HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-25 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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TH(J ~DA Y AR'ERNOON , JANUARY 25.-1973-·
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Lava
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BomMng,-Slaelliag
Foes Fir~ --.~·:A_·W.ay
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As Truce 'Nears •
SAIGON '(UPI) -U.S. warplanes
striking throufl:houl South Vietnam and
the heavi~t Conunwilst shelling in -near-
ly a month spelled no letup on either side
today with an official Vietnam cease-fire
less tbah three days ilway.
Neither U.S. nor South Vietnamese or-
fciil.ls made any sec'fet of their intent to
keep fi1hting until the cease.fire takes
errect at a a.m. Suriday (t p.m. PST
$alurdayf. , •
• "Until Sunday We'll do anything v;e
want to," said a Vietnamese official.
"The.re ha' been. no,cba'nge in .mission,"
aai4 a·ranking U.S; officer.
• UPI correspondent Alan Dawson said
North VietnameSe · gwmers fired 4,000
artillery and mortar shells on South Viet-
namese paratroops and marines between
sunset Wednesday and . sunrise today
near the destroyed city of Quang Tri, 435
miles north of iaigon. It was the heaviest
shelling this month anywhere' in South
Vietnam:
U.S. command spoliesmen said 11111 jet
fi&hter-bombers and 90 BS2 bombeis hit CommWust poaltlolUI in So\ltb Vie1nam·1n
the 24 hours ending at I a.m. today. It
was the first Ume the fight~4>omber
raids dipped btlow 11111 since Pre31dent
Nixon hilted the bombing ol North Viet·
narn Jan. 15.
Rumor of aroond-the-clock curfews for
Sou\b Vietnamese cities as the cease-fire
appi:oachet have been spreading for days
.and tbe first such curfew was ann~
today. To no ~·s Burprise, it was for
~Bwl Dinh Province ln the · Coutal
Hlgblands, which. statistically has alwaya
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0r ... e'
Weatller
~bat cooler on Fti4a,y 1s
the wl!J the weAthcrlady lreadl Ii,
with ~y swmy sldea. f<lllowloi overnltibl cloudlnesa along Ille ,
Oran(O Cod. lligbs fn the mid-~ llOL Lows ~ in the 40s.
INSIDE TODAY
How are the1t going to ketp
Hrnrr1 .. Kiuinocr down on the
/arm a/kt' he'• 1een Paree-and
hammered oiu-Vietnam ptace
accord1 See •torr, PCUJ• 4.
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been -tile least "'pacified" of South Viet-
nam's 44.provinq!s.
OrQers ffOOl tbe province chief, Col.
Hoang D~ Tbo, were posted throughout
the provillC<! ~ng all people without
curfew pa.sses, m~ing nearly ev~e.
at home, from 8 p.m. tod~y until 6 a.m.
Sunday.
Four American fliers shot down in
Laos · were adde(f' today . to ~ official
(See llO~ING,,P.a4<,IJ
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U.S. Announces . ' ' . . . .
En.d to Vietnam
Orders for Gl-s
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WASHINGTON (AP) -'lltt United Sta~es today sWµng into Jtjgh·level
diplomatic talb leading to a Vietnam
cease-fire going into effect Saturday.
(See related sior:les, Pqe 4)
All sides hurried preparations for im-
pl~ting the complfcated ~ set-
tlement, ioduilillg a stop order .at the
Pentagon on virtually all Arrierican Gis
prevlcuJy ordered to Vietnam.
Odly some IOldiers with special skills
are to travel lo Vietnam diir!ng the final
three d3ys of dnct U.S. involvj!ment In
the fi&btinc. • •
AJio ill w~. Sectetary ol State Wllliam P. Rccera mot oeparately wlth
Cal\ldl'• fcfticn minister, Mitchell
$Imp, and wtth-.U.N. Secretary 0.n.
Kurt Waldbelm.·1 · .
~ one of: the four countries
aupplying · contingenla , for .the fn.
ternatiooal control group su~ tile
Vietnam r ceuHlre, Sharp said . Canada
will aend .11' _,..,. and ill 111pport
staff for a total of 281 among lhe 1,1•
total.
He .said Canada, which.has long er·
' ~': jo:! :'"th. =i::m .
~ slay for the eo days Ametldln ll1!oPs .,. '
withdrawing. · •·!
After that, a conUnued -~ will
depend .on , "whethe'r we will be ~ .
fectiva." •
Waldbelm Mid any peacHeeplng by
the United.. Natioao lo Vlttnam will de-
pend upon w1lelber l1lo "partlciputa
wish us to play a:!> a nilo."
He Is 16 taft• part In Ille 1kat1an 11>-
ternatlonal VMllarn peoce ...,-
con!.....,. due lo h< held·-a -of the Salnrday liplag. •
8-1 bol allll itlated a -'Ill lalor Ind~ rill Ma!" Malik, !ortlgn ~
ol l11b Iii, """°"' ol tlie lntenlltlona(
Conlnll ~mlploo -i.in.
uoc1erillt ~ tl1 ~ r::: .... JI
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Supervisor Loses .Bid
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• 7;f) Oust LAFC Panelist
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Iceland Harbor Water
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BllllLING LAVA ERUPTING FROM HEtGAFJEll VOLCANO.IN ICELAND TURNS·NIGHT INTO DAY
Houses 50 Y1rds Aw.y ~rom t~ Mouth Burtt Into Ffll'l'MI From the Rad iated Heit
Arraign_ment Set
Eor :pr.: Lear y
Timothy Leary, 51, the· Harvant . Jn-
1tn1ctor··tumed apostle of~LSD, will ~
malgned 1 in . sQperior eourt Friday on
charges 'of escaetng from a prison clmp
near s.. Luis ObUpo 21 months ago.
Leary was arretted ir1 Afghanistan and
returned to Ille Uniled States. He 14 "' b<
arral&J)ed Tuelday in Santa Ana, on 11
charge1 ol ~ and conspiracy a1
the a!Iqod mastermind ol the
HBrotherbood Of Eternal Love," descrlt>-
eCI by narcotics invStigators as a multi·
rolllion dollar intemalional hashish and
LSD smuggling ring.
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Soledad Inmate-Dead
SOLEDAD (AP) -Sopnte stabbing
.-.. t-Scllodld PIM l>ave.clalmed
Ille.. Ufe GI .., -IOd aeriously
w.ICled lllOlller, ..-olliclals !lport.
Oftloen ,llld lr1< WllUam Rodney, 23,
died GI mulllple ab wounds Wedne.day,
IDd WllllMI Wlllam MaltheWI, 11, Wll
blled In lllo-dlelt and ...........
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Superv~or Loses Bid
... ! ' To Oust LAFC Panel~t
A move to oust a pobJic member of the
Lrical Agency Ji'ormation Commission
Wednesday by Third District Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich railed 1R a tie vote.
The action was ;.imed at SlanleY
Northrup, former• San Clemente mayor1
named the pobUc member after the
dealh of Olarles l;'e&rson more than a
yeir ago.
Northrup had served for nve years as
a city representative but he ,lost· the post
when he wu defeated for reeleCtion in
san Clemente.
Dledtich, who emphasiud that h~
move wa1 not atmed at Northrup·
personally, said the· public mtmber
•hoold truly b< one. that a !onner city
representotlve might b< prejudiced
toward a munlclp&l side of disputes. • eouncµman Louis "Red" Reinhardt
lmmedfately )umped lo tilt defenaa
saylnc, 11a man who has served in
government lmow~ the problem1." He
polnte<I, out that !ht alternate public
meinber Mn. R .. Burnap ol FUllerton
,; ..
had never held public o(rlce. He 1aid
~trs. Burnap has sat for Northrup on
maoy occasions. ·
Northrup, defending his position sald
tt-.at Diedrlch 's ~easoninf COuld be ap-
plied to the ~rd of supervlsora with a
rule that no former city official would be
eligible for the l.'0Unty'1 1oveming body.
D.edrich Is a former l"Ulltnon city coun-
ojlmaQ.
Commissioner Robert Battin who bas
urgtd tliol the public member-be 1'ithoot
fprmer cllf. and county ties said a-lormer
city councliman would lhow bias towards
citiea. He suggested that future a~
pointees. should be from unincorporated areu.
Dil'drich's move was recommended by
tilt. 1972 Orange County (;rand Jury.
Northrup said tilt grand jury recom·
mendaUon was Idiotic. ....
tn the . showdown vote, Diedrich and
Battin moved to oust Northrur and city
repreeentativts Reinhardt and chairman
(See OUST, hit I)
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Six Houses
Da111aged
By Volcano
VEST?IL\NNAEY JA!t Iceland (U PI I
-New streams of glowing lava rolled in
to the harbor today, raising the water
temperature to 111 degrtes Fahrenheit.
"The sea water is so hot, it is hard to
keep the engines properly cooled," the
engineer Of a pilot boat said as the boat
made an· inspection tour of the Heymaey
harbor area , the third largest on Iceland
and a center for the important fishlng in-
dustry.
Clouds of steam billowed over the
town, making il dangerous to land at the
tiny airstrip on the island off the Iceland
coast.
Five houses were on fire or had burned
today, ignited by lava from the Helgafjell
volcano that erupted without warning
this week . One house collapsed under
pressure from a lava stream.
The 5,000 or so townspeople were
evacuated late Tuesday and brought to
th11 mainland. Some were allowed back
today for a few hours to collect valuable
b<longlnga.
"It is hard to say how long the eruption
may last. It could take three weeks, or
three years," said a geological ei:pert
from the Reykjavik University.
The fish f~ plants, accounting for
one-fifth o~ 'Iceland's fishing industry.
were emplied today of their remaining
st°'* -tom of dried codfish for
Portugal and Brazil where It b UJed for
"bacalhM" stews.
"I aDi ~ horrified as anyone elle over
, this dlsa.ster," said Icelandic President
Krlstjan Eldjarn, who new here from
Reykjavik this afternoon.
Police and pilot boats patrolled the
harbor today, kteping shiploads of
curious tourists from the mainland away
from the' risk area. Landing by boat and
airc.rarl ,was restricted, but telephone
connections were restored again today
after being partly down since Tuesday.
A long volcanic rift ope~ across the>
21k·mile wide island but was partzy filled
with lava by this aftemoOn. Orie main
crater and several small craters wtre
still active, spurting out fire, smoke and
lav~.
' FHA Defrauding Seen
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; LOS ANGELES fAP ) -Alter an ox·
tensive . investigation of Southern
California real estate fraud against the
Fed~ral Housing AdministraUon. the
government soon may ask the grand jUry
here to return lndktments in the C&!e,
the leader o( the probe uld Wednuday,
A<risiant U.S. attorney Brian O'Neill
said the investigation of local monaaae
companies' real estate brokers, credtt
repOrting companies and home buyers
"has been under way for aome time.•
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DA.IL V PILOT s
LBJ Returned ·Home
Capital Pays Quiet Tribut.e to Ex-chief
WASHINC1'0N ! APl L~11don 4rtm:"--Uld-ctose rrlcnct l\1ar\lln Wall;On fn
Johnson w33 borne hoinc lo final rest in his eulogy.
the Texas hill rountry today after a quiet "T.bol!le o! us who loved hUn tu.~·
tribute fron1 the capita! and the people fort in the lcnowledse Uwt before he died,
he ser\'ed. he could see tbe dawn of dom~tlc tran·
·"The yt>ars \111\ be lonely withou t quility and ol IOf'eicn peace which he
U,.I TtNflloi.
E'a1·e1vell, Gra1idf at her
Patrir k Lyndon Nugent salutes the casket of his grandfather, Lyn don
Baines Johnson, during ceremonies at the Capitol R'Otunda \Vednes·
day. Besides him is fl.1rs. Johnson, the widow of the former president.
Girls in Protest
As Teach.er Finks
On 'Pill' Takers
~iANSF"IELD. Englnnd tAPl -·Senior
girls at a local high school staged a pro-
test todav after their headmistress wrote
to 65 pafents claiming thei r daughters
were taking contraceptive pills.
Sixth-formers at Sherwood Hall
.Technical and Grammar School held a
playground mret\ng protesting the
"interference'' of the headmistress,
Mary Timson .
Many denied the allegations.
The girls, 16 to 18 years old , said their
parents searched their bedrooms,
clothing and book bags after receiving
the warning le tters Wednesday. fl.1.any
said they had been forbidden to see their
boy friends alone.
"Afy father went mad when he got the
letter," said one ... I am not on the pill ,
but the letter has made things very
awkward at home."
fl.fiss Timson refused to discuss the
situation.
"This is a private matter," she sa id.
"\\1e often prescribe the pill for girls
over 16," said a doctor at a local family
planning clinic . "J.iany parents of teen-
age girls ',\'Ould rather see them on the
pill than walking in the door with an ii·
legitimate, unwanted baby.''
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Bee r Ties Up Traffic
LEWISTON. fdaho !UPI I -A !ruck
flipped on U.S. 12 Wednesday, sending
hundreds of beer cans onto the pave-
ment. The Idaho Highway Patrol said
motorists caused a massive traffic jam
because they jumped from their cars to
scoop up the cans.
OIANH COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Tlto11111 K11•il
Editor
Thom11 A, Mur,hi111
M111191ng ~llor
Ch•rl11 H. Looi Ric~•rd P. Nill
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From Page l
BOMBING ...
Indochina death toU. bringing total U.S.
battle deaths in 12 years of Indochina
\\"8Jiare 10 45.937.
The U.S. Command also said today the
guided missile frigate Preble was hit
\\'ednesday by Communist shore bat·
terles while oo an offshore operatioo sup-
p:irting South Vietnamese troops in
Quang Tri Province. Damase wu Ugh~
nobody was hurt and lbe Preble re-
mained on station, the command saJd.
As the ceaSe-fire nearea, SOiith Vfet-
nam's cities blossomed out with red-and·
gold national fiags at the request of
President Nguyen Van Thieu. Mort
police, ,including national police ln
camou.Oage unifonns, helmets and Oact
jackets, were in evidence.
Otherwise, life in busy Saigon, Da
Nang and other cities proceeded
nonnally,
In Saigon, Thieu told a meeting of l,000
national police officers today, "We must
be prepared to beat the Communists in
si.x months in a one-man, one-vote elec-lion."
U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker,
v.•ho conferred with Thieu Monday - a
day before the cease-fire was annotmced
jointly by Washington and Hanoi -drove
to Independence Palace today for
another meeting with the president. Jt
lasted 3S mlnutee. Ju usual, the subject
',\'as not dllclosed.
On U.S. bases, the chief order of the
day was stall meetings deciding who
would go home when. The fewer than
23,700 U.S. troops tn South Vietnam have
60 days to leave after the cease-fire takes
effect, but most are expected to be gone
',\'ithin 45 days.
Some units may leave as 3000 as Sun-
da y.
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Prisoner List
Appears Today
In Daily Pilot
The DAILY PILOT today pr inti on
Page 14 the most complete list available
-although it ii known to be incomplete
-of American war prlsoners and miss-
ing servicemen.
U.S. officials emphas ized that the mere
lisUng of a name, or the absence of a
name, does not Indicate any confU111aUon
of the prisooer's status, or any change.
They noted that the list la not a new
ooe, but includes tbe fullest Information
know n taken from lists complied by
POW·MIA groups, newspaper aceounts
and Hanoi rad k> broadcasts.
The U.S. and other parties ln the cease--
fire agreement are to exchange prlaoner
lists Saturday. It Is not known how soon
the names on the lists will be made
public.
Ctliforni1 has the most names In I.he
compllalion on Page 14, and several are
from Orange County .
Towns Won't Unite
RICHMOND (API -an.,. again, Iho-
Conlra Costa C'.oonty rural communities
of Alamo, Oanvllle and San Ramon have
defeated 1 proposal to Incorporate. By a
vole Tlltlday of i,621 lo 5,171, the
measure lo create the 15th city In the
county faUed.
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gave so mucb or hJS grnrlieilflotil'Jiij
about." ·
Jolu11J011 died llllndey at hls Tnll
raocll at the ... ol IL
The state fW*ll ..-vice, llltln( an
hour, wu offlcial WllblJli1on'a Jaat
farew.11 to the 18th Pnosldent of the
United ·States. Ill! suc:ceuor, Richard
Nixon and '-fra. Nixon, '1tttnckid the
services as theY hod Wednosday when
the llac-<lfaped coffin WIS broucbl to the
Rotunda o1 the Cllpltol to lie IA state.
Mrs. Jobooon, hll wUe of • yww -
all through his rise through °""'""' the Senate, the Vice Pruldency and finally
the nation's highest office -was ae.rene-
fy composed tbrough the service.
"Lyndon JohnOeo loved a _,,.,, and
she wea hi& greatest joy and oomfort,"
said Wataon. "He loved hi& chlldten and
his granckhildml and to see them
t.ogtther-was a be:artwarm.lnl ez.
perience, lot it tnnaconded oormal faml-
fy de¥0tloo.
"And coupled with that be loved each
oI us, 10metimn with wry amusement at
our failures, oltan with sharp ·-at
GUI' lmperf'°"'IJs, but always with a
._ina andg...,... omdentandlatl of our fi-ailUes . 'lbe d.lmemiooa of thla man
were vQt."
Watson was President Johmon's a~
polnlments secretary.
Througbout tbe chill night, the lines. of
people \\'aiting to file past the bier
stretched across the capitol Plua -
often to the Supereme Court a VW1 long
block distant. capitol police esllmal<d
40 IXXl 1aw the coftm.
For a final lime al the cap11o1, the
presidential ruffles and 6ouriJbN and
"Hail to the Chief" were played for
Johnson.
Hundreds were waitine at tbe National
City Christian Cwrch · when the
motorcade arrived and saw eight
military pallbe"""' carry In the lilvwy
coffin.
The invited guests, lncluded the
powerful of &his and other naUoos -peo-
ple who bad served with ~ ~
those of the Republican adrrun1strauon
that foUowed. Aod another presidential
widow was there, Mrs. Dwight D.
EiseJJbower.
Dr. G«qe R. Davis, minlllu ol the
church wt>m Jolmoa bad aemd u an
honorary elder, recalled that newspaper
accounts of the former president's death
were that he died ak>oe.
"Oh, no. Ob, no." be .~· "No. man
ever dies akme; he may.._~ m \ooehneu,
but not alone."
ADd when the aervice WU O'lfJ", Mn.
-=-llOl!!ll!!i-~--l1}~ -f . wall<ed behind the nag.dra.,... .,..,.. o
her husband. Her two daughters and
their husbands were behind with Patrick
Lyndon Nugen~ ooe 1>I the four
.. ~ ud al-Ille foot of the
--~".:~-to ~ • . . J.llL._lben
"--.. Tftai; •hm began the "'."'~}._, ,.,:;_.~.
burial WU llCISUl.lft:U --~-"' .
F ..... Pfltiil
PEACE •••
are in be pulled out of -Vietnam over a 60-day span and the CGmmunlstl
are to r.... American prilooen.
U.S. medic.al evacuation teams . were
poised in fly inin Hanoi to evocuata tjle ·
flnt batcb of POWs u IO<ll u they 11'1
!be green light followln( the ..-nr..
U.S. negotiator 'Henry A. ltllllnler
says the pri!onen are to be brlluibt out
in roughly equal-sized groupe durlnl Ncll
15-day period of tho !ll daya wltile
Amerlcan forcH are coming h:me from
South Vietnam.
The four nations medlng 1,l!ll trtlce
supervi90l'S to South Vietnam are ex-
'pected to get Ibetr advance conllngentl
on the scene within 48 houri of the cease--
ftre, wbk:h la to begin at 4 p.m. PST
Saturday.
Hungary and Poland are the other two
members of the International pollcln(
group.
Tbe Hungarian govemmelll -o!-flcial wllllnpua today IO take part In
the cease-fire control effort. Each country
is 10 send about 290 men. Poland has not
yet made public its re.spome but ta m
peeled to participate.
Indonesian 90Urce5 said a baHalion of
troops will leave for Vietnam even before
Saturday's scheduled signing of !be peaca
agreement in Paris.
Rogers ltavea Friday morning lor
Paris to join in !be algnlng with his
counterparts from North Vietnam, South
Vietnam and t.be Viet Cong's Provllional
Revolutionary Government. Hm:>t'1
fotelgn minlster, Nguyen Duy Trinh, II'
rived in t.be French capital today . ·
In Paris, specialist.I from the United
States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam
and the Viet Cool met on detalla ol
applying !be ceue-lire arrangement.
In Saison, Proaldent Nguyen Van TltJlu
predicted that ll lhe Communllll vtolllte
lht ceaae-flre and w1111 new war, many
nalloos will join South Vietnam ~
fighUng them.
The fut-moving dlplomaUc and
military moves Ot Into tho lntrlcalt
scenario set fotth Wednelday In a IJ.
page peaco agreement, plU1 !«Ir aide ao-
cordl, made public by Wublng1on and
H•nol·
Exuberance ovtr tht prvipecllve wlnd-
llP ol the Iona war wu ml>od with cn-
Uon over whether the tettltment wlll
stick In ·a land wbef'I the flCbUnc flOa
been solng on for • ,_rallon.
Prealdent Nliom spoke in congreulooal
leadelW of "a peace, h,,.,...,. lrqlle,
which we have hopoo wW endun."
Negotiator Henry A. Klulnger pledied
a maJor U.S. effort for a penn&JIOnUy
peocelul Indochina btlt cautioned thaI lite
auOCdl of the agreement rtlll alto "oo
the spirit In which It la lmplemenled." . .
l\'etR111111ing
Sen. John v. Tunney ot cili-
!om!a said he would not ac-
cept a vice presidential spot
on a ticl<et in the 1978 elec-
Uoos.
T exa11 Gets 101
Years-Judge
Preferred Deatli
WACO, Tex. (UPI) -District Judge
Carl C. Anderson hu sentenced a oon-
victed' murderer to 101 years in prison.
but told !be man be would have prelerred
the 9e0lence was death in the Texas elec-
tric chair.
"If 1 had the right, 1 would see that
you would never be released .in society
again," Anderson said. "11le state does
not give me the authority to prooo~
the sentence on you that I would lilfe to."
'lbrougbout the lecture, the convicted
man, John E. Swift, 24, g_azed !lt the ceil-
ing In the oourtroom, apparenUy trying
to igno~ what Andenon was saying.
Swill was charged with the alaylng of
H. C. Kelly, 53, preoldent of the Planters
and Merchants State Bant ot Hearne,
Tei., who was found dead <it his home
May 17, along w!lb his 49'-year-old wife
and 19-year-old daughter, Mrs. Nancy
Stovall.
The Kellys had been stabbed and
strangled, while Mrs. Stovall had her
throat cut.
Oil Plants Struck
LOS.ANGELES (AP) -Operations at
three struck Shell OU Co. 1<flneries and
chemical platita "' Calllornia con\lnued -~ .. ~"::'~ · woner. .... 1 an-al loon Wednea-
day--at Ille --·· -plant In the S8Q FrandtoO.llity .,.. and two
facWU. Iii the Loo Angeles area. •
. UT A.H REJECTS
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -Utah's
lq:lalltture bu defeated a re10lution raU..
lying the federal .......... Equal Rights
Amondment while the leglalatur. In
nellhborq Wyoming bas become the zinl state to ratify the amendment.
The Utah lawmakers Wednesday voled
51 to at against ratiftcation.
Utah Rep. Eldon H. Barlow (D-
Clearlleld), called the amendment a
"vicloUI, divisive lnatroment to destroy
the Cbrlltian basis of this nation -the
famUy."
r
-Investigator Fired ••
Drug Execution
..
N<;11 Intrigue ls emerging In !be u -
•cutloit plllldtr of a La(ltlll& Beach man
who ~11 hljacUd a planeload of
mar!Juna 41> 1eara ago, dotlblt<:r<llllng
· his llOif In a 1$4,000 deal with tho .Hell'•
Angelo ~· lllli· The bo"1 of Wamn B. Hudaoo, 18, of
990 Ocean Front, was nnaUy found IJst
year in a Riverside County mine shaft
near Elsinore, mummified, manacled
11.and and foot and identified by dental
· records and a $5 gold piece.
California and Ari1.0na authorities wh9
finally obtained murder, marijuana
smuggllna and conspiracy convictions
agall'lll' t1lree men announced Tuesday
one key lnveatiga1or In t11e·caae has been
fired:
Maricopa County, Arlz:i Sheriff's Capt. ff.1W>b McMlllen joined tnat department f~s qo, about the time Hudson
y • 1t ' ul~ion, dlsclOA ._ that
McMlllei w«ked as a 'l)tivate in-
vestla:ator with a llnn hired tO hunt down
the victim by bis Cilnvicted tillers, just
shortly before his 1968 job change.
Newly sworn·in Maricopa County
Sher~f Paul Bluhaum penooally coo-
ducted a t-te probe Into ex-C.pt.
~tcMillen's prior aSIOCLIUon' with lm·
prisoned drug '!D"W"' Larry Fwl..-
aod his rtnc.
Sheriff Blublum cod~ with
lawmen in the Riverside'° and Phoenix
areas before firing li1cMillea.
"After reviewing the flies and disclJ.ss..
ing pasI and present lnvestlptlons with
•.. authorities, I ha ve concluded that
Ralph Me].iillep cannot effeetively serve
the Maricopa County Sheriff's Depart-
ment," he declared.
Dealings by Mcl\lillen with Fassler -
who only had drug charges pending
against him at the lime -were revealed
last year.
-McMillen, a !onner Phoenix, Ariz.,
policem.m aud state liquor control board
aaeat, ~ed any W'l'll(clofng In eon-
neCUon wilh his alleged dual role in the
Fauler ease at that time.
He has 10 days in which to appeal his
firing by Sheriff Blubaum. who defeated
former sheriff John Mummert in Novem·
ber.
Sheriff Mummert haH tnvUtlgated the
situalion and <:Jeared the man he hired as
a-captain of any conflict of-interest in the
murder and 111-arijuana..gmuggllng cue .
Hudson's )'life filed a )pissing per.!QD!
report Oct. 29, 1968, with ~ Beach
police, saying ahe feattd her husband
robed
had met fouj play In eonnectlon with a Mreoucs 1mu11ti.n1 operation.
loform1Uon dJsclONd later lndJcoted
Fuller -ed perblpo the moat fal'-
flnn& dope lqlportlnJ ring thal lllfllllied
u.ser1 with tcinl of conb'1blnd llowit or altlJ!llld In by boat from Muloo.
. Hiid.an -aceordlng to autllor!Uea -
waa 1 pilot for the P'usler operation and
hljaeJ<ed I ahlpment of manjuana. leli· In& II for 111,000 lo undlaclooed parties.
He then assertedly met the Jlell 's
AnceI.s cycUstl from Northern Callfornia
at the a11J&ned pickup Point and robbed
them of 184,000 they carried.
Fassler, SO, and two aUeg~ ac·
compllces at one time were believed to
have hurled Hudaon out or a plane high
over ruQed Sanla Ana Mountain te,.
ritory around the Orang:e-Rlveralde coun-
ty line.
No body bad been found, hul Fualec
wu convicted on clttumstantlal evidence
and testimony in one of C.Ufomla't rare
missing~ Qlurder cates.
He and 'bis· two cornpanlons are cur-
rently' serving time on narcotica smug.
gling charges In Arizona, while Fassler
faces a California prison term upon
release for Hudson 's murder.
The distribution ring masterminded by
F8!Sle1\ authorities say, was the primary
IOUrce at that time for dnJgs avaUable tn
Ibe ·Southland and partlcularfy along the
Orange O>ast
Fro,.P.,el
OUST •••
Clifton Miller, mayor ol Tustin supported
him.
Diedrich followed with a motion !hot
future public members should not have
held appointee or elective ofCice for live
years previous lo appointment to the
LAFC. This motion passed 3-1 with Mlller
supporting.
Deputy county counsel Victor DeUerue
said the action would not be b!nding on
future commissioners.
Flood Plea in State
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Rooald
Reagan Wednesday proclaimed a state of
enteriency In Marin and San Ulla ~Obispo
counties as a result of flooding last week.
The action was taken in response to re-
quests from the boards of supervilors of
the counties.
S-i~-!9-Em~~-Angel
Dog Quits City to Oppose · Yorty
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Tile dog may be man's best friend, but !or M~ Satii Yorty, Angel Goodman Is a turncoet poodle.
Angel came to prominence about a year ago when "she'' was appointed a
memb« of the Mayot'• Commtmlty Advi.9ory Boen!. H..-mast..-, Barry Good-
man, told a friend be could get anyone appointed to the mayor's eommlsslon-
even hls dog.
HE WAS RIGHT. Yorty approved Angel'1 appoinlmenl, grousing taler thai
while Goodman said "she" was a relative, "he didn't say anything about her
being • dog."
Yorty left Angel on the commission however, noting thet maybe "she" could carry signs In an election campaign.
ANGEL HELD A NEWS oonference Wednesday. Goodman said be wea act.-
ing as her spokesman to announce that "she" resigned to join the campaign
of former Polioe Chic! Tom Reddin, who is running agalnat Yorty !or mayot, .... cinctal mucol"
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5 0.till Y PILOT :J
The Chase Is On ai 1'ion Country Safari •
' •
Holl;iwood came to Lion Country Safari in Irvine this week with ihe
filming of a new-movie based on the wildlife preserve's most famous
former citizen, -''Frasier the Sensuous Lion." The climax of the film
-
includes that old movie stan~b , the chase scene, shown here. In this
one. a Lion Country jeep g the "good guys" pursues a Cadillac
with the "bad guysn through e preserve. The Caddie swerves around
Dirty Burglar
Hits Sex Shop
REDWOOD CITY !UPI) -An
X-rated burglar struck a local
dirty book shop and fled with'
"
• OA11..V·,.ILOT ....... .., •ldllrlll ~
a guard tower, the jeep doesn't with these results. In the tower is vet·
eran stunt man Bennie Dobbins.
TV Censor Powers Sought
By Memphis Reyiew Panel
hom e?" asked Morrow, whose agency
watchdogs movies shown in Memphis
and literature on city magazine stands.
-Seventeen sex manuals valued
at 1104.
-Thirty-six movies depicting sex
activists, valued at $900.
-Twelve novelties, valued at
1215.
~t EMPHIS, Tenn. (AP ) -Irked by a
televised movie, the 11emphis Board or
Review is seeking-censor powers over
network television programs coming into
the city on local affiliates. .
"I don't see 'why city council can 't pass
laws prohibiting that type of stuff from ·
corn ingover TV," said board member
George Pt1orrow, referring to the film, "l
Love My Wife," shown ~1ooday night on
WMC-TV, an NBC affiliate.
A spokesman for the television station
said the film had been edited prior to
showing. But board member Mrs. J.L.
Pampuro said a movie can be oo an adult
lt vel , even if the most frank see~ are
removed.
-And $100 in cash. "If children c3n be stopped from
paying lo see that kind of stuff at movies ,
then why let them see it for tree at
. -
.JJ.J. 9arrelt
JANUARY
The board proposed to establish rules
requiring 1-iemphis stations to cenaor
programs sent from the national
networks .
'
includes a special collection of
DREXEL UPHOLSTERY
•SOFA
Reg. $579
NOW $489
1n a generous selection of beautiful fabrics . -
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Reg. $375
NOW
• 15''/. to 25"/0 OFF on several
DREXEL • HERITAGE
Bedroom , Dinin9 Room ,
Ocassional Collections
• SAVINGS UP TO 20"/.
on ell Floor Sample
LEATHER CHAIRS
r
"
and SOFAS Baby Stolen at Knif epoint .~
• 15 TO 25 °/0 SAVINGS
On Ma ny Upholstered
Chairs & Sofa s Now
On Di•play.
a '(];ff.;,,
MODESTO (UPI) -A distraught
young mother has asked lha kidnaper of
her lt·month-old son to leave the Infant
on a church doorstep or nt a hospital -
places where he won't rllk a~t.
Mn. France.I May Louver, :1:2, made
the plea on .local ttlcvlslon to Ille
UDAhavcn man who took hfr Infant at
tnilepolnt Saturday Alter llO<OOllng her
in a supennarke t parking lot. •
'
the Stanislaus COunty sherllf• office
said It bad no solid leads and could pro-
duce no apparent motive !or the child
theft despite hundreds of catl1 from
throughool Co!Uomla from penono olle~
Ing in!ormaUon.
Mn. Laum salJ the man forced his
way into her car al knlfepoint1 asked her
how much money she liad. •l'oPl>ed 'tho
subject alter 111& told blm Ibo h&d only a
'
few cei!U, drov. her to u orchanl two
miles away. and ordered ltei ·out of the . . car.
He dnm! -off with' 'l'llomU Michael
Lauvtr Jr. r i.Jllllc lbe mother :
"Thing's •re ~ 'lbll'• "'1Y I'm doing
what I'm doing.''
The kidna)l<r told her be -idn't hurl
tho child.
' .
NOFESSIONAL
INTUIO~ DESIGNERS Open Mon,.
Thurl, le FrL lvt&.
2?15 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
r
• •
••
1 /
DAIL\' PILOT I
.Just •• Viet Accord Reflects Face-saving
'< '\'\
with
-To--
arphine .. ~'it!:! ..
"
Giving Polver
To the People
By WILLIAM L. R\'AN .,.._..c.. 9 7
Each pa;rtlclpant ln tbe Vietnam war,
dlttCI or indirect, claiml '· ctory In
die sense th.flhe Aineitcon& got "Iii<
right kind or peace."
President Nguyen Van Thieu of SOuth
Vietnam held that the Commwllall loll
and Saigon was vtctorlou& because North
Vietnam bad been .. lorctd. to call off its
agcresslon against the South."
Le Due Tho, North Vletuam's chief
negotiator, called the accord "a great
vic1ory for the: Vietnamese peoplt." 1be
wonl "people" In Communlal parlance lJ
lntttehangeable with '·Commun.lslS."
The Sovtet Union, wblch J>OIU'd
military and """'°mlc aid lnlo the t/Jort
ror yean, held also that the "peoeie" bid
-....,c due in lup-part-to·"the'Uliltance
and •uppott of the Sovtet llllJon and other
soclallst nauons ...
CIUNA, WIDCH abo aupplled the
North Vietnamese at COZlllderable e:r·
pense, professed lo ,.. a "people's"
triumph.
A popular asswnptioa II that !......,v-
ine lJ Important ID the Orient. There W••
plenty ol ii In the q,..ment Heory A.
Kluinger and Lo Due Tho reached In
RICKY TICKY POUTIX : When you
, gau In v.'Onderment at all the wheeling
! and dH.ling that gees on up at our Coun·
: ty Seal, 90metimes It's easy to conclude
Role Jtfa11 Change
What Will Kissinger Do that most or 1he political machinations go
on at the Board of Supervisors level. This
can be misleading.
Ob, It's true, when it comes to politics ,
~·e get some of our larger giggles out of
the county board. And at other times,
: turns of the supervi90rial corkscrew
: aren 't really very funny.
For Encore After Paris?
; But, you ask, does all the really juicy
• political actloo, center on that augus1
I supervisorial body ? ~laybe not.
WASHINGTON (AP! -Has Henry
Kissinger talked himself out of a job?
President Nixon's assistant for
"What can top Paris!" he mused dur·
Ing a conversation, referring to the clty
be visited U times in 41 months pursuing
a peace accord. ! In recent years, it ha! become evident
• that the powers of another political body
1~ up at the County Seat have sometimes
vexed the Board of Supervisors.
national security attain simply smiled
Wednesday wben uked that queslloo. Kissinger said a few weeks qo that
once a Vietnam peace was wrapped up
he hoped for a leisurtly vacation in Mei·
!co. Be)'Ol!d that, there bu boeo little In-
formation about his plans.
;
• nDS GROUP ts known as the Local
A&tnCY Fonnatloo Comtl\lMion, or LAFC
ror abort. The five memben are a con·
glomente of all our political groups.
some appointed by dtl~. some by the
county board and one known as a "public
member."
Any'"'·ay. what the LAFC does for a liv·
ing is to sit up there in the County Seat
and qUle on things like formations oI oe~·
citid and annexation of coun ty [erritory
to existing cities.
Thus every time the L..\.FC boys ap-
prove formatioo of a new mwicipality.
li ke the city of Irvine, or they okay ad·
ding a chunk of territory, lo, say, Laguna
Beach, an interesting thing happens.
That is, territory controlled by the
BoJ,td of Supervisors shrinks. Abruptly,
some city, either new or old . now con-
trol s it.
Wbol lhdeed will KiJalnger do now that
Vietnam peace, at lut. is at band!
Goosipy Wuhlnglon ii churning oot an
assortment of answers with Utile belp
from Kissinger, who has indicated be
doesn't know himself.
Judge Rips
Watergate
Attorneys
NO SllDDEN CHANGE la anUciJfeled
in Ki!singer's role as Nixon's dlle!
foreign-policy advtser. But KiJalnger bu
suggested to friends that the National
Security Council----apparatul be Jiead.s
would have a better chance of enduring
in subsequent admini!tratio11!1 lf it bad
someone else at the helm -at least for a
Y{hile -before Nixon leaves oCfice.
In this Way. the Germ8JH»om.. former
Harvard professor has signaled a desire
to leave the White House before Nixon
does. probably to write his memoirs and
return to his_role as one of academia's
leading experts on global politics. WASHINGTON (UPI) -His deep-set,
dark eyes nashing, Federal Judge John
J. Sirica told lawyers for defendants ln BUT THERE HAVE been sign&, too,
the Watergate political espionage trial that Kissinger would relish an op-.
they \\'ere "ridiculous'' ~·hen they argued portunity to tum his immense energies to
their clients broke into Democrati~ na· other world problems -rebuilding
RECEl\'T STATEl\IENTS by County tional headquarters to protect President America's European alllances. helping
Board Chairman Ronald Caspers have Nixon. build a new era in East West relations
suggested that he believeS v.·e're already Sirica dressed down the attorneys and perhaps working for a Middle East
got too many cities messing up Orange \Vednesday while rtjecting the req~ of solution.
County. Caspers has sort or suggested Watergate defendant James W. McCord Kissinger has 1ppeared to leave public
v.·e'd be better off leaving the rest of the Jr. that he be allowed to build his effGrts toward a Mideast seUlement to
COlJnty out of cities. Thus, of course, the defense an>Wld the argument lhal be others -perhaps because ht is Jewish.
Board af Supervisors would take care a! spted-on-tbe Democrats to euard Ni xon But the Arabs 1hemselves reportedly
things. and the v-·bli (fl ·ai from have sbawn some lnterest in enlisting Now. if YoU look back at the LAFC, you bartn. 0 r ~ ... .,.. can !? Cl 5 Kissinger's talents toward working out a
find generally it has two members who solution.
are city-oriented and another two who l\fcCORD, THE FORMER chief of Kissinger's timetable for departing
are county appointees. How about the security for Nixon's re-election com-from the White House conceivably could
fifth man'? He's tbe ~ public mittee, and G. G-Ordoo Liddy p {onner be influenced· by what baa been in-
member. Now you pt it? He's ~ IWiqg White House aide, are being tried on ~rpreted as a recent •ie. of ~ts by
vote on approya.b..Jor illlllUalimls and....-cbarges of conspiracy, -bUfglary and-Nixon..---,.---'--'-.-
new cltyhoods. wiretapping gfQwing out of a breakin at
NOT LONG AGO, the public member
was 'former Laguna Beach mayor
William D. "Big Bill" ~1artin. Presently it is Stan Northrup, former San Clemente
councilman.
Since both men had served time in
mwlicipal government, you can see how
certain Wrong Thinkers up at the County
Seat would figure they might be just
slightly city-oriented.
Thus it was that only yesterday.
freshman Supervisor Ralph Diedrich took
his seat on the I.AFC and promptly sug·
gested that they boot Stan Northrup off.
Nothing personal, he added, it's just that
good old Stan used to be a city coun·
cUman and ought not to hold that public ,..,,
BESIDES THAT. Diedrich argued.
even the Grand Jury had suggested the
public member shouldn't be a former of·
flcial.
This prompted Northrup to suggest the
Grand Jury's commoots "were idiotic.''
Hah ! That's telling 'em, Stan baby.
In the end, the LAFC voted against
ousting Northrup and voted for a poli cy
of no more ex-councilmen or ex·
supervisors in the public position unless
tbey'd been-retired from those· spots for
rtve yean.
You suspect they figure a former of·
rlcial has forgotten everything he learned
after flve yean oH the job.
How wrong they are. 1n Orange County·
politics, oobOdy ever ~orgets.
the Democratic National Committee of·
fi ces last June. Five other defendants
have pleaded guilty.
The three-week-old trial was in recess
today during tbe nation.at day of lllOUm-
ing for fonnef' President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
At the close of Wednesday's pro-
ceedings, Sirlca ordered the jury from
the District of Columbia courtroom and
called the lawyers before the bench. The
black robed judge lawiched into a lee·
ture, saying it v.•as his opinion that
McCord. a io rmer CIA and F'lil
operative, should have oolined the prop-
er authorities if be feared for the safety
of Republican officials.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Ot!i~ry of the Daily Piiot.
1\ 91111rantttd
~ll'l•r·l'•ld•,, 11 , • ., "• ... , II•~• ,_ ••!I'S• •Y l 1:it ,,m .. c•ll 111<1 r••• n 11r w,n
•• ......,., i. ,.., C"lt Ortl II•"' ""'''I
7:.)f """ ,,,,.._,., .... """'°'' M ¥M ... -..-1 ... ,_ .. " ., f 1.m , Silll ... fY• '1' I 1.111.
~.,, ••II 1...r • t•"' wla .. •rMfllt ,. y .... (•I~••• IH1" ..,.,m lt ... II\,
Ttltphont\
Mosr CK1nge COlllllV ...... ~ l42-4JJI Nortll-1 Hunll"'lltvn lie.en
""" w"tmlnl!11r . . . . S40·1221 $In Cleftwrli., C1pl1tr1no lll!th, $In J111n Cop111r1no, o.,.. Point,
Sol.llfl L.agun1, L.g11R1 NIV...-1 4f2·4420
Paper Doolares
Sniper by Self
At New Orlealis
l'\EW ORLEANS (AP) -New Orleans
police officials have concluded that onl y
one sniper was invol ved in the Jan. 7
shootout at the Do"'YITown Howard
John90n Hotel in whtcb six persons were
killed and more than a dozen wounded, a
1elevision station has reported.
WVUE Television Wednesday night
said officials reached the conclusion that
only lt1ark Essex was involved, based on
physical evidence at the scene, in-
terviews with witnesses and a monitor of
the tapes made of police radlo broad·
casts during the turmoil.
\VVUE said a monitor of the tapes
showed Essex had enough time to set the
various fires on three different floors of
the hotel without aid.
However, a spokesman for the police
department, officer ca.rot Gonnan, said
she had no information on any such con-
clusion.
Essex was ltilled Jan. 7 by police fire
di rected onto the hotel roofto9 by a
military helicopter.
Police had thought there was a
possibility of a second, or even poss.ibJy a
third sniper.
Rain Due for Southland
Colder Temperatures, Sltarp Wir tds Predi.cted
High lodlJ mos"" 60s.
C0.1111 llmQ9fll!Ut•s •1"119 IT9"I Al
tt n. !nl11'1d lempt!'1ht••t ,,,,.. from
11 lo U. W11ff '9m1Mt•llllA 6t.
Smt, Jtloon, Tides
TMURSOAY
p.,.11. !Uluro, the DMZ becomes pnwlllonal -
Tho -and SOuth Vitt~ I mporary -by definition and rather cantmded that tho demllltarbod ;o;at permanent ID pracUc:e. F..,. ii .. ved all
the 17th 111nllel ._...i a dellnlte around.
bOundll)' w!lidi hlct-to be .... ,cltd ·b1y--'llil&--AM&RIOANS-llld-6Quth-V
the . NorUl'I O>mDMmist ,...1me. Tile ...,... laid they ~d not tolerate the
North llllld there oooll<i-IHnio ,pem.o ... t IDIJIO!ltlon ol • coolltlon on the Sout,h. '!'lie
deman:atlon lino bocause VJetnam -North and the N•1too.J Liberation Ftont
really all one utlan. wanted a ooalltloo, with the Thieu
Tile oolutlon: Tho DMZ waa adjudged a aovmunent throwo out.
proV!Jlonal demmalloo, pend t n g The ooluUou: elecUoos to be arraqed by a "national oouncU ol rtCOOdllatlon reunl!Jcalloo ol North and South Vietnam and canoonl" with equal ropreaeotetloo
by !roe oloctlona. Since 1,.. electlona IOI' the Satp "lime, NLF and neutral•.
throqbout both Vlelnama ...., ao Slnoe thlJ council mull operate on "the unllkel¥ prospect in any foreaeuble principle of unaptmtty," tta ouUook 11 for
$outh Chino
S•o
,.,_
f Pattern Of Cantral I
ANG• co•trolt.d by v ... c.,.. ofld/or
North Viet'*"•• -·· ..... _
NEWSMAP SHOWS AREAS HELD llY COMMUNIST FORCES
Rado Hold L•r .. !'ortiot>s of S. Viet, C11mbodl~ •nd I.Ho
Will Cease-fire · Work?
Peace -(!.,mr'1{s Raised
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The eom·.
pllpted Vietnam peace accords raise a
number of questions. Following are some
of the obvious quesUons and the
answers:
Qu..Uoo: The United States baa been
lighting In prevent a Communist
takeover in South Vletnal!t and President
NII<Ml bas declared that he sought to end
the Vietnam war with booor and achieve
a peace which had a chance ol lasting.
How well did he succeed 1
Answer: President Nuon in an·
noonclng the Vietnam qreemeot Tue ..
doy night llllld that be bad achieved aU
blo go.ta. The Vietnam agreement wW
get U.S. ttoops out ol Vietnam within 60
daya and return tbe American prisoners
of war. But the future of South Vietnam.
stW seems unctrtaln.
Q. WRY IS mE Mure ol SOuth Vlei·
nam tmcertain? '
A: Becawe the Vietnam peoce agree.
meol did oot clearly settle what wW hap-
pen nezl The aocord provldea ooly that
the Sllpt government lhoold eater Iulo
negotiations with the SOuth Vletname ..
Communllts to form a "National Council
of National llecoocillatloo and Conoord"
and eventually to attempt to negotiate a
reun!Ocatloo ol Vlel"':".:/l'·llanol . Q: Wbol II the Na · Oouncil sup-
poaed to do!
A: Ill purpooe la to bring the.opposing
Viebwnele parties lotlethe< Ud lo
superv~ !r<e and democratic e1ecdaaa'
In SOuth Vtetmun.
Q: CID tbe NoUooal Council really do
th!J!
A: THAT II QIJESTION.ult& The
Natlooal Cooncll IJ to be ceml)Qlld of
repreaentaUm of the Soutb -... government, the SOutb vieu-ecm.
mwu.ta and neutraliola. They .,.. to
mate dedsklCll wanlmoualy, wblda
means that 11 any l*rlY bas a atrtOas ob-
)ecifoo II can voto a dedsioo. 'll1e •
unanlm)ty rule oould quickly lead. to
deadlock.
Q: How about North Vietnam's
determination to unite •II· ol Vi.timn
under Ill ieldenblp! .
at fll'St if some uni~.s do not &e'· the word.
Q. Lo the"' •ny "''I danger that the cea:se-flre will break down!
A: During the eo doy1 that It will take
for the United Slateo to withdraw and the
North Vietnamese to return_ the
American prisoners of war, it aeema th.It
both aides will have plenty ot incentive to
nlake the cease-fire hold. 'l1le ceue-fire
wW be policed by an lnteroational
supl!hisory team composed of troops
from Poland, Hungary, Indooesia, and
Canada. After the United States is gone
diplomatl are hoping that the
aupervllory team and world opinion will
diacourage the North Vietnamese from
committing violatlooa as lhey did im-
mediately arter the 1954 Genev, agree-
ment ended Freoch involvement in the
earlier lndochlna conflict.
Q: ARl: TIIEllE any bidden dongers
which could jeopardize the cease-fire?
A: The Vietnam agreement permits
145,00Q.300,000 North Vietnamese troopo
to remain on South Vietnamese territory.
SOulh Vietnam II dean:::~ nervous about their presenoe, and potenUel
to cause trouble.
A: The Vietnam pe1oe agmment Pl'>-$fCond Ntfl ............ 1:1.J•."" s.-lorw ,,,, ... 1:201.ll'lo
f'llOAY
Fir.I h19h .... ., ..•. 1;.i.tt,m. 4,,
~: Y1de1 that Nortb and SOuth Vietnam will
seek to untfy all ol Vietnam peacefully
lhrough negotiation. But lhere Is no cer-
tainly that after 2S years of .war the two
sldeo wm really be able lo negotiate their
dll!ertnoH and acllieve uol!lcaUoo.
First low ., , ......... IO: ... a.m. I.I
S.CW lllth ... . .. ..• , S:U P.fft. I,,
5ec:oNI kNol , .. l :ZI ll-l'ft. '·' Sun R!wt f:Ua.m. lets J:l)O."'-
~ lets ttz•a.m.
tlOIMO, ____ .,
lm••1tt ~t.NOw
~ ..._All ~lllOWltl '"°' llOW
Co1Utnl Weathe r
For Sports
The DAILY PILOI' II the
DeWSpapef flX' oporta .tong
the Orange Ola t. •• complete
-st11tlstlcs on local home end
awaf games, •taff coverage,
more exclualve •tories on
Orange Coast.sports than any
Q: wm the ..,.......,, at leas~ stop
the ngbtlng and bring peooe a!Jo to Lao&
and Cambodia which bod been '°eked In-
to the Vietnam nr? •
a aood deal of talk and little eiM.
Meanwhile. Thieu'• aovemment ttmalrui
In ol1loe. Bui !loo II uved.
Durin& the oeaotlalionl, the United
Slotot-brooclll-up-tbe--moltor-of-ltll;Olll)
north Vte-lroOpl It llllld wero In
the Soulh. Soutll Vietnam llllld Ihm
were, In !Alcl, :I00,000 northern ,...w .... In
the Soutb and oothlna oould happen unw
they aol out. North \'tellwn oald it had no lroOpl In the South and anyway, they -:J lelvo. To the end, Lo Due Tllo
re!e IOOm!ully IO the "-.lied
quesUoo" ol tbe oortbem tn>opo.
'll1e """'°t: Nothllli al ell oald aboul ii In the aoootd. Face la .. vec1.
Teachers End
Long Strike
In Chicago
By U-l'r<l1 Interutloaal
A tentative settlement with a f21.5
•illlon prloe 18' that ellows a 11l1ry In·
crease and smaller class · alzes was
reached today In the Cbica&o teachers'
strike, larges~ of four in the nation.
The se'ttlem1t1t was sub}ect to approval
by vOle ol the lull ocbool boanl and by
JJ'lembln of the Chicago Teacbfn UnJon, .
( IN SHORT .•• )
which called olit tlie t .. cben "' Tao. to to begin the longort ochooi walkoot In the
city's bi.story.
Walkouts of teachers continued .at St.
l.ools, Mo.. at Plliladelphljl and at
Superior, Wis.
e 'Notlldllfr Pers-I'
MEXICO CITY (AP) -The three Hal·
tlans who held U.S. Ambuudor Clinton
E. Kool at ppolnl unut Ibey and 12
political prlsonen were promised escape
to Mexi<o llllld they had nothing aplnal 1
Knoz penooaliy.
Arriving Wednesdai< night In MeJdco
City, tbe woman and two men said the
64-yeaNlld diplomat seemed ao Im·
porlanl peraoo whose capture wu !DOit
likely lo force HaiUan Pruldent Jean-
Clllude Duvalier to '™"" their demands.
• Duvall«, to seare' the reieue of Knox
and U.S. Colllul G<nerel Wanl O>r!s-
tilll90ll, freed 12 poliUcel prlsonen, Dew
all 15 to Mexico aboard an Air Haiti
plane and paid them $70,000 In nwom.
e V.S. Dollar Stq9~rs
LONDON (APJ -The U.S. dollar
opened weak on Europe's chief money
market today, reaching a record Jow ln
Zurich, but r<COVering all(hUy In later
~ aald the dollar's decUoe ""
due parUy lo 1 bluer !ban espected U.S.
trade deficit for 1972 and to growing
doubts In Washingloo about the abWty lo
maintain international monetary ex-
change rates.
e Tt'<lde Detklt Soars
WASIUNGTON (AP) -Spurred by 1
burgeoning economy, the U.S. trade
deficit totaled lf.4 b!Won In 1972, thrtt
limes tbe 1971 figure and the wont In
history.
The Commerce Deportment reported
Wedneaday that imports last year totaled
$55.5 bililon, up from $45.5 billion In 1971,
and exports amounled to $49.1 billion,
compared with $4.1.5 billion a :rear
earlier.
e Whites SU.y Away
MEMPms, Tenn. (AP) -The ....
tion's 10th largest school system bas
coasted through its first day of
desegregation busing although ·white
abeentoelsm was high and was espectod
to-today.
Pupils who wtnt to school were unruf·
fled by lntegnUoo. One labeled it "a !Un
day."
other I o c a 11 y distributed
newspaper. 1
A: mE AGREEMENT orden the high
commands o! •ll aides. lo lnaltUCI their
regular and lrJqulor troops to stop
fighting as ol 4 p.m. PST Jan 27. lllory
lulnger, In a White lloule prea OOllfer.
ence w-.,. 111ld be bad a lll'Oll(
expectelton that • aimllat .,..,..Ore
would come. Into e!lect sborUy also in Laos and Clmllodla. Bu~ lnevttobly,
there are likely to be minor ytolaUoos
UlllT ...... •
'IT'S GOT TO Ill A Dltl AM' SAYS POW WIFI MARii RUDLOf'P
F....ily Heon-. of l'uea at Mtram•r Novy Air Station
I. ' .,
\
\
'i .•
•• .r.:. ' •••
Pentagon Trial News
Jurors Hear CIA Link iri Death of Diem
LOS ANG ELES (AP I -,--------., dlctmeol against Ellsberg and Dealings of U.S. officials who I ran the Vietnam war, In..__ _ • ___ t...._ Rusao charges them onJy with
eluding thei r role In the death $1& •....-COpylrij lhe papers In 1969 iDd
of South Vil'tnnm President 1970, not relea!lng them.
Ngo Dinh Diem, have been ex-Ell.Iberg, 41, and Ruaso, 85,
PoSed to jurors in the Pen-both former researchers on
togon Papers trint Tor Uie first government projects, ha ve ad-
lhne. ted Since the panelists said dur-mH leaking the papers, saying they hoped revelation
Ing jury selection they hadn't of U.S. policies would help end
read the secret papers in tl\fl Vietnam war.
books or new spapers, this Is thelr first look at the material Gorman, tesUfying 85 an e1-
Daalel Ellaberg and Anthony pert In lnteWgence, told jW'Ors
Russo revealed to news media that vlrtually all Information
in 1!171. in the popert woold be 11useful" to a foretcn power ln
11IE DEFEN DANTS are "Oeablng cut" their ln-
cbarged with espl-Onage, coo-"!l-. tell,11ence on the United .
CALIFORNIA
Cycle Ooh .
U.S. Agree
To 'Peace'
lhursday, Januif)' 25, i q73 DAil Y PILOT .J
Coast Panel Seeks Pr£!Cedures Okay
SAN FRAN CISCO (A?I -
The new commission created
by the passage or the Prop. 20
coastline inlliali~ begun
est8.bUshlng macfftnery to con-
trol development a I o n g
California'! I , O 8 7-mile
iMrellne.
At its first meeting Wednes-
day, the commission sent
to regl-Onal agencies for ap.-
proval a set of Interim pr<r
cedures !or developers seeking
coastal construction pernlits.
TJIE COflfftllSSION agreed
to try to adopt the procedures
drafted by the state attorney
general's office at the next
meeting. Feb. 7 in Los
Ange les.
The procedures cover be determined later. for its use by Prop. '%tl, the
regulatiom !or cooomlsslon i\IELVIN Z. LANE of Menlo commission also agreed to in-
operatlona, public hearings, Park, publisher of Sunset terim allotments uf . up to
application tiling procedures, f.f&gazine, wa! elected com-$10,000 to each of the si x
ft'Cs and violations. mission chairman, and -Ellen regional commissions to begin
The controversial coastline Stern Harris -0f Beverly Hills, opening offices and hiring
initiatlv~1 i!J?P.:rovaj by $5 P:,er-who writes a consumer ad-staff.
cent of the state's voter! iast vocate column for ~tlie-Los The slate co mmi ssion
spring, provided for 1he com-Angeles Times, was chosen agreed t-0 meet the first
missior\ and six regional com-vice chairman. Wednesday of each month in
missions to "prese rve. protect Using $5 million specified vario us locations. and rest"ore the resources of l---=-'----.::;.:::.::..::_.::c::..:::.::.::c.:....:... ___ _
the coastal zone."
Conunissioners hired Joseph
Bodovitz, executive direct.or of
the Bay Conservation and
Develop1nent Commissk>n, as
exec:.!tive director of the new
state commission at a salary
lo range bet ween $24,000 and
$29,000, the exact amount to
SPEED READING COURSES
TO BEGIN IN
BEACH AREA
splracy and theft , and th~ 'Ebb.rg .c.1•, exhibit A, States.
government, by s how Ing your honor/' Corman said a foreign SACRAMENTO (AP) _ '11le
jurors lhe papers, is trying to power coukt have learned
Hospital's Top Deck
Shipshape for POW s
Ant nt•fl'l•lltt h•v• b.•11 m•d• l:t., A.lft•ric•11 ll.•1d i119 Foun·
d1tio11 to co11duct • 21-hout cout1• 111 •P••d r••di119. Th. cout1•
It op•n to 111yo11• •bov1 th• •9• of I) 111d 9u1r1nl••• •v••v
9r1du1I• lo trip!• th •ir •••dint 1p•ed with •11 incr••1• in corn-
p•1h•111io11,
prove that the information from the papen the names of U.S. Bureau of Land Manage-
was so sen!itive it should not Lodge's messages to variogs "specific individuals involved ment and a South e r n
have been made public. ln the death of President Ngo California m o t o r c y c I e
Brig. Gen. Paul F. Gorman, secret sources said the UnJt.ed Dinh Diem in November, organization have agreed on a
who helped supervise the Pen-States would not 11thwart11 1963." Some of those, he said, settlement under wh1ch the SAN DlEGO (AP) -The given a brief tour of four
tagon 9tudy. testified Wednes-such a coup. wereVietnamesemWtarymen 1mell of fresh paint pervades wards on the top floor, where
day for the government as Gonnan testified that 8 who to 1969 were "stlll active BLM will drop plana for 8 the top floor of the tallest the POWY, after debriefing at
large slides of pages ma rked foreign power, reading the political figures." lawsuit and the cycllstl will building at the largest military other military facilities, wll l
"Top Secret, Sensitive," nash-d in _ -·'d ha 0 T 8 E R ~-RMATION restore desert areas damaged hospital In the nation, the area be . ed on 8 movie screen before ocuments 1-, \.VW ve .ar.t1v during an unauthorized race known as "sick officers' treated until they are well
jurors. added to its dossier on Lodge revealed to jurors through the on public labds la.st month. quarters." enough to leave.
he who was then a. U.S. papen was that in the 1950s Tbe h On I se pages, they read of 1. 1 t lh p ,_ after ... Geneva Accords BLM and the El Cajon T e building has its own former Ambassador Henry negoi ia or a e arl5 peace uic Motorcycle aub announced. WITHIN THE NEXT few o p era ti n g rooms and
Cabot Lodge's dealings with talks. He said the enemy cou1d limited U.S. military person-!be: agre:ement Wednesday. rrionths the 120-bed floor at laborator ies. On the top noor
CIA . agenl.! and Vietnamese have used the data in negotia-nel ln Vietnam. CIA agents The motorcycle club and the San Diego Naval Hospi tal ts to are six glass-enclosed recrea·
rflilitary men who were in-lions. were sent into Vietnam posing American Motorcycle Associ.a-house most of the 50 area men Uon rooms where patients can
volved ln a planned coup THE PAPERS were not ~ 1:~~ fsd~=~~= tlon -wbicb originally had who will be retw1ling home sit on sofas, watch televlsion,
which would over-throw Diem. released until 1971, but the in-of the use of remaining refused to recognhe the from North Vietnamese prison play at game tables and look BLM's authority to restrict its camps under terms of the out on the port city.
military fotei!s in Vietnam for use of public land.!I _ agreed cea5e-fire intelligence p u r p 0 5 e s • • · Hospital officials te lephoned
Aft1r th• 1•v•11 wt1\: prOfr•"'· • p•r1011 c111 •••d •nv
•v•••t• book in 1•11 th•11 1n ho ur •"d und•rtl1nd It b•l11r. In
1ddition lo 1p••d r••df119 th• Cour1• 1110 •lftph11 j11t ilftp<ov1d
1tudy l•chniqu11, b•l1•r t•1t t1ld nt 1\:1111, i nd i11cr•111d conc•n-
tr •lion 111d r•l1ntion •billti••·
Th• coun• roqulr.1 I P9tlO., to 1tt.H o.,• c.1111 P•• w•1k
011 th1 •v•nin9 of lh•ir choico, For tho1• who would Ii•• mor•
infor1111tion, without obli91tlo11 to •nroll, • 1•ri•1 of FR EE on•
hour orl•nt1 Uon l1clur•1 h1v• b••11 1ch•dul•d.
Th•1• m••ti1191 ••• fr•• to th1 publlc .ft.Ct th• cout1• will
b. •xpl1i11•d ill COfl'lpl•i• d.t1i1 lnclutlint 111ir1nc• r•quirl m•nh.
c1111roolft proc•dur•1, twitio11, clt11 1ch1du l• •nd loc1tion. You
n••d I• tlt.11d 011ly Ill• mt•tl119 which 11 th• 111011 co11v•ni•nl
for yow. Th••• fr•• on• hour •ri•lli•ti o111 will b• h•ld •• follow1:
Thursd•y, Janu•ry 25, 7:30 P.M.; Frid•y, J•nu·
•ry 2b, 7:30 P.M.; 2 meetings on S•turd•y, Janu•ry
27, IO:lO A.M. •nd 2:00 P.M.; •nd on f iMI meet-
ing on Wedne1d<1y, J•nu<1ry 31, 7:30 P.M.
ALL Mm•N•s WILL u HRD AT THI
LAG-UNA HOTIL -THI GAIDIN ROOM
411 $, COAST HWT .. LAM NA llACH End of Flies Sought Go;:•npa:~. he ... ; .. ~ pa~:.ypa.u!ya:ea:1:e~~: t~e~~:~~;hog:~:~-~bi~! :i!~~~::J~t!~~r:: ~-"""" :1 ~::::.:_ ________ __'bu~il~di~n~g-~W~ed~n~e~sd~a~y'__~w~e:""-.-~t~ion"'_'o~f~a'.._11n~ew~s"--"w~tr~e~. __ __.!~'!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""'~'!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""''!""'~ revealed that in the early1 F p H • z 1980s American relaUons with or orrwna ospita ~.1~lh .. ~~e ~
tinutng concern of the South
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Air Bakersfield and William L. Vietnameae that they 1p.
conditloning 'would be Installed Leonard of San Bernardino peered in tbelt relaU0111blp
pt Pacinc State Hospital in have been appointed by Gov. with Ame:rtcan omcials as ~ t 1 .1 Ronald Reagan to the puppets, as the tools or ln-
i-vmona a a cost 0 $5.5 mt -California Highway Com- struments of American of-
lion to protect Its occupan ts mission. ficera.''
from fli~, heat and smog un· .----------------------!
der a bill Introduced in the
Assembly.
Assemblyman John V.
Brlags, (R-Fulierton), in-
troduced I.he bill whi ch follows
reports late last year that flie1
we" plaguing the ho,,pitat's
residents -many of them
handicapped children.
e Search Euds
SAN FRANCISCO (AP )
The book.a have been closed in
the search for two aoctally
pro~nent East San R'rancl!co
[ __ B_RI_EF_S _)
Bay couples who vanished
while on a cruise In the Gulf or
California, the Coast Guard
said today. ·
ProlNbllJ wh•t 1JOU .
don•t hno-..v •boilt
l•nclin...,.ii
could fill• book. ·
Thisbooh.
MafNPS:--
:io bit fukolor
ilblwti<w.,..
chlrts.trlflhs
ft. fukolor ;i-'*"
loW-flllfl 11..i.w •1is ::=: ol lt.llitl!Ynd. ~ _...,._
.bl Ill In Jhe coupon and MAI. TODrofl'( a 'IOI tJw• · 1 rltE The O>aat Guard said a
thorough air searth covering
100,000 square miles failed to
turn up any trace of the
Jordan Carltons or Rollo
Wheelers, whO disappeared
Nov. 19 near La Paz while
aboard the Lupita , a chartered
32-foot Grand Banks: trawler.
r-,;;,;;;;;-,;;;,---~--------, --3.tONo.~a.d.. ... "2
....... llo:il\Oll. VlMO I ""-111111i..--.t11 .. boel,llOWlQllOM lfll'm)~ ~ , 111e1 "'..._. I lrd o "'-*o..., .... k:Rfl* ... 111Ma....,.W1111111•• pollllOill. ,-1-
I I I I
I
I e Appointments --~
SAC RAMENTO (AP)
Kenneth E. Vetter
•
The Parking Pinch
Lucky to find° 1 parking place? ~
timea it takes more lh1n luck to get out.
Par kill& lo~? Expen1ive, and 1here'1 tho
inevitable scraped iender. Hcre•a bow
dress model Kris Goddanl oolved tho
pnlblem: .. 1 bavo as many u five 1ppointmc:nts
a day. I mukln\ mate them all ii I
dttlYe from one to the olher, and park· in& oostl wre eatiq up my iacolQe:.
Now I leave my car behind uxl JO from
,,iace to pl1ce oo the Rn>. E.peciaUy
the downtown Mial.B1ll Wblcli ii 1ti-
oduldy the llUkll o;;{y IOc a ride!"
IJ you cao do witlloot the partdna
plJICh, tab tho &tnCu to "' arouncl town. Ira my on the ~
South~rn Califomla J1UiN1CRR l
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D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL P A.GE
• w •
a·t Will It Mean? '
e low-key announcement and ~ually subdued
receptlOilOrtffi!-Vil?lriam cease l.l'e arehifiDy surpris·
ing.
onti be m~ now in wbelhe<-«-not OU•~---1-------l
sacrllfces do result in peace In Southeas\ Asia or delay
or deter aggression el&&Wbere. Or more Importantly,
jar all the great powers into the realltation that military
confrontations are no longer worth th eir cost.
_ For perhaps the first time in history, there \\'as ~
reason to expect that ne\\'S of the end of a major \var
wQUld be greeted \\'ith celebrations an d dancing in the
streets.
Not that it is unwelcome news. or has not been
awaited ''ilh as much yearning as the conc!Usion of
earlier "'ars. But over seven years it had become no longer a
"'ar of glorious heroics and noble causes in the tradition·
al style of 1nan's forays into battle.
It's easy to be cynical and critical or the cease (ire
se1 tlen1ent -Americans have acquired .a penchant [or
cyniciSJn and extreme shortsigbtendess in these matters.
Realistically, \\'hether the pa<'t will result in niore
Lban three or four months' lull in the fighting -long
enough for the United States to get well clear of mili-
tary involvement -depends on the North Vietnamese
intentions much more than on any terms that coul d be
\Vritten.
U their intentions are. as the administration spokes-
men seem to feel, to substantially live up to the spirit
·of t.be agree1nenl, there is hope for a period of real
peace in this troubled area.
It must be recognized that the North Vietna1nese
ain\ of placing all oC Vietnam under one rule -their
rul e -remains the same. But even il the North Vietna-
mese are only i nterested in having peace until their
country is substantially reconstructed. there could be
several years oC peace .• i\nd during that time there is
the possibility that a system of peaceful accommoda-
tion may be fashioned by the Vietnamese themselves.
For this nation. •·peace with honor" means that we
\\·ithdraw with awaren~ of other nations that "'e have
gone to great lengths to fulfill our original commitment
-not to permit South \'ietnam to be taken over ?>y military
aggression.
\Vhether history "ill prove it "·orth the rost can
For the American people, especially !or the gallant
famillts or the prisoners and mJssing men wbo have
'''aited so long, the greatest reaction now \vlll be a long
sigh of relief.
A Shameful Chapter
··Maybe be wasn't the best President we might
have had.
But \\·e sure as bell aren't the OOst people a Pres-
ident has ever had." . ' • •
Those blunt words by a Chicago newsl"per colum-
nis~ Alike Royko, written back in April, 1968, may be as
meaningful a commeow, on the Presidency of Lyndon
B. J ohnson as all the thousands or words of analys1s and
eulogy and anecdote wtiich ,have poured out since Pttr.
Johnson's death on Monday.
Whatever th~ judgment of history on LBJ,-it seems
certain to be harsh on the people be led and served ·as
President. The ihcredible acts of vilification and abuSe
against him, and the depths of gross irresponsible be-
havior of a substantial portion of the citizenry during
his. preside~cy are pungently noted in Royko's 1968
article repnnted elsewhere on this pa,e.
So perhaps it is uniquely appropnate that we are
bidding goodbye to Lyndon Johnson at the same time we
are bidding goodbye to the war that hurt him -and all
oC us as a nation -so deeply.
\Vhatever our feelings about LBJ's shortcomings
• 'and achievements, however, this nation ought to be
deeply ashamed oC itself for the-treatrnenr accordOOllie
36lh President of the United States. And we should re-
solve not to permit it to occur again in our lifetimes.
'
•
Russia's Naval · S ybarites
Had a Real
Prerident of a Divided People
' Strength Grows Bed of Roses
\\'ASHINGTO~ -There is conclush·e
e\·idence Russia is in the process of
making a significant major addition to
its steadily expanding naval might -its
lirst aircraft carrier.
This momentous departure fw the
Soviet. which in the past has deprecated
carriers, is under construction at tbe
i\ikolayeve Nesenke shipyard on tbe
Black Sea. It y.·as at 1
(ROBERTS.AI.I.EN)
Leafing through Frances Perry's
beautiful oew book. ··Flowers or the
World," {Crown , $22.50 and worth it), J
devised a quiz about flowers. ~1y own
sco~ \\Wld have been a paltry 40; see if
you can do better:
Cuban missile crisis) the Soviet navy i,1·as I. How did the La-
abnost entirely cooftoed to defense of the tin phrase. 111b !"08'
nation's far-flung coastal waters. Since meaning under the
then there has been a drastic change in rose, COOle to signify
concept. something told in se-
AI a ronaequencc, Russia is now . a cret~
world sea power -second only to the 2. "'hat is the ori-
U.S. gin of the ei:pression
ln ooe sOOrt decade, the. Reds have "a bed of roses''?
thls big installatioo
that the Reds' n-.·o
helicopter l'arriers
\fere built -the
15,COJ-to-18.000 -too
1'.loskva and Lenin·
grad~ oow both oper-
atimif w1th half
decks for anti-sub-
marine helicopters.
built a powsful armada QI beavy missile · 3. Wha!_ flower -_ , ~...,__..,,., ... ,.., IMlic:iili'er -· ~·~IL •ided lbe .. ~)J.vWmc kDOwn as
numerous other large and small modem vanilla? ·
.. fighting sbip.s. 4. From what nower did unmarried
Tbe first aircraft carrier, with a full
flight deck . Is around 800 feet in length
and between 30,000 and 35,000 tons.
That is approximately the size of the old
U.S. Ess.ex-<lass carrier.
THE INDICATIONS arc the vessel will
be completed in the fall of this year and
undergo sea trials in 1974. Presumably it
y.•ill become operational some time in
1975.
Obviously, in preparation for that. the
Russian navy is light testing a vertical
ta ke-off jet fighter for use on the carrier.
UQtil now, V-STOL type planes have
been the sole province of !he Soviet air
force. But with the navy £light testing
vertical take-<>[f and landing jets, it t,
evident they arc to be u.sed on the carrier
to eliminate catapults and planes with
folding wings.
\\'bile avoiding such complicated and
expensive equipment. use of V-STOL
craft means a considerably reduced
flight range.
WESTERN military authori ties view
Russia's construction of the aircraft car-
rier as further forceful evidence -if any
were needed -of the Kremlin's policy of
extending its nlilitary ,might and in-
fluence far beyond its o"n borders.
Until the early 1960s (at the lime of the
EXAMPLES: A new class or ,heavy men get lo be called "bachelors"?
missile cruisers with the Kara already 5. What flower was largely responsible
completed and operational and others un-for losing a war~
der construction: the Moskva and Len-6. What nation2l flag is a flower?
ingrad anti-submarine helicopter carriers . 7 What flower-is cited in the Bible as
cited above; a new type ship-to-ship-a cure for sterilitv?
missile vessel capable of operating on the 8. What flower did the French fleur-de·
high seas. lis come from?
The Nanuchka, as it is kOO\\'ll, is
around 230 feet long, displaces 700 to 800
tons, is dieseJ-poy.·ered and has a speed of
more than 25 knots. At least 10 have
al ready been buiil in a Leningrad
shipyard.
Principal armament is two triple
launchers for SS-N-9 surface-to-surface
missiles mounted amidships.
The development of the Nanuchka
gives the Reds still another weapon
against U.S. ai rcraft carriers in the
Caribbean, ri.1editerranean, Barents and
NoN·egian Seas. It was clearly created
for that purpose.
Under the Nixon administration's
economy plans. the carrier force would
be reduced from 16 to 12 -with four
World War II carriers verging on
obsolescence being laid up.
They would be replaced with l\!<O
nuclear--powered carrie r s . the
Eisenhower and Nimitz. each costing $1
billion exclusive of aircraft.
~YDNEY J.HARRJs)
ANSWERS :
I. Cupid's gift of a rose -the
emblem of Jove -to Harpocrates, the
god of Silence, as a bribe not to reveal
the amours or Venus. Thus. when secret
matters were discussed in ancient times,
a ro.se was suspended from lhe ceiling
and what took place beneath it was
strictly "sub rosa."
2. In Sybaris, an early city of Italy, the
Juxuriouslty affluent citizens slept on
mattresses filled with rose petals. (See
··sybarites.'')
3. Before synthetics, the flavoring.
\'anilla. was extracted from the seed
pods of a tropical American climbing
orchid.
The Dilemma of Rape
4. University students in the Middle
Ages y.·ere called "Baccalaureus'' from
the laurel berry adorning their heads;
since they " .. ere forbidden to marry, all
urunarrieO men came to be called
"bachelors."
It is hard to tell whether the crime of
rape Is on the increase or whether
women are more inclined to report the
offense than in the past. Certainly the
subject is being discussed openly as
never before. Now the National Public
Radio has put on a series of five brood-
casts exploring the topic from the view-
point ol psychologists. lawyers, police,
rapists and rape victim!.
NOT TOO LONG ago even the word
''rape'' was taboo in the public press.
When il y.•as necessary on rare occasions
to mention the crime. the family
newspaper referred-to it as "criminal
assault.'' The women's liberation move-
ment has done a lot to bring certain
aspects of the rape problem out of the
dark closet Women were once ashamed
to ooaless tha l !hey had been raped, and
with good reuon. Society tended to view
I.bf: victim of rape as a '4ruined Y.'1)man.''
lier cha.nets or a good marriage "·ere
sharply dlmln!Bhed. Today's liberaied
woman la not ashllmed of being raped .
But ~ Is very angry at the way society
d<.als w\1h Uils crime. To put It blunlly,
she thlnkt ~ male-dominated society,
especially as represented by the police
and the courts. doesn't treat the crime as
"rlOUlly as It lhotlld.
A certain skeptical attitude toward the
MtMn wbo clal1111 abe wastaped doeJ ln
fact run lbrvugh much or the ICrlous
llteratu«: and the casual commentary on
EDITOIUAL
RESEARCH
this crime. Women's liberalion leaders
think this renects a prevailing masculine
attitude of suspicion toward won1en.
They think many men tend to be over·
tolerant of an excessive degree of male
sexual aggression. Such men believe a
\\·oman 's "no" often means "yes". They
have little sympathy for the woman who
"leads them on." \Vomen have too often
heard the comment of a male th.it "she
(the rape victim) y.·as asking for it.''
IN ANY CASE, a very real dilemma
faces the •·oman subjected to a rape at-
tack. A recent casi In Washington. D.C ..
illustrates this. A man accu.sed of raping
two university students wa3 acqulttcd
because the jurors felt the girls had not
struggled enough. (After the acquittal
the judge told the jury the accusep had
confessed the crime but the confession
had not been admlsslble as ·evidence.)
Police advile women not to rtaist a
rapl.st if they don't want to be beaten up.
This leave1 tbe WO,l!lan with a poor
choice: either she sl!Mnlts and Is con·
sidered a willing partner In the act. Or
she de.mon.strates her innocence by
resisting and winds up in the. hospital -
or tht morgue.
5. Mark Antoay railed to conquer the
Parlbians In large part because his troopo
"'ere poisoned by munching on deadly
niG)ltshade_
6. The "Rising SUn" in the Japanese
nag is not a sun at all, 'but really a
yellow chrysanthemum With ff central
disc and 16 flaring petals: the
chrysanthemum was the h-1ikado's
personal emblem, and only roy alty was
allowed to grow It.
7. Mandrake, by ~·bJch Rachel con-
ceived Joseph, in the book of Genesis.
8. From the Jri5, chosen by Louis Vlr
as his emblem in the Ctusades. (Oddly
enough, seeds or this same species were
used as a cotfee substitute.)
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
About all th1s nobe over motor-
cycles In the desert, who's listen-
ing?
J. A. D.
""" ,..,.,. "'"""' ......,... ¥llwlo ""' llll>(ftM!ib' """ lff ... at••1Mr, .....
mr "' •w • o"""'' Gn. DlllY ''"'·
•
I
The Troubled Land of LBJ.
