locker roon1. isn't honoring Truman because he was a Democrat. He said Orange County I! known as one of the most advanced areas in California for leadershlp in the field ol en- vlronm<ntal protection. "It I! shameful to reverse our efforts to do our share of the cleanup," he concluded • In Reservoir No Peril Not so, says the club's p r o shop operator, who is responsible for raising and lowering the Flag each day. "That 3().day period was only ror govemm('Jlt offices," said Gene Davis. • Independent consultants from the Los Angeles Department-of \Valer and Pov.·er have determined that a ~foot long Mr. Etheringto~ Of -G>sta Mesa Dead · at 100 A private family burial was held today for 32-year-ald C.osta Mesa resident William Jame.s Etherington who died Tuesday at the age of 100. Mr. Ei.bermgl.ntl was a native of Michigin 8iid spent ?nost of 1~ to 1930 as a railroad engineer for m~y com- panies including the Santa Fe and the Southern Pacific railroads. He was a firem.ari on the Illinois Cen- tral Railroad at the .outbreak ' of the Spanish-American War and be joioed a volunteer troop from Illinois that was sent to join .the Rough Rider> in San JUan, Puerto Rico. He &el'\led ~ as a Navy' chief machinist for (~r years afterthe lurn ol the century. Before retiring ln 1930, he ran Joaing engines In Oregon. Mr. Etherington was an active member of the Santa Ana chapter of the Spanish-runerican War Veterans until it disbanded in 1972, a member of the American Legion and of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. "We observed it for two weeks and then crack in a wall of the San Joaquin raised the Flag back to tur staff:• Reservoir in Irvine poses Do hazard to Davis said there is no poliUcal reason life and property in nearby devel~ for the action. He said il was simply a ments. William Hurst, manager of ~ decision he made in regard to b1a Flag Irvine Randi Water District (ffiWD), duties. said today. "After all," Davis observed, "they U.S. Postpones Skylab Launch IRWD is the OM!<LOLihe.9TLmilJio!-di~•Jliave t_be Flags_at~tha~ ..):.TD~l -Mi . .l :U.,.,.,__ · gallon:np:mty reservoir, whlCh is still at tilfitaff.•l U lW tF'"J.T.1«-J~---=- shut down pending study and repair of the crack in the south wall. CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) -The launch 1. can be fully repaired, Hurst em· Bla.ze Triggered or America's Skylab spaee Blallcn was phasized. An Offi cial from the delayed today for at least two weeks, r.1etropolitan \Vater District (MWO) from April 30 to sometime in May :U,:'~y';:!~ri:,.1\'.:::.,,rv;~ By Frencli Fries 00eauseo11agglng test1ngoperauoos. ' to residents. 1be space ageocy said a new launch The crack was discovered last October D K • he date for the natioo.'1 fint manned "~ the reservoir was ~ to allow estroys . !tc n orbiting laboratory will not be determJn. far its -Cll'St cleaning m abc:llft seven -ed tmtil addiUonal tests are <mDpletld. years. A Costa Mesa couple with a yen for ~ ....... When the water pressure in the French fries could have done better by Skylab is a M-too spa~. station ~ reservoir went down, the balance going out for a lS<ent bag of them ed to be occupied by three crews of three ., between that and the pressure behind tbe Thursday night and probably would have met. each for a total of fi~ months over clay aod asphalt surfat"e ll!'as destroyed. nvoided a $3,000 fire. . an el&ht-mootb period to see bow w As~ result, Hurst explained today, the Investigators for tbe Costa Mesa...Firt .... men ·can live-and~.w.ark in $p!ig f clay line« pushed through aod crackl!d Department said the kilch<n of the David ks 1 ll --·- tbe asphalt surface. Derby home at 3274 California Ave., w ee 8 ~ mt. An engineer's report on how much the virtually destroyed by the blaze. $2·b1llion project was scheduled to repairs will cost and how. long lbey will Flame& had completely env the be ~Pleted by .Christmas this y~,1Wt take .... due at the mwo olflce thiJ kltcbem ..... when firemen commanded th aanc~ delay means'the program Will afternoon. . by Batlalion Chiel Gary Golson arrived eltend Into early 19'14. Until be studies that, Hurst said, be shortly after 11:15 p.m. authorities said. Astn:::1auts Chafles ''Pete" Conrad, Dr . c~'t say how much longer the reservoir Smoke damage w~s re po r t e d Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weitz will will be shut down. . throughout the rest of the house, con-be the first to occupy the house-siled But the general m~e.r estimated a tributing to the $3,000 loss. laboratory. They were scheduled for · two to three month penod. Firemen said Mrs. Derb¥ -was heating launch May l, but th~lr flight will be oil for French-fried potatoes and left for delayed until one day after Skylab is a few minu~. returning '° find the over-launched unmanned into a 270..mlle high healed grease had "l'loded into flames. orbit. After Afabanlstan autbor1tles deported LelJ')I, and wtthou\ his pauport, Lear) accompanied the olllcen willingly, ahO said. "Everybody was ,very nice to 01 all the Wly bore .. We could hove escaped oplQ in Frankfurt. 1'Four days ago he said he was so ha~ PY to be going home -even to ~· He's mastered freedom 110 completely be can be free any-where," she said. she added. . "He was so ~PPY when he saw the Pacific Ocean agaln," sbe aald recallliit< hi! mood u the jumbo jet "Clipper Re<! Jacket" turned to make its 1pproach to U.. Angeles lnternallooal Airport ·-4:30 p.m. 