HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-22 - Orange Coast PilotDrange Coas.1 :/
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ED ITION 'I!!?
T oday's F ina l
N.Y. Stoeks
' ~----· --VO~. 66, NO. 22, l SECTIONS, 36 P ~&ES ~ONDA'I'; JANUARY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS
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'.l'ridmplaed in 1964
Bullet -Sent :lBJ
Into Presidency
By The AllOCl.ated Press
An assassin 's bullet thrmt Vice Pres.
dent Lyndon Banes Johnson into U:Je
presidency.
On Nov. 3, l!l641 11 months and 12 days
after he was hastily sworn in as 36th
President of the United States to su<c<ed
the slain Jolin F. Kennedy, he was elec-
ted to a fom"·year term of his own·
He won the greatest vott majority ever
actonled a presidential candidate and
carried into office 'l\'lth him the biggest
__ p,uty ~~ •!net the
election of 1936.
, Under the ConstJtution, Johnson was
eligible to nm for a second tenn of bis
own in November 1968.
A n1Uon, frustrated and angry about
the Vietnam war, troubled by racial
strife .and caught by illllatlon, more or
leSI -thal the 'higllly poljuw Johnson would do !bit: ' '
To the llUlPlil<. of. the' electorate,
Jobn80ll -.-_:---till a .ni&awtlie
·• telovlsioa speech .., -n, 1111, thot 7 "I shall not seek and I will not ...,.pt Ille
nomination of roy party as your
President."
HE REFERRED to that unity of the
Country when lie was so overwbelmingl)'
elected in November llM and asserted,
"What we have won when all our people
were united must not be lost in
partisanship.''
Then,-ackbowledging there " as
"division in the American house," he
witbdl'tw in the name of national unity
which he. said was the "uJtimate strength
ol oor country.
"With American sons in the field far
came Jan. 16, 1969, four days befcre
Johnson left office, glvi!Ji . him the
satisfaction of knowing there was a
pOSSibllity of peace.
1befe were other breaks to ahllerate
Johnson in the few week• before be turn-
ed over the preskiency to ·Rlcbarc;I M.
Nlaoo, ReflW!lican, who delealed )'.ice
President Hubert Humphrey In the 19111
election. · ·
On Dec. If,' 1968 Gambodla ttlea!til IZ
Americans who had been irnprJaoned
there. Eleven were U. S. soldiers seized
w11<n-their-boat-wandered-Jnto-eam--
bodian water~ July 12. 1be utb waa an
American helicopter crewman captW'ed
Nov. 28.
On Dec. 22, 1968 North Korea released
12 cttW'membera ol the Intelligence sblp
USS 'Pltolllo '..wlio. bid.~.~
since J ... 1,-19111 When t1lelr lbip I'• > , ~li:tl( .• ~ ... ,.~.-_.;~ , ~ . . ~~ ., °" Dlli:. ·rr-4Am<ricia ..-.u11 murled , !rom a ols..saJ.piu spaoe
..,... ~lotit' .... 11--the moon. 'lbe tiilrOpid upl31tro were
Air Force Clo\.· Fr..,ir B~n, Navy c&pt. James A. LoVeU and· Air Force
Maj. WilUam A.· Anders. Several dayi
later·, Joboaon greeled tbem at the Wblto
House and awarded them mt4a[s.
"Things. att a lot .better than we u:-
pected,"" Johnson mused on the plane
,vhich took him to retirtment on hb Tex~
as ranch: "Nw ... )Ult hopO good things
ar< going to 1iappen fOr Mr. Nlson."
In bjs crushing defeat of bjs Republican
opponent, U. S. Sen: Barry Go!dwater of Az:iz.9oa in N<!Vember 116', Jobnson won
some 61 percent of the vote.
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· away," be said, "with the American
future under challenge right here at
home. with our hopes and the world's
hopes for peace In the balance every day.
I do not believe that I should devote an
bOUr or a day of my time to any personal
partisan causes or to any duties (lther
that the a w e s o m e dutJes of the presi-
dency of your countrY." He coupled bis reelecllon declaration
with an announcem~nt that he ordefed
bOmbing of North Vietnam restricted to
the ,rea below the 19th Parallel and call-
ed for peace talks. '
But such pojJularify dr._r llW'ply. In
November, 1tl7 the Gallup .polL lhowed
that only 31 percent of the people, •P'
proved bis handling ol the iresldency. 50
pen;ent of those questioned expressed
dlsap'proval and 11 percent had no opit>
ion. The major cause ol-the
disillusiomnenl appear<d to he the South.
Vietnam war. Rioting in Negro sluma
across 'the country did not help hlrn,
eillier.
Teen .Chai1wd · in Woode(t
Three days later, North Vietnam
silrpri!ed the President and his advisers
bY accepting, saying preliminary talks
coUld-be held to arrange an end to the
reat ol the bombµlg and then broader
quutlons could ba discussed.
A month ol hagglin, °""' the slte
fGllowed. On April 3 Hanoi and
Wishington a~ a French offer .of
Paiia, aareelJ!ll lO meet Ma~ 10. .._
TWO DAYS OF discussiqn between
deputy ambauldOr• ol both sides to set
up procedures followed. On May 13, 1363,
W. Averell Harriman, the U.S. am-
llulador to the peace tails, and Xuan
'fttUy, the North 9ietnamese ambas~ador
to the talks,' 16d 'lieir reapecttve delega-
tloas into the lnlematioaal COOi.,_. ee~ter. ronnerlj the Majestic Hotel, to
belin the fateru talk!. Jl took elght months of talking to
determine bow subltanUve negotlatioos
could proceed. 'Ille 8JlllOWICOmenl of the break through
Squib Vielnam-'Where the Viet Cong,
Comrriunist Sollth ···Vietnamese w b'o
wanted to take over the ·eovernment -
had. plaglllld Pr-E\senl>oWer and
Presideol Kennedy. They sent military
advisers lo balp organize the South Vlit·
-·anny lo c<imbat t1>e perrllla tactlCs of the Viet Cong who were aided
and abatted by Communlsl-North Vi.t·
rwn. But it waa President Johnlon'• Ute
to commit Amabn troopa to a land war
In South Vietnam.
• '
'
B;ox; Police Se.ek • Fiend
.. , I .
,.
wooda~n" and might have fled into the
vasi ·Dhrrytl Siramp, •a 30Mquare-mlle
area , of hei.vily wooded swadlpland.ln t1>e
two sta('3.
Chapman' doscrlbeil Ausley as "arlned.
and VU)'. <!&lgeroos."
Four iabbtt hunters told police they
were a\ the dead end of a Jogging rMd in
a, remote ar,ea when ,they u.w a boy's
head ~Y rue'1lp out of a alx-foot
--of· earth.
, Police said. the boy bagan crying, then
explajped he ll8d been ltidllaped by a
l1l8ll ""°iS ed.·hlm up on a Portsmouth sp-..i ' liiked hlln11 he wanted.oi>me
wort http mOve' furniture.
1be boy had a·chain attached tO'his Jett
leg and the chain was secured to a nail
drl1/en ln the slde or 1he plywood box.
P,oUce uid the box had betn meticulous--
ly built, was six~ feet long, four feet wide
• and flve f~t d~p·with enougb ,room for
two~.
Tbe bO.s: was covered with earth and
leavta ~ contained' varioul survival
items, fncltld.ing food and water. ' '
' DAILY PILOT AD
MA DE TO ORDER
, ~~in& tq_sell ? '!l;Y a DA)LY P!Wf dus11ied" waht ad ~ ~'re
made to order. Here's bow one owner
ordmd a boyer fo: bis real estate:_
R4 CP, nr 17th St., CM
-Sopet -rtntal ma. TITI -
unlls. Ajfl. -lllll DJ· nu. . "'111e l""P"rly WIS llQ(d"the • flnt ~. OftO 7iiur onfer lo a·DAIL'Y PILOT ad-vtoor -d!JI direct·MWm.
'
Ex-President
Suffers Attack
!FROM WIRE SERVl,ESI
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. -Form·er President_Lyndon
B. Jobnson .. has died, his press secretary said. '
Tom Johnson, a long-time LBJ aide and press spoke•
man, said John.son was rushed to Brooke Army Medical
Center this afternoon and was dead on arrival:
Johnson, 64, had a history of heart trouble.
Johnson's airplane was at San Antonio International
Airport when a sudden call for ambulances was put out.
He was flown to the hospital by military helicopter
ambulance from the airport several miles away. The heli-
copter arrived at the airport at 5 p.m.
MRS. JOHNSON, ~accompanied by a squad or Secret
Service agents, arrived at the hospital shortly after her
husband.
Johnson was the nation's 36th President, held office
, during the stormiest domestic times since the Civil War
, .~d'~.~ ~ ior a second full term. .
Hil &YOWed reaaon for failing to seek the office In
l!lell WIS that b~ willled lo devote full time for the ,...
mat.nder of his term, without the distractions of cam·
paJgning, lo ending the Vietnam War.
Tom Johnson issued this statement from the hLt
tal: "The fo1mer president was stricken at the
Halich and !llas flown to Brooke General Hospital in
San Antonio ,where he was pronounced delid on arrival
by Col. George McGranahan. Mrs. Johnson was notified
and flew to San Antonio where she is now. Funeral If·
rangements are incomplete."
GM Announces Recall
Of 3.7 Million Cars
DETROIT (AP) -General Motors an-
nounced the recall today of 3.7 million
1911 and 1972 can for inst.allation of a
shield over the steering coupling to pre-
vent' the possibility of fiylog stones lodg-
ing between the coupling and the car
frame.
In malting the announcement, GM said
it reetived reports of 96 incidents where
stones w<re scooped up, retulting In Z3
accidents In whlch 12 injuries were re-ported. .
Involved In the recall are full·size 1971 ·
and 1971 models ol Cllevrolela, Bulcb,
Oldsmobile1 and PooUacs.
The company .. 1d the sbleld would he
installed at no charge to the car owner.
II said ownen -1d be notllled In about
two weeks: .
G~I said that if one of the can ls
driven over Jooae gravel at speeds whlch
cause the car to pitch excessively, the
front frame croumember may ecoop up
loose stones or grnveJ from the roadway.
Thought Bugging
Watergate Okay,
Witness Claims
W ASHJNG'l'ON. (AP) -The man who
said he Jslened to wiretapped ..,..
versaUons [Nm DemocraUc head-
quarters testified today he thought it l\'as
legal because his orders came from the
.-lty chle! ol President Nlson'• .,.
·elec!Joii committee. '
"Weren't you suspicious that aome
han.i<Y'flll-, was goinJ on, Iha!
IOllltlhing waa wrong when he 'told Yoll
to use an usumed nalne?'' Juc;la:e John J.
Sirlca ul:ed the wltneu, Allred C.
Btldwln-JU, al the· Water1•I' trial.
''Not the UAe of an assumed name, no
&Ir. your hanor.'1 uld Bakiwtn, a fonntr
FBI apot who once taUJ)lt police -· llaidwln, the ptOH<Ution'• sw wll·
(8..-'lf,&TEllGATE, PIP-I)
..
Some of the stones could lodat betweeu
the steering coupling and frame, caumq
steering interference on a left tum, tbl
automaker reported, adding t h a t the
stone ls dislodged when the lltoerlnc
wheel Is turned to the right.
GM said 11 decided to ut the cnrnm
ol 3.7 millioo cars to brJni .them In for
installation of the ·lhleldo ...,, =' only a few can might ~-to~; ·
GM said the declslon followed lnveatJ.
gatloos by the company and the Nallooal
Highway Traffic Safety Adminlltrltlon.
G?t.l's announcement came on the aame
day thal the Center fOr Auto Sofety In
Washington urged the recall. The cmter,
funded by the Colllumera Unloa , aald It
had r<porla of 15 crubeo, wll1r nine Jn.
juries, stemming lnlm Ibo '*':Dll lock· up.
Oraa11e
Weadier
Mostly IUMY oO Tueoday, with
. sllghUy warmer i...,...1ura aionr
the Orange Coul IJlghc of fl are
~· wllh Cit.Ill' norlheut windB wanning t1>e air sUghUy.
Lows tonight 3MO.
INSIDE 'l'OD-'Y
S~n Snl/der IOGI 1ootching
Prerident Nixon dmlce with hb
wife, when au of a 1uddc'n, tit•
ctouid · .surged /0f10Qrd, forcMlp
her into kil °""'· "'""''"rprjml I didn't /aiflt on ~ ipoe, • 1Plc
lattr rtmorktd. Stl ~
tto'l/ and pholol °" foO< 4. ......_ .
:: .. ·~ 'I ·-... -.. O•e i • 11 --, ........... ' .... ,. I ll ,..... lt-11
.......... 1 ..
' '° z DAILY PILOT Mo11ctu, J.uiuarr 22, l97l
·FORMER
f'roa r ... J _ _/
PRESIDENT JOHNSO~ DEAD ..
Jn AiJillSI, JIM aftef CommWllst PT
boats attacked U. S destrnyus ln the
Bay of TonklnF Johnso.1 obtained coa-
grustonaJ approval ol a r~uUoa 4rant-
lntrbtnrfull-111~ for "all ..........,.-
action lo protect our armtd forces. 1'
He told Congress. "The lssut> ls the
futw-e. of Southeast Asia as a \\·hole . A
threat to aey nation in th at region is a
threat to all, and a threat to us .•. The
-Uniled--States intends no rai~ and
seeks no y.·ider war.''
But when Norlb Vietnamese attacked
an Amerjcan baSfl on Feb. 7. 1965 killing
nin e, woundini more than 100 and w~ck
ing planes, Johnson ordered A.mencan
planes Into 1ctlon over North Vietnam.
North Vietnam f3iled to get the
meMage and on Feb. 10 attacked another
base. Johnson ordered another atlack.
AIR AITACKS co ntinued on military
· targets, bridges and highways with the
intention of slowing dov•n aggression .
They even extended north of Hanoi, tbe
Nortb Vletnam capital.
Tllo. actlom brooiJ>I Johnson public
aDd private demands for negotiations
from leadtng Democrats In Congress,
from American, intellectuals, from an
...,..itc letter wrlUng public, from
neutral nations. from the United Natiom
ond from tbe Soviet Union.
' The lighting continued.
, Johnson asked Congress for an ad·
ditional $700 million for expanding opera·
tions in South Vietnam. Pttore American
troops were 9ent there. By mid-June. it
was estimated 70,IJO().~.oot American
troops were involved.
By November, 1967, 469,000 Americans
~ in South Vietnam.
The war widened a rift, barely con-cealed, between Johnson and u. s. Sen.
Robert F. Kenj!edy. Keonedy opposed lhe
bombing of North Vietnam and said so in
a SenatP. speech. 1..
KENNEDY'S OPPOSITION to the Viet-
nam war and Johnson's handling of some
domestic problems spurred the New York
senator to announce h.is candidacy for the
Democratic presidential nomination even
another term. Already L1 the political fray was U. S.
Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota.
After Johnson's announcement, Vice
President Humphrey joined them in con-
tention.
T!le-wlitical maneuvering of the three -
was stUMingly stilled the ni(ht of June 5
when Kennedy, celebrating a California
primary vic.tory, was assasslnaled in Los
. Angeles. Humphrey obtained the nomina-
----:-1.iOh bUt losr to-Nixon.
• The rioting in Negro slums, which rose
. to a crescendo in 1967, caused Johnson
' . great concern and some observers 00-.
. lieved ii hurt bis image.
The riots began in 1964 in New York's
Harlem and Bedford Stux,vesant sections
and involved only Negroes. The following
summer of 1963 Negroes rioted for six
days jn \Yatts, Los Angeles' Negro area.
But 1967 proved the longest and hottest
summer or aU with riots in small
towns, small cities and in sprawling
Newark, N. J ., and Detroit
AFTER THE Watts rloting Johnson ad·
dressed the nation and tried to find words
to describe rioters, white or Negro. He
said:
"A rioter with a Motolov cocktail in his
hands is not fighting for civil rights any
more than a Klansman with a sheet on
his back and a mask on his face.
"They are both more or less what the
Jaw declared them: lawbreakers."
He sounded somewhat mournful and
very frustrated as ·he looked back on his
years in Cong ress and the presidency.
"During the past decade." he said.
"more of my energy has been spent on
protecting and preserving and writing in-
to law through the legislative halls, the
rights of all Americans than I have spent
on any single subject or any half dozen
subjects."
Johnson contended for the presidential
nomination in 1960 with the then U. S.
Sen. Kennedy of Massachusetts. Political
observers considered him well equipped
for the high office.
A MAN OF driving energy, he had
served in the House of Representatives
Crom his native Texas and then in the
Senate where he became Senate maj ority
1 leader. He wa.:: considered the most ef-f fective Senate leader in this century,
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DAILY PILOT
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k; c;eimWned ff'lt H_,.r..... ii '*"'19'1ft ~
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Sin Jllllll (l plttr-A tlnult r19lon1(
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TM prlnclP11l publhft!r,.g pllnt 11 11 l30 Wet!
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• ..
probobly In 1ho blslOfY of Ille United s ......
He was • master of detlil, knew wtllr'fl
ever senator stood on every Issue and l>elorrV<lllna UJM inew ~rt every
senator wu or wu aoinl to be.
He wu considered an espei't In the art
of -promt,., able to get bolh aid,. to
make t.'Of!Ces.sioos even though both sided
were less than pleased with the ~suits.
The -day aner Kenne<ly Oefented
Johnsoo for the oominaUon. on the first
ballot llJMOI, tbe yoolh/ul Democratic
ltandard blartr ...... caned Jobnlon to his
hotel suite and asked btm to take second
ptsce oo tbe ticket.
It meant &!~ up the vast powers of
Senatt majoritj leadtt for the traditional
olncurity of the vice presidency. but
John>on, u a Potitldao, kntw Kennedy
needed help in carrying the South. and,
as . a Texan, that he could provide the
political muscle. l!e accepted.
As vice president. Johnson presided
over the Senate but De\'er sought to bo.!s
it as be did as Senate majority leader.
HE SERVED AS the President's
emissary ..overseas going to Southeast
Asia and West Berlin in 1961.. to the Mid·
dle East in 1962 and to Scandinavia and
the Bendux countries in 1963.
Johnson and his wife . affectionately
known as "Lad y Bird," were in ..jhe
presidential pnrl/ .. ·hen Kennedy and his
\1•ife. Jacqueline, made a two -day
poliUcaJ trip to Johnson's nntive Texas.
They planned to entertain the Kennedys
at their ranch the night of Nov. 22. the
day that chilled the nation.
The Jo~ were riding in the third
car of a motorcade through Dallas. when
the· fatal shots were fired at Kennedy.
The Johnson car sped to Park.land
Hospilal where the stricken lreimedy had
been taken and, within minutes, Johnson
learned that Kennedy had died of his
y.·ounds. Johnson automatically became
President. the fourth vice president to
succeed an assassinated chie[ executive.
Six months after becoming president,
political observers agreed that the Ken-
nedy-Johnson administration had become
the Johnson administration, T h e
Administration· carried the LBJ brand.
so me writers said, alluding to the brand
carried by cattle on Johnson's Texas
tar.ch.
Political o~rs credited Johnson
with restoring communicatkla between
the eiecutive and legislative branches of
government to such an extent tbat the
1964 Congressional Record was described
Ifs the-most frultfUl tn -a-decade:
STATISrICIANS estimated that be got
57.6 percent of his 217 specific requests,
the best batting a\·erage since President
Eisenhower got 64.7 percent of his 232 re-
quests in 19$4.
Shrewd political iJWght brought about
quick action on a tax cut bill in 1964. He
paved the way for an $11 billion tax cut
by swhing the budget $900 million,
reducing the federal payroll by thousands
largely without hardship.
Another feather in Johnson's cap was
congressional passage of lhe most sweep-
ing civil rights bill since Rel'Onstruction
days.
It was in 1964 that John.son sought to
identify his administration with a quest
for what he termed "The Great Society."
It apparently was to be a tag as "The
New Deal" was for President Franklin D.
Roosevelt, . "The Fair Deal" for Presi-
dent Harry S. Truman and "The New
Frontier" for PresidP.nt Kennedy .
He lalked about it in a commencement
address at the University of Michigan
l\1ay 22, 1964. Jn tha t speech, he urged his
youthful audience to join in helping to
rebuild cities, preserve the countryside
and promote education.
Johnson's record in the months Im·
mediately following Kennedy's assassina-
tion and his previously known presiden-
tial ambitions left no doubt.! in the minds
of Democrats and Republicans that he
would be_ his party'1 presidential nominee
in the '1964 election, The question wa1
who would be lhe vice presidential
nominee.
A l'TY. GEN. ROBERT Kennedy,
brother of. the slain President, was
mentloned frequently.
But Johnson picked H u m p h r e y .
Johnson campaigned up and down and
across the country, Historians likened his
campaign style to that of Andrew
Johnson who dispelled ~he early grandeur
of the presidency and opened lhe White
House to the fcilks . •
The Johnson campaign style wu in
marked contiallt tu Goldwater's, The
senator held himself aloof and seldom
mingled with the crowd.
Jollnson was at his Texas ranch elec-
tion night. When the tabulation of votes .
showed his Plectlon was a certainty, he
went on television and radkl.
He called the result a .. mandate for
unity " He pled ged that his sdministrn·
lion would ''be a government that pro-
vides equal opportunity for all and ape.-
cial privileges for none. It (his election )
is a command to build on those princlplea
and to move forward toward peace a~ a
better life for all our people. I promise
the best that Is in me for a.s long as 1 am
permitted to serve-J ask all thme who
si.;pporttd me and those that opposed rrie
to forget our differences because Ulere
are many more things in Amerk:a lbat
unite us than divide us."
.JOHNSON WAS inaugurated Jan. 20.
1965. He wore an ordinary oxford gray
buslneS! suit tn contrast to the formal
clothes of his predeces!IOrs. And Mrs.
Johnson held the Bible Qn which his left
hand rested as Chler Justice Earl Warren
Administered the Oath Of orfict.
As he concluded lhe oath, Mrs. Johnson
grasped one of hls arms And gave him a
long. affectionate look. lter eyes were
misty.
J ohnson's first year In office on his own
-1965 -was noted ror the arrests and
brutality In Selma Ala .• when Negroes
sougbt to register to vote, the dltpatch of
~tarlnes to Santo DomlnMO to protect
Americ3N caught In B Donlinlcan Re.
,• .
publlc government :aval and the ftnt yea,,~:-= pl~. ~b la • Democral~l)' went to work w1:
dlspatcb. J..,_ aald -.....U. lahr "I
lhJnl; I· can tnithlully aay I doubt lborO
ha& ner been a period ID Aa.lcoA
hli:tory when the (Supreme) Court a.od
the Congress and the e1ecuUve were
worlling ,..hllt'll161llousiy,""'-----"!"--.,
l'he Congress passed 86 Administration
mes SW'et. Johnson called the 1e.ssloo.
"1muowtlly ~~Ilepubl~ called much ot the' unwise. and
charged that lt WU bulled= by tbe Johnson Admlnlttrttkln __.
political power and :without adequlte
debate.
AMONG 11IB l<gtslallan pmed wu:
-A ~1edicare-Soela1 Security bill
Y.'hich provided medical and hospital care
for the elderly under Social Security.
UPIT ........
-A Voting Rights Acl wblclt struck it
counties and slates where there wv.
Uteracy tests and where less than 50 ptr-
cenl of the voUng ag• Population
regtster<d or voled In the llM pttalden-
tial election. The bill provided that
wherever state and local offtcl.al•
persisted ln discrlminaUon qalDst Nesro
applicants, federal examiners would be
sent to register all·ellgible voters. 'era-. Was to Freedottt
nine captives. Riccio ~bed through a thin wall to
a hidden stairway and led the nine to freedom after
40 hours of captivity. (See story, Page 4).
The second session of the 19th
Congress, which opened with Johnson 's
State of the Unio n message Jan. 12, 1966,
seemed paler than the momentous flrst
sessloo and tbe pace .......i lllower.
Tuer< wu-groater prooccupotloo wWt
the Vietnam nr. N-, Joboaon
caUed the 89th ''Tbe Great Ocugrea,"
Jerry Riccio (right) dances with one of nine hostages
on the roof of a New York building near Riccio's
sporting goods store where four gunmen had held
It enacted among""'-otbtt legislation a
Social Security bill giving II mtllloo
persons ina'USE!s of at lea.st U perceot in
pension cbecks and lncr<aalog tbe Social
Security Ill of lhoS< llllll <arolog.
A summit me<tiog of Latin Am<rlcao
presidents, a four-day Mlddle East war
and a visit to the United N at1on.s by
Soviet Premier Atael N. Kolyglo whlcb
resulted in two conferences wltb Johnaoo
marked 1967.
The Middle East war Jnaplr<d an
emergency session of the United Nalion!.
It brought Soviet Prenitr Kol)'itu to
New York to explain the Russian v1ew of
the situation.
Paclflc 1Dd rode oo some bomblng
mlssions. Gen. Douglas M a c Art h u r
decorated blm with the ·Silver Star.
RooseV<lt ordeiecfhlm baci to tlie Hoose
in mid-1M2.
Ho roached Ibo Senato In 1141,
defeating Gov, Coke Steveuon by r7
volel out ol a mll1ion cut. 'nlat won him
the nickname of "I.andsllde LyndoD."
JOllNSON'S DRIVE aod pollUcklog
Miii woo him the Smale minority
loadmhlp belote he complelod hla first
term. Io 11161, wben a Democ:raUc
Congress swept lo, be became majority
leader.
Some of Johmoo's Senate coll.eagues
thought him overbearing u majority
leader and accused him of running a one-
man show; others were lost in ad-AFTER DELICATE diplomacy, it was mir1tlon for bis efficlency.
decided that be and Johnson would meet lt was generally qreed, however, that
in the amaH ooilege town ol ~k h• bad fonoldablo usets In his penooal N.J., aboot hallway betwem or cborm aod .,.. ... ,.,.,. bearlnp, bts
and Wuhlogtoo.aod-J~~ ~ !~ 10
10 capability for logical arl\JDIOllt, his
Washington -----~ :--atimid t1ni1fii iiil-..,,.-po1111ca1-seme New York. amounting to 1 touch of genius at Um.es·
They met far the first time June 23 In He had a natural knack f o r
the borne ol tbe coilege president 84 mllllpulaUng and brtoglog about a
talked for fiv~ OOur'I iand 20_ ~ute!~ desired political end .
least iWOliiiUi"s loog<r than ~· In-He ll<eded these skills In 11157 when he
Jo1:;'.'! ::.='i:t 1i:':'~e1iher piloted througb the Senato tbe first civil ~~gave in to well dtabUibed viewl. lt rl&ht• bill in more than 10 years.
was cleelded to bold a oecOod meeting.
Kosyglo aa1d "We have amused so
great 1 number of qoestloos ••• lhat Is
why we .have decld~ to meet agam OD
Sunday." Jobnsoo &aid "W• l!ave .. changed
views on a number Of tntemational quee-
tions. we also··acbanaed vien on the
questions Of direct bilateral relations
between tho Soviet Uoloo and tJt< United
· States," Both men were aware of ~ lm·
pllcaUons of their meeting. Kosygln ::
10 worry aboUt Cbloele propaga
which would surely accuse him of col·
laboratlng wllh tbe United Stalel and
"imperialism!' Jobn.son bad to consider
lh< tmpact of tbe m.etiog• oo U.S. com-
mitments ln the Middle and Far East and
Vietnam.
ON SUNDAY, June 2S they met ag~,
After the four-hour meeting JobnsOn said
the sessions had mJ1.de the "world a little
less dangerous." Kosfgin called ~
meetings ''useful." But neither side
changed its position on ~ matter1 on
which they were in oppos1t1on.
John!Kln was born near Stonewall, Tes:·
as Aug. 'll, l908. the son of Samuel Ealy
and Rebekah Baines Johnson,
Johnson finished high school at 15 but
showed 00 interest in college or a career·.
After some months at menial Jobs, ::;
followed the wishes of his parents w
persuaded him to enter southwest Texas
State Teacher College at San MarCO!I.
FOR A TIMI! Ill 1116& there WU lur
JolnDl'I cuw 1'11 llldeil. I/ Ated
from II& bani drt.ing ~ dall<a,
ht aullu<d ...... chest polna -...
...to to vlalt a !rlood ID V!rptla. --" '
An om<r&ODCY uimtnatloo by a .local
doctor dlagooeed a btart 1ttad<. Ttitre
was •'quick trip to Ibo Naval llo&pltfl 111
Bethesda; Md., where doctor• went ~
work.
FN91P.,.el
ABORTION. ••
llberatlooa by the jultlc<e. u -bued
prodomlnalllly CX1 what Blacbn<m callid
• right ol privacy. He aald tbe r1cht .. ~
brolldmouchtoeocompaa ·1W01111111
declstoo whether or not to tennloat• btr
PIJ=·~yroo 0R. While ond William
H. Rehnquist dissented, White said he
could "find nothing in the language-or
hlstory of the constitution to support the
court's jud_gmenl" .
Rehoqullt oalcl "tbe court'• aweepuig
invalidation of any restrictiOM on abor·
lion during the first trimester is impos·
sible to jUltlf'y ... "
-·In a second 7 to 2 ruling, the court
struck down Georgia's aborti~ ~w. ffnd.
Ing three provisions to be unconstitu·
tlonal.
Frot11P .. eJ
W ATERGA.TE TESTIMONY •••
neM, was on the stand !or the third day
as the third week of trial be1an for G.
Gor<loo Udd,y aod James 71. McCord Jr.,
charged wllh Cllml>iracy, buraW7 aod D·
legal wa.tappioi In 1 case ln"'lvtng 1 •
break·in at Democralle IM:f!dquarten last
June. Baldwin said be used the allu
"Bill Jobnaon " at McCotd's dlrecUon.
Baldwin had said be was rocrulted by
McCord to monitor conversation1 from
his hotel room ac:rou the street from
De::tocraUc headquarters in the
Watergate bulldlng.
He said be saw a letter McCord wrote
to the Federal Communications Com·
mission re.questine the UJe of certain
radio frequenclea and that be received
p<rmlsai-00. He aid that, II-nll...u
McCord'• poslllon wtth tbe rfflectloo
committee, were factors ln believing the
activities were legal.
She ·Tries Again
-To Not Have
Another Child
SYDNEY (AP) -Mn. Janette Proose
tried 17 v1rietie!I of the pill, three dlf·
ferent contraceptive devtces and had 1
sterilizatkln operation.
Despite thla, she bas given birth !or tbe
ninth time.
"When Fred and l married tn 1980, we
planned to have only two children," said
Mrs. Prouse, 30, of Newcutle, 100 mlles
north ol Sydney.
"But nothing seemed to wort to halt
our person.al population upk>sioo. We've
been lrytog to atop mo having babi"
since the birth of. our second."
'1be couple's nlnth child, a girl, wu
born today, II moothJ alter Mn. Proos<
underwent a sterilization operation.
"ApparenUy, there WIS some joining of
tissues after the openUon," she aald. "I
don't intend suing anybody. The opera·
tion was done properly.
"I think of this baby u a miracle, but
I'm having a partial hysterectomy this
Urne to make absolutely sure there are
no more·." ·
The judge sent the jury from the room
and asked Baldwin: "You thought what
you were dCl!nf. for McCord wu: perfectly
legal?"
"Yes," Baldwin said.
Baldwin also said be hand~elivered
two days of logs of convrrsallons to the
headquarters of the Republican Com.
mttte< !or tbe R~ectloo of the Presl·
dent.
J1:dge Sirlc.a called attention lo
Bald• ..... ln's remembering m.t:1y details but
not the name of the m¥n to whom be ad·
dres5ed the envelope containing the logs.
Q, You want this court and the jury to
believe you gave it to BOme guard you
ha:dly knew?
A .. He.Jold me he-"'.®1Mell¥.er ii lo lhc
individual. -
Q. And you left it at that?
A. Y". Because of the procedures that
were in effect at the Committee for the
Re-dection of the President then.
Woman Injured
In Costa Mesa
Pistol Accident
A 29-year-old Costa Mesa woman was
injured over the wee~nd when a .45
caliber pistol accidentally discharged In
her boyfriend's bands and a piece of
shrapnel imbedded itself in her shin ,
police reported today.
Treated at c.osta Mesa Memoria l
Hospital Saturday afternoon was Susan
C. Reese, 29, of 2700 Petenon Place,
Costa Mesa. She was released from the
hospital following emergency room treat-
ment of lhe wotmd.
Today Costa Mesa police said they had
been given two different versions of the
accident.
Tbe Ree3t woman told oUicen the gun
accidentally discharged outside her
apartment. But the boyfriend, identified
as Wllllam R. Oldham, 47, also of the
2700 Petenon apartment building, in-
sisted the gun went off in bis car.
OldbaDl told police the automatic pistol
fired when ~ tried to uncock It by ea sing
the hammer d?wn on a live cartridge.
When It went off, the bullet struck the
heater and a fragment from the heater
hll hla companion In the rtghl shin,
Oldham "'Ported.
To defray expenses, be worked aa a
janitor . Whlle sweeping out classrooms
he practiced speeches for his public
8peaking-COW"Se' He received a Bachelor
of Science degree in 1930.
For the next two yean, Johns~ taught
public speaking and de.bate m Sam
Houston High School ln Hduston. In 1132
he made a fatelul move. He went to
\Vashlngton as secretary to Rep. Richard
LAST C'HANCE When they're gone,
they're gone I
Kleberg. "·-He became a protege of Rep . DIU"
Rayburn. a fellow Texan, wbO penuad:
President Roosevelt in 1935 to appo
Johnson as dJ.rector of the Nationsl Youth
Ad.ministration for Te1as. i
A VEAR BEFORE he bad married
Claudia Alta Taylor. .
They had two daughters, Lynda Bird
and Luci Baines.
When Rep. James Buchanan died ln
1937 Johnson decided to seek the vacant
seal His wlfe borrowed f~o.ooo rrom her
father to nnance the campaign, There
were nine other candidates in the race.
JohMOn felt be had to do so mething
dramatic to get the spoUight lie came
ou1 hard for the New Deal. JohMOn won
the election and President Roosevelt's at·
tcnlloo, toO. Roosevtlt. who was R5blng off COrput
Christi at lbe time, was ao dellahttd wtth
tilt victory be brrited Joboaon to ride to
Washington in tbe prtsidential train .
Roosevelt arranged to have Johnson
seated on the Important Naval Affalr1
committee -a rare poat for 1 fre1hman
representaUve -and tnvtted him to the
\\'hlte House for Sunday breakfuti.
Then came Pearl Harbor and JohnlOo,
a naval rwrve offlctr, obtaJned 1 leave
frorn the House and went (o war. He
served on a Ui'nf&.man eomm.luion ln-
i;ptetlng conditions in the Southwest
' •.
FACTORY BUY -OUT OF AU -
REMAINING
LI TI ON
MICROWAVE
\q OVENS
with
Micro
Browner • only at
1815 NEWPORT BLVD., Downtown Costa Mesa-Phone 548-7788 •
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Mond.lt, Jan11ary 22, 1971 H OAILY PILOT /J
Cease ~fire Agreement Wednesday?
.:/
I , '
,_-:Sout-h-C--1last-Ba~-
' ------
Hosp.ital ·v ~ancy
81 FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL
Of ... O.Hr ~U.-at.H
Unlll a year aod a half qo, South
Cout Community llosptlat ol lloulh
Laguna virtually beld a mooopoly on the
delivery ol hospital care In llOUlh Oranp
County.
Today, with two new comJJ'!tUora open
and a third facility to be completed in
July, South Coast Onds much ol the turf
Jt once controlled is gone.
The hoapitaJ. aco>rding to a number of
health pl&Ming officials , familiar with
south Orange County, is the victim of a
unique situaUon : hos pital development
along the sou'th coast is moving well
ahead or the populatioo growth of the
Hospital, a 124 \ed facility was aulborii-
ed under a IOoC8lled "grandfather
clause" duriog an interim period when
CHPC wu abollsbed Bild lbe ulstlng
Oranre COunty Health Plannine C4unc11
estlblished. It also is in operaUon.
'Ille bQard of directon ol ~ck
Communlly Hospital, • -profll .....
poratioo, received a~pproval for-a !5G ~
facility from the FacillUe1 Review Com-
mittee of CHPC on Dec. 15, lMt. Sqon
after constructklo was authorized by the
lull CHPC body.
Saddleback, however. realizing too
many beds were under . construction
changed its plans and decided to start off
with only 150 beds. 8~~tb Coast, acoordlng to ad-"When Public Law 89-749 was passed
ministrator Bernard F. Carr, ts establishlng Comprehensive Health Plafn-
operating far below the "optimum oc-ning Re~tioos, provision w~ made or
cupancy" for a non-profit hospital. the 'eStablisbment of such bodies 11 the
-With 125 beds available for use South Orange C.ounty ~Comprehensive Health
Coast is drawing between.58 and
0
89-pa------Plari'ning ~n and. '~-~~~~;-•.
tients a day. Jn percentage terms, the oc-Health _Fa~ties Review COID"!fliltei,
cupaney is running anywhere from 44 Carr said. Unfortunately, appombnents
percent to 71 percent. to . t_bese ~es are made b)'.: local
For a non-profit hospital, Ill percent to ·J>O,~tic~ ~titi_es. .
85 ~nt is considered optimum. 'Ibis m t_um might allegedly leave
· Directly related to the sagging oc-room for pohtical patronage and favors.
cupancy are the amount of money the I do not know if these were facton that
hospital ls collecting, the number of peo-were in~olved in the history of this situ~-
ple employed and lhe number of beds O?, but 1t ap~ars that. so!lle shrewd indt-
available for use. v1duals exercised their influence to ob-
For the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 tain permission for the construction . of
1972. the hospital showed a $22,ooO proprietary facllitle.r whic~ rotild be
surplus in a total blJdaet of $5 million. placed upon the line by profit motivated
The hospital would have shown a interests prior to lhe construction of well
deficit had it not bflen for $168.000 in plann~ {acil.ities whl.ch ha~ been clear~
"retroactive re.imbunements" received on their basic planrung with the state,
from government and private health Carr said.
plans, said Carr. , "Had this plannin_g been followed, some
"We're going to have some tough sled-of the problems. which are prevalent ~n a
ding for the ne.zt couple of years," Carr temporary baslS at the prese~~ t11De
admitted in a recent iQterview._ __ wou~ not have.~ ~counter~-! ~d~ed
The last two years have been tough Carr. ~ think you shOUJ.O:De pomtmg
ones as well. the fuiger at the individuals who have
In ' 1970 South Coast employed roughly violated basic comprehensive health
400 pe~ns. That figure bas dropped to planning· by irresponsible _building of
290, according to Victor C. Andrews, unnecessary .~ to the detr101ent of the
president of the board of directon. He general pubhc.
said "further dislocaUons" of personnel "I thi~ >;~u'U . find a good: deal _of
may take plate in the future. opportunism, 'SB.ld Andrews m an •i;
Carr also indicated additional staff terview, "by people following the pro!1t
cuts may be made and that bed capacity motiv.e."
now bmng ~ In tht expat!ion While there is no\hinl wrong with free
program. may not be opened ror asi for enterprise, Andrews said, it is
several years. unfortunate that master planning was
The roots of the complex overbedding turnea aSldc m:t the community forced
problem wind back to the late 1960s when ti' pay for the overbedding problem.
South Coast with 171 beds open for use "It could ha ve been prevented, a lot of
was operatl~g at 95 percent occupancy. ' money sa.ved a~ ~~ C?uld have avoid~d
A 1969 study by Stone, Marraccihi and a lot of d1slocahon, said Andrews.
Patterson concluded that more hospital Hospital trustee Tristan Krogius, who
beds were needed in J.he South Orange occasionally has b e en at odds with
County Hospital Service Area, which Andrews, sayS there's more to the prob-
runs from Crystal Cove south to San lem than just overbedding.
Diego County. "Unfortunately, we offended som~ doc-
The study recommended South Coast tors when we ran the whole thing,"
immediately begin construction of 100 Krogius said.
additional beds. It also recommended the The doctors, be said, complained about
planning start for a 250 bed hospital to the treatment offered at South Coast.
serve the Saddleback Valley, and, by When the new, proprietary hospitals 1m, a 150 bed facility be constructed opened, the pbysicla.ns took their patients
between San Clemente and San Juan elsewhere, he explained.
Capistrano. Krogius said the task now is for the
south Coast followed the recom-board of directors and the hospital ad-
mendation and entered the current $7 ministration to express confidence in the
million expansion program. At the same medical staff.
time, fund-raising began for the $12 "What I'm working toward on the
million Saddlebaci Coipmunity Hospital, board is making this the best damn
scheduled to open in Laguna Hills ID Ju-hospital in the area and showing the doc-
ly. tors we care about them. t hope the
The The Stone, Marracclnl and Pat-slights they may have felt in the past will
terson report became, in essence, a tie forgotten," said Krogius.
precise plan for South Coast and Sad-Other sOurces. blame poor l~atiorrand
dleback Community. Other interesJ,s, personnel rifts for the problems SOutb
however, ignored the study. 'c.o&st is facing.
Groups interested In constructing two "South Coast is the one wilh the prob-
proprielary (profit) hospitals sprang up Iem," said one member or the Orange
-one in San ctemente, the other in County Health Planning Council, who
Mission Viejo. asked not to be ~tilled.
Construction' of the 116 bed San "There aren't a lot of people DJQY1N:
Clemente General Hospital was approved into the area," he added, "except tor
• by the Facilities Review Committee of Laguna Niguel. But South Coast may ~
comprehensive Health Planning-Celmcil competing with Mission Community and
(CHPC, of Orange COunty oo Pct. 13, Saddleback for those patients. I see a
1970. very real problem."
A week later, the full CHPC gave its Carr contends, however, that Laguna 1 approval to the project . With no appeals Niguel growth will ease the overbeddlng
of the deicsion beard during a :JG.day problem for South Coast. The area. he
period, work on the project began. It l! pointed out, is~ to grow to 12,000,
now in operation. persons -an tncreue of 50,0IE perlODI
t Constructioo of Mission Community over the present population. ,
But a spokelman for Avco Community
Gimpoint Rapist
• Assaults Woman •
: In Lagima Beach
A Laguna Beach woma{l was raped at
gunpoint late Saturday tn her north
Laguna home by a man wearing a
fearsome bl.1ck ski mask with eye and
• mouth holes outlined in red.
1 An extensive search of the area by
Laguna Beacb police failed to locato !be
revolver-wleldJllg ~ de9cribed u
• being IO to 30 years <I. II•· about six feet ~ oue Inch or six feet three inches tall and
wearing faded blue Jeana and a faded
yellow or. oCf wblte ch.in.
t 1'11e woman. described by pf8ctrs as
extrtrnely distraught by the expttlonco,
waa ta~en lo South Coast Cmununlty
Hospttal for treatmer.I a11er the lncidcnl. 'Ille Incident, reported at 10: 18 p.m.
I Salurday, b undtt lnv .. ttaatJon by the
I , cioj)llJ1DM!nl. PolJC< "°"Id not ..... Mr
age.
'
Developers says growth In Laguna NlgueJ
is far behind what was orlgina.lly planned
and that the 62,000 population figure Is at
least 10 to 15 years away.
According to,carr, recent studl .. show
that the overbeddlng problem lacing
.. SOOth Cout lltould .. ,. by tm, when
the area populltlon Is UJ>ected to catch
tip with the number of lloopltAI beds.
In the lltftlllllple, he points out, South
Coast wlD td6 a stronger role In oi>-
poslng ha""-<! fllcUity divelttpmeot,
particularly rrom the two profit hospitals
in the arta. Jt will also continue to better
its total patient care and services, 1aMS
carr.
South C.OUt, along with a number of
other protesters, bas aJreadr IMt one Im· portant battle. Addition o !9 kds to
Mlssloe Communlty,.though turned down
by the stat.> Health Planning c...ncu, I•
now lll)der way. Those new beds wlll open
In May. .
The unfortunate fact. says Andrews. is
reur hospitall • ,.111 be fighting "for
everybody" and none of the facilities
may be able to exceed a 35 percenl ...
wpaney .•
"It's a ~ •.. )1111 sinful." said
Andrews.
I
i
Leary G<!es
To Court
Qy GEORGE LEIDAL
Of .. 09llr PUtl lhfl'
A . "quiet" Dr. Timothy Leary •i>-
peared this morning In Orange· COunty
Superior Court and was atraigoed on 19
charges linking him 10 the international
drug smuggling organization lhe
· "Brotherhood of Eterna' Love."
Leary's attorney, George Chula, told
Judge James Turner his client would
waive reading of all 19 counts.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jack Ryan said
following the brie.a' court appearance this
morning, Leary was scheduled to enter
pleas to the charges at a continuation or
the arraignment this afternoon.
Ryan added there is ';some question"
whether Chula will continue to represent
the famed drug advocate during the re-
maining proceeding.:;.
He described this morning's represen-
tation or Leary by Chula as being a
"special appearance."
Leary's new girlfriend, ~fiss Joanna
. .... HaJ:court.Smilh.. said last .. week . .Be.erly, .
Hi:!1 ittornty dregson Baut:zer would re-
fend the fonne·r Harvarj l.?eturer.
DAILY PILOT Slaff ""'9
BeaehC!OmfJer •
The tides raged high in Laguna
Beach, bul this hardy fellow
doesn't seem to mind as he
waits for the waters to wash
ashore some goodies. '
OfficerL Trial
In Bar Shooting·
Death Postponed
A n~ay delay was ordered today in
the Oraote County Superior Court ar-
~aignment of two policemen indicted by
t& Grand Jury after a 'l'Ustin bar
shooting Iha! ended with the death of a
Marine Corps pilot.
Judge James Turner ordered Cypress
police Sgt. Thomas Baroldi, 26, to return
to· his courtroom Jan. 31 to plead on
murder charges filed an.er the barroom
slaying of Marine Capt. Steven Robin-
ette, 25, of Phoenix, Arizona.
He aet the same arraignment date for
Garden Grove police officer Jerry Gray,
28, who is charged with assault with a
deadly weapon for his alleged tole in the
shooting of bar patron Sam Campise, 35,
Tustin.
Baroldi is free on $100,000 bail. Gray i3
free after posting a $2,000 bond.
Both off-duty officers were arrested
Jan. 5 after a shooting fracas at the.
Bachelors Ill bar in which !tobinette was
fatally wounded and Campise received
serious wounds from which be is now
reported to be recovering satisfactorily.
The Orange County Grand Jury in-
dicted both 111en after being told by
witnesses: ulat Robinette was actually
trying to come to the aid of tie two of·
ficers when he allegedly was gunned
down by Baroldi .
Kathleen Bush
Succumbs at 38;
Services Slated
Rosary will be recited tonight for
Kathleen S. Bush, wife of Daily Pilot
compositor Jerome A. Bush of saota
Ana who died Friday. She was 38. M~. Bush was a native of Maine and
lived In Orange COunty lor 28 years. She
was: a CUb Scout and Girl Scout leader
and a member of Boy scoot Troop 165
Auxlllary. Sbe also wu a member of J ef-
feraoo Elemtntary School PTA in Santa
Ana and an active parish member of Im·
maculate Heart of Mary Cburcll.
She leaves her husbiJ,nd, three
dau1hters, Ann Marie, carolyD and l\fary
Kathleen; two sons, Michael and Steven,
all of the family borne at 2413 s . Rita
Way; ·her parenlJ, Mr. and Mn. Freddie
Jolin of Santa Ana; lhrte &i.sten, Lalll'
eti. Kale ol Hemtt, Loraine Anni or
Telas 'Ind Linda Ann Elliot of Whittier.
R&ary will be at a p.m. in the lm-
maculate Heart ol Mary Church. Santa
Ana. MISS will be qelebnled at 10 a.m,
Tuesday, also at lmmacul.ate Hearl.
Clmn:h. Burial will follow in Hoi1
Sepulcher Cemetery, Orange.
Peronisl Kurdered
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Julian MO!'
eno, a Permist labor leadel" and cancU-
dalo !or polltlcal o(lko In the March
etoctlOM, was ....inaled IA)day outside
bis home. A pollc6 opokesman nit! the
....,111 Oed all« lhootJn1 Moreno and
his chaul!ela u tltq .. lcred MCll'<DD'a
cor-
~ .
Chula rep~nted Lear; during his
1970 trial in Orange County. That action
resulted in Leary being convicted of
possession of marijuana. Lagima Beach
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell arrested Leary,
his wife Rosemary and his son John, on
Dec. 7.8, 1968 after discovering a quantity
of pot in lbe family 's station \Vagon,
parked along woodsy Woodland Drive.
Mrs. Leary's whereabouts aren't known.
The "tune.. in, turn on and drop out''
apostle appeared quiet in court today,
Ryan said. He said l':.! is "one of the
county staff'1 assigned to prosecute the
charges agairu.~ Leary. who is believed to
have founded the worldwide drug smug-
gling organization. The Grand Jury ·in-
dicted.. Leary in August.
Leary's court appearance today was in
marked contrast to his ~iling, jovial
mood at Los Angeles '.°'lternational
Airport 1·J,ursday. Mometits after be was
manacled by agents of the U.S. Bureau
of Dangerous Drugs, Leary passed by
waiting newsmen grinning broadly. An
unmarked Los Angeles Sheriff's van slog-
ged Leary through a rain drenched rush
hi..ur to Los Angeles County Jall wbere be
spent a night ~ore being transferred tct
Orange C.ount)· Jail.
Chula was said today to ·be meeting
privately with Leary prior to the af·
ternoon appearance.
The charges faced by Leary in Orange
County link him with some 50 others in-
volved in the Brotherhood of "Eternal
Love. The Drotherbood, believed to be an
offshoot of Leary's League of Spiritual
Discovery, was responsible for bringing
more than 1,000 pounds of hashish worth
$4.3 million into the U.S. each month,
authorities say.
Leary's ball· bas been set at $5 million,
an amount equal to the bench warrant
issued for him by the county C1>urt last
August when the Grand Jury indicunents
were handed down.
Even with no baH, however, Leary
would return to prison. He fled the
minimum seturity California Men's
Colony at San Luis Obispo in September.
197:>. He only partially setved it one to 10
year sentence there for his Laguna
Beach conviction. The night, believed to
have been set up by the militant
Weatherman organization, launched
Leary's 28-montL wanderings in Europe
including stays with the Black Panthers
in Algiers and in Switzerland. Lebanon
and finally Afgbanl3tan where he was
spotted by U.S. agents.
•
SNOOPY APPEARS
IN ROMA N DIGS?
ROME (AP • -Did the-ancient
Romans !'lave their Snoopy. too~
Yes , said Home's II Giornule d'Italia
today with a headline: "Snoopy \Vas a
Ro.man."
Archeologists \\'Orking under . the
Basilica of St. l\1ary ~lajl)r discovered
1,600-year-old etchings on the wall with
remarkable similarity to Snoopy.
Snoopy is the dog 111 Charles Schulz'
cartoon strip, "Pe.inut s."
'E vacuatio11'
Flap Studied
At Sa11 Onofre
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of lllt DtllY PHtf Sttll
Evacuation of several South Coast
communities in case of a nuclear ac-·
cident at the S a n 0 n o f r e Nuclear
Kissn1ge1·
E1t-Route
To Paris
lly Unilfd Press lnternall&nal
Dr . Henry A. Kissinger left today. for ·
Paris for crucial a.nd perhaps final talk~
\\•ith the Vietnamese aimed 21t ending the
12-year-old Vietnam \Var.
Saigon and \\'ashington reports said 11
cease-fire could be initialed as early as
\Vednesday, with the formal signing Ct!re-
•1n<lny a few days later.
The foreign ministers of South Vietnam
and the Viet Cong arrived in Paris wilh
opti mistic statements.
Le Due Tho, the principal HanOl ne·
gotiator, had remained in Paris when "'"
Kissinger flew back to Washington for
consultations with President Nixon after
their 23rd round of talks.
Generating complex would take in excess President Nixon had sent Gen. Alexan-
of two hours, an expert told a licensing der Haig to Saigon to win agreement
boa rd over the weekend . from President Nguyen Van Thieu on the
Los Angeles area traffic enginetr M. new draft cease-fire agreement and toda y
V .1)beppard told the Atomic Safety aod gave final instructions to-Kissinger be-
·Lld:nsing Board.Saturday Ulat-the..oom--fore the security-adviser · returned to
mun.ities of San C1emente, Capistrano Paris. Haig briefed Nixon earlier on hi~
Beach, and Dana PoiRt and San Juan talks v.·itb the Asian allies.
Capistrano could be evacuated in less White llouse sources said Kissinger
than three hours. . \~·ould be prepated to initial a Vietnam
But foes or the proposals to bu.1ld. two agreement by Thursday if no unexpected ~w reactors at San Ono!re ~ave insisted snags arise in his talks Tuesday with Lt
1n past month~ that e_vacu~tion plans for Due Tho and Xuan Thuy. the chief North
the communities are mfer10~. Vietnamese negotiator in Paris. Sheppard appeared as a witness for the . ·. · 1 f h" f' I two utilities proposing the projects. K1s.s1nger hea_ded direct y rom . 1s 1na
Southern California Edison and San meehng with Nixon to .Andr:ew~ Air Fortt
Diego Gas and Electric companies. B~se to bo11r~ a presidential JCt for the
Sheppard told the three-man panel flight to. Par1~. . . .
assembled in San Diego that it would re-Todays arrivals 1n Paris included lw~
quire 28.000 cars to evacuate the foreign n1inisters -Mme . Nguyen Tbt
residents of the four South Coast C1>m-Binh of the Viet Cong. and Tran Van Lant
munities. of South Vietnam -and both issued op-
In areas closer to the plant, it would timislic statemenLs. The Hnat agreement
take considerably less time, he added . is to be signed at foreign minister level.
Both the utilities and the Atomic Blld weather forced Kissinger to drive
Energy Commission stall use three to the air base by limousine rather than
separate zones which would be affected taking a helicopter. He said nothing to
by plant safety matters. newsmen v.'hen he arrived al Andrews.
_ The first. ~ne, the "exclusion. zone" is but paused twice at the blue-and-v,.hite
an area within an 800-yard radws of the plane to wave and smile broadl y. Tht>
reactors. . . bareheaded Kissinger was peppered by
No permanent residents are allowed 111 •. a wind-driven rain but appeared nOI to
that area. notice it.
. A second, ','low-µopulatio~" ~ne is also The \\'bite House said Kissinger would e&~ed. 1't!&t is the area within a , three-confer Tuesday morning with Tran Van µ,i~e radius of the plant. Included m that Lam and meet Tho at 9 a.m. {midnight
Sedor are ~ 50t!therly strelcbes of ~n PST) A pokesman said Kissinger would Clemente (mcluchng the Western While . · 5 . . I h d House) and parts of C8mp Pendleton. be 1n touch with Nllcoo by cab e but a no other comment on the outlook.
Navy Sky Diver
Killed in Plunge
A Navy man from Vi('torville was kill-
ed instanily in a skydiving accident at
Camp Pendleton Sun.'lay.
Base spak:!smen said Randall Card, 22.
stationed at North Island Naval Air Sta-
tion, was killed after his chute fail ed to
open properly during a sport parachute
jump at Isadora F1ats.
Card had been jamping with 16 fellow
membe~s of the North Island Naval
Parachute club when the mishap took
place.
Base spokesmen said Card wa s a
seaman stationed aboard the USS
Buchanan which currently is in San
Diego Harbor.
The skydiving activity is an authorized
recreation for military groups <ln the
base. informatior: aides said. ·
f.1eanwhile South Vietnamese ·mrantry·
men and annored units kept two battered
North Vietnamese regiments pinned in
deep jw:igles north oI Saigon today while
\vaves of U.S. Air f<~orce B52s pounded
the retreating Communists, military
spokesmen said.
Six waves of heavy bombers roared
over the Michelin rubber plantation Sun-
day night and dropped more than 500 tons
ot bombs on the Communist troopa RUii·
ing deeper into the heavy jungles , ac-
C1>rding'to U.S. Command reports.
Fighting broke out suddenly in the area
40 miles north of Saigon Friday afternoon
when the Communist force was caught
trying to sneak in close to the capital
area to prepare for a land grab after a
cease-fire .
The two South Vietnamese battalions
that made the initial contact were out-
numbered and badly mauled in the open-
ing round. The understrength Commwiist
regiments numbered about 1,600 men and
the South Vietnamese force was about
1.000. according to military solrces.
11 ffil\liROR ml R?.OR
ON iH{ WALL • WHOS~
TH.t FAIR{ST OF TH-€ffi ALL"/
ffiAGGI IS •••
Q<.CAUS<. W".(N mAGGI \.\AS A
Siil{ , l'f'S A FOP. P..( Al.." Lt GIT,
"ON(.ST INJIN ~ SAL~ ,I OP. tL~( •
'THIS UJ.((I<.
l"T''S m IP.ROR S ,I
OV~P. 7S OF Tff.( MOST UNUSUAL,
S(AUTIFUL~ l>OM(STIC ANO
Ull?OR'Tt t> , 'ST'i'L( '> YOU ~AV.f.
.(V(~ S{4.N •. I\\ PRIC{ ~ VOU
.)UST -UJON'T ~(Ll(V-' • • •
ON Sl\Lt NOW
f P.Om
14 T~ 300
(OOLLAll.~ -r'~AT IS)
.;...,oA.JLY PILOI
-A Jet Nose
In the Tent
WJLQ BLcE YONDERS DEPT. -
Cousider the aE'roplane pllot who might
be dusting through the clouds O\'er our
Orange Coast region and abruptly get in·
to airborne difficulty.
There aTC iv:o major comforting
thoughts for him. First, Orange Count)'
A \rport just inland of the Newport Beach·
Costa ?i.tesa region and secondly, El Toro
1'1arlne Corps Air Station, just over the
hill from Laguna Beach in the Sad·
dleback region .
If the aircraft sutfering some fonn of
malfunction that prompts the necessity
of seeking immediate real estate is of the
small, puddle-jumping \'ariety, there art
other spots or comfort. These include
1'1eadowlark Airport in· Huntington Beach
or Capistrano Airport down in the
southerly sector of our coast.
MOST FOLKS, HOWEVER, do not
lend~ to fret about these smaller planes
much, figuring they can pull' an emergen·
cy exit from the ~'ild blue a lot of dif-
ferent places, like freeways, beaches,
cornfields and the like.
r..tost of us laymen, however, assume.
that the larger models have fewer op-
tions. Therefore. aerial troubles in these
parts for the military and commercial
jeis would necessitate a landing at either
El Toro or Orange County.
El Toro is. of course, a military
airdrome while Orange County is a
civilian commercial port. Again. most of
us who are laymen presume that pilots
would take little time to discriminate at
times of trouble. thus following the
seaCaring motto of Any Old Port in a
storm.
THUS IF A J\.IIUTARV jet was
acting up and Orange County Airport
were the nearest sPot. the pilot l'-uuld
come in there forthwith.
By the same token. you would assume
a commercial jet having dif!iculty would
drop in on El Toro's airstrip if it were
the closest at hand.
All of these things are assumpllons of
non-aviation types.
Thus it comes as somewhat o{ a
sufl)rise to those of us with landlocked
feet that Orange County officials have
formally negotiated a proposed pact with
the U.S. Marine Corps for use of the El
Toro airs~p in times of strtss.
COUNTY AVIATION Director Bob
Bresnahan will present this agreement
he worked out with Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang
to the Board of SupervisoNI tomorrow.
ln brief, it says that should Orange
County Airport be shut down due to fire,
flood, fog or civil disturbance, civilian
commercial jets can land at El Toro.
The agreement also reportedly stresses
. that the pact doesn't cover handling of
commercial jet operations at El Toro
because of a planned closure of Orange
County Airport. ·
Well, all that ulde, it ls well known
that numerous Newport Beach residents
and many in Costa Mesa would like to
see the big jets vanish from Orange
County Airport. And at the same time,
residents of lhe Saddleback Valley, in·
eluding El Toro, Laguna Hills and
Mission Viejo, don't want to !ee those
same jets find a new home at the Marine
Corps Air Station.
THE EMERGENCY landing agree-
ment, therefore, is very likely to, be met
with some nervousness by residents of
the Saddleback Valley who migbt barbor
some suspicion that the commercial jet
has just stuck its nose in tbe tent.
Oh well , maybe it's just a nose.
Winter
4 Musli111s
S111·1·ende1·
' Peacefitlly
NE\V \'ORK (API -Four .gunmen
~·ho had vov.·ect· 10 die for Muslim
paradise in a haU of police bullets ha ve
surrendered peacefully after their nine
remaining hostages mnde a dramatic
escape to signal the end of a twtrday
siege in a Brooklyn sporting goods stort'.
The end came late Sunday afternoon.
O\'er '47 hours arter a sllt>nt robbery
alarm alerted police y.·ho surprised the
young gunmen in the store. One
patrolman wa s killed and l\\"O others
'·'"Ounded in a fury of gunfire.
AFTER nlE INlTI.AL shootout subsid·
ed to a standoff. police ri.ngrd John &
Al's Sports, lnc.. in Brooklyn's
\Villiamsburg section with sharpshooter$.
But fear for the hos!sgt>s prevented any
foreed showdown and police concentrated
on keeping t'OmmWlications y.•ith the gun-
n1en.
The break came shortly before I p.m.
Sunday when the hostages, led by a co-
owner of the store, broke through
plasterboard-to a sealed off stairway and
escaped to the roof while the gunmen
were diverted.
Four hours later, ronowing more
negotiations with police and pleas from
some relAUY..es, the gunmen walked· out .
T"·o carried a stretcher wiJl a third ~·ho
was WOWlded and the four1h walked
ahead.
Police said preliminary reports in-
dicated their marlcsmen had nbt fired a
shot since the original gunbattle,
although the gunmen had fired volleys
from time to lime.
POIJCE IDENTIFIED the four by
their Muslim names as Salih Ali
Abdullah, Dav;d Abdullah Ar-Rahm and
Shulab A1xiue Raheem, whose lawyer
said he was also known as Carey Earl
Robinson. The wounded man, Yusef
Abdul. 20, was in Cair condition arter
surgery at King's County Hospital.
Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Eugene Gold said
he would go before a grand jury today
with charges agaitW the four that prob-
ably w-o'U t·d-fnclude the murder-of
Patrolman Stephen R. Gilroy, the at-
tempted murder of Patrolmen Jose
Adornb and Frank Carpentier, kidnaping
and weapons possession.
Police said they Were searching for a
fifth man who was said to have been
driving a getaway car when the robbery
began about 5:45 p.m. Friday. They said
the molive for the robbery was to obtain
guns, not money.
In a hand-written letter carried out by
a doctor who attended the wounded gun·
man. the four described themselves as
"'servants of Allah" and said they ~·ere
''expressing solidarity with all Muslims
and oppressed people of the world."
"WE HA VE NOTIIlNG to lose and vic-
tory and paradise to gain," they
declared. "We will not give in to your
demands, but we will continue to hold the
hostages who are being well treated and
will not be harmed intentionally by us."
Earlier they had released three other
hostages. The nine remaining included
Jerry Riccio, a co-owner of the store.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
DtHvm of tht Daily Piiot
is 9uarantt~
M-•Y·l'ridl y: 11 ,.., •• "ti llf>'t ,..,r
,.,.r •Y 11Jt ,.m., c•ll •nd Y""' •li'Y will
" t .. 119111 r. ,..... c .. 1, ••• '""' IOl!lll
7:# '·"'·
Se,,. .......... lolf!Ny: tr ...... "°' rtttl ... ~· CIPl ., ' ...... '"w .. •r .... I ...... su""•r. e1U •"" 1 ct,., win lot ,....,,,, "'
JIW. C1H1 •r1 ,._ ... tlllll It I .Ill.
Ttltphones
Most Or1111111 County Are1s ..• '42.4121
HClr!llWU! Hunll1111ton Bt•UI Ind WtlUn!n.llr ... 540•1220 s..n c1..,,..,1t, C10111r•no 81acn, S..n Ju1n CIPl•lr1no, Dan• Point,
SClultl Lt11un1, l•;lll'I• Nlt ut! 491-4420
•
• MRS. SNYDER SHOWS PHOTOGRAPH TO CHILDREN
'But WMre'1 D•ddy' Tot W•nta to Know
U~IT ........
THIS PHOTO MADE H.186!CCELEBRITY OVIRNIGHT
Seys Nixon ; Admits TMt She Doe•n't.
1'Modern Day Cinderella at Ball
~ .... ., .. , ... , ......... _ ................. ~·
Susa11 Da11ces Witli President-'I'm s:Uiprised I Didn't Faint'
STERLING, Va. (UPI) -Susan Snyder became en Instant celebrity when
newspapeNI Sunday carried a photograph of her dancing with President Nixoo
at an inaugural ball. Her two small daughters were not impressed.
Mrs. Snyder. a 27-year-old blonde, said her brief ·dance with the chief
executive came about accidentally and she was j<surprised 1 didn't faint on the
SlXlt .''
' J\.tRS. SNYDER SAID during an interview at her suburban home that she
was st.anding on the dance noor of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Saturday night watching Nixon dance with his wife, Pat, and the ~·ife of a
U.S. Senator. Suddenly she was pushed forward by the crush of people and
found herseU dancing with Nixon. "Lf I had thought of dancing with the presi-
dent. I'd be a nervous wreck," she said.
Airs. Snyda-, who ~·as wearing a low-cut purple goMJ. said Nixon was a
A-_.,..., ~~~~ ''JU'" ·"" -u~
good dancer but admiUed that she isn't. She said she cooldn't recall what
Liooel llamptoo'• band was playing at the Ume "but li waJ something I could
fol.low. I'm surprised I didn't faintoo the spot."
"l was floating on cloud nine afterwards," she said.
HER TWO DAUGHTERS, however, were more concerned with the where-
abouts of their father, Gft'ald Snyder, who works for tbe Xerox O:>rp.
1'.1rs. Snyder said she showed the newspaP!f!r photograph to her 3-year-old
daughter. Jennifer, Sunday morning and told her, "Mommy danced with the
president last night."
"Oh, you didn't dance ~·Ith daddy?" the liUle girl replied.
To her daughter Jill, e year old, ~1rs. Snyder said, "see here is fn9mtnY
and President Nixon."
"Where's daddy?" asked the other tot.
.U (P.e'>..e."72 .... W.:a·~ I t? 1 , .... -nS
Antiwar Protesters Leave--w ashington Vow March
WASHINGTON ( lJll,l I -The last of
tens of thousands of antiwar protesters
trickled out of Washi ngton today with
their leaders vowing they would continue
mass street demonstra~ions until peace is
achieved. .;
The protesters. most o( whom left
Saturday night and Sunday, following a
mass march and rally demanding tbat
the United States get entirely out of
Southeast As.la and sign the peace ac-
cords, packed the last of. their vans and
autos and headed home.
THE HAD kicked off their three days
of "lln inauguration of conscience" with
a news conference at the gates of the
"1hite House and an anti-inaugural con-
cert, conducted by Leonard Bernstein, o.n
Frday.
They concluded their protest events on
Si.:nday with . an ecumenical service in
"•hich political, religious, show business
and military personalities urged an end
to the war.
U.S. park Police estimated the crowd
at 60,000 Saturday afternoon during the
main anthYar rally on the grounds of the
Washington Monument. Some estimates
were lower, some higher.
Leaders of both the National Peace Ac-
tion Coalition and the Peoples Coalition
for Peace and Justi~. co-sponsors of the
rnass march on Saturday, said they
would continue to call street protests un-
til there was a settlement of the war they
liked -and they made it clear a cease
fire would be only the first step.
BOTH DR. SIDNEY Peck of the PCPJ
and Jerry Gordo:i of NPAC said they
were surprised and "pleased at the
turnout or demonstrators on Saturday, ·
the largest antiwar demonstration in
\Vashington since April 24, 1971, when
more than 250,cm people participated.
But both men stressed that this would
not be the end of the antiWar movement.
Peck promised "sustained, ma£S, non·
violent actions that will go be)'ond May
Day" in its scope. During May, 1971, an-
tiwar prolesters carried on nearly three
weeks of sustained activities that
re.ilollted in more than 10,000 arests.
There were on1y a handful of arrests
during the inauguration weekend.
GORDON CALLED for a march on the
WHERE A SALE IS A SALEI
Capitol Feb. 2.1 to demand complete U.S.
withdrawal from southeast Asia.
At Wesley United Methodist church.
more than 700 protesters filled the
church to bear fonner Sens. Eugene J_
1t1cCarthy and Ernest Gruening denounce
the Nixon administration.
.Home a Gift Shop
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•
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•
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I •
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Wallops Midwest
\ :1 ',
', 'll ........ ... .... ... ... •• ....... .... ---• • ..... -...... l'=·
Sn,ow Plagues Motorists From Oklaliorna to Micliigari THIS IS ITI ALL SALE ITEMS SLASH·
ED AGAIN, HURRY BEFORE THEY
ARE GONE!
NAllOMAl WIAl"ll Nh'tCl POllCASI I•,_.,. 151 I ~), ~ 1) '
• 29. )
Coastal Weather
F•1r todfor. l.ltht v11rl1blt Wl"ll•
nlthl •fld "'°"""° "°"''"' ()IC-11111 wt1!tt1y • to ,, ~ '" •l!f"'°°""
tod1y 1nll Twttl•'f· Hlth today ~
Co&•l•I ~tvrft , ..... ln:m .i
~ ''· 1n1111C1 t!Wf1Ptr11llll'fl ••• mm •• ~ "· w ..... l..nptrlhlrt "·
Sun, Jll oon, Tides
MONDAY
Stcond low 11•1 p,111, f.I
TUllOAY
l'lnt h'9h , .... 12:U 1.lft. 4.1
Flrtl low ........ , . •1 I• •·"'-1.t
SfCOltd lligll ••...•.... H :" •.m. t,1 ~ low •iU 1.m. 0.1
'"" ,., ... •:5' '·"" .... t :lJ •.m..
FANTASTIC BARGAINS · ON ALL
THREE LEVELS OF THE HOME AND
GIFT SHOP AND IN THE PARTY
SHOP, T<DOI
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9-6·
RICHARD 'S LIDO CENTER 3433 VIA LIDO;NEWPORT BEACH 673.6360
MOorl •11n •14 •·~ tlft f:6' e.m.1 .. ----------------------------------------------11
••
I
•
)I
LOS ANGELES .\l!.j. -· Two poUUcai aollwar ac-
llvl>tt,--Jone Fooda
and Chicago 1 defendant Tom
Hayden, 1 have married amid
fetUvltles that ranged from
Vlctnameae son•s ~ Jrlih. lfg1. -·~ •.
l;OOO~o
To LA Rites
For Wyman
LOS ANGELES (AP\ -Na·
tlonal political leaders were
among more than 1,000
mourners who attended
funeral services for
Democratic party leader
Eugene L. Wyman.
Bess 'MyerSQ111 New York
e LaflOtf• Seen
SUNNYVALE (AP) -Up to
900 employes of the Loekheed
Missiles & Space C.O. bera will
face layoffs in the next few
week! because of a Slowdown
in efforts to flnlsh the Trident
missile, a company
spo1',esman has said.
D. A. Stuart, vice president
and general manager of the
Sunnyvale faclllty; said In a
memo to employes tlli! month
that a review of the Trident
program made It apparent
that "•ctlvlty 'Pl""""' for . thil ,...,. muat be substanUally
reduced," involving about 75
in the next two moo.tbs.
e Protests Held
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Chanting "out D 0 W , 1 '
thousands of demonstrators
staged peaceful marches here
inauguration day and heard
speakers demand an im-
mediate end to the Vietnam
war.
Pollee eslimat.d S,000 to
5,000 persons attended a civic
center rally wl\i_le a n
esUmated 2,500 persons held a
separate deroonstraUon at
Mission Dolores P a r t .
Assemblyman Willie Brown
and Black Panther Party
Preslden~ Bobby Seale spoke.
Hand Found
On Shore
Gives Clue
SANTA CRUZ (AP)
Fingerprintt from a band
discovered at the edge of
Monterey Bay may help ln
Identifying a human body
from which other pieces have
Washed on shore at scattered
spots, the sheriff's office said
said Satarday.
The hand, foond by a surfer
at nearby Capitola Friday,
supplied legible fingerprints,
said Santa Cruz County Sher·
llfs Lt. Ken Pittinger.
Pittinger said autborittes
believe the band belongs to •
bady muti l ated torso
• ~ered Weclne!day at
Natural Bridges State Park
Beach. The hand and torao
were found five miles apart.
A woman's arms and lower
legs found south of here in a
remote area of Monterey
County Jan. 10 may belong to
the same tors<i, Pittinger ad·
ded.
Board Elects
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
State Board of Equalization
ball elected offleers for 1m.
'Ille new chairman ls Wllliam
M. Bennett of. Marin County
and new vice chairman Is
George R. Reilly of San Frao·
cisco.
Inland Surf?
I
City May lnsroll Waves
OAKLAND (AP) -Switng? In landlocked Pleasanton?
The board of directors ol the Alameda County Fair
tltlnks It can be dooe, and they'nl cooslderlng Installing a
$1 mlllloo permanent artillclal surfing beach with machines
to make waves five feet high. ·
"The surfing beach would be built on an eight-acre site
at the county fairgrounds," aaid lair manag ... Lee Hall Fr~
day. -"The projectton calls for three million gallons ot water
and three big pumpa that would make waves eveiy three
minutes," he added. "The wavee could be controlled to be
anywhere from three to five feet blgh. People wilold ride
the wavee with surfboards or mWl rafts juat as they do at
the reaJ ocean." l!all said ao arUficlal surfing beach already bas beeo
built In Tempe, Ariz., "In the middle o1 the deM!rl."
THERE IS A FACTORY
AUTHORIZED DEALER
FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbor Baulevard Df Car•
LOOI POI THI IMIUM AT
DAVE ROSS lCOSTA MESA PONTIAC DATSUN
2AIO 2145
HARBOR BLVD. ARBOR BLVD.
•
DAILY PILOT 51
Corona Holdout
Juror .'Pressured'
1 Me~cedes:Benz announces .
precisely the kind of model change
you expect from Mercedes-Benz.
•
'
. ----M ODEL CHANGES at Mercedes")
I Benzarcinspiftdnotbythetrends
of fashion but by the thrust of engineer-·
ing progress. One such change b«omes
official today: the Mercedes-Benz 250
Sedan bas evolved into the 280 Sedan ~
without strttching the body one inch or
stooping to the sllghrat hint of styling
. trickeiy.
The technic:al improvements that in-o
spired this clwlge willsetthe280furthcr
apan than ever from other c:ua in its
clasS. -
Should you in•est your $8,96g• in
the 2go Sedan? Study ita ~ ~
finemcnts.. Weish .all the factl. Measure
thia car's performance ogainat)'Ollrn«ds
~then decide.
ll<marbble new engine.
The engin<en hid the 280~ biggest news
uadcr the bood.
Fmh from a Jong laboratory incu-
bation is a new 2.8-litre d<lvb"-r-
luad-<111mhaft engine. Hemispherical
combustion qwitbcn, 2-stage dual com-
pound carburetor-this lovingly assem-
bled Six could be mistaken for a high-
performance sporu cu engine. (Note
that it r<vs up to 6SIJIJ rpm.)
''The crankshaft is something of a
masterpiece," repons Britain's Aurocar
--
Nn» Rtillf boaJu do"
magazine. urunning in seven main bear-
ings, and every one of the twelve webs
incorporating a countcrwcighL" l'.he
goal: low engine vibntion.
The men who designed this engine
limed for l/fi<inu::J instead of brute pow.
er. You get the running smoolhness you
expcet from a car of this class. Some-
thing you may not expect from a car of
this class: the 280 engine's rcsuained
appetite for gasoline.
As agile as before
That engine can be lighter and 1eos bulky
than those uaed in other $8000 sedans
beca~oe the 280 Sedan itscll is lighter
and less bulky.
It is an mfinuring fiut that tlu top J
dmrtaric "luxtny" sldans all weigh ot ltmr
Ital/ a ton nwrt, and mtaturt a f11U 3 Jeer
,.,,,.,, than tM 280 s.aa.. &mu fDCfllkr
IAot dtly.., tMif h"I• V,& ,,,,;,,.,.
Ye1 the ema bulk or thac 1qer can
.ICClllS more a maaor of show than°""
. ~ .. . . '
/,
)f mttfu.Bnt6 280 Stdlln i1rii jun a clum6td car; ir'1 an impr(lf}1icar)
roominess: the 280 matches them for
interior space--and-actually exceeds
them in trunk capacity. ·
Those $8000 "hm1ry" sedans art
impressive standing in a driveway. But
compare driving them with driving the
280 Sedan, out in the real world.
Yoµ'U discover that the 280 twirl•
through a turning circle of only 36:4
feet (about the same as a little VW 1200
"Beetle"). Those larger cars don't.
The 280 nips into parking spots those
heftier sedans have to pass up.
And you'll slip through holes in city
traffic where dreamboats dare not go.
Fully independent suspension
Let others brag about how ·big and qr-/
nate their cars arc. You can brag about
how well your 280 Sedan handles.
",,. rht mott controllabh hith 1p11d
1tdan we'w u1ud!' ~
That was Motl)r Trtnd magazine's .reac ..
tion to the 250 Sedan; and the 280's han-
dling ia unchanged.
This ia because its superb 'urpen ..
sioo i1 unchanged: a four--w heel. fully
independent system with a diagonU..
pivot rear swing axle. Gag..pressurized
shock absorben and anti-sway ~an front
and rear are standard components. Also
atandard: 175 SR/14 radial-ply tirel on
wheel rims s~ inches wide.
The engineen fitted an addidonal
shock absorber to the 280, in an unusual
spot-the steering system.,
u.,..,,,... i"4t,,,...,.,.., ,,., "',...,"""
Instead of aquandering your money
on boll.., sheet metll and styling that i1'
1000 pasK. you irwm it in fundamental
•
engineering with the 2~0 Sedan.
The body of your 2go is an all-welded
steel structure so suong that a separate
frame is redundant. That bod_y is the
frame.
Precious weight is saved. Enormous
strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
over the miles because there are no bolts.
J97l domati.: lw:ury~dlll
280 ojftrJ th1 liu:ury of tffi,it11l si::t.
Run a finger over the.finish. You will
feel why it took several hours to paint,
bake, and polish to that high glqss.
Numerous outer body scams were filled·
and made invisible before painting.
When you buy an $8,000 automobile,
you deserve such fastidious touches.
4-wheel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc brakes on Your
280 as standard equipment.
Consider that the front brake discs
measure almost 11 inches in diameter,
virtually the same size as the front discs
on the famous Mercedes-Benz 4SOSL
sports model. The 280's brakes arc pow-
er assisted, of course; another standard
equipment feature.
• 4-speed automatic shift
Your 280's automatic uansmission is so
quick-shifting that e.vtn aponing drivers
hive expressed surprise-and approval
You can set it in DRIVE and leave it
there; you can also shift through the
forward gears b~ hand.
The padded shift lever sits within
easy reach on a central console. (If you
prd'er, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no cxtn cost.)
You are not charged ttttt for this
automatic trans.mission, or ·ror power
steering and power brakes, or for an
eICctrically heated rear window. They
are all pan of the 280's base price.
Even air conditioning falls under the
heading of standard equipment. Y0u'll
oount four separate outletl OD the in.·
arrument paneJ-two for the driver, two.
for bis front-seat passenger.
Comfort not forgotten
The painstaking Mereedes-Benz engi-
neers found one subtle way after another
Merced ... Bem motor can:
from,$15,182• to $6,439t'
Metcedc•·Bem otfen 1 v11t ranee at
mode It. Here are 1une11ed tt11il pricea
for 7 of the mo•t popul1r rypt•:
.. 50St£Coupr
450SL Cwpe{Roadstcr
2IOSB '·' 5"azl ' Z80Co1.1pc
l80Sedan
220 Sfllan
220Dinel~11
-$15,11.1-
$11,761
$10,J?I
$ 9,614
I 1,961 s 6,66~ s "6,439
•w..1C-.por1.,,_,,_1_111 • ..,...,.., ....
..,.i-. -......... ·-· It -°""' .. lnJ, .... -.......,,-... ~·-
to make the 280 an eminently livable
machine.
You Sit high enough to see the road
ahead. Large glasa areu enhance visi-
bility. Your body is supported firmly in
scatS built around a network of coil
springs, not cheap foam rubber.
You needn't fumble around to find
the headlight dimmer switch or wind-
shield wiper and washer controls.They're
a .fingcnip away in a pod on the left of
the steering columnj you can work them
without taking a hand off the wheeL
More than mm.
The new 280 Sedan is plainly nor$g,96g•
worth of bigness, or styling, or status.
Buy it and you buck the trends o( the
••Juxury" class head-on.
Your satisfying reward: ownership
or a precision machine engineered to
outlive Lrtnds. One test drive will con-
firm your wisdom in cbooSing it.
Arrange with your authorized Mer-
cedes-Benz dcalCr to·uke that test drive
Soon. For more useful facta about the
280 and other modeJs, clip the coupon
and mail it todly. You will ra:dve a froc
color brochure. r-------
' @ Jim Slemons Imports, Inc. I 120 W. Wtrntt A11tnue
S•nt• An._ Ctllfon1l1 92707
Plt.1.e Mtld me your lull-eo1ot brocbuN
of lhc Mcrctdta-Bcna CDCMOC' Ciiio
. .
120 W. Warner Avenue, 5.mta.Ana. Uilifornia 92707 Phone : 714-546-4111 •
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• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Freeway Alternative
.
News that the Orange county Road Department Is Highway trafllc. ·
about to launch a study of a "transportation corridor" Wblle pointing out a grave lr&n3POJ'lltlon deliclen·
t Si:i-Wij'RE 'lllf A!>!>l!>1AN'f
SliQ!&1ARV Of pfFEIJ!>li LIEP
'fO A ~1~ COMMl't'r~i A80U1
ittA COtJln' OF LAW rUA1'
16S11MON'f WOUl.P..W.ViJ!i~1~
IN A l'ERJ'URV C~AR~G I .-...... "!
' ' All $11bllW.IOtl-1.MH 1D A/./. between Newport Beach and San Clemente may well be cy In the entire coastal sector, 'CO\Ulty planaen vow they
the first smoke signal in what could develop into a lull· will not try to force any plan on communlliee that op-
scale batUe inY.olving _coasW lan4qwn8", developers, pose i~.J\Jl<l!Lai)Jr mijqr !'Ofridor Is developed, It will AmfRN:r ~PAHV.
environmentalists and traffic experts from the Los An· have lo Include buffers to reoldeltUl! aonee.
geles County line to lhe San Diego.County line. --1'lle...plam>fls-ar--.fa<'ed-wllb a delicate balancing __ _.,_..._
The initial move was a request from the devclopers act if they bope lo satisfy the demancb of landowners,
of Dana Point's Thunderbird Romes tract for a decision environmentalbts: and ,preaent residents, All of whom
on the fate of 80 acres of their 455-acre tract which had would be . well advised lo ""'°gnlze the many-faceted
n earmarke<l...-ngnt<>f·wayfortlie-now=aerutrct'----·~6!e11nl1Crtlilllrll<ltlrofflrtnrconstrutttvnug..,..----i--
Pacific C-Oast Freeway. lions so an eqllilable solution may be found.
The road department revealed that Ibis, and other
freeway right-of.way property, might be needed for .•
nlajor "transportation comdor" to help solve traffic
problems already developing.
While no precise definition of th e term has been
forthcoming, county officials indicate the "corridor"
might be a sort of super-highway, but not exactly a
f:ree\\>ay . ·. . . \Vithout some reasonable traffic solution, said one
county planner t:taUy, development. soutµ of ~e San
Diego Freeway \\ill have to be curtailed. •
" Ten1porary efforts to lower high density zoning
• along the former freeway route already have produced
some static. l\ Laguna Niguel developer whose land was
zoned for 11 units per acre whe11 the freeway was
planned bas since been dropped to a five-unit density.
He has threatened ·to sue the county if it continues to
block his planned !llgher-density demopmenl
But, say the planners, traffic generated by high
density zoning established along the freeway route can·
not be band.led on existing roads.
Newport Beach freeway lighters were shocked by
the "transportation corridor" news, fearing it could
mean revival of something resembling the freeway they
!ought to kill. . . .
The issue . also pronuses to~generate a split 1~ La·
guna"Be3ch, where envi.ron.mentaliSts greetea.-tfie ~deatli
of the freeway '\\i th joy, but others feared its loss would
only increase the almost insupportable burden of Coast
.
Extending· Daylight
Call!ornla's Rep. Cnli Boemer Is a Dian wbo's will·
Ing lo take bis lime, and eiJs time It look:s as If bis pa-
tience may pay off. .
Hosmer'• House Resolution 15579, which would es-
tablisb Y'!il'n>und Daylight Savinf Time, has 'IJ!:en Ian·
guishing in the House Interstate and .Foreign Commette
lor some four years. ....
But this year, Hosmer has l'Ollllded Uj> 25 C<>ngres.
sional COS)>Onsors for bis bill, compared With a mere 1'
last time around, and they include committee chairman
Rep, John Moss, also from California, who apparenUy
is ready to hold bearings on the measure.
The bill, if successful. Wt>uld ·eliminate the clock·
changing confusion that afflicts the U.S. e~ery April and
October, and simply leave daylight saving in effect for
12 months of the year.
This, says Hosmer, would enable most of the wurk
force to get home before the early evening hours of
winter darkness, when traffic accidents and crime peak,
and to enjoy additional after-work recreation time, along
with savings on f~ and electricity bills.
Opposition to year-round daylight saving continues
-to-com·e--from"'farmers;--btrt-tbe""U:S-;-no-longer is-a-prin----1
cipally aJl!'arian country and Ibis change in tho law clear·
ly would benefit a majority of today's citizens.
A Modern
Ve r sion of
Old Adage
Dear
·Gloon1y
Gus
, Move to Ct1rlt Costly. Legal Harassment
1--~YDNEY J.HARRI~ _
Reading a aews item the other day to
the effect thal Westinghouse has been
chosen to lead u industrial group that
will build a $700-million electric plant ln
Tennessee, reminded me of an incident
that I had forgotten.
Some time last fall, just arter my
books had been published, I was inVited
to appear on a Pitt,s.. -·
burgh TV show prior
to an autographing
party at a local
department store.
As the technician
hung the mike
around my neck, 1
said. "Why do TV
lights still have to be
so infemaUy hot -can't they make some cooler lights so tfle
perfonners won't '6_weat to death during
the show?"
THE TECHNICIAN grinned. "Ob,
there are cooler lights." he said, "but I
guess the company.feels it can't afford to
buy them for us." At which the whole
technical staff broke\Ollt laughing. '
1 was puzzled -Wltil he informed me
that this was a Westinghouse television
station, and Westinghouse is the com-
pany that makes the cooler TV lights!
I'm getting sick ol all the "Glj>omy
Gus's" that harangue Pnjsident
Nixoo as the warmonger in Viet-
nam. Is this a policy, or doa't any
of your reeden feel that the Ru.s-
. Jlans,~ and _N;>rtb Viet·
namese inigbt be playing a Piii'I
in prokingatioo « the war?
' CURIOUS
1Mt ....... ""*" ~ ~ ...
-ffly ......... -· StM vwr Ht .....,. tt Gtllmf Gin. 0.11¥ 1'111'1.
seems to deserve a soort of derision -
but as modern testimony that the aneient
adage still appli .. : the sboemam's
children go without shoes, and the
baker's children go without bread
(Some years ago, 1 recall, when air·
conditioning was starting to boom. one of
the firms making air-conditioning equip-
ment continued to manufacture its pro-
duct in a non-air-conditioned factory until
the discrepancy threatened to ·break into
public absurdity.)
Whilst it is true that In some respects
we take bet~.r care of our own than of
others, it seefus equally true that just as
often we neglect our nearest in the area
of our greatest competence.
NOTED engineers who build mighty
structures live in shambles themselves;
doctors who display the highest concern
for the welfare of patients pay no at-
tention to their wives' or children's ii·
lnesses; and I remember the great
modem architect, Miese van der Rohe,
the leading apootle ol "purity" and cold
functionalism. oca.1pying an apartment in
Chicago-whose furnishings resembled the
remnants from a Victorian fire sale.
Police 'Nuisance Suits' Soaring
WASHING TON -Police and other law
enforcement authorities throughout the
country are increasingly b e in g
deliberately obstructed and handicapped
by "harassment" and ''nuisance" suits.
In the past five years. these impeding
actions have soared an ala rming_ZQll_per
cent.
According to the latest available
statistics of the Administrative Office of the' U.S. Courts, the
numbers of such fet-
1.ering"lawsuits zoom-
ed from a few hun-
dred In 1967 to 8,267
in 1!17l Still • hr
complete records le<
)112 indicate this
shocking trend is
cootinuing.
Says Rep. Richard
Ichord, O.Mo., chaim>an ol the House
Internal Se<urity Committee, -ls -soring legislation to curb such hindering
litigaUoo:
"THE NUMBER of frivolous suits is
growing rapidly. Once rare, but no
longer, their sole purpose is to block and
deter law enforcement officers. 1bese
suits have become an. in~asingly _
serious impediment to efficient and
vigorous law enfofcemeot."
As explained by the veteran legislator,
bis remedial bill would:
"Make it necessary for a plaintiff suing
a Jaw ' enforcement officer in federal
cou rt to file a bond with the court for
payment to the defendant of reasonable
(ROBERT S.AI.I.ENJ
m· a frivolous or malicious suit of this Such expenses often nm into thousands
kind." or dollars. !chord cited tbe following
-Most of these deliberately obstructive striking instances:
lawsuits are instituted under, Section 1983 -Los Angeles -In 1988, a suit was
of Title 42, U.S. Code involvina: statutes filed against the. police chief charging
relating to public health and weirare. The "conspiracy to viola~ the civil rights of
costs of__inve~ti_gation and legal lees if the Section is as follows : Negroes." This action, it was revealed,
officer prevailed." "Every person wbO, under COJOr 01 any---wu-tinanced-rwith_-feder.al-~-by-tbe
Such a safeguard, Ichord contends, statute, ordinance, reguJation, custom or Office of .~rruc O,J,>POrttmity -the
would not interfere with anyOne who usage, of any State or Territory, subjects so-called . anb·poverty agency. After a
seriously believes be has 1 legitimate or causes to be subjected. any citizen of long senes of legal maneuven and
grievance against police or other the United States or other person within machinations, the case was finally
authorities. the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation dropped.
"There is nothing in my measure that of any rights, privileges or immunities "Thus what amounted to no more than
w®ld deter those wbo booesUy believe or secured by the Constitution and laws, a nuisance suit," points out Icbord,
have reason to believe " says Jdlord, sbaU be liable to the party injured in .an ''wound up by costing taxpayers more
"they have been \be~ of improper action at law, suit in equity or other ~·,117,000 in mao-bours alone."
police action, or that their ctvil rights ' proper proceeding for 'redfesa." , · .•-Dade 'C'<>untt.,,l'la.; wbiclo IncludU
have been violated. But I do tb1nt it FEDERAL COURTS' ,..._:__talion of Miami -15 Secth:m'1983 cases were fl1e4 would make those who are interested ....... .,. ~ d there in two years. Ooe cost more Ulan ooly In b•~ .. in. our police and courta tliis law has generally b<en of .a broa ISO,Ooo t. investigate -before the plain---nature. A study of tbe!e decisions shows hesitant t. prostitute the legal p~ the courts have consistenUy held the till asked tbe court to dismiss it
for their own purposes, whatever they statute was "not intended as 8 source for -Charlotte, N.C. -39 Section ·1983
may be." damage action by disappointed , litigants suits were filed against the police depart·
POUCE, prosecuton and other of·
ficials with whom lcbord bas discussed
his legisl.i!.lion heartily apProve iL Some
would even go further.
He quotes Royall P. Terry, legal ad-
viser to the Daytona Beach. Fla., police
department as asserting, "Many of. these
suits are not only frivalous but the result
of actual conspiracy to defame law en-
forcement officers and their agencies.
Such conspiracies should be pwtished as
crimes. Certainly punitive damages
~d be allowable against 'any
organization or individual participating
ment in a J.2..month period by an :f~:r ~!:~.;~i:ng within ~ scope American Civil Liberties Unlon attorney.
With one lnsl.mificant exception, evetY
"Nor was the purpose of Section 198.1," one of theSe ~ses concluded In a "no.
maintains Ichord, "to discipline Jaw en--verdict" by the jury. forcement officers, nor to tym every
defeat of a claimed states right into a
federa1 right with federal remedy."
Another purpose of !chord's bill, be
stressed, is to deal with the "surprising
fact" that law enforcement officials do
not have protective insurance against
nuisance and harassment suits. Few
cities or states have measures to provide
for costs involved in such cases.
·"CONTESTING these suits was...,...an
ordeal for tbe defendants," says Icbord. ·
"In one CllSf;, no less than 18 officers
were sued ror $170,000. It was a clearcut
instance of harassment. The suit was
brought by a Black Pap.tber organization
after their headquarters bad been
searched for weapons 'stolen from a Na-
tional Guard armory."
U.S. Civilian Build-up in Vietnam
\
'·
What J wondered about, and still
·wonder, is how a company can ef-
fectively sell a new technological device
to customers when the company itself
doesn't utilize the device within its own
studios? lf the lights are truly "too ex-
pensive" to use· in the Pittsburgh station,
how can salesmen for \Vestinghouse
persuade strangers to buy them?
I MENTION this not by way of putting
down Westinghouse -!bough it certainly
It is said that Alexander Graham Bell,
when be built a summer home in Nova
Scotia for his retirement years. refused
to have a telephone installed anywhere
on the premises. It may be an
apocryphal story, but it fits the adage too
.,perfectly to be dismissed as legend.
Pee ring Ahead in '73
Most Americans probably assume that
when the shooting finally stops in Viet·
nam and the last U.S. troops come home,
lhis country wiU have ended ita en.
tanglement in the affairs of Indochina.
Well, don't count on lt.
Recent news reports from Saigon tell
of a rapid ti.lid-up of American civilian
finns in South Vietnam, with several
~housand U.S. workers already in the"
country and others arriving daily under
new contracts quietly negotiated br.~tbe
Defense Department. As many as 10,000
American civilian workers may even-
tually be required to handle wor~ wider
these conflacts, accordlng to the ac-
( GuEST REPORT J
remedy was more and more Americans
to do more and more of the work and
fighting, until a few hundred advisers
had grown into a ball·mlllion-man U.S.
Army fighting a major war.
feelings and getting them to take another
look at tbe government of South Viet·
nam."
In a way, that remains the problem -
and it is Jikely to be the ultimate frustra·
tion. Under President Nixon's "Viet-
namization" program the United · States
has trained, supported and equipped a
one-millioil-man South V i e t n a m e s e
military force. In the last couple of
months we have rusbed jet aircraft and
huge quantities of other military supplies
into the cowttry to beat 'an anticipated
cease-fire cutoff of such shipments. But
there is . little if any evidence that these
last-minute efforts have been any more
su""'9alUI than the long yean befo<e tn
'jwinning hearts and minds" in South
Vietnam.
ability -or the !allure -of Congress t.
learn what the administrations of"
Presidents Kennedy and Johnson were
doing and planning 'to do in Vietnam. The
wipubliclzed'buildups ,of the early ,19611S,
the growth of covert combat operations,
the secret "contingency" plans for ·.
massive military intervention -,all these _
went forward W_lthout serious con-,
gressiona1 scrutiny,. let alone frank 1
disclosure by the executive branch. A 1
Nothing will seem free in 1973.
But there is DO reaS<ln for mankind to
give up hope, according to our annual
glance at the old crystal ball which re-
veals j>oth good news and bad ~ws.
The good news is that jobs will become
more plentlfuJ. The bad news is that
prices will go on ris-
ing, and more and
more peeople will ac·
cept the viewpoint
that inOatlon has b&
come a permanent
way of life in the
United States.
A move will devel-
op to abolish penny
coins on the grounds
that t hey clutter up the pockets,
slow c a s h transactloM and no
long.,. are worth the trouble ol coont·
ing. Twenty years from now an attempt
will be made to drop the nickel for tfie
same reasons.
A MEDICAL quack will announce that
he has solvtd the problem or cancer and
that it ill on the edge of es.tinction. He
will dlt of the disease himself later in the
year.
Congress will ban cigarette smoking
during meetings in both the house and
senate chambers. The dlstribuUoo of
pornographic materlaJ and the teUing of
lewd stories in the cloakrooms Will also
be prohibited. Soul! and chewing tobacco
wW continue to be allowed. A move to
(aist _congressional aalarles and pensions
··-·--
, ( HAL BOYLE J
wUJ be abandoned after voters stage a
national chain letter protest.
Developments on the international
froo.t :
LONDON will offer to set Wales and
Scotland free if the struggling Irish will
just setUe down and behave lhemselves
Uke the decent Englishmen they aren't,
North Vietnam will Offer to send com·
bat teams to teach guerrilla tactics to
the Irish Republican Anny. The Irish will
politely reject the offer, explaining that
they invented guerrilla t a c t I cs
themselves more than eight centuries
ago.
In Paris, the French Academy will
Unanimously tum down a proposal that
Americanese ht taught as a second
lru>gullge In-Franco.
MOSCOW will announce that the
Russians defeated Red China's ping pon&
team iil a secret match. Peking will deny
the report for three straight days, and on
the fourth day Chairman Mao will
vohmteer to play the whole Russian team
singl&haoded himseU -if he can keep
score.
In summary, 11173 promises to be just
another of those years that will be more
fun to look b3ck on later than to go
through.
counts.
The first American soldier to win the
Medal of Homr in Vietnam referred to
those early days In an interview. Maj.
Roger Donlon, whose 12-man U.S. Army
unit successlully defended a tiny Viel·
namese special forces camp against a
massive night assault in 1964, put It this
way: "One of the fruStrations of Vietnam
is lbat we """ the battle that nigh~ but
never had much luck ht revening their One of the things that got this country
into the Vietnam morass was the ln·
U the administration ts planning to
replace the overt American military
presence 1n Vietnam with a pseudo-
civilian fo?ce, i( ought to say so. U the
Odminlstratloo wfll not do that VolWl! I
tarily, Congms ought to require the
resporusibile officialJ to d.lsclose their 1
plans. And Congress ought to act quick· •
ly; U i.t does not, what most Americans '
expect to be the: end of the Vietnam story '
could tum out to be just one more
chapter in a cootinulng tragic chronicle. '
The civilians are being sent to Vietnam
to take over a wide variety of tasks that
until now have been Iuindled by the U.S.
military: teaching the South Vietnamese
bow to fly and maintain the oombat
aircraft rushed into the country before a
cease-fire agreement cuts off further
shipments; rurullng the computers 'that
control Siagon's military personnel and
logistics programs ; operating and ttpair·
In& the complex U.S.;irovlded com-
Tricycle Hazard Cited ' -MlnneapaUs Trtbllle I
munications network; replacing tbe U.S. While Apollo 17 was retumlng from
Amly men who have dominaled the ' what 1pace and sclentlDc uJ>ena already
"pacification" program. have tenned the most lotrlcate and
'lbe rush to build up a ~profile, useful trip to the moon, a research firm ,
non.military AmericM presence ln .South · in Buffalo threw a wet blanket on
Vietnam. gives an Ironic twtst. to the ap-America's more earthbound tecbnk:aJ
preaching end of the U.S. mlUtacy role in know·how.
the long Indochina war. It ls as U the we can't seem to OOlld safe trlcycla.
clock were being turned bact a doien
y .. rs to ,thooo optlmlsUc days or t96t and
1962, when U.S. adviSOMJ first went to
Sototb Vietnam to show the V1e~
how to slop Communism. Wlien the In-
itial el!orts proved unsucceoslUI, ~
Quotes . •"
Men will not fight and die without
Mowing what they are Oghtlng and dying
for. Do111Jas MacArtb~r
so CONCERNED wu the u.s~ Bure•u
of Product Safety over the charge that
these Cavort~ chlldhoad lo)'> beve "an
UllSlfe design COliflguratlon", an4 the
lact that annually tl!<tell" between
100 000 and \30,000 trlc)'<lo-related i...
jurles, that It promptly started d,a!tlng
mandatory design and performance
reaulatioas for IDIDllfacturen .• will
lll<o effect nut fall, .aflfftll!i. the
estimated 1.S million trlcycltt sold an:
nually in the United States.
The meareh report charged that
I
"tmstable performance, particularly
rollover whlle turning" can occur within
Ibo normal Optratlng ranp of many
tricycles. One problem ls that you can~
'post >peed llmtls for the kids. It Is claim-Robtrt N. Weed, P•bllllttr ed the average five year old can pedal a
-.!aid trike at mo~ than slz miles an T K"vll, Editor
hour. At even a modest two and a hall Ba anl Krttbich.
mph II 'Will tip over II tbe child atttmptt -t---..d:Ui,;:z:;'iil• Page Tdft.r a right angle tum.
·~-O NGE f The ttdl~ri31 p11,Jre or tht D11lly &'lv ...... .:.n. A R actor is the Piiot acttk:t to lnfonn and &timu• rtar ttep, whlch Is an open lnvlt~t10l'Lf9t _ la.~ road.en b.>• prescn.Un&-.this
a st:all'd1:ip passenger. BaCkwardjOlpovtn: ntt"IVJ1P41ptr'l opinions and com·
caused by the latttr's weight fttquenll)' ment11ry 11n topi<1. of lntemt and
resWt 1n head Injuries. ~hcnlfic:ancr, b)' 1wt1vldlna .-forum fur the 1.•xprruion of our ~11.drrt' Let's bope a nation wblch-can desJgn olilnlvns. and by prmntlng. tb11
craft capable of taltlna: men aafeJy on d ""nc vttwpolntt nf Informed oh-
round trips to the moon can C'Ome up '""''firs •nd 11puke11mt>n on topics
with a tri~ycle that can tlike a child aafj. nf th~ ~.
ly around the block. Monday, January 22. 11173 ,
California Feature Service
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UC Irvine Offers
Varied Activities
I
"l~Ptfldlllt M~ COl*IMMN."
-...~~~o .. ~. Mukall Sludln. e.llfin\11
lt1k Unlwnl 1t \..Olll 1Mct1. A
ttlt...O.y ~ ... rt .. 1·10
11:m. 1-i.t .. ~:m,.1t l'liOllll., N J.m .. "7;10
11.M.1 SUI! .. ' 1.m •• tt '*"'• 1·$ -.11'1.;
Jill'I'!. -t?'--"""'*"'tltt-HIMrllC-k'vlllt-
caMp111 Fott: t«I,
IAYVlDAY, ., .. !
"Stltcllni vWt lmtll .,__,... COffto
-.-~-70'a.'' l."" wtkh. M.I>. .. ~
nMrlt tidvlllorY -4t111t ...c!1U1t,
Altll.tlldef •.Orfftl •Cl ...... ~•.
Of'eft, A'1n1rdef Ortl • CO. A tllf-dtY I.IC lrv\.op E....,.kWt ..W~r. t :•
1.l'll."4:• "'"'' RM-174 C°""""' ki-. ~ UC ltvtM MlflCIUI ..... 1 us. MldudM Mldt .,.. (lllrlllf!f.
IAf\llDM' ... ·su~Y. ,.._ S, 4
''Ol\...,_,I of Glfltd. T.i.n'-' 111'1111 ,,...,..,. fftdl~" MMllY"I ••
.,_, M,,,.,,. _,.,lftf, ~ end B nd s . k~ N :Zi~i,"..!:,"n:~ ~~ ra pan •tlfl em
MtM1 C_.,...., UC ltv!M c~
Mo!WIQ, January Z2, 1973 OAJL. PILOT T
Course Ge~s Okay
On Riverbed Bid
l.Q. Of 145
And A Slow
SANTA ANA -The ex·
perlmtnt of 1 golf coorse In
the bed ol tho Santa Ana
River has been so s~ssful
~Rtvervtew.Jloll Club wants
to eipand to protect ihe facill·
entrapment and possible
forage for horses from ad· R d ?
jacenl boarding stables. ea er .
Freewa y Ramp A notecL pubtilher ill Oiicago • reportl there LS a simple tech·
Discussion Set-.~ o1..,.':~d~;.~:
1be goU club, which long your reading speed and yet re·
malntalned n1ne boles on the ANAHElM -~~ed lain much more. fl.1ost people
ilutt""llong---tbe river-between fr eeway ramp_ modilicatiDns not-reaHa.e how much lhey
17th Street and the Garden on the Santa Ana Freeway at could ipcrease their pleasure.
G Anaheim Boulevard, Katella success and income by reading rove Freeway in Santa Ana Avenue and Haster Str.eet will faster and more accurately. has been given permission to be disc d t bli be
plaet the riverbed from the usse a a pu c &r• According to th!s publisher, lng here Jan. 31. many people, regardless ol their
freeway to Olapman Avenue !he state. Division of present reading skill, can use
in Orange. Hijj:hways will conduct the this simple technique to iJl\..
1be golf course operators meeting at '7:30 p.m. at Fre-prove their reading ability to a
said the additk>nal river bed mont Jr. High School. 608 W. remarkable degree. .whelber
would be planted for sediment Lincoln Ave. reading stories, books, technical
~ us. MOllO.t.Y..-,.. , The Orange County Tran.sit District (OCI'D) has received two of the six new
c~•=•i~-: ~ propane-powered mini·buses from t.he Flxible Company of Alabama. The new ~ ~ •l'IC~ Uni IMcfl. buses will go into service in La Habra on -Feb. l.
•----'------------------imatter, it becomes posslbJ~ to
read sentences at a glance and
entire pages in secoods ,..ith
this method. '-"Of I UC Irv"-~ leeMw-----"-----------C::...:C:..::.__:: ______________ I .......... ~ .. ,_ '"""'1Y
~ ..,_I lnYftl'INll\I t1)CI ~ ... J-f:31 P·""·• ltm. 1'1. ~ttft Mtl'I, UC ll"llM UlmJlll'. .11..-aomfttlon, u .~ TU•IDAY, .... ' , ... llllldln E~ of Mt. $eftc-·~ aM ......... .,, • .._ N tlOl'I 111d Product o.twrmlNitton." NM·
-' 1 • -v ~ r1u ""*'· ~. lurw Houslfllil T~;:" '?:.-=: ... i:oi!t •'. c.,.,,,.__,,rt .. .,. L!S~ . .!!,· Gets W t Ee d
vc ·~·M· ·· _,,, ~·"'-,, ......... ~ ... ""''"' ·-·~·· ,. awm·
Flood District Chief Psychiatry
Talk Slated O.VIOtofl, Ph. o .. c;llnlelt P$'fd!OIOtlst. ~ • -• .-.u._...._ un y 0-
...,..111111 'fll'hll ,._ 1outMn1 t:'9 p.rn., ~Ill. 111. "-ltlll Miii. c111tor!'ll• 1t1Q1o1111 c-11 of ,..,..,,. UQ. '"'i,.. c.ell'l!M. Sll'ICll• ldmlulon. The UC 1rvine department
Wffllollt .. "1Ml'1. Pr1 , ... 10 ...,.,w "'·• M. ! I '1.m . ..s 11.'" .. ~""" 11:-. Alrporttr "HMrt fl•nin.-u-' T. 1..,1, SANTA ANA -H. G. the Santa Ana River and San of psychiatry and human
llWI, 1170t MlcArtll\lr l lW., NftOPOl'f .,,,. -'-•·• J and Tr bu .. Kii. FM! -l'ldlt. usi ""th M.o .. ..,..... "' M1111klM1 """""' OSborne, chJef engineer of the uan a co creeks . He behavior has set a free public
.. ~!t..,~14-lndudet Friciwt ·-· tnd \=~rm~~=--~ n,.,.,.,,0 r .... -ty Flood ~i-J also Worked to imf.all the '"' · ....,_.....,.. -s cwcwt«Y s.,.twn .. '"IU46 """"' vm""' lecture, "Prevention and Child
PllM • u.~"a.1"' IUllDAT, ,.,. -.... .• .._.,... ~ H.ir. District, bas been •warded the county's first bicycle trails Psychiatry", for 8 o'clock
.,
To acquaint the readers of
this newspaper with the ea sy·
to-follow rules for developing
rapid reading skill, the com· l""'Y has printed fufl details of
its interesting self -trainJng
method In a new booklet, "How
to Read Faster a n d Retain
More,•• mailed free to anyone
who requests it. No obligation.
Send your name, address, and
zip code to: Reading, 555 E.
Lang St., Dept. 50!H4, Munde-
lein, ill. 60060. A postcard will ••• ...,..,._.. °"""" .,... 11:i.11 T*"" ~ '!""' • .._ .. uc 1"4• c.-. along tbe Santa Ana River and r 7,H" ~.o.)_,. ....... _ ftrlt~Euvlt•11D*d1! •cNeve.-BrerCn!e•lr-----tonigbt...ln the Science ·L«ture L O-CAI:
MlldlN " ~ "J.-ot 11 Our -c;;:;... .. ,,....,.. -I Award '-the n--ty Hall th COi-........ _ .. '-·-----... _ ~ "' ~ Board ebalnnan Ronald • on campus. e re"'sury a.di. A """""' ....._ mMtlftg, fW J-"'*" l'IO of e 1JC ......... b Board of Su.,...,.H.,_ ,..,..,.....-'d Osborn Dr SauJ ( ff•~ is"!" ";i Fr1., t:•M "·"'·' "'" t t.m...!1 '"'·· ..... l«1w. ...-"MorMHY ~.-..... ..,...,.,..rs S8l e was . . iUc •!IOn, v 1 mg EDITORIALS
.. 11 11.m.1 SUR.. ' •.m.-1 llJft.o Rift."" TWllW!f i.. .,, n. i.-.. 1._. • · 'Ibe board cited bis chosen for such long-term ef· professor, psychoana]yst and DRY CLEAN ING ~l'lltla Kiil, UC INIM c...-. kMa Llct\lre HeH, • uc" ~~ In tho l thr boo"· hild ..... MO. ~Mdt ~ ~ .._.. ,.,,u··~ u.so. leadership In preserving more forts improving the ea-au r 0 ee ..., on C 51ANADA 1uw I800CUtl'llCftll St l!OllAM<l Stp,ihtd.1..-.d~ The DAILY PILOT
PltlDAT. .. DAY .... IUllDAY, TMVlllD4Y • .::;.. • than eo acres of the Upper v l r 0 n m en t w hi I e psychiatry, will speak. WOODLAN D MIWZISOOYi-+-Bhd LAKEWOOD Cirsoa St.and P11nM1! Blvd. ,..,, .. a. • ~ of '"""'••II or-: ~ ..... , 0 't O"-Deat .. Netlees ''°"''' c~.x..a:ey, cu Atrflotn, Ali8o Creek channel u a simultaneously meeting the Harrison is professor of 11v1n 1013520Ty1erSt 10111ara11Bt11:nilldOlanietbo<tt UI e rren ,. ;:.",,= °' ~,~:. .. ,~ greenbelt and b1s involvement demands or his own depart· psychiatry at the U.nivenlty of SANTA ANA J900Soutl1 Bristo1St. t lANGl GMllH Guwe Bl~4. and Ma11C1itst• F·ights City Hall
,.,.. of• uc •""'-~ *1ur9-._.::w.::ilb::..:o~pen=1[>1Ce::.::=.pro~::leda:.:::.::al=o::ng:::.._m_enc:.1_. ________ :__M.::::ichi::=.g::an::..::M::edl=c=•l:.:Cen==ter:..:___! _____ •.::•_"_"_'_'_"_'_''-'_"_'_"_'_''_'_-_''_,._'_''_'_'_''_'_· ___ _!'=o==========.! ..._ UC-• • • Etlolafy,I
ARBUCKLE 6 SON
1VFm'CLIFF MOR11JARY en E. 17111 SI., CooUI Mela -BALTZ-BfRGERON
FIJNEJ\AL DOME
eor-.r.r --
Colla Mela -' • BELL BROADWAY
MOR11JARY
lit Bnldway, Colla M.,.
LI W43S • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MOR11JARY
1711 LlpM CU,.. M .
-II • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
CUleWY ~ ~pel
11tt Padfic View llrln
Newpwt Be~. Calllonia -' . I PEIX FAMILY
COLONIAL FIJNEllAL
ROME
7'tlllohoAn..
flnl--• SlllJTllS' MOR11JAJIY
cnMlll l!t.
llnthlgton --
EptN!ftlolat\h ~." 1·1t p.rn,,
SO(IN)r<IOit lM1ur9 H•ll, Mlldlcet S1.1r99
I 91dg , UC Irv'"* U1n11W-S1110i. ld-mlNIM. .....
'11:Mlelb end Aftw," Kturd NHml. Ph. 0., vice c:toenceUor,
Acedemlc Affsl"1 Pl'OfMlor ot E"'!l11sll
UC ll"ltlw •. Pert of a UC 1..W. E•· t-kin lecfl.lre-n tm ..,.._, ''TM Fece
end Mllld ol l ... end." 7·10 p,m., ltm. 111, l"t!'ftlQI k '-91d; .. UC lr.1,..
!:lmPULllnlle~.
-~ry Saturday's News Quiz
)
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IMAGINE!F'AMILY CIRCUS$M~ETS
ANO PILLOWCASES AT NO EXTRA
Cl IARGE-WITH EVERY FRIGl.DAIQE
WASH~ CMCYEA OQ I AUNDRV CENTER.
With _, Frtgldalre washer or dlY9f
you buy be\Ween Jlll1UBl\I 21st and
Februaiy 281f1, you'll rece!Ve a set of
flne aheets and )llilowcases by
Burtlngton, at no extra oharge,
·Im printed with all the lovable Bil Keane
"Family Circus" characters;· And with
the purchase of a Frtgldalre Laundoy
Center or a Frigidaire 11111dly pair,
you'll receive "two sets.
0
I
Each set contains two Permanerit
Press twin sheets (one to p and on•
fittsd) plus two plUQWcas~
Short on space? You can still have
a complete home taundoy thanks. to
this Frigidaire Laundoy Center. It's
only 24"" wide, yet it washes and
dries famlly·size loads. And this
model runs on conventional 120 volt
household Current, plugs into
aey 3-wire outlet on a 15 amp
SBparata branc.h circuit
LCT3·120
1359''
More ways to save on
Frigidaire this month
Fl1gldalre'i CUStom Imperial
Top-Foeezei" rofngerator d ..
Dvor> a full 20.S cu. tt. ol
O<gllllzed storage space. an
of It 100o/o Frost·Proof. The
5.82 cu. ft, freezer section
stores up to 203 pounds of
loads. The refrigerator sec--
-tlon hat a Meat Tender to
keep meets frosh up to a
week. plus twin vegetable~
~ng Hydrators.
FPCl3-205TS
•37995
Got-all the wash day capacity you need with lhe
Frlgldalre Del uxe washer and diyer. The washe r
features Frigidai re's Jet Cone Agltatorto clean deep
down wllhout pounding or besting; and has a 16
pound capacity. The doyer, with Flowing Heat
to provide evoh, lhOrough doylng, without hot
spots, holds up to 18 pounds.
WCDMf-OMf
•359!,S,.. -----J I GOT"TME
BEST l=W<'r a:
TME DEAL... A i:f2EE
FA..\AILV c~us
CXll OQIN6 l3CO( .AST
l=OQ ~N ' IN !
Get a 4.75 cu. 11. freezer that
atoros up to 1 B8 pounds ol
frozen foodt and 1 T.O OU, 11.
of otorageapace overall from
this CUiiom Imperial
Frfgkfalre rofrlgtn1tor-
,_,Best of all, tt's 100%
Fn:ilt•Proofto ellmlnat1
dlfrostlng lorevtr.
FPCl3-1"1GTT
•34995
You'll love it So will your kids.
COSTA MUI
M-A11A
411 L S.•••1-St. ...,. ... , .......
646-1614
o.a,,. , ... , ... , ...
137-3130
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0
0
0
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DAILV PILOT Monct&y, Januar1 21, 1973
L./tf. Boyd
Don't Overexert
Ene1·gy at Forty
' \Vas none other 1han Dr. Peter J. Steincrohn v.·ho said:
"After age 4-0, muscles need only be efficient enough to
~P our ,keleton from dnngUn_a. II YOl!.'r~tllJll!y )uy_.
stay thal way. We're allotted about 3.5 billion heartbeats
\\'hen v•e're born. \\'hy dissipate lbem in wasteful unneces-
sary energy?"
"~tOTIOS PICTURE theater'' translates in Chinese as
"Electricity Shadow Ha.II ." ... T~ERE'S oo inheritance
tu in Mexioo, pleese "°"' ... PITY THE GROWN male
watde<I starling, poor bird. It frequently
gets bald , .. TEETH of the minnow are
in its throat .. , TH.o\. T DOG LEAST apt
to bite people, cmtends one canine expert,
ls tile hound.
YOUNG LADY. count lhe number of
accessories -scarves. flowers, bracelets.
pins. pendants -you're wearing. If the
total is more than tllr<e, you probably
have a tendency to over-<loo-dad. 'Ibat's
the claim of a fastllon expert. Earrings on1y count 6ne.
SMOKING -A lot of 111"1 have quit smoking in the
last dozen years. But a lot ol women haVe taken it up. U.S.
Public Health .statistics show that. To be precise, oo.ly about
50 percent ol the grownup males smoke now. About 57 per-
cent smoked in I9ti0. Almost 33 percent c:l the women smoke
now. Only about 28 percent smoked in 1960. ~r pe-
culiarity' this.
Q. "ON WJDCU SIDE of the flounder Is ils eye$, the
right oc the left?"
A. The right. It's the fluke that has eyes on the !ell
Q. ''"'HA.T'S a 'Nantucket-sleigh ride . 11
A. That's a f~ trip in an open boat lli th a harpooned
whale for an engine.
BY AGE 70 -U yoo've lived to be 7ll, you've spent
just about a year and a half washing yoorseU. Or so re-
pitts a clean computer expert.
DID I TELL you 250,000 cakes of soap are used nation-
wide every year just to draw X's on new windows in build-
ing under construction?''
IF \\'ORK doesn't interest you much, come back as a
garter snake. That beast genetally \\'akes up around noon,
forages for awhile, then retires for the rest of the day at
about 1:30 p.m.
WHY SO many men get stomach Weers while so few
women do likewise has not yet been explained by the medi-
cos, unfortunately.
PERSONAL NOTE -\Vhen I was a !ad rehearsing my
craft. v.·ords came easy to describe how tlilngs looked or
sounded or felt or . tasted. But there-were never enough
\\"Of'd.s to desribe how things smelled. A new bicycle, for
~re. It looked like the shiny insides of an alann clock
all set to go off. Or it sounded soft. a gentle hissing, like
OOthing so much as \\'3.ter running. Or it felt cold and crisp
like a musical horn not yet played in the morning. Or it
tasted puck.ry as a handlebar should, like the caustic
flavor of pennies. But no \\'Ords said how it smelled. Fnis-
lfa~, even without ~um, I remember th! smell
d( tharDike more clearly than all the rest of it.
Address moil to L. ~f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Net.0-
port Beach, Calif, 92660.
This is one of the
best muckrakers
...
lly Phll lnteflandl Heavy Breathing!)s an Art
B7 DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPn
Allthor!Ues in Ntw York aad
oomo other dUes mo trying to
clole down J>OnlOll'OpbJC
bookatorts and '!iiovle llouses
that nourish In downtown arus.
From a IOC!olog!cal stand·
polnt, this may be a deslra ·
move. But it ls an economic
jletbaclt.
""-'~ l can't 1111.Y • note but I'm ooe of Ui· beavl<st
. brtatbtr1 In ahow bl.I."
I llld, "How dooo a pral-
Year-round_ ,
wlonal bmtller 10 about
preJ>arlnl f<r a *in ruct role?"
"Techniques vary. My
ptrlOnal method Is to lay oH
all fonna ot e1erclae for it least six wetk.t. Then, just
btlor< m start rtcor<Ung-tl>a sound track, I run UQ a abort
Oltbt .of alaln." Daylight . -
_,!•!.._~-~"'.OOULl!NTJBE-ind.1•cer
T:me Urged get the •arne effect by taking FOR REGARDLESS of what " a tape recorder Into the
your atUh.kle toward obscenity emph,ysema ward ol a nearby -mlsbl-berJ10U·will-llava-to-<e1 .. •--ca .... p1to1 No-Ser>jleo-hoopltal
'11 WU just Jucky, l IUl'S5,"
GHpair< Aid. "l bad a lot of
uUuna atl&CU wbtn 1 wlU a
cblld.
'"Mlat plu.s a bad cas e uf
POilen 'adtn0ld1, got me into
the habit of tnathlna through
my mouth, which Is one of the
requisites ol skln filqk rtsplr:t·
tlon.
"The Uttle reflnemenls
came later. IJkel .alarling to
smoke •t an early age 111ul developing a chronic alnus
condition.
"BUrrjlve credit wtie re
credit Jg due, It was air pollu·
Uon .that made me a star."
cede I.bat tile smut boom tias WASHINGTON _ Hop '"lbat woold be arUsUcally
opened new employment op-Craig Hosmer (!\-Lone Beacb) dimmest," Gaspalre nlplled.
portun!Ue1 for people with tbe h" 11 C<H-• for " bill "Muimum dramatic lmpoct.1;::=:=:::::::;:::;:;::::::;:::;::;
right kind-cl talent. which wOuld establlJb yoar-can only be aclllevecl by
1-=
"You"rebaving 'olleoltboledaya't You.,. bad -rl
tbOM days' for two weeks now."
• Not loall """ f<r eumple. I round Dayllchl Savq Time. malching the breathing wilh
wu lntroc1uoed to a chap who . ·H belJ lt woUid red the action on tbe serftD."
Identified himself as a pro-cri~e an~ve~affic acclden~ J said! 11How did you' happen
fes.s.ionat breather. provide electt1caJ and tuel to acq~e thls talent . Was lt
Tyrone Gaspaire (to use his savings, i.nc:rease recreation God given, or ~ y.ou
screen name) explained that time and eliminate the semi-had to work at? be earns his llvtna: by
breathing ort sound tracb for annual doct W. coofualon.
X-rated skin flicks. other Ca 11 for n I a con-
p gressroen co-authoring the bill
"IF YOU have ever seen are Alphonso Bell (R-West Los
any of these films, you may Angeles ), Clair W. Burgener
have noticed something (R·La Mesa), Georae
peculiar about I he 1... Danlelsoa ClH""' Angeleo),
scenes-the lovers never Richard T. HaMa (I).
speak to each other," Fullerton}, Chet Holifield (0-
Mootebello), liarold T. "Blzz" Gaspalre sald.
ANNOUNCING
NEW OFFICES OF
Palisades
Chiropractic
DENNIS L THOMPSON D.C.
Veteran Running
For Office at 97 I sald, "Mere words are in· (0.RMeviDe), John Moss (D-
expressive in moments like Sacramento), Jerry L. Pettis
that." CR-8an Bernardino), and
"And a Is o expensive ," Edward R. Roybal CD-Los
Gaspaire said. ' ' Sound Angeles).
2232 S.E. Bristol St. -•mo1 .... TO
MINllYI
ll'OW: ..... f'T. 1714) ,,, ... ,,
1714) "'"''''
F'l'Om Wire Senices girl has been living with Curtis cameras and cre\n cost a lot
A ffl-year-old veteran of the ~ his third wife, Leslie, for ol mcoey.' So we shoot the . -1iveo-mon""""'tb,.•---,,---,----scene1-mute Md-thert-dub · -Spam!h American-Wsr-1.s "!n· eurtis and his wife have a the audlbles. n1ng for Lyon County (Ky) · tod f
"
THE STORE THAT BROUGHT LOWER PRICFS
TO THE BEACH AREA
sheriff In the firm belief that ~n Ntcbolas, 2, and cus yo
"old age don't cut any big his two daughters, Alexandra ,
fi .. a, aod Allegra, 6, by a mar-1gure. · to a~s auutine
''TllE TYPICAL skin fliclr.
sound track is a mixture of
progressive jau and heavy
PHARMAC.Y .
S. Aforgan Martln, who held ~~mann. '-"' ~
his first public office -lo'fll .*
,,,_______ Bayley Mills. the 26-year-0ld Aii Resources ( J British movie arjress, has ~EOPLE ~= :ii.r ;.!~i.~~ Unit Spills It .._ ______ __. Hospital in Uindoo.
marshal -in 1906, says young "I'm happy to say he looks C.pltol News Servtce
people "need us older folks as remarkably like Hayley," Roy SACRAMENTO-The State examples." Boaltlag, the 40-year-old bus-
"Of course I'll have younger band of Mias Mills said. Air Resources Board will ............ d deckle this mooth whether to
' hi• l'rb 13t
73t
13t
73t people to help me if elected," Boulting, a .,. ....... ucer an keep "trade secrets" private
he added. "But young people director, and Mlas Mills were or make them available for need our innuenoe. When -married in May li'll. 2700 E. Coast Hi"1wav. at Fernle:lf. Coruna'ldel Mar
we're passed on, there will be + public lnspectjon.
plenty of time for the younger Ar1lmr SmJtb hasn't seen lbe The California p u b I I c
generation." movie "Deliverance" but he's Records Act makes most
Martin, a native of Lyon going to sue the movie's ~ records of state agencies open,
County, bas operated a trailer ducers, Warner Brothers but there are ei:ceptioM in the
part since retiring several Studios, just the same. case of personnel· matters,
• 644-7575
Years ago from the timber and Smjth, _a pofAllar country. • specified fmandal information
l and "trade secrets." sawmill business. But he music artist aod a le evtS1on -----~-----======--=~-------doesn't believe in retiremenl celebrity in Olark>tte, N. C. * said the SOl)g "Dueling Ban-
Actor Toay Oria !J seeking jos" in the ftlm ls the bme be
custody of his ts.year-old wrote and recorded as
daughter, Kdly Lee. in a "Feuding Banjos" in, 195%.
Superior Court suit which Poet James Dlcby author names actress Janet Leigh as of the novel j~Dellverance,"
defendant. said from bis Columb!J, S. C.
An attorney who filed the home be oouldn't loll the dU-
!luit in Santa Monica said the ference between the tunes.
This is a lanli~ man
who teadtes a
•
thru Feb. 10 *REFRESHMENTS* FUN
Grand Opening
-lebratiori
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS and loan Association
1640 Adams (2 blocks West of Harbor Blvd.)
TAKE A LOOK _ _,
at our beautltul new office. Ira 011r most modem branch, fiRod with
all the latest equipment enabling ua to give you the bast pOSBlble
service. A few of our specla.l 1eaturea are:
FREE safe deposit boxes*
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Drive-up teller service
In a hurry? Drive rlghl up to one cl our handy new oUJalde Wlndowa,
and make your transacllon wltltcut over lei~ ycur car.
in the business today Sunday school class New extended houn
For your convenience, we wlll now be open during thefotklwfno houra:
Which Is The Real Jack Anderson?
The answer is "both." Jock And erson, selected more thon ZO years
'ago by the late Drew Pearson himself to be Pearson's heir is, in
fact, outdoing "the m.oster" in the profession. He was at the bottom
· of some of Pearson's most startling exposes and has gone on to make '
his own contributions to give 'em hell journalism.
The paradox, perhaps, lies in the fa ct that Anderson really is 11 fam-
ily man and Sunday School teacher who literally feels sorry for the
public officials who fe el the prick of his pen. Thoug~ he describes
himself as a muckraker, he really fe els he is carrying out 11 special,
though sometimes painful calling, when he e.xposes corruption.
It Takes Both Jack Andersons To
Create The Editorial Page Columns Which Appear In The
Tho . -°"' c..6tll 11l1
;;..1,;
Cl1111i
Mon.-Thurs. 9-5 Fri. 10-e Sal 10-2
Here are some llddltlonal Brentwood Savlnga IH1ure11
FREE Travelers Checks' FREE Money Orders•
FREE Photo Copy Service* FREE Save-by-Mall
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We have seleet.d lour very popular books. We wont ycu to aelacl y011r favorlte and take it home with you. lt'a yOllre FREE; our wey of ll)'lng "thank you'" for takll>g the
time lo vlsll our beautitul new office. Happy reading from BrentwOOd savings.
-bo-NqVl!Od.
• ._hold to .... Of quatllr.
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Monday, J.inuary 22, 1~73
t-%1 ..n:.::.i::=.
.
DAILY PILOT
. k I t1r thit i• my GYM "t'll do my otli1r homewor ~. ·
liomework.
'
' 'Big Brother'?
'
• I
I
Pentagon to Test
Home Alarm Units
I _ WASHINGTON (APl -The
lrJ'entagon plans wide-scale
sts next month on a radio
rn.rning system It wants to
~bedroom.
The radio recolver Uatem
1llenUy to a government fre-
quency '1\d comes to life only
.-ben the military activates It
wt th a special, coded ·llgnal.
The aim Is to save lives by ~ dcasUng warnings of
madoes, hurricanes, Ooods
dr nuclear attack. Imtallatlon
o! the rgdlo device woold be
J>Yolunlary. ' e\ l)iRIGINALL Y Civil Defense
. lclals hoped for a law re-
quiring that· the radio
1 receivers be built into every
Ji11W television set sold in the
United States.
But White House broad-
casting officials overruled the
illtary, which nma Civil
Defense operations, at least
o.temporarily. They feared the
public might interpret man-
datory ln!tallation of the ·
'receivers as part of a govern-
>
Blast Ends
l1i Murder
ArrestS
GRANDIN, Mo. !UPI) -A
small explosion at a Poplar
Bluff. Mo., garage apparently
resulted In the arrest of three
su.spects In the murder of
Grandin banker Robert Kit-
terman, his wife and 17-year·
old daughter.
Authorities said a tipster
told Butler County Sheriff
Clyde Hendrix he had seen one
of the suspects, Dallas Ray
Delay, 33, at the garage a few
days before the Kittermans
were murdered. The tipster reportedly told
authorities Delay had a pistol
and something resembling
a dynamite stick. which he ex·
ploded with gun powder. ,
"I'm going to use this to rob
a bank." aulhoriUes said Ute
tipster quoted Delay as
saying.
RlpleJ' County Prosecuting
Attorney James Hall said that
SUnday Delay, Lloyd Dwalne
COWin, 21, and Jerry Rector,
22, each would be charged
with three count.a of nrst·
degree murder. 'Ille three llv·
ed in Van Buren, Mo., about 15
miles northwest of Grandin.
AurHORmES said the lrlo
had been camplf!J in a wooded
area where a fake bomb and
currency were round . The
makeshift campsite was about
seven miles from where the
bod1es of. Kitterman, '3, his
wife, Bertha, 33, and their
daughter , Roberta, were found
last Wednesday.
I
ment propaganda and apy
system almllar to the one uaed
by dlctator Big Brother In
George Orwell's novel "19M."
n-11u1i-Doo1r,--..,..r· lin' -11
agent.a kept watch on cltllens
In their homes tbrougb cloled-
circuJt televtskm cameru. Big
Brolher could prHmpt any
program lo deli.., orderl or
propaganda.
The Pentagon's tyJtem CID
only talk., not watch or listen.
Regular eommerclal broad-
casts aren't affected.
CIVIL Defense olllclala, who
ooooeJved the warning syttem,
have built a bombproof ndlo
transmitter near BalUmore
aod plan to start t..i broad·
casts to a 11).state area in ear-
ly February.
About 400 high-priced
reeelven: are being built, and
will be dlllributed at first only
to state and local government
authorities who want them.
But i.ctm!clam are clooe to
perfecting a home receiver
cheap enough -about 110 -
for almost anyone to aHonl.
'l1»e civil defense officials
call the system DIDS, for
Decision Information Distrlbu-
Uon System.
PLANNING began in 1"4,
smaU-tcale field tests were
condul'ted in 1988 and
Conlf"'" appropriated $2
mlllloo !or tbe first transmit'
ter and r.eceivers In 1970. Colt
ovemms have rabed the in-
tual price to 16. 7 mlllloo.
If next month's tests are
succeafut, and lf Coogrtss
goes along, the Pentagon plans
eventually to build a total of 10
transmitters that together
would reach nearly every cor~
ner of the nation, o:cept
Alaska and Hawaii.
11le automated transmitten
could be overated by remote
control from the North
American Air Defense Com-
mand near Colorado Springs,
Colo. or at either of two back-
up points.
BY PUSHING buttons on a
console, a technician at one of
these control poinll would be
able to turn on air-raid sirens,
broadcast messages by voice
or teletype to st.ate and local
officials, or • e n d m-
nouncements over ho m e
recelv,n.
The Pentagon began think·
Ing about improving Us na.-
tlooal warning syllem more
than 1 decide 1go, when
mtulles made the old,
telepbone-and-alren 1 y J t e m
oblolete.
That S)'llem, changed UtUe
today, would taken an
"'11maled !JI minutes to reach
75 percent-of .the population,
even under the beat of
circumstances.
Olflclala estimate the DIDS
system could warn 90 percent
rl the public In hall a minute,
if everyone hid a receiver.
I See by Todats
Want Ads
e FOR SAILORS • 12' Snow
Biro. compleie, tor 111s.
e CAMP IN COMFORT' In
tllla '67 °""" Truck, 6
cylinder, with a cUltom
built camper. The~
hu .. alMJ tram• and h'•
llntd Ind lnllllated. On
dw Joalde i. a i.cl, ko
box and cabinet&, ~
l6llO.
•
SALE PRIC-ES-HONORED-IUES;-& WE ., JAN. 23 & 24 OILY!
''IADGIR'' ly lnsinkerator-9
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REG. $26.99
SAVE $7.001
WIS. & wtD. ONLTI
Dispose-It
GARBAGE DISPOSAL
CONDITIONER
35' REG. 49c
HURRY I • 0.1. •
Deluite Aluminum Fram•
FOLDING COT
"Hurryl Hurry I-Limited To Stock On Hand!"
•Real comfort on this big 2.4 1/211 x 72" deluxe coll
• Heavy-duty canvas cover hos double needle·stitched seems.
• Nol just for comping-use it
for a "Company" bed ...
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THIY LAST!
TUES. A
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WOWI
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I
fantastic Close-Out!
WOODEN FOLDING CHAIR
• Sturdy wooden folding choirs
for home, church or club.
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REG. $4.99. WOWI $299
SAVE $2.001
TUES. & WED. ONLY! WHILI THIY WTI
famous Dlsston
PROFiS-S10NAL-HANDS-A
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• Highest quality chrome nickel alloy stHI Dinton• Model D-23.
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REG. $10.99 $599
SAVE $5.001
WHILE THEY LAST! WIS, & WID, ONLY!
Your Choice!
,, TOASTER IOR STEAM-IRON
Close-Out of Famous Proctor·Sllex flectrlcal Appllance1I'!
• 2 •11<• toaster features •electronic color control--.
perfeC! toaat from any ki~f bread!
• Sproy •team 'n dry iron haa a built-in waih & weor
lemperotura c;iuide-.proy, •team & dry! YOUI CHOIQ
famou1 Spartu1• Electric .1~11c11µu11r11n1;~i11~,11a1 CLOCKS! CLOCKS! CLOCKS!
Any IM!or """d
MOTOR OIL
• fine quality heavY duty o~ non-detergent
20 or 30 weight motor oill
• Havollne•, Penn1oil", and Quaker State•,
to name lu•t o t.wl
LIMIT 6 QUARTS 38' PER CUSTOMER QI.
TUIS. A WID. ONLTI
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OIL DRAIN PAN
ltl , llalM in ,.0 rage or dri¥ewoy. • Prevants •P • • •
• Lo~• capaclry metal pan.
UG. ,2.1 9 $139
t-10. 711
rUu. & wtD. ONLTI
I
I
•
"Special Purchasel--Your Choice of Tremendou• Styles cit Popular Savln111''
•
l ••
I
J f DAILY PILOT
lnsm·ance
Bill Seeks
True Costs
• '
Tormenting Rectal Itch
Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues1
Promptly Relieved
In many..,.. Preparation H
sivee prompt, temporary relief
from such pain and itching
and actually helps ehrini:
swelling of hemonhoidal tis-
tum caused by inflammation.
dlOds of patieni. showed this
to be true in many caaes. In
fact, many doctors, them·
selves, U9e Prtparation H8 or
recommend it for their fam.
ilies. Preparation H ointment:
or suppositories. Testa by doctoni on bun.
. .
•
•
THERE ARE OVER 20
ACRES OF NEW AND USED
CARS FOR SALE
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevard
af Cars
LOOK FOR THI IMILI .. AT
PONTIAC Mlraclo M1Jd1
2480 2150
'
DAVE ROSS I HAL GREEN'S
HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD.
t.
FAR~UNGDALE, N.Y. (AP)
-The award of an Air Force
fighter contract to Fairchµd
Industries Inc. has arouaed
visions of new jobs and bulg·
ing payrolls f einiiUseent of
aerospace '11rosperity years
ago on Long Island.
SuHolk Cowtty Executive
John Klein said Fairchild's
contract to develop the new A·
X close air aupporl atlaek
plane probably amounttd to
Long Island's "biggest single
ecoilomic shot tn the ann" in
several years.
OFnCLWi HERE at the
finn's Republic Division,
which will ' do the work,
estimated an increase of 1,800
jobs by the ond of 1974 wben
the developm<nt pbue will be
over.
The project Is expected lo
mch 114 peak in 1978 and if
Fairclllld rei.lns the contract
after 1974, It will have to hire
an estimated 4,500 new
workers and more than lripte
its current oompanywidj! $30
million payroll •
Company of!lclals . also releriW to a "trlpple etrect,"
a formUJa that atatw'that for
every new 1 aerospace job.
thrOe-.nd·•·hall other Jobs
sprln& up In th• Nwau-5uf.
folk counties area.
The Air Force did not
distklst lhe amQllJll ol the
Fairehlld contract, which calls
for the constnlcUon of 10 Jl'"'
production al'cra/t. The r1na1
Product II expec1'd to cost
II.I mllllon each and the Air
•
COMPI,ETE NEW. YORK STOCK LIST1
\
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Monday's Closing Pri~mplete ·New rork Stock Exchange List
News Not Enough
To _R~y Market
NEW 'YORK (AP)-Tho stock market got I~
Into forward gear briefly Mond•y but ended Ille 'Clay In reverse.
~alnlng tho turnaround, Rllph ACllllpora of Hams, Upham & Co. said, "The weekend news wu
JIQQd, but ii WI.ill'! enough to sust.\ln t-nlly.. -
He referred spedflcally to tndlcallons tbat Vi.to
• , nam settlement could be sJsned soon and to some
tough anti-inflationary talk about economic Phase S
from Administration offlclals, notably WlDJam· E.
•Simon, the No. 2 man In Ille Treuury Departmellt. ..
..
j l •
SC DAILY Pll.4T Jl
"
'
• .. JZ OAJLYPILOT MOtldQ, JinU1r! 22, 1973
Mesa Youth Wins World H_ohi~ Cat Title. ~;::_::d
• The ~. Guard rta"Uitin1:
By ALlllON LOCKABEY "I fell I 1'ould be ludcy lo -came •P with third Jolm R ... ·OUU•n, 17, w ..,..111.waa the lamed OWit---BourtLJr., ..l'ueno slllliln ,lit Sillli~Ana hao ...
HONOt°UL"iJ" ~"' ;;J"gbtoen-wind up_ -. Jelf )llat pa<e,.0l".Ol'ill.afle<_pladng :1-k Ne!\'p)ll BuclLwaa .,.. Clnot Club llf"Watml. , 17.S; Harold Huldl!'.,.1, ooed open! In al
. year old Richard' Loufek is doesn~ do Iha! badly In urJ I In Salllldafs heavy wealher Forty.five 1klppm from IS , Prim won anrded' lo tho Honolulu, 107; Leith~. · nou I . ngs aever
Ylinglng his way Nct to his ract," the young Me.san Wd. r.ces that saw at least half a countries competed ln ~ flcat » fin.Llbm...7bey ... \ .......--H.aulu1 11t; Nellon-Pfoclo, ~ for uperlenold lilrrwn.
mainland bome today ~ But In !he Ughl COIDc -bolls ca~. Loulek flrst world c:lwl!Plonsbfj) for 'l!lcballl...J.ouf.t. ....Jlrllll._, .IU; Jlct N'.al•h, ,a.be -">ii. maey ol Jhem
down with oitpaintlngs. a new can.pa came Olp With a plli<i<!J+I In lhtSiluiifay !he Hoble-l& Wbicn are bulll M,.., SUS: Jtll ~. Salt-Kalluo, ljawail, 111; . open lllrougb pay arade ~.
spo<;t.s jacket Ind a bottle of seveoth . as Loulek won, bot raoes. by Coast Catamaran ol San ta..Crua, 10.ZS; Boblo Alter, Ileane J'nlome, Honolulu,/ cnumpa~ "' wtucn pro-still re!oit!«l L mPe<:table • Juan Capistrano. ' -...papistrano--~-U.71: 11.lo-Mlt•Hlol....,Honohily( · lnclude.quartemwler,.supply
BOATING claim him the · flrst world lead. ft wu In the 10th Ind OTHER OllM'GE COUNTY The evtDI was eo-sponl!Ol'l!d Wayno Schaefer, Clplotrano 114; Claudio Kunze, Bruil, ofOcer eleotronlCI lechni·
cham pion_ or the Hobie Cal:lt --f~ -race.-.tha:l-Quiepa-blew,_, aallort -placoed-11mong-the--ffl'S\....-by-Pr-lmo----Brewlng-Ce..----ot--Beach, at:~~a;-Georae-itorslt , , c I an 1 1 n d b 0 s p I ta I
class. his chances with a l!th place ten in the colorful regatta. Jn Honolulu and Pan American Hcuolulu, f0.7Di; John no.. Auatralla, 182;' David L}'Olll, rvl ' otnct ls aald For
The .Costa '-fesan, who says finish. Loufek again was the fourth place ·was Wayne AJrwayt. 'Oiaan. NewpOrt Beach, ta; ~y. 163: Denny Keough, ~~ .. ~an, 1 __ 11• s.~7 h< li•es just a"""" Jhe street winner. Schader of Caplstiaoo Beach, · Demll Wllco<, Florldo,._77· Sldne HI· Ind er Bam1 •=...-lnfonnoUon ~ ~ · ....... Newporjl!each,•m•~~-;~"~o~~·~A~lt·~·~·~r~c.~.~~:ii~iii8"'"1ia~~=-~~~~~~~::::~~RS~~~~~~~~·1fi~"Biifir~=~;~trc~OliCil:UJU·A·~=~:::~~~I:~:·~-:::::;:~~~~~~~~~~ Two Lead Cinal two races of the 10-race Ii i
regatta to edge Jetr Canepa ot
Santa Cn.iz by one and a
quarter points as tbousands or
spectatorS watched the light
air duel from the beach at
,.
Powerboat ,
Standings
Bobby R.aut~ard or ?iliami
Beach, Fla. and Sandy Satulla.
Cleveland, Ohio, emerged as
the stars of the offshore
po"·erboat competition in um.
\\raikikl.
Loufek has been a top sailor
of Hobie Cats since they came
on the sailing scene some five
years ago. He is a former na-
tional champion in the class.
AS QE WE1'<,. in to the final
1 .... -0 ra<:t$ Sunday, Loofek was
19 points behind Canepa.
Rautboard had a year
dreamed of by powerboal
racers. He ""on four Union of Boeing
1.-Totor!:Joat (UI~ll races and
the 1972 \Vorld Offshore
Championship.
He now joins the elite list
v;hich includes the names of
the world's most talented
powerboat rncers -Bill
\\fishnick of New York,
Building
Jetfoil
\1icenzo Balestrieri of Italy, SEATTLE (AP) - A plant
-· Don..Arooow-oL.Elorida. Dick Jormu·~usecUoLJ>Jtodi.iclio<>
Bertr~m and Jim Wynne of of the m jetliner, is now the
Florida. home of the "JeUoil", the
Boeing Co's venture into com-
•
SATliLLA, A rookie driver, mercial ocean transport.
\\·on four major raei!S in a row 1be cavernous building was
in his Copper Kettle. Starting ' the setting Friday for the
with a win in the Hennessy laying of the keel for the first
Hurricane Classic at St. Jetfoil, scheduled for delivery
Petersburg, f1a . (a revival of in the summer of 1974 to Far
the old Hurricane Classic and East Hydrofoils of Hong Kong.
a race which will be held Boeing began· ~
again this year ) Satulla then hydrofoil production last
took the Sam Gri£fith September. and 'Vil Ham Af.
Men1orial, the Bahamas 500 Schultz, program man8ger,
and the Hennessy Grand Prix said the firm expects to sell 40
at Pt. Pleasant. N.J. It ..,,.as of the $.1.5 million ships in the
the first time a rookie has next five years and 100 during
ever set such a record. the next decade .
Star of an entirely different The company says it has
type of powerboat racing was finn orders for 11 Jetfoils
Bill ~iuncie who almost made from Far East. Pacific Seat
a clean sweep in UnHmited Transportation Co., of Hawaii
Hydro racing las t year. In his (for inter-island service ) and
boat Atlas Van Lines he won Condor Ltd. of London (for
the Miami, Fla. race, the English Channel operation).
Owensboro, Ken.. race. the Schultz said the JeUoil is of.
Gold CUp race al Detroit, the unique design and will offer
Madison. Ind. classic, the pa.Ssengers a comfortable,
Pasco -Kennewick · Richland, safe, rapid ride 00 a depend-
Wash. race and the Seattle, able schedule, e~q_ in bigb
Wash. race. wi-•· d •--Bill Sterrett Jr., was the •iw1 an i-=<1vy seas.
wtrmer or the President's Cup The Jetfoil wiJJ literally ride
race at Washington. D.C. on underwat er wings. It will
C A U FORNIA DRIVERS
scored in some of the smaller
classes in both inboard and
outboard races. So me of the
champions :
FIVE-LITRE -George E.
Fox, Van Nuys (driver ~1ickey
Remund ); Wayne Thompson
and John Wolf, Van Nuys.
CRACKER BOX -Danny
Edw ard Mang, Glendale.
B RACING RUNABOUf -
·Patterson, Calif.
K RACrNG RUNABOIIT -
Charles E. Boyd, City o! Com-
merce.
A RACI NG RUNABOUT -
AJan Ishi, Pasadena.
C RACING RUNABOIIT -
Rich Fuctislin, Dixon, caJif.
C SERIES RUNABOUT -
Manuel Carnakis. Bakersfield.
C HYDRO -Fred Ha.uens-
tein, San Jose.
PREDICTED LOG RACING
(James Craig Trophy ! Robert
Wilson, Cali!ornia Yacht Club,
Marina de! Rey.
have a displacement of 16 tons
and will be able to transport
as many as 250 passengers at
up to 50 miles an hour. It will
be 90 feet long with a max-
imum beam of 31 feet.
Duty Delay
Hitch Set
The United States Coast
Guard recruiting office in San-
to Ana has annoW'ICed a new
enlistment program that1
allows men to enlist im·
mediately but delay the start
of aCtl\'e dut y up to six
months.
The program is intended for' I
but not limited to . high school
seniors within six months of
graduation. according to Coast
Guard officials.
· For further information call
~7-5431. '
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EGISTER Now·
· aasses Start Janu ary 29·
FANCY
Bananas Golden ripe
Spinach Frosh and Tender
Oranges Sweet ind Juicy
BANANA .
Squash Thick Moated
2 lbs. 25¢
2 bun. 39¢
6 1bs. $1
lb.
,
<JiJe:fieerf e:sse:Fl
RICHARD'S
•
Egg11ndfotato-Salacf-.4tj9¢-
KNUDSENs _:_ }\
Natural Chee'SeS oil ..,;o•.. , "· 69c
Hooiemade ·sauerkraut 22 oz.
Pillsbury Biscuits ,, •• ~a•., c.,, .... '"'' I or.
29c
lOc
RICHARD'S TOP THE GRADE U.S.D.A. "CHOICE"
PREPARED FOR EASY CARVI NG
Standing Rib Roast
Short Ribs of ~eef
FROZEN
Braise
or stew
Lamb Shanks New Zealand
_.BAR M SMOKED
1.59 1b.
69¢ lb.
79¢ lb.
P k l • R Like C1nedi1n 1 29 or Ofn oast Bac11n 0 lb.
BAR M
Smoked Pork Chops 1.49 .lb.
Oran~e Pork Chops
Coit 6 thielr chop• with • rnilnltr• of 2 T. flour elld 'h h p. 1•lt. In 2 T.
hot oil, brown chops tbout 10 l'l'lin, ••· 1idt. Combine I T. bro wn sugtr,
I/I hp. ginqtr, I T. 9r1h1d or1ng• pt 1l 111d I C. or111flo jute1. Pour ov1r
chops, cover. Simll'ltr •S-SO min. Add I C. or1ng1 11etion1 j111t b1for1
11 rving. -S1rv111 6.
