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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-23 - Orange Coast Pilot• • .. ' -. • ------ -• . ., • ?--. --- ....... -' .. ili!iiii!l!ii.iiiiiilllm' .. .1"'"'1miiii•"•'•·.miilliiiiiiiiiii ............. ~iiiiiiiil!!ll .......... l!!I ~~1!1 ............................................................................. - • 0 I t> I • , • ~-{ • " -~ 1.-.., "lollls&•~~ I Pro1.ni·s · ~ 1 _,, ___ • T ~ •·) !, , "' ' '• f, -~~,:J..COO Residents ... . ~ ' . . . ... . ' .,_ . -. . __ .. . R~~i5it : .. • Coast •• .. . ·. --' • , • -I. • ' -· • . ... ... ·--. Fl"e As Voleano .. ~Jll•a~te« : ... _., Death . . .. . ...__ ~ .. .. ·--;Jars -I~eland Isle --·~-·--·-· ----·---: ., . '' -'-=--"=~; rn>K<AFiERNOOt'if.:joo;a;RYF:i;,r119n- . . °"°"' "' MO. it ~ s•c.T.c>Ns; 16 '""8e5 • . .. . ' Executive Mourned . '/ I . nson -s .. as .. , ',_, •. -" -· , . · Dog~ :I(iU •Pet; ' # ... Willed · ·Mo.ne y • SfATESVILLE, •N.C. ·(AP)'·- Polly, a little furry white spitz, WaJ! killed by other dogs . ih the dog pound before she could begin en- joying her, inheritance. Polly was willed an income of $480 I'! year from stocks left by lier mistress, ~year-old Ann Robinson '4 Cowan, who lfved alone and was /o.USTIN, Tex. (UPI ) -The people • found dead In her home Jan.12. .. • am1 . ' ..._· ') ., ..... exan .. . ,, ,l/ N·ixo:n · ·May .Tell Viet Cease-fire who knew Lyndon B. Johnson best -his Police said they couldn't reach a W""IDNGToN (UPI ) -President leader Gerald R. Ford of Michi0 an and tb veterinarian over the· 'weekend and rw D family, friends and JJeighbots .from e neighbon wouldn't keep Polly tern. Nixon •will .address the nation on radio Hoose Democratic leader Thomas P. Tex.as hill country-flied past his body :in pm:arily. They said the dog was and television tonight, probably to an-O'Neill of Massachusetts. . the marbled Great If all . of the LBJ :µ. snapping at them because they nounce a Vietnam cease-fire agreement. Ziegler also announced there will be a b_nry today to honor and mourn the 36th were strangers, so they muzzled White House Press Secretary Ronald larger bipartisan congress i o rip. I U.S •. Pteli.dent.~:(See related storieS, pie· ~er and placed her in the dog L Ziegler, in making the announcement leadership meetlng at 5:30 a.m. PST turi?s, Page 9) • ' pound. this afternoon of the broadcast, ~Id not Wednesday. .. John90n, whose.pursuit of the Vietn~m say specifically that Nixon would speak Ziegler de~Jned .. t.D say,. hoW"''ioN War divided a -ation to which he h3d ~ ..... ~ • ....,..,.lp)..;lo~·\Bul· all signs pointed .to tonight',s 'speeCb will be or to exp8nd lO pledged a'"Great' Society," died Monday 5 20 . 0 . p·~ l J ,.,. u. any way on his terse armouncement. , of a heart attack. ,He Was '64. ' > ee -?:iegler said the speech at 7 p.m. PST If as expected Nlxon announces tonli1tt The tall Texan who described tbe ' • • . is designed "to report on the status of the an agreement has been reached, It wltt White.House aa.tbe "lonely acres" waa a t Vtetnam negotiations." comt! almost four years to the day froil man who toVed and needed people. Alict l The speech will follow a meeting by the first J>Ct!:ce talks In Paris. a they came to him toda7 to pay their final' ·Vo cano· Nixon with Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, his It was on -.Jan. 26, 1969. that America respects. • chief Vlelnam negotiator who ·was due North Vietnamese, Soµth Vietnamese ' His body will lie in state in a gray; back in Washington at 2:45 p.m PST Viet Cong negotiators gathered at t . metal casket. unUI 6 a.m. PST Wednes.-1' n le' e· Zan ;J after a three-hour, 45-minute meeting in Hotel Majestic in Paris to try to eod the, day-at the top-of the stairs-in -~ u__ Paris tpday with Haool's Le Due Tho. long, bloody . war. ... . , 1 s~tely Great Han of the $18.6-millioo', The Paris meeting broke up amid -Details of Hie cease-fire agreemen~ 'nol library id front of a black mirble pylOO. ' 1' warm smiles and waves from both Kiss· imhlediately made public, a r e ex~ '±•1 1· Smartly unilormed membets or the.O.tb ·VESTMANNAEVJAR, Westman Island Inger and Tho. to closely parallel the .me.point an1 '~. ! Anny's "Hell on Wheels" Division stQOd · (fu>I) -This tiny isla.Dd practically Kissinger had been expected to remain that both sides nearly agreett on I • ~t i: by. , . bufst in two early loday · when the in Paris for several d~. His qukk Oc~~·That<alifld,for .tbere.tumof1al Johnson s ~idow, Lady Bird, ~· hei:. sl.imberin Helgafjell . VDicJno ;etUP.kd. .. _return suggested .~t·tl!e (inal. ~Jon of U.S. prisoners of war and the withdra~a -· two---daug~ten and lou~ grandchildren, d' .~. 5,200 'nhabltants fieeina in · the long alrefcult negotiations went (See fEACE, P•p 2) accomp:anied the bcxiy 1n a motorcade ,.seo. ing .,n:; -! ---~-a -th! ' ' ,........__ ' • • • • f ' !lie Weed.Qi I Fune I H to Jll¥1JC. smoo . y. \f.-·-.-r. " ~ ., • t"', • ~' ~ ' ~.f ~)f ,r -~~·~ -'1. ,·• rem rey ra ome The volcano, which has been dormant Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ~d· . 1 , • .~ _. , L ~Nl»N '#tHh;:~S(/!i,,:~ ·m~ • ·~ !:;.;). .t »' ~~~·i.e1?';! ;:t ::J::1~~ t~ , since the Vikings landed on the Island ln • dress, tie '1'11\njee~ ~.~&!lit.eat~< '· ··o"raag··~~-.. ' ' Form1i P.-Ji!Oi.f OMd.of Hiort Attock 1t·R•"1'h , ~ 'tlll~ti:d..,.jllCl<v,01'•1ll<ii <ll<log· ·llio'-·C>blftl!t" '!illtl at''l~ p.m:-Wltb a , C:out , • ~ , -. ,1. !;.;e·tiildr jQst'i9tk'itW~~'it1J·'f"'· ~ nfiF-' bot 'tli'Cri came to life shortly after bipartisln group or congressional • ,- , I • L • ·/ --; ••• -1 . .\ .. ,..,. l .. .., ~ r ·~ !"' \., ~t 'l've ever had n said Toms Jo:~ I : m night. sp~tlf!8 f!r:c ail,d. tl~usands ,of 1l118illel'S'. ... -• ~ h' th . LBJ'~. ·· · · · ' · · "' 1 to s or mo,ten ·lava·1nl0 lbe skies. Hugh Scott of. Penns)'lfUia; senate ~ · -~ · / 'l'l,a...,_, o s' 1 an ·•!de to ~ .fonner President 'but \'lo : t Ten hours ;Iter the ffr~t erupUon1 the The latter are Senate GOP leader eQ,& ~ i . ~ I ""\ •1 r~ati~e~~~~~~~e~a.::y ~ I lafa stream rolled over the airfield and Democratic leader Mike Mansfl~l<t: . \ 1 • :t .. '--...... _ ·, ·L • \H , , , former boss m'a business suit. I re9ched the-~t.skirts of~ Ule town. ol Speaker ~Carl Albert, H.ouse. Republican ·' · · . ' .. 1 ·Johnson wis stricken during an af-1 V~stamanna,eyJar ,,where several houses --~---------D · .. 4 _:-j l • cf"' • 'A ternooq nap Monday l\t his LBJ Ranch· 65 ; · were "f:rted op ft re. 4 700 Ii were · D.BlUrrr, (8· Oast ,. rea · · n111es1rom>.ust1nSecretserv1ceagen11 t.vT!,edb=oiioo~~g00ais. TEEN GIRL GETS • , · • rushed to help him. , coastal veuels and airplanes and NOTE FRO!'tf LBJ • • ; ;\ , ' • • · ... They found tbe former . President j" heljcopters fror:n ~ykjavik, the capital · "'-• LKb>..-, . • ... t6e id and be med Johnson on lhe Ooor m:xt to his bed. He of 1CtlaOO I) mim,rtes flying time away, DJ GEG~_:... W!/1# AL to ~ ency assu was not moving," said Tom Johnson. ll and the US nffal base at Keflavlk. Just last Friday, former Pre!lldent ,or the ~'j;'.,...., bf the lole ,.._.,1b1lity l9r : K.ennedyls CO!!'" "'He was lying on bis back. An agent aald 'l1wy said ~ were no casu,alll... Lyndon B. John!on wrote a letter to a t;. ·l!IUklent · 8 . .lobDlon on various hlltment to place ..a. man on the moon ht appeared dead: ~e wu dark blue. tn '!' With the airfleld out or action the re-year old girl, telling her that "every age *"' to 1bt or.., o.t lie -only .. wltllin tho ~-· . , color. They admin1Stered ••YR,~ ahd r majpi111 500 lnhabltantJ, many ol tbem turnl 001 10 be ' a e when you -lilC onooa6 IO _._,.,....._ (Sp Tlle'cralty foin1t1 ""~ lildtr mouth.to mouth mlllCltation._-. I ~lldanl to ~ve: theJr hpm,., ~ht::_ iea£:Uf::.__ _ . . .. ::--: _..,. Pop i i-· ,. • also uswned'tbe 11w'den ol mo<1og.1he· ' Onpie.blacl<·IMPb!e pylon·io:lln,·above , sbtlter ' Ill °* lllitbor 'Wl1tlng'1or lhl! The lfiltt was delivered to !ht honk-or ~ m~ -~ cm ~-Kemted;y New Frontier legi.alatiDD for-~ catafalque were these wot&: ~. ev~atlon vfllltb to talte them out of Heidi L. Brown--on Monday morning -d lfl3 ~ .•~1 ,,, r~ ward as the ~ of what LBJ wu 1 have followtd the-peraonal f the area. ... . the day of the formtr presldentl death ~'CentertnBw>tNionBeachaod totmn."TheOreat&ociety." phllOIOjlby tbat I am a free man, an 1 dlflcials aAkl the island could e~lode In the ielter,.Jolµw>~.~·:au~.;W.,. ..._.i!J he P!"-tJl _,•1.~ of Prom11e or that J-dream ,... Amerk:sn, • public sei;vant and • I. and'~~or ,lnthtoeai"i'\rl.r<&l\ ~ •-'"wett''ff!J, l"ltollto oot even think oow -· : ; • ' !l>olen in whit WN to become tho.~1!' member. 0[,!!1~,,£$. ;;-~!)!! ~ • .;· Tlivl!l'Ojltlili opo!IA!ol•lltf • rirl about the pasaibillly that !Ue may begin 1"llllie dar• tai. Ille ""'Ml':. T.auo• cil.Y 'ill-Irv""''°'-... _. ..... • 11)1' lllMl..,l!r, , """""tho ilWm, fllllch ii 211 miles wide at 30 or 30 or that It stUI can be a great •Dolfded Air t~·o. .~flih'-1 bielOrehlie'6Cti0ntothehighestofflol!i 1tn i'Tbe Great Society asks not how .,. and five-mllel long. 'Ibe rift was nearly life even tt al.'~ Dldlla ~ aod loal: ..,_., ollice ' tile Jud. The occNIOn wu the dedico~ much, but how good; not only hoW to _twd mDoa long and roached from the . See tbia story, plus photographs ol the ..-UU., hllll IO fliltll tllll ._.. ol tbe new t,Olhcre campus. create ,,..1th bul how.to use It: not on!y • volelho hi a curve out ·to tlle Atlanlic lonner president and other storiel on 11111 -I.id diiwn-bi:•lll hr «Jain .In the --. J-atd,,,.ex. how rut we~ Solng, but w~ we are Ocean. . Paa• I today · Weather SUnny skies afe on the agend8 !or Wednesday, with dlmlnlsh!JC northeast winds, according· to the weatherlady. Wghs of 68 at the beaches and 70 inland are expectecl. Lows tonlgllt, a cbilly JM!. ' INSIDE TODi\Y A rhotgU.n-wielcUnq T o p 1 k 11 man goes beritrk and kills fiUt J>t'~0111 in Ptit n•jghborhood, 1'1fthlll" ~ f«h• ....... capitol, b<fbrt ffirnlng th• gun on hm. 11lf. ~ Police ar1 m111HJied. Stt storv on. Page 4. ,_..-_,("'irrf ~<4~ ~I ·1 '"1e (lffflM'llN • """""'' ,llllft ,. Ci. ....... ' It.II ......... .._. 4 CtM1o · II Ol'IMt CMlltY' 1 (,....,..,., If IMm 1•tr Dlllifl I~ J SMlft ""'""' M-11 ~ ,.... . ' f-~ "' .,. ...... ,,. .... ~ .... , .. '"'""" . ·~ lf.11 W.!Mr ~ ..., ... ltec9N ' ................ , ... Mwnu•• 14 _.,... *"" 4 """ ......,. ,. I x..i.cty pe<ta hlllll' -tn Amerlcr''to • headed. It pro_. 11 the finl lelt !or a At llrst, many older peOple rtl\lsed to · .Aa wwW•-t ---·(o. (1111 P"MO'rs, Pop II . ~ (1111 .IOBNION, Pip I) (9" VOLCANO, Page I) ------------~-!....,====---"."",...,..--' ' -.. • .1 .l ' ·-· ' 2 DAIL 'f PILOT s lutsday, January 2l, l97l -Sta111 a t $100,000 ~ Watergate Bail Requ-est Denied < WASHINGTON (UP.I) -The trial judge brusquely refused today to reduce bl.iii for four men, now In jail, who plead- ed guilty in the Watergate bugging case. Federal Judge John J . Sirit'a stressed their admission of participating in "clandestine activities" in rejecting the -request 10 lower ~he $100.000 bail for: each of the four men, all from the "tiami area. Daniel E. Schultz, newly hired attorney S usp ect Held In Burial, Sex Assault fur the (our... urged the reduction on grounds his clients had pressing personal problems nt>Cessltatlng their release. Sirica declared : "Each of these rour dc!cndants is flutiot in Spanish and one or snort -of them appareoOy bas ties in foreign countries. Each of them bu ex- perience in clandesUne oper1Uons, eluding tbe use of aliases .•• "The court fails lo see why U>eae defendants should receive better treat- ment than their co-defeodanl, Mr. 1-loward Hunt. . .and the court sees no reason to make an blvldlous diltloction here." · 1-lunl , a former White House con- sultant, pleaded guilty separately from the i\liami four. The four. who are being held !0< -...cing at the eod at Illa · trial. are Bernard L. Barker, Frank A. Sturgis, Virgilio Gonzalez and Eugenio R. r•rlartinez. . . . \l'I T.._.lt • l'le!IRP ... I PROMISES. • • ... crou 1!1a1Q1 !'?.w 'fronllara,and ono of the molt crlllca1 " the fnltttler ol lbe dty Ille. . "Now 10 percent of our l""'pl• live in • urban anu like Los Ao(<!.._ '!11elr needs are lmmenle. Bu~ j\111 11 our col· lqet ud Wllvenltles cbln(ed tbe future of our !arms a century ago, so Ibey can help change Uie future or• our cities," said the president who left a classroom for a political career. ~ u1 have come to enurornla to ask you. to throw on 1{0lll doubts about A-lca- llelp ua domoostrate to the 'world that people or compuaJoo and commitment can me tbe1r fellow cltlunt from lbe bonds of inju"1oe, lbe prlaona of poverty and the chains " ignorance,.. Johnson llld. Allbouib the Jo"'-administration was to foster more leglslaUon to 'l'fteet U>eae promlseR than any other in history, Jebnson's record was to be cast ln deeper doubt> by the Vlatnam War. Jn November of 1967. Johnson again visited the Orange Coast. This, time the place WU El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta- tion and the occask>n was the ltlnd · blrtbday nl the U.S-Marine Co.rps. • Ul't T._.. LBJ Before lllnerr Former President L,yndon. B. Johnson was •een chomping on a cigar only days before he was bospitaliied tn Virginia in April of 1972 after suffering re- curring chest pains. PORTS1110UTH, Va. (UPll - Richard Alvin Ausley. wanled in connection "'ith the live burial and sexual assault of a 13- year-old boy. surrendered at his parents home here early today , the FBI reported. An FBI spokesman said Ausley's father telephoned the FBI in the early morning hours and indicated the 32-year- old carpenter's willingness to surrender. Slrica said: "While It is true that the defendants did not violate their bail con- ditions , It must be realized that the temptation to nee. now would be much greater than before. They are f a c I n g rtassive fines and long jail sentences. Th.:.1 have bad a t~e in the past week of life in jhll and I'm sure they didn't find it pleasant." . WIDOW, DAUGHTliR RETURN TO RANCH APTER DEATH Lody Bird Johnson With Lucl-N-t ln Sombor -.i Three months later be returned to El Toro. On Feb. °19, 1918. a now "worriOO" President Jolmaon wlsbed · Godspeed to Camp Peodleton's 27U. ReglmenW•Land- ing Team u Ibey left loi Vietnam. "This is I decl.slvt time ln Vietnam," be said .. "The eyes of the nation and the entire world -the eyes of history itself," he said prophetically, "are on that brave band of delenclers who bold the pass at Kbe Sanh and tbe area around II. 3 Youths Held On Pot Garden The spokesman said Ausley, who v.•as being held in Norfolk City Jail, would be turned over to Nansemond or Portsmouth authorities following a magistrate's hearing. The unidentified youth was found buried. in an eig ht-by.four-by-four-foot plywood box south of Suffolk in rural Naru1emond. He was discovered Fffday by a group of four rabbit hunters who noticed the box under some lea ves. The youlh, an eighth grade honor stu· deot who lives in Portsmouth, was reported , resting comfortably at his home. Police originally thought Ausley, con· vicled in 1961 of a similar offense and paroled in 1971. fled into the 30lt-square mile Dismal Swamp. The FBI was called into the hunt Mon- day after state police and local police from six .cities and counties in the Tidewater area searched vlithout suc- cess. Ausley was arrested by the .FBI on charges of unlawful ~t to avoid pros- ecution. sodomy and i.idnaping. B urglar T urns Th e Right S1vitc li A burglar found himself $145 richer this weekend because he was sharp enough to tum on the switches con· trolling !he cash register of a Costa Mesa bar. Janet Hamilton. an employe of the Escapade bar, 1664 Newport Bou1evard. told police officers she locked the $145 in the till Saturday but when she returned Sunday, the money was gone. Police theorize the burglar popped the register open by turning to the on posi· tion four circuit breakers. one of which operates the electric cash register. Il was learned by police that bar employes secured cash in the register by turning off the electricity. F r om P age 1. VOLCANO ... leave their homes but officials said they changed their minds when they saw the lava stream rolling toward the town. Authorities flew police and rescue workers inlo the island durlng the early morning hours and in Reykjavik , schools and hospitals were readied lo take care of the evacuees. In 1963, a sinailar eruption created the nearby island of Surtsey. OIANfi COAn IT ' DAILY PILOT 1'llt ()nnge CO.SI DAILY 1'11,pT, Wllfl Mlldl k CllftlblNd 1tM H...,,.,__ ' MlllMll b' ftte Ono~ CMlf l'W/Wllrtf c.omoenr. Sepe. r•te edlt!Dnl ire llWlllMd. IMnllay ~ Frld1y, tit COii• M.... H_,.,. a.ell. Hllnllntl!Oft B1ath/Foun11ln Vtlley, l.1911111 alldl. l.,,lnetS•doll~ ..... Sin Cllmlnlt/ Slo" '""" C.pltfranD. A 11111.. N91-I cdltlen 11 publi.11 ... Slollill'd1n elllll Sll!IOlvs. Th• prlnelOll Jl4,lllllthl!!O l>Ynl Is et »D West 811 $1rHI, Cllte Mnl, C1H!Orn!ll, tM'M. Robert N. W 11d l'retkllfll IM .. uflU.,.. Jee:~ R. Curley Via Prnlotent Ind Glnlf'1I M""911" 1\01P11I k1eyJI Eltlcw lt.01P11t J.., Murph;,., MIMOlne l!!dltcw Ch1rl11 H. loot Richer4 '· Nall Ae.&l1l1nt MllllOlllll l!!ll1111i Olft<• C:..11 Mftl: »0 Wnl 1•1 S!rfff NtwPlfl ltldl: m.J ,,._., lkiulnlN ~ IMdl1 m ,,., .. , ..,,,_ H""'~ IMCl'll 11'71 1.-ell lo\lllVll'd Sift Clttniiftlt1 al Norlfl l!I C11P11fte JtNI f"••••• (7141 '42-4J21 Ci.MM Alnrffllllt 64J•U71 PtM Cllllll Al'MI lt9lll .r L..-. IMdl 4tJ ... 4Jt 1 ,,_ Htrtll Ot~-~ ~ • 1-.11n COllYrleM. 1f72, Ol'•Mt Ctllf llllM!ltllnll COln!Nny, HI ,._. ••lft. tll11!1'.ftlon., ldlMrlll mettll' w """"II•.,...,,. '*•In -· ... • ,~ 1Wltlloul IJllC\11 ...... ntll tf C09'1'tlellt l'fl'Mf. llCMd CllU ........ MW ll'Cftl; MHe. C.Ntorn'-. lllbtf;ri.1111'1 lw Un'ler u. .. ,,.,!111Y1 lly !NH U,ll JMntll/fJ mltlt.,., fltflflllloM a.u mon1P11r. ~. They admitted they participated in the break·in and bugging of Democratic headquarters at the Watergate apart- ment complex on June 17. That left only two men on trial - James W. McCord Jr., former .ecurtty chief for the committee to Re-elect President Nixon, ~ G. Gordon Liddy, one-time finance counsel to the Nixon campaign. They are charged with con- spiracy, burglory, buglDg ud -p- ping al the beadquarters- Hunt is free on bond. Lawyers for McCord and Liddy spent much of Monday trying to discredit testimony by the star prosecution witness, ex-FBI agent Allred C. Baldwin Ill. He teotifled he thought his poliUcal espionage work for President Nixon's re- election campaign -eavesdropping on some 200 Democratic phone calls -was legal. Racial Inquiry Panelists Claim Laxity by Navy -WASlllNGTON (UPI) -A House arm- ed services subcOcnmittee that investi- gated racial incidents aboard two aircraft -canien charged loday-thal the Navy is fostering "permisslveoeas" a n d urged that command discipline be restored_ The subcommittee, which took 71 hours ol closed-door testimony last year, said it was unable to find any case of racial discrimtnatioo that could bave precipitat- ed what it called a "riot" aboard the USS Kitty Hawk Oct. 12 and a sit·in aboard the USS Constellation Nov. 3 and 4. "'Ibe riot on the Kitty Hawk consisted of unprovoked assaults by a very few men. most of whom were of below-aver- age mental capacity, most <lf whom had been aboard for Jes,, than one year and all of whom were black," Cha1nnan Floyd V. Hicks (D-Wash.) said. Hicks said h!5 special three-man auJ>. committee also found that the C.OOStella- tion sit·in was "the result of a carefully orchestrated demonstration <lf paMive resistance where a s m a 11 number of blacks, probably less U.an 20 to 25, loo- tered and encouraged among other bl'acks the idea that white racism waa <lf wide extent in the Navj and partlcu1arly aboard the Constellation." . Hicks, in remarks published today in the Congressional record, said the sub- rommittee found that the vast majority o( Navy men are performlng thelr duties ."loyally and eflicently." Art Historian Dies OAKLAND (AP) -Mt historian and scholar Dr. Alfred Neumeyer d°ied Sun- day at his borne here at the age of 72. Prior to his death, be was working on the first history of Ameri can art to be wrlt.- ter. in German. Roof er Suroives N eiv port Plunge Of Four Stories • A Fullerton roofing contractor Monday survlve<t a four--story plunge from the top of a Newport Beach apartment building. Jerry Luther, 41, suffered a badly broken leg and dlslocated blp in the !all, according to a spokesman at Hoag M~morial Hospital_ "He'll be here for a while, but he's doing okay," the spkesmao said. Luther was in no condition today to explakl the cin:umstaoces of the fall. Police aod flre rdcue units on the scene said Luther bad' fallen about 35 or to feet to the pavement below. He landed oo his stomaclt, ~upper ball or his body on a pile of sand and bi.I i..... on the ron-cr.te sidewalk_ -.- Luther told police at the scene he was ~·orting near the edge of the roof at 8001 Seashore Drive wben be loot his belance and fell. l'rotn Page l PEACE .•• of all U.S. troops Within ao days. A cea.se-fire would take place within 24 hours of the formal stgning, and an in· temational supervisory team would go into Vietnam to police the cease-fire. . The accord established a National Council of Reconciliation made up of represen~tives from the Saigon and Hanoi governments p 1 u 1 neutralista to supervise electkim which would determine the pollUcaJ future of Vlet- naJTI. The October aceord also provided that all sides respect the sovereignty of Cam- bodia and Laos, measures which officials said then would lead to a cease-fire in those countries. All U.S. and Soulll Korean troops would be wlbdrawn. There was no specific language tfor removal of North Vietnamese troops in the south. but various reports have said tin· un· derstanding existed on that point. Berrigans Grounded, Won't Visit Hanoi WASIUNGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme q,urt voted 8 to 1 Monday to stay a lower court ruling which woul4 have allowed an~ priests Phillip and Di.D.iel Berrigan o travel to HanoL The court acUon u Id a temporary stay l.ssued by Chief Justice Warren E. Burger Wednesday after a federal ap- peab court ovemiled a U.S. Parole Board decision blocking the trip. A bortion Aeproval Count y 'Life' League Call s Ruling 'Depressing' Pi.1onday's far-reaching U.S. Supreme Court ruling on abortton was described as "very depressJng" today by the prtsl· dent of the Orange County chapter of the RJghl To JJ!e League or Southern C.ltlomia. !Related swry, Pago 5.) Mrs. James F. Sullivan of 1703 Glblon Circle, Huntin1ton Beach, oald, "Beacule tbe nine members or the U.S. Supreme c.urt cannot agree wben life begins this doeJ not change the fact. that lbe unborn child Is a-·baman beln& and ls always the victim killed 1n an abortion." The head ot the antl·abortlon group was re(errlng to a 7·2 decl1lon which bal'! stales from Interfering with the decis ion of a woman Rnd her doctor to end pregnnncJcs within lhe lint three months. • ' Mrs. Sullivan, who cl'1ms a mem- bership ol S,000 !or the Orange County chap"'· uld the J11ibt To JJ!e League would r<double 111 ollort.s )ll.fducallon and aervlce in view of the ~&· "In educatk:m wt wlD contim.11! to empbaslu that even K a"bertlon la l'fal It dou not follow thlt it ll right, tvtn lf aborUon Is leaal II doel not follow U.at a woman mull submit to abortion, and It ctoe• not folio., lliat a plly1lclao must perfonn an abortion." Mr&.-Sullivan declared. _ • "And Jn lhe aru of ter••loe we will • advertiae even more ei:penslVely our seven hoUlne11 offering alternaUve11 '° abortion to all girls and womtm who ba\le problems ~aled with pttpancy." Tt l're•Pqe l . JOHNSON ••• n1tlon : The quality of its people." Mrs. Charles Beckham of Smithville, Tu., was the first person in.line during the mornlJli to !Jle past the casket. Sbe loot ber !Our cblidren out of scllool and drove 50 miles north. "I respect President Johnson," Mrs. Beckham said. "I was about to lose my only child and he helped bring my hus- band home from the mµitary." A jeUloer provided by Nixon wOI fly Jolm!oo's body to WuhingtGn w..ine.- daf. The casket will be taken to tbe Capitol, Where.the body will lie in slate in the rotunda until Thursday, followed by funeral services at the National City • Christian Church. The body then will be flown bact to Texas for a fll18.l ceremony and burial at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the family cemetery on the baIW of the Pedernales River, a quarteMhile from the -LBJ Raach_ -•'nie.e plans represent Ille wishes of the family ,,,. Tom Johnson said. Of Mrs. Johnson, he Wd, "I would desaibe ber coodiUoo as very sturdy. She is holding up very well:" President Nixon proclaimed Thursday as a naUonal day of mourning. · The Presldeol, in a public proo- lamalion and in a message to Congress, formally announcei the death of the 36th President. Nixon issued an executive order re- quiring closure of all federal agencies, except for those involved with the na· tional security, on Thursday -the day of the funeral. The President dlrected that flags be displayed at ball stall for 30 days. "Tbe whole story of the Johnson years in the White House remains to be told, and history bas yet to make its judg- ment," Nixon said in his message to Congress. "But millions of Americans will always remember a bitter day in November, 1963, when so many of our people doubted the very future of Ibis Republic, when ao many were atwmed at the very idea thlt an American chief of state C<lu1d be auasslnated ln this age, and so many abroad were fearful about the future course of the American democracy. And Lyndon Johnson rose above the cloobt and the !ear to bold tbls nation on course until we rediscovered our ,faith in ourselves·." A "We do not doclbt the outcome. The enemy's tide wlll be broken ... "I bllve asked you lo ·gn and be)p them_ I know you wW do your duty. May GOit blw and keep each ol you. ~ "We will be prouder wben' you come -and yo!> --the Job," Johoaon uJd_ Bu~ it WU to be· lt10tber Pre81dent wbo -• l>rlltl ·--" the 500,IOO i._ JallnloO commltted<td the I d.-of Southeast Alla. · :And, on tbe occasion· of bis 81st blrib- dlly, President Rlcbanl M. Nixon e .. t~ LBJ at tbe Western White BOUll Ill San Clemente. It -on tbJa A\llUll r7, 1111 visit that LBJ Dll!dt hll -'Jut (llWDlle to the ()nap c...t, a promise be wouldDi teep. • -:"Yeo, k la' roaJ pretty be<e in ()nap .,,__ . ~, .. "Maybe now that I'm a private ciUzen, I can come back and be JU.It lite the rest of the tourists and take a closer look at lhc area." Nodding to President Ni.Ion at a luncheon in LBJ's honor at La casa Pacllica, Johnson said, "He canies the burden now. I can do aa I pleue. I think ! will come back to Orange County,·~ he said. .. He never did. • • Raps in Mesa PoUce booked thre< Co•la Mesa youlhs on charg~ they ~ssed marijuana Monday after officers allegedly u:. covered a marijuana garden containing 46 plants ID their bedroom closet. • Tateo Into custody ..... Donald .t.. JOilin, IO, and John G. Shipley, 19, both of 820 Center SI., A~O, =:id Tlmotlly (l. Doolin, Ii, or zm ate Drive. J All • three were arrested by narcoUcs o!ficm at the Center Street addt<u late MonClay 1.fttr police received a tip that tlie youtbs allegedly cultivated mari- juana.. li r Police said the plants were be:lag grown Jn wooden r>Uk crates-allil ' meuured ... to !Our Jncbea In belglil- Tbey were about two weeb old. 11 The plan!t, almlg wit!J ball ~ OWICO of · purporled mart)Uaoa aqd lrapieota er pur1JCll'ted marijuana aJlegedly louncf elsewhere .In the house, were confiscated u evidence -\ .. . , ·-Death Bill Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP) -The dea(i, penalty Would be mandatory for fil1l· dearee murder in C.!Komla under a bUI introduced MO'ldlly-'by freshmoh Aasemblyman Mike Antonovich \ ' ' , Little Cigar { I t f FTC Seeks TV Ban on Product ' I , )VASHINGTON (UPI) -The Federal Tride Commission told Congress to-~ day the legal deflnllioo of a ciaaretto should be changed to include "Ultle 1 cigars" -and thus put an end to radio and television commerlcals for the • ~oducts. I Friday, the 81ylual surgeon general'.• "JlOrl oo smotioc said ''little cigars" I are probably 11 1hucb a health hazard as cigarettes because smokers usually inbale them. Two -ts ago, Sm. Frant E. Moss, (0-Ulah), announced plana ' to introduce legll!lalioo to ban broadcast commercials for the cigars. l The FTC said there has been a boom in "little cigar" broadcast advertis-I ing the pall year, and more than two dozen varieties of the product are being \ marketed. t Moot memble cigarettes in size, shape and design, but are wrapped in i reconstituted tobacco rather-than paper, and U.us escape lbe 1eiaJ deflnlllon at ) a clgam". · "The conunJsslnn believes that lbe pubUc Interest would be better ""'<!d \ If lbe defln!Uon of the term-!clgarette' ..• were amended," '!lie FTC uld. 1 / ' \ MEASURE FOR TREASURE • • Ono factor ..Vai!Oo ko\l " liy -cUilclinoi'I--rn buying carpeting is the measuring for y1rd19e •. Al of our s .r..mon know how to mHsur• end figure e11ct y1rd1g., ·often providing.. our cu1tomtrs 1ub1t1nti1I savi ngs in yard•Cl• alone. Also, wah tho tramendous installation tx· peri1nc1 our 11l11m1n h1 v1 (••ch previously W11 an expert inst1Her for us), wt are able t o forsoo any potential problem. Please stop in and look al tho trHsuro1 . available to ou through ~ur sto ... Wo have a glganli~ solaction, and the mHsuring will bo ACCURATE! • r ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES fi!\l;1 1 ~·~ r1 I -.,_,_~ iJ l~t~ 0~1 1 J _ , l· .. ·-· - --' L ~. --.:::--· ... ~ ~ -~." ----v., . -·~ ~, ·--. tit COSTA MDA llMCI 1"7 1663 ~9titla AYt. COSTA MESA 646-41131 HOUltS: Man. Thru Thurs., ' lo 5:30 -PRI., P lo 9 -SAT., 9:30 lo S ., " ., -- -· ... ''Ill-• ... , "J • h ~ B <I ~ b II N .. L u ~ ·Ill 1' b • J --· ~-----) .. Tmda)', January 2), .. ,973 , s • DAILY PILOT 3 • eary: Sajrs .He'll: A · ··Mainly as Own La wyer -• lly TOM BARLEY lawytr In the world," lndloatlng C4sta Leary'& plea Iha was abduottd from that thty tbould have a cnick at him I ., "' --'"" IJl111 trial lawyer Goorge Chula, who Alghanlatan ,returned to the United first." Flanked by a batttry ol lawyers and spoke for 1-y'ln the brief coort &!'lloo. Stateo to flee •P«Charlea, d"plte th'e-·-1.ear'h'bad served six lllO!lths of a state pushed bac~ Into hit. Jury box seat by a "But I will be prlnclpatly .!"COl!!!JU!<.lll>1<--fac1. that nation.has no truly o1 ex-PriSOI)-nn of ooe to 10 yurs impoaed to bevy o1 tolovlalon .. merao, Dr. '.timothy~ my._owo cW.,,_.mtl will ba<e a series tr•d!Uoo A/gJ!Jnlttan._ _ Or~ Cojmty w~e bolled from the · Leary lllDOjmeed Monday hi• plaDs to de-ol motlona to olftr and be ruled on befo,.. u ... ,.. VfrY uotlkely today that the gerlaiifc ward of San Luis Obispo men's lfand1ilmsetf In any Mure Orange County we can ev.n think of •going to trial," mo.lion WW have to he 'debated before colony In September, 1970, and began 'rl 'llUPfltl« Court acUon. Leary expJalned, frequenUy haltlng hla months of freedom that took him, on his ·.:•I.But; tM very rtm luut to be r,aolvtd comments to wavt"and grin to admiren . any Or~ty judge. own count Mondaf, to 11 nations. ~ ls the .... that I am here and wu In the packed COUl\troom audlenc_e. Chief Deputy District' Attorney James "We wouldn't be violating his rights or 1brotllht bore tU.gally,'' the 1tohetrotUng Judge Tumer pt0mptly denied Leary's Enrilht commented, as "Leary was any law that I know about by rushing &WU of the LSD Cult told lawyers and motion for permiask>n to defend hlmself whisked away , Wlder heavy guard to his him up there this week," Enright said. ~•en l.'DOnients aftor Judge James wblle making it clear that It was a m1; cowi~ Jail lsolaUop cell, that be is mak-"lie could then take up this issue of il- Tumer hetd'hls arraignment over to Jan. tion that abould be taken up at the time iQS 'every effi:l«'~to have Leary return-legal anest wltb"·the proper people and, 30.' 11: .. -of trial. ed. to Sa.it Lqb·~ CQ:\ll)ty this week. poulbly, go on trial up there on the Leary, 52, made it clear that he. will And he refused to uffer any Immediate "He 1 eaeaP,ed from there," he said. escape charge." qean heavily on the advice of the best Cilmment on the second motion uAnd IO It seems pretty loglcal to me Conviction on the escape · allegation ' . could bring Leary a rurther state prison term of one to five years, Enright said. . "Theu we'd have to decide whether to try him down here on his alleged master-m~ of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love,11 tile chief prOSiCUtor said. · Leary was one of nearly 50 penons in- dicted by the Grand Jury on their alleged link with a multi-million dollar drug Ciln· spiracy based In the Laguna Beach area but linked through drug traffic with many of the nations visited by Leary during more than two years of freedom. Leary had earlier dismissed the Brotherhood allegations as "moonshine, another bid by the Orange County district attor11ey's office to put me away . *** *** C:ult's LSD. Lab Policies fer ·Growth Running ·Water Faucet Turned On Policemen .:me ":t:!~:ier1=~:1: n::;:~ Louis, Mo., Sed to discovery of a cellar labonitory believed to hive supplied the Brotherhood of Eternal Love with LSD doles known as Orange 8unshlne the billion dollar drug smuggtlog ring is helleved to have distrlboted to poln,. from Laguna Beach around the world to Australia. The dixcovery led to the arrest of Nicholas Sand, 29, of tht 12511,000 estate near Fenton, Mo., 13 miles west ol St. Louis. He is one of 46 persoris named in Orange County Grand Jury Indictment. for their alleged lnvOlvement In tht ~rotherhood, an lnternattooal drug traf. llcking orgaolzatlon believed to be an qffshoot of a ...ngious organization found- ed In IMS by Dr. Timothy Leary Jn Laguna Beach. When mall overOowed Sand's post of- fice box, Fenton pallce went to the secluded· estate to Investigate. On seeing water dripping through tht living room celling, the Ftnton.policeman entmd. lie found· the dripping faucet , %5 . pounda of marijuana in an upstairs -...,, and the .LSD laboratory In the basement, poHce say. . Two daya later Sand was arrested when he returned to a garage to pick up • a car he'd left fOr repairs. Saturday night, an 18-yeaN>ld Cana· dlan, Leslle1 Daniels, was arrested OU~Jide Sand'l-~Daniels WU-laid to be carrying about $200,000 worth of drugs .and a inaehine used to compress Orange Sunahine into .. b:et.. Judging by tht distinctive mark& the machine imprints Into the tablets, in- vestigators believe they have put out of commission the operation responsible for manufacturing the LSD ,.bl hetleved sold by the Brotherhood in nearly every state and some 20 foreign countries. 'lbousands of tablet. with similar marks, autbortties aaid, have been seized in raids in Laguna Beach, New Jersey and Australia. Narcotics officers who arrested Sand said he wu involved in a San Francisco drug Oj)eration which was shut down after LSD was made illegal In the mJd- 1960s. Millionaire Augustus Owsley . Stanley was p'urported to be the leader of that ring. • · At the time of his arrest in Missouri, Sand al9o was being sought on a federal warrant issued after Investigators assertedly found 98 grams of another hallucinogen, STP, in a safe deposit box he had rented in 1967. When the rent on the bo.1 went unpaid in April, agents were on hand when bank Officials opened it. • Cruh Victim Alexandros Onassis, 23, only son of Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis, was fatally injured when his plane crashed during takeoff at Athens Aft. port Monday. Wives Blow Whistle ' On ,Gambling Mates ELIZABETH, N.J . (UPI) -Twenty· seven husbands have been arrested at local -hling clubs after a three-m2!!J!I investigation prompted by complaints from their wives. The arrests came after the women told authorities their husbands were losing all thtir salaries because of gambling "and how tem'ble their Christmas had been," said John Stamler, assistant county p~ ecutor. More SaddlehackDensity ~ 'Detriment' to Laguna Increased population density in the ~ddleback: Valley will have mat:ked_ ef· fects. On the city of Laguna Beach, members of the Laguna Be'ach Tax- ppayen were told at a recent meeting. "Can you see what will happen to Laguna Beach ~ the Saddleback Valley fills up?" asked Bart Spend1ove, presi- dent of the Saddleback Area Coordinating Council. Today, he s,aid, only 30 percent of the land in the valley ii developed. "Density is our number one problem." said Spendlove. "It should be the number one problem you are concerned with." "We should be cartful with growth policl~ that in the end may be detrimen- tal to us all," he warned. Spendlove said a major thrust of a geh- eral planning eHort now under way in the Saddleback. area will be to establish definite growth policies and "grOwtb rates" for developments. He noted that efforts of the SACC were successful in getting a growth rate of 20 percent per year ~itten Into the permit for the Canada Foothills development. "That's a little lenient. We'd like to see IO percent or five pereent. But at least we got our foot in the door," the SACC presldt.nt said. Other areas with which the city of La· guna Beach and the Saddleback area should be concerned, said Spendlove, ls developfuent of parks and recreation fa- cilities. For exaIQple.. ~___JJl;id, the SACC sup- ports maintenance of Aliso Cree.Ir: Can· yon _ "from top. to bottom" as a Greenbelt. Spendlove said lhe final area of inter- action between the two localities should be to Corm "poUtical clo.ut" to elect a county supervisor from the south county area. "The fifth district has been dominated by Newport Beach lnteres1s," declared Spendlove. In response to a question from Laguna Beach Mayor Charlton Boyd, Spendlove said that incorporation of the Sadd1eback area is "premature" at this time. "I personally don't believe it's the best thing for the Saddleback area," said _Spendlove. "Most of us came to the area to avoid the city. tr we inCilrporate. we 're back In the sane old rat race." An alternative to incorporation be ad- ded, might be lhe establi~enl of "municipal advisory cowicils" to v;ork with county government. County Planners Increase Meets The new Orange County Planning Com· mission has voted lo try meeting three days a week rather than the current two because of the heavy load of matters to be considered. Environmental impact statements have been added to the measlires which the Cilmmission must approve and they have proved .time Cilnsumlng. Regular meeUngs are now scheduled for Mondays and, Tuesdays with selected topics to be considered on Wtdnesda)'1. Under existing Cilunly 'law, the Cilm- mlssioners are paid for a maximum of eight meetings a month at $50 per meeting. The commi!sionerrr.' decided not to request additional pay from the supervisors unW the threi. weekly -meeting become permanent. • ln prison for my opin ions. ,. '"Ibey haven 't a shred of evidence to back those charges," !he closely guarded Leary said while his vocal supporters were being ordered to "coot It or quit the Ciluttroom." Possibly !he mos t vocal of his admirers · wa.s British socialite Joanna llarCilurt- Smlth, the 27-year-old niece of London publishing magnate Simon Harcourt· Smi th of the Harcourt Press, and the woman who repeated her earlier vow to "leave this place with Tirnothy 1 in freedom. "I love )'ou, Timothy, I love you, my darling," s.he called clea rly as Leary, his hair dyed black and hls bands manacled , apparently attempted lo clasp his hand s above bis head in a victory salu1e as deputies hustled hin1 from the courtroom. Leary readily ronfirmed ~1 iss Harcourt·Smith's statement that theirs was "the perfect love'' but would not comment on the present status of his rr.arriage to Rosemary Leary. 40 . Mrs. Leary, who was with Leary and his son, John, 23, when the family was arrested in Laguna Beach Dec. 26, 1968. and faced trial on identical drug charges. was with her husband in many of the na· tlons be visited following his break from the San Luis Obispo pri.<lon. "Rosemary .•. that's a long story," he grinned Monday. "She is a beautiful woman in many ways just as Joanna there is very beautiful. Look at her, she tells me I'm lting." Miss Harcourt·Smilh, still sallow fron1 her battle with the hepat.itus that struck her down shortly after she met Leary in Vienna, confirmed Monday that she had now "fully recovered" from the disease . "I don't believe she Ms, and I thlnk she_'j jeopardizing the health of a great many people who have been in contact with her since she arrived here," Enright &>mmented. But Miss HarCilurt-Smith, who said she will be staying with friends in Laguna Beach "for at least thi.s week," stressed that she was now cured and "perfec tly fit to fight the most important battle <>f my life. "We plan to Prove that your country is unjustly prosecuting a man who could be a great ally to President Nixon in his war on drugs," Miss Harcourt-Smith said. "Tim made it very clear on many of the occasions I was with him in Europe that his view s on drugs we re in many way~ identical to those held by the authorities here." Miss Harcou rt-S1nilh said she will also use "every means in my power " to make sure that the "true slo imothy Leary is told in the B · · press. "There is more mi>athy for him in Europe," she said. "People there recognize him ror the great hope that he is and not the evil drug advoCate who has been so repe¥edly condemned by bis fellow Americans." ; Weekend _ on the Slopes ' . Proves Real Snow Joh By TERRY COVILLE Of tllt ~r Pllft Staff I may not be as ifaceful as Jean-Claude Killy. I don't even rate a refer- ence ,as a "ski bum," but I definitely have been bitten by tbe snow bug. ohnson & son· invites you to come celebrate with them during our announcement of ••• I got my flnt taste of skiing last weekend at Big Bur. > Taste? It was more like a mouthful of snow. I burrowed more tunnels than a mole. I reduced the mountain to a mole hill. DON'T LEr anyooe tld you. There's nothing more 1<freshlng than a frosty smile, two rows of frozen teeth and a stiff tongue. I also found out why some guys still run around with crew cuts. Even a hot comb fails miserably against a batch of long, frozen hair. l The sti trip began badly. Fool& will teli you lt'a only J a two-hour drive to Big Bear. It too~ ua nearly five hours ...I Friday night. I Four would-be skiers set oot In my 1Jrother.Jn.taw'1 1 Vega. Safely tucked inside1 the car was a brand oew aet of . Ure chains for the.icy rvad. COW.U.I A SALES SIJP 'guaranteed us we oould retW'n the . chillna ti they didn't fit. That's small comfcn halfway up the moun,.in, icy wine\ ripping at your light clolhlng. . · 11re chains. con quickly ~uoe noophyte aoowmen Into a· poet of hahbtlog, llhlverlng, ~ flatlanders. ' A rugged loo~ mountain man ltnally wmle!td down the roid and of. ,-fered to fix our chains for $5. We would have paid llG. -· BY that time, we · had spent on hour outside 11rvgg11ng with the chains. Ooce on, they were too loose, rattling our Vega cace like aJi armoured pen!(& nel carrier. ~ Tilt CAR LOST a mud !lap and now has one large llote In the µbanal pipe. once we p1llie<I Into Big Bear Vlllagt ~·with a mtllloa otfler atten -It toot another hour to find ool how to drain the rodlator and fill U with anU· {J'eelt, I By 4 a.m. we were tucked safe1y, if not warmly, Into our cabin. By I •.m. we were. up and mdy for the slopOI. It tumed ollt the olopet wue better f1l'I: pared for us. My fl!'ll time oo slds I was -'8ed to find t could. aland Up. I waa evm more surprlaed to find mysell moylng backward& with Utile .,, no effort. • • I QUICKLY maate~ the ~·s basic move-the pnllall • We ~ In a beginner's cluo wlllch laugbt,. 1-._,.........,. -, tht allow· plow, tht '.mow plow tura, grabbiq the rope tow and lalllni. The anow plow lnyolves apre..un, your stis In a V formation (prelerably with tht Uj>s together) and dlgin1 into the soft snow. The snow plow tum Involves tliO llllllO m<Uiod, excopt you put more weight on one *1 and shove It downhill . wlllch. suppooedly turns )'OU. rr Tl1ltNED ME intO a crawler. 1 Grabbing the rope tow la a Jot of f'lm -for maaocilists. The rope la "°"' SIMUY slldlng uplllll. You llowly lrlP-11-wtlh --aad you're .olfl - youri:-=.wni~ la hoW to fall: It'• the Diiiy 1111'9 llep. Properly exoculod k k>ob UM a ar...iu1 lllde 1mo homo plate, your body uphill, your. aldsciowalllD. , Do it .,.... 11'1 more ii.a rlJll» ~ In mJd.nm bf a hilh ~ rllle. WB AUO loomed -Git 'fall llae -tho dll'lctlon In 'tlfllch akl1 WOllid naturall;y -downhill • thalr .... I left mi own fall 1bleo all over ibe aiopelieopite the -. oltpo and IRlmblel'. *ilns la ID txcltlnJ lrl(>. I'm reedy to 111 aptn. • . • . . --, 111111 lllLEllll * IF 1111 * • Refreshments • Gifts For the Kid s • Flowers For the Ladies Drawing £-or FREE Bl NIGHTLY •.• Tues., Wed., Thurs. & Fri. 8 P.M .. OPEN . 'TIL NINE .. Corne Get Acquainted with Our "G~kleri . Touch" . ' Home Of Tht New Car .•• "GeUea '.l'otoclo" ' I ' Ornnge Count11'• "Fomll11 of Fine Cars" 2626 Hai bor 81Yd.0 Costa Mesa • 540.5630 . o-Jlllle Seatll of tlte Saa Diego Freeway -r , ' Tea1n. -. -- ' "'Ii'· .... f ;JI! . ' - Home Of ,.,..,, NPw rar •• , ''Go'tte. l 1•11cll'' • l • ' Cat Catchers A Rare Breed CAT.CATCllERS DEPT. -Tuesday started \·e11· early around our house to- day 1o1 hen our number three cat, known as ~tC. did an a1o1•ful thing in the middle of the kitchen floor. Housthold animals seem to have a sPe- C'ial facility for selecting critical n1oments in home life at which to pull off some fonn of spectacular. This one oc- curred in the midst of breakfast.faxing. ~!C's bla1ant action so infuriated the Little Vt'oman that she dropped a frying pan, fetched up a rolled newspaper and sprinted through tbe living room, chasing the offending feline with a \'engeance. NORM AU Y, nns would have been an exercise in frustration. This time. ho1o1·e\'er. the cat lol'indow was closed. thw the offending animal was trapped and had to riverse her field. ln so doing, the Little Woman 1o1·as able to get in a few good licks 1o1·ith lhe rolled paper and a couple of special wortis for the beast. A! ~tc streaked back through the house, she y.·as forced to pass adjace.nt to our number four cat, kno"11 as Smokey 'Joe, alias The Mouse. The ~touse let MC have it with a couple of swipes .u she flashed by. The h-touse was not offended at "'.hat MC did on the kitchen floor . He just takes every opportunity in conftl!ion to get in a couple of good swipes. ALL OF TlllS brought Dog on the scene. He did no damage unless ·you coont barking and scrabbling about on the slick kitchen floor. 1ttC wm last seen sulking atop the teevee set. Elder son viewed all the con- fusion in a sort of detached manner and suggested he hadn't seen h.is mother so out of breath since the time ·me ctwed the ice cream man out of the neighborhood. That 'ftas several years ago. Despite the Little W o m a n ' s acknowledged agility, it Is clear she would have never caught tht cat in the first place if the cat widnow had been open. PONDERING ALL THIS, I thought· with some amusement of lhe Huntington Beach City Council which, in its infinite wisdom, is now pondering a law which would require the liCensing of cat..s. The •luntington notion is that each o"'Tler pays $5 for licensing each feline he owns. Unlicensed cat..s could thus be rounded up by a municipal cat-catcher. The vision of thU absurdity is enough to make you roll around on the floor laughing. Who, I ask you, can catch a cat? YOU CAN CATCH a cat under three conditions: IJ The cat is sleeping and doesn't care: 2) The cat wants to get caught : or 3) The cat is dead. If. on the other hand, the cat doesn't want to get caught, forget it. Cats .are faster tln their feet than greased light- ning. A slow cat is one that runs in a blur. Apparentl y trapped, a cat can put more moves on a pursuer than a halfback ruMing broken field out of sheer fear . Actually cornered, a feline becomes a fearsome thing which appears to be composed of only three parts: mus- cle, teeth and claws. IF HUNTINGTON BEACH ever does hire a cat-catcher, he'd better be quite a guy. Faster than a 9-flat sprinter . Able to leap fences and tall buictings at a single bound. Champion tree~limber. Skin as tough as leather. Even then, he'll still lose. You ~on't think so, just drop around our house 90me time. Storms , • I - Ul'IT......._ Trg Again, Mona • The newest resident at St. Paul's Como Park Zoo in Minnesota, is a baby, camel named Valenti.ne. born Sonday to Ginger, a dromedary camel. Zoo officials hope Ginger can successfully raise the call-un- like a m.ale calf born last ·year '"'ho had to be bottle fed. l 0.3 Percent Increase Tacked on LitJing Cost WASHINGTON (UPI) -Higher prices for eggs and fresh vegetables -plus big-. ger bills for such things as rent, property taxes, insurance and repairs -paced a Q.J_percent increase in the Cost oL Living in December, the government said today. THE BUREAU OF Labor Statistics of . the Labor Department said a sharp surge Kld11ap Suspert A knife-wielding ab d u c tor !sketch) took 11-month·old Thomas Michael Lauver Jr. from bis mother, Frances Lau· ver. 22, in a !hopping center in Modesto last Saturday. Po- lice withheld information in the hopes the kidnaper would re- turn the child. in wbolesale food prices in December - the largest in a quarter ~otwy -had not yet showed up in the Consumer Price Index (CPI). They can be -expectea lo be reflected in higher retail food prices in the Janury CPI, due out next month. The BLS said higher prices Co and for fresh vegetables in were offset to S<lme ~'eni.. • prices for meats and fresh food prices still went up 0.5 pe ast month -most for any month since last July. The BLS said the overall index In- creased 3.4 percent ror all of llr/2, same as ror 1971. It was well below the 5.5 per- cent advance in 1970, a 6.1 percent in- crease in 1969 and a 4. 7 percent jump in 1968. DURING THE FIRST 14 months or President Nixon's Phase Il eainomic controls -from November, 1971, through last month -the CPI also went up at a 3.4 percent annual nte, down from the 3.S percent rate in 1971 before the Aug. 15 wage-price freeze . But food prices went up at an annual rate of 5 percent in Phase 11 through December, the same rate as in 1971 prior to the freeze. DAILT PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE DtliYtry of the DallY Piiot ls 911arant!!d ~ .... , .... i.ay, 11 ,... " ... , b1¥• , • .,,.. ''"""'".,. S:lif , ...... c•U 1...t ,...., c~r will M .....,,.,, Ho , .... (Ill• -Uk.., \lftlM 1:)1 ,. ...... Sahlnla, """' s.Ny: II .,_ .. _, "'t(H ,.... ..,.,. ., t ....... Sa•-··· ., ...... . SuM1y, call 1M • ce,., wt~ lie ............ It ye~. C•ll1 1r1 l••t~ Vlllil: lt .. f!I. T tltphonrs Motl Ot"lnge Co\l'llfy ,t,rNI •42-4121 Morlll-1 H""'ll!>glon lk.,;11 and Wes!mlnlfer . . . . : 540· 1220 !an Cltlftfftle, Ciopfttr1na BMCl'I, San Juan Capl1tr-, 0.11e Point S.OU111~L1g1,1na, L"'9Ufll NIQu.I 4t2-4420 Hit New ·England Precipiwtion i1-i N ortl1.lvest, Texas ana Florida I l(ansan_ G9es~Rerserk Shotgun-wreld~ng Man Kills Five,;S~lf TOPEKA. Kan . (UPI) - A if.)'<ll'<lld llllll -• benerk Monday oliht, otonn· Ing t h r o u I h a .dinlY rtvor&ont neighborhood killina his boardina house landlady and four other persons with sholjun blasts. Police said they may neyer know why he did It. 'The IW1Dl&n be.came the slxth victim ol tho .melee when he broke Into a horn•, sat down on a couch, turned the 16-gauge Resort Owner Loses Wife To Avalanche SUN VAUEY, Idaho (AP) -Sun Valley ski re!!Ort owner William Janas' wife was killed by an avalancht--wblle skiinl: in an area "safe skied" and cbecfed by avahmcbe control experts half an hour earlier. · Ann Janss, 54, <lied Monday when a massive snow slide swept down from Balcom Ridge, seven miles north or Sun Valley. SHE WAS HELICOPTER skiing with three other persons when the slic:lf: oc- c~ said Ruth Lieder, a spokesman for the resort. Miu Lleder said hellcopten are used by skiers in remote aree of the ski area, where lbere are no ski lifts. The other thrtt. ~tr. and 1t1n. S&m Grossman of Phoenix, Ariz., and SeJte Gargarin of Fairfield. Corui.. were not hurt, ~tiss Lieder said. • U.S. Forest Ranger Butch· Harper said the area in which the avalanche occurred had been "safe skied" and certified mountain guides. "mosUy highly trained mountain specialists," had com11leted some two hours of avalanche control "·ork, including setting off explosive charges to settle the snow. THE EXPLOSIO~ WERE set off hall an hour before the skiers were allowed to be nown in, Harper said. Harper said the snow "fractured an estimated 15 feet above the skiers" and carried them about a half a mile down the slope. He said Mrs. Janss' body was recovered 55 minute1 Jilter the_accident. British Explain Immigration OK For Billionaire LONDON fAP) -. BilliOhaire recluse Howard Hughes was. admitted to .Great Britain last month without a passport bet.ause he "was able to satisfy the im- migration officer about his nationality, identity and means ," the British govern- ment says. Under Secretary David Lane of the Home Office told the House of Commons Monday that immigration inspection of. Hughes and Jiis party was carried on aboard plane when they anived by private jet at Gatwick Airport, south of London, two days before Christmas. Lane said the party was provided the facilities nonnally available t o passengers arriving by private plane at night. Hughes. 68. was granted admission to Britain for three months as a visitor after leaving earthquake-torn Managua, Nicaragua . e FREE Delivery Of Course Fe.,turing: THOMASVILLE, SEALY, SIMMONS, REMBRANDT, CAVALIER, LA-Z-BOY, ROY AL COACH, CAL.SHOPS, , . HECKMAN CABINET, BRANDT, HAMMARY, BER KLINE. shotsun to hi• he1Kl and pulled tlie trig· ger, THE VIC11MS included tho 115-yeo"'!ld landl•dy, l\e.r dau1ht1r and an elderl.Y man thoulht to be anothor boarder In !he homo, where tho gunn\fll Uvod. several houses down the street, a woman · watching televlsloo and I middle-aged man were killed. The body of the last man waa found four hours after the C.Cldent by • neighborhood woman who wu sorting 1hrough ck>the! In the ckllet of the house. Police said the victim had apparenUy tried to hide in the closet, but waa spot- ted and shot as be crouched beneath the clothes. "He tried to hide," said Detective Leonard Aahwortb. "'He just didn't hide good enougl;l." Police said all the victims Wert black, L'lcluding the gunman, .lderttlfied u Geritol Firm Fi1ied by FTC . NEW YORK (UPI) -The manufacturer of Geritol wu fined 1811,0tlO Monday for fabe a<l- vertlalna, The !inn was cited. for c1aimlnl that Geritol wu effective qain!t tiredness sympComJ In It _,,, .. • lelevtsloo commerclala ahowp on 100 octaslon!. The line ,.-$W,tltl0 qainlt J.B. Wllllama Co. and 1356,0tlO against its wholly-owned adv er tl 1 in g subsidiary, Parkson AdvertWng Agency Inc. -is believed to be the highest e'1er for vlolaUng Federal Trade Commission regul&- tlons against false advertising. Rooald G. Jordin, bellend on1in1lly from Denver. Ol!IE WOMAN WU -.nded at the IOO- oncl home, bul alle WU In oerloua ...,_ dltloo : and · unjler lnleNtve care at a Topeka hotpltal. A hoapltal 1poklllman said her conclltloo bad'"otablllzed nlcoly" early today, "We're having a hard Umt tnicklns down anyone who uvr thll thlna hap- pen," llld Lt. Milton Johmbn. 11Moat ol. them (wllnwe1) are "Cleod, and the woman who survived 11 in intensive care. "EVtn 1f lhe lives, it'• hard to aay if -we·can determineTmOtive or not; We'r1 stiU wottiq on It. You alwa:1t hope for witnessei, but )'OU never know." PoUce said the kllllnp were the worst mus murder In Kwu In at leut lbrtt decades. 1be last aensaUonal case was the murdera of four members of the Herbert Clutter famUy in the late 19505, cbronlclod by author Truman Capote In the book, "li'I Cold Blood." Early reports indicated that Jordan, who police described u having a mi.all crl.mlnal record primarily for "strong ann robbery," lnd1'crlmlnately knocked on doors In the nel&hborhood and shot whomever appeared . Jordan apparently knew all ol the victims he killed. THE BIZARRE attackll occurred in a mosUy black neighborhood across the KaNaa River from tho Topeka buslnou district. 1be. one and t~story frame homes, located in the shadows of a river viaduct, were within light of the dome of the Kansas Capitol. 1be injured witness was ldenllfled aa: Darlene McCray, 40. 1be dead were Mn. Jessie Mae Avery, 55, the landlady; Pearl Avery, 31, her daughter, and ~ar · Maddox, 63. Two doon away wu blcllle Cowans, 52, and Herbert Gatewood, described as in the early 409. Gatewood by ducking Into the closet apparenUy was the onfy per&OD who tried to escape Jordan. Nigerian Crash T t?,ll Unknown, Possibly 180 LAGOS, Nigeria !AP) -There was still no official word early today on the death toU in what may be the "·orst air· line crash in history. Airport officials at Kano, in northern Nigeria, said they feared 180 persons died in the crash Monday ol a chartered Jor· (..__IN_S_H_O_R_T._ .. __.) danian jetliner as it was landing during a period of limited visibility. The passen- gers were Nigerian ~1oslems returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. Reports said 29 survived. e Prince•• Crltlcbed UlNOON (UPI) -Princess Anne ha! come under attack again for going Im hunting. But this Ume she ba.s company -her boyfriend and a member of the councU of the Royal Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animals. 11le princess, 22, and Lt . Mark Phillips, 24, went !01 huntlng during the weekend. Riding with them were other members « the equestrian team that won an Olympic gold modal at Munich, inchld· ing Richard Meade, a member ol the council of the Royal Society for the Pre- vention of Cruelty to Animal!. e Ast...,..uts fa DC WASHINGTON (UPI) -The lut Apol- lo astrmauta visited Capitol Hill MoiJ!lliy. The entire Senate was absent, ~ the House the space explorers spoke to only about one.third of the members and to galleries that we~ half full. It was the tradiUonaJ tribute given American spacemen. The Apollo 17 com- mander, Eugene Ceman, noted the end of the ApoUo moon program in bis re- marks and spoke of the gains of the American trips to . the moon. . e (I .S. to Redure BfUes TOKYO (AP) -The United States and Japan agreed today to reduce and con- solidate some of the American military bases here and cu[ U.S. Air Force per- sonnel in Japan by 2,100 over tbe next: three years, mostly in the Tokyo ar,ea. The move wu made under mounUng Japanese pressure for mort land for a growing population and lnaiatent attacb on the U.S. military preience in Japan. But the projected-cuts wUl Ml change appr<Ciably I he U.S. llOCllrity pootur. eiQler in Japan or in the Far East. W• • M9'tf11t ............ .......................... i-t.iu,.-.,.. ... - rlct. • -.... ...,... .................... ....,. .......... WllWllcc ....., .. ....... wtikll ..... UllfW .......... -............. . Sae our new lines of: ANTIQUE PINE, a COLONIAL, • COUNTRY FRENC~ ENGLISH ind • MEDITERRANEAN. Al:L AT SALi PRICIS • • ., • U.S.Paper Abbrtion RuUng I I ' • Tursday, January 23, ltJ73 DAIL Y1'1LOT 5 . 'Useful' React ions at ·Odds Ju8tice to Study Nomi~e -. SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -governor. Reagan annoonctd THE 011IER members of Chief Juttlce Donald ff. the SUpreme Court ap-.the commission are Atty. Gen. Wt:libt hes Uked the Staie poinlment ol Jan. I as a Evelle J. Yoonger and Senior Bar of California to "assemble replacement ror the late Presiding Justice Parker To Eneniy '. SACfW.!ENTO(AP )-Tbe Los ANGELES (AP) _, U.S. &Jpreme Court'1 abortion An Anny aeneraJ teotlfy!n • rulln( has made "abortmn on at the Pentagon Papen trla,' reque1t" av1Uable throuSbout says a Vietnam war report the nation tnd that 11 good, written by Gen. William West-"Y' ·the O al 1 for n I a moreland nnd publ!ahe\I by the Leglolature'a leading aborUon U.S. aovemment In 1989 could advocate. have been "useful" to the ''The end reaults of thl1 enemy In Vietnam. declslon ii that 1tate1 may not J~t. Gen.. Wlllinm Depuy, impose any restriction& on who.helped edit the Westmore-abortions during the f~1t lMd report. iald Monday he th~ ~ths of pregnancy - knew lt v.wld be publlahed pe~1od, Sen. A n tho n y and IOld by the rovemment Be_1k!n10n (D-Beverl y .Hilla) prln"·• ff! f • Ht said Monday. ... '6 o ct or " o anyone Beil~ a u lb__Q r of who wanted to read IL Callrornta's 1967 Therapeutic e 'No Tampering' FAIRFIELD (AP) -De- spite a holdout juror'• claim that a aheriU's matron di~ cussed the Jl.l8.11 Corona mur· Abortion Act. "THE STA.TE hu no over· riding lnlertll which woold permit It to lnterfere In this verr ertvate dec lsion," said Bellen1on, author of CalUomla's t967 Therapeutic Abortion Act\ The court's 7·2 ruling tossed out state restrictions on abor· lions during the first three months or pregnancy and said states may impose only medical restrictions on how aborUons are performed, such as. making sure they are done by licensed doctors, during the second three months of pregnancy. . There was no immediate reaction to the ruling from Gov, Ronald Reagan, who recently had complained in an relevant factual nlaterlal per· Justice Raymond E. Peters. Wood Associated Preis interview taining to the qualifica tions" of==========:::::::=::..:=========::: that court interpretations of state Supreme Court nominee 1-; Bellenson's 1967 act had WUllam P. Clark Jr. virtually provided aborUon on Gov. Ronald Reagan, In· - nd I ~ ... , I hlch terviewed M o n d a y Jn a D \AlllorD a, W Sacramento after the &n· Reagan satd be opposed. nounc«nent, said, "I ain Ass EM BLYMAN John CALIFORNIA surprised. It .is highly unusual -virtually unprecedented. I Vasconc.elloa (0-San Jose), '---..... ----am at a toss to say why this who has opposed llbetallzed was suggested ." abortion bills, said he was T W Wright, chairman of the surprised by the ruling. "But WO omen. Commission on Judicial Ap- that's bow we handle prot> polntments. said the com· F d mission and not the bar would lems. We kjll people." oun Dead evaluate the qualifications or VasconceUos and Belleru:on did agree on one Juue _ the Clark, 41. best way to prevent unwanted Alo R d Clark has been an associate babies is by blrlh control. ng OU justice of the District Court of "There should be good. Appeal in Los Angeles since education about birth control McFARLAND.. (AP\ ..... Two 1'1arch 1971 and formerly had al I ,1 been secretary to the devices, sexu ity, faml Y women have been found shot ,-------~--life," VasconceU01 said. , '? •••Y·C•r• te•Tvt Wiii" (j" WE Wll BE CLOSED WED., JAN. 24th. TO PREPARE FOR OUR SALE WHICH BEGINS THURS., MORNING JAN. "25th. 10 A.M. Hiker Lives Student Lost for a Week (..__BRI_EF_S _) Beilenson said, "Abortion is to deaUJ along a rural 1aad In not the way to take care of northern Kem County, sher. unwanted pregnancy. The way Hrs deputies 1ay. to do it is to prevent pregnan· Deputle1 said the women's cy in the first place." bodies were found early Mon· Beilenson 1ald, howe\ler, day along Pond Road , about that he would not reintroduce two miles west of California ~ ·FRANCIS- '\,, .ORR cJ' der trial with her, a local 1ber iff says he Is satllfted there \vas no jury tampering. YOSEMITE N°XTIONAL 8 bill that would allow "aex· 99. FINE .STATIONERY under the tree, dumping rain ally active" California Deputlet Identified one vie· HALF PRICE on him for several days at a teenagers to recetve birth cort-tlm 81 Charlotte Fay Pitts, 43, $All time. Dressed only in cowboy trol devices -including con· or ·Delano and said the other c••D• -st.r.t10N1•v boot.I, )eanl, and a shirt and traceptive pills -without was tentatively identified as o•'"t' 11111 •cc&sso•111 llcht 1weater, Baxter buddied parental permll1lon because Aline Burm, al!O known as 1111111AI! 11,MWAr 111-1111 b111k•m1rlc;1,, • lllllflP "'llPtl <t4 f11h lo11 11l1nd, n1wport b11ch 6'44-1070 ' . However, Solailo O>unty Sherirr Al Cardoza said Naomi Underwood's claim that the matron promised to tell her things that woold "ease her consc.lence" after she cha.ng· ed her vole to culllY, "should be heard in court ." PAllK (AP) -Robert Bax· ter'1 114aY bike" turned into a weekloDa nightmare u he lay injured beneath a tree 1n Yll!elllite National Fort1~ In too much pain to move more than a few feet from where he sat. under a poncho for the worst Reagan baa vetoed the bill Helen Tacad, 56, of c1111A 1n •••·c•••111n1 r•u111 parttollheomrm. -~thn!t~~tiln~e1~stra~lgb~l-----M~cF~ar~l~1nd~---------~~~~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~================~~~~~~====~ Sleep WU U hard II food e OU Decreases OAKLAND (UPI) -The Coast Guard reported Monday night a "drastic decrease" in the volume of an oil spill that polluted an arm ol San Fran- cisco Bay and kUled nearly 300 water fowl. A l!)Okl!llllln said the re- malnlng oU from the vandal- caused spill waS noatlng In patches in the Oakland estu· Baxter fell from a path Jan. 14 while biking in the John Muir Trail near Nevada Falls. He was rest'Ued by a team of 11 rangers I ate Sunday night, ·a week after bis acei· dent. "Thfre w11 nally no one to miss me until the beginning of Fehn.iary," be said. Baxte:- fell about 200 feet from the trail. "I couldn't walk, I could only drag myself across the &n0w, so I placed myself ·un· der a tree to rest and wait:" iry, but that the body cl wa· THE TREE became hia shel- ter would remain closed for ter for the week. When he conUnuing cleanup, Two for-attempted to move the next elgn ships were allowed to d&-day, he found that his lnjur- part. tes were more serious than he had thought. Doctors said • _ he has five fractured -verte. ft Fl•1'"' Ru:e brae, a sprained anlde, abra- SACRAMENTO (AP) -Cal-skins and severe frostbite. to come by· for Baxter. He didn't sleep at all for the fltSl tv.'O days. "l'rS SURE changed my thought. about registering with the park before I go hik· ing,'' he said. "But I don't thlnlc I'll ltoP hliln1 and camping alone. It's such a good way to get together with yoorselr ... Acoordlna to ranceni, Bu· ter would probably never have been found alive if It hadn't been ror three_ San Francisco youths who heard one of Bax· ter's cries for help. "I think once the initial re- adion wean off, the whole thing wW be a good ell>Ori- ence. I had a lot to think aboul up there, a lot cl look- ing Inside myself. You .. a11ze how superfluous you are and how Important other people . are." lfomla health olflclab say the 11There wasn't anything to 11tate'1 detth ton from f1u and do the whole time," be added: -----=,----- pneumonia eomptlcatloru: ii from a hospital bed, his voice sUll on the rlse. lllsJIUy foggy by pa!n-!<flllng d~s. "I wrote novels and The epldemlc already has stories, t dragged myself to claimed 265 lives and ls mov· fora ge for snow ind Ice for Ing touthward, Vince Vandre drinking water; and arter • of the state Pubtic Health ~ day or ao t had a pattern for partment said Monday. The calling for help." San Francilco Bay Arel had •11 would call 'help' loudly, been the hardest Nl. bot Van· then ·wait for a ~t Qf five, dre s11:id the eoidemlc was then call help ·aga inf t h e n · e~H1in~ In NOl"'thi>:'TI Olllfnrnla count to s.Wy. The countin. anrt erowiM worse in Southern seemed to~el pan lhe time. C>11f""1la. Last wet"k's deith The only Baxter had ·-•1 I II It pl packed I hia day cl biking ~" " an -c v sam e was wa1 a lunch ot dates, carrots JDS, Vandre said. and nuts. It had to last hlm --~'"'"''··"· ~tl!P,ft for seven days. THC RED BALLOON LTD.~ ..,.,.-,_i;,,.,._ " "I ATE v~-dates e•-ry di• .... ••U.•11.11, •• , ... , SAr.RAMF.N'J'O (AP) -rJIJ.. "'"'"" ... .WMre•'• "-'· '".·r-~itii.•• lfl'lnlla could uve 1448 mllllon other day, and half a carrot Falhlon I•• I" int@Te!'t tlflvmf'nt.-1 If It u,"'11 the first haU of the week and Newport Buei the 1urnl111 ITI t~ ~te bndqet the other half the second part MUlll of the week. to c1tnr.tl unM)ld state bnnd5 '"The hunger didn't bother Town 6 Country in!t:Htd ol cuttlnr Income me too muCb," be said. "It Orange Uixeii. ~11Atlve Analyst A. was just a long diet." A1 1u1 Pt'.lllt 1avs. The weather didn't cooper-(714) J58..tltl ThflJ "°'1t'Mlr1i11An 1tn11l\tll"f: tnld ate with the fallen hiker. Two Huntla(lon Harboar thft S-n11~ F1n&nee Ccmmlttee violent 1torm1 croeaed lhe (714) 14&-IIU Moml8v th11t an lncnm@ t~x ~S~le~rr~a~s~d~urln~g~Baxte~~r~·1~wee~k~~!!!!!!!!!ii!!!!!!!i!!'!!!!1!~I cut wnold not 00 a "locrici:il" I· Wl'IV to di!linose of the surnl1tt1 hecause inr.nme taxes 1reri't where I.he bulk of tho surplUI came from. Reim planted Arm Failure SAN JOSE (AP) -Surgeons have been forced to cut off the . relmplanted arm of a b:al pizza maker which was tom ·off in a dough roller less than a week ago. • The new operation became necesnry when blood clots formed In the right arm flrteries of Bertram Vasquez, 2s, a Valley Medical Center l!)Okl!lrMll said Mooday. I m's • Air channels ~: Cellulon fibel to reduce ·1a~· and nlcotine ... astrange-looklng poly- ethylene chamber with baffles and air channels ... and a flavor you never !hough! P0861ble in a low "18(' and nicotine ciga- rette.Thar's the"taste me" system.You can't beat I~ wny not join II? "I~ you ta':: ::JP'----- ' Menthol, too! ---..r"'t • Let Us • • .. • ,. • • • • • .. l " '·' HOME DELIVER YOUR Fino OrocorlM Liquors l Wln11 Fresh Produce CALL COAST SUPER MARKET &7~510 U47 l.COAft Hltl'L Q~ON.+. l>IL •I r • I Werning, Tha Surgeon General Has Dattrmined Thlt Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. [ ALTER;MENTHOL. ll 1111-"UI', ti m~ nlcotr.. fl. Pit c~tLFTC llalottAUG.'.7Z. l -'~ .· • " I • . DAD.Y PJLOT-EDITOBIA.L PAGE Coping with Growt·h Noting that Los Angeles County experlencod an e..'Codus of 100,000 residents last year, while Orange County gained 76,000 -almost four-fifths of tbem from the Los Angeles area-Supervisor Ronald Caspers com· 1 mented, ''Los Angeles' loss is oUr Joss ... " He referred to their reasons for leaving Los Angeles County -rongestion, rising land costs, smog -imply· ing that these disadvantages may be in store for Orange County if the population influx continues. Caspers ren1arked that 1lie biggesf cause'of deterior- ation of the environment is a continued influx of people. \Vhile this is !airly obvious; the question of when, bOY.' and if the tide could be stemmed is much more com· pl ex. Attempts have been made to slow it down by set· ting building height limits, zoning for lower densities and preserving land for parks and greenbelts. But there is clearly no wa y for the county, nor any of its cities, to erect enough barriers to halt the steady flow. So it seems apparent that any effective develop- ment slo\v-do\vn is going to have to be based on some new standards for development, cooperatively arrived at by the cities, tile county and industry, arql strongly supported by popular opinion. There are many things Orange County can do to lessen the impact or increasinng population. 