'l'lwr!day. Wblle her "perfect love" was removed from .the plane in hand<Ulfl and under guard of both federal and U.. Angel .. ~uthortlies, Ml.ss Harcourt~th. aga.lnst whom police said no charKes were pend- ing, left the airplane v i 1 the rouUne customs check. She said a doctor confirmed that sh<\ had serum hepatiUs -"it's not con- tagious" -when the plane landed. The illnes.s sbe said led ~ to begin Lil five<DWltry flight which resulled In hit being apolled ~y U.S. _ olflciall.J11 Afghanistan. Desj>lte the lack or .... , tradition !Hlty wtth the u.s. Afghanistan authorities apparent l '1 cooperaled In the tumoV<r. · woman, believed to be the daug of a British publisher, said she contra hepatitis while the pair were lit-' making the anU-addictioo film: ~ "On birthdiy, Jan. 13, I became W. Tim omised to take me somewhere I've never been and get me to a hospital," slle ,said. .. That trip: led1to.iwbll the claimed WU the "illo(al¥ removal of Leary'i pwporC and tbe pair's "free ride" to ~ At.geles. "I've never been here bef'ore. It WU a lovely Oigbt at the U.S. gov~rq,ent1,1 ~-pe.nse" . . • Sbe · ftrSt said she planned to go to a; hospital, before finding a place .. near t.o- hlm, near the jail so I can free him." He leaves his wife, Ida May, of the family bcime at 12.8 E. Wilson St.; two sons, William, Jr. of Costa A-fesa and Robert Etherington of Newport, Oregon: a daughter, Mrs. Helen Fitzpatrick of South Gate; eight grandchildren and nine great·grandchildren. CLEARANCE SALE CONTINUES Burial took place at Ft. Rosecrans Na· lional Cemetery, Poinl r'.Oma, San Diego. Frem Pagel RAINFALL ... 8.04 inches. That CQmpare to S.20 inches at this lime last year and a season total of 5.79 inches for .the ~ntire 1971-n ra in season. ~ IN COSTA MESA: Neither the fire nor the police department reported any significant problems as a r result or the latest downpour. Police Lt. Austin Smith said there was a rise in traffic accidents but that there were nu injuries. No rain· fall figure was. available. JN NEWPORT BEACH: Driving rain triggered widespread nuisance nooc1ing in lo\\'·lying areas of the city and fears were renewed that the onrush of water down San Diego Creek might carry away the old bridge on MacArthur Boulevard. Crews worked for several hours pump- ing out the hardest • hit Dood areas. There was some mu4 runo[f in parts ol the city but no roads were closed with the exception of a short stretch on h-1acArthur Boulevard. Tra!l\c was in· terrupted until 6 p.n1 . to inspect the bridge. JN LAGUNA BEACJI : Ra inwater cascading down Park avenue caused nooding along Forest Avenue and minor damage to some downtown stores. Ex- zctly 1.3 inches of rain soaked the city during the storm. Water rose up to the sldcwalk level on Forest Avenue · and seeped Into Fairchild Stamps, 310 Glenneyre and New Direc- tions, 265 Forest Ave. Other merchants were forced to sandbag the area in front of their stores. IN THE SOUTH COAST area: Ra infall amounted to more than one Inch and caused cars lo stall and s-.verPI lo spin out on freeways ln Mls$iOn Viejo and Laguna Hills. The latest storm brought the month 's ralnfall to a hefty 2.9 loches In San Clemente Rnd about lhe same for San Juan Capistrano. makl.ng January already an unu sually wet month. In the central county area: The storm J brougfil . 73 loches of rain to S.nta Ana making the total for the-year 8.87 incbea, more than doublr: the 4.43 inches of last year. TONIGHT COSTA MESA CMC PLAYHOUSE - "You're a Good Man, CbarUe Brown," tonight, Saturday and Swiday, 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday matinee 2:30 p.m. Admission $2 for matinees and $2.50 for evening performances. 834-5300. SAN FRANCISCO OPERA -Touring subsidiary presents La Traviata, com- plete opera sung in English, OCC Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. AduJts, $2, Students $1. ' . OCC FILM SERIES -"Sweet Sweel- back's Song," Forum, 7 p.m. Admission SL UC! -DANCE CONCERT -Program presented by graduate students in dance. Studio Theater, Fine Arts Village, Friday and Saturday 8 p.m. Admission $1. WRESTLING -0CC vs. San Diego h1esa, OCC Gym, 7:30 p.m. BASKETBALL -Magnolia al Es\an- cia., 8 p.m. Mesa at Los AJamitos, 8 p.m. Newport Harbor at Santa Ana , 8 p.m. ALL-CAL TOURNAMENT. UC! host, Crawford Hall, Tonighl and Saturday, 8 p.m. "PLAY STRINDBERG" -South Coast Repertory Theater, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 8 p.m . SATORDAY, JAN. 20 LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Movies for all ages: "Dracula" and "Skater, Dater." 10:30 a.m. "GREENING THE RIVER" -Help plant ice plant along Santa Ana River levee. Bring hoe and bucket. West levee from •1amihOn to AUanta Avenue between 8 a.m. and noon. OCC EXHfBIT -"Photographs of a New Guinea People," OCC Llbrary, 2nd floor, through Feb. 18. .... JOSE LIMON DANCE CONCERT - OCC Auditorium. 