Ed itor's Not.e : Tiu! followin g aTticle
was written by Chicago Daily News
columnist Mike Royco i-n April of
1968, shortly afttr Lyndon B. John.son
/lad a1rnouiiced tO the nation that he
would not run for nor accept nomi-
nation to tlu~ Presidency in 1968. Now,
almost jive years lateT, it is an inter-
esting perspective on tlie troubled
PTendn1cy of LBJ -and a pungent
commentary on the mmmert and
mood of America.
By AUKE ROYKO
There were those "'ho screamed \\'itb a .
vicious joy when President Johnson, in
that slow, sad way of bis, said be was not.
running again. •
'lbere were others who reacted with
Silllen cyruclsm~hif blSingfe .....
The white racists said "good." The
black r,cist.s said "good." The super-
Ha"°'b said "good" and the Doves said
"good." And mos t of all the yoling said
"good."
They were all so busy being jubilant in
this strong man's terrible moment that
many didn't listen to the serious thing he
told them.
The President of the United States told
the people of the United States that they
are so divided against themselves he
dares not take part in a political cam·
paign for fear that it could get even
worse.
But they answered, many of them, with
one last jeer d. cootempc. and hatred.
rr FIGURED. Understrained hatred
has become the dominant emotion in this
splintered country. Races bate, age
groups hate, politlca1 extremes hate. And
when they aren't hating each other, they
( J
LBJ OFFENDED others by engaging 1q
an ''unjust" war. Their collective con-GUf;ST REPORT science rebrlled against !he "unjust,.
war. So lhe.v portr?red him as the eager
murderer of bJbies.
1 And he offended nu~ny by h~lack of
have been turning it on LBJ. He, more style and wit, his sore-footed, hound-dog
than anyone else, bas felt it. oratory.
The white racilts, those proroondly ig-So the abuse he took from all •• ocnnt bigots who toss eggs at sdJool busses. blamed him for )he very ex-remarkable. Pn!sidents. like all poUti-
ilte:nce of the Negro. To them be was 0 cians, have to taie abuse. It is within the
nigger lover. rules of the game lo criticize them , to
1be black separatist could find ·no in· spoof them, to assail them.
suit too vile to be )lSed on him. To lbem But there may not have been 3nythlng'
be is a white rKiat. That be launcDed in our history to compare with what has
tome of the most ambit!~ dvi1 rights been_ tossed at President Johmon. ,.
legislation io the nation's tilsfory means A plaf that says he arranged the
nothing In a_llJno_wi!en bl~_-lais_~munler_of John F."-'Kennedy has been a
NY Abe Llncoln was the worst kind of hltwilli lli8rntelleawils;-aild UiOSe Wlii
\xiot . • • think Ibey, are. .
THE SUPEll'8AWK complained that '
be wasn't tilling the Viet Cong fast
enough .
The Doves portrayed hlm as engaging
in war almost for the fun of it.
And the young, that very special group,
were ()(fended by him in so many, many
ways.
For one thing, be was old. They might
have forgivea him that if he had at least
acted young. But he acted like a harass-
ed, tremendously busy, impatient man
with an enormous responsibility. Just
like their old man.
He offended them by failing to pander
to them. by not fawnipg over them and
telling them that they were the wise ones,
that they had the answers, that they
could guide us. He didn't tell them t.bat
beca~ that fact waa, he was the man
charged with running lhe country, not
them.
A SOMEWHAT popular publication of
satire called , the Realist printed
something so obscene about him that J
can't find a way to even hint at it.
High government officials were hooted.
down when .they tried to represent the
Administration point of view on cam~
puses, those temples of free speech.
Every smart punk grabbed a sign and
accused him of being in a class with
Adolf Hitler or Ric hard Speck.
He needed more personal protection
than any President In history. That can't
feel very good. But it was necessary. ·
U you live in a big city you see the
hate that threatens ii. He lived in tbq
Ytbole cou.ntry and looked at it all. And be
couldn't see a way to unite it.
Maybe he wasn't the best President we
might have had.
But we sure as hell aren't the best peo.:
pie a President has ever had.
•
The Organic F~od Crisis
The adamant refusal ol America's
leaders from the President on down to
legalize marijuana led inevitably to The
Great Organic Food Ban.
Polls showed most Americans opposed
marijuana in the belief that it led to
heroin and other hard drugs. While the
physiological evidence was to the con-
trary' they based
their btlief on stu-
dies which proved
most heroin users
bad, at uie time or
anothtt, smoked pot.
With this conve~
tlonal wisdom estnb-
IWled, the time was
ripe for a crackdown
on organic foods.
The campaign was Jed by COogrmman
Bagsworth Boodle.
IN A SPEECH on the House Door that
rocked the Nation. Boodle ~ a
report proving that 93.2 percent of the
country's middle class marijuana
smokers had. at one time or another, in-
gested organic foods.
"Thus we see," cried Boodle, "that
just as marijuna leads to heroin, so
organic foocb lead lo marijuana! We
must bruk this vicious chain at its firat
and wukest link! 1·11 tt JnY -wotkler the COmmunlsts
book our boy1 ln Vietnam on brown rice!
'You aro·what )'Vlleal.' theoe poc>t addlcta _,.. IJcrt Ihm, 1111 lriends. is a plot to
tum us Into a naUoo of vegetables.
Quotes
f'Ai•t 0.gotd, s. f'. buslne91 exec
civic leader -"When 7ou die it's no1
whit you did but what you tried to do.
that oounts:·
( ART HOPPE J
"And why do t}lese victims crave
wheat genn, sas.wfras roots: and other
nefarious substancet? It makes them
feel, they confess, good!"
IT WAS nus last, of course, lbat car-
ried the day. Every decetlt American
la)ew that what mode you !eel good was,
Ipso facto, bad. . ·~
:rhe Boodle BW, maklng pos1ession of
organic roods (or 11org" as It became
known ) a · felooy, ·swept through
ConiJ"eu. 'l'be ooly W-tlng ........
·cut b7 S..tor Prounlre, • sUspected
uaer. ' once oq bid been made 111'1!•1 , lhe
OOlllUJlll>llOo "' II natanlly t r l p I • d
overnight No,. that huge profits could be
mtlde 1n1mctcma In the otull, the Mafia
mpped In. Slw;y charocten huog out on
every school comer.
"Psst, kld." they'd whisper. "Want a
hit of Ae>pulco alfalfa sprouts! ll's the
""'1 aJufl, right olf the boat.' '
EVERY COLLEGE dorm rteked ol the
s-...t a1'1d odor 61 .. tural beneji and
clsbe,. butter. Oporatlng under the ...
knock law, nattOllcs agents conducted
wholesale raids on dinner partJes and ar-
mted thousands or coo!IPl!led mlddl&-
class criminals before they could .-wallow
the evidence.
First oflenden were aenlenced to
RehablDtaUon Fanns, wbere they le~
td to ·spr1y prst:tcldes and were fed can-
ned peas wllh1 monosodlwn ctutamate.
1rtJ!iclal <Olorlog Ind other 1ddlllve1 to
break !heir $.IO-a-day habl ta.
A mother In Kalamazoo wu ~
tenc:ed lo l<n years !or broast1e<ding her
l
baby. But the verdict was reversed when
a clever attorney proved her milk con-
tained DDT and strontium-90. And in El
Paso, Adelle Davis, the guru of the o~
generation ("Tum out and tune up !") gOi
20 years for possession of three ounces cf
blueberry yogurt. • THE END CAME when Congressmao
Boodle discovered a report that it was an
insatiable craving for good health ~
led to org addiction. "That's sickeatl
jng!" he cried, and introduced a bW tO
ban vi.tamin tablets, jogging shoes, <Old
remedies and fluoridated toothposto.
Am.ericans rose up in anns. Boodl~
was 1mpeached. AU legislation bann~
~thing was repealed. And a new la~
was passed upholding every American!j
Inalienable right to kill himself any way
he wanted to. ·~
-·'
I·
OIANOI COAST
nrlll 1 •1• nr the n.uy
to lnl n And -lliUmu·
dt'l"ll l)y , J.ll'~nlinM \hla
~ . '1 Oflinlons antt t-orn·
ment on to1>k'tl ot In ~t •net
1i~nlf Clnct. by provldlnl{ a tnrurn tor th@ expreuft}n 1)f our rf~d.:ni'
opinlorui, and by J\rt"S<'"Ung Ult•
dlvrts4} vlt"'fXlints or Informed ob·
1,1(.rvt't"J .and fpuknmen on toriloi: l
ol the day.
Thursday, January .25, 1973
I
•
•
. . ' ' ' . • • •• . .
'
oekley C allenge
IQ Tests for Blacks Proposed
PALO ALTO (APl -Nobel Cavalli-Sforza for nearly four x ,·a Blac k 1'fU111lm, said of
laureate Wllllam Shockley ht111 hours on "the nature of Shociley. "We are ln a stage
propoeed ul1ng black students heritabillty of l.Q. and il.5 ln whtt.h the whlte race
at Stanfor<I Unlver1ity here in social, economic and llUcal throulh Jta sclentlstJ bas -an~Kpermtent-to test hls con-J mjillCifions." deciaedtlilil a signific ant pa r-tro~erslal theories Uniting Jn--::,Wbat he feara and hates tion of our people will be telhge~ wllh race. most is our elistence," Cedric ellmlnated."
Blood tests on the -------------------
uni11t1r11lty's 550 blacks wtiuld
show thot they have a higher
degree or Caucasian ancestry By Phil lnterlandi
than blacks In general, thus r--------------".::=~~~-::"~....;,;;;;~;..
explaining their reportedly
superior in telligence, Shockley
said in a debate here Tues•Jay.
SHOC KLEY SAID that work
by T.E. Reed, . a Toronto
anthropologist. sho\fed that
black:i in general have a~
ancestry that Is 22 percent
Caucasian. •le predicted that
tests would show that Stanford
blacks have a 40 percent
Caucasian ance stry .
Shockley, a Stanford pro-
fessor whO won the Nobel
Prize In physics for work as
co-inven tor of the transistor,
said such a study would prove
his hypothesis that for each 1
percent increme ,fn Caucasia n
ancestry the average J.Q. of
the black Population goes up
by approximately one po int.
CH AR LES OGLETREE,
chalnnan of Stanford's Black
Student Union, called the idea
''ridiculous."
Shockley debated two black
Stanford psychologists-Cedric
X and Dubois McGee -and
Stanford geneticist L . L .
"lfe's a great computer man, but hll mJnd wanders. 11
FURTHER REDUCTIONS
SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE
.------MENS SHOES----.
•
FLORSHEIMS
16.90 TO 21.90
Values to 42.95
WOMENS
e Volloy
e Lady Florshelm e Deliso e Hill & Dale
• Enne Jettlck1
• Cobblor e Fndrlckt by
Howard Fox
1 GROUP WOMEN'S
CANVAS SHOES
e Red Boll e Ktdt e Sperry
Values
to $11.00 s400
Childrens
LAIY·BONES e
PRICE
VAL\JES TO $17.00
WINTHROP
10.00
Valut1 to 22.00
SHOES
OFF
Voluet lo $31.00
1 GROUP WOMEN'S
BOOTS
• Valley • Lady Flor1heim e Sblcco e Huth Puppy
1/2 OFF
VALUES TO $45.00
Shoes
STRIDE RITE
'
BOYS • GIRLS
DISCONTINUED STYLES· BROKEN SIZES · ALL SALES FINAL
•
• I M~~: I
54 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORTCENTER -644°4U3
I
,
~ . . .
•
Panel Eyes
Nomination
Of Clark
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
Chief Justice Donald R.
WriRht aayo the CommJ11ton
on .Judlc!al-Appolntmenta will
meet In ope11-aealoo Mll'Ch 2
to consider the nomination of
Wllllam p, Clar!< Jr. to Ibo
1tate'1 bJsh berdl.
Gov. Ronald Reagan ap-
Polnted Clark, a 1 a o c t a t e
justice of the Court ol Appeal
in Uls Angeles, Jan. 9 to nu
the vacancy resuUng from the
· death of JUlllce Raymond E.
Peters.
11IE NOMINATION has
raised controversy and the
c omm i ssi on received
n u merous communlcations
concernlng It.
One qu..iion raised b that
aark dJd not receive a law
degroe but passed the bar ...
am!natlon.
Clark, Reagan's former ex-
ecutive aecretary, was named
an appellate judge Mardi 1'71,
after serving u a San Lui>
Obispo County Superio!' Court
Judge.
PERSONS WJSlllNG to
make statements at the Man:h
2 session have been aUed to
advise the commlJalon In ad·
vance.
Clark's -lntment must
be approved by the com-
mbsion before be can advance
to the Supreme Court.
' .. 1 hurM:lay, Jdnuary '2S, i.., 1 J DAILY PILOT 7
ClMss -Action
Joh Suit Filed
By Homosexuals
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -A
clua action suit haa asked the
U.S. DlstrJ.ct Court to end
what It ~!aimed was a !ederal
iovemmerit practice o f
d.lam1saing employes aolely on
the basb ol homosexualtty.
'Mle sWt was fUed Wed·
neaday Ill' Donald w .
HlckerBOn, 25, and the Society
for Individual Rights (SIR),
an organization claiming a
membership of 1,300 homosex-
ua ls.
regulation requlrlng removal
for 11crimlnal, Warnous,
dishonest, t mm o r a I , or
notoriously disgraceful oon·
duct."
ffiCKERSON SAID he was
fired only "because he
allegedly in the past engaged
In private, consentual, non-
criminal homosexual conduct
and showed no desire to be
rehabilitated."
He said no other reason WB.!
given and the on ly evidence of
H
A
R
B
0
R
B
L
v
D
OFFICIAL
GRAND OPElillffG !
JAN. 23 • 24· 25 ·26
Har&ar Baul•vard
af Car•
SEE BACK PAGE OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT
FOR DETAILS!
NEWPORT BLVD .
such conduct ~·as gleaned
1-=================== WCKERSON JS a student ~t from Anny records. I-
the Butte CoWlty Community Nearly Everyone
We Dare You
College. He was hono·ably dlscharg-
The suit named the heads of ed Aug. 8• I9?0, alter nearly
the U.S. Civil Service Com-three years .ervice as an ex-
miaalon and its appeal board
1
_ _1'pe'."rt~ln~t~he~Ch~in~es~e~l~anguo~~g;e·~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;,;;;~~==== and Department of
Agriculture officials. They
were immedJately unavailable
for comment on the suit.
It said Hlckerion was
~ved from a supply clerk
job In the Agriculture
Department'• consumer
martet!n& service In San
Francisco. The order claimed
he v\olated a Civil Service
.
VINTAGE CARS
this wHkend on the MALL
South Coast ?lua
•
Today, Mexican& Airlines opens a new ticket
oftlce in Orange County. So now it's more
convenient than ever to fly the airline moat
people fly between the U.S. and Mexico.
Our network of routes covers all of Mexico
and many of the largest cities in the
United States. And we're proud that
Orange County is now a part. With 48
yoan' experience we'ro the airline that
knows Mexico best. Fly home with
us. To Mazatlan. Puerto Vallarta.
Guadalajara. And to Mexico City,
,.;..--~ Free colodul brochures and ~ormation
about the many low cost tours now
-available. Call your travel agent or
Mexicana at (714) 77~2620. Or
write Mexicana, at the Disneyland Hold.
a mex1cani11, II\
1bem••most people ffyfoMu:lm.
7-"..-;;:~n./P ... W""' Denwr, let Aooolos..Mi...I. ~ Ncw Yort Por11ond, ... -!loo 1\-... ,_, _ MElQOClt ~~· ~·· RmnoolfJO, Jilt mtliil, Mme!~ ,MuiaU, -a,,, Mlot~tlu, ........... N""° Luodo, OoloCa, PW1o Y ...... na,,loo, ~ NADA : Vaneovwr, B.C. JAMAJl,.;J\: Kinpton.
..
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8 DAlL." PILO r Thursday, JAl!ArJ 25, 1973
L. ltf. Boyd
Higl1er Speeds,
Mean More Gas
Start wilh the Latin ll'Ord "flnnare" meaniflg _1_'to_ cm-
firm ." In old Rome, the firmare" \\'BS the ~
ture ol. any business establishment. Tbe tra~ Iv.en.:
tually, conversationalists simply called it'tlie • flmL" WhJch
1s why that ~'Ord is llO'o\' used to designate a company. So
reports our Language man.
BELL Telephone laboratories continue to ft~ on 1
dial·it·by·voice phone. Just announce
the number. The mechani.sm trans·
lates. Theoretically. We bad some such
so years ago, sort ol. Ap operolo<. A
particularly dandy instrUmenf for•the
blind. this labor-saving lnnovaflm, il
it ever gets operational. Years ago
the science boys worked on instru-
mentation for an elevator tb.lt \\'OUld
go like that, but it has not appeared.
GASOLINE -What the energy experts are worried
about no"'' i.s the mo"e in some states to boost the freeway
Srui Diego
Makes Bi.~+i
LSD Hard
speed limits to 80 m.p.h. Say a 1.000-mile trip today coslS 11.==========:
you $17 for gasoline. The same trip at 80 m.p.h. costs yoo
$JS. In other words, about twice as much of that fossil fuel
known as gasoline. No doubt what.soever, they say, we'll
run out of fossil fuels even before we run out of speedy
drivers.
FIGURE 60 percent of the college educated women are
working, 40 percent of the high ~ool graduate girls art
y:orking, and 33 percent of those young ladies who hadn't
gone beyond elementary school are working. Those statb-
tics were turned ·up in a Columbia University study.
THE SUN generates about two ea1ories per pound. The
human bcxly. about 10 calories per pound. Still, in just a
single second, the sun sends out more energy than man has
used up since the start of civiliutioo. It's the inoooceivable
size of the thing.
HURRICANES -During the last 10 years, most o( the
big bad hurricanes hai;e hit into the Gulf Coast. In the
pre\'iOUS 25 year.>. they seemed generally to romp up and
dov.Tt the Atlantic Coast. And in the 30 years before that.
there were simply fe~-er of them, far fewer. The weather
boys are trying to make some sense out ol this pattern. No
luck. so far.
''OU'RE in. a Chinese restaurant. Rice is seryed. You
cootemplate I.he agonizing hours some sinewy oriental
stooped over ii. To plant, to cultivate, to harvest. Jenee.
deep in ~·ater snmetime. sometimes in mud. And oh the
heat overhead . \Vrong! Rice is the most mecllani7.ed crop
or all. Hereabouts. at any rate. It's untouched by human
hands from the time it's planted Wltil the time it smws up
on the supermarket shelf.
. 4ddress mail to L. M. BoJid, P. 0. Bo:t 1875, New-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
WHY AU THI
NEW UGULA'llOllS7
by T&llY cilANT. I .Ph
Not very many years ago
the ,laws controlling tbe sale
of medicines were pretty
strict. Even such products as
aspirin could not be sold ex-
cept in a pharmacy and
then only by a registered
pbarm&Clst. \Vhen ,these le-
gal barriers were broken
down, we fast bec&.me what
the experts now' call a "pill
taking, drug oriented so-
ciety."
It has reached such dru·
tic proportions that now it
bas become necessary to try
and put the brakes on with
new reguations and lawa.
Frankly, we thought the
public had their needs served
better when medicines were
on1y . sold by people with
tra1nlng and knowiedle of
drugs .
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PRONE US when you
need a delivery. We will de--~============~======1 liver prompUy wttbout o:· ..: tra charp. A oeet CMDY
1
tty Evernine
ns to Landers
p@Oole rely on us fol' ~ h~th needs. We welcome
requests tor delivery ~
and charge accolllltL
PAIK LIDO PHARMACY
... Ut Heepihl .....
Ne.,.n lwh .. ~,_,,.._Drlltwry-
ONCE A YEAR ------11 ......
SALE "~".....: -l ">::~
' '\;~? ...
SAVE $100-$300-$500 1 , .. :::
AND MOREi .• ·· · L--__;__,l.._...L_ __ _;
SAN DIEGO FllWY. & EUCLID, FOUNTAIN VALLEY
PIANO & ORGAN SHOWROOMS
Hammond-Conn-Thomas-Lowrey-Kimball-Steinway
JUST A SAMPLE OF NEW -USED PIANOS & ORGANS!
HAMMOND CONN GVLUANHN Ol'TIOAN ORGANS ORGANS ClllGAllS ClllGAllS
(18) (8) (6) (3) •~m '• ·~· ,, ..... ,, ·~· ,,
5195 . 52000 5395 . 51495 5395 51095 595 ... 5195
LOWRIT THOMAS WUIUTZD. SPKIAU ORGANS OllOANI ClllGANS ....... (1 OJ (20) (12) ·-" .... ,, -,, .....
5395 .. 5995 5125 ". 51295 1125 5995 (10) ..... '695
UAD SPINIT PIANOS
(10)
UAD HAND P1A1101
(14) • ·-5299 ........ ,, 5595 ,_ '395 ......... '3095
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY AT EUCLID
545-0415
l&.l4t L fwlW It,. h"r lt.f,.......,. 10..•, ..,._ 12.._
l'INNT-OwtUY flNANCfHO RIMI TO 41 MOHTMI.
Rodent s· F-ound in Cookies
Ortho Tension
KING SIZE
ALE PRICED AT •••
ol Ohio Gingerbr .. d Trtats "
'n. 6Uery alao marll•O
what 11 calls "Raaedy An!>"
and "Smlle" cookies, mnong
otber1.
•
oath Post
PolllR Relt • , . at .,&ctacular 1avlno11 Fe1turlng ·
llftOolft bUtton-free Scroll..Quilted cover & Temp8red·Steel
lnnenpring. eoo-complete with Mattress PLUS 2 8011.
Spring1 PLUS Ortho-Pak PLUS Double Bonusl . .'·.'.'
QUEEN SIZE • • • TWIN or FULL •••
With Mattrns, Box Sprl11g, •99 complel• with Mlnreu, Boll: ....
Qrtho.f'ak l Double eorws1• Sprirlg l Double Bonu\1 eilU
Ortho Balance
KING SIZE Sal• Priced 11 •.•
Sli p up to luxury! Gorgeous *189 f1oral·pat111rn Scroll.quilled
COY11r. With Mattress, 2 Box
Springs, Ortho-Pak l Double
KING SIZE Sale Prfeed at ~,.
Oeluie quality! Cover M11ltt-·219 Quilled lo V2" loam. HelY)'· •
duty innerspring. Complete
with Mattress, 2 Box Springs,
· Ortho Pottu111,
NQ SIZE Sa .. Prad •l··.
The~ ...... """' Cow<-~ .. ·259 Quitted to loam over thick Ur• • · tt\anll padding, Complete with
Mattress, 2 Box Sprfngt, Ortho-
Pak l Double Bonus
Bonus!
QUEEN SIZE .. ,. ...9
PrlcM at.··••
24'45 N. Tustin Ave .
l1cro11 from Or111t• Mall l
• Phon1 6J7·051 I
Ortho-f'ak & Double Bonusl QUEEN SIZE TWIN or FULL QUEEN SIZE TWIN or FULL
:teed at ••• $189 ~ ot ••• $79 ~:..i ..... $209 =..i ......
With.,,.,, ICJ1tgot QllMn •• •
the ORTHO•PAK
King or Queen sized Fieldcrest No-Iron T~ Sheet •Fined No-Iron Bottom Sheel • 2 No-Iron P1l1oWcue1
• 2 Bolster Piiiows • Matlreu Pad• Metal Framt on
· Easy-Roll CutarL
And, with erV/ M'ettr .. 1 Set •• •
the DOUBLE BONUS
King or QllMfl: Padded Vlnyl He96boerd AND
Cuihed Bedlpread. Ttrin or FuH : Headboard ANO Metml Framt on
Eeay-AOI\ eaten. ............ --
S1l1Pricodot!178 IN ICOTCHGARD9 PftlNT
Senutlonal low prleel Inch.Kin, Belmont IN HERCULON9 FABRIC. ~uperb contemporary rnodeU With
Herculon 1taln·res!1tant labrlel Color•
lull Ee1y to clean I Also In Full Size ·
& L0\19 Seal. Malchlng Chair available•
SUPER QUEEN SIZE'
2 M1ttret111t, 2 Box Springs, 2 etylllh ·
quUted Coverlell, 2 Bol11e1'1 &
Corner Table In Walnut.gr11ntd flnteti.
,
Capri lrf SCOTCffGNID8 PRINT .... Priollt al • • ,
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16 131 Hori.or Blvd.
l1orn•r ol Ed!1191rl N1JI to 2ody'1
Phon•1 IJt-45 70
ANAHEIM
1811 Wastlinco1nAve.
l•tW••ll Euclid and Bt11o•hunl
Pho111: 776·25t0
Avenu••
Ju.i 111t 11f Ftd Mert
OIMIOl'OUI ltytjngl Includes 2 Mal· ., • .,_., 2 Boll. Spfll)QI~ 2 fltt9d qulhed
COvel'l• In flamboyant modem print.
2 ~op Botnm. & YM1alile
CCmerTable In echolceot 8 fln'9het.
OF MATTRESS Si-ECIAUSTB
LAKEWOOD
4'433 C.ndlowood A.,.,
Ctndltwood Shops
t1c101• hofl'I lalriwoed c ........ 1
Pho111J 614 .. 4114
OPEN DAILY IO 9 • SAi Iii ti • SUN 12 6 • IMMEDIA IE OELiVERY •CREDI I I ERMS AVAILABLE• 8ANKAMlRILAl\ll • l.'.11; 1111 • Ii r.i 1,1
• ·, I
\ '• I
•
•
. '
~· " .... . ' -
' .
·I '
'
..
• •
I
,
. ~· . ,.· ~ • • J
'··' , \ . . ,,
•
· Just about every cigarette tastes great the first.time out. But how about lat-e
in the day ... when a fresh taste is more welcome than ever7That's the real test.
Does your cigarette ~ome through for you? Or does it tG1ste
scratchy, cottony, hot? Consider a switch ... to Sale.m's Nptural
· Menthol Blend. ' . . . . . '
For cool taste, we start with natural rnenthol. 'Not the
".kin.cl made in laboratories. Since our golden tobaccos are
11ot1Jtally 9rown, ifs only natural our menthol
· sh.ou~d be, too.-.
· It is thi'$. blS,n·~.of naturqlly grown in·
gredients that turns the taste.of coolness into
a taste that's1
" natu:ra lly refreshing''. .. no.t
harsh o.r scratchy. A taste that-refreshes like
Springtime ... everytime ... anytime! After all,
isn't that what .smoking is all about?
.Salem's ~tural Menthol .Blend
means naturally refreshing taste.
'
J -
r
r!'
King or Super King.
Wltlling, The Surgeon General Has Determined -,
f iJhat C~te Smoking Is Oengerous 10 Your Health. · KING, SUPER KING, 20 mg."taf , l4 mg. rncotine, av. per cigaren~ FTC Repon~G. ·n.
' . '
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~·
I
0 OAll V PILOT Thursday, JanuMY 2S, 1973
"'ll.OV YOU-YOU RE -SO
t.0V6LV-'50 FERTILt:. !"
Ma1i Guilty
In Murder
It!)s a Bird-·Snperehieken!,
WF.Sr POTh'T, C.lll~(AP) tnlckload ol chl<kens In a dieo • of col<!. I threw some In~
-It murdtl"ejl its l_S-pou.Dd r game. -and bing<!, out came aome
son. kllled two cats and . a 4-GRANT SIJU.ENS, then on-' gray ones that produced Ul<e
)'ear-old .roooter, but still b Iv IO, beaed IU falller ta lot ' hell."
held ln high estt.-em. h1.m keeD the cblckw. He dld ; By "just plugging aw•y"
11 ·, SUperehlcken, hopefully and tlJe ~-I bt&on Gnni hoped to get a chicken
the grand sire ol a new breed "l lost mon than ioO ot that could survive the eDld Md
of glant fryer chickens that them af\er tht ftrtt IMW.'' 1fOW blqer, fasttr, than any
c..-oold , have-an-kn pact-on-the Sul~ reeaUid. • • T"Jre n---knowtrbreed.
world s food supply.. somebody' told me llbodt Aller ellht years of crossing
seven breeda and e,000
chickens, Superc'hlck en
emerpd. Named "WcirdO," it
W<!lghed ti pounds when only
eight rnonthl old. And It grew
blgger -and meaner.
"HE GOT ME In the le~
thurub wllh thole thtee·lnch
spur• or his and th6 doctor had
to take eight stitches," Sullens
said. Al a top aeaaonal wellht ol. Island reds could stand plenty and ....,....1ng Involving
22 Poundl, B!Jporcblclten 111--~-!iil~-~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiii--;;;;;;;;;;:~~ threo t1me1 "8avi.r than •I
nonnal -ler, th nouil of Vl'NTAGE CARS years ot meticulous croasln&
of several chicken breeds by
Grant SUilens. 18, a hllh
school senior who developed
Superchlcken without the aid
of computen or any formal
genetic traJnlni.
"EVERY GENERATION II
getting just a UWe biaer,"'---
this wHkend on the MALL
, &oath Coast '1ua
Sign up for sewing classes. Class~ start Feb. 6, 1973
S20 Basic Creative Sewing. Eig~t 21h hour lessons.
Of Da1icer
says Sullens of the ~sltaln
which he calls "White Sullies"
after himself.
Superchlcken has bred a
SAN DIEGO (AP > - Joseph Dock ol 40 superchickeos and
Alexander Belanger Jr., 29, of people are sending queries
lderrimac, Mass., ha& been fl'om the Zaire ({onnerl_y the
convicted of first-degree ~lgian CongQ), Panama and
murder U., the strangulation TtJuana, where a cockfight
stabblni of a blonde go-go " promoter wanted to ¥11
2640 Harbor Blvd. For beginning adult students with lillle or no sewing experience
$20 Creative Sewing, Plus! Eight 21h hour lessons.
For intermediate·to-advanced adult sewing students interested in
expanding th eir fashion and sewing skills daDcer Superchlcken for $81300. ' m.,,; the Jury re~ Its Ralph !ml, po u,h rt $15 Start·To·Stitch. Eight 21h hour lessons.
Exclu sve ly for young teens (ages 11-13) eager to learn to sew.
$6 Pants that fit-Pant styles unlimited.
verdict W-.!ay after seven speclallat at the Unlverilty Cl
bourt of study Belll>ler nick· Cllllomla, said the l\:br>!l ed bis chair qulet!Y, without would send, IOl!leone to w : _ tmltloD. \: ,8u1Jen's ~ While. 1•anythtD&
appartDI · II poealble," after viewln( a 2 -21h hour lessons designed for those with
limited or unlimited sewing experience
• Experienced instructors-sewing machine
• Sewing machines available for cliissroom use
TllE NUDE body of Linda pholo, he >ak1 ts skeptical o1.
Nadine ,Bartley, l.l, wu Its reported wel&bl.
di9eo"""1 May 17 In her
• For exact class hours and detailed course Information, pick up
an enroll ment brochure in our fabric department, today.
Mission Beach apartmenl Sbe St/lU:N SAID other prlV1lle
had been stabbed twice and pooltry experts eoalhlbld
!lrangled with a gold chain Supereblcken's-wel&hl -
and a pair of 11anty hose. special sc:ales, and tbi.t be
Belanger. who worked as a keeps close tabs with a home
dish washer in a cafe nearby, scale.
JCPenney
Huntington Beoch, 7777 Edinger (714) 892-7771
testified that he had been in "There's no doubt in 1llJ' Mi~ Bartley's apartment that mind about his weight," SuJllpl
day but left her in a tavern said Tuesday. "He slims dO'fm
later with another man. a litUe in the winter , but by
Belanger was arrested at a June he should be back ' to ' < r e I a t i v e • s home in about 22.8 pounds."
Massachusetts last July. He said he ·purposely
Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers A JURY OF six men and six
women was given almc.st
wholly circum s tanti a l
evideriee 1n the two--week trial.
reduces the bird's weight in
winter, and now Superchicken
checks in at about 17 pounds.
The experiment began w.ben
NOW IN SlOC._ FOR IMMEDIATE
OEl!VERY' w ... St1A.8LE \l!Jrnl s.
F~OC~S ~NO PlflNIS fOlil: (\lfllY
ROOh\ OF YOU~ tlOME.
BUY 3 llOLL!t Gl T TM[
4 1HROLL fllEE ~
Oecoralor
Quarry
Tile
... ......
FIRST QUALITY
. 32~'"
Wood Parquet
Floor Tile
UtilMATCHEO NATUflAI.. llU.111'T!
PftE ·FINISHE 0-REAO'( tO WM.IC
ON I CHOOSC RtCll #ATUlfAl. 0-'I(
OR ANTIQUE 0 .lilC -
SElfSTICK
Carpet Tile
PERMAMEMT W4TERPtrlOOF-
8EAllTY fOR BATHROOMS!
"' 37 4
VALUE IO. "·
BATHROOM
~. ~~~!!!.~.~
1
( TOP .liND IOWl: Wlfff[ 1 j -.· , I~[ WITH GOLi~ Tlllll. , { ·J 20A:20 JNCll. f AUCl:T Elfk
.l -c-'~J. WHY'AY3288 ~-$47.917
Medicine Cabinet
ADO •IAUTY ' unlrn to .,,~ IO a.\IY lO llllltAUJ
"... 1311 at• lllO ....... , ••
Cork Wall Tiie
PfCOl'IATIVf OUllT I EAUTYI
00 IT YOUllS!L1 1"
,KO. 4 IQ, fl. l'llL
CERAMIC 8ATH'TUI
Edging Kit lalhtub Floor s .. 1 1'~ & Sil..., No Slil llt lllOll t llllC:U, IUU LIAltt
22 Strlpt 311 ,,.,biehtt .. ,
It ON Wll I W-"'Tli" U..,..t ........... 111 I PL I lft.. !foll IA.
DO IT YOURSELF
C.. ,,,. CM""""°" "'-'r!Mott 'Ml ......
lo!o MY-tellloSa .. h 11ttf'Cltltf~!
.' .. , .... ,.,_,,,, ___ "
........ -i .... , ... , ..... _
FREE
,, ...... 1 .. 1 ..... .......... __ .... ~ ......... _
""' 1.1ini1101111 unm
::...~aat
l!N vol.,.! Hf otol.,.
PLAIN GOLP VEIN
49.~ 59~
SIX FOOT WIDE
c:NlmlllT •Yllt. Nl\ltJI
VALUES
fO '·"
I Deluxe Shrier Door
STUllCY, i.E:IHF"OllCl!D M,UMffilVtjl
STANOAAO t>IZES
WHYMYM·'" 1 ~
W)TEfl,..OM"o1NllWAHl!:JfT
Tub a ~'C.111
US CIACU lliMI ,...mlfl
•WMI•~
... ~ ........ ! •••T..._~.....,_, .... ,.....~ .... ......... 121
·~oz."'*
Sullem' father won -a
• LOMG-lASTINQ, LOW
PNC£0 9lAUTY fO" YOUR
BATHROOM WAUS!
~ EASY TO INITAU. .ol {)-·
DO IT '(OURSEl.J<t ::.~ 1
•• 2c ~
VALUE '"-..........,.
HEAVY, DELUXE
Bathtub
Enclosures
UIQllHS ""' ...... Clltfi\llSI
.SHA TTfltl"tK>OI'"
l'LASTIC DOOltS
WHY PAY
$39.00?
32'';.~2~
AUL LOOKING. .........
Brick Wall Tile
CEflAMIC. GAOUT &
Tile Cleaner
• Wlllt..,1 Qroul
Ou1e•1r1 .,._,, .. --a. ...... ~
COSTA MESA-2221 Harbor Blvd •
645-1126 • II
STORE HOURS
OPIN SUNDAY-11 •·•··I p.M.
MONDAY, FllDAY-1 w.M. • t p.-.
TUllDAY, WIDNISOAY. THURSDAY, SATUIDAY-1 •·•· • l:.JO '·"'· PLENTY OF FREE PAR(ING
WI AESERY£ THE RtGKT TO Lllllt'T QUANTITIES
IT'S NEW ·: • • .
COSTA MESA
OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5:30
SUNDAYS 9 TO 5
CLIMBING . TROPICANA
One of America's most
beautiful R<>se"
TROPICANA, is now a -"Climber". Tropicana 's
Luminous Orange-red,
Fragrant Blooms are
Outstanding in Every Way.
Now grow T ropicana on
Fenee, Trellis or Against
Your Home.
#1 Grade
-Guaranteed to please 3.98
' • ROSE BUSHES-Hurry They're Going Fast
le98 To 3.98 Old favorites and some new for 1973,
the very bast Quor.ty S.ro·Root Roses .
• '
CYMBIDIUM Orch id Planes _
JUST ARRIVED:
Unbelievable Colors ..•
Exquisite Cymbidiums are
hordier and easier to grow
than you might think. Can
become a Fascinating Hobby.
Priced from 7 • 9 5
Unusually long lasting blooms.
Gloxini<i Bulbs, Hybrid Lily Bulbs, Peony Roots, Garlic sets.
New ...
Rieger c:Jatior
BEGONIAS · CREEPING CHARLIE
14. promise of blooms indoors In
1winter. Brlllitnt oranges, reds
and pink. Single upright flowers
and double blooms.
(Seo Pg ) 60 Jan. iuue Sunset
Magaiino.l . ' .
Priced from 6.50
.
One of the prettiest perennials.
ind H • n g I n g Basket Plants.
l-ush1 green shiny leaves cas-
cade bHutilully. Grow nearly
anywhere, practically pest.free,
79~ to 5,95
• .
'"''",.... c ...........
PHONE 546-5525 Hallmw~
• •
{
•.'
(
'
, !', 1
,. ... Offida&
-Impact ~eport·
~Class tn S_t ,.u..i ... ~'--c~~
A new course called of Environmental lm~Ct
11Envlronmonlal -1 ~ p •·c ~ ProCilea. His background 1o
Reportl," wlll be orrered by environmental studies incl~
Orange Coast Evening Colle&e ra<lla&ion monitoring at an
thla 'Jprlng. · ·~ atomic test site, health
a'he four-unit class meets physics, industrial hygiene,
~ays and Wednesdays . environmental health and
frikn 4-7 p.m.ln Room 3 Of the safety, envlronmenta 1
CX::C Environmental Center. It phJsiology and solid 'Yaste
11 designed eapeclally for management.
persons · working In city or
county planning departments. BURTON HAS tauaht cours-
ployes of development es at UC Irvine and bo&ds
or for tme cornpletinJ-degr<es in. applied pb}'sla ~
environmental science pro-public health. . m: -·Registration for sprlhg 1he course provides classes Is being held by ap-
1nmg and practical ex-pointment on1y through Jan. 21
lence In the prepa~atlon , Jn Ute OCC Admissions ~·
d review of envlronmenial , 1Ate registration on a drop
pact reports. in" basis will be held Jan. 2t
"Both industry and govern.. to Feb. 1, Feb. >9 and Feb. li-
nt are beginning to make 18. The Admissions Office 1'fll
n v Iron men ta I Impact be open from 9 a.m. to I P1m.
parts,'' said Samuel R. Mont.lay through Thursday and
terson, chairman of OCC's from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Pri·
vision of Techno\0 11· ~ay.
se re-ports are 'lnlde '.to.-=· ·=Cl=:;;u;;ae;,•==::bogl:;:;;n=F=e=b=. ='=· ==ii termlne what Impact a nt;r1;;
vek1pment might have on
environment and t'COl"Ogy
an area. REFLECTIONS
"IF POU..UTION: problems !..,
expected because o1 the , ·Reyn
velopment, a study is '\hen Sh ff ' de to see what modifica-e er
in the plan can be madel'-----'
eliminate the problems."
The course will review statelr----L~~
federal legislation. It wUt ll
so examine such en-
nn1ental facton as air
atity, water resources,
lse. geology. topography,
bltat, and land use.
Course instructor ls Dr.
urto~ 8. Milburn, presi®nt
esa Junior
ets Honor
Eloise Knoy of Costa Meaa
s been named on the fall
mester honor roll of
lrtbwest BapUst Coll~ge in
llvar .,,_Mo. for ~ a S.O
ade point average Of better.
She is a junior and the
ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
rge D. Knoy, 213 Hanover
"AbHnc• of occw,.tton 11
not mt; • mind 11utte .,.._
c•nt 11 • mind dl1tr1 rtMI •
< -Most of us work very bard,
xct never seem to gain on
the backlog of tasks which
urgently need to be done. We
look forward to some dls· tant day when we may
achieve a little rest •. , an
"absence of occupation."
Well, we11 probably never
arrive at that status so we
may never know, but Cow-
per telll us we wouJdn't
like it. Not total idleness, at
least. For people accustomed
to being busy, a change In
4CCUJiation is ·mare rest.1\tl
than "nothirig to do," espe-
clally·.,.,,hen .. nothing" means
a Vacant mind.
\Ve can be helpful in ar-
ranging for a religious serv-
ice tor those who hav~ no
regular church affili\f.!gn-._
Sheffer )1ortuary 1fn1!1
faoillies or a11 faiths an.a·
tiSt Rip1o¥l~ ·:% !~ ~~~~:ao~;;i"' --
-1 1 ot ,YOUr choice. '
All alitns living in the U.s'. ~ .,..,
ust report their current ad-~ H lft!!<.FFlft!!<.R ...., by Jan. 31 to a po>! cif-c-Co
or an Immigr8tion and mo1tTUA.l.Y
aturallzaUon . Service Office. -LAGUNA IEACH
For more information about 976 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY
e Addre• Report Cards, · 494-1535
ntact a post ofClce or the SAN CLEMENTE glt:ilion office in Los 153J NORTH El CAMINO REAL
Angeles at (213) 683-2791. 492.0100 , ..
0%
OFF
'
BIG AND
TALL MEN
uptoalze88
""' •
•1 I ,,; •'
1
' SAVE $500 -· . 45 PC. MEIMAC SfJ
RE•. 12.t7 . . .,,.,,
Colorfvl panerned ~ "'°'' cbip or crack. Conlii!tle SflYice tc. g, serving pieces.
BATTERY
INCLUDED
-•
SAVE TO '2.97
MEN'S JEANS
s4
. '" . NYLON 2 PC.'
Thllrsday, January 25, 1973
SAVE ••
WITEFRO
ANTl·FR&ZE
&COOl.ANJ 5x6' BATH RUG KIT
500
SHEETS .
FILLER PAPER
I EG.
"' sac
Wide or colle2e nile
1111dloo-filler.
Gentle and mild
formula: 16 oz. ..,.,
SPECIAL VALUE
Plush nylon pile with non·
skid back. Assorted colors :
machine washable.
ADV ERTISED ITEMS NOT AT EAST tOS ANGI US Sl Olf
se
V.l~ll<(J F•
DAIL y PILOT I I
., • • 1• rmm 1,.a 11.A111• Wills ... PLENTY OF fE:P•• IN • WRi. t11111 Lill
_ 111 IOPDIT I.VI. • COSTA llSA
• 16111 ond NEWPORT BLVD.
•';. --~-
STOii ~IS: MONDAY thrv FRIDAY 12 NOON to 9 PM• SATURDAY and SUNDAY 10 AM to '? PM
r;:;:;:;:;;:;:==')'-;;;~-;;-;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;n ~\
'COSTA MESA 3088 BRI STOL ST.
Sin Olrtgo Freeway 1t Bristol
'
~-.... \.
Mst-11 .......... ' •lllSRt , ......
I
•
•
JI DAILY PILOT
!-~---
• I
/
Fo1· the:.
Record "·--------..
}
l Bissolutlon1 • •
•
Of Marrlage
WA>~, 1\HOWELL -'-l'tfi'ICllW "'""' ! ,4, 111 114••0« 111•1\i"L..1111; "~'~fl' effft ....,, 1'11¥ II\ Ellllllt U. H. WJ11111 ''" tc:WM1
W11P1 flllfll ROSSWOAH·Ll.IC1'$ -Wllllt rl'I Arrlluf, :U. USG E. 17"', Ap!. 111. $.,.II IV'4
-1na !ll1rvl Anne. ,,, "'"""',\pl, O,
H11n11no1on 811cl'I TRAVIS-OAMST -G1rv LM1111f4, tt.
7t11 Wtt~rn ,..,.,. BINIM p.n; " OtbOrl ll K11til""-11, tlll Toulo\IM,
A.pl l . Hvnllnotor1 8..cll
A;!CHARD-ARMS'l'A;ONG -JoM
Al'll"°"Y• 20, Cl I:. '3rcl &!., S111 0~0 Ind 81r1Hr1 J o.11, Ill, ft,1\ T•lbfrl An .• Hvnlln11roo klCll
OUPONT·HELSHAM -R1y OM11, JO,
5'3t N~l ClrCll, H....,11"8fon '*" 111<1 M1rln1 El<!'liit, )0, stJ1 NUQl<'I
Clrci., Hun!ln91or1 Bea.ch
Ll lGHTER·MAASHAL -V t f l'll
0tl"11t, s~. 170l>l S11nle~ LIM, Hiin-
u ncitGn Bis>'" 1nd T11elm1 Mery, n,
11!.C·B Jtllerson Line, Hvnllflll!On
I N ell
REVES·RAMOS -Ernfl!O CorOft.1, 11,
1U'I Steveiv A•t .. L~guna llea'I! \"'
Anna M1rl1, 11, 26612 Minion I.,
i an Juan Capls!•ano
BliANAT·NEWTON -Marten, ~1 , 2Qfl •irk 5!., El Toro u>O V!orl.ii Tlll't'\11',
31, J.564 Via Vlen!o, Mli.slon Vlt lo
llOMD-$1o;AW -Douola$ Allen, ll. 1102
1•111 51 .. Wtitml~ler and Sylvla
I•-· 14, 111 s. Rio v;s11, Apl. 1$4.
A11thtlm
ENRIOl,IEZ·VI NING tSCHL EYl M1n...i Jehn, It. 11'11 Frltr SI .•
Nortll SI .. NOtlll Holl¥ .... Ind LM
((1ron LM, \I, l?U •••"Ill..,....,
LtgUM 8e1cll
llOWMAN·l"AUL.AS -0.lt Altfl, l~.
21 551 llrookl!IJl',1, AJ:rl, 15, HUfltlng!cr>
81Kll Ind OllOtll9 ll1ftle, If, 11"1
&rOOIU'tl.lrtl, Ap!, IS, H11ntt1191on ·-· 5PAIN·STUllB5 -Dtnnl1 E1r1, 29,
Ultl S..llnaL Gankft GrOft •l'ld
Moir• Ovnc.1n, 31, 16l1J "" J1c1nro, Fount•l11 V1nev llAll:TOSH-0.STRO -DovQlas LH, 19.
t2.Q Ruf11'1'1, Apt. C, Cotti MtM lrod Olana Helen, 11. 19"4 ICllklH, Clrclt ,
Cosl1 Mlw TU TTLE·llOl lN -.t.Vrrllt Ofle, .U. }~ o.i.11i.r Ttrra<e, lrYI,,. and
J UOJ!h A.n11, J.I, SSol6 Oakley Terr1c1,
lrvlM BU RlllETT-O ENT1LE Mk~tl
G11M, 21), 34$ E. 14ltl S!., Ccii1!1 Meu
.tl'ld Karen Ma•J1, 1', JOlll Clltf Orlv1,
Newporl lllKll
CAVANAUGH·WHALt!N ~'-'" ~ Rlc~rd, :0, 2245 Repul1Hc SI., C<nll
MttSI and Ctllll-Dellgl!I, It, t!l W.
20!11 SI .. Cotti Mew
CARSCALL EN-llRUMLJ Y -l lcNrd
Charles, 29, UIC Alli, Wnl,,.lntler
.iind V1ltrfil Krl1llt11, 21, Ul~t Al!t,
W•tll'nlnsflr
HAVlilN<lONTZ -llaberT Bl•\"• U. 120 E Etc1I NH, ltn Clemtn t llld
snlrl.y 1t1ve, 20, no E. lii.eeliortOI,,,,.
Sin CIM't'*lfl
HAZEL-MAllTIN -John fOf't!>I, It,
1145 HtWlhor,., F1;1U11lel11 Vt U.,. •nd
Rotwrt•-R .. , 11, lMIS H1wtllorPe,,
Fountl lll V1H•v
CAllO\lflLL .... ETTY -Enwsl llon1Jd. u , 1101 Mlln St.. Hunllnglon
Beul'! flld S1"11r• l(fy, U. 1142
Etv!rt Aw .. W .. tmlrq!tr
SMITH.OTTO -RO!Ulld Tl!Om•t, ~1.
1°'92 iilloreiset A'v1 .. 8 111111 Ptrk •P'ld
hTIO .. fl<I, )1, 1'3": Florttl(.f Allt .. 9utnl Ptrlt
Et KER·SILVlllMA N -Mire Awry,
f,I, 7101 W1r111<', Apt. H·\21, Hu,..
i1no1"" ae1e11 •nd Uftd• Pnvm .. u.
u,t1 BUllM Viti•, AnlMlm
OlllNG-HIOO -Nlffllll'tlel P1ul, 3.S.
u ns S1fkoy, V111 N...,s. Ind Michiko,
V, 12Gll P1rtl N"'"POf1, Apt, ZIO, Ntwp0tt Bei en
FRATT6-KEVEN -Tllornal GrtgarY. n , J#I Olu rder, Apr. J . Buen.a Perk
alld l(erry R!w , 21, IOl2 Sin Leon
Cl rdt, 9\111\t Ptrk
WrntllELL·OllAKE -llllM l"tttt n,
-@, :!IOI P1rkv'-w '--• Apt. 11-8.
lrvlflf fl1d Helen 6ttlr\c•, 21, llOl
Perkvltw l i ne. Apl, 11-&, ln lne
&O~E.FAHR, Jll:.-LEONARO -Harold 01vlcl, ~1. :r»iJ Mal!DU Lilne, HU!\o
llNl!On llUUI Ind Stiwon ROH, 13.
1Hl S. Centtr s1., Silnl1 Ana
HAN.MER·HENUiY -~ l!'~lt, l.S.1 Loi,_ Clrti., H""'ll"fl•
l ea<;l'I end Jlildltll 1'M. IJ. 11'# I nch St., FO\ll'lltln V11lley
P•llSONS·BRAOY -Phllllp Eugeiw, ti, 1331) Eal! Brlt!ol. A~!. n , ~n11
Ant <lnd L.Ornl Gtl, 22. 11lS6 l111 Amla"'-For.on11Jn Valley
PH ILIPS, JR.-L.A FERR -Thomas prury, 22. ~ Par~ Ave., Aiir. C,
~ICIUl'll 8"'" Ind Miry Jo, II. M09\ t.:DPP<tf Lan,ern, Apl, 4, 01n1 Po!nr
W1'-L IAMS•ARM$Tll:ONG -J1'""s PnUllp, 2J, 1"61 W y o m Ing ,
Wntmlnl!er lrid Jo-Ann Jt1,,.tt1, 22. ''f;I Pt~lle-<o A~e , WHlmln1ter
Death Notices
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF MORTUARY
4t'1 E. 17lh St., Costa J\.1esa
llMlll
BALrz.BfRGERON
FUNERAL DOME
Corona dtl Mar lll-M50
Co1&a Me11 Ml-UM • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Colta Meu
LI 8..1111 • ~lcCOllMICK. LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
17«1 Laguna CUyon Rd.
4H-Nl5 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Ceme&ery Mortuary
Chapel .
JIOO Pacific View Drive
N_... B<atb, CllUomla
lff.tlOI • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNl!RAL
HOME
'7St1 Boin Av.e.
WetlmlolleritW525
SM1'111S' .foRTVARY
lf1 MalaSt.
llUl!lstooll<acl -
Thursday, Jan11ar1 2S, 1973
.,_
ftAIL Y Pl~OT Sl•ft ....._
SON LECIL (RIGHT) JOINS DAO IN RITIRIMINT
The Sl11Ncks -89 Ye•rs as Court Reporter•
Chalk Up89
Court Aide Re'tiring
By TOM BARLl'.:V
Of ffM ~Ir PUM Stiff
SANT A ANA -A man
whose father made Orange
County ~pe_1'ior Court hl1tury
6y putting in 53 years of
service as a C<1urt reporter ha!i
retired aJt~r 36 YrnJ of
service in the sa1ne pro-
fession.
Lecll Slaback, 61, Santa
Ana, a court reporter who
received the rare honor in 1969
of being appointed by
Governor Ronald Reagan to
the state Certified Shorthand
Reporters Board, has u.5ed his
machine for tht l:ist time in
Judge J .E:T. "Ned" Rutter·s
courtroom. ·
SLAllACK MADE t h e
Cross Elecuc pen shorthand
system . but domonstrated his
versatlllty at 1n age v.'h(;n
many reporters CQnsider
retirement by ,.,.,,itching to th~
machine method uo\v used · in
all courtroon\S.
Until recently 1 the elder
Slaback could da ily !le seen
swinging a deadly rac~et on
the local tennis court s. And ho
"''as nearly 60 when he decided
to hang up his baseOall cto,·e
and leave a game in which he
won many admirers.
LESTER SLABACK and
Lecil Slabac k -between them
they have put in 89 years of
service in Orange C.ounty's
Superior Courl courtrooms.
. .
$5.5 Million H~ealth
• . ~
Care Bid Gets · De~ay s -~ -----· BROWN•IAIDllltttlomq ... -.......... rw.u .... 1-11--------...._,,,_ __
FULLERTON -A prepaid ceneral ruled ·~1 II '"'--....,..It liWlt !lie tlate
tll mllJloo milllcal health •for a. prolll..,.klac mid-Ill~ •
••M plQ Jllmed at serv•·· dlemanlolnllr11tllW-1 Uodef1'"'8ithtallhplan,I-_. __ _
-· .... prof...ianaJ-......... ot'°' ...... ...... . -I0,000 Oronp County l>OOr lessioliala wblall 1n • I arouJ " ....., u.iilUlu
people w)!Jle Mving lupayer1' fftvlcea to tho f\lli.t'." II• Md* llit ••ti niedloal
money has been stalled In said the ol)lnloo was bued on Hrvlceo liln up lo talte care
Sacramento. pteVlOUI slate eourt decisions, or I certain nwnber of people,
The mlddlel!IAll -Ille Whit-and there Is· no atalulory pro-and 111'1 paid a Dal fee In ad·
taker Corporation w 1 t h hlbitlon O! IUcll I pl'lcllce. vanco.
several Orange ' Co a i; t Governor Ronald Reqan Is
1uboldiary olanta -•lnld1 urallll wktlr UIO of prepaid · hu Invested fl lftllllon In a llNltli plan1 u Ill alternative
Fulltr!On cllnlc lo 11'11 the lo wllal llo calla I lendlncy ex~ted paUentt, toward aoclau..ct modlOlnt.
AUTHO RITIES lN
Sacramento, -:-= ·~ th~ Is llO prJ« I• alallon
allowlnj a profi""'8 !Im
to lakf over such a projecl af.
ranaed bet-• I public .,.n·
cy and 1eam1 ol tntdlcal Jri-
fessionals.
Offlclals of lbe Los Angele ..
based firm, which deab in
boat·bulldlng, steel, chemicals
and textiles, expressed dismay
at the tum of events.
The corporaUon's Orange
Coast O)lerllioos Include
Nannco Materials, 600 Vic-
toria St., OJsta Mela; COi~
bia and °"""""" Yacl>ta, %75 McCormick Way., Ooala Mesa,
and Balboa Marine Hardware,
2612. W. Coast Highway,
Newport Buch,
A apokesman for UM
Callfomla Health and Welta
A~eocy-said··Wblttaker's-•IF
plication for the contract bas
be<n pile«! on a "deferred
status." That action was
partly because of an opinion of
the state Attorney General'•
office and partly because of
the lack of legislation eabling
a profit-making firm to mak.e
such contracts , the
spokesman, Anthony · P.J.
Browne, e1plained in an J.n.
tervi ew.
Tiie llepubllcan chl!f ••· ... uve iaya tht pla111 11•• Utt tqpaym .-y, '1111 In-
THE STATI doeo !IOI sign
coolracts unlea lbe price Is I
_.nt below wbal It would
COll .for lhe same plitlent• to
10 to individual docklr• and
rue claims separately, tfncials
-.y,
AUCT"iON .........................
of R•N Valuable Stock
PERSIAN RUGS
and other Orlont1I R1111
A c0Mpl1t. .tr.I,.....+ of .,. .. 1 ... lt1-.1,.....11 .. rtl•• •-' 1th1r
Ori1nt1I lVf' .... rM f., ._ ~t9'1•• Mle ffr +Ni ·•t.r11.
TM11 '"4• d'41 111t 1rti" .. ti-. •"41 ~·•• fl11•Mltlly ,.tpo•·
llM• hf __... ""ll.•.14 1h1,...m h.• .. l11ttt•ctM tMlt U.S. •1•nt1
.. tll1poae of ttt. e..ti,. shl~ et A11'"•*·
' f'hlt direct 1hl,.eat, 111 out •lllfll•11, 11 th• f1fl9'1t ••llMti•n i11
detlt .. ct1fttMeMlilp •M cMor1 of IMl••iii• ,.,,... tvt• 1110
hl••.n -lrt1v• •••r '"" In all 011t yttrt 111llhtt •Aly tl.e ftnt1t 41tllty Ofle11t1I l1191 1IMI C.,,.h. '
For v•11• ••11ftnl9t1q ~ '"4• lrt1" be.11 mo.-t.1
--BEKINS-MOYlllG-l-:STORACE~
1111 Na .... A.,... c.... ..... c ..........
TUESDAY, JANUARY 30 8 P.M. .........................................
I .
lncllltletl 111 1m1ll ~Ml laf'tt !'"' •te strict"' tk flMtf'.-4" of tCERMAtf, IOKHAltA. fSF "At-I, TAIRl:Z. al\.OUCJ41STAN,
NATUllAL Sil.I(, QUM~ HUNTINt SCENE C/IOfT, JISHAN,
SHlltAZ. HAIN with 700 l111ot1 p1r t\_ll~re 111, kURDISTAH, IAK·
THIARI, lltAVER ltUtii, ARDEllL. INDO-$AVONJ4111. 1Mll '"'"Y
other1 111 111 11111.
A df1a11r1 JOI IAMIAIY
•
A-
L
E
FINAL
DAYS
MEN'S TRADI'J'ION.U. CLOTHING
17tft incl IRVINE AVE. -WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT IEACH -Ph.,,, 6'45·0792
Ex-UCI Official Ffued
s, •••Mii "r el.OU fliH DOtlA .... COMPANY ,.,..,cm.~
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers decision after several sessions
in the operating room £ailed to
correct a circulatory disorder
that impaired hi s perfermance
u a court reporter.
Slaback: started work as a
court reporter in 1935. And un·
til he first took time off in
November 1970 to receive
treatment for the ailment that
prompted his retirement, he
Dever missed a working day
for illness or any other reason.
$500 for $1,000 Crime b ·alsam'e Store Wide Clearance SALE
Tbe younger Slaback would
only }Xlint to his father's
a s t o n ishing sickness-free
record Ui te!f>Onse to con·
gratulations on his own
performance.
LESTER SI.ABACK , 87,
retired in 1956 after 53 years
of service as a Superior Court
reporter.
lie was the last exponent in
Orange County's courts of the
S.i\.NTA ANA -A $500 fine
was imposed Wednesday on a
former assistant dean of
students 'at UC Irvine who y,·es
accused on arrest of em·
beullng more than Sl,000 from
the school's student loan cof.
fey8.--
Orange County Supe rior
Court Judge James Turner
imposed the fine and declined
to add a probatic.n term for
Robert Edward Sharpe, 44,
!All Angeles, despite protests
by Ole prosecution.
Sharpe pleaded guilty Nov.
27 to one count of grand theft,
a conviction that can Carry a •late prison term of one to 10
years. He successfully pleaded
Wednesday· for dismissal of
the remainin& allegations
against him.
Sharpe was arretled in April
117.LbJLdislri<:t attorney'I Jn.
vestigators after the officers
were called to the school by
suspicious UCI officials. l'bey
added a second · cliarge -d
grand theft to the aUes:atY.ms
filed at UCI after a cbeck of
the assistant dean's Joan
transactions w i t b two
students.
OI/}y Coast Qffors
• 63Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday $ervice
·The Insiders Club
Art Llnllletter
The Insider• Club: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
membership card permits
you to buy nearly every·
thing you need from the
finest closed-d oor show·
rooms at substantial sav·
inSs -appli ances, furni·
ture, stereo equipment,
sporting goods, draperies
and much; much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet'' price and
mobile homes and motor·
cycles at substant ial sav-
ings. The Insiders Club
I
&i ~ . ,..
•
Effective Annual
Earnings
5.00%·5.13%
PaS'Sbook. No Minim um.
5.75%·5.92%
One Year Certifica te
$1,000 Minimum,
6.00%·6.18%
Two to Five Year Certlficat&$
$5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 days loss of
Interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity
on all certificate accounts.
also provides bi g dis·
counts on tickets to sport·
ing and e ntertain ment
events ... plus a whole
list of free services: safe
deposit boxes, money or-
ders , travelers checks,
and notary services.
Mem QershiP require·
ment fo r saver-s -$2,500
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now receive as·
sociate memberships en·
titling thelll to all outside
refe rral services. Ask
about joining at any Coast
office.
MAIN Of'1Cll
9th & Hiii, LOS Anples. &23-1351
OltMr otflcel WILSHIRE •I GU.Ml~'( ftUCf1
3933 WUshlre Blv<I .. L.A •• 318-1265
L.A. CIVIC CENTU:
2M & aromdW1y • 626-1102
HUNTINGTON IUCHI
91 HunUn1ton C.nttt (714) 897·1047
SANTA MONICA!
718 Wllthl,. 81'«1.• 393-07"6
SAN NOfl'Oi loth It. helfle • U1WS41
wtST COVINAI 1 Easlland S~lrc Ctr.• 331-2201
PANOltAMA cnY:
Chllsa 6 V•n Nuys 81Vd.• 892-1171
TAR ZANA:
la751 Vtntufl Blvd;• 3.45-8614
LONG llACHl
Jrd & Locust • "37•7411
EAST LOI AHCllUl1
8th & Soto . 26M510
DIAMOND IAtb
321-s. Dlmmond.81r (714) 59~7525
TUt TIN1
l.Arw!n SQuar1 ShopJ)ln1 Qr.
(714) 831'6810
LA MlltADAl
u Mlr•CSI s1ior1n1 Ctr. (714) 50!2-675
IAN OA•JtlCl:
Del Mat at Lis Tun11 • 21?.0Ul
O.lly Hours-9 AM to 4 PM
All Offlc", txctipt CMc
Center, Optn Saturdt)'S
9AMtolPM
ASSETS OVER ONE BIUION DOLLARS
1111111 SullaJ 12·5
\IO's at Values!
-r-
enllre inventory
reduced!
Or1ng1 qounty's l.41911t Selection
of Contemporary Fvrnituro
R09. Salo ,_., clMllr and -HCtl-10•10
L shape 9re1n 1tripe -----····················-· $795 $595
5 pcs. game sats •................................ trMffy nclllCMI
,, .. sofa
wood trim, choose colors, harculon
f1brics , loose cushions ·······-··············-f429 $299
cllaln. 2 °"" tux. 1rms blue velvat down fillad
pillow back ···········-··········-··········· .. ch '299
9'171/J' ...... HCtl-
luxurious importad valvaf1 ·······-·--··· '889 $595
Sof9T
bl•ck/whila hound•loolh ···-··-········-099 $279
'""',., coff ............. o)i !iHI 1nd •hapo• •·-········•·l129·'419 $59 •$289
._.. I: wlt1 • ......... MJt ........................ ON SAU .
..... of ullf, b"*'"" -~ ........ _ ........ _ ON ULI ..........................
41" round t1bl1t with 4 chairs
made by londH ·······················-·········-'449 $289 ·
kop-- -floor Hmpf., .• _...,..., --
, I' lofw Ir I' low11Nt
wood trim -pl1ld horculeo ... -··-··--$619
erlflnal
con,emporary
on 'paintings
3'14' -4'14'
v'luo• up lo •219
579 ... ,
•,
' '
·$429
bl1ck or brown I is pictured I
Rag.
7 pc. llrowa •-·--dlalot ... 6 uphol1tared high b1ck cheirs, 66x'40
dining t1ble opans to I 06" with 2 fils $1489 z,... ... -101&
whit• linen tux.do style .................... $879
k .. ny, browa coffH tabfH
oilad walnut I 8x60 ............................ $219
dooln 2-,
white with gr••n' velvet piping, down filled
pillow back -----···················-------·--·· eech $279
102" Mia
loot• cu1hlon1 -orll'HJ• ind
b<0wn fur 1trlpo .................................... $399
2 pcs.1KH...i
with built in teble 9x tO made by
Cr1ft Incl. m1tchln9 pl1t11u tebles a 2 chow loblo1. all 6 pcs. ················ $1450
lnwallllllli:•
pfcen ceff11 t1bl11 with c1binaf l0x60 $120
pae1n commodes with doors l01lO .... $252
p1~1n h1x19on t1bl11 with doors ........ 8230
welnut cornar teblet w/smoka gl111 tops $259
10'18' L...,. sof9
choo11 col•rt, harculon
febt-lcs or valvet I pictured below I ...... $749
!' ~·
$288
Sale
$829
$558
$99
$169 ....
$239
$89~
$199
$149
$139
$139
$549
,I
..
I
f
I
~
I I
I
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... 111sdo11, January 25, 1973 DAILY PILOT I ;J
City.~Rai~es . Dust Over Razing Sandhill -. · MONDIA
Retulor $400.00
From Wire Se"lcet dlJcuss the. Vieinlm peace ! He noted mat dairy leaders
Aa11e Hamilton Spaldlnl, the agreement, there wertn't have asked for an 18.4 percent
bank,anduseslhetlmelopick served In the Pactllc during namese motives iii mcvlng NOW $349.9.5
up the refuse. World War fl. from deadJock to the peace M ~ Thru l·S1·'7i
• Public re1aitns executive Presidential '!dvtser Heru-y ~;:,~:i~~-terms dbclosed Balboa Bicycles
Robert~!. Gmlct; 52, of Los-A:-K1Iiliigusa1trhe woula not "rliave loo much trouble 673•5051
mother of actor. O.Orge enough chain around the boost in milk supports,
HamUtoa, has betn arrested cabinet table lot all ~ * on • Clilirge iineifroymg a fenillna. As ... o-as he-!lnlabed-col-
sand du~ in front ot her Some aenaton, including lecting money at the Malone
beachfront home at Palm Republican Barry Goldwater (Fla.) farmers bank the
Be.Cb, Fla. o1 Arlt.ona Md ~t J. mayor ol the tiny Panhandle
Angelet has been named theri'~pe~c~u~la~te~o~n~~N~or~th~~V~le~t-~a~na~ly~zi~ng~our~""~"·~"~h~e~sa~l~d.d~!!:~ Navy's {!.(at reserve rear ad·
miral for publlc affairs.
"''lbey're making a test case ,,---------, town starts collecting garbage
out of me, and I don't Uke It,'' ( 1· all :_ver town an afternoon a
said Mrs. Spalding, who wlll PEOPLE .... ' be arraigned Friday In "!l's easier than listening to
MunlclpaJ c:ourt. ''11lis iJ the complaints when It doesn't
really making a mountain out Wlllam F • I b r 1 1 b t of get picked up,'' said Mayor
saolndhllla mo11:;iuu. or should I say Arkansas, had to slt in other Robert J. WaUord.
chain lining lbe wall. WaUord, 28, has Wedneoday 3•,,eee Hoat
Garrick enlisted in the Navy
reserve in February 1942 and
MACl'I UNIT CAll'IT
& UPHOLSTllY CLU.NING
$10 Uvl119 Room . $5 l•droom,
$15 7' Co11ch. $7 Cho1ir,
After 4:l0 • 714:551·9151
Pat Mullaney, presi-
dent of the lrvlne Jay-
• CMS, will host a Cable-
visloo Channel 3 pro-
gram to point up el-
fortS or Jaycee move-
ment today and Friday
at 7:30 p.m.
Her gardener, La~ When photographers were afternoons oil from his job as
WJ.Lton. . WU arrested last Wlhered in to record the startr_:cash="="~ler~~a'.tJt;h!e~j''""~r ... ~~i;~t~~!!"!! December alter he allegadly of lbe meeting, Nlaon told
bulldooed away • l\Hoot 88nd Presa Secretary Rooald L.
dune in !root or lbe home to Zleeler • .Jllotlonlng to the con-
Improve the ocean view. gressmen not seated at the
Wilson's case is pending, table, "Be sure they shoot the
and Mrs. Spalding wu ar-people ln..the back row."
· : Guideli1ies
For Public
rested on the-same Charg~. "I was merely beautifying ''You'd better rephrase
my £1: of property," Mn. that," Goldwater told NI.Ion.
Spal aald. * · A congres,.! wilh literary
The gals .,.. in charge a[ flair has urged Agriculture
Del Mar -and not only Jn the. Secretary E.,1 L. Biitz lo
kitchens. 'llley run the seaside, resist the blandishments ol
clly, from top to bottom. . dairy leaders seeking to When_J~ck Shelver reslgne(l:
R d E d
recently as city manager, he persuade him to jncrease the ecor ye left evorytbing to them. government support rate !or
The 1T14Yor Is J.-c.. mtlk.
-SACRAMENTO (AP) _ ~JWmm1u Gwgla ~eoples. Rep. Paul Fllulley (R-111.I •-I bl' ••• , _,,, ts piannhlg sectttary, Donthy advised Butz in a letter to .xvera pu Jc ag'""""'es ·~ . BeJBOldl ls uWlty clerk. follow the e1ample of the have to come up with · ~..1.• • ... h1 .... 1 Ul ho found ~guidelines to comply wllh the M.te Dorette ts CJty CGD1uer. m1w.....-ysses, w a
state's 1970 Public ltecords Gloril E. Carry is dtf c~k. novel way to protect him.sell
Act under 1 ·measure intro. city ~ and acting city from attradiona which wou1d
duced in Legislature. manager. . . :v~~ to the destructlon of
OFFICIAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23-24-25-26
Harbar Baul11V&1rd
af Car•
SEE BACK PAGE OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT
•
CHIU>RENS CLASSES
Ballet (Cecchetti traded method), Tap, Gymnas-
tics, pre·scbool dance.
TEENS and ADULT CLASSES
Jaz1, Hawaiian, Tap, Ballet, Keep·ln-Trlm, Belly dancing.
Expert Instructors ...
beginners through advanced
Assemblyman W 1111 am When !'rt•~ Nb:oo 00.,.· "Chain )'OUSell..l<Lihe ™~l-_J
--icllqley, (&&n-!Wael), said vened a meeting or blpartl$an and be not beguiled by the 1n introducing the bill that · some <kiM1rtments and agen-congressional leaders t o Slttn aongs," Findley said.
~g[~Dance Center
25071 Front Street,EI Toroe586-5422
cies have "done nothing ef·
ledively lo detennine or
designate" which '8.l'e I.heir
public record!.
THAT MEANS "lhe average
citizen 'is helpless to dislodge
records ol interest to him,"
Baaley added.
Agencies affected by the
B111ley lllll in(:lade the Depart·
ment of Motor Vehicle!, the
Department of Conswner Af·
f lalra and the Golden Gate
Bridge Dlstrlcl
I • ' I
I
•
I
~
I I
Obscenity
•
Caller Gets
New · Trustee
PASADENA (AP) -Gilbert
W. Fitzhugh, chairman and
chief execuUve officer of
Metropolitan Life Insurance
Co., has been named to the
board of trustees of Caltech.
·He ls a New York City resi-
dent.
IF . • ~ '"' l11ttmt.f kl acc1-ltll111 _,.,
• • • 111¥1 ._ """"lllNI "''""""*-'·
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.1170/14 ••••• •31" .,., ........ •39" .,., ....... •39"
fl7t/14 ••••• tJ4" R70/l.5. •••• '34'1 1170/15 ...•. t44t1
•1111~· ••••• 537" M71/J.S ••••• •37• ,..,~-;,:-,.,:.:.:.,
5~ .. /15 8.00/15
5.80/5.H/8.00XJ:S
. 5.JOXl:S
CONSUMER
POLICY
Ow t-•-,_lier It I•
2 9 ••tl•r ''''' r••· II r•• e 95 '''' ••f ~111111• t:••· -RJ c:1r11i11 ,,,;.,,, ff 11r· ,1,., , •••• , •• ,. !"•
. •,·".. ,·.•. ',.'.' ''"" '"''" "' D •K· -t1r 11 C1•1•••r Aff1lr1,
--• Mr. S. Ar1 .. l11, SSSS St•
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1
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1111: J'llCll: ~.t'.l l l&t: l'tltclr •.1.1, If WI ... 111• 1111 1•t •I ,.., 11..-, • .. ••i• Ckck"' ISS/l•I 2991 l.!iO . 1551·14 2'91 1.-llJ will H J11H• •111N'l•t •
1.-.1 · %9" 1.6'1 ,l.SSl-11 29'1 J..ltJ l1t1r •1ll11ry •t ••• ••· Ylftl1 .. ,nc .. ,, •. , .,, ..
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GARDEN GROVE
14"'0 lroekhunt
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LA HABRA
2000 Whittler lfvd.
,,.,., .. """""' .. hid!) ., ...... ·BUINA PARK
2HJ Llncoln 11¥4.
1-........... 1(111111
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FUL ERTON
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U.S. Con
_ __,__
'
. . •
4-OAll.Y PILOT
'Most. Complete.' List of POWs, MIAs .Now A~ail~hle -
NEW YORK !Ar) -Fol-
lowlng Is a list of "'ar
• ptlsoners and some ntissing
.. servicemen compUt'd from a
__yarJ.et~ Of sources, Including
... the 11.!ils issul'd by the Com·
mlltee oC Liaison \\'l!h
Families of St•rvlcernen ~
: laint.'CI in Vlet11111n. !The U.S.,
---vreln:'lril anCI otht>r P,.'lrfies a~e
10 exchange prisoner \is1s on
S..'lturday.)
1'he inrorrnat!on also came
from nev•spapcr and fantlly
sources 3nd from llanol radio
broad1.as1s.
Oil Spill
Lawsuit
Enterell
LOS A~GELES (AP1 -The
state attorney general's orrr~
has filed suit in l" S. District
Court seeking $3,000 in civil
penalties and S2.090 in
damages o\·er oil spilled from
a ship that ran aground at the
entrance to Los Angeles
Harbor Oct. 7.
The suit was filed by At-
t\·. Gen . Evelc J. Younger,
\\·ho said the action "'as re-
quested b~· the Slate Uepart·
n1en1 of Fish and Game.
The action was filed against
the SS Liberty ~l:inufacturer.
y.·hich allegedly spilled up to
( ECOLOGY)
60 barrels of oil. and the
\lanufacturers Na\,gation Co.
of Panama "'hich O\vncd the
ship at 11\e time. It has since
been sold 1or salvage.
e Db ease 111 n-
BEAID.fONT IAP )
Newcastle disease has struck
again in Olerry Valley near
here "'here a slate-fOOeral
group has destroyed 166.WO
af£licted chieklfls since Jan. I.
officials said .
A spokesman for the
Ne wcastle Disease Tas k Foree
in Riverside said the owners
of the birds -which were in
ty.·o separate flocks -were
pa id fro m 35 cents tn two
dollars' per hen.
to.tore than lO million
stricken birds have been killed
in Southern California in a
year at a cost of about $10
million.
e Report NI.red
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
\\'eyerh aeuser Co. terms ''ut-
ter rubbish" a report i~ may
be phasing out its lumber
oper-ations in the Paci fic
Northwest. y.·here it oy.·:is 30
percent of the industrial forest
land .
The company's remark was
elicited by an article in this
mooth's Sierra Club Bulletin
by Gordon Robinson. the c:lub
fores ter and for many years
chief forester for the Southern
Pacific huge timber holdings.
Robinson sai d in the
magazine for the 140,000
member c l ub th at
\Veyerhaeuscr y.•as using its
profi ts from lumber export~ h'l
Japan to nnance a Sl·billion
expansion progran1 in other
parts of the y.·orld.
e Suit Rejeelerl
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
Superior Court judge h:is re·
jected a su it which would have
cut off one-third of the Los
Angeles wate r supply.
Sacramento County S•1pcri".lr
Judge William A. White denied
a requ est by In yo County to
stop Los Angeles from dra11o·-
ing about 150 million ol the 4i)()
mlll ion gallons of wate r the ci-
ty uses daily from wells in the
Owens Valley.
\\'bite held that the
C a I i forn ia Environmental
Quality Act of 1970 did not ap--
ply to pumping opera tions at
about 70 Los Angeles-owned
"·ells in the Bishop-Lone Pinc
area.
e Project OK'd
SAN FRANCISCO (API -A
federal appeals court has ru1·
ed tha t work on the Verba
Buena redevelopment project
in San Francisco n1ay pro-
l'Oed.
But the 91.h U.S.Court of Ap-
peals ordered a n en·
vlronmental Impact report fil·
eel on a planned industrial
park in We.st Berkeley.
The decision came in the
court's affirmed dismissal of a
suit filed by san Francisco
Tomomwl 1gain5t Verba
• Buena.
'I11 court revened d'-'missal
of • slmil•r suit against the
ll<tkdty projecL
'Ille (Olllplalnts elleg«I lhat
the Houolnl· and Urban
Dovelopm<nl department II·
iepUy _.,ved and financed
~ tor l!b!ch no en-
.., l'tronment1l Impact
~ staltments ba'd b<cn flied.
\\'here rtlOr'f; than one ad·
dress iJ given. the llrsl ls that
of the commi ttee of Hal.ton list or o.c. 22. 1970.
Nan1es and...rilllh have. been
check~ with an of!lelal Pen.
ts.gon list or prisoners lssuOO
Det. 30. 1969. \\'hert no rank
J1.ppears. it indic<1tes-the name
cornes only from the liaison
co1nn1i1tee list. The names:
Mlbol, M•I. J-.:ill S. Jr .. Ntw
J•rw~ AbtlOtf. C_., -..rt A1U111, o.ca..-.. mt. Ml(l'I.