'The firsl is to observe, analyze and, for a cba.oge, pay some heed to the missteps tbat h • v e led to ~n­ vironmental destruction in existing overcrowded areas. And it will take.more-than merely refiex calls for "more open space" or blind inveighing ·against ''higb- rise" to come up with ·a balance that is environmentally and economically viable. Open space may have to take multiple forms other than only being "green· belt." Land prices being what they are, housing for tow income families inevitably means high density housing. And in some locations, that can mean high-rise. port ..... ua1s. ) Calelul zoning to control llelteMkelter develop-• ment ... perm! adequate rrolit for landowners' witb· out letUog deilsltiu get ou of band. In tile long run this will work to eyeryo~ advantaee. · But most importanUsJndlvldual awarenesl that Ille days of Ille promised land are numbCred unless we all learn how to blend tGleraD<e of our neighbor's needs ~1111 day-te>dlQ' concern for •our own litUe patch of Orange County. . Wea pons of W ru· -. They're known bY, such colorful names as -Com- mandos, Enforcers, lagles llld' Spitfires. They can IW11 a sillgle, warped individual into a one-man army capable of wiping out ma.oy of tile "enemy," real or imagined. ' Just this month .011e. pf them. known as a Co~ mando Mark m, brought sudden deatb to two Loe I.Ji. geles Sheriff's ,deputies. The officers, armed with tbeir service revolvers, hardly expected the murder •usPect they were seeking to arrest 'to respond with a ball of bu!· lets from a sub-matjline gun. Most people would guess,. correctly, tbat it's against the law to owa a maclline IND·• Unfortunately, it's still possible to buyand own a semi-automaUc weapon.like the Commaoao Mark ill ai\ii otbera of its. ldricf. • They're handy, we're told, for home defense, target sl\OoUng an..d hunting rabbits. . ·And.apparently it's' simplicity llsell to make a few adjusbJ\<nls to change that "semi" Into fully' automallc. ·~ I ' 1 ' -- And, for the first time, we now have to assume there are limits to our road capacities, energy supplies, v.·ater and sanitation facilities and other .urban life-sup- SU"ggestions , for Ugbtelllng gun reguJatlons in·evt· · tably ge~te a storm of emotional protest. But It is clearly time for soll!e legislaUon to persuade "target shooters, bunters, homeowners or others who feel their life s.tyle.muires guns that they can get along witb l05i. automatic weapons. They are even more spottihg,-.nd' a whole lot safer. ~ DOMINO TTIEO~Y Moderates Stand Back In Crisi s Dear Gloomy .Gus News Restrktioas f:•tiaue to Grow Censorship a Worldwide Problem • • ~YDNEY J. HARRI~ U we understand socjal psychology at all, we must recognize that one of the main reasons the world keeps getting in- to messes regularly lies in the fact that "moderation" alone lacks a dynamic power. I mean by this that the great bulk of people everywhere are moderate in their views but moderation. unlike fanaticism . does not inspire action. Rath- er, it lnstiUs an amiable passivity in most people. Then, when a situation {usually through long ne· glect) heats up to a crisis, it is the rabid partisans on either side who take command, and who try to take advantage of the situation, in-- naming feelings, exaggerating injustices, and making conciliation all but im· possible. THIS HAPPENS, time ·and again, on every level -bel\\ttn nat ions, between races, between religious sects, whether it be in the Near East, in Ireland. in American cities, in French-speaking Canada, or in Belgium, where the Flem· ings and \Valloons are grappling bitterly over a language conflict. All these conflict s could have been set· lied justly , and wilh relative amicability, had the moderates on both sides paid any attention to the festering wound. But, in Yeats' famous line, "the best lack all Auocialed Preu In the last year foreign eorrespondents around the globe have laced growing · """"""'1ip probl-; mostly'tbroulh 'ar· rest or expulsioo, the tbreal of expulsioo or the dEllial ol entry .visas. (GUEST REPORT J ; A record-breaking $4 million for Nixon's inaugural! Was ii all neces- sary? We know he's really the PresidenL Half of thalJ.igm'e could feed all the hungry children In lhe stricken city ol Managua ••• -C.O. They abo eocouatered lhe iDcreaslng -form ol beavy-handed censorship still ex· refusal of officials to provide lads and Im In Ugandl. ftb ... !wt ret*h .......... .,...... .., were hampered by state Control or There is no official censorship in -UMftl'J' .......... -.. -. s..i rwr ,.. ""'9 '9 G'-"!Y NI. D-"Y Plllt. censorship ol the )ocaJ ~ oa which Nlgoria, but !ear of arrest and detentioD foreign reporters · often depend 'for news without trial inhibits press freedom in lips aod background iD!ormation. bl~ Africa's most populous oatioD. conviction. while the worst are full of 11lE ANNUAL Associated Press passionate intensity·" survey of the flow of news across ill- THEN, when the outbreak of hostilities temational boundaries shows that formal is already inevitable, the moderates on censorship as such -the government both sides are bullied and browbeaten in-man reading dispa\Ples moving into and to rival camps by the extremists, who out of a country ~~w only -~tly, assert that anything less than their zeal IYl0$1 notably In the~·- is a concession to the "enemy," is President F~ f:. Mireos halted betrayal and treason to the Cause. that nation's 25-year tradition ol press The extremists are always il\ the sad-freedom when he imposed.martlal law in dle during a crisj.s, with their implacable September. · slogan. "If you're not with us, you're Most of the informal censorship, that against us" 1 done through intimidatioo or dose.mouth-- nus IS the sad history or all wars, ed officials, occurted in' developing coun- wbether the religious of the 17th, the im· tries of Asia, Africa and Latin America.· perialistic ·of the 19lb, or the Ideological They considered it· a vnfy to' protect their of ttie 20th. When the lines are drawn, images in the outside world. · ~ there is no longer any room for the The Internatkmal Press lmtitute con- moderates -even though they may have eluded tb.a.t the Upitedr states ·also lost been in the majority all along. They are some pew: freedom, ~ this was simply swept up in the {renzy of.r.age and mare apparent intemallj' tlian 00 outgo. hate and blood-lust. ing Stories of foreign correspoodem,,_ The What all societies desperately need is lmtitute says the U.S. government "in some kind of rational mechanism that will various guises is attempting to chip away serve a self-correcting function in sucb at press freedom through ·the courts ~ cases -like the thennostat on a furnace by thrQi.ts of court action." that automatically starts up when the This is the way AP correspondents room begins to chill, and shuts off when . o.verseas describe the current in- it gets too warm. If we let it wait too tematiooal censorship situaUon: long, we would either freeze or bum. \\rithout such a thermostat for the body politic. everywhere, there is little hope for peace. • AFRICA Several otber .,,._._, in wei~"OI!~ sqotbern Africa do not exercise advance ceMOrship, but the lhreal of e.pulsjon is widely used _ to pressure fcnign newsmen. Matthew White, a Briton who was a part.time correspondent for 1be AP, was given 48 hours to leave Malawi in Nove~r. Foreign oboervera detected an Increase in press freedom in Liberia under reform-minded Presldeol Willlani .R. Tolbert. Liberian newspapers still are not free enough to launch an outright verbal · attack on the government,. but there is more . critlCal comment than in lbe days of bis pn!(lecwor. 'Mlere is no fonnal censorship of in- coming or outgoing news in South ~ •. · but residence permits tot foreign newsmen are carefully coo.troll~ ASIA The imposition ol martial law in lhe Philippines multoii In the hamllng ol reports from abroad aiUcal Of the ·coun- lry, temporary Cftl80nlhip of outaolng dispatches, the suspensioo of about 10 major Manila dallies, 30 radio and four television statkms and the arrest wit.bout charges of 23 journalists. Rod Will Be Spared In September,.14 foreign reporters, in· <:)udlng .As..,.iat<il ·Press! correspondeot Andrew Torcbl&, were arrested and jail· ed In Uganda miring an lnvaskln by foes of the government of President Idi Amin. Never told why ·they were detained, they · surmised it was ~uoe-tbey would not accept uncrlUcaljy Ifie· olliclal pro- nouncements on be figbtilfc. All· even- tually were released ind deported. A By mid-December, the Philippine government bad relea!ed 13 of the Joumalllts held and bad allowed three ntWlpapen to' Jesume pub~qition under tight oontrola. ~ new paper was given a f1m1111 ~ publish, becal\S< -in the words Of ooe ofllclal -"they've agreed to write1 po9itive news~" f'rtsldent 'O>mg Hee Park Unposed marUal Jaw,. lncluding strict prt81 •...-Ip, .IJil South Korea: late In.NI% Thi1 censorship was lilted after two - months , and Seoul authorities made almost no effort · tn cenSQr outgoing dispatches formally. but foreign journalists found It more difficult to report on Korean developments beCause domestic restrictions set down in a new consUtuUon dried up Korean sources. EUROPE In Spain, the foriign press. was not sub- ject to censorship ol outgoing news per se, except by the threat of u:pulsloo. This bas not. happened to a permanent correspondent in four years. Spanish media, however, continued to be cen . Sometimes, the office of the presidency' calls editors tn advance and. tells them to avoid tett.3in subjects. Otherwise censorsbJp Is accomplished by threat·of closure. · -·Dispatches of foreign correspondents were not censored in GreeCe, but the govertunent-controlled Athens News AgencY ceMOred incoming itews before dlstribullng IL The . <1£ency deleted anything ·which might l'embarrass the authoritarian government. Britain ls about u free of censorship as any country, but a government com· mittee urged reforw ol the Official -Secrets· Act that would have the effect of ~n;nitting more investigative reporting • similar to that ~ in the United State,. LATIN AMERICA CARIB8¥N I N8'1ft: aieoc.ies and other foreign cor- respondents resident in Chile ' were told they would face wupecilled difficulties unless they complied with a government order to submit copies of their outgoing dispatcbel to the presidential press office . twice a day. . While internal cen90rahlp remained alrlcl under Brazil's military government, foreign newsmen encountered little di!fU:ulty sending news oUt of the coun- try. The lack of basic civil rights for B,ljlJlllam and lnternAJ cenaorship, lioWever, made it dlffiCllll,_ for cor-,.._.ren"' to obtain lnlormatioo. · 'There was no pbyaical ceosorship of stories l>ehig lratllinltled oulalde Argen- tina, but the 1overnment nwie it clear .. that a foreign correspondent ooiild go to ·jail if he was responsible for publicatlm abroad of news emanat~ from gu~ groups. . Uruguay, with a long history of civil liberties and press freedom, has'been un· der De'4'S censorship sinCe 1999 as part of "the government campaign against Tupamaro guerrillas. The state of siege was replaced in September with a tough security-law which bars pubUcatkm of in-- formation dealing with subversive ac· tivities unless it is issued In com- muniques. In th< Caribbean, CUha continued to censor incoming and outgoing news dispatches .. Western newsmen working for media deemed unfriendly _by Fidel Castro's government could not get entry visas. lltIDDLE EAST Censorship officially does not e1i!1t in Egypt, but every. foreign correspondent knows that a censor is the first·per&on 'to read his story on its way out of the coun- try. A ma}or problem for foreign COi'· respondents in Gairo is the lack of access to officials. 1 In Israel, news concerning mllitaty security. army, oil and 90IIle stories of the occupation of Arab territory re-- malned OD the military censonhip list. But there were signs the rules were being relaxed. Only minor censorship was imposed during the attack on J;od airport by Japane5e terroristJ and the llj- jaeking of a Belgian airliner to Uie airport in May. , SOVIET UNION No American newsmen were expelled from the Soviet Union in 1972 -perhaP,S an indication of government reluctande to disturb the process of Soviet·Americaii detente. ·A British correspondent Dav~ Bonavia oC the Times of London, ~as CJ· pe~ed .in May. A Japanese newsmao, !'tkio Kunura of Asahi Shimbun, was told m October to leave "voluntarily" or be expelled. He left. Outgoing news dispatches continued to leave the Soviet Union uncensored. P~ographs, ~wever, were subject to close scrutiny. -EDITORIAL RESEARCH Caning is to be banned in London 's primary schools. A delayed dispatch from the Dickensian era? No. the Inner U:>ndon Education Authority has decreed that teachers in such schools may oo longer Te sort · to the cane to inflict punishment. Caning of older children in secondary schools will con· cat o'nine tails on convided robbers 9,"as tinue. Edward Chancier, head of the Lon-legal until 1920. ()~ ·~ecoming a Prr~ature Antique: don Schoolmasters' Associati~, says: On the lsle of Man, the nogging in· "The cane must be kept as the r ltimate strumoot of choice is the birch branch. deterrent." Harry Corlett, a former police-dog ALTHOUGH the heads or mos London handler who now adminlsten blrchings primary schools oppose the banf The there, told The Times of London that, London Evening Standard probably was •,•As far as I am concerned, there is only correct ·1n' auertlng that, ·~1 ~he one thqtg wrong with birching : Those '111wt.ckWns of ,ttli! world are on their who deserve it don't get enough of it." way O!Jk'"8UU, there Is litlle chance that 'lbe ·blrch branches used for nogging Parliament would approve legiSlatiob to are 'seJectOO each 'spring and cut to ii outlaw caning, rtrapping .(em ployed in . length of 40 inches.· Boyl between the Scotland), and other fonns of corporal ages of J'i and 21 are blrched on bare punishment in'•ll or the n1fipn'a.sch0ols. flesh ; those between 10 and t'f, with their The Brlllsh prw relishes ....-i can-ln>USen on. John Boltoo, chairman of tHe ing storlet. Roy Smith, a Qoydgn heed-Isle of Man's fioaaee ,~,r mltendl m .. ter lut year IUSpC!lded 1 J31'""1'()1d • · thal blrcllll!&• pmlde a l&lutary boy for' refUs!nr to accept ttfO strokes. :A lesson.'~ Betides, he sa"' t"lhe lltUe 16-yeaN>ld In London took six wbacb, bllgb\iri. • ;,want lilmlllatlng." ' al'ter a woman teacher fo\ind a c::o6:' .1.-traceptlve In his d<sk And tbe he» NOi' llVBRYON& loell that Wlf. A ol 2 -p11' ·-• group coiled the Society ol Teocben Op-moster a ,-pu c:o111pre.~ns1vc -'"""'to ~ . I Punl hment (STOPP) scbool complained that he was I0<1ng bli JN"<" , .. ysica • tooch because he had put the wood to on-haJ ~uncbed an ant_kanlng campaign. ly " boys last term. The 1mlble is that S1'0PP haJ only 700 memben out of the approximately 400,000 penlOllS employed In the educo- tlonal system. In h~ book, Ccrporol Punishment In School" Peter Newell reports that between 80 and 90 per cent of British teach<n oppoce 111< abolltlonl•t cause. ~foreover, publlc opinion polls show that parentJ support lhe r\iht of leacbers to apply-tbe rod to lh<lr children. SMAIL WONDER, then, that BritJln Is tbou'ght or In some 1cl.rclcs 111 a nation of nagellantJ. Samuel Johnlon wrote In 17'15 th•~ "The'" Is now leos !loping in our greal achools than formerly -bot theo · fess la leamtd there ; "' that what the t¥>.Ys get at ooe end they lose at the otliel." Eii&llsh lll!Sbanda could legally flog their Wfves until 1891 , and use of the ,, •. • l I Everything on eanh matures and grows older -from microbes to, oak trees . But some things grow older sooner than they have to. People in particular do. Some people. They let the years suffocate them early. They give up on life and become tiresome victlms or thelr o w n ennui. They Jose UMects- sarily the lnspiratioD lhat change brings. They deliberately seek 1he sal'ety and anonymity of the Mil. ·( ) . HAL BOYLE • It has been three montjls llnce you reed a new book, and it'I\ Jll'dbably -be ll)!>tber lbree mootha be ore you get skiing is cr81J and an;rone over 50 who plays• i.mua· 11 either showing off or dellberately tnYIUng tbe undertaker. '11le g11rdeo patch tn your bockyard is Jen untlJ1ed ,bocfluae the year be!-last your J"'lPbor srew bljller tomatoeS than you aid. around to reading ooe. .. £\.oty mor;nilig ~ nke up feeling t!relf ...: day alUor day after doy. I I Ev~ lll<llll to h'ave IDOi< flln than IN TUE LAST live years yoo hayeq'I you do. made l\\-o.-new friloda, or ~ea founcf-one ,. 1r 'BAS ...:.....t _ .1 • __ . tliat yoo·re reslly slruck by. And you'd 0~~" yeors alnce anytlllng ' rather talk lo your old fr-tver Ille burl you eao<'8h to make you cry, bu~ telephone lhan go place.a with them. you lwfllne aboUf,~n:uticm many You have three balls ol strlns ·In a limes a day. Youd ra complain ~ ldtcben drawu, and you'U go ......., on praile. The wbol• . ol counie, ~ I consists largely of a 11eries of sporadic grunts. . When spring comes, you are the last one on your b1ock·to see the first robin.J Man, you aren't Just growing old. Ym are prematurely man u I a c t u r u t 1111 yourself into an antique. J OIANOI COAIT .. ' - DAILY PILOT ...... -• .... eopced la • flllantlc i9<-oolraey ·-.... -·-. ' you -good lleovens aAer" all 'Ii no1 -DOW -CAN ONE t<ll if· ha II un-Reading the oblluary l!!I~~ your paraoo1t1 _ bu1 moit GI tbt ~you- consciously letting hlmoell act and f«J oeWlpapor giv,. you 1DOre p!eoMn thali mee aeem to !If. Rober N. Weed, ~bliahe Thoma• Keevil, Editor ..,;;._ BCh'boro..J:rtiWc.I\ Edftoriat Page Edito .. • ' ' ' I f older than ne reelly needs to be! Well. ,.,ding tbe .>portl paco. Oo tJ1i liCli<t If )'OU have 1 secrelfrY you oever II lhe penoo « you, you ahould give hand, there are a lot cf ""11 wben botbet to tell her thal abe•i -~·· a :'.":If !~king up 11 these things are ' nobody loterestlng ....,. 'to die, aren~ pretty dresl or that you llk;b;'1.., ,_, hereJ ---·-• balrdo. • Yoo watt ~ until .a new film b on When you p for.-a • "1t, m out d As 1 'm1tter of fact _ don't even te1"'13IOI\ !>el ... ~ eee l,I. W1'Y go to live u\Ma ':IOol'. follc\w t .. -nut&. -r.. tell lw lhat y.."l"'don'I like her the bother <I C?i"I O\I\ to a movie and Your Sonday drfviol , have fl'llllD prt11y new l>alr*, paying mon~-""" when you can aee II • patterned too. ' You tol -it tbt--p!aee.avery for nothing lh a year or two or three? -.... aod M "' u -· ha to You never have to loolt around lhe INFANTS '1orl you, leenapn lntUle """ -1'" ,_ ve go house to find an)'thlnc, because you know you, and coll<ae lltudentJ all aeem IO be to 1 .different ont. , where everything ls -11'1.just when it unbearably ·radlcal. ,YOUR CONVERBATION Mlh ·you•~ beloogs. · You thlilk that anyone over 30 who goes w~e_ ,Is usually lllODOl)'liablc, and ·oflen • 1, I !I r • • • t I.' \ j , ' • " -j I I I I I I I l • t ( l I -_J I ,- . -' I J 4 ,~ ,c I '< " • ,• • _/ -, I l . -• TurSIUy, Ja""wy 23, 1973 $75 Slated 17 Cities in F old DAILY PILOT 7 • Gain. Seais N-ew For Winner FlJU.ER'!ON -A contest is btin( bold IO produce an of. ficlal ,.., for F\11lertoo COIJege. First Meet lly O. C. HtJSTINGS takes in the aouthern coastal receive IChool credit for duties ·Ana PubJic Ubrary, 502 Civic ' °' .. °""' "-' ... " area of Orange County. as member• of the Student Center Drive West. Tho desJins enttrtd, must meuure at least three inches length or In height and must For Cou ty ·ICC ho.freshmen congressmen represenUng Orange County Appointments are made by Lobby during the 1973 The meeting ls open .\o the have been given committee the Republican Conference legislative s e s s i o n in public. For further in· aas~nments by the 9w upon recommendations by the Sacriunento. formation, call Virgil Elkins, Congress Republican Con-Republican Commlttee on They are: P.1ansfle ld Collins, 542-788.t be adlplable to the use of the By UCK BROBACK I ~~___!l_K.l _gold <.yllege con_ Of ... o.11)< ...... '"" ~a floaWaiil will be given s;INTA ·lill -Orange to:,tht winner. County's new lntergoveriunert1- Entrle1 must be aubm.itted tal Coordinating Councll will by Mll'C!\ I to Amanda Smith meet for tbe first time Feb. 7. coordln110r of ciiinmunlty Orange City Councilman servlm, at the college, 321 E. Don E. Smith. cbainnan _of a .CllN>Mon Aye., Fullerton clty-<oU11ty committee work· 921M, 171-«JOO. • ing on organilatiOii or the new govtnuneotal body, said 117 Facts Offered ' ' Aho~t Cancer _ TU$rm -, "~ Facls and Figures,'', a booklet with the lateat lnfomialion · on cancer research and .... pro- tection, Is ndw available at Amel'lcao cancer l!o<!ety of· flees here. · The officQ are -from 9 a.m. to 5.p.m..al 11316 Irvine_ Blvd. cities and tbe county already have IP.IJl'OVed the concept. Most of the council's actions would be aimed at such iJSUeS u open space, recreation, tranapOrtatloo, com- munications and regional plan- ning:- With 17 cities and the coun- ty ,~ up the JGC ·is a reiliijr, Smith· aaid, 1nasmueh as much more than a majority of the county's 1.5 mllllon population is represented. terence. -Committees. Rosalyn Jmmer and Bruce * * * Buena · Park and Garden Rep. Andrew J. Hinshaw of * * * MlnlO. t, * * FIVE ORANGE Co as·t G M•··lo VI j ts residents have been appointed rove. ~ ~ n eo won sea on T·~ • pnder the loint powers two committees -Govern. SOUTH~ COASI' Republican IV!o.P ERS Incorporated by Assemblyman Robert E. agreement approved by the 17 ORAHG£ COUNTY ment Operations and Post Of. Fonim members from Irvine will meet Friday to discuss Badham (R-Newport Beach) cities Ute JGC can hire Its own flee and Civil Service. He and the Saddleback Valley·will plans for a statewide initiative to the RepubJ lca n State ·Cen4 staff, lease office space, '--------..I represents the 39th District, nieet to elect officers at 7 p.m. that would reduce property tral Committee. purchase supplies and equl~ the,,only Congressional district Friday in the Saddleback Inn taxes. They are: P.1rs. Edwin F. ment and levy assessmen ts: en£1rely within Orange r.ouoty, Wine Cellar, 1660 E. First St.. The organization also will Steen Jr. and Herbert Shearer agaln!:t 1.ta n1emben to cover Bo S Rep Clair w. Burgener~ Santa Ana. discuss a redevelopment plan Gavin Jr., both of Corona del an annual budget. y COUts serve on the Banking and CW'· Dinner follows the no host In fianta Ana and salary in-~tar; 1-tlchael Nason of 1be JGC cannot tax or own rency Committee. The San ri!ceplion at 8 p.m. Tickets at c reases for c o unt y Mission Viejo ; Paul H. real property. Decisions need Otego Cowrty .Republican joins $5 each may be reserved by supervbors. The meeting Presley of San Clemente, and ~t be ~pted by any m,. · Schedule another Orange County calling 552-7797. begins at 7:30 p.m. in the Charles P. Taylor of Laguna divldu81 member and cities CongttSSman, De m <1 c r a t · * * * nr.Spur;;;geo;;n ~·Roo;;;m;;a~I ~the;:San~ta;:;;:Bea:;c~h.;;;;;~;;;;;;:;~ can withdraw by May 15 of l Richard T. Hanna of P'ullerton 1118.EE IRVINE residents each year. Top Angels on that committee. from various University of Under the agreement, no c~ Burgener'• pod California .campuses will ty can be charged more than • ~~~~~~~~~~~~;~;-;~~~~ 12 percent of the budget. The ANAHEIM -c111 if or n I a ti county's share will be 15 Angels owner Gene Autry, 'pe.:b:ntlimits were placed to John Roseboro, Angels coach, p~ent any city or the county snit Bobby Winkles, Angels from dominating the organiza. manager, will appear-Jan. 31 tion financially. at the soth anniversary dinnet Westminlster is the only cifjy of the Orange County ColmCU to vote-outright not to join the of the 'BOY SCoUts of America. . i--cDe-•7'dl..,...,., N_ot_l<l_ee~a~ .ctues which have yet to ap. prove the-cooiiCn-include Coeta Meoa, Seal Be'!Ch, San Clemente, Loa Alamitos, council. COuncibnen charged that ·tl!e , rpU.ty already has Winkles will .be master of enoµgb > "°'PtCils, commissions ceremonies and Autry and •nd Ccnmittees and ~t the RoseborO. will present the an-- city could·best handle its own nual Silver Beaver ahd Silver 3 Writers To Ap~­ At lrV:iiie - PITr.e~Gc replaces the. in· Fawn awards during the din- fonnal 1 • Supervfsors ·', and ner ·at the Anaheim Coo- Mayors 1Conf~i'ence which has vention Center. met monlbly for the past two Tile history of scouting In yean In an effort-to improve-0range-eowrtiwlll be-told-by· relations between the county KNXT newsmin J e r r 'J and Its cities. Duiiphy in a taped film. UC Irvine's Verano Literary J Under the joint powers The dinner ~ begin, 6·30 Festival will include three agreement, each city will have p m in the Aziabeim Roo~ Southern California writers one delegate and one alternate-For· ticket· information con: reading from their works at I All five county supervisors are tact Boy sCout offices ~t 3811 m Friday The t Ill be members. s Be St • Santa A p. · · even " Smith's committee has been · ar ., na, held in the recreation center telephone Mf-4990 of Verano Place, tbe niarried· working sinoe las! Septeml><I: · and gradual< stui!ent housing lo refine language of the joint complex in the eastern ·area of agreement to a point where it would meet most of the ob-~o~:-Ronald SUkenick jections of those who fear the and his wile. ""-I " Lynn council cou14 become a third t"""' layer of government. Suken!ck, and Robert Peters, Adopted rules require that a poet arid professor . of English at UCJ, w i 11 any agreement' or changes in plans must be approved by a participate in the festival majority of all . members of which is sponsored by the Ule oouncil and only at a campus housing office and Of· meeting whe~-twc>-thlrds of fice of Student Affairs. the members or more are in First Aid Class Set SANTA ANA -A five-week class in peraonal safety and first aid will start Jan. SI at the Orange County Chajiter of the American Red Cross. Ronald Sukenick is the attendance. author of "Up," a novel, and School districts or s,_'..ial ·The class will meet from 7 WHAT PEACE THERE IS ••• in timeless beauty I "Sylvie" Lalique'J paired doves in-crystal motion. A vase to hold your gaze a wh ile ••• along Witll. roses. $108. Com& in and see our complete · coUectton of Laliq1:1e 'pieces. Do Something Beautiful .,. Ch.a,_ AcCMllfl IRVl!tlllll -A-..ll:MI lllltttt •.U.~N 1111111 M11ter c-....,., 1 .. SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 ''11le Death of the Novel ," a purpose dUtiicts are n:;t' in-to I Tuesd and collection of short stories. eluded in tbe membership, but ~~ay O P·:eoings ay for REGISTER flfOW Peters' most recent book is · · I •A · · 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH -644-lllO o,.. Mt!!llly lllolll l'riHy, 11 1.m.. " f :)I ,.m. "Connections in the English =~::'. a~r as non-voting training in rescue, police, Classes Start January 29 Lake District." He has The org aniting meeting is public safety, ambulance and l ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=======~~!..':========:'::::========:!.. Wlltl loc.llioM ot: Torr•nct , Or1ng1, l.1 Certltol, U1 Hl rllrL I ACIO: S.., Diego I nd .I.II \leglll. . ' AJliliJcKLE • SON -1' WESTCLIFF MORTUARY C'I E. 17lll St., Cotta Mesa 111- BALTZ-BIRG~N i FUNERAL HOME l c...,;. def· -171-1151 Costa,' Meia 1111-!0t ., . BELL BROADWAY •• MORTUARY tflll Broadwaf, Costa Mesa I) U 1Mm . ' . McCORMICK LAGUNA B!i:ACB,M081'JARy I' j 17• Lapu Cnyo1 Rd. llMll5 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery M«tury .%:'3511 -~ Drive iwport -Ctlflmd• . .,,,.. .. . ' • • PBEK FAMILY COLONIAL "1NDAL " ..... lfllMI!;.., .•• , l t 18"l 'Bol• llfto • • )t We8"lilnwD11'H ' . SMJ'l'llS~MORTUARY ,,, Mabl 81. Bnlfapoo Ben llt- published several otiier collec· , scheduled fer 7:30 p.m. Feb. 7 hos(iital · i e ch n i q u e 1 of1- tions of poetry ~ a~ at. Fullerton City Hall. emerg_ency aid. The chapter frequently in pen~cals. Delegate& will pick a office is at 601 N. Golden Cir- Lynn ~ck IS a young nominating commiUee for cle Drive.. • poet currently irl -tbe UCI...,....,.pemumnt officers and plan For re-gist rat i o'n lri- department of Enilish as a futute sessions. formation, all 835--6381. lecturer. Her work has a'~·---,:-----.,.------.,.-----'-"---'-"-='--1 peared in sevefal _ ~ter journals and ls·includeo In the fortt>comlnt! "Anthology !!! Women Poets." - The reading will be followed by a reception in the center. TUSTIN -Two city coun- cilmen have been appointed to represent . Tustin on the Intergovernmental Coordinat· Ing Council ol Oran~ County. Tom Woodruff will be the chief representative and Joe Langley bas been named an alternate, The council has been a~ proved by 12 cities and will be foniled when more than a half ot the 26 county cities join. Its purpose is to bring county and city governments together to dJscuss issues of mutuil in- terest. Esthetits Surv.ey ed l I -• annuahnen1ber1' meeting of · .... SOUTH COAST COMMUNITY HOSPITAL \J The-annual meet i ng ol the' membershi p of Sout~ Coast eommunity ~ Hospital, a nonprofit corporation, will be held in the - ..._ . 1 Auditorium of tfle Hospital . 0 ~J1m -11g1iway. -.._ · January ZS. .1m at 7:30 p.m. ' . Z for the piirpoM of Olecti09 Di,..,tors to ..,.-. fii h OMuint .,_., . ~ .............................. c:.,.""' ..... .... ' N •· action of such other business that may come before the meeting. I I' Courier's slicker price is one or the lowest. And you'll appreciate It awn more when you see how ' mueh the price Includes. It's ' not Juat jb_e slandard equipment that may be extra cost on others; 11'1 the bulc truck. Courier starts With extra space In the box, ext .. heft In the chaula • A long .104-ln. wheelbase to smooth the rlde,A handsomely tailored Interior. Check Courier now,,, at )IOIJr Ford DeaMir's• ' . ' ' I ' r---------·--~·..-----.-r-~-, · FORD OTHER 1 . COURIER IMPORT 1 Wheelbase •••..•.•....•. 104" Curb wel1ht .....•....... 2510 lbs. Payload rat1n1 ........... 1400 lbs. Box size ••...•••....•... 74.5"x 62" Engine size .............. 1800 cc. Brilht front bumper ..•.... standard Brllht &rllle ...••..••..•. standard Whitewall tires .•..••..... standard I Brllht hub caps .......... standard Mud flaps at rear •........ standard . Dlal san visors ••...••... , standard . ,, I --I .J~ ~lbs. : " I --I __ cc • DNi nrests .•. 1. . ., ..... s~d•r:d 1 Fill floor mat -· l bicbd bJ lnsalatl ••••••• standard 1- Stollle spa behind l latched seat back •...••.•. standard 1 I Stlcklr price .... : ........ $2222* $ 1 :::'i::::::::~~~ ... --------.J . ' ' -, F:ORD COURIER. •ManutltMtn tuQOlltld ,.. ,,_ O..tlnetlon Cf'l:ll'gl ($24), ~ -• •• cti1rvt. If 1n1, •t11• anc1 IOOil.. , a • 1, ' FORD DIVISION ~ -• • - l fl DAllY PILOT Tltffdly, J1nU11Y 23, 1~73 ' Wealthy _Demqcra~ Works for ~radley ~-- By THOMAS O. EUAS The man \\'ho lert George ?t1cGovem'a presidential can1- pallft in a flt of pique last au nr mer after co ntribu ting more mooey than any • other ii'° divldual during the primaries has taken ove r a key spot in the Los Angeles mayoral elec- tion. And ?.fa.'t Pljlevsky can be sure he won't be subje-cted again to the sort of "rude handling" that top Democrats say v.·as the reason he deserted ?tfcGovern after donaling more than '3$0.000. JUST . A . WEEK after returning from a month-long European honeymoon wlth bi3 second wire, Palevsky moved Into a llnolet.1m-noored office in the Wlllhlre Boulevard headquarters of City Coun. cilman 'lborna! Bradley, where his contributions have ea.med him the campaign chalnnan's j-Ob. To make certain Palevsky im't alienated from him the way the Westwood }'!ulU· m i l li on a i re w1y from f-11cGovem, Bradley says he has placed Palevsky ·ln charge of 0 pollcy·maklns; and the day-to-day operaUon of the campai gn." Unlike McGovern, who allov.·ed his staff to isolate hlm SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOCUS. from bi3 'l<ading llnanclal angel, Bradley laid In an IJ>. terview that "we intend to we his ta1enta. A aucctssfut b u 1 lne11man like Mr. PaievUy bu a lot lo oiler us." PALEVSXY BI MS!!: L F revela In bis neW "1o, where he supervbes seYen former membert of McGovern'• psid Southern: California ataU. By cmnporllon, the~other "liberal" ln the mayoral n<:e, J..,s Unruh, could list but oae former McGovern aide on h13 campaign staff. ~sides Palevsky and the candklate hbnself, the best· known political !Jaure In the BtadJey campalan ls David, Garth, who tuptrvlsed tho media and advertlslng opera· tlons In Democratic ·Sen. John V. Tunney's l9'ro campai~n and performed the same task la.st year foi llllnoJa Gov. Daniel Walker. The Bradley campaign ia Palevsky'a second fora y into Southern Cal ifornia politics within a year. \ RE CONTl\mtrrED $35,000 last !all lo Vlnc..t T. Jluillool 'a UMUcce.sslul eflorl lo unoeat Lo> Anielea County Dist. Atty: Joseph P. Busch, though be aaya be only met Buglloal once. "I haven't really decide<\ yet how much-r wUl contribute lo Brai;lle7'1 campaign," 11\d Palevaly, who amast&l hla lortuno through the Xerox Q)rp. • Workshop Topic €hildren -- --' 1 . Tochnlque.1 of dlJC!pllnc, and •arioul -llld ala&H In the , atart ol tbe 'Prine fUldlnl cblldttn'a IOClal and tllelr P<tlC!loot ywa, ''Ibey &«neater hb. I may be made emotional devtlopmeo~ and come lo Wldontand their own by conlaclinl the Golden Well1 '========== llai• <I. growth w1l1 be toy feelings and behavior and1-Coll_•.:.&•_a<1m_1m_riss_1ons_o_lf_i"'_· __ '_· _______ _ topics In parent pmcbool thole o! thalr chtldl'f!1." worluhopo offered by Golden Rqbtratlon b limited to Weal Evening Collea•, starting two cbildr<o per lamlly, ages Feb. 5. 2-and-a-haU to 8 yeirs. There Five _workshop sections will Is a ~ materials char&• for be available to mothers and , one chlld, and $6 for two. the.Ir preschoolers -two at Mrs. oatderon. who bold.I 1 Lake Park Clubhouse, Hurr master's-dearee In wly t~on Beach; and three at childhood educaUon, aald Sigler Park, Weitmln!ter. many mothers are amued to At Lab Park, sedJoN will find out bow many othera are 00 held Mnnday and tueaday, ccofronted wtth·tbe-prob. g a.m. to noon; and at Sigler lems b:i 1eamina: about tbe1r Part, Monday, Wednesday children .and Friday, 1 a.m. lo noon. Other iop1ca covn Include Mothen attend with their toya, ldeaa !or lnaxpenalve yoona:sten three hours -1 play materilla and old venus ~e:~t ~ 1::t:Y ~ , new dilclpline ipproacbea. dl9Ctlsslng child development Appointments to re&iJter for with other mothen. THE WORKSHOP aettlng, said Mn. Linda ffONO ··«oNG ..... Ctte"'• T.u.n ,..,~,_.,., 1,. ~~ AM """ , ..... """' -1 SALi 2 .'iUm''ISS SAYI UP TO I~ •AU WI .... M off-... M-49 l111t1, 0..Mt c.lt ........ .. ................. llllrtt ~.:::::U ti • w1 m ... , 1111 ............ ..t ,,,, ...... 19 • AN1 ITTU COPtlD ....... n " • n.a a1.nUTiOHS ~~-·~···J!n.~ • ~.Tnt ~ -A~~ .. 9: -"'== t;:X:2I JUN. '°"' hf "'1,.ld•11M ,._.. U~-0211 .... ,.... r ,., .. ••••t MecArthw a1.11.--htt9 .... ~-. Mii ..,_......., ...._' "' ....,..,. c.111 • ....- ... "'.......,.,,., '"""· .. ~ 0 .... ., ... _. , .. ,. ....... 't llttf rr.11 ... w.-""· -U. O.C. AlrioM. leader at Sigler Part, be mothers aaln a better awarene11 of their chlldren, Gem Show Scheduled I AM THE BENEFICIARY ON AN INSURANCE POLICY I OWN UPON MY BROTHER'S LIFE. I HAVE NOT HEARD FROM HIM FOR SEVERAL YEARS. IS HE CONSIDERED LEGALLY DEAD WHEN I CANNOT LOCATE HIM WITHIN 1 YEARS 7 A Gem and Mlneral Sho wtlJ be held on the Orange County FaJrcrounds In Q>ota Meaa Jan. 11 and It and offer gem-cutting demomtraUons and jewelry dlxplays. The ahow wtlJ be fl<lm 10 • by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON ,.._ ... ~ ......... -........ .,.. ... It .... ,... ....., i.n It ... .... , ... ~ ............. -..Ch .... ..., .,,., ........ n. C:' ,, ........ ......... ••••• • • .... ... ... ... ... ... ...... ...... '""'... wrfttH lite ............... " ... ..., .. -... ,,, ......................... ..,.,.,. .... ................. ,,.,.., •. ::=, ............. T 0 ~.: ==-~ ,.., ... ~'::. ~ -=-=..:-:,:..~·~ • ..,,.,., 17 • .._ ,_. ..._ I• ... ••••tiMe w ....W ....._ te ,_., ttMi ,_ I pi1 1 •• ..., ........ , ,_ ..... ~;;, .... .., ... ~ ... 14 .. ,.W _. ... l"• .. •lt ••t I •• ....... .,.. .... yow '""'"'9r II M*-4 ..... ty - Bui be clld lndlcale thal bi& contribution lo the black clty councllman will be &0mewbere between whit be gave to McGo"'"' lllC! his donatloo lo Buglloal. Woman Proposed As. Major General "'ftlll!IE'S NO doubl motlOY will make a difference in this delemed In the Jlftllll'Y 1n1e race," be aald. From Wire Service• ~ a.m. to 10 p.m. Jan. t7 and ·from 10 a.m. to I p.m. Jan. 2S In the Youth Exhibits Builcllng. ""'' ....... l\lete Striwgs Tbe event will ~ open lo the public free lllC! ..........i by the 'Orange Coal\ ldinerai and Lapidary Society. H .,.. .... • .....,._ ~ ,_.. ..._ ~ write ., ..n. WM11twr peu&aii., .. ,,...._• .. au :esslll ........... Balt:·Bergeron Funeral Dome COSTA MISA 2 LOCATIONI COIONA da! MAI Air Force Brig. Gen. Jeune M. Holm has been recom- mended for promoUon to berome the first woman ever to ho ld major general rank. of ''Town and eoun-" in an p·•· '"' trlbuU "' ~va.,'a con ons The fi'~ of 194 new artlcl.,..rttten by Blrmlnpm -• •··• al •-f!o•· UJ u" ~th uN ·-r •-.. e '~ " suspender cables on the baled oa an tntemew w• probably be needed for Mn. Sanford. Bradley lo maintain the lead Golden Gate Bridge fJ Accordlng lo the oomplalnl be hlld onr the entlro field In unreeled by Allied Slee! !Ued by ber attorney, the artt. early polla Liken by bis Com Pan Y wortm.n. '·The Air Force Is out ahead of all the other services," cle lndlcated that Mrs. Moran, organlxatlon and by rival con· The project will cost as a former actrtts, was "Ul· clJdato 'lbomu Reddin. $2.8 million and take ( J placed" In Palm Beacll social Unruh'• campaign man-until November to fin· outcast11 amoog the swank seL the Spencer-Roberts nrm PEOPLE circles and that ohe was "an ager, WWlam Roberta of ~~is~h·~~~~~~I o..._r,-n-,.--Sec-re_i._ry __ M_el..,vtn * which handled both of Gov. Laird said in sending the The first stage appearance Ronald Reagan's aucceuful recommendation to President by Betty Huuoa. in seven e.lecUon efforts:, llated business .,.,.,,..._. Nixon. years ia off. uecuUves James Sweeney of HoW To HoW Gen. Holm. SI. a blondl!!. bas Th! blonde actress faces computer . Machinery Corp. ra I l/!!E TEETH been director of Women In three weeks in a Culver City and EU Broad of the Kaufman r....._, the Air Force since 1965. She hosplt.al with an old shoulder &: Broad construction firm, · S.Cvrely y;on her first star July 16, injury, a spokesman said. along with several labor Do taltl"tMt•~nillam. )'!)"-bJ 1971, becoming the first Air A production of "Here unions, as Unruh's chief ~ .n:.~ ..tt:.:~la~~ Force v-·Oman to achieve that Today'' in which Mm Hutton , sources of funds. rASTUT:!f.::9dentv:n11 a Jonr- k •1 -~-' lo•··· San er, ft.rmer-, bold. Makel ear.-ran . t11 , wu~~-•I.di. m · btrmon~FormorelllCUritJ ~1iss Holm i! one of two Dlego'a Off .Broadway SUCH EARLY support is udoomton,m1PASTE.ETBDeo. female generals in the Air Theater, wu cancelled. vital to Unruh and Bradley, tun Ad.bnrft Powder. Den'""' Foree. and one of only seven * both of whom tee 1 stl'Qng run = ~~ =~~ beat~ S. ever to reach that level in all lijin~the~A!p~r~il:p~r:im~a:ry:e~lec:tio:n~~~~~~~~~~~I iYranches of the anned forces. A plau to solve • the IJIUl'llti them of victory in the * bankruptcy problems o f May runoff .. "Uranium King" Charles Singer 8 composer Richard steen has been filed in U.S. Carpenter broke a leg and District Court in Reno. wrist ln a rollislon ~th Offered to the court by another . motorcyclist at a Stten's attorney, George Ab- motorcycle park in Pomona. bott, the plan outllneJ 8 max· Carpenter· 26, "·ho performs imum i n d e b t e d n e s s of with his sister as "The $4,302,0l4 compared with Carpenters" singing group, listed assets of fT,611,229. v.•as treated at Downey Com· munity Hospital and released, The document said "when hospital spokesmen said. payment is made accordlng to The drive r of the other this plan, Mr. Steen will have motorcycle was reported unin-at least a remainin& worth of jured. nearly $3 million." * ~1rs. Gregg She"•ood Dodge f\1oran , ex·actreSs and fonner v.rife of the late Horace Dodge, from whom she inherited a fortune, brought a $50-mlllion libel suit in N.Y. state Supreme Court a g a i n s t socialite '!\tary Sanford, writer Stephen Birmingham and the Hea rst Corp. f.lrs. ?t1oran, who is 1narrled to Daniel f.1oran, identified in court pape~ as a former policeman, claimed she was fosr, Thorough, Gvoranl(·l·d Re•I Estate ales and or Broliii·r L•C• fl~t> TRAINING Phonl' for fr.-r (oldl·t I ANTHONY SCHOOLS HAllOI Cllntl lM M•rtllN Ceott•r c.,.11 Mtol, C•lltol'fli. ..... (714, '7f·Zlll 1711 s. •rflikll•"1 St. A.n1Mlm, c11. fttf.I Ph. 17141 77WIM ARE YOU A BO UT SERIOUS LOSING WEIGHT? medical weight reduction linslor•'• unique pr09r1m 11•11fe and pr1ctic1I method for th1 entire f1mily to 1011 wt11j1ht, •• undtr · the strict 1up1rvi1ion of Medlc1l Ooctor1• Call fOr lnform•tion Mondey thru Fridey N1w Houri: 8 1.m, to 6 p.m. LINDORA ... MEDICAL. CLINIC 1' SHERMAN OAKS 789-710] WOODLAND HILLS 347-5647 ··~Yldtrt co ...... v ... D'(I ,.,.,......,,,..., OIANG>E 5l8-2l95 TMHltoC .. '"'91t .............. '"'· NEWPORT lfACH 645.)740 l"tc:• .. ,.,... .. , ... L~RACH 426-6549 kl'""' ..... ' ... M .. lc.i ..... U.HANA 694-1029 MNlc .... Mellictl .... ' GARDIN GROVE PASADtNA 534-2051 796.2614 ..... ......... , .,.,. WIST COVINA 962.)4!8 Mik- i ... , .... w 111111 11111. FULLEITON 870-9501 Ill" C .. lft, Mlillkll lllif. NEWPORT. HARBOR KIWANIS FOUNDATION PRESENTS TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE SERIES Friday, January 26, 1973 8:00 ...... ORANGE COAST COLLEGE AUDITORIUM 270 I FAIRVIEW ROAD, COSTA MESA ERIC PAV!L "Pan-American _High.W.ay" HWe't 1 ff'lp bound to 1w1n1 tlf tfill .......,,., In 111 If ......., ~ 1MOI mile IGlll'lllY _,., tt Arllrlfll, vl1ltlllg 1ncllnt Nina. 1tllnltM ... i-. ""~ moun111na, ~ ffliPk,lll IWlli-W 11'9rrtit o-t1. T1MI l'•rt-""-kln HIOtt-'f t1k.-11 ltrst ti ~-City .. It etl!IW9tft Olrlll""I. W• "'"" IM AltK rvlM If Ttollftwt•n • .,,. "" City If l"vlble. remlnllCMt of S,.nlsll Coloo!Wil dtYL 11'1 Gult•mllli, wlltl lb ... fllt•b Mil lllw -t•ln .., t111 -.Cl *''" If th. MIP" r9C:e II.,. t inlell 1111~ tly rnocMm """'" ~ ~ a1 .............. lfl<ao '-.ut to P•NllN, W11 tl'IWI !Mii ny lh'lf ..._. I ..... W lwtmfll kl ColllfT!bll 11!d Ecu.dOI", ht !"IN WI '*-llW A.-.. WI tM ...... fltollal r•lll'OICI "' • <•r l!tml Witt\ IOIClll llftl w!IMll. In CTUCO WI ,,...., 1111 MK9Ntenb of !Ill ln<l.l, then .crou Lalil Tiiie.Ka bf tl091. W. !rl .... I llOnlil lollYlaft l!ighW41y. •I 1 .. 000 feet, ll!d tlMn dtsell'ld fO "'-PlmtMI ot Argenlllll wti.r-1 _.. ... 11'19 flmout G•ucho lltfdlnt 1111 ctttll ~ l•mlno wrld 11onn. llASOH TK:ICITI 1°"'1 tit' .. , ... MllfllttflM) AOVLT ........... ,., 111... (Afttl ~It..., ... .,, ...... n.11) ITUOEN1' ,,.,.,. •• , •• tlM I ................... ·••••••••• fl ... I . . II~ T!Clt'.ITI Af'•IUILI AT1 Ntw"rt Htrtlf lt'.IWl1tlt CNll, H I ,..,, .......,, h«fl, t2UI .... tld Al '"'" ".,..•r•. ms w •••• l lvll .. ,..., 8MCll """"' MtrW QwMw of Con'IMll'ct· °" " MY '""'1Mf' If !tit N_,.,t H•Aor ICIWtnl1 (lull. 646-2414 · 67l·M50 FREE TAX RETURN PREPARATION PROFESSIONAL -qualtfttd tmc oounlllon wlll Pf'IPll't your Penon1I rttUm1 tnd mtkt 1u,. thtt: you reoeM ·"""" pollibft bentftt ul'ldtr th• tax llW. Eich mum will tMn bl triplt-Checktd for •CCUIWf by hWwty.1rllntd 11••U• All wo* II dOM irt tht prfv1GY of your hdflo Slvin• offica uilnt tht traintd l*IOllMI of Tax Corpontion of Amtrlol. Thia firm . nartld In 1941, 11 th'I aecond largest Uk oompany In tht tJnhad 111-. TlWf cumntly llfttllO'/ -•.l500 -nsaton Ind have ~ mor1 than 1,000,000 tax -... WORK GUARANTEED -b'( Tax C«poration of Am.ica. Guaranteed Accuracy. -... .,. .. rp-111 i.. ,...,...., of m1.....,at1ca.,,.. NPfOduodOn. If the compeny IMktt In enw In rnathtmatk:I « rwproductlon. It will Pl'f any pemlty or lnt.,.n wec&ltM wftt. the utra tu 11•IM Guaranteed Protection. If your mum II q.-lonad by the G...,,,mant, 1111'1 WW -all lho-loat no W,,. In oonfo'mlty with -lltory ..,-• ..., ' ALSO -you"' 1 FREE Salo Dlpolit Bole, -loa ""-FREE Trmfa(1 Chocks, FREE Collaetion of -FREE Notary Satvloa and FREE flnonclal eou_,,._ AND -yourdtpoait..., l!llpor..,... (ft •-IDflwyeor 1"5.000mlnl..,ml Certlt1-....,unt-ll(ll Pll" mnum In 1 Ont to.flvtY• (•1.000 m4nlmuml C'Mtlflaatll aooount or'" p1r annum In a regul• Plllbook .-ount, 1U compounded dlUy. n-n the hlghtlt '"" pakl by anY ln1Urtd ln1ti tution1. ' . REMEMBER -ID qualify for tllia frM -yoo -only to maka your dtpOlit. If you haw .an ACCOUNT ELS~ERE.. bflnl UI your p1 it •·Mii WI will tl•ft yow money to hcifk: for Yoit. Off# ......... , ...-.... not looyond ~ •• 1173, ·so HURRY-• ..., your dlPOlit TODAY -or..n or nop by our nM'8toffice for more lnfonnadon. -· Plqs - FREE Federal Tax Guide THIS OFFICIAL GOVERNMENT PUILICATION OFFERS VITAL INFORMATION FOR EVERY T AXPAVER PACIFIC IAV!HOI AND LOAN AllOCtATfON haa p..,,,...i a llmhad """""of Ill• valuable book!.,._ The booldlt la Mllblt II ....... It Ntlll ,.,_, but It PREE TO ALL et yow ftNNlt offlcs of P1eific S.Vlnp and i--Thia off1r pod only whllo lUllPIY- Al.L ACCOUflTI INIUREO IV PEDIRAL IAVINGI AND LOAN INIURANCI CORPORATION TO $20,000 OPEN NIGHrf and DAY · I Hours: Monday-Frid.ay 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M. Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. SOUTH COAST PL~ lrllell IL otSan Diep F,_, CoS11.,. PHONE 14040H ' " --,-... . . THE-MALL OF ORANGE Tmllo A,., at Malts A¥1., Oranp PHONE 1374112 ~ ' ,/ • ! Joi ~ :l . [ de! J Pe< tho vial We F ler Lyt Prt to I t Rei da) B Bel tbai da~ ' R bad apa We< 1131 J Br< lns1 ni~ an( ~ dre Tu " " .... UC thll .. ' tbit ma! Ila I .•1 '. ~ . Tutiday, January 2J, 1~73 DAILY PILOT 9 1-=====LBJ ~ntiei ed Death~ Friend. ·Says "STONEWALL1 Tex. (AP) -Lyndon B. Jolllllon e-ed lo die IOOO, "YI I nel&bbor who watched lha,!ormer pre1l- dant ll&bt 1 cf&•reti,, l!<llnUy and remark , "I am juat 40lnt to IO ahead 1and enjoy lt." · Dff@I C-lo the nallon'I !8th prtsl· den! Monday afternoon. 3. O. Tanner, who llvu 1lon1 the Pedernales River about two mllea from the LBJ Ranch here, aald he and h1a wHe vii~ -Johnlon et Johnson's ranch lut W-y. . IN HUNTINGTON BEACH '- Just eight days befo1'1! Preli· dent Kennedy waa aaaaasinated, then-Vice President John90n was the principal speaker at dedication riteo for the $50 mil· lion McDonnell Douglas plant in Huntington Beach. LBJ Wrote Girl: E ver.y Age Is Good PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -In a 't•l· ter dated last Friday, former President Lyndon B. Johnson told a IS.yeaN>?d Providence girl that "every age turns out to be a good age when YoU reach It." Tbe Jetter was delivered to the home of Heidi L. Brown on Monday morning, 'the clay or Johnson's death. HE WAS RESPONDING to a letter Heidi bad written him In which ahe thanked him for remembering the birth- day ol her uncle, Rulsell. Russell Brown, a Washington attorney, bad shared a $20-a·month one-room apartment with Johnson when the two were law 1tudents In Washington ln the ll!Os. Johnson , who usually sent cards to Brown on his birthday, malled a letter bL!ltead to mark Brown'• eoth an· nive.rsary. Brown sent the letter to Heidi,. and ahe wrote the Preldent in thanks. Tbe letter to Heidi, with a return ad- dress of "Lyndon B. Johnson, Austin, Texu, 78701,'' said: "Dear Heidi: :TIRST LET ME tell you that every , ICt turns out to be a good age when you . reach It, and it is comfort.Jng to old folks Ute your uncle Russ and me to know this. "But, ii I were you, I would not even think now about the poulblllty that life fl\l.Y begin at 20 or 30 or lhat It still can be a great llfe even at tK>. ~"'Aa you aay, you have much to do Jnd- ~ want to get on with It. The sooner )!jiu commence, Iha better equlpped you W\D: be io flqd all the later ages as ll!Jichlng .. the young o .... "Yea, It Is really true that our rent was Q> a month. -llur salary was auch that =could not afford lo have dinner very at the Dodge Hotel dlnlng room uae the leut upenalve dinner was $1. llHOWEVER, WE DID not f,.I loo hlmpered by lack ol money. !Jfe waa • ucltina: challen1e as we dreamed and ltlked, and bragged a ll!Ue, and prepared oUnelvea to meet lhe future ." · ' Nation Without .E.x·presidents !(are Occurrence ' WASillNGToN (AP) -Lyndon B. ~··death leavu the nation without 1 Uvln( ex·Jl"'lident for the !Int time In *':rears. For ooly the RC!llld Ume, Ill&• ll!e being nown at haU-slafl for two fn>er chlel executives. 1-'• death Monday nl!llit came "1thin I month Of (ormtr Prllident Har· rf1 S 'l'nlman'I demllt Dec. II. 'lbe only ~CJiltume "'1en flap._. !Inn at half- ~ ror two ex-prtlideola wu when Tlli>!'W Jd&noo and JOhu Adams died cmit11111m1 doy -July I, Im. ~· .... •• deatll ~ filth timl In b~ the Uolted Slala! 11 wtthooJt I llV· .. ......, proatdent. "TlioOdore a-veil Mmd the !JI! , .,.,-... ol h1a pi'taldtnq 'With no llvl111 ~ldonl 111« <Hover Cie'llland died J ... II, !IOI. • Gtor11 WuhlnltOn'I death Dec. II, 17'11, loft h1a lormtt vioa -ldeot, Jolin . Adams, without a Uvlna: predecutei. 1 ,, I 11HE SAID TWO or three Ume1 that he just wun't eotn& to live very long," Tao· ~ SIJd. "We commented 1evera1 times lhal he looked good and bod real llOOd .color. He had, 1 though\, a good outfook, except for lhe lew limes he said he wasri'l .Olnc to llve very long." Tanner said . Jolwon said he doubted he would ~ve to see completion of both a natlonaH>ork and the LBJ Slate Park along the Pedemales. Tanner remembered Johnson lit a . <:lgarette during the visit although the former president bu suffered from heart trouble. i.He aald, 'l can't really see hew It would shorten my life vtry much when I am &t. I am just going-to ·go ahead and enjoy It,' " Tanner quoted Johnson. Tanner said that duril'lg the visit he, told Johnson that Tanner's father, a minister of the Chrl11tadel)>hlan Church, performed the first funeral at the Johnson famUy cemetery where the former president said on numerous oc- culons he wlshed to be buried. THE CEMETERY is on the LBJ ' Ranch. . Tanner aald thlt the burial took place In the early part of the century when the Jlood!ni Pedornale1 prevented · flln!ly mmbers from taklna: lhe body to the Stonewall cemetery. Nelghbon reacted with shock and sad- ness to Johnson'• death. They llld they remembered him aa a friendly man who was likely tO show up with pruenta at Christmu and with help when needed. "He was a wonderful neighbor, we thought, all these years ·we have lived here together," aald Mn. Ernest ffod&e1, UC PRESIDENT CLARK KERR !HANO EXTENDED) WELCOMES LBJ TO JUNE 1964 UC! OEDICATION With President (from left): Governor Brown, UCI Chancellor Aldrich, Regents Ch1lrman Carter (parti1lly hlddtnl • whose r1nch adjoins the CBJ Ranch. apparently was Johnson's last public ap-·~11 anything came up he was willing lo pearance Saturday when Johnaon helped help u.s all ln what we were lryin1 to Lady Bird plant the first of 100 redbud under.take." trees along "'RiiiCl1Roacf 1, which passes She said Johnson and his wife, Lady in front or the LBJ Ranch. Blrd. came by Christmas Day wltll a box Mrs. Kowert said Johnson "was not his of caody, a fruit cake and a fifth of uSuat bubbly self and said, 'I'm sorry but Scotch whisky. I'm not feeling very well.'" "Every Christmas he has been here , he Mr · has never failed 10 itve us that ,'' she ~fr. and a. Kermit Hahne, owners of said. the Stonewall Cafe, were in tears when asked their remembrances of Johnson. ART KOWERT, publisher Dr the .. ''It's such a big shock. J can't beUe .. ·e Fredericbburg Standard, covered what it. I just can't believe it," Hahne said. PRESIDENT BIDS 'GODSPEED' TO VIE TNAM-BOUND TROOPS In February 1968 at El Toro Mlrin• Corp1 Air Station -Bullets Thrust Johnson Into Presidency By Tbe A110clated Preis An a.ms!in's bullet thrust Vice Pres- dent Lyndon Baines Johnson into the presidency. On Nov. 3, 1964, 11 months and 12 days after he' was hastily sworn in as S6tb Prealdent of-the United States to succeed the slain John F. Kennedy, he was elec· ted to a four-year tenn of his own· • He won the greatest vote majority ever accorded a presidential candidate and carried Into office with him the biggest party majorities iii Congress since the election of 1936. Under the Constitution, J$nson was eligible to run for a second term of his own in Noveiiiber 1968. · A nation, frustrated and angry about the Vietnam war, troubled by racial strife and caught by inflation, more or less asswned that the highly political Johnson would do that. To the surprise Of the electorate, Johnsen announced in a nationwide television speech on March 31, 1963, that "l shall not seek and I will not accept the nomination of my party as your President." HE REFERRED to that unity of the country when he was so overwhelmingly elected in November 1964 and asserted, "What we have won when all our people were united must not be loat in partisanship.'' Then, acknowledging there w a s "division in the American house ," .he withdrew in the .name of national unity which he said was the "ultimate strength of our country. "With American sons in the field far away;" he said, "with · the American future under challenge right here at home. with our-bopea and the world'• hopes for peace in the balance every day, l do Mt believe that I should devote an hour or a da'y of my time to any personal partisan causes or to any duties other that the a w e s o me duties of the presi· dency of your country." He coupled his reelecUon declaration wilh an announcement that he ordered bombin1 of North Vietnam restricted to the area below the 19th Parallel and call- ed for peace talks. ~ days later, North Vietnam surprised the President and hls advisers by accepting, saying preliminary talks could be held to arrange an end to the Mlt. JOHNSON CALLS ON HIS SUCCUSQR IN SAN CLEMENTI In AU!lutl 1969, Hl1 Birthday WH Oi>Hrvod In Ora"ll County ,. I " rest ol the bombing and Ihm broader questions could be discussed . A month of , haggling over the site followed . On April 3 Hanoi and Washington accepted a French offer of Parla, agreeing lo m .. \ May 10. TWO DAYS OF di.scuaslon between deputy ambassadors of both s.ides to set up procedures followed. On May 13, 1968, W. Averell Harriman, the U.S. am- 'A threat to a111r -tlon '" that ......... h • tllreat to .U, •"" • threat te ... ••• Tiie l111ltell States f,.. tetul• · -..... -•• ••d •Hk• llO tofder tc•r.' buaador to the peace tllkl, and Xuan Thuy, the North Vletnameae ambassador to the talk1, led their rtspective delega- Uons Into the International Conference Center, formerly the.Majestic Hotelt to begin the. fateful talka. It took elaht months of talking to determine how aubatanUve negotiations could proceed. The announcement o! the break throulh came Jan. 16, 1969, four daya before Johnson left office, giving him the satisfaction of know.Ing there was a posslb!Uty of peace. 'Ibero were other breakl lo exbilerate Johoson In the few weeka before be turn- ed over the presidency to Richard M. Nlmn, Ropubllcan, who defeated Vice Preatdent llubert Humpllr'1 In the 11!1 election. On Dec. 19, 19611 Cambodia releallld ll Americans who had been bnpriaoned thert. Eleven were U. S. solctien 1elzed when thelr boat wandered Into Cam· bodian watlra July 11. The 12th waa an American bellcopler C?eWllllll captured .Nov. 28. On Dec. 23, 19611 North Korea releallOd · II c,.w memben ol lh• lntelllaence lhlp U8S Pueblo who bad -1snim-alnce Jan. J, 1M8 when tbelr lhlp WU captured. 0 ON DEC. 17 three American astronauts returned from a 1lx-day·plu1 1pa~ voyace which took them ID times around the moon. 'l1'e intrepid explorers wert Air Force Col. Frank Bonnan, Navy C.J>I. James A. Lovell and Air Foret Maj. William A. Andera . Several days later, Johnaon 1r.eted them at the White Houte ind awarded: them medals. "Thinfl il'I I lot b<tler !ban We OX· pected,' Jotuuoa mused on the plane which tool< bbn to rttlrement on h1a T"' 11 rancb. "Now we Jwl hope &ood things 11'1! iJ01111 to lloppm f<r Mr. Nlann." In hla cnulllnt dtleat ol his Republican o-~ U. 8. hn. Bl!TJ Goldwater of .Arlaona Jn• No••1W JIM, Jobnlon won IOllll ll __ t ol the vote. But IRicll _..,111 drel1l>ed lll•rtlY. In November, lM7 the Gallup poll showed lhat_onl!' 11 percmt ol tho people, ap- p<OVtd h1a handllng of the pt .. ldtocy. 50 · perctnl of' lhoae quelllloned exprused dialPl'rotal .., 11 Par..nt bad no opln- l«L Tbe 111j1r cau. ol the dl1lllwl0111Mnt appeared lo bl the South Vietnam war. 1Uot1n1 ln Nearo slums acroaa the country did nql help him, either. f ' I South Vietnam-where the Viel Cong, ())mmunlst Sou.th Vietnamese w h o wanted to take over the government - bad plagued Pmldent Elaenhower and President Kennedy. They sent military advisers to help organize the South Viet· namele · army to combat the auerrilla tactlct of the Viet Con1 who were aided and abetted by Communist North Viel· nam. But It was President Johnson's fate to commit ·American troops to a land war in &Nth Vietnam .. mE FIRST American troops were sent to South Vietnam in February, 1965. Thir· ty months later the controversy over the United Statea' involvement had risen from a murmur to the level of an ani:lous naUonal debate. With the COit of men and inOnty mount- ing and atl!I no end of the "" In slgbt, both the hawka and doves in Congress were becoming IDOl'e strident in their call for a cba.na:e in policy-I.be: first Ior unre1trained alr and naval war on North Vietnam, the second for de-escalatlon. E1calation of tbt war actually OCCWTed In Augllll, -11161 allef Communist PT boats attacked U. S. destroyers In the Bay of Tonkin. Johnso.1 obtained con- gresllonal approval of a resolution grant- ing him full support for "all necessary acl.lon to protect our armed forces." He told Con1re11, "The l~e Is the future of Southeast Asia as a whole. A threat to any nation In that re1lon la a threat to au, and a threat to us ... The United States intends no rashness and seeks no wlder war." But when North Vietnamese attacked an American base on Feb. 7, 1965 killing nine, woundlna more than 100 and wreck· lng plants, Johnson ordered, American planes into action over North Vietnam. 'Note tee , ... , hope IJOOd thf•g• are 901•9 to llap- pea tor lllr. Nb:o•.' North Vietnam failed to get the menage and on Feb. 10 attacked another base. Johnaon ordered another attack. AIR ATl'ACKS oontlnued on mllltary llrtl•ll, brldg .. al)d highways with the intention of 1lowln1 down aa:gresslon. 'nley even u.tendect north of llinol, the North Vlelnam ••Pill!. 'lbe lCltolll bnJualll Johnson publtc and private demua. for negotialions from leading llllnocrala In Con&r••s. from American Jntellectuall, from an -aettc letter wrtttna public, lrom neuUo1 nattona, fTuo the United Nationa and from the blet, Union. The !iflltlnl coatlnued. Johmon uked Conlll'tu ror an 1d· diUooal flOO mlllloa lor upandlnl opera- Uont ln South V...,_m, More American troope were Miii lbere. By mid.June, It wu estimated 'I0,000.11,111111 American ttoops we.re involved-. By November, 1111, 469,000 Americans ,..,.. In South v-. The war wkltned a rtn, ibare\y con- celle<l betwm JohnlOn and U. S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy opposed the bombln& of North Vietnam and aald so ln a Senate speech. KENNEDY'S OPPOSITION to lhe Viet. nam war and Johnson's handllng of aome domestic problems spurred the New York senator to announce his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomlnaUon even another term. · . Already L1 the politital flay was U. S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota. After Johnson's announcement. Vice President Humphrey Joined them In con- tention. The political maneuvering or the three was stunningly stilled the night of June 6 when Kennedy, celebrating a California primary vic.tqry, was assassinated in Los 'What ace lla ve won w hen all 011r people mere 11.11ltell mu•t not be Iott f11 partb•••hlp.' . Angeles: Humphrey obtained the nomina- tion but lost to Ni1.on. The rioting in Negro sl ums, which rose to a crescendo in 1967, caused Johnson great concern and some observers be- lieved It hurt bis image. ~ The riots began in 1964 in New York's Harlem anJ Bedford Stuyvesant sections and involved only Negroes. The followln1 summer of 1965 Negroes rioted for sl1. daya In Watts, Los Angele.~· Niro area. But 1967 proved lhe longest ' hottest summer of all with riots small towns, amall cltiea and in sprawlin& Newark, N. J., and Detroit. AFTER THE Watts rioting Johnson ad· dressed the nation and tried to find "orda to describe rioters, white or Negro. He said: "A rioter with a Motolov cocktail in h1a handa ts not righting for clvll rllhts any more than a Klansman with a abeet oo h1a back and a maak on h1a race. "They are both more or less what the law declared them: Jawbreakers." He sounded aomtwti&t mournful and very rnuitrated u he looked back on his years in Congress and the presidency. "During the paat decade," he said, ' ''more of my energy bu been apent on protecting and praervlng and wrlUna: I~ to law through the leglslallve halls, the rights of au Americans than I have apent on any single subject or any ball dozen subjecll." Johnson contended for the ptt1kh1ntlat nomination In lll60 with the tlltn U. S. Sen. Kennedy of Massachusetta. Political observers considered him weU equipped ror the high office. ' A ~fAN OF driving .energy, he had served In the House of Repruentatlwa from his native Texu and tl'lln in the Senate where be became Senile majority leader. He Wit; consld.tred the molt ef. rectJve Senate leader ln thla ctntury, probably In the hlllor7 or the United Slattl. He wat a master of dettll, knew where evtr senator stood oo every illue and before voUne .time koew where ev!!/ aenator w11 of w1s goin1 to be. He was cunaldertd an e1pert In the art of compromise, able to get both aides to make. concessioM even though bot.l'J aldtt were lea than pleased with the ruulta. . ' lf DAILY PILOT -=a•~ N<''f ........ THERE -ARE OVER 2000 USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S I Harbar Baulevard af Cars LOO« FOi THI IMll.llll AT CADILLAC, INC, OLDSMOBILE 2600 2850 .. NABERS I UNIVERSITY HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. Q easy-cir• •ctiv• weal" Q' • WE Wll BE CLOSED WED., JAN. 24th. TO PREPARE FOR OUR SALE WHICH BEGINS THURS., MORNING JAN. 25th. 10 A.M. b1nk1m1ric1rd e 1r .. 1f1r ch1rgt 44 l11k io11 i1l1nd. ntwport batch /)44-5070 • SPEED READING COURSES TO BEGIN IN BEACH AREA A•r1119tll'ltllh h1v1 be•n m1d1 by Am•ric111 R11ding Foufl· dottion to conduct 1 21 -hour cour1e in •Pt•d ••1di"9· Th• c:our1• 11 op•n to 1nyo"• 1bovf th1 191 of 1 l 1nd 911111111111 1v1rv 911d111t1 lo trlpl1 th1ir r11di11o; 1p11i:I wiih 111 inc11111 in tOffl· p11h1111lo11, Aft1r the 11v1n w11k pr09r1ffl, 1 p1111n c111 r11d '"" 1¥11191 book in 1111 th111 111 ho11r 1nd und1r1t1nd it b1t111. 111 1idition lo tpnd r11d i"'i th1 c:our11 1110 1111ph11i111 irnprov1d t!udy ftch11iq1111, b1tflr t11t t1kin9 1kill1, 111d i11et111td c:onc1n· l1ftlo11 ind rei.ntion 1biliti1t. Thi co11n1 r1q1,tlr11 • P•rton to 1tle"d 0111 cl1u p11 w11k en th1 1¥111in9 of th1ir cho!c1. For tho11 who wo11ld li ~1 more l"for1111tio11, without obU91tlon to 1111011, 1 11rie1 of FREE 0111 hour ori1nt1tlo11 l1clur11 h1¥1 b11r1 1ch1dultd. TI.ete "'''H"I• 111 fr11 ID the public end th1 eo11111 will H 111pl1h1fll 111 eo11tpl1t1 d1t1~I Including 111tr1nt 1 r1quir1m1nh, cl111re-pNCMur11, l11itio11, cl1u 1ch1ch1f1 end loc1tlo11. You 119" to 1tt.nd Oflly 0111 ll'lf1ll119 which 11 th1 11t01t con¥1nl111t f., fh· TJ.111 free 0111 hour orl111!1tion1 will b1 h11d 11 f0Uow1 : Thurldey, January 25 , 7:30 P.M.; Friday, Janu- ary 26, 7:30 P.M.; 2 meetin91 on Saturdey, Jenuery 27, 10:30 A.M. and 2:00 P.M.: end on final meet· in9 on Wednesday, January 31, 7 :~P.M. AU. ltlllTINM 'wlLL II HllO AT THI IA~ HoTa -TH£ GARDIN 10011 W L COAST HWY .. LA•UN4 HACH J .. MUTUAL FUNDS ~ • '\ COHP.IEfE NEW YORK S CKLJST • l I I I I ~ t I i .. I :a ~ • 'll ~·~ ,. ~ .. ~ -~ am 'j Si • a1~ ..... ~r· M• N •M~ . ... , ~~-N~ =n:j • NAM ... =~ =to• No:~ ·r.:e. "" NU ~ t:l:tc ~i ~:fi:i ··~ =-~ N I _,, ..... NWill• _,,. ........ 7 Nowst: ~S1 t" II NW'°1 ..... Pac LI PKP• ,.( ... P'-cSw "'1' ., h •KT ...... "1:1 ... ...... P•n At ~·"" ·~· PIMN! P•:tH Pl rt "W. ~:.:t Ptnn I E::.'t!t .. ~...J ~fj i~: ~~-= e: rl ~::.\11 ~~ ~:;I. ~:t:.'I ~s IF I 11 f ~ ~~ -' 1' ""'~ """' • M .. l r~ 1. ~ = n I; '! ' 1 ~ l : I tl .~ . • 1 ~ ,. .... 1' ,~. ~ .... ~ """""' ... ,, I , I \ l ~ • j I l 'r I • J ~· JlllUUJ , 1973 . ~. DAILY PILOT Jl • • I • ' ,. • • L J% DAILY P"-•· I Uffday, January 2), 1973 ' ' I ·' " ., • • • • ' .__-:-~ l : ' Starts WednesdGy Fabulou$ afterrinventorJ . . ·n· .. :~··~ . . . ' . . ( : . I , . . ' . \ . ' ; ... ' ~. . ' . . . . i..' Save on ali ii¥>6'8. ~a~s. . . ... Sale 15% of.f.. • Saie15% . . .·off ' • • • . ' .. • • • • . " ... . ........ ,_ ... • • • , , ' . • ci-~ . sOekS.-. ~~on .. Sale,15% off. Reg. .6Sc .. t2 . A great selection of men's' ankle length and QYer the ci.lf Socks for drelis or ~ual wear. · Ch?C>Se terry crew. socks of ~crylic/ stretch nyton, casual soc.ks oJ · polyester/stretch ny\on or anti- static nylon:socks with spandex top for"sf~y-uj)-fit. Reinforc.<i . t\eef and .toe With' eu~hion sole for' I orig: wear. Patr&rtis or Solids 'In sizes 1~13. ., . . J·CPenn~y " I' Reg. $9 Now 765 S-M-L • All the best styles and looks , . are here. Lo'ng and st\drt' ~la'e~e ­ polyester Print pant tops; Chobse from a large selection c·t falhion cdlors·and stYles, some hilvi' 1 .. pocke)s. flem.einbe~: this sale will only last for one. big 'Qay, .so come ' early for best selection.,· J . ' .. . . I -~ \ . ~ .. .' We know wh~t yo~·~e 1.ooking for. , , Sh ~P"8:~nd_ay no~n to 5 .~ .. at .~he following stores:. Newport ·e~ach (714j 6114-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER .. Hµnti"gto~ .~ch (714} 892-~77 I. HARBOR CENTER, Colle F>,SHION ISLAND, ...... . ' ' • -• ... Seg.$1~ · ow1<P> S.M·L· Reg. $13 Now11os 3,8to44 Na·· •• ~ 3~ ~oll4&0- 11eg. $4 and, $8; Beautiful:aelection of mini. shifts with matching bikinis, or dress length gowns. All of nylon trfcot. Choose from tailored or•frllly sty!• In bright t an~ pastel fuNon colors. Sileo P,S,M,t.. , Misses gown u abcvi flog "5.00 N9W -4.00 SizoaXL-XXL · ' . • • (7-14 .6'16:!!021. ~· • ii • ' • • • • ·-•• . ~ . • I I -j _j ,I I ' ,I ' • /" Becks Cover All Angles Su .nwear Fu nwear • BEA ANDERSON, Editor I _J!Y_JQ OIAl>N _started as.a.!.'.pinmodel" (fitting model) Of IM O.lly PINI ll•lf · at 13 for her father's designers. She at· There maY, not be a real ·Betty tended the Univeri;ity of Southern Croclttr, ' ~a Scudder or Aunt CaJl!ornia for six semesters and dropped .\~lmah, tiut. there is an honest-to-out to go to work because she knew what goodnw Ellsabeth Stewart and she does she wanted to do. This, of course, was lo design her own swimsuits. continu~ in the garmmiL .business. In a modem ractory in Bell Gardens, Leisure time now means homev•ork Elisabeth stewart Beck and her husbaod, 'Robert Beck, along with h\r brothers time for .the Becks, who are Flintridge Dave and Bill Stewart, produce a full line residents. They spend as much time as of leisure wear from the briefest of possible aboard their yacht, the Fifth Season, which is moored at the Balboa bikinis to the most elegant of cover.ups. Bay Club, and all the while are looking ____ T,,he~ four bad aJLw~o~rk~edc--..,fo.,_r_,,the,._ _ _,atQ"-"'und.,.,._,1o.._.see.._w,.hat people....are wearing stewart patriarch, Ed, dwner and for their leisure tbne activities. founder of Catalina swimwear, and ·round that their collective talents were ade-PEOPLE-WATCHING quate to found their own oelehsure wear This is very important to tbe success of ,_.,, ,_.,., 11. 1f7S Pat• 11 company when Catalina was sold. the Elisabeth Stewart line of ac· cessorized playclothes because Mrs. "It seemed that we · had one of Beck feels the only way to find out what ' -- Two piece or one - take your choice ('left). Elisabeth Stewart also offers peasant pants, sh irts and shorts for cover-ups I below at left ): Jantzen shows old and Old suit is from. thei r collection of swimsuits from the past. everyt®lg," ~rs. Beck said. "?w1yselfJn people want for leisure wear is to be design, my husband in management, where they are at leisure and observe. Dave in sales and BW In productlon. "All of us do live the majority of our ALL YOUNG nonworking lives otit of doors, skiing and "We started with 10 sewing machines boating, so we felt we understood it," she in a loft in downtown L.A. We started commented. "We enjoy miking clothes small because we were very young and to go with it." we wanted to learn what we didn't know." Elisabeth Stewart designs are "no°" They elected to do their own manufac- turing, and built their business from "zero" accounts to 3500 in the course of producing 16 amJuaJ collections. Mrs. Beck, a sun-tanned enthu&astic woman who obviously relishes her work, ' . • serioos" ·in ..:natur.e,...All-fabrics are col· orful, bright and hil:ppy·and are meant to help women of every age have fun. Mrs. Beck started .... out in the design room by herself but now has several assistant!:. It is in ·her domain that the company's philosophy of making clothes for women of every age first surfaces. FIVE WOMEN "A worilan's figure ls as important as what-fashion she likes,'' emphasizes Mrs. Beck, drawing a .diagram of various figure types. "We design really for five imaginary ladies." Prints and c;olofs are ordered Crom paintings, and when the material arrives it is c,arefulfy checked against the original art work for accuz:acy in design and shade. _Mrs. Beck designs from the Prints, f~1in_g that some are 1nore ap- ~iate for bi~s aaj some are ~st for more '"mature-type'""swimsuits. The cOmpany recenUy· bas entered in· to the temlis market, using the eight female offspring of Uie . partners as models. U the Stewart..&edt ~girls like the designs, Mrs. Beet 111)'1.' she figures other teenagers will. SCHOOL SllIFI' 'To keeP its nearly 400 employes hap- ..py, .the -company bas initiated a "school ahlft" for mot.hers of small children. The women may come to work after their children go to school and leave before they arrive home. A day care center soon will be opened oo tbe factory grounds, Beck said. ' Adding a further note of interest to the modem facility is ~trs. Beck'• collection ol. anUques, wtuch was moved from the Los Angeles showroom when it was red<corated. She hopes lo have her stlJdio..office revamped to include some ol the historic lumlture. . . One of her1 favorite trophies ls a large picture of · three of her femaje frlenda, swimsuit clad, who were vacationing together on a remote resort island. When they opened their suitcues, they found that they had identical Elisabeth Stewart swimsuits. Betty Beck herself has a large col· leotlon of Elisabeth stewart swimsuits, and gladly gives one away when someone admires it. This way she can go to the rack and get herself !1 newer model. The only thing that .deijg!ltt· her mere than having a new swimsuit is see.Ing someone else in an EllMbeth Stewart design. Tben she's ecstatic and really feels fashion Is fun. Gar:<lin ~s D.r:eBtns Coming ·r rue .. li By MARIAN CllRJSTY · , , , MeanU.me Cardih, a caMy French a bed and I say to myself: Pierre, why· NEW .YORK, _ Fa~ F/.ench ' .........,.,)who lea"" oo stone Ur> why·why mll!I the bed be that belg~t? d·"'-· Pierre Catilin -fiiflylsh, turried, bas designed the printed Interior Why can1 it be lowei:, closer to the Oopr? -... -ol anolher fwm of transportation -the waspish and lllll)f!rlatlftly inventive -is ·new-Ainerican Moton Javelin car which And, of course, I immediately want to the kind or vis~ wbo thinks 00 ,carries hls li&ri!oturt. design a different kind ofJ>est." dream Is Impossible. ' ' · Pierre Clrdln also 'll'otl't buy the . -Uy s~. with the problftii of Wild 'dr.ams get wilder: heretofore ae<epted fact that the woros '-pollution ind the related dllcowry1Uiat "Future can will be fUmlsbed with "faShiob" and "clothes" are synonymow: bicycles '"' a' majo< inelhod ol changeable lnterion," 11)'1 Clrdln, who and Interchangeable. transpol'Utlon • ._ the """" tblnlts ltaodard equipment will be for 1Ma)'be the designer, who waa born In eYeryWhere, C&rdil) cr:eated a foldable covertnas. for w.lnter cociDess and. silk vemce, admitJ that French couture bas bicycle. Dower prmtt for spring Joy. The daigner dimmed power. It's because too many Surprile. It's ~ _.,lbt -;;..,.