8:30 p.m. Admission: Adults $3, Students $1. ucr DANCE CONCERT -Studio Theater, Fine Arts Village, t p.m. Ad- mission Sl . BASKETBALL -ALCA;AL TOURNA- A1ENT. UCI Host . C:rawford Hall. 8 p.m. ."PLAY STRINDBERG" -South Coosl Repertory Theater, 8 p.m. SUNDAY, JAN. It MIDWINTER CHORAL CONCERT - OCC Chorale and Chamber Singers, OCC Auditorium 8 p.m. No charge. SOPRANO RECJT AL -By Nancy Bramlage, UCI School of F I n e Arts, Village Concert Hall, 8 p.m. Featuring many fine collections from such well known lints as HENREDON, HERITAGE, DREXEL, MARGE CARSON, SHERRILL, WOOOMARK, end othirs , , • ell sukt_~ntielly reduced. The large_Jt selection of qu&lity upholstery is now on displ•y end ready for i~mediate delivery. Save now. Henredon Alver1do lshownl On Sele Now DREXEl:-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMAIU(-KAllASTAN INTERIORS WllllDATS I SATURDATS f:OO le l1JO ..ioA \' 'TIL f :00 NEWPORT IEACH e 1127 WfSfCL IFf Dl., "42·2051 LAGUNA BEACH e 141 NOATH COAST HWY. ,f .,,.,,,, TORRANCE e !JM! HAWTHQANf IL~,Jl·l i1t • . · Wavu Road • Pt•llnltlff E~cted · Budget Astmuids _ ---. -I GO~ Legislator / SAciwlENro-(AP.)---A 1eadlnc Republlcan lawmaker says be Is "astounded" at the site of Gov. Ronald Reagan's It.I billion budcet for tile fiscal year •lartlnr July I. Aaaemb~ John Stull, a caodldate for a vacant San lltego state Senate sest, added Thur9day, "I eipect tile legis- lature to do some pruning." Stull joined Democratic critics In saying,_ "I C8JlQOf. aee the reasons for such 1 massive increase in our state budget ..• I Wnk the people continue to want fi!ca1 e@Mmy, not budgetary expansion ... In a 11.t1>UllonSilflilus al ~ · end of the comJng fbca1 year. A BA. 'ITLE ls expected over dlsposlllon of tile surplui. A!semhly Speaker Bob Moretti s a Id tile ODe-<:e!t sales tu: tncreue can be delayed for a year and a ball -WKll January, 1175-by us- ing tile surplus. Unless tile Legislature acts In the meantime, the sales tax increase from fiv_e to six cents pef dollar In most of Cali!omia takes effect June 1. A rood to the King Salmon fishing area on Humboldt Bay near Eureka is lash· ed by waves that tossed boulders on the route. The budget is IU bilUon larger than the cu~t state spending plan and would result "We have been able to pro- vide homeowner property tax relief, provide new money for schools, and at the same time, to -acrumulate a surplus · wltllout tile lieeesslty of Im- posing new taxes on the average Californian," MoretU said. Stones Boll • ID LA Navy HuntS For Gigi By Radio 18,600 Fans See Benefit for Managua INGLEWOOD (AP) -Most of the old lngredieot! were there: rock guitar, blaring d!:qms, ·screaming fans and a 7 vibrating Mick Jagger. But something was missing Thursday as tbe Rolling Stones played a benefit -co~ cert 8.t the Forum for Nicaraguan earthquake vie· Ihm. Gone waa the mab of hopeful . gate crasben, tile police witli riot, sticks, the f i g b t a and mass arrests that have characterized past Stone .... certs. Except for a few fans who were ejected for disorderly P~ntagon Documents 'Aid Hanoi' conduct and a handful of gate crashers, one might never llave known tc was a Stones' concert. Btrr THE crowd or 10,600 SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The never missed any of it. The Navy is again looking for Gigi Stones played "Brown Sugar," tile whale, hoping tile AWOL * * -{;; "It's All Oyer Now" and other leviathan will check in by . bits. The fans, who had paid radio and reassure her fans . UC Chief So far, there is only silence between-$10 and $100 a ticket, from the Pacific, where Gigi cheer<d, some youths standing _if •he is stm alive -should n: "mayed "fr "'k "fr and swaying In the musk. now he migrating southward ""' Jagger, lhe Stones' flam-with other gray whales to Ba-Japan Bars boyant lead · dttBaed ja C.llfornia. LOS ANGELES (AP) • singer, Gigi attracted nationwide Despite some good news for In turquo-nid v el v • t attention last March, when she tile University of C.lilornia In Mick Jagger pants and wearing a ailver became known as "tile ap-Gov. Ronald .Jleagan'•-- headband, thanked the au-prentice whale." Captured posed 1973-74 spending ~ '<.........-.-. dieoce for "shelling out so shertiy alter birth, . she was gram, UC Premdent Oiarles J. TOKYO (AP) -~ much bread." raised In a tank at Sea World Hitch A)'! he is disappointed moters of a five-day Tokyo ap-He then led the group in a by Navy and other marine in the operating budget for the pearance by tile Roillog Stones nearly two-hour performance researeh llCientists. nin&<:ampus system. rock music group announced of their songs, mixlng newer In a statement to the Board today they have canceled the hits with vintage .renditions AN ARGUMENT developed of Regents finance committee engagement because lead like "Route ·es," w hi c b the between Navy and other scien-Thunday, Hitch .said: singer Mick Jagger bas been Stones recor:.ded in 19&l tists over )Vhether Gig could "This was t0 be the year barred from Japan due to a "They were good, but it survive when released in the when he would shake off the rme he received for possession wasn't worth $15," said J&D ocean since she had been austerity of the la.!t six of narcotics 1n Britain last Johnson, 26, of Van Nuys. deprived of a normal whale budgets, the year when we year. • _., ''Here we are, a COQPI~ of childhood. would-get the university Udo Mostc sal.,.u 55,000 adults, waiting to see the Gigi appeared to give moving again, the y ea r of tickets for the Stcoes" stones,"·aaid Judy Jones, a 22 grounds for such fears for a renewed ccmmltment and the perlmnances beginning Jan. yea'r-old Redondo B e a c b while. Sbe hung around tile means of fulfilling H. I'm 28 had been !Old. It will refund secretary. ''.But we11 probably Southern Ca!Uornla coast for a a1ra;d ~ hopes look pretty LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ the money. be here when we're 55." couple of months. empty now." , '!be Pentagon Papers included:l----'-----------------~---------'C.:...