Stuffed Chicken Breasf
Vi Cornish Hens stuffed .; ... .,, • ., ''";,, d .... ; ..
A COMPLETE SELECTION OF EXOTIC SEAFOOD
We also process meat for home freettrs.
E<Ylie:rf!J
1.19
59c
Butter Crust Bread
Potato Rolls
Fruit Boston Cream Pie
46c
6 for 39c
1.69
LA.GE
'Assorted Coffee Cake
-tr/ewer iR.efJ
YELLOW -end WHIT~
Marguerite Daisies
bun. of 25 1.29
-LIQUOR
Rlch•rd's PriYat• Lebel
RICHARD'S
Scotch Whisky 16.1 Proof fifth
RICHARD'S KENTUCKY
Straight Bourbon Whiskey 16 proof fifth
RICHARD'S
London D(y Gin 10 Pf'OOf fifih
RICHARD'S
Lido Market Vodka 10 ""f fifth
.99c
6.38
4.75 ·
3.80
3.80
..
~~ UDO CENTER 343) Via lido, Newport Beach
'oPEN OAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 -6 673-6360
I'
QUAUTY -VALUE -SERVICE
. .
Crisco ·Oil
RICHARD'S
Large -AA Eggs
YU BAN
Instant . Coffee ·
BORoO ·-
Grapefruit Sections
Chiffon . Towels Big roll
Hunts Tomato Sauce
Smyckers Cherry Preserves
CAMPIEllS
Chunky Split Pea wi th Ham Soup
CAMPBELLS '
Chunky Chicken with Rice Soup
Betty Crocker Ginger Bread Mix
Nalleys Chili with Beans •o<'''" Hot""'''
Nabisco Premium.. Sa ltine· Crackers
~GREEN GIANT
Bake In Serve Casserole oil • "'1011" "
MRS. SMITHS ·
Apple or Coconut Custard Pie • •
' '
•
48 01.
doL
a ...
16 OL
1 .. 19.:
3 for $1
4 for $1
I OL
12 01.
19 oz.
19 01.
141/1 01.
15 01.
I lb.
12 01.
10 for $1
3 for $1
·49c
49c
33c
3 for $1
39c
39c
79c
. AD PR ICES GOOD
MOND.liY THRU SATURDAY, JAN. 27th
• ' ·~
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OI .,. ... ...
. -M ~~ HARBORV IEW .1660Mac Arthur,NewportBeach :i
OPENDAIL)'9-8,SUN.9-6 673-2155 1
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-'-/>~'\-, -vV,~,..·I id --....-rt Eol~eetto··--'--
• By JO 01.'ION
: Of .. o.llY "" '""
Slz yean ago at an antique lhow tn Ft.
Wl)'l>e, lnd!ana, Allan aod Ernestine
Green boot!ht an old quilt and found they
were booked on a new collecting bobby.
,-since then, they have "rescued" ap-
• proo.lmateJy 150 quills, a o m e antique,
from swap meeta, flea markets, moving
a \rans, attics and t.he backs of passing
)'OOlb!.
The South Lagunans both are
+ aoldsmllb! by trade and laughingly say
they work only to support lhelr collecting
•habit.
-Quilt collectlng Is a natural outgrowth of the couple's talents d interest!.
Allan left bis nine-year posltloo as a t>ro-
Why are·qullto•mw turD!ng up.at swap
meets and &ales?
"Quilts moved west In wap trains,"
Allan Aid. "Many lhn<s Grandmother
would give a CJl!!lt to a Graoddaughter
and she wouldn't want It. You'd ... u !or
sale or being abused. ,.
0 'lbey're . great fof: funUture moving.
We've rtsCUed several from movitg
vans."
Anotberwa>j>Un:hased ·by Allan during
the Laguna rock festival aeveral yean
ago !or a bargain price of II when he
spotted a group ol yoolb! sitting oo tt
listening to the music. .
Allan and Emeslllie dl"""8ed the
history of.quilting tn America:
PIONEEBS~Pl\AISED
... A'merlca's pioneers wen! ,a unJque
group of people. The women led a drab
life -\lley worked hard and , &<>t lltUe
reward for it. .
. 41 baUon olflc.r for Los Angeles Coonty « aeveral yean ago to open an antlQue
'I' atore ln Laguna, something be bad ti always wanted to do. "They could piece togother a quilt on
" EmesUoe came Into t be store as a the farm with materials on band, or in f customer one day, was recruited to make the 'ciUes they could puzzle 10< days
fur purses and theo married her boss. creating a pattem.
iO-J'laturallyr she ~-he..-husbend's--"Qullto·.....,-aeldom hung up.and vie"'
wedding ring and designed ben. . ed as art objects until county lairs came along ••
I BOBBY FIRST Qullto were done as piecewoi:I< hetw<en
41 Ernestine studied goldsmlthlng first as household chores, the G....,. 'added. Jn
• a hobby tn her naUve HoUand and then In Oilonlal timeo, a. giri"slarted aewlng at
• Ireland. She came to the lhllted Slates u the age ol 3 and aewed It least 13 qullto
• 1 Mootessorl teacher and cootlnued stud· for her dowry. ·
• 1inc Jewelry mating oo the side. _ Quilto are ma<le In -ei:aI ways, !hey .•
lier rings, pelldants and bracelets sre pointed out. There are qull!Hrith blocb
1eometr1c tn form, breathtakingly stitched togother tn c!rlinite . pattems,
•modem and futuristic In shape. crazy quilts wl>er~ pieces· ol dl!fmnt ~ Allin's jewelry Is, by cootrast, old-fabrics are fitte<I tbgether_,t r8ndom, ap-~fubloned and delicate. Be rea-eet.ee old pl!qued quills where tlle'cj;stgn Is cut oot
? aettiDgs ln new rings that w111 look like and ·sewn to-a plain M>p; and quilts wbere
ii antiques themselves after a few years' the design is crtated by the stl.tebes.
•wear. . NEW INTERFSI'
"' His training came first from dental Quilting has become a popular lhing
, le.boo! studies, which be never-com-once again, the Greens said. and they
f pleled, and, after his marriage, .from his feel it' Is just beginntng to see Its
wife. He also took art cl8l8el aMhe t:Jni-renaissance. ..We feel strongly that
venlty of calilornla, Sanla>Barhara. · quilting as a hobby will go through a new
• Qullto however .,. the matn totem! phase o1 Interest."
of the Greem ~Y They aean:h for But their biggest desire Is to have
them ~er they-troval, 'tocluding quilting rec<>gniT<d U ID art form. 'Dln>pe and theo restore them, dlsptoy ''Tho patdmrt quilt ts every bit aa ~ ~study their history. ~d !fS: 1~;t' ;.'tch":
l!QUIL'l'llD CVRl'AINS Qlliltinc la every bit u wild an art as
'f!lo1 uae them oa 1 IOtatlllf baels as -• PI<asso was dotng In Ills ooilage>.
lo
"
, i. .. ..,. haolini as Bl) art It's aJ.':'" -ao tntemttng picture," thdr Uvtng ,_ ind uae "!>' said .
liqued quilt .. ter1a1 for cortatns. . (See QlllLT; Pae! HJ
DAILY
PILOT
PH.QTDS
by
RICHARD
KD&HLER
A sunburst pattern
is among
quilts to be
displayed through ·Jan.
26 in the Laguna Art
Assoc iation Gallery.
~men
•EA ANDERSON, Editor · ......,_,.,_,. & rm .._. 11
Erne stine and Allan Green show
a block fo r a quilter's cata.
logue (left). Above are
samples of Ernestine's
jewelry.
•
"
•
• • • Appetite Voted Matter ·of Mind
•
'
was OllCe very lusty) and havtn(-to !-
yourself to eal Yoo can gel the food
down·all right, but the pleuure la gooe.
Pleue, Ann, take the word of eomeone
wllo Imo.... -GRATEFUL FOR A
GOOD MEMORY -
DEAR G.RATEP'UL: Ye a r letttt wu
oae ol maQy from woma w'9 111d tlie
tame thing. More. womn; lrtwever,
.roce u lib oae clkl. Piute read H:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: f md with In-
•
temt the leUer lroni the woman who
had a hysterectomy at C, and signed bor
letter "The Thrill ls Gone." I bad a
hystmctomy two yean "f.! at 40 and I
am signing my letter 'Better Tbao _ Evtr."
For •ight yeers before the operation I
wu plagued by female-problems and a
!ear. ol pre11J180CY. I had bad llve
chlldrai, cloaely rpeced, Ind I spent ball
my time tn the doctor's .umlnlq room.
Illy gynecologist UMJl'ed me that my
RX Qle would be tbe same u before. He
told me about the pllls that would replace
the hormonal Joa wblch every woman
upertenqes wllen she has her ovaries
doctor can help lmmemely by counseling
In advance and g!Yin.< the woman
retMll'IDCt. My doctor, bless him, was
willing to apend the time to educate me.
removed. ~ .I am now 4J and enjoying msrltol n!lo-
He spent an hour ezplalntng encUy t;oos mctt than I ba•e tn ts yesro. The
J1Vbat the operation waa all about. I wUl thrill i!_ NOT gone for me. It I• -BET·
nevtr forget hiJ words, "You will feel-TEI\ TIWi EVEll
better, look better and DO hetu!r alter
the IUl"f81'f• H
He went on to tell me that many
-dread a byste~tomy becall!e
they view It as the end "" tbelr "womanllnea." Others lhlpk of the
operation as a convenient ereu&e to avoid
marital ,.. (which they never 111joyod
anyway). r concluded that the problem tn most
-)J poycholo&lcal and • """'
DEAi! ANN LANDERS: Olr son Is 20,
and to ...... exprooslon that will -ly
dato mo, he Is tall, dark and handsome.
'Ila problem Is tnetgnllicant oomparl!il tO
many you receive, but It has turned ~r
dlnnor table <lilli""""!lon Info a deballilg
socloty.
Resolved : Sbould Jim grow a heard!
Hla lltl aays "No l" Hls older brother
says .. Yes!11 His dad aays. "It would look
terrible. Yoo have enooall hiJr u It lo.• 1
say, "Po as you please and atop taWns
about It." 1Jlm ts undecided,, We...,
agreed to send two pll:turea ol Jim to
Ann Landers -one with I beord dmm
on, another ciean-thaven, • i. la .,,._
Please yote yes or oo. Thant you, -
TRffiAL COUNSEL
DEAR '1111BE: Alfer ....... 11 ..
plctur .. ,1--.1 .... -....
father. Be lw ._. .... •I II.
Do you feel awhard, ..U~ -
1oo<1y1 W•icotne to the club. ,,_...
·h<lp for you In Ann Landen' "'11*111
'"nle K'1 to l'opiilari(j>.• ~ ilelllli
In coin with your rtquest ml 1 .....
stamped, self..td:aeaed 1a10 'DJ• to Oii DAILY PILOT.
•
-• . 4 OAll 1 PILOl Monday, January 22, 1971
fr Higher Marks Sought • Negotiation
l Uy CAROL MOORE
Of ""' DallY PIAlf IMift l tr you think teachers' strii~
are all a matter of salary,
" think again.
I" The contraot package In-
cludes sudLfacton as teacher-!~ student or counselor-student 1: ratios, upgrading of library
supplies. election of deparl-
loond none eJlsted in the
C'OUnly.
"c.Jlfomla Is the only •tato
that doesn't hive colledlve
barfalning and out• Ide
arbitratkm (or teachers," abe
saki. "Our Ce rt lf le at ed
~ployescooncns aM a poor
substilut~ titcause tbelr___muc..
ture can be divtslve."
men( heads and sabbatical ~IEET ~ CONFER
criteria, _ _,,.,ch djstrlct'.s . c EC -r rn~ co~l<lerahons Will representing all t. cu 1 t y ~ co1ne under discussion when orpnlzatioo.s, "meets and
l 1Cl Extension presents confers" with the school board
Negotiations : Participation "'hicli mates the final
and Strategy for Teachers decision.
• starting Jan. 25. "But there are minority fac-
~ Barbara Baber of the Cen-ti0n5 'Wlthln the CEC; It's good
tral Labor O:>uncil of Orange for the weak groupe but bad ! 0:-unty coordinated the Thurs-for the second strongest
day evening series when she group. Many issues are com·
I ~. tried to take such a course and promised even before they
l • • .
rta<h the board," MJ. Baber
ffll)aloed. A. improvements Illa ....
gested even blrlalnJn& powu
for teacher• ancf Cn&atees and
mon awareoeaa ar tcbool
!lnanots whldl usually It
avallable 1o leadlerl~ooly u-
an odminlstraUft ...,,...
·Ms. Baber, euttkulwn
director fe< !be EngUlb
Department at Fulltrton'1 . . ""
gathored bluo ribbon IJ><aktr•
for her tandmarl< courae.
PotenUal lmpad It ao -I
that both the ClllfonU
Federattco ol Teachers and
c.JUomla Teachera Alaocla-
tlon are pa~ IUIUon for
aome members.
w!U en\Ui new and pending
lqlalailco oo March n. Donaldson, uocuUve directors teachcn not to dlscolmt
of the CFT and Cl'A, t.1. .. unlonlilttj; 11 11 non .. pro-
pl4lnlng Colltldlve llarplolnl fwlooal." ' ~ls ~Jlcbael
Brick, Stanley Corey, John
NlcoU-.itlCHloorge Plwnlolgb
h'on\ Fouotaln Valley, Irvine,
Ne"PQri:Mesa and Lo 1
Alomltoe tcbool dlslrlcts wW
dllCll8f lllflerent Points of
View on March 22.
and tha Winton Act. Donaldson She lltttller a tt r I b µ to 1
wiU dfferlbe-Organillng--lo --l11<Ult1 rellucll...,~'llnioobio-j~
Negollala on Fel> I. lo the fact that ei.mtntary
Atlomor_ Jaclo LeVllle wUI tea c.h •rs have been
oulllne Strlka Bnd EmpioYO'• preOOri\iliiiill,Yfemaleo, work· · JUihla -...!'.Wben ...,-st:lbs In& under Jl!l)e admlg!S!ralorl
n.....ary and what works" -and llJUl!ly earning the second
during the Mardi IS sWlon. Income, wbo "don' wanl lo Rudy Koe'• session on Fin-
din( lllddeo Fund.s on Feb. n
wtll-deat-wttta w1paddtng-Interim speaken and their
llCboot budgets to make more topics are Roger Kuhn,
money dlreclly beneficial to Beyond Salary; Dr. Jopn
student>. Bright, School Finance lo
''Teachera should have more Callfomla; Jim Ballard, The
say about what's best for the Art of NegoUating, and Larry
c b 11 d r en . Administrators Sibelman, Resolution o f
become detached lo their of-Disputes.
fices," Ma. Baber interjected. Ms, Baber bellevts it's time
'Jbe aeries will start with for women to get into labor for
Oiucl:' C8nlll and John political action and for
rock the boaL"
~ltt-leoeben1-....-.µ
tends intemaUonally.
Aa a dlroctor for the
American HOilt OrganiUUon
which brings European
teacher1 lo tha U.S. for ml·
dent seminars, she ls involved
with the An.-CIO'• hlceo-
teonlal Meel the Amerlc1111
project aimed at having ...
mWlon lorolgners villtJng the
COUDtry by 1971.
Yo ur Horoscope To morrow
•
BARBARA BABER
Gemini: Trust Your Hunches
!
: ' ' I
Benefit Honors Honorary Chairmen
TUESDAY
JANU ARY 23
Restrictions now art for your comn11micatloa line!. Broaden
own benefit. 'I'h1.s may be dif· borW:m. New approach could
ficult to accept -but U l.s mean profit .. Act accordingly.
By SYDNEY OMARR true. RelaUves are confused PIS<fES (Feb. 19-March 20):
ARIES (March 2l·April 19): and some seek arguments. Long-range · investment
Accent on finishing touches. Heed your ow_n counsel. Ideas possibility should be ex-
amined. U :you are careful,
you could fmd ioor way to
something productive. Follow
tbrough bn opportunity. One
who Is uoorthodol may have
correct answers.
-Complete-rather-than-begin--"~J<L.twrture----~----project. Stress is on area deal. .vmoo (Aug. USept. 22 ):1 __________________ _
lng with partnerships, speciat' Fmancesneedattentlon.Some. • • • • • • • • • • • ·~ • • • ~-•.....L • I
relationship.!, including mar-one ~ laughs a b could • 1 •
riage. You may have to do behavingf\matyoor-.• ''INCHES A WAY'' some mending where public ~ so.me ~g. What you • . • • •
relation5 is concerned. fmd could eventual!~ save you • . _ •
TAURUS (April 2o. May money; Act .•c«>r<lingly. Be THE. PROVEN METHOD •
20) · Tllke time to be<ome analytical. Find reasoos. Do •
aw,;,.. of sublle nuances. some dettldlve work! • NO DANGEROUS OR
Delay works in your favor. LIBRA (Sept. 23--0ct. !2): • COSTLY SHOTS . Play waitiDg game. Contract. Tear down in order_ to_r._ebuild. • . .
tegai agreement has hidden Judgment oow " 00 target. $1 o· OFF-ioopboie. Know lt and seek ad-You have WBY of wlnlllng peo-•~ _ • With Tbl1 Al
ditlonal -lolonnation Leo iiF-J>le to· yoor side. ·Know-It and • K ·
·dlvldual could aid · take advantage of It. Money • 5 INC . LOSS
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): which seems going another • .FIRST VISIT
(9UAAAHf1101
JEANS INCHES-A-WAY
1799 Newport Blvd., Co1\1 Me11
PHONE 645-8890
Hunch pays dividends. Have ~ay boon:terangs and-returns
faith in your own feelings . m your dtrectlon. •
Aquarlan could play signifi-SC~RPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): •
cant role. Look beyond the im-Face lSSUes directly. What you •
mediate. Gain shown if you fear could be transofrmed into •
share knowledge. Learn by asse.t. ~ pla~s key role. te~ Affair of heart is Seem hgbt of reality. One who •
feattired: Lovers' quarrel may poses threat is merely' blUf· ,. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
be on agenda. ling. What is behind scenes
CANCER (June 21.July 22): rep~esents challenge, not
Ccnditions at Mme base do pent. TRAIN to be a
• • •
• • • • • •
Kicking off. the Mothers' March, which begins to-
morrow, was a benefit luncheon fashion sh.ow in the
Elks Club. Special guests attending are Qeft to right)
Claire Trevor, honorary county chairman of the
march; Secretary of Stal8 Edmund G. Brown Jr . .,
honorary state cbaliman, and Mis.5 Elaine Whitelaw
of New York, national director of MOD.
not remain static. What ap-SAGrrrARIUS {Nov. n.
peared settled could be Dec.11): SOmewho ~friend..
uprooted. Forces tend to be ly may, have moilves which
scattered. Display versaUlity. are difficult to fathom.
LEO (July 23-Aug. n ): Protect youn;ell in ..-!
DENTAL TECHNICIAN
Six Months ln-ve Trolnlngl ·
• .
' ' .
Members Go to Bat for Club Causes
Troj an Gu ild
Rod Dedeaux, USC baseball
coach, will diacuu baseball
and the upcoming season for
members of tbe Trojan Guild
of Orange County and their
husbands Thurlday, Jan. 25,
at 7:30 p.m. lD the Part
Newport Apartments .
The coach, recenUy named
Coach-of-the-year by the
American AssodaUon of
College Baseball Coadles, bas
Jed his team to the naUoual
collegiate championship ln the
last three yean,
Women Voters
state standards, legallUea: ol
plarm\ng, cunent legtalaUOn
and the process of planning
wil I be discussed by a panel
for Orange Coast League of
Women Voters Thursday, Jan.
25, from 9:30 a.m.to 2 p.m. in
Island House, Fashion Island.
Panel members for the
luncheon meeting will include
the Mmes. Joseph Napoli,
Charles Smlth, Lawrence
Margol, James Murley and
1t1s. Judith flamburger .
Ho spital
Members of South Coast
Community llo8pltal, a noo-
prollt corporation, wW gather
for their annual meeting
'nwrsday, Jan. 25, at 7:30
p.m. to elect officers for the
coming year.
AARP
Newport Beach C!apter Ul,
American AsaoclaUon of
Retired Persons will meet for
a potluck IAmdleon 'lbunday,
Jan. 25, at noon 1n tbe
Newport Harbor Luth"'an
Omrdl.
A business meeting and a
pl'Olll'l!D of sUdel from Scao-dinavta will be featured.
Church Women
What Are We Afraid Of?
will be the topic of Mrs.
Thomas Phelps when she
speab to members of Harbor
Area Cruch Women United
FriW.y, Jan. 28, at 9:30 a.m.
USC COACH
Rod Dodeaux
.
Professional Couples Cub
Saturday, Jan. 27, at 7:00 p.m.
at the Los Coyotes Country
Club, Buena Park. Speaker
wW be W. Marvin Wataon,
former United S t a t e s
Postmaster General.
Yacht Club
Formal tmtailallon of of·
flCUI will highlight the annual
Commodore's Ball for the
Babla Corlnlhlao Vadlt Club
SaturUay,Jao.27.
Dinner 11 the clUbllouae at
I: 30 will follow I ooclal hour
and cocktall parties in
memben' homes. D<no!ng will follow lo the music ol Joe
Moshay's Orchestra.
Coast Juniors
South Coast Junior Woman's
Club will tpoo.tor a. ki:cal
recruitment and orientation
meeting Wednesday, Jan. 24,
at 7:30 p.m. to introduce the
Community Friend! program.
Nancy HaniJ, director of
progrlllll!, will dlacuss the
pioject aperated by the
the Orange County Mental Health
Aaoclation at the meeting lo
the F®lltaln Valley High
School cafeterta,.
Churchwomen
More than 1,000 women are
expected lo attend the 71th ap-
nual meeting . of Eplacopal
Clwrcl!womeo ol tbe Dloce!O
of Los Angeles Friday, Jao.
:le, at 10 a.m. ID tha
Dimeyland Hotel
The Rt. Rev. Erle Bloy,
Bishop of the dlocese, will con-
duct the service and officers
wW be lostalled.
Da nci ng
Scottllb CountrY Dancing
will be offerod for adullt and
chlldr<D by the Westmlnater
Pub and Recreation Depart·
meat in the community
aervlce building for cblldren,
and Warner School f0< adullt.
Children's classes, begin
'l'hunday, Jen. 25, and adult
cla..., open to eighth graders
and above, begin Jan. 31.
clinches. Take nothing for
granted. Caprlcora Individual
could figure prominently. You
gain access to secret.
CAPRll!ORN (Dec. 22.lan.
19): • with
Sogltladaa. Accent II OD tncnesB ID change bulc dlreo-
tion. Get new olghtlng on
ulllmate goal. One lo posllloo
of authority Is w!Ulng to give
you credit. KnoW It and ,...
pond accordingly.
Enrollment ilf CR0WN and BRIDGE, i1nd DENTURE
prog rams now open for day and ev•nin9 cl•~••••·
For Information, phone Immediately
(7141 635-3450 ' . .................. ... (----Southern California College
of
Medical & Dental Careen
• • 1717 5. BROOKHURST ST., 'ANAHEIM, CA 92804 ~ --.,, ,...,_.. '--cletlM te TniM &' Tld!llCel ......_
' AQUARIUS (Jan. JO.Feb.
!!): Unusual m-eo mayl~~~~=;:::;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;:=:==~::;~~~~ need deciphering. Accentr
study, added knowledge. Look WIHAY1Youasm2y, to 12
beyond tbe Immediato. Catch 1.----1 Not oll llylet In 11111 abe ..., ...
up on comopondmce. Cleor
From Page 13
. '
... Quilt
"Pioneer Americans, espec.
laI1y the women, were much
more creative than they were
given credit for."
Ernestine has been so in-
spired by the creaUvlty of the
pioneers that she would like to
rnal<e a qullt horseH.
But true to tradiUon, the
qullt collector hasn't had -
to •It down and mal<e .... .
JU!! like !lie ~er_\\'.bo _
had no shoes.
Enna Jetticks-
SEM1 • ANNUAL SHOE
VALUES TO 21 .00
Auxili a ry
The women will gather in
tho chapel of st. Andrew's
Presbyterian ChJrcb. A
luncheon wW lollow Iha In-
stallation of olficen.
C.oupl es
Nonna Zlmmer of
l.a1!1'1t1ce • Well: Show
entertain the Business
will '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-::==~11 $ 97 and
1\fembers of the Women's
Auxiliary to the American jiiijjjijjjiiiijiiiiij'-iiijjiiiijiiijiiiijjjiijjjijjjiiiijiiiiijjiijjjiii I Society of Me clhanica l
Engineers will tour Lawry's
California •Center Thursday, ONE-WEEK SPEC'IALS '• .
i • Jan. ZS, at 11 a.m. Hostesses ; ..
~ J•
include Mrs. Joseph c. Wi<I-JAN. 22 tbru JAN. 27 mont Jr. of Newport Beach.
. GOP Women
I . Costa Mesa Republican
: Women's Club will lns1all of-
; ficers for 197l-73 Thursday,
iJ, Jan. 25, beginning · with a f social hour at 6:30 p.m. t To be ln5lalled are the
r
. 0 1.irnes. David Firth, president:
Ray John, F'ra.nk Gonzales and
Robert Beeney, vice
presidents; Sandra Firth, ~ recording secretary, and
, . Cllarles Benton, treasurer.
~:
I
VITAM IN E, D'ALl'HA
100 1.u., 100 C•psul•
·~~~· SPECIAL 1.99
1 LI. SUNFLOWER SEEDS
Plump & Jutcy
... ~~· SPECIAL 55¢
COASTLINl '6'10 PIOltlN
~~~,!;',;.~ SPECIAL 2.49
WHEAT GUM OIL
.... ~.~'stA• SPECIAL 99¢
Coastli ne Health Foods
TUSJ1N
. IOM lrvlnt llvd.
NNr 5•¥·0n
J44.71J4
LAGUN.( HILLS COSTA MISA
141 OJ b foro lcl, Hllftrt11 &qutl'9
Nr .... ,.. 270 I. 17th It.
1No7... 541-tW
'
r
•
ARST 11Mf EYER IN COSTA MESA !
Monday and Tuesday, January 22 and 23, 1973
RODEWAY INN -1400 PALISADES ROAD
COSTA MESA
I
COST
and IHOaJOl BELOW ··-COST ewou e CASUAL WIAI
sins AUILAILI FU RTHER AND FINAL
~-------. REDUCTIONS A/4AA •••••••••• 6\IJ-11
AM ......... : ... · .. tt • All 9.97 1hoes on
AA ••••.••••••••• Sl/1·11
A •.••...••..•••.•• , s-11 r1ck1 end t1bl11
I """" .. """ I V>-t2 • Sllff plainly markld c ................ JV!-12
••••••••••••••••••• 4-1 1
IW ••••...•....•••• 4-1 0 • Hundred• of pelrs
to choon from
Yft1 WI NA.YI C AND D WIDTHS
Enna Jettick Shoes .__ __ ._. -~~s~.t11c.--
WUTMINSm CINTH .... "'" m ~ .... WUfWMlll ll¥'f, NONI "1 ... 1119 ~
ANAHllM IOWMOWM I
)\ot Wlft UMCOUI AYI. "'°"' .....
SANTA ANA
1 .. IAll Mltf.""°'9 14W2'1 ..
J
-· t 11S te 6100 ftl. '111 t
SANTA ANA
...,, t111 .. •11t
• ••
\
••
' ....
AMILER
•
by DOUfJ Wiidey "' DOOLEY'S WORLD ¥
-·r~111.·--·~-
__ .. _ ... __ _
FIGMENTS .
AND DON'r SLEEP
WITHVc>.111.MOLml
OPEKl'THE'UGM1'
KE&l>$ME A-1
"8AAIT I TOOGOoo
by Dale Hale
GORDO
NA.NCY by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACKERS
. ' .
••
•
'I HEAR · YOU WENT iO
CHURCH YESTERDAY
FOR THE FIRST :TIME
" "
42 Less«-
Loko
.... QyerhMg
.47 CRyln Syrie
49 Tom
51 Thf'ow
behind
K hed!M
&2: 'Au, mul'l'IP'o ....
53 Biblical""" .........
' ' ~-~~m!rt"-+ ..... -t~.,
' :-~+-t-;--;
. ~ ~tt-+' -t-t~
·~ ~ 2930 I
: rfl~l1-i1:.,mrl-fl'f1-HHHri!;:,rTI;1~-;1·1Th"· -t--t--t
1
1...-1.-l-l-1:.,H,,.,,,,i,,.,,., 1-+,-;-1P. .. f .... +.. ,.,r+-+-t
I .w; IY
" -. --
'hr+-t-t-+-i-., ' ·~
--
.,
THE
MUSIC
w~
NICE·-,
JUDGE PARKER
WHEH LYNN
Slt .. '1ESTER JS Utual.E
TO RfCOGHIZE
ErrHER HER
HUS&AHD OR
Ae8EY SPEHGER,
'THE DOCTOR
SU66ESTS THAT
SHE '&£.SEEM ev
A PSVCHIATfUST !
~o= ~ ~/f,,,,Y/:22<
L
MISS PEACH
DICK TRACY
•
···BUT THE
*COMMERCIAL*
WAS A LITTL.E
L.ONG
NO, fr> 6010 JAIL Al5T
-.
-,
. .
IF H~ AMNESIA IS PSYct40i..061CAL.
oll.41l'llA, ~T l.ll~T
,. NtGH'I' t 1AIC>, 4&181 PAP, TOMOll:l'OW Wll.L
Ill J'AN. ll 0 1~15, FOi'.
THli Vllr\' l'll<fT •
TIMI! . .,'
•
... ANO .... ~101 •A KIO WITH
YOU!t LITTL'
~XPl!RIENCE
HM-NO 1'1""'1'
TO MAI<! '!'MAT
. <Sf'A1'BMeNr ...
by Mell
'NIJW, MY Qf.JISTION
I~ IN 'fWO PAl'TS:
(A) IVll.L MY FAl'Mf.R:
JVlill llfl>Pl'T MY
OPINION, ANI>, (S)
~S THE!r£ &VJ"
IJlt.H A J'N'l,l2,
1q7~ l!ll!FO/EE?
.. ' \ I tc.." . .' .-•
/'"'l.2,
W.--...c.=2...Uu_!I!!'-"'"'IWJ'.
by Chester Goald
MR. INDIG DECIDED
TO SHOOT FIRST,
Monday, January 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT .J IS
5 ll
• "
I~ I com.!
I~
I CtJJYt!
' by Roger ,Bradfield
by Gus Arriola
. -by Ferd Johnson
r SHOUL~HAVE ~l<'!URll>
THl'T OUT WHEN SHI!'
INSISTED ON A <l&NOINI!'
MoONLIC5HT W!l>l>IN<O'-
..---,i
1• ·~
-tr.:r1
by Roger Bollen
><••/·b, ""'-~.y --._ ......... ,,............ .
... \It CA))AL\IJA45 -.,
TELL IT'S A t>R!AIA
61.1 ~ Ill~ IJ/Jf.$
/>liO(J/JO l!le ~~/
"I Dow It's out Gf order -I'm just enjoying myself!"
DENNIS THE MENACE
·'f<'.Od' 2 / .. .lfL ....
•
• DAILY PILOT
--,
• Chargers to Fly Friendly Skie of Unitas
SAN DlEGO {AP) -\1eteran Baltilnore
COits quarterback Johnny Unit3.! was
obtained by the San Diego Chargers today
for "future consid~ratiOM,'' a spokesman
.for Ille Qwgers "!id.
"The Owgers "ill assume Unit.as'
standard player contract," the announce-
ment Mid. \'No present players or--dralt
choices are involved in the agreement''
·There have bef'n nimors that John
lladl. 11-year qWlt1trback or the 0iarg.
ers who bas pul himself oo the trading
block. would gn t• the Colts or Jl9lajj/ly tfle Los Angeles Rams in a three-.way
deal \rilh Bal~.
Harland Svare. bet c00cb Of the
Cl1argffs, •said ht WU .. booortd and
proud to acqulnl Joimn)' Unitas. the
~atest q_u.wterback ever ,lo play the
game."
The one-time Uniwralty ol Wuisvllle
player ia going into his lltb f'llT-in pro-.
resslooal !OOlball. Over his .,_.,.. he
complta.d ~ouhl(-5.110 -W
tempu and bu possed foe :lt,1!8 yards
and287!oochdowns.
Bui Unltas was iddlnedJhe laO«.Pllrt
of the tm...,.. !n ra...-of Marty Jlom.
Champ Tabbed, 7-2
Foreman, Frazier
Collide ·for Title
KINGSTON, Jamaica (UPI) -George night spot just three days before the
Foreman thinks it's time for a change, fight. But ~Uy be kept to binuielf oVer
but the ·odds are 7 to 2 against him mak· the "'·ee kend. getting mentally prepared
ing it here tonight when he tries to take ror what could be a tough fight,
the world heavyweight boxing UUe from physically, foe him.
Joe Frazier. Frazier is favored to retain his title
"!rs my time," says the eon!ldent, and pttd!ets he will stop Foreman Inside
unbeaten Foreman, wOO will have former .15 rounds. "I don't think George can
boxing champs Arebie Moore and Sandy compare wilb my speod," Frazier says.
Saddler in his corner when be tr,ies to '~He's got punching power but I'm not
wrest away the title Fraiier DQW bolds. gonna stand there and let him ~·t
'lrTl!inunnc-goo<n•iJRh~<>e--.'lrgonnlnnainla!n~-.n
goes," says Foreman, who has stopped 34 smokin'. When he's hurt I'm not .
of his YI op~ts. '"The end is near for pull back_"
Joe Frazier. Tba\'s easy to say, but rm No matter wbal, Fruler wjlJ put a few
gonna do it." dollars in his pocket -some $850,000
Foreinan, !4, bas been brought along compared to $375,000 for Foreman. Those
carefully, his opponents being hand pick· were the guarantees put up by the pr~
ed. by manager-trainer Dick Sadler. motel's, who upecJ to get back their
There hasn't been much reason f o r mooey from the clOsed circuit satellite
Foreman to think about losing. transmissions around the world.
His li!t defeat came back in 1967 as an , Only 10,000 tickets we.re sold fer t be
amateur in the Golden Gloves after fight up to Sunday and the paid crowd
which came an Olympic gold medal. undoubtedly will be way under tbe
Foreman has never been serioosly hw'I originally upected 41,000 ~Olll.
in lbe ring as a pro. He hasn't given his There has been a marked coolness
opponents much time to do any damage. down here toward 1American tourists on
"Nothin' can hurt me." he said. "I'll the part of the local Jamaicans. To
set it all straight once I have Joe Frazier forestall an'/ possibility of trouble from
in the ring." the fight fans tonight at NationaJ
Frazier has remained coot throughout, stadium, about 1,000 police and army
and even made an appearance at a local personnel will be close to ringside.
At Riverside Track
Donohue's Stock Soars
With Western 500 Win
RIVERSIDE -Mark Donohue, a
member of Phllade1pli.ia's social set, bas
officially joined the exclusive club that
belonp to the "good old boys" of
Soulbem stock car racing.
He acquired his membership S'tmday
when he drove a box·llke American
Motors Matador to an easy victory in the
$100,000 Western 500 at Riverside
International RaCeway.
Donohue was paid $11,TtO for first
place. His average speed was 104.056
miles per hour.
The race opened a 31..event tcbedule
for the National Association for Stock
Car Auto Racing· and it drew St,000
persons into the sprawling road COlD"Se
grounds.
Donohue, 35, didn't become involved in
NASCAR doings until last yur, when be
made bis debut in Roger Penske'• UD·
tried Matador in the traditional Rivenlde
opener.
He came to that race with -good
credentials. He had won the old U.S.
Road Racing title twice and bad captured
TransAm championships !n 1968 and 1970.
His Matador wasn't reliable or strong
enough to cause the stock car boys even
mild concern last year, but the moon-
faced Pennsylvanian was hot as a pistol
el.sewbere. He won the Indianapolis 500,
amoog other racing plums, and came
back to Rlverside with even better
credential>.
He displayed them almost Imm~
diately qualifying the red, white and
.blue machine fourth fastest among 40
starters -just slightly behind front·row
sitters David Pearson in a Mercury and
Jittery Scene
At Kingston
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -Tireats
of sabotage and a telephone -b lhreat
provllked enlarged ""'url!y measur'8 by
police today prior to the heavyweight
championship fight between champion
Joe Frazier and George Foreman.
Douglas McFarland, Deputy commi.
stroer of Police, admowledged there bad
been thr<ela but declined to dlsd08e lbeir
SCIW'Ce.
"We are 85Signing 740 police and 200
military to the ringlllde," the police ofH·
cial said. "These may be the -k o1
pranksters but we must take every Pf""
cautJon.
"With our security u-e can guarantee
complete safety for the fans."
McFarland said a 21).man guard had
been placed around tile arena 24 boors
a day.
When Frar.ler and Foreman showed up
1oc !be weigh-In for: the u;.""1!llkr, ~
lk:emal !n bla<I: and red uniforms. wllb
,,.,. an their hfp1, ...,.. tMndlng every·
wllere only a f.,. yards apsrt .
~ ,,
Bobby Allisoo in a Chevrolet. Nert to
Donohue in the second row was Hershel
McGriff, third fastest qualifier, in a
Dodge.
But when the race got under way, it
became evident that the ~combination of
Donobue's road course ability and the
.Matador's handling qualities would
become a major factor over the 500-mile
distance.
He raced strongly with early leaders
Pearson, Allison and Richard Petty,
stock car racing's all·time champioo.
When Pearson was forced out by
mechanical woes, to be followed a short
time later by Petty's Dodge, Dollobue
had things pretty much his own way.
Allison was his only major competition
over Oie final 300 mile.a around the eigbt-
tum, 2.6Z..mile circuit. Alli.son, top money
winner in stock cars last year "1th
$284,735, drove the final miles with a sick
• engine aod was almost two laps behind at
, the finish.
Third place went to Ray Elder,
Caruthers, Cali!., in a Dodge, fourth to
Bobby Unser of Albuquerque in a Ford
and fifth to Jimmy Insolo, Mission Hills,
in a Chevrolet.
Pro Bowl
Statistics
N1tlDn1I C11ntertnce 1' D 0 1' -:II AnwrlUft Conffrtntt 0 10 10 13 -J3
NFC -l!JP"Cldl:ln1tlon, 1 f\111 (Mtrail kid<) NFC -ll"O(klnglon, 3 ~u from l(JI....,. tfo\•ro:ol
""" AFC -SlmplOfl, 7 run I~ kid()
AFC -FG, CO.relll II
AFC -FG. Gtr ... rt Al'C -Hl.llitwlrd, 11 n.in (Gtrelt kid!)
...,C -Otis t1v1or, 5 ·s-u lrom Lf1T1Cnk1
!klCk telltdl
Al'C -I.ii, lJ lnlerc:ep!lon "'"" fG«iolll kk:k) NFC -l rocklngtOn, 1 !'V'1 (M1n.'OI kldl)
NFC -l(w1I~ 11 ~ll Ir°' Snlld (Mtreol
'"'' Allr.d1nc1 -'1.11'. .,,
Pini '*""""' 17 Rini. -Vtrdt J0.1'6
l"•ulno y11"111 n ,..,.,."' y•rd• ,. P11-t.zs.t '"""h S.-.Q 1'111!11Wes -lelf •l ,._ltl• -1•1"111 7·J7
lldl\lldutl "-"""
"" " •;::
I 11.u1 ..., ...
J.10
11..-.... -A,.C, SlmptOn 1~112, Hubbard 7-411
NFC, BrockW.lon ,._., JallnlOI\ Nl6, Hlll 1046.
•«Mwlnl -Al"C, SI~ », M'f'I" N-11
NFC, lrlldllnoton UJ'. Kw1lldl ).», ....... -AFC, Hadl 7.J,.l, 110 Ylrds., l•
ITIOlllCI U.0, I y1rd11 Nl'C, Sl!Nd 1•2'-2, 144
y1rdl, Kll""' J<lt.O, .:! y1rd1.
Winter Boonced
HOUSTON -Coaeh Tex W!nttr was
fired Sunday prior to .lhe Houston
Rocl:eu' National Basketbell .woclall<>n
game against the New York Knlcks. He
wu replaced by assistant C68cb Joe
Egan. ·
The Rockets entered the coatut with a 1 to.game losing streak -their longest
sil'ICe moving here from San Dlea:o two
' )'W1 ago. 'lbelr ...,.. record wu J7,'IO,
matching their mark at the same time
tut year.
•
FOOTBALL'S UPS AND DOWNS-The NFC's Calvin Hill (35) leaps
past a defender (top) in Sunday's Pro Bowl. Below tbe NFC's Ron
Smith (48) is rudely dumped after returning a ltickoff 55 yards. The
AFC won, 33-28. -
It's Laver-
.In Winning
For~Again
MIAMI (AP) -Rod Laver, ~
to pro!esslooal tem1ls alter being disabled
mucb Of last year by a hock ailmenl, cap.
lured the 110,000 !!rst prim !n the !50,000
sap Bay -tlaalc Sunday wilb •
7'4, ~. 7-6 triumph over YOW'i Dick
S!ac:kloo.
JOHNNY UNITAS
Race Track
Has No Money;
Wilt Explodes Laver, 34, coollan!ly outpoaltloned Ill•
21.year-Old Stockton, a former Na!looal
Colli!giate Albleltc Association champloo BOSTON -Wbat does a race track do
who pocketed 16;000·M·nmne...up..---wben..iL doem'L have..money..JALpay_ojt __
"I played pretty good today," s a t d winners? Wby, ti just keeps on !aklng
Laver, an Australian DOW living in O>r· bel.s, of courte. .
ona del Mar. But be admitted, "My COft. Suffolk Downs was left without working
diticn isn't too good. I knew if I bad to capital with 10,102 borseplayers co hand
go five sets it could have been di!lerent." Sunday when Wells Fargo was unable to
"You have oo chance if )'OU think you deliver a $650,000 bankroll.
don't have a chance," said Stockton. While Wells Fargo tried vainly to open
''1bat's the big !bing you have to be able !be vault !n tis Wakefield o!liee, trac.lt of·
to do. ficials went on a money bunt.
"I've seen a lot ti. guys beat him (La-"We called everybody with money we
ver)'that I've beaten. I knew lt wasn't could think of," general manager Ed
out c4. the question. I needed a super day Sullivan said.
and he had to miss crucial sbols, which A couple of big restaurants had
he didn't do." deposited Saturday night receipts. Two---
Laver, who 'ftDt ewer the $2 mllllon other tracks, Rockingham Park and Bay
mark in career earnings two years ago, State Raceway, v.·ere W18ble to help.
had trouhle wttb Stockton's strong first Their dough was locked in time vaults. .~_._ ..... _ ... i. but his b'I After delaying the first race for one servts "" .......,.. -ma...., 8 1 • hour, Sul!olk President Joe Cresci told
ity to Oll.......,. Stockton wilb bts shot the cn>wd on the public address system placementa prvved to be decisive. . He poc.lteled $19,tltlO for the victory !n what was happening. He apologized, of.
the event, lint -stop o1 the yw-!or !ered rain cltecks and llllllOUllCed that
World Championship cl Tennis, and add-winning tickets W-Ould be cashed as soon
ed $900 for bis share ol. the doubles as money was available.
crown he and Newport Beach's R 0 y The track, which even borrowed $1,000
Emerson collared by belting fellow coon-from a former executiYe, fina\ly bad suf.
t'"""""'" Colin not.I-and ....._. AdcUsln. fici.ent capital to begin cashing tickets
............ ..,~3 ..__.3 after the. third M. Later, Wells Fargo
MA. ';4.;.,... •• t u the _ to La. ver managed to deliver !200,000 obtained .. ....--... ---.. from another source .
...... tbe 10 potol3"" Pined -qua!· tfy!ng for the WCT cbampkllllbJp play-
off !n Dollas -worth ll!>.000 to the win-
ne<.
"The pn!llllnl down the line starts IA>
increase," said Laver, 34, of the tour
light to qualify !or Dallas. "I'd like to be
in front at tbe-begbming."
Stockt«I, who won the Natiooal Qlllegt-
ate Atbletlc Alllociation singles crown
last year, said !be ~ !n the pros
was no di!lerent to him Ulan !bat !n the
ooUege rank& But he admitted he was
"jittery" before tn!'leting Laver.
"I don't think I've ever bad an Idol in
tamls," said Stockloo, who eamed IS.ODO
second place ~y. "But when l was
growing up, be (Laver) was always
there, No. 1 all the ttme."
--lost the first set by !alllng 7-5 !n Ille Ue-break!ng 13th game, bed bts
serve broken In the stxlh game ol the
second set and lost btl oervice !n the nu.
game ol the lul set.
"Even when I was down, I never felt
oot of the game," be aaid, "because I t~·I could serve my way out of il" ~ wm all the four tl&breelrer
games be played wlille advancing through
the tournament.
Bullfighting Lags
MADRID -lnllatlon, along with other
things, 11 bringing a deOa!ion to bull·
fighl!ng !n Spain. La.st year was !be
managers' wont !n a decade, wilh an U.
dlcaled drop o/ l&-20 -!n box-Office receipts.
A 10 pen:ent rise !n eoat o/ living ts be-
lieved IA> have kept many Spsnlards from
the boll ring. Other !nfluences are a lad<
of big stan and Of arlful fighters, Ibis
latter perhaps the biggest sin of ell !n
the fans' eyes.
Kings in Trade
LOS ANGELES -The Los Ange~
Kjngs announced SUnday nigbt tliey had
traded defenseman Paul Curtis to the St.
Louis Blues for forward Frank St.
Marseille in an even-up National Hockey
League player swap.
St. Marseille, 33, a native of Lenck,
Ont., bas -ed aeven goals and added 18
assists for the Blues this season. He
scored S2 and Sl points in his two
previous seasons with SL Louis.
Raise for· Honter
NORFOLK, Va. -Jim "Catf15h"
Hunter, ace righthander of the world
champion Oakland Athletics, said Sunday
be has signed his 1973 contract at · a
"substantial salary boost."
Asked if be got $100,000, the winner of
two World Series games -including the
finale -replied :
"No, but it was close to it." Hunter, a
21·game winner, was the speaker at a
Temple Israel father-son banquet here.
Connors Wins
ROANOKE, Va. -Top-seeded Jimmy
Connors of Los Angeles won the Roanoke
Invitational Tennis Tournament for the
second consecutive year Sunday,
defeating Ian Fletcher of Australia 6-2, 6-
3.
Goolagong Rolls ·
. CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand
. Top • seeded EVOIUle -Ooolagong, the
former Wimbledon champion, beat Janet
Young 7-6, 6-2 in an. all-Australian
W-Omen's singles match for the New
7.ealand tennis championshlps t!Ue Sun·
day.
NFC Prestige Falls-Again
Sid Ball of Australia took the men's '
s!ngles liUe, healing Warwic.lt tl-2, 6-4, U ,
7..S and Warwick and Ball teamed for the
men's doubles champion$hip, trouncing
Helmut Fickentscher of West Germany
and Lars Elvstrom of Denmark, &-4, 6-4,
thl.
DALLAS(~~:~~::: F~~:~~:~:~~ ~~~.c~~3~~: .. ~riumpli
ball Cm!enmce formed in a fiery m,..ger rushed for 112 ya~nd aught !llree Otis Taylor of Kansa. Clly, who caught
with the old National Football League. passes for 58 yards. a fivt-yard tGUchdowo pass from
had every rtght to be chesty today -at "O.J. made us look kinda funny at OU1and'1 Daryle Lamonica, said there
least for a year. times" admitted Atlanta linebacker was much more at stake than the dif·
The AFC made ft a historic clean Tom,,W Nobis o( the NFC. ference between '2,000 and fl,500 for the
SWi?ep over the NaUonal Football C.On· '"I'tl.k w•s 8 fun game. I haven't had w1Mtrt aad losers.
femice in Sunday's 33-28 Pro Bowl vie-many fun games in my pro ca reer," said John Btoctingtoo of Grtto Bay scored
tory. Simpsoa, a rour-year veteran who was in three toacbdow11S and quarterback Norm
Pr<vlously, tbe AFC had eaptured th< the Pro Bowl !or the first lime. Snead ol UW New York 'Giants bit Ught
exbiblUon seuon 77·25-4 and the regular -The victory belo,. 47,&'19 chilled fans in end Ted IC"*1ic.lt of San l"nlncl""1 wtlh a
season 21).19-1 from their old rtvais and Tex8' Sladlum 1ave the AFC. a :i.t lead JS.yard &Oring pass but It wun1
Mlaml dropped NFC m em b e r o'ler the NFC in the series. eoouc:h-.1 Washington IH In the Super Bowl. _ SimpJOn said Offensive llOj!men Gene Marv H-rd of Oal<land scored an an
Sunday wu the cl!ncher !n a eolll>ion up.ww or Oakland, Walt S\n!eney of San U-yard nm, Bobby e.11 of Kanaas City
of All·lt"' helween the two leagu<1. Diego, Larry Little .ol Miami and Intercepted a Snead pw and rotumed It
"Lui year tile NFC got the mest tnk Winston Sill ol the New York Jeta had tJ yanlo !or • touchdown and
-we wanted to prove oomelb!n~," said him wtdeeyed becauoe they ,..,.. ... ~·._ Roy Ge,.la kic.ltcl field
running back 0 . J. Simpson ol Buffalo, l fired up !or the pme. aoall of II and 22 yonts ror Ille AFC
the game's Moat Voluable Player. "'11lese ~ lllked all Wffk 1bout lxiw llllldl overcame a 14--0 !Int quarter
Slmpsoo, who led the NFL in rusltlna they ....... going to kill lhelr llWl," ddldL
•
(:
•
Lakers Romp
Lcis ANGELES -WUt Cbamberla!n,
tile man who once averaged more than 60
points a game for an entire National
Basketball Association IM!890n, l!llys he
bas forgotten how to score.
The Big Dipper returned •• ID Of·
!ensive lhre>t Sunday nigh~ tMigh,
scoring 28 points and leading the Los
· Angeles Lakers to an easy 123-102 victory
over the Kansas City-Omaha· Kings.
O!amberla!n .also grabbed 21 reboUnds
and was a big (actor on delente.
1.
' LK ....... (lU)
0 • T
• u " t H II
•
'lt.lf " • 14 11 ' ,., '' .... . ... .
2 1-t ' . .. .
' .. I ' .. , 13
'
F or Cru11aptma
Tucson Becomes
Another Victim I've always felt-that the most
FEEL "INWARD" WHEH PUTTING
TUCSON (AP) -Brue~
Crampton has t11ke.n lwo in a
row, but the Australian
veteran harbors no lllus12nl
--aoout----wrru\lng three-con·
secutive ·events on lhe tough
American pro golf tour.
"No, ..l don'.i. th.Ink BO,''
Crampton said when asked If
hei planned to make th.ls
week's Blng Crosby National
Pro-Am h1s third successive triumph.
"This one took a lot out or
me," ~rampton said Sunday
after his easy, front-running
victory in the Tucson Open a
decision that was tarnished
j113t a trifle by a meaningless
triple bogey seven on
Crampton's finishing hole.
Sea Ki ngs
Top Hoop
Rankings
lmportal'}t t~i111 abo_Mt puttinc If
to remain absolutely motion less. .. I'm pretty tired," he said. Only your haqds and arms
"f dld11'l sltep very well all &houkl move duting the stroke.
week . I came In here knowing If you allow you r head or body
Lns )lla,Ylng weJL Lwas: to move. you will never con-
keyed up, ready to get on wllh sistently strike the ball with
It. 71our puttsface square to the ''Now that it's over, I'm ne. really-tlre<lr. ------t-1-n~d 11111-1-carrellmlnm-
"Bing has given me a good body movement tt I feel "irr ~ ~
amateur partnu, Frank ward" when I set up over the
Souchak," he said, looking ball. I like to feel thatmyelbo'#S ~1 ahead to this weekend at Peb-and my knees are clos&-in to-/ , \ bl~ Beach. "I just hope they ward anlmaginaryaxisthatruns
gJve him lots of strokes, up the center of my body. Th is _ _.
'cause I'm just going to be feelins tends to keep my weight
riding bis back." centered during my stroke.
Crampton'& victory, follow-Whenever my putting goes
Ing his triumph at the Phoenix awry. the first thing I do is
Open just the week before, check that I am "quiet" with
made him the first man to my body durin& my stroke. AA a
win Consecutive A.merican result, I often save myself a tournaments since Arnold I of hi for the Palmer took the last two great dee searc ng • ...,.,......,.,._
events of the 19&9 season. cause of the problem. .. •
Palmer also is the last player
to win three In a row, in 1962.
Crampton opened the final
day's play -the start t.ias:
deli1yed Ith hours by frozen
ireens and biting. 21ktegree
temperatW"es -· wltb a three--
stroke lead, eagled the second
hole and wan't threatened as
he breezed home with a 71 for m, 11 under par oO the 7,200
yard Tucson National Golf
Club course.
"HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUmHO"I H•r• " Arnold Palmer'•
fl.Illy lllu1tr1t.d guld• to pt.tttll'I tt1ne1, llM-up; &trokel Send 20•
1lon1 wlth 1 •limped, 11lf·1ddt-..d 1m9iop9 to AmokS P~hner,
In e111 of llllt n1w1papV,
Redskins Pleased
Newporter
Memories
Linger On
UC I Base ball
World -Series
• Supe:r Bowl Vil ls just a
mem°'l' to many but tllose By HOW ARD L. HANDY
mt{llortea wUI linger long in Of ,... °""' P1 .. 1 s1att
the mind.! of the nation's _pre111 There's a question mark at
following their visit to the 5e00nd base and left-handed
Newport.er -1nn Jn. Ne.wpor! pitching is lllnlted to one can-
Beach. didate but the UC Irvine
With cleanup just about baseball team will embark on
completed and hotel epera-the urn season with an air of
tions back to normal,--a qutck oPtltnt!iiran<f a veteran nnc--
check of the area show11 few up, according to coach Gary
n:mlnder1 of the beetle pace Adams.
of a wee.k ago. "I tblnk we have an ex·
"Publicity-wise, I think It cellent chance to go all the
wu fantastic for the enUre way to the college division
area," Mrs. Cynthia Shiekls of world series this year,"
the Newporter slaf! says Adams says by way of ex.-
about the operation. planation. "At least I hat Is fl:
"All press releases from the going to be our goal and we
National Football League car-aren't even going to think
ried a Newport Beach dateline about the regionals until they
and mentioned the head-get here."
quarters here at the ho.tel. On what prem!Je doea be f I
"We have a.lrtady had base such an opinion?
GARY ADAMS guests in this week ftom "We have more speed this
Wa!hington and other places year and our pitching should
around the country who tell us be better overall. We have tf1e
they read about lhe guys to get on base a lot and
Newporter 1M in their we have some power hitters hometown newspaperfl." returning.
How does the Super Bowl "We are lacking in le(t
operation compare with other handed pitching, number-wise,
functions at the hotel? and we are converting an oul-
11enlors Bob Barlow and Tom
Dodd, juniors Gary \Vheclock
and Ray Humphries and
sophomores Jerry Mara s and
southpaw Steve Fox.
"Last year at this time we fielder Into a sec 0 n d
bad the Prime Mlnister of baseman,'' he says.
Japan, Saito, here for a vislt. The power hitting he talks
The press room in the Monte about will come Crom four
OMLV PILOT J
Set s
Goal
make the transition satlsfac-
torily.
Dave Lyons. a Junior. bolds
down !he third base post and
Jack Cle.veland, a pitcher last
season . will serve as utility in·
fielder.
The Anteaters lost the
service$ . of sophomore Rtct
Peters to the Army tor two
years. lie was the belr·ap-
l>afcnt to lhe seoond base job
and hit .~7 ln 28 game!! a year
ago.
In the outfield, sophomore
Rod Spence (.242) Is back In
left· field with senior Chuck
Spanski as backup man.
Rich ~Jolina (.328), a senior,
returns in' center fieJd with
freshman Alao BelaSco (La
Serna) behind him.
Clark Schenz (.283), another
senior, will start in right field
where he opened about half of
Hi.e games last yea r. Doug
Hlmmelberg, a converted
pitcher, ls backup man in
right.
Don Jones. an all·league
selection from Pasadena City
College. is In school but late
afternoon classes preclude a
turnout for the basebaJl team.
He is a computer science ma-
jor. Corona del Mar Hlgh's
unbeaten Sea Kings, with six
or their 15 conquests by three
_poJ.nt& or les.s,..coo.Unue l~
the official Orange -eoonty
prep basketball poll as
1<lected by the DAILY Prrm.
He had an eight shot lead
before-he hit into two diilerent
lakes on the 18th bole.
FIMI IC-•nd .,_.,-w!1111lno$
With--Stay-H-ere
Carlo room was set up.similar veterans of last season when
to,!he way it wu last week. the ~-~[ed a 32-~l --~we-have--abo had Presf..---marrand-nlade the NCAA
dent Nixon here for PttS!J con-regionals for the second
ferences: ln the pa.st,'' Mrs. straight year.
Shields adds. _ These veteMln! include
ln addition, two promising
freshmen' are making inroads
into the staff. Mike J{ickman
from Tustin High and Tad
Davis Crom Loara are the
yearlinuros~ts-
""Ba.rlow -is Che wiifningesl
pitcher in UCI &Mais with 23
victories. He also leads in
game.!! pitched (47), games
started (39),-Innings pitched
f268~) and most strikeouts
(203 ).
Stupy will have sophomore
Carl Petemel and senior John
Baker as backup catchers with
freshman Bruce Banning
(Villa Park) also available.
The Anteaters will play at
least 49 games plus three ex-1
hlbitions during the 1973
regular season. With rn vic-
tories in the fold over the first
three years of compeUUon, an
early milestone will be reach·
ed when the tooth victory is
posted.
The Sea Klnp edged Foun-
tain Valley, IH7; Friday
night, but the Ion Called to
drop the Barons of Fountain
Valley out of their No. 2 perch.
Huntington Beach's rapidly
improving Oilers, now 6-0 ln
sunset League battle, moved
up to third place with thelr 65-
63 triumph over Loara Fri.day.
ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10
Poi. Team, Record Polats
1. Corona del Mar (J.S.-0) , 57
2. Fountain Valley (15-2) 56
3. Huntington Beach (14-4) 44
4, Fullerton (1.Z-4) 33
5. l.<Nlra (tihl) 32
6. Tustin (JU) 30
7. Troy (tlM) 17
8. La Quinta (IH) 14
9. Marina (14-7) 12
10. El Modena (l.1-4) i
Others: Orange (l:H),
·Valencia (12·5 ), La Habra (11·
5).
(Katella High not eligible for
uinal.deraUon due to all-star
status acquired t h r o u g b
trlllllfero.)
'"'*v In thf ji°"'' llNC9 CrM1¢on. .... mtn-->n Gtof'llf Archtr,f l »& · -112 \,.•bro!I H1rr1., r 1 71·11· f!tfY-£~:11" ~ il 7· J:iry =· ~7'5 ~ .71J'-Jtrrv ~rd 16$ 11· ""-71-~':l'H r.'il,riJ7" t!:1.:'1:ll: Jl'"fl\¥ rlOlit. S3,7&S 1s-11 ·ll1!-~rtv Hr.:..~·Jl'SSO I:.itlr:"J:: ~~~ ....... w.ll'!l:I LH TreY/;."Us.so n-n-10-0an s1 ... 1f.a«I l·n-n.n
Forrnt ·l'"zler, t;t: 6H3-7iilEn-• Jim W•l~hfrs, J 75-71-Ltrry Hln111n, J 11·1W'
Ktrfl\11 Ztl'ltv. 11.IOO 70-7'.Z·7f.~216 J~k Motil\IO<Mrt. Jl.215 7'-"·~
-Jl1'ir.. ~.~~~1'k1i':d15( il:J:W. i Atv P'l ..... cl, I 21 7f.7i-7
Jlm Coltlfl'I. i1, S 11-1f.1 ·1 ~7 Ptu! H1.,...y, 11.215 75* 7 :~1nwll\1.!:·2ll71 ~,.,.,,_ i:C~~'s.W2 ~~= Jim Jtml-. SIT.I 71.n.n-n-211
Jim Ftrr1e11, Yn n..,..11.n-m stevt MetnVll. "72 rz.1s-n-a-211 Fr..i ~rtl, Sl12 n-71-14-'1-!M o • .,.. ll•rtier. yn 7•·71·12-11-311 tlob Mvrolw, U 7S ff-14-n-1._219 Gll>tlY GUl)frt U75 11·7'.Z·~n-2'1
lOfl\ Wt"°"' U1S 7).~72-72-1 Ln P'~, l$7Q Jl:jt~tJ:: e;:,,:w.;;;~ n.,.,..,._
Old!: Lol'l.. U10 70-'241-JS-
OtN"f G,._ M21 ~1'W>71-2'1
Chfrlet CoodV M27 7Ut-12·~2'1 PIM 1..-, $(27 71-1 ... 75-11-0'1
k•rr,: IMt~bSF' · • :~'11!}5~~· "27 J1"12=11
6~~ :r.Olt.r
West All-stars__Mter
'
. Third Straight V~ctory1
CIUCAGO (AP ) -Coach
Bill Sharman of the champion
Lo8 Angeles Liken will be
seeking to direct bls West ag-
gregation to an unprecedented
third successive victory over
the East in the 23rd annual
Natlori1l Basketball Auocia-
Uon All·star game here Tues-
day night.
The East, now leading the
mld-season pro claasic 14-3,
won three All-star contests In
a row be£ore Larry CoateIJo
produced a 1971 West eyelash
triumph at 10&-107 and
Shannan's West unit sneaked
Prep Swim
Rela ys Set
Tuesday
LONG BEACH -Eleven
Orange Coast aN!a prep swim
contingents are involved 1n
Tuesday's CJF swlin relays
pN!llms at Belmont Pim.a ~
the season's initial event.
Includod in the day's pro-gram, which begins at 2:30.
are Co&ta Mesa, Estancia, Edl-
aon Fountaln Valley, Huntlng-
ton 'Beach, Laguna Beach, Ma-
rina, MJsslon Viejo, Newport.
Jtarbor, Unlvmlty and West·
minster. Corona del Mar swimmers
take to the water Wednesday
bl the other half of the pre-
llms 1be fln&ls are billed for
7 p.'m. Friday 1'ith the 12
fastest umes ln each event
from the prellms quo111ylng
ror finals btrths.
Varsity and !rosh·~
evtnts are scheduled and in-
cluded In the proar811\.-the
4 I' 100 Individual roedley, e x
50 free, 4 • IO breast, 4 • 50,
fly, 4 x 10 back, 4 • 11111 Im
and 4 s: 50 medley. SUnnf llllis HJg)l I! the d ..
[ending cll1mp!I and the Lancers, a 1 o n wtth the
Knlghll of Foolh HlaJI, are
co-faV'Oftd to cop the Vll'Slty
tllle. • Admwloo to the pttll1111 I! r~. 11ckttl to the ftna11 are
It !or adulll and 50 centa !or
students.
a 112-110 triumph at San Diego
last season.
It will be the first AU-star
game here since the series
was inlfugurated at Bostorr in
1951 with an 111-94 East vii!-"
tory. A sellout Chicago
Stadium crowd of 20,cm is ex-
pected ror the natlooally-
televised tilt (Cbannel 7, 6:10
p.m.).
Sharman again matches 13-
man super squads with
Boston's Tom Heinsohn, who
saw his East team last year
blow a 64-54 halitime lead and
succumb to a whirlwind 33-
polnt third quarter by the
West which hung on for a two-
polnt victory.
The West again Is headed by
the NBA's legendary big man
tandem of Kareem Abdul.Jab-
ber and Wilt Chamberlain,
with sensational N a t e
Archibald, Jerry West,
Spencer Haywood, Riclt Barry,
and Sidney Wicks rounding out
a group aelected by NBA
writers.
Later West additions by
Sharman included Dt~ Bing
and Bob Lanier of Detroit ;
Gail Goodrlcll or the Lakers ;
Bob Dandridge of Milwaukee,
Golden State's Nate Thur-
mond, and the host Chicago
Bul1s'1Chet Walker.
The East's Drat selections
were John Havlicek, Dave
DeBusschm, Deve Cowens,
Walt Frailer, Pete Maravich,
Lenny Wilkens, Lou Hudson
and Wes Unseld.
Added to the East aquad
Tuesday were Bill Bradley of
New York; Jo Jo White· of
B<>slml; John Block or
Pblladelphia: Jaclt Marino o[
Houston, and Bob Kauffman of
Buffalo.
J V Basketball
Will Bruce Gelker's Sad-ce of getting them to stay here
dleback IM become visiting if they come to Southern
sports teams headquarters of capifornia for more than one
Southern California? night," Ge1ker says.
lt may take a while to "Chuck Layne of the Green
establish such a trend on a Bay staff was also here and he
permanent basls but last woold like to have the Packen
week's visit of the Washington stay here' when they play the
Redskins did a great deal to ~~s~ have been in contact
benhance that image and to lay with the University of Iowa
the groundwork for such a and I feel they will be here
situation In the future. next fall when they play
"It was a beautiful week UCLA.
and we certainly enjoyed It,'' "With this parUcular ex-
Balboa'!l Bruce Gelker, owner perience with the Redskins, I
of the Santa Ana establish-feel we µ>e now 1n a position
ment, told the DAILY PlLOT to handle any incoming team
tod in a satisfactory manner." ay.
"We felt It was es:tremely How about a Rose Bowi con-
11ucce.ssful and we have receiv: tending team?
ed both written and verbal-1-"I'be Eutem-(Big-10)
confirmation to that effect teams are commltted to
from coach George Allm and Pasadena but we cert.alnly
others connected with the" would lite to have a Pacific-I
Washington team team atay here. We certainly
"118 ..td be . ree1ly IP. will be going after them In.the
preclated the way th1np;,.,. fllture and they ban 1mple
done 11<ro and also told me places to train at the Bania
that in no way was thelr lool Ana Bowl, the Big-A and
caused by their atay at our 00. Orange Coast College.
tel "I th1n.k we have an o-
,;~1any of the players also cellent shot at getting some of
expressed their gratitude and these visiting teams in ~e
appreci&tion. Some of them future 4lnd we .~ be going
said It was the best place they ~ them, 100, Ge.Iker says
have st~yed all year and Joe with_ his ev~ri>resent en-
Blair, their public relations th~ for life and getting
man, told me they were things done that many people
actually raving about the only dream about.
prime rib and steaks.
Were the newsmen and NFL tche J s1 327 r· t -•• ia1 ..i , ca r erry upy, . , rrs uu1 c .!II cooperauve. baseman Jeff Malinoff ( 344)
"Very much so. They didn't shortstop Dan Hansen ( 2'l6)
create any addllionat problems and outfielder Rod sp;,nce
or unusual situations. They (.242).
were very well organl7.ed and Malinoff is the bellwether of
once the press room was set the 111ugging brigade and will
up In the Monte Carlo room, be playing his third' year for
we .really didn't have a lot to the Anteaten. He led the team
do. in homers (6), triples (10) and
Was the presence of the rbi (65) last season and was
news media per80Mel for a second ln doubles Ills total
week beneficial to the area? bases mark for th~ year was
"Ther had 95 cars av~µ&ble 117.
and qu1te a bit of free time on Hansen, a senior this time
their hands. l do know that around ls the all-time team
there was quite a bit al traffic leader 'in home runs (11 ) rbi to Fashion Island. A number (93) and total bases (195)'.
of wives were also here." In the all·important pitching ~n Weiss, coordinator of department, Adams will have
pubhc relations £or the NFL six members of last year's
and asslslants Bill Granholm staff back in lhe fold including and Joe Browne, did most of
the ground work for the league
and press headquarters at the
Newporter. All three made
numerous visits to the area
priQr to Super Bowl VII to
complete llnal lfl'1lllgellle!ts.
Would the hotel welcome a
slmllar sltuatJon when the
Super Bowl returns to Loo
Angelet1 ln the future?
"There has been no
dl.sc11S11ion with us about
future Super Bowls. But we
certainly would like to do it
again and all of the NFL and
media personnel told us they
were happy with the si~tion
here1" Mrs. Shields say!.
Prudhomm e
Tops OCIR
Drag Test
Doo Prudhomme of Grarui.da
Hills won the top fuel
eliminator class Sunday in the
all·pro drag series at Orange
County International
Raceway.
"He had told me earlier ln
the week that You never hear
anything from the players
unless the food I! bed ,., I
figure this is a big com-
pliment.11
The Redskins weN!
quartered In a new part of the
hotel where privacy prevailed
and they had only to cross a
bridge to get to the banquet
room. There were a minimum
number of. distractions and
Gelker became not only a
RedskiM fan but a George
Allen boo!:ter as well.
Rugged Schedule Set
For UCI Golf Team
H1s time was f.58 second!
and he had a top speed or
223.76 miles per hour. He
defeated Rick Ramsey of
Carson, 6.81 and 214.79 m.p.h.
Funny car tiUe winner was
Pu Foster of Reseda, 7.03 and
171.75 m.p.h .. and pro stock
king was Butch Leal of
Lawndale, 9.36 ror a track
record and 147t05 m.p.h.
"The Redskln11 players
were , without exc:epUon,
gentlemen. The entire· group
remained together and acted
like a family. Our staff fell ln
Jove with them," Ge:lker say11.
"George has to be one of the
most appreclatl.ve and humble
guys t ever met and be was a
sportsman before and alter
the game."
Did the Saddlebaclt have
problems with security?
"Actually, a minimum of
problems and at no time dld
we have any trouble. But ·Nith
children around, It's like open-
ing a can of worms. They
seem to squirt out of the walls
and George bates to say no to
a youngster. I never uw him
tum down a single kid."
What about the future?
0 We have an excellent chan.
Fish Repor t
\
campus course, the Southern
callfomta lntercolleglates at
Torrey Pines and the Trojan
Invitational at Pomona Na-
tional.
In addition, the Anteaters
have home-and-home matches
with USC and UCLA. Home
matche.!!1 with these two will be
at Santa Ana CC.
Prudhomme's victory main·
talned hi! lead In the top fuel
points standing!.
Foster is second In overall
standings despite mlsslng the
opening Series race.
Earlier Foster set a top
speed al 223.32 m.p.b. Leal 's
clocking broke his own track
record.
Pro Cage , Hock ey
,7N .... ' ..... 1,
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Ollly g11M1 llChtclYltcl
TOll1911t'I 0-
No UI""" ldl90ultd
lwtd•J'• 0.11141
111 !Cl
Uf IJI
121 lll , .. us
UI IM
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Ctll!W'nll 1t NN York bltndtrl ,
O.troll " Plllltftlplll•
LO' "'"""'' ti Mlnnnat1 °"'" '''"" tcl'M(lulecl ... ....
lfls arm problems of a year
ago a'ppear to be improved
although Dodd ls still plagued
by Injury and may not be at
full strength. t1aras is still
with the basketball team and
won't begin workouts until the
cage season ends.
Keith Bridges, a junior col·
Jege transfer from c.erritos
whcre'-he was all-conference
as an outfielder, is working at
The Anteater~ will al!JO be a
part of the Grapefruit League
involving Southern California
major university and college
teams with UCI playing 23
such game11.
second base. ·
"11e fields ground balls well
but I!> still struggling to make
the double play," Adams says.
The coach is confident he will
Home-and·home o u t l n g s ·
with both USC and UCLA are
on the schedule along with
defense or the Anaheim
Tournament title won last
year.
Alamitos Entries
l'l•ST Ill.AC.I. -400 y1rd1. J ..-r•r
oldl a. Up. Flllltl a. lnll'e. d1lmlf111,
Plll'M llllXI. Cl1lm/ng prlc. U ,500,
Lullnk1 CSmlth)
Sht't Oel\1 00 fWrlohl)
l 1rry Spinn (~r)
Stomp Otnct (P191)
Lltt11 Miii B~• CMyln)
Vicki Vtntu .. l •ldlaN:ll)
LIMI Sir Liiiy (l,cl1lr)
Mollt'\' Moo (Crotby)
117
117
H1
H1
"' "' 117
"' "' 117
~ml W1tcll (DAylf')
llurnl it.Mtl fKnlol!I)
Mr. J-lfl' !Acl1lrl
Top Fr.IQl\f Clm!l!I)
Olck~ ll1y lltr Ol:OCl!ntonl
M11n<11n1 (AUlaonl
lloi;lle! Re11m (Myl1tl
ttGmm•n.d JtPPllrd (Mllt\1111)
AIM 111111111
MobY Kllll1n {W1rdl
01rvln COllftty (Acl1lr)
c;u10rn11 11nd1 cs'"1111>
Ml Pit CWrlQl\I)
117
"' "' ltt
1"
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llt•
117
117 .,,
AIM llftllllt
l rl1h1 Sir !LlpMm)
Lloh1MDrttll (H1rl)
f rtl!lll1'1 f lMlt llmtl:\)
117 SIXlH llACI -400 y1rd11. J Yftr •
111 olds & up. Clltmtng, PUtM S2.200 ~ 117
SECOND Ill.I.Cl -.l» Vtnll. 3 ye1r old mftlclen1. Cl1lmt1111. PurH JlAl)O.
Cl•lmlng prlct M.000.
Cl1lmlng l)f'ICt t.M(IO,
R11Y1I Sltvtr IMylft)
Rocket Mick fl("IOlltl
s~ Ptl!iU lCrotby)
IU Donlt "Good llillCNil'Vll
l20 KIPIY'• Tlmt (A.of!•) no ll«ktl Diil Jr (Vf<Wl!nl ~~ LlvMnfl'lll Wild! (W1t'Mn)
\U Don't L«* llKli (AltltWtl
llS Run MOOll Ihm CCtrdoU.)
117
"' 117
117·.
117 •
117
117
11• n•f
Cl\ll Cl>u s.tfll (l(nlQt'Pll
J11tl at Flln (V1119nnl Stlln't W1r tri.nr (~fl)
SUl'l<ltV Jtoytlly !Sfl\11111
MIN VlllO P.,-r (WrlQhll
0..1!1!"1 lltt Clllclf; (GtrUI Gre.n COIOQnt (Llplltm!
Rocktt ••• Chick (CMdou) Mont1nn1 IOrt'l'tr)
l lny'• er...c:t CAdtlrl
1» •• '"
SIVllfTH I.I.Cl -G y1rclt. I 'l'Mt
oldt & up, AJ'--nct. Pvnt P.JOD. llll • earo1·1. .,, .. ftl9lblt
Sl•m-•v IClrdouJ
Moore PNrb (5!111111)
FltmlnQ Honor {H1rO
Ectlo Too (lloblntonl
1• "' 1•
'" THUii> llACI! -400 ytrcl1 J '(lllr
olclt a. up, C!tlmlf19, Pu•M 11.600.
Cl1lmlno prlet $2,000
tt1111•1 ll~t (C1rdoul
Mr O~rb Hiii (Ml!Wdll
Olo Tlme1 (llleh1rd1l
Un11tt11ctwd (OrtV.,.l
P1ml!1>e 11111 tHtrl)
0011•11e• SO'! <Sml111J Du1t1r Bir lloy (lloolni,an)
Mtllow MOt:1fl \All1lr )
lclft Dl11111r (Myl11l
P'll'lM Ill.Cl -1111 y11rdl. J ""' okll a. UP. Clll1J1h19, Plll'M ''·\OI), (l•!'"lng prlct u.oao.
T t.e Short ihOO,
lllO Ctnyon l.\dt!r) RQU911 StlJfl IC1rlloZIJ
Lot1rlon C Knigf!O On RllQllftt CLlplllfl\J floYtl Go Go (Jll<lltrdtl
El P1r1n11 (W1tlcnl
Llmlh lllrdMlt C5mll!ll
TH ERE IS A FACTORY
,,UTHORfZED DEALE R
FOR EVERY POPULAR
Ml\KE. CAR IN THE WORL O
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baul9Vard af Car•
1.001 l'OI TI41 IMUli AT
'THEODOR E I COSTA MESA ROBINS FORO DATSUN
2060 nu
HARBOR BLVD, HARIOR ILVD.
117 '
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117
ltt·
in in'
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111 ...
11• '" 1111-
117
117
11• 110
TIT 1"
'
•
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•
Jf DAILY PILOT MotldQ, JaftUN'Y 22, 1973
TODAY'S
TV IDGIIlJGHTS
NBC D 9:00 -"! Love My Wile." Elliott
Gould stars in this recent movie about a young sur-
geon who grows tired of his wile and cblldren.
-Srenda Vaccaro, Angel Tompkins.
ABC 0 9:00 -'How the West Was Won ."
Conclu.sion oC the two-part epic movie dealing with
America's westward expansion. Among the stars are
James Stewart, Debbie Reyn<>lds;-Cam>U-Baker,
!Ucharo Widmark and Karl Malden.
KCET fD 9:00 -A Skating Spectacular. Janet
Lynn, the national senior figure skating champion,
heads an all-star cast or Olympic skaters.
KHJ D 11:00 -"Mr. Peabody and the Mer-
maid." William Powell is the perplexed Peabody
and Ann Blyth plays his finny friend in this 1948
n1ovie comed y.
CBS 0 11 :30 -"Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers.'' This well-received musical extravaganza
features Howard Keel, Russ Tamblyn and Jane
~ Powell.
""""-""""·····'-"'--~-,,..------
TV DAILY LOG
DAILY PILOT 1W1 .......
LESSON TI ME -Lucy (Barbara Beindorf) gives
Linus (Scott Swenson) an astronomy lesson as
Schroeder (Stephen Reichle) and Patty (Toni Berg·
man) look on in awe in a scene from HYou•re a
Good Man, Charlie Brown" at the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse.
'Cha,.lie Brown'
SparkliJig Musical
.
Presented . -
Ill
"YOU'il• A qqc}D eN, CNA•Lll likible (Ot her crabby
By 'l'0,\1-'l'l'l'IJS--!:.~ .• "' l~wa:,_, .,.,. ~ characltr. As her-child-~00£RTAINMENT-
Of 111t Dt111 l't"' ''-" &,.;.-;:··k~~.:C.'"W",= Jgy baby brother, ·Llnus,
The only real regrett~ble i•mo.11fft1, .:11n 31:::°' t.nJi:·&:ott Swen.Son la quJte engag. ·'---------" aspect or'!'" Costa ~lesa Civic e!?.ii)fp!P r' TIN n" tnc; 6u1 his lack or projection Playhouse's production ol J'..:.W: .,..il/' ... ~"!'~'f.I causes the 1 or !Ol!i-•-~-;...,--·----~
"You're a Good Man, Charlie m-. ~~-~~ri:C:: •• remarks . OSI e cy
Brown" 11 that It's all owr. ..... ._.c~'-11,-~~""" --· Gielgud
Only one weekend was allot-C.!!!!.'" •-~. cmvo;:_~ ln the ~ roles leas rlchly .
ltd for this sparkllng and ~ .... :::.:::::·::".' = charactenzed by the ICl'lpt. engaging musical rovue aM ............ s ~ the plano-playing_S<hroeder St 0 l althoogb lho: playhooseo!lered ' '. .. ::::·:: :-. . ~ and the rope..tlpp"l!g Patty, eps U
Of 'Irene' five performances over a all the way to the rear of the Stephen Rek:hle and Tom
lhree-<lay period, the show theater to create 1 Snoopy 00 Bergman turn In laudable
really deserved more exposure a par with 1.ack McEwan's performances. Re1cbl~. though
-regardless of the fact that w e 11 • r e me m be r e d m. be rushes hla lines • bit, comes It's atr.ady been "e1J>Osed" in terprelatlon In Wesbnlnster off qulte aolldly while Miss NEW YORK CAP) -Sir
We_,tminster, San Cemeote, ?ttuler ls first rate ln all h1S Ber~ ls cute and perky, John Gielgud bas withdrawn
Fullerton and Lon,i Beacb. solo scenes and. b~ the shining brigh~st during ~ as director ol the l!00,000
14Charlie Brown" Ls the kind show wide open wltb 1 Jolaon-part of the Book Report musical "Irene" and Is belng
of show that never grom vaudeville rendition of the number. replaced by· Gower Champion.
sta1e. It's sort of like watching plum "SUppertiIM" number. A OOLORFUL block set and nie producers. in an-
"'11le W1iard of 0&" on effective . rear projections nouncing the change, said the television once 8 year and IN THE CENTRAL role of Uf Ute _n enjo shift was made necessary Charlie Brown, David Pigman amp Y OVCTIW ym.ent because rive extra weeks of being thoroughly entertained . I ch r the "-·· o! the COsta Mesa production, each time. The innoctnt magic proJec s mu o conwrua.l while Anita Grossman's ac-out of town trying have been
ol the Peanuts comic strip frustration of bis part and, companiment lends an overall scheduled. Sir John said that
charaCters, set to Clark like Miller, uses his racial at.mospbere of protes.!ionalism he had a commHmetit to a
Gesner's music and lyrics, muscles well. All that ls lack· to the musical portions of trie British television program
makes for a special blend of ing is the ever-pretent in-how that would preclude hls con·
··"'-eoL nocence and cptimism which 8 · tinuation. ....,.,... al · Into the--•-· ol the "Charlie Brown" s•""ed so go ~P '""1.1 The musical, which stars,
PATI TAMBEU..INrS Costa character. . . around only one brief Debbie Reynolds In her stage
1-.tllpl ..... Or ... ~ ·~ JMt 11:,, .... -1. htwO'T..--~ ........
'"MAN 0, LA MAHCMA ..
0 m flllC Mofldlr 111..it: (C),
Mesa production is ertremtly ~ Beindorf 15 an . e.1-weekend, but it delighted debut and was Gielgud's ftrst
well fashioned, partlcularly in cepUooally stroog Lucy, brmg-busloads of youngoters . -musical directing asslgmneat,
Monday
Evening
JANUARY 22
--(Zttr) "f Uft"..,~ •. ~,~ -
Ellia" Gould. Brenda V1c:caro, A•
-tho.area..ol.-..,...._~_ a .vo~ce !hat might lhat· which ".'! the pnmary ob!ecl had been scheduled to open on
Her young cut, two of whom gia:sS t.>11erliifl,~ot-thl> ~Broaawiy Jan. 21:-~--·have dofle the show befon in comes off altogether too given in addition to the1 ___ _:_ _____ _
l<IO fJOO!D!!Jal""'
rn@J ....
0 lon1nn "lllt Artist"
(!)kt S.•lt
0 Wild Wiid Wut m TM n11tstt11tS
aJ SbrTNt
111• Tomp~iris. DlbntJ Cot~n. Tiit
ltnsillns of 1 mcdem 1111ni111 art
txl)!Offd in this story cf 1 sua:esslul
)"OUlll SUICtoll who has '""'" tirff
or his wife ind thi1drtn. '
o m oo rn uc Mond" 111ow1t·
(C) "°) "How till Wtst Was Won•
Concf. (wu) '63-lamts Stewart
Otbbie Reynolds, Clrroll Bake1, Kar
Maldtn. A spin of 50· )'tlrl de1lln1
wltll America's 9191nsion westwart
from.1bolll: 1839 tG 1!89 is see1
thrnu(h th• lyes of three ·1eiie11
lions al pioneers.
--. ---~ ...... STADIUM "? ',.·
·~
- -.. -:.ri.-:1 STADIUM ,, .'I.'
"ELVIS Ofll TOU•" •• "SICYU.CkaD"' fl"G)
"JUDGI ltOY •£AH" ...
Hf'HE ltEVEMGlltl"
"l"!TE 'N TILLff:H
-' ...
"~LAY rt AO.I.IN, SAM'"
different roles., functions with regular five-play . season.
the ensemble precision re-Come back, Charlie B~wn.l ..---=--==:=""".::--, ~":1.b~=!..:.'t~ 'Superstar' =..you can stay a .litUe u~·'•i I
curtain goes up promptly on F p . 'f~~~;::;;;;:;ii~I time and comes down precise-or revm n
1y 90 minutes later. DOWN ln various venk>ns of the HOLLYWOOD (AP)
fE Ml Dvkt ba•.r.U
ED HMPflOCl11 Lod11 m Action Tlltltlf
mnrw51Npl
S:JO (I) Kopn't Hereo
Qg)Movle: (~"Sol ol I Gu~~F";;:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiii~~,1 fiPttr" (wf.S) '66-Ruu T1mblJ11.
l!J PmyMno1 -
·~
Peanuts revue, di!ferent roles Composer .Andre Previn will
have emt!!'ged as the · more conduct all scoring on the rock
memorable individual efforts. opera film "Jesus Christ
While the C.OSla Mesa pro-superstar," a spokesm&n for
duction tends more ~d Universal Studios said.
ensemble perfomliii:e, it. is Previn will begin work on
difficult to overlook one single the film Feb. 15 in London. He
standout in the cast -Mark has been associated with more ~tiller's superb showmanship than 50 ... moUcin pictures, ln-
SHOWING
NOWI
fJ Meftt: <'O> "SIM. Ult llt#.artt"
(dra) '60 -Kennelll More, Din•
Wynter, ltlr1 Mohner.
CJ) CIS Ntwt W11tu Ctonklte
@) Merv liiriffill SM m...,.-
m MH1111 Tltl1p liiflW ''D:ifidint' m ieuM Clntt1 S...
m-m r•' "8tler
IE L!nlo""""
1:00 u rn a m-o a..t/111 W Dtllm
@ TMll .r c.n.enat rn Wildlltt T1lllht
0 Wlllt't MJ U11t? m I LM LllCJ
Q) I Drte• ol Junnlt
U) Fray Di1btUlt m Wheels, lllns llld a., f!l El AlllOI' Tltnt Cara M MuJtr
(1i} Y11itdtdts MllSlalts
G)Dot42111
IE _._
• EE NIM •
fD ll!!l!!!J. ...... -11lar Janet lpn, Udits N1tianll
Senior Firure SUtinc Champlorl
heads 111 aQ-sW cast of Olympic .......
t.30 8 (J) Doris D'I' Siient Doris Mlf·
tin offers to help her buu. Dr.
hter Uwmice, Giit of an emblr-
rmin1 J1n1 " 1htin1 1 luflion
shotlr to rlise hmds hlr the Com·
, rnunity Hci$flitll, but the resul1 1p-
pe1" Jib!J to tnd their fl)mlnct.
0 ............
a -m V1ricdldel
tO:OOFJ (l)TN ftn Ill CtsbJ Show
omm ....
0 ~mt Fi&hten
ED Nona T1 hNonlit
ED Rold1 t. Ftttdt• Boris, ci>n·
v1lncin1 fmm wounds, 1111 1 visit
from his sist!r IYich, now unllap·
'pily mlfried to Cltude,
el Muchadl.I It.bl•
mv1riedld m Spom Cllllltnrt
. io:•s m 11111kl
t1 :0>fJAA P.l!!JNm
r>lr>J ~· ... O Ont Step hyoM
(6) M1nh•I OUlon O Movie: "'Mr. PelbodJ ind tilt
Menn11c!" (ci>m) '48 -Wlln1rn
Powell, Ann Blyth. m Tnrtli or CMMq\ltlltet
@Piny Mno11 rn Ciamer Ted An1stmt
ail Cllud: JohlltOl Show
l:Oll 9 ([) HIN't·lllCJ' Gout Elsa llito
ctlntet pltp an Ht1lll·mlndtd
b1nk fObbtt who 1uddtftlf di-..
lvcy, IA 111 ulllfmlwlr rolt , Is llt1
!WW c:tn1111IL
''"fJ -(C) --c.. kn.., lc:om) '60-Molly a... o -1:00 tJ-(C) "Ito ,,,,,. ~ot)
'65-Anne H'J'llll)Od. P1t11 Yin Erck.
·Tuesday
• OAYTIM' r•cv:rs
l;lO 0 "tlllll1 Dr. '*"" (mys) '43
-Lon CfllllrJ, Pltricll MorritOft.
0 "Ctllrler'• Alftlt" {Cl>l'l'I) '41-
.llct Benny, Kar Francis.
O "h111c Jn Ille Te~r Ztro" {df1)
'62-'?n llilland, ltln H~ftll.
«.& ('C) "Sword or Llnttlot" Ctlnel.
(Idol) '63-Comtl Wlld1, Ntn Wil·
\ltt, "•me tf tbt liitlll.
NOW PLAYING
SOUTH COAST PLAZA #I com. Mele -~2711
FOX TWIN #1
Co•i111 -312-1122
n MONTI
El Monti -'441-1422
STATE
P1s1d1n1 -792·7139
PftfOIWllCll 7:ll & f :lO
ALL SEATS $2.00
'~KE WOODSTOCK
ONAWAVB'
PClcific VibiGtioal. CQlQR.,_ ... _.... __ ...._.
ENDS
TOMORROW
MEs.r..-c.,,1a M~1U2
VILL.A.-or1119.....,,.....
GltOVE-G1rMft Gffie-JJl-66GO
lltOOKHUltlT-A..alMf......rn .....
TtJS T IM-Tntfll-5.44..16N
WliEKDAYl-5-1·'
SAT. & SUN.-l·>S-1·t
SOltltY -NO !"ASSES
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEATRES
GENl HACKMAH
ERNEST
BORGNINE
RED BUTTONS·
~ / .... -...... "
• ... a.. ... ~-.. -· .. -.......... , ..... IW1M e...i ... .
<•~···· ,.,,~ ·-.. ••d ....... . --·--"''"'" ,.._ ..... ----STlV£
IVh:(llJEEM
All
CAROl
"""
in the role of Snoopy, the ca· eluding "My Fair Lady" and
nine sbow stealer. Tall, tousJe-"Gigi."
hairt!d and outlandishly fwmy,
Miller employs a variety or
facial cootortions which play
HELD DYER
.. ILYllA MADl•AN"' ,...
iOrftlMI U..clft ....... .. ~ ......... .............
I• Wstery'' -
N.w YMbr
Al10
D. H. l..wl'911ce'1
"THI V11.IN &
THE GTrsr·
l1tlt Color IR}
CiARK. GABLE !\': t
VMENLEIGH .:.,.:.i
LESLIE IIOWARD
OLIVJAdeHAVll.LAND
0. ,..... °"" 7:00 ... ,_ ... s.-., Sc .......
''I1p the Sandbox is a joyJ
Barbra Streisand's sixth
film is her sixth hit!":..:=.
---~Lively and funny! Barbra Strci5'1nd is excellent!
Foor camera eyes!'"---
"One of the year's ten best! The most outspoken,
outrageous, image-shattering film in years.•
-!Es;::::..~------.... ·-----.... ... ---........ _ . ,,_..,.,.._,...,, ___ _,.,_..,.....,,._ ---· .......... --...... ~"""""'··-~1•~·J
IARIRA ~~ STREISAND
SOUNDER
IS A
MUSl
(t"rPI -··t:= ~ .. , .. ,,
!Ill BOX
ftll•ltllrM.ltVJN
GEN! HACKMAN
..,tlMI CUT"
HELD OVER
THIRD WEEK
"VANISHING
YilLDERNESS"
....... Fri.
5:00 • 7:00 • t:OO
s.t. -In. 1.3.5.7.9
s..,. w... 1.z4 W•-''SNOWBALL
EXPRESS"
r OWl'IPQ<;
I • I/
1 t\I \l\i I \lfR .. ~ ' ' . " . "' . . . , .
...
I .
.. 1 ltlM!l llOME in
MllMiOi". DlLI •Wiil! liiiil
CO.HIT DllVE·IH ONLY JI.VJ
~~. WAR DEVILS
I
,.
!
. ..
•
.IJ
Aft
mt
col
sJ stao
Dep
bout
to I
stat
Diel n
pro(
the
Nati
Hall
stat1
fede
·~
two
the
othe
., orf j • SI
Call ....
und• --(0.! ,
I
I
SI
stall
!leR l•Bag
crea
bud,
a<!!• duri n
Opel
lion,
mill
E'
in l Iron
hold
las,
dey1
Iron
~
L
NE1 lov~ ~I
st
~ ~ ''ll
cuttur
nuen<
Dur
tervle
Reub
Joyce
Jolmo
"I
"""' blenu
ubu
tinl.le4
keep re~
doing
ton1
AIU
""""" ,Unite
regre ....
''I ' 111111'<
Ing, I
\,
Double Take
• ••
·Cla1111es Scheduled. PUBLIC NOTICE
Teachers Strike;
St. Louis' First ,
'
Publlc.acbool teadlm in St.
Louis joined teacbers In
Chicago and Philadelphia to-
day as they walkedO !f their
'M'l-r"ri::lt-..;;.:'-'-jobs in-th&-liut--strike in the
city's history.
The 2,800 teachers in the
combined.memberships.of the
St. Louis Teachers Union
(IN SHORT ... )
L<ica.I 420 and the St. Louis
Teachers Association began
picketing the city's 1&6 public
schools about 1 a.m. after
authorizing the strike Sunday.
Despite the walkout, a
e C1-uhKUfs4 MOTIC1! TO C1retJfTOtlS---5UPEtllOtl COUJtT 0, TMI: STATE 0, CALIFOtlNIA Fo• OMAHA. Neb (UPI) _ A THE couNTY oF o•Atrtoc ' N., A•74I06 t~e Cewia 3JQ...a.asb; -~~~GRACE o•EoLe: RoaLsoNL__
ed on landing at Omaha's Ep-N0;1cE IS liERE8Y GIVEN lo ""'
pley Airfield Sunday .nlgbt. cr«lltor• of thl •bove n•mH dtc9cient
F , !Pit! •H ""°"' 111'\111>8 C11lrm 1911tti1 TM our persons were killed and wld dluaent 1r1 recir.tlrtd to n11 them. one critically in1"ured wUl'I IN nec:eswry vouc1>1tl. 111 thl office • ot !hi dirk ot The •bow e.illlled court, or
Authorities said the plane to PAMnt !him. with 1111 t'llC'Hll....,
f , , \IOUthen, lo tfll ~ 11 ttll offkl was en route rom a powt m ot her 1ttor11tY. Wllll•nt M. Wlkoa..,., Al· Kansas but its destination torney 1t L1w, m P1r11 Ave., L19u111 • , 81.cl\, C•lltor~ Hlill , Wllld! bi tl>I plan was not immediately known. o1 bllsl111U ot HM unGtrMvnec1 111 111 ,...,.
W't said ... I ''"' perl•lt\11111 lo tlM Kllll ol Wld clK• I nesses 1o1JC P ane ap. cM111, wlli'lln lo!.N' "-1h1 111.,. tn. "rs! proac.bed the airport from the P11C>lk1llon of ll'lls no!ICI .
h durin f . °"'" J_,., '· n 13 sout west g a reezmg JEAHETIE WEllER OILLEY driu.Je but fell short of the Ex.cutrU; of the wm • of Thi lbove nlmed clecedlfll runway and slammed inta a WILLIAM M. WILCOXlN
As ~e UI_lited: States experiences some of the bitterest cold of season, it's sum-
mertime m Rio de Janeiro, and there approaches to keeping cool-vary-from a
cold drink (left) oo a scanty outfit
spokesman for the school
board said today that custodial
employes had reported to the
schools and classes were
sclieduled to he held as usual
for the system's 103,000 pupils.
dike which protects the airport :f.'-;!'!.. ·~~·
from the Missouri River. LAtuu BNdl.·c111forn11 tw1 A"'°"""" .... l!•itailr1•
e Foml Dotmt?
PllDtlll'le<I Or11111e Coa!I Dally PILOT, Jenu1ry U, 22, :19, I nd Febru•ry J, 1913 llG-71
WASJUNGTON (UP!) -PllBLIC NOTICE
To~rey Pines Reserve Near
SD Enlarged by Stare
e fluake Recorded
BERKELEY (AP) -The
University ot California
Seismog raphi c statioo
reported a upretty big" earth-
quake oil the coast of Mexico
Agriculture Secretary Earl L.1-----------
B tz f l h, k HOTICli TO CREOIT01t5 u oresees ower c IC en 5U,ERIOR CO\JtlT 01'" THI! prices by spring and reduced STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOtl THE COUNTY OF OUNGl poTk prices next fall but is not No . .t.-1•n•
ce:tain about a drop in beef w ~'~'J~soN~I :k~NA E ~:ARN E:.
price!. , NICKERSON, DKtltf!CI.
B tz_ •·-id ... _, that NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN '° 1111 U al.31..1 sa oJll,luuay creditors of the ~ n1med d«l'lllnt
Americans still are "gett; .. ·., a ltlat •It PtOonS hiving clllm• t11aln1t lhl ~ Wld dl(edtnl tr• !'l<lllir«I to fit. ltltm, bargain 00 the Whole" for food wtltl ttll l'llt;KMl"f -..Clllr'I. In thl otlkt and this' year will spend less ot thl clerk ot"" •bove ft\tlfild cOWl, or lo present Thent. Witt! !hi ~!J
SACRAMENTO·(AP) -The It would perrnn--sUcb-tloMin Call!ornta-are-ute ..... Up;-l.<t--the-aoutb-of-Mexico--Oty.
state Parks and Recreation citi.r.en.s to obtain cards ex-per Kem area of the Inyo Na--· Station spokesman Tom
tb8J\. .16-percent-of-lheir-,_.._,.. VI idti il\lll«l""lt·n'if-offict
ho I fond of Mr 1~ Gfll5MAM. WINSTON, me pay or . VANDENBERG, NOTT ANO CONWAY,
Department ~s. aMounced it ~mptlng them from fees for tiooal Forest, 130,000 acres; ?.1cEvilly said the temblor
bought an addilional 36 a~es -the Sheep Mountain area of measured 6.2 on the Richter e Litton Accused
IODll JerglM Tnnl 8r.tlldlng, LOllg 8-.elt.
C1llfoml1 to!02. WPlkf'I b 1t11 plan ot
bwl-of The ~lgned Ill 111 m1nen,
pen1rn11111 1o 1111 """ or Nici c1ecec1M1, wi thin for.tr mot1lhs Iller llw lint pr,tblk• to add to . the Torrey Pines ( ) Ange1es National Fores, 31,600 . Sta .. Reserve north of San OUTDOORS acres; and the Mt. Shasta scale at 4.4.1 p.JII. PST. He
Diego. . area of the Shasta-Trinity Na· said th~ quake centered about
'lbe ao-called "Worthington tinnal Forest · 4 700 acres the ZOOO miles south of here.
WASHING TON (UPI) -11on of tt11s 11011ce.
n-Le •-. (1).W' ) °"'"" J1111111"y '· 1m n.c:p. s IUIPID IS. says BETTY BARMES
the Navy is preparing $16 • ~x:!''~\!.! ~~Hdtotdeni
property" wu bought from day-use facilities and gra"nting spokesman s~d·. '
the Southern California First a so percent ieduction of e Park l\'l:red
National Bank for $608,000. overnight campin~ sites. SAN BERNARDINO (AP) Half the money came from ' . state funds and half from the e Wiid Area -County supervLSOrs have
federal Land and Water SAN FRANCISCO (AP} dropped plans ~ consl~ a
.Conservation Fund. Three.quarters of a_roilllon re~~onal ~rk in a fissure--
The . reserve ls one of only acres cf California natiol;181 t~atened area near Twen.
two plae6 ln the world w.tiere forest land have been tynme ~alms, a 1 t h o u g h
the Torrey pine ls found. The designated as wilderness study $100,000 Ul county fu~ds have
other ls on Santa Rosa Island areas, the U.S. Forest Service been spent~ the proJect. ,
off the California c.oast. says. " The ~perv1~rs agr~ with
.., A spokesman said the 16 ~ting eng:snee~s that there
• Fee S•VlllfJ areas ln California were lS no w~y to tell ~ a fissure
SACRAMENTO (AP) -" among 235 areas in the nation that drai.ped a lake 1n the area
califomians 62 and older could designated for study for possi· last July could reopen. They
save money on state park fees bl e future w i l d e r n e s s agreed. to look elsewhere for a
under a proposal b y classifiration Wlder t h e park site.
A=hlyman John Thunnan, Wilderness Act of t964. e Wildlife Site
(0.Modesto ). Among the designated loca-
e Motive Sought
million worth of counter· GRISHAM. WINSTON, VANOIEN•••&,
clalms against Litton =~~tl~waY
I n d u s t r i e s Inc for ''°' J1r11ns Tnist B .. 1111111. ': L°"' -...Ch. C1llfontl1 Mitt WASHINGTON (UP!) A overcharges on suhmanne and T .. , 111ii us-1m -ammuru'"on ship contracts AttorMr•"" ••~vtrtx special 11-member police . ..., . . : Puonshed Of'11101 cont o.nv Piiot,
squad probed for a motive tn Jbpm said Sunday off1c1als J11ni1rv 1s. n . :19, ,r.:1 F•brr.t•...., s.
tbe mYrd.er ef ~ven members of the Armed Services Con-1973 131·13
of a Muslim group today, in-tract Control an~d Appea1s PUBUC NOTICE
terviewed one f victim who Board had told him that thel-----------Navv already has submitted F1,tr!..T,•o,uTs•T'•"•"•'•'T" survived the grisly attack and • J ..... c---~ecked reports that 8 $11 million in counterclaims Thi tollawlng Plftorl• ... dol1111 '~ d ll babl b , t bl/slllftl I S: gun used in. the killings was an wl pro y SU m1t a MONTEZUMA·s REVENGE, l'UV.
stolen. least another $5 million.,L~ton ~•nt!~~n..:_1w .. Newpor1 8tldl,
Tb special d has demanded $173 million. Rodney Klfldlll eo1111 end c1ro1 s ... e squa was "lf the Navv's allegations McK1y, 1mv. w. 1111-lll'IO;! .• New· assigned Sunday to handle an. · / por1 a'*"' c1111ar1111 '26611. ly the case in which two adults are true, then L i t t o n TN• bu5lilti1 11 being COllduc:l9d by ,
and five children were slain Industries has consciously ~.i !.'~~V
Thursday m. . a 178,-house cheated the government out of Tiiis Ha1emem 111" wir11 ""' ewniy ~ ( "& il(" ,, .1.. • CIM1t of 0!'1"119 COl.llllY or" J-v 11, once owned by Mij.waukee at east ... m IOO, .ruipto 191), WILLIAM E. ST JOHM, COUNTY
Bucks basketball star Kareem said. a.ERK. By 8""' J, ""''""' ~ttm
* * * * * *
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state Parks and RecreaUon
Department has announced it
bought nearly sii: acre of
wildlife area to add to Morro·
Bay 'State Park in San LWs
Obispo County.
Abdul.Jabbar. 111e house was PUBLIC NOTICE PubHshld Of'lllOI c_, o.1tv Piiot, J1nu1ry 22. 29 Ind ~ s. 12. later donated by him to lhe1--,~m.;.,-a.;;;;;;;n--J '~"''.'_ _______ _'.""_'·~n H afi Musilm -~ f bicbl ,IC'TtTIOUS •uSIMllS
Park Op~ratioJIS"-· • MeGfwern Talk
an ~~ o w """'• STAT•M•NT PUBLIC NOTICE be is a ~-n.. ~ng sie~ 11 dol111 blltloeur~~~--------
"1 ASPHALT COATING CO.. 1!15 W, STATIMlNT Of' WtTHDll:AWAL PtlOM Ori~ Fr.tlltrlOll C1lllomla P.U:TNHSMIP Of'l!fllATINO • IJNDIR '2'33 ' ' FICTITIOUS BUSINISS NAMI
e1p.e, ll'lt., 1 c1n1ornt1 corpanillal\, Thi folJowlnt person his wtthdr1W11 ••
Bill $29 ·Million
The tract is the home of at
least 68 pairs of great blue
·herons, th.J!; department said.
It has 1,000 feet of bay
shoreline.
OXFORD. England (AP) 1*'51 VOii K•rm111 Awn.,., 1rv1111, • ;omer11 P'rllllf h'om ..tl!I PM1'M!'ll'llp -c1nfornl1 ~ OPOtrlll/111 r.tllder Ille fkTlt1ou1 bu1lnn1 -Sen. George McGovern said Tiii• 11u11111U 11 conduc:l911 b'f 1 cor· 11•m1 of c & w Pall'lt •llO' kdr Shop,
rd I poritlol't. al 19.SS Church Slrffl, Colla M1111, CIU· in an Oxla University ec-ELPAC, IMC ' fornl1.
lure Sunday the American ltoOtrt N. Mateer Prnldtnt Tilt ~llllOlll blnlntU name 1f1t'""'"t .... Thi• Halement WIS tl;J with !I'll COUii· ""' the Pilrtlltr"Shlp Wit filed Oii J1n111ry presidency is winning ne .. tr CIHk of Or•~ CounTY on J11M11ry 11, 21, 1'11 In lhl Cout'll'f or Or•f1119.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
state Parks and Recreation
JleRQrtment, aided by the
!Bagley C:OnservaUon Fund
created in late 1971, ha1
budgeted 124.7 miiiion for park
acquisition and development
during 19'/Ht
1be department will have an
ogerating budget of 129 mil-
lion, an increase of about SZ
million over the current year.
EVEN WlTll the $10 million
in Bagley funds, a windfall
from the conversion to with·
holding of tbe state income tu, the construction anG
deyelopment budget is down
from ,this year's $47 million.
The largest single item is
fl. 4 milUon for construction of
recreation facilities at Perris
Reservoir, part of the State
Water Project, in Riverside
Coonty.
OTHER fl.IAJOR items in·
elude:
-$2.2 million for land ac·
quisilion at Point Mugu State
Park.
-$1.4 million or con-
struction at San Onofre State
Beach, the beach near the
Western White House which
the state acqUired by lease
from the Marine Corps.
The land was bought from
Shirley and Hult Enterprises
of Et.1gese, Ore. for $350,000. e Plan Rapped
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federal conservation study has
renewed earlier opposition to
creation of a national
lakeshore recreation area in
the. Lake Tahoe Basin.
The re-port prepared by the
federal Bureau of Outdoor
Recreation fears national
lakesbore designation might
trigger overuse of the Tahoe
area, U. S. Sen. Alan Bible (D-
Nev.,) said.
The report Is a final version
of a preliminary study issued
last August .. Bible said there
Was little significant change.
PUBLIC NOTICE
power at the expense of 1'13. · Full n.me ind AOdress ot tM Perwit P124M Wlltldrawlf>8: Congress, the major political 9JM>C tllchlrd Wood .. 96S Def Mil' Ave.,
parties and the press. Pr.tbllshtd Of'1ng.t COlrf D•llv Pllot, L1ur.t111,,!-,,,'·wc~1om. ''· J1nu1ry IS, 22, :19 tnd FtOrwory J, 0<>1 .,.... "Executive encroachment 1m 121-n s111nec1:
and legislative paralysis," he PUB UC NOTICE 'lllllllhed 0r~ c°''' D11ty "pJ:c!i~ said, is what weakened• ----~.,.--~~.,.---January 22. :19 •rod Fet1r1,11..., s. 17, 1· 1'73 17S..13 Congress and "why one man ,,CTITIOUS BUSINESS MAM• ITATEMINT in the White House was able TM ki(krWlno Ptf'ao)ll• ... doing
busllllll I I: 1--~--,.---~---LEJCO ENGINEERING, f'M2 Al.llurY FICTITIOUS BUSIMESS e Neu:isman Nanaecf om •. wn1m11111.,. f'Hl3 N.u.11 srATlMt::wr Dntcl Arlhr.tr Shepherd, "'2 AslNr\' The follow!ng perllOM 1r1 doing Cl n:le. wntmln1ttr nm M'-,., SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -y_. Ltvlont. '312 .Alt!Ury C1n:lt, lllSMAC INTERNATIONAL, Alf'P(lrl
Tele l · journalist' "'--~ W11tmt111ter '261:1 T-North. $r.tlte •7S. 11552 MKArthw V SlOn ~er Thia bulllllSI l• bl1f>8 canc:hict.d by 1 Boultv1rd, 1rv1111, Cllll«"I• '27!17 Vanocur, former co~ ptrtMnlllp. CANADIAN 81SMAC flONDON)
nd t lo CBS and NBC Y"'°" Llvl11nt LIMITEO, Ollf1rlo, C11\1da, (orpot-1llO!'I, respo et'! r Thi• •11'-I fllfd wlftl ttle Cor.tnly f'3'I Lt11hot't>t Strttl, londoll, Orillrfa, and now working for the cltrk or°''""' cou111y Oii: J111. 11, 1913, C•ll•d•
Public Broadcasting System WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY Tiiis .bwh'ltU ,, bllr19 (Vfl(fuc:lld by , CLEllK. By Tlltrtw M. W1rd, Deputy. 1 rorportlotL •
has been appointed a COO· P11t1Hshld Ot'11191 C011t O•JI~ ""= H. A. 8ruc:1, Viet Prnldlrrl sultant to the Center for th J1,...,.ry 15 22 :19 •nd F1brworv s: Thi• st11emen1 llttd v11111 tilt COUl'lly e 19n ' ' 1,,_13 ct .... k or Cr1noe Catin!Y on: Jin. 11, 1'7J. Study of Democratic lnstitu-WI LLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY tions . • PUBLIC NOTICE CLERK, by B•tty J. e1rvs1t11. Dtpr.t,~
(--~==~~==,.---(JAMii T. (A,lllTZ. Allomty 11 L••• ,ICTITIOUS BUSUt•ss Al"""' T-Nlttll-S11111 41S,
Sex ~iors Probed
NAM• ITAT•MIHT llSH M.U.l'fllr.tr l'°"llVfNI, Tilt followlng ptl'Mll\I lrl doing lntl111. Cllifontl1 "7tf
bOllntn •1: P~blll!Md Of'ang1 Cot" Otlly PUor, HEMINGWAYS, 117 Mlrtlll A.,..., J111wory 22. 2', 1nd Flbrv1ry S,. It, 81lbol 1.i1r.:1, P<ttwport BMCh "'60 1'1J 17•·13 tl11161ll H, Johnlcin, 2110 81y.i<11 Dr.,1---,,-,,,.,-,-.,.-,--,----
Corona c1e1 MM n.11s PUBLIC NOTICE Ar.tlllll FlNtY\ 117 (lny)(, 81tbol lsl1nd , _____ 7'=,.-----
.{look Analyzes Many Approaches to Love Problems Tlll1 IMlllnns s bllll!I conductlG by I I . IE ita
Pfrtllll'llllP. R1~ll H, Jotw'lllOll NOTICI TO ClllOITOtlS Thia 1!1...,._I lllld wllll 1111 c_,iy SUP'ElllOll COUtlT OF TMI CIH11 of Or1nge County Oii: J•11. 4, ltn. STATE OF CALIFOllNIA l'"Otl WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY THI COUPITY 01' OltAMOI -i NEw YORK (AP) -They range frorr.
lov6>m columnists to highly-trained
1beNpista; from self-proclaimed sex ex·
peril to lclentific se1 researchers; from
enciunter gmijl l<!aderi to hypno\iSIS: fmft authors of how.to manuals to dual
sexl'co-tberapy teams.
y Include anyone who pretends
a rtty to treat sexual, emotiona~ or
m tal dysfwJction, explains Patrick 11-1.
M dy Jr., wbo has written a book
a them called "'Ibe Love Doctors." , "' . -"I.REALIZED THERE was a new sub-
culture that could have a tremendous in·
nuence on us,'' says the author.
During three years on the book, he ln-
lerviewed 1uch suhjec\I as Dr. David
Reuben, Dear Abby, Ann Landers, Dr.
Joyce Brothtr1, and Masters and
Johnson.
"I wanted to know who tbeae people-were who addreA lhemaelves to our pro-
blems1 whether lhey are any good or just
u hung up IS the rest ol us." he con-
tinued. 11Most went to great lengths to
t..p ._ from findiillJ Olll. They were
reluctant to t.Jlk to me..'..'
McGrady spent four moo\hs In Europo
doing rtteareh but found fewer love doc-
ton thtrt thaJi lh lhil COW!lrY.
Allhoui~ au problems are a universal concern, they ,,. especlal)y oo In the
United Stati:io where, he 1ay1 In a tune of
re:grtt, people read se.r: books to tell them
even whit they ought to want.
"1 DON'T KNOW OF I really good
marriage at all ," declam the good-look·
lttg, ~ McGredy, now nwrted
•
I
for lhe second time. "Ninety percent of
them have grave faults and some couples
stick togetbf:r for so many bad reasons.
Eventually, the sexual relaUons.hlp plays
a tremendous role in bow the marriage
turns out.
"Some people will not countenance the
ldea of teaming any more than they
knew on their wedding day," he· adds. "U
you can just learn to talk with your mate
and explore pn>blem.o and try to do
something about them , you can be
hefped. But in the United States couples
can't even get it out of their mouths -
much less get it Into their beds."
Most often, be believes, it is the
woman who is more realistic about the
necessity for seeking help.
"As a result of women's llb. women
have desires they have never bad before
in lhe sexual area and all other areas;
they want more out ol We,'' be says.
THE FJELD OF .SEX .PJ"Oblem treat.
ment was once dominated by the Frei.I·
dlan poychoaoalytlc ldlool, but they'rt
being "utwly wiped Olll" bec&111& people
wa.nt a cure "aM psycboanalystt ls not a
cure. Freudians destroy more marriages
tb3n they help ," MtOri.cb' notes.
Whert do people go foe hclp? T1' hyp-
nothtrapists, to en«JW1t"1' groups, to hlo,
therapy. behaviorists, to frillge l'f'CIJ•
tttlonm who may he totally unqualUled;
to media therapists, Including newspaper
columnists and radio am televlllon ad-
vice-givers..
"The paper therapiltl tan be of
lttmendoas help ID ~n lilformal. educa
tlooal way," McGr1dy 1111. 'Though the
rormat or the column requires readabili CLE•K. 8' BttTr J. 8.,.,..,. ~ E.i111 o1 Gro.te'~ KRESs. 11so
• l"vblldlld °'""°' C011f 0.111' Piiot, k-ll GEORGE 11 ICH~RD ICRESS ty and humor ror which wisdom must J1t1111ry •. IS, 22, "· lf'7S 11-13 Ind G. R. KRE$$, GEORGE KRESS . ._ ...
often be sacrificed, the writers come up PUBLIC NOT!'""" NOTICE IS HEREBY GI VEN to ttle '"'c. CTtdltor1 of t!le 1bow named dlclOlnt
with good amwers from the experts they !---,===,-,,""'=.,.---""' 1n --hlvlnel e111m, ~•tns• 1111 'IC'TITIOUI BUl lMISS 11111 Cltcldfnl , .. reqvll'fd '° lilt tlltm. consulL And when an Abby or Ann 111.t.M• ITATSMINT with the n«Hilry vouc,,..,,, Jn '"' oflk• Ttot folkiwl111 ""'°" II dol"t Mlneu of thl d111t Of tlll ....,._ ll'lttlltd ~. or Landers shows some breadth of ,., 1G ~' tl'ltfrt, ''"'' "" 111USsary
t I h . the f coiTA MESA ll:OOTER SEllVIC&;l V011Cller1o lo lhe ~Md •I , ... Oftlcl 0 era.nee, sue as m area 0 IOIXI Canc:ord St .. C4!1ll """"''26U Of SELIM s. FR.AttKl1M, ,1,.,. S.1111 AM homosexuality, this can be comm~ J-Ar•l'l'lbWlt. 1Cm COtlUlrd s1 .. A-. Cost• Mtst, c111tom1• mn. C01t1 Mal fM2i6 which It ""' llikl Of bVllneu o1 "" ufticated . It also helps readers to know Tiii• Ml,.. 11 1111119 cllfldUclfd b'f 111 vf>lllrslOMd 1n 111 ""'""* 1Mrt11 .. 111111 to t~-ha prob! ll'ldl'lkllllJ, "" "'''' or "'d decfdtnt, wl lflin tOllt' 0 Jit:1., Ve ems . J-Ar11t1t111l1 monlllt: 11ttr !I'll ""' P11bllctt1on of thll Th\1 •l•t-' "'td •1111 the Co\11111' noll«. "BUT I RAVE N~ bod Cltrk of Or11191 cou11tr Ol'I: J*11 . .i. 1m. Dlttd J111111ry ~. lm v• seen any y. WILLIAM I . IT JOHN, COUNTY • SELIM s. FRANICLIN wlth the exception of Masters and CLERK, By: 8•tty J, ••rt•ltn. 09pu!y, EX1Cr.tlar or !he Wiii
J h ho esslull ,. t1)M ot '"' '"°"' lll!'Mll ~tnl 0 rl90D, w can succ y reverse a f'llbllthld °'""" Cont Diiiy ,11,1. SILIM s .... ANICLllll severe ..-J...1em ot aexua1 ~-function J'""'"' •· is. 22: :it, 1m 1 .. n 1t• ""'' """ A-,._ ..,. 1------------Cllll /111\tla. CA tMS7 when the; marriage ls in a PUBLIC Nant'E T .. , 1n•1 Ml4'4J
terminal state," be continues. A':::l,! ~·.,.:: c°'''
"Their treatment bu to do with NOTtc• fo1'.:BotT01ts J_,.rv •· 15, 22. :it. 1t13
Otlly ,-tktt, ....
desensitization and operant cooditlonlng llJP'lflllOtt COUllT 01'" TN•
-unlearning the NWelies and acqulrlng ·~:~·J~:.A!"'o7"~ .. W PUBLIC NOTICE
a skill ol pleasunng' the -"-~-and .... A·7fflt NOTICe Df' PUBLIC N•A•r• -H-.....:-11' ·---11 to he p1"'.'.~ . .!'::;-,,,' •1t1i.• MAltY E. MAllKS, ~. NOTICE IS HERE8Y OIVl N ltllt lWUWUli:t , ...... ~ ~~ JotOTM:E IS HEltE8Y GIVEN let !I'll Plltllk -.r1n11 wm be MW try lhl CJl'f Such teams •"-•.... ...........t... ln ttldll•r, ol IN l bOVt """*' • ...,., Covndl ot ,the City of C.I• MIN on ' "'"""'6" &'"" .. 'e lllef '" ,,.,_ MV!ng (ltltM 19•IMI ""' l'ttww...., s. 1'73, I I 1111 '*"Of •:• pm .• ,number, can treat l limited ntDDbt'f of. Mid d9adlllt -rl!lllllrM te IMI thtm. 111' M -tlllrN!f«" •• ,ttll """" tney I "--ualifled tak wtltt lf'll ,_....,.., VOl/dltrs, t11 ttll offk1 Ill hllttl. /11 ""' COUntll °""""" II ..,. coup et. ~y unq penons e 11 "" c11rt1 ., fhl ~ .mtKtd c-1. • City Ht!•. n F•lr Ori.,., cm.ti Mt11. rtdvantage of those who need help to ~ "*"· wilt! ttie '*'*'Y Cailfwtil•, .. "" "*9wl1111:
McG_ .... nni .. tz ou' inclu"•• an ..... ~ ~ ,. "" ""'*"""" ., "" afllcl 01111 .. AL 'LA" AMOlfOM•NT ND-•• ....., ,........, ., ...... ....., ... _..... ef W .,.,.....,.,.. OlllSQN, DUMM & 01'"'1M'J. C'Olll~ MIN PlllWll119 C-VlCt he interviewed wbo ruu a sex in-CltrTCMEJI , .SIJ Saufll ... ._. ,,,..,, Liii ll'lktlOI\, CCNl1tlno " ~
ll.(tu ...... ,_ 1 ~· lor ~· ra• .. ~ .... _ A..._ e:1n1on111 fl0011, Wllldt 11 "" 1111t111du"''" 10 "" ~· """' 111 ...,. U-~ BIWllUUl -i.ua-Y.lilW l4ta 9' llllMlllH d 1111 vndlr119ntd 111 Ill '"" bounded b¥ &vr!f1oWer Al/9Mlt, kn
anv tJod of t.bera-..1. ..... establishment. ,....,,... OHWlnlnp 1o "" "''" ot wld DtHo ,.....,...,., ._. "'"'' 1nd -v pmiw.: ......,.,, 1'iltll11 tovr """'lllt 111tr "" F1lrvltw ltofd. *'if ~!Mri of lh11 l'IOl!u. Ca-llil Allf AVAIL.AILI of t111 lll"O'
"IDEAU. V mOSE WHO ARE ID the O.ltd JtfM.!MY " 1tn ....., •!l'llfldmtfl" 111 "" <>Met ot 1tw KAY HA'l'.1$ tte>W"EU City Ow-. • medlcal prol'ealoa ahoutd acquire the Mmlflhlr•lflJC wlfil HM Win NO'TICI II l'\JtlTH£• OIVlll llWI "
lo,_ '·~-r arta •-au-tbal'I ~-pa -ICI Gt !I'll n l1!1 ti Nici lllftl •!Id plkf ltJ'f ttnd 1t1 I*'-"" UU!o.:W !...:\; """"' "'UCI II:: • ll'tl lbo¥f 111111fd ~I lll! .... ftd fl'l•Y '"""'" Ind bi hffnl by tientl bring their problems," 11-lha ••UM, DUMM • CtlUTC.H•• ""' Cll'f' CwncH Of ttle ('lty ef C<tlt• M-,.. By1 -Mette "'"" Oii ""' .._t!Ollld l19m ol C'Or.tfte:ll author, who lhlnlcs physicians are dtfi. J11 '-'" ,....., '""' t1.1s1""". clent In this ...... peel. "But .. _ ........ l.91 """"'"' C.o\ "'71 ~'LeEN p, "HINNIY • ...., --,~ T .. r (JlJI ...,_ Cl!y (1ttll,,.ot IN
sbou1I: be a bit of " 10\le doctor 1nd &earn ~ ,.. ~"''"''" .. <TA c11y of '°''• M-. bow to communicate." '11t111li!ICI ar... COll•t 0.11., ,-11oi. l"l.olithtd 0r_... c:o.u o.11y ,1101, JlflVWy 1. '~· 22, :it, 1t11 u.n J•iw1ry n. 1m '" n
•
' I
.
Mondi~, January 22, 1973 DAIL.V PILOT .iiiiiiiiliiiiiilii;;;----T1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ -..-=.
Daily Pilot
Classified
-•• &:As•
General
TAX SHELTER
2 1-Brtn. units in iirin1e ron·
dilion & lo..::ation un lovely
Nl!'«PQlt Ls.land. l~c~ at
$54,500.
Call: 67J..3ti63 67~ Eve&.
associated
BROK ERS-REALTORS
Z015 W ialboa 67]•3663
$29,950.
EASI'SIDE . Country size
yard, deep shag crptg, ror·
ner stone !irept, beaut
decor. Sparkling bltns &: doubl.e ~tacbed garage.
Hard-to-find 3 BR, 2 BA, home at thiil price. 545-8424,
SOUTfl COAST REAL TORS * * $32,950 * * 4 BR + Maid's or guest rm.
Pecky paneling, shag carp.
Most outstanding buy in
N'pt Hts. Bett~r hu!TY!
BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 *
llBST
IDYil
<113-
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General
POOL BARGAIN .
Located Eastside Costa
Mesa on quiet tree lined
street. ~dded, paneled
family rm, heated pool
15xl8 covered patio +
enclosed cabana, 3 big
bedrms, 2 tiled baths,
huge corner brick fire·
place, built·in kitchen-
See this one ! asking
$35,000, Call Red Carpet
Realtors, 54tH!64ll
$28,500 . .
BETIER THAN NEW
Only 3 yrs . old this 3
bedrm 2 bath home is
in mint condition, beau·
tiful built·in kitchen,
spacious living, owners
are anxious, -Hurry!!
1-"'"'_Red_Ca<pet,..Rub.
tors 546.8540
SPANISH DELIGHT
$29,500
4 bedrm, 2 bath home
on big corner lot-5 yrs
old + bas been remod·
ele~ in custom Spanis h
-archways instead of
door ways. elegant shag
cpt., brick fireplace ,
gorgeous built·in kit-
chen, Don't miss it -
Priced to sell ! Call
Red Carpet, Realtors
546-8&!-0
11 ACRE C-1
+ e
3 bedrm 2 bath house
Located in prime Cosla
Mesa area, ,spac.iolts
1600 sq. rt. House in ex·
cellent condition-large
21h car garage suitable
to Jive + have commer·
cial business. Hard to
Find! Cail Red Carpet
Realtors 546-8640
DIRJ:Y BARGAIN
$28,500
Only needs paint +
clean-up. Sbedrm 2 bath
home with everything
you need. Built-ins,
forced air beat, fire-
place, double gara~e.
excellent residential
neighborhood, q u let
street. llurry-Owners
are anxious. Red Carpet
Realtors 546-8640
BACK BAY
R-2 $21,000
Fantastic com.r loc:a.
lion near lbe back bay
great development pc>-
Lential, exi!ting 2 bedrm
bouse easily rentable-
wllJ carry Itself ~ smne, asltlng $%1,
Won't last. Call Rotl
Carpel Reallora 5M ••
-
• . / 0 DAIL.V PILOT MondQ, Janu.,y 22, l '173
Everyone Hos
Something That
Som eone Else W onh
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIE.D
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange-Coast-Dial 642-5678 f
DS
I
Fast Results
You Con Soll It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Wont )..d
w ..... . ... ..... ,.., .....,. ... ,
$27,250 • 3 Bdrm
2 be.tbs. Patio, shake roof.
Dining nn., dishwasher.
Fireplace. New paint in.side
& out. Cl03e to !IC'hoo!s &
shopping. Shade trees. Brk.
540-173).
3 Bdrm • Family
4 Bdrm • $30, 900
2 baths. Patio, dining room.
Built-Ins. Cuatom dr&PH, 1rr
direct lighting. Extra llOf-
llge space. Uke-new home
v.·lth .,.,,all.~wa.U carpeting.
Brk. 540-l'lXI.
$32.950. 2 baths. Patio, dining S32.SOO. Pool, patio. Dinlna;
•---~rm.,-built-IM;--d!shwasher.2-1-'un.,_nh1'"1!lu,1.,.,1no,1, -dl.l:hwuhtr
fireplaces. Cheery home, Fireplace in family room.
carpeting, drapes. Nicely Rear li\ring room. _Contem-
landscaped. Brk. 540-173). porary honie with solarium.
****** *IAYL-OR-CO:-Y
Brk. 540-l 7J'.l.
The Are•'•
Top Prot.11lonal1
Slnco 1M9
I Olil \I I Ill \II\
. . '
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
SPYGLASS HILL-$99,500
FantaJUc view of city lights, bay, ocean &
Catalina from this brand new 2-sty. 5 BR,
fam. rm. & formal dining room Colonial.
3-Car garage. A true traditional beauty. OPEN DAILY -CAMEO SHORES COSTA MESA "Our 2llh YNr'' 4639 FAIRFIELD. Beautifully dselgned & VETERANS!
·540.1120 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RNltors decorated 4 bdrm. & pool home with great .
2111 S.n Jooqvln Hills ROid them are 30' lots) and there's trees all over Are you allglbleT Can you ''Ov lookr.t,!B~C '-·-t Cl b" Quallfy fOr VA, tlnat\dng? Is Three 2-bdrm. unlts in tr 1nyon ~ ry u c REALTY s7c3000 your prevlously-uoed loan l!Jre..n!!W condition. Nice
TRIPLEX
l ;G'""•"'••"'••"'l------..-~,-------1 NEWPORT CE E ' N. B. MM910 BAY .& BEA II .,. relMtablei GIVE us A M--v ..... _ carpetlng, bit-In ranie & l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;G;;;t;;;ft;;;t;;;r;;;ll;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;:;;;;l~Gt~~~·=l;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;Gtne;::;";I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, ...,,.."!',....,;I,..'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.!! CALL.. •-"'9 retrlg. in each. Upper unit -:;; I GeMrll GINN'( MORRISON Lovely 3 bedroom on cul-de-hu vtew of hill1 & night
HARBOR ISLAND
WATERFRONT
A RARE RND
A real Ct!M charmer, on the ocean side of
Hwy., yet walking distance to all shopping.
Tbis 3 bdrm., I 'Ao bath home has additional
sleeping room in 2 car garage; we have the
key -give us a call Offered at $64,500
Gen«• * -REALTORS-sa.c. Cozy family room and ligbta. On Jamee St., Over Corona del Mar ,,/* **• um Kea fireplace. Very desirable 80% loan at 7% can be u -MOVE IN
CONDmON
11.M ;-~-Dr S'o..t area. L sumed. Askin&: $49,950. Triplex ~~:'a::_ M. ~-645-722l CA.LL, ~ ' '''·2414 '* * .......,.. 1733 Westcll.H Dr., N.B. "\;I' Lovely 5 BR., 5'h baths, waterfront home.
Lge. Jiving rm. & famil y rm., just redecor-
ated: Pier, float and sandy beach. Beautlful
yard w/lge. shade tree & swimming pool.
NEW umNG
A True Home at Ccllor. 4 The leas\ ~nsive Ieaal *** 551-CUO .. ~.-.
Bedrooml, 2 Batb.L Bl Gas triplex In town la 1"'o one o! (Open Evenlnp) PETITE & NEAT _U. -Kitchen with Dishwasher. the sharpest with new IEALTY eustom Fireplace. Near carpets, new paint in and 3 Bedroom h l d e-away, N••r H••••rt Pest orrlt•
New Carpeting. Excellent ouf, built-ins and a six car Coron1 dtl Mir Eaallide 0:1ata Mesa. with VACANT •nd READY
Area near Adams and carport. All units are two Qcffnside 1% bath, hardwood floors P3 000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Eastside Costa Mesa 3 BR-$31,000 Buschard. $31,850. Call ~aTictna ~~to al~~ of the Hl9hw1y ~3"place. Huny, only 3 BR, aep d~; or 4th BR, l'l
AnY.ttme. 6t6-Q55S.__ -oe-Corona.-Two trtplexet Hmne____and_ .income on an ' · BA, paneled kit/din area. 341 Bayiiile" Dr., Sulit I, JCS. CORBIN. MARTIN RARE BLOSSOM available at 115.000 each. o.....md lot 42ill8. Charm-Ca!l 540-115l Open Eves. Living rm w/!plc. Dbl av.
Gtneral •
• Fixer Upper
• Throe Units
located an Laree Eastside
Costa Mesa lot with room
for 3 more unilll. Investor's
delignt Y.1th loads of poten-
tial. Home ~ remodel-
ing, so bring your hammer
and paint brush.-Call us for
complete d~tails, but hurry,
won't last long.
546-5'titl !Open Evel.)
Call 673-8550 lng 2 bedroom. 2 bath borne shake roof, sprlnklen. Xlnt Seldom seen.· •• CHOICE Ol'E#ntr• trSR.MrotEMCEJ with tarp UviJIC room and cond.
General COSTA MESA EA s T 111 1
:;';::: = ':r,: Costa Mesa Realty ioSA~rut~~~. REALTORS 644-7662 !W~!+liJ 1Qftli!l1 ~~ .. % = ''Think of ..._,_ .. SPA~ou!4:'.~~,2 !"R.111
sh:>ps $165,0CXI Gentr1I Gentral Roo Jakarta Island F = ......,, · I m •• T" BA condo. Bit-ms, frp]c. 15 Units, beach loca-m, an-C. F. Colesworthy &: Co. you don't have, then hurry to Separate garage, PooJ,
tion S320.ooo ATTENTION JUST LISTED ~,?l'P"wootlngo F1and00 ,
80,0LID, WXURY & ~~ ""the home that t1oes. 3 recreahon room. 1aunt1ry Large com m er c i a I ~ ' ~ bedrooms. 2~ baths, 1.-e tacllltiea. Quiet adults only.
store ... ~~ OCIO YOUNG OR OUtllide: 15 year warranty LOCATION __ ... •---7~ N ch11dre und 15 2400 •~-M V rd "Kenl~e" ""'"' pin• alley f.amil>' room; ~~ -•-u< o n er . 2 small C-1 1 one d -esa e e-u.oo. _.... .... WALK TO BE~CH dlninl: area. You must take Elden, CM 963-2187. homes $26,950 RmRED! access for BOAT! Many OOVER SHORES -BAY &: du the ,6me to see .~ Ol'M'!· ME.ii DEL MAR 5 Br, 3 Ba 80' C·l roned lot • Jale or U you are looking for a Spa.rlding 4 bedroom, or 3 other extrU to save you OCEAN VIEW 4 Oversized .•. From this uwex with ~n t ~e a dee1sm until immed. occupy. All neW
·lease $42,0CXI fabulous 3 bedroom home and den, 2 fireplaces • one time & trouble. HUR· bedrooms, formal dining rroe bey view; 2 R. lower YoU oo. Only $40,500. Call e11>ts &: drpt. Beaut.
Call 675-7225 here is your opportunity'. 1n country kitchen complete RY ... $ 2 9, 5 00. Call room, fireplace and open All1-::-.:~e~~~~· now 842--~ landacaped Huae yard nr w. Completely _.ded with ;;,',~ :;\'':i.,,~:c'':~t AnYtime. w ~~ ~y~m, ~ Call: m-:mi 673-Q188 Evet. ""'"""•"tl'1.flroeE1i1CE1 !IChooll. Many extra 1 • li .. .,.,_~,.~"iill ~~1br~ c~()ntu .. ~0~. ~·~im ·~!RI ~~:~::; [111$$'11ll i§.~:.$}£~~ l !!!~=::""::;";i"i:::;::::'"'ll _;;'"::;'::;";;;:"~"~'.;:°';.;;"';.";;"':;:""':;;;;o;';;;"·,1 of rose lants. Located · "'21 -·--OR -~ -I Call It Charm oneoit.."moopopo;JarO: ~' '""'"'"°''"""'W1Uco. -REALT -EMERALD BAY COLLEGE PARK, Sharp LOYEL Y 3 domlnium areu 1n Orange ~ I I , 642-5200 Mighty Nice VIEW 3Br, 2 BA. Fam Rm, lrplc,
This home has that certain BEDROOM Countywitbresidentmgr,3 A Palace ~ Th" Prl Charming ho me ~ltMBow111nad Gr:!,n,J!r.
--f ,,. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
something that everyone swimming poola, 2 tennis at II ce w/posaJbillttes tor ex-..,.....,....: ow wn • ......_,
wanto. Maoy extras' formal COLLEGE PAR" eouru, S&Wla and jae<ml; BIG 5 Looking WESTCUFF Soacloua 4 bedrooins, 2 p&Jllion. Larp llvlntl room TRANSFERREO;I BR, 2 bal dining room, separate farni. (" neighborhood In excellent F K• &a: w/b&y window view &: din· fam nn, lge patio & Iott of
ly t'OOm, utility room, dark HOME condition. Apprai&ed at FIVE - 2 bedroom homes, or a lftCJ EXECUTIVE SUITE! are~'ln ~~n~a~~ Ing alcove. 3 Bdrml., 3 trult Uft1. $34,900. By
room, 2~2 bath.<!, workshop Beautiful hardwood. noon, $29,000 with temui to suit five garages, 5 aeparate fen-Gorgeou.s 4 bedroom, plus Executive Weltclitt 3 bed., 2 Huntington Beach near baths. $7U_.500. Carol Tatum, owner, Tertn1. 541).'1718.
;rea, also is in ~ew~ ~~ sh8~~ & !:t~ ~ your needs. Call now ced yards, on big 15x30 family room, plus 3 bath on maniCUJ"@id corner sclx>olJ and abopplng. At a ~~~~-0700 BACK BAY429,950 1:i~ms~aVacai1t and financing availablt'. 842-2535. street-ttHtreet lot. Income C8l' garage. This home baa tot PlUlb carpet., dnpes, price )'OU want to btlieve. 550 N-Cent8r Dr Sy owner, 3 BR w/frplc. OPENT1Lf •IT'S A.W10BENICEI $740. per month. Asking lt all. Super upgraded bullth11, dining room -$27,500, 847..Q)l(). .. .. _. • Lge yard w/cov'd paUo. ~. ~~·~· ~~ /'Cat. co,.ATS I 1m1·1a1u1 ~~ Open Eves =u7~a~ ~:: ::. • =~~~by~~= 1i"J}'f'"' 'Llf'I' 2 BEDRM f..PLEX, E'/1\de 640-0166 or 6'0--0227 ~WALLACE Jifii'fHJ\: . :;,~~'.!~~m .. ..,., ~,!),~ -subnrtt ,,.a ll~IJtt ~~-;.:me ~Mo.~::" t~ 20E:er~
-,o-p-,.,.~ ... ~ .. ~~~~:~Rs In Forec:kisure! llllWl'llif ~-~ l'M 101 ::~=~.~:.ty s7H891 ~ m, ~~~e~
$15,750 4 Bedroom• . =-·-··-·-JJ .... BUY MY OWNER lmlferred. 3 BR., 337 Maanolla, ownr 642-8310
NEWPORT Model Home FULL PRICE! * BEST BUYS * ·~ si.ter-tn-1aw·s tour "°"'' 1n 111 BA. Newly decorated. 2 BR. interior redone, 1o1
HEIGHTS 2 Story Alpha Beta shopping center Lots of charm. $71,500. 146x69 R-2, $23,000. 645-3509 When Built ffiJRRY! FORCED SALE! 3 BEDROOM & den -25.12 !or 110<.ooo. she renia them 613-1~. Jim, 61'-3001. Very Very See thla attractive 3 Freth.ly painted Interior. Assume & Save Crestview, Bayshores, Npt. tor $llOO a month and lhe Bllboa Penln1ul1 • . 1 V 11 bedroom, 2 bath home. Ex· WASHER and DRYER 4 . Exciting two story Spanish Bch. $51.500. will carry a first T.D. of rount1 n I .,, Hard to qet tra cabinets built ln llll'i'? REfRIG. INCL u DE D ! 'Wilt\ all four bedrooms 3 BEDROOM, family rm &. Realty Company 75% of tbe(isales prlce.lor 30 -NEW DUPLEX OWNER Saoifice. 4 bednns,
3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 kitchen, 220 In garage, nice Stat~ess-steel kltchen with upstairs, Walk one bloclt to ~ Ul5 Devon Lane, Blycrtlt Be1vty years at 8 r..-Call 676-72ZS. 3 & ~ BR.-apll. Open beam 3 baths. Covere<i patio,
fireplaces, den, electric sized lawn fmt and rear. built-in blender._ D l n In~ park, tenn.d courts and pool. estclfff, Np!. Bch'. $59,500. 3 BR., superb land8caplng, c cell 1., 2 trplcs. ea. unit. built-ins, dis b was b,i
kitchen, 2 car garage ott Thill can be yoUJ'I tor only room. Private garden pat1o, Assume VA loan with total 6 BEDROOM & family -971 handyman'a praae central Ii~ •LI QuJck popea. $101.Ji()O. fireplace in famlly rm. private alley. Very best 5~{) down. Selling price Storage lockers. ™MACU· month by paymerit11 of $253 Paularlno, M~ North, vacuum ll)'ttem. I~ Wells I -GEM de aac, brk $36,000, 842-,
school district. Only $48,900. ~~{ l~'S~~':o"it NICE! ~~tA.~~~RE ~'. PITI. Asking $38,000. Call ~ ~u5k· ~mCE TO designed. Reduced t 0 4! 4 ' ' 1610 w. Colt Hwy., N.B. OWNER desperate. 3 batN:,
GAIN TODAY! Call 64$-0303. 54&-23ll to see. SEE BY $19•500. Jayce E d I u n d ·r.:r. • · : .REALTORS 6j2-4623 4 bedrooms. Patio, dJn1na . te <WN'17l.t•IT'SFUNTOBEMCEI APPOINTMENT ANYTIME 642-8235 (Y25) LOT~ ba •Br vi rm, built-ins, dishwuber,
PE!f.l !II There is a reason 1u1s101Atr Of rHc COiWru. co. l ~vm y, ., ew, family rm with fireplace
'1 1.1.lJ!l'l~'lJI 18yeansamelocatlon $5.1,950.0uplex$19,500 Tri-level bkr 138 9.50.
ONE BLOCK iitNi;U; '!642-8235!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ... 64!!4.m!!!!!9 ~$76~ -.MARSHALL Realty 67$-4600 962-5566.' • • ' ~ --=-"··-=" vacant. Move 'rleht ln. Seller Corona dttl Mar ~.¥&Ji0~.. ~~~ llarborT~e!c;~a?e~o , • • CUDDLE & Don't Lose ~t:1.:ur~Am:! 0ne*ot 1: ~~~in, ~:le:xt:i:r ~~t=:
•«h pool: 4 ""'""" 211 "P~NORAMIC SNUGGLE Out! for the yo~ exeeuttve. 3 du~· 2 •a den•r,lwua new total electric builtina and baths, large lam. rm., n ·aJty Com~ VIEW" Bed tam co•~ard air-cond. 2 to 4 bedrooma,
•>.e "WHALE" of a hoUR. 2 Trlo·n·a ~" · -v ' 2 .·, "'f!:per p umbtna:; ~ck ~·-••Ion. -~m oversized lots, on Cul d~ Sac IMA_GINE_ HISl_I Catalina & •-•--Chica State Little bouaeon bl£ land. pest LIDO ISLE ,.......... rru St. Land included. $73,900. A H b nt DUUl<l Eut Side area. Good 1uplex VIA WAZIERS story, S bedrooms, 2 baths, COLD BANKER-convenient · Priced to 950. VA/FHA 5%. We
Howard \\'ells ~~1 f nu= i:!,the Beach. Iron gatn provide lot neu; St. Joachlms. Plen-Owner motivated -bo·~ 11..-..deal Uhovlnmge ""'torm,lhlac'l!•e•~ Reel.tan 644-2430, 833-0700 RllMOforROl71AH,500REALTY buUwt tthheemm. bell because Wt COLD\\i'ELL, BANKER \\ sy o me court yard privacy, Unique ty of tre~ or~s &: shade. another "'6"' Ji-..... 550 Newport Ce ter Or Realtors 644-2430, S33.0TOO be<:ause they gavi; It °!e kitchen&: fan\lly room. Sur-Jurt Sllr.500 otter takes lt. home! 3 BR .. acp. famly M1~!1~:t r~ ...... an n · 67U642 67U4.S9 l1rwln rt•lty fnc.
550 Newport Cl'nter Dr. san1e lov\ng care given this rounds tbia klvtly ' bdrm Call fut! DR., lg. paHo. May consider )'OUI' en ........... '8 •-=i..iS. <n<J _ .. M
1.,.,,_ ... .,,_.,.. ___ 1 elegant 5 BR, FR. ln abode Priced to tell at lcue «lease with option to Shop early for th1' one. 9 UNITSI FINE BUY _ m.soot Near ~
''JUST-PElfl=ECT•' f!~.blu~he i~~~intia~~ $48.~.Submtt yourtenna. ~. $71,500. Charlene ~~i:,~i~;ouHm11tN1Cti 9 Unlta. ro: ~ $13,000 I:w·,~· ~~n:s~c~ .Huntln9ton htc:h
Covered patio _ wishing wi'll ba.rgain today. Hurry . ·ror ~iiNIMll Rtalton 545-9491 COL.DWELL, BANK'£R I ·~~~ '•li'tl ~it~~. t':e ;:'1..! ahA, crpt'&, ope~1~ cell-~ REPOSSESSIONS
-v.·uterfall and fish pond. 3 ~'(~ ) lnls Miller ~alto•:'!"':O':"":'•-I ---::OC'pen5;,.:EY<"'-'•;-·-;---Realton 644-2430, 833-0700 · l-P!-1!·1!'-il'tl•!•-!!llM-!l-ll 00 thla one. Alklnl $96,500:' lnp, FA he'at, ..aec garage For tnrot'matlon and location
large bedrooms -all for '""'" •• ~ CORONA ~Newport Center Dr. 1-J opener .. Eazy R-2 co~ of these FHA & VA homes
$ 2 6, 9 5 0 . Unbel ievable! l Open Evet. ""!!!'"'"'l"'""'"'!!!!"''""I!! I , ta• veraion. Steps to Btr contact • ' Convenienrly do., to 11f.l~I •I 111: OWNER-oua. 1 bedrm, 2 DEL MAR The Last Time Corona. Conalderlfade. Call KASABIAN ~001-~'•. •0o•dn·1'wh .. 011"1'01 ~~ 642-8235 644-mo J>aths, Pool a: patio, dedr· New Ustfng We offered a..___ ln th'a NEW ON THE ,:673-:::,:,73::11:;,·c,;Bl<r;::;;;;,· ~~~~1
........ .... " "'*" '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!<!!!I 1ng. Bullt~lns, diSbwalhtr. "'"11"' .,. I I SPYG" ••• HILL N 4 Rtal l1t1tt ~· """ thb one. CALL NOW Firnplaee in !amllY rm. nelghbomood, In thl!I '1Yls, MARKET! --ew .......,
Sf2...253.5. brk., $31,!'(K), 54{)..Jn). 2 Bedroom. bft.cb O>~ti! at thia price -oor phone B~~~ =~~e~l $2;1XA:l. Down. Sharp """
OPENTll t • "s FUN TOM MOE' NEW LISTI NG O\VNER must sell. 3 bdrm•., 2 lot, 40xl18. prime""""' • jum~ otr the wall. Ltaht· Westclltt -lar;e • bed. -4 • BACK BAY LOT ?rot lnd.lcpd. Drps. crpt•1'. bedroomto.' new drape• ~ ~II ! BAYSHORES ' bath•. Pool & patio. $45,000. llurey !bit won't nlng hu ltNck aplni 2 ""th-dlnln&roomand-Oh View of mtor .. mountain&. By owner. 640-1858 ~<:18 122.llO. BKR.
Newly decorated, Cute 2 BR. Dining nn., built-ins. Fami• lull = 4H=n ~a~ Baycrt1 t addreJt. BY .Owner, old COM GR A ·WARM~-fi
cottage with neat guM;t ly rm. hrlt S37.950 ~Tl)). l;dl; location. For $3S950 Call Two-stary holne ·p1'¥ Rm home Ocean •, •An•n:, ne netr:hb;ln.
quarters .., or ??? A MUST OWNER desperate. 3 I.Oda)'. 847..eno. ' · pennimb'.Je. Full oli~ HarbOr vu " bik to water H.B. nr sch, bch, .f + ;
REAL F.sl"ATE _ EXP'D SEE. Attractive leasehold. lxodnnx. ~ baths, Pool A j --fl.I• trSFIMlOMNICD S29,.:!0,:.~ CGene V-l"Mlancf J\·2 lot lllmn, 673-9403'. ~~ Owner, DO qt
SALESMAN ASK FOR Fest ~ion. Call Sud patio. Dining rm., built-ins, 4 1idl w...u BANKER %14 Dahlia. In;.;;;;;;;:;;-'-::;:"-=:-;:-::-:"°'~
GINNY AT ·557-4130 Au~Un dls1l"111asher. FamUy rm. brk I:~~!'!',!!!!!!~~~~~ Real.ton , 833-0100 FOR ... ~~.~--· CdM O\v'NER anx.loua. 3 b:ath ~ 4 1,.;;=-;;.~"-',-=--i"'-;:-· -:;--,, CUWWELL. BANKER $21,500 51<).!1ltl. liliO Newport Center Dr ~ .., ~0~r -bdrms, pool !lo Din
1b6 faltest ~· ln the We't. ~llltors fl44.2t10, 83J.-0700 Like to trade? Our Trader'• nw tutest draw ln the Wnt. l'!!''"'!''"'!!!!"'!!!!'~-.,.·I!!' I ~ m-'r~ Apt. ~,500. rm. buitt-tM, P3dtah. •• .a Da!IY Pllot C1ul1Ded 550 Newport Center Or. Paradise column !1t tor you! ••• a Dally Pll6t Qullfled Need a "Pad"T Pl.Ace an adl ftttpl11ce lh family rm.
M . MH618· 5 Hnes, 5 da..Ytl for 5 bucks. Ad. 6'M618. --------"'--'='""-'~~~"-"~-.~Ca!~l~Ml~-m8.=----Need a "Pad_''? Place 111 ad? $46,900. 962-8865,
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* * * I ' LITTLE GREY GOOSE A 2 BR. 1 BA hOUle wanta to 9'2-4471 (;::) 546-l!Ol srow on these two R-2 kits,
!!'!!"'!'~'!!!!!!!!''!!!!!!.'!!!!'!!!! approx. fi,500, s.t. Mu1Uple
OWN£.'R sacrince, 4 bedrm1. up.1t area. Price $41,<WX>.
3-bath!J. Covered patio. 494-8025
built-ins, d ts b w a ab er, 1186 S. Coast Hwy.
firl'place ln family nn. Lagun1 Nlguol
• • . ' ' .. •' ' . . ' . .
' • •· Zl
lli [ _ ... _ )~I ~[ -~ .. -~1~~1;1 --;;;""-;;;;;.;l~;;;;/~[-~ .. ,.-...... _ ... -~I~~
SALES & LIASING
hill •rvioe tacUJt)'
Dallllal' Motor llomes
* Quick Cash * \Viii buy your property. All
cash within 72. bn. Call
00>'8SI
HOUMS Furnished 300 Houses Unfurn. 305 HouHt Unfurn. 3QS AptL Fum. 360
Lagun.sBHch
VAC . 2 Br, fl~. clean. AllO
Wilk to Wtr 2 Bt Ilse, CdM,
kids.