~ ~ ':;' r~ ~-Paris dolignen have reverted to making llke a hlndbog. ,_ ... , -·-jlpaw puzzles -Im • repulttlon ror rehashes ol clothes from pa.st ., .. .00 chance. And, ~-Cal'dlD, the maltblg 111s;c1<aa PIY olf. Reported ... women have rejected that Idea. bicycle becomes a body --•wllh 'nuaJ volmne Is In the vlclnfty ol llO . Conlin "'°"' at the tr<nd : "When a luturiltlc .-, mllllon. • designer makes a prediction of whit "Fdhion." ,.,. Cardin, "'embracts \Oa'.or1ow'1 woman will wear, ll cannot tbe tolal ·--not jal clodles Tlje mqoire IPil CG11tltlla •to lk)'tcdet be a pege out of )'tlittrd•Y'• living." he whlcb IN tbe pnoul 6lltrt••nwt.'~ _ ~ Cll'llln la~•...mtlttl roan wt)o _ .... says. 0 Wbere's tbe.~becy? Generally, Clldln'• pol'lable ~· tall-..i.out ~' are ,.,.. belag made ex-perimentally In .,_ .... _ ..,_a.d to be made available bJ,tJle UdCod 8latet In late tm. I -I ,, · 111-.Jy ,..,,_ lo ho aatlsfled with -Y'• fashion is a copy -not a crea. tl)e "~ th1Ags are..1 tion .. ' TJpbl Cordln i'botorlc: ·~·m always The quesuoo .. f.fhe.hOOr, tn the face or d~ there's a better way, a newer tha bh~jean ayndromo, which has way, a.fraber way. Somotl .... t look at recently taken l'atls by storm and <Or> I • , founded couturiers, is; What will people of the future wear? Cardin says . that by the year 20CO the .. male-female "uniform" will be a tw~ way.stretch body stocking. "Future generations will be free of fashion as we know lt,'' says Cardin. "They will wear clothel unencumbered by details and compllcaUons." WU! body stockings of tomorrow sland u ts? Not exactly. Cardin envisk>m that men will wear !eat.bet .abort-shorts over their gear. Women, Innately -fancifiil, will a&1- j<welry, boott, belts-any kind of stand- out algnature. "Perhaps it will be the 1tyle for women to wear adhesive-backed plastic (lowers on her body stocking." 11ys Cardin. uMaybe sbe11 just •licli: them_ on down lbe 1kle of one leg -like a _stripe~.. ----~ 1"The prt!lent environment is lbe wrong Jetting for modern clothes," says Cardin who dream.a of wide1pread changes. "In the end we mull change everything In the tnvlronment." I \ ) , \ • • • J'I DAILY PILOT ,_,, J,.,.., ll, 1973 7 LOSE WEIGHT H . r T d B · TH1s WEEK I L . oroscope: '=ancer en us1ne-""" r&5.%.¥.t~ WEDNESDAY JANUARY H By SYDNEX OMARR Cremin\ nlay be the IT\Olll animat.ed sign bot THurus takes honors for being the n\OSI quietly expressiye. Leo ls showy but Ca~ ii most apt to make 1tdtdf' progress. Pisces co~ up from nowhere a/id usuaUy l:s the und<'rdof:: thtll surprises "'Ith key plays. AJllES (~tnrch 21-April 19): New approach 1s ~· Talk thln&s over with m-.te; pal'Uler. Se willing to llt1on. Jmportant to mUe lntelllgent conceulons. Take SQ!ne steps bnc.kward so \hat eventually you can go forward . Leo is in picture. . .. --Ott rW ot """ LIBRA (Sept. 13-0ct. II): rid ol bunlen rightly )'OW' Ill ... Jloit -· 01rinu "' "" Perfect tecbNques. Obta1D own. \lltlll '*""~ bf tholltand• 111 ww .lid hint ~ Vtr11 ,.,. ~ .. , 1"C01Mtf1forlC)'Wt.OdrlM11'Mn v '1 "'" ~ '~ -an. cottt 1S.Hlftd1~1tfl•KOnOmJlltt message. Reject secondhand lt): Stu sa1 l ttarl•1 $5.H.Y011ll'Millt1ottuc1Y r•t or-YoU,. procfucls, methods. Strlv• for m;::f.e ve lot ~tor tn, · nu•lltt and orlglnallty. ~i. d • • '-••"-"~""'"'"111• '1 .. vr...... ' ol ~action. Ht tllUllolll ••ktd. Aettpl no tll~· 11 hlg and your time has U' IM ii picture. lcbl II '""'"'· ..,.. will\,._ """' "' rlvt¥f. t1eans go a~er whit on Uon, ac evemert\. · tut lHRlfTY '"'' ""' \'l'>l <>\, .. T '>I (1111' CURR i NT I' AS H IONS at OISCOUNT PRICES ,.. ...... a.....-. _ .. '"""C.• ... DIU'f~-= "'.M. 111 ' Burglar 's Take May ·Alarm Him 'TAURUS (April 20.May 201: Slacken pace. Keep medical, dental appointments. Get facts about current situation . Discard rumors. Trust your own hunches. Now you can collect data. Later you can evaluate. Poslllon shou1d be that you art wllllna to learn. CANCER (June II.July 22): .Make lij>eClal ellott to bulld \)II IOUd base. Be lborouah In personal and bul1-allairs. Home and family matlara tend to dominate. You feel restricted. But thb lJ tem- porary. Realize that apparent minor points could be major If neglected. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Emotional burden could be lifted. You have more freedom. Key is to avoid you ne<d. onaI superior ii ~· sco~ro (Oct. JJ.Nov. sn:-~~~-~.i::::i~·I ~~~~~~~~~:.~==~:.:~~~;; Accent 1s on gain thtou&h more respona!blllty. By ER~fA BO~lBECK E\'erytime y,·e leave the h~ anymore., I play a game c alled . ··Stump t he Housebreaker.'' "1 · just know someone-is going to baek: up a tr:ick ~~ lake all of bur possessions. l told my husband . "That me-ans the \OS! could go as high as $37 .52," he yawned. ''What do you mean' by a crack like that ?" I asked. "It means this is the stuff \\'e gave to Goodwill and they sent it back with a turkey and a box of canned good!." ~ .. Well a crook doesn't know thi l 1 ckm•t ha\'e a vault full of precious jewels." ... . "When he sees a house ~th an Edsel in the dtivey,•ay with four flat tires ~ a McGovern . bumper sticker, he kno¥>'S .he hasn't exactly picked a win- ner." . ht "You laugh. 'The other n1g 1 watched an interview with a man on tele\'ision who \\'as serving time for housebreak· ing and he had a lot of neat h " tips for omeowners. "\\'llich include?" ''First. he said to leave your bathroom light on." Pa ir Selects Wedding Date Catherine Anne Herrick and Craig Allan Shertr.er, both of Costa P.lesa, are planning to marry Feb. 17 in St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa ?itesa. Their parents are f\.trs. Viola Herrick of Costa Mesa. Carl A. Herrick of Applelon. Wis . and ~Ir. and P.1rs. Larry Shertzer of Costa ~lesa. ~Us.s Herrick is a graduate of Qista Mesa High School and her fiance Is a graduate of Estancia High School. AT WIT'S END "\Vith three teenagers, our bathroom light hasn't been off in 12 years. Come to think of It neither have the lights been on in the bedrooms, hallway' living room, baserilent. attic. garage kitch e n or refrigerator." "Then he said you should deflnitel y have a vicious dog ." "The last time our dog moved was when I stepped oo his tail with my goU shoes." "We got lbat big stuffed dog Crom the fair we could wind up to look real." "Don't you think a robber \\'OUld gel suspicious when the dog smiled and did a backflip every 15 seconds?" "The trouble with you is you don'! take this very serious." "I do take it serious. It's just that l put myself in the place of a housebreaker and I cannot see myself breaking the law for an old TV set that makes Orson Welles look like a thermometer and a jewel box that contains three baby teeth and a 40--words-a-minute typing pin .. , "You are trying to tell me in your subtle way that no one wants what we have." "Let me put it another way," he explained. "Do you remember when there was a Peeping Tom in the neighborhoOd and you un- dressed for bed one night \\'ithout pulling the shades and we haven't seen him since?" "You made your point," 1 said stiffly. "Let's go, kids, and don't forget to leave the doors unlocked!" GEMINI (May 2hlune lfr Stress \'ersaUllty. Expand. Status quo wlll not suffice. Saitttartan ¥>'0Uld like to aid. Display sense ot humor. Social contact could lead to romantic- siluaUon. Glve full play to creative resources . If single, you cou1d take step toward allar. wasting time, e n e r g y . Relatives, heighbora may 'seem to convtrge. Display sense of humor. Take one step at a time. Ideas need more time to develop. VIBGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221: You can feel more secure -if you collect what you need. Gather in(ormatioh: Do some researoh. Genuine-bargain Is available. You save by spen- din& on quality. Ignore one who talks of get-rich-quick scheme. spt'Clal organization. You AQUARIUS (Jan. l ·Feb. could be honored through ll ): Good lunar aapect gow unusual request or ~~ colncldea with wr1Ung1 travel, ment. Accept. Thia can be 1 study and ability to percelve time of po"-er p!ay with you pu~ needs. Follow through emerging on top. Know it and on lllDet feellna:s. One who t tt-n--rd Id•· -pu!atnllltnyou.Your go o · new• cou ~ oppOrtuntty ls now, not some greater than lllUclpated. abltract tuture time. ' SAGITfARRJS (N<lvo Jl. !'ISCeS (Feb. 111-MarcJt lG): Dec. 21): Old rrtend brlnp ~~IO:\Slop back bittenWfft memorlea. tUtng bo<k seat to thole who Ll<e ..ln..'i>me!!t. Antid(ltle -~Y-be-tnllrior. Look future: Don't brood a.bout what around and make move which might have been. Stop brings ~easure, g r e a t e r punishing yourself w I t h recognitJo'n. HetJth Improves sledgehammer thoughts. Get through change of 1eenery. Knot Breaks Family. -Circle DEAR ANN U NDERS: This is an urgent cry for help. 'Ibrow me a rope - even lf it's just one single sentence. high school education. How would I sup. port our two sons? Counseling Is out. He ls "satisfied with things as they are." # Please answer soon. I hope I'm 1row:1d to read ~.-DEPRESSED WOMAN (I was going to sign "Depressed Wife," but that word doesn't fit.) I said I wu sorry but It was bis own ~ 11,y..ca~ 1ctlv• w11r a" WE Wll BE CLOSED WED., JAN. -24th. TO PREPARE FOR OUR . SALE WH ICH BEGI NS ••• THURS., MORNING JAN . 25th . 10 A.M. N11k•M.,.lc1r4 e m••l•r chi tt • 44 f•thloll ld1N, lllWport lt.1ch M4-1070 Our only daughter ran off and married a fellow we never cared for. I accepted her decision when .I S!W we had no choice. 'l'bey now have a beautiful Utile 8- month-Old baby girl and my daughter seems very happy. DEAR WOMAN: Yot doli't uy btw old you are bat I 1upect you are too yoaag ta dry .ap aad blow away. Seek COIUllellag for younelf If the male won't go. You mlgbt decide later to 1tt Nme )ob training and make a new llfe fot yourself. Your balbaad m111t IUppOrt bl1 sons ao matter what you deckle to de. So please get going, dear, and pod kick to yoo. fault. r· He goL,very nasty and yelled about L-==.;;::::.-,_.....,,,., sending me the bill for new gluleo and H I r<IUsed lo pay It he would .lend the bill to my father. Do I have a respoosibllity to pay for his glasse.!1? Yes or no? - SHA'ITEllED IN SHEBOYGAN nie problem Is my husband. He wants nothing to do with her or the grandchild. They visit me in the afternoon when be isn't home. Yesterday when my husband walked into the house and found them here be mumbled, "Hello," and walked to the back of the house. You would have thought he was a repainnan who bad come to fix something. My daughter was heartbroken. I could see the burl in her eyes. Neither Qf us said anything but we w(re thinking tlie aame thoughts. Is there anything I can do, Ann? My husband has always been stubborn as a mule. For e:m:amplC!, be hasn't spoken to my brother for 14 j1elI'S because be bought a furnace without consulting him. Last month be ran off an insurance man ~ because be was driving a Volkswagen and they a'ren't union made. · We have no sex life. I clean the house and cook the meals and he pays the bills. We have no communication, no social life. I've thought of leaving but where could 1 go? I don't drive. 1 have only a DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 am a girl 16 and this guy I alwa)'I thought was so super is 17. I have been wanting him to notice me for a year, and he finally did. Our first date was Frlda,y night He in- vited me to go to a three-hour documen- tary at a drive-in. I would have preferred a coffee date so we oou1d talk aod 1et ac- quainted but he was determined to see the movie. D~ SHAT: No. And I doubt v.ry moeb tllat lie would aeod Ille bW to yoar fa&her, eonlldertng tbe clmm1Wtee1. The """81 el 11111 story 11 ltOll a py wloo llllkts pa11e1 lllookl lake off llU ........ CONFIDENTIAL TO CAN'T HACK IT: Your problem comes from within and that's where It must be solved. Pills can be IUelul lo get you through 'a c:risl.s but they are no soluttoo -nor are they a permanent refuge. Talk to your - about getting your bead together. • Alter about 111 boor ol wbat I thought. ~Wbat kind-el weddlas pet wltti todiy'1 wu a very fascinatlng film, he turned to new life styl~? DOes u ytlW:l1 1•?-Alii me and a.aid, "I'm bored. I'll bet you're a Luden' completely aew "'ne 'Bride'• neat kisser. Show me." Gulde" telb: wbat11 rt,pc for 1.tc1ay11 we6- I told him to forget lt -that I was en-dlnp. For a copy, lead 1 dol lar bW, p1u joying the tnOYie. A few minutes later be a long, self·addressed, at.amped e11-,. grabbed me. I lelhim have It' right in the (11 cenU: Postace) &o A.an Landen, Ba mush. Unfortunately, I broke his glasses. 3*, Clalcago, Ill. IOl5t. Open Monday & Thursday E¥0ftlnp Coast Cl .ubs • 1n Session Golden Needle's s~ o1 IM~"' Gardene rs A carriage tour or Sant.a Barbara la on the agenda of the Lagun a Beach Garden Club for Thursday, Jan . 25. Tiie group will leave from the Ft stl\•al of Arts groww11 at B: 15 a.m. taking along sack lunches. ADP Al ums James R. Cofer of the Orange County Water District ¥.'ill speak before member• of the Alpha Delta Pi Alumnae of Orange County Thursday, Jan. 25 at 10:30 a.m. ln the Nint h Wive restaurant, Huntington Bench. LB Ebells Laguna Beach Ebells will conduct a rummage sale from County Association f o r Retarded Children will be in· stalled during a dinner meeting in the Revere House, Tustin at 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan . 'ti. Speaker and installing of- ficer 'fti11 be Thomas R. Houston of Long Beach, assis- tant executive director of the state association. He y,•ill discuss current activities and future plans of the organiza· ti on. Offictrs are H. William Compton, president; Jack Nelson, vice president; ?\lrs. Bettie Vrooman . secretary; Delmar Suydam. treasurer. and George Carvour. Ivan Cranston. Richard Da vis, r..trs. J . D. Littlejohn and Dr. D. S. Stylianou, directors. BSP !1,1ommy and Me is the theme of the annual dessert fashion show to be presented at 12:30 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 27, in Peei.'s Family Terrace Room . \Ye.stminster by Md Upsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma . I SUEDE SKINS rtl 31.tl ea. __ Now Only 19.97 Irvi ne Jun iors IA! Golden 'l1eedle FABR1cs Trvine Junior Woman's Club y tout K COAST PLAZA • CAlloutlL LIVI\. Phi. youth committee will bort a \;~~~=~~~-~~,.~·~-~'~' ~· ~"~""'~"~::::i::::i::::i~~~tll Foster Parent Recognition Night at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 31, in the University Community Ass oc iat ion Clubhouse. Proceeds from a "kidnap day" amounting to $677.38, were presented to Dr. Richard Wellie. superintendent of schools, for the libraries. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday, Jan .. 1 ___________________ _ 28. and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Jon. 27, in the Drastic Reductions clubhouse. Au ociati on New ofncer1 of the Orange 'Protein 'Penn SPECIAL $16.75 by Mu tu Stylist loclud<t ·~Mf.(llt ulllonn l'pflOlnttllrnt ffiCKORY FARMS s\Uttt-bot .:m~tarb .. MMe From An C!f)(b tltlrit;f!• ~ern,rut ~~ 1'ec1pe 11 t l,f '1 n1.11ourf•--•111 ... ,,_,... ~·· ..,...,. lu w~lqy~ anti oxd!i"-t tntt I'll JVll' 1rn MAdwk>h : 1old IHI 10 .. ~ odt. or.Id -I f111Ut,., 81~ • ...,.., tic. Tty I ..... p11 b.ro .. f" bwJ 111'1 i.,o~t 1tror dd!Ptfulb ~111.,.,,1 ..,, .... ,. .. ~bl. Sis0..Jor,~5lc =4se Off,, food J•"· 11 thru J1". 21 ff itt"y f 4f.!S® S..(llltJlall COSTA MESA ,:,,c::--...::.., • 0,. Dlllr. h!Mlan fMtll' dlurtlll tll J ,,in. flMH ....,,, AMmuCA 'S ~DING cmfl!sE S1'0RIS -, UP TO 70% off DM to • ,,bltht "'°' ht OM ..... ""'". 0 11 Jfttlelry 16 .. , ........................... 1:; ,, fo r immediate disposal during remodellin g Dresses Long & Short ' Blouses Costumes Sportswear Coats Corona de! Mar ' 3653 E11t CNll Highway I Block W11t of Fl.. Crowns \ THE GREATEST SALE WE HAVE EVER HAD. COMBINED MERCHANDISE FROM ALL OF OUR OTHER STORES, ASSURES YOU OF GREAT SELECTION . • . FANTASTIC SAV- INGS! MORE SALE e COCKTAILS e CAPRIS & COATS e DRESSES e FORMALS e COATS ' e AT-HOME-WEAR Charge Cardi Welcome 3424 ·Via Lido • Newport Beach 'I I • I • • .. 1 ' \• I I ' I J ' ' I ~ '' 1 1 ' I ' I I J I 2 l i . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' I ' ' ' • I I A ' . AMILIR MUn -AND JEFF FIGMENTS .. 'LET'S JiO TO A Ji10V IE --' -- ~-.__,., TH IS IS -:',::r::::I THE FLU SEASON~ AVO ID CROlii/D,ED PLACES· · TODAY'S CIDSSIDRD PUIZLI ACROSS · 1 Fish 45 Sia nymphs 5 Lowest point 47 Dishonest 10 Throw 50 Adherent: 14 GeM1al --· Suffix Bfadley 51 Unpleasant ~ 15 Highly sound disploned 52 P}orre --: 16 Malarial fever Can. P.M. 17 Sponspage 56 Fuu' partner features 60 A Lee t 19 lni:bn of 61 Mu1ic Canada p1oduc9I' 20 "Vatse-•: 64 Ofttle USA; Sibelius Abbr. composition 65 Bird 21 Deficiency 66 Fibersourc. disease 67 "What.a Y astetday'• P\lzzle Solved: 23 Voice ·-l" 11 Fabled 44 Kind of 26 Salt: Pharm. 88 Gardener's mons1er grass: 2 • 27 Petroleum purchase 12 Fat words product 89 Callout 13 No1ices 46 Down 30 Tire pa1ts DOWN 18 Holy persons: prodUOMS 34 Style 1 Young animal Fr.abbr. 48 Woodell 35 Ancient 2 MusNmlord 22 FunnychaJ19 sl'loes Briton 3 Hindu 24 Without e 49 Farm8t''S chafiot princeas stop: 2 words conc:em 37 Cooking 4 Actor Robert 25. Nappers 52~TranspotUt- formul1: 27 French Uon ~ Abbr. 5 -·Creed: militaryceps 53"Sittlof 38 Fool: Formal 28 Soft Varican Cky Prefix Chnstilln plaslic resin 54 Utilizes •1 39 Combines b't' 111tement 29 Pilot's device er Exhort . heating· 6 Nigerian 31 Of an extent "" • "41 --Marie nativa ofsurface ff7 Excrntioli Saint 7 Patriotic 32 Bibf~ .58 Chemical 42 "-·One Girt group: Abbr. chanicl« suffix I Man'': 2 8 Roman road 33 Flaking 59 Fast dance 1 words 9 Active 36 Car ' 62 .. -yoo- "43 AN OY91" oppoeer 39 SignificaflC9 ready?" 1 44 Go on• 10 footbal "40 By degrees; 2 63 Medlcjne: cruise i poafllon words A"r· I \ DOOLEY'S WORLD SALLY BANANAS. ~~ -AU VOCI WAHi'. TO DO IS AJ!rftJ•f . '""' ,,,,. T11esday, January 23, 1973 ' OAIL V PILOT JG by ~09er Bradfield / 1 By Charles Barsotti ~~~- i'Tll:Jl'mQ.-.. ~~ ·~ . .. ,. ... .. .. by Al Smith by Dale Hale \ by Emie 8-11111ler PEANUTS JUDGE ' PARKER GORDO ,6A'/S~ J/V 012JJJUZ TO - COJttJ!CT TllE . AWMl~C CJ.CCI!',,. TO 11/E . ., R.OT. TICJIJ, MoON MUWNS ' fJ ANIMAL CRACKERS SEl/ol<& ti:l/JE' ~ 8fASTS IS A ~A!Jia.ESS U'OB·· qoo 00 50ME1"HllJ<i> GC()Dill.lD ·n-1s EKPf.CTED· J3Ur MAI:!! OME l,ll'rl;e·ill5TAKE- ' ROCKY, l T,HINK HAVE 'YOU WE 5~ULP TfLL THE DOCTOR TIIAT LYNM Al'IY IPf A I AAVE NO JOEAf LYNN WM M.Wl>.YS A RATHER DRAMATIC PERSON AND, AOMITTEDl.Y, I by Harold Le Don MAY t MAKE A SU66ESTIOH ? WtN CAH'rt TAKE LVNH HOME WITH ME? IF SKE OOESN'T SHOW . LEFT YOU AND CAME TO V15rr JAE, THAt WK'f SHE SHE WA'S EMDTIOHAU.Y PlSTUAe,EO, ' WAS UPSET, HAVE 8EEH RA'TMER t4EGU6EHT .Of HER IN ltEGEMT MONTHS ••• M CAUSE Of T'HE , Aeol!T 60METHIH6 8UORE MR.SILVESTER? TKE ACCIDENT KAPP!H!P ! MISS PEACH . NO ! l 'M ALWAYs; OOIN<S YO/A FAV~! f'R~S OF BUSINESS! Foll:, 'lllUI: INFOftMATION, YOU DID ME. A FAVott. ON TUi-WAY, JU Ni llf, 1'161 I AND ANCn-<51:: Oto! Fltl- E:l'Y, JANUAltV JO, 1~70. . ·~C> TMAT'S All.! lMPROVEMEKT IN A W'Ef!I<. l'P GO OR 501 TNEH WE CNt Al.ON& CONSIDER HAVlHG WITH H!R SEEK ev .... TH.A.l ! PSYCHIATRJST! by Mell WHKM •s WHAT n+EY WERE AFTER IN TMC FIRST I ' . I. -MV 81KE? ~ AUTTU! AEPJlt.1~ SEt;SION INTI.IE -~. OlO llOV. .. ~- AND l!\IERIJO~e CAJ:Jr °AAIT ~TIL.. Tl-le</ .JOk\P /11.L I OJeR~SIC~· by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson 1H.o\T1'1ME, WMEN HE !>ll>'l'HI! o?PoSrre A$ usu,o\I., IT ,._---li FIOAl.~YGOTTHING$ IN AMESS... 11F ·by ROC)er Bollen THE GIRLS • DENNIS THE MENACE I '1 NEEO '!HE pjel(f.ES b KUP 1NE JEU.Y Flt»\ ·SLIDING Off 'IUE PfAHllT ~ .' ' r I .. . ... ... --. • UPI,........ Fo eman Begged -Er&zier's Manager ' ' . T~. Stop the Fight . KlNGSTON, JIJllAlca (AP) -The box- ing world -up todly with ·• new 11eaY1wtllb\ ~ I 111-,.....icl former 1dell•t*'i -'mild ,lllllUlel't and -llllrl -a pali or 111o ..... 1 dlY¢illll ftlll lllo ...,.1111 .... . George, Ftftlllll! -Joe Fralor rplJ>. nq to JI., lilt blue CUYMc lix_ Ull>el MC>llday nitbl 11111 ....,... the n.,.., ~ Uh ,u._ champ bl 1:11 ol 1111 '°'* '°""" bl a lllUVtnr UpMl Fonmtn appeand almoll·on the vtl'(e or lean moments1 ·afterward when oowtmen lwoopod -on hiJJl In hit light Utile CU...tng room in the catacombs of Kingston's National Sll!liwn. ~Ldldll't 'f!UI t!Lln!!l lllllll!\YJ!Wt," he lllld. "I llepl beUIAI Yaney Dllrham -(Fruter'• trabler ID( muqer) to atop from cable televl.tlon and ancillary rlghll. When . the batlered ind bleedin1 Fra~er wu Iad to bit corner 1nd referea Arthur Mercante r11Jed tho richt ·ann of the new champion, the aowd went wild. J amalcana had made torernan tbelr pmOul hero dilrlnl the lut week ol hit tralnlng. 'Ibey even Cheered him when he abadow-boJ:ed. And they bet thelr,.ea1er pay on blm to win in lhe 10me .140 betting ~Ion of Luclen Chen, ~bo !el'Ved is clilef advilor to the promotero. Halo s Move In • Outfield Fences; Kiiigs in Trade It. II Tbe aw~tnoU ol tbt tutuovtr of box-The Cllllomla Angell' pltchtng 1tafl , _._, baa beeon>e IC good In recent yean It tor I moot .. -""""' WU aimolt pennltted only lt home rlUll II bomt bl unbeliev1ble. • 1m1 · •. ~ :.!.. ':.:.ilbll ~-That figure may 1• up In 117! htc•ute _.....,, -d 111t ft1 ihro111h 19 the Angelo announced Mond1y they _,..11 u a in. ~.'!"t Iii ol 1<ouldmove the lenee1 In. But the Ancell them, and n . lllOllllll .. ... beaten play half of their garnet In Anaheim Mull.ammad Ali in tbl toaDed Fight of stadium and should benefit most. the Century. • The move lsn't. great. The center field Matched again.rt the untMted For:ema.n fence will come in only four f-eet and still on thi!I sultry ~cal island ~a blWte stands 402 feet away. In riaht center and JOE FRAZIER TOPPLES BACKWARDS DURING TH E SECOND ROU ND OF HIS HI AVYWl!IOHT TITLE FIGHT WITH GEORGE FOREMAN. atmosphere, Fruier bad ~ mstalled a left center the fences come In teven feet 3111 to l favorite. to 386. ' certaln1y, he and hi.a SLIPPOt'tel'I had no "n\e moves come just a week ·after the Idea tllat he would lose· the UUe under Los Angeles Dodgers aaid they would IUcb drounstanres and tllut forfeit whit brllll'ln their fences . The Dodier center promotm bad "1d would be 1 no field feDCf! II to he 399 feet Foreman Not Gloating ·over. Title .,. KINGSTON, Ja1naica 1APl -Quiet. introspective George Foreman doesn't conside r the \\'Orld heavyweight boi:ing champlonshlp something a man se.lze.s as a personal prize and gloa ts over. . "It's borro\\'ed," the big. strapping son of a Tei:as const ruction \\'orker said after upse tting Joe Fra:r.ler before a hysterical cro"'·d in this lazy. tropical metropolis discovered by Christopher Columbus in J-49&. "The title Is borrowed from the people and must be given back," Foreman ad- ded. "All \\'otl It and kept It In tnl.!l for th~ people, then Frazier \\'on It and did tht iame. "I plan to take advantage of il while 1 Top Stars Out . ' ' . Of All-star Tilt; '.! West Favored CRJCAGO < AP)-With Kareem Abdul· Jabber and Rick Barry mls!ing, th€West 'viii be hard pressed tontaht to acore a third 1tralihl victory over the East ~ the National Basketball Alsodatlon't 23rd All-star game. · Chicago will host the clanic for the first time and a capactt)' crowd ol Z0.000 i.! expected for the nationally televised contest. Jabbar, the farmer Lew A!clndor and super atar of the Milwaukee Bucks, an. .nounced his withdrawal Monday night for ,"personal reaSOfl.!." Barry, the high-scoring ace or the Golden State Warriors, auffered an ankle injury In Milwaukee Sunday and had to On TV Ton l9ht Chan nel 7 a t 6 •:lthdraw. Jabbar will be replaced by Bob Love of the Chicago Bullt and Bar- ry's replacement will be Connie Hawklnl of the Phoenls Suna. Despite the loss ot Jabbar and Barry, the West still figures to be a slight fa· vorite. . It \\'8S not known to what extent Jab- bar's withdrawal had to do with an in- cident last week when a e v e n members of a l\fUJllm sect to which Jabbar belonged were k.llled in Washing· ton. D.C. Jabbar once owned the resi- dence ~·here the killings took place but had "donaled it to the lwlustim group . \Vithout Jabb8r, West.coach Bill Shar- man of the ~ Antele1 1Akef's will have only two plyotthcn -Wilt Chamberlain ol the Lakers and 'Nate Thurmond, of Golden state~ Tom Heln!!Ohn ~ will direct the East 9<1llad for rhe second sttelght yea':"". AJ- though the Eaat holds a 14-8 edge in the series which began In 1951, the West won the last t"'·o 1amu. can, treat everybody good, and when it's time to a:tve It up, I'll do so, 1mil.ing." They sald George Foreman .ll'JI not a legitimate cballeoger, that be climbed a stepladder ol burnt to bit witamllbod re<:ord ol :r7 victories, M by knockout, and nofded meeting contenden ouch u Argenti'na'1 Oscar Bonavena, JimmY EUii and Jerry Quarry. Foreman'• ean •tun& from the Jlbea, but be never reacted. He simply listened to the advice of his peppery litlle man- ager, Dick Sadler, and waited for Sadie:-• to tell him when be should commit him- self. ''We'll take the bii f~ when we're reld.1," .llld16adler, paUenUi w1itln1 for ' ' ·~ \ . Ex•Newport Star 1:21 . ,, . . the shot at the title anchbe bl& payday. That day came on Jan. 221 1973, lo the mlddle of a toeeer stldlum on a West In- dian tsland where rum ani1 bananas are the m1jor pn>ducll. Foremtn ls a 11-lool-l, 217-pound atbleUc marvel who came to boxing llrictly by accident -and largely qainJt his will -and who fought h1s flnt fi&ht on Jan. 26, 00, a fint row>d inoclcout in the Parks l)jamond Belt toumameht at Pleuanton,-caut. He was a gold medalist in the Olympl< Games at ~exlco City, an honor won four years previoUsly in Tokyo by Fraz.ler. Moat American fans wUl remembtr ~H~ven .Plays Big R~le . ' . , I ·. . In.Buffs' Hoop -Plans Spedat to the DAILY PILOT. BOULDER --The recent 81·79 overtime win by the upstart COiorado -Buffalos over powerful Missourl in CotUtnbla may have landed like a cannon shot on the college balketball world, but Buffs guard Lee Haven, a slick Junfor who got ia of those point!, knew It wu tlOlna to happen all alOlll. -"Well, actually I knew earJy in the ate> ond hall after ~·e came back from 10 down to ~head," says tbe Ex-Newport Harbor fiash who bat iuddenly burst onto Big Eight scitte aa a bona fide •star Clndkfate, averaging 20' pc>Jnll per game tn the two league tertl for the Buffa llld ahooting an even IO percent on the teUOll from the fi eld . • . "Atisaoar1 Ls really good," 11)'1 Haven, "but we knew we were ready. We have felt Ill along we were good, but we Just didn't get it going until now alter that layoff before Christmas after oUr 1ood December showing. We have aome guys With experience and they are ttartlnl lo plily again lite we did al home." Haven hit on seven ot" tltfeD llCODd half shots and got 19 of bit SI polnll in the trtretdt qalnst Mi-.1. "II n1 ereat to beet them. They have a ~at place to play and their people make a lot ol noile. 'Ibat makes it fwi to beat 'cm." Coach Sox Walseth's team Ls now U on the. )'ell'., •!Id "1lb two botne fl&lllA!I com- illl up, he bas a chance td get t!>lne• rQl1.. in(,.wtlll Havel! playing a big role. u11e•a 'really taking chalit now," 11y1 Sol:'.ol' the niot>-bllred j\Jl..,.._ un- dlJdpllnect sboCk bl. hatr ha• earned him the rilckname of •!Harpo." "He bas really come on in the last cou- ple of week! and It's a result of bi&: own hard work. Lee ii just now Vf:ry quickly deve!_.,opin« into a IOlid, consistent and Ill· ' LIE NAVIN around Big Eight player, both on oll- and' defense. We'lre played him aome 1t guard and IOllle at forward, but he'• played wbere'fer we•ve uktd him to. "I think size.wise he's a better guard, but be'a a beck of a baseline shooter, 90 Wi" dn use him l>oth plaeet." Haven frankly likes guard better,· but he-was a short center all through high tchool, so gl"1.ng away size is no new -thing for the Buffs star. "I'd rather play guard," be says. '1 get the feeling that you can direct things more and you are aJWa)'S facitll the bUket, where as 1 torwfrd you "SOmelimes get backed loto a t'Omer and don't always know wbere )'OU are. -million alravapma betweon Fruler Boll> cluba laid an eight-ioot·hlgh rcnce him as I.be baler Wbot=-1.(ter beating the and Ali ln June, problbly In Houston'• Would be CGMtructed around the outneld, favored RUlllan, Joaal CbepJus, for the Aatrodome. _ . • Instead ot tbe 10 reet which now elistt. gold JDl(la1 took "'1t a ..U American N_ow U. ~ -divl.!ion lS. in Angels' 1~ral manager Karry Dalton na1andwaved1111 he circled the rtnr· dlumy, ronmao II the new .king and said the moving or the fence• woold The pature wu particularly •lanlfl· · will call 1111 tbota. Nellbtr Fruler, who "create more scoring and there!°'" mere cant ·becaule It waa a time of racial lDlilta be WIDtl 1 rematch, nor Ali, who excitement for the fans . It will slW be a strlle In Amettco -burnlnp, riots and II .m1f11r In 1111 wlnp, 11 Ill hl1 Im-test ror the pitcher. .. black proleot. -and ooq days before mediate future. . U.S. athletes,,Jobn ca1'lol ml Tommie "r ID1 not thlnkinl •bout any blf Dlhll Tllnn M k 'f d Smith, made 1 blaclt·atovecf salute tmn now," ha 11114 lltennrd. "I -t a lon1 ~....ae;8 3 -e 1'3 e the 'vldory stand In the. Olymplc rest. I -t to go bon!O and oee my new Stadiwn. • daughter.-.ST.-:mms_ 1'he St. ..Louis Blues sent "I bad pl!RDtd to do it all liloog and "Atfer that, I want to go all around the forward Frank St. Pifarseille 10 the Los the other tbl.np bad nothing to do with count!')' -to Houston and cities llke that Angeles Kings for defenseman Paul it," Fortman explained later. "I am an -:-and talk to kldl. I want to tell them Q.lrtls in a two-man trade between t.be American. J wu proud to represent roy they can do anytblna 1p.ey want U they N,atblonllt. Hockey League clubs Swida~ countrJ " try. I am an eumple. ' Foreman'• wife ol. a year, Adrlenoe, t. Marseille, 33, wa1 one or only fQ).11' Breach Widens, Prothro Talks 1tve brith earlier thil montll lo their playert left In St. Louis from the Blues' llnl ch1ld al thllr bome in Hayward, nrst aeason, 1967-ell. Curtl1, ZS, had been caut. with the Kin&• slnct 1970, when LoS . The new champion received ma,ooo ., ¥,let .. acquired him In the lnW-le&iU• apilllt _IO IMrC<Jll ·ol' lhl'llfltl'• pilil dTill trom Mmit"al. ·" , wblle Frazier ·was goar111i.d 1811>,000' 1111n1t ui. percent, but 11 11 ,...,... Tilleman Traded who now ii In a potU1aa lo ll1k to pro- With Attorney < moter1 In mllUO&dollar tmnl. HOUSTON -The Houston Olien Mon· · ''I uw blm before the fl&bt " 11ld day traded defen.1ive tackle Mike Anaelo Dundeo ol Mlaml, trainer ior IJJ. Till._, their leading . tickler tut "I said, '~e, we want to talk tcryou · seMM, to Allanta ror the Falcons' ftnt after you Win and be smiled and said, rowid pick, but stood flnn with their own LOS ANGELES (AP) -The gulf •you know, ~· you're CX11 ol my No. 1 teleclJon In next weei't National between Los Anj;eles Rams coach Tom-favorite people. " Football Letaue pro draft. my Prothro and owner Carroll Dundeo wu one ol tha few expa1I who The Ollert now hlv~ two plcu In the Rotenbioom, appeut to have widened predicted a vlctoty for the YOUftl gt.ant first round . Atlanta tias the 14th selection with tha report Monday that the owner ii who grew up ln • dllodvanlaied In the ltrst round. . background bl Tuu, once DlaYed.. bCde-T1lleman, a seven-year veteran from i... than plwed with b11 held man. -lln<Reerwlth the-copt and-ntiHtll-llle--.iontana played out bis opUon Iasl "Tommy Isn't u much In the plcture turnei! ll'OUnd by joliilnJI 1111 Job Oorpt. teUOl1 alter contract oquabbles with the this week u he was last week/' 18id A 'blow to boxlnc'1 bAa =tan, Olten. Tilleman rtportedly wanted & Rosenbloom. " who now muA ~ tbelr five-year contract and the Oilers only or, Th many rumors that Prothro would future pl1n1, Foreman 1 trtumpb WU fered three. e beady wU>a for the Jamaican majority In be rired, with three years 1e11 .. a nve-the ourpr11e c:mid o1 11,000 wbo 11mott Ro e t S n Jo-· year contract, and the fact that the filled the combination -field and g rs 0 a ""' Rams have interviewed many people for cycling drome that ii Klnpton'1 Natlonal SAN JOSE -Darryl llogert, w~ Fresno State teams beat San Jose State the last three seuon9. was nam·ed San Jose'• new head football coach Monda)'.· the job left Prothro up In the •Ir. s~ ... crowd peld a iurprlltnr pit of Prothro and Rotenbloom met Jut 1411 ooo with the govemment·bac~ed Wadneoday and the meettng was termed opoO-l'Oltlni perhaps It.I million amicable and pleaoant but alter the meetlllf[, Prothro clllad Rotenl>loom and "told him I didn't wllll to do lllytbtn& bellind hit back but thil lllln( seemed'to be getttng serious,'' Jl'totbro said. 0 1 refused to take no for his anawer," San J09e State Prtaldent John H. Bunzel said ln announcing that Rogers, 38, would coach the Spartans. "So I Aid I WU going to call my It· tomey and !Ind out what my po1ltloo '" Al the time I called Mr. Rotenbloom he utd U that's what )'OU nnt -fine." ProlllrO WU coocemed about hit con- tract, which ha l&YS lllpulatot that he can be fired only (or moral callle. He reportedly makes $90,00> a year. He said be wanted to know what bit ri&btl were. ---... the othet Mod, ·•p-l Jieared lllllO)'ad It Prouir.•1: al-lion. · "Mr. Prothro tiu now made this lnlo a , th!ni wheri he II now talilnfl in legalistic . tml\I/' llld RolenblOOin! · _R<l<enbloom aays, ~l J!J!te ~ : Tomniy tbot he'll 1et eyery dollar com· 1!11 to him In his contract ll·~·s not re- .taU.ed." But the owner tlso aald he baan't decided on whelher Prothro will ltay or whether he11 leave. ' ' SmithTops Parun In Tennis Action ftoaers wu the first man ,,interview~ for the job alter Dewey King resigned a~ Spartans coach Jan. 5, but he asked list week that hit name be withdrawn as "\ LA COSTA (AP) -~seeded Stan ~n:i:.:as the man we wanted for tbe Smith tumed blck 0My Pan1n, 11-1, i-2 Job," 1ald Bunzel, who talked Rogero,tn)o and unseeded Tom Edlefaen ol Los' •·· I ,,.... •·••• --~~ Chari cban&tnr his mind. . ._e ., .,.,.... a..,.~~ es Jlolert Is a Fresno Sttte gnidUate Ind Putrell, M, f-7, f.t , MQaday In the flrsl bad 1 ~I re<:ord In 1even aeasons " roUbd ol the l!O,llllO pro-celebrity -~ bttd coacli 'o! the Bulldog1. He preVIOl!f' ~~~.;.lcbet, liJcJrtlHeeded ly Wll bead coach II Cal Slitt-illyward. C\ifll\lcbtfolSanAngeJo,Tn.,dropped . Annels Wo·rk Out Ove : ~ el <Sweden 1-1, 7.f, and ~ Ani!reW attllon ·Of Rhodtlla stopped · Jaime Flllol ol Chile' w, 1-1, 1-1. Eleven Callfomla Aniel• and lour rn two other mat<hel, Fraw McMillan pl,yett !rom other bueball teams work· ol South Alric• betlt'Edlton Mandarino ol ad-out at Allabelm Slldlum Mondty, 1•t· Brazil &-3 M ancl)'bll Dent ol Aultnlll t1n1 the Idnb out o wtnte~resled whipped Frank Froehllnf ol Oort! muidff., • • ' · ' . I - Gables, Fla., 11-l.'f-t. . Letdllli lhe . ll'OUP of players were In a litlr match Barry Phillip,. pltclwtl CIYile Wrtgfa, Rudy , May, Rick Moort Of Aultr•lla beat Nlitd Pille, M Clerk, Alan FOiier -and llooH'emnoeld M w. i I ' and lllntlder Bill Gnbaritwlll, recaptly ' ~f!Oailll(LosiAngtle1~t'I. The West won 108-107 in 1971 and by a 112·110 count l11t year OJl Jerry West'! baJ1Jet with two second• left. We:at, along with Los Anaeles teammate Chamber· laln, will be making a 13th All•ttar ap- pearance to 1le the record set by &b Cousy. Featunna the' We.!t attack wUI be &- foot-I Nate Archlblld Of the Kanw City• Omaha Kina•. Archibald, the NBA '1 leadlnl acorer1 was the top vot .... tter in the All•lir oaUotlng. Spitz Top Male Athl~te • Ill , Alto workinC olit were Toin.F.f1111 and W Id Jay Jo!tnlloOe ...... 1onntr Angell """ with Or the Clifeqo l'!rute lox, Jim~ of the New Yori Mell and Jim Merritt of the Cincinnati fto49. Huskiee Get ~bpay Heinlolll Will have two of hi! Celtlct jn the lllrtlni line-up -John H1vlicelt. who w111 be m1i101 hit tlahth AU .. i., appearanc., lftd Dave Cowtns. Also 1clledulod tn 1Iart for the Eut la colorl\JJ Pe~Maravlch of Atlanta, who will be ma hla fint All·1tar •t> peanmce. M1ravl p!Obably will ream at the guard PoOltloa wllh Wtlt Frutar of the New York Knlcks. HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -Mari Splllt overwhelming 9.1nncr of The Auocl1tea Press award for World Mlle Athlete of 1972. is approaching hit new career tn show business tht same way he tnlned to be ... OIYl!lPic supe~barnplon: calm· ly, melhodlcally and wltb t!Otllldenct that be will win. The wiJUMr of teven aoltl mtdall and seven wOrld 1Wltnmfng recordl 1t tbe 1171 Olympics In Munich .......i 4111 •otH 1n lhtl_~f.t.a_tlllua1 poll o11pcw1& wr11er1 tnd ,.,.,,.....ters. Golfer J1ci Nlcitaus v.·aa MCond Mlh a. Spitz ncelved lllWI of the awanf wllh hll customary cool: "rm him about u -but I W11\lldn't bave betn dlllppolntad if I didn't wln. 11 Rarely_ 1:\11 a sport• star to radically cban&ed his Illa liyle a!lu reaoh!nl the peak ol lila ,caner. .Upon relumlnj trom hit Mtmkb trllllllDll. Spitz tl&nod wllh tlll --Wllllam Morris A&encr-to handle hll--'illw carter • J an cn- lertalnmlllt ptl'lml(lty. • He made comad1 1ppearance1 on !he ·~ ·~ ' 0 ---~~--~~------'~-~-~~~~ _ _.ii Bob Hope, Bill Coaby and So!tnY and to ntct lilt new 39-loot -I on tha. Ctltr telovltlon thoWI. lie eatired a lol>J· Ptclllo watct _, hit lpotU-. run, hl1h-paylng lllOdatMtl with 1111 "I've -lwllnmlnC maybe 11ven khlci eomptny and bepo allPMrlnr In U-tlnc:a Mllnfch, • be -· "I 'llV eommercloll lot w...; a. ...ir u 1wam to muc:b for 12 ytara that 1•ttlnl endorlemeoll lor hit la.orlte baverqe-Into lllo water far ntcreatlon ltoldl no •P- fttilk. . ~ for ...... He moved hit born• f111111 lila lamllJ'• ~ wu lnlamewed In the Slllltt roldcnca near Sacrtmk!nto to a bacbtb' S ollloa ol Jlr. pubUdll. Ht II thlMlr pad In Marina Del Rey. He ~ Iha be -In Munich, havlnl dropped enpced to _beautiful bf""* _ Jncidel_ 10 pOtlllCM tmn Jill 111c1n1 welgl>t of 175. SUton Well¥'. • The trade-mark mu1tache rem.Ins, but Hi rarely goer near tilt water, ucept hi• hair ii a btt abaggter. I \ I SEA'l'l'IJ) -Toity Kopay, on utlttant coaclt II UCLA, WU named to the 11011 'OI coaclt Jlllr OWenl at the Unlve11llji ol Wuhlncton Monday. Kopay, a rullblck on Wasblntlt.11'1 19111 Rote Bowl ttarn, II tht third Ullltaot tcldecl to the. HuakY 11&11 In the past -.. Chuck AII!n ond Bob lt\'enon wert. named la.st week. Kopay,_11, who worked Wl\IL the of· fenslv• line at UCLA, wlll do 'the ·111111 for O-.·cns. I I • ' I ! i I i i ~ ·~ , .. I I i l 1 I • • Alamitos / Lagunans_, DH Clash Wtdflflday, January 24, 1q73 Los A ltos Racing Resul~ DAILY PILOT IT It's Official: .. Woods Out Racing Entries -... . fMMty, ,,, ... ..., u. 1tn C:tiNr, lrldl I.SI The DAILY PlUYr's ,. • elusive story of Dec. 17 regarding 1tiater Dei High football coach Bob Woods and his 1m~ndlng release as Monarchs football coach was 'Confirmed today by Msgr . John Reilly, principal of Mater Dei. Natural rivals L a g u n a Beach and Dana Hills square off for lhe first time ever in Orange League basketball }May lonlght at the new Dana Hills gym. Laguna Beach. currently tied for third in the circuit, Will be hoplng for an assist from University as the .~ jan1 face first place El Dorado at El Dorado. ., •rlST IAC8 -.00 vffft. S ....... Mdt lo VO. Flllles I. lfllrh, C1t lmlf'll, 1"1¥W '*'· LIHllM!t& '"°' tMrt-J J1,IO 1'-00 7.tll kolcll 0.. 81r (C1nlOl1) L.,.., lltr UdV CAd1lrl Tim. -2lAI. ,,Ml 1 . .0 ··~ Alto l'llol'I -C11t1MI, Lulllllt•, She'1 Gol'l.ll 00. Tll'l'Y Solon· Stomp O•nc•. Vlctd._.IUfl, MOll!V MOO. ..krtldllcl -· Trl!M I 1 r , (F11Mf!e1rfld l'rlnlOt'I flnlll. ft 'Dell )·utftt Min' IU• t. 6· kekll DM IM, ..ill tUIM AJI games st.art at 7. IStOMO UC• -:00 ... n1 .. l YHr' La n. h •· be olds, ~ Cltlml1111. PIH'M 11400. guna v.:ac u a avy Tlnv'• 11rvct1 <Ad•l•I •·• uo JAii favorite to 11COre its 12th win Echo TOI' ut~l • . .a •.:io of the season against the first. lt~tt ltr l~ IC11"do11) 3.IO lUCTH IAC. -GI Ytrd•. 3 Ytlr ~ & lie!. Clll'"lita.. P11r11 '2iOD, Darllr It Good (lld'\lrd1) JI .Ml 10.20 (.IO 7.00 • •.DO Slflo<' Ptnde (111'111'11! Don'I LOOk l ack (AUllG;ll! Time -20.11. '·" AllO ritn -ltoval SUVI<' l 1r, ltOCkal Mic!<, 1&:;!p!y'1 Tim•, Rockll Dial Jr .. Llohlnlt111 W1tcri. llvn M-Run. No JC•tlchn . tS l•Mtt 4-DtMI II eOOd I. J.Sllllf 1'111d.1, H ill MM.$1. S•VSNTH rtAc...-=-.ioo Vl•~I-Ytlr o!d1 I. ""'· At1ow1nc1. Pur11 . llo C1nyon (Adtlrl S.20 J. J,:111 Lot..lon OCnli:I) i .JO J,.g lllOUQll Sll,llf ! trdoU ) S.00 r1 .... -20. Alw r111 -0.. Rt'Qllf'll, llOUI (;q ao: E1 l'er4n11.·crm1tt s1M:IMl1~ No Krt ttllel- 111sgr. Reilly will not renew Woods' contract and add! no further comment t.o the mat- tor. year Dolphins, who .will be ,,,: ,:; _ c;_., c1w ._, Jlllf 11 without the services of stat--o-·"'" w. c,._,, s-a.v J orward Mark Schrey. llJWtttv., Miu VIN .,..,,, Gr- Schrey Injured an ankle in a ~ ~~Moo'!t~wo.,.,...,, 81, crikk, game against Saddleback last si.intw1v. Moore ,.Nrt.. """mlna Friday and by Monday it was Honor. Also expected to be handed the same disposition is the balance oC Woods' staff, in· eluding a,thlel ic director Marv Bain and three others. .JM•==· c:.ul.eJ..~J: .... 11m-·:i.r.Jlr-• ~i~J~"' 1D !"!i~ 1-~;t I"" IH ~'~-. Ill '°"""' -· -.. ,. .... ,.,.., ~ t,)t ="'°· Plll'WI 51100, i.1'"° &.iw::~~.:1.-.1 ::1 81.'=\.r. ~~i:r.1 1'n ~~1 ... rt ) 11 =.."f:;.1m:;'" m ' ,,,,,. uci .....:f; wffdl. a 'l'HI' Did mllotiil. ,_ 11 • l~IMI lt'f~.J!iJ l"Hlllrl) llf .~;.l:'f.;;,;;, ' Ill Llttlil Go Fi.ti ti~lt _ 11.J ·-~.·~ ~ l'I =:1: fiiT.:.i V)I ) iY ~~Wroetrt> 1U oJ!xt._N ~f'*'i: y~ llf:ir DAILY PILOT,_..-, W. ,.,.. '"'•"" ~•• ,,.... ·PLAYING TONIGHT -University's Jeff Scott readies himself to fire away ....,,_IE-:'il~~(~E\~1 JU against Dana Hills' Mark Schrey (33) and Kevin Peck (55). University is in ac- ., &.~~L1 HJ __ ti_o_n_toni_..:· ght:......_•_t_El_Do_r_ad_o_w_h_il_e_D_a_n_a_H_il_· l_s_h_osts __ La--=.gu_na_Bea __ ch_. _____ _ I I LAii ~ul'ijl_.. 117 = ··~ ·((\.~) ::: ~ ~ ~-11111 ll; Will· Bamboo Bat,sBe Next For Sunset League Teams? ataNTM ltAC• -a v....n. l v.-r ;-l u. Allawl!IC'· P-13lDO. Thll 1 .. 1nttmat1aM14-n11 AM. • Since the &mset League is now involved in (Wlrdl lit • -::r.;~~a\~f\i'111r1l lff using aluminum baU for baseball league ,.i:: I ttle Ge•'~.:tl H1 play, perl\M)S the next tltep is the bamboo LllCW• t ~lkM.ml lfi bat being tested in Hawaii. -~~Al\i=r'> l.1 It seems the bamboo sticks are being tried .. WITtl ,. Midi"~1 llt in the lslands-hecanse _of a shlrtage_ci qua1. CIF Poll Released Three Oraime Coast area buketball leains have gleaned 'l"'ls In 'the CIF AAAA ratings with Corona del Mar's un- beaten Sea Kinp still thin!. Fountain Valley dropped to ninth and Huntington Beach's Oilers have moved up to 10th place. . ..... . ,. ity ash am! the !atle< pooblem Is Ille """"' why llO many high school bals are broken natloowide. Hawaii High School Alhletic Amciation executive --.!My Tom Kiyooaki ays the bamboo bats are allghtly more expensive, ROGER CARLSON about a <lol1ar more lllan aah, but Jaot 1oog. "· . He says the bats are cheaper In Ille Jong run since ·they last about one year under noniial . ooodiUoos. K1yosaki says bamboo bats are preferable to alumlnwn bats, which also are being tesled. "B.imboo feets bett<r in the band then aluminum. Aluminum bats also nick easily, causing· sharp edges which tear the ball apart." lie also says the aluminum bats pro. duce a whiiltllng sound wbkh players don't like. The bamboo bat is made cl laminated bam- bOo with the grain running in both directions and ts sUghUy Ughter than a regular ash or hickory bat. .... * -1 l ~Si\}!, · iii Ren·and tllere: 1 •. i•*°-v~ nw1 l!;'!J Lapu Btacll lllgb bat a trander from * * 5· •ITf~~ !1"'1l ; Welt V1...m.ta wbe it baraN ~ Deb ln '· an • .. a- 1: ~ ct=~,~J.1.,.1 I .. min basWball action. · 1!: ~~~~I l ff He'• Mike Allen, a .. tin aD-roud _player • ~-Sout11 H ns. T111t1n1 L-. averaglq U.4 pelaQ per pme tlavll': ftve N t1, II MOcltrll. Uff'Ollllht. ,.._,_ r .---.t--(R --o;-or-,._., Vktor "" ... 5e·--a-·--. .. v.. . TflOllla'ld ~u. lllll>ldolnc. ms pomt prochldlea w .,_ a., 11, u, 11 AA ad 41. Aad lie foaled oat wttll five mhnrtes t l.'~'i::'\ltlt" jft 1o 1• ta 11 .. ,,1u1 effort. Coodi Jenme _,., 1 ;:1m 5'111119' (1).f) '' ........ aatftt b • • la '--..... . .. "~~!)'"IL Jf IUUlt~ --.-.-z t ~~IJ;oJ I Ii • ""lo."=.~.ilitl ! . "'bn::..~11 .JJ~. E1 Dortdo, Worll1'1'911, UQurwl llffcll. lrawt.w, '9n Cllapman Olllege'r baseball twn will put on an exhibition at University High Jan. It at 2:30 . Former Foabla Valley RIP -• Dlmtt: ' • T141RE Alt! OYE" 100 WAYS TO FINAHCI YOUR CAR ON COSTA MESA'S Harbor Baulnard af car. LOOI POI ·'1111 Ill ... AT CONNl~L JJOHNSON l\SON CHIVROLIT Llolo1lrM!llercwy -·-JU6 HAlllOlt ILVD HARIOR ILVD. "''' .. '" C••• I s ....... I standout Glen.a Andenoa coathsaes to lm· .press everyone at Cal Poly (5a!1 Lab Obis- • po). He's beconie lite Ont wrestler ta tka& la- stitatioa.'1 oalltudlag w1t1tti:ag idltoey to. captme-t• -11111 .... ---to .,..,pete la tbe Eall-Wtsl .W..... -.Oy at LelllP Ualvenlty Feb. 5. ~woo tbe le,oa.d utleul <Un> pioollltp tn Ille cotlqe dl\'IJlon IUi ,.ar. Journeys for prep boseball teams tbiJ spring are in the news with FOlllll4ln Valley, Huntington Beach and M.iaioo V:M>jo going oo overnight trips. _ Q)ach John Cole's Foontain Valley Barons and the Oilers ol Huntlngtm Beach coach Don TerTanove will trek to the Santa Bar· hara area Mar. 2 and 3 and play Dos Pueblos High ol Goleta and,5an Marcos !Ilgh cl Santa Barbara. . Misskll Viejo's venture is to Catalina Is- land where the Dtablos will play a pair of games Apr. 17 and II again!lt the Avalon ~ The IDIJll receat Wftltlbl( 1taadlng1 tn Oruge Couty ....U.oe lo Ust V-tala Val· 1ey Ud Padfka tn • -1 lie for Ont place. Odter'I la order are Western, Baeaa Part, El Modeu, Bolsa Graade, Solton, El Dorado, 1-11 ad Colla-· The vacancy created at Marina High by football cooch LellO Wheeler Isn't expected to be filled until mJd.Mareh. . Prtnctpal Charlos Weaver says applicatlonl for the head football coaching job will be open until Feb. 28, ocreentng will take place from Mar. 3 to 5 artd interviews will be held from Mar. 5 lo 15. A lo--· b doe aut ytar wben Loara DIP'• Kim Frolillnc gnidaalel to tbe vanity. Rb 111111, ~. b tbe Magno!!& High COM:lli -Loan's trMttkM' riv.II. TusttD High'• junior vatstty basketball team saw Its IM overall record go down the drain and ts now tHS due lo an iJleltglble Maler Del High tranofer. It teemS the athlete did oot change resi- dence and transfelTed to Crestvi<w League school in order to take. courses nol offered at Maler Dei. Administrators at-Tustin falled to follow up hi! move with a proper waiver from the CIF-thus the dllquallficatloo of the Ttllers. ll apparerit he would be out for-.. TMtrtD aACa -"°" v•r<h. J YN·r -It or SO. olds t. ""'· O.lmlnQ. ,,_ SltOO. "~ Un1tttdwd (pl 51..0 11.tll Kl.Ill Woods' immediate future is up in the air but those close to the scene expect him to con- tinue iri foot ball at some level. Laguna Beach, meanwhile, P1mH111 11111 ro 11.e0 '·'° ~·-~ Ill) 4.IG -bi; onJy twice in the ... o•.o.!.,ll'IT~J!:f:'• Mr. Qll~MI league,, Of1Ce ln overtime and ~ ""' , ldM 1~ ,.,. eov. once by a single point. The Ho~=--~ D • Artists rot)ed to two straight wiris last week and are a~ parently playing pt_ maximum efficiency. clt!t.• Cltlm 1111 P SI . •OllOT14 1!tAC• -WJ\il11nl'I. J 'f'tllr ~ .,_ ''ii!\:,:r ·" '-" HI ·~1ta~N,C::'.Jvs1 l.2C !:~ Woods' record as head coach at ~1ater Dei includes a 47-lf>.2 mark and one Angelus League championship in his initial campaign as head coach in 1966. !Jnlverstty wilt be hoping to ·rel>ouQ<l after a thrashing by Liiguna Friday. . ' UCI Gains 5-2 Victory TllM -1t.IO. - Allo ''" -Frontl.r Tow Tonio Llnji;s. BllQl/kk McCoy. Andy f>o.it 11, Attan Ga!, Cher Che1 Llro.an, La ,.._, .. krtlttlld -A11111l01 KIH, Jon'ltr'I IUIY 8"llo Trlilf\' Mloglt, HOw Ari YOll. Sof.al Five Vs Chapman A pair of first half goals by Ger'hardt Fischer and two sec- ond half tallies by Pete Kreft paced the UC Irvine soccer team to a 5-2 victory over Olapman College Saturday at Chapman. Fischer's two goals came on Southern California College penalty kicks as UCJ took a 2-1 will be shooting for a 15-6 halftime · lead. Kreft then overall basketball m a r k broke away for two goals in tonight when coach Paul the [int 10 minutes of the sec-Peak's Vanguards host Cha~ ond ball to put the game_ man Coll~ge.._ away. Tipoff is slated for 8 o'clock. The Anteaters scored again The Vanguards nipped to close out the day, Leif University of San Diego Satur- Larsen getting the pointer off day night on Bill Helm's two an assist pass frOm Jerry free throws in overtime for a Kaiwi. 66;58 triumph. Goalie Fred AJbertS9D and This is the first time Peak's teammates Brad Askin, Dave outfit bas met Chapman this Koziel!, Bob Guthrie and year. Rowlando Castillo aD con-Leading the Vanguards in tributed heavily t.o the win as scoring is David Payne, who the Anteaters were in control· bas oonttibuted a 16.7 average throughout. -in the last1our games. • ~· ••~y-cat• ec:+iv1 wear ~ ·we WI! BE CLOSED WED., JAN. 24th . TO PREPARE FOR OUR SALE WHICH BEGINS ... THURS., MORNING JAN. 25th. 10 A.M. b1nli1m•rie1rd • m11t1r th1r91 44 f11hion i1l•nd, newport b11th 644-5070 GOOD/iEAll~~: • -.r • ~ •4· • TllE-UP 1215 • Adfu1t band• {If needed) • Owlp tNn1. oil • Cl11r1 or NJll.ci [Iller If needed • N1w ,. ....... , • Set lbl\att l .S0.13 ltl.lelwalt tubeltM Dlut $t.1J ,__ b. Tn .... tltl tilt. ~ 95 · '1.!lt-IJ11'5.ll0-1S WM1-I• wlllteWlll 11111 $1.73 DI' J.74 , ... [I. 7• _._..ur .. • New bnk• Uninl' all 4 wheels • Nnw Front Cruse S11&.11 • New Return Sprln11 •Tum Dru.mt • Ara lln1D1t for t9tal· V•l( ...... "'"" ...... .... , G71·14 .,, .. P.U F7t-1S ,,7 ,, ..... G71·13 ..... OTMIA 1izi:1 LO'# '"tC~D TOOi cont1ct • Add new fluid • Remove I: clean front wheel bellringt • Jn1pect. repack bellrin&• • Adjust all 4 brake• PROFES$10NAL ... RBIE • ln1tall brake Uninp all 4 wheela • Include• VW't, Toyota1, Oata·un (drum type). Wheel C)'h. as.so ea--Ontmi bu111d '3.00 11.-Fronl sr-111 Milt M.75 pr. -illtu.m 1prlap a.oo ... utra Cott. Fiil·• IUGlllT ..,.,, Any U.S. car plus patt1 if naed•d -Add $2 for -Jncludu: •New Spark Plup ~cars with torsion ~~rs. • New Potnta • Ntw Condenser :r .... Add$4for8cyLaut ... Add$2 u-· -·- Othat partt ex.tn for Air..COndltlonad cart. }r . -· --- If needed • SEE THE PRO'S AT THESE GOODYEAR SERVICE STORES. COSTA "'MESA Gu.,...r s.Mce Sten -JUST NORTH OP Yount & Lane • mt - - -.. t ... ts SOUTH COAST PLAZA 119• ----,.._nil ................. , ... ···-..... ~. J:Jt .. lifft ht. Jill .. l :Jt WISTMINSTER Goodyoar Tiro Clfllot LAGUNA BEACH JJ61 h. Mnl et M•ArtHr y • L Oaa•9 .. , Ser.a Store t7t.HtJ oung "' 1ne 6171 -::.:. . .:::.!:.-. .,...,,,, ..... .,... •:• .. •t0t1 .... I:" .. 4100 4m,:r: =· M 'ti .. S.. 'II 1111 4: MM.•ff'f.. l :OI ,. 1:11: ht. 1111 te I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • \ I ' •• • • • / DAI LY PILOT tte11y, Ja11uary 2J, l~1l 'S KHJ CJ 7:80 -"Trial ." Glenn Ford stan as a Mexican boy's Ja er in a murder trial in. this 1955 drama with Auljl r Kennedy and Dorothy McGuire. ABC 0 8:3o/-"Chaplin's Art of Comedy." This 1969 movie compiles a number of Charlie Chaplin'• film milestones. CB.5 D 9:30 -Entertainer of the Year Awards. Ed Sullivan Is th e emcee for this special presenta- tion to "live" artists. Among the honorees -Iba Minnelli, Carol Burnett, Carroll O'Connor and SOn· ny and Cher. NBC D 10:00 -White Paper -And When the War is Over. Th e first of a t\vo-pa.rt NBC News special on what to do \\•ith the U.S. military when there is no Vietnam war to fight. K'ITV m 12:30 -"The Big Heat." Lee Marvin plays a supporting role as a sadistic hoodlum ln this 1953 crime drama starring Glenn Ford and Gloria Grahame. 1-a---"'·. .. __ _... __ _ TV .-DAILY Ll)G Tuesday Evening JANUARY 23 •:OO IJllJ!l§ll)llJl!i>"'"' 0 Klnrs Mtcktf LA. Klnp vs. Mi11- 11esot1 North Stars. D (]J (J) t!I NIA All-star Ci .. Etst n. Wtst. 0 WIW Willi Wtlt mn..-m•rr.- fl)MIDllla~ m ""llPM" Lod11 l!l"'""""' 1:30 Cf} CIS lkn Walltr Cr1111•ll1 ~ lll•l"f lirfffio Slltw m Andy lirttliHI ED .lstrolllfll)' I m .,."'" c.n. ..... llD- !!)Uttlo- 1:0011om-oo Slflll" ........ fl Wlut'1 My U..1 m I LM LICf m10n •• .r .... it m u hrtll Shi hr m T1MI Fntldi CMt ti) £J t...r TlllM C.. de lilllftl' m-m,,_.,_, Wednesday DAmME MOVIES •:OO 0 XEROX PRESENTS: * "AMERICA" Episode 6 THE CIVIL WAR 0 i10 m Aaeriu ~A Fir1h1M ill tM M!1ht" Alis11ir ~e miew1 tl1t lmp.td: of slavery and some al !ht othef issues 111bich ltd to lht Civil W11. Ht 1bo discuws the tffects of lht 1111r on tht youn1 , .... Ill...,_ .... m••""'"' 1.1on 1:30 8 "fllew ftft T_.. (COii) ·•t- Fttd MKM111rtJ, Miry Mtttlfl. 0 "Tilrl .... 11• (com) '51-TOll- my Noon111. Peter M111h1H. " ' . 'Lat of Red Bot bwers' • 1=======·1 Serious Comedy ~n San Clemente ~ I .,Bt_ ~~ ~. marital mlaadvtDlurea ..,. does wind up wllb oome ..i., lncludln!I tbtt al otap DO\NN f h Betwc<n the rapid 11"' ~~~buYtououlaUChf 1 :~ lbehl poortoo min~ ~-~lellalac:Uon. .......... , urnor of "Plaza Suite" •nd -· Y ,. .I!' m • •~ •-, the fecklela ''Lall ., the_ Red Hol the black come<ly of "The u he puraut1 a round-hetled fhlh merchant hu palrtd all ·i.o ll!ll!ll!Ul!l-f Prtsooer of Second Avenue" divorcee, i. dingbat nl&ht club with a matronly acquaintance vers" may .not be Nell oomethina happened to Nell singer an<I, u a lut resort, of h11 brldp-playlnf clrcle In Sjmon at the peat al 1111 fonrt · Simon. He started to take the wife of ooe of hla best a nla~tp tj)at ii cfoc>mad but It ii an lmmenaely en'. himself serloully. frlendJ. from lbe ootaet ("Yoo'n not terlainlnl -1111 -and lht The l)'1llptoms flnt surfac-going to have U.: Ume with llrst 1Umpoe of lbl1 oomody In hi La f the R H rr IS DIFFICULT to take ") "'·-~·--· °'""' Oouttlf. There will be ed In s " It o ed ot me · u ... ,. VW411JU enacts more _ many more. Tbe show Lovers," the ta test Simon the tetne away from any ol the female fataUst .. though continues Tbundaya through them, and G«Jrge Donka u she were ploylnf the tb1rd of Saturday• for two, and ·- the hapleu ,..food ,.staurant Scrooge'• p.m, con1tanlly •·•"· ·~ ,.~ owner rarelf dou, lbollflb be wuving a pattern of Sloom _.., --· more weekendl at turna In a most credible and dOIPllr lb a t tumo the C&brlllo PlarbooJe, IOI _......_.-, Donka coococts abruplly Into hlP faree: Aveolda Cab r II o' San OOERTAlllQJ not nearly as well written - and It contains many al 1be ,,...___ J1'm ~wbo came In Cltmente. aome hllarlott1 m_o.rnentl --::=:=:=:=::§;;::=~~~J rubbing coloane on his fish-late -In , don an tm· ~ SHOWING HOWi l llllMI !!Ail[ Ill heavy overtonel w h I c h comedy to be releued for became do<inrliht laaden In. amateur production, which is "Prisoner." stained fingers, pouring Scotch presslve job In '1111 dlnoctorW by lbe thimbleful -but lbe debut with a cut that llao balance of comedy In the three fluctuated In p<rlOtlltOI. Spain scenes (particularly lbe ,.. has Injected oome iplendld cond) ls upped In raver or the bils of stage bllsli>ea Into lite ladles. ::_~l·pac<d proceedings, and His first apl\ll""nt ccnquest un:: scenes are rich in st~ ,._.¥ tural balance. . -· llllll•-liiiil CO.NIT DllY~tM CNllYt'¥l giV!l1 a good. ..Ud 1n· · In "List of lbe Red Hot terpretaUon at the San Lovers," the comedy ii mixed Clemente Community Theater. almost randomly with the It ls structured much like ~rious stuff as the sqa ol a "Plaza Suite" -thou&'h It is middle-aged man's extra- Is a wisecracking 'wench who would chW lbe bot blood of an Errol Flynn. Newcomer Judi Tauer plays her wlth · Jey precision as &be sniffs out • Donka's weaknesses and D P UCI lacerates them with ardor-kit· ance rogram at . \ Ung nlppancy. At the scene's climax, bolb eipound at left(lb on their respective motivation "Dance and Black CU!ture," ti<>nai expressions identifltble In a contrived bit of businesa a program of dance. music with black life style. Walk pat· that is nevertheless quite mov· and, poetry~ will be presented tem.s, gestures and physicnl ing. by Carole Johnson ln UC expressions combined with Irvine's Fine Arts Village mu.sic forms aucb. as the THE BEST scene of the Studio Theater at a o'clock spiritual, blues, jau and elec· night ls the second as Jcwme tonight. The program is open tronic music have evolv~ into Applegett strikes com I c to the public without charge. what oow can be called "black sparb all over the stage in :m ~tiss John!ton, "'lJITentiy dance." cutlandish portrayal of an in- serving as guest lectuter in Numbers she will present In· cessantly babbling, kooky dance at UCI, will itiustr-ale elude "I Am a Witness " "To entertainer. The subject or idiomatic movement anJ emo-Cleaver's Wife," ueonstlucuon sex, at least between the two In Green," "Finl Omen" and of them, never even comes up "Gin-Woman-Distrcs!." 'as Miss Applegett repeatedly THE STAGE of lbe C&brtllo Playhouse Is attracUvely set by Dodi Donka, who functlona In a varlelf of backstage rnno101 •IWNIT llACM • ......... HRDOYER HILD OVIR THIRD Wll!K "VANISHING . WILDERNESS" -"With Six Yau Got 1!119roH" ~l;, WAI DIVILS ' NOW PLAYING -IOUTH COAST PLAZA el c.... .... -146-J111 ~;;========~! cu ls Donka off in mid-sentence to embark on new bizarre, lo-!""'"!"' _______ _ quaclous trips. However, he FOX TWIN #1 Co'+'ill• -ll2-1122 U. MONTI HELD OYER "ILWIU MA8teAN• .... 0--....... ............... .............. ,._._ -·-Alto ''Up the Sandbox is a j_oyJ Barbra Streisand's sixth film is hers~ hit!":..:=. "The sharpest, gen Liest, funniest film of e year-the ultimate woman's picture!" ---' ~ ' "'Don'tmiss ~ Barbra ~ Strc;band's most mov-1 iog:per-' formance •i, to"<tate.• I • ... "A tooching, funny, mature, exhilaratingand important ovie."-·--- .; "Barbra Streisand gives the best performance of her career in Up the Sandbox, a story of a bou.. ~ wife who fan-ff.. tasizes b«sclf in iJ all sorts of wonder- ~ ful adventures." -·-------·--- "Lively and funny! Barb.ra·streisand is excellent! Four camera eyes!" _ "Ooeof the~s ten best!~emostoutspokcn, outragcous,unago-sbatteri.ng film in years." ------ IVh:()lJEEM NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES I "BROTHER OF THE WIND" (GI UP ... ,...,._.,,.,., .. ,u 11:..i111+t:•J1lH GENE !iACKMAH lRNtlT BORGNtNE RED IUTIONS WOI, IYNIY BA\Ulfo <II BO~ SOUNOfR IS ~ MllSI , .. , PA,~(RI ORANG& COUNTY fNOAOlM0E~T .... . " NEWPORT (-·~· . ~ l'\U1 • UI ¥ARVIN otNf HACIMAH ..,llMICll"" 'W" "'' ! I\ I \\ \ 1 I \ 11 f, ". ' ' . . " ~~· . •'••., ENDS TOMORROW MlllA-Ct1!1 M.,.......101 \'lll.fo-Of•~11 IJI' •N o•ovt:-G•'*" o ...... ...-.J,_.... l•OOKMUltST-AMlltl~7n"'4oM TUSTIN-Tntl~liff WllKDAYl-4-7 .. SAT. & SUN.-1..M-1 .. IO••Y -NO PAllll ------ ...... ·-.., .. VALA.CH I ,........ . . .:--"O•t= 01.NCI" fltl ... c ..... I Mell. ---CINFDOMF ?D " ~.:!._-_L....1;-•• --.·.~ ---CINfDDMF ?I .. ~-.-._! ....... ---.. SIAD/UM I ... -· ... ,. -..,._ -.. SIAD/UM 2 ... -· ..... --- -.. STADIUM .. 1 "-· .. . ----,, STADIUM J DEL El Mo11to -r 4-41·1422 STATI P•1•d•na -792·71lt •ulnlft I 111••• ,...,.. ............. ....... ,....., ..... "1'1DOLI• Oii Tiii IDOP" ···~ ... NOWl.Al.l IXHUI" • "THI! alSCUtT UTall .. l•I "ILVll OM TOUR'" • "$KYJACIC•llt" l N I "JUDOI ltOY ION,. ... "Tit• ltllVINllltl" "l'ITI 'N Tllll•" ... "PLAY IT AGAIN , IAM" WEDNESDAY NIGHT" • ' ...,.,. 11141 I Diiiy .... ltM~llA!Mrt Htun11:PL1•• Alli l'ltll" "LOVl•S I OTHlll STltANOllltl" klll M C .... tHI NEWPORT BEACH Brl1tol (Pallsad11) al Campus SANTA ANA 4th St, and " _.. . .... ., I flWl\l•I' + ' I' I \I \ ( t \ l I !( ' ' ' . ., ... ' . ''' Nowport Fwy. TUSTIN Rod Hill nHr Santa Ana Fwy. I ! • • ' I • • ' • ' I ' I • • I I ' ! I I • ' i r ' ' I • I t j l i j I ~ 1 L. Jff. BOfld H He's in Red, Raise His Bet I Every l<lw1h plltnt In this country bu llO!Mthlng to do wHh • cu .•• PLl!ABB ADD to thlt excetdlllllY short llJt al flmCIUI fellows with , .... ., .. the 1enUem111 llnown .. Englebert• Humpenllnct • • • DID YOU MANAGE to put away 8.1 pounds Iii turkey last year? That wu the paUoaal averqe ~ citizen • • • BOY BURGLARS ou~ ~ &Jrl burJ1an by about 25 to one • • • A FULL PINI' al ala>hol mixed with a lull pint al water makea __ t leq lhlJI a quart , sir. NOTE rr CLAIMllD In print by some IClence bo)'I · that pip are smarte than clop, rail are ~than horoes, and sheep IJ'O-.llJIUi. er lhlJI bou>e call, Now hold m. Find no araument 1bouf those brllllalll pip and br1&Jit ratl. But to cootend -lbeep are .,._,. than howe call, thlt's poppy- cock. Q. "WOMEN b1J1. the -Bibles, no?" A. 'Ibey buy nine out ol 10. , ABOUT COLORS -Mighty dtmcult to win at poker oaplnat a mlll -favorite color is blue. But a man I who prefers red II lllUally fairly easy to betl So oon- : one student rl mind. Blue players, he aven, never plunge, I novtr bluff. But nid pl1yera, with or without tile high conll, lend to (0 for broke. Remember Iha~ )'tlllll( fellow. i Oieck out the lhado al the old boy'• ablrt bdore you up ,bis bet J NO, I CAN'T uplatn. why it la that the average woman Im a lharper ..,... ol taste, smell, bearing and slgbt than the avenae man. But< 1eienUflc researchers have clairoe4- oudl to be Ille caae, repaatedly. . ! WHAT, YOU can't Dune the only country In South t ::::. both an AtlanUc and Paclllc coutllno! O>me i EXACTLY n yeora ago, the 1~e woman work'"' wao 21 yean old and single. Today's she s II and married. THE BOT DOG -Argument <00tlnue1 11 to who in- } vtnted tile il>t q . Still, moot esperis 11y M wu BrttlJh. bom Harold Sl.ve111. Or ll he didn't Invent ~. e<rlaJnly he popularised the dellcocy when he flrlll aold Iran-• t oo roils to -11 fano In New York City. . r ANY MAN WHO kn°"" exactly wbero to grip the giant .,.te beltlnd It. head can beat sold repllle in a lile-and- dealh otruale. sycl> II tao oootenllon ol a "'° espert. He ~ al t6e anlcooda or the boe or tile pythm. It'• in- ~vable, •YI he, lhal ellh« Tarzan or Marlin Perklnl '\"""d !Ole Olch a fight. .1 THOSE SCHOLARS who lhould know say man's lcnowl- ijjodge doubled bet-. 1750 and 1900:·'1llen agaJn bet...en 1900 and 1950. And """" more between 1950 and 19!0. Since, ploy contend, m111's llnowledge appears to double at iffst ewry five years. Remarklble. Hadn't noticed. ~ I IN THE hill times at llpGrtlng evtnlo, !he British are no! coiled upoo to pay heed to fan c y drill !Nml and ~PPY bands. '11ley sing. AU together. Hymns, mosUy. And patriodc dittlea. • YOU OUGHT not buy a pair ol -on any giY1!11 day 'flinm you beve taken 1boul 15,000 *"'· So advises a foot Ill. l!oel pl blptr 11 the day wean oo, he says. te lltemm, thentoi'e, ~ !he Ides! Ume for such ftttlnp. ' Addr.,, mall to L. M. Boyd, P, 0 . Bo: 1875, Neur port"Beoth, Coll/. 92660. I D~fective Bicycws Recalled SEikO Crumble UFFELL' UPHOLSJERY w._ , .. ·-....... ltU......,N. c..,.,...._sq.oz1t DIWESTCLIFF PLAZA Sb~ 142-7ot1 Open Monday & Thurlday Evtnin91 THERE AR& OVER • 20 ACRES OF NEW AND USED CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbal" Baul.vard af Car•· LOOI ,.a THI IMKIM AT Johnson & Son I HAL GREEN'S Lincoln-Mercury Mlroci. Maafo 2626 2150 HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. sure beall the hecllc palio o1 city Jiving. Enjoy a beautllul protected lll'/lronment .J.L,.Ja JEWELE118 1...0. •fllll Yim C+!ltH tr-•~h111nt I "4•11111• Hu-+T•" lt••h •••·1111 wllh loll o1 room to roam. Boll or all, the p~ce from • 1~Sl9.HG ~ $1,000 Down, No CIOllng Costs. '::' 'llE 26SBtdroomTC7#!1homet [=/ 'a' (114) 551-4041 ,__ _ _.__~ ... HoillCS ' I [ " PUBUC N011CE ) I j ' . Tutsdaf, J!ll'lllary 23, 1973 PUBUC NOTICE PUBL!C 1'1011CE DAILY PILOT J9 PUBUC N011CE I See by Today's Want Ads *PUPPY LDVE: th a t't wM.t yoa 'U havt tr tilt• ...i. Gomwl Sbtpbord poppy • bt's' -old. * LOOKING AROUND FOR A OAkt Hn'1 a 13 VW wilh a rtbullt mriM• Mll<t oil«. -. ' • DAILY PILOT I (LASSIFl.ED ADS • Everyone Has Something That Someo ne Else Wants ·The Biggest Marketplace oo the Orange Coast -Dial 64~·5678 for Fast ResultS You Can Sell It, Rnd It, Trade It With • Want Ad I~ [ I~ I -·· _ .... _ ..... --wi _,,, .. _ ...... ·' GeMral Gener ii <Hneral General General 1.;:.::.::;.;;;_~~~~;.........~---+7:.r.=:;,._,~~-=~~~..._ General • $27,250 • 3 Bdrm 2 baths. Patio, shake roof. Dining nn.. dish"·asher. Fireplace. New paint insid<' & out. Close to schools & shopping. Stui.de lrt'ff. Brk. ;>I0-1720 . 4 Bdrm • $30, 900 '2 ba.ths. Patio, dining room. Built-ins. Custom drapes, in- direct lighting. Extra stor- age space. Like-new honie "'ith "'al.1-10.wall carpeting. Brk. 5-ID-1720. <6'\'V'/~-S.iM ~•moams REALTORS 2821UST COUT HGR.W CORONA DEL lllAll.CAUF. 644·n70 * Beautiful family home in Back Biiy area You and your family will enjoy this beauty. 3 Bedroom, 21'> bath, LARGE FAMILY ROOM. Spacious rear f e n c e d yard with COVERED PATIO for your entertaining. Near new golf e<>Ur$e. . . . .. .. . .. .. . .. $39,950. \AUSTIN·SMITH, GOR~N & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-n70 General General 3 Bdrm· Family 3 Baths + 4 Bdrm l------------- $32,950. 2 balhs. Patio. dining nn .. built-ins, di.sh\\·a.sher. 2 fireplaces. ChN'iy horne. carpeting, drapes. Nicely landscaped. Brk. 5-IO-li'.10. $32,SOO. Pool. patio. Dining Rn1., built-ins, dishwasher. Fireplact! in family room. Rrar lh ing roon1. Contem- porary home \\'ilh solarium. Bri.:. illli'20. 2955 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-1720 ****** ' * TAYLOR CO. * SPYGLASS HILL-$99,500 Fantastic view of city lights, bay, ocean & Catalina from this brand new 2-sty. 5 BR, {am. rm. & formal dining room Colonial. 3-Car garage. A true traditional beauty. ''Our 21th Ye•r6' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHllors 2111 Son ~In Hills Road "Overlookl"IJ Big Conyon Country Clu~' 1 ~--------------1 NEWPORT CENTER, N. B. ......910 General .General General Generil HARBOR VIEW HILLS Best buy in area. lmmac. 4 bdrm., 2 batb single story home. Large p~tio, room "for pool. Newl y redecorated. View of bay & ocean. Low lease. $65,000. BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suit' I, N.B. 675-4161 General General If The Name of The Game is U VING, come play In this charming 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Great lluntington Beach location across fron1 park, convenient to schools and shopping. AS&Ume low interest Fl-IA k>an. Tola! paymcntJI $1.84.00 per month. 847..fiOlD. Ol'fll 11'. 9 • tT'S FUN 10 BE NICE1 If peace, comfort and ~a. lion are Important to you , better look this over! Quiel cul-de-sac street, :t c:ocrra large bedroo1ns, plus large F /R. Localed near shop.- ping, l!Cl;iools and park. Price $35,lloo. 847..f.OIO. BIG 5 FIVE - 2 bedroom homes, flvf' garages, 5 !IC(larate lcn- red yards, on big street-to-stl'C(.>t Jot. Inrome $740. per month. Asking $68,500. >•1-1151 · .& ..... HERITAGE REALTORS IORl.\I I 01\0\ Nf:Ai. "ORS A RARE RND A real Cdtrt charmer, on the ocean side of Hwy., yet walking distance to all shopping. This S bdrm., 1 'h bath home bas additional . sleeping room in 2 car garage; we have the key -give us a call. Offered at. $64,500 NEW umNG Eastside Costa :tifesa 3 BR-$31,000 CORBIN-MARTIN • • •1 SPIFFY, SPACIOUS AND POOLIE Spiqy because it's immaculate; spacious be- cause it is; and poolie because there is a heated and. filtered swimming pool AND a family/game room that easilr. ace<>mm<>- dates a re'gulation pool table. Spiffy, spacious and poolie is a four bedroom, three .bath, rambling single story adjacent to the Mesa Verde Cou ntry Club Goll Course. This-is a beautiful home. Priced at $92,000. UN19UI NOMn Of MISA Ylltll. 14Wtto ·1-ofM-- U~l()UI: tlVMI:§ REALTORS General The Are1'1 Top Profeulonals Since 1Mf OPEN DAILY -CAMEO SHORES 4639 FAIRFIELD. 4 Bdrm.;-31>ath-tiome has many added features, in.cl cuStom cabinets & blt·in color TV. You'll enjoy the pool & very private patio . . also, the panoramic ocean view. $125,000 BAY & BEACH REAL TY 675-3000 Generol _ ...... .-....... Genorol _,..' ••••••••••••••••••• * * FOISICE ~ * Fonner model homes at ''THE RANCij" in the City of Irvine Plan 30--San 1dlguel $47,400 - n •• ~~~UNTED '2500, 4 ~ S baths, 2250 sq. ft .. Tbls home has QJUlraded shag cupets thru· ou~ . dral'"•• waJ1paper, wall paneling, air ronditionmg. Good financing available. Quick occupancy. AYRES REAL TY Macnab-Irvine ' • I~ Coot• - MESA VIRDI IJAST Su..,., brllhl and airy on ·real quiet lnstde ltrftt, The on!)' noile ill ow twceUnc of blrdL A • cubbed and treahlY painted-f I n e carpefed beautJ. I t ' 1 vaCClllt, with · S bdnnl. 2 bath<, llnlploci, u .... room. In--....,. rm. Patio, dbl ~ , Iha.kt roof and a buy at S-U,650. Costa M11a Really * ,..7111 * ~ I 1 'I ' .I I I 1 • >I •I I •• I I l • • ; 1 .. • • I I <I 1,- •l f v . -~ ~ L • .. ·--r I 'L• • -· •I ,, '" Buy a Border to Border Bargain Every classified want ad in the ·DAILY- PILOT appears in. every edition every . day. That means your ad will be seen in papers delivered lo homes and sold from newsracks from border lo border an along the Orange Coast • . • an the way from Seal Beach to San Clemente You Get It· All HuntlngtQll Peach -' . Fotantaln Valley Costa Mesa Newport Beach Laguna Beach Irvine Saddleback San· Clemente Capistrano <Plus the daily newsrack 'edition) For . One Price ' .With A ' ' Classified Ad Phone 642-5678 ' YOU CAii CllAICE1T, TOO. • ••• I • • DAIL) ~lLOf 2J ' _.., .. I~ [ _,,,.. l~ I _,,,_ l~ I _ .... l~~-i;;;;::;:;:~~~ I~ I lli1 [ • F-llA VolleJ H~I ....... Boach Ma~ Vol'# hh lnco-Proporty 166 Butlnon 0 ··~"-• ~-. Opportunity WNER--•• --ELEGANT AS A DAlsY. INCOME UNITS : ~~::-d ~, ~· BACHELOR · 1rp1c ""11 y""1. >FOR 147,500. n.1wce units. MOM & POP fireplace In !amily nn. CUI 1 Bit. 116,500. Your temu. CUSTOM ,000 by owner • ..,_,.,., Good C.M. loca00n. BUSINESS de sac, brk $316$(1, 80-2561. ~t• leta than ttnf, no Cloll!: to M~aa VeJ'de Coun Univer1itv Park &-FOR $75,000. North C.M., Price red u e,_e d, lia.rn· OWNER de1perate. 3 baths, me.int. Why are )'OU boyln& Club _ Large exec ' 4 Is terrific &\ $980. nKI In-burger-Taco D ti v e -I 11 , t. bedroomL Patio, dlnin&; 1orneone !Vl ape.rtmenl 'holl"""m witfi ~·-, pool· • 5 BR honie w/crpts .l come, Teena&:el"S can help, too. rm built .. jns diahwuber, bldg'f Buy this as a future t;-bitoT"" wet refrig: etc. drpa. Beaut In d 1 e pd . 10-WITH $1000 nlO income $7,500. CENTURY 71 l\E· 200 taniUy nn ~Ith fireolace. rental. AllO ~ BR. $21,500. ewlf d at'ed with !wt· G r ee:nbell w/swimmlng e;otng tor $145,000. ..:84Mtc:::..:.o':.;''-· -~~---I Dllftll BA~llM =~· bkr $3 8,9,50, 1,Your' down will handle. ~rklln:~f :~~y :a~~. te~~ls U~l.vo~:;;~ ~~~!1.$350,000. pencils o)lt ia~a~tbi~~~~;t> '_f..!PJHe__ -""'DJ ' C H-O-J CE--LA R Wi N . groun'il11. Call~ ~----How about 143 at 2 mllllon! Typewri{er Sales &. Scrv ' "1'IBURON" condominium HERITAGE REAL'iJ.'ORS. CALL BKR 646-S8ll Glass & Screen business LQcated Eastslde Costa re..i" now on marl!•!. NMa1 l:JMf.llU · FANTASTIC BUY! HOLLAND Bu1.Salo1 Mesa on quiet tree lined Total exterior maln~enance. Newport Buch MobleHom.s {t•} 1716 Ot·angl!, CM 64.>4170 street. Added, paneled ~~~ ~~ ~$26,950. W Hff A Call on this exciting listing! lSalesn1an Needed) family rm, heated pool Quick pouelSioD.---=-Frorn Real dollhc>l.ae • Clean, HtC : - . f'H-38 Unils, Costa l.Iesa. Ex· Sl-'()RTSWEAR relllil store, 15xl8 covered patio + $27,950. VA/FHA 5%. We sharp, wUh niany xlr8'1. $39 950-Mobile Homes cellent condition! nten & .... 