------- .. a secret analysis of th~T of· , feosive that could have • : ed Haooi planners , clo)t 1 they came to SUcctS5 .tJ0w : to improve their attack · the 1. next time, according to a high i ranking generOI. . , "To them, this might be the ' ' i[...__BRI_E_F_S _) .. " best piece of military in- , telligence they ever bad," Lt. Gen. WU!iam DePuy told the · · ... Pentagon Papers trial • Ash Pa11s Off LOS ANGELES (AP) - Three founders 0£ Litton Industries -one of them Roy L. Ash, newly appointed direc- lnr of the fedeal Office of Management and Budget - have agreed In pay 12.4 million to the estate of a man who aaid he helped found L;~ ton but was kept from receiv· Ing stock at advantageous prices. ' Superior Court Judge Arthur K. Marshall agreed Thursday to dismiss a 14-year-old civil 6Uit filed agaimt LlttOn by the late Emmett T. Steele once • 1 the payment is made. 1 • Seale Flies ; . OAKLAND (UPI) -Black . Panther Chairman Bobby Seale entered tile mayoral ! electkMl race 'Jbursday, called for a "slush fund" to provide ' jobs for minorities and J predicted a "landslide." vie-,. tory. l)eale, 35, paid bis $200 filing ;· fee and presented a petition ; with a required number of :·signatures by registered • voters. e RefJa• PlefUb ' SANTA BARBARA (AP) - ,. Former singer-actor Phil I Regan has pleaded tnnocent In 1 charges he tried to bribe a , county supervisor In a zoning ' decision. ) Regan, !16, entered his plea i Thursday In Municipal Court after being charged with of· : le~ 11,000 In lnflueoce the • vote on a rezonillC -1 • that Involved a 'ISi-wilt -fious- , Ing de~ west ol bere. '· e Blut Pro""4 I DELANO (AP) -Federal I' lnvestlgalnra say dynamite , wu the probable ca111e of an • uploslon that damaged a building at tile United Fanna I Workers comple• bere. · Alcohol, Tobacco an d 1 Firearml Invtstlgators aald it I' appeanid that at lean two sttcb of dynamite were used I In Ille blast that ripped open I an If.Inch thlcl: oteel-rein- 1 forced wall ol tile UFW Coop -station Wedneadaf night. ' ·' • ' NQntETO TELEPHoNECUSTOMEBS wen _.a iaamillhl rates Im some •-of-stall ca11t ~ . . The American 'Jhlephone and Tulegraph Company. has filed a new schedule of Inter- state rates with the Federal Communications Commission which increases charges for .some customer-dialed calla during weekday bus!· nesa hours, for some operator-assisted · calla. for some'person-to-pefson calls, and for ·WATS(WldeArea Tulecommunlcattona Service~ All ratOI for fnteratate Long Distance calla yoa dial yoanell without ..P.,rator OISlltonce In the nenfnp, at nllbt, and '!11 weebnclo wW remain nachangad. The newrat8s for Long Distance calls be-. ' come eHecttve on January 22, 1973. The new rates for WATS hecome-effacllve on, March 13, 1973, unle88 suspended by the FCC. , H,em are the provlslonsof thenew Interstate rates: 1. Some . of the rates for slatiol>-to-statlon calls you dial yoursell wtuiout operator assistance from 8 a.m. to' 5 p.m .. Monday through F~day, will he Increased five cenls orlOcents!ortheflrstthreemlnutes. ·2. Some of the rslea Jn all time perloda for operato..,.asslsted statJon-to-statJon calla, (that lncludea ·credlt-card, collect, thlrd· number, hotal-gueat, and coin .telephone calls) will he Increased five .cents for the ·first three minutes. 3. Some rates.for person-to-person calls in ail tlmeperlodswlllbelncnsased five cent& or 10 cenls loi the first three mlnutea. 4. The ralea for each addltlnnal minute on some . calls In all . time· perloda wilrJjij- ratsedlnarangefromonecenttoflvecents. 5. Interstate WATS rates will be Increased about two peroent~ 6. Rates for statlon·lo-slallon calls you dial 'youraell without operator a88lslance dui-- tns evenings nlghtl, or weekenda· will .nmaln the !'Ill'•· Interim nit ea and supporting data have been filed with the Federal Communications Com- mtaslon, The Increases for Long Dlatance'calla have been authorized by the FCC on an Interim basis to he effective January 22, 1973. The FCC will conduct additional 6eartnss on the lawful. ness of the ralea, and FCC rules pennlt.any In' terested persons to appear and participate. This will be only the second general tncreue In lntersllte .Long DIB!ance rate levels· In al· most 20 years. During thlB period, In spite of lnfiatlon,·tnterstate' Long Distance rates have been reduced repeatedly. Even with this In· ctease, the ·level of the new ralea will sHll be below the 1953 level. Yet In !hose 20 Interval>" tng years, Iha coet of Uvtng has gone up more · thanoq·percent. The new rates are deslsned to increase total revenue.; from interstate service. by abounwo percent. EDinPles Of Lolic Distance mes (or coat to coat calls ·s~ ,_ ..... -.. -Assisltd ..... II.II.~ IJ.S$· -u, .•. sa. "' ..... 1114111.a." ... _ .. ,_ .. ,_ $p.11.S-. :ip ..... ... Sl..O S3." ·-Jlp.a.S.. ..,,_ Int 3 lllimlla ... ,_ 1111'-"fri. 11, ...... .. -~ Sl.111.1 -·--.._RI ·-"' ......... _.., '13--) {3 ..... 