Alll>Oll. Mii-WIHIM ICtttt. 5"~ 0-Alcot'n, l t. 'N9flOtll ~. Klft.tMlflll,
"• • 11.o (lwllel'lh.I"" P• Ali~. N,aJ. F••l\jl-f••••· """"'""· o, .. ~ ,,.,,.~u... ..ue. Mm W111I v..-o. Lll-,IM»tll•. ltorii. .U-iat. l.1. lit) l!~l<efl H,Jt~ ,..,,
II ('11•1.
OR. JUSllN P. COLYAR INSPECTS NEW COMPUTER ORGAN 11.T OCC
Comp uter Stores Tones in Memory B•nks; Organ Sounds Authentic
Computer Organ Counselol'
For MIT
Appainted Aids OCC Class
Orange Coast C-OUege has ad-
ded oot on1y a new 5t2.000
Allen Computer System 300
organ to its ~tusie Department
this spring. but a new organ
instructor as well. • Mrs. Patricia Adams. the
dean of the Orange County
Chapter of the American Gu ild
of Organists, is on the staff
n!placing organ professor Dr.
Justin P. Colyar "·ho will
spend the semester in Europe
on sabbatical lea ve.
Colyar will be in Europe to
study historic organs and to
take a ma ster organ class in
the Netherlands. He will
return to OCC in Se ptember.
Mrs. Adams, who will teach
IY.·o OCC organ courses. is
pursuing advanced $tudy
under Catherine Crosier. a
renowned organ recitalist. She
is also the organist at Placen·
tia Presbyterian Ch urch .
TllE NEW ORGAN, a pro-
duct of the Allen Organ Com·
pany of ~lacungie, Pa., y.•as
a three -year collaboration
bet\\·een scientists or North
American Rockwell Co. and
musicians and tec hnicians at
the Allen Organ Co.
Scientists ctairn it is the
first prope rly tuned organ in
!he world that will never ha\'e
to be retuned. This is like the
arrival or perma press for
or.canisls. 11
There are no pipes, no ranks
of oscillators. no needs. no
spinning disks.
\Vhen the orgai;iist plays the
keys or pedals he •·tells" the
romputer "'hat notes. chords
<ind melodies are to come
forth. By depressing different
stops or combination of stops
he draws upon the memory
banks of the con1puter where
varieties of tone have been
slored. Tut result is authentic
organ sound coupled with un-
precedented tonal variety_
T II E I ;'\; STR Uf\·IENT AL
sounds of pipe nrgnn s arc
n1adr \vhrn wind ra~scs
throt1gh a narrnw C'fllU1nn and
sometimes ovrr rrN!s. Stand·
ard e 1 ec Ironic organs
make us e of ose1lla 1ors.
\'lbrating rt~.~ or tone wheels.
lf the OCC nrgan had been
constructed 1n lhc same
rashion as a stnnriard elec-
tronic organ. but had the same
capabiUties it pai;se'8(1s as 11 computeriicd or(.l:tn, it \\'ould
be gigantic in SiU': "'ith more
than 2,000 ehx:tron1c parts.
Instead. new techOQlogy has
reduced !ht p..ins to 1ninh~cule
ronn.
~!enlists rti~verM tlw
1 w11,y '9 con\lert. sounO "':l\'tS
Into digital sign1tls \vhich cnn
be ctored in the compu!cr and
brought forth at the Prt~s of 11 key or lhC J>llll of • knob.
Ralph G. Schmjtl, duce~ Shannon _ Drive, Huntington Sounds of some or the greatest organs in the world. Beach. has. been appo~t~ to
Engineers ta ped sounds ~r tbe Educational Council of the
organs in the wo,rld:S. grea~ J.iassact1115'tt; Jnstitui,e qi
churches and catfiedrals. They Technology; President Jeromt:
"'ere then fed into a computer . B. Wiesner has announced.
It responded b,y absorbing the The Council is a nationwide
sounds and giving back organization of MIT alumni
numbers which represented established ~o assist schools
the exact electrical wave and to couasel young men and
shape the co mputer must women about the Institute.
rem ember.
Since the sounds have been
shaped from those of existing
great organs, the Orange
Coast College organ has a
close similarity to some of the
\\'Grid's greatest. Even the
randomness heard on pipe
organs has ~n programmed
into the new CX:C model.
Also by inserting a punched
computer card the organist
can add a clarinet or chimes.
One of the magical feats of
the sophisticated new organ i.s
Jls abil ity to, transpose in an
instant.
SCIDUTT IS ..I production
manager for The Plastics
Group o[ Los Angeles. He is ne
of 49 council members in the
Los Angeles area. As an
educational counselor. he will
work closely with individual
secondary schools and com-
munity youth organizations.
An officials representative
of the Institute, Schmitt will
be available to dl!cuss the
educational fields represented
by institutions such as AUT, as
well as the Institute itself,
with any student in the area
who r11ay be interested. ._. __ ._.._.,.,, ..,,.,.
Po•·no Bu~ks
Dirty Dollars 011 Sale
Af\ISTERDAAl (AP) -U.S. Treasury officials and the
Dutch police have been ruerted to the latest wild ,item on
the Amsterdam sex market. Phony $1 bills, with porno-
graphic illustrations, 8.re being peddled by numerous 8e.1
boutiques in the city's seamy red light district.
They have approXimately the same size and color of
authenlk: greenback.s and appear to be photocopies. How·
ever, the Great Seal of 1lhe United States and the lmage
of George Washington have been replaced by photo lb.sets
depicting sexual antics.
AT ONE SEX SIJOP in a street much used by pros-
titutes. the dirty dollars were displayed openly on a rack
and sold at 2~ guilder!, about 11 American cents.
A S«Olld shop bad .only one bill on display.
"We're sold out bUt more on order." said a female
clerk. "There's quite a demand for them."
At a third establlshment, a male assistant produced a
st11ck of pon10-bills from under a counter. These sold nt
three guilders, or 92 cents.
ALL TllE BILLS ARE represented as part of. the 1969
O SI sc.ries. signed by John 8. Connally, lheti secretary
of lhc Treasury .
A U.S. Embagy spokesman in the lfague said the
Treasury Dcp:lrtment hos be<n notified a:>d cheeks made
''wilh appropri ate offic ials to determlnt the status of such
tl1Jngs." lie added that ('.ireulation of. the bil\s bad been
noted In ol.her European countries but that no lntematkJnal
COn\·entlon existed to deal with them automatically.
An Amsterdam polJce spokesman cmftrmed thPt a
run-scale invesUgatk>n hod been launched ~* the request "
U.S. authorities. Tie o.dded that the couni.etfeit department
and not lhe vice squod was handling lnquim..
AS FAR. AS CAN BE a9Certa!ned.' tbc dirty doUArs' 1 i
tu~ up only ln $1 dcnomlnalJons. 'Ibey pose numerous
que~ions for officials: whether they cootrnvene U. S. ol>
SCt':nity or counterfeit Jaws. where they originate 1utd wh11t
V.'OUld hnppcn to a U.S. tourist can:ying them b11ck to the
Stiues 0r putting them through the ·U.S. mails?
1 .. WHAT SOqND! docs it pro-
Spokcsmen m1de dear the answer to such questions
lay in Washington. but one off.idal said privately: "If they
are not considered couMerielt bills, they are 11t least con.
sldertd vtle."
I ' ,, .. \
I '
Boy Scout
Seeki1ig
Booklets
Huntington Beach Boy Scout
Steve Davis is trying lo find
Boy Scout Merli Bodge
booklets that nobody'1 using
anymore.
He's collectlt!l: the booklets
., 1111rt o/ hll "!'.rt·•"" bis El&gle Rank. 1111 couecuoo wil
be <lonot.d lo lhe Huntlngton
lleoch public ·library so Iha
scouta In lhe Huntington
Beach area can hive ready
8«eSI lo them.
I
t
According lo !be Scout
tMre are more lhaa 100 dit
lercnl tlUe90 f lh<!e booklttl
l!blch are used by boys wbo
are eam1n& yarlout mer!\
badgtt. Once the wort 1111 the
~ Is complete, he. ex.
plaliled, tho booklets usually
wind up· stlting on ... shell
• .
aomJtwhere.
Anyooe wbo wcu!d like lo
dooale ~ merit badge
booldeta fo tho library can
contact' 0.vls 1!53ffllll8.
•
*· FYOUll9, M•I. J.., .. F., HtlilVwoocl. •• • J"OUIJI, &ii«;. ' ~ A..._WIH.. 301 1 "'WO.re. <if'IV'I ~~ 111. Youna, C111t Robtr1, YuHf. LI. Col. Johll li...-ry
* N.z~, LI. a..,-._,,.. ~'""'1('
. Pacifica?s J
Hospital Set i
For Revam
Paci[lca Hospital In Hun-
tington Beach has two ma~
additions under construclirol
that will add 5,000 square fee
lo the exialing 35.000 square-
loot lad!ity.
The first addition, to be-'/
completed this March, is a1
2,000 square-foot -addition to:
the emergency room. This ex
pansion will add. six beds to•
the four-bed unit. Adjacent to
!he new Emergency Room'/
Department is a large muJtf)
purpose room \"hie& is eq uip.
ped to handle major disaster
.situations, serve as a holding
area and also can serve as a
conference room and educa~t
tional center.
On Dec. 'rl. 1!172, work began
on another Pacifica project, to
be known as "Pacifica South ."
'This 3,300 square-foot facility:'
will provide a new location for1 lhe hospital's rapidly ex··
p a n d i n g Cardio-Pulmonary;
and Technical S e r v i c e i
Department. It will also Pl'O:'.
\;'ide space for additional of
fiQts. and .storage space. (
The new construction wUI
also extend tty corridor rrom
the south side 'bt Pacif\ca
Hospital over lo one wing oV
!he adjacent Extended Car
Facility. When completed th!
corridor will permit ets
transfer or J)aUentl betwetn
the hospital and the Extended
Care FacllJty, lhus redUCln
costs to patients. It will alSO'
provide transfer of material
and patients to and from thd
Technical Services Oepan
mcnt wh~e such terVlceJ 111
needed for patient care.
Beheading
Reported
NEW OELllT (AP ) -
An Indian vlllager cut o(.f
bis ~year-old &on'a bf:acf~
!llinldng he could put It
back olf ag'1h, then com·
mlUed suicide by lhrowlnc
hlmatlf-beneath t b e
nheels of a lraln, the
nlled New1 of India
report..i. The-·-.... rellgloul r It u 1 l Ill
sacrlHco, the report uld .
I
.,. .. .• ; •. .i:::.__ .. . . . . . ..
DAILY PILOT I 5
ft DAY • HO
INTllHT • NO
CAllTIN•
CHAIGL un
l'_QUJ._IHCO.M.I 1-
TAI llfUND NOW
EVERY 1973 RCA 4 ZENITH IN STOCK
O.A.C.
AT SPECIAL JANUARY CLEARANCE PHI CES
18'' RCA COLOR XL-100 ~~A~~ Color 19'' SUPER CHROMACOLOR
With ABC's Exclusive
Warrenty
Compact 19''. Portable REMOTE CONTROL
. ' •
•
l
'
e 1 Year Free S.rvice -...
• 1 Year FrH Parts
• J Year Picture Tube
Warranty
Oi19on•I
Tune TV from •CfOlS th• room wi!ll 1ilenl 1ouiid . Jui! ,,
pt•H • b11tton to •iiu•I vol um• to two lev1l1, m1,1!1
1011ni,. tvn1 1•t on or off, ch•ng• VHF chann1l1
eilh•r iir•c:tion, No wir11! No cord1! No b1tt•rit1!
REAL
VALUE FOR
YOUR
TELEVISION
DOLLAR I
s
. e DIP.GI•. ~tonM e I Sot VHF Fino
Tuning
• ldool for Fomlly
Viewing nan
ICA
Ell-410W ,
OVER 90%
SOLID STATE
TIT AN 101 CHASSIS
WARRANTY
3 YEAR PICTURE TUBE
WARRANTY-I YEAR FREE
PARTS. I YEAR FREE IN HOME
OR SHOP ~ERVICE. DEL. & SET·UP.
________________ .. e Black Matrix Tube
e Automatic Color
e Automatic Tint
-·· .....
25"RCA WalnutConsol
WAll•AHTY~ v .. r Pim.tno
T .... We,.,...ty, t Y .. r Pl'MI
Plrh. 1 YMr ...... "-
W iW Sttvlce.
25'' RCA· XL-100 Solid
State
WALNUT CAllNn WITH II.ACK GLASS TO,
---thtlOl'MT• .,._. ftodolGllMt ---~ ...........
0
• '"'"" .. ,... "" Miii ..... 111111 ,...,_net. e Trve 11iix-
11ry Ill ai .. r VIMllll •ttr-
"*" '' • wry rMlhtk ,,-let
•.• "" ..... , ... 11-~ Ill Or•• C-ty, • ~le
Ctl9!' fllOllll~ • A•IOIMlk
PIN Tlfflillt e Ultn •rWtt
l ladl Mllrtl Pktwt T• e .
I .,..,. .id-1vM w1rnonty
• I yMr lrM ,. ... Wll'ftllty
ll lrNrfrMlll..,._.,....,
lenlkl •• ,,..11ty.
Low . Low-PRICE
25" Maple Solid State
Di•gon1I
FROM
RCA
e A•t•Mtlc "• ...... ...... -.~ M-e ..... M.n. ..._, ....
• WAUAllTT' I
I TIAI PICTUl'I tun WAllAHTT
I YIAlfUIPAmWAllAHTY
1 YU.I Fiil IN HOMI 01-SHOP-SllYICI
Ylll'l'LOW $559 ntcl FOi . '
21" DIA•. SOLID •
STA.Tl COl.Ot •
OllANGI COUNTY'S 1-AltOIST
DIALIR ~ -1
El-414 .......
.
-25" SOLID-· S'fATE COLOR
Dlagon•I
From Zenith
FULL ELECTRONIC REMOTE CONTROL
....
200 w ... , ... , .....
S.114 Stat9 A111r • a...,, ..... 4owl I AH • • n.c....ic ,._.. coMrol ICA't Mn I , .... , ...... _ 111-1
S02567DE
• Dn °'* c•h..,,. e AIM SD ZS66 r.c..
e J Year l'ktttN T•M Werrary e 1 Y.-,,_ hrtl
• 1 , .............. SNp ....
CALL FOR
PRICE
... -'=" 'ALL THE TOP
OF. THE LINE
RCA FEATURES
100% Solid State Chassis
ONE BUTION TlIIDNG
SUPER LOW PRICE
THE SPALDING BY ZENITH
25" Super Chromaeolor
• Tr11n1ltlonal Styllnt • D11rk Pecan Cabinet
• Conculed Cast.rs -For Easy Moving e Instant Picture and Sound • Solid State TUMr e Autom,atlc Fino Tuning • Two 6" Ovol Spookoro
WHY BUY FRQM ABC?
e No flwo Ci..111 If l'.w lo to lloys •
No -_. 36 M•"' to P.y 1-1 e I Y-Frff ,_ e I Y-Frff:.sonlco e J
Y-Plctwro T• W•••ly • l'roo -ory ·
...i ht Up e ._~/-Clowta
• Wo Sonlco WMt Wo Sell • Wo a-Ow "'*" lnldo .... °"' -.
CALL
FOR
PRICE .. _. ICA-·-'•A.....,..1 .......
new19737.'"f-''H SUPER
CHIOMA<OlOI.
25' GIANT-SCREEN CONSOLE
• new, brighter picture • one-button 1un1ng
• 100% IOlkl-etat• chlllil
UllttlYIOdtm etyllng: High OIOll Whl'-
11equer flnllh wtth grained AOMWOOd color
top. Tlt1n 200 Chnll• lor In.tint plctwe
and tOUnd. ~ Supllr Gold Video
Gu•rc\TUMf, MC. 54.lper Chrorucolor-.
bf1g11Jtf plctuN tht.n tN temoue Oftg!MI
Zonllh aw-11111o.
CALL FOR t PRICE ·
STORE HOURS:
MOte ......
10 A.M.,. J P.M.
SATUIDAY
10 ....... • l1Jt .....
SUNDAY
11 A.M, • f P.M:
-••
• •
' •
•
I
1-l
~ t t ~ • ~ ' -l-
' ' ~ ' • • • ' l
i
~ ,. : • • • '
• • ..
. ' ..
SALE SHOES·
~
•
. ' ' FINAL DAYS
LADIES SHOES • I
I
AS LOI// AS I
. I
' I
,.
REG. TO $22 . .
i I
MEN ~HOES
~ ... ......
M-l1•1HM
A.I. Ne
hell_,..
Of ....
AS LOW AS
TO
REG . TO $35.
Q,.. Me11dtsy .,.. ....... .........
151 9 P.M.
1052 IRVINE e WESTCLI FF PLAZA e NEWPORT BEACH
548-8684 -..
JANUARY
CLEARANCE -
• 10 ONLY
SHRUB & HEDGE TRIM f~ER
13" single edge blade ad· s7 88
justable side · handle and
V. H.P. motor. • ... '"·"
• •
i
SAW
$17" S.UE
•7101 .... Sl9.9t
SAW KIT
$27" . SALE
--' R ... SJ4.tt '
COSCO 4 PIECE
CANNISTER SET
BAR ~LASSES
$498 •••. 59.t S
SET,'f'F. i
NOW ONLY $498
lEG. Sl.00 •
WESTBENJ.-7 PIECE SET ONLY $39.95
COUNTRY INN MISC.""' "OM $4.99 .
• ... ·-
STAlllLESS TABLEWARE. "" .~.:~.,·::~ii:. i:: ~"'". $9.68
CASUALWARE STAINLESS .... >:.:~·" '"'""~·· ... 1..$14.81· '.
CANDLES FROM 75c ••• SAVE TO 8()0/o · ·
MOll..,.I. ...
MT • ... , ...
1M
•
I
SAU ' 1
•... ·~
1 ..
•
I
I •
SPECIA L SALE
BRAS .. . ..
' . . ' .. 9~
DISCONTINUED STYLES ,
AND SIZES. )'6LUES
TO $7.00.
LINGERIE
·.rROBES
. 'BRAS
I
. ' ~~·
PANTY GIRDLES . . :
••
-'
. .. '. •
• PRICE
,_. . '· "~......;.i;;;,'..
.... ,V~t~;s ~ . . . I
' INTIMATE APP~AEL ~
We•tclitf Pl111 • •• 17th & lrwini
WEEK-END SPECIALS
Thurld•y Through Sunday
REGULAR "GOUDA"
CHEESE ' ... ...,, .....
GARLIC CHE.DDAR
CH !:!ESE SPR EAD
REFILLS 1• J>Z. aeo. Sl.J9
.SPEC IAL •
SPIClAL
"". ;J' t;' I
I .
I ' , ff·itr~ :t4~S4D !
. ' -WF.STCLll"JI' ,,_ ... ~A
Ow.: MM.•l'rl 'Ill f -SI,, '1:1 I -.Sii!!. 'TU S 11111 a Ill.YIN ... -Nl )ltl'OllT 8t::ACH
TOWN a•c;ouNT,R"t sHoPP,!lfO Cl!lrffl• -OllANOE
Acro,s tro.n S1n!A AM PMl'l\on '§quM'• ' I\ PASHM>M SQUAil~ -I.A' HAlllA AM ERICA~·61ADl.NG CHll!ll STORl!S . :
•
' . . . .
'· ·• MONTH-IND tlolAUNCI '
I PJUCD ·SLASHED
; 5D"-'. & MORE .
ori "PANTS & TOPS
• • ..
,
J 8 _DAM PJl.OJ -Thw1J. JlllUltl-21 Ull
FRIDAY •
•
SATURDAY
January 26, 27 .
, ------• Don't M SS ··11! • ..
' GRAND 'FINALE
EVERYTHING ·MUST GO!-
•
ISOMEPLA<;El
last chance to take
advantage
of t~is great opportunity
to save!
on fashion-f ashfon-fashion!
·· Bigger Markdowns on
Sale Items
·l9ts._of . new things
added
Oh yes···
a $5 rack
WESTCLIFF PLAZA STORE ONLY
17th & · . N°E -f'!EWPORl--BEACH •
SALE
•
Starts Tonite Thru Saturday 27th
JA~:;-r.:~ ao.oo NOW V2 OFF
s~!~ ,.5.H11~~~ NOW V2 OFF
DRESS SHIRTS
Rog. To 14.00 NOW 5.00
Mons Florod PANTS: NOW 3 99 Reg. To 15.00 · •
S1ll • TO al WAIST ALSO A l"IW Jt
LoR~'.~.J~~-=: NOW 3.99
' / Sidi M TO 21 OHLT
KNIT SHIRTS: NOW 3.99 Rog . To 12.00
Other MarkdOW'NI Jn,.lude Bclis, 1SoX, etc.
ALl. MLIS MUST Bf AL. Pl.l!ASI! I I SURI
01" ·s1z1s. LOOklNG ,.(, AAO TO SEllYIHO YOU • .
llonltAmerlurd-
Mllllflr Charge
'
'
.. , • •
--.
,
r
•
II BEA ANDERSON, Editor : I ""-'i ,_.., ... "" -"
; I
I . I
: i
:r
f By JO 01.BON for Women was asking women to take
f. Of 111e o.11r .._. staff another klok at themselves as volunteers,
ha warning tllem that the volunteer oystem From Colonial days , Americans ve "also reinforces a woman's low self-im-
n helping each other on a volunteer age, by, offering wort which, because
is, providing inspiration for such unpaid, confera BtUe atatua."
ljdages as "many band5 make ligbt Bettin lies a question: are wbmteers,
"1Jrk." once a good and nec...ary part of the 1 ~Barns were raised, crops brought in Am rican ..m-.... in rel ant' Or ~, d the poor fed in the early daY.S of vol:Uteers '"~J;iY ·~loi~ ~ =:
erica by people helping their _,, wl1o are llupidly giving their
gbbors. services away when they could and
•By 1912, volunteerlsm bad taken on a al>ouJd get paid for tbeml
ore organized forn1.;Aw<oxfmately 55 •
fillion volunteeni were: .at 1wort acroa DEFINED
Jmerica, conlribuliftll billions of dollars First, let us define voltmteerlsm.
' orth of hours to h.mdreds vf agencies Ludlle Kuehn, former assistant to the
J
· g people in need. vice chancellor of. student aftain for pro-
In 1912 also, the National Organlzallon gram development at UCI, oontenda that
.. .-,,
"Therefore, be it resolved: Thot
NOW distinguish betw..,.(I)
voluntary activities whidt......,e
to maintain woman's de~dent
• ~ I • and secondary slatus·on the
one hand, and (2J clienge.
directed activities which lead to
more acti.ve participation in
the decision-making ptoc~s~: ind
be it fu~rftolvocl :
"That NOW sffk to raise the
consciousness of womea en'gagec:I
in these volunteer activities,
so that they use their 'volunteer
p~wer' in an effort to change
policies detrimental to the
interests of women.••
-Guidelines for Discussion,
Task Force, Women end
Voluntoerism, National
Organization for· Women.
. . '
' .
. '
•· . -
Sha,pers · of
volunteerism is "a uniquely American
phenomenon."
She defines it as an association in
whlch "a person ls free to participate or
not, as he chooses. Volwitary organiza.
lioos have. a double ....,..,.wruty. They
provide service or further a cause for
community betterment while they pro-
vide an opportunity for members or
volunteers to share In their purpooe by
helping dlrecUy .t lndlnclly with pro-
grams."
During , a speech given at an in-
vitational conference at Radcliffe COiiege
last year, enl1tled Women: Resource
for a Changing World, lbe Bald that the
omission of volunteerism. from American
'
history ls linked with the omission of
women from American history.
OMISSION
Tbls is true, ahe suggested, because
· "more women than men cunpose the
: volunteer force" .and '"there are more
women's organizalioos than those of
men.
'"Ibe absence of women and volun-
teerism from American blstory ls lnu-
trlcably Involved with the llsues ol the
status of women. self-perceived as well
as evaluated by otben:, and the value
plac<d olt volunteer activity."
sucoeil and otatus tradltmally 8"'
measured In America by education, oc-
cupation and income, Mra. Kuehn said.
"A more current and accurate measllre"'
ment of the ~tus of women should also
incorporate unremunerated volunteer ac-
tivity."
The National Organization for Women
divides volunteertsm into two entities
which are "separate and distinct," said
Kerstin Joslyn, a spokesman for the
organization.
"One is change-directed. We have no
quarrel with this kind Of self-expression,
which ls the cornerstone of a democratic
.society. Without such volunteer effort,
women could not liberate themselves.
"The other kind Is service-oriented
volunteerlsm. This seeks to complement
insufficienUy funded social services with
•
/ ,,;-, ' ,,, (-;' . . / 81n ·/
o,;;/
Open House Doesn't Pass lr:ispectlon
DEAR ANN LANDE!lS: We read
bout the thousand5 of grieving pamita
o are in a state of despair because
r children have left home. I'm not
ng about hippies who hit the road
· are living in communes, spaced out
u drugs. I-mean the kids who wake up
day and say to tbetmelves, 0 I've got
get out of here. 11
rm a 20-year.old male who )eft a
utllul spli~levd house -I
ver felt at home lhere. When I w11
young I got my bands alapped W
ttlng fmgerprlnta on the wall or oo at
rlgerllor or on the mirrortd ponell.
1 cOuldn't hive magu:inel m my rG(ID
aU1e they were "messy." Evet')1hiQI
d to be perfect In .... ,....body draP-
tn 1mezpactodly.-Our ---or t....,..U.0 Z4 boun II day.
Aa I grew up , ~re ...,. othlr ntlet:
o more thin one frielld """" -to houle It I time. My .............
.
'
tertalned bquently, but I was never
at:'1'Wed to have a party because my
frtelldl mlgbl -IOllletbiDg. Pleale pllbllsb thll lolt<r !or 1onetome
JJ8""'11 who rallecl their kids In a sbow1J1oce lmtead ol I home. -I LOVE
.M\'-<:llUJIMY-PAD '
D&Ul LOVE1 lloft It ,_.--..... -It ...... ,.. t ,,,.
....... ~ 'MMl*-MI .....
llg'..l llJ.....,. "* -_)1111 .... le .. ., I m tlt'9 a>: ..... el
.......... -. ..... ,_. (11'1
~ -~-:::..-~-~ -., .... zs'f ............ ....
,..., ,, 1 ,.. .. ....,. "'*' .,.
Allll.LANDElll: -.. ..... .,. lfltl..,, 11111 ...... '°)'OU
!or balp. I - -liCI' wilt 11111 i.... ..... -three ,...._ Wa -a-.,, bat 11111111111 ..
•
are ready. I am sick and tired ol people wut\nd a -mother. The baby II jult
ding me, "II your w~e pregnant )'<!?" ...,... to wallt oo natuttly. be lallJ
11'1 nobody's buslnell and I don't .... down I lot. It IHllll lite be elwato bu I dentand where they get the ilerve.
CID you think ol an -that will let blm>p ,.. • bndoe -here and my
peoiile -I don't can 1or the -bol'l>oM blameo me beca-I "don' tloll! I WlDI lo IOI the point -lo 11 11'11111 doe boy:"
h-way. I doa'l llU to~~ We bodl liave tempm. My lluoband'I
pie. 'l'liiml!I, Ann. :_PRIVATE PEJl80\'I II,,_ tlllm mine. lie ytlll wben thtilgs DEARPEllSON:1'o ___ doa'l • .lift ,btm. And I moon ytlll. No __ ...,,_,..r• 1,..r" __ ,.._orw11o11......i.
....,~"' .. , -· ---beop..lllo_..i,..canbWlilm
--I Ml -I' ~ to II bloclt --lie doem'I ""'whonean p1111Wt." 1'1&111 dell' .. ........ blm.
I loobd lornrd to bavlnl 11111 boby,
DIA&,,\NN L.UQllllll: I'm • -mt k --Jiii -·· -1or
•
1
my husband to find fault with me. He
~~I'm~ lousy mother and maybe be ii
rigbl. Pleue bel2_ me. My confJdence !'
lhoL I feel u JI rm cracking up. -
HELP NEEDED,
DEAR D.N.: Ytw aoed mvo belp !baa
1 ... l(lft -,... to yev -
.... ·""' ....., ....... -. Tiiey Cllll ....-<•-M I _. Wlftl rud_,
m11.W. ~ died ~ .. )'Olr CodtJ
-.. --,.. Allll take yev __ ,_lbe'llp. UM-Ct ----E-W ~ II the "In" thing In
your crowd, It .-.·1 crowd you sut.
Leanl tho lacto from Ann Lancttn' -1e1, ,._ Ind You -For
T..._o Onl)'." Send IS cenll 'In poln
and a king, 1811-oddrelled, otamped
en•elopo to Ille DAILY PIWI' with your req.-.
0 lt is extraordinary that a
uniquely American phenomenon
-volunteerism -has been
omitted fr6m much of American
history. This sin of omission
is co mpounded by sins of
commission.
"Rarely have historians.
soci®gists , or even the 'pop'
freelance writers, whose
observations compose part of
soc.ial history, given the
appropriate value to volunteerism
as a social force in history.
"Furthermore, there seems to
be a parallel pattern of omission
in history between lack of
docuMentation of volunteer
participation and the lack of
documentation of the
contributions of women and an
accurate assessment of their
motivations."
-Lucille Kuehn, ''American
VolunteeriSm: An Anti~history
With Anti-heroiftes.''
nonpaid labor in order to alleviate aoclaJ ills."
OBB :TIONS
Joanne Schwartz, past vice president of
the Orange County Chapter of NOW,
agrees. "I don't object blanketly to all
volunteerism. I object when women feel
they can achieve self-satisfaction by
volunteering.
"Volunleerism isn't bad in itself. I do it
myself. There is so much good that
comes out of volunteerism."
Miss Schwartz, a law student, stressed
however that women should use
volunteerism only as a means to achieve
ch~ge.
Volunteerism has followed the course
of American history, changing 8!1 the
needs of the country change and being
challenged as the people and government
are ch81lenged with social issues and
problems.
One of the current goals of,volunteers
ls to have their donated time count u an
income tax deduction .
TAX DEDUCI'ION?
"Ag encl es and volunteer professions
alike mir .bl agree lo work together for a
nitk>nal lax deductk>n for volunteers. If
a cash gl~t deductible, surely a gift of skill and e rience should be too," says
WMCA : II for Action, a citizen com-
plaint service in New York staffed by
volunteers.
EstabU,hed by Ellen Straus, wife of
the pr_elldent of radio station WMCA,
Call r~ Action tenns · i~ workers
''volunteer professionals."
Mrs. Straus and her co-workers feel
that trained volunteers are entitled to
more recognition and rights than they
now, receive, and she baa ,gone so far as
to oper a model agreemeot soellloi: out 13
sJ)tiCific responsibilities of ,tf>e·a~ to
volmteer .
According to Call for,. AcUon, a
volunteer who wishesi a profeislonal's
Qgbta must accept a proressional's
fesponslbllities, working at a particular
job over a period of Ume on a regular
schedule. ·
To protect the agenCy, and ensure full
volunteer cooperation, Mrs. Stram sug·
gests a similar IS-point agreement for
volunteers to sign when working with an
agency.
Regardless of the level of pro-
fessionalism at which volunteers are
working throughout America. they are
donating time enthusi1stically.
Wby are they doing itl
ADVOCATE
Mrs. Kuehn, who believes sbe ls one ot
the few people who are doing research on
v•~sm, Is a voluotee' herself and
advocates volunteeri.sm tiecluse It is a
growth .,...... and does a lot for both
the participant and recipient.
It is also, she feels, an opportunity for
students to explore the more than 2,000 ~uOns open to them before com.
mitung themselves to a course of study
ln ,a specific field.
"C will always find time not to do
things f<r money," Mrs. Kuehn stated. "I
will not be moved by monetary reward-
ever. If one <mly worU tor money
you're mJsaing out on some of the ex·
cltemtnt in life. There are greater
rewards than money."
Men can serve as effectively-as-women
ln a volunteer capacity, thouab tome are
surpriled when they UUnk of themselves
. as volunteers .
Robort Guggenheim of Newport ~
a dedicated volunteer who b a
p""1dent of Big llroth<n and member ol
the board of trus1eH ol the Newport
Harbor Art Museum, Children's lfospillJ
of Oranp County and Chapman College,
serves these organiZatloni becaUle be
feels that 0 someone has to do Jt."
''There's a need for Jt,1' be aakL
"Unfortunately y6u find IO IIlllll' people
on two or three boarda. I don~ know ..,
naticin that'• as-charttably-mladed a
Amtricl.''
Guggenheim ._led culdellnet Ill< ..i.cu.c volunteer Inool-: "Wark
-(Soo-vouJNTllERS;-Plp II)
I
I
'
18 DAILY PILOT
Around
The World
In Fashion
A global l lne of fash-
ions '"ill be paraded
du r i n g the annual
lun cheoi1 benefit of the
\\'oman's Auxiliary to
the 0 r a n g e Cou nty
ti.1 e d I ca 1 ASb--ociation.
The e v e n t will take
p I a c e at I \:SO a.m.
Tuesday, ~'eb. 6, in Los
C'oyotea Country Club,
and proceeds will be
given in scbolarshlps to
students pursuing ca-
reers in I he health pro-
f essions. liiodel!ni? en-
sen1bles aro ~1n. Rob-
ert Lucas (left) a n d
rit rs. \Varre n Kramer.
LORI SUCHARD
July Date
Selected
Mr. and Pt1r1. Sidney N.
Suchard of Newport Beach
have announced the engae:e-
ment of their daughter, Lori
Anne Suc:hard to Phillip Mtrtin
~tetz_ger of Newport Beacll.
A July 7 wecldin& ii being
planned in Christ Church by
the Seo, Ball1'"·
MJ1a SQctiard Is a araduate ot Newpor~ Jtarbor Hlah
School and now 11 iludylna: at
an Oran&:e County bU1lne11
colleae.
Her fiance, son or Mrs.
Louise Pttetzger of Fairfi eld1
• •
Newpor L:ontians Fete Senior Coeds
D~P~t~~
Eaclt month the l'.onta Chill •
·or Newport llarbor selects 1.
senior g~t from oacb of lllt
N~ hill! octtooll U
_llll...z-.Qld.ol,U,,.montb,
Tiit ltlletJOn II buod oo
_lolllll'llllllP( C t t.ll I A I b I p ,_
ldlolartltlp and lk!l'Vlct 10
ld!ool. llurln,I !heir IWlllL
month. lhey 1nd lhelr moll1'1rt
1r1 boaortd 11*11 11 1 club
~.
At lhe end of the 1ChoOI
,1111', honorw Hloet the Of\I
they feel mOll qulllflecl to be.
Dlltl4ld ZOnta OlrJ .. 1.tJw.ye111
for lllllr ICilool and eoch reel· t:'J. -Iv• 1 llO Savlnp
ODIBIGH
A mombll' al tho ld>Ool choir
for tnreo )'W'I, Ruth Jean
Qulek bol)ll to major in mU1lc
llld thufor 111'11 11lor Ibo doel
..,.. tnvelln( loltowln( her .,..su.uon.
Till d•UJhltr or Mt. •nd
Mrl. Poul c. Quick or Corona
dol Mar, ii pl'Ol!idel1t of MUAlc
Muter, mullc repttllfnt1tlve
in AS8 member of '111e1plano
and adive in drama. !ht alllo
has been a member of the drill
team and madrigaJs.
ESTANCIA
Lois Leenerts, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Leenerts,
is class secretary, Speech Club
vice president and chairman
Your Horoscope
)ti.~~~~ .. .,....~ ...... ~~
CdM HIGH
Ruth Quick
o~l-cour11 and C1reor
Pay,
P11t 1ctlvlt101 lnoluckt mem-benhJp on Al'S, CSF, Spanl•h
Club, l'TSA •nd Eeology Com-
mlttoe, a r11porter and ed ilor
for Jtl Aqui\1, secret11ry or the
Student F11cully advisory
Con1ml tt ee and c I a s s
tre.a11urer.
She pinna to attend Orange
Coa.tt Colh~a:e for a year and
then transfer to eilhcr UC I or
the University of California.
Riverside. She is interested in
environmental sciences and
\\'Ould like to do research.
llTANCIA
Loli Lffntrt•
11111 man
Aft.er gi\aduatlon Wendy Rae
Smith pla~ to study in
Brlgium for a semester and
then comp lete her education
fo r a teach.Ing career in a
liberal arts college in Illinois.
She is the daughter of ~1r.
and J\1.rs. Kenneth R. Smith of
NH HIGH.
Wendy Smith
CM mGH
Adele Oliva is a Yll'iity
cheerleader, CAA treasurer
and a member or the Girls'
Tennis Team and the Educa-
tional Development Council.
~tiss Oliva, daughte r o( ~lrs.
Vincent J. Oliva of Cos ta Mesa
CM HIGH
Adele Oliva
and the 1•11 Mr, Olivo, 1' a
1973 reci pient or the DAR
Good Citizen award.
She plans to study at UCl
majoring in social science to
become an elementary school
teac her with special Interest
in teaching the handicapped.
Newport Beach. ~1lss Smith's•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;-~-----:fi"~;;;;;;mschool ac tivities in c I u d e11
membecship in Pep, Spanish FREE PATTERN and Ski clubs, AFS , GAA. An
honor student she has been a v-c1tea' of ... Y Slmt>llc..-,, McColl'•
Student Congress represen-or 111ttffkk ftMknl wltii tllis od 011d a
tative and Is a member of the ss.oo 111hil"'11.n1 p11rc1taa•.
executive council. ;~:.:: ]" lHroru .
·'*-' .. ,,..., a ~e 1-l1·7l,
i~·N. -8tteP .
To avoid dilappointment. prospective
brides are remin ded to have their weddin g
stories with black and \Vhite glossy ~holo
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Aries: Logic Dominated r.:-.:: PM lt60 lt;ott AYt. (111 UMtl11t) a'lo 1.. IUINA PARl " '21·3820
Pictures received alter that time will not
be used.
For enaagement announcements it 11 imperative that the story, alao accompanied
by 'a black and white &loiiy picture, be •.uJ>.
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline ts not met, only a Mry will
be used.
To help fill requirement• on both wed·
ding and ongaiement storto1, lorllli . ire
·available Jn all of the DAILY PILOT offict1,
Further que.Uon~ will he anawered by
Women'• Section stall members at 8'2-4321.
Along the Coast
Programs Arranged
5·day Pro9r11m
Health and C her1 o t e r
Education Institute w i 11
pruent a 5-day plan to atop
1mok1ng from Monday, Jan.
29, to Friday, Feb. 2, at 7:30
p.m. at 271 Avocado St., C.Osta
Meta.
The session is limited to 35.
Silver Anchor
Sigma Phi will meet l or a
potluck and cards Saturday,
JJri, 27, at '7:IO p.m. in tbe
l'<>mo ol Mr, aod Mrs. Glenn
Gwrnn.
Alumn1e
FRIDAY
JANUARY 26
By SYDNEY OMARR
"Would you plea1e reconr
mend two modem books on
aStrology7 " -Raul Lopez,
Santa Monica. Answer: You
asked for two, but I will elve
you three -"A Ttme for
AatrolOI)'," by Jeu Steam.
'' Attrology for the Mil Ilona,"
by Granfl.ewl and "My World
of Attrology," by Sydney
Omarr.
ARIES (Maleh l l·Aprll 111:
You may be traveling In con-
nection with money transac-
tion~ Social contact now can
prove important for fu ture ad-
vancement. Be open to sug-
gestion by Sagittarlan. Emo-
tion tends to dominate logic.
Don't expect something for
nothing.
TAURUS (April 20-h-1ay 20):
1.faintain low profile. Play
waiting game. Do more listen-
in g than talking. Permil
others to show their hands.
Situation is not what it ap-
pears on surface. Retrench.
Protect interests. Study Oocu-
ment for lega1 loophole.
GEMINI (Illy 2hlune ~):
Be ready for basic chtn1e·
connected with work pro.
euentlals would be error.~ you, find you 1timul1tlng than
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 2!): ha1 ~n true In recent put.
Information from surpriill: You get chance to move about, aourre adds to your prestl&e.
Delaney Bros. Seafoods
Older Individual hai;: your best to travel, to experiment and lO
lntere1ts at hea rt. Know lt Md create your own productl,
reapond a c c o r d I n g l y . e1slgnment1, Come out of
Capricorn poraon plays pro-shell. Be greaarloual
minent role. Gain indicated in AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
money area. 18): Restrictions 41'1' removed.
UBRA (Sept. ZS.Oct. 22 ): Goal ia closer than might bt
Accent is on gettl'* rid of apparent. Be thorough IJld
1ltuetion !hat drains yoo emo-contldent. Someone is making
lion ally and financially. Check room for you at more elevated
wltll Aries. Stop trying .to be po11ltlon. Your special abi litie.t
all thing• to all peri005. Stlve can be constructively ex·
now to be youraelf. Means ploited.
don 't carry lo1d thtlt belongs PISCES (Feb. Ii-Marcil 20):
to aomeonc else. "~ Travel, basic changes are
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): emphasized. ~tember of op.
OYEN·FRIED FISH
I llJ. lltll llllftt 1/J C, •H 1 C. Wlllle •lllMI" wl11•
IT. NII
I t . cllf ..... lll rtll'Y
• lelflflll. Cl~l•ltrto
I C. l•l"C!d "'9-.1 c""mb1
C:wl tlllfh Ill .. NIJl ... IQ P*'ts· D11 In Wlllf !mllll ,, .,,.,
""¥ H Mlt1ll1Vk0l1 "II I~ Ml,.,. .. f'tld crvmk1 "''' 111
W1114!1111 lli"flf "'-!. l ,rll•lt wlfh I ll lflll -llllllt Wiiie.
111111 111 lie! """' UHi 111oijl II mla., tr 1111111 11111 .11¥"
MlllJ. ftnt 1prlnll ltll w11-"''*" .,,. ttf'llKllW wlltl i....... -....
FRESH PETRALE SOLE •.• $1.79 lb.
(lUbjed kl IWl it.billlyJ Your personality oow could be posite sex: could play key role.
dominant .factor. Key is to be Establish communication line. u °"" Tnrv 2.1.71 ~
positive. Make new starts, Let others become aware of • {
I
contacLs. Take initiative. your ideas, concepts, am-'--------.,--,., ___ ...__,,. ,
Highlight ori ginality. Lead bitions. Speicaf docwnent niQI 2800 L1f•yetfe~ Ni wnar-t Seac ..:....
....., • ' ,...-, \: •' \ I r::ither th"an follow. 1v1e1tlttre in achievif!8 purpose. . . . ~ ~
juices flow. Imprint your •67l-J450 or 545·2217 Opo": t -6 Mo11.-Sot.; 9-f :Jro ''"·
style. ---,:,;;aaiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;,;;,;;;;~~~".:. SAGITT ARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dt>e. 21 ): Tcnd~ncy.now_is ~o
Ji ve In ¥.'Orld of dl u11on. Key is
lo s~arate fact from fiction.
11ave ·fun but don't foo l
yourself. 1.f1sa1ae will become
lncre11ln~ly clear. Aqnarian
could play important role.
<l,4PRICORN (Dec. iz.Jan,
19); ~10fe persons relate lo ••
VINTAGE CARS
this weekend on the MALL
South Coast 'Ptua · Ohio and Charle• Metzger Ot
D1dls1, also l1 a graduate of
NHHS. Currently he i1 aervlni
in the Navy and 11 on a tour ot
duty of Vietnam. New officers of the Silver
Anchor Auxiliary, Huntington
Intercommunity Hospital will
be lnttalled Wednesday. J an.
31 , in the Huntington Harbour
Beach Club.
Harbor Alumnae CIUb ol
Alpha Garruna Delta · ha1
scheduled a bridp lllllCboon
for Tuesday, Jan, 30 in tbl
Corona de! ~far home of Mn.
Jorge Luhan. New member1
are welcome to attend.
oedurt1. Dependent ukl for·i-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "'°"' tl!Jn yllll might be wm.
ing to cxinctdt. Key Mtf is to
gel thoughta, ldus on paper: Wedding
In Offing
E1tancla lllah S c h o o I
graduate• Ro1emary Van
Schai k and David Dickel plan
to be married March 10 In the
Chapel of the Bel11, Anaheim.
Their cmjlDgement ha1 been
announced by her pc1ren11, Mr.
and ~1rs. John Van Schaik of
Costa Meta. ~1r. and Mr1,
Courlney Dickel, al.so of Colta
Me111, are parent1 or the
future brldeeroom who 11t-
tends Orange Coa11 College.
Good Deed.
make tht ICOliO
Sundays
In the CJiijUl!Qf
Mrs. Wilfred Ro.se will be
pr11ident for a second term ,
and serving with her will be
the Mrnes. Fred Gibson. David
Reese and Darwin Kassell,
vice presidents ; Louis Leopold
and Dale E ri ck s on ,
1acretaries. and Richard
Crandall, treasurer.
BSP
Beta Alpha Pi Chapter ,Beta
Handicapped
fAlt MiMiit 111iWLl2lllb"t6 oaoi • $169 OAPAOOLA . .. · .. · .... "·"
OUI owfi HOMi 111116 MOUfli WlliilHa 99"'
t'' L•m011 Meringue PIE 11:1e. •1.w •
lt.A~IAN DILi
a11tAUUHf
9Ake.lllY-Glt0CElllY
91!1!11:-W\ME -
'"'" GtH ""'II c ...... 1/Jl /71
-.,II Ad•m• •I M .. nell•, M'"'tlntton 8Hch,
0... ., .... Nt ... I 0.11 o...,r1tioll1 ... C.tllftfllll, !fl °""""' 1¥f t 21 , ....... "'"' tlf"Y!19 ,.llllt~ltll l fHll, '""""' Ylllfy, C1111 M ... , HIWf'l't • •II el o,_.. Cfff!f't
11Ew HOURS ••"' " .. ,., -,.,. , .. , n IUlllDAY 1H CLOSD MONDAY
Education
Jacquelyn Blotner and
James Push of the Lon g
Beach School District's speciall
education classes will speak to
members of the Orange Coun-
ty Chapter of Southern
Calirorn ia Associalion for the
Education of Young Children
Tuesday. Jan. 30, at 7:30 p.m.
in the Garden Grove United
~1cthodist Church.
Open House
Costa Mesa Preschool will
ha\·e an open house at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday, J.an. 31.
Outline what YoU want, what
you are prepared to give.
CANCER (June ll·July 22 )>
You receive proof that one you
care for does feel sa me way
about you. Basic domntlc ad·
justment is featured. Stri~t
for harmony . Avoid needless
disputes. YOWlg· pers on
brings pleasure. ~,ride of
achievement is spotlighted.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take
specia1 care where land, riill
estate deals enter picture.
Protect Jong-range Jriterests.
See situations , pcrsof\I as the~
actually exist . Steady Pf\CI ,
necessary. Rushing p 1 a
JOE FORRESnR
HAIRDRESSERS
Joe Ferrester
Ptter Alv•re1
Cerol Kob1c:ker
Styli,ts
1,IC:IALl%1NG
IN
HAltCUTTING
~---FOR APPOINTMENT----;
645-5370
J90 I , 17111 St., C:ffll MoN
Nht T• ....... MOlittt .............. , .........
t I •
t
Jl•lllY.
.!I II &I\ all
All of ATTA'•' 1lngu l1rly dl1tlnctlv4 ~umiture
is marked down, Thia mtltnt qu11lty .aofaa,
chain, dining t1bl .. , Will Unlta, and every
imaginable d .. lgn 1ccesoory, including an t K·
tremely la111e selectlon of dr1pea 1nd wall·
paper, Now 11 your tim1 to ,..,, 0111n Mon·
day thni Stturd1y,
•
)'.
1(
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I
•
•
• •
•
..
• •
' . • • • ) • r . .
I.
• • I
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•
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Thur1d.,, Janu.a"' 25 1173 ~
;Squirrel Fund
~--
~ouples Exc hange Vows
Fa'ils-Nuts?
~
LEIGHTON-WHITE·
DcAni'f White became the
bride of Steven Leighton dur.
ing Ceremonies conducted by
Rev. Roger Huebner in the
United Methodi st"
Orange coo.t COiiege. Her
husband. a graduate ur La
Quinta High SChool, attends
Golden West College. They
will make their home in
Ql!l'deo-Grove.
Sdn ~·rancisco, · Schoo! t,
Jl'i11a11ce. llis par~n1 Jr'• ;\!··
and Mrs, Johu ~rrr:11·11 ~,r
Vubri City.
WHITAK ER -WILEY By ERMA DOMBECK
Evoi-ybody tolkll aboul glv·
h111l1e Amerlcari ho>Q!use!!!·~4---aal,iry, ·oo 00; one ever does
~ anything about it.
~ hr-Co6ta-Mesa •. ---·-W
Their parents are Mr. and
'... Mrs. Robert Wblte and Mr.
aOOMrs. Davitt Leighton, air
I ~C~NN-DYER
Dr. and Mrs. Thomfs Calvin
DY.er's Newport Beach home
was the setting for the ma r-
·-Nancy--Jemr \V1lrv t.1~C'hmr·
the· bride of .J cf!rt•\ l )t·"1•1
\Vh.ilaker dUl'HW. t ci L ·u•J.!UL;.;;
pertorn1ed by 1hf' 1~\·1 1';1111 ~ he QnlYJ>OSitive th1ngO u·r· --l
116-hQur work Week has
brot,lght about within the past
• • •
10 years has been the develop-to which I have been
meat of the 18-bour deodorant. cootribuUng money for every
{We may be dumb .. but we job I did that would normally ~ dOn't sweat.)
While everyone sits around be done· by professionals.
baQUng over our social Shaving the dog's rump -
aeeurity, our sick leaves and $8. c:aar vacaUons, a housewife in Telephone answering_ service
Te:us has "°1ne up wlth a for f11.mily -$15.
solution. Counseling of son tQ
-or~::Mo~sahonJ was Mr!I. ·
Debbie Sheaffer: bridesmaids ·
were' the Misses sue CarlsOn ;
and-;.Jud1-0gr1en~ man was
Gary 'Logsdo.n, and ushers
were Rob Sheaffer an d Dan
White.
'I1te newlyweds, b o t h
graduates of Estancia lligh
School, will reside in Costa
Mesa.
HARTLE-HOWELL
Sbe has established a Squir-alleviate deep depression from
reJ Fund. For example, getting a haircut -$25.
everytime she fixes her own Auditioning amateur drum-MARRIED FIVE DECAOES Westminster Presbyterian hair, she tosses $4 into the mer wbo got 5 drums and a 6-Church, Escondido was the
Sgui.rrel Fund. If her cleaning page booklet for Christmas -Mr. end Mrt. Ernest L. Oldfield , setting for the marriage oJ
lady doesn't show up, she $15. Deborah Jan Howell and Ken-
tosses another $13 into the Mediator between daughter neth William Hartle.
lund and'ttshealtersberown locked in bathroom for two Golden Anniversary Their parents are Mr. and clothes, she oompensates the hours and son waiUng to get in Mrs. Jack Howell of Corona
Squirrel Fund. She has -$12. . . del Mar and Mr. and Mrs. A.
become the most affluent Medical fees for healing in· Oldf1'e' Ids Cele' prate Kenneth Hartle of Valley squirrel in· Texas. fected pierced ear -$10. Center.
During the past week, I Catering an after·bours Attendants were Mrs. James
decided to Initiate a Squirrel slumber party -$25. Serrano, matron of honor; the
...-Fund.at my house. The results Ironing hair to straighten It Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. brothers, Sidney and Ronald Misses Carol Blanpied, Ann were rather astounding. -$8. Oldfield of Huntington Beach Mount and their families. Wilson and Martina Munday,
.. The kids found me packing PLUS all the usual duties of celebrated their goWen an-Covering the table was a bridesmaids ; Tony Borders,
' my suitcase yesterday mom--laundry, f®d service, chauf-niversary during a reception gold cloth, ,a gift, which best man; Dick Jeanso.n, Ran-
ing. feuring, bookkeeping, maid given in the Huntington Beach originally was used on one or dy Veach and Steve l>ahl,
' "Where are you going?" service and liveJn roommate. borne or their son and the tables at the opening of ushers, and Michael Serrano, ',• "-y ··•ec1. I lcked ~-u11:: --. p up my suitcase and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. the Kennedy v:nter in ring bearer.
• "Mama bas to say good-turned to them. "Believe me, Douglas Oldfield. Wa~ton, D.C. The bride is a graduate or
' bye," I said soberly. it it .w..-e left to mel'.~-1?,-Also. hosting the party was _.Mr.:.,.and Mrs. Oldfield were -c;prona~del Mar High School-> My husband-appeared with stay. lllke yro. But frankly their other son Norman Old-married in Toronto, Canada·' and her husband is a graduate ~. puzzlement Written all over I said turning to my husband, field. ' Jan. 27, 1923. They have lived of Escondido High School.
f--bis-f8ce..-!!Wbat1s-going-oo'f."'-.,_,,,,l-lmow-what-yoo.-make-a---Among--guests-attending-in Huntington-Beach-for-rf -Both-attended-Humboldt State-
, I shoved the list under his year and the simple truth is were the honoree's five grand-years and were owners of the College and they will reside in ~ no.se. "Thia ls a Squirrel Fund you can'l afford me." childr~ and Mrs . Oldfield's West Side Market for 15 years. Valley Center. · -· ).
• i
I
i • • ' I
From Page 17
• • • Volunteers Force ·shapes America
if it's a good cawe and you
have '°8Je interest in it. There
are so many areas lbat can
use people and their services."
Jack Glenn, owner of the
Jack Glenn Art Gallery,
Corona del Mar, serves on the
boards of the Newport Harbor
Art Muaeum and Sohth Coast
Community Hospital and is
·president of the boards of the
Laguna , Beach Art Museum
• llDIUJ
end South Coast Repertory
Theater.
'JUST DEDICATED'
"I've· never thought of
my.sell as -a volunteer. I'm
just dedicated to organizations
that benefit the community.
I've never considered it
work," he said.
rewards. It can give vaJuable
training that is a step to paid
employment, contrary to
NOW's statement t h a t
"volunteering rarely qualifies
(women) for well-paid posi-
. tions, !hould they be in real
need of employment."
Two women will testify to
this, both former volunteers
who now are working in paid
positions directly stemming
ham their volunteer servic2 .
for my job," she sa"id.
OUTLOOK SHARED
More than 1500 Qrange
Coast residents share the
outlook of Mrs. MacDonald,
Mrs. Arundell,. Glenn and Gug-
genheim. 'Ibey have been plac-
ed in volunteer positions by
the South Orange County and
West Orange County bureaus
serving nearly 200 agencies.
Others have been placed by
volunteer6 b u re a u s in
businesses and on college
campuses, and still others are
working on their own.
';The heart of volunteering
is the chance given one to al-
ter the future of another per-
son and make it better because
you were there. Kindness, like
ocean waves, spreads to dis..
tant shores of which we know
not."
NOW says: "VolWlteerism,
thus, has served to give
Women an illusion o f
participation in the world at
large. It has created a pseudo-
world, largel y pcpulated by
women, but still within tbe do-
mains of male authority and
t age o eir au er,
Christina Lynn Dyer 2nd
Steven Edward i1cCann.
The newly weas arc li1 \\'
students at C;i l \Vestern
University, San Diego.
The new Mrs. McCann is :1
graduate of UCLA where she
majored in polilical science.
She attended Newport Harbor
High School and is a National
Charity League dcbutante.
Her husband served two
ears in Vietnam and is a
raduate of t University of
, . ' '
horne of hPr 1>al'l·r11-.. \\1. <illd
fllrs. Robert k \','
Parents of thl' IJruJr1•rnn
ar~ i\1r. arl.d ~1. \\ .lu.
Dean \\'hitr1 k1'1 ,, 1•
Laguna Bcttc)1
Attendants v.1·1'•· \I r. ·1
Fornev. Miss DilHH' JI urdt,
J im i·tarrison . l\nfJt'!·t \\'11
and Michat•l \Vhit·1k1·1· .
The ne\v\yweds.' .~r:id11:i1,
of Lagwu1 Bcal'h lli!!h S..•l\1~·
will residl• 111 S;1n Ju: 1
Capistrano . VAN WALRAVEN·
CO~N
Catharine Elizabeth . Connl-;:~t;;"YJ{;j;;r;;;;:;;;;;;;---,--. -~--..._
and Glenn 4rlhur Van
Walraven exhcanged vows and
rings before the Rev. Dr.
Charles H. Dictenfield in St.
Andrew.'s Pr~sby,ter-ian
Church, Newport Beach.
Tbe.ir parentS are Mr. and
Mrs. Ral~ Burton COnn of
Newpott, Be'cb 'and Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Van Walraven of
Santa Ana.
Miss Jean Slattery was the
maid of honor , and
bridesmaids were the Misses
UFF ELL'S
/.UPHOLSTERY
When Yo• Wa•t
The lest
I f22 Harbor Blvd.
Costo M"a -5'48-0259
@o~~1i~!s!!,~;V(i
Women• Appar~_i by
e Norman Wiatt e Bleyle
Also Golf Weir
2711 £cut Coo•t Hwy.
Coro~Q HI Mot
•73-4740-
Jllll Fitzgerald , Marlene Silv-l~iiii::i:::::iiiii:iiii:iiii:~::.:iiiii:~:'.---..:~~~~~-~--, erburg and Lenore Weiss. II
=~.~~;'ii"~::e':! ~~~~ LONG SHI FTS-BEACH OR-PATI O
ce and Robert Conn, Tony
Sahagun and Gary V)ln
Walraven.
The bride is a graduate or
Newport Harbor High School
and now Is a student at
Buying
Budget~~t
"Please, mother, please"
isn't the answer to a teen-
ager's dressing on a modest
allowance. ·
If you must stick to a
budget, buy your clothes extra
carefully with switching-about
in mind .
If you have sisters who wear
the same size, you might
merge your clothing
allowances and buy parts
within a· pre-determined color
scheme so you can have a
larger number of items to mix
and match.
SN.th Coast Pima -Costo M"a -loWff ""'91. 5"n end of moll.
DirRtly ac.rou from Woolworths -Pho11e 546-2066
BIG SA LE
NOW
IN PROGRESS !
225 E. 17th St. -COSTA MES A
548-277 8 t diamond
inventory
The lack of financial reward
for doini a job does .oot bother
Glenn and be states that
"interest is the important
thing. OUr responsibility is to
make more people familiar
with the organizations so they
can help.
..!!J find -no reluctance OD tiE
part of most people to
participate. I just wish there
was more time."
Vivian Anmdell, a teacher
at Hope Haven School for
retarded children in Costa
Mesa, worked at the school for
a--year-and a -half as a
·volunteer before being hired
as a teacher.
"·The national average for
volunteering is fOllr"' hours a
week," said Eugenia Jones,
director of the West Orange
County bureau. "These are the
magic four hours. H everyone
would volunteer w.e would
change the face of America.
male-s tatus-determination. Itl1I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;~;:;;;:;;::====;:;:===~ has kept large numbers of r
capable women out or the
labor market, out of com-
petition with men-(maybe also
out of mental institutions)."
e ••nltAllMrlc•rd • • M1,1tr C.h~rgt t
;-
;
l • ~
J,
·" , ... llllrt ~ ~ Ari .... -.. ~-' ... $1100 l!IOflll .., lfllt aptcill ,
~~· c1m PIU WPI dl1lllOINL V.,Y
IMillllllt 111d 11t1lltnl $595 u.rtty ;•. Doll'! 111111
11111 -' offer.
.4' C.arlt C¥11 Gl-d.. $395 $uptltl ...... llty.
1.0I CIFlt ..,.,, di""°"IL ""00
f.tQlltflt quollty. " real "'7 buutv 1., .,1,
1.J4 Clr1t -r1ld c"" dl1lllOIHI. Ul'iDf
Mock ol' b. txc.llont $J 500
Ylluo II only I
1.Jf C.afll !otll woighl d\1mood 11r•
r111111. '"'° fll1flil'lg di,. $ J 000 _..,. Mt lftlo 1 ~ cult 1 Jlllow told 1111ok. .91: C.arll Mlrqul .. di-IL A ,..1
-· ' """'"'""' $J 900 price. Youn for OIOl\I • -~~ fllUll.,. .... Cent 1111• SllaPI ..........
Besides personal satisfac-
tion, volunteerlsm bas other
MUSIC BOXES
WAY PAVED
"You get addicted to these
children," she said. "I had no
e~ence with retarded dlil-
dien1 before. Volunteer work
paved the way for my job."
Pilople Shotqd volunteer, she
feels, because it's a "very sat-
~iSlying and fulftlling Uting to
do." Mrs. Arundell also thinks
that potential volunteers
should carefully examine their
true feelings and decide wheth-
er or not they really want to
donate their services and time.
"It's a very personal thing,"
~e explained. "Volunteering
ii!! not for everyone."
Loyce MacDonald, execu-
"Volunteers add a personal
touch you can't buy. There is
no remuneration. It costs the
volunteer_ Those of us Wt\O
were born lucky need to help
those who weren't.
"America is based on the
volunteer system. We s~ed
it. Taxpayers do not · have to
pay for these services at $1.65
per hour. The cost would run
into· the millions if we had to
pay.
Evelyn Davis, rounder of the
Los Angeles .volunteer
Bureau, who now is retired
and living in Laguna Hills,
views voJunteerism from a 50-
year perspective.
The Los Angeles bureau was
founded, she said, to do a bet-
ter job of fitting people into
the increasing number ot op-
portunities for service.
"Volunteerism is tbe basis
of democracy," she stressed.
"Without it, America would
close up and go down." st-for ludo • low 1 I
eoi.r, 1:111 111d ci,rity. $500
"" .-ctllent INy II
... ""'_ ..... ,. $•~ 900 1 • " ,.,., IMil!llnl di_... jjJ,
'tl'Ve· di"rector of the South Or--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""1J ange;COtmty Vollmteer Bureaul1
. receiVed.ber tr.aining as an ad-
ministrative volunteer at Fair-
v.ieyr §tate Hospital.
Emlt.nt '°"'· ' ~•11 Otn!lll hl!t Of ·--
NOW •••
Serving Th•
HARBOR
AREA!
5895
A SPICIALTY AT •• ,
salitna's
CARD I. •IPT S!fOP
c~tet •nd ,,__,.. •lllO fftl\Jrlfl9 costU-1..,.1.., ,.., All11~t1 A"-.t M ...... 11
Ht11t1..-. letcll -HM'lll
llnkA-'clnl -~ °"' ..... (OURTISY Gll'T WRAP
~ alSo served as an ,a~
tant Girl Scout leader and .was
; ·m charge of the bookstore at
her chnrcb before assuming
Her current paid position.
"The experience an d
knowledge I · gained from
volunleer work qualified me . .
with -~ • •
• SWIMMAR
-• CRUISE WEAR
•RESOttT WEAR
OPlll AU YUi
'
THE WORLDS LARGEST SELECTION
' OF FIN I WOMI NS SWIM WEAR & ACCESSORIES
I I 'tsae lc.-4 -...._. a.,t
L _ 390 •· MYHtMnlfl st --costil -
NOlll to Ralph'• Mlrbl, Co<. of TUllln Ave. -541 6601
Allt ... llWal I I ......
------~-·-· .. ·-----~-/
'
THE GREATEST SALE WE HAVE EVER HAO.
COMBINED MERCHANDISE FROM ALL OF'
OUR OTHER STORES, ASSURES ·you OF
GREAT SELECTION •.• FANTASTIC SAV-
INGS!
OFF
AND MORE SALE
e _sotKTAILS
e CAPRIS-& COA'TS --e DRESSES
e FORMALS
e COATS
e AT-HOME-WEAR -c:r--
VIA LIDO NEWPORT BEACH
'
SPOITS SINCE 1924 "WE DO IT BETTER"
FLASH! FLAS D •
NEW SHIPME NT OF NORDIC!\
SKI BOOTS HAVE ARRIVED
t lneludlng the ''Yellow Banana'' J
*1 A & T LAMINATED
Te111pt1! Ski • l>levodg locl Toe •
h Ko Slsp In H••I 0 Tom1t Polc1
·' *2
LOTS OF'
SNOW IN
LOCAL MOUNTAIN S
TEN.NIS
DRESS
SALE
*3
• Special Group• of Our Regular
Stock at Give Away Prices
From 10 to 700/o Off.
• HIAD ''XRI'' ~
--..EWEST -ALUMINUM.
TENNIS RACKET from Hea d
:;~:n9 .~~~-~'.~~ .1.~1~~ •• • $3600
!';~~ ~l~~-.~1~·.·~-~~~~~-. $39'5
ROSSIGNOL
Ol:YMPIQUE Ski
Ne•odo S!11p.ln
Binding-To1Joic Pol11
KNEISSL SKI
Geie Step-
In Binding-
Tomi< Pol11
•to. 76.90
lfG, 148.00
$12595
IEG, 209.4.S
$15 595
•
•
•
%9 DAIL'( PILOT Thllf$da.J, JanUMY 25, 1~'71
AMBLER
TUMBLEWEEDS
GOING MY WAY1 ~15 !j()Y?
.: '1'•
MUTI AND JEFF
-"--, _ _....,...;;. ..... --
FIGMENTS
, .. -
1 ~'# °"". ¥llldey ..-----
by Tom K. Rpn
WJW LUCKY!
NE l°™ER AM I!
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
r..e~.ct.lve~ ~pcwh>&~I
GORDO
...
@
I
I
~6
J.11<1' AN . SteHT-
POINT/!12/
r-N_A_N_C_Y_~r-,--------'~--<,.._ ______ __,by Emie Bushmiller ANIMAL CRACK.ERS
M Y DOG HAS
MORE FRIENDS
THAN I HAVE
~ ..--.. .......... _-..,,ro -~"'"''L~ ....--.__
TODAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLE
Yesterday's Pu..zzle SoNed: ACROSS
1 Buddhist
monks
6 ----lolv
1 I Blue gra1s
14 Come up
15 ShYn
16 Uncooked
17 Sibeli1,1s
composi1ion:
2 WO!dS
19 Mouths
20 Ouahf1ed
21 Teas11d:
ln!o•mal
22 News sO\l•te
24 Mike muddy
26 Took long
step•
27 Diago1ge: Z
WOfdS I JO Kind of
re1ail9f"
32 1/t20thofa
piaster
33 Part of the
bod,
34 Youngsters'
·~· 37 P\8nt in so~
38 Mild oath
39 China: Comb.
fMm
40 Colo<
41 Feminine
name
.t2 Hurl 1ock.1 et
"' 43 Holy people
I • •
•
1' ..
•S ins~
•6 Ac1 divisjons
•8 B11d part
<19 W ines
SO Parent
52 Amt1.
Humn1-
poet
56 Mon -:My
'"""' 57 Go terther
60 Beverage
61 Moun11ina of
Russia
62 -----of~
63 Bird
64 Dogma
65 Orche&1rt1I
group
DOWN
1 Molten rock
2 Egyptian
3 $ 001
23 Live
25 P1oooun
26 Ocean
constituent
Tl Oi<ector'i;
conc9fn
28 C1uising
29 Type of
4 Avowed sorme1
5 Behold 30 Martin and
6 Composi:r' n Rusk
7 Oed1c 111e 31 Differerit
8 Fail1ow1n 33 Sheep'scry
9 Eng .••• ; Univ. 35 The "A" ot
subject '"A.O."
10 Lil a sk1Hful 36 i. on one's
men nor
1 I R1tio
w" 38 Containers
39 lie in&Clive 12 Moved a boM
13 lnlo1mecl
18 C111iH
41 Oiseppurs: Z
WOfdS
'ft 7 I ' 10
II
: 'l'f
JI ·' . l2 "
"" .1: .. " 11 :/) ..
' '7 .. " " " •
42 Offense
44 Against
Preli.o:
45 M9flu items
46 Sudden flood
47 One showing
promise
48 Part of the
"m
50 Muw.le<
Mikita
51 lnac11ve
53 P'rtce of
something
64 Marine fish
55 Pos5euni.
w ord
58 Yo1kshire
1iver
59 Smoket'•
concern
II " ll
16
19
" ' ~ -,_ ..
I "
11 ,,
w l 1' .. ..
"
,,. -" -.,
I .. " .:~ .. " ~ r141" " " -" -~ 1:
~
THAIS ·BECAUSE
SHE WAGS HER
TAIL INSTEAD
OF HER
TONGUE
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
WHA'T WOULD 8E THE
COURT'S ATTITUDE IF I
ASKED A PSYCHIATRIST
TO SEE L'r'NN ! SILVESTER?
'
I
MISS PEACH
i
j
I r /I I • ,' .. :1y
! -. •
DICK TRACY
VERY
FUNNY
·:
by Charles M. Schulz .----,..---.......:.
I
BUT SHE TOLD BOTH Ae8EY AND ME
THAT SHE WAS AFRAID OF ~ER
MU58AHD •.• THA1'5
WHY SHE LeFT HIM!
W".N All:ll YOU 1.00l<ING AT ltVi
~ F\ANl>ILV? C\?N'T '11)1.1
THINK l 'M GliTTIN ON ?
, ,
,1 .. · 1r. . .. ,, .
'(.,
I I
I
AAT~!IHADA~
6(Xl? 5f'EECH 601N6 1lm ~A MINVTE!
by Harold Le Don
1-10, eecAUSE SHE'S IM OTHER WORDS,
AMNESIC ••• DOESN 'T WHATEVER SHE REMEMBER AMVTHlt-16 FEARED 8EFOR.!
PRIOR TO THE THE ACCIDENT, SHE
AGCIOeHT! MO LONGER. ~EARS .
•
FKANl<L"'f, r T...al.(6»<T
'>t1IA we11:E
ALl'•APY """' ...
,r.' . .J
' '' I _,r . .. -.·
by Mell
1->S
-TOSSING AN CU>
ARTIF1CIAL. LEG AWAV
IN 'TMI'. PAIU( I
•
.
by ...... ......w.
i --
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd Johnson
by Roger Bolen
~ HE;c>:; "R~ 1SM't !
:J: (J!lt>fli:SfMlD lHAT 11.l .
SOME MAOOKCITIE>1~
li'>a(eT Cl>Jj &111\Je I& ClPfl
THE GIRLS
~ 1-:~
"Tbote i:aewlyweds, aut door, are certalnJy settling don
&o man1ed We ln a hurry -all the)' do IJ argue and DOW
abe's packing to leave b1m acatn."
DENNIS THE MENACE
,.
I
(
•
•
'
I .
!
• . •
• -• . •
·' • t
' •
t
• • t
~
-• ..
-• 1 -• •
• • ..
'.
11
,,
I
I, ..
I
•
'I
' ' I
I I
I
I '
~
• I
-,, ..
• ...c' !'.::_:""-"',..,_..:._;' '.=""~.c_:""c.:."':.:_• ''-'.".;__' ----"''"_. ~ , .. :..:..___-I
.
FABRIC CITY •
8878 WARNER AVENUE
(
NEAR MAGNOLIA e FOUNTAIN VALLEY
SELLING OUT COMPLETELY! I I
EVERY LAST ITIM IN OUR STOCK ... EVERY ONE OF ,OUR STORE FIXTURES ... EVERY ARTICLE OF STORE SUPPLllS, EqUIPMINT AND STORE NECESSITIES ... ALL ARE INCLUDED IN THIS DRASTIC SACRIFICE! IF YOU 1AIE IN THE MARKET FOR YARDliGE, PAT· TIRNS, NOTIONS 01 STORE FIXTURES ... COME IN AND' IUY WITH EVllY DOLLAR YOU CAN SPARE! YOU MAY NOT SEE GINUINI BARGAINS LIKE THESE FOR MANY YU.RS TO COMI.
REGARDLESS OF THE LOSS JANUARY 26th
AT 10 A.M. OUR PURPOSE IS CLIAR ... WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR STORE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY . . . SELLING OUT COMPLETELY AT THIS LOCATION ... AT SENSATIONAL PRICE REDUCTIONS THROUGHOUT THE EN· TIRE STOCKI NOTHING RESERVED ... NOTHING HELD IACK! ALL PRICES HAVE IEEN SLASHED TO THE IONE.,, TO MAKE SURE THAT WE ARE COMPLETELY SOLD OUT AT THIS LOCATION ... WITHIN THE TIMI ALLOnlD. IT IS A COMPLETE LIQUIDATION OF STOCK AND STORE FIXTURES TO THE IARE WALLS.
McC11ls, Simplicity, Butterick
ind others. CHOICE OF THE HOUSEi
-. .
DRAPE TRIMS
1/3 OFF!
I
IANM•11tRIC4Ri-I l.
STORE HOURS: SHOP FRIDAY 'JIL 5:30 p.M.
THIS IS A SACRIFICE IN DEAD JARNEST ... TO TURN THE ENTIRE STOCK AND STORE PIXTURES INTO CASH ... AS QUICl!LY AS POSIBLEI A COST ... NEAR COST ... BELOW COST .. , MAKES NO DIFFER· INCE. WE ARE WELL AWARE THE EXTREMELY LOW PRICE IS THE ONLY THING THAT WILL INSURE QUICK LIQUIDATION OF THIS FINE STOCKI THIS SALE IS LIMITED TO OUR STORE IN FOUNTAIN VALLEY AND THE SALE PRICES WILL IE FOUND IN THIS STORE ONLY. THIS IS WHEU THE ACTION IS!ll OUR OTHER STORES WILL CONTINUE WITH "BUSINESS AS'USUAL."
1/3 OFF! 4~::. P~~.~!~5 fllllll._..._ ... D._.R_.E .. S ... S 11111F,..A ... B.,.R_.111111C11111S.._. ...........
REG. $3.49 $229
FAKE FURS
Prints & Solids NOTIONS
Entire Stock of Sewing Ac-
cessories . . . Including
Threed, Zippers, Rick Reck,
See,;, Binding, Bies Tepe,
Lac•, Braid, TrimmingS, Pins ,
Needle1, Etc.
TAFFETA
Ast. Colors & P1tterns CLOSE OUT y ..
REG. 69c 35¢ PRINTS
CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. $4.50 $288
REG. 80c 45¢ CLOSE OUT Yd.
CLOSE OUT ... REG. '$6,00 $388
NEW COTTONS & CLOSE OUT Yd.
COTTON BLENDS 100% POL VESTER ONE GROUP REG. $3.49 $229 REG. to $1.59 69¢ (lQSEO.UT
CLQ.SE=--OUT Yd.C. REG."$4;69 $2·97
CLOSE5108UT Y4. $129 CLOSE OUT Yd.
72'' NYLON Wid~!!~~ c~~~!~inh
NETTING ONE GROUP . REG. $1.98 . 89¢
CELOSE OUT Yd. 19¢ CLOSE OUT Y,.
45,, DENIM SEERSUCKER
d Prints & Solids Polyester & Cotton Bien s ONE GROUP REG. to $2.69 98¢ REG. to $2.98 3· 9¢
CLOSE OUT Yd. . ' CLOSE OUT Yd.
45'' COTTON Jersey Pr1nts
TIERRY REG. $2.89 '79¢ REG. $2.39 $1' 39 CLOSE OUT Yd.
CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. $3.59 $149
GINGHAM CLOSE OUT Yd.
CH ECKS REG. $3.98 $198
REG. $1.29 89¢ CLOSE OUT Yd. .
CLOSE OUT Yd. UNDER CURRENT
TERRY
VELOURS
Choice of Colors REG. $3.98 $269
CLOSE OUT Yd.
COTION
VELOURS
$288
•
A w•shabl• luKury underliner
for dresses in • choice of
many colors ••. Also en ideal
curtain fabric:.
R09. $1 .49 4 $100 CLOSE Yds.
OUT . . . . . . for
QUILT FABS
Solids & Prints REG. to $3.10 $149
CLOSE OUT ...
A wld• HIM:tlon of 100% cotton•, cottons and polyester, cotton and d1cron, and
many other fine fabric mtxtura ••• mostly No Iron fabrics ••. In 1olkl colors,
atrl,.... chKlu, ,1aid1and1•f• colorful prints.
REG. TO $1.98 •ot· 1o SJ.00 ONE GROUP 49 C ONE GROUP $129
CLOSE.OUT • • • yd CLOSEOUT • • • Yd.
REG. TO $2.49 .... to S4.00 ONE GROUP 9 8 C ONE GROUP $149
CLOSEOUT • • • yd . CLOSEOUT • • • Yd.
DRESSY FABRICS TAFFETAS, ORGANZAS, IROCADES, SATINS, AND MANY OTHER FABRIC$ FOR THOSE EXCITING FASHION FOR AmR 5 WEAi AND FORMALS.
ONE GROUP
REG. TO $2.49
CLOSE OUT PRICE
ONE GROUP
REG. TO $5.95
CLOSE OUT PRICE
ONE GROUP
REG. TO $7.50
CLOSE OUT PRICE
98~
$1~.'
$2~.'
CORDUROY
ASSORTED COLORS AND PRINTS
ONE GROUP REG . TO $3.19 5169
CLOSE OUT PRICE Yd.
oNE GRouP REG. TO $5.00 s229 ,.
CLOSE OUT PRICE ,._
. ... ' ,.
, DOUBLE KNIT
60" Wide ... l 00 % Polyester & Acrylic ... Choice ·
of many colors and prints.
SPECIAL GROUP
REG. TO $7.98
CLOSE OUT PRICE
CLOSE
00
OUT Yd. $259
60" COTTON KNITS REG. $2.10 $148
CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. $4.50 $288
CLOS£ OUT Yd.
Acrylic & Polyester
60" DOUBLE KNITS REG. $3.4?" $199
CLOSE ~our u . REG. to $5.50 $329
CLOSE OUT Yd.
60" Polyester.
DOUBLE KNITS REG. $6.50 s4&0
CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. $7.98 $560
CLOSE OUT Yd.
BLOUSE & SHIRT
FABRICS
1/3 OFF!
54" BONDED
ACRYLICS
Choice of Colors ONE GROUP
. CLOSE'50UT $1 97
72'' FELTS
Wide Choic• of Colors
REG. $3.49 $229
CLOSE OUT Yd.