Ront·A·Houso 97'-1430
--l05
--------Huntlft9f0n Beach Newport Beach Costa Mesa ----1 FOR LEASE' Twt><tory, • THE BLUFFS Casa de Oro Br, 2\0 bo. Fonn&I aJnU,i, larat famlly room wtth Condomlniurn llom£l:ol AU. UTILlTIES PAID
tlrtplace. Choice localloo &t * S BR, ~ Ba. 111)' $350 Compare befan! yoo f't'nt
netpborhood near 1Chool1, * 3 BR., tam nn, DR $500 cu.,1om desJ&®<t featurln.ir;:
beacll and 1bopp1 n g . * 4 BR, 2~· ba, fam/ldtS415 e Spacious kllehen \lo'lth In.
Available 1 Feb '73. '* 3 BR. 2 ba .. VIEW S:OO direct tlghtlng
$S25/mo. Including water & OTIIERS AV All.ABLE e Separate d!.n'g area
gardmer. ls~ & lut mo. PleaAe call 111 for e Home-like storaa:e
rent & deposit. Owntt ~ your rental l'lt'eda __ •_Private patk>l'I
ent,-90-8118 ff-'963-~. 1-"~ o C10iCa aarage w/alor8l,,oe NO FEE, VACANT. !. .. ~ e Marble pullman
ff!! peNr month, fires~ & C::st ~~· t2 tufl' : ~·~ =ues . iur-
4-'W... ear new _ 1ty (...'1· ~)· Q!')J rounded \\'Ith plush Jand-
Park. 3 BRS, builttns, 1 f'\ really scaping.
BKR/OWNER 962-5511 ~!; Adult living at i!s best
EXT R.DlELY luxurious 2414 Vlsta del Oro LARGE 1 BR $190
4Bit 2BA trn1 din nn, lf'll: Nt-11.'J)Ol1 Beach 365 w Wl~o Peta .. ,., 1971 fam rm w/ tpl, Nr aehl. 644-ll.33 ANYmtE · Mn .,.....
~a:~·~ ~n Newport H•t9ht• . El Puerto Mesa Th1I immaculate 4 bC'dnn ~~!'83. , brk $36,SIX). • -·'--~----
hom. la a new listing and ~-=,:;o:"-----~ PACIFIC Wand VUiJale. 2
lhould sc.tl. ·hhrned. \VFW OWNER leaving, 4 bedrms. 2 BR, 2 BA, ocean A mtn '1m""'."21x""'••"""2"er"'."'1"'ea.:-:s"s,,..w carpt1 &: draps, new tile bat•· !lo d'"'-~ •-.,, f-sbly paint-• In & '"'· pa ' ""''ti nn., view, over1001r1--_....1, Adul~ -ok. , .... ! 1 'J'hese Are Just A Few Of eves. Aat. 3BR i_;;;;d:--chiicb-e.-;& 1 BR's-$130 & UP
;Jr.a1i11ir-Our ?.tANY RENTALS · · · 3 BR, 2 BA, elec R/0, FA pt'tl ok. Avail Feb Gth. Unfurn. & Furn, illl ~ II 11,.A REAL*FIND•. 1 •-. ht, w/ wcrpts & drw. dbl. $275. 6'5-n.3. ' All Utilities P1ld LWU• '" "" built-ins, d I 1 b washer . clu•~·--l N,-=::., .=:. ,.IL .....,;,. ...,.. ~ out. 10% ON will h,,,., thl1 F rk ............., r ....... •·~~ •-.r. ~ irPplace, tam!J.y rm. B · Ewt &: wkend 493--2175 .,.,... u..· gar, fncd, lndscpd. >dnt loc. T ti Pool & Rttttation
home today. Call for appt. S36,500 962-8965. Lid I I • ·
I ' OWNER ..._ 3 balha, 4 --• -'-'----bdrma, POOi, patio. Dlnlno 3 BR & DEN nn, built-ins. dishwasher, • 531·5111 I =1 531·5IOI !h'eolace In family nn. 8'k Ideal TamUy bom•
146,900. 9624a65. '5 Foot lot • $79,950
NEED CASH? . e 24 HOUR SERVICE e
,C/J...L us firs t -\Ve will sell
yoor property or guarantee
your equity before moving
day. CALL for lrruned. 11ppt.
96H456.
BEST BUY LOWEST PR'ICED •••
De.Para tor delight l Bedrma Home on Udo, 2 BR. +; 2
on huge pool sized lot. baths. Quiet end of the ia·
Outstanding patio' "" deck· 1"""i.. 1~05(lt)REAL TY Ing, Large pantry. Boat
g11.te. Our Best Buy price 3377 Via Lldot~l Beach
$32,5()1). CENTURY 21 R.E. 673-
842-4474.
BROKERS INC. Cottage. Crpts, drps, gar. $2'29. mo. AGT: 962-44.n or us n 19.59 l\taple AV1!., Of
I I ~ i iiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I l1~FURN. *APT•. All Util 546-81tn. 4 BR, 2 BA, fenced yard, Also garages for rent
• ":.'~~-JU"'" 4BR., 2BA. full crpt &. children v.·elcome, lease * $32 so WEEK & UP . . Pd. Quiet area. 1 child ok. drps, sealed gar, CJ ea n . S300 month 716-3534 ' I ]~ * Nice neighborhood Covered ' ' e Studio & 1 BR Apl ".
flnlndal • $175-PRIVATE! 3 Br. House. patio. $250. 846-2396 or HOUMt Furn. or • TV & Maid Service Avail
Bu1lne11 Property 154 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiii·~ Fenced for kids/pets. 846-3122. Unfurn. 310 • Phone Servic~Hld. Pool
I \VON'T LAST! e Chlldren & Pet Section CLEAN income prop, cent Buslneu * DUPLEX. 3BR, or 2BR & Newport Beach 2376 Newport Blvd., CM C.M. By owner. $45,000. E-Z Den 2 BA. new. fenced yrd, M8·9Th5 or 64$.l967
trma. 645--313) or 6U-656(). 0ee!_rtunlty ~ ~~~a::.~~i~ ~~ 53&--2914, 348-3446 3 BR, 2 BA, house, 2 blkii to NEW 1 BR's from $00.$200.
Comm.rel.I TRAVEL AGENCIES ,_,.,,_ beach. $250/mo. Adu1t> N ,_ -• & •-, -·LANDLOR-DSI . 1325-1 Br. 2 Ba FIR. Crpts, 675-5494 , r ~•u• ••~P .. Property 158 Two fully approved, In drps drps. p tio s Id ll4 E. 20th St.. C.?-.1. Oran&e County. Have been FREE RENTAL SERVICE Busharo1Ada!a: ~ ' Condominiums l-"548--0"-"13=7. _____ _
est. in bu&tneu 1958; own-BEACON RENTALS FRESHLY Pa.lnted-2Br hse Unfurn. 320 NICELY furn. Jrg. I BR.
en retiring. * 645-0111 * 1 1 1 11~1 lit end gar. Quiet. Adulti, no w w w ~, ,., mo. SPACIOUS 2 BR, 1% BA. pets. 24.12 Elden 6-\6-2768. WHY RENT & lut mo' 1'nt. 842->ll8. Cpl" ."'1>•. frplc, blt-iM. JONF.S $lOO down t and Bike to Beach . Vac 2 Br, P~l, recreation room. No D•n• Point
REAL1Y INC monthly ~en or $119 Rgar, ~ Kida/pe~ •~ ~!dreE. C:?f M~ A~ __ :_.:;.:;.;;. ___ _
ESCl946 will do It p-um lovely 2 .m._,oun ..,,_30 EidOO No. 9. $210 mo. 1st LIVE in the all new DaJ: !-p!l-llliiim--tl!o-J-~.-1-laa.th-· o-beadr.-3"-BR-a-aM-ta:sr.~2131. "' beautiful P.tarina Inn Motel
(714) 573-G210 ~t-inl~ ~ls ~drape! DEN. Dshwhr, 2 car gar. vrEW! Few steps to beach. 34902 Del · Obispo St:
aoa1W . ....,.ltrlld. floor-to--ceiling used brick B1g yard. No pets. 968-~ Spac. 2 BR, 2 BA, ll!p. din (~235.1). Kitchens, el-
..._,.._...,c.lllonM92990 firenlAl'P, Full. price S20,tl00, Irvine rm., frplc., el~ator. $485. ficiencles &. apartments, 0on'i"t•. phone today. 530 ClfH Dr. Lag. Bch. heated pool, direct dial
MOM & POP I YES W ha • Renta•• 644-1615. phones, tetevbk>n, sauna • e ve ....,. I 1 bath laundry fadlltles BUSINESS May we be ot service In rY ne meeting room clo6e to &ui
38R,2BA.3)TB)'OW11,IUl)er Price reduced. Ham-Rnlton 54&-0)22 sol.vingyourhousina;needs! 2 BR 1~ Ba New Bltns Clemente 8m Laguna
roomf at below market. ~ootaavembneytodayln burger-Taco Drive-In . e am.o Pet welc! 2 .pool' ' · • Beacll. O:lme play in our
NEAR THE BEACH
VAC 2 BR, 1% BA: deep
.,hag crpt1. S19,750. Call any·
ti.me, SCOTI' R E A LT Y
5.16-7533. Qredhill
$37,500. BKR M6-88lL Green Valley! New on Tflee~e.;! .. ,!;:'"URYh•:n'•· R~E-Br hse., tncd yrd, eocl gar, mo Mo. 642-2657 h~.l.1.... _ .. r, t I n_!_a --~.. tonn-model 1 ,.,,.,.., .... .,..~~ . . ~ bl"-fllll: sl"M.._.... ... ,., p na ........ Newport BHch ~ or de;; down aiid 2 842-4474.. • u• . ...-. M i•1ion Vle)o restaurants. S50 week and .. __ . A Rental• e 6'5-3900 up. u..;-... ;. ad and 1bedrooms up, wet U<U". Frie--NEW ling! o.nuog ui ... Westcliff Area. od "' .. u. $30.000. NEWPORT BEACH • RARE Indeed• 1 a. -BA ~ •• • ;;,,0;•\,2.,!'R;,_~ ""'" IS ott on !Int l•rwln r.•lly Inc. , Marine Contracting Finn tuie Bal 1a1 r>:.~~i. t • ~-.. • ... • • .. .,. v.·eek's rent. $39,950 ~---t 1 & • • · -~· po "SINCE -· patio, aar .. ""'or pool, xlnt -==="'----(7J4l 968-4405 r u1a1 e q u pm en t ok. ;;m mo Utll Pd. · loc $210 mo 830-5891 Fo Fa lly Fun REALTY LaHM Rumpus waterfront locaUon. 35 Yr. ALA Rent•l• e 645-3900 1st Western Bank Bldg. · · Huntington &.1ch . f m A Company With Vision • 7-Income Property 166 old oompa.ey. Space avail. · University Park, Irv ine N.wport Belch snn~,;;;," ·~::;,¥,~ uv~,:: . u~ ~~'."~,_~ Room. Pool INC<>ME UNITS: B~'i.\:"~R1u°N'ovpaR'LTR. LANDLORDS! D•Y• 522-1000 N'9ht1 BLUFFs-BAYFRDNT 'iiR. E~!!;~.E~;;;i:s
w/firepl, ceramic bench, OU!ce houn 8 AM to 6 PM Just begins to tell the story ' 675-4161 We Spectall:r.e in Newport 2% BA, cusL decor., frplc, 727 y k Blvd
&bowers. Sep. utll. nn, aOOUt thiJ Newport Beach 3-FOR $47,500. Deluxe unibl. Beach •·Corona del Mt.r e 2 BR. l%. ba. $22,j drps, CJtlll, patloL Nr. pool. or town •
watttBoftener. Walk to home. An exciting p:>oltide Good C.M. location. • Beauru Salon . Ir: Laguna. Our Re11taJ Ser-2 BR. 1., ba .. _ "-nd 1....,.... Lse. $525fmo. Owner Beach Blvd. at Yorkto.,.,·n a•...,_,,here that flowl FO -ooo N ~ CM v vice Is FREE to You! T"-' "' 'nu·....., · ~ ,,,.._....,18 ' 536-0411 beach, acbls. $44,650. CALL Irvine Terrace .... .._t' 6-R .... , • O•-..i• • ., Typewriter Sales &. Serv "# 3 BR 2 ba. S3'T5 U'IT"V• •
963-4456. 1 --------~ ~Wi1:: =:::;; ~ remttc at $980. mo in-=~s:.=·= ~J.1;1~W RENTALS ,. ed h 11'l 'u"'n-;lc-v-.,~,"11y,.-,P=a-,-,k---I :~uD~~!! 1 BR'1. 3 BR., 2 BA, lrg. fenced •lep •--.. , •----••wi'rn' 11660 In e yard, pl us boat storage yrd, ~;;: 646-nlL' ... ~ ...... mo come HOLLAND Bu1.S•l•1 673-4030 or $3248 r I SNGL level 3 BR, 2 ba end • Heated jX)O\
wlk to Balboa Island, Some going for n45,CKXl. 1716 Orange, CM 66-070 FREE unJt. Untum. $350, )Tl)' • Laundry facilities
Vu, !.1ust tell. Asking OPElf ,11.l•l'T'3RJN10ll«llCE1 28-AT $350,tm. pencils out (Sal@sm.an Needed) leue. Avail Feb. 15. can e F1'ee utililies ::~::_7~ i81l~$'11I £F·AN~TA1S~T .. 1C~1
••
2e.mlllionuv"'f'.· '~~~.:~ =~.1" ... ~~ u~a;,yi:~~ ~:~5:-~=~~ 350 i i2i~~:" "'"
NEW HOME UK 2BR, 2BA · -BEER~• N ~-Office houn 8 AM to & PM e 1 Mile to ocean 'med ' ,,.-.,... r ...... ch. Sharp 2 BR, den, 2 be., '1' blk heh & -"-"-'=.c.:..==---1
GOLFERS SPECIAL: Fae-exposed bea oeil, frplc, s Call on ftrls exciting listing! Set lor liq. lie. TermL Own-2790~ ..... BlvdU::~~ I -una ·-·-h bay. J.125 mo. yrty. 1359 E. Huntington letc:h ~uW~ ~n ~th~ ~~· !38,500. tnq~ NEWPORT SHORE 38 Urrlts, ea... Mea Ex· V leaving. 6t6-8811 Brk, ......,..,. ....,...,_. -. ~ Balboa Blvd.. Apt A1 :.;:;o;.;;;;.:,<;.:;;:...;:.::;:;;:;. __ ,
·fairA>'· 2 •tory, 4 bdrm, L BM h Walk to beach Lee 3 BR ~t condition! an. EASTBLUFF $200 -UW pd. 2 Br So. ldwnstn), 536-3518 or $14.S -$165 w/lrg fam. rm. formal dn. 99una c ., ~. 2., bath. m'i ' Priced to sell! Individual home, over 2000 Laguna. Gar. Yard. Deck. 213/863-1008. BACff,ELOR I. 1 BR. pal.Jos, rm, 3 ·baths, Spanish FP, v~r· 711 s. .,. ns. 61iii X GROSS 4 ailldrer le ~le I prlv prqet
shk rf, many ameuiliesi! AWARD cN:-~6'1-k~r'TY $31$,000 FNncW ll •l ~L,orunf:1 J~eF~ $2'J5 _ Ut11wepd, Olarming l .Costa Meu = ~th~ 1::i ~
ded. CaU Walker & * ,.01_ * LIDO REAL TY room plla t ...... e formal din-Br. Frplc. View. Steps to $160 MO .. 2 BR., stove 1 ;·bl · • o.•• Real Estate, 700 Edi~er WINNING ,,_ &7V • · -...,. -be -•• 1 i•-Cl poo ..,. es sauna .,,. B ch 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beaoh Ing room. Complete privacy •~· · " .. '"'1' -~· ""' See for ;..,...11 1130j
Ave ,' ll ' ea c till Thi rd winnl mod I OCEAN VIEW 673-7300 with ~led rear and front $300 -Utµ pd. Lr& 3 Br, 2 to cost. Agent 646-2414 . Keelson Ln. Cl b.lk-W. of
TI4/842-4455. Open eves ou~:!w:OU an thengne1!.est ~ Modern Duplex 4 Bdnn. up, COSTA MESA Builneu ~ yarda. Lovely garden. No Ba. Frplc. Car. Yard. Huntington Buch Beach -I blk N of Slater) :~3fJ.owner, 4BR 3 B,\ m o d e rn conveniences. 2 Bdrm., On. Very tara:e. Opportunity · 200 pets.$475~month. NU.VIEW RENTALS ' se-M '
trl-level. 2 Fpl's, lrg lam Close-in location, beautifully prime location. $65,«KI. 12 Units $156,500 SAN'" ri te Be Salo ~ 6'l or 546--3688 ~ 'or ~ IMMED OCCUPANCY L •-· landscaped. An absolute HORVATH REALTY 4 U It . '. • $86"""' ,,....emen auty n COTrAGE $35 mo. Abo 1 Br . • agun• -ch nn wfwet bar, form, din "Prize" of a home. Must be Ask lor Dave n I • . • . . ,_.., Great potentia.1 for owner SllVft'ado 2 Br Mob. $130 , l• Nl....t New 3 Br apt1 $250. mo.
rm. Many xtru, cul·cle.aa..:. 67S-tm 494-00lS 4 Unlh ..... $60,000 operatnr. Dwntown loc. Call BR. F~ hie $140 H«J fl!?'. C::. · Obi garap, dshwahr OCEANFRONT :.e~~-~Pll~t~~n-~etoH~~=~ed. Call BY OWNER; 4 yn., 4 Br., :!":;.;:;m. tail to RanCh on acreage.,.fno. All ~CEf'"~~ 'fu:' vle~e 331 ~H.B. Leue l ~· or ~
FOR Sale By Owner, 4 br ~~I 4 Ba., Din. Rm., Fam. Rm., . I: reEltabl~ Vac. ~ .ecik>n ~ S: ~:r_ fo~ J.urn.e ex;-Good
townbouAe. $23,495. $500 ,,,,/TOf!IZ/t ~~ts., drp. Nr. IChool. ren yrs~. m:ia-boa lsland. Rent-A-Houle . 91'9-l430 race. ~parate home. Month Newport 8ffCh security, pool, =~aior to
... unQer }i'HA approval. Swim-• eves. Phone 675-6900 673--843) 2 BR. HOUSE, newly decor-or leue $500. 49J.-6769. -beacb sweepina v I e w
pool; tennis crt, buskelball REAL ESTATE OC view duplex. dlx 4 ICE CREAM Parlon-Good ated. Fenced yd, gar. 1 THE SHORES NEW Dupll!lt, 3 br, 2 ba ~illne. Adults ~only. Lwc-
1. park. 962-5040 aft 6. 1190 Glenneyre St. br/2 BR. Sl2,000 inoome. INVESTORS locations. S7000. WW handle. child O.K. StS1 mo: + SlOO 3 BDRM: 2 BATH From 128&-s.110 Yrly. Walk ~ 11~ at the blue
ASSUME 6¥4% LOAN J 494-s473 549--0316 5304 Seashore. &G-6793. 'IWO 4-P~. x Int Lucas. Agent. 642-2290. clean-u,p lee. ~ Wallace $400. MO'. 496-8817 to bch. Encl gar. 642-3188 or ~cific. mo. SWartz
4 BR. FIR, DIR, 2 BA. 1 rPtum, only 147,500. each. 240 St., ~3589. &a.-7914. · alty. 499-3005. Payments less than rent. HARD TO FIND blk tow.: & .... ..&. Harbor $4,S . down. Call W-1418. Money to t.oen kmCH nr beach. O:i&or tv '!••• lux"~ foal""'' U 3 Areh B ~·· 2 BR., 1 Ba. ut· yon!. I Lido Isle • l140 mo i,p. •M, Wk ... ·'·" ~ deep-~ag carpet: J:'°bstructable ocean v~iw=. ~omes, S
57
•
5
00 •• 'Am • '1 t' TD L chUd 6.X.Sl55mo.~'F" ENJOY lJdo Ufe! 3 BR, 3 , • J[•J pd.49+-mlor~.""' FloCked wallpaper .. 3 Bdrm Priv. beach & clubho"--. WAUCR $ oans Wallace 546-7506. r • b ... ~ ... nee: Marina lli. $28,900. Charming 5 bdrm 3 i;th OUP.lexes nea.i: the ocean ..... .-. ~· aepL din. rm ., lrg. pa-v -' ""' Lido ltle ~y 21 R.E. 842-4474. home. Lge. den, w'tt bar. 2 Miles*~ 1:altor 1nn Be.ch Blvd., H.B. 6% % INTEREST Corona del Mir ~b. ~114'~~or a;'ri~: flrn.N---.-1'-bdrin-. -. -util--pd,-1
~~Y ~R·~· =-e~ ~~s. ~0~~~=-~ • BLUFFS x-ptan, 3 BR; ~~r S•le 110 2nd TD loans SPYGLASS 133 Via wanen, 675-2518. Apts. Furn. 360 garaee. 1 adult. No pet.a.
patio wJfrplc, dark room, $82,500. _tam nn, dlnine nn, 2 frplcs. (2) TWO vacant iota 315 & Breathtaking Vu of Ocean. ,Open &in. 1·5. -NS195. mo. r;!:_~h ·
comp. decorated, lE!e to ap-* 499--2800 * lmmac. Upgraded. $58,000. 319 Canal St, Udo Shores, Lowest rates Orange Co. Bay 4 City lJihlS. 6 BR, 811.boA Pentnsul1 ew.po:.;•.:.'..;-==---I
preclate. Owner, No agents. m· . ~;...._.. , 64H067 or 646-8824 Newport Beach, $25,000. Sattler Mtg. Co. 3% ba, Fam Rm, Dln Rm, Newport BMch ----~"0 ·"'• .,,,,......,.,.. 2 hi JhnE Burktt 11 3 car gar, I yr lse, incl -e S28WkAUp0n Ocean S29.50perWkAup.1BR,2 $34.500. 540-8932 or 847-.,,.... ~ · HARBOR View Homes -eac ot. 0 · e • 642-2171 545-06 gardener, 640-1768. $225 -2 Br. Qlanneltront. Lovely Bach • 1 BR-Rooms BR & Bachelors. Color 'TV, FOR sale by owner -S&S ---. · ~ BR + den. S54,500. Fee. 7008 Corregidoi' Rd, Van-Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. Gar Boat allp avail O:lld Maid Se I Pool Utll Pd aid .......:i The M
Park H"-ti"m"" trl-level. 4 ~-Mf.~,.11..~ 2024 Pt. Provence. Open 1-5. couver, We.ah. 98664, phone SO. of Hwf-2 BR. 1 BA. • · rv ce · • m serv., ...-v<• eaa "'' ,,...,., _,,.,...._...,........ (208)695.2957 CONSOUDATE BJU.S Fl'p!c. Fi-cshly~nt~. ok. e CaU 675-8740 e .USN. Newport Blvd., NB.
BR, 2~ ba, formal dining __ ._.,.._ Private money available w/w crpl'g, , No $215 • 2 Br. 2 Ba. Udo We. BE by YouneU. Beach I. 646-9681.
nn, kitchen 00Hng area, lge * OCEAN VIEW * Newport Heights WATERFRONT, 30' lxiat slip 2ND TD'S _ ANY AMOUNT ehlldren, no pets. per Frplc. New apt.I, drps. Bay area. 2 Br. Sundeck &:IJ=B..::LK=tD-oce-on,--N-e-wjiOl-l-.1
family nn wtrough cedar 2 BR.&: den or 3 BR. 2-sty, 2 FREml AS A D ... -.. in Balboa. Lot 7 Collins Isl-Call cn4) 675-4494 Bia mo . 673-0C57. ~·-2 n. -le ..__,, aara&e. Call 6i3'-M32 Kids-pell ok. 1 Br $1Th. 2 Br pAneling & frplc. OV!'nlzed & din l\.li>J. and, 6'13-7T10. ....,.. °' ,,. '"' ""'""" lot, water llO!t.eoe.r & l''rplct., llv nn. · area 3BR 2 ba, frplc &: lrg yard • .=::o_;=.;;,:,__,=-=---IMort~ 4 BR, 2 BA, FIR. DIR, near beach., CdM. ·G&rqe: Coron• del Mar SI~ • Until July lat. purifier. Many upgradl'd wf1ocean view,· Bltn ~~· $42,950 by owner, 645-1446. TIME FOR Trust Deeds 260 frp.lc. Bltns. Comm. pool, OilldJpet ok. 1 ~--~=------t
I t F t """'"'"""~"'n du oven, d shwshr ..... U!!ll. Harbor Vu Home. "50. N"VIEW RENTALS 1 Ar. rum., -• aar. AdJ. ·-2 BR, on the •--~'pie•, ea ures. as ...,..;..--"' drapes. carp, thrwut 2 Unlver1ltv P•rk QUICK CASH $40.000 lit TO, pa1d. dwn to &13-3894. ..,.. oomp1 lhop~":r.. S1'15. 002 W/O, Yearly or :nt; mo c~~Zxn114~:0Beoo o~ ~~~~decks. A rare • 5 BR homo w1-·-•. THROUGH A $20,IXKHxlYering vacant ~ wow, new Spanlsb 3 BR., 3 673-4030 Or 49'-3248 Heliotrope. 831-lllO. mo. prkJ: • pr. 53l-5006
968--Wil. ~f!SSION IiEALTY, 494--0731 ~ .... • actt oonuTlf!2'dal propm;y Ba., nr. B1i a.ma Beach. 3 BR., N'pt ff&hta. Peta. 2 bib to.Bbl Corona Bach Apt , U f , 365
'IlUNKING or SELlJNG Need a "Pad"! Place an ad! drps. Beaut ID d I cpd . DAIL y PILOT San Juan Capl4trano, valued $400 Mo. ownrl ait 613-6510. clilldm'I OJ<. $115 Month, S160 .• n'f! UtU pd: Yrly: _: __ ._._m_. ____ I
YOUR HOft.1E1 We've sold Den'l --u !be a~I ' Gpoolr t!l!nbelt ,_ w/IWimmingball WANT AD at $45.lyOOO.aU9d% lntln 5 only 2 BR, 1 BA. CrpU. drpt, avail. Feb. lat.: tee. 2 BR. 1 iadult, oo pet. 64.>1624 2 &: 3 BR A.pta. Opt.. 115 cm hO ' ONE AT A 6 '¥"' up · I. tenn .. &' volley quarter • ue Yl'I· stove I: refria. Frpl Adults, 2 ba. apL nr. ~:J!I~ dra blt-inl From tito TIME. F;1eciimplete sales "List" it in claa~~J...:: p couru. Nr UCL $40,(0), 642 5678 10% dlAcount B r o k e r , no pets. S275/mo. 962-8449, S2Qi montb Hal Lee 2 BR apt. Immac cond. ~ 01' ~ for tnf service, call \Yalker &: Lee to Shore Results! ~ni:. 552-9035. • n4-«9.1-1154. Rltr. ~ Gtod locaUon.~Qlll 175-2663 o.
Real Estate, 7682 Edinger S17.500 2nd TD, on com-Cotta Mesi BLUFFS Condo. 3 lule aft 6pm Balbol lll1nd
Ave., H'Beach, ~. merclal property dwntwn S2:i0-BRAND NEW 3 BR., 2 bedrooma, built-in kitchen. V.JEW 2BR Apt So of ELEGANT 2 Br ,pt I
Optnevea tW S:3CI. ·s@~~lA-&i~s· San Juan Capistrano, Bath double carage pool privllepa. -2 car b!atiw~ 4mo 1JUblet. adlta , a&chw~. CO ER LOT CLEAN no.vable UT5 per month. T--·-.. -·--ro-.t. A~ bit 1ara,ae l'DOd &ref!D belt orily, call S'rrr22T9 Slept to lhop I' I ' :_rl)'. ~ 3 ~ near ne~ ~d 9% all due in 3 yean. ~,.'j(jJ;"' ;"vf;,l:',.Ava11: vitw. Town boUle dca1l!l. Costi fMN 8.15--343'1 Days: 541-1398
g,;iH """'cpt. •lo, with 10" The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuckle Owner .. .,...,..., con-""'· DsYI 1213) sn.-or i.ea.e only 1335 per month. ,;Eveo;;;•;c/Wkndo~=·7-~--1 ot cozy comfort. Priced s t r u et Io n Urll year Eves (TI4> l.f2--oWS, Broker 640-0020. 1 BR. Fum, 2 trw. cloeets, Bllbol Penln1ul1
right under S23,COO. HUR· OR l.tters of tti. wfS)),000 ba.nk de))Ollts. OCEAN FRONT-NEW 4 qu...en site bed, prlv dress--R'¥! Call Walker & Lee f:;ru,::mbled WOt<b b.. 15% dlscOunL Broke1', MESA Verde 3BR 2BA. S26Cl ixtrm. Beams. wood, rock, Ing rm. xi:ra 11'¥ roomt, encl 3 BR. 2 BA. Deluxe Apt.~ yr
Rial Estate, 7682 Edlni;ter low to form four slrnple word1. TJ.4/493-1154. SBR, new carpeting. S250 glaal. Spectacular Ir HUGE, gar w/storagc. Adult. only, lease lncl. trpte. Dln nn. S
'A:ve., H'Bea.ch, 842-4455. SBR, 2Ba., Jra, bk. yd. $225 S500/mo. Yrly. Dave no peta. balconies. Clost IO both BIY
Open evea till 8:30. I T U Q I N A I ~~1~J~0,,· s.1.~:: CElm.JRY 21 ~ 6$.tm $0615 2035 F II ~-CM" & Ocean. • oWNER traruderrea. 4 WU JMMAC 2BR duplex. Ntwly ' u •11'"'' • • ~2306 or 673-8ltt
bedrooml, 3 bath + flOOl.1 I I J I 11 ~:ie:.u~.44 Box 3' Apple redecorated. D • h I w • h , $.1~u!, BR'• on~~· FOR purt1cular people, Delx BETWEEN . Sly A Bea~ 2
PaHo. Dlnlrlg rm, built-In•. 1 pa.Ho, Laund, 5'8-6823, SU5 Mr ~213. m-3M!I mob. home. 2BR, l\t ba, BR. 2 BA. Car~.
diahwaaher. Flrepl&ee, rear
1
,
1
plua depolJt. . 7.30 to 11 AM ~ttkdays wfw ~t every rm, cornp. Call 673-6332.
llvlnlr nn. b<t 138,0lO. I B E D I A • I[ II! I LOVELY Vu ho m •, uOO , Sands, 3 Br, 2 Ba, ~ . ..,,"''::!:, 11h~ ,:'4 Coron• rlol Mar -I I' I I ---<BR.2BA, elect ldtoh, """· !n>lc ::J, ~-OWNER transfered. 4 -drpt .. $390. 962-8004, 546-3164 ;i:.ftp ' _ _r.d. bnlul crpl>,I Seuons 2359 Nwprt. ~ R00,,1Y 3 Bedroom 2 bath. Bednns + pool. 2 baths, · · -• • ... , .. , • n 1 • 1 BR. Sl.O & Sll5. l..arft, groundJloor. S350 pf.. month llltio. Dining nn, bulltin11, NICE 3 BR home, dbl car /rm. 64$-Q81, Idt"al for Bachmn. Adlilts next to park il tenn.11 call
Clilhwasher, fireplace In I f E K U L l I HOUMI Furnl.hed 300 prap, fenced yard. Pm BLUFFS BAY>"RONT only. 1993 O\urch St. M3-9S33 Bailey 673-3550 Alt-'
tam.Uy rm. Brk $35,900, . • f.cllher't odmls~ i hove 11 _1L--Island ok. S225 mo. f79..6319, Dcec. o~el 2 BR .. 2 ba. l"'B='-"'•·~--,.,..-..,·'-'-~"'l=""';,..:,;==-='---1 !162-i3n. I I' I I ' u. -East Bluff din. nn. S525 Mo.~. r, , ... -.,, Cl'Jll•, drps, bllna, • GREAT VIEW ... 2 mt. * BY Owner, Franc\aean to pay a woman hush monq. .., B 11a. L -* 3 BR or 2 I: Den 2 & Pool. Sl.35. U6 Monte .Vilt.a, Frple, bltn&. sum.dm. pool FountAlnl. 2 yrs old, I.<• 4 She'1 tho nune who keopl • r,. n -.. yrly. 4 BR & DEN DIR, Lnt yrd; I , ot<i'. ""' No. 5 . .....,,_,, ~O ... 615-353$.
Br, 2 BA. fa.mll.Y room I E L H I S lthe bobyWfll."' 1-'J.1 673-!488 lrdivtdual Home, OVtt' 2.«0 Pool_prtvI. $396. 333.i't( LRG, clean Bacb. Utll pd. 2 BR. Poot 2 s-ft'I aLllla.
'::'E.tbadrll, 11111t:lnfr~ Pa' ....... .,.,. I& I' I I I 0 -t&o dMfdo qvoOod Loguna llN<h oq. ft. Unuaual lua• 4 3 BR. 3 ea. '"'l'ldnli>'I ""°';J""· Adult ever ~ $210 mo lncld'r walti'. -· -•· br llloo., "'° -_,i, bedn>om 00' 3 • dm Family Fl'PI 'Pr1v .e.cb. Util pd. 518-, &4>-3394. 9-~ * · landlCa~ S.fl,500. 10% • "fOll ...... frOM ttep No. f be&cw. $110 -Util Pd. Ntoe ttdec. I room pl\.11 l~e ~ din-1415 'Month. Art. &15-440:> ' 2 BR. Ttailtt $125, 1 BR SO. of H~ BR, l BA. ~ra<. """" Sal • .. PRINT NUMBERED lfml$ IN r r I' r r I :0 ~1~. ~ a.. ::::oh·~,:, .,:1;;:>; 3 BEAQI -3 •• BR, Trail .... 1121. No "'"d/J>N. !>pie, Ip polio, ~
fOR al by 2 \f# THESE $QUA.RES _ • _ _ • w/garqe: Dllld/srnl pet . ards Lovely ~ No tpl, Pttlo• S2T5-400 Vea.rly. 646-t!Kl9, &0-3.115 . lndey nn. $235/mo ........
houac!s. o:.ner tot~BR. winter. ~la. ·u15'" per month.' Call ABBEY ~TY 642-n NICE 1 BR FURN 0 2 BR, frplc. new cpts • *"'
$315 lncomt. M~ fin. 1229 '8 "UNSCiAMilf" ABOVt LITTJRS I I I I I I $2'lS -1 'Br. M~ty rum. 67::..6$6.~ or1 54&-36S8, vaetnc18 COil money! flenl ~:~ 161~~ ~ t1*). Poot LN..e S2:IO. ,._. Dtlawan St.. S2,850 dwn. 1'0 GET ANSWER • _ • • • • Frpl(, pract, xlnt Joe. your hlu.le, apt., 11tott evtcythlng. 6'1S-3850.
BY OWNER 3 B 2 BA new 0tun Viflw1 • Have 10mtthlna you wa.nt to bldR;. tt,e. tluu J O..lty Pilot U.RGE clean 1 Sr., 2 Bf. BEA1JJ'IFUL loft!' WJ1t. 6
..int. <P"' ~"1><.'5222 SCRAM-LETS ANSwntS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 ~IEW.!'1~48 1 ~~.~~~ • ~~~~~!,!; ..... ~l~~'&t~~~· i~~11o. .... Nb4~ Caliente. 126.950. 96&-0140. •• 9tft
,o I
..
DAILY PILOT M....,, .llA"'1 22. 197.l
J~I -•-ul•• .. l[!J I ~ .. -1~ , ... tm•tw-ll!J 1 -lw~ I~ I -I~ I W•-~~;;;;;:.:~~~l~~~t~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Apt. Unlurn. 365 Apt. Unlurn. I :..::i==="'---"" Apto.. Aph,. •-Office -al 440 ,_ (I-Mt! 550 Cabl.notmaklne PlumlM"'
General Gonoral '_;..F;:.um;.;;.;.'.;°':;...Unfu;:;;;;:.;.;"";;..;"';;.;...;.F;:.u;;m;:•;:.'°":..;:U;;:nlu:::;m..::,...;""::.:.." COR-• DEL ~• "-"' PUMBING REPAIR i'i~iii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iii;;-iiiiiiiiiiiiimml ,. £_.__ .,.... ..,..R ~2-, ... ck G<rmallCUSTOM woodwork, I• FOR ..... whO ·-·· !:lu~tl~ llNch Hunt......, .... h A-. UllO ... ft, -~~· •• '!"'--. ~<llalll cablr<lt, -"""· aee'I ~ !'1'~ the WIUIU9.1. 1 a 2 Bdrm .• 2 ;.;.i;. •pe.ee taUoM to )'OUt c,to.. =~· .. ~ w• NP&(r:I. Vlnce l..anbou, • ba, euw>m aptL Large Nn. Jo'\LU teetUrib' Weta. etri Bnch. Ca I 61).!85.l, a.t'ter 6, 53&-'41'5 O"'RIJNS uncUutd -f7.50 VILLA MARSEILLES
SPACIOUS I A 2 BEDROOM APT,
Furn I shed & Unfurnished
Adult Living
roomt. wkte OOl!Ul vle'llrS. HIJNTllll!fON '$ A with ample partdnc · _ Sewer line to JbO' • SU. •ard•n1. si-A privacy llM NEST AJk tor Cbrlotin. l'OUND• Bill nlale mootl> .a.,....t•r • • 5fi.250:I • ~~utta. ~:rai:· ~'u: BO\'D R.F.ALTOJl.S ~ ~~ "¥w ~J· 'liLtniU oL Stwlnt1/ Alter•t1w -~pl"«· Se:l• .... '-R of ........ Spam'sh \VE'RE mo.n .. a, We need 646--""11 """_,1...... .~..... i-· * CARPENTRY *Q . &" w""'8pe;;'.-Partiati; "'""' .,.;,;.' MUil ...., Tin.;~ ·-·---"" la. A sm. 5:£.1641 Altoratlono 642414! Dishwasher color coordinated appliances -
Plush shag carpet . mirrored wardrobe doors-.
indirect lighting in ·kitcheo • breakfast bar •
---1tiu 'vate fenced-patio--plush~landsca
· g • k Bar-s.Ques -large healed poo s
& lanai. Air conditi oning .
~;..,!!50 'I'o $650 monthly. 2 Acres. Be8 klr:!k:Jlke surroundlngs. 1~ ... po,vh\e .$125, wW PEKJNGESE. t em• l e~" (MMftt-COMNt. -Nnl ... aa.-urale, ~ )'C!l" e;\P· -S ,.. neaotiate pri«. 350 *I ft April.'Ol It wblttt w/Fle& ' St..n1 trd01-~ unken Pool apar g~Sl)anlsh Fountains e.wport Retch Jo c..-......couar, Vic w· E.-i. -2ATIOULANY.&RS ",!_________~ 0 1 e • Spacious Rocuna • Separate Dining GU-3300. Paint.a, Anaheim. Call Alt Concrete Work. Brtck, MAGNETIC s I s n • ~ UPSTAIRS 2 BR. I BA, • \Valk In Closets SPACE NOW AVAILABLE 5U-l228 ~um-wt. J!94.3533. ecoooffilc•I W&f,. to ad•
Cfl>ts, drpa, trple. A<Ut.t, no e Home-like Kitchens & CablneU Westdltt Bulldtna GREY cat with red oollar CUSI'OM: CEMENT WORK vertile. SlO to t25 pair.
•
3101 So. Bristol St,. Santa Ana 557-ltOll ,. ... Im leue. 613-38)1. I BDRM. Unfurn. Sl65. Furn. $185. Col'n•>r We&tdlf1 Drivo It ,&,....loll/yellow .,,.., V~ DrlvM WALKS, . pallot.I ;.:-==-· -----COLDWELL, BANKER A CD. ~-l(onle 2 BDRM. Unfurn. '185. Furn. $215. l,!;:~~.Nowport~~ =·" Hllntlllaton, ltB. Pool ikcko. Doo. 64><1fil4 .. Tli. MANAGING AGENT ---DELUXE 2 & s Br. 2 Ba. TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, I ~Ba., 1400 sq. ft. DESK •pace aY1111able llO BLACK Jooa oat wlth PAnos, W&lllii di'!wi. Saw, CERAMIC TILE NEW A
encl a:ar, J.160 up. Rental Unfurnished $200. mo. Will provide ftunltw. r~·fowld vie, Irvine !::etert=-~ re~ remodel. Free nt. Small
Ofc, lll5 Mace Ave. ALL UTILITIES FREE at$5mo.Anlweri.Qa.wvl.ce • Ne"'PQrt Beach. • orn jcX»weloome.531r2U6. 54&-lOM. -avallable. 222 lllrett AYe., 64$-'lf72. Child CaN 1,A.::P:.:';..· .;U;;.n;..fu.;.mc;;;.. __ ....;.36.;.50 .~pt. Unfurn. 365
NEW 2 Br .. 2 "'-· dbl ..,. Walk to Hunlingtoo Center L&&una Beach. -. FND. male P<lPPY lrllh s.i. WA-[[fl]
KIDS LOVE OUR FUN 1265 ""l:.l't""~ Adults, No pets HUNTINGTON BEApl sso lf.:..U;~· H.~lde~ NTED [ 1 ula 1 t
Coron• del Mar Costa Mesa l~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii
ON TEN ACRES
Apts. furn./u.nJurn. Lease
F'ittplace / priv. patios.
Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfsl.
900 Sea Lan, Cd:\! 644·2611
\MacArthur nr Coast H\\'Y)
MOMS LOVE NEW II QUINTA H-· ,. !'111 ... fL, cptd. .... ·~y 9&M!!O alu·:ri l)yslttto&. Ttodu l.ovi"11 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;1 Newport llM<h U1 U1-.Jft ~th. prllg. ulil pd., a<ij. SMAu_ ' ' Care. My home nloh ... J\6.ll
CARPETS, DRAPES P.O. -. Mr. Wig 714' '" ~'°1'111· 6bladi 4 ll&ble .. w.nt . 2 ~ S.A. •-L w-~• f I 702
16211 P '··I•-L H B IMD-l301 'i,)!f," ~. ~ • 130 E. 5U-1691. -~-. -a Get more out or living Utls OCEA nd •rKa.... •ne, • • ., '-n"OININ rl:'C! .... w SL, u:;>1t& Me 1 a. COST
b -~-the , __ .... N a • -G om~-615-1939 A Mes& Pre-School col.LEGE atudent <o c.c >
''"' Y~-~ -·~ HARi 714 847 5441 ' bllgy lnlenection C.M. $911. • cornerl8thAMonrovla.CM -partlhneotllce:....i;, :';!just ·~n! ~ OR VIEW : • UW'a inc. ~ >Jl!ffWa w~t~~ vk:inlty Open 6:30-6. ~ 2-8. PJ.&n. clerical., .P.B.X. etc. eo.c.a
left Pool, play yird plus ''Where Congeniality C• blks. So. of San Di:fo Frw~. on Beach, DESK OR OFFICE SPACE tinaton Beach Olll ~ ~~Uc d. &G:-4050, Mesa area. Available after· nearby acuvitit'S for the Prevails"' lll btat Newport Beach loc. &: iMllU(y. • · noons 1 pm • on and Satur·
kids. 1500 square feet ot llv· Elegant apartments designed J •~l~b;'.lk:'.""'W'".,.o,.n.,.R,.o,.11,..10"".lr.;l~l~P!!a!!r!!!!!s1,.·d,.e,.L,..a,.n,.e,;,),.. ,. J !Pe~rt~ect~tor:]broker[!!!~~· =6'&-441=~"· FND: Girl'• zipper purse Contractor _ da)'s. Call Lind& 546-4478. ~Pi:!thtoo ~. bedrooml. with a Master's b'.>ucb, au-BusfMtt Rental 445 w/money. Vic. Oyater Bed NEED help al hOmeT \Vt PRE~nt:'n .,...,
8
_ Priv., perb house security, exclu-Apts., Apts., Ln. lt.S. 96&--'15.12. JACX Taulane -Repelr have Alde1, N u r 1e1, "c.n.n.i:...... ...... THE VEN DOME sive Vena.Illes Club and Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 "THE Factory" bu &bops FND yna maJe 1 a.II remod., addll I> yn. exp. Housekeepers, Computlona, z~~ ~It::• !1:-v.~: l845 Anaheim pool with unlqu.e Aquabar, avail. In the mal taflt\na black~ Vic. Centnloa. c;l'O l.Jc'd. My W13 Co. 547~. llemem&ken, UP JO h n 1 ~ 675,.~ Call M-PhiJli'nc "~" _,..,.,.. fountains and formal ear-Newport Betch Newport Be•ch trom $80/MO. Ideal tor del Mar. ~ ..-. na AddiUona Re....,.,.,.B.... 547...Q)Sl. Avail nov.·. fol-JU· "':""''"• --::::..::::::•~::,.:=0<•::....·..:~=::.::o••• ~ book store peciallt;y card v•ol"'VW.J. .. ~ -t.I 6TJ--0937. -OE E dens. All part ot the South _.._P etc' 5--h SI. Lost 555 Gerwtck & Son, Lic'd COILEGE SFrtludent :-·.-, LUX Coast's finest apartment """ • • "U<J· ...,, ~ * -M!r2170 p/time Mon-. Gen'I ofco
3 BR. below lli•'"Y· Frplc., APARTMENTS oommwtity. BEACH LIVING Newport Beach. 673-9606. LOS'!" vi~ Buabard In. -keypuncll • re1all exper. ~ ~~isev~~~rA!.~: Air Cond 1-l'plc·s 3 Swtm l Bedroom/studios from Jl95 (Now You Can Afford) !IOO Sq ft. on 17th St In Costa dian&poUa, H.B .. anan•kltl&' Or•fting 6#-UU aft 12.
ends. ming. ~ls -Heaith Spa : ~ ~ ... 9 n.rr ~usk BACHELOR (Furn) ~ $195 :sap>, -Busy Calltnt~~.t ~12/ wt~,J: ~-~altese PLANs-H~·· Re m 0 d • Hel~ Wanted. ~M & , 710 Tenrua °"""" _ Game aod ~co · ...... · .. · .. r •vm or w.slSO · ,......... Sii:1222 -••· ~w~u $100. !loom Additiom. $00 up. .. <.
2 bedroo~s ~C'.h. :!!18-Billiard. Room. 1 Bedroom . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . From $180 • • 557~ -557-9695 , r::n. uasr'iax> ::. 1 BR. From nm 2 Bed.room . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . From $230 COMMERCIAL • Industrial LOST ama11 black A white Glrdeni Accounting Clerical ,
month. ea-in13'8550-m.TR. -BR-1<-Ilen """"--·1----FFUULL-SECURITY SYSTENMl-----1 -... -· ~ lo_2l50 ............. _ f>ll.JIO-col. "' Fee Paid
NU 2 BR.. 2 BA., 1>ayv;e.., MEDITERRANEAN ON THE BLUFFS HEATED POOL or the BEACH ~~" SM ~~·or-~· N.B. PROFESSIONAL G&ni.ner, =~llkkpi' to =
Yeuly le .. e. VILLAGE AT NEWPORT Elevator Annual Lease lndustriol lloo\tal 450 ire. -. pruning, Exec.Sec. .. iioo l6Si m.9045 Adults ·ou1y, Sorry No Pets ___ .....__;;=;;_....;;;;;:1 RALPHS, CM, -lot ·Jan oprinlden, cleanup Joi.. --A(ijjl]Ciiifl'&>I Fea •
Costa Mo.. 2400 ~;iJ;'';.~~C.M. FromNewportBlvd.,turnat LAS BRISAS READY FEB 1st 1973 0. °""'" Women • lsndsc<pJnr. George, B-F/C fill!
* * * SPARKLING NEW
BAY SHADOWS
Apartments
Spacious, Light & Cheery!
ADULT LIVING
I BR's FROM $157
2 BR's FROM $177
Beaut1Iul appointment!'! in·
elude Decorator Fireplaces.
Shag Carpetin&. Private
Patios. Pool • Jacuzzi •
Volleyball rourls • Gu
BBQ's.
409 BAY St, Costa Mesa
ManOfOr Bldg E-103 * 646 3317 *
Oter 500 Ull tre!1
ana lO slttf"'~ w+th
wal~rlJlll c•t~1e I
re111on1 $tllmC lot
RENTAL OFFICE Ifospital Rood (1 block: LAGUNA N1ou'eL orpiUzation 1951. Reward. 64&-589l. l G!Ji'oWce to$.)()) above Pacific "-·-1 H~l to 5515 RIVER A VE., NEWPORT BEACH PO Boxl171 Npt Bch. GARDENING service, com-,.,, _ _,_ Typi.t ""' OPEN 9:30 4.M to 5:30 P~t ~ -., ( · M-1 I cl .. -~-~· -entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, The New Place In Newport) BLACK KITTEN 6 mos. old , Pete ean-up wm• by ex-G. Ofc (stat typlne) $SU 3 BR. 2 BA, no pets, $175 mo. Newport 811.:!'i ea. 926mt. Res. Mgr. Diane & Wm. Sbarbaugb 642-2.566 ;soo SQ._ FI'. A UP. wilt. flea collar. U'hder Vet. Perie n c e d, re Ii ab I e Free &: Fee Positions 1SltOOCMde.p~7__,10.,1s77 El Camino Telept.>ne :· (iu,) MS-0060. On San Diego Freeway care. 600 bUc. Center st., gardener. Free estimates RUTH RYAN AGENC"t .,,,, ·1 ----Call 831·1QXI C.M. 645-1291. 963-1072 or 96H832. l'193 Newport CM ......
3 Br., 2 ba apt, crpUdrpa," PARK NEWPORT -ApFh., Unf 370 FOR LEASE M·I units, 1'00 FEMALE Gennan Shephord EJG', Hawailan Gardoou. 119ll Beach, llB 84Hl611 trplc. 2515 Orange. $200. I urn. or um. & '600 sq ft Santa Ana 2 yn. Reddlah tan 1r blk Complete garden eerv.
"""" APAITMENrs l i~;-;;;"•;~;";"";-;;~~~J !N~e~w;po~rt~B~ta~c~h~-;-Owner 7lff98)-3196. back. Vic. or Vktoria & Kam&lanl, GH-4676, ACCOUNTING CLERIC 2 BrJ crpts, drps, bltna. PooL IRVINE Industrial Area, Oak. 642-23l4. 642-l33'7. t~ee Paid. Beauutul moder.ft
$145. Avail 1131. 126 MQnte On the bay * OCEANFRONT * 10,000 sq ft, dock high, LOST large beige cat vie'.. Hauling ottlce located In F&lbklll
Vista, Mgr No. 5. 646-6353. Luxury apartment IJving ov· Apt. Unfurn. 365 Lower 2 BR. winter rental spr1nklen. 541r'16:ll. Adams & Newland, H.B. Island. Great benefits I: ro.
2 •. 3 nu fl<:n & 11..., • .," erlookln" the waler, EnJov ~ Mo , _ 3 BR 2 ba ;:dO Needs medical a t t n . YARD, garage cleanups. promotes from within. Sta.ri "' .,........,......, w. .,..., ·-o .r S Cl • ....., · ..... wer ' " • R-tals Wan ...... ~ 962-Ql2. Remove trees, dirt. ivy. $450. Also Fee Position& dep. Newly redec. Avail $750,000 health spa, 7 swim· •n emente Yearly $300 mo. Agent .. , ,_ . 2/1. 'l53 Shalimar, 645--0973 ming pooh, 7 li6 hted ten-675-1972 675-4013 . . LOsr~ black Husky-type Drivewys, grading. 84'1-2666. Call Sally Hart, ~
nis courts, plut miles ot NEAR beach & town 2 BR, . WANTED: Buildnig for male dog w/white chest SKIPLOADER &: dump truck Coastal Pel'IOnnel Aa:ency,
SPARKLING 2 BR, 1 BA. no bicycle trail's, putting, shuf· lndry, gar, storage, Cable Tustin Thrift ~ ~nt. REWARD. GT3-lC81. • work. Concrete, asphalt 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM. ~b~ n~ds ~~~~ &: Oeboant. croquet._Jwdor I 's '!!·1319$160., 310 Del Mar, SC, THE ENRIQUE APl'S REWARD. white female cat, sawing, breaking. 846-1110. Account Clerk to $52.S * S'MJNNING 2 Br. 2 from $174.50 monthly; also 1 ~ · • ADULT living, no peta. with flea collar. San LOCAL moving&: hauling by Figure ap · .... call Lcrralnt
Ba. Garden A~ Pool Rec. and 2-bedroom plans and Sin Juan Capistrano Spaoous 1 bdrm apt from II iil4) Clemente. &5424. "udent. ~ ru.a.. WestclJlt
nn. no W. 1Bth SL C.IL ::-:o;xtc~ ~ ... ~ paEl~~ 2BR Slc.5. per mo. Util pd, Aliwmm•••ts LOST since Dec. I. lz& Red 5J.4-l846 or 1651~:],_!!'ncyS.A.
.. .,. •...uao ...,,,. • NEW condo/water pd. heated swl.ming pool, 2 Male Irish Setter; Housecle•nlng ~iii~)
; 2 B~ 1 BA. Mesa Verde. or balconies, c~. dra-Crpts, dips, bltins, pool patio&, Lawxtry facilities, Call 549-91112 -542-1136 ~~:-pe~t-ts. ~:th ~l~=ag,c ~ Paseo Carolina. ~-~ olairN~ LocaFwyted,,:_" Announcements -500 LOST, Udo Iale. F•maJe cat HOUSE OF CLEAN ~~d ~. Ju.st north of """"'"'u'~ .....,.,...,. ~~,...... • grey tiger ttriped. ~.. ' TifE PROFESSIONAL ~CT NOW -Repreient San.a
3 BDRM. 2 Bath _......, VMlcllFageaddeWnay°", ....., ~Tustin OL-D FURNITURE 613-41163 ~1182 CLEANl.NG SERVICE Coventry In )'l:)'ll' attL No Patio. ll70/MO. Fuhion Island at Jamboree ...,.._ .............., vi..-10% Discount w/this ad investmL No collect. Ne
Mesa del Mar. 645-1208 and San Joaquin Hilla Road. .. Furn • .or Urdum. 370 Don't throw it away yet. It 642'""24 or ... 2527 deliv. Xln't ~ to
NEW 2 BR with view. S175.
Collectiw toll
£n4l 968-356.1
Huntington Beach
* 1'10VE IN TODAY • $139 A MO.
Telephone {n4) 644-1900 ~ it's stageworthy, the Irvine l If I•) OFFICE CLEANING TOO! add to your famlly inconl& for rental information Corona dfl Mir I & Community Theater wW ••-• Phone 892-5.333 or 8.16-7831
._. ,-take it off your handa. we · Fair Price Cleaning 1 ,or"""646--0082."=~~=~~=,I
Ye•rly.S.yfront 2 ~ 2BR apts, untum annual. ~ coucbt's, cha.in, tables, Con)plete. Home Cl~ ADVERTISING SALIS
3 'Lovely new unfurn. apts. furn. until June 15. Ng!, etc. Gall Tom Titus at Floor Waxing -Windows
3 & 2 BR., 2 ha. ea.di. Pier 67J..312l. Rooms 400 557-7297 after s·o'cJock. Schools & Rug Shampoo _ WallJ Foi:merYellowPqeor~
& slip. Many extras. Immed. Costa Mesi Instructions 575 Free est, lic'd., insured azme .space expa. Male or
occupancy. ::;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;[ROOMS I'° k kl S" -· -• _1 female. Comm. only. $3»-Call: 673·3663 673-8086 Eves.• ..., w up w/ t. J[j] DOES your dog need --7--,~ $300wk.ly "ava:.Callforappt,
associated
BROK ER 3-REAL TORS
202S W llolboe. 671-3663
CONVENIENT f~ ~n. a~~~~ ...... trainina:. School fOf pups & Dedlc•ted Cleaning 1 ,::.646-0>36:,:..:;:::c·~=~~~-I
LOCATION Blvd. CM. 5 4 8. 9 7 5 5, adlt dogs, Martincrest Ken-* WE DO EVERYTHING * AN OH IO OIL CO. offers
Quiet & comfortable adult 64&-396'1. nels, 546--0989. Rets. Free est 645--2.839 opportunity for high income
luxury apartmenta 2 BACH ...... 2 biles from Personals 530 Xlnt Housecleaning PLUS cui:i bonuses, CO!l"
Only two available ~ [ lf5l 8y D~. Own Tranaportation ventlon trip& and f:rinie
2 Bedrooins &: 2 baths ~-l::r&Nt>atpe:;.ss~~ *HINDU SPIRITUALIST * s.w:. ... ...,... * 83&-0648 * benefits to mature man Jn
Park·Lik1 Surrounding * 2 WEEKS FREE * ~ &~: t!:= req'd. (UW. pd.J, Student ~tllls ~ ~ ror:! · . . Prof. Carpet Cleaning ~ !~=. ~
Qu1ET DELUXE Vista del Mesa Pool, ......, and peet;d. 53IHl366 better Professlon&I advice Also wi.-. & floe• =· 1.. F. ru.ad, -.. Am...>I
you1 "'~e1ou1 ~ew l-or
2-be61oom ap1rtment Small
pell ok. from $16S. r11rn1turt
avli,11111(. Modtl1 optn 9:00
lo 7:00. 2300 faln~w Id,,
Costa MIU. Phone: 54S-2300.
Spac. 2 & 3 Br. ln 4-pJex.
Several avail. ALL EX-
TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kida
"·elcome. From Jl39. See
?.1gr. 17311 Keel.son "B" 1
blk W. of Beach Blvd. off
Slater. 968-751D or 847-43i0.
l, 2 & 3 BR APTS OVER 62 ? ? ADULT GARDEN HO:\oIES many more fine feahfts PRIV. room t: bath 'ior on life. Uc. 'ReadingB daily. Babysitting Call Dutch 53'7-15CE can Lubricants Ol., Bea: 6911_
Pvt Patios * Htd Pool UNDER l5 ? ? ffiVINE AVE. AT MESA Resident Mgr. 645-5780 woman. Kitchen privile&eL ro · AM·lO PM. m.9136. Dayton, Ohio 4MO!.
Nr. Shop'g *Adults only IN BETWEEN?? ~ov;1~ w/depos~ts only
200
zm ELDEN AVENUE Pool. Newport area . 493-0034, 312 No. El Camioo BABYSITTING eXperl'l:.;n;;;eo<:.;m:.; .. ,_T;..:;ax"-----l;iiiii;iii;;i;iii .... iiii;.,.lilal
Also Furn .Bach. Apts 2 BR. -$144 1 r. Br. $ s::is Ugtumished or 545-1517 Real, San Clemente. mother, my home. Fncd yd, s "le T r....n
Martinique Apts. ALL trrILITIES PAID. ~f~~~:':7 1245 Fumlsbed PRIVATE room & bath. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Coo-~ ~ ~ Wlllttler ml J al .llil UICe _A• l
17i7 Santa Ana Ave., cr-.1 VILLA YORBA exercise..-. billiards, col-HA"BOR: Kitchen and laundry tident, sympathetic ·•rpor Ar t-1gr Apt ll3 646-5542 ..... privileges. Wmirina: \roman pregnancy counseling. Abor-Bathtub rel)llr • 15 Years UXALLY e " .,
142.9622 ~~-~~P~ cp~,; or llChooi SSS. 58&--0996. tion &: adoptions ref. AP· & refinishing Fee Schedule ~~!. ~:rl-.~~' "'"*!"''?F'?R'?E~S~H~A~IR~ prt patio or d<ck. 54.>4ll5S U&"'\f.~p':'J.• ~ pc::·,.= READINGS REFINISH in whlte or color W ~~ ".t,~i () f / l I
Teenager or Jnlant OK. FOR LEASE lng, $85/mo. 839-3489. Tells Pa.st, Present &. in your home or business. 642-2221 Meuage 6&9666 Jnn -"'lo e
• 2 Bdrm, 1 BA ...... $195. \Valk 3 blocks to Beach Fututt (213) 69+-1350 Fully ~o Tre. Inc.
Beaut., spacious apts • Lrg 3 BR. Apts. Newly Luxury Ba,yfront Apts. I ·G;;;"°;;;;';;;t;;;H;;;°';;;m;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;4;;15 tic. e INCOME TAX e
1 f'"e11ced yards, patios and decorated, w/w crpbs, drps. l &: 1 BR.s. $350 to $550 1 • ALCOHOUCS Anonymous. Businal Service Western
quiet pri\'acy. Adults, no hltns, except r ie fr I g . Georte WlllMtmson !!!!!!!~~~!'!!!~""'"'"' PhoOne M!"-'1217 or write * BOOKKEEPING * ProfM.....,onalmeStnaflt Services JK"t~. &12-4837. $250/~~-lmNo singles, no Realtor LA MANCHA * Prlv•te Room * P. , Box .u.w, c.osta Mesa. Full'Ull"' part. Call "·ne ess1
2lMO FuUerton St. (at Bay) pets . ....,.,.... ' * 548-6570 * Brand New Deluxe Units for SWINGING SINGLES 493-04oo. before ~n Rea90nable Rates QUl~T 11 e 1 g h b 0 rho o d 2 BR. Luxurioll3 Apts. Furn Rent now for your con· Ambulatory Lady or 1'18n Call Jim 3-9 ·PM 646-0771
overlooking Back Bay, 2 BR. or Unfurn. 2 BR + Den. OCEANTFRONT condo, 3rd sttuction allowance of 1 Good, nutritious Food. 539-3122
flC'.ated pool, v.•/w crpt'g, \\'et bar, frplc. Sauna. Pool. floor. Fantastic view ocean mo'a free rent. l BR, 1 BA Nice, cheerful atmosphere. 1---=co"u"P"L,;ES;;:::~Pe:AR"·=rlES=-$4. min. Open 9 AM-8 PM
d' p s, v.· ate r paid. JaC'.UZZi. Full recreation. nl 2 R 2 ba Ir: -'~-2 BR's & 3 BR'• * Call <" ~· * 438 N El "·-•-""al Reasonable. 24=.=. Irvine, facilities. From $205. & bay. U urn B • • Fro~m• n~. ~-•w··•··, ona-s•...i Call ~t'.? .. 9 PM JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery • """'' .. "" n.c "" HARBOR LIGl-ITS trplc1 all bltns, crpta, drps, ....... '"'""' ....,."" ~-Ori-Shampoo free Scotch-San Clemente, ~92-.6766
l\1gr Apt H. S.'8-7476. APTS. parking w / 1 e c ur it y. Garbage di8posal, all units!· """"'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'I -,,--,.~~!!?,.,,..--guard (Soll Retardanta). Janltori•I BACH. t, 2, 3 BR 16700 Say~~~· HB. Nothing like it in town! $425 Encl gar, awim'g pool. Rentals to SMre 430 Be a Hotline!' al Home Degftuer1 &. all colorl.;.;:.;:.;;.:;;..;.:;;.. ____ _
Frptc, ~ls, :;«ur1ty guards. &: util. &thl392. BBQ'i Pm acceptable. The Center will train you bri&btenen & 10 minute J E FF ' S CL E AN I N G
No prts. ~' mi. north of Huntington l'ES!! WI: TAICE PE'l'8!! GC-2007 m Scott Pl., C.M. MAN, straight, tn share 3 BR Call 642-0377, lDAM-lOPM bleach tor white carpelJI. SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL.
HARBOR GREENS Beach. Sl40. 2 BR. Bltns, 2 Weeki Free Rent too! Under New dplx nr ocean. BAI. Penin. Save JOU1' money by saving COMMERCIAL. 646-6384. 546-0371 crpts, drps, pool, play yard. Pool, Ree, Bkla. dlhwhr. Man...,nent $125 to June 15. m-.:m& Social Clul»I , . SSS me eXtra trips. W\U clean Masonry
=-=-'""'="----1 Lndry facil & carports. Cpl. 2 BR. $200. 11m. $lfiO CASA VICI'ORIA FEMALE 23 JooidnK for FIND YOURSELF liYing rm.~ dining rm. •&1:.;;~:.;:.;'------I
DELUXE: 2 Br., 1:2 Ba. & 2 sml children ok. No VIstA DEL MESA 5L'H855 l &2 Br. Furn & Unfw'n. female roommate at "&> hall $15-Any rm. $'150 8 k &Jock Studio on dead~nd street. pets. Call !H2-4664. OCEANFRONT-NEW 4 CarpetJ. drapes, D/\Y, TV Oakwood Apts, Newport. IN D~~eF couch $10. Chair $5. 15 Yrs'. rlc --Stone ~~·P8 ~~~·s1~1ctu~t~:: WALK TO BEACH bdnn. Beams, wood, rock, ant. Pool etC'.. Come By & 714.:m-.1833. DISCOVERY exp. ls what counts, not 645-8266
Carpet Service
Opposite
Orange County
Airport
HOSTESS
(Gourmet Dining Room)
Also
BUSBOY
Apply In Penon
18700 MacArthur Blvd.
Irvine, Calif.
Equal Oppor. Emplaytt · No pets. ~7154. New l & 2 br., cptJdrp., glau. Spectaudar I: HUGE. Inquire about our Move-in 3 BR. house, share w/l or 2 TI.f.835..6885 213-387-3.393 ~thod,t 1 Jf...o:.ur myaill. Painting &
d w hr . • frpl. 316 16th. $500/rno. Yrly. Dave, Allowance. 525 Victoria St. male or females.. Call ·~==;;;;:;;;;;:::;:::;::;:;;;,..:::;;;;";·;;;;::;:;;==~l..;.P:!•~po~rhe~~"l~lng~,,.,,~-1 $159.50 VERY NICE. Sep. 847·l%i . GT:>-1972, 49t-0615 at Harbor, Of. 642-8970, 60-4179 aft 5 PM. ,,, APf Manager for (6) 1 br house, 2 Br, 1 Ba. crpts. ts _ _.,, CUSTOM PAINTING units. ~ hlk ~an. Hunt
d-. adul•· only, no pe•·. NEW 1·2 & l BR. Beach ADULTS ONLY 11IE EXCITING 2 Glr ..-w share 3 Br apt Bch M'•~-l'd.:Jl'l ·~ ~ ~ A PAL .. uESA APTS t -·-· 2 blk to beach tnter/Exter. Untum. inter. · .uaie ,,_.,:e •I'"' , Refs. 2354 Santa Ana AvJ!, pls. From Sl55/per mo. 4 DELUXE 2 BR. $1U JTl m • CdM_,&Ji ~rffi., ' T d I Pa d• spec. price. Free color con· off rent~ or 637
673--0395 bl"' from water. Mgr. DMwh• frplc 1wlm -MINtrrES TO NTP. BCH. . ' ra er s ra 1se •ultlng & est Uc. 1.,. _att'"-"~===~-~-t
£.\'TRA NlCE l BR . 1 ba, Wanted. Tobin Realty, 20342 'Santa' Ana Ave. Bach. 1 &: 2 BR. From $145 Gar1t9ft for R9"t 435 Won't be underbid. 642-6005. ARCHITECTURAL
new paint, crpl!I; drps. Pool, ~33TI. S bl Pk Ne Adults, No Pets. I .... Bar-B-Q & lnfl.-v rm. Nr. 2 BR, gas & "'at('r pd. 1 child u se wport 1561 Mesa Dr. GARAGE .For Rent, 3100 W. i"nes No Wasting D""FTSMA.N shop'g & beach .• Adultsonly •. ok. No pets. From $!40. 2 br 2 Ba unturn top floor (5 blka fi'om Newport Blvd.) C.OU1 HWft _ N.B. Facing *WALLPAPER* Established Interior dn:ign
Sl.29. G46-Zi?5 )1622 Cameron St. or beau! bay view, near spa 546-9800 Udo lale, $30 per mo. Ex-When )'OU call "Mac.. 11.rm In N'pt Beach l.l'M.
842-1652. no t•lng d1•p. 644-2442 x47. EXTRA LARGE·l BJ, New ceUcnt f~ itortna boat t1" mes MS-1444 646-lm now In planned expansion,
D.'1'RA NICE 2 BR, 2 ba, OCEANFRONT -2 BR.. ,....,.. m~ •-1e<1.,r.r.L ~"ge;;:="'"-':.642-==---~ PAINTING • PAPERING, Aeeks exper1en6ed dratt. new paint, crpts, drps. Pool, SPACIOUS new 1 BR. Dsh-..... ,..., ,,., •.-:• NEW 1torage aragea, 3 w In in erto (uf Bar-B-Q & lndry rm. Nr v.-shr. frpl c, crpts, drps, gnr. Garage. $.325/mo. Yearly, From 40. Mature-· ultt, ize 1 ~e homel a> yrs. In Harbor area. Llc ::;an .t r archltec . •
shop'g, beach. Adulta only. Nr Hig Harbour. Adults. ~or Unfum. Call l.nfanl ok. No pets. 1881 ~~ ~ mllC e $i8-9766' dollars &: bonded. Refs turn. F~taJJ1~M 54l).2800., 250 $149. 641r25~. . 536-0269 or 213/434-8249 · Monrovia. ~'2174. 644--1061. • • ~2356. r, •
f'URN u I 2 BR BRAND New Oceanfront 1 BR. Adult& 1 Wk to beach. PROF. Painter, honell wort. ASSEMBLERS-Growth 0.-$140 up apac. 2 br/3 be 1~ bA · or n urn. -• Condominium. 2 BR, 2 BA ~ .... ......-..,, drPt. No -·. OfflC9 Rental ~ .., -... itv t With pool, cpt/.i-, bltn, ply---'. shag crpt'g & blt·lns. l blk 14001 ... , ... _ ... ,..,. ,...... '-----------------..11 ,.,,as, Uc'd I Ins. Int I ext. .............. .., or 1~...._...
2212 Coll~." No. 5 ... 64l427J lo stores. From $150. m1 675-=.' .ear J e a1 e . $135. Xll 14th St., 536-0352. DESK •ce avallable $S0 ·n . 30' -5th wheel Uir. '72 he est. Refs. ~2759 strons tnecban uu ""u-.
1996 Maple, No. 1 ... 642--3813 Ellil or call Mgr. 842-18.11. 2 BR. From $115. F'ift utll mo. WW provide turniturt O\f:V. 1-T. rruck. Power HAVE 10 acres In ~sno APt INTERIOR. Auembly I: ~ exp. N-
2 WEEKS FREE "~·! NEW 2 BR., 2 ha., dbl g&r. ...._, ..,.__1 _,, ~ .... at"_ "---~-'-Ian •·• mod·' Uk O>. Value $1,000 per ac . ..._ ,..,,_, ·cl-·'·-"·rs _ quired. O>le Dllrwneftt NEW 1 BR's 'from $170-n!Kl """'~ ·-$26S rt; n1111o • .c.Ql.OI •-· 1.11111•w .... PU. ..., ...... ,.. ... ~ .... _,,......., p t, uauxe ""•• e Want tncome property tn FRE"EEsiiMA""fiTES· "':.,,:......,,, C«p. ~ PlM:entla. C.ll
Nr beach .\ shop·g Adult& Br. F'rplc, shag crpt, $15.i. mo~-rl~ Avocado st. CN 646-DM. avallabl.:. 111175 Beach Blvd. nu Sl4.00J ieq. Trade for 0ra.np Co. ~ 11ughes Q'W·'"""' 60-«l80.
114 E. 20th st.'. c.~1: ~1661. !r-5 PM. Huntl""°" leech . J{untlnston Bff.cb. 6G-(321. property or !? 536-3652. Rltr, 499-1731 or 833-1355. PROF. PainUng, al.lo roots. Equal Opportunity Emplorlr-
548-0137. 2 BR. 2 BA. Dix ~·1. -·~. 3 BR. 2 BA, frplc, bH-lns. 1 """.t.D QC. "-..... ,_, acoous cell tnler/exter -
N Bch I'"~ "" "'1""' yr old, blk from beach ~ B••wo NEW ,..,...,....., · ..__., ,_., WJU. tnlde l beautiful HAVE mech. perfl'Ct '64 · · ·ASSOCIATE or partner, full
LOVELY I Br Apt. Near ear · ....... Can be furn hop' Call L """"' ttttauranta. Dlx. IJ*Ct, tm-acre view lot, Whittler Volvo 'll!flan; nn~ II iima, Llc/Inl, Fm est. ~. or p/time to managa lmall occ & uo. No pets. SIJS J..1&-5882. 2320 1'1orida. 1 g. ynn, 675-299.f QUO VADIS Ill med. occupancy, , Lowet:t area on 6-8 units in New-~ 10r mort. Need OI'-SIC Diie. -W,P. &: labor, Real Eslate ore ill N.B.
mo. Call g79-0m Irvine , 10 CllOJCE beach aptt 2, 3, 4 Luxury Gal'den #. rates. 2172 Du Pon I, ...-Beach artll.. Pollock, pn. boat moortna nr Sal· call for aam~ea & est., The 1tvR, ~. ·c;..~;______ BR. IZJS to $650 ,..-.y ua-·-·-OM1 • 2 •• --~· ·~ H -~ 2 BR. Adu!•· pet BA\' -ABBEY REA n ~-• .. ~ Aa~nl, m4l .,..,.9550. boa It. or boat. 67l-3342. angmen """'°• ATnlACTIVE Slim .,.._._ • .... no s. 2 BR. 1 1~ 133. NE\V. Bll·iM. LTY 642-3850 FD• $1•• NEWPORT CENTER .~ MEADOWS APT. 387 W. C n; H TRADE $80Q). ~ty In 4 WANT borne with acrtage PAPERHANGERS Women, to demonatrale oew
Bay SL CM 64&-0073 Pool. 10 min. from UCJ. San l1ment1 Hid Pool.Jacuzzi.sauna. Sobleue.1.or 2 dlJt view bdml tiome. CoUeiie: Padr, Qranctt / Rtvmide I San Reduced rates_ {or the oil _food . product tn ~~
' $210/mo. 642-~71 1-----'----Re.nanon Room It Morel omCf'1, llCCtttll"lal area. V..eotura, Calif fol'_ limllar Dif!goCCun~forotrice/apt. teaaon. 9-5, fi46:.:2fl9. Own trans. -P/tlmc sso· W
2 BR, unfurn. Crpta, drps, L a.. h WE care at Cua O:lntcnta. ·Adult• On1Y. • Ho Pita x a. ....... ""' .. 64f.0023 I •-··· --~ •·-I wk 613-f66.1 nuige/ow:n, refr11. No peta. agun• ueec Grt1CIOUJ llvina In quiet IMMEDIATE ef'O.'IC"" r="•' eqty n iw:ooc or ._.....,.,..,, 1.1-.-11e un ti. 43'1 F•ir Dr. EXPER. painter. Ex'ler and . , •
SltO/mo. 968-1455. LUXURiOUs--otean apt, 2 MT• "ith oeiean vu, 2 DR. 2 OCCUPANCY AP 4 or 5 of.c mrits $315. C01ta Mesa. 5t8-6113. •ZH. O>lta. .Meaa ~ Inter... Reu.. rates. Cal! AJP1yabfe to $13,4,M)Q
LARGE 2 BR, crpt&, drps, Br, 2 Ba, $425. or w/fum. BA c o Io r co. 0 rd floe fro. I>e8k ~ce ~· 13' All &laas Slc»p Sal~ SPACIOUS 2 slory 2 BR, Dick, 96&o4065 e\'t'S. Fee Paid
nr. F..tanc.ia HJ IC:hool. ~1070. cpll/drps/dswW " ranKf. 1·' 18!192blk. wnor~~Ald w ~ k It c l'I /bat • . '\ad 08 tnr, ftllly equip!, lWi BA. bll·lna, frplc, 'etc. Pl•~t•r Patch Rapalr Heavv con.ttrucYon tqer.
0 1•--~d $135 ·-m~ ";;;~;::-,,.,.-.,---,,....,..~I ~ din area, open hl'•m n · · o :i.ui;i ~3988. 548,000. value. WlD t:ttde Adult community. 'n'ade ' ' Othtr Frtt I f'et POO~ \I<;~ .... ~ • • "'.......,' ,OCEAN view leue . 2 .l 3 II Md Bead\ BJycJ.) --""'A'........i t RUTH RY•N • PETS. 2 kids ok. Rclrtl:~A D.R., 2 BA. New. Blk let heh. ct.I Ilg, pMv be.loony, rec 6: .,_....::=.=o:;;..::;;.:=....,..,-Any da.f 1' the Bl3T DAY to for aelf"-Vl!....-:Q ce:mper cw bou9e or unJIL * PATCl:I PLASl'ERING .,. .,.GI y
DshWllr. $165. mo 8911-rut\i $24S up . .tru .,.,0., 494-.......... hu1ndry. Adult •, no pets. A goad want ad ts a good P. run &n Id! Don't dtli¥· •• or ~ bout, 482-7*. 96)..2187 AU ~. Ftl'O eitirnatei 1793 Newport.CM StS-4$4 ~ ~ <'12-22511, ·~· ~""~~"~• ... :::::t·--~~-~·=un=.ctod==ay"""~=-=::::::~~ 1 • .., .................. -. ........ ~11 __ ~Call~1~~~--.r1~1'll31!!..:Be~ac~h~,Hl!!!!~~IM!'4!l!!!:!!!!I
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J[iJJ[ l[Il] ~I •"''*•·"··iiiiiiiil~fj]];l~I ~·~·"' • l[!ll l.___""1____.l[Il] I .,..,.... l[fi]1L-I ;;"""-···-~l[Il]~I ~[=.·=" -·· -~iffi .. I
Help Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wen tod, M & F 710 Help Wontld, M a. , 710 Help WIOIM, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 7IO ~Hi;eli;ei;Wi;oi;nti;od,mMm&~F;7l;D Hele Wentld, M & F 1101:::, Wanted, M & F 7ID Furniture 110
I
ADVERTISING SALES OEINERAL HELPER MAIDS WANTED NURSES' -Ul'<l'. ... L. Recept. Sec'y to $650 s~~~:;:T~ ~·-· ~ wo.;AN 10 iron, )')ur home. 6 Nat""'I Te•k captain TRAINEE 1.o uUt IA the suppl)' room. Matutt, El(per. Prerd. Full all shlftt, txcdlent work1n8: Aailt super ctiarmhQt a in· benctl.ta. E:xptr pttt'd. Full V.'ill deliver I . pick-up. ~~· llr:"vu new u'~
pick-up auPOUH from ven. 't'lrne. See Personnel Min· coudltlool. Bcrv«!~Manor tere•tl.na boss in to1-1 nat'I & pt ti.mt avail. Apply Sh@LI Penln. area. 673-{,.900 11.ft S. Redecorating $50. each. 25U
You're the one \'o'e need. if you have ambition don, he W1l1 DtCd • aood *&t'r'salt>c-. Ba)' Club ~d.a H~ .Ji~ firm. A~eet A greet client_S & Station, 11th I; lrvirv:, N.B. WORK at home-phone IJ.lllet. A Elden C.M. 645-11}12.
and don't mind working. The DAILY PILOT =~·Call foe •P-U21. w. C:OUt Hwy., NB s.n-atm'. ' ~e!d t:P&h~~t ;~:SERVICE Sta. Attendant, f7J~r8:z!_';:f~2· c.a.\1 Collect '•welry 115
needa a sales trainee to learn the newspaper 546-960l MAINTENANCE MAN NURSES Akl•lmmed ;r,j"· Irvine area. Call ~'T-6i2'2, tema.le. «l ·llr wk. APi.>'t·l~jjiijijj-ii;·ii;iiiiiiiiii J n~M<~;;;;;-;:--;;;;:-;j advertisln. g business and eventually call on · .. .. ..... & , 30 Abtaail Abbot Personnel Mlasion Viejo r.1oblle, a;oo.111 INDIAN Jewelry, 1!1ver &:
t GENER.AL OUl"-e-MWlt tYP't· ATphoa r t me D t ~~~~ lili •~: ..,. ,,.. : • ......... ,,,. 23Q W. w-~r, La Paz Rd, MlllslOn Vie"' tu....,uoise. JW1t returned DU omotive, rca.I, estate and other a•·COWlts.. 1.1 .... .....-.."""" ,., I/time. Parle Lido Conv. "6" ... "YJ_ "''"" JVo r------,,~ ., Great opporturuty tor right perso; Good ~~ J:rc:. f:1.y :~~ e1~l1c jii~-filng. awn Hosp, 466 F1aphlp, N.B. SU!le 209• S.A. SERVICE Sta. 3 Jsland MltchanciM ~ ~~1r:~1eri~~n. b~~~_:::, co~anr employe~ogram.-11-y-OU-are--t!n--pm. Mn. Wa.tton. A.lrparter toola. ~ ~/monl!L -_QE[U:Jt Nlll'IC:l.W or RECEPI'JONIST·Law Ottice. Jalesmen needed. Apply . V hl.~hi. squash Wossoah.---1n·
thus1asLic , reliable, ependable and capable Inn Hotel, 18700 MacArthur ~ ~ medical 1$tll1tant starting Typfnlt necessary;-Phone :-rcorv1ne ~~tton at-17th &l~lliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmllli-iij-j-jtfdian ;ewe1ry l'C'palred. Blvd. NB salary $500 tnfllf Mon~1'"rl ~ vnta Mesa. ' I' · N ajo Trad\ 2 4 3? apply : , Mi1lntenanc.Floor1 919--!i680. . RESIDENT'""'"· rel. couple SERVICE Sta. Allend. full & Antiques 800 av ng, ~
p GIRL FRIDAY Houseman, exper. ln ru& w tnan&~··s aptalSan P/tlme. Apply rol So. C-oa!t SCRAM LETS ~~~~ Blvd.. C. l\t , ersonnel Dept. Cuat.Serv'I'rne ~+ thamJ)OOina&Door·care.F/ OPERATORS, lingle needle Clemen,e. 4.9Ul646 Hwy, Lag.Sch. • THE DAIL y PILOT l Glrl ore. El Toro + time, ... thin. Small ""'" ovedock. Zlppenellor. Top 837-1012. s E w l N c MA c H l NE Machinery 816
330 W B P/·U·~otf'rvtne1_, day• ea.. botJp, Pacilica Hoop., pay, ""1'<'· only. Rolf's RESTAU•··-OPERATOR wanted. ANSWERS l-C.C..='-'-----"-'I , ay St., Costa Meso Pl-· .. !"" 18192 o e I aware, H.B. MIK.. 86S Productlon Pl, ~.. Call HOBART 300Amp wleder on 1-;:;i;;:W::;;:::;;-;:;-i~<.,~;;,,,:;;:::.;::..,;:;;~;_,= Leia.I Tntinee $450 .,_,...,..1 ext .. ~ NB. Bus men, waltreues &l·-~-~.,.._;;;;;;;;i;i;;;;;;;;;;;I .J ~·heel trlr. $250, 1t1elp Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wented,''M & F 710 "'''"'""'"" l4lO ~~. · -walo.n. See M"8 Mcl.<od &1;.1511 ·* Great S..neftta $416 MA I NT EN AN CE ?a.fan PAlNT Spra,yer & Belt after 4pm. S El • Quain! -Abide -.1'luke -111 AVON CALLING! RIVIERA EMPLOYMENT wanted, ~ hlil per wk. Sander Wanted ror Orange BEN BROWN'S r. ectron1c Sll"tgh -QUIIIT Miscellaneous
To help "''ilh those aft .. r-1"-EDP TECHNICAL AGENCY, INC. Salary open. Contact George ceo~atty !u .. ~~com~~~ RESTAURANT Technician/ Father'li adniission : "I STEREO, ·~ car r a rd hOliday.s bllls. A 1~1~ndid 2082 Business Ctr Dr, Ste. 290 Smith 611 Udo Park Dr, ... •w.., "' ...... ,, have to pay a .,.,'Oman hush ...,,,,
earning opportunirv •n ,,.,11r Support Specialist Irvlne 833-9410 N.8. or call after S pm, bel~till.~~ ..... ~usl '""1ne•· -311~~~th· ~.!' .. "''Y· Jr. Ennineer n1oney. She's the nuise .,.,.ho ~,.';,.,~em.,.,~ .:Ui:r:: " ,,-(Orange Co. Atrpon Ma) M&-1608 """ ftli...,. .. .,.,., rv · ........, ~...... ,. keeps the bat-." QUIET." own neighborhood. N-·-•·ach ~----·,·a1 ~1 -REST \URANT Bookk UJ receiver. Jen 1 e n air --~· = '~ GIRL ~-.. ~A -~ ~~ 'lAINTENANCE ··-~ Man ""' ~ ' eeper 540-7041 Scrv1ce1 lll5titution bas im· .... ......., ~ ..-..... " .....,.."" PART TIME wanted,• dava wk. Appl" 111 ProfreS&lve electronlc &: ANTIQUE suspeflllion speakers • tape
mediate openln&. You. will or f/tim ary open-for p It t me. Apply COUNTER GIRL penon aft 2~ pm, The ~~ve medical diagnostic t n . SHOW & SALE deck, Still brand new ln 8ABYSITl'ER u r i en 11 y
Mede(!. Mature & depend.
able, Mon·Frl, own trans.
HS area. 842-1916
B.ARA1AID wanted, various
ahl1ts open. LIUlt John'•
Inn. 20072 Santa Ana Ave,
S.A. Apply in purson
lla.m-2pnl.
BOOKKEEPERS &
ACCOUNT
CLERKS
VOLT
lnst•nt Personnel
1 Temporacy Service
1 3848. Campu1 Dr., Suite 106
1 Newport Beach ~741
1 -Equal_ ()pPQt' EmP1oYtt
Bookkeeper
AUTOMOTIVE BOOK-KEEPER
With REYNOLDS &
REYNOLDS experience.
Contact lttARIAN PAR-
RISH. DUNTON FORD, 2'J40 S. Main, Santa Ana.
BOYS ,& GIRLS
' Wanted for Newspaper routes
I ·in Corona del Mar Area.
€all Daily Pilol 642--4321.
\ '"" ~ Keith Crofts
I. BOYS, a.tttr school & Sats ..
p/tlme. Hand bills. Pizza Man, &(2.-9.152 aft 4 pm
Bus Boy Needed
Apply In Pen;on, morns
Exper. prel'd.
Alley West Restaurant
2106 w. Oceanrront, NB
CAFETERIA
PERSONNEL
Short order. ca&hlerlng &
gen'l setup & .terviet'. Ex·
per, only need apply.
8Jl.B691.
CASHIERS
/p/time positions. Gd
pay. Growth co. s Loca.
uons. METRO CAR WASH,
2950 Harbor Blvd, CM.
COLLFCTIONS & Aul&ta.nt ~Booklc:eeper w/aood AIR &:
provide teclmical lij,pport to mlnitnum"'.d ye¥' college &: SUverwoods,. 45 Fuhloii Cro·-· Restaurant, .,.,...,1 E. strumentation finn located $3,000,000 Dtsploy box. \\'as left unclaimed on
r •• 0 IV. 0 •• r •. lite ._.,.... &kill. Need 1-'and, NB Over 21. Apply in ....,...,,.,n ...... ...,., in Santa Ana •· "··•-··· ol laya\va)" Now, UM. credit vr"• a.i r""" c.oa.at Hwy, CdM. No phone . . ""'~u"""' . 100 AnUque Exhibits d 714) "9:l--050 tional hardware or IOftware creative penon to J.eam MA N AGER . :r r a i n e e only after 2 pm. Deli Shel, calla accepted. h!l'l'li All electronic techru· Long Beach Arena ept. ( 1.
probl.enu plua deveklp pro. camera.graphic art & script Salesman lpl' tut &rowing delicatessen Re 1 ta urant. c1an _w/mill. ol 5 ~ ~nalog Ocean & U>ng Beach Blvds. * AUCTION * duclion and testl IChedulirtg writin&. Phone 8am-8pm, Tile Ir Home Improvement Brookhurst & Adams, Hunt· RN Supervi!or for small & di~ltal exper. Xln t co. Jan. 25, 26, 27, 28.
ntl'tlKldl tot OS en-Corona del Mar, 675-3648. Center. Natlori\vide ex· ington Beach near Sav-On nursing home in beach area. benel1t1. Sa I a r y coin· Thun:/Fri/Sat 1 pm _ 10 pm Fine Fumlture
virorunent. Glrls~Women panslon program otfen xlnt Dru&•. Call n4: 6HIOTh tor appt, mensurate w/exper. Sunday 12 to 0 1>111. & ~Uances
Full or p/tim(I doine pleas· opportunity for advance--Pt/time help delivt'l:'in&: &: RUBBER presa operator 4 Send rmime ot background • ANTIQUES 207~ OFF AIK'tions day,' 7:30 p.m..
ant phone work in our of· ment. Ear'*1P over $10,IXXJ Picldna: up e&ra. Muat have Wlll train. Steady work: whi1abu)' requirement• to· Antiques for Interiors 3545 E Windy's Auction Barn E!!SCntial l'eQUirements in·
elude exl.enslve OS opera·
rlons experience on large
scale S/360 or S/370 equlp-
n1ent. Candidates must have
cxcelll'nt knowledge of OS
JL1. and Utilities, ,
Apply 9-12, Mon. thru Wed.
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700• Newport Center Drive
Newport Beach
EDP CONTROL
CLERK
Run EDP Service Desk, Per1orm tape librarian
tuncUons and olh<!t' Jteneral
duties as asslpled. Previous
EDP experience and/or
EDP School training prefer·
red.
Apply 9-12, Mon. thru Wed.
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Newport Center Drive
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor Emplcyer
ELECTRONIC
ASSEMBLERS
A.ssembleni needed w/PC
board & soldering exper.
Perm. employn'Jent in
pleasant stllTOWXlings.
can For Appt
Industrial Relations
(714) 494-9401
flee . Guam. salary + gen· ht year. Ph 645-1126 or ap. driven lie. Apply 1643 beneflta. Willing to work ' Cst H~'Y. CdM 6/;r-2515. zrrr.,~~ Newport, CM 646-8688
eroua: bonus. Apply, 7908 ply at 2'221 Harbor, Cotta Placentit, CM. Equal op-2nd shift alter tralning. Call Classified Ad No. 592 Behind Tony's Blda:. Mst1 .
We11bnhlster, Suite B, Mesa. portunity employer. ~ c/o Dally Pllpt Appliances 802 O'Keele & ~lerritt built-In
Wesbn. Or caU 897-5.309. MANAGER, mature female PLUMBING & Seating Saleslady P. 0. Box lSiSO ·---~-------used dish\vasher. Good work.
HOSTESS wanted. Womens awbnwear. repa.lrman. 0 n I Y ex· Grocery Checker Costa Mesa, Calif. 92&26 KEN1t10RE automatic Ing condition, Avocado. $35.
Apply 390 E. 11th St., CM. perlence need appcy In per-"1ATURE & exp'd·. wanted waaher $65. Kenmore gas Portable Sln&er s ~win i: Apply In Peraon, morn1
Alley West
2106 W. Oceanfront, NB
HOSTESSES
FR'f COOKS &
DELI MEN
Experienced, Fuil Time
Apply in Pel'!On
HOCHMAN'$
DELICATESSEN &
RESTAURANT
548-6601. ' son. Re 1 e re n c e s · 7793 to work tuU tin1e at Health dryer $45. 5'i&-86T.! or ~lach!ne \\<\th attachments,
MAN with Aul om o ti v e We It mt n It er Ave., Food Store. 40 hr. week. No TECHNICIANS 1 ~"='~-3ll=S~-=~~-._.,. $60. Phone 633-9264 after knowledg~ to work part Wl"lt:mfn5ter. Sat. night or SUn. work. GENERAL ELEC. retrig. 4:30 p.m.
time. 1.lam-4pm. POSITlON open lJllm tor Unilorm turn. r.tedical & Gd. cond. $40. 4-bumer gas
3599 Harbor Blvd. .serv. station • mecha.nlc. hoepltal benefits. Apply p d . . stove, big oven $40. 642-2'.inS. N~~ s:r· ~
at MacArthur_ ?rfust know brakea & Lindberg Nu~tion, In rear ro UCflOft aft. 5. 67Hl261.--8ayaide VJ.ll&a,
').fAN· over 25 wanted to saw alignmenl Have own hand oi Toy \liorld Store, on lo\\•· Test S80'"'"""'1"'YR=.-=gu:::arn=,-d:;:•:;l-;&c-;::-in-NB No. 275
and oaU nursery boxes &: too!a. Top wage1, comm & er level South Co&st Plaza 11tall. Late mod. all cycle
drive truck. AppQ-l7552 Ins, pd vac. Penn, Apply Shopping Center, In Costa Kenmore wu.her. 839-1178. D~u~ie~~p, ~!J15-::
Gothard H.B. 11>-4. ~~~ 604 So. Coast !desa. Ask fut AJ Ca.sbara. ~~ ~ttca:~ns"°;~ : • DLSHWASHERS, washers, Antique misc. Movina
MARKET re sea r ch in-=owyo='="'C''-7'~,.-,....,,~ *SALES POSITION per. production test techni· d~rs. reblt, guarn & 979-5333.
terviewera needed. No lell-POWER Sewln& Mach. Qpn. Occidental Life in .Newport clans to troubl~t & test delv'd. 839-7620; 546-5218. TOWLE Ster 11 n g
Ing. Exp'd. Please call Exper. pref'd, Good pay & Beach hal a posiUO? open digital data system• & Rent Washers/Dryers (Craltm\an) 8 se~, xtra '"!"""'-'-~ steady work. 1733-R tor an enthuslut.Jc in· ,.,.,w·pm-t ~ .. ~ Full main · J5M~ • .w .,...,.....u..:.. Monrovia, 01. 645-7447. dlvidual with sales exp. -.. 00" • ..-. ""' t. pieces, 7<' Ou. ·
MASSEUSE Position oHers managerial * 639-1202 * S?ECIAL 1hag carpet sale.
WlU 'ITa.ln·, ••••••••• ~ WP RESS OPEkRfAT~RS1. potential, 11Cw oommission c ~~ \\'ASHER. white Frigidaire, From $2.85 yd. Can install. omen to wor or pas 1c contract that Is tops In in-·$120. 52Jll Seasho~". Reas. Guar. 642-TIDl t:Vf!.
428 E. 17th Sll'ttt MATURE LADY molding plants. 546-3370. dustry. Initial financing & 0 iM N'pt Bch. 548-847.0. •• WATER CONDfflON-
Costa Mesa BOOKKEEP. ER. P od t ' H I direct mail program, Call F It 810 ER. Ev.rsolt, "'w $100, Equal Oppor. Eniployer r uc ion e per Mr. Freundt at 644-5600. ~ , urn ure Part time to a.s.sL't In clea.n-J. 1---------a&k:lng $350. 644..c!!S,
We need a full charge book· ing & purging or small elec· SALES OPPOR'.I'!!?iITY • • Hl.""RCULON sofa & BRADBUftY Sea.scape $250. HOUSEKEEPER, f/tlmf! fur keeper to work in our New· tro-mech. devices. Please AVAILABLE f a 10 loveseat, tables, din rm ret. Signed Braque l.Jlho $l,450. residential care facility. port Center Office. You will apt>lv, for aggressive, yo~ man. king bed, also glo\lf! 1eaU1er 0th
Xln't working ronds. Apply have ro be fully experienced GuLroN INDUSTRIES Must have executiVe cype 19700 JAMBOREE BLVD. sora & loveaeat. lt1ust sell. ers, Pvt. Pty 535-6595.
Parkhurst Retirement & able to take full charge 1644 Whittler Ave .. CM aales ability. Immediate NEWPORT BEACH .Pvl. pty. 536.fi&ll. USED BICYCLES
·Residence, 9 9 2 5 La of our books. Pleasant wort.· 642-2400 positions available{ Phone F.qu.al opportunl~ employer * * * Sola 4 loveseai newr ~,,:A,::1:,.1 ,,,•ype=•:..:*'-"6'2-=.,:1272=-
Alameda, F.V. Ing condition1 &. llSlla.l bene-Eqwtl Oppor, Employer for interview, 213:293-6101 used both for $160 ~sua.lly NE\Y klngslze Ortho bed and
HOUSEKEEPER for club, 5 fits. Salary $550 mo to start. Production Helper ask for Mr. WbileL TELLER honMi. 968-7910. ' linens only $Ziil. 586-0998.
days per wk. $2.50 per hr. Please do not apply unless Part time to uslst in Clean-SALES people wanted for 'IV
Appboa.ly Wed. 720 W. Bay AVf!, you are fully experienced. ing & purg:1ng of amall Direct Sales ·work. Good NCR PROOF OPR
Ball Please phone Joan at electro-mech. de v l c e i, pay, Flexible hrs. Newport
HOUSEKEEPIN'G &: 10me ~ for appointment. Pl apply or Seal Beach office. Commercial bank vcper. min.
oooldng. Own trans. P.1EDICAL Insurance G~TONnffiUSTRIF.s Teleprompter-An equal OI>-6mo'1req'd,NewportBeach
1Gam-8pm, Mon-Fri. $250 Secretary Receptionist with 1644 Whittier Ave., CM portunlty employer. Call area.
mo + meals 6~. M e di c a r e • Medi-cal 6'2-2400 642-3260.
HOSTESS, MATURE """'ledge. New lab in Equal Oppor. Employer SALES cl"'11, part time,
I/time. 644-2459 bet noon Fashion Iiland. &tn-Ol40 ask prefer drugstore experience,
(714) 646-7121
Mrs. Rkls for Jean. 11).-15 bra/wk. Bushard's
HouHkMper, f/tlme l\1EDICAL Sectttary-bus)' PROOF Phannacy, 494-1059., Equal Oppol'. Employer For Conv_. Hosp, 549-3061 medlcaJ. otnce. MUBt have 494-0145.
A ~£HT SHOPPING~
SEWING GUl0£ FOR THE
CAL ON ll1E GO.
I oollecUon background. Min
' • 44 yra exper. N.B. financlal
l 'organization. Xln't co. of.
·nLONIC
INDUSTRIES
Lagun• Buch
Equal Oppor. Emp)O)W
lNSPF.cl'OR-p r ~c 11 Ion experience in insurance bill·SALES =""='°'Oerk,"""",---c-a-17h"1.,.,-r, TYPISTS
...... rotary switches. In& •«•>II................... OPERATOR ...,...,,.,,~ fuU time, VOLT Cole lnalrwnent Corp, "'14 exp. prefd. Salary open. · benefit., reaa. b o u rs ,
Plac:entia, C.M. 642'-1IOll) Call 644-2323 uk for Cathy. Save-Most Uquor Stores Instant Personnel
F;qual Opportunity Employer MECHANIC. Claa A Smo1 Inc. 841 Ba.Jeer St. CM. Tem,poraey Service
For an ad In Woman's World
C1ll Mery a.th 642·5678, ut. 330
J111t 2 Parts! Fashionable Ccipel tertna oppor. tor ad-
~ent, 644-4360.
a:>oKS, Utime1 1 yr exper.
· ~. Pane Udo C.onv. Ho5p,, 466 Flagabip, NB.
COUNTER Parts Salesman
Auto, parts coun t e r
salesman :Full time, exp & .,.f roq, Hub AulD SUpply,
·2120 Harbor Blvd, CM:, ·-DELIVERY of D A IL Y
PILOT, SUNDAY ONLYL to
newspaper caniera. Ke-
qulrea the use oJ a StaOoo
Wqon or Van. Contact Mr.
HalT)' Seeley, 330 West Bay
St., Costa ltlesa.
DENTAL Rec e pt lo n I 1 t
Newport Beach Orthodontic
Office. Tqp Wary. Liberal
truw:e be-nefita. Pleasant en-
vironment. Dental exp req.
Age 25-35. No smoking.
642-:/l!lS.
QENTAL Sec'y·Bookkeeper.
bper. or college. Call
54&-3000.
Department Store
J. W. Robinson
Newport Beach
Has Opening For
PBX
Exper. 552 Multiple
P/time lncluding Sal!
A1ao Mon &: Fri Niles
~; Apply In penoo w.s pm
-#2 Fashion 1111., NH
t.Qual Oppor. Employer , I ~ n
!ISHWASHERS Needed, Beverly Me.not Conv. H1>1p,
Lquna Hilla. 337.-
DOG sroomer • t0me expt'I'. nee. Apply Tues., 113
', 4Broadway, C.M. No phone ,, ·!Ollla p!eue.
~rt Beath Financial
1 lnlUtuUon haa Im·
;· 1tnedlate •nlng. You will
• ' opttate 860-.'t70 cc.mputen
" on a 3 ~ lh1ft Nsls. Can· , dldate ·must hal(lt mlnlmum S ,..,. .. ,.,. IBM OS.
MVT exptrlence Jllua lood 11 ' :'bowledae ot JCT. and
I' J 'tifD.l.tin, "j ..
: U kzue worklDI environment
, ( l"P bentHts.
' ,ARply 9-12, Alon. lhn.t Wed.
;, : ,J:'ACIFIC MUTUAL
'
'jF ,,;~'J)Ort Centtr Orl\"I Newport Beach ' '•
1lquRI O!>POr Emplo,.....
I
Exec. Sec'y Mktng
Sec'y, Bkkpr AIA Recept!T)'plst
$650 ......... -V.• ~ llc.Tune-uplcllteduty.~ Opening Avillible SECRETARY N3:48wpoc:11&:.'c~"Sul~~1 to $800 • ply 990 E. Coast Hwy, N.B. Tustl!t &OuCollln1 Work directly W/Young exec. Equal Oppor. Employer
A+ P Construction
Acctng Ork1 Walnut
General Office
Exec. Sec'y to pres
F/C Bookkeeper
Secrolar»•
Jm ""'""'~ pcoC'f"'\h.ftlr..fCI or pluah private club. C.o. * Tn•INEE ~ 1~.v11~c: l.l\.AJl,,,LL Branch In Orange will even train bright begin-""' * ~ CCD\N""'CC'~rct..V"'V * ner wlaood lkills. Call Jan Plastic Manutacturins; Train· .......,"-L>-~...._, m We offer a fine Page, 54!Hi055, Costa! ees fur Layup & Moktlng. 4
:: Fee & Free Positions OOn starting salary, ex~ Pen10nnel A&ency, 2790 diy, tt1 ht". work week. $55.1 Exec. Secretary to $675 Harbor Blvd. CM ·Appl,y tri~(:iet.on Edler In·
Oertc Typist
Property Casualty
UndeIWriter
1425-Bkkpr/Glrl Frid.,. to S650 cellent benefit s SECRET ARIES dustrlH' loc. 2Wl Dov•, Sec'y Hite ahJ w $500 //) I package, pleasant Newport Beach.
IJSK R,,,..uTyp~t ·"' IOOO f<aker working environ-VOLT I Typist/Proofreader
Bookkeeper to S62S ment and plenty of Instant Personnt Partitlme. Cd.~·"·· ...... NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
833 Dovtr Dr., N.B.
642-3870
Inventory Contrl to $450 T Servi ...........
RecepVUte type $433 We •re now .cceptlng opportunity for ad-3848 ~~ .• Sui~ 106 Apply ~ ~raoo. ~':·
File Ork, p/time $2 hr applications for vancement. We pre-NeVt'JlOrt Beach 546-4741 saver, ewport "
4.S8 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM fer individual with Equal Oppor. EmpkJyer 1~c,,M,,.,,. """'"""'===.,,..."'
EXP'D MOLDERS
'42-1470 Part-Time at least 6 months •s.c·,. var1..,, .,,!800uPHOLSTERERS • ~'\..• '•"•" ,..... eTYVlrience. • Oerk T.vPtm . to $450 Upholstery Cutters, Exper. -w -.... ~,.... • Secys Legal MTST to l600 ~ for ~ County
BUSBOYS Pleaaa Call tor AppL * 100°/o FREE * & co':"..:"·b ,":,".' ,"/';':",
940 W. 17th• Street. JOBS
Mary Haroldson , tJ.z Reinders Agency Domina lnduatrlea. 17S72
ssa.22n """ campus 0r. Anmtrwt&. 1rv1ne. S1Hos1
Costa Mean. 642-0542. URGENTLY NEEDED
Equal Oppor1unity Employer • Secretaries
F I B ER GLAS S Hand e KeYPUDCh Operaton
Laminaton, piece work, e Solderers/wire wrap
Jtelmet mfg. apply 1m • Blllln& Oerk Typiat
Placentia, CM Irvine 540-4450
HOSTESS ) SECURITY
PACIFIC
BANK
-iiiiiiiiiii;;iii;;i,..,..,....., Anaheim SSJ..2322 0v 21
• NEVER A.FEE AT TEMPO tt
FACTORY
Announcing ***
New Lttt lndumial
Division For Women
Nelded lmmodlotely
E•perlenced
PC AsHmbler1
' Abo
Trainees For
Lite Industrial Work
' • Mn.ny u1tanments in the
Newport ~ach, lrvlnt',
Santa Ana & Co«ta Mesa
areas. ,
• Experienced & trainee
Positions. Exoellenl earn-
ings. WeekJy paychceks.
2061 Buslneu Ctr. Dr.
Irvine UJ.1441
Nr.~Co . ....,...
Temp 'Ilmporvy He!p Please Apply
Journeyman Llootype Ma-Betwn 8 & 11 am & 2 & 5 pm
chlnlst. Nia.ht position, 35
hr. wk:. Xlnt Company Ben· 18M2 MacArthur
efits, Paid Medical, Lile, (ACl'O!I• from O.C. Airport)
Unitonns, Credit Unloil, etc. Newport Beach Equal Oppor. Employer
DAILY PILOT I ~Equ;al~Op=por=. ~E~m~p)OymerZr II ~:~~:~:.~ Ask for Larry MUlu I: QUALITY CONTROL
e 642-4321 e Needed Immediately Growing local tlnn need1 In·
JUNJOR Sa!eamon' 11).JS. JRAINE£ div, w/background in com·
Earn SZ-$40 per week ret· munlcatkm e q u I p ru en t . Una new custom.en tor lhe Ability to interpn:t elec-
DAILY Pil.OT. Thia 11 not a l(l(lnlDLERS tro-mech&nlcal tunctk>n1. nenpaper route and doe1 A.HUftD Start · $'150. Call Helen
not lndude ooUecttna: or Hayes, ~. Coastal dell · ,.._R-xmatlo ts Long Term Alltpmenlt Per.t0nnel Agency, 21'90 ~ \V;"":::rk ~ Holid&)i Is Vac.tion Pay Harbor Blvd, 01
bo<as 'an.r ....., and s on VOLT Sat1Jrda1. We have orntna:• Instant Penonnel Real Estate Sales
for f'ouirt.aln Valley Soutb T ·-·-FREE HuntJncton Beach areas on-emponry """'• .... e
Iv. You must be out of 3848 Clmpua Dr •• &rlte 106 , N..,_ ll<aeh 51U141 I T I
...... ,,, 3 PM I 0 Equal Opp>r Employer L cenM " "'"' ~··· Exoerl<nceJ ' Llmltld Time Only oot.•Jven pr fo r l t Y . Famoua license coune now
NEED ' attractive women available tbn:i Tarbell Com· KEYPUNOI Operator, ex· 30-0, for up to 6wkl public pa.ny, Applicant• tuUy re-
per. Nltea, f/times. PeMK>n-rcl1t\ont project, to In-imbuned upon quallticstlon.
nel Dept., Hoq Hosp, NB. troduce: new bake eervk:e to New or exper1enced .. 1ea
KITOIEN Aide-various bn Costa Mesa residftlts. No people. Openlna:1 avallablt.
A dl)ll. Full &. p/llm4!. selltna. Uniform ~B · Complete traln1nc program.
Park Udo eocrv. Ho.p., '66 Salary. call Mtt. lahop Future manaaement oppor-
F11.phip, N.8. st>-'1S91. tunltle&. Call Mr. Sloan al
LABORATOih Vcnl.l'uJlc. Nnspt1~per c.IT1tn 832-5'40. -~ p/tlme d.,.., Person. BOYS & GIRLS TARBELL "' uelpl, Hol& lfoop1 N.B. JO 1'I and older. ~":""'&' ~.~.:: Lf.OAL SEC'Y TRNE w~';:ll:.. =d "M:;-f{EM, TOlfS
li•lm" ManuL A PP I Y {Newport &:!,~ Se~ Seay Deily Pilot, CM. , R-ptlOl!lst $450
Trabaca Products, 837-W. rtswne '° ad • • • f42.432l. • l8th SI CM • • $59 t:lo ~ Pilot. P.O. . -.. 1'09 apot h/r tlrl llfltlU~ ' Box lS60, CoN. Mesa. Calif. N\i,... N11t:l1d 0t.rett u letal tee'y, No
FRY CDOK 92;Z. tt 7 & Ofhor Sltlftt ~al °"1'<'· ""'d.
Qy.,. 21. AlusLJie clean k LVN. Rellet SU-far Top• _. ~y VEIUAAGENECYMPLOINYMENTC. neat. APPb In pmon, Surf 1111.n ttun.tnsr: home. Bttcb ,.. ... '· r--• • .. Sirloin, l930 W. Coast """-C.U 114/GHOT5 tor lmmed. ,:L *tr dtt1Y . m ButltltM Or. Dr. S...
llwy., N.B._ -. . !.f!PL ~b': Auit.~~~ J:Mne 290 ~o
}'Rl: 000,l<J.. EXPER. • MAOtlNlSf· ExoH. Op-Mon.Fri 9-5. Le 1 co u It e fO!!rp Co. Atri>ort Azwa) e BLUE uuLPHIN portunltf, Proclaloo ....... N....,. 'J«rltlr>', 3$1 -RECEPT!ONIST •
3351 Via Lido, NJ!. ~.!. -Good •ho\> pllal Jlt!:, N.B. (LobbY Paric YAClrr BROKERAGE
OR ACTIO N nd ttq'd. Co" Lido 111dg.) 612-9111$ or WEli:J<ENDS ONLY F • • • lnltrume:llt ~ 2J3t MQ..9951. Gl"Nl our cuatonMl'I, Ml"""r DAILY PILOT "'r CJll, 64 NURSE AIDE TRAINING -. Ute typ1nc. tt ,....
CLASSIFIED ADS Fqu Opportunlfl ~OJ!!' A b<alth --· 2 wlc are allrectlv•,
MAID "°"' In ll>Cltaltlo for d--· -· W<ll-tlroomed A llke poop!•,
546--2ll8 Newport Beach WAITER or waitreu (JiJ.e
SECRET ARY ~~i0:l':,,~ ~.;,,.: '""""1~.:/-
'ld•ert1•lnt/Morketint Dr, ~N1..,.1.
Great opportunity for ad· WAITRESS, exp req. Over
vancemeot fOr pel'80n who's 21, :r.tust be mature &
brigbt, organized, am-l'ellponlllble. Apply bet 3&5
bltloul, likes a challenge pm, Van De Kamp• 3099 So
a nd ca n handl e Bristol Costa.Me.a
hlulti-projec_t aasignmen.ui. w~ . Over 21
Good tpelhng, secretarial M . food •-ktail tkills and current work ex· exican "' coc a. , ,
perlence eucnUal. Back· l0:30amll:~ & 4:30p.m-
eround in marketing, ad· Apply d~y. 10.~ ani-ll.30 •
wrtislng or public rela· am & 4.40 pm-5.30 pm. Ml
Uolll helpful but willingness CAla Mexican Restaurant,
ID leun and• !lexlbWcy most 296 E. 17th SI., C.M. • ~
lmportant. Salary open. Call \V A1TRESS, I/time ' tor t
Lisa at 979-~ for in-rHklential care . facWty.
teMew. Xln't worldna: oondl. Apply
SECRETARY Pal'lthurst Retirement $600 Fl'ff Residence, 9Z La A1ameda, ,,., wor: far oUlllandln& )'OWlfl r.v. 11f,..;..., 11fe.."'T' ...
exec. of elt&b. co. tn WANTED bul bo)t, brealdaat
gJamoroua surroundings & lunch, Expu only, 23700 POP thl• pert prttty aun-
Good lk.lll1. . wu~te Dr, Lquoa dre11 on and off1 your Jt'Wln« ~IO Fee PoSJtlons lgu • machine In minutes! Just 3
RIVEmA DtPLOYMENT WANTED attnu:tlvt )Wn8 pa111 plua drawstring bows,
AGENCY. INC. Hostess. Daya, exper only, rutOed. pantll. \Vhlp up
20!l2 Buaineu Ctr Dr, Ste 290 23700 Oubho111e Dr, Lqwla teVmli ln pique &ef!'rsucker Irvine . 833-9410 Niguel. Dacron ' '
(Orange Co. Airport Areal WANTED txp'd watch Print~ Pattern 9481: NEW
Sec'y-Purchas $750 maker for lnqu1rlea. Chlldnln's Sitts 2, 4 •• 6,. 8.
Enjoy working m•' * ~2731 * S11,e 6 ~ 2~ yards 35-inch
olliCea of an u~::iu~ W E E K E N D R E CEP-tabrlc.
beautiful buildl111t? Thi• one TIONlsr -Real Eltate or-&EVF.:l'CTV·f'IVE cr.~"16 alw~• get rays. Work far lice. 9AM-fPM Sal I: Sun. for each pa.llern -add 2S
very nlce pW'ChUtng agent S2.50 per hr. Age ~35. at· ce.nll for finch pattttm for
of lqe apt =lex buUd· traclve. CALt. Mr. Butlett, Air ?tlnll and . Special Handl·
f':r. Top 'l,. Call ~1361. U.: Othel'\\'I~ thlrd<:lass
557-61221 ~bl.p.ll Abbot Per-WHO W.\N'fS TO WORK? delikttry ~ill lak~nd~
Ptnel l\leJ'IC)', 230 W, \Var-DJUVE A .. CAS! • ~" ~,.;;~~iM DAILY
ner. Suite D. S.A. Ol6bSE ~ hours. Yt"Otk PILOT . .U2. Pattern ~t ..
Jor )'O\ll'atl!, be >Wt" own 232 \Ye~ tBth St. New SECRET.RIES boll. Men or 'lll'OD\f:n. CAn ' Print ~ be ~'"1>1111 hand·c pped York. • .Y. IOU.
8!int: ~"i!t!'~nT ~ Vtt. re6ftd, Aat 2\ ~o 10: N.&MT., A,DDRF.SS ~'1th
1-i "J: not -·-. Supplement YoW' income. ZU', RUE and STYLE ..... -....... ~-~ DrlW: a cab 6 tin or mon!. a NVMJSE&.
MTST sh or l hand drly, APPlY tn penon, SEt~ MORE Q u I ck
drsfrable. Pleue send Yellow O.b'Co .• 186 E. liith P'Uh\ont Md chtlc>!e one
l'l!:IWl'le and u.lary re-S1 ., Costa MHB. tttm tree ll'()m oor
qulrtn-.enta to P . O. Box WIREMEN • to bulJd treftd. g:r1ng-Summer Cat~. All
4.182, Santa Ana mlt!. boatdo .. tett flxtum Muoi if..,, °"1> 50c.
'SEMI ambulal117 middle ttftd tcbemaUt'I. Pi.rt a: INSTANT SE\\'lNG BOOK
11ge woman DO!& helper. r / ttmt' po111tion.I avall. 1ew today, •.-ear tomorTOw.
Uvt In"°" out. 549-0'Ti'9. Xln't h! .... e bcnetllf. 3 wkl 11. .... ,.. INSTAf.tr FASllION pd voe. Pd med, dental A BOOK _ llundm:ls 0 t
life Ins. Pd '°"' ltm1 diMb. •~-u., •-~-~
""· A"""'1nl appll<atlDnl -" • ~-~· ••· dally, QOOtt"" Inc, 1M5 So. A aood wut •d la a ltOOd lno
ltfanchettcr, A n ah et m , vt1tment.
7024
""A6a T3Mti. Greet sprin&: In fashion tn
this new cape.
eo.y, cuddly.warm " "" way you feel 1n thil eMJ'--
crochel cape with mtd:
cables plus oontra1t ooklr.
Use lmftting wonted. P•lt•
em ;o"JI: M-' Sbet ll).3)
Incl. Sl:VENTY·nVI: CID'l'll
tor ea.ch pattern -add 2:1
cent1 for each pattern fix
Air Mall and Special Hand!·
Ing; otherwise thlrd-clu•
delive'ty wtU take tbree \\'~kt or ~. Send to
Allee Broob, the DAILY
PILOT, 105, Needlecraft
Dept .. Box 163, Old·~l ..
Statton, New York, N.Y.
10011. Prlnt Nt.me. •ft -.
........... 11 ....... N £ E D L E CRAFT '72!
CroctM!t. knlt. etc. me
di.rec:Uons. 50c.
JMWit MAcn:tM. 8lilA'..
Ba.sic, la,,., -pol. terns. $1.00.
l iUIWlt ~ ... -
Le'"' by plctunol Jlot • trms. $1.1)) • Com--Gift--mort than 10) dll -
SUIO. ----· SLOO.
II .Jltfy I• ... • !lat.
.noot of 1' ...... .......
50<. QtilH 9ool I .. U Dlltlra.
50<, M-.--1· 00<.
Qalllo fw _,.. -1
11 btau111ul .. -.... -CALL 642 5671 aot. :1318 Ntwp<trl lllvd., Penonnd Dep\, floa& Holp, call Mn. D<vls tor 1ppt. • C.11. "8-ml. N.8 , -'<days M, 642"16X. --------
SERVICE Sta. AUcndftnt,
f/tlme. Ltte mech. know'I.
2 '(~ min. BorlU11 f<lr llc'd .• fool: req'd) Nett ln appear. (\ff.It 259() Newport Blvd, !lq~fO!>POr.P:mJ>)oyor. 1 ..................................... ..
"
%4 t.1All't' PILOT
Office Furn1tura/
Equip. 824
ROY AL Elect typeY.'riter
SlUI. X1.n1 rond. ,.,.3612
Piano•/Organs 826
ORGAN HOBBY
Don't buy any 1 gan until
)"OU can play! Non-players
welconie to attend free v.·ork
shop6. For mformation
Contact : Tom Dieterich
, • 642-2151
Coast Music Service
Ne"·port Blvd. al Harbor
Cos1a Jl.tesa
*PIANOS*ORGANS '
Going OU! For Business
Best quality • prices . serv.
Ka\vai-Steinway-Baldwin, etc.
Player Pianos & Rolls
Rentals . . . . . . . \Ve Buy-Sell'
Daily lB-6 Sun 12-5
FIELD'S PIANOS
Costa Mesa (U41 66-JZil
*PIANOS*ORGANS*
Hammond, \\urliucr, mllJll'
others. January clearance
on oow! lbe best deals ~
always at
WoUichs Music City
South Coe.st Plua 54>-1830
WANTED: PRIVATE PAJt..
TY TO BUY PIANO FOR
CASH
Gnux1 Plano -parW me,
Excellent Condition!
$100. 644-4355
TV, Radio, HIFi,
Stereo
1-... -
Pets, General
836
][B
850
&
Monday, January 22, 1973
for used cars & trucks, just
. . . . .
OR
NEW lm
PICKUP
NO
DOWN
PAYMENT
0. A,C. .
Buy « t..eaae All ModtJs.
IMMEDIATE DWVERY
call us for t.rff estimate1. ~,,;,,=~~~===!! GROTH CHEVROLET
Yes. just $«1.00 ls the total
down paynient and only
$.l&S.60 is I.he total nwnUtly
payment incl. tax. license
aOO all ftnance charges for
72 months on approved
credil. The cash price is
S55()2.&I including tax aOO
license. Deferred payment
price is $0028.31 "'hich in-
cludes all finance charges,
sales tax & li.eense. Annual
percentage rate is 12.L
~eadJ =i Ask for sates Manager 9 ..:::.~ 18211 Bead> Bl"'--_ Himtington Beach
84.7-6087 KI 9-U'll
VW DUNE BUGGY Cash For Clean
11.IITALFLAKE Silver Manx
Body, Full·""""' """"" Used Can & y,·1.th all_ ..oew part.a. WkSe y:...o:=L~ "'heels. Tires, New Con-l"lftO.ll>
V('rtible Top, Street Legal,
629CIE
$1895
VW BAJA BUGGY
SUNROO F AM/FM,
Full-house EnRine . Tuned
E.-xhuast. \Vlde Tires &:
\\l1eels, 639CIH,
$1895
How•rd Chevrolet
Newpon Beach
Mac.Arthur Blvd A Jamboree
13U555
BILL BARRY ' entl1 ]ltttplllrts;
G.M.C. PONTIAC @lt ..:,w..:::-.=
FIAT
* 1910 850 FIAT SPIDER -Good cond. 35,500 mi $1(XXI.
64f-1S64.
HONDA
' I ) ' ),
) I
•
ANDERSON
·· IMPORTS "
~)~--;• ~2<1L•
SUNBEAM
THERE ARE OVER
100 W.AYS TO l'INANCE YOUR
CAii> ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar BaulltVlll'd
al Car• ,,_ f&. THI llllWI AT
CONNILL I UU
0
ER CHEVROLET · BUICK
-. :ms HARBOR BLVD. HARllOR llLVD.
Automatic trans. radio, '69 CUSI'OM' S.Auto., P/a, 250 heater, ecomy 6 cyl. .,.hite owrbead cam. 6 new ttres.
exterior, blue Interior. IUOO. ""--
SCll682 ~'-'-,T~-l~l~RDo:-~i $8&6
See It • You'll Buy rt
~ CLASSIC T-Blrd, ad
cond. Beat offeri Orta. Owner. QUI 60:95'17 •
VALIANT
'68 Tort.no. ~eel. condition. tMMAc. '66 VaJlant 2 ·nr.
$'195. New tJl'CI. l owrer. Sant 6 cyl, auto, RfH
494-781.l _ 12,000 E-Z mllrL c;;o;i
VRcanclca coat money! R«tt t1r't'I, new brkl. recent
your houte, •"Pt·, •tore I v~ve. job. Loob beaut. tn-bldg., etc. th.ru a (''1!,y PUot aide It out. Runt ulL Pttv. CUl!n.d Ad. pty. $511. 53M400.
'
7
r
...
•
'
n
' -. •
•
MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 22, 1973
_..__.,~g_¥fa--i:d-Bugh@S-Sul-le~s
A(ta:cla~· Paper Beports,
VOi.. ... MO. & I l•CTK>NS, '6 PAO'I
•
r
• • • • • • • • • • • •
• Leary · Arraigned on Drug · Charges
' Chargers Get
:--J~hnny-~~itas
f St.i'I Dlf;ll!!.AM'l..._ Tbe S...
Diego O>uten 2*''"" vet· eran ~ Un.Ital from
tbe llal~ Colt> for "futm.
consideraUOns," a spokesman aaid.
(See story, Page 18.)
The acquisition "fueled nnnors
that · John Hadl, 11-year·
qbarterback of the Chargers. wou!d
go to the Colts or to the Los
Angeles Rams.
Coach Harland Svare or the
Chargers called Unitas the
"greatest quarterback ever to play
the game." He played 17 years for
tbe Colts.
'Woman Attacked,
Xhought It Mate
COPENHAGEN !AP} -Police at
lirkeroed/ north of Copenhagen, are l&>k:ing for a mati -.vbo sneaked intb a
house at night and had sexual relations
wtth a woman who thought he was her
liiisband.
.'The 46-year-old woman said she did not
discover her mistake until the intruder
was climbing out of bed again and she
discovered her husband srioring in the
.~r bed, police said
.~Her shrieks woke· up t~ husband and
their three children, but the man got
'!l''Y· \
-----~~----·-
High Court
,~ives 01:tay
To Abortion ,
WASlilNGTON (AP} -The U.S. Su-
preme Court today barred states from
interfering with the decision of a woman
apd her doctor to end pregnancies within'
the fll'St three months.
In the 7 to 2 decision striking down the
Texas abortion law, Justice Harry A.
Blackmun said medical data indicate
abortion in the first three months "al-
though not without its risk, is now rela-
tively safe."
Thererore, he sai<L "any interest of the
state_ in protecting'ibe woman from an
inherently hazardous procedure .•• has
largely disappearod."
The Texa1 Jaw made it a crime to end
a pr_egnancy except "for the purpose of
saving the life of the mother." It had 00.n
challenged by a pregnant single woman
who said she could not afford to leave
_Texas to gci to another state where abor-
tionJawt were m011:Jenient. She bad the
baby whUe the case was pending.
The law had been declared invalid in
June 1970 by a three-judge federal court
In Dallas.
At the White House, pn!SldenUal press
secretary Rooald L. Ziegler said he had
no immediate comment on the court de-
cision , ana added that be doubts: there
will be any White Rouse or presidential
comtnent later "after we review it, Which
we will."
The ruli~g followed two years or de-
1iberations by the J\l!tlces. lt was based
predomina'lilY on what Blackmwt called
~rashed Way t4» Freedo111
Jerry Riccio (right) dances with one of nine hostages
on the roof of a New York building near Riccio's
sporting goods store where four gunmen had held
Worst Air Disaster
U'IT .......
nine captives. Riccio smashed through a thin wall to
a bidden stairway and led the nine to freedom after
40 hours of captivity. (See story, Page 4).
t Police are treating . the matter as a case of rape although the't woman ad-
ri!Itt•d that she willlogly lut..itted:lond
~d ' no complaints unUl she discovered 1hat her bedmate was a stnng,er.
_.Howeveii the police said the man could 1iii charge<! 1filh Violatlng 111 ancient .J?anLsb 1law that provlde3 for up to four
)'tars impri90Dmf!nt for "tricking a
1i<>man· Into, the act of love by pre!enillng
to be her Wedded tilsband."
a right of privacy. He said the right "is '--
broad enouah to encompass a woman's
decision whether or not to tenninate her
pregnancy."
Justices limo R. White and William
H. Relmqulil dlsaented. White said he
could "find polblllc In lbe language or
history of thi Conllltutloo to llllJlPOll the
Crash ·Kills 180 Moelems
'· •
' •
'
(See ~ON, l"!P I}
' .
:FeJted~
. ' . -l •
,Accouiit of Heart Atta<;k Denied
LONDON• AUPU -An ~~ ...:.i li>e"i•llst bu flowo <o London to
• 1tr'l't 11o .. ard Hughes for a luspected hJeert-alladt, tlle London Deity MiJTor
sald today. ~ . ' ' '. • . . -
An alde•for tbibil~lre t<Cluse deiiied the report. I
I ; ' • • ' '
• • · .TllK ~A,PER JAlll Hu&i.~'1,~ bee CClllbl to bed In his pent. ·
bou9e oultt ID ,.. bm cm . Iii. Part< lfllce 11Je llllldeiltt!ld spedalJst esamlned
Illini .. -. • • •
J111 Eckenloy, on -wtth tile Hugheo party llt the botel, said: "No ape.
clallll bu -Mi-. lflPeo ad Ila ii DOI Jn bed." •
IN LOS .lNOBLES, llUGllBI opoksnan Ricbard Hanna aiao said, "There
\ . ii no truth to tlU llor7 at 1111."
The Dally Mirror Ille! lflllda ii ltlll oonllned to bed Ind an etedrlc -1-
chari has bem d<llvtred lo .Jlii ninth floor suite fpr him when he II able to
use tt • •
\.'
• •
' • •
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) - A Jordanian
airliner carrying Nigerian · Moalem
pllgrlma home from a pilgrlmAge to
Mecca cralhed in northern Nigeria to-
day, killing 1ll of those •board, airport
ollidall said, In the worst air crash In
blstory.
-'l1le olllclals said 22 penons, including
the pilot and five crew membera, surviv·
ed the crash al Kuo, 520 mlles
... northwest of Lagos.
, They Ded tllrough an ' em~rgency
-pe hatch near the tail of the plane.
Otfida11 uid the coritrol tower warned
the pilot ol the Alla Air~ Eoelng 7fT/,
• which had been charter«! by NJicrl:ln
Airways, of fog and poor vilibillly. Just
belore he landed, ,
'l1le plane~"" on sravel 40 feet oil ' . 0Uictal1 said ..
It -toto illtch .iilch Sll.lpped off the-left wlltel, lhe!r ~ ... the qe of the nmwoy and bunt toto o ......
Many of the dead _...,, were
thrown from the plane and l1'elr bodies
1e1.1terecl aloog lbe runway. •
some of lbo8e who survived got out
through an emergency hatch In the tall ,
the only part. or ·the aircraft not . coo-.
sumed.1 by names.
An ajrport Official i said, "The plane
was gut\ed by fire except £or the tail sec-
tion. It literally melted'.".
The worst previoua air dlaastu was the
crash at Moscow's Sheremetyev Airport
on Oct. 13, of an AeroOot Russian built
Jlyushin.Q jet, in which 176 persons died.
A Japan AirUnes plane crashed at a
DAILY PILOT · AD .
'
MA.DE TO ORDER
Have !Omethlng In sell? 'fry a DAILY
PILOT ctassilled ~I ad -they're
made to onler. Here• how one owner
ordered a buyer for his reAI estate:
R*3 CP, nr . 17th St., •CM super • renul aroa. 1'17 I
units. A.gt. m-.au m·
11.U. •
' 'l1le property wu sold the firtl day.
Give your order to a DAILY PICOT ad-
~ -dial direct 141.a71.
MOS(\OW airport on Nov. 28, tilling~ 82
perl008.
Today'• aurvlvcrs were taken to a
hospital in Kano, while the bodies o! the
dead wece laid In grlm rows ot blanketed
bundles ·on' the airport tarmac. Officlals
said many bodies had been burDed to
1keletooa.
They were to be given a mass burial
later tonight or Tuesdaf, officials sakl
The Jlight, from Jed<tah In Saudi
Arabl.o, C8lTled 198 Nigerian ~!ootem
pilgrims back from a visit to their holy
city ofi Mecca. Other pilgrim flights had
to bf-CllverU!4 to Lagos .after the airport
al Kaoo was closed .
Federal CommisslOner of Transport
RuHeR Dlklro left Lagos for Kano to ln-
vestlaate,tbe crash. Alia airlinel manag-
illg dlrec10r All Ghandour ilew froin Am-
man to 1utst.
Aut11orUJe1 aealed off the airport while
the llal: Of pulling the last of the bodlet
from the wrecklge was completed. The
flame• burned away almOJt everythlna In
the wreckage which was .not metal. ·
Police also moiinted guard around the
hospltJI rooms where the pilot and crew
were tit.en.
•
Ex-Harvard
Prof 'Quiet'
In Court
By GEORCE LEIDAL
Of lliMI o.11r ,lfrtt 111ff
A "quiet" Dr. Timothy Leary ap.
peared th.is morning in Orange County
Superior Court and was arraigned OD' 19
charges linking him to the international
drug smuggling organization the
"Brotherhood of Eterna~ Love."
Leary's attorney, George Chula, told
Judge James Turner h.is client would
waive reading or all 19 counu.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jack Ryan said
rollowing the briei court appearance this
morning, Leary was scheduled to enter
pleas to the charges at a cootinuaUon of
the arraignment this afternoon.
Ryan added there la "90me question''
whether Chula will continue to represent
the famed drug advocate during the re-
maining proceedings.
He described this morning's represen-
tation of Leary by Chula as be.ing a
"special appearance."
Leary's new girlfriend, Miss Joanna
Harcoort-Srrllth, aald last week Beverly
Hills attorney Gregson Bautzer would de-
fend the former Harvard lecturer.
Chula represented Leary during hil
1970 trial in Orange County. That acUon
resulted in Leary being convicted of ·
possession of marijuana. Laguna Beach
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell arrested Leary,
his wife Rosemary and his ICl"I John, on
Dec. 26, 1968 after discovering-a quantity
of pot in the family's ttatlon wagoo.
parked· aloog woodly Woodland Drive.
Mrs. Leary'• wbertdoutl aren't known.
1be ••tune in, turn on and drop out"
(See LEARY, Pap I}
•
MOOl!y SUMY on Tuetday, with ~lgblly wanner ~peni!ures along
the Orange Cout. 1lI8hs ol (fl are
expected, with gusty northeast
winds warming the air sllgttUy.
Lows tonight 3MO.
~SIDE TODAY .
Susan SnJlder woa watching
Preaid(n' Nizon dance with .hi.s
wife, when oU of a sudden, the
croibd 1urged forward, forcing
ht• &.to hil arm.s. 'I'm. JM1"'J)riltd
1 dld"'t 1Qint °" the apot/ IM
iokt' ......,.kid. Set fllalt01irol , •toril and photos on !'all~ 4.
3 DAILY PILOT s
Kissinger 9n lfa9
Final, ·Crucial
GMRecitlls
3.7 .Mil1ion
Vietnam Talks?
' 1-----~1 Il1l!edhuaJJilttulloMl1 ___ ,_talloul~wlth-l'nsldtol Na""8111r--t----DETROJT.'.<AP) -GOllfl:al..MOIOrlLIJb~
nounced the nic1ll today d U million
1n1 and. 1m can.for IDll_allaUoo « a
ahleid over tho llleel'inc coupllna to in-
vtnt the poalblllty d fl)'lnr alonol lodg·
Dr. Henry A. Kissinger left. today for their 23rd round ol talb.
Paria for crucial and perhaps final talks Presideilt Nixon had sent Gen. A)e1an-
wilh the Vietnamese aimed at ending the cf er Ha.lg to Saigm to · win agreement
J.J.year..ald Vietnam war. from President Nguyen Van Tbltu on the
Saljion and Washington reports said a new dralt .,._!In! agreement and today
cease-lire cou1d be lnltia1ed as early as gave ftnal lMtructions to Killlnau b&-
Wednesday, with the formal signing ctrt· fore the aecurity adviser returned to
mony a few days later. . Paris. Ralg briefed Nixon earlier oo bis
1be foreign ministers of South Vietnam talks with the Asian a1lies.
and the Viet Cong arrived in Paris with White Hoose ....,,,.. said Klllin(er
optin1islic statement!. would be prepared to lnitla.I a Vietnam
Le D.lc Tho, the principal Hanoi ne-agreement by 'Jbursday U no unexpected
gotiator, had remained in Paris ~·hen snags arise in bis talks Tuesday with Le
Kissinger new back to Washington for Due 'Ibo and Xuan Thuy, the chief North
Vietnamese DelOl\llor in Pllil.
Slie Tries Again
-To Not Have
Aiwther Cliild
Kissinger headed dlrectly from hil llnal
meeting with N-to Andrews Air Force
Base to -• pruldentW jet !or tho flight to Paris.
Today's arrivals In Paris Included two
foreign ministen -Mme. Nguyen ntl
Binh of the Viet Cong, and Tran Van Lam
of South Vietnam -and both issued op-
timistic statements. 'lbe final agreement
i3 to' be signed at foreign minister level. SYDNEY (AP) -Mrs. Janett• Prouse dri tried 17 varieties of the pill, three dlf. Bad weather forced Kissinger to ve h d to the air base by limousine rather than ~===~~evices and a a taking a btlicopter. He said nolhhJ& to
~ tlill; she 1w given birth !or the newsmen when he arrived at Andttws.
ninth time. but paused lwict at the bi....ncHrhite
"When Fred and I married In 19111 ,.. plane to wave and amlle broldly. Tiie
planned lo have only n.o cbildren," ;..i bareheaded Kissinger was pepper<d by
Mrs. l'rouse~lll, o( Newwtie, ll!I~ _a wind:driven rain bot appeared not to
north of Sydney. notice il .
"Bui iiothlng otemed lo work lo halt The While House said Kissinger woold
our personal populatloo eiplO!ion. We've confer Tltesday mmling with Tran Van
been trying to stop me having babies La!Jl and· meet Tho at 9 a.m. (midnight
since the birth of our second." PSTl. A spokesman said Kissinger would
The couple's ninth child , a girl. was be in touch with Nixon by cable but had
born today, 14 months after Mrs. Prouse no other eomment on the outlook.
underwent a sterlization opera~.. . . P.teanwbile South Vietnamese infantry-
. "ApparenUy, there wc.u ~e JOln!Jlg .~f men and armored units kept two battered Uss~e~ after UM; ope.ration, she said. I North Vie~ese regiment! pinned in ~ t intend swng anybody. The opera-deep jungles north of Saigon today while
t1on was done properly. 1 us Ai F o•~ uncled "] think of this baby u a miracle, but y,·aves O · · r orce ~ J>O,
I'm having a partial hysterect<>my this" tilt retrealing Communlslll, millllry
lime to make absolutely sure there are spotesmen said.
no more." Si% waves of heavy bombers roared
over the Michelin rubber plantation SUn-
day night and dropped more than 500 tom
of homhol on the Communm troops pull-Gunp_oint .Rapist
AssaultS Woman
··--· tng_.deeper .Jnl<>_ the. beaVY iunaies. ac-
In Laguna Beach
A Laguna Beach woman was nped at
gunpoint late Saturdaj in her narth
· Laguna borne by a man wearing a
fearsome black ski mask witb; eye and
mouth boles outlined in rtd.
An extensive search " the .... by
Laguna Beach police failed to locate the
revolver-wielding !Uspect, described as
being 20 to 30 years ol age, about sll feet
<lne inch or six feet three inches WI and
wearing faded blue .,jeans and a faded
yellow or off white shirt.
The woman, described by olfi«n as
extremely distraught by the ..p.rience,
was taken to South Coar. Ommunity
Hospital fer treatment aft.er the incident.
The incident, reported at 10: 18 p.m.
Saturday, is under investigation by the
department. Police would not release her
age.
cording lo U.S. Command ttpom.
Fighting broke out suddenly in the area
40 miles north of Saigoo Friday allemoon
when the Communist force wa caught
trymg to meal In doo<t to the capital
area to prepatt for a land-grab after a ceasefire_ •
'!be two Samit VM•Wll! !le MttalkN
thB .-ta iaillal -.ct ...,.. out.
...-e1 ... _,_In tho -q --'!la -illacth Comnnmltl 1..gi••eA walbaed about 1,0 men and
the Soadt Yll"bpnvse rlftle WU about
.... atUll .... to millllry .. 1-.
But taclbl warplanes, artillery and
auoond mills DIOYed In with Infantry re-
inloccmion1'1 and pisbed the Communiata
bock inl<> the steamy jungle alter a light
that lasted through Salunlay.
Tiie Communists oo Sunday offered in
free 130 South -prilooen woonded In the heltle. But commanders
bypassed the offer btca.,. prisorJen had
been used as bait in a IUCCt!SSful ambush
in the same area earlier Sunday, the
Saigon command said.
A Chicago pet shop is home to a chimpanzee named Bingo and his
affectionate puppy friend. The relationsbip may be short-lived though, as both are for sale.
f'ro• Pllfle l
LEARY ...
apostle appeared qW:et-in court today,
Ryan sald. He said h.! is "one of the '
coonty staff" assigned lo pro6e<Ute the
char&es againa< Leary, who is believed to
have founded the worldwide dNg smug-
gling organization. 1be Grand Jury in-
dicted Leary In AygusJ,
Leary's .court. itppearance today was in
marked contrast to his smiling, jovial
mood at Los Angeles ~11ternational
AJrpori Tburaday. Momenta alter be ....
manided by agents of the U.S. Bure.au
of Dangerou.. Drup, Leary passed by
waiting newsmen grinning broadly. An
unmarited Loi Angeles !iherif('s van slog-
ged Leary through a -dn!ncbed nub
hc.ur to Loi Angeles County Jail where be
spent a night belott beillg transferred to
Orange County Jail.
Orula was said today to be meeting
privately with Leary prior .to the af-
ternoon appearance. _ _
The charges laced by l.oary In Orange
County link him with some 50 others in-
volved In the llrotherhoocl of Eternal
Love. The Brotherhood, believed to be an
ollahoot of l<ary's League of Spiritual
DlJcovery, was responsible !or bringing
more than 1,000 JlOllllds of haahiah worth 14J million lnl<> lbe U.S. each month,
au:.horities say.
Leary's bail bas been set at $S million,
an amount equal to the bench warrant
issued for him by the county court last
AuguSI when lilt Grand Jury indictments
Quiz Disclosed
Of Prostitution
In Huntington
Huntington Beach vice officers today
continued their investigation of an alleged
prostitution ring they said h a s been
operating in the city for about Uu:ee
weeks.
The investigation first came to light
last Tburaday with the arm! of thne
women pollct allege were working out of
a house at 6762 Capstone Lane.
Officers identified the women as Judy
Ann Klusmeyer, 25, Fullertm; Helen
Marie Ryan, YT, Garden Grove, and
Cllrol Ann Domain, 'Zl' Loos Beach.
All three were arrested on suspicion or
conspiracy to commit prostitution, a
felony. 'Ibey were booked into Orange
County Jail and have since been released
on their own recognizance. Arraignment
Is scheduled Thursday in West Orange
County Judicial District Court.
Church C.Ouncil
Hits Big Finns
In& helwetn tho coupllq and the car
frame. •
In mating tho .,..,...,..,..!, GM said
II re«ived repot1s of 96 incldenlll where
stooes were JCOOPed up, resultin& in 2S
accklents in which I! injuries were re-
ported.
Involved in the recall are full..al!e 1971
and 1m models ol Chevrolets, Buicks,
Oldsmobile.s and Pootlacs.
The company said the shield would be
installed at no charge to the car owner.
It said owners would be notified In about
two weeks.
GM said that 1f one of the can ts
driven over loose gravel at speeds which
caute the car to pitch excessively, the
front frame crossmember may scoop up
loose stones or gravel from the roadway.
Some of the stones could lodge between
the 1teertng coupling and frame. cau&ng
steering interference on a left tum, the
automaker reported, adding t h a t the
stone is dislodged when t h e steering
wheel is turned to the right.
GM said ii decided to ult the owners
of S.7 million.cars lo brin& them In for
inSlallallon of the shields even though
_ only a few cart mljiht become involved.
GM said the decistoo follOftd investl-
gallom by the company and the Natlooal
lligbway Traffic Safety AdmlnlatraUon.
GM's announcement came en the· same
day that the C.euter for Auto Safety In
Washinginn urged tilt recall. Tiie center,
funded by the Consumers Union, said It
had reports of 15 crashes, with nine in-
juries, ste_mming from the steering lock-
up.
f'rom Page l
ABORTION. • •
court's judgment." ·
Rehnquist" sakl "the court's sweeping
invalidation of any restrictions on abor-
tion during the first trimester is Impos-
sible to justify. . . "
In a second 7 to 2 ruing , the court
struck down Georgia's abortion law, find-
ing three provisiOM-lo be unccmtitu-
tionat
They were that (1) In the ~ three
months the operation be performed in an
accredited hospilal, (2) that a medical
committee must give its approval and
(31 that lWo pbyaiclana must concur with
the woman's own physician that the preg..i
nancy should be terminated.
Blackmun said lhe "interposition Of a
hospital abortion committee is unduly
restrlclive of the patients' righL!I."
Summarized, the court held :
I. The states are barred from 'restrict-
ing abortions within the first three
months.
2. In this period, the abortion decision
must be lei! in the medical judgment of
the pregnant woman's own physician.
3. After the first three months, the
state, if It cbooee3, may regulate abor-
tion procedures "in way1 that m rea-
500;ably related to maternal health."
. l».ILY PUT S ..........
8-lleo111•er
The titles raged high in Laguna
Beach, but this hardy fellow
doean't seem to mind as be
waits for the waters to wash
ashore some goodies.
Kathleen Bu.sh
Succumbs at 38;
Services Slated
Rosary will be recited tonight for
Kathleen S. Bush, wile of Daily Pilot
compositor Jerome A. Bush of Santa
Ana, who died Friday. She was 38.
Mrs. Bush was a native of Maine and
' lived in Orange Cojmty for 28 years. She
was a Qi~ Seoul and Girl Scout leader
and a member of Boy Scout Tr<op 1115
Auxillaif. She a1ao wu a member of Jtf-
fers6o Elementary School Pl'A In Santa
Ana amd an active parish member Of Im-
maculate Heart of Mliry .cburch.
Sbe leav., her hUSband, three
daughters, Ann Marie, Carolyn and Mary
Kathleen: two sons, Michael and Steven,
all of the family borne at 2413 S. Rita
Way; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Jolin of Santa Ana; thr<e Bisters, Laur-
ette Kale or Hemet, Loraine Arms of
Texas and Linda Ann Elliot of Whittier.
Rosary will iJe at 8 p.m. in the Im-
maculate Heart or Mary Church, Santa
Ana. Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.ml
Tuesday, also al lmmacuJate Heart
Church. Burial will follow ln Holy
Sepulcher Cemetery, Orange.
Cause Investigated . ~down. Even with no bail, however, Leary
would return to prison. He fled the
minimum security Calilornla Men's
Colony al San Luis Obispo In September,
l!r.l. He only partially served • one lo 10
year sentence there for his Laguna
Beach conviction. Tiie fll&ht, belleved to
have been set up by the mllltaut
Weatherman organization, launched
Leary's 28-month wanderings in Europe
including stays with the Black Panthers
GENEVA (AP) -The World Council
of Churches blackllsted today 650 com·
panjes from the United States, Britain,
Holland and Switzerland for having links
with South Africa, and' announced it
baa IOld all 11'1 holdings in them.
4. In approximately the last t h r e e
months of pregnancy, the state may, if
it chooses, regulate and even prohibit
abortiOl'lll to preserve the el)>ectant
mother's llfe or health. SNOOPY APPEARS
IN ROMAN DIGS?
Beach Residents Who\
Fled Blaze Called Lucky
Huntington Beach firemen said today
lhat the four occupants of an apartment
which was completely d~stroyed by a fire
Sunday were lucky to e!Cape the blazing
residence alive.
OIANN COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
11lt Ol'lnOe C•t DAllY "II.OT, wttll ""lctl
11 cornblntd 1tM ,,._,.. ... 1:1 llUl:llllfled ~ ,... oranoe c:...-1>v11111111r11 COtNlnr. i...
nott •Hilwll •r• puol~ ....,...Y 9''""911
,,....,, fot C•t. Mela, .....,_.. .._..,
HwillnftOn BHdllfowl .. 111 Y1ll9y, LlfUNI
8-(h,. ll"'llM/Udlllt"9dl ... $111 (""""'"
Siii """" C.0"4"'"" A tll'llllt "'°lonN
lldllllft h pW1~ ....,..,.. Mil hrllllYto
n. ,r111c:11111 Pllbl!Millll Dl«!I 11 '' 111 w•
111 61,..r, C.t•. Mal, C.llrotnll. tM3'.
fto~1tf N. W1H
ll'T•ldenl Md l"ubti.tltr
J1ck ft. Curl1y
Vkt Pl'flM""t tnd: 0-.-11 MM1W
Tllo1t111 K,,.,11
'""' Tho'"'' A. Murphin•
M&nllllll t:•lfOI"
Ch1rle1 H. Loot IUch1'4 ,, Nill
Almlll'lt M.Mlllnl t:41ton
~
c.te .M9M: 1JI Wt:!.:f Slrttt H"""" kldl: JW H ltvltwff u.r,w. IMdt: m l'lnal A-..,,..... hlctu l7'11 IMdl ...,...
... CllllWltil1 "' """" ll Clmlfll ...,
~ Tll1••111 CTI 4t '4J-4U1
0 IM1 Mse:tl:I 11 '41-1671
p,_ ~ .,... ...,. ., u.-e ... di
4tW4Jt ,._ .... .,.._ °"""'" Ctit::: .... _, ...
._.,,. mt. GNNI ttttt ~"""9 ~ Ne ~ t•llt, lllWll'tllMt. ...,..,.,. ........ .,.. ... _,~ .....
_., -.......... wllMlll ............ ........ ~--· ..... diet ....... HN If C..11 M9M.
C.11""'"-' lllMcrlflltltll IW Clnilr U,61 ,......,.,., .,, !MU U.11 mlft1M'1 mllltlrf -UMl'l'llillll"·
The aP11rtment at 64-01 Warner Ave.
and Us contents, valued at $13,400, were
listed as a total loss by firemen.
Occupanl• of the apartment, Cindee
Hall, 22; her daugilter, Tiffany, 4; her
sister, Paulette Rangel, 20, and a friend,
Tim Flynn, 21, said they discovered the
fire at about 9 a.m. aM fled the: apart-
ment in their night clOthes.
A spokesman for the fire department
said the cause of the fire is under in·
vestigali.on toady.
A Navy veteran and a Marine Corps
pilot who lived In tilt adjoining apart-
ment were ~orced to scramble down their
second floor balcony to e: ape the smoke
and flames.
Phil Bisson and Lt. Joteph Durand,
both 23, said they were awakened by the
sound of sirens but when they tried to
leave through their front door, they were
driven back by the beat. smoke and
flames. Firemen said tilt pair climbed
down the balcony.
.one fireman, Craig Thomas, requlrfJd
stitches to close a cut in his hand lhat be
sldfered ohile llthllng tilt Dre.
Firemen said the apartment 'lt'BJ com-
pletely involved In flaroes when they llr·
rtved and they v.·ere able to contain the
blaze within five minutes . They said the
fire catmd some smoke damage to ad-
jacent apartments .