1>mens. Established enclosed cabana 3-big know tbem bHt b!ea.ule we 1..Dvely carpet.a:, drapes, I For Sale 125 Priced to Rll! 3 yrs. Balboa Island. bednns 2 tiled 'bath• "'\1' lhl:lm. . lty .... wiving. Ov""""' lot w/ Large Rumpus 61> x GROSS ~67>-"-'-'8420=·----~ huge conuir brick tire'. ·~7~.)~ • """" fo< "°"' "' !nil•<. .Room. Pool Motor Home Renta!s LID~~L TY Money to Loon 240 ec•u::.uil~~e~~~g Huntl•n Boach -':~~": ~~-= SALES & LEASING 3377 Via 6~73 8'ach 1st TD Loans •K 000 Call Red Carpe:l SUPER home. An exciting pooWde luU •· I ·11ty ....,, : atmoopbue that flows ,.,.,,~, "' COST A MESA 6% % INTEREST Realtors, ~ FANTASTIC :!:..~""'':: ::Zia~:: Dallll3r Motor Homes 12 u.; ...... $1s6,soo 2nd TD Loans $28,500 -emER THAN NEW Only 3 . yrs. old Ibis 3 bedrm 2 b8th home is in mint conditio~, beau· tiful built·in .<Jtcben. spacious living, owners are anxious, Hurry! ! cau Red carpet. Real· tor! 546'8540 SPANISH DELIGHT ''"' down ""'' bar. nn.e Sll 6800 4 Units ... , . $86,000 · story executive home. Enor·liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I bedrooms. 64&-nn. • 4 Un its $60,000 Lowest rates Ora~e Co. mous 11!'PfU"9.te family room $23 SQ() OPENTILl•tr'SFUH70BENICEf LIKE new 12x00, Expando Sattler Mt9, Co. ~~~e~:fi 3i!~·ir: :a~~r;:i1!~b~ i IDNl·~1 ~~1?rk~ B~ l~~~: ~~¥~:::T;~~· plua 3 other . ~s. 2~ Yl1I old, all elect kit, ____ -•••-• 3 BR, 2 BA mobtle home 111 Phone 675-6900 Private money available Baths, custom tie-back disposal, FA ht, dining rm., . 2ND TD'S -ANY AP.fOUNT drapes w/sheers, shag car-front roop:i, crpts, drps. ocean-front park, Laguna Lot• for Sale 170 Call C714J 673-4194 Bkr pet thruout. All elec kitchen Min. $1200 down. Payments I ACK I A 'Y I Beach. $22.000. 494-8239. w/dbJ oven &:.solarium tile less then rent A real good M · ~ Owner transferred, 1972, 20x WATERFRONT, 30' boat slip Mortg•ges, Ooot. Step down living rm, starter home. Jt's sharp -CONDOS 54. 5 Star Adult Park. Con1· In Ballxia. Lot 7 Collins Isl· Trust Deeds well .landscaped & lots ol See it.today_ -.----.in-1-3-d plete. 400-4886. • and, 673-mo. concrete. catl to inspect and If Carer:ree livnig arge an ATTRACTIVE 12x55 tn adult Real Estate disc tenns 9GS-«56 4 bedroom homes. Excell uss · ' . area, priced from.$32,950. to park, Costa Mesa. Shag Exchange 531·51ff-( =l 531·5111 1!,':5°;,!'"'w~ll:'pt,~ ~~ =.c.~ 6:6';:3.!· n , 2 M-1 gar. Jrg rec area, cocktail BA. in Driftwood Beach h OWNER sacrifice, 4 bednns, lounge, bi.lUard rm, O~plc Club., H.B. $7,950, 53&--0321., Exe GRCJe 182 260 $40.,!XXJ Isl TD, pa.id dwn to $20.00D-eovering vacant ~ acre oommerclal property San Juan Di,pi11trano. valued at 545.000. 9% Int only quarterly, all due In 5 yrs, • 10% discount Broker, ~uilt"~· d ~:: s re~: pool. 10% ON. West side of BAYFRONT NE \V p 0 RT 140 x 140 prime industrial fireplace In lamll,¥ __ rm. Back Bay, Santa lsabeDe & BEACH $18,500, 46 Cabrlllo, kll. Wilt exchange for com· $l?,500 2nd TD, on com- Cul-Oe-sac. bric $36,500. Irvine. 10-3 pm 71~17 or merelal or industrial lnwme rnercial property dwntwn 714-493-1154. 84&-1383. If 646,0078. property. Lot is lree and San Juan Capistrano , REPOSSESSIONS OWNER leaving.~~. 2 -~!Sl'furt~ 1J~~.J!·~ payable SI75 per month. baths patio d1n1ng rm I ( --Incld 9% a1l due In 3 yean. ForJ ruormado_n and location built-ins, dl,shwasher''. 531-511 -J 531·5111 I [jJ ·54EJ.1600. Owner guarantees con-o~ mese IBA &: VA homes, Fireplace, family rm. Brtc. lNVESI'MEN1' DMSJON st r u c 11 on lhili year contact • $36,500 962-8965. OPEN nL" • fT'S FUN ro BE NICE/ W/$ro,000 bank deposits. KASABIAN OWNER arudowo, 3 baU.., • NEWPOR.f-SHOR-E·S [ ~ 15\0 d""°"nt. Broker. RMI Estate 962""44 bdrms, l)OO]., patio. Dining P. , Bu1lne11 Property 154 1 '. ~n~4~/4'J~3-~t.15<~.~~~~~I &iiioiiiiii;i;;;iiiiiiiii•I rm, built-ins, dishwasher, Walk to beach. I.£e, 3 BR. "-'-"''-"-'--'-"--'--'- COME AND SEE fireplace In family rm. Bric 2-Sty. 211.i; baths. BU-ins. CLEAN lnoome prop, ~nt 1~ $46,900. 962-8865. MUST SELL! $42,500 C.M. By owner $45,000. E-Z 1 .,. ~for~ ....... this very sharp deo:nted 4 $22:000 FULL PRICE: 3 CAYWOOD REALTY trms. 64~203J or 642-6500. Real E1tat1 Wented -n:I $29 500 Bdrm.. huge tot, next doo1 ' bdrm. hdw fioon, l'K & * 548-1290 * Comme<clol * "'ulck Cash * ~---;;;;;;1 f · to $40,000. homes, or oveP., dbl garage on a 60001--~=~=~~-'I" • $28,000. CALL 842-1418, rt. lot with nn tor boat, OCEAN VIEW, Property 158 \VIU buy ~ propttty.~All Houses Furnished 300 4 bedrm, 2 bathu:me PA'M'I WALKER R. E. camper or what tia.ve you. Modern Duplex 4 Bdnn. up, STAR.i'YOUR cash within 72. hrs. Call on big corner lo yrs -. HURRY! Walker & Lee 2 Bdnn., Dn. Very large, 962-8851 Balboa Island ld h be od BY ownEtr, 4BR 3 BA Real Estate 7682 nEdlnger prime location. $6.'i,000. I BUSINESS HERE __________ , Oled-f;-as .. _ en Sre . b tri-level. 2 Fpl's, lrg fam Ave. H'BeaCh. TI4/842-4455. HORVATH REALTY Good lnvestmen1at1914 New-i . 3 Br., 11f2. be., yrly. e ID CUSw~ pan1s nn w/wet bar, torm, din Ope.i eves till 8:30. Ask for Dave. port Blvd., C.P.t. For info. ;111:w:1 ..... · 673-1488 -archways instead of nn. Many xcras, cw-<1e-sac. BEST BUY 675-1972 494--0615 Call -~ • Corona d•I Mar door way~, eleg~t shag Nr ~ ~h~ s:;n-Decorator delight. 3 Bedrms 4 BR, FIR, DIR, 2 BA. I 400 Lt7• cpt., brick fireplace , ture. • · · . · on huge pool si~ lot b1:k to pool A park. Harbor !!'!!!!'~ BROKERS tNC. Sep. Garage Unit $911. Also gorgeous built-in kit-FOR Sale By .Owner, 4 ~br Outstanding paUO and deck-View Homes, s 5 7' 50 0 . C.ll jiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I CoUat'l', c.~t. $85. And H.B. ch D n't miss it -townho1!5l'. $23,495. $500 ing. Large pantry. Boat .::83:03-3894"7"''--~---~ acre util pd. Pricen.ed Oto ll' Call under } HA approval. Swun· gate. Our Best Buy price Ouf!lexes near the ocean I~ Rent-A·Hous• 979-8430 se · pool, tennis crt, basketball $32 SIX! CENTIJRY 21 R E Miles Larson. Rea1tor Flnlncill Red Carpet, Realtors &: park. 962-5040 aft 6. ~74. · · * 673-8563 * L•guna Beach 54&-8640 ASSUME 6~°1• LOAN BY OWNER 3 Br, 2 BA, new e BL~. X-plan, 3 BR. 1 ~=-"=----'l-60 ~ii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~ [11~10~-c.u~1ffiil~P~d~. ~N~lce;::;...i;;;;;.,;:). l ·ALMOST ~ ACRE C.1 + l bedrm 2 bath house Located in prime Costa Mesa area, spacious 1600 sq. ft. House in ex· cellent condition-large 21h car gafage suitable to live + have commer- cial business. Hard to Find ! Call Red Carpet Realtors~ DIRTY BARGAIN $28,500 Payments less than rent. paint, cpts, dlhwhr. S2'l2 lam rm, dm1ng nn, 2 frplcs. EVERYBODY'S Bu1in .. s Br. w/garage. Laguna. ""'"' luxury ,,........_ Cat>ente. 126.950. 008--0140. Immao. Upgnded. ISl!.000. DOING ITI 0 ~. 'ty 200 $200 -mu Pd. Ll'K• l 8'. Ankle deep shag carpet. 644-B067 or 646-8824. ppor rvnl w/garage. Child/sml pet. Flocked wallpaper. 3 Bdrm Irvine HARBOR View Homes _ 2 Why not save money todl\y in Winter near Marina Hi $28,900. BR + den. $54,500. Fee. Green Valley? New on NEWPORT BEA~H $225 _ · 1 Br. Nicely turn. CENTIRY 21 R.E. 842-4474. WHAT MORE... 2024 Pt. Provence. Open.l-;-5. market, fonner model. 1 Marine Contracting Finn Frplc, garage, xlnt loc. bedroom or den down and 2 Finest e q u Ip m e n t & Ocean view! · Lpyu.Y 3BR. 2BA, bar ad-.•. coo.Id you want? 3 Bd· Newport Heights . ..,.. bedrooms up, wet bar. Prlc-wa1ertmnt location. 35 Yr. NU-VIEW RENTALS JOining Uv ~· covered rms., family nn. &: util. rm. ed to sell: $30,000. old t;ompany. Space avail. 673-4030 or 494-3248 patio w/frplc, dark room, Lovely yard & view; tn OCEAN VIEW · larwln realty Inc, tor bOat sales & repairs. comp. decorated, see to ap-Univenity Parle $53 900 (TI4) 968-4405 BILL GRUNDY RL TR. CO'ITAGE, redec., nu blllnll, preclati. Owner, No agents. · ' · N'pt. Heights, Olft Or.; 3 Income P-rty 166 , 675116~ crpts, dra~,_ nr bch. 1 adll. $34,500. 540-6932 QI' 847-5410 i eel h•11 bdrms., 2 ba's., bit-In oven/ • --. ~ UUI. pd. S2(JO. 494-598S e~. FOR sale by owner -S&S r I range; frplc., F.A. ·heat; FOR sale by owner. 2 BEER-Pool·Nr fieach. Sharp Hou••• Unfurn. 305 Park Huntingtoo tri-level. 4 ·., terrific bay &: ~an view. houses, Coi'rM!r lot. 2 BR, Set for liq. lie. Terms. Own----------! BR, 21,9 bat 1onnal dining , Lease/option, $1,~; S275 S3l5 Income. 90% tin. 1229 er leaving. 646-8811 Brk, General rm, kitchen ee.ting area, lge REALTY n1onth. $47,500 . FUTTl. Delaware St ., Huntinll'ton Van. 1---------1 family nn W/rougb cedar A Company With Vlsloo CA.LL J;\· '46•1414 Bch. $2,850 dwn. SAN Clemente Beau~ Salon 2 BR. HOUSE, n~I)' decor- . & frplc. Ovmhro Univ. Parl< C'"'"· trvln• 9.~.,., V·-·-~ , •--G"'at porentlal Jo< OWi>?< aled. F•nced yd., i"'· 1 • ater tottener &. ~can An_ .. '"""·""'""" ......... ,...eJ O'.>St mopey-"-"""" •---can ·child o.r.11so mo. + noo .. .. ......, 1wu )'OW' house, apt.. st~ operator. Dwntown """' purifier. Many upgraded Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM ' KIA.LTV bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pllot l 493-330'J aft &pm. clean-up ftt. 2029 Wallace feature&. Fast possegsion N11r Ntwpert P•sl Offlt• Classified Ad. Sell Idle ltm1s A good want ad is a lood in-_Sc.I.~, _675-_3'89~·-----I =~mi $4iiiemBend °¥:. lrvlne Terrie• Claulfled Ads ... 642-5678 now! Call &12 5678 Now!· ~tmcnt. Need 11 "Pad"7 Place an adt o"!':': """"'-. • ',;::,-·p1~. ::!">:!:..'.'~ USE THIS HANDY ORDER BL ANK. WE PA.Y POSTAGE! bedrooms, 3 bath + pool. wllt to Balboa Iaianp, Some Patio. Dining rm, built-ins, Vu, M111t aell. 'Asking disbwaaher. Fireplace, rear $59,500. 6T;r7689. ~ nn. brk $38,900, Leguna BMch o: + ~'T"i.a~ UVE FOR LESS patio. Dlning rm, bulltin.s, ... mo'ney per month. This dishwasher, fireplace· ln 2 unit income property Is family rm. Brk $35,900, located In deslrable area of 962-137J. Laguna Beach. Large lot BY OWner, Franciscan provides loads or room for Fountairul, 2 yn: old, lge 4 expan&k>n. Great potential Br, 2 BA, family room for owner/live-In. Nicely w/cathedral cln,g & Parquet landscaped. MllBt 9l!e to· ap- Ooon, ahag crpt, prot preclate fully. Call Dick landscaped. $41,500. 10% Johnson. $57,500. down. Open house Sat j; ~ Sun. 842-8004. . I FOR we by owne<. Will "ll Oe.an ~~.i: •• i'HAsu,°' ..f.'w ~; REAL ESTATE S SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE UNE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES • • 7 " . TIM• TIMU TIMB TIMU ---- $4.SO $7.40 $11 .70 $17.70 $S.IO $9.01 $14.SO $22.50 • $6.10 $10.76 $17.30 $27.30 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 TO P~Ull COIT . Only needs paint + praisal. ~ Br,'-~ ~ frplc, ~ Glenneyre St!Hl31. c:rpb: A drpit,,._~con-494-MrJ · 54 6 clean·up._3 bedrm 2 hth vm.d to lg\i dm $28,000. · PRICED RIGHTI home Wtth eve~mg 84&-4739. ! Big ocean view! 3 Bdrm., you need. Built-ms, BY OWNER: 4 )'11., 4 Br., 4 2 bath home with beautilul forced air heat, fire-Ba., Din'. Rm.. Fam. Rm. view of ocean &. hills. Lge. place,, double ~ara~e, Crpta, drp. Nr. scbool. living ll famll.y rm. w/trplc . excellent residential 96tr2'115. eves. Attached 2 car garage. Nice OR USE YOUR CHARGE CARD • 'w• 011ly 0110 word i11 otth •p•ct tlto¥t . 11111.Ho your tddrt11 tr fM!o11t ll'l'Mlitr. The cod of 'l'•llt ,.4 h ti !ht e<0d of th e lh11 011 which t!lt 111t wo•'4 ,.f 'l'OWr td b wtil• le~. A<l<l $JM! pl111 J li1111 ~·•1• if '1'011 ,.11 ...... ·' DAILY ,llOT lo• 1-Mce with M1il1tl r1pli11 • · bbo hood i t WARM home fine neigbbon patio attu. Euy~are \and· ne1.g r , q u e H B. nr sch; bcb. 4 + 2• llC&ping. A jewel at $49,950. street .. Hurry-Owners sM,500. Owner, 'no agL * 499-28'.XJ • are BDXlous. Red carpet ~2322. • Realtors ~ OWNER .;..;..,,. 3 bat>u, • ~ ~ bdrma. PoO], patio. Dining ~ ..... ~ BACK BAY , . R-2 $21 ,000 FantasUc corner loca- tion near lhe back bay grea\ development po- tential, exi.sUng 2 bedrm house easily rentabl&- wlll carry ltsell plus some! aakin1 '21,000-Won• last. Call Red carpet Realtors 54&-8640 • • -..- rm, bw1t-lns, dia.bwaaher, IOU!tl~C'AUI' fireplace ln famiJ~t,rm, Brk .,,._......,..o...- $46;900. 962--8865. * OCEAN VIE\V * Th 2 BR. A. deh or 3 BR. kty. 2 e lr"'rplcs., llv rm. I. din. area w/ocean view. Bltn ranae, I A I Ly ~bl .. ":.""c.:!:."W:-ru.u'i""; Balcony view decks. A rare ~ • find.at $43,950. Mts.SION REALTY, 494-m31 PI LOT . il=~~!'J'.'~: ORANGE ·COAST'S leading oceAn vu, $38,500. Inquire 8-2211 Lido lslo 3 Bl!. A DEN ldd.I tamlly home 4S l'oot lot • 119.!ISO LOWEST PRICED ••• Home on Udo. 2 BR.. +; 2 bl!lu. Quiet end of the I• 'land. $5!1,1511). LIDO REALTY 3377 Vla Udo, N'pt -'7J.7M . Met1 Venle Markentlace :~£t= Sall tdle lttnu .•• scum P11tli1li fer , , • ••,, , •, d•y1, fftl1111i11t • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Cl•••lfl•t#.11 , ,, ,, , , ,. , , , , ••••••• ·., ,, •• •• • • l••• • • • • •• •••••••••• • ·························································· .. Ad4r•N ••••••••••••• •••••••••• •• •••••··••• •••••••••••••••••I••• City , • , •• , , • • •• • • • • , • • • • •• • • • • • • • • P1te11• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •'' •' '•' ._.~N1 ........................ .". I~ ............ . ,....., c-.. " ........................... ..,.,..... ........... . -----------Cut Hiii -PAITI ON YOUl INYILOK ----------• , I IUS INESS REPLY MA IL Oron1e CHlt DAILY PILOT P.O. lft lNO Cl1llillotl: Dept. • f •• ./ "'' OAJLY PILOT Tuesd«I, JIJNJ11D,1973 ! ..,...,._ l~I --lijll _-.. ,.; I~,,. .. -.... -IItJ , ............. 11•11 ... ,.._,._, b"'W ll!J r----1~ 1..-. ... -ll!J I .__., ..... 11.1 305 ........ """'"'-I ;.;.;.;..._.;...-'"'"--''"" Cotta-Mesa No~ _.. C-.. M.r $2'0-llRAND NEW 3 BR., I $215 • 2 Br. ~. VIEW IBR As/. So ol Bath doubt• ra" &• Gar. Bolt ollp avail. a.Id blihwu -oublel. adlta VILLA MAJllllLLIS rownht'luae. crpu, drPI. bit· ok. ool,y. Olll S15-:079 s •ci hu. Kilb A Pool. Avail. sm • 2 Br. I Ba. um hie. 1 bib to Illa a-..-. p,. OUS 1 I 2 llDllOOM APT. ,..w. °"" ('1Jl m.-or Frplc. New ..,.., -$110. & ll!l 11U1 Dd.. Yl!J. l'umltheol & UnfumWMll ;.·'\'ts ITI-11 ~ Car. l adult. no pet. fC5..lat ..,It Llvlrw 3:11 • Uitfvm. MS Apia., ~ ~"' ._.. l'um. or """'"'-m Pum. or IWunl. * llOVJ: IN TOOA'l" * Hunllntfon JIMch Hunt!""°" -ch •••• MQ, -I &·I Br. II ..... -a..U. ALL EX· 1'IU8. Pool..i, .... bldr. Kldl -· ..... iu.. Sol Mar. 11111 -"8" I Heute• Unfvm. -al East Bluff S:., · ~:.· ~·-~ Colla MOM Dbhwasber color coordloa1'<1 aDIJllancu • <» W, 111• COITAMUA 4 BR I DEu Oilld/pet ok. Plulh slwg carpet• minored wanliilbe doon> Th.,. Are Just • Fow 0 1 ~ NU VIEW RENT•Ls C-de Oro tndlnct lfr ttna In kitchen· breakfast bar • • ... ,. lndlvidu11;l Hotn&, OV('f' 2.00> • "' ...... ~ •• bli w. "' ....... Blvd. oil stater.-.TS1D0<NT-. HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST • s• C.by Estate llYIRI 2 Acres. B1autl1ul park·lllte 1urroU11dlilS•· SUltken· Pool. Sparkllng ·Spanish Fountains. Our Mru•Y "''"TAI~... .... n. Unuaual lart• • ~ Or -ALL tmLITIESPAID ...... ate ftDctcl patio-· ·pluih landlcap. OVIR '2 t ' ·+ bedroom or 3 • d.,,, Ftunily 3 BR .. N'pt Hahts. Pets. eom..,. be'°'"_....,, lnJj. rick llal'B-Quu • large heated pools UNDlll IS t t • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining m · l BR .. f'\lm Cc>tt&2f'. room plus larte formal din· chlldrt'n O.K im ?t1ontll. C\istom dellaned. featwina: & lanai. Air concUUontaa. • IN llTWll N t t tu U~I ri·okCouple or mil· roor'l1. Comple-!e privacy avall-. }~t>b. lit.: Lee. 2 BR. e Spacious kitchen wltb W. 3101 Se-llrl1tel St., Sarile.. SS7.aoo • Walk in Closets • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets uro "<' · I w;th "'""'""rear and front 2 ba. apt. nr. Cdllt Hl&tl. dlto<t Ila!>""' COLDW•LL .. IAHJ(llt & CO. ALL k~"PAID. • yank. Liwelv garde. No Sl6) month Hal Plncbln. • Sepuate dtn'r area u.a.ua.AINO •AINT VILLA YO Sl50 -1 BR. ·oozy Cottago I "'"· S<1' per monlh. call RI". 675-1392. • 11om .. llke s-.. ..,_....., "'" RIA l BDRM. Unfurn. $165. • Jhlrn. •185. 2 BDRM. Unlurn. •165. Furn. W,5. 2 yn ol~. \\'O~'T 1..AST'? li7"~ or 546--~. BLUt"TS Condo. 3 1aore • Private patlol ~~~~~~~~~j;~~~~~~~m1~~~;,-;:;tm;-:o::~I Jl6$ _~~Bu.* NF.Wcriits. Huntington Beach =~=in ~ttc~ : = :n w/11orq:e ~· Unfvm. S6S ~· Unfurft. '61 drp&, '"'<tu. ltlCd lor kkl•' rnr. LEASE' ,.....,...,,, 3 ,.,.... eooct .,... bait • Klnr.., Bdrm.o Balboo lslond COiii Mau * FRESH AIR TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, l'hBa., HOO sq. It. Unfurnished $200. ALL UTILITIES F REE Wallr to HunUngioD Ceflter AduJts, No pell pets. Br. 2'ii ba, Formal dlnin&. view. Town hou5t dealRn. e Pool • 8&rbtquet • .,,....1---------I·;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;~ Walk S blodal to B1acb. * I~ family room v.1th Leue onlv $:U5 ~r month. .. .. ~eel with pll1Sb Land-ELEGANT 2 ~ apt w/gu. I 1 Lrs S BR.. Aptl. Ntwb $11$ . PR!\',\ l'E ~ Ul!. h....-. hreplact>. Choice location I: ~Brok::,::::=•:.•,:.:;;-="'----..... p~. , Step110 lhop r 6 bch. YrlY. * * * ~ w/yf ~ta. drps. A Real Jo'ind! t":nr·. f'n~ t•ir neighborhood near schools. 3 BR., 3 Ba., nrp/drapS AduJl llvin& at Its best l3S-M.11' Dt,ys· 50-1* bltnl, except rt fr I 1 . IA QUINTA HERllSA kids pet,, ~ach and shop p 1 n a:, f'rpl, Prtv .btach. Utll. pd. LAROE l BR $190 EYel/Wkndl. • SPAlll.lll IEW $250/mo. No llhw'et, no * Avall11ble 1 Feb 'Tl. s.m ~fonth. Alt· 66-4400 No PetJ, Bllboe p I ii peta. 531-lTU. LAND LORDS I S-'25/mo. including waltr &-EAOI ~·-• 6 4 BR 365 \\", \VilJon • 642-19Tl t n MU -• 2 BR. Luxwiowl •pto. ~-•-~o-r. t•t • •··t mo. 3 B ,......_ .. .J ' * •MSO WEIK & U IAY SHADOWS ~ '~" F~~·~~~'~'EJi~rt~C ~::&~:;,.~-u·~~ =. sii;;. 1 BR APtl-p s~'.!tg;!~oi'.."'~.'I ApailllNilll ;..~i.J.:..!.11:: 16211 Pa rkside Lant, H.B. * 645.41ll *NO FEE, VACANT.1 .S;.;•;;.n.;;l•;..·_An;.;...• _____ l :~~A~ ~=ClowtobolhS.,. Spocloualn;tJcl>tAa...ty! =.~::."- LANDLORDS ! S237 per month, first & , BDRMS. 2. Ba'"· ... ~. • a.n.,.. •Pet Se<lioo 1515-230fl ... 11H14 1 BADR'a "',.RLMNOM 0$l" IWUIOR IJGHTS APTS. (fb!t_llr•w· So. ol ll.a Diego Fi'wY. Oii Beach, . uw ·~ • • -·· 11 ~"· •• ., ISIW -Lane HB. 1 ~. . on Holl to 16211 Parlalde Lane). 714: 847-5441 \Ve Sptclallze !n Nl.'\\•po11 last . Near new City blW. w/w crpta,~ 2 ....,.,,, on...y """tel C~ clel Mir 2 8R'1 PROM $177 '"""~-~--!!:!~::::::_• =~1·~~"'""""'""""'""""..,~"'""'""""""'"""'m"' Beach • Coronil d<'I ~l:.r • Pflrk. 3 BRS, bu.ilUns, c10~1i aal'r•h•,.'t' .._ .;, ...:..~. 23'M ~= ~CM 1tii ml. north ot HUnti•"'"".. Apt1., Apts,, & Laguna. Our Renllll Ser· BKR/OWNER -"11 n.~ • .... """" Ad ~ ~-" Be "•" -•· 1 ·•-• F U vice ls fllU: 10 You~ Try rrv~ Open all da,y \Ved. ror In. •""""'" GK .., on. wk'& rent. &Ui.uw ap......,tmtnts n-Beach. tl40.. 2 BR. mtn1, um. or nfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Nu-\"'"' 3 BR, 2 BA. oloc R/0, FA opectlon. 2902 Wost ComW• El Pverlo Mesa ~· dude Decon.tor Fb'e-. "!>II, drpo, r,1, pi., ...... NU-VIEW RE NTALS ht. •·I wcrpts A chw. dbl St. Call 81USU alt 4 p.ni. Shao Carpellq. Private Llidr> ta<:U eupor!J. Cpl., 1 ;N;•;'";-po;rt;8;oa;c;;h;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;N;•;w;po;rt;;B;•;•;ch;;;;:;;;;;;;;J ~r. f.nf'tl, lndscpd. x'.lnt Joe. 1 IR't-$130 I UP PaUol. Pool • Jacual • & , sm1 c:hUdren ok. No · 673-4030 or 1"'3218 $229. mo. AGT' 96Mrn "' Condomlnluml Unfum. & Fum. ~~ball .,,..... • Gu polJ. Call ""'881. BEACH LIVING FREE 546-8!00. Unfvm. no All Utllltlea Pold ON 'j'EN ACRES I BR. 2 BA. D1x NI -side. DUPLEX. 3BR. or 2BR •I--,;._----"-' Pool. Recft<tloa Apts. IUm./unlllm. Loue 409 BAY Si, CootaMOsa ~~~bltum (Now You Con Afford) Rental Book with many tu choose from. Stop by and browse. ~ 2m~~· ~29J~~~s-~ ~;,io~2 ~. 1~t-:!: = =:b-• ~ ~~1 &!~t'I ~: Mlft1pr aw. 1~103 Leevn-Beach ' . BACHELOR (Furn) ............... From f l96 or 49H3SI Pool. ...,..11on room. No ,1--oBR.ii:=:C,,Fum,E=-::2 :.;Ira::.;. :.;d:::....o1e11,'"' 900 s.. Lan, CdJlf 6'!· l * ...,_ * 1 Bedroom .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. From $180 ~~ ~~~2 ~:m ~ ~=E~ ~::a~~;: ~~ ~ !!!~ ~ !MacArthur nr Q)aA HW1) 1 ~;;:;;;;;=1L~~~ .:r~ 2 ~'GLL" SECliRiTv:svsT1U°m $230 2790 HRrbor Blvd. a.t Adam Btg ya.rd. No ptta. 968-2365. and 111.st. 963-2187. pr w/llilrqe. Adulta Ollbt. PREFERRED &fff • Prtv., · HEATED POOL or the BEACH Coata !1-lesa 5<>---0t65 Priv. bom~ oo acreege sm. :l"'rv"i"'ne='-""'-'='---na peta. k>vd)' 2 Br., 2 BL o,>ts, QCEAN view ..... • 2 I 3 Elevator Annual Lease EASTBLUFF AW 2 Br, 1135, 1113. $150. --------2US flullerton CM chw. bltm, w/prlv. pr. BR. I BA. Nrw. lllk to belt. Adults Only, Sorry No Pets fndl~duru home, °''" 2000 Rent-A-Mou.. 97M430 '.!: 114 Ba. NIW. m.-. ~---~--··· ...:.....:. ,,:,,_ ~va!!,-no, w. $250. --up. _ ... !1113, -LAS BRISAS 911'· tL, unu5u11.I larg(' 4 bed· $210 ~...,.,, ..-.... -~ ~ "'-' PllCCllll ~ ~ ~ p1°';,s1_.~c11",~:..!.i""'<11~ 1.';;'v;;;l;;;ne;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;; ~lo. 642-26.11 =· °l'!.ihom~~.:..,. l~=·· 3 !R, be~11 .. _Htway. AFrpldulc., ~:?n ':,..,, · ;;: a ~. -= t 5515 R(TIVERb NA VE., NEWPORT BEACH '"""" -.. ........ -1 · Mission Vlt)o ~·~# ..... • .... am cei ... _ 1ar. ta. ~un. ·-a e e ew P lace In Newnnrt) Ing room. Complete prtvacy YES. We have ft.eDtala tum. Wlh bid • pis, 60-5631 eves. or week. <Mr'°° 1111 lrH• tbe unQIUIJ.. 1 A 2 , 2 Re M Di a.. ~ ., ... .,.,i th enclo!ed N"ar and front M~ we be ot service In NEW .1 .. ..r ,...,..., 2 BR I adlta. no pets-$175 mo 4 ti'\d1. :~!t~~~~::1:11tt1 bl., CUilom apta. L&rse s. gr. ane a; Wm. Sharbaugh 642-2566 ~ l ly -~ No ••• ho .. -'-_A_ .. _. ....,..e-1-""#t ' See.tons 2359 N..,,.,, ... 548-6332 -· ............ ··-·-y&n1I. .ave. "'"'""'"-v ... ,. )'Ollt -·~· BA, crptg, drpa, bltna, cov -........ 2 bedroonll each. Blttna. r91tllrll .. , ... ,., ................ N ·-· ... u pets. $4TS peor month. patio, aar .. u.e of pool, xlnt $135 .. :00 dlx mob mne, nJce carpets I: drapet. ~ ~..-:Mtll'll' t·• g.M~ 6 privacy .,..pt, nfi.lrn. 365 Apts., Call 673-G."i68 or 54&-3688 loc. mo mo. 83G-689l pauu, comp tum., W/W location. Leue $2» pr. ~~:r:.~=~· adulta. COie :· be~rur: Newport Bffch I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 e 2 BR. h.;;e. Blln!I, fnC'd yrd. crpt, middle l&9 cpl. no month. CaU 673-8500 RLTR. t 'lfillllll. Noittl•tPtll 9,00 &ho • Sdection - ChUdN"n / Pl'IS wPlcome! Ntwport BMc:h peta. Ponder'OI& Mobile lo7:D0.2>o0 f1lrri111H., & PPllll· • Poart!f l'llgl * 2 WEEKS FREE* Cost• MeM $3X} Estate1, 1991 Npt Blvd, CM. ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, Co•l• Mtu.. l'lloflt: ~~300-wallpapers !ally 1---------I ALA Ranlols e 64S.!900 BLUFFS-BAYFRONT 3 BR. 6l6-83'IS. around floor. S350 pr. month tum. l250 1'o S650 monlhly. Vista del Mua LA MANOIA e 3 & Den ~ \\'orksh<tp. CIW patio, fncd, OC-an1 l't'il. S250. ALA Renlols e Ms.3900 Coron• cltl Mir SPYGLASS B~athtaklng Vu o! OCt'a.n. Bay A: City Llghu. 6 BR. 3t,li ha, Fam Rm, Din Rm , 3 c:ir gar, 1 YT IJe, incl gard~r. 640-1758. WOW, new Spa.n1sb 3 BR., 3 Ba., nr. Big Corona Beach. $400 Mo. ownr a.gt 673-0510. 2 BR, 1 IL\. Crp(s, dml. stove I: retrlr. Frpl Actulls, no petll. · S2'151mo. !162-8449. EASTSIDE quiet eu1*8ac, 3 br, new crpts, drpe, ....... $225. 518-3085 21Ai BA., cu1t. decor., frplc, FREE re-nt 'W Feb ht BR ~e to ~OC&AA a.t~s, call DELUX! 49f...t65.1 ADULT GARDEN. HOMES ReBral nd New ~luxe Unit.I "SINCE 1946'' -~. crpta, patloa. Nr. pool. bltns, pool, qUiet ' at: Y o;i•.-...iu .....,.. APARTMENTS Lido late ffiVlNE A·VE. AT MESA n now ,..,r your ccm-• --~-Owner 3 BR. 2 ba t ~1 stnlction allow&ncf' of 1 1st \\"e;;tcrn Bank Bldg. .._, _, .. _ . moaphe,.re. $155. adults. upptt &JI · .... ., c, Air CQnd. Frplc'&. 3 Swim· UPSJ'AIRS 2 BR. 2 a .l Move In w/deposlts only mo's free rent. 1 BR, 1 BA University Pi!rk. lNin~ ~48. ~~ bltnl, 2 sundecb. Nr ahops, mine Poala • Health Spa -uno l Br. $160 2 Br. $200 • d Doyt 552-7000 N&...hfs bch. $325. 96>-D?O .or Tennia Courts • Game a1'd ~ts, drpa, trplc, Adlta, no Day & Night Security, Puol, ""' en, 2 BR'• & 3 BR'1 "' f ,U;:.;.;.ni;_v.;.e;_n;..ily;:...;..p..:.':c'k.:_ __ NICE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool, Nr. 833--ll03 Billiard Room. peb, S2'l'S Jeqe, f'n-304. Jt'ountains. TWc. UJdg. wt From $155.. Dl&hwalhet, ahops. Util pd. Adlts. no l BR. ~-lllll u ••• Ve.....a... exercise rru, billia: ... ··, col· Ga.rbaie disposal, aJJ unJlll. SNGLlevel38R,2baend pet&. 1884 Monrovi a . •GREATVIEW-2BR.* ... ~....... m... ,_ ..,, Encl gar, 1wlro'1 pool. unit. Unfum. $350, yr\y 54IMl336. Frp!c, bltna, sundeckl, pool 1 BR. 6 Den From $185 or TV. Ba. Apt. has dish-BBQ'• Peta acceptable. }~aa:Ppt~ 15. CaIINEW ~~"i"'BR;,,,,..,.,,,..,--ll~-~,._.,12115= ~up. m-~. MEDITERRANEAN ~~. 2 J60 3 :· kra8:i ;~:U:-:8~~~ 642-2001 T'l8 Scott Pi., c.Jit DuplexN Unfvm. 350 Adults, Nr beach A -··· 2 BR. ~·new 'I'" 4 drpo. VILLAGE otc, :ms Maoe Ave. TIU: EXCITING )ll E. 2hb St,. c.bl. Pool. "' S250. Near 51&-lfDI. FDR LEASE PALM MESA APTS. B bo ft--543-0131. ~rythlng. 6'13-31151). 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. NEW 2 Br 2 ba dbl MINUTES TO NTP. BCH. ~ •I • r-wntntul• N'ICELY furn, q , l BR. BEAUTIFUL loftr l·BR I: t1'14) 557-8020 $265 mo. yrim..~ pr. Luxury Bayh'Ont Apts. Bach, t•2BR. From$1e 2 BR, den, 2 ba, 1tii bD: bch ii encl ~ ::; Adults.-no den. Patlo. No pet.. Child OPEN~4,t2~~ PM Call u•,,_ ~:;·~i:r!:'n AdWta, Nq Peta. bay. 1325 mo. yrti.. 13'19 E. pets. 64&-"'8. 0 .K. mi Mo. 611>-1400 SP CIOUS RNltor (5 blla ~mN:"..:t Blvd.) Balboa mvd.. Apt A' I Bdrm $ISO mo -Utll. NU ' BR.. 2 BA., bayvfow. A AS A ~~ -h * S4a.6570 * 5'6-9860 fdwnstnl, :136-3518 or Call 61>-1674 alter 5 pm Yearly le.,.. ·HOUSE • ' 213/86.l-lOOll. wkd&y1 oc anytime wknd.I. 673-H EXTRA LARGE-I Br. New ~BR. 11i ha ............. $2Zi 2 BR. 1~ ha . A.Ir Cond. S265 3 BR. 2 00 .•.•.•••••••• $375 ired hill r.EALTY Coll• -l BR. $140 • $135. t.anre. 2 sR. Pool. 2 -·· "'"'· Your ............ ..,..,.nt OCEAN and NEW 2 Bdrm unlurn, ~pt ""''· paint, h..... pool. • ""'""""""''"""'""'""'""'I ::!~..!:!:=:_____ Ideal tor Bachelors. AdUltl $195 mo lncld'& water. ha.I the room. and privacy HARBOR VllW t250 mo. AnnUa1 lease SU f"°n1a~ '!40k.' NNao turepe!Jad. ~.':; L1gun• 8elcll $160 MO., 2 BR., ltOve only. 1993 Cburch>St. 5'8-9633 * 60-J073 * ol )'OW' own home, yet none w. Ba.Y-NeWport &ach. .i.o111 1 .\ Company Wllb VWon Univ. Park Center, l.rv1ne Call Anytime, 552-7500 Office houn 8 AM to 6 PM "tot.co. lt.carp/dRLn ·~~. 2 BR. Trail-m < I BR COltl MeM ol the-up.k~ and worries. ''WMre Congeniality C.all 886-4832 days (San Monrovia., MS-2174 . $.200 -Util pd. 2 Br. So. . A,aeni fr-,-.,.. ... -. l!lOO lqUl.l'9 te-et at living, Previlfi'' Bernardino) or 88.1-2943 1 BR. Adults. 1 bll&: to beacb.' Lrg clean 2 B;r home, pr. Laguna. Gar. Yard. Deck. H I •--...i.. Trailer, $120. No child/pets. newly decorated Fromm& eves Shag crpt.s drpa No pell. S120. fnc'd, k1d5/pe1s. Cllildren welc unt nttoft -" 646--WlS, 642.-3375 P1rk~Llk• Surroundint · · Elegant apartm"entl deslped • '• ' Ronl·A-Houn 97'-8430 1225 • UtU pd. O>artnin& 1 NICE I BR roRN DPLX QUIET DELUXE THE YENDOME wllh a Nutor's touoh OU· OCEANTFRONT condo, 3rd ll!S. 202 l•lh St .. 536-0352. B -t VI ~-to OCC ' • • 3 BR APTS "" •-·• Im perb houH HCUrlty ~clu floor. Fantastic v1ew OCf!a.n Cost1 MeN ti!8ch:'t1c .. ew. -><JI:~ IMMl!D. UPANCY Quiet, adult, ~ $.Ul. -·Pvi'Pa'tlo. * Htd Pool . Can M;,'Mps 5f0.078l slve VersaU.le1 dUb and & bay. Unturn 2 BR, 2 ba. l_H_un_1_1n...;gt,_on_B_o_a_<;.;h __ f J100 -Util pd. Lrg 3 Br, 2 New 3 Br apt.I $2511. mo. 21.6% l6th St Nr. Shop's * Adults only pool with unique Aquabar !rplc, all bllnS, crpta, drps, *3 BR.~89 MO.* Ba. ~1 •. Gar. Yard. Dbl prap, dlhwshr .... ~·-•·~Apt DELUXE 2 Br,. Ill Ba. fountains and 1 al ' oarlcing w/•ocu,lty . BRAND NEW ., 1 ...... .. 331 e>sweco. H.B. Dan. Point nuu ~ ... ,. &HOU•· 1 Studio on dea.H:nd 1t:reet. orm gar-Nothinj: like It in town1 $4Zi QUO VADIS Ill NU-VIEW RENTALS 53'-U60 -Martinique Apts. erpta, chw. pool, bltoa, d""'":U .... , °' lh• South & ulil. 1142-3392. • Large fenc@d yard, cul-de-sac 673-4030 or 494-3248. LIVE in the all new Dana ltrl Santa Ana Ave CM pl1v. patio&. $155.1 child ok. =uni:--~ent YES!! WE .TAKE Pt.'TS?I =r~ ~r.';. itreet, quiet area, kid& OK. SPOCl'ACUl..AR c u• tom _Newport &Mdl Point Harbor at the Mp Apt 113 ~ No pea. 548-7154. 1 Bednlom/;tudlo1 trom $195 2 Weeks Free Rent too! FRum $135 Tenant P<Q-'-' utU's. Reftt-homf:, 3 BR. 2 BA, 2 Jrveb, beauutu.I Marina IM Motel, aDle $159.50 VERY NICE. Sep. 2 Bedroom from $305 Pool, Rec. B.Jdi, dahwhr. Hid Pool-Jacuzzl·Sa.unu :;",...";"'~~2711 for :.;"',;.=~ ~~siios~:_t =~&Kia~: ;;r:.~ ... 11~ :i:·Jw~·~~~ -~·llopm9A.M.tll.duak ~_!l-0~·JJ.Z·~ ReM:ii:!°~mN:i!!f.1"1 CLEAN 4 BR, llh BA houle, L•tuna Nifuel to bch. Encl pr. or heated pool direct diai Teenqer or Inf.ant OK. Refl. 23:>4 S&nta Ana A~, BRAND New Oceanfront IMMIDIATE bit-in stove, refril' avl. U1D ""=""-"'-''"'-'----I "SU-=191=1:.· --~---Dhooa, tel~ sauna e 2 Bdnn, 1 BA ...... $195.. 613--0395 Condominium. 2 BR, 2 BA OCCUPANCY mo. 226 Slerlcs St. MS-ii6!K> EXCEPTIONAL ocean Ww. UPPER duplex, 2 Br, w/w bath. . laundry facilities, Buut., 1pacW>U1 apt, · EXTRA NICE l BR, 1 ba, $400/mo. Year le a I e • 18992 Florida St. '**** New 3 bdrm. Eu:h:Wve pte crpt, drpl., bltns. doct. No mHlilll room, clo.e to San Fenced~ patk>I and new pa.Int. crpta, drpl. ~. ON THI ILUl'llS _,67=5-"'7691."=-''=~~~~-(% blk. w. of larfleld Sml 1 Br. Duplex, stvlttfr, guarded 1tttion of Sea Terr· c~n-peU. 6'13-t92T Cen¥nte and J..aiuna quiet~~· Adulll, no Bar·B-Q A lndry nn. Nr. AT NIWPORT NEW 2 BR., 2 ha., dbl. gar. and Beach Blvd.I gu pd. $125. ~. ran!. SPparatP hm'M. Month Yearly, 1 blk to ocun Beach. QJme play In our pets. . ahop'1 I: beach. AdWttonl.)i. ~zoo. yeariy. DELUXE A prt do. NU .~md " lb!UBR, bar2tl yrdba, or lea.se S50J. 63-5769. Ku npts & drps, patio, 3 BR. ~1.h;,... at!ipup~!~ "J.d ~PRIMEFullm2onBSEDt. (ROOat ~) ~ ~Nl25CE7' ,· From Newport Btvd.j tum at Call 673-9545 Mus.le, 6' ~t.;._.;,;,, :a. crp.,., l"JMI, ns, · · l ido l1le 2 BA. UXJ, M&-1438 aft 8. ;:;t.~·$.'JO -k nd M .c..t\1n.tt. .~ 2 ha, Hospital Rood C biocJc 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, blt-ins, 1 $130. Spacioul Ppoltlde Vu of ocean. S400 ""!· ~ & up ~... this W:, !ntt ln excellent locale. Builtlns neiw paint, czvta, ¥P9-Pool, •bove hcWc Cout HW)'> to yr old, blk from beach -Bungalow mo. N&-02:!t. last. $150 deposit. 54,,-:,,,..,r.i. ENJO'i Lldo Ufe: 3 BR. 3 ~ ...... " tt first carpets A: dn.pe1. Walk to Bar-B"Q A lndrY rm. Nr entrance. 900 Cqney Lane, shop'g, Call Lynn, ~2994 ~ !l-rE.5A Verde 3BR 2BA. S2fi0 BA, sept. din. rm., lrg. pa· 1 119 ) ve 0 on theater and all shopping. 1hop'1, beach. .AdWtl only. Newport B'W.cli, <:a,·n.o. 1,N_o_w .. po.._rt_h_•~•h ____ 1 SBR, new carpeting. S2.i0 t». nu decora1ed. &\-ail. ~ lorlllftl .week'• rent. Adulta only. $1SO. mo. Call $149. 64&-2575. Telephone: <nl) l60080 S•n Cltmentt 3BR. 2Ba., lrg. bk. yd. sm Feb. 1-JuJy 1. $475 1or )Tty. -Huntlntton 8Hch Mr.Black 5&-8424 SOUTH 2 It 3 BR.n51) A $165. 535,1 __ :_ ______ 1r.:;;::;";':::::~'::::--::--:::-L. CENTURY 21 5"H152t 133 via ww.n . .,.,,,.,.1 co•sr REALTORS. dep Newly mee Avau PARK NIWPORT NEAR boaeh & town 2 BR, l~e IMMAC2BRd 1 N 1 Opt>n S\ln.1-5. 1 360 LQWWEEKLYRATES QOIET nelshborhood 211.'753s11aUmar,&.5--09"13 lndry,gar,storage,Cable rederorat~. ~p~efi-,w~h~ Newport BMch ]A:.;::cpl;.;:s.;;..;.F.;:u;_rnc;. ___ -"'-' ExKVtive Suites overlooklnsBackBa,y,2BR. * STUNNING 2 Br. 2 APARTMINTS TV, S160., 310 Del Mar, SC, petio, l.aund. "'8-<823, $16' Balboo Island nJ Yorktown Blvd. Hoatod pool, w/w erpt~, Ba. 0....0 Apts. Pool. R<c. 1.='93-::..::ll="'::.· -----'b•1g plu5 deposit. 4 ~P.. f/~. WJ:l. 3 BR. m:;. ! Beach Blvd. at Yorktown ~~n'.abl~at~ Pr:v\ne: rm. noW. lBtb St. C.M. On flle bav San Juan Capistr NICE 3 BR home dbl car f rplr. 8'>1! rlean CNel • .3 BR. Bay View. Modern JM-0411 Mgr Apt H. 5411--'1476. * 2 BR, l BA, Mesa Verde. LuKury 11.'Utment nvfn& OV• ano ::&s fenced .yii.rd. Petl Dwhr. C.Omm. p 0 0 1 · SZiJ/roo. Wtnter. ufil STUDIOS & I BR's. Up1L&in. ~c!Oleb. ~lookooo'"\!l~ water? :I::. NEW 2BR condo/!"'ater pd. 2BR Sl'JJ~· =· Yard. ~~~~R'1 on Klnp Rd ! ~.!.. ~=n:1~ : =~~ ~~~b, ~~~':re.. $1SO. 3N::a: ) BatJ\'.4. mifli poolt, 7 '&;'bted ten-?il~:m~f:u!!~fu:~ Privacy No petl 688 B w Blln!. rt'pll, drpl. 00 I • Laun4r7 tadliUes HARB~ P(jR11NS Patio. it101MO. n!s courts, plus mile1 of 400-7078 from $140 WU11>n. 642-6'1!11.. . ~Ir. f'o¥r.tld 2U: 62&--.1549 e m 'Wk I: Up On 0ee&n •• ~ ~~ rJ11. ,..71 Mtta del ?fu. 84S-UOll ~~_..tra, ~.ttJ!nrun' shUl!,·f,2,:;;oBR,:.,"7l~BA,~-tl1DVe--,-...,~frlg-, 1·:'.0 to 11 AM -..·pekda)"I. l.n\~ty B.adi. 1 Bft..Rooms ..,...,., .......,.. -..,..._"\I .... .., .... , 1JOr ~ mi 3 BR. 2 ba. cltan. sharp. Nl<"e 1.100 s.<t.nrll. 3 Br. z Ba. ~ ~ • Pur;il -Utl1 Pd • T.V. I:: maid aerv. avail. Dana Point from 11TL50 monthly; Blm 1 gar disp, · · mo. Oakwood Is $1 million In ' y11.nl. 31U Coolidge Ave. frplr, 11'2 ml. nu erptJ. • CaD ft7C74Q • • Bar &Que $140 up 1pac. 2 ltr/3 br llh ba and 2·bedroom pl&n1 and 499-.2221.. 7916, aft 5. $295. Call Jim 6CHMtl. rim!. dshv.-hr .. b 1 t _ i "' _ "--..,. .. _. ...,__ • Pho~ ~ pool, cp1VdrpN, bltn5, ~~~ RENT reduced from _..._ to J..ttor)' town houlei. Dec-,.South::::;;:..;L::•:1::=___ recreation, Swimmi ng l BR "-Bo, ab & • .,.,n ....,,.., \,AllJ" -_.. e 1 M"· to 2212 Collep, o, .. '1'W-"V•.J -trlc kitchenl -..,,.po .• .., poo ls . Healt h clubt. •-= nr Y 1 u ~/mo. 64&-i.n;i. ua ocetn 1996 Map1e, No. 1 •.. st>38ll $175. Luxurious 2 BR, 2 BA. or b.iconin.',.~..::.,,1 ... A..... 2 BR. 2 biks beach, nr she..... Saunas. Tennis cou"o. 1 ac~s SI. from p11.rk. Fncd BLL'l1''S BAYFRO~I l Br furn..,~ pr Adj.'° ne -SJ.65 . NEW 1 BR'• floom $1'l'0411J Ocean vu. O'pta, Ctrp., Dlt1-. &ibte~o:k. ping. $200 mo. inc. util. Kids II yard, no JX'I~. 5-t!J-Q>l6. F:Yl'c. OOP-IP\'rl 2 BR .• 2 bL ~ &U--'P't Mft&.. sm. 9l2 BAOiELO=· ~R a: 1 ~R. patiol, Nr beach I ahop's, Adult•, bllinl, will oomkler tu:rtba ina with ele'Yaton. Optlonal OK • .f99..4313. Billiards. Ind oor golf drfv· ,a ·;o"";::;;':::'"":=''=:':::' ,,:·::·=·::"'=:';·"~"~';:;'":::· ::~:=· ""'=::::"::":· --==-""'""'"';'..,:='¥;,:::"":=·""'::;== .•• ~ lh. ~~ ol-u 4 E. 3'th St., C.M. reduction for p I t Im• maid 16Vke. JU1t north of A-. Ing range. Sand Volleyball. t • • .._.. A Jo\a 5C8-0l37. ma.naaer. 837•3927. P'uhlon bland at J&mboree .... _ U Iv Whirl pool Blths. And Iott , ---:-::---:--:---------doletl~b~· ~ ~u! SINGLE lady, 2 Br 1 Ba, Huntlnftort lelch and San Joaquin HUia Road. Furn. ot n rn. 370 moce. A ree ldent tennis Q r;Q 'O .£\' .( f) -C ~ ca for )'aunelf. 11301 sm. + cln,. fee. Ideal Joe, NEW 2 It 3 Br • .\»ta. CrPtl, T!2,_~, C~:Jnn~t:x1 Corona dtl Mir pro and activities director , p~ 1-'"CJ ~ ... -~ p s· Ktt11Dn Ln. Cl blk W. Of sate It ll!CUf'e, !10 drp1 blttna. 1 blk to S.D _ _!••v.·..,.~r.~~;s;;~n!!__li~~;.;;,-i;;.;;;:;;;;: who plans free Sunday The Puu le wil' f 'e •ui'lf-/n C'uc'le Beach.1 blk N. ot stater). Rochnter St, 81)-1264. ......;,. ,· l!Jt,.. ee ..... No YnrlY"LYfront 2 • 2BR apfs, Unfurn annual, brunohe• and barbecu ... 1· n n u n • tc-'rMI 2 BR. 1 BA. cottap style liy-pets. C&U 6*-!'f88 or J Lowl.Y new untum. aptl. tum. un~J~ 15· Starting as low as $1 .0, o •earrong, letters of rti. Laeuna 8Mclt ln& W/prqt, Nr Harbor ~. s. 2 AR., 2 bl. llCh. Pier . . S!ngles, one and two· I four tcromb'-d words ti.. ~ 1 Blvd. _$1'15/mo. Call aft 5 WALK TO BEACH 6 .Up. Mt.1t1 otru. lmmed. IC ;;0;s;;t•;;;M;to;";,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bedrooms, furnished al'fCI IDw to form four 1httol• worch. HACH l:!l'· beach. CoJor ~r pm for lhowlnc, 846-<1152, New L A 2 br cpt/drp Ot'C11iuc¥· jl I I ..,, d S ~ I $140 ... ~ ""·U Utu 2 BR, w/1ar, I bll< lo bul & d w h'. • 1rp1.'' 316 i611i: Call: --Ev<s. -CDHYINllNT ~~lid~~ ·~r ~.0~: j 1 IL Al s ,~ 0, ,N I I pct. -... shopP1nlr center. No ..... 8'"3S57. LOCATION open deify 10 IO 7. . _ _ • Newport -ch . ~-Feb. lllo -$14!. N?.W 1·1 6 S BR. Beach Quiet & comlorllblt adult $29 lO por W1c A up. I BR 2 LRG 2 BR,. ~~ '" AJ>ts. n.tn $1151 ... mo. ' IWOll')I apartmenlJ 0.kwood I BR, 6 n -chtlon. Color iv · .... 45. -blkt from water. Mgr. OsQ tM> avail&bM M U P l 0 1 ti -' 1\dlp Lani. M.... w.-. Tobin !l<alty, 2 llodlooma • I bltbl 0.rden Ai*tmenta _ . maid -.. pool. n.. Mell Call !« /mr 5IMil3I. &16-3311 ADULTS ONLY !!Ila& ......._ boilt-lnl I 11 I I '1$ N. Newport Blvd., NB. 1 • Gu turnbhed Newport S..ch ... 8111. LOVELY I Br Apt. Neu I BR. t1U 6 wata pd.1 child DELUXI 2 IR. $tl5 A w•ter INtnundlOlh • • • • DCC A ucr. No pets. sw o1t No "'"' rrom 11«1. l>shwltr ~ "" poo1. Poot. ,.,..... lllld 1~ok.~~s~~ mo. eau mom 1,m Cameron St. or 21XW2'!ant:·Ana ~w. ~n:-~~. 645-0850• M2.a110 I F 0 N E T j ! $195 • UotU July lit I BR. Ad.ill, no peta, BAY 8'2-1152. Sulit" Pk He-2311 ELD~ AVENUE * OCEANrnDNT * l I( I I A person I ahow bu J.. ~ MEA.OOWS AP'(, 387 W. SPACIOUS MW 1 Bil Otho 2 l)r 2 81 untum ~·noor . s:is; Unfw'nl&hcd or Lower 2 BR. winter rental n1u detorl~ what hot ~ BEACH l Room Apu. S.,. SI. Clf. 615-0tm wshr, trplcit!:t:;,. drps. pr. beaut bey Y1ew nJr IPI •• . PG ,....-1225 Mo. Lowv 3 BR., I la r------~ on1; ....._,.11 ltom'--wllh $9011100. y..ey. UtO 2 BR, unturn. Crt>ll. drps. Nr Hta • AdUlll-no clnr dep, ...:,.., xC1. ••Ol'I ..\;.'"'IY SlllO mo. Ap~ - I H E T R E T j "~' _,.... tnd'tl.-61>-1211, 67HOIS. ....,../own., nfrll, No pots. 5.16-026!I or 21.l/-19 _ _ _.,_ "' -.rllft .,~,. -on.H t·1.S $1.0/mo. •1tM: FURN er Ubfurn. -2 BR. eoa ..... ,.. crptl, ~~ Tustin ' f j j I' I / 0 C-,~ 1he -· q;dol BEAOl _lront bldlelo' apt. LARGE I 811.--crots. drpo, -~·1 l l!lt·bw. I blk ,.,,... POilo. $181. Ill • by '"""" .. tho -.. ..... ms. mo. ........ util pd. Elt IU hoot "' ,,....,: n.m 1150:-T13J lut, lal3 HoYon -Call Tll!l ENRIQUE APTS • -'VO'I ct...Sop froftt s199 Ne>. 3 L..~l-... 650'1 Oceanlront, 5f.8....m. orllj:._ 'rct.11."._ -~e. · 1':l.U1 or call Mgr. SQ-JJ31. for ... lJI~: Ml-27J3 or ADULT l'tt.,, no C -2 BR. the be ch/ le ~• Pft •-••~ . 04IM3ll2 S•pa<0111 I ' *91 ' ~ fli~fe~!~~slETTElS IN I' r I' I' I' r I W{D. Y:"arl)' or~ PEtS.21ddt ok. Rl!fria. ' WEEKI riitE RENT--1 OCEANFRONT -, BR. $14$. per mo. Utll pd _ . _ . . • _ • mo, prq A-gu, l>shwhr. $115. mo a.1"9 Br. "1>1e. -erpt, llllo Cusp. 1325/mo. Ylll'IY. 73 A400 heated owtmtnr pool,, __ • •tJNFURN I BR · 111$ $50 -· H PM.-' rutll or tlltllJm, Oill 6 .., U.. lo-...ftocll..-. • ~~ LmllS I I I I J · j I S•n Clemon!• dtooett. M w.u..,. No. c 2 Bloekl bellclt, 2 BR. ,,... -· 1----11!!!!!~..,.. 1=.ir01 air~~: . . -I BR. 2 BA Laundry. rm. 5lk!01 crpts. pain~ ll50 lrd utO. 10 CHOICE bo•ch •P~• S, C I BR. ""'"' 1JI, ,.,,,. utU. °'""'M-~-•~ 00 ~ Sca.aus..-ANSWERS IN CLASS N 0 Adu1.., no"""· $21111 mo. •eooctwantadlsaaoo.itn-..ua111r1--. BR.!mtolOlll)'I& Poot.EnclprClf.~~!U! ~~· ·~ __ ..,.._..,._ ... :;,.,_;•• _______ ....;_:.,:IF:..:IC..:..c.A~Tl:..:0;:..:..._8;:..:...0_ 1'!.19 eu.na vlitas.c: .....,.nt, Need• "Pad"' PIJcoanadI ABB.EY REAL'l'Y • Awoodo St. __ , 1_:V~Ul~ ... !!_!!!W"1!li•c!!!-!!:!!!!...._ (1 I I I I • DAILY PILOT [ I -I~!.__...._ ..... ___,!~ I ....... _ llSJ ( ....... -l[S] [ ----1~ ·( -···· lfiill ........ llill ( L-·-![fl] [ '""°'"*• i'il1 ~--~1 ~;;;;;;;;;;~~1 ~----·~1 1 .;;;;.--~~~--~~--~~,~--~~~, ilMIM 400 Office Rtftt1l . 440 -(!NO Nol NO Loot NI Clftlr-Help W•n!M, M a , 711!40!£ W•nl._, M I. , 710 ~!!P W!_i!~~~!..~~~ Htlp Wonted, MI. , 110 llOOMS m wk 111> w/klL ornCE -:IO'x40', -iiiAu. W11111 female doc SIWlGY 111 ... M '°'poodle J~~ ~"'1:-Ill-"'?:1' ADVllTISING SALES """'"'A•d""" Need eu, GIRL PRIDAY ~ wk up •Ptt. Oilldrln wlndow rtontqt, w/w DIW W/lf'l.1 em, .k>okl lUci vlc.C. ~ .... ~\! ... ~l ~d. My waj Co.~-0031: oever1y M.v.1~ 4,lonv. llYtaU, Clat. Serv 1'me SQ!S + ;.:;_' NOt\on. Z,,16 N11wport e&rpeI, a.lr"!Olnd.,-b&th, .....Po o d 1 t, lowld vkl Af, _...,_ ~·_, Dll1WI -TRAINEE L.lli:ill!_~ 11Ulft_ l-i...,!_...ckMI _ _ 1 Girl Ofc, El Toro '* + ~~1· 5 48"'97 ~5 • t?'Y~~t~i!! :::=.~~:~ESE Ca.t. Set.lpolnl Dr.ttr,. You 'retheoneweneedtf'youhav&amblUon U\J\.I l.li1Xlmt1i·, wnie ex-PJtbne-JMne ~I I BACH 2 blka trom C.nttt, 121 so. ~'t nant.-•1385-malt, vlo llA1iiMrlti • PIM~ R. m 0 d . and don't mind working. TbellAILY PILOT ~:~~,~~· ~ c::Lll•o'-t, r!.~ ~ !LB. D1tt'!°'tf0 pott. 110 , Suite• llln>okbunt •Boll! LARGE iijil&l!. -. ., s.u<1111o c.w. lllwud. l&~Mclltlonl. llO~f:-need1 a sales trainee to learn the newspaper --Roc~r''°"'" w. f.t to lat mo'• ,..nt Call &I>. llcN-. IG-4rn. wlil,. doc,-..,. oollle, ...,. fff-6729 adverl!Jlng bllllneas and eventually caU on t.uP •llNIUR ~E~~~LOYMENT req~d. (Olli pd.}, St\ldont or 5aH103. tritDdl.Y. WIU'iail Jlta col· LOST at IWI o.c. Fait Swap O.Ntinl"I automotive, real e1taUI and other account•. ...,_. .. KA rvtt AGENCY. INC. Pl'!!'d. ~ DESK t/l": 1vlllihl0 l80 Jar. Vic: w._1-.. )l .. t, boby INDY -· PMl"ESSIONAL Gardon<r, Great opportunity for right person. Good . 2ll8'l Bu1tn ... Ctr Dr, Ste. 290 ROOM 1'01.at.O, ovt entr mo. W Pl'OVldt fumtNN Lark GoU OOl.&ne, H.B. lltward111&419l~ lrff wont. prunln1, company employee proaram . U you are en· i'~por' .w:&~ ,,u~1cuu lrvtne .IM-9410 pvt ~. overlook\~ can'. at $5 rno. Anlwtrtna lll'Ytct ••214& LOST 11nc1 Dec. 1. l.r1' Red •prinkltn: cleanup Jobe th 11 tic liabl di ;,o.:L·v.t..-c• L.u..i.1111.KM.1 iuu. 1111-(Oranp Co. Airport Areal )'<II\,. Laa. u. 494-8322. available. 222 J'orte{ Avt., ™ pu,ppy, black • Malt ltllh Setttr. =~ 0 , 0• r 1 , '. W Bl c, re e, ependable and capable, ni1io'OJ.ll•• upuu.i.16'. l.t.lu ww 01 1 Women 0 I H 41s Laauna Beach, CM-Mii. curb' fije1 l/11 iao i: Call 549-3812 1 -apply: ol!C1·w. • .: ~ju <."W.Ui>\lkl._ .... 11 ',.~-do'·· plou UM ome HUN'l'INO'l'ON BEACH S50 ~111 • Sl., l:o.ta IM lit • It. : p I D t ~ il J u~ .. u..t ~-1-u..1-r ~ or p u.ut .... • 900 .,....._~a... GARDENING Mme., com-er1onne ep • awaw ruwit u.vt: muumr.lln ant phone v.'Otk In ow-of· * PrlY•lo Room * to.· A1nb\llatory ~ ot Man Good. nub·ltlo111 l<"'ood.· Nice, Chetrf'ul atmoephere. * c.u ~'1&3 * ' "'' 0 " opt'd, pvt, ........,, I~ pie,. -"""' liY •>-THl-..AILY PIL-OT 3 ""' neavy 1.0'4 ""' Ike. Guam. """"' • pn: ,b&th._.erkl:. uUl pd., adj, TOUND Terrier IYPt dOI. ~ ~ ptrl•need, relllblt ., 111\ol Clll~l'il!lll.:lil JN.WI K\IVU ttOUS bonus. Apply, T90I ·P.O. $90..$180.:Mr. Lanen': )'OW!I male, Ginatr cc»or, . 1t.rdener. J'l"le t1timatft 330 W. St. Costa Mesa Kl)()Wl~ii 01 ""'.1.. ano Yt'e•tmlnlter, SUit• B, 5t0-l~l &Utc!Joute • fnttJU&enL 963-10'12 ~ f111o1)132, I UlUllH!li. Wtslm, Or call !9'1-5309. DESK lp&ct av&llable "" lnlo f.fi.6nl EXP. HawaUan Gardeilir. Jo W1nhd, P.etn1I• 02 H•le ~·nttd, M F 710 HOSTESS mo. WUl provide furniture SML gooali/oook•poo q, khoott I Complete Sarden eerv. -" " Uniqwi woritin& enviro1uno11t A I I ~ at$5mG.Anrwtrlnclll'Vlot M.aie-whit.e-coUat • flel. ln1tructleM 575 Karrialan1,, 146-46?6, SCANDmAVIAN LADY BANK a wp bllUtlil'-ppy n • mom. av&llabJJ. l'J87S Beacb Blvd. tq. Vic: Hun, 1n1 ton &U-1331. Ettidtnt. mature. Can drive. Teller Trne to $400 2106 ,,.~~~l. NB Himtln&ton Beaeb. ~ ll&rbor. Mi-160.1 ~.~ ~ puptnee: GtMtel S.Nlce1 ~~~itte ~i:e:: u )1>U llke"to pta.y monopoly, A~t'ct~·cMMJru:~· HOUSEKEEPER: Utlmt tor R~tllt to lhtre 430 NEAR O.C. ~· holmttl, l'OUNO fema.lt d&chalutnd adlt dop, MarUnertlt Ker.. ln& for alnale pel'Wln. Preb!r you'll i.. ~ .... thla. Sharp 700 i"l•wpott center ur1\·e rea1dent1al care faclllt;y. retil&IU'MU:. DOA. lp&Ct, • bla.cle • brown neat JJvine ntll ~ HANDYMAN -au klndl O( Uvtns OUL Reta. 67Hl83 tr:lendv UMiiV. 'Nill ~·In j'lj~port ~ach Xln 't woridn& condl. Apply YNO world.na woman will med. occu21upeney, pLoweit A lllth, Cotta Aina, wearine ' • work, lm&ll jobl • OO" ~E •tudent (O.C.C.l °'1 Ill., 1..Qve!y bank-1 beaut. Parkhul'lt Re t Ir• m • n t Wnu4BRhM1nM1Mion ~~.;_ 72 Du ont , tle&co1w.~ 1pedalty.97t-4838$t8.a123 . .......,.... ocauon. Call Jo Kelly, i;-,.UiLJ.Qpnr•"Emplo""'r RHldt!nee, 982l La \ -~ [ l~ -Miki part Umt otftce work, 833-2700, Dennis & Dennis """ r-1~ ~· w/aanui. ~ NEW;Olt'i' CINTIR u~. ~!.a blk. v1c'. ~!~t.e .ltrlllMllllf..... Haullft! clerical, P.B.X. etc. Co11la Pflr'90Mel Aaency o! Irvine, Alameda, F.V. 1,"-'='!;;;"------~ _...... v~ -• ""''" , . Mesa ana. Available alter-2062. Mlchel&0n Dr. HOUSE!<tEEPlNG Ii IOm• MAN,atraiaht. toahare3BR Subteue 1or2 dlx view Pomotia Ayt..04 (brown SKIPLOADERA:dumptruck noona 1 pm. on and Satur-EDP TICHNICAL oooldruc. Own trans . di>lx nr ocean. Bal PeniD.. olll~•. Nett~ leather oollar) 8f6 ml work. Ooncrtte, u&halt days. Call Linda 5464476. ~n~an~~I~ v~!~! Supp0rt Speclallat. 1.,.0a,,,...+ ~'~:.,a~~. 12511 $125 to Juna 1$. 6'D--3036 Xerox A: puking. FOUND tema.11 cat. brown l•thtvb rtpelr aa!rinf, brealdna· 146-o. NEED help at homeT We JM, 20072 Sant11. A11A A\'t, 11~ v•.- ll"EMALE 23 looklna' tor AP 4 or~ otc 1uitt1 $315. Of· with wbilt face. Viel.nit)' I ~!nlthlM LOCAL movtna • haulina: by have Aldt11 Nu r 1e1 , S.A. Apply In person Newport Bt)ach t'inanclaJ HOUSEKEEPER to ..mt female roommate at fico $70. Delk tpace S40. ct.tneO tqhlands, ~ --· .;..:.e student. l..arKe truck. RMI. HOUHkMper1, Compe.nk>n1, llam-2pn1• .'.)t'r\o1c~11 ln11u1ijtioll nu lni-wtth elde_rly_ cou,ple, Uw tn. Oakwood Apta, NtWJkll1, w/kltch/batb. Oit. FO~Blk~male REFINtSH1nwhiteorcolor 5l6--1U6or~&I Homemllken, U .pj ohn, n1"°la11 opttn~. Y-ou wili caU496-2ml. n-t:t~.1833. 979-3888. kltten. 'vtc : Dovtt Sbote1. tn yoW' home or bualneu. YARD. lll'll' cleanupa. ~1..-1. BOAT 'UILDERS p.a'Oviue tl!ciuucw aupport ui 1.:1 ::0;:.,:;U:;S.,:E,::KEE::;;,,~P~ER-~u~-~,n ' Glrlt wUI ..i.a-! Br~t 2 ADJOINING omCES, ~ 5'3-5470 Tre. lne. Remove trtee dirt, ivy. COIJ.EGE Student needJ Exper. Flnl1h CA?l>f'nttl'1 ! t e • o iv e o p ~ r a· '"""" mo l ACl.ult. Ut. ..,.. ....a .... a-·A-.. C.M. --"-'.-..nl :.::::;;1_...: 847... /11m M ~ ~-'I ol Mlllmen needed tot quality tion&l h&l'dware or IOUwa~ f#oJU • W/ same. 2 blka \0 be • ~ .. ,-.-..\.OU<• .,.,.,, PORSCHE "Rys bmd in. &ulklM't v••·--~..-.. p!Q"1!· ' pion e cir .. , .. ....,n c, u..llboet manuf. problema plus develop pro-dutlH. Car neceu. tl57~ CdM. Cali 81&-m'r. 'Inc.-· llJla!u'• S®aro porillna Ha-IMnlnt tm>unch It reWl exper. WESTSAIL CORP. duct>on and'"" ec1>o<1°'""" G lo It I 435 OORONA dol MU • Cl'ptd, JoL c.11. _, OOMPLErE bulldlq to 64<-JID aft 1J. 1626 Placent!a Ave CM mt1hodt !0< OS •n: HOSTESS, MATURI or~ r on 18'"12'. Shlrp of!!~ FOUND man'• watd> at _,.., -~homo HOUll 0, CLIAN " vlronment. 11ume. 614-2'$9 be!. noon c~c'ii!";, i:t~: !~~.~ lbath,I por!dl!(R .ntll!l.1 .. ~ ft~ ~ eau " ~· ""'-c.ne, 1117-1138 ~~~OJ/$i H•lp Wonted, M I. , 110 IOOAKCKCEOEPUENRTS & Eu<nt1t1 cequtremento Ii> 1:;':,~%.~..'. • ;_!1~ Lido lale, l30 per mo. Ex· UI ""' I • , ~ """J• lullMM hrvfce 10,. PitooUnl w/thlt ad ACT NOW -Repreaent Sarah elude exten11ve OS o~!. C.Ole Instrur:nl Corp, ~ ceUtnt kr -•Wrlna boat "THE Factory" bu ahopt J'OUND .mall doe 1n Park "2-4124 or "'"2527 ~~~:f. 1nN%°~ir:t~· ~~ CLERKS ~i!J~ S/ex;;r1:r~13tg .. ~; Placentia, c.M. 642-tOIO Jt&r· NJ.&405 avail. in the ma1 ransinl ~Tract._...,_ l·.21. * BOOKKEEPING * OFFICE CLEANING, TOO! dellv. Xln't arrantcment to VOLT ment . C&nd1date1 must nave Equal Opportunltf Emp!o)v Office Rental 440 t:r:: ,::,M~e: ~ FOUND: Fem. Jrlab Setter, ~~ .=: '•Ir Price Cie~ning add to your famU,y lnco1nr. lnat•nt Personnel exC<".llent knowledat oL OS ~t Va• ¥c • ahOp, etc. 425 !K>th St. m collar. Monday man:i.. C.rMt Service . ~t,.ete. Hom~ Cl~~. :rho~~2:5333 or 836-7826 Temporary Ser.it1..--e JO.. and UtWtle1. CORONA DEL MAR Newport Beacb. f'B.4180S. Slater, H.B. 8'7~. .... r;.;;..;. , R SbamUJlll Walll :JS~R Camplll Dr .. Suite 106 Apply 9-l2, Mon. thru Wed. 18.M..tr nrn~ntt.t..JD Approx. mi oq. tt. ol!lce !IOO Sq It. on l7lb St ln Coota SMALL white Jemlle doe JOHN'S Carpet to UpliOll-'?ree et~c'd -Jntuftd ADVERTISING SALES Nowport S.och S«HW ,.AC"IC MUTUAL ""·""~ n ;l\.l\.11"""'" llPICti tt.Uore4 to ~ de-hh!1&. Bm:y lntule<:don, w/blk spot on rtll' l4a.t.n Dri-Shaml>OO free Scotch-SM llM' 1 ·• '61-09SI Former Yel1o"' Page or maM:-Equfll Oppor. Employer '100 Newport Center Drive SERY1CE51'~ aian. Full HCUl'lty b1dj:. ample Pllfcinl:, Call 5U..4438 Beach, LB&unao ~. euard (Soll R.etudanta). azl ne space ex~r. Male or Bookkffptr Ne"'port Beach F A: Jf'ree POl!Uont with &mple parld.na. ot Na..!1150. -old ... --•-Id Otanuan color E atudent will do fe1nale . Cornn~ . ..inly. $200· Au TO }.1oT1 VE BOOK· Exec~Secret•"" to -AU: for Chr1IUne 6 mo ..-·teu-nan. brtihtenen & u work. .Afternoon. 4 hl'. $300 wkly ll\iv. cu.11101· appt. KEEPER Equal Oppor Emplaytr ... , ""'" BOYD REALTORS 87S-5930 ~~~e· ~nd:= Vic: Co1lep Park 567-7a57 blacb tor wblte .;arrreu· rnlnlmum, $2.50 hr. ?dea& 64$-0538. \\'lth RE YNOL D s A =~~~~t:,;day : = WE'RE movlr\a. We need d , ~-to mo., San Lost 555 :;e: ~ wru -~ Y!~-Ol' CoUep Pk. area. AN OHIO OIL co. oUers ' RE YNOLOS experience. Recept/Typill to '500 mare spe.ce. Mlllt IUb Clemente, $.l.Ml u .. h.,. rm .. 1!1-' w rm. &: Ol"IV"'ftHk oppo1twtily for high income Contact ?>.!ARIAN PAR· EDP CONTROL Bookkeeper to - lease • pa,yllla ~. will 2 dop, "Z&mbit"·lfr old ~-$15. An,~ ST.SO, LADY wanta houleclet.Dlng PLUS caah bonuses, lXlh-RISH. DUNTON FORD, (LlflK Inventory Contrl to $'50 neirotJ&te prtct'. 350 ICI tt lndulfrfll Renttl 450 German police/collie, blk, coucb $10. owt is,. 15 yrs. work. Exuerienoed. own ventlon tr\~ and trtn,e 2240 s. Jo.lain, Santa Ana.. • Recept/!ltt type M.13 Nfl'WPOrt Beach loc. brwn. malt. Approx 15.bl, exp. LI what count.I. not transportatlon. bentn11 to maturt! man n BOYS & GIRLS Run EDP Service Dealt. eon.tr. Bookbeper $550 ~!366. Rl!ADY I'll. lit 1'73 ''Snowna.ke" 4 rt old, lite rqethod. I do work m,yaelt. 84.7..3637 Coata 1'.leu 15.tt&. Rtpnl· Wanttd for Newapaper route• Perform tape Ubre.rlan Acctna Clrk/I'ype '47S VAILABLE LAGUNA NIOU,IL tan Gennan Sbel)herdlbox· Good Dedlcattcl Cleaning leasFolRcxperle~, air mall. In Corona del Mar Atta. funcUona and othor lltneral Tellers le 9r~1= ABulld.in& er. Fem. approx 4o lba. RE· rel 53l..(110L * WE DO EVERYTHING * I... • cad, i-!'l:'I., ,\ml'rl· CaJI D ll Pilot &42-432! dullea u aallned. I'rtvlo111 f&8 E. lTth (at lrv!M) CM Olrner Wtllclitt Orlve !:: I M-1 WARD. 863375 day 1 Cablnatmaklnt Reta.~ ut. .._2139 can t.ub11canta Co., "Box 696, 4k?ith Croft• • EDP exptnenCe ahdlor '42~1470 J.rv1M Blvd, Nt!wport Beach 1600 SQ, FT. It UP. M6-t324 eves: Vk: HUDtin&· _ Da,yton, Ohk> 45401. EDP School tralnin& pre.fer- ••-, __ _. ·~: "lDl On San Dleao Frffwl)' ton Harbor. d • Xll:lt HOUltdlan1rla BOYS, after IChool • Sat1., red. .....,,... ..,.... .... _. ~ _,.... C&ll 831·1600 t'USTOM woo w or • By 09¥ Own 'I'l'&naportatloo p/lim•. Hand bUl1. Pina QUICK CASH FOR !.EASE M•l ""'"· = ~:r..:t ... ~~.·~ :::::· ~llnai.tntt'. ;. -c* .A Man, Su-9452ll !!ti pm AJ!PlYC&-IFUl.C)(Mon.UlhruTUAWLod. JOBS • l600 oq ft, Santa Ana to "BAM BAM". Vic. Vic-&'B-1851;"1111!r 6, 53H47!i Prof. Corpol lunlnt, BOYS lo oe •wwon1. $1.50 p,. URGENTLY NEEDED owner nt19b--31.96. toria. 4 Pomona. c.:a. Alto windows 6 noor care. ir.porler hr. & up plu• bonuses. cau 700 Nflwport Centtt Drive e Seeretatle• THROUGH A CM •• M·l corner l2T'x90' Reward. 548-1981 Carpenter Call Dutch 537,1508 Paul, 497-1295. Newport Beach •Ke= ~ton w/blda. 991 W. 19th St. LOST: vie. Buahard A In-Carpentry & Plumbing Income T•• BUS Driver 21 or over ror Equal Oppor Employer : :!u:;9g;rk ~P P LOT 225. 842-34SO. 41anapoUJ, H.B. cnaU Iona: Call John or Bill (J / J I private Chrlltran SchoOI. -lrvW 5tO-oM DAlLY I mVlNE lnduotrlal Area, halftd whli. tom. l!Wlete 549-"'8! • !6'1.te28 • INCOMI TAX • Jnn ..Nole 8""' "'" ww 1n1n, Good ILICTllONIC Anaheim l33oU !~~e~. ~~ hi&h, ~Jl.31172· Rnud $100. All type• ol W.....,, ~vtnain~::.-~ ASSIMBLERS NEVER A FEE AT TDll'O WANT AD t-•• * CARPENTRY * M t 5erv1cff Broolchurst. Fountain Temp T•mpct!ll' Ht!lp j Stor!fe 455 R0~ct:!to~b:!n:;: ia. & en. 538-lMS Prole::!ime&1au Opposite Valley. '\:dbl~n 90~~ ~{!;. ~o~:;,1e;:•:,;etk1~~ 642.5878 WA.REHOUSE tor rent. A 2llt St. Ana to "Mooait". Ctmtnt, Concrtte Reuonable Ra.tea OranCJ9 County &us Boy Needtd Penn. emplo)'mtnt In ttna new c1.11tomm for the! U'x26', $40 mo. On Cout 64Mlll. CEMENT Work 4rlve.. '46-0nl Airport Apply Jn Pertonf' moms pleasant a\llTOUtKlinp. DAll.Y PILOT. Thll ls not a Ii;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;\ Hwy.:..,., Newport BMcb, YELLOW Lab, maltl, 2~ii yn wa1ka pado& d..u ad-' .... min.~n 9 AM-' PM AlleyExJ!!t K';:t:mt Call For Apppt newapaptr route and doe• CWl"ll!D HOURS ,\dvertlle'l'I may Jillace their adl by telephone 1:00 a.Mo to 5:30 p.m. I Monoat UU'u f'rtday 8 to noon ~&turd.a¥ COSTA MESA omCE . 330 w. Jlly ' IMU6711 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 N~ Blvd. 6'2'-68111 HUNTINGl'ON BEACH 17815 Jk!ach Blvd. I M0-!%!0 LAGUNA BUCH 222 F01'8t A,,e. --' SAN CLEMENTE 3CG N. !I Camino Real ' '82 IGO NORTH COUNTY dial -M0-!%!0 I CLANll'llD ' DIADLlNl!S beadiine for copy .\ ldU. ill 5:30 J1.D>. Ibo dly be· :tor publlcatlon, except ~... Sund&Y a Monday 1Ed.1Uorw When d8d.llne ti Saturd.Q', 12 noon. I CWSlFllD REGULATIONS RS: Mvttt'tlUn cbeck thelr Mb )la1ly .. _. ...,.,,. ilnlmodiatlly._ THE lbAU.Y PILOT auumet llablll.,, for tilt '""' In· fOn'«t ibllrtton only. o:i.u.TioNs, n ldllln1 an ad bo to make a record tbo KILL NUMBER I-,... b)I )'Ollr Id iaktr u ~t ot your CMCllJ&tlon, Thi• k1U 'saumblr muat bl prea 1.eated by the .d!W:rtiaer 'In cue Ot 1 diJ:pute. !CANCELLATION 0 R coiwx:noN OY NEW AD BUORE RllNNING ' 'p;wry -la -"' lillld' -·:Id tt\l.t nu bl9r\ Ol~ bat we-•_.,. tee to dlO IO \intll the ad '1w _... In lh• pe.pe<. t>IME-A·UNE ADS' 'l'beM ... .,. --111..s ..... 11y owl ot at urt one of out ol• -NO phcnoorderl. l :t'lli' DAILY PILOT ,.. ·-the r1aht to cla• ..Jl,bt, edit. centor .or ro- iu.. · any &dvertlMmlDl. ud to chane• lta nt• I ncuJatlona wlthot(l prtorllOtlcO. ' Ci.Allll'llD ~ILlNO ADOlllll r. o. -"'i.,o. °"'" -- -·-• .,,.._ old, loct Ba<k Bay .,.... dilio,,; Free '<11. liHroo, ~ •--•·-al MA not tncludl oollletti111 "' Rentals W•ntecl 460 Name "Patrick". R.twan:I. ~2921. . 431 N. UUIWJll Re HQ$ftl'l' noo w. Oceanll'ont, NB Indu&trtal dona del!ve.rlnc. Trlnsportl.don Is 84H917 ·SU Clomenut, -lw.l BUSBOY , ... -. WI --WANTED: Build... !Or LOST iillllll black to .,hllf PATIOS.PLANTIRS J1nltorl1l F-UU"'""" time. Good poy (714) 4-1 hoUl'S after school Ind I"' Thr1tt: llhop. I.ow ~nt. temali tat. no tail, llO ool· All Concl'ete· work •. Brick, . , (Gourmet Dining Room) & met.la. Apply In per50ll Saturday. Wt tiave orn~ Call 6<&-49811 Jar. Vic. Bea"n Bay, N.B. dum-wk. 1194-15,13. JEFF 'S CLEANING AhO WOODY'S WHAR, ' TILONIC l0<FountalnVallty Sou W-7032 or m-2185. cumJM CEMENT WORK stRVICE. RESIDENTIAL, IUSIOY 2318 w. N..._. Blvd., N.B. INDUSTRIES l!'."'t~".F." ~bo "',: '~i [ ]~ RALPHS CM .... lot Jlll Drives, WALKS, . polio~ OOMMERCIAL. -· CA,ITIRIA schOol by J PM to ~ ~ 5, Chirter' -vr 0 me n I ~ deckl. Don. MWSlt. Masonry L19un• Btach partldpatt !:xpertenceJ .•. -<Ion 1851. -....i. P•nOS. walks. dr1vtl. Saw, Apply In Pen on PIR~O_NNIL boys llftn priority. ';;;;;;;;;;;~~ PO S..1771 Npt lid>. .,..., 'W"°ll8ia' "'""' Brlck·Block.S-Short ordu, clllllerina • Equal ~. ~ !J6&.9Mf. • LOST:-Iliah Setter, fem. concrete. forest 6t5-l2e6 18100 ?.lac.Arthur Blvd. rtn'I set\l.p A: lel'Vkt. Ex· .;iioiilii•••Oiiiiiilil i ~A~n!!n~o~u!!nc~ot!!m~IOl!!n~h!.,._!500~ Reward! Nr. Slater & Chlld Care P•lnting & Irvine, Calli. ~.Bsst~nly nttd •PPb'· Exec. Se<l'y ~ I KEYPUNCH OLD l'URNITUlll Gold .... ~ ... 84J.!892, WANTED . P•(l!rh•'!fl'! Equal Oppor. Employ ee CllJLOCARE, my homo, ~·tBklcil'fuAIA to o~~T~A~~lt Don't thl'Ow ll , .. .,, yeL U BRWN lem '''cl'"1""" Vic: CUSTOM PAINTING Baltooa Pon. Boy IO, pl 6 A+V~tnictlon NIWPORT 11•cH ll., A'""ev.'O"''"· the Irvine Oakwood Apta, Newport Babyaittlna. Tender Lovin& APT M.anti.ar tor (6) 1 hr from 2·»-.pprox 5·31'.i. 34 a~ w-•-t " Com ._ lty ... nieater wW Beach. Reward. ~ Care ?.-ty home nlabts. Re-Inter/Ext~. Untum. inter. unit&, ;, &lk ocean. HunL d.a.YI Week. IOmt Wbnds. ~~ OttJce .... ,.u 2nd !lilft 14 pm·l2:» am} take n;,~tt your hand•-We FEM. eockapoo, lbaaY llab19. Infant • 2 )'fl. s.~. ~wt"1r· ~~e U!.~r c;:: Bch. t.Uddle are pret'd. $50 rel req. 8'15-6814.. tier 2:~ EJtecs=~ to pre1 ~ $3.33 Per Hour need coucbee, chalrl't1table11 bttp color named~ 5fi3.3681. Wol'i't be underbid. 6fiM005. ott rent. 538-3409 or 637"600 QIILO Care-2 lrvlne llCbool F/C eeptr Tempora.ry poattion unU1 ruga, etc. Call~ tul at Vlc: O:tM. f15.-0993 COSTA Meaa ~ · No W-.tlna aft 6. 21rll, 3 evu wkl.y. MUS\ =~~t) ~~ :"'ptt 1!" i::''cra~ '57-"" after 5 o clocli. COLD domed nn., diainond comer 11th 6 Monrovia. CM * WALLPAPIR _. .~. ~•• liavo own cu. 83H119. =~ .. c .. ua1••' Contact Penonnll omc., eet loot Friday 1/19, Opel g,31).S. AA"'-'· Plan-' " ,!" ~"~~ COOKS l/tlm 1 •v v vd N Reward' ---nod ,.,011rani. Uc'd. ~. When you call Mic Auemblen & · •, yr exper. u erwrlter ll>K l300 Newp>rt Bl :.:a.~-I · Evu fmo6237. SIS-14" 146-lm l4!iH3llJ, Park Udo Colhi. NIWPORT port Baadl, CaUt .,.....,. QUICK CASH D•Y c.n, 1n1an1s to·s yro, PAINTING • PAPERING, l"ac:ken :V:;1?':!t=·~~Y p.,_, ~ 1<1:YPUNCT1 °"""''· ... ~----~~~I THROUGH A !!3~ Call -: ~~,~~ UraHtlv Neeclecl ~"'~~LYN! w Dow~, N. . :r·~~·~~~p,T, Ponon1l1 SJO DAILY PILOT CilntrlClor W-2356. wij~!"';..,~:0,. ~lb• UM ol a StatlOn KITCHiN AJde.varloul In ~~~~-----l ~PROii>:rf..'Jp~11nliiUtarir,;i-iiii>iii't ...,.;;;;;i,, """'' want! Waion or VM. Contact Mr. IXP'D MOtclRI &: da)'I. Full ·• p/dlne. BOATMEN WANT AD Addition• · lllmodtllnr rou, Uc'd I ln1. Int I elil ,_ Harry Seeley, 330 Weil Bay Ml w. 17th Btnet. Park Lido Conv. Hoop., 4111 =.. ao.~ = 642•15671 c.rw1c1< • 11on. U c'd ""'~~·••:::: Interim 91., """' M-. °"" M .... tJC.<W. rtoglhlp. N.B. 7 PM • .,._.., tven!nr -* !14Hl70&. carpet cleutna. Rtrs. -P~nel Service D!:NTAL Equal Opportunlf¥ Employer LABORATORY Veni.Punc· J""""" 30th Fan ESTIMA'n:S 642-1050 771 W. 20th, C.M. RIClflllonlll to $450 FIBERGLASS, hao<J '"",_p/Ume -· P'"°"· Co1tn1 conducted by '42-ll!i 546-2$'2 8mootb runn!na of<: seekl --pllel -1<. n<l ..,.pt, HOBf Hoep, N.B. Hunttnat<>i> llMch Pa d" PROF. Pllnttna. llao roolt, iObup pel'IOl\&l>I• lndtv. to a.1met Mfl, 1777 Placentll, Lf.OAL SEC'Y TRNI -Squadron Trader's ra 1se -cell In'"''"""· Equal o-. EmPlo>'" -· appt1, ..... JJO· 'Of, (Ne"l>Ort Center). Stnd For addJtioMJ. 1nlOrmadon Llc/lna. l"rff nt. l4S-5lt1. ASSEMBLER.s.Growth Uent. • &naftr phOnH. PRY K re~um• to Qualfltd ad no. call tn4) fl62..18M, BlG Dile . ...o W.P . A labor, portunlty for penon wi°S; Wondttful doctor prov1dea Over 21 Must be tltan 1 559 c/o Datb' PUhl, J•.o . I .• nes call for aamDlu .I: est., Thi atronc medwlJcal aptitude. Jftf,l benefits. Plush ore. I Awl ll'J ptJ'JIOn Sw1 Box 1560, Coltt. Mtu. Calif. * HmDU SPIRlTUALL!Jl' * HUllDl.tn 5"1'-51411. Allt:mbly 6 WP txp. re-Call Lee Ph=, 833-2700, ~a $ir1o1n > 5830 W 'coa11 ,,926~>;". =:::-=:=:::::<::: Let thlJ ~ cbanp your PAPERHANGERS qulttd. ~ lnttNmtnt ~-=': irvi!::~ •lW)'-, N.B. . LVN, R.tUtt luptrvllor fo~ :.i:o:. ou~ ':~ ti mes Reduoed ......... the ol1 Corp. 2ll3I PlaceolJa, C.M. Mich"'°" Dr. ' FRY COOK, EXPER. ~l ~41~~ "'lllt. IJc. llledlnll dllty, ~"'~-M,p•'!'"~ ~-:""""""•'11 Emp-DENTAL TRAINEE e ILUI DOLPHIN • 'IP': 10 AM·lO PM.. ~ AW.• & ~.l.~\rc.AUU, =cc:= Join • drlll tum ~Via Ltdo, N.S. ,-v N .... "-· d•-7-3·30 ·~-· "' N El Camino dollars ntll, fret ... 10 yrs ASSOCIATE or partner, full HU ... • IWI ....... --. w~, -o. """ !nil !1&7-M!!. or p/llme to ....... amaJ1 G ... t "'°' in wonderful Ole 011 , rk11y to -X!nt '!rlnp hnlto. - Real, San Cltmentt. EXPER. painter, Exler and Ret.l Eat.ate otc in N.O. for &hlf'P eaaer to learn .l.n· Top eatn1nla A fabulous c>po Manor COnY. Ho!p. ~7111. A.Tl'RACI'IVE )'OUZC exptrt inter. RfM, ratea. Call HVR. 97!M2$2. div. F1nt doctor wlll train por. for lndJv. who enjoys MACHINlsr· Exeel. ~ danctr wW tMCb )'OU'28: . HA'-•• ·-In -.......... Dldr, ..._ evr1. ATiltAcrM Slim 1\rl1 a )'OUC ln chain.Ide P!.~~~~_.: varlet)'. Tt;rlflcetnllon· portwUty Prtcllkln part. lattlt attps for '12 • )Q' • &lb wb"l b1r. '72 •• w -•• ", .... .., iiF""-=-ii""°"'""'.--.-d t"e'at opPQI'. ~ ""'"' al IJ"OUP tetld ln6t-tool• • 'din Good 1ho9 SbtJ'on, (21S) a>-7921 • aiev. 1-T. truck. Power Co. ValUt; $1,(d) per ac. Pll•t•r, P•tch,,111.apalr :c~uctemolnl\ltr'a~:. Phillipa,_ ~~I Denni• • ~nt 1ptr1t, Call anon ~ 'req'd. ()))re :>lailt, delwce modtll, Uk• Want 1Dc:ome PC'0'*11 &p ,.,__ P/tlme •&n.. .1-. Otnma Pn'ICIMll Agency ot Ma.M, ~2700. Dtmll l i-·-·rit CorD. IDI ===,..,.----=cc nu $14.000 aq. Trade for Ort.nc• Co. Lee Huahll * PATOI· PLASTERIWQ ~ ... ~ __,..,r Trvine, 2082 MkhtilOl'J Dr. Dmn.i1 PtnoMtl AltnCY of Pt";;~ C.M • ...,:. PROBl..£M PretnucY. Con-property or TT ~. JUtr, a11U or 13).1!55. All bl*-Fr'ff fttimatn DENTAL Rt c e pt Ion I 1 t lrvtnt, Z!l2 Mtcbtlaon Or. ~Op1Unlt;y Dnftlnwor Ment, 1yaipathetlc WI1J. ...... .L 1 be&utll\ll HAVE ZMCh. l*fect '14 Call 540-Q25 A.'M'RACTIVE bolttll , N rt S.ach . Uc O RO!:NER Mu.st bl ---.n J""'.C: p..........,,.._u._.Abor-acre "'~lot, Whlttlor Volvo ledln; """•-. l'IVmWnt prtvall club, ~!:etonty, Jr~ Top tlllJY, Ubo ,1,......,nd iw.ct,.... ror IDI "A~~D~ Oon A adoDdoal nf, AP· area 00 g.1 unltl tn Ntw· 8l&c' tor mort. Netd or-Wed thru Sun. trtna-e benefltl, Pfeuant e pn11 me.tnt. af toWnhou.H MalUrt, Erptr. · CARE. ~. port Beach area. Pollock, pn. bot.t moon,. nr Bal-\ PlJMBINC REPAm AVON CALLING! vtrontnl'nt. Dental fXP • condo. 9635 Cornwall, 1:1.B. Time. Set Ptt11>nnel Man. MALE. 40. QWet .. Af.. Agent, (tt4) 521.-0. boa la. or boM. ft3.3342. No job too small To M:lp with thole after-tnt• A&• 25-SS,. No mtokln&. 98Htll. _ aaer,Balboa Bay Club !ectlonato, 111m .seekt ltm. -·~E -. -G • WANT -wllb..,..... * * 60-J128 * "'°"""' bU!t. A •plondld ~. GIN1••L HILPllt 1-w ~., H NB ClOWllttpllt to ... '5. ~ ~eou; Padt, Oranp I JUvenldt I San OJWNS uncloaed • $1.50 eamlnl opportwUty In your DENTAL Stc'1·Boolekttptr. '° IMilC ~ht qolY room, ... ~ . .......... '?'.;,:. ~aft$. .. Veri~ Calif tll' ilmllar Oie&C Ooant)'-b'otftct.l•S't· ltwfr line to 100' • $15. own nt.J.chborhood. ~r. or OoUtat· CaQ p~ 11,,ippllH ·frOm. Yin-llAIDI tranted a.~ )'Tl. PALM • ClllD llEAOINCS eqty ln -"' cotido, bxoo>• ""'"· '37 Fair Dt. * 1119-25Q2 * S..7041 -· don, ha will need I '°°" Part time. N!wport Oil....t Telll Pu~ Pfttlnt to Coota -. lllMIJJ. •JM. Ooltl M ... ,,,_,, ROlfllM BABYSl1TER u r 1 e n t I y drlvln& ..-Call lor ap-Inn, - J'tillll'I (1118) llM-llllO l'tl11Y 23• All rfaoo 111oop SrJJor SPACIOUS 2 ,..,, J BR, ;.x • • neoded. Mature & dopend· Dtp..-tmont St°" potntmcnt. ' MAINTINANCI MAN lie. • .,... OB •<w. lul1Y eq111p1, 111 BA, blMm 1rp1c tte. MOBILHomerootcoa«rcto abll, Mon-Fri,...., t"""· J. W. RobllltOfl 546-9601 A_part"!••t Com~ ALCOHOUCS -148.000. -· Wiii ttld• Adult ...,.,wit~. TrOd< eeellnf. IDeclal Jan 4 f'eb. HBana. !G-1111 • ' OINERAL o,,IC.. 'l'holOlllN1tlec~-· a~!""~~ ....__ Kr121'f or 1fttte ·~ .. u ___ .__.. ---for hOUM Of unit&. s· (n'> ~'1-2439. BABYll -Ila"" ' N~Btach ~ ....... -.. Vl'U rDUI"" ""-· ..__ --~-_. .. ..,... .._2117 -,.,llOK. ,......, · OM airs oll'1ce. Ute b'J>i'W, tools. l&laq tlOONnOatb. P,O. 9"" I!?!,=· or town -, --l .. /Altor1lhns -· 111>1. vu1out Hu Ina ror able ,,, •wit with ~-• a -MUn1 llWINGING ~ WILL tUe toP 10 $20,000. Fine G1>1 O>l1ectloa ._ -l'!Mllt. good p11one ponotttllt>'. Call Call Jim H r• Boat ., port "' ll!S.000. for ... f11bJoa boat In nted Allot•l*ll '42.a4S 8ABYllTl'Ell. COU<t<l atrl PBX m.1611 lor aept. M A I N T E N A NC E Min Ut.-1121 ~ = at Harb« of rep&lr. ' Neat. ~le. 3) )'t&rl exp, W/2 tree de.yt -~k. ~ dmtR.AL omce-iiurt l.YJ)t. :t::Ot!. c:iacr ~ ~Pllll 1':.~ Qulnlnd :!:":!i .. ~-l'KONI '7Ml4t !ii!-home, BluU.. NB, 611-4147. Hn: 7,30-4 pm. bt~ Smith f11 Lido Put Dt, -:<e BANI< TELLER Exper. '52 Mlllop!e Ill" OU!<e, Appl¥ ""' ~ N.L 0<..ctll .a.r· I Ill'· 5it-Jlll DENT.U.llldlcal BuUdiftr, TRADE .. 0.... V-1, 11y. MAGNETIC S (In 1 ·-You'll Count_ Hort P/Umo tn<ludlltl kit pm, Mni. Ila 511-llOll ,e ~=i;;n--~ t:N~ =· .: ~ ~:,.,~~ =-~ -~rt .::: F1bWoua ~~al~ drttlrny Allo MM 6 Fri NUes ~~· 1l700 ::. MAtNTENANt:il .n, Man Call SG4177, -M RoY -tutr. IH>O IOr It clllne blll or 4 1111 -Iccatlao -lrlfndlY lndtv. Al>l>IY Ill -»-' pm CIRL Fild.,,-AP ~ Pert IOr ' It I mo ' ..= iOCIOI c;w li5 •Tllo wldr.,, ... 111l!llr-Tlil A -smile wllI ao a ·e1 Fuhloi! W., Nll er l/tfm,.Ml&ry opon-C;'l:' 45 n!ll1TOURIELF r=E::':'~ i::.:...~=: CEIWllC-L .!E!= !(EW-~ =·wgntn~n:!'. Equa!Oppor.Emplo)o<r m1!""'~~~rTIJv.,. ___ """"l.\~ lN SOMIXINI a.a: For • llUDdnL • a Una tti r .--ftt. ..._.. t:n-2'1GO. ~ r.. JOO.. D l N N E Jl c 0 0 -A cn1.Uv. ptrtOn to tun ~ I &Pt·i =~ DISCOYlll ....... Tai'oe, ... Vil I W. j!!bo -5»->GL ' Otnnlt a Dtnnll """"""'' di-. """ln -.............. o111c "' a ICl'\pl •·1 etc; .... DoJIJo ~ DllCOYlllY Lido, _,.., --..... -A -.... Id". -l:j. ..\lency "' r..in.. :w an. pm. 1111""7 ,.,..,, =3 wr1tlr(. -......,.,, Claa ll«l A4 loll kilt,....,. '11+.a:b -%1Wl1'·33U -----------------· !i'Wh1.a. 4 ~ Dt. tut Coett Kwv, MB. 0arca dtl Mar. m-M.. MWI Clall....,. Mlwl ----- ---·----· ........ . ~ • • • • • • • DIJlY PILOT lutidlJ, Jollll.IMJ 2), 1973 •t•; • l[ll] I fin..., sa 1 l[ll] I l[i]/tiiiiil iiiiii l[IJJ I .,.,, I l[IJJ [ ......... 1~1-' iiiii ...... iiii, illiiiiil\'!!'I Help Watltod. M & F 71D Help Wanted, M & F 71' Ho!f' Wanttd, M & F 71D Hole W-. ".' & '7IO Help Wonted, M & F 710 Antt'un · , IOO Ml_llo_ II! ~ .. ~lo, Hlfl, '34 CYt,:;t 0 811tM, 92S Floor I Salfflady TYPISTS AN'l:JQUE ~ lt•• bed Fair Wea\h(I( Friends POWERFUL '13 g,.,...... "" " Malntenanc. 1 _ N ~ Jmm~l.al1:1.,Y p= ~rot'&~ Grot•ry·Chedc1r whlle w/braP trim on Mad Anybody can be fl.1endly tall 5219,95 • Af.f/1'~M/ JO.SPEEDS we're 1Ull eotna: llooimian, cxp.<r. In 11~ ~ TRAINEE ,.._, r \V~ I ur.. i\IATURE & exp'd, \l>llnl<'d VOLT & loot $11'5. ~-~~ )'OU are a;lvlrw \hf.in St••-/"nXl'·t-·ck 1.,,,... out at buslneu 111Cf bLtve on-atuuu(JllOl.iia &: floor \'<Lil'. f V1Ullty m ture ·~· IQ wo.1·k tu!J ticnu 11t •tcallh I t t p rsonnel ~ • .._.ne111. But wit.ie o. 1..'0n1· ''"v ·'"-_ 0 ... ~., 1 .. , 11 left .,% ovtr -tlnie: day s.tittr . .::,n111.1J :"·utl' Greal futul"f' A-. company }'' 1 • .ti> hr ,. k N "'·'" • . • ANTIQUF;S 20~~ OFf plJlnt . and that'• IUlOthet" head pOOnea, ~ waloot h 17 4 12 " Be h mvrt care' hosp. Pai·lf1\'I' 11«-.p.. ASSEMBl,ERS ~nettt&.Oontlno lndUstrye1. Sa~ ~-C:· or Sw~ ... oe'";r:rl.~ _ 'J'f;rn::b..St!~ct" A11U<I~• tor lntaiol"l l5«5 E matter. Ptllltenee& dluolvts •PtUers. Janunry prl<.-e 11 u 8 rt')I. ac ., 187!1~ Of' 1. a~ art', 11.B 17672 Am\$ll"OIW. Jrvme. ,,,,j1 . ._., "·-. Medical & .. ~~~-.. ·• S~ itli7~, C5l ll"-1'· Cd_r..t 6t5-2Sa, ,._11_. d~ to ~-··na $102.00. J..Dw u $5.00 month .. ,,,,,,·,.·~=-..--==~ 8"2-0611, rxl. ;:~. 537~· ~.,I:~ '~..n11. APPb' ''~~i QW;. Employer 'U Appli1ncn 802 ~ --~e ~li ~ !.)'. USA Stttfo frtischt U·1USED 115 SUI.. reblt: 21" MAN AGER Tr 11. 1 n er t.oog Tt"rm Aiisigruni'nts *Photogr•ph~r ~$$ h r Llndbel'&' Nutrl!Jon, in n:~ p T T)'p1't, 2 ~ wk. Ao-llOfnetim<'• At Al..'S CAR· &klato1'S, 179 £. 17th SI., FW, <:luunbt>r, Jee at James Salt11n\an fot fast i:fO"ing llolLMy & Vac•tk>n 1'11.y l\lanu.1. rxptt. \\oric ·1n cloo-ol Toy \Vorld Stof'I!, OO. lo'tl'· curttt' lrvloo area ~ t YR. IUU'Q, del &: ln-PET, we jlke to be trlcndl · StS-244.2. l.ld .• C.~1. M~t ICC to ll:P- Tile & Hotllf' 11nprov('nlf"11t VOLT trunks. T'e<>hnk·alJy In· t'I' l••'A---1 South Coft...il Plaia · -n Col 1882 rtall. Late mod • .it cyt:le with our cusloniers eve-n lU Ft Thotell8 Sl.l!IW•i_cP;,""'"'°"'c,'•,_·=-..,,=-;;;,-,""" Ct-nter. Natio1111 idi' •'.\• lnitant Personnel clln~. ftf"QS rkl41:' toll•n1_11(•r. Sl.OPPl.nii: Centu, iQ CO:lt.a ~c:..J:~~ ~:i474 Kcruuoro. ~r. ~lTIB. 111 "st.:i1·1n.y weal!~." [A T nn1e1ipUon Tun1taWe. BM\V R~15. 1911: ~ Km; panslon progrnm ol!en: xlnt Ttain l'lttwrs \\hen nt0vc to hlc11a. Ali.k !or Al C~ba.t:u.. ' · ' · e DlSl1\VJ\S!IF..RS, wuhcrs, 110n1e>l.hl°' wron&:? Tt>1' ml neur new TO m wJ;'I'Pl4 ailvr:r: $250 xtra11; x1p1 ~:,~ir~in~:1·°'.:~\~t~.~ 3.~~ ~:~1~~;::;:b~~·1&!J~ 100 M. ~~~; SciiaUi-r *·SALES POSITION Plastt J!!.~~1~~ ~'rain-d~l'll, reblt, guarn I ~y~h~lllkc it ~t . without ~~~ part)!, make offl't' ~k.lo blu bk + lO :i 1st "car. Ph 6-\5-11'.!6 <'r "P-:\li•"'PoM U..•1t"h $lf).474 t Pt·nionnct Agency Ck.-ci~ntal Llfe 111 Nt'wport ~toe L.u,yup .l Mo1dilijj;. 4 dcv'd. s:J9..Tt20: S.'6-mS. AL'S.CARPET llONDA CL 175, lm, kl pl)I ~at Z?ll Harbor, Cos!u Equal 011por. Employer ·fl62 Can1pus Driw, NB ~N..'ha~s t'~u::~~~ Ollj: da)t, 41 nr. v."O~ W(:Ck. KENMORE gu itove, white, &. RUG . \YORKS mileage, $375 llrm. 646-6129 1.11'8&. SUl!e H~ 5.:>f..zrtl d.lvldwtl v,:Uh IK.lea; C!XP., APPJ.>: 111 1ie~ Bd.ler l.n· good ~~9-319l 293 S. Main SI ~ [ If I afL 6 PJll MANAGER. malure fefn.llk> ~C\.\'RP.'\Pf'r CatTlers PO\VER Sewing 1'1ach. Opn. POliillon oftert n1Aa8'!(!ri&I dustne1 Inc •. ~101 Dove, 542-6400 • 542 .. 9909 frw to You 1 ,,,.Tlc;.,VA~M"A"ll"A-, °"F.x,..e<=11e-n"t"'t<>"°'t..,>I v.-anted. \\'omens sv.imwt!ar. BOYS & GIRLS Exper. p~t'd. Good Pl.)' & pok'ntlal, ne\\' ('01runbsion Nl"WJIOrt Beach. REFRIGERATOR dlUon $!95 Apply 390 E. 11th St., CN. tO vrs and oldt'.r. steady Work. 113 3 • R contrucl that U; toDS In ln.. Trainee to $400 $50.. GOOD ~N01TI~1834 ~suRCv~ _s 5 \Jw~ A~~ 3 LIMs, 2 :rtm11, $2.00 ·• S<iG.9338 • MS~l. \\', N1t,\·1ll1r\ lit.>;it h areA. ~tonrovla, CM. 66-l«7. ~t::7· ~~tia~':~.in~Jl Ute T)'plug .. clc.t 111 1 lArra.lne f'OR CHILQRJ!!N or el.le '69 Greeves, 3'0cc $40i ).J ANAGER-Hospilal ran· Good pt'06ts. Co ntnct 1'1r. ~lr. f"reuudl at ~. Wevt IIBFRIGERATOH. 5 Yt'!lMI ~'ould be idekl W txtn LARGE, atfecrionatc, aJten.<d e 66-15l? e tetn. Expcr. in n>laillng &· Seay, Da.ily Pilot, C:\I. Pen;onn..•I Ai,:ent..-y old auf(Klefroe:t. Very l·lean stonAgc lip&el! ln your gar. n11lle, grey Sll'iped Tabby -,=-ii-~7".-~..--1 foods. 5.2'l-28\9. • ti-12-1.121 • PROOF SALES clerk, pArt _fim", 1&;1 I!;. Edlni(!r, S.A. 893-900). age. PfUCED l•'OR u.t. cat. Neecbi gOO<f home. 350 Honda, lo mi'a prefer drugstore e.qienence, t1.tarlc Ill CetttC!&'l KENP.10RE auto gas dryer. MEDIATE SALE. ·~• S. 54()..2055. ~77 aft 5 A: wlmda !l.1AN O\'t"r :5 \\'anted to s&\\ 1~15 hrsJwK. Bushard's 5'2-8836 SUgbtly SSS uu ""';.:=;;;:;,-;;.,-,.,,--;---,,.,.,,1-;:i;;'';f:i;;T."""'";::;;:=-and nail nW'St'ry boxes & NursesNHded OPERATOR Phannac)I, '494~1059, ~ Roiis St., Santa Ana,LOVABLECock-A-Poo '69YAMAHA175Enduro dn\•p trucii;. Apply lT'a.il 11·7 & Other Shift s ~145. Up H 0 LS TE RE RS & ~312). w/poodle clip. Grey, blk & Dirt or Street $325. Gothard 11.B. 10-·l. Top pvt. duty fHIY· SECRETARIES Upholstery Cuttm'S, £xp<-1'. OVER 200 washet11. dryers, G ORll AM s te rl ing wht, feml, 2 )ltS old. Needs1 _~Ex~.~"'~""~· _•_1'HI092 __ ._ 1 MARKl:.I resear c h in· lnuned. pay for CIOOI' duty. p1-c! tor Ora~ Counly refriti:entfot'S h'oin $39.95. Silver-Fairfax Pattern. 6 hon1e. 64&-Bln. t"rvie~rs needed. No !It'll· Counl)"Y.'ide. Ne«! RN · Opening Avo1ilable VOLT F'umlture Mf.g. Cttat future M5--0780. ' knives. 6 torka, 6 soup GORGEOUS Russian Blue Motor Homes ing. Exp'rl. Please ~all LVN · Aldf'S. Inlervit>n·s At Our lnsto1nt Personnel & compan,y be n e f i 111 · Rent Wa1her1/Dry1rs spoons, 12 teaspoons. Prac-lritt)I, 11 mos, temale. Gentle Sale/Rent ~01~~"' '""A illoo-Fri. 9-S. Lesco u l 1 e Tustin & Collo"ns T•ml'VU'G"" ,.. __ ,;,_ Domino Industries. 11672 ..,, Wk Full -·'•t flcaU,y new, ordered now, & \ovable 831-1282. """' .;JJ<r<-.n Nurses Rc11:isuy, :51 llos-""A" c" .--i-..."""s.·v-,. 1116 Armstrong, Irvine. 55T~. "' * ..:....~-··· O\lt'I' $400 Sale price $300. • 2'1" TRAVt'O 940 MATURE Women for retire--pital Rd .. :\l.B. {Lobby Park Branch in Orange ,,,,....., ampus .,,.,., te ~~ G. MaynUd, 12Bl 06.le St., 2 yr old female Gf!nnan 25' DISCOVERER menl borne, practical nUf'St', L.,.,, Bldg.J 6-11·99» or Newport Beach 546-4741 W~ exp req. Over Furniture 810 Stanton. Local ph "'ne Short Halr. 20'·2'l CONTINENTALS Etc. Sa\\yer Holllf' ~6. fl.;'~. \Ve offer a fine Equal Oppor. EmRployYer ~spo=c. ~~a~~ 539-9565. ~ 492-H80 ews. 2:1' PRIDE & JOYS J\IE"diC'tl\ Ra't'ptionist NUH.SE AIDE TRAlNING starting salary, ex· SECRET A pn1, Van De Krunps 3099 So ~~:;,1 &~~~~ ~~:= srEREO, 1!173 . c 8 r r a rd VAN CONVERSIONS ANGEL IN WHITE A ht'alth career oppor. 