9x12
FELT SQUARES
c1osi our2~25¢
65 ~. Dacron, 35 ~. Cotton Bland_._._spoRT CLOTH REG. $1.29 I In solid colors & prints •ntire ot CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. to $2.69 $169 R~G. $l.9& $129 CLOSE OUT Yd. CLOSE OUT Yd.
REG. $2'39 $149 60" BANLON
CLOSE OUT Yd. REG. $3.39 $229
100% COTTON CLOSE OUT Yd.
PRINTS ACRYLIC PLAID
J 00% ACRYLIC REG. to $4.99 $297
FABRICS CLOSE OUT Yd •
REG. to $4.00 $229 ARNEL CLOSE OUT Yd. .
JERSEY TRIGGER REG. $2.98 $1DJ CLOS;$t~~;·~:~ $149 CLO~E=;~~ ~
CoHon Knits PRINTS
---------. REG. $;.98 $197 SHOP DAIL y CLOSE OUT ...
9:30 to 5:30 ~~21ic Kn2i•:
· CLOSE OUT ...
F~ABRIC . CtTY FIXTURES
FOR SALE 8878 WARNER AVENUE ·ALL OR PART
NEAR MAGNOLIA • F-OUNTAltLVALLEY
\
I. ,
'
ZZ DAILY PILOT
PUBUC NOTlC:S PUBUC NOTICE
"'liltoUI IVll•IU ~OUitA..CI MO J).t<A MOTICI Of' PUILK MUll ...
•AMI ITATIMIHiT ..... u•••MCY oalNMMtc:I °" "'' lnATt•• TO ""' NILIMt..,.., ,,_ ......... ..,.._. -~ CITY COU..CIL Oii TMI CITY Of' CUITM. •lAWT AHLKATIOM .-Olt • ......,_. n 1 COSTA MIU Mt.•TU .. A •1Mh'I"• TMI l"IVl·TIMI CUrTAL lM>
l --vt'40N·VIOAti.IOOI ll!ALTY1 ~)1 DAY l)(TIMJIOtf 1:0 Otl~fll.t.MC I ,,_ PlOVIMl.NT , .. 00 ..... -TO HO. ...... ,,,... "·· 5"" AM. c.11-llf, INTl.llM I.._ ll•f,tU,f.oMS VIM PUIL.C TIU.1Uf"041TATtOll : nJW THl ..CITV COIJN(IL _~ Tt4!._ Cl,.., lllYtCl IN~ .... COUNTY=---"-~ • ~ _,, te. ~ Oii COCTA ¥AA~C>Oel ttElllY OI.• L Millet 11 .:ii• lbll l • tt., ,_.. AM. ~ tv01 OAIN AS FOlU>WS: llMtlfll wlM '9 "11M ~ tJ • A-J, ltllll"IMt, sm I& hl1Gll. S!CtlOH I, ,_ (lty C-it 'et ,.. TrtMtt Olitlrict ltt *' a09l"f If
' . S.... ,Mt, Olfl...-t1107 Cit\' ti C.I• ~ ~ ~ 1111111 Md S\lpenolt11n' llMriN f'Clll'I!. lllftll *°"• SU,
: lflh ............. Lt Mllll ~ t'1 • -.w. 11111 ~Jc ._,IN ¥-11 '9lffl ._.. .._.. ~ s.ta AN. c.11--. ~ ~ k<Ordl~ to ""' ,..........._ ti $CllOll In FMnMry M, lm •t f:91 A M ... Ille
V1ola R. Galle!Nt ~ Dt t11e ~I C-1 tNI •t.N ~ti~• """4d tor wtlldl ' 1lllit 1ltlfMMnl "ltd •ltl'I IN C-l'r "*-compMIM 1M rwofil llr•rt rtpGr1 ol l'lnlnflol MeltNollet It btllli ...,.., "-Cl«t « OrWllM cwnti'Ofl JM!. II, tt1l 1ttot ~\It ..... .,._.......,.,, tM U.!Mfl Mw Tr•t1•••''•tl•11
W1U.I°"" Ii. lT JOHJrr, County '*'-by ...... 11\tl II 11 -~ tO !Mir.I • "*tllnbW1'*'-~I te IM Ut ....
T ........ M. W•rcl, r;J9puty. ~le ~ t111 ...-1~ of IN MA• Tr ....... t911M Act .. ~ M ----;-~ -~-.:tiMM'C___ ........... ....,...., ~ .... ._.r-
~ °'!'J'! eo.11 ~ Piiot. SECTIOtt 1. TM (Wt COUil'ICll "'*and A. ~ Ill ...... I
J-v lt, ~ sncl F~ 1, .. a.:1 ..... ""' '"" prDfl'\ofklfl Of l>Ullllt .. TM Ortlltt c""'"" Tr.n.11 Ohtri(I ''~ 10'-73 t.tinl ,....irt1 tlMI ONI-)Nf, I~ tits tM!tl«I for t ftcl9rel~"---------,-,,==--~ 1«lm tluol '""""''""'" .M ........... N!)itbl 91'1111 lo 1ul1! 171 fl!llllC.,. ,.,,._.,..r 1---"°'":==~-~n~~B~I ~··~ "~OT~1~CE~:-...::= .. ,, tiia ""' .., • ...,., ~ tllf ...,.~ c:1p11 ... 1~1 1i!ff191'1 tNt ,.., c. '-"..!-, ~-vi~-,,.,, ifr"~ -bft!l~,Y-tllt-ot'TD llOlif'Cl-
fltCTITIOUS llUllN•Ss ,..,Mt,_ ft ill llf'll<lllC'Y -.1 !Nit • Olr-.c:tor'*, OMctlMcl btlow, .... the IM!nt !Vtl'*' ,.._ tor 1119 MOPtltn o1 11111 ta be ICQll{!'11d 1t11C1 ~lf'\lc:l9d -tilt ._,~A~I STATIMINT OOlllO ordl~ *' 111 ur9tftCY Ofdll!Mtt 4t fMI Mlll fl.,. .,...,...
TM "" -I'll per-. ''' 1"'9 tludY snc1 o....,eH 1\sn pallcy tot IM I. l"lltcflA• ol 1t2 ,.w .._..._,
butlor' cru~LLE f.LEC'rttONICS A.. y s (Uy wlM be ~ lll\IHI IM 1t1lu1.quo 1Jr<Oftd!tlatllill tNMll bUllt.
'
.,, A• '° '' H ""'ton .,.ct;• °" 119111 11 fl'l&lnl•ln&d pendl1'19 the rtwlt1 t. P~ Of 1 DI, I """1111. .. & ml '' ""' ' ol Wld 11.W'Vr!'. lrMMnl"'-Ml;y tor ,.. ltJ -C&lll • ..,.. SECTION 3. Tllll Ol'lll~• ttwll t1kl WMI. J.-J. De OU.It., 1011 C<torN& tlltc:I tno:I tit Ir! tvll ~ tlld ...... lm. 3, ~ of ltS c:ot-aetiltriflt St,•Ht,ll'lttftgton llKfl. C1IU . .,.., ' Olf'&ld D 11:....ii. 9141 Criwlord Cir rnedl&t.ly 1n.,. h PISSIMo sncl betllr9 loc'-ICI r.-M l•r• bo.lln wlfll vac:wm u · ~ 'e.tct1. 'cetH """' " 1S$11r&ll011 ol fl"-(If) llll'S •tttf 111 tr1ctloft. Tiii ......._ I i..1-'uincllle1ld by 1 PQN81, WI! be publlallM ~ In llW '· PuttllllM ol 6IO W. t!Op ........ ~ .. Panri ... ..-0r..-Cont C.lly Pllol, • -P•• ol $. Pvn:tw. ot ., ll'IOblll r.-iot .....
J-J 0. Gvtll• ...-.. dl'(Vlf.tloll printM -Pllbllihld clucll"ll Ille ~!Ion *'•"°" ... Tilll •1•'9ml!>i tlltd 11111P! tM Cnunly In trll City o1 C..... MMt. fOfl"*" wllfl ""'5cl• loNtot ,.,.,_.,,_
Clri"' OranQoe C-ty Oii: JM. t. im rM -ol"" ~ Ol IN Council "' l"urcr.P& OI It Nrric• otel'llcln Ir..
wn,LIAM • IT .JOMM COUNTY voll .. for 111'111 IOlllllf "" -· tl\lltl .. "911• .... ~ .... """ ..,..;le. n••K. bf 1i--M. w..;i. ()epUty. PA$SED AHO ADOITEO ~ 1Stll Uy lrvc:U. Mid -'°"" tnldl. p mM ol J111111tT. 1m 1. PurtN• o1 i.1111 for rntln-....
,/
TODAY'S Wallace of CBS
-11-Win~ Top. Award
ABC D 6:30 -,... "SamJon and ah." The walls
come lwnbllng down In the con U!lon ol lhiJ Cecil
B. DeMille blbllcal epic tl'Om 951 starring Victor
lllature and a~ Lamarr.
• 9iOO -''The etujab Trail." Tblnty
citizens of Denver In the d west attempt to re-
plenish their depleting pply of whlsb and run
HJ!Jlo--t rouI¥e--lrom--.,...,._ Burt-Lan
caster, U\<l Remick, 1 m Hutton, Pamela Tflfin.
KCET ID 9:00 -n American Family. Bill and
Pat Loud attend a dance recital In which daughters
Delilah arid Michele are perlorml.ng.
KTTV iD 9:30 -Alternatives. A dlscu9Slon with
seven single divorced or widowed parents about
the advantaies and disadvantages of raising a cbUd
alone. \ NJ\C o 11:30 -Johnny Carson. Among John-
ny's guests is Frances Sayers, a Fountain Valley
grandmOtber who does some funny things with her
face.
NEW YORK (AP) -Mlke Jan. Ill at the unlvenlty.
Wlllace bu -an Mlltd I. The .. -member jut)'
~~mnhla Unlvenlty clled Willac0'1 "cant1ffilli1i
•....-d lor-b-r 0·1 d c a 1 t aeries of dllklctte:t -wltlt
joumalllm lw hll "'"'lllln-Americans who had something dlng-roportlng" oo,tbe Colum-bia BroadcalllnL~,..., "60 to hide," Including -011--In~= I lord--irl'inC-, lobbylt\-Dlla
• 1 lleord, and M~lal •eterana Nine i.Ievlalon stations, pro-capt.. Ernest Medina and
ductlon units and producen Private Paul Meadlo wve aJao named .w"-1 · Tuesday of the fourth 11111U11 Richard '!bunion Walkins,
awmls, wlllch will be giffll hooorod for producln( "Atllca. -+--tl>o -~"
TUl BDBLOWS!
for WABO-TV, New York, and
TOlljl Batten of WNET·TV,
New York, lor "Youth Ganp
In the South Bronx" ...... the
llnl Nack prodllCttS to win
the award.
PAClllC DRIVE -INS
Pllblltl'ltd Ortnlll c-t Q&lly Pllol, JACK liAMMETI' -tdmlnl1tr&tlM ~s. T--. II._ J•_,., 4 11, 11, 2i. lf7S as-n :'~,: ::.!''ty ~,.:'(!,_-:'6:!':.,. "Is1~ 1~1= :.:11 ...... ,..., .......... .,, ............... ..
PUBUC NOTICE ATTEST; ptOidrnttelY I• &(At ~ c ....
Other winnerl were:
-Fred Freed and the Na-
tlOlllLBroadcutlng Company.
for "The Blue Collar Trap," a
documenlary about assembly
---Si;>im;;;;Ci.,,iiin--1 EILEEN P'. PHINNEY OI,,.. Orde. P&e:lfk E*"1< 11:'"'-tf, ,l('TITIOUS I USINnt (Jly a ...... ol "" •1111 w.odbWY ltl*I 1-i OI HtrbOI'
NAM• ITAnMIHT City of Coate Mnt IOll!ev.,-ii Mii 1GUt11 of tt11 ~
Tiii fallawlnl pw-. h do!• bl.lllneu STATE OF C.ALIF°"NLA l G,_ F-..y).
&1: COUNTY OF ORANGE ),._. Tiii "9COnd Ille (SITE II 11 loc.lttd hi
ACCURATE P'HOTO & COf'Y1NG CITY OF COSTA MESA ) the -'flclnlty. It la 111Pf'U\11'1111'IY I
SEltVICE. t1.U PKlllc c-1 Hwy, Na. I, EILEEN P. PHINNEY. CHY ci...t Krtl -lnlnh °" W•tmlnatw A-
,., Hun!l"lll«I Bffcfl, ,,.._ 1no t•.<iffldo 0.rll o1 the City Council o1 In Wll vicinity ol A hlltf' Wey. II' It M&•lnt E. P1I,..._, 21~ Plclffc llW City ot COi~ ,.,,..., htf'MIV ctt'111Y Mllt«nl lo 1111 City ol Gtrdell Gr-
' Cos.I Hwy, No. Jf, Hunlfn;ton I~ 1t.11 1M e1MW1 •nd for'lgolrl(I Ordl1111nc:1 ""'lni.titnc:• y1rd•.
I '2!Mll. No. 13-1..l WM lnttOdu<M ttld ~td I. C-IT\,ICtlon ol & rntllllllrlellt't end
Thi• bullneu I• btln; conducltd bv 1n t.tci1on D'f MCtlOll •• 1 ,......,. "'"'lllg GI tc1ml11l11T'ellon tKl\lty lnducll"' 1111 1 ....
lncll'<lldu&t. MOid City Councll Mk! °" the l!lh a.v ot Pf"CWWNl!l• and lllCMtil"I' equiPll*!I to MIXlM E . Ptt!wson J.,...,.ry, 1'73, ancl """"tier ptued Incl IWOVldl I llJll·t.trVk9 -••llOR·
Tiii• 1t1lemtnl flied wllll "" C-ty &liop!llO ... wllole If I ,...,.., rnetllno The projlci 11 lacti.d In Orlllll9
Cltn. ol er.,. County an. J,fllU&ty •• ol w ld Clty Counc:lt Mkl Oii the 15111 d1y c-1y. C1lllwnl•. ltn. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY of J&n.i&ry, 1973, by tM foll-Ing roll call Tiit "lllNl!ed ~I ol 11\t Proitc:I II CL£1UC. b'/ TMr.11 M.. Wtrd, Deputy. vall: Sl,,n.t,tflS. A ,._ti 1111nl 11 requnttd
F!MIS AYES, COU't.ICILMEN· JOl'cllll Wll· for Sll,1""51 from lhl U~bln Mtu Putllbhtd Or ...... C:O..t CU.Hy P!lof, -, Pi..-..V ltldfl • ' Tr1m.port1tkln A•mllll1tr&t'°11 of 1111
J-ry 11, II, t5 Md FltlrWl"I' 1, . NOES coJHCILMEN· N-F&d«al ~ o1 T•lllSf>Ortllkln
ltn JS.n AllSENT COUNCILMEN: Hammett ......,.., tht Urtitn M&n Trinsporl•tl°"
1N WITHES$ WHEA:EOF I htn ,,_..oy Act ol tN.I. M ~. Iv "'1P In PUBUC NOTICE wt my 11111111 end •"'-' ft.. SAt ot "" lll\llnc:l1111 fNI P'Ol«"t. TJl<I loo:1I con-----~=~====c-=co ICl!y of Cotl• ......... fN1 WIP! d•Y of trillullon of l.UMa will be •••U•lll• STAnMlllfT OP AIANDONMINT 01' J-lry lf73 from the Ol1lrlct'I ,,_r1y tu 1--..
USI 01' PICTITIOUS IUllMISI NAME E1LE£N P. PHINNEY mlftt and 1111 Or..... COUlll\I The follawl .. --.... &b9ndonld ff1t City Clwk 1111$ tx-otfk:lo T•&-l1lloll Fund II SIMCl"td by ttlt
VM ol !hi llctltlcan. -IMK.i."""°' Oringe Clerll of lhl City C--.cll ol Sllll I. ol Calltamll Tr111S9Qrl&tlon
Count'r Mutftel' ~let. M MOrlll !hf City of tost• ~ 01"IDPflll'l1I Act of 1'71.
N--1 BoulW.,d. Newport BN<.11. C&lll. PubllU. Or&ng1 Co.111 Deity Piiot. 9i_•-;::u::;... ar f....,lllts w1f1 tit nwo. J.......,,. 2S. 1m m-n di~ by 11111 Pf'Olect. N• ~ or
•
TV DAllY LOG
Thursday
Evening
JANUARY 25
t.ttl 8 Cll ... ,......, ..... , !Cl (t\\IN) __ , .... t ... )
Whale Watch
Cruises
BllQlmDnq Jan. S
line workers. -
· -Robert Markowllz and
CBS News for " •. .But What
lf the Dream Comes True?,"
an In depth otudy ol a wen~ ..
do Mlchlian lamlly.
Westinghouse Broad-
casting Comp&Qy for 0 Tbe
Search for Quality Educ&-
Uon." a series of three one-
hour programs on busing and
other issues in education.
Tr. licfftlous t!Ullneu 111n. rmrred to PUBUC NOTICE t•mHlel ,,, llv!no °" situ 1 fllld J of
aOon wu flied 111 Ot•nge County on 1111 ~ illft fol' "" Melnlen&nce
M&•ch \,, 1911. CITY OF ••VINE -Mmlnl11r11i.i F&dllty, 0:00 u ID o mm m ID ....
'6s-8urt Llt1C1St1r, Lt1 Rt~
Jim HuttOI, Ptllllll T.nln.. Durl111
th4I '"" dl7I of t111•west. Dimer citizens cli5c:oftf' thlt their whisMy
stod is aJMOSt .,itted, 11141 O)fll·
ffJ mulb 11 tMy try lo remedy
John Drbnmer and
WNJT-TV, Trenton, N. J., !or
"Towtrs of Frustration," a
·•tudy of tbe problems beset.
ting residents of a Newan
housing project.
'
•. Jeff!Tf Jihni, Jr.. UCl Atli.o o•.t.NGI COUNTY, CALIPOtl.MIA 2. Ha tMJneun Ml loc&Ttd on Site l
A-. NtwflOrl leKft MOTICI TO CO..T•ACTO•S Incl I~ 111 Aioc:llfon 11 r"'1ll'ftl.
Tith t!Ullnn1 W&I concll.ocied by Ill In· $Uled ptOPQMll w.f11 tit l"IQ!i\Md &I the S. ...... lcllllvr.. 1"'"'1111 of UCiP'f)
d!vfdu.I. Offke of Cl.., Clertl o1 1M Cl.., C_,.;11 ot bull-1111 II C~ Gii SJ .. t llul R. Jrffrey Jlhm. Jr. ., " 0 ..... --•-•-• PUU llW City of lrvl111, Calltornla. Ol'I ar tllfor9 nor oe1,.;;;;..11 ..-. "',,.,._,..,.,
Putlll!Md Or•A(ll CO< 01lly Piiot TJttncllY "" '"' d•r ol F-ry. 1m " c . l!rwl " Jll!U&rY 11, 11, t5 -Fitllnl&ry 1: 10:00 •.m. o'elock. 1t whldl tlrnt tlllV wlll Thli proftd wlM hive • Mgnlfkant
lf7J 10-n be IMJblkly _. lfld rl'td In rlM City llQ&ll .... tnVlronmlftl•I lmClttl °" tile Council Oii~. dll C•ITllJ'll DrlVI, lrH. 5111 Exhllllt L of !hi Prelhn!111rv -------------Siii.. 2tl0. 1rvln1, c.111om11, tor cm-Awllctllon far !hi tnvlninmtfll.i lm-PUBLlC NOTICE s1n>ct1no ir.111c: t.111n&1 •ncl llfhtlno •~ '*' ,,,,.,,_1.
-------------11tall1tlorl5 In KCord&nu wllll the pl1115 O. Ctm~ Pll--.:
Pl(TITIOUI llUSIMl!SI •ncl &p1ClflcalfOM "1t<etar. to wnlch Tiit Pl'OPOMll projtc:t corrforma la lllt N.t.MI! STATEMl!MT .-Cl&I r .. .......:t II mid• IS totlows: ottlc:l•I rKODnllld RtlillOllll Com-
TIM fallawi"11 "'''°" 11 dalno l!u11MU IN THE CITY OF IA:VINE. Tr•fflc IN'tlleolllVI Lind Ute and TrMllPQl'l&llon &a; Signal Incl Llgllllng Jn1t1U1llon 11 lt>t Pllnl. TIMI PrOild r..1 tletn wtlmllltd
Cll®l -o-
@ ........
(:JllUlll ..... m"'-111,._,,..
fB Mi hlcl C.-..U m-.. .....
'1) TIHM $tlflCll
lht situation. '
ID llill ID 1-'1ho "'""' Cllltf lraasldt hllti Officlr Frn
Bllcfln1 b tit oitect of I distuf!IM
1111111 f1nt.sles when she r.:1iwa
f.dulll $3, Children $2
CALL 873-5245
• arlu of lllOllJlllOUS celb. P•ul 1------------
lAllllMrt ind Btny LMncstol IUISl
D Puce vs Violence * Venceance•Trapdy
KUNG FU-Now!
TONIGHT!
WINNER OF 3
GOLDEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
e W.t.Lm MATTHAU -A-e CAlOL IUINm ED IUCHMOHO .. ASSOCIATES. lnt ... 1&ellon1 af Ct,olWI' D•IVI •nd tor ttM A:19!0111I rm-b'/' IN SO\llMl'n
12731 T1ylor SI., G1nMn Grovt, 92W W1lt1UI A\lelll.111, encl Culvt1' Ori.._ 1nd C11fkwnl1 AUod1ll011 of Gov1tmm1nll 6:30 @ Hopi's Mula D Cll Ill ID .... ••"" £1'"' •n [JI" C.ln•1s lftorts to tu:h his --E!191r E&rl Richmond, U1l1 T1ylor Meull°" P&rtwiy. &nd tor ltll Sl&le of ~IDnlll Clelr·
SI .• G1nlen Gro\l<I fK6 e 1os 1r. required ftlr ,,,. .,.,tire work lnghal,IM •"""-and lhll\lnlled S!ltn
Thll bullntu 11 bc-11111 ainclucltd Dy 1n &I cleKrlbtd lier.In: Otllc1 af ~I •nd ludglt A-95 l~dlvldu•I E.llllM«'I E1Hm11t Cle•rlngllouM Ind 20ol ........... llltl'ldn.
EdO&r E1rl ltlcllmond Item QNlll, Offc:'1ptloil o1 E. IEIHrll' IN HMlllU ..... :
Thi• 1111-1 lllld w!lh the c-ty ..... wn Tht OCTO 111 ""l!Pldllc.!klns tor ltw
Cltrlt af Or1n11e County Gii: Jin. U, lf7l. MW Duin '#Ill _...kit IMttll' ll&nclr•lls WILLIAM e . Sr JOHN, COUNTY CLEAi(. I L.S. 'Tt•ffic Sl;nal Ind Ll11hl-f ' I ' '"' !Cul,,.,. Drive •ncl arw&rd IC "II .. Is. pedi.,lollt recu. By TMl'IMI M. W•rd. Deputy •nd wider and man c:ornforltblt oea111111
PW?f W .. nul A-l to help ttM tkllrll' Ind hincllc&ppf'd.
PublllN<I 0•~ Ca.11 Oelty Piiot. L. S. Traffic 5l9nt1I and ll9ht-Nirw t1u1 routts .,. ..... to pl'QYlde
,,1.,....,,.ry II, 25, incl FtbrU&~ I, I, lf1l In; (Cul,,.,. Orin &ncl .,...Ice to 1111 ., ... d rNlar tlclt<1y
PUBLIC NOTICE
U1-7l MoullOl'I Patlcwly) conc:IH!IT'lllOll.
Pl•~. Sl)IC:i.I Provlllans ancl pr_..I 11. At tn11 publk llMl'l"ll •n ~ty
form1 un cnly bl otllllllld ~ prOJPK!I.,. wlU bl lffontld Joi' lnltr'Hted perton1 or
biddtf"I -Pl""""' ol IS.GO, wllkn 19111ClH "' be llurd wltll ·~ -"" Jl'ICTITIOUI •UllNBI -I ...... "°' bl retuncl&Ole. All IOCl&I, -~• Ind 911"'4,...,.._!11
NAME STATEMENT dllets .... a bl mldt PIY•blt Iv City of -II ol llM' P"i'(«t. lnl«nled ...,._
lht folla.,.lnv Pll<'Kln 11 CIOing blts.IM» !rvlne •nd malled to City ol ll'Vl1>1. '201 ""'' Wbrolll or1lty or In wrlll"ll l"llcie!a 11: C&mpUS Or\ ... , Suite 20G, lrvlnt, -rtaimn'llnlllli-will! rlHPICI ta tN1
UNIVERSAL ACCOUNT5, 111st c ... Cll!torl\I&, 926U. Pro(M ti 1111 Pllblk hffrlng. Wr!lllHI
dot, Founl•ln V&llly, C&lll. 921111 No bid wlll be c:onsJder'ed unleu II Is Ill,..,..,,. fl'l&V be 111bml1t..i prior to the
L H&ll Tl....,, oll1 Eslhef SI .. Cost& ,.,_ °" I blank form fllrnhhtd by !hi publk ,,.... .... ~. C1lll. 92626 City Incl II ~ lfl ~· wllfl Ille Ill. A eapy ol IN PAlllmin&ry AP. TNs t:Mlneu 11 Del,. COlldllcltd Dy •n pravl~am ol 1111 s11fldtrd SPf'Clfle11lon1 plk1Uon tor • F~I 11~1nt kw lflt pro-lncllv1d111I Incl Specl&I Provisions. POMd pt'o(fef, logellae!' wltll the en-
L. Hell TIMI' TIMI City Counc:fl o1 1'119 Oty of lrvlnt vlr°""""lal i~t lt&f9fnllll wad 1111
Thh lllt.<nffll Hltd w'llll the County """"" '"' rtghl lo rtilCI any OI' ... lrwll dl~tlOPh•-progt•m !Qr Orang.e
c1.,.t ot 0••"91 County on: Jin. u. 1'73. bids. COvnty •nd lhl N111111111I •rH 11 •v•ll•'"
wtLLIAM E. ST JotlN, COUNTY CLERK, Tiii llldclw"1 &ttenllon ii dlrK!ld to !hi for ~le: ~ 11 the_Dr&nge Caun>
By T,,_rn& M. W1rd, Otpvty. ,,,_iilonl In Sic:1ion 2, "Pr_,J R• ty Trlllll! D11lrld atflces 1t 515 Horii!
fnn7 Qlllrtmetl~ Incl CandlHons.N of the 51•n0-SycunoA, s."'' ""'· C•lllotnl•, ""-Put>ll1!\td Or1ng1 C0&1t Olllf Piiot, &nl SlllC11'1Cl"OllS •tor 1111 A-Qt,olfitmln~ 1:00 A M. Incl 5;00 P.M. Wft!o;O.ys.
J1nwry 11, 2S Ind FtbrU&ry l. I. Ind c:ondltloftf whlcP! he mu1t obscrvt In Thll Jll.lbllc llN'11Wj1 Is requlrld tiy Ille
1973 . 1.U.13 the preper1llon ot ,,,. propoul form •ncl Orbin Mtu T r I n Ip or I I 11 on
-------------1 lhe IClbmlHlon of the bid. Admlnl$tr&llon DI 1111 FMt•r•I °'Pl''"""'
PUBLIC NOTICE PrDYlsl°"I of tllt Sl•te C°"lr1cl Ad 1rt ol Tr1n1DOrllllon l>tforl fllln; af Ille
nol •Pl>llClbll, •nd prOl!lptc:fl ... bl~ .. Fl .... Gr•nl A~tlc1!lon. Tiit P1'1Xlldl"11I ------,-,-,n-,-----' wlll not blYrequlred lo bl P•t<111tllfl«1. will ti& l•lnKr1bld and lnc:h.idtd In the
MOTICI TO c •l!DITOltl The Genef&I Prtv&ll11'1!1 WIOI A1t1 &P-Ffnal Gr1nl Applk•tion.
SUPl!•IO• CDU•T 0" THE i)!lc•blt lo the 1re.1 Is lound •nd JACQUE MOO
STAT• OP CALIPO•NIA 'OR cllMrrnl....., to tie ~I forlh In tti.1 c1r!1fn Clerk of lht Or1ng.1 THI COUNTY OJI' OllAMOE i:locumlfll IHllltled: "STATE. OF County Tr&Mll Dlslrlc:I CALIFOAHlA e u s I N E. s s ANO o..,,.. Cwnty. Calllornl• Ni. A .... 411'1 Tll:ANSPORTATIOH AGENCY, OEPAA:T· Pllllll&hed Or&ng.11 CWll 01\ly Pilot, o!';!~ ot JULIA MARY ALLEN, MEHT OF PUBLIC WOfUCS. DIVISION J111111ry 2S Incl FW1,11ry I, 1913 211-73
NOTICE 1S HEREllY GIVEN lo the OF HIGHWAYS, EQUIPMENT RENTAL PUBLIC N-CE
crtdlton of "" •l!On 1111.....i dlctdtnl ltATES ANO GENERAL. PREVAILI NG V•I
ftl&I Ill Pt•IOM r.iivln; d1lrn1191!nS1"" WAGE RATES, JANUAll:Y, 197J'' ln--cl-------------
Mllcl die .... !· &rt ,.,1r..i 10 flit !Mm, CGrPllflled lllnlll ~ tllls r1ler1111e1 &nd a Jnn
wllfl 11W nKnterv voudlln., In IM ottlct rntcle 1 Plrl hereof II lfloullh Hf lorlh In MOTIC!: TO Cll:EOITOltl
of Ille d trt. ol tM it>ow .,.,Tiiied tDUrl, or lull, COPies of tnl1 dac:-1 •rte on lilt In SUPE•IOI COtJRT o .. TMI
lo "'"'"' """" '#1111 , .. l'IKHMl'Y !he Office OI "" Clly Clerk -Ir• open ITATI OP CALIPO•NIA FOi ~ to 1111 undl s1 ....., t 1515 ta Plltllk lniPtc:llon. THE COUNTY OP OllANOI! 1' C r II 1 i!IY OflOEA: OF THE No. A·MMI ::=· 1!"':. Aj,i1C:11:i ~;..;.111!:"'~ CITY COUNCIL OF THE Estell o1 OLGA M. FOi.LiNE, &ho Ullden.IOf!ICI Ill •II m11ren. Plflllnlng la CITY OF 1AVINE , CALIFOA:HIA known &I 0. M. FOLLINE, Dtctased.
1111 nlilt of i..k1 dlctdtlll, w'llt\ln tour U.ROL J . FLYNN NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN to rM
..-thl itttr lhl flrll p!.lbilc1tlG11 of lhh Oeputy Clly Cl•rli. of llMI tredltor1 af Int 1llovl lllfMd cllc~I
nollct City CoullCH ot !hi 111111 •II Plf'IOAI M'll"ll ct1f1M IOllM1 rM cu.,;.i JimHrv I 1173 Clly at lrvlM, C1lltvrnl• w ld dtcedtril 1r. requlr..i lo tlll thtn\,
E\IERETT,LEA:OY ALLEN Oil~: J&nu&ry 23, 1f7l wrtn""' ntetciMlf'f vaudler1, In 1111 aff\ce
E•ecutor of 1111 Wiii Publ••lltd Or11119e Coast O•llr Pnot. of !hi cllrk of 11111llov1 .,.,llH9d court, ar
o1 1111 lbaVI n1rn1C1 dece<lllnt J,,,.,,,..,. 25. Fetw-u&ry l, 1m 2.W.73 to pr'Hli'll ,,.,..,,, wltll 1111 nt1etu1ry
NOll:MAN 0. JUOOERT PUBLIC N~CE 'IOUd!l'I. lo,,,. under•lllllld •I the oltlcl
ISU lllllllr, 111111 A l---==,,,_:=;V="~'----of A:OGEll L. GAMIATESE, 714 TnJrd C•t• Mn.I, CA JUM PUl\.IC NOTIClf OF Strffl, P.O. llox '55, 01vls, C&lllorn!1
lTIO ,,.,...,.. t.IEQUl!ST FOR STATE. 9~16 which 11 The ~· of tMlnn1 o1 lht Atl•MY IOI' •x«MI... Cl!•TIFICA'TION OF u-slv!Mid I" •II mtllft'I plrl1lnl1111 la
Publl•htd Or1ngt Ca.st D•llY Piiat, RICONST•UCTION OJI' IAYSNORES 1111 fllll<I at Mid dtc«llnt, wlfllln klur J&nu1ry 11, 11, 2S •!Id F111<111rv 1. MA•INA llY TNE monl~ 1n..,. 1111 flrll pu1>l1c1t!on of thlt
1913 19-13 IR\llNE COMPAHY NEWPORT IEACH nalltt. -------------N 1 1 ' O.ttd D«ll!nbllr 2', nn.
PUBLIC NOTICE Ol ti 1 her1Dy Ill...., lh1I Tiit lcvlne WILLll\M 6 FOLLIHE Company llat applied lo !ht Stal• W1t1r • A:esource1 COtlli'ol Boa•d pursuant lo the Extc:ular ol 1111 Wiii ol
------,cc.,c,.c,-----provls!Of't ot well°" 11 {I)) ol Federil ROG• 1111 •boV• n1mtd dlC9defll
NOTICI: TO CIEDITO•S Wl!l'f' Pallullon Control AC! for certlllc:1-Att....:,. ';, ~::•AT•s•
SUPl!••o• COUltT o .. THli !Ion to Ille Otpert"""'I at ,,. A•my, LOI 714 Tlll'1l lll'WI
STATE OP CALIPO.NIA PO• Ang.lln Olstrkt. CarpS ol Enol"Mrl, th&! P.O. •011 us
THI COUNTY OP o•AMOI. "" ""'°"'1''-!Cllon ol B•yll'lor•• Mlrln• DIVll, Cllllor'lll• "'" Me. A·1Slff by TIM IN•r>e Campany 11 dllcrlbtd T....,.._., ltlO ~
E1t1l1 of OOA:OTHY MAllGARET LEE, ~~ :::: : c'ftu1Cled ~~ 'ti. l!llfl!lll' A"°""" -1., l!•K.,_
llto known &I DOJIOTHY LEE &ncl 11 auillty lllndlnl '1 •~I•.,,.~ le Q11:f Publllt\td Ol'Ml!ll C:0.11 O.Uy Piiot, OOAOTHY M. LEE, ~Nd. ty Conlrol Pall~· i!-'fC ' I I s' r w • J1nuary 4, 11, JI, 2$, 197J 9-7:3
NOTICE IS HEltEIY GIVEN lo tM 1"'9 ••lilln; f 111:1 :i ~~,_
crtdltor1 of 1111 •llovl ... ,.,.., dlcldenl ··-n ·--IK ··~-" PUBLIC N-cE 1rw1 111 per1«11 l\lvl,. cl1lm1 ag1!nsl !hi .... 1111• ...... t..i •I 2S1' BIY*hor• Of'lv1, 1 v1.1
w ld cllclOlnl •r• reQ\llrtd ID ftle ""'"· Newport 8•Kh. htVl"ll outllvtd HI IN'IK·l ------'~-------1
with"" MCl'll&'Y -..cllln. Jn 1119 otllct llul -tcOl'IOfl\Jc llffl, Is IN'OPOMd to bl PICTITICIUS •USIMISI
of 11!1 clerk of till •llovl .,.,llntd cwrt. ar rte0111trvc:tld It 1111 Mimi loce!IOll. The MAM• STATIM•MT
to prlMlnl them, w1111 1111 ntcnwrv fllW fKIUty w'tH c:onslll of lllovt !JD llooll Thi fallow1"11 P1f1011 II dilling llvslnns
-n...1, lo !hi vndtnllllltd •I "" oltk• lllPll r&1'19lll!J from •boll! Jn'"' ID 12 '"'· • ., • ot ht r 1t!Of...,... PLUHICETT & TM boll slips Gi'1 lie»! tielch &rff 1rt COlLECTION 9 U It EAU OF
PLUNKETT. 02 Ollw A-. P.O. Bo• ~ri lo bl dlmollshM, llul na new WESTERN °"ANGE COUNTY, 11t W.
?tt, Huntl1191cir! ll>ldl. C•Hfoml1, whkh N Pl art llf'OPOsed In fN1 &ru. 20!h St, Co.II Mtq, Clllt. 1161'
11 "" plec• ol IMlllU& ol IN llncleril~ -'"''_,,, wru be IN'Ovkltd. Tiii Long llHdl Cl"Mll A...oc:l•tlon, •
Jn 1H m1111B ""1•1nl,. to lhl nl•t• of ~onst,~klnof :1"-" ""'• Ire •tlOut •.OOO C.tll. CarJlll'•,,..,_ 4i01 Ptclflc Av• .. MOid die..,.,.,,, wltllln tour manths 1fllr c •• s '19· Tiii tlutklle.., 11 L111111 lffdl, Clllf.
thl fir11 pW!lc&llOl'I ol thl1 notice. ""' Pf'Ol'OMd lo be •11......0. A cciin-opwtt· Thl1 bull-I• being c:ondllci.., try •
0.ttd J-ry 1" 197!. td Plol'l'lli DUI Slll!Oll lo 1M1f11P "" -11111 COf'PCll'ltlll\.
OO•OTHY J. CANEDY from llW hokll"'ll t1nb ol ttll llOell w111 I , L. Glbtll, S.C,_.l'l'
E11Ku!Y111 of 1M will of bll P!'ll'lldld. Tlll1 tt<!Nnt flied ..m, tllt C-ty
IN 1-. nemed ~I 0.. llfld lldl, the Plrll!ng lol wilt be CMk of Of'l"ll't COll!lty Oii: JllMllfV 15,
PLUMKITT a. PLUNKmTT i:ompltt.!y renovtted, wllktl Wiii l«Ofn-1'13. WILLIAM E. $T JOHN, COUNTY
•It Olln A-rnocf•t• IPPl'Oldm1tlly .. Cl f'I Incl -CLEll:K. ly T,,.,..... M. Ward, Depvty. P.O. IClll ,., lack .. tloWH. TIW rl(:Otl1tn.ic!lon work Wiii Pus.
Nt,onf11tllMI ••Kii. Cellt. '2'41 be' °°"' "' TWO pMltS 10 kttP !hi Mtrln• PllblllMd Orlf'ltl Cafft Deity Piiot, T1I: (114) ~ n -••lion. J•11111ry 11, ts 9l'ld FION1ry 1, 1. Al1tnt1¥1 ,., ••tc11lrl11 COllCl'l'l\td 11>1rll• '110111d lr1n1mlt le 1m 111.73
Pullllsh«I Orarllll CCIII! P•llY Piiot JllTllS W. Anclertu1, EXIC\lll ... OttlCM,.1-------------
Jlnuary lt, 2$ •116 F1bru1ry 1. u, C•l!lar"1• lteglanll W•l'tf Qu•llty Con· PUBLIC N-CE 1m ,,5.n trDI 11a1n:1, S.nl• AM Rt11lon. 664 v.11 ----~--------MQnolfl AVMU&, SUlll '-lll'Vlnldt,,l-------------1
PUBLIC NOTICE C1Utorn11 ""°'' •llY r.iev1111 lnlorm&ll°" '4!11t or aof«llan1 by Fel)IWr)' .. ltn. MOT•c• if'O c••DtTOftl _____________ , Pt,otltl-°''""' .eoa11 Diiiy Piiat 1u•1•1ott COUll:T Of' TNI!
SCP·tt J1n111ry 2.S, 1t!1 221·7J STAt• O' CALl,OftMIA t"Olt
s u .. 1110• COURT OP TNli TH• COUlfTY 0" Oll:A"O• ITATI 0' CALIPOIMIA 'OR PUBUC NOTICE Mt. .... ,,.,.
TM• CO'f.'!:r::.:..o~ANOI 1u,1•1ow COU•T 011 THI £1111<1 of ••THUii: o . IER~UDltt.
MOTICI OP M•A•INO Of' P•TITIOfll STATI! 0, (ALI POlNIA fOR = .. ::-&I A. D. IE• UOEZ.
POii: PJ!DIAT• OP LOST 011: TH& COUNTY Of Oll:AHOI HOTICi II tjlltllY CtVEN !Cl 1'119
Dl!STROY•D WILi,. AHO POii: Ln· MO ""7nll1 awlton o1 t111i ....._ lllll'IM -..-1 T••I TllTAMliWTAll:Y MOTIC• OP H•A•IMO 01' PlfTITION 11111 tll,,.,..,.. M'llllll d&lllll ttt.IMI 1111
&1t11t' ol CHARLES J. IARNE.5. JR... POii Pll:OIATlf 0 .. wn.L ANO PO• 111111 ~· ... l'tWINcl to flle """'· DKwHd. Lft'Tlltl TalTAMIWT.t.•Y wllh !hi nKftMf'Y "°""""1, In 1119 office
NOTICE 1S HEll:EIY GIVEN llwll E1t111 DI LEONARD IEANARO of IN clerk DI 1M 1-. Mllltltld ~.or
fll:AJrKES IOUl.ME a.t.•NE5 11111 flltd GOl.OILATT, Gec .. Md. 11 ""9Mllt lllln\, wltll !Ill l'IKftMl'T
f!lnln 1 petition kw P'roblte o1 IOI! or "IOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN !Ml '1'911t1'11r .. to 1'fll ~Clllld ti 1111 ~
lltltrored win -lw ,_Ill Ul1ws HAZEL GOl.Ott.ATT .... fllM Mreln I DI "" '"'""YI< l'LUHICE.TT I
Tftl,llrNnlllr'I' to till Jilllll-'''-'-Ptllttot. fot Prollll• ., WIU .... for fi'lUNKITT, 41t 011 .... ·-· P.O. lox to wl'llcJI 11 "*" tw Nr1111r pertkul•rt. I-of Lltltf'I T .. lltnlllluy to lhl W.. HW!titletM llNdl. eatllorNa. 11Nc:J1 Ind ,.._, !hi time and 111act Ill llllrlnt 1M "-""-referftlW le wllk:JI 11 l!lldl for It 111t littef of tlvll,_ of j1M ~
-.... 9-1 1111 "' Ptllnllrl' t, tm. ""'1lw pettlcuttrs. .,., !Ml lhl tlrM Md 1111 1111 f'M,..,. .,......,.,. to tr. .. , ... ol
•I t rot 1.m., 1n IM mvrtTomn ol Otpwt• plK• ol l'll&rll'tl !hi .. n'll M1 blln Ml Ml• dllollilnl, wltllln foUr "*""" 1ftof 1'119 mlftl No. 3 ol Mid ~. 11 100 Civic: tor F..,,,,.,, 1). ms, 11 t :OD f.m., In 1M """ JNOfkllloll 111 1111• llCllllQI.
c ... i.r Ori.,. Watl, '" flll City ot Sin11 courtroom o1 Oiiilrfiillilt No. 3 o1 Mid O.teel J1111M1ry 16. an. A111, Ctltlttftft ~. ti 700 Clvk e.ntw Ori.,. Wul, Ill ltACHIL llltMUOIZ O.ltd "'•-rv IS, 1m N City ol S.llt• Ant. Ctllfomlcl. E•tct,oWIJI OI 1111 wlll ol WIL.l.IAM 11!. IT JOHN, 0.1911 J&nutry 2', 1173 _Q lhl "°"9 llMlltd dl(Mlnl
C-tr C"'11. WILLIAM &. &I J()HN "'-W.Kln I PLU"ltlTT TMOMAI 'AY l•YAN, ,., C-ty C)tflt •11 OllVI A-
MAG•L. ••IAN AMD DAVIOSON, IMC. ITUA•T L. 411:.t.MT P,0 , ... Uf
1111 HlttJI MM!l ltrtolt ~ 11' ......... W•Y 1·P H11Hl11tflll ... ~ Clllf, "441
UCI ..... lllt .... ,,, N9W1'11'1 INCk. C•lllorlllt Tell 1no w.-
hfrtt Alli, C .. tlnll. Alho1!tf flt PttllltMt' ·~· .. •••ctllria A~ fM'I ........... hblltnld~ Ot1111t Ca.ti 0•111 PllOt, Putlll"* Or•noe COMI D•llY Pllol
Pvbll'11M Orlnlt C11111t 0.11, Pllof, JlllUll)' Sf, M and fil~ry 1, 1m J•-rl' ,.. Jj lfllf ,...,..,., •• 1J, .1-ry 11, It, 11. 1m 1 2'f.n Im u..n
fJ Mwlt: (C) (90) "Sao.... 1N
Dtlll1k• Conti. (dni) '51.....&dy LI·
mur, Vidor Mll111t, Gto!ll Slllden..
(j) CIS RN1 W1ltlr Cnlnkit1
®) Mrrv Critflt S111w
m""' '"""' ED DEIUT Alt """ rm of four·
put 111 series foatslq Oii 1rtim-
their l!Yes 111d work. m Jullne Clt'Mll ... m-
QJFraH••flHcJ m...,.._
7:00 IJ CIJ Oll!l-0_"'_ @ Trttll « C1111, 11cm
CIJ ........ -0 Wlllll'• ., Ult? ID"""""' e1.&1ma•..._. m--m r.i QI Q'llU-[xercises
QI 0 A.-Tie111 Cira de MllJtr
(li) T•!Wstl Mlllltl!
m 111t4t '" w--
phllosoph)' of pllact •1111 foflivlllm
to 1 tl¥Hlf·filled f1111ily pl1ce hb
own tlft la dlnp1. m_,,..._
Dl """ ED,. ....._ FHlllJ am •nd
Pat loud attlff 1 clanct rtdl•I II "'"idl daullrtfrs Delil1h 1nd Mldlelt
""""
t.lDOTk -w-"1-"i"' P1lmsN o-m Mndlll fr1nca Friday mod-
mtn 1 dlsalssloll with *'" othef sin< (diwlft.ed or wldawtd) p.u.
ent& ebovt tht 1d'tlntlps and dis-
ICMnt1111 or raisins 1 tlllld •Iona.
li!i) """' ""'
tO:ODO!llll•••• 111111 ._
De1n's 1unts 1r1 Petul1 Ct1,_ ind
Jolly Bishop. am m-a THE STREETS OF SAN
* FRANCISC~EWTIME
7:30 6 l••I Dr. lllldnt "By Thb Sltn" 0 (}) Cll EB..._ tf S.. frt ..
Kikl1r1 incl Gillespi• tr11t 1 youn1 dsc:a "Thi Stt·UPY All o:-hit m11
tir1 for 1 sti1m1t1, blffflin1 of the for • crime kln1 •lfHS to do one'
palms ind fOfeheid , that hu con-mo11 )ob, only to filld hi111$111 Ula
founded c1octon for 1 thoustrtd 1ul murdlf Ur11l st111rt Whitmll
)'ell1. Ind Jack ~rtson (Uest.
00 ltopn's llfrMs D loris brtetf l"malb
GI n. ""'9t9ft1' "Goins. Goin(' fll "-. T1 .......,_
The M¥en!Urll is suspected of be-fm W.W Prta
1111 1 doll~• q:ent when 1 lortip Cl llucNcM ltdiM
~list, p.n 1S)'lurn !ft Brltlln, lO:JD D T• llCl
dislppun.. e CIM•~ttn• TIIMlll 0 ....,..: (2111') 'ftnto• PWlt" fJD ,_ w.,.. (R)
(sct-fi) '6241Mn frtdtficb, Col· Gl ,....1s,n
een Gray. CIJ ,, 1111*1rutti 11:eo a a mm m....,. \
SHOWING
NOW!
• •llALDINI P.t.l•I ........ '*' Ac-
LID 0 """0" !!EA': I~
l .. 1;..... . l . ' --.
Done by Dunn
Pat Dunn gets things done.
Throw her your challenge
and see how she handles It in
Sunday's "At Your Service"
column.
CIJ """ -· illCll®l -(:JMl ... I -(t) 12'~ 0..., -_,ucu .... I~~~~~~~~~~ "DaailOM 7r (wet) '65 -Ml! MW Brains "" l.oyoll. Ii
HtH .W .. !Kk llSter. Cl).,_... DilliNI
@I Llt'1MMtt1 D11I 0 ..-: ..,._ II Outilf SillCt" m T1llt 1111 (SC:l·fi) '64-llSI 61)'1, f11f11Ho
m-'"· ED Acci1n Chkl111 m Trvtll er C.-.llllCll m lllllin' 111 ""1 ..... '
al Ptllct Su11ton fl) Slrl« TH Anutro111
EflMdtln' ra11111y GDllUd
l.'f.ID . fi'I!) Ci«* Jtll111H ShfW
UTHE WALTONS--A SHOW11:11m..,_"
*FOR ALL THE FAMILY ll·IDIDl!llD __ _ 8 CIJ TIM w~ Whln Cody trl•I· • D ()) Cil m Dkl CMl ....
$Oii, OIM1'1 ba_~lllMl undt, oom11 ., Tel IM Trllll
to risil, thf Wtlfill l'I Min I 1
d1t1 witll tM sl•mDnM d~ UM. Cl) C1S U. ... : (C) ......
Cordelit Hunnicut. .W D11ct ........ {dn) '71-Jolll D 11i ID flip WlllH *" S.111· ForsJtM, 9111Mn a.in.
my Ol¥i$ Jr .. M1rilya MldlMlt 1nd ........... ,,_..
Ed Slllllnn 1rt n1p'1 1uestt. • 111-' ti........,_
0 Cll Ill Ill ......... ,.,, ""
the Wtlcoml Mt! for DMlll" A tlll· U:lO DIM ....
trautM 111111 Is drtflft to nerer kiB· GI IM: ...._ tf .,........
ln1 whln 1 nunt stells rnedltlllofl (Wll) '37-W1l11tt a.try.
Intended IOf Ills wif1. How1rd Ditti llt c..trJ If ..
1nd M1tth1 Scott 1Uest l:GI ,..... - D Cll -m Hae•'• ... ~ · 1£1 -m 1N111 , ... * ~ 1:• e MMe: .,... 1p111" <dr.) ·sa-f.8 ~ Cer1)1 Anthony Qll\lln, Shlr11)' Booth. Shir·
!Iii"" --1'7 M.0..1"'. m=:::... 2'11·"'----.· m ...,..: (2lw) -.......... 1-1• *Clll 2Wi .,.. ..... "'Tiit ...
("'l '11 -"' ~-. "'"' .... ......
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
,,.._, """" ... -r (drl) ·~1ry seott, Flltli DIJ. .., ...
1:11•-~ ... -(""1 . .._.. ....... -.....
• (t) ...... tsd·fl) ~ ·-
Eaoo. '--l:ID IJ) (t) .... 117·--
•·-u-·-·,,,. <"'> '54-<dr•J·11-•llt¥tfl.""' ..... -·-~ ID ftl"-.,IM-Sttrlint Hiydln. Med• SllritlL 9tlt'" (IPIC) '11 -Mthony H11,
IO:tlCJl"• ., t... ~ '!!°'"._!') Joyco '""'· 'IO-Ridlfl'tl hMMft. ;aU "',""" tit (C) ........ fl Mjc..,..
D ..,... ...... (11!)'1) 4$-Collet (c»m) '62-TOllY fr1ncma,
lon CMntY. Bflfldl ~ Jo r '4 lZ:DO 8 ~ ...... (1117') '31-nt 0 '·
· lton•ld Colmt11. f•1 wra1. 4:tl II (C) "TMlf ti .....,. {ldw) '40
l2.:ll II~ (dll) •4z-JMn G• -ltu ln1f1rn, Cofl1M V.ldt.
blft. ld1 Lupino. &;II (l) S.. a 111111 .. '
I
IN CONCERT
THE ~STANOIA HIGH SCHOOL BAND
AT
3141 HARBOR.BLVD., COSTA MESA
Saturday, Jan. 27~oon to 2:00 p.m.
COME HEAR THE ESTANCIA HlGH SCHOOL IA'Ni) AND
HELP KICK OFF THEIR FUND RAISING DRIVE. lHE MUSIC
IS FRl:E AT McDONALD'S AND lHE FOOD Will HIT JUST
' THE RIGHT NOTE.
'
I I
I
j
I -·
,
• •
OAIL 'r' PILOT
'ClaamJJ!pe Co1nplex'
Cas·t Saves Comedy
Some Bot ROllNltlee
'George Donka u the "Last of the Red Hol Lovers" is perplexed over the be-
bavior of Joenne Apple&ett, who playJ a koolty act?s in the Neil Simon
comedy, "9Umfiig tonl1ht It the San Clemente Community Thea~r. •
'
·Huntington, San ,9em~nte,
Santa Ana Holding Tryouts
Castine calls go out this
weekend for a Plir of lamllltr
dramas and •n un(amlllar
political satire at three
Orange County community
theaters.
Whi le the San Clemente
Community Thttl4r boldl
11udttlona for tho 1U1pen11
thrlller "Walt Until Dark," the
Huntinjton Beach Playhouse
-which .._uly .Ugod the
Frederick Knott drama -wlll
be conducUnr teyouts for'P.&d·
dy Cheyefslcy's "Middle or the
Night."
' And in Santa Ana, the Com·
munity Players will be 1111king
a predomlhantly male cast for
an ori&inal play called "Tbe
Boston Story,"
Randy Keene, one of the
area's blllle1t directora this
aeason, returns to Huntington
Beach where he staged the
Comedies "'lbe lmpoulble
Years" and "Gener1Uoa.''
He'll be holding audlt!i!ns
Monday II 7;30 p.m. !or "Mid·
die ol the Niaht"
A cast of three men and
eight women from 16 to 60 11
required for the drama about
Tuotday ovenln11 al 7:IO In
the theater, 202 Avenid.a
Clbrlllo, San Clemente. The
cut 1nclude1 1Jr ·men, one
woman ...S a loeoi4le 11rl.
,-.-------., FoW'leen men 1nd three
(,. .1 r r no.• .1 n n) . women are beinl IOUiht by l l.UU.<.&JU i4AU dJroctor Let Howt.,i.n !or hla
production of "11te Boston
a love affair between a
mlddle-a,ged manulacturer and
his young, pretty secretary.
trhe iryooll will be held in the
playhouse, 2110 Main St., Hun-
tington Beach, where the pl1y
opens on March l& for five
weekends.
-The county's second look at
Story" for the Santi Ana
OOmmu.nlty Player1. '"1e play
is an original satire by Lou Vsrne. .
Tryouts are scheduled for
Sund1y Jt 2 and l p.m. in the
Pll)"ll'I 'lbe1ier, MO N. Ross
St., Santa Ana. The show
optDI March 11 fot: w three-weetend run. · 0
Wait Until Dark" thls sea.son:f~~~~7;~~~~~ (wbich wW bruk a lotli ltrinl
of local ~ at the
C.brillo Playhouse) <X>mH up
on -March·· !I ·at tM' .. Sin;lplllll
Clemente Community Theater.
...... Carden ildlnictUii the
drama of a bliocJ girl ter-
rorized by three boodlum1.
. Auditions are Monday and
"A SEA FOR YOURSELF"
SHOWING NOW! UP
BARBRA THE .!.
STREISAND
'ilYILY AND FUNNY
UIHA STlllSAND
IS IXCIUIMYI"
·CUE MAGAZINE
BOX
--~
UA CITY CIM•MA e SAT & SUN e 1t1• & I :• PM. "ll:llA IN 1NI: ltrTCN•N" l•I COL.Oil
.
"
"Vanjshing
Wilderness"
1t7J tOlDIN llOll AWAID NOMINll
lllT 'IOMlllN& i.1wc•11 :=:
1nw
~
llll•t-W111!~810t.
SIMWWI Wiii nDOW
"'"'**
Tiii OlllY OUllll eotm llltAllMINT
llN TNU.Ttl fl) f* TlfUTll llt '
~ .. ••..;·•······· l •• I '..,,,+,,' • ct i\j\I\•' •Ill!
NOW
DOCTOR
ZHl\A.GO 7:00 P.M.
IFrt & s.t. 7:00 md lO:JOI CALL T"iATll ,01
SUNDAY scH•DUl•
GENfHACKMAN
~NEST
BORGNINE
RED 1un0Ns
CAROi.
LYNEY
·--,... ~ .,. JON VOIGHT· ~f RCYta.!lS 'MKN.'!9Qfl•
•M--COll"ll
6th
llCOID Wllll
NOW AT AU 3 IOWAID'I <JlllMAI .
1m Got.DIN llOll AWAIDS
NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTUl& ·DRAMA _,
ACTa.:-JON VOGIT OIRKlCl':-J0ttN IOORMAN
SC!tEEHPU.Y SOHG -ounlNG aAHm-
11111111CINIMAWllT#1 Afll NII
."Ml(All& .... 1111.UI"
. . . . . 0
''"·"'""' . CINfMA Ylf-.j0
..,,......,
C.'#., , .... "Vi.i..-1.i, ....... -... ...... ~ MCCAii & Mt$. MIU.II
---CtNIOOMF JO ','.,
.... -•Lr..:.:.11 •·1~ .. ~ ... ---CtNFODMF 21 ..
.. • • • •• • ••• j -... -... SIAD/UM ·/ ..
.. -''l fl'•• ·----.. S!ADIUM ' J .. -· , ...... ----.. S!ADIUM •J : .. -·-·~·· .. ----.. SIAD/UM 4
.. -.:• ... titll: ,.., -...._
rLUI ·ti( MAIV\N
C.HH H.a.C ~M.C..N
"PllMI CUT''
•t11 t11.1t wnr
HELO OVER
"EL'r'll4 MADIGAN"
"• Orltl•1e1I U111vt
'r'trsle11
"P.,haps tfi• M•lt
ffo11tlf11I lftOWle
h1 hl•t•ry" -
New Yetll1r
SOUTH COAST PLAZA a 1
Coit• M•1• -54•·1111
"SLAUCIHTllMOUI• J" • "CATClf 11"
"I LYll ON TOUlll" • "SICYJ&CJCtD°' CP'GI
"JUDOI lllOY llAN'" ,,,.
''TH!; 11\ltNGlll"
"PETE 'N TILLIE" ,,,.
"PLAY IT AGAOf, SAM"
MoQUEEN/
ManGRAW
TllE OETAWM ..... -""" .... _ .. ............. ---·--""'°'--·-l!lllo 1.-. tm
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"flllWAlllTWllr MIN UIWOMlll"
1•t:i0<1 ~U•••, 11>1-~· c o
1973
GOLDIN GLOll AWARD
' NOMINll
HSY MUSICAi SCOR!
"'"" ....
..... \.tt '\
NEWPORT <·A·-1 •• ' .. , ·~1'
NOW ·..e:~"· ''SOUNDIR'' ... _.,"" .. ,,.OUND.Rff 197JGO\DIN llOll AWAID NOf!'IMll
llST AC Tl CS I • CICllT TT10N -
PAIAYdlOli· 1At10 (11 llCOlOI ll'T PIOMISUH~ NIWCOMll -''SOUNDER'' ...
I ' . . 1-
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. ' • •• I'
.jl4 DAILY PIL~T Tlnirsday, January 2S, l<J7l
--Finance . -\
State Bar {)ff ers--N-o-;fautrBill -Propos.al
•
Briefs
e 3 T ankers
PORTLAND, 0 r e .
-cuooerson Tffc. says the Keet
for the first of thfee tartker
ships ordered by Standard Oil
of Calitomia-for-the.-West.
Coast trade will be laid Feb. 8.
"The 35,000-ton tanker is
scheduled for delivery in the
second quarter of 1974.-
DeJiverv of the second and
third vessels is scheduled in
the fourth quarter of 1974 and
the second quarter of 1975.
e Geo-Gestalt
SACRAMENTO CAP)
Like t11.·o drive.rs jousting (or
the same parking place. the
author of a major no-fRult
au to insurance bill and the
Californ ia State Bar Associft·
lion have found themselves on
a collision course over what
theDill Should do.
Leonard S. Janofsky of Los
By Airwest
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (AP) -
An intensive, $200,000 pro-
VANCOUVER. B.C. motional campaign aimed at
Hobrough Ltd. of Vancouver increasing business on nights
and Teledyne Geotronics of to Las yegas and Reoo .was 1
Long Beach, Calif. have announced this week . by
agreed in principle to form 8 Hughes Airwest. '
new equally-ov.-ned compan y to be knowri' as Geo-Gestalt Russell V. Stephenson, Airv.·est vice president, said
Inc. lhe campaign would begin
Jeremy N. Kendall. presi· Ffl:t. 1 and'i'-~x\end for 2in:
d.ent of Venturetek ln~~h moqths. All of the 74 Airwest
t1onal Ltd · Toronto, stations in the western United
controls 40 ~! . of States, Canada and Mexico
Hobrough's stock. said ln 8 v.·ill carry material promoting
statement a forma~ agreement I Nevada flights. Theme of the
--is expected to be signed by the campaign will be "escape
end of February to se~ up the with the Sundance Kids,"
new company localed to Leng Stephenson said.
Beach.
e Vnionamerira
LOS ANGELES
Unionamerica Inc., the holding
company for Union Ba~k.
reports a 42 percent upswing
in sales during the final
quarter of 1972.
The increase, based largely
on a strong earnin g
performance of the cor-
poration 's.non-bank
subsidiaries. raised fourth-
quarter net earnings to a
record $6.8 million, or 66 cents
a share.
e Cranston Job
WASHINGTON -Sen. Alan
Cranston (D-Calif.). has been
named chairman of the small
business subcommitee of the
Senate Banking Committee.
Calling small business "vital
to california's economy,"
Cranston said in a statement
the new job will give him
more power to .pro~te ~uch
inteiests as minority finan-
cing, management a~sistance
and disaster rehef t o
bffinessmen. and fiomeowners.
California
Ends Year
In Black
SACRAMENTO !AP)
California ended 1972 with
$119 6 million in the bank,
state Controller Houston
Flournoy said this week.
That is 639 times the closing
cash balance in state coffers
at the end of 1971, when
Flournoy reported a general
fund balance of just $189.147
and unpaid bills of $363
million.
Flournoy also said this is the
first time in 14 years in which
the state has met all of its
(lb!igations in the first half of
the fiscal year with<>ut bor-
rowing.
"Most of this remarkable
impr(lvement in cash flow is
attributable to state income
tax withholding which started
Jan. 1, 1972," Flournoy said.
Because of the even flow of
income tax revenue provided
of income tax revenue pro-
vided·by withh<llding. the state
t6ok in cash receipts _(If $2.58
billion during the first six
months of the 1972-73 fiscal
year, Flournoy said. That was
a 29.8 percent increase in cash
receipts . over the previous
year in the six month period
ending Dec. 31, Flournoy said.
The cash receipts do not
relate directly to the budget
surplus , which is calculated on
an accrual basis. That surplus
is expected to .swell to a
record $852 million by the end
of this fi!cal year and could
top $1.l billion in 1974.
cording to estimates of
Department of Finance.
Rossmoor's
Profits Show
Big Growth
An earnings increase of 25 to
30 percent per year, a goal at-
tained in 1972, was set as the
continuing growth objective of
Rossmoor Corp. during the
forthcoming year by Ross W.
Cortese, president a n d
chairman, before the annual
meeting of Rossmoor Corp:
Shareholders this ~eek in
Anaheim.
Selecting a single word -
"Growth" -as the most evi-
dent characteristic of
Rossmoor Corp., marking its
first year as a publicly held
company listed on the
American Stock Exchange,
Cortese cited increases i n
revenues from $35.2· million to
$55.3 million with net income
climbing from $1.9 million lo
13.5 million and per share in·
CQIJlt reaching $1.10 compared
with 86 cents for the previous
year. ·· ·
Co~ributlng to the sjgnili·
cant ~gains were "backlog"'
figures existing in December,
a term used to describe dwell-
ings which have been placed
under deposit sales contracts,
but which have oot as yet been
delivered. The b a c k I o g
represents $41.7 million in
sales, or an increase of 59 per-
cent over the previous year's
backlog of $24.6 million.
Indicative of corporate
financial progress '"'ere the
tesults of the first quarter
·which ended Dec. 31. "Net in·
CQme and per share ear1ungs
for the three months ended
Dec. 31, \Vere the best first
quarter net income and per
share earnings ·in Rossmoor
Corp.'s history.
"Sales and revenues were
$14,855,000 CQIDpared to
$14,256,000 reported a year
ago," Cortese said, "with net
income increasing to $970,000
compared with $813,000 for the
prior year, earnings per share
rose to 30 cents compared
with 25 cents," he pointed out.
; Open Mon.-Thurs. 9a.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.-&p.m. ' .,
IUEMA PARK Mercury~ Bldg,, Valley View at Lincoln * HUITIHTOM HACH MttCtlry Savings Bldg., Edinger et Beach * * TUSTHI Marcury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Avt. * * .. I.A HAIM-FUUtrroM Mercury Slvtngs Bldg., lmperlil Hwy. at Harbor * * CA.Rimi Mercury Savings Bldg., Avalon Blvd. at San Olego ffwf. *
**********************
•
ITEM -QUAN. PRICE
SHOWER'& WINDOW CURTAIN IDISCM!l¥M·Lfoel 100 V2 OFF
PRESTO VUTICAL IROILER ........................................... .! 12.00 •
BLACK ANGUS IAKE-IROIL OVIN ....... -....................... 1 17.00
ILACK ANGUS ROTISSERIE ............................................ 1 20.00
G.E, MANICURE sn ........................................... -........ .! 9.00
CARVING sn ................................................................ . 2.00
VACUUM CLEANER IAG & IELK ._ ................. : .. _.200 · 20c ........
HAIR DRYER ........................................................... : ......... 1 9.00
ASH TRAY & LIGHTER .......................... _ .................... 10 4.00
' 6~00 , .. •
SALAD sn .... _ .................................................................. 3
EBELSKIVIR·PAN ................................................ -........... .26 3.00
2.00 ' STEP STOOL ..................................................................... 14
POPCORN POPPER .......................................................... M 1·.10
18" FIRE GRATE .............................................................. 62 .ao
ELECTRIC Ll,Cjl. LIGHTER .............................................. 84 1.20
SAF£GUARD FAUIC REPELLENT .................................. 76 2.00
TIKI TORCHES IAut. Col«» ........................................ 70 1.40
FLOATING POOL LITES .................................................. 24 .~o
I BUILDltlG AND PLUMlll'-G I
ITEM CjlUAN.
' WINDOW & DOOR WEATHERSTRIPPING lllT ............ 40
PRICE
.60
CEILING TILl-·12" x·lZ" .................................. 1000·M. .• QS.-
•
, ~;
CARPET SCjlUARES-12". 12" SHAG ............... .uo ..i: 1.so ....... ;,.
PLASTIC TANK ·FLOAT .. : ............................................. -100 •
'
GARIAGE DISPOSAL IStalnl111 Snell .............. :: .. 1 ·"""'
MEDICINE CAllNn •2036P ................................... .1 -"""
MEDICINI CAllNT W/WOOD·PANEL ................... 4-eoly·
'
MAllELIZED .TOILIT :SEAT -............................................ 1
TOILm -JOIUT CLEANll. ........... -....................... ;lO
WORK GLOVU ...................... --·•···--·-·· .. ··•··--·· .. ··'° ...
HOSE H,(oNG~_ ............ :r--·· ... :.'. ......................... :·;"-.... ,n
-.,14 ·
~·
r
·40.00 ' . , I ;so.OQ ,
10.00 I
'.60 I .
'12: dfJf
' • 25 ,., .
.35
•
HARDWARE:
ITIM CjlUAN.
3" CLAMP-ON VISE ...................................................... .10
'SURFACE MAILIOX LR85 ................................................ 37
WASH & POLISH KIT .................................................... 62
HANDYMAN PLASTIC UTILITY IOX ............................ 55
1 O Px. SANDING· PADS. C....._ ................................ 100
DECOR DOOi PLANT-'ONS ................................ 1'9-1.99
DECOR DOOR PLANT0 0NS ....... _ ....................... 119. ,99
DECOR DOOR PLANT•OllS ................... <. ........... 119. 3,49 . '•
" . -. .. .. . . . .
DECOR DOOi PLANT.OHS ........................... _ ....... '2:49
.,.,.. ..
Fl.ATHEA_Q-l!HILl.trS 1Jct-_;_$CRIW .: ....................... -1000
TILi SCjlUlm llAClln ...• ,: .. !.C:.: .• 111. 4,88 ................ 36
" . ~ • •4 .• -
14" PIP! WRENCH. .......................................................... 40 . '
8" PIPE WRENCH · ...... : .... , .... :, .... , ................................... 36
' GIAIUR -14" ......................................................... .100
• PLASTIC ·FLOOR ~o'llCTOR, 6'124" ........................ 720
_, . '!"'
5 LL GARAGE FLOOR CLEANER .......... , ....................... 30
' .
36 DRAWll .CAllNn ....................... : ............................ 24
SUllPOAM SCULPTOR lllT ........ , .................... : ... , ............ 6
PIY IAI ..................... _.f.: .............. " ............................... 26
SAFIT\'·IYE ·GUARD ....................................................... .29
' TOOL SALi ........................... _ 4Mt'd •................................
PROPANE TANKS ......................................................... 100
'f ELECTRIC
.ITIM , . CjlU~.
,l'LUOllSCENT<LANTIRN .................................................. 8
' '' ' . . ' • HCIPTACLI W/GIOUND ............................................ 80
' IVORY SWITCH , ........................................................... 60 ., I • f -' ~ . .
llEYLISS LAMPHOl.DEI "4'1wl .................................. , 15 ' :; '
ELECTRICAL TAP! ....... ( .............................................. 1JO
IXTRIOI POICH LIR "+65-Ul ..... -......................... ,31
COLOR PLOW LITI ........................................................... 5
' •
DOWN onNSION CORDS. 6° ., t•., 12' ------.. .120
' 20" IOX. PAN .......................... ::..-...... : .............................. 6 . .
Ciinwniooti1 locoN ... ;&oy To IM<hl
2666 HARBOl.ILVD.
·IN COSTA MESA PHONl·S46-7080 <OIU ' Miil ,
HOURS• WEElCDAYS 9 TO 9
SATUIOAY A"1> SUNOAY 9 TO 6 PM
'
I I, I " • I I
Sil• ·--~~
Wtd.....Uy
''"· )1.
--HICE .
1.00
3.00
.so
.60
.10
1.00
~40 -
1.50'
1.00
.01 ...
2.00
2.50
2.00
.ao
.15
.40
' 6.00
6.00
.60
.so
.88
.77
I PRIC~
·8.00 .
.40
.40
'
.30 •
.30
7.oo
s.oo
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Thut$day, Ja~ 25, 1973 DAILY PILOT ,2$
Bruins Mter-Record-tying No. 60 Tonight
' .
ai r banks
-To Pros?;
USC Wins
CIDCAGO (~) -\"ll>e loai.,. the
llreok lilo-11'1" lboy WW 10 -It."
'J\at -cOoch Jollnziy W«idea -1<· Ing Wedne9day u ho lhephenfed his
~1abwous-uCI;A team Into hll naUve Mld-
west wbere the top.ranked 8nllns ctn
__JDilchJDd then, ~ C9IJ>a• blllcet·
ball'.1 i:ecord-an.tln•H•inolng stree.k.
'lbe Bruins, 1C.O for ~ eeuon. seek_
their !0th su~lve tliump.b tonight agaldst Chk:ago Loyola (8-5). It wm ..
biOadcut locally at 5:30 on KMPC.
BOSTON -Chuck Fairbanks, bead
Io o Iba II cooch at Olllohoma, has
reportedly tccepted a job with the New
England Patriots ol the National Football
!.<ague.
The report, which came at the end ol ~ baU·boor Boston television newscast Id-not specify whet.her Fairbanks might
ve been hired as head coach or general
"'"""". • Patriot>' olficlals had '81<1 they wanted
" hi!' one man for both jobs.
,.Neither Patriots' olflciab nor
rbanks was immediately available. for
, ent.
seven seasons at Oklahoma,
banks has a 52-15-1 record. That ln-
four bowl games with three vic-
es and a tie. ..
rojans Triumph . ....
1!0NOLULU -CarlOll Mina sank .a Niort r<bound shot In the second
[
ertlme period and the University
Soutbern California It.ailed for more
n a minute to down the Submarine ·
llorces, Pacific -here Wednesday •• "Gus Williams was high man for USC
h 20 potnu.
· ight Champ Killed
;'J'OKYO -Masao Obha, the World
xing Association's flyweight champion,
killed Thursday morning when his
crossed a road divider and collided
-on with a truck on a highway, police
rted.
:Ponce said the 23-year-old Obha was
llone in the car and died be(ore he could
taken ta a hospital. The truck driver
aped Injury. ,
lue8 Edge Kings
INGLEWOOD -Mike Murphy and
yd Thomson each 9COl'ed two goals
y night as the St. Louis Blues .-i a wild 7"5 National Hockey League
.,,. hum the Los Angeles Kings.
Ji'f'be victory gave the Blues an 18-21-8
, moving them to within four
of the Kings In the NHL West. Los
eles is 21·2U.
sher No. 16
ENVER -Costa Mesa's Barry
• recent wlnfier of the rn,711
boat Classic in Las Vegas, gained a
mulfinals berth in the Denver Open
'9wlillg tournament with a 2,557 pinfall
~ a dozen qualifying games.
Tustin'! Butch Soper also made the ~
'liiln cut a notch behind Asher at 17th.
Today's top five finallst.1 will compete -Y In a nationally televised wind-
Iii;, with $6,000 going to winner. ·
Favorites Advance
WNOON -Arthur Ashe and Ken
IMewall, two of the top contenden in Cle $47 ,000 Rothmans International in· f!or tennis tournament, moved into the
QtiarterOnals at London's Royal Albert Rall Wednesday night. =.Ashe, former U.S. Davis Cup star from
hmond, Va., overcame stubborn Bob
chael of Australia, S-2, 6-7, 6-3. ,
'ltosewall, 37-year~ld A u s t r a I I a n , eyed with all his old cunning in.
Zl'.eating Pierre Barthes of France, 71,
If ulllng It Over •
On the same program II Notre Dame
Rosenbloom
Puts Gabriel,
Kno x-on Spot
LOS ANGELES (AP) -In a couple of
breaths, Carroll Rosenbloom pui both his
new coach Chuck Knox and bis
quartuback Roman Gabriel on \lie spot.
'Mle _.. of the Los A>lieles l!am•
want! to win -now.
Roeenhloorn fifed Tommy Prothro on
Wednesday aod 'appoint~ the 40-year-old
Knox wbo has been an asslatanl with the
Detroit Lions for six years following
tenure with the New York Jets.
0 What I know ol. the Las Angeles
Rams, we abould have gone to the Super
Bowl," said RoRnbloom at tbe news con-
ference introducing Knox to L4s Angeles.
"I think we should have gone to the
Super Bowl this year."
So out went Prothro with thrte years
left on a contract of $80,000 give or take
some thousands. In comes Knoz who
says, "The people I admire the most are
consistent winners. I think football should
be coached with enthusiasm.
"I . think the players reOect what the
coaches do. You can't stand on the
sidelines with your hands ln your
pockets."
Criticized during the Rams' 6-7-1
season was the motivation by Prothro
anCI the throwing by Gabriel, the veteran
quarterback who suflered tendionitis of
the right elbow.
Kno:r · skirted the question of what
would be tbe quarterback situation, but
Rosenbloom didn't.
"We _think Gabriel can be a fine
quarterback," the owner told the news
conference. "But we have to go with
more than one. We do need another pro-
ven quarterback and we're out to get
ooe.''
And perliapo shaking up more ol the
Rams organization, the owner said.
"Everything we can do tO improve
ourselves, we will do, and we have other
things In mind."
Prothro, 52, said be hadni heard of bis
firing until his wife heard It at her den·
list's.
"As soon as I heard the news, I called
my attorney and turned the whole thing
over to him. That's all J have to say at
this time."
Rosenbloom said that Prothro's al·
torney bad contacted him earlier and so
he could make no comment on the status
of the former coach's contract.
"We will pay him whatever Is due
under the contract," said the man who
last summer traded the Baltimore Colts
for the Rams
Marvin Meyer, Prothro'• attorney, said
be plans to meet with Rams' attorneys to
settle the matter.
Prothro Wl8 signed alter the Rams
fired George Allen following the mo
seaaon. Allen subsequently signed with
the Washington Redskins and took that
team to the Super Bowl last Jan. 14.
In 1971, the Rams of Prothro polled an
8-5-1 record, just missing the league
playotts. But in 1972, they were ~7-1.
: Matte Ponders Future •
~· After Chargers Trade ,.
BALTIMORE (AP) -Tom Matte the
C" arbage can" running back who made
wristband playbook famous, says he's
eclded on whether to report to the )In Diego Olargen or retire from pro
)otball.
0 1'm mulling U over,1' 'Matte said
ednesday after helng traded to the
rgen by tbe Baltimore Colts for an
,.htl>round choice In next week's Na-
~ Football !.<ague player dralt.
:ft was the second d•al In three days
ween the two clubs involvtog a
..,.. player. On Monday, the C.lu
Jecmdary qutl1'r1>odt Jollll
to Su D1ep !or "!II--
..... " Unlbll ll8o i.o ·lDdi<lted
tlOll$ about ttporttnf to the ~~"'to11u. Mitt. had complained ~ •. last WI about the tactics ol
;:::_re'• new genua.J manacer Joe
Alltr •tartlnc the llnl lour ,.,... ol
the ....... U.tt. .... lide1lDed by a hip inJlll'l' ag'"* Siii Diep. 81 milaed the
Dallu canltlt the lollowlnti wtek and on
Oct. 21 was dooc!Jv1ted alter IU!lerlni •
recumnce ol bleeding ulcers.
At mldseuon1 he c•lled a news OCJrr
,......,. to compllln about the delay Iii
his reactivation and criUctt.d the Colu
70Uth movement under 'lbomu. Thal
•
movement saw Unit.at, the 17·year all·
time AU-Pro, benched in favor of young
Marty Domrea and Matte replaced by
second-year man Don McCauley.
Matte was rttumed to the active roster
Dec. 9 and Performed on the spedal
teams during the last two games. But
tt...ughoot the c._ip, the on .. ume
Ohio State star IDdlcated that 197% would
be his final }'ear n a player.