Peronist Murdered
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Julian MO!'-
eno, a Peroni!t labor leader and candl·
dale for political ofOce tn tho Mardi
elections, was assassinated today out.tide
his home. A police spokesman said the
· auauln fled after shooting Moreno and
his chauffeur 11s they enttred Moreno's
car.
in Algiers and In Swiaeriand, 1'han0n
and Cinally Afghanistan w!lere be was
spotted by tf.S. agents.
Leary, now 52, began bis ex·
perlmenlaUon wilb drug . litUe more than
a decade ago in a Harvard University
laboralory.
"At Harvard I was experimenting with
the sacred mushrooms of Mexico and
LSD ..• 1 was turned on to marijuana by
Harvard undergraduates in 1962," the
let:ding exponent of the drug culture ooce
told a newsman . ,
For having experimented with UD
with student volunteers', Leary said he
was "kicked out" of his lectureship poll·
tion.
At that Point in his career, Leary came
to California.
"Studenlll all over tho country """"
plckin& up on LSD as an interesting thlng
to know about. Leary wun't the only
man in the country to atart that. Matter
of fact be was kind 'of later," aa1d Dr.
Stuart Loomis, chief poychologiat at tho
Haljihl-Aahbury Free Medical Clinic in
San Francisco.
"The drufl culltllO needed a folk hen>.
Someone with bis -Leary's -kind of
credentials to say It was 'okay,' "
Loomis said last week.
LSD bu "been a whole MW We ror
me," Leary said ~teral years ago ju1t
after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned
a Texas marijuall'a conviction.
Leary hh 11\d be was born to 11a con-
servaUvt New England famlb',11 the 10n ot a Sprlnglltld MUI., dmlllt.
A deW<ll Caibi.ilc uoUI he began to
doubl hb faith while attonding Holy
crou College in Masaachuaetta, Leary
entered West Point In 1940. Four months
later he was found dnink, beat a court-
martlal charge in the incident, but felt
the academy alter being • ostri.dzed by
fellow cadets .
He attended lhe Unlventty of Alabama
for lwo yeara prior lo Jolninl lhe Aney.
Y was honorably dilcharfed.ln January,
1948.
A spokesman said the list was
clrculated among the more than 200
member churches In more than 80 COUD·
tries in an e.ffort to have them join in a
new pressure move against South
Africa's apartheid policies.
The list included virtually all in-
ternational giants, ranging from General
Motors or the United States to Britain's
Imperial Chemical Industries, · the
Netherlands' Phillips and Switzerland's
Nestle. ·
5. The stale may allow only licensed
physicians lo perform abortions and may
prohibll abortiooa by noophyalclana.
The court also:
-Agreed to review a 1972 New York
law providing varlouS !onna ot assistance
to parochial schxlls and the parents of
children attending them. (See story, Page 3)
-Rejected an appeal by five Irl!h-
Americana who were held In contempt
for refusing to help a grand jury in Texas
Jnvestigate possible weapons tbipments
!<> Northern Ireland.
ROME (AP) -Did the -ancient
Romans have their Snoopy, toot
Yes, said Rome's ll Giomale d'Italia
today with a headline: "Snoopy Was a
Roman."
Archeologists working under the
Basilica of St. Mary Major discovered
1,600-yeaN>ld etchings on the wall with
remarkable similarity to Snoopy.
Sooopy is the dog in Charles Schulz'
cartoon strip, "Peanuts."
LAST CHANCE When they're gone,
they're gone I
. -
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G~inea 6 Uprisi°:g-
L der ___ .~.·----..l ~e-m ~---l.:.'1~11eu •
'
By LAIUIY llEINZERIJNG • LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Reports lrom
Guinea accuae Portuguese agenta of the
assa11ID11tlon of AmUcar Cabral1 the
leader ol lb• rebellloo in Portuguese
Guinea.
Cabral wu killed sa1urilay n1gti1 by
"Portuguese agen1'," according to an
emotional broadcait Sunday by Prelidenl
S.lou Toul1' ol Guinea, a counley bol<ier-
lng the Portuguese provlnoe ao< lhe I
* * * Coast Talk:
Expert Sees (
Consequences
By IBA J. WEST
AtMdttMI Pl'IM Wrlttor
The assass!nalion of African revolu-
tionary leader Amilcar Cabral has dealt
western bulge of Africa.
Toure said Cabral, 47,. was assissinated.
by "paM killers" outside his home ln
Conakrf, the capital of Guinea. He s8id
the "principal tillers" tiad been ar~ted.
Tho Portuguese govemment declined to comment. -,
1bere was speculation that the
leadership of Cabral'• Independence
movement -the African Independence
Party of Guinea and cape Verde, or
PAIGC -Y+'OUld pass to his haU brother
Luis or to Aristides Pereira. Luis runs
the PAJGC office in Dakar and Pereira
lhe Conakry beadquarten.
Foreign Minister Johll Malecela of
Tanzania said the liberation struggle in
the Portuguese province would continue
despite Cabral's death. He recalled the
assassination in 1'-89 of Eduardo
Mondlane, the leader of the liberation
movement in. Portuguese Mozambique,
and fttlid bis movement is stronger today
than ever before.
Cabral, soft spoken and easy going in
manner, was tile lirst leader of a rebel
movement to be granted olficial observer
status .at the United Nation!. He said in a
speech last tall at U.N. headquarters that
he planned to proclaim a new nation in
the national libeiatlon movement of the rebel-controlled parts of Portuguese
Portuguese Guinea a terlous but not fatal Guinea.
blow, a University of Califomi"a polifical ~e-h!d-ryn a-guerrilla . -war-o~
acientist id Si.Inda · La Bea h independence m Portuguese Gwnea from " sa . . Y 111 _guna c · his Conakry headquarters for the past ·
In a sense this 1s a serJous setback to nine years.
the national liberation movement Csbral's borne. a two-story building
I
Mondu, JlftUill'Y 22, 1q73 s DAILY PILOT 3
Wate1~gate
Def enda11ts ...
-Get Offer?
WASHINGTON (Al?I As thr
Watergate political espionage trial c11
tered its third \veek 1od1Jy, Time
ntagazine said it learned Lhat one of the
original seven defendants. E. llo\vard
Hunt Jr. offered money to four other
defendants as an inducement to plead
guilty.
The government 's key v.•itness. Alfred
C. Bald\\'in Il l. a former FB I agent. far -
ed cross.examination from defenS{'
la1vyers today.
Only l\\'O of an original seven defcn·
danls remained on trial in U.S. Distric1
C• urt here" in connection with the break ·
in and alleged bugging of Democralit·
part y headquarters at the \Yatergale las!
sumn1er. Hunt and four others pleaded
guilty in the case.
Time magazine said Hunt offered the
other Jour $1.000 a month apiece for each
month they spend in jail. It said the ad-
missions of guilt by Hunt and the others
"staved off'' testimony that lhe operation
had been approved by other persons.
Hunt's lav.1yer, \Vilfian1 0 . Bittman.
said Hunt "categorically and em-
phatically denies" the magazine story.
Tirne magazine said ~Iunt recruited the
four to bug the Democratic offi ces
saying : "It's got to be done. My friend
Colson wants it. Mitchell wanrs it ... •
The-magazine said this was a
reference to former Ally . Gen . John_ .
Mitchell. who was also Nixon's campaign
manager for a time. and to Charle!!
Colson, a special counsel to President
Nixon.
because he possessed great leadership shaded by mango trees, was the target of
qualities," said Professor Ronald Chi.I· a bazooka ·attack in 1970 during the
cotte ol the university of 14 Angeles Portuguese "invasion" ol Guinea. He was
campus. out of the country at the time, but a
POLICE INSPECT WOODEN BOX WHERE BOY WAS HELD CAPTIVE EIGHT DAYS
Rabbit Hunters Stumbled on to Youth in Desperate Situation in Chesapeake, Va.
It didn't S<lY v.·here it obtained the In-
fo rmation.
Of the statement allributed to Hun!
that the operation 1vas.desired by Colson
and l>.1itchell , Bittman said : ''Hunt
"categorically and emphatically denies
ever making that statement or any
-similar statement." He said it "is
absolutely raise -not only false far·
tua lly but false in that he absolutely did
not mention it or anyt~ing similar to that ·
Cabral "founded a movement not Yugoslav doctor was killed when a shell
dependent on one individual but on struck the house next door.
.. thousands of people, and so it will not fail His movement claims control of two-
because or the death of one person," said thirds uf the rural areas of Portuguese
ChiJCotte, the author of a recent book on Guinea,-a-lelTitory alightly larger than
Male Topless
Dancer Shows
Discrimination?
Teen Chai1ied in Wooden
relations between Africa and Portugal. Maryland and Delaware that is
Cabral was assassinated Saturday in san.dwiched between Senegal and Guinea .
front of his home In Conakry;-the capital It is an impOverished land of swamps
of Guinea, a broadcast said. President and grasslands with a population of abo~t
'6ekou Toure ofl Guinea said the 47-year~ 800,000 plus 30,000 Portuguese troops. Box; Poli'Ce Seek Fiend to ... Time ," ~
"The Tim e magazine report as il con-
cerns me is an absolute falsehood,"
t.1itche ll said ,in a statement today.
"Never at any time have I said anything
that could have been construed as con-
doning the \Yatergate incident. On the
contrary. I have said many timrs that I
deplore and condemn it."
old Marxist was killed by Portuguese Cabral, backed by Soviet arms and
agents. supplies, established jungle schools and
"Cabral possessed great leadership hospitals and a judicial system in the
quall~ies and was one of the mo5l iD-"liberated zones."
telligent theoretical thinkers in the third Despite his Marxist views, Western
world," Otllcotte told a newsmaq (rom diplomats in Africa generally agreed that
his home here. "He bad brought about he was not a Soviet puppet. He himself
one of the most important revo!utiooary : often complained because no one but the
struggles against colonial power in Russians would give him aid.
Africa," the professor added. He turned against the colonial ad·
"But tbe important thing to keep in ministration and with five others formed
mind is that the struggle was not PAIGC. They began organizing strikes
dependent on a single µtan, but based on and demonstrations.
a welkrgaoized itJIOYemeu.l which has ~ the , Portuguese killed 50
succeeded in tUlng over control o~ two-dockworkes;s during a strike, Cabral
thirds ol Portuguese Guinea." began planning armed revolution and
Cbilcotte said Cabral, who turned to 1 mapped out a campaign to mobilize the
armed revolt against the Portuguese in countryside. He moved to Cooakry in
196.1, was relatively unkoown because of 1958 to organize the rebellion, which
his "unpretentious nature." began In earnest in 1963.
Court to Review NY Law
Aiding Parochi~ School~
SEATTLE (AP) -A tavern Ovlner
here has put a bare-chested male dancer
on stage in an effart to prove that a Ja1v
against topless !emale dancers is a form
of sex discrimination.
Frank Colacuirco presented his male
dancer after Superior Court Judge Jaffies
Dore refused to issue an injunction to
stop police from enforcing the no-topless
ordinance. _
"The ordinance is sui'y." said Colacur·
cic>, owner of the Firelight. which prior
to Jadge Dore's decisioo w a s ooe of
~tile's most popu1ar topless go-go sPots.
"They let males do it. Why can't fe-
males. Alter all,-the-people of our state
voted to give equal rights to everybody."
He ooted that the King County ordi·
nance speciftcaUy states that cabaret
owners can not allow ••female employes"
to bate their breasts.
While Colacurcio's male dancer, 31-
year-old Jack Larsen, was baring his
chest, halters and bikini tops were being
CHESAPEAKE, Va . (AP ) -Police in
t\vo states today sought a man with a
history or sex crimes alter a 13-year-0ld
boy who was held eight days in a wooden
box was found by rabbit hunters.
"lf it hadn't been for lour rabbit
hunters, T doubt if anyone ever would
have fo!ll}lt the boy," said Police Sgt. S.
'8 . Champman.
The boy was discovered. Frjday in a
large wooden box buried in the ground.
Police sa~ be had been kept chained and halt been seXui.Tiy assaulted.
Richard W. Ausley, 32, a Portsmouth
carpenter and prison parolee,, was named
in w~rants charging him with abduction
and Sexual assault. Ausley was being
sought in southeastern Virginia-and
Stalin Subject
Of GOP Address
donned by female dancers across the "My Five Years Under Stalin in
city. . Hungary" is the topic or the guest ad·
WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S.
Topless dancing thrived here since dress before the Saddleback Valley
1be cases acc.epted by the Supreme April, when a judge ruled that it was a Republican Women·s Club. Federated at
Court for review involve: form of expression protected by the First 9:30 a.m. Tuesday in the· Community Surpreme Court today agreed to review a 1m New York law ~ providing various
forms of assistance to parochial schools
and the parents ol children attending
them.
Two provisions of the law were struck
down as constituUonally invalid last
October by a federal district court in
New York City. A third provision was
upheld by the panel.
t. Allowing tamiUes with gross incomes Amendment. Room o! Royal Savings, El Toro.
of up to '25,000 a year and who pay at But last month. Police Chief George The speaker is Ladislas K. ~rker ,
least $50 a year in tuition to parochial TielJCh aIU10WlCed that, because a Dec. rector or St. Michael's Seminary, and
schools , to exclude as much as $3.000 5 U.S. Supreme ·eourt decision upheld the principal of St. Michael's Preparatory
from their siate income tax. This pro-right of states to regulate entertainment School in El Toro. Father Parker fled
vision· was upheld in the district court, 2 in establishments serving liq uor under a Hungary in 1950 finding refµge in the
. to 1. state license. his officers again would en· United Slates.
2. Providing about 280 paroch ial force the 1966 no-topless ordinance. The public is invited to atteod the
schools in densely populated urban, areas "\Ve'll have a male topless dancer, but presentation. Further information is
with as much as $4 million a year in all all our girls will wear toJ)EI," Coh1curcio available by calling Mrs. Russell Diehl,
northeastern North Carolina.
Police said Ausley, paroled in 1971
afte r serv ing a prison term on a similar
charge, was an ''accomplis h ed
woodsman" and might bave fled into the
vast Dis·mal Swamp, a 300-square-mile
area of heavily woodL'<i swampland in the
two states.
Chapman described Ausley as •·armed
and very dangerous."
Four rabbit hunters told pplice they
were at the dead end or a logging road in
a remote area when they sa w a boy's
head sud~enly r· p out or a six-foot mound of e . '
Police the boy began crying, then
ex~he had been kidnsped by a
n\an wh61>icked hini up on a Portsmouth
street and asked him if he wanted some
work helping move !urnlture.
The boy had a chain attached to his left
leg and the chain was secu red to a nail
driven in the side of the plywood box.
Police said the box had been meticulous-
ly built, was six feet long, .four feet wide
and five feet deep with enough room for
two people.
The box was covered with earth and
leaves and contained various survival
items, including food and water.
The boy told police he had been beaten
and sexua lly assaulted repeatedly' in the
eight days he was held prisoner. He was
released to his parents after treatment at
a local hospital for a broken nose. a
broken tooth and facial injuries. His
name was '\Ot made public.
The boy told police that the last time
he saw his abductor was about 8 p.m.
Thursday -12 hours before he was
found.
Colson's office issued a statement
saying Colson "unequivocally denies tha t
Hunt is quoted as saying and point! out
that he (Colson I had already denied it
under oath."
Police Holding
Marine in Death
IpS ANGELES (AP ) -A Marine sta·
tioned al Camp Pendleton was booked
Saturday for investigation or murder in
the beating death or a 31-year--Old man
whose body was found in his living roo m.
police said.
Investigators said L. C. Pearson of Los
Angeles apparent~ got into a fig ht with
the Marine, 23-year--Old Jerry Streeter.
over the serviceman's former girlfriend.
Pearson died after what was ap·
parently a long struggle, polict said.
Backgammon \Vinner
LAS VEGAS (AP ) Oswald
JacOOy. 7()...year--0ld contract bridge slar.
rallied in the final 30 minutes of a two-
hour final to win the Seagrams world
championship of backgammm. Jacoby.
the eighth-seeded veteran from Dllla.r,.
trailed 17-16 late in the match Sunday bot
defeated Edward Burns, 65, a Santa
Barbara businessman, ~19 for his fourth
tournament victory in 12 contests here
and abroad.
'J1le Supreme Court, acting on appeals,
agreed to consider all three provisions
begiMing with a hearing in April.
!or ·heat, lights, custodial services, and said. "We'\-e got a.liq\¥)1' license, and we club president, at 837-6079.
the like .. This provision was struck down don't want any citations that will affect.--------------------------------------------
unanimously by the district court as in our license. We'll stay ithin the law." The high court already bas under con·
sideration a 1970 state law appropriatlhg
$28 milliOn a year for record-keeping,
testing and other services in the non·
public schools.
About 750,000, or 18 percent of . all
school children in New York state, attend
oonwblic schools. __Most of these schools
are Roman Catholic.
violation of the First Amendment's pro-Larsen, married and the father oC two
hibition against establishment of religion. children, does a three-minute dance rou·
3. Direct payments of $50 .an el~en-tine every half hour.
tary pupil and $100 a h.lgh school pupil for "What's there to say?'' he said. "You
parents with net tuable incom~ of Jess get up, you dance.
than $5,tXKI a year. Thts,.provision also --"People are being. really civil. The
was stM.Jck~ dOwn uganimously as in seem lo uode~ '!hat we're trying to
~olation of the establishment cl~use. get across. I'm •bating a bl.ast.''
\l(V mA6C.I •
'IOU <OUl.I>
I.OS' lllOUT/
5 61G ON{S,
11 ffilRROR mlRROR
ON \H{ WALL • WHOS.t
TH.( FAIR~ST OF TH~ffi ~LL"/
mAGGI 15 •••
'6(.CAUS{ WH<N ffiAGGI \.\AS A
Siil(, ,,.·s A FOP. P.-EAI.." 1..(GIT,
HON( 5T IN.JIN, SAL(.' OP. ~L~( •
iH\S W((K
11''S M IP.ROP. ~.I
OV{ll. 75 OF "fH-E mos,. UNV SUAL,
l?.(AUTIFUL, l>Om(STIC ·ANO
llnt>O~i~ 1), S'TYLt !. . VOtl ~AV-t
.(V{~ S(.~ N • , l\T PP.IC{~ VOU
.JUST UJON'T Q(ll(V~ •, •
Siil~ NOW
f ll.Om
14 ,.0 300
(DO~LAll.~ -r'~A-r IS)
'
• • : Ad•tfen Approved
1 • ' '
Mr. and Mrs. James Adams getiilg bug In Houston
after winning court autho)izatlon lo adopt Muican·
American boy. Viclor Martinez Wilkerson .. The
Adamses have been foster parents of Victor, now 6,
since ht was a baby.
, •
\
'• (J
DA!l 'f Pi LO I
'
Jost ••
. "'" whh
·.Tom
'Marphine
~~.:._-,-.
.! Jet Nose
In the Tent
:\\'ll,11 BLL"E YOSDERS DEPT. -
cpn~1dt>r the ae roplane pilot who might
be dusting 1hrough the clouds over our
Orange Coast n.>glon and abruptly get in·
to ai rborne difficulty.
Therr a:-e iwo major comforting
thoughts for him. First. Orange Count}'
Airpo rt just inlariQ of the ~ewport Beach-
Costa '.\Jesa..region and secondly, El Toro
!\\ar1ne Co rps Air Station. jus1 over the
hill fro m Laguna Beach in the Sad·
dfeback region.
If the aircraft suffering some fonn of
rnal function that prompts 'the necessity
of seeking immediate real estale is of the
small. puddle-jumping variety, there are
other spots of com.fort. These include
---!feadowlark~Airport in-Huntington--Beitcb
or Capistrano Airport ·dov;n in the
southerly sector of our coast. ,
l\foST FOLKS, HOWEVER. do not
!end to fret about these smaller planes
much. figuring they can pull an emergen·
<'Y ex it from the \\:i]d blue a lot of dif-
ferent places, like free~·ays, beaches,
cornfields and the like.
Most of us laymen, ho"·ever. assume
that the larger models have fewer op-
tions. Therefore, aerial troubles in these
parts for l!\e military and commercial
jets would necessitaje a landing at either
·El Toro <lr Orange County.
El , Toro is, or course. a military
airdrDme while Orange County is a
civilian commercial port. Again. most of
us who are laymen presume that pilots
\\'OU\d take little time to discriminate at
rime s of trouble. thus following the
seafaring motto of Any Old Port in a
st onn.
THUS IF A MILITARY jet wag
acting up and Orange County Airport
~-ere the nearest spot. the pilot would
come in there rorthwith. ·
By the same token. you ~'Ould assume
a commercial jet having difficulty would
drop in on El Toro"s airstrip if it were
the closegt at hand.
All of these things are assumptions of
oon-aviation types.
Thus it comes as somewhat of a
surprise to those of us with landlocked
ft>et that Orange County officials ha ve
formally negotiated a proposed pact ~·ith
the U.S: Afarine COrps for use of the El
Toro airstrip in times of stress.
COUNn' AVIATION Director Bob
Bresnahan will present this agreement
he worked out ll'ith Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang
to the Board of Supervisors tomorrow.
In brief, it says that should Orange
County Airport be shut down due to fire,
flood , fog or civil disturbance, civilian
commercial jets can 1and at El Toro.
The agreement also repo rted!}' stresses
that the pact doe sn't cover handling of
commercial jet operations at El Toro
because of a planned closure of Orange
County Airport.
\Veil. all that aside, it is well kno\\11
1 that numerous Newport Bcacb residents
and many in Costa ll-1esa would like to
see the big jets vanish from Orange
County Alrport. And at the same time.
residents of the Saddleback Valley, in-
cluding El Toro, Laguna Hills and ·
A1ission Viejo, doa't want to see those
same jets find a new borne at the Marine
Corps Air Station.
THE D1ERGENCY landing agree-
ment, therefore, is very likely to be met
\rith some nervousness by residents of
the Saddleback Valley \vho might harbor
some suspicion that the commercial jet
has just stuck its nose ih ihe lent.
Oh "well, maybe it's just a nose.
Winter
•
I
Pea
NE\~ ORK-(AP-) --Four ---
~·ho d vo\\·ed lo die for A1usllm
paradise in a bail of police bullets have
.surrendered peace.fully after their nine
remaining hostages made a dramatic
eSca pe to signal the. end of a twp.day
sie"ge in a Brooklyn sporting goods s1ore..
The end came late Sunday afternoon.
over 47 boors after a silent robbery
alann alerted police who surprised the
young gunmen in the stofe. One
patrolman "·as killed and two others
\rounded in a fury of gunfire.
AFTER 'l1IE INl11AL shootout subsid-
ed to a standoff. police ringed John &
Al's Sports, Inc., in Brooklyn's
\\'illiamsburg section with sharpshooters.
But fear for the ho.stages prevented any
·forced showdown and police concentrated.
on k~ping communications with the gun-
men.
The break came shortly before 1 p.m.
Sunday \\•hen the hostage~. led by a ro-
owner of the store, broke through
plasterboard to a seated·off stairway and
escaped to Ille roof while Ille gwimen
\\"efe-diYerted.--, --~ -
Four boun later. following more
negotiations. with police and pleas from
some n!l!ltlves, the gunmen walked out .
T"·o carried a stretcher wiJi a third who
was wounded and the fourth walked
ahead .
Police said preliminary reports in-
dicated their marksmen bad not fired a
shot since the original gunbattle,
although the gunmen had fired volleys
from time to time.
POLICE JDEN'l1FIED the four by
their Muslim names as Salib Ali
Abdullah. Dawd Abdulfah Ar-Rahm and
Shulab Abdue Raheem, whose lawyer
said he was iiiso known· as Carey Earl
Robinson. The wounded man, Yusef
Abdul. 20. "'as in fair condition after
surgery at King's County Hospital.
Brooklyn Dist. Atty. Eugene Gold said
he would go before a grand jury today
with charges against the foo:r that prob-
ably w o u J' d include the murder of
Patrolman Stephen R. Gilroy, the at-
tempted murder of Patrolmen Jose
Adorno and Frank Carpentier, kidnaping
and weapons possession.
Pol.ice said they were searching for a
fifth ·man who ~8$,.said tp have been
driving a getaway car when the robbery
began about 5:45 p.m. Friday. They sai51
the motive for the robbery was to obtain
guns. not money; , ,
In a hand-written Jetter carried out by
a doctor who attended the wounded gun-
man. the foUJ described themselves as
"servants of Allah" and said they were
"expressing solidarity with all Muslims
and oppressed people of the world."
"WE HA VE NOTIUNG to lose and vie·
tory and paradise to gain," they
declared. "We will not give in to your
demands , but we will continue to hold the
hostages \Yho are being well treated and
will not be harmed intentionally by us."
Earlier they had released three other
hostages. The nine remaining included
Jerry Riccio, a CG-Owner of the store.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtli•rtr of ti" Daily Pilot
is guarantted
-···'""'''' If YH H Ml ~lff ·-PIPt• •Y J:)f p.m., c1t1 1n<1 '"'" top, ..-m IH .. """1 It )'ft, C•ll• lro Ilk.., .,.,ii
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Yl'll• <•l'Y '' ' 1.m. 511~•-••· •• I f .m. ~ ......... <I ll ...... COPY wtn .. ,,.....,., ••
)O~. COii• l tl tall*" ~nl•I 11 l .m. \
Moll Ol'"ll'lllf C.OU..ry Aru1 ... •42•4)21
NorthWUI Hu1'11ir1910" BNd'I •nd Wn!ml"ll•• . 540· 1220
S.n Cl-!t, C111t11r1<10 Bt•ch.
S..n Ju1n C1~1!rtl'IO, °'"I Poi"!,
Sou1h LI1gun1, LIIOll"' NJQouol 4t2-44ZO •
MRS. SNYDER SHOWS PHOTOGRAPH TO CHILDREN
'But Whore'• o.ddy' Tot W1nlt to Know
-
Ul"IT........._
THIS PHOTO MADE HER A CELEBRITY OVERNIGHT
S.ys Nixon Dances W•ll; Admits That She Doesn't
' ModeJ!cn-Da~-Cinderel-la~at-Ball~.
Susan Dances With President-'l '1n Surprised I Did1i't Faint'
I STERLING , Va. (UPI ) -Susan Snyder became an instant celebrity .when
newspapers Sunday carried a photograph of her dancing with President Nixon
aL ·an inaugural ball. Her two small daughters were not impressed. .
hlrs. Snyder. a 27-year-old blonde, said her brief dance with the chief
execu tive came about accidentally and she was "surprised I didn't faint on the
spot."
r.ras. SNYDER SAID during an interview al her suburban home that she
~·as standing on the dance floor of the Kennt'dy Center f9r tbe Performing Arts
Sattuday nJgbt watching Nixoo dance with his "'ife, Pat, and the wife of a
U.S. Senato<. Suddenly she was pushed forwaro by Ille crush of people and
found bersell dancing with Nixon. "Jf I had thou8bt o( dancing with the presi·
dent. I'd be a nervous wreck." she said.
Mrs. Snyder. "'ho was "'eating a low-cut purple gown, said Nixon ~-as a ...... • . ..
good dancer but admitted that she isn't. She said she couldn't recall what
Llooel Hamptoo 's band was playing at the time "but it was something I could
follow. I'm surprised I didn't faint oo the spot."
"J was floating on f!loud nine afterwards," ft said.
HER TWO DAUGlrl'ERS, -however, were more concerned with the-~
about,1 ol their father, Gerald Snyder, who works for the Xerox Corp.
Mrs. Snyder said she showed the newspaper photograph to her 3-year-oid
daughter, Jennifer, Sunday morning and told. her, "Moouny dancod wtlh llle
president last night."
"Oh, you didn't dance with daddy?" the little girl replied.
To her daughter J.ill, a year old, Mrs. Snyder said, "see here: is mommy
and President Nixon."
"Where's daddy?" asked the other tot. -.. . ... ~ _ .. • .....,f_
Ai1tiwar Protesters Leave Washington Vow March
WASfflNGTON (UPI ) -The J/s;; Washington slnce April 2.4, 1971, when tiwar protesters carried on nearly three Capitol Feb. 23 to demand complete U.S.
tens of thousands of antiwar protesters more than 250,000 people participated. weeks of sustained activities that v.·ithdrawal from southeast Asia .
trickled ou_t of Washington ~y wi1;!1 But both men stresged that this would resulted in more than 10,000 arests. At Wesley United 11.tetbodlst church,
their leaders vowing they would cOntimle not be the end of the antiwar movement. There were only a handful of amsts more than. 100 prot~ers filled the mau $\feet dem~trations '1fil ~ii ised •••• ~ achieved. • •-:-: , • • Peck prom· "sus..;,,~ mass, DOD-during the inauguration weekend. chtirch to hear fonner Sens. Eugene J .
The protester~ .most of. Wh>m left violen~ actions that will go beyond May ~ccarthy and ErneSt Gruening denounce
Saturday night 8nd Sunday. follow.iq a ·pDa-yii"iiin-ili_sco_pe_. iiDuiiriiing-iiMiiaiiyii. iilm_.iiaiinii· --GiiOiiRDO-iiN•CiiAiiU.ED,__1iioriia•miiariiciibiioiin;,,,,othe--•he-iiNiiixiion•aiidm•inii~O:tr:Oaiitiiionii. ____ iiiii mass march and rally d~ that 11
the United States get entirely Out of
Southeast Ast3 and sign the peace ac-
cords, packed the last of their vans and
autos and beaded home.
TIIE HAD kicked off their three days
of "an inauguration of conscience" with
a news conference ai the gates of the
'Vhile House and an anti-inaugural COD·
cert, conducted by Leonard Bernstein, on
Frday.
They concluded their protest events on
Si.:nday with an ecumenical service in
v.·hich Political. reUgious, show business
and military personalities urged an end
to the war.
U.S. park police estimated the crowd
at 60,000 Saturday afternoon during the
main antiwar rally on the grounds of the
\Vashington fl.fonument. Some estimates
were lower, some higher.
Leaders of bot.'1 the National Peace A~
lion Coalition and the Peoples C.oalition
for Peace and Justice, co-sponsors of the
mass march on Saturday, said "they
\.\·ould continue lo call street protests un-
til there "'as a settlement of the war they
liked -and they rnade it clear a cease
fire would be only the first step.
BOTfJ DR. SIDNEY Peck of the PCPJ
and Jerry Gordo:i of NPAC said they
were surprised and pleased at ttie
turnout of demonstrators on Saturday,
1he largest antiwar demonstration in
• ,
'
• • • ~·
*( • • •
WHERE A SALE IS A SALE!
.Home a Gift Slop
...
...·* ~-* '• • ., ,, . • • • ' \ • '" .... " " '* I ' • • I ' • • \ ¥-• I • • • • • • • • • ' ' ' ' ..
Wallops Midwest .
Snoiv Plagues Motorists Fro1n Oklahoma to Michigan Tl:llS IS ITI ALL SALE ITEMS SLASH-
ED AGAIN,.HURRY .BEFORE THEY NAllOMAl WIAl"ll Ml'tlCI POllCAST 11 7AM t•1 I -1),-7}
• 2t. J
__ L
•
ARE GONE! •
FANTASTIC BARGAINS ON ALL
THREE LEVELS OF THE HOME AND
GIFT SHOP AND IN THE PARTY
SHOP, TOO! '
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 9·6
•
•
RICHARD'S LIDO CENTER 3433 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH 673·6360
•
f, l. . ,,
'
•
~
J 1
'
1,000 Go
e Layoff• Seen
SUNNYVALE (AP) -Up to
900 employes of the Lockheed
Missiles & Space Co. here will
face layoffs in the_ next few
weeks because of a slowdown
in efforts to finish the Trident
'missile, a company
spokesman has said.
D. A. Stuart, vice president
and general manager of the
Sumyvale facility, said in a
memo to employes this month
that a re\'.ieW" of the Trident
program made it apparent
that "activily planned for this
year mi.mt be substantially
reduced," involving about 75
in the next two months.
Hand Found .
On Shore
Gives Clue
SANTA CRUZ (AP)
Fingerprints from a hand
discovered at the edge of
Monterey Bay may help In
"identifying a human body
from which other pieces have
washed on shore at scattered
spots, t9' sheriff's office said
said Saljlrday.
The hand, found by a smf<r
at . nea rby Capitola Jl'riday,
supplied legible fingerprints,
said Santa Cruz County Sher-
ill's Lt .. Ken Pittinger.
Pittinger said authorities
believe the band belongs. t.o a
bady mutilated tono
discovered Wednesday at
Natural Bridges State Part
Beach. The hand and """" were fottnd five miles apart. e Protest• Be!cl A woman's arms and lower
SAN FRANCISCO (APJ _ legs found south of here In a
Chanting "out n 0 w , • • remote area of Monterey
thousands of demonstrators County Jan. 10 mar belong to
Staged peaceful marches here. the same torso, Pittinger ad-
inauguratlon day and heard , ded.
speakers demand an im·
mediate end to the Vietnam
war.
Pollce estimated 3,000 to
5,000 persons attended a civic
center rally while a n
estimated 2,500 persons held a
separate demonstration at
Mission Dolores P a r k .
Assemblyman Willie Brown
and Black Panther Party
President Bobby Seale spoke.
Board Elects '
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
State Bomf of Equallzation
has elected officers fOI' 11'13.
The new c'halrman Is William
M. Bennett. of Marin County
and ne" Vice chairman Is George R. Reilly of San Fran-
cisco.
Inland Surf?
City May lnswU ·waves '
OAKLAND (AP) -Surfing? In landlocked Pleasanton?
The board ol directon ol the Alameda li'olmty Fair
thinks it can be done, and OJey•re considering Installing a
11 million permanent artillclal surllng beech with machines
to make waves five feet high.
"The surfing beach would be built on an eight.acre lite
at tho oouii.t)r fairgrounds /'-said lair manager Lee Hall Frl-
dsy. -~
"The projectloo calla for 1l1ree million p1looa ol waler
and three big pumps that wou1d 'make waves .et~!')'.. three
minutes," be added. "'M>e waves could be coo~ to be
anywhere from three to five feet high. People Would ride
the waves wllh surlboaros oc amall rafts just u they do at·
the real ocean."
Hall said an artificial surfing beach already has been
built in Tempe, Ariz., "in the middle of ~ desert."
" .
THERE IS A FACTORY
AUTHORIZED DEALER
FOR l!VERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulnard aJ Ea1...--. -
LOOI -THI llllLlll AT
DAVE R0$5 ~0$TA MISA PONTIAC DATSUN
2A10 M
HARBOR BL VD. . RBOR ai_vo.
,
' Mond.iy, January 22, 1q73 OAJL Y PILOT i).
' Corona Holdout
Juror 'Pressured'
t will tell you lhings about
Juan Corona that will easi
your conscience lf You ... ~v'
qua1ms about the way you
voted."
"\Veil, we were talklng
about it and J said, well, I
couldn't understand this at all.
I said that if Mr. Corona had
done it, where were the bloody
clothes," ,.1rs. Underwood
said.
Mercedes-Benz announces
precisely the kind· of model change
you expect from Mercede·s·Benz.
M, ODEi. CHANGES i t Merced~
Benz ... inspired not by the lm1ds
of fashion but by the thrust of engineer-
ing i>rosrcss. One such c:hlDge becomes
ollicial today: the Maceda-Beaz 2SO
Sedan bu cvolwd into·thc 2a0 Sed111-
without 1~ the body cmeinch or
llQOping 10 the al;,hU.t bint of styling
.!Jid<ery.
, The tcdmical :C:'e:ments1that in-
apired this c:hlllge · acttbe280furt)>et
apart than ever from other cars in Its
clasl.
Should you ilmst your $8,968• in
the 280 Sedan? Stady its aiainecrin1 ic-
finements. Wap all. the fac1L Meaure
thil cu'I perf01111111Ceapinstyour....U
-then decide.
, lkmadtable new engine
The engincm bid the 280'1 biggeot news
under the hood.
Frah from 1 long laboratory incu-
bation · ia a new 2.8-litr< dovb1'-owr-
lltad-<411Uhaft engine. Hemiapbaical
combustion cbambent 2-stagc dual com-
pound carburetor-this lovingly assem·
bled Six could be mistaken for a high-
pcrfonnance spons car ·'engine. (No\C
thalit RVIUpto6SOOrpm.) ;
''The crankshaft · is something of ·a
masterpiece,'" repons Britain's Au.tocar -.
-Nts ""'i'" IHHuu
mapzioe, "ninning in seven main ~
inp, &Dd every one of the twelve webs
incorporating a counterwdihL" The
pl: low •ncine vibration.
The men wlio dniprd this ensine
limed for ~ inatead of brute pow-
er. You 1et the numing llllOOlbneal you
expect from a car of this class. Some-
thing you may not expctt from a car of
this class: the 280 engine's restrained
appetite for gasoline.
As agile as befon1
That engine can be liahter and lea bullr.y
than those uocd In other $8000 """"' becauae the 280 Sedan iudf ii lighter
llld laa bulky.
It iJ •• ..,;...,;., faa that 1/u top 3
4-tit "I-=:/' 1tdaru all fD<iih at kart
Ila/I • .,. _., and """""' a fvJ/ J f9t '°""'' 1Mn tlu 280 Stdtm. Sca111 """""1
... ""'"" ... ,.,,. V.8 ........
Yet t1ie·a111 bGllt ti._ llraer ... ·--·-111 ....... 111a11-
_,
Mt'lttlu-B1nx 280 Stdan ivltj111t o c.ltonged car; itrms iMprt1Wd e~'
roominess: the 280 matcbCs them for engineering with the 280 Sedan.
interior space-and actually exceeds The body of your 280 is an all-welded
them in trunk capacity. steel structure so strong that a separate
Those $8000 "luxury" sedans are frame is redundant. That body is the
impressive standing in a driveway. But frame.
compare driving them with driving the Precious weight is saved. Enormous
280sedan, out in the real World. • strength is built in. Bolts won't tug loose
You'll discover that the 280 twirls over the mile& bcuuse there are no bolts.
through a turning t;ircle or only 36.4
.feet (abo ut the same as a little VW 1200
·~Beetle"). ThOle larger cars don't.
The 280.nips into parking spots those
Jtcftiet aedans have to pass up.
And yoU'll slip through holes in city
traffic where drea mboats dare not go.
Fully independent suspension
Let others brag about how big and or-
nate their cars are. You can brag about
bow well your 280 Sedan bandlea.
•' ••. 1h11 most con1rollabl1 high speed
1tdan we'w u1ud."
That was Mow Trend magazine'• reac-
tion to the 25.0.Sedan; aod the 280's ban·
dling ia unchanged.
This is because its auperb auapen.-
sion it Unchanged: a four-wheel, fully
independent system with a diagonat..
pivot rear swing axle. Gas-pressurized
shock absorbers and and-swa'y bars front
and rear are standard components . Also
srandatd: 17S SR/14 radial-ply tires on
wheel rims Slh inches wide.
The engineen fitccd an additional
shock absorber to the 280, in an unusual
spot-the steering system.,
U11tlt0fl1t4: l,..1111Wkrtl nar rwpnW-.
Instead of squaoderiq your money
oa bollow 1hee1 metal and uyling that ia --P".X. you ...,,ii, in fUlldamental
•
Ma«dff.Bu11 ~80 SflUn
280 o!J1r1 tht luxury of t/jicitnr 1i:1.
Run a finger over the finish. You will
feel why it took scvCral houn to pain~
bake, and polish to thar high 1tos1.'
Numerous outer body seams were filled
and made invisible before painting.
When· you buy an $8,000 autoYnobile,
you desecve such fastidious touches.
4-wbeel disc brakes
You get four-wheel disc brakes on Your
280 as standard equipment.
Consider that the front brake discs
measure almott 11 inches in diameter,
virtually the same size as the front discs
on the famous Mercedes-Benz 4SOSL
spons model. The 280's brakes arc pow-
er assisted, or counc; another atandard
equi pment feature.
4-speed automatic sbiit
Your 280's automatic transmission is so
quick-shifting that even sporting driven
have expressed surpri~ -and approval.
Yoll can set it in DRIVE and leave it
there; you can also shift through die
forward gearl by band.
The padded shift lever silJ within
easy reach on a central contolc. (If you
prefer, a column shift lever can be fitted
at no cxta cost.)
You are not charged extra for this
automatic transmission, or 'tar power
steering . and power brakes, or for an
electrically heat(d rear window. They
are an part of the 280's base price.
Even air conditioning falls under the
beading of standard equipmtnL You'll
count four separate outlets on the in-
strument panel-two for the driver~ twO.
for his front-scat passenger.
Comfort not forgotwl
The painstaking Mercedes-Benz enal•
ncers found one 1ubtle way afccr another
Merced~Benz motor can:
from $1Stil2• to $6.439•
Mtre«lc:1-Bcm offm • •••t taap t.I
modth. Here •tt sug1esrtd l'CUlil prlort
for 7 of the m01! popull.r rypn:
•
,d
UI
•sosLC Co\IJ'lll'
•SOSL CoUJ'lll'/RO .. fa'
280SE•.S~
280 °""'"" 280Sedan
SIS,tU
SJJ,761
SIO,J71 s 9,614 ...... s 6,6111 s '6,4)9
!IT
•...OJ
t'411lj
I ~oo
2Z0Sed•n
220 DI-I S«Un """" w I ...... .._ ... "'_ ........ .,.__.-
.,..;... ...... oM loul •••• II -Conri ... 1'71, _ _._ ......... " ........ I ladl
roJt1J1 L....~~~~~~~~~-'.xn.aq
to make the 280 an eminently livable u!W
machine. lbnow • ·
You Sit high enough to see the roecl •vlJ,,l J
ahead. Large glau areu enhance Yiai.cn oJ
bility. Your body is supported firmly in m~b
scalS built around a network of coil ~1buJ1
1prings, not cheap foam rubber. iimq
You needn't fumble around to find i:,od
the headlight dimmer switch or win<f..: ,q-
1hield wiper and washerconuoll. They're ~ I "
a fingertip away in a pod on the left cl 01'Nob "
the steering column; you can work thClll ·•
witbP,~t taking a hand off the wheeL
Moretbaa-
The new 280 Sedan is plainly not $8,968•
worth of bigness, or styling, or status.
Buy it and you bud< the ll'Cllds of tbe
u1uxury" clan head~n.
Your satisfying reward: ownmhlp
of a precision machlne enaiJxered, to
outlive trends. One ttst drive will con-
firm your wisdom in choolina iL
Arrange with your authorized Mato
cedes-Benz dfller to take that tat drive
Soon. For more mtful facu: about the
280 and other models, clip the coupm
anci mail it today. You Wul ...,.;,. a Inc
color brochure.
I/®---::i:"' lrnporit, Inc.. I 120 W, w.rn•r A'.""•
• S•nle A11•, C.llfentl• t270J
Ple1se: tend me JOU!' f'ull-color brodnart
dtht Mtf«dn.Bcmmot0rcva.
g,,,__ _______ ~~~
·~··~--~----""--~-T4JopMlt
-·
Jim Slemons Imports, Ihc. 120 w . warner Avenue, s.ntaAna,c.Uforni.192101Phone: n4-s'6-411&.
; •
(• '/ ••• )
, .
DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL ·PAGlf
Freeway Altern~tiv:e
News that the Orange County Road Department Is Hlgb.,.y tratllc.
abouHo-tauncb a study-oh~'tnnsportation-.orrldor"-' -Wbile-polathrJ-out-a-Jnft'tnnlpOttalkwi deftdea;;
between Newport Beach and San Clemente may well be cy In the 9llllN .-.i-Ndor-11 pllD._ .... .,~lhe~j'==-1='
tbe._firsLsmoJfe.slgn&I in wlal.oould_cleY.Olop_.inlo_a_!ull, ...,.;Jl.JIJl011:1o-~~~Clll30llillllllllllilJllll"Oll-~--t
S<ale battle involving coastal landowners, d~elopers, It. And If uy major C'OITldor It ~.it 'Will
1~-----e.1vvifil'OGlR'1m..,entalist....,d...\t'affie-expel'ls-ffem-lllle--L&li-A.,._---lla~llCle llulf..,._lo,-n!lill<lllllal-llOll<..,_:.._ _____ -1-
geles County line to the San Diego County line. The plannen are faced . with a dellaile belancln&
The initial move was a request from the developers act U they ~ to •tidy the d.emandl ol I~
of Dana Point's Thunderbird Homes tract for a decision envlronmentalisls and w1prl nsldenta, IJ ol wllOOI
on the fate of 80 acres o{ their 45S.acre tract which had would be well advleed 1o re<'Oglllte the ,~
. been earmarked as right-of-way for the now-defunct problem and lhinlt about ottering .....-.. • ....,..
Pacific Coast Freeway, lions so an equitable IOlutloll may be f<iuDd. .
The road department revealed t!at this, and other
freeway right-of-way proper\)!. might be needed for . a
major '"transportation corridor" to help solve Q'aff1c
problems already developing.
While no precise definition of the term has been
forthcoming, county officials indicate the 11corridoru
might be a sort o{ super-highway; but not exactly a
freeway. · . . . ~ Without some reasonable traffic solution, said one
county planner flatly, development south of !he San
Diego Freeway will have lo be curtailed.
Temporary efforts to lower high density zoning
along the former freeway route already have produced
some static. A· Lagwia Niguel developer whose land was
zoned for 11 units per acre when ~e fre~way ~
planned has since been dropped lo a ltve-urut density.
He bas threatened to sue the county if it continues to
block his planned bigher-<iensity deV1!1opmenl
Bul, say the planners, traffic generated by high
density zoning established along the freeway route can·
not be handled on existing roads.
Newport Beach freeway fighters were shocked by
the ''transportation corridor" news, fearmg it could
mean revival ol something resembling the freeway they
fought lo kill. . .
The issue also prolll!SeS~to ~nerate a split In La-
guna Beach, where environmentalists greetea theCleath
of the freeway with joy. but others eared Us loss would
only inet'ease the almost insup?Orta le burden of C.oast
Extending Daylight .
cautornla's Rep. Crallr Roemer It a inlD wllo'a will·
Ing to laU hll time, and a.ls !Ima lt,loob as lf·hll pa-
tience may Pl1 oil.
HO$mer'a House Reeol.111ioD 15579, which ..,uld ..
tabllsh year-round ~bl.SaW.g Tillie, Jias'beeD la&
g~· · · the HOUie lntez:state and Forelp;S::ommerce
for so . four yean; . • • ·
B this year, HOllDer baa rounclecl up 25 ~
siooal cosponaon ff!? hll bill, compuocf with a mve'.H
last time ll'Olllld, and they illdude COlllllllttee cbllrman
Rep: John Moa, also from cautornla, 'Who ·•pporenll,y
is ready lo bold bearings on the measure.
The bill, U succeosful, ..,uld. ·eliminate the clock·
changing confusion that afflicts the U.S. evuy April and
October, and· simply leave daylight saving •In effect for
12 months of the year.
This, says Hosmer, would enable most of the work
f<>m> lo get home before the early evening hours of
winter darkness, when traffic acddenta and crime peak,
and lo enjoy additional after.work recreation time, along
with savings on fuel and electricity bllli
Opposition to year-round daylight saving continues
to toftff>-ftom farmers;-blrt-tbe-U:S.-uo ·1onger-is-a-prin·
cipally agrarian oountry and this change In .the law clear-
ly would be!lefit a maiorit;y of today's cltiz0118. ·
'
•
, !;---·
l • '
IHl'A COURI Q' bAW 111A1"
f6S11MollY·l'IOlLP liAVf R£Sljl.W '
IN A -PERJ'URI' CHAR~& I
Move ,to-Cwrft ·Costl9 Legal Harassment A Modern
Version of
Old Adage
Dear.
Gloomy
Gus Police 'Nuisance Suits·' Soaring ... ., . .. _, ,.,
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
-Reading a news item the other day to
the effect that Westinghouse bas been
chosen lo lead an industrial group that
\\ill build a $700-million electric plant in
Tennessee, reminded me of an incident
that I bad forgotten.
... Some time last fall, just after my
books bad been published, I was invited ~
to appear on a Pitts-· • ,
burgh TV show prior .
to an autographing
party at a local
department store.
A3 the technician
hung the mike
around my neck, t
said. "Why do TV
lights still have to be
so infernally bot -"
can't they make some cooler lights so the
performers won't sweat to death during
the show?"
THE TECHNICIAN grinned. "Oh,
there are cooler lights," he said, "but I
guess the company feels it can't afford to
buy them for us." At which the whole
technical staff broke out laughing.
I waa puzzled -until he infonned me
that this was a Westinghouse televi.Sion
station, and Westinghouse is the com-
pany that makes the cooler TV lights!
I'm getting siok cl all the "Gloomy
Gus's" that harangue President
Nixon as the warmonger in Viet·
nun. Is this a policy, or don't any
ol your readers feel that the Ru..
sians, Cltinese, and North Viet·
namese might be playing a part
in prolongation oi the war?
CURIOUS
"",....,. ................ ,....,. .. _ _,...,,. ....... -····· .... _,..,..,.. .. ~..._Dto ... Plllll.
seems to deserve a snort of dertsi.on -
but as modem i..timony that the ancient
adage still applies: the shoemaker's
children go without sboeJ, and tbe
baker's children go without brtad.
(Some years ago, I recall, when air·
conditioning was starting to boom, one of
the finns making air-cooditioning eqW~
11Wll continued to manufacture its pro-
duct in a non-air-conditioned factory until
the disettpancy thttatened to break into
public absurdity.)
Whilst it is true that in some respects
we take better care of our own than of
others, it seems equally true that just as
often we neglect our nearest in the area
of our.greatest competence.
W ASl!INGTON -Police and other law
enforcement authorities throuebout the
country are increasingly b e i n g
deliberately obstructed and handicapped
by "harassment" 8lld "nuisance" suits.
In .the pa.st five years, these impeding
actions have soared an alarming 700 per
conl
According to the latest available
statistics ol. the Administrative Office oI
the. U.S. Coorts, the
numben of such fet-
lering lawllllts zoom.
eel from a few hun-
dred in 11167 to 1.2£7
in lt'l'l. Still -in-
complete l'l!C<lnb for
1'72 indicate this aliocking tr<nd is
continuing.
Says Rep. Ricbard
Jcbord, f>.Mo., cbainnan of the House
Internal Seair1ty Commlttei, who ls apon.
soring legislation to curb such hindering
litigation: · •
"TUE NUMBER of frivolous suits is
growing rapidly. Onoe ran, but no
looger, tbelr sole ~ le to block and
deter law enforcement officers. 1'hele
suits have become an increasingly
serious impediment to efficient and
vigorous law enforcement."
As uplained by the .veteran legislator,
his ......rial bill would:
"Make it necesoary !or a plaintiff !llling
a law enforcerpent officer in federal
court to file a bond with the court for ·
payment to the defendant of msonable
. "
(ROBERT S.AJ.J,EN)
costs ot inves~ and legal fees if the
officer prevail~:~
Such a safeguard, !chord contends,
would not interfere with anyone who
.. riously --be bu .• legitimate. grievanoe qainsl police or other
authorities.
''The" il·Dlllhintl In my JDeUllTe that
would deter -wbo booeatly-believe or have reason to believe," says~~~
"Ibey bav. been Ille victims of ~
pplioe action, or that lbefr dvfl rights
bave been violated. But I do ibink it
wouJd make -Who are inlemted only In baruslnc our police and; courts
heisitant to proolltute tbe legal process
for their own purposes, whatevei: they
may be."
POU CE, prosecuton and other < of·
ficlals with whom lcbonl bas dlscusaed
his legislatlao bwtlq approve. II. Some
would ...,, ,. furtber.
He quotes Royall P. Teny, legal ad-
viser to the Daytona Beach, Fla., police
department .. auerting, "Many ol lbese
IU!ts att ool only frivolous but the result
of actual conspiracy ·to defame law en-
!on:oment ofll-and tbelr agencies.
Such ooosplncies should be punished ..
crimel. c.rtainly pun1u.. .damages
aboold be allowable against any
Ot'ianizlllic.i or individual participating
' ., .. ..,
·1n a frivolous or malicious sujf of this Such e:rpenses often nm into Uwiundt ...
kind." ' ; of dollari. tcbord cited the followlng '·'
Most of these deliberately obstructli'e striking instances:
lawsuits are instituted under. ~ion i983 -Los Angeles -In 1968, a suit was -:2
of TiUe 42, U.S. Code involvin~ statdteS filed against the police chief cbai:ging
f " relating to public health and we are. TW "conspiracy tp violate the ci\lil rights o ~·
Section is as follows : Negroes." This action, it was revealed, ·~
"Every person who, under color of an;. was financed with federal 'funds by the ,~,
statute, ordinance, regulation, c:Ustom or Of(lce of Economic Opportim.ity :-the "'"'
usage, of any: State or Territory, subjects so-called "anti-poverty" agency. After a ,
or cllluses to be subjected, any cltir.en .o,f_ long series of legal maneuven and ~~
the United States or other n.,._,, within machinations, the case waa finally .
the jwildiction thereof to o;-d;privitioil drojlped. . ;-;
of any rights, privileges or immunities "Thus what amoonted to no more than, ''.i
secured .by the ConstltuUon and laws.; a nuisance suit," points out '!chord. "·•
shall he liable to the party injured in an "wound -up by .coitlog tupo,)'tf1 ..,.. ...
action ~t law •. suit ln ;equl.ty .~r otbef • .~$117,000;ln QWl,~aloDe.~'. ~ . ~
proper proceeding for r.dreis. -Dade County; Fli., .wbidl lnciu<les , -
Miami -15 Sectioo· 1!113 ciles wm filed '·
there in two years. One cost more than -:
$50,000 to investigate -be[ore the plain· :'·
tiff asked the court to dismiss it. ,;
FEDERAL COURTS' lnterptttation of
this la.I' has generally been of a broad.
nature. A study of these decisions shows
the courts have consistentiy beld tho·
statute was "not intended as a source foe.:
damage action by disappointed litlganto
. against officers acting wltJiln the scop&'
.of their authority." ....,
"Nor was the purpose of Section 1183,"
maintains tchord, "to discipline law en-
forcement officers, nor to t~ every
defeat of a claimed states right into a
federal rigbt with federal remedy." , _
Another purpose of !chord's bill, 1;1e
stresxd, is to deal with the "surprtsibg
fact." that law enforcement officials ~o
not .have protective-insurance apinst
nuisance and harassment suits. ~w
cities or states have measures to pro'ride
for costa involved in such cases.
-Charlotte, Ji.C:'·-39 Sect.ion 1983 ·~
suits were fi1ed qainst the police depart ... '_;
ment in a 12-montb period by an
American Civil Llbertles·UnioD attorney. ·~.
With one inSignificant e1ception, every ~7:_
one of these ,cases concluded in a ''no ;:,
verdict" by the jury. "
"~TING these suits . was an · ''
ordeal for tbe defe~dants," SVJ ,Jcbord.
.. In one case, no less · than 18 officers ~
were sue;d for $,170,000. It was a clean:ut ·,
instance of haraaament. Tbe suit was '
brought bY, a Black.Panther organization "'
after !heit headquarten \Ill~ been ~.
searched for .weapons stolen from i Na-.,,
tional Guard armory." \ '
What I wondered about, and still
wonder, is how a company can ef-
fec tively sell a newrttchnological device
to customers when the company itself
doesn't utilize the device Within il!I own
studios? If the lights .are truly "too ex·
pensive" to use in the Pittsburgh station,
bow can salesmen for Westinghouse
persuade strangers to buy them?
NOO'ED engineers who build mighty
structures live in shambles themselves;
doctors who display the highest concern
for the weUare of patients pay no at·
tention to their wives' or chUdren's il-
lnesses; and I remember the great
modem architect, Miese van der Rohe,
the )ddi!!g apoolle cl "purity"_and cold
functionaJIJIJl, occupying an apartment In
Chicago whose fumisbings resembled the
remnants'from a Victorian fire sale.
It is said that A1exander Graham Bell,
when he bdilt a summer home in Nova
Scotia for his retirement years, refused
U.S. Civilian BlJ:ild-up • Ill Vietnam .1·1
" "
"
I MENTION this not by way of putting
down Westinghouse -though it certainly
· to have a telephone installed anywhere
on the premises. It may be an
apocryphal story, but It fits the adage too
perfectly to be dismissed as legend.
Most Americans probably assume tbat
when the shooting finally stops in Viet.
nam and the last U.S. troops come home,
this country will have ended its en-
tanglement in the atfalrs ol lodochlna.
Well, don't count on it.
Peering Ahead in '73 Recent news report• from Saigon tell
of a rapid build-up cl American civilian
!Inns In South Vietnam, with aeveral
tboluand U.S .. wwken alttacly In the
country and others arriving dally under
new contracta quletiy negotiated by tbe
pe!ense Deparlment. At ma!JY_U 10,11®
American clYillaa workers may even-
tually be i'eqWred to bindle -k under
these contracts, •cc::ordinc to the ac-
counts.
Nothing will seem free in 1973.
But there Is no reason for mankind to
give up hope, according to our annual
glance at the old crystal ball which re-
veals both good news and bad news.
The good news is that jobs will become
more plentiful. nie bad news is that
prices will go on ris-
• ing, and more and'
more people will ac-
-~pl _the -viewpoint
that1.nflaUon has be-•
come a pennanent
way of life in the
United 'States.
A move will devel·
op to abolish penny
coina on the grounds
that t hey clutter up the pocketJ,
slow c a 1 b transacUons and no ·
longer are worth tile trouble ol count·
lnt. Twenty years ftvm now an attempt wilI be made to drop the nickel tor the
same reasons.
A MEDICAL quack will announce that
be bu IOIV<d the problem of cancer and
that It le-on the edge of· extinction. He
will die ol the dlJoue bimaU later In the
yev. c.a,res. wtll bu cigarette. smokina
dUrlDg meetings In both the ho!ISe and
senat• chambers. nie dletributloil of _,.,me material and the tellln& of
lewd itoi1H In the c1oatroom.s wtll also
be prohibited. 5nulf •od cbewlnfl tobacco
will c:Gfttlnue to be alloWed. A move to
ralte ...,._iooal salules aod pension•
( HAL BOYLE )
will be tibandoned after voters stage a
national chain letter protest'.
Developments on the international
front :
Tbe civilians ""' beinl eent to Vietnam
to take over a wide variety of lute that
until now.have been handled by tho U.S.
military: leachlns the South Vie-
bow to fly and malntlln tilt combat LONDON will offer to set Wales and atrcratt rushed into tbt country before a
Scotland free lf the struggling lrisb wilt .....-n"' agreement cute off fUrtbtr
just settle down and behave themselves shipments; nummc the computers that
like the decent Englishmen Ibey aren't. contr61 Slagon's military -1 and
North Vietnam will offer to .... d com-·logbtics program&; operatq and.,..
bat teams to teach guerrilla tactics to lo& the complex U.S.-erovided com-
tbe Irish Republican Anny. Tbe Irish wtll mw1lcatioos network; repllCinf tbt U.S.
politely ,.ject the offer explaining !!iii~-Who bave dominated tho
they invented guerr'illa t a c t i cs "pacification" program.
themselves more than eight centuries 'Ille nub to bulld up a ._r-proflle,
ago. non-military American pr....,. In South
In Paris, tbe Fr<nCh Academy will Vietnam gtv,. an Ironic twtll to the •p-wian~y tum down 1 proposal that proaching end cl the U.S. mUflarJ n>le m
Americanese be taught as a seoood tbe long lndocblna war. It le aa lf the
In ~ clock were being turned bock a doaeo languaa• " •.nee. yem to 11-oplimllUc doys ol 1111 and
MOSCOW will announce that the' lllC, wtien U.S. advllQR first wint to
Russla!Jl4efeated Red China's pi1ljl pOlll Sollth \littnam to -tile -team In a secret match. Peking will deoY' bow to atop Commuaiam. Wiim tile in-
tbe ,.port for three straight days, and an itlal efforts pro...t lllllUCCONflll, the
the fourth day Chalnnan Mao will
volunteer to play the whole Russian team
sing) .. handed himself -if he <an keep
llCl>Nl.
In· 1Untmary, t9'11 promises to be just
another of those years that will be more
f\ln to look back on later than to go
through.
. .
Quot.es ·-. Men will not fllhl and die without
knowing what Ibey ... flcht1na and dylnc
!or. DoqlN MacAllllOT
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(GUEST REPO~~J feeiings and getting them to take another ability -or the failure -of Congress to " ·
look at the government of South Viet· learn what the administratlona of nlm." ~ Preaidents K~y and Johmon wtte '.-:
In a way, that remainl tbe problem -doing and planning to do In Vie~n>. The ·
and tt is likely to he ~ ullimate '!rustra· unpublicized buildups cl the early lteos, .,
remedy was more and more Amertcaltl
to do more and mare ol the worlt·llld
figbtln(, until I M bundred edvlteri
had grown Into a balf-m!llJon.man U.S.
Anny pgbttng a major war.
Uon. Under President Ni1on'1 "Viet· the growth of covert ,combat oporatloll8, ·..,
namizatioo'' program the Unitt!d States the secret "conttngeney" plana for .• ; bu trained, supported. and .equipped a maasive mllltary lnterveotlog ..,. all~ _
~million-man South y, i e t rua·.m e s e went forward without aerlouS con-
nilllfary fbrce. In the 1aat .OOple cl. , gresslonal scrutiny, let alCllO frank
nie first American -to;win the M~of Hooor in Vietnam --to
tboee early doys In .an lnliritew.-Maj .
Rocer Donlon, ..-IJ.man U.S. Army
unit IUCCeSSlully defended a tini Viet·
lllllM:lf special ! ..... camp apinst I
m .. 1 .. oJ1hl ....Wt ll) 1114, put 'it this
way: "Onecl·thecfruotrat!OiiiclV1-m
Is tbat --Ille battle that oJPt, .but
-had muCb luclt In revenlng tbelr
months we have rushed Jet alrt:raft and disclosure by the ext'ICUUve bnuich. 1 huge quantities of otber'mllitarf JUj>pues 1f. the administration Is planning lo
into the country to beal ah anticipate(! replaee ~ overt Americari military 1 cease-fire cutoff o{ such shipments. But p~e in Vietnam with a pseudo-1 there is little if any evidence ihat tbele clvlllin force, It ought to say so. If the 1 last-minute efforts have· been"any ·more tdminlSttatlon ·will not do that volun-; 1 ~than the 1oo1 y~ before tn taruy. eo-. .ought· to· ""'"1r• 1be , I
'1'ifinnlng hearts and minds\ in SoUtb responsibilE! oUiclals to discloee their
Vittnam. , plans. AM Congress ought to act qulck· I
One of tbe things that 10.t tbis country Jy; If it, does not, wbat most Americam 1
into the Vietnam morus was the in-expect to be the end of the Vietnam etory
could tum out to be just one more
Tricycle Hazard CiietJ, ,
. While Apollo 11 wu r.tumlnf ~ "unS\able per!onnance, particularly
wbat spooe and oclentlflc esperll'al!udy •rollovft' while turning" can.occur within
haV1! termed tho moot Intricate encl tilt normal operating· nowe cl. many
Ulflul tr!P to the . .-. a mwdl. llrm tricYcles. One problem' le tilat you can't
In Buffalo ~" • 'ft! blanUI . on post speed limits for the kldo.·lt is claim·
Ame.rtc:a.'1 mort earthbound tec:boical ed the aveiage five year old can Pedal a
llnow·bow. standalli trllte at more tbaa six mllea on
We can' ,..m to build Ale tricy<les. hour. At even a modest two and a balf • --mpb·lt will Up ovtr If the dtlld attempts c1==:':: :l: ~SW:~ a¥ aagle tum ,. ' •. -1!a-....._ io,tobe-~ ANOnlER DANGJ>ll $:t.,. Is the -
unaafa deslp, 1 "'8'11m_atton", ,,..lbd the rear step. which is an opeo invitation for
fact tbat aMlllllf tlMre lri bet-e standltp pa!l!el1ger. Baclrwant n;povers
100,000 and 1.111,IOO ~ .iJ> cauaed by lbc latter's wejght frequently
jlu'lfs, that it promptly itarted mflln& result in head injuries. • •
mandatory deolp and ~ lot'• hope a nation which can des!Cn ,..W.~ lor IDlllllfac:tunn.~ wm craft capable of taking men safely on lilll, --~fall,~ l'Olllld trips to the moon'< can come up
estimated U mllllao tricycles an' with a tricycle that can taie a child ,..,_
nually In tbt United States. ly around the block.
Tile -.ith ,.pOrt char&ed • tbal C.Uloml• Foatart Stnlce ' .
I
ct.\pler In a conUnulng tragic cbronkle.
-Mfllleapolla 'l'l'flMl1le
O•ANO( COAST •
DAILY PILOT
• • Robert N. Wetd, PublUhtr
" ' ·, Th.ol'MI Kee vit, Editor
Barbani °Krtibich
Editorial Pagr Editor .
The l"dltorh1I f.qr-11f thCi Diiiy
Pllot ~eeks to inrorm arid 1trmu·
late retdl'N by f)l'('lfntlng ,this
newspaper'• opln1oM and ri>m·
rnenfl\fl un to1>i~ nr lnte~t and
1di:nifl<:tncr. by 11NWldlnw: a torun1 tot the ~1111ti'$1don of OW' readers'
<tul nlt1na, al'ld by prt.'IM"nling tho
di\'l'tse vl~1,..,int11 of lnfonntd olr
.,..n.'<'l"l and tPJ)kesmen on topic.
nf tht' dll.f.
Monday, January 22, 11178
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• Monday, January 22, l«J?l DAIL , PILOT 7
UC Irvine Offers
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Varied Acdfities
Course Gets Okay
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On · Riverbed · Bid
l.Q. Of 145
And A Slow • • -'l!le'-followtn la I list ot· •• ,...... --·
SANTA Ar;~ -, The n· entrapment and possible
c1uRJ olfl!l'<d .th• public """1' •· ,_, '"''' "-· 1==~~~-:=:l!l!El!i:'.;!!:!~,ii':~~:iiiii'j,;~~~.,._:!:':.,,,;~kl'f-u,._."",~..,""'~•~••""'~,,,_"'
gram. 1be activlUei are ttv~, -"W ~. ,.,,. r.11
>------1~hedulod.lor-i'eb<uacy....----.. •u·••'-«""",u.. ..... ...,,..._LlJL
perlment of a golf course In
lhe bed ol Ibo Sonia Ana
~ RiYet has been so successful
forage for horses from ad· R d ?
jacenl boarding stables. ea er .
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• i~' y .,. 1 ,,,.,.1 S1.11'1 .. t •.m.·lt '"""" l<f p.m., "TN r,1.. / -' P1&1 lllCI ltm~•· H111N111lllta Hell, UC: lrvl11t t.'"""''• r ~,f~D" 1f'fS. Cl I f'K: ._..., . ~ft II lw~.P•r. ~. ~~rt3 . SATUlllOAV, N. J '" VO..V~m rr •• ~~:;}p.m.. "Sel,ct11111 Yow:'lNI! --~ c-~.100. S.Cltl kltfte1 ~ Htll, ,ottf1<£lkff'«lft Acwuntlni fOt'" tM 'Q)s:r"',. Clll'IOW. 1111111• MmlMWI. ,.. .... ~ Wrlld'I. M.l.A ... IMM99'
~ ecMsory COMUlll!lt IPldell", """°'"f"' Orlll'll a. Ce., Ml o-,. It. •
°""~· Of'1t .. Co. A_...., UC I lo• ExltMio. ~. f ::lf ''""~' .. lt>"W ""'· ,,.. ~ '~ IOQ .. \l'C 1"""'9 c.tll\Olll. F•: us. llllldl ._. ,.,...IN.
IATUl!b&Y .... SUNDAY, ...... a. 4 ' "O.....,,_,, of Gifted, Tt ...... ..... cntttw l'9dl"ridlNl1/0 ,,,.'11V11 ••
"-• M .t... GIM\llt.nt, i.ctww anc1 art111 . .1.. ~v -'lotN -"-"'°P· '
, , Of I 1.M,·l! ~I l·S:Jt ~m .. Gold It'°"'' 'Br•nd Sp11nking New
"4M ~· MotM C-. UC lt"Ane U""""· z~U~':!'..~~-:Pli.;-1 it"K! "": m . MONDAY, M . s The Orange County· Transit Dittrict (OCTD) .has received two· of the six new
_t:=he,_R,,Ic.v•,,rv:=l"ew"'G"o"lf"Cl"u'°'b:..:w,_,,an:;t=•--1'-re0Wa¥-R-anu• A noted ubl~hcr ,in Chicago to expand to protect the facill-./ · -1~ reports there 1s a simple tech-
l n· . s nique ol rapid reading whi ch y. ISCUSSIOD et should. enab le you t~ crease The golf club, which long yoo r reading speed · yet re-
maintalned nine holes on the ANAHEIM -~~o~sed taln much more. ~ ost people
blulf along the river between freeway ramp modificallom do not realize how uch they
17th Street and the Garden on the. Santa Ana Freeway at could increase their p e=
G Anaheim Boulevard. Katel~a suceess and income by rea g
rove Freeway ln Santa Anl Av~ue and Haster Str_eet will faster and more accurately.
haS been given pennl!!ion to ~ discussed at a pubhc heat· According to this publisher,
plallt the riverbed from the mg here Jan. 31. . . . many people. regaklless of their
freeway to Cllapman Avenue The state. D1v1S1on of present reading skill, can use
in Orange. High~ will conduct the this simple technique to if"!l~
. The gOU course operators meeting at 7 :30 p.m. at Fre--pro,·e their reading ability to a
said the additional river bed mont Jr~ High School, 608 W. remarkable degree. Whether
would be planted for sediment Llncoln Ave. reading stories, books, technical
,-----------~----------l matter, it becomes possible to
rn.l..i c.n:i-~-~ .. " "'*'tn C'"*"•: ,.,... v..._ ~ ~an::ir,wered mini-buses~from the Flxible-Company of Alabama. The new ' __ Cott:• It~. Grouoold. A.t.A.. • • La ~'~~~ !f:1 • ~·vc;;;i:!' i':;;....'": =•··----~"g_o_in_to_·_sem __ -.,_e·m_· __ H_a_br_a_o_n_F_eb. __ l_. __ · ___________ 1 ~·°' .,,,, c trvfM. ,.~,.{ "'"*' "11:.,...n., •-~ , Ir:)'!..'!' q ·•1\1,~I~ .-=:=J.~• I::..'"::. ~
read sentences at a glance and
entire pages in seconds with
this method.
~~j~a:ma{'iiYlri!·'?r~ ~~"?+i~~:~=I: c.mpw. ·~oo.J.-T\1"str'1•'c: t Ch1"ef ~Fi "" llilkl...-$ e .... 1u.11on of SU• StlfC· l.i I U. £1
l'l'Wle'f ~ hhll'M'f ,. .... w tloo tnd ~r~I e>ei.,,,..Lntllan:• Mer· . , ' )
"'Tiit· I'?!: !'.,-tnt ~ : . V"i.rdfr, rlll tt.ltlt'", ll!'ftlanl, 1lutllll'" Houtlll9
T ...
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.,_.ow .. , ltoWrt c.-atlon. fltrt of 1 UC Irvin• Ex· G Co "Ee d • ' · ~ lectwt win-"ProfnMclnill ts t 0.Vld-. ""· D .. cllnlul P'~llO!oll•I. PrKll(n In !ht Houtl~ Indus.try.'• 1· ', e , un. y, o-awa1· ~~ ·: A .-:cl•I .:,_onltfWIU In t::•f O.l'fl., . ,,.. Hlil'l'llU\llln Hiii,
Psyc,~iatry
Talk Sl.atecL
To acquaint the readen of
this newspaper with the easy·
10-lollow mies ror developing
rapid reading skill, the com· f>Ml'. has printed full deta ils of
its interesting self -training
method in a new bookJet, "How
to Read Faster a n d Retain
More." mailed free to anyone
who requests it. No obllgation.
Send. your name, address, and
tip code to: Reading, 555 E.
Lang St., Dept, 5(1&.84, Munde-
lein, ill. 60060. A postcard will
<lo.
c':fi:.m. lt9fl0rllt ~11 or ~:':l'i: uc 1rv1n1 c pUS.. Slngt1 .om1..ion, The UC Irvine de""'..tment W1t11011t ~ flri , •II Jll~ Mt.. It. I ,...... ..,,
• a.m . ..t 11.rn.. ~"'"""' ll:OMI, "''"°""' · .... ~.......... ,. '"""?7.'; .__, T '"" SANTA ANA -H. G. lhe Santa Ana River and San of psychiatry and human IM. 1-·~ llW,, ....,..i ·~· • .__..... , • . ...m. 'fltl· M1Knt111 t111 1 wltt1 M.D., pr "' ~1 cfll9t, Osborne chief engineer of the", Juan... and Trabuco cteeks. He behavior has 9et' a free public cf'llltt ~ ~ ,,_~'f 111111*" 11'111 dlvhlon of loMo\', UC 1r¥1n1. hrt • ~ , . . . ~ _.-...,, · "'• uc ,,,,.. ~-.....,...-*' Orange c:ounty Flood CoDtioI also worked to install the lecture, "Preventjan and Child
,. ........ ~ya. ~-'\JUllDAY. ~-,.::"'"' Cll'CVl9l~':i: Dbtrict has been awardedtlti' eounty's first b!cycle trails Psychialrf", for 8 o'clock
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'ol-... ·-·-~ S.,.,,. ~ UG lnllM am. ~-.~=•=-'-•~"'""1_:_~ • i along the Santa Ana Ri. "ver and • ,:.,.-,,HM.,,. Jt ~. ~u;.: ,.... u.ii5e~. ...:.. J.UM J:.o(I 111J11UIQIMU ArnlO"" • Brea Creek. . lonight in the Science Lecture ~ .......... °' ldllc:IHaft, .. Judlcl 111 Our eovrn·w ''"'-" -t Award by the r--•· Hall n c mpu th LO''AL ~ ll ... Ul'll-.lfy .. L8fll lf'ootft Mo!•ol'Offl. 111f1W of "Str\f9111f u.l'liU ............. , Board chairman 'Ronald . 1 Q a S. e re<>sury \_,
-.. • -_.,. _,,., .. ''""''·" Pw• d •'UC •-... Board Of Su, ~~lsors. eas~rs said Osborne wa1 Dr. Saul I. Harrison, visiting "" EDITORIALS """ , ... M '·"'·1 Sii .• t l.lft.-4 pm.. ........ ledun ~ "#« llty ........ • ,... DRY CLEANING
.... """' """"'' 91111'"1 11.m.. lllft. "" Twllltht z-" TIM ._...." ~ 10 • • • The board cited bl.! cho~ for such long-term ef· • professor1, psychoanalyst and ~fin "-II. UC ln'IM ClmPll'$. Sc:i.w;. Ladlll'll HIN, '''C0 rrv:. " lho f three bnok.s • hiid
PltlDAV. IA ltDAV ... IUHDAT. TNU1t19AY, ~. • than IO acres of the UN'il>I' vi r 0 nm en t w bi I e psychiatry, will speak. WOODLAND HILU 21500 V;ctr,•18" lAKIWOOO C•·-SL •-'i'•~BIYd. e ...... ML brlt?u uctt 1unc11tt. c...,,n. SlfWlt Mn11..ion 55"'.,w. leadership in preserving more forts in improving the en· au r 0 on e Git.NADA HILLS 18!lll Cn.tt~1r¥t11 St l!OllANCI Seriu~J and tta ... 111ome Th DAILY Pl LQT
.... t. s.' "DlllM'I• of ........ JoftMI DIMw· rr,-• ...... .,., Q 't Oft 11°"'1• cyto1~,)...Riiy, CEA Mtlotn; Aliso Creek channel U a simultaneausly -meetlng the Harrison is professor of l1VllSID135l0111e"St. IUEHA,AllC ~.;Ju1ndOli11gethorPt UI 8 en Detlda Notlffs :it"~ '!f ·~~u~ .. 1~.:, .. greenbelt and· his in_volvement demands of his own depart-psychiatry at the University of SANTAANA 3900Sou!.'1 B11~1Gi SL ORAHGI G;irden.Grooe B11d. itl1d !iancbesl# Fights City Hall
. -AIMILL '"'of I UC ln'lnl E~ )td..WW,_wc.:,:llh=ope::.::•:.:•:::PIC<:;:::~""'=lc:ecls.:=:.:aloog==--m-tn_t_ . .:..__~ __ _:_ ___ M_i_c_hl"'g'-an_:_M:.:ed.:.lc:'•.:.l:.:Cen:..:.:::ter::'~:O....--'-----·-·-"_"_'_'_"_''_'_'_''_'_"_'_''_'_-_,_ .. _._.,_._"_'_'_'·-----'"==========~ Vlctofll1 L ""9111 • ..i W..tm1111M Avt.. Mrltl, "C-.-... • lflolon,1-
1 ltldl. O."' of dltftl. J•l'llMrY EPIMmlolorf, Ti.r.,.,.:• 7·10 11.m., n. kH"Vf* 1W toll, E." Mllcol"' ~ ~ H1J1, .v..dlcll $ll!""OI ' ~ 1r.ndloll. Wllll1m .M-Anellh I 11111 , u~_JrvlM CM!lfllS. Slllflt' .._ f , l rllfl w, """41. lenllcff, n'lt1Mon, M31. • ~. lllfl·&ft"olron CO.II "/v•i. '""r'"'"'· l•lll-'11..tlt!Uon •nd Afllr," H111rd \fllfl"I Homt, CCllll Mnl, Adlmt. rh. D. vie. Cl'llnc;ellor,
CDP• Al:lcllmlc Atfilrll '-protft,..,.. o1 Eng!IU.
tdrMr'll \..lftlbOnl Capt, lam In Lotrdcln, UC lrvll'IL Part pl, I UC l~ne IEx-
Englltld, Mir '· 1•1 dlfd JMWttY 20. '"""°" lfctut9.fllm lfl"ln. "The FKI 1tn. SIWVIWd by !fl"" ll1ter .. MISI Ind Mind of lrtland,•• 1·10 p,fft., Rm. ,._, co... ,,, ~ llffdli Mrt. l'r•n-101, l't!>ft.k.tl sc-.. lklt-, ue 1rv1nt
at J. Wllll•rm, l"Klflc P1l1HCIH1 Mrs. u ...... '""" E:: M-".
lwt M-R-. UguM HIUu 1wD nl«t" "Tiit Cltholk •~IV -A tr1ntl· Mrs, R*"I J. N"'91"et1. Flllltrtoo\1 Mr.. " 1 •• .....,., llrbet-1, TOIMllOI. S.Vlca will °" :· J•-J. 'Pl'l.b.,•dl111dor •
... .... T""411r. t PM; SMfHr ' --~ IMfltutt .. flfnll'I' lteltllon1. "hlcfl Mortvtry, with prlvlll ~ Hallvwood; dL111dor, Sir ThMl.t1 Mort
_. 11 Flll'fl9vtn Memorlll l'lrt.. sr.t-F1111lly Cll!lk, °""""1'· Ptrt of • UC ttv!M Ex'-lan \lctUrt Mrlft. '0Llvlna .... i....,... ltKll Mortutfll, Directors. T~ In FMllllel." 7.f":..S p..rn ,
'Ill P. 0.Ylt.. ...,:'J.llCll 201D ~ ltt!I. ICID; SOdll $dt!w:e ~I H .. 1. , l+\lrlllrwtoll IMc"-Difilt of th, UC IMnt UITIJllll. Sino!• .am!~.
1G,. lr72. S4w-11¥1d D'I' le. W.15. O"TUODA' Y i •~ .rnothw, 1"1lllnca .. • fl& M
I I~ ~Ill \.~ $11 '"C""'8Jll(I ltllwllor," H e W • r d Dfr'.!!" ~ • l --. '""""'·. "*"Jnktntlw .-"""r:.tfr ~~ lt-0 AMIOclitts. Inc,. A _..,
J c=t of Uil UC I"""' ~ Mm1111t, t:• .:c:~ ~ .... -,...rd, 1H1.1nt1n1': •.m.-4:]0 "·"' .. Golll ltOO!fl-Mesi eom. .or.-. In' P• ftfNly C06onlll mons. lJC lrvfM n'"""'-F•: W. Jn. 11 t4MW. · ~ l11ttrvctlon9'j lnll .... 111 .. lundl ~ ~-·fin, 1Ji:"!.i ., ..... Ill= PlfklnS. MOMcufT. Ji'tlt. It ·.::.~~"~7E=ter-;• "TM~ of .Rltlld9ntl9t ~w· ,'fl-1!.,.-;nr~°'I: ~. '~·;;.,,:::: ~~ YW*:· a.1n:......,,.ron C\lmOlflY, 0r.,.., P•P"f ot 1 uc trvln1 irr,:ni Honw", Coslt Mai, F-•rdlno Ext-'Ofl lletur1I ........ "RMl4Hrtl1I
D rtcton. . 01u_ Income l"TOPft't'I' A1111rtmtnl lioll1K:
E A. Gm. 315 Moo.lntlrn Rold, Lt011N1 1n ..... 1"*'1 Ind M•neotmtnt.'' 7.f:11
> II. D•I• Cl! ctt1111; tnlllrv J.1• 1tn. p.l'fl .• Rm 161, Humff\illn H•ll, UC lvtcl lw "t'lfl. VI Min, .ck Gill lrvtne UlnM. Slnglt lldrnlHlon, W. -~•~":-",r.x"1111m "A.. JW~.J. W~.l!r.n1r, TUISDilt.'f', 111• 11 ,-/''Mow to ,.,_.,. ll'ld S"llMl!I tilt ~n'°" 1 • "'· ~ '' • l',KUot to• LtnOW:· Jlllln 1eorr1111w, 5=1,~.; ... 19~ ~ JAi( C-tnldlm! ~'I'· Pwt Of I "'fi View • I, Fort UC lrvlllf E~on i.cturt _.., H loll NI • 1111 "ProfeukNI PrKl!ctt In !flt HOV.ifiij
Anterilo. I M!, Giii Ml • llrnl , ....... _._" 7 • -R ''' ll'ltrthlnt or • --• -LOllll '"'w""" -.:.... p.m.. m . ..._...... C1f Llilllrll IHcli Hurn.nftln Hilt. UC ltvlnt Cl"""", =;1~1 ll'lll~Fll'flll"f · -II Sl~e Mlmlulon; $6.
I• 1 m.ea:IJ.t.~~~Jic •vi::"~ .. M)'OC.ll'dl•I l"""rct!On CHMrt ,.,..
DlrlClort. M•IKI · , fldr.)," M1rvtn • A. "Klcli-. M.D.,
IUOC:llfilt ~' M.didN., Ill A~"':::l· l':rll Min ol Mr. •nd~ ltesldtta, UC lrvlftt, ""' of 1 UC ::..,::t5:JJ.. 1v:'1~s7,,.=;: 1rv1nt ewi.nMon 1ec111r. --. "Tow ~.i...1 Mt::v:r.,, . thi-.. Tlltlll,..._!.'I'• HHrt Ind Omll_ftory ,,,.-..,H 7.,. f:"" 9-¥tnlv C•lhl..lc p.m.. ~ '1.Ktvnl H1U, Mldlcal Cllurdl, " ~ lnlwrmtrrt, SllrOt I 11111.. llC trvlnt umpw
Gliod ~ C-'erV. ll•m•raotf'Oll Sing .. Mlmluloft. 16.
F"iiMfll ~. m\~y , D •"'°"' Holbllm Or "A ......., Abortion Llw" :• w.tfer gt,' H. ~1 'tt :Jfdllrll. J~ri T>'l11~ o:i-l'Dundlt ll'ld Jlllll pre&ld9nf JO:' • ll'f wli'l llltl : ol ltlgoht To Uh LHVIMI .vthw Edit<, • r.Ji= lt.m.-1 Mid I-cpl tdYi-to PLtnn911 P1rtnll'lood. I UIWltl l-1.JOll*, 0. Cllttord Pwt C11 1 UC ll'Vlfllil !xleft$10n lecture =~~. S....V~p.,.,....lr~~·,Yell'lj ........ "Mor•llty ,,. TWll~ ~Of H ;:'1'j:''j~ n. , 1!1> Tr. Law.'' 7·10 p,m •• Sci~ Ltcture • c:=c.i~MY· 1n ' "'"' 'I' •UO-H .. I. UC lrVlne Clfl'llMll. Sllltlf ao. -b w tllll'lo tO /Ntl:t ~Ill !Tlltllon, $5.50. ~tr~ ::::~::..=•':. 9111/i. '""'91c!t"~0,:::• .. ':iv:: A. Sfllf. ~ 11ntr1l t. COlll ,Meu, frrltl'I, M.0 .. cfllllc.il fl.lldtl'lt prom;'°'
rtclorw.. 1t•IM•1t of $1J1'1'11Y, UC ll"YIMI pr'1oldtftl,
}
'"'"" J~ -Jl91mtl'. llnldlnt of Amerkln C.-SOClely, 0r-... 1knklt, 1 "'1111 .. Dltt of dlllhl c.inl'!' unri. P•rt of 1 UC Irvine E11· •-1"'1 It, tn. s11rv1Y111:1rv WI,., Gii ""lilon lotclurt -'"·""ClllC .... : ' c_. ~!lmtl'"I IOM,' ltkhtll'lf J. Jr. ti¥! f:llolOg'f', Epl~OIOll'I'• Thtrtpy.'' 7·10 p"vit cJ 11:1=' ~~ IN!. ~fre M~ p.1t1., Sophom°'• LllClure H111, .v..111c11 !Ehl~ t-•1•111t7rJ • ..,. ~· .~~i':~.i $Urot I 81d9., UC lrvlne Cll"nPlll • . ::r.r.· utld1 , 11 • ... ~ PIClfk: V1tW Slnglt admlu.Lon, U .50. . ,_ lntt>rmt!'lr. I"~ lew Mtmorltl _ 0 P•r ',,Klfle VI~ rv. Director.. 0'Tht (:hlc.ino Ftmll'f'1-·lnnovtth•
k•ltlrvn I. T.,,:;;;:···.... -of 12' C1brmo Otowtf\," M•rprlt1 Mltndei, M.s.w ..
It., (etll Mnl, tl9 dfllh. J1ftl,llry Swtrvlalng h yc:h111trlc SOCl•I Wort:tr.
1, 1f71. S""""v llwbflld, Hlmlllll Etat LOI °'"°"" DIPlrtn\enl of Nltfl..
f;"''' Mr. ll'ld M,... AnlOI\ Vrelflldl s~.1 11-1 HN/ltl cnn1c. P1rt of 1 uc trvlne , .... ~ICk, Alllll'I Jr. -Ell'-'tloll ltctvrt M ri.t, "LIYlng OMPll v ... n . re.. •. ~ W• TCllMfhtr In Famnr.s:• 7..f:<U p.m.,
l"M, COllJI J°'""""""' 1•~ fltm. 100, ~I klt!ICe LIC!ure H11U, with Rtv. ll:Mrt eccllll UC 1-• Jni.m-t, Mlfl1"'4d. I '"'" Umpl,IS, Slnglf ldmlulOll. ll"Otdw9' Mottvlry, Oli"tctarl. M.7S. !
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17'1 Lopu cu,.. Rd.
OMIJI • PACIFIC VIEW
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folewport -. Callftnll
r -' . I PEEi[ FAMILY
l OOtONlAL FUNEllAL
I -=A ... WMwih ..... ..-
SMl'IW' .LrruAllY ., _81.
bllloCIM ..... ·-·
rry ·Saturday's News Quq
•
• " •
IMAGINE. !-~F'AMILY CIRCUSSMe:ETS
AND PILL.bWCASES AT NO EXTAA , ·-
Cl IAl2GE ·wttH EVERY FRIGIDAIRE WASHE1~; DNE'Q· Ol2 LAUND'2V CENTER.
I
Wit!) every Frtgidalre wasb.er or dryer
' f' : you buy betw~~nJanpaiy_21sfan~
febru81Y 28th;,yO'u')!. r~ce!Ve • .. set ot
fine sheels ~nd pHIOwt8$eS by .
Burlirigton, at no extra c;:harga,
·Imprinted with atl.the lovable.BU !(eane
•:Family Clrcu&~cb~rayters:cAn~hh
t~o purchase of a Frlgl<faire Laund,Y
Center or a.Frigidaire laundry pair,
•.. -· " . ' ,,
. ' you'll receive two sets.. · · ' "'
Each set contalnS two Peirganent
1Press twi~sheets (o.ne top,and one
fitted) plus iwO.plllowcases, ·
' ' "'
Short on space? You can still haw· .
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this Frigidaire Laund ry Center. It's
only 24" wide, yet it washes and .•
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household curreht, plugs into
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••Rarate branch clrcul~
tCT3·120
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,
More ·ways to save on
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Frfgldalr9,8 C~!Ofn Imperf!!.·
T(!p-Fr9eze'r fefl1ge rator de· "
flvtni a f1Ill'20.5 cu. n. of
Organized storeg~ space, all .
of It 100% Frost-Proof. The
5.e:2 cu. ft. freezer section
sklres up to 203 pounds of
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tton has a Meat Tender to
keep meats fresh up to a
week, plus twin vegetable-
crllplng HydT8tor..
" ' FPC~S
1379''
Got·all the wash day capaci\Y10U need with llie
. FIJ91dalre Deluxe washer and dryar. The washer
, feature•; Frigidaire's Jet Cone Agitator to clean deep
down ~thout pounding or beating; and has a 16
pound capaclly, The dryer, with Flowing Heat
10 provide even, thorough drYlng, without hot
apots, holds up to 18 pounds,
• WCOA3T·DA3T
1359!' ....
Got a 4.75 cu. ft. hezer that
stores up to 168 pounds of
frozen foods and 1r.o cu. ft,
·of etorage space overall from
thlo custom Imperial
fltoldalre refrigerator ..
froozer, Besl of all, ll'a 100%
Frost-Proof to ellmlnate
-ng forever,
~170TT
~349'5
.You'll love it SO .wHI your kids.
• '
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COST I ' MESA
· MA-AllA
411l--St . ..,..,, ..• , .......
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8 •DA.IL\' PILOT M ...... .lanU¥J 22, 1973
QUEENIE· By Phll lntwlandl L.M. Boyd
. ./ .
Heavy Breathin·g~Si ._.ait Art
Don't Overexert
Was none other than Dr. Peter J. Stcincrohn who said·
1 After age 40, mUJC!es -nf.ed only be efficient enough to
keep our skeleton from dangling. If yoo 're naturally laey ,
stay that way. We're allotted about 3.5 billion ~ats
when we 're been. Why dissipate them in wastclul UDRect.$-
sary el'let"g)'? "
"l\IOTION PICTURE !heater" translates in Chinese u
"Electricity Shadow Hall ." . , . THERE'S no inheritance
tu in Mu:ico, pleese note ... PITY THE GROWN male
wattJed starling, poor bird. It frtquently
gets bald •.. TEETH of the minnow are
in it5 throat ... TH.4.T DOG LEAST apt
to bife people, cootends one canine expert,
Is the hound.
YOUNG LAD'', count the number ol
accessories -scarves, flowers, bracelets..
pins. pendants -you're wearing. U the
total is more than thre<, you probably
have a teodeocy to over4oo-dad. That's
the claim of a fashioo expert. Earrings only c:ount one.
Sl\10KING -A lot of men have quit smoking in· the
last dozen years. But a lot of y.romen have taken it up. U.S.
Public Health statistics sOOw that. To be precise, only about
50 percent of the grownup males smoke now. About 57 per·
cent smoked In 1960. Almost 33 pereent of the women smote
now. Only about 28 percent smoked in 1960. Another pe-
culiarity, this.
Q. "ON WlUCH ~IDE of the Ootmder is its eyes, the
right or the left?" r .
A. The right. It's the fluke that has •Y'S oo the left.
Q. "WHAT'S a 'Nantu<l>t"!lelgh-.1de'~ --
A. That's a fast trip in an open boat l'.ith a harpooned
whale for an engine.
BY AGE 'iO -If you've lived to be 7-0. you 've spent
just about a yMr and a half washing yourseH. Or so re-
ports a clean computer expert.
DID I TELL you 250,000 cakes of soap are used nation·
"Aide every year just to draw X's on ne w windows in build·
ing under construction?"
IF WORK doesn't interest you much, come back as a
garter snake. That beast generally wakes up around noon,
forages for awhile, then reclres fer the rest of the day at
about 1:30 p.m.
WHY SO many men get stomach ulcers while so few
women do likewise has not yet been explained by the medi·
C06, unfontu1ately.
·~
"You'rehaving 'olleollholeda11'? You..,. hod._ . .,
those days' for two weeks oow."
Veteran Running
F r Office at 97
girl hA! been living with Qzrtis
A 97-year-old veteran of the and his third wile, Leslie, fef'
Spanish American-War is rup. five months.
ning for Lyon County (Ky) ~ and_ bis Wile have a
sheriff in the firm belief that 5?n N~~. 2, and custody of
"old age don't cut any big his two daughters, Alexandra,
figure ." -~ and Allegra, 6, by a mar-
s. J\.torgan ~lardn, who held r!age to attress aimt1ae
his first public office -town Kau.fmua. * .
,.--------., U.yley MDb, the ~)'taN>ld
( '"'Q · J British movie actress, has P .IJ PLE given birth to an 1-poond, 12-
-_ ounce 8Cll at Queen Charlotte ..._ ______ ...J Hospital in Londoo.
marshal -in 1906, says young
people "need us older fol.ks as
examples."
"Of course I'll have yot.mger
people to help me if elected,"
he added. "But young people
need our inOuence. When
we're passed on, there will be
plenty of time for the younger
generation."
"I'm happy to say be lookJ
remar~ like Hayley.~' Roy Booltiac, the 40-year'*' hu-
band of Miu MDb said.
Boulting, a producer and
director, and MiM Mills were
married in May 1'11.
* Artlmr Sm1t.b hasn't seen the
movie "Deliverance" but he's
going to sue the movie'• pro-
ducers, Warner Brothers
Studios, just the same.
Smith, a popular country
music artist and a television
"TllE TYPICAL akin Olck
sound tract is a mixture ol
progressive jau and heavy
• Air Resources
Unit Spills It
Capito! News Service
SACRAMENTO -The Stalo
Air 11etom«1 Board "m
decide tllia mooth wf>elber to
keep "trade secrets" private
or make them available for
public inspection.
The California P u b I I c
R~ Act makea moot
records of state agencies open,
but there are excepUons in the
cue of personnel matten1
apedfied finandal infonnaUOD
and "b'ade secrets."
ANNOUNCING
NEW OFFICES OF
Palisades
Chiropractic
DDINIS L THOMPSON D.C.
WE QUOTE-PRICES
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANYTIME
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CLOSE-UP T001"!PASTE, 6-2 OL ··········'····· $1.0, 9Ji CLAIROL IALSAM 2, Hair C.'"'itto,..,, I 01. ·'-•••• $1.59 $1.Jt
SHICK SHAVE CRE.A.M, Horbol or Oro .. o,'11 oa. •• $1.19 99¢
Liie l"rtrt
73•
73• ,73,
73•
2700 E. Coast Hi!hway, at Femleaf. Corona def Mar
• m 644-7575 " PERSONAL NOTE -\Vhen I was a lad rehearsing my
craft, y,·ords came easy to describe. how things looked or
sounded or felt or tasted. But there were never enough
"-'Ords to desnbe how things smelled. A new bicycle, for
instance. It looked like the shiny insides ot an alarm clock
all set to go off. Or ii sounded soft. a gentle hissing, like
nothing so much as y,·ater nmning. Or it felt cold and crisp
like a musical horn not yet played in the morning. Or it
tasted puckery as a handlebar should, like the caustic
navor of pennies .. But no words said how it smelled. f'rus..
tratfug. Still, ev-en without 'Mlrds, I remember the smell
of that bike more clearly than all the rest of it. '
P..1artin, a native of Lyon
County, bas operated a trailer
part since retiring several
years agQ from the Umber and
sawmill business. But he
doesn't believe in retirement.
*
celebrity in Oiarlolte, N. c.1-----------========
said the song "Dueling Ban-
A-TOily c.rtlll ls seeking jos" in the film la the tune he
custody of Illa 16-year-<>ld
daughter, Kelly Lee, In a
Superior Coort suit wruch
names actress Janet Lelgla as
defendant.
wrote and recorded as
•·Feuding Banjos"' in 1952.
Address nioil to L. IH. Boyd, P. 0. Bo:t 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660. An attorney who filed the
suit in Santa Monica said the
Poet Ja111t1 Dickey author
of the novel "Deliverance,''
said from bis Columbia, S. C.
home he cooldo't tell the dif-
ference between the tunes.
This is one of the
best muckrakers
This is a family man
who teaches a
in the business today Sunday school class
Which Is The Real Jack Anderson?
The answer is "both." Jeck.Anderson, selected more then 20 years
ego by the late Drew Pearson himself to be Pearson's heir is, 'in
feet, outdoing "th~ master" in the profession. He wes et the bottom
of some of Pearson's most startling exroses and hes gone on to make
his own contributions to give 'em hel journalism.
The paradox, perhaps, lies in the feet that Anderson really is a fam-
ily men end Sunday School teacher who literally feels sorry for the
public officials who feel the prick of his pen. Though he describes
himself es a muckraker, he really feels he is carrying out a special,
though sometimes painful colling, when he ex pos es corruption.
It · T akts Both Jack Andersons To
Create The Editorial PCICJ9 Columns Which Appear In The
J
. .
•
thru Feb. 10 *.REFRESHMENTS* FUN
Grand Opening
lebration
. ' BRENTWOOD SAVINGS and Loan Assoc~lon
1640 Adams (2 qlocks West of Harbor Blvd.)
_TAKE A LOOK
at our beautiful new office. lt'a our most modem branch, filled with
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service. A few of our special features are:
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Our vault is just loaded with ~ariout 1lzed boxes. Wewant.youto
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Drive-up teller service
In a hurry? Drive right up to one of our handy new outside windows,
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New extended hours
For your convenience. we will now be open during thefoUowlng houra:
· Mon.· Thurs. 9-5 Frl. 10-e sat 10-2
Hm •rs eome •ddlllonal Brentwood Savings featum1
FREE Travelers Check&• FREE Money.Orders•
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• n.. -..... -n. Chai -°"""" NEW
C1 lll11lc ·-,_ ~ ;;..Jr. ..... ,. .•. ~ -Cltifri -.
We have selected four very popular books. We want you to select your favorite and
take It home with you. It's you11 FREE: our way of saying "thank you " for taking tho
time to visit our beaotiful new office. Happy reading from BrentwOOd Savings.
'*"""" btllnol requfl'td. • •wri.n htfd to ~ or quarttr.
• ,, ...
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' MonclQ, J.t11411ry 22, lfl73 'DAIL V PILOT ,. ..... c:._
" '" "~ -"-._..c.~~~ ))i
' ... ~..:.==. , "'t'"J
rk lot1r. lhi1 i1 my GYM ''I'll do my other homewo " homework . I f
• : 'Big Brotlaer'"I
I
' I : . Pentagon to Test
• I • I . HomeAlarm Units
I WASHINGTON (AP) -Tile
I Pentagon plans wide-scale -tests next month on a radio
aming system It wants to
-In your bedroom.
~-ndlo receiver listens
· ently to a 1overnment fre-
ency and comos ID lire only
n the military activates' It
Ith a special, coded signal.
The aim iJ to save lives by
f:dcastlng warnings of
doea:, hurricanes, floods
uclear attack. Installation
the radio devki would be
oluntary.
ORIGINALLY Civil Defense
C' officials hoped for a law re-
uiring that the radio
~eivers be built into every
• w television. set sold in the
nited States. .
But White liouse broa d·
~ting oflicials overruled the
f'fnilitary, which runs Civil ~Defense operations. at least
J mporarlly. They feared the
~blic might interpret man-
j-,~tory installation of the
... .f'Ceivers as part of a govern·
Blast Ends
In Murder
-A rrests
GRANDIN, Mo. !UP!\ -A
small e1.ploslon at a Poplar
Bluff, Mo., garage apparently
resulted in the arrest of three
suspects in the murder of
Grandin banker Robert Klt·
terman, his wife and 17-year-
old daughter.
Authorities said a tipster
told Butler County Sheriff
' Clyde Hendrix he had seen one
of the suspects, Dallas Ray
Delay, 3.1. al the garage a f,ew
days before the ·IOttennans
were murdered ..
The tipster reportedly told
authorities Delay had a pistol
and something resembling
a dynamite stick, which he ex-
ploded .with gun powder.
"I'm going to use this lo rob
a bank," qthoritles said the
liJX!iter qOOted Delay as
saying.
Ripley County Prosecuting
Attorney James Hall said tha1
Sunday Delay, Lloyd Owaine
C.Owin, 21, and Jerry Rector,
22, each would be charged
with three co:.ints of rirst-
degree murder. 'I11e three Jiv-
ed in Van Buttn, Mo., about 15
miles northwest of Grandin.
AUTHoruTu!s said the trio
had been camping in a wooded
area where a fake bomb and
currency were found. The
makeshift campsite was about
seven miles from wberr the
bodies of Kitterman, 43. his
wife Bertha, 33, and their
daughter, Roberta, were founa
last Wednesday.
'
. ment prop .. ganda and spy
system simi\ar to the one used
by dictator Big Brother In
George Orwell's novel "198Ji.'f
In 111al ~k, govein~
agents kept ,.atch on citizens
in their homes through clOsed·
.circuit televt8on cameras. Big
Brother coulO pre-empt any
program I<> dtliver orclf'S or
propagande. l
The Pentagqn.'1 syl!lte~ can
only talk, not ,,-tc}l or11isten.
Regular comtiercial 1broad-
casts aren't aftected:.
CIYIL Del'el\!ie officials, who
conceived the wammg system,
have OOllt a bombproof radio
transmitter near Baltimore
and plan to start test broad·
casts to a l~state area io ear-
ly Febitiary. · ·
About 400 flgb-prlced
receivers are being_.bllilt, and
will be distributed at firs t qiily
lo state and local government
authorities wtio want them.
But technicians are close to
perfecting a borne receiver
cheap enough -about $10 -
for almost anY.Qne to afford.
The ctvll de!erR officials
call the system oms, for
Decision lnfonnation Distribtl·
tion System.
PLANNING began in 1964,
small-scale fjeld tests were
conducted 'in 1968 and
Congress appropriated $2
million for the first transmit-
ter and receit-ers In 1970. Cost
overruns ha'1e raised the in-
itial price to .'5.7 million.
lf next month 's tests are
successful, and if Congress
goes along, the Pentagon plan:!!
eventually to build a total of 10
transmitters ' that tOgether
would reach nearly every cor-
ner of the 1natklrn, except
Alaska and Hawaii.
The automated tran9mitlers
could be overated by remote
control from the North
American Air Defense Com-
mand near Colorado Springs,
Colo. or at either of two back-
up points.
BY PUSHING buttons on a
console, a technician at one of
these control points would be
able to turn on air!raid sirens,
broa\lcast messages by voice
or teletype to state anti local
officials, or s e n d an-
noun~ments 'over h o m e
rece1ven.
The Pentagon began think-
ing about improving its na-
tional warning system more
than a decade ago, when
missiles made lhe' old,
telephone-and-siren s y s t e m
obsolete. -
That system, changO!i Ultle
today, would taken an
estimated 30 minutes to reach
75 percent of the population.
even under the best or
circumstances. 1
Officials estimate the OIDS
system could warn 90 percent
of the public In hall a minute,
if everyone had a receiver.
I 1,
I See by T odaf s •
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''first Cholc:e of Carpenters/''
•Highest quality chrome nickel alloy steel Disston® Model D·23 .
• Full taper ground, bevel filed,
hardened, tempered & polished.
REG, $10.99 $599
SAVE $5.001
-WHILE THEY LAST!
Your Choice!
.TOASTER OR STEAM IRON
:1c1~se-Out of famous Proctor·Sllex Electrical App/lancesl''
2 she• toa1ler featu,..1 selectronic color control-
perfect toast from ony kind of b,..odl
• Spray •team 'n dry iron has a built-in wash & wear
temperature guide-spray, •team & dryl YOUR CHOICI
nns. &
WtD, ONLTI SAVE ss.OO! SAVI $5,00f REG.to$12.99
1ro1c1ffit1f1r11,11v~:11~111iE
Any Maiar lrand ·
MOTOR OIL
• fin• quality heavy duty o~ non·detergent
20 or 30 weight motor a1ll •
• Ha>101ine•, P•nnxon•' and Qua~er Stole '
to nome just a fewl
LIMIT 6 QUARTS 38' PER CUSTOMER QI.
TUES. & WtD. ONLTI
M ... I
OIL DRAIN PAN
• Prevenl• spills & sloins in garage or drivewoy .
• larg• capacity metal pan.
REG . $2.19 $139
No . 711
TUlS. & WtD. ONL YI
t
Famous Spartu1• Electric
CLOCKS! CLOCKS! CLOCKS!
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JO · DAILY PILOT • $
lnsw·8nce
Bill Seeks
True Costs
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
' -•
Philip Hart says Americans
could bMluying their life-in-~
suran« "In the blind" nnd lir----;;O<;n IDylopojfiliar opinion -
all life Insurance does not cost
about the same.
I
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Hart, a co-author of the na-
tional-no-rault auto insurance
bill, says it may be time ~
for ''truth-in-life-insurance"
legislatio n. !\:
sval LEGISLATION, tbe
~tlchigan Democrat said,
would require companies or-
fering life policies to breat
down their premiums and ex·
plai n what part or the poliCy
bill goes for \vhat kind of pro-
tection.
\\'Ith such a brea kdO\\'n,
Hart says. Americans could
compare the rtlqtive costs of
different policies, something
that is virtually impossible
right now.
"~lost people seem to
believe that all life insurance
costs about the same," Hart
said in a statentent. '·Actually
the price of de.:ith protection ,
- a basic of any policy -can
\'ary by as n1uch as 300 per·
cent even v. hen annual
DEALER GROUP AD COUNCIL ~ Preparing to kick off new Harbor Boulevard
Dealer Association campaign are advertising committee members (seated left to
r ight) Fontia<! dealer Dave Rqss,-Ford-d.ealer-'f.heodore-Robins.Jr.,-and-Li.ncoln·
Alercury dealer Dick Johnson. Standing is Chevrolet dealer John Connell.
111 High Gear
premiwns for ideJ\tical
policies vary only by 15 per-
cent."
The confusion. Hart said ,
comes because most policies
include both death protection
and savings element.
Hart said he would exa1nine
the question in hea rings before
his Senate antitrust and
m o n o po 1 y subcommittee
beginning Feb. 20.
Harb.or Boule~ard~N_e:w Car
Deale1·s· Create Association
There is competition for the
ronsumer insurance dollar.
llatt said, based on service
and company reputation.
"What we are going to find
out is how much is based on
price,'' he said.
"TO CONSU~IERS, it can
mean buying blind. This is
goihg on in the life insurance
market toda y," he said ..
Bankan1erica 's
Dividend Told
Directors of Bankamerica
Corp. have authorized a
quarterly dividend of 191h
cents per share on the COT·
poration's capital stock.
The dividend is payable Feb.
28 to shareowners of record
Jan. 31.
PRIVATE TRUST
FUNIS AVAllAILE
FOfll MAL l!STATe LOAMI
111 & 2nd TRUST DEEDS
$1,500 To 1250,000
UP TO llO'Jf. LOAKS Off
TIUJST DEED COLLATERAL
Jl!Wl'Offf EOUITT l'WDS N~C9nler 820 N~n Center OriV'll
NIW!IOfl Be.ch, C1lll. (714) M4-1824
By CA RL CARSTENSE..!'J
01 lt>e o.llJ 1'1191 Sllff
After more than a 'year in
the planning stage, a nucleus
of the franchised new car
dealers on Harbor Boulevard
in Costa '-fesa have joined
together to for m an associa·
lion.
Called "Costa tot e s a ' s
Harbor Boulevard or Cars",
the new group · was primarily
organized to promote their
sales and service racilities to
the people Of the Harbor area.
OFFICERS . OF the
organization are Cadillac
, dealer Dick N2bers, presi-
dent; Chevrolet dealer John
Connell," vice-president and
Da1sun dealer George Zim·
merman. treasurer. Costa
'-1esa aitorney Roy June is
legal counsel.
While the official M -off
campaign gets underway
Tuesday, Naber~ said that
"we're hopeful that our new
group and our intentions will
continue indefinitely." ~
"The consumer demand for
1973 automobiles is at a pigh
level," Nabers said, "and we
know "'e have a responsibility
to the people 1£ our cmD·
munities to ma i.ntain,
or upgrade if need be, our im-
age as business people and we
all agree that a specific code of
ethics is necessary. We are
·willing to an~ftr to the
customer any time." Nabers
also said they will be ~
dertalting various civic and
charitable duties as a group.
DURING THIS introductory
week all sales and service
departments, body shops, and
even the "boss's office" W'lll
be open for yoW' JMJ)edlon.
Also each dealer in tbe group
will award a new 10 speed bike
the first four days of the cam-
paign.
One of the organizers,
Oldsmobile dealer 1"'1 Beimi ,
sald, "\fben I first · opened""
HazWr in 11164 it was hard (o vtsuillz.e a boulevard with this
many new car dealers but I
Nabers Cadillac.
Robim Ford and
Oldsmobile.
* *
Theodore
University
* Record-breaking cars sales
totaling 41,556 ha ve turned
1'72 into the best-ever for
Mercedes-Benz. The figure
represents an bnpromnent ol
mort than Ia percent over the
pn:vious record total of 35,159
unlls sold in 1971.
"Though our sales for the
past -year hav.e-slightly ex·
ceeded our own projections,
we are pleased but not en-
tirely surprisal. Our dealeni
built up a momentum early in
lhe y~ that never let up1"
said X-arllried Nciianiail,
president of Mercedes-Benz of
North America.
* * * Final 1m Chevrolet •flilftS
or 3,183,911 passeDger cars and.
~ have Id new auto ii>
dustry reconls, F. J. Mo-
Donald,-general managu,
has announced.
had tbe fecllng"tlleJnfe·wou14-mGHL1GBTING the best
eventually have a New Car year in the division's history,
Dealers Association. It's a McDooald ·s a i d the fmal
good thing. I think we all passenger car toti:ils reaChed
Jbare the same problems and 2,345,834 dealer deliveries
have similar ideas on bow to while truck totals were
solve them but It seems easier 843,0'rl.
it you can do it together. It's . "With lhe continuing strong
better for the customer too, economy and the availability
and we 'll do everything we-of both cars and trucka, we
can to make it easier .for think 1973 sates levels could
him." ' reach the 3.5 million mark,"
be said.
CHARTER ME M.B ER Tbe 11'12-sales record
. dealers are Bauer Buick, Cori-
nell Chevrolet, Costa Mesa
DatsWl, Dave Ross Pontiac,
Johnson & Son Lincoln-
represents the aeconcl con-
secutive year Chevrolet bu
broken the three million car
and truck sales mark for the
indiVidual auto maker.
AdY11rtlHm1nl
Tormenting Rectal Itch
Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues
Promptly Relieved--'
In many cueo i'roporaijon H dredl ol patimta lhowod·this
giveeprompt,temporaryrelief to be true in !DUIY cues. In
from sudl pain and itching fact, many docton, them-
and actua.11y helps ahrink selves, use Pr~poratiM 1J9 or
awelling ol hemorrhoid.al ti&-recommend it for their fam.
&ue& caused by inflammation, iliea. Preparation H ointment
Teat.I by doctors on hwt· or suppositories.
••••••u11• • IF Mii ·•
THERE ARE OVER 20
ACRES OF NEW AND USED
CARS FOR SAL E
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevard
af Car•
LOOl fOI THI IMILIM AT
•
l>AVE'"ROSJ!Al-GREEN'S-PONTIAC Mir•cl• M11d•
2AIO 2150
HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD.
Mercu~, Miracle Mazda,
They've ~· ·It
Contract Spar:ks .Optimism
FARMINGDALE, N.Y. (AP) Force is known to want
-The award of an A~orce 'between 600 and 700 planes. fighter contract to Fafrcbild _
Industries Inc. has aroused _
visions of new jobs-and h.a!g----A:RMED·wrrn a·30mrn can--
ing paytolls reminiscent-Of Oon andeapable of cerrying
aerospace prosperity years 16,000 paunds of explosives
ago on Long Island. -the A-X, far attack aircra'ft~
Suffolk County Exec\ltive experiment, is intended as a
John Klein said Fairchild's relatively slow but highly
t'l)ntract to develop the new A· maneuverable attack plane for
X close air support attack supporting groWld lroops in
Plane probably amounted to batUe.
Long lslanc:Ps "biggest single 5eledion of the Fairchild Al
economic shot in the arm" in prototype over a prototype
several yettrs. bw'lt by Northrop Corp". of Los
Angeles was based , the Air
OF,ICIALS HERE at the Force said, on the results of
firm's Republic Division, flight tests and evaluation of
which will do the work, each contractor's proposals ln-
estimated an Increase of l,a>D voJVing costs of a propoaed
. jobs by the end of 1974 when first buy of 48 production
the development phase will be aircraft plua life cycle costs of
over. the.proposed pine.
The project Is expected. to Northrop offlcals said loss of
reach its peak in 1978 and if the contract will have no 1Jrt.
Fairchild retains the contract mediate effect on etnployment
alter 1974, it will have to hire at • the firm's Ha~
an estimated 4,500 new (;alif., aircraft division. But
workers and more than triple they said tbe company would
ii! curreat companywide '30 have hired $-'.:io addiUonal
million payroll. worm il II tiad """ Ille
COmpany otOcials allO award.
referred to a "trlpple effect," Obviously we a r fl
a l!'""ul• that statu that !or appointed. with the d-
every new aerospace · Job, to telect the FalrtbUd
tlu<Hn<J.e-balf-«her-jobo-alrn1lt;" said North r o
spring •P In the Nwat>&ll· Presideill Thoinu V. J..,.,
folk counties area. ''We believe the AJA ll a very
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W~all Street • • •
Fifteen out of every 100 Americans
"> • ~ t
We co.uldn"t -prove it, of course, 1:1t
. );, h -. ii ·tijat 't e percentage 1s .even greater
toda own stock.
1t see ,;; 'i. 4ikely .
, I• ..
here in the Or-
"
. . . .
,a·nge Coast area ... lln~ it's growi·ng every day: ·
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That's why the DAILY PILOT was 'proud, years ago,
to be t he first newspaper in Orange County to bring
its readers "today~s fi~dl '.stocks tOday". via super high
speec.! wire services.' We're still doing it in every home-
deliv~red edition and the servic~ gets better all the time.
'
Wall Street's computers "talk to". com pt1 te rs in the
DAILY PILOT plant every trading day at the rate of
more than l,000 words . 'per minute. It takes only 12
minutes to-move the entire New York and-Ameriea·n .,... . .. .
Stock Exchange reports from the can ?on s -of Wall
Street to the typesetting machines of the DAtlY Pf(OT . .
right here on the Orange Coast.
And when technology finds a way to beat that speed
record, 'the DAILY PILOT, no doubt; will. be among the
first to use it to bri ng readers "today's. action today/'
When it comes to financial news, the one that means
business is the
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Tho Air Force did not One airplane In the boll
disc1ose the amount of the Northrop tradJtion. ·
Fairchild contract, which calls jjAnd we are confident In the
for the construction of IO pre-long run the" A9A would hive
prodl.lCtlon altcrafl. The final proved to be the lo}tesl COil
product 11 expected to ... t aircraft system !or lhll mJt.
•IA millioli each and tht Air sion. IL.---~-------.;.·..;,·..;..,;,.-______ _. _________ :.;., ___ ~
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-Daily
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Pilot Story
DAILY PILOT, Laguna Beach DAILY PILOT,
Saddleback DAILY PILOT (for Laguna l';iguel, ·
Mbslon Viejo, El Toto and surroundin g areas ),
Costa Mesa DAILY PILO'l', or San Clement&Cap-
istrano DAILY PILOT. ,
' -emtonarpQlicles and 'news decisions · ate
gre&Uy influenced by editol'll in each of the various areas. Advottlsora are servedlb)l.:advertlsing-alaff
personnel assigned. to each of .Jhe communities
served by the-newspaper.
Byt the job of fitting t~e plect\S)9f.etber -
the complicated task of processing and ' manufac-
turing" each 4ay's newspaper-ls haii<lled at home
base, 330 West Bay St., Costa Mesa.
The story can be told·in the recital of a
string of facts: .
• CIRCULATION -Covers approximately 145
square miles, average more than 45,000 copies per
day with a on&<lay count of 46,025 for Dec. 12,
1972. Sub&crlbers will pay more than $1.2 million
Ibis year to have papers delivered by nearly 1,000
carriers. ·
HOME BASE FOR ALL DAILY PILOT EDITIONS IS EXPANDED COSTA MESA PLANT
Edllon Food In N.,..and Phot.os, Get.Back,Tallor-maclo Community Newspa~rs
I 1. REPORTER-PHOTOGRAPHER team collaborates OD local story
J which will be featured in the day's edition. DAILY PILOT often teams
l camera specialist with writing specialist.
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\ 4. COMPUTER boosts words on their way at alniost unbelievable
1 speed by assisting with job of perforatinit tape whiCb activates Lint!'
1 type machines. Here, paper tape is fed into $25,000 computer. • •
1 · 7. PHOTOGRAPHS, meanwhile, are being selected to be procesoed
r in Photo Lab, putUQg pictures with words for the day's collecUon t of information about your world and your community .
• . I: 1 • ' • • •
I 10. MAT TAKES Impression of all type and en
• is laid on page form and forced under roller which uw up \0 3,000
!..J>OUDdS or pressure per square inch,
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2. WIRE REPORTS from throughout the world arrive on both Assoc-
iated Presa and United Press lnternaUonal wires at DAILY PILOT.
Editors often select best elemenla from both reporls, combine them.
. S. GALLEY OF TYPE ts ready for proofing after. tape-activated
llnecasting machines set it up in lines one column wide. 1be tray on
which it is arranged is called a galley, hence the name "galley proof."
I. ENGRAVER takes really close look at the \iegatlil alter making
a photocopy of a photograph to be reproduced In the newspaper.
Image on negative will be etched on sensitized metal called a cut.
ii. PLATE MOLDID from mat baked into a curved WPe'C'1!'be .,
locked onto rotary preu units, like the one shown bere1 where each
plate prints one pace or the newspaper. . ·
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3. COPY DESK (foreground) is where stories from several different
sources are checked !br accuracy in spelling, grammar and style. Head-
lines are written here, copy is pneumatic "tubed" to first floor.
6. PROOFREADING is next step, Galley proofs, proofs of headlines
and printed proofs of ~ all are checked in Proofreading Boom
before next printing steps are taken. · .
•O
Cl.~'-:; • .-
9. PAGI MAKEUP sees words and pictures brought together in a
form called a chase. It la like a metal frame, newspaper-page size,
in which.engravings ("cuts") and lines of type are arranged.
' 12. WHILE INK is still drying alter the presses spill out the day's
run of DAILY PILOT editions at 70,000 newspapera per hour, carrier
busUes aloni? his route to drop utoday's world~' on your lawil. .
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T
J 2 OAJLV PILOT
-
)
. Mesa Youth Wins World .Hobie Cat Title -=-= ----• .... •
Coast Cuard
Spots Open ,
, , Tbe Coast Guard rocrult~g
By ALMON LOCUBEY .. , felt I would be lucky to Bf.lch came up with lhlrd John ftost.Duc&••· 17, of reptta wu lhe fl!Nd Ou!rif· Roberto Bou .. t Jr.. Piierto otatlon In S..ta •••. ·--·-
Ot .. °"""' ,.... hMt 1..A ... ._..-..1 J-" .,,.. -~n _,. __ ...ia..1-"1 N_._... n---'-sixth. ""'~-""·· '""1.... • .. ., u.11 •r HONOLULU _ Elgll'-WuN up -~ ~ ,_ -u•~-~= ..-.-r • .. ,_. ~ was (er --~b of W11klkl. Rico, 97.I; Harold Hu-••• l1CMIDCt!d -•·-In
l"" old R1cban1 Loui.t Is doeln' do !bit bldly In 1111 5 In Sllurday'1 belvy woa\ber For\}'-five nippers from IS Prbel wtn ·-to tho Honolulu, 107; Leith Anderlon, .,...™,.. ,..., ..
"
\\'inglng his way back to his nee,'' the young Mtsan 11.ld. races that saw at leut half a countrlts .competed in this l1rtl 21> f1nlsben. Tbey wer.: Hooolulu, 110; Nelson Picclo, ArtlJ for etperlMCfJCI aeamen.
-mainl•IXI bome todt¥ lolded -ln-th&-IJibl-IOin«~~.-Lou/et-llrll--ld--<hompioolblp-""'-RlcUrQ .--<:oot•-Brelll,-IU· Rick Mol•b, '!be openings, maoy.ol.lbtm-,--il '--...--,
down With oil palnttnp,a --Canepa-c..,.-up-wltb a plactd 1-U In the Slt\Uday tile Rbl>le-,41 Which ara"llullt .,.;-a:zs, elf Canopf;San--Katlua, H1Woil, 11 , ·pejllliNuP. PIY srado ~. J
sporu jacket and a l!Ottle ol seventh u Lou/et won, hut racos. by Cout catamaran ol SU ta Crui, 40.JS; Hobie Alter, De-Froome, Honolulu, ' i Clll!lnp>gne,.,,.-or-wnict1,.,..-.~-.-...pe<t0ble ·Juan"Clplstrano. Caplstr1no~1n1; 1S;Mlke1iolmor,'Homlulu,:-'"'lude·quartennaslff,-111pply --''
claim him tile first wo~ld . lead. It WU In tile 10th and OTllEll OR4NGE COUNTY Tbe event w11 ...Cponsored Wayne Schaeftr Caolsll'ano Ill; Claudio Kunze B't1ruil~,___9!of!llficer~__1:l!I cdl:l~LJilcl!nl:_ _ _.1--
"Cliiimpion of the BObie CiFRIUUil race ~t caMpa blew salkiiii ptaCOd lmong Uie DiSI l>Yl'fliiiOllrewlng \:0. ol BeaCJi, 59; Cii)py Sheeley, !IT; George lfolifef,iir. y, c I an 1 , 1 n d h O.§ P. 1 ta I clau. ~ hiJ chances with a 13th place ten in the eOlorfUl regatta, ID llonolu.lu and Pan Amet1can Honolulu, 60.75; John Doss-Austr1Ua, lGi DavW Ly0nt1
OATING
Two Lead
Powerboat
Standings
Bobby Rautboard of ~fiami
Beach. Fla. and Sandy Satulla.
Cle\'eland. Ohio, emerged as
the stars of the offshore
pov.•erboat competition in 1972.
Rautboard had . a ;ear
drean1ed of by )>O\\'erboat
racers. He \\'on four Union Qf
Ptfotorboat -(UIM) races· -and
the 1972 World l(}{fsbore
Championship.
He now joins the elite list
v.·hich includes the names of
the v.·orld's most talented
pov.•erboat racers -Bill
Wishnkk . of New York,
Vicell1.0 Balestrieri of Italy,
Don Aronow of Florida, Dick
Bertram and Jim \Vynne of
Florida.
SATULLA. A rookie driver,
won four major races in a row
in his Copper Kettle. Starting
with a win in the Hennessy
Hurricane Classic at St.
Petersburg, Fla. {a revival of
the old Hurricane Classic and
a race which win be held
again this year) Satulla then
took the Sam Griffith
l\1emorial, the Bahamas 500
and the Hennessy Grand Prix
at Pt. Pleasant, N.J. It ·\\·as
the first lime a rookie has
ever set such a record.
Star of an entirely different
type of powerboat racing was
Bill 1'1uncie who almost made
a clean sy,·eep in Unlimited
Hydro racing last year. In his
boat Atlas Van Lines he v.'On
the Miami, Fla . race, the
.. Owensboro, Ken., race. the
Gold CUp race at Detroit, the
Pt1adison. Ind. classic, the
Pasco -Kennewick -Richland,
Wash. race and lhe Seattle,
Wash. race.
Bill Sterrett Jr.. was the
winner of the President's CUp
race at Washington, D.C.
C A LIFORNIA DRIVERS
scored in some of the smaller
classes in both inboard and
outboard races. Some of the
champions:
FJVE-LJTRE -George E.
Fox, Van Nuys (driver Mickey
Remund); Wayne Tholppson
and John Wolf, Van Nuys.
CRACKER BOX -Danny
Edward Mang, Glendale.
B RACING RUNABOUT -
Patterson, Calif.
K RACING RUNABOUT -
Charles E. BoycL City or Com-
met*.
A RACING RUNABOUT -
Alan Ishl. Pasadena.
C RACING RUNABOUT -
Rich Fuchslin, Dixon, Calif.
C SERIES RUNABOUT -
f\.1anuel Carnakis. Bakersfield.
C HYDRO -Fred Haucns·
tein, San Jose.
PJ!EDICTED LOG RACING
(James Craig Trophy) Robert
Wilson, California Yacht Club,
Marina de! Rey.
The Costa Mesan, who says fU>lsh'. Loulet again w11 the fourth . place '"" Wayne Airways. . Duggan, Newport Beach, 65; Sidney, 163; DeMy • KeoUih. serviceman, o!Oclals said. For
he lives just '""""' the.sl1'ol-whuier. _ Schaefer ol C.piltruio Beach, DeMls Wilcox, Florida, 77; Sidney, 111!; and Roger Barrel, rUrtber lnlormaUon call 117·
from Newport Beach. won the Hobie Alter of Capistrano a former naUOnal champion. HEADQUARTERS for the Xeitb Baxter, Honolulu, 13.75: Honolulu, 170. ·MM.
rmal two races of the 10-race
regatta to edge Jeff Canepa ol
Santa CrUz by one and a
quarter points as thousands of
spectaton watched the light
air duel from -the beach at
Waildti.
Loutek has been a top sailor
of Hobie Cats since they came
on the sailing scene soc:ne fivt
years ago. He is a former na-
tional ctiampioo in the cl;m.
AS BE WENT in to the final
two races Sunday. Loofek was
19 points behind CanEpa.
~Qeing
Building
Jetfoil
SEA TILE (AP ) - A planl
formerly used for production
or the 727 jetliner. is now the
home 9£ lbe ••Jetfoil'', the.
Boeing Co's venture into com-
merciaJ ocean tramport.
the cavernous building was
tile setting Friday for the
laying ol the keel fut the fir.I
Jetfoil, scheduled for delivery
in the summer of 1974 to Far
East Hydrolo1ls of Bong Kong.
Boeing began commercial
hydrofoil prodUction last
September, and William M.
Schultz, program manager,
said the rum expects to sell 40
of the $3.5 million ships in the
next five years and 100 during
the next decade.
The company says it has
firm orders for Il Jetfoils
from Far1' East, Pacific Seat
Transportation Co., of Hawaii
{for inter-island .service) and
Condor Ltd. of London (for
English ChaMeJ operation).
·Schultz said the Jelfoil is of
unique design and will oHer
passengers a mnfortable,
safe, rapid ride on a depend-
able schedule, even in high
winds and heavy seas.
The Jetfoil will literally ride
on underwater wings. It will
have a displacement of 16 tons
and will be able to transport
as ~ as 250 passengers at
up to iO miles an hour. It will
be 90 feet long with a max-
imum beam of 31 feet.
Duty Dela y
Hitch Set
The United States Coast
Guard recruiting: off tee in San-
to Ana has annotmced a new
enlisJ,tnent proiram that
allo~ men to enlist im-
mediately but delay the st.art
of act ive duty up to six
months. ,
The program is lniended for,
but not limited to: high school
seniors within six months of
graduation, acrording to Coast
Guard officials.
For further information call
547-MM.
,
FANCY
Bananas Golden ripo
Spinach Fr"" .... T•""""
2 lbs. 25~
2bun. 39~
Oranges Sweet Md Juicy 61bs. $1
BANANA
Squash--1'.hlck Mooted-lb.
.
<ik/ieBf~ePl
RICHARD'S
Egg and -Potato-Sulad-,~ OL 59~
KNUDSENS
Natural Cheeses 9 OL ------1 •II v1ri1+i11
-Homemade Sauerkraut 22 01.
Pillsbury Biscuits e.tt .... ilk "eo .. ..., Stylo I 01.
f/leBf
69c
29c
lOc
RICHARD'S TOP THE GRADE U.S.D.A. "CHOICE"
PREPARED FOR EASY CARVING
Standing Rib Roast
Short Ribs of Beef
FROZEN
Br1is.
or stew
lamb Shanks New Zeal1nd
· BAR M SMOKED
1.59 lb.
69¢ lb.
79¢ lb.
P k l • R t Like Canadian 1 29 or 01n ODS Bacon -• lb.
BAR M ..
Smoked Pork Chops 1.49 lb.
. Oran~e Pork Chops
Co•t 6 thick chop1 with • 1r1iw11tre of 2 l. flour •!!d lh. hp. 11lt, 111 2 T.
hot oil, brown chops 1bo11t 10 1r1i11. e•. 1id1. Combin• I l . brown 111g1r,
I/I ftp. 9lng1r, I T. 9r1+.d or•nge peel•'"' I C. or1n91 juice. P111r over
chop•, CD"•'· "Simtn1r 45-50 1r1in. Add I C. or11UJI 11ction1 jult b1for:
11rvin9. -S1rv11 6.
Stuffed Chicken Breast
% Cornish Hens stuffed .; ........ ""';.1 ,.,,,;,,
A COMPLETE SELECTION OF EXOTIC SEAFOOD
We also process meat for home frffzeri.
' fficg}ierg
1.19
59c
Butter Crust Bread
Potato Rolls
Fruit Boston Cream Pie
46c
6 for 39c
1.69
LAR6E
Assorted Coffee Cake 99c
1!l0wer i§rJfJ
YELLOW •nd WHITE
Marguerite Daisies
bun. of 25 1 ~29
Richtrd', Privata Libel
lllCHARD'S
Scotch Whisky t•.I Pro1f fifth 6.38
RICHARD'S KENTUCKY
Straight Bourbon Whiskey •• ,,,., nftt. 4.75
RICHARD'S
London Dry Gin 10 .,._., fifill 3.80
RICHAlD'S
L·do Market Vooka 10 ,,.., ftftti 3.80
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QUALITY-: VAbUE .:.. SERVICE
•
f/reeerf!f
Crisco Oil
RICHARD'S -
Large AA Eggs
YUBAN
Instant Coffee
BORpo
Grapefruit Sections
Chiffon Towels Big roll
Hunts Tomato Sauce
Smuckers Cherry Preserves
CAMPIELLS
Chunky Split Pea with Ham· Soup ,
CAMPIELLS
Chunky Chicken with Rice Soup
Betty Crocker Ginger Bread Mix
<
Nalleys Chili with Beans R.,., ... ~·· .. r•;.•
Nabisco Premium Saltine Crackers
GREEN SIANT
Bake 'n Serve Casserole •11 • "'1"'"
MRS. SMITHS
Apple or Coconut Custard Pie. • •
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48 OL
doz.
8 OL 1 .. 19
16 OL 3 for $1
4 for $1
I 'DI -
12 or.
19 or.
'' 01.
141ft 01.
15 01.
I lb.
12 OL
10 tor $1
3 for $1
49c
49c
33c
3 for $1
. 39c .
39c
79c
AD PRICES GOOD
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY; JAN. 27th
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REGISTER NOW
011111 Start January 29 •
1(~ LIDO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newpor.t Beach
OPEN DAILY9 -7, SUN. 9 -6 673"6360
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1(~ HA~BORVIEW 1660 MacArthur, Newport Beach
OPEN DAILY 9 -6, SUN. 9 - 6 ' 673-2155
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0, a E
h
rei
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limo
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~ 'A Valid· Art ·Col ecti I
'· • • (
tJ I s ssem~
By JO OIM>N Wily are'Qllills -turnhlg>up at 1wap
Of .. Dllr.,.... ... " meets and sales!
• Si.I years ago at an anUque ahow In Ft. "Quilts moved west In w~ trains,"
ayne, ladlana, Allan and Ernestine Allan flld. "Many limes Grandmotber '"G~ bou&ht an old quilt and found Ibey would give a quilt to a Granddaughter
~booted oa a new collecting hobby. and she wouldn't want it. You'd see it for
Ii Since then, they have "rescued" ap-. sale or being abused. -
"!'-1 .... te1y 150 qlillta, 1 0 m e antique,.\. '"Ibey're great for funilture moving . ..---o In We've rescued several from movilg from swap meets, ea markets, mov g ,.
varu:, atllcs and the backs of passing ._. v3.!:olhe.r was purchased by Allan during
lbs. 1 the Laguna rock festival several years
'lbe South Lagunans ·both are ago fOr a bargain price of $8 when be
g dsmiths by trade and la~hingly say spotted 8 group of Y®ths sitting on it ~lfhey work only to support their collecting U.tenlng to the music.
f babll. Allan anct· Ernestine disCUS!ed the
Quilt collectlng f,9 a natural outgrowth history of quilling In America:
of the couple's talen&s and interests. PIONEERS PRAISED All.B!!l~t"blJ_!!D._t)'.e~tffln as a l>ro--1'America's pioneers were a wUque ~Ion Officer for Uis Angeles ~ty group of people. The women led a drab
NBtveral years ago to open an antique · life _ they worted hard and got lltUe
store in Laguna, aomethlng he had reward for it. ,
always wanted to do. "They could piece together a quilt on t Emeetine came Into t he store as a the far:m. with materials on band, or ln
""1stomer one day, was recruited to mate lbe cities they could puzzle fOI' days ~ punes and tbeD manied her boll. creating a pattern.
· Naturally she deslinecf her busband'• "Quilts were seldom hung up and view-
wedding ~ and be deslinecf hen. eel as art objects until coonty fain came ·
,
.
DAILY
PILOT
PHOTOS
by
RICHARD
KQEHLER
--a1oag .. IJIOBBY rtllBI' Quiliii:ts;-;..,.;;;;,.;:";done;;;;;;:-;.;;, ;;;pl;;;ece;..,;.,;;t'1beli;i;....n;;;~---~~-------
; Ernestine studled goldsmilhlng fin! as household chores, the G,.... added. Jn
~ bobbr m her nauve Holland and tbeD m O>fontal tlmoa, a g1rl'atarted sewing at ~ Sbe came to the United States aa the oge o1 a and . ......i ·at leas113 quill!
:fl.Montessori teacher and continued stud-for her<l<JWry. .
))'Ing jewelry making on the side. ljullts are made in several ways, Ibey
•.• Her rings, pendants and bracelets are pqlnl<d out. There ariQuilts ·wjtb blocks ~eometric In fonn, ' breatbtaltlngly stildied together In . definite ' patterns,,'
!modem and futuristic in shape. cruy quilta where pieces· of'. different
,. Allan's jewelry I!, by c:oirtrsst, old-fabrics are fitted together at random, ap--ned and delicate. He re-creates old pllqued qUllls•where tbe'cfeslgn Is cut out ~ttlngs in new rings that will look like andl'1ewn to !Ji plain top, and qm1ts where. ~tlques tbemaelves after a few years' the deslgn.iu:i~al<d·by ~stitches.
'lwear, '"'\ NEW INTEREST
His training came first from dental Quilting . bas become a popular thing
I studies, which be ·never com-once again, the Greens .said, and they
et«!, and, after hlJ ~e, fnlm·hls feel It is just beginning to see Its
He also took art cLlili.e>af .the 1JJli.. renaissance. "We feel strongly that
ol,,c.Jilomla,,Sonli. Jlarbai'a. , quilting as a bobby will go tbrougb a new
ta, however, qre~lhe-main irUl'tst· 1 phase of ~ten;st." .
GM.s today. They search for Bu~ lheir b1~est destre is to have
lbe.m wherever they fi'lftl, including ll'!ilting recognized as. an. art form ..
and then restore them display "!be pold>worl: quilt " every bit as ~study their history, ' valid an art form l;l8 painting or music.
· The visual -expenence of patchwork
'1'ED CURTAINS quilting is e""Y bi1 11 valid m art as
They .Ille them on a n>tatlng basis as wbat Plcasoo was doing In hlJ collages.
· have me banging I! an art It's a picture -an interesting picture,"
ject In tbelr living room and uoe 81>' ~ Allan.
. quill material for curtains. . ., (See QIJIL'T, hie H) •
A sunburst pattern
is among
quilts to be
displayed through Jan.
26 in the Laguna Art
Association Gallery.
\
Ernestine and Allan Green show
a block for a quilter's cata-
logue (le~ I. Above are
samples of Ernestine's
jewelry.
Tast·e,, Appet.ife Voted Matter of · Mi·nd . '
• •
WU•ODCe very lusty) and havilc to fon:t
younelf .to eat. YOU can 8"t the food
down all right, but the plwutt ii gone.
Please, Ann, take the wmt of llOllleone
who -· -GRATEFUL FOR A GOOO MEMORY
DEB OM 'l'Bn:JL: Y e I r leaft' Wll
-II may· hm -wbo said tile
llllll .....-. Mere . wmn, '8wevu,
..... u lib -61. ,,._ ..... •:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read with Jn.
-''"
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1ere11. the leller fnlm the -who bad I hysterectomy at 42, and ligned her
letler '"lbe 'nlril.I ls Gone." 1 hid a
hysterectomy two yean ago at IO and I
am signing 1111 lett<:r "Betltr Than
Ever."
For night )'tart hdott Ibo operation I
wu plagued by female (lnlbftm1 and a
fear of pregnancy, I had bad flve
children, clooely spaced, ad I -half
my time In the doctor'• ........ room.
MY gynecoloefll -me tllat 1111
\
sex We would be the same as before. He
told me about the pills that would replace
the hormonal loss which every woman
experiences when she bu her ovaries
removed.
He opent an hour OIJ>lainlng uactlY
1"hat the operaUon..wu all at19ut, 1 will
never forget hll wordl, "You will f"1 ,
betler, look betler and DO belier afltr
the llD'lel'J· u •
He went on to tell me that many
women. dread a h~torey becauae
they vlew It Al the end of their
''womanlineu." Olben think ol the
operation as a convenient excuae to avotd
marital ae.x (which they new enjoyed.,
anyway).
I ooncludod that the problem In moot
lnstanet1 Is f>l)'Cboloe1cal and a good
I
doc:tor can Mlp immensely by counseling 41 advance and giving the woman
rea&BUraoce. My doctor, bleu him, was
wllUtig to apend the time to educate me,
I am now 41 and enjoying marital rtla-
tiona more than I have In 15 yeara. The"
lbrill Is NOT tone for rile. It Is -BET·
TER THAN EVER
tenible. You bave ellOllgh hair as tt ii." I
say, "Do as you please and stop taltfnr
about It." Jim Is undecided . We've
agreod to send two pictures ol Jim to
Ann Linders -one_ with 1 belrd drawn
... another cle&Hbawn, .. ht Is ......
Please wte yes or no. Thant yau. -
TRIBAL COUNSEL-
DKAI\ TlllBg: Aller ....... al lllt
_ DEAB ANN LANDERS: OUr IOll Is :IO, pidmo r -"' r -... -'I and to Ule an exprmion Ilia! will IUJ'<ly , 1 ' ~-
date me , he ls tall, dark and bandllOl!le. •Iller. Ht -'-' -• • fl.
1'le J)roblem is insllJ\lflcant c:om·pated lo Do >'GU feel aw~ ..ir-ftl•'•• _ lnany you receive, but It has turned our I ly! w I ••-
dlnoer table convc,.,.tion Into a debating one e C9111e ,. ·~ -· ,,,.. .. help for you In AM Landen' 1looldot,
society. "'nit x~ to Popularity." Send • ..a
ResolV<d : Should Jim f,10\f 1'lltard? In coin w)tb your ._t 11111 1 .....
H~ g~I says "Nol" His older brother llamped, 1<11-addrttaed .. ..,. IO Iii
says "Y-es!" His dad says, "It would~ DAILY Plt.Or.
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J . DAIL V PILOT
• • . • • • • • • I
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·Higher Marks Sought •
'By CAROL MOORE
Of ,._ o.lly l"lllf SNM
_,
found none uisted io the reach tbe board," Ills. Babtr will erjllaln new and ptndlng Donaldson. uecullve di-teadlers not to dl-.nt
county. explalned. le&lslatkm an t..iarch ~. or the CFT and CTA, ex· wilonWng as ' 1 n o·n • pro-
1r you think teachers' strikes "California is the only st.ate AJ lmprovementa she •lit· Supfftmende.ot.s ~1 I ch a e I plalnina: Collective Bargalning fe.ssloo&l/'
arLaiLII JUBlter of salary.. 111@1 .im..,i.·Llla.YLCOlledlic gtsted even ~~ power Brick, Star!Jey air.r. J and the Winton Act. Donaldson Sile fllrtller a I r l b
think again. bargaining and o u t s 1 d ·e ...... l otletthera -afl(rfriistees and Nk:oll and George Plumlelgh w de~'bf Qi'gantlirii' to feC\lltj rel o
The ·contract package in-arbitration for teachers," she more awareness Of ICbool from Fouotaln Valley, Irvine, Negotlate on Feb. 1. to the fact that element.ary
eludes such factors as teacher· said. "Our-C e Hi f 1-e ate d flnance&-w.hlc:h usually Newpon..Mea and I .. o s· ' Attomey Jack Levine-will-J u .c.h e..r..t-bavt-..,....,ti
student or counseJor-student Employes.Councils are a poor availabl~ to tY.chers onl~as Alamltoe 1 districts will outline Strites and Employe11 predomlna_ntl,yialectl'"".mi';,leslliti, .,-..,,r· -f --,..~'5'>=-=="i'E'=.rifE'C--substtture-becausnl!e~u-odminlslroll..-....... · ... nrP<>tnt.--.r--Rlgb~~-
ratios, upgrading of ibrary lure can be divisive." ' Ms. Baber, curriculum View on March 22. nectuarv and wbat works" -mii usuallyeamlngtheMCODd.
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supplies, election or depart· "# J ho "don' I to n1en1 heads and sabbatical ~IE.ET AND CONFER director for tbe Engllab Rudy Kae's session on Fin-during the March 15 seulon. ncome, w Wiii ·
criteria. -Department at Fullerton's dini Ridden Funds on Feb. 22 rock the boat 11
Each district's CE C , Troy High School, has will deal with unpaddlng POLITICAL ME~S Her lntereal ln ltacber1 ez-Such considerations will representing all fa cu It y gathered blue ribbon speakers achool· ""...i"eta to make more Wterim speakers and their ttnds IJitematlonally.
ronte under discussion \.\'hen organizations, "meets and for her landmart course. money ~ beneficial to topics are Roger Kuhn , Al a dlrflCtor for the
UC! Extension presents confers" \llith the school board Potential Impact is so great studen(s. Beyond Salary ; Or. John American Host Organlr.aUon
Negotiatiom: Participation \\'hich makes the final that both the Callrornia Bright. School Finance in which brin.p Eur 0 Pe 1 n
and Strategy for Teachers decision. FederaUm ol Teachen and "Teachen should have more California: Jim Ballard, The teachers to the U.S. for resl-
s1a rt1ng Jan. 25. "But there are minority rae-California Teachers Assocla-say about what's best for the Art of Negotiating, and Larry dent seminars, &he ls '~volved
ood c b l I d r e n . Administrators S"bel R sol tio f w B::irbara Baber of tht> Cen· lions within the CEC ; ifs g Uon are paying ttµtion for I man, e u n o with the AF'lrCIO'a blcen--
tr Jl Labor Council of Oninge for lhe weak groups but had some members. become detached in their of· Disputes. tennlal Meet the Americans -~'-·led ·•· Th f the second t ....... n fices," Ms. Baber·interjec:ted. •IJ Baber C<>unty <..vwuwo U-11;1 urs-or s .. ~est .n • believes it's time project aimed at having one
day evening series when she grou p. M~ is.sues are com-<:LEADING LECl'UaE 1be series will start wltb for women to get in lo labor for inlllk>o roreignen vlsltlng the
trted to take such a course and promised even before they As.sem.blyman Kenneth Cory ChJck <:aniff and John Political action and {or country by 1976. BARBARA BABER
/
Benefit Honors Honorary Chairmen
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Gemini: Trust Your Hunches
TUESDAY
JANUARY 23
Restrictioo.s now are for your
own benefit nu. may be dil·
ficult to accept -but lt .Ls
By SYDNEY OMA.RR true. RelaUves are confused
ARIES (March 21-April 19): and some seek argument!.
communication lines. Broaden
borhool. New approoch could
mean piofit. Act accordlhgiy.
PISCES (Feb. lg.March 20):
Long-range investment
possibility !hould be ex·
amined. If you are careful,
you coold find your way to
something productive. Follow
through on opporttmlty. One
who ls unorthodox may have
correct answers. Accent oo finishing touches. He«! your own counsel. ld<a•
Complete rather than be_gfil need ~. lime to nurture;_
project. Stress is on area deal-_VUtOO (Allg.~pt"""!Z). ---
ing with partnerships, special F~needattention.~ • ••••••-..!......!_•_!_•-•-•-~'--!_~-•-••I r.elationsbips, including mar-me w~ laughs a lot could •
riage. You may have to do bebavmglunatyourexpense .• ''INCHES•A WAY'' • some mending where public Do some cbecki.Dg. Whit you • • •
relations is concerned. find could eventually. save you • •
TAURUS (April 20-May mone~. Act accordingly. Be THE PROVEN METHOD •
20): Tat:e time to become analytical. ~ re~som.. Do •
aware of subtle nuances. some detective work . • NO DANGEROUS OR •
Delay works in your favor. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>:. com y SHOTS •
Play waiting game. Contract, Tear down m..order to rebuild. • •
legal agreement has hidden Judgment now is on target. $1 0 OFF •
loophole. Know it and seek ad-You have war ol winning pee> • With Thl1 Ad
dltional lnlormation. Leo in· pie to your Side. Know It and • 5 INCH LOSS • dividual could aid. take advat1tage of 1t. Money • •
GEMINI (May 21-June 20): which seems gOing anotlier • Fl~VISl'I' •
Hunch pays dividends. Have ~ay boo~erangs and returns • faith in your own feelings. in your dlJ'ection. . • UAllANTalDI
Aquarlao could play signili· SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): • JEANS IHCHES-A·WAY
cant role. Look beyond the im-Face wues directly. What,you •
mediate. Gain shown if you fear could be tran~f~ Into •
share knowledge. Learn by asse~. ~ plays key role.
teaching Affair of heart is Seem light of reality. One who •
1799 Newport Blvd., Colla Maw
PHONE 645-8890
f\!atured~ Lovers' quarrel may poses threat is merely bluf-,.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
be on agenda. fing. What ts behind scenes
CANCER (June 21.July 22): reJl!"OSCnts cballenge, not TRAIN to bo a
Conditiorui at home base do peril.
• • •
Kicking oil the Mothers' March, which begins to-
morrow, was a benefit luncheon fashion show in the
Elks Club. Special guests attending are Oelt to right)
Claire Trevor, honorary county chainnan of the
mardl; Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr.,
honorary state chairman, and Miss Elaine Whitelaw
o! New York, national director of MOD.
not remain static What ap-SAGmARIUS 1Nov. 22-
peared settled ·could be Dec.2l):Somewboarefri<nd.
uprooted. Forces tend to be ly may have motives whlcb
scattered. Display versatility. are difficult to fathom.
DENTAL TECHNICIAN
Si4 Mo11.\h1 lnttnslve 'l'noinlngl
Enrollment io CROWN and BRIDGE, eod DENTURE
progr•ms now open for day end evening cl•sses.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): .Protect yourself in emotlooal clinches: Take nothing for
Members Go to Bat for Club C-auses
granted. Caprlcon lndlvk!ual
could figure prominelUy. You
gain access to secret.
CAPRISORN, (Dec. 22--Jan.
19): Dealings indicated with
Sqlttarta. Accent Is on will·
ingneos to change basic dlreo-
tion. Get new sighting on
u!Umate goal . One in position
of aulbority is willing to give
you credit. Know it and res-
pond acxordingly.
For Information, ·phone immediately
17141 635-3450
............... kc .......
..... ., l....e4 ...._. LHI ,,..,_
Trojan Guild
Rod Dedea ux, USC baseball
roach. will discuss baseball
and the upcoming season for
members of the Trojan Guild
of Orange C-Ounty and their
husban~ Thursday, Jan. 25.
at 7:30 p.m. in the Park
Newport Apartments.
The coach, recently named
' Hospital
Members of South Coast
Community Hospital, a non-
profit corporation, will ga_lher
for lheir annual meeting
Thursday, Jan. 25, at 7:30
p.m. to elect officers for the
coming year.
AARP Coach-of-the-year by the
American Associatiq_n of Newport Beach Chapter 121,
College Baseball Coach~. has American Association of
led his team to the national · Retired Persons will meet for
collegiate championship in the a potluck Luncheon Thursday,
last three yean. Jan. 25, at noon in the
Newport Harbor Lutheran Women Voters ' Church.
State standards, legalities of
planning, current legislation
and the proce!s of planning
will be discussed by a panel
fo r Orange Coast League of
Women Voters 'Thursday, Jan.
25. from 9:30 a.m.to 2 p.m. in
Island House, Fashion Island.
Panel members for the
luncheon meeting will include
the Mmes. Joseph Napoli,
Charles Smith, Lawrence
Margo\, James Murley and
J\ls. Judith Hamburger.
Auxiliery
Members of the Women's
A business meeting and a
program of slides from Scan·
dinavia will be featured.
Church Women
What Are We Afraid Of?
will be the topic of Mr s..
Thomas Phelps when she
speaks to members of Harbor
Area Chuch Women United
Friday, Jan. 26, at 9:30 a.m.
The women will gather in
the chapel of St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Olurch. A
luncheon wiU follow the in-
stallation of ol'flcers.
USC COACH
Rod Dedeaux
Couples
Nonna Zimmer ol
Lawrence Welk Show
the
will
entertain the Business and
, Auxiliary to the A mer ican I jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjiiiijjjiiiiiiiijjjjjiiiijjiiiiiijiiiijjjiiiijjiiiiiijiiiii 1 Society or ~1 e c h an i ca I
· Engineers will tour La'lol•ry 's
California Center Thursday,
Jan. 2.5, at 11 a.m. Hostesses
include J\1rs. Joseph C. Wid·
mont Jr. of Newport Beach.
"GOP Women
Costa Mesa Republican
Women's Club wlll lnstatl of·
ficers for 1972·73 Thursday,
Jan. 25, beglMing with a
social hour at 6:30 p.m.
To be installed are the
J\1mes. David Firth, president:
Ray John, Frank Gonzales and
Robert Beene y , vice
presidents; Sandra Firth,
recording secretary. and
Charles Benlon, treasurer.
•
DTEl\Y
Allt .STl!:P-ll!llNAltOO
-VINlll: IDWAltDI -GlltllltlCH -,.,. FLYl!lt$-U.S. Kl!D• o.nc. WHr bY Ptntltln
Cfll'ello 0.M• lllOn
.. --·
ONE-WEEK SPECIALS!
JAN. 22 thru JAN. 27
VITAMIN '° D'AU'HA
100 1.u ., 1 C•p•ul•• • ·~~~· SPECIAL 1.99 -
1 LB. SUNFlOWER SEEDS
Plump a Juicy
... ~:~· SPECIAL 55c
COASTLINE ""' raomN 1 lb. (16 01.) SPECIAL 2.49 R .. ular $2.H
WHEAT GHM OIL
.... 1.;'itA• SPECIAL 99¢
Coastline Health Foods
TUSTIN
1094 lrvln• Blvd.
Near Sav·On
J.44.7134
LAGUNA HILLS COSTA MIU
24102 El Toro lld. Hlll1ren l11u1r1
N,. tolpfll 270 I, 17th St.
11 .. 7010 541-tW
• I
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Professional Couples Club
Saturday, Jan. 27, at 7:30 p.m.
at the Los Coyotes .Country
Club, Buena Park. Speaker
will be W. Marvin Wataon,
fonner United S ta t e s
Postmaster General.
Yocht Club
Formal installation ol Of·
ficers will highlight the armual
Commodore's Ball for the
Bahia Cprinthian Yacht Club
Saturday, Jan. 27.
Dinner at the clubhouse at
8:30 will follow a social hour
and cocktail parties in
members' homes. Dancing
will .follow to the music of Joe
Mmhay's Orchestra. ..
Coost Juniors
South Coast Junior Woman's
Club will spoll!Or a lopl
recruitment and . orientation
meeting Wednesday, Jan. 24,
at 7:30 p.m. to introduce the
Community Friends program.
Nancy Harris, director of
programs, will discuss the
project operated by the
Orange County Mental Health
Association at the meeting in
the Fountaio Valley lligb
School caleteris.
Churchwomen
More than 1,000 women are
e1pected to attend the '11th an-
nual meeting of Episcopal
Churchwomen of the Diocese
of Los Angeles Friday, Jan.
26, at 10 a.m. in the
Disneyland HoteI.
The Rt. Rev. Erle Bloy,
Bishop or the diocese, will con-
duct the service and oUicers
wUI be ln!talled.
Danc ing
Scottish Country Dancing
will be offered for adults and
children by the Westminster
Parks and Recreallon Depart·
ment in the community
service building for cblldren,
and Warner School for adults.
Children's clasaes, , begin
Thuraday, Jan. 25, and adult
claaaea open to elgbtb graders
and above, begin Jao. SJ.
FIRST TIME MR IN COSTA JISA !
Monday and Tuooday, January 22 and 23, 1973
RODEWAY INN -!400 PALISADES ROAD
I COSTA MESA
,
Southern California College
of
Medical & Dental Careers
AQUARIUS (Jan. :llf.Feb.
1717 S. BRQOKHURST ST., ANAHEIM, CA 92804
AccNtM --.,, MM•I Aukllttell .t frtde & TtcllltkM Sea.&
18): Unusual meaages mayrJ~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!';::::::;;~~~:;;:=====~!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!!' need deciphering. Accen.fJ
study, added knowledge. Look
beyood the immediate. Catchl.----1
up m C01Tespondence. Cleer
WI llAVI YOUR SID 2 '/, to 12
-•II llytu In lhb llM Nnge. .si...--...aain..w..u ... t1.oo ......
From Page 13
• • • Quilt
"Pioneer Americans, espec-
ially the women, were much
more creative than lhey were
given credit fo r."
Ernestine has been ao in-,Pired &y the creallvity of the
pioneers that she would like to
make a quilt herseH.
But true to tradition, the
qullt collector baln't bad time
to sit down and make ooe.
Just like the sboemaker who
had no shoes.
Enna Jetticks"
SEMI • ANNUAL SHOE
COST
and
BELOW
COST ·
Sim A•AILAILI
VALUES TO 21.00
97 ·
SHOIS FOl
• DUSS e WOltl e CASUAL WUI
FURTHER AND FINAL
~-------, REDUCTIONS MM ••••••• •.•• 61/a·ll
AA.A ..... · · ... • .. · '-11 e All 9.97 shot1 on M ........•..... 51/1°11
A ,, ................ 1-11 r1ck1 and t1ble1
I ..•••••. , ....... l 1h ·12
c ................ 21/J·ll • Slz11 pla(nly markad
D ... · • ·· •· ·· ·· •· ·• • 4-11 e HundrHt of p1lr1 1W ••••••••.•..•••• 4·10 to chooH from
YUt WI HA.YI C AND D Wl°1mts
Enna Je.ttick Shoes_
...._----~-5-!ep. r ... c . ..,.., ....
WUTMINSTU CINTU ·~""MAU = ~ 6fftWbtMIMfllllYl',fttOHl"7 ... 100 ~
ANAMllM .OWNTOWN
10I WUT UNCOUf AYI. MOHi Al+MO
IANTA ANA
IOI IAfT 4tt1 If, PttON1 14Wt11
ltOUU• f115 to 6100 fll. 'tU t
SANTA AMA
hllyt111 .. 11ot
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AMILER
TUMBLEWEEDS
.WHERE AA£ WE GOING;
Al.IHI Hll.P~Alll'?
MUTT AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
•
? Wf'SJ1J5T VEH,l KNoW/
DllEl>MIHG '>tolJR""1111t
IWMA . WAS ~ RUHMING•
F\Jlj,.CF R>OOI
. ~
I HEAR · YOU WENT TO
CHURCH YESTERDAY
FOR THE FIRST :)"IME
AND OOtfr S!-EEP
WCTH '11>1.R.MO<ml
OPEN/THE UGHT
KEEPS ME AWAl<E!
--
HOW DID
YOU LIKE
IT 9
PEANUTS
by Doug . Wildey
.~~
HllNt lT I TOOGOCQ
liy Tom K. Ryon
by Emie Bushmiller
THE
MUSIC
WAS
Nl<;E·-
--BUT THE
"COMMERCIAL•
WAS A LITTLE
· LONG
/
I
DO LEV'S WORLb
SALLY BANANAS
I /cam!/~
/cam! /~/cam.!
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
l\
?.::
'
I
Monday, January 22, \qi)
lilwnk I oom!
I~
I c.am.I
QAIL Y PILO; 15
by Ro~er Brodfie)d
• by Gus Artiola
by Ferd Johnson
I SHOOL.~WoVo FIGU!lol>
· THAT OUT WHEN SHI<
INSISTED ON A <SENUINS'
MOONL.IGHT WEDDING-••
by Ro9er Bollen
•. 40U CAl3ALIUA45
TELL IT'S A Dll!A!A
Ill) Ttle: il"'61.1/ U~E6
Alnv.)D ~e ~EL.Sf
TDDAY~S CIJSS~~~!~.~!!J.B j ·~ HO, fO GO lo JAIL. Fll1ST 1'0 COME TO VISIT '(OU!
ACROSS 51Tribeol1srael A STI' SCR A P A SH I
1 Rich cake 52 "Om:a ----· 1
5 Electronic with Amy"
deYi<:• · 55 Fence part
10 Counterfeit 59 Denture
14 First wearer's
century poet problem: 2
16 Garman words
man"1name 61 Notlnthe
16 Hawaiian chips
wiodstorm 62 Passageway ·
17 EKh of IWO 63 Writing
1 18 Eurooe and ma1erill
'I America 64 Heb1ew high
20 Mos1 lovable priest
'22 Mo11modern 65 S1rocture
23 Flower 66 Golf
1
24 Bird toornamants 19 On no
25 Arkansas and 67 Profound occasion
Nile DOWN 21 Ripped
I 28 Standoffish , 1 Short jerky 2-4 Greek lettlrl'
42 Lestier -
U.ko
44 Overtleng
-47 City In Sy1ia
.t9 Tom I 32 Part of "lO . motions 25 Fanatical
b." · 2 Decla11 26 Native of f
A · 51 Th1ow 33 Askin frankly s111n behind
country 3 Quantity of .kingdom schedule
35 Municipal food 27 Setlsgoods
VIP in A Stick 28 Group of
Canada 5 Alcoves stocks
36 Prohibit1 6 Spring up 29 Cl\lnges
62 'Flu, mumps,
6'0.
53 l;liblicli rnWI
38 Opening• 7 Notch direction ~ AO Churchman 8 Do 30 Avoid
, Al flivar of Tibet something tulfilring · 55 Show
• • "" n .. . . ...
. " I<! ·~ ••
' 43 Winged 9 African 31 Thick-headed surprin i 46 T~gh· mammals: 34 Pltliflal'CI 66 Disawur t fares: Abbr. Informal punts ~Iv
46 Shows off 10 Put on a spit 37 Presomed .to 57 Palnlul
1
48 East Indian 11 Sharpen · be true , 58 The mouth:
MCI member 12 Insects 39 l/etican Citv Slang
"60 Chums 13 Ship'1spa1 basUica . 60 Garment part !
17 ,,,, " "
N ~' -
r .,. ·,., ~' ' " -'
" 11 " JO I
·~ -·-JS • •
" . -•• -'
• ., ., .. " I .. " · . -..
I ~ ~ . -, .. ,.-'· -" --"" • -~~ " -' -. -~ Jl!l"
•
JUDGE PARKER
WH~H LYHN
51LV~TER' t5 UHA&l.E
TO RECOGNIZE
EITHER HER
HUSBAND OR
"'68EY SPENCER,
THE DOC.TOR
SUOOESTS THAT
SHE &E SEEH 8V
A PSYCHIATRIST!
-/lt"ROt..P /f.1'?:i~2< -
MISS PEACH
MA!t'CIA
MA~ON
. · 1-~lTO~~
J 1'"0PA'f
I FA;lt'f
! ltElATt ot-1~ •
by Harold Le. Doux
IF HER AMNESIA 15 PSYCl401.0GICAL,
•
r
/Mrt!llA, J~ST ~ST
NJG-HT :t 'MIP, "&ea,
C>AP, TOMOll:!rOW WILL.
IJE J'AN. ll, 1q15, F'Oll:
"TH& VlltY l'ilr~T
TIM& ... •
-ANO M' °'AJO,
"'A KIP W,fM
YOWi: cimw
EXPi1f1eNCo
MA, NO ~ICiH"i
TO MAK! 'l'MAT
'S'T"AT!M!Ni."
by Mell
W,MY~1'10N
1$ IN 'TWO PA!r'l'S :
(A) WILL NtV FATMElf
!Viii' lrilSP'f'T MY
OPINIOl'l1,.AN1>,(I)
HAS TM•ft 'VEii: fft.N A JAN.ll,
1,7, NF'O!U 7
:;-, .
' "
/• l.2,.
.W.---"='-iD.L-"'"'~ <Ji"'-.""'-·
by Chester Gould
\
•
.
" ·"
"I bow it's out of order -I'm jail e1joyia1 myaelf!"
DENNIS THE MENACE
r ,
.·6oclo~,
~w~:
'
. ....
•
DAILY PILOT Mood.1)', Janu.uy 22. 1971 "
Chargers to Fly Fr.iendly Skies Qf -Unitas ·
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Veteran Ba!llmore deal with Bal!imore. res. whom tho Chargers lrad•cf earlier In recent -11!, Uft1tas said be would
~Its quarterback Johnny Unitas \\·as llarland Sv1re1 bead coach of the to Saltlmore atltr using him ooJy spar-never again play for the Colta.• Tbomas
obtained by the San Oltgo Chargers today Chargers, said be was "honored and ingly as backup to Hadl. ordered Unitas benched ln ravor of young
for "fu ture considerptions," a spokesman proud to acquire . Johnny Unltas, tho Last year Unitas ranged fourth in the DomNlS.
.,__~for,, the Chargers said. rreafest quarterback. e\'er to play the National Football League ln pnssin1t. Unit.as wu rcteased by the-Pittsburgh
"' TIMI Oilirgers will =wneUiuGs.--pme." --corliPletiii( 811 Ol"ID atl<J!ililj Tor Ull Stetler& illUl>eliig walled Ill lhO ninth
standard player contract.'' the announce-The one-time Unive rsity or U>uCsville ya rds and {put touchdowns. round In 19$5 ¥Cf was sianed by the Cblts
~t..-said.~o present. pla)!etS-or drafl -pJ&yet-.i&-going into hn 14\h year..in pl'.Oo-• •The trade ended mi outstanding 17-ycar In 1958 after playing a year ol aandlot
choices are invo lved in the agreement." fesskmal football. Ov~r his career, he career \v:ith the Col.ts for Unitas. The 39.-ball. lt---~..-.--N°""-b<..-~'mors that John t«riplered---S;7'!18 ~t-of-5:+1&-at· year-el:d-Yftila&.-wb&--eempteted--flt6re----Un.itas~named-tJie..Nfi:L!I: molt val.-
Madi. 11-year qtiai1erback of the Chatg-temptS and has passed for 39,768 yards µitSSeS for more yardage and more touch-uable player three times. was an AD·
I
ers \\'ho has put hi mself on the lrading and 287 touchdowns. clowns than any other player in NFL bi> Pro selection six times and was picked
block, would go to the Colts « possibly B;ut Unltas was sidelined the !ut ter part tory, spent most of the 1972 sea.son on for the Pro Bowl game on 10 occasions.
the Los Angeles Rams in a thret>-\\'ltY 'Of the 1972 seuc::ri in favor of litany Dom· the bench. He was named the greatest quarter-.
Chanip Tabbed, 7-2
Foreman, Frazier
Collide for Title
KINGSTON. Jamaica (UPI ) -George
Foreman thinks it's time for a change,
but th~ odds are 7 to 2 against him mak-
ing it be.re tonight when· be tries to take
the world heavyweight boxing titJe from
Joe Fraiier.
"It's my time," says the confident,
unbeaten Fore~. who wUl )lave former
boxing champs Arthie Moore and Sandy
Saddler in his comer when be tries to
wrest away the tiUe Frazier now bolds.
"U ·I hit him a good punch, then be
goes," says Foreman. who has stopped 34
of his 11 opponents. '"lbe end is near for
Joe Frazier. That's easy to 6aY, but I'm
gonna do it."
Foreman , 24, has been brought along
carefully, his opponents being hand pick·
ed by manager-trainer Dick Sadler.
There hasn't been much reason f o r
Foreman to think about losing.
His last defeat came back in 1967 as an
amateur in the Golden Gloves after
which caine an Olympic ; gold medal.
Foreman has never been seriously hurt
in the ring as a pro. He hasn't given bis
opponents mu ch time to do any damage.
"No1hin' can hurt me," he ·said. "I'll
set it all straight once I have Joe Frazier
in the ring."
Frazier has remained cool throughout ,
and C\'en made an appearance' at a local
night spot just three days before the
fight. But mo,,tly be kept to himself over ·
lhe wee kend, getting mentally prepared
for v.·hat couJd be a tough fight,
physically , for bim.
Frazier is favored to retain his title
and predicts be will stop Foreman inside
15 rounds. "I don~ think George can
compare with my speed," Frazier says.
"He's got punching power but J'm not
gonna stand there and let him hit me.
I'm gonna maintain my cool and keep
smokin'. When he's hurt I'm not gonna
pull back."
No matter what, Frailer wUl put a few
dollars in · his pocket -some $8!i(},000
compared to $375,000 for Foreman. Tbose
V.'ere the guarantees put up by the pro-
moters, wbo expect to get back their
money from the closed circuit satellite
transmissions around the world.
Only 10,000 tickets were sold for t h e
fight up to Sunday and the paid crowd
· undoubtedly will be way under the
originally expected 42,000 sel!out.
Tbere bas ~ a marked -cooines,,
down here toward American tourists on
the part of the local Jamaicans. To
forestall any possibility of trouble from
tl\e fight fans tonight at National
Stadium, about 1,000 police and anny
personnel will be close to ringside.
At Riverside 1.'rack
Donohue's Stock Soars
With Western 500 Win
RIVERSIDE -?\'lark Donohue, a
member of Philadel~bia's social' set. ha s
offici ally joined the exclusive club that
belongs to the "good old boys" of
Southern stock car racing.
He acquired his membership Sunday
"'hen he drove a box-like American
Motors Matador to an easy victory in the
$100,000 Western 500 at Riverside
International Raceway.
Donohue was paid $11,770 for first
place. His average speed was 104.056
miles per hour.
The race opened a 3l~vent schedule
for the Nationa l Association for Stock
Car Auto Racing and it drew a!,000
persons into the sprawling road course
grounds. ~
Donohue, 35, didn't become involved in
NASCAR doings until last year, when he
made his debut in Roger Penske's un-
tried Matador in the traditional Riverside
opener.
He came to that race wilh good
credentials. He had won the old U.S.
Road Racing title twice and had captured
TransAm championships in 1968 and 1970.
His Matador wasn't reliable or strong
enough to cause the stock ~boys even
mild concern last year '-bUt the moon-
faced Pennsylvanian "'as hot as a pistol
elsewhere. He won the Ind ianapalis 500,
among other racing plums, and came
back to Riverside \Vilh even better
credentials.
He displayed them almost imme·
diately qualiryi ng the red. 'o\'hite and
blue mac hine fourth fastest among 40
starters -just slightl y behind front·ro'v
sitters David Pearson in a l\-1ercury and
Bobby Allison in a Chevrolet. Next to
Donohue in the second row was Hershel
f\icGri(f, third fastest qualifier, in a
Dodge.
But when the race got under way, it
became evident that the combination of
Donahue's road course ability and the
J\tatador·s handling qualities would
become a major factor over the 50().mile
distance.
He raced strongly with early leaders
Pearson. Allison and Richard Petty,
stock car racing's all·time champion.
\Vhen Pearson was forced out by
mechanical woes, to be followed a short
time later by Petty's Dodge, Donohue
bad things pretty much his own way.
Allison was his only major competition
over the final 300 miles atOWld the eight-
turn , 2.62-mile circuit Allison, top money
winner in stock cars last year with
$'l84,735, drove the final miles with a sick
engine and was almost two laps beh!nd at
Uie finish.
Third place went to Ray Elder,
Caruthers, Calif., in a Dodge, fourth to
Bobby Unser of Albuquerque in a Ford
and fifth to Jimmy In.solo, Mission Hills,
in a Chevrolet.
Pro Bowl
Statistics
NMion~I Confltl'e<Ke u 0 0 H -,.
.lm•rlCln Conlereno:• 0 10 JG 1l -Jl NFC -erocklno1on, l run (M&rcol kick I
NFC -flr0(1df>9IOI', 3 ~II from Kiimer (Merco+
~i(~) . .lFC -~impwn. 7 run (GtrP!• klclq
.lFC -FG, Gtrtll lS
.lFC -FG. Gt•ell 'll .
-
U,ITl.._.JH
FOOTBALL'S UPS AND DOWNS-The NFC's Calvin Hill (35) leaps
past a defender (top) in Sunday's Pro Bowl. Below the NFC's Ron
Smith (48) is rudely dumped after returning a kickoff 55 yards. The
AFC won, 33-28.
blclt ol all time In "'1lmtn>O{aUon of
the NFL .. llOtll l11111Yet1U7.
UD1tas ·pl~lhe final aeaaon of I =r:.' contract caUJna for 4125,000
Fonner Ollla owner can.u-ll<lle.,._
bloom llCDed 111111u lo a !~ear contract
for 111 eollmated llQ,000 a year ellecUve
when b1a piaylnl da.ys are over. Tb e
~-""'-"l/nlllll-IG--JIOFlorm~--. -services for six months a year. That con-
lrael wq wumed by Robert Irsay when
he took over ownmbip of lhe Coils last
July.
It's Laver
In Winniu_g
Form Again
MIAMI (AP) -Rod Laver, returning to prolesslonal tennis alter being disabled
much ot last year by a back ailment, <;ap-
tured the ll0,000 llrst prize in the !50.000
saga Bay Tennis Cluslc Sunday with a
H, lhl, H triumph over young Dick
Stoclrtoo.
Race Track
Has No Money;
Wilt Explodes , Laver. 34, constanUy outpos1Uoned the
21-year-old Stockton, a former National
Collegiate Athletic Association champion BOSTON -What does a race track do
who pocketed is;ooo as runner-up. when it doesn't have money to pay off
"I played pretty good today,'' said winners? Why, it just keeps on taking
Laver, an Australian now llviQg in Cbr-bets, of COW'!le.
ona del Mar. But be admitted, "My con-Suffolk Downs was left without working
dition isn't too good. I knew U 1 had to capital with 10,IO'l borseplayers on hand
go five sets it could have been different." Sunday when Wells Fargo was unable to
"You have no chance if you think you deliver a $650,000 bankroll.
don't have a chance," said Stockton. While Wells Fargo tried vainly· to open
"That's tbe big thing you have to be able the vault in its Wakefield office, track of·
to do. ficials went on ~ money hunt.-
"l've seen a lot d guys beat him (La· "We called everybody with money we
ver) that I've beaten. I knew it wasn't could think of," general manager Ed
out of the questicn I needed a super day Sullivan said. ..
and he bad to miss crucial shots, wbicb A couple of big restaurants had
'he didn't do." deposited Saturday night rereipts. Two
Laver, who went over lhe '$2 million other tracks, Rockingham Park and Bay
in.ark in career earnings two years ago. State Raceway, were unable to help.
had trouble with StoctlDn's strong first Their dough was locked in time vaufts.
serves tbrougbout the match, but his abil-After delaying the first race for ·one
ity to outmaneuver Stockton with his shot hour, Suffolk President Joe Cresci told
placements proved to be decisive. the crowd on the public address system
He· pocketed 410,000 for the victory in what was happening. He apologized, of.
the event, first tour stop of the year for !ered rain checks and announced that
World Cbampiomhip ol. Tennis, and add· winning tickets would be cashed as soon
-f "'-shat of h do bl as money was available. ed •~ or 11u1 e t e u es The track, which even borrowed $1,000
crown he and Newport Beach's R 0 Y from a fonner executive, finally had suf·
Emetsoo collared by beating fellow coon-ficient capilal to begin cashing tickets
trymen Colin Dibley and Terry Addis.m, after the third race. Later, Wells Fargo
MA.. ~portanl as the money to Laver .. managed to deliver $200,000 obtained
were tho 10 points he gained toward qual-
ifying for the WCT cbampiooship play-
off In Dallas -worth !50,000 to the wiJ>.
nl!1'.
"11le pressure down the line starts to
increase," said Laver, 34, of the tour
light to qualify for Dallas. "I'd like w he
In front at the beginning."
Stockton, who woo the Nalional Collegi-
ate Athletic ADociation singles crown
Wt year, said the pressure in the .Pros
was m different to him than tha t in the
college ranks. But he admitted he was
"jittery" before meeting Laver. . •
"I don't think I've ever had an idol in •
tennis," said Stockton, who earned $5.000
second place moneY. "But when I was
growing up, he (Laver) was always
there, No. 1 all lhe lime."
Stockton lost the first aet by falling 7-5
in the tie-breaking 13th game, bad his
serve broken in the sixth game of the
secood set and lost his service in the !Ith
game of the last set.
"Even when I was down, I never felt
out of the game," he said, "because I
thought I could serve my way out of it."
Laver won all the four tie.breaker
~ames he played while advancing through
the tournament.
Bullfighting Lags
MADRID -Inflation, along with other
things, is bringing a deflation to bull-
figl>ling in Spain. Last year was the
managtn' worst in a decade, with an in-
dicated drop of 15-20 percent in box4fice
rec<ipts.
A 10 percent rise in cost of living is be-
Uevl'd to •ve kept many Spaniards from
the bull ring. Other ipfluences are a lack
of big slats and of artful fighters, this
latter perhaps the biggest sin of all in
the fans' eyes.
from another source.
Kings in Trade
LOS ANGELES -The Los Angel•
Kings announced Sunday night they had
traded defenseman Paul Cw;tis to the St.
Louis Blues for forward ·Frank St.
Marseille in an even-up National Hockey
League player swap.
St. Marseille, 33, a native of Levack.
Ont., has scored seven goals and added 18
assii-l for the Blues this season. He
scored 52 and 51 points in his two
previous seasons with St. Louis.
Raise for Hunter
NORFOLK, Va. -Jim "Catfish"
Hunter, ace righthander of the world
champion oakland Athletics, said Sunday
he has signed his 1973 contract at a
"substantial salary boost.!'
Asked i£ he got $100,000 , the winner of
two World Series games -including the
finale -replied:
"No, but it was close to .it." Hunter, a
21-game winner, was the speaker at a
Temple Israel father-son banquet here.
Connors Wins
ROANOKE, Va. -Top-seeded Jimmy
Connors of Los Angeles won the Roanoke
Invitational Tennis Tournament for the
second consecutive 1ear Sunday,
defeating Ian Fletcher of Australia &-2, &-
3.
Goolagong Rolls
CHRISTCHURCH, New Zealand
Top -seeded Evonne Goolagong, th e
Conner Wimbledon champion, beat Janet
Young 7-6, 6-2 in an all-Australian
women's singles match for the New
7.eal'!J1d tennis championships title Sun-day.
Jittery Scene
At Kingston
AFC -H\ll>Ollr(I, 11 rvn (Gtrtll kkki
AFC -Oti1 Ttylor, 5 !l<'H lrom L1monk:t
(kk k l•llO!d)
AFC -8•11, 11 lrltercepllon n!lllm (Gtnlls kk:k)
NFC -8nxlc111910n, I !"\Ill [Mlrt"OI klckl
NFC -Kw1!k:k, 12 pen from Sr'"'3 (Ml!lrcot
""'' AllllllCI•~• -a.an.
NFC Prestige Falls Again
Sid Ball of Australia took the men's
singles title, beating.Warwick 6-2, 6-4, « .
7·5 and Warwick and Ball teamed for the
men's doubles championship, trouncing
Helmut Fickentscher of West Gennany
and Lars Elvstrom of Denmark, M, 6-4, lhl. .
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) -Threats
of sabotage and a telephone bomb threat
provoked enlarged security measures by
police today prior to the heavy\\rei~ht
championship fight between champion
Joe Frazier and George Foreman.
Douglas ,.fcFarland, Deputy Commis--
sioner of Police, acknowledged there had
been threals but declined to disclos., their
BOW<e.
"We aie assigning 740 police and 200
military to the ringside," the police offi-
cial said. .,,,,_ may be the work ol
--. ...... .,lksten but -we must lake eVery pre-
olutlon.
• "Wlth our security we can guaranteo
eomplm safety for the fans."
McFarland said • :ZO.mon guard had
bt<n plactd around the arena 24 hours
o day. Wherl Fratier and Foreman showed up
lor'the weiib.Jn for Iha 15-roundcr, po-
llCe:nel'I 11'1 black and red unllmns, with .-... their hlpe, ...,.. standing <!Vflr'j-
...tiore only a few Jareb apart. -
'
• AFC HFC
Finl Oow!lt 11 '1 Rlllhls -Y8nll l().IU )ii.Id
Pntll'IV y1rd1 '1 IU ll:~•n y1r(ls 1• 2
P11ns t.)~2 !r.J4·1
P\1!'11'1 J . .Q ~"° F~mbles -l°'l ._J :l·l
P«1allleJ -y4rds 1·21 1·\G
lncllvklv•I Luders
lllJltllng -Af'C. 5imp$Oll 16"1!2. Hubri,.rd 1.4 ,
NFC, 6•0<.k!r191on tt-.O. Johnson t·l6. ~!II 10.3'. AKll~l"9 -AFC, Simpson J.Sll, MYl!'t 2·"41 NFC, Btoc:~lr-.;iTon s.JI. Kwtlkk )..1'2,
,llllftt -AFC, Hlldl 1·19<1, 110 y1rch. LI•
IMflltl l +o, I y1rdll HFC, Sntecl 14"22·2, l«
Y••d,, Khmtf l•U-4, "3 Ytrdl .
Winter Bounced
HOUSTON -Coach Tex Winter was
fired Sunday prior-to-the Houston
Rocket.s' NaUonal Basketball AssociatiOn
game--agalnst the New Vm-k Knicks. He
was replaced by a$..c;ist11nt coach Joe
Egan.
The Rockets entered the contest with a
10-game losing streak -their longest '
since moving here from San Diego two.
yean ngo. Thetr season record was 17·30,
matching their mark at the samr: time
last year .
\
A meric an Conference Rolls to 33-28 Triumph
DALI.AS (AP) -The American Foot·
li<11I Conference formed in a riery merger
v:ith the old National Football League,
had every right to be chesty today -at
least for a year.
The AFC made it a historic clean
sweep over the National Football Con-
ference in Sunday'• 33-2&. Pro Bowl Vic-
tory.
Previously, the AFC bad captured the
exhibition season 27-25-4 and the·regular
season 2°'19-1 from their old rivals and'·
Miami dropped 'NFC m o..l:h b e-1
Washington lf-7 in the Super Bowl.
Sunday was the clincher ln a ~Ol'l'
of All-stars between tt>e two 1 agues.
"l.ast year the r;FO sot tb6 JllOlt ink
-we wanted to prove sometbfng,!' said ·
running bAck o. J. Simpson or Burtalo,
the gnme \ Mosl Valuable Pla)<ef .
Simpson, who led thf.. NlL In nWlilll
•
' .,
with 1,251 yards, sCilred one touchdo\\-11,
ru shed for l 12 yards and caught three
passes for 58 yards.
"O.J . made us look kinda fuMy at
times." admitted Atlanta linebacker
Tommy Nobis of tbe NFC.
. "This was a fun game. I haven't had
many fun gaints in my pro career," S1Jd
Simpson , a four-year veteran who was in
the Pro Bowl lo> lhe lint lime. -'.l'h• victory before 47,819 chilled Ions in
Te1as Stadium gave the AFC a 2-1 lead
over the..NFC in the series.
Simpson said offensive linemen Gene
Upsll&w of Oakland. Wall Sweeney of San
Diego. t..a.rry LltUe of Miami And
Winston Hill o( the New York Jt.ts had
him wid~-eyed because they were so
fired up [or the game.
'"l'ht,. guys talked all week about how
they were going to ldO lbelr man,"
Simpson said.
Otis Taylor of Kansas City.,. who caught
a five-yard touchdown pass from
Oakland's Daryle Lamonlca, said there
was much more at stake than the dlf·
remice belween 12.000 and 11,500 for the
wtooe"' 4Dd losers.
John BrocllngtOn of G""° Bay scored
three toucbdowm and quartertiack Norm
Soead-ol-tbt-New York Giants hil Ughl
end Ted· Kwalick or San Fr1nd3co with a
a.yard acorlng pau but " wasn't enough.
MatY Hubbord ol O&kland scor.d on an
II-yard run, Bobby Bell of Kllnw City J
intercepted a Snead pass and returned It
12 yards for a touchdown and
Piltsburgb's Roy Gereia kicked field
goab of I& and 22 yard• for the AFC
which overcame a. 14-0 first quarter
deficit.
Lakers Romp
LOS ANGELES -Will Chomberlaln,
the man who once averaged mort than 50
Po....-ints a game £or an entire· National
Basketball Association season, says he
bas-forgotten how to score.
The Big Dipper returned as -.n of-
fensive tbreat Sunday night, though ,
scoring 29 points and leading the Los
Angeles Lakers to an easy 123-102 victory.
over the Kansas City-Omaha Kings:.
Chamberlain abo grabbed 21 rebounds
and was a big faek>r on defense.
KaMU Cl~ (11:1) lli"AllfiM (ln) Ol'T Ol"T
ll:tlft' t M 12 8rldoet J ._. 10
\1111,i,.w.i. • 1·2 • MtMllllllft • ... 11 ""'" l t:O 10 C!Hf!lb«l•litJ t l l;lt 1' GU01tt1 j-1 t oeadrld'I t 1•1 17
Arcl'o lbllld 10 M n Witt! t 1·t lt
Gibbs ) M ' COV!'l!J o M o o,._ J 1.1 1 1r1tkwn 2 1-2 '
Kfmbtll I Ml 2 Grtftl 2 1•2 J
Kojl1 ~ 00 • T\l!'fltt 2 °" 4 R1t1!tf 1 W 1 Prl«I 1 M )
Slllt<1 2 >-J 1 ltll•Y t 1·1 lJ Wfllllfnt I 0.(1 2
T'ot•ll 1.1 l._21 102 'l11t11t • 11..)t 1U
Kt n6111 Cl'Y.Qmt~ 21 2"t lt '6 -IOI
LOJ Mttle 11 • II :ti5 -111 A1t--.n<11 -15,111,
.,_
For Cra111pt o11
'
Tuc son Become s
Another Victim FEEL "INWARD" WHEN PUTTING
J'va olways felt·lllat Ille moot
lmpootont thins al>Out1"1tti111 lo
Tucso. to remain absolutely motk>n11$1. N (API -Bruce "I'm pretty !Ired," 11< said. c 1. •• ~ Only yo ur haqds and arms rampton 1w.:1 taken two in a "l didn't sleep very well all ·should movo durirtg the stroke.
•
'· -
NeWPJ>rterj UCI B;~;h~ll
Memories
~er On World Series
By HOW All1) L. HANDY
Of .. ~ ,, .. '""
DAILY PILOT
Sets
Goal
miike the lranslUoD sat1lflc.
torily.
•
row, but the Australinn week. I came in here knowing f u allow r head or body
-'l.e.ieJ'an-bar.bor.s-oo-ilhnions-1-was playing.vett.-r-wa~~toJ'.!mo!'.::'v~e"', ~yo='u~w~iilJ"':!'nev;;,;e';.r-':co;;;';;n'.----\lz'
about. winning three con· keyed up, ready to get on with sistently strike the ball with
.Super Bowl-VII la ju>t a mtmOry to many but thole
memorlea: will ~ k>ng in
the ril.tnds of the 'natlon'e prtss
following their vJJit to the IHl--1---mwponer IM lri Newport
Beach.
'M>ere'a a queaUon mark al '"'°nd buo and...Ww."""<1--
pitchlng is llmited to one can·
dldate but the UC Irvine
baseball team wlll embark on
Davi:! Lyons, • junior, holds
,---dow<Hhe-thlrd -potl-llnd1---
Jack Cleveland, a pltchir lut
sccullve events on the tough It. your putterfaee square to the American pro gofr tour. "Now that It's over, I'm lin Wltb cleanup j111t about
completed and hotel ..,..,.
!Jons back to nonnal, a quick
check of the area shows few
ttmlndeta of the beetle pace
of a week ago.
"No, I don't think so." really tired. "j· find that I can eliminate
Crampton aald when asked it "Bing has given me 1 good body mcwement if I feel 1'ln.
he planned to make this amateur partner, Fr a nk ward1.1 when I set LIP over the
wee'k's Bing Crosby National Souchak," be said,' looking ball. I like to feel that my elbows P~Atn his third successive ahead to this weekend at Peb-and my knees a re close·lf! to.
triumph. , ble Beach. "I j!iii hope they ward anlmaglnaryal.il;lfiatrUns
"PubUcJty.wlat, I think It
wu fantastic for the entire
area ," ~1rs. Cynthia Shields of
the. Newporter staff saya
about the operation.
"This ooe took a lot out of give him lots "'9f strokes, up the center of my body. Thl5
me," Crampton ~aid Sunttay 'cause I'm just going to be feeling tends to keep my weight
after his easy, front-running riding his back." centered during my stroke.
victory in the Tucson Open, a Crampton's Victory, fo!low-Whenever my puttin1 goes "All pre51 release. from the
National Football Lea,gue car·
rled a Newport Beach datellne
and mentioned the head·
quarten here at the hotel.
decision that was tarn ished ing his triumph at the Phoenix awry, the firs t th ins I do Is
just a trine by a meaningless Open just the week before, check that I am "quiet" wilh
trip le bogey seven on made him the first man to my body durin& my stroke. As a
Crampton's nnishing hole. win consecutive American result I often save myself a
Sea Kin gs
Top Hoop
Rankings
corona del Mar High's
unbeaten Sea Kings, with six
of their 15 conquests by three
points or leas , continlie to lead
the official Orange C.OUnty
prep basketball poll as
selected by the DAILY
PILOT ..
The Sea Kings edged Foun-
tain Valley, 43-47, Friday
night, but the Joas failed to
drop the Barocts of Fountain
Valley out of their No. 2 perch.
Huntington Beach'• rlijlidly
improving Oilers, now 6-0 in
Sunset League battle, moved
up to third place with thelr 6$-
63 triumph over [.(Jara Friday.
ORANGE COUNTY TOP 10
Pol. Team, Record Points
t. Corona del Mar (15-0 ) 57
2. Fountain Valley (15-2) 5&
3. Huntington Beach (14-4 ) 44
4. Fullerton (12-4) 33
5. Loara ( 15-3) 32
6. Tustin (13-5) 30
7. Troy (UHi) 17
8. La Quinta (!~) 14
9. A-1aiina (14-7) 12
touma"ments since Arnold great deal of se·arching for the
Palmer took the last two ciusa of th• problem. •• .............. _ "We have already had
guests in this week from
Washington and other places
around the country who tell us
they read about the
Newporter IM in their
hometown newspaners."
events of the 1969 season.
Palmer also ls the last player
to win three In a row, in 1982.
Crampton opened the final
day 's play -the start was
delayed l 'n hour,s by frozen
greens and blt.liig, 20-degree
temperatures -with a thfee.
stroke lead, eagled the second
hole and wan't threatened as
he breezed home with a 71 for m , 11 under par on the 7,200
yard Tucson , National Golf
Club ccurse.
He had an eight shot lead
befo~e be hlt into two diHertnt
lakes on the 18th hole.
"HOW TO IMPROVE YOUR PUTTING''! H.,. It Arnold hlmff'a
fu lly llluttr1twd 1uld• to puttln1 1llrK4, llne·up, ttrok•I Stnd 20t olonl with 1 atampltd, utf-addrllMCI onwtlopo tD Arnold Pahntr,--
In car• of thlt newspaper. -
.Redskins Pleased
' With Stay Here
How does the Super Bowl
operation compare with other
functions. at the hotel ?
"Last year at this time we
)lad the Primo Minister or
Japan, Saito, here for a visit
The press room in the Monte
Carlo room was set up similar
to the way It was last week.
"We have ·mo bad Prul-
dent Nlmn here for press eon.
ferences in the put," Mrs.
Sblolds adds.
Will Bruce Gelker's Sad-ce of getting them to atay here Were the newsmen and NFL officials cooperative? dleback IM become visiting if they come to Southern uvery much so. They didn't
sports teams headquarters: of Capifornia for more than one create any additional problems
Southern California? night," Gelker says. or unusual situations. They
It may take a whlle to "Oluck Layne of the Green were very well organiud and
establlsb such a trend on a Bay staff wu alao here aDd be once the press room was set
pennanent basis but last -.Id lib In have the Packtn up In the Monte Carlo room,
-stay •--~--they "'•y the ""c1o.-really dldn~ have a Jot to week's vi.sit of the Washington nuc wuc:u .-••
Redskins did a great deal to ~~ have been Jn -.ct Wa• the presence of the
enhance that Image and to lay with the Unlven:lty of Iowa new1 media perlOlll;lel for a
th< groundwork for such a and I lee! l!>'Y ..W be hero week beneficial to the ma?
situation In the fu.,,.. nezt fall when they ploy "They had 111 cars anllable
"It was a beautiful week UCLA. and quite a bit of Cree time on
and we certainly enjoyed Jt, '' "With thiJ particular ex· r-their bandt. I do know .that
Balboa's Bruce Gelker, Qwner perience with the Redskins, I there was quite a bit of traffic
of the Santa Ana establish-feel we are now in a position to Fashion Wand. A number
ment, told Uie DAILY PILOO' to handle any incoming team of wives were also here."
today. In a utisfactory manner ." Don Weiss, coordinator or
"We felt It was eltreme.ly How about a Roee Bowt con-public relations Cor the NFL
.successful and we have receiv: tending.team and wlstants...BID-Granbolm
the ms a.uon with an air of
optimism and a veteran line--
up, AC<OrdJ"i to coach Gary Adl\JnS.
"'1 think we have an ex·
~lent cl!,lloce tQ go all the
way to lhe college dlviaion
world series this year,"
·Adams aays by way of u -
planation. "At least that is
going to be our goal and we
aren't even going to think
about the regionals until they
get here."
On what pmniu does he
base such an opinion? GARY ADAMS "We have more speed th is
year and our pitching should
be better overall. We have the
guys to get on. base 1 Jot and seniors Bob Barlow and Tom
we have some power hitters Dodd, juniors Gary Wheelock
returning. and Ray Humphries and
"We are lacklng in Je£t so phomores Jerry Maras and
handed pitching, number-wise, southpaw Steve Fox.
and we are converting an out-fielder into a 8 e c 0 n d ln addition, two promising
baseman," be says. freshmen are making inroads
1be power b1tting he talks into the stall f\1ike llickma n
about will come from four from Tustin High and Tad
veterans of last season when • Davis from Loara are the
the team compiled a 32-20--1 yearling prospects.
mark and made the NCAA Barlow is the winningest
regiOnals for the second pitcher in UCI &Mals with 23
straight year. victories. He aJso leads in
These veterarui Include games pitched (47 ), games
catcher Jerry Stupy, .327, fiTSt started (39), innings pitched
base.man Jeff Malinotf (.3441, (268%) and most strikeouts
shortstop Dan Hsnsen (.226 ) (203 ). ·
and outfiek;te.r Rod Spence His arm problems: of a year
(.242). ago appear to be lmproved
Malinoff ls the bellwether of although Dodd is still plagued
the slugging brigade and will by injury and may not be at
be playing his third year for full strength, Maras ls still
the Anteaters. He led the team with the basketball team and
in homers (6), triples (IO) and won't begin workouts until the
rbi (815) last season and was cage season ends.
second 1n doubles. Hll total Keith Bridges, a junior col-
bues mark for the year was lege transfer from Cerritos
117. t~1here he was all-conference
Hansen, a senior this time as an outfielder, is working at
around, la the all-time team second base.
leader In home runs (11), rbi "He Cields ground balls well
(93) and total bases (195). but is still struggling to make
In the all-lmportant pitching the double play," Adams says.
department, Adams will have The coach is con fident he will
six members of last year's
season, will serve as uWity in·
fielder.
The Anteaters lost the
serv i<:i!s of sopbo~re RJck
Peters to lhe Anny for two
years. He was the helr-ap-
parent to the second base job
and hit .357 in 28 games a year
ago.
In the outfield, sophomore
Rod Spence (.242) b back In
left field with senior Oiuck
Spanski as backup man.
Rich Molina (.328), a aenklr.
retu rns in center field with
freshman Alan Belimo (I....,
SC!rna ) behind hlm .
Clark Schenz (.283), aoolher
senior, will start in right field
wher~ he opened about half d
the ga mes last yea.r. D;llg
Hlmmelberg, a CDnvei1eii
pitcher, ls backup man In ,
right.
Don Jones, an all·lea&Uo .
selec tion fro m Pasadena City•.
College, ls in school buf late
afternoon classes preclilcle a
turnout for the baseball team.
He is a computer science ma-
jor.
Stupy will ha ve sophomore .
Carl Petemel and senior John
Baker as backup catchers with
freshman Bruce Banning
(Villa Partc) also available.
The Anteaters will play at
least 49 games plus three ei·
hibltions Mur-ing tbe 1973 •
regular season. With 97 vic-
tories in the fold over the first
three years of competition, an
earl y milestone will be reach-
ed when the tooth victory is
·posted.
The Anteaters Will also be a
part of the Grapefruit League
involving Southern California
major ·unlvenity and college
tetims: with UCI playing 23
such gimes.
Home-and-home o u t I n g s
with both use and UCLA are
on the schedule along wtth
defense of the Anaheim
Tournament title won last
year.
10. El Modena (15-1 I 9
Others: Orange (13-4),
Valencia (12·5), La Habra (11·
5).
stall back ill the fold Including
AlamiUJs Entries ed both written and verbal ''The Eastern (Big-10) and Joe Browne, did most of
confinnaUon to that effect teams are c:ommltted to the ground work for the league
from coach George Allen and Puadena but we certatnly and press headquarters at the p dh
(Kate\la High not eligible for
conslderat.ion due to aU-star
status acquired t h r o u g h
transfers.)
others connected wltb the would lllte to have a PacllJe.& Newporter. All three made rll OIDIDe
W•shington team. · -_tnm 11aJ bin. We ·cerlalnli nUJ1!<l'l'UI vlalta to the area
"Re said ba ...n; •J: 'wtll ba...., --1n Ille priGt 'to SOper eow1 vu to Tops OCIR preciai.d the way th/nP _.. luture and they haft ample complele llnol .,,._II.
done h<re and also told .,. places to train at the Santa Would the hotel woloome a
that In 110 way ,... their· i-Ana Bowl, the Blg·A and l1mllor sltuatloo wban the Dr T
··--' b ·~ a1a t ·-0r..,. Coast College. Sapr -.-.. "' 1o1 ag est All Af · ;:i~ Y ·~• Y 8 ...-.,.,. "I think we bave an es. Aopift tn ,the fulure? west •Stars ter' ,;Many or the players also cellent -at Jetting"!"" of . "Tbere bu -no Don Prudhomme of Granada
expressed their gratitude and these vlsltlng tasma Jn Ille dllcuoolen wttb I» •bout Hills won th< top fuel · r So of them fu""" and we ..W be aolJig fUture Super Bowtl. But we . Thi d S • h v• t ap.ptteu> ton. me after them, too," Gelker 11)'1 certainly would like to do It eliminator claas Sunday tn the r t lPO•g t IC or,1 said It was the best place they with hla ever-present en-again and all ol tbe NFL and ~ ~1'"1 drag series at Orange
J. U.O. J hav.e stayed aU year and .Joe thuslasm for Ill• and _,_ media -raoMel told ·u1 they County t n ter n a t Ion a I
CHICAGO (AP) -Coach
Bill Sharman oC the champion
Los Angeles Lakers will be
seeking to direct his West ag-
gregation to an unprecedented
third successive victory over
the East in the 23rd annual
Nalional Basketball Associa-
tion AU-star game here Tues-
day night.
The East, now leading the
mid-season pro classic 14-8,
won three All-Star conteats in
a row before Larry Costello
produced a 1971 West eyelash
triumph at 108-107 and
Shannan's West unit sneaked
Prep Swim
Relays Set
Tuesday
Bla>r, their public relatiOna thi done that •-i: ~ wltb tbe Raceway.
a 112·110 triumph at San Diego man, told me they "'m °" many peop were .. PPY atuatloa HlJ time was 8.58 second s
last sea90n. actaatly raving about the only dream about. here, Mrs. Shleldt says. and be had a top speed of
prime rib and steaks. 223.79 miles per hour. He It wilt be the first All-star "He had told me earlier In defeated Rick Ramsey of
game here since th< series the week tbat you never hear Rugged Schedu, _ Set Carton, U l and ZlU t m.p.h. was inaugurated at Boston in f the I W 1951 with an 111·94 East vie-anything rom payers Funny car title winner was
tory A sellout Chicago unless the Coad ls bad SO I PN Foster of Reseda, 7.03 and
Stadium crowd or 20,000 is ex· fil(llre ~is is a big com-For UCI Golf Team 171.75 m.p.h., and pro stock peeled for the nationally-phment. king was Butch Leal of
t le ·sed tilt (Channel 7 6.10 The R e d s kin s were Lawndale, 9.36 for a track e vi • · , quartered 1n a new part. of the record and J 47 .OS m.p.h. P·~tman again matches l3-hotel where pri vacy prevailed UC Irvlne'I golf team will campus coune, the Soothem Prudhomme'1 victory main-
man super squads with and they had only to croa. a undertake one or the most Im-Calllomla Intercolle&iates at tained hla lead ID the top fuel
Boston's Tom Heinsohn, who bridge to get to the 1?3nquet posing and am b itious Torrey Pines and the 'I?ojan polnta standings,
11 w his East team last year room. There were a mmlmum schedules in the history of the Invitational at Pomona Na· Jl'oster ts second ln overall
a . number of distractions and . school tbil year with many of tlonal. ltaDdiDp detplte missing the ~~:U:n~~ ~lr~:l~~~ a~~ Gelke~ became not only a the top country club courses in In addi tion, the Anteater• opening Serles raoe.
point third qu arter by the Redskins fa n but a George the Southland being utilized nave home-and·home matches Earlier FOiler set a to,P w st which hung on for 8 two-Allen booster as well. for play. with USC and UCLA. Home speed \at m.sz m.p.h. Leal s ~nt 1 tory "The Redskins ptayen Coach Jerry H u 1 b e r t ' s matches with these two will be ~ broke hla own track
po 'The W~st a.gain is beaded by were. without exception, Anteaters will parUcipate in at Santa Ana cc. record. , lg gent1emen. The entire group aeven tournamenta Including the NBA s legendary b man remained together and acted the.ir own UCI InlvtatJonal at
tandem of Kareem Abdul.J~b-like a family. Our staff fell 1n Santa Ana CC on Monday, b~rh and Wilt. ti;am~laln, Jove with them ," Gelker sayt. March s. wit sensat1ona a e "George bas to be one of the Other tournament action in.-Pro Cage, Hockey ... Archibald, Jerry We s t. most appreciative and humble cludet Fullerton at canyon
Spencer Ha~ood, Rick Barry, guys I ever met and be was a Criit cc, the All.cal tourney
and Sidney Wicks rounding out sportsman before and after at Bel Air Country Club in
a group selected by NBA the game." Brentwood, the Santa Barbara w L I'd. ••
writers. . . Did the Saddleback have tournament at Sandpiper CC 80.1111 1' 1 ,..
LONG BEACH -Elev~n Later West additions .bY problems with security? In that city, the stanford H-vor11. " 12
Orange CoaBt area prep swim Shannan Inell!-~ Dave Bmg "Actually a rni..nlnium of iournament In Palo Alto on the '11"•'° u SJ
.1'5 2l'I
.Jlf ''"' ·"' "" contingents are involved in and Bob Lanier of Detroit; problems aiid at no time did _,._ 1:f '1111'"'11111~t111r11 01~'
Tue!day's CIF swim relays Gall Goodr.ich of the Lakers; we have any trouble. But 'Rith '{::{ '}...; ••1tll'llor1 • ,, .63' -
prelims at Belmont Plaza In Bob Dandridge of Milwaukee, children around It's like open· 1m uc1 GOLP KMIDIJLI ::. ~ : ;m 1~...,
the season'i initial event, Golden State's Nate 1bur· ing a can of 'wonns. They s!,f:· ,! ji1 ,~i. s.rr Dleeo '' L.-.. CllYtllllll 17 11 .»o1 U\.\
(j Included In the day's p~ mond, and the bOlt Chicago seem to squirt out of the walls ""'· • -ucLA 11 Sift'• ...,.. cc W:.. ~
gram, which begs a.t 2:~, Bulls' Chet Walker. , and Geora:t bates to say no to 11~:,1• 12 _ ~ • uc ..,, 1111........, • 1s ·'" -
are Costa Mesa, tanCia,~di· The East's fint aelect1ons a youngster. J never uw him .. ,~~.·~~1C4i:1'~"~:!;.· ~~~111 . : : !; ,;.:
son, Fount.a.In Valley, Hunting· ..,..re_Jolln. _Havtlcek, Da ve tum down. •'••'e u •.• 11, mi Dttr«t '° :it . .aa " . Be h Ma ---.1"~ . oa eo ... U'&' r..w ~,, _ c.i ,._ .. 11.M ........._, t1t hc:tl'k DM*" ton Be"'iCJi;l.aguna ac • • De8usschere, ve w~s, What about the tuture? si ntt ~""cc nt:M!. .... u. ... ,..... " 11 .7N -rlna, Mi."ision Viejo, NeW:rt Walt Frazier, Pete Marav1ch, "We have an aoellent ch&n· ,..,. 22.0 _ •1-.-,..,..,.... °""'" si•i. 11 1• ...o 1
Hsrbor, University and ts:t· Ltnny Wilkens, Lou Hudson -',.~~'-'~'cifi~'t0•0~ ,,.., " ::;:• ~ : :: ~ minster. and Wes Unaeld. t 1rv1t1t eoe11cc111;•1. ,....... 1t • .J• H" ,.._., del Mar swlmmers Added to the v.5t oquad ' Mtf'Cfl 14-,...,..,. TtwrM"*" t1t .....,... ,_ ~-we<1n--' ~ F" h R t c~ ct11t cc 111 1'Mtldt1. "'"mort ,., ""ll6tlttr1•,, lttie to the water cway Tuesday were BUI Bradley of IS epor Mardi s -UCl lrrt1l1tt-i " ..... Mllwl vk" 1:11. Cklldtft ..... IOI
In lhe othc,r hai r of the PfC" New York; Jo Jo White of · A'i!.~ <~ •_:.t.,... .,. c.i .,... ::_~ 1~. =:~.!! ..,
lims. The frnals are: bllled for Boston· John Block of ~HTA HJ.••A•A _ , tt'lfllll'•: 11 tFuli.-tlll'll •' MeM ..,.,.. CC..Oblf). Loi ... ,..... 1n 1t1nM• CtfY<()lftthl
7 p.m. Friday with lbe 12 Phllad~lpbta.: .Jack Ma.rinO or :".M' .. lTttl ·;11ra~ M Mlllnl MO l•~=.:.;-c~h=.~~· •I ~ lllf'lel ICMdultd.
fB5test times !" toch 11~v~nt Houston and Bob Kauffman ot flt1C. tod. Marc11 , .. 21 -""°" ,........,.. .i T""•""' o•"'"
rrom the prehms qua 1o1ymg B ff 1 ' ~ ... !t~Yl,~~ \I=""~~ ·~;r11 ''~lint. ..,_.. H• •1inv~~
for finals berths. u a 0· ¥:1:!~ Mi "' T1Vfn1nwnt 11 ......., cc. 11,1.w.., Alk!w G.-•' Clllc.eflJ Va-ily and frosh--soph ...... ~!"' COVI -u.. WMltf1il ,,.,II ' -UCLA If lt4 "''cc (ff). JllNL " Jed d · '°1l•wAcr.L •SY -21~'": 1 ...... II I -!JI( If ...... AM CC a.-t
events m sthedu an m-JV Basketball ~~er"c:*~ ~,-1, ....... n o~. • -c.i '"" '""""""'' .. ... " l' ""., .. eluded it'I the J:fia m are the ~;;,;:y,T • ..., unM cc 02:•1. M011tN11 • • " " m , .. iodl. · medley 8 x · Mr· • · ..... -,_ N. v. 1t.,..n • 1) • .. 11t nr 4 X 100 VI UI • I !'....~ -1 tr.-, -J:i .:r1: t -v-tt _..,. .,..... n n 4 " "' Ull
50 free, f X 50 breast, 4 X 50 B~~::r'll) (tll I' Cit) "=-,::: "'i>ffgil,O I---,_J -711 C~)jj-:;;-l,ljl\J .... YWW C.C = : :: : : 1~ re
fly. 4 x SO back, 4 x 100 free H•rrllW'Oll 1101 F 1•1 ltatllllUf! 11111tn: u Y"flowt•ll, >.....,. -11ew. "'· r..mw 1• n 1 ,. 1"' 1n and 4 x 50 medley. Dwl• 1u c co' ~ _nJA,~ ~ ......, _ .. ~1~ r CAif ** I~ ...,... .. , v11'1CDWW 1i 1t • SJ 1• • s• au11 Wgh 1s the dt--Mtl'IOlo 111 c:o i•1 ,,...., !!!!ltflI •• !'f ~ ... .....-__!!!:~ ,,.,. •-w: ..... .,.... .. ..,... "· v. 111.,... • • 4 _,.. " •
fending champtOn and the ~,:1
"*: ~!"-~ WJtO::;;• -1!-rJl• :t'"'a..: c:: ~ j ll.: c.11 ...... ''""" -..a-i ",'fiiiiiiifiiiiiiF;iH:;~~~F-l Lancer!i ilong_ with the •111"._...,..1.ut11-..nity-Of'*'"' .-. 1 ,,,.........._,,"-..... 1a """"*'"'~· .II
Knights ol Foothill JUgh, are ~'::ri:: u11tf91'11" "'''-""~r..\o -'fl .....,; ti1 ftdi: ,.:"' ...,:--"9flflnll TMM"*" 11
flti~~vored to ~ the Varsity Hlldi._. ...0 C•l cMJ "-9 ~roG-,._ 1f~~\"'i = ..:',!ec'fi.~11" l"°"I l ttdll 11
Admission to the ~llmrls ::~1
1ss1 ~ 11'~.':'ili --'°""'~ .... .,.. Gt 1~111_'!.11 ,l •= ;.-J'111~t.h ,..,. °""1 11
rree. Tickets to the Clnals are kliWl111111 t3• c "' ~111~ "°"""" -Mitt , -felltfWrl t111fwftl•
SI for adults and 50pnts for g:i,.:1111l121 g 1\~,1 °,~ ~\·;~ 11Jf',."'C::~1:~ ":!,=-i;tp•.!'\:"1:=1~~· ...... studenb. H.tM-i u.. 8'a&. ~~ ltl i n bel'lltt. TM'llMIMr • ......... Mtt-.1. ,., ______________ ~-----'"
. ' • I
P11tlT ltACI -..00 '(9f'd&. ) .,..,
oldt & up. FIUI" a. rnar.. l•!,,,.ng.
P111se lltoD. (1•1mln0 prk:t St.500.
0-.1 Witch ll>Nywl
'"""' A11Vt1 OC11ltflt) Ml. J_,.,. l~•l
-!:> ,,,
C•l1! ... 1 (l.11)Mm) "' 1.ullnt• (~mlth) "' Sl'lt'I Gcltl• 00 {Wrlohl) "' Tfl'ry Solnn (0..V.r) "' StomP O•nct (P-vt) "' Scotch Ott lllr (C1r~1 "' lltll1 Min lllllC (My! .. ) "' \lk tl \lllfll'Unl (ltlchlrdll "' u-ti•• Ud¥ !Adllrl "' Molli\' Moo (C«Hy) "'
Top ,,..101\t {StNfll)
D!ckl'!' 81y k (ltol:llMOfl)
M.1111lttt1 (Alli-)
RDC:kll llt1lm (Myla)
Hornll'llnd J1pperd l.iMtMlll ....... , .. , ....
MdtJy Kllll1>11 (Wenl)
G&rvln CO\lflly (Aclllr)
C1lllornl1 Sindt tSmlll'IJ
Ml Pit' (Wrloft!J
"' '" '" '" "' '" "'
"' "' "' "' """'""" T•llhl air ILl~l'lll LlgMM.1111'11 I •11)
Fr1nt l1'1 Fln1l1 tlmltil "' "' "'
SIXTH ltACI -400 Y•nh. J YHf
ollb .,1& up. CMllll'llfll. Puna U,200
Ct•lmlnv prlc• 12,xll>.
ll!iCOlllO ltACI '-3.50 .,.1rdt. 3 y•1r
old m1l<Mn1. Cl•1mhu. PurH t l,.00.
Cl•lmlng p1lct M.000
110'(11 SllV« (Myln)
R«k1! Mick CK"lahf)
Senot P1nd1 (Cro.&vl
115 D0td1 111 GOOd fllldlllnll)
UO l(l11fV'1 Time !AdalrJ l70 Roelle! Dlt l Jr (Y ....... ) :~ LIUl!!lll"ll Witch (W•ltonl
115 l)olt't Loo1t 8.ct I Alll-1 IU Rvn N'--. llun (C1rd0q)
"' "' "' 117 • 117 .
"' "' '" !ff
Cini Chu ~ fl("l!f'll)
Jwt 8• P"llfl {VtllOJ'lt)
5111n'• W1r C"-"t (4•r0
S""'°'•Y Royl lty !Srllthl MIH Vlt'IO p.,,. 1\0'riOl'IO
OU1tw'1 Btr Cllld {G1n1I Or""1 Col~lll (Lt>Mm)
Rocket 81r Chide (C1rdolal
MOn!•llnl (Or".,-)
T111¥'1 lrvai CU.tr!
•z ·~ ·~
t l\llJllTH llACI -«Ill Ylnlt. J Yllf old• .. up, AUow1nc1. P\#'M $),'°°· TN ' a oru1·1. Al .. lllt llil•
Sl1m1 .. 1y lC.rdaUI
MOort P .. rl1 !Smllll)
Fl1mL111 1'1-r (H..,.,J
Ed"' Too !Rabi..-)
·~ '" ·~ ·~
Ilg C1"'f(ln CU.Ir )
ll""9fl Sruff CC1rdoul lolt<'lon I KNofrlll
On It-I (Llpf\ll'llJ
Roy1I Go Go lltldllnltl
Es P•rtnll {W11-I
Llmlt1 l1r0ffl1 (lflllltr)
'" 117
"' "' 117
"' 117 TMlltD lt...CI! -~ Ylrd1 ) 'I'"'
old1 I. 11P. Cl•!ml1111. Pur .. Jl,600.
Cl1lml"11 prkf 12.000
Hug'1 Tl~ (C1rdou) llGHTH ltACI -lJO 'f'lnll. S VMr
111 DIOI I. VP. ililklWllnc:9, ,.WM P,.fll(I.
Mr Ou1rtt Hiii (MalWd•f
Otd l'lme1 {Rlchlrdl) Un1ll•chlld IOl't'ffl')
P1mtl"I 8111 1Htr1) ~""' lloy ($,.,.lli't) !>Vilt<' l•r Boy (RoojnlOll)
Mt'!"" N'--. (,t,O•l•l
111 T1w>11, Luk•'• c 11 •rc11 ll'lltfl<lly
Idle Dltl9er (Myl11)
lit Cl\1p1tr.
111 Dn•irl hlldlfortll !Meir)
117 BOD'• 8•r 11111 ILIPflanll 111 RDC~ll Tl Ma !C•rdOU)
117 Sc..,t of Llmt ll'•l 117 81ttlmlt. (lmlll'IJ
111 TruiY l'ltMll'!I IWl1tftll
P1l'1 Cllltodtet (Kitt)
GolO CDCIY (C,..,I
H1'1 aOUlld To flCdflltl
W1!Cll l oY IW11-) "'"' ......
"' "' '" "' "' "' 1u · ••• '" 111 '
"' "' lU
Ml11 Air ,llQllt IAhlr) 117
"' ..... HtlllTH •A.Cl ::=Jsoy...-., J .,._.
old• a. "'· Clllml1111 ~ llAOIJ. • Cl1lml1111prlct12.-.
"' '" "' "' "' "' "' '"
Mid Pol .. (Llplwml
LHllt St111 IMl!Mlll
C1k.utll llfooll•I ••• 1111 ~ l lCll'llt)
Strffky J•mn CSlll'by) Ol1mt11lt (WVOJ
Mr. 5•lcll (M'f'lnl &11el! ~ tltk fllrdtl
R1ymoncl Bir loy IA.4tlt)
,IPTH 1t4C• -"0 Y8•d•, ) YNr
o1d1 & up. c111mtno. '""M u .1on.
Cl•lmlr.g porlu tJ.000.
...... lltfl .... ll•ltt ... (Hitt)
PMlt<' l oll !Sl!lfltr)
1'1rr Cl1~ {Ward) ri. s""'• $110p.
l
llotrl119 Rocket (W1hOl'I}
THERE IS A FACTORY
AUTHORIZED DEAi.ER
FDR.EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD
ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Ba.ul.val"d
af Car•
LOO• PO• THI IMIUM •T
THEODORE I COSTA MISA ROBINS FORD DATSUN
2060 -HAR BOR BLVD. HARBOR ILVD,
\
"' ,.
111 • n7
117 '
"' 117 '" 117
'" '" "' "'
..
l
I
II DAILY PILOT Mond1Y, Jo"""' 22, 1973
I
TODAY'S
TV ffiGlllJGHTS
NBC 0 9:00 -'1 Love My Wife.'' Elliott
~ Goul d stars in thb rece~ ~vie about a ~g sur-
. geon who growi. ilrid ot...b.1s wife. and children.
-
Brenda Vaccaro, Angel Tompkins.
ABC 0 9:00 -'How the We.I Was Won ."
Concllision of the two-~c movie dealln with
1er1ca s westwafd ex n. ong s are
James Stewart, Debbie Reynolds, Carroll Baker,
Richard Widmark and Karl Malden.
KCE'f fl!) 9:0Q -A Skating S~acular. Janet
Lynn. the national senior figure skatlng cbarilpion,
hends an all-star cast of Olympie skaters. •
KHJ 0~11 :00 -"Mr. Peabody and the Mel'
ma.id." \Villiam Powell is the oernlexed Peabody ,._
and Ann Blyth plays his linny lriend In lhii 1948 ~
movie comedy. · ii
CBS ID 11:30 -"Seven Brides for Seven
Brothers." This well-reeeived musical extravaganza
fe atures lloward Keel, Russ Tamblyn and Jane
Poy.·ell.
TV DAILY LOG
' Monday
Evening
JANUAl't 22 . 1:00 eou111cai-
rn ~-
0 m NBC Mc:llfkJ M1rit: (C')
(lltr) "t loft My Wife" (drl) "70-
[lfio" Gould, Brmd1 YKUIO, ~n-
111 Tompkim. 0111nty Coltman Tiit
tensions of 1 !lll!dtt• m111111e 1rt
a p!orfd iq_ lllis stOf)' of 1 SllCC~slul
you111 su11eon who ll1s 1rO'lln t1rtd
of his wift 11!d children.
DAIL T PILOT S"" ..._..
LESSON TIME -Lucy (Barbara Beindorf) gives
Linus (Srott Swenson) an astronomy lesson as
Schroeder (Stephen Reichle) and Patty (Toni Berg-
111:111) loo k on in awe in a scene from "You're a
l';ood ?wtan, Charlie Brown" at the Costa Mesa Civic
Play house.
iiiiiiiiliiiiW~~.-1 IE~ 0.,... C._tr ....... wt IERllll-1.
...... O'T .... -~ u...
--•• __ 7,,,--.
STADIUM -? 1,·
.. ~c ----
"MAH 0, I.A MANCHA"'
W•ll~
"SNOWIALL U,•ISS-
' '"TME llSCUIT U.TIEA" IGI
"ELVIS ON TOUA" • 0 le11a111 "1lll Mtsr
(i) '-t S.tlt
(:J WIW'Wlw.t
m Thi FllllbtHls
0 G\)@ ~ABC No!IUf Morie·
(C) '90) "H<lw tilt West Wai'W1n'
Cond. (was) '6.1-Jlmes Sttwut
Otbbit Reynolds, C11roM B!kt1, K.u ~ 'I • Milden. A span of 50 ye1rs ~11ln1 '/:ff, 'l/B, ~~~i~ii ___ "IWYJACll.11,: .. "::"tH:::::'I -"""
"JUDGE. •OT •IEAN" ...
With AmeriCl's llfllMion westnr1 fit:f
1
.:]
from •bout 1839 to Hl89 is seer
"'Ttt1 aaw,...111s ..
I!) Slit' Trek
@)MIO.kt~ ... m 1ttc1ppoc111 LMct
EID Actittl TIMM m n11• Sttor11
l :JO fl') Hopn'I MtNa
iO .-,. "l"ET!: 'Iii TILLIE" :~=~=Pt~~ of thrtt 1ener1 lj~~~i~l~·;~z~{i.~!~.!!!l!~§§~~·?~"'~'~"~:'~ .. ~'~"'~'~"'~·~i:ii~~I · ~ Movll: tC) "Sofl of 1 Ciun-
fiihttl"' (wu) '66-lluss T1mbtyn.
IDhfTJ Mno1 •
f!) NiM O Mowle: ('°) "Sink till .._n:l"
(d11) '60 -Kenrieth Mat1, Da111
Wynte1, Kar1 Mohner.
{j) cas Nws W1lter Cronkite
@I Merw liriffiil SM
m ..., '"'"' m M1t1111 n inp Cll'lf "Oividitl'" m ...... c.r..sw.
!l!l"""
EE FrlM & KIDCJ
mum.bsuh
1:00 ID rn om-o 11w11q "'Wtn
@ Trd II' C.1M"9•llCll
CIJ -"""" 0 W'llf• lllJ Unel
m• """" ID I Dlull of Jwulie m r,.,. DilWln. m WU.ls, Kiiis led CllJ
iE W\m6I" Tll• Clfl M Mu}lr m Ylfle.Wes Makllu
m Dll:.tma IE--' 1:MI f) Jollfff .,._., SbM U, 1~
ChHr HuJh O'Brlln llltSb.. rn Hot:•• HrffMI f'll fM NN MCI It ll1't
0 MO'l'lt: (a., "Clmll If Homrt"
ff\Ol'I 'EO-Antcn Difflint.
(J) Tt l*" tfle Tmll
(I) T1M: TirilltHt:m 0 Mltl:ct1 S Mowlr. (C) (fir) "Ttt1
TllollWld led'" .. " (com) '57 -
Ot1n Martin, [,1 B1rtok.
l1i'I) Wild llln16HI m Tl11t c1rf
m"'"" m CMspirtt• tn T'al CM Ct!'•.....&1rctses m "" Adwtdurer (Ji) Rn. by Plutrr9
A S<iorb a.111tnp
m Ti• Add•as r111111r
l:flD 6 (I) lill!lllHll ''P1fTtdl" Htw!J
O'Britn m1rri1s 1 JOUlll wom1n.
P1trkl1 ColbJ, whom ht hid court~
whilt both wtt• tendiq !ht lnJurH
from 1 K1nsn toin1da.
fD I IRC1:tl I A SUti•I s,tct.K·
1llr hMt lfM, Lldiu N1t10111
Senior Fi1u11 Sbtln1 Clllm?iof.
hucb an 111-star wt of Olympil
Skllffl.
t.JO 6 00 Dtris Dey SliM Doris Maf·
tin olte11 to helJ her buu, Dr
Ptter Uwrentt,.OIJt al 1n emb11•
r1ssin1 j1m bJ slltilll 1 l1shlon
st.ow to raise flrnds for tflt Com·
munity Hmpit1l, but tti1 result ap-
pun likely to tnd tlleir rom1nc1. .,t·' . ,., ... ...,_
o-e Ytritdldel
10:00 8 (I) Thi New 1111 Cosby Sho'I •mm ..., Q Crimi Fl111tm m II.Inca,, l"erdonlfl m it.tt It frttdlm Borjs, con·
valestl"I lrom WllllfldS, his 1 v1s1I
trof!I hit slsler lvich, now unhip·
t11ly ma to Claude.
rn• mv
al
10:3(1 M Talk
0 (IJ DEBUT Whit Abaat To-
llOfTW? "~ tilt Sidt ol Min" This
new ABC Ml.s u rits examines hii-
man comm~icltiofl, with 1n em·
ph.uis on m~ijncl's ch1ngin1 rtll·
lionYiips wit.h teehncloo h~
m1de possible.'
(8 BiM Cosby S~o'll
m """'s,o'11 (l)4ZPhn
10:45 fD l•llffi
11 :00 ID n n"" m-m~ ffl "ews 1J On1 step &ertnd
(i) Mtl'1ital DilloR c:J MO'l'I!: ~Mr. htbodJ 11'11 the
Merm11d" /com) '48 -Willia m
Powell, Ann Btylh.
(fl Truth 01 C":tlltflllfntet
ITil l"elTJ Mason Pl G1rntr TH hstrolll 0 Ol ID LHP.tl Sammy Otwls
.If. ILRlh 11 "dt iu~p." a!) CluKi hhnw-Show
D CD (I) ft'! r:mrnDI ' • 1 11:15 m Rolllr '•ts &Mdd '" tllt WolW If ....... '""* "TM Wiid Docs II Niki" Jl:lO Fl {I) C8S Litt Mowir. {C) ''fit-
This doannlfttllJ·SIJlt ptOCnm lrida1or SMll lrotlltn" (mut}-
ti!mtd 1ntir1ly In Alrlu dllm Into How1rd Keel, Russ T1mblyn, /ftll
Ille Wl'f ol lilt of • pack of 'lrild Paw.n.
doll. 0 if9l m '°'""" tlrton Dom °"' m Htt•'s Ktrllt l oui!e ii substitute host.
If) .... , Pylt USMC 0 rtru1 loxlnt
ti) ttermlnn Ctnijt P f'l) (6) ~Die' tlfttl
fDll!lC!ICIOptta TllNW ~Thi (Q f1Ttl1tHTrut~
Dulh Goddess~ Shin lhbt's COii· £E) CJ\lld fahnsot1 Show
tempor1ry llp1nest op1r1 version •
of a classic Qrirnm'a ftiry Ult. lf:llO m Alfred Hi1tllcld: htstnb IE,._.• IN m s.1111 to Adventurt
mi Mlptltt,...,.. 12:30""' ...
aJ MIM: ~!) 1ntlltr lit llld m Movlt: '111t 111 store" (romJ hlf! (com) 40-Pr1Kl111 l1n1. '41-Ttit M1n Brothers.
1:l0 m Mtrr ort""' ,...., m Mtlmt Jvnct!M IE"""
1:001J CJ) Hm's lKJ GUISl Du l•n·
chelter pl1p 1n 1b•ll'l-111lndtd
b1nk robber wlto 1udde11ty d!1CCWrs
LUCJ, 111 •n lll\dlrtO'+'lf role, II her
,.... ca1!1111t1.
Tuesday
DAYTI~'" •. ,-~~ -----·--l :J01i(C1 • Jr ' 'f1'v)
(9 C~1t11ry Music
1:00 rn o m•m
l:JO I) MoiM: . (C) "CUltrlOM c ..
..... (<Otll) '6G-ilolly lte. o -
J:OO 11 llnlt: (C) "TM Brain" {ho!')
'ts-Anne Heywoad, Pett r Yin EJcl
'"" o-. e.. -· ( ... l "' -ton QllMJ, Pitric\I Morrison.
0 "OI~~· Ant" (cvm) '41-
ltd e·i-.. "·• Fta~eb:.
.,,~.~ ,, .. ?" '-:r-"l•c/fi)
'63-"'·· ·--··'• "Jry Un.
• NOW PLAYING
SOVTH'COAST PLAZA a1
Cotto ..... -546-1711
FOi TWIN •1
Co.,i11• -lll-1122
l!L MONTE
El Mo"t• -441-1421
5.lATI
••••G•11• -1,2.111•
~~~,~ Perfotm• • 7:Jt:& t :JI lt:i:~i'Jff:, ALLS.EATS $2.00
'UK• WOODSTOCK ONAWAY•' ---Pacific Ybutiw.
COL.QR .. -... .... -....---·
• Kr IT .... M"°"r CIVILIL\TlOM
5WUl"l IT AW1"V.-
~••"-'TIP n
Rl:X: Au.t:S
,·
ENDS
TOMORROW
MES'-Ct lll M-Utl,Jt
VILLA-Or•..,.....,....U
GIO'll-GlnlM Orllf~ll-66611
IROOKHU II ST--AllllMim-7n+M6
TUST IH-T•111ri-S44-1 '"
W•IKDAY~7-t
SAT. & SUN.-l~S-7·'
sba•Y-NO l'ASSEI
•
NATIONAL GENERAL
: THEATRes
'
I '"BROTHER OF
TH E>.WIND" !G)
w..U.~:lS-7 .. :U
12:•2:ls+5:•7•1H
\\
GEHE HACKMAN
ERNEST
BORGNIN(
RED IUTTONS
~ -,. o., .. ,,_ .. ~ . ._,.,....., ........ -...... ,,, .......... , ,. ····~··· ... ,~ ... , .•.. .............. ~ ... -, ....... ,. __ br __ _
StlYI
CAJlOl
lVNFt
'Charlie Brewn'
•
Sparkling Musical
• .
-Pres-eitt-ed=-in M-esa ·-"""' •
• e-.-m:.-eHMH.•• llka I or her crabb
By TOM TITUS fi·"""lcll by tarll "_,, ~ Oft ' character. AJ her child prod· °' .. Dtlrr ""' tttff c':.ri!."~"~K~,:C.,.."" ,:t1 W baby brother, Unua, The only real Tegrtllable i•mbtl•i::·· .=T! a1:::: &:1 SCott 'Swtnson Ls quite encac-... _______ ...,,
asped of the O>ata Mesa Civic kh 1\o!i~ ·~ • Ing, but hla lack of projecUon Pylicy~se'a producUonJ' of F..J-~1'Dli111 sw.cw. ~· causes the loss of sorno juicy
.. OU re a ~ Man. C'tiarlle ft:. lt'ie co.i.,~"'cl~IC.:.:n=:: remarks. G' I a'
Brown" 1.S·(hat lt'.t all over. ""~~Tw'I ~tiv--ln the two roles le.ts rt'cbly .. le gu
1J"%,. one ,:~nd ,';';!! allandot-Ji:';~ .. :.· .. •"5tl'l:l charocterued b~ the seripl,
ei1gaglng' mus1c:r;;'6 and 1ii ,,. ~·::::::::::: .. s~; the--piano-playing Schroeder S 0
although the playbouse~ffered t=,···::::::::::::: · I and !be rope-skipping Patty, teps ut
live performances ·over a all the way to the rear ot the =n ~.::Uh.le 1n 'j!ud T~
three<iay period, the show theater to create • Snoopy .., r1 . • Of 'Irene' reaJty-destrved more ezposure a pu with Zack McEwan's pe onnant;es., a.e.ichle, lhough
-regardless of the fact that w e I I -r e me m b e r e d In-olfbe rusheJ his hoes a bl.t. ~
It's already been "e>pOSed" In lerpretatloo In W..nntnster. quite solldly while Miss NEW YORK (AP) -Sir
W.,,lmlmter; S>n Clemente, Miller is flfsl rate In all his :,C£:"'.!.' •• :: :OO·ngperkyher, John Gielgud bu withdrawn
Fullerton and Lofll Beach. solo scenes and breaks the """-'& ..,. '6'-'.. un ., as director of the '800,000 "Charlie Brown" ls the kind show wide open with a Jobon-part of the ~k Report musical "Irene" and ls being
of show that · never grows vaudeville rmdiUon of the number. replaced b:y Gower Champion.
stale. It's sort or like watching plum "SUppertime'' number. A COLORFUL block set and The producers, in :1n-
"The Wizard of Oz" on effective rear projections nounclng the change, said lhe
televls.ion once a year and . IN .THE CENTR~ ~e of amplify the overall enjoyment shift was made necessary
being thoroughly entertained Cba,rlie Brown, Davad Pia:man of the Costa Men production, because five extra weeks of .
each time. nie innocent magic pro,ect~ much of the continual whUe Anita Grossman's ac-out of town trying have been
of the Peanuts co"mic strip f~lrat~n ol his ~ and, companlmen\ lends an overall scheduled. Sir John said that
characters set to Oark like Miller, uses faclal atmosphere of professionalism be had a commitment to a
GesQeJ!'s ~usic and lyrics, ~~es well. All that ls lack· to the musical portions of the British television program
makes for a •"""!al ., __ , ol mg lS the ever-present in-show that would preclude hls con-
... 1 ......," IMQIU nocenee and optlmlam which · Unuatlon. ~OJoyment. also go,.. to·~ --~ .. Pol the "Charlie Brown" stayed uc u~ The musical, which stars
PATI TAMBf1LINJ'S Costa character. around only one brief Debbie Reynolds in her stage
Mesa producuOO is eztremely Barbara Beindorf 1s an ei:-weekend, but it delighted debut and was Gielgud's first
well fashXllied, ....... :cular1y in cepUonally strong Lucy, bring-bosloads of youngsters -lcal 11. ti~ , _ _. the area of ~ ... transition. ing a voice that might shat-which was the primary objeci mus U'eC 855'6'"·-~· ter glass to her ........ , but. she of thi.t "bonus'.' production, had been sched ed to open on Her yNM• cast, two of whom .,... ' B-•dway Jan 28 --e comes off altogether too given in additk>o to the.,--·-----·-·-,----have done the shlw before in 1· different roles, functions with regular five-play season.
the ememble precision re-Come back, Charlie Brown,! r--:HB:-==:--:1:--'"1
quired by the script and there 'Supers•~r' wtien you can stay a mue , ls not a mmnent wasted _ the Id longer. __ _
curtain goes up prom;.tJy on F p , ·-~~
time an11 comes dOwn precise-or -reVJ11 ~~(DJ]L I DIOI VI:"'~ ly 90 minutes later. DOWN"' In variowi versions of the HOLLYWOOD (AP)
Peanuta revue, different roles Composer Andre Previn will •nrM>flT 1uc" • Ol.MJISO
have emerged as the more conduct all scoring on the rock
memorable individual efforts. opera !lim "Jesus , Chr~I HELD OYER
While the Costa Mesa pro-Superstar," a spokesman for .... ~ _ "'-
duction tends more toward Universal Studios said. .... ....
ensemble performance, it Is Jh"evin will begin work on Matthau
difflcu1t to overlook one single the film Feb. 15 in U>ncloft. He (tarol
standout in the cast -1-fark has been associated with more a..:='=..-.....
Miller'.t superb showmanship than 50 motion pictures, in-~
in the role of Snoopy, the ca-eluding "My Fair Lady"· and ._-1"--·-··---
nine show stealer. Tall, tou9le-"Gigi." "Pek:9n'Ti1Jie"
haired and outlandishly funny, I:-~~~~~~~~~ Miller employs a variety of!I
racial contortions which play
HRD OYER
"ILYllA MADl•AN" ....
~ U•-cwt
'"""' • .......,. te. ... .. ........ ... .. ..,_.,.._
N .. Y.,._
Al10
D. H. L. .... r•rie•'1
"THI Yll.IN &
THI •mr·
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VIVIENLF1GH .:..:.,..
LF.SUE 110\VARD
OllVIAdeHAVIUAND o.· ..... Ollfr 1:11 ... _ ... s..., ScW•
HELO-OVER
THIRD WEEK
"VANISHING
WILDERNESS"
..... ..,. frl.
5:00 • 7:00 • t :OO
s..~1 ...
1°>-S-7·•
Stwtl WM. 1.24 w ..........
"SNOWBALL
EXPRESS"
OOWNS-;
SHOWING
NOW!
1m.!l ~fNliinl
Mlm'· U lrOOJJl" fiiiil
CO.HIT DllYf·IN ONLYtl!&°J
~:;, W,lR DEVILS
''IIRthe Sandbox is a joyJ
Barbra Streisand's sixth
film is her sixth hit!":..::nm.
UA CITY CINSMA • SAT a SUN • lt1• a 2:• P.M.
"llElllA IN T)IE KITCHl!N" 10) COi.Ott
wom11n·s
picture!" ---
---·--
"Lively and funny! Barbra S!reisand is excellent!
Foor camera eyes!"'.---. ' . "One of the year's ten best!Themostoutspoken,
outrageous, image-shattering film in years." ------"' ll'fl• .....,,.,.
"ILVll °" TOUA"•(O) "OANO COULDN'T
SHOOT STU.IOMT"
""' lfl c...,. 1'41
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rnu Nnrn
15 A
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hii&JIOTl .... --~---.. "TW WT If TIM
"I'll MIT lOYllS".
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'" '51-4.cu:a Jrun:'.tr.. "'t~11 Pt!fl.
lNI I]) .. llt'lili!fl!'J (Wes) ·~ • • ~dtt
Mu11'Jlf, Join $11117. . e "llMler 1111 tM LMY" (dra)
I , '51-DIM Cttrll, Nt0ml ,Ctllfttt.
IMI·-ti,.-!"~ '17
D "hl'ltt ln Ult Tt:r Ziff" (d1a)
'62-Rtv f.lllland, ,letn H&1tn.
al (t) "Sword ti Ll nctlol" Cone!.
(tefrf'J '6.l-Corntl wnae. Jean W•t·
lace. """'•I tllt 811111.
l'Uts·Ut"""8V~
<iflr'l HAC~MAN
'f "PIMU_(VJ"
t.OWARC'!.
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1!;11 • ..,,.... (rom) '41 -Merit 4:00 II (C) "TM ltrflt sue•" (1ui) 11
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othe
off"1 • SJ
Cali
savt
imcli
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stato
llep
Bag
crea
bud1 acqo
duri n
Opet
lion,
mill
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in I
Iron
hold
tax,
dilvt
fro~
B
• *.1 lovelO
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'°'*"" from
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cultur. nuenc:
Dur
tervie
n.ubt Joyce
JohnS
were
blem1
fu.u~ keep I
reluct McC
dOU\Ci tOITI ~~ re~~ even t
•
£lesses Selaedu
Teacher
~
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,
PUBLIC NOTICE
111nmous IUSI NEIS IU.MS ITATEMINT TIM ~ ,.,_ -dolnQ M l-111 M. .. Ill COHITIUCTIOtl CO, U7"5
$M Ooa"6o Of'., MMlon V!t lo l'M1J
I,._ Miklos. ~$.In Gon11lo Dr ..
• MIMlon \llllt ~7S
S Lo ' F. loD Whll1, IOU ll'Pll)tf'L•I Avt . L ~S Ir St "!=:E:!= :"' Ollfl!I ~onduclld by • $11Wft Mlklol " TM1 •11•1 ...... I !llecf wltfl 1111 COUfll'Y ~ ~ ---~'tt:~t:'MOr•~~~o'flN.~eCo46~;q l\l_bJ~acb®lte In St for so long to continue a con· cLE•it.. tv lllfT:i, a119st1n, °""'"'·
.IAuts joined t in ni~t of madneM in Southeast PUbllW!ed 0r.ne. ca1ii 0111: ~~
Chicago and P delphia t~ Asia bated by so many of his Ja111N1ry •· ls, n. ,,, 1m · u.13
' Monday, January 22, 1973 DAILY PILOT J9 --Daily Pilot
1 Classified II;;_;;,,,._;;~ ];;~
General
count~men." General >nn1 D •RGAIN da as the w off their .,, ~ --1----
jobs In the first" strike in the Cr NOlK• TO Cll!!OITOAS 11::::::::;:::;;;;;;:;;::;;:-;;;;;;.,-1--1
city's history. e ash Kill& 4 sul'e••o• cou•T o" TNE TAX SHELTER Located Ea!itside Costa STATS: OP CAl.llJORNIA flOll 2 1 J! > tin d 1be 1,800 teachers in the OMAHA, Neb. (UPI ) _ A TKI! cou .. '.'',.,•.,.." OIANoE -I'm. uni1s in prln1e con· 1,·Jesa on quiet tree e d11Jon & ]{)(.:atiun on lovely t t 'dd d eled combined·membershlps of th e twin-engine Cessna 310 crash-ie11111 of GllACE G1'EBL& 1oa1sott, N(!\1p1l11. JslunJ. l'rk"e<I al s ree · ·'"' e • pan
St. Louis Teachers Union ed on landing at Omaha's Ep-°:~~E 1s He:REBY GIVEN 1o 1111 SM.500. fainlly rnl, .heated pool
pley Airfield Sunday night crtc11tflt'$ ot tM et1ove ....... c1ec.,.,, Call: 673-3fi63 673-668S Eveti;. 15x18 covered patio +
(IN SHORT ... )
F . ' Ill.II Ill Otrtom Movlfll d•lm1 1111lns1 "-e I d b 3 b1"g oor persons were killed and 111d.-....,1 .,., r11QU1rtd lo 1111 1n.m, • nc ose ca ana,
one critically tni'ured w1•h !he lllCHMrt vouc111r1, 111 1t11 oftl<• bedrms, 2 tiled baths, ' of the tltrll. ol IM M>ev1 tnl1111d COii!'!, Ot' k fir Authorities said the plane 1° ,,_, ,........, w1111 '"' -rv hu ge corner bric e-
l . . VO!ld'llr .. ro 1111 ~ 11 ,.,. ol'fK• pla bull"-kitchen was en route rom a pornt m o1 11er •"O!'MY, wm111n M. WlkGlltn, At· ce. I>"µ. -
Local 420 and .lbe St. Louis
TeacJ:>ers Association began
picketing the city1s 166 public
9Cboo1s about 1 a.m. after
authortzing the strlke ~
Kansas but its destlnat"1on IOt'My 11 u.. 23" P~ ,..,.., u;un. See this one! a sking I • • hKh. C11Jtornl!o t'MSI, ....... di II !ht pl•c• was not 1mmed1ately known. o1 Dvtlnns of 1111 Ulorlerllgnld 1n .. 1 nwt. $2 $35,000, Call Red Carpet
Witnesses said the plane ap-''" P•"•'"'"' lo 1111 1111,. of .. 1.1 ci.c:e-9 1 950. Realtors, ... oo.n dent, Within four rnontns 11111'" 1111 flr11 ;rnrcv'TV proached the airport from the pur>1k111on of t111s l'IOflcl. EASTSJDE -Country size
Lb L d . ( . 011..:1 J1nuary t, 1m ya'd d-p • ag 1 sou wes ur1ng a reez1ng JEANETTE WEBER OILLEY . ..,-l crp g, C'Or·
drlttle but fell Short Of the EJrKUlrlJr of 1111 Wiii n('r S!OnC ftrep[, beaut Double Take ' · • of !hi IDO'H n......i cllndlnt fl('t:Or. Sparkling bltns & runway and slammed into a WILLIAM 111. WILCOXEN ilouhh· . derachc-d garage.
M the United States experiences some of the bitterest cold of .season, it's sum·
mertime in Rio de Janeiro, and there apprbaches to keeping cooL.. vary-from a
cold drink (left) to a scanty outfit.
Despite the walkout, a
spokesman for the school
board said today that custodial
employes bad. reported to the
schools and classes were
scheOuled lo be held l8 usual
for the system's 103,000 pupils.
I dike which protects the airport :i,,tw;!-:,. 111~• llariJ.10-find .1 BR, 2 BA,
from tbe Missouri River. LltVM ,ffdl.. c1HfO!'nl1 tuSJ hnnir-at this prit·C'. 545-8424, AllOl"ftl'I lor EllKutr11 SOL"1"t J CO ST Pul;llll.Md Or•ng1 Coast 0111r Pllor, · A RLALTORS e Foml Doten? ~;~j"'''t' IS, :n, 29, lt'ld F-wo7:Jll.~ * * $32,950 * *
4 UR + r-.t.1id's or guest rnt. Pecky p;incling, shag carp,
Mosl outstanding buy In
N'pl Hts. &>Her hurr}'!
BALBOA BAY PROP. Torrey Pines R eserve Near
SD Enlarged by State
WASHINGTON (UPI I PUBLIC NOTICE
Agriculture Sc<:retary Earl L.1-----------
Butz lo e ee I h. k NOTICE TO CllEOITOlllS r s s ower c IC en SUPEll,IOR COURT o" TH• prices by spring and reduced STATE Ofl CALIFORNIA POI: Porlc prices next.fall but is not THE co~~~X-~~71o1tANo•
certain about a drop in beef E1tare DI "EONA w E 11. Ne 111 BERKELEY (AP) -1be I NICKERSON, lkl ED N"' w. pr ces. NICKERSON. DKe•$ftl. Universlly of ca Ii f 0 r D ta n ... H 1~A "d Su d h NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN "' Ille .QUW a-.. SlU n ay t al credllars ot 111e •llllve "'med decl'dfnt S e 11 mo g r a p h t c station. Americans still are "getting a 1t1.t1 •II Jl«M>n$ heYlng e1.im, • ..,, tM ,. uld dt<:edoenT are ...,.ulred Iv tna tr.m, reparted 8 "pretty ~.!git earth-bargain Oh the Who)e for food w!lll Ille n~sary vouc:ller1, Jn Ille offluo
qua•-oU 1be coast ol Me·'co and this year will .,.....nd less ot tl'la ci.rk o1 rne abo.,. nt1111ec;1 covrt. w A.Cl .._. "1"" to present them, wltl'I Ille ntCHUlry of than 16 percent of their take-VOUCMr1, 10 "" unc1er1l9Md 1t tr.. ortk1 SACRM!ENTO (AP ) -The It wou1d permit such lions in California are the U~ to the south Mexico City. home pay for food of "-'" •ttorne-11, GA1SHAM, w1NsToN,
I P k nd •---• • btain rds StaJioa 1.A_A_ • VANOENBERG, NOTT ANO CONWAY, sate ar s a n=1cation CJUUtlS to o ca ex-per Kern area of the Inyo Na-SJ)OMri>wau Tom 1000 Jer111ns Tr..,.1 Buikllng, LOfl9 BHc1>,
Department has announced it empting them !rQm fees for tiooal Forest, 130,000 acres; McEvilly said the temblor ciutorni. 90e0'l. w1>k11 is IM p1..,. o1
bought an additional 38 acres the Sheep Mountain area of measured 6.2 on tbe IUcbter e -U tton Accused ~:::...:' ,~::=;:::':' !:J1:.=:!1:1~.
to add to the Torrey Pines ( ) Angeles National Fores, 31,600 ·· w1i1>in '""' "'°"'"" 1nu 111e ""' PllClk•-State Reoerv ·north r Sa OUTDOORS nd 1be Mt Sb ta scale at <:43 p.m. PST. He ,WASHINGTON !UPIJ -·~· "" ~ ... . -e o n acres; a . as said the qullke centered about ' Re_p...tes 'Mpin (!).Wis.) says •'ldBJE~~rvB~R1:~s
Diego. _ _ area of the Shasta-Trinity Na-the Navy is preparing $lG E•ecutrix ot tt.e wm
The so-called ·,:'Worthington ·jional Fo~. 4,700 aa:es1._tbe 2.000 miles~ of here. million tfbrth of counter-011sH.::-.";1~~;~N~·~N~::e~~g,
pr(Jpertj" was bOfigtit~fiOm daf-Ose""facrnues iOO granting spokesman aald. claims against Litt 0 n :~~. i~N._WAY
the Southern calffornla Flrst a 50 percent reduction of e Park Nl-ed e M ot l1'e Se119ftt.· 1ndu 1 tr1 es Inc. for , .. Jett'"' Trust 11111111111. National Bank for $608,000. overnight camping sites. · ... ! L.ont •••di. c1111om1. t0101 Hall 1be money came from • Wjfd SAN Bl:RNARDINO (AP) WASIDNGTON (UPI) _ A evqcharges on submarine and Tel: u1si os-1u1 Are Cou ty Uperv.... s have mun1u·on shlp contracts Att-v1 ior E•eculrl• state funds and half from the a -n s r special ll·member police am . , . : Publl•lled Or•noe coa11 0111v P1101.
federal Land and Water SAN FRANCISCO (AP) dropped plarus to construct a squad probed for a motive in 0161pln Annedsaiil ~r1,.2~1ceo"n1~ ~;;r'Y 15' ·22' 29' •!'Id F•°'u'';";1.~
Conservatk>n Fund. Three-quarters of a million regional park in a fissure-the murder of seven members 'the ....:::• v .... ._
The reserve is one of only acres of California national thr~atened area near Twen--of 8 Muslim lfOUP today, in-tract 'Control and Appeals PUBLIC NOTICE
two tlaces In lhe world where forest land> ha:ve" ~. tyrune ~alms, .a Ith o ugh tervtewed one victim who Board haCt ltild him that lhel----------$too 000 I r .. ~-ha Navy a'--dy has submitted "1,CI~.·0~,,',"•"•'•'•" the orrey pine Is found . The designated alfiiwilderness stµdy .. • 18 coun Y w.l\Q ve survived the grisly attack Ind u-,:a ..... ~·
other is on Santa Rosa Island areas, the U.S. Forest Service been spent~ the pro]ed. . cross-checked reports that· .a $11 mlllionffi. In hcounl tebrcl~ims tiJ,'i:.u ~~~1119 persons ••• doing
orf-the California c.oast. says. The ~upervi.i:ors agreed Wllh gun used in the killings was and w proba y SU lllJl at MONTEZUMA'5 REVENGE. 162S"2
A spokesman said the 16 consultmg engineer.s that there stolen. ..l.. least another $3 ailllion. Litton ~~111!!,11:°" ~-•vd., Nirwport 81~11• • F ee Se.,l•g areas in California were ls no w~y to tell 1f a rwure 'lbe special squad was has demanded $173 million. 11:oot1ey ic:_.11 ao1in •nd C•l"OI s111
SACRAMENTO (AP) among 235 areas in the nation that drained a lake In the area assigned Sunday to handle on. "1£ the Navy's allegations ~·~~~~~1~!~'ti;;'~.1w .. N--
Calilomians 62 and older could designated for study for possi-last July couJd reopen. 'lbey Jy the case in which two adults are true then L i t t o n TMi buslMn is being con®c.tld by •
save money on state pa:rk fees ble future w i I d et n e s s agreed. to look elsewhere for a and five chlldren were slain Industries ' has consciously generii !:"~""~~~
'·-'er a -.• 1 b y cJ---''-•a"on under 1 h e park !l_te. """ursday m· a ~a,ooo i......~-• Cheated the government out of This •l•t~t 111..:1 w1111 u,. c_,.,. l«J\,I r ._v.,,-~.., i.i_ _ 111 ,., ~ I I!& ill' .-, As . Ct.r1< of Or•1111e Cuunry llfl: J•-rv 11, Assemblyman John Thurman, Wilderness Act of 1964. e Wildli fe Site once owned by Milwaukee at ea.st m 100, pm 1m. WILLIAM E.· sT JOH N, cou NTY
Mod said CLeR ic:, By ktty J. 11r11s1en. OMM.rtY. ([). eslo). Among lhe1designated loca· SACRAMENTO (AP) -1be Bucks basketball star Kareem · ,.,,.,.
_,._ J_ _,._ A ..A-.A.. state Par"-and Recreation Abdul.Jabbar. The house was PUBIJC NOTICE Publlslled Or•llVI cont o.11y p11o1, w ).( ).( l,{ w · ).{ . '-3 later· donated by him to the . . ~;n-rv 22. 29 Ind Fflfuiry ~tl~ll
· , Department bas announced it u..!..-. u 11_ t J ~·~l -:-1,;;1CTCTrlT~l~011osli•~";;.,ii,iESu1:---1~--,-=~~~~-~~
P .• k 0 ' , ·'~H~ -;..~~ r -,boucht ..nearly ·!ix acres! at: ~~"~!....":!. aee 1A .,.~ -;,.. •AM• IT.t.T•¥•NT PUBLIC NOTICE ar Pera Qns -wildlife area to add t.o Motro ~ a ~-. · "!" ~ .. ~ !• .,. bullMJ&
• ~ f • at. STATEMENT O.F WITHOIAWAL ,.~ -Bay "'State Park m San -A$PKALT COATIN(J ~ .. 211: w. l'AITNERSHIP OPEIATINO UNDl:k -Obispo County. • ' • MrfleN rn Tfllk ~ifll1"""• ,.unffflWI, Cill "1'1!• F1CT1T1ous 1us1NEss NAME
Th tr t •-the h of t Elpmc Inc • C11/forY!11 carpor1tl<ll'I TIM l0Uowl1>11 pen.on Ml wlllldrlM! 11 e ac l.lll -ome a ta 11651 y ·K,ll'nllll A-1rv1,..' 1 9-r•I p.,r1111r 1rom ,,,. J*r'tnwllllp
B · n $ Milli. least 68 pairs of great blue OXFORD, Eng nd (AP) -C•lllorrll:"""' ' • • -1111111 under" IM fkllfl-but!MSS
I 29 On herons, the department saJd. :-Sen.Oxa..f rrdge UMc:Governlt sald1 ·~~?on~''*' 1• ~ cond\let:ed br. • eor" ~:n;:ss«c~r~ .. ~,,:;;~'c!t': t~. ~: •1 lt has t ooo feet of bay' m an o n1vers Y ec~ etPAC, tNc ,. 1orn11.
, Sh e)jn ' fure' Sunday the American ROC.l'f N. M1t ..... Pf'l'ldettl The llclillous bll1lnn1 n11n1 •l1ttm.nl or e. . . Thi• 111i. ...... 1 w11 tiled wltll tM ~°""' 1or tM parrn«sf\lp w1' flied on J•nu1rv The Jand was ,bought from presidency IS Winning ne ty Clerk of Orart111 Cwnly on J1n111ry 11, 21, 1tl1 In 11\e Countv of Or••·
Shirl d Hult E I -wer &t the eTN>n._.. of lfTl. Full name lt'ld AcklrltS of TIM Peri.on ey an nterpr ses ~ -,............ · fJD4M Wlll'ldrawlng:
of Euoese Ore for $350 000 O'mgress, the major political HMk: lkhlrd Woadt. 965 DI! Mir A111 .•
• SACRAMENTO (AP) -The The largest single item is
state Parla and Recreation $7.4 million for construction of
Department, aided by the 1 recreation facilities at Perris Bagley Conservation Fuod
o • · · • • parties and the press Plltllllllld Or•nee Coa11 ·O•ltV l'llof, Lagvn• s1ac1>, c1ll!O!'nl1.
• P •--ftap-d . · Jlllllllf'f u, 22. 2t •nd F1tw111ry J, Richard Woods .... r -"ExecuLive encroachment tm 121-n s19nt<1:
WASHINGTON (AP) - A and: legislative paralysis,'' be PUBIJC NcrnCE Pullllstwd Or1nge Coast D•llr ",;::~·. created in late 1971, has Reservoir, part of the State .
budgeted $24.7 millicn for park Water Project, in Riverside
acquisition and development County.
federal coo.servatlon study has said, is what weakened J1nuary 22. 2P 1nc1 F1bruarv J, u,
renewed earlier opposition to COntress arid "why oOe man l'ICTmCkn •u11Mft1 im 17.s.iJ
creation of a national in the White House WU able Thi fol::,: ".:::..11CT-dol'no PUBUC NOTICE during 1973-74. lakeshore' recreation area in · bull""' ••:
The department wtll have an
operating budget of $29 mil·
lion, an increase of about $2
million over the current year.
OTB.ER MAJOR items in-1be Lake ~·--Basm· . N LESCO £NG1NeeRtNG, n&t Asbut'Y F1CTIT1ous 1us1M1ss
&GUU'I: • etc•--• N a Med c1rc11, W•tmln•l.,. f2'll NIIMI STATIMl:MT elude: The re~rt prepared hy 1be OIYllll Artflur S111pt19rd, '362 At.lMY TN totlowlng '*'°"" .,, doing
I"" Cll'de, Wfttmlntt ... niill butlrtft• Mi
EVEN WITH the $10 million
in Bagley fund!, a windfall
from the conversion to wllh·
holding of the state Income
tax, · the construction and
development budget Is down
from this year's $47 million.
-$2.2 million for land ac-
quisition , at Pcint Mugu State
Park.
federal Bliteau of Outdoor SANTA BARBARA (UP I) -y._ L..,.llltil, tiu i..liun-csrc11, e1sMAc JNTERNATl~AL, Airport ·--1· r ti I Televl . 'A .. __ ,,_t Sand Wntinlntt ... fMl:I l-Nori!>, Suite .us. 11U2 111.KArtlllH' neu-,;::a lOn ears na Gna SIOD JlNt'llO.Ulll er llllt ~ It belfl!I conduclld br 1 llouttvird, Irvin., c111torn11 '2101 lakesbore designation might Vanocur, ·former L"OI'-pw!Mnlllp. CANADIAN Bl~ (LOHDONI
tri r 1be T hoe nd L I CBS and NBC Y-Llvlont LIMITEO, Orrt1tlo, Ca~, Corpor1tlon, gger overuse o a respo en or , · Tiii• ttaterMnt 1111d w1111 tM c-ty "' LNl!lomt s1rH1, lofldon. 0nri r1o, -$1.4 millicia or con:
struction at San ~fre State
Beach, the beach near the
Western White llouse which
the state acquired by lease
from the Marine Corps.
area U S Sen·Alan B1"ble (n.. and now --"tn .. for the Ci.rk of OrlnOt ~ty !If\: J...,. 11• im. c11'11d1. ' . ' " v-Pub)" 8· ':,:'ast ....... , °'•le WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY This llu•lnni Is being conducltd by Nev.,) said. IC roa""' utg u3., m, CLERK. syTlwrtM M. w1rd, Otpu~.._ 1 corp0rtfon.
The report is a final version bas been appointed a con-lluttllar.l Ori'* coeii D•ll¥ PHot H. "· Br\ICI, Vk>t 11m1c1en1
of ll . d •--ed )(ant lo 1be Cent f Jh J 1 - -, -5' Tlll1 1111.,,_1 lll'ld wttlt llM County 1 a pre ~ry stu y ~u su er or e 1::;i11ry s, .... Q •nd .... u•7.,,,,j c1n of 0rer1111 COUnty °"' Jt.n. 11, 1tn. 'last Au.gust. Bible said there Study of Democratic Institu-WILL.1.1.M e. ST JOHN, COUNTY
was UtUe sigriificant change. tions. PUBLJC NOTICE cLEllK. "' B•ttr '· ,.,..~ °'9u~ ,. JAMIS T. CA .. lltTl, A"'""" It UIW, l'IC'TITtOUI •USINlll Al"""1 T-lllfl'tll·SfJlll en. . -
Sex Do~tors Prohed
llAMI ITAT•MlllT lllMI ~IH' 90llltvl~,
Tiii fotloWIM Plf'ton& .,. dolno '""'•• cattMnt11 t11t7 lluJIMd 111 Publlt.lted 0~1nqt· Coast Dilly Piiot,
lolEMINGW,AYI, t17 MlrlM A ..... J-ry 22, 1', •ncl Ft0ru1ry 5, It, lllbaol l .. llnd. Newport INCi! '2660 1'13 \74.JJ RandlU H. J°""""', 2710 l1y1ldl' Df.,)--------~---
C-.. *' IU' m1S PUBLIC NOTICE
Avtoll ltlnlllT• 117 Orty1, ltlC.O. 1-.l•nd•-----~=----~
. .
Thll Ml-11 bll....--ncluctecl &., 11 -I )tJN
111"'*'1110: llllfldlll H. JoflNoll' llOTICE TO CRl!OITOIS Tlll1 1t1'-"""f flltd w!lll 1111 County SUPEIUOR COU RT 01' TNll
(.lint of Or-.. County Of\! J1n. 4 1'13. STATll 01' CALll'OllllA l'OR Wit.LIAM E. ST JOtiN, COUNTY THI COUNTY 01' OIANG•
Book Analyzes Many App roaches to Love. Problem s
I .
' fjEW YORK (AP) -They range frott.
lovelorn columnists to hJghly-trained
~ists ; from self-proclaimed sex ex-
to scienlific sex researchers; from
en ter group leaders to hypnotists:
from autmrs of how-to manuals to dual
se'1 co-therapy teams.
~Y include anyone who pretends au~rity to treat sexual, emotional or
m tal dysrunction, explains Patrick M.
M ndy Jr., who has written a book
at+t them called "The Love Doctors."
1~ REALIZED·THERE was a new sub-
culture that couldlhltve a tremendous in·
fluenct on us,'' says the aulhor.
During three yean on the book, be in-
terviewed such subjects as Dr. David
Reube'n, Dear Abby, Ann Landers, Or.
Joyce Brothers, and Masten: and
Johnsdn.
"! wanted to lmow wbo theae people
wtre who addres.. themselves to out pro-
blems, whelbef Ibey are any good or just
SJ buns up aa 1be rest of "'·" he con-µnued. "~lost went to great lengths to
keep anyone from finding out. They were
reluctut to talk to me.'1
McGrady apent, four mooths ln Europe
dol!J& research but found fewer love doc-tors 1llere than ill this counlry.
Although sex problems are a uni•ersal
'°'1cern, they are especlally '° ln the'
United States where, he say• In • tone o1
regrtt, people read tel books lo tell ihem
even what they OU1ht io want .
"I DON'T KNOW OF a roally good
mania1e. at all," declares the. good·look-
lng, lnlell!ffYtd lltGro~y, now married
•
for the secOfld time. "Ninety pw,:ent of
them have grave faults and some couples
stick together for 90 many bad reasons. '
Eventually, the sexual relationsbJp playa
a tremendous role in bow the marrlqe
turns out.
"some people will not countenance the
idea of learning any more than they
knew on their wedding day," he adds, "U
you can just learn to talk with yoor mate
and explore problems and . try t<I do
aometblna: about them, You can be
helped. But in the United States, cou,plea
can't even get it out of their mouths -
much les:s get it into their beds."
Most ohen,._,he beUeves, It Is ther
woman who is ·tnore realistic about the
necessity for seeking help.
"AJ a result ·of women's lib, ll.'omen
have desires they have never' had before
in the sexual area and all olhcr areas;
they want more out of life ," he says.
THE FIELD OF SEX problem treat.-
mtnt ·was once donlinat~ by the Freu·
dtan psychoanalylio -but they'"' being "utltrly wiped out" beca.,. people
want 1 cure "anll psycboonalys!J 11 flOI a
cure. Freudians dielttoy mare BWTl.qes
ihan ibty llelp,'' l.lcGracty -.. •
Where do people ilO !or btlp! ,.. it.Yi>
noth<rapllll, t<> eaooanler .,..Pl. to bl ..
lberapy behavlorilb, t<I fringe prlctl-'
Utlonen who may be lolall.• unquallfi"';
lo medlo lberapisl4, Including .. ..,_
columni.sls and radio 1nd tele.vlllon ad-
vlc<-llven.
"1be Jlllper tlierap1a1a can '-or
lrmendoos btlp Ill an ln!onnal, educ ..
tional way,''"McGr1dy say1. 'Though ibe
l
format of the colunm requires readabili-
ty and humor for which wisdom must
often be sacrificed, the writers come up
CLERIC •• ., ...,., J .• .,.,, ..... ~ty. En.rt ol G:6RtE~ KRESS, llM ~llblllllld 0r.,. Co11I 0.11'1' ":::t k.-" GEOlllGE l lCHAltO Kltess J1_.-, •• u. ZI. ,,, im 1~n :!: .. ~II:. KRESS, GEORGe KREIS.
PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV EN to Ille
cndltors ol tlM 11X1..., "'"*' dKmmt
Wllb .....,.. answ-from 1be ••perts they )---..,=,--~~==--tMt au-~ Mvlng c111ma •rtalnlt 11>1 !!ii"':"' """ ....,. Plet!TIOUI IUSINISS Mid ftc:'ldtfll ,,. rtqUirtd to Ille tlteM, consult And wben an Abby or Ann NNU ITAflMINl Wiii\ t!lt ,.._ry -"""•· !fl 1111 offltt . TM ............. ,..._ It dollllit WllllMI ol 1111 dirk ol tlM IDO'n tnUllld c-1, Ot'
Landers shows some breadth or 11: " " ~· 1hlrn. """' "" ~ \..---· COSTA Mt:1A ROO"tl!ll se1v1c.1. WIUCtltn. to llll ll'dtnlOl*I tt the office to--tl,lM;C· • such as in the area of lO(I) c~ It.I Col.II Mel '2UI ol SeL INI s. FRANKLIN~ ltil .. "''Ant homo9eruali"' this can be comm· ,_. ~·· 1oos eoncor. 11 .• Awnut. c0t11 ,,,,. .. , c1111on111 t'Mf7, . •3• C..~fMat Wlllcl\ II 1111 Plaot ti butlftft~· '"' un1cated~ It aho helps readers to know t111a .. 1111111 ~ "' '" lll'ldll'"'8ntc1 1n .,. fMtttn _..., 111 t• l•-~ ha bl · lfldlv!M -IM! n1111 ot 111111 ...,_,t, '11t l'I '°'1f" o 1~~ ve pro ems. . =Al'9fllllut• mon11>1 11,., rn. ttr11 (IUblk111on of 11111 Tiii• flied wtlh fne CwntJ notice. "BUT I HAVE N-ybod c11r11 9f c-t., °"' J1n. 4, 1rn. o.tlftl J1nu1'! 4, 1m • VJ. seen an y, WILLIAM •. ll JOHN, COUNTY $ELIM . FRANKLIN with the e .. .-...1.... of Muters and CLl!ll(', l1t1 11.itT J. B•l'Olttn, DffvtY. E•ecutor of tM w111 -..-...,.._, fl ttM4 of 1111 •bo_... nlmfd cllc9dtnl Jobmon, .. can succeutuJly reverse a ll'UOlllMd Or-. Cont o.ur Piiot, Sll.IM s. l'lltllKLIN seve<e _..._ ,J ----1 ...,,.,,_Ion J""'9rf., IS. n. ,., 1m 1 ... n '"' s.1111 AM,,.,._
.,.,......... .. vt ~ "'3'"""""' ------------ICOlll MtM. CA tul7 when the marri,ge-ls ln a PUBLIC NOTICE Tt1: c11•J M·MU
terminal sta " he contln Atllnlly Ill 111'11 l'tl' te, ues. Publllhed 0.Anot Cfloflll 0111, Piiot. u'I'hdr treatment bu to do with MOT.C• f."::101TOtts ' J.w1wory a, n, n. :19, 1'1l ""n
deaensJtii.Uon and operant ~tlonlng ~~:~:': ~°'f:l.::' ... = PUBLIC NO'MCE -unJeaminc the anrietlts and acquirblg TNI' ~ °" OltAll••
•allllilll . o( peuurq the. other person and 1!1t1•• "'W,Y ::1::1Ks, D«ffMd, NOmlC~s0"H~~l~·N=~·~=· tMt
OWUI& )'OUf'lllf to be pleasUred," NOTICt: IS MtlE•'I' GIVEN te It. pu91k Marino wlH tie _.., DY n. Cllr SudJ -,,_~,.... • iJ'I u.lllDn llf ttlt lboW _,., dl(AdMI C-11 of 1111 City of Cotl• ~ on ~ ' -of !1'111 Ill ........ ill9flll1le Cl911M ... lnll IN ~ S, lfn, 11 !fie 1'lour 8' •:JD ' rn., numl,llll:I", -.. treet a number Mid ~· .,, ,....,.... 111 11 .. 1111tn. ., .. ..., Tlllf'N,,.. .. "" rn1ttw rn1v ...._ ·~ uw11,..UA..1 •£!.. with fht ~ ftlUCfW1. M. 1'11 ollle1 .. tlHtf. ln tlle C-it Cl'ltmOlr OI fht cou.......,. ~---pertonl ...... ot "" dtft!'tif .. -...,.,.. tntlltM court. or cir, w.i1, n FW °""' c.11 Miu,
advantage • tfiOet who , need help, ~~~-"':':..,:' .. :"o=: ~~':::a: °'"p~feO::=DMl!llT NO. McGrady pointa. includlrtg an ex..cono 9( """ ' Ol•SOH. OUNN .. 01'·1M1. Cotti .. ,.. l"talllllno Cam-·-vict be tntervle1recf 'Who rufW4 1 IU ifl... CltUTCHE1'. fl SWtfl ,--. ltrMt, 1.• l'lll(t!On, c.t1J1""9 11! .,..__,
i..u t" tbal ,_ -, ._ __.i..~ •i..--...,........ CatlfWl'l/1 "'71, .wtrlctl It N .,....IOl!'411!1 to 1111 01Mr11 Plt11 In ""' WI.RU 8 ,. I a.-tel i:a.wi::i-w.-u OllCll et Ml= ol thl "''"'Ngcled 1111111 -llDund9d 11'1' ~ ttYll!IUI, s~
1J1Y kind of lherlpeutlc. egtlh'ltbment. :=i.":1t11t1 I'll~ '::.,.~~ ~ =..:=~· ..... STrMI, Ind
ftrtl l"*llollM ol ltllt Miiot. C01'1ES A1'e AVAll.Alll! of 1111 ""°'
''WEAILY moa W80 ARE in the .,....i..mv\J~LL ~c~f\f& In'"" Ollltt "',.. medJca1 pfofession abould acquire the • Mrntnlt1u1Mx -.111 IN Wiii NO'f1C£ IS P:(jlTHEA 01\fEN !Mt ., •-··-;-~ •rta ~.-that' -""-"'-aflrlltll:ld Of 1111 ...... of Mflll flmt llnoi ll'!KI lllY Incl 111 Plf-IU~ ~ ~-I Wlllltll:l J>8'" *t ...... '*"'" ....,.. m.-1.;: l'Nof tPPll!r -tl9 llNrcl by tllntl brin• their ---i..lems •.• .. -tbe ........ DUNN a UUfCMP 1111 CllJ COUf\Cll ot "" City ot C:oa11 ~
• .. i....._ __L_~ •i..t -i..-.,.°""._ • • .1·\J~-.. ty1 ... ..,._ 1111v1, on TN •fot-ttoned '''"' of Cou!KU luw--I wm WUllU t'?'fSiCiant Ire Qe(J• n• ..... ......, .,,... M lf'lffS, dent In this J'M..._..t -l'But -~ ......... CA....,, EILEIN I'. ftHINNEY
-t""" • "·~·1~-1 '"' (111) us.t• (Hy (!1•• Ol 1111 aboud be a bit ot a krve doctor and lMrn ....... fw """'~ CTA City ol (MIA M-
k-to -m·-1-11 " ,.. ..... 0r..,.. co.11 0111, ,,tot, ~1"* Or•rio-ca1" o.uv l'Hot, 1111w ,.._., ..u}J\;• • _.......,,. 11 11, n, n. 1111 •n .1~ n. "" 1 ... n
l j
* "42·74,1 *
ISEST
ISllYS!
c
L
A
5
5
I
F·'
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
$28,500
BETTER THAN NEW
Otliy 3 yrs. old this 3
bedrm 2 bath home is
in mint condition, beau-
tiful built-in kitchen,
spacious li ving, owners
are anxious, Hurry!!
Call Hed Ca rpel, Real·
lors 546-8540
SPANISH. DELIGHT
$29,500
4 bedr1n, 2 balh home
on big corner lot-5 yrs ·
old + -has been remod·
eled in cu stom Spanish
-archvways instead of
door \Vays, elegant shag
cpt., brick fireplace,
gorgeous built-in kit-
chen. Don't 1niss it -
Priced to sell ! Call
Red Carpet, Realtors
540-mHO
\l ACRE C·l
+
3 bednn 2 bath house
Located in prime Costa
l\ilesa area, spacious
1600 sq. 'ft. House in ex-
cellent condition-large
21h car garage suitable
to live + have commer·
cial bu siness. Hard to
Find ! Call Red Carpet
Realtors 546-8640
DIRTY BARGA IN
$28,500
Onl y needs paint +
clean-up. 3 bedrm 2 bath
borne \vith everytltlng
you · need. Built·ins,
forced air heat, fire--
place. double S'arage,
excellent residential
nei ghborhood, q u i e t
street. llurry-Owners
ere anxious; Red Carpet
Reallors 54&-8640
•, BACK BAY
R-2 $21,000
Fantastic comer loca-
tion near the back bey
great develop111ent po.
tential, existing 2 bedrm
house easily rent.ab!~
will carry ltsel! ~ some, a.sJdng f21,
Won't la•t. CaU Red
Carpet Realtors~
•
'
..
OAILY PILOT
Everyone~
Something ·That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFl'ED ADS
I •
The Biggest Marketplace on .the Orange Coast-. Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, TraCle It -
With 11 Went Ad
I -..... I~ I _..... I~ I -..... _ ..... _ ..... _ .....
G•neral
$27,250 • 3 Bdrm
2 baths. Patio, shake roof.
Dining Mn.. dishwasher.
Fireplace. New paint ins.ide
& out. Close tu schools &
shopping. Shade trC'es. Brk.
M6.1'7"a>.
General
4 Bdrm· $30, 900
2 bath$. Patio, dining room.
Bui\t·ins. Custom drapes, ln-
din~I lighting. Extn. stor-
&gC' S?Q~. Like-new home
1\·1th \\'.,.U-to-v.·all carpetlQa,
Brk. 5.fil.J73),
Gtin.,11
.. ro7 ~-s.dt4 ,-...umms
REALTORS
2aalASrCOMri-.
OORONADIL MM,CAl.w.
644·7'Z70
• , * Beautiful family home
in Back Bay area
You and yow-family will enjoy this beauty.
3 Bedroom, 2'h bath, LARGE FAMILY
ROOM. Spacious rear f e n c e d yard with
COVERED PATIO for your entertaining. Near
new golf course. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $39,950.
AUSTIN-SMITH, GO~N & ASSOCIATES
REAL TORS 644-7270
General General
3 Bdrm • Family 3 Baths + 4 1c1nn1------------
$32,950. 2 baths. Patio, dinini: $32,800. Pool, patio. Dining
Rm., bullt·ins, dishwasher.
Flrt'placc in !an1ily room.
Rear living rooin. Contem-
porary hon)e with solarium.
Brk. 540-1720,
rm., built-ins, dish1\'asher. 2
firt>places. Cheery hon1e,
carpeting, drape$. Nic:e.fy
landscaped. Brk. 540-li20,
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
****** *TAYLOR CO.*
SPYGLASS HI LL-$99,500
Fantastic view of city lights, bay, ocean &
Catalina from this brand new 2-sty. 5 BR, ·
lam: rm. & formal dining room Colonial.
3-Car garage. A true traditional beauty.
. ''Our 21th YNr''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHltors
2111 S.n Jooquln Hiiis Rood
Gonetol G.norol , Generol Oenor•I
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii II;.;;;;:~~=~ OPEN DAILY 1 ·5
Corono dol Mor
47 FEET OF CHARM
Here's a Unique duplex in South of the High-
way Corona de! Mar on a 47' lot (most of
thme are 30' lots) and there's trees all over
the place! .Front and back! There's a two bed·
room home up front. with yard. And a one
bedroom unit out back, with yard. It's a
charming investment at $69,000 .
UNl9UI HO~D OP COIONA HL MM. IJWOOO .. ....... ., ............
3. :0~~ HOMI, __ • EASTSIDE 4620 WAYNE RD.
•· •"<~ $27 950 CUatom 4 BIL 3 Ba. FonnaJ patlo, lar&e pool. All !n!th-lY painted. new Catpf,ltt and ' • dinlna: rm., family rm ., btk:· Ute Mow'ln .-.... , •"" &M Thls cute 3 bedroQJn home flt. uet.. Min)' e-xtra fea·
' ........., • -·-· can be your key to tuture turea. c
E-Z* t~ *· * * proOt! DON'T RENT 1U1Y
longer, when only 11400. will ~ BACK BAY AREA ret you Into thll beauty. NO
CUit ...... DOWN TO VETS! You'll " om "-'1 5 BDRM hOme, Jove the hardwood noon, ·
3 Ml bfttha, taml.ly room, bullttn dlshwuhfr, cuatom J>Olt·Y. ¥UJC)CUK
office or den, 2 firtplace1 ciblneta and love'" --tt. ~t.'U. T~a + indoor 8-8-Q, larae pcml v .. -....
A: wading pool. Many n10rt. WHY WAIT? ... oi-i
splendld features. Prlcfd ~-COATS ...:'::.ma right at $87 ,500. & \ . * * * * * WALLACE l--'------1 4 Bel~ •• 2 &.th REALTORS lc __ os_,_._M_ ... ______ I
New ,..,,. .. """""'· ' car 546 4141-MESA VERDE EAST
&&rage. Eastlidc Cos ta (~ Evenlnts) Sunny, brlabt anti airy on ?-.fesa. $28,950. · real quiet "inside street. The
Roy McC•rdle Re1ltor only noise ls the tweeting ol
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Newport Beach birds. A scrubbed and
54&-7729 FurnfsL-~ fremly painted f In e
Don't Pay
The Landlord
mru carpeted bcauly. I t ' s
B h H I vacant, with 3 bdrms. 2 eac ouse. baths, fU.place, living
REALTORS Pay youneU the rent. It's
like a savinp aeoowtt, not a
Gen.,.11 o.ner91 lo.ss! But h&ve the C!U)' U1e 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I In this pride ot ownership 2 I ~ bedroom condominium near
the beach. Private PQl)~S and
large rec room. Just Sl,100
down and $230 per mo. Pm. 616-nn.
---------------
83 STEPS TO SANDY room, interior laundry rm.
BEACH! Cozy knotty pine Patio, dbl garage, shake
kitchen. FAMILY ROOM! 3 root and a buy at $'3.,650.
~' ~S!IA4f. Costa Mesa Realty
Boat·trailer accetS. Outdoor1 -....o*._ .. s~ .. • .. 11 ... 11 ... *.,_iiii;I show e r , EZ care yartl.1•
j;'S~·~~Ni~~ -G.REAT -
The Area's
Top Profo11lon1ls
Since 194'
OPEN DAILY -CAMEO SHORES
4639 FAIRFIELD. Beautifully dseigned &
decorated 4 bdrm. & pool home wl!h great
them ano 30' Jots) and there's .trees all over
OPflf Tll I • "'FUN 70 BE N/Cll
[11Ri$;Jlil
YmRANS!
I OHi \I I OJ \II\
Family Home
Lovely 4 BR, 2 BA, lrg kftch
& dln, nice ld.ICpg. C1oee to
~-. ... ' '1 ' ' " .. ----1' 8843 ADAMS, 118.
96>-2456 567•3403 -~21 ____ -TRIPLEX
. ~ I I I ~ 2-bdrm. wllts in ''Overlookil11 Big CenYon Country Club''
G"'•"'••"'r•,,-1 ------;;G--,------1NEWPORT CE TER, N. B. -11 BAY & BEACH REALTY 675-3000
1-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;";;•;;ra;;l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I General General l'!'•""!!!9""""""!!!!"""'!'!!!!!!!!l'I!""""""",..,.,.
540-1720 ~ )'Oil ellglbleT Can you
Quality for VA ftnanclng? Is
your previoualy..ueed loan
retnstable! GIVE US A
CALL. Mesa Verde
like-new condltlon. Nice
carpeting, bit-in ranre 1c
refrig. In each. Upper unit
bas view of bills le night
lights. On James St., Over
80% loan at 7% can be U·
1wnecl. Asking $49,950.
I" -•I . Gonor1I
HARBOR ISLAND
WATERFRONT
Lovely 5 BR -. 51'.z baths, waterfront home.
Lge. living rm. & family rm,, just redecor-
ated. Pier, float and sandy beach. Beautiful
yard w /lge. shade tree &·swimming pool.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Or., Suit1 1, N.B. 67Ul61
A RARE FIND
A real CdM charmer, on the ocean si'de of
Hwy., yet walking dl!tance to all shoP,ping.
This 3 bdrm., 1 ~ bath home has additional
sleeping room in 2 car garage; we have the
key -give us a call. Offered at $64,500
NEW LISTING
Eastside Costa Mesa 3 BR-$31 ,000
MOVE IN
CONDmON
A True Home of Color. 4
Bedrooms. 2 Baths. BI Gas
Kitchen with Disbwuber.
CUstom Fireplace. Near
New Carpeting. Excellent
Area near Adami and
BU.chard. 131.850. can
Anytime, 646-«65.
RARE BLOSSOM
GINNY . MORRISON
•***• -REALTORS-*CJl!l* l.5m Meta • *Verde Dr. Euf. * * C.osta Mtta • *. • • $1'""130
(Open Eveninp)
U::ively 3'bedroom on cul-de-
.aac. Cozy family room and
fireplace. Very deslra~e
"""· 645-1221
1733 \Vestcllff Dr., N.B.
mrrE & NEAT
CALL Ci) '''·Jftf ~ .. 7'r1ALTY
3 Bedroom b 1 de -away , N••r N•WJ•rl P••I OFf lee
C0t0no del Mor EuUltl< Ooota Meaa, with VACANT and READY
0...nsldo Ill bath, hardwood !loors $33,000.
of the Hl9~w1y and fireplace. Huny, only 3 BR, sep den or 4th BR, 1%
Home and Income on an $33,500. · BA, paneled kit/din area.
inr 2 bedroom, 2 bath borne shake roof, sprinklers. Xlnt CORBIN. MARTIN ovenlzed Jot 42x1J8. O>arm· Call 540-IID Open Eveo. Living nn w/fplc. Dbl ,.,.,
Seldom aeen •••• CHOICE with 1arae liviqJ' room and cond.
l·G;;e;;n;;or;;1;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J General COSTA MESA EAST «1ZY wood burnlnc ti.re lace C M R lty
1• --· ~·· trom p1,.. 1arp bachelor ..J: "" osta esa ea SAN CLEMENTE REALTOR$ 644·7662 WESTCWT Shope & tncome and tax .. uet. * 546-7711 * • Fixer Upper
• Three Units
located on large Eastside
Costa ~iesa lot with roo m
for 3 more units. InvestOr's
delight with loads of poten-
tial. Home needs remodel-
Jng, so bring your hammer
and paint brush. Call us for
complete details. but hurry,
won't last long.
5t6-5880 (Open Eves.)
10 Uni ts, ... a I k "' ~ ~.1.;"'~~ =--patio. Asking ''Think of Thl.ngs" SEACIOUS 2 •to'Y, 2 BR, 1\0 shops $165,IXMJ General J Gener1I Room Jakarta llland F ' · · BA condo. Blt-1ns, frpl c. 15 Units, beach 1oca· ' · an-C. F. Colesworthy I: Co. you don't have, then hurry to Separate garage. Pool. tion $320,000 ATTENTION ta.sy Carpeting and SOLID LUXURY & REAl..'roRS see the home that does. 3 recreation room, la\UlClry
L " g • c om m e " u I · JUST LISTED HARDWOOD F 100 r i n g. 640-0020 bedroom•," 2\0 baths, largo lacilttios. Quiet edulta ol'J&
"0" St.15,{J)) YOUNG OR -M v rd ~:.e~:. .~~~ LOCATION fomily room, and fantutic No children under 15. 2 small C-1 zoned RETIRED' esa e e-acceaa for BO.i\,TI Many DOVER SHORES _ BAY Ir WALK TO BEACH dinina: area. You mult take Elden, CM 963-2187.
homes $26,950 • 5 .... ..a.11.... 4 bedroom. or 3 the --to VlEW 4 Ov--•-..... From thia dl'fiex with the flme to see this one. MESA DEL MAR 5 Br 3 Ba 80' C 1 ;nned lot aa.te or .,..........,. 0 r "C:Au....:o save you OCEAN .,.,..._..., • • · , Don't make a decision until ,·mm·•. -c"pv. All' _,. le~ -,~., ntVI lff ~~ .. are3 ~~ far a and den, 2 fireplaces • one time & trouble. HUR· bedrooms. formal ~ aome ~view; 2 R. lower do 0 .. 1 .. 11.tn 500 Call o:u ..... ~ '"""
Call 67fr'72'JS .,............., a~s """ ........... m home, ln country kitchen complete Ry .• ,$29 ,.500 , can room. fireplace and open :n1-:R. u~tieD~garage, ~ 842-2535 ,.._, ' =~ if'P'· ~aut.
,._......,rflllll~•I II• mp ete y upgra"""' ""' lna:. quiet cul-de-sac street. "" & jacuzrl. Beautifully plan-uw: v1--., v•.J"'VQOD ~ • .,.. JK:UUU111. .._..., ex r a 1. ~ Cob'"' 1~ 1your op~cyth. with builtins. New carpet-Anytime, 646-«j55, beams in 1amUy room, pool ,.._., ,!..,~!. _..9 ~~·-... OPENTlt.11 • rr-S FUN10BEMCEI __ .. _,_ M .. -~e 1 • nr IE+il ~~~1£~~ c~· ~~-$W.~,m ~p ~fi:re;::~; !llll~<&I ~~;,S2f~~ l '!!"'!'~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!P S\JllS!DlAll' Of tM{(OlWfU.(0. of l'OSe plants: Located in c~)ntutv --·--hmcp<!, $52,{J)), 64Hfil6. 1· l"'""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilo,,.oftt..moctpoputarCon-'T' .,.......T.,...,eo<W111co. -REALTOR-EMERALD BAY COLLEGE PARK, Sharp Call It Charm LOVELY 3 dominium .,.. .. in Orang• 642·5200 Ul-hty Nice VIEW 3Br, 2 BA. Fam Rm, frplc,
This home has that cet1.aln County with resident ~. 3 A Palace '""JI Ch a rm Ing home 293 Bowling . Green Dr,
something that everyone BEDROOM swimming pools, 2 lenni.s ~ at This Price w/poasibillUe11 for ex-$34,500: low dWn. 646-0968
:." HERITAGE
REALTORS
wan.,, Many"''"" fonnal COLL EGE PARK "'""" oauna and jacum; Looking WESTCUFf. Soaclous · ' bedrooms, 2 panolon. Large lMna room TRANSFERRED-< BR 2 ba "'1yninroo•n""',, umtil' 1"typrooar"m". fd~,.·_ . HOME neighborhood ln excellent BIG 5 For a King EXECUTIVE sum•. &a tbs. patio, larle eating -::~bayal -, vi~~-din,-tam. nn, lge patio & iots oi ..... condition. Apprai.eed at FIVE _ 2 bedroom homes, . . _ area In ldtcben. U:>cated in ll~ cove. Dl.lenui., frult tree1. $34,900. By
room. 21,fi baths, workshop Beautiful hardwood Doors. $29,000 with terw to suit five gar ... i. 5 ....,.,.,.te ten-Gorgeowi 4 bedroom, plua Executive Wettclltt 3 bed., 2 Huntington Beach near baiha. $76,500. Carol Tatum. owner Terms s.m.s area, also is in Newpor t's many shade & fruit trees, your n~-'s ,.._,, now -~-••-~ •·-"· room pl"• 3 --~11 nd .c-'"" •t COLDWELL, BANKER ' · • """" • \..4U ced "a rd s, on big J.;JI<.ON ..... ....., • -. bath on manicured corner """IUV a 11uupp ... <11;. "' a Real•-,., """ 833-0700 BACK BAY -.soo finest area. 4 large heavy shake roof. 95% 842-2535 " car garaie Thia bOme bu price you want to believe ...... ..,.....M"WY ._ bedrooms. Vacant and financing available. . street-kHtreet lot. Income . all Su, ·--"'-' Jot. Plush carpets, drapes, 127 w.m ,,_ ..,..,,. , 550 N-eenb?r Dr By owner, 3 BR w/lrplc. Ol'fNTILll •"'SFt.W10flENICEI $740 per month. Asking ll . per "1'5-6-bulltlns dining room -,.,.,., . .,...,..._,,.,. "'"t'"'•· . l..ge yard W/cav'd patio
waiting. Only $69,500. E-Z ~ S69 5oo thnlout. Gttat mme tot · private' yard with beat.ed "'1fN rn. • •, IT'S Fl.IN 10 IE NICiW1 640--0166 .. or 640-()227 ·, ~~;.::.TD<E N: ~R~;~t;~~ ~ llQl;ll!ll 540-iioi Open Eves. ::~:~~:t::t.: rJ:r~""'-bys:~-= [llfiilllfl 2~::::::~~'.~:.ant~:~~~~ i 1, ~ ~~~;;;i In Foreclosure! 11111~&111 tarrm l'M BOB ::~=~s~:" ~5891 ~~ ~:;·.i!,t:
$15,750 . -·-··-~ BUY MY OWNER tranllmed. 3 BR., 337 Magnolia, ownr 642-sl!O NEWPORT Model Home FULL PRICE! 4 Bedroom• * BEST BUYS * olfd Sl•ter-in-taw's four "'°"' In 1\0 BA. Newly docorated. 2 BR. intorioc redone, tot HEIGHTS 2 St A1 ha Beta ho . t .Lou . of charm. $TI,500. 140x69 R-2, $23,000. 645-3509 When Built HU RRY! FOReED SALE! ' ory 3' BEDROOM & den -2532 -ro! $104,00). ·mi:~1.acetbe: 673-l488. JUn, 6~3031. Very Very See this attractive . 3 Freshly painted interior. · Assume & Save CresMew, Bayshores, NpL for $1100 a month and the Bllbol Peninsula F t 1 V 11 H d , be<lroom, 2 bath home. Ex· WASHER and DRYER Ir Exciting two story Spanish Bch. $51,500, wU1 carry a tint T.D. of oun I n I ty ar to get tra cabinets buil,t tn large REFRJG. I N CLUDED! 'with all four bedroonul 3 BEDROOM, family rm&: Realty Company 75%ofthesaletpl'icefor 30 NEW DUPLEX .
3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 kitchen, 220 tn gjrage, nice St~l~ess steel kitchen with upsta.lra. Walk one block to pool, 1215 Devon Lane, &.ycrnt Beeuty years.at 8%. Call 675-7225. 3 A:
1
4 BR. 11pts. Open beam 03WN~~~~ bemir~·
firepla ces. den, electric sized lawn fmt and rear. bui!t-1n blender. Din ID g park, tennis COW'tl and pool. WestclW, Npt. Bch. $59,500. 3 BR., ~ J&nd9captnr, c cells., 2 frplcs. ea. unit. built-ins,' di Sb w a 1 re r'
kitchen, 2 car garage ofl This can be yuurs for only roon1. Private garden patio! Assume VA loan with total 6 BEDROOM & family -971 handyman I prage central u~ •II Quick ~ ... $101,500. fireplace ln family rm (',,j
prh·atC' all('y. Very best 5';:, down. Selling price Storage lockera. IMMACU· month by payments of $253 Paularino, Mesa North, vacuum sys~ Iv~ Weill ~ -GEM de sac brk.$36 500 W..:200[1
school district. Only $48,900. $27500 Call a.t&-2313 LATE townhouse -POOI., PITI Asking $38000 Call C.osta Me1&. $40.950. dewtaned Reduced to ---' ' ' ' . ' loo! BUY ntIS RARE BAR-54&-inJ to ' • CALL OUR omCE TO $'79.500. 'Joyce Ed I u n d · · • :J • 1610 W. Cost Hwy., N.B. OWNER desperate. 3 ba.ths,
GAIN TODAY! Call M;-0303. see. SEE BY 64:i.ci5 (Y25) . • · .REALTORS 642-4623 4 bedrooms. Patio, dining
-~14 OPENm.t. rr'S FUN 10 SI MCEr APPOINTMENT ANYTlME 5UIUO!AIT or ltt{ CO\WIU-CO. 1 I..Ortrom bay, 2 Br .. view, :n11:u~l°!:iu!11s:;:~c!·
ONE BLOCK
TO SCHOOL
I l::irbor View Palermo , • .
\\,'ilh pool: 4 bdrm&., 21Ai
bath1, large fam. rrn ..
owrslzed lots, on CUI de Sac
Rt. Land incl uded. $73,900.
HO\\'ard Wells
COLD\YELL, BANKER
Realtors 644-2430, 83.1-0700
5..l'i(] Newport Center Dr.
-·
IOl!J\I I llJ\11 \
fl ! " ' '
Macnab-Irvine
[llli~liilll 18 =~"=tlon ~ ~ Va~:~=~S.Uer ::.:.~:"f~ ~~TL~~~~;~~ Lache nm yerl
CUDDLE &
SNUGGLE
R" .•1,,, Don't Lose· lett town, Sharp, comer * 101 ACACIA * "Ml" row on market. loea.tion. -All the amenIUe1 One 1Jf tbcr better loo .. --ln a Total exterior maintenance1 Out! for the ~ executive. 3 duplex -2 &: a den Pf~ new ~~r~o ~~
"WHALE" of • hottle. 2 \':1i0,;0 ~ -2 l>drm.; copper plombln&: ~lck ~Qlon, From Llt11e11ouaeonb1t tand.Best ·LIDO ISLE ~-. 5 ~·-· • ba"·, •••• -~·•·nt toe. Priced to 950 A-· ~. w ~-•• SJ•· ·-a. Good au-•-VIA w••11RS ··~·, UCl.Al\NUI.... Ula COLDWELL BANKER .............. _ ' I • II:'~ -.r(fl. e = ~ -· ~ ,... I•-• lJ·•-room, la~. "'"' ..U ft>t' 171 IOO know th-~st•· lot near st. Joachlm1. PleD-Owner motlva.ted --. ... 1.t 1deil ~~ for the Re~rsN _ _!!"~'.....833-M'OODr. . MOROAN' REA-LTY built the~""' ""'cauae we ty of rreth oraN:el &: shade. 3 BR...,..., _.., a-J#J ., .. ...,.. \A:l1u::1· Just $19,500 oiler takes It. another home! " &CP· !amly and ..., •• ect '"''. 67,.....2 67$.6459 l1rwfn re1lty Me.
Call fut! , DR., la;. ~tio. Mu conak1er ~ entertalnln8: nffd9. , 9 UNml (TI4) 96&-4-tOO leue or eue with c>ption to early ror tbll one. ' FINE BUY -$TI.SOO! Near
buy. ,500. Clmlene S36. • 1Mf1010. · ~ 9 Units, grou over" tt3,IXXI new, Jge, luxurlouii 3 BR, 2 Huntington Bffch
Whyte. • •· O/l'!N Tlt.11• /T'fFUNlOllNICll Try l0% dow ba, fam & din rms, rich ·
Realtors -COLOWEU.. BANKER tiiii ii u1 ;:UI carry 2nd. Ma~e = shag crpt'g, open beem ceU-REPOSSESSIONS
CoOpenREV<ON,.A Re~~ewi:~e~ni&tajc on thit one. Mkbls $96,500. ~':0:,A = e1~2c-: F:,rt~~f:,~~~-~~ 1:;~~n
-••= ••=·=~ -wnlon. -Stepo to Big oonlacf . ' . ' DEL MAR The Lent Tl-. T . fJf!t =.c;Jder tnde. Ct.ti KASAllAN
New_Us.tlng We Olfm<I •~in th~ NEW ON HE ' Sltim SPYGLASS HUL • New 'RHI Estoto 96U'44
2 ll<tdroom. ,_,h cottqe. 1t-~~our ~ MARKET! -BR.-oo poo1..i..d 1ot 12,flOO. °"""'· Shart> 3
2 lot, '°'<ll!. prime location. Jumped Off tl>e wall. £11~~ Weatclif1 ·tarp 4 bedr -4 IACK IAY LOT ~-~. crp"1:::: ;>:<1..!':?!"• ~ ~•rapesBKR· $45,000. Huny' this 'M)n't lll.n& bu ttruck '8p.ln1 2 bftth .. dlnlnaroomand .. Oh ~""" u-'""' • ..._ ......... .,.. .. N lutl •10l'J', 4 bldrooni borne In Ytt! fWll bwner trandef.. View of water A: mounta.tna. By owner. 641>-18S8 _ IWi..1418 ·' • ·
1be tuttsl draw In the WHt.
• . .a Dally PUot CUll.tleil
Ad.60-6618.
Hunt!~ Bea~ ft'd, $19,000 HUIT)'! Ba '1 e-r e it Ad d f •I I • BY C>lrnwr, old COM 4BR I: WARM ho !::c r ~ ~ 850 ..,.;." Two-.atQ_.ry home play FRm ..__ ~an I. me, Ulent .bon,
_,. •Ot' • • ~ liill-pennlaab\e. "ill pr1<e 1IUbor w~''bit to"''"· 11.B. nr _ .. h. bch , + 2, today. MHOIO. «; Ii ~ $29,flOO. Geno V>edan4 R-2 tot 01~. 613-S41)3, !l!•I002322' Ownor, "' .,._
0Mf11L •• tfi FIJll m. NIJEt r.sm-• - -COLDWEU.... BANKER 214 o8Jilla 1,-==,...· -.---,,~~-
Rtalton &f4.2430 •. su.o700 FOR SALE 'By Owne. CdM O\VNER arudous. 3 baths, ( r~:;'"8 nif R EAi .. I. •II ESTAl ERS
'-----
Don't stve up the lhtpl 5!IO Newport CC!nter Dr. HOWM! wtth A(>t. r "5a,500. ~.n''bu~ns. paJ~=
"Utt'' 'h tn clanU'ted,. Sblp Nef!cl a •'Pad'!f J'late.u ltd~ Call 6'11-o1502. :ll.mlace tn family rm. Brit
to ShoN Ratultll ~ Call ~. Nmt a "Pad"? Place an ad! Ktoo. S6l-8865.
~. ' ) ,.
....... .....,, ... , ... "'1 -· 1'11, 1----• Oil._ l'1LOT 2J l~I .__ --""-'*_.][;) I ---- --·---
l~I .__ -~;;;''" ;;;.;1~;;1 ._I -iiiiiiiiiiijj;i--~l~~liil iiiii----~l~~fl!~1:;;t -----~1~;1~1 -·"'•'"'""•"'-~lrtJ~•1 Huntl..;..on -h · --,,., Hun.lington ·-h Mol>lt. Hamot RNI EJl•lo ~ Fiimlthlll 300 Houw Unfurn. 305 HouH• Unlurn. 30.I Apto. Fum. :WO
4 SEASOlilS -. ""-Por Salo 125 Ex~h•'!I! In L....,• Beach Hunllhflon -h Nowporl Buch cost• ~ : S:::
-SPECIAL ELEGANT £· ·~ Matar 119 Rentals M· 1 bchallC)e rorr•cE. -. .. °" bltJns, FOR L£ASE, .,......'°"'· 3 -'------1----""---1
• Bc!dn~., • Bath. 2 SLO!>· LG 9UESTA $48 000 """· dropo, nr bet>. 1 adlt. er. 211 ba, Fonnal "'"'"•· THE .BLUFFS Casa de Oro ·
F1.1nU1 rm. w/firepl. Vtty $48,(KK). fetturin& 4BR 3.BA, 3 40x.l ' Ut11. pd. '200. 494-5985 evt. tarp family room With Condominium Homes AU.. lITJLITIES PAID'
_ .... -----
f(l,mlll dlnlna rm., 2800 sq. oo pr. Evttythl.na uperad-11n1:1:rW t!'J -~ Newport Beich tire-pl~. Choice locatlo.1 & * 3 BR, 2 Ba. 1-aty s:t'>O Coinpare hr-fore you rent ~~11\dll.!!N, __td._JJcb u custm drpa. l6'th "llfd Po~~~. ne~hbomood near 1Chool1, 111 3 BR., ram rm, DR 5.'RKt :::ustom deif&'nei!, fcaturln:"";+----1 --AD-i~rihi:-call 968·'4SS. crptg, setf"'Clean oven, fix, Mesa _ Far excha.~ _ lnto VAC • 2 Sr, Sl'l'!I, dean. Ai.fto bea.c:h and •ho Pp I n,11'. • 4 BR, 21n bl., farn/klt.$415 e Spsclous kitchen with in-
tum, fonnJ llv rm, •P din rommttelal or 1ndulb1al ln· Walk to Wtr 2 Br Hse, Cdt-.t, Available 1 Feb 13. • 3 BR, 2 ba. VIEW $500 direct lighting
rn\ f4m rm. fpl, po.Ho, yoor ~6"106 yard wtlh fruit 531 6800 come pro~ Lllhd 111 fl'9e kkh. $325/mo. including v.·ater & OTIIERS AVAILABLE e Separall:' din'r are&
terma. Our ab&rpest home! tnea, dor rian, patio, t1repll, • and clear_ call M&--1600. Rent-A.House 979-8430 &ardener. 1st l lu t mo. Please call us for e Home·llke storaa:e
-1-h.r•== ne_w riced wldtt etc. 3 BR. newly -BA-mob!k-home-tn---Oil'fH.lJL..f...a..Q'.l~1tl•HIC'S posit ow -l.'OW'..tt..ntal needa .. Private-patios-=---__, ___ ..,.
nun. H..tS. I i:1~ A panek!d. ' tron Laguna ~ I Agent, 90-8118 or 963-263.1. e 0 Closed garaee w/atorage
must to see. $36, ·• * * ;:,ct;: $2%~~4*t238. IJU'lll!· .. il!I NO FEE, VAC_ANT~ ;(·. ib. • ~tarble pullman
EXTRA SHARP
4 BDRM
$24,950
Th.la 1mmacu1ate 4 bedrm
home ls a ne:w listing and
should sell lmmed. W /\V
carpta: &. draps, new tile noon. !mhly palmed ln • out. 10% ON wW bey this hMle today. Call for appt.