2 ~·k cellent b ene f its Advertising/Marketing Bristol, Costa Mesa table, $50. 2 chain, flor&l model. Systcmizcd auto ::aIC'!\ • Service • Rcntols Net'<!. to handlr front offit·e class. E1nploym<'nt oliered. package, pleasant Great opportunit)' for ad· \YAI'l'RES.SF.S • Over 21 linen, S30 each. Misc. changer, DJ watt am/bn [ J["'-.J } * Danmar Inc. for this.. wooderful doctor. P,•8rsonnel Dept, H<>ai Hosp, working environ· vancement for penon who's Mexican '~-&: coclctails. lamps. Z\teau"" ""a1t to ap-==iOn 1J;.k:r! '& ;ir., ,. .. ~ r"'t 13801 Harbor Blvd., G.G. Plush ofc. k location + ; · · t d plenty ( bright, organized, am· 10:30amll:......u1 & 4:30pm.. preciale. 4 pm, deck. Still brand · s.11-&nl great hrs. Q-nerous dcM:lor NURSE.S' aides, ex:per. pref., men an , fo ~ b~ likes a chalreng11 A dally, l.0:30 &m·U:30 536-13l1. • box...JvasJett ~ ~~ _ Next to C.G. Oat.sun_ has terrific benefits. Call a.11 shifts, excellent v.'Oridng opportunity r a -and -cllli n. an die am &.-£41fpm:S:3lrpm.--~n 6 ~••·-• Te·" "·ptain •···away .. Now .. S'" Credit Pets, Gooer1I &SO R 1 A u~ H Barbara 11.fa(.'k, 833-2700, rondilions. Beverly 1-Janor vancement. We pre--multi-project assignments. case. Mexican Restaurant, c~,;_ ... Bra00 ~ ';peelal ~ 171 ~ en mun;ior ome ' Dennis & Dennis Personlll'I Conv. Aosp., 24452 ViR fer individual with Good spelling, st.>cretarial 296 E. 17th St., c.M. order, never u 5 ed. N~t ~S93...<l51)~ . 1 GROOM &. BOARD, 11 )'I'S .for your Vecation ' Agmry of ln.'ine, 21112 £s1mdR, Laguna Hills. at least 6 months skill! and current work: ex-WAITRESS, Utinie for Red@00!'8.ttrlg $50. each. 2518 per. am1 ton all breeds Free pickup! * 139-4301 * r.licllf'b1011 Or. t337~, experience. pcrlence essential. Back· residential care facility. A Elden C.M. ~1042. ~-el=lde ro~~;: i ~~rr~~ Poodle P1.IP5 '71 FORD lT Mini·Like new, r>.fEDICAL Secretary, mull NURSES Aide-Immed open-i;I'O'Jnd in marketbling, ad-Xln't woridn& oonds. Apply 'l HERCULON sota & NB No. 215 ' · low miles. $51lOJ. Pvt p~. knoii· insuranee. S;>nd lng 7-3:30. & 3-ll:l'.>, "-II! A vertising or pu ic rela-Parkhurst Retirement 1 t 1 bl ., t Mt4pm ·~21163 !/time. Park Lido Conv. Please ...... or ppt. lions helpful, but willi .......... ss ovesea • a es, wn rm se, SPECIAL shag carpet sale. "--1 854 ' .._.. Resume Ousitif'd ad no. Mary Haroldson to learn and llexibili.;.,,..~ Rcs.idenccJ: 99'J5 La A.ta· king bed, also glove leather From S2.8S )Id, Can install ""'""¥ Auto Service, P•rh 949 597 cfo Dail)! Pilot, P. O. Hosp, 466 Flagghip, N.B. SSl-22n important. Salary open. Call meda, r . v. sofa & loveseat. l.turt tell. Rea,s. Guar. 642-7101 eve. OBEDIENCE 'class to start ---'--'----- Box 156(), Costa :\Iesa, Ca OFFICE Nurse-LVN or Lisa at 919-7620 for in.-WANT E0 0 E"X PER P\•t. ply. 536-f.641. Wed. J an. 31, 7:30 pm, in CADILLAC PARTS • l9<ll ~. . medical assistant. Starting, SECURITY tel'View. Seml.su·ess, good wages, MAPLE splndel bunk bed!!, Mlscell1neous the Newport Beachflrvine Mpdel • HAVE GOOD 1\!EDICAL Insurance salary $500 n10. A,f~Fri. SECRETARY :t1n1 v."Orkina; oond. Apply ladder & gU&l"dra.ll. $30. Wantesi 820 area. Open to oJJ dob'8 OVf'r TRANS MISSION, AIR ~1f7,~ptlo~~i~ 979--5680. $600+ F'reea 14" eo.1 caJMolinoOl'A,.... ....,~ Good 54.5-2607. ANTE US eo· Coll 5 mo. old,~-~~~r!~:™iJolAUJ:rlT, OPERATORS, single needle PACIFIC emen e or ~. ***Sofa & lovt'St'at, never w. D: . . m . ec-DOG School Instruction New m• S. "-·St •---knowledge, Ne~· lab in 0.,,-erlock. Zippersetter. Top \\'ork for outstanding )'0Un$il WANTED 'd t h uaed ho 1 Sl60 al'•· •-·· • aceummula• ..... .,,. ,...,--~·--...i.... T 0 •• ~ .. .,..,., ... Fashion Island. G-»-01~ ask M1.. n-u• exec. of estab. co. in ell.ll w a C , th or , USU v ...,,..., ..., ... ~.. ,,....,, .. 'll Mz..3120 pay, eKJ)el'. o ... ,,.. l\ULl 5 ld' maker for inquiries.. home, 968-'1910. Private out-of-town buyer. 9:30-10:30am, Wed 8-9pm & ===~.,.,=-== for Jean. Mfg., 865 Production Pl, BANK glamorous surrow. inga; * 67$-Z131 • Gar-• '·le 812 Write. Clusilied Ad No. Sat 9:3&-10:30am. J.Iartin .. CUS'TOl\ol palntlng -No job ~fECHANIC. Class A Smog NB. ~J=il~~ Pos.ilJf)ns WEEKEND RE CEP· :-• ~ EiOO, Dail)! Pilot, P.O. Box crest Kennels, 54&-0089. too complex for us. Fttte lie. Tune-up .r. lite duty. Ap. 0 P TOP.IETRIC assistant. RIVERJ,.\ EMPLOr't'MENT TIONIST -Real Estate Of· ~IOVING, Everything must ~·Costa ~lesa, Cal. 92626. ADORABLE puppies, half estimates. 89l-0573. ply 990 E. Coast Hwy, N.B. part time, matwz,~~ in t:"-·~1 Oppor Emplo""" AGENCY, INC. lice. 9AM~M Sat. & Sun. go: Washer, Dr ye r, NEEDY Famil)I Needs cocker, will be small, $lO lo TOWABLE P lumbing Vaa, NEED 4 attractive women tlttl:l, must type.~ ~....... · ,,_ 2082 Business Ctr Dr. Ste 290 $2.50 per nr. Age 25-35, at· Telescope, 2 n1an raft. BB Clothes, furn. ~ food loving homes onl)'. -494-4i19 ~ns shelYC!t l111lde, $15. ~ 30--45, ror up to 6\\·ks public * * Painting in exchange Irvine 833-&llO tracive. CA1J... ?.tr. Bartlett, guns, radios. MCN'.lel T Run-despernlely. 2164 Puente after s. lie. aft 5, 9'&-1274 rel&tions project 10 iir for apartment, 4 hrs a day. PROOFREADING, filing & (Orange Co. Airport Attal 846-1361. ningboard. Collectibles. Ave, 01. troduce TK'\\' bake service to fCX' your '"°nt. 548-975a. typing· Part time, \\'ed .t: SECRETARIES WHO WANTS TO \VORK? Rock. Brick & Flagstone.1 "0_1_SCAR~~D-ED _____ l_l_eg AFGHAN. fem, lyrold, mU!lti••·------•f Cos!a llesa residents. No "\\'eed it A: Reap" Sat. Apply in person on Santa Ana law lirm requires DRIVE 1\ CAB! 5902 1-leadowlark Dr, Hun-for old famioncod • round r~a1'W d:;.)e~ reg II caj selling. Uniform provided. From treUUftl to tra!ih Wed. at 1545 Newport Blvd xlnt typists full & part time, CHOOSE your hours, work tington Beadi. Nr Spring-table. ~·~ 0 --I Mostol'Wt Sall\f'Y. Call ?\tn. Bishop turn them into cash or call 642-081.1 legal exp not necessary. for youl'lti!', be your own dale & Edingl'r. Call GG-3.515 AtALE Isi!lh Setter Sacrifice, I ~j;;j;;j;;j;;j;;j;;~~~I 540-7S91. CAll. DAILY P!LOT Real Estate Sal11 ~1'fSf & shorthand boss. Men or women. Can MOVING Sale! Double bed, Office furniture/ S4S, Moving causes sale.II A=~t aa lS a good in· CLASSIFIED ••••••• 642-6m fR£[ desirable. am.Ple~f,,_, send ~s ~ Af,~~¢~~pe~. compJete 26" woman's bike Equip. 824 G= ~~ poppv, General 9$() rei;wne --..3 re· SU 'p1 l. . · · w/baby seat. stroller, an· p ~ i---------'-qulremenls to P. O. Box I? eruen your income. hque chair,v.'igs, mlsc:. Must 5· Walnut Credenza $250 t\ilale 6 wks, $25. 400 4382 Sanl& Ana 92702. Drive a t.'Ub 6 hr;s or more a Sell bu Feb. lst 548-5IDI. w-•-·t offi-•-k $100. 646-2Sl3 ~fcCORMICK tractor, ' day. Appl)! in person, " , ... ,.u '"" ~ I-="'°""""'""'"'"°.-gal. spray Jig, disk & sprin&: SECRETARY-p/time 4 hrs J ellow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th 'ewelry 815 \\'alnul side cftr $10, swivel TOY FOX TERRIERS tooth ham>\\'. 6371$4l. 1 a day Ior small manuL St.~COsta Mesa. desk chair~-66-1200, H. Reasonable Trucks N2 fi!'m· Varied duties. W~k WIREAIEN . to build bread. INDIAN Je'Nelry, silver & WD DESKS $:1)..70; wk/assy alter 12, 4924.143 A CO!'MMfHt StfOlllPINQ AHO 9EWMl. CUIOE FOfl Tff( License Training Limited Time Only Famous liet>nse l'Ourse nov.1 availaole UU'U Tarbt'll Com· pan)!. Applicants full)! re- imbursed upon qualification. New or e...;per1enced sales people. Openings available. Complete training prograni. Future managen1ent oppor· tunities. Call Mr. SJoan at 832·0HO. directly iv/owner. \\'ill hoard! & test fbcturt'.'S. Must turquoise. Just returned benches $20-50, file stordr • •AKC. Silky Terriers, !!Ill.MAN f1962 COMMEill I.rain. No sh req'd. read schematics. Part & from reservation. All new .$1. 867 W. 19th CM 642-3408 male1, 6 wks. PANEL TRUCK Equipped PARS 0 NS MANUFAC· f / time positions avail. jewelry, rings. bracelets, Pianos/Organs 826 $100. 548-0508... with Overhead Rack .. GAL OH THE GO. 1 TURING Xln't fringe benefits. 3 wks hilihl, squash blosso1ns. Ifl:' • Purebred Bloodhound P~ Interior I In e d wl1h for· an ad In wornan•1 World TI7 Ohms Way, CM pd vac. Pd med, dental & dian jewelry repaired. ORGAN HOBBY ple!I, 7 wks. S.lO each. SllELVES • PRICED FOlt Call &16-7663 We ins. Pd lq tem;i disab. Navajo Trading, 2 4 3 2 645--0307. QUICK SALE. SECRETARY ins. Accepting appHcatlons Ne\\110rt Blvd., C · M · 1212 s. Ross St., Santa Ana Call Mary Both 642•5671, ext. 330 TARBELL Gl'CW.'ing eDgU1ee.ring linn daily, Odetics, Inc, 1845 So. 642-7%il . Don't buy nny r gan until ,\FGHAN PUPPIES 542--mtl I needs ind.iv. who has the Manchester, An-ab e i m • Machinery 816 )IOU cnil play! Non-players C~p~ ·72 1',ord Courler w/camper pl'ofessKmal manner to deal Equal Oppor. Employer. welcome lo allend lree work shell radio weslem gl)ie \\.•/engineers. Call Jan. WOMAN over 18-'! You can HOBART 300Amp wleder on &hops. f"or intormnlion J.fALE Afghan, 2~1 yrs, with mimlrs & hyy dty bwnpS-. Subtly Sensational Smocked Pinows • < I I ( ' I I ' I ' • ' ' ' I t " ' ' ' ' ~. ' ' I ' 1 ' i ·~ • ' ~ ' ' ' ~-· ' ~' ' ,~·. ' ' " ' ' Suh!lr \\·ay to look sema· tional -Si'\\' lhill slender shape in a soft knit l~r row and spring. Top stitching at:· cent<i the lithe lines. Printed Pattt<rn 9357: :ffl\V 1o1iSSC!I' Sizes 8, 10, 12, 1-4. 16, 18. Size 12 {bust J.ll take8 2~, yards 45-tnch fabric. St"\'ENTT·f1Vl~ Cl~~"f!< r9r each pan"m -. add z; (.'(!nts for each pattern tor Air Mail and Special Hand!· in~; olheNise lhird-claM dellvery wtll take thrtt weekJ or more. Send to Mal'ian l\tartin. the DAILY PILOT, 4·12, I>attern Dept .. 232 We.C. 18th St., New York. N.Y, JOU. Print N~ AUDRF.88 \111ilh ZIP, SIZE 'and STYIE NlJllUIER. SEE MORE Qut ck Fubions Ahlf choose one p.eJtern f/tt from our SOc1"1.Summl!'r Catalog:. All .,,.,, Dnly50c. INSTANT SEWING J!OOK 1eW I~, \\lef.f tomorrow. 'INSTANT FASHION BOOK -JJulW'eds Of faahlot, !acil. "· REAL TOR$ P11:ge, 5-JD..6055, Coastal earn sro per week, P/time 4 v.·heel trlr. $250. Contact: Toni {)ieterich papcrs 7 . $100. Me Ito w ~ $1900. Pvt pi)I. 837-9362 r REAL ESTATE-Personnel Agency, 2'M job. No delivery with Sarab 645-1517 * 642-2851 53&-091 l9Ei9 DATSUN p U New SALESMEN -Why not work Harbor Bl\'d., Ci\t Coventry. 962-JnO Miscellaneous 818 Coast Music Service IRISH SETTER paint job, bra~." RullA in the bDtteat area Him-SECRE'I'ARY-l.Dng estab. \VOl'ilAN to iron, your home. Ne\~•port Blvd. at Harbor 1 yr old. Call 548-6312 good. Best otr. 548--0Ml aft tin & t o 0 8each/FOuntain yacht sales otc needs an ex. \Vill deliver &: pick-up. * AUCTION * Coiila ?.1C!sa HorHs 856 4 pm. --Valley and Jet UA train )'OU! per. sec'y/rttepl w/some Penin. area. 67".....5990 aft 5. Call Phll McNamee, bkkpng exper. prcf'd. ?.1ust Fipe Furniture *PIANOS*ORGANS . 1964 CHEV.% ton pick.up • Vlu.AGE REAL ESTATE, meet public v.·eU. Good WORK at home-phone saJes. & Appliances Going Out For Business PALAMINO Quarter Gelding w/8' camper. Good com. 962-4471. working conds at pleasant ~rirsJ.~~-Call Collect WAuc1iodn11 FrAiday, .7:30 p8.m. ~I quality. prices . serv. ~l~~:e5; tack $100. ~~s1.,..~ 1 to a 6 pprec. $1100. Receptionist to $'150 waterfront Joe. · in y's uct1on arn l\awai-Steinwny-Baldwin, etc. · · ... ~ a ler SUPER STAR Atr. Chltv.'OOd, 673-m:I 207511. Newport, CM 646-8686 Player Pianos & Rolls 1969 .FORD F250 Pickup, 390 Famow; entertainer seeks at· SECRETARY p/time, 9--4, II ~· ) Behind Toey's Bldg. ?.1at'l Re~tals · ·· ···• \Ve Buy-Sell [ I~ enguie. % T. P/S, Pl.B f S!H, Genera1 oftiCt', send [ Mlidwndlsa Dail)! 10-6 Sun 12-5 btG,=••t • ~ disc, $1550. H~ 100 B, tractive vigorous indiv. or resume 10 Box •S75, ,10 O'Keefe & ~ierrill built-in FIELD'S PIA."'lOS ...,_ 1C. 1970, Call 491Hi50f!. front office position. \\·111 .1 p ·1o p 0 Bo 1560 . used dishwasher. Good \\'Ork· Costa Mesa (714) 645-3250 l~mm;;;m;;m~;~1 ·G6 DATSUN Pl~··p -·~·. handle general office & Dai )I 1 t, x ' ing condition, Avocado. $35. ORGANS* I ~ CJl.ll u"~ . meet VlP'1. Must have C011ta Mesa, calitornia 800 Portable Singer S ~ w Ing *PIANOS* Bo t G I 900 Xlnt running concl. Year old super penonalil)' lot !his 9'2627. Antiques ?flachine with attachments, Hammond, Wurlitzer, man)I " s, enera eng $TOO. 675-8193 1 luxurious olc: tall Debby 'SECRETARY .. Pre-School. SCRAM-LETS $60. !'hone 633-9264 aftct· others~ January clearance * * * * * Vo1ns 963 Dugan, 833-2100, Dennis & l''ull time. Appl)! in person, 4:30 p.ni. on now! The best deals are SKIPPER/Mal t M n 1----------1 Dennis Penant'lel Agency of Sunllower Early Achieve. al1rays at . . n " '69 Ford 8 super Van livine, ~ Alichelson Dr. ment Center, 2&15 Sunllo~r ANSWERS S!fth~~~ ~~~e~ Wallichs Music City ~~s ~c;tm~fm~:z· Camper, E-300, re~, Receptionist $4§0 . Ave, S.A. . blades. lnclds Dado Set &. South Coast Pl!l1a 540-28.10 714: 9s3.4688. • ~m.5 ~0PPm.. t 01 I e J • Top spot lor girl Aeeking SERVICE StatiOn, Grave molding head. Selling for l'at-ecr as le&al sec·y. No yard full time, pref college Slogan -Opium -Often -S340 at Sears for sale at WANTED: PRIVATE PAR· 14ft. Boat. Fish or Ski •. 72 GMC Yandura %. t.9n legal exper. req'd. student. P/tlme eves, & Tctbet" -TIGHTS $225. Npt Bch 644--4741 TY TO BUY Pu.NO FOR ~ercury 35 horsepower. heavy duty 350 v.s'. auto RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT wkend1, days. Mu11t be exp A person in show. business CASH ...,...____ Fiberglass over wood. trans. 546-5.5:5 bet. 5:30 pm, AGENCYC INC. w/local refs. Arco. l!lth & dcsc1·ibe11 whal hot dogs are: 2 'l'WN beds, box spmg, mat-.....,...u;,a Trailer. $300. 5.57-$92. ' · ,_ D Ste CM '"They're hamburgers v•ith tress, Blk/wht port 1V, gtl Grand Plano _ .... ~lor si~", 14 1 Boa ~-" Ski 1966 VW Camper Van. Xlht 2082 Businei;s .u. r. . Newport, . cond Rollaway, gd cond. ...-""" t. t.. r ""' or . Cood. Many Extras! Make 290 SERVICE Sta. Attendant, TIGHTS on." &l&-ro43 Excellent Condition! ~ercury 35 horsepqwer. Oller. Ph: 675-5675. 1 Irvine 83.~ f/time. Llte mech. know'I. ANTIQUE $700. 6#-<l355 F1berg11W over wood. l~"='"'"""~=~~- COrange Co. Airport Area) 2 Yn min. Bonus for He'd., SHOW & SALE • • \\'ATER "CONDITION· TV R di Hifl Trailer. SJOO, 507-5692. ·ss Chev 108 Van. Reblt erw. --r:l"ECEPTJONIST -toot .req'd> Neat in appear. $.1.!XXl.000 Display ;s'!,•ingE~~~4-~~ $700, Ster:O 0 ' ' 836 Boats, Power 906 ~~: 00.b~schoc'r, YACHT BROKERAGE Apply 2590 Newport Blvd, 100 Antique Exhiblti< \\''EEKEN DS ONLY CM. Long Beach Arena BRADBURY Seascape $250. 1973 ZENITH & RCA '!! at 31' CHRIS Cabin Cruiser, top '72 CHEV Van, mag!I, stereo, Gl'C'el our cuslOmt'rs, answer S E R V 1 C E s t a t I 0 n Ocean & Lon11: Beach Blvds. Signed Braque Lltho $1,450. tremcndouJll savings at shape, twin eng. radio, cust int & pa.int. V-8 eng, phones, lite typing. If you Salesm~Top pay _ fringe Jan. 25:26, 27, 28. Others. Pvt. Pl)! 5.15-5500. Orange County•11 largest slcreo, depth tinder. full high back seats 847-7538 , are attracti v e, Ex fd Full Thuts/Fri/Satl pm -10 pm USED BICYCLES dealer. Priced Ieu than the ljl.a1le)I, n1anyxtras, aleeys6 Avtos Wented 9£11 wcll--m-• & like peopl•, bencflli. per pre · "'•R""" 1" to o" om. ' "th 3 · f < •= ~ =17 'I" 13 II ... ~ "o" . 1 & pt tim'e avail. Ap1>1Y Shell .,..,...,.....,. "' All types * 642-Jm discounters wi yr pie-m com or . ...,.,1~. ,,,......., . /... · -0. ca Airs. av15 or appt. Station, 17th &: Irvine. N.B. lute tu~. 1 yr par!$ ,I',, l Yt' 35' Owens Jamaican Crulser, "'I . ~ v.·cekdays ~. 642-l!Ufi. I .iii~~~~~:'!'"'""'\ "'UICK CASH PORTABLE TV. 17" Zenith, service. Ca."h 90 Plan or sips 6, exc. electronics, lop REWARD RESID~NT 1ngr., rct. couple NS ,., 6 nlos old. $45. tenns lo 36 months. ABC mech concl, many xlras. Smocked pi\)a.,.,, -easy and to n1anagc 5 apts/San JECHNICIA THROUGH A 847-66.'ll Color IV, 0021 Atlanta, Best offer over $15,500. Priv fast tu do! Use velveteen, c I ~ ni en 1 <'. 4 9" ""Hi ILOT FIREWOOD sale. $a> atackl. Hu.w; .. .,.,.n Beach 968-3329 714 ... ·•~ ' contoroy, heovy oouoo. •Ilk. -DAILY P "-~-· · """' '-· WILL PAY ovni Pillo\\'S are smocked on the 837-80!2. ANT AD Split, oak & eucalyptus logs. A~Radio AM IF M 21' FBRGLS boat & trlr • ..., 11.TOng side of fabric. Pattern RESJ'AUHANT Production W Brian, 494-2694. • Becl:c:er Grand Prix -toueh Fantasy. Flybridge. SJee?i Kelly Blue ......., 7269: transfer: direction." tor Bus men, wRitresseA & 642.5678 D&il)I Pilot Want AdJI have tuner never installed. Pri 4 Heatktove.sii'lk: AC/DC F I t model~ 121,t inch round, 12" gquan", v.·aitcr1. See 1-liu Mc:Leocl Test :::;;::;;::;;=======""=:"':;•;;;"';":;'='°"'=·===-="""":z::;;·;::m;;:ake==•=U=er=5.l6-;::;::"1343::;;;;'I ref.rig'. 1$ RP o'.M,C. 1~ or • e. , c~, 131~" holster. after ~m. db/out1>d. $47ri0 .. 963-2673. low milH91 ....... SF.VF.NTl'·flVE CF.N'Ni BEN BROWN'S Collins Radio ts now a~ Boats, Sail 909 tics, Imports, tiydca •r f(lr each p,q!fel'll -Hdd 2.i RESTAURANT l't'pllng appUeaUona for ~-1f campers. cenl" for each pattern for Jll!li s. Coast Hwy. per. production test techrn· STAR GA'ZER.:'1<-l'1' •71 , ISL. 27, fully eqpt, Cail and ask for BUJW Air i\i!ail and SpeciRI lfandl· South Laguna cian!I to trouble shoot A: test ;;-='-""':.,----By CL\Yll POILANl---,----i custom teak interior. Pvt DAY£ ROSS ing: other,>.•\&e third.class digital data &ystenUI & pty, uc-$5995. ~43 delivery \\'ill t:lke three l{ESTAUltANT Uookkccper t.'<tui""'tnt. 'M: Yow.Dolly .Adlvity Gvfd. }{ S /Dock 910 ~'l't.-k:s or more. Send 10 wanted, ;, dnys wk. Apply in , ... , ~ Ar:cordf~11 lo tft• s111rr. ...,-. Bo.ta, llps s PONTllC Alir.t" Brooki;, the DAU.Y person aft 2 pm, The l''ive Todeveq.~sogaforW~, llft PJIDT. 10.i, Nttdlecraft Crowns Rellauranr • .m1 E. nKldwordscon!'SpOl'ldingtorurb=r.s DOCK apace avail, prime • 1 Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea Coo.st tl\\'Y, Cd?.1. No phone Co&~ ofyourZodio<birth sign, 'loc. Sml boats $1.75 ft ll'R' 240I H c_ 8 ._. S · N y k. N y call 0 -pt-' · • ,. ,. boe!S u"p 10 45' $2.50 It •rggr •TWt IA.hon. ew or • • s ._ ...... "'" 1.tJ..U , Mok• J1 HfQll' ~' s.. ""T-1~· '!IF . 8:00.5:30. Coata Mne -.11 10011. Print Nanle, Add~11. RestaW'ant _ Fas I FoOd 2 .,._ 32 A"' 6'l H~ OM AON 1• Zip, PAttom Nnmbrr. Serv. 1.flddle aged wornan RaJi .:'1$arowo-:Ulmt ~~~~ 55' Slip, xlnt loc. WE PAY TOP Crochel, knit, ctr.:. Free 673-6128. GIMIMI . 6~11t1""t J6F...,,.. 6'1W,,. NEEDLECltA1'1' '72! p/time, H.B. CaJJ eve11. •0 ~&':,;"'''* 5;~:; (>SAM NewpC'lrt Harbor IM-7334_ CASH . direetions, 50(, ~-1-----a11-· ?t !I 7 Sc.llt. 37 51'tov!J 61 r11.,,k~ IMtant 1't•Ct'9ow Book. llN Supervsor for sm 1_ JAMBOREE BLVD. ,ll"J.1 a J~ 3alH -tlBPrmvre-'~ nursing home In beach area. ;ri1N at ,.JU..r 9 ,.,,,.,, Jq Shc:vld &9 To ol.... ,._ BaAic, f(lncy knots. Prtl· Call 714: 4!H-8075 tor appt. NEWPORT BEA 100,. AOS. 70Renr:h 1b44QW• .. for ustd CUI I trucks. ,tust terns. $1.00. Equal opportunity em.pkJ>'er ~ ... -,,. 11 11--..1c •1 Stlll"lllrcodi 7 r s"'"...... ~al61RuoOlH'"' 'c-H"EYi'frtim Instant Clrorht't Root • R..N. relief night m.trt, ,.,. :;r.,~,: :~1..i-~~~..,. . "t:C" Learn b)I pictures! Pnt· ll-7:30. Bevf'rly Manor ~ CAMCll 14Ard .i4e. 7•or C 5 I /Ront'20 trrng. $1.00. _Conv. Hotp. 496-5186:.___ TEl\.~R ~.JU~f'/.f 1STa 4$C• 75N-.: amperl, a. G NCR PROOF OPR J/JL'IU l6Pl!Jrl'I~ •6k '6Yovr Complete ln11tant lft Book RUBBER press operator -17 ~ "7HIOh 77 tv. ATT.ENTION Aslc for s,Jea ~ -nlOl'f' 1h:1n l OO i;if11 \\'ill t.a.in. Steady work; ~ t.~~!!I 1aw.t1 48M111 78Pio!.r IMPORT OWNERS 18211 ~h J3J"1. $1.00. benefits. Willing to work Comrnerctalbe.nk~· min. 51.;t 191'1on "'°' ne .. nvt New custom b.llK. $tl!. 1funtinaton BC!acil Ownplete AIJlwa Boot -~shift after tralnina:. Call 6 mo'• req!d. Nevrpot1 Beach ft~ !!O :,>~it.l,, Owrhead Afffjjel's a. 847-b7 KU-f33! $1.00. 96~ llt'ttl. 22Co\lld 31 II.._,.. ClllDSJ(!r& dt \-CfY, W1'Y lo IMPORTS WANTED 1' Jiff)' Rut Book!! ' ~. SALES OPPORTUN ITY 23 Yau ll ~ Pficta. f inanclni;: avail. 0"""""' O:iUJ1t·"1 Boot of u ~ Ar,.twt.. /\VAIL.ABl.E (714 ) '46-T11t ~= .. ew-. 89,1..03,73. TI)p .. i nll'YiR 50cQu.llt 8oot 1 16 Ht' tor aure!l8.lw, )"OU"t man. Mn. Rios .26""'""'-,:.,'fl:~~lityi::;:""""° CAMPER~ for 6' ftctwp BILL MAXF.t_ TOYOTA ,-.11... -oa ""-· r.luict buvt. txct.'\ltive typ11 '»I':'!',~"' ....,..., $~. I.umber ntck a.1"°'433 18&11 BC!ttCtl Bly;. • ...,.,.. lllkc ability. Immedialt Etr1111.1 oPpor."'tmploy8' 29 "''"..... =:r:,1~ IW!..JlllMI JI. Bc&ch Ph. Mt r!!-.m. Quilt Book 2 -PMilk>ns avallabll!. Phone I ~~~~~~!'!"~~~~: I sur.1J ~~ •~ ....,,... ....... ~ ~ I -•·~ -~011 · ~--•·" ' tO. ~ ()'°v~ • NEW S" CAMPER Don't ...... the "'1pl Qolltt I• Toda.v'• IJ,·lnr;: -ivi-nt,,.,..,., =~ Uke to tnde7 """ l lllUU 8 W'IT\$'Good \BIA!tttae Nm:r.i SllELLS $'119. ''Lllt"lt ln clusitJeiL....,Qitp JS beautitul ,oatttrn1. ~ l.$k rw Mr. • Pand.lle OQluma 11 tor )'OUI ---~~=============:;:::!::~~~~-;-.J 893---06'13 to Short Rmlltal MHnl. ~ A. "Pad"! P1Ace an ad! S lif'ltlJ. S da,rl for 5 buck&. • ,\ ) I r ' ' ' ' t ! 1 . ' ·I TuHday, January 23, 1913 '11 .......... _,,,!Wo J§J l I Autot tar Salt l§J ]§JI l§J I I ~ 980Auto1, Ntw 980 Aulot, Imparted Aulot, UNd 990 THERE ARE OVER 2000 USED CARS _ l'OR..SALE ON COSTA MESA'S Harbar Baulnard ., af Car• LOOK POI THI IMILIM AT THEO.DORE I UNIVERSITY ROBINS FORD OLDSMOBILE 2060 2850 1-!ARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. TOYOTA DODGE ~ OXolla 1ta Wl?l·Xlnt "10 Volvo l:W S, am/fm, '69 ELDOR.A00-37,000 ml. cond. New tires, RJH. 1Uck, $1795 or be1t oUer. Radi&J Urea. $3500 firm. '63 6 C stlek, R&H, $150. '66 DODGE Wag. 383. Aufu '63 ~ n, '73 license, 6 cyl Ex. cond. $796. Gary, CJO Super aharpl $995. 642..o8T9 494-8881.1 $4&-flOJ) btwn 8:30-5 1969 TOYOTA Mark u. Air, A-:cu""10""1.~.o"-soc1~--~m=. ===c~A"'M"'A7=R°"O.,.--­atlc 25. 642--7MO Box 5.51, Balboa or see at C .... sx1. 1 owner, Xlnt cond. $915. 644-0440 ' ~IUMPH •OATMEN LKSW.AGEN_ Basic Boa.ti~ 6ourse Marina High School 7 PM • Tuesday evening January 30U1 Course conducted by untl.ngton Beach Power Squadron '72 VW BUS For additional lnlom1aUon Radlal1, An1-Fm 1tereo. Low 1 __ caU=-(=1°"14") ,;962~·183<'°""°' __ ml. Day• 645-2'162. BUICK 'TI VW Sundial Camper. 11.SOO miles. IJ()P'"'l'op. Xlnt I ·,-S?_B_Ul_C_K_W_A_GO_N_._N_u_ca_· cond. 979-1038 alt 5. dials. Radio I heater. No MUST sell • '69 VW Camper, smoke. $250. cu.st. inter. $1650. Call """" San An s -1208 alt 5 ........, ta a L, "'~ pm. Costa Mesa, 546-4478 '68 BUG, only 700 mi'1 on 'Tl RIVIERA. PREMIUM 1600 Reblt eng. Xln't cond. COND. LOADED. FORCED $1100. MS--5360. TO SELL. TAKE OVER 1964 VW Good transportation. PA YMNTS, NO 00\VN. $450 548-4258. -• '69 CAPRICE * SL 2-(fr, air. Good cond. $1195 1970 Dodge Challenger, V-8, '70 Can1aro 350, alr, p/s, or inak(' offer, 546-8539. auto, Pia, vinyl roof, p/b, vin top, l.'OllSOle, etc. alr/coruf. $1900. 5.52--7949. low mi.. 1 ov.·nr, under '65 Impala 4 dr, aU pwr. Air l U. $2600 cond. $300. Pvt' pty, 642-9178 '71 DODGE Cha.llen""'r, MWJt wrn y, new rei;, · 6 I ·~- 494-TIS5. aft · se_I. x_lnt cond~-~;°· 17,000 '67 Camaro 8S-4 spd-350 COMET mi. Pri. pty. ·st 70 eJli.-Maga & headen $1005. ----------1'69 Charger·A/C, A/T, new MS-2083 between 5:00 & 6:30 '64 Comet, reblt eng &: trans, tires. Yellow w/cream top. -p.m. auto trans, pwr steer., ask-Best otter. 963-2225 CHEVROLET '"" $345 or offer. 845-55.15. FIREBIRD CONTINENTAL PURPLE PEOPLE CONT'L '70 Mark II. A very PULLER mcJiculously kept car. Ll.lw A ,67 Camaro C'.oupe priced mileage, all e x t r a s . to be iOOe by Monday. Only Sacraifice. only $4't:l5 tSer. ~~ for thla 4 8~ 74501. Dlr. Call CTI4) '68 FIREBIRD 400, showroom looks, custom, auto, xlnt cond $1380/oUer ''"""°" FORD •""" V"''"' 545-4114. machine by Chevrolet 1950 FORD (upv°'Sl '71 CONT Sedan. Pert cond. .,.. · % ton . Flathead six. 4·spe00, GUSTAfSON Loaded w/ovorythtng. Only Now c1"lch. bat I°' Y • ll,000 mi, $4750. 642-4100. regulator, plugs, starter. Lincoln-Mercury ·n LINCOLN Contlental, 4 Good 6 ply tires. Old but dr, Loaded! Immaculate. d·-ndabl• 111-••• -16800 "·ach at \Varner ... ,.~ '" :>. '-">T"V:mv ct: $4500. 639-ITI2 or Ms-5609 Autos, UNd FORD '67 FORD truck camr.r special, P~c age, a-ood 673-<843 990 ~ lon, Ranger 1hape FORD V-8 1969 Future, very clean, low mlleagt', l o.,.,'ner. Auto traM, power, $1295. Ph 673-4429 JEEP 1967 4 WO Toyota. L.C. Con-fer conversion, 327 ....... Big """· Roll ..,. . J\.sklng $1395. 492-44~ eves. 1956 \Vlllys 4 \\'hi drlve ,.,,gn. W /'189 Ford eng, O/drivc, P/B, Wide tires. $1000 645-1517 BRONCO Front end ront- plete with hubs & brakes. $15. &J5-L'i17 MERCURY '67 Cougar XR-7, clean. 37,000 mi's. $1200 or offer. Ph: aft 6pm, 5.36-3815. DAil V PILOT 2$ ~ Autos, UMd 990 OLDSMOBILE • OLDS '70 Cutlass Supren1t> Coupe, air cond, am/fn1 stereo, n1lnt eond, lo mileage $2450, 64-1-2750 644-2566 '69 TORONADO. Like lll;'w. All raelory e:..:tr-ds. Am·fin. Sacrifice '2595. &-14-8 189. '68 DELTA l!il Olds, 1 OWlll'I', l!lp oonditlon. $1750. &l&il48 'SS F-85. air rond, PIS, P/8, good tires. Ot·1g owner. $~. M8-4240 aft ~- PINTO PINTO -'71 2"DR. &>clan. 4 spd. Lo\\' n1i. 2000 CC. Xlnt cond. $1500. 842-1225. -PL"l'MOUTH -· PLYMOUTH • • 640-0766 days • CADILLA I 1,.-,---.,.,.,..~~-~9~61~-~--~~970 '66 VW. Xlnt cond. Rebll 00 C Huntington Beach 191'1 LTD Country Squire sta. 842-8844 * (213) 592-5544 CORVmE wgn., air cond. am/fm "Home of th•. Viking" stereo, P/windows, 16,000 l-.-67-.-,-U-ST_A_N-,G-V-R,-X-.l-ot_co_nd_, MUSTANG '6.~ Plyn1ou!h 11'ilh po 11· e 1· steering and brakes, factory air conditioning, radio and ht>a\C'r. Plyn1outh's top of lhl• line mode! (\l!Pl 4 door in good condition, for salt' by o!"ncr, Kelly sugg(·sted retail Sl,350 .... JJrice $975. 837-4239. Autos We~tld Autos, Imported HP engine .• Ma.gs. New 1----------1---~----tires. ctu1ch. $650. m->128 YOUR ONLY Cash For Clean MAZDA '65 cam,,.r, nu .... "'" FACTORY Used Cars & 1uoo or best otter. AUTHORIZED 19n Maida 616 Lo mileage 64.'H7l2 Trucks lOOtlcc, 92hp. radio. •'""' ·ss vw '"" body & tram CADILLAC H aerial, heater, very good Le ~"..t ...... , $75. Cali • mi. Take over rwmnts. · d' '66 CORVE'ITE FASTBACK;, '65 STINGRAY, new eng. & &t5-Sm/SJ&.~ ,,.,... Air, ra io. pwr. Serviced 427, 435 hp: 4 spd, posi, trans, AM/FM. Rear mags, I'°''°'===-~""°....,.-.,. reg by \\'Oman drivrr. $12j(). Cragar Mags, AM-Fl\!, P/\V. Pvt. party. 552-8504 1955 FORD % ton 6 cyl. auto 544-7843, 9-7: wk en rt needs minor v.'Ork $1650. '65 STING RA y, new eng. & $275. 1962 Chevy \i. ton. 6 642-4473 893-6460 trans, AM/FM. Rear mags, cyl. 4 speed $495. Best otter '65 l\1UST ANG F''astback, P/w Pvt party 552_0CI\. or trade Chevy. After 5 pm · A " P/S '63 IMPALA SS. P/s, P/b, . . . -.,.,.,.. 723 Victoria, C.M. 646-702? ve~ nice. uto u-ans. . PONTIAC LeManns '66, bkt seals, 11.uto. pv.T, nu tires. R/H, a/c, bPst offer. 5-Jo-4ROO beg 9:30. ollt. oward Chevrolet tire.. ear in xtnt cond. $1675 "~!?75""'6..... DEALER Newport ~a1r1ch ---or make-offer. May -accept .'=,,..,-=="....,.~-~~--Largest selection of Cadil· ' MacArthur Blvd &-Jamboree trade. Call 645-2444 or '63 VW, reblt eng. ~e offer lacs· in Orange County. 83J..OSS5 645--S.552 aft 7: 00. 675-4831 Tues & Thurs alter Sales-Leasing. t ~~--COUGAR ~---T-BIRD ""''· , Ru"' great. $525. 66 FORD WAGON 54>-£896 -644-6471-1-------~---10-passenger. V-3, auto, R/H, '65 MUSTANG-R&H, Rir.1--------- 'TI MONTE Carlo, ps/pb, **'68 COUGAR XR.7, air 2-way tau gate, good tires. new tires & brakes. $675. '70 T Bird. Sunroof, every factory option. Pe1ie<:t.! $3500 fi.18-5609 i \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP USED CARS U Your car ts ex:tra clean, see us first. BAUER BUICK 2925 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 979-2500 AC. S2850. or trade for older cond., stereo, rad i a Is , * 543-3691 or 544.3417 * 548-9729 fj Nabers truck or motorcyle + pb/p.s. n350. 673-:1342 '60 Ford V8, auto trans, pwr ·** 1966 Must11.ne; Con- money. Negotiable. 548-84;)4 DODGE steering, $100. • · ' ·, vertible. Original ~·ner. MERCEDES BENZ 5 pm. VOLVO 50 USED MERCEDES ON DISPLAY VOLVO '72, 145 E Wq: rue! Cadillac BEAUT fathom blue '72 842-5108 alter 5 pm Goorl condition. 673-4976. in~: 19Km; rreen: 5 nu 2600 HARBOR BL. Kingswood Estate \~."gn, still '65 DODGE Dart, 6 cyl '65 Country Squire, 10 pass, '65 MUSTANG -V-8, auto. Mich X radlals; xlnt lhane: COSTA MESA under warrty. xlnt cond. automatic, $350. Must sell air, P/S, P/B, P/ 11 eats, X1nt tires, battery, eng. low blu bk + 10% 642-3181. 540-9100 Open Sunday Loaded. 4S4--0711: 644-2199 immediately. 645-,1219 pri,pty. $375, 640.-1295 Quick sale, $595. 494-3765. VALIANT 1963 Valiant V-ax! 4-dr. Auto trans, slant 6 eng. Orig owner. $295. 546-:859-1 s For Jank~ or wrecke<I Sharp New Car Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, M_ew 980 Autos, New 980 ' , , -1--MW Used Mercedes Luso Plans Good selection of used BM\V's House of Imports 6862 l\fanchester, Buena Park on lhe Santa Ana Frwy 523-""' MG • '58 MG MAGNETTE * CREVIER BMW Good transportation. Sales -Service • Leasing $399. Call 675--i865 :m W. lat St., Santa Ana •n Midget, wires, Mlchellns, US-3171 Abath roll bar. Aft 6, l·,~--~-'"'-.:..C:-'----, • ._."~ Visit our oew home! I -'~'-'-="-· ------ ~ 19n ::~:::. 5 ,, ~ wS/Rhl•" Sl4oq000uipmmo1?1. MS -~~lioyc Roy CARVER. Inc. . ' ' ·= gold. Xlnt cond. $400 below 234 E. 17lh St. book, $69'35. firm. fi73..6220. Costa t.1esa . 546-4444 PORSCHE '69 912, xln't con<!. 5 sptl, chrm whls, '• '11 BMW, 2002, air, Al\'I/FM, am/fm s.w. + many xtras. Mlchllen XAS. Sharp! •AIUV'I """ =•= 548-7938 .......,., . ...,..-,.....,.. '68 911-Factory air Konis, mags, new radials & brks, AM/FM. header!. 640-1279 or 641)-1500 ext 20'll '63 PORSCHE 356-C, reblt eng., needs some body work, $1250. 645-4508 after 6 ·n PORSCHE 914, xlnt cond, with extras. Make offer. 673-2500. DATSUN 1·1~~-------1973 DATSUN ALL MODELS IN STOCK . Immediate Delivery FIAT * 1970 850 FIAT SPIDER -Good cond. 36,000 mi. $1000. 144-1S64. JAGUAR ' ~ '87 Jag 420 Sedan Clautc. · AM!FM, wire whls, 4-spd w/o'dr1ve. Must sacrif, for $2400. 96&-1009. MAZDA 1 * Moul• '73 Rotary * $66 MONTH 36 MONTl-IS OPEN LEASE · • · Will accept trade-ins CALL MR. FRY 842-66li6 · ·Hunt. Beach MAZDA . ' 'TI Porsche 914, xln't con- dition. Call 642-8601 914 Porsche '71. Low mi. All-American racing mags, all extrrui:. 642-3472. '63 Porsche, 356, SC 1600. Runs perfect, needl paint. $1750., 493.fi676, aft 4. RENAULT NE;W RENAULT R12 #2384 $2095 ANDERSON · · ·' IMPORTS ' · · ~ '•57 5242 . ' ROLLS ROYCE . • .. AS A PARTICIPATING MEMBER .Ofl THE COSTA MESA'S HARBOR ,BOULEVARD OF CARS TUESDAY • WEDNESDAY • THURSDAY • FRIDAY _Japuary, 23-24-25-26 SPECIAL 1973 OPEL GT IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 4 •peff fftn1., tlntM 9t•t1, AM rtdio, 1pec.i•I •P•~ whetl1, roellnil'lg •••h, eon· c.otlocf ho1cfll9hh. Opol'1 bo1t, Ori"• ono todty, ll!M4l66l. 53399 or 58213 (;;..";:,. 1973 REGAL HARDTOP IMMEDIATE DELIVERY A11tomttie tr•l'l1., powtr dite br1k11, powor 1tetrin9, AM rtdio, whitowtll fir•1, tint.cl 9lt11, wiro wheel co'f1r1, vinyl top. ll11rqundv with whlto fop. (]JI 17]t) •• .s3995 or 59867 ~M;.,:. 1973 BUICK LE SABRE SPORT COUPE Sport Coupt. Powtr 1fttri11f, pow•r disc. br~k•1, tir c..ortclltionin_g, whiltwtll tlro1, tlntoct t 1t11, citlu1t whttl eo .. t r1, bumptr 9u1rd1 & 1lr!p1. Woq't l1•t tf our low, low p~ieo, l lCI I ltttl 54395 or 5111" .:::. M.;:. 1973 ELECTRA CUSTOM 4 DR. HDTP. • • t J l J " -. ,, '.-'-:: ..... 1. '·. ;, \12'' WIN A 10-SPEED ~IK~! l&L OUf 1'111 COURtM o•tl ci•"41•i+ •~ p61• 'oo• u ""' Hubot loul••ud of Cwt OMI., ••. E••ty O••I•• ... a1 ""'"" • tO·•p••cl b:cy<lt to''"'" 1 •• ~, wlMor .,.ii 4oy (fu•''"f·W•cl•Hcloy-T~ ... c1.y.Ftiday. J•••••y 2J .24.21·2•l. Or•w"'9s It I I'·"'· •••~ '•y. p•;•• cou'po•• "'"'' bo d•p•1ih-' loy 1:10 I'·"'• ...... ..,, :Y .. fttecl fttl ba ''"'""' lo "''"· •• '"'"~"'" "''"""'Y· ~'·. ·." :-.. .... ·. :" .36 NAME _ ADDRESS . COSTA MUA'S llUBOI BOll.EYAlll Of .CMS -Nmou.~.-".. ........, JJ .,.;-..... I O·SPllD BIKIS 11111!1 U ~ i; ~~·r. FilJ out •~<II lo• 1 .,;.. . •:J:, •·1;,; ~-r·-r " _____ ..:. PHONE .. - -~ . "' _. ' ., ': ----------··--... ---t-•' " .,.,. k·. .'' ." ij ;~~·~ .. Ba11tr Buick along with the other membors hive spent more than a year in planning bolter -way• to •orvo you bettor through organi1ed ,fforts ..• come in during this big 4 day kick-off and you 'll 19r11 the emph.,is has boon put on courtesy -con· venitnce -reliability. ' GRAND OPENING PRICES ' ' '69 Buick .C~'t"' Skyluk $1995 Cpo. Auf.m•fic: ·tt111,., pow1r ••••rint , powor brtkt1, f•cfory tlr,~••tr•M•lv cl1•n, I •"'M~, low Mlltt.~ ' " . '71 Buick' Estot• Wogon $3895 Y Pt11, full powt i, ftc.torv t lr, roof rick, only 11,000 Mll11. It h•• ... ,ryttiln9 vou e1n think of! (9]7 EXA) " '61 Olds 98 $1895 4 doot. F11U powotr l ftefory 1Jr. IWX, 7441 • -. '71 Joguor V12 $6495 2 + 2, Only lt,000 Ml11t. Lik1 n1wJ,full pow1r'l ftcfory tir. 1711 DFA I 70 Joguor XJ6 $5995 Only 21,000 Mii,., Llk t now l Full powtt, f•ctory tlf~ 1029 1$YI I '69 VW .Bus $1695 3 11th, LI•• Ntwl I 172 AGGI 72 BUICK SKY LARK $3395 full powtr I ftetory tlr, Only 12,000 ml111. 1125 FEN) 1 . I Tl Buick Rlvioro . $4895 Fully l11111ry •quip. Fi.II powor I f•etory t lr, 60/40 11111, (.hroMo wht1l1, '"' lltroo. Only 14,000 Milot. '61 Olds Cutl111 $1695 Fvtly oqvlppod, l11cl. f1etotV •Ir, powot 1to•rln9, powor br1•11, b11ckot JOth, •uto. h •n•. l~D 4J91 '61 Rlvi1r1 $1995 Fu ll p6wor I f11tory tlr. IXIC 0611 IDIEilR, . I iip£1; • Jilguar J ~·~·-- -.. " 2f DAil Y PILOT • • . t • E T w E E N T H E s A N \ • • • • +· • • • • • + • • • * LOOK FOR THIS EMBlEM AT THESE COSTA MESA OWERS + .• • Bauer Buick • 2925 Hcabor llvd. Connell Chevrolet 2828 Hwbor ltvd. Mesa Datsun Hai bor ltvd. Pontiac · + • • • • • • • + . .. ·, i . • • • • • • • .+. ... + ' • • '• .•. . . IT'S JHE ·sT . . . • ... . . + + !:."HA~VE~IYI WATS TO· saw COME IN,. MUI' ·YOU'U.A.._ CONVBmtCE- ' . t • • ' - • ' . ~· 10~SPEED- , , .... • 4 • • • • . t . ' . . . . . ' . . " ' ' . . . . COSTA MISA'S: ~· . W.·M!YAlll · .. <r~ . · ' .. -·l'llZl·DIA ---~"" + t . • • • ' r ' • ' San t;Jemenie I Today's Final ' .. Capistrano I •EDITION N.Y. Stocks ORA~E-C.OUNT!'., CALIFORNIA TUESPAY, JANUARY _ll, !Ill _ TEN CENTS , ougllI -.or Dana Marina -science Lab Final Respects ., - About !350,000 la needed to build the rtrst btcrement of the ~JQOO.square-foot building pl&Med at lhe west end of Dana Harbor next to the fishtng pier at the """ ol the, -county educaUon oHlcials, led by "MacLean. have made pttl.lm.illary con- tacts witb national •rpniuitions like Rockefeller FoundaUon, Carnegie Foun· ~alion and the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare. Meanwhile, ~he department has a tw~ Country Mourns Lyndon Johnson AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI) -The people who knew Lyndoo B. Jolmsoo best -his faniUy, friends and neighbors from lhe Tuas bill COW1try-llled past his body In the marbled Great Hall ol lhe LBJ Li- l>rary today to honor and moom the 36th U.S. PiOS!cleiif! (See related stOfles, pie· turea, Page SI) ~ohnaan_, Jllbose pursuit of t~ Vietnam ''tl''" * * Death F oi"la ' ' ' LBJ Promise To Countians By GEORGE LµDAL Of ... o.llJ ........... Of the four promises made by tbe late President t:.yndon B. Jobmon on variQus vtsits to the Orange Cout he lived ol\ly long enough to keep one of ·them. (See pictures, Page l ) Then~ vice president Johnson on Nov. 13, 1113, -dedicated the Douglas Space Systems Center in Huntington Beach and dilcussed the promise of man's quest of space. Nine days later, the craggy Texan boarded Air Force One parked on . a Dallas runway and took the oalb of office colnmittlng him to fuUW that promlae aDI$ ·others ·laid down by President John F. Keljlledy. . An assassin's bullet hurlOO Johnson in· to the presidency ard he assumed responslblli.ty for Kennedy's com· m1tment to .place a man on the moon within the decade. The crafty fonner oongression.aJ leader also assumed the burden of moving the Kennedy New Frontier legislati.90 for- ward as the wellspring of-what LlU was lo term ''The Great Society." Promise of that Johnson dream was spoken in what was to become the new clty of Irvine on June 20, 19M, monlba berore bls election to lbe highest office in the tsnd. The occasion was the dedication or the new 1,006-acre campus. In the next decade, Johnson said be ex- pects higher education In America "to cross many new frontiers and ooe of the most critical is the Crontier of the city life. ••Now 70 percent of our people live in urban areas like Lot Angeles. Their needs are immense. But, just is our col· lcges and ilOlverslUes changed the future ol our farms a century ago, io they can help change the 'future or our cities," said the JftSldenl who left a clam .... for , a pol.Mlcal career. ' "I have come to California to ask you to throw oil :fOUI' doubts about Ammca. Help us demOnstrate to the worjd that people of mmpasiioo ar.i ~ can free their feJlow et._ flun the • bonds nf ihjustlce, the pri8onl ol powrty and , the Chains of ignorance," Johmon said. Although the J-ldmlnlllntioo w~to-mcn~to- • (S.0 PllOMllllS, hp I) Art Histprian Dies OAKLAND (AP) -Mt -Ind scholer Dr. Altr.d lleume1'f dlld San. doy at h~ home hen II Ibo .,. d 71. Prtot to his death, be --Ina .. the flrat bfltorJ "' -. II\ lo lie -ttn In German. . ' . \\'al' divided a nation to which he bad pledged a "Great Society/' died Monday of a heart attack. He was 64. Tbe tall ''J'exan who described the White House aa the-''lonely acres" was a man Who loved and needed people. And they came to him toda7 lo pay tbelr final respects. • Ells· txldy will lle iD state in a gray ~~.~I HA-PST. w-. daj-11t the II & I rs Ill the ~ • ti!:Ulillion llln'rJ in fluo>I ~ a k ~ pylon. _., ~ ' hers lf'the 511! Armf'• .. 8'1((11. Wbeer.•· Division stood tiy. .. , . Johnson's widow, Lady ~ird, llO, her t~o daughters and four grandchildren, a.ccompanled the ~y in a motorcade from .the Weed-COrley Funeral Home to the library. They met solemnly by the caiatalque before the public lying in state. ~ "I had just about the tougbem assign- ment I've ever hid.'' said Tom Johnson, an aide to the former President but no relation, who helped prepare the body for the ceremony, including drWing' his formet boss in a business suit. Johnson was stricken during an af· temOOn nap Monday at his LBJ Ranch 65 ntlles from Austin. Secret service agents rushed to help him. , · "They found the foi;rr.er President Johnson on lfie floor next to ,his bed. He ~·as not moving," said Tom· Johnson. "He Was lying on bis back. An agent said he appeared dead. He was dark blue in color. They admhtistered oxygen and mouth to mouth resuscitation ... " On the black marble pylon rising above the catatalque were these wprds: "I have foUowed·-the personal philasopby that I am a free man, an ·American, a public servant and a member of my party -in that order, always and only. "The Great Society asks not bow much, but how good; not only how to create wealth but bi:lw to use it; not oriJy how fast we are going, but where we are' headed. It propo5es as the first test for a nation: The quality or ita people." Mrs. Charles Beckham of SmitbvWe, TeX., was the nnt persori in line during the morning to file past the casket. She took her four clllldren out of school and drove 50 miles nor1Jt. . . . · "I respect Preaident Johnson," Mrs. Beckham said. "l w11 about to .lose my only child and he helped bring my hus- band home from .the military.'' A jetliner provided by Nixon will fiy Johnson's body to Wahington Wednes- day. The casket will be taken to the C•pltol, where the body will lie in state . !Seo JOHNSoN, Page I) ' TEEN GIRL GETS I NOTE FROM LBJ Just last' Friday, former President Lyndon 8. Johruloq\wrote a letter to a l~ year old girl, tilling her thit ''eYery age 1'lr1la out to be a good ·~· when you reacJ it." • -Tiie lelter wu delivered to the home 6[ H<ldl I. Brown an llonday morning - the day ol the former pmfdent'I death. In the letter, --. "Bui, if J were J'OQ, I ..ad not evm think now about the poulbllllJ Iha\ ur. ..., bePt at JI 0< 30 or Iha\ ~ lliJI Cln be a great life ewn 1t •·" Seo tbla llary, plu pbotopphs ol tho former prelddtnt and «her Aoriel on1 P ... 1 kllloy. • • year lease, option-t1>-buy on the laod at the harbor. In the interim, the county Harbors, Beaches and Paril , Department is trading the area and marking It with 70 to 75 WQplites .to provide · overnight beach camping. ' The Dana POlnl .,.__ will be open In early opring. u plans ao tbrouab. the on-shore marine lcleDOOI building wW ..,,Jace the curren'\ ooe-dassroom complex at the . ' ' harbor, where the county department's "floating laboratory," the Fury 11, is docked. · · "It's going to be a neat thing," Macl.ean enthused. To be open 18 hours a day, seven days a \\'eek, it will house nine distinct p~ grams in coastal and marine education. "From the open sea all the way to the first mountain range -the influence of the ocean doesn't stop al the seashore," said MacLean, an oceanographer. • 'I'1ie building design includes three laboratories, a large a q u a r i u m , auditorium, four to five classrooms, photography darkroom, offices, base- ment research area for graduate students, bookstore and artificial tklcpool. Marine science education programs in the cowtty .department began in 1967 with a three-year federal grant, given on the condition that the department establish the feasibility of a floating lab. MacLean says the county proved the fea sibility and prepared for the end of the three years by adding five other pro- grams. These include the on-shore facility, special marine research workshops, slide presentations in lbe schools, teacher iri· sirviee training and instructional materials. "We knew someday the districts (in· dividual school districts) wou1d have to (Seo LABORATORY, Page II 'OSSI e 0 ' ' FO'RMER PRESIDENT Pl.A'l'S WITH· GRANDSON . P•trick L.yndOn Nugent W•t.h Gr•ndp.1 on LBJ h .nch ' CitiZen Panel Disbanded; Eco-impact Expert. Eyed San Juan Capistrano city councilmen 1'-fonday disbanded a citizen's committee charged with reviewing environmental Impact reports and agreed instead'to look for a consultant to do the job. The committee, which was composed of volunteers from tbe community, had reviewed the statements for the past several months, but occasionally ran into problems L1 . Jmpletely understanding its rol~. ... · . Councilmen Monday agreed, with the panel's coosent.1 to di!band lhe organizi· tlon. Instead, City Manager Donald Weidner will ~raft a list of consultants who would undertake the evaluation when the need arose. Road ':Rebuil~ing ' Project Okayed • By Ca·po Council • A major, 1121;880 roeci:t .. bulldlng proj· ect. for mu C,h ~°' Camino ~plstrano throuiill the city of San Juan Clptstrano won ollicial appn>Yll MOllday from city counctJmen, The proposal talb loo the widening to rour lanes of the city's m11jor 1ttetl, from OrteP Highway to Oso Road . Funding wijl come from the county'• Arterial Highwey ' Financing 'Progr1m and th~· assessment dillr.Jas aet ue for pniperltls at either •Ide ol the street which It pretent ·is a-dtted, ~two-lent lhomlgblar.. A bicycle rrail, curbs, gutters, 1idewalb Ind other major additions IO tho roadw11y alao will be <onstnJcted, ll1d -liflhts and underl1<>Ulld utilities allO will be installe<I, a<a>nling to plons for the job. I Councl1meo ,.t their nexl meeUll( Feb. 13, as the lime !or the stnnda;;i pullllc bearing to bear prot..tl or ob- jecllolll to opeclliC .............. When·the stattments woult! be required and review sought (rom a consultant, Weidner said, the developer submitting the report would then pay the ta}>. In other actions Monday, the coqncil : -Postponed a dec~ion on a com· plicated and entaugled rezone request for land known 8' the Zaenglein property pending a thorough study on traffic circulation and other factors affecting the 2f.acre parcel which lies in a valley southeasterly of the Intersection . or Ortega· Hlghwey and the San Diego FreeWIU'. -Enacted, fonnaJly, an ordinance rorbiddint any private CQnstruction for :-Profi~ pn Sundays, a· code which sorfie critics termed 'a "blue law." The ex- empted act.ivltlcs, however, wOuld be either municipal emergenCy work or a private homeowner 's work to his own property, -Heard a prelimiMry report from We.idner on lhe fate or 114 iJJegal signs in l~e. ECO-IMPACT, P11e !) Dogs Kill Pet; Willed .Mon,ey STATESVILLE, N,C, (AP) - Polly, a lltUe furry wh!le..spitz, was killed by olher dos> 'IJi, the doK pound before •he could begin en' joying her Inheritance. • Polly ·wu wiUed, aQ income. of ' mo • year 11"1" stock>. left .by btr mlatttso, '11-.yur.old Ann-ll•!1111101h Cowan, wllo llv&f alone Ind wu lound dead In lier bome J,., 12. Polko aid they -·t ,_,, a vettrlnarian ovtr the weekend and neighbors wouldn't ketp-P<lly - porarlly. They said the dog .... ""'~ at them because they were •!rangers. so they muuled ' lier and placed )!er in tho dog pc!und, I.~ Nixon Will Make Speech at 7 P.M. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will address tbi nation on radio and television tonight, probably to an· nounce a Vietnam cease-fire agreement. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, iii making the annoWlcement this afternoon or ~ broadcast, did not say specifically that Nixoh would speak on a cease.fire. But all signs pointed to it. Ziegler said lbe speeeh at 7 p.m. PST is designed "to report on the status ol the VietJUUn; negotiations.'' , ' . , Tbe ~ will IQJlO.w a m<etlng by Nix<if with Dr. Henry A. Klailipr, bis chlf Vktnam negotiator who was i:Jue back in Washington at 2:45 p.m PST ·'after • three-hour1 45-minute meet log 1n P;arls today with Hanoi's Le Due 1bo. The Paris meeting broke up amid warm smiles and waves from both Kiss· lnger and Tho. Kissinger had been expected to remain in Plris for several days. His quick retW1l suggested that the final session or the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly.. _ . Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ad· dress , be will meet at 5:30 p.m. PST with his Cabinet · and at 6 p.m. with a bipartisan group of CCJngressional leaders. Hugh Scott of PeMsylvania ; Senate The latter are Senate GOP leader Democratic leader Mike · Mansfield; Speaker Clrl Albert, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and House Democratic leader 'Ibomas P. O'Neill or Massachusetts. Zlegler also announl'ed there will be a larger bipartisan co n g r e s s I o n a 1 leadership meeting at 5:30 a.m. PST Wednesday. Ziegler declined to say how long tonight's speech will be or to expand in any way on his terse announcement. If as expected ·Nixon announces tonight an agreement has been reached, it will come almost four years to the day from the first peace talks in Paris. It was on Jan. 26, 1969, that American North Vietnamese, Soulb Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiators gat~red at the Hotel Majestic In Parla to tcy to end U/e long, bloody war. · . ·Details of the cease-lire agreement, not immediately made public, a r e expected to closely parallel the nlne-polnt accord that both sides nearly agreed on in October. That called for lbe returtl ot all U.S. priaonen of war and the withdrawal of all U.S. troops within 60 days. A cease-fire would take place within 24 hoursJOf the formal signlng, and an In- ternational supervisory team would go into Vietnam to police the cease-fire. The accord established a National Council of Reconciliation made up of repre,,ntatives Crom the Saigon and Hanoi governments p I u s neutralists to sOpervlSe electiora which would 7 determine the political future of Viet-nam. The October accord also provided that all sides reJ1pect the sovereignty of Cam· bodla and Laos, measurts which officials said then Would lead to a cease-fire In those countries. . AU· U.S. a n.d South Korean troops would be wtbdrawn. There was · J>O J ·Amendment Backed CARSON CITY, Nev, (AP) -A resolu- tion to ratUy • propooed oonslllutlonal a-· glYJnc equal rilhts IO men and -bas surfaced In the Nevada iellite. ,,,. mollltlon was lotrodu<td MOlldaY. by Democrat Sens. Richard Bryan Of Las V<eH and Thomas Wllaon of Reno, and was sent to the Senate Judiclary Connnlttee. specific language ror removal or North Vietnamese troops in the south, but · various reports have said an un- derstanding existed on ~t poin!. * * * U.S. Bombers Strike Red Viet Targets· SAIGON (UPI) -Soulb Vietnam's sec- ond largest city was on full alert today in antlclpation of a cease-fire. U.S. \Varplanes, In what co,uld be their rtnal major action, pounded Communist posi- tions with the heaviest bombings in five months. More than 4SO planes bit targets in South Vietnam in a 24-hour perlOd ending at 8 a.m. today, the U.S. command lald . ~ 1he-largest.-rwmtier OCiiids OVerlfie SCiUtb In a single day since Au . American planes also bombed the Ho Chi Minh Trail complez Jn Laos and targets in Cambodia to4aY, the command' said. The government or Nguyen Van Thieu or~J?red the-city of Da Nang on alert and announced additional ......,,., d..tgntd to crgck dbwn on possfble Commuailt ac- tivity during a cea!l&-ftre, Correspondent Alan Dawaon Jn Da Naag roported ' l,lllO Americans at the sprawling Allied air base and Its sur- rounding area had ,been ordered on "gray'' alert with no travel in town ex- cept on oUlcla: business. Gl'.QUIXI acUon was relati\tely quiet throughout Vietnam today. The South Yie~ command reported only 52 Communist·lnltlated Incidents, a of which """' obellings, Jn the 2t bours end- ing at dawn. One week after bomblng'ol North Viet- "-"' 1\'&s l>alted by President Nbcon, the command said American fighter· bombers new 374 sorties and B52 bombers Dew r1 missions, averaging three planet each, over south Vietnam. In seven days, American fighter· bombers have flown 2,m eortles ...:. one mission by one plane -and the· B52s have flown 204 lhree--plane missions ac- cording to command statistics. ' Or UC• • Weadler Sunny ·skies are on.. lhe agenda for wedne.d.,, with dlmlnlahing nortbeut 'Winds, a"""'11fng to the weatherlady. Highs ol U at the beaches and 70 Inland are ~xpected. Lows tonlghl, • cbllly<:lkl. INSIDE TODt\11 A shoto11n..wtetdi11a T o p t k a man Qot• ber1trk and kfll.t five person1 In , M• ""lfillborhood, witldn file ~I U1r,•llJ""'olipflol. ~ be/ore tt'n\fng lhe QU.• on b1m- t<1). Pollet ore mustl/itd. See •torv !"Pour. 4. l.,M...... It ,..... 11 ~ . ..,,...,.... " c ..... IN' .............. . Ollllla u ....... ~ , O•••• 1i ...,,. ,.,, •• -..c.. 1 ..._ ~ it-n ............... ,.......... " ........... It .......... • ....... ..11 ---• hf ... _.. , ............ ~. ...... ~.. u ........ • AM LM1111rt 14 z DAil Y PILOT SC:_~~----'~Tut1dc:c;~~~·-''-""-"'-'--2l--'-,-19_7l Capo District ~~II-year Survey Will Be Mailed ---Tho---Capistrano... Unified Sctxio! dislrict. the citizen's all-ye&Nebool co~ mittee and the groupg opposing the con· ccpt to pl&l'e youngsters Wlder a 12· month-a-year educational schedule ~·ith 45 school days and 1~ va cation days In continuous succesaion. ' District 's professionally-Y..'orded poll on 4>15, all-year-school, ~·ill be mailed lo hundreds of pattntl starting late this week in a Unal effort 10 sample public opinion of 1~ <.'Qlltroversial idea. District Director of Adminis trative Servi~ Joe \\'imer said parents of students in grades from Kinderga rten through sixth grade will receive lbe sampling packet in the mail and only ooe ''ballot" per household ~·ill be sent. The sampling includes detailed literature on the 4fr.15 proposals, as well as a simple qucslioana ire prepared bY volunteers al Cal State Fullerton - persons skilled al public opinion sam- pling, Wimer said. 'lbe deadline for return of the com· pleted questionnaires is Feb. 6. and self· addressed . stamped envelopes "'ill be provided to each-parent. . Wimer said that the entire package of data -was compiled and then approved by a panel of volunteers representing the 5,200 Flee Volcano In Iceland VESThIANNAEYJAR . Westman Island (UPI) -This tiny island practically burst in 1wo early today when the slumbering HelgafjeJI volcano erupted. sending the 5.200 inhabitants ne€l_ing in panic. "\Ve came to a total agreement on all the materials so thel't!l shouldn't be any problem about how 1he survey was word· ed or bow it will be counted," \Vlmer said. Trustees have agreed that this Jattst "professional" poll will be the final it· tempt to seek public opinion before a final decision is made on the proposals. Thus far the support for 45-15 has been rather dismal. 1r a "significant" percentage or favorable commenls comes from the latest sampling, trustees have said they will consider a pilot program at Viejo School where present oven:rowdlng threat~ns to end the school's innovative, open-classroom coneept. Under a 4fr.15 fonnat, administrators have said, tbe program could be saved. Ironically, the Viejo area is where the gr'fa.~t cootroveny is focused over 45- 15. Parents in the area "'ho oppose the concept insist that the majority of parents agree with them. . Yet district officials, including the Vie- jo School administration. have said that support in the area is greater than anywhere in the district. Wimer said that by color roding of the questionnaires, officials will be able to determine the attendance area of parents. The balloting, however, will be anonoymous. Wimer urged all parents to fill out and return the questionnaires as soon as possible. From Page J LABO RA TORY •• The volcano, which has been dormant since the Vikings landed on the Wand in 864 erupted sporadically during the night but then came to life shortly alter midnight, spurting fire and thousands of pay -make it a pay-as-you-go opera- tons of molten lava into the skies. ticn," Macl.ean said. Ten hours after the first erµption , the The only county-state funds supporting lava stream rolled over the airfield and the program go for salaries for reached the outskirts of the ~own of MacLean's secretary and MacLean, wbo Vestamannaeyjar, where several houses dot.i.bles as marine science curriculum were reported on fire. coordinator for 550 county schools. Officials reported 4,700 people were There are no provisions in the state- evacuated by a fleet of 100 fishing boats . mandated count-y service budget for coastal vessels and airplanes and marine sciences. Theoretically, other helicopters from Reykjavik, the capital county funds could be diverted to fund of Iceland 20 minutes flying time away, the program, but "they'd have to fire and the U.S. naval base at Keflavik. somebody in charge of mathematics or Tiiey said there were no casualties. something. They only have certain slots With the airfield out of actioo the re-in budget amouotJ," MacLean said. 1be maining 500 inhabitan~. many of them, "'county board of 111~rs baa DOt finan.. reluctant to leave thetr OOJ:nes, sought ctally supported the program. sheller in the harbor waiting for the He called the biggest program the ' evacuation vessels to take them out of county department of education has an the area. "orphan -we like It that way -self-suf· Offi~ials said. the island could explode fiCient." and disappe.ar LD the sea. . . . Individual school districts pay a varie- The erup~on open~ up a w1d~rung ~lft ty of fees for ll.$e of county facilities. across the 1.sland? which lS ~"12 miles wide A typlcal use Is two classes with about and five miles IOng. The nit was nearly 30 to 40 students In both each going out two milf75 _ long and reached from ~ for a half-day trip on the Fury II Wblle volcano m a curve out to the Atlantic the remaining class uses the on-shore Ocean. 13b At first, many older people refused to This would cost $370 leave their ~m~ but officials said they About 40.000 students' a year go through changed their m.mds when they saw the the aiunty boat and lab program at Dana lava stream rolhng toward the town. Point Harbor. Nuclear Plants Go Underground? SAN DIEGO (AP) -Underground nuclear power plants might be safer than surface stations during an earthquake, a California Institute of Technology research engineer says. Martin Goldsmith told an Atomic Energy Commission board fl.1onday that underground facilities would not be sub- ject to the violent shaking many surface buildings undergo during a quake because of the nature of seismic waves. OMN•I COAST DAILY PILOT lite Oc'lllf'9 C.111 DAIL 'I l"ILOT, wlllt wll~ ls COITlllllMll IM Htw1-~r111, 11 pWl)llllltll .,, lh• 0.lnQI coa11 l"lltlllllll119 COP!llNl!'I'. Sept. r1t1 tdll~ 1r1 ""'t>1!11Md, MoncltV lhrOUVf! Frld•V· frw Cosl• Miii, H--9 Inch. l+untlf!WIOn l•~lil'-11111 \'1lt.y. LIOVM lttdl, lrYIM/S.Wlottaac.k encl $111 Cltmtfllt l S.11 Jlllft C1pl1Tr1<10. A 1lnQl1 r19i.n.1 N illlll'I Is JIWll.,,.. S1tvl'd1y, 8fld S-..\'l. Tht prlnc1"1 M llllll"I pl1/ll 11 11 UI Wt1l l•y Strfff, CMll MtM, C&lllornlot. tUJt. Ro~ert N. w •• d l"r11octen1 Ind Pvttlli.Mt J1ck -•. C11rl1y Vk t Pr"lcl1n1 •M G-r•t """'9lf lhot'l'l11 K11vil Edllor llio""'' A. M11tphi111t Mlnf91111 Eo1uw Ch1rl11 H. loo1 Rlch1r4 r. Nill An!11111! Mll\f01"9 Etll10r1 s. c1 • ...,.. Offke JO' N11tt. El C1'"l"o R11I, 92•7? °"'°' ........ C.11 M"'; »I Wttt l1y Slfftt Htw'llOH .. kfl: J.W ,,._,...., lolllc'llf'O H1111ll111• .. 1C11: lttlS ltKft ~lf'tl Utunl IM<lll 2tt fw"I A,,_.. Tll ...... 1714} 6U .... IJ1 C~ Aftttrl .... '4J·S671 S. C.._... Al le,aorm•az , ... , ..... 49J-442t """""'' 1t'2, Or.... CIHI f'Utlltfl ..... ~. "" ...... '*'" """"''..,., Mlllritf _,,., ... ~'-" ...... fl'll'f IM ,......... Wl"*'9 .,.u.f ,.,.. mlftlill " GIP'tfleilll ..... S.CW c ....... , ... Hlf • C.. ._, Clllfltnlll. ""9crll'llwl W airtlW a.ii tl!ll'llfllt'I W -II I.I.If "'9lltfl~t fftltfl9n' --·-..... ~lllY. • II Because some school districts can't af .. ford any marine science experience, the county department of education has been seeking contributions from the Orange County business and civic community. MacLean said he recently received a $1,000 contribution from Westland's Barut, specified for the Orange UnUied &hool District. The boat goes out daily throughout the yeat. Cosl of the program for a school year is $200,000, about $50,000 of which comes from lhe department. The remainder comes from districts, service groups, Boy Scouls, universities with marine science grad programs. "Going out to sea costs us money," said MacLean, listing partial expenses as $235 a day for the boa t lease, $70 a day for on-boet salaries, $400 month lease on the on:shore building and equipment. cal-Tech University nlll! a marine research lab in a three-story house at Newport Harbor. But Madean said this perhaps more ecorlomlcal arrangement wouldn't work for the county department's plans for the Dana Point Marine Studies Institute.. "Absolutely we need our own building," he said. "It's a difference bety,·een plain research and insLruct.lon." From Page J ECO-IMPACT •• the city, but the C1Xlncil agreed to hold of! on any action until Weidner returned with a new schedule of "amortlz.atlon" for the offending signs. Councilmen agreed that they wanted a more refined time schedule which could be used to phase out the signs. -Agreed to prepere the speclficatkms for construction of Bonito and Four Oaks parks \lso lhnt the project could be ad- vertised and bids sought. -Denied • raque1t , f o r a tecon.Slderatlon Of I preion1ng · requett for pn>perty along DeJ Obispo Road which iJ propoeed for anneullon to the city. The council several weeks ago had declded to reject 1 bid by devoloptrs of tho Raney property to rezono the parcel from a1ricultural to plaMed-communlty zoning. Coundlmen oppoeed tho pro- jected detully of the condominium development suggested for the land. ~I l"1' •• P,,.e J JOHNSON • • • In the rol-111W 'l'bttndo7 followed by funeral •rvica al Ibo Na&;;;i City ChrbUan Qiurd>. The body tbeo wW be flown bact lo Texas for a final ctrtmOftY and burial at l :!O p.m. Thunclay In ·the lllDlly e<metery oa the ~ ol Ibo Pedemlles Rlv,r, a quarter-mile from the LBJ Ranch. - "Thtse plnn! represep.t the wishes of the tamlly." Tom Johnson said. Of Mrs. Johnson be said. "I would describe her condltioc'i as very sturdy. She is holding up very wtll." President N-proclalmed Thursday as a national day of mouminfl. The President, In a public proo- lamntion and in a mes,,age to Congress, formally announced the death of ~ 36th P>esident. Nixon !.!sued an e:ieartlve order re- quiring closure of tll feden:l agencies, except for those involved Wlth the na- tional security, on Tbunday -the day of the funeral. The President directed that Hags be displayed at half staff for 30 days. "The whole story of tbe Jobn.90n years tn the White Howie remains to be told, and history has yel to mab Its judg· ment," Ni.ton sald In bLs message to Congress. ''But millions of Americans will always remember a bitter day in November, 1963 when so many of our people doubted the very fUture of this Republic, when ao many were stunned at the very ~ that an American-chief of state could be ..,..,lnated In tbts age, and so many abroad were fearful aJ>out the future course of the American democracy. And Lyndon ·Jobmon rose above the doubt and the fear to bold this nation on course unti1 we rediscov~ our faith in ourselves." Gerald L. Wmen, deputy White House press secretary, said Johmon's widow and members of the family would stay at Blair House, the White llouae guest hou!e, while In Washington Wednesday and Thunday. Warren said Nixon wW send hts "Spirit ol '11" jelltner -the same plane that Johnson used during his prealdency -to bring Jobmoo's body to Wasltlngton. Niguel Woman Named to Head Capo· Bond Drive -Ml'I. Nancy <l'apo, a Laguna Ntcuel housewife active in community projects, bas been named a cocbairman of Arvy's Friends, the group pcessing for passage of the $25 million bond issue In the Capistrano Unified School lllJlricL Mrs. ClaPo wW join the Rev. Allan Vernon of Sia. Clemente in 1leadlng the pareDta• c:ommittee. 1 'lbe local bolllewlle-ts the -of three and Is • past p-t of the crown Valley Pareit • Teacher Guild, secretary of the Laguna Nlguel Coordinating Council, a den mother, a Brownle leader and a Junior 'Girl Scout volunteer. , Her husband, Wllllam, ts an eucuti,. with McDomtel1 DoucJu and allO ts ac- tive In local community projects. <l'IPo · is treasurer of the Dana HD.ls Booster Club. 'lbe two chairmen hope to have eoo volunteers working ln the district ln COlD- ing weeks to effect a two-thirds majority vote in favor of the $25 million bond issue. Swiss Let Franc Float; Dollar Capo Aides Eye B.ridge ' f ~ epair7ob .'. -San Jilin-Capistrano councllmeo ·aban. don<d auuest1001 Monday tbat the. first chwit of: revenue sharing tunds £0 toward paying the city's bill for count] police prot~on. Instead, !lie money mlaht help fL'llllee a ballty needed brtdae widening project on oet Obispo 11oac1. City Manager Donald Weidner orlglnally had suggested the use or the -mooo-ln federaHW\do to-help .pay the hefty amiuol blll for aberlff services -. th<! city. . But Wtldne.r later discovered that the county might consider ualng some of Its revenue-11haring money for such things as joint · construction of roads and bridges. "llel ObisPo Road Is a county·ad· ministered roadway and tbe bridae (over Trabuco Creek) already quallfiea for wtdenlng, but funds uoder the f'Oll· ventional system are nonexistent," he said. But the need for a wider bridge T from two lo four lanes -is lmmediat9. The total project could "COSt as much l\o' $200,000. Weidner said he would propc>oe t)\e blendln&. of r revenue-sharing fund! ftorfl both agencies to see tf the bridge can ~ built sooner. l YNDON BAINES JOHNSON-1908-1973 Former Preiidtnt 0..d of He1rt Att1ck 1t R1nch Evaluating the· council's decision, Weidner said he felt the council was somewhat receptive to the idea or ualn,g the cash for police services. · "But the Idea really didn't tum them on," be added. CapQ Beach Unit Schedules Meet, To Study Goals Members of t be Capistrano Be•ch Community Association will meet the group's new olflcers and discuss goals for the coming year at a regU1or mootbly meeting Wednesd1y. Frank Rainey, a Palisades area sur· veyor, has been selected by the wocla- tkn board ..., pres:ident ror-tne""""coming year to succeed Ron Butter. Larry Larsen will serve as vke presi- dent; Barbara McCarthy u secretary and Bud Reynolds will be the group's treuurer. WednoadajJ'a meeting will start at 8 p.m. to the Boanl of Realton olflce on . Camino de Eolnlla. Rainey uld that Ill mem-and other -ll « tbe community lnter- eoted In membenlllp I!< welcome. "We have already begun a major drive for membership far the new year and letten to all residents were sent out this week. 1'Addln1 new members will be a major job for the usoclatlon In coming monlhs so Uult our voice can be heard strmgly at the county level," Rainey said. Purse Snatchers Get Open Terms From Page J PROMISES ..• these promisen than any other in history, Johnson's recard was to be cast in di!eper doubtit by lhe Vietnam War. Jn November of 1967, Johnson again visited the Orange Coast. This Ume the Four Tract Maps, Facing Action In San Clemente ~ place wu EJ Toro Marine Corps Air Sta· Tentative-tract maps for four majqr Uon and the occasion was lhe 19'lnd residenUal projects and a sign-beigbt birthday of the U.S. Marine Corps. variance bid will confront San Clemen~ Three month.! later he returned to El planning commissioners Wednesday. l Toro. On Feb. 19, 1968, a now "worried " nie tract maps involve major COD· President John.son wished Godspeed to dominium projects as well as proposals Camp Pendleton's 27th Regimen.tal-tand· for single-family-uni~ developments. In& Team ~ they left fQ.r Vi_etnam. The _issues involve! "This is a decisive Ume in Vietnam," -The Grant Land Corporation's r• be said. "The eyes of the nation and the quest for approval of a 213-unlt proj~ I the f \,.;_._ ··--u •· on 30 ac;res of property which reeenhy entire wor d · -eves o W3wry J14e , _,, the . . i ~ said propheticall:Y.''are on that brave was annexC\.I into e1ty m band of defenders who hold the pass at Palisades. The Anaileim firm plans Khe Sanh and the area around it. develop more on it1 8Q-acie parcel aft r "We do not doubt the outcome. The the initial ~ pb.ue. The P enemy's tide will be broken . . . perty is locatett aOutbftsterly of Cam· "I have asked you to go and help them. Mira Coat.a between Camino de Est a I know you will do your du ty. Moy God and Camino Capistrano. All the units wll bless and keep each of you. be condominiums. I "We will be prouder when you come -A request by the Douglw Pacific ho and h d the job " Corporation for approval of 29 ~~~ Jo::i~n said:ou ave one J ' type lots 'easterly of lhe city goU COW11e But, it was to be another President along an easterly continuation of Aveniaa who would bring borne most of the San Palbo. ' 50",000 troops J9'W<>n committed to the -ProposalJ by the Vista de! V~ defense of Soutbeast Aaia. Company for development of more And, on the occasion of his &1st birth-nine acrea near the 16th Fairway , f day, President Richard M. Nixon en· Storeclills Golf Cour:se into31 lots for~- tertalned -LBJ at the Western White ventional houses. The property lies alo_gg House in San Clemente. Avenida Vaquero east of Camino de J.es It was on this August 27, 1969 visit that Mares and is a continuation of the Visje LBJ made bis last promise to the del Verde housing project. , Orange Coast, a promise he wouldn't The sign issue 11 a resun-ected teq\lflit k P by Jocil auto dealer Joe MacPberaon C.r .. . "Yes, it is real pretty here in Orange a waiver of sign height restrictiom. County. , MacPhenon seeks permission to erecUa OAKLAND (UPI) -A judge has "Maybe now that I'm a private citizen, new sign 11 feet higher than the city ~e sentenced t-::70 purse snatchers to two-I can come 'back and be just like the rest allows. The agency is located at Aven14a years-~life prison terms, declaring the of the tourlJts and take a closer look at Presidio and El Camino Real. ~ crime "one of the most cowardly end un-the area." De h Bill p .I principled offenses I can think of." Nodding to Presideot Nixon at a at rOJ>OBC'\ Lo S rt Harold V. Hove warned Monday that PacWca, Jobmon said, "He carries the SACRAMENTO (AP) -The d se8 uppo similar offenders would be dealt with burden now. I can do as I please. I think penalty would be mandatory for • Alameda County Superior Court Judge luncheon in LBJ's hpnor at La Casa l harshly in his court as he sent 1. V. ! will come back to Orange County," he degree murder in CQliforn~under a I GENEVA (UPI) -The SwiJI Natlooal Johnson, 28, am; Lawrence A.Den, 26, both said. introduced Monday r11 Ir Bank wHhdrew support of the dollar to--li~of;;O;a;kl;an;;;;d,;to;;sta;;;te;;pr;IBOn;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;H;e;;•e;v;e;r ;dl:;;d;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~Aase;;;;m;bl;y;ma;;;;;n;M;;;;ik;e;;An;;to;no;;vi;;·;;ch;;;;,t' day to atop speculation In the buying of 1 Swiss francs . 'nJe dollar dropped on other t European money markets. 'lbe .......,. permitted the Swiss franc to Ooat on the open market and commer- cial banks accepted only mna11 lllllOODts of dollars and other currencie11. -EUropean banking sources aald that the move IJ probably temporary. A di· rector of the Swiss National bank, Michel de Rivu, said in 1AJrlch that the bank is not planning to let the Crane Ooat more than a few days. In Paris, the dollar dropped to 5.05 francs today on the free money market compared wltb Mooday's Ult cloelng rate. French bankers 1tlributed the drop to the swt .. refusal to wppor1 the dollar. "It appean to be another European speculaUve attack on the dollar," a French banking llOlllte uld. The Swtu National Bank, acting with the seven-member cabinet In Bem, de- cided to stop buying dollars at the olfidal rate ol S.'151 franca after a heavy influx of foreign currmcies MondAy. 'lbe dollar opened today at l.69 Swiss francs and clOled at a.10 fr&DCI. "But prndlng devtlopments we are ac- cepU01 only amp.II amounts, mostly from tourist.a who need to change money," Lloyd's Bank In Geneva iald. Today's move meant an upward revalu· atlon o1 the Swiss frlnc, whlcll already<. went up In value last year, ,, uwe have to make allowance In pres· ent tr.,tlng for .-poulble revalua- tion," the IJoyd'a olllct,Bll'1ald. . Gas Tanker-Accident DEL MAI\ (AP) -A llnltor !ruck and tr•Uer conl1lnin1 8,l>O 1atlons of gatollne fl~I over an emblnkment Monday, I n1 about t:,000 Callons of lu.I. The r, James Cline, n. of El CaJoo: was taken to Scrfppo MemorW Hospital and listed in oerious condition. MEASURE FOR TREASURE Ono foclor ovorloohCI !;y customon in buying c•rpeling is tho measuring for yardage, Al of our Salesmen know how to mHsuro •nd figure e11ct yardage, often, providing our customers subsl•ntiol savings in y1rd1go alone, Also, with the tr.mendous inst•llolion OX· perienco our salesmen have (oach previously w1s an expert in1t1ller for u1)1 we ere able to forst• any polontiol problem, Please stop in ond lool< 11 Iha troosuros available to you through our store, Wo have 1 gigantic solac:tion, and tho measuring will be ACCURATE! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES IN COITA MhA l lNCI 1fl1 1663 l'lacentlo AYt. COSTA MESA ' . 646-4838 · HOURSt Mt!!, Thrv Thu,.,, t lo 5:30 -FRI., t lo t -SAJ,, 9'30 lo 5 ,, .. - J ,. ., II " - ' Women in Construction Hear Irvine Company Talk , THERE ARE OYER 2000,USED CARS FOR SALE DN C!)STA MESA'S Harbar Baulevard of Car.