111 want to taJt Jt over with my wife
and See what'• golbg on" before making
a fio.a1 declslon on retirement, Matte said
Wedneoday.E Miu. wu Cotta' No. 1 draft ctlolce
ID 1111 and I . for tight-·· He eomed Ille n1oknlme "Garbage
Man" for his lbllity to do 10 many things
to help a dub without showing a Oashy
•t.vle. Statlsllcally, his best ...... In the
PfOI WU 1•, whm be led tho NFL In
combined ylnlr with 1,12:1 and was third among.-. With IOt. 1¥ the feat usually auodaled with
Matt, -In 11115.
• Wfll( lloltas and hi1 heckup, Gary
Claolo, IQJured, Matte WU caOed upon to
quuWbock the C.lu. A play lbett taped
to hla wmt, MattA> directed 1 20-17 vlo-
ro.,.-..., Loo A°"'lea to Jl(ve Baltlmoro
a shar. of lbe Western Conference cham-
piooOhip.
I
I
.(S.7), facin( D11nols (7-4). The Fighting limes," 1&1d Wooden, "but on the whole_
lrltll ~ bijlCIOUCU-Si-f iltcr· we've been pleased with our play oo lar.
noon. 1bat could be a b1ltoric cmtest "Lut Friday, oui victory over san
produeiJlc the-1111--...-Bnlln Franclaco ln.M) wu-our besrpme-.t
triumph, lhltletlng the coUe(Jate record the >"""· I was V""f pleased .alao with
ol 60 held bl Ille Unlver~t,v oUJ!!I Frln· our per1onn.....soturday •aaioe!'.J>rov-
ctaoo s!JM:e t!IS7, • ldence (beaten by UCLA 101·771' bU( I
There 1uid been conjecture that dldll'I thlnk we played wlih tho ...,.
UCLA ·was ripe !or a tumble this •year, ;i"femity u the previous night.
but Wooden'• Wonder Meo dlspelled any "I dm'f thlnk this ~as significant
trend toward inertia l~t weekend. as It is for us. means pressure al-
"Our de/..,. bas · been 'l"'lt.v al thoucJ> It wUI he a tough weekend. Nat.
W"ally, etch team we meet wants to be • the one to break our win rtreek.
"I'm eoftfldent ll we be, it will not
he becauK"Ofl>ressure but tii!Ciu.e ol
an oppoDf.Dt having a tremendous game
against ua."
Loyola coach George Ireland com-
mented "we're going to be badly eut·
manried, but other things, like meotality
and determination enter ln.
Lo)'Ohi•a &.feet 8 Paul O:lben-.-..,~lgned
fo guard UCLA's All-American BW Wal·
too , insisted the Ramblers v.·ill be loose
against the Bruins.
"They're ~l, but v.·e're not wor·
tied," said <;Oben. "We have so much to
gain and nothing to \Q$e. I'm not really
nervous at all about tbe game."
Notre .Dam!!' ~mii],gly on the up-
sv.·eep until an 81·72 loss ~1ooday to
Duquesne. was the last team to de.feat
UCLA. That happened at Noire Dame
Jan-!..~ 1971.__wben brilliant Austin Carr's
40 points handed the Bruins their only 11
setback (89-82) in a 29-1 season. I
Illini R ipped Do ns
Former USF Ace
Saw Streak .End
By HOWARD L. HANDY
CM t1141 C.llr Pllet Sl1fl
. For a man who has run the gamut or
-playing on a college basketball team that
won 60 straight games, spent eight years
in the pro ranks as a player then coached
and did broadcasting, partlclpatiOh !fl a
"litUe league'' in Irvine would hardly
seem excJUng. ""
Mike Farmer, a resident of Irvine, has
___:____ l!a-d such a back.ground yet he get.1 as
much kick out of the three-on-three
games that are determined by l~ute
time interva ls as be did in his earlier
youth.
The 6-9, 36-year~ld basketball addict
says the Irvine league is good eiereise
and he enjoys bis particlpaUon to the
fullest degree.
This is a man who once started as a
sophomore for the Unlvenity of San
Francisoo with the likes of Bill Russell,
K.C. Jones, Carl Boldt and Hai Perry,
then moved to the St. Louis Hawks for
five years, played 2¥1 more with the New
York Knicks and finished his playing
career with the Cincinnati Royals for a
half season.
During his sophomore season at USF,
Fanner played on an undefeated team
that won the NCAA championship.
He was captain of the Dons the next
two years, and disappointedly in that
position when the team finally lost a
game after winning an NCAA record of
60 straight. ToW&ht Ua.A can tie that
mark of SO wins in suCcession.
IRVINE'S MIKE FARMER IN NEW YORK KNICKS LIVERY
"We lost to the Univeriity of llllnois,"
he recalls. "They beat us pretty bad that
night, too. Something like 14 or 15 points
{it was 62-33 )."
W an't_ Feel Pressure
Farmer Says Bruins Deserve Record
Irvine's Mike Farmer was captain of
the University of San Francisco basket·
ball team during the 1956-57 season when
Ule Doos ran out a string of 60-stralght
· victories to set an ~CAA record.
This year the Dons had an opportunity
to nip UCLA (Friday night) after 57
straisht Bruins victories but fell short of
that goal and now the Bruins of John
Wooden will equal the USF record if they
can whip Chicago l.A>yola tonight.
How does Farmer look at the situs·
tion?
"I £elt USF had the ability to give
them a good game," he reflects. u1
follow USF as an interested alumnus and
I'm sure thers was quite a bit of emoUon
,Involved with the ,..,,."
Would be like tc>•iee the Bruins break
the USF record? ' •'
"No, I would love to \• the record
l
stand," he admits. Then hastily adds:
"With the record UCLA has had the
last 10 years, If anybody deserves to
break our mark, It bas to be them.
"This Is really the only major obstacle
left for Wooden to conquer. His teams
have won so many championships that
this isn't a major challenge anymore."
Will the pressure of the situation get to
the Bruins?
"I don't thlnlc so. They are used to
pressure games," he 8'YS.
But Mike Fanner isn't going to let it
worry him if the Bruins do go on and on
and on to move the consecutive victory
mark above the 60 mark. Or for that
matter, above the 70, 80, 90 or 100 mark,
either.
Right now he's more concerned with
threHn-three night league games in his
home area of Irvine. But that 's another
story.
The JOS. didn't collapse the USF squad,
however. The Dons went on to finish
third in the NCAA finala despite the loss
tiy gniduafion of Russell aJXI Jones.
"The University of Ka.baas beat us that
year in the semifinals. They bad Wilt
Chamberlain."
How about his final aeuon at USF?
"We had the best college record in the
country, 24-1," he says. "But we lost out
in the NCAA regionals to Seattle
University when Elgin Baylor scored a
last·second basket."
Following graduation, he was signed.by
the St. l.A:>uls Hawks to a pro contract
and remalned. with the team for five .
years.
"We finished In second place four of
those years. But we never could
overcome Los Angeles in the seventh
game of the playoffs."
He was playing against Jerry West,
Baylor, Rudy La·Russo, Rod Hundley
and ot.hen on the Lakers team.
Hls mates at St. Louis included Cliff
Hagen, Bob Pettit, Lenny Wilkens, Zelmo
Beatty and Riehle Guerin.
When he Hnished his eight-year pro
career, be had a Ding at coaching at the
tender age of 2:9. His only season was a
disaster and be turned to broadcasting
Hawks games in St. Louis with Skip
Caray'.
"When they moved to Atlanta, m,y wife
Paula and t decided against goiug there
and I took a job with a chemical com-
pany in the A.strc>-turf divilion.
After two years ot behtr on airplanes
about 80 percent of the Ume, I 1Witcbed
companies and now I get to 1pend much
more time at home with Paula and our
ton, Brad, 8."
Farmer, along .with lour other USF
athletes, was inducted into the 1ebool'1
ball of fame in Novemtw 1971. That wu
the last time he uw all ol his teammates
from the glory daya !o(ether but be rum
across individuals quite often.
What position did he play with a man
like RUMell on the team?
"I was a forward in college but 1 think
At Irvine Coast
I had more playing time than anyone else
during my sophomore year. Russell
averaged only about 20 minutes a game
because ~·e would get so far ahead and t
would move to center when he \\'as out.
"I played guard in the pros and worked
against Oscar ""Robertson, West and
Sharman. ln 1 ooe game against the
Celtics, I was against Russell. Sharman
and To'm Hein.sobq. l felt like a utility in-
fielder must feel in baseball."
Was Russell tough to guard?
"He wasn't rough and didn't use brute
force to get the job done. It wasn't a hard
&Mignment in some respects but he
didn't let you get any offensive rebounds.
"Shannan was the hardest to play
agaimt because he was quick and WU .a
good shooter ...
Does he miss basketball these days!
"Yes, and I would like to be involved
more. But they don't come looking for
you when you've been out of. the game
for a few years."
Mike Farmer may not be coaching on
the professional or college level but he
remains active in the sport as a partici-
pant.
And he may soon return to the
coaching ranks.
Yoo see. he has a youngs ter with a
lively interest in all sports in yoong
Brad.
Laver Breezes
To Easy Victory;
Emerson Wins
LA COSTA, Calif. (AP) -Rod Laver,
who was considered the ~g of tennis
two years ago, ls using the $50,000 World
Championship of Tennis Michelob Classic
lo make his comeback.
The ftlp-seeded Laver defeated Frew
McMillian ol South Africa with a
straight-set 6-3, 7·5 in second round play
Wednesday. ·
Newport Beach's Roy Emerson also
won, defeating Barry Phillips-Moore, U,
1-3, 6-2.
Second seeded Stan Smith whipped
aille's Patrlclo Cornejo 6-2, 6-3, wblle
Tom Edlefsen of l.A>s Angeles downed
Andrew Patti90D of Australia 6-3, U, &.2.
In doubles matches, F.dlefaen teamed
with former UCLA sur Roy Barth to trip
Rob Maud of Sooth Africa and Pat"""1 6-
4, 6-3 and Laver and Emel'30fl. teamed to
whip Colin Dibley and Newport Belch'•
Terry Addison, 6-4, 6-3.
Phil Dent upset fourth-seeded Cllff
Richey of San Angelo, Tex., M , 7·5, and
John Alexander turned back former USC
star Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, &-3, 6-
4.
In a late singles match, fifUHeeded
Bob Lutz of Los Angeles, another former
USC player, was upset by Harold
Solomon of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 6-1,
H.M.
f:llll \AWff, ~ 111e't"!!:, ..... ~-Mc:Mlfll4'o kMll Alrlet. w. 1·5.
Tom E111f'!len, LC>s Allllllw, belt Alldr-"•ltlMft., Al/'ltr•IW. • .._2. 24, ... 2. '"41111'1 DN>leT. AultT1ll1, biMot AllM Sr-, Allll!f11111, .... , llov E,,,.,._ • ....,_.. lffdl, ..,., ••rrv ""Liii• ~1. AU1"'9Ji8. H. 6..l,. '"2. . M1_11_ s.Nlf\, ,,_, i.tt "•lritlo Cor!Wlo. Cfilll • ... ... MIO'Old SO.:.-, !<-art L.11.rderdilt, Fii., b11t 8ff
'~~ '<l:..':"r::· t" ....... Tu IM. ,:1. 1111t1 II, NII Clllf litld>W, 1811 A .......
::k:ilift'. AlellMtdtr, Aullrlf... blat t>8rw111 lltlt-. 1t11 .... t1tld ...........
U \ftf' llld E......-C~I,_., Wlwl. H""'"" lff<fl, 11111 DllMW .... ..,, ~""~ll•"'=•·"t~~~ ONtY ••rvn. ~z .. IMlll, .. 2. s.1._...., ltay e1rm. '""" 0.11.1. ,,,.. ~•lefM'tl ._, •~ MIUll. ScM.llfl Air 1. Int P1ttl1011. M. ~
Women 'Pros to Compete
. u, • ., ......
COSTA MESA'S llARRY ASHER HEADS PRO BOWLING$ WINNIRS.
Showbolt Tourn1y Vlclvry l>1ws Him $16,"61or·73,
I
Controvenlal Jane Blalock and Sandra
Palmer of the Ladles Prolessloc>l Goll
Aaodation will parttc;pate along with Z7
Oilier tllUr1n( prol..,looalo In o pro-
81118teur. eat:-day tournament at Inrine
Coast Country Club Friday with 1 shotgun
start 1t 11.
Bla1oct ad Palmer ha.., had their dU·
1.._ wlllt the LPCA In the pall but
will lorpt thdr tn>ubles Frtclay In Ute
~ -t 11 Itvlne Cout CC.
I A toto1 of :II pro!! will participate with
llS am.etetn -two men and two women
-11' -°'"°'"'· Scoring will he on a two ktw Ntl of flvesome net basl1 with
the tidy prvo also having tl\l!lr own iJ>.
dMclual compelltlon.
lldendi111 champion , Pam Higgins, has
another "commitment this yoar and will
be un1ble to make the tournament after •
•
setUng a course reoord 65 1n last yur's
ac1loo. 11IJs Is eight under part at IMne
Coast.
While this is oot an oCfidallt anc-
tioned event or the LPGA . all of the pros
sre memben or the oraaniZIUon. Tbe
publlc Is lnvUed to 1aDery tho ...,..
petltlon. '"" of charse· Other pros Include Sbltley Entlleham,
Janice campbeu. Shirte)' W'8ter, .i..
Huntsberger. Marilyn Smllb. Pal 1-,
Clrole Jo Skala, Mazy Blfrledl. S1llr"1
Sport.
Mardell Wilkins, Shcni Wilder, Lou11e
Bruce, SUe Tubman, Karolyn K-,
Gsll Denenbe11. Dianne Palt<l'IOll,
Jackie Ev3ns, Nool Scbntlde:r, Linda SUe
Galloway, Sandra Ho,ynte, Jo AM
Washam, Gloria Joan Fechl, Sllo1ly
Hamlin, Martha Mitchell, Bonnie~
De Do Owens aJXI Klthy Martin.
(
!6 OAIL Y PILOT ~b· ~ 25, 1973
'
GWC Gets · Bounces,
Bags 74-73 Thriller
By CllWG SllEn' ...............
__ A ~pl• of bowlces w.nt
Golden w .. t. Coll4i•'i ·w.;y
Wednesday nl&bt and U a result the ' nu,Uen .,.. now
back ln thel Sollthern
California Confutf'ICfl basket-
ball race.
CoacbDlctSt r i ck 11 n 's
Golden West club ltUOlled
visiting East LA w~
nl&bt, 7t73, but It took I com-
blDltion of detenninaUon by
the Rustlers and a UtUe luct.
Golden W•st caplWOd Its
fourth straight clttult win In a
row and is now dtadlocked
with lour other toams lor -
ood pi•"'· just one 1ame behind Santa Monlc11 a loser
to LA So\lthwest Wednffday
nl&bl.
&ricklln'• club didn't ,..
the Jead unW there was just
-maan)"8)m, n w&Y,an upblll battle all
the way lor the Rustlers.
· Tbl,y lraJlad·by annuch ••
ti In the first hall against &n
Eaat I.A team that hit 57.t
percenl (IO 10< 15) In the fi rst
ball.
But then with 10 minutes to
10 and the Hu.kles up by nine
(I.WI), Golden Wes! began to
peck away.
Two dantly shots by Orlllll -
ooe a twisting revtrte layup
-cut tho dtllclt to five (II-
1 113) and Golden Wes! now had
the momentum .
The two te1ma lhen traded
point• with-St.Clair-hilling a
layup and Young and Jell Butt
gunning tn two long ones each.
Then SL Clair hit a bucket
from In close to cut t.he
margin to one (7h70J and lft
the 1t1.ge for Orgill'• berolct.
St. Clalr paced the Ru9llers
with 28 points, giving him a
two-year total of 741 and mak-
ing him the fourth all·time
scorer ln Golden West history.
Late Mesa Surge
Too Late, 46-40
1:0! left In the 1ame when By BOWARD L HANDY did the ·moot damage In the
guard Gary Orgill stole 1 Of .. ~ rti.t •••ff second hall, hitth10 three field Hustles bounce pa& and lben ~ hit 1 layup, glvlnl Iha A valiant bend ol Coota goals from outside the key In
RusUers 8 72·71 lead. Mesa ~lball playen star-each of the two periods and
It wu hecUc the rest of the ed with the vaunted Fountam bringing the Muatangs back.
Valley Barons Wednesday Both teams had a cold spell wt.st LA had a chance to go ntgbl through S:35 of the to start the second half with
ahead with 17 seconds left fourth quarttr before suo-Browning equalllJll lbe Foun-
when guard Don MWer was cumbina to the pressure o( lain Valley team lotaJ at six
fouled . But bia flnt free throw lbelr taI!er loet to drop a -lot the eight-minute ..,., ...
hlt lbe bade of tho rim and Ibo Irvine League decision In ac-He bad 11 lor .game honors.
tloo on· the wlnner'i home Lanky Scott Reider hod a RusU.n' Jell St. Clair got the court. bad shooting olght but dld well
rebound. 'lbe Mus~were with.in ' bl "'•• r--M Then with ti aecandl 1"11 St. ( ) 'th 4 25 m oc-. ,.ven ~,a eaa Clair was fouled . He canned two points WI : shots and grabbing rebounds
M ILY PILOT ...... .., Wt,._
GOLOEN WEST'S GARY ORGILL 114) GUAROS FOE. OTHER RUSTLERS INCLUDE GREG KYLE (1 2), JEFF BUTT AND JEFF ST. CLAIR.
!di to play but a pali' of free of! the defensive board. He hit the first one, for • 7S-71 lead thron by Tim Adams, a a field goal in each of the flr3l
but the seoond charity toss basket by Tim Hill and two two stamas then ran lnto a
careened oil the rim back to addltionol charity tosses by dry spell that saw him mis! on
the Rustler center. Jell Hatfield put it out of lS successive lbots.
It's 16 Straight
For CdM, 60-53
•
8}' HA!\K WESCH
ot llM Delly l"lltl Sltft
~!alt Keough led a fourth
quarter Corona del :\tar
upsurge lo put away an upset
n1tnded !\1agnolia baskrtball
team 61)..53 "'cdnesday in
lrvine League basketball ac-
tion at Corona del Mar.
The Sea Kings ootched their
16th straight victo7. and sixth
in a row in th·e eague, but
they had to overco me a 4340
MagnO!ia lead after three
quarters to do it. And that's
where Keough came in.
The 6-2 senior forw ard was
held to just four points in the
first three quarters of play,
but popped in lour baseline
jumpers in the fourth quarter
as: the Sea Kings roared back.
An IS.footer from the corner
by Keough trimmed the
~1agnolla lead to one, and
v.·hen Casey Jones hit from the
left of the key with 7: 18 re-
ma ining the wiMers took the
lead for good.
Keough tossed in two more
jumpers before the Sentinels
got untracked, and then hit
another as Corona took a 5045
lead Into the final lour
minutes and held on.
Magnolia looked much bet·
ter than its 1-5 league
record might indicate in the
first three periods, never let-
ling Corona del Mar take
more lhan a four·point lead
and holding the lead itseU oo
four occasions.
The Sentinels crashed the
offensive boa rds well and·
picked up fouls from Corona's
tight man-to-man defense and
hit bine of IO free throws in
the first half to slay close.
They outplayed Corona in' tlM!
third period as guard Dave
Flood poured in eight points on
drives and J2...15 foot jumpers,
and forward Randy Rozar
worked well inside for six
points.
Magnolia's 2·3 zone defense
was troublesome in the first
quarter but the Sea Kings
worked the ball well and hit D9
percent for the flnal three
quarters of the game. Smooth
and steady Jeff Wharton wa3
the key man lhrou~h the first
three perk>cls, scoring 18 of his
game high Z2 points on
medium range jumpers and
follow shots under the basket.
~i. (Ill ""'''' Hollltt. ! ' l 16 ":1.·· : ' ~ : ~1C:.. 1 2 1 1• Dell!" ,,,.
Tol1li 22 t 12 SJ COf"Oflll *I Mir ( .. ) fl ft ,, 111
JO!lft ' 2 2 10 Cl1r• 200• ~"!_l!Qh 6 o 2 n """'"°" 10 2 l " Attltsey 1 I • ~ttf1~ f i;
T oi.11 71 • 11 60 scorw ~Y 011t111tn
M111no111 I " 16 10-Sl Cc!M 1 16 12 20-.!iG
Losner's 29 Enough,
Vikings Collect, 72-65
By ROGER CARLSON
ot lh9 CMllY l'lltl l ltfl
;\f a r ina H igh 's 6·5
sophomore Bob Losner scored
a caree r high of 29 points
Wednesday night in leading :iiis
Vikings teammates to a 72-4!5
Sunse t League basketba.U
triumph over Newport Harbor
before 1.100 rans.
The victory keeps coach Jim
Stephens' Vikings In ron-
tention for the circuit crown·
as th e first round comes to a
close.
The Vikes are nO\V ft.2 in
league play and allhough they
are still two gamea off the
pace of league-leading Hun-
tington Beach. they have Hun-
tington Beach and second·
place Loara sti ll to 1neet in
th e Marina gym.
Losner, who has appeared
and performed like a senior
even when a freshman last
ytar, stole the show with his
hot hand aa he consistently
connected from outside with
his n1oon shots and oc·
cask>nally went Inside to
further frustrate Newparf's
saUon. .
Newport coach Dale Hage)
assigned Jai me Ho Im e •
'l!ln1fde) and Kurt Spreen
(outside ) on Lolner In a man--
to-man defens.lve si tuation.
But Lomer was equal to the
ta1k and turned in a nifty cf·
fort. -
... His 18th counter came w11h
5: 17 left in the lhird period
and it gave Marina a 36-35
lead and the Yikes were not to
trail again after Newport's
Sailors had equaJized things up
lo that paint with a balan~d
effort from guards Brian
O'Flaherty and Jack Altman,
along with Holmes.
O'Flaherty and Altman each
scored 14 while Holmes had
11. Newport's scoring effort
was damaged with the loss of
Jim Swick (mumps).
The Yikes broke it open In
the next four minutes after
Losner's go-ahead bucket.
First it was Mark Adams
wilh a five-footer and 2f).
footer. tber\ Lo.!ner hit again
from six feet to give Marina il
42-35 lead.
Mark Ford got into the act
with a layup off Adams' assist
and Bill Fick added two
buckets to' give P.larina a 48-38
edge with 2:3$ left in lhe lhlrd
period.
........., H~ llJJ. fl '4 If
-l j ' . "=i!1Y ' : it
-I 1 4 t"""" ! . ' 14 w""'I« rd 8 ~ t f:::r: 2~ II 11 •! IMrfll• cm ~r:: . "1· ·1 : ii LOMtr 1 3 2t t:.li: lJ .. r.::.... ! I
H,_i;r,1, 71 11 1.1
kM lty S"!!t" ~.::: t 11 l! lt ltil
) . --' '
STEVE MONAHAN
Monahan
Headed
For UCLA
Orange Coast College's All·
American wide receiver steve
Monahan will pla y football at
UCLA next season. the DAILY
PILOT learned today.
Monahan, who obliterated
most or OCC's receiving
records in the past two
seasons, will enroll at the
Westwood campus in March.
"I've liked UCLA since I
was in high school and I think
I can fit right into their
system," says Monahan.
Although the Bruins stress
the running game with their
wishbone-T offense, l\lonahan
feels he will be an integral
part of 'the 1973 UCLA team.
"They have a really good
running game, but they know
they ha ve to pass more next
year. I think 1 can tum the lit*
tie pass into the big play,"
adds Monahan.
In two seasons at Orange
Coast, ri.1onahan caught 91
passes for 1,508 yards and 11
touchdowns. The former two
marks are school records
while the TD total fell one
short ol tying the school stand-
ard.
~le also returned 20 punts in
two seasons for 215 yards and
two TDS and also had an 87·
yard run from scrimmage ln
the 1971 campaign.
11onahan pr ep ped at
Marina. ·
Unbeat,en Oilers
Slap Foe, 56-47
Taras Yoong then Iced 1t for reach at f0.32. Dan Malane was the spark
Golden Weat by bagging• free CO.ta Mesa fell behind that Ignited the Barons, hilting
throw with Just 10 second! to steadJly In the opening stanza 12 points for the night with sg-
go, giving the Ru.atlers a 7._71 and was forced to play catch-gresslve rebounding and sec-
Mlflin. up for the balance of the ond efforta most of the way.
Miller's outside shot wllh . night. '!be Mustangs held the Fountal• Valley ($-I) , ..
three ticks left for East LA lead, 2.0, after Rici Browning mains a game behind league
'1:r: '1:r: '1:r: hit the first baskel lrom the leading Corona de! Mar while •••t u. fn>.. " ,,, free throw line. ~e MU!tlhgs drop to 3-3. L~f.r l 11 ii 1be Mustangs were ahead "-''"' v111e.,. tw1 ~.·---, I 0 ii! again briefly at 4-2 on a Mike HIH ~ ~ "'1 ': By GLENN WHITE after the '.lr!t quarter, l Berry tally underneath the 't::.": t I 1~
or .. o.iry '"'"" 11.tt allhou h th ·-U'ed ~~· , ~ 1 ~ hoop, lhen were quieted for i· Ad""" 1 o , Huntington Beach High's g e .... .,re was Xii'~ 1 0 1 ~ the balance of the first stanza. ...~"'" 3I : I 11
Oilers did at the free throw twice In the second st.anza. Tot•t• ...._ ..., ,,.,• 17 11 When the bw:zer sounded to Tot•I• 1 10 '''
line what they · couldn't do It was Weir who kept his ~. ff('•"',~~ end the period, ft was 13-4 In tglft ccu• Mew'*' "i •
1
~, ·:,
from the field -bJt the basket mates In ·u early, getting 10 of i,i'."l~f.l r 12! I J favor of the bosb and they "'
-as lhey held on to subdue Huntington's fll'St dozen nw I never looked back alt.bough =!: ~ 1~
stubborn Western Wednesday points. And It was \Veir who ~:::;:-~• s l f 11 the Must.anp made their fmal ~ ~ ' g
night, 56-47 · came back with six points in i 1'fe1-1"' o1 o ' o3 spurt in the fourth stanza. • .smni 11, ~ 'tG 0 u "
Thus coach Elmer Combs' the fourth quarter to save i!. ro11~11111nw: I•" LA. A '" 14 It W83 guard Browning who "'" V•ll•v 1J 'i • lt::= Oilers -close out the first round 1-----'------------'----------....::c_ ___ ....;; ___ ="'::":._::""'=---''-'::...:'cc;cc;_ of Sunset League basketball
play with a 7~ record and a •
surprising bold on first place.
Yet it was anything but easy
Wednesday as they connected
on only 32.1 percent of their
field goal tries. However, tlley
were warmer al the gratis
stripe, canning 20 of 24 al·
tempts -a nlfty 83.3 percent.
And, while they were
generillly guilty of standing
around too much and
uninspired play, they com-
mitted only 10 turnovers -six
through three quarters.
Western, the decisive un ·
derdog , remained a serious
threat until the closing
minutes, despite the fact the
Pioneers committ~ 1 7
turnovers and made only 3~
percent of their field goal et·
tempts.
With 1: 12 left Huntington
was only on top by f!\'e and
Western had the ball.
However, Doug Rabe re·
bounded a mlsaed shot by the
invaders and seconds later
mate Jim Weir was fouled.
The Oilers whlz responded
by getting both free throws
and victory at last appeared
secure with the Orange and
Black owning a ~5 edge and
only 4& seconds sbowlne on the
clot;k.
Then a pair of free throws
each by Raul Contreru and
Rabe ln the closing 17 seconds
sealed the triumph.
It had been close throughout
with Western never leading
OUR BEITER
HAlffOS1'A
(l['rt~ .. WEIGHT. ••
And iainec! a lot of friends.
The new -EarJY ~ Half Gallon
bottJ• i!I DOW t 'l'O pounds lighter.
Al'id stronger, ~makes it easier to
carry, e~ to handle. Easier to
pour, too; because of ita unique built-in
pourer. What's more, our Better Half
ia easier to b11y because of a bigger
savinga on the bigger size. Early Times
in the new, lighter half gallon bottle.
Our Better Half thought you deoerved
a break.
I
I
• ~
Lions Eat Up Anaheim,
Roll to 65-55 Triumph
%GAU.ON
NOW'llH
Buyacase
Save 10% more ' ~ ~· rl li~· I ·~ ... -· i ........... ..-o'" ,.,,
Westminster }ligh'• 1.AOlll
closed out the first round of
the &inset Lea111< hutelholl
.. ...., witlt their third
str1lght win . ln c:onvlnclna
style, thrashing the boat
Anaheim Colonist&, !$-!$,
Wtllnelday night. r
It waan't that close as 'coach
Doug Stockham's wlMet'$,
behind .the nllty all·l'Ollnd play
ol 1uard Dan AccomandO, til e
lltorlng prowess of Gary
At'ldrews and the board work
•
ol Date Parker, ran up a 2Q.
point margin through thrtt
periods.
Wetl!MMfw CUI
"""'"'' I ' 0 nl 1 I o lJ
0 t ' 11 s 3 0 1J
I 1 0 I
.!.I !.I •<-lty Oulr11"
rol.:I'~"" ll 'l 11 II I
l
. ,,. !
--r:""" -. ...... -· I • I
I
I
I
. -
·1
I
1
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Estancia ,-----
~In ·68-53
Conquest
By DENNIS CAMPBELL
Of Jlle DAllY ~1191 ll•tf
A well-executed defensive
effort paved the way Wednes-
duj night as host Estancia
•Ugh School routed Santa Ana
Valley 88-~ ln an Irvine
tea·gue btftketball game.
'nle Eagles, now 2-4 tn
Jeegue play, used a tight zone
deJense to keep Santa Ana
Valley's shooters away from
the basket and then con·
. slstently beat the Falcons to
the board! for defensive re-
bounda.
Eitancla shot well and
handled the ball well,
partlcuJarly against Santa Ana
Valley's full-cou rt press.
Wlth Tim Pirtle bringing the
ball up court and getting help
from backcourt teammate
Scott Gayner, the Eagles
handl~ the pressure without
incident and used an ag·
gressive press themselves to
con1tantly harass Santa Ana
Valley ball handle!'!.
The' game was almost a one-
quarter affair. At the end of
the first quarter the Eagles
led U-12 and the rest of the
game was played on more or
less even tenns.
Todd Colllns gol Eslancla
rolling, hitting two quick
baskets oot of hls game total
18 as the Eagles quickly
jumped out in rront S.2.
From then on lt was
downhill as the Costa Mesa
team added four more points
to the margin ~at halftime
behind a balanced attack that
had five players scoring in the
second quarter.
Santa Ana Valley's effort
wasn't helped when starters
R. B. Jalnlson and: Mike
Chargers
Roll Past
Foe, 82-72
Thursday, Jan11ary 25, 1CJ7J
Ashcraft Doe,s It ;
Gauclws Win, 68-62
<
OAILV PILOT 27
SCC Hosts
Redlands
Southern Cali(ornia Q>llege
SAN BERNARDINO and lhe lead aeesawed lhrough of Colla Mesa wlll conlinue tts
Forward Steve Ashcraft hit the nert slx minutes or play. bid ror a possible NIAt\.
four hee throws 1n the final The score was tied St 152 all d' t · 1 ff be h I I hi two minutes to lead Sad· wlth 1:50 when Mberart is net P ayo rt 00 g
Bl-DAN BAYES dleback to a 68-tt victory over scored his free throws to put when the Vanguards entertain °' .. ~ , .. ''-" San Bernardino Valley College the came away. the University of Redlands In
'l1w! Ed1lon Olarll'ers finally here Wednesday. the campus gym \\'ilh tipof(
ill' U~lttlKlt "•4 ft "' .. I 8 put It all totethtt as they lm-The win was Saddleback.'s Mri}J11n1• 1 2 2 1i a ·
presalveJy coasted to an ai-n first in six A1isslon Conference A '111 • j • 4 1 Coach P~ul P e a k 1 s
I ~~·~r ~ ! v ctory over visiting Loa games this season and leaves 1 u Vanguards a e currently tf>.&
Alamftol ln l'rvtne League ae-tile Gauchos-at 5-15 overall. ~~~.... t ~ ~ On the year and 11:2 a"ainst ro11ts '' 12 u 61 o , Uon Wedne9day night. Saddle.back led the entire s'" ,_.,.""° HU District Ill opponents.
The Olarger1, now 2-4 in first hair or the game, and 31r11n•r 1 ~ 't It Peak will have Jack Causey
league play, bad a happy went to the inte.rmlssioo with gS,.. Y ~ lt at center, Jim Payne and Pat
cotch after their performance. a 37-30 lead. San Bernardino .-.r,:1:, 3 g 1 t Quinn at forwards and Kip
"I was very pleased with our came back. to lake a 56-64 lead :~~to' 3 ? i : }fearron and John Curtis at
offenBive game,'' commented with 8:01 remaining, however. ~:If,\!,."'-~ sNc1t•OK~21,J.1 •2 guards . F.diJOn coach Dave Mohs.-:::::..::.:..:..:.======'--"'="-"=-"'==='--"--'-------
•·we•ve now had three good
games in a row -the kids are
starting to do a better job."
Despite displaylng every
turnover imaginable, the Charier• jumped off to a slim
first quarter lead, probably
because the Griffins had even
more Dall-handling errors.
In the second period the
Chargers added to their ad·
vantage behind the outstand-
ing play of Bill Ford, Jay
Wllson and Dirk Zirbel, and
ended the half leading by 11
poinls. \ _
, 'Ille Gr1fnM, playing in
spurts, made a few comeback
tries in the second half, but
for the most part it was
Edison with ease.
Los Alamltoa closed the gap
to four points late in the third
quarter u it connected on six
consecutive shots. But the
,bargers' offen&ive exploits
were nearly unstoppable as
they comtstently hit oa so per-
cent of their shots, rar better
than they have performed in
earlier encounters this )tear.
fllATIONAtlY ADVERTI SED
llANDSAND lOW Pll(ES.
WE HAVE 101.H.
BASEBALL
EADQUARTER
". ' ... o,.,..., (
ftstba1 .. 111H~ ti IH tM" lHriter ,
si119le speed ll•pwtlt, '91y "S"
Bokosky left the contest in the --------------------·----------
third quarter.
The Olargera were carried
throughout the game by some
sparkling floor play by their
guard duo, 6-1 Willon and &-0
Zirbel. WU.On dJ.sPlayed aome
facile moves in gelling open
for shots, while Zirbel shot
with almost untiring accuracy
on his two-handed set shot.
. '* .... lee•.
14so Jamlson was whistled for ~:;tnrl~1;w1~~· .. :~: Hayward Risked Future Bokosky's un sc heduled
departure came afte r he red.......____:.
Wilson ended the game with
18 points and Zirbel had 16,
but the leading scorer for both
teams was Chargers forward
Bill Ford, who worked Inside
on the boards .and put in 21
points.
dened an official's ear. with a
naughty word.
Jamison had bit for 10 points
in the period. including six
straight, but the Eagles seem-
ed to ha ve the game well in
hand at the Ume.
~. Mike Magner w.@_S the scor-
ing leader in the co~ with
19, played good defense and
rebounded well against the
taller Falcons, while Collins
added 18.
Jamison was high-man for
Santa Ana Valley, but no
other player scored In double
figures for the Falcons.
••Tlllda ,., """ ,, l ! ! '!
' ' l 1: • 1 • ' ] 2 1 • 1 2 ] • 27UH61
Slftll All• Vtl11y I~ ft Jlf i.
Bol<os~'t' 0 2 ! ' J1ml"1f' B 1 17
O'Rowke j 0 '
p.., I • ' woruaw 2 l ' l'leld$ l , • Wrklhl 0 O 1 St1nlbl.frY 1 o 0 2 ~ .. ,,,.,, , I ' • Tot1l1 22 11 5l s-1IY Diii""'" E1l•ncltl 2'.I 16 lj H-<f I .A. Vellev 12 U 1 16-53
JC, Prep
Basketball
Standings
At June Mountain Resort
By ~1. R. SNOW
Of lfM DlllY Pllof Sl'tf
As National Ski Week
celebration comes to a grand
climax Sunday, the Bud
Hayward story -indeed an
Orange County yarn -is
worth telling today.
seeing Green Mounta in,
Hayward began life as an area
operator in 1959, feeling that
skiing was ideal there. He in·
quired of the Forestry Depart·
ment, with officials giving him
the selection of two sites. He
picked the present one.
Today, he feels he made the
right decision. Be.fore laying
Off the Slopes
After all, who in his right
mind would risk bis future and
that of his family in a business
with so many traps. You can
start with the fickleness of
Mother Nature, follow up with
attempting to please the out the June area, he checked
general public and go from it thoroughly, including in·
there. spection in the summer
Hayward, a c o u n t y months.
businessman and a Santa Ana Ha}"vard may be the last of
resident, while not involved in the breed -the lone wolf who
the operatioTI of June Moun: puts his life on the line by bor·
taln in the High Sierra coun-rowing huge sums of money to
try, is one of the modern start a ski area. The future
breed. spas will have to be left to
It is his love for skiing that corix>raUon financing provided
made him what he is today. a tie-up is made with real
This lo ve began while a estate development. 'nle cost
teenager in the early 30s. makes it too tough on the
Flashback to the days when loner now.
he lived with his parents in Despite the many years
South Pasadena. Y o u n g Hayward has spent In siding,
Hfbrd would get up as eat· be contends that there are no
ly :t a.m., hopeful of real experts. Dally new prob-
reaching Mt. Waterman by 9 Jems arise which have to be
or 9:30 the same morning. settled right now. Ilsa case of
H1s equipment wu crude learning by trial and error.
compared to t o d a y ' s Even the Forestry Depart·
sophisticated fancy boots, · ment officials have no ex-
fiashy laminated skis and col-pertlse on the sport, Hayward
orful ware. His bindings were a!.!ures. He righUy points out
straps then, with toe clips on that the forestry people ~avhe
his boots. Hayward allowed been caretakers of land Wlt
hlmseU a couple of, luxuries, a their No. 1 job being timber.
vacation to Yo.mite and later Not until recenUy have they
a trip Jo Sun Valley. been introduced to the recrea·
HayWard's Introduction to tlon picture. Hayward thinks
June Mountain was in 1941 they are learning fast .
when there was onJy one rope JUne Mountain bu years to
tow aod tbe place -wa.s called go before success: can be
Green Mountain. He had made clalmed. Haywara dreams of
a qWck stop t\t Mammoth eventually developlnl bls area
Mountain ln those years, too. into a large complex, tncluding
Mammoth thetl traiisrorted Its perbal"J II to 17 new IU11 plus
skien by rope. tow attached to a gondola. Much area remains
a weasel. Othm rode on top to be developed, perhaps two-
cr the weasel up the slope. lhlnts more lhan u It otamts
Ejghteen years after first.I presently. He honestly feels
Pirates, Rustlers Face ,
Key Wrestling Tests
Orange Coast College bids
for Its third straight South
Coast conference victory Fri-
day night while Golden We1lt
takes pan ln the Arizona State
UnJversity tournament at
Phoenix.
That's the weekend agenda
for JC Wt'Hlllng.
Coach Vem Wagner'• OCC
Pirates, tanked stvenlh in the
state. host Santa Ana tn a 7:,;i
mat.ch. Santa Ana comes into
the mat.ch with a 1.1 circuil
mark and the state's No: 9
ralln(. •
OC(; owns a 9-S rtCOTd 1n
dual meet action this season
whne Sania Ana ii 9-2.
Steve Joannes (118), Paul
LaBlme (1421, Dan Lewis
(167), Gary Cosey (177) and
Tim Bandel (190) head the
OCC contingent.
Lewis has a 24-l seuon
mark while Bandel is 20-1.
Making the trip to Phoenix
with Colden West coach Dale
Defrner will be Cbuck Kehler
(Ill), Glenn Asamolo llJS),
Ron Vaughan (114), Pat Buono
(IG), Dave Lopez (158), Rick
Masten (167) and John SUter
(heavyweighl).
PreUminarles are set rcrr
Friday wilh Salurday'• ,.,...u.
Ing 1ehedolod to begin 1110 ID
the morning. Tht finals com-
mtnce at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Approxlmate~te teams will partlclpale In tourney, ln-
~ing many otil"'year uni·
T'ltles.
that June has the potential to
become the largest in
California.
llayward is aware that the
skiing public is greatly disap-
pointed when looking at June's
face. It is challenging because
of its incline. OnJy experts
dare ski down Jt. Eventually,
there will be a lift from the
preseat parking lot to the wall
of the face.
Under Hayward, J u n e
Mountain is one of the
friendliest of all slopes. From
tl1e owner to the hired hands,
politeness and the will to be
helpful are marked cbarac·
teristics.
Hayward is surrounded by
loyal and hardworking staU-
fers. Tom Brown has been sk.I
school director for eight years.
Overall, Doc Marten ls the
overseer as general manager,
his task being to handle
anything and everything.
After ski.en visit June, they
return with a feeling that
somebody up there really likes
them.
CM Cagers
Face Rams
Saturday
'll1e Los Angeles Ranu will
play the Costa Mesa High
faculty in an exhibition
basketball game Saturday
night with tipoff slated for 8
o'clock.
Included in the Rams con·
tingent are Dave Elmendorf,
Jack Snow, David Ray, Coy
Bacon, lslah Robertson, Les
Josephson, Fred Dryer and
Cash Birdwell.
Opposing that crew will be
football coach John Sweazy,
wrestling coach Dave Petroff,
baseball coach Jim Hagey,
track coach Joe Fisher,
athletic director Bob Hunter
and administrators Terry
Cole, Tom Jacobson and Don
Achzleer.
Tickets are priced at $1.50
each. Autograph& will be
available during haUtlme and
after the game.
n ckets art available-at the
Mustangs ASB ofrlce or at the
gate Saturday evenln&. It's
sponsored jolnUy by the loot·
ball boo!ten, baa: k et b a 11
boosters and ASB ofrlCe.
OFRCIAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23 ~4-25-26
Harbar 8aulward Df Carll
SIE IACK PAGE OF
TODAY'S DA ILY PILOT
FOil DITAILSI
\
;
RAWLINGS XFGl GLOVE •••••••• 37.9S
RAWLINGS XFCB PROFESSIONAL ••• 40.85
RAWLINGS "BROOKS ROBINSON". 20.55
~XfCll7
BATA "BULLET" ALL-
PURPOSE SHOES
4•s
SAUCONY "PRO"
BASEBALL SHOES
fully \iNd t•p <•whiff, ,..ddtd 1Mlt1 11111 !•••• ,,..._ N1MJl1. Nyi•lf lntM1w1i1ht
ff11w/2'f'(.1l1tl .,ikn. Whit•/Wat .. stripes.
1399
BROOKS BASIBALL SHOES #173 LEATHER.,. 10.95
SPALDING BASEBALL SHOES #631 VINYL ••• 6.49
3 DAY LEAGUE SPECIALS
MAC GRIGOR OFFICIAL
LITTLE LEAGUE
BASIBALL
~.~~·140
S~ICIAl llllC
APPROVED LITTLE LEAGUE BATS
ADIRONDACK ALUMINUM BAT •••••••• 7 .50
LOUISVILLE WOOD BAT #125-LL., •••• 3.00
LOUISVILLE WOOD BAT #225-LL •••••• 2 .50
NYLON
WARM-UP
JACKETS
f9f1 lil"lity. Sriep frflllf, t'91ticiltd sltn'H. YMr
cliekt •I 12 trl9t ,.i.,,, tusMll MWh.
1011' 4•s MIW'ls•s RIG. RIG.
S.fS I.fl
Sl'l(lll · Sf'((IAL
BASEBALL UNDERSHIRTS
POTS' 149 MIN'S 1 86
BASEBALL CAPS IRIG.1.2s·".1
LA MIRADA
IHOP"1llf0 CINTtll
STORI HOURS: MON. TMIU FRI. 11 A.M. TO
'~.!II. SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. TO I P.M.
ORANGE ,,,,
N TUSTIN "'° ... 6l7 11l0
TUSTIN SANTA ANA
NtW,OllT .t.Vl . 3)11 a. •llllTOl I t .
•t 'tllST SlPil(l f 11 MacAllTHUPll '"°"' 132·5191 ,,...,..: .,,,,,,,
•
n,,...,, J....., is. 1973
What's Doing
Outdoors
J IM NIEMIEC
Rainy -.·eather all but put a halt to ootdoor activities this
week as an tmeXJ!ed.ed storm front passed through the South-
land. Even though this he8Vy rain and stroo.g winds kept anglers
olf lakes and hwiten out oC lhe field it most assuredly will ~
fit wtdoorsmcn biter in the year .
Bus fishing at lrl'ine, tlenshaw. Vail and the San Diego
lakes showed signs of breaking loose prior to the rain and with
ntild tempenitures cookt continue to ~-ard fresh water anglen»
"ilh p&eoty ol action.
Bass "-ere taken at deptM bet"lli'ten four and 16 feet on spin-
IM.'f'-tYJle baits similar to ~ Brush Hog and Hogback lures.
Best l'Oklr's were v.·hite. purple and black and ~ aver~ bronze.
back weighed a b o u t t'A'O pounds. Howard Ashby ol Newport
Beach bagged a four·pound bass out o( lrvile Lake on a Garcia
~V.'Oml.
TI:wJse Jakes in Southern California which stock rainbow trout
oo a ~ be.sis continue to give good actioo. ~lost anglers
using light tackle are netting near limits of fighting bows. A few
oC the nxre popular trout attractors are: Eddie Pope Fishbacks..
Zeke's F1oat'n Bait , smaJJ spinoers aod the old slaldby salmoo
eggs.
Anaheim Lake Is ronsidered the best bet for trout anglers
living in Orange County, but dose behind is the even mare popu.
lar Irvine Lake •'hich opened to tbe public tbiq week.
The outlook for the next few weeks is fair to good for all
species oC warm V.'3ter Jake fish except catfish. Give lakes a few
days to clear after heavy rains and fishing should be productive.
Lake SheNwd in Ventura O:lunty and the Big Bass Lake Lo\l.·er
Otay in San Di.ego will open during the first couple of weeks in
February.
R ah1bo1C T rout De rb11 Be g l ..
Trout uglen ba\'e m1tD Feb. IS to rqiSkr dteir catch of
rainbo"' trout la Su Diece'• Flm Allnul Trom Oert>y. A total
of I lakes lo Su Diep County are plrtlclpallllg la the derl>y
"ith mott daa.n SC,• lD prlu:s to go to lecky winers. For more
lnformatioo oa the deny ud lake reservations phone ?3"5S:U
Added l1ttt1ttl11e a t Lake Hlit1flru
Angll'f"s "ilo are going after big striped bass found in Lake
Ha'o.su have an added incentive to fish now. McCulJocb Prop-
etries, Inc. has posted a $200 cash av.'3..rd for the heaviest striped
t:ri~ officially "-eighed in at Lake Ha\'asu )farina during the
decby wbkb nlN lhrough Mareh 15.
A few med1um sized stripers have already been taken out
oC Havasu during the ~ oouple of \li'eeks and the season should
be at its peak between Feb. :zn and lilarch 12. .
Fi.sbermen shou1d troll down the deep channels near the dam
using Hellbenders, big Rapals, Smithwick Rooters and ®ep div·
ing Bombers. lfeavy tackle is recommended and no less than a
ro.pound test line should be used. For an update on fishing and
\\·eather conclilions oo Lake Havasu, phone George Foster at
( 602) 85S-2159.
YeUo..,talJ H ltth1g Near S aa Diego
Yellowta.11 and •·bite tubess ketp oa popping up from time
to time addlat to the adtemenl of ocean Oshin' out of San
Dttp Judlng1. \tllen anglers locate schools of the big game
fia actloa ls bo& and lteavy wttb mo!lt anglers taliug bome a
number ol big-fi.s~. TheR Is ao ltot spot oa the islands to bit, u
sldppen report tbe fllll ~ jut wltere you find them. Live Nit,
squid, IDd Straggler lnu all are pn>dudive w b e 1 wwtiq
scboois are loca&ed.
Newpon barbor boats are still couectiag oa IOmt bonit.
and bass near kelp heck, Md most of Ute acijo.a is taktlg: place
above: deep olf Uort rttf1 wi.tre: rock ftsll are plentihd.
Bay fisllhtg Is rated above a\'ttage wttll bay bass aod en>ak-
er takiag ghost sbrimp aad dams in deep cllaueb. Spotted
bass are: alse llrikillg pl•gs tnlled down eel grass coveted chan-
nels oa the: changin1 Udes.
Some big croaker iavt also been taku in~ bay, but
local baJt shop operator Dave Upldn states tilat the bite bas it0l
really developed.
Duc k Sea r oa Co11c luder
This Satw"day marks the close of the 1972-73 waterfowl sea-
son for Califurnia hunters. In general it "''as a very good season
as roost hunters managed to bag more ducks and geese this
year than they have for the past couple or years.
Shooting was excellent aU year around the Salton Sea, espe-
cially on private clubs, and the average was even up on Wister.
\\'aterfowlers increased their a\'erage by more than l 'h ducks at
the Hidden Valley Gun Club in Riverside and the same held true
for clubs in the San J acquin Valley.
Hunters will mw have to tum to ?itexico ill order to get in
on any duck huntin g or take a trip to ~IOITO Bay to try their
hand at brant hunting y,ith the B & H Brarlt Camp guides.
Pheasant hunters can still take advantagi! o( club sOOoting
through ~larch. Linc Raahauge's Plleasant Club in Corona is an
excellent club f« unattached hunters to enjoy the great out·
docn. Dr. Gerald Winkler of Newport Beach recently hunted on
Raaha1J8e'5 2.000.acre preserve and took home roore than his
share of ringnecks.
Most of 1he other clubs in Southern California are on a mern-
benllip basis with the exception of Mills' Shooting Preserve in
Bakersfield.
The quail season comes to an end Jan. 28 for all of California
but prospects are very dim due to \'ery wet hunting conditions.
Area Cage Scores
JllfliOf' V1rt11y
L" ,IJ.l!NI" I") a.i-(~I
OllQU!ll !12l F 14) lloy
Tham•• 191 F lll R1nwl
O......,patl CIOI C U) Ptrlll'll
J.Kabson Ill G llS) Tullv
ll«tl.t<1• U> G 091 Wtllare
koflllO SUM; l.01 Allmlt05 -6itll no, •--112). E.:illOn -w1111t (I).
H.Cttlm1; EdllOll, :w.n,
M..-1111 fMI fMJ H_,..-t
IC"'ler 01l F Cll Cl1•~
H1~ (Ol F 1111 Lawl11'
L1nil! l'I C rd S111nv1rr
lllrlnnll\O !61 G (I) C11CP1<:1rt
Jtnlcl,. ('l G ClOJ Y1110erA1
Volleyball
Girls 2nd
Teams from the Orange
Coonly Volleyball Club ploced
second in all divisions of Its °"° gtrl!I tournament held last
weekend at Marina High
School.
• M••lna KorlnQ ,_, K05ick 10.
Llndllt•I '· Sllvall 2. NIWJIOl'I -Vil·
dCl 2.
H•llllmt: Hewe>arl, 20-li. '
P'-l1t. Y.nt11111 .. Ufl (1111 M•11<1
D'l'1~ft E•l F 1'l H'"i-11
l Od•sll'in 1141 F Cl) C1rrlto
Jff•V Jollrv Ill c l" Jec-
Eppc!l'>el~ Ill G 10 Hoftm1n
C•rv.-16) G (1) klia.
Scorlno "'°': Fovnt11n V•ll•v -
C1nnl1 2, Jefl Jollly t, Miiler •.
Lucclo.1aw " C0511 M111<1 -J°'""*"' J,
Jlunlle 2. Wll1an !.
H1tt!lme Katt: F-llln V1lley
11-11.
OIM Mlllt Utl Ull L.,.._. lllC~
Jli01111 (9J F UOJ SeN'lnc!
Halht..i OJ) F {101 Rl!~b\ln
O•OWfl (Jd C l•l M(M1n111
Gr1enl1w Ul G (21 lllatoaJo
l(ou OQI c; (1) wtloM
L~oun1 Karin; •~bl : ICo.rnlg 6,
M1"t •. NtH l, A~lns 1.
H1lttlmt; 01na HUis, l7·U .
u.i...,111, uu
Br1idl( (t) F
01vlt C6J F
H1trl"1110n !fl C
Menold Cl) 0
H•n:h 10! G
Unllrtf"llly -~ comns :a.
uu •JO.He
Ul Slllrlllt-C•l l(....r1111
1101 Fto11
Ill l1y
1111 Scll11ml'f'I
lllltll: turka ll,
H<lltttw. ._: Ut1h•tt1fty 2J<D.
AJamitos
Racing
Entries
S,HIRLEY BAIASHOFF
•
VALERIE LIE
Area Girls Sparkle
CULVER cm' -Shlrtty
Babashoff of Fountain Valley
won the 100..yard freestyle in
s.s.a and plac.d """""' at the
200 frft in l :S.S.I in a Southern
Pacific AAU meet held ill tbt
Qil\•er City Natatorium O\'er
the weekend.
Shirley also joined Mission
Viejo's Valerie Let tbut·
Ier(ly), Huntington Bffcll's
Susie Whilater (bactwoul
and Gina lltner (breastsiroU I
In th< •medley relay to posl
a victory. J
~fiss L<e .,,.. !be a bul·
Ierfly In 2 :05.J and . pllle<d
third In the ZQO lfteolyle ill
J:M.I.
Miss Whitlket'"WaS fow1h in
the 2llO lndlvldual medley.
Alamitos Results
'" 1~ ,.
• .,._...,, J_,., M. 1m
CINr, trKt ....
FlaST aACa -350 Y•f11s.. J V-
ol<IS &. 1o111. Cl•lmh19. PvrM 11M!O. I'm Serie !Wwd) JM UO :LOii
Aoan MM«• !Slnllfll lM LIO 5pK1 N""° !Webolll 1111
T\fM -11.11 . .Abo ,.,, -lllot>b'I lllOll. Ded.&blr,
Fl•t:ib9r. llar•I L.MYtiw. Jo Anro's
T,.1111r1, Cw.do llo't' AM, SplorQ ·-· Scrolo:Md -Nl.11 Fttt., ~llor'• c~ en.nee "'· Vll•M111'1 Jewel. " l.1.ICt• ...... ..... .. ... _
MeMa. ,.w u1.-.
SllCOMD llACI. -G y.,lts, ~ J .,. ... olds. o.im'"91 ,...,... l\«IO.
l'lilml,. ..._. {Hort) 20.00 tM •.ea
DKieollb.cll {,,..twdol) 21AO 12..0
Chldtro Too (Wobonl u_io
Time -20.tl. Also ••n -si.mewoy, Glar.-1 Go, \llndlc1tor 2. Merion GuY, A:on
(1'w11"9«, Oii So Goo.
5cr1ktled -~Y I Win. TC!fll0'1 Bir
Ouk1, Ruby J•n, HIOll Flyer.
THlllD ltM:I -S.et y1ros. l ¥'!-If
olds &. Ill>· s11rter1 1llow1nc1. Puru ..... Ol1mond
(C1rdoz1l •a11lder
1Clu1>11 Too IMllrl
City Cax IRld'IMlbl
Tl"" -2tJM
,,. $.(II! 3.20
t .:io l.111 ,..,
Alsa rM -Mr. Cucld, El A••M,
lyY'1 W111t11r, P1lleo M!kt, O.vl1 J-.
Nk:hl Del M¥. Tao Brvce.
5cr1Td'led -F1y•1 J Bay, IUIOll.
Moving to Heavyweight
No Problem for Garratt
By HANK WESCH
Of tlM 0.llJ .. 11.t S11K . ~·lark Garratt oi Corona del
A.far High escaped from
"·restling's weight worries
1nerry-go-round by eating his
"'ay into the land of the gian._ts
this season.
And so far Ga rratt is faring
quite well there.
A 194-pounder last season
Garratt checks in at 210 now
and sometimes has to give as
much as 25 pounds while·
\\TCstling in the heayvweigbt
class.
But he has chalked up l2
victorles against only two
defeats. and is likely to be
among the top seeds at the
Five Counties wrestling meet 8t Fountain ValJey High Satur·
day.
Garratt made the switch to
heavyweight this season partly
because he .wanted to. and
partly at the sequest of Coach
Dick Aforrls to fill a vacancy
in the Sea Kings lineup. So far
both are pleased with the
results.
"I only have trouble with
guys who nre a lot heavier
than I am." Ga rratt says. "l
try to jt:st wrestle defensively
and let them make the
mistake. because they have. a
big' advantage if J shoot in and
get caught."
''Mal'k's very stn:ing and
very quick." ~forrts says.
HJte's got a lot of teclvdque
too. and that's tht realOO he's
winning. He ha sn"t had any
ttouble except fo.-UM! two
Both of Garratl's defeats to
date cteme in tournaments,
and in both cases he came
back to win the consol!.Uon ti-
tle. One loss a S-% decision at
the Costa Mesa Invitational
came to Estancia's V i n c e
Kl~1, a respect e d
heavyweight he bad earlier
dereated. G~rratt says Klees
is the best he has faced.
"I was sick before that
match though." Garratt says.
"J hope to get to wrestle him
again."
Klees and his Estancia
teammates will not be in the
Fountain Valley ·tournament.
But another favorite ad-
versary Les Becher of the
host Barons, is a potential op-
ponent if he tn0ves up a
v.·eight class.
Garratt lost to Becher in the
Irvlne league fmals last
season, but bas oo qualms
about a rematch.
"Le! end I are good friends,
and I'd wrestle him any
time," Garratt says. "He and
Klees are the only people J
have trouble with in the Irvine
League."
A t"-o.year letterman after
tra n s ferring in from
PennsylvanJa 11 a freshman,
Garratt i., a captain of thit
year's Corona del Mar team
Titinlr
MIU H.wy-2 fKnfohll
Tltnt1 -lt .1 ..
. ..
AllO ,.,. -,,, .. Fn111t, IJl!de Jimmy,
Rack1t Huo Mita. "''"'-z.-.t•. E~ 1tM11, Trvfy Trlld.
;1,pac-Bir.
Scr1!dllid -Stom>llO', Sinn Cl'lk.
FIMI OKl1b!. ODii LI LI
U l'UCW ._,,,_ aan & ~ D911Y, ..... .,. ...
SllYEMTM llACll -1'0 y....a, 3 YNI'
akb • "'° (.w..Jf'-d •"--~ .XC0. Tl'l9 U A W ~ No. Ul.
IClllO Bird ITrltillrl) IUI! JM 1.21
Tiny ll1n IHk:odotmUll :JM 1't
Rackf'I :5.111119 (Ward) ....
TllYll -11.02.
AllO rift -letiel't Qwefl. TOii MMlwf', AoYll llKk Wiiiow.
SU11C:Nd -C~ Racllfl.
a1eMTM •M:I -170 Y•rd1. S YM• Gia lo up. Allowl!ICI-Pur11 132QO. TN
Rot1ry Club al Or~. Vl,_hl !~Ir) 14.j,Q ,_. SA
Rov•I P1u (W•flOll) t.IO 5.IO
Id• Aun !Mlcadflnul) 2.60
Tlll'll -45.16.
Aho r•n -Fw O.vkl. o\clfaft Urw.
Uncl1 W'", Swl"mur, P•""• Dan.
Sc:r1tchtcl -H1rclna. Ru. F1ree, Chill Bit, G10Dy'1 Bay.
NllftM 14CI -O Ylfdl, 3 y.,.,-olds &. uo. c..irn1119> ,._ Jltl». .
Bllllff (TtNMl!'I) J.Glll :S.• U0
Hiio 1100 CA ... lrl • 5M J • .O
J-y aao C5"'1ltll UO
11 .... -l!0 .. 1.
Abo r1n -On Thi flMl'n. S.hlr~y
Hlra.. Lftl11 511n. l.llder 1tacke1. eua,
P1rr c~. COlll'lk
Ha tcr11C"".
"' luct1 1·lltllw • 1•"1'9 ...... ..... fltUI.
Scores
Sears
In AA competlUon, the San-
ta Barbara YWCA team was
the winner, whUe Banning
took.the title in both the A and
Junk>r·Higb School divisions.
c...."' MN 401 IU) ~n· loaes."
!;1111;1 bob
OiCl lyman's
M EN'S SHOP
The Orange County Junior·
High School dlvlsJon team was
the surprise ii( the tooma· _,t, placing .....,.,00 with a
team of 12 and 13-ye&r-olds
•11lnst high ICbool aae· com-
petlUon.
TllCkW CU) F 11) Hit! -
R.CIY c•i F (ll W1!11c1 ~" ti) c (2) ~ .. a.it ... UJ G !tl Huot• Earl 10 G fUI -.
eor-'ct.I Mer seotlnfl 1u0t: IC,.
I. SNllWI '· K&'tttlr!ll: M""°'i.t lf.11,
••••••••
o-" ... ,,., •<Ink-(1)
"""-(4) ·-"1dt• 16! ,,,,.... ill
JIEW
ARRIVALS
for
Sp.I ... -·-
Checking 'Out .,.Area . .~
Prep, JC Wrestling·
U.aARON -Former
Fountain Valley · Hig~·
star Chris Sones, a l lS.
pounder, has belped
the Univemty of Iowa
to an unbeaten wres·
tllng season lb11& far.
He's a senior.
·--,...,... 4•U IMl SM• ,,..
1s1,.,w":" ~ lMl *" """' GoHY
IOS -lfnnttt IS) dlC. SMrrlcll tM) ..... 11' -s..-{Ml M. P-a tSJ ~ L t: 122 -o\lltlf'ooll {M) Jlf""" Ho1MY {$) l'~ -OlM ISi wWl:.f.-~f . 1ll -\.Qle CMJ ~ (SJ
1:11 • -
I* -lllM IMJ pl~ GiltMru t5l 1;•1 -t'i -"kkttt IM} O.C.. Sffret'OI <SI ... 1"7J& -S-tM51 dee. lt-....0 IS) f.I, !. -S..U...r f ,) OK. sa-. {Ml 1•
111 -KMMINl<ll !Ml plMld ~{$1 1:01 I. In -,.,.., .. IM) dee. Mdl"Oltl (SI ,_
Hwy -~II CM) OK. W•ll !SI ..0.
J..W V~ty MlrtM Ull IJtl S#I• ...._ ,_ t1 -McCDMIUOfMIV (Ml dtc. Fl,._ n ... .., ISl l-0.
105 -C•frto (SI dfc, Boor~t 14. 114 -lmkM-SJ dK. {M) l·I. <h -ll11111d1l•1 CSJ dK. Gl'ffnlH IM .. 7. l -all \S won l>Y !Offtll. I -illdrcittl (M) OK. CarlQ CS! f. •• '" -SEW jMl dtc:. 8rown 5-1. 1'5 -M .COSl (J1, 15' -n { I dlc~ndllr1f tMi 1· 1. •
161 -Hotk....mllh ISi OlnMd Luo-Plft1 2:SI.
111 -°"'" IS) l>lnMd R-(M) :If. !fl -Fr•illw ISJ pfnMcf Toctt,...... !~.,::~ 1'11ndlan IJ J Ok. Clesc1r1 (MJ ...... ·--MIN& tal C>\ S.... AN (S\~.0:-LMtoilafl Ml dtc. 8-IT
JOS -Cfllvu IM) d«~~~l_J~I 1-1 . 114 -StJeftv CM) die • ............., <SI 7. •• 122 -ll•UMY {M) d.K. Oonov.,, (SJ 1·1. 4. 12' -Gvnl lM) die. ll•ncrott fSl 7·
!l!eM'IJ~· .. ,~~-·
BIG -n-TALL
llG SALE
NOW IN
PROGRESS I . ' U1 I. ,lM St., CelN• "-
k!Wlell smwr, • ""1rty °""
la Me. 'c...r .... u WJtJ ..... _.~-"""" c...,..
Prices Effecdve Ju. %5tli Co 30tli
Use Sears RevolvfD&
Charge
., ·-·-
CUT
Our Entire Inventqry of Mens',
Womens' and Children's Parkas Are
On Sale
°" Sale
Instructor Lengths, Sbort
Lengths and Chalr Coats
We.re St; ta $.SI
lteptarf!.99 Yotrti Pulll1 ........... " -• •
" Mtmbert ol tho team in.
dude 14ld1elle Jolmaon and carol Stoneman of Newport
Beacll, Mary Plalfool or Costa
t.fesa, Kerry Oreaver and
Dale Keough oi Corona del
~far.
Slr1ll011 141
k«lno tlfl)I.: O.n1 HHh -Murl)ll1
I, Vll\Olll 10, Cllllmer• ), 11•11* 11
L....,.. hl<:ll -~"9111 ~ L'°"'" I,
•1my t, MCC1l11 1, Ooltly 2
H1tltlmeJ ""9UM hld'I, i.1 ..
"" .._ ........ ,, ·jsearsl 3333 Bristol· St.
Phone ( 7 H) 541).3333 Costa Mesa
I
I
........... ...,._ .... Wt
,
' • ..
I
i "
i.iAlL V Pit.OT
Fo1· the Record
ljlV1 Airman Apprentice
Rldr D. Relsierta, 1on or Mr.
....S ,»n. JJ'. Robetl,o or 11181
DunelDDOllAve., W~, w """pl••ed Ute Aviation
Eledrtdio•a..Alai. -'Sdlool 'al
Jacluoovllle.
Navy Seam.an Recruit Bruce
S. cartb)e, aon of Mrs. DorJ1
c'arllsle of 16.180 Laura Way,
Wtflminster, gtaduated from
recrult tralnlng at the Naval
Training Center a!'San Diego.
HIV)' A.lnnan Rec r u It
WIWam M. Wlllllm.Ma, 10n ol
Ml'1. ldariarel M. Beelby of
~ -----=-"i.,!_ o m • r 1 1 t · Ave~, Wiiimmster, ~ oompftled
!he ~rull pllase of !he
Navy!1 •1Four tt> Ten MontP"
11<live duly prolll'am al MIU-• ·liliton. . •
Navy Fireman Recruit -,·
1
•
Navy Airman Recruit Frank
0. Reick, eon of Mr. Richard
A. Reick or 894 C.pltal SI.,
Costa Mesa, has reported to
Helicopter Combat Support
Squadron One at the Naval Air
Station, Imperial Beach.
James W. Sml~. ton of 1Mr. ·'' Marifte Sgt .• Mart R.
and Mn. James V. Smith or Cordova, son of Mr. and Mrs.
7792 24 St., Westminster, R. V. Cordova of JIS37 Colville
graduated from recruit St., Fountain Valley com-
training at the Naval Training pleted the Nu c I ea 'r Bkr
C<nl<>r al Son Diego, logical aod Cbemi<:al 'War-
fare Defense OJune at the
1.1arlne Corps Air St at lo n,
Kaneobe Bay, Hawaii.
Navy Fireman Daniel £ ..
Hogcarth, of 15580 Narcissus
St., We.stmiDJter, completed
the .basic Electrlclao·s Mate
School al San Diego,
Navy Petty Officer Second
C!asa Gordo.a J. Balley, hus--
band of the fonner Mias Gail
L. Stirewalt of 7671 Baylor,
Westminster, has returned to
his bomeporl al Long Beach,
caiil., . after ·an eight-month
deployment ln the Western
Paclfic aboard the guided
missile cruiser USS Long
Beach.
Navy Petty Officer Second
Class Job H. Edmiston, son
of ~Ir. and Mrs. Paul
Edml!l<ln ol 2424 Lesparre
Way, Costa Me!a, is Jn the
Western Pacific aboard the
nuclear-powered aircraft car4
rier US,S Enterprise.
Navy Airman Job W. Bat>
Iller, m of Mr. and Mrs.
Roger J . BanoJer or 333 E.
19fh St., Cos ta Mesa, is in the
Westeto Pacific aboard the
nuclear-powered aircraft car-
rier USS Enterpriae.
Marine Sgt. Ernat W.
LladUbact, IOD of Mt. and
Mra. L. W. Lauderl>acl: of
U891 Cedar St .• Westminster,
compleled the ,\vlation SUp.
port Equipment Technician
School at Millington.
Air Nallonal Guard (ANG)
Robert L. Mct_,,..le Jr., aon. or Mr. and Mn. Robert L.
McLaugblln or rm Cambridge
Circle, C.osta Meu, bas
gradualed al Slleppanl AFB,
Tex., from lhe U.S. Air l'or<:o
tadlo)ogy spectallst course
conducted by !he Air Training
Command. '
AJrman MeJ-.iighlln, whl>
learned to operate
radiographic equipment Uled
tn nuoroscoplc examlnaUoos,
i• retumln1 to hi• C&llfornla
ANG uolt at Vru:i Nuys.
Alnnao Scoll R. i-, ooo
of Mn. Beverly G. Laraeo of
SJ46 Sharon, Coeta Mesa. bas
compleled Air Force bU!c
training at La<klaod AFB,
Tex.
During hlJ •Ix weeks
training, he 1ludled !he Atr
Force mluloo, organlzaUoo
and customs and received
special Instruction In human
relatlons.
Tbe atnnan ts remalnlog at
lhe Air Training Command
base for 1peclallzed training ID
!he security pollce field.
Navy Petty Officer First
Class Burtoa M. Uarrbon Jr.,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Burton M.
Harrison Sr. of 10142 Pua
Drive, Huntington Beach, bas
left his homeporl at Norfolk,
Va., for a 1lx·month deploy·
ment to the Medlterraneao
aboard the amphibious
transport dock ship. '
Marine Sgt. Earl M. Brown
Jr., husband of the former
Miss Patricia E. Henderson of
lo.192 Mast Ave., Westminster,
completed the Aviation . Sup-
port_ Equipment Technician
School at Mllllngton.
Frut M. Deu, aon or Mr.
and Mrs. Frank B. Dean of
1215 Key West Drive, Corona
del Mar, .wu recently en-
tertained by the Bob Hope
Christmas Show aboard the
aircraft carrier USS Midway
io Singapore. .
~tarine Sergeant Randy E.
RobillSOI, husbtnd of the
former MiB5 Dorothy Morgan
of 13162 Golden W. SI.,
Westmlnster, has reported for
duty at the Marine COrpo Air
Station, Iwak:uni, Japan.
Navy Ueutenant Com·
mander Robert A. Jolmton,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Johnson of 1846 Samar, c:oiita
Mesa, bas reported for duty at
the Naval Air Station North
Lslaod, San Diego.
Ainnan Scott R. Llrttn, son
of Mn. Beverly G. Lar&en of
3146 Sharon. Costa Mesa, has
completed Atr Force basic
training al Lackland AFB,
Tex.
The airman 11 remalolog at
the Air Training O'.lmmand
bale for 1peclaltud tiafutng h1
!he security 'police field.
Airman Lanen allended
Costa Mesa !Ugb School.
Series Set
On Issues
"Behind the Headlines," ls a
semesteNons lecture series
being ottered llllJ spring by
Orange Coul Eveolng COi·
lege. 'lbe ' .mes, which meell
Tuesday• from 7!»9:30 p.m.
In !he OCC Forum, begins
Jan. Ill and rl1DI lhrouib June
$, coune 1n111'11dor la Dr.
GUea T. Brown, profeslOt of
hlllory and dean or Graduate
51..U.. al cil Stale UD!venlty
at Fullerton. Brown, a noted
author, has made 17 oveneu
lripo during u.. paa1 11 yem.
He bu lni.rvtewed key
pollUcal, business and educa-
Navy Petty Officer Second tkmal leaders on every con.
Class Robert B. Pruitt, soo of tfnent.
Mr. and Mr1. Albert J. Prulll Eadl lecture In the seriea Is
of S5022 Camino C&plstraoo, en lo!onnal dilcuulon of
Capi!:trano Beach, ts in the today's vital IJSUel, Brown
Western· Pacific aboard the will offer presentaUoos u well
nuclear-powered aircraft car-~ .. ~:~g 1peclal guest
rler USS Enterprise. ~ ror the serlel are
avallable In lhe 0 C C U.S. Air Force captain A<1m111ton1 and llecorda Of·
G«doa L N-• ..., or Mr. nee ror If.
and Mrs. Clarence F. Nedom,
41tl Sandburg Way, ltvlne,
bas lll'iduated from tbe Air
Univmity'1 ~utdron Officer
School al Maxwell AFB, Ala.
Captaln Nedom wa1
spe<lally Klected for !he 1'-
Wftk profe1sk>nal officer
coune whtdi Jl"•PI"" juolor
officers to perform command
and slall dutlea required by
the Air Force.
The cun1culum coven ~
munlcative 11klll1, leaderlb.lp, ·
human rtlatklnl, national
aecurlly, man a a em en l
reaources and lntematlooal
relations.
Navy Petly Ofllcer Third .a. .. Qallde A. Erllll Jr .. IO!I or Mr. and Mn. Claude A.
Emil St ., o( 11!0 Wallace
Ave., Onta Mfia, ls a
crewmember ol !he deltro1'r
ucort USS Cook which
reacu<d two downed pllot1 oil
!he coot or s.uthenl
callfoqlla.
P ermits Soar
WESTMINSTER-A record
3,000 bulldlog permlta valued
at S42 million wer. tllued here
during 1971.
••
•
••
• • ..
Q
• " • •• •
~
" • • •
•
•
'll1lllam Allea Kldwtll o/. 141
Rocheller Sitt<!, Colla M ....
bu enllated In !he t ..... )'Ur
actlve duly pn>1ram of the
U:S. Naval Roaem. Kidwell
wu aworn Jnto.tbe 1ervioe bJ
LCDR JJ:.S. Schwelur, Com-
mandlns Otncor or !he Naval
Rtlem -· 1346 Bil'
r*tlcl Rold; -Alla.
:-£..,.rything i1 very qui-el in the winter 'car.1,e
••
1
pl0ru1 are ·,1nplng."
tn a
I
I I
I
I
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11.i»loJ.O', Janu..,y 2.), ,.,,.>
"
Everyon• Has
_ Some.thing That
Someone Else Wants
• ~ • 1 .. •
·DAILY· .PILot.-:.tLMSS.IFlEB ·~ ADS . . -~ -~ ~
You Can Sell It,
·Find It, T r!'de It
With & Want Ad , ._ • • '' ' r
·The Biggest Marketplace on t~e Ora~e Coast -01~1 t)42:_5678 for Fast Results
[ _ .....
General
The Area's
Top Professionals
Since 1949
LIKE SOMETHING DIFFERENT?
........ -
Moci.· Avail•ble by C.-.dlt Rejection!
A New La Cuesta UV1S.ncl1 Mo&kl u •
This att.ractive 2 bdrm. bome bas what we
term "character." The lge., cheerful living
r1n., \vith a frpfc,, provides the cozy feeling
that the entire family \\rill ~njoy. Property '
localed on R·2 lot, 10 fl. wider than standard. 0 ~ One story, 4 BR, dining ,_,,, fomlly
room, 2 boths, c•rp0!od. in living, dinlnt . room~ master IMdroom, master 'bedroom
closets. 1865 Sq. Ft. homo ln ·Le Cyost•
un it ii. SAVE $24~1 ·~"19 .sold et. unit
11 price. MUST Sf;EI • .
s21,250. 3 .. Bcim 4 Bdrm · $30,900 Invest • • • • ' $59,500 · r t
CHINA COVE-VIEW ... T '-• ~-2, baths. PaQo, shake root. 2 ~tbs. Pa~. dlnillg room.
Dinllli., rm .. : "dlsbw~e.\"~ Bullt-lns. Ctist.om drapes, in-
Fire~ace. ~ew PJllnt. inside dlrect llghtul.g. E;<cb·a stor-
&: out. CloSe to scbools 6 a.ge space. Uke-1\e\v home
shopplni:. Shac:M l:rees.-Bric. wltb wall-t~wall carpetlnl:.
• • • • in y our future
You'll enjoy Jiving in this 2 story CONDO-
MINIUM. 3 Bedroom, 2'1.i baths, stone fire-
place, family room (or formal dining room),
built·in kitcher;i with private patio close to
the pool & recreation rooms, and it's on fee
land in the BACK BAY AREA. $34,500.
3 Bdrni., 3 bath home on lee lot (not lease-· '"\,t .
hold). Just 100 fl. to beach. $98 ""0 f' -~
•. '~ :,. ' JEAN ROLFE
BAY & BEACH REAl;'l'\',,;.',.6~~ CQKGRATULATIONS to
Gener11
Don't Mimble·
This ·One
A little delay -and UUs one
\1·il! be gone. A secluded 3
bedroom, 2 Oath Hacienda
su11'0Ullded by "'ails for
privacy. This one offers
thick Carpl'ts. \\"all to wall
fireplac('. fantastic family
roon1 "'ilh \\'Ct bar and your
01rn babbling brook. Asking
only $43,500. Call 842-~.
OPfN T/L P • fT"S FUN TO BE NICE/
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Distinctively • • •
... Different
TAX SHELTER
Tu·o l·bdrm unit!! in prime
condition & location 011 lovl'-
!y NC\vport Island.
Priced at $5<1,500
Call: 673-3663 673-6688 Eves.
associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
.Z02S W Bolboo 673·366)
Gener:J
Gener-II -, . ;.:< T' .....
4 ~ ;t0 mily1
Bonus + Dine
Pool-$39,500 !
UNBELIEVABLE VALUE!
Scree!K'd portiro entry.
Decorator sunken living
room, dining room and fam-
ily room! 4 huge bedrooms.
Bre-akfast area in brite
kitchen. Large pantry. ~!es
say cen1er. \\'ASHER and
DRYER INCLUDED! Co(l·
vertibl~ BONUS ROOM
and/or garage. All paneled,
lighled and tilf."d -\\'ITH
BAR! Patio. SPARKLL~G
POOL! Boat acCi'fis. Super
valUt" at $39,500! Call oow -
64>-0303.