I' rllflge Reol EstJ te
531-5110 ':::tJ $31-~0I
NEED CASH? e 24 1-IOUR SERVICE e
CALL us first -We will sell
your property or guarantee
your equity before moving
day. CALL tor lmmed. appt.
968-4456.
I f LITTLE OREY GOOSE Owner tms1.-1972 20x iJiif:lii:l.t $237 per montb, flrsl & ("_ ~'\~~ : ~'"f" = A 2 BR, 1 BA house wants to Sf, ~ Star Adult Parlr. com. last. Near new . <;ity c,ast ~ ·: u ro~d~ with p~~h. i:::d.
962.4471 ( =) SCMlOJ grow on these two Jt..2 Iota, plete. 496-4886. RNI E:it•t• W•ntetl lM Park. 3 BRS, bu1lt10s, / ~. rea ly scaping. !!'!~~"'"!'!"~'!'·'"!''""' approx. 6,500 1.r. l'o1Wtiple A'M'RACTIVE llx55 in adult BKR/OWNER 962-5511 !~~ · Adult living at Its belt
OWNER sacriftce, 4 bedrml, unit area. Prlce $(1,000. park. c:o.ta M6&. Shag * nyJck Caih * EXTREMELY luxuriou~ 2.U4 Vis!; de! Oro LARGE 1 BR $190
l balha. Covered patio, 494-I025 carpel, $3Dl. 646--2131 ,, 4BR 2BA tml din rm hlt Newport Beach No Pets
built-Ins, d,I sh w ~I be r, 1786 .S. Coast Hwy. BAYFRONT N E W p ORT Will buy your property. All !am rm w/ fpl, Nr '11eh1, "'-ll.13 ANYT!JI•""' 365 W. Wil900 60-lBTl 1i...p1 t il,y cuh within 72. hn. Call "" ~ Cul~c. m brlcm $36.~: .L•1une Nlguel ~E['CHpm $18.if>~'f":; 9&2-8851 ~J!.~~ar:r ~ll Newport Heights El Puerto Mesa .
846-1383. . PACJFIC Ialand Village. '2 646-9018. i t These Are Just A Few or eves. Agt. ~ 3SR Lge yard~;;;& 1 BR's-$130 & UP O~ER le&Vl.Q&,d41ningbednna. 2 ~. 2 BA, ocean 4' mtn 1972, 2())(43, 2 Br. l Ba, 5 Star =l•l~I Our MANY RENTALS · · · 3 BR. 2 BA. ell'C RIO, FA pe'll ok. Avail Feb: £th. Unfurn, A Furn.
bu'u"': __ padtlol, b hnn.. view, overlooldna pool, Adult park, pet ok. Must .'t. • * ht, wf wcrpt.s & d~. dbl $275. 6T~J0;;3. All Utilities P•ld t-u ... , s w a 1 er. clubhouse ' puttlrv ~ aelL 496-7965. S14G-A REAL Fl~'D! 1 Br. gar, b1cd, lndscpd. Xlnt loc, . Poot & Rtrcre&tkm
Fireplace, family rm. Brk. E'vel • wkend, 49.l-2175. .._,,.,.,..._INC. Cottage. Crpts, d~. gar. $229. mo. AGT: 962-44TI or Tustin ,..
S36,500 962-8965. Lido ltle ~ * 546-8103. 1959 !ilaple Ave .... -
OWNER arudous, 3 baths, 4 IHI r-..--1 ~ r1m FURN. APT! All Util 4 BR, 2 BA, fenei!d yard, Also garages tor rent -~., POOi -"-D'M'-.... ~ •'-Ar 4BR, 2BA, full crpt & children welcome, lease * ·~-SO-WEE" • UP UUl",.buut-tt' .,...... .. ... 111; 3 BR. I. OEN ~ Pd. Quiet atta. 1 chLld ok. drpa, sealed gar, CI c 11 n . $300 month 776-3534 -4· --"' •
rm, t-lns, dishwaaher, Ideal •·-"" horn• I I~ * Nice ne1 .... borhoocl Covered · · · • Studio & 1 BR Apt&. fireplnce in family nn. Bric .... ~ ..,_ __ ,_, 16" H F e TV & M 'd o-• A a1L 900 f5 Foot lot. $79,950 ............ $175-PRIVATE! 3 Br. HOU8e , patio. $250. 84&-2396 or OUMI urn. or &I .-&Y•CEI v 146· ·890>-886SEST~ B·UY. LOWEST PRICED,, • Bu1lne11 Property 154 · Fenced !or kids/pets. 84&-3122. Unfurn. '310 e Phone Service-Htd. Pool
Home on Udo. 2 BR. +: 2 CLEAN Income prop, cent WON'T LAST! DUPLEX 38R r 2BR & e Children It Pet Section
Decorator delight. 3 Bednns batha:. Quiet end of the I• c M B $45 OCIO E-Z Butlnffl * Den 2 BA ne.,; funct'd yrd Newport Beach 2376 Newport Blvd., CM
on huge pool sittd ·lot. la.net $58,M>O. · ' ~=[· ~ Onportunlty 200 $240-NEAR BEACH! 3 Br, 2 $250 mo '536-2914 548-3446 ~-9T~ or 64f>-3961
Outllla.nding patio and deck-LIDO REALT¥ trm1. or . i;;. ~~-Dbl garage. Fenced for or 4~ ' ~BR, 2 BA, house, 2 blks to NE\V l BR's from ~
ing. Large pantcy. Boat ;.,. h Commercl•I TRAVEL AGENCIES IUWI beach. $250/mo. Adul ts, Nr beach a: shop'g. gate. Our Best Buy price 3377 Vla Lldo, -~P.t Beac ISi · ·LANOLOROS I $325-4 Br. 2 Ba F/R. Crp11. 675-54W C.M
$32,500. CENTURY 21 R.E. 67S.7300.. Property 1;)'~~~un~p:-:i· bee~ FREE RENTAL SER°vtCE . ~~~~d~n!!°· ~d. Condominiums ~i-o1~i. 20lh St., • .
842-4474· Meu Verde START YOUR est. in business 19S8; own-BEACON RENTALS FRESm.Y Paln~ed-2Br Me Unfurn. 320 NICELY furn. trg t BR.
FOR aale by owner. Will eell BUSINESS HERE ers retiring. * 64>0111 * '•/ 11751 ls encl gar. QuJe(. Adultt, no
GI or FHA or~ con-ELEGANT Good invesunent at 1914 Ncv.r-v. w/w c;t'P1• mo. 1 SPACIOUS 2 BR. l~~ BA. pets. 2-152 Elden 646-2768. ven~~aJ,. B\ly2 Baow-,_:_a,~ port BIYd .. C.M. For info. WHY RENT & last mo a rent. 842-3418. ~1· drps, \ofrplc, blt-lnsN.
pra....... Br, • ... ., c, CUSTOM Call _ JONES I I DO ~--1 and !like to Beach . V11.c 2 Br, . . rl'creat n room. ~ Dana Point CJ'flta, & drps. G~ con-' l ...-wu paymen •ii.r s1~. K!d!ll lpr'~ c.11ldren under 15 .• Avail --· -'-"""'-----1 1 wrted to lge den. $28,000. Close to Meaa Verde Country 400 L17' , REALTY INC. ~if1: lt~lliJ: l~e~~ Rent.A.House 979-1430 now. E. Costa htesa. 2400 LIVE in lhfl All new ~ •
846-4739. Club -Larg:e executive 4 C.fl ESt "'6 bath horn G Eldon No. 9. $210 mo, 1st Pol.DI Hlll'bor at the bedroom with 34• end, pool· bedroom, 1 e. as WALK 10 beach. 3 BR & and last. 963-2181. beautilul Marina Inn Motel,
1:=========1-lr;;;v;;ln;;;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; table, wet bar, retrlg., etc. (114>e73.e21D ~t-~~t.s ~a:raiie: ~~-~Nhr, 2 ~~· VIE\V! Few 1te~ to beach. 34902 Del Obispo St. I• • Newly decorated wJth lux· 200'lw.-......._ floor--to-ceir used brick Ii" ya · 0 pets. • Spac. 2 BR, 2 BA, sep. din !496-2353). Kltchem, ef-
COME AND SEE LUXURY LOO. K urious shag carpeting. ...,.._.~·Ctllornls&leeo fireplace. ~price $70.<KXl. Irvine rm., frplc., elevator. $485. ficiencies & apart~nt..
th; ........ ~loft-decorated 4 Sparkling pool and lovely Don't delay, phone today. 530 ctiff Dr. Lag. Bch. heated pool, dlrect dial. "" ·~ ....... 1, Jn tbla 4 bdrm. home, with grounds. Call 546-5880 MOM & POP , 644-1615. phones, televialon, aauna Bdrm .• huge lot, next door Its upgraded & well llERlTAGE REALTORS. BUSINESS YES. We ~av~ ~ntals I • ba1h laundry facllltln to $40,Wl. homes, for coordinated carpets, dnipes, May . vie be ol ~('?'V\ce l~ rv1ne meeting room, close to sM
S'l8.00'.>. CALl. 842-1418, wall papers &: walk-In Price red u c e d • Ham: Realtcn 546-0022 _solvm.g your ho11S1ng needs· 2 BR, l" Ba, New. acmente and Laauna. PA'M'I WALKER R E 3BR, 2BA. 3 yrs young, super ..,,,_ T D · · 1' Bltns, · · closets; landscaping com. roomy at below market. Why not save money today in ...... er--aco n v e -1 n · e CHll.D Pet welc! 2 poo1. Beach. Come play in our
Far Fam ily Fun
5 lkdroor1s, s:cp.t•p Uvln ·
nn., • big fam ily rm
w/firepl, ceramic bench,
showers. Sep. uW. rm,
watersoflcner. \Valk to
beach, schla. $44,650. CALL
96&-4456 •.
f~;1;; location ilpremiwn. $37,500. BKR 64&-8811. Green Valley? New on ~~~~RYhe~, R~· Br hsa., 1ncd yrd, encl a:ar, $210 Mo. 642-2657 harbor 1 urlln~ .., · · _ N rt BMch market, former model 1 &ci-4474 · · trplc bltns. $185. M. . V sporUflshing, lhopplns a e d h II ewpo bedroom or den down and 2 · ALA' Rentals• 645-3900' _..!_511on telo restaurants. S:SO week and . ,· · re ; West~llff Area• ~ $fo.::. bar. Pric-NEWPORT BEACH e RARE Indeed-;-1 Br. 1Urn NEW single story, 2 BR, 1 ~lv~ris t~~ :: := II larwln reelty Inc. Marine Contracting Flrm Bal Ill Sundeck t BA, crptg, drps, bltns, cov week's rent. $39,950 CTI4) 96S-4405 Finest e q u IP men t le !:.°'pio ~ Uw Pd. ' pe "SINCE 19M'' J:tlo, gar., u,,e~I, xlntl --==-----1
REALTY:
A Company With Vision
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call Anytime, 562-7500
Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM
Irvine Terrace
Lama. Rumpus waterfront locatbn. 3.5 Yr. ALA Rental•• 645-3900 ht Western li '··. i~ld . I oc. $210 ino. Huntington BMch
• .,,-I p rty 166 old company. Space av•ll. Unlversl ':I ,..,~r·:, /rTir. Newport Buch -Room• Pool ncom•_..c'""!-·-·-for boat sales & ,.pain. -LANDLORDS! D•y• 522·7000 Nights -.. ----------$33 WEEKLY
Just begins to tell the story INCOME UN ITS :· BILL GRUNDY RLTR. we Specialize 1n Newpo11 r:========IBLUFF'S-BAYFRONT 3 BR, Executive Sultn
Be h 675-4161 I • 211 BA. ""'" decor., ""1'• 727 Y kt Bl d about this Newport ac 3-F'OR $47,500. Deluxe units. r---o-'--"-:.,,C~---Beach e r.orona de! Mi.r • 2 BR l1' ha S22S drps, crpta, patios. Nr. pool. or own V •
home. An ex.dung poolside Good C.M. location. , • Beauty Salon • A: Laguna. Our Rental Ser· 2 Bi l'i( ba: Air Cone!. S26S !-f:_:,,..Ao $.525/mo. Owner. Beach B5J~di 04ai1v1orkt0\vn atmosphere that OO'o\'1 6-FOR $75,Wl. North C.J\.1., Typewriter Sa.Jes & Serv vice is FREE to You! Try 3 BR 2 ba .,75 "'"...,,,...,.. -
3 BR., 2 BA. lrg. fenced step down wet bar, Three 10.WITII. 11~ mo income HOLLAND B S I • e e Full kitchen
=ghwi~ =la~ !:,~~at $980. mo in· =~s::~··= ~Jt;.~W RENTALS e· . ed ........ h ........ ,, U'7n;-lv~e""r°'1l~ty~P~•-r7k---1 STUDIOS & 1 BR's.
yard, plus boat storage yrd, hedroo 0-.71... ........ us •• •s 673-4030 or 6'-3248 r I SNGL level 3 BR. 2 ha end • Heated pool
wlk to Balboa Ialaod, Some ms. UW"""" ,.... going for U-45,000. ln& Orange, CM 645-4170 un11,.!:., "•"'vail'!"'·FebS350. 15,. ~I)' •. ~,",,.,,.',"",.,.Uitles Vu, Must &ell. Asking Of'Oi'11.l•tTSAAn>«MCE1 28-AT $350,oo:>. pencils out (Salesman Needed) FREE ...,.. C&ll ..,,~ ~ <r:: !1111~$jlll ~~A$1f(i··~~; rSECRET=~=="'"·AR1AL..,C..,"'~win<..,"~.'_eWr..,r_:,,,:~·:_1f'. ~=~·'1"'°' ":? ~ ~~E;\~via~• :~:~;=~~ 350 i if~:"serv. avail •
.,._.;.....,.., .... ~ ...... l ~NEW~~H~oiiME<E. .. ~ i...;-;;2BiiR.u2BA;;::;:, I BEER-Pool-Nr beach. Sharp omc.e hours a AM to 6 PM 2 BR .d 2 ba " ... heh • 1 Mile to ocean
GOU"k.1-t&. SPECIAL: Fae-~ beamed"", Cl!U, )rP:lc, Call on ... _ _.H......, liaH .... ! Set for liq. lie. -Terms. Own· I !!"'"""'!!!!!!!!!!!""'""' .. !!Pl ' en, • 71 um A-
1 Jng the green with a 4iceen VU;.i$38;!llO. ~~ NEWPORT SHORES ~..ug ... ~ er leaving. 646-88ll Brk, 7799,}!.a:txn'M.,.Blvd~un Laaun11 Buch . bay. $325 mo. yrty, 1359 E. Huntlntton IMch beautiful view of the 496-221II 38 Unlta, eo.ta Mell&. Ex· --'~=:;.,,~~:;=,,~===--;.z Balboa Wvd Apt A
1afrway. 2 story, 4 bdrm, Lanuna Beach Walk to beach. Lee. 3 'BR. celJent coodltion! Van, EASTBLUFF $200 -Util pd. 2 Br. So. (dwnst.nl, Sls.3518 or Sl45 -$16!5
w/lrg fam. rm., fonnal dn. • 2.Sty. 2% baths. Blt-lna:. Priced to l!ltll! IndividwU home, over 2000 Laguna. Gar. Yard. Deck. 213/863-1008. BA~R I: 1 BR, patios,
rm, 3 baths, Spa.ni&h FP, $42500 6% X GROSS ]~ .sq. ft., unusual large 4 bed-Olildren welc Cotta MeN frDlca, prlv. earaa:et -
shk rf. many amenities ad-AWARD CAMUYWsrOOSEOLL~EAL TY . $315,000 ~ • room or 3 & den. Famil,y $225 -Utll pd. Clw'mlng I Dfvided be.lb A loll of
ded. Call Walker &. Lee LIDO REAL TY . room plus large formal din-Br. Frplc. View. Sleps to $160 MO., f BR.. Jtove close1 "· b1"cl • haU, poobaLth~
I n.eal Estate, 1682 Edinger # WINN.ING * 541-1290 * 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach ing room. Complete privacy beach! ref., carp/drps. Close poo ta el, lllUM. a.
Av e., H 'Beac h, OCEAN VIEW --withenc"·sed rearandfront $.100 -Util g!;,'-3 Br 2 to cost. Agent'646-2414 See for younelf. 17301 714/842-4455. O""n eves till This award wlMt.. ... remodel 673.,_ B I "' · ..... ' K hon Ln (l blk W of 8·30 .,.. otters you all t~~newesl in Modern Duplex 4 Bdrm. up, COSTA MESA UI nffl yarda. Lovely garden. No Ba. FJt>lc. . Yard. Huntington a.ffh . erach 1 blk N of Slate?)
B-f .owntT, 48R 3 BA moder n convenie_nces. 2 Bdrm., Dn. Very Jar&e, ~portunlt'( 200 pets. $47Spermonth. NU.VIEW RENTALS • 142-ri.a ·
trl-level. 2 Fpl's, 1-tam Close-in location, beautifully prime location. $&5,!KM>. 12 Units • ~.-• $, 156,500 SAN Oe le Be ty Salo Call 673-6568 err 546--p 673-4030 or 4,%.3248. IMMEO OCCUPANCY
ha f "• d' landscaped. An absolute HORVATH REALTY " U It $16.000 men au n COTI'AGE $35 mo. Also 1 Br • , L•gun• h•ch rm w/wet r, orm, in "Prize" of a home. Must be Ask for Dave ,. n ,I ••.. , Great potentlal fur owner Sllverado. 2 Br Mob. $130. 3 Lanuna Nlnyel New 3 Br ,_,,ti $250. mo. --
rm. Many xu'a.'I, cu1-0c-1ac. seen lo be ap-·'a'~. Call 675-1972 494.oolS 4 Unlb ... , . $60AOO operator. Dwntown k>c. Call BR.,· Farm hie 1140. Hone • "!' Dbl iraraee. dsbwahr OCEANFRONT Nr Marina & St Bonaven-,..~..., wu 493-3302 aft 6pm 331 o H B.
ture. $46.500. Ph: 846--402-1. Steve Hurst. $M,SOO. BY OWNER; 4 yrs., 4 Br., Sl-'ORTSWEAR ~tail Ito~, ~ on acreage $210. AU ~c;:ri~~:eu:t!e ~~ &16o . r~eou! I~ ex°!c. ~
FOtowR_ .. ~: •• By1!!,w4~r, 4$500br ~~O I J'F,. ~~:. 01~1:1'1Ni.~: 8men I: womBa1""00a· Esi.~~landlhed Rent·A~Hou• 97M430 iUU"dedc-..~hoot Se~!a-.th e~ rum.1 apt. ,,. ,,,,..,.__.. ~. ""· ..,,//'0'1U,1"' 91)8.2775. eves. yn. .,. · race. _ _..... me ....... n Newport BeM:tt security, poo , eleva!or ... under rltA approvlli. Swim-E Phone 67$.6900 673-M3>. 2 BR. HOlJSE, newly decor· or lease !5pl. 493-6769. --beac~1 aweepbw v le w
pool, tennis· crt, basketball REAL ESTAT OCEAN view duplex, dlx 4 ICE CREAM Parkin-Good aced. Fenced yd, pr. l THE SHORES NEW Duplex. 3 br, 2 ba coasume. Adultl only. Lux·
&. park. 962-S0.10 alt 6. 1100 Glenneyre St. br/2 BR. Sl.2,!XXI lncome. INVESTORS locations. $700). Will handle. chi ld O.K. $150 ~· W+allaSlOO 3 BDRM. 2 BATII From $28H31D Yrly. Walk = llvlrtR at the~~
-ASSUME-6:V4o/;iOAN 49.1-9473 549-0316 5304 Sea&hore. 6U-6793. TWO 4-PLEXES, xl n l Lucas, Agent. 642-2'290. clean·up fee. -ce $400. MO'. 496-8871 to bch. Encl gar. 642-3188 or Realtc. l'1fil mo. --w
I 1 --HARD TO FIND-4 BR. FIR. DIR. 2 BA. 1 retum, on1y $47,500. each. Mon l40 St., 615-3589. &42-7914. ty. 49!J.-lXIS.
I PJ\.~~~~ntal~ Lnaf~at:;::S: U 3 •-h B blk to pool&: parlc:. Harbor $4,150. down. Call 80-1'1!. 1:c:;:.:"Y:;.,_.,:lo;:...;L;;01o:;.;,n;..._= 2 BR., l Ba. Lrg. yard. l Lido Isle BAOI nr. beach. Co&or.!!1 Ank~ dt.>ep shag carpet. J!~tab1;''ocean :i:w~ ~~omes. $51,500 .• ~'::..~. 1 t TD L ch1Jd0.K.$155mo.201S 'F' 11•1 :;."'~.l:/:i~ .. ~.,...
Flocked ·wallpaper. 3 Bdrm Pri.v. bl!ach & clubhouse. ~,!.~ s oans Wall&ce 546-1006. ENJOY Lido Llfe! 3 BR, 3 [ "Jub1 ... flrllllt Lido Isle . · near Marina Hi. $28.900. Oiarming 5 bdrm., 3 bath Duelexes near the ocean Cor ona del Mar BA, 1ePt. din. rm., lrg. pa· . _
CENTIRY 21 R.E. 842-4474. home , _ deo w-~-2 Miles Lanon. Realtor inn Bee.ch Blvdl-, H.B. 6"-% INTEREST Uo, nu decorated, avall.l'iiiiiliiiliiilmiiiliiil~~~I Frpl~.H~bby shop~'~·of * 67J...856.l • 2 d.,. TD L Feb. 1-July 1.6"16/or yrly.1 1 FURN. 1 bdrm, utll pd. i LOVEI.Y U3BR,RM2BA, ~~'~ """"' & •torage, Mklng e BLUFFS X-plao, 3 BR, Loll for S.lo 170 n . oans SPYGLASS 1l3 Via Wufen, 675-2518. Apts. Fum. 360 garage. I tdwl: No pa.
JOLrung v ' ...., 2 •-! Breathtak'•• Vo of n---. 0 """ 1 • I'~ mo yr'• --patio w/ftplc, dark room, $82,500. fam rm, dlnJng rm, .. ., ca. (2) TWO vacant lots 315 & "~ &BR ~pen-----~-·----.....,, · Y v•~•· comp. decorated, aee to ap-• 499--2800 * lmmac. Upgraded: $58,00'.>. 319 Canal St. Udo Shorn, Lowest rates Orange Co. Bay l City Lights. • Balboai P•n•nsula ~!!'port Beach
preclate. Owne.r, No agents. -~-644-8061 or 64&-8824 * Newport Beach. $25,oo:>. Sattler Mtg. Co. 3
3% ba, Fam1Rm, ~~n f!.m.1• Newport BMch 128 Wk • 0 1
_ t , $34.500. 54D-8932 or 847-5410 ~\;:(~ HARBOR View Home• _ 2 each lot. John E. Burkett, 642-2171 $45.0611 car gar, yr68 -=· inc • -. Up On cean S29 50 per Wlc A: up, """'• ~ d SS4 500 F 7006 Com!gido Rd v gardener, 640-17 · ~ - 2 Br. Channeltront l.()ve)y Bach - 1 BR-Rooms BR & Bachelon. Cokn' TV,
: FOP Rk salH e llby toowne, 1' 1-S&I 8
4 !!" ..... ~ -2!' .!1.~ ~~ ;t. ~~nee: ~n 1~: c.oover, Wash. ~,' ~ Serving Harbor area '21 yrs. so. of •tw;<-2 BR. 1 BA. Gar. Boat allp avail. Oild Maid ServiCe • Pool . Utll Pd maid serv., pool, The MtM
ar un ng n r -CV1! · -·~---.--. (2061695-2951 OONSOLIDATE BILLS Fll>lc. Freshly ~·nted. ok. e Call 675-8740 • 415 N. 'Newport Blvd., NB.
1 BR, 2\.i ba, formal dining -.-...... a-. N-rt u-l•hlt Private money available wfw crpt'g, refr , No $275-2 Br. 2 Ba. Lldo Isle. BE by Younelf. Beach .._ 646-9681. · rm, kitchen eating area. li;;e -~r-~ • WATERFRONT, 30' boat a!ip 2ND TD'S -ANY AMOUNT hlldtt Jlf'ts Frplc New crpta; drpa • lFiiJ<'b;-;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;-,1 i =:~gr~ ~l~~ei:~ 2Bit_ ~n~n:iw~.2 FRESH AS A DAISY. ~Bal~mo~ 7Collirals1-Call CTI4) ~ Bkr ~b. 6~. . per(;:·_· 2 Br Frplc' borne. ~~ :73~k & lK~pe:o~'Br~
lot. water aoltener & Frplcs .. Uv rm. I: din. area 3BR 2 ba, frplc &: Ill[ yard. TIME FOR Morte.-, 4 BR, 2 BA, FIR. DIR. near beach.· CdM .. Gllrl&e: Corona d.S Mar $195 • Untll JuJ., lit. N•••'fl-. Many opgraded w/ocean view. Bltn range, $42 950 by owner, 64.5-1446. Trvst 0Md1 260 !rplc. Bltna. C.omm. pcll)I. ......... ,,., -'-_ 642-9955. ..... .... dbl oven, dishwshr. CUst. · Harbor vu Home. $C50. ...,....... .-. l:'-7=='-.,,.......,-..,..._-1
!eaturcs. Fast possession drapes, c_:arp, thruoot 2 Unlv1r1ltv P•rk QUICK CASH $40,000 ll:t TD, paid dwn to 833-38S4 NU~VIEW RE~TALS 1 Br. furn., ~I pr. Adj. to 2 BR, on the ...,.. possible. $41,950. Open Balcony View decks. A rare ----------' ~ •M• Or .:..:~ ...... A oompl lhopg &ttL $175. 602 \V/D. Yearly or wllar iii daily. 20031 Big Bend Lo. find at $43.950. THROUGH A Sl0,00()-ooverlng v"""'L \! WOW, new -l BR., l ••~ , _..... Hellotrope. 831-1300. mo., prl<g • """ -
968-roil. ~flSSlON REALTY. 494-0731 e 5 BR home w/crpta & acre commercial property Ba .. nr. Big Corona Beach. 3 BR., N'pt ff&htL Pet&, 2 blka to Big C.Oroni. Bach A t U f
THINKING Of' SELLING Need a "Pad"·'! Place an ad! drps. Beaut Ind• cpd. DAILY PILOT San Juan Caplatrano, valued S400 fl.to. ownr/agt 673-6510. chlldnm c5.K. $215 Month, $160. & U75. U!U pd. Yr!y: p • n urn,
YOUR J-IOME? \\le've sold ~1:', "!:~~;. :'~~~ WANT AD !,1, .. ~1cm,, a119~ue ~t 5 ~ 2 BR. 1 BA. Crpta, dli:il. avail. Feb. llL: l.4le. 2 BR. I adult. no pet. MS..1624 2 & 3 BR Apta. 115,000 ho1nes, ONE AT A Don't give up the ship! ,,.,.,... "' ....,.,.._. ..,.._, ,... stove & refrht. Frpl Adults, 2 ha. apt. nr. cdM Hl&h. dra-bll !no -
sal "List.': ii in clusifled, Ship cour1s. Nr UCL $40,<Dl. 642 5678 10% dl.scount Broker, .... pe•· -1mo. 962-8449. $265 month Hal Plnchln l...ge 2 BR apt. lmmac cond. ,.,..q, · · ""'°' TIME. 1'~or COJnplete e1 I ,..., ~ "~" ''"'"' • 714 ·-..... ·--~·" Rltr, ~-. • • r~ Joca•~-Call .,___._.~ MG-3786 or~ tar hdb. service, call Walker &: Lee J ~'=•;;S;:ho=re=R=eso=!s;:l,;~::;;:::••::;·,_:.=-=~-~·======J..:=="=;,;i;:===:;;; --~=-~~------I C t Mele .,,...,.,,_ UIVll ....,.,_ v•r-Real Estate. 7682 Edinger $11,500 2nd TD, on com· °' a BLUFFS Condo. 3 lara:e alt 6pm BalbN ltland
Ave., ll'Beach, 842-4455. merdal property dwritwn $%JO-BRAND NEW 3 BR., 2 bedroomt built.-bl kitchen VIEW mR Apt So or G
Opencve1tUJ8:30. cifi'Qi'O j),.( .. f)'C ~Q.9 San J uan Capistrano, Bath doubk! carace pool iitvlleaea. 2 cU highw-.y (l1lO aublet, adltt:ELE ANT2 ,Br-cw~.
CORNER LOT: Cl.EAM, ~~ l.'ot,J ~... 'b PC/· v payable UTS per month. Townhouse. Crpb:, drpa. blt· earaae. iOOCI sreen belt only. call 6Th-2279 ~;; ~~ ~
O.EAN 3 bdrm, near new lncld 9% all doo in 3 )lean. Ins. Kk1I 1: Poot. Avail. view. Town bani! deltan. Cqsta Meu Eves/Wknda. • ,
gold ..... opl, rto, with 10" The Pun/e with the Built-In Chuckle Owner -'"'" row. Daya (213) 53Hf!f10.. I..ue only ""' per DtODth.1.;c:=..;.;,;=----1 """""'~=.,-~--1 qf coey comfort. Pr\Cl'd I t ru ction thbi Year Eves (TI4) 842--4538. Broker li40-00Jl. 1 BR, Fun:), 2 lr(. clotets, Balboe PenlMUt.
right under $23,oo:> . .._•JV~ 0 l:.amm;e Wt.rt of the w/$31,<KXl bank depoiJIU:. MCSA Verde lBR 2BA. $2SJ ~·NEW 4 queen slie bea, prtv cttta. 3 BR 2 •, Del -1 ' R\'! Call Walker "' uc-c four tcJOmbled word• (>. 15% discount. Broker, SBR, new tin& $250 IJdnn, Bellml, wood: rock, Ing rm. xtra lri rooms,•enct , °"' uxe Apt. 'J't
Real Estate, 7682 EdinR:cr IOW' 10 form four Jirnple word1. i14f493-1154. 38R. 28.a. ~ yd. s= ~·· Speetacu1ar I: HUGE. gar \V/stoT&&e. Adults onl,)', ~ase ,::1.~. ~:8' I
Aove.. •rBc,11"1'sh·'30 842-4455. I T U Q l N A I 20% DISC. ht T.D. Seuonecl cEN111RY 21 5tH52I /mo. Yrty. Dave no pell. • ~-•· to ,Ila) pen eves · · well secured. Paya $190. mo. 6'Th-19'12. .f!H..0815 2035 F 11 C M. ...,._...,an.
OWNER transferred. 41 I I I I 12. 10% du~ 1.977. Box 3. Apple l~M:'c 2!3~ duople<.h /-hly $375. 3 BR'• on Klr .. Rd. u erton, • 65-2308 or f13..810. bedroom!!. 3 bath + pool. Valley, 2.\2.3144 •~cora~. 1 w I • Bl'"ll, crplll d-Call FOR parUcular people, Delx BETWEEN Ba.y A Beach 2 Patio. Dining nn. built-Ins. patio, Laund, 5C&-6811, $165 Mr "Gt.raws m:~ mob. home. 2BR, l~ ba, BR. 2 BA. Garage.
dishwasher. Fireplace. ~ar j pita dep>slt. 7:30 to U AM ~ttkdaya. w/w crpt ewry nn., romp. Call 17J..6.132.
11v1 .. rm, hrk $.18,9DO, I 8 E D I A I j [ I~ LOVELY Vu home '"'"· dslt/"1h hid pool, c.-...... -,=;dolc;.::Ml;::::::::.. __ I 842-2561. I .._,_.,. 11! CBR.2BA. elect Jdteh, crpt.!'. UDO Sanda, l Br, 2 Ba, adlts. no petg. $1'15 mo 4 o r
OWNER trt1.n.<dcred. 4 1_-11_ ... l '.....JIL-_.j_, I • .,1·_._ -... .,,_. d1111., $390. 96Z-86041 546-3164 :f1>lc, ::J,wti~ b)ut. ~~'. Seuona ~ Nwprt. MU.132 ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath.
Bednns + pool. 2 baths. ,,.. NICE 3 BR home, dbl car =mo Gt&-75116 1 BR. $140 A: Sll$. Luge. ground Roor. $350 pr. moath m's~~~~ r~Pi~tinrn I F E K u L I HOUMI Furnished 300 gang~. fenced yard. Ptlt BLU~S BA vraoNT Ideal for Bachelors. Adult• next to park I: tennll, caQ
tamll.Y. rm. Brit S35.900. 1--,.-.,......-"T'"-fl-• fothe(o odmistlon• "I hovo ok. 1225 mo. m<i319. Exec . ..,......., 2 BR .. 2 bo. only. 1993 Chtltth SI. "8-96.13 Balley ~ All·
962-UT.I j !• j I hush a.1i.o. lslind EHi Bluff din."'" IS2S Ma.-· l.l:'!l ~~·· drt>t. bll!>S, • GREAT VIEW. 21111. '* ~loun~· yn~:~ ;.~,h.W::: who "'f.: 2 Br., 1 ~ be., yrly. 4 BR l DEN *o~R or 2 •.nrn· 2 '!id: ~t~ Jo. 5. ~'.e Viltft, ~~·:~~ POii
Br. 2 BA, famllY "'°"' ,.,-6"-E_l_H_l_S_.,,tho baby.....," 1·'1 673-!'88 lndMdoal Homo, """'2.1111 1 Pool pn'l ~ 1133J.t.l LRG. dtan BacJ\. Ut!J J»1, 2 Bit Poot. 2 P<t11'e -~!_~hed~~t~ A ~ If.. """"'° ...,.... UfUM llNch "" ti. Unwnlal -...-,. • , 3 BR. 3 ea .,..,,,.,.,... "'°L SllD.~lf ...,. K 1210 mo lncld'r ... .,.. --·· -I I' I I I .. br -.. "" -....... • -... 3. den. Family Frpl. ·-........ Ullf. pd. 543-W!, 66-1391. --· --· :=:i.~ f!:O· 88f'1 . . p dMoalap N 1t19 No. :f ti.to.. $11':1 -Utll Pd. N~ redec. l room pl~~t ~~ din-$475 Month. Aft. SU-4400 2 BR. Trailer $Ul. t BR SO. of Hwy.2 BR, 1
&in.-8Q-tl004. ift PRINT illl.MfJU(O unlRS IN r r I' r I' I st ~'t~. ~i Br. =~kl&ed r:u and= 3 BEACll house•, 3 " 4 BR. ~ii&.'~ child/pm. ~le, tp ~tlo, -"'-=" FUR tale by awntt: 2 a THE.SE SQUARES _ _ • _ • • wfprqe. Cl\lld/s:m! pet. yards. Lovtly p.rdt:. No fJ>I. patk>; Sm-tXI Yl!trly. NICE
1
• B LX ry nn. mo.
\ hOUtel. Q>mcr lot. 2 BR. Winter. peti, . $415 ptt mooth. Call ABBEY ftEALTY 6f2-~ 111.. R F1JR.i'J DP 2 BR, frpl~. new cpta A
$31.S Income. 90t;"r fin. 1229 A UN.lSCORAMllGrr !N's~·.e l(TftRS I I I I I I $225 -1 Br. Nlcely furn. 67s-6668 or $4WSSB, VacJ.nCll.•1 colt money! Rent Quiet. •dull. no P<'tS. nm Pool. Ltue $2.'IO. Delavottt St. $2,850 dwn. V ,. ·l~ • • • • • • F't(llc, aarap. xlnt 1oc, your houM, apt.. •tore 216'ii 16th St &42-.369.1 everything. 6T.J..38SO.
1 BY OWNER 3 Br, 2 BA, new Ocean view!
1
Have M>mtthlnc·)'OU want to bldK., etc. thru a Dally Ptlot LARGE cle1n l Or., 2 Ba. BEAUTIFUL low.r 1-Blt
f'Olal, cpl•. thhwlr. !Im SCRAM•LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFfCATION BOO NU.VIEW RENTALS ,.111 o...tlled Ida do ti Clwllled Ad. S.!I ldlo llems paotl.. UUI pd. Adoltl .,., den. Pallo. No oot..
c.ali@nte. ai.!flO. 96S-0140. 6?:!0\0 or 494--32CS wt:ll ·call NOW I0-5878. now! Call 642o.SSTI Now! 35. ,,,.,. 548-2407, 6633!H. O.K. S200 Mo. tMIJ...10 ' ·-
\' I I I l
•
j
..
• '
\.
'
OAlLY PILOT •
l!ll !....,.._-__.!~.I ........ _ la] _ ... _[51 _ ... _ lltJ[ ~·-"""'--11'1 I ~ ........ -lltl l-·~ ...... --1~ [ ~-.........
l.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~.;;;.;;;.;;;.;;;•;.· ... w iifuij\;'c ~-
.,,. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 :..X.. · Apta., Aph._!!_ . Office Rental 440 ,_ (I-Hsi 550 Coblnol•_!!m~•k~l~"llL;_-l :P:--t~;,:;;;;;;;:.-;,;-i
General Go-•I ~ _,, Fum. • """'"'-310 Fum::O. Unlum.-: sit . . ~--PUMBING REPAIR
COfl,eNA Dl!l MAR ~-~ ~ ~~ ~111 woodwork'; _ ~0Jo1>1oo smaD 1iiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiii roa • '"" -•ooreci••• Huntl°"""' ._., Hunt!"""" llNCh II the unlf4Ua). l & 2 lidrm., 2 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, "-1lOO _.., It. ornc. --· ~~ ....,.. ,~· cabli\el>, panelln(. a<n1 * * 64Wll8 * a i..-e tailom:I to ur ~ colJaJ:, vie, 68th ~ti repa.ln Vince l.cnhoU 1~~,;;.,""'-.;:;;:.=::;_.;;..=d aptu >'ull -Ul'l)'<I W• Newwt Beach. Co I 67)-18>i, &It..-6 536-8<75 ' DRAINS wwtl°"ed -$1.10 VILLA MARSEILLES ba, ""tom •VU. Larae •
SPACIOUS 1 &..2 BEDROOM APT. "'°""'' wide .._.. .. vie•" HllftlNCTON BEA'Cll'S FINEST
Spanish c.ntry Estate Living
•· • ..,"'I t1 ...,. 6$5621. ' se"'•er llnu to 100' • $15. · ,
---~F~u-rni&bed=L.Unfur:nltMd_ Pl'.dma. ~ &. priVftey
Adult living ----,--~-','!!'a<tu Una~~ to ~tw~
w1U• ~:r~ine FOUND: lllk m&leo· ~U)t -=•rpenter • 549.2502 '* :BOY~ttll ·~:l!lll , i'<A"~.""t.I: : Soitlng/Altor-,
Dishwasher color coordinated appliances llboppine. Selection °' "I?
Plush 'Shag carpet -mirrored wardrobe doors-& •'au~. J?arti&Uy
\\'E'IU; IUO\'l~. We netd 646-7021 morninp. ask ioz.· * CARP RY * Al~rotlon-•-.5145 nlOl'e spa~. MuQ sub Tina J.a. It s:m. S$..1648 1• ~
indirect Ii htinzJ!!. kltch1ee~n~·~b~r~eal<~fa~s~t1jb~ar~·-!-f"'"'~!!· ~"51>\':--•-l"<l=-mon=U>lY=..J· -i2~A~c~re~s.. ~autiful· ~k-liko surroundings. hu ge pnva e encea patio . plush land scap-lido Isle Pool;-Sparlll iiililillFO .
ing . brick Bar·B-Ques -large heated pools •Spacious Room.-· • parale Dining
lellSe' • JHl.Yina:' $125, will PEKINGESE J em a I e c ...... nt, ConcNte Neat, ~'aft.~ yel.l'I exp. ~KOtiate prtctt, 830 lq· rt A ~I ' ' $ n " """pot18t'a.Ch Io c . .ii; -Vic 58.1 E. Lil nlOs:PCANTERS -i &~. Palnia. Anahclm. Call All Concrete Wo1·k.. Bdck. MAGNETIC S I & fl.I ..
SPACE NOW AVAILABLE 524-1228 tlum.oetone wk. 894-353.1. ~-onomlca1 Wft1 lo a(!• & lanai. Air conditioning. UPSTAIRS 1 BR, 1 BA, e. Walk in Closets
3101 So. Bristol St., Santa Ana 557.a20I <'P"·Jin· lrple. Adi!>, no • Hom...uke Kitcbens & Cabinet$ Westclitt Building a'REY' cat with ~ «.»liar, CUSTO.M CEMENT WORK ~~ $.10 to SZ pair.
COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. pets, i ..... 6'3-.!8>1. 1 BDRM. Unlurn. •t65. Furn. $185.
MANAGING AGENT MelO Vent. 2 BDRM. Unlurn. '185. • Furn. n 15.
Corner \Velrtclitf Drive It. arttniShJyeUow ~yea, Vic. Orivt.'5, WALKS, pa,tios.l:.'i-""'-·-------1 lrvine 81Vtl, Nev/POl't Beach Elmira A Huntlnatoo, ll.B. Pool decb. Don. 642-851(; Tiie
l~!!!!!J!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!J!i!!!I DELUXE 2 & 3 Br, 1 a.. TOWNHOUSE 2 Bl:i, l~Ba., 1400 sq. ft.
,.A::P;..';..· .:u.c".;..'"=-r_n_. ___ 365'-Apt. Unfum. 365 bf~~ gar~SlOO~~ R~\~ Unfurnis ed '20().
Mr. lloward -. MS6101 W-1998. PATtOS. wttJk# d l Sa
DESK space avllilable $.ill BLACK Iona hatred cat with brellk ""~ ~ ve;epl;; ~C ~ t'IJ~E~OU:
mo. Will provtde fumi~ M~ eyesN~!k.llealrvlnoch concrete. 54-8668.tor e$1. :lob• -·elCome ~
o-,-ALL UTILITIES FREE Corona del Mar Costa Mew 5'16-!034.
at SS mo. Answtt1Jla aervlce 2'ltlcl, ""...... • • • ay&l]aJ>le. 223 Forest Ave., 64>7412. • Child C•re
lliiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiim -h'"E\\I 2 Br., 2 ba., dbl gar. Walk to Huntinrtoo Center
11 KIDS LOVE OUR FUN S2li5 ~C.~1im-""' Adulu, No poi.
LllaW1ll Beoch, '9<-!1166. FND. m_•l•°'P•PPY lrlah Set· WANTED
1 HUNTINGTON BEAQi 350 ::!'mur~· II ~ kle: ...... , ...
MOMS LOVE NEW Newport Beach lA QUINTA HEDIJSA
CARPETS, DRAPES
& 900 aq. ft.. cpt'd, pvt. tlfy, 968-9810 8ft S:30. Babyalltln&. TP.1'¥!f.!:r J..ovtna:I ;iijiijiijiijjiiiijiiii~~~J buth, prtq:, uUl pd., adj. S.~ Cltt. My home nights. Rt."' JI
P.O. S90-$180. Mr. J...ana nf: I pu.ppy, black &: liable, Infant • 2 yrs. S.A. J b W ~• f ,_ 702
Get nlOre out of living this
ON" TE N ACRES year by choosing the family
.\Pl~. /urn. unfarn. Lease SE'<'llon at The Ven-
f,t'<Plar,, priv. pattOs. dome-just one apartment
1'1'10I .. T~·nn1s Contnt'I Bkfst. lt>ft. Pool, play yard plus
11.io St-a Lan Cd!ld 64<!-2611 nl'arby activities kir the
', ,,,,. .. -thur ffl. Coast Hwy) kids. 1500 square feet of liv-. ..:u ing with 3 bedroom&,
I lll"f'place too $206.
PREFERRED al'ea · l'nv., THE VENDOME k1v11v 2 Br., 2 Ba. Crpts,
drps: bltns. \\'/priv. gar. 1845 Anaheim
,\,tnl now. $'2.50. 67$-ISTJ, CaU l\lrs. Phillips 54C>-0'78l
'134.l37. DELUXE
' BR. below Hi.,.,:ay. f'rple., APARTMENTS N.'111n i:eilings . gar. Adults.
S:!Sj, 642·5..iJI e\·es. or 11·eek.
~'nds-
2 bedroon~s each. Bltins,
carpets & drapes. chOice
loeation. Lease S200 pr.
in•)nth.. Cali li;3.s550 RLTR.
:-, 1_· '! BR.. ~ B.-\.,
Yea1·lv lea;;e.
. bT.l·~j
Costa Mesa
. .\ir Cond . F'rplc's • 3 S\vim·
ming Pools • Health Spa -
Termis Courts • Game and
Billiard Room.
I BR. From $160
1 BR. & ·Den From S18S
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2.WO Harbor Blvd .. C.l\J,
l TI4J 5.17-8020 '-;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;I REKTAL Q}~FICE I• OPE.i~ 9:30 A.\I to j:30 P:-.1
* * * SPARKLING NEW
BAY SHADOWS
Apartments
Sparious , Light & Cheery!
ADULT LIVING
1 BR's FROM $157
2 BR's FROM $1n
Bt:'autiful appointments in·
1·l11clt• &rorator Firejl!aces.
Shag Carpeting. Prlvate
Patios. Pool -Jacuzzi .
\'oll1'yball courts . Gas
"BBQ's.
409 BAY St, Costa Mesa
Manager Bldg E-103 * 646 3317 *
~·I o.,, 500 1.111 '"i?' lnd HI 1!re.1m5 W•tll
w•lerfJlh t reate'
tel,ui"E "1-Umg fer
your Jl!KIOU5 new I· or
2·btd1oom ~~rtmenl Sm11t
pth n~. fron\ SI~. Fuu1i!u1e
av•1labl~. Model$ npe~ 9:00
tn 7:00. 2300 f1irvie"I Rd.,
Co~U Me1.1. P~onf: !>45-2300.
3 BR, 2 BA, no pets, $175 mo.
$100 dep.. 1016 El Camino
SI. Cf.1. 557-15TI'
3 Br., 2 ha apt, crpt/drps, &
frpl C'. 2515 Orange. $3XI.
673-0053. •
2 Br, crpts, drps, bltns. Pool.
S145. Avail 1/31. 126 Monte
Vista, Mgr No. 5. 646-635.1..
2 & 3 BR-$150 & $165. $35
dep. NE'Yily redec. Avail
2/1. T;ll Shalimar. 645-0973
$PAP.KUNG ~ BR, l BA, no
pets, 2 kids ok. Refrig &
dh51,·h. $165 mo. ~7129.
* SfUNNING 2 -Br. 2
Ba. Garden Apts. Pool. Rec.
rm. 110 W. 18th SL C.M.
*' 2 BR. l BA. Mesa Vercre. Upstairs. Large closets.
SWO. No pets. 833-8974. •
3 BDRM, 2 Bath
Patio. $170/MO~t.
l\Iesa de! Mar. 645-~
Dana Point
NE\V 2 BR with view. $175.
Collective toll
l TI 4) 968-)563
Huntington Beach
* !\JOVE:;; TODAY *
$139 A MO.
M0--1301 cur y. Tuet, 1116, 130 E. 543-3691. ~ o an,_, ..,. .... 16211 Parksicla lone, H.B. 201b St Cos•a M OCEAN and 2 AOJO!NJNG OFFICES, 6<5-3939." • • ••• COSTA Me.. Pre-School COu.EGE •ludcal (0.C.C.l
714 847 £111 buS)' intenectton C.ht. $90. FOUN. . -· · . . corner 18th&. Monrovia. CM seek8 part Uune ottlce wcrk, . HARBOR VIEW : ".rt't Utll'a Inc:. 642-6560. He I D whole pup vtolnoty 0..., 6:30-ll. Ages U Plan. cl<ciool, P.•.x. etc. Cotta
''Where Cweniality DESK OR OFFlCE SPACE ti~n&Be~~~ ned program, llc'd. 642-4050, Mesa area, Available after-Prev-;iis•• (4 blks. So. ot San Dlego Frwy. OD Beach, In best Newport Beach klc. &'~nt:UY. Eves 83W237. noons 1 pm . Oft: and Satur·
1 blk. W. OD Holt to 1~ Parlcside Lane). Perfect for broker. 64&-4414. FND: Girl's zl Contr•ctor dtl.)'ll. Call Unda $46-4478.
Elegant apartments designed ·Bus.i'nes1 Rent11 445 •/money V1c ~A_PurseBed NEED help at ootne? We with a Master's touch, su· Aph A l.n. H.B ·fM:<>_..i:,.,.Y ._. JACK Taulane .. »-.. ir have Aides, Nuriles, perb house security, exclu· '' pts'4" · ..._.,_.., mod ddl -·-~ I! k ~ -··~ Furn. or Unfum. 311 Furn. or Unfu,,m . 370 "THE .Factory" hu shops FND re .. a t. "" yn. exp. ouse eepers, ........ m_. ...... ns, sive Versailles Club and avail in the mal ranging black-~ male cat -all l'.Jc'd. My Way Co. 547..(X)36. Homemakers, Up john•
pool \vith unique Aquabar, Newport hech Newport BMCh from $80/MO. Ideal tor del Mar.~~ Corona AddiUonJ Remodeling 547-wii. --
fountains and formal gar· I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I book store. ,.....,.; .. ntv card l ( Gerwlck • Son, LlA•.i COLLEGE Student aeed.s dens. All part of the South ~v Ott 555 oc "'"" Coast's finest apartment ahop, etc.. 30th St. -673-6041 * 54~2170 p/time Mon-Fri. Gen'I otc,
community. BEACH LIVING Ne.._ Beach. ~. LOST· vie 8 shard • 1 ~ keypunch & relail exper.
1 Bedroom/studios from $195 500 Sq ft on 17th St ln Costa dia.M.pou .. · H."s. ·-alloc'-n':; ..,ratting .644-1311.aft 12. I N9w You Can Afford) aired ~ -· ru.~ M~e~=rtg ~T. ~usk BACHELOR (Furn} ............. From $195 ~~~ ~. ~~l1g ~. 121'if'Jii__~a:1~\~ ~~r:=iia. ~ ~.o d · Help Wanted, M & ~ 711 '\ '2_,,.,. iff,..., 1 Bedroom ..................... From $180 or ~-963-3222. 5.57--0626 5.57-9695 I I I ~-~ 2 Bedr~ULl.0 'SECU'RiTY · SYST'et°m ~ ~~R~e-~~~~ ~~1:~8f, :i!i1 &now~: Gardening Acco";!!.'1~ tr ca
HEATED POOL or the BEACH s:f. $65. to ·$210,, San Jar. Vic.~aoon sicy, N.B. PROP'ESSIONAL Gardener Adm Sec'y ~pr to= ON THE BLUFFS
AT NljWPORT
F~NewJX>rt Blvd., tum al
Hospital Rood (1 block
above Pacific Coas~ 10
entrance. 900 Cagney Lane,
Newport &.ach, Ca. 92660. Telephone: tn4J &15-0060
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
on the bay
l.u.'WJ'Y apartment living ov·
erlooking the water. Enjoy
$T:il,000 health spa. 1 swim·
ming pools. 7 Ii• bled ten·
nis courts, plus miles of
bicycle trails. putting, shuf..
fleboard, croquet. Junior l 's
from $174.50 monthly; also l
and 2-bedroom plans and
2-story town houses. Elec-
tric kitchens, private pa.'::is
or balconies, carpeting, dra·
peries. Subtemmean park·
ing with elevators. Optional
maid service. Just north or
Fashion Island at Jamboree
and San Joaquin Hills Road.
Telephone <n4) 6"-llW
for rental information
Elevator Annual Lease aemente, &.l&i> 642-'1002 67l-2l85. tree work Pr u n I n g ' Receptionist $650
Adults Only, Sorry No Pets Industrial Rental 450 RALPHS, CM, prkg lot Jan Sprinkle~. , cleanup jobs: ExecA:;i~!f ~1:. Fee
LAS BRISAS READY FEB. I.st, 1973 S. Charter Wom e n s landscapong. George, Bkkpr, F/C 1100
organization 1951. Reward. 646-5893. 1 Girl OWce to $500
5515 RIVER AYE., NEWPORT BEACH LA~.U~ Ntl GUEL PO (lo' JT!4 NPl Bch. . GARDENING .ervlce, com· Clerk Typ~1 145.5
(The New Place In Newport) moo BLACK Kl'ITEN 6 mos. old, plete clean.up work by ex-G. O!c tstat typing) $541 Res. Mgr. Diane & Wm. Sharbaugh 642-"'i:.U: 1600 SQ. IT. & UP. wht. flea collar. Under Vet. per i enc e d, re It.ab I e Free & Fee Positions __,,,, On San Diego ~vay care. 600 blk Center St., gardener. Free estunates RUTH RYAN "GENCY can 831-1600 C.M. 645-1291. ~or 96H832. 1793 Newport-cM 646-48M
Apts., · -FOR LEASE M-1 units 1100 FEMALE German Shepherd,~· 'Haw~an Gardener. 17931 Beach, RB 847--9617
Fur:n. or Unfum. 370 & 2600 sq ft. Santa' Ana 2 yrs. Reddish tan &. blk complete garden serv.l"!''!"!!~~~~'"l'!"l!!!!'l~I
Owner7L4/98i-3196. book. Vic. of Victoria & Kamaltu>l, 646-4676,ACCOUNTINGCLERK Newport Bffch IRVINE Industrial Area, Oak. 642·2314. 642-1337:~ Fee P&id. Beautiful modern ••• .. •••••1 1 -~.:-COCEANFROa;;j;!};;:oNNTrr*;--10,IXD sq ft. dock high, LOST large beige cat vie. Hauling o1fice located in Fubion
A U-.c-365 sprinklers. 540-~. Adams & Newland H.B Island. Great benefits a co. pt. nTVm. Lower 2 BR. winter rental Needs medical 8 ttn : YARD. garage cleanups. ll{Omotesfromwithin .. ~art -s"'a_n_C_lo_m_on_t_e ____ I $225 Mo. U>wer 3 BR., 2 ba .. Rental1 Wanted 460 962-5832. . Remove trees\ dirt, Ivy. swi. Also Fee Pos1uons.
6~~ $300 mo. Agen~ -W-ANTED---.-"··B-uil-. ,-;---,-LOSf-Lge black Husky-type SKIPDrlv;::sAD·ER""'!""'d· 847-2666.k g~~~er~~ ::
NEAR 'beach & town 2 BR, u-.. or male dog w/whlte chest. u.J '°' ump true 2790 Harbor Blvd ·CM.
lndry, gar, storage. Cable 1 _T_un_in_______ Thrift shofi' Low rent. REWARD. 673-lo:ll. "'tlrk. Concrete, asplm.lt '
TV, $160., 310 DeJ ~far, SC, THE KNRIQUE APTS l ~~~Ca~l~-~~~~~I REWARD, white female cat, sawing, breB.king. 114&-TilO. ~ccount Clerk to $525
493-1119. ADULT living, 00 pets. I : with Dea collar. San LOCAL moving & hauling by Figure ap . ···.Call Lonalne
San Juan Cepidrano Spacous 1 bdn::n apt front ~ ll iii14J Clemente. 49:1-5424. ~~ ~Jmk. Re"' p~:t~ncy $145. per mo. Util pd, LOsr Sl~e Dec. 1. Lrg Red 16.51 E. Edinger, S.A. NEW 2BR condo/water pd. heated swiming pool, 2 · Male Ir1Sh Setter. Houtecleantng~ (Mark m Center) ~~32i~Pas!!~~ :~~ :~. f~~ed:' -soo Call ~s-3612 HOUSE 'OF ClEAN S42-8i36
493-7078 Comer of Newport Fwy & Announcements LOST;!Jdo I~eped. Female cat, THE PROF'ESSIONAL ACT NOW-Represent Sarah
McFadden on lS69l Tustin gtey" tiger Su• ' CLEANING SERVICE Coventry in your afta. Ne ~m. or-Unfum. 370 iv~w~ag~·~w~.,~·~826-423:1~.~~~ Do~~'!!~~~~~~e~. It ~ 67>l7R2 1~'b: 6~r~27d ~'!Yt~.tm~'tN~;ntNt!
------~ l ApM't!Tlftlb for .....
~ it's stageworthy, the Irvine Iii-) OFFICE CLEAN.ING TOO! add to' your famlly ,mcome. Corona dal Mar I( &) Community Theater wtll • lllltructiol '-'=~-"::'7=':i-~'7--~I Phone 892-533.1 or 8,36..7826 . ._.. ,-take it off your hands. We ';;;;iii;iiijiiiijiiiijiiii~-~I Fair Price Cleaning or 646-0882. Yearly-Bayfront 2 _ 2BR apts, Unfurn annual, need couches, chain, tables, • Compwle1e. Home Cle~ 1,A;;D,,;V;;E~R"T"°IS"'t"N"G~S"A"L"'E°"S
3 Lovely new un!urn. apts. furn. until June 15. rugs, etc. can Tom Titus at Schools & Floor axing -Wuxlows Fonner Yellow Page or mag·
3 • 2 BR 2 •-ch Pi 673-3121 557.7297 atter---5 o'ciock. , Rug Shamp(IO -Walls . '"-le °' ·· ua.. ea • er ~-~~--·---Rooms 400 instrudjgns 575 Free est lic'd insUrt"d wne space e?'~· 'y"' or & slip. Many extru. lmmed. Cotta Meu ' " -" female. Comm. vnly. $m. occupancy. I ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:; ROOMS $18 "'k up w/kit. 1 .~. DO-ES---your-.--dog--need-536 8884 968-0951 $300 wkly avg. Call tor appt.
call: 673·3003 673-8086 Eves. r. $32.50 wk up apts. Children Perl0!1* " training. School for pups & Dedicated CIHning 646--0536.
CONLDCVAETNllOENNT ~le:.t ~:,n. ffl!i:tr5rt, '-------' adlt dogs, Martincrest Ken-* WE 00 EVERYTHING* AN~~o"'H°'r"'o-,,o"rL-,co""". -,o"'tt"'erc,l associated
B~OKEA:S-REAL TORS
202~ W Balboa 67)·?66)
nels, 5!l&-0989. ' Refs. Free est. 646-2839 opportunity for high Income
Quiet & comfortable aduJt 645--3967. Parsonalt 530 Xlnt Housecleaning PLU.s cas~ bonuses, ~n-
Iuxury apartments 2 BACH apts. 2 bllcs from ---------·Ii '-i~ By Day. Own Transl)Ol'talion vention 1T1ps an~ fri~e
Only two available H.B. pier. No pets. $70 &: * HINDU SPllUTU .. , •c..... * Ser'flc9 --. * 83&-0648 * benefits to mat~ man 1n 2 Bedrooms & 2 baths $80. 1st &: lat mo's rent 1 ~' Costa Mesa area. Regard· * 2 WEEKS FREE * Shag carpets, built-ins req'd. CUtil pd.). Student Let his ad change your · Prof. Car.,-t Cleaning less of experienre, air mail.
Park-Like Surrounding Vista del. Mesa Gas & wa1er furnished ......... ,.d, ""'" ,,.,......_ whole outlook on life for the I ••••••••••!Also indows & floor are n...... Am I .,....... .-nNUU better Prole·-•---• .., ........ I' w · c · -L. F. Read, .-,-..,.,, er· QUIET DELUXE Pool, garages and ,_,..... ••'-"'" B b I Call Dutch 537-1508 can Lubric-ants Ol., Box 696,
Spat" 2 & 3 Br. in 4-plex.
Several avail. AU. EX·
TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. ~
\\'elcome. From $139. See
Mgr. 17371 Keelson "B" 1
blk W. of Beac-h Blvd. off
Slater. 968-7510 or 847-4260.
1, 2 & 3 BR APTS OVER -62 ? ? ADULT GARDEN HO:\IES n1any more fine features PRIV. room & bath for on life. Lie. Readings daily. a YI tting Dayton, Ohio 4540l.
Pvt Patios * lltd Pool UNDER 35 ? ? IRVINE AVE. AT J\lESA Resident Mgr. 645-5780 woman. Kitchen privileges. 10 AM·lO PM. 49'J-9136. I T Nr.Shop'g *AduUsonly Moveinw/de{Xlsitsonly 2311ELDENAVENUE Pool. Newport 'area. 492-903f,312No.Elcamino BABYSITTING exper1_nc_o_me __ •_• _____ 1 A.ISO 1-~urn Bach. Apts " IN BETWEEN ? ? l Br. $160 2 Br. $200 $!!15 Unfumished ot ~1517 ~al. San aementc. mother, rny home. Fncd yd, Sm1'ley Tax Serv1'ce M • • Apts. 2 BR. -$144 Day & Night Security, Pool, $245 Furnished PRIVATE room & bath. PROBLEM Pregna C.on hot meals. reas. Nr Whittier art1n1que ALL UTILITIE.5 PAID. Fountains. Rec. Bldg. w/ HARBOR Kitchen and 1 au n dry fident, s y m P :~et 1 ~ Sehl. C.M. 642-6~7.
1777 Santa Ana Ave., CM VILLA YORBA exercise rm, billiards, col-privileges. working woman pregnancy oounseling. Abor· Bathtub repair e 15 Years LOCALLY e
'1gr Apt 113 646-5542 842_9622 or TV. Ea. Apt. has dish· or school $85. 586-0996. tion & ~do tlons ·ref. AP· & rtfinithing ree Schedule
N D pl \\•asher, refrig, "'ag opl, & CARE Mailed On •-uesl -ew u exes--...,...,...,...,...,...,...,..... UPSTAIRS iurn. liv rm. BR · · · · ·~ -= prt patio or deck. 5454855 & BA. sep ~try. no ~k· PALM & CARD READINGS REFINISH in white or color W. A. SMILEY, C.P.A.
• 3 Bdrm, 2 BA ·••••• $295. * FRESH AIR ing. $85/mo. ~3489. TeJJs Past, Present & in your home or business. 642-2221 -Message · 646-$66
Teenager or Infant OK. \Valk 3 blocks to Beach FOR LEASE REALTORS Future (2l3) 694-1.350 Fully 543-5470 'IU. Inc. e 2 Bdrnt, 1 BA •...•. Sl9S. Lrg 3 BR. Apts. Newly Luxury Bayfront Apts. SINCE 1944 Guett Horne 415 lie.
Beaut., spacious apts -673 4400 B i S. I Fenced yards. patios and decorated, w/w crpts, drps, 1 & 2 BRs. S350 to $550 • ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Ut ne11 rv Ct
quiet privacy. Adults, 00 bltns, except ref ri g. George Williamaon Phone 542-7217 or write
pets. 642-4837. . SZ50/mo. No singles, no Realtor LA MANCHA * Priva,. Room * P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa.
2MO FulJerton St. rat Bay) pets. 53&-l7J1. * 54U57Cf * Brand New Deluxe Units tor SWINGING SINGLES
* BOOKKEEPING * Full or part. Call Rene
493--0407. OOfore noon
e INCOME .TAX e
Western
Management Services
Professional Staff ,r,or;1able Rates
QUIET n e i g h b 0 r h 0 o'd 2 BR. Luxurious Apts. Furn Rent now for your oon-Ambulatory Lady or Man Call Jim 3-9 fM ,
overlooking Back Bay. 2 BR. or Unfurn. 2 BR + Den. OCEANTFRONT condo. 3rd struction allowance of 1 Good, nutritious Food. 5.19-312'l C1rpet Service orA mi Ope 9 AM-8 PM
Heated pool, v.·/v: crpt'g. \Vet bar, (Tplc. Sauna. Pool. floor. Fantastic view ocean mo's free rent. l BR, l BA Nice, cheerful atmosphere. COUPLF.S PARTIES ..... n. n
ri rps, w a 1 t> r p 8 id . Jacuzzi. Full ~reation. & bay. Unfum 2 BR, 2 ba, & den, 2 BR's & 3 BR's * Call S48-47S3 * Call PhU 3 to 9 PM JOHN'S Carpet &: Upholstery 438 N. El Camino Real
Re11sonable. 2455 Irvine, facilities. From $205. frpl c, all bltns, crpbl, drps, From $155. · Dishwasher, SJ9.3344 Dri·Sh&mpoo free Scotch· San Clemente, 492-6766
;\1gr Apt H. :i.tlt-7476. HARBOR LIGHTS APTS. parking \\'/sec urity . Garbage disposal, all unitA!. guard {Soil Retardants). Janitorial
BACH 1 2 3 BR lbiOO Saybrook Lane, HB. Nothing like it in town! $425 Encl gar, swim 'g pool. Rentals to Shire 430 Be a Hotliner at Home Degreasers & all oolorl ---------
• ' ' 846-33<11 & util. 642-3392. BBQ'11 Pets acceptable. C~ ~~~~l~~ brighteners .·& 10 minute J EFF'S CLE AN I NG
frplc. pool~. sl'curity guards. 1~ mi. north of Huntington Yf;S!! WE TAKE PETS!! 642-2007 T18 Scott Pl .. C.M. MAN. straight. to $bare 3 BR bleach for white carpets. SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL,
HARebR ~R E ENS Beach. $140. 2 BR. Bltns, I 2 \'leeks Free Rent tool Under New dplx nr ocean. Bal Penin. SocliJ Clutn· 535 Save your mooey by saving COMMERCIAL. 646-6334,.
t'rpts, drps, pool, play yard. Pool. Rec. Bldg, dshwhr. M•na.gement !$125~.!Clo~Ju~ne~15::!.:;673-3036~~"-,,_-I "'-;,;;.;;;;...;;;.;..;.;'-----"-;.. l!'e extra triP!I·. Will clean M4'i0riry ==~~=0~3_7_1 ___ 1 Lndry facil & carports. Cpl. 2 BR. $200. 1 BR. $100 CASA VICTOR!(\ FEM.ALB 23 looking Jor FIND YOURSELF living nn., dining mi. &1---''------I
DELL'XE 2 Br., l H Ba. & 2 sml children ok .. No VISTA DEL MESA 545-4855 1 &2 Br. Furn & Unlurn. female roommate at JN SOMEONE ELSE ~ch ~0. ~ ss.· if:!'. Brlck-Block·Stont
Airporler
Opposite
Orange County
Airpart
HOSTESS
<Courntet Dining Room)
Also
BUSBOY
Apply In Per&0n-
18700 MacArtlwr Blvd.
Irvine, Cali!. Stud io on dead-end· street pets. Call 842-4664. O c EA N FRONT-NEW 4 Carpets, drapes, D/W. TV g~IB33Apts, Newport. DISCOVER exp. ta what counts, "00t 64f>.8266
crpls . drps, pool. hltns, WALK TO BEACH bdrm. Beams, wood, rock, ant. Pool etc. Come By & ='=="':"7~~· =----,,--,:-;; DISCOVERY method. I do work myseU. Paintl-& Equal Oppor. Employer ~riv. pa1 ti~~s!nl~; l child ok. Ne"; 1 & 2 br., cpt/drp., glass. Spectauclar & HUGE. Inquire about our Mow-in 3 BalR. house,\81fare1 __ ,_wfl
0
Call'
2 ~;4"351885~~~;;;;~213~-387~·~&'9~3;'.,.~Good::;;;re~f,~531~--0l~OJ~.;;;;;;;;;;;:l-:~P~•~-;""'~m~e;~~l;9:;;~;;-l ~~~~;~~[!l'.!~I · 0 P£-' $. ,,.,, ..... rl \\.hr . . frpl. 316 16th. $500/mo. Yrly. Dave , Allowance. 525 Victoria St. m e or eHuuc:L ,..-APT Manager for (6) 1 hr
Slj9.50 \.ERY NICE. Sep. !H7-3957. 675-1972, 49t-0015 --at Harbor, CM. 642-8970. 642--4.1'19 aft 5 PM. CUSTOM PAINTING units, Iii blk ocean. Hunt.
howie, 2 Br. l Ba. crpts. N'°''E,o~,cv=1 ."2-.~,-B~R.~~-~,~h ADULTS ONLY THE EXOTINC 2 Cirls will share 3 Br apt lnterlExter. Unt:am. Inter. Bch. Middle age pref'd. $50
drpg, aduhs only, no pet.. Apts. Fl-om 115.5/per mo. 4 DELUXE 2 BR.-$185 PALM MESA APTS. Cdw/MsamCale., ~·l~to beach, Trader's DK;rad1'se· spec; prloe. Fr .. color con· off renl. 53&-3400 or 637-<043 ~~ Santa Ana Ave, blks from water. Mgr. Oshwhr, frpic, swim pool. MINtrrES TO NTP. OCH. . v,., . .,,~,.. rCll sulfing & est. Uc. Ins. aft 6.
\\'anted. Tobin Realty, ~342 Santa Ana Ave. Bach, l & 2 BR. From $145 0.rages for Rent 435 Wotl.'t be underbid. ~. =,A,.;R"C"H"l"'T"E"C"T"°l./"RA='L-I t~:\'TRA NICE 1 BR. 1 ha. 846-3371. 1--:'"7-"''="""'""'""c,,.-Adults; ·No Pets. I' N w ti DRAFTSMAN
ne11.· PQint. erpts, dr'ps. Pool. I 2 BR .. pd I hild Sublte Pk Newport 1561 Mesa Or. GARAGE For Rent, 3100 w. Ines 0 .. '\(_ Bar-B-Q & lndry rm Nr , gas & "atcr . c 2 hr 2 Ba unfurn top Door (S blks from NIW.1p0rt Blvd.) Coast Hwy. N.B. FjlejnA: * WALLPAPER * E11tabUshed interior design
ahop'g 1:..-ho<ii. Adults.only: j ok. No pets. t'rom $140. beaut bay view. near spa 54&-9860 . Lido Isle, S30 per mo. ~Ex· When )'OU call "Mac" flnn in N'pt Beach area
•,,,.. """-~ • 17622 Cameron St. or I d '" •442 47 cellent for atorina 00..t ti' mes 543,;14-44 646-lID now In planned expansion, <=. '""""'.:> !W2-1652. no c ng ~p . ......,..., x · EXTRA LARGE-t-Br. New ,..,. ..-r. k r1---~ d-' ---gear • .,_.._.., p'.ln.M"TNG k PAPERING, see ! e:xpe <;lll,,."ll\l lOltl--t:XTRA. Nli...c.. 2 BR, 2 ba, SPACTOlrS new I BR Dsh-0CEANt1tONT ~ 2 · BR. crpt, paint, heated pool. NE\Y storage garages, 3 ro~:.:..~fnJlarbor 11.t"e&. Lie man bt interior archlteciur.
ne"A' palnl.. ttPts. dtps. Pool, I h t....'.. ,_ ,1,...: Garage. $325/mo. Yearly. From $140.-Matu.re adults, ,_.. 1 bll hornet "'" al detailing 54G-2860 2:11) Bar-B-Q & lndl'y qn Nr 11.·!1, r, 're. crp~. "'t''" gar. 1''urn or Unfum. Call Infant ok. No pets. 1887 g._s, or mo e • dollars & bonded. Ref's furn. ' ,
gbop'g, bra<:h. Adults ~nly. Nr Hti Harbour. Adults. &45-8008. Monrovia, G45-2l'l'.t. ~-tt,lM'I & ~ .5.48-9766, 642-23$6. Fl&cher, C.M.
JI"' ·~-~. S36--02ti!I or 2131434-8249 V'lr """~ In "'" ASSEMBLERS-Growth o""-.....,.....,,'1-BRAND New Oceanfront l BR. Adults. 1 blk to bl!l.ch. PROF. Pa ter '"'nest work. . . ..-
•J«> · 2 br 3 FURN. or Unturn. -2 BR, Condominium. 2 BR. 2 BA Sha ~ ,_ N ....t. Office Rent1I '40 "----"'.'------------""I ,..,, llc'd I fn~. Int I ext. portwuty tor penon with • u;i ~-br 11' ba ahag crpl'g & blt·l1". 1 hlk g Cr'P·a·• ..... l''" 0 .......... free est. Refs. 54&-2'159. atronc mt>eh~ aptitude.
por.d., cpt/drp, ,b!v1,. pl)'Jl;m'.I, to 510~ From SI~. 7731 $400/mo. Year 1 ease. $13.5. 3>2 14th St,.. 5.l6-<l3S2. DESK mace' avatlabl~ $50 '72 • 30' • 5th wheel trlr. '72 HAVE 10 actts In Fresno rucsembl)' &: &bop exp. re· mz Coflrtt. No. 5 ..• ~m Ell;· or -11 M~. 0 00 1831. 675--7694· 2 BR. ~m 0 175. ~ ulil. W' __ .,_ ··-'•"-' j k APT 1NTERJOR ~ 1--' ~·. I -· ' I ~ u ..... 1 N I ,.~..._,....,,. ... .... a· ....-... u • r•-= JnO.-' 1 .,. ......... -i.w .. ,. ..... Chev. -T. true. Pl)""·rr Co. Vahie $1.000 per ac. · . , qu1'1:'1.1 • ......,, n11u umen .,.,,,, -.. e, ' o. . •. .,,.,.,-_..,. NE\V 2 BR, 2 ba., dbl. gar. Pool. Encl gat. DMWht· 241 at $5 mo. Ao8Werinl se:rvlr.e plant. deluxe model11, Ukl! Wanl lnt'Ome property in A carpet cleaning. Refs. :-Corp. 2034 Plactnl1a, C.M.
SEW 1 BR's from $171)..SOO 2 WEEKS FREE RENT$ .:1 $265 mo. yearlv. Avocado St. CM 646-1204. availat)J.:!. !~Beach Blvd. "" $14,000 eq. -•e for o-·~ ~-. Lee II"""'"'" FREE ESTIMATES 642-7958 642-8080. s ..... ,. .. • -~-· Ad 111 81'. Frplc. shag crpt, 155. . Cali 673-9545 l •-m.• .... ,"~ \.N "6""" iJA uc-£" · "'""'~!· ~M: 539-1661, ~s PM. Huntlneton leach lJunttnaton eh. &C-C.l21. property or ?'f 5.16-3652. Rlfr, 499-1731. or 833-1355. PROF. fainting, ala> roofs. .Equal Opportunlry Empl?}y fl ~ 2 sn 2 BA DI =•r 6'.1-3 BR. 2 BA, lrplc, blt·infl, 1 1---''------N'&AR O.C. Airport. botel, WILl. trade •l -beautttul HAVE m·· """· ---t '64 accous. ccll. lnt.U/l'lll:t(!t. ASSOCIATE or partner, full ....,,,,,_ ~ · x '~ -·~· Id blk from bea h BRAND Nl!W-· Ix I "" ~"~ Lk/lns Free ..t 645--5191 _ Near Sch. t1S5. Can be 111111 yr o • c -rcstauran~. 0 • ce, m~ acre View lot1 WhltUer Volvo sedan: runa 4 runs, · · • or p/time to rnanftle small
LOVELY 1 Br Apl. Near ~ 2320 F'lorjda shop'g. Call Lynn. 61$oo:.1994 QUO VADIS Ill med. · • Lowest area. on 6-8 units In New-eager for more. Netd or· BIG Disc. -W.P. A labor, Real Eltate otc In N.B.
OCC & UCI. No pets. $135 • · -· JlJ CUOICE beach apt•t 2, 3, 4 Luxury CIU'dtn APt.s. rates. 21 u Po n t ' port Beach area. Pollock, gan, bdat mooring nr Bal· caU for aampltt It nt., The HVR, 9'19--SZ2. · c.au mlJllt _lrv_.-.._m_e _ _.-._ . .__ ___ _.._1 BR..-$215-to·J850 ~any Baebelnr;...:. Ac-2·Btva. -__m.3221 Aa;ent, Ct14) ~95.00. boo Is. or boat. 673-3342.. Hana.men 547·5"46. A~CI'JVE sum gtrl1 , ..
2 BR. Aduli., no ptb. BAY 1 BR. 1~ Ba. NEW. rut.in,,, ABBEY RE.(LTY 642-'381JO ___ .fRum_$1 3:S== N&WIWR.'LCEN'l'.ER..... OE-$li000.--eq IA-< W~~ PAPERHANGERS _ _Worn n, lo demonatrate·ncw
MEADOWS APT. -m W. Pool. 10 min. from UCJ. S.n Clemente Htd .Pool·J,aCU2l-i·Saunas &1blease. l or 2 dbc view bdrm home, COUep Park, Orangt I RJvenlde / .. San ~tie" "Oft -=fiiOCl"-phXhid-1n----m~
Bay St. CM. 646-<d13 $210/mo. 642~2657. Re~auon. Room .\ Mort! ottJeeti. Aeetttarfat &l'C&. Venture., Calif for 1lm\lar D~ COunty !Or ottlce/apt. iteuon. ~ 646-Ul9. Own tram. P/Ume $S0 Pf
2 BR. unturn. Opts. drpc, le""un• Bee ch WE care •\ Casa COnteplt. .Multi Only • No Pett Xerox & parklna. 644..(023 eqty in hou11e or condo, lnconlt unltt . .f31 rah· Dr. EXPER. pelntcr Extcr a.nd wk. $~. -ra~lovtn, n?frig. No peta. • Cr8.dou& lv:lll( in ~t IMMEDIATE AP 4 'Or !S ofc tu.ilea $315. Of· Co!lta Mesa. $48.6U3. •2G41 Costa Mesa 979-3988. Inter. Rt.u. i-atet. Call A/P1yabl• to $13,GOp
tl40/rno. 968-14~. LUXURIOUS ocean ttpJ, 2 atta wlt.b oct&n VU. 2 2 OCCUPANc:Y !ice $70. Deak ....,,... $t0. '23' All alau Sloop SMilor SRA.CIOUS 2 story 2 BR, Dick, 9fiS.4065 eves. • Fee Paid 1 BA c olor c o-ord t-. ..... -~ ~· H --· tJon LARGE 2 BR. crpts, drpt, Br, 2 Ba, $425. or v.•/fum. cpts/drpt;/dlWSbr A fal'C'!· 18992 Flo~"'· w/kitcl\/bat •... 1 ... "lad OU cng, fully eqtlipt, l'ii BA. bll··lns. frplc, etc. Plat.ttr Pitch Rapiir tavy con~uuc ~·l 11r. Emlll!Ail Ml 11ebool. tm-1070. 1.4le din area, open btam <it blk. W. of ~IU'field 979-3988.-• $C8,000. value. Will trade AdUlt community. 'f'raae ' ' Other Fret It Fee Poslbuna
Older pref'd. Sl.3$. 613"4:145. OCEAN view lcaM-• 2 &: 3 t:till.na:, prtv t.lcony, l'tCl A and Bea.C"b Blvd.) AnY day Js the BEST DAY to for l('Lf;(l()r'ltalDed camt)C!l' for hoU.tc or u.nllJ. * PATCH PLASTERING RUTH RYAN AGENCY
Pers, 2 kids ok. Relrll & BR. 2 BA. New. Blk to bch. lanndry. Adulta, no pets. A ROOd want ad 1a a aoo<S Lr nm an adt Don't dela,y. ~ • l)t" town houle, 4:9J.12+1. · 963-2187 All t,yptt. Free estl,matea 1793 Newport CM =
Dl)hwhr. $16$. mo -..7.129 S.245 \IP· 494-3383,_ 494-2119. 492--2'159, 49>0464. '-'-='-="'"----=--.call today 60-561& ~ C.lt ~ lT9.11 ~8.Ch, JIB 811 -'
1, . j •
,
2
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•
•
0
1
5
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/ I •
. / -Mond4)', JanLIM)' 22. }qJ3 DAILY PILOT J!IJ
·I . ' [IJ] -. ... , ....
I . rm 1 ....., .... -1[Il] 1 ~ ...... ;;, .... ;;;;;,[IJJ;1 ~1_ .. _ ...... _ .. ··~~~'[IIJ~• ;;;;1 .. ~...., ...... ~'rm~i 1~ 1
I Help Weni.d, M a ,. 71@ .ip Wanltd,M' " 710 Help Wontocl, Ma F. 710 H_e!p W•oted,)\.l.J' 110 Help Woni.cl; M' F 710 Help Wonted, M ' F 710 Help Wonted, M ' F 710 Htlp Wonted,},\' F 710 f:Ui'iilfure 110
-I~
ADVER=G SAW Gl!NEl!;t.L HELPER · MAIDS WAHTED NURSES' alWI exper. pm. Rocept Sec'y to.$650 s,;;:~ St•/ lo n WOMAN to iron ur hotru: 6 Natural . Teak Captaln
.1 to twltt In the IUpply lYOm, Maturi, ~r .. PJ.rd. Full 0.11 thlfts, exttllent ~ AN.iat suPer cturnninll A In-belll'fill. Exi!~'iref.d.~ Will deliver 'l° pick-up: ~!:!';.;· 8i'ic~ernt'W u'~ INEE pick-up 11uppl1e1 lrom vt'.n· Time. See PertollDel Man-conditions. Beverly ~ tertxtlng boss 111 top 11at'l & pt ume: iwail. Apply Shell Penln. a~a. 673-5990 alt S. Redecorating $50. ea.Ch. 2518
You're the need if you have ambllion dun: he v.'IU 0000 ll good &:er.Balboa n .... Club Conv. HOlip., ~ Via 1lrrn. M~t & 1treet cllent,s & Station, 17th & Irvirie, N.8, \VORK a t home.phone Sltlea. A Elden C.M, 645-UM2.
and dolrt min king . The DAU. Y PILOT drtvrnl( record. Ctlll Cor 11P-1221 ~ ~':· Lquna Hilla. heU> keep th1!1K11 inc_ivinit. SERVICE Sla Att nd t" Exper. prel'd, Call Collect ltwtlr 115 --l-"t>•t'1ed!d~' o-+-'e~-.,,.~. intmcnl. W. Coo.st ffwy., NU • Need lite ill. Great rru~s. · e an · l:-'jj""iji'jj""ij.:ljj'[i''jjiiiiii~~;;;;;'";::;;,°';:;:~~-1 '' o-a-o., · w • ~u wo "~····r-r MAINTENANCE N NURS D· SC-Ciill 557"122: · · · · A~ly:ll " adverlls~g business and eventualJy call on GENERAL OWce-M11$t type. AP u. rt m., n t C.OtnJ)lex. ing 7-3: . J. :30, !~iga!I ~~botw Pewrsonncl t!lfl~:; ~e~i!:~~l~1 . 51 1~1?,!~~se~e""~::it· ~~ automotive, real estate and other accounts. Hrs: 7:304 pm. Banquet 1'horoughly experienced in t/time. Parle Lido Conv. ..enc~ ~ · arner, · eJO. f'lrt... f~~' reservation. All new Great opportunity tor right ~on. Good .. ,.. Salea Office. Apply ~wn 2"" electrlcal le plumbing. Own 1-losp, 466 Flagship, N.B. SUlte ' :s.A. SERVICE Sfa. 3 Island ~ V jewf!lry, rings, bracelets,
c:omr:::y emp1o"e .... nrograllh-ou ar-&-en-----pm, Mm....Wataon. A.il.Wrter -...StllArY-mmomn. -OF.EICE___Nw:ae:LVN-RECEP!:!ONrsr.i.aw Offire: _salesmen . needed. --Apply . i.,-9!f\tft91t-4>1..,,...,.,..i,>+--I , ._,, I n Hot<I 18700 Ma-•·u °"=· 71 --••--• "''·Ian· L Starting tng necessary.----etiOt'ii! ~tton-----ii:t 17th ' , ..-.. ;_,. thus a.stic, reliable, dependable and capable, ffivc1 NB• """" iur 'norM ~"'°"' $500"' Mm--Fri: 64G-OSOO Irvme Costa Mesa. , dian jeONetry ... .,..... ......
apply: G1RL FRIDAY Malntenance-Floort 9~. mo. an--RE.SIDENT mgr., rt't. ('()Uple SERVICE Sta. Attend. full & Antiques 800 ~!~~1 n;:l~~· J~~~ Personnel Dept. Cust. Serv --s·~ + Houseman, cxper. ln rug OPERATORS ..IR_, ____ .. ,_ to 11'1.!UW.ge 5 apts/San P/time. Apply G04 So. Coast SCRAM LETS 642-7251 . .._,,.,. _, shampooillg&fioorcare,F/ · • • .,.....ie ·~ Clemente 49Ul646 Hwy,Lag.13ch. • · ~-~-----=! THE DAILY PILOT f,,'fi~~~~ Toro ~i:s time: day ahllt. ~all acute overlock. Z!pperiftcrito1r,P 8.17-8012. ' SEW 1 NG ~1 ACH 1 NE • Machinery 816
330 W. Bay St., Cost·• Mesa Plush oU1ces S455 care hosp. Pacifica Hosp., ~. e::r·Pt!t~don Pl
1
RESTAURANT OPERATOR wanted. ANSWERS HOBA~T 300Amp wleder on -Legal Trainee $A50 181?2 D e 1 a w are ' H.B. NB ' ~ ' BWI men,. \\'aitreSS(l's & Ca ll ~ 4 \\'heel trlr. $250. 1 Help Wanted1 M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Receptionist $450 S42-06ll, ext. 24(1. • waiters. See Miss McLeod 645-1517 * Great Benefits $41S MA I NT EN A N CE f.fan PAINT Sprayer & Belt after 4pm. • Quaint -Abide -f1uke -AVON CALLlNGI RIVIERA EMPLOYMENT wahted, 40 hrs per wk. Sander Wanted for Orange BEN BROWN'S Sr. Electronic Sleigh -QUIET Mlscellan•ou• Ill
EDP TECHNICAL AGENCY INC Salary open. Contact George County Furniture fiffg. S T h • • / FathE"P"s admission: "I To help wilh thool after-the-I 2082 Business et? Dr, Ste. 290 Smith Gil Lldo Park Dr, Great future & company RE TAU RANT 8C 111c1an have w pay a v."Oman hush
h0lldb.y11 hllls. A splendid Support Specla list lrvine 83.1-94l0 N 8 call ft 5 benefits.Domino Industries, 31100 s. Coast H""'Y· Jr. EnCJineer nioney. She'' the nurse who
STEH.EO, 1973 G arr a rd
nlOdel. Systemlzed auto
chnnger, 200 watt am./tm
receiver. J en 1 en air
suspension speakers I: ta;e
deck. Still brand new la
box. Was left W)Clatmed on
layaway: Now, $134. Oedlt
1~arn.hli.OPPC1ctun.ity in your (Orange Co. Airport Areal s.is--iS: a er pm, 17672 Armstrong, Irvine. South Laguna keeps the baby QUIET."
OWl'l neighborhood. N~ Beach Financial d 25-35-Part 557-&152. RESTAURANT Book.keeper ~7041' Services JnstituUon l\a.s Im· G01:1' 1;/'ui::~ . open· MAINTENANCE work. Man PART TIME wanted, 5 days .,,,.k, Apply in Profresstve electronic & ANTIQUE
BABYSI'ITER. I mediate opeoi.na:. Yoia will mln!Jnum 1 year college & tor p/time . Apply COUNTER GIRL person aft 2 pin, The Ji'ive mediCJl.i .dia~stic in-SHOW & SALE
u t ge n t y provide tecimic81 au,pport to lite typi .. -skill. Need Sl:verwoods, 45 Fashion 0"e• 21. Apply In person Crowns Restaurant, 3801 E. ~trumSa ""t taAntion lttrmd . located! $3,000,000 Display needed. Mature & depend · r e a o l v e o p e r a· "• Island, NB y • Coast H Cd1'.t N hone 1~ . n a a s ~Sll'OUS <! 100 Antique Exhibits able, Mon-Fri, own trans. tional hardware or eoftware creaUve penon to learn M A N A G E R Tr a 1 nee only after 2 pm. Deli Shel, alls wyted · 0 P h~rmg an. electronic techn1· Long Beach An'na dept. (1141 89J.-050l. ~
HB area. Ba--1976 problems plus develop pro-camera-graphlc art & script Salesman far .taat growing delicatessen Restaurant. c accep · c1an .w/mm. ol 5 ~ ~nalog Ocean & LonJi: Beach Blvds .
BARMAID-wanted, various 'di.iction and testa schedWing writing, Phone 8am-8pin, Tile & Home Improvement Brookhurst & Adams, Hunt-RN Supervisor Lor snmll &. dJ~lal exper. X1n t co. Jan. 25, 26, 27, 28. *AUCTION*
shifts open.· Utt.le John's methods Jor OS en· Corona del Mar, 615-3648. Center. Nationwide ex-ington Beach near Sav-On nursing home in beach area. benefits. Sa I a r y com· Tiiurs/F'ri/Sat 1 pm _ 10 pni
Inn, 20072 Santa Ana Ave; vironment. Girls-Women pansion program otters xlnt Drugs. ... can TI4: 49'HI075 for appt. mensurate w/exper. Sunday 12 to a nn1.
F1ne Fumiture
& Appliances
Auctions Friday, 7:30 2-tn.
Windy's Auctioi;s 114'11
2075~1 N('Wport, CM 646-8688
Beh.ind Tony's Bldg. Mat'l
O'Keele & f.1erritt buill·ln
used dishwasher. Good work·
ing condition, Avocado. $35.
Portable Singer Sew In I
~lachlne with attachmentl,
$00. Phone 633.93)4 after
4:30 p.m.
S.A. Apply In person Essential . requirements in· FUll or p/tlme doing pleas-opportunity for advance-Pt/time help delivering & RUBBER press operator ~ Send ~ime of background * ANTIQUES 20% o~FF
llam-2pm. nsi ant phone WQrk in our of. ment. Earnings over $10,000 picking up cara. Must have Will . train. ~teady V.'Ork, "'/salary requirements to· Antiques for Intl'riors 3St5 E elude exte ve OS opera· flee. Guarn. salary + gen· 1st year. Ph 645-1126 or ap. drivers lie. Apply 1643 benefits. Willing ~o work ' Cst Hwy, Cd~! 675-1515.
BOOKKEEPERS &
ACCOUNT
CLERKS
VOLT
ln&tMt Personnel
r ' Temporary Service
1 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106
Newport Beach 5464741
1 Equal Oppor. Employer
, Bookkeeper
1 AUTOMOTIVE BOOK·
KEEPER
.1 With REYNOLDS &
R E YNOLDS experience.
Contact MARIAN PJ\lt.
, RISH. DUNTON Jo"'ORO,
1 2240 S. Main, Santa Ana.
BOYS l GIRLS
1 Wanted for Newspaper routes
' ln Corona del Mar Area.
I Call Daily Pilot 642-4321.
Keith Crofts
1 BOYS, after scl1001 & Sats .. 1 p/Ume. Hand bills. Pitta Man, 642-9452 aft 4 pm
Bus Boy Needed
Apply In Person, morns
Exper. pi-ef d.
AJJey West Restaurant
2106 W. Oceanfront, NB
CAFETERIA
PERSONNEL
• Short order, cashier ing & ~ gen'! setup & se"rvice. Ex·
per. onJy need appl,y,
• 833-8691.
I CASHIERS
\ Full/p/time poaition!J. Gd
• pay, Growth co. 5 U>ca·
Uons. METRO CAR WASH,
l 2950 Harbor Blvd, CM. I CO!LECT!ONS & Al&lmnt
Bookkeeper w/good AIR &.
oollection backgrdund. Min
' 4-5 yn exper. N.B. financial
organization. Xln't co. of.
ferinl oppor. for ad·
tions experience on large ero"• bonU!. Apply, 7908 ply ·at 2221 Harbor, eo.ta Placentm' , ·CM. Equal ....... 2nd shllt after training. Call scale S/360 or S/310 equip. ""' "'· . B M wy ~8 Classified Ad No. 592 nlent. Candidates must have Wesbninster, . .,.ntE' • esa. portw\ity employer. .,c/o Dally Pilot · Appliances 802
excellent knowledge ot OS Weslm. Or call 897·5309. MANAGER, mature female PLUMBING & heating Saleslady , P. O. Box .1560 ~~-------
JCL. and Utllitiea. HOSTESS wanted. Womens swimwear. re'pa.\nnan. on I y ex· Grocery Checker Costa.Mes.a, Calif. 92626 KENMORE automa t ic
Apply ln Pel'90n, moms Appty~390 E. 17th St., CM. perience need apply in per. P.1ATURE & exp'd. wanted washer $65. Kenmore gas
Apply 9-12, Mon. thnJ Wed.
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Newport Center Drive
Newport Beach
F.qual Oppor Employer
EDP CONTROL-
CLERK
Run EDP Service Desk.
Perform tape librarian
functions and other general
duties as ass1¥ned, Previous
EDP expenence and/or
EDP School training prefer·
red.
Apply 9-12, Mon. thru Wed.
PACIFIC ""UTUAL
700 Newport Ceqter Drive
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor Employer
ELEl:TRONIC
ASSEMBtERS
Assemblers needed w/PC boatd & soldering exper.
Perm. employment in
pleasant surroundings.
Call For Appt
Industrial Relations
(714) 494-9401
Alley Wea:! 54&-660L son. R e f e re n c e s · 7793 to work tuH lime at Health dryer $45. 54&-8672 or
2106 W. Oceanfront, NB MAN with automotive Westminster Ave., Food Store. 40 hr. week. No TECHNICIANS 1.,;,84;;74=.llS""_==--~
· ' HOSTESSES
FRY COOKS &
DELI MEN
knowledge to work part Westmtn.te•. Sa , night or Sun. work. GENERAL ELEC. "Ing.
time. llam-4pm. POSITION open lJ'IJJm for · onn turn. MC!dical & .,. Gd. ('Qnd. $40. 4-burner gas
3599 Harbor Blvd. serv. station mec . hospital benefits. Apply stove, big oven $40. 642·220S. Nimrod Camper. HamlltM
at MacArthur Must know br & Lindberg Nutrition, in rear Production .. -'~"~· -~~------Beach electric rottuerV. ~ 673-o261. . Bayalde Vlllap, ~tAN over 25 wanted to saw alignment. l-lave band ot: Toy World Store, on low· Test $80 1 YR. guarn, del & in· 'NB No. 275 .
and nail nursery boxes & tools. Top w , comm & er level South Coast Plaza stall. Late mod. all cycle
drive truck. Apply 1'7552 ins; pd v . Penn. Apply Shopping Center, in• Costa Kenmore washer. 839-1778. Chevro tat. 604 So.· Coast Mesa. Ask ior Al Casbara. Collins Radio is now ac-1-"~=cc-c===:c='-'o= Experienced, Full Time Gothard H.B. J0.4. H Bch cepting applications for ex-e DISHWASHERS. washers,
MARKET r esearch in· wy, ' · *SALES POSITION per. production test techni· dryers, reblt, gUarn &
DINE, lan1p, table $15-$30,
Countertop dshwhr $15.
Antique misc. Movine
979-5.'133.. --Apply In Person
HOCHMAN'.5
DELICATESSEN l
RESTAURANT
428 .E. 17th Street
Costa Meaa
Equal Oppor. Employer
HO~KEEPER, f/Ume for
res1Clential care tacl!!.ty.
Xln't working conds. Apply
Parkhurst Retir e men t
Residence, 9 9 2 5 La
Alameda, F.V.
HOUSEKEEPER for. club, 5
dll)'s per wk. $2.50 per hr,
Apply Wed. 120 W. Bay Ave,
Balboa.
HOUSEKEEPING & some cooking. C>A<n. tr an s .
1oam-8pm, Mon-Fri. $250
mo--+ meals 673-8663.
HOSTESS, MATURE
f/time. 644-2459 bet ooon
HousekHP'!r, f/time
tervlewen n¢eded. No sell· POWER Sewing Mach. Oprs. Occidental Llfe in. _Newport clans to trouble shoot&. test delv'd, S.7820: 54&-5218.
Ing. Exp'd. Please cail :X,e,"'dyr. prewof'~:. Good17 P3•3'_ R& Be1 ach has ath~tlO!l ope1 n digital data systems & Rent Weshtrs/Drytr1
213/556--1234 ~ n1. or an en us1ast1c n-equipment $2 Wk. Full I Monrovia, CM. 645-7447. dividual with sales exp. · · ma nt.
MASSEUSE PRESS OPERATORS Position offers manaj!;erial * 639-tm *
Will TraJn .•••.•.•.• 645-0860 . potential, new commission c ~~ \VASHER, white Frigidaire,
MATURE LADY Women to work for plastic contract that is tops In in· Sl20, 5208 Seashore, "B",
molding plants. 646-3370. dustry. Initial financing & O j nj N'pt Bch. 548-8420.
TOWLE S terlin&
!Craftsman) 8 settlnp. xtn.
pieces, 35% off. ~.
SPECIAL shag carpet sale.
From $2.85 yd. Can lnatall.
Re11.s. Guar. 642-7101 eve.
** WATER CONDmON·
ER, Eversoft, new $700,
-$350. 644-4355,
BOOKKEEPER Production Helper ~~~..:'~t f:SZ..';;,.c"' R. Fu•nituro 110
Part time to assist in clean· Ji We need a full charge book· ing & purging o! small elec· SAJ,.ES OPPORTUNITY • * HERCUWN sofa &
keeper to wo.rk in our New· tro-mech. devices. Please AVAILABLE a to loveseat, tables, din rm act, BRADBURY Seascape $250.
port Center Office. You will apply · for aggressive, young man. . king bed, alao glove leather Signed Braque LlttKI $1,450.
have to be fully experienced GULTON INDUSI'RlES Must nave executive ·iype 19'700 JAMBOREE BLVD. oofa & loveseat. Must aell, Others. Pvt. Pty 535-5595.
& able to take full charge 1644 Whlttler•Ave., CM sales ability. Immediate NEWP.ORT BEAOi Pvt. pty. SJ&.0041. USED BICYCLES
of our books. Pleasant work· 642-2400 , positions !lvailable: Phone Equal opportunity employer *** Sofa & loveseat. never All types * 642-1272
ing ~ndltions & usual bene. Equal Oppor. Employer for Interview, 213.29l-fil01 used bottl for $160 usually c.N"E"W'"ki""~ng~s"tze""o.tho'"""""b<d'-'"_utd_' fi~s. Salary $550 mo to start. Productton Helper ask tor Mr. Whiles. TELLER home. 968-7910. , linens only mo. 586-0996, •
p ease do not apply unless Pllfl time to assist In clean· SALES people wanted for TV l1iiiiiiiiijjjiijiijjjiiijijjilliiiiiiiiiilijjiijiijjjiijil you are fully experienced. ;n,,. & pu...m"" of small Direct Sales work. Good NCR PROOF OPR Please phone Joan at -... ·e--e Fle•'b'-hrs N elcctro..mech. devi c es. pay, ,... .., · ewport · 53.1-6000 for appointment. Please apply or Seal Beach office. Commercial bank exper. min.
MEDICAL Jn s ur an c e GUL.TON INDUSTRIES Teleprompter-An equal o~ 6 mo's req'd. Newport Beach
Secretary Receptionist with 1644 Whittier Ave., CM portunity "employer. Call area.
M e dicare I Medi-cal 642-2400 642-3260.
knowledge. New lab in t:'-·~I Oppo Em I SALE"'s"'"c1~.,...-part~-.,.-F&Shion Jslarid. 640-0140 ask >:At..... r. Poyer er • ime, er:efer drugstDre experience, for Jean, 10-15 hrs/wk. Bushard's
(714) ,646-7121
'Mrs. Rio' A CONYF'tfftNT SliOf'PIHQ AND sewn.a CUIOE FOR THE
GAL ON THE GO. TELONIC
INDUSTRIES •• For Conv. Hosp. 549·3061 MEDICAL Secretary-busy PROOF Pharmacy, 4 9 4-10 5 9, Equal Oppor. Employer
medical office. Must have 49t--0145. l!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!...,!!!!!!!!!!! ... !!!!•I ~:ii::!,~~~ OPERATOR 1
SALE '~""'s"""cie""r"k,-c'"a,-s-;h-;t"e--r, TYPISTS L .. una Beach
Equal Oppor. Employ<r
INSPECl'OR-Precision
parts & rotary switches.
Cole Instrument Cmp, 2034
Placentlo, C.M. -Eqwil Opportunity Employer
d SaWy permameot, full time, VOLT exp. pref' • open. benefits, reas. h o u r 1 ,
call 644-2.123 ask for Cathy. Save-Most Liquor Stores lr:tttent Personnel
Inc. 841 Baker St CM. Temporary Service
Fo• •n ed In Women's World
C•ll M•ry Beth 642·5678, oxt. 330
Just 2 Ports! Fashionoble Copel
vaneement, 644-4360. Exec. Sec'y Mktng $550 ~
MEX:HANIC. Clau A Smog UC. tune-up & lite duty. Ap-
ply 990 E. Coast Hwy, N.B.
Optni"ll Avallablo
At Our
Tustin & Collln1
Brench in Orange
SECRETARY 3848 Campus D•., Suite 100 . Newport Beach 546-4741 COOKS, f/time, 1 yr exper. ~·y, Bkk~r AIA to $f«)(>
$456-$525. Park Lido C.Onvo ~P,P=ction ~ Work directly w/young exec. Equal Oppor. Employer of plush private club. Co.1-'=~=cs;""~"?"'
.,.,,ilf even train bright begin-* TRAINEE *· Hosp., 466 Flagship, N.B. Acctng Clrk, Walnut ~
COUNTER Parts Salesman General't>llice $450 * ner w/good skills. Call Jan Plastic Manufacturing Train·
Auto parts co u n t e r Exec. Sec'y to pres $700 salesman Full time, exp & F/C Bookkeeper $Tr!O Fee &. Free Positions
We offer a fine
starting salary ex-
cellent benelits
package, pleasant
working environ-
ment and plenty of
opportunity for ad-
vancement. We pre-
fer individual with
at least 6 months
Page, 54()..ro55, Costa! ees fur Layup &. Molding. 4
Personnel Agency, 1190 day, 40 hr. work · week.
Harbor Blvd, CM Apply in person Edler In·
SECRET ARIES dustrics Inc.-2101 Dove,
ret req. Hub Auto Supply, Secretaries· $.55..1 Exec, Secretary to $675 ~24&1 Harbor Blvd, CM, ~~;wgr!sua1ty $425 =~r(1~:'Jiriday :~:: VOLT Newport Beach.
Instant Personnel Typist/Proofr~ader DELIVERY o! D A I Ly UnderwrilE"r $15K Recept/Typist tO $500 NEWPORT Bookkeeper to $625 Pll.DT, SUNDAY ONLY, to Inventory Contrl to 5450
ne"'°spaper c&frlers. Re-Personnel Agency Recept/Ute type $433 Wt are now accepting
epplic~tlon1 for '
Temporary Service Partlume. Gd. spelling essen.
3M8 Campus Or., Suite 106 Apply ln person, Penny·
Newport Beach 546-474! saver, 1545 Newport Blvd., qui.res the use Of a Station 833 Dover Dr., N:B. File Clrk, p/time $2 hr
Wagon or Van. Con tact ?-.fr. 642-3870 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM Equal Oppor, Employer CM.
e Sec'ys, variely to $800 VPHOL S T ERERS & e Clerk TypiAta to $450 Uphobtery Cutters, Exper.
Ha~eley, 330 West Bay 642-f470 D~ALR~::·pt ionis t EXP'D MOLDERS ~ Port-Time experience.
Newport Beach Orthodontic 940 W. 11th Street. JOBS
Office. Top salary. Liberal Costa Mesa. 642-0542. URGENTLY NEEDED BUSBOYS Please Call for Appt,
Mary Haroldson sse-22n
e secy" Legal MTSi to $650 pref for Orange County
* 1000, FREE * Furniture Mfa, Gre" future 10 & oompany beneflts .
fringe benefits. Pleasant en. Equal Opportunity Employer e Secretaries
vironment. Dent.al exp req, F J B ER G LASS -Hand e Keypunch Operators
Age 25-35. No smoking. Lamina.tons, ple<.-e 'WOrk, e ·Solderen/wire wrap
, Liz Reindera Agency Domino Industries. 17612
4500 Campus Dr. Anmtrong, Irvine. 557-fi002. Also
642-2626. Helmet mfg. apply lm • Billing Clerk TypiBt
DENTAL Sec'y·Bookketper.1 ~pii"ii"iiiniitiiiiai;;, CMiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.., Irvine -
HOSTESS SECURITY
PACIFIC
BANK
54fr2118 Newport Beach WAITER or waitress (size
SECRETARY s-12'· Lunch • "'-· "'· · per only. 23100 Clubhouse -~~Ji.
Exper. or c:ollere. eau 1. , Anaheim SJ3.2:tt2
546-3000. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
Advertising/Marketing Dr, Laguna Niguel.
Great opportunity for ad· WAITRESS. exp req. Over
vancement for penon who's 21 Must be mature &:
bright, organited, am· re'sponalble. Apply bet 3&5
bltious, likes a challenge pm, Van De Kamps 3099 So
Department Store
J. W. Robinson
Newport Beach
Has Opening For
PBX
Exper. 552 Multiple
P /lime Including Sa.ts
Also Mon & Fri Nites
Apply in person 1(1..5 pm
' •2 Fashion Isl., NB ~ ' Equal Oppor. Employer
I .
'•DISHWASHERS Needed, I Beverly Manor Conv. Hosp,
I L.ag1.1na Hills, 837....&Xll
G &r00mer • 110me exper.
' nee. Apply 1rues., 1l3
1 Broadway, C.M. No phone
f· calls please.
1 DOG Groomer, some ex·
peliencJ!. 113 Broadway,
C.M. No phone calla!
DRAFTSMEN w/lorlc ex·
i 13.-needed for smill grow· 'I c,omput~r co.
1 nefita. S.A. 83$-046.5.
I
' EDP SENIOR
OPERATOR
Newport Beach Financial servtces lnltilutlon has im·
,J mediaio. npcnlna. You will 1 1 operate 361r370 cwnputen
1 I on a 3 day Mitt basfi. Can·
1 didnte must have 'minimum I 3 ,...,. • heavy IBM ~ MVT experience plus I lmowl<dge -ot-~Cl.--and
I .utilJtiea.
I Unique WOt"kinA environment
-• top beotflta.
Apply 9--12, Mon. 1hnl \Vcd:. PACl ~IC MUTUAL
. 'lOO Newport Center Ork·e
• Newport Beach
FACTORY
Announcing ***
New Ute Jndustrlal
Division For Women
Needed Immediately
Experienced
PC Auombltrs
Also
Train.Ht For
Litt Industrial Wo.k
• Many assignments In the
Newport Beach, Irvine,
Santa Ana &. ~ Mesa
areas.
• EX'per1enced &: trainee
Positions. Excellent earn-
ings. Weekly paycht'eks.
Temp Temporazy HeJ.p
Journeyman Linotype Ma·
chinist. Night poa!Uon. 35
hr. wk. Xlnt Company Ben·
efits. Paid Medical, l.Jfe,
Uniforms, Credit Unilln, etc.
DAILY PILOT
Ask ior Larry Miller
• &12·4321 •
JUNIOR Salesmen: 10-15.
Eam $20-$40 per week .get-
ting new Cl,µltomera for the
DAILY PILOT. ~l.! ii not a
newspaper route and does
not -Include collecting or
dellvertng, Transportation is
pl'OVl<led. We work four
hours after school and 8 on
Saturday. We have or'""'"' for Fountain Valley Sooih
Huntington Beaeb areas on-
ly. You must. be out of
IChool by 3 PM t o
.oartlclpate. ExoetlenceJ ~J"en prio rlty.
Please Apply
Betwn 8 &.11 am & 2&. 5 pm
18542 MacArthur
(Across from O.C. Airport)
Newport Beach
Equal Oppor. Employer
Needed Immediately
TRAINEE
ASSEMBLERS
Long Term Assicnments
Holiday & Vacation Pay
VOLT
Instant Personnel
Temporary Service
3M8 Campus Dr., Suite 106
Newport Beach 546-4741
Equal Oppor. Emplbyer
and can ha n dle Bristol Costa.Mesa
multi-project assig1U!lents. WAITRESSES' Ov 21 Good spelling, secretarial ~ er Equal Oppor. Employer skills and current work ex-~1exican food & cocktails.
perience essential Back· l0:30wnll:~ & •:30p.m· QUALITY CONTROL ground In marketing, ad· Apply d~lly, 10.~ am-ll.JI! vert1slng or publie rela· am&: 4.40 pm-5.30 pm. f\11
7024
Growing local firm needs in· tio"' helpful, but willi"'"""" Cua Mexican Restaurant. 'j,\: div. w/background ln com· ....... 296 E 17th St CM IN ff {,q f\1113 munication e q u I pm e n t , to learn and fiexlbillty mo1t · · " · · V t-f1l.c& ~
Ability to interpret elec-important. SaJary open. Call WAITRESS, Utime for t .
tro-mechanlcal f\lnctlons. Lisa at 97~7620 for tn. residential care facility. ~ Greet spring in fi.&hk:ID ta Start $150. Call Helen lervlew, Xln't working cond1. Apply ... ,.
P kh R I •~ new cape. . Hayes, 540-605.5, Coastal • SECRETARY ar. tnt et rem en t Cozy, cuddly-warm ii tllit
Personnel Agency, 2790 $600 Frte R.e11dence, 9'l5 La Alameda, way you feel in lhll ~
Harbor Blvd, C~t + ~-.. ! }'.V, f_. '111'L.• ..,,,.. -' crochet cape with JDOdr: _.iiiiiiiii;i;;;iiliiiiii ... ~~~. f~fou~!b:b. ng c:_ou~ WANTED bus~. breakfaa:t _!'f l~t~•'""! lllt.iil.... cables plus contrast color.
Rt•I Estate S•kt gtamoroos surloundings &: lunch, Exper only, 23700 POP this per1 pretty sun-use knitting worsted. Patt. FREE Good skills. . Cl.ubhouse Dr, Laguna dres!!I on and ott')'OUI' aewtng em 1024: Ml.uct' Si21ea JO.JO
Also Fee Positions Niguf!l. machine in minutest Just 2 lncl.
I T I I RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT WANTED · auracttve young parts plu& drawstring bows, SEVENTY·FU'E Cl£llftl
L ctn•• ra n ng 2082 n.~?ENCYCtr, INDrC.st 290 Hostess. D&)'fl, exper only, ruffled pants. Whlp up tor each pattern -add .25 Llmfttd Time Qnly ,_ .. ~ness -0,,,,e.,A•o 23100 Clu~ Dr, Laguna several In pique. llCel'lucker, cent• lor each pattern !of
Famous license course now ... Y1"" Co ~ Niguel. Dacron Air Mall and Speclal Hindi·
NEED 4 attractive. women available thru Tarbell Com· {Orange · Airport Area) WANTED exp'd w at c b Prtnt~ Pattern 9481: NEW ~i . ...!the:Jr': t!ne
KEY,PUNCH Operator; ex· 30-45. tor up to 6wkll public pany. AppUcanls tull,y re-S-'y-Purchas $7tA nmker for inquiries. Children's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. .... " .. .-per. Nlte1, f/timeL Penion-rela.Uow: project, to in-lmbursed upon qualllicatlon. E ...... world I • -* •675-2731 * Size 6 ~t 2~ yards 35-lnch weeks or more. >1111•.. lo
KITCHENnet Dept., ~ .~~-~hn ~:e M:'. ~~ N~ . New! o•Oexptl'fpen•••"'s 'a~alll&lablees ofm'e1 of ~n n u= WE EK EN 0 RE CEP· fabric, ~ ~~· ~JlitAIL~Ylj ~"' ... ..,.,.. seW.. Uniform provided. peop e. "46 y • beautitul hullding? This one 'T'IONIST .. ~al Estate Of· SEvr.K'IT·nvfl CENTS Dept., ~ 16.l. Old Ole'-:ar:Ttdo ~v ~1ttz;; Salary Call Mn Bilbop ~mplete training~~· &.lway1 get rays. Work for nee. 9AM..fiPM Sat. A Sun. tor each pattern • add 25 Station, New Yark, N.T.
2061 Business Ctr. Or. hi NB • P.·1 St>-1Wi. . tu.re manageme,~-very nice purchut.ng qent $2.50 per hr. Ago 25--35, at· cen~ for ea.ch ~tte.m tor 10011. Print !fame. ... ...._. lrvlM · US.1441 Flags p, • · tunltles. Call Mr, at of large apt compJcx build· \racive. CALL Mr. Bartlett Air Mail and Special Handt· Zip, P•tten Nomber. L&BORATQRY Venl-Pu~ Newecptr Carrlel'I &12·5440. er. Top benefit.a. CttJI 846·1361. ' lnfil otherwise third('lus NEEDLE CRAFT ''121
Nr. ~ge ()>;,Airport :ebeft~;m,:~~o.:~·rr.S: l~yyr~ ~ ~~-$ TA RB ELL 557-6U'Z, Abigail Abbot Pet· \VJ-10 w ANTS TO \VOJ\K? de ~ will ~akSeoo ruro Crachtt. ":· etc. Free
FOREMAN Fiberglass sonnel Agency , 2.10 W. War-DRIVE A CA.l!i! M:rl ~ ::J° ihe DAILY directions. .
per. Cd pay. Gd ni1U:: l..EGAL SEC'Y T.RNE W. Newport Beacb artll. REAL TORS nt'r, Suite 3l9, s.A. CHOOSE ~ 1¥>W'I, work Pn.o'T. 44~. ~~ttern Dept.. tn~tut Ma~ aoot.
Helmet Manuf. App I y (Newport Center). Send ~ ~ta. 1:n~ Mr. ~ for yaursel., bP. .yout; own 232 \Veit 18th SI., New Buie, fancy knott. P&t-
·Trab8.ca Products, 837.w. resume to Classified ad no. a.>',~ P t, • Receptionist r50 SECRETARIES boAA. f\1en or women~ Can York. N.Y. lOU . Print terns. $1.00.
18th St CM 559 c/o Oail.Y Pilnt, P.O. • 642-4321 ,e Top spot for xifl seeklfllt Snnta Ana law firm requlttt be 111\sr:htly handicapped, NAl'lf: ADOlt£SS with IMW!t ~bet !Soot
FRY COOK ~1560, Costa Me.a. C.Uf, N.ur ... N11M ;rex~r.l~d.~M'E·y. No xlnt typilta tulJ &: JNll1 time, V~ts.pl~· ~ ~r:~: ZIP, 'ftUE and STYLfJ Leam ~ plctuml .,_t.
, 11-7 & Other Shtfb R EMPLOY NT legal exp not ~. • .... a .. ,. 6 h'1 o• moro a NUMBER. it.ms. $1. • Over 21. Must be clean k LVN, Reller SupeMaor for T pvt duty IN RlVE ~lA MTST Ir. 1 ho rt h and ~.. .... I • SEE MORE Q u l ck CGmplete r...at Gtft 8ooll
neat. A~ in PtnOn, Surf rmen llUJ1fng home. Beach r : • for ft!."~· tr a2 AGENCY Ct IN<fu, S dcatrable. Please tend ~~iow ~t>a, .. ~86 r'.~~ Fuhk>M •and c.hoo&e one -more than ~ a1ftl ..
. .l Sltk>NB 593t..Jll •• C.OUL .--Ctll 7W'9Hm <of.-C:,i.;.:ru Noea--.,Jl ' Businell5200 r. · te. t'CJiumc and W.ry0. re-St .• Cost.a MitiSA. pa.ttem rree mi.m our Slo,~-• .....__ -
Hwy,, · • appt. ~ : Aiiie.. Jntmri~ Irvine m-MIO =es::: ~ ~ Box WIREMEN .Jo build brf&d,, Sprfng.SUmml!'r Catalog. ~I SJ.00. ~
-f'R·'f-COOK., EXPEJl. lfACHINtST· ~eel. OF Mon-Fr1:-s:s:i:e 1cou11 e (OrMJtt Co. Airport Areal SEMI 1.. •• ,,....., , .. .a1 · boB.rds & test ttxturt!I. Must lf!Nie:,..ST! Only 50c5 . .,..'.\'ING BOOK ti JUIJ' •111 a.u · 110c. I e 8LU6 DOLPHIN e portunity •. Predslon parts. Nunes fWl[istry 351 Hot-RECEPl'IONt SI' _ amuwa .... " mlUU e ttad achcml'Ucs. Part A ANT r~• 8ool at 11 PJt.t Af1t n1 3355 VJa Lida, N.B. toolii l d~. Good 8hop pita.I Rd., N'.8. ci.ob'b)t PIU'k YACJlT BROKERAGE age woman needs helper. t / lime poe11iQns aw.II ICW 1oday, \\'CU tomorrow. !JOc,
FOR ACTION ~ req'd, Cole Lido Bldg.) 642-99156 or WEEKENDS ONLY Ll;o In or out. MIWo'11!. Xln't frinfl'! ..... rli .. 3 wb II. Qudt -I -U •"'"-
• • • lnafn!menl ~ 1>34 5"41).9954. G~t our cuatomcn, answrr SERVICE Sto.. Attendant, od vac. Pd n)('(I, dent.al It INSTANT F' A~~ 10 ~ $0e. DAILY l'ILOT Pl•c<nt"-C.M. :L::.. NURSE AIOI! TRAINING pbtlntJ. Ille typing. 11 yoo f/Hme. Lite ""°h. knovl. lilo ""· Pd Iona Itrm dlonb. ::,;K i;,., H~nd 0 .!-- -t 1
CLASSIFIED ADS Equal Opportunity Em= A. health car«r 0-2 wk arc a ti ra < ti v., 2 Yn min. llonus '°' lic'd., I••· Ao«Pllnc apj)lklltlons 0" · • . ~
. MAW wm1t bl ~ tor Clue. Eml>L1Ymrnt oftt...:d. welkroomed A like people. (nol teq'd) Neat ln tppter. da~. ~tics, lnc. t.845 SO. A good want ad is a J?OOd to-Qllltl 1w !'NQ'I ~
; 1 F.qusl o-Employer CA' 'l 642-5678 ~· :131' Newport Blvd., Ptraoanttl bej>t. Hooa HOIPo call Ml'I. Davftl f<>I' appl Apply ,ZIBO Nowport Blvd, Manch..t<r, A • • h e I m • "'stmenL 1~ ._.t!ltll _-.; '·'.I,;.;;;;;;;;,,;;;~ ......... _. ___ .. ______ . or. 548-1715. • N .. D. ' ~.YIM, 64.l-lG. CM. Equal ()ppt'lr. EmJ)lO)'tt'. '·--------------1!11•"' • . '
,\ • . ~ J. ..
'
Z"f OAILY PILOT
•
Mond01, J......, 22, 1973
Boeh, GoMr•t 900
* * * * * SKIPPER/INlnt MM
Motor -S.lo/Ront
v ....
940 Fon! I Soper v .. Cam_p.
WINNEBAGO. lcl1 containeil er, E-300.-~ atDve.
luxury Wiii for r'!'nl by da.v popo.top, toOeL ~ alt
-
Des1rt& tull tlrne ~mpkly. W!'ek 01' month. For--appt. ~Pm. -
m•ot. ""'"" bo<t ooly. call 5'Hl8.1 alter 2pm. iiie"V\V CUiper Van. XIJ\t NEW 1973
n" ~-Auto Service, Part• M9 Cond. -"':·:-~~·j-D;A"5 11--1..;;.,.p;,..,r,-, .iiiini;Qoiiliit---,~
-•tlmeL At AL"S .., .. ..,.: Mercury 3$ hor1ep&.ver. CADILLAC PARTS • 1959 A to W-:.= a...• w.r, (WIJ189), trom ., •
-·· ~ Fibera:lus over wood. Model • HA VE GOOD u 1 . .,.._ 1200 $11tS PET, we llke lo be friends '.ftaller. SDI. 5.57-5692,... TR A NS t-.tlSSlON . AIR "' .
_ .....
:lh •• ,~cus=~~:;;-'~ ..... ~·:.~Bo=•:.:"::.· :.P:.:o::w:::•::.r __ _:.906~µCO~t!'-IO~IT~IO"N~IN,,c~.,uriNl!i..1 T.:_:_, l-
1----h""1e~ Ten us . 31' onus C.bln Cruiser, top 1212 S. Rou St .. Santa Ana \Ye'll make Jt rl&ht . without M2-3120
. -··--................... .S.. It · You'll ""'1 It
l
,,
'
8 ft&:ht. ahape, twin eng, radio,
AL'S CARPET stereo, depth finde-r, tun CUSTO?if paintin& _ No job & RUG WORKS galley, n1any xtras, sleeps 6 too con1plex for U&. Free in comfort. $8975. 675-8577. l'StUnates.. 893--0S'll.
293 S. MalQ s;,_ ara.,ge Boata,-Slt-/Dock1 -910
WILL PAY OVER
Kelly Blue Bool!
For late rnOMt, clNn,
tow mlt..go c1omo ..
tics, fmportl, trucks or
campers.
510
OR_
NEW 1973
PICKUP
• I ....;!, 1911 POllSCHE 911,S. speclal t.ml
'"'"'· i..1~;-alrc 10111r1 atetto. Recaro Sport. Seats. ;I Ill
THERE ARI! OVER
100 WAYS .TO ~INANCE YOUR
--•CAR,9K COSU..MESA'S
I
4-542-6400 • ..,.9009 ••
l'2-:D'"E=s""K"s'"'""&n<1'""""'""""BOO="K·-I iX>CK' space avail, prlrM [ ,_....,.Wt [{ ~} low nllk!s. abowroom new Harbor Bau.lward
afca ... SHELVES.SU ITABLE loc. Sml boats $1.75 ft lrg .
FOR CHILDREN o.r else boats up to "5' $2.50 ft ';;;;;;;;;;;:~~ NO
DOWN
PAYMENT
cond. Pri...i l'OO· be1ew 19111 Ha>;bcwo C.M. l'8-'I03t> ~ ~J11 Joe, '66 VW-FutbM:k. IOCJd con-~~~~~=-dltlool !.13 ..ira... -(,
would bl kteal for extra 557-1250 l\L 1', -S:J0.;,:30. • Call and ask for Buyer
DAYE ROSS ROW ROYCE 84H>76S ...,_...--LOOI IOI THI llllUM AT ~°!:8'P~ ln ~ ~ 55' Slip, xlnt loc.
MEDIATE SALE. 1212 S. Newport Harbor 673-n'M ------General 950 '72 VW IUS
ROU..S Royce "fil Silver Radlalt, Ani.J'fn stereo.U>w
Cloud, wblte. 52,0IXI miles. mL ~· 6t5-1162. CONNELL I BAUER
Ross St, SMta Ana. CHEVROLET IUICK
,:.:~-.. 1la4 -)[•)
1-w_._.,,_od _____ a20_ j ;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiilii;;;;;· ~~
J.tC'COR.f\tlCK lractor, 400
gal. Spl't\)' rig, disk & aprine
tooth harrow. 6.17-68.u. PONTIAC
Recr.ational
Vehicln
2408 Hubor Blvd.
956 c.,1. Mou -17
WE PAY TOP
1mmac.. $12,000. CU 3 > "11 vw Sundial caa,.,..
(M..(lil49 or (n4) $-0332 ~ mUea. Pc:ip-:Top.. xmi
SAAB conc1: m-11138 <tt s. ·
ma ms
HARBOR ILVD. HARBOR ILVD.
0.A.C.
\\'ANTED: U.S. Coln Collec-Campe_r1, Sele/Rent 910 tioni & aceurnmulaUons. '67 F()RD
CAMPER-VAN CASH
Buy or lase All 1'10del1.
lllMEDIATE DEUVERY
MUJJI' ..U • '18, VW ~;
'72 ·DEMO =L lnltt. $1IEO. Call
CLEARANCE .,._UCll oft .....
Private out-of-town buytt. CAMPER'S
Writ•. Claultied Ad No. Conv<,..;,,n, ioo-box, oink, [~ 11$nm} '~9.9~1::/FM rad<>, vinyl ~si-~=! = AUtoa, u.d 990
""'· Dall> Pilot, P.O. Box DELIGHT 1500, Costa J..tesa, Cal. 92626. douhle bunk; maxs, big ta;\. 1000w.~ ...,_ $2995 e 1968 VW s~.......... 1984 FORD
NEEDY Family Needs Brand new 1973 % too GMC tires, 929ASJ tot used can & trucks, Just ·~ ......., ._. t4l...oo ' ~~---,-
pocl<up wHh p. st~ril"'• 1. $1595 calJ us for free estimates, abltt\ Xlnt cobd. Wee" new. Sq
Clothes, furn. & fuod
desperately. 2164 Puenle
Ave, CM.
Office Furniture/
Equip. 824
ROYAL 'E3ect typewriter
$lli). Xlnl cond.
5&-3612
Pianos/Ol"flnl 826
~ GROTH CHEVROLET S!nJ 968-009 , 19n LTD Country ulre 1ta. "'""· '"'· fud >ank. RAT ' CHEV w~. air cond. am/Im chrome -ill. VS •ngine, p. m = 1964 VW Good transportatloo. •"" b" ~ 3J 1450 stereo+ P/w~ 16,<m ~~~~E~~:!t ear 1200 w c.. ...,.. ~ ~:.. ~~~ger • ~ 008:. 'it~~~: • 640-07fi6 ~· • 8d Air Station w~. 1 "'~"~c;s;:.122/536.::;ak=·:;:..:~:::"'=·-r~""""~-t·. ~ ~ -Huntltlgton Beach 644-l.SM. VW 'TI., Bee:Ue, Xlnt cond. a.utomatic trans, VS, rad\a, RANCHERO •• 69, Fairlane 1
that ileeps 6. camper in-S4i'-«187 Kl S..:Wl HONDA Pr/pty, AM/FM stereo, hea.ter beaut iful 5(1), 4 apd, 351 vs, m: ~·~~ n:;;'.· .~~"';:t~ VW DUNE BUGGY Cash For Clean SUNBEAM .~dt~,m~:!;,~ blue m•~$466B030. ~-ua-o ••.
"',.,!"'y~;.,~_no. 51'm2 • METALFLAKE Silver Manx Used C & '71 HONDA '65 SUNBEAM HP ........ Map. New c ~ Body, Full·"°""' •ngin• · an ....., clutch. S850. !nHIA Se< It· You'll Buy It 66 FORD WAGON $489 DOWN with all ""' part• Wide T---L-CLEAN. Low Mlln, 876 DNO ONE ..,.,..., low mll•• No. lfl."""""I"· V-3, auto, R/H,
ORGAN HOBBY whttt.. ""'5, N"' eo~ ,._,.,, $ltS &19, ,.., "65 """'-· NI "'" A tirn I a...!. 2-way tall ..... ....., U....
vertible Top, Street Lepl, Howard Chevroht ~~.1 $1100 Of best otter. Lmll * 5a-3691 or 5"-3Cl.T * ~~~:,'t~·~.~~i~ '~~~~~~O~~ ~imm$1~5 M•~=S.:-. H~~ \~=j voLvo !~~~ .. ,Ml ~u.-.!'°'!~""'·~,;:...;cr'" ... "',RD"'."',r-"":..X'"0'-;•~.~"'~-."'"7-;1 :
shops. For infonnation s~.60 is the lOtal It'l(lnlhly \VE PAY TQP OOLl.AR lj , inj; 19Km; 11Yffn; 5 nu ·n (GMC Sprint). Exact de-'65 Country Squire 10 pus,
Contact: Tom Dtetericb payment incl. ta..x, license uoo w. c.-.-..., ~ ··FOR TOP USED CARS .JAGUAlt TOYOTA . · Mich X radlall; xlnt Shane: algn of El Camino. PYt. pty. air P/S P/B p/ 1 eat1 642.2851 and all finance charges for ~ a.cti M-Mil..; If your car is extra clean, low blu bk + 10% 64Ul81. Llke new. Uaed only for prt°pty. '175, Mo-ta '
Coa•I Music Service Tl • mono.. oo approY<d VW BAJA BUGGY "' us °'""· ~' '70 JAGUAR '70 Volw 14-1 S. am/Im, local drl~. 1 _Owntt, 1 1 JEE• Nev.·po~~::11z.1!!.Harbor =~64~~ ~~SUNROO F APn/Fftt , :Z:~r~~--XKE COUPE 1970 TOYOTA ~~795 or b6t otter. ~3oo~~~h': ______ ,. ___ ,,
GANS lice nse. DeJerttcl payment F'ul.1-house Engine . Tuned Costa Mesa 919-2500 -·-·•· ,_ dty susp. New canopy. By 1956 WUlys 4 whl drive wp.
*PIANOS*OR price ls $90'18.al which in. E.xhuast. Wide Tin?s & IMPORTS WM'TED r:~i::;te, s~~er~·: MK II Auto1,..Usecl 990 appt. OllQi. 919-6136 9-S pm W/'189 Ford ena:. O/driw,
Golng Out For Business eludes all finance charges, \\'heels, 63!1CIH. Orange County's AM/FM/SW r dkl 403BNN ' BUICK Mon-Fri. 637-1926 7~ pm P/B, Wide tires. $1*
Best quality -prices · serv. sales ·trut & license. Annual $1895 TOP $ BUYER a ' 1 eve/wknd1. $3400. Plee.se 645:-lSll ~av .. ai·Sleinway-Baldwln, etr. percentage rate is 12.L BILL MAXEY TOYOTA ~ ST AT 10 N 'VA G 0 N don't call unless you care to BR=o°"N=.CO~~,....,.-n""t_e_nd~-00-m--I
Pia)"" Piano• & RoU. Bill BARRY rnr11.r,-~~W11ii) 18881 Boacb Blv •. .... .... .Juwnrtsl automatic tram, air cond. '51 BUICK WAGON. Nu ,,.. pay ..... ~ !or a""" ..... with hubs & -~=~~ai:~ . . \\'e. ~-~!~ j~U!!!io w Qm HW-w :·;:;~united =h. = .~!l, ~ ~::6hin& rr1:t.~~. ~or, =e. ~~I heater. No .: r::,:ito--=.: Yb\YI f15. M5-15ll ""'~s.~\':'~3250 G.M.C. PONTIAC q;l' - -... .-...... ' -$ 26S3 Sonia Ana St_, top, -'"· -MERCURY FIAT 494-1003, ext 6M 24 bn. '61 Jag 43) Sedan Classic. Costa Mesa, 546-44tt11 Immac. Pvt Jt1. 613-3933. .
*PtANOS*ORGANS* .Trucks 962 AutOI, Imported 970 AMIFM. """ whl•. ttpd · s.e It · You'll Buy It ·12 RIVIERA. PREMIUM '89 CAPRICE ~. -~-.-'---.. -.... --00-ncl-.I
Hammond, \\'urlltzcr, many (1st SL at S.A Fwy,) --::::--::-::=:::-:--1:::::!:..!!!:!::::..:::::__.:.:__: w/o'drive. Must sacrif. for ~ l COND. LOADED. FORCED Air, &bod cood. Needs job. call aft :;,
othen. January cl•.,..,.,.,. >JOO E. J.st St., s.nta '71 DATSUN BMW $2400. 96&-lllOO. ....:. TO SELL. TAKE OVER mos. Call~
on now! The ""'t d•al> .,. Ana 551-1000 PICK-UP MAZDA -ID PAYMNTS, NO DOWN. COMET
.i.,.,.. al ATTENTION _Good.eloclionof -19YOJA--548-4258. --MUSTANG w.mchs Music: City IMPORT OWNERS Ra~;o.J .. lights, now .. """'B!d\V• * INzN '73 Rotary * ' lJl63 _BUICK :znr .• 'l\'ono. "64 °"""~ ftl>lt ..... -'70 MUST"·NG
South Coast Pla7.8. ID2830 New custom shells. $119. plys, lo 1$~J'9s 415CAX, & $66 MONTH 1966 Harbor. C.t.f. -&t6-9":m car. Good lire&. Runs aood. auto trab8. pwr ateer .. uk-"
-ANTED--PRIVATE PAR Ch•erhead sleepers & 36 MONTIIS OPEN LEASE 1972 $295. 548-4810, l.."Yel/Wlendl. U.-$345 or offer. 66-6535. W : • campers at wry, very lo CADILLAC
TY TO BUY PIANO FOR '''=· Flnancini; avail m-..i. ] ~ . Will accopt -..... CONTINENTAL
CASH S!n-ffi73. f""P ~ CALL MR. FRY w.66li6 TOYOTA -G-..,,.-~Plano"-=:"'=par-IM,---•7""-· c='i!,.~~~:·.= • ...::.~ CREVIER BMW Hunt~ Beach y~~~~~LY ~~~~~
E=J;ft~tionl .-~ s· CAMPER HILLMAN fto;2 COMMER) ~~ .. ~'.,"&.,.~"~ MAZDA Landcruiser AUTHORIZED =:c.. ~ j~!t~~
TV R d. HIFI PANEL TRUCK Equipped 135-3171 CADI"' •c 1@). Dir. Call en<) , I to, ' SHELLS $ll9. with Overhead . Rack • WAGON like new. Worn DEALER.,... , 546-411(. ...,
' _.;.St;...o_roo'"'------'-36· I --,..-..,m-am~~~---1 lntertor I I n e d with VI.sit our oew home! hubs, _ _.,_ lJKE ~! ! •n CONT •·•·-~ __ ,
1• Cycles, Bikes, SHELVES . PRICED FOR & 17331 Beach Bl. St2-666 Green ·~iUte. ani;"'"iloo Lanfest ae!ecUon ol Cadil-J.otided w~ ~
ScootefS 925 QUICK SALE. 1971 Mazda 616 Lo mileage milea. 282FWQ ~i,;n.i~e County. U,(O) ml. $4150. &«2-4.ioo. ---------I 1212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana 1•~-~, radoo" •l-t $4066 -
USED J8S Suz., ,..bit. 21"' >42-312) .~· ,;~.;,., .,.,.; ..;;;, CORVEllE ~:. c~~~see S:: tirui: 1:gi~~ ~ ~~P.P~ ROY CARVER, Inc. ~~ ~U~.ntMC:~~~~ See It· You'll Buy It Q, ~~-
POWERFUL '13 StilttOS -re-
tail $219.95 • AM/FM/
Stereo/MPX/8-track tape,
head ~. bl& walnut
speak en. January , price
$102.00. Low as $5.00 month·
ly. USA Stereo Fr9l&ht Li-
quidators, 179 E. 17th St.,
CM. 645-2442.
'61 MUSTANG -Shelby GT
500. 351 Cleveland. 390
Pistons. 428 Head• wUh 428
Cobl'a kit. f Spd. Hunt.
Mag. wbeell. Rear air
sbOcks. New paint. $1295 Or
otter.
1913 ZENITH & RCA.'1 at tremendous savingl at
Orange County'• largest
dealer. Priced Jess than the
discounters with 3 yr pic-
ture tube, 1 yr parts & 1 yr
serviOI!. Cuh 90 Plan or
tenn1 to 36 months. ABC
Color · TV, 9J2l Atlanta,
Huntington Beach, 968-3.129.
HI Fi Thorerui Stereo
T ranscription Turntable,
near new TO 124 wfrP14
arm. Pr\ part)', make offer
536-1"34l.
AlJ't1>.Radk> AM IF M
Becker Grand Prix -touch.
1uner never instAlled. Prl
party, make offer 536-7343.
Pets, General 850
GROOr-.1 l BOARD, 11 yrs
all breeds. Free pickup!
"Sherry'•," Poodle pups
avail. 546-2848.
Dog• 854
OBEDIENCE class to start
\\'ed. Jan. 31, 7:30 pm, in
the Newport Beach/Irvine
area. Open lo all dais OVf'r
5 mo. 'tlld. ~
DOG School Instruction New
Classes 11lartlng T u es
9:30-lO:llam, Wed 8--Spm I:
Sat 9:3D-10:30am. Martin-
crest Kennels, 546-<1989. '•,
BEAUT AKC reg. purebred
German Shepherd pups, 1
wb. $50 &: $75. Some black.
968-8185.
TOY FOX TERRIERS
Rea.!IOnlble
aJter 12, 492-4143
2 TOY Poodles, AKC, wltlte,
1 wks. sz.
551.ro28 * * AKC, Sllky Tc'lriers,
males, 6 wks.
noo.~
e Purebred Bloodhound pup.
~. wks. $51) each.
MALE Af&han, :llfo yrs. with
pe.ptta. $100. M e 11 o w I
S!Hfll1
ENG. Bull, 2 yra, mnlt,
AKC. LoWa "°pie. M"" •U. bHtotftr. 645--1469.
....... 856
BOAllDEl>-Too location. $GS. 2rm Acacta. Sarita Ana
precia.te1 disc, Sl!fil. Hodaka 100 B, 234 E. 17th St. trade. Call 645-2444 or ~ t•...:• !19 ""9UI-...
BMW R-75, 197l: ~ Km; l97D. Call 4~. Costa Mtaa 546--4444 6ti-.l552 aft 7:00. (AllUI
•ilvoc; l'lstl xtras; xlnt '62 FORD Ranch .... , top nm-MERCEDES BENZ YOT1
""'"' lo blu hi< + IO'.< ning rond!Hon. Noar .,... DATSUN II
642-3181. tires. Doesn't burn oil. 24 --------
2600 HARBOR BL. COSTA MESA '66 Muttang, V-8, auto., $675.
COUGAR Will accept oldtt car or
540-9100 o,,.., sundar """""'' .,, color TV or
833-0144 Aft. 4 P.M.
'65 $I'INGRAY, new eng. I:
trans, AM/FM. n... map,
P/W. Pvt. party. m.350!
HONDA CL 115, 1911, lo MPG. $350. 5'~6584. '71 DATSUN
mileage, $375 firm. 64&-0129 1962 Ford FfiOO, flatbed 24"Z 50 USED
MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
1"'6 H.-. C.>t 646-9300 * '65 CAD!i.LAC * 1--.6-9-c"'"·o'"-_U_G_A_R_ vacuum fee -pymnL "' 1969 C.Orolla sta wgn-Xlnt very iood condition bids. 645-1219.
all 6 pm truck, $400. v-cond. New tires, R/H. --""''c---*-54&-~'11134~--iAh' c:ond. AMIFM Stereo, '67 MUSTANG VS. Xlnt cond, Su,., "'""'' 1995. 642--0879 CAMARO '°" mlln, ..,..,. clean, Air, radio, ,...,. -'7t YA.MAHA, Excellent eon-* 645-1517 * Original Inside & Out, air '70 Toyota Mark TI. 4-dr., ---------i 230AGV. regbywomandrtver.$1250. dition. $lll5. Vans 963 cond., radio, new mags & * 546-9338 1t radials, 299CFV, Sharp New Car auto, disc brks, R/H. $1275. '67 Camaro ss-4 spd-35(1 $2095 ~~· 9-7: wk end
'69 Greeves, 360cc $400
• 645-1511 •
350 Honda, lo mi's
548-54Tl' aft 5 & wknds
·n 'iii HUSQV ARNA 360,
Perteet cond. !'.lake offer.
Call 645-61TI. 64&.2189 alt 6.
Motor Homes
Sale/Rent
27' TRAVCO
25' DISCOVERER
940
20'-22' CONTlNFNTAI.S
20' PRIDE & JOY S
VAN CONVERSI JNS
\es e Service e Renlals * Danmar Inc. *
ll!IU' Harbor Bl vd., G.G.
5.1t..SOO
Next to G.G. Datsun
Rent A Motor Home
for your Vacation * 139-4301 *
1965 CHEVY
SUPERVAlf
~1aroon with contrastln~ Blk
Interior 092FYV.
$966
See 11 · You'll Buy lt
~w.LW!i& W TOYOTA
1966 lln.rbor, C.M. 64fi-93w.
'61 DODGE Van, VS/318
auto. wtradio, htr, custom
inlf:T. Nw shock, brakes,
mags, fat tires. Xlnt cond.
S1350. 64fr-7234
$4195 Trade-ins Eves: 67'3-3m2 eng.-MB.gs & headers $1005. ·"' ~,,,
Comint In Every Day 1969 Corolla sta wgn _ Xlnt 545-p.m.2(83 between 5:00 lr6:30 ~-..i..,.L:=:::o..' ~ '65 MUSTANG-Rldl, air, ~~ .... -71-.......+..1 Ask About OUr Unique cond. Now lltts. R/H. !!:""! .2.IUIJWI new tirn & -·• $6"15. 1:.~•1 .uu ...... w . UHCI More ... LHH su,,., <harp! $8'15. 642--0879 CHEVROLET 9 --:=, ..,.mg 9...:!t•s== House ~"i~rts 1~~ar~~-ro':: 1-.-.. -CO~R~V~E~'r!l!E~F~ASTB~~*~CK~-w. J'.::~1969~':CO~U~GAR~~XR-~1;::'. *~b~~~~
3 D TSUN B =-""=~~=--m, <35 hp ; • ""'· ...,: ~';:~_a1o. Xlllt conc1. Call, OLDSMOBILE 197 A 6862 Manch.,.ter, "!""Park TRIUMPH FM ~ On the •--1& •-· ~... Cragar Maga, AM· •'-",7.i'°'==""""=-.., -------·I All MODELS 52J..r.i.O-,. . .,.., needs minor work $1650. 1ir•'68 COUGAR XR7, air
IN STOCK ---~~'----1 '6'7 TRIUMPH GT6, Good 893-6460 cond., stereo, r adials, 1964 Ollrdl CU1 ti...lnafd442, fUll MG cond. WI.re wheels 45,000 BEAUT fathom blue ,72 pb/ps, $1350. 613--1342 pwr, a , e tan e Ir out, I mmediete Dell very miles. Eves 657-3726, days Best oUer. 548-4145.
( l\! ttttt"'rl l!L•--· '67 MG'S AT ,6 ·:;;1S--02o,:::;;48=·==~=~ :'..r"°"~'."'~,""~, ___ D_O_D_G_E__ '69 . TORONAOO. Li.ke new. 1 ~1':-~-"' ltl(lWUfi i-VOLKSWAGEN •-All factory exlraJI, Am,Fm. 1 I;!;\. ""° w. c--BEACH IMPORTS Loadod. <9'--0111; 6WlJ!l9 '"1 DODG>: Van. vt!/318 Sacrlllce 12595. 844-8189. I ·~ ........, '-*' W"-MOo 1970 Caprice, $2lO below blu auto. W/radlo, htr, custom 68 B Roadsters, B GT, 110me ·n VW. Will sell for $300 bk. At $1950-All pwr, inll=r. New ahocks1 brakes, 'ro:;;~~i! ~~~-1 owner, '69 DATSUN with overdrlv~ all with uader top book. stereo, MU5t Bell. 968-3371. mags, fat tift, xmt cond. 646-&l.CB
wires 558-'1943 '65 Impala 4 dr, all pwr. Air $1350. &15-7234 I ::o,-;=~~=--.,.~=
ptaye<, roof ,.ck. new ru... -w, .._ -A-," lmpOrloCI 970 Autos, lmP,Ortod 970 645-!219 .,NTO YNW744 M1ritr.pcr1 a.di &c.H40t l970 Dodge O:ulllenger, V-8, r1
s!~~·ra:A~~~ m£Urll =i ~~ ~'r' now! eai1 :~. sooo. Pvt ply. 642-9111 ·~ARJn~nd~~-a:: ·H~~~ ~
auto, P~SOo vinyl roof, air/cond. ' . 55>-1949.
SACRIFlCE, 1969 VW van.
St'mi camper. !rim..• tires, $1195
11095. M,. Carr, 492-3406. ___ , • \ OPEL
'72 GMC Vandura % ton ~ .rtl"h =~
Any day Is the BEST DAY to heavy duty l50 V-8, auto !ilGl:J'"'..,~ __ _: ~ '70 OPEL GT
run an-ad! Don 't -dday .. tran&.. •. ~2S bel. S:30 pm. V .....,~:t::rf 4-speed, Red with black
~gca11~t~od~ay~642-5618~~~-~~~S.~ll~l~dl~o ~H~om§'~·=·=·~~~2~·~:~~~~~~~~~~
FALCON
'72 Wig. Alt, P/s, Plb.
R/H. Finl $2,450 Taket!
Pri party 67U6l4.
''5 FALCON WAGON PlN'IU • "11 2 DR. Sedan. ' lpd. Low ml. :IOOO cc. XIJ\t RUDI. 1100. 847-8115 cond. $1500. 80--1225. Interior, radio, radlala.
-09'JBNP
£m;f§TAR GA'ZEK1<~
A•tU By CLAY.'k. POUi.Ni--~~--'-~
"'Alt. n M Your Dolly Acliwify Gvide ):/. LllU , y . St,T. ZJ&n "'It " Afc111d11111 lo Iii• Storr. ,
• . 11-lA. · To develop mtssoge for TUtsdoy, ocr.11 .
.:.-:· '8-64.73 reodwon:lscormpondingto~rt. 'l-0-51.J,,S
of your Zodioc birth sign. 1~7·70
1 Sui:>erian 31 Vour
'2Trv Jl&Ht
3 Puv Jl Ht.nc:hn
•Nw JAG. .. !J w.,,, 3~ Could
6 5'>Kicll 36 Doy 66 Alfft 7To J7C·c;1:u11,. 67r''" I Or 38 In 68 Po..
9£1dM 39 1, 69~
lOTo 40..V. 70...,,._. l lE11Citlld A)lM 71TM-.1
12This A2 ~ 7'2Fottort ~~~~ 13 WG'llM ~,,., 7J y__..,.
l• Foor .. &. 7A lrldlc0t.4
15 11 A5n. 75Ct.J,1
lira. 46 YOY 76 VeiiofUt 17 AtlfttlM A7 A-n A
llY-q~ ;altlOd lfTo 'flo 79New ,,_ 300lf ......
21 r,..,,. ,, 01t11P 11 M 22~ 52.Momt azi. ..... .,.
2J K.y 5l Of Al 'ht
24 ll'l(IMI 5" Frilld: ... LOl'lll
25 Wilt\ M ftllow 15 ~ ~[:., !&. :~ .. ,
29~ .59 Led; """" 30~ .. _ '°'rni-
•")23;"""'!!1 ,.@Goo! ®.i.i-()~.:..
$1595
h~
PORSCHE
• ., -912. 5 sod. Xlot cond., AM-FM. radials, coco mats,
l'l!blt eng, $3349 or make of.
fer, dA¥I 646-4181, nftni
642-5981.
'61 fl2-Foctory •Ir
Konls, map. ,_ radlata •
brb, AM/FM, be&df'l"l-
&41')..1219 or 641).1500 tirt 2121
'71 PORSCHE 914, xlnt c:ond,
Wltll extru. Milk• oUer. 6'J3-25!l>. ,
·n 1'llncbo 1H, xln 't .,... dltlon. ~
Ca1J6fi.8601
'6:1 Por.che, 356, SC 1600.
Rwu perfect, needs .p&tnt.
Sl 750., C93-6676, an f .
. · FJR•~D i --:el'L""'Y~M"=-OUT~H~1
'18 FIKEBIRD 400. PLY~TH ~rit :J;,1380~':; '68 Plymouth With p ower S15--0075 . , steering and l:nkea, factory
'I FORD
·1_988
MUSTANG
Vac8nclet COit money! Rent ..... -· .......... bldg .. etc. thN I Daily PiJot
air ccndltlonlnr, radio and
heater. Pb"rnouth'a top of
the line model CVIP) 4 door
in aC!(ld condition, for Sile
,,,. ......... Kelly -n:tall $1,350. ••• price '915-837-<2.19.
PONTIAC
'69 CUSIOM S-Auto., P/1, 250
CMrbead cam. 6 new tires.
$ll00. !'A, -
T.allD
'59 T~lrd. -11"1 Good ..... SoundbbdY.
$DJ. • 116-um
'!fl CLAsSIC. T-Bii£ Id
cond. Beat -· Qr1r. °"""'· Coll -VAUANT
IMMAC. '116 Valianl 2 Dr.
Slant 6 eyl, auto, Riff,
72,COJ &.Z miles. Good ~. TIC'fJ brtcs, recent
' .
lfflL -or 644-Ql6 n·1 I ........ .IOU )'OU!'
............ Daily PDll 0 1114. ICHITI. . '
111 Tarp 9U , I -
Am•Fm. $3500 "' -· Ci.ii 2.-2615. CaiodllodAd.
valve Job, Loob bell.ut. In-
side A: out. Runs xnlt. Prtv. P'r_: ms. 53H<Oo, _
--------,
I . l ,..
'
' ' ' I ' -
' . . ................... ...._ ____ .. .. • . . . . .
San Cle111ente '
' ·Capis rano~.-:-E DI T~IO-N
..,. . -~
Today's .Final
N.Y. Stoen
VOL. 66, NO. 22, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS
N igerian Plane ·rash -Kills · 130 ..... w orst .. Ever
' LAG!)S, Nigeria (UPI) - A Jordanian
airliner 'carrying Nigerian Mo.ti.em
pilgrims home from a pilgrima&e lo
Mecca crashed in northern Nlge.ria to-
day, killing 180 of those aboard, airport
oUlclala aald. In the worn aJr craah In
hlatOry. ' • •
'!11" officials said n persons, Including
the pllol and five crew membera. ourvlv-
ed the crasq at Kano,· 520 miles
northwest of Lagos. .