1 a ...... n" 11.'5 ..... ....... s,. ....... lnl~--·'nil ..... ..,_ ···-· ....... Fil - @Al&I • Frldlf, Janu~ 19. l97.l DAILY PILOT ( HOW WOIJID WOii llKIE '10 •v•,'"'~~~~:~~~~~s:~. Relax on weekends while professionals lake care of all landscaping and exierlor maintenance. From Sl9.9§C) ;:::::::::i ., $1,000 Down, No Closing costs. 2&3BedroomTownhomes (714) 551-4041 ••. on Magnavox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and ComPonent Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and Monochrome TV, Radi.os, Tape Recorders, and Portabie Phonographs. Shown below is just one of our many Magnavox Annual Sale Vilues. See them all and saviJ ___ _ M .. biiiWlllA .... 111- modlt 7544. 8la:alatel1Y,._. .Eye ••• mak11 lllg111101 T J.C. tll1 .at btllly 1atolutlc clillr system JOI aa llay! ~ Tho only color Mt that o-...atk:al1y adj_ Its pfcturoto-.. Ing light condltlonaf Mognawx T .A.C, (Toti! Aolomatic Color) not onty1u~c:oms-mt11for1n thoM1hing1fromoutlld.the-.. thlt can mM1 up )'CMS plctwr, now MegnlYOX TAC. wfd\ Videoll•da IUlomOticlfly _ ...... lo< tho ... thing -tho -lhot - ,_ ,.pyour plcun:-changing room light! Tito VldlOlltltlc Eye_., ·-·tho changing light In your room end eutomltieolty adjum tho cofcr, brig_ Ind ........ _ glw YoU th• belt pooolblo --right plcUn --drf"' nlghtl And the chaai1 i1 Modul1r 100% SoUd~Sbte-Whh pfug..tn -.,..._ moduloo and tranolstool. 2fi• dlogonaf -· SAVE '30/ NOW '629 UYDIA . .. 2. .~I~ _l®AJlQU.. . . GOLDENWEST & WARNER HUNTINGTON BEACH Sales Only 842-5596 UNITED ' 401 MAIN STREET HUNTINGTON BEACH S.rric• & Sales 536-~561 Try Saturday's News Quiz . - We Dare You • . ' I • • • DAD.Y PILOT ITOBIAL P.i\GE · reless ----..-.--- • Despite ooculonal rumors al city hall lhat some sec' Ilona of th.e new Costa Mesa . procedul'lll ordinance will he stricken because of its adverse effect on the public's right to know, the gtg rule adopted by the City Council late In J 972 Is still with us. Last "'OOk l\1ayor Jack flammett saw fit to explain in a letter to the editor the reason for the existence of th.ls law. He said it ~·as adopted to streamline into one ordinance all the V3.l'iC>Us rules under \\'hieh tlty govern-- ment operates. Certainly there is no quarrel with MA'Jdr Hammett over that aim. It is important for Costa Mesa to have dearly defined procedures f<>< conducting lhe public's business. But whether by design or by accident, the ordinance adopted by unanimous vote of the council gained a few ertras that did not e:<lst in any previous Costa ?.!esa ordinances from which. the ne\v procedural ordinance wu supposedly derived. No previous ordinance in Costa Mesa restricted the public's access to public documents such as correspond· ence addttssed the city ooilncil And no other ordinance ever made it illegal for a public official to speak his conscience about a violation of the law, which in this ease is the Ralph M. Bcown Act. The newly adopted gag rule does. And it does so despite clear indications that some l!le~be.rs of the coun- cil had no idea whatever that ob1ect1onable eJ ements were rontained in the ordinance, simply because they either didn't read it at aJJ , or didn't read it closely. When Councilman Alvin Pinkley admitted that he didn't read the ordinance a.nd when Vice Mayor \Villard Jordan said he had not bffn aware of all the provisions in the ordinance. that alone indieated the routine man· ner in which this ordinance got adopted. Mayor Hamme tt's endeavor to explain away the sec- tion pertaining to subjects discussed in executive session Can Energy Match Pace Of Growth? Dear Gloomy Gus • ~YDNEY J.HARRIS) ' 1 read a frie:htening riddle the other day. It was propounded by Or. Peter E. Glaser at a scientific conference on Energy and Humanity in London last fall. It goes like lhis: A farmer has a pond with a w_ater lily in it. 1be lily i.1 doubling in size e\lery day . Jn ~ da ys It ~·ill cover the entire pond, tilling all the crea- tures living in ii. A school bus driver's nightmare is a rainy day on Davis Middle School parking lot. B.D, .., .... .. 1M --··-IMll ,_ "" ......... " • ....., .... ~ l"I"'. ~wable resources, we will l'On- tinu : not only to deplete these resourcts at an alarming rate, but also to throw the whole system of nature drastically out of tilter. 1be farmer doesn't WE MAY NOT yet be at th~ 29th day, want this to happen, but it is app~ng far faster than the but he is busy with layman imagines. And if we are to other chores and de-dellect this catastrophe in time, it Is im· cldes to postpone ~ peratJve that the nations of lhe world cutting back the unite for a common pul'JIOSe: to protect plant until it covers the survival of this closed planetary half the pond. system of the earth, and to assure that 'M)t riddle is: oo _____ ~ will have at least eoough. what day will the. l~ly cover half Lile pond: Instead, as Arnold Toynbee observed And _ the aru,wer is:. on the 29th day -not long ago, since the end of World War ~vmg the farmer JU.St one day to sav JI, there are twice as many nations and his Pond! sovereignties with half as much space as This is what is meant by the chilly fore . Nationalism and separatism have mathematical p b r a s e "exponential liferated everywhere on tbe gk>be ; the gro~h." Our technolog.ical society is gr t powers may f rn d a modus growmg at an e1ponent1a lt rate -and vivendi but t h e smaller nations will along with it our need for energy to feed soon Possess the capacity to make hr