IORL \I J Ol \O\
ll£,.,1.rt;R:;
2 & 3 Bea room Townhomes
(714) 551.-4041
· Jean. Rolle for a FAi.'n'AS;
1;..IC month o( Deeeotber. -
She \\.'aS the Selling · ftUes-I
man and/Dr listing Sak-s-
man on over a quarter· mil·
lion dollars \\'Orth of volumt>.
She sold single fanlily resJ.
deilces and inc.'Ome propecty ·
in • N ~'port Beach, Corona
del Z..far and Costa ,.1esa.
She n1ade a beautiful tax
free exchange ror tv.-o of
her long · time chenlS.·"Jean
has bee-none of \\'ALKER &
LEE'S professionals for 11
•
La" CU.st• Sy ·Th• S.. ' .. -See 'lhe Model• •I .
Brookhunt & Attarita
Huntington Beach
c .• n 962.1371
yean;! lf you have a prob-
Jen1 selling, or finding "'hatl!'!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!llf!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ you need, call J E A N Gener.ii _ .. ~11 ROLFE at \\'Al.KER &1';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;i,;:;;;:::;c;;:;;;;;:;;:;:;;;; LEE 64i-77,ll. You canrt do !•
helter.
PRESTIGE WATE~FRONT HOMES
.
54().1120. --Brt. 540-1720. . .
3 Bdrm • kmily -l Baths + , :4 Bdrm
r·
I * AUSTIN·SMITH, GO RMAN & ASSOCIATES ·
REALTORS 644-7270
•" 6-neral. Gener11
$32,950. 2 bath$. ·Patio, dining $32,800. Pool,~ patlo.-.Dinlngl;;;~-iiiii·iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\
nu., built-ins, dish'washer. 2 ~·· bullt-ida,'-disbwasber.11
fireplaces. ChQory homi! F.ireplace in la{nlly rool!l.
-.---.,-,.---.--" -Rear· living 100m -Conten1-ctlll"""<. ......,: llts<1' . .
landscaped. Bfk."546-1720. · porary home with solanwn.
I Brk, MO-l n<l,
• I
2955 HARBOR . BLVD.
·cosrA MlSA
540.~1120
' A U/loll()Uf: ti()Mf:
SUPER DUPLEX!
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT . Genw•I
Two of the finest duplexes in Corona del Mar
are located at the corner ofcMarguerite and
Fifth; one of them is for sale! Three bed·
room , three bath owner's unit and a two bed·
room, two bath rental unit that is leased un·
til October 1973 (wilh others waiting in line).
This duplex is clean, modern, yet cbarmin·g
and a proven investment.
-53 Linda iii. Drive··
Elegant.5·bdrm., 4¥.i ba\b:s;. on lagoon. New
carpets, drapes & \vaJlpaper. Large attic
storage area; 4 firep\aces. Lovely garden.&
lge. slip .. ,. ......... , .............. ,. $212,000.
For Complah .. lriiiwnuitl&. · ' .
·on All Homos .,.. LQ!s, Please .call:
-~ ... ••••••••••••••••••• *: ~-k"~,.EOli:SALE * *
' • • • '~ j ' .. :
••
·Former model homes at
".THE .RANCH"·
in the·'c!ty of Irvine
PlmrllhSrur-MigueHHT;400---·
• PlSCOUNTED $2500.
· .. 4 ·Bedroo~, ,3. b.aths, 2250 sq. ft.
UN IQUE ttpMU OF NEWPORT HACH, '45·650t
A Ustl-v of Did Yenu
U~l()UI: tl()MI:§
General O.neul This 'hbnie blit uf>graded shag carpets Uu:u-. . '!J• . -,I~ out, ·'drapes; waJ.IPJlper.~:iwall paneling; air CMn.r. in-_ Macnab-Irvine REALTORS
1 ~e~~A'iJ'Tl"F\'I L . Model Home; , . -~~ ..'.~.01•1.!t con4it16nint.·GOod (lnancing available. Quic~ Ge_n_or_•_I __ _
BAYCREST Wlien' Built ·. · ·~cl"~~:~ oc<.'ll~r· :' : • • · " ._ · • 0 1•;;;3 ;;;9;;;;1>_ ;;R1'f;H;;;;o;;;;M;;;E;;;_:; 2 BR.· TRIPLEX
Lovcly 4 BR.02% bath home. See • this,• attractwt .. a .. ·..-•.,-.."'1 ,.. .AYR(S--'lll!ILJY··. ,.. · ''' •01·2 3 1'.DRM-ltome,-en<l-$·75·,·000· Luxurious ·ear p e ti rr g bedi-oom, .2 Ila.th home. :EX. dtlded-.pri~cy· surt"QUllded ftUI tl....-o
& drapes. 1.lany ·extras io-tra Cabinets built in large by perfecl lli'ndacapllig. This · ' , ~ • ·•·· · ' patiO, large.pool. All fresh· Build l'or that rainy day.
chufo1g wate' "''""" & kitoheo. m in garai<e """ 4e!ighUuJ.3 Bedroom Home ••. •••. ••••••• • ••••. · •••• •• 1r palttted, new cupet• """ Quality built uni bl "1 cltoice electronic filtration. $19,950. sized la\vn frnt and 'rear. is available' tor" linmediate .. tile. Move in today! $26,500. Corona del Mar location. 2
\Valter King 644-63'.k> <Y29) __ This can_ be Y®IS~Icir o.nJy · ~ion. $33,950. Call 6*Mral General E·Z terms. BR each, Built-in kitchen
Macnab -Irvine ·-5'1o · doWh: ~Selling • t>rf'ce· Anytime, 646-0l)55, • • *· * * * * with dishwashers, one unit
1zpoo. can 546'23!3. . Hard To Find * -·. * . * * * * BACK BAY AREA ... Ur.place""' 111 bath•. b. •• ~ ...r . .,..,_FUNTOBEHICEI • · Ctistom bulit 5 BDDM home, Quality v;/w carpets and 642~235 °""°200 OP8i ,..:•"·ff" .. _ Great 2 Bedroom HQme on • .,.. drapes. E."<cellent incon1c ~i Ri$11'll Eim~~[;~ ~A,-.TA¥LOR CO. *·, ~~1~·r~=~~~j WI:~~~:=~~:~· EST A TE · . _ paint inside and ~· ~er • · • • • splendid features. Priced
. May Catty all Fmancmg. right at $87,500.
Two acres overlookiDg Back UNBELIEVA,BLE TOTAL BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM * * * * *
Bay. Swimming, riding , IS ONLY S21 500. Call Any-The Bordeaux~ Most popular model! En~ 4 Bdrm., 2 Bath
ranching and entertaining. time, &as-0556: l d d t · d 2 M n · ~~1~~1°:e~~~ic!~~~~!, DO~e~Jr ~~S -j ~·;I fu~y ~.~~~~; 3 ba~~er&Bk~t;!: N;~::eE~s=utC:sct3! "~~ •11121 ~ :!iedn. SC:or:u~~ ~~~ne~ ON ~HE BAY Ii~ · ~h rage. Exclusiye Oluntry Club area. $97,500. ;;;J~C~~lle Realtor \..l'l llU.,,
Elegant living ar its best. ~tom _built 2-story Ji.ome. S! i : 1'~r.:·21th Year" 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
Call for more details. Distlnctivt; ~ of bnc!< -·l" · •·· ·• WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO;, Realtors 548-7729
ETE REn wood & tile give a charm 3 BR Uk p BAR that is appealing & inviting. SUllSIDIAll'J 0 , JIU COl.WRL co. . 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road • e new
-REALTOR-aa'B,!'_:.. FRA·-~;'. ~,:5'lll'35·. ·Off. S" •soN NEWPORT CENT.ER, N. B. Ready to move '" beauty .
V<U" ""'"' uu.-o ICA General ~ · General huge Jiving rm &: family rm,
642-5200 (Y32J. SPECIAL ·--'-----!FIVE _ 2 bedroom homes, tnodern kilch, lots of cup--. NEW HOus1:·c. uve gp.rages, s separate re~-board space, huge master Macnab-Irvine
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
.Z02S W Balboa 61J-16b)
l ac he nmyer ·
Re,1 tto·
.. ~ .. ,_
11
'
. TRANSFERRED
~ustnn'rs~ toore:~ .
their lovely Lido We. '
. home, ""um came in
, they were transferred~
If )'tlU're looking-· for
an exeellent buy in
a 3 ba:iroom
Lido ·Isle home
Call us.·
$'16,500 .• •
HARBOR
-~ ced yar d s , on big bdrm, ·beam ceilings, low
1. ·Laguna -Arch Beach street-tcHtreet Jot. Income down paymt.
Heights • 3 bearooms, 2 S740. per month. Asking 645.7221
'baths, ~·, fireplace, ca-$69,500. 1733 \Vestcliff Dr., N.B.
thedt'al "'i)lngs, shake roof 54<J.ll51 Open Eve•. NEW ON .THE and fantastic view. $4.3.500.
2. C.pi .. rano Beach • 3 bed· MARKET! . rooms, 2 baths, 1630', fire-
place, 5 mln. to Dana Hal'-Westclif! -large 4 bed .. -4
bor, 90% financing, great . .' bath -dining room and -Oh
,view. $40,950. l'"'!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!' Yes! Pool! Owner tranafer-Call ~75-7225 , red. $89,000 Hurry!
Attention Builders
~, -HERITAGE
'. REALTORS
l
\ , r I ..
..
'
DAILV PILOT
1::::;;;-~"' .. ~l~-l ~I ;;;-;;;;;;"' .. ~\~=I _ ..... I@ I _ ..... l•J I ~-l~I ._ I~ l.__-iiii;;;;;"'-~l~~.1 lmiil iii-.. "' .. -.llil~~1~1 ;;_;; .. ;;-;;l~-
1'(;'ner•' H L -!fl!l!!I Cotta Mau t ~-LWit W.. M1 .. ll1 tt-lwh:,11 --....... Unfurft. 305 HoV..t Unfvrn. 305 HouM1 Unhlrn. Jl5
Lov.ly-To·Look· Unmatched ValM! ELEGANT 1-IR. & DEN Per Sole 135 . !?f:e•t'"'lty ~ General Hunll~ BNch Newport laach
At! Nico s -bom• tn 1dlof lamlly-. LlKE ..,. IMD, -TRAVEL AGENCIES 1--,-•N-D-LO_R_D_S_I_ NO FEE, VACANT. BLUFFS Coodo. l •--
··•·•e • ···-. ' -· eoodl~ II ·--n.. MANSION 45 r ... lot .119,91111 llvlnc nn, 2 BR, 11' BA. ...... ~·-In .... -·· "'"\Mal .. ....,, ... ......... .__... u """...,_ L-IST PRIC&... adult ........ nr ..-... "'-;;;; ••· 1..A -•7 per month first & bedroo~ built-In kitchen.
bedroom home In 1 peaoctul r.:: -~~~-.. ~'. ' BR S BA. 3 car aar, over ~ 00 , ~ 2 •• -+" :, •2 m..-lm. __ .. , ~.. v.,•,""". ,_e "-·-'-~: ?.!~. :::_~ We Speci&llze in Newport ~""" · • . pool povilei,:u. l car .ettlnl:. 2\.1 batt\tl, bc!iutlM .., auu "'"'l"" s,ooo sq 1L 1zK enll')', tmJ. num. . --~ .w ........,~ J.-...... Beach e Corona del 1'.tw-e last. Near new City ~urlli•· gooct ~n belt
1tpante ftl.lnkt-n fwnlly Pin&:· _pa_tio wJth ~. rm. q tam rm, Vitt w, ~~ -~ eod of the l.t-3 Bft. 2 BA~mobile home tn 1 ers ftdric&. $23),~ _A.._~~ Reynt al Ser-Park. 3 BRS, bw1tinsi ~~w. Tonl\\-"D ~U&C de~ ~
room wilh flttplace and wet Anumable VA lol,n, Priced dmJ.!~ ht, fpi, wlw cr1)tl MUu. -.-.--oceu-frobt Lquna ' ... '!!!~~...... ...we & Fk.c/'10 oal Try BKR/OWNER 962='551 ....,a,se oruy ~ per n\Oll ....
bo.r. Inipttulve entry. kit a quick &II.lo. $27,900. l Of'PS, an uperadtd bltln LIDO RIAL TY DMdL $22. .19f-8239. Nu-View! Broker G40-00al.
Scpante dining roo1n. Ex· 64&-Tin. · appl'L Patk>, bk>ck wall, 3371 V!a Udo, N'pt Btach )ONES NU-VIEW RENTALS S.i\IALL 2 bdnn In relll', 3 BR., Npt. lights. Pet•,
panalvc w/w e arpet11 OPfHnt.t •ff'SFUN JOMMCtt pcU ldlcpd. 3 Yn new. 6'JS.nl0 j IEAU'Y"INC 8'l3-tl30 or 494-3248 clean no pets, 3 blks frorn childt-en 0.l(. $775 Month,
Uu-uout. Well landlCIO.l)Cd ~ I Prlccd•btlowmktat$$,951). Mes• Venll fStM ~n. Want perm. &: avail. }'ell. lsl.; Lge. 2·8R.
yw. Room -•or """'· 100:-I.Illa; !'!!I---,-im:u -FREE ""4blo ,.,, •• ,., i 1 a.0-. 2· ""· ape nr. ·oor Hlill; -_!:_1e~~~~r:!!: JiQ' '* L!qa:Jll _ -. ,E~AONTM-.--~~-~~~ .. 154 •• ~~-ir=~"' WN~ mb';' .. ~ '~!~v.:''i ~~~: ~Ci f~P:1~;~~RE~~ r ~ · '-' ~, u~rn:i ..,...... ·· gar, lncd, ~. Xlnl loc. y •at! l 3 BR 2 bQ.
! lt~lli\ll ~:~~"•N.: Real ~5~· a .... ~.:;:s~.r:::::.n ~%.o;m'o."5AM 8=~=":!~:~ 2190~..:!w~ ~~~· ::r, :":,: ~~~~·~1j ~ · =~ -carpetin&, bit-in J'1Ul&e & aharp, with maey xtru. table, wet bar, rtfril:., etc. Com.,.,rclal 4!µ-3302 aft $pm. Crpls, dl'pfl, drps. Patio. 5 ewport •·• I
$26,995. &
SHARP!
rerrtc. ln each. Upper unit Love.ly carpets, dr1pea. Newly decoriited ..tih lux· P...,.rty 151 Money to Loin 240 Corona del Mlir nm old. BUlihard/Adams. ------,..... haa view of hills Ii: nl&ht shelvin&. Ovttmed lot w/ uriooa •I\ a.c carpeting. -'---------1 968-1202 ~
ll•hl•. On James St .• Over room for boat or trailer •• SoerldlnJ pool and lovely C-1 SITE · 1,1 TD Loans $21S. 2 .... bltna, new crplA, DUP~. 3BR. or 2SR & Kings Place 80~ loan at 7% can be as· CAU. 968-4468 pou.nda. Call 546-5880 drpa, dbl carport, deck, Den 2 BA, new, fenced yrd, 3 BEDROVM-vtEW. Super
1umed Aslcing $49 950 ... HERITAGE REALTORS. NEWPORT pool. $250 mo. 536-2914. 5-48-3446 clean. Available 1-2 years. ASSUME FHA
3 &:droorns. 2 btttbs, wall to wall carpeUng, COV('rcd
uatio. Assume 7~'1" FHA loMn. Anyone can qualify.
Sts8. per 1nonth pays
ALL!!!
CALL . e ......... ·~ 8%% INTEREST 1295,2 br~c. gar.i~. l 0'4....:!64 $350. mo. BARRETT .,1... .......,..-Just '.:"t:fui~ ~ 211 G~~wtll .. ~ ;..u,,,t ~2nd TD Loans ~~hr. '~lr:~. ""· 1 .. 1.. ~
•.. -...._ Ba, den. form din rm., DU ~·~ -·.1 ...,. ''"'°'" yd, patio, 2 bib, bch. !!ALTY 4 BR POOL VA n'-n .. -· ,,,. floL 2024 Deed wit~ low down 1*.Y· Lowest ratH Orange Co. NU-VIEW RENTALS HouHs Furn. or 310 Ntar Mtwpert P••l Ottlc• Cozy ~ style 4 BR, not &i:an'C' ... D'r ... 557-5343 er ~1,.A.. ~ .~~ ..:....~ Sattler Mtf• Co. 673-4030 or 494-?MS 3 BR., 2 Ba., Sharp! S365 Unfurn.
Fount1in V1lley tar from ocean. ~1.1.. leave meuqe at MS-olS17. .,..,. vw •'-"' uw.>nDluua.. '42-2171 MS-G611 WOW, new Spanish 3 BR,. 3 3 BR.&: fam . rm., 2 baths l---·------1 I-.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; c&...,<v INVESTMENT D.MSION h brand new, Turllerock $37;> Balbqa Penln1ula
1 , decorated In light wann .._,._..... IMch Ol'fH Tll.. 1 • trS RIN 10 llE MCEI Serving Harbor atta 21 )'1'8. Ba., nr. Big Corona Beac .
(:,,ATS 4 BEDROOMS col.ors..The"latest"'inan. =·r~; . ~"SOUDATEBILLS S400 Mo. owner/a1t 4BR.,fam.rm.,2~batbs, ---------• II ......,., brand new 11Jrtlerock $425 ~ & pllaocea and fixtures. lie•!· -Sell YOtll' Private """""' available ::;673-05~:::1:::0·~-~~--2.BR., 11> .... alr/cood. '"" Home on Point WALLACE 25'x1 §' ed &: filtered pool. No money 2ND TD'S -ANY AMOUNT 3 BR., 2 Ba .. family rm.; -s~~~RS RUMPUS ROOM =s. ~~a'k~~ your Take '=!a"'°:~-~ cn4) ~ Bkr ri1~~v~~.$500S:Zzn N~~,!~~~~.a~~'°~~
(Open Evenings) ~~~ :: as.;!·~;i0bu.Y1r~~~ REPOSSESSIONS ::r.=~~ ~: Income Pioperty !! Tru:r'o;...1 260 Houffl Unfurn. 305 ~an1T:~One W~k rn~
1-:::::::::i:::::::::= I nbrhood nr F.V. Hi, very FofrthbitonnatFHAloo•andvA.locaho tlon ~. pool, recrea~ ~ INCOME UNITS : 11fu... 1JKI TD on com· ••A ~£Ti!eR~.· ~~-Ii clean borne w/many xtru. o eae • met, and creen roUlne n.u.ui. .. 1.... .-• Cost1 ,... .. • Fixer Up per All terms, VA or eonv. contact • kwe!y o:ndcmiDium with 3-FOR $47,500. Deluxe unill. ~~ P~~ t dwntwn 1---------''SINCE 1946'' ~
Owners are transferred, llO KASAllA.N cath@dral re4thlis 'three Good C.M. location. _uan a P s ran °' • Sgla delight 1 Br, stove, 1st Western Bank Bldg.:.-Condominlvml • Three Units they are anxioui to seJL RMI Esta.._ bedrooms, three baths ~ 6-FOR ,15,ooo. North· C.&.I., payi!)Jncld !!. nall75due~ 3month. retrlg, fenced yard for pet university Part<, Irvine Un{\lrn. 320
I · •• BR down can be a. deii tor ls terrltic at '980. mo ln-;:no "' years. $1.25. 552 7000 Nl.-&..t located on large Easl.lk!c ' •u -....._11 .,..,,1111 ·come 1 Owner ll'\llll'lllltees con-ALA Rentals • 645-3900 Daya .. ¥'' 1 SPACIOUS • BR. I'.'• BA. Coata .Mesa lot with room OME D SEE ..-~ ...._ ~ • :w.wriff $1660 mo lnoome st r u c t ion this ~ar • for 3 n10re units. Investor's l C AN ONNTil.t• "'SRMJOIJJEMCD -~ 11 •• 000. w/$3),000 bank de ...... ita. e Room to brea"· 2 Br, Cpts, drpa, frpl.c, bit-ins.
delight with loads of JX>ten. 53 ·5111 C :J 531-5111 thla wry ~ deoorated 4111 I ,.... -. 15~· dilcowrt. ~ need ard u., )oRd 2 BR, 114 ba., air cond. $235 ~~~:rn i5.1°1'A~ ~ £:~~~eaV.~: u!11:iLE RED ~~ r'i,i~~ni_;'i ll~Mt; £~;:~.~ ~ nii-™ . IF:.1L~n1a1: • ·~:_ j ~ !t:J:::~~ ~:~o!j:i~~ 21:
~~':t"fu~i:;:'::; ~~~~~~=:.=.,=:.2:A. IACKIAY FANTASTIC.BUY! I -for-11~1*3BR-$189MO.* i edh•11MlttionVIOIO
\Vartn carpets, deoorated in COOi H tlngton Beach Large lenced yard, cul-de-sac r I NEW &in&le •tor)' 2 BR, 1 antiques you won't believe. 1oc. ce . CUl~c ~ CONDOS Call on this aciting li.sthig? street, quiet llfe&, kkls OK. BA, crptg, drps, 'blt.1t1, cov
3Yx13' family ·rm. 4 Drapes. Formal 'Dln Rm, Carefree iivtnc in lara:e 3' and . 38, Units, O:llta Mesa. Ex· Houses fumflhed 300 Tenant pays utilities. Refer-. patio, pr., use ot pool. xlnt
· bedrms. Transtem!d to .J.y 1 00 $37,500 4 bedroom bomeL Exoell cellent cond1tlon! · · ence required. 642-Z'l21 (or REALTY i~'~"'~·~$2_1_0_mo~. ~-~---Chicago. No down VA or ~11·&~ all. y~ area priced from-$32,950. to Priced to sell! lllbol laland message 646-9666). A Company With Vision Newport BHch
·~~"'"HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
name your terms. Just name the tenna. Vacant. iii:i50. 'Bli; kitcb, 1ml din, 6% X GROSS 3BR. 2BA, rent by mo. or $250-BRAND NEW 3 BR., 2 Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Balboa Ptn!nsu1a listed BKR 962-55U Call m-1103. troo.t nn w/tlrepl,. 2 car $315,000 Bath double garage Cali Anytime, 552·7500 BLUFFS-BAYFRONT ! BR. 1----~----CHOI·CE LARWIN 1-cocktail LIDO REALTY .year, Prt patio, balcony, nr Townhouse. Crpts, drpe, Office hours 8 AM to 6 PP.' 2% BA. cuat. docor .• frplc, NEW DUPLEX "TIBURON" condominiwn FOR sale by owner. Wlll teU gar,'M• rec amL, terry.'21.H29-9288 1 ail · ......i _""''' now 00 --~·e• GI or nlA. or p CIJ& lQUJ\ie, bUllard nn, Olympie 3317 Via Udo, N'pt Beacl) • B I'£ ba I bit-ins. Kids &: Poo. Av . drps, c:rpta, paUOI. Nr • ....-3 It 4 BR., beam ceil'a., 4 ,.,_ " ...... "'... tlonal B ~in, pool.~% ON. West side of 67s.7JOO • r., .YI ., yr Y• now. Days (213) 531-6880 or Lse. $525/mo. Owntr. frnlcs. Putios. Posh decor. Total el<tea·ior maintenance, ven • llY .uc w ap-.,..., 1488 E (11•) 81~'"~ Laguna 8Mch cAA _,,..,.0 Q~clc possess. $101,500. ~~~~r~ ~u~~ ~· 3~ ~~ ~ ~~· san~ "Isabelle... COSTA ~ESA Coron•~~ ~r c:.;s ~pl~~·spaclous $165, UtU pd.' frplc, open u"'".~1'-'."-··-=,.~,1y-=P-ar~k---I
-GE11M11o--Quick possession, Frqin ~ to lge den. $28.000. ll 12 Units .... $156,500 "-G (I 1 $90 A•-bachelor,furnished, utll Inc. beams, charm! l~S blks SNGL level 3 BR. 2 ba e·• 1610 W ~.,t HW\I NB SZT,950. VA/FHA 5%. \Ve 84&-4739. 4 Uni~ $16 000 """t1· arage n t · .tUMI $125 bch ~ REALTORS' ...... ,&ti-4623 know them best because v;e FOR Sale By OWoer 4 br 4 U ~ .. , .. ~·,;;,. Cottai:e. C.M. $85. And H.B. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 . unit Unfurn $300 yrly
built the.m. townhouse. -.495.' ISOO H1·5111 ( :IU UI-• "'" · · · · · --I> acre util pd. IWll Util pd. 2hr· So. 1!'f· ,,..;,. Aval! Fob. Th. Call
Corona del Mar larwtn realty Inc. underFHAaPP'rovaI.SWlm· 'Rent-A-Houle t7f.IQO Students! 3 Br, 2 Ba, near ~Ut~·:.c~.;_~~;;1~ ;:''o.'..:a"'P"P':.·.::;"'"',_.::;==·-~=I
OPEN DAILY 1 5 1114) 968-4405 pool. tennla crt, baakelball Cotta -O.C.C. Kld"I':' .. 11Jlll, home. Gar, yd,nr h~.chl. DuploxH Unfvrn. S50
• OWNER Sacrilice. 4 bednrul. & park.'962-004ll att 6. NEWPORT SHORES 1.;;.;=--'-----ALA Roni•• e 645-3900 NU-VIEW RENTALS
4620 WAYNE RO. 3 baths. Qivered petlo, OWNER-sattifiee, 4-bednm, ----~,1r--l BEDROOM fUmished 2 BR, 'W·3 car·gar. $.250. Ad-""""'~~030~~~0~'~,,,.!· ... ~3248~,.8_•_1bo_•_. _P_ ... _ ... _··~1~·~".""'."I Cuslom 4 BR. 3 Ba. Formal hu11t-ins, d i sh w a she.! 1 3 baths. Qwered pe.Uo., Walk to beach. lge. 3 BR. rnune ~ SEPAMTE-MU!le-;-E/S1de-<IIWna.ratoni:g'e ptages-,25. t-• I blk bch •
dinlng: nn .. !aruibr rm., brk· fireplace..J!1~500y Dr;:-~ ~~ .. t-in.s. d,~ •hr~-~.• her, 2-StyMU. ST2\>SELL,ba~ !it·500ins. ESTATE BUILDER c.Jl. on a.Uey, 6T.H.Wf. per mo. Adult1, oo pets. ~~~·fui~.~le~re~'. 2~':' ~ ;!'·~. 1359 E.
fst. it.rea. Many extra fea· de sac. u111.-. , O'W>""-., .... .., ace ... aiuul __ nn. . ..-. 4 UNITS 10% DOWN C.M. LltUftl INch ~7661. $250rno, Avail z.o. 213-Baltxla Blvd.. Apt It.
tW'(!S. O\li'NER desperate. 3 baths, CUl-de-sac, brtr"" JJS,fa}. CAYWOOD REAL TY Units can be uperaded &: $210-f250 3 Br, &: 4 Br. All 39'1-2920 tdwrutn), 5.'£.3518 or
4 bedroom's. Patio, dinblR 84f'r1383. * .S.-12'0 '* rents increued. · $170, Util pd, redec 1 bl' w/ conveniencea, clole to 1Chls, $425/MO. Fabulous ocean, 1 ::;:213:::10:116.1-:::,:l;::OO!l.::::... _____ 1 rm, built~ins, dlshwuher, OWNER anxious. 3 baths, 4 . OCEAN VIEW $t9,CO> 557-d gar, walk: to bch/town. lhop'g. Redecorated, harbor view. 4 Br. 3 Ba, Costa Miu
family 1TO with fireplai;:e. bdrms, llOOl. patio. OUU,. $225, 1 br, mealy tum. Fl'ple, 546-0469 John, 545-9491 Ftm F/P ts dps 1---------1 ~l,. bkr S 3.~-=-5 ~ • ~~\~~mg~i:,':"::k ~od~~ \,~ ~~ &f,• ;1"~ ~ c:.-:i. ~an ~~~ 4.uJ:' ~·~· BBQ.::& patiO. ~7'14 ' Sl60 MQ., 2 BR., stove
Hunti-'-Be•ch $46,900.9C-886.S. primelocation.$66,<m. w lrgdeck. , ..... ..,., • · ·SPECTACULAR custom ~00.~~&t&-~
.... -.. HORVATH REALTY NU-VIEW RENTALS Vu of ocean. $400 mo. 111 I: home, 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 level&, ,.,...::.,;;=='ii'~~~-1
SUPER
FANT Ame
lrvlne . Aak-roo Dove --luL 115D depoa!L ....-. decks. cou111ne \Oew. $350 Hunllnvton -
61$-1912 -IAIGAIN 6T.HD30 or Gl-:!24S. 2BR $130. Garage. Yard. ~m~o.JRe~lere~noes~._,!4"""350!!:!:!"!!"~·-11;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~;:;;;;;~1
Y-'3 11 a" -----~ <-BR. F /R, DIR, 2 BA. 1 DUPLEX' -· Unfvm. 305 Privacy. No pets. 688 B W. L NI I IMMED. OCCUPANCY --r--blk to pool A JSarl<. Harbor Wilson. 642-0111. a1una @UO
NEW-NEW-NEW c:i:: th~~~th ~lf8J ~-~ =..n '°".::-e5wt":~ti; V'ew liome&. $57 ,500 . 2 BR · l BA UNITS, Hunting Gener•I JBR. 2 ba, clean, lharp. Nice E"CEPTJONAL ocean view. Nx;bll :,..:: 1:-W:-
Un iverslty Realty story executive home. Enor· pi'~;b carpeting and fonnal 833-3894. .ton Bea.ch.-Pr!l)clpalsl only. yard. 3112 Coolldae Ave. New 3 bdnn. Exclusive gate "3.11 o5~H.B. ~ow Hwy. oorner. Exciting, m0us separate family room d1 .. 1 .... room. It's lmmacu-Ouetexes near the ocean A5k *>r ' Dick ~!~· $295. Call Jim ~U. guarded section ot Sea Ter--36-ail
111 I I • bd 3 b , bar ·-~ ~"ea . • --"·altar KASABlAN R.E. lllWVQ'rt, race. Sen• .... te home. Month ·eve .. rm., a. \11ith fireplace ""' wet . late, on premium loc~tion ,.... -...-"""' eves. 5.17.f.608. RENTALS 3 BR hie nr Boy's Oub &: ~1~~'$500~}493-6~~769~==11:;;:;\''l:~~.,. .. ,I
home + 2 bdrm., 2 ba. Formal dining room, fiOO sq and the price of J75,950 in-* 613-8563 * 1 sho • , across 1t. from park. Fncd L2.'ldoeueltlo • • ~port Btech apartment over 4 car gar-ft master bedroom suite cl~s the Ja.nd, e ~UFl"S· ~-vlan. 3 BR. 13 WEIL b ~apt.a. Nr. P. Ha•ll ·--ti. yard, no peta. ~. _,;..;..;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;. ___ ,
age. Inspect U1e plans to-plus 3 other bedrms. 2~ fam·~dilitlctm, 2b!plca. pl.rig. LoW vacancy. Mlgbt * ••i·.o...!.J. *' EASTSIDE quiet cW~c. · THE BLUIT,s..spac'lod 3
ay! ($98,500) Baths, custom tie-back 8 red .••• ,,. Im.mac. ~ $58,IXKJ. exchange. Fortin Co · -VTl1 . ,.:i_,, CHARMING 38R, 3BA, DR, bdrms., .lam.Uy rm. 3 Bil, University Realty drapes w/sbeers, shag car· 64+-8067 or 6£.8824. Realton 3 br, new crpts, .... ...,, lrg patto, Nu decor, Belt laundry pool & yard
1 E. Cllt. Hwy. 673-6510 pel thruout. All elec kitchen ~ 833-2220 W.1HtCOSTAMllA garage $225. 5t8-lm5 k>e, 133 Via Wazlen, Open m&tnter:..nce .. $750. mo. ht
* DUPLEX *
w/dbl •oven & sol~um tile NnRT He,igbtl~ ~ FOR sale by owner. 2 These Are Just A Few Of ~ ·clean 2 Br home, gar, daUy 1-?, $475, 6T~2518. & la.st + iuo. dipa.lt. Avail
)loor. Slep down living rm, REALTY A,950 ~-=:· houRI. Comer lot. 2 BR. Our MANY RENTALS ' ' • $12>. fncd, ldds/prts. Mlufon Vielo March 1st. R3:H1635.
One of the best buys in /y,·ell landscaped &: Jots of A Company With VWon US. • $315 income. 90% ftn. 1229 * Rent-A-HouM '79-8430 NE\V Duplex, 3 br 2 b&
!own! 2 & a den & 2 bdr ., concrete. can to inspect and Univ. Park Center, Irvine HARBOR View Homa -2 Delaware St., Huntlnaton $85 • 1 BR. Fum ·eouag~. CLEAN 4 Br, 1% Ba house, PRIME vu lot, beaut Deane :From mio Yrl '. Walk
SoM. 0olRHGwy.Nl11R.500EA. LTV . ,disc.USS terms. .. 968-4456. Call Anytime, 552-7500 BR + den. $54,500. Fee. Bch.'$2,85o dwn: All Util Pd. Couple or ma· blt·ln stove, refrla: avl. s:no. Home lB!l-&BA. buae ~ ·to bch. Encl D'U, ~or
;A Office hours 8 AM to 6 PM ~Pl. P.rovence.. Open 1-5. Lots for Sele 170 ture ain&le ok*. · mo. 221i Sieriul St. 548--6680. form din ~_. .. incl 642-7914.. •
67• u•2 47• u59 • Newport Heipt1 glll'dener Ir: wtr. --~...-i===::=.o-,-,--:-=-~I -~ • • Irvine Terr•A *·OCEANFRONT LOT $1SO • 1 BR. cozy Cottage. East atvff New rt Beach UPPER duplex, 2 Br, wfW HARBOR VIEW HILLS mESH AS A. DAISY. Miaruftcea.t view, for sale or 2 )'t'l .old. WON'T LASTl 4 BR & DEN po crpl, drpa,, bltnl, dock. Mo
Spectacular harbor & ocean ..,..,..,..,..,..,,....,,.
1
3 BR., 2 BA. Ira:. fenced lBR 2 ha._ frplc 6: Ira: yard. trade, South Laguna. · * Individual Home, over 2,CO> 4 BR, FIR. $450. S BR, $395. children-pets. f'l3..t82T
view. Lusk 4 BR & lge • yard, plus boat storage yrd, ~by owner, 6f.5-.l446. 493--3429 ** 329-776C $165 • 2 BR. NEW Crpts, Ml· fL Unusual Iarae 4 Frplc. Sell clean oven.
lam rm. Prof decorated & $19 ,000. CONDO wlk to Balboa lsland, Some Univ.nitv P•rk· WATER!'RONT, :ll' boat slip drps, ll'& gar, fncd for kids/ bedroom or 3 &: den. Faml1y Dwhl\ Comm. Po o 1. [ , • ci:~~!~i-4. :!·:S NEXT TO POOL , cc~=u·=.500'-';-~":;_=--'_" .. "-11
____ ''•__.5...-BR-'--"ho-me-.-Yl-/crpts--A ~~~~ 7 Cdlllns Isl· pets. * =:.P1Cc~:1!°~~: p~LJoo condo w/pool _ •11MrDW.... •
DUPLEX M ril I "L •···h d-. Beaut lnd•cpd. 11~ PRIVATE 3 BR •·· 3 !~---~---~!!~ on argue e, A fine 2 BR 2 BA house or agun1 ~ ...... swimmin R I '&it t '" · · """' · with enclosed rear and b'ont priv. Nr Hoag Hosp. BR, beaut. cone!. 2 & 1, 3 & 2, a min $950 dn. Paymts leas Greenbelt . W/ ~ NI ch.• • 112 A Real 'Find! Gar. Fncd for yards. Lovely 1arde. No ba. $300. Adults. Avail 2/L Apt F
$610. mo. income. Prine. on· than rent. Adult area, no OCEANFRONT :°'"~. te:,1' uh vo $40,CDJ. EK !?I! kldl/peta. peta. 1415 per month. Call 548-3993 aft 5 pm. J :.!:::"~"::"'-.;:. ___ .:;;:;~J
ly. $79,500. Call 837-2447 By children under 12. Price inc COMMUNITY 552--9035:. WllL TRADE * 673-6568 or 546-3688. $375. 3 BR's on Ktnp Rd. 8.tlboe· l"....S
owner. alr-cond, all elec bltins, LOE. family home, ocean-W tm1nster HOUSE FOR·-LANDl.ORDSI Huntington BtHh Bltns, ctjlll, drpa. Call
BY Owne r, old COM 4BR & crpts & drps. Just out-the-front nelahborhood. 5 BR., 3 .. el dettrt..oriented aeller ha.I FREE RENTAL SERVICE Mr. Gerald 213: 6ID-3M9 3 BR. Ba)' Vlow. Modem.
play Rm home. Ocean & doorandintothepoolarea ba., Huge llvine .rm., NEW home by owner. 2 $1D,500eq. lnhouleat3615 BEACON R'ENTALS WALK to beach. 3 BR&: 7:30tollAMweekda,vl. $250/mo. Wlnter. UtU
Harbor VU 1 ~ blk to water, or sauna room. It's ideal w/trplc::. Formal din nn. ~ BR, 3 .._ ,__ &: rutott& Dr., Rlwnlde~ * '4M111 * DEN. Dlhwhr, 2 car gar. UDO Sanda, l Sr, 2 Ba, lncl'd, 613--1184 or $75-6838. R·2 lot, C!tarm. 673-9403, See today. ,._ "'ell ~ ... ~ ldlc .. -n story,.. ..... • .&4UU nn w .. to ~ -J•-ll"-B ... ·--' No ....... ~2365. frpl ..c. ....... .. "" ... l""' ur: ' bonus nn. 2700 sq ft W .. 111 -·· ... ,1e~ a:.:l'.: EASTILUFP .. ,.,........ ....... C, Ira: • nu crpll, CorOM ., .,. .214 Dahlia. ,, centrally k>cated. Recrea-Completed by May. Ail m: -.. u-...; ........,.. Prlv. home on· acreace $130. drpe, dab , b 1 t ·Ins . cozy 1 Br cottage ln CdM. tion rm. Over.=· ft. on terior 6: ext. options still house tor condo aeywhreN lndlvidual home, over 2000 A18o 2 Br, $m, $.!.!:. ,!!!;. $330/mo. 646-1586. VIEW 2BR Apt 9:> Of
On R·w lot. 138.500. By SJ1·5111 (:;:J 51.1'5111 "!" level, ed by open. Milch less than -oo ._,._ Fruces lloold. oq. IL, llODIU3 aldla:pF4 bodl'•; Rent-A-House ,,_ BLUFFS BAYFRONT highway 4mo lllble~ adlta
Owner. Prine_ on I Y., ..,,..,..,..,..,..,....,~ '.:'."".::!game~. are.!'ti price. 2l3/31Hl952 att 5'30. Broker, 5738 Carlton Wa'.'y, room ot " en. am v 3 BR P&ct!ic Sanda • Fncd pcec. one--1.evel 2 BR., 2 ba. only. call m-2279
673-4169. 11 l:~~~~~~~~~tJLoO~· Aoa<~~la'.;,~ea:;.~:00:21~. ~(213:) 'roosn plus large fDnna.I dirt> ·---~· new -· Sp din. rm. S525 Mo. 644-6489. 2 blka tor! Oonma. Bl<h. FOR sale by owner -Sl:S pl home. Room lDr 467~2223. · In& room. Complete privacy _, ..... , , ..... v-. >'Off R ~ Bhy 0w,ne.r .;_0CdM500 Park Huntington tri-level. 4 pool. $9'1,500. ~ ~ 1a• with e:ndoted rear and front for • $21). &15-1851 .. ".EACH boules, 3 •. 4 BR, '160. A .lltil .Pd. Yri¥·
ouse ...,.,t Ap. ""°' . BR, 2',9 ha, formal dining * &2800 * I .c ........... , ~j'4 RMI lit ... W....--" yarda. ~ly prdtn. No V ndft: COit money! Ren! I, patto; S275-400 Yet.tty. 1 adult. peL 66-104
Call 61>-1502. rm, ldtchen eating area. lge ----. -k .......:i. C-L * ~ ~ .i=; '!'~-~ ,.._ ut. """'I 'BEY REALTY -38:i0 I Br. rum., l!ld pr. Adj • ., Costs Mo.. lnmUy rm w/rough cedar ~ ~ .. ~-'I'•-_, -··~ ----.. •lc. lhiv t Dii11y Piiot "'f!Jl'1ING 3 BR. 3 ha. a>mjil thoo'• ...._ $1~ IOI oanellng 6: frplc. Oven1ied . ...,.... WW buy YoW' prope.rry, AU ROUSE Huntfnrf Wttcb tbe Cluslfl.d Ad. SeU ltfle ,,,.,.... Private beach, Utll. pa.kl. Heliotrope. Ill-UDO. VACANT and READY lot, water softener & ~.,,.~ tMblle i....,_ cash w.ilhin 11 hrl. Call OPEN HOUSE cdumn. nowl Call 642-5618 Now! $475 Mo. Agent &15-44(Jf. Cotta MMe
$33,000. porlfie<. Many upgraded ----. ,_ Sale 125 _, ,
3 BR. "'"den o' 4th BR, I" leaturee. Fast po........, i -' El hem> M•a
BA, pattCied !01/dln ..... -ble. 147,960. ~ TOWNHOUSE . 50' Alma ~ •'d.1111~ .i).,.,_,, ~ ~Q.• UP !i:~:~r.w/~~:i.: ~i ~:mil B.: Beocl DELUXE Mobile Hoine··· p~ J."'1..1 ~J.. ~ J.J(/'v l ~·i~.:...
oood. FORECLOSURE ':nn'.":.=."' ~.': '~ 2 Bed"'°"', lullY """"·ball> ll!IJ!l!M llC. Tire Pml• with the luilt-ln Chticlcle All ~j1tr.. PaW Costa Mesa Realty ......... Niguel ·'' PHctle&I· room, -· Must telL ""°' • Recreatloo * 54'-nll * Vacant , opening an escrow ty btud new & Juot waiting $2150 ..... ,_ "'-ol the ,r--...__.,. 191!t M.,,ie .Ave .. Cit
thl k _ __, fOr IOmEnne to Uve In It. OR four ~ lll'Of(:l1 ti.. Ale !!r!p! tor Mt
426 CABRILLO s wtt can stop PI-vu.~· Ocean vtew1 Owner riruS'I' [ I~ . lo.rt to form fow .,_..words. 1 BR, Furno 2 q. cloeeta.
OWNER $42.150 Ina•. 2 Stoey, walk lo ocean. SELL! ~-" Joe To-"'·--MAKE OFFER -~ ' I '"· ~ ~ -3 BR 2 BA oak .,_ Winding italrcaae leada to ...... •111u.,.....,... p E H V E M queen lw.c. --... ,,...v ""~
oopper• plumbing, ~ .. "':: m.,1er 11Uile wilb huge 111-$40,;;;16;500. TED'S llllJOIS 1,,. nn. •"" lrK....,.. ..ct
$21.000 1%.Loan UIWnal>le. ting rm ....... vaolty ~~ . t. .... . -...,_--.--I I I I I ~ gar w/-. A<lul_la ooly,
Other terms U needed. gTass ICI~ __,.. ' '.;,') ·~ ~ . . . . • no petJ. BKR. 96:1-s511. V _,._ 2llA -Blvd., ~·T'!"'r 200 i 2025 '•lie.....,, ,C.M. 8/:tClcoO~f.2 "Bl\!1.!.B'l:.21~• OWNER tranafered. 4 REAL ESTATE c:.ota Mesa c-•·•-I i A R C E I i FOR ~"k:ular people, Defx
Se ,......, 5;.i:_, Bednna + PlOI. 2 batha, ' '4S 6144 . .._uty ...... , • I _.. 2BR 1~ bk, J>8"'t• ....... ~. . D' . -·""-1190 c1 ..... ,.,.. St. Card • Gilt s-• I I I I I mob. hqm•. • l'l!<.'l'tatlon room, laundry patJO. lllUlC rm, uwu...-i;o, 494-7413 • 51MJ316 .._...-..__ .. ..... Typewriter Saie. I: Serv W/W Cllit. every rm. ~ facilitles. Quiet adults only. dishwasher, fireplace In •111 -L£ Glau A Scrfft1 bullneu rum. dllb/Wfl htd poo&. ·o childttn under 15. 2400 family nn. Brk $35,900, * OCEAN VIEW * HOL' •uD Bua.S.IH 1 .ad.Ill. no pets. Sl'ZS mo 4
i>den. CM 963-2187. 96i-1373. 2 BR. "' den or 3 BR. :kty. 2 • ··1-~ I ~ 'E R En • Se-1158 NWJ>!I, 54t.a:t:I
S BD-~ 2 Bab, r BY O\\mer, Francl.IC*D Frplca., Uv nn. &: din. aftl SALU & Lw nv tn6 Oruae. CM 645•0.'ro . HU&bond"• hl_.,,ighti .,, I $135 mo ~-mob ~-. ~ n.i.., t am rm, Fountalnl, 2 )Tl old, lie 4 w/fd.en view. Bltn l'J¥• fU1J .vtc. fllciUb . (SDcnul Needed) I 1 · I -lo-at flrs~-,'lnht, so I '"'"" lllUC -
or. So. Coasl ~ 6 er. -~ 'jM, !amUy IOOm dbl ""'"· dlahwW. Clllt. ...._ II IS m llACH • --. -·· •• • petlo, eomp flln1., wtw lcliool" 134,fAID •• GI or 5% w/ct......., ~ A -dnlpta, csrp. °"""'' 2 • •• I Ill .~!:.~~ _ married her. Then I w~hocl I crpt, middle ,.. ""-•
down. 0.-., 5*-1409 alter a-., shag . ap_I, prof. Baleony view dacb. A rare -':'::.--1--• ~t l ,..,-H-0-0-5-,..-,11--.1 hod to Ion a -look.• • • pelA. ~~ n~ ~ 11. ~-· llf% ftnd~950. SJ16IOO ·~q~~Yr. " '"J _...,_ .... __ _ By ·= 'r~f9·!°11>i>1c. ~-,.._ Sel '~=HO~TYm~ ,_., J BR,+ D•n, 2 :=:·.-..:.-' I [ I' I' I ~~i!~a'. :,.lllFeb.lst,BR. ~.166Y•m ... l ;:(~d pello. OWNER ....... 4 f?edrma. 2 "'--' botmed" cell, ll'plc, !!t;-, '"n.s.~~~ llLL GRUNDY""R I ~. nu"':-1-11"
ll'lll'"V ..,..,,...,...., baths, pfttlo, dllllf11: nn.. ocean w, $31 •• Inquire ......... ··----161 • PttTNHl'S~SQU~t~Su:nEts IN I'. I' I' r 1· r -OCEANVIE\Y .Ne\v Cu11om bul1t-tns, d ls ~waaber . -.ml BAYntONT NEWPORT 67.W ~,. "" •.• _ • -. ~4. horn•, er."' ao. ~"' • 11'1reS311~ce ... ~ nn. Br1<. lido ltle Bl:AOI 118.SOO. • Cabrlllo. HEALnt Foods-. rc:~~I E n~ I I I I I I I NICE 2 er. 2 BL Pool, i.. den nn. cpl¥. d r a pet ·--lo-1 . JIO' 114-41H5l7 ' or N'l'~ Good -• UNSCIAMllf A¥:fV If lhopa. UlD pd. Adib. m lnd$Jl2,000,§16-~'i16.:._ BYOWNER3!k,2BA,new OPPOR11JlllTY. '1llR, 311A.. &4Mlm. • W othor ,__ -TOG!TANSWU J>OU, 1111 .llonro•l,a.
PROBATE SALi! l\:Jnt;-cpts, illbwhr. ~ DR. tgo 11&tlo, 111,lOO. 133 It'••-· O!!f.-i-. ..u. Lo dwn ..,..._ 1llllS 54H331.
1 BR, 2 bath hom• "'" nar-llente. $26.950. 98Hl40. Via wazl<n. Open 1-G. with - -Doll7 Pilot t.~C>a•1~ ~ ~L~SC~R~.>.:::M=LE~O~~S:-=A:M:S:.WE::::..::::R:::S:....::IN:.:..,C,=.:LA:::SSlc:fl:.:.::C::.A..:.Tl:.:0.=..:.N.;_I00;...;.,;_1~w"'an:::.l..=MI::.."""'=:::"'"'".:.· '"'' I04ii=o;; bOr A Wlllon 546-1300. Sell Idle Item· .. HZ·~ s&-2St.8. auwkld. ~ , Bl-. 4 _..r, ..,_.
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:J.i lW'-Y PILO I ThwsdQ, Jan111r1 251 1973
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~-~1~-·~~=1~jr~~-~~~-~i~~~~~-~~-e~~1~E-~~~-~1~51~-~~~~~i1~·~~~·~~1~~i~1~~~~~-~·~
•~·•um 1 ~ ""' ""'-US -""'""' • US --MS AplL A.to. Offlot. -.., +tO ,..~ AO oUnd 11-...., 1 ~~~ .. ~1-::. ~-:::.:::.· ...:...=..:;..::-= ~: .i flier . ~. ,... • =· . .,..:.., .. m .... .:. ... """""" m COR~IL MAR". PROBLEM -...,,. Qin. SML poodle/C:ockopoo • '-'H;"";';1~;;;;:1;1;1;'h;;;. E~unt1;;.~...ton~~~l;11;ch~;;;;~H~un~ft~ntl!1;"";~·~•;•ch~;;;;;;jA-. )JlO ,., fl olllce lldtn1, •)'mpatb •li• Mal...,hlt• collar A Casa de Oro -OVIR ,. ' ' • .....,.... ... ,.,_ to -de· prtpancy ....... 11 .... Abfii' lq. Vie< H. nun 1 to'll -:!g-FUil -"'ti' bid<. .... • ~ rel. AP--· ~1!!03 ' c~,,a!:~ ,.;;~t ~-. IN~~~~.3:~:? HUHTINCTON BEACH'S F1lfEST th~pl.:..~atine ~in>LES PAJITI.F.'I 7i.~0PC,""&:~··~
Cu11orn <le•laned. fet&turlna: 2 BR. -11-44 BOYD RFALTORS 61$$30 Call Phtt 3 tq 9_PM._ ~ H\lh SchOOl, Cd
• Spaclow; kltctien with In-flM.Ulll ..ALL tmUTIES---!'AU>. , .... -c.b rn.11 I hdlli CdM.-1150 ~fl. _(ronLoorner, &39--3344 (Tlj) j9?-J73S'ew:1. .
• ~~.r .. "",..' ,'~d"°""1n·r ·-• ON ·TEN Aruciu;;;. ,."",',.'!.-· 4': VILLA YORBA .;,...-J ... ,.. wr1115 2nd Do9f. J::levat«, •ir Soclal CIUb1 W AFGHAN white A
""' • .... Apt!. turn.Jun m. u:ue -... ..,. --eond, carpeta, drapet. puppy. J'ollnd i.twlllh
e llome·like storaa;t F'ft'eplace I prlv. H,_ljoS. Ovtr ~ ''" ''"' -·!'--2 Acres. Beautirul par~llke surroundings. a&rap A ~ lot. 14 FIND YOUR!ltLP' ~JO~ &. Acacia, CdM. :.~[!!lee~: w/storage PoolJ Ttnnlx Cnntnt'l'-Bk!lt. ::.~~1:1~~:.;~"' , M0\11: lN TODA..Y • ~'unken Pool. Spartllng ~•h Fount.ams. private ottice1. ~ 1t2no IN 9'.>MEONE ELSE ~ · ·-::;
e P.1arble pullman ~~h~ Cd~~ ~·~~~~::,. tt $13' A MO.. e Spacloua Roomallts In .Cl .._para\e Dinln& ~:r ottt<:.r°~~c~ DDISISCCOOVVllRRY FOUND: 8lk ahOtthlJr ~~ • K1n"·SZ Bdnn1 ··-~ 2 • • Br t ... -t-• W oae•• di· .. ~----~.;:""'_.. ' kltten. Vic: OoVt!r ... -~ "~ l""*Ollll tC*lfllflt."1111111 (', K ;J • ft ~· Kl ~Ca In '• caD nu9• 111~ 71~ 213-!87-33:93 .<!All ><M'J, !""' • ~~~ ~~h· l=. ~~ ~:._·~':a; E!J:.i.==~tw. ~~':'"rec ~~ 1 B~:~~. i;r,::s ~ -~~$'1ss. 6!~wm-~"~t!! ::w•v si"i
sc:::·livirli: at i{j; best drpl, Nfns, w/piiv. p.r. e..11 Mtw. ,.._., !M5-alOG. ~~~~ .~ 2 BDRM. Unfuro. $185. Furn. '215. at 15 mo. Anlwert,.. tervl~ 1 l[S]
LARGE 1 BR Sl90 Avail now. $250. 61$-4813, DELUXE blX w. of ~Blvd. 11.H Townhouse, 2 br, 1112 avallable. m Fortat Ave.. i.ot...i-LOST' male c ockapo•~
No Pet& G13-0937. Slater. 847 .. ...,,. -:-ba 1400 ui ft Furn. •240 Lacuna Bucb, 4M-He8. , apricot,.& mo. old, Aolwdl 365 \\'. \Vibon 642·19TI 3 BR, belO'I\· 1-llway. Frplc., APARTMINTS .._,, . ""' ,.. DESK apace avaUablt j!O · to "BAM BAM", Vic. V.. w EK & UP beom e<Ulno" •"'· Adule,. Air Cond • ,.,,...., • S SW1m-* FRESH AIR ALL UTILITIES FREE mo. Wilt provide -·-totla A Pomona, C.ll. * $32.SO E Sl'!O. so.'631 ..... or ....i.. ming Poot. • Health Spa • walk 3 •'--~ to•···• Wall< to HunUnn+•• Center at 15 mo • .WW.rbta llU\llco Found Uree ldl) 550 Reward. ,.lBII "7 e Studio & l ijR AptJ. --'• Tennis Courts • Game and ~ ~· a--·-"-bl 1-•-h 81·~ I k -~ -'· I ~ • TV • ?.!aid Service Avail. "'""' Lq 3-BR. Apt.I. Newly Adults, No pet.a av-..-J , '""'' ~ac YU. LOST 8 ae 1m:1.1 .... e ~u• 2 ·~---h w··R-Billlard Room. ..__ ....... w~· -~. ~. Hllntlnatan Btacti. IG.mt. SMAU., Wtllte -~~ -... _ .tnn, Old " .,_ ....... V»'. • Phone Serii'ice--Htd. Pool unuv1t1• .. eac · ....... 1 BR. From SlOO ~luo:u '"" ..... _ ... .,. wire>' ean .....,_ wu: ...,.. .':::~.., ~
a Children & Ptt SKtion carpell & drapes. choice 1 BR. 6 Den Fl"om Sl.85 bltns, except re!rls. IJ QUINTA HflllftH FUU. SERVICE p >odl •found vie Colt Hwy/A~ •
• L<M· !-.10llthly RAt'el locttion. Leue $X0 pr. EOITERRANEAN $250/~ -No linelea. q:t ..,... WD'IOD'F BUILDING w:.':mm:t~ • sprtrqrdaJe, ~~ tq. $Z ftW 2316 N"-1JOrt Blvd., Of mOrith. CiU 673"-SSSO RLTR. M . pet&. ,,_..1ru. Domer Wettdltt Drive &; Westm1nster. Ml)' be ptt&· V•""""""'1· et
518-9755 or 66-3961 ROQ\IY 3 Bedroom, ' both. VILLAGE 2 BR. Luxurloos AptL f""1 16211 Parkside LMO, H.B. Irvine BIYd. Newport Beoch nant. 891-1.185 REWARD Siberian H....,,
Ad good !or $5 on .,.k's ~nt. &J'O'lud floor. $J50 pr. DliODlh or Un.tum. 2 BR + Den. 847 'Ul Mr. Howard &U-6101 black/white muk rn&rt-
• SHADY EL:\lS. POOL * Qe..¥t to put l:i~*• ca.LI 2m liarboc Blvd., C.M. Wet bar, trplc:. SaWIL Pool. 714! . .,..... HUNTINGTON BEAOI 350 I.AR-GE female, brown· A ~l 1 blue eye, 1 ~
Ball fih..855o .,.,..~ ITI.C> 5574020 JaCQZZI. Full ~don. A 900 aq ft cpt'd pvt wblte q, part roille, VU')' 70-w Iba. kilt v1c. of Lake
: ~il~:.e~~,d~1~!° up 3 ~~bi upper~ Trplc, OPF.N~~O~~ PM facilities. From UlS. 1 (4 blks. So. ot San Diego Fnfy, on Beach, bath. orki. ~tU ~ m~ fi!_~nd~C: W~~r/~a:~ Park, H.B. ~1873. .¢
177 E. 22nd St .. CM 6'>-364> bltM. 2 ......... Nr -· k Llk •.. roundl 16700~!.'-~.~ APl'SHB . 1 bit. w. PD Holt to 16211 Parkside Lane). P.O;!>-JIBO· Mr. n . Lark Goll °"""· H.B. LOST; Wbtte phOIOrt;al~-bch. ........ 962--22"1U « P•r • • .vr ng _.,,,-Wl.QI. .....,._., • Ml)....,._ .. .., ·2JA" Vlc. Mi111kin & NEW 1 BR's lrom S180-Q)5. ..,_,. 848-3341 _,..; w d IM C •-Adu!-. Nr ~-ch • -~·1. 8.U-U03 QUIET DELUXE •-A NEAR o c AlrpMt hotel Meaa e ar, . · n.c
.a ucn "' .,""' l, 2 ~ 3 BR APTS ~ ml. north of Huntinaton ~~,••t pta... ttataura~ti. Dix. api,ce, tm~ YOUNG German Shepherd, s557-(165(J. 1
11w7 20th St.. C.M. ~~~ ~ ~ Pvt Patkla * Htd Pool Beach. $140. 2 BR. Bftns, Pu~ or """'rn. mt l'urn. or Unfvrn. 370 med. occupancy, Lowe•t approx 9 mo, found in THIN Black, male cat, 9 )ft ~54""'=·c..,.. _ _,..._~= t:Ig'up. 67}3535. Nr. Shop'r *Adults only crpts, drps. pool, pl.a,y )'lll"d. 'N -h N •~--L. rates. 2ltil DuPont, l..quna Beach. May be old. Need• Vet care. Pie~ NICELY turn. lrg. ~ Bit Al!O Furn Bach. Apta Lndry facll & carports, Cpl. 1wport 1wport ~ 8.13-322!. clalmed at the ASPCA in ,,all .. _ad or alive. 642-26&1 • ...,1 gar. Quiet. Adulm. 00 2 BR. "1>Jc. new <;>ta A drpe. Marti 1-A-& 2 sml cllildreo ok. No J.aauno. listed under the • -
pet•. 2'.12 Elden 646-2768. Pool. 1.e... !250-Near n.,-,..._ pets. Ca1I 842-1664. 1617 WESTCL"F nome "Happy." CM. 'l'!
1 Bdrm '150 mo incl. Utll. .....,utlni. 613-3850. 1rn Senta ""' i.ve., CM SPACIOUS ..,. 1 BR. llsh· 1IEACH UVING !200 oq. It. Crpl1 air oond, SML. niddiah Telrler type WIDE ""Id b r • c e tll
Cali 673-1674 alter ~ Mar Apt ll3 646-"'2 ....., _, "•-(Now You Can A&&..-') 1U11ple pq, uut.-Janlt.,... ~-Male Al"""'"· New w/b<oker oalety ~ · r •• ,. u.... '~.-c; crp '-~.pr, JT1lilllll"U BalllnlU'dner 810l 541-5032 ...,.y-~ 1,....;, Ed ... ~~!.1.1! ..., Reward. 6'73--6732. ·•I wkdays or anytime w • _,. ,_. PRIME 2 BEDROOM Nr Hta Harbour. Adulti. CHE $ 9S un. _.. um nuou .......
1 BR. $140 · 1 SllS. I..arKe. !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I ln excellent k>cale. WBuiltins 536--02i9 or 213143+.-8249 BA1 n...1~LOR (Furn) · · ........... FrFroom •
1
1
80
AP•~ o~~tn $315. .OJ; flea taa Mn. Ginaer Bl.OND Pe~i!.Jne t)!9;
Ideal for Bachr:lors. • AdUlts * * * carpea I: dn,pes. alk 10 ~m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . m • f1ce ..,,.,, ~ tpace '""· ~ or aft S -546-1038. mlsainl: -....,. ·
only. 1993 Church St. 5-l8-!1633 theater and all lboppina. Leguni Buch 2 Bedroom .. , .. , , , ..•••.•...... From $230 w I !J.,l ch Iba l h. CM. U&bl oolon!d cat w/daric warner1.~0Chlal, Hn
2 BR. Trailer $125. I BR SPARKUN6 NEW Adu!" only. $150. mo. Call FULL SECURITY SYSTIM m--. lino•"' ,.n bl!<'"'"" on Beach, ~· · ,....,,,., sm No ehlld/pe... Mr.Black 545-84>1 SO!Tnl FOR a tew who appr..tate HEATED. POOL or 111e-BIACH 01M. :woo oq. tt., SSOO '° 1600 face !"'arinl'wt>t collar vi< SIAMESE Bluep>lnt, To0>. ~1809, &&2-3375 COAST REALTORS. the unusual. 1 & 2 Bdrm., 2 Elevator Annual Lease per mo. 7'Dl .q. ft. S12XI Capo Bch. 496-3610 vtc. State Sts & .nklit =,,:::;;~~~~=1.:=x IA y SHADOWS BACH. 1, 2, 3 BR bo, -..... La,.. per mo. "11 Cout ru..., • DASCHUND mla1I red ,.. blue oolt&r. Rew. Q~!~ ;d: ~~P $120. Apa Frpl.c, pools, ll!Cl.ltil)' (UAt'ds, rooms, wide ocean viewJ. Adults Only, Sorry No Peta MacAnhur. ~7651. male, identity, Harbor LOST: Ja.n 12, small Blk·
21s1; 16th St 642-3693 rtitNnts No pets. ~~:e." ea~ LAS BRISAS . DELUXE OJflce, pant!! F..tates, SM Clemtinte. white do&· Vic Brookh
2 BR. Utits pd.. m;. mo. ~ut'f~~ery! HARBOR GREENS adults. ~ to bead> A 5515 RIVER AVE., NEWPORT BEACH wait., cupet, -· 2050 <m1"1. Indlanspolil. 98S--0648.
No peu. 2217 Maple St. ·1 BR's FROM $157 546-037l ~ ... Srlerticc . ~ ·rup (The New Place In Newport) Newport Wvd., C . M ' FOUND Terrier type do&. LOST: Gold 6: Jade
...... 13 AVAIL Feb 51h -Lovely • "wall ,...... Partially ft •• Mgr n•--L w Sb ba h ~· "'~ Ground tloor. -= """"" male, Ginger color, Link. Reword! '..1 2 BR's FRQM $177 vtew 2 BR upper apt. w-sun film. $250 To ~ monthly. .n.m. • .wwe ~ m. ar ug vsv~ OFFICE 1paoe a: suitff avail affectionaUL..;& intelligent. Call 5'&-«185
Dana Point d k cpll diiis.. stove <194-465.1 by RJw ralde Ave. Polt Of. (213) SS>?im LOST woman's d 1::.;;;.;;;_;.... _____ Beautiful appointments in-c;iel dead-end at nr: OCEAN view teue • 2 6 3 Apt. Unfum. 365 ~ nee. 2l5 lUvenlde, 642-3.Ml. FND in Huntington Beach rll'I&'· Vicinity Fuhffl
LIVE in the all new Dana ~e Deeorator Fireplaces. WestcllH 1hop atta. $165. BR, 2 BA. Ne'W. Blk to bch. N.WDOrt Beech Furn. or Unfum. 370 2 ADJOlNING OFTICES, Prkina lot -Ute red male Jaland, Reward! 644-1932 .• •
Point Harbor at the P•tlo' '· CPoolarpe~.Ja~t~ 64&-4112. $2"-'i up. 49f.3383, tw.:ms. ~ H ti--*-•~--L buay intenection C.M. $90. kitten very tHendly, dtnall· BRWN fem cockapoo. VIC:
beaotiful Marino Im1 Moiel , c=• PARk NEWPORT un .... -. _, Utll'• Inc. -ed, -· o.~~ Apll • J.:902 Del Obispo St. Volleyball courta -Gas GARDEN Apt. • 2 Br, 1~ LUXURIOUS ocean apt. 2 . ,.wvuu
(49&-2353!. Kitchen&, el-BBQ's. Bath. l..arze p&lk>. % block Br, 2 Ba, $«0. or w/fum. BRAND NEW PROFESSIONAL Sult!! ready FOUND female dacbahund Beach. Reward.
fielend"' & opartmen... , Olhopplng, Quiet. Adults no 67;.I07D. APARTMENTS QUO VADIS Ill to go. Heil at Bola& Cbll:a. black A brown, near Irvine FEM. oodalpoo,
boo!ed pool, dlttct dial 409 BAY St, C01!1 Mou pell. 6'>-046l·m Cabrlllo, Lido Isle Oft fhe i._,. Luxury Guden At>"-H.B. ms/mo. 114&-13'3. '19th, C:O.ta M,.., weartna beige color named •
phonea. television, sauna M1n. .. r Bldg E-103 C.M. _,.,. ~ 16 2 BR'L CORONA del Mar • Crptd, flea collar, &t6-6448. Vlc:.CdM. 675--0993 ~
bath, lawxlry l&cillties, * '46 3~7 * $140 up spac. 2 br/3 br 1~ be UPSTAIRS 2 BR, 2 BA. ~1M~~wa't,.llvlng. ~~ FROM c135 ll'xl.2'. Sharp ofttce, pvt lJTI1.E male blk &. white GOLD domed rizw. ~
meeting room, close to San · -POOl, . epUdrp, bltn,. p].ysmd. crpts, drpg, frplc, Adltl, no .,._..,. ....,. ""'-'JU~ Htd Pool·J~-8aunu bath, partdna. $85.. 6'r3--31:MS. poodle type dof. Vlc. 19th A .et lOlt Friday -ifiijJ
Clemente and 1...quna L LIFE 2212 c.olle(e, No. 5 .•. 646-0'13 pets, $275 lease. 6'7;3824. $150-.000 health ':h 7 swim· Re .reatlOJl Room A More! Busineu Rent•t 445 Pomona Ave-CM (broWn Reward! 644--"95 ,,;!°~
Beach. Come play ln our THE FUL 199& Maple, No. 1 ••. 60-3813 Meu Vent. mine P>Ola. 1 ~. ted ten· Amltll \)nl,y • No Peta leather collar) 646-6921 LOsr alnce nee. 1. Lra RM ~me. ~~ nJ.i Have a pl~ for everythin& 2 BR. $155 I: 1 BR. $140 ~~m:.:~~! IMMEDIATE ''111E Factory" bu shops FOUND; Male, bllt &: white Male Imh Setter. -I restaurana. S50 v.-eek and plus interestina' Paces to go Eut:Ule loc. Nu pa.int. DELUXE .2 &: 3 Br, 2 Ba. flebDan!, croquet. JwUor r 1 OCCUPANCY avail. ln the ma! n.natn&' mixed Ten1er I. Poodle, Call ~3812 u
up. Bring this ad and nearby. Our gardtn apart-eoclJd pr, 644-2259 or encl Pf'. $160 up. Rental from llc'-50 tnonthb.; alM> 1 18992 Flonda St. from $11)/MQ, Ideal for long-haired. Vlc. Harbor WST at Sun 0 C. Fa1r M r
recei\-e SS oft on fir1t mentii are surrounded by 548-03"18. Ok, Xl95 Mace Aw. and :.bedroom plans and {~ blk. w. ot }arfield book store, 1peclallty card Vk!:w Homes, N.B. M4-8'.176. ]!fttt baby ~ trarDt:
week's rent. broad lawns, pUtting &n!CJ1, $115. 1 BR. ~ dlsp, 54&-l034. ~ to'lliD bouael. E1ec-and Bnch Blvd.) abop, etc. 42S OOth St. SMAU. tan female Terrier 'flewU,tt 675-8991 •
pool. and pat». Inside: 2 porch, prkng area. 9U N..JPOrt IMch tric ldtcbens, prfvate pa::>1 DELUXE. Apt.-prlv patio. Newport Beach. 67J..a;()6, type do&', flea collar, vie I~~~·!!~~~~~
Huntington BMch ~ ~lngn, really w. 19th St. Plum !or or balconlea, c:upt!tlna:, dra· MUlic, 6 pools~ tennU co MM EJtCTAL.Leue/700-Kaber School, C'. M ·I'. WE'~ en . areas. wsh/drytt 673--5729 per:les. Subternnean padl:-Sl.11 Spadous Poobide aq. ft. $200 mo. a mo sq. 548-1948. I I
LOWE•w .. ~=.·.K0L'! .. RA1~;Es :"$.is"" kitchen. 2 NEW 1 BR'• rrom $110-$180 OCEAN and 1na w1th e1eva .... Optional Bu'"1aiowmo.841Hl259. nF.alrvll300 ":!', 2133cM• !:!'SAMOYED. ma1e. v 1.
1
,;;..-;;;; .... ;; ....... ;;;;::;~ •• -•-THE ORUA,NS Nr beach A llbop'c. Adults, HAUOR VIEW" maid ..,.r.e, JQlt north ol ew ~.. . , ~-Anahebn !LU<coln '"Sa" . ·727 Yorktowt\·lllw.d. 114 E. 2)th St., C.M. J'Uhbi llland•at lamborff NeWport BMc-.. 6f&-8811, College). 630-1514 or
Beach Blvd. at York\Qwn 1741 Tustin ~ 541HJ1.37. ''Where C0naenlality ud SU JOlqWn IUUI Road. * OCEANFRONT + COMMERCIAL • Industrial 535--960.· • ~ B __ obysl",IM ' t •,.-;.J .. 536-.0411' .:.:c=-o==---....:::::..::::; BR. 2 M "'-Uo Prev1IW' Teleplme (Ut) &M-1900 • -·· ' _,_._ la! shop or storage 500 to 3>50 ~ N' t B h --_:.:e; --~ ---------13 BA. on .... ,. torrentalintorrnation u.rwer BR.-... .._.r rea f $65 t 1210 San • ·:v "'·p1:~· e,a.Jtl . I STUDIOS & 1 BR'1. ·* NEW * 'l\>wnbou&o. ~ dj'pl, dbl Elepnt apartments d<ilpecl $225 lllo: Low.. 3 BR., 2 ho. 1:i'emeot~ ~18411 " call & !tit y. BAB;tsrrTINO-M•~~ WI! • Full kitchen garqe, Dshwhr, Pool. with a Master's touch, au-Yearly $300 mo, Apnt • 64H4fi0. _babysit any q:e. HVU1·1y,
• Heoted pool YILIA NINOS Klds/pe" o~ 1225. m.anJ>. perh houle oecurity, <Xc!U-FOR LEASE 67;.!m ~ lndU11rl1I Rlftlll 450 MATUR>;.i:at, !<male. .,00, daU . 96H302. . ·I
e Laundry facilities . PRIVATE lge. 2 Br, 2 Ba, aive Va"lllillea Cub and LuxtJr)i Bayfroct Apts. Tu1tln ' READY FEB. 11t, 1'73 v'°e""rdeha~.,'J!al7collar, Mesa 8.1 tu ...,. f •Free utilities pool, trplc, iundeck. Water pool with unique Aquab&r, 1 I: 2 BRa. $350 to $550 ..., _,, .. '& reflnllhlnt1
e ~linens 2 BR, 2 BA APTS & gas pd. Back Bay, dtoun..._la!AllnsA:!,and Oftorma!the Sougv.th Geo,.. WUll1mson TllE ENRIQUE API'S LAGUNA NIGUEL FND ~ .... t.ae 4 whl. te male 1-.::..~;;;;.;;;;.~---11 • T.V. &: maid serv. &\'ail. Su ~-•·rtable ~., t «0-74-RHI~-AD ul --~ REFINISH In white -e Bar-8-Que per.........ww .,,,u..e .,_.. '"' C.out'a apartment ,.,.. ULT living, no petl. "'" cat · on Ba 1 boa u•
e Phone sel'\llce Near Newport Back Ba.y. SINGLE lady, 2 Br, 1 Ba, tnnwl'li * 548-6570 * Spaooua 1 bdrm apt from lSIO SQ. FT. le UP. llland. 675-7739, ~ ho01e or huainft
• 1 Mile to ocean Gar It Water Paid. Mo. to S160. + clng. fee. Idtal Joe. l~~tudm from $Ul5 $145. P'I' mo. Util pd, On San Diego ~a,y rotJND female cat, brown 1..::=;.c::...:Tro=·.::;ln<:o;;;.. ---II
S145 -$165 Mo. rentals $185-$195. Safe & secure. 31 o 2 Bedroom .from $305 NEW 2 Bdnn unf\lm. apt. heated swimhc pool, 2 Call 831-1 w:lth white face. V1dnlty Bulklera n
BACHELOR & 1 BR, patios. 9.Jthl:! w~s. Rochester St., 642-"64. Modeb open 9 A.M. W dulk 1250 mo. Annual leue. Sl1 = ~ =~=.'TOR LEASE M-1 unit.I, i: cameo hlgtllands,'m..3308 , \')
frpl c's, prlv. garages • 2l>I ElOen Ave. • 8Jl.2480 2 BR, 1 BA, cottqe llf)ole liv-~f~ W. Bay-Newport Beach. c.orner ot N~ Fwy i. A 2W> Ill ft. Saata PORSCHE keys found in Bu1ln111 Service . Dl'vided bath & lc*9 of lng w/prqe. Nr Harbor - -· C.U 886-4832 days (San dd 1=-...... • OWnt!r n~3191. 1.111 ...... • C?Ao. 1.1.:.~ r closets. Ree. hall, pool &i '"""'~"'""'"!!!!!!~!!!!!!•I Blvd. $175/mo. Call .aft 5 Bernardino) or 80-2943 McFa en on.._, ~ .... unCM. M·l comtt 127'x90' ~ ....... na ..,.. ... are pu ..... ,. *BOOKKEEPING*·'
pool tabll?S, anuna baths. $145 & UP pm for ahowin&'. 84&<1851. eves. Vll.lap Wwt, 836-4232. ~/bldg. 991 w. 19th SL kit. C.M. 60-~ ~~ ~:'~ ~
See for )'OUT9eU. 1'1301 GIGANTIC 1 &: 2 BRI 2 BR, w/gar, 1 blk to 00. & ON THE BLUFFS BRAND New Ocotanb'ont SlZ. 642-3490. ~e~ 8!1..~ wa~ &!
Keelson Ln. {l blk W. of You Bet it's underptittdl 1boppln& center. No pets. AT NEWPORT Condominium. 2 BR, 2 BA I !l _al ffiVINE lndustna:I Area, identity. 6f6.6T39 Cirpet Service
Beach, 1 blk N. ()f Slater). That's wtcy this apt. won•t Avail. Feb. 15. $145. $«XI/mo. Year I ea a t, ........ ,. lD,IXX> aq. ft., dock high, FOUND small dog il'l Park JOHN'S Carpet & Up
8f2..78C8 last long.Cpt.s, drps, atove & 642-2818. From Newport Blvd., turn at 61>1QM., 1prinklert. &Mr'lUJ. Huntington Tract. SUn. l·21. Ori-Shampoo tree Seo
2 BR. 2 BA. delux poolside nr n!lrig. Lots of green lawn. $165 • 2 Br, CID, bltna, Hospital Rood Cl block s.n Juan Caplltr'ano Storeae 455 96&-4119 (uard Clbll
beach. $185. Cover'd ~·· Adults, no redecorated. OOfle to So. above Pacific Cout Hwy) to Rooms 400 ...x.;. =-=~=--:=--::=-Oegrusen & all
_ _:.....-=.::::· "=-o"r-'.,._O"-l"m"---I pels. 2lW erton Ave., 11 eo.uit Plaza. 54&-0f69 John, entrance. !n> Caaney Lant!, NEW 2BR coodo/water 'Pd. WAREHOUSE for ftnt. FOUNDcoU.:'em, ~ Setter, brla:htenen I: 10 ·~~~I
Ntwpart Buch 1Blk81· !'· oSof Newport! 0 ...
81c"';1
1 56-!H91. Newport B"tlch, Ca. 92660. Crtit1, drps, bltlna, POOl ROOMS $18 wk up wlklL l3'x26', $4Q mo. On O>ast nosta--He.' M817~ morn. bltacb tor white c ~ • o ~· ·" .) Telephone: (Il4) &1;.0060 S195/32l05 Pueo Carol1na. $32.50 wk up aptl. Chlldttn Hwy, Ntwport Beach, ""'• · ' Save your money by ll
642-6690. ** ATTR.AC new 2 BR, 1 493--7078 & pet teedon. 2376 Newport ~'1091 evea. SMALL white female dor me extra tr!.-. Wm ch $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2
BR & Bachelors. Color TV,
maid sierv., pool. Tht ?.ltsa
415 N. Newport Blvd., NB.
646-9681. .
1 BLK lo ocean, Ntwport.
Klds-pt"ts ok. 1 Br $175, 2
Br Sl95 -Until JuJy lsL
642-995.5.