- LOO« POI fHI IMILIM Af NABERS I UNIVERSITY CADILLAC, INC, OLDSMOBILE 2600 2&SO HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. WE Wll BE: CLOSED WED., JAN. 24th. TO PREPARE FOR OUR SALE WHICH BEGINS THURS., MORNING JAN. 25th. 10 A.M. b•11k•flleric•rcl e mtlftr thtf1t •4 fe1hio11 !1ltnd, 11-port beech ._.4.5070 ~ , SPEED· READING COURSES TO BEGIN ·1N BEACH AREA • Ant.llltllh h••• Men M-41 by AIMrlc:111 l"clh19 ~II· dttiOft ta co11d11ct ., 2 l·ho11r co11rn 111 ''"" reffl119, Thi co11'11 ;. .,." to e11yo111 tbo\l't the .,, of I J 111d 9111r111te1i ,...,.ry tr-.f111te to tflttM ffitlr re11fl119 1pt.d wltf. tii lltCrettt 111 CHI• '''"1111011. After th1 .. .,,,. w1tk p,..ttlfl, 1 ,.,," c111 rud tflY t'ttlrtgt 0..k ht !111 tfi111 111 he11r •IHI 11"41rst1MI 1t beittt. 111 -'diHofl te •'"4 r11Jl119 itlt count 1110 fltlPhttb11 h11pro•M 1t.Hly hchtlltift .. bffttt t.,t t1kl119 1•1111, 111.! i11u.uff c.011tt11• tt1tlo11 41"4 ,.t...ti111 1bllltt.1. , , 'Ttlt eo.n. rtq~lrM 1 ,.,.P fo ottelHI one cl•tt ,., •H• •fl tfto •~i"t of tMlr chelco. "fot thoff who wo11W li,ke MO,. l•fer••H•, witho11t ebli9otio" h oMolJ, • 1ori" o4 FlEE CM't ho11r ...i ... toff°" IMhlr•t ho.,. Mori 1c~11loi. ~ .. "'"fi"1• .,, f'" t. tho ,.bne end th• """• •ill k npleil!Olll 111 cOltlplot. 4et•il il'IClvdl.., ffttenco Nflulr-.... t, cl111tfftl'I ,r"'94-.,.., tultl911, cl•n 1""41110 oM locotiu. Ye• ....., t. ..._. ._.., ......... .w,, .Wet. l• ttte tMtt c.,.""'-t ,., ,..., rt.... fne -how orioit1t1H1 will IM a.w '' t.tt .... : Tllu .. day, January 25, 7:l0 P.M.; Friday, Jonu• •ty 26. 7:]0 P.M.; 2 rM•tings on Satur~ey, Janu•ry 27. tO:lO A.M. •nd 2:00 P.M.; end on finel M..t~ ;119 .. Wa<lo...iay, Jonuory l I, 7:!0 P.M • • ALL MWIWI WILL • .. At lMI U.llM ttO'flL -TMI ...... IOOM .LCOMT-~U>-AllACM • OVER .THE CO ' • •I R COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK LIST I I DAILY PILOT ~ LBJ Anticipated Death~ :Friend Says STONEWALL, Tex. (AP) -Lyndon B. Johnson expected to die soon, says a nelahbor who 'A·atched the former presi- bent licht a cigarette ~ntly and rtm1rk, "J am just going to gti ahead and enjoy It." Death came to the nation's S6th presl· dent Monday afternoon. J . O. Tanner, who lhtts along the PedemaJes River about two miles from the LBJ Ranch here, said he and his wife visited Johnson at Johnson's ranch last Wednesday. DAILY ,ILOT Ii.ff ....... IN HUNTINGTON BEACH - Just eight days before Presi- dent Kennedy was assassinated, then-Vice President Johnson was the principal speaker at dedication rites for the $50 mil· lion ?tlcDonneU Douglas plant . in Hun tington Beach. LBJ Wrote Girl: Every Age Is Good PROVIDEi'lCE. R.I. (APJ -In a let· ter dated list Friday, former President Lyndon 8. Johnson told a 15-year-<1\d Pro\·idence girl that "every age turns out to be a good age 'A'hen you reach ii.'' The letter v.·as delivered to the home of Heidi L. Brov.TI on lYlonday morning, the da Y of Johnson's death. HE WAS RESPO~'OING Co a letter Heidi had written him In which she thanked him for remembering the birth- day of her uncle, Russell. Russell BrOY.TI, a Washington attorney, had shared a $21).a.month one-room apartment with Johnson when the ty,·o were law stud211ts ln Washington in the 1930s. . Johnson, who usually sent cards to Brov.'TI on his birthday, mailed a letter instead to mark Brown's 60th an· niversary. BroY.n sent the letter to Heidi, and she-wrote the Pre.ident in thanks. The letter to Heidi, with a return ad· dress of ''Lyndon B. Johnson, AuStin , Texas, 78701," said: "Dear Heidi: "FIRST LET ME tell you that every ase turns out to be a good age when you reach it. and it is comforting to old folks like your uncle Russ and me to know lh!s . "But, if I were you, I would not even think now about the poMibility that life may begin at 20 or 30 or that it still can be a great life even at 80. "As you say, you have much to do and you want to get on with It. The sooner you commence, the better equipped you will be to find all the later ages as enriching as the young ones. "Yes, it is really tru e that our rent was Pl a month., Our salary was such that wt could not afford to have dinner very often at the Dodge Hotel dining room bfcause the least expensive dinner was $1. • "HOWEVER, \\'E DID not feel too hampered by lack of money. Lile was an exciting challenge as we dreamed an d talked, and bragged a little, and prepared ourselves to meet the future." Nation Without ' Ex-presidents 8are Occurrence WASHINGTON IAP) - Lyndon B. Jotwon's death lea ves the nation without a Uvlng ex-president for the first tllne in 40 ~ar~. For only the second time, naa:s •• bemg nown at .. half-start for two fRtr chief executives. fohnson's death 1'fond1y night came wlhln a month of fonner President Har- rf S Truman'• demise Dec. 2&. The only otier Ume when dap were flown at half-·~ for two ex·presldentl was when T1¥1mas Jeffeuon and John Adams died o~=• day -July 4, l!ZI. '1 dtalb marks the ftflb time In Unlled Staleo ii Wllbout a llv· prealdtnl. -velt aerved the IHI ~ of hla pre•ldeney .with no llvtns e~denl alter Grover Claveland died J• 14, !IOI. Oaorse W11hl111loa't duth Dec. II, I'm, ltft 1111 former vl<e pmlde!it, John Adams, wltl>oul 1 llvil\I predecmor. . ,. 11 "llE SAID TWO or three times lhat he just wasn't goi.ng to Uve very Jong," Tan· ner said . "We commented several Umea that he looked eood ind had real good color. He had, I thought. a sood ouUook, except for the Cew times he said he \.\·a!n 't going 10 live very king." Tanner said Johnson said he doubted he v.·ould live Lo see completion of both a natio nal park and the LBJ State Patk along the Pede.males. Tanner remembered Johnson lit a cigarette during the visi t although lhe former president has sufftttd from heart trouble. "He aakl, 11 can't rully see how. It would shorten II\)' Ula very mucll when am 14. I om juot, golnl lo 10 wad and enjoy lt.' " Tanner qoo1.ed Jobnsoo. Tener said that durll\I the visit be told Johnloo that Tuntr'1 lather, a mintmr of · the Chrlstadelphlan C1111rch, performed the llnt fllneral at the Johnson family cemetery where the ft.>rmer president said on nwnerous oc- casions be wlshed to be burled. THE CEMEl'ERY ~ on the LBJ lllnch. Tanner Ilk! that Iha burial took place tn the early Jlll'I of the conlury When the Ooodll\I ~ pre"'11od lamll,y membtra from tlllnc the body-to the SIMeWall oemetuy. Nellhbors ructed wllb lhock and 114· ntsa fo JolmlOO'I dtath. TbeJ said they remembered b1m u a friendly man who was llke!y to show up wltb preeeotl at Chrlalmas and wllb help w~ .-cl. "He WU • wonderfUJ. ntlahbOr', we thought, all the.. yean we 6aft Uved here together,'' said Mra. Ernest ~1, °'"'YPK.OT ..... WUt"-,,._ UC PRESIDENT CLARK KERR !HAND EXTENDED) WELCOMES LBJ TO JUNE 1964 UCI DEDICATION With President (from left): Governor Brown, UCI CMncellor Aldrich, R199nt1 Chalrm1n C1rter (plrtl1lly hldcMn) w-ranch ldjolns the LBJ Ranch. "II anythll!1 came up ht was wllllns lo help U1 all tn whit wt wart lilfni lo undertake." Sht aakl Johnlon and 1111 wUe, Lac(y Bini, came by Chrblmu Day wllb a bo• ol canc(y,, ~ _ fruit celle and a fifth ol ScotcJt WW><)'. 1 11Every Christmas he ha1 been here, he hu never flJled to atve ua that," she said. ART KOWERT, publlaher ol the FroderlckablJ'I Standard, covered Whal appmntly wu Johnooo'1 · l11t public ap- p<aranco ·s.1111day when·Johnaon !HolP'd Lady Bird plant the nnt of 100 redbud trees along Jlanch Rold I, which passes tn fn>nl ol the LBJ Ranch. Mn. Kowert said Johnlon 1'was not his uaual bubbly sell and Ilk!, 'I'm iorr!' but I'm not feelln&l very wtll.' 11 Mr. a.od Mra. Kermit Hahne, owners or the Stonewall Cafe, wn ll\ tean l'hM l!ked their remambrancea of Joltmon. '1lt'1 IUCh • bl1 lhock. I can't bellevt it. I just can't believe It," Hahne 11ld, DATl.Y .PILOT ,.... M' ltidllff ....... PRESIDENT BIDS 'GODSPEED' TO VIETNAM-BOUNO TROOPS In Ftb!-uary 19'1 ti El Toro Marine Corps Air Stttlon Bullets Thrust Johnson Into Presidency By The Associated Pre&\ An assassin's bullet thrust Vice Pres- dent Lyndon Baines Johnson into the presidency. On Nov. 3, 1964, 11 months and 12 days after he was hastil y sworn ln as 36th President of the United States to succeed the stain John F. Kennedy, he was elec· ted to a four-year tenn of his own· He won the greatest vote majority ever accorded a presidential candidate and carried into office with him the biggest party ma}orilies in Congress since the election of 1936. Under the C'.oruititution, Johnson was eligible to run for a second term of his ov.'TI in November 1968. A· nation, frustrated and angry about the Vietnam war, troubled by racia l strife and caught by inflaUon, more or less assumed that the highly political Johnson would do that. To the surprise of the electorate, Johnson announced in a nationwide television speech on March 31, 1963, that "I shall not seek and I will not accept the nomination of my party as your President.'' HE REFERRED to that unity of the country when 'be was so overwhelmingly ele<:ted in November 1964 and asserted, "What we have won when all our people were united must not be lost ln partisanship." Then, acknowledging there w as "division in the American hoult," be withdrew ln the name of national unity which he said was the "ulthnate strength of our country. · "With 'American sons in the field far away," he 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 hour or a day of my thne to any personal partisan cau..es or to any duties other that the a w e s o m e duties of the presl· dency of your country." He coupled his retledlon de<:laration with an announcement that he ordered bombing of North Vietnam restricted to the area below the 19th Parallel and call· ed for peace talks. Three days later, North Vietnam surprised the President and his advisers by accepting, saying preliminary talks could be held to arrange an end to the l»ill.T PUT ..... W UI ,.,_ MR. JOHNSON CALLS ON H1s·soccrssolt JN fAll CLEMENTE In August 1969, His Birlhday Was Obttrvtd In Orangt County I' reSt of the bombing and then broader questions could be discussed. A month of haggling over the site followed. On April I Hanoi and W asblngton accepted a French offer of Paris, agreeing to meet May 10. TWO DAYS OF discussion betw~ deputy ambal!adors of both aides to set up procedures followed. On May 13, 1968, W. Averell Harrlman, the U.S. am- 'A threat to aft II IUltioK '" tlact res'-b • threat to .U, ""4 • tllreat to u ••• The VKite4" States i11o tetlds no rula11eas a11tl seeks no toider -r.• basaador to the peace talk.I, and Xuan Thuy, the North Vietnamese ambassador to the talks, led their respective delega· t!Olll Into the lntematlooal Confmnce Center, formerly the Majestic Hotel, to begin the lalelul talks. II look eight months of talktng lo determine bow subotantlve negotlalkms could proceed. The announcement o! the in.at through came Jan. 16, 1969, four days before Johnson left office, giving hlm the satl!lacUon of knowing there was a posslblllly of peace. There were other breW to exhllerate Johnson in the few weeks before he turn- ed over the presidency to Richard M. N!Ion, Republican, who defeated Vice President Hubert Humphrey Jn the 1968 election. On Dec. 11, 1968 Cambodia reltased 12 Americans who had been lmprl!oned there. Eleven were U. S. soldiers aeiztd when the~ boat wandered Into Cam· bodian watera July 12. The 12th was an American helicopter crewman captured Nov. 28. On Dec. 22, 1918 North Korea released 82 crew members of the lntelllgence ship us.s Pueblo who bad -Jmpriaoned since Jan. I, 1111 when their abl_p wu captured. ON DEC. fl lbree American astronauts returned 'trom a s1X..ctay·plu1 space voyqe whlcb took them 10 llmea around · the moon. The intrepid explortra were Air Force Col. Frank Boman, Navy Capt. James A. Lovell ollll AJr Force Maj. Wllllam A. Anders. Severe! days later, Johnaon areetiil u-at tht Whlta Hou11 and awarded them med.ala. "Thinga are a lot better than we ex· pected," Johnlon muaed on the plane which tool< him lo "tlrellllDt on 1111 Tu· u ranch. "tlow we just hope Sood tbtnp '"' aotl\l lo bappm !Or Mr. Nlmt." . In hl1 crushll\I delta! ol bit llepubllcan opponen~ U. S. Sett. Barry Goldwater of Arllona In Novtmbef lNfi, JOhnlOD won some 11 perotnt of the vote. But 1U<b populutly dropped abarply. In November, 1117 Iha Gallup poll abowtd that only II percaat of the pqle, If> proved h~ handlltltl of the presldtncy. 50 p<rcent ol thoat queotl«ttd Ul>l'dled dlaaJ>pnwaJ ""' IJ poroaot blltl .. Ofln-lon. The maj.or e1U11 al lh1 dl1il1U1lonmonl appeartd lo bt tht South Vietnam l!.lr. lllollo1 Jn NqroJlum• acron the """1tcy did not belp hint, ellhcr. !..1 ' South Vietnam-where the Viet C.ong, C.Ommunlst South Vietnamese w h o wanted to take over the government - bad plagued Pr<aldent Eisenhower and President Kennedy. They sent mllltary adVlsers to help organ!ZA! the South Viel· namese army to combat the guerrilla tacUca of the Viet Cong who were aided and abetted by C.Ommunist North Vlei· nam. But it was President John.son's fate to commit American troops to a land war In Soirth Vietnam. 11IE FIRST American troops were sent to South Vietnam in February, 1965. Thir· · ty moritbs later the controversy over the United States' involvement had risen from a murmur to the level of an anxious naUonal debate. Willi the coot ol men and money IMWI~ 1111 and lllll no end oLthe war In sight. bOth the hawb and OOves in Congress were becoming more strident in thelr call for a change ln policy-the first for unrestrained air and naval war on Norlh Vietnam, the second for de-escalation. Eacalatlon of the war actually occurred ln Augmt, 11164 after Communist PT boats attacked U. S. destroyers in the Bay of Tonkin. Johnsoil obtained con- gresstonaI approval ol. a resolution grant· Ing hint lull support for "•II neceswy action to protect our anned forces." He told Congress, "The lssl!e ls the future of Southeast Asia as a whole. A threat to any nation ln that region Is a threat to all, and a threat to us ... The United States intends no rashness and seeks no wider war." But when North Vietnamese attacked an American base on Feb. 7, 1965 k.llUng nine, woUDd1ng more than 100 and wreck· in& planes, Johmon ordered American planea lnto actloo over North Vietnam . •No., ece f11at ••pe •-" thi119s are 991119 to hap.. -pell tor llfr. Nlzon.• North Vietnam failed to get the meaage and on Feb. 10 attacked another base. Johnson ordered another attack. AIR ATrACKS conllnued on mllltary larpla, bridges and highways with the tnlenllon of llowlng down aggresalon. The)' even extended north of Hanoi, the North Vlelnlm copltal. ' Tbe -· brotJPt Johnson Pllbllc ud.1 prttJate dtmlndl (or ne1ot11tlon1 from 1-, Dmtocrala tn congrm, from "-lean lntallectuala,' lrom an .-fll)c le«er writing Jlllbllc, from ncatnJ natlana, !rGm the United Nallolul and lrom the Soviet Union. The fighting continued. Jobolon l!kecJ COngress for an ad· dlllolull flOll million for expandtng~op<ra· · Ilona tn South Vletnom. More American 1rOopa ...,. Hiil lhere. By..mld.JWll, It WU utlmaied 70,tll)0.7S,DDO American troope were Involved. By Novem~1 1117, 111,000 Americans wart In SOUlh Vletnom. 'lbl w1r wldlned 1 rllt, bartly eon- ctaled, between Johnlon and U. S. Sen". Robtrt r . Kennedy. Kem!ed1 oppoattl the bombll\I ol North Vietnam and Ilk! oo Jn a Senate speech. , KENNEDY 'S OPPOSITION lo the Viet· nam war and Johnson's handling of aome domestic problem! spurred the New York senator to announce bis candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination even another term. Aliea~y L, the political fray was U. S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy of Minnesota. After Johnson's announcement, Vice President Humphrey joined them in con. tention. The political maneuvering of the three was stunningly stilled the night of June 5 when Kennedy. celebrattng a California primary vic..tory, was assassinated in Loa 'What -laat>e "'°" Mllaell all o•r people were uKitetl •••t Kot be lost'" p ... tlsaKshlp.' . Angeles. Humphrey obtained the nomlna· lion but lost to Nixon. the rioting in Negro slums, which rose to a crescendo In 1967, caused John50n great eoncem and some omervers be- lieved. it hurt his lmage. The riots began in 1964 in New York'a Harlem and Bedford Stuyvesant sectlon.1 and Involved on\y Negroes. The following summer of 1065 Negroes rioted for six days in Watta, Los Angeles' Negro area. Bui 1967 proved the longest and hottest summer of all with rklts 'In small towns, small clUea and in sprawlin& Newark, N. J., and Detroit. AFl'ER THE Watts rioting Johnson ad- dresaed the nation and tried to find wOrds to describe rioters, white or Negro. He said: " "A rioter with a Motolov cocktail In hia hands b not llsbttng !or civil rJcblB any more thaq a Klansman with a aheet on his back aftd a fDask' on his face . "'Ibey are both' moce. or less what the· law declar«I them: Jawbreakers." He sounded 10mewhat mournful and very frustrated as he looked back on hia years in Congress and the presidency. "During the put decade," he said, "more of my energy has been spent on protecting and preaervtns and writing In- to law through the legislative balls, the rigblB of all Americans than I hive spent . on any slngle subject or any half dozeo subject.a." Jobnaon contended for tho prelldantlal nomination tn llllO with the then U. 8. Sen. Kennedy of Mu.sachl.lSt!tta\ Political observers considered him well equipped for the high olflce. A MAN OF drlvinfl energy, he had oerved In the HOUie of RepresentaUvu from hJJ naUve Texas anti then tn tht Senate where ha became Senate majority leader·.-Re wa• consldel'!d the mott ef· fcctlve Senate leador In thil cenbory, =Jy In tbt blalory of-the United He tu a muter ol detail, knew where evtr atnator stood on every lslue and before voting Ume lmlw 1'llere every llnltor Wal Ol WU going to be. 81 WU Mltldered ID Hp<rt tn the art ol .... --. able lo pl both -lo lltlU -lorll even t!loU8h both afdel wm le11 than p)eued with the ruulla. J' l • • p E ~ • 5 i p p p p p ' ~ p ' ~ ~ ' ' ' ' i ' ! ' i ' ' I ' ' i I : I ,,_,_ .. _.,_._J_.,_,_.,.,~2J_._1_9_ll ____ ;_c _____ o_•_lL_V_PILO~ll Tuesday's ·Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchan_ge List Stocks Helped ·Some by Reports I I I • I I DAU.t y , .... '"'~~. Jll"IAI') 2'. 19/3 ' I ' Starts Wednesday_ At NOOn ... Fabulous after-inventory savin9&- . p' • .------------------:.:..;. ..... ;;.......;,· " . 'fi ' Save on all men's jeans. Save on sc:>cks. Sale 15% off. Reg. 4.98 to 7.98. Save on every pair reg. 7.98 or less. Including our brushed cotton sateen jeans wi'th flare teg. Or our cotton denim jeans with western ~kets and wide belt loops, in all of today's great colors. Penn Prest" and machine washable so they hold !heir handsome ,...1 shape and fit . In men's ;~_ waist sizes 28-42. .. ( ' ' '• •• "I • .} • Sale15% off. .. Sale 15% off . Reg. 65c .. $2 A great selection of men's ankle length and over the calf socks for dress or casual wear. Choose"terry crew socks ·of acrylic/ stretch nylon, casual socks of polyester/stretch nylon or anti· static nylon socks with spande>t top for stay·up.-lit. Reinforced heef and toe with cushion sole for long wear. Patterns or solids in..,. sizes 10-1 3. - • ' Sale'Soff. Reg .. $9 Now 765 S-M-L / All the best styles and looks · are here. Long and.short sl9eve · polyester pririt p9nt tOp"s. Chooi e from a large selection of fashion colors and styles, sOme· tiave pocket!\. Rememb&(, this sale will onfy last for one' bl~ ·day, so come early for best selection~ . JCPennev · · We-know what you're .looking for'--. - • • • / , Shop ~~nday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, N,ewpo;.+ Beech (7 1+) 6«-231]. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington ~ .. ~h {71~) 892-7771. HARBOR CENTER, Costa Mo~ • I I . • -J '·. Reg. $13 Now11os 38to 44 Not·· ... ' 320•ncip Reg.'$4 ana $8; Be8utiful slfection of ·· mini shifts with matching bikinis, or dress length gowns. All of nylon tricot. Choose from tailored or frilly styles In bright .. and pastel fashion colOfl, SizM P,S,M,L \ .. Misses gown aa above R,eg. 5.ll,O Now-4.00 Sizes XL-XXL (ZJ 4) 646.5011. ' ' ' • • ' ~. / • ' •' ' ' ~ vc - A mil tio1 "" me pli1 1 me ... COi the 1llli w fa T ti bi J j I f v I• p 1 s d • h I c • l I r I j l I t ' ' ( l ( . ! l ... ' . . . ' . ... " Lag1111a. Beaeh ., EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 66, NO. 23, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES • ORA.NG_E 'COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1973 TEN CENTS Main Beach .Panel .Nettled by P .a.rk Proposals .I By JACK CHAPPELL 0( ftM EMlllY "1tt1 Stiff A diigrunifed Main Beach Park C.oro- mittee Monday voiced general di.s.utiafac- tlon with new recommendations for the oceanfront park, prop<>sals committee members felt were too big, too com- plicated and too costly. The group turned back the recom- mendation of landscape architects Lang and Wood with a terse comment that the con.struction estimates were too high and the. location or the IUeguard tower was 11nsa1.isfactory. Ji'ine~ Respects Lang and Wood were not invited to at-. tend .the meetinl. Critical comment by committee members centered on lhe size and k>ca- tion of the lifeguard facility, Md on the expense and form of the park Itself. Harry Lawrence, committee member, termed the design of the tower a "catastrophe" and called the park a "concrete jungle.'' Committee members c o n s I d e r e d locating the .tower 1¥>rth of the proposed location, about where the present tower is located, to a position along the clills Country Mourns Lyndon Johnson AUSTIN, Tex, (UPI) -The people who knew i...yndon 8. Johnson best -his family, friends and neigbbors from the Texas hill country-liled past his body in the marbled Great Hall of the LBJ Li- brary today to honor and mourn the 36lh * * * Death F-oils LBJ Promise To Countia11s By GEORGE LEIDAL Of 1M DeilY Pilltl Ii.ft Of the four promises made by the late President Lyndon B. Johnson_ on various visits to the Orange Coast he lived only long enough to keep one of them. (See pictures, Page 9.) • Then vice president Johnson on Nov. 13, 1913, dedicated the Douglas Space Systems Center in Huntington Beach and discussed the promise of man's quest of space. Nine days later, the craggy Texan boarded Air Force One parked on a Dallas runway and took the oath of office committing bim to fulfill that promise and others laid down by President John F. Kennedy. An assassin's bullet hurled Johnson in- to the pres'idency and he assumed responsibility for Kennedy's com- mitment to place a man on the moon within the decade. The crafty former congressional leader also assumed the burden of moving the KeMedY New Frontier legislation for- ward as the wellspring of what LBJ was to term "The Great Society." Promise of that Johnson dream was SP.Oken in what was to become the new city of Irvine on June 20, 1964, months before his election to the highest office In the land. The occasion was the dedication of the new 1,000..ac.re campus. In the next decade, 'Johnson said he ex- pec:U higher education in America "to cross many neW frontlen and one of the . most critical is the frontier of the city life. I ' "Now 'n).,percent of our people live in (See PROMISF.s, Pqe ~) Dogs Kill Pet; ' Willed Mon.ey ~ U.S. President. (See related stories, pie· tures, Page 9) · Johnson , whcse pursuit of the Vietnam war divided a nation to which be bad pledged a "Great Society," died Monday of a heart attack. He was 64. ,'.!'he l!ll Tef"1l who deoeril!ed the White.House as the "'kmdt,acret" was a man"who loved and~needecFpeople. AniI they came to bJJn toda7 to pay their final ~· llis IOdy will Ue. in state in a gray metal casket until 6 a.m. PST" We<fnes.. day at the top of the stairs in the stately Great Hall of the $18.6-mlllion library in front oi a. black marble pylon. Smartly .miformcd meqibers of the 5th Anny's "Hell on Wheelsll Division stood by. Johnson 's widow, Lady Bird, 60, her two daughters and four grandchildren, accompanied the body in a motorcade from the Weed-O>rley Funeral Home to the library. They met solemnly by the catafalque before the public lying in state.- "1 had just about the toughest assign- ment I've ever. bad," said Tom Johnson, an aide to the former President but no relation, who helped prepare the body for the ceremony, including dressing his former boss In a business suit. Johnson was stricken duri ng an af· lernoon nap Monday at his LBJ Ranch 65 ntile~ from Austin. Secret service agents rushed to help him. ''They found the fonr.er President Johnson on the floor next to his bed. He was not moving," said Tom Johnson. "He was lying on his back. An agent said he appeared dead. He was dark blue in color. They administered oxygen and mouth to mouth resuscitation .. .'~ On the black marble pylon rising above the catafalque were these words : "I have followed the personal philosophy that I am a free man, an American, a public servant and a member of my party -in that order, always and only. ",The Great Society asks not how much. but how good; not only bow to create wealth but bow to use It ; not only how fast we are going, but where we are headed. It proposes as the first test for a nation: Tbe·quality of its people." Mrs. Charles Beckham of Smithville, /Tex., was the first penon in line during tbe morning to file past the. casket. She took ber fou r children out-of school and drove SO miles north. "i respect President Johnson," Mrs. Bec.kl:iam said. "l was about to lose my ) (See JOHN8?N, Page II TEEN GIRL GETS NOTE FROM LBJ STATESVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Polly, a lilUe furry white spltz, wu killed tiy other dogs ln the dot Just last Friday, former Presldtn~ (lOUnd before Ille could begin to-Lyndon B. Johnooo wrote a leltu to a 1$- Joyinl ber lmertlonce. yw old girl, telllnl her tbal "every 1ge Polly wu wIIlld on Income of luml out to be a good age when you l4l0 A )'Ur 1Jvm crtocU left b)' ber rue'.. it." mtstrm, 'IS-~ Ann Roblnoon The letter wu delivered to the home of Oow111, who Uved alone and WU Heidi L. Brown on Monday morning 1 - -lound«11Mn·hef.home.J111,..<·,._•_,_ _th< clAy of the &Jrmer preolcle11r1 death. 'Police said they couldn't reach a lo the letter, Jorn-wrote, "Bui, If I veterloarian over the,,....ld and were you, J would not even· thtnk now neJ&hbon ..Wein~ keep Polly teen-•bout the pooslbllltt that Ille wy begin porarily. They tald tbt dog wu at :JO " 311 ar !bat tt 11111 cu be 1 great mapping at them because they rue even at to. u were strangers, ,. ttiey muzzled See this atory, p\111 pholocraphs of the her and placed her In tbt doc former pmldent l11cl olber storla •• pound. Page I lodly. ' "" ,• and they considered integrating suard ' facilities with othe11 construction and haviag only a mini tower on the sands. "l don'i wnat to get hung from the nearest tree for repeating the library In the rplddle of th~ Main Beach," sal~ Vern Spltalerl, coinmittee member. He apparently .rererefed to architecture of the new library building. The recommendation presented for the panel's consideration would cost an estimated $663,000 and would be essen- . tially similar in concept to the original plan which was returned from bid at about '300,000 over estimates. Reductions in park estimates were made by Lang and Wood in abandoning center parkscape construetlon along the street and sidewalk ($73,000, rounded to nearest thousand), the intersection treat- ments across coast highway ($29,000), simpler seawall construction ($32,000), cheaper wood for boardwalk ($9,000). grading and earth work modifications ($47,000), d e mo-Ii ti on modifications ($51,000), paving modification! ($56,000) and shade Shelter elimination ($6,000 ) . • A reduction of about '18,000 was achieved due to elimination or phased oonstruction. Because of delayed con· struction, the entire properly can be developed at one time. In addition, Lang and Wood said dur- ing an interview, many potential bidders were scared ofr by earlier complexities of the phased construction and as a con- sequence, only two bids were received, the lowest one being $327 .000 over esti- mates. . , Lawrence hit al what he 1ermed the ex~ssive paving of the park and urged the design be "simplified .'' He also charged that the lifeguard tower was 11 "monument" to Skip Conner, lifeguard department head. Bernard F. Syfan, contractor, said the cost of paving areas of the park was much higher than planting it· in grass. "If you keep lawns in very good siies and you keep the people off of them. there's not that much money to main- tenance ,., Syfan said. Estimated total daily attendance at the park is placed ,at 3,000 persons during summer season . OSS·l e 0 a ,. UPI T...,,..tt FORMER PRESID~NT PLAYS WITH GRANDSON P1tllfk L'fi\don Nugent With Gr1ndp1 on LBJ Rone~ Falling B~anch of Tree Douses Power in Laguna Some 1,500 homes and busines,,es in Laguna Beach were hit by a power outage Monday when a falling tree branch' hit crosftd high power electrical lines and shorted two major circuifJI. • Al Geiser, Laguna Beach Edison Com- pany manager, said power was restored to 800 customers at noon and all service Volcano · Erupts On Tiny Island; 5·,200 Evacuate VESTMANNAEY JAR, Westman Island (UPIY -This tiny ~land pracllcally burst in two early today when the slumbering Helgafjell wicano erupted, sending the 5,200 inhabitant• fleeing In panic. The vo?cano, which has been dormant since the Vikings landed on the island in 1164 erupted sporadiCally during the night but then came to life shortly alter midnight, spurting fire and thousands of tons of molien lava into the siies. Ten houri •fter the first eruPtloo, tf>e lava stream rolled over the airfield and reached Ple outskirts of the town ol Vestamanhaeyjar. where several house.s """ ~ .. fife. was back by 1.: 12 p.m. North Laguna and Emerald Bay were the maln areas af- fected. L.'lguria' Be8ctf firemen · were called to an apartment at 100 Oliff Drive to ' rescue a woman trapped in an elevator stuck · between floors when the power went out. S!Orer Cable Television said today due to the cul 'in power, some of their subscribers may have lost service, and said that one of their lines was also . blown down in stiff wiDds. Manager John Romania said it was not likely that damage to :rubscribers' television 'sets j!OU}d ~r if the com· pany's cable .be(ame electrified through some mishap. "There's always some weird things that are ·waexplainable but not likely," Ror . .ani1 said. He explained the company has severaf protective devicea built into the cable sysle-m. · 1 ''Green Slime' ' In Laguna Il WU Josied In by the Laguna Beach Police Department as a "suspicious circom8tance'' and a cryp\l< notation given of a "un- iu-n ....., subllance coming up thl'OUlh gromd." ......... to a call on Diamond Strtet, Lite oftlcer 11kl he was ·.....w to tlltennlmI the Niture" Ofllcilll -1ed 4,700 peopln ..... evaeu1led b)' 1 lleet ol 100 filblng boats, coastal v-1• and airpJanu """ helicopten rrom Reykjavtt, a. e1p11p1 of lcellJld ii minutes Dying tlm• •WIY, 1 and the U.S. '111Val bate at Ktftavilr. They Did tlNre were no cuuahies. ,, .. ~-... -·. ...... -.up. "It .. ...., <tJe•• Parks 8upor•llor Cl)'lle Sweii-qld this With the airfield out of acUon the re- maining iOO Inhabitants, many of then\ .relu<tant to leave their homes, 10U1hl shelter In the harbor waiting, !or the evacuation veucll to take them out of the-area. Olhclals Nld tie Island COllld nploife ' (S.0 VOLCANO, Pip t/ "'°"""'" " ' He~ that• n<orby home W a IMIJ I Cte6Jelk bl the pdvlJ.e line leodin( to the '""" main and the .,_ dJo wu ~ In their 11otem IO tnco tile leok. • : . ' Nixon Will Make Speech at 7 P.M. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will address tbe nation on radio and television tonight, probably to an· nounce a Vietnam cease-£ire agreement. \Vhi~ House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in making the announcement this afternoon of the broadcast, did not say specifically that Nixon wc;>y!d. ~ak Of! a cease.fire. But all signs poinled to IL The~ POll·Dilpatcb .~ed ·~:·~ hl~er and Tho ~actuall.Y lnii1aied Ute aereeD:ierit. J!Ut """' uted point-blank at Orly Field U. they bad dooe ,/,, the 'jovial and smiling Kisstoger 'replied: "I have nothing to say." Ziegler. said the speech at 7 p.m. PST Is designed "lo report on the status of the Vietnam ,negotiations." The speech \Vill follow a meeting by Nixon with Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, his chief Vietnam negotiator y,·bo was due back in Washington at 2:45 p.m PST after a three-hour, 45-minute meeting ln Pa ris today with Hanoi 's Le Due Tho. The Paris meeting broke up amid warm smiles and waves from both Kiss· Inger and Tho. Kissinger had been expected to remain in Paris for several days . His quick return suggested that the final session of the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly. Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ad- dress , he will meet at ~:30 p.m. PST with his Cabine t and at .6 p.m. with a bipartisan group of congressional leaders. The latter are Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania; Senate Democratic leader Mike MansUeld ; Speaker Carl Albert, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of lltichigan and House Democratic leader Thomas P. O'Neill of Massachusetts. Ziegler also announced there will be a larger bipartisan congr essi onal .leadership meeting at 5:30 a.m. PST Wedneoday. . Ziegler declined to say bow long tonlgbt's speech will be or to expand in any way on his terse announcement. lf as expected Nixon announces tonight an agreement has been reached, It will come almost four years to the day from the f1r1t peace talb in Paris. It was on Jan . 26, 1969, that American, North Vietnamese, South Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiators gathered at the Hotel Majestic ln Paris to try to end the long, bloody war. Delidlt of the cease-fire agreement: not lmmedlately' made public, a r e expected to cloaely parallel the nine-point accord that both sides nearly agreed· on In October. That caUed for the return of all U.S. prisoners of war and the withdrawal of all U.S. troops within 60 days. A cease-fire would take place within 24 hours of the formal 1lgnlng~ and an in- temalional supervisory team would go- lnlo Vietnam to police the cease-fire. The accord established a NaUonal Council of ~nclllaUon .rnade up of represent&ti~es from the Saigon Ind Hanoi governments p I u 1 n.utrali•ts lo supervtse: election• whkh would determine lbe political future of VJet~ nam. The OClober 1ccord aloo provided !bat all sld" respect the ioverelgnty of Cam- bodia Ind Laos, measures which officials aald then would l<ld to a ce.,..llre lo those count.nes. A!I U.S. • II d South Korean troops would be wlbdtawn. There: was no specific language tor removal of North Vietnan1ese troops in the south, but va rious reports have said an un· derstanding existed on that point. * * * U.S. Bombers Strike Rea- Viet Targets ~ SAIGON (UPI ) -South Vietnam's sec- ond largest city was on full alert today in anticipation of a cease-fire. U.S. warplanes, In what could be their final major action, pounded Communist posi- ti ons with the heaviest bombings in fi ve months. More than 450 planes hit targets In South Vietnam in a 24-hour period ending at 8 a.m. today, the U.S. command said -the largest number of_rajds over the swth in a single day since August. American planes also bombed the Ho Chi ,Minh Trail complex in Laos and targets in Cambodia today, the command said. The government of Nguyen Van ThJeu 1 ordered the city of Da Nang on alert and an nounced additional measures designed to crack down on possible Communist ac- tivity during a cease-fire. Correspondent Alan Dawson In Da Nang reported 5,000 Americans at the sprawling Allied air bUe and its sur- roul'Hjing , are11 had been ordered on "gray" alert with no travel in town el· cept on officia: business. Ground action was relatively quiet throughout Vietnam today. The South Vietnamese command reported only S2 Communist~lniliated Incidents, 42 of \Vhich were shellings, in the 24 hours end- ing at dawn. One week after bombine: of North Viel-n.:,-was halted by Pres.itlent Nixon. the command said American fighter-· bombers flew 374 sorties and 852 bombers new 27 missions, averaging three planes each, over South Vietnam . In seven days, American fighter- bombers have fiown .2,333 sorties -one mission by one plane -and the B52s have flown 204 three-plane missions, ac- cording to command statistics. Oraige Coast Weather Sunny skies are on the agenda for Wednesday, with dim inishing northeast •·Inds, according to lhe weatherlady. Highs of Ill at the beaches and 70 inland are expected. Lows tonlght, a cllllly 3M3. INSIDE TODA l' A. 1hotgun..witlding T o p ' k a man goea ber1erk and killJ five persona In hl1 ntfohborhood, witlLin right of lilt Ital< Capitol, btfort niming Cht gun ori hJm· 111/. Pollet or. JllUltl/itd. S•< storw on Bqg1 4. ':""'] L.M, ..,. 1t ~ II ~ ....... , .... " (........ '"' "'*fllMI ...... • 0-la ,, ...... c:..t¥ , ~ ~ IS """' .M-11 o.1111 Mlicft ' ,_ ........ •11 1-.ntl p,.. # T...._ lt . .,..._., .. ~ . ....._.. •n -.,. • iltw .. """"' ' ............. .. • ... llllbl .. ........... • ............ 1. :# D~ll V PILOT LB Tuesday, Jan113rY 2l. 1'973 OAILY ,ILOT lt1H P'M• MOTHERS MARCH TO FUND BIRTH DEFECTS FIGHT City Chairman Mardi Spalding, Oitective Alex Jimene1 Mothers Mar~h Canipaign Be gi1is in Laguna Beach ..\II through !0~11. mothers began marching today for the annual :\larch of Dimes fund raising ca.npaign set through next Tuesday. "Birth defects are forever -unless JOU help" is the motto of this year's campaign being led in Laguna Beach by .\lrs. 11fard.i Spalding. Assisting in the fund campaign are . many community organiultions including the Junior Women's Club. the Explorer Sc<luts, and the A.sslsleens. At the high school. the S Club and the Key Club have met vdth campaign organizers to offer support. A Rubella-Measles Clinic held in Laguna Beach schools and at the Free · Clinic was a recent beneficiary of the ;\1arch of Dimes effort. !\.lore than 600 cbildren v;ere vac· cioated against the disease which can cause birth defects if contracted by a pregnant y,·oman. In addition to collecting funds for such clinics, the March of· Dimes financts research , education, pro!essional sym· posiums and genetic counseling. In Laguna, lhe campaign drive in- cludes participation hy Mrs. Spalding, l\.1argaret Cringle, Dita Vaughn and Pat O~eilly, Emerald Bay : Lila Almond and Patty Anderson. Irvine Cove; Paula From Page 1 VOLCANO ... and disappear in the sea. • The eruption opened up a widening rift across the island, which is 2Y.i miles wide and five miles long. The rift was nearly two miles long and reached from the volcano in a curve out to the Atlantic Ocean. ,\t first. many older people refused to leave their homes but officials said they changed thei r minds when they saw the lava stream rolling toward the town. Authorities new police and rescue \\'Orkers into the island during the early morning hours and in Reykjavik. schools and hospitals were read ied to take care of the evacuees . In 1963. a similar eruption created the nearby island of Surtsey. Death Bill Proposed SACRAMENTO (AP ) -The death penalty ~'ould be mandatory for first- degree murder in California under a bill introduced l\.1onday by freshman Assemblyman Mike Antonovich OU.Neil COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tiit Or•nge COIJI 0...ILY PllOl, wllfl -ld't 11 combined !tit H...,.·Prn1, !1 publl~ oy ftl• O.itngr c ... 11 Publl~lno Company, S.,,a-••t., lld!llons ••r pu11111~, MCll'Clty tflr11u,h Frid1y, f<>f' Coitt Mn1, N.wpor1 lie.ell, H11111 lnglon 8r1eh/Founl1"1 V•lt..,., L1gun11 lludl, '"'•nr/Stddlflbaclt 1nd Sin Cle"ll'nttf Sin Jutn Ctpl11r1no. A 1111(111 reglon1I ldltlori 11 PllOl'1Md SllUrdt'f!; '"" Sunc11vs. Tne prl.,clpal publllhlno pt•nl 11 •I llO We.I 1111 .Strrtl, Costt Ma.a, C1~l<>f'n!1, JU». Rolt1rt N. Wied Prukleni •!Id Publl1~1r J•clr R. Curley Viet Pr•klllf'll •!Id Gtne<"•I Mtnqtr lhom1J KttYil EdllO<' lhom11 A. Murphint M•nt91"11 Edi,... Ch1rl11 H. Looi Ric.h tr4 '· N 111 "11l1tenl M1~l11; EdllOrt L.f•H IMcli Offlq 112 ftrttt Awt nut Mailiag A44r•tn ,,0. lo• •66, •2651 °""' °'"'" CMlt M-: ~-Wet 81,. Slrllt N=lffdl: JlJ:I Nt'"'l*'t ~11'11 HMll IMctt: 17'7J l•dl tOull .... nt ltn C i.: IOJ Ntrtfl El c..min. A•I Tll ...... t7141 642-4121 t•HIH A4"""'-t 642·1671 Llft9H ..... AR .,.,..,.,...,., ,..., ..... 4f4-t466 COpyf1alll, 1t12,. Oftllft C"tt "llblllllfnt Comotny, No nMS 1!0!' .... , IU1t1t!r'lllont. td•fofl•I INllltf' or fifYfftll'"*'lt lltr•ln """ IM rtpr'IOllCed Wllhllut -..Clll ,.... Ml1•lon of mf!Trlttit -... ~ Cl.IK '"'"' Mid ti COlll MIM, C•Htom\1, s.ii.a:~non bJ' c1rrltt 12.u J _,,ll'llfl lw mtll tJ,lJ. IMl\llllVI fnlllfto l 11t1111111IOl!l ».U rnontl'llf. Dolts. north Laguna: ~1ary Healy. Top of 1he \1lorld and ~1ystic ~!ills areas; Judy .Swayne, cen1ral Laguna : Shirley McCalla and aGil Barus, Bluebird Can· yon areas: Joanna Linden, South Laguna and Jan BOrucki. Three Arch Bay. Explorer Scouts led by Alex Jimenez also \li'ill be collecting funds for the cam· paign. Laguna's Winter Recreational Activities Set Navigation, Food Garnishing, Knit Sewing, and Crocheting are winter courses of the Laguna Beach Recreatk>n Department still open for registration. The schedule o[ the classes is as follows : -Navigation -Held Crom 7:30 to 9:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday at Laguna Beac;h !:ligb School, First class, Feb. 1.2. Fee, $10. -Food Garnishing -Held at 7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays at Laguna Beach High School. First class. lonlght. Fee. SS. -Knit Sewing -Held at 7:45 p.m. on \Vedn esdays at the Laguna Beach Recreation Department . 175 N. Coast H.irhway. First class, Wel:fnesday. Fee, 11s, ---Crocheting ~ Held at 9 a.m. Wednesdays at the Recreation Depart· ment. First class, Wednesday. Fee. $9 for beginners; $7 for advanced students. Registration for the courses made at the Recreation Department daily between 8 a.m. and 12 p.m. and I to 5 p.m. For further information, call 494- 1124. Ext. 45. Capo District Will Mail Out School Surveys The Capistrano Unified School District's professionally-worded poll on 45-15, all-year-schoo l, \li'ill be mailed to hundreds or parent.. starting late this V.'eek in a final effort to sa mple public opinion or the controversial idea . District Director of Administrative Services Joe Wimer said pa rents of students in grades from Kindergarten througlt sixth grade will receive the sampling packet in the mail and only one "ballot'' per household v.·ill be sent. The sampling includes delailed literature on the 45-15 proposals, as well as a simple questionnaire prepared by volunteers at ~Cal State Fullerton - persons skilled at public opinion sam- pling, Wimer aaid. The deadline for return of the com - pleted queStionnaires Is Feb. 6, and self- addressed, stamped envelopes wlll be provided to each parent. Wimer said that the entire package or data \\'as compiled and then approved by a panel of volunteers representing the district, the citizen's all-year-school com· mittee and lhe groups opposing the con· ccpt to place youngslen under a 12· month-a-yea r educational schedule with 45 school days and 15 vacation days In continuous succession. ''We came to a total agreement on all the materials so there shouldn't be auy problem about how the survey was word- ed or bow it v.·ill be counted," Wlrrier said. I Trustees have agreed lhat lhl1 latt1t "professional" poll will M the final 1t- temft-to seek public oplnlon berore a fi11a decilioo Is made on the proPQSall. Thus far tbe su pport for 45-15 has been rather dismaJ. If a "signlllcant" percentage of favorable commenla come. from lbe latest sampllng, trustees have said they will consider a pilot program at Viejo School, where present overcrowding threatens to end tho acbool'1 innovative, open-classroom concept • I •• -~--. --- Dw Poitat Pt-!fect l'rom P .. e J Sea Lahorat9ry PROMISES ... urbu 1m1 Ilk• Loi AngeJOI. Their need! m lmmtnle. But, jUJI 11 our col· lege1 and unlvenHles chanced the future of OW' farms a century qo, '° they can help dwlp Ibo tuture of our cllles." saJi1~the11ttstdent who !ell a classroo•n for a poULlcal career. 1 Funding Sought ''I have come to C&lltornia to ask you to throw oU your doubts about America". Help us demonstrate to the world that people of_companlon and commltmer\t can free their fellow cltuens from the bonds of injustice, the prlaons of poverty and the chains o! lgnoranco," Johnaoil aald. By CANDACE PEARSON °' ... Dlllb' ll'ltlt .... Orang• county D<partinent o! Educ .. Uon officials are tesuni the waters of charitable foundatlons JD attempts to cet fundinJ !of I proposed $1 mJllJoo on- shore: marine science laboratory at Dina llarbor. "\Ve have two years to fmd the money," said Don Macl.ean, ad· mlni:ltrator of the county's marine science programs. ., About $!SO,OllO Is n<eded to build the first increment ol the 40,QOO.square foot building planned at the w.U end o! Dana Harl>or nut to the flsbloa pier at the base of the blu!fs. County education c!!Jclab, led by AfacLean, have made preliminary con- tacts with naUonal organluttons like Rockofeller Foundatioo, Camegi• FOWl- dation and the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Wellare. Meanwhile, lhe department bu a two-- ye3r lease, opUon·to-buy on the land at the harbor. In the 'interim, the county Harbors, Beaches and Parks Department is grading the area and marting it with 70 to 75 campsites to proYide ovemicbt beach camping. 1 The Dana Point campgrounds will bo open in early spring. If plans go through, Ibo O!Hhore lllllrine sciences building will replace the current one-classroom complex at the harbor, where the county department's "floa1ing laboratory," the Fury 11, is docked. "It's going to be a neat thing," Macl.ean enthused. To be apen 18 hours a day, aevto daya a week, it wW house nlDe dlltioct ~ grams in coastal and marine e&lcatloo. '1From the open sea all the way to the first mountain range -the lnDuence of the ocean doesn't stop at the ltUbore," said MacLean, an oceanographer. Tile building design includes three laboratories, a large a q u a r i u m , auditorium., four to five claarooms, pbotograpby darkroom, olll=, base- ment research area for graduate students, bookstore and artificial Udepool. Marine science educatkla programs in tile ClOllllty department hogan in 1917 wltb a three-year federal grant, liven on the condiUoo that the department establi!b tile feasibility of a floating lab. MacLean says the county proved the feasibility and p..,,.....i !or tile end o! the three years by adding five other pro- grams. Tbese include the O!Hhore facllily, special m.-...,..il:h 'iortibops, slide presen&ation.s in the schools, te.acber ln- service training aod lnstnactional materials. Niguel Woman" Named to Head . Capo Bond Drive Mn. Nancy Crapo, a Laguna Niguel housewife active in community pro;ects, has been named a cocbainnan of Arvy's Friends, the group pre.uing for pasqge of the 125 million bond Issue in the Capistrano Unified School District. l\.frs. Crapo will join the Rev. Allan Vernon of San Clemente in leading the parents' committee. , The local housewife iJ the mother of three and Is a past president of the Crovro Valley Parent • Teacher Guild, secre tary of the Laguna Niguel Coordinating Council, a den mother, a Brownle leader and a Junior Girl Scout volunteer. Her husband, William, iJ an e1r.cutiV'l! wltb McDonnell Douglu and also Is oc- tive ln local community projects. Crapa Is treasurer of the Dan.a HillJ Booster Club. The two chairmen hope to have eoo voluntee rs working in the district in com- ing weeks to effect a lw&tbirdl majority vote in favor of the fl5 million bond issue. Judge Refuses · Wat.er gate Bail Reducing R~quest WASHINGTON (UPI) -The trial judge brusquely "'fused today to reduc. bail for four men, now In jaU, who plead· ed guilty in the Waterga.te bugging case. Federal Judge John J. Slrlca strtued their admlsslon of participating In "clandestine aclivilits" in rejecting the request to Jower t he $100,«XKI bell for each of the four men, aU from the Miami area. O.nl<I E. Schultz, mwly hiftd 1tlorney for the four, urged U. reducUon on ground.t his cllenll bid Jftll1nl penonal probl<ms neemllltlal tbelr rtitille. Slrlca decllNd: "Eocb or -four doleodlnll 11 O""'t ID 8ponllb and ..,. tr more o! them ~ bas Uel In foreign countrlet. ·£acb ol them bas n · porlence. In -operatlonl, ln- cludlng the ut• of ·~· •• "The coort !alb fo -Wl\Y !hue ddendanll lhould ..... 1.. bolter treat- mont than tbelr co-delondanl, Mr. Howard Hun\. , .and the coort ..., no reaJOn to make 111. tnvidJous dJltlnction here." ,. ' I "We knew someday the districts (in- dividual 11ch0ol districts) would have to pay -mako It -. pay-... )'Ou-p--.pent· tlon," Macl.ean said. Tile only county·sllte fUnds SllPP!lrllng the ~ram so for aa1aries for ~iacLean s aecretary and MacLean, who doubles as marine science· curriwlum coordinator for 550 county schools. There are no provis ions in ttie state- mandated county service bud&et for marine adtnefs. TheoreUcally, other county funds could bo diverted to fund the ~ram, but "they'd have to fire .somebody In charge of matbemaUcs or 80mtlhing. Tiley only bavo certain slots In budget amounll," Macl.ean 1&ld. The county boonl ol 1UptrYl!on bas not finan. clalty slipporled the program. He called the biggest procram the county department of educat:iob. bas an "orphan -we like it that way -self·suf- ncJent." Individual acboo1 districts pay a varie- ty ot fees for use of county facilities. A typical use Is two classes with about 30 to 40 students 1n both, each going out for a hall-day lrlp oo !be Fury lJ while the rernainlDI class uses the on-shore lab. Thi! -1d cost $3'10. About fO,«XKI students a year go through the county boat and lab program at Dana Point Harbor. Because some school districts can't af- ford any marine science experience, the county department of education bas been seeking contributions . !rom the Orange County buslness and dvic community. MacLean II.id be receaUy received a $1,0llO conlributlon !rom Westland's Bank, -1fled !or the Orange Unified Scbool Dl!lr!c:t. · Swiss Let Franc Float; Dollar Loses. Support GENE\/ A (UPI) -The Swisl Natiooal Bank wltbdrew support ol the dollar to- day to atop speculation In the buying of Swiss francs. Tbe dollar dropped oo otber European .-y markets. Tile .,..,.,,. permitted the Swlsa franc to Boat on the open market and eommer· clal banks accepted only small llllOUl!ls ol clollln llMI other curm>clel. European _.,. """""" ·sa1c1 that the move 11 probollly lanpl<ll'l!. A di· reclor ol the SW. NaUonal bank; 1dichel de Rivas, said ln 7Alrich that tile bank ls not pWuting to let the franc float more than a low days. In Paris, !be dollM dropped to 5.05 francs today on the free money market compared wltb Mooday's 5.09 closing rate. French bankers attributed the drop to tile Swiss r<!usal to support tile dou.r. "It appears to be another European 'speculative attack I on the dollar," a French banking &OUn:e said • Tbe Swiss NaUooal Banlt, acting with the M:ven-member cabinet ln Bern, de- cided to stop buying dollars at the official rate of 3.75 francs after a heavy inflw: of foreign currencies Monday, The dollar opened today al 3.69 Swiss francs and closed at 3.70 francs. "But pending developments we are ~ cepting only small amounts, mostly from tourists who need to change money," Lloyd's Bank In Geneva said. Today'11ll(lve rrieam an upward revaJu- aUon ol. the Swiss franc, which already went up In value la11t year. "We have to make allowance in pres· ent trading for another possible revalua· lion," the Lloyd'• off1clala said. DAILY "ILOT ltm ""9tif HONORED FOR WORK Detective Nell Purcell Legion, District To Honor Purcell For Police Work The 29th district or the American Legion which includes aU of Orange County, bas selected Laguna Beach Det. Sgt. Neil Pun:ell to receive the Orange Coun~y Law Enforcemeii:t Special Award. Purcell was one of only two officers in Orange County selected ror the award, to he presented at the Orange County Valor and ~1erit Awards Banquel Feb. 3 in Anaheim. It was Purcell who arrested Dr. Timothy Leary in Laguna Beach in 1968 ~n the charges that eventually led to the prison lerm for the former Harvard pro- fe3'0 r, and investlgatlona by the narcotiai squad, which Purcell leads, that led to the exposure and cracking of the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Purcell was selected by a committee composed of a former Orange Count y judge, a California state official, an Anaheim school district trustee, and American Legion officials. He had been.proposed for consideration by the group by Laguna Beach Police Chief Jose ph J. Kelly. Nuclear Plants Go Unde11ground? ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Underground nuclear power plants might be safer than surface stations during an earthquake, a California Institute of Technology research engineer _says. Martin Goldsmith told an Atomic Energy Commission board Monday that underground '8cilities would not be sub- ject to the violent shaking many surface buildings undergo during a quake because of the nature of seismic waves. The AEC board is reviewing a joint Southern California Edison Company and San Diego Gas &i: Electric Company pr& posal to add _two additional units to the present San Onofre Nuclear power sta- tion. The waves, Goldsmith said, stress the "limberness" of surface structures by the way they move over the earth's surrace, causing the mlddle and upper stories of tall buildings to shake more violently than the ground noor or base· ment. Goldsmith said nls theory has not been proven but he stressed that it wu a possibility. The only way to prove the theory, be said, was to build an un- derground facility. Allhoogh tbe Johnson 1dmlnl!tra1lon wu to fCJ$ter more legislation to meet these promise!: Olan any other In history, Johnson's record was to be cast in deeper doubt, by the Vietnam War . -In November of 1987, Johnaon again visited the Oronge Cout. This Ume !be place was El Toro Marine Corps A1r Sta- tJon and the occasion wu the ltlod birthday o! lbe U.S. Marine Corps. Three months later be returued to El Toro. On Feb. 19, 19$8, a now "worried .. P""'ldent Johmon wished Godspoed to Camp Pendleton's 27th Rea:lmenta1 Land- ing Team as they left for Vietnam. ' "This ls a decisive tlme In Vietnam " he said. "The eyes of the nation and the entire world · -the eyes of history itself " he said prophetically, "are on that braJe band of defenders who bold the pus it Khe Sanh and the area around it. I "We, do not doubt the outcome. 11Je enemy s Ude wW be broken . • • ~ "I have uked you to go and help !hom. f know )'OU will do your duty. May God bless and teep each of you. , "We will be prouder when you come home and you have done the job " Johnson said . ' But. it was to be another Preside11t who would bring home most of the son,ooo troops Johnson committed to the delenoe o! Southeast .Ula. And, on !he occasion of his Slat birth- day, President Richard Af. Nixon e..,. tertained LBJ at the Western White House in San Clemente. It was on this August rt, 1969 visit that LBJ made hls last promise to the Orange Coast, a promise he wouldlit keep. "Yes, it is real pretty here in Orange Counly. "Maybe now that I'm a private citizen. I can come back and be just like the rest or the tourists and take a closer look at the area." Nodding l<' President Nixon cit a luncheon in LBJ's honor at La Casa Pacifica, Johnson said, "He carries the burden now . I can do as I please. I think ! ".'fil come back to Orange County," be said. He never did .. ~·\-"'••#-re 1 JOHNSON ••. • . ' only child and he helped bring m,y lnls~ hand fiolf'le_ from the military." i A jetliner provided by Nixon will Oy Johnson's body to Wuhington Wednes· day. 'nle casket will be taken to-ilie Capitol, where the tJody will lie In stile In the rotunda until Tbunday, folio Md . by funeral aervlces at the Nat!Onal ~y Christian Church. -,- The lxldy then will be nown bact 1to Tuas for a final Ci!remony and~· al t 3:30 p.m. Thursday it> the f y cemetery on the banb of the P River, a quarter-mile from the Ranch. / "These plans represent the wisbe!l 1>f the family," Tom Johnson said. Of Mis. Johnsoa, he said , "I would describe fv condtuon as very sturdy. She Is boldilg up very well." ' Presideat Nixon proclaimed '11lurdy as a national day of mourning. l The President, in a public , prfc.. lamatlon and in a message to ~. formally announced the death of the 3tth P.-esident. l I MEASURE FOR 'I'REASURE Ono factor ovorlookoCI !;y cusio1Mn In buying carpeting i• tho mHsuring for yardage, Al of our S.lo.,.,.n know how to musuro and flguro oxaci yardage, oftan providing our customers substanti1I 11vin91 in y1rd1ga alone .. Also, with the tr.mendous installation .,. parlonco our sal.smon have (Heh previously w11 en ••ptrt installer for us). we ere able to f.,,... 1ny potential problem. Pfoa,. slop in and loolt at tlio m.sur., availoblo lo Y°" ~h our store. Wo have • gigantic .. loetion, and th. musurlng win be ACCURATE! • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placetltla Aft. COSTA MISA '646-4838 HOURS1 Moot. Thru Thul'I., t lo 5·30-FRI., t lot-SAT .. 9:30 to S I I ' .. • • ... ,,., • . ' ' ' •• • Saddlebaek • . VOL. 66, NO. 23, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ' ' I· , ' ~ . ' :.. . . .. Today's Final iv.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1973 TEN CENTS • .Ji-vine to Consider l-year City Office Term I .81.f " ' , ' Irvine city councilmen tonight will ttctle the question or limiting terms of Office of city ~appOintees Including tfiose ~ planning commissioners, to one year. CoWlcilmen meet at 7:30 In city ha11, 4201 CamPus Drive. Irvine Mayor Willi8m Fischbach in Deceniber first proposed the oqe-year limit, whlc~ he suggested affects all c;:lty council designated pos& -including his I own. · ·~ .. • • -1 Since then, others on)he council have var~s_l>'. _augg!Sted cpmpromlse time limits Of two e.nd four years. Planning commissioners presently serve\for four yeari. The first seven coin· missioners drew lots to establish the length of their inlUal terms. Two com· missionen1 Harry Shuptrine and Wayne Clark dre\\' one year lots and Clark bas announced his resignation fro!J\ the com- mission effective Feb. 10. • Mayor Fischbach also has proposed limiting the number of commissioners to five. · - U tha tsuggesUon meets with the ap- proval of a council majority, at least one commissioner faces r,emoval from the planning body. Mayor Fischbach believes the council h~s a duty to review Its appointees at least once yearly. He suggeSts that if no appointee feels his job is to last more than a year, it will be easier to keep new -faces in city posts, making room for m_Qre _citi~ns t9 be involv~ iq their government, with fewer feelings being hurt. Councilman ~lenry Quigley, on the othe r hand, has suggested four year terms for planning commissioners noting he believes the present commissioners "have performed in exemplary fashion.'' Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor has said she would support a compromise two-year tenn. Neither J\1rs. Pryor nor Councilman Henry Quigley support tbe view that an· nual reviews and subsequent removals will seare the feelings of volunteers who are replaced. "Whether it is after one year or four years, it's all the same." Quigley said. Councilmen John Burton and E. Ray Quigley Jr. have expressed some concern over proposals for appointments to other city posts as well. Burton sought the council nod for the new Intergovernmental Coordinating Council of Orange Count y (lCCOC ) a post which went to Henry Quigley . Along with the discussion of terms of office, the. council is expected to consider naming a human relations commission, discuss the current status of other citizens advisory committees and· mull assignment <lf developm~nl of a park and acquisition program among other park related items. _..ease~ :Ire e 0 Final Jtespcts • Country Mourns ' Lyndon Johnson AUSTINj Tex. (UPI) -Th(O people who knew i..yndon B'. Johnson best -. his family, friends and neighbors fr.om the Texas hill countcy-flled past his body in -the-marbled.,..Gfeat Hall of the LBJ Ll- brary·today to ·honor and mourn the 36th U.S. President. (See. related stories, pic- tures, PalO t) * * * n~ath-f ojJ$,:r --·-... 'iBJ Promfse .. ·- To Countians By GEORGE LEIDAL Of lfli O.llr Piiot St1f1 Of the four promises made by the late PresidentLYOdon . John.sop--oil-various visits to the Orange Coast be lived only long enough to keep one of them. (See > pictures, Page 9.) Then vice president Johnson on Nov. 13, 1913, dedicated the Douglas Si>J<;e Systems Center in.fluntingtodBeacb-arid disCussOO the promise of man's ~quest of apace. 'Nine days later, the craggy Texan boarded Air Force One parked 'on a Dallu runway and took the oath of offi_ce ~mmllting him to )ulfill that promise alid others laid down by President John F: Ktnriedy. An assasairi's bullet hurled Johnson in- tol the " presidency and he ,assumed responsibility for Kennedy's com- mitment to place a man on the moon Within the decade. The crafty fonner congressional leader also assumed the burden of moving the Kennedy New Frontier legislation for· "8rd as the wellspring of }"bat LBJ was to•term "The Great Society:" Promise of that Johnsarr-drearh was spoken in what was to become the new city of Irvine on June 201 1964., months before his election to the blghest oHiCe in ~ land. The occasion was the dedication of the new 1,000-acre campus. •In the next decade, Johnson said he ex· peCt!I higher education in America "to cross many new frontiers and one of the m*t Critical is I.be frontier of the city !Ht. nNow 70 percent of our people live in 1 (Set PROMISES, Page I) • I ' iDogs ·Kill Pet; .. Willed Money • • 4 srA'l'£SVILLE, N.C. (AP) - Polly, i litlle furry white 1pl1Z, was ltllled .., -clop in lbe dog ~nd beiore Ille could begin ,... l°!!ng bei' -tlnce. Polly wu 111iu.CI an Income o1 14!11 .. )'Ur lroln -loft by bor ..... '11-yar-ald Ann lloblmon an, who lived alone and was ild dead In 'her home Ju. 12. Police said ibey coulcln~ reacb a vettrtnartan over lhe weetend anc1- 11tlihbon -keep P)ll)' len>-pororily. They said Ille dog WU Rllppin& at lhem -lheJ • """ rtrangon, .. Ibey mumed ber ml placed lier In 'tilt dot! pcund. ... Johnson, wh~se pursuit of the Vietnam war divided a nation to u hich be had pledged a "Great Society,'' died Monday of a heart-attack;---He-was 64. The tall Texan who desctibed the White House as the "lonely acres" was a man who loved and needed people. And they came to him toda; to pay their final respects. 11Ji ~ .wl\I :lit In llale In a gray me'41-l8llll •c\im 1'ST W.,.. day ·atlbe lop of~ alalra Jn lbe $talelf Greal Hall ol lbe lll.k1illlon Ubney lO f11111i GI a· blilcl< marble J>l'kln. SmarUy .mllonned members Of the 5th Army's "HeU on Wheels" Division stood by. . Johnson's widow, Lady Bird, 60, her two daughters and four grandchildren, accompanied the body In a motorcade. from the Weed-Corley Funeral Home to the library. They met solemnly by the catafalque before the public lying in stlite_.. _ " "I had just'"about-the-tougbest'"as~lgn­ . ment I've ever had," said Tom Johnson, an aide to the former President but no relaUon, who helped prepare the body for the ceremony, including dressing his fonner boss in a business suit. Jphnson was stricken during an af- ternoon nap Monday at l!J.s LBJ Ranch 65 nlilei: from Austin. Secret service agents rushed to help him. "They found the forrr.er President Johnson on the floor next to his bed. He was not movlng," said Tom Johnson. "He was lying <lD his back. An agent said he appeared dead. He . was dark blue in color. They administered oxygen and mouth to moulh resuscitation ... " On t~ black marble pylon rising above the cat.a!alque were these words: "I have followed the personal philosophy that I am a free man, an American, a public servant and a meinber ()f my rparty -in that order, always and only. "The Great Society asks not how much, but how good; not only how to create Wealth 6ut how to use it; not only how fast We are going, but where we are headed, It proposes as tl)e first test for a nation: 'The quality of il3 people.'1 Mrs. Charles Beckham of Smithville, Tex., was the first persoii in line during the morning ~o file past the casket. She took her four children, out of school and drove 50 mileS north. "I respect President Johnson," Mrs. Beckham said. ••1 was 11bout to lose my only child and he heipeo• bring my hus- band home (tom the military.'' A jetliner provided by Nixon will Oy Joh-'• body to Washington Wednes· (See JOJINSON, Page I) TEEN . GlRL GETS NOTE FROM LBJ ' Juat last Friday, former .Preside!lt Lyndon B. Johmon wrote a 1etter <to a lS- year old girl, telltna her th1t "every age· lllt'nll out to be a good age when· you reac:. it." Tbe Jetter was delivered to the home or Heidi L. Brown on Monday morning - the day of the former pn11dent'1 death. In tbe letter, Jobnlon wrote, "But, i( I were )'OU, I> would not evm think OOlf 1boolt tbe ponlblllly t1lll Die IMJ' begin 11 lo or ao or lhel It 11111 c111 be a great life even 1t It.'' See. tllis story, plus phologrepbs of the • former Jl!-and oilier stories ext Page t lodaJ. ....... · ...... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,-~~- I II • • '« .. c • FORt.IER PRE~IOENT PLAYS WITH GRANDSON -Petr)<!< ~yndon ·N~-Wlth--Gr111.dpo:on..LllJ Rone -' Irvin~. 'Citizens Gro~ps . 1~.. . ' ', ' . ' For General p:fun Told Members of the six citizens groups assigned to work on the l!vine general plan phase one program were a!DlOunced today. Each of the committees is made up of five members, each .appointed by a city councilman. The following is a list of the ap- pointees, by committee: CIRCULATION: Carl Morrison, Ton1 Glenn, Jerry Choyke, Joe Ball and Jerry Miller. Volcano Erupts On Tiny Island; . . ' 5,200 Evacuate V~TMANNAEYJAR, Westman Island (UPI) . .:_ This tiny island practically burst In two early today when the slumbering Helgafjell voicano erupted, sending the 5,200 inhabitants fleeing in panic, ' I : The vo!cano, which has been dormant since the Vikings landed on the island in 864 enipled sporadica11y during the ' night bul then woe to life shortly alter. midnlgbt, spurting fire and thousands of tons of molten lava into the skiea. ENVffiONMENT: Dr. Irwin Alber, Gen Clark/ Juanita Moe, Bill Littlefield and Virginia Harchol. . HOUSING : Steve DeLapp, Mary Ann Gaido, Will Heaton, Ed Haworth and LOwell Johnson. P 0 PU L ATION·ECONOMICS: Art Anthony, Charles Huegy, C. L. Clark, Angelo Vassos and Daniel Grubbs. PUBUC FACll.ITlES : Jim Thrash, Geor'ge Knowles, Kay McNaUy, Marsha Stolzoff and Pat Bonner. lJRBAN-DESIGN: Ja(lles Hewicker, Skip, Benei, · Art Danelian, Norrisa Brandt and Gordon U>hre. All COnuitittee members will be briefed on the .dulies of the' advisory panels in a special meeting called for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday .in city hall, 4201 Campus Drive. . The citizens groups will work with the city's general plan consi;ltants -Wilsey and Ham of South Pasadena -and tbe city planning staff, director Bruce War· ren noted. Later this year, the .,ihasc two advisory committee will be formed -drawing members from each of the community associalions in the cny. I Ba~hall Players ' . To Vi.Sit Viejo Ten hours' after the first eruption, the Java stream rolled over the airfield and Baseball players Bill Melton of the reached the ouLsklrts or the town of Chicago White Sos: and Larry Sherry, Vestamamaeyjar, where aeveral houses rormer Los Angeles l>odger, will appear were reported on fire. "'-•-'-! Nigh 8 M Ofllclals reported ~.71JO people were al ~ ......... ty t al p.m. on. evacuated by a fifft of 100 fiAblng boatl~ day at the Montano'.so Recreatioo Cen~er coastal ve,..ls ml altptalltl Alfd lo MlDlon Viejo, spoMOl'ed-by the helicopters from ~ykjavilt, the capital Mluloo Viejo Elk> Lodge 14«. of Iceland JO minutes O)'in& time away. a.at speaker f« the semi-annual and the U.Si navll bee at KeRavik. event wlU be John McDonough, -Nat!ooal They said there ,.. ... no casualtieS. foolball League olficlal. With tbe abfleld oul of 1<'\0ll the re-~tivt E1b members and their maJnlng 500 inbabllanll, many of thim flml1IOs are Invited to attend. reluctant to leave their homes, SOU&bt JWr.hmeots will be terved. • ·-in the barbor walllntt for !be·-BolhJle!i.tl ml Sherry.have hOmcs in (See VOLCANO, Pip i) Mission Viejo • Nixon Will Make Speech at 7 P.M. WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon will address the nation on radio and television tonight , probably to an· nounce a Vietnam cease-fire agreement. Wh.ite House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in making the announcement tliis afternoon of the broadcast, did not say specifically that Nixon would speak on a cease-fire. But all signs pointed to it. The St. Louis post-Dispatch reported from Washington today that Kissinger and Tho actually initialed the agreement. But when asi,ed ptil)l-blanl\ a\ Orly Fliold if' they liad .,_ '°• the jovial and smillll( Kisstnier re!II~: "I )ljve nothlll( lo 181·" · , , Ziegler .ur tbe sj>i;ech at 7 p.m., PS'l'. ...,. Is·~ •'•to report·on the status of the Vietnam negotiations." 1be speech will follow a meeting by Nixon, with Or. Henry A. Kissinger, his chief Vietnam negotiator y;ho was due back in Washington at 2:45 p.m PST · ,alter a three-boi.tr, 45-mlnute meeting in Paris today with Hanoi's Le Due Tho, The Paris meeting broke l:!P amid warm smiles and waves from both Kiss- inger and Tho. Kissinger~had been expected to remain in PariS for severaJ days. His quick return suggested that the final session of the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly. Ziegler said that prior lo Nixon's ad· Qress, h,e will meet at 5:30 p,m, PST with his • Cilbine~ and at 6 p.rn·. with a bipartisan group of congressional leaders. The latter are Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania; Senate Democratic _leader Mike Mansfield; Speaker· earl Albert, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and House Democratic leader Thomas P. O'Neill of Massachusetts. Ziegler also announced there will be a larger bipartisan congressional leadership meeting at 5:30 a.m, PST Wednesday. Ziegler declined !o say how long tonight's speech will be or to expand In any way on his terse annoWlcement. If as expected Nixon announces tonight an agreement has been reacbed1 It will come almost four years to the day from the first peace talks in Paris. It was on Jan. 26, 1969, that American, North Vietnamese, SOuth Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiators gathered at the Hotel MSjeatic in Paris to try to end the long; bloody war. Det.r.ils of the cease·fire agreement, not immediately made public, a re expected to closely parallel the nine-point accord tltat both aides nearly agreed on in October. '11lat called for the re tum of all U.S. prisonel'B of war and the withdrswal of all U.S. troops within 60 days. A ceMe·fire would take place within 24 hours of the formal signing, and an In- ternational supervisory team would go into Vietnam to police the cease-fire. The accor:d established a National Countil of Reconciliation made up of ·r·epresentaUves from the Saigon and 1 IRVINE STREET TO BE CLOSED ,-Har:varil -Avenue between Walnut Avenue and Moulton Parkway 1n tbe clly of tmne will be clostd for ~ reconllruetlon for 1 !O<lay period beginning Wedlletday. ~ Motor1ltl who ordlnarUy traversa Harvard abould ust CUiver Drive as an alternate north-south route, a city spol<esman said. J ' • Hanoi governments p I u s neutralists to supervise elections which would determine lhe political . future of Viet- nam . -(( -(( -(( V.S. Bombers Strike Red . Y .ift T,argets -. sAfGON (UPI) -South Vietnam's sec- ond largest city was ·on fUU alert toda3 Jn anticipation ot a cease-fire. U.S. w~rplanes, in what coWd be their final major action, pounded Communist posi· tions· with the heaviest bombings iii five months. More. than 450 planes hit targets in South Vietnam in a 24-hour period ending at 8 a.m. today, lhe U.S. command said -the largest number of raids 0\1er the soulh ID a s.lngle day since Augus~ .. Amel'l caii planes also bombedtt~-Ho Chi Minh Trail compler in Llfi._ and targets in Cambodia today; the coritlhand said. The government of Nguyen Van .Thieu ordered the city of Da Nang on alert. and announced additional measures designe(l to crack down on possible Communist ac- tivity during a cease-.fl.re. Correspondent Alan Dawson ht Da Nang reported 5,000 Americans at tbt ' sprawllng Allied air base and its 8UI'· rounding area had been ordered on "gray" alert with no travel in town eJ· cept on officia: business. Ground actiotl was relatively quiet throughout Vletnanf today. Tlie South Vietnamese command repcrted· only 52 Communist-initiated incidents, 42 of \Vhich were shellings, in the 24 hourS end- ing at dawn. One week after bomt.:n3 of North Viet- n .. 