They fled through an emergency
escape balch nHr the !ail of the plane.
Officials said the control tower warned
the pilot of the Alla Airlines Poelng 7ffl-,
which had been chartered by Nigerian
Airways, of fog and poor visibWty just
before he landed.
The plane touched down on gravel 40
feet off the runway,.airport officials said.
It veered left into a ditch which snapped
off the left wheel, then skidded along the
·. .
edge of the runway and burst Into
Oamea.
Many of the dead passengers were
IM>wn from the .Riane and their bodies scatterecLalang the runway.
sdme of those who aurvlYed got out
lhroulh an, emergency balch In the tail,
the only part of the ain:rlll nol con-
sumed by names.
An airport official aald, ''The p~e
was gutl<d by fire excepl fdt the tail aeo-
tton. It literally melled."
~our
19 Charges Chargers .Get
Johnny Unit.as
SAN. DIEGO (AP)·-· The San
Diego Chargers today obtained vet-
eran quarterback Jotm Unitas from
the Baltimore Colts for "futur~
coosiderationa," a spokesman said.
(See story. Page 16.)
Leary Arraigned
'
The acquialtion fueled rumors
that John Hadl, 11-year
quarterback of the Q.ugers, would
go lo the CollJ or lo the Los
Angdes Rams.
In ·County Court
Q)ach Harland Svare of the
Chargers called Unitas the
___!!greatest_quarterback ever to play
the gamo." He played 17 years for
the Colts. I
Mayor in .~po
Wants Revenue
. . .
For_ Police Pay
'·
By GEORC'E LEIDAL
Of *' DlllJ Piiot ll•ff
A "quiet" Dr. ~thy Leary ap-
peared UU. morning-In Orange Cotmly
Superior Court and ·was arraigned on 19
charg<S linking him lo the tnltmallonal
drug smuggling orgapizatlon the
''Brotherhood of Eterna' Love."
lary's •ll!!!!>ef, Pearce Cl1uJa, lold
Judge James':l'UrnOr hla clleilt would
w~e rudil!ll of~ 19 counts; lieputy Diot. Atty. Jock RYl!I aald
followinc the briei court ippurance this
momtng. Leley WU ochecMed lo enler ·
pleas to the charges at a continuation of
the arr~ignment this afternoon.
Ryan added there I! "some question"
whether Chula will continue to represent
San Juan Cap\slnno Clly Mansger the lamed drug advocalt drig the re-
Dnnald Weidner tonight will propose tbal matntng proceediggJ. _ .. ·-'" He de9c:ribed this momlnc's represen-the city COW>Cil commit the laleal ~ tatioo m Leary hy CbuJa .. being a
of fevenue sharing tncome, $.17,278, "special appearance."
tdivard the cil)l's paymenl lo the counl)I l,.eary's new girlfriend, Miss Joanna for J>Qlice services. ,. . llaf<OUrt-&nllll. aald laal week Beverly
Jn a written memo to councilmen m-HL!1 attorney Gregson Bautzer would ~e-
cluded in agendas for tonight's 7 o'clock feod the fQl'IDtf Harvarj lecturer.
m'teting Weidner states that police pro-Chula repre91!Dted Leary during his
tection iS amooa the most 'costly items in 1970 trial in Orange CoOl.mty. That action
Ulll cil)I budgel and also is a preferred resnlled In Leary being convicted or
eipense In the t-evenue-sbaring program. possession of marijuana. La&1ma ,Beach
-Weidner stresses in the message that · Police Sgt. Neil Purcell ai:rested Leary,
he believes the city should not draft any 'his wife Rosemary and his son John, on neW projects or expenses which would Dec. 26, 1968 after discovering a quanUty
deplete tbe revenue sharing income. of pot in lhe family's station wagon,
San Juan lasl flacal year opent about parked along woqdsy Woodland Drive.
fllO.OQO ,to pay for police services under
coptract wltb the county sheriff's office.
'!)lnlcllt'• oouncll meeting will be con-ducted for the ·11rs1 time by cooncilmen
wbD have bad the benefit of a
,..n -ion heloreband. Hughes
Mrs. Leary's whereabouts aren't known.
The "tune in, turn on and drop out"
apostle appeared quiet in court today,
Ryan said. He said h.! is "one of the
county itafr• assigned lo prosecule the
charges agains~ Leary, who is believed to
(See LEARY, Pqe I) .
Nayy Sky:·Diver:.
• .. .,. : ~ l
Killed in Plunge
A Navy man from Victorville was kill-
ed instanUy ln a slcydivtng ·accident al
Camp Pendl-SUnday.
Base spok.:!smen said Randall card, %2,
stationed at North Island Naval Air Sta-. tion, was killed alter his chule failed lo
open.properly dµrtng a sport paract.J<e
jump at Isadora F1ats.
Card hid been jumping with J6 fellow
members.., of the NortJt Islanll Naval
Parachute club when the mishap took
place.
Base spokesmen said Card was a
seaman stationed · aboard the USS
Buchanan which currently is in San
Diego Harbor. • -
The skydiving actlvity·ls an aul.horized
recreation for military groups on tht;!
base, infonnation aides said.
Isadora Flats lies about three miles up
coast of the main gate of Pendleton.
F ·elled?
Last F.riday night coonclln\en met In a
~· {See REVENUE, Pa1e Z) , ' Accoun,t of Hear t Attack Denied
D;41LY PILOT A.D
MA.DE TO ORDER
Have 90!llethinl lo sell? Try a DAILY
PILOT classlfleJ wanl ad ..-they're
mMe to order. Here's bow. one owner
ordeled a boyer f<>t hla real eota<e: :?t:s· CP1 nr 17th .St., CM SUper -renlal ue'I. >Try 6
units. Agt. JD•DD UI•
l DD. •
TR property -llOld the rant day. Give your order lo a DAILY PILOT ad·
vilof -dial direct -· "
LONDON (UPI) -An American heart specialist has flown lo Loodon lo
treat Howard Hughes for a suspected heart altack, the London Dally Mirror
1ald today . .
An aide for, the billionaire recluse denied the report.
1BE NEWSPAPER SAID Hughea, 111, has been confined to bed In his pent·
house aul<e In the Inn on the Park since the untdentllied speC!ailst examined
him last week. .
• Jan Eckenley, an aide with the Hughea party at the hotel, aald: "No spe-
'cialist bas visited Mr. llughea and be ts not in hed."
JN LOS ANGELES, HUGHES spobmnan Richard Hanna also aald, ''T\tm
is no truth to thla: story at all."
Tbe llllly llln« aald ff...._ ii llill ccnflned lo hed and an eleclrlc wbeel-
cl!air has -~ lo fill nlalb floor sulle for him when be fl Ible to ~~ . .
' • '
The. worst previous air disas ter was the said many bodies had been burned to
crash at Moscow's Sheremetyev Airport skeletons.
on Oct. 13, of an Aeroflot Russian built They were to be gj.ven a mass burial
Ilyushin12 jet, in which 176 persons died. later tonight or Tuesday, officials said.
A Japan Airlines plane crashed at a • The flight; from Jed.dab in ·Saudi
Moscpw airport on Nov. 2&. killing 62 Arabia, carried 196 Nigerian Moslem
pen!Qllll. _\ pilgrims back. rrom a visit to their holy
Today's survivors were taken to a city of Mecca. Other pilgrim flights had
hospital in Kano, while the bodies of the lo be diverted to Lagos after the airport
dead t0re laid in grlm rows of blanketed at Kano wa.s closed.
bundles on the airport tannac. Officials Federal C.Onunlssloner of Transport
' .
Russell Dikko left Lagos for Kano to in-
vestigate the crash. Alia airlines manag-
ing di rector All Ghandour flew from Am-
man to ass ist.
Authorities sealed off the airport while
the task of pulling the last of the bodies
from the wreckage was completed. The
flames burned away almost everything in
the wrec kage which was not metal
Police also mounted guard around the
hospital rooms where the pilot and·crew
were taken.
=.3-month
.
ll~~bie IH.sehaf-ge
,'UPIT .......
Sgt. iqnest i Pounder; 2!J-xear-9ld, ~uch decorated Vietnam veteran
and oqe-tiine lbember· of ·White House sec.\lritfi detail, has, ~n honor-abl~ diBcharg~ from the A.rmy as a conscientious objectOr.·With him . are bis children, Joey, 9, Bobby, 12.
• 1• ~ ' j ' • " .. ' Clemente · Coun~il Facing
Po stponed Light Agenda
'! r '
San Clemente city ·councilmen hope to
muster a quorum Tu~ay night to take
up an agenda which was postponed last
v.·eek.
• Two councilmen and City Manager
Kenneth Carr were in the nation's
capital, attending the President's in-
auguration.
A third councilman was called out or
town, 9(> the session was cancelled.
The M:enda is a .,.elatively light one,
containlDg complaints from residents In
the Avenida Socorro area opposing a
freeway access system of roads through
the area.
Another Jtem involves a recom·
meytdatloo from planning commissioners
that a major tract proposed near san
Clemente High School be approved with
13 conditions.
The ~ncil has the righl lo set its own
hearings on the matter, or to si mply oon-
cur· with the planners' recommendatiop.
The project calls for more tlwi'* lots
for a. major single-family~ tra<:1 ln the
Rancho Margarita section of the ctl)I.
Other items oo the agehtia include:-
-A .reluaal hy local building dealgner
Erle Boucher to requests by City
Manager Kenneth carr that Boucher
design a, new pier entrance under a
broiled budatl. .
Boucller bal said that a project pro-
posed lo «ill 116,IXIJ Is not effeCtlVe at
the entruce. He adds that the city
should prea for an at-grade rail cros!ling
at, the erarincc, Instead ·of ~ttfn1
fund•n=•rd lrylng lo refurbish lhe
unde entrarice.
-requett by the Juaneno Jndian
Guides ·for the use of the commwtlty
clubhoule tree Feb. 25 [or a fund-raising
pancake breakfast. ·
-A reoommendatlon by the city traf-
fic a~ parking commission that the VTN
(See AOENDA,,l'age ZI
Pregnancies
Terminated
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Su-
preme Court today barred states from
interfering with the decision of a woman
and her doctor to end pregnancies within
lhe first three monJhs.
In the 1 to 2 de;clsion striking down the
Texas abortioo law, Justice Rarey A.
Blackmun said medical data indicate
abortion In the ftrSt three months "al-
though not wlthout its risk, is now rela·
lively safe."
'lheretore, he'1&1d, "any lnt.ere!t of the
stall In prolectlng the woman from on
tnlmnnily hazardoua pnieed\lre • . • ~
1arply disappeared."
· 1be Texas law made It 1 crime to end·
a prqnancy excepl ·~or the purpose Of
·saving the Ille.of the mother.'' It had been
challenged by a prqnant single woman
who said she could not afford to 1eave
Teu.J to go to another atate where abor-
tion Ian were more lenl<!>l She had the
bahy while the case was J><nding .
The In bad been declared Invalid In
June 1970 by a three-judge federal eourt
in Dallas. Today's ruling ·.viii hl•e--an
ilflpact in 44 states with almllar statutes.
At the While Houae, presldenUal ~
secretary Ronald L. Ziegler aald be had
no ·lmmedialt cmunent oo the court de-
cision, and added that be doubta there
wlll he ony While -or preel-1 comment la ter "after we review it, 'ftlCb
we wlll.11
The ruling followed two yean ot de-
liheniilooa hy the J-. It w11 booed
predomlnlnily on what~--eolled
a ril!>I m privacy. lie Aid the rlPI "ii
bro.t eaougtl to f!it"MQPMI I WOllllll'I
declsiaa whether or DOI' to terminlle her
pregnancy." '
Juott ... Dyron It While and 'Wlllfata
H . .Rehnquist di-.led, While aald be
colJ)d "llnd l!Olhlnl In the tanguop or
hisloiy m the Constttutton 1o support the ·court'• judgment"
Reboqujat said .,"~ court'a sweeping.
invalidaUan of any ft!lltl1ctkm on abor-
Uon durlnc the flrsl trlmester ts imPol-
slble lo jus!Uy. . ."
In a secoOO 7 lo I rultnt, the '°"rt
atruclt down Georglo'1 abortloo law, find-
ing """" provlsialll lo be uncuwtltu-
Uonal.
Tbey were that (IJ in the nm uu.e
months the openllon be perlmmed ID ·m
accrodlted lloopttal, 12) ltltit 11Mill<ll
~ (Se<! ABORTION, hp I) • •
Occupancy Saggi~g .. at South Coast Hospital
Weadaer
Mostly sunny nn Tueoday, with
slightly warmer 1<mea-aJonc
the Orange CoMt. lfilbo of fl ore
expecled, with .....,. -II
wtnd1 warming the llr alllbill'·
Lows tonlCbt.-. -By FREDl!RIClt SCBOBMERI"
Of .. °""' "" ....
Ullll a year and a ball qu, Souar
eo..t ·eommuntl)I 8oopllai ol -1-vlrtually h<ld 1 monopoly nn the
delivery of boopllal care In aoutll Orange
Counly. _ l'Odar. with t"" new competllon open
and 1 third .foctllty to he compleled In
July, South c..11 -much., u..turf
ll ot\c!e controlled ii .....
'Ille. boopltal, occonllng lo I -her of
hea!Ui ~ olflclals famllllr with
aoutll ~ Caanl)', II die -m 1 unlqua -lillt: llllpilll .,..,..,_
. lllona the -.... fl ...... wtll ahead of the popil-powlb el Ibo .... ,
South Coll!. • •••• 11., lo !!Cl-
~ llnMI r, Clrr, II
'
• ..
from government and prlYlle hellth
plans, said Carr.
-''We're gntng lo have -....... oled-dfnl l4r the nell couple ol ,_., • Can
Dnltted In • recent intenlew.
'Ille last lwo Years bove "'° ""1lb ones, u well.
In 1970, South Coast employtd l'OllllNJ
400 persons. That figure haa .tapped lo
llO, according lo Victor C. Andrews,
pruldent of the hoard ol dlrecton. lie
ukl "further dialocatlona11 ti palWmtl
may like place in the rm-.
Corr alao tndlcaled 11Cldll111lll -
c:u11 may he made-and lbll bed • r Mr
DOW being constructed ta .. •q al a
_..,.may not he..-... •for -y ....
'Ille ,_ of-the Qlllpla ... """' ..
Jl!"lllem wind baek lo the Illa mpo -•
'
South ·eoast. with 171 beds open ror use,
.p11 operating at 9$ percent occu~.
A Jtel study by Stone. Marraccml and
Pattenon concluded tha t more hospital
~ were' needed in the South Orange
County llo!pital service Ar'ea,· which
runs lr<1m Crystal Cove soo th to San
Diego Counly.
'Ibe study recommended South C.oast
lmmedil1tely begin eoristnlction of JOO
1ddiliooal beds. It also recommeoded the
plamitnc start !or a 250 hed hospital lo
1trve-.tbe Saddleback Valley, and, by
1977 1 150 hed racillly he oonstrueled ~... San Clcmcnle and San Juan
CapillrlM. . • I
Soollh Coast ... -the .......... ___ .... __ !.,
mlDion erpanslop procram. At the aame
time, fund-raillng began lor the $12
,
million Saddlebacl: Communlly Hospilal,
scbeduled to open bt Laguna Hills in Ju·
ly.
Tbe The Stone, Mamcclnl and Pat-
tersop . ~rt.· t,equne,. in fJIRDC'e, I p""'8e plan tor South Coast and Slld-
dleback CommUnltr. Other 111-.
howmr, Ignored the study. ..
Groups ln<eresled In con&lruC!ing two
proprielar)' (profil) botpttals spran1 up
-one In ·s.n Clemen<e, the other In
Mission Viejo.
. C:OO.tructk>n of the 116 hed San
Clemenle General Hospital was sfllllV'ed
by th< Fscilltlea Review Q>minlttee of
comprehensive Health .l'!onnlnr Coune:ll
(CllPC, m Oranp CounlJ ... Ocl 1 ,
19?11. •
A week taler, the 11111 CBPC pve lta
ISee oo.mTAL, i'1ICe I)
INSIDE TOD~Y s"""' s..,.i,. .... w1<:11mii-Prefidellt Nfzoa daocc tmth IW
""''· toM• o1i 6/ • -· tM CTowd "''lllld /onoord, forcing
her iRlo Ail """'· 'I"" ~<l I dld•'I fallU Oii tM Jpi('ihc
la<er remarked. Set .,,,_.llli storr and,p/lotao on l'oge'4.
l..M,..,.. •
-u -. =---: C1M1af lf
--I ·--. • ...,., p i ,..-._ .,, ...., .......... -.,
... IUlll N
• •
, •
DAILY PILOT SC M-1. Jan""1 n. 1173
Eva~ua1ion Fl•p
Emergency Studied at San Onofre P'la.nt
.By JOHN VALTEllZA or "-0.ll'f 1"1 .. 1 Slllt
Evacuation of several South Coast
communlties in case of a nuclea:-ac-._ __ Claefil aT tile San 0 nor re NU.Clear
Generating complex would take in excess
oC tl!W ~. an expert told a lic~nsing
board over the weekend. '
Los Angeles area tra!Oc engineer l\t.
V. Sheppard told the Atomic Safety and
'• Licensing Board Saturday that the com-
muniUes of San Clemente, Capistrano
Beach, and Dana Point and San Juan
Capistrano could be evacuated in Jess
than tliree hours.
But foes bf the proposals to build t~·o
new reactors at San Onofre have insisted
in past months that evacuation plans for
... ..... the communities are inferior.
Sheppard appeared as a witness for the
two utilities propoSing the projects~
Southern Ca1ifomia Edison and San
Diego Gas and Electric companies.
· ~ Sheppan:l told the three-man panel
assembled in San Diego that it would re-
quitt 28,000 can to evacuate the
res.I.dents of the four South Coast com-
munlties.
In areas closer to the plant, it would
take considerably less time, he added.
Both the utilities and the Atomic
Energy Commission staff use thrt'e
separate zones which would be affected
by plant safety matters.
The first lbne. the "exclusion zone" is
an area within an fro.yard radius of the
reactors. 1
No permanent residenls are allowed in
that a~a .
A second, "low-populati~n" zone is also
cited. That is lhe area Ylilhin a three-
mlle_radlld'.ol tbe pianL IDcluded In Iha&
sector are the 10UJheily stretcbel or S..
Clemel!te (lncludlnf Ille WMlero Wblle
u ..... ) and ports o( Clmp hndleton.
-i\ISO lnlliit""llfl .,. sCCllocs ol tbe
San Onofr : State Park.
The tbinl ....._used for W""""-In
safety matters Is the entire South Coast .....
But spokesmen for the utllitles ll1ve
repeotedly Insisted Jhat only 1 ono-ln-
mlllions. chance ol Ill accldeot II tbe
plant would require any evaCtJation.
And Jooy ""' loalh to dlscuJs tbe prob-
abilities and typett of accidents which
mlght occur. Instead. Jhey stnss that all
aspects of construction and operation at
the existing reactor and two proposed
new ones are within AEC regulations .
The most severe accident at the plant,
they admit, would be a IOM-Ol-coolant in-
cident "·here the reactor would continue
to generate immense heat but its cooling
systems would fail . ~
. SUch an accident ha! never occurred in
a commercial reactor, but uperts
theorize that It could trigger lou of !He
and widespread ~ Jo ndltltlon.
Buf In commercial reactors, say utillty
officials, simultaneous breakdown In
dozen,, or separate system! woold be
necessary before such an inddeot could
occur.
The bearings In s.. ~ ........ been
callee! to ewnine. oaly the hu!Jh and
safety aspects of the utfilty proposals lar
San Ooofte.
But what can be admitted Into the
record and what can not is an exacting
issue regulated strictly by Washington
trial lawyer Michael L. Glaser, the
l',....P8f19J
LEARY .••
have rounded Ille -i.twlde dntt ..,,,,.
&IJnr orgaolzalion. '!be Grand Jury Jn.
dlcJed Leary In August.
lary's court •ppearance today -In
marttd cootrut to bis :irnlltttc, jovial
mood al Los AnceJes "'llanltltltml
Airport 'ltursday. Momsla Iller be WU
manacled by agenla ol the U.S. Buftau
of Dangerous llnlis. Leary pasaed by
waiting newsmen griiUlln& b!oodl1. A,.
utmtall:ed Los Angeles Sherill'• ,., llog..
ged Lary through a rain dtt!ldled rub
b<.ur Jo Los Angeles County Jail Wllere he
spent a night before being tranden'ed to
Orange Count) Jail. ·
Chula \vas said today to be meeting
privately "'ith Leary prior to the -af-
ternoon appearance. '
From Pagel
The charges la<:ed ~Y Loll')' In Orange
COunty link him with some 50 otben in-
volved in the Brotherhood or. Eternal
Love. Tbe Brotherhood. believed to be an
offshoot ol 1-1'• Lequa of Spfritual
lltscovery, WU retlf:"'Pible fGr .._ HOSPITAL OCCUPANCY_, •• ,..,... thiD l,OflO ~ .iilliiilllibWiiili IU millloo Into Ille U.S. eocb 1D1>11b, approval to the project. With no appeals
ol the delcslon bean! during a ~ay
period, work on the project began. It is
now in operation.
Construction of Mission Community
Hospital . a 124 bed facility was authoriz-
ed under a so-called "grandfather
clause" during an interim period when
CHPC v.·as abolished and the existing
Orange County Health Planning Council
established. It also is in operatioo.
The board of dlttctan of Saddleback
Community Hospital, a DOD-profit COC-
poration, received approval for a 250 beG
facility from ~ Facilities Review Com-
mittee of CHPC on Ott. 15, 1188. Soon
after construction was authorized by the
full CllPC body.
Soddleblck, hbo"•"•"'e"•, reali%ing too many beds were under construction
changed Ila plans and decided to •Jart oU
wilh onif 150 bedl.
"When Puhllc i-JIJl.741 wq "*5e<f
eslablisbing Comprehemlve Healtli ~Jan
ning RqulaUoits, provtalon ,,.. made !or
the etllbllsbmenJ ol such bodies, as the
Otqe County Comprtbwlve HealJh
Planning Council and ill subdivision,
Health Facllitles Review Commlttee,"
Carr said. "Unlortunolely, appotntmenls
to these bodies are made by local
political entitles. ·
"This In-lum might allegedly leave
room for political patronage and favors .
I do not know if these were factors that
were lnvolved in the history of tblt situa-
on, but It appears that some shrewd Indi-
viduals exercised their inOuenee to ob-
taln permission for the construction of
proprietary facfilties which could be
placed upon the line by profit motivated
interest! prior to the constructloo of well
planned facilities which had been cleared
011 their basic planning with the atate,"
c.arr said, ---..
"Had this planning been followed, some
of the problems which are prevalent on a
. temporary basis at the present time
, would not have ~en encountered," added
Carr. " ... I think you should be pointing
the flna:er at the Individuals who have
· violated butc comprehensive health
plamllog by irresponsible building of
unnecessary bed! to the detriment of the
general public."
0 1 thfnk yuu'D flnd a good deal ()f
opportunism, 0 aaJd Andnws In an ln-
tem.ew, "by people following the profit
motive."
Wblle Jhere II nothing wrong wtJh Ire.
IC
DAILY PILOT
Tiie Orllllt C..t DAILY ,ILOT, wltll _,.lcll
11 combined 1111 N .... ·~rtu, It M llth.i lly
W. Or-. CW.If h1Mllfl'"9 CM'IHf!Y • ..,._
ralt ·•11• •rt pwbllllllld, M°""•Y ftll'O\IO'll
PrMay, ftt Cos ta Mesa, ,.,....,.,, 1.-cll,
H!Mllllfl .... l1at.lllP'-....1J11 VIII"', l111"'"1
IMCl'I, lrvlMJSaddltMck allll Slln Clltfte~t1f
5111 J~11 C.piUrlM.. A 1111';111 reo;i<Gntt
«l!Oon ft M U111tif $1hlnl1y1 Ind SU!ICl~V•
Tllt prfn(l,.I JIUlllltllnf 'lant 11 11 ~llO Wt1I
•• , s1r1a1, c .. 1. M••· c.111wn11, t11n.
aoD1rt N. w,,J
enJerprlae. Androws aid, It ts
unforiunlle !hit muter planning WU
turned asid< and Ille communtty loreed
I<> pay !or the ovubedtllng problem.
"lt could have been pmented, I Jot of
money saved and we could have avoided
a lot of dislocation, .. said Andrews.
ffQSpilal trustee TrJstm Krogiu>, wbo
occl!Siooally bas be e n at odds with
Andrew.f• says tbert's -more to the prob-
lem thih just oVerbedding.
"Unfortunately, we offended some doc--
tors when we ran the whole thing,"
Kroglus said.
The doctors, be said, complained ·-the trutment offered at Soutb Coast.
Wiien · the new, proprietary boapttals
opened, the phylictam toot their palienla
elsewhere, he eiplalned.
Kroglua said the taU now II tor Ille
boanl ol tllrecton and the boapltal ad-
minlatl'ation to -coofJdetJce In Ille
medkal stall. f
0 What I'm working toward .. on the
board la maklng JhlJ the best dlmtt
hospllal In Jhe area and lhow!Di Jhe doc-
tors we care about them. I hope the
sligbla they may have !ell In the put will
oo lorgotlen," said Kroglus. · .
Olbe< llOU?Cel blame poor locollon and
penonneJ riltJ !or the problems 8oullt
Coast la lacing.
"South Coast is the one with the prob-
lem," said one member or the Orange
County Health Planning Council, wbo
asked not to be klentllleil.
"There aren 't a lot of people moving
into the area." he .added, "except for
Laguna Niguel. But South Coast may be
competing with Mission Community and
Saddleback for those patients. I see a
very real problem ."
Carr contends, however, that Laguna
Niguel growth will ease the overbeddlng
problem for South Coa!l. The area, he
pointed out, is expected to grow to 62,000
persons -an increase of 50,000 persona
over th.a present population.
But a spokesman for Avco Community
Developers says growth ln Laguna Niguel
is far behind what was originally plaMed
and that the 62,000 population figure is at
least 10 to 15 year1 away.
According to Carr, recent studies shaw
that the overbeddlng problem facing
South Coast should ease by 1978, when
the area PopulatJon la txpeCted to catch
up with the number of horpttal beds.
rn the meantime, he pclnta out. South
Coast will take 1 monger role ln op-
posing haphazard facility devel()pment,
particularly from the two profit hospitals
in the area. It will also conUnue to better
its total patient care and aervices, 11id Ca rr.
South Coast, aJong wlth a number ()f
other protesters, baa llready lolt one im-
portant batUe. AddlUon of D beds to
Mission Communlty~thou&b tumW down
by Jhe 'slaw Helltb PlaMJnr eooncn, II
now under way, 'Jbose new beds wlll open
in May.
au:.borlties say. •
Leary's ball bu been 1et at 15 mlllloo,
an ltttOUlll equal to the bettcb nrnnt
Issued ror blJn by Ille county court lut
August when Ille Grand Jury Indictments
were handed down.
Even with no bail, however, Leary
would return to prison. He .Oed the
minimum lle<llrity Calilamll Men's
Colony at S.. LuJs Obispo In September,
IC'.1. He ooly partJally served • ooe to 10
year senlence there !or bis Laguna
Beacb ooovictltn 'lbe fUcbl, belleftd to
have been let up by Ille mWLlnt
Weatbennlo orpnllalltm, lmtc:hed
Leory'1 -IL ,.-.... In Europe
lncludlnf atays with Ille Bllct Pllllhen
In Algien 11111 In Swlllerllnd, I~bllm
and llnalJy A!pnlma -he wu
spotted by U.S. aamo. . -
Leary, DOW Iii, bepn Illa ...
perimenlalloo with drui . li111e -Jban
I decoda 1iO In a llmftl'li llntftntty laboraloty. .
"At llarvanl I WU~ with
the lllCl'ed mlllhrooml ol Maico and
LSD, •. I WU turned on to llllrijul!ll by
llarvanl undergr1dullel .In !Ml," Ille
ludlng ezponent ol Ille drug culture,...
told a newsman.
For bavlng eiper!mented with LSD
wJJh student volunleen, Leory said he
was "kicked out" of his lectureship posi-
tion.
At that point In bis career, Loll')' come
to Calilomla.
"Studentl 10 over the country were
picking up on LSD u ID lnlet'estlng JhJng
to know abotlt. Leory .wun't Ille ooly
man in the country to start that. MaUer
of fact be was kind of later," said Dr.
Stuart Loomis, chief psychologist at the
Haight·Ashbury Free Medical Clinic in
San Francisco.
First Aid Oass
Set in Oemente
Fit'lt 1ld tecbnlques will be Jeugbt tn
lour le!llom beglnnlnf -Monday by
JeM')' Brown, 1 volunteer Red Crou in-
structor from San Clemente.
Tbe clus will meci from 7 to 9:30 p.m.
Jao. II, II, Feb. &-and 7 In Ille Little
Theoler 11 S.. Clemenle Hilb Scbool.
The course will be spolt90red by Jhe
Orange County Chapter ol tbi American
Rtd Crou and II open free of clwie to
Jhe public. The required JeJtboot will
cost 11.fll.
For lurtber lolormaUOD call 13U181.
Marine Found
Shot to Death
The unfortunate lacJ, says Andrews, lo LA MIRADA (AP) -Tho body" 111
four hospitals wlll be fighting 11for 18-year-old Marine privat.t flnt · cllll
everyOOdy" and none of the facilities who hu been missing from El Toro Ma·
may be able to exceed a 35 percent oc-rlne Air Base since Jan. 8 has been found
cupancy. -under hi! mother's home here . of!iclala ''lt'a a tra1edy ... just sinful," ij~ reported today.
Andrew:s. ·::. · David Kelly apparently died lrom a
.,. seJl.Jnfilcted gtWbot W0\111d in his bead,
deputies said. A .»30 caliber rilie was
-1!0t1gside the body. Medical Oass
Given on Coast
Emetfency medico! technical lralnJng
Is 11no1ia 20 claa 1Ubject.1 altered free ol
charge by the Clpiltrono-LIJllllll
llegi<tfll\ Occ;upatronal Proaram w!Jh
cl...., allrtllli In Februll')'.
Tbe medical Jralnlnt provides Jhe suc-
cessful student with an Advanced Flnt
Aid training necessary t-0 quallfy 11 1 ureauard, playground supervltor, lzn.
bulance driver, fire man or pollctman.
Frltt!dl who lo\md the'body aald Kelly
-lut -Jon. t and 11 lhlt UtlM he appaored ''vety moody," 1utbortllot llld.
Anaheim Man Dies •
In Apartment Fire
James E. Divis, 20, died ol bums and
11moke lnh1l1Uon tn a fin wb.lch twept
hi• apartment Sundly, Ot•Di• Counly
Coroner'• Office aldea rtporled.
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(:laimp's Best Friend u~, ,,...,. ..
A Chicago pet shop is home to a chimpanzee nained Bingo and his
a!leetionate puppy friend. The relationship may be sbort·lived though, as both are for sale.
Quiz Disclosed
Of Prostitution
In Huntington
Huntington Beach vice officers today
cOntinued their investigation of an alleged
prosttttJttoo ring· they aaid b a • been
~rating in the city for about three
Weeki.
The lnveatigaUon llnt came to llgbt
lut 'l'butoday with' the lltTest .of tbtte
women police alltge were wortlng out of
a boose at ~ Clpstone Lane.
Officers identified the women as Judy
Ano Klusmeyer, 25, Fullerton; Belen
Marie Ryan, 17, Garden Grove. and
Carol Ann Domain, 17, Long lleJcl).
All three were arrested on suspicion of
cooapiracy to commit prostitution, a
felotty. '!'bey wert booked lnlo Orange
County Jail and have since been released
on their own rtcoplunce. Arraignment
is scheduled Thursday in West Orange
Counly Judicial Dbtrfci COurt.
SNOOPY APPEARS
IN ROMAN DIGS?
ROME (AP) - Did the ancient
Romans have their Snoopy, too ?
Yes, said Rome 's D Giomale d'Italia
today with 1 headline : "Sooopy Was a Roman."
An:heololisla working under the
Baslllca of St. Mary Major discovered
1,600-year-old etcbinp on tht wall with
remarkable similarity to Snoopy.
Snoopy iJ the dog In Charles Schulz'
cartoon strip, "Peanuts."
Flu Deaths Recorded
SAN DlEGO (AP) -The London nu
was blamed at least party for two deatbs
In San Diego CoWlty, Dr, J. B. Alkew,
COUDty health dlreclm', aald be conllnned
thU through cultures grown from tests on
five dead penons.
• •
committee must give its approval and
(3) that two pbysiciane must concur with
the woman's ()W11 physician that the preg-
nancy should be tenninated.
Blackmun said the "interposition of a ,
hospilal 1bortloo commlltee la unduly
restrictive of the patients• rights."
Summarbed, the court held:
I. The atales m han<d lnim Hltrlct·
Ing abortit1t11 wilbln the !Int lbreo
motllhs.
2_ In this period, the •bortloo dedaJoo
must be left to the medical judgment "
the pregnant woman's own pbyUdan.
3. After the first three months, the
stale, il ii ci-, ..... , rqulal<! •l>or'
tion procedures "In waya that ar.e rta-
sooably related tb matemal-bealth."
l'rom Page I
AGENDA •..
Corporation of Irvine be retained u 1
parking consullllll Jo lhe .Jty.
-Fonnal ratification of the an-
nexation of 80 acre.a In the Palisades u
approved recently by the county Local
Agency Formation Com.nlsslon. 1rbe new
city territory orlginally was to have in-:
eluded an added 20 acres which the city
did oot request, bu~ opposition by
residents in that area cawed the com-
miulon to change lta mind and exclude
lhaJ portion.
REVENUE .•.
#
sludy leJllOD format (meettnp art
publlc but yield no lonnal actions) to
review information In their agendas for
tonight's meeting.
The theory behind the work aesslcm Is
to cut do'Rn on meeting time.
In recent months late adjournments
have beeJl commot1plaee.
. .
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3.7
DETROIT (AP) -G-al Motors an-
nowtced the reca!J today o1 ·s.7 million
11rri and 1m cars !or tnstallaUoo or 1
<leld over the aleerlnJ couplltl& to pre-
vtml Ille """1blllty, " llylnr •-lodi· lnl between Ibo coupllnc and Ille car
ritune.
In maklng the announcement, GM said
It ncdvt\l rtporla " 116 Incident. where
Stones were acooped up, reru!Ung ln 23
acddents in which 12 injuries were re-
ported.
Involved tn the recall are fulklze 1971
and 1m models ol Chevrolels, Buk:ka,
Oldsmobllea and PooUacs.
The company said the shie1d wouJd be
lnatalled at DO clwge to the car owner.
11 said ownen would be tiotllied tn aboul
two weeks. ,
GM said that U one ol the cars II
driven over loose gravel at speeds whJch
came the car to pifch excessively, the
lrottt fiame croamember t1lO)' ac:oop •P
1-stmes or gravel !Jom, lbe t'O(dWlf.
Soma of the stood coold lodp be-
Jhe steertnc dlupllng and frame, cauotnc
steering lnlerlerence oo a left turn , Ibo
aulomater reportod, lddJng th a t lbe
"'"" Is dislodged' wbai t b e steering
wheel ls turned to the righl.
GP.f said it deci&!d to ask the owners
of 3.7 millim cars to bring them in for
installatkm of the shields even though
only a few can might become involved.
GM said the decision followed investl-
gatiom by the Company.and the National
Highway Tralllc Safety AdmlnlstnUon.
GM's announcemeot came on the same
day that Ibo C..let' for Auto Safety In
Wasblngtm.urged the recall. 'llJe center,
funded lJy the COosumen IJnlon, said It
had r.ports of IS crubel, wlJh ttlne In-
juries, stemming from the steering lock·
up •
A rtpor! by the cenler last July """It·
f:'d in ' consumer alert bulletin Issued by
the U.S. Departmtnt ol TransportaUon.
General Motors then provided dealers
with the shield , but ownen: were required
to pay 50 cenla !or the device , plus lt>-
staUatfon coms.
The lariest recall in automotive history
involved U mllllon GM veblclea In llNlll.
Train Derails;
Blast Likened
To Atomic Botnb
POWDER SPRINGS, Ga. (UPI) - A
Seaboard Cjlas\ Line freight train Cir·
rying five tankers of butane and other
forms of gas derailed and exploded "like
an atomic bomb" Sunday night about 500
yards from a cbemlc1l plant. Two
crewmen were injured.
Two ltmlltn containing LP bullne gH
exploded allet' the train skipped the
trackl In a sparlely-populated area, but
poUce said the lhree ttmalnln( L1nken
held JOme sort of "deadly, tollc" gu.
Police evacuated about '-00 perlOlll
from tbelr homes wlthln a one-mUe
c;id!UJ of the derailment but alJow.d
them to return after several hours when
it appeared the danger of further e1.-
ploslons was past.
Pollce said at I a.m. thal the !Ire ap-
parently bad been brought under -control
and Jhere waa utUe danaer of. lhe threo
other tanters exploding, "barring 1 lw
in the tankers."
The derailment happened just Iller the
train bad picked up the gaa Llntor1 from
the A·J chemical plant 11111 WU helded
east toward AU1nt11 SO mlle1 away.
The re<k>range &low tn the 1icy could
be seen In Allanla.
"11 loobd lll:e an 1tomlc bomb go~
off," said Sara Crews, who was riding trr·-
a car 11 miles away when the first blast
occurred. "It looked lib the sun wu fix-
ing Jo come lit. the 1ty wu so brlgbt."
LAST CHANCE When they're 1one,
they're 1onol
FACTORY BUY-OUT-
oF AU.
REMAINING
LITTON
MICROWAVE
OVENS ,
with
MicrQ
Browner
Mo4ol JOZ '
• ••
_.., at
1 The ell!" wlll he Jauaht ltont 6 to I
p.m. Thunda)!t beilMlna Ftb. It II
Ricllanl Henry Dana School, Dino PofnL
Further lolonnatton COll<'entllli t'tflltr ..
1lotl and olher clauas II ••allablt by
calling ~ms. ·
A neighbor, IAollll'll N. Bautr, pulled
DoviJ from the bedrwn noor or hll 1417
W. Ball Rood, Attlhllm, apartment and
••mniOllld aid. Flrt deportment ~ . 1°F=:..°":l.U: ~ ~ 1115 OPGRT avo., lllnlM c.m Mm -:flhnl'41.naa
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orJi!neled frnm a clgu..tl•. 1.1.-----------------------------...1 -' ,d I j
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JO D~llV ~ILOT
Insurance
. Bill Seeks
•
:WASHINGTON (AP) -'Sci\.
Philip Hort '8y1 Amor!Cans
cculd be 1lng Jheio lilt In-·
auranee ~in the blind''• and
. contrary to popular opl,nlon" ...
a)I ~~ lnlurance does no\ "*t a~t the same. •
Hart, a co.author or the )la,
tlonal .0.fault aii1o fiiaura~
bill, say> If may be time ·lor
for "truth·ln-llfe-insurancet.1
le&lalaUon. • SUCH · LEGISl,\TIO~!)>O
Mleblgan Democrat sal~. Jl'<lut4 requ~e col"Panles of.
lerlng We (lOlicles to b~~
down thelr premiums and ~"
plain what part ol the Pi)licy
bill &oes lor what kind 01 proo
teetion.
With such a breakdown,
Hart say>, Americana could
compare the relative costs of
diff•rent Policies, aometlllnl
that is vlrluaUy Impossible
right now.
· "Most people aeem to
beUeve that all life insurance
costs about the same," Hart
said in a statement . ..!•Actually -
the price or dealh protection
-a basic of any policy -can
·vary by as much as 300 per·
cent even when annual
pre,miums for identical
policies vary only by 15 per·
cent." ,
DEALER GROUP AD tOUNCI~ ~ Preparing to kick~ Dew Harbor.Boulevatcl
Dealer Asoociatinn campaign are advertising committee members. (:ie1ted·1e1t to
right) Pontiac dealer Dave Rotlii,.Ford dealer Theodore Robina, Jr., .. ad Lincoln·
Mercury dealer Dick Johnson. Standing is Chevrolet dealer John Colll!ell.
The confusion, Hart said,
comes because most wlicies
Include both death protection
,and savings element.
Hart said he would examine
lhe question in hearing§ before
his Senate antitrust ahd ~on 0-p o-1-y -subOOmmitt.ee
begjnning Feb. 20 .
. There is competition for the
consumer insurance dollar,
Hart said, based on service
and company reputation.
"What we are going to find
out is how much is based on
price," be said.
1'1'0 CONSU~tERS, it can
mean buying _blind. This is
going on in the life insurance
market-today;"-he said .
•
Bankamerica's
Dividend Told
Qlrectors of Banlcamerlca
Corp. have author~ a
quarterly dividend of 1911.&
cents per shatt 6n Jhe "°"'
· poration's Capital st~k.
The dividend is Pj\Yable Feb.
ia to shareown,ers of ~
Jan. 31. -
In many-Pnponllon H
li-prompt,lanponryrellel
-IUCb pain and ltdllnc and actually helps shrink
....W.r ol -boldal U.
-cauoed by inllammation. Tella by docton on hUJ>.
THERE ARI OYER 20·
ACRES 01' NE'f' AND USED
CARS FOR SALE
ON COSTA· MEM''<---
ffarbar Baul.vi.rd
r.a -~--af CCIN --
LOOI HI-Tift lllUll AT
DAVE ROSS I HAL OREIN'S PONTIAC Mlroclo M.me ,.. 2151
HARBOR BLVD. HARIOR ILVD. ' '
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MOftday, Jal\uary 22, lfJ73 DAIL 'I' PILOT
-c-~ '-.,J
....,"'----ri<-l':"o .. t•-, lti i\ i\ my GYM
"I'll do my other liomewo " . homework .
:'Big Brot her'?
Pentago11 to Te st
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Home Alarm Units
WAS!DNGTON (AP l -The
Pentagon plans 'A'ide-scale
tests next month on a radio
\1raming system it wants to tut in your bedroom.
t 11le radio receiver listens
iueoUy to a government fre-~eocy and comes to life only
"'hen the military activates it
'th a special, coded signal.
The aim is to save-lives by
broadcasting iwarnings of
tornadoes, hurricanes, floods
Or nuclear attack. Installation
(Jf the radio device wou1d be
ioluntary.
. ORIGINALLY Civil Defense ~fflcials hopcd1 for a law re.
Quiring that the radio
~ivers be built into every
cew television set sold in the
-nited States.
.. But White !louse broa8-
'8Sting offici~ls ov~!!'11ed ~ Jhilitary, which-·nms Clvtl
Defense operations, at. least
lemporarily. They feared the
public might interpret man-
datory installation of the
receivers as part of a govern-
' •Blast Ends
In Murder
Arrests
GRANDIN, Mo, (UPI) -A
. small explosion at a Poplar
Bluff. ~to., garage apparently
resulted in the arrest of three
suspects in the murder of
Grandin banker Robert Kit·
lerman. his wife and 17-year-
o!d daughter.
Authorities said a ti1>5ter
told Butler County Sheriff
Clyde Hendrix he had s~n one
of the suspects, Dallas Ray
Delay, 33, at the garage a few
days before the Klttermans
''•ere murdered.
The t.ipster reportedly told
authorities Delay had a pistol
and something resembling
a dynamite stick. which he ex-
ploded with gun powder.
"I'm going to use this to rob
a bank," authorities said the
ti~ter quoted Delay as
saying.
Ripley County Prosecuting
Attorney James Hall said that
Sunday Delay, Lloyd Dwaine
Cowin, 21, and Jerry Rector,
22, each would . be charged
~·ilh three CQUnts of first·
degree murder. The three liv·
ed in Van Buren, Mo., about 15
miles northwest of Grandin.
AUTIJORITIES said the trio
had been camping in a wooded
area where a fake bomb and
currency were found . ·The
makeshift campsite was about
seven miles from where the
bodies of Kitterman, 43. his
wife. Bertha, 33, and their
daughter. Roberta, were found
last Wednesday.
'
menl propaganda and spy
system similar to the one used
by dictator Big Brother in
George Orwell's novel "1984."
In that book, goverfunf.nt
agents kept watch on ~tizeias
in their homes through closed..
circuit television cameras. BJg
Brot her coold ~pl any
program to deliver Ofden or
propaganda,
The Pentagon's system can
onlYt talk, not watch or listen.
Reglllar commercial breed-.
casts aren't affected.
CIVIL Detense officiah, who
conceived the warning system,
have built a bombproof rad.lo
transmitter near Baltimore
and plan to start le$! broad·
casts to a lktate area in ear·
ly February.
About 400 high-priced
receiven are being built, and
will be distriOOted at fll'St only
to state and local government
authorities WbQ. want them.
But technicians are close to
perfecting a home receiver
cheap enough -aboul $10 -
for almost anyone to affonl
The civil defense officlall
call the system oms. for
Decision Infonnation Disbibu-
~n System.
PLANNING began In 1964,
small-scale field tests trere
conducted in 1968 and
Congress approi>riated -$2
million for the' first transmit-
ter and receivers in 1970. Cost
overruns have· raised the ln-
iUal price to $5. 7 millim.
If next month's tests are
successful, and if Congress
goes along. the Pentagon plans
eventually to build a tmal of 10
transmitters that together
would reach nearly every cor-
ner of the nation, exctpt
Alaska and Hawaii.
The automated transmitters
could be overated by rremote
cootrol from the North
Afllerican Air Defense Com-
mand near Colorado Springs,
Colo. or at either of two back-
up points.
BY PUSHING button s on a
console. a teclmlcian at one of
these control "points would be
able to turn on air-raid sirens,
broadcast mes sages by voice
or teletype to state and local
officials. or s e n d an-
nouncements over h o m e
receivers.
The Pentagon began think·
ing about improving its na-
tional .war:»ing system more
than a decade ago, when
missiles made the old,
telephone-and-siren s y s t e m
otieolete.
That aystem,r changed little
. today, would taken an
e!Umated 30 minutes to reach 'is percent Of the population
ewn under the best of
circumstances.
Officials estimate the DIDS
system could warn 00 percent
of the public In hall a minutt,
If everyone had a receiver.
I See by Today's
Want Ads
Bird, complete, for $175.
e CAMP IN COMFORT in
thbi 'S7 Chevy Truck, 6
has a steel frame and ·11•1
lined and lnsulated. On
the Inside ts a ·bed, Ice
box and cabinets. Only
$650,
•
"IADGER" ly lnsl nkerat .....
GARBAGE ' DISPOSAL
"lnslnkerator -The Best Name In Kitch•," Helpersl"
• features o continuous feed operatio~.
l3<1dger
• Stoi.nless steel grinding elements-
durable and sanitary. •
• fast, ~osy installation.
• 1 yeor·warronty-U.l. approved . . ~ .
REG. $26.99 $1999
SAVE $7.001
TUES. & WID, ONLY!
Dispose· II
GARBAGE DISPOSAL
CONDITIONER
REG. 49c
HURRY I
Deluxe Aluminum Frame
35'
8 os •
FOLDING-~COT
"Hurryl Hurryl -Limited To Stoek On Hand!"
• Real comfort o~ this big 24 1/2" x 7'2'' deluxe cotl
• Heovy-d~ cOr\vas cover hos double needle·sfitched seams.
• Not just for camping -use it
for c "Company" bed.
HURRY! WHIU
THEY LAST!
TUES. &
WED. ONLll
REG.
$9.95
WOW!
NO, 2405
SAVE ss.001
r
Pa11tastlc c 10 ... 0vt1
WOODEN FOLDING CHAIR
• Sturdy wooden folding choirs
for home, church Or club.
I • Reody to be stained, painted or antiqued.
• Perfect for parties, picnics, games or
just extra seating!
REG. $4.99 OWi
SAVE $2 .001 W
TUES. & WID. ONLY! WHIU THIT WTI
Famous Dlsston
PROFESSIONAL HANDSAW
''''''' Choice of Curpenter.sl''
• Highest quality chrome nickel alloy steel Disston" Mod el D-23.
• Full toper ground, bevel filed,
hardened, tempered & polished.
IUG. $10.99
SAVE $5.001
WHILE THEY LASTI
Your Choice! ,
TOASTER OR STEAM IRON
"Close-Out ol famovs Practer·Sllex flectrlca/ App/lances/"
• 2 shce toaster f.mtires fflectronic color cont1"9l--perf~ toast from ony kind of b1'9adl ~ Spray steam '11 dry iron hos o buflt·ln Waih & weor
temperature guld..._.,,,oy, steam & d/Yl YOUI CllOIQ $799
TUES.&<
WED, ONLY!
SAVE $5.00I
Famous Spartus• Electric
RIG. t~ $12.99
.1ro1019tiJ1r11n1~~i11913:11 CLOCKS! CLOCKS!,
AnyMo(o<'"'"d
MOTOR OIL
• f ine quality heavy duty or non-detergent
20 or 30 weight motor an I ,
• Havoline•, Pennzoil', and Quaker State '
10 nome just a few!
LIMIT 6 QUARTS 38(
PER CUSTOMER Qt
TUES, & WlD. ONLY!
Mota!
OIL DRAIN PAN
• Prevent• spil\1 & stains in garage or driveway.
• large capocity metal pon.
REG. $2.1 9 $139
t-10. 711
TUES. a WID, ONLJt
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"Special Purchosel-Y!Jur Choice of Tremendous StylH ilt Popular Sov/n9sl"
TUIS, a
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Monday's qosing '~ces-C«Jmp{ete New Yq~k StoCk Exchange List
~~News Not Enough
~·yM
NEW YORK (AP)-The stodc l;IW'ltet gqt ltseU
Into forward 1ear brietly Monday but· epded Ill• day : • lll revene, .
Explalnlnf the lw'Daro_.(':),pb Acampori of
-Harris, 'Upham I< Co. pie!, ~eekond IH!WI wu
iood, but It wasn't eno~gh to h•Wn i rally.• .
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. He refemd opecil!ql\Y to ~tlolll that Viet-nam setUement could b8 slped IOOll end to aome tougb anti-inflationary talk allout .economic Plwl 3
from Administration officiab, notably William E.
Simon, the No. 2 man in tbe Treasury DepartmenL -
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SC OAILV PILOT J.i
-... MINf> .... LfWLlltC -... NC.....-L.-LllfC-.
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J:f DAILY PILqT
BOATING
.Two Lead
Powerboat
·standings
Bobby Rautboord of Miami
Beach, Fla. and Sandy Satulla,
Cle\'eland. Ohio, emerged as
the stars or the offshore
powerboat competition in 1972.
Rautboard had a year
dreamed of by powerboat
racers. He won four Union of
Motorboat (UIM ) races and
the 1972 World Offshore
Championship. .
He now joins the elite list
which includes the names of
the world's most talented
powerboat racers -Bill Wi.ymick of New York,
V~m.o Balestrieti of Italy,
Don Aronow of Florida, Dick
Bertram and Jim Wynne of
Florida.
SATULLA, A rookie driver,
wm four major races in a row
in his Copper Kettle. Starting
with a win in the Hennessy
Hurricane 'Clissic at SL
Petersburg, ·F1a. (a revival of
the old Hurricane Classic and
a race which will be held
again this year) Satulla then
took the Sam Griffith
Memorial, the Bahamas 500
and the He~ssy Grand Prix
at Pt. Pleasant, N.J. It was
the fu-st time a rookie has
ever set such a record.
Star of an entirely different
tYJM; of powerboat racing was
Bill Muncie who almost made
a clean sWeep in Unlimited
Hydro racing last year. lo his
-boat....Atlas-Van Linel...-...Won
the Miami, F1a. race, the
Owensboro, Ken., race. the
Gold Cup race at Detroi~ the
Madison, Ind. classic, the
Pasco -Kennewick -Richland,
Wash. race and the Seatt1e,
Wash. race.
(
I
Bill Sterrett Jr., was the
winner of the President's CUp
race at Washington, D.C.
C A UFORNIA .DRIVERS
scored in some. of the smaller
classes in both Inboard and
outboard races. Some or the
chllmpions: .
FIVE-LITRE -·George E.
Fox, Van Nuys (driver Mickey
Remund); Wayne Thompson
and John Wolf, Van NllY'.
CRACKER JJOX -DIMy
Edward f\1ang, Glendale. •
B RACING RUNABOUf -
Patterson, Calif.
K RACING RUNABOur -
Charles E. Boyd, City'of Com-
merce.
A RACING RUNABOUT -
Alan Ishi, Pasadena.
C RACING RUNABOUT -
Rich Fuchslin, Dixon. Calif.
C SERIES RUNABOUT -
~tanuel Carnakis, Bakersfield.
C HYDRO -Fred Hauens-
tein, San Jose.
PREDICTED LOG RACING
(James Craig Trophy) Robert
Wilson, Callforitia Yacht CJub,
ritarina del Rey.
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Ho.hie Cat Title (4>ast Guard
• • SpolB Open •
87 ~ lXlCKAJEY "I ftll H1'0Uld be· Jtd1 to ... ,with tlt1nl • ' '"" 0out Gutn1 rocruttinc,
ol regatta -th6 f-Otlttti· lloberto Baunl Jr• PllOfto *lion tn S..111 Ana ll&I an-·
aer Ctnoe Clult Of Wllltlkl. Rico, l'l.I; llln>ld lltllc\'1tlP• . nounced Ol*lin&a tn MYeral
Fort a .. sklppen from IS Prlw Wini awudocl to IM · Honolulu, IQ'I ; Lelllt Anderton, •. ; •• ~
coon · colllJ>Oltd _II>_ this • flnt JO flnllhers. 11,.y !NlO: llooolulu, 110; Ntlaoa Plcelo. U..a for uper~~-aeamen:
Of ... _ - -• 'wind up -Jell J1* •lier placlnc 1-1-HONOtULU -Efgbteep-
yur oJd. Rlcbard Lou/el< ts -~ do that badlJ la anr lurday'1 heavy -tber
wlntln& bla way bock to 1111 race," tba yooDglll!Mn aald. tbat •• at least ball a
malnlaod home loday loaded But 1n tho lliJtl fllinl boats co"'1Xed. Loofelt world championship · . RicbaJ;d Lot11fk, Co1t4 Brull, Ill; Rick ,..lob. 'l1lt opeo!ttJs, many ol lhtm
lJ1" HobJe.14s which an built Meaa, 19.15; Jeff Canepa, San-Kallua, Rawall , 111; • open lb!ouah pay grade &t, • !>Y COUt Catomaran of S1lo ta <;rui, 40JS; Hobie Alttr, Deane Froome, llonolul u, ·
down wUh 4ll paintings, a new c...i-.-came up with a l+t. In tbe Satuntay
sports-jacller aoct a bQttle o .9b'entb as Loulek woo, but r~
auan Capistrano. Capl&trano . S.aclt, U.75: I.\!; Miko HollMI, Honolufu, Include quartermuter, supply Cl)8Jn~, an or 't"blCft pro-. sun lfttaJned • hspecla~e '4
claim him lite Orsi world leod. It wu· In llte 1'1111 ud
champion or jbe Hobie c.1;14 flnal race that Cone~ blew
clasa. · hi. cbaocel Wiii\ a !lilt pl.tee
'!'be ·eos1a Mesan. woo ~ rmish. Lot\ftk apin wu tbe
OTBD ORANGE OOlJNl'Y
sailors placed .,...., lite first
ten In tbe colorfltl rtptta. llt
fotttth ¢loe , WU .Wl)'DO
Sdllofer of Capistrano Beac1t.
a loniter .. ~ cbainplon.
Tlte.ovtOI wu C<HpOOJOIOd. Wayne SChaeffr, -c.-... 114; Claudio KUlllO, Brull, officor, elecu.olcs 'leclinl-
111' Primo B1"wlog Co. of Boacb, SI; Clppy llboolej,, 117; George llonlq, Sidney, c I an 1 , and boa p If al
Honolulu 11111 Pan Amerlcu Hottolulu, IO.ll; Jolla 0..' Alllihlll, IC; David Lyons, wvlceman olllclolallld. For •
Airw8l'L lll1gan, Newport Beach. II; aldney, 113; Denny Keouib. f\n1her lnf.;._tfOa coll 147. he lives just aeross the street w:lnntr. \ Dennis Wllcor, Florldoi, !7i Sidney, I•; lllCI ~ Baml,
HEADQUARTERS for tile Keith Buter, llon6htlu, D.11; llooolulu.111. IMel. from Newpoit S.ach, won t111• Hobie Alter of Clplstnno
final two races of the ltl<aee
,..gaUa to edge Jell Canepa ol
Santa CM Ill' one and a
quarter points as tliousandJ ol
spectators watclle<! tbe li&ht
air duel froni the beach at
Wai\Ud.
Loufe.k has been a top sailor
of Hobie Cats since they came
on the sailing scene some five
years ago. He is a former na-
Uonal champion µi the class.
AS HE WENT in tc the final
two races Suriilay, Loufet was
19 Points behind .Canel"!.
Boeing
Building
Jetfoil
SEA1TLE (AP ! - A plant
formerly used for production
of the.727 jetliner. is now the
home of the "Jelfoil", the
Boeing Co's venture into· com-
mettial ocean transport.
'lbe cavernous building was
the setting Friday for lite
. laying of the keel for the lint
Jetfoil, scheduled fir delivery
in the summer of 197t to Far
Ea!! Hydrofoils oflloog Kong.
Boeing began commercial
hydrofoil production last
September, and William M.
Schultz, program manager,
said the firm expects. to sell 40
of the $3.S million ships in the
next five years and 100 during
the next decade.
The company says it has
firm orders for 11 Jetfoils
from Far East. Pacific Seat
Transportation Co .. of Hawali
(for inter-island service) and
Condor ·w :oi London (for
English Channel operation).
Schultz ~d the JeUoil is of
unique design and Will offer
passengers a emllortable,
safe, rapid ri~m ,. depend-
able sch<!dule, ~en in high
winds and heavy1Seas.
The JetCoil will literally ride
on underwater wlngs. It will
have a displacemmti'..of 16 tons
and will l>e a~ . l4? \transport
:1.5 many as .290 Jl8Sl!lllgers at
up to 50 mDes ·an' hoUr. It \viii
be 90 fOet li1ng wtul a mu·
lmum beam 'of 31 feel..
Dllty Dela)'
Hitch Set ·
The United Sta~s eo.>t
Guard recruiting office in San..
to Ana has announced .a new
enlistment program lha
allo,vs men to enlist iril-
mediately bot delay the start
of active duty up to six,
months.
The program is intended for,
but not limited to. high school
seniors Within six months of
graduatton, according to c:oast
Guard officials.
FOr further information call
547-641&.
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FANCY.
Bananas Golden rlpo
· Spinach Frnh •nd T•ndor
Oranges SWHt ind Juicy
BANANA
~Squash •
Thiele_,...
2 Ibo. 25¢
2bun. 39¢
lb.
'
fk!ie<!1(e$$eP1
RICHARD'S
Egg and Potato Sa.tad 14 OL 59¢
KNUDSENS
Natural Cheeses t JI Yltittlt& f OJ, 69c
Homemade Sauerkraut " .. 29c
Pillsbury Biscuits '"'·~m ... c.,..., '"'' I OL lOc
-
RICHARD'S TOP THE GRADE U.S.D.A. '•CHOICE"
PREPARED FDR EASY CARVING
Standing Rib Roast 1.59 lb.
Short Ribs of Beef Braiso 69¢ lb.
or stew
FROZEN
Lamb Shanks N•w z .. 1.nd · 79¢ lb.
' BAR M SMOKED Pork Loin Roast Lik•s~;;:di•n 1.29 1b.
BAR-M . •
Smoked Pork Chops 1.49 lb.
. ' Ora~e Pork . Cl.tops
c .. 1 6 thlc• ch•pt witl! • fl'lh•utre 'of 2 T. llour trwl ¥1! hp. \elt. 111 2 T.
.... •ii. l:wo-chop1 ebout 10 1T1i11, ••· tlcfe. Cornbl111 I T. brown 1u91r,
J /I hp.. 9i~r, I T. freted or1n9• peel en<I I C. or1n90 juice. l'our 0¥1•
chop1. CO•er. Simfl'ler 45-50 mi11. Ad<:! I C. or1n9e 1ec.tio111 ju1t btfor•
1enrin9. -StrY11 •·
Stuffed Chicken Breast 1.19
Yz Cornish Hens ~stuffed wilh ... •w• .,. ... , ,,. .. ,,, 59c
A COM PLEtt SELECTION Of EXOTIC SEAFOOD
We also process meat for home frHars.
Merjj
Butter Crust Bread
Potato Rolls
Fruit Boston Cream Pie
LAR&E
Assorted Coffee Cake
46c
6 for 39c
1.69
99c
1r/0roer lnep
YELLdW ••d WHITE
Marguerite Daisies
bun. of 25 l 029
LIQUOR
Richard's Private Label
RICHARD'S
Scotch Whisky ll.I Proef fifth
RtcHAl:O'S KENTUCKY
Straight Bourbon Whiskey 16 proo, fifth
RICHARD'S
London Dry Gin 1.0 proof fifth
RICHARD'S
Lido Market Vooka 10 proef flfth
6.38
4.75
3.80
3.80 • •
. ~~ LIDOCENTER 3433Vialldo,N~Beach
OPEJ:l eAILY 9-7; SUN. 9 -6 67J.6360
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QUALITY -VALUE -SER'llCE-
J .Cf~rf!f
Crisco Oil
RICHARD'S
Large AA Eggs
YUBAN
Instant Coffee
' I BORDO .
Grapefruit Sections
. Chiffon Towels Big roll
Hunts Tomato Sauce
Smuckers Cherry Preserves
CAMPIEllS
Chunky Split Pea with Ham Soup
CAMPI ELLS
Chunky Chicken with Rice Soup
Betty-Crocker Ginger Bread Mix
Nalleys Chili . with Beans ~ .. ,,.,, Hot .. Thi<k
Nabisco Premium Saltine Crackers
. .
&REEN GIANT ,
Bake 'n Serve .Casserol.e •" ''"'"'" . .
""MRS. SMITHS •
Apple :or Coconut ·Custard Jiie •
48 ·C!L-·
doL
8 OL
16 oi.
.1.:19-
3 for $1
4 for $1
·I OL
19 Ot.
It 01.
14 Vt 01.
15 OL
I lb.
12 Ot.
10 for $1
3 for $1
49c
49c
33c
3 for $1
39c
39c
'79c
AD PRICES GOOD
MONDAY THRU S.ATURDAY, JAN. 27th
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• . OP~ OAJLY9 -8, si.JN: 9-:-6 _613-215.5 · •
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Lag~•••a Deae:k
' . -· EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. St.eeks
VOL 66, NO. 22, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1913 TEN CENTS
' '
Nigerian · Plane Crash ·Kills !80·-W orst Ever·
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -A Jordanian
alrllner carrying Nigerian Moslem
pU1rlms home from a pilgrimage to
Mecca crashed in northern Nigeria to-
day, killing 180 of those aboard, airport
olflcials said, in the worst air crash in
history. •
The oUiclels said 22 persona, including
tbe ptlot •nd five crew members, 5Ul'Viv·
ed the crash at Kano, $20 mlles
northwest of Lagos.
Chargers Get
J~hn,ny Unitas
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San
DlejO Chaiprs today obtained vet-
eran quarterback John Unltas from
the Baltimore Colts for "future
consi(lerations," a apokumBn said.
{See story. Page 16.) •
· 'Ibe,acquisltion fueled rumors
that Johh Hadl, 1 1 · y e a r
quarterback of the Q.~rgers, would
go to the · C.Olts or to the Los
Angeles Rams.
Coach Harland Svare of the
Chargers called lJnills the
••greatest quarterback ever to play
tbe g~." He played 17 years for
the Colts.
Lagllna Merchant
• •
Jack A. Gill
'Succumbs at 78
FUneral services will be held at 7:30
,p,m. Tliesday at PacHic View Chapel,
Newport Beach, for · Jack ~-Gill, long·
time Laguna Beach merchant who died
Sunday at the age of 78.
Mr. GIU came to Laguna Beach in 1938
and opened Gill's Fine Foods, 245 Forest
·Ave., known as having lhe liest produce
in town.
The naUve of Rector, Ark., owned the
market through 1949, when he purchaJed
GUI'• Liquors, 278 Broadway. He sold the
store in )959 when he retired. ,
Mr. Gill is survived by hi!. widow,
Dorothy, of the family home, ·315 Moun-
tain Road; a son, Jaci:, of Phoenix,
Artz.; two stepsons, J. K. Wagner of Pa.
and William A. Wagner of San Antonio,
.Texas; a stepdaugllter, Mrs. Patricia
Flaherty of San Antomo, Texas, and
seven grandclilldren.
FoUowtng the serv)ces Tuesday night,
Mr.' GIU's body wlU be transported to the
Fort Sam Houston National Cemetery,
San Antonio, Texas.
• Mr. Gill had lived bi Csll!omla for SO
years and in Laguna Beach for the past
35 year&. He was a member of the
Laguna !leach MetbodlJt Cburch.
1be family suggests memorials in the
Conn of contribuUons· to worthy chattties.
7 -year-o1l, Hero ·
PllOl!:NEC Ariz. (AP) -A 7·Ye&M>ld ' ' Phoenix hoy bu been credited With .....
Ing .the me of a loddler Wl>p plunged into
a prtvato sWimmlDi pool Sunday while
riding her trtcyde, firemen said.
In...uptorl said Kevltl Lym jumped in-
lo the j>ool and pulleJ the clllld, 3-year-
i>ld Bttll' Jo -. to ulety -alter he saw the llrl tllp Into the pool. •
They Oed through an emergency
escape batch near the ~U of the pline.
Officials said the control tower warned
the pilot ·or the Alla Airlines Eoeing 7ffl,
which had been chartered by Nigerian
Airways, of fog and poor vlsibWty jmt
· befor, he landed. ·
The plane touched down on gravel 40
feet o(f the runway, airport officials said.
It veered left into a ditch wbl~h snapped
oU the left wheel, then skidded along the
edge of the runway and burst into
names.
Many of the d'ead passengers were
thrown from the plane and their bodies
scattered along the runway.
Some of . those who survived got out
through an emergency hatch in the tail,
the only ·part of lhe alrcrafl not con·
sumed by names.
An airport official said, "The plane
was gutted by fire except·for the tall lfC·
lion. It literally meJted."
•
~our
'.
19 Charges
Leary Arraigned
1-n County .Court
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ... .,.., , .... lleft
A "quiet" Dr. Timothy Leary ap-
peared this momtog to Orange County
Superior Court and was arraigned op 19
charges linking him to the international
drug smugglinfi organization the
"Brotherhood of Eterna' Love."
J.eary's aUomey, Gtprp Cbi.lla,. told
Jllllu J .... Turner his -would
!l'alve reading OI au.a coomf!I.
l\1rs. Leary's wbere'abouts aren't known.
nte "tune in, turn on and drop out"
apostle appeared quiet in court today,
Ryan said. He sald lw ls "one of the
CSee LEARY, P•I' C)
Gunpoip~ Rap~l
'Assaults W.omatt
In Laguna Beach
-~ Diii. Atty. JIClt R71D 8atd
'toUOWlng the brW court appearanct this
momlng, Leary was scbeduled to enter
pleas to the charges at a continuation" of
the arraignment this "afternoon.
Ryan added there is "some question" A Laguna Beach woman wa1 raped it
The worst previous air dl!aster was fhe
crash at Moscow's Sberemetyev Airport
on Oct. 13, of an Aeroflot Russian built
Dyushin-62 jet, in which 176 persons died.
A Japan Alrlines plane crashed at a
Moscow airport on Nov, 28, killing 62
persons.
Today's survivors were taken to a
hospital in Kano, while the bodies of the
dead were laid in grim rows of blanketed
bundles on ·the airport tarmac. Officials
s
'
' said many bodies had beelf burned 1 to
Skeletons. ' ·
'They were to be given a mass burial
later tonight or Tuestl.ay, officials said.
The . light, from Jeddah in Saudi
Arabia\ carried 196 Nigerian Moslem
pilgrims back from a visit to their holy
city of Mecca. Other pilgrim flights had
to be diverte(l to Lagos after the airport
at Kano was closed. ·
Federal Commissioner of Transpcrt
whether Chula will continue to represent gunpoint Jate Saturday in her north
the famed drug adVt1C&te during the re-Laguna home by a man wearing ·a 'i 1 matning proceedini;. fearsome black ski mask with eye and ·
He described thl! morning's represen· mouth boles outlined in red.
tatioA of Leary by Chula as being a An extensive search of the area by
"special appearance." Laguna Beach Police failed to locate the
Leary's new girlfriend, Miss Joanna revolver-wielding suspect, described as
Harcourt.Smith, said last week Beverly being JO to 30 yeari of age, about siJ: feet
H. '.1 attorney Gregson Bautz~r would ~e-oue inch or six feet three inches tall and
fend the fonner Harva: I l:clurer. wearing faded blue ·jeans and a faded
Chula repreSt!nted Leary during his yellow or off white shirt.
1979 trial ln Orange County .. 'lbat action 1be woman, described by officers as
resulted in Uaiy being coovlcted of extremely distraught by the experieuce,
possession of marijuana. Laguna Beach • was taken to South Coast Community
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell arrested Leiry, Hospital for treallnent after the incident.
_ his wile Rosemary and hia son Jotm, on The · incident, reported at 10:18 p.m.
Dec. 26, 1988 after discovering a quantity Saturday, is under investigation by the
of pot in the family's station wagon, department. Police would not release her
parked along woodsy Woodland Drive. age.
Hughes Felled? ..
Account of Heart Attack Denied
LONOON (UPl) -An American heart specialist bas flown to London ta
treat Howanl Hughes for a ""Jl'Cled heart attack, the London Dally MlrTor
said today.
An aide for the billionaire recluse dented the report.
THE ~PAPER SAID Hughes, 67, bas been confined to bed in his pent· h.luse. suite in the Inn on the Park since the unidenWied specialist examined
him last week.
Jan Eci:enley, an aide with the Hughes party at the hotel, said: "No spe-
ciallst has vlalted Mr. Hughes and b~ is not in bed." '
·' JN Los ANGELES, HUGUES spokesman Richard Hanna also ..aid, ''nM;re
Is no trulh to thl11tory at all." I
'Ibo Dally lllmlr said Hughes 11 still cmflned to bed and an electric wheel·
chair bu been dellYered to his ninth floor mite fer him when he is able to
use it.
' , ! ; DAILY PILOT_...,,,....
Page""" Progratn ·
Don;W.il~iatii'soQ, directo~.and producer of. the Pageant· of the Masteri,
Friday .preseo,ted a proposed 1973' progralo to ,the Festival of Arts
Qoard of Dire.ctors, who' will give apprnv.al .to final prqgiam Feb. 12.
Directors al~·wiJI consider replactltg "Llsl Supper" of da Vjnci with .
the "Last Supper" of Tillan. .
'. •.i.
Laguna School Trustee~
'
To Select lnteriln Chief _..·;
•
Selection of an interim superintendent.
employment of a consultant and study of
a five-year financial projection are three
items tc. .be considered by the Laguna
Beach Board r of Education Tuesday
night., -
The meeting will open at 7 o'clock at
tbe Education Center, 550 Blumont St ..
with 1lD executlve (secret) session to con·
sider ~ appointment of an acting
st1perintendent until a pennanent
replacement for Dr. William Ullom,
outg'olng superintendent, is found .
Dr."'Ullom,. under tenns of an agree-
ment reached with the board la st week,
Wfil °leave bis position Tuesday.
Bi>ard members also will decide which
of four consliltants to hire to assist them
in' establishing criterfa for selecting
Ullom's replacement.
-Dr. Ernest Lake, profenor of eduCa-
tionaL administration at California State
.(See SCHOOLS, Page Z) .
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DAILY PILOT AD
. MADE TO ORDE!l
Have something to sell? TrY a DAILY
PILOT' classified want ad ~ tbeY,re
. ma~ ~ order. Here's how one owner
ordered a buyer fw his real est.ate:
R-3 CP, nr · 17th St., CM
Super -rental area. Try 6
units. Agt. XD·llXI' ux-
uu. -1be property was sold the first day.
Give your order to a DAILY PILOT ad-
vilor -dial direct &42-5178.
Occupancy Sagging · at South · Coast Hospital
By FIIEDKRICJ: ilCllOBllBID-operalinl for IJo:low the "optimum oc-°' ..,. o.Mw PAtt """ • cupeney"~for a noo-proftt hospital.
Until a year.'and a.. boll ago, Soudl With 126 hedl avoDallle for -Soolh
Cout Community B>lplla1 of Soudl <lout ts draw~ *""'" • and 8 po-LICunl virtually llofc! 1 monopoly oo the ltentl a day. In pe<Olllage terms, the °"'
delivery of holpllal Cl!" in oouth Oranc• cupancy la nmnlnC anywhere from 44
County. . .~to 71 _.. .
Toclly, ll'.lth two -compettton open F'or a DOl>fl'Ol!lboopltal, IO -l·to
and a lhird ladllll' to bl completed In IO perconl la oooslderad op\lmwn.
July. -~ findl much of the turf Directly nlated ti Ille sagging ...
h once eontrnlltd ts -· cupency att the amaunt of money the The hoopllal, aocordll>I to a 1111nher of hotpilal la collecting, the number ot,...
heallh plaminC ofticlall lamlllar wllh pie -lolOd and the number of beU
IOUlh ~ County, Is the vlclltn ol a available f<r nae.
unique lltuatlon' holptlal ~t For the flocal year eodinl Sept. IO,
along the -....i ts ~ ..U ml, tho ~ showed a 111.1111
ahead of the population powlb " 1111 1UrplD1 in a loll! budget of 15 million. '
area. • The holpUal -1d have lhown a
1oat11 Cool!. acxm!ilt& lo ad-cldldt bad' It l10I been for JIA,tllll lg
m1t11otra1or -F. CllT, Ir "-Ive 'ftlmbaneJl""la" l!Cd'ftd.
' I
' from government and private health South Coast, with 171 beds open for use, million Saddlebeck Community Hospital.
planl. said Carr. was operattng at 95 percent occupancy. scheduled to open tn Laguna Hills in Ju·
''We're.,.. to have IOl'Df: tough aJed.. · A 191111tUdy by Stone, Marraccini and ly. dtol tor the -couple of '/fAn!'· c,rr Pat~ concluded that more hospital The 'Ibo Stone, Mamicctol and 'Pat-
-la a....,. -·~· .. a '°f bedl -iieeded in the South Orange tenon report be<aine. In """'"· I Tiit lut two ,.,. -• > Coun1f BosPttal Service Area, which JH'OCljlt' plan. for Soutti Coai1 ~ Stld--._u ...0. ' • rws ...., , ()ystal Cove sooth 10 ~an dlebacl: Con!mmlltY• Other !QtemU, ~l970, South Codi anp1o,..i i:oqlllr -Dilpl Coaa\y. • · · 00w...r;1gnored the study:-;· •
!!If -. That figure bu d.._i to The study recommended South Coast i'Groltpl. tnterelteil •It! Cllnltnlctlng ' t ...
• • ...,.dlog to Victor C. A-.i 'Immediately• begin coMtructlon .. of lllO ......,r1e1ary (proGO hospitals sprang up ~ 11 'ibe boerd ot cllr<cton. H~ . -tlonal hedl. It also cecommended the -one tn San Clemente, the other in
d furtloo< -· of poroonnel plannJnc ilart for • 250 bed hospital to Mlsalon Viejo,
may lake plice In the futlirt, . ' •"e ·the Saddlehack Valley, and. by · Construction ol •tbe 116 bed San c.n' alto lndlcalld ....,... Slaf[ 111'1 a uo bed facility be constructed Clemente General HOlpital was apptOYed ..0 -be -_. tlltl i..i ~ bltWeen San Clemente and Sa• Juan . by, the' FaclliU15 lteview Committee of
..,.. ..... QiMI M ID dll ... r '*' 1 Clpillrtno. " comprehensive Heellh Pl•nnina Councll
pnilrllll may IOI be opened b' lllO 'for 8outb Coast lollowed tbe re<am· (Clll'C, of Orall(< Cotinty on 0 ct ti,
_.. ,..,._ -and entered the curreot fl mo.
The -of Ille eornplex avvbed&lug mtWoa -""' program. At the same A -....;k laltr, the full CHPC give It>
problem wind baci to the 11,te 1--time, fllockailh>I began for )he Ill • CJlee BOll~ITAL, Piao I)
t
R!!~ell ~kko left. 4BJS !or ~!!!.0 to in-
vestigate the crash. A ·a airlines manag-
ing director Ali Ghandour flew from Am-
man to assist.
Authorities sealed Qf1 the airport whiie
the task 'of pulling the last of the bodie:i
from the wreckage was completed .. The
flames burned away almost everything in
the wreckage which was not metal.
Police also lll6Unted guard around the
hospital rooms where the pilot and crtw
were taken .
3-month
Pregnancies ·
•
Terminated
WASHIN.GTON (AP) -The U.S. Su·
· preme Court today barred states from
interfering with lhe dec:ision of a woman
and her doctor to end pregnancies within
the first three months.
In the 1 to 2 declslon striking-down the
Texas abortion law, JUS\ice Harry A.
Blackmun sald medical data indkate
abortioo in the firs& thtte, moolha "al..
though not wilbout ita: rl$1 la .now ~·
tively safe."
'Ibettfpre, be salil, "any 1nt.-o1 tile
o!ate in PrOtectinl the _,,.. Iran an
inberenOy buardous procedure ••• bu
largely disappeared."·
'Ibe Texas law made It a crime to end
a pregnancy ·e:s:cept "for tbe purpoee: of
saving the liie of the mother ~'.1! baCI bien
challenged by a pregnant Sl{IKle 1'htan-
who said she could ·not attcrd to' ieave
Texas to go to another state .+e abor-
Oon laws were more· lenieot. SM had the
baby while the case was pending.
The law had been declared invalid in
June 1970 by a three-Jud&e federal ~
in. Dallas. Today'.1 rul~vlll have -~ ilnx:'~ln ~::s..:.\hp:..1.\1:.:::
secretary Rooald L. Ziegler said be bad
no Immediate comment M the comt·dt.
clston, and added that he doubts there
Will lie any White Houae .,. pr••-
comment later "after we revlew·lt, wldr:b •
we will." . .... . . ---
The ruling foUowed two ,.._,. el de-
llberatloos by the juolk:el. 11 WU -
predommantly OD what !!Lu:kmm called
a right of prjvacy. He llkl Ille rllbl "ta · broad ~ to ...... _ a _..,,
decision whether or not to ta 11 tt1 ber
pregnancy." .
Justices Dyron R. WMte and --H. Rehnquist dtsoented. Whlte aald he
could "find ~ in the ~ •,
history of the Cooltltution to support Ille
court's judgment."
Rehnquist aaM! "the court'• IA 11,lng
invalidation of any restricticm on 1tior-.
lion during the finl trim-ts tnqilll-
1ible to jU!tlfy ... "
ln a second 7 to i rullng, the court
slNCk down Georgia's abortk:m law, find.
ing three proVlsions to he -tu·
tlonal.
They were that (I) in the lint three
nM>ntho t'he operation he pa (onued ·In an
accredited holptlal, (I) that 1 medical
(See !BORTION, Pl(e I)
0raace.
Weadler
l\tostly sunny oo Tuelday, wilh
11ightly warmer "-ralurel alon(
the Orange Coast. Blgha of rt are
e<pected, with guoty northeast
winds wanntnc the air slighUy.
4>w• tonlghl IMO.
IN81DB ftDAY
Suon Snr<f<r -• wtchfno Pretid<m Ni:<on dmic1 tDlth his
w{fe,. 11U. aU of • -.., th•
crowd "'1P«t /-rd, forci"ll
, hor;..,.,""'-ll'm RrJ>ril•d u dltlll~ 'fl!IM ~'IA< spot,' '"' l01'1' -w s .. i-•rol
story ond p/lolo1 °" r.o. 4. ...... _ . -" -. E1 1 .... ....._ , ............. 1-.1. I \f ....... ...., .............. , -"
. 7 •
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J're• Page l
LEARY ..• Flood Pltdtl S.;Lagunci
Meeting Viewed -------pfirtrGoos
GM Recalls
I county st1ff'J assigned to prosecute the
~es •&al~ Let.ry, who i!beUevecl to
have IOOnded tho worldwtdo drua smug·
&Jing organhallon. The · Crand Jury in·
didod Leary ID ~
Iary11 court ,.ppearance todaf was In
rnarkta contrast to his :.mlllng. jovial
mood at Los Angeles ~'ltemaUon;i.I
Airport 1·hursday. Moments after he "·as
manacled by agenls of the U.S. Bureau Of Dangerous Drugs, Leary passed by-
waiting newsmen grinning broadJy. An
unmatked, Los Angeles Sberlff's van slog·
ged Leary through a rain drenthed rush
))(.ur to Los Angeles County Jail "'here he
spent a night before being transferred to
As Pro,Iucti~e·
Orange C:OUnt, Jail. .
Chula was said toda? to be mt'fling
privately with Leary prior to the af~
• temoon appearance.
The charges raced by Lean· in Orange
County link: him with some SO others in-
volved in the Brotherllood of Eternal
!Ave. 'lbe Drotherhood, believed to be an
ollsboot of Leary's !.<ague of Spiritual
Discovery, was responsibJe for bringing
mor. than 1,000 pounds of hashish worth
$4.3 million into the U.S. each month,
au!horllies say.
Leary's bail has been set at $5 million.
' • an amount equal to the bench warrant
•1-isslled for him by the county court last
August when the Grand Jury indictments
were handed down.
Even with no bail, however, Leary
would return to priSon. He-· ned 1he
minimum security California Men's
Colony at San Luis Ot>i!po In September,
19':'J. He only partially served I\ one to IO
year sentence there for bis Laguna
Beach conviction. The night. believed to
have been set up by the militant
Weatherman oraanization, latmched
Leary's 28-montL wanderings in Europe
including stays with the Black Panthers
in Algiers and in Switzerland, Lebanon
and finally Afghanistan where he Y.'aS
spotted by U.S. agents.
Laguna Beacl> city olflclab aald tha1r
meeting Oii O.OC plain ...,u,g Frldsy
•ith Filth Distrid Supervisor Ronald
Caspers 'lll'AS s:;roductJve ·even tboUgh the
chairman of the county Board of
· Supervisors made no commitments on
the subject.
Tha.t was the Usessment oC Laguna
Beach Mayor Cllaflton Boyd, who, along
v.•itb Roy Holm,· 'touncilman, and Al
Thea!. public worts directo.·, Wked wltlJ
<:aspen, Stuart BIU.y. coonty planner
and Carl Nelsoo, flood cootrol engiDe<r.
At is,gJe is the application of a Flood
Plain 7.ooe to areas of Wlineorporated r' ~:y territory L. Lagw:ll Canyon.
The matter comes before the
supervisors at their meeting at 10 a.m.
Wednesday in Santa Ana.
The city of La<una Beach, the-Laguna
Beach Unified &hool District and the
canyon residents have expressed opposl·
lion to the measure.
Further opposition might .come from
the chamber of commerce, and the
Lapma Beach Tazpaye.rs Association.
"Essentially, we accomplithed · two
things. We presented the city'• posltloo
in l<rms of specillcs aod having to do
with the feasibility of widening aod
deepening of the uisting channel and or
its extension from the present painl of
termination to all the way to El Toro
Road," Af.ayor Boyd said.
"No ronc.lus.ion was reached, but the
coonty officials seemed most pleasaat.
Front Pfffle l
HOSPITAL OCCUPANCY •••
approval to the project. With no appeal>
of the de.icsion heard during a »,day
period, work on the project btgan. It is
now in operation.
Coostruction of Mission Commtmity
Hospital, a 124 bed fa cility was authoriz·
ed Wlder a so-called "grandfather
clause" during an interim period when
CHPC wall abolished and the existing
Orange County Health Plaoolng Council
estl'blished. It abo is in operation.
'!be board or directors of Saddlehack
Community Hospital, a non-profit cor·
poration, received approval for a 250 ~
facility from the Facilities R.evttw Co~
mittee cf CH.PC on Dec. lS, 1969. Soon
after construction was autOOrized by the
full CHPC body.
Saddleback, bowev<r, realWng too
many beds were under COD!Struction
changed lis'J>llllil and decided to•&rt oil
wilh only 150 bed!.
"When Public Law 119-749 was pused
establiabiag Comprehensive Health Plan-
ning Reaulations, provision was made for
. i the !Fbllslunent of such bodies as the t.. OraDi.e County Comprehensive Health ·~:\ Planning Qiuncll and its subdivision.
~'.; Healtfi · FacillUes Review Committee,"
,_. Carr said. "Unfortunately, appointments
to' these bodies are made by local
; poliUcal mUUes.
;;. "Tbls in ·tum might allegedly leave rm for political patronage and favors .
· · I do not know It these were factors that
were bm>lvedJu the history of this situa-
on, but it appean that !Orne shrewd indi·
viduals exercl.led their infJuence to ob-
• tain permission tor the construction of .• IX'l!lfietarr fllCillU.. wllich could he
placed upon the line by profit motivated
interests prior to the construction of well
planned facilities which had been cleared
on their basic planning wilh the state,"
Carr said.
. •
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i.Had this planning been followed, aome
of the problems which are preval'tnt on a
temporary basis at the present time
would not have been encountered," added
Carr. " ... I think you should be pointing
the finger at the individuals who have
violated basic comprehensive health
planning by irresponsible building of
unneceowy bed! to the detriment of tb<
...,...ai public."
"I think yoo'll ftnd a good deal of
opportunism," said AndrtWI lo &f\ in-
terview, "by people following the p1'of i1
motive."
OIAN51 COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
, Tht °"""9 Coast Mil Y l'ILOT, wit!! whl$
b cllftllllned the H-Preu, II publlal!td b'f
fl'le °"'""° C-t Pllllll$lllnt1 COMP9nr. s.p..
nllt' .Sllllin$ trt Wbll1htod, MIH'Ml•y ttlrwwfl
,.,..,,. IOI' C..11 M11'ai, NfW1191't at.ell,
H1mlfngton 8ucll/FOU<ll111! V1lley, Lat,_
e11dl, lnilM/INllllbl~ alld Stn CllmefllV
S1" Ju111 C1pi.tr-. A 1lnglt ng~
tdl!IOll b pWJbllld S.ll/rlltyi Mid Svndtys.
Thi! prfMINI publbl\11"111 P1111I It ti UI WM!
8t y Sl!'td, Oillll Mt11, Celltomtt , fttlf.
Ro~1rt N. W11d
"-111 .. •lllJ 'ublbrllr
J11k R. Curl1y
Vite "'-111111t tlld °""""'I MllllfW . Tho"''' K,,.a t:411W
'Tiltfftlt A. Murphll'lt
MMwl .. fidltw
dri•rl• H. L.o1 liclttr4 '· N•ll Alt6llwlf .......... t:.iiw. '---2J2 Ferttt Art.1111•
..,,.., AUNua P.O. l1x •U.. tJ612
' --• c.i. .... 1»0W.a.y ....... =91Cf!I -....,..... """"""' """' -..ct!! 11'1J ••di ~ .. "' -,..,. ,, c.r.t. ....
, .. ., •••• '"'' '4J-4JZ1
Ct_.., A41Mhl I '4l•h71 ·--· ... -Tllsp•sss 4f4.f466
°"""'9flt, 1m. °"""" Qlll ""''"'""' c~. Ht """ . ......._ 111w1n111ont. .. , .. i.. Mttw .. "*',...... ""'411
l'l'ltY !It ,..,.,..uc;N wl"*ijf "*"' I*'
111ll11tr! If ~I "'""'
hoDM , .... ,. • .,. .. kl .. c.tt ~.
C11F"'7\la.. '41111cr1MINI 1W Ofttw au
{
lftCll!llt11 ti,, ~ l),IJ. ~· ........ -......Wllll SUI "*'llllY•
'While there is nothing wrong with !roe
enterprise, Andmrs said; It • Is
unfortunate that master planning was
turned asldr and the community fon:ed
tr> pay for the overbedding problem.
"It could have been prevented, a lot of
money saved and we could have avoided
a lot of dislocation," said Andrews.
Hospital trustee Tristan Kroglus, who
occasionally bas been at odds with
Andrews, SIYI there'• mott to the prob-
lem than just overbedding.
.MUnforUmately, we offeoded~IOIDe doc-.
ton when we ran the wh:lle thing,"
Krog1us sold.
'!be docton, be said, complained about
the treatmenl offered at South· c.out.
When the ..... proprietary bolpltall
opened, the plij'!iclam -their patients -... he uplained. '
Krog1us aald the Wit now Is for the
hoard of cllrectofl and the bolpltal ld-
minislraUon to express -In the medical staff.
"What I'm working toward on the
hoard is mlllng Ibis the bell damn
hospital In the area aod showing the doc-
tors . we care about them. I hope the
slights they may have felt In the past will
be forgotten." said Krogius.
Other sources blame poor location and
personnel rifts for the problems South
Coast is facing.
"South Coast is the one with the pro~
lem,"' said one member of the Orange
County Health Planning Council, who
asked not to be identified.
"There aren't a lot of people moving
into the area ," he added , "e:rcept for
Laguna Niguel. But South Coast may he
competing with Mission Community and
Saddleback for those patients. I see a
very real problem."
Carr contend!, however, that Laguna
Niguel growth will ease the overbeddlng
problem for South Coast. The area, he
pointed out, is expected to grow to 62,000
persons -an increase of 50,000 persons
over lh'? present population.
But a spokesman for Avco Community
Developers says growth in Laguna Niguel
is far behind what was originally plaMed
and that the 62,000 population figure is at
least 10 to 15 years away.
According to Carr, recent studies show
that the overbedding problem f1cing
South Coast should ea!e by 1978, when
the area population is expected to catch
up with the number of hospital beds.
In the meantime, he points out. South
Coast "'ill take a stronger role in op-
posing haphazard facility development,
particularly from the two pront hospitals
in the area. It will also continue to better
its total patient care and aervices, said earr-. .
South Coast, along wUh a l'lllllber. of
other protesten, has a.lready loat one im-
portant battle. Addition ol II heda to
llllssion Conununity, though tumed down
by the stat.. Health Plannlni Council, ls
now under way. Those new beds will open
in May.
The unfortunate ract, says Andrews, Is
four hospitals will be fighting "for
everybody0 and none of the facUIUes '
may bt able to exceed a 35 pet«nt oc-
cuPancy. •
"It's a tragedy ... just sinrul.'' said
Andrews.
Boy, 13, Injured
In Cycle Crash
A lS.)'laM>ld Laguna ll<.acb boy suf·
feM a broken leg in a motorcycle ac-
cident Sunday.
John Hobbs, 3175 Mountain Vlow Rood,
was roported in uUslactory condition to-
dllY a( South Cout Community Hospital
following sursei, for a compound frac-
ture of hi• right leg .
eollce said the ~th was ridll1( his
motorcycle In the dirt exlcnslon of Alta
Laguna llouleVlrd In Top of the World
•rea -bt •t ..., tho OltJl of a hill and slammed lnlo a parked car.
'
They attm<d very glad to have obtained
our viewpoint without any commitment
to accept.log," the 1nlYOt said.
"'Wbat the city would,llte to ... 11 that
dwmel extended all the ...,, ........ a
primlUve bast.I," he Mil
Boyd pointed out !hot dl<rltlc the rteenl ntn.., the atate highway. Laguna Cal\)'00
Road, was flooded. He said plw would
be made to the atare '"' Wlatance ID kteping the road open.
"U we are I01"l to llaYt to clooe that
road ffOi!y time It nlm. then Wt haft
~·;:i~·:r.::ru.. dt1...a
"ml&bl not lake care ol !hot IDO JNr flood. but JI will pt us lbroocb the all•
night riln.s ...
Following the metting, the supervisor,
mayor and • husload of residents
si..;rveyed the area •.
She Tries Again
-To Not Have ,
Another Child
SYDNEY (AP) -Mra. Janette Prouse
tried 17 varieties of the pill, lhr<e dif.
ferent contraceptive de.vices and bad a
sterilit.atioo , operation. ·
Despite Ibis, she has given birth for the
ninth time.
"When Fred Ind 1 married In 1980. we
planned to have oaJy two clllldron." uJd
Mn. Prouae, 30, of Newcutle, lei mOe.I
north of Sydney.
"But nothing -to -to boll
our penoaal -1tlloa ~ We've
hem trying fo .top me bavl!J& babies
a1nce the birtb of our leC<lld."
The c:ouple'I ninth child. a glrl, WU
bom today. 14 Dllllltha alter Mra. Prouse
tmderwent a sterillza.Uoli 0Puat1on.
1'Apparently, there WU 101De joining of
tissues after .the operation.'' abe llid. "l
don~ Intend luill( anybodJ. Tbt _..
llon WU done properly.
"I thiDt of lhll'blby 11 a mlrlcle, but
I'm bavio( • pai1lal i'1llen!ctGmy Ibis
time to mate ~ "'"' U>ere art
DO more.'"
~P ... J ,
smoots .. .
University, Fltller1m.
-Leland Doqbty, dlftdor of -nel servloes, Oran(t County Depanment
of F.duc.atloa.
-Dr. Keimelb BalieYI cnr.ctor of
leacber educatloo, UC livlne.
-Dr. Robert -· '111Sislant superintendent for instructioa and
personn<L
Each of the meo WIS Into-by
tho board during a lhr<e hour acret
meeting Saturday montiDg. Questions to
the men were llmlled to qualifications
and backgrounds, ID line with a l1lling
delivered Isle Friday from the Orange
County Counsel.
Spedllc procedutts for the selectlotl of
Ullom's replacement could not be
diseusse<I behind closed doon, the ruling
stated.
The final item to he dlscusaed by
trustees if a five • year flnaoclal pre>
jectioo prepared by Dr. <:barles Hess,
assistant superintendent for bu!ineu.
Preparatton of the atucty waa recom-
mended by the !'.ducaUonal Prlor1Ue3
Study Committee in a reporl written ID
June.
D1'cWlsion of the projectlotl will he
open to the puhllc.
Food Garnishing
Class Scheduled
A class in food lartti!ltlni will bt of.
fered •tarting 7:30 p.m. ~ at the
Laguna Beach llJ&b Sc:lloOI -lpollJOrsbip of the Laguna Btacll.Rectta-
tlon Department.
The classeo w111 be lauPt by Bruoo
Baird, lifeguard captain, and -chef and Cord"'1 Bleu cootlq ICbool atudlnt.
Cl..,.. will stress eye appeal, -of kitchen tools and kllclten tr1cb la
preparation of both family and large
company meals.
Regl!tration is at the -loo
Department OffitelJ, 175 N. Coot
lllgl>way dslly until claa starts. Fee Is
$8 for five sessions.
2 Dance . Classes
, Set for Laguna
TWO dlnce ell.a will ap1n bt olltred
by the Ll&lll!I ---°""'"'" matlhll-
Jm dance ciaos for '-Ind
adulla will be held lntm 1 to I p.m. Jlon.
d11 at the h1cb ICbool glrll' l)'m.
Roclllrttlloo 11 at the Recreation Doport-
ment ollk:or. 171 N. Coast Jlfgllway. ,
An ldult hallol.-daso will a1ao bt of.
fered at a p,m; 'l'uetd.y 11 the glrl1'
gym. '"' for botll cllUOt m II for elChl ltloot11, and botll an lalllbt 111 Jill Swtet, a UC lrvlnt pwdaale ._,. llll·
c1ett1, 1a..i pall member If U. Lquna
~ c1v1c·111ne1 Comp&!ll'.
•
_To County
The South Laguna. Ceneral Plan is
ocheduled for conslderat1911 by the
Orange Cowity Plnnnlng Oommlsalon at
1:30 p.m. ~Y a\ lhe he~J room,
In the county Engineering Bulldtng, 400
Civic Center Drive, Salita An.a.
The plan, suJ>potted by the South
Lapna Civic -lion. has bttn undor .
Jevelopment by a commltt,. of South
Lagunans.
It -prohl61tlon of -grad.Ina or constructioll of new rOldl on.
ateeply llopiq hlllsldes, rttentloa of
about &lO acrea of -space ID the hllls,
• and --of coula1 develop. '""'' to lftV"lt ezcslve deoslty, helPt, bU1k IOd alto ......... .
Standardl r<Cllmmended under the
proposed general plan wcu1d deliDe
1imitstloo1 on do~t whlcb would
allow a Mure populatJoil less than double
the present popuiatlon di f,000, because
of hlllslope conditions, runoff, geology.
water supply and road access, according
to the SouUt Laguna Civic Association..
The usoclat!oo notes that since the
plan was first taken under submission
and "abelved" by the commia.ioo in
May, the panel bas received 1 majorll)I
of new commissioners.
Officers' Trial
In Bar Shooting
Death Postponed
A nine-day delay ~~s ordered today in
the Orange County superior Court ....
ralgnment of two policemen lndlcted by
the Grand Jury after· a Tustin bar
shooting that ended with the death of a
Marine Corps pilot.
Judge James Turner ordered CyprtSS
police Sgt. Thomas Baroid!, 26, to return
to bis courtroom Jan. 31 to plead on
murder charges flied after the barroom
slaying of Marine Capt. Steven Robin-
ette, 25, of Phoenix, Ariwna.
He set the aame arraignmeot date for
Garden Grove police officer Jerry Gray,
2&. who 11 charged with assault with a
deadly weapon for b1a a11eged role in the
shooting of bar pab'OO Sam Campise, 35,
Tustin.
Baroldl is free on $100,000 bail. Gray is
free after potting a $Z.,OOO bond.
Bolb oll-<NIJ ollicen were arrest<d .
Jan. 5 after a ·lhootl!ic fracas at the
Bachelors Ill bar in which .Rob~Ue was
falally wounded and Clmj>iae IOCelved
serious wounds , from which be is oow
reported to be recovering satlsfactorily.
The Orange County Gnmd .Jury In-
dicted both men after being told by
wltnesse.s that Robinette was actually
trying to come to the aid of ti>e two of·
ficera when he allegedly was gunned
down by Baroldl.
Navy Sky Diver
Killed in Plun ge
•
A NayY man from V!ctonille was till·
ed lnalanUy In a sQ<ljytng accidellt al
Camp P<ndleton Sun;la'y.
Bue ~-aaJd Randall Card, 22,
1talioned at North lsland Naval Air Sta·
Uon, wu tilled after bis chute failed to
open properly during a sport parachute
jump at Isadora Flats.
Card had been jumping with 16 fellow
membe:-a of the North Island Naval
Parachute club when the mishap took
place.
Base spokesmen aald card was a
seaman stationed I aboar:d the USS
Buchanan wluch currently is in San
Diego Harbor.
The alt1dlvlng activity is an authorized
recre.aUon for military groups on the
base1 lnformaUoll aides said.
DAILY Ph.OT Jfeff"""
BeHla-ller
The tides raged high in Laguna
Beach1 but this hardy fellow
doesn t seem to mind as he
waits for the waters to wash
ashore some goodies.
Regional Board
To Study Water;
Sewage Needs
A public hoaring to determine ff Im-
mediate planning by the Aliso Water
Management Agency of ~age and
storm water faclDUes-ln El Toro Is need-
ed will he held at 1:30 1.m. Feb. 2 by the
Santa Ana Regional Water Qualily Coo-
trol Board at .. lfagnoUa A ... ,
Riverside. ·
Interested persons will be glV<n the op-
portunity-to addrm' the bi>ml. If poost.•
ble, wrllten copies or leatimotlj' to he
, presented al the hearing should bl
furnished in advance.
The board must declde U facllltles are
necessary to guatd against pollution
from the El Toro Water DJ.strict and
Rossmoor SanJtation, Inc., ln compUanee
wilh lhe Interim Water Quality Control
Plan for the Santa Ana 'Regloo. ,
These would Include collecton lot
sewage, waste and rain runoffs. U a need
is found , the Aliso Water Manqemeat
Agency could, subject to a local r.1.,...
dum, issue constru<:tloo bonds by
ordinance, not by i •parate vote of the
residents.
Copies ol testlmolly can he ""1l to
James W. Andenoo, e:iecutive officer of
the Santa Ana regiolla1 hoard.
f'ro•P,..el
ABORTION. ••
committee must give it! approval and
(3 ) that two pbysidlll! must concur with
the wol!J.an's own physician that the preg-
nancy should be terminated.
Blackmun said the "IDtarposltlon ol a
hoop!tal abortion c:ommlttee II undulJ
restrictive of the patlenll' rlgbtl."
3.7 Million
I ,,.,--..
Vehicles
-DETROIT (AP) -Gtneral Motors an-
nounced the recall today of 3.7 million '
1971 and 1m can for inatallatton of a
ahleld .,.r the 1teerlng coiipllDc to prt-
va the P*ibllll7 of flylng atoneo !Oq-lna between the coupllna and the car mm.. .
In mUinJ the lllllOUllC9DOl)t, GM said Jt ftceived ,.ports of M locidonta where
atones ,.... ocooped up, reoultlng In ZS w"-• in fticb. 1J inJuri• were R ·
ported.
Involved ID the recall aro lu1k1ze 1171
and 1'11 modell of <llevrolets, Bulcb.
Oldlmob1la and Pontiacl,
'l1lt -aaJd the ollleld would be lnllalled at no c:bargo to the car ........
It aaJd ownen would he nolllled ID about ..... -'
Gil uJd that U -of the can II
driven over I-IJ'llftl at Jpeeds willch
cause the car to pltdl ez-lv.ly, the
front frame Crossmtmber may scoop up
loose stcaes or gravel from the roadway.
~91 the ·11ones could lode• between
the -.nng coupllng llld lnme, callllng
•tes!DI IDterler<nce .., a lelt tum. Ille
·--,_ied, addJ,ng I h o I ll1e -Is dillodled when t be steering
-11 tumecl to the r1gltt. Gil said tt decided 1o ul the .,_.
of '·' mJlllon can to i.q them In for lnslallatian of the shields even thougb
ooly a few can might become Involved.
GM aaJd the decision followed ID...U-p-by the <OIDpanJ and the National
Highway Tnlfic Safety AdmiDlatrallon.
GM's lllDOUDCelDmt came cm \be ume
day that the Center for Auto i1a1e1J In
Washington W"&td the r<call. The center.
funded bJ the c.ns.men llDian, uJd It
had ftpodl ol 15 croabes, -Dine In-juries, 1temming from the ·steerin& lock~
up.
A npm1 bJ the -.r mt Jn!J .-It·
edlnawalert--by
.the U.S. Depu-of ~utlon.
General Moton -Pl -with the ah1eld, bpi o ............ required
to pay 50 ...is for the device, plus ln-
staDallon coots.
The farg.st recoil in automotive l1latory
inw!Yed U million GM vehicles ID 1119.
Service Tuesday
For Lagunan
, .
.!Jem~!!, L. ~pe
Funeral ......,.. ... IChedu1ed 'l'Uel-
day !or B4nard Langbome Cope, a
loogtlme Laguna Beocb resident wbo
died Saturday.
Mr. ·eope was a naUve of London and
moved to El Toro In 1111& when a "'"111
child. He attended Santa Ana !Ilgh School
and gradualed f111m UC Berkeley as a
mining engineer.
ll<fo,. .retiring In 11160 to lift
permanenU, alltlsbcaeat41JGl-
St., Laguna ll<a<b. ho ... employed by
the American Smelllng and !lellniDg ()om.
pany In Arabia, South -IOd .Nu·
lco.
lie leavts three allters, -llelee eoPe of Laguna Beach, Mn. r-J.
WUIJama of -~ IOd PbyOis B. -.of i.aRuDI Hills, and two 0-.
Mn. Robert Notaae of PUllartan aad
Bar1lera Barberi of ,._a.
l>ervicos will he at 2 p.m. at SHoller
Laguna Beach NortUary Chooel. A
privale burial will follew at Falma,..
Memorial Park, Sanla Ana.
Flu Deaths Recorded
SAN DIEGO (AP) -'111t London Eu
wu blamed al i.aat party for two deaths
ID San Diego County. Dr. J. ~=
county bealth director, uldbe
lhll limlcb cultorea pvwu film teata OD
Eve dead persons.
LAST CHANCE When they're 9one,
they're gonol
' Y·
'
FAOORY BUY-OUT
OF ALL -·
UMAININ5
, UTION
MICROWAVE
OVENS
with
Micro Bromr • ----· -=!--. ..., ..
Moclol Jot-· • . . •-_ s~~.,'-3299~
1815 UPllRT BLVD., lllwntaw1 tesb Ilsa--548-711
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Saddlehaek Today's Final
•
ED IT I 0 N N.Y. Stocks -
VOL. 66, NO. 22, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES . ' ORANGE <;OUNTY, CAUFoRNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS . , ...
Supervisors _to Consider · ·EI Toro .. Air -Pact
' .
Orange County 1upervtaon Tueada_1
will consider an agreement with El TOro
Marine C0rps Air Station to ac-
commodate commercial jet planet
needing emergency landing facllltiel
when Orange County Airport iJ closed
due to ~•ther or cannot handle an im-
pending Cristi.
Meanwhile, Co1. Murra,y Staples, publlc
liaison officer for the Marine 'base, said
~ay "there is nothing new about this
agreement. There has alway1 been a pro-
South Coast
HospiU.l
Beds Empty
By FREDERICK SCBOEMEllL
CH ... Deltr PllM Slaff .
Until a year and a half ago, South
Coast Community Hospital of South
Laguna virtually held a monopoly on the
delivery of hospital care in sooth Orange
County.
TOday, with two new com~titors open
.. and a t.hlrd facility to be cOmpleted ln
July, South Coast finds much of the turf
it one-. controlled"ls gone. _.
The bosp\ta~ a«:ordlng to a number of
health planning officials familiar with
south Orange County, II the victim of a
wrlque situation: hospital development
along the aouth coast b moving well
ebead of the population growth of the
area.
South Coast, acconllng to ad-
miDistl'ltor . Bernard F. Carr, II
operating far below tt>e "optimum oc-
eupaDcy" for a noi>pr<Jllt boopital.
visloo that civil aircraft could use El
Tq_ro nmwaya even for reasons of bad
weather."
Earlier news repetrt.s indicated that the
agreement facing supervtson' action
Tuesday was a new ooe rt&ched ,by Coun-
ty .A'!iatlon Director Robert !resnaban
and Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang.
An aide to ~g1saj.d this morning the
rePort was "completely erroneous."
'Sta.pies, m'eanwhlle, e1.plaihed that the
Corps bas alwa,ys . made its faciliUes
·-
available when civilian jets or other cnft we!-. In trouble.
''I can remember several .times in re-
cent years when we've had fOlll' or five
big jels parted out here when l..o!I
Angeles or Orange County airports have
been closed due to weather," Col. Staples
said.
Staples said be believed the:a,ireement
before the supervisors TueSday would be
only .. a renewal of the same aereement
we've bad in the past."
He noted, however, another agreement
with the county -for provision of
emergenef' helicopters or servicing or
county rescue craft -is being con-
&idered. The status of that document, be
said, ls not known.
11Military bases other than the
~Ya~~~~~~~as~~.:~e ~=~ ~
available If an aircraft bas a bona fide
emergency whether that emergency is
due to Wt:.f.!lher·or other ffctors. Further, -
we provide our crash crew service to
Orange-County airport along with the
heavy equipment necessary to lift a large
jet," Staples concluded.
Tbe report of the alleged "new
agreement" gave rise to speculation
among leaders of the Saddleback Area
Coordinaung Council (SACC) and Irvine
officials that more commercial flights
might be eJpecled to use El Toro.
"Where life and safety are an issue. I
don't think anyone can quarrel with the
use of El Toro for any true and rt.al
emergency," Irvine Mayor William
Fischbach said.
Re<:ently Fiscbbacb strongly •fiUed
against a Southern California Association
of Governments (5cAG} airport study
which recommended joint military and
civilian use of EfTaro as a wiy of pro-
viding expended commercial jet service
to Orange County.
Today, Fischbach said, "l don't count .
(See EMERGENCY, Page ZI
Early Abortions OK'd
High Court Blocks State Bids in First 3 Months . .
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Su-
preme Court today barred at.ates from
interfering with (be decision of a woman
and her doctor to end pregnancies within
the ftrst thne mootbs.
In the 1 to 2 decisi<ln st;riking dov.rn the
Texas abortiop law, Justice Harry A.
Blaclanl!J'! said medical data indlcate
abortion m the first three months "al·
though not wjthout it,, risk, is now rela·
Uvely..aafe.!!......_~ --
'Iberefore, be said', "any interest of the
state in protecting the woman !rom an
· lnber<nUy hazardous procedure ... bas
largely dlleppeared ."
The Texas law made it a crime to end
a pregnancy ·except "for the purpose of
... 1ng the life of the mother.'' It bad been
Worst Airliner
Crash Kills ' .
challenged by a pregnant Single· woman predominanUy on What Blactmun called They were that (I) in the first three ~
who said she could not afford to leave . a right of privacy. H& aaid ijle right "Is months the aperaUon be performed Jn ·an
Texas to go to another state where abor· broad enough to encompaM a woman's Ccredited '-Ital ( I tba edi · 1 lion laws were more lenient. She had the decisk>n whether or not to terminate her 8 r ......,., ' 2 t a m ca
baby while the case was pending. pregdancy." committee must give its awroval and
'Ibe law had been decllred invalid in Justices ~yron R. Whlte and William (3) that two physicians must concur with
June 1970 by a three-judge federal court H. Rehnquist dissented. White said he the woman's own physician that the pres-
in Dallas. Today's ruling ·viii have an could "find nothing in the language or nancy should be terminated.
impact in 44 states with sbnilar statU:tes. tllstory of the ConsUtuUon to support the Blackmun said the "interposition of a
At the "White House, presidential press C{)IJrt's judgment." hospital abortion committee Is Wlduly
secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said-he..bad--Rebnqulst-aaid~tbe court'a-.sweeping-restrietive-of-the-patients'--rights;''
no immediate comment on the court d~ invalidation of any restrictions on abor-Summarized, the court held :
c.Won, and added that be doubts there tion during the first trimester is lmPoS-1. The states are barred from restrict-·
will be _any WlUte Houte or presidential sible to justify .•. " ing . abortions within the first three
comment later "after we re.view it, which In a second 1 to 2 ruling, the court months.
we will." struck down Georgi8.'a abortion law, find· 2. In this period, the abortion decision TJle rulini followed two years of d~ ing three provisions to ~ unconstitu-must be left to the medical judgment of.
liberatieos by the justices. It was ~ tional. • · .-• the pregnant woman's own Physician .
Qughes -:Felled9 'Quiet' Leary
' •
Aceount of-' Heart,Atta(k De;n.ied A:rraigned on With 125 beds' avalJalile for me, SOUth
Coast 11 drawlll( -II ud • pa· tientn day. In peroeqllp lerma, the oc-
cupancy II 1'W111in1 iiqwilft fnl!u 44 --tton~ ~--~a . ..,.:.pr.nt llalpttat, • peroel\I to 180 Moslems I--+"~..... . . ' ~ ...... -' ""-\'~ (UPI) ~An AnjerfCan i.,rt ~talllt bas Down 10 Lclldon to ~1:.~ for a ~ Mart attack, the Londbn Dally Mirror 19 Drug ·Raps B5c;1:.i.~ ~:~g OC·
CUPIJ.ncy are the amount 'of IJlOMY. the.
hospital IS collecth\g, the number of peo.
pie employed and tbe number of beds
avaJ,lable for use.
For the fiscal year ending Sept. 30,
1972, the bosplial showed a 122,000
surplus in a total budget of $5 million.
'lbe J~pital would have shown a
defteit had it not been for '1111,000 in
''retroactive reimbursements" reCelved
from government and private health
plans, said 'Carr.
"We're going to have tome tough sled-
d\ng for the oen couple of years." Carr
admitted in a recent lnterview.
'lbe last two years have been tough
ones, as well. •
In 1970, South Coast employed roughly
400 persons. That figure bas dropped to
290, according to Victor C. Andrews,
president of the board of directors. He
said "further dislocatioM" of per10DDel
may take. place In the future.
Carr also indicated additJonaJ staff
cuts may be made a·nd that bed capacity
no~ being constructed in the expansi,on
program may not be opened for use for
several years.
The roota of the complex overbedding
problem wind back to the late 19805 when
South Coast, with .171 beds open for use.
was opecating at 15 percent occupancy.
A 1969 study by Stone, Marraccinl and
PaUerson concluded that more laoiPital
beda were needed In the South Orange
County Hospital Service, Area, wbldl
nJJ1s from Crystal r~ve IOUth to Sao Dieco County. ""'
'!be ltudy reoommended South Coast
Immediately begin comtructlon of 100
ldditlonal beds. JI abo recommended the
.'planning stari for a 250 beilnospital to
aerve the Soddlebock Valley, and, by
'. 11177, a !&ti bed facility be constructed
between Sao Clemente and San Juan
Cspiatraoo. J ,
South Coast follo'ftd the rocom-
mendatlon and entertd the cur,,.t fl
!See HOSPITAL, ~ I)
Chargers Get ·
•
Johnny Unitas
SAN DfEGO (AP) -The Ian
Diego Chargers today obtained vet·
• eran quarternack John Unltu from
the Ba1t"1>qre eoits 1or ·11rture
~ conlidentJOm,• a ...._..-silil.
(See atory; Page 18')
-'!be aequlllllloo luel<d rumor1 -
that Jolin lladl, 11 • y •a r
' quarterback al. the Ch....,... would
' IO to the Colts or to the Loo
~-· . • Coad! Harland """ ., ...
Charprs , callld Ualtas lie .
• ,_:•.,..taat ~ ..... IQ,..,
the game.'' H1 pll1"f IT JWt IW
the Coho.
•
' , ~ U.IL,Y•Pl\.OT ,,.,. Pllllt
Beaelaeo1111Jer
Th~ tiae; raged high in Laguna
Beach, but .this hardy fellow
doesn't seem to mind as he
waits for the waters to wash
ashore some goodies.
Regional Board
To Sindy Water,
Sewa ge Needs
A public hearing to ,d~terrotne if lm-
med,isle planning by the' .A!Wo 'Water
Management Agency of . sewage and
stOnrl !water facilities in' El Toro .is need-
ed Will tie held.at 9:30 a.m. Feb. 2·by the
Santa·..Aha 1Regional Water Quality Con·
trol .Board at 8848 Magnolia Ave ..
Riverside. • Jnteiutt4 ~ will ~given the op-
portunity to addrl"s the boanl. If possl-
ble, whiten copies of leslimony .to be
ptt8enled at the · beailnc should be
furnbaed in advance. r
The 'board mnat decide tt facilities m necessary to guard against pollution
!tom ,the El Toro Water Otatrlct and
Rosamoor Santlattool, Inc., In complllnce
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -A Jordanian
airliner calT)1ing Nigerian Moslem
pilgttins borne froll! • a pilgrimage · ,to
Mecca crashed In northern Nigeria Lt>
day, killing !SI of lbnse aboard, airport
officials said, in the-worst air crash in
history.
The officials' said 22 persons, including
the pilot and five-crew members, IUl'Vtv·
ed the crasb at' Kano, 520 miles
northwest of Lagos.
They O~ through an emergency
escape hatch near the ~ail of the plane.
Offlclills said the control tower warned
the pilot of the Alia Airlines Eoeing 'lf11,
which had been cba.rtered by Nigerian
Airways, of fog and poor visibility just
before he landed.
The plane touched down on gravel 40
feet off the runway, airport officials said.
It veered left into a ditch which snapped
off the left wheel , then skidded along the
edge of the runway and burst into
flames. t
Many of ttie dead palsengers were
thrown from the plane and their bodies
scattered along the runway,
Some of t.OOse who survived goi, out
through an emergency batch in tbe tail,
the only part of the aircraft. not con-
sumed by Dames.
An airport officiat sald, "The plane
(See PLAf!!i,. Pqe I) • •
Marine Found
;::: the Interim Water ~ty .Control Sh D--.. L rnn the --Ana"Rogion. -ot to eMU-,._ woqld tnclude oollecton for
sewagt, waste ud ra1tl nmtllll. I! a -IA MIRADA (AP) -T1>e body o1 en
II found, Ille Allio Water ...__ ia.,.....,id Matin• private llrst clua
Agency Clllllld. aabJecl lo a locol,ref...,.. who bas been misslnginni El Toro Ma-
dwn. !ale oomlnlctloQ bGDdo by -Air Baae since Jan. l'bas been !oun1 o~. not by a _. -ol ·lllll .~-·~ _., home here olliclall
i rts"5eo&I. ' • • _.. -todaJ. •
• An aide for the billionaire reoluse denied the report. " . TJfE' Nll'SPAPl!R SAID Hughes, 67, has been -lned to bed in hll J>ODI·
house autte· in the Inn on t.be Park since the unidentified specialist exanUntd
him last week. •
Jan Eckersley, an akie .with the Hughes• party at the hotel, said: "No spe-
cialist has visited Mr. H~ ind he1is DQt in bed,"
iN LOS ANGELES, HUGHES spokesman Ricbard Hanna also aaid. "There
is DO truth to tbil story at all." The Daily-Mirror said Hughes ~ still "!nflned to bed and an electric wheel-
cl>air bas been delivered to his ninth OOor ..Ute for him when be b able to
-~ .
Irvine Tip Aids Police
In Arre st of Beach Man
A Up Crom an Irvine businessman this
weekend led police to arrest aJ{untington
Beach man on a charge of• attempting to
steal · ,1,750 worth of construction
mattrlalJ.
Police credited Bjame Frederick
Qvale, 47, of European Auto Partll on
17152.Dalmler St. with touching off an in-
vestigation which led to the booking or
E-Raymond Mc:Qulld<, 30, ol 1482
Bruh Ddve, .Huntington Beach, on the
grand lbefl charge.
Qvale told invsstlgators t-e was at his
,cooatrUctJon 1ile ln the industrial <;om·
plex Saturday afternoon when he Saw two
suspects Joad several bundles of steel
relnfofting rods onto a Datbed truck. ·When he lnqufred about tbefr·presence,
the men supposedly told him that ·the
foreman oC the construction company
had told them to pick up the rod! and to
move them to another area. ·
QvaJe l:iecame auspicious when the men
incorrectly Identified the construction
finn. He Bald be subseqently ordered
them to put the rods back and Ibey
obeyed him.
When Qvale turned the truck'• license
number over to police, officers traced It
'to a rental yard in Huntington Beac.b.
From forms filled out at a rental yard
for a flat bed truck and a fork Lilt, police
obtal.ned ~e's lddress and ar-
rested him at his home. 1'hl ·oUMtr-man,
wlio haa not yet been identified, was not
arrested by police.
-GM Announces-Recall
• I '
,, Na vy :Sky J)iver · ·
,. Killed µi Plunge·
~:UY apparet\)ly died from a ,.i'"~ ~ wiimid In his bead,
.. ollea WI. A .30-30 caliber rifle was
!ti~~ r!:r \':::1""'1 said Kelly
wio tlolt -Jan. I and at that time he a_...i """'1 moecly,"•aotboritles aald.
Of 3.7 Million Cars
A Navy mm fl.a~ wu till·
ed tmtantly In a .-, ••loC -at CAmpl'endl*l ... iaY. • Bue..,...,_ llldllandall Cm!, a.
stationed at liort1I !Jland Nani Air St>
lion, ns killed after bis chute failed to
~Ol'ft~Y . durtnc a -.port ~butt
-Jwm>.at i-t'Flata. Card bad .,_ JumPnl with 11 Jeflow
-ha ol. Ille North jlland Naval
Paracblte club when tho Dualtap· loot PJiili:. --, -
-· ........... -Cm! -a
---ibolnl Ille 1118 · Bucbanlm wMch currently ii In Ian
-Di·---The ak1di•q actMty II an autherlltll
'
recnotlon rw military -on the
-· -...Uoa alclea llld.
.. _
DETROIT (AP) -General ~fotors '1l-GM said that U one of the cars Is
nounced the recall today of 3.7 million driven over loose gravel at speeds which
D .I •LY' p' ILOT ATJ 1171 IDd 1m can for Installation of a cause the car to pitch ea""'tvely, the
4.1.. lbleld over the steering coupling to pre-Cront' frame croamember may ICOOP up vent Iba P*ibllity of fiylng stonea Jodg. • MA.DE: TO ORDER Ins bet•-the coupling and the car. ·-or ....... !run the roadway.
--1 • Some al. the llones could I~• betw ...
Have oomethlng to ,.nr ~a DAILV In mattn& the. announcement, (!M aald . lbe.llOOrinl coupUnc and fralllf, ca!"lng 1'!LOl'~c1asalfied want ad -they'~ r h -ed r.ports of 96 incideots wbere 11efriog}"terf......,. no a left tum, the
-II order. lltre'1 how ooe ._,. -. ..-. ICOOped'up. resulting"ilr2i . atllolllder r<p91'te4 .. addn.g that the
-ed a bonl' for lill teal estate: accldenta In which tJ Injuries were: rt--la dlalodged when the atoerlng R..:I CP, or 1'1111 Q... • CM pot1ec1 wbee1 11 lllmed to the r!ghL
Super • rental ... 'l'IJ I -~ In the ,....JI .,.. rwt~u. 1171 GM WI It decided to ask. the -· '"1111. Act. ......,. ~-..r 11'12 models of Chevrolets, Buickl, of ti mWion can to brin(I them lit for
an. ~ and Pontlacs. inltaltatiao of the ahleldt !""" thoutth
'Illa l"'!P"' ty _ wu. 111111 Ille lint dly • '!'Ila. ,..paoy Bald the shleld would. bo aal7 a "".can ml(Jht ~ tnvotved . = yaurdtalan:.: ~y PUm ad--fled at no charge to the car owoer. GM aald th6 d<clllon followtd lnveotl-
-ll Mid'.'""""' would be notified In about ptlonl by the company and the NaUnnal
two -• HJpway Tra!lic Safety Admlnlltnttlon.
• •• ' . .
• •
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of .. Dllh' ...., ,..,
A "quiet" Dr. Timothy Leary ap-
peared thJs mornlng in Orange COunty
Superior Court and was al'fa.igned oo l9
charges linking him to the international
drug smugglinK organizalJon the ·
"Brotherhood of Eterna' Love."
Leary's attorney, George Chula, told
Judge James Turner bis client would
waive reading of au ·19 counta.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jack Ryan aald
following the ~riel court appearance this
morning, Leary was scheduled to enter
pleas to the charges at a conUnuatloo of
the arraignment this-afternoon:-· -· ·
Ryan adde:d there is "&0me question"
whether Chula will continue to represent
lbe famed dnlg advocate during the ~
maining proceed.Inga.
He described.Jhis morning's re~n
tation of Leary by CJwla as ~I a
"special a~.!' · .
Leary's new girlfriend, Miss Joama
Harcourt.Smith, Bald Jut -.ti Beverly
H. '.s attorney Gregson Batrtzer wuUld c!&
fend the former Harvar:I lWurer.
Chula repreadllid Leary dUrldg hla
19'10 trial in Orana:e COulity. na:t 1ctJon
resulted In Leary beln(r coavlctOd of
poaeealon of marijuma. W.,... Buch
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell arrested Leary,
his wile Rosemary a!'d hll -.lalm, 111
Dec:-26, 1968 after discovering a qlmltity
of pq_t in the family1s ltlUon ....,a,
parked along woodsy WOQdland Drtve.
Mrs. Leary's wbereaboUta .,..•t known.
T1>e "6ii>e "1, tom on and drop out"
aposUe 'P11e11mt' qute( In alurt today,
(IJe<L&UIY, ~ II
Weadler 1 •
Mostly sunny on :fueaday, with
slightly warmer tcnperatur• atcna
the Orange Cool!. fflllis of rt are
eipected, wJUi l"llY northeast
wlnda wa1'110nC the air •lllhUy.
Lows tonight IMO.
tNSmE TODAY
Susan S11vcttr IDOi 10atching
Preiidmt Nlzo-n dance with hi.s
wift, 10Mn au o/ a tuddtfl, the
crowd '"!'lied fonoard, forcjna
"" !ftto h~ '""'·llll-'"fJldi<d 1·dldnr:-·10iat. °" ,, IJ>Ol,' silt 1
lakt Mncirl<d. •• illmlgllral
story and ~hotoo "" 1'oQ< 4.
l
•
. % OAILV i'll.OT IS
' Kissinger
Leaves U.S.
. -For Paris
By Unlltd Prtss lnttmatlon11l
Dr. l~enry A. Klssingt'r left today for
Paris for cruC'ial and perhaps final talks
with the Vietn8.mese aimed at ending the
, l2-year-<:1ld Vietnam \Var.
Saigon and Washlng1oo reports said a
cease-fire could be initialed as early as
Wednesday, \\'ith the fom1~\ signing Ct'l't'·
mony a few days later.
,
/
\ -
Ul'lf ....... h
Ax Co11tract Awarded---····-·-· ---··-·
'Ibe foreigri minis1ers ,of South Vietnam
and the \'iet Cong arrived in Paris with
optimistic statements.
· The Air Force has decided to award -Ille lucrative conlnol for its new
close-rombat support fighter lo Falrchild Industries, Inc., New York
Sen. James Buckley's office says. The model Is shown with 18 500-
pound bombs.
Leisure World ..... r,,..1
"
Le Due 'T'ho, the principal Hanoi ne-
gotiator, had remained in Paris when
Kissinger Cle\v back to Washington for
consultations v.i.lh President Nixon after , HOSPITAL OCCUPANCY • • • .their 23rd round or talks. Residents Hit
President Nil.on bad sent Gen. Ales.an-mlllloo expansion program. At the same Wbilt ~re ls nathln& wrong with free
der Haig to Saigon to 'vin agreemen t M , £ GJ be time, fund-raising began for the $lJ enterprise. Andmh said, it is
from President Nguyen Van Thieu on the 0Vlllg 0 0 million Saddleback Community Hospital, unfortunate that master planning was scheduled to open in Laguna Hills In Ju-turned aside' and the community forced
De\Y draft ceaSe-fire agreement and today • Jy •-pay 1-the overbedd'·• n~blem. "As the World Turns'' may be the most · • . . u• .... .. .. rv gave final instructions to Kissin ger be-populai' television soap-opera at Leisure The The Stone, A-tarraecuu and Pat-.. ll eould haVe been prevented. a lot of
• fore the security adviser returned to the . WIOD report~ in essence a .........-Saved and we could bate avoided . Paris. H ... 't .. briefed Nixon earlier 00 his World in Laguna Hills if interest-a--_-; -, • ._. ... .,
-=talks wil~liO-ASim allies:~. _____ m:.,..~.Jl'ii~nts in the....!!)QvlnLof pr<dse plan !Dr_Soutb Cou1 and Sad-a Jot of dWocatloq," aid Andr<Ws.
tl.eir own glantgJOlie any iocbao"'Uiili: cllt-~tll!lllF(JI lnt:6<Jnr,='lli)!jiHiHiiiSt~~;;oo
White House 80W'ces said KisWlger The 30-foot diameter blue and silver bowever, 1gnored the study. occasioriilly bas been at odds with
\\'Ould be prepared to initia l a Vietnam globe. official trademark of the Gro~ interested in C?05lruCting two Andrews, says there's more to the pro~
agreement by Thursday if no unexpected Rossmoor Corporation. was taken off its proprietary (profit) bosp1t.als sprang ~p lem than just overbed.ding.
snags arise in his talks Tuesda y "'ith Le axis at the entrance to Leisure World on -one in San Clemente, the other m "Unfortunately, we offended some doc-
-Due 'l'ho and Xuan Thuy, the chief North El Toro Road a few weeks ago. Mission Viejo. , • ' tors wben we ran . tlfe whole tlilng,11
, Vietnamese negotiator in Paris. The resulting outcry by some residents Con.,truction of the 111 bed San Kroglus said. .
Kissinger headed directly from his final who also considered the globe to be a Clemente ~~~ral Ho~ital was approved The doctors, be said, complained about
meeting with Nixon to Andrews Air Force sy mbol of the retirement community by the Facihhes Revtew Committee of the treatment offered at South C'Aast.
Base to board a presidential jet for the prompted a reply by Rossmoor Corpora-comprehensive Health Planning Council When t& new, proprietary hospitals
flight to Paris. lion President Ross Cortese. (CHPC, of Orange County 00 Oct. ,13, opened, the pbysidans took their patierits
Today's anivals in Paris included two "It'~ understandable many people have 1970. . elsewhere, be explained.
foreign ministers -Mme. Nguyen Thi ex pressed concern over the move of the A week Tater, the full CHPC gave its Krogius said the taH now Is for the
Binh of the Vi~ Cong, and 'l'J'<m Van Lam globe. But we can assure everyone the approval to the project. Wilb no appeals board of directors and the hospital ad-
o! SouUt Vietnam -and both issued op-ol lite d !<Si b--~ durln »<la ministration to °"""" conlldence In the ' timistic statements. Tbe fina1 agreement globe's oew location will be as attractive. e oo e411.1 g a Y medic.Ill staff.
is to be signed at foreign minister level. well-designed and pleasing as the original period, work on the projed began. It is "What J'm wort1ng towll!'d on the
--site." now in operation. board is mating this the best damn
The structure will be set up on a Construction of Mission Community hospital 1n the aru and showing the doc-
FromP~el
EMERGENCY ••
bad \\'Cather among such true and real
r emergencies.
"I have been and will be unequivocably
and una1terably opposed to commercial
joint use of El Toro ?.tCAS as an
., aJternative airport site to Orange Coun ty
Airport for bad weather, convenience or
any other noo-emergency reason.
"I might say I'm a little bit surprised
that the military \\·ould ronsider an ex·
pansion o fthe )oint use provided com-
mercial carriers beyond the eipected
emergency service," Fischbach con-
cluded.
Mrs. Nance North .* 2.5431 Classic
Drive, Mission Viejo, a leader in the
SACC organization, said she too was
surprised by the reported new agree-
. : ment. "I will be at the supervisors
. · meeting Tuesday," she said.
· She expected others in the Saddleback
Vaney group would "be very interested''
in the proposed agreement, but said she
couJdn't say what stand SACC le.adership
wouJd take on the issue.
Bresnahan who was reported to have
said the new agreement stemmed' from
new Navy regulations regarding
emergency use of military facilities, was
unavailable for comment today.
The contract is said to contain a clause
speeifically noting that the agreement
does not cover handling other than com-
mercial air operations from El Toro on a
regular basis due to any scheduled or
programmed closure of Orange County
Airport.
Observers note. bowe\•er, that if the
agreement constitutes increased com·
mercial use of the military base, it may
be the "'edge needed to implement the
SCAG study recommendations that El
Toro runways replace those of Orange
County airport in handling the county's
commercial jet traffic needs.
quarter·acre site just north of El Toro Hospital, a l24 bed facility was authoriz. · tors ·we care about them. I hope the
Road, adjacent to the San Diego Freeway ed under a so-cilled "gnmdfatber sllgbls they may have felt in the past will
and to the p;u:lt!6g1 iot of St. George's . clause" during an interim period when be forgotten," said Kroglus.
Fpiscopal Cburclt. CHPC w.., abolislted and lite existing Otlter ...,,... blam< poot locaJlott and
But Ute sphere which tt"'1 lo turn is Orange County Health Plamtlng COOndl persomte1 rifts for the problems South
planned to be stationary in its new home, estPblisbed.. It also is in operation. Coast is facing.
surrounded by a variety of palm trees, The board of directors of Sadd1eback "South Coast ls the ooe with the prob-junipers and floral beds. " said f the Or Lent·Forsum Associates. landscape Community Hospital, a non-profit cor· lem, one mem~ o . ange
architects and designers of the former poration, received approvaJ for a 250 bed County Health Planning Council, who
Id "t Ill I t th ·~ ooo facility from the Facilities Review Com-asked not to be identified. ;~ject s~eA.p~I. comp c e e ..,.,, mittee of CRPC on Dec. ·15 1969. Soon "There areD't a lot of people moving
Meanwhile, lhe globe is resting and after const.ructiQn was aulhorlzed by the into the area," be added, "except for
rusting at its new site. A refurbishing full CHPC body. Laguna Niguel. But Sou\b Coast may be
project also is slated before April . Saitdleback, however, realizing too competing with Mission Commµnity _and
''We're delighted our Leisure World many beds were under construction Saddleback for ~ patients. I see a
residents share our emotional ties to the changed its plans and decided to atart off very real problem.
globe," Cortese said, "and naturally with onIY 150 beds Carr contents. however, that Laguna
we're proud of our corporate trademark. "When Public ~ 89-?4' , ....... ...1 Niguel growth will ease the overbedding . .• "35 ~"' problem for South Coast. The area, be But we also understand that to them it's esta. blilltlng eom. prdtemi. ve Health Plan-pointed out, Is ___..,, to ~ lo a ,ooo a symbol-of the cOntent, security and Re-·1-u __... made f -r"....... e-w-happiness they have found living here." rung "'~ cm, .,.u!wlCll"" or persom -an ll'IO'e83e of 50,1'.QJ persons
Kathleen Bush
Succum bs at 38;
Services Slated
Rosary will be recited tonight ror
Kathleen S. Bush, wife of Daily Pilot
compositor Jerome A. Bush of Santa
Ana, who died Friday. She was 38.
Mrs. Bush was a native o( Maine and
lived in Orange County for 28 years. She
"·as a Cub Scout and Girl Scout leader
and a member of Boy Scout Troop 165
Auxiliary. She also was a member of Jef·
ferson El~mentary ~hool PTA in Santa
Ana and an active parish member of lm-
maculate Heart of Mary Church.
She leaves her husband , three
the establishment of such bodies as the over the present population. Oran~ O:>untJ . Com~ve~~ltb But a spokesman for Avco Community
Planning Council and 1ts ·subdivision, Developen u.y1 growth in Laguna Niguel
Health FaciliUes Revie'lt' O>mm.ittee," is far behind what was originally planned
Carr said. "U~unately, appointmei;its and that the G,000 population figure is at
to t.hese ~ea are made by local least 10 to 15 years away.
political entities. According to Carr recent studies show
"This In turn migltl allqedly leave Utat the overbed.fu.g· problem facing
room for political patronage and ravon. South Coast should ease by 1971 when
I do oot 'tnow if these were factors that the area papulation is expected~ catch
were involved in the biDJry ~ this sltua-up with the number of hospital beds.
o~. put it appears that. so~ shrewd indi· In the meantime, be patms out, South
viduals exerdled their in!luence to o~ Coast will take a stronger role in ~
tain permission for the construction of posing haphazard facility development
proprietary facilities which cotild be particularly from the two profit hospitajJ
placed upon ~ line by profit motivated in the area. It wW also continue to be•
interests prior to the construction of well Its total patient care and services said
planned facilities which had been cleared Cirr. '
oo their basic planning with the state'," South Coast, along with a number of
Carr said. other protesters, bas already lost one im-
"Had lhl! planning been followed, some portant battle. Addition of 89 beds to
of the problems which are prevalent on a Mission Community, though· turned down
temporary basis at the preaent Ume by the staw Health Planning Council, is
would not have been encountered.'' added· now under way. 'Jboee new beds will open
CatT. " ... ·1 Utlnk you should be pointing In May.
the finger at the individuals who have The unfortunate fact, says Andrews, ls
violated basic comprehensive health four hospitals wUI be fighting "for
planning by l!Tesponsible building of everybody" and none of the facilities
ultlleCeM8ry beds to the detrlntettt cl the may be able lo e=ed a 35 pen:enl oc-
geDe'al public." cupancy.
''I think you'll find a good deal of "It's a tragedy ••. just sinful," said
opportunism," said Andrews VI an Jn. Andrews,;
,...._PopJ
LEARY •.•
Ryan said. He said b.: ii "mt of lite
county 1rta1r• uslgned to prooec11le the
charges agalns~ Leary, who is believed to
have founded the worldwide drug smug-
gliug or1llllilaUoo. The Grand Jury ln-
dlcted Leary ID Aucwtl-
Leary'1 <®rt •-ance toda1 wu In marted CIXllnll lo bis omlllnc. joTial
n••d 1t f:m-~-"
A1rporl 11'urlday. -lftitlii ,... manacled by .,..11 cl Ute U.S. llumu
of Dangerous Dntp, Leary passed by
waUlng newsmen &rinnina broadly. An
unmamd geies Sbei111'1 von alog-
ged Leary a raJn dmtclted ruilt
h<.ur to Lot Ang es Coonty Jfll where he
spent a nilbt before being trinsferred lo
Orange Coont; Jail.
Cltttla was said today lo be meeUng
privalely with Leary prior to the af-
ternoon appearance. -
Tile cltarges faced by Leary In Orange
Coonty link hint wiUt sont< IO olhers In-
volved In the Brother!tood of Eternal
Love. Tbe Brotherhood, believed to be an
offsltoot of LearY's ·1.eague of Spiritual
Discovery, wu responalble for bringing
more Utan 1,000 pounds of lwbWt worth IU million lnlo the U.S. each mooth,
au!hariUes say.
Leary's ball bas been set at 15 mllllon,
an amount equal to the btDCh warrant
issUed for him by the county court last
August when the Grand Jury Indictments
were banded down.
Even with no bail, however, Leary
would return lo prison. He Oed lite
minimum eecurlty callfornla M~'s
Colony 1t San Lula Oblapo In Seplemher,
tr.:I. He only partially served • one lo 10
year sentence there for his Laguna
Beach convictloo. The filgbt, believed to
have . been set up by the militant
Weatltemwt orgllllilatiott, lawtcbed
Leary's 21-mooth wanderings In Europe
Including 1taya with lite Blsct Putlten
in Algien and In Switzerland, Lebonon
and llnally Algltanlstan where be wa1
spoiled by U.S. agents.
F rone P qe I
PLANE ••.
was gutted by fire except for the tail sec-
tion. It literally melted."
The worst previous air disaster was the
crash at Moscow's SbeTemetyeY, Ailport
on Oct. 13, of an Aerofiot Russian bullt
Jlyusbin-62 jet, in which 176 persons died.
A Japan Airlines plane crashed at a
Moscow airport on Nov. 28, kllllng 62
per90M.
Today's survivors were taken to a
hospital in Kano, while the bodies of the
dead were laid in grim rows of blanketed
bundles on the airport tarmac. Officials
said many bodies bad been burned to
skeletons.
Tbey were to be given a mass burial
taler tonight or Tuesday, officlals said.
The · rught, from Jeddah Jn Saudi
Arabia, carried 196 Nigerian Moolem
pilgrims back from a vlslr lo tbelr boly
city of Mecca. Other pilgrim fll<ts bad
to be diverted lo Lagos aft« the a\rporl
at Kano was closed.
-
·san Onofre
Evacuation: -
~wo Hom·s'
By JOllN V<ERZA
01 ,,.. .,.,,, l'llol llllt
EvacuatJon of several South Coast
communities In case of a nuclear ac-
cident at the S a n O n o f r e Nuclear
Generating complei: would take tn exces.-;
of two lto<al. an expert told a litwitttt
board over the weekend.
Loi Angeles area trafflc enginee\ M. '
V. Sheppard told lhe Atomic Safety and
blceftsbtC-&ard Saturday that lite com·
munlUes of San Clemente, Capistrano
Beach, fnd Dana Point and San Juan
Caplstraho could be evacuated in Jess
Utan three ltoun.
But foes· of the proposals to bulld two
new ructon at San Onofre ha•e insisted
In past months that evacuation plans for
the communltles are inlerior .
Sheppard appeared..., a wttnes. far Ute
two utilllles proposing the projects.
Soutbem Calilomia EdllOn aod San
Diego Gas and Electric companies.
Sheppard told the three-nian panel
assembled in San Diego that it would re·
quire 28,000 cars to evacuate the
resldel\!I ol lite four South Coost <!>lll-
munltles.
In arus closer to the !ant, It wou~ld~=j line e a
Both the utilities e
Energy Commiaion staff use three
separate zones which would be affected
by plant safety. mattera.
The first zone. the "exclusion zone" ls
an area within an Q.yard radius of. the
rtactors.
No permanent resident! are allowed ln
that area.
A second, "low-population" zone is also
cited. That 1a the area within a three-
mile radlUI of lite plattl Included In that
RCtor are the llOUtberly str<lches of San
Clemente (Including lite Wellem Wbite
House) and parts of Camp Pendleton.
Also in that area are sections of the
San Onofr l State Park.
The third zone used ror reference in
safety matters is the entire South Coast
""'a. But spokesmen ror the utilities have
repeatedly insisted lhat only a ooe-m.
millions chance of an accident al the
plant would require any evacuation.
And they are loaUt lo discuss the prob-
abilities and types of accidenls Which
might occur. Instead, they slress tbat all
aspects of construction and~operation at
the existing reactor and two proposed
new ones are within AEC regulatio{IS.
The most severe ac;eident at the plant,
they admit, would be a loss-of-coolant in·
cident where the reactor would continue
to gmerate immense heat but its cooling
sysr.ms would fail.
Such an accldent baa never occurrtd in
a atmmercial reacloc, but experts
theorize that it could trigger loss of life
and widespread expoaure lo radiation.
But in commercial reactons, say utility
officials, simultaneous breakdown in
dozens of separate systems would be
necessary before such an incident could
occur.
The bearings in San Diego have been .
called to examine only the health and
safety Mpects of lite utility proposals for
San Onofre.
But what can be admitted into the
rtCOrd and what can not is an exacting
issue regu]ated 1trictly by Washington
trial lawyer Michael L. ·Glastr, the
chilirman of the board.
On Friday Glaser refused to allow
several utility expert! to testily about the
possibility that some .\EC earthquake
design standards might be too strict.
Peronist Murdered
BUENOS AIRES (UPI) -Julian Mor·
eno, a Perontst labor leader and candi-
date for political office in the March
elections, was assassinated today outside
bis home. A police !J>Okcsman said lite
a•ssin Oed after shooting Moreno and
bis cbaulleur as they entered Moreno'•
car.
El Toro offers two, 10,000 foot runways,
a ground controlled ·approach system
capable of guiding a jet through dense
fog to a safe landing and complete crash·
protection systems including foarn.ing of
runwa ys.
daug1uers, Ann Marie, Carolyn and Mary
Kathleen ; two soru;, Michael and Steven,
all of the family home at 2413 S. Rita
Way; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Freddie
Jolin of Santa Ana; three sisters, Laur·
ette Kale of Hemet, Loraine Arms of
Te1as and Linda Ann Elliot of Whit lier.
Rosary will be at 8 p.m. in the Im-
maailate Heart of Mary Church, Santa
Ana. Mass will be celebrated at IO a.m,
Tuesday, also at Immaculate Hearl
Church. Buria1 will follow in Holy
Sepulcher Cemetery, Orange.
t'rview. "by people following the profit II;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--~
motive."
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ORANGE COAST ts
DAILY PILOT
Tllc Oranoe C-1 D ... ILY PILOT, will! ..tll('l'I
Is COl'Tlbllltd "'9 H.._P...u, Is ptlbllt,hell llV
ll'le 0<1,..,e eoa~ Pwbli1tting CO<T!P9ny. $fpjo.
r.te-..mlDl'll--.tt-PClblilM<I. ~Y" ftll'ou;"
Frl1hy. lor Cosl• M,W, H~ ~d'I.
HunllnQIOOI llt1dl/FDUr11tin \11llry. l 19v111
8Mdl, lrviMIS961lt~ llr.d Stn Clt"-1fl
S.n Jw~n C1pbtrano. A 'in1t1 rW'on1I
Wl!icll\ Is publlihed S.lurdl\IS •nd S\1<11;11'(1..
"'" prlr.c)NI po,ibllit\lng pi.nt fl 11 J:Jn Wt\!
l1y :.tr&rt, Costa Meu, C1UlprnWI, n.u.
Robe rt N. W11d
l'rnio!1nt Ind P\ltllilntr
J1c\: It C11rl 1y
V'tCI Pralffrtl Ind Ge"'r•I ~
Tholl'l11 K•1vil
Eel!!«
Tholl'l1i A. M11rphin•
M.i•1glng ECIL!Or
Cli•tl•• H. Loot ~ich1,,f P. Nill
Aullt1n1 Ml""lll1111 Eonors
Celll Mlla.1 »! Wiii l ay S.,...
N"""°" ICIKll: IW H"POl1 "°"'-Vlf'Cl
LAtunt hldJ: m '°""' Av-Hltltlllno*' ~: 11'1J llNdl "°"'""•
.... ~; -Nortll l!l cami.. RMI 1'.tlf•••• (714) •4MJ21
Cl ... ~ 642 .. ,71
Im Ca.•nlw Al h,_11w•1s:
T1l1Jl 111 4t2~420
~ 1'13,-ON!!oe • C-1 ......
e.ntNny, Ho -. •'-'""'· lthntrt•ion.. _...,.... """" .. M ..rtis-tr" llt>'t lfl IN\' M ••-.c..I ~ tfl'Ci.i ...,.. .......... ~ ~
~ cJm ...,.,. iNllll •• <:ott• """· C.11...,..., lllllK1llllofl 11'1' untw U.iU ~.,,, .., -11 U.lj ,,.,.,.fllly, 11'111f..,.
•---GM ftlMllllY,
'
Gems, Coin Collection
Stolen by Burglars
Jewelry and a C1'.lin collection valued by
the owner al more than $1 ,700 were
stolen during tile weekend from a
Laguna Hills home, Orange C'.ounty
Sheriff's oflicc rs said.
Deputies laid the theft or a watch, ring
and a quantity of collector's coins was
reported by Larry Frank Ccvert, fl,
238.11 Pesaro St. Thty said there wa& no
evidence of a breakin at the premises.
Officers said the jev.'e\ry and the coins
were taken from the master bedroom at
the Covert borne while the owner was
absent.
Anaheim Man Dies •
In Apartment Fire
James E. Davis, 20, di~ of burns and
11moke inhalation In a fire which swept
his apartment Sunday, Ortmge County
Coroner's Offlcci aides reportl!d .
A neighbor, Leonard N. Bauer, pulled
Dav~. from Ute bedroom fioor of his 3<27
W. Ball Road , Anaheim, apartment and
summoned aid. Fire department efforts
to ,·evive "avia failed.
f'fremen aaid Int blaze ev1dl!nlly
originated from a cigarette:
Last Ri™ Held
For Carpenter
Gavin H. Baxter
Funeral services were hell:! today in
Santa Ana for c·avln Hamilton Baxter, a
4l·year carpenter foreman with the
._lgdne Company who died Saturday at
tf;e age of 82.
Mr. Baxter was a native of'Canada and
lived in Orange County for 57 years. He
wM a member of the 'I\lstln
Presbyterian churclt for 116 years and
supervi9ed Its church !Choo! for 12 yellrt.
He was also an elder of the church. P.1r.
Baxter reUred from the lrvlne Company
In 1957.
He leaves his wife, Blance, of the faml·
ly home at 11122 W. (lccldental SI., Santa
Ana : two aona, Gavin Robert of Santa
Ana and Jobo Primly of Virginia; a
daughter, Marlatt Brillian~ or Newport
Beach ; 111 grandcblldren, 11 n d three
Jll'O"iirandclilldren. -.•
Burla! wu lttld al Fairltaven
MemorlOI Paik, S8lttl Anl.
Flu Deaths Recorded
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The London nu
WH bl11ned al lent pat1y for lwo deaU...
In San Diego County. Dr. J. B. Aakew1 county health director, said he c:onflnnea
this through culturu .flTD'lll lrom tt.u oo
five dead persons.
LAST CHANCE
-~. ' ,..., __ ~ .......
When they're 9one,
they're 1onol
FACTORY BUY-OUT-
oF ALL
· UMAINING
, LITTON
MICROWAVE
OVENS
wltfi
Micro
Browner ..
Modol l02
• Ollly at
~ .
1115 NEWPORT BLVl, llanllwn Costa MeSa-Phone 541-7788
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Buntqil)ton Beaeh
Fou·ntain Vaµey
'
VOL. 6/>. NO. 22, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES " -
•
-Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
ORANGE couNfy. c.iuFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 22, 1973 TEN CENTS .
'"'
Beach~istrict LaUnches ·Bond Vote Campaign
• By JOHN Z.\l~·ER then be expected to find five yes votes -After i'nitlat -dlS!greetnenl · among rr.any-peo ple as -possible.'' ----·--. ~!!' lllrl 0.llY ':.lllt I ...
The Hunting'ton-Beaclt Union High
school District has launched a campaign
to recruit 10,000 workers for its Feb. 27
same number of no votes Jn February
together with 50,000 yes votes, the boad
would easily get the 67 percent voter ap-
proval It needs to pass.
to involve' as many-people as possible
and not ask them to do too much."