-New Duplexes--~la~~~-~. 1970 * 2 WEEKS FREE* 2 BR. 1 BA, stove, retrig, Blvd. CM. 548~9755, Rentils Winted 460 w/blk a_pot on rur, Main llvlna: rm., dlnina: rm.;
• 3 Bdrm ' BA ·-LRG 2 BR. ··-··-$1" ... Vista del Mesa gar dilJ>, POOL "°°· mo. 645-3!167. Beoch, Loguna. 494--0195. -.ii 1150· Ch""'a1r ~ 1517
' -.,. • ..._...,, """ .wn 499-2"J2l. •ma, aft 5. WANT Lady 6S +. Prlv. bath WANTED: BulldlnR !or 6 mo old blk female kitten. couch $1 · ""'
Teenager or Infant OK. Tulip Lane, Costa Meaa. ADULT GAR.DEN HOMES ln lovt:ir. Newport Beach Thrill shop . .,11J:" .'f!nL Vic: College Parle 557-7357 exp. ta what counts, e 2 Bdrm, 1 BA Sl.95. Call for key, 548-.:i53L ffiVJNE AVE AT~ A Call ~ me~. J do work myae
Bc!aut., epacious . a pis • •UNFURN 2 BR • ..,f)., ~ · pts., home. tchen prlv. $75 mo. FNO last week in C.M. blk &: GooU ret. 531--0101. -· F--~ -~ and .....,... -?i.tove l2n Bedroow/deposmlll only Furn. or Unfurn. 370 548--6288. wbt male d....,.. '-""-~ y ... -..,., patios deposit. ~ Wallace No. C ~
quiet privacy. Adults, no 548-4.'lJl Ul> Mew LOwoVrELk'"! ... ~~ .. tor rent for I -,. . .., 11•1 Mal!f)~~pet pets. 642-4837. Po D~ & Nl&bt Security, Pool, I C.:ott;;:;.:1~;o;.;;_____ -""' ....... ,...--. ~ All 'YP" of , BEACH 1 Room Ails· 2040 Fullerton st. (at Bay) Dina int Fountalnl. Rec. Bldr. w/ THE EXCITING Ms..6107 • BLACK & white do( toood nr * CARPENTRY 11 N
C1rpenr1r ;,
$90/SIOO. Yeorly. tll NEW VILLA PAULA RENT reduoed 'ln>m $1911 to exerelae rm, bllllanta, col· PALM Ml!SA APTS. Guest -415 i~~;J~~~~~~l~Bc~acb~l~S~la~t•~r;;. -~~I;. ;;_.;:;;~l~•·;•~•m;·~53&-~1648~';"J Incl'd. rn.1241• li75-5MS. 2 Br., 2 Ba. From SWJ. $175. Lux\ll'iou1 2 BR, 2 BA. or TV. Ea. Apt. haa dbh· MINUTES TO NPI'. BCH. jl'ersonalt 530
BEAClt front bachelor apt. FAl\t!UES WEI.COME. Ocean Y\L Ctpll, drps, wuber, refrig, abag cpt, 6: FURN. OR UNFURN.
$125. mo.. Furn., u1ll pd. Super for 2 \\'Ork 'g gall. bltina, wW conalder further prt patio or dtck. 564855 UnbelJevabJ,y lare:e aptl , * p Iv ~ R *
6507 Oceanfront, ~2396. Shag cpl/drps,, p8.Uo, be.am reduction for p / t I me Y" .. rly..Bayfrant buae poo~ Jacuz::i elect bit-r ••• oom
BACHELOR, yrly. ~1 block ceillnga. Garages. manager. !37-3927. 3 Lovely new unlUrn, apta. l.na, ahaa crpta, drpl. aauna A_ ... ,1 .. tmy 11Ady ~
to beach. Fully equlp'd. 622 Hamilton, C.M. 548-2062 SPECTACULAR w h It e. 3 & 2 BR. 2 ba. each Pitr etc. AdWta, no petl. • ~ ~ ~ Buie Boe.Una: Coune $135. Eve1: &12-55.57. See J\fgr. Mr. & Mn. Hoban W t n •••• -t VU! 2 •-.11 ,.. .. !... extra.a. fuimed SINGLES Flom $150 • ' Marina Hlah School, 158T1
NEWLY DECORA~-BR.a °'2 ~BA.~-.-:::. Le~ ~P~· ...... ...., ' 1 BEDRM. From Sl60 Nice, cheerful ~. Sprin&:dale, H.B. 'l\tH, Jan-* • Yearly, upper, new 2 ~·.i:..u --· Call""''"."...,. • ..,.., _ ~-J 2 BEORM. From $180 * Call 5t8-t'l53 * uary 30th, BR, garage, crpta, drps, nr 2 BR, w/carport. $140 Wtt Crpll, drps, stove, refl'lg-, · .,,,,. v•-~ .. -. Untum Apta A;rail From $10 7 pm
ocean. S25(1. 646-5800. pd. Nr schools. ~ "D" laundry. 837-0310. h to $15 LESS. 4-. Courae conductt!d by Hunt-
2 BR., on the beach/pier, Placentia Ave. Call bet 1 • Huntlnpott IMC y • rta;ht they' und Summer Rent1h 6u tna:ton Be en Power Squad
\\'JD. Yeari or '1.1nter S250 5. 63&-4.120. prl~ 1561'hteaa ~. tt· WILL """"'-our cute ron. Info a96&-1634. •
mo., prkg & gar. 53&-5COO. CH ARMING 1 BR. WALK TO BEA<;H 15 blka from Newport Blvd.) LUe ~ad cahln,'·•=HIN~D-U~SP~IRITU~-.-U-iit~.-11
NEW furn. bachl. apt Nr DUPLEX. Sl35. Lovely New 1 .l 2 br., cpl/dfi>., S..911:J s!MPI t, tor JOUl' 3 bdrm Let tblt ad cballfCI! your
Bay & Beach, & shopping g al' d c n 11 u mxuxllnp. d w h r · • trpl. 316 l6tb: OCEANTf!RONT condo, 3rd LA MANOIA beach 1JouR close ocean. whole outlook on We for the
FREE! Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
' l
-·•L -' \ S175 mo. Utll tncJ.. 675-1841 . ~1i. aduJts 0 n 1 Y • 847-3957. Door. Fantastic view ocean Bnnd New Deluxe Units June tbna $ept. or less. better Profellion&J advice
N1?1 1·2 1;; 3 BR. 8ea.cb A ba.y. Unfurn 2 BR, 2 ba, Rent now for your con· (213) 2Q.3274. on life. Lie. Reldinga dally.I'-·.--------------~ '* SHADY EL?.tS. ·l?CK>L. * Apt.. hom $155/per mo. 4 aall bltns, crpts, drp11, struction allowance of 1 10 AM-10 PM. 4"-9136. WIU. take up to $20,000. SPACIOUS 2 story 2 · San Clem~ntt .
2 BR, 2 BA Laundry rm. • Adu I fl: Poolside S140 up. blla from watrr. Mgr. i w I Se c u r rt y_ _. mo'• tree nmt. 1 BR, 1 BA Rentals to Shire 430 492-9034, 312 No. El Cami.no Boat u part ·on $315,000. 1* BA, blt·lna, trplc I
i\,dultii, no pets. $200 mo. • Chlldren next block Wanted. Tobin Realt1, olhln& like tt In town! S425 tc den, 2 B&'I A 3 BR'g WILL llbare 3 br townhae Real, San Clemente. bualneu prope~ at Harbor AduJt .oommuni~.
1539 Butna Vl!!ta S.C. l77 E. 22nd St., CM 642-3645 84&-3371. A utU. ~. Fmm $155. Dlihwuher, I lngl ki lrl or MAGAZINE editor A author and Newport Bl\'ds. for house or unlta. -
2 & 3 BR.-$150 & $185. m NEW'. 3 Br. Apll. Crp•· ADULTS ONLY G~e dlapoeal, aU units!. w. e wor ng g 50 will -• QWntard Realty • 642.29!1] 963-211'1 .J::> Apt. Unfum. 365 d N 1 Avall -. Encl gar IWlm'e pool coll9 atudenL Pvt rm & age • · or 8 Coll ~ , . ·.;,;.;;..;;.;;,;.:cc.;;.. __ = l'p. ew Y redec. drpa, bit-Ina, 1 blk to S.0. DELUXE 2 BR. $115 BBQ'• Pt~ acceptable. ' lia. u interested call, la?Reboat alt tor rent & utll. OBNTA' ·Medical Buildlni, Fine un ect In
Balboe lslind 21 1· T:i3 Shalimar, M.'H!973 Frwy. & HJ\tg. Center. No Dlbwht, ftplc, swim pool. 60..mt m Scott Pl., C.M. !557...e621alt6:15 pm. In Newport area. lA>cal refa. P'),IXXI equity. WANT ftlr'am. fllhlni boat • * STUNNING 2 Br. l peg. Call 646--3188 or 20342 Santa Ana Ave. u-..a...• ~M*O ~G 'MD'klng woman will Write aa.U.led Ad No. SU, LANO. 3ubmlt any area. of repair. 1~, ELEGANT 2 Bl' 11pt w/p.r.
Step• to shop'g & bch. Yrly.
8.15-3437 Days; 548-7393
Evts/Wknds.
Ba. Gardtn At>ta. Pool. Rec. ·545-<m!O. SublH p l( Newport .~--L~ 'ahr nu .fBR-..bM ilr.-Mlaion .Dt.Uy Pt.lot, P. 0 . Box 1500, Roy Arntaon1 Rltr. PHONE as.eser-
rm . 710 \V, 18th St. C.M. 3 BR condo (or ~nt, 1 blk 2 bt 2 Ba unfurn top noor ManafinMnt Viejo, w/aame~ 586-<l$.l3 Colt.A. Meu, !"J528.-G4'1261l * 2 BR, 1 BA. Mesa Verde. from hl>acb, $33$ mo plus beaut bay viev.t, near epa CASA VlCTORJA eves A'ITRAC'l'IVE )'UWW expert TRADE turquoise ,..,,.!ley,
Up1;t,ain. l,.aJ'g! cloMifa. cleanln.a: depo1\t, adlta onl,y, no cina dep. 644-2442 x47. 1 & 2 Br. Furn A Unf\lm. SltARE 1 bom Malt dancer wW tnch YoU the Indlan nias er antiquea,
$150. No pet.I. 833--8974. no pell. ~1182 Carpet.I, dnJlt!I, D(W, TV f 'J nr ~ Uo latest IMpl Int $29.00. For 1.iJCn palntina, 'Tur-
-3 BDRM, 2 Bath FURN'. or Untum. -2 BR, ~ .. wpa/Wtlo.~ ~~ ·~.1!:"°lbouetc. ComeM 8Y1 A :u ~ ;el' 4 pm a and Sharon, l2UI 4.)).1921 guoi Tl!Pte, 3355 Via 3 BR, 2 BA. Deluxe Apt. 1 yr Patio, $110n.to. ahaa Cl'lll'I It !>lt-lns. l blk u:n1.~ .....,, UJOoiU<o4" a t our ove-n Lldo le-wporl: Beach.
lease Incl. trplt'. otn rm, 3 l\tesa de! Mar: &4~120ll to stoM. F'r'om Sl50. mt tut. 1603 Haven Plaoe. Call Allowancl, 525 VlctoN. St •. weekendl. O~GE Co Silvtn:do
balC"Onle!!. C'°5e' to both Bay 2 BR Adults, no pet.a. BAY £llil or call Mgr , S.U.-1831. ~pt: ~ c:r at Harbor, CM. ~ y,_, Mother will lhr b:nnt in MALE, ti), Quiet _ Af. ranch I acr.aie. Ide.al l)'n-
& Ocea11. MEADOWS APT. 387 Wi 2 WEFlCS FREE RENT-1 EXTRA LARGE-1 Br. New ~nah. .. ~ Mu..i... ~ to fecdonate, trim .Sttkl fem , dbcion, cbtiri:b "" ecol·
67;."1tl or 613-8148. n ... St OI 84&-<IJ7S B ~I •·· t, IUl5. DELUXE 3 Br. 2 Ba. C/D, ~ palm, i>eat<d POOL --· rno ... .....,... coun-" to qe 45. _ -· C<.iiid..,. bin, C 1 1 a •• ch ~ · · r. "•·-"11 bl.,,., trpl, encl gar. 2 n-$140. llfo!ur< ldults, NEEJ)M•.,...,..-.$75. ~~13 alt$. -;;-,..rt, boat or 1, -L •P 1 rano D99 2 BR, unfurn. Cl'pts, drp1, !139-• H PM. ~Uot:, Adlts, no pets. 1M tntant ok No ta. 1887 ... ~ _,_ "
a BDnu• 2 »·th. -ta .. ranaeloven, rtMa. No pet&. 2 &locb ~. 2 BR. new ~ ... • ... ··-..::n .. , mo, Dana ~.!!11;, PALM A CARD READINGS '17 tbevy c.amper SpecJa1
""'"""" -· -·· "" $'10 Ul . . J>fON'OVllllt<n<r
1'· -Ttlll Put, Prntnt a.,,;•n9i,;·cabovtrcamper, ~ ctri-. bttnl, dlWtir. Ocean 1 /mo. 96&--l4S5. ~ ~ ~ u • NEW 2 BR.. 2 ba., dbl. a:ar. 2 BR. From $175. Fret utll. NEED 2 millet to ebare ' er Future (IDJ •mo Jl"'Ully ~ue. n.dt tot '70
view, S2'1!i. 60-USS ... LARGE 2 BR., crpta, drpa, · $265 mO. yeuty, Pool Encl sar o.hwhr. 2U houle A uUI tn R.-Sch. lie. TO -pe-or t
C....,. .W Mer nr. Eltanc1a H1 1'hool. 2 BORl)I delwle apt, poolside Call 673-9545 AvoC..ilo St. cil M6-1lDI llO-li&ss. "• , , r• •v .,_ Ol~!f Pl"'fd• $135. 673-<!45. rude• bu .. alow w/lrpl<:, • 11111 mo. ALCOHOWCS ._... &4M8'6
1'U l 'BR., l 8A.1 ~··•ew, LOVELY f Br Apt. Near Adults, $210. 84tHl2Sll ~~/ -~ ~BR. Huntlngloft -h GI ..... for Rent 43J Phone 114).7217 « writs l'J\IPLEX • ' BR. 1harp ..._ ~?· 1 ...... -e. -mo. ta · . .;.....,s,.;,;. P .O. Box 1223, Cotta Mtsa. units we1t aide ~an1e Yearly I~. OCC &: UCI. No pet1. $135 2 BR., 2 ~t delux pooWde nr Fum or Unturn. HUNTINGTON C 1rdfln1 GARAGE For Rent. SlOO W1 SWINGING cm.rot.ES ~or o!-1 or ui,llJ,. no 000 ~ mo. Call 979-0JM. ' bo•oh. $111C. tl45-000!, Apts. Heil •t Bolo• Chica. Cout HwY, N.B. Faolno ~-'I •1 .":'PM " "~~" .;
·1 2 BR. ,Pool, 2 J*k.'1 stalla. LOE. nrly MWl·Br. apb No 53&-5882 or 82S..1'127 10 CHOICE beach apts, 2, 3, 84&-Im Compare -See 1Jdo lale S30 per mo. Ex· ..... " m .....,, fQllll)'. Jlm Broom~·
$195 il>o l~!<r. chll<ln!n or ~ts. Near Soll kilo I--i Call 4 BR. Pl> To l6SO Yearly wflal __ )'OU ... milllnr• Fr, ctlltnt L.: -boat N-~ "P~tl!.. an ad! pol'l Mna llollty, • • * .._,. ' atani. J.r. )'IJ'd. 646-U &lM61I No'ltl ABBEY' J'tEALnt 64:>-3850 $130-;Bl. rear. 6u.&a '"'~=•=-'-'-::;...~==~
81lboa P1nin1ul1
' "
J
TRADE 22' Owen V bddae bunka, head, a bait !lllk, depth !Ind~
S2400 for It dww r.rr
wl dr . &f.5.1821 dan
.. v.w. l"ukct -~,..bl, .... vii.
for Trude A C&mptr,
vl.lut. Anaheim.
$35.-4647
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DAILY PILOT 33 r -.
J~~ L---1[5] I ... ,... llil1 ! Lt...,~ I .... , .... .lllll ! r.e-. J[HI " '"~·-][j] [ " ... IO)•-l[l]]IJ: ....... I~ ·~ P1lntlnt I Holp Wanted, MI F no Helf Wa !'fod, M I ' 7!0 Hole Wantod, M I F 710 Holp Wontod, MI F 710 Holp Wa nted, MI F 71 0 Help Wen t.,t, MI ~ 710 Furnitu re 110
ICEl:t.f!NT .~orkd, ·• drl,.,, P el'!r h•ntlnt BOOKKEEPERS & GIRL Fi1doy lor garment MAINTE~CI' RHI Etl•le Soltt S:-E '• v ICE !'INE .. ~ Ju rM-_lKI, patKl9, eMll, ad· · · man\lf.acturer. Mutt have ad F/time, dependable. ad FREE f;I _ _,.. St a ,t,.: .. o,. n WOMAN ovtr 65 )Tl. No o.-.,....... rnHurc. all ma·
altlonl. Free tJt. 54lH'J05, PAPERltANGERS ACCOUNT lmow&edge or lewlnc 1 bC! wo.licl~ conda. k ~mpio)<ff e1r .. -.op PftY -; .... :4Se p@r. he<.oeu. P/tlnlC hn. jor brand&. lnOOor/outdOor, '*"2821. Redu~ ratet 1or the oU fuhlon oriented. ca 11 binel.ltJI, WUI ~ lnlft"lltf!w· ncu~ E¥Per-pr'.cld....EUU Muat-lncl~ dlQ'I, llOml!I 11ro>•eorie1, a.ntiqttes. Seo-
PATIOS.PLANTERS aeuon. H, &16-2449. CLER.KS 64&-191.0 berim 9am--5:30 tna; bel ... on 10:30 It 4:~ rtl LI T I ~ & pt tinte av1&U. Apply Shell rdte1 & 11.'knds. Min "'a,ae. tkuW 10fa Ta JI a I a 1 en Al Qlocrele work. Qrldc &XPER. palrufr. Eiler and pm. A Mon 1445 Superior Ave ceme ra n Station. 17th• .Irvine, N.8 . Jnteresttna work wtt>eople. deslg~ by Prank LJoYd
, aLwni-fOCJeWt7•-3.Ml. ' inter. Reas. ratet:. Call VOLi GIRL'S Oub at the Hubor N.8. 00-2410. " l imited Time On Y SretJ~guard fw pvt Nr. Hoq Ho&p. Call Wright. Sat 27, sun 3,
STOM CEMENT WORK Dick, 96M065 eves. ln1tant P ersonnel ' area needs 8 dance tri· M ANAGER~ital can-Famoui Uct111e coun;e .now comn1un y entrance gate. 642-9955 Bet.,.>n 8A.gp. g:~10t1! ~i~t~ :;:= r,--~vea, WALKS, . J)ltlos. :>le:.t er, Patch, R-.afr Ten1porary !#Mee atructor for 1lrl'1 ~12 hn teen Exper fn retailina: a avaUaOic lh!1J ~ll Com· UnUonm furn. Full tl1ne. WORK a.t boU*phone .sale1. Beach. J POo! dcckl Don. 6CW5l .....-3848 Campus Or., SUile 100 k. $2 atte food~ ~:z819 ~~phcant.s .lJ!lY rt· Rm 230, \o,,r, 4lll St., San-Exper. prt!f'd. Call Collect • · 4· * PATCH PLAS'l'EliiNG Newport Beach 546-47.U :: 646-mru.c ~~i:: · · m uponqUalihcallon. ta Arin. (TI4J.lm-'3438. ANTIQUE DR fbcture, DR ie~TIOS, walkt, drlvea. Saw, All • ...:. E.qual Oppor. F.lnp&oyt>r 1 ...... ~. ,.. • M A_T UR~ lJ v~e l h r.{ew or experien~ pJe• TEACll"R " ~ 2 00 )( n •v T'~cu-.,1111_ table $100, 6 ehllirs-$12-eac., I liloalc & pl lypta. Free etl.1.u1ate1 ....,... }lousekecper Balboa tor people. Qpenhu:11 avaita6Je. . "' . P/ul'ue, :.»-•fUIW --. "-...--h. b ~te~~ tor 1!1t~ Call $4(H)825 BOYS A GIRLS ClRL 21-30 Barmaid, start elderly lady. Call anly 5 to 6 Con1plete training progran1. 5·30· A1so, to sub8tltule. Ex-Ready I<> hire OOY.'. Regia. f'::. c 1":11~~~net, ~~~~ ~lld Ca N Pltr1mbing ~~for N:is~r ~ea $2. hr & tips. No exper, nee. Jim. 673"32M A&k tor J011.nn. 1'"uture management oppor-per. Over 30. 5,16...$88. tered X-R&y tech to •·Grk chaise S225. clock, cedar
Call D':i1 ...,lot ,,'!!-4321.a. 646-9400'. Medicel Trenscriber tunltie&. Call Mr. Sloan at T ELLER for rad)olog:i.st. Mk for chest, ntaple cor desk,
•r WANTED PUMB.1NC REPAIR / Y .r• ""' iiosrESS wattted, full time, $47S Free 832-S.1-tO. Bllf'bara. bookcase, chest , Span Hl-
a.-11n ..... Tendtr '-".... ~orb~~ BOYS toKe~~ c;:!!.. $1.50 ~~.' "' • .!.~J.i aNpopl~hone,., "' .. ad; to hlrehandno,w. Tlop girl TARBELL NCR PROOF OPR RIVJ~~~d:.~~~T =~~'=isc:Lad:..· ::.~=-'-==::""",,,_, "~"-'-.,, .. ,,,_"_, ~---'"• h bo r-u o.;&O.L ....... ~ ,, 1 t can e o c mat' ""~---2092 Business Ctr Dr. Sle. 290 Catt. M,y bOmt nil.ht&. Re· DRAINS uncfoggtd • $7.50 r. & Up plu.a nuaea . ..,.. pel"IOn after 2 pm, Five position along w/n\edk!al REALTORS •.. uuunerclal bank exper. 1nin. Irvine 8.13-MlO COUCH & matching Danlah
llllle. Infant • 1 frs. S.A. Sewer line to 100' • $15. Paul, 491-1295. Crowns Restaurant, 3801 E. lranscribing. Ask f or 6 n10'1 req'd. Newpot1 Beach (O r. 1 chair, $50. Walnut coffee
&u.JG:n.. • 549-2502, *1 BUS Driver 21 or over for C.t Hwy, Corona <lei Mar. Barbara. REAL ESTATE-area. ranee """· A rpon Area) table, $50. 2 cha.in, floral
DAY r .. -Infants to 3 )Tl Rooli private Christian School. HOUSEKEEPER f/Um f Also Fee Jobi ~EN -Why not work linen, S30 each. ~Use. J'18 ~;,:eek. Call 6f&.5788 ng ' Short hrs. Will train. Good rcsldentlAI ea!e 1a:u1::. RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT In the hottest area Hwt-(714) 646-7121 . lamp!!. l\fust see to a.p.
ar 645-4002. '-10BIL Home root coating &c driving reoord required. Ap. Xln't working conds. Apply AGENCY, INC. L 1 n Ii: ton Beaeh/Fountain Mrs. Rios [ ;..d•·dft• 11 ~ J preclatt>. Can aft 4 pm,
1.._..:-ractor aeallng. Speclal Jttn & Feb. ply in peraon. 1683.5 Parkhunit R e t 1 re n1 e 11 t 2082 Bu.sines11 Ctr DI'. Sle 290 Valley and lei Uil train YQU! . . 'V c536-=-17'""::o.· ------I ,...., price. tn 4) 567-2439. Brookhurst, Fountai n Reskience, 9925 La livlne 833-9410 Call Phil McN,aniee, Equal Oppor. J.o:mployt!r * HERCULON llOfa & ~CK Taulane -Repair Sewlng/Altara ti">ns Valley. Alameda, F.V. {Orange Co. Airport Area) ~~?E REAL ESTATE, A I 800 loveseat, tables, din nn set,
,n mod., addlt. 20 yn. exp. BUSBOY llOUSEKEE'PER _ Live in&: MEDICAL · TYPISTS & nt ques ktng bed, also glove leather
Llc'd. 'M,y W~ Co. 5'17~. Alteratlons-642-5145 Full or part time. Good pay compe.nion who drive11 & Secretery/Receptloni1t RECEPTIONIST SCRAM LETS sofa & loveseat. Po.lust sell.
Add1Uon1 Remodellng Neat, accurate. XI yellN exp. &. meals. A~-i .• in perlOJl, cooks. Waterfront apt, $300. lntell~I. well groomed Be the as&stant 10 the pres. STENOS • Pvt. pty. 536-004l .
. ,_. Gerwick It Son. Llc'd WOODY'5 WHARF per mo. Repl:y Box T33, Bal-(lrl Wlth m~cal _back· !leel'etary. This growing co. Needed Jn Beach Area. LOVE .eats, gold/tangerine l~~!!._ _ _;•~-_!54~!1-~21~'70 Signs boa, Calif. 9'1661. ground needed ~ediately promo1es from within w/lite ANSWERS Table, 4 Captains chn'. 2318 W. Newport Blvd., N.B. HOUSEKEEPER. for home for busy '!iP pract~. Peil;-sh you could rise to the ex-Long & short term . Stereo, lovely cabinet.
Qreftinl MAGNETIC w~~g~05 ad: CHILD care needed for yr on Urda Isle. Mon-1"''rl. °"'n board, typulg & billing. For ec. le\-el. Start $450. Gall a.ssl~eni!ra;~lable. l\fahoJz' desk. Reasonable. ~S-Houaes, Remo d • ::'rtl;\c~lO to $2S pair. old baby, 5 to 6 lu's per day trana. $250 mo + meals. appt call 644-2070. Sally Harl, 540-6055, Coastal VICTOR ~!~:~No Rebel -,548-018="='-'-l._~~~~-
ft-Addi"'---r..n "'~"'2449 in my borne. Vic. of 673--fi663. Mod. Front Ofc to $600 PeNIOnnel Agcn<y, 2190 TEMPORARIES BEAUT ovaJ French dining ,.....,m uunis. """up. ~ · Magnolia & Atlanta. Need Harbo Bl d CM l-Iusband's hindsight: "It !able, 68", leaf 18" $175. 4 lft-<1826 5.57..g&95 Tiie Refs. M~l818 • HOUSEKEEPER, part Local ........ Call LoJTaine r v ' · 1360 So. Anaheim 81. was love at first sight, 110 I P.taple "thumb back" t"haln •irdenf-11me, Own transportation. Call Mn.. Schmidt RESIDENT n1g,r:., ret. couple An h I 63• ,.31 n1arrl.ed her. Then t wished $25 ea. Packan:I Bell st-
flll! ··• CEitAMIC TILE NEW & CHILDCARE, my home, 644--7515. Westcllfi to manage 5 aptsJSan • e m -r had taken a SECOND $25. Irvine 5Sl--424S "'..v PROFESSIONAL G!lrdener, remodel. Free e'llt. Small Balboa Pen. Boy IO, girl 6 HOUSEKEEPER to ll.!.!list Personnel Agency C l em e nte. 492--0646 look."
tree work, pr u n Jn I, jobA welcome. 536--242.6. from 2:JO..approx: 5:30. 3-4 with elderly couple, live in. ll\lark Ill Cente1·) 837-8012. TYPISTS """"'-~-~-~= DINE'ITE set, l year old, -~·•• le jo .. -daya v.·eek. some wkends. Call ~---5424136 R ANTJQ. plate steel safe, 24" IR'e table. 6 wrought iron ""5 ...... ers, c anup ua, TrH Service rel req. m-6614 bef 2:30 .....,..."'u-ESTAURANT VOLT wide, 41" tall, 18" deep. cha! v 1 ~pt.ng_ G "e""O r-g e ' CHILD Ca.re-2 livine school HOUSEKEEPER -Teacher MEDICAL Secretary, mu1t BuH men, V.'ll!lresses Ir: lnstent PeBonnel Has 12 upper compari. ea. 675--~7 ery n ce. ;45. ,_.,-::c::=::._ ______ TREE Trimming, Pruning. needs belp 2 da1• per week. know insurance, Send waiters. See MISS P.fc.Leod s~J" x 6~". 4 \o......er eomp. I "°"'=='""~~~=--
<X>MPLETE garden aerv. Small Job Specialists. Free iU'lJ, 3 evet wkly. Must 968--9901 Resume Clasiified ad no. after 4pm. Temporafy Service art, u~~xlO, all %" plate '12 Sony Color TV 12" push
,..t.awna, cleanup, rea&-rates. est. ~ have own car. 833-9449. IF "· 1 la 1 597 c/o-Daily Pilot, P. O. BEN BROWN'S N3848•wpoCamrt ee""'a·hOr."' ~~ 106141 steel w/ Yale locks indiv. button lnstamatic port.,
'Rella. serv. 10 yn exp. CLAIMS CLERK thayot u •~1•• a .,.8 P_ nthanor ~ Box 1560, Costa M~. Ca 1
3
R
11
E
06
STSAC4URAHNT <•ual Oppo .. r. Employer k~. Weig,hs over ;roo lbti. Sl'i'S. Upright frttttr, '12 «7 .. ~-emp oyes , ... ~ ~ Real col.le<..1or's item. 1~. Continental $400. 842-4253. "OA> -~t.loO'. J[llJ Co. needs ind.iv. w/bubbly people & you need xtra · · ast wy. !IT · 2 d k ... ~
t l:IJU'. Hawaiian Garderier. [ I phone personality & lite t~ cash, call (TI4) 646-9760 an. 1'!~~CAL n-~-n s. u ~an ?the South Laguna ~te~/~rvine ays~a: 548-1862. Will deli"er. :e plete garden serv. . l:oQllu)ll•lt lng to take claim reports. 6:30 & wknd1. Days (213) ·~;.n:~ ™PtionJ.Ht WI Restaurant -Fast 1'"'ood Barber-Colma n Co., 1882 ANTIQUE
ud anl, 6 4 6-4 6 7 6, 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;~~ I Fine co. & beautiful office. ~-4223. Med 1 care, Medi-cal Serv. Middle aged woman McGaw Irvine 979-1474 SHOW & SALE
1331. -I St8J.'t s;J75. ·Call Jan Page, IMMED. Openings for l0-l5 know ledge. New lab in pJtime H B Call eves --'. -·---$3,000,000 Qisplay
nDTOTlLLlNG • Ne\v lawns, Job Wanted, Female 702 54tHi055, Coastal Penionncl lad•.•• lull or p/'"'1-e. Paid Fashion Island. 640--0140 ask ~ · · · UNDERGROUND Cable TV 100 Ant.,. ue Exhlbiui ._ 2190 Harbo• Blvd ...... , for Jean. · installer. Exp'd or Trainee •~rink1er1 trees remo\.'ed ''6ency, ~ • '"kly. "·rn -money or RN s · f u Long Beach Arena .. ' . SCANDINAVIAN LADY 01 .. un ,...... ....,,.,,._, .... ,IC ~ ••• A S upervlSO: or sma considered. Apply 2.624 w, ,.._ est. 9'm--23>51979-'i848 start a perm. career. For "'CA.<~, · .._"':"'3 mog nursing home rn beach area. Coast Hiway ...... ~an & Long Beach Blvds. LAWN maintenance an:t Ettlclent; mature. Can drive, COOKS, f/time, 1 yr exper. interview call, 892-5333. lie. TwlH!p &: lite duty. Ap-Call TI4: 494-8015 for appt. n.:LErRUMnER CORP." Jan. 25, 26, 27, 28.
-Muling, free estimate, ~~lite ~~ ~466 P~ ~ N"i;"1v. 83&-'nm or~-ply 990 E. Coast H~, N.B. R-N. relief night shill. An Equal Oppty Employer Th~~~~h 1,:T ;n,1.0 pni
C38-9933.. 1 ..... tor 3inale person. Prefer ·p., ~· ._s p, · MEN .wal)ted fJtim~ for 11-7:30. Beverly Manor u pH o Ls TE R J:: RS & I ==~="C..::'--"'~='----
MtlAlSYSITTING my home fi:i .... ou°t:'Rcts. 613--4893 CUSTODIAN, part time/full .....,_. 1f• • ""'" viirlooii car wash duties. lf Conv. J;fosp. 49&-5786. Ex . FRENCHJ\lAN! Fr a n ce
"06 time. Call 842-4461 for in-you 're reliable-&; b>king for --Upholstery Cutters, J>CI • Ever-1'~mnce F·ore\·er. a ~-F, Hot lunches & big COLLEGE student (O.C.C.J terview. Commtmity United n1.mr..tr DCD<"t"Vrr..nr..tct steady y,.'Ol"kJ apply In ROOM CLERK p;·er. for Orange: County print sllO\ving France fron1 ·a.rd. Kathy 5-iS-8269. seeks part time office wori, Methodist Church 11';.VU"'t~ r U\.J'\Jl"11"1U. person to mgr, Lido car Exper. 3 Pl\t-11:30 PM, 6 ~ urn1ture ~ltg. Great future 1he Dollmen Gronos to
ueneral S.rvlce1 elerieal, P.B.X. ere.-Costa SERY1CE5»Art:1ro.rv Wash, 481 E. 17th st., c .M. nites. Call Bill Schneider, & company bene f its· Gen'I Foch, 201hx~7 1,i. A Me sa area. Available after-DAILY Maintenance ntan, -~"I\. I 2 pm-4 pm. Ncv.·porter Jnn, Domino lndus.trles. 17672 122. research defining plc-
noons 1 pn1 -on and Satu.--begin 9 am, $1.95 hr. Also Fee & Free Pa1ltions MILL FOREMAN N.B. 644·1700. Arnuitrong,, Irvin:!. 557~~ tu1-e, 13xl7". Call tor niore
days. Call Linda 546-4478, Day hostess, being ll:30 Sales Order Desk / 5 yrs min exp, Furnitul't! \VA.ITRESSES -Over 21 into, 548-1862. am. 5 day wk. The Rwty Electronics to S800 cue goods. Great future for Mexican lood & cocktail.s. ,;;;c:;:,"-"..:::=.~~--NEED help at home? We Pelican Restaurant, 2735 w. Exec. Secretary to $600 top _man. Man>: benefits. SALES WOMAN l0:30anlll:30am &: 4:30pm-GERMAN grandfather clock.
INTERIOR designers sofa
bed, dO\\'n cushions, $85.
Eve11: 644-4281; D a y s
6T:.t"3903
LIV rm 3 pc. sectiona.l;Go!d,
\\'hite A gray Doral pattern.
Excel cond. Cost $6IXI new,
1225. 64S-<378
Gi1raga Sale 112
l\IOVING Sale! Double bed.
complete 26" woman'• bike
v.•/baby seat, stroller. an.
tlque chaJr,wig:s, misc. Mutt
Sell by Feb. l11t. 548-53M_
GARAGE sale ll5 Coral,
Balboa lslMd, Fri, Sat I:
Sun 9 ~1,5, k verything must
go. 673--or 633-7542.
IJitANDYMAN -all kinds of
1).uk, small jobs a
.~lty. m-4636 546-9723.
r>.ii Rain Gutlfl'I, Installed.
QU&ilty work. Reasonabll".
F)ee estimates. 963-l:Dj
have A~. Nu r 5 e s· Coast Hwy, N.B. 642-3431. Sal .. _ ,.,,...., •cnn Donuno Ind.ustrk!s. 17672 Full 1. . Xl , 1 1 0 30 ··n ~k Oak. 1 feet tall. Housekeepers, Companions, cs ..,.,..re,__, -.N Annstro i llvine 557-Gl52 1me, expenence. n t App y llal y, ! : am-l1:Ju u•nate face and v.-elgh!Ji
Homemakers, Up John, DELIVER\-oi L> A I L Y Recept/Typlst to $500 n ' ' -salary, Comn1W1on & bene-am & ~:40 pm-S:30 pm. Ml $615. &42-l060. ~ewelry 115 547--6681. PILOT, SUNDAY.ONLY, to Bookkeeper to S62S fil.!I. Casa P.tcxican Restau.rant, ;.:;..::..:"-!...;:. ____ .;.::.~I
newspaper earners. Re-Inventory Contrl tme to $450 Needed lmrtM!diately Call for Appointn1ent 2!16 l::. J tth St., C.l\1. • ANTIQUES 20';b OFF INDlAN Jewelry, silver &:
Hole Wanted, M & F 710 quires the use of a Station Recept/lile type $433 TRAINEE 54().5050, ext 30 WAITRESS, ;/ume for Antiques for Interiors 35-15 E I u r quo Is~. RellE!rvatlon
.... ullnt
J!l!.ve 32' Furn. van. Wlll
t'.f~an attics, c e 11 a r 1 , APT Manager for (6) 1 br ~ or what have you. units, ~ bllc ocean. Hunt.
Also, will maiu? short haul Bch. Po.fiddle age pref'd. S50
V "" la t ••· "···•· Bookk •:oc:n Cst Hv."', CdM 6'ia-2515. prl·-s RI"-b--let• Wagon or an . ......,n c ....... .....,,.,,.:.. eeper .....,.. residential care factlity. " .... · .... ~. • ..... c •
Harry Seeley, 331 West Bay Acctng Clrk/fype $475 JOSEPH MAGNIN Xln't working conds. Apply ANTIQUE ?of i me o gr n p b hlshl, squash bloS90tnS. Jn.
ntrUJ. 548-1862. oU rent. 536--3409 or 631~
LOADER A: dump truck ,aiili;I ii'·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
St .• Costa Mesa. Tellers . $405 ASSEMBLERS Equal Oppor. Employer Parkhurst It et i r c 111 e n t mach. {1916) $50. 21841 Santa dlan jewelry repaired.
DENTAL Recep t io n i It Purchas Clrlc!Pkgng $600 Rcsiacnce :f'd25 La Ala-Ana AVe. 'B', C.M. Nav11jo Tralling, 2 4·3 2 lnsrall Loan Clrk S440 Ne\\110rl Blvd CM &12-Tl51 Ne wport Beach Orthodontic · SALES person lo sell sta-me<la. F.V. Appliances 802
k. Concrete, asphalt •
wing, breaking. 114&-lliO.
moving & hauling by
nt. Large truck. Reu.
~1846 OI" ~216'
;TARD, garage cleanups.
"!tf!lnO'Ve trees, dl.11, lvy.
tDr!vewya, grading. 847-2966.
HouteclHnlng
HOUSE OF CLEAN
1.-· THE PR01'"'ESfilONAL
CLEANING SERVICE e.i~,;, Discount wi th.is ad
,_642-6124 or 646-2527
9 FFICE CLEANING, TOO!
ASSEMBLERS
Assemblers &
Packers
Uffjfftly -,.Hded
Will Train·Never A Fee
\\rork when & where
you want!
Interim
Penonnel Service
771 W. 20th, C.M .
642-7523 546-2592
Equal Oppor. Employer
Office. Top salacy. Liberal "811 E. 17th (at Irvine) O f Long Tenn Asslgnmenta -tionery . supp~ies in local --W'A'l'"T"R=E"S"S"E"°S~-
fringe bencfiU;.. Pleasan1 en-6rfl.1470 Holiday & Vacation Pay area. Will train. Beach Sta-Lunch & Dinner Shifts Ex-
virorunent. Dental exp req. .....,.« y. x W-• VOLT tloners, 1807 Newport Blvd, per. only. Apply in pel"llOn,
Age ~35. No smoking. Instant Personnel C.M. T~ lJerby Hestaurant
&42-3>26. URGENTLJOYBSNEED~"" Temporary SerVice SALESlfAN, Ex"p hardy,.·are. 1262 S.E. BriBIDI, 0.f
DENTAL Assis\allt, exper. s;.,u 3848 Campus Dr., Suile 106 nit~ Mon thru Fri, Apply in ~
chalndde WJknowledge of • Office-Oerical Newport.Beach 546-4741 person Kenn RI ma WAITRESS, exper, over l1..
desk. Salary open. Send • Keypunch Opera.ton Equal Oppor. Employer Ha.rdw11re, ~ Harbor Aiipl" in .,..,.......n after loam,
resume to Box 1199, Lag : =~~!8/wire wrap Blvd, Costa Mesa Mrs': MaJOOi";t Mesa Ven:le
Sch. Irvine ~"' 540--4450 Nurses Needed SALES clerk, part time, Country c 1 u b , 3000
DENTAL Sec'y·Bookkee~ Anaheim 533--2322 11·7 & Other Shifts prefer drugstore eA"perience, Clubhouse Rd , CM.
Expe.r. or college. NEVER A FEE AT TEMP Top pvt. duty pay. l~~ hrs/wk. Bushard's WA NTED EX p ER
546--300'.l. Tempo Temporary Help lmmed. pay ,for Ooor duty. Pharm~cy, 4 9 4 -l 0 5 9 • Seanu11 1·ess. gOOcl wages,
D I NNER Cook A: JUNIOR Salesmen: JG-15. County-wide. Need RN· 494--0I4a. x.Jnt v.'Orking cond. Apply
dilhwashcr. Apply in penon Earn $3l-$40 per week get-LVN • Aides. Interviews SALES clerk to lelll"ll sta-148 Los Molioos San
aft 4 pm. Hungry Tiger• 353 ting new custDmen for the ~fon-1'1-i, S.S. Le s co u 11 e tionery business. 'full time. Clemente or call 492-821J..
East Coast Hwy, NB. DAil.Y PILOT. This Is not a Nunes Registry, 351 1-Ios-Beach Stationers, 1807 WANTED inan, &Orne. ex-
COLl.EGE student will do A'M'R.ACTIVE Sliin girls . -DISHWASHERS ~he e dHe d' newapeper route and does ~:! ~jdgN.B) . =Park Newport Blvd., C.M. perieoc-e. grav~yard shill. ·-work. Aftemoons 4. hr. Beverly Manor .....,nv. osp, not Include coll~..... or .,.......... · or SALES OPPORTUNITY Ncv.""'rt Center Texaco. \Vomen, to demonstrate new Laguna Hills 837-8!XXJ ...... ':""'.'II' is ,,,.. JJJ't I"' minlmum, $2.50 hr. Mesa. food product in markets. • delivering, Transportation · AV Al LAB LE 64Hn55.
Verde or College Pk. area, Ov.•n tnu\s. P/time $50 per IX>G Groomer -f.fust have provided. We work four NURSES' aides, exper. pref., lor aggressive, ~ man. ''w~ANTE==0~-cx-p'~d-w-.-,~, h
546-4478. k 6'13-a663 some exp. Apply ll3 hours after school and 8 on all sh.Hts. excellent working f.:lust have executive type maker for inquiries
REFRIGERATOR v.·a!her,
and gas dryer. l\tust !!ell .
Cl•an. 946 Junipero, C.M.
!'»>-1769
SQ) 1 YR. iUllJ1l. del &: in-
11al1. Late mod. all -cycle
Kenmore "·aahrr. ~1778.
e DISl-l\YASHER.S, washers,
dryers, rt!blt, guarn &
delv'd. 8»-7620: 546-5218.
R.Eio~TGE;RA TOR 5 years
old autt>-deh'Ollt. Vel'Y clean
893-0060.
OVER DJ wuhera, dryers,
refrla:erators from $39.95.
~5--0780.
Rent Washers/Dryers
$2. Wk. r un malnt. * ~1202 .
, fx p ERIE N c ED \\' · · Broadv.>ay. C.P.t No phone Snturday. We have openi11g1 conditions. Beverly Manor sales ability. Immediate * 615--27ll .;
ATTRACTIVE hostess , calls! for Fountain Valley It South Conv. lfos:p., 24452 Via positions available. Phone ~.-Liv•H•.°""n. ;~~:1~k. private club, nights only, OOG G•~m,,, refs ......,uired, ·Huntington Beach areaa on-Ertrada, Laguna Hllh1. for Interview, 213:293-filOI Wl-10 WANTS TO WORK! NE\\' Se&.-d-~, (electl, " "" Wed thru Sun. 846-1361 "" ·~" ly. You must be out o1 831-soo:J. Mk for Mr. Whilel. DRIVE A CAB! '" • .,._ ~ ·, • 547·1843 • write Lona's Pct Shop, 14423 school by 3 P M t 0 NURSES Aid In ed CHOOSE your hours, work v.11rklni Frig washer ltte It
ROPER Gas range, 4 burner,
38" wt~. Hotpoint refrtg, 1
ru ft. Make ofter, 646-7978
"· Ex . __ _,. Activemlddleageor retired R G•r •• u· --• i .. ,..,, ven prio r i t y. Ing 7-3:30. & 3-ll:JO, y, 11:rA to.""" boss. Men or women. Can A-MATIC he ~
DIA. Sol. approx 1 ct. $35(1,
F.nrrlngs l et. Leisure
\\'orld. (2131431-1924 6-8 pm
Mltcollanoous 111
Fair \Yeather Friends
Anybody can be friendly
when you are giving them
bu1lne111. But voice a com·
plaint -and that's another
niatrer. Pollteneas di1aoJvea
-smiles drop to frowns •
words become shouts -
110metlmes. At AL'S CAR-
PET, 1t1·e like to be friends
with our CUJtomers, even
In "stormy weather." Ia
something wrong! Tell us!
\\'e'll make it ri&ht -without
a fight.
AL'S CARPET
& RUG .WORKS
293 s. Main St., 0raore
542-6400 • 542-9009
2 DES K S and 'BOOK·
SHELVES. S UIT ABL E
F'OR CHILDREN or else
would !Se Weal for extra
1toraae space In Yollt iar·
I
'
LADY wants housecleaning APA RTMENT Manager -CUlver Dr. Irvine, Ga. 92Ai64. ~I te. ExperienceJ e-un open-Sec' Bkk IA Jl!IJO for YQursel!. be your own buy drytr, $100., 493--3)29.
!i ,~·porta:n~e'"--=• own couber!~fs ~!f~.~11;·:~ ~x~. • ~~. c f:'!'rs-;rt ::tln1e.,.:ark,·1ag~·do N~nv. ~P~~Oon $&Xi be ali~hUy handicapped. iJ~c dryer m ~rtabi~
·' 847--3637 64&--0591 Ramsey Rexall Drug. CM. osp., ip, Acctng Clrk, Walnut ~ Vis, retired. Age ~ to 70. dishwasher $t0. MIH848.
Cl I No plDne t"alls please. JR. BUYER OFFICE Nurst-LVN or General Office $450 Supplen1~nt your llll.'Ome. REFRIG ~'"'..iiaft! ~ i ;" Dedlcahd Nn ng AVON CALLING I medical assistant. Starting Exec Sec'y to pres $700 Drive a call 6 tu:s or more a . ~-~...... ' w
I Jr \VE DO EVERYTIUNG * To help with those alter-the-EL 1' ERL y hoUsekeepcr, salary $500 mo. ?.Ion-Fri. F/C 'eookkeeper 5750 d~. ,\pply in 1-:rson, frttzer, aoo<l eolld. $95.
11.1e. PRICED FOR IM-~.
l\1EDIATE SALE. 1212 I .
Rou St.' Santa Ana. >U-3120.
r.;, Reta. Free est. 646-2839 holidays bills. A splendid live-in possibly. 2 chlldren, \Vith Electronic & 979-{i68(I Secretaries SS53 Ye ow Cab Co., 186 , 16th ;53S-4844::::..=:.o::r-;;53&-;:::..:23::1c.4 __ _
Xlnt Hou.h:leaning earning opportunity in your l2 &l3. S42-2G22. ~fcchanlcal Background. ro · I need! Clerk Typist $425 SL, Costa Mesa. Cemeras & ~Day. O\Vfl Transportation O\Yn neighborhood. * Escrow Sec'y to $700 VOLT o~~<>ek. 1i1pi!~t~er. To~ Property Casualty ~ Styllsts &: ~for Equipment
'1 • * 836--0648 * 54C)..7041 Some exper w/escrow, Lille O pay exper only Rolf's Underv.·rltcr $1 5K nge C.Ountie1 wla: I co. or construction ofc. TECHNICAL C RP. M!g 865 ·Production Pl Jnvenloiy Clrk S500 store chaln. Call Connie, -Prof. Carpet C eanlng BABYSITI'ER, A1esa Verde llelen Schaffer 384!1 Campus Dr., Ste 106 NB." ' Accounrln~ Trne $425 (213) 966-4455 loday.
• A11o windows & fioor care. area, nr. Mesa Ve1'de Sehl, Personnel Agency Newport Beach 546-4741 NEWPORT WIREMEN -lo build bread·
IOI
3 PC. clrcu1ar sectional,
avocado lf'H'n/a<>ld. Ex.
cond. Colt $700, eeJJ SlSO.
Eurek11. canlrter v a e .
clt81lt!r, power1ul suction,
all attach. $30. Nrly new
man'1 black recliner $70.
642--9188. Westcllff Dist. CaU Dutch 537-1508 for 1 yr old. aftns 2:30-5 4262 Campus Drive, NB t624 Orangethorpe \Vay 0 P TOMETRIC 1L11Sistan1, Personnel Agency boards & lest fbctures. Must
WINDOW CLEANING p.m. Call 'vkdys aft 6 pm, Suite B-4 ·557-2711 Anaheim 8'l9-ll3.10 part time, mature, live in 133 Dover Dr., N.B. read schematics. Part le SJ'EREO, 1973 G a rrard
Ask for Glen 24 Wts 494-0737 540-6498 ar wknds. ESCROW TRAINEE Z: area, must type .. 54S--OS55 642--3870 r I thne po11IUons a vail. ~ ~emi~ a /:,:
ASAH I Pentax (1potmat1c)
Super-Takurnar 1:14 Jena,
Vlvltar Tele-zoom 85mm-
205mm. Phone. 64z..8970
Furniture 110
ll'ICOIM TIX BABYSITIER'wmedot""• ~ }~ Learn all areas ot escrow KEYPUNCH . °<fr1li~~~.F R 0 NT ~n'vta~ed ~.·ta. n~ai~ 4 MAPLE CaptaJ.ns Chalrs, =~: J e ~s e nam air 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ~~-!~'!i~Y·o .. 'tl Tntnsp. wJone of the fastest grow· OPERATOR ~ SECRETARIES !!lei,;. Pdlonglerm dilab. ~~w, SGO, for all. Call =r.nsion i:.=-•ta~ ' e INCOME TAX e 640-1716. Ing firms in the area. Mu11 CITY OF * * Painting in exchange VOLT ins. Accepting appUcaUo111 box. \v:mlett uncl~ on have good typing skills. Call 0 T BE•CH fdr a .. n .......... nt, 4 hl'I a day. daily, OdeUca, Inc, 1845 So. BUNK beds, coUee table, Western BABYSITTER, steady part Jan Page, ~. Coasta1 NEWP R ~ for =.r";~nt. 548-915a. Instant Personnel Me.ncheater, A n ah e 1 m, 1ml rocking chair. layaw•fj NoW, $134. Cn!dlt
Management Servlcc11 time, afternoons. 2 childn!.n. Peraonnel Agency. 2790 2nd Shlft (4 pm·l2:30 am) J VM , Teinporary Service Equal Oppor. Employer. • S36-2769 • dept. < .4) 88:Hl501.
Profeulonnl Staff · $1. hr. Santa Ana Hgls. Harbor Blvd, CM $3.33 Per Hour PAINT Sprayer for & ~ 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 WOMAN over 18-? You can *** Sofa & loveseat, newr SP1X:tAL Iha& carpet sale.
Roaaonn1able Rates area. 557·1318 9 an1 to 1 pm. EXPERIENCED Shampoo T,"",,,"°, '",.'K,, ~~i:,-~nt~ Sander Wanted1 . M'~ Newport Beach 546--4.741 earTJ ioo per week, P/time • ·1sed, both for Sl60, Ullually ~':, GS2~85ar. yd6A;._~~ !:a11-...0 BABYSIT'l'Ell, days, my Girl -?trtust be good -'"'~ CounG Iy fU Furn ~ ,,.. Equal Oppor. Employer job. No delivery with Sarah home, 963--7910. ·...--
J-1. min. Open 9 AM-8 PM
438 N. El Crurutto "'al San Clement~. 492--6766
lmt5e or ywrs. in NB area, 1·~.001'week. Apply in nl0'1 exper on IBM 029. real tu.re • company ------....,. """ 2 PC .. A ...... _, «A--'fi ..-n: NEW be.ltc..., cha-12 '""'t
2 • ~ u;i Contact Personnel Office, benefits.Domino lndustries, --~ Coventey. 1111r3T70 ~,..,,...., • .-u, ce ...... '" ... ~ ...... for 2 girls, age ;i, person-Hair Hunter1 Salon. 3300 Newpo11 Blvd., New-11672 Armstron&, Irvine. • Sec ,ya:, variety to S800 Put a llttlc "loot" in your Full bed, compie~. 2 lamp&. compact. Many uses .
67r4I92 7o 1"ashk>n Island. port Beach; Calif. 613-6633. 557.fl.152, e F/C Bkkpr to S'i'SO Levls-seU tllOle beubles for SSHl.03 5-18--M66 aft. SPM
BABYSITI'ER, reliable. 2 EJtp Molder1 & Toolers PART time girl needed good e ~Legal MTST to S650 "bu<'kl" CalJ ClaulfterlA ;:::..,..,=.:::,.....c...,,_nd....,.,;."""a"'aood==1n-FIREWOOD· M2.42H
children. Days, various Coastal Recreation, 940 W. LAUNDROMAT cleanup, lite n Frl' •g • Sec Y, p.1. engmg S3 hr 642.-i£7B." vetrtment. Stacked & Delivered
hourL i79-4289 pay, good bene ts. · .,. Uz Reinders Agert<.')' ,1===1~~;;~~::~~~===:~~=:~~~~~~~;:;:;;: tJ LE A N 1 NG ' 17th St, C~1. 642-0542. F.qual work. Ideal for retired pm. Sat U pm, Sun. 11...fi. 4500 campus Dr. _
E F F' S C 8ABYSI1TER, college itrl Opportunity €mpk>yer. couple. 546-fi694 aft 6pm. Apply at Fotoma_ te in Soulh "'""211S N--n •• ~ ., .,sER.VICE. RESIDENTIAL. w/'l tree days Yt>eek. ITl,)' ,,_. <;-t"'•• .,..,. .. ..:u I~ G '7E~;i.~-l( ... ,COMMERCIAL. 646-£384. """"· Bluffs, NB, 641-4141, EXPERJENCED dcn0taJ ... LADY w/e>ptt. for laahlon Laguna. 499-J650. ~ . '• S TAR .A:., ~ '1'
.. &i1tant with X•rtt)' cense. boutique. Pt-ti.me. Cllll SECRET•RIES 'II\ ~· '" alntlnl • BABYSITJ'ER: 5 days per 5411.8844 838-9726 aft 6 pm. n-1 Cle.., " AllU Dr ~y l. rv.-w... UllA
:Jt Paperl\angl• week while n1other goe:t. .10 FEMALE no exp. nee. 1'Ull LEGAL SEC'Y f"al.wlUlll I ft Santa Ana law firm l'('(fulrea ~ k.--., M v-o~l,AdMI)' GitrJ. )i.. ""· u tti.
, school. Refs. 645-1800. time 8 to t :!IO. Resin pou..n!r xlnt \ypllll tulJ & part tln1e, :AMI. " -V-.t.ecord1n1 ,,.11te Stvl'J. od. 11 ~
: CUSTOM PAINTING BABYSI'ITER Mon thru ni & or electronic IWlllblr. ~C::,,':_ ~~~ ~~ -OCEAN VIEW-~8Jr ex: ";'~0~~ ' l"'\1-J-ti·!. ~d=~~. =j~0~~:: .~lt~• ~ter/Ex'ter. Unf\u't). Inter. tor 1S mo. old girl. My $1.75 to start, M9-02-11 &: take over. Salary to $650. deslra.b~. Ptoellse aend ~·-· z bf lgn. :rtb.f'1:· ~ ~~ ~~ home Balboa Island 673-8881 F I BERG L ASS, hand Fee Paid/AOO Fee Po!JI· SCHOOL DISTRICT rttume and salary re-~TAUttn of your od·-.c rth1 "°""°
Won'tlie underbid. 642-GJO;j, BABYSII l ER needed from lanil.naton, p~ work. tlona. Call Helen H~. •rll _. Month quirtmenll to P. Q. Box M+ 20 ~~ ,,)~~.. ~=--ocr• »~
N W·"I 2--fipm, ln Woodland Scbl · Helmet u1 ... , 1m Placentia.. 540-«t55. CoQ13l .eenonnel ~ " 11382, Santa Ana. 92'100. ...,--... wAt 10 l ~"" '3 IL ~.IT o -ntt .. -~-·att~ ·-2190 11-~ Blvd h\2-1S.17"' •Y-34a-., ..,...c_. 1 -d .. ..._WALLPAPER * .,. .. -= ~m. CM. Agency, ~~· ' SECRETARY • P,..S<hool. L>:<i<"7s.3il '"°' ,,,._ ...... .,.....,_ •§-~i!IJ
1-tL'When ca.11 "'Mac" BAJUitAIO wMted, varloul GENERAL HELPER • CM OericaJ A Receptlonlat dudet N I Ume Apply In ~l'IOll, llMINI ~=.-·• ~~ ~~ r.!
j,a..t4'4 .YoU 646-lnl shlhs opM. Uttle John'I to Ulill in the suppl:y room, Lf.GAL SEC'Y TRNE ~~or ~~I~~ SUn0owtr' Eat1y Achieve-r;M\WA'I' 11 INot JIG.I .,...._ :::",. u AJNiMS
Inn, 2l0'72 Santa Anl Ave, pick-up 1uppUcs from ven-(Newport Center). Send ~ 40 w.p.m. Appl.y Per-ment Center, 2315 SunOower F.,~,J • fNolt>lnt >tMllJ' 69~
PAINTING It PAPERING, S.A. Apply In penan don he \\'Ill need a aood l"C5Umf! 10 Cla.sSU1ed ad no. IOllnel Commiu ion Offtce Ave, S-A. ( cMtf H 100. 40 ~ 70.._.. ote. '' ~ ~ ,yrt. In Harbor aru.. J~lc Uam--2pm. drtvlng retOrd. Call for ap-559 c/o Daily Pl.Int, P.O. nm \Varner Av•. }lun.1:'s'"ECRET";!-"'"'AR'=Y~p~/~tin-,.-.~ ... ,..,. 6\J.j.S.7J :~~ ~: B~ w~~ -~~11\~~f• film. BEAUTY Open.~ fltime Polntment. --Box: 1560,. Costa Meaa. Calif. Bch. Prior to 4-pnf,l'ebtu· S/IJ. GeACtal -omce. send 11 ~1...s Al"'-n~ ~· ' ahampoo airl It aaalstMl. 546-9601 92626. iU')' 8th. -rel\lme to Box •1'1Th, "" CA.MCll J.o4 YO\l'N "'""°"""' ,,.. UNICOIM
!llOF. Paintl'r, honnl work, 1610 W~ O»lt ttwy, N.a Cit:NERAL Otfic:e-Mu~I l.)'pe. L.V.N. l'll11 time dl)'l 7-3;3:0 Equal Oppor. Empioyer Dally Pilot, p O Box 1560. WJU::: ::~""-' ~I:w P.f§:, ~;Jt .Jet·
ft!M, llc:'d /Ina. Int I ext. BOAT BUILDERS Hn : 7;31)..4 pm. Banquet Xlnt fringe bnf!s. Bet.vly COlllll Meta, California ~ 11~ .o47Todo1 11 JA#.lt ~
fftrc nt. Ref:a..Mt-27'":>9. D:per r1nbh Clrpmtm A Salc!9 Offtot. Apply \ltwn 2-t Manor Conv. Hosp. 496-61'86. REAL ESTAT E SALES1,,;;m:,:::;:I"'. ~~~--::-( .. 1 ~:~~ .!J~ "1;.-. ~-~fA"I 1~' APT. 1id'F.RIQn MJnoien bCtded for qu.uty pm, Mn-W•UOO. Airpoc1tr ~ wanted JI.~ Jn. ~Orm bN ~ SERVIO: Statioft. Crave !: 20~ SON IO YW',. ....,._. 1~~ ~IW.ft. -aUbolit manuf. 1nn Hot~I, ll700 MacArthur Part nme. Ne wport O:Mumtl u exper1tnotd 1oe1J R.'t. ysrd tulJ tirne, pno:f eoUeae ~~er" ~~ ~= ~=.,.. JM, w '..A .,-~ UTIMA 642-1008 WESTSAIL CORP. Blvd. NB Inn. ~30J). ~n,..,,, wilh to ex-atudtrt. P/llme evtt. A Au-8.n 2J"-'31f &J G.t ,S.it ~
-PftOF. Paint!ng, at.I roob. 1~ Placen~ A°l-e., CM I GENERAL otti«. lite book. MAINTENANCE man Ulan-.,.00 tnlo the Ue.ldt of Ft.£. wbnds. dan. Mtl5t be ~ ~ ~ 1:::''' 3:~ ==-~·f'~21~~m ..J!iCCOl». oetL iDter/ecter. lkdlfte kfieplng. P\fa1ant phOIM! ~). part time, Ii~ development Ir land~ w/b!al tt&. Arco, 19th ?•· :»C.wt """'°"" "~ J: ,.ua ~
LIJdlns. 1"n!e est. li$-5191. AUToic"oTtVE DOOR· .-otce.. W'kndl ooly. Apply pfatnttcc, earpentr)' I:~ ..... Ntwpe11. OI. 't'IUO f!A St w.-...-.PT~ mm mo Dbc.. • W.P. A labor, KEEPE.lt Carpeteria. ln-4 Newport trical. Rtquim toolL $3.fO M. Cumblner a: Auoc. SERVICE Sta. A.Uendanl, 21c,;11e"'" $1 N.d •Me.H NL,,,~--~~::fr~ t., The ~~~OtJ,NO~nc:. =· Cocta Mell. Ask b" ~f.:;. ~.:;. Tmollaa, ~~ H~ rv:·m~~e~for~~~: :::!~ tJ..V:11 :t: 1 =~= ~~~.•'"'d
My c1a;y ts the BUT DAY kl Co11tAct MAR R· Like to tl'al1eT 0U? Tndtt'1 Haw™'-10'I wd. to 'J'bt fulesl4raw In the Wiit. (not rcq·_dl Nnit In •J>PHl'· • IJUt flt ®Good @Ad.,.. ()Nnud
,_ "" odt Don't ll<W)o. • RISH. . nJllD Ptttodl>t column Is ... """' IOllt C\Qollltd ldt do tt • .a . Dally Pllol O••""' APPlY :rr'90 ~ Blvd,
,caJl JPd!I!' -:a.JO"-Santa-. , SU-S d!,)'S for & bucks, °"U -<all NOW 64Hl1I. Ad. co.6m. CM.. • ------------.--------------
Janitor I al
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:J j DAILY PILOT thursda,J, .bnuary 25, 197)
I~ I ••=A: ~I ..... ll§ll --==-I~ I --llil I _ ..... l~I -·-1§1 I -·-I~ 1· --.. 1.-.
icM.:.;l•;..;<"-tl-"I•;;.""°".;.='---"-' ~Mliiisceliiiiiiil.tiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiii=~l~ll~!'~;~::::..:::°"!"!'"~jjji:;jjj;;;~jjj-·-;_~,;m"::;~,;1l~Bae;:tt.;~:s:!r::.:I :::~llOOi C~.!k" .-92.S IT '".'r".'ucl<:-"1::':"_-:'.~::"~"""llA!""'u:;.:IM~W~•~IM:;:·:...,.,.;;;:;NI= A-, l"p0 'fld_ * AUCTION * ~~ ~ii.t° ~ ORGAN HOBBY FREE! ,---EEOS--,..-.,.-,"'"t11J-..,-.-,. '67 Chev Jf~ Ton wil: PAY TOP FIAT
FRIDAY 7:30 P.M. '67, 21··, Cdor TV. pufect outofbualnruandhave~ Pick u,p. VS, automaUc,-ps, CASH
970~-·~
PORSCHE
970
JANUARY 26 rond, $Dl. Near new act. Don't ~ aey <'.Ian until Tl#"h:: Uoa.tine Counc ty 11 let1. $"° cwr eo1t, Air, ~ ~· c:u.1tom * 1970 8SO F'lAT SPIDER •
="rmni:Ui bar :. 31001,, Ul'unv-Spo.uldi.11& &0!1 ctubi, woodl, }~ ~an pla,y! Non·plt.Ytn 1'.lnru\& ll1&h School, "871 hurT)', 17412 Beach Blvd., (.'t.bO. CQ3l091NLYl 51795 ~~· 36,COJ mi. $100>.
\\'lC'k pool tablr ,C\'.Jlor TV'•. JJUfttt.-4.. bl&-$95. or Bc.-11 ~lcome to atttnd he v.uk Sp1'tn(da.l£, ll.S. 1'1.&n, Jan· ILB. (or used can a trudcs. Jut!
:\trr•'OS. Cotft"I.' t • h I es . Otter. ~1 11;h0pi. Fnr lnb'maiJon WU}' 30• • '10 KA\VASAKI JOO HOWARD Chevrolet call ua tor tree C!lrtmatta. '89 Ftat U4, 4 iJ>(l,•alr/cond,
ChM1S. Runk bt'd1, U<'<lr'(IOfll S£Alts JO" ftadta! A?m Sa~ Contact.: Tom Dlettrlch 1 PUI Gn:t"Nttt•k, exp an a Ion Newport llHch GROTH CHEVROLET ~00._$900 °' bea_t oUert " ,,, ,. ,, • 1 r, ,,11h .,,,,,, ·•b'-i •. ••tra 642·2151 Courice oonductcd by ll\lnl· ...... _,_ k b·'I Ilk ~ ~,.1.~. u1\ .. '· " , " ' u11; ... .-..~ 1 Be Ch Po\\.tt Squ d ,,...,,. .. .,,r, no ~ e11, e !le\Y ~tacArthur Blvd A Jan1borec
P11u·tl•'"· ~·1' u1~ 111ul·hu1,.s, blad<'s. Inclds Dado Set .£: Co111t Mv1lc Service na;ton n . • • $32!1. &4H~t ••• A255 1958 lo"'iat 4 dr sedan 1200
1 .. u1i1•"· Pu·uu'l.->s, Or1l'n111I rnoldJng tx-11.d. Sellin& for N''"''llQrt Blv1!. lll lla.tbut rou. Info 968-l6.'34. USl::O 185 Sui., reblt. 21 •. ~ Ask for Sa1'8 Mlnqtr Cranh1<:f", $190. J11tere5Ung
i 1 ~111 tab!.· & s1CIOI~. !:..)'<' $3..U ti.I Sef.n for ~e ttt Co11ta r-.1eut * WANTED * f'\\', l'hnrnlx•r. st"e 81 J1tmt?I I ULLMAN (1962 COMMER} 18211 Beftch Blvd. tranSJXlrtlUon lm--1101
\,•1 l'I .~111v1·~. Fr el' /. l' r 11, S:!:?S, Npt Sch 6-14-4741 Store, Restaurant, T'r&ller 10r n ft. boal. Atust Ltd., c .rif. J\tust see 10 9-PANEi. TRUCK Equipped !-luntlnaton Seacb HONDA \\1l'lht"~ ,'\• Ht"fnremtOY'S, "Mlic•fli neous Bar 132 be In -..v1 condition & n~· p1'¥<'lalel wilh C>vtthe6d Rack • 847-6087 KI 9-3331 '----------a11d '.\ll'C"ft .\IOBE!! W _, 820 •"""'' Interior lined wlthl--:;::--:-7--:::7=~,-
WINOY'S AUCTION ant-1-------"'"""'" Crul 837-5003 •ft BMW n-~. im: 20 ""'' SILELVES. PRICED ron Cash For Clean Ot::LJ 1-e!t·lg e o u n t t' rs , 6 pm. siJ Y!'r; ~ ,;trtJJ;; xlnt QUICK SALE
* WANTED * ,..,..,,,., .. ,;,, ,., •""'&a'~-~P----~906= .,.,.., 1o b1u "" + 10~ , •••• n---St .. , ••• ,. ... u·-..1 Can & ovt>n, ..... tk in ctr & fran1t>s, ats, ow.r 642-.1I!Sl. .t.U ~ ,...,... __., """' ._.. .:·c1,11: BRO\\'SJ-: AHOUND TrMth~r ror Zt rt. boli.1. Alust 96-.l4l3 · M)-lal Trucki : .. •ni;,12 .\\•wpor1 Hlvd. bi.< in j(n:I rondition &: rte.· ~. · 31' CllRlS Cabin Cruiser, top II NOA CL 1'15, 1911, lo 1950 FORD
1;.,h1nd r.111~ ·s: Bldg. ;\.lt\t'l11. sonable. Call S.37-5003 ait TV R d HIFI shape. twin eng. radio. mllel\Jt", $375 tlnn. 646-0129 \I ton. f'lathead lix, 4 speed, Howard Chevrolet
l'c>i:l3 ~lt'SI\ * 64&S'6S6 6 pm. s' I lo, 1 U6 Stf'reo, depth finder, full alt. S pm New clutch, b attery, N9Wport hach * Cl.1.lSE: Ol."T SAU: * 11,··-o·, • -·~, ... ~ ,.... tereo ¥1111")'· man,)' xtru. aleeps 6 ~gulator, pl\lil, starter. MacArthur Blvd I: Jamboree
5 .....,,.,""' i.eni·~ """"" ,. 1n rom!ort. $8975, 67>8577. Motor Home• Good 'J! "-Old TIIL;Jl:' · Sun 10 to · pa.rel, furs, cos tumt" 19TJ ZENITH &: RCA 's at . Y .u~ but ISS-0555
\\11nann« s ~Ilg. Lndlrs & jf' .... ·elery, ('tr. Must bf< ~\.l't'I II'('mendous savings al ~ Ou·l'na J&rnakan <;rulser. Salt/Rent 940 dependa e. $175. 534-6996 Ch1ld1,·n.~ i!n.·~!>!.'S is n-.ov· '"nd & quality. Call TUl.'s · Orange County's Jargrst ilps 6, ~c. eleetroruct, top I----------·n FORD F-100 ..Piclr:·up. Autos, Imported 970
1n,.: Salt' At 333 ~laruX' A\'t", Sat. 10 . 5: l), dealer. Priced lea than the mech cond, m.11.~ xt~. 25. ~l~V~ER R/11, Air, Gem top. SteeJ 1----~-----1
Ball•ia 1 ~1'c"-----~9311 discountf!'n with 3 yr plc-Best otter O\'t'r $15.500. Priv 20'-22' CONTINFNTALS belled tirrs. 12.800 ml. BMW
IJJC.·\Lj;iol bui.lder \\Ill take :.Jl::ED\' 1'~a1nily Nf't"ds ture lube, 1 yr parts & 1 yr parly 7},1:644-5-IOO. ro· PRIDE I JOYS Sharp! &low market value.1------------
all,)1h1ni.: or vl!.lue u1 tr:iclc. ClollK-s. furn. & food serviee. CUh 90 Plan or al' FBRGl...S boet & lrlr. VA.i.~ CONVERSI:JNS Pvt. pty. 534-ll67. LEA$[ A
\!lO' ru1.u\c11\j.:: on the de5pttl\lf!'ly. 2164 Puente l('mls to 36 months. 1\BC Fantasy. Flybridgt. Sle@ps :.-'lies e Servlcu • Rentals '72 Ford Courier w/camper
'Tl Honda Car. ·XJnt c<md.
$100'.I. Call bcfont 1 PM
.. 64&--3128 •
MAZDA
'"~l:.tnl"l' '\'11 p..'\yml'nt.; untLI Aw . 0 1. Color 1V, 9021 Atlanta, 4 Head~tove-sink, AC/DC * Danmar Inc. * shell, radkl. western 1tyle ~I;\\. .\.;k !or Mr. Rhuk-. -"'==~-----lluntington Beach, 968-3329. rebig. 155 HP O.M.C. ~ ntlrrors & hvy dty bumper. 1973 BAVARIA 17331 Beach Bl . 8'1U66 .;~11:xi. Offi ce 'furntture/ PO\\'ERF'UL ·73 Stereos _ 1'l'-db/outbd. S41:i0:..~~ l3Sll1 Harbor Btvd., G.G. $1.900. Pvt pty. 831...9362
2-n\·N li..><ls.-b.:Jx s pn11:, nlllt-Equip. 824 t1t il $219.95 -Al\l/F?-.f1 25' BERTRAM 5.31-6800 1969 DATSUN P.U. New 1971 Mazda 616 Lo mlleaae tn·~-.. Blk/v.ht pvr! TV. gd Sh'rt'O ')IPX/8-tra.ck tape, Navy top wt camper, h,·1n Nt>rt to G.G. Datsun paint job, brakes. Runs CREVIER BMW l600cc, 9'lhp, radk>, =
('lnld Rolla\\'<\)'. gd <."'Ond. S' \\'lllnut Credenza $250 head phones, big walnut 1968 120 JIP, $5,!m. Prlv. Rtnt A Motor Home &"OOd. Best otr. ~a.ft Sales. Service. Leasing fi::1C~~;11~~t :Z.. $l67S
PORSCHE '9 912, xln't
cond. 5 spd, chrm whls,
11n/tm 1. w. + many xtru.
w;oo,~-
RINAULT
NE.W
RENAULT R12
•2384
$2095
ROU.S Royce '61 Silver
Ooud, white. S2,000 milts,
ln1mac. $12,00). ( 2 13 )
tl4--0W!I or 17141 4M--03l2
TOYOTA
1969 TOYO'rA Mark II. Air,
4-spd. L owner, Xl.nt rond. --'TI t'OROLLA, R/H &Ir, S
track, 2 nu tltts, stick. xlnt
cond. $1700. 67Hl21
TRIUMPH &lh--00-13 \\'a.lnut otlice desk $100, spC'akPrs. January prlre ,Pft=.rl.cYc.· °'n"<~' """'""·9S"J"6_. -= for your Vacation 4 pm. 208 W. lit St., Santa Ana or ma.kc oUer. 11-luy accept [lTE l~n. approx. 150 yards \Valnut side chr $10, swivel $102.00. Lov.· as $5.00 month-Bo S 909 83$.3171 trado. Call &4>2444 or
''
..... ~ l"a r"''tin". Good quid!-dt•sk chair $20. 645-U!)O, ~5. ly. USA. Stf!'l't'O Fre\a:ht Li· ltt, all ~ 839-4301 * 1964 CHEV. % ton pick-up -u.:;;-::::c-::::::-~=-645-.lM2 tt 7 OO '67 TRIUMPH G'I'tl, Good ·~ ,_ • quidato.... l"" E 17th St :of~-w/8' camper. Good cond. Visit our new hom•I ..:c::..::=.::•::..:c:;' ::::_· ___ cond \\lire ivhl'ela ~ 000 h & ronrl. r-.takc offer, \\'D DESK." $2Q.S70 wk a.smb .... •;J ~· " LUDERS 16, 26 ft Sloop. Ex-'71 FORD 17' Mini-Like 1Xm'. ?-.twit see to apprec. $UOO. G · ••lie•'· Evea s-37~, d'·~ Stl--1:.2:.'1 hf-n{'he~ S20·S50 file stor dr CM. 645-2-442. eel cond. v.'ith mooring. 101\• miles. $5800. J.)yt pty. S48-6S03 after 6 MG " ,.,. ""' vv ..
?. t::.\RLY r\n1t'r. brKid nu::s. $l. 867 \V. l9th CM G42-..M08 HI Fi Thorens Stl.'I'f'O ~t Art 4 pm, ~&-2863· '63 FORD~' ton pick-up. V8, .~7",~V-A_Con_v_e_rt_Ex_oo_I
9 :ic 12· s:r; each. lf x 17' Pi•nos/Organs 826 Transcription Turntable, '71 ISL'"'"· ~Z7~,-,1~,lly,,.--,eqp-;t, Tr•ilers, Travel 945 Cruise-o-rnalic trans m' '72 Midget, wires, Michelina, low I dial tlnl
n..•i\· 11 ~r.:"l'n shag c3rpetlng near new TD 124 wrrP14 custom teak interior. Pvt w/S' bed. $550. 545-723S. AburU1 roll bur. AU 6, ~· 54~23W, .. ra
"pod SJ?;. ;,;i.19'8 '" 6. *PIANOS*ORGANS ~;,li' pe.r\y, make oiler ply, ,.,,__, S<IHlJ<l 13' '62 Alrfloat, good eond. V ~· ROY CARVER, Inc. 6>MOl8. . •
CARPCT. 113 yards, beige Going Out For Business · 31· ELDRIDGE r-.teGinnis in-Slps 4, 12 volt ayst. propane ans ~ .234 E. llth St. * '58 MG MAGNE'TTE * VOLKSWAGEN
ll"OOl slw! 111 home. Large em: quality _ pti<"f'S • serv. AUTO-Radio A ?of IF M boa.rt{ cruiser sloop $l2.5M. 3 burn stv/l'.lven &. refrlg., Co Good transportation.
nd ~ ~ • I St I Bald • t elec b"" "~ 6#-.1585 "' '68 ,..___ Van . "• M... $16'"" ' .-;;;·-~g,an=.-;;::..; ·~-·,. '68 YW B BT"f'.!l.S., !111l' co . ... }u. ~a,va -e n11.1ay· WU!, e (', Becker Grand Prix -touch Avery & Company 615-8990 • ..,_.... ,_,...-. 1 -· v•-.. UCJ
1'6-"17. Player Pianos & !U>U. "'"'' "'""' IMW!ed. Pri d•ys 6'3·8650. vs ---• BMW '70, $11'll. 34 000 mil" MERCEDES BENZ ZKZ B Se'! Ba t SI" /""---'--910 T II U I , •uu11.1ard, radio, heater. am-'-11100 'prt ~-< •peed, radio, heater ( • Rentals ...... , \\'e uy. !1 party, make otter 536-7343. a s, 1ps ...._.. ra ers, t llty 947 (28437B) un, . t''ol• l21J)
•;;;;011,lAIRE "1','1 ,"""""" Dail' 10.0 S>m 12.; SAILllOAT ·'" . t _, 1---'---'---ONLY $1695 n<-m-2524 week•nd• 50 USED ONLY $995 .JJ"J: tnt."!<.tte nia · ·' • ~'lELO'S PIANOS """"etie 0 ¥J • STEEL UTILITY TRAILER.
sprui..,"< S:!j: 12· hf>adboard Costa ~fesa 1n 41 6(5.3250 $2.75 a ft. 213' min, Slip Ior Ne1v liCt'nse. Spare wheel HOWARD Chevrolet DATSUN MERCEDES S!O: Cf'rl3r rhr.;t Sl0.613-1-132 JI I lrg pv.T or sail, $2.~ a ft. $JOO. 642-4547 HOWARD Chevrolet
°"'OPY BED. Whit•. dbl•, *PIANOS*ORGANS* ,,.. to You 1Lldo1'7.50P "•'0rmcN. Bnun. ";! ~A-.~,.-s~,-,-.~ic-e,~P-.rt-1 ~94~9 Newport B .. ch '70 Dcmun 1600 ON DISPLAY '1 !ac ~•~rpoBlrtvdBI• J•amch~-inrl. hncns !no niattres..<;('s ll;1mmond, \Yur!lt:cr, many ':-.,..,---,--,,,,--~ ar .. · ·or Cau r.tacArthur Blvd & Jambortt .. n.1ui.. UUl=-
$2.i. :iJ&-0528 others. January clearance 3 Lines, 2 Timts, $2..00 ~16'M aft S pm. CADILLAC PARTS .. 1959 833-0555 Sportscar Sharp New Car UMS55
on no\\·? The best deals are 24' SUP, Glass sailboat $60 M<Jdel HAVE GOOD Radio H 1 4 pd Trade-ins BRADBCHY ScascaPf' s:25(1. al C '69 Ford 8 SUper Van . ea tt, 11 , new '65 V.W. BUS, 9 pus. Good
Ll ho $1 """ ii·ays at FREE 10 ~ home• &' per mo. Avery & ompany TRANS MISSION. AIR c E 300 ~ top runs Ille b-~.. Comlnn In Every Doy nd $825 •1 1 Sell !-\1\"!nE'd Braqul' t ,......,, W II" h " • C'ty 5vuu -.. amper, -, reu·1g, , e , ....... new. ··• co • , ., us . Others. P.,·t. Pty 5JS.-559;j. a IC s MUSIC I Shepherd ~ Pointer PuP5. I0'6750'fHl990='=-----o--,-COl'lDmONING UN IT, stove, po~op, to i I et . MUST SELL Ask About Our Unique 644-6412
SouU1 Coas! Plaza 540-2830 excell~nt markings. PaJd DOCK for po .... ·er boets, RADIO and ~lATOR. 5'1.')..3215 aft 5 pm. LOST OUR LEASE Ustd Merctdts Lease ·10 V.W. Bug, sunroof. Ex· USED BICYCLES
.AU lypes * 642-1272
Fn{E\V00D sale. $20 sta<!ks.