1 was halted by President Nis:on, the command said American fighter- bombers flew 374 sorties and 1352 boml:iers flew 'J:r missions, averaging three planes «!Ii~ over Sduth Vietnam. Jn seven -da)'I, .American flghter- bombers have flown (m sorties -one mission py one plane -and the B52s have flown ~ three-plane missions, ac· cording to ~mmand statistics. Oraa1e Coast Weatller Sunny skies are oo the agenda for Wednesday, with diminishing northeast· winds, according to the weatberlady. Highs of 68 at the beaches and 70 Inland are expected. Lows lon1'bt, a cblJJy 3&-13. INSIDE TOlti\ \' A shotgul'HOiclding T o p e k o man ooe1 btr1trlt and kills five ptrsom in Mt ritiohborhood, within •IQht o/ I~~ 1tot• Capitol, btfort turning' th' gun on him. stif. Police a.re tnt1td/Ud. See ttory o-riPage 4. f IJAllY Pllb 1 AllAMTIC OCIAH YlSTMANNAIYJAI Uf'I T.-..... TINY ISLAND NEAR !CELANO NEARLY BURST' IN TWO 5.000 lnMbltant1 FIM Spurting Fire, L1v1 Flow Summer Scl1ool Study Session Set for Irvine A special study session on Summer School 1973 in the lrvine Unified School District Ylill be conducted by trustees at 6 p.m. Wednesday in room.: 19 and to ~t t;nlversity Park Elemenlary School m Irvine. Although the Irvine Unified District doesn't become fully operalional Wltil Ju· ly I, it will have to administer summer classes in the area schools lhis year. Superinteoclent Stan Corey has been consulting \9llb area scbo· I principals on possible programs. He will present pro- posals for discussion Wt · 1ay. Tbe regular meellng of the board is scheduled following the study SCS!lion. Irvine District trustees are en- couraging residents lo attend the study session, as well as the business meeting. Also an Wednesday's agenda are: -A report on the seiectioo by UniV1?rsi- ty lligb S<hool student body of Craig Mitchell and Joni WertJ as student repre- sentaUves to the board. -Discussion of a pupil peM!OMe.I date -Discussioo of a pupil penonne.l data Grove UnWed School District. -Presentation by architect George Knowles . Arizona Tough On Marijuana PHOENIX. Ariz. (AP) -The Arizona Supreme Court has ruled that Arizona's drug problem justifies classlfyi.Dg mari- juana as a "narcoUc drui" with tough penalties upon convJctlon. A Coconino County Superior Court judge sentenced Lee Anthony Wadsworth to five yeal"3 in prison for fllmilhing marijuana. Wadsworth's attorney ap- pealed lbe conviction, saying it was too hanb for the crime. But the Supreme Court differed, also saying that the mandatory three-year prison term in Arizona for the offense is valid. Justict James Duke Cameroo wrnte the unanimous Supreme Court opinion which pointed out that the use of mari· juana in Arizona "is widespread" and harsh penalties may "discourage Its con- tinued use ... " SF Protest Routed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI f -Police were summoned Monday to r o u t a peaceful demonstration outside the Soviet consular mission. About 100 persons marched around the Russian quarters to protest the Kremlin's controversial education tax on emigrants. " DAILY PILOT '""ar...., C-1 DAll'I' Pit.OT, wll!I W111c11 h ~ tti. N_p._ .. h ~ltllld by ll'lt Or•llOt c .. ,, Pwlllh.lilng C~v. s_. ,. ..... , .. 11'• Mll1l>tll, Mond1y ltttw;J'I Frlffr. for Cosl• Meo•. Newiiort Dtlth HWI""""' 8t.O/FO\lf!11i" V•lley, L...,,.~ htdl, lrw ... IS•ddltt>:itk and Sii\ C"'"-"t11 Sa" J111n C1plltr-A Jlf191• r19iat\1l edition II Plllllllhfd '-lllfdlYt l'ld Sl.lrld1y,, ri. 1Wlnclptl pull1!1J'l'"9 llllint t1 •I m W~I 811 $11'tott, Cbtl• M-.1. C1llhlml1, fltM. llto\itrf N. W11d '°'"ld1n1 •l'ld P11t1lhllfl" J1ck It C11rl1y Viet ,, .. ldwlt ffld O.,.,r•I MIMftt tho1t1•• K•••il ...... thoM11 A, Mur,ftino M--.lftt ldllor 0 1rttt H. loo1 •ld"'4 P. Nell Aall&IMI ~ !•lllrt --Clsto Maa: »t Wtll toy ~ ....,.., .._, Im ,,....,, ... ....,.,.. 1..,.,,.. 11tc:t1i m ,..,.., ... _ ,...,..,,.._ 9ttd!1 UWJ aoecti ............ $M °"'*"ti • ,..,.,.. I.I~ Ill ... Ttl1J•111 1714) 14MIZ1 ti nM.4.Alwlfth ... '41·1671 S.. C ....... .Al a.,atMl!h: , •••••••• 4f2-442t ~. ltn., Or.... CMt1 P\IMtlJlllll CMINfrr. ... .... llOl'ltt. lt1w!,.lllM. ........ MIMr tr .. -.rti-n ...... _., .. ~ -""*" ..... ,.,. ...... ., Clllt'filfll ._.,, ,.._.._~NMolCMtt~ ~ MlctltflM W a"ttr PAI ......-L llr f'M!ll II.It n.-1r1 "'1111.,., .... -AAS "'*"'""'· I\ From Page 1 VOLCANO .. : evacuation vessels lo take then1 out of lhe area. Officials :said the island could explode and disappear in lhe sea. The eruption opened up a widening rift across the island. ~·hich is 2"1 miles wide and five miles long. The rift was nearly two miles Jong and reached from the volcano in a curve out to the AUAntic Ocean. At first, many older people refused to leave their homes but officials said they changed their minds when they saw the lava stream rolling toward the town. Authorities Oew polict and ~ue workers into ~ island during the early morning hours and in Reykjavik, schools and hospitals Were readied to take care or the evacuees. In 196.1, a similar eruption created the nearby island of Surtsey. Swiss Let Franc Float; Dollar Loses Support GENEVA (UPI) -The Swiss National Bank withdrew support of the dollar to- day to stop speculation In the buying of Swiat francs . The dollar dropped Oil other European money markets. The me.asure perm.Itted the Swiss franc to float on the open market and commer- cial banks accepted only small amounts of dollars and other currencies. European banking sources said that the move L9 probably temporary. A di· rector ol. the Swiss Natiohil bank, Michel de Rlvaz, said in Zurich that the bank is oot planning to let the franc float more than a few days. In Paris, the dollar dropped to 5.05 francs today oo the free money market compared with Monday 's 5.09 closing rate. French bankers attributed the drop to the Swiss refusal to support the dollar. "It appears to be another European speculative attack on the dollar," a French banking SOlJru said, The Swiss National Bank, acting with the seven-member cabinet in Be.m, de-- cided to stop buying dollars at the official rate or 3.75 francs after a heavy influx of foreign currencies Monday. The dollar opened today at 3.68 Swisa francs and closed at 3.70 francs . "But pendlng developments we are ac-. cepting only small amount.8, mostly from tourists who need to change money," Lloyd's Bank in Geneva said. Today's move mea nt an upward revalu- ation of the Swiss franc , which already went up in value last year. ''We have to make allowance in pres- ent trading for another JJOS5iblc revaluit- tion," the Lloyd's officials said. Nuclear Plants Go Underground? SAN DIEGO (AP) -Underground nuclear power plants might be safer than surface stations during an earthquake, a California Institute of Technology research engineer says. ~fartin Goldsmith told an Atomic Energy Commission board Monday that underground facilities would not be sub- ject to the violent shaking many surface buUdJngs undergo during a quake because of the nature of seismic waves. The AEC board is reviewing a Jolnl Southern California F.dison Company and San Diego Gas ~ Electric Company pnr posal to add two additional units to the present San Onofrt Nuclear power sla-tion. , The waves, Goldsmilh said, stress the "limberness" or surface structures by the way they move over the earth'!I surface, causing the mkJdle and upper storie1 of tall buildings to shake mort violently than the ground Door or base- ment. Goldlmlth said his thoory h•s not been proven but Ni •tressed that It WU I ponlblllt)c The" only way 10 prove the theory, he said, waa to build an un- derground facility . '111le ultimate practicality of un- derground nuclear 11tations can only be determined by actually building one." C'TOldamllh said, "but our 1tudlrs have found so far no l11$Unnountable dlf- llculUea." I ,.,.....,. ... J JOHNSON ••• .. day. The ...at wtll be llJ<en to the C.pltol, where the bodJI will lie ID •late ID the rotuodl 11DW '111undiy, followed by l\lntral oervtca 1t the NaUOllll Ctly CllrilU111 Cll=h. I 45-15 Poll To Be Sent To Parents • The body theo will be llown bid< to TtxlS for I ftnll --Ind burtl1 1\ 3:30 p.m. Thursd1y In !he lamlly cemetery on the banks ol the Pedemales River , a quarter-mile h'om the LBJ Ranch. "These plans represent the wishes of the family," Tom Johnson said. Of Mrs. Jolwon, he said, "I would' delCflbe her condition as ""'l' sturdy. She b boldln& up very well:" 1 The Capistrano Unified School District'• profesaionally·worded poll on 41>1,5, all-year-school, will be malled to hundreds ol paren!a 1tortlng late !hi~ week in a final effort to sample publlti oplnlon of the c.'ODtrovental lde1. President Nixon proclaimed nuznday as a national day or mournlnj. · The President, in a public proc- lamation and in a messa.ae to Coo&ms. form1Uy annowx:ed the death of the 31th P:esldent. Nixon issued an e1.ecutlve order re- quiring closute of au federal agencies, except for tbi»t lnvolverl with the na- tional security, OD Tburtcby-the day of the funeral. The Pruldent dil;oet<d that lligs he disployed at hall stall for 30 days. District Director of Admlnistratlv• Services Joe Wimer 1a1d parents of students In grades frorii Kindergarten through sixth grade will receive the sampllna packet In the mail and only one "ballot" per household will be oent. The samplln1 Include> clttalled literature on lhe 4$-15 proposals, u well as a simple questioonaire prepatt<:I by volwtteen at cat State Fulfertoo - persons ll<llled It public opfnlon llm- plJng, Wimer said. The deadline for return of the com- pleted questlonnaim Is Feb. e, ..,d aelf· addressed, stamped envelope• will be provided to each parent. ' The New York and American stock ex- changes said they . will close Thursday in observance of the mourning day. Regular mail deliveries will be can· celed for the day. ''The whole story of the Johnson years in the White House remains to be told, 8JJCf history has ye! lo make its judg· ment," Nlioo said in bis message to Congrw. Wimer said that the entire package of data was complied and then approved by a panel of volunteers representing the district, the citizen's alJ..year-ec;hool oom- mit~ee and the groups opposing the con- cept to place youngsters wider a J2· month-a·year edllc1Uonal scbedulia with-< 4.l 9l:bool days and 15 vacalloo dlys lD contlnuoui success.ion. "But millions or Americans will always remember a bitter day in November. 196.1. when so many of our people doubted the very future of this Republic, when so many were stwmed at the very idea that an American chief of state could be assassinated in thi.s age, and so many abn>ad were fearful about the future course of the American democnC)', And Lyndon Jobmon .... above the doubt and the fear to bold !hlJ natk>o on course until we rediacovered our faith in ounelves." Gerald L. Wamn, deputy White House press secretary, said Jobnloo'a widow and members of the family would stay at Blalr House, the White House iuest house, while in Washlngton Wednesday and Tbunday. Warren said Nli:on will send his "Spirit of '76" jet~ -the same plane !h4t Johmon used during hb presidency -to bring Johnson's body to Waahlngton. Frot11 PflfJfl J PROMISES •.. LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON-1908-1973 Former Pre1ident 0..d of Heart Attack at Rench Sea Laboratory Funding Sought for Dana Point By CANDACE PEARSON Beaches and Parks Department is "We came to a total qreemeat on · all the materials so there shouJdn't be any problem about how the survey wu word-- ed or how it will be counted," Wimer said. Trustees have agreed that !hlJ latest "professional" poll will be the final at· tempt to seek public opinkn before a IU11l declaloo 11 Dllde oo lhe ~ Thus fu the lllpport for 4$-U bem rather dismal. 1 U a "aignlflcant" percentqe of favorable COlllllllllll ClD!DeS. from tht latest 1UDpUnc, --have said !hey will consider a pilot program at Viejo School, where present overcrowding threatens to end the school's •innovaUve, open-classroom concept. ot "'° o.wv r111t 11.tt grading the area and marking It with 70 Orange County Department of Educa· to 75 campsites to provide overnight Racial Jnqwry' lion officials are testing the waters of beach camping. charitable foundations In attempts to get The Dana Point c~mpgrounds will be funding for a proposed $1 million on-p lists a . shore marine science laboratory at Dana open in early spring. ane ftJm Harbor. U plans go lhrougb, the on-shore "We bave two years to find the marine sciences building will replace the La , b N money," said Don Macl..ean, ad-current one<lassroom complet. at the XJ.ty y . avy ministrator of the county's marine harbor. where the county department's science programs. "Ooating laboratory1" the Fury U, is WASlllNGTON {UPI)_ A Heme~ About '350,000 I.< needed to buUd the docked. ed servt<es subcommitlee that inv~- needs are immense. But, just as our col-fint Increment of the 40,000-square foot "It's going to be a neat thing," gated ncial inciderits abOard two al.tcraft leges and universities changed the future bull•u .... ..1 .... .....t at••· west end of Dana tr1acLean enthused. ....... .. .-... ,,.... • ., that ~ "'' ti ol our farms• century ago, ID !hey can """'..,.,.,.. ~ carrien -•-..._, -·~vy help change the future of :'cl ·cilia:," Harbor next to the fishing pler at the · To be open 18 hours a day, seven days fQ1'J*!w¥1....,.... a ad UJ'll!!i said the n-ldent •ho t·• a .. __ 'basO! of" llie blulls. ' · ' " "' i week, It will hou>e nine distinct pro-!hat ,.Ml~ be ........i, ; for 8 politi;i ~. ~· __ .._.. Cuunty educaUon oU!Cials, led by grams in coastal and marine educatkm.. The ~~filtlt~ took 74 ~ "I have come to C&lifornia to uk you MaclA!an, bave made preliminary con-"From the open seit all the way to the of cloeed-door testimclly lut year, 11'1 to throw off your doubts about America. tacts with naUonaJ organizations like first mountain range -the innuence of it wu unable to find any cae of. racial Help us demonstrate to pie world that Rockefeller Foundation, Ctmegie Foun-the ocean doesn't stop at the seashore," discrlm!Dltion that could have p.reclpita!f- people of compassion and commitment dation and the -U.S. Department of said MacLeap., an ~ographelj ed whltJt called a. "riot" aboatd the ~--!heir fell Health, Education and Welfare. Th 'I In d I " U~ Kit ... !lfawk Oct. 12 and a alt-iD can ,,= ow citizens from the Meanwhile, ~he department has 8 two-e bu1 d, I esign inc udet three aboard .~~ USS Cooatef1Ation Nov. 3 and bonds of injustice, the prisoo3 of poverty 1 . bu laboratories,· a large aqua r I um ,' wn;: ua and the chains. of ignorance," Jobnson year ease, option-le> Y on the land at auditorium, four to five classrooms, 4. • the harbor. hot hy d · kroo !fl ba "The riot oo the Kltty Hawk cooat.oted. said. In the interim, the county Harbors, P ograp ar m, 0 ces, se-I Although the Johnson administration ment researcf} area for 1raduate of unprovoked uaaulta by ._ very ew studenu, bookstore and artificial men, mG'!tfof whom .were of below·aver- was to foster more Jeglslation to meet tidepool. age mental capacity, most of whom b'4 these promise" than any other in history, weekend ClaSSCS Marine science education programs in been aboard for less than ooe year and Johnson's recard. was to be cast in the co1.a1ty department begao in 1967 with all « whom wue black," Chl1rmlh deeper doubt~ by the Vietnam War. u d { S h } a three-year federal grant, given on the Floyd V. Hicks (D-Waab.) aald. ' In November of 1967, Johnson again rge Or C ()0 S condition !hat tbe department establish Hicks said hb special thrte-man ! v~ited the Orange Coast. l'hb time the the !easibillty of a fioatinfl lab. committee also found that the Oonltel • SACRAMENTO (AP) -A s an Jose MacLean says the cowity proved the lion sit·in was "the result of a caref place was El Toro Marine Corps Air Sta-legislator has . proposed weekend cl85.5E!S feasibility and prepared for the end of orchestrated demcnstraUon of pual Uon and lhe occasion was the 192nd f bl ' boo ·•-••--b ddln II ther reslstance where a a mall number/I. birthday of the U.S. Marine Corps. or pu 1c sc Is. u1t1 WJJ.ci:: years ya g ve o pro-;i-. Assemblyman John Vasconcellos (0-grams. blacks, probably Im than 20 to "1, f Three months later be returned to EI San Jose), who introduced the bill Mon· These include the on-shore facility, tered and encouraged among other bllcliJ Toro. On Feb. II, 1968, a now "worried" day, said It ls needed to give school special marine research workshops, slide the idea that wlite racllm WU <of "'4e President Johnson wished Godspeed to districts more scheduling flexibility. presentations in the scboob, teacher in-extent in the Navy and ~¥, Camp Pendleton's 27th Regimental Land· Pupils still would have classes only five service training and instructional abo&rd the CooltellaUOD,'' 1.~ f ing Team as they left for Vietnam. days a week, be said. materials. · Hicks, in remarks publ.iahed today la "This is a decisive time in Vietnam," The bill could be used, for example, to "We knew someday the districts (In-the Coagresslonal record, al1d Ult llli- he said. *'The eyes of the nation and the enable high school students to work part-dividual school districts) would have ta committee found that the vast major!:~ entire world ·-the eyes of history itself(" time jobs whlle having some weekend pay -make It a pay-as-you-11:0 opera-of Navy men are per.forming their d be said prophetically, "are on· that brave classes. lion ,'' MacLean said. "loyally and efficently;" • band of defenders who hold the pass at I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;~1 Khe Sanh and the area around it. 11 "We do not doubt the outcome. The ~ enemy's tide will be broken . . . , "l have asked you to go and help them . , I know you will do your duty. May God. \ bless and keep each of you. MEASUR 0 SURE 1 ~:ee =~ ~oJ~~~ :O~ :' ~~~ E F R TREA I Johnson said. But. it was to be another President J who would bring home most of the SQl\,000 troops Jobmon committed to the defense of Southeast Alia. And, on the occasion of his ll!t birth- day, President Richard M. Nixon en- tertained LBJ at the We.stem White House in San Clemente. . It was on this August 27, 191'9 visit that LBJ made his last promise to the Orange Coast, a promise he wouldn't keep. "Yes, it is real pretty here In Orange County. "Maybe now that I'm a private citizen, 1 can come back and be just like the rest of the tourists and take a closer look at the area." Noddins tc-President Nixon at a luncheon In LBJ'• honor at La Casa Pacifica, Johnlon said, "He carriei the burden now. I can do as I please. I think 1 will come back lo Orange County," he said. He never did. Loopholes Attacked WASl!INGTON (UPl) -Sen. Edmund S. Mu1kie (0-M>llfe) propooed tod1y to modify or tllm!oate tax lhelten which olttn enable wealthy people. to pay a smaller percentqe of their Income in taxes than ts Pakt by wage-earners. ~'uskle's pf'Ol)OSlh for 24 revl1lona In the tax laws would Increase by •11.1 billion a year by 1975 the tues paid by !he rich and by corporaUoM. ( , One factor overlooked liy customers In buying carpeting is the measuring for yardage. All of our Salesmen know how to measure ind figure exact yardage, often providing our customers substantial savings in y1rd1ge 1lone. Also, with the tremendous installation ex- perience our salesmen have {each previously was an e1pert installer for us) •. we are ible to fors~e 1ny potential problem. Pluso stop in and look •I tho tr.Hurn 1v1il1blo to you through our stol'9. W1 hive • gig•ntic sal1ctlon, and t+.1 mHsuring wlll be ACCURATE I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES '-"'·:.r., R --r1· 1 l·.'., .u ~~~ 11111,11 . '.. ' ----1 j ' • -· c -.,.. l ---• ~ -.... IN -· ..... llNCI ltll -- 1663 l'lacHtla Ave. COSTA MISA 64M8JI HOURS: Mon~'l'ltrv Thlll'I. f to 5:30 -FRI. f te 9 -SAT. 9.:30 to s '· • ' • • l I • • 7 ' • . DuJJtin1tton Beaeh .. F~D_.D_:(ain . valley 1 Today's 't'lnal N.Y. Stocks -·* -* * VOJ.. .66; NP. ·23, 2 SECTIO~S. 26 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY,/CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1973 TEN CENTS I ' '. • . 'I • f!.S. Mourns Lyndon Johnso~ ~s Death . , Uf'I T ..... '9 ' ' ' l . ., .. , L"'YNDON BAINES JOHNSON-1908-1973 'Former PnsJdent Dead of He1rt Attack at Ranch l• • lsl~d -~ea~ly in Half . . ,( . ' I 1 • t, ' t ' • '• I 'VESTMXNNAEYJAR, Iceland (UPI-) first as the volcano' spurted thousands of -More ,than s.• pertot!s Oed their · tons of burning'lava, stones and ashes ln- ti<mbllnll•llOd 1moldng il!8nd liolne. o)f . to the darkened skies and oj>ened a IcelaM'a SOU:them ·coast'°'tOdly after the steadily widening rift across the island. Heliafjell -: enipted and prac-,The deadly· lava -rolling down tldlll!! ~ island in """ tbe . Helgafjell, eztendb)g nearly two ~ wM' rnllowecf up Wbeb the · miles ·from tbe volcano to the .coastline lfOllDll""': wit °"8n on a : hillslae arid and pr;actically cqfliftg ·the island iq two, llames ·and molten lava were thnlst more just missed the town but some houses on than' 100 ym* Into the air. the OUlsJtirts Wert ... <ll1 fire. '"80$ .there wen ho personaJ injuries, The eruption continued unabated more Mayor Mapus ·MaldusSon said'.. • than 10 hours after the volcano came to ·Gebloitlsts 1 ~ fears' that the life for th! first time in maybe 5,000 or · llland, J .5 miles wide and five miles long, 6,000 years. rbay, pplD<te and disappear in the Allan-The islanders, many of whom agreed Uc. .to evacuation· only reluctantly, were fer- :JJut. Jocal .. offlcials in• Vestmannaeyjar rif!(i. iicross ·to Iceland In a ,surprisingly said. they1 bellayed the 'eruption would sm.ooth operation In tffi:!. ,early morning sub41de aoct the islanders Wi:luld be able hours. A fleet of ·more than 100 fishing · t.ct-return home. · bOats, coastal vesse1s, coast guard cut- ' A • few hllndred 'persons, mostly fcfs and airplanes and helicopters from ~men, police and rescue workers, re-the U.S. Navy base at Keflavik got more rijalDed behind to patrol the deserted. than 5,000 persons out within a few hours. ~ wllh the ground trem~Ung under Many fled dressed only in pajamas. ~ feet. Vestmaonaeyjar is IceJand's They locked their houses and drove to iJilrd blgg..t city and the f~ !'Jl'ital t"': ~rbor wbect 1.bfY parked their. cars . Al tbe nation. -..: and went aboard tbci rescue ships. 'ii]: erup\Jon came in the middle of ,the In the capllal \ ol Reykjavik\ scjlools and created prujlC tn tlie st!iets'a) ' · · ·(See VOU::ANO, Page Z -:r. ' .,, ,,._~~~~_;_...,.~_,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,.__, l t. I ( ,. " l ' - I ' .. ~ .. All~IC ~IAll UPI T91 ..... t TINY llUHD. NMR ICI~ NEARLY 'IURST· IN TWO 5.0lll.JJlhaltllonta Fleo 5;.lrtl .. ~ U.. Flaw • -. ,._USTJN, Tei. {UPJ) -The people The tall Texan who described the who knew Lyndon B. Johnson best -his White House as lhe "lonely acres" was a ramlly, friends and neighbors from the man who lovt:.;and needed people. And Texas hHI country-filed-past hla body In the marbled Great Hall of the LBJ Li-they came· to · toda; to pay their final brary lnday to bonor and mourn the 36lh respects. , U.S. President. (See related stories, plc-His body will lie in state in a gray tures, Pages 3 and 9.) metal casket uritll 6 a.m. PST Wednes- Johnson, wh.!se pursuit of the Vietnam day at the top of the s t a i rs in the waT Oivlde<r a natiOitlO""i1hlcDlie ~stately Great Hall of the $18.6-mtltion pledged a "Great Society," dled 'Monday library in front oi a black marble pylon. of a heart attack. He was 64. . Smartly .miformed members of the 5th Army's "Hell on Wheels'' Division stood by. . Johnson 's widow , Lady Bird, 60, her two daughters and four grandchildren, accompanied the body in a motorcade from the. Weed-COrley Funeral Horne to the library. They met solemnly by the catafalque before the public lying in state. "I had just about1 the toughest assign- ment I've ever had," said Tom Johnson, an aide . to the former President but no relation, \Vbo helped prepare the body ror the ceremony, including dressing his former boss i.n a business suit. Johnwn was stricken during an af- ternoon nap Monday at hi:i LBJ Ranch 65 nlile!: from Austin. Secret service agents rushed to help him. "They found the forrr.er President Jqhnson on the floor~next to his btd. He was oot moving1" said Tom Jolmson. ,;He 1"lS lying on his-back. An agent said (See JOHNSON, Page Z) Peace Possible Today • Nixon to Address U.S. At 7 P.M. on Television • BULLETIN PARIS. (AP) -Henry A. Kiss inger 8Dd Hanoi's l:.e Due Tito lntUaled a Viet- nam peace qreement ioday abortly be- rere IOnlDger Bew back lo Washington to report lo Pretldent Nixon, reliable ' . sourcet reported. WASHINGTON (UPI ) -President Nixon will address t.he nation on radio and teJevision tonight, probably to an- nounce a Vietnam 'tea.Se-fire agreement. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in making the announcement this afternoon of the broadcast, did not s8.y specilically that Nixon would speak on a cease-fire. But all _signs pointed to it. (Related story, Page 3.) The St. icws Post-Dispatch reported from Washington today that Kissinger and 1bo actw.illy initjaled the agreement. uu• ~ .-...~~r •:'l•k .... Qrty F'le!GK they_~ ao, the jovial and ~ ~ replled: "l"boff' notbtnf·Jo -r:"' . Ziegler Mid the speech at 7 p.m. PST Is de!i'gqecl ''tO repotl on the status of tile V.ietnam· negotiations.'' The speech will folJOW a meeting by Nixon wltb Or. Henry A. Kissinger, his chief Vietnam negotiator "\\"ho was due back Jn Washington at 2:45 p.m PST after a fbiee-bour, 45-minute meeting in Paris today with Hanoi's Le Due Tho . The Paris meeting broke up amid warm smiles and waves from both Ki.st- inger and Tbo. · Kissinger bad been expected to remain in f"aris for several days. His quick Three Trustees Seek Re-election 111, Huntington All three incumbent school board members whose tenns expire this year in the Huntington City School District have filed as candidates in the April school board election. With the filing of Dale Bush, Steven Holden and Jack Clapp, the Huntington Beach elementary district becomes the first district within the Huntington Beach Union High School District to have all three. incumbents seeking re-election. Each of the reriiaining -five districts in west Orange O>unty also has three seats available In the election, but many of the board members whose terms are running out have .not yet indicated whether they will seek re-election. R. James Shaffer, president of the . Ocean '(iew School District board of trustee&, ii t b i cxily incumbent to an- nounce that .be will not seek re-election. Deadline for ftling candidacy papers is Feb. 16 at the county Registrar of Voters oClice, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Santa Ana. The election will be held Aptil 17. • return suggested that the final session of the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly. Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ad- dress, he will meet at 5:30 p.m. PST with his Cabinet and at 6 p.m. with a bipartisan group of congressional leRders. The latter are Senate GOP leader liugh Scott of Pennsylvania; Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield ; Speaker Carl Albert, House Republican leader Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and House Democratic leader 'Illomas P. O'Neill of Massachusetts. Ziegler also annoWlced there will be a larger bipartisan congressional leadership meeting at 5:30 a.m~ PST Wednesday. Ziegler declined to say bow long (See PEACE, Page Zl ' • • Swiss .Qank's ' . ' . ' Withdrawal Htirts Dollar GENEVA (UPI) -The Swiss National Bank:""wilbdrew support of the dollar t~ day to stop speculatioo in the bu.Ying of SW. francs. The dollar drapped on other European money markets. 1be measure pennltted the Swiss Crane to float oo lbe open market and commer- cial benks accepted only small amounts of dollars aod other currencies. European banking sources said !bat the move Is probably temporary. A <\i· rector of. the Swisl National bank, J.licbel de Rivaz, said tn Zurich !bat the bank is not planning to let the franc float more than a few days. In Paris, the dollar dropped to 5.05 francs today OD the free money market compared wilb Monday's 5.09 closing rate. French bankers attributed the drop to the Swiss refusal to support the dollar . "It appears to be another European speculative attack on the dollar;• a French banking IOUree saJd. The Swiss National Bank, acting with the seven-member cabinet in Bern, de- cided to stop baying dollars at the official rate o! 3.n frlncs alter a heavy influx of foreign cumocles Monday. The 'dollar oP<Ded lnday II Utl SW. francs and c!Olied at 3.70 francs. "But. pending developmeott we are ac- cepting only small amounts, mootlY !run tourists who need to chanie money,'' Lloyd's Bank tn G<neva said. Today's move meant an W'Ward revalu- ation of the Swiss franc, wblcb already went up In value last year. "We have to make allowance in pres· ent trading for another possible revalua- tion," the Lloyd's officials said. FTC Seeks TV Bari on Product w ASHING TON (UPI) -The Fedlral Trode Commwlon told COOjiress to- day the legal dcfinitiOo of a clgare«e lhotild be chlnged to Include "litUe c;pn• -aod tbDJ put an end to rodlo and telev1llclt commerlcal1 for the products. · Friday, the amiual surgeon general's ..,...i an -,. said "little cigars " are probably as muc1I a be&llh'hazard 11 dgaetlet -.-ers usually inhale them. Twn -ka ago, Se!. Frllli: E. -, (0.lltah), announced plans to·in\toduce' legillatlon to ban ---for lbe cicars, The FTC said there has been a boom In "little dpr" broadcaat advert\!; Ing U..-past year, and inore lhan two -•llriifles at the ~ are behll marketed. Moot reoemble cigarette• in me, ..,. llld dellln. but are wr•pped in .......Ututed tobacco rather than pap<r, al tbull eo<ape Oie legal definition of a cigarette. "The OOIJlltllsolon belleYts that ~ ,podtflie Interest -Id be better &erVed If Ille dcfinl1ion "bl lbe term •ctprette ; .• -. amended," lbe FTC said. •• .-.. 4 HENRY llllSSINGER AND· HANOI'S LE DUC THO-SHAKING'ON ITI. P•-N.,.il1tor.-Wroath0d'ln Smll••"ollowl"' P1l'ls T1llu. ' County 'Life' League Calls Ruling 'DepFessing' ' ' • Mondiy'a far·reaCfilng: U.S. Supreme Court nding OD abortion was described as ''Very depressing" today by the presi- dent ol. the Orange County chapter of the RlPt ' To IJfe League of SOUthem calilomia. (Related story, Pag• S.) Mra. J-F. Sullivan of 1703 Gibson Circle, Huntibgton Beach, said, "Beacuse the nine members ol the U.S. Supreme Court cannot alfl't" when life begin! this does not change the fact !bat the nnbom child II a human being and ls always the victim killed in an abortion." and service to vn of the ruling. "In .. Illa ~ will ~llnue to emphaalze tb&•_r.:abortion Is legal it does n6t ~follow thlt lt is right, even if ·ibortion il'legat it ·does not follow that a woman must submit.to abortion, and it (See ABORTION, Page II ·0i:aa11e The bead of the anti-abortion group wa.s referrtng to a 7-2 declaion which bars states Crom interferln1 with the -Weatller decisk:ln oC a woman and her doctor to end pregnancies within ~ fltllil ~lhre=e_, __ S!!!lllYJilll>s ace. on lhLa&enda-_ months~ for Wed~~ay. with diminishing .Mr..s. SuUivan, who claims a mem· northeast wlnds, act.'Ordlng to the bership of l ,IXXI for the Orange COUnty weiit!>IJ;lady. Hlghs ol 61 at the cliapter, Slid the R1gbt To Life League beache9-and 70 lnllllld ore expected. would redO,.ible Ill e(lotts ~ education Lows ~lght1 a illy ~- Principal Selection Expected Tonight -oLllla fftm!~ Beadt Ct!Y ~ Diltrict 1re •!l*k!d to name • prlndpe1 for the dlolrid'a new middle ~ I& &Mir ....... '9ftilht. The -. II-SdtoOI, whlc:b ~ ICbedulod to opoD Jn ~ber Is Cll~ reotly undor conatructlon oa Indlanapolls Avenue betwteD Bulbanl &Od Brookbunt st ... i.. . 'lbO -l bclu.i•-tlng will be i.111 at 7:10'p,m. ln 'tbo 'llbta1Y ol Dwyer School, 1182 Palm Ave. · INSIPt: 'l'OD" Y A 1hotgurMft1Wing T o p t k o .... Jib<• bon<TI< 11!14 kllb fjoi J)<ncms In 1111 Mighborlwod, ~~~ ~~ ~ ·::.~ ;~~ self. Poll<O on 1llfld/ifd. 5., SIOrfl Oil Page 4. L.M. ~ ' 1t ·-I =---: Clu:as• • •• !!!!!.!!"'-• ;;;;;;. ,,... . ........ , .. -"..... . .. ~ ,., ........ ' 11w .... • M -~ 'H' =n. 1: ...... , ...... _._ . IMf"ll ""'' ..,. Mlrtlett •n -. -. -' ............ , .. "' --. .I I.II , ~I "' ' r.,....,ie/ ''"°'"J II 11 .! -' - Weekend on the Slopes Proves Real Snow Joh By T£RRY OOVILLE Of .. o.ll't PiliM ... T may not be as graceful as Jean-Caude Killy. I don't even rate a refer· ence as a "ski bum." but I definitely have beei1 bitten by the snow bug. J got my first taste of skiing last weekend at Blc Bear. Taste? It was more like a mouthful of snow. I burrowtd more tunnels than a mole. I reduced the mountain to a mole hiU. DON'T LET anyone kid you. There's oothlng .-~reshing than a frosty smile, two rows of frozen teeth and a stiff tongue. I alJo found out why tome guys still run around with crew cuts. Even a hot comb falls mberably against a batch ol Ioog, rroun balr. Tile ski trip begao badly. Fools wW tell you it's only a two-hour drive to Big Bear. It took wi nearly five hours Friday night. Four would-be skiers set out ln my brother-In-law's Vega . Safely tucked inside the car was a brand new set. of lire chains !or the icy road. cov1u.• A SALES SLIP guaranteed us we could return the chains if they didn't fiL That's small comfcrt hallway up the mountain, icy wind ripping at your light clothing. Tue chains can qtllckly reduce neophyte snowmen into a pack of babbling. shivering, ready·to-go-home flaUanders. A rugged looking mountain man finally wandered down the road and of· !ered to fix our chains for $5. We would have paid $50. By that time, we bad spent on hour outside struggling with the chains. CD:e on, they were too loo,,e, ratUing our Vega cage like an ll'mOW't!d person- nel carrier. THE CAR LOST a mud Oap and oow bas one large bole in the exhaust pipe. Once we pulled into Big Bear Village -with a mlllkn other skiers -it look another hour to find out how to drain the radlltor and fill It with anll-fr<eu. . By 4 a.m. we were lucked safely, U not warmly, Into our cabin. By 9 a.m. we were up and ttady for the slopes. II turned out the slopes were better pre- pared for us. ?tty first time on skis I wu SUl11riJed to find I could stand up. I wu even more surprbed to find myself moving ba,,....anl! with UtUe or no effort. I QUICKLY mastered the beginner's basic move-the praUall. We enrolled in a beginner'• class which taught us four basic maneuvers - the snow plow, the snow plow tum, grabbing the rope tow and falling. 'lbe snow plow involves spreadiQg your skis in a V formalioo (prt.ferably with the tips 11>1.therl and digging Into the llOfl snow .. 'Ibe mow plow tum involves the same method, ucept you put more weight oo ooe ski and shove II downhlll, whicb suppooedly turns you. IT.TURNED ME into a crawler. Grabbing the rope tow ls a lot of !un -for mHocblsts. Tile rope ii coo- stanUy alldlng uphill You slowly grip II with both bands and you're off - """ skis mostly. '!lie baodie.t thing taught ls bow to fall: It's the ooly sure step. Properly esecu1ed It Iookrllke a-gracefllrallde Into bom1r plate, your tiOdy upblll, yoifr- lkis downblll. Do it wroog it's more like a rhino dropped In mld-run by a hlgb powered rifle. WE ALSO learned about the fall line -the dlrecUon. in which skis would naturally slide downhill on their_, pwn. I left my o,wn fall lines all over ~ slope. . Despite the mlscueJ, slips and bumbles, ak1lnl is an escitlng trip. I'm Mdy to try again. -- Bail for Four Watergate Defendants Affirmed WASHINGTON (UPll -The trial judge brusquely refused today to reduce bail for four men, now in jail, who plead- ed guilty in the Watergate bugging case. Federal Judge John J . Sirica stressed their admission of participating in "clandestine acti vities" in rejecting the request to lower t h e $100,000 bail for each of the four men, all from the Miami area. Daniel E. Schultz, llt'\llly hired attorney for the fou r, urged the reduction on grounds his client s had pressing personal problems necessitating their release. Sirica declared: "Ea ch of these fou r defendants is Ouenl in Spanish and one or more of them apparently has ties in foreign countries. Each of them has ex- perience in clandestine operations, in- DAILY PILOT The ~ CMlt DAii. Y P1l.OT w1iti wtildl .. ~ IM N-..Pr--. Ill Pllt>l!Wd by ttie or.,... c ... , Pv&11s11111g c-....y. Sei>t- r•t. editions 1r1 Dlllllbhe::I. M°""'y ttirouott Friday, for C°'l1 Mts1, N~tl kKl1, HUl'lllt19!on lltKh/Fount•ln V1tley, t1gun1 llUC.11, lr>1i11t/$1ddltbltk Ind .S.n Cl!mtnltf Sin J11.., C111111r-. A 1111911 '"'°"'' N illon is publ""*' S.lurd.,.s lf'ld Sund1vs, lt>e prltM:iNI pulo!W!lllf pl.In! It 1t lXI We!.t ll•r Slreet, C•I• Mtu., C11itomll, f"1Ut. R1Nrt N. Wied Pmldtl'lt tnd "'1bll..,..,. J 1ck R. C11r/1v Vici Prnld.-il tf'ld Gene•1I MlnlQIJI" 7kolfta• IC11"il Editor TJ.olfllt A. ,.11rphl111 MtMtll'IO Editor ClierlH H. t..11 ~lch1rJ P. Nill Mlltltfll MIMllN E:dtter. y,,..., c • .,u1. W.I Or-.1111 ~r .4ff&r ............. ~ 1717S le•c.h loul•••HI M1iJi!tl A .... ,.,11 ,,0. lex 7t0, t2'41 LatlN ~ ~'::1 A-. C..lt "'-I ,UI Wrr.J. '""' ....,_,, '"an SUI '4 ._lt¥1,,, 11'1-C-....1 JOI Nofllil I Ctfl'lltlt lhill 111•••··· t71itl 64Jo4JJ1 ct-NW A'""""" •42•1171 ,,_ ... ,... on.,. Cw.t)' Clf!l ..... la .... 1JJt ~ mt. 0r..,. Ctltl ~ c-r. "'' .... ...,., lltlllllf•'*"' ......... """ tr """"~ """" ""' .. ,..,,...., ..... , IPf(lll ,.... .... "..,,.... -· ,__ ~ ,_, ... MW et c:.tt Mtte. OtMlmle. .,_,lflllofl W om.. *2.41 "'°""""'' ., -11 u .11 m1111t11Y1 mint.,. ........... INl'l!Mr. duding the use of aliases ... "The cow1 fails to see why these defeodants abould receive better tttat- ment than their C<><lefenciant, Mr. Howard Hunt. •. and the court sees no rea!On to make an invidious distinction here." · Hunt, a former White Rouse con- sultsot, plead~ guilty separately from the Miami four. The four, who an! being held for sentencing al tbe end of the trial, are~Bemard !.. Barker, Frank A. Sturgis, Virgilio Gonzalez and Eugenio R. Martinez. Sirica said : "While it is true that the defendants did not violate their ball con· dilions, it must be realized that the temptation to nee now would be much greater than before. They are f a c I n g ~1assive fines and Jong jail sentences. Th..; have had a taste in the past week of life in jail and I'm sure they didn't find it pleasant" Varsity Club, Police Set Basketball Game Members of the Fountain Valley Police Association will meet tbe members of the Los Amigds High School Varsity Club Jn a basketball game Wednesday night. The game wUI be played at the Los Amigos High School gym , tM Newhope St .. Fountain Valley, al 7:30 p.m. Tickets art $1 . Proceeds from the game will be split between the club and the a5.90eiation to be used for service projects. Fro111 P_,e 1 VOLCANO .•. clos~ and were equlpped to flouse the !!itandert. The govemmtnt e1llcd an ,rnergcncr swton to work out relief Pn>srama. Government IOU~ sakl' penonnel wUI be leCt on the Island to protect property and keep tbe huge fish freealog plants -klnl. If electricity Is cut off, huo- dreds of funs of frozen Osh wUI be destroyed Tbe sourtts said the emption, comfng at Ille alart of the fbttlng season, Is a serious blow to the nation's already shaky econo1111. U"IT ...... • • .... .... • Doaa Poln¢ Project • I . , . . I Sea -Laboratory . . ' t)1 Funding Sought ·" • By CANDACll PJ!)A~ Of .. DtllY ''"' .... Otanae County Department oi Educa· tlon. official& are tfllilng the waters of cbirltable loundaUoos In attemplJ to get f\mdlng for I proposed 11 mllltoo 00- sl>on marlne· aclenee laboratory at Dana llart>or. "We have ty,·o years to find the money," said Don M1cl.ean. ad· minl.strator ol. the county's marine oclence procram~ About pso,ooo Is needed to build the f1rat lncmnent of the to,llQO.lquare foot !>UUdlnc .plaooed 11 the weal end of Daoa -au:t te lhe fllhinl pier at the -ol. lhe blulfa. Oouoty educlltfm olllclala lod by Moel~••. bave made preliminary con- toc;ta wttb .111Uoaal cqaolsatlons llke Bocbleller Foundation, Camecle F- datlon and the U.S. Department of Hetltb, Educatloo and Welfare. said MacLean, an oceanocnpher. The building deslgn lncludea three laboratories, a large a q u 1 r I u m . auditorium, four to five classrooms. photography datkrooo>. offices, balt- ment research art_I for 1rad\11:1tr students, bookatore and artiflclal tldepool. t.tllrine se:lence educaUon pregrams hl the county der.rtment began ln 1967 with a three-year ederal gr,ant, 1lven on the coodltlon that the department establish lhe feaslblllty of a Ooallng lab. MacLeao· aaya the county proved the feulblllty and prepared for the eod of tbe three yean by adding five other pn>- grama. These Include the OIHhoro fllO!llly, special marine ,...arcb workabopt, slide preaeotatlona In the schools, teaober 1n-. service training and Instructional material!. FORMER PRESIDENT PLAYS WITH GRANDSON P1trlck Lyndon Nugent With c;;r1ndpe on LBJ Ranch Meanwblle, the tiepa.rtment h11 1 two- year lease, option-to-buy oo the laod at the barbor.' "We knew someday tbe dlJtrlcts (in- dividual school dlstrlcla) would have to pay -make lf • pay·u-you-ao opera- tion," MacLean said. l • From Poge 1 Ill the Interim, tbe COUllly -·· Beacbea and Parka Department Is grading the UM and marldnc II with '10 to 7& campsltea te provide ovemlg!>t beach camping. ...... P ... l JOHNSON MOURNED • •• ABORTION. • • he appeared dead. He was dark blue in color. They adminis tered oxygen and nlOuth kl mouth resuscitation ... " On the black marble pylon rising above the catafalque were these wof'd3 : .. I have followed the personal philosophy that I am a free man, an American. a public servant and a member of my party -in that order, always and only. "The Great Society asks not how much, but how good; not only bow to create wealth but how to use it; not only how fast we are going, but where we are headed. It propo ses as the first test for a nation: The quality of its people." ~1rs. Charles Beckham or Smithville, Tes:., wa5 the first person in line during the morning to file past the casket. She took her four children out of school and drove 50 miles north. •·1 respect President Johnson,'' 1'-trs. Beckham said. "I was .ubout to lose my only child and he helped bring my hus· band home from the military." A jeUiner provided by Nixon will fiy Johnson's body to Washington Wednes- day. The casket will be taken to the From Pagel PEACE ••• tonight's speech will be or to expand in any way on his terse announcemerit. If as expected Nixon announces tonjgbt an agreement has been reach~d . it v.•ill come almost four years to ~ day from the first peace talks ~Paris. It was on Jan. 26. 1959, that -American, North Vietnamese. South Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiator~ gather~ at the Hotel Majestic in Par;s to try!~ end the long, bloody war. Details of the Ci!ase-fire agreement, not immediately made public, a r e expected to closely parallel the nine-point accord that both aides nearly agreed on in October. That called for the return of all U.S. prisoners of war and the withdrawal of all U.S. troops within 60 days. A cease-fire would take place within 24 hours of the fonnal stgning, and an in- ternational Supervisorf team would go in to Vietnam to police the cease-fire. The accord established a National C.OUncil of Reconciliation made up or representatives from the salgon aod Hanoi governments p l u s neutralists to supervise elections which would determine the political future or Viet· nam. Racial 'Inquiry Panelists Oaim Laxity by Navy WASHINGTON (UPI) ,-A House arm- ed services subcomnllttee that invest!· gated racial incidents aboard two aircraft carriers charged today that the Navy ls fostering "permlsslvepess" and utged that command discipline be restored. The subcommittee, which took 74 hours of closed-door testimony last .year, said it was unable to find ,any case of racial discrimination that could have precipitat· ed what it called a "riot" aboard the l!SS Kitty Hawk OcL 12 and a sit·in aboard the US.S Cons..!eJJatioo Nov .. 3 and •• "The riot on the Kitty Hawk consisted of unprovoked assaults by a very few men , most ol whom were of below-aver- age mental capacity, most of whom had been aboard for less than one year and 111 ol whom were black," Chairman Floyd V. Hicks (0.Wub.) lald. Hicks said his special three-man aui> corrimlttee also found Iba( the COMtella- Uon ait·ln was "the rffUlt of a carerully orc~lrated demoostratlon of paastve rtslataooe where a s ma 11 ·number ol blacks, probably less than 20 to 26, 1 ... tered·and-encouraged......,. otb<r blacks the tdea that white raclnn was of wide extent In the Navy and plrtJcularly aboard the ConstellaUon." Hicks, In remark! publlabed today in the Congressional record, s&ld the sub- committee found lhaL the vast majority or Navy men are perfonnlnl their duties ''loyally and e.fficenlly.'' • Capitol, where the body will lie in. state in the rotunda until 'Illunday, folk>wed by funeral services at the National City Christian Church. The body then wW be flown back to Tes:as for a flnll ctremooy and burial at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the family cemetery on the banks of the Pedernales River, a quarter-mile from the LBJ Ranch. "These plans represent the wlsbts of the family," Tom Johnson said. Of Mn. Johnson, he said, "I would describe her condition as very sturdy. She Is holding up yery well." President Nixon proclaimed Thursday as a national day of mourning. The . President, in a public proc- lamation and in a message to Congreu, formally announced the death of the 38th P.-esident. Nixon issued an executive order re- quiring closure of all federal agencies, except for those involved with the na- tional security, on Tlfursda7 -the day of the funeral. '""' President directed that nap be displayed at half staff for 30 days. The New York aDd American stock a:· changes aa1d they wW cloae Thursday in observance of t~ m9t1~ day. Regular mall deliveries will be If~ celed for the day. ~ · "Tbe whole story of the JobmOO yean in the White House remains to be told, and history ~s yet to make Its judg- ment," Nixon said in his message to Congress. "But millions of Americaruvwill always remember a bHler day in November, 1963, when so many of our people doubted the very future of this Republic, "-'hen so many were stUMed at the very idea that an America" chief of state could be assassinated in this age, and so many abroad were fearful about the future · course of the American democracy. And Lyndon Johnson rose above the doubt and the fear to bold this nation on course untiJ we rediacovered our faith in ourselves." Gerald L. Wl':'ren, deputy White House press secretary, said Johnson's widow and members of the family would stay at Blair House, the White House guest house, while In Washington Wednesday ·and Thursday. Warren said Nixon will ~nd his "Spirit of '76'' jetliner -the same /.lane that Johnson used during his pres! ency -to bring Johnson's body to WasbJngton. Tbe Dina Point camptrouncls will be opeo In early oprlng. u plm .. tbrougb, the O&abort marine -ballcJlnc will nplace .the cumnl on&daanlom comer!:! at the harbor, -the county rlmellt'• "flootlne ·lobaratory," t11e Fiii)' n, 1s docbd. .· ' .. It'1 aolnl to 1ie I neat thing," MacLeoA eothuled. To be -II boun I day, aeveo daya a week, 11 wW -nine dlatlnct pro. grams ln ooutal and marine oducatloo. "From the open sea all the way to the fint mountain range -the influence of the ocean doesn't stop at lbe aeaabore," ' Nuclear Plants Go Underground? SAN DIEGO (AP) -Und"1JJ'Ciund nuclear power plants might be safer than surface stations during an earthquak~ a California Institute of Technology rtsearch engineer says. Martin Goldsmith told an Atoml<: Energy Commission board Monday that underground facntu.s. would nor be ebb! ject to the violent shaking many surface buildings undergo during a quake because of the nature of seismic waves. The AEC boUU 1' •roviewlng a Jo'i!t Southern Clllfornia F.di9cm: Company a.M S&n Diego Gas II: Electric Company p~ posal to add two addiUonal units to the present San Onofre Nuclear power sta· tion. The waves, Goldsmith said, stress the "limberness" of surface structUrtS by the way they move over the earth's surface, causing the middle and upper stories of tall buildings to shake more vlolenUy than the· ground Ooor or base- ment. Goldsmith said hla theory has not been proveo bllt he stteased Iha! It was a posalbWly. The ooly way to prove the u-y, be said, WU to bulld ao un- derground facility. "Tile uJUmate practlcallty of un- derground nuclear 1tatloos can only be determined by actually building ooe," Goldlmith Jald, "but our studies e found so far no inaurmountable ficulUes." If an underground facillly had tO be built IOnte distance from the ocean, Goldsmith lald, It probably would be necessary to recycle water far cooling. I does not follow that a physician must perform an abortion," loin. Sullivan decl~red. "And In the area of aervlce we will advertile even more upeuively our oeven botllna offering alten>aUftl to abortion to all tllrla and -who have probJema uaodated witb pnpncy." Jaycee Award Winners L'ist.ed In Beach, Valle)· Jaycee organlaalioos In Huntlngteo Beach and Fountain Valley have an- nouoced the wtonero of their 11111ual dlatlnplahed service awards. Ill Huntln(too Beach, Mrs. J...,. Koch. director of the-Youth Employment Service, Is the first woman ever to receive the Jl)'cee honor. Fountain Valley's award went to Fred Voss, a trustee of the i'ountain Valley School Distrld. The nuuiei;a up in,Hun1°'819• Beacb were: Robit'f iensen, Sout6em Caittmi1a Edison; ftobert Terry, a downtown civic leader ; Thomas Cooper, a parks and recreation commlssio~. and Henry Dulte, a cl!r-COW1Cllmu!., • Bemie Svalstad, a Fountain V11tey city councilman, and Ron Talmantez, Jaycee vice president, were nmnersup in Foun· tai.t1 Valley .. Trustees to Eye Minority Plan An AfflnnaUve Act.loo, program de- s14"ed to correct aUe11Jd lnequltles ln mmorlty hiring wlll be Pftltllted toolgbt to trustees of the Huntlngtoo Beacll Unloo Hlgb School District. The dlatrlct wu .told to P"l"'I" a ·plan by the federal Fair EmpiOJIDtlll Prac- tices Commission last October. The dislrict was threatened with fed- eral sanctloo that could cut oil fede:'al aid if it clld not drift an aHirmaUve> ac- tion plan. Trustees will m~t at 7:30 Jn!:; Jn Room 15 at Wlnteraburg Con tJoo High School, 17200 Goldeo West su<et. MEASURE FOR TREASURE • One foctor overloohil !;y. customers In buying corpeting is tho mHourlng for yerdago. AH of our Salesmen know how to m .. suro end figure oxoct yard1ge, often providing our · cuslomen • subst•nliol savings in y1rda90 alone. Also, with the tremendous lnslo!l.tion H· peri.nce our salesmen hovo (11ch pt'9viously wos en expert instollor for us), we 1ro obit. to f...,.. ony potontiol problem. Ploose stop in ond loolt 1t the troo...._ 1v~il1ble to you through our storo. Wo hovo • gigantic selection, ond tho me01Uring will b. ACCURA1'EI ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES Ill COlfA MllA UllCll-tlJ -• 1663 Placelltla Aft. COSTA MISA 646-4831 HOURS: Motl. T!irv Thvn,, t It ldO-fRI., t It t-SAT~ ,..JO It S • '' I I ' 'I ' • ' " .,, " I • • • ,, I l I I ' I I I I . ' ~ . ~B.J Promise IJ•ep1·· . Death Pr~ent.s-His R;.,fsiting. ~ounty, -~. By GEORGE LEIDAL • .. .. Dllty '"•' ...,. .... 01 the t.ur plomlies made 'by the late Prelldent Lyndon B. Johnson on vorious vlalla to the Orange Coast he lived oitly long enough to keep one of them. (See pictures, Page 9.) Then. vice president Johnson on Nov. 13, 1111, dedicated tho Dougla• .Space Sy-. Center In Huntington Beach and dlacuaed the promise of man's quest of space.· Nine tl!lys laler, !he craggy Tesan boarded Air Force One parked on a Dollaa l'llltWIY and took the oath of office committing him to fulfill that promise' a,.i others laid clown by President John F. Kennedy. 'An auasaln's bullet hurled Jobnsoo m:- to the presld<ncy and he usumed mpooalbillty for Kennedy'• com- mitment to place a man on the moon within the decade: . '!'be crolty former congrwlooal lfjlder alao aaaumecl the burden of moving the Kennedy New Frontier lealslaUon Cor- word u the wellaprlng of mt LBJ wb to tenn "The Great Society." Promlae of that JOO-. dream was IPOken in. what was to become the .new -clty ot Irvine on june 20, 1964, months before his elecllon to thi highest office In the land. 'l1le occasion was the dedication of the new 1,ooo-acre campus. In the next decade, Jobnaon said be ei· pect1. higher educallon In America "to CttllS -many new frootlen and one of the lllOll critical Is the front!" of the city life. -1 UrtT.._... ·! :'Now 70 percent of oor people liv'e in '"811 areu like Los · Angeles . Their needs are immense. But, just u our col- leges and unlveniUes changed the lutpre of-.ir farms a century ago, S> they can help change Ille fuluro ol our cities," aaJd the praldent who left a classroom lor uolltlcal career. WIDOW, DAUGHTER RETURN .TO RANCH AFTER DEATH Lady Bird John ... With Luci N_. In Somber Mood "Iliave -to California to 8* you lo 111row off yoor doubts about Americ;J. Help ua -~ta to Ille world that people of compualoa and commitment . can free thaJr lellow cltuena from the boncla of inJu!llce, the prlaons of p0verty and the chains of Ignorance," Johnson aald. Althoulb the Jobnaon adlllllilliritlon waa to foster more leglslallon to meet these promlaet• than iny other In history, Jobmon'1 record was to be cast in deeper doubl!< by the Vt.lnam War. In Novemlier of 1967, Johnson again vlallecl the Orange Coast. Thia llme the place· was El Toro Marine Col'P.J Air Sta- llon and the oceulon was the 192nd birtbda)'..t.tb U.S. MarlneCorps_ Three months later be returned lo El Toro. On Feb.· lf, 1911, a now "worried" President Jobn&oit wlsbecl Godspeed to Camp Pendleton'• 27th J\eglmental Land- ing Team as ~Y left foi Vietnam. ·~ ls a decisive Ume in Vlttnam," be said. "The eyea of the nation ·and the enlire-.world ·-the ~es of history. U1tll11' lie ii8iil piOPllOtlCilly, ''.areOl<lbat &rive band of de(enden, wbo bola the peaa 4t Kbe Sanh and the area around It. "We do not doubt the outcome. The enemy's tide will be broken •.. "I have ulted you to llO·an'l·belp them: I know you wlll do.yoor duly. May· God bless and keep each of you. "We will be prouder when you come home._and you. have_ done the job," .fobnson said., ~~y .~.ays .~e:z~··4~t- Y'?.· ~ ,, ..o .r.;rr , n-~-m--'><I -•--...1-)1 ,_ ~s Defense AttQ.r.ney : By TOM BARLEY Of .. ~ '"'' '"" him down here on his · alleged master- minding ol the Broiherbood of Eternal Flanked by a battery of lawyers aDd ~ve/' the c::hlef prosecutor aa~. 1 _ 'pushed bpck lnt,o his jury~· seat by.a .Leary waa ,one of;nearly 50 pe-.a In- bevy of televi.slOn cameras, Dr. Timothy dieted by·the Grand Jury on their alleged Leary announcecl Monday his plans to de-link with ,a mulU.mlllloo dollar drug con- lend himlell In uy future Orapge County spiracy baaed ln;the Lgima Bea<h aru Superior Courl aM!on. ' but liplted ',through drug traffic with "But the very first Lssue to be resolved many of the naUons visit"1 by Leary Is the illue that I am here and was during more than two years of lreeclom. brougbt here illegally," the globetrottlng • Leary had earlier dlJll1lsaed the guru of the. LSD cult told lawyen and f!rotherbood .allegations aa "IDOOlllhine, new.men moments after Judge James another bid 'by the Or1111e. County 'l\trner held bl' arraignment over to Jan. district attorney's office-to put me away :io~ 1 ln priJOD for my opinions. Leary, Sf, made it clear that he will ~ .. 11tey bavm't a shred of evidence to "lean heavily on the advice of the best back'tbbse charges," the closely guarded 1a..,... In the world," Indicating Costa Lj!ary said wblle his vocal aupporters Mesa trial lawyer George Chula, who be· a.1--.1 1 .. " I It It the spoke for Leary in the brief court action. were mg Oi"\ft:I cu "" coo or qu , courtroom." "But I will be principally condacting Possi.bly the most vocal of bis admirers my ·own defense and I will have a serle8 But, it was to be another President who woold bring home . most of the S<>',000 troops Johnson committed to the defense of Southeast Asia. And, on the occasion of bis 61st bfrth. day, President Richard M. Nixon en- tertained LBJ at the Western White House m-San Clemente~ - It was on this August 27, 1969 vjsit that LBJ made b1s last promise to . the Orange Coast, a promise be wouldn't keep . · "Yes, it is real pretty here in Orange County. "Maybe now that I.E. a private citizen I can come back and be just like the resi of the tourists and take a closer 1ook at the area." Nodding . to Presi4ent Nixon at a luncbeoo in LBJ!s baoor at La Casa Pacifica .. Johmron said, "Be c,arries the _._,I cali *>as I~ I think ! will come.bad: to Oranse c:oUnty,'' he said. ..._ .__._ ,JU___,...;.1...1, • ' He never did. . ' &~ x:~l .z~ t ,~ ,iit~ ""'•v, ··~ · ~ ~~~~·*ii', A TIMI OF TRAGEDY-JOHNSoN TAKES OATH OF PRESIDENCY AFTER KENNEDY'S ASSAssi~..:1-'i~ White Grief Stricken J•cquellne Kennedy Looks On, Judge Sareh T. Hughes Administers Oeth TEEN GIRL 'GETS NOTE FROM LBJ . Just last ·Friday, former President Lyndon B. Johnson wrote a letter to a 15- year old girl, telling her that "every age ·turns OOl to be a gciod age when you reac:. It." The letter was delivered to the home of Heidi ·L. Brown on Monday-morning ,.... the day of the former president's death. In the letter, Johnson wrote, "But,_ if I were you, I would not ev~ think now about the possibility that life may begin at 20 ,...or 30 or that it still can be a greal life even at 80." . See this story, plus photographs of the former president and ot~r stories on Page SI today. ' Wives Blow Whistle On Gambling Mates ELIZABETH, N.J. (UPI) -Twenty· seven husbands have been arrested at local gambling1clubs after a three,.month investlgaUon prompted by complaints from their wives. The arrests came after the women told authorities tbetr ltabands were losing all their ~ bec;ause of gamb~ ':and bow terrible !heir i:J!risjmas )uid beeft.~ saJd John Stamler, ;wistant counfy'pros-ecutor. ~, •. '. • ' 1, . .. . Final Action? Da Nang on Alert; U.S. Bombing Reds Heavily SAIGON (UPI) -South Vietnam's sec- ond largest city was on full alert today in anticipation or a cease-fire. U.S. warplanes, in what couJd be their final major action, pounded Communist posi· tions with the heaviest bombings in five months. More than 450 planes hit targets in South Vietnam ~a 24-llour period ending at 8 a.m. today, (he U.S. co~ said 7" the largesi number of rai ver the suuth in a single day since A t. American planes also bombed the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex in Laos and targets in Cambodia today, the command said. The government o£ Nguyen Van Thieu ordered~t7-of4>a Nang-on alert-and announced additional measures designed to crack down on possible Communist ac· tivity during a cease-fire. Correspondent Alan Dawson in Da Nang report.ed 5,000 Americans· at the sprawling AUled air tia1e aDd its Sill'· ibundlng are• -had been onlered on- "kray" alert Wlth no tra~el ID tOWll ex- • cept on officta: business. Ground action wa~ relatively ~uiet througAout Vietnam today. The South Vietnamese comma'nd reported only 52 Communist-Initiated incidents, 42 of which were shellings, in the 24 hours end· ing at dawn. County Planners Increase Meets The new Orange County Planning Com- mission has voted to try meeting three days a week rather than the current two because of tbe~av;y lo_a.!LQ! mat~rLto be considered. - Environmental impact statements have been added lo the measures which the commission must approve and they have proved time consuming. Regular mietiligs are now scbeduled for Mondays and Tuesdays with Selected toples lo be considered on Wednesdays. ·,o_li~son & son fuvites you to conie ~elebrate With ·the1n during our iulnouncemen t of •.• ' of motions to offer and be ruled on before was British ·IOCiallte Joanna ' Harcourt· we can even think .of going to trlaJ,h . Sml~ the ~~' nleee ·of London .,. > 111111 lllLEllll *-IF Mii * Leary uplalnecl, frequently baiting hl1 pUbllBblng mqnata Shnoo Harcourt· comments to wave and grin to admirers Smith of the Harcourt Press, aril the In the packed courtn>om audience. woman who repeated her earlier vow to Judp Turner promptly denied Leary's "leave lhll,' place with ' Tlmollly In Dl\)lloll for permission to defend binuelf &-. . while mUing tt clear that tt was a mo- tion that ohould be tabn up at the-time "I looe :lll!lo ,,_,, I J0.e JOU,· 1111 o1 trial. , dm!lnc,"'o11e-a11ec1de.rtyaif.eoa,1i11 And he refused to .uer any lmmecllate baJr d,..s bloct ol.t·ldo lwldl'maoclecl, comment on the oecond motion -apjiCmlly -.iM to clasp !di lwldl ~lt plea that he was abducted from abofe bis held la 1 Yictory ubM u Algblnlsian and returned to IM"Unlted St.ates to face eocape cbarges, despite the deputlea lluotlecl blm from ihe fact that this nation has no treaty of n • cuu:rb:oom. . tradltiiln with Afghanistan. Leary 1'adlll' • conf'•mecl Miii : It seems very unlikely today that the Harcourt-Smith'• •-that"thelfo was '1the perlect loft" bat would not 1 moUon will have to be debated befott comment 00 the preeeat atatul of his any Orange Coonty judge. mlrrill• to 8-r)' Leary, e. Chief Deputy District Attorney James Mn. Leary, who -with Leary and Eqht commented, as Leary WU ,.. • •-.. _ amn wh!fkecl away ,U!Kler heavy guard lo 1111 'r -Jolin, 7,1, w--f y WU eount• jall loolltion cell, that he la -""-arralecl In Laguna ~Dec. M, 1111, 1' .... ""',_trial 00 ldenll<al drul cllorpj, 1_ lal. 'ev..-Y eUott" to' bave~-MY-t'C!'•. wil Wltlt W b••'•Dll m ....,. . ., die.,.. eel to Sin Lala Obllpo Coonty this --be YllUecl ....._._...., ...., frocn "He "eacaJIOd 1mm· Ihm," he llld.' ::"Illa Lala ---• · .. And S> It-Wini Jftity Jogbl to me 111'] "'1· •• iaat'• a laal ..,1"'\e" lbat they ohould have a crack al blm ......_. "'-'••, "Siie ii a booottl6ll 111'11." :.;;;;;;;-~ _. j1lll u Joaima Leary had oervecl als moothl of,_ tllen Ii Y8ry beallllful. Loolt II her, Iba prl.ton·tarmol-to 10years1mpw 11 lelll me I'm kllll·" Onnp County ,when be bolted -• Miao Bon:ourt-&nltll, 111111 ·Allow - . pdatric -of San Lala OIUpo _.. : ... --Ille bep!Jtllm tbat -_, In ..,...her, 1111, ... boClll ..... ~ llDtlJ """ ......... ~ In.' -.tbs of fr-lbat toot him, Oii his v-. -med Mondar lllat Iba bad own count,....,· lo H ..-.._ -•fa111·,,..,erecf" from Ille-· "We -~ M ftoiatlol bll rtiJjla ~ "! doli~ bellen Iba bu, and I think any lfW Iba! I lihow -'111" .iwblnl she'I jeopardlalrw the health ol I great ldm Id> -tlllt -.· llllrtPI aolll ._ pei>ple wbo have been' In contact "lie couM tllea too up tbll 1aM of II-wltll her st ... she arrived here," Enrll)lt legal --lbe -....... aod, ........... . poaalblJ, ., ., trill up lben ., tho •t lit• ~Ill, wbo aald Iba • flCapt clllrlo." -will be ~ wltb -In 1-0 COnYictkm an the eecape ~ alllpUan Bwb '"for· at leut this weet," 1treued ~ brlal Lury • --,...... lbal obe -now cured and "perf«Uy flt """ of •·to !In ,..,., Elwt&l$ llld. lo llPt Ille -llltportan\ Wlllo ol my '"lllm we'd -lo -wbelller lo try Ille. I• • ' l ' ' • Refreshments · • Gifts For the Kids · • Flowers For the Ladies Dr~Wing for FREE BICYCLE NIGHTLY .•• Tues;, Wed., Thurs. & Fri. 8-·P.M. -1 COPEN-'TclL NINE Come Get Acquainted with Our "Golden Touch" Team . ar-. .. C•••J•• Rorm,Of The New Car ••• "Q•~ r-•" l I •· -.· ' - "F-U1 of .11'1118' C::er•" 2626 . Harbor Blvd., Costa ~ • 54Q-5630 0-llde s-c• or die s-Dlei• Freeway 1 I ' • Rome Of The New Car .•• .. ,.. ... ..._...,,... •, { DA!LY PILOT funday, January 23, 1•73 . 7 Cat Catchers A Rare Breed CAT.CATCHERS DEPT. -Tuesday .started very early around our house tcr day when our number three cat, known as P.fC, did an awful thing in the middle of the kitchen floor . Hoosehold animals seem to have a spe- cial facility for selecting critical moments in home life a! which to pull off ~me form of spectacular. This one oc- curred in the midst or breakfast.fixing. P.fC's blatant action so infuriated the Little \Voman that she dropped a frying pan . fetched up a rolled ne\\·spaper and sprinted through the living room. chasing the offending feline with a vengeance. Try Again, Mona NOR~tAU..\', 11115 would have been an exercise ill frustration . This lime. ho\\·ever, the cat window was closed, thus the offending animal wa.s trapped and had to rtverse her field. In so doing, the Little Woman \\'as able to get in a few good licks with the rolled pape r and a couple of special words for the beast. As MC streaked back through the house, she was forced lo pass adjacent to our number four cat, known as Smokey Joe, alias The Mouse. The Mouse let ltfC have it with a rouplt of swipes as she flashed by. The Mou.se was not offended at what MC did on the kitchen floor . He just takes every opportwtity in confusion to get in a couple of good .swipes. The newest resident at St. Paul's Como Park Zoo in Minnesota, is a baby camel named Valentine. born SUnday to Ginger, a dromedary camel. Zoo officials hope Ginger can successfully raise the calf-un- like 1-male calf born last year who had to be bottle fed. 0.3 Percent Increase ALL OF nus brought Dog on the scene. He did no damage unless you count barking and scrabbling about on the slick kitchen floor. Tacked on Living Cost MC was last seen sulking atop the teevee seL Elder son viewed all the corr fusion in a sort of detached manner and suggested he hadn't seen his motb..er so out of breath sinet: the time she chased the ice· ettam man out of the neighborhood. 'That was several years ago. Despite the Little W o ma n • s acknawltdged agility, it ii clear she would have never caught the cat ln lhe first place if the cat widnow had been open. · PONDERING ALL THIS, l tbolliht with some amusement of the Huntington Beach City Council which, in ils Infinite wisdom, is now pondering a law which would require the licensing of cats. The Huntington notion ls that each owner pays $5 for lice nsing each feline he owns. Unlicensed cats could thus be rounded up by a municipal cat-catcher. The vision of th.ii absurdity i! enough to make you roll aroW>d on the noor laughing. Who, I ask you , can catch a cat? YOU CAN CATCH a cal under three cooditions: I) The cat is sleeping and doesn't care; 2) The cat wants to get caught; or 3) The ca t is dead. If. on the other hand. the cat doesn't want to get caught. forget ii. Cats are f~ster on their feet than greased light- nmg. A slow cat is one that runs in a blur. WASlllNGTON (UP!) -Higher prices for egp and fresh vegetables -pl.us big- ger bill! for such thing!: as rent , property taxes, insurance and repairs -paced a 0.3 percent increue in the Cost of Living in December, lbe government said today. THE BUREAU OF Labor Statistics of the Labor Department said a sharp surge Apparentl y trapped, a cat can put more moves on a pursuer than a halfback running broken field out of sheer fear. Actually CQrnered, a feline becomes a fearso me thing which appears to be com posed of only three parts: mus· Kidtaap Suspeet cle, teeth and claws. A knife-wielding· ab du c l 0 r IF HUNTINGTON BEACH ever does (sketch) too k 11-month-old hire a cat-catcher, he'd be tter be quite a Thomas Michael Lauver Jr. guy. Faster than a 9-0at sprinter. Able to from his mother, Frances Lau· leap fences and tall buidlngs at a single ver, 22, in a shopping center bound. Champion tr ee-climber. Skin as in Modesto last Saturday. Po- tough as leather. Even then, he'll still lice withheld information in the ~Ou don't think so, just drop around hopes the k:idnaper would re- our house some time. ___ turn __ lh_e_c_h_il_d_. ____ _ in wholesale food prices in December - the largest in a quarter century -had not yet showed up in the Comumer Price Index (CPI). They can he expected to he reflected in higher retail food price5 in the J anury CPI, due out next month. The Bl.'l said big)ler prices Jor eggs and !or !mh "'Selablea In llecember w~re offset to some extent bf lower pricer !or meats and lttsh ~ But food prices still went up 0.5 percent lut month -most for any month since last July. The BLS said the overall index in-- creased 3.4 percent for all of 1972, same as for 1971. It was well below the 5.5 per- cent advance in trro, a 6.1 percent in- crease in 1999 and a 4.7 percent jump in 1968. DURING THE FIRST 14 months or President N'lXOn's Phase II economic controls -from November, 1971 , through last month -the CPI also went up at a 3.4 percent annual rate, down from the 3.8 percent rate In 1971 before the Aug. 15 wage-price freeze . But food prices went up at an annual rate of 5 percent in Phase II through December, the same rate as in 1971 prior to the freeze. DAIL! PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dtflwry of the Daily Piiot Is 9u11rantted ~··'"""' It YW ... "" Ill•• Ytwr "'"r tr l:Jf •·"'" (Ill 1"4 f"Wf <•PY will 11t -...1 tt ,..., c .. 111 ••• ,.._.,. .... 111 ,,,. ,. .... ~, ..... s..Nr• ., -........ 111 .... .,..... c.,., 1r 9 t .M. SatltN1y, ., I 1.m. iolfMl1r. Cl" INll I Hn -.lb llt lftoot'it " .,..., t1i.. 1r1 ...... .,,.111 ll l .M. MIHI Oraroge County Al"HS · l41-4)1J NorltlWftl Huntington &tact! -w .. 1,..11111... . ... . 540•1121 San Cremtnft, C1olstr1no liac:h, San J.,.11 C1pblr1no, 0.111 'oll'lt, 5ol.rrh Lt'"""', uti-Nlgwl 4fJ.4421 Storms Hit New England Precipikition in Nortliwest, Texas and Florida Tempernturew . Hl<lll Ltw '°'· Atb.111y 5i li .11 A111;hor"1 l .. .11 All111i. ,, '' l~::t. 51 ll " 51 • lS ·" ~t~ri.°" " " .. " " . " ~" l! H ·" .... y tt .~ 2::Jiu .. • . u " n "-"" n ~ K1t1$11 City lf " t=r:-~ ~ 1v11t1 n .M Mt-· ::r..