Tbe district Is using a pyramid or
chaih plan to recruit its worken.
each. •
"they can ·get iliem from their own
families, neigbbors or whoever they
know,'' Hunt said. "Tiiis is the same plan
always used by Long ~ch schools,
which have never lost an election."
trustees, the measure is now unanimous· There are several new elements to the
ly back:ed by the school board. new campaign, Ro~r noted .
7
bond election. •
The plan la ·to have 1ach of these
worke~ fmd OVePr;o-bond voters &Qirto
see that they get to the polls. '
In the district's unsu'ccesslul bcirid el!O'
tioo last "September, the Vote was 10,169
in favor, 10,026 against. Asaumlng the
Beach·-Residents . . .
Who Fled Binze
'Lucky' -Firemen
Huntington Beach firemen said' today
that the four occupants of an apartment
which was completely d'5troyed by a fire
Sunday were lucky to escape the blazing
residence-alive. · ,
The apartment at 84011 Warner Ave.
and its contents; valued at SU,ilOll,.were
listed as ·a total lo8S by "firemen. '1
Occupantt bf· the aperUnent, Cindee
Hall, 22;.· her daughter, Tiffany, 4;. ,her
sister, Paulette Rangel, 20, and a.friend,
Tim Flynn, 21, said they dilc!o'ier<d 1he
fU"e at about 9 a.m. ant{ fled the aplrt·
ment in· their. night clothes. · ,
A spOkesman for the fire1 department
said ttie cause of the fire is under in-
vestigation toady. ·
A Navy veteran· and a Ma(ine ~
pilot who lived in· Iha adjoining aJ>ll1·
meot were ~orced to scramble down tbe.ir
second floor balcony to e: ape t.be,SlDOke
and names. Phil Bisson and Lt. Joseph OOand,
both Z!, said they """' awakened by the
sound of sirens but when they tried to
leave throogb1hti\-front.iloOr,tllq . ..er.
'driven back by the beat, smote and
.Dames.-Firemen said tba pair •cllinbtd
1down t.be balcooy.
One fireman, Craig Thomu, ~
'stitches to close, a cut in !Uhand that be
Sldfered -,bile fll!htliig the fire.
Firemen aald lhe·a1Nu1ment was com·
-pletely invOlved, in flames when they ar--
·rived and-they were able to contain the
blaze within five mtnutes. They said the.
,fire caused some smoke damage tO ad-
• ja<enl apartment!.
Weapons· Stolen
ROSEVILLE (AP) --Police say
burglars b"*< Into Calllamla Natiooal
Guard armory, a liquor store. and a
private home over the weekend and stole
' guns, automatic pistols, ammmlitioll,
rifles, handguns and 111 masb.
• ·DAILY PILOT AD
.MADE TO ORDER' -ua .. oomethln& to sell! Try a DAILY rum ci.11111«1 woal ad -thl!f,.
_, made to order . .Jim'• how one OWlll!I'
ordered a buyer for bis real Olllte:
JW CP, nr llth SI., CM s.oer . mtal ..... TIY • unlla. Act-........ ....
nu. The property ........... flnl 4111,
GI .. y0ur ort1er to a DAILY PILOT»
vllor -dill dlrt<U4Hf7L
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However, lhe dl!trict has lost four
straight bond elections Stretching back to
1181 ud ofliclals say they must aim. high
to haft any liOpe of passage tbill time.
"We d1ink our plan is a llO'JDd one,"
said Superintendent J a,c k Roper.
"Instead of asking a few people to do a
huge amount of work, we're goiJ1tl: to try
It will start with about 100 chiefs, who
will be "our hardest workers, the people
we can always rely oo," acCordlng to
Jobn·Hunt, a district official coordinating
lbe bond dri.,,,. ' .
Each chief will be expected to find 10
captalna, udJeach captain will be asked
to find ten workers .. The workers will
Tbe February bond election will be for
$27 million and will p~vide funds for at
least one, and ·if necessary, two fliW
campuses for the 52-square mile high
school district.
..
The high-profile, vigorous· campaign One is an effort to raise as much
and its eflort t~ involve as many people ~ money as possible for an extensive
as possible are in rihlrked contrast to the advertising campaign. Nearly 15,000 has
campaign preceding the September bond been raised so far, and Ron Shenkman,
election, Roper noted. chairman of the bond drive finance com-
"The decision was made to have a very mHtee, says the goal is $9,000.
low-key approach to our last election," "We've got to present people with the
Roper said. "But this time we've decid· (acts," Shenkman said. "Unfortunately,
ed to go all out in an effort to reach as (Sei CA~tPAIGN, Page %) •
•
-o~ti-Oll--Gets 01(
High . Court Approves 3-month Period
.
Watergate Witness S·ays
. '
He Thought It Was Legal ,,
WASITTNGTON (AP) -The man who
said l)e Jstened to wiretapped con-
versatioos from ~aUc bead-
quarten teitilied"todaY he'tlidUght It wa.
legal becanU bis orders.came ·frpmJQe . • ' \.. -• l ·~urltJ ct>Jef of President , Nixon's re-
. elec~IQI\ ~mittee.
"Weren't you suspicious tbat some
~~·.was goi!ig on,. _that aomelhln& was wrong when he told you
to uSe an·assumed.name?" Judge Jobn J,
' ' I •
)
Mesan Winner
'Of Hobie Title ..
Eighteen • year • old Ricllard
Lou1ek ol Costa ·Meal Is headed
home today after winning the 0¢
world cbamplOlllhip In H-Cal-14 · elm sailing at HoOOllllol, Wwall.
J:oufelt, a· former national cbam-
pion in the class, won the·~t two'
races of the 1£1.race regatta to take
the title. For detoils, see the
boaUng page today, Pllg<! U.
Sirica Asked the witness, • Al!red, C.
BaldWin, Ill, at the Waterg11te llial.'
"Not the use or an auumed namt, no
'~ir, y'our honor,''" 111id Bild.win, ·i. '!!Orin.er
FBI agent. · who once laugh~ . pollc~
science. ·
. Bald~n,. the , prosecution's.. slat wit-
ness, was on the stand for tbe third day
·as the third' week of trial be&ili '!Or G.
Gordon Lid<lY and,James W. McCord Jr.,
'charged with ~piracy, burglaiy and U-
" legal wiretapptng in a case inyotvmg a
break-in at.Den\ocratic heac;tquartera last
June. Baldwin ~~4 t>e ~ tPe aliat
"Bill Johnson'~ at McCord's direction.
1 -Baldwin had Said he was. recruited by
'Mcc.ord 'tO monitor conv~tions from
'his ~· roOm across t~ street froll'I
~~ratlc headquarters in the
Watergate building, ·
He said he saw a ·Jetter McCord wrote
to the Fedorll Communications Com-
mission i:equesttng t~ use of certain
'Tadio ~ ml that he r.teived permilsm .• He said that, as wen as
Jol:cCord'a poalllon with the r~tlon
commli.tee, were factors in believing the
activltles were legal.
The judge sen\ the jury from the room
and uked a.ldwin: "YQU tbought what
lSee WATERGATE, Page I)
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Su·
preme Court today barred states from
interf~ with t.be decisibn of a woman
and '~r doctor to end pregnancies within
the first thrte months.
ln the 7 to 2 decision striking down the
Te1.as a.,bortion law, Justice Harry A.
Blackmun said medical data indicate
abortion in the fU'St three months "al·
though oot withoot its risk, is now rela-
tively safe.''
Therefore, be.said, "any interest o( the"
state in protecting ~ woman from an
inherently hazardous procedure ... has
largely disappeared.''
The .Texas law made it a crime to end
a pregnancY, e1.cept "for the purpose of
saving the tile o£ the mother." It had been .
challeng"' by a ~gnant single woman
who said she could not afford to lelive
Teut lo-"g<»to ~ state where abort . _._,.,.._~had Ille
• jlal>y oirbOe lh\0-nse.was pending. l3li bad 1*11 declared Invalid In J f,llt '1"•--Judle ,_ ......
in las. ~11 nilina ·vlll ba•e an
impact in 44 statei with slmilar ltatutee.
At! the White House, presidenUal press
secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said he bad
no immediate comment on the court-de-
cision, and added that be dclubts there
will: be-Eiy White House or presidenUal
commtnt:later "after we review It, which
we will."
The ruling · followed two years of de--
liberations by the justices. It was based
predomJnantly on what Blacknuzn called
a right 9f privacy. He said the right "is
broad enbugh to encompass a woman's
Qui.z Disclosed
Of Prostitution
In Htintington
Huntington Beach vice o[ficers today
continued their investigation or an alleged
prostitution ring they said h a s been
operating in the city for about three
weeks.
The Investigation first came to light
last Thursday with the arrest ol three
women police allege were working out of
a house at 6762 Capstone Lane.
Officers identified the women as Judy
AM. Klusmeyer, 25, Fullerton; Helen
Marie Ryan, 11, Garden Grove, and t;arol AM Dooioln, '/fl, Long Beach.
· All three w~ arrested on suspicion of
,o.mpiracy to ctmmlt prostitution, a
felooy. They were hoolGtd Into Orange
County Jail and have since been released
on their own ~. Arraignment
is schedu\ed Thursday in West Orange
County Judicial District Court.
Eeo-.impact· Hear.ing Set
Lagoon Condominium Bid Facing Stiff Opposition
,.
a, TPRY OllYILLB pn>jecl wtll aell lor about $'71,000, a~·
• • -- -Ill( to 1loa Byrpea, general manager of A pobUc -... 111 Bmitinlfoa liar-H1"1tlll(toa Harbotlr Corp.
hour'• con-.i ~ Last ~. the ctty ctu11Ci1 refUJed
.... Is -did for I p ia. Tu8t. to appn>Ve the final tract map for the pn>,.... ' ' project ...W the fldl envlrt1lmental lm-
da7, bef4ft tllo lbitlltigl<llt -..... , pect ~ II writlen and reviewed.
vtroom!ntal review bolnl. • BJrnea aald Huntln(ton ·Harbour Corp.
It's the city's first public hearinl ott lpenl 110,000 to haft 1':nviroomental Im-
an environmental lmpecl report . T h e pact Reporll. Inc. (EjR) write ita lm-
ltearing Wlll be In the admlnlstrattve an· pact llltemenl oe:x. -• -___ ..._ · -· Tbt full tmpect report will be written
The lqom pn>jecl.baa faeod oppoolU... bl' tllo dlY'• <11vlroamental review bolnl,
fn>m .,.,. HlllllfnCtm Harhc>Jr property -wtll cover the eompanY'• stat ..
ownm who claim It wW IUrther bann ment, public -f.-t1io llear-
the allqed poor woter drculotioo In Har· q, wrltWI pullllc .....-. ud a ~
bour -Is. . view ol all h1finlol• 0, VIMlfbeil, B....... lllnour Corp. plsal IO ,..._ ... No-. (\'TN) ol tmne.
build Ill -Ind.• IGtD'tm "''""• 'V C«p. will pay the tac-m It ecrw al the norihealll:nl dl1 -~·for • VTN study, q.o1u......-........,u1y. llylllll llil .....
11le ·--In the -1nlum Richard Barlow, chalnnan ol the city'•
.
enviromDentat review board, said no de-
clii<NI will be made Tueaday. The pur-
pooe o1 the heatlnc 1s to collect further
public comment.
Huntington Harhc>Jr, In Ila enviraD-
mental impact statement, cJaim1 the
lagoon will actually benefit water circula·
tioo because a aerl•• ,<>! J""llflll wlll be
u!ed to t:OOStantly roctr<wate the watt~.
One property owner, Milton n. Bfy·
cholt, 11142 Courtney ~ hu wrltt<n
an extensive critque oppaotnc \he lagoon
project. --
He tenns the EtR statement "quite fn..
a<lequale an<I faifing to meet any court
test that might ensue.''
Beychot criticizes Huntington Harbour
ftJr not .,,...1ng the 011U" 134 acres ot
vacant land {the rest iJ for rutu,. develop.
ment), whk:h he aays -Id mean an
addlllooal 1W homes, l4IO boot slips ud
{Seo IMPACT, J>'ce I)
decision whether or not to term inate her
pregnancy.''
Justices :Jyron R. White and William
H. Rehnquist dissented. White said he
could "fiqd nothing in the language or
history of the Constitution to support the
court's judgment."
Rehnquist said "the court's sweeping
invalidation of any restrictions on abor·
lion during the first trimest~r Is impos·
sible to justify .. -." ..
Chargers Get
Jolinny Vnitas
· SAN DIEGO {AP) -The San
Diego Chargers today obtained vet·
eran quarterback John Unitas from
the-Baltimore ~ts for .. future
conslderaUons," a 'spokeiman utd .
(See story, Page 1&.)
Tbe -1allloa ftieled ru~
that Joliri "' HadJ, 11 ·Y e a r
quarterback of tbe Ch~gers, would
go to the Colts or to the Los
Angeles Rams .
Coach . Harland Svare of the
Chargers called Unltas the
••grtatest quarterback ever to play
the game." He played 17 Years for
ihe Coll!.
GM Recalls 3.7
Million Autos
For New Shield
DETROIT (AP) -General Moton an-
nounced the recall today of 3.7 mlUioo
1971 and 1972 cars for installation or a
shield over the steering coupling to pre-
vent the possibility of flying stones lodg-
ing between the coupling and UM! car
frame .
In making the aMouncement, GM said
it received report,, of 96 inc.identJ where
stones were scooped up, resulllng in 23
accidents in which 12 injuries were re·
ported.
' Involved In the ~I are lull-size 1971
and 1~ models of Chevrolets, BUickJ,
Oldamoblles and Pontiacs.
The company said the shield would he
Installed at no charge to the car owner.
It said ownen would be notified In about
two weeks.
GM said that if one of the cars Is
driven over loose gravel at speeds which
cause the car to pitch excessively, the
front frame croumember may acoop up
loose stones or gravel from the roadway.
Some of the stones could lodge between
the steer!"I couplin( ud frame, causing
steering Jalftfertnce on a left tum, the
automaker reported, adding t b a t the
stone II dlllod&ed when t b e steering
wheel Is turned to !he-right~
Purse Snatched
At Knifepoint
A 60-year-old Huntington Beath woman
told police •he lost her pune SUnday momlni to a young, knife-wielding pune
1D1tcber who made bla getaway on a
Dlcycle.
J'ollct said .Rosin< Hanson told them
she -walking through • shopping ~!er "1kln& lot II Bolsa Ollca Street
and Kell Avtnue whe:t ihe was aecoSfea
by a -man bfandialtinj a butcher knife.
Mn. llaofon told ofllcen the y0ulb
demanded her pune ud · tlJne ped.oled
a'!ly. headln1 wttt oo llell. _
lln. -aald Iha puree <mtllnOd •bottt f45 In eaah.
l
In a second 7 to 2 ruling, the murt
struck down Georgia's abortion law, find-
ing three provisiohs to be'unconstitu-
tional.
They were that (l) in the first thrte
months the operation be performed in an
a:ccredited hospital, (2 ) that a medical
C<lmmittee must give its approval and
(3) that two physicians must concur with
the woman's own physiciaa that the preg-
nancy should be terminated.
Worst Airliner
Crash Kills
180 Moslems
LAQOi, N~,(lll'JI A Jordooiln
alrjto« c...;t.W ' Nlprtan . -
pillrims· home from a pllgrijjjiige to
Mecca crashed in notthem Nigeria to-
day , .killing l!Kl of those aboard, aJrport
officiaJs aaJd, in the worst air crash in
history.
The odictals said 2% persons, 4Miuding
the pilot and five crew members, sdhoiv-
ed the crash at Kano, 520 inlles
northwest of Lagos.
They fled through an emergency
escape hatch near the ~ail of the plane.
Officials said the control tower warned
the pilot of the Alia Airlines l!oeing 701,
which had been chartered by Nigerian
Airways, or fog and poor visibility just
before he landed .
The plane touched down on gr:aYel 40
feet off the nmway , airport ofDcJiJ1 aid.
It veered ten into a ditch which 1n11pped
off the left wheel, then skidded aloog the
edge of the runway and bunt into
flames .
Many of the dead passengers were
thrown Crom the plane and their bodleS
scattered along lhe runway.
Some of those who survived got out
!See PLANE, Pace I)
Angels' Infielder
Top Jaycee Speaker
Billy Grabarkewltz, infielder for the
California Angels, .will be the apuker
tonight at the Fountain Valley Jayceea~
annual Distlnguiahed Sem<e Award
Banquet.
Activities will begin al 7 P·"1· at Jeri·
cho's restaurant In Htintlngtco Beach.
Tk:kets are M per "penoo IOd are avail-
able at the door.
Weadler
M<fl\Iy ll\IMY oa_Tueaday, with
slightly warmer temporaturea along
the Orange Col'sl Hlfllis of 17 are
expected, ·with gusty northeut
winds Wll'IDln& the air 1llghtiy.
wws tonight -·
INSIDE TODA 'Y
Sman Snudfr 100I wa tching
President Nixon danc:t with his
tol/1, when au of a 1uddt1t, tht
CTOUKl rurgtd fonoord. forcing
htr into hi.s Or'tnl. 'I'm aurpriltd r dktn'S.-t faint on the .rpoi. ~ Jht
fo.ttr remarked. St• inaug1'1'0l
llori aJ!d photoe °" Page '1.-
L.M. ...,., t ,... ........ 11 ....... -·..... . caMtw..a. I .......... 4..t.." ~ ... .,,....~ 1
C..ict 1J ...... •11 a ,.. • u ........... »n ,._ ..... , ,......... . _......,. .. ~ ,.
... alalP bl 11 .,..., • ....._ M-11 ..... ~ ... ,. ......... 1 ........... .,_ .... -..
'
•
,
• OAllY PILOT H Moncia1. January 22, 1~7) ---
Ena,ergency Vsage Mountain County Views Trip Plan
Under Fii·e .El Toro ·Air Pact
Orange County super\'isors Tuesday
\\'iii consider M ngretmt"nt >M"ilb El Toro
1tt111'ine Corps Air Station to ac-
commodate co nuncrr1at jet planes
nieding emergency landing facilities
when Orange County Airport is closed
due to v;eathe.r or cannot h311dle an im·
pending crisis.
Pt1ean>M1tile, Col. Ptturr~y Staples. public
liaison offiC't'r for tht" Ptlarine base. said
today "there is nothmg ne"· abou1 this
agreement. There has aho1•ays been a pro-
• vision that t:l\'il aircraft could l,ISt El
Toro run'A·ays C\'en for reasons of bad
v.·eatber."
Earlier news reports indicated that the .
agreement facing supervisors' action
Tuesday >M'as a new one reached by Coun-
Businessman
Tips Police
To Theft Bid
A tip from an lr\•inc businessman this
\\"eekend led police to arrest a Huntington
Bearh man on a charge of attempling to
steal Sl,750 worth of construction
materials.
Police credited Bjame Frederick
Q\•ale. 47, of European Auto Parts on
17152 Daimler St. with touching off an in-
ve!tigation which led to the booking of
Eugene Raymond McQullde, 30. of 1482
Br11Sh Drive, Huntington Beach, on the
grand theft charge.
Qvale told investigators he was at his
construction site in the industrial com-
plex Saturd8.y afternoon when he saw two
suspects load several bundles of steel
reinforcin& rods onto a flatbed truck.
When he inquired about their presence,
the men supposedly told nim that the
foreman of the constructivn company
had told them to pick up the rods and to
move them to another area.
Qva1e became SUSl>icious when the men
incorrectly identified the construction
firm. He said he subseqently ordered
them to pul the rods back and they
obeyed him . ·
When Qvale turned the truck's Ucense
number over to police . officers traced it
to a rental yard in Huntington Beach.
From forms fllled out at a rental yard
for a flat bed truck and a fork ltft, l'Oli~
obtained McQuade's address and ar·
rested him at bis borne. The other man,
who bas not yet been identified, was not
arrested by police.
Shortened Day
At Huntington
School Slated
Students at Huntington Beach High
School will have a shortened day once a
week until June so that teachers will be
free to revise the school's study pro-
gram. •
The "Professional Day" !or teachers
has been approved by the Huntington
Beach Union High School District Board
o! Trustees. ·
On the shortened day, usually Wednes-
days, seventh period classes \\"ill be
released at 12:41 p.m. Normally they are
released at 3:11 p.m.
Each class is 18 minutes shorter than
the normal 51)..minute period on the
shortened day.
Principal Larry Lucas, in his first year
as head of the school, said the staff is
revamping the entire enducalional pro-
gram of the school.
l Lucas pointed out that even with the
} s~rtened day once a week. Huntington
high students still receive 36 minutes a
week more instruction than state law re-
quires. "
OlANGl COAST •1
ty ,.i\\'iatjon Director Robert Bresnahan
and Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang.
An aide to Lang said this momlng the
report "'"as "completely erroneous. •1
Staples. mean'A"bile, erplalned that the
Corps Has al't\•ays· made tt.s faclllUts
a,·allable when civilian jets or other craft
't\·ere in trouble.
"I can remc.mber se\•eral times in re-
cent years \\'hen \\'e've had four or nve
big jets parked out here when Los
1\ngeles or Orange County &ll'lJOtU have
be""irlcloS:eadiie to weather." Col. Staples
said. ,
Staples said he believed the agreement
before the supervisors Tuesday would be
only "a rtnewal of the same agreement
y,·e ·ve had in the past."
He noted, however, anolber agreement
\\ itb the county -ror provision of
emergency be.licoflters or servicing or
county rescue craft -Is being con-
sidered. The status of tbat document, he
said, is not known.
"rt1ilitary bases other than the
Strategic Air Command bases," Col.
Staples emphasized, "have always been
a\'ailable if an aircraft bas a bona fide
emergency whether tha t emerg"ency is
due 10 \\'Cather or other factors. Further.
>M'e provide our crash crew service to
Orange .C.Ounty airport along with the
hea...:y equipment necessary to lift a large
jet." Stiiples concluded.
The report of the alleged "new
agreement" gave rise to speculation
among leaders of the Saddleb&ck Area
Coordinating Council (SACCI and Irvine
officials that more commercial Oigbts
might be expected w ~ El Toro.
"Where life and safetNre an issue, I
don't think anyone can qu!frel with the
use of El Toro for any true and real
emergency." Irvine f.tayor William
Fischbach said.
Recently Fischbach strongly a'rgued
against a Southern California Association
of Governments (SCAG) airport study
which recommended joint military and
ci'lilian use of El Toro as a way of pro-
viding expended commercial jet service
to Orange C:Ounty. 4 •
Today , Fischbach said, "I don't count
bad weather among such true· and real
emergencies.
''l have been and will be unequivocably
and unalterably opposed lo rommercial
joint use of El Toro MCAS as an
alternative airport site lo Orange County
Airport for bad weather, convenience or
any olher non-emergency reuoo.
"I might say I'm a little bit surprised
tha' the military would consider an ex4
pansion o ftbe joint use provided com4
mercial carriers beyond the upected
emergency service," Fischbach con·
eluded.
Mrs. Nance North of 25431 Classic
Drive, Mission Viejo, a leader in the
Sl\:CC organization, said she too was
surprised by tbe reported new agree-
ment. "f \\ill be at the supervisors
meeting Tuesday," she said.
Westminster Man
Guilty in Kidnap
Of SD Executive
Laf!ked llp
A trip to the mountains proposed as a
rtWard to upper grade students at
Bushard Elementary School drew
crlllclsm Tl>unday night from 00.
trus1ee of ,tho Fountain Valley School
District.
Tnl!tce Fred Voss said he had no quar·
rei with the idea oI laking the .students to
Barton Flats In the San Bernardino
MountliM for a weekend, bot said he has •
"severe reservations" about using the
trip u a reward f0r good behavior by
lludents.
'11>e 1rip from Feb. 8 "' Feb. 12 for 50
seventh and eilhth grade students was
approved on a 3-1 vote. Trustee Roger
Bel.gen was abeent. .
Guy EJ>Plilh\, a teacher a1 the school,
explained that selection of. students for
the trip will be based on the number ()f
points they have accumulated over the
past 10 weeu.
Gymnasium door at Edison High School in Hunting·
ton Beach is locked up tight with chain and p1dloclc
\vhile a basketball game is in: progreM and hundreds
)ILV PILOT ........ Leth .....
of spectators m lnslde.1! tbere was a fire, or a riot
coufd anyone get out through this door! The sign above the door says "Exit,"
The point system, he said "eaten com-
ple1ely "' behavior and is completely
removed from academl~." He said
teachers at the school developed the
"behavior molding" project as a means
of encouraging good behavior from the
studenls and to give all the students a
c.bance lo earn points, regardlea of their
academic abilities.
Dads ' Go to Kindergarten
In Beach School Program
Boys' Burglary
Trainer Given
5 to IO Years
v.., emphasized tha1 bis obJecti= 1o
tbe project were based 10lely on tbe
me1bod of oelecting atudellts fo< tbe trip.
He &aid he is hopeflil that -•
-In tbe dl8lrtcl wtJJ haft the
cbaoce "' go 1o the -and 1bat be is not against tbe d!Atrlcl upending
11111 1o ..... tbe cost of bus tranaporta·
Uon u well as the salaries for two
subltitute teachers for ooe'day. Preparing a one-night clau for poppa
is no tougher than preparing it for po~
pa's >year-<ild son, according to three
kindergarten teachers a~ LeBard School
in southeast Huntington Beach.
Tbe teachers -Betty Steidinger, Pat
Okura and Mary Jane Blateslee -will
take all tbe kindergarten youngsten and
their ~ i!1 low Wednesday and Tbur>-
day nights.
It's tbe Leilani Scbooi annual back·lo-
scbottl night for fathers.
·-Is ·t1>e third yw tile ltlodergar1en . teachen baV<O held • lalher'1 nJcbt In
class. They developed tbe _... for 1
variety of reasons.
One aspect ti "' g1v• Illa dac!S 1 vi.,.. of
what actually happens' in class. hM>tber
aspect iJ bringing tbe father clooer 1o bis
child.
"Mothers are always involved with the
school, but the da~ are more reluctant
to join in," says Miss Blakeslee. "It also
gives the child a chance to be alone with
father; somet.'ling that may nJVer happen
in a big family."
AU three. teachers said the fathers ac-
tually get in the spirit of the class more
than mothers and are Jess Inhibited.
"'lbe dads are like children on the fll'St
day of school," saya Mi!s Blakeslee.
"They run around greeting ()ther dad!
they already knot .. But the kids won't let
them get involved in business con-
versations." '
"One li1Ue girl 1old ber dad he his to
hold up bis hand ll be wants "' uae tbe
bathroom," said Mrs. Okura.
The night's events· include such ac-
Uvlties u finger paln1ing, drawinf squig·
gles (!Wiily picture9 wl!h a story),
1'.tilding blocu, cutting paper doth,
ptaylng house, dancing, singjng and en-
joying jelJo and -· The most rigorous event Is tbe
parachute dance. where ...,,... grabs
tbe edce ol a paracbu1e, danca in I cir-
cle, 111111 nms underneltb when individual
nwnben are called.
11'1 Q\llte a li>Oe ~ Jor ·-of tbe dadS.
While some fathers are hesitant about
t.be program It ftnl, tbe lelcbers say
most admit ~Y enjoy Jt. ·
l'romP~el
CAMPAIGN. ••
A mAD ICCUlled ol .tralnlng Fountain
Valley boys "' burgtarlr.e houslni trlCU
bas been le01enced "' five 10 years In
state prison.
William H. Miller, 35, bad pleaded
guilty earlier to one count ol f!ral degtee
burgluy. Superior Court Judge James
Turner In pnlllOUJlclns eentence said
Miller .... gull!Y ol_ itadlng cbildren "' •
.life of crime. .
Mlller, his. wife, Linda, 25, and tbelr
four cbildren ·fled Foutitaln Valley !ill
July when wunnts '"'"' oblalned lor their arr.sta. .
'l1ley bad UV<d II DIS El Capitan St.
and were an-e!ted several days later in
Dallas, Tu. They waived mraditloo and
were returned lo Orange Counlf .
DUring earlier court ....WO. Mn.
Miller pleaded gullty 1o ooe coon1 of ...,.
ood degree burglary and was sentenced
lo one year in the county jail and placed
on three years probation.
Fountain Valley police said Miller, who
originally was held on 19 charges had ob-
talned a master key le a 44·home tract
"But I do have some pretty ~
reser1atkm about the way In wblcb this
bu. been appro1cbed," he added.
"Service to the achoo] or community isn't
tbe kind ol thing that should be rewarded
by AOCial brownie polnta tha1 can be tum-
;ct In for a trip 1o tbe mountains." .
Voa alao said be fears Iba! creaUv!1y
111111 oelf expression can be ACfiflced
whon an lns1itutloo "attempts w teach
values in this manner ...
1hJs1ee Sbella Meyera voiced support
for tbe proje<t. "Most tlda 'live With
rules and accept them, but --.um..
there are yuunpten who come under a
different ca1egory. This kind of thing en-
courages ttv.m to follow rules In t h e
hopes that-~ behavior will 1ben
become a habit"," she said. ..
Beacli Council
Asks Park Bids
that ~ts money so ~e've been con-and sent at least four boys to steal
tacting businesses and individuals trying household Items and bicycles. Officers Huntington Beach councilmen h a v e
to raise what we think it will take." said they found $4,000 worth of stolen asked tor early canstruction bids on eight
Shenkman says the money will be used property at the home 01 a relative. city parks to beat the deadllne for
to finance a series of flyers and in· Proposition %0, the coastline preservation
formation she.els, and. toward the end or initiative.
tbe campaign, n e w s p a p e r ad· l'rom P .. e J Councilmen agr<ed "' a special
vertisements. ~lg J"an. 29 lo o~ bids, so the cit>:
In addition, the borxl committee main-IMPACT can· avoid the lengthy permit proce.S! It
ta.ins a speakers bureau which bas been • • • might face when the regiooal coastal
delivering speeches at the rate of two commission starts work in February. The children are excited before and
after the program, say the teachen. It
becomes tbe highlight of their year. per day for about a month, according to two to three more salt water lakes. Wort on the eight parks ls expected to
Byron Handy of Westminster bas been Hunt. He abo doesn't feel the EIR ttpOrt cost slightly more than Sl million. The
found guilty in San Diego of kidnap-Speeches were made before ctti7.en adequately covers water cond.Jlloos in biggest venture is the 27-acre F..diaon
ing wealthy indUStrl!ilist James T. groups in the Jut election, Roper said. Huntingtoo Harbour. community park, across Magnolia Street
Hawthorne after lurinl!'-him lo' a pr.. FrMa Pqe l but not nearly a• many. City officials hive said they wtJI bmie from Edl9oo High School.
dawn meeting at Hawthorne's machinery WATERGATE A third element in this bond campaign no · its in any cue until The Edison project will cost about plant. is the formal Involvement of the elemen-aft the U.S. Army COrpl of Engineers $600,000, according to city officials. A flrt
A superior Court jury deliberated 30 • • tary districts. Officials in each have gi es its approval for the lagoon con-staUon and community center already
minutes before convicting Handy, 49, of you were doinr, for McCord was perfectly ft'~:: 1:n~~t I~~~ election just as ~~i:~ may hold a bearing on the ha= :1n!:1'{: :~ s~ city's kldnaping. armed robbery and using a legal?" the
firearm while commllting a felony. "Yes," Baldwin said. "At this point, a month before.the e1ec-project IOllletime In February.'· second biggest park, ranked behind
llawthorne testified he got a phone call Baldwin also said he band-delivered tion, we've already got more people ln-Byrnes said his company has worked on central park. ,
the night of Oct. 5 from a man calling two days of logs of conversations to the volved than we did in the whole cam-this lagoon propo611 for nearly two years, The other seven parks are a11 small,
himself Jim West, asking him to be at headquarters ()f the Re-.a..ucan Com-paign for the September election," Roper and tile city's failure to accept the final nefgh:.Jrbood facilities, with four in
1he Hawthorne Machinery Co. in San 1 1 ion,,.... sakt. "And we should be just starting to tract map merely delays it another southeast Huntington Beach and the
Diego at 5 a.m. the following morning to mittee or the Re-e ect of the Presi· pkk up momentum.'' couple ct weets. other three io the northern part of town.
dent. · 1·r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mii;;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-discuss a tractor sale. J•·dg s· . u-· "· tloo lfawthorne said he drove to the factory e, inca ~ t:U aucn to
and was accosted by Handy, whom he Baldwin s remembering ma.,y detaillbut
said he recognized as a former t'Ustomer not the name of the man to 1'.'f>om. ~ ad-
of his company. He said Hancly forced dr~ the envelope contain1bl the log!. s
I
1
1
1
DAILY PILOT
him into a car at gUrrpoinl and drove to ~-You want Lhis court and"the )iry to -z Hawthorne's beach house. believe you lave it to some Bl:'ard you ~ At the house, the industrialist sakt, he -~kne"!..!...-_
LAST CHANCE When they're 1one,
they're gone~
'EACTORY BUY-OUT
}
j
' t
1 ~
t t ,
I
' t
~ i i ~ • }
I • l
I , •
•
'The Or1119e eo.11 OAILY PILOT wliti ,..,!di
11 combined lti• N1ws-Pms, 11 Pllblishtd b'f
the 0r•"911 Co.it Pvbtblllflll C""'P•11y. Se'*°
r11• cdl!loll$ ••1 P\lbl!1he<1, Monct.Jy lhfllUllh
Frld1y, tor Co1t1 Me.1, HewllOl1 Buch,
Hu"!l119!on btlCh/FOll~l•in Vdll~. LMOlllla
lltK:h, lrvlnr/Stddltblck 1"11 Sin C~mr~11/
Sin Ju•" Capl11r1no. A 1lnol• r1Qion81
flli11011 11 publlthtd S1lurday1 •Jld s11...i~v1.
TM prlndpal P11bll1M119 pi.111 b •I lJO W•~•
llt y Strtfl, Colli M.,,., C1!i!omi1, 91i1',
Robert N. W11d
Pr.,lllt'llt Ind Publl)fler
J1elt II:. C11rl1y Vici Pttsldenl Ind o..ntr1I Mtntvtr"
Tholft•• K11vil
E.dllor
TI!olfttt A. M11rphin1
M.M1111'19 Ed!IW
Cli1rfn H. L..01 ll:ieh1rd '· Nill Aallsl•nT Mt1119lrl; E4110n
Tetrv c • .,;u.
Wtsl Or1rme C-tr Edi~
" ......... IHdiOff.ce 1717$ l11th loul1v1rd'
M1Ul91 Acldr111 : ,,0. 11111 7t0, '2641
OtMr Offlcn 0.-lltilldl· 222 F0tttl Avtr111t
C..11 ""'-' JJO w111 aay Srrff! ...._., 14A(f!J ~ H-.wt hullw9"' 111'1 C»mintw: JIU ~Ill .El Ornltil AIM
Tel.,.._ 17141 44.Z-..JJt
ct..lntlll AMrthl., 64.Z·S671
,,.... Her• or..,. c.w.tr C-MW11t11t
140-1221 °"""""· lrn, °''"" ""'' l'Wttdllnt c.m..nr. He Mwt •IDrfft. lllillltr••loM. •lflrlll Mlttl!' fr H"ffrt!Mmlfltt l'llftln
-
"'" .. ~td wl!lllM.tf IUIKlll PW>
of f.lll"l'l'IOlll -· ....., clttl llOS! ... Nld .t C"I• MN, Clllfonlla. $11hlrll'llon tw Cltrllr U.fl
• .......,_ •• _b¥ '"'11 illl fNfllfllJ1 fl'llHllrf .......... &Ml _,,.,,._
-
was forced to telephone his bank and ar-A. He told me he wOOJd""'TlV.er:O-ffto the
range payment of $186,500" ransom . todJvktual. . '
Police said the money was wilhdrawn Q. And you left 1t at that .
and brought to a prearranged point, but A. ':'es. Because of the proCedures that
was never picked up. were m effect at the «?>mMlttee for the
1-fawthorne said Handy tied him to a Re-election of the President tm;n.
bed and left but he broke tree, ran to a · Me~nwhil~, the mag~e aatd 3mldly
motel and called the FBI. Police said the f1.ve gwlty pleas in tile Watergate
Handy was arrested around noon In a car bugging trial staved off . te.'ltlmony that
which contained keys to the beach house. fo~er Attorney Gen~al John N.
Handy claimed he loaned the car ~11tchel1 and former \Vhite House aide
before the kidnaping lo two men from c.harlcs w. Colson app~oved t~·wi:retap
"the syndical(! in Kansas City" to Pt~g of the Democrahc NatlOllll Com-'
transport some money in an unrelated mittee. .
affair. He said they brought the car bac~ Spo).es~n for both Mitchell and
later with the keys on the floor but with Colson derued U?e report.
no money. Time and NeW!\veel: alto f'f'POfled that
l'romPageJ
PLANE ...
through an emergency hatch In the tall.
tilt only part ()f the aircraft not con-
sumed by names.
An airport official gaid, "The rh1ne
was gutted by fire except for the !al sec--
Uort It literally melted."
The wor1t prevk>us air dllaster was the
crash at Moscow's Shaiemetyev Airport
on Oct. 13, or an Aeroflot Russian built
llyushin-62 Jet, ln which 176 persons died.
A Japa~. Airlines plane crashed at a
Moscow airport on Nov. 23, tilling 112 persons.
•
,
lour of t.be defendADll who flltertd IOilty
pleas r«:eived and ...Wd 1et flnancl1I
hflp from 11fliends11 wbo wanted to
"minimize the OOP's emblrranment"
about L1)e epltode.
Time said def•Dclut E. H.,.anf Hunt
"promised bis lour conledenlel that
unidentified 'friends' would otter each
defendant up "' 11,000 for every 111011th
he spentln jii190tl, wltrmorf inOlioy to
be paid at the tlme of hii release."
•
Flu Deaths Recorded
.~
$AN DIEGO (AP) -The Loodoo Ou
WAI blarn.d 1lJeut J>l!°IY tor 1wo de•tb•
In SAn Dlqo County. I>r. J. B. Aaltew,
county l\Mltb direc:1or, did he ~
thi• tbnNlb C.l!UrOt po;in'hom'wu on
five dead penons. . ' . . I \ .
Modi! l02
to .., --"''" .. crHlt
OF ALL
REMAINING
LITTON
MICROWAVE
OVENS
with
Micro
Browner •
only at
1115 IOPORT ILVD., llMllwl. Cata Mlsa-Pllone 548-1711
•
•
' I •
Monday, J.1nuary 22, 1CJ7l H DAILY PILOT 3_
Cease-fire Agreement Wednesday? -••
/
/ . I Grew ·Too .Fast ,
South Coast Has ·
Hospital Vaca.ncy
By FREDERICK SCllOEME!ll.
Of IM ~111 l'llM llafll
Until a year and a hall ago, South
Coast cOmmunity Hospital of South
Laguna virtually held a monopoly on the
delivery of hospital car~ ln south Orange
County.
Today with two new competitors open
and a ilurd facility to be completed in
July, South Coa;st finds much ot the turr
it once controlled is gone.
The hospital, according to-....number of
health planning officials familiar with
~uth Orange County, is the victim of a
unique situation : hospital development
along the south ~st is moving well
ahead of the population growth of the
area.
South Coast, according to ad-
ministrator .Bernard F. Carr. is
operating far 'below the "optimum oc-
cupancy" for a non-profit hospital.
With 125 beds available for use, South
Coast is drawing between 58 and 89 pa·
tients a day. In percentage tenns, the oc-
cupancy is running anywhere from 44
percent to 71 percent.
For a_oon-profit hospital, 80 percent to
85 percent is considered optimum.
DirectJy related to the sagging OC·
cupancy are the amount of money the
hospital is collecting, the number of peo--
ple employed and the number or beds
available for use.
For the fiscal year ending Sept. 30.
1972, the hospital showed a $22,000
surplus in a total b~dget of $5 million.
The hospital would ha ve shown a
deficit had_ it oot been for $168.000 in
''retroactive reimbursements" received
from government and private health
plans, said Carr.
·"We're going to have some tough sled-
ding for the next couple of years," Carr
admitted in a recent interview.
The last two years haVe been tough
ones, as well.
In 1970, South Coast employed roughly
4.00 persons. That figure has dropped to
290, according to Victor C. Andrews.
president of the board of directors. He
said "further dislocation&,. o( personnel
may take place in ~. futlire. ' ··
Carr also indicated additional staff
cuts may be made and that bed capacity
now being constructed in the expansion
program may not be opene(!. for Pf· for ·
several years.
· The roots of the complex overbeddihg
problem wind back to the late )960s when
South Coast, with 171 beds open for use,
was operating at 95 percent occupancy.
A 1969 study by,.Stone, Marraccini and
Patterson concluded that mort hospital
beds were needed in the South Orange
County Hospital Service Area, which
runs: from Crystal Cove -south to San
Diego County. •
The study recommended South Coast
immediately begin construction of 100
additional beds. It also recommended the
planning start for a 250 bed hospital to
serve the Saddleback Valley, and, by
1917, a ISO bed facility be constructed
between San Clemente and San Juan
Capistrano.
South COast !ollowed the recom-
mendation and enlered the current $7
million exv.ansion program. At the same 1 ·time furtl·raising began for the $12 milli~n Sii\tdleback CommunitX Hospital,
schcdulz~to open in Laguna Hills in Ju-
ly.
The he Stone, Marraccini and Pat·
terson repart became, in essence, -a
precise plan for South Coast and Sad-
dleback Community. Other interests,
however, ignored the study.
Groups interested in constructing two
· proprietary. .(profit) hospitals sprang up
-one in San Clemente, the other in
"'1isslon Viejo.
Construction of the 116 bed San
Clemente General Hospital was approved
by the FaciliUes Review Committee of
comprehensive Health Plannill( Couocil
(CHPC, ol Orange County on Oct. U,
1970.
A week later, the full CHPC gave its
approval to the project. With no appeals
of the deicsion heard during a :JO.day
period, \\'Ork on the project began. It is
now in operalion.
Construction or ri.1ission qimmunity
' Gmipoint Rapist
Assaults Woman
· In La guna Beaclt
t A Lag\lna Stach woman wu raped at
gunpoint lale S&turday In her norlb
Laguna home by a man wearing a
k fearaome black 1ld mask with eye and
, mouth holes outlined In red.
An extensive aearch of the area by
Lapna Beach poll« faUed to locate tho
• revolvtMrio!dtng suspect. detcribed 11
1 bein120 to 30 years of 11e, about six feet
J oue Inch or ail: feet lhree tnches tall and
1 fisring faded blue jeans and a faded
; ytllow or off while olllrt.
1be woman1 described by o1£iccrs as
Htremely d!Slraught ~ ••perience,
was taken 1q South Commooity
Roe:p1tal far lreatmer:t aner the Incident.
1 The lncidenl, reported at 10: II p.m.
I Saturday, Is tutde< lnvutlptJon by the d_ ... l'olke would ... -her
age. '
>
Hospital, a 124' bed facility was ·authoriz-
ed under a so-called "grandfather
clause" during an interim period when
CHPC was abolished and the existing
Orange County Health Planning Council
est:>bllibed. 1t also Is in operaUon.
The board of director1 of Saddle,ba~
Community Hospital, a noo-proflt cor-
poration, received approval for a 250 bed
facility from the Facilities Review Com-
mittee of CHPC on Dec. 15, 1969. Soon
after constn,tction was~authorized by the
fuU CHPC OOdy. .
Saddleback, however, realizing too
many beds were under construction
changed Us plans and decided to start off
with only 150 beds.
"When Public Law 89-749 was passed
establishing Comprehensive Health Plan-
ning Regulations, provision was made for
the establishment of such bodies as lhe
Orange County Comprehensive Health
Planning Council and its subdivision.
Health Facilities Review Committee,"
""'Carr said. "Unfortunately, appointments
to these bodies are made by local
political entities. ,
"This in tum might allegedly leave
room for political patronage and favors.
1 do not know if these were facton that
were involved in the history of this silua-
on, but it appears that some shrewd indi·
viduals ei.erclsed their inCluenq? to ot>-
tain permission for the construction of
proprietary facilities which could be
·placed upon . the line by profit motivated
interests prior to the construction of well
planned facilities wbich had been cleared
G' on their basic planning with the state,"
Carr said.
"Had this planning been followed, some
of the problems which are prevalent on -a
temporary basis at the present time
would not have been encountered," added
Carr. " ... 1 think y<iu should be pointing
the finger at the individuals who-have--
violated basic comprehensive health
planning by irresponsible building of
unnecessary beds to the detriment of the
general public."
"I thtnl< you'll find a good deal of
opportunism," said Andrews in an iJI..
terview, "by people following the pr?fit
motive."
-While there is nothing wrong with free
tn'terprise, Andrews said, i' is
'llllfortunat@ that master planning was
turned asidf' and the community forced
• l!'.' pay for the overbedding problem.
"It could have been prevented, a lot or
money saved and we could have avoided
a lot of dislocation," said Andrews.
Hospital trustee Tristan Krogius, who
occasionally has b e e n at odds with
Andrews, says there's more to the prob-
lem.than just overbedding. ,
"Unfortunately, we offended some doc·
tors when we ran the whole thing,"
Krogius said.
The doctors, he said, complained about
the treatment offered at South Coast.
When the new I proprietary hospitals
opened, the physicians took their patients
elsewhere, he explained.
Krogius said the task now is for the
board or directors and the hospital ad-
ministraUon to express confidence in the
medical staff.
''What I'm working toward on the
boaid is making this the best damn
hospital in the area and showing the doc-
tors we care about them. I hope the
slights they may have fell ,in the past will
be forgotten," said Krogius. •
• Other soui'<:es blame poor location and
personnel rifts for the problems South
Coast is facing. .J ·
''SOuth Coast is the one with the prob-
lem." laid one member of the Orange
Count):' Health Planning Couneil, who
asked not to be identified.
"There aren't a lot of people moving
into the area/' be added, "except for
Laguna Niguel. But South Coast may be
competing with Mission Community and
Saddleback for those paUenta. I see a
very real problem."
Carr contends, however, ·that Lagwia
Niguel growth will ease the overbedding
problem for Sout~ Coast Tt>e area, he
pointed out, is eJg>eeted' to er.ow to 63,~
persons -'In increase or 50,000 J)er1ons
over th~ present population.
• Bui a sP,OteSman for Avco c.ommunltf.
Developers .. ys growth in.Lali\JM Niguel
is far behind •hat was originally Planned
and that the 62.000 population figure I~ Jlt
least 10 to 15 years away.
According' to Carr, recent atltdles.show
that the overbeddJni problem facing
South Coast sh<Mllil ease by 1978, "lien the. areft pf>pulatlon j~ ·~peeled to oatch
up wl!h tbe number of hospital bed~
tn the nieantiin., he poh111 out. South
~ will take a stronger role lo op.
posing hlphoranl flclllty devoloplDeat.
partlcu!orly from the two prollt hoopitajs tn the aru. It wm abo continue lo bett<1r
Its total patient em and servk:M, Aid
Carr.
·South Coas~ along with a number of
other protesters, bu already loll one Im-
portant battle. Addition of Ill beds to
Mission Community, though tumecl down
by the stat• Healill PlaM!ng Uouncll. Is oow undtr way. Those new ?>eds wtll 'aPen
In May.
The unfortunate fact, says And......, Is
four hQop!Jals will be fighUng "for
everybody" and none of tM facRltlea
may be able to exceed 11 35 percent oo-
cu~. • U's a tragedy _ •• Just sinful,•• said
Andrews.
•
DA ILY P'ILOT lllff P'llole
Beaf!lteonaber
The tides raged high in i.agwia
Beach, but this hardy fellow
doesn't seem . to mind . as he
\vaits for the waters to wash
ashore some goodies.
Officers' Trial
---.
In Bar Shooting
Death Postponed
A itln~y '"de1ay was ordered" today in
U:ie Orange County Superior Court ar-
raignment of two policemen indicted by
the Grand Jury after a Tustin bar
shooting that ended with the death of a
Marine Corps pilot.
Judge James Tumer ordered Cypress
police Sgt. Thomas Baroldi, 26, to return
to his courtroom Jan . 31 to plead on
murder charg~ filed after the barroom
slaying of Marine Capt. Steven Robin-
ette, 25, of Phoenix, Arizona.
He set the same arraignment date for
Garden Grove police officer Jerry Gray,
28, who is charged with assault with a
deadly weapon for his alleged role in the
shooting of bar patron Sam Campise, 35,
Tustin.
Baroldi is free on $100,000 bail. Gray i!
free after posting a $2,000 bond.
Both off-duty officers were 3rrested
Jan. S after a shooting fracas at the
Bachelors Ill bar in whlch Robinette was
fatally wounded and Campise rl'Ceived
serious wounds from w~ich \he is now
reported to be recovering satisfactorily. The Orange County Grand Jury in·
dieted both men after being told by
witnesses that Robinette was actually
trying to come to the aid of 1;1e two of·
ficers when he allegedly was gunne$1
down by Baroldi.
Kathleen Bush
·suecurnhs at 38;
Services Slated
Rosary will be recited tort!ght for
Kathleen S. BuSb, wife of Dady Pilot
compositor Jerome A. Bush of Santa
Ana who died Friday. She was 38. M~s. Bush )"as a native of Maine and
UVei:l in Orance County for 28 years. She
was a CUb Scout and Girl Scout leader
and a member of Boy Scout Troop 165
Auxiliary. She also was a member of Jcf·
fe.rsolf Elementary SChool PT A in Santa
Ana ind-an active parish member of Im·
macu1a.te !{ea.rt of Mary C.11.urch.
Sht leaves her husband. three
daughters, Ann Marit.1 Carolyn and Mary
Kathleen· two sons, M1chae1 and Steven,
all of t~ family home at 2413 S. Rita
Woy: her par<Jlts. Mr. and Mn. Fttddle
Jolin of Santa Ana: tblee sisters. Laur·
eue Kole of Hemet, Loraine Arm1 of
Tens and Linda AM Elliol of Whittier.
1IOwy will be at 8 p.m. In the lm-
macutate. Heart of Mary Church, Santa
Ana. Mus wW be celebrat<d at to Lm,
Tuesday, also at lmm8eulate Heart Churc6. Burial will follow in Holy
Sepuld>cr Ctmetery. Orange.
Peronist Murdered
BUENOS AlRES (UPI) -Julian MOl'-
tao, a PttO!l\ll labor lcadtt 1nd candl·
dlte for polltl<al offlct: In ihe March
clecUons. wu amiduted today outside
his honle. A pobot spok""'on .. Id the
assassin fled ali.r ahoottna Mo"'10 and
hil cilautfeur as iJ10J ..lired -·•
car.
I •
. .
Leary Goes
To .Court ·
On Charges
By. GEORGE LEIDAL
.Of t1M 0.11., P'llet Steff
A "quiet" Dr. Timothy Leary a~
peared this morning in Orange County
Superior Court and Was arraigned on 19
charges linking hlm to the internatiQnal
drug smugglink organization the
''Brotherhood of Elerna' Love."
Leary's attorney, George Chula, told
Judge James Turner his client would
waive reading of all 19 count3.
Deputy Dist. Atty. Jack Ryan said
following the briei court apj>earance this
nlOrnlng, Leary was scheduled to enter
pleas lo the charges at a continuation of
the arraignment this afterooon.
Ryan added there is "some question''
1Yhether Chula will continue to represent
the famed drug advocate during the re-
n1aining proceeding:.
He described this morning's represen-
tation ol Leary by Chula as being a
"special appearance."
Leary's new girlfriend, tttiss Joanna
Harcourt-Smith . .,said last week Beverly
Hi:'.s attorney Gregson Bautzer would c'e-
fend the former Harvar:t lrcturer.
Chula represented Lear/ during his
1970 trial in Orange County. That action •
resulted in Leary being convicted or
possession of marijuana. Laguna Beach
Police Sgt. Neil Purcell arrested Leary,
his wife Rosemary and his son John, on
Dec. 26, 1968 <\_fter discovering a quantity
of pot in the family's station wagon,
parked along woodsy Woodland Drive.
Mn. Leary's whereabouts aren't known.
The "tune in, turn tilrl and drop out''
apostle appeared quiet in court today,
Ryan said. He said r..! is "one of the
county staff" assigned to prosecute the
charges agains. Leary, who is believed to
have founded the worldwide drug smug-
gling organization. The Grand Jury in-
dlcted Leary in August.
Leary's court i!.ppearance today \\'as in
marked contrast to his :.niiling, jovia l
mood at Los Angeles ~nternational
Airport 1'l1ursday. Moments after be was
manacled by agents of the U.S. Bureau
of Dangerous Drugs, Leary passed by
waiHnJ newsmen ,grinning broad1y. A.n
unmarked Lo.. Angeles Sheriff's van s\og-
g€d Leary through a rain drenched rush
htur to Lo.1,Angeles County Jail where be
spent a nlgtlt before being transferred to
Orange'"Count, Jail.
Chula was said today to be meeting
privately with Leary prior to the af-
ternoon apPearance.
The charges faced by Leary in Orange
County link him with some 50 others in·
volved in the Brotherhood of Eternal
Love. The Brotherhood, believed to be an
p(fshoot of Leary's League of Spiritual
Discovery, was responsible for bringing
more than 1,000 pounds of hashish worth
$4.3 million into the U.S. each month.
authorities say.
. Leary's bail has been set at S5 millioo,
an amount equal to the bench warrant
issued for him by the county court last
August when the Grand Jury indictments
were banded down.
Even with no bail, however. Leary
would return to prison. He fled the
minimum security California Men's
Colony at San Luis Obispo in September.
19~:>. He only partially served :i one to 10
year sentence there for his . Laguna
Beach conviction. The £light, believed to
have been set up by the militant
Weatherman organization, launched
Leary's 28--month wanderings in Europe
including stays with the Black Panthers
in Algiers and in Switzerland, Lebanon
and finally Afghanistan where he was
spotted by U.S. agents.
l>.4V mll,41 •
'IOU tOU\.11
\.OS' •IOUT I 6 6\G ONES.
~NOOPY APPEARS
(jN ROMAN D,IGS?
ROME (AP I -Did the ancien t
·Homans have their Snoopy, loo'! •
Ye9, said Rome's II Gip.rnM 'Italia
today with a head line : "Snoopy \~as ~
ltoman."
Archeologists working under the
Basilica of St. 1'.fary· 1'.fajor c!!scover('d
1.000.year-old etchings on the wall "'ilh
remarkable simi larity to Snoopy.
Snoopy is the dog in Charles Schuh:'
cartoon strip, "Peanuts."
'
l(issii1ger
•
En ·Roe.te
'
To Paris
B}' Uniled Press lntemaliOflal
Dr. Henry A. KissingC r .left today for
Paris for crucial and perhaps final talks
\1•ith the Vietnamese airried at ending the 'Evacuation' • 12.year-old Vietnam "'ar.
Flap Studied
At San Onofre
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 111• O•ll'f P'li.1 St•ll
Ev;i,cuatlon of several South Coast
co mmunities in case of a nuclear ae-
cident at the Sa n 0 no fr e Nuclear
Generating complex would take in excess •
of two hours. an expert told a licensing
board over the 1\•eekend.
Los Angeles area traffic engineer ft).
V. Sheppard told the Atomic Safety arid
Licensing B6ard Saturday that the com·
munities of San Clemente, Capistrano
Beach, and Dana Point and San Jua'ft('·
Capistrano could be evacuated in less
than three hours. -
But foes or the proposals to build two
new reactors at San Onorre have insisted
in past months that evacuation p\ag1 .for
the communities are inferior. ·
Sheppard appeared as a witness for the
two utilities proposing the projects.
Southern California Ediso n and San
Diego Gas and Electric companies. •
Sheppar<l told, the three-man pilnel
assembled in San Diego that it would re-
quire 28,000 cars to evacuate the
residents of the four South Coast com-
munities.
In areas closer to the plant. it would
take considerably less time . he added.
Both the utilities and the Atomic
Energy Commii;sion staff use · three.;._
separate ~iones which would be a{[e~
by plant safety matters. '.
The first mne, the "exclusion zone" is
an area within an 800-yard radius of 'he
reactors. ~
No permanent rtsidents are allowed in
that area.
A second, "low-populatiop" ione ls also
cited. 1bat is the area Within a three·
'm.Jle radius of the plant. Included In that
sector are the southerly stre_tches of San
Clemente (including the Western White
House)·and parts of Camp Pendleton.
Navy Sky Diver
Killed in Plunge
A Navy man from Victorville. was kill·
ed instantly in a skydiving accident at
Camp Pendleton Sun jay.
Base spok~smen said Randall Card. 22,
stationed at North Island Naval Air Sia·
lion, was klUed after his chute failed to
opell' properly during a sport parachute
jump at Isadora Flats.
Card had· been jumping with 16 fellow
membe:-s or the North Island Naval
Parachute club when the mishap look
place .
Base spokesmen said Card was a
seaman stationed aboard the USS
Buchanan which currently is in San
Diego Harbor.
The skydiving activity is an authorized
recreation for ·military groups on the
base, iilformalior. aides .said.
-PSaigon and Washington reports said a
cease-fire Could be initialed as early as
\Vednesday, "'ith the formal signing cerc ..
mony a few day·s later.
The forejgn ministers of South Vietna.m
and !he Viet Cong arrived in Paris with
optimistic statements.
Le Due ,Tho, the pr incipal Hanoi ne-
gotiator. · ha'lt remained in Faris when
Kissinger f~w'._back to Washington for
consultations "'il h President Nixon after
thei; 23rd round of tal ks . , ..,:
President "Nixon had sent Gen'. Alexan-
drr .f-iaig ID' Saigon to wi n agreement
from Presideri.t .Nguyen Van Thieu on tht'
ne11• draft ceaSe.fire agreement and today
gave final instructions to Kissinger be-
fore the security ad viser returned 10
Paris . Haig briefed Nixon earlier on his
tallcl' with t~ Asian allies.
White House sources said Kissinger
w'OulCi . be prepared to initial a Vietnam
agreement by Thursday if no unexpected
snagS arise in his talks Tuesday with Le
Due Tho and Xuan Thuy, the chief North
Vietnamese negoti ator in Paris.
Kissinger headed directly from his final
mee ting with Nixon to Andrews Air Force
Base to board a presidential jet for the
fligl'l.t to Paris. ' •
Today's arrivals in Paris included twQ
foreign ministers -,.,.fme. Nguyen Thi
Binh of the Viet Gong, and Tran Van Lan\
of South Vietnam - and both issued op-
timistic statements. The final agreement
is to be signed ·at forei gn minister level.
Bad we ather forced Kissi nger to drive
to-the-air base by limousine rathe r th an
taking a helicopter. He said ~bing to
ne\YSmen when he arrived at A~rews,
but paused twice· at the blue-and-white
plane to w~ve and smile broadly. The
bareheaded Kissinger · was peppered by
a v.•ind-driven rain but appeared not lo
notice it.
The White House said Kissinger would
confer Tuesday morning with Tran Van
Lam and meet Tho at 9 a.m. (mtdnlghl t
PST J. A spokesman "Said Kissinger would
be in touch with Nixon by cable but had
no other comment on the ~tlook.
Meanwhile: South Vietnamese infantry-
men and ·armored units kept two battered.
North Vietnamese regiments pinned in
' deep jungles north of Saigon today while
waves of U.S. Air Force B52s ix>unded
the retreating Communists. military
SJX>kesmen said .
Six wa-of heavy bombers roared
over the Michelin rubber plantation Sun-'
day night and dropped more than 500 toM
of bombs on the Communist troops pull·
ing deeper into the heavy jungles , ac-
cording lo U.S .. Command reports.
Fighting brokeput suddenly in the area
40 miles north of Saigon Friday afternoon
when the Communist force wu caught
trying to sneak in close to the capital
area to prepare ror a land grab after a
cease..fire.
The two South Vietnamese battalions
that made the inltial &mtact were out-
numbered and badly mauled In the open-
ing round. The understrength Communist
rfgiments numbered about 11800 men and
the South Vietnamese fo rce was about
1,000, ae<?Ording to military aolrce.s.
11 ffilRROR-ffilRROR~
ON iH{ WALL • WHOS.t TH~ FAIR(5i OF TH~ffi ALL"(
ffiAGG I I Se-;-. -
Q(CAUS<. WH<N ffiAGGI . \.\AS fl
Sl\L(, ,,.·s I\ 'FOR P.-EAL.'I L.<GtT,
"ON.( ST INJIN, SA'L( /OP. ~L~< •
iM\ S IJJ.(.( K
ll'S M Ill.ROil. S .I
OV(!I.. 75 OF T~ MOST UNUSUllL,
Q(AUTIFUL,-l>OM(STIC: AMO
lm~ORi(l>,STYL<~ VOU ~AV~
.(V(~ .S(.~N •• l\T PRIC{ S VOU
clUST WON'T Q(L\.(V~ •. •
ON Sl\LE NOW
fll.Otn
14 To ·300
( OOLL All.• "!'~AT ")
i'H4 NO"l'O~IOUS \>1\.1(( (\l,.T.(~
01' C:~NM( ~'( VlLLAG-' ON ,._,..,-t'
Llt>O P(Mlt-ISOLA • • •
••
' 4 DAILY PILOT
. ---
with
Tom
urphine
· A J et Nose
In the Tent
\\'ILD BLUE YOSOERS DEPT. -
Conside r the a£'ropl<ine pilot Yl'ho might
be dusting tlirough lhe clouds over our
Orange Coast region and abruptly get in-
to airborne difficulty , ·
There a:-c t~·o major comforting
thoughts for him. First, Orange County
Airport just inland of the Newport Beach-
Costa r..1csa region and secondly. El Toro
~1.arine Corps Air Station, just o\•er the
hill from Laguna Beach in the Sad-
dleback region.
rr the ai rcraft suffering some fonn of
malfunction that prompts the nttessity
of seeking immediate rea l estate is of the
small , puddle-jumping variety, there are
other spots of comfort. These include
:\teado"A·lart Airport in Huntington Beach
or Capistrano Airport dov.TI in the
southerly sector of our roast.
PtfOST FOLKS, HOWEVER. do not
•
Monday, JMJ.Lal')' 22~ l 1173 •
Peacefully
NE\V YORK (API -four gunmen
\l'ho had VO\\'ed to die for ~tuslim
paradise in a hail of police bullets llave
surrendered pe11CT'fully 11fter 1heir nine
remaining hostages 1n:idt> a dramatic
escape to signal the end of a two-day ~
',siege in a Brooklyn sporting goods stort. 4
The end came late Su.OOay_,afttcnOOI).
over 47 hours: atter a silent robbery
. .alarm alerted polit'e ""ho surprised the
young gunmen in the store. . One
patrolman "'as killrd and two othe rs
11·ounded in a fury or gunfire.
AIITER THE l?\1TJAL shootout subsid-
t'd to a standorr. police ringed John &
Al's .. Sporls, Irie., in Brooklyn's
\\'illiamsburg section "'ith sharpshooters.
But fear for the hostages prevented any
forced showdown and police concentrated
on keeping rommunications with the gun·
n1en.
The break came shortly before t p.n1.
Sunday \\'hen the hosuiges. led by a co-
0\\1le r of !he store. broke through
plnsterboard to a sealed off stair\\'ay and
escaped to the roof \\'tiile the gunmen
\.\'ere dl\·erted.
MRS. SNYDER SHOWS PHOTOGRAPH TO CHILDREN
'But Where's Daddy' Tot Wants to Know
(
' UPIT ........
l:HIS PHOTO MADE HER A CELEBRITY OVERNIGHT
S.yo-lllxon DencH Well; Admlt1 That She Doesn't
Modern Day Cinderella at Ball Four hours later, folloiA·ing more
negotiations v.·ith police and pleas from
some relatives, the gunmen walked out.
Tu·o carried a stretcher l'ii:h a third who
tend to fre t about these smaller planes "·as Ytounded and the fourth walked ~
much, figuring they can pull an emergen-ahead.
Susa1~ Dan.ces Witli President-'l'm Surprised I Didn't Faint'
cy exit from the "'ild blue a lot of dif-Police said preliminary repoMs in-
• ferent places."'-Hke free"·ays, beaches. dicated _their marksme.n .had not fired a
cornf ields and the like. shot .smce. tbe or1gmal . gunbattle.
•,__,...., of-...i-..... ___ ..,, . • although the gunmen had fired volleys
STERLING, Va. (UP!I -Susan Snyder became an instant celebrity when
ne\\·sp:apers Sunday carried a photpgraph of h1!r dancing with President Nixon
at an inaugural ball. Her two sm8" daughters were DOt impressed.
'
good dancer but admitted that she isn 't. She said she cooldn't recall what
Uooel Hamptoo's band was playing al the time "but it was something I could
follow. I'm surprised I didn't faint oo the spot ." •
"I wa s fioeting on cloud nine arterwards," she said. \
"tt! ... ,,...,=n,--."'wei.:et.-.asswne...__from-time 10 tjme,
that the larger models ha\·e fewer op----_ .
Mrs. Snyder. a 27-y~ar-old ·bloode. said her bMf· dance, with the chief
executive came about accidentally and she was "surprised I didn't faint on the
spct." HER · TWO OAt,JGHTERS, however. were more concerned with the where-
abouts of their father, Gerald Snyder, who worjcs for the Xerox Corp. " "tton.r. 'Ilf!more. lilerial troubles in ,tbe.s.e POLICE IDENTIFIED· the £~ ..,._
parts for the military and commercial thei{..-""1ttnsllm ames as Salih Ali ~ !\IRS. Sl\'YDER SAID during an intervieY.' fal her suburban home that she
was s1anding on the dance floor of the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
Sa1urday night y,·atclting Nixon dance with hls wife. Pat. and the wife of a
U.S. Senator. Suddenly she v.·as pushed forward by the crush ol people and
found herself dancing \l'ilh Nil.on. "If I had thought ol dancing with the presi-
dent. I'd be a nen•ous y,'f'eCk, .. sbe said_
jeLo; \\'OO!d necessitate a landing at either Abdullah, Dawd A'Btttrffah..Ar-Rahm and
E! Toro or Orange County. Shula b Abdue Raheem. Whose lav.'Yer
El Toro is. of course. a military said he was also kno"'fl as Carey Earl
airdrome \\'hile Orange County is a Robinson. The v.·ounded man. Yusef
civilian commercial port. Again. most of Abdul. 20. was in fair condition after
us who are laymen pre!!ume that pilots surgery at King 's County Hospital.
\\'00.ld take little lime to discriminate at Brook.lvn Dist. Atty. Eugene Gold said
times of trouble. thus following the he 9iould go be.fore a grand jury today
seafaring motto of Any Old Port in a With charges against the four that prot>.
stonn. ably w o u Id · include the murder or '
_ 1J.IYS IF A ~lIUTARY }et "'as
acting up and Orange County Airport
v.·ere the nearest spol. the pilot would
come in there forth\\·ith.
By lhe same token. you \\'Ouid assume
· a commercial )et having difficulty would
drop in on El Toro·s airstrip if it were
the closest at hand.
AU of the~ things are assumplions of
/non-avialion IYJ>es.
Thus it comes as somewhat of a
surprise to those of "us wilh landlocked
fcet 1 lhal Orange Counly officials h&\'e
formally negotiated a proposed pact \\'ith
the U.S. Marine Corps for use of the El
Toro airstrip in times of stress.
COUNTY AVIATION Director Bob
Bresnahan will present this agreemenl
he worked out with Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang
to the Board of Supervisors: tomorrow.
In brier. ii says that should Orange
CoWlty Airport be shut down due to fire.
flood . fog or Ci\il disturbance., civilian
commercial jets can land at El Toro.
The agreement also reportedly stresses
that the pact doesn't cover handling of
-commerc1al jet operations at El Toro
because of a planned closure of Orange
County Airport.
\Vell, all that aside, it is well known
that numerous !'ewport Bcac.h residents
and many in Cos1a Mesa Y:ould like 10
see the ~ig jets vanish from Orange
County Airport. And al the same time.
resl~ents of the Saddleback Valley. in· cl~dt~g ~I . Toro. Laguna 11ills and ~11ss1on \11.•10. don't v:ant to 84:!e those
same jets find a new home at the Marine
Co rps Air Station.
11-I E DIERGENC\' landing agree-
1nent. therefore. Zs very likely to be met
with some nervousness by residents of
t_he Sadcllc'?ark Valley "'ho might harbor
som~ suspicion_ that the cnmmercial jet
has 1us1 stuck 1\s nose in the tent .
Oh "'ell. maybe. it 's just a nose.
Winter
Patrolman Stephen R.. Gilroy. the at-
tempted murder of Patrolmen Jose.
Adorno and Frank Carpentier, kidnaplllg
and weapons possessioo.
Poliet! said they \\'ere searctung for a
fifth man who WM said lO have bttn
d.ri\'ing a getaway car when the robber)·
brgan about 5:4S p.m. Friday. n.y Did
the motive for the robbery •'as to ~obtain
guM. not money.
In a band-wrillen leuer carried out by
a doc1or wOO-attended the-wounded gun-
man. tht four destribed themselves m
"servan1s of Allah" and said they "A-ere
"expressing solidarity "A'ith all 111ushrns
and oppressed pe<iple of the ""-orld ...
.. WE HAVE N011IING to lose and \·ic-
tory 3.nd paradise to gain," they
declared. "We will 001 give in to your
demands, but we v.'ill continue to hold the
ho.stages who are being well treated and
will not be harmed intentKMially by wi:."
Earlier they had released three other
hostages. The nine remaining included
Jerry Riccio, a CCHlwnet of the store.
DAILY l'ILOT
DELIVERY SERVI CE
Otl•YtrY of ·tile Daily Pilot
Ii IJUlri'Jfttttd
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Moll Ori~ Covnty ArHI ... 64J·4lJ1 No•!!'l ... e:U H1P1!l11Ql9n 8Htll
Ind Wntmh11t1r . .. • . 540-1 JlO
.S..fl C"'-tt, Co~1r1no IMcll,
S..n JU•n C1pl1lr1no, Dani Point,
Sou1n LIO\lftl, LA11un1 NIOvel 492-4420
l\1r s. Snyder said she showed Lhe newspaper photograph to her 3-.year-old
dl!ughter, Jennifer, Sunday morning and told her, "Mommy danced with the
president last night.·,•
''Oh, you didn't dance with daddy?'' the UU!e girl replied.
To her daughter Jill, a year old, htrs. Snyder said, "see here is roommy
and President Nixon."
Air s. Snyder. y,iJo was v.·earing a Jov.·-cut purple gov.n, saW:f Nixon was a "'Where's 'daddy?" asked the other tot.
Antiwar Proteste1·s Leave Washington Vow March
\\".\SHISCTO~ 1l"Pl1 -Tbe bst ol •·-a:sti:ngtm smor: April 2t, 1'71. wbeJ ti..-ar proteste.n carried on oearly lhree capitol Feb. 23 lo demand complete U.S.
tens of tMnsaMs et }arrt:Nar pntestm, mn tmn s. ~ partii:ipaud_ nets ol sustained activities. that withdrawal trom southeast Mia.
lllCkltd a&a o! W&Shinglcm_ todaJ st11t Bea b:U IDill!l'l stressed &aat tW .-oWd multed in mon than 10.000 arests. At Wesley Urllted Methodist church,
,_ leodon T""1ag tbq--... be I.be ml GI tho-....,. ...,...,,__ n..r. ool handful f than 700 l f'Ued lb mass street """""•st• atiws mlil pmcr ii ·~ y a o arrests more pro esters 1 e
adlin---ed. Peet prornhed ... 11Dfamed. mus._ im-during the inauguration v.·eekend. church to bear former Sens. Eugene J.
The proiesters. ID05l or .mm tett vdml actions Lbat will go beyond )Uy McCarthy and Ernest Gruening denounce
Saturday 11igN md ~-foUotrirtg a ·~Da;;;i;y;;;;';;;;m;;;;ns;;;;· ;;;;;;;sc;;;;qiio1e.;;;;;,;During;;;;;;;.;ii;Ma;;;;;;;;yi;;,;;;;lf71;;;;;;;;;;;' """;o·..-;;;;;;;;;;;GORDO;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;N;;;;C;;;;A;;,L;;;;L;;;;E;;;;D;;;;f;;;;or;;;;;;;;a;;;;m;;;;a;;;;n:;;;;h;;;;on-t;;;;he;;;;;;;;;;;;t;;;;he;;;;;;;;N;;;;lx;;;;oniiiiia;;;;dm;;;;;;;;ln;;;;is;;;;lr;;;;al;;;;ioniiiii.iiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oj
mass nwcl! and rally """'""""" thal ~ Ur Uniled States get eutirfty ~ of
SOuthea..st Asia and sign tbt ~ ac-
cords, packed the last of tbtir vans aDd
alllos and beaded ~-
THE HAD kicked off their three days
of "an inauguration of ~ence" with
a news ronference at the gates of the
Yr'hite H01.1.5e and an anti-inaugural con-
cert, conducted by Leonard Bernstein. on
Frday.
They concluded their protest tvenb on
&nday with an ecumenical servi<:e in
\rhich political. religious. show business
and military persooa]ities urged an end
to the war.
U.S. park: police estimated the crowd
at 60,000 Saturday afternoon during the
main anti.,.,·ar rally on the grounds of the
Washington ~1onument. Some estimate11
were lower, sofne higher.
Leaders of bot..'l the National Peace Ac-
tion Coalition ~nd the Peoples Coalition
for Peace and Jlisllce,-~spon!IOMI of the
mass march on Saturday, said they
u·ou ld continue to call street protests un-
til there was a settlemenf1 the war they
liked -and lhey made i clear a cease
fire would be only the fi t step. _
• BO'l1J DR. SIDNEY P"'k or the PCPJ
and Jerry Gordo:t of Nf'AC said they
were surprised and p1eased at the
lurnout of demonstratort; on Saturday,
the largest antiwar demoostraUon ln
• ~·
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WHERE A SALE IS A SALE!
.Home a Gift Siop
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Temperat11retc
THIS IS ITI All SALE ITEMS SLASH·
ED AGAIN, HURRY BEFORE THEY
ARE GONE!
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M/~~~·~un 01 lruclr.t and Cl,. 111"•
-rned lrom !1'141 11-d ltl~r l rldot
!pto h!WI Sund y niflhl '""' I~ , •• 11,lol'I O'f 1 ti •f!d two Mm lrlllft
truclr.1 qn Int l•ff to Mir ~ Bl11tti. AllhouQh ,,.,.,._ ~ no . ln!...,.les,.11 Ir '1i.tttd ar l"tlr..ii:n IMfllnd rM IC( t tCtM II I to I •
Cl'ltl ~-K -.il1t«I In m A:.r,1111 lleod 'Qtch Wll Cll l'I 1111 • Miii "' lndl11111
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fANTASil_c__.8A8GAINS ON All
THREE LEVELS OF THE HOME AND
GIFT SHOP AND IN THE PARTY
SHOP, TOOi
OPEl'CMON. THRU SAT. 9·6
RICHARD'S LIDO CENTER 3(33 VIA LIDO, NEWPORT BEACH 673·6360
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Today's Ji'lnal
N.Y. Stoeks
. ' voe-'*. NO. 22, 3 SECTIONS, 36 P.AGES . . ORf.NGE CQUN'I)', CALIFORNIA MONDAY.-JANUA~Y 22, 1973 N T~N CENTS
" ' City Ey·es Versaill~s Pact, Bal Building B~n
-·
By L. PE'l'Ell UlEG
Of ...... , ........
Newport Beach councilmen loni&ht
hope lo put a number of cootro\'fhles to
bed, but a"' espected to take 1 number
of other acUOna that may cnate new
• ODel.
Meetlllf at 7:30 In city hill; "°'""'llm"'1
will· COOllder: ,
-A n!wrl)ten agi.ement for develop-
ment of Phase n of the Versailles
apartmenta In West Newport
-A p.._,t emergency ordinance
stopping all but 1lngle-lamily hoqle con-
1INdloo oo BalboLPenin!ula. .
-Formation of a charter revision ad-
visory committee. '
-Sale by aucUon of 4.7 acres of prop.
erty In Huntington Belch.
-Revllloa of the ft.U "llmlled dU:,
• pies" IOlle, maldnf'tt·....,...,. -
live. . • ·
-Ajlplyilic that new ~ lo virtually
all of BllbOa llland. ,
~reeUoD of a new zontaa 1~lca
tklq -open ~ -,that <Ollld be ap-
plied ·to aey i>l°l'""Y to keep . It un-
devetoped. • •• ·
....,Tbe Lax-exempt status and' en-
vironmental impact of a propased senior
citizms retirement borne at 333 P\acen-
tia Ave.
-A request by the Irvine Company to
redevelop Baysborel Marina.
---eomtruc:1ion o1 lwe-iroins-911-Llttle Balboa~-= -A pn>pOOOI by Hoag Memorial
HOspital for construcUoo of iD. emergen·
cy hellport. .
1be stall in new coostruction on the
Balboa Peninsula hU been' propoled by
Vice Maf(>r Howard Rogers,. who
·~ , '
rep~ntJ the area, to allow lime lo
study imposition of the R·LS zone. ·
The zoning classification is designed to
cut the sl2e ot two-family homes (duplex·
es) allowed in present R=2 zones.
'M>e revised agreement for the
Versailles on the Bluffs project is likely
to get the cbest scrutiny from coun-
cilmen, who have remained silent on the
new document since it was released Fri·
daY1 COntroversy has surrounded the pro}
ect•almott since the day it was first pro-.
posed -and It erupted into a major
issue when the first Wlits ·v.·ere con·
stnlcted.
\Vest Newpo rt residents criticized both
U1e looks and the density or the
apartments.
Public reaction forced councilmen to
hold an agreement to build more in
abeyance pending what has turned out to
be two months of negotiations to rewrite
it. •
The agreement originally was signed
after the developer, the Donal d Scholz
Company, filed a $12.7 million lawsuit
against the city because the planning
commission had recommended the dens!·
ty of the project be cut in half, from 37 to
18 units per acre.
Councilmen are moving slowly on a
proposal by Councilman JOhn Store to
revise the cily 's charter.
They t~?Ointed a councilmanic com-
mittee two months ago to decide whether
a Charter ReVision eommission should
be created. Now they are oonsidering a 1 "Charter Revis.ion Citizens' Ad\risory
Committee." •
They have yet to define what authority
the co mmittee will·have. It will consist of
twO' councilmen and seven public
members. ·
EI . Toro Air Pact
EXCLUSION AREAS
., ' "° Co .unty to Weigh Emergency Accord
. '
Restdent1 1l Zones w1th 4 or Hore
Dwelling Units per Acre w1th
'Th~n SOI of Lots' Fully Deve1o·ped
' Commerc i al
Orange . Cowity supervisors Tuesday
will consider an agreement with El Toro
~arine OJrps 'A4' Station to ac-
commodate commercial jet pl.~ needing emergency landing faciliti s
when Orange CoWlty Airport is cl ed
due to weather or cannot handle an im·.
pending crisis.
. Meanwhile, Col. ~furray Staples, public
liaison officer for the Marine base, said
today "there is nothing new about this
agreement. There baS always been a pro-
v1s1on that civil ai rcraft could use El
Toro runways even for reasons of bad
weather."
Earlier news reports indicated that the
agreement facing supervisors ' action
Tuesday was a new one reached by Coun-
ty Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan
and Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang.
An aide to Lang said this morning the
report was "compJetely erroneous."
Staples, meanwhile, explained that the
Corps has al~ays made its facilities
Mes an Winner
Of Hobie Title
Ei&bteen-year • old Rkhard
·Loufek of c.osta Mesa is headed -' -,
' N~wport Aide
S~ Surplus
Of '.~4,ooo· · home today after winiling tbi first ,,-,..,...;;ld cliamplohllhlp in Hobie cat 14
,, .
'
I·-
~ ..
D.t.ILY f'ILOT ~
Newpoct Beach City Manager Robert
L. Wynn t~y fon!C&st ao $834,000
general fund iµrplus for the end of lhl>
· 1972-73 fiscaf year. • ·
Exetttpted. Area:. The Ou.sh· n.naliclat' status for the city
represents a major turnaround from two
years ago, WheJl former City ManaJ(er
Harvey Harlburt was forced to order ma-
jor speiidm'g cutbacks because pro-
jecti<ins sboWea' the city would end 197G-
71 nearly •• ooo in the red.
The sha4ed areas on tlils map .ate pottiollS of New-
port' Beach that could be exempted from the con-
trols of the South Coast Regional Coas\line Con-
servation Conuniision established hY ProPQSitioil 20.
City Councilmen and planning commlSaioners will
meet in special joint aeosion Jan. :ZU-ti>liliicliS! how
much they wimt to ask for in terms of exemptions.
Under te:rms of proposition, residential zones with
four or mote dwellings per acre developed to 80
percent of potential and commercial zones 80 per·
cent developed can be exempted. The cutblcb were made at the time
and the cltf• books balanced as of June
30, 19'11.
Jordanian Plane
Crashe s, Killin g
180 Pilgrims
LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -A Jordanian
airline• cirrying Nigerian MOl!em
pilgrlm.s home from a pilgrimage 'tet
Mecc;a crashed in northern Nig\?)ia ~
day, kllllng 180 of those aboard, airport
of!iclab said, In the worst air crash in
history.
Tbe officials said 22 Pnons, including
the pilot and five crew members. IUrViv·
ed the craah at Kano, 520 miles
nclrthwest of Lagos.
They fled through an emergency
escape hatch near the ·~u qi the plane.
Officials said the control tower warned
the pilot of lbe·Alia Airlines Eoelng 'l!n,
which had been chartered by Nigerian
Afrways, of fog and poor Visibility ju.st
before he landed.
The plane touched down on gravel 40
feei off the runway, airport officials said.
Il veered left into a ditch which snapped
off the left wheel, then skidded along the
edge of the runway and burst Jnto
flames. ·
Many of the dead passengers were
thrown from the plane and their bodies
scattered along the runway.
Some of those who l\irVtved got out
through an tmergency hatch in the tall;
the only part of the aircraft DOI coo-
sumed by names.
DA ILY PIWT A.D
MA.DE TO ORDER
Have oomethln.l to ,.ni Try a DAIL 't
PILOT cl...m.d' want Id -they're
mode to arder . Here'• how ""' owner
ord<rtcl 1 b'1ytt for hit ml estate:
R-3 CP, nr 17th SL, CM
Super • ... tal 11U. Try I
alp. Alt-m-1m: m· nu.
The property w .. IOld Ille llnl day.
GIVe your ordor to a DAILY PILOT lllo
vllor '-dlol dlrtc:I -
•
Watergate Witness · Say~
He Thought It Was Legal
Wynn, in his mJ(\.year budget report to
councilmen, saya the extr~ money ex-
pected to be available this year Is the
result of a v1..r1ety of things.
First, he said, projected revenues are
up nearly $374,000 -primarily from the
receipt of $130,000 mote in sales taxes
than had been counted on when the
budget was prepared last year.
Wynn noted also that his , original
budget had projected a surplus of more
than $500,000.
WASHINGTON (AP) -The-man wbo
Said · he JsteDed to wiretapped con·
VerSations ftom Democratic head-
quartera lest~led today be tbooghl II was
legal because bis orders came from the'
security chief of president! Niloo'a re-
Train Derails;
Blast Likened •
To Atomic Bomb
election committee.
"Weren't you suspicious lhat 19me
hanky-panky was going on, that
!IOlllething wu wrong when he told you
to 111e an assumed name ?" Judge John J.
Sirlca asked the · wibless, Alfred C.
Baldwin, lil, at the Watergat:! trial.
"Not the use of an assumed name, no
sir, y~ ~~~aaid Bahlwin, 1 former
FBI a.gent wDO once tauglit pollCe
sc"8ce. • Baldwin, the prosecution's -star wit·
nea, was on the stand for the third day as the third week of trial began for G.
Gordon Liddy and James 71. McCord Jr.,
char&ed with conspin<y, burglary and il-
Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis said this
morning some part of the surplus will be
used to help pay for the new police sta·
tlon planned on Jamboree Road.
But, t~ mayor cautioned, he wants to
see a good chunk of it kept in reserve.
"One thing has bothered me for many
years," Mcinnis sald1 "For a corporation
with 1 $10.12 million budget, we yt"ere
running wrtb $,50,000 in·reserve and that's
a pretty dangerous tlilng to 00
"Any kind of sttuation might come up,
and you're simply caught," ht said .
.Mcinnis noted the precarious times of
two years back.
(See WATERGATE, Page!)
"Two years ago the mid-year review
clearly indicated that lf we didn't dCI
IS.. SURPLUS, l'llge !) PQWDER SPRINGS, Ga. (UPI) -A
--~~c;ar,_ -==::-::=--,--
rytng 11 .. tanUri of bu_. ... other GM A -R z·z--~~:..~-:i =:~ nnounces eca
yards lr<>m a chemical plant. Two
crewmen were injurtd. ·
Two tanken cootalnin( LP butane g11
exploded aflei' lht ttaln lklpped the.
tracks In a ljllnl!y-populated aru, but
pollce sald the -temllnlni -. held ·some IOl't of "deadly. tcmc" pt Police eYICUlted alJoul ., ,.._
from their -wtlhin I ·-radiuo of the ollnllment but -them to rel>n -,...,al houri when
· It appeared lht danpr of lurlbor es·
plooiono .... pool. • •
Police sald II I LOI. Miit the fin IP'
parenlly hid bee> broqbl --
llld there WU lillJe U.,.. of Iha -
Othet tanJcm ~ "barrlnf I 1111< ln fti tanken. ,.-~
'Ille -.. -"" Jllll lk lht train hid i*ltld '41 the , .. tanken fnm1
6'° A.J .-...i plant and WU -
east toward Atlanta, Ill "11leo •"'1·
'Ille ,__ lloW In the *1 coald
be-11-...
"h looloed ·Iao an 1toQtlc lmlb ...._ oil,. aid ... aw.. wflo WU .. Iii •
• CIJ' 11 .... -when lht nn1 bleot uccmaed. "lt loabd Ukl the SU11 wu n1-
)Jll 10 -Ip lht My Wil IO llr}ahl." I
.,,
op~.7-jJlillit:>n Cars
DETROIT (APj -General'Moton an-front frame crossmember may -p up llOllllC.d Ille recall today of 1.7 million looae atones.o"V"vel from tile roailway .
1171 and 1171 can for -lta,Uon of 1 Some of the 1tooes could lodge betWffll
lhleld ...,. the lteerln( couplin( to pr.. the steering coupllrig and frame, caualng ..m the poaaibillty of fl7lnl .-lod&· ateertri& Interference oo a left tum, the Intl bet""" the c:oupllq llld the e1r automaker repotled, lddtng t,b • t I!><
!rime. • • llone ii dblodged when t h e steertiig
In mHlnl the -t, GM said wheel b turned to the rt&ht.
It received reports of II lnddeota jWberl GM aakl II decided to ask the owners
-.... OCOOl>ed op, MUlllllfl In a of 1.7 mlllloo ..... to bring them in for
..,.-. In wlllcb 12 inJurjel wera ,. 1-Uatlon of the lhleldl eveo tbouP
ported. . Giily 1 few can miabl ~ inVOlved.
lnVolved In lht recall ... lufl.a]ze 19'11 GM Aid the dec:lltoo followed lnvelll·
llld tf'l1 -of ~. Bulcks1 ptlonl by the company and the National
OldooNMlll llld -· Hlgltway Traffic Safety Admlolllratlon. 'l'lie --.Id the lhleld' ...W be GM'1 lllllOUJlCement came on the aune
-at DO duirp to illt mi: --day that the Center for .Auto Saltly In It 1114-1"11111[ lit .al!Mll allout Wuhlngton urged the n!Clil. The Cflller,
two .-. . funded by the Comumers Union, sald It
GI( 11111 tllti W one of illt can ii · bad repo!U of 15 crasbft, ..tth nine In-
-...,. .._ -111 ll!l'eda which Jurlet, ll\!l!lmlng from the steering lock·
CIUll tbe Cll' le jllfdl uoeutvely1 the up.
cl aalling at Honolulu, Hawaii.
, a former national cham·
pion in e class, won the final two
races of e IG-race regatta to take
the title. For details, see the
boa~ng page today, P?e 12.
Supreme Court
OKs Abortions
Up to 3 Months
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Su-
preme Court , today barred states from
interfering with the decision or a woman.
and her doctor to encl pregnancies within
the first three mooths.
ln the 1 to 2 decision striking down the
Texas aborUoo law, Justie~ Harry A.
Blackmun said medical data indicate
abOrtion in the first three months "aJ.
though not wlllJout Its risk, Is now rela·
tlvely safe." ·
Therefore, he said, "any interest of the
state In protecting .ifhe woman ifrom an
inberenll)' hazardous procedure ... has
largely diJappeared."
'Ibe Texas law made It a crime to end
a pregnancy except "for the purpose ol
savina the life of the mother." It had been
challenged by a pr<gnalit single woman
who aaid she could not afford to leave
T~ to go to another state where abor·
tiofl laws were more lenient. She bad the
baby while the case was pending.
The law. had been declared Invalid in
June lt10 by a three-judge federal court
in Dallas. Todqy 's ruling ·viii have an
impact in 44 states with similar statutes.
At the White House. presidential press
sccretary-Ronald-L. Ziegler said he hod
no immediate comment on the coUrt de--
cision, and added that he doubts there
will be any White House or president~!
comment later "after we review it, whJch
we will."
The ruling followed two years of de-
liberations l!y lhe ju81lceo. II was based
(See ABOlt110N, Page !)
Reduced School
Lunches Offered
SnKteoll in the Newport-Mesa Unlfled.
School District mliy receive free or reduced-p~ce school lunchts during the aprm, aem.ster H parent Incomes • r •
below 1 federally defined level.
Children of families ol rour members
with 1 max imum monthly ihcome of $394
are eligible to receive free meals. And
children of families of four wllh 1
monthl)' Income of from '* to $445 are
entitled to daily lunches at a reduced
price. ' Parents may ask achoOi princt~ls far
IUrtber information about ellglbtuty
under the federally IWlded proaram.
•
available when civilian jets or other craft
were in trouble.
"l can remember several times in re-
cent years when we've had fotr. or five
big jets parked out here when Los
Angeles or Orange County airports have
been closed due to wea ther," Col. Staples
said. -
Staples said he believed the agreement
before the supervisors Tuesday would be
only "a rene·Nal of the, same agreement
(See E~fERGENCY, Page Z)
Marina Seeks
Newport Okay
To Renovate
Bayshores Marina will get a $400,000
facelift" soon, U the Irvine Company gets
the pennits it needs.
The proposed reconstruction project
goes before city councilmen tonight for a
revised harbor permit, but company of·
ficials say that is just one small atep on
the road to final approval.
"Before Proposition 20, we bad hoped
to get all the work done by sprl"','' Jald
Charles Saffell, senior doctmalitf for
C:!lifornia Recreation Company, 1
su bsidiary of the Irvine Company.
"But now, even with all the other
permitJ in hand, Proposition 20 pull
everythjng L.p in the air," he sa1d.
Saffell said the old 1 docks, some o{
\\'hicb were built in the early 1930I, are
felling apart.
Saffell said the existing marina bu 133 •
lxlats at anchor and parking for • Cll'S
on shore.
"Our plans call for installation of 130
brand new slips and 10 more parking
spaces," he said. "That will actually in·
crease our boat space by about .50."
Satfell said the two new homes planned
for the project will be locaied at either
end and will be leased or sold by the
Irvine Company. •
tn ,ddition, small beaches at either end
of the marina will be enlarged, he aald.
The revamping already has been ap-
proved by the Orange C'Mmty . Joint
Harbor Committee aiJd the Newport
Be_ach planning cOmmiss!on, but ap-
proval by the Army Corps of Engineers
is still outstanding.
The corps must be asked to approve
the project because IOfTle minor dredging
is planned , Saffell said.
Or ange
Mostly l!WUIY oo 'l'llelday, with
slightly wAmier te~~bnt alon&
the OrllJlfle Coall. m,bl ol fl '"' . expected, with · glllly northeast
wlndl wanning the air allghlty.
Lows tonlghl :IMO.
INSIDE TODAY
Sutan. Sn~ uw tDOtching
Presid.,.t Ni:<tm -IDfth his
wife, lollen aU of • 111dct<li, the
DTowd ~rged f01'1Dlll'd, •forcmg
Mr fnio hil anni. 'I'm nrpriffd
I didn't faint on tht ipot,' 1ht
·rater rttnarkfd. Stt inavgural
ltO!ll and photos .. Pat/• f.
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.~ D.iLY PILOT , Monday, J.nl!Mf 22. 1973 .
Hughes Fel led? ~Oppositio~
Account of Heart 'Attaek De1iwd Chief Dies .,
LONDON (UPI) -An Americln beort sped'1i.!l bas 0o'RJI lo l.Qll!loo lO
treat Howard Hughes for a sllSpeCled heart attack, the l.ondoo Dilly Mirrcr
said toda y. · .
An aide for t11e billionaire recluse derued the report.. '._In Gtfi nea
THE NEWSPAPER SAJD Hughes. 67 , has been confined. to bed in his pent·
Muse suite in the Lnn on the Park since the "1Jlidenlilied specialist examiaed
him last week.
Jan Eckersley, an aide \\'llh the Hughes party at the hotel, said: "No spe.
cialist has visited Mr. Hughes and he is not in bed.."
IN LOS ANGELES. HUGH~ spokesman Richard Hanna also said, ·~er'
is no truth lO this sfary at all."
The Daily hlirror said ~lug~s is sti ll l'<lnfined to bed and an electric wheel-
<-·hair has been delivered to his ninth lloor suite for him '>"'hen he is able to
USC it.
Cou r t t o Review NY Law
'Aidh1 g Paroclrial S~hools
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Surpreme Court today agreed tp review a
1972 New York law providing various
· forms of assistance to parochial schools
· and the parents of children attending
them.
. Two provisions of the law were struck
1 down as constitutionally invalid last
' October by a federal district court in ' Ney,· York City. A lhird provision Y.'as
upheld by the panel.
The Supreme Court , acting on appeals,
F rom Page l
·WATERGATE ••
legal wiretapping in a case involving a
~·break-in at Democralic headquarters list
• June. Baldwin said he used' the alias
''Bill Johnson" at l\.icCord's direction.
Baldwin had said he was recruited by
McCord to monitor conversations from
· his hotel room across the ·street from
De::lOCl'atic headquarters in the
Watergate building.
He said he saw a letter McCord wrote
to the Federal Communications Com·
mission requesting the use of certain
· radio frequencies and that he received
permission. He said that. as well as
McCord'& position with lhe re-election
. committee, wtre factors in believing the ·
activities were legal.
The judge sent the jury from the room
and asked Baldwin: "You thought what
you were dolnr. fer MeCord was perfectly
legal?"
~ "Yes," Baldwin said.
Baldwin al9o said be band-delivered
two days or logs of conversatiom to the
headquarters of the Republican Com·
mJttee for the Re-election of the Presi-
dent.
Jr.dge Sirica called attention to
Baldwin's remembering ma:iy details but
r not the name of the man to whom be ad-
dressed lhe envelope containing the logs_
Q. You want this court and the jury to
believe you gave it to some guard you
hardly ,knew?
A. Jfe told me he would deliver it to the
lndividual.
Q. And you left it at that?
A. Yes. Because of the procedures that
were in effect at tbe Committee for the
Re-election of the President then.
From Page l
SU RPLUS ...
something, our outgo wou1d exceed our
income.
"We did a number of things we
shouldn't have done to correct things but
it was hell," he said.
Pointing out that councilm'en were
scheduled to di~ss the budget status
this afternoon, McIDtlis said he intended
to !ight for "keeping a significant arnOunt
:: in reserve, and spending the balance on
l! the police sta tion.
' 111 hope we use it wisely," h'e. 58.id.
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Ol.t.NI E COAST •
DAILY PILOT
The an,. Coast DAILY PlLOT, w11h wllldl
h mmbl"Cd tl!e He-Prn1, I~ Pllbllshrd by
h Of1111119 eo.11 />111111"'"'9 eomp.ny. ~
ntto tdttlafts ••• PVbli1hed, MlllD,ly 111n1W1!
Ffidt't', foe' Cod• Mew. H~ euch,
H\lnllfllllon !leKNF--.111n V11lley, ~11
'4ldl. lrvlneJSaddlt119<:11 lft:I SiNI Clel'l'left1e/
•, $111 JUlll C1p[slr•ne A sinole '9ulonal
:• , .-flllon Is putlli1hed Slturd•'t"' 11'1d Sllnelay~
TM prlnclp1t PllD!lll!Jno pl911t 11 11 lXI Wttl
.. ., SlrHI~ Cost• Ma., C1lilOl'llt., 9262'.
• .
. ;.
Rob.Ii N: w •• d
Prirsldet1I llld Plltllithtr
• J1cl1 R. C 11tl1y
Vici Piakl«tf lll1CI ~•I ~ill'
Tirto""' K11vil ·-Tho"''' A. M11rpftin• MllllllillllS Eclltol'
L P1t1r Kri19 NIWPOrt .. ldl Clly Edllor
... _,_ ..... Otffu-
JJJJ N•wport lo11l1.,1rd
...,.. A'4rtti: P.O. lox 1175, t2'6J
"""' Ofllca
agreed to consider all lhreo prnvlsloos
beginning with a bearing U..April.
The high court already has under con·
sideration a 1970 state law appropriating
$2& million a year for record-keeping:
testing and other services in lbe non-
public schools.
About 750,000, or 18 percent of all
school children in New York state, attend
nonpublic schools. Most of these schools
are Roman Catholic.
The cases accepted by the Supreme
Court for review involve :
I. Allowing families with gross incomes
of up to $%1,000 a year and who pay at
least $50 a year in tuitioo to parochial
schools to exclude as much as $3,000
from their state' income tax. This p~
vision was upheld ~ tbe district court, 2
to l . .[. ·-
2 .• Providing about 280 parochial
schools in densely populated urban areas
with as much as $4 million a year in all
for beat, lights, custodial services, ·and
tbe like. This provision was struck dov.'n
unanimously by tbe district court as in
violation of the First Amendment's p~
hibition against establishment of religion.
3. Direct payments of $50 an elemen-
tary pupil and $100 a high school pupil for
parents with net taxable incomes of less
I.ban $5,000 a year. This provision also
v.·as struck down unanimously as in
violation of the establishment clause.
Front Pqe l
• EMERGENCY • •
we've had in the past."
He noted, however, another agreement
with the county - for provision of
emergency helicopters or servicing or
county ~ craft -is being COO·
sidered. The status of that document, he
said, is not knoWn.
"Military bases other than the
Strategic Afr Command bases," Col.
Staples e.mpbasiz.ed , "have always been
available il an aircraft has a bona fide
emergency whether that emergency is
due lo weather or other factors. Further,
we provide our crash crew service to
Orange County airport along with the
heavy equipment .necessary to lift a large
jet." Staples concluded.
The repart of the alleged "new
agreement" gave rise to speculation
among leaders of the Saddleback Area
Coordinating Council (SACC) and Irvine
officials that more commercial flights
might be expected to use El Toro.
"Where life ,and safety are an Issue, [
don't think anyone can quarrel with the
use of El Toro for any true and rJal
emergency," Irvine Mayor William
Fischbach said.
Recently Fischbach strongly argued
against a Southern California Association
of Governmen ts (SCAG ) ai rport study
which recommended joint military and
civilian use of El Toro as a way of p~
viding expended commercial jet service
lo Orange County.
Today;-F-i5chbach· said, ''I don't count
bad weather among such true and real
emergencies.
"'l have been and will be unequivocably
and unalterably opposed to commercial
joint use of El Toro MCAS as an
altern ative airport site to Orange County
Airport for bad weather, convenience or
any other non~mergency reason.
Ernest J. Bose,
38-year Mesa n,
Last Rites Held
Funeral services were held toda'y for
Ernest J. Bose. a residenl of Costa Mua
for 38 years whose occupations rana:ed
from streetcar conductor to shipwright,
carpenter and boysenberry grower on the
Orange Coast. Mr, Bose died Thursday.
He was 84.
A native of Nebraska, Afr. Bo.w came
west and was a streetcar conductor in
th ... state of Washington frbm 1914 to
1920. After moving to the Orange Coast,
he was employed by the old Solllh Coast
Shipyards In Newport Beach until 1954.
( Later, he worked for a private contrn.ctor
In Costa Mesa.
From 1935 to 1967r Mr. Bose raised
boysenberries and sold lhtm to Harbor
Area residents from hi1 Costa Mesa
home at 26& Esther St.
Mr. Bose lea~es hls wife, Hope of the
family home ; two sons, Ernest J. Bose,
Jr. and Bruce E. Bose, both of Coat'
Mesa. Burial was at 1llU'bor Rest
Memorial Park, Costa Mesa.
..
LAGOS, N".,.na (AP) -ll<porll lrom'
Guinea accme Portuguese agenll of lhe ·
assassinat\Oll of Amllcar Cabrol, the
leader ol the rebellion lo Portugu<se
Gulnea.
Cabral WU killed SIJurday nilbl-by
"Portuguese agents," according to ~
emotlooa1 broadcast Sunday by Presidei'lt·
Sekou Toure of Guinea, a country bof'.d_e~
ing the Portuguese province on the
western buJge ol Africa.
Toure said Cabral, 47, was mssinated
by "paid tillers" outside bis bome ln
Conakry, the capilal of Guinea. He said
the .. princlpal killers" bad betn artested.
1be Portuguese government declined
to comment.
There was speculation that the
leadership of Cabral's indepeod<n<e
movement -the African lndependeoce
Party of . Guinea and Cape Verde, or
PAJGC -would pass to bis half brotbef
Luis or lo Aristides Pereira. Luis runs
the PAIGC office in Dakar and Pereira
the Conakry headquarters.
Uf'IT...,_..
· ,Foreign Minister Jolm Maleoel.i of
T;mxania said the liberation struggle in
tbe Portuguese province would continue
despite Cabral"s death. He recalled the
assassination in 1969 of Eduardo
Mondlane, the leader of the llbenUon
movement in Portuguese Mozambique,
and said bis movement 11 stroncer today
than ever before.
Cabral, soft spoken and Wy going in
manner, was the first leader of a ttbel
movement to be granted Offidal observer
status at lhe United Nallom. II< aald in a
spe<eb la!t fall at.U.No·belldquamn tllat
he planned to prOclalm a Dew nation in_
lhe rebel-controlled pan. of hrtugu<!<
< POLICE INSPECT WOODEN BOX WHERE BOY WAS HELD CAPTIVE EIGHT DAYS
R1bblt Hunters Stumbled.°" to Youth In °"-' .. Slt~tlon Noor CheH po1ko, Va.
Cliar gers Get
Jolinn y Unitas Teen Chairied in Wooden
Guinea.
He bad run a guerrilla war of
independence In Portuguese Guinea from
his Conakry headquarters for the past
SAN DIEGO !AP) -The San
Diego Chargers .today obtained vet·
eran quarterba<:k John Unltas ·from
the Baltimore Colts for "future
considerations," a spokesman said.
(See story, Page 16.)
Box; Police Seek Fiend
nine years.
CabraJ's home, a two-story building
shaded by mango trees, was the target of
a barooka attack in ll'lt during the
Portuguese "invasion" ol. Guinea...He was
out Of the country .at the Ume, but a
Yugoslav doctor was killed when a shell
struck the house next door.
His movement clatmS oxrtrol of ~
thirds o! the .rural •f!as Of Portuguese
Guinea, a tenitory slightly larger than
ltf&rytand and ~ware that is
sandwiched between al and Guinea.
It is an impoverished and of swamps
and grasslands with a population of abOut
800,000 plus 30,000 Portuguese troops.
The. acquisition fueled . ru.mors
that John Hadl, 11 • y ear
quarterback of the Ch:u-gers, would
go to lhe Colts or to the Los
Ange~s Rams.
Coacl1 Harland Svare of the
Chargers calJed Unitas tho
"grulo!t quarterback ever lO play
the game!" He played U' yean for
the Colts.
From Page I
ABORTIO N . • • Cabral, backed by Soviet arms and
supplies, established jungle schools and
~i~ 8:n~ .• ludiclal system in the predominanUy\..on what Blackmun called
Despite hL5 Marxist views, Western a right of privacy. He said the right "is
diplomats in Africa generally agreed that broad enough to encompa'ss a womin's
he was not a Soviet puppet. He himself decision whether or not to tenninate her
often complained because oo ooe but the pregnancy."
Russians would give hlm aid.
CHESAPEAKE, Va. (AP) -Pollce lo
two states today sought a man with a
history of sex crimes after a 13-year-old, ·
boy who was held eight cloys in a wooden
bo• was found by rabbit liunten..
"If it hadn't been for four ,i'abbit
hunters, t doubt if anyooe ever w.ould
ruive found lhe boy," said Pollce Sgt. S .
B. Champman.
The boy was discovered Friday in a
large wooden box buried il'I the ground.
Police said he bad been kept chained and
had been sexually assaulted.
Richard W. Ausley, 32, a Portsmouth
Last Rites Held
For Carpenter
Gavin H. Baxter He turned again.st the colonial ad-Justices :Jyron R. White and William
ministraUon and with five others formed H. Rehnquist dissented. White said he Funeral services were held today ln
PAIGC. They began organizing strikes could "find notblng in the language or Santa Ana for Gavin Hamilton Baxter, a
and demonstrations. history of the Constitution to support the 41-year carpenter foreman with the
When the Portugu... kllled 50 COurt's i·udgment." I · Co ho d. d Sat"~ rvine mpany w 1e "'uay at dockworkers during a strike, Cabral Rehnquist sakl "the court's sweeping-tt.e age of 82.
began plannlng armed revolution and invalidation of. any restricUom on abor· rdr. Baxter wu a naUve of Canada and
mapped out a campaign to inoblliz.e the tion during the first trimester is imPos· lived in Orange Cic:Mplty for S7 years. He
countrysJde. He moved to Conakry in sible to justify. • ·" was a member of lhe Tustin
1958 to organile the rebellion, wbicb In a second 1 to 2 ruling, the court Presbyterian church for 55 years ·and
began in earnest in 1963. struck down (ie()rgia's abortion law, find-supervised its church school for 12 years.
..A.. ..A.. ..A.. ing lhreo provlslCllS to be UllCOMtitu· He was al30 an elder of lbe cburcll. Mr.
W' H W-lional. Baxter retired from the Irvine Company
From Page j They were lhal (I} in the first three in 1957.
months the oper&tion be perfonned In an He leaves his wife, Stance, of the fami-
E t Co accredited hospital, (2) that a medical ly home at 1022 W. Occidental St., Santa xper OD 3 St committee must give its approval and Ana ; two aon.s, Gavin Robert of 5anta
(3) that two physicians must concur with Ana and John Prunty of Virglnia; a
Gives Appraisal ~~:;m.i:Jd": r:::'..ithat lhe preg-~~~~·,er~ixM~!::::: ~f n ~e=
Blackmun said the "Interposition of a greatgrandcblldren.
carpenter and prison parolee, was named
in warrants charging him with-abduction
and sexual assault. Ausley was being
aousht in southeastern Virginia and
northeastern North Carolina.
Police said Ausley, paroled in 1m
after serving a prison term on a similar
charge, was an ''accomplished
woodJman" and might have fled into the
vast Dismal Swamp, a SOO..square-mile
area of heavily wooded swampland ln the
two states.
Chapman described Ausley as "armed
and very dangerous."
Four rabbit hunters told police they
were at the dead end of a logging road in
a remote area when they saw a boy's
head suddenly rise up out of a six-foot
mound or e.arth.
Police said the boy began crying, then
explained he had been tldnaped by a
man who picked him up on a Portsmouth
street anrl asked hlm if he wanted some
work helping move furniture.
The boy had a chain attached to his left
leg and the chain was secured to·a nail
. driven in the side of the plywood box.
Police said the box had been meticulous-
ly built, was six feet long, four !eet wide
and five feet deep with enough room for
two people.
The box was covered with earth and
leaves and contained various survival
items, including food and water. .
The boy told police be b>d been beaten
and sexually assaulted repeatedly in the
eight days he was held prisoner. He was
released tr his parents after treatment at
a local hospital for a broken nose, a
broken tooth and facial injuries. His
name was not made public.
The boy tole! police that the Jast time
he saw his abductor was about 8 p.m.
Thursday -12 hours before he wu
found. Of G • D th hospital aborUOA committee is unduly Burial was held at Fairhaven filDe3 ea " restrictive of the patients' rights." Memorial Park, Santa Ana. 1-r-=-;;o;;;;;;;i;;=--'==-=-=-~=-=-=-=-;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;-=-=~ By m A J. WEST--
AllldlM I",_ Wrftw
The assassination. of African revolu.
tionary leadf:r Amilcar Cabral bu i 'ealt
the national liberation movement of
Portuguese GUinea a serious but not ta1
blow, a University of California poli~icaJ
sClentist said Sunday 1n Laguna Beach.
"In a sense this is a seriOUI setback to
the national liberation movenlent
because he possessed great leadefahip
quaUties," said ProfeS90r Ronald 00
cotte or the university ol Loa Anlllf.les campus. ---,---
Cabral "founded a movemen~.not
dependent on one individual but on
thousands of people, and•so it will ·!faU
because of the death of one pel'IOn," lald
Chilcotte, the author of a recent booJ on
relations between Africa and Portupl .
Cabral wu assasalnated Saturdaf in
front of hil home In Coollry, lhe~tal of Guinel, a broadcast aald. ent
Sekou T<l\IJ'e of Guinea said tllo 47· ar-
old Marxist WU k!lled by hrtu&ilae
1gents .
"C~bral possessed great leadellhlp
qualUles and was one of tllo mool bi-
tellilenl tbeorotlcal thlnbra In the ~
world," Oillootte told • oewRNn from
his homt here. "lie hid bnl4'fl>I ~t
one of lhe moat hnpo'rtant revolutlojlary
•lnlUlet ljll\nlt "Olo!>ial po..J, In
1'{rlca," lhe prof.-added. f
"Bul lhe tmportanl thlnf to keep In
mind 'ls lhal the •truale waa not
dependent on 1 """1• man, bot baaed on
a well-organized movement wb1Cb bu
succeeded lo taldng over control of twe>
thirds of Portuauese Guinea."
ChUcotte llid Cabral, who turned lO
armed revolt against tho Portugue,. In
1963, was relatively µnltnown because of
his "unprttenUous nature.11
LAST CHANCE
•
When they're gone,
they're gone•
FACTORY BUY -OUT
OFAU
REMAINING
LITTON
MICROWAVE
OVENS
with
Micro
Browner •
only at
1815 8PoRT BLVD., Dew11toM1 Costa Mesa·-Plloni 548-7781
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I voi.:. 66, NO. 22, ) SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ·-O"RANGE COU NTY, CALIFO RNI/. MONDAY, JANU ARY-22, '1973 TEN CENTS c
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~ llnique . Courses · ,Set
" You may wish you were back in achoo(
-when you see the latest coursu beih& of-
,_.fered to students at Costa Mes.a and
'tEstancia High Schools.
·· The new courses approv~ by Newport-
•Mesa school lrultees include lnlroductlon
lo Fine Aris, Llt<rature of Lunacy,
1aitcano Uterature, Mlrrorl d . ceim.
mupicatlon. The Periodical, The World of Elfutm1 Ba11c Relnfor<ed PluUc, Siu·
d<nt Leadmblp In tbe Soooodary l!libllc
$chool, , En~tal Seminar and
9':1anlzed Crime of the United States.
lntroduellon lo Fine Aris will he of-
f,ered lo ninth and 10th graders at Coata
HCLUS ION AREAS
Mesa High SChoQI and wlll focus on
musie, dram., journaijsm, ceramJcs,
crafts and the pictorial arts.
The goal of the Chicano Literature
course, also at Costa.Mesa High School,
Is lo help 11th graders gain an un·
derstandJng of tbe,abundanoe of Chicano
Ut<rature by reading novela aQCI poema.
Perhlpo tbe -t UlllllU8l of tbe new
........ In Lllerl!ture of Lunacy, open to
10'12th grade 1tudenls at Ealanda ·~
School. The premise oi tbe class Is that
writen and artlats look at reality In a
malll'ler that Is unique. ,
Some of the worka that student! wlll
' R111 dtft t 111, Zones w1tft 4 or More
·Dwelling Untts per Acrt w1t h
'Than BOS of lots· Fully Develo ped
' Commercial 1nd Industrial Zones
Investigate are "The Nose" by Russian
writer Nicolai Gogol aod the first chapter
of William Falkner's "The Sound and
1be Fury.'' 'rn addition to reading,
student.. wlll be expected to engage in
dlscussions and to write essays.
MirTOrs of Communication also ls a
J.bt.h to 12th grade course for Estancia
studeht.. Essentially !I ls designed to
help studenls see U..lr own mllog and
bear their own speech as others hear it.
Audio and video tapes will be recorded to
help, the stu.dents reach an accurate level
of ~lf-appraisal.
. ' ID Harbor Sebools
The Periodic4l is a course aimed at
teaching 10th through 12th graders what
kinds of materials they can find in at
least 20 periedlcals, bow to use the
Reader's Gulde and to learn about
magazine writing. This Is also an Estan·-
cia course.
Eleventh and 12th graders at Costa
Mesa High Scho(ll will learn about love,
hate, fear, and Inger in The World of
Emotions. The course will inclu(!e
readings and projects dealing with
literature, photography, mass media and
psychology.
Basic Reinforced Plastic is for 10th to
•
12tlt grade students at Costa ~lest High
Scllool. Students will make fiberglass
crafts such ~s surfboards, bowls and TV
trays and learn to do repair \VOrk on
boats.
Student Leadership in the Secondary
Public Sc_bool ls ror all Costa Mesa Hign
School students who have held , are
holding, or are running ror student body
offices. They'll learn how to perform
their tasks better and understand the
public schools system as It relates to the
individual student, according to school
officia ls.
The EnvironmentaJ Semiriar is. open to
Costa l\1esa seniors ond juniors. Students
will do research and make an in-depth
study 0£. one or more factors in the en-
vironmental crisis. One or more term
papers will be required.
Organized Crime in lhe United States
is being offered to!Estanci11, students in
grades 10 to 12 and will focus on crimes
encountered on the federal law en-
forcement level. Students will hear lec-
tures by law enforcement represen-
tatives, read source books, and view TV
documentaries .
AbOrtion Gets 01(
High . Court Approves 3~month PerWd
WASlilNGTON (AP) -The U.S. Su-
preme Court today barred states from
interfering with the decision of a woman
and her doctor to end pregnancies within
the fim three months. •
state in protecting the woman from an June 1970 by a three-judge federal court
inherently hazardous procedure .. : ha! in Dallas. Today's ruling ·?ill have an
largely diuppeared." impact in 44 states with similar statutes.
The Texas Jaw made It a crime to end At the White House, presidential press
a pregnancy except "for the purpose of secretary Ronald .L. Ziegler said he had
saving the life of the mother." It had been no immediate comment on the court de-
~challenged by a pregnant single woman cision, and added that he doubts there
who said she could not afford to leave will be any White House or presidential
Texas to go to another state where abor-comment later "after we review it, which
•
In the 7 to 2 decision striking down the
Texas abortion Jaw, Justice Harry A.
Blackmun said medical data indicate
abortion In the first three months "al-
though not without its risk , is now rela-lion laws were more lenient. She had the we will."
7
•
I
Exempted Areas?
<
DAILY PILOT .,._.
much they want to ask for in terms of exemptions.
·. ·Under terms of proposition, residentia1 zones with
four or more dwellings per acre developed to 80
percent of potential and commercial zones 80 pel"'
cent developed can be exempted.
The shaded areaa on this map are portions of New-
port Beach that could be· exempted ·troll! the con·
trot. of the Souih Coast Regional &aatline Con-
servation Commissinn establilhed by l!foposition 20.
City ·eouncilmen and planning commissioners will
meet in special joint session Jan. 2i tO dis'cuss ba)V ~~~~-'--~~~~~~~-----'~~~~~~~~~~
' Mesa Planners,
Council Slate
Sessions Tonight
Teen Chai1ied in Wooden
Box; Police· Seek .Fiend
Both city councilmen and membel'I of ·QIESAPEAKE .. Va. (AP}·-Police in were at the dead end of a logging road in
the planning commission will come to the two stat.es today eought a man, with a a remote ar~ when they saw a boy's
Costa Mesa Civic Center tonight for bistOry of sex crimes after 8 lS-year-old head suddenly rise up out of a six-foot
separate meetings on the city's bu.siness. mound of earth.
The city councll meellog, ~ .st•"'-1>oy,Wh<'·-beld eight days .In 1 wooden Police said the hoy began crying, then ""' hor was found by rabbit htmten. sessloo, has heen scheduled fO> 1:30 p.m. explained he had been kidnaped by a •,•u. it·.· hadn. .'t been for four ,rabbit man '!ho p"cked him p ~--·th In the filth floor conference room. The r oul . . I up on a O• ...,lUU\I hunters, I doubt if anyone ever w d street aM asked him if be wanted some
planning commlsllon meetltig begins at have found !be boy," said P?llce Set. S. work helping move furniture.
8:30 p.m. In city oot111Cll chafhert. Both B. Champman: .·The Iioy had a chain attached Io his lelt
are public. -The boy was discovered Friday In • leg and the chain was secured lo _a nail
Tonight's councll siuey-....ion-...m-~J:-;:);"4~!::~~ :-: .td~b!.i t.i, ~fi"~ f~ on no fewer than H agenda Items, bad beet) sesuilly uuttlted. ly bull~ was silt feet long, four feet wide
rangmc from sidewalks to bike tralla. Richard w .. ~usley. D, 1 Portsmoqth and five feet deep with enough room for
. City Manager Fred Sorslbal said this carpenter and·Prbon parolee, was named lwo people.
morning some of the major items slated in wam.oU,chlfg1na him with-abduction The box was covered with earth and
for discussion are 1 joinUy-operated and •aemal uaauJt. Ausley wu .being ~a.ves and contained various survival
gymnasium blvolving the city and sought In IOlllbeaatem Vlrglnla incl items, including food and water.
tive ly safe." · baby while the case was pending. The ruling followed tYi'O years of de-
Therefore, he said, "any interest of the
Man Thought
DemQcratBug
wrui ·ie a1 · -_, ' -g
W ASIUNGTON (AP) -The man who
·said he .istened to wiretapped con·
\'.ersations from. Democratic ' head·
quarter.-testlfied today be thought it was
legal because bis. ·orders came from the
security chief of fresident Nixon's re·
election committee.
"Weren't you suspicious that some
hanky-panky was going on, that
something was wrong when he told you
tQ use an assumed nalne?" Judge John J.
Slrica asked the witness, Alfred C.
Baldwin, W, at the Watergat':'! trial.
"Not the use of an assumed name, no
sir, your booor," said Balt.lwin, a former
FBI agent who once taught Police
science.
Baldwin, the prosecution's star wit-
(See WATEllGATE, Page!)
Mesa Schedules
Public Briefin g
MaYor Jack Hammett has sc~uled
his first quarterly "Report . to the
People" for 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the
north Costa ,Mesa area.
The mayor and several staff members
will give their briefing on city ball ac-
tivities in the multi-purpose room of the
Bear Street School, 3100 Bear St.
Persons Dvina In the north.COs.la.Mesa
area are invUed to attend the meeting
and to ask questions about their city
government.
The Report to the People wlll move to
other areas of the city later .this year. It
was launched this year by Hammett as
an effort to "take city hall to the pec>-
ple." -
The law had been declared invalid in _ (See ABORTION, Page Z)
Mesan Winner
Of Hobie Title
Eighteen • yur • old Richard
Loufek of Coata -ls beaded home today aft.er whmial, the tint
world chamf¥onship in IW>ie Cat 1•
cl.ass sailing at Honolulu, HawaJi.
Loufek, a former naUorial. cham·
pion in the clll§S, won I.he final two
races of lhe J~race regatta to take
lhe title. For details, see lhe
boating page today, Page 12.
Ernest J. Bose,
38·year Mesan,
Dies; Rites Held
Funeral services were held today for
Ernest J. Bole, a resident of Costa Mesa
for 38 years whose occupations ranged
from streetcar conductor to shipwright,
carpenter an4 boysenberry grower on the
Orange Coast. Mr. Bose died Thursday.
He was 84.
A native of Nebraska, Mr. Bose came
west and was a streetcar conductor in
lhv state of Washington from 1914 to
1920. Alter moving to the Orange Coast,
he waa employed by the old South Coast
Shipyards Jn Newport ~ach unW 19$4.
Later, he worked for a private contractor
in Costa Mesa.
From 1935 to 1967, Mr. Bose raised
boy'seiibettles and sold them to Karbot
Area residents from his Costa Mesa
home at 2611 Esther SI.
Mr. Bose leaves his wile, Hope, of the
family home; two sons, Emesl J. Bose,
Jr. and Bruce E. Bose, both of Costa
Mesa. Burial was at Harbor Rest
Memorial Park, Costa Me114.
Supervisors
To Consider
El Toro Pact
-orange C.Ounty super'visors Tuesday
will consider an agreelJ)enl with El Toro
Marine C.Orps Air Station to ac-
commodate commercial . jet planes
needing emergency landing facilities
when Orange County Airport Is clOsed
due to weather or cannot handle an lm-
pending crisis.
Meanwhile, Col. Murray Staples, public
liaison offl~r for the Marine ba~ aald
today "there is nothing new a~. this
agreement. There has always been~
vision that civil aircraft could · .. I
Toro runways even for reuoos of d
weather."
Earlier news reports Indicated that the
agreement facing wperviso~' actJon
Tuesday was a oew one reached by Coun-
ty Aviation Director Robert Bremaban
and· Brig. Gen. F. C. Lang.
An aide lo Lang said this momlng the
report was "completely erzooeoua."
Staples, meanwhile1 explained that the
C.Orps bas always made its flCl.lities
available when civilian jets or other craft
were in trouble.
"I can remember sev_eral t1mea in re-
cent years -when we've hid fwr or ftve
big jets parked out here when Los
Angeles or Orangfil County airports have
been closed due to weather," CoJ. Staples
said. ·
Staples said he believed the agreement
before lhe supervisors Tuesday would be
only "a renewal of the aame agreement
we've bad in the past."
He noted, however, another agreement
With the county -for provlsloo of
emergency belicopten or servicinc Or
county. rescue craft -II helnf con-
sidered. The lllalul of tha t clocumont, be
said, 11 not known.
"Military bases other than the \See EMEl\GEN~, Pip 11 -
schools, bike trails, priorities for new ~id ~lllley~led In 1'71
ordinances, a comx:ll pay raise, a public after serving a prta term oa a similar
relations program, and sl.dcwaJk defi· ct:arge, was an • ' a c c o m pl l 1 b ed
clencies. woodsmao'.'. and migltt blYe 8ad "!lo tbe GM Announces Recall Mesa Residents
Onl y Eligible No official action may be taken by the vast Dismal ~a ~De
council on any items bn the study ~ion area of heavilJ swampland bl the
calendar. two atates.
Items on the planning Commi.ssiOn Chipman delcrlbed Ausley u .. armed
agenda include a zone exception for a and vtrf~~·"
billhoard on 19111 Newport Blvd. and a Four rabbn ltunters told police Ibey
zone esception for a condomlnlwn. pro}
ect in north COrta Mesa near Paularioo
Ave. Reduced School
DAILY PILOT AD Lunches Offered . .
MA.DE TO . ORDER Students In !be NewPort.Mesa Unlfiecl
School D!strlcl may receive free or
HIY<! somethlng to ..U! .:l'rJ I DAILY reductd-price ICbool luncbea during tbe
PILOT--duslfied want .t -they're tptlng WT I .... lf parent 1obxnel I r e
made lo onler. Here's ho1f cme owner below 1 -.Uy dellned level.
ordered a bozyer for llll nal etlate: Cbildrea ol lamillel of four membm
R~ CP, or 17th St., CM wttb • mnbnum moolhly lncGme ol,llM
Super • rental area. Try I are eliclble lo receive free -11. Aad
units. Act-=·nu xa-c:blldNI ol fllllUles of four with a
uxr. -"'1 ._.. of from 1395111 144$ are
-· -~ _,. -..._ <lldlled fo dolly luncbel at I ......., .. ~ property .... --"'* _,. prlne .
Give ,...,. order to aJlML Y PILOT ad· Pai.at. ""'1 aat school princIP.t. for
vl>or -illll direct lliNm. . ~ loformatlon about ellglbllltY
. 1"lder fbe fedenJly funded procra111,
I
\
•
Of 3.7 MillioJJ Cars 111 Lo go Con t,e st . .
DETROIT (AP) -General Motors an-
nourte<d tbe recall today ol S.7 mllUOn
1'71 ..S Im can for ImtallaUon of 1
thleld over the mering CllUpllni to pn.
... , the ..-Ibillt7 of flJlnC -lode· ~ lllllwwo the coupllll( and tile car
frame, --In mUing the ltlllOUllCe-t. GM said
It receiV<d reports of N Incidents where
11oan were scooped up.-mttltlng lit II
aa:ldettt1 ill--.rblch 12 Injuries were ,...
ported. '
-In tbe ·recou are fuu .. u.. 1w1
llltf It'll --ol Oievrolltl, Bulcka,
Oldll1'"'6el IDll PoaUacs.
'l'be --llld tbe --1d be -at no -.. Ill Ula car owner. It Aid ownn 1lllllld" be nollllal lo ahout
two-
Gll llld tbal H t11t "" llle can II drmn over Jaaae pvet at apeoda which
cauae the car to plt.ch exceaively, thtl
'
Thomas Baume, director of the loa:o front frame crossmember may scoop up oontest for lbe: Costa Mesa U.S.
loose atones or gravel from the roadway· Bicenteim!al Commlttee, said today lhal
Some_o.f U.. atooes_ could lodge hetweeiJ the competllloo Jot.Uif 1100 .S.l!@as B9nd.
llle"'1temng coupling allf M.,,.....-causirig will he UmJted escluslvely lo ~-Mesa
ateerlng interference on a left turn, lbe restdenll. .
automaker reported , addlhg th a t the · c.ontestantl are reminded that entries
lllone is dislodged when the llleerlng wUI he accepted until Feb. 12 (Lincoln's
wheel ls turned to the rig)lt. Birthday) and U\at the winner wlll he an-
GM Aid II decided to ask the .own<ra OOllllCed Feb. ti (Washington 's Blrtb-
of 3.t mllllon can to bring them in for dai). •
. lns\lllatton of the ibieltls even though 1'o quallfy for the hond dottated by-the
only a few can might become illvolved. Southtrn' C.lllornla lit Ni Uonal Bank.
GM said the dcclll<n foD~ liln:itl-tntrantl must design an "'1ll>lem forttse
gaUons-by the <0mpany..and tbe Natimal on ol!lclal documents and Ielter• by-the
Highway Traffic safety AdminhtraUon. committee. ,,.
GM''s aruiOUl'.lefJ'nnt came on the 1&111e One color and one bltck~ ind white
, day .that the Center for Auto Safety In rendering measuring no iarger than 4 by
Washington urged the recall. The center. • lncbel "1ould he sent a Iona with name,
funded by the consumers Onion, said fl 1ddrc11 100 a stamped return envelope
had reportl Iii 15 crashes, with olne In-to (he Costa Mesa U.S. Blcentenl\lal
furies, 1Cemmlog from the steering lock· Committee, Costa Mesa €Ivie Center, 77
up. • Fair Drive . ...
• .·
. w-dter
I
M..Uy sunny oo Tuesday, wlllt
11ightl,y wanner temperaittrea along
the Orange Cout. HtPe of Q are
expected, wllb gusty northeast
winds WU!llOlg !be air sllghUy. _1:9.ws_l\"'IP.I IMO.
tNSIDE TGD.4 Y s ..... llnlld<r .,.. wtclt~
Prencunt Nizon tfallcw tofl!I Jtf,
toff t, 1Dhtn all of a rvdck1I, Ille
crotcd 1urgrd forward,, forcing
Mr into htl a,,,.,, 'I'm IVrpJiffd
I dldn't falot on t~t JpOt,' rite
f!l lfr '""°'lctd. S<r 1 .. llQWl'Ol 1 sto'l'_ and p__hok>I cm PaQe 4. .......... . ....... . CM~ ol J c...,.... »14
C-'Ct tt
-u DMlll *'lie.. , •I
...... .... f ·-" ""'"" ,..,, ,., ...... ' --"
,
,.. ...... tt -" ....... _ ...... --' -..... ----•n -" -. =-.. J .......... ,,"
~~:::::D:~:L:Y:P:IL=D=T=======c=========M:""':::~:J:an:':"'::2:2:,:'9:7:3~~~~~~
Dng~es FeUe d ?
Account of Hec1rt Att.ack De11ied
.
WNl!ON (UPI) -An American bwt spccl.u.t bas flown 10 London lo
11 .. at Roward Hughe> for a suspected boart.all.lck,..Jl>o ''°""°" Dalt> lllnor
.aid OOday.
An aide for the bllllon:ilre recluse denied the report. · •
TUE NEWSPAPER SAID llughes, 67, has beffi l'lllllined to bed In bis pent·
house suite in lhc lrut on the Park since the unidentified specialist e.umi®d
him last week,
Jan Eckersley, an aide with the Hughes party at the hotel, said: "No spe-
cialist has visited Atr. Hughes and he is oot in bed.''
IN LOS ANGELES. HUGHES spok..man Richard Hanna also sai\I. "Then!
is no truth to this story at all."
The Daily Mimir said Hughes is still coofined t,o bed and an electrlc wheel·
chair has been delivered to his ninth floor suite for him when he is able to
use it.
"Co urt to Review NY Law
. Aiding Pa1·ochial Schools
• WASIIlNGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Surpreme ~urt today agreed to revi ew a
'1972 New York · law providing various
fonns of assistance to-parochial schools
and the parents of children attendlng
them.
Two provisions of the law were struck
down as constitutionally invalid last
October by a federal district court in
-New York City. A th ird provision v.·as
upheld by the panel. ---~~
I ndustry Project
Action Deferred
A proposed industrial condominium in
Costa Mesa which would border
the northwest edge ef Orange County
Airport will be referred le airport direc-
tor Robert Bresnahan fo r comments en
air safety. according to recom-
mendali<>ns of Orange County Airport
Land Use Commissioners.
Located between the airport and
Red Hill Avenue and the San Diego
Freeway, the industrial building is p~
posed by Don Kohl.
Bresnahan's comments probably will
be sent directly to the city of Cost.., Mesa
•· and lhe Federal.Aviation Administration,
-an airport spokesman said today. -
TONIGHT
COSTA MESA PLANNING COM-
MISSION -Regular meeling, City Hall,
6:30 j>.m.
· · tJ.91 LECTURE -"Income Tax
· Asftcts of Residential Income Property
· Investment," part of series on Residen-
tial Income Property. 161 Humanities
Hall, 7-9:30 p.m. Admission $6.
TUESDAY, Jan. %3
UCI LECTURES -"Capital Punish-
ment and the Manson Trial." part of
series on ~1orallty: Twilight Zone of the
Law. Science Lecture Hall, 7-10 p.m.
Admi ssion $5.50. "Title Encumbrances
... " part of series on Prof~lonal Prac-
tices in Housing Industry, 178 Humanities
Hall. 7·8:30 p.m. Admission $6. "Elec·
trocardiography." part of series on Your
Heart and Circulatory Sy s t e m ,
Sophomore Lecture Hall, Medical Surge t
Buldg. 7-10 p.m. Admission $5. "Ethnic
Tensions in Soviet Society," series on
Challenge of Racial and Ethnic Dif.
ferences Around the World, Social
• Science Hall, 8 p.m.
: "A IS FOR ALICE" -Play by Space
: Reaction Co mpany, Italian theater
: troupe, Village Theater, ! p.m.
: Admission $3. students $1 . . -. OUNGI COAST ...
DAILY PILOT
'nit 0,.,,,. 0-t DAILY .. !LOT, Witt. wflldl
ts c:omb!ncd "'' NfWl.Pffta. .. l)WlllMll 11Y
flle er.noe Coert l'vbllslllrt11 ~. S..,
r111> edltloM ·~ P<,lbll,lled, MOl!d•r """""'
Frld1y, 1llr C.!1 Mts.,, H,,..,... ~
twnllrt11lot1 Beecll/F'01111llln v11i.,o, Le°""'
8Hdl, lrvlrtffS111dllbldl and S111 CltrMn!e/
: Sin J111n Gtt111tr1no, A· 1111911 rwglanll
, mdlllon 11 Pllblll~ld S1!11nl1:r Ind Svndays.
: -Tiii prlnc!Pll pVb!11llln9 !IYn It 1t JlD W~t
.. ., Slrfft, Cl:llt1 Miit, c1111on1i., ,2'llh
Robert N. vi,,J
• • i
••
l'rftklt<ll •nd P1111c11ner
J1r.k It. C11rl1y va ,.,.JcNrit end o_,, MllnltlMI'
Thom11 ic,,.,u
l!d/fof
11ieM11 A. M11rplli111
M~lrlf loltw
dlert. H. Looi Ricl11N r. Nell ~MIMlfrw Ullin
C... "-Office
110 W11t l1y Str11t
Mttl°"'I M4te••: r.o. 1o. 11•0, t2121 0....-......... atedlt 11P N"'°"' ........ '-"WM lelCJI; 112 "-1 A"""""
............ 1 1117$ • ..,. "" ...... ,.. IM C.ll!ftenhll m Mlr1ll l!I C.unlllll ll:•tl
, ........ (7t4l 142-4JJt
QAtlfle4 M14:ftllr1 MJ•H71
flll;w llt'll, 1m. 00.... Clttt ~lilt ~-,.. ....., '"""· lllWtr'• ...... ......... '"'""' ... .....is-11 ...,. ~ ............. l!\Ollt apteMll ,,,,._ --"~--· ...... dMI ~ H id If c .. 11 Mtw, ~ Mircr111t1o11 iw cerrltf a .u
......... } "' NM U,JJ IJIOl'lllllrl mffir..,
----st.6.J '""''"""
The Supreme Court, acting on appeals,
agreed to consider all three provisions
beginning \\'ith a hearing in April.
The high court already has under C<ln·
sideration a lfro state law appropriating
$28 million a year for reeord-keeping;
testing and other services in the non·
public schools .
About 750,fXXl, or 18 percent of all
school children in New York slate, attend
nonpublic schools. Most of these schools
are Roman Catholic.
The cases accepted by the Sqpreme
Ceurt for review involve: .
1. Allowing families with gross lncomes
of up to $25,oo.1 a year and who pay at
least $50 a· year in tuition to parochial
schools to exclude as much as p ,ooo
from their state income tu. Tbi.s pn>-
vision was upheld in the district court, 2
.to I.
2. Providing about 280 parochial
schools in densely populated urban areas
wi th as much as $4 million a year in all
for heat, lights, custodial services, and
the like. This provision was ,struck down
unanimously by the district court as in
violation of the First Amendment's pro-
hibition against establishment of religion.
3. Direct payments of $50 an elemen-
tary pOpil and $100 a high school pupil for
parents with net taxable incomes of less
Lhan $.S,000 a year. This provision also
was struck down • unanimously as in
violation of the establishmemt clause.
Front PG9e.l
EMERGENCY ••
Sttategic Air Command bases," Col .
Staples emphasized, "have always been
available if an aircraft bas a bona fide
erTiergeri·cy whether that emergency is
due to v;e8tber or other factors . Further,
we provide our crash crew service to
Orange County airport along with the
heavy equipment necessary to lilt a large
jet," Staples concluded.
The report · of the alleged "new
agreement" gave rise to. speculation
among leaders of the Saddleback Area
Coordinating Council (SACC) and Irvine
officials that more commercial Dights
might be expected to use El Toro.
"Where life and safety are an lsrue, I
don't think anyone can quarrel with the
use of El Toro for any true and real
emergency/' Irvine Mayor William
Fischbach said.
Recently Fischbach strongly argued
against a Southern California Association
of G<Jvernments (SCAG) airport study
which recommended joint military and
civilian use of El Toro as a way of P.n>-
viding expended commercial jet service
to Orange County.
Today, Fischbach said, "[ don't count
.bad weather among such true and real
emergencies. '
"I have been and '9111 be uneqWvocably
and unalterably opposed to commertlal
joint use of EJ Toro MCAS as an
alternative airport site to Orange County
Airport for bad weather, convenience or
any other non-emergency reason.
"I might say I'm a little bit surprised
that the military would consider an e1-
pansion o fthe joint use provided com-
mercial ~ers beyond the expected
emergency service," Fischbach con-
cluded.
Mrs. Nince North of 25431 Cluslc
Drive, Mission Viejo, a leader in the
SACC organization, said she too was
surprised by the reported new agree-
ment. 1'l will be at the--supervlsors
meeting Tuesday," she said.
She expected others in the Sad,dleback
vaney group would "be very interested"
in the proposed agreement, but said she
couldn't say what stand SACC leadership
would take on the is.$ue.
Bresnahan who was reported to have
said the new agreement ltemmed from
new Navy regulatlon& regarding
emergency use of $tary facllllie1, waa
unavailable for co ~today.
The contract is said contain a clause
specifically noting that lhe agmment
does not cover handling other than com-
mercial air operations from El Toro on a
regular basis due to aey icheduled or
programmed closure of Orange Cotmty
Airport.
ObServers note,._ however. that U ~
aireement constJtulel Increased com·
mertial uae of the_ mUlta.ry base, It may
be .lhe wedie needed to lmplemenl the SCAO study recommendaUons lhat El
Toro runway1 replace th9sc of Orange
County airport In handtini lhe county's
commercial jet traffic needs.
El Toro offers two t0,000 foot runwa ys,
a ground controlled approach 1ystem
capablo of guiding a jct through dense
fog to a sare landing and comple~ crash
prttectlon syatems tnciuding f0ttJl!ni of
nmwats.
_Nigerian·_
Air Crash
•
Km s ·rso
I
LAGOS, Nigeria tUPll -A, J<lnlanlan
slrllner carrying Nigerian Moslem
pilgrilU3 home from a pllgrimap to
Mecca crubed In norlhern Nileria to-
day, killing I!O of those aboud, ~
otticlals said, ln the worst alr crash in
history.
The efficiats said 22 persons, includina
the pilot and five cnw membtra, IW'Vtv·
ed .lhe craah at Kano, lZO mlleo
northwest of Lagos.
They Ded tbrough an emergency
escape batch near the •.au of tbe _plane.
Officials Wd lhe control tower wained
the pilo1 o1 the Alla Alrllna eoe1na m.
whlcb bad been cbartmcl by Nigerian
Airways, of fog and poor visibility just
hefore be landed.
The plane toucbed down on crave! 40
feet off lhe l'UllWay, airport omclaia said.
It veered left Into a ditch which snapped
off tbe left wheel, lhen skidded along the ·
edge of the runway and burst into
names.
Many of the dead passengers were
lhro.wn from the plane and their bodies
SC.!tttered along the runwa)·.
Some of those wbo survived got out
through an emergency hatch in the tail,
the only part of the aircraft not con-
sumed by n...... -
An airport official Wd, "'rbo plane
WU gulled by fire escopl f« Jbe lall ...,.
lion. II lilerally melted."
The Worst previous air d.i5aster WU the
craah al Moscow's Sbe:<melyn Airport
on Oct. 13, ol an Aen>flot Ruutan bull!
IlyushJn.Q jet, In wblcb 171 perso111 dled.
A Japan Airlines plane crashed at a
P..1oscow airport on Nov. 21, klll1n& ~
person,,. -
FederaJ Commissioner of Transport
Russell Olkko left Lagos for Kano to In-
vestigate tbe crash. Alia airlines manag-
ing direct.or Ali Gbandour flew from Am-
man lo assist.
Authorities seaJed off the atrport whiie
lhe task of pulling lhe last of lhe bodies
from the wreckage was completed. The.
Dames burned away almost everything in
lhe wreckage which wu not metal.
Police also mounted guard around lhe
bospllal rooms where the pilot and cmr
were taken:.
Today's sutvlvors """ ~ to I
hospital 1n Kano, while the bodiu ef tht
dead were lakl in ~ ~ of blanteted
bundles on the airport tarmac. Oftlclal•
said mariy bodies . had been burned lo
skelelons.
They were to be given a mm burial
Inter tonight or ·Tuesday, officials aald.
The fllgh~ from J~ in Saudi
Arabia, carried 196 Nigerian MOllem
pilgrims back from a visit to their holy
city of Mecca. Otber pilgrim fligbla bad
to 0e diverted to Lagos Iller the airport
at Kaoo was closed.
Robber Steals
$25, Groceries
In Costa Mesa
• •
Craslae• lf •!I to Freedom
' Jerry Riccio (right) dances with one of nine hostages nine captlvee. Ricciysmuhed through a thin wall to
on the roof of a New York building near Ricclo's a hidden s~y"and Jed the nine to freedom after
· sporting goods store where four gunmen had held 40 hnurs oj..<:apUvity. (See story, Page 4).
~~~~~~~~~~-'--'--'--'-~~'--__;;~~~~~ .
Cli.ar ge rs Get
Joh 11ny Unit.as
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The San
Dleeo Chargen OOC!ay oblalned vet-
eran quarterback John Unitas from
the Baltlmo"' Colts for ''flrture
considel'llUons, 11 a apokesmaa said.
(See story, Page 1'.)
'Ille acqulsllloo fueled nunon
Iba! John Hadl, I t·year
quarterback of lhe Chvgers, would
go to the Colts or to the Los
...-hgeles Rams.
-Coach Harland Svare of the
Chargers called Unltas the
"gnatest quarterback ever to play
the game." He played 17 .vem for
!he Colts. ·
Fl'OtllPegel
ABORTION. • •
~ .... -by Jbe julticel. It Wll based
predamlnmly m wbat--tm called
• -P'#J,ol prlney. Be aald lhe i:Jcbl "la
broad enoqb to encompass a woman's
deciskll whether or not to terminate bu
pregnancy."
Justices ~yron R. Wbile and William
H. Rehnquist dissented. White said he
could "find nolbing In lhe language or
history of the Comtltution to support lhe
court's judgment."
Rehnqul!t said "tbe court's sweeping
invalidation of any restrictions m abor·
lion during the first trimester la Impos-
sible to justify. • . "
In a second 7 lo 2 ruling, lhe courl
struck down Georgia's abortion law, find-
ing throe provlalnna to be UllCOllllilu-
tiooal.
l'rot11 P.,,e l .
WATERGATE TESTI MONY •••
oess, wu on-the stand for the third day
as the tblnf -of trial bepn ftJr G.
Gordon Liddy and Jam .. 71. llcOicd Jr.,
clw1ed wilh cnnspfracy, btqlary and n-
lecal ~ In a -la\'alYlng a lnalt-ln al Democralic boodquartm Jut
June. Baldwin" aald bo med the allu
0 BW JolmlQo" at Mce.otd'a dlrecilon.
Baldwin bad said bo -recruited by
McCord to monitor cooveraatlons from
his 'hotel room acroa the ltrfft from
De::iocratic be1dquartm in the
Walergale bulldlng.
He said be saw a letter McCord wrote
to the Federal Comtnunlcatlool Com-
-requesting the -of certain radlo freq""'°""' and Ibo! bo ncelnd
permlaloo. Ha aald Ibo~ .. well u
McCord's posiUon wltb tbe n electiea
commiU.., were factora lo bollevtnc Ibo •
actlvitiea \\'ere legal
She Trie8 Again
-To Not Have
Aiwther Chil,d
SYDNEY (AP) -Mrs. Janelle Proose
The judge oent the Jury ·from the room
and wed Baldwin: "You thought what
you were do~ for McCord was perfectly
legal?" -
"Yes," Baldwin said.
Baldwin also said he band-delivered
two days of logs of convmatlolll to the
headquarters of lhe Republican Com-
mHtee for the Re-election of the Prell·
dent.
Jr.dge Sirica called attention to
·Baldwin's remembering m~1y details but
not the name of the man to whom he ad-
dreaed the enYelope containing the logs.
Q. You wanJ Ibis court and lhe Jury to
believe you gave It to some guard you
hardly knew!
A. Ha told me be would deliver It to the
lndMdual.
Q. Anll yoo left ii at lbot!
A. Y ... Beca111e of the procedures lbot
we. lo effect al the Commiltee for lhe
-of the President then.
•
Woman Injured
In Costa Mesa · .-
Pistol Acciden t
tried 17 varieties of the pill, three dif-A 29-yea.r-old Costa Mesa woman was
ferent CXJllraceptive devices and had a injured over the weekend when a .45
slerillzatlon operaUon. A caliber pistol ICddenlally dlscbarged In
Desptte lhlJ, she bas g1 ... birth for lhe her boylriend's hands and a piece ol
sbrapoeI tmbedded ltxll in her abin, ninth Ume. police reported OOC!ay. "When Fred and I married In J.9llO, we Tl'eated 11 Costa Mesa Memorial
planned to have ooly two cb.lldrm," llld Hospital 8aturday afternoon was Susan
Mrs. Prouse, 30, of Newcastle, 100 miles C. Reese , 29, of Z700 Peterson Place,
oortb of Sydney. Costa Mesa. She was released from the
S 'G U ' "But nothing lll!ellled to work to bait bospilal followin( emergency room tiul· late to reen p ment of lhe wound. our penooal population aplooion. We've Today Costa Mesa police said lhey had C ta M ff• h been trying to atop me having babies been given two different versions of the
A young robber wilh a big appetite beld 08 esa 1g ways since the birth of oor """"'1." accident.
up a Costa Mesa ex11venience market Mesa will loot The couple's ninth child, a girl, wu The Reese woman told officen the gun
SUn<lay and look bome -In cash and a Costa qulJe a bit born •-'••, 14 moolhl Iller Mn. Proole accidenlally di8charged outside her ~ greener this year as a result of an am-~ Bu lhe boylrl c1, Identified bagful of groceries. bilious $385,llllO road· planting project by underwent a Slerlliiatloo operalloo. apartment. t en
James Shields Kenny. 47, a clerk at the lhe Slale De artm t f Pub!' W ks "ApparenUy, lhe-wu some joining of as William R. Oldham. 47, also of the
7-Eleven 8•-oo :1150 Placentia Ave., P en ° tc or · • ., 2700 Peterson apartment building, in-~< The ~-·-pl ·-lnslall llOO -tissues after the~· ...... II .... --·~ "I reported to police that be turned over the owue ans w .. ~. -,._-..,..., -.aJU. silted the gun went ofi in his car.
goodc alter b<lng told to put bis badda up 17,llllO shrubs and 450,llllO Hotlentot fig don't lnlend llUlns uybody. Tbe opera. Oldham told police Jhe automatic pistol
and race the wall. ground cover plants on the Newport Uon was done properly. fired when he tried lo uncock It by easing
The robber, dressed 1n a tbJ'ee.quarter Freeway between Paularino Avenue and , "I think of thll baby u a mlracle, but. the hammer d'lwn on a live cartridge.
length trench coat and a red and blue oil lhe San Diego Freeway, and on lhe San I'm having .a portlal hyotanictomy lhla When It went off, the bullet struck lhe
cap, a.lmulated a gun uocler bls clothing Diego Freeway between the Newport beater and a fragment from the heater
.., he approached lhe checkout lllalld, ac-Freeway and just wt of Harbor Ume to make abonlulely """' there are bit bis companion in lhe right shin,
v-··Jevard no more." o•••·-rted < ·ding to polle< reports. -· ~ repo . He specifically asked for $25, and lhe ,,__,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_, ...
quart of milk and Jin of Scandinavian
-be bal blooght to the c:ounler along with two other e&m of food , Kemy .
told investigators.
The robber reportedly made bis
gelaway after Jelling Kenny to go to lhe
back room and not to come out.
Ka thryn Taylor . --
Rites.Wednesday
FunCTal services will be held Wednes-
day for Kathryn 8, Taylor, 27-year .
resident of Costa Mesa who died Sunday
at the age of 63.
Mrs. Taylor was 11 native of Ohio and
moved to the Harbor Area in 1933. She
was a member of the Foursquare
Churcll, Colla Me11.
She leaveo her hltsbond. Rerman, of
the lamlly bome at DS Cabrllio SI.: her
parents, Mr. and Mtl. Amoa Vrtlnlcb,
Sr.: lhree bn>lhen, Jadt, Anton Jr. and
Jnsepb Vmnlcb, all of Oblo.
Servlc6 will be al l:IO p.m. at Costa
Mesa FOJlraouare aton:h, wUh lbe Rev.
Robert Ac:obs olllclatln(. Burial Wfll be
In Mansncld, OhlO.
Mother Convicted
(·
When they're gone,
llMty're 9onel
FAcrORY BUY-OUT
OF ALL
REMAINING
LITTON .
MICROWAVE
OVENS
with
Micro
Browner •
only at
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