quoting the city aUorney's opinion leaves us uncon· vmced . It is only an opinion and not lhe law. Instead or attempting to justify the questionable portions of the ordinance with arguments, Costa Mesa city ofticiaJs \\'Ou.Id be doing the public a greater service by an1endlng the ordinance to make certaln the public's right to know is being protected. Mesa's 'Lake' Hazard \V henever it rains in Costa Mesa, parts of the city are transformed a I most immediately into lake-shore <.'Ommunities. This might be an enviable reputation tor Cost a Mesa. were it not for the fact that the lakes like to form on we:ll·Lraveled roads such as Newport Boulevard, 17th Street, Fairview Road, and the short sectior. ol Adams Avenue between Harbor Boulevard and Fairview Road. Roads \vhich are flooded by even th e slightest rain· stor1n such as the ones cited pose a threat to motorists. Often they loom up unexpectedly and the hapless driver \vho comes upon one of these puddles finds he can't see where he is driving because a wall of \\'ater obscures his vision. Fortunately, some progress is being made in reduc- ing hazardous conditions by improving drainage. An am- bitious project involving the Orange County Flood Con- trol District and Cost.a l\fi;sa on Fairview Road is already half completed. But unfortunately the portion of Fairview \\'hich ex· perienres the worSi flooding -the section near Costa l\1esa High School an d Orange Coast CoUege -will not he finished unW September. . Continuing flood problems in other Parts of Costa 1tfesa demand equal attention. 'On your mark. Get set. Go!' I c • President .Must Be ltntnune to Criticism Measured Pace of Nixon Game Plan WASHINGTON -The measured pace of the Nixon administration never ceases to surprise and startle. So many ol Presi- dent Nixon's de<:isions run contrary to accepted wisdom, such as lifting man- datory wage-price controls at a time (RICHARD WILSO~ delays and mishaps, to condi tions in whlch Hanoi "'ould agree to a cease-fire while Saigon still control11..'<i most of the country. I when inflation tends .to resume its u~ ward course. Or, the predictal> ly unpopular re- sumption of bombing in Hanoi · Haiphong area, which might be resumed again if the peace talks in Paris fall again. which once again appears possible. Here agaln there-is evidence or the measured pace. Ea rly in 1972 Nixoo accepted with amaring equanimity the advance of Com- munist regular forces across the DMZ to establish a foothold in the northern pro- vinces of South Vietnam. To prevent that advance from going too far the President ordered the mining and bombing of Hanoi-Haiphong. and the South Viet- namese army was able to arrest the ad- vance with the loss of only one major capitaL events whi ch made it conceivable for Hanoi to agree to a cease.fire in place. So there was a perceptible pattern, if not a preconceived design, all through 1972 based upooo the creation of rtal military conditions which Hanoi could... consider acceptable, at Jeast for an interim period. Phise 1 then moved on toward Phase II, the heavy bombing to ooovince Hanoi that it must oow move aloog toward tbe actual execution of a cease-fire whk:b diet not require an overt commitment to withdraw its regular troops . Jn other matters a measured pace can be perceived. Nixon must bave known - certainly his associates did know -that there was virtually no J>r'O'"Sl>Rt-th1i:;__..;_ll---- Coogress wauld embrace his massive NI1on goes by a measured pace and this Is what is least understood about him. In the fall of 1971 when Phase I I of economic controls had barely replaced Phase 11. Nixon's economic planners began to chart Phase Ill , the lifting of controls. The plan has now advanced by measured stages into Phase lll, volun- tarism, which was intended in the first place, and is consistent with Nixon's loog-tenn oppcsition to compulsory wage- price cont~ls. HE WILL CLAThf the same con- sistency In tenninating the Vietnam war, Still, the · North Vietnamese regular forces did. in fact, establish themselves in the northern Provinces of South Viet- nam. This fact underlies the present Shape of the peace negotiations. Nixon's tacit acceptance of the presence of the North Vietnamese regular forces in South Vietnam was the irreducible price oE peace for Hanoi -the recognition of two annles in South Vietnam as refleC- ting the realities of the battlefield. FROi\1 · TmS single point Do"«ed the Phase W, the resumption of bombing when COmmunllt del'1 ind tttacbery sabotaged the peace negotiations, eould not be considered a Preconceived plan but Henry A. Kissinger evidently left the Communi.sU In Utue doubl lliat further delay and captious· changes wouJd result In a renewal of the bombing. THIS RESUMPTION was a hitch in the proceedings and matters were not going at Niroa's meuured pace. That pace bas nevertbeless resumed, and wblle at a slower rate tban once appeared pors&ble, aw: falla within a NJxonlan game plan. He may ye\ be able: to say that a plan. ned course of events, from the first withdrawal of troops onward, led, despite governmental reorganization p I 3 n . From the beginning, it was implicit that, at what was deemed the proper stage, the President v•ould put this plan into effect by his own devices. He has done so, not perfectly but he has', in el- fecl, combined the functions of severaJ departments u n d e r super Cabinet members with White House status. • . IT lS the same with hi s commitment to cut goventment spending. Congress will not help him in this, so he is doing it anyway by stages and phases, in effect impounding and refusing lo spend money approprialed by Congress. It is typical of the game plan approach that many of. Nixon 's actions are tem- porarily unpopular or misunderstood so be has to be endowed with foresight of a good outcome and immunity to criticism . He takes second place to no one in the se endowments. Response to Senator on Tolerance I this growth. We are nearing the 29th day, nuclear bombs and enter the arena of when we must. either fi nd new sources of political and military oombat. ... energy that w1U not threaten ou r planet, Just al the time when we should be To the Editor : in the United Stat.el!!. What we really need in our society are less gun dealers and '--' parents, ask wfiY have so many dislricts found all-year acbool infeasible? Why did our own district show no interest after paying for studies on four all-year plans? or cut back drasticall y in our rate of pro-subordinating our provincial djfferences duction, popuJation, and cc;insum ption. to our oommon global plight, we are 'Ibese are the only alternati ves open to drawing away from each other, in u.s ; anything else is mere political smaJler and more fiercely tribaJ units. rhetoric. Just when we need to pool ,QUI' resources Unless we -by ~·hich I mean lhe tor the salvation of the species, we seem whole world -can obtain enough solar bent on seizing more of the spoils. It is energy to replace our dwindling stock of oot merely evil ; it is madness. Profitable Inaugural? Presidential Inaugurals are curi~ events, combining pomp, pompousness and pageantry in almost equal measure. This year something new has been ad- ded. Against all odds, the 1973 Inaugural Committee hopes to make the event pro- fita ble. TO TRIS end, the committee is cutting down on overhead and charging hefty tees tor almost all activities . The In. augural balls or recent memory have been held in such hotels as tbe Shoreham, Sheraton Park a n d Mayflower. On Jan. 19--20, 1973, however, the various balls and concerts will be held ln government buildings, including the Kennedy Center, Smithsonian Institu- EDITORIAL RESEARCH Untll 1817, all inaugural s in the nation's ca pital were held in either the Senate or the House. But that year the two chambers of Congress became locked in controversy over whether to use the ·~fine red chairs" of the Senate or the "plain democratic chairs'' of the H.ouse. As a result , James Madison took the oath outside a temporary "Brick Caeltol ." The British had burned the old Capitol In 1814. tion , Natkma.I Gallery of Art. and Na-BAD WEATHER occasionally dJms the tlonal Portrait Gallery. Cost to the in· luster of inaugural ceremonies. For ti· aug1.1ral convnittee : oothlng. ample, it was snowing when Will iam Inaugural-parade spectators who want Henry Harrison was sworn in on the Eut to sit in the bleachers a I o n g Portico of the Capitol in lMl. The new Pemsylvanla .Avenue can do so for President, 6a years old, nevertbelw prices ranging is high as $50. Tickets to refll!ed to wear a hit or roa.L lf the day the three concerts scheduled for Jan . 19 waA windy, '° was l1arrbon; It took him art scaled from $20 10 $00. On the other nearly two hours to read hi! lnaupral hand, admJsslon to an mlonnal reception ..t!ddress, the . Jon11:est ever made. He al the Smithsonian for Vice President \I caught cold after the cer'emony and died Agnew is a l.'OrnpataUve steal 1t $10. a month later. AT ntE FIRST Inaugural, Geo11e WaJblniton took the oath of.office on the bal""'Y of Federal Hal!J n New York City. There wu a ball llterwards and the first ~!dent danced the minuet. Tl» first Inaugural ball In Washington WU that or James Madison. Some of the women guests curtsied lo the Prtsldent and 1ddressed his wife, Dolley, 11 "madame prcsldentess.'' TilE CENTERPIECE of any lnaugura· lion Day iS, of course, the President's in- augural address. These havt raneed In length from Harrisor\'1 8,50Q.word yawn- provoker to the llS words Washington spoke after being sworn in for his second tenn. The average la about 2,400 words. which Is almost precisely th!! length of each of Ow!ght D. Eisenhower'• ad- dresses. • In regard to State Senator H. L. Richardson's article about Intolerance (Jan. 15), I must agree that there are a lot of things which we should no longer tolerall.._ 1 HERE lS a brlef list of a few of those things: narrow-mindedness, bigotry, hypocrisy, unwillingness to change for the better, and all those things which violate the laws and principles laid down by our Constitution. There are some things that deserve our utmost attention. For example, when we hear the banshee screams of the women liberationists, perhaps ~·e should take notice. They are only exercising their freedom or speech, which they were granted along with full citizenship back in 191&. If they speak the truth. lben maybe we should adjust our views. AS FAR. AS the youth of America goes, It la my opinion that they are not as sad a crop of kids as suggested by the Slate Senator. They may have their shortcom- ings, but at least they have the, guts to say what's on their minds. If they speak the truth, then we should