·~,,.Mll ll !! :r. New ~I " ~ N .. YOf " M .v ~!wltN Cltr " • • ~~9t'phl1 i: " ~::r J li I , Ori. :,~ " il " I: ~1<1 Cll'f H r111ellc.o " " • 'Nit!! llOIOll • •·AIM ~lf!OW ,,.,..,, ~ .. . la!.JIMOWt'tl , f tOW I • " -··. • -"' ... . . Kansan Goes Berserk • Shotgun-wielding Man Kills Five, Self --r<>P!:KA, Kan . (UP!) -A lt')'ell'Old-sbotlUD to hll bold lt1!I pulled the·trli· man wail -Moaday nJcbt, florm-ger. Inc tb r nusb a dJna rlYel'lnint nelihl>orhoocl k1llilll hll boarding bouse landlady and lour other pel10IUI with lbolcUn bluta. Pollce aald Ibey may never tnow Wb)" be did It Tiit gunman 1>ecame the sixth vtcUm of the melet when be bn>lte Into a borne, Sil down on, .. coucn, tili'ned lb0.1$'1auge Resort Owner Loses Wife To Avalanche SUN VALLEY, Idabo (AP) -SUn Valley skJ resort owner William Janss' wife wu killed by an avalanche while skiing Jn. an ma "safe skied" and checked by avalanche Control experts half '8fl hour earner. Ann Janss, 54, died Monday when a massive snow slide swept down from Balcom Ridge, seven miles north ol Sun Valley. SHE WAS llEIJCOPl'ER sldlni wltb lhtte other persons when the allele .., curred, aald Ruth Lieder, 1 spokesman for the rt!alt. Miss Lieder said hellcopters are used by skiers in remote areas of the ski area, where there are no !kJ lifts. 11ie otber three, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Grossman of Phoenix, Ariz., and Serge Gargarin of Fairfield, Conn., were not hurt. Miss Lieder said. TllB Vlc:mlll lncloclid Ibo 116-yeil'Old landlady, her daupw and elderlf man tbousht to lie another llooi'der ID the borne where the ....... Und. s.ov.nJ houlu down the -~ a woman wllcblnf televlllon and a m!ddJe.qod rnan were kllled. · Tiit body of Ibo Jul man waa found four hnun alter the Incident by a neiahbortiood woman who wu oortJnc tbr<>Ugh clotbes In the clooet ot the -· r.u .. aald the vlctlm bid applftllUy tried to bide In the cloaei, but WU apol· ted and llbot u be crouched beoeetb the clothes. "He tried to bide," aald Delecllve Leonard Albworth. "He just didn't blde good eonucb." Pollce aald all tbo vlctlml were black, lncludinc Ibo -ldentilled u Geritol Firm Fined by FTC NEW YOllK (UPI) -'l11e manufocturtr of Geritol wu llned 181J,OOO MOllday !or false ad- vtrlfsln1. '!be Unn was cited for clalmlnc that Geritol WU effective qalmt liredr*I sympto1111 In 11 _.. .. Jele.tsloa commertlals ahon on 100 occaslona. The fine -flSll,000 acalnlt ~.B. Williams Co. and 1151,000 .. - Its wh&Uy......., advertlalng subsidiary, Parkson Advertising Agency Inc. -b believed to be the highest ever for vlQ!atlng Federal Tl'1lde Commlsslon regula- tions agllnsl falae advertising. Roniild G. Jordan, believed originally from Denver. ONE WOMAN WU 'l!OUllded al Lile Bee· ood bomt, .but abe wu tn aerloua con· dlUoo and under lntfnllvo can at a Topeka hospital. A hospital IJJOWm'" aid lier condition bad "atablllled nicely" earlf today, _ ·:we•r, having a hard time tracking down anyone wbo 5'w Ibis thing hai> pen," said Lt. Milton Johnson. "Moat of them (wltnesaes) are de>d, and the woman who aurvtved Ls In intensive cart. "Even U &be lives, It's bard-to say If we can determine a motive or not. We'rf; sUO wor!tinc on 11. Yoo a!w<Y1 bope ro, wltntael, but )'OU never know." Police N.ld the kllllnga were the wont mua murder in Kansas ln at leut three decades. The last sensaUoaal cue was the murders of foor memben or the Herbert ,Clutter famJly In-the lite IllM!, cbroolcled by outbor Truman Copote in the book, "In COid Blood." Early reports Indicated that Jonlan, who police dercribed u havJnr • miall criminal record primarily for "strong arm t'>hbefy :· llidllCrlminately knocked on doors In the neighborhood and shot whomever appeared. Jordan appartnUy knew all or the vlcllJBI he killed. THE BIZAllllE attacks oocumd in a mostly black neighborhood acrou the Kansas RJver from the. Topeka businea district. The one and two.story frame homes, located in the shadows ol a river viaduct, were within sight of the dome of the Kanau Capitol. 11ie Injured wlto.., waa ldentlfled u Darlene Mccray, 40. The dead were Mn. Jeiale Mae Avery, 55, the landlady; Ptarl Avery, It, bet daughter, and Oscar Maddo1, 13. :rwo doon away _was Lucille ~wans, SS, and Herbert Gatewood, delcrlbed ,, In the early 4111. Gatewood by ducking Into the closet apparently was the. only peraon who tried to escape Jordan. U.S. Forest Ranger Butch Harper said the area in which the avalanche occurred had been "safe 1kied" and certi.fjed mountain guidea, "mostly blgbly trained mountain speclallsta,'' had completed some two hours of avalanche control \\"Ork, lnclucting setting off eiplosive charges to settle the snow. THE EXPLOSIONS WERE set off hall an hour before the skien were allowed to be flown .in, Harper !aid. Harper said the snow "fractured an estimated 75 feet above the skiers" and carried them about a half a mile down the .slope. He said Ptfrs. Janss' body was recovered SS minutes after the accident. Nigerian Crash Toll Unknown, Possibly 180 British Explain Immigration OK For Billionaire LONDON (AP) -Billionaire recluse Howard Hughes was admitted to Great Britain last month without a passport beLBuse he "was able lo satisfy the im- migration officer about his nationality, identity and " means," the British govern- ment says. Under Secretary David Lane or the Home Office told the House of Commons Monday that immigration inspection of Hughes and his party was carried on aboard plane when they anived by private jet at Gatwick Airport, south of London, two days before Ouistmas. Lane said the party was provided the facilities normally available to passengers arriving by private plane at night. Hughes, 68, wall granted admission to Britain for three months as a visitor after leaving earthquake-torn Managua, Nicaragua. e FREE Delivery Of Course Featuring: THOMASVILLE, SEALY, SIMMONS, REMBRANDT, CAVALIER, LA·Z-BOY, ROY AL COACH , CAL-SHOPS, HECKMAN CABINET, BRANDT. HAMMARY, BERKLINE. LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -'nlere - still oo official word early today on the death toll in what rr1ay be the :.worst air- line crash in hlltory. Airport officials at ~ In nnrtbern Nigeria, said they fean!d llO penons died in the crash M<llday or a chartered JOI'- ( IN SHORT ... ) dantan jetllner u It ""' landing during a period ot llmlted visibility. The_. gen were Nigerian Moelems returning from a pilgrimage to Mecca. ReporU said Z9 survived. e Priiecu• Critfeised LONDON (UPI) -l'rlncela Anne baa come under attack again for goinc fol hunting. But lbts time ahO baa rompany -ber boyfriend and • m<mber ot the councll of the Royal SOclety for the Pre- vention of CNelty to Anlmall. The princeaa, 21, and Lt. Mark Pbilllps, 24, went fo1 buntJnr durlrw the weekend. Riding with them were other members ot the equestrian team the! woo an Olympic gold medal at Munich, includ- ing Rfcbord Meade. a member of the ·. IANKAMERICARD • MAST~ CHARGE OUR OWN REVOLVING CHARGE 1865 HARIOR BLVD. DowntoWll COiia Mesa • 548-5l3l • ' council of the Royal Society for the PrPr ventim of ()uelty to Animals. e Astro-ut• In DC WASlllNGTON (UPI) -The laol Apol· lo astrooalils Viilted-CipltofHID Mcnlay. The entiTe Senate -was abeent, and In the House !be space eiplorers 1pol:e to only about ~ ot the members and In gallerles that were half full. It was the traditional tribute &iven American spacemen. The Apollo 17 com- mander, Eugene Ceman, noted the end of the Apollo moon program in bis "" marb and spoke of the galna ot the American trips to the moon. e V.S. to Redutt Bue• TOKYO (AP) -'!be United Stateo and Japen agreed today to n!duce and cor> llolidate -ot the American mllltary Imes bere and cut U.S. Air Foree pel'- ....,.i Jn Japen by i,100 over the nm u.r.e yean, mostly In the Toll}'o """· '!be move was made under mounting Japanese pressure for more land Ctr a growing population and Insistent attacltl on the U.S. military preeence In Ja- But the projected cuts will not cbani!• appn!Clably t b e U.S .. llOCllrity poature either in Japan or in the Far East. We et Md•'• fMI tHt •" ...... h ......... -. .... , .. ..m .. ----rlct. • -..... .....,., "91. w ............. ...,. , ................. ...., .................... _ ., ... ....,_ ...... " ... See ou r new lines of: ANTIQUE PINE, cOLONIAL, COUNTRY FRENCH, ENGLISH •nd MEDITERRANEAN. ALL AT SALi l'RIC_IS - I I 1 I l 1 ' ., • I t l I • -··Orange c~!!t Today's Finni · N.Y. Stocks I.· VOL 66, NO. 2J, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES . ~.IJ.S. Mourns Uf'IT........_ LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON-1908·1 973 Former Praiden! Dud of He•rt Attack.at Ranch · ' ' ' .. .. • • Volcano Cuts :Icelandic I . . Island Nearly in Half VESTMANNAEY JAR , Iceland (UPI\ -More than 5,000 persom fled their trembling and smoking isla9d home Off Iceland's sou1bem .coapt today after the Helgafjdl volcaJ¥> erupted and prac· tlcally cut Heimaty island Ui ·two: A horse l\'ils swallowed 6p w"'-'1 the ground burst op;e'n on a ht1lside and names.and niolten lava were thrust more than 100 yards into the air. .• But ,there w~re, oo personal mJur•es, · ll~r Magnus Magl!usson said. * GeOiogistS expressed fears that the island, 2.5 mlleS wlde and five mifes long, 1 n\ay explode and illsappear in the AUan- tlc. 'l' But local .officjals in Vestmannaeyjar said they bellaved the eruption would subside and the .Islanders would be able ·to return hom·e. · ,,.; A few hundred persons, mostly •ftremen , police and rescue workers, re.- mained behind to patrol the deserted .streets wi~ the ground treinbling under their feet. Vestmannacyjar is Iceland's 1llitd bigga! city and the fishing capital ·bf the natiOO. ... The eruptioo came in t~ mJddJe.ot the nJgbt and created pani_c iq the streets at • • I I •. ' f ,. ..... ...,1. first as the volcano spurted thousands of tons of burning lava. stones and as6es in- to the darkened sk.ies .and opened a steadily widening rift across the Island. The de8dly lavp stream rolling down the Helgafjell, extending nearly two miles from the volcano to the coastline and practically cutting the island ln two. jtist misied the town but some houses on the outskirts were set on fire. The eruption continued unabated more than 10 hours after the volcano came to life for th'? first time in maybe 5,000 or 6,000 years. The islanders .. many of whom· agreed to evacuation only reluctantly, we.re fer- ried across to Iceland in a surprisingly smooth operation in the · early momlng hours. A fleet of more ·than 100 fishing boats, coastal vessels, poast, guard° cut- ters and airplanes anti helicopters from the U.S. Navy base at Kenavik got more than 5,000 persons out within a few hours. Many fled dressed only in pajamas. They locked their houses and drove to the harbor where they parked their cars and went aboard the rescue ships. In the capital-of Reykjavik, .. schools : (S.. VOLCANO, Pap %) ' ,1 L;~~~....;.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-.-,-T.-..... ~ ........ I TIMY ISi.AND NIAil• ICELAND NEARLY' IUllST IN TWO s.oao lnha~lllnh flea lpurttnv ""'· l..wa "- I . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 197l N TEN CENTS Lyndon Johnson~tJ Death ;.USTIN, Tex. (UPI! -The people who knew ;.yndon B. Johnson best -his falt)ily, friends and neigh,bon from the Texu hill country-filed past his body in the marbled Great Hall of the LBJ lJ- brary today to honor and mourn the 36th U.S. President. (See related stories, pie· tures, Pages 3 and V.) Johnson, wh:se pursuit of the Vietnam war divided a nation to r1hich he had pledged a "Great Society," died Monday of a heart attack. He was 64. The tall Texan \l.'bo described the \Vhite House as the "lonely acres" was a man who loved and needed people .. And they came to him todaJ lO pay their final respects. His body will lie in state in a gray metal fasket unlit 8 a.m. PST We<!nes- day al the top of the stairs in the stately Great Hall of the $18.6-million library in front oi a black marble pylon. Smartly miformed members of the 5th Army's "Hell on Wheels" Division stood by. Johnson's widow , Lady Bird. 60, her two daugh~ers and four grandchildren, accompanied the body in a motorcade from the Weed-Corley Funeral Home to the library. They met solemnly by the catafalque bcfor~ the public lying in state. , "I had just about the toughest assign- ment I've ever had," said Tom ·:Johnson, an aide to the former President but no relation, who helped prepare the body for the ceremony, including dressing his former boss in a busine!lS suit. Johnson was stricken during an ar- ternoon oap A1onday at hi:: LBJ Ranch 65 miles from Austin. Secret Service agents rushed to help him. ··They found the fom:er President Johnson on the floor next to his bed. He was not moving," said Tom JolulSOn. ··~le \Yas lying on his back. An agent said (See JOHNSON, Page 2) Peace Possible Today Nixon to Address U.S. At 7 P.M. on Television BULLETIN PARIS (AP~ -Henry A. Kissinger and Huoi's Le Due Tbo Initialed a Vlct- n1m peace agreement today shortly be- fore IGsslnger Dew back lo Washington to report to Presidenl Nixon , reliable sources reported. WASHINGTON (UPI) .. -President Nixon will address the nation on radio and television tonight, probably to an· nounce a Vietnam cease-fire agreement. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in making the announcement this afternoon of the broadcast, did not say speclfically "lhat Nil:on would speak on a cease-fire. But all sip pointed to it. (Related story, .Page.3.) .in Paris. f0t-severaL__days. His quick return suggested that the final session of the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly. Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ad· dress, he will meet at 5:30 p.m. PST with his Cabinet and at 6 p.m. with a bipartisan group of congressional leaders. The !alter are Senate GOP leader Hugh Scott of PeMsylvania; Senate Democratic leader li1ike Mansfield: (See PEACE, Page %) Newport OKs The SL LouiS Post-Dispatch reported v am-f rom ""WiililDg(OOfOOiYUjat Kissingir and 1bo aclllally initialed the agreement. ers es l)ut wbea · ~-..... blonk al Oily · I Fie1d .if &hey 'baid. ~. the jovial c ndi • aDd •mlllliil )Q•Jr ~: "I have . 0 llO. tn"c ~·-ay.'" ..---.---,--'.I.IO ·ziegier said the speech it 7 p.m. PST Is de$igned •:to report on the status of the Vietnam neg~tiations." The speech \vlll follow a meeting J>y Nixon with_D_r . .Jt.enry ~. Kissinger, his chief Vietnai,i negotiator who was due back in Washington at 2:45 p.m PST af\er a three-hour, 4!i-minute meeting in Paris today with Hanoi's Le Due Tho. The Paris meeting broke up amid warm smiles and waves from both Kiss· inger and Tho. Kissinger had been expected to remain Roof er Survives Newport Plu11ge Of Four Stories A Fu1lerton roofing contractor Monday survived a four-story plunge from the top of a Newport Beach apartment building. Jerry Luther, 41, suUered a badly broken leg and dislocated hip in the fall, according to a spokesman at Hoag Memorial Hospital. "He'll be here for a while, but he's doing okay,'' the spkesman said. Luther was in no condition today to explain the circumstances of the fall. Police and fire rescue units on the scene said Lulher had fallen about 35 or 40 feet to ihe pavement below. He landed oo bb !tomaclo, the upper hall ol hi> body on a pile of sand and his legs on the con- crete sidewalk. Luther told poilce at the scene be was working near the edge of the roof at 6001 Seashore Drive when he lost his balance and fell. Balboa Rezoned By L. PETER KRIEG Of IN DtllY Plitt Sl9fl There will oe 453 oew units built onto the V~rsaUJes op the Bluffs housing proj- ect in West Newport. They wlll look pretty much-the Mlnle as the old ones. The numbers and the looks of the proj· eel are just two conditi~ in a revised agreement between the .... ~\Ider and the city approved by Newport Beach roun- cilmen Monday night. The action climax- ed a year-loog controversy surrounding the blufftop development overk>oking Newport Harbor and the Pacific Ocean. The vote wu split. Approval came 5-2, over the objectiQnS of Councilmen Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoff and West Newport resident Richard Clucas. Kymla said he didn't like the "visual lntrus.ion." Ryckoff still doesn't like the density and both he and Clucas said they still have fears about the potential traffic impact. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers . appeared to express the majority opinion when he said he'd vote for the scltlement because · cooncllmen were under threat of the multi-million dollar lawsuit filed when planning commissioners had asked that the density be t..Ut to 18 units per acre. "ft would be politically expedient to turn it down," Rogers said, "but we must balance it against the true realities . Fighting, and perhaps losing , a lawsuit would mean a loss of considerable money that otherwise could be used to buy open space." City Manager Robert L. Wynn, the chief architect of the rewritten agree- ment that slmul'8neOUSly settled the lawsuit, spoke strongly in favor of it, Wynn had ~ crtUcal of the original agreement -signed in a hastily-called special meeting Nov. I. the day after the IS.. VERSAILLES, Page Z) Council Gives Okay To :V ersliilles Project ' Here in brief are major actions taken by Newport Beach counciJmon Monday night. VBRSAILLES: . Approved new Pact that clears the way for construclioo of 453 coodominium1 aa P-ll. Density IJ cut and bllllder....UI be required ta pay rees and other Improvement COits undet the qnomet>t. ISLAND REZOr.'E: Placed all but commercial arHI ol Balboa Island under """· R-I.5 (limited duple•) zone Intended to reduco density aod bulk ol buildinp. • 1'111'111'l8ULA BlllLDING; Turned doWn proposal by Vic.. Mayor Howard Rogers for emergency ordinance that .,,.ouJd have stopped all but single-family home COOltruction oo Balboa Peninsula roe llO days. • OPEN SPACE: Created new zoning claatfocatlon tbal could be placed on any pti>perty that would require it to be JJJ'<'llbelt. CHARTER REVISION: Named blue- ribbon dtbens pa1ie:l to study possible charter revialonl. Tl*I named Include former mayor Doreen Manball; Les Steffensen, who chaired the commlllee (See GLANCI!:1 P ... II - ' .... ' t" Ul'IT ........ HENRY KISSINGER AND HANOI 'S1t.E'DUC' THG-SHAKING ON IT? P11c• Neeotiato'rs W~11thed in Smll•--Follo~i·na ~•.ri• Talks . -- Swiss Move Hurts D·ollar In Europe's Money Marts GENEVA (UPI) -The Swiss Natliinal Bank withdrew support of the dollar to- day to 1top speculation In the buyil1g of Swiss francs. The dollar dropped on other European money markets. The meBl\ll't permitted the Swiss franc to Ooat on the open marll:et and commer- cial banJu ~pted only small amounts of dollars and other currencies. European bankln& soar~ aaid that the move IJ probably temporary. A di· rector of the Swiss National bank1 Michel de Ri.vaz, said in 1AlCich that tne bank ls not planning to let the franc noat more lhan a few days. · In Paris, the dollnr dropped to 5.05 francs today on the fne money market cotnpared with Mondlf's 5.09 Closlrig rate. French bankers a~l.c(I the drop to the Swi'8 refusal ta~ ·the dollar . "It appears to be ariMher European speculative attack on lk dollar.'' a French banking so=e llid. VD Program Slated In Newport Tonigh' A community lnlonnatlon pr(lgram on venmal -II IChedliled ror 8 o'dock tonl&bl at M1rlner'1 Sc;bool, 111111 Marlnert Drift, Newport Beach. Co-•Jl0115<)1'bj by tllo Junior Ebtll ol Newport Beach and the Youth Problem Center ol Orange County, tho me.ting will r-00 plans r. r esUlbllalllng a "Harbor Area center for tr e. a t m e n t. diagnosis, and counseling on venereal dia<ue. The Swts! ·National Bank. acting with the se'Ven-member cabinet Jn Bern . de- cided to stop buying dollars at the olficlal rate of 3.75 francs after a heavy influx or Iorelgn orrenc~ Mooday. The dollar opened today at 3.119 Swils francs and closed at 3.70 francs. Oraage C.ut Weadter Sunny skies are on the agenda for Wednesday •. with dlmlni•hing northeast wind51.-accordihg to the weatherlady. Hilhs o{ 68 at the beaches and 10 inland are ei:pected. Lows tonl&bt, a chilly 11-43. INSIDI! TOD-'Y A ihotgw~witlding T o p e k cz n1an o~· btrrttk and kill1 Jive persona in h.il 11dQ~or~. within tight of the state Capitol. before tumino Ult! gun on 1llm- sel/. Police ore m111tf/icd.. Su 1torJ1 on PQff •· l.M."""' 1t ...... It <......... ' ...... ,, ... " ca.1111 ............ ,.... • ~ 11 ....... c..iv , ~ 11,_... ,,..U ...... --1 Sllldl ~ lt-11 ............ f T......._ It -----· 11 ~ " ,..._. 1•11 ....., • Pw .. """"' t ._..., ..... ,U.lf ..... I-14 ........ 4 AM U....,. l4 2 DAILY PtlOT M TwtSCtay, Jtnwvy 2J, 197J :===========;- Dogs Kill Pet; Willed Money STATESVILLE, N.C. (API - .Polly. a lltUe turry white 1pl1it wu klllell by olber dop In the dot poond b<loro she could IJeiln en· joying her tnherllanoe. PoUy was willed an income of $480 " year from stocks lefl ,by her mistress, 12-yeer-old Ann ltobin.!JOn Cowan. who lived alone and was fo und dead In he.r hon1e Jan. 12. Polict? saJd they couldn't reach a veterinari111 over the weekend and neighbors wouldn't keep Polly tem- porarily. They said the dog w.u snapping at them because they "'ere strangers. .so they muuled ter and placed her in th~ dog pound. New por t Aide Wi ll Make Noise Query Ne"1>0rt Beach Assistant City Man~­ ger Phil Bettencourt said today he will appear before Orange County .airport co111missioners in Santa Ana . tonight at 7 o'clock to question effktiveness <lf noise m<lnitoring systems at the coonty airport. The commissi<ln \\'ill meet in the supervisors' hearing room at 515 N. Sycamore St. A presentation of the monitoring :sys- tem and the state-detennined ooise lev- els by county noise abatement specialist Norm Ewers is on tonight's ag~ 111be City Council and staff have rea-son to believe that the county may not have complied witb the state noise stand- ards at Orange County Airport," Betten- court asserted today. 'Ibe city of Newport Beach has directed a letter on the aubject to the Board of Supervjsors, asking if the county bas complied. If it hasn 't complied, Bettencourt said, then the city is asking why and if the county will seek a variance from the state standards. Ewers said today that his report is "nothing unusual'' and will mainly be a description of the county monitoring ~ gram for the benefit of the three oew cornmW:ioners who came on board two weeks ago. Bettmcourt commented that he wants to see what the viem of the three new member. mljiht be on the aubject. Also on tonight's agenda are: -Dilcusakn of a -model home complex proposed at Genloimo Lane and Canada Rood in Lake Fcrmt In El Toro. Airport I.and Use ~ reaoatly rec- ommended potential residents be warned ol ooise from oearby El Tbro P.faJine Corpe Air StallOft. -DisCu.ssion of an Irvine Cotnpany proposed planned community, Village of Valley View in north Irvine. Part ol the project which is still be.fore Irvine planning commissioners is adjacent to the Marine Cocps Air Station, Santa Ana. Judge Refuses ' Water gate Bail Reducing Request WASll!NGTON (UPI) -The trial judge brusquely refused today to reduce bail for four men, now ln jail, Who plead- ed guilty in the Watergate bugging case. Federal Judge John J . Sirica stressed their admission or participating in "clandestine activities" in rejecting the request to lower the SI00,000 bail for each of the four men, all from the Aliami area. Daniel E. Schultz, newly hired attorney for the four, urged the reduction on ground s his clients had pressing personal pr<lblems necess itating. their release. Sirica declared : "Each of these four defendants is fluent in Spanish and one or more of them apparently has ties in foreign countries. Each of them has ex- perience in clandesllne operations, in· eluding the use of aliases ... OIAN•I COAST " DAILY PILOT Tiie Or-.. C:O..! DAILY PILOl, ..it11 W11k:11 Is c.,.;ne11 1119 News.Prn1, II PUlbliM!cd b'f' h 0r•"'9 CM.II ~11~"'9 CO!nPM"I'. Sepa. r11t .alltllln5 ar1 PllOlilf!ed, Mond1y llll"OVgll Frlay, tor C01!1 Mn.a, NtwpOtt ... ,II, Hwnll""lon llllldl/fOl,lrltli<l \'1tley, Laf4,>NI Btac.11, lrvi"'ISaddlrillck and Sin Cllmetllel Sin Jw.i Capl11rane A 1111911 rwglofl1/ H itio11 Is pUblhlllid $.llurd1y1 1nd Sund1yl. T~e prlnclPlll Pllbll1lli<19 pl1n1 I• If JJO WIS! Illy S!r"1, Ca.11 Mt... C11lll)f'll!1, 92'~ Robert N. W11d Prniden1 •nd PubUlll« J 1ck R. Curl1v \'let P~lclenl Ind GtMra! Ma1119W l !.0,,.,11 K11Yll liioliw lho"''' A. Murp!.ine "l•nltlflll IEO!fw L r1t1r Krl19 Nt"IWllOrt ••Kii CllV ~dllof' N..-,..t .._, Offk• ]J]J N1wport lo11l1w1rd M1ili119 Addr1111 r.o. ••• 111s, t266l °""' Ollkn C..111 Mna: »Cl Wiii tty Slfett L19111'111 IMCll: m l'-t A-H1'11t lntr1111 ltl(JI: 1111S INCtt lovln"tre ""Cltmtntll •s Narrll IEI ''"'!no tl:ttl Till.,.._. (7141 642-4321 c...,,.... ... rtltl!tt 64Z..S671 ~t, 1'72, Ora,,,. Co•1I Pllblltillno Qmp9n1" ~o """' •!Orin, lll\llltallora. •"'™t fNllll" w MwM~ her9i11 tnty .,. rtPf'tldllclf wll!IO\lt ...-ci.1 ,.,. ei copyrlfllt -· Cl ... Mlttf •Ill' at COt11 Mfu, lllf"ni.. fWKtilltlon OI" CltfJtr U.U ll'llV/ f!IY rNll IJ,11 montt\IFI ml!rtwy llMtlfM "·" JNftllt/Y. \ •• M•rhter's Mile Sewer Joh 8een ~lowing lraffic I By-WIWAM SCIUU>.111El\ · 0t tM Otlll' ~lilt II ... COnstrucUon or a sewer main along ltfariner's Mlle is going to add to the traffic woei in Newport Beach (or the nex:t couple Of mooths. The ~·ork has forced an alma.st total ban on part!ng along PaciUc Coast lligh· ~·ay due to lane restriplng and business- nien 'fire already angry, councilmen ~·ere told Mooday night. "ThJs bas alarmed me.tthants along lhe highway," said 01.itrict Engineer VERSAILLES • • • suit was tiled -and bad told councilmen in a secret meeting they were "giving away the store." That earlier settlement brought pro- tests hum throughout the community. Wynn said the .major chinges between the t\\'O documents include : -A 10 percent reduct ion in dwelling unit density, from 505 to 453 units: from 24 to 21.8 units per acre. -A cut in the number of bedrooms, from 1,150 to ?SS. -A requirement that the builder, the Donald Scholz Company, pay $9.1,000 in building excise tues and pay other fees. -A deed restriction forbidding children under 16 years old from living in the proj- ect was added. · From Pagel GLANCE ... that wrote the charter in 1956; former councilman and city m&Lager Robert Shelton ; Richard H. Spooner; Mrs. T. Duncan "Jerry" Stewart ; Roy B. \Voolsey, and three councilmen. MARINA FACELIFT, Asked the Join! Harbor CommlHee to review Irvine Com- pany plans to reconstruct Bayshores Marina . GROINS: Approved construction of two groins off Little Balboa f,land. LAND SOLD: Auctioned t. 7 acres of property in Huntington Beacb to Frank Ayers Compaily and sold lot at corner or 32nd and :Jarcua Streeta lo a Los Angeles :ovings and loan company. TllAPF!c UGll1S, Delayed plarui for stop light at Palm Avenue and Balboa 'Boulevard. Decided Instead to use funds for s.ignal at Santa Rosa nr:ve and San Joaquin Hills Road in Newpon Center. HOTEL: Approved plans for a 120- room Beflkr cilizens hotei at 333 Placen- tia Avenue. AIRPORT: Demanded that Orange County Supervisors "adequately" fund operations of the Airport Land Use Com- mission, formed two years ago by state law to ruJe on land development near airports. PBR AUTIIORITY: Told Parks. Beaches and Recreation Commissioners to furnish more detailed minutes of their meetings if they are unhappy -wtuch they said they are -about council's failure 10 heed their recommendatioos. .~ ... Fred Harper. "! Juot dtove d<'"n there and J know wb,1.'• · Many 00.inesMs aiooc Mariner's Mlle J><O•lde no olf..troet parking and depend on the blabway tor tl "The dlstrict is in the process of cre- ating chaos on the hia;hway." Hari>t"r said. unus sewer main Das been needed for a Jooc time but it will ~ prob- lems." llalper said the main Is being l.Ud •looc the Inland side of the hlgbway and in order to maintain four lane3 of traf- fic flow, the parking lane on the ba)'llde had to be eUinlnated. 'Ibe '6001000 project, which Involves lnatallation ol a 24-ioch, !orced·Oow sewer Une from tbe Santa Ana River lo lbe -aalboa Bay Club, will serve as a backup to tM single main serving grow· ing areas of Corona deJ Mar and Balboa Island. "The line will hopefully provide for anticipated growth in the city and will Pl'Ovido~for-&erYice-sbould the-etlStfng llne down O>a.st fllihway need repair," said Ray E. Lewis, the district's depu ty chief engineer. Harper told councilmen the parking ban is already in elfect for the bayside cf the Pacific Coast ~f~~·ay but "No Parking" signs Will be down on the inland side and re-installed ooly as the work nears critical areas. Lewis said hand;delivered letters were distributed to businessmen in the affected areas last week advising them of the scope of the project. The Jetter said in part that the no park!ng plan was adopted becau.se it "would expedite canst.ruction and would be in the best interest of all involved." Lewis said today his stall consulted closely with the city traffic engineerin~ department and with the California Div1- ision of Highways to detennine the best possible means ot getting the pipeline laid. "We determined the plan now in effect would be best in terms of avoiding traf- fic congestion and getting work done as fast as possible," Lewis said. He said workers have already laid 9,000 feet of pipe from the river to the Arches bridge and are proceeding at the rate cf 250 feet per day. They still have more than 6.000 feet lo go, he said. Harper estimated the project \\i U take at least two more moo.tbs to finish and he urged -businessmen to cooperate with each other. ;·we need as much cooperation as pos· sible." he said. "Help each other cut in providing off-street parking." Harper said the pipeline trench will )le filled and temporarily covered as wOrk progresses to provide par~ as soon as possible Oft the in13n(f sid~ or· the high- way. From Pagel VOLCANO ••• closed and were equipped to ltouse the islanders. The government called an emergency sesskm to work out relief programs. Government sources said personnel will be left on the island to protect property and keep the huge fish freezing plants working. If electricity is cut off, hun- dreds of tons of frozen fish will be destroyed The sources sakl the eruption, coming at the start or the fisbiog season, ls a serious blow· to the nation's already shaky ~nomy. Mesa Officials Study Historic Bond Ballot By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of It'll 0.llJ Piii! lttff A bond election for $5 million to SIO million -the first in Costa Mesa's 20- year history -today is being considered by the City Council to buy open space for all city residents. The bond vote was suggested to coun- cilmen Monday night by City P.fanagcr Fred Sorsabal as a means of securing some 100 acres of property that soon will become available as surplut. "It's Ume the pejlple told us what they want. If they want open space, Jet's fllld out whether theJ are willing to spend the money to save it," the city manager urg- ed. Costa Mesa, he added , ls not in A posi- tion to acquire the land from budgeted fwids and a bond elecUon will be necessary to preserve the land from private development. The sudden land rush was sparked by separate decisions of the Orange County Fa ir Boa rd and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to dllpose of their excess lands. Available in a few weeks will be the fGllowl ng properties: -Thirty·th ree acres or unused Orange County Fairgrounds land In tbe Ylclnltr, o( Arlington Avenue and Fairview Road. This property is valued at '1.5 mllllon. -A 20-tefe middle school slle In tile general vidnJly of Estancia lt!gb School. -A 10-acrt schoo l i;.lte lmmedl11cly acijacenUo the tuture "7·acre Fatrvlcw Regional 'Park. -Twelve acres ol school propert y north ol the Col!ta Alesa Ootr and Coun· try Club in the Buccola tr&ct. Th is Is the Tanager site. -A 10.acre school site In North Cos1:.i Pt1csa in the vicinity of Sunflo~·er Avenue nnd Fairview Road. I -The 8-acre McNally Continuation High School campus at 1901 Newport Boulevard. • Sorsabal explained that the school dis- trict intends to divest itself of the prop- erties because they are no longer needed and that the fair is selling Its land to secure monies for the improvement of existing facil ities. While members of the City Council dld not immediately ask for a bond elect~ during Monday night's study sesskm, the mood was generally in favor of acquiring at least some of the properties. Even Councilman Alvin P\nkley, who was not in favor <lf buying the Fairgrounds property, agreed it would be prudent "to keep the door open" until the council knows t:xactly how many of the parcels It wants, and what the price tag will be. Although every one of the parcels is zoned l·R (instJtuUonal and recreational) the council could not unrta10Dably pre- vent any private development by refusing to remne them, Sorsahal indicated. 'Ille bond election could go from a low ol '5 mlllioo In a high ol 110 mlllion, depending M wbetlJ<r the council chose to Improve any of the properties. A two- lhlrds mtjorily woald be required !or passage. ShoUld mem:ien of lltt council decido In favor of a bond election, h would be the lint -oleellocLslnce the city waa Incorporated In 1113. Bolh the Costa Mesa Civic Center and the Costa Mw Goa and Country Culh were financtd wllhOf.lt a public bond elec- tion . tn both ca!es1 non•prof]t cor· porations wert fonncif Which then sold their own bonds. Until the Issue has been dccld<d , Coat• . Mesa cOuncUmen tiJll attempt to kt!tp · their hand In the land deal by asking tho owners for vie first right or rtfuul. ' FN•P -.eJ JOHNSON . : . • l be appeared dead.. He was dark blue in color. They admini stered oxysei1 and 1nouth to mouth resuscitation ... " Oo the black inarble pylon rising stiove tbt catafalque weni th~ wonLt : "l have followed the personal phlloaophy that r am , 1 free man, an American , a public servant and a member of my partr -ii) that ord,r. always and only. "'The Great Society asks not how muc:h, but how good; not only how tu create wealth but how to use U; oot only bow fast we ure goina, but where we afi' headed. It proposes •• the flrst teat for a naUon: The quality of Its people." Mrs. Char les Beckham of S1nlthvinc. Tu .. was the first person In line durln!l the momma to fil! put tbe casket. She took her four chUdren out of school a.v::I drove 50 miles north. .. "l respect President Johnson," Mn;. Beckham said. "I wa1 t:bout to lose my only child and he helped bring my hus· band home from the military." ' A jeUiner provided by Nlxon will ny Johnson's body lo Waahlncton Wedntk· day. '!be caaket will be lll<en lo the Capitol, where the body will lie ln s;• In the rotunda unUl Tbunciay, folio '. by funeral services at the NatJonal C CbristJan Church, The body then wlll be flown back,40 • -Texas -for-a finat-ceremo1"1Y-ti001Jliriiijf. 3:30 p.m. Thur&day In 1'1< family cemetery on the banks of the Pedema1ts River, a quarter-mile from the LW Ranch. COAST HIGHWAY PROJECT AODS TO PARKING-TRAFFIC WOES Mlrlner'1 Mile Ch.os Expeded to Cont1nue Two Montht Newport~ Vice Ma:yor Hits Phone Service Disruptiorl Newport Beach Vice fifayor Howard Rogers took on Mother Bell Monday. The verbal scufne ended in a draw. Rogers, annoyed at the tG-bour disrup- tion ol telephone service th:oogbout the city nearly three weeks ago, demanded to know why Pacific Telephone couldn't, wouldn't, or didn't get it restored a lot sooner. 1be disruption was caused by a ~k­ man wbo drilled through a 11!8jor trunk· · line at,the Arcl!q"!IJal Cl!M<'ls N~rt Beach with Costa Mesa and man Of the rest of the outside world. Telephone Company spokesman Mrs. Pat Krone tried to tell councilmen that all servict wasn't disrupted, but that the demand oo the limite4 number of other trunklines available resulted in most people getting busy signals. Rogers claimed he couldn't make a call at all. ';I've got two phones in my house and I couldn't even call myse.U," Rogers com- plained. . Explaining that the tnmkline only af· rected calls into or out of the 673 and 675 e'A'.changes, Mrs. Krone told Rogers, ''You ~hould have been able· to call yourself." "What do you suggest he call himself?" smiled Mayor Dooald Mclnni3, keeping the conversation light. "I lifted the pbooe and got no action at all ," Rogers continued. Mrs. Krone admitted "there was an abnonnally busy condlUon," saying that when most people find out there's trouble with the phones, they all pick one up and try to make a call, just to see for themselves. "It's like people seeing a 'wet paint' sign," she said, "they've all got·to touch it. .. Hogen persisted, however, and wanted to know _why the telephone company didn't provide a more adequate loop sys- tem so calls, at least emergency calls could be rerouted if something like that happens again. "An operator would seize a line if there was an emergency," P.trs. Krone assured Rogers. . ~ That wouldn't be much help If a person. couldn't get an operator, Rogers pointed out. When Mrs. Krone said simply tbal cost would preclude tbe company...,fr!m in- stalling any system to provlde 1111ll ,per· cent and Instantaneous" backup systems, Rogers told her he wanted a letter trom the tele~hone company about what sort of standby service they are going to "make available if this happens again." Mrs. Krone said the problem may get worse before it gels better becauSe of th e·increased number of unde[ground wires. She urged all contractors to check with the telephone company before digging to ensure they won't hit any cables. But she noted they don't all do it now, feeling it would be cheaper to pay the cost of re- pairs if they hit something than waiting for a check to be made. c.ouncilmen wondered if the city could do an)'lhlnjj about enlorclng that and Mrs. Krone point<d out the telephone company has a claim for d a m a g e s against the city now ~ause city crews cut through a line last month. Rogers said he still thought the com- pany would be better off building a back- up system than paying fonner basketblll star Bill Rus.seJI to do televtsloo com- mereials durliig the football games. "These plans represent the wlsbet 11r the family," Tom Johnson said. Of Mrs. Johnson, he said, "I would describe her condition as very sturdy. She Ui holdlrig up very well." President N110ll proclaimed Thursday as a national day of mowvJ.ng. : The President, In a public pn>c· lamation and in a 1'11eSSage to Con~. !onnally announced the death of the 31th P:e..sident. .. Nixon 1.ssued an executive order 'le. quiring clooure of an federal agenciea, except for those involvet! with the rfa. tional security, on Thuncll7 -the day •I the funeral. --1 The President directed lhlt flqs lie displayed at half staff for 30 days. t The New York and American stock ew:- 'ebanges said they will cl.,. Thund•y in observance of the 'moumhtJ' day. Regular mail deliveries wiD be can- celed for the day. · Frot11P .. el PEACE •.. Speaker Carl Albert, Hou..e R<publican leader Gerald R. Ford of P.tichigan and House Democratic leader Thomas P. O'Neill of l\fassachusett.s. , Zi_We> aJ90 atUlO<lieed ~· Yill lie a larg!!I' itpartisan "c o n gr e •* t-o·n a I leadei'!hip meeting at 5:30 a.m. PST Wednesday. Ziegler declined tq aay how long lonifbl'a speech will ba Oii lo upand In any way on bis terse announcement. If as expected Nixon announces tonight an agreement has been reached, It will come almost four years to the day from the ftrat peace talb in Parll. It was on Jan. 26, 1969, that American, North Vietnamese, South Vietnamese <y:1d Viet Cong negotiators gathered at \Jle Hotel Majestic in Paris to try to end \he long, bloody war. J ~tails of the cease-fire agreement, oat immediately made public, a r e eipected lo closely parallel the nlne-poinl accord that both sides nearly agreed on in October, That called for tbe return of all U.S. prisoners of war and the witbdraial of all U.S. troops within 60 day&. : A cease-fire would take place within 2t hoW's of the f<lnnal signing, and an in- ternational supervisory team would go iuto Vietnam to palice the cease-fire. J .. The accord established a Natlo't"'I Council or Reconciliation made up 10£ representatives from the Saigon and Hanoi . governments p I u s neulrall.sta to supervise ·elections which would determine the political future of Viet- nam. MEASURE FOR TREASURE On e factor ovorlookeil liy customen In buying carpeting is the mHsuring for y1rd19•. AH of our Salesmen ~now how to measure 11nd figure exact yardage, often providing our customers substantial wvings in y1rd1ge alone. Al .. , with the tremendous insl•ll•tion .,. perience our solesmon have {t1eh p<9viously wH •n u ptrl installer for u1), we are •ble to forJOe t ny potential problem. Pfea,. stop in •nd look t i tho lreHures av•ila ble to you th rough our 1ton. We hove 1 gigantic 1elect ion, i nd the meHuring will be ' · ACCURATE! ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES •• COSTA MBA MMCI 1f f7 - 1663 Plac•ntla Ave. COSTA MISA . 64MB3B HOUllS:. Mon. Thrv Thun., 9 to S::IO -FRI., 9 to 9 -SAT .. f::IO to S . .. ~I • ... ~ I I l ' ·j r \ Today's Final N.Y. Stocks .· ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1973 c TEN CENTS lJ.S. Mourns Lyndon Johnson ~s Death ~USTIN. Tux. (UPI) -The people who knew i..yndon B. Johnson best -his family, friends and nelgbbon from the Tux11 bill country-liled past bis body in !he marbled Great run or the LBJ Li· brary today tO honor and mourn !he 36th U.S. President. (See related stories, pie-- lures, Pages 3 llld 9.) Johnson, wh~ pursuit of the Vietnam war divided a nation to r1hich he had pledged a "Great SOciety," died Monday of a heart attack. He was 64. , The tall Texan wbo described the White House as the "lonely acres" was a man who loved arid needed people. And they came to him todaJ lo pay their final respects. His body will lie in state in a gray metal casket unW 6 a.m. PST Wednes- day at the top of the stairs in the stately Great Hall of the $18.6-million library in front oi a black marble pylon. Smartly mlformed members ot the 5th Army's "Hell on Wheels" Division stood by. Johnson's widow. Lady Bird, 60, bet two daughten and four grandchildren, accompanied the body In a motorcade from the Weed-C:Orley Funeral Home to the library. They met solemnly by the catafalque before the pubUc lying in state. "l had just about the toughest asslg~ ment I've ever had," said Tom Johnson, an aide to the fonner President but no relation. w.ho helped prepare the body for the ceremony, including dressing his former boss in a business suit. Johnson was strickefl during an af· t!rneiOn nap f.fonday at hb LBJ Ranch t5 miles from Austin. Secret Service agents rushed lo bclp him. "They found the forn:er Prtlident Johnsoo on !he floor next to his bed. He was not moving," said Tom Johnson. "He was lying on his ~ck. An agent said (See JOHNSON, Page %) -Peace Treaty 'Signed' ---LYNDON BAINES JOHNS0~190&.1973 ---P-Ol'!Mr P...._.DNd of-J:lnrt Attock 1t·R1nclr- . . . Nixon to Address U.S. At 7 P.M. on Television BULLETIN . PARIS (AP) -Hearf A. KJ1slnger and Buol'• Le Doc Tho initialed a Vlei· 'nam peace agreement today shortly be- fore Xlsslnger Dew back to WasldngWn to report to. President Nil:on, reliable sowce1 reported. WASHINGTON {UPI ) -President Nixon will address the nation on radio and television tonight, probably to an· nounce a Vietnam cease-fire agreement. White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, in making the announcement this attemoon of the broadcast, did · not say specifically that Nixon would speak on a cease-fire. But all signs pointed to it. (Related story, Page 3.) The-St .. L00Js..11ii&W)ispatcll-repo from W~ton -today that Kis,,inger and Tho actually initialed Q>e agreement. But when asked· point-blank at Orly Field jf they bad done 90, the jovial and tiliiJJnl' KlliJoi;:r ,..,,Ued: "I· hive 00\hiacclo JIJ to --• Ziillor-idd 'ltil ...... 9i T'p.m. PST Is delicned "to· ftllCll'I oo tbe -or lbe Vletri:am nejJUltkn." ~lssinger had been e1pected to remain in Paris for several days. His quick return suggested that the final session of the long, difficult negotiations went smoothly. Ziegler said that prior to Nixon's ad· dress, he will meet at 5:30 p.m. PST with his Cabinet and at 6 p.m. with a bipartisan group of congressional leaders. The latter are Senate GOP leader Hugh Srott of Pennsylvania; Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield; {See PEACE, Page ti Mesa Council Considering ~ 7 B1 l\UDI NdDUt:•AgT °' ..... "" .... A hood eledioa for '5. mi.Ilion to $10 . . IsJan.d .~Ne~ly · fu llalf The speed! will follow a meelfni by Nixon with Dr. Heru:y A. Kissinger, bis chief Vietnam negotiator wOO--was-due back in W1shington at 2:45 p.m 'PST after a three-hour, 45-minute meeting in mlll!On -lbe first In COiia Mesa's - year hlstorY -today Is being con!idered VESTMANNAEYJAR. Iceland (UPI) first as the volcano spUrted thousands of -:-More than 5,000 1pers6n5 fled their tons of burning lav8, stones and ashes in- trembling and 1smoking Island home oU to the darkeried 'skies and opened a Icelind's htthem coast today ·after the stead.i)y widening rift across the island. Helgafjell volcano erupted and prac· 'The deadly )fva stream rolUng down Uoally cut HeiroaeY Wand In two. the JieJgafjell, · extending nearly two A horse was swallowed up when the miles from ·the volcano to the coastline grOuod bUrst • o}>en 'do a lillskle and and pi::actically cutting the island in two, flames and molten lava were thrust more _Just missed U>e town bu\ some: houses on than 100 yards into the. air. -the outskirts were set on fire. But 1there1 were no personal injurierf, <-'' lI'he eruption contimled unabated more Mayor Magnus Magnusson said. than 10 hours after the volcano crune to • Paris today with Hanoi's Le Due Tho. ' The Paris meeting broke up amid. warm smiles and waves from both Kiss· inger and Tho. Timothy Leary Goes to State Obispo Facility Geoiogists expressed fears that the life for 'th'! first time in maybe 5,000 or island, 2.$ miles wide and five miles long, 6,000 years. The itinerant impresiaro of the drug ma, explode and disappear in the Allan-The ~!anders, many of whom ~ set, Dr. Timothy Leary, Monday night tic. . to evacuation only reluctantly, were fer-ked r Or "' Coun J ii · the But local olficials in Vestmannaeyjar ried across to Iceland in a surprisingly cbec out 0 · an5e ty a m company of State Department of Cor· said ihey believed the eruption would s,mooth operati()I\ in the early morning rections.. officen who took hlm to subside and the is landers would be able hours. A fleet pf more than 100 fishing California Men's Colony, San Luis to return home. . boals, coastal vessels, coast guard cut· Obisop. (Related story Page 3). A_ few ~undred persons, mostly ters and airplanes 'and heli~pters rrom Leary, 52, whose arraignment on ftn;men , pohce and rescue workers, re-the U.S. Navy: bast at ~e~av1k got more Grand Jury charges linking him with the matned behind to patrol the deserted than 5,000 persons out w1th1n .a few ,hours. ... Brotherhood of Eternal Love drug smug· stree~ with the ground trembµng und~r Many fled dr~ss,ed . only m p&Jatnas. gling ring has been postponed to Jan. 30, their feet. Vestmannaeyjar b Iceland s , They locked thell' houses and drove to checked out of the local pokey about 7.30 third bigg~t city and th~ ~ng capital . tQe harbor where they parked their cats , p.m. Monday, Sheriff's Sgt. Geo~ge qJ the nallor.. . l ancl went aboard the resCue ships. Johnson said • 'The eruption came .in the middle bf the • Iii the capital of Reykjavik, schools lt iso't ·knoWJL....bow Leary was night and created panic 'in'lhe jtree~ al · (S<e VOLCANO; Page IJ · !ransported to San Luis Obispo. .,. ~• · Since his return to Califomla Thurs-,_ ___________ ..,. ______ ..;.. ____ _, day, Leary has visited the Los Angeles County Jail for a night's stay before being brought to Orange Coonty where the Charges were brought agaJnst him 'Mooday in Superior Court. ' Leary still has a one to 10 year sen· tence to complete at the minimum security San Lu1s Ob~po facility. He ned the prison in September, 1970 (set LEARY, P•ge %) by the City Council to boyropen space for all city residents. The bond vote was suggested to coun· cilmen Monday night by City Manager Fred Sorslbal as a means of securing some 100 acres of property lhat soon will become available as surp1ltl. . "It's time lbe people !old us whit Ibey want U they want open .splCe, let's find out wbelber lbe/ u:e willing lo spend lbe money to save it," the city manager urg· ed. . Costa Mesa, be added, is not in· a posi· lion to acquire the land · from tiUdgeted funds and a bond election will be necessary to preserve the land from private development. The sudden land rush was .sparked by separate decislorui of the Orange County Fair Board and the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to dispose of their excess lands. - Available in a few weeks will be the following properties: -Thirty-three acres of unused Orange County Fairgrounds land in the vicinity of Arlington Avenue and Fairview Road. This property is valued at $1.5 million. -A JO.:acre m1ddle school site in the general vicinity ot Estancia High School. -A 10..Cre scbool site immediateJy adjac:eot to the future 257-acre Fairview Rtgiooal Park. -Twelve acres of school property north ol the COiia Mesa Goll and Coon· try Club Jn lbe Buccola tract. This is the Tanager site. -A lG-acre school site in North ~ta lttesa in the vicinity of SUnOower AVenue and Fairview Road. The S-acre McNally Continuation (See BOND, Pqe IJ ., Little Cigar -~·· ' ' ' ' ' " AllANllC OCfAH I " • . '. \' 1viuM'ANAIYJe!I I I . FTC Seeks TV Ban on Product WASHINGTON (UP[)-. The Federal Trlde commJsslon lold COOJ1reS1 Jo. day Jhe leill cleOnillon of a clg-t< showJd be chlnged 10 Include "little clgan" -and tbuo put an end lo ndlo and television ""'11DefkaiJ for the products. • Ftlday, lbe onnUll surpoo general'• report on smokinc aaid "little clpr1" are probably u mucb a bealib huml u diaretta because omokerl usully inhale them. r... -U ago, 8"'. Frink E. MOii, (Jl.Utlh), announced plua lo lntrodllce lf:lialllioo Jo ban broodcut -f0< Jhe cil•n. The FTC aaid lber< hll been 1 _, In "llllle dpr" bt-oclrertl>- Jng lbe put,_, ond mott than two -vmell!.t ol lbe ~ ~ bejnJ marketed. .. -resemble clgareuu in 1W!, ... pe ind delip, but ore wrl!IPld In • ' I ' HENRY KISSINGER AND HANOI'S .LE DUC TH°'-SIQKING ON IT? . .Pffce ~e,otl1tor~ WIJ*thei:l In Smiles Following Pfflsr1Talk1 L Swiss Move · Hurts Dollar . ' . . ' . In Europe~s Money Mart~ GENEVA (UPCJ -The Swia National ·Banlc wiibdrew support or ~dollar to- day lo stop speculation in tile b\IYing .of Swiss Crancl. Tbe dolJar dropped on olher European iponey markets. · The .-permlu.d lbe Swiss rr'l'lC to noat on the open market arid commer· clal banks tceepted only anall omounts or dollan and other "'""'1C)ls. European banking ~ said lhat the move Is probobly temporary. A di· rector ol tile Swill National honk, Michel de Rlvaz, said In ZUrich that the bank is not planiling to let the ftanc float more than a few days. In Paris. the dollar dropped to 5.05 frt1ncs today on the frte moneyi market compared with Mondey '1 5.09 clo81.ng rate. French banken attributed the drop lo the Swia refltsll lo supporl tho dollor. "It appean &o be another EuropeM speculative attlcll: on the dollar," a French blnling ,oourte ~· VD Program Slated • • In Newport Tonight A communlly lilormlllon .,......m on venerul 6-o ii ltdllduied for a o'clocl: JoaJP1 ill -·• ScbooL 2100 Mlrinm Drift, lle"JIWI Beoch. , . The Swis> National Bonk, actina with the Seven.member cablnet in Bern. de-- cided lo stop buYing clollln at \he olflclal rate of 3.75 francs after • heavy Jnnux of foreign currencies Mendly. lf'be 'dollar op!llia'tot!ay It 3.WSwlss l~ and: closed It 3.70 francs . ' c ... t Sunny skies are Oh the a-nda for Wednesday, with diminishing northeast win~~ according to the weatherlady. Highr of • at the beac~u and 70 inland are expected.. Lows \Dlllght, a chilly 31-41. · INSlltE ..... D.\ l' A sliotgurf..tofeldHto T a p 1 ta »IOn goes berttrk ond Jr.all five persons In ltil Mtghborhood, withiil 1ight of tht tWtl CGpiMI, befor1 tMrning the oun o• hlm- 1tlf. Po"tt arc mvidfild. See •torr on Page 4 • L.M, k?'ll It c.ii~ ' Cltj~ Jt..V ~ n OMtrt Mfkft 1 '· -tuled tobloco rslber thin paper, and -acape lbe ~ delliiftlon ol Co-•--' _, Ibo Junior Eboll or Newport -11111 Ibo Yauth Prol>I~ Center or 0.-. Qiwoty, the -tfng will fOClll en ploltO lo r ..tablillllrtc a Harbor Arn center for t r e a t m e n t, diagnosis, 1ad COWllOllnl on venerool di.seate. .. ,.,,.. ..... . .,..,............ " '· • ,. t ,. t ' • ' U,1 Tti--r' TINY · ISi.AND NIAR ICILAND NIAR.L Y IURST IN TWO 5.000 lnholllt-l'loe Spurtl"' flro, l.o¥1 l'low • • • • clf.-te. 'The -believes that Jlw pubUc Interest would be be"'r """ed • U lbe dollnilloo ol the l<rm :clganlte' ; •• were •mended," the FTC' aaid. • '" .. • . . PlllMct lt-lt ...... lttc•\'111 1 IW9tc.. u .... ......,., u OAJLV PILOT Weekend on .the Slopes Proves Real Snow Joh 8J TERRY OOVUU: Of .. DelY l"tllt '""" I may not be as graceful as Jean-Claude Killy. I don't e\1en rate a refer- ence as a .. ski bum.'' but I deflnltely have been ~lttm by tbe snow bug. l got my first taste of skiing last weekend at Big Bear. Taste? It was more like a mouthfUI of snow. 1 burrowed more twmels than a n1ole. I reduced the mountain to a mo1e bill. . DON7 LET anyooe kid you, ~·s oolhing more refreshing than a lro<!ty smile, two rows of frou:n teeth and a stiff tongue. ' I also found out why llOme guys still run around with ,..., ' ' . -ft' ~ ,, ·' crew cuts. Even a hot comb falls miserably agalMt a l)atch of long, frozen hair. The ski trip began badly, Fools will tell you It's ooly a twl>hour drive to Big Bear. It took us nearly five hours Friday night. Four would-be. skiers set out in my brother-in-law 's Vega. Safely tucked inside the car was a brand new set of tire chains for the icy road. cov1L.L.S A SALES SUP guaranteed us we could return the chains if they didn't fit. That's small comfort halfway up the mountain. icy wind ripping at your light clothing. Tire chains can quickly reduce oeophyte sno"'lllen into a pack or babbling. shivering. ready·~go-bome flatlanders. A rugged looking mountain man finally wandered down the road and or- (ered to fix our chaiM for $5. We would have paid $50. By that time, we had spent on hour outside struggling with the chains. · Once on, they -·ere too loose, rattling our Vega cage like an armoured person- nel CilTier. THE CAR LOST a mud flap and now bas one large bole in the elhaust pipe.Once we pulled into Big Bear Vlllage -with ~ million other skiers -it took another boor lo find out bow lo drain the radiator and fill it with anti- freeze. By 4 a.m. we were tucked safely, if not warmly, into our cabin. By 9 a.m. we were up and ready for tbe slopes. It turned out the slopes were better pre- pared for us, My first time OD skis I was surprised to find I could stand up. I wu even more surprised lo find my,.JJ moving badwards wl~ lltUe or oo eff<>rt. I QVJCKL V mastered the beginner's basic move -the pratfall. We enrolled in a beginner's class which taught us four basic maneuvers - the snow plow, the snow plow turn, grabbing the rope. tow and falling. The snow plow involves spreading your skis in a V formation {preferably with the tips together) and digging into the aoft snow. The snow plow turn involves tbe same method, except you patmore weight on ooe ski and shove it downhill, which supposedly turns you. rr TURNED ME into a crawler. Grabbing the rope tow is a lot ol fun -for masochisb. The rope is con· stanUy slldlng uphill You slowly grip it with both hMds and you're off - yoor skis moetly, The bandiest tliini. laugbi is how lo faD: It's the only sure step, Properly ezeeuted it looks like a graceful sllde Into home plate, yoor body uphill, your skis downhill. Do it WT"ODI it's more like a fhino drOpped in mid-nm by a high powered rifle. ' WE AL50 learned about Ule fall line -the dlrectlon in which skis would naturally slide downhill on their own. 1 left my own fall lines all over the .slope. -, ~ ' . Despite the milcues, slips and buml>leo, siding ii an exciting trip .• I'm reedy lo try qain. ,, • Newport Vice Mayor Hits Phone Service Disruption Newport Beach Vice Mayor Howard Rogers took OD Mother Bell Mooday. The verbal scuffle ended ln a draw. Rogers., annoyed at the lD-hour disrup- tion of telephone service throughout the city nearly three weeks ago, demanded to know why Pacific Telephone couldn't. wouldn 't, or didn't get it restored a lot sooner. The disruption was caused by a "-'Ork· , man \\'ho drilled through a major trunk· line at the Arches that connects Newport Beach with Costa Mesa and most of the rest or the outside world. Telephone Company spokesman ~1rs. Pat Krone tried lo tell councilmen that all service wasn't disrupted, but that the demand OD the limited number of other tnmklines available resulted in mo s t OIAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT T"-Or .... CMtt DAILY l'ILOT, 1'tftl •left Is Cll'ITIMMd ttl'I N._,A"M. ll tl'lbllllllll Irr Ifie ar.nte CO.ti Publi,tllrot ~. S.,.. ,.,. edllkwll ... publlllltd, Moroil.., 1h'91111t l"rl!S.y, lOr Centi Mn•. Hewiiort leK!I. Ht,1ntll'lft0n 8..:tl/F-11111 V1lley, L.,_.. lad!, lrviM/Slddllbld: .... SM a.rntntt/• . kfl J,_.n CIPlllr-. A •lnt+e ,..._..I t<:lhilln is llllblbMll klllnl1)11. ...... Swd•'t"1-· Tl'M ptlnc:ltNI !11*11111"'9 $tit II 11 llll Well 81y StrMt, Celle M•, C1lll9mll, tit». R .. ia.,t N, We1d l"rnld..,. •ltd l"IH!llthlf J1d[ R. C11rl1y Ykt Prw.INll aflllll 0---1 ~ Tlit111111 k•••il EdlW Tho1111c A, M111rpltiJ1e M••lrll ldlW 0.1rle1 H. Leos kic..1r4 '· Hilt AublWlt Mtllll91nt h llonl c:-. .... OM.. llO Weit l1y Str11t M1ili11t h!dN1n 1.0 •... 11.0, tJ:i2:i --"""*" hldl: S)U M..,..-1 ... li'llrll '-""""' •Hdl: m Fw .. t """"" liV"ll•llflo!I Madlt 11t1J MICl'I ..,....rd $iln. Clemtnlt: .. , Nor1!1 II c:.m1111 It.Ml Tel ...... 1714) Ml-4121 ~ .44 ....... """671 ee,r,.r1s111, tm, °"fttl C.St ~llililtl ~. ,., ,.... .... l!Mtl'lllllM, ldi11111i ~ -' .....,ltll'Nl'IN _. ,,.., lie ·~ •1"-'f ..-:111 •· """*' ol CIPllfllllt -· · StCOnl tll" ... ,... Mii .t CMll Mell. Ctlllll'!'llt, ~tlW! w urr1tr u..u mon"""1 ..,. l'l'lfll I.I.II INMlllY, ml1lt1FY *'lll'lllllN 4IM ...... ,,., ... .. people getting busy signals. Rogers claimed be couldn't make a call at aD, "I've got two phones in my house and .I couldn't even call myself," Rogers com· plained. Explaining that the trunkUne only af· fected callJ into or out of the 673 and 875 exchange!, Mrs. Krone told Rogen. "You should have been able to call yourself." "What do you suggest he call himself?" smiled Mayor Donald Mcinnis, keeping the conversation light. "I lifted the phone and got no action at all," Rogers continued. Mrs. Krone admitted "there was an al>nonnally busy condition," saytng that 111·hen most people find out there's trouble '1ith the phone!, they all pick one up and try to make a call, Just to see for themselves. Y' ''It's like people seeing a 'wet paint' sign," she said, "they've all got to touch it." Rogers persisted, however, and wanted to know why the telephone company didn't provide a more adequate loop sys-. tern so calls, at least emergency calls couJd be ruouted if something like that f'rott• Page J LEARY ... just a few months after his conviction of possessing marijuana. Leary, his wife end son, were arrested In Laguna Beach's Woodland Drive neighborhood after a quantity of pot was discovered in the family 's station wagon. ' Deputy District Attorney James Enright prosecuted that case and speculated the return of Leary to San Luis Obispo would facilitate hia con· vlcllon of the felony chafie of priton ..,..pe, If tried In Orange County on the smug· gling and co11spiracy to smuqle d•Dien>US dtup counts, Eorlght has said Leary'• attomeys mlght atiUe for a dismissal or the prison escape chlrge on the gtOUllCis bo'd been denied a Jp<edy trial, ' Others in courthouse circlea suagest county prosecutors would llke to prOceed again.!lt the other 45 persons Indicted in the Brotherhood ring without the glare or publlctty the former HarvRrd lecturer at- tracts. , I " . , ........ 1 .. • • , JOHNSON MOURNED • • • Ut'IT......_.. FORMER PRESIDENT PLAYS WITH GRANDSON Patrick Lyndon Nugent With Gr•ndpa on LBJ Ranch ... be aP9'artd dead. lie WU dark blue In color. They admln.laterid oxya;eo and -th lo moutll rt .... ltatloo, •• " On Ille blm nwllle pylon rlalns above tbe cala!alque wtte lheae worda: :•1, have followed the personal plilloioiihy lhoV I am a free man, an American, a publtc scrvanl and 1 member of my party -in that order, l)way1 •!!'! only, · "The ' Great Socltly alka not how much, but bow MOO<!: not only bow Jo create wealth but how to use It; not only how fut we an aolna. but when we are -· It pr'OfJOtel 11 tile lint teat for a nation: ne quality or Its people ... Mrs. Charlet Beckham of Smlthvllle , Tex,, wu the flrat person Jn line during the monilog lo Ille past the caaket, She took her four children out of school and drove $0 miles oorUt "l respect President Johnson," Mr&. Beckham said. •11 wu cbout to lose my only chll<I and be bolped bring my 00.. band home from the military." A jeUiner provided by Ni1on wlll fly J-'1 body lo WlllhJl1iton Wedne&- day, 'lbe caKel wl!! be takeo to the C.pltol, wbere the body wlll Ue in state Jn the n>lunda until '11!unday, folio.-.! No Bush Seen by fUnttal 1t:rvlce1 at the Nallonal CitJ C)uiallan Church. The body then will be flown bark m Tua• fer a final wemony and bUrlal '' l :IO p,m, Thursday in the fomlly cemetery Qll lhe ban.ks of the Pedernnlel> River, a quarter·1nlle from the U J Ranch. "Tbese plans represent tbe wlthes ol the. famUy," Tom ·Johnson 111d. Of ~tr~ John110n, lit 1ald, "f would .deaerlbe ~r condition as very sturdy. She i1 holdu1~ up very well." • Pre:Aldent Nixon proclaimed Thursday as 1 nation.al day of mourning. The President. in a public proc- lama1Jon and In a messaae to Congress . formally announced the death qi tbe 36ttl P:tsident. , Nixon la.sued an executive order rr.- quiring clo:i.ure of all federal agencieJ. uctpt for those ln\•olve<I. with the !)I· llonal securl.ty, on ThursdP7 -the day or the f\lneraL The Pmldeot directed that nap be displayed at hllf staff for JO days. ~ The New York and American 1tock eJr changes said they wlll cloee Thursday 'in observe.nee of the mouminl day. Regular mail dellveriea wltl be can- celed for the day. ! ' Newport Aide Will Make City Sidewalk Survey: Mesa Comes Up Short Noise Query TONIGHT Uc' LECTURES -"CarutaJ l'lmisl> Newport Beach Assistant City r.tana -t'' ger Phil Bettencourt said today he will ment and the Manson Tria1," part of appear before Orange County airport series on ttorallty : Twilight Zone of the commissioners in Santa Ana tonight at Law, Science Lecture Ha 11, 7·10 p.m. 7 o'clock to question effecllveness or Adm . $5.50. "Title Encumbrances ... " noise monitoring systems at the county part of series on Professional Prac.ticea airport. in Housing Industry, 178 Human!Ues The commission will meet in the Hall. 7-9 :30 p:m. Adm. $8. "&lee> supervisors' heating room at 515 N, trocardiography,'' part of series on Your Sycamore St. Hea rt and Circula tory System, Soph. A presentation of the mo~itoring sys· Lecture Hall. l\1cdical Surge J Bldg. 7-10 tern and the state-determined noise le,v-p.m. Adm. $.5. "Ethnic Tensions in Soviet els by county noise abatement specialist Society," series on Challenge of Racial Norm Ewers is on tonight 's aienda. and Ethnic Differences Around World, Social Science HaD, 8 p.m. "The City Council and staff have rea · "A IS FOR· ALICE" _ Play by Space son to believe that the COWlty may not have complied wilb the state noise stand· Reaction t;ompany, Italian theater ards at Orange County Airport," Betten· troupe, Village Theater, B p.m. Adm. '3, rted tod students ~I. court ~ ay. . WEDNESDAY, JAN. Z4. The city of Newport Beach has directed COAST COMMUNITY CO!.LEGF a lette~ on the ~bJ~..J!> the Board of_DISTRI~&galar board-meeting, Supe~sors. asking 1l the rounty has 1370 Adams, 8 p.m. com~hed. , . . OCC LECTURE SERIES -"Invitation If it hasn t ~mpli~, Bettencourt. said, to lntUnacy ," Charles D. Leviton, CXX::: then the city lS asking _why and if the Auditorium, 7:»9:30 p.m. COW\ly wU1 seek a varLance from the BASKETBALL _ Costa Mesa at FoWl- state standards. tain Valley, 7 p.m. Estancia vs. Santa " Ew~rs said~ ~ Plaf. lUs !"'Port .is Ana Valley at Estancta, 7 p.m. Newport noth_1~ unusual 8nd wlII ma~ly be a Harbor at Marina, 7 p.m. descr1puon of the_ county rnonHormg pro-"SPRING'S AW • KEN l NG 1 • -gram for the"' t>eaet!f of the three ne\v •• . • commiss ioners wtio came on board ty,·o Perform~ce by Space Reaction _Com weeks ago pan,y, Jtahan theater troupe, UCI Village Bett~rt commented that he wants '!'heater, 8 p.m. Adm. $3, students $1. to see what the vie•s of the three new "MOONCHILDREN" -South Coast members mJght be 'bn the subject. Repertory Theater. Wednesday and Also on tonight's agenda are : Thursday, 8 p.m. -Discussion of a QlOdel home complex proposed at Geronimo Lane and Canada Road In Lake Forest in El Toro. Airoort Land Use <;ommissionen recent1f rec· ommended Potential residents be ·warned of noi se from nearby El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. -Discussion of an Irvine Company proposed planned community, Village of Valley View in north Irvine. Part or the project which \s still before Irvine planning commissioners Is adjacent to the Marine Corps Air Station, Santa Ana . From Pagel BOND ... High School campus at 1901 Newport Boulevard . Sorsabal explained that the school dis· trict intends to divest itself of the prop- f'romPafrel VOLCANO ... closed and were tQuipped to house the islanders. The government called an emergency session to work out relief programs. Government sources said personnel will be lefl on the island to protect property and keep the huge fJsh freezing plants working. If electricity is cut off, hun- dreds of Ions of frozen fish will be destroyed The sources said the eruption, coming at the start of the fishing season, L! a se rious blow to the nation 's already shaky economy. COsta Meu needs one-third more sidewalks, accordJ.ng to a rteePt survey, bul It appurs unUkily today that the city councll w!ll appropriate the IU mllloo lo get them'bulll A dliC!ooure Monday olgbt by City ~ Services Director Nonnan K, Spielman that Coota Mesa oeeds 800,000 feet more aidewalk to cover all of the city bnlugbt no Immediate nlllh lo get out the council checkbook. The sidewalk survey had been ~ quested by Councilman Rober! M. Wiison f',....P .. el PEACE •.. Speaker Carl Albert, House .Republican leadri" Gerald R. Ford of Michigan and House Democralic leader Thomas P. O'Neill ·of 1.tassacbusetts. Ziegler also annouDced there will be a larger bipartisan congressional leadership meeting at 5:30 a.m. PST Wednesday. Ziegler declined to say bow long tonight's speech will be or to expand m any way on bis terse announcement. t ff as expected Nlxm announces \onlght an agreement has been reached, 1t will come almost four years to the day from the first peace talks in Paris. It was on Jan. 26, 1969, that American, North Vietliam~. South Vietnamese and Viet Cong negotiators gathered at the Hotel Majestlc in Paris to tty to end the long, bloody war. Detw;ils of the cease:-!irt! agreement, not immedJately made ptiblic, a r e e~pected to closely parallel the nlne-polnt accord that both aides nearly agreed on in October. That called for the return of all U.S. prisoners of war and the withdrawal of all U.S. troops withln 60 days. . A cease-Ore would lake place within 24 hours of the formal signing, and an in- temaUonal supervisory team would go into Vietnam to pollce the cease-fire. The accord established a National Council of Reconciliation made up of representaUves from the Saigon and Hanoi govemmenll p I u s neutralists to aupervile elecUorui which would determine. the political future of Viet· nam. wbo indicated tbere was a need to coo· s~ more sidewalks' In the ~ Homes aJU and on the city's wt1lde. 1 No agreement waa reached amcmj couocU member& on c 1Jle 1Ubjecl of sldewalb, ~except to ,.je<t a suggestion by Spfe!mau that the clly contrlbuta *i pen:ent of t!>e comlNctlaa COIL • Tllat woold bav~ meaat a total cool qt l900.000 lo the taxpayer& for the eotlie progam, • ''f don't think 'the city should partlcipate lo so perceo\ of the cost of slderilkl since ltl 218 o f the people alread1 bave them," llld CcuncllmaD Willml T, Jordan, The survey plac.ea the cost of sidewalk coostructlon at 13 ;ier lineal fool In local area. and » per lineal foot along arterial hlghways. Nuclear Plants Go l]nderground? SAN DIEGO (AP) -Underground nuclear pqwer plants in;iht be sale!' tban stirloce itittlons during ao Urthquake, a California Institute of Techook>gy research engineer says. Martin Goldsmith told an Atomic Energy Commission board Monday that underground facilities would not be sub- ject to the violent shaking many surface buildings undergo during a quake because of the nature of seismic waves. 'l1>e AEC board is reviewing a joint Southern Calilornla Edison Company arid S&n Diego Gas le Electric c.o-mpany pro- posal to add two additional units to U)e present Sin Onofre Nuclear pawer sta- tion. i The waves, Goldsmith said, stress tfie "limberne1s" of surface atructurea liY" the way they .rnove over the earth's surface, causing the ,mJddle and upper stories of tall buildings to lhake more violently than the ground noor or base· ment ,1 Goldsmith said hls theory has not ~ proven but he stressed that It was .. .._ possibility. The only way to prove tbe theory, he said, was to buOd an un- derground facility. " erties because they are no longer needed and that the fair is sell ing Its land to secure monies for the improvement of eiisUng facilities. MEASURE FOR TREASURE " J ,J ,. While members or the City Council did not immediately ask for a bond election during Monday night 's study session, the mood was generally in favor of acquiring at least some of the properties. Even Councilman Alvin Pinkley, who \V8S not in' favor of buying the Fairgrounds i)toperty, agreed it would be prudent "to keep the door open" W1lil the council knows ti:acUy how many of the parcels it wants , and what the price tag will be. Although every one of the parcel! is zoned l·R (institutional and recreational ) the council could not unreuonably pre- vent any private deve)opment by refusing to rezone them. Sorsabal Indicated. The bond election could go from a low of $5 millloo lo a hlgh of llO million, depending on whether the council ehose to improve any of the properties. A two- thirdJ majority would be requlrcd for passage, Should mem:Jers of the council decide ift favpr o{ a bond eltct\on, It would be the hnt bond election since the. city was incol-porated In 1953. Both the Costa Mesa Civic Center and the Co5la Met1 GoU and Country Culb were financed "'1thout a public. bond cl~ tlon. Jn both cases, non-pto{lt cor· porat\ons were formed which the.n sold their own bonds, One factor overlooked by customers in buying c1rpetin9 is the me11urin9 for y1rCl•9•. All of..our S1lesmen know how to me11ure and figure eiact y~rdege, o*en providing our customers substantial savings in y•rd191 •lone. _Also, with the tremendous installetion ex- perience our salesmen have (tach previously was an e1pert installer for us), we are able to forsetl any potential problem. Ple11• stop in and look et the treaourn available to you through our store. We heve a gigantic selection, end the -meaouring wiU be ACCURATE! ALDEN'S CARPETS -e DRAPES Ill COSTA lllSA llNCI 1tS7 1663 l'lac:entla Awe.•' tOSTA MESA 64Mt~i HOIJRS: Mon. Thru Thun., 9 le 5!30-FRt., 9 lo 9 -SAT. 9:30 lo~ • • .. " ,·!• "' •• .. •• ., •V ... :0-, w '" .,, ·~·· •• UnUI the issue bas been decided, COs:ta ht i!aa councilmen will attempt to ltccp their hand in the land dee! by asking Ille ownero for the fll'lt right of refusal. ,.._ ____________________________________ _. c -- ,.