know it for what it Is. In respect to lhe patriot.ism or young Americans. I believe it Is as strong as evtr. I believe lhere are plenty of them willing to defend and even die for the principles establi&hcd in our Con- stitution. You may have a hard time find- ing someone willinC to f l g h t for a government as corrupt as the one in Sooth Vietnam , however. The educational system may leave •om<lhlng to be cle>lred, but wh<n you ' ,---B11 Geor~e Otar George : Down at the saloon I've met some guys who say you Mve NEVER followed your own advice. Right! CYNIC Dear Cynic: Well, I don't know. SOme years 880 I advised myself to quit honest work and start writing an advice column. But if you mean following the "advice" given ln thla column. of course, I haven't. ( MAILBOX ) Letters from readers are welcome. Normally writers should conve11 their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letter1 to fit spec~ or eliminate libel is reserved. All letters must include signature mid mailing address, , but names ma11 be withheld on r equest if sufficient reason is apparent. Poetr y will 1l0t be published. see Americans walking on the moon it isn't because they're big and strong it ls because they are intelligent and educated. AL FAULKNER 'Wh11Gun1? To the Editor: This has reference to the letter about guns from Michael D. Grant, e1eaiti1/e vice president of the Grant Boys. JUST TO get the facts straight gun• are manufactured for profit and the follow ing reasons: I. To KfU. humans. 2. To KUA. Oll)lmals. 3, To KILL fowl. 4. For target practice to better the aim in order to kill humans, to kill animals, to kill low!. The gun, any gun, ls an loatrumcnt of death Dnd this Is Its u!Umate purpose .. ONE CANNOT pick up a newspaper to- day without reading :about !!Orne precious llfc being taken ~ a gun, through ac. cldent or on purpose.. We don't begin to know how life ls created but we surely know haw to destroy It Mr. Grant stslH that the gun business Is rigidly controlled. C.Ome on.Mr. Grant, anybody can buy a gun il he h.u the money. All human helnp 1..,. their temper at times. COmbJne this wtth the svall.'.1blllty of a gun and we prodtWt thousands of needles., deaths each year less guns. _ _. WARREN!. I;IENNINGSGARD Where Wu 'Copte.-'! To the Editor: As to the report that our small oom- munity ol Balboa is no longer safe Crom such Infamous crimes as bank robbery, possibly it ls time we address ourselves . to lhe credibility of our cantrovenlal new pclice tactics. Was the Police · helicopter really any consolation for the poor, helpless bankteller, r.1iss Margaret Alford? Was the belioopter in the a~a to mist In the apprehension or was It pouibly patrolling some other area of town? And why would 1 resident of Balboa, fully aware of the helicopter's capabilities, not be deterred from even the thought of aucll a crime! MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM MAmQ~ Sehool Coaeerns To the Editor : As·a reply to your editorial, Jan. 13, we would like to clarify 1tOme points discussed. MOST EDUCATORS suppori year- round IChool as a soluHon to crowded schools or ghetto problems. Not one of lhe!n clalms, or bu prool, that a student's acholastlc achievement im- provea from the schedule clwtge. But, the stall at Harpor School In Costa Mm is trying to Aell the pirertll oo all-year school U ID edueallooal advtnla(e without sbowlnt! uy aullltla or otudlu to baet up Its claims. The 1'11)erinUndenl IA)'t year-round school will be optional. Wllat Is optional about hiring to chan{le ochools! Particularly for parents with si1 graden. YOU APPROVE or the WIY the boanl is approaching all-year school cautiously. Jfarper Sehool wants to put our children on all-year schoolbY next fall. We are askln1 for more Investigation before tbe change ii nuidt. • ' . - /.fany districts have vetoed all·ytar school. It 11 not a new trend . It has been around at least JO years. We, as lnvoJved AS PARENTS of children at Harper School we protest the use or our children for e du c ti t i o n a 1 experimentation, meanwhile disruptinK our family life because our older childrnl In junior and senior highs are on a regula r schedule. We ask the school board to indeed, pro- ceed with caution berore committing Harper School to all-year school by Sept., 1973. , COMMITl'EE OF CONCERNED PARENTS Bike Trail Fau To the Editor: J am a student at Corona del Mar High School and it bas been brought to my at· tentioo, as I am a current rider of the new bike trails, that you have received seve~al letters o( complaint regarding the dips in the trails. Th.is is no letler of complaint, but merely a letter of appreciation and thanks to those who petitioned and sup- ported construction of lhe bike trails. Dips or no 'dJps, we are all most thankful. TRACY WESTERWELL ORANOI CO.lST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. Wttd. Publllhtr Thom4S Keevif, Editor 801''bara. KrefQicli. Edllorlol Page £d1tor Th<! CC1Hnrl.al J•5:C: .. r t ¢ O.Uy Pllut setb lo Inform llnd 1llmu· 1 l&lf' rtllde:n. by 11~nlln1t thla \J Mw1~per'1 op lnlona aort com· mc•ntary un to11lci of lnterc~t -.nc1 1\i:tnlncan<.'t"1 by 1irr1vldlni: 11. forum for tht expl"htlun of our rt•tulera' nplnlflnl. and by fll"l'M.'nllnR th1• dh·trsc viewpoint.I of lnforml!'d ob· servtn •tld lf:IOkhl'nen on top\" l)f the dsy. Friday, January 19, 1973 , I