Split. oak & eucnl)'ptus log!.
Brian, .j9-1-269-l.
\\'Ai'ITED: PRIVATE PAR· stud suvice for these. 6 "20'-34'. $1.50 per fool . 12'12 S. Roass.t&Santa Ana '62 FORD Econollne Van. JED'S MOTORS Plans ~lien! cond, radk>. $1150,
TY TO BUY PIANO FOR Weeks. 54(1....99)3 Newport Beach. 6Tr2124. brand new engine, trans, House f Imports CdM. 673-3929
CASH 7 mo purebred fem Shepherd. 55' Slip, xlnt loc. COMPLETE 1959 Ford 6 cyl. clutch, brakes, exhaust, 0 !97l V\V. Red w/blllck con.
Good temper Loves kid _.. .... .,A motor $35. It runs but out tires, etc, ssoo. Ask for 2014 Harbor Blvd., 6862 ?tfanchcster, Buena Park $2lSO.
ORGAN. Yamaha with auto.
R h y t h m accompaniment.
Asking $4j(}. I yr old.
a57-7'.m
· s. Newport Harbor •ur •.J-l'I of ...... Al.,, hea"' for 352 C M vert top • • ml Sho 64~ 643-0130 ...... John, 592-1676 ' osta esa on the Santa Ana Frv:y · · ...,., · eve~· ' Bo.ts, Speed & Ski 9TI Ford w/recent valve job. 645-6644 523_1250 Eves: 644-8135
FR. Pruv. Dinin~ +abll', Buf·
fL'l !, chairs, $-175,
390 Ford engine block. '65 VW Caniper-Reblt 1500 1966 VW Fastback, Good
LOVABLE Cock-A-Poo 16' -Fiberglass ski or fish Straight axle $20. 544-3417. w/big horl!' · l.830cc. New j973 DATSUN"". PORSCHE trnns needs 1mln1. $500. or
li.\:Mi37S V•'/{b>Clle clJp. Grey, bllc & boat. w/trler, 50 hp Uphol. $1400/best otr. Call "f bl'sl offer, Call eve. 6-16-9279 wht, fem!, 2 )'t'S old. Nffds Evlnrude OB. Xtras. $1005. CUSTOM painting -No job Tim bet:. 3. 536-1060. ALL MODELS 1971 PORSCHE 911 T. ;, sp, ... ~ ""nmof B'!t ho-·. ""81n. ~8764. too complex for us. Frt'e 1965 FORD v IN STOCK ~ ~ .. ~ .,..,.,.... ,,,...... an, new motor, S/R, S ..,...,ipment. 5 alloy "-·J Cu Ex nd !~~~~~~~~~~~I estimates 893-0573 I _,1 D II .... y 1u."'I. & te. . , M0\1ING, pedigreed Siamese · · new ovcrsil.ed tires & mags, mm.u att t very whls. 14,lXlO mi. ri.tetallic Sacrilice! S57S. 6Th-5.1'1 ~~:h ~~~"'°:rt~ I T,....ut• 1r•l ~%~~i~~,,v~~ ~'l:~ '~~~~~ Call fn~~rt ilatsun) ~t. ~-;~~"'." ~~ "i~.;;69 'ri"~..,~
AFGHAiV. mixed pups, . . '72 Gri.JC Yandura 76 ton ~~ 1000 w. c-. ""'-'68-912, SUPER clean. ~ee to 499-la:Jll aft Spm.
adorable. Frtt To qualified I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:i;~~ J CHRYSLER Hemi · Ellgine, heavy duty 350 V..tl, auto ·~ ~ ...,. W ·MOo apprec. BI au punk t ,
H O" "'" -an 5 II com...1etely !'f!'blt, 11"7!:. tr •~ss-•·1 5 -A'l/FM h · 13 500 '68 BUG, only 700 mi's on omf's •u}'. ~· · Cam rs, •·le/R0~ 920 96''2 '~ altcr~·~pm ans.,"""'" ""...., · :""pm. " 'c nn runs. ' · "'-"' Xln' cond pt ~ '"'' .....,"" " '64 Ford Van, FM racHo, nu 1972 DATSUN 1200 Coupe, 673-8735. l600 '""uot ena:. t · TO good home lo\·able & -20~ - --XI 1 nd h f 6 ·"'=""'""'==~=,-""°" SUOO: 548-5300. playful Lab Ret:rievf!'r, 7 ATTENTION 10. 3x " Ford wheel & tire. lires. $500 or best offer ' n co , p at pn1 '63 PORSCHE JSfi.C, reblt
I·-all ho" 67U287 10 Lug whee) ·~ &'. L....... ..,..., .. ......, .... , -.-•, ·-· body '61 vw. GclOlt cond. Needl mon '""· s .... .,...,, · IMPORT OWNERS " s.1s-i862 ....,,1"" ,,...,,...a=u ''cit s:iiii" ~ a1 6 minor engine work.
FREE-LRG. dog, lrlsh Set-New custom shell.Ii, $119.1 ~~~~~~~~~ '72 FORD Van-Crpt'd ln-FIAT \\"O • · • · tf!'r $250. Call : 847-4402 ter/Lab. Blk. Very good Overhead sleepers & terklr1 V8, auto. FM tape, '64 S-C Conv~ All Orig. ,70 VW llowiblk _,~
\\'/childrn. Call 830-8154. campers at very, very lo portholes. S421Xl. 537-5687. '70 FIAT 850 Spider, am-tm Must ~I Sac.Tifice! J good «,~ Semperlt .. fu::
p_rk.'!s. Financim! avail. Autos forS. II ~ J Autos Wanttd 968 29,000 ml. British racing SlOO/oUer 675-ft397 Coco mata. $1300. 546-9292
For an ad 1n Woman's World
Call Mary B•th 642-5678, oxt. 330
Seamed-to-SUm! I Jiffy Crochet! gsJ..0573, . ~ -green, n095/ofrer. 645--0734· '68 9ll, SPRTA,,.fATIC, 62,lXlO -I ;. and Suppliee ]/"-'I SHELL for El Camino, '68-REWARD 1970 Flat 124 Spider air mi's, tangerine, am/fm * '66 V.W. $400 . r. '72. Sa!ety·glass windows. Gentral 950 ~ cond., niags, V<!ry ~lean. rad. m&ny xtrn11. 675-1494. Needs work. 673-7333 J ~mliiiliiiliiiliiiiiiii.:;~~J $200.·.Call 536--0275 --------Must sell. 499-4.167. Nf'ed a "Pad"~ Piere .<in ad: You'll find il in Cla.uU\ed
850 *sm;~v ~~~13 CAMPER ?\!~~:;,c~g. ~~t~r!pr: WILL PA y OYER l:A;;";;';;"';;';;l;;m;po;;;r;tod;;;;;;;;;9;;70;;A;;;;;;ut;•;;•·;;;lm;;po;;;rt;;od;:;;;;;;;9;;7;;0;;;;A;;;;ut;;o;;1;;, ;;;'m;;;;po;;r;;;tod;;;;;;;;;;9:;70;j
o;:r..:rvJ tooth harrow. 637-Q43. II GROOM & BOARD, u yrs ·==-=-c=-=--,,.-.,.. Kelly 81·-Book
7109 Pets, General
all breeds. Free pickup! HOME mad!:! walk in Trucks 962 ••
"Sherry's:' Poodle pupa cam.pee, $100. For late model, cltan,
.. ail. >ts-2848. >t&-180t '70 Chev 1;, Ton -1ow mn .. ,. domoo-
Dogs · 854 Cycles, Bikes, Pick up. vs. slandard, radio, tics, imports, trucks or
Scooters 925 heater. t57247F"l camptr1.
OBEDIENCE cl.au to start ONL y $1995 Call and ssk for Buyer Wed. Jan. 31, 1,20 pm, ;n 'TI YAMAHA, Excellent eon-DAVE ROSS the Newport Beadt/Irvinf!' dllion. S195. HOWARD Chevroltt
area. Open to all dogs OVl"r * 546-9338 * Ntwport Beach
5 mo. old. 54&-4928. 350 Honda, lo mi's ~JacArthur Blvd & Jamboree PONTIAC
DOG School lnstruction New 548-5477 aft a & wknds . 833-0555
•
Classes starting Tue a MUST sell• Nu '70 Suz.. 1967 FORD Pick-up, % ton 9:30-lO:JOam, Wed 3-9pm le TT,....~ · '. k I Sat 9:30-10:30am. Martin-...... maru, ni:_ver run. true , new t res, good con-
crest Kennels, 54&-0989. Nds wk. Sa.3...:_£.50. 96.2-9603 di lion. 67:>-TI02.
ADORABLE puppies, half SUPER BUY! '71 'r.'.ama_.ha '61 Chev, Corvair Pick Up
cocker, will be small, $10 to 250 OT 1 w/GYT kiL $525 Truck. Good cond. $275.
loving homes only. 494-4Tl9 or best oUer. 837-5813. Cash. 894-5103.
after 5. HARLEY Sportster 1972. '59 V.W. Pick Up. Runs good,
TOY poodles gorgeoua Cafe icmcc stock. 6,00J mi. X1nt nreds palnt, $35Cl. or Oller.
Au L.ait, 5 ~o. Quality bred. cond .. J\oJu.st sell, make offer. 540-7562.
Beaut. stud to approved .~'=""""""""°'='"°"=-c:=7""7 '6'1 Chevy % T. Xlnt cond. bitchf.-1. Pvt Pty 531-7446 um SUZUKl 125, street & $950.
AFGI-IAN, fem, J,yr old, muat trail, 961 miles. Xlnt cone!.
sell 10 good home. AKC reg ~$3_1_5._5'&-824_~_7 ____ _
($75/best oUer) 54Xi645 TACO '66 Shp, good
• Purebred Bloodhound pup. suspension $50 or best ofter.
pies, 7 wits. $50 each. ~C~•~ll~S<~>-~2135~~~=-~
645--0307. '70 YAMAHA 360 MX, xlnt
AKC reg Gerntan Shepherd cond. Expansion chamber.
Puppies. R l n -T I n • T I n $525. ~2182
Bloodline. $50. 8.17....5487 A good want ad is a good Ll-
BEAUT lrtllh Setter fcm. ,~""-tm~•-•_L ____ -c=
pups, AKC reg. Shots & Trucks 962
wormf!'d. Tlof/82&-7353
Call 54!l-1508
!-'ORO 1969 F250 Pickup, 76
ton, $1500. .,...,,..
'60 CHEV. TRUCK
$150. GOOD TIRES
• 548-7654 •
'66 DATSUN Pickup truck,
Xlnt running com!. Year old
eng $700. fi?S.-8793
Trucks 962 9009 / -1 Look your bl?st every da)'
SIZES 8-18 in f"IC\\i!.<:I crochet scpar~tes~ YORKJE Terrier. male,
2408 Harbor Blvd,
Coste Mts• 546-8017
\VE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
If )'Our car is extra clean.
see us first.
Bi\UER BUICK
2925 Harbor BJvd.
Costa Mesa 979-2500
IMPORTS WANTED
Oro.nge Cowity's
TOP S BUYER
BlLl... MAXF.Y TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv :.
H. Beach Ph. 847·8555
S For Junked l'.lr wrecked
autos.
494-1003, ext 608 24 hrs.
LATE model Nova·Dart-
Plymouth, 6 cyl, auto, Jo
mUes, owner only. 548-4938
Truckl 962
. r N'STANT -CROCHE.T Ch 1. AKC II-•· J~. 4T . 4'f1T"( ..,.: I poncho and sklrt are smart. · ine, • a ~ts. "'7 lll""'•W. 111 4.\1~ shn11ning in a flattering t--~$15~'-· -*~675~>-8066~~-I design of graduated shell~. ADORABLE Silky Terrien,
It's 8 Sl::.\:-OlED-TO-SLii\.1 Use large hook, knitti.ng 1"'ks,21'1ales, 1 Fem. $125-
style "·ith pyramiding lines ""O~stf'd .. ~.at. 7100: or"lf!' 51.ZC $150. Call 644--&78
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BRAND NEW
Huit narro\\' yoo cvl'ry inch ht s l\111"'~"'.s R.-~6. Af~GHAN PUPPIES
Of !ht' \\'fly. Zips up on Ol'I(' SE\ EST\'·f'IVE CENTS Champion aired
11irh• to ;i f1l'llt b,1nd nc.•rk. for C'flC'h pattern -add 2:i Call &U-4560
&>ml' <·cnt.~ lnr ('a<'h pattern for MALE Aichsn, '"• -, with : Alr !\fail ancl ~pccial Handl· .,.-
Pnnl,'''! l'artern 0009: NF,~ 1n~: o!herivise thlrd·cla!!ll fll'lper.. $100. ?\1e 11 ow !
f.11sses S1l1's S, 10, 12, 11. 111, dl'll\'E'T'V \\'ill take three 5.16--0917
HL°'111.~·.,,512. ihusft b34_1 tuki.•s 41 ~ ! 1vi'f'ks · nr mort'. Send to ENG. Bull, 2 yrs, n1ale,
yun ii..,. ·Jnc:h a rte. 1 1\hc·P Rrookii, the DAfi.Y AKC, IAves people. l'olust
,o,;t-;\•t:NT\'.YfVJ<; CJ.:~TS ) PILOT. 105, Needle.craft 11ell, beat offer. 645-7469.
for each p11 uern _ 11dd :!:"• Dept., Box 163, Old Cheleea 1 -~~1 R=IS~H~S~l!=n=~E~R~••rnts ror rach pnttem ,.,,l ~111rloti, New York, N.Y,
Alr r..1:111 and Special Handl-1 10(\Jt l'rin1 Na.nwi, t\ddreM, l yr old. Call Mll-6312
In§;:: o\herw1!1l' third-ela'(.<t Zl11. Pnlf1•rn Nu1nber. HorHI 156
deLivery "i ll take thf'l't' · ·" I·: EI.) J. E Cft.\1'! ''r.!~ 1----------11
"'r>eks nr more. Send 1n C'rochl'I, knit. etc. Free THOROBREDS-REAS, ~111.rian r..1artln, the DATLY du'rction!I, ;;6c. Rae., brff'd, show 99.l-4Uof PILOT. 412, Pattem Dcp1 .. I Tu111an1 i'.f$1.Cramt! Book.
232 \Vei;t l8U\ ~.. NelY Bas!!'. lancy knots, pat-HO~Baclt: Bay area, Yo1k N.Y. 1011. Print tern~. $1.00. Board, feed. cleanln&, dally
NAft(I-", ADDRESS Wllh ln.•li.nt l 'rorl'lel Book -exereiae, ~7-7083
ZrP. srn; and STYLI:; l.A'flrn bv pictures! Pat· PALAMINO Quarter Gelding NU~IDP.::R. h•l'T!•. $1.0CJ. S37S. Western tack $100.
SEE ?-TORE Q u 1t'k
1
Cornpk!tt ln!\tant Gift Book 1 ~67i~>-4<~~17~al~t ~0~,30~,~~~~ll F"Mhlona and choose l'.llll' -more than 100 gUlJ -
PQttern rree from our S:l 00.
Spring.SUmmer Catalog. All Con1plclc Afllwl Boole ..
sizes! Only 50c Sl.OO.
lNSTANt SEWJNo BOOK 18 Jiffy Hu~ Book• • 50c:.
$i'¥ todny, wear tomorrow. ~k ur 1',t, PTlae Afihan•. J 1Ba:.;•~lliJiii, iiG.iinoi'iiriieliiiiiiiii900i
INSTANT FAS tt JO N QutJt 8'1nk 1 • 16 oattems. -
BOOK -•lundttda (I f 50c. tut001. tact& St. :'.•Jlitum Quilt Book t, ..
f. good want ad Is a good in· q~11t1 fl)f' Tod1.1'1 Uvlnc ..
1~ment. lS heau6tul patlemL OOc.
' I I
I
IS Ft. OUTBOARD, 40 h.p.
Evit\.r\lde bit wheel tilt
trailer, tih 10lid n1a~~
Clt n ''L" hull, <:over. $600. ·-·\
..
1973 GMC
VANS-PICKUPS
4 WHEEL DRIVES--JIMMYS
(tQ -3 TON CAB & CHASSIS
AT CHEVY· FORD PRICES
Brand New & Used Open Road • Harvest • 4 Star
Slid• 011 Campen -Al Low Al $595
--
I
I
GEORGE ZIMMERMAN'S
COSTA MESA DATSUN
*
ANNOUNCES
FREE
REFRESHMENTS
PRIZE DRAWING
FOR FREE
10 SPEED BIKES
* DEMO $ALE * • Low Mileage • Exec. Cars •
J29417
'72 510 4 Dr. Automatic •
)5 t561
'72 510 2 Dr. Automatic •
)<4.507
'72 510 4 Dr., 4 Speed • •
121201
'72 510 2 Dr. Automatic •
• • •. .
• • • •
• • • •
• • • •
$2395
$2195
$2295
$2195
I
• $1995 ' 12 7711
'72 510 4 Dr., Stick • • • • • • •
ALL HAVE RADIOS
'71 1200 2 Door • • • • • • • • • $1595
AM a..119, c ..... , y.,.• '''" 'fl.yl loof, U .. nHI. #IJtJ4t
'71 510 2 Door • • • • • • • • • • $1795
'
AM ...... Side 111.t.U ... Lail Newt •z•4JOt
Above Prices Reflect
Mo1:1ey Savings
FULL PARTS & Sl!R~ICE
COSTA MESA DAYS N
2845 Harbor llvd.
I Mlle So" Sin Dltgo Froewoy
Costa Mesa 540-64 0
DAILY PILOT :Jlf ----·-~ .. -
l§ll ~ ....... !§)I -~., .... ~=l~~-~.,~"";;l§l~"'~i ~l ~-~-~ .. ~l§J~l~I ~-~-'""E,..~l~~"'!i~I=~~ ..... :-.... ~ ~,,, .. I~ I l~A~·~""~"~·.!N~--~--...!"°~A~Ul!,!•~·!N~ ... ~WL--.!"°~l;A.;.;-~~;;:;u;;'""~;;;:;;;;;;'-"°""l!~A~ut~o!!•::..· ,!:U~M<1!!_ __ _!990~1 Autoa, u...i 990 iul!I, 61!5 * A""-UIOl"'-',_u._...i=--...;990,;..; ~A:;::Ut;;:O~/~u::...i:;:: __ .....;990:.;,;: Autos, Used
--.... ..... .... 1§1 _ =
990
OFRCIAL
GRAND OPENING I
JAN. 23 ·24 • 25 ·26
Harb~aulnard
af Car•
SEE BACK PAGE OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT
CHIYlOLET CHRYSLER CORVAIR DODGE FORD MUSTANG PONTIAC
CL-.. '66 DODGE Wq, 383. Auto '71 .,. .. ' WCllJOn '118 Ch""1" N .. Yorker. c MECllANie SPJ;X:IAL Ex. "'"'· ms. euy, CJO VS, automaUc, pt, atr, (99S-Dr 1rr, Jtxtra Nlce whh 1982 Co'rvalr, auto trans, Box 551, Balboa or 1ee at C
DBA.), -Factory -Afr, P.S., ~.B~P. --ftdio/ hea~r, l(lib(t ~. "So:<•;_ __ ----~---
ONLY 52195 ~],.~ %;,,=7"~:C c:~: ;:";1!.~"fi;;f. work ""' car FALCON
HOWARD Cflevrolet trot, P1:emiun1 Parelll Rnd· , 586-5950 ---------·I
Newport Beach la.I TU'es, Beautlful light CORYmE ·oo 1'~ALCON wagon ~ Runs
MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree yeilow finish. MUSI' SEU.. good, looks bad. $35. A!lk for
U$o055S l:. J:!!: 1=. Blvd., '65 STING~YJ new ena. ~ _T:;"'c::..· 96='..,..:4::.77:_ __ _
,.URl'U ,.Eo,LE '"""· AM/.-M. R«r """" FORD . CONTINENTAL P/W. Pvt.-·~ ------l'UWR -1 9 6 0 CORVETrE-Cherry '12 MARK IV conct. 301 ena:, ti.fl.ii. Beat A '81 Camaro Coupe priced
to be eone by Mond1l)'. Only
$989 for th1a 4 speed
machine by Chevrolet
CUPV848).
GUSTAFSON
Uncoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
• Hunttnaton Beach
S42-ll8C4 * (213) -"Hom9 of the VilcN\g''
'68 Camaro :Z.28
V8, 4 speed, radio, heater,
mag wheels, w'de oval tires,
stereo tape player, low
Sparkling buJ'rundy wlth a ofter. 615--1187 art 5 pro 7fD'firatf' '""· '""Equip• COUGAR
$7195
,.. . Allen
l iiJ Oldsmobile
l:..:.. Cadillac
1981 MERCURY COUGAR
XR-7. $1250. Call after 6 pm.
552--0169.
1967 Cougar-P/1, P/b, auto.
New tires. 1.Dokl!I sharp.
Sll.50. EVl?I: 644-il.35
1969 COUGAR XR-7
Air, radials\ Xlnt eond.
Call 6C+-OJl69
DODGE
'89 FORD 8 pe.ss. Chateau
Oub W8iQn, long wheel
base. fully eq uipped
w/radlo, heater, auto trans
fapt., air cond.. xlnt int.,
fine cond .. good titts. $2575.
642-8372 Ask for ?t1r. 'i an·
l<>rn.
"r.? FORD Gran Torino, wgn.
351 eng., psJpb, AC, h-SUfip,
radio, rack, ctsy/grp, tint
a:Jass, knil \jnyl seats, pld
cond., 27,000 gd ml. Askin&
$3~. Prl/pt)' 80-5738
tcrro LTD, Xlnt l'Ond, P/S,
P/B, air eond. Lo mileage,
wan-ant)' $1850.
'67 Ford 10 Pass.
Wagon
Sharp with all the extras,
P.S., P.8 ., P.W., air oond.,
rack, 11ew bl:akC$.
S795
'68 Ford 6 Pass.
Wagon
~·lth rebuilt enatne &: trans.
MAKE OFFER
TED'S MOTORS
2014 J.J'arbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
'66 V-8, auto, $675. Accept LE MANS '68 p/s p/b ale,
older cat, freezer, Col TV, LilUwh., an1/ln1 radio,
vac p/pymt, ot bid&, auto, landau-top, re a 1·
66-1219. fendcor dan18.l(t'd, pl'L. $815.
e FOR sale, '65 Mustang V8, I -'8:.:41:_-6.183;::::::·~----
new tires, good l-ond . $800. '67 rrREBIHD -100, by orig 354"11-844,::;.~3.,,_=~~~~-I 011•ncr1 xlnt l'Ol\l.I. Loil.dcd.
'76 MUSTANG", 21.000 n1i's, Air. slerco 1ap.._. drck, Jl"'I"
11.ir l.'Ond, v-8 cny, palt' brJ..Ji, s11xr1ng gold
yellow. 675-149'1. w/black top. 5'11-4U9 • * 1966 ~'1U!;t111ig Con-Le MB.Ms '66, 6kt seats, auto,
verttble. Original owner. pwr, nu tires, R/H, a/c,
Gooll_COndition. b13-4976. best offer. 5-1(}..JSOO bef 9:30,
'63 MUSfANG . V-8, auto. aft "'--~----
Xlnt tires, bal!ery, eng. '61i C<1tal1no 2' Dr hd top,
Quick sale, $5!0. ~94-3i65. au1on1, tiir, r/h, 11/s, p/b.
OLDSMOBILE Guoll l~lnd. S&l."1. 4!1-1-64.15.
=,..,..,=~64_S.._6_6_4~4 ~--I * OLDS '11'.l CuUes!I: Suprt'n1e
l9T1 LTD Country Squire 11ta. C.OUpe. air CQl'ICI, en1/lm
RAMBLER
196.J RAJ\JBLER Sedan, nina
good $150. WiJl., a lr cond. an1/fllJ stereo, mint rond. lo
stereo, P/wlndows, 16,000 milea&>e SW.O. 64-1-2750
ml. Take over pymnls. 644-2566
645-5722/536-3652 '70 OLDS, 4.J2' PS, Pv.T rlisc
5Ji..9639 ------T·BIRD
66 FORD WAGON brks. air cond. Still untl1•r '72 T-BIRD
1G-paasengu. V-8, auto, R/H, fact v.•arranty. Orig o1~n. Private P arty
2-wll,,)' tall gate, iOOCI llres. '"'""'12,,450""· °'H'O.Bco.,_53cc'c,6-44o'-"•"'-· I Dark saddle !e111hf'r interior.
1---~-~-~=~-~----~~I miles. CBYl.IOI) Autos, 1m)Ortod 970 Autoa, u...i. 990 SA YE SSS
San Dteao Ftwy at Avery
Pkwy, Laguna Niguel.
49$.0IOO 831-0800
CONT'L. '70 Mark II. A very
meticulously kept car. Low
mileage, all r x t r a s .
Sacraillce. only S.t~ !Ser.
7450). Dlr. · Call (TI4)
54S-4114.
644-2259 * 543·3691 or 544-3417 * '6!1 TORONADO, Like ne11'. Sprl·ial ortlrr walnut fire
1970 Dodge Challenger, V-8, '68 GAl.AXIE 2-dr. Fae a1r,
'""" P"· vinyl roof, P P/b 300 . 1 MERCURY Ali factory extras. Atn·f"n1. IJocly & 1i•ht>t•! l"<>\'crs "' 1,.-on-
Sacriflcc $2595. S.~l-81S9. 11·asllng textured vinyl top
'68 DELTA SS Olds, 1 owner, 400 l'tl. in. cngittc, .trulse ''---'---'----~~-VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport Be•ch
MacArthur mvd A .Jamboree
l3J.055S '68 vw SQbk. lu.,aae rack. CADILLACS
air oond. light blue, ex-1970 Cps &: Sed DeVUlea
ccll cnt 1'Unning con d . 5 to choose from
_,&l&-"--''='"'-------i PRICED FROM $3!95 '66 VW Sunroof, Excellent
l.'OOd. Only 49,IXXJ mi. New
tires, $725. 644-5767
'66 VW, nu ~Intl..~ tirea,
&: many xtru. $"f:>U.
S3U68S tEr Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
* '69 C/&PJUCE * . 2-dr, air. GOod cond. $1295
or make otter, 546-8539.
·n El Camino, 11,965
actual mllet. "111 power.
631-1926
1969 LINCOLN Cont. Hi
mileage, lo price. Xlnt.
oond, nu tires. $2400.
831--0379 .
'71 LINCOLN Contiental, 4
tlr, Loaded! Immeculate.
$4400. 6.19-1712 or f»S-5600.
CORY AIR
a lr/l'Olxl. $1900. 552-7949. s, , eng, vmy ---------roof. Pvt pty. MUST '71 DODGE Challenger, Must SELL!~ !168-4339 9 PASS Mercury Sla. Wagon
sell, xlnt t.-ondltlon, 17,000 1970. By owner. $1970.
ml. Pr!. ply. 842-9570 1008 LTD Wagon, air/cone!, Green w/n!dwood s Ides,
PIS. P/B 10 pan. lo luggage rack, 34,000 local '65 Dart Sedan, 6 cyl auto. niileage. radial tires. Xlnt miles. A-1 coru:I. 548-5703,
lop l'Ondition. $1750. l'Ollll'Ul, tilt st~ring 1vhcel,
646·8148 A~I/f'J\1 s!eJ'co radio & nu
'&.'i f'-85. air eond, PIS, i ::ivall power optio.ns. $4700.
P/B good. til't's. o1·tg or nu1ke offer. ~vcs arter
O\\'ner. $8.'10. 5434240 aft 5. ti P~t S:%-7~. ~~!t ~ini~~.~=· rond. $1250. 642-4411 • 2612' S.E. f.1esa Dr, Upper
'69 LTD. A Beauty! 2 Dr. Bay '68 CUTW\SS, R&H, fact air,
f.1UST &ell! '50 l ~ T. Dodge HT ,,. E Pow A/C I owner, XL cond $995
'70 T Bird, Sunroof, every
factory option. Perfect!
$3200. 54~51.lO'J. Van panelled, great to fix To~ ;'ncl. ~e 0~~. Pvi MUSTANG 683-3521 I 833-8~86
l1P· Sacr. $200. 962-9603 ply. 644-l!m ---------·l'64 OLDS 88, full pov.-er, a ir,
CORVAIR Eniine, 150 Turbo '64 Dart, 72,000 miles, 3 FORD V-8 lll69 Futura, very '66 MUSTANG·V8, 289. Auto. xlnt tires, dented fender,
Chafre, trans a: rear end. spd, 2' dr, '73 smoa: device, clean, k>w mUeage, 1 owner. R.lH, atereo 1pkn. Gd S300. ~
l969 Thundr1·bird, full P"T &
air. Vrry 1,.'00d cond. $1695
499-3969
·n VW Sundial Camper.
13,500 miles. Pop-Top. Xlnt
cond. ~1038 aft 5.
COMET Aftor 5, 551-8451 S400. S<&-1196. Auto Ira°" "'"'"'• $1295. Ph ~~~ •• "l""'· $650, m"'t sell. PINTO San Dleao Frwy ilt AVerJ Vacancies cost money! Rent '69 Charger·A/C, A/T, new 1 ~·~13-1429'-'-""--------~Laguna N~j-'64 Comet, rebU eng l trans. )'OUr house, apt., store tires. Yellow w/cream lop. '66 Ford convtbt Runs great. '67 MUSTANG , good conct, PINTO -'"11 2 DR. Sedan, 4 1963 VALIANT V-200 4-dr.
VALIANT
'66 VW SUndlal Camper.
fi1ech. perfect. Cabana,
Xlnt. conct. 6'16-2265 evt!s.
4 .OIOQ auto trana. pwr 1teer., aak· bldg., etc. thru ·a ~Pilot ,:"'=''-' co'1:::1"=.'o_· 96>-=_,==~~ Radio, heater. S 3 0 0 . 42,000 miles. spd. Low mi. 2000 £C. Xlnt Auto trans. slanl fi t>ng. 01ig
·72 Eldorado . Uke -new, lng $345 or otter. 645-f.635. ClaulHed Ad, ~ Seu itlle items . . 642.5678 499-1671. ;ll::.000=·-~---'846-=;o'895~ ~oo=nd:.:._,l1500'7."''-'"""-2--"1.225=-·--,= owner, $295. 5f6-859.1
VOLVO After 6: 64&-9163. fully equipped. l9,!XXI mi.: liAr·~·toa~,~~New~~~~9ilOfA~u~to~•·~~Newiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9iiilO~A;u~tiii•~•·ii~N·w~iiiiiiii~9~8~0Aiiu~t~o~•·~-~~iiiiiiiiiiii"°~iiiA~utoo~~ .. liiNt"( . , 980 Au tot, New 980 Autos, New 910
moo. eau days:
821
-8130: iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~i!iiii!!iii!!!piiiiiiiiiii~I ~---
VOLVO ·12. 145 E Wa"' fuel '%w~~~ooo 0::::: ~ BA u ER BUICK e lnj: 19Km: '""'" 5 "u S<&-803! bh'n 8:3£>.S I I I
P.l1ch X radials: xlnt sha1-c; CADILLAC '67 .sc"">d~an-~de • •
IOlv blu bk + IO'k 642-31111. Ville $1500. Xlnt cond. AH 1
'70 Volvo 144 S, am/fm, xtras call 644-4894 aft 5pm
stick. $1195 '' best oUer. CAMARO nnan _
I 7'<9':.:-888-=:::::1·:.,_---~= I·-------........... Autos, Used 990
AMX
* '68 AMX·P/s, P/b, auto.
28,000 ml. Clean. 642-2303 or
49-HOlJ.
BUICK
'70 Can1uro 350, air, p/s,
p/b, vin top, console, etc.
low mi.. l ownr, under
wrnty, new tires. $2600.
494-7155.
'67 Camaro ss-t 1pd-350
eng.-Mags & headers $llS5.
Sti-2083 between 5:00 le 6:30
p.m.
•51 BUICK WAGON. Nu ..,.. CHEVROLET
dials. Radio I heater. No ---------sm~ ~in Ana st., '70 Malibu
Costa fifeQ, 5-16-4478 \'S, automatic, ps, air, buck·
'64 Sh."YLARK, very clean, rt seats, console, vinyl roof
S400 or best offer. l207AGCJ
642-30.15 """ 5 rm. ONLY S2395
'68 RIVIERA, Excel, Looks HOWARD Chevrol•t
sharp, full P'Nl' & air, stereo Newport BeKh
S21SO. 642--4810 MacArthur Blva· & Jamboree
CADILLAC 13S.OS55
YOUR ONLY
FACTORY
AUTHORIZED
CADILLAC
DEALER
·Largest selection of CadU·
laca In Orange County.
Sales-Leasing.
... Nabers · l!!iil Cadillac
2600 HARBOR BL.
COSTA MESA
540-9100 Open Sunday
'71 EL DORADO
Beautiful metallic brown
' with matdllng vinyl top, air
~! lleteo, It tuUy equipt
(GAA122)
$6495
,.,,..,,. A lien t~'f'r Oldsmobile .'..-J Cadillac
1911'.1 CHEV, Conooun estate,
Sta \Vgn, 3 seat, pwr steer,
auto, pwr disc brakes, AM·
1''1tI slCrco radio, Wl steer
"''heel, luggage rack, panel·
if1¥, air cond. Has 1973
Ucense. e.skJng $ 2, 3 7 5 .
55.1-41161
·n EL CAMINO. Xbrt cond,
many exlras. See to ap-
preciate. $2700. $l)O. below
blue book. m-9760 after 6
or wknds
'70 Monte Carlo
Cpe.
VS, automatlc, ps, air, buck·
et teats, COIUIOle, vinyl roof,
radio. fZYK105l
ONLY S2695
HOWARD Chevrolet
Newport Booth
l\lacArthur Blvd &: Jamboree
833-4555
'65 IMPALA SS. P/s, P/b,
R&:H. Dlx Interior, x1nt
tires. Runs great. $525. '4H4n
·n MONTE Carlo, ps/pb,
San Diego Frwy at Avery AC. $2850. or trade for older
Pkwy, La&una Niguel. truck or motorcyle + 495-0800 131-0800 money. Negotiable. 548--8454
{oo CPE OcVllle, full pwr, '65 Impala S.S-Bckts, cons,
fact air. Gd cond. $1DI. air. Fair cond. $450.
Call 646-6385. 5.57~ aft 5:30 pm
/'i5 COUPE de Ville Xlnt 1968 Chevy Malibu, clean,
cond. HI mileage All new tires, $850.
power. Make offer. 642-7947 * 493·9116 *
970 Autoa, Imported 970
AS A PARTICIPATING MEMBER OFi THE
COSTA MESA'S HARBOR ,BOULEVARD OF CARS
,THURSDAY . • FRIDAY
SPECIAL G"R.AND OPENING PRICES
1973 OPEL GT .
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'
4 ''"'' hen•., tint'-' 91••-. AM r1clio, 1peci•I 1port wit.els, recll11i119 111h, con·
ce11ed h11clti9hh. Op11'1 be1t. OriY• 0111 tocl1y. ll044J661.
s3399 or '8213 ~ 11;;:.
1973 REGAL HARDTOP
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Auto1111tlc tr .. 111., pow1r di1c br1lt11, pow1r if11rin9, AM r1dio, wfilt1w1lt tlr11,
t inted 91111, wire wh11I coY1r1, ylnyl top. 811r911ndy with wfiit. top. l l21 1711). ~ s3995 or '9867 "' ...... a....PyMt.
1973 BU~CK LE SABRE SPORT COUPE
' . . -
,
S,.,,.t Co11p1. Power 1teerln9, ro-r 4bc. br1ke1, 1ir cortclitloni119, whit-•ll
tlr11, t!nt.41 91111, d1l1111 whH co,,1111 bumper 9111rcf1 & 1tliP1. Wo11't l11f 1t
eur low, tow ,rice. IJCI 1 lllf) • ...
s4395 or •111 19 i!:. ".;:.
1973 ELECTRA CUSTOM 4 DR. HDTP.
'
,• '
WIN . A 10-SPEED
BIKE!
. "'1 OJlj Tt.a COUPON 1M 41po1il ;ft pfi11 i... •' ••1 HorH• 1.,,1 •• .,4 .f C.. D.tlw , •. f.HY 0.1l1• ... 11 .,,..,4 1 ID-1p•14 t.icycl• lo ,...,,.i.c~y ........... 411 (TWfl41y·W1'•••4ty·Tlw.,4ty-Ft;41y, J••~••y Jl.Jl.fli·l•I.
........ It I,..,., Melo .Cty, priu <...,po,,. ... wit bo 4ep11il14 lfy 1110 ,...,.
..... -.~ ........ 111! bt I''"'"' lo,,.;., •t ,.. .. ~ ... ••<1111ry. ::~,. .. :-.
COSTA MIU'S
HA1801 IOWYAlll Gf UIS
-,.ID DU.MMe -'.
.,__.., JJ ·M ·ll·U
.36 10·1PllD BIKIS ... 36J;i",;
. .. ~,.." F;lt 1wl 1n4 b1 • •lill.t ' '1}~ : ·
_. __ . --.,--NAME .
AOOR~SS . •\ . •. ----··---~-. . . .. ~ . : . -~ "~·
B•uer Buick along with th• other m•mbers
h••• sperit more than • y•ar in planning
better ways to serve you better through
orgenized efforts ... come in during th is
big 4 day kick-off. and you'H 19rff tho
1mpht1is hes been put on covrtosy -. con-
1 • venience -reliability.
""
QUALITY
USED
CARS .
'69 Buick Cuatom Skylark $1995
Cpe. Autom1tic h•n1., pciw1t tfe11ln9,
pow1t br1k1•, fector, 1ir, 1ictr11111ly cl1111,
I owner, low mll11.
'71 Buick Est1te Wagon $3895 t P1••· Fvtl power, f1ctory 1lt, roof tick,
011ly 11,000 ll'lil11. It h11 IYerythlo9 you
c111 th ink ofl 1911 EXAI -
'68 Olda 98 $1895 4 doo,. Firtl pow11r I f1clory 1lr.
IWXP 7441 .
'71 Jeguu Vl2 $6495 2 +. 2, Only 19,000 mll••· Lr•• fl twl F11tl
power l f1ctory 1lr, I 7 I I OFA )
70 Jaguer XJ6 $5995 Only 25,000 11\1111, Ulto 111wl F11U power,
ftch.ry 1lr. 1029 ISYI
169 VW Bui $1695 ) ,,, .. , Lilte N1wl (172 A61iil
'
72 BUICK SKY L:ARK $3395 Full pow1r I fect"V 1lr, Only 12,000
1111111, 1125 FEN )
72 Buick Rlvlero $4895 ):1111v l11111ry 1q11l111. F11H power I f1ctory
1lr, &0/40 \•lh, chrome wh11lt, 1m tler10,
Only 14,000 mitt•. -
-
'68 Olds Cutl1st $1695 F11lty 1~11lp~d. IMI, f1ctory t it, po•tr
1l11rln9, power bt1k11, bucket teth, 11111•.
tr1n1, jVfO 4)91
'68 Riviera $1995 F111t , ..... ,, & f1ctery 1lr. tXIC 067 1
IDIEn&·
• J~guilr
' ,,
•
'
/
I r DAJLY Pl t Tutlday, Janua.-y 2), 197)
-
COSTA
I
E
·. · ~. TU .
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~ 111111 II
: * IF M N
T
H
E
s
A
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LOOK FOR THIS EMBLEM
AT THESE COSTA MESA
DWERS
+ ..
• · Bauer ·Buick
2925 Hai buf Blvd.
Connell Chevrolet
"' 2828 Hcabor Blvd.
<is~ Mesa Datsun
. Jlt~buf Blvd.
Dive ' Pontiac · •
'
•
•
J. •
•
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•
I .. .. . . -.... -~ .. -. ./•
··RBDR· BO.UtE¥
• I
ESDAY • THURSDA
•
,. ry, 23-24-25~2 • ' t .
r 'I
' < " -•
•
-:-+ . .: .
•
' + •
• •
• • • " ' • ~ •
• •
\
+·
DEALERS USIED
PLANNING Iii Id
ANIZED EFFORTS •••
DAY KICKOFF, AND
POT ON COUR11SY -
+
•
10-SPEED -
•
• •
• . t . • • • • •
«»UPON •"" d-it In prile bo•-•1 any H•rl>or loul• .. rd
•• : ·Ev•ry O.el1r will .-wwd •.I o..,,.ff bicycle to '°"'' lucky
•y ITu .. d•y-Wodnffdoy-Tltursday.fTidoy, J•nuuy 2!-24-25-261 •
p.m. ••ch Gay,· prize coupons must be d1p01 it1d by 7:10 p.n,.
u n11d not be present to win, no purch1s1 fl1C1ss•ry.
.. COSTA MISA'S
HARBOR BOllEYAID
36
NAME -----~f§il
ADDRESS __ _
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-Your Hometown
•
San ~le1n-eJ1ie
Capistrano EDITION Dally Paper
.• VOL. 66, NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, 44 P"SES ORANGE COUNTY, CALrFoRNIA THU!lSD AY, JANUARY. 25, 1973 TEN CENTS
Coast Initiative Stalls Clemente Pier Work ' •
7
..
San Cle.mente builder A.L. Wulleck
provided tbe·city with an interesling prod
this week ln an effort to see the start of
eonst~cUoo of a new pier entrance -
aome valuable free services.
But WuHeck's offer of a cost-free
demolition of the 'Old pier entrance might
be diffJcult to accept -at least for the
Ume being,
' The Coastal Initiative, said coun-
cilmen, ls the major hangup. ,
The city, Jike any other interest seek·
Ing to do coastal construcUan, needs a
,_permit from the Regional Coastal
'
:Tie Halts
~orthrup's
Ouster Bid
A move to oust a public member of the
Loeal A' g en c y J.'ormatlon Commission
Wednesday by Third District SuperVisor
Ralph Diedrich failed in a tie vote. -
The acilon was ·::Im~ at Stanley
Northrup, former San Clemente mayor,
Mmed the public member after the
death· of Charles Pearson more than a
rear ago.
Northrup had served ror five years as
a city representative but he ~t lhe post
fhen ht was defeated for reelection in
~n Clemente.
· t.' Diedrich, who erilphasir.ed that his
i;nove was ~not aimed at Northrup
persooa.Uy, said the public member
'
Protection c.ommis&ion before it could
launch a renovation project.
WuHeck surprised couocllmen this
week witb tbe offer under the auspices of
the county Buljdmg Trades Couticll.
The group has a "'""am whereby
some free strv.ices are available !or
publlc-ucreatlooal project. only. -
One ccasao for the offer. Wulf eek said,
was his own personal dislike of the ex-
isting pter entrance -a Depreision--tra
facility badly in need of replacenient. ..
"Just wa_lk through It some nights dur-
'
--should .truly-be-one-;-!Mt a former -city
~epresentative might be · prejudiced t'oWard a municipal side of disputes.
Councilman Louis .. Red" Reinhardt
lmmedialely jumped to the defense
saying~ •ia man who bas aerved in
f1Pvemmtnt knows ' the piotilem&." He
p(I~-out that the alt<nlate -public
member llln. Roe Burnap of Fullerton
had ne~r held public offt~. vHe said
Mn.. Burnap bas sat for Northrup on
many occasions.
· Northrup, defending his positJon said
that Diedrich'•-reasoning could be a~
~lied to the board of supervisors with a ~le that, no former city official would be
eligible for the county's governing body.
!>.-odrlch is a former Fullerton city coun-
CJ]man.
• 1 COmmissioner Robert Battin who has
Qrged that the public member be w!UlQut
f'~ clty and county ties said a fonner
G!tY councilman would aho\, bias towards
s1tiea. He suggested that future a~
pointees should be from unincorporated
Meas. ~ ·Diedrich's move was recommended by
the 1972 Orange County Grand Jury.
Northrup said the grand jury recom-
mendation was idiotic.
In the· showdown vote, Diedrich and
iBattln moved to oust NorthrJF and city
'tePJ'esentl(ives Reinhardt and chairman
Cliftol'l'Miiler, mayor ol. Tustin supported
blm.
Diedrich followed with a motion that
fUture public m~mbers should not have held appointee or elective office for five
"tears previous to appointment to the
11'..AFc. This motion passed !-1 with Miller
supporting. .
'i:: Deputy county counsel Victor Delterue bk! the action would not be binding on JUbiro commis:slooers.
Volcano Spurts
Lava Into Ocean; ..
,Sea 111 Degrees
., VEST!IANNAEYJAR, Iceland (UPI)
T" New streams of .&100,, lava rolled in 'JP ti"! -todly; rallln( the woter lemperature to m o!Wees Fahninbett.
1 DAILY PILOT~ PM" Wlaee · ,.... '
· eharles Nauma~ Jr., 14, o! San
Clemente w~ tin route to ~t
shop for a beak trim for ~.s
parrot Pedro, 4-year-old Mexi-
can yellowbead. "He can fly,"
said Nauman, "but nobody has
told him Y.et."
U.S. Announces
End to Vietnam
Orders for Gls
WASjnNGTO/i (AP! -The United
States t($y swung into high-level
diplomatic talks leading to a Vie.tnam
cease-fire going into ieffect Satu,rday.
(See related.stories, Page 4)
All sides:i.burried preparations for• im-
plementing the complicated peace set-
tlt:m.ent; including -a. stop . otder at the
Pentag<>n on .virtually all American Gls
previously ordered to Vietnam.
Only some soldiers with specl&t 1:1£ijls
are to travel to Vleinam during the final
three days of direct U.S. involvement in
the fighting. •
Also in Washington, Secretary of State
William P. Rorers Dlet separately with
Canada's foreign minister, Mi\chell
Sharp, and -pitb U.N. Secretary Gen.
Kurt Waldheim. ·
RepreseJiting ooe of the four countries
supplying contingents for the in-
ternational control group supervising the
JSff PEACE, Page Z)
,
PrisoJJ.et List '
~ppears Today
In Daily Pilot .
. "The .sea water ts 10 hot, 1t Is bird to
kt!j!p the .q!nes. properly cooled." the
-ellfllnOer ol a pilot boat said as the boat
·~ an insptctton tour of the Heymaey !iarbot ar<a the third largest· on Iceland
lulll-1 cente; !or the-Important lllhlng In-.fl"""' , The DAILY P!Lm' today prints on Cb'its of steem billowed over the Pagt 14 the most complete list avlllable
town, ma~g It 4angerous to land at the -although it ii known to bo Incomplete
jlny ilmitp ., the bland off the Jcdand -of American war priooner1 and ml,..
coast ., ing ~rvkeinen.
.-FJve houses were on fire or bad bumtd . U.S. otbclals edlphasized that the mere
today, Ianlt<d by !av~ rrom the Helgaf)ell listing or 1 name. or Ihe abo<llce of a
•alcuo tbat erupted wllbout '"'"''llfl name, doeS not -any confirma\liln lllk -it. One -collapsed under of the pri>car'utatus, or any change.
~ from a lava stream. They noted tblt lbe list ls ~ a new
'rho 5,000 or IQ townspeople were one, but Ind-the r.flut lnfonutjon f--~~ou.t*!-J":'*;;n>a"'a:l,,lfli~~~to-.jltnow~o1b,1 · Usts complil!d ~ tbO !DlinJend. some were allowecl · ~ DeWIP.I ......, iotlay !or t few bourt to collect valuable and 11tDOt radio broadcosts.
"'"'""'"•• The U.S. and other pa!1lu 11 lhe -7l"itio,-..;,i to io, how lortg the tirupdon ftre a.,.......t ore to mltanp !lliii•
• )l>iay 111t. JC oto11c1 --wMD: or 111111 sa_,. It Is not known llow • ,...., .. Aid 1 polollc:al upert the names .., the lists wm be n16
the ftoykjovtlt U-lf· public. • " The lilh lreulni plBllll, -U., M CallfiJmla. Im the most ,..,.. in the
..n..flllll of Iceland'• lllhlna tndultry, eompi!Olloo on Pqe 14, and 10Veral ore f -(S.. VOLCANO, Pip 11 from Onnp Coonty.
ing the winter and you'U see why," be
said.
"There's crowds.of loiterers there and
it's simply scary.'~ be said.
Perhaps the soonest his offer could be
accepted, councilmen learned, would be
at least 60 days.
That is the approximate time periQd
·which Mayor Arttiur Holmes predicts
before the coastal comtnission (of which
he is a mem!Jer) would be able to begin
passing permit requests.
That time factor, however, places the
entire project in yet another bind.
Even if the city were able to reCeive
state pcrmlss:ion to build the new en-
trance, it could not complete the project
in time for summer.
"It looQ like another year's gooe down
the drain on this project," lamented
Councilman Wade Lower.
Councilmen have about $16;000 m-band-
lo ~the work on -the entrance.
But an overworked engineering staff in
city hall bas been unable lo do the
deslgnlng in·house.
Recently councilmen agreed to fann
out the work to private enterprise.
But the first designer offered the job
turned it down.
Erie Boucher, the designer of the
lifeguard building . and commwiily
clubhouse, said he believes an at--grade
crossing would be the only solution and
added he could not, In good faith, design
an "ln~erim'.' project.
Thal lelU!>!> matter back in the hands -
of cowicUmen this week.
The council now has several opUon~:
-Return to Sacramento with renewed
,!
requests for sta te approval of an at·
grade corssing of the Santa Fe tracks
with safety gates to protect beach
vi sitors. Previous attempts have failed
dismally because of violent opposition .
by the Santa Fe management.
-It could attempt to rush the permit
p<.ssage _through the CQaStal commission
and take up Wulf~ck's offer in hopes of
be'ating the summer crowds.
~r, it coqld wait until after summer, ;
hope that Wulfeck's offer still stands and
complete the project in time for the rush
during summer or' '74.
Intensive Viet Fighting
' . . -
Goes On as Peace Nears ~
Officials
May Obtain
B-eac·hfront
Poche Beach . - a popular surfing
beach in county t~rr.jtory pear tht. north
end of San lllelilem' -nifgbl 611icially
become a pubUet'strarid; San Clemente Cl· J
ty a,WlCilmen ~this week.
The !P'periled beachfront bad been
earmarkel:t fol private development
recently -projects which if completed
would mean no public access to the
. shoreline from Poheny to San Clemente's
Estacion Beach.
DAI\. 'Y PILOT llllff P!W11
A . Star is Born
But City !\1anager Kenneth Carr told
cou ncilmen Tuesday. that county
supervisors are considering a feasibility
stu dy on purchasing the small section of
beachfront which oHers good sport to
surfers.
Councilmen agreed unanimously to
support such a county study.
, Actor Michael Callan cuddles a lion cub at Irvine's Lion Country
Sifari during a break in the filming of a new movie, "Frasier the
Sensuous Llon." For some exciting scenes from the film, turn to
Pijge 3.
There are complications, however.
In the center of the beach section is the
Shorecliffs Beach Club, and the only off-
s•reet parking in the beach zone belongs
to members of that private club. San Onofre Plant Critics . . • Spokesmen for the Shorecliffs
Homeowner's Association told coun-
cilmen that members are extremely con-
cerned about the ,fate of the colony's
private parking lot near-the comer of El
Caminfi Real and Camino Capistrano. ·
Will Bring Up Evacuation
At present, several stretches of the
beach are acc~ble through a. sub-
terranean series of staitWiy1 and
catwalks installed along a Dood ·control
drain.
The exact jurisdiction of the access,
however, is confused, and ownership
along the beach is Complex as well.
Supervison this week agreed to a 30-
day delay on any decision on the
feasibility study -a delay brought about
In part b•· their desires for an opinion
fror.-tbe city, Carr said.
He added that there seemed "a very
strong chance" for a joint application for
federal ·grant funds -the city and coun-
ty being too appUcants -for eoougb
cash to buy the 1,500 front feet of beach.
Sie
Opponents ~ to pf ans to . bUild two new
nuclear reactors at S· ,1 Ooofre today
vowed to resurrect lhe· luue of emergen-
cy evacuations when federal bearings on
the plant prooosal resume nextMarch in
San Clemente. ~
Mrs. Lyn Harris Hicks, the leader of
too Sooth Coast '!l'pohen!.i to too billior>-
dollar reactor protect, saia that evacua-
tion times and specific population
estlmates gtven by utility witnesses last
\\-'eek were "way off." ·
Speclali!ts testifying for Southern
Catifomla Edison' and San Diego Gas and
Electric companies told the Atomic Safe-
ty and Lloem:ing Board that If a nuclear
"incident" were to take place at the
plant that required evacuation JXJpula-
Angel
Dog Quits City to Oppose Yorty
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The do( ~Y be man's beat friend . but for Mayor
Sam Yorty, Angel Goodman Is a tumcoal poodle .
Angel came to prominence abouL a year ago whetl "&he" was appointed e
member of the Mayor's Community AdviaQry Board. lier. muter. Barr)' Good·
man, told a-friend he could get anyaie appointed to the mayors colIUll1'!kln-
even his dog.
BE WAS aroBT. Yorty approved An&el's appolnlm<nt, grousing later that
-wblle Qoodma 11kl ....... wa a-relati ' dkfn!t-•r anything abotrt~ber-"-
bflag a dog. o
Yorty Wt Anpl m \he commlaakln bowever, notlng tblt maybe "she"
COllld oa'rJI lip lam eleclldn campaign. · '
' ANGEL -.O A NEWS confertnee Weltneoday. G«>dman Nld he was ac~
l!tg 11 her spoktsrMn to anOOW1Ct! that ''she" r~ to Join the campaign
ol former Polloe Chief Tom lledilln, who r,,...lri& agal111iYorty lor·mayor,
"as oUk:ial mucot."
•
I
lions along the South Coast could be
rnoved from harm within two hours.
"No one took panic Into accowit in the
projections. But Instead they forecast a
smooth, orderly evacuation of thousands
or person!!. C:O.-nmon sense says that It
just doesn't happen like that when
radioactive materiab are involved," said
Mrs. Hicks.
The moving of the hearings to San
(See ONOF~, Paft I)
* * * Scientists Say
Big Earthquake
Isn't P1·ohahle .
SAN DIEGO {AP) -"A major earth-
quake ls unlikely to occur near the San
Onofre Nuclear Geoerating Station ln
north San DiegO County, two nuclear
,cienUsll say.
The scientist, called as material
wltneues ln an Atomic Energy COm-
mlaloo hearing on two proposed ad-
ditions at the generating facility. both
discowlted an AEC safety report which
said U.t offsbore taUJting near the plant
wAI .Ult "active."
But the AEC. which bas continued lit
heortDp unW Marth t3 , did not allow the
testimony on '"'"nds that the joint
Opotalors ol Ille San Onofre station, the
Soatliem Calllomla Edlsoo Co. and the
Siii Qleco Gu & Elt<tMc Co .• bad ac-
cepted the AEC report as the basis for
the be•rtng•. '!'be AEC flndln&• dllCloatd this week
QJd 'tbe Sm Onofre offl_bore faultlng Wl\S
llllked to tlte tnatewood·NOWJlOrl faiilt to
the north and the R.,. Canyon litult to
(Seo DANGKJI, Page II
,_
Sl1ellings
Heaviest
ht 1 Month
SAIGON (UPI ) -U.S. warplq,nes
striking throughout Sou lh Vietnam and
the heaviest Communist shelling in near-
ly a month spelled no letup on either side
today ~th an official Vietnam cease.fire
less than three days away .
Neither .U.S. nor South ·Vietnamese of--
fciials iDade any secret of their: lnten~ to
keep filhtiug until the cease-fire takes
fecW~t<...,1--a.m.--Sunday-(.t...p.m. PST
Saturday).
"Until Sunday we'll do anything we
want to," said a Vietnrunese official.
"lbere bas been no change in mission ,"
said a ranking U.S. officer.
UPI correspondent Alan Dawson said
North Vietnamese gunners fired 4,000
artillery and mortar shells on South Viet-
namese paratroops and marines.between
sunset Wedne9day and sunrise today
near the destroyed city of Quang 1i'l' 435
miles north or Saigon. 1t was tM hel\'imt
shelling this month anywhere In Sooth
Vietnam . -U.S. command spokesmen said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 BS2 bombers hit
Communist positions in SOutb Vietnam in
the 24 hours ending at I o.1.m. today. It
\vas the first time the fighter-bomber
raids dipped below 300 since President
Nixon baited the bombing .Jf North Viet·
nam Jan. 15.
Rumor of around..the~lock curfews for
South Vietnamese cities as the cease-nre
app~oacbes have beer: spreading for days
and the first such curfew-was announced
today. To no one's surprise, it was for
Binh Dinh Province in the Coastal
Highlands, which statistically has always
been the least "pact!lcd" of South Viet-
nam's 44 provinces. ·
Orders from lhe province cbief, Col.
Hoang Dinh Tho, "'ere posted throughout
the provincf: keeping all people without
curfew passes, meanlnt neerty everyone,
at home from I p.m. today untU 6 a.m.
Sunday.
Four American Diers shot 4!;twn In
Laos were added today· to the olftcial
Indochina death toll, •bringing total U.S.
battle deaths in 12 years of lnbochina
warfare to 45,937. ·
.orange c ... t
Weatlaer
SOmewbat cooler on Fr!ilay Ii
the way the weatherlady reads It,
with mostly sunny skitl followlna
overnight ek>udlnesa alone the
Orange Coast . Higbl in the mid·
60s. lAws 1onight in the 40s.
lNSIDtl 'fUDA \'
1low are cht11 aoina to keep
llenf'11 Kis1inger doton on Che
farm aftt.r -e'1 .tet• Perte--ol'ld
lumunered out Vlttnarn peace
occord? s •• •torv, Page •.
·.
-" =';.·:,:'-~ ----. --" ,_.. -. _. ... _..., --. ...... -"'"" --.
! DAILY PILOT SC
Dana Point
Hearing
In Offing
Public hearings on Pme.ndments p~
posed to group dwelling and off·street
parking regulatlorui -'A·hlch some Dtma
Point residents contend are directed
chiefly at them -have been continued to
Feb. 13 by county planning com·
missioners.
1be commission also asked that
sometime before Feb. 13 that an in·
fonnational meeting be held in the Dana
Point area to allow citizen inpuj to lhe
plans.
That meeting bas DOI been scheduled.
Stuart Bailey, auistanl planning direc-
tor. suggested that Feb. 5 mlghl work
out.
The Dana Point meeting won't be a
public hearing, but rather a study session
for both the commission and ttsklents,
one planner said today.
An amendment to a section of the R-2
group d-.ffiling ordinance recommends
that the density be changed from 1,000
square feet per dwe!Ung unlt to 2,000
square feet per dwelling unit, effectively
cutting it in hall.
The amendment would atfect unin-
corporated areas throughout the county.
but a large concentration of R-2 mning
and small lots is in the Dana Point area.
Some residents in that area have ~
jected that the cut in density \\'OUld hurt
them economically.
The second issue, off-street parking,
"·ouJd also pertain to~ entire county.
One of the more controversial aspects
of the oU-street parking amendment is a
suggestion that the parking requirements
for multi-family residences be increased
from 1.5 spaces per unit to ,two parking
spaces per unit, both covered.
The current regulation! require that
one space be covered, but allow tbe half·
space lo remain uncovered.
Planners Okay
200 Palisades
Condominiums
A tentative tract map slxlwing more
than 200 condominium units on 30 acres
of Palisades land l'ect!ntly annexed to
San Clemente won approval from plan-
ning commissioners Wednesday.
The proposals by tbe Grant Land
Corporation of Anaheim call for 2U con-
dominium units on property lying
between the San Diego Freeway and
Camino Capistrano in the westerly fringe
of San Clemente.
The project next will go before city
councilmen.
One other major item as yet unap-
proved is the zoning on the land which
came Into the city with no land-use label
at all.
The Anaheim finn sought annexation to
the city several months ego and won the
merger recenUy from the county's Local
Agency FonnaUon Commission.
The tract map was one of severaJ pr~
prmed to comrnlssloners at a busy
meeting Wednesday.
One other major project, which was
delayed by commissiooen, calls for the
approval of 29 kits on a rldgeline above
the city golf course where estate homes
are proposed by the Douglass-Pacific
Corporation.
The project is part of the master plan
for the entire Presidential Heights pro}-
ect. Continued study and reporting on
several aspects of the tract by the city
staff was the reason for the postpone·
ment.
Yet another item on the commission
agenda )Illas poMponed.
Proposals by MacPherson Chevrolet to
exceed the city limit on si~n },eight by 11
feet wa s postponed indefinitely.
Spokesmen for the agency sought the
delay -the second one since the Issue
arose -because the sign is being
redesigned.
OMM•I COAn IC
DAILY PILOT
Tltl Otaftle CNll DAILY PILOT, w'ltll Wl'I~
11 <9fMllltd 1119 H.,...Pre1, II _.ltlllit J1t
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Tilt IM'lrltlMI "11111111"-111fll 11 at »O Weit
l•'I' ll!'9tt, Coil• Ma.I, C1 Hlernllt$. nut.
••hert M. Wetd
P1•1C1t11t •M P'llDtlf/ltr
J1ck •· Cvrl1y Vkt Pr•ld.,,t end Gtntr11 M.8111911'
lhtfll•t Kt1"il
Editor
l htM 11 A. M11rphh1\
Mlflltllll ~it«
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Presidential Widows ., ••
\Vitb the death of Lyndon J ohnson, the nation has no living ex·presi·
dents. Surviving cbief executives are (clockwise from left} Bess Tru-
man, i\1amie Eisenhower. Lady Bird Johnson and Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis. (See related story on Page 4.)
Ca.po District T'rttstee
Won't Seek New Term
San Juan Capi!ttano restaurateur Fred
L. Newhart Jr., a member of school
boards of trustees along the South Coast
since 1951, has decided to "throw in the
towel," be announced recently.
Newhart, thus, will llOt seek reelection
to his seat on the Capistrano Unified
School District Board of Trustee> In elec-
tiorui this April.
"I just figure it's time someone else
had a chance lo do the job," be said Olis
week.
Newbart's is one of three positiorui up
for eJectioo in April -a vote which wll11 be conducted in a radically different manner this year.
Voters last November decided to elect
their trustees at-large.
Previowly, the district had conducted
elections only in the districts represented
by each trustee.
Newbart's first post on a school board
was on the old Capistrano Elemen taiy
School District board in the early 1950s.
"Harold Ambeuhl (who recently retired
as principal of San Juan Elementary
School) was superintendent then and I
owe a heck of a lot to him for showing
me the ropes ," Newhart said.
Since the first stint on a board
Newhart has been deeply Involved in
education, not only in the South Coast,
but throughout the county.
He sat on panels which formed the
Sadd.leback Community College District.
On another, Newhart helped select the
location of a state college in the county
From Page 1
PEACE .••
Vietnam cease-fire, Sharp said Canada
"'iii send 176 observers anci 112 support
staff for a total ot 288 among the 1,160
total.
He said Canada, which has long ex·
perience In often unsuccessful peace-
keeping jobs like the one in Vietnam, will
stay for the 60 days American lroops are
withdrawing.
After that. a continued presence will
depend on ''"'hether 'A·e will be ef·
fective. ··
Waldheim said any peace-keeping by
the United Nations in Vietnam will de-
pend upon \\'hether the "participants
'A'ish us to play such a role."
FrotnPage l
DANGER ..•
the south -and 'A•as slill considered ac-
tive.
But Stewart Smith, professor or
geophysics and chal nnan of the graduate
program in geophysics at the University
of Washington, contended in his prepared
testimony tbdt the offshore faulting
would not sustain a major quake because
it CX11Si.sted of short folds and faults.
There must be c:onUnuous faulting along
lengths of at least 10 miles to generate a
large quake, he said.
Smilh said that even if a quake did oc-
cur along the Inglewood-Newport fault -
some 18 miles from San Onofre -It
would not harm the proposed additions,
wbicb would have a structural resistance
of 67 percent of lhe rorce of gravity.
A major Inglewood-Newport quake
\\·ould produce ground motion of less th1U1
50 perceiit of lhe force of grayjty, he
said.
The olher 9Cientist, ~fason Hill, a con-
su!Ung structural Rod petroleum
geologist, aald In his tettimooy that the
lnglewood·Newport fault Is really only a
"zone of dcfonnation ," which does not
-a facility which was built in Fullerton.
"One beck of a~ bas changed in
education since I f1r1l sat on a school
board," be observed.
"It's become an extremely complex
job these days ... nothing is simple, and
I find that I'm still learning."
Newhart, however, hinted that one
habit formed over the past 111 years on
boards might be difficult lo break.
'·All of a sudden my nights will be free
again. I don't know bow I'm going to be
able lo adjust lo that," be quipped.
• F,.._P.,.el
VOLCANQ ....
were emptied today of their: remaining
stock -tons of dried codliSh for
Portugal and Brazil where it b Used for
"bacalhao" stews.
"I am as horrified as anyone else over
this disaster," said Icelandic President
Kristjan Eldjam," who Dew here from
Reykjavik this afternoon.
Police and pilot boats patrolled the
harbor today, keeping shiploads ot
curious tourists from the mainland away
from the risk area. Landing by boat and
aircraft was restricted, but telephone
connections were restored agaln today
after being partly down since Tuesday.
A long volcanic rift opened across the
21h-mile wide island but was partly ftlled
with lava by this afternoon. One main
crater and several small craters were
still active, spurting out frre, smoke and
lava.
From Page.1
ONOFRE .••
Clemente, she added, would mean that
citizens most a f f e c t e d by the
developments at San Onofre could more
easily follow the progress of the intricate
hellrings. The first sessions took place in
San Diego.
Earthquake design st.rndards and other
safety matten will be taken up by the
·board during tbe bearings along the
South Coast scheduled to reswne March
13.
Several weetJ after the close of that
phase, the same panel will return to San
Clemente. and lake up the environmental
Impact upects of the licens~ application
for the reactors.
Mr. Lacouague
Last ·Rites Held
Requiem man was celebrated In Old
h11ssion San Juan Capistrano this morn·
ing for piooeer South Coast reJtdent ~
erre Lao:iuaaue, who arrived In the com-
munity in 1910.
1i1r. Lacouague, rt, who died Monday,
v.·as the father of San Juan fire Chltf
Jean Lacouague.
He wu a native of the Basses
Pyrenee.i, France, and flrlt worked u a
ranchhand ln tht San Juan valley. In 1920
he marrlC!d and bought 260 acres ol
walnut trees from Cornelio Ecbanique -
a fellow Basque.
The ranch later was oonm'led to
orangts and mnalns under famUy
own~rshlp and ope.ration.
• . pw the San 0oo1re .. 11e.
Mr. Lacouague leavea • hiJ widow,
Bonifacla, of the home at tbe ranch OD
Ganado Road: his ooo: ~ diughtell,
.Julia Poo •f Saratoga and Graoe MalnYll
of Wtlser, Idaho: • Slster, Grae< Malll ..
of France and 17 arandclllklren .
LBJ · Returned Home
Capital Pays Quiet Tribute :W ~x-ch~f
WASlllNG'ro (1J'),-:::--t:yrid0n
Jobnson waa borne horn< lo final rest in
the Texas hill country today after a quiet
trlbute from the capital and the: ~pie
'" 'he served.
"The y~an will be lonely without
him," said close friend ~1arvln Wat.son In
his eulQp. '
"Thole of us who loved him take com-
fort In lbe tnowlec!gt that beforo be died,
be could tee the dawn of domestic tran.
qulllty and of foreign peace which be
gave ao much of Jlis grtat heart to bring
about."
John.tan died Monday at bis Texas
ranch at the age ol 64.
The slote lunenJ service, lasting an
hour , wu offidaJ Wa sbington's last
farewell to the ~th President of the
United States. His successor, Richard
Nixon and Mrs. Nixon, attended the
services as they had Wednesday when
the nag-draped cotno was brought .to the
Roltlnda of he capitol to Ile In 11110.
Mn. Johom. hls wire ot :ll years -
all through hb rise through Congress,,the
Senate. the ·Vice Presld~ncy 1f)i:I finally
the...n8lion'1 highest offi ce -W·terenc-
ly composed through the .en-ice.
"Lyndon Johnson loved a woman and
she wa! his freatest joy and comfort,"
sale Wai..n. 'He loved his chlldrtn and
his grandchlldrtn Ind lo -tbem toge~er wa1 a heartwarming ex·
perience. for it tran.sctnded ~ faJN.
ly devotion.
''And coupled with that h6 loved each
of us, someUmes with wry amusement at
our fallurtt, Sten with sharp words at
our lmperfections, but al.WIYI with a
sweeping and geoerous undenlaodlng of
our frailties . Th~ dimensions of lhb man
were vast."
Watson was President Jobnt&n's ap-
pointments .secretary.
Throughout the chill night, lbe lines of
people waiting t<> Ille put the bier
Laws' :Funds Available
Reagan Plan to Halt Flow
OfDrugsTermedFailure
SACRAMENTO (AP)-A major Reagan
administration program to bait the fiow
of barbiturates to the illegal street
market has failed tO gel off the ground
even though necessary laws were passed
in 1970 and federal funds have been
nvailable for two yean, interviews with
state officials show.
In a series or interviews with Larry
Aide Acclaims
San Clemente's
Water Treatment
San Clemente City Eng~ Phil Peter
this wee.k praised city water r~lamation
efforts and stressed that even though a.
major pump slotion bas aullered
breakdowns, the city reclaimed 90 per.
said the engineer.
"And lhat isn't a bad record at all."
cent lt.s sewage last year .
Peter'a comments came as city council·
men scanned the mktf-year reports on
city de~ental activities.
City Councibnan Thomas O'Keele, a
keen observer of the monthly gallonage
figures involving the city sewage outfall,
asked why the city bad to dump 84
million gallons of eCfiUtnt at sea last
year.
The cause, Peter said, was the
breakdown on several occasions of the
critical CalaUa pump station.
When that OCCt.TS, he added, the waste
treatment · system is stymied and
reclaimed water can not be dumped into
settling basins or sprinkled on the city
goU course.
Interim repairs have been effected on
the station since the latest failure of
switches, be said.
Peter asked councilmen to look at the
other side of the picture -84 million
gallons dumped at sea, as opposed to 414
mllHon gallons reclaimed and used on
dry land.
The 19n ocean discharge amounts
were about hall the totals recorded for
1971 when the new reclamation plant was
still in the shakedown stages and more
effluent bad to tie sent olfsbore.
Stanuiier, Capitol correspondent for the
820 Jose Mercury-News, state officlals
said Interdepartmental ..,..gling and
red tape haYe stymied a COO'lputerized
program lo close!JI ii>onltor the
legitimate traffic in barblturates so lhat
narcotics agents could quickly move in
when supplies are Illegally diverted for
the street market. ·
The pro}ect :r originally to bave begun
July 1, trn-still Jo not .fullf..operaUona,
State Board of#' Pharmacy officials
acknowledge. ~.
Meanwhile, the U.1.· Senate sub-
committee on Juvennt1 "delinquency
reported that barblturif< · "bse among
teen..agers lave reached tiepidem1c." p~
~ in Calilomla aJlil. ffia!tm. of 1J.
legl!J barljlbu'ates by stata -II have
climbed ~-millioo ....... llD!ts a year. r• . 1. ,
Tbe laii setting up Ille ,..._
moo1lorla8 .,stem ---plliitil4>y Ille
Legislat""' and iigned Info 1ow In 11'10.
alter a._,.sslonaJ invest~!fo> in 111611
created l)Jtjonwide betl<l1¥L _ ,
It di3ckiled that U;S. ~cal
c:ompanies had been tbiJli>~ ~ tO an address that tUriied' out lo,.,._ tbe 19th
hole of. the Tljwma GoH Coone Jn Mex-
ico. The pills then were being smuggled
back into California.
The purpose of the new system was 4>
make sure that JeglUmately. manufac-
tured pills bro;.igbt into the stltte did not
end up in the Illegal market.
UT A.H REJECTS
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
SALT LAKE Cl')'Y (AP) -Utah's
legislature lw: defeated a resolution ratl·
fying the federal women•s Equal Rights
Ameudment while the legislature in
neighboring Wyoming has become the
Z1rd state to ratify the amendment.
The Utah lawmalce.rs Wednesday voted
51 to 20 against ratification.
Utah Rep. Eldon H. Barlow (0.
Clearfield), called the amendment a
"vicious, divisive instrument to destroy the Christian basis of this nation -tbe
family."
stlelclied acr.as the C.pllOI Plaza ..:.
often to the SUpereme Court a very long
block distant. Capitol police ~•tlmated
40,000 salt \be 1.'0f[ln, , . _
·,-or -a lliial iimO at the Capitol, tho
P.realdentlal ruffles and flourlahe1 and
'H_all to the Cbief" were pla)'ed for
Johnson.
Huadrtds were waltlng at the National
Clly' Chrllllan Church when the
motorcade lrdved • and .. w eight
milituy pallbearers carry In the tllvory coffin.
The Invited guests, Included the
powerfuJ of tbJs aod olber nations -peo-
ple who ,had Served with Jollnooo ind
lholtt of lthe RepubUcan admJnlstratJon
that followed. And another l""sJdentlal
widow WIS there, lifn. Dwight D.
Eisenbowtr.
Dr. George R. Davis, mtnlster of the
chwd! where Jobllloo had served u an
honorary elder, recalled that newspaper
aooounts of the fonner -prtsldcnt'a death
were that he· dled alone.
"Oh, no. Ob, no." he said. ••No man
ever dies alone ; be may die in loneliness,
but not alone."
And whto the 11etVlce was over, Mr1.
Johnson -nodding to acquaintances -
walked behind the flag-draped coffin of
her husband. Her two daughtera and
their husband.\ were Dehind. with Patrick
Lyndon Nugent, one of the four
grandchildren. •
In the church and at the foot of the
stairs she paused to say a'"few words to
President and Mrs. Nixon. AM then
began the journey home to Teru: where
burial was scheduled this afternoon.
San Cl.emente
Developer's Bid
·on Zones Denied
A San Clemente developer this week
lost a bid lo be Included In a ~t by
city officials that certain hlgn-a!nslty
areas be eicluded from the strict pro-
visions of the coastal initiaUve.
Joseph Colombo, the developer of a 2._
llD!t condominium project along Ola
Vista near the Riviera Diitrict1 had ask·
ed that the council Include his property In
the exclusion area.
But counctlmen agreed unanlmollsly
Iba! only the city s1aff should decide
which areas will be included in tbe re-
quest. They added that they did not
believe the land qualified.
COiombo" requeat .... tbe lint IJllCh
petition &ince the iniUative was passed
last.> November.
San .Qemeote soon will see.k exclusion.
of tbe blgh-Oenslty attaS of the city -a
requeat corn1ng before the lleglooal
Coastal C.OOservi.tion Commission.
Gifted Children
Topic of Session
Parents Without Partners wil1 meet at
7:30 p.m. Friday at tbe Shoreelllfs Goll
Club in North San Clemente.
Jeanne Delp, coonllnalor of Rllpld
Learning for Garden Grove acbools, wUl
speak OD "Do Gifted Children Hold
Important Lessons for Us All?"
The discussion will begin at 8:30 p.m.
and will be followed by refreshmenta and
dancing to live music.
Parents Without Partners, Inc. is a
nonrrofit, educational service devoted to
interests of single parenll and their
children. lnlorma.lion Is available by call-
ing 837-3319, 4ff.2025, 493..tOlt or by
writing lo Box 1222, ~ Beach.
LOW PRICES ARE BORN HER_E_. _ •• _R_AIS_E_D ... EU_E .... 'Y_HE_R_E
BUY"•• .. •
100% SOLIO-ST,l,TE
1'1111112111 '
CH"8SIS
ellmln1tet
all ch111l1
lul>ta
NO ONI
SllU
DNITH i:oa-uss
.... lAHOTOND47-
Gralll9d Wtlnut cotot m.ui cablrttt Super
ChromlCOIOf ftlctut'.-bttohter thin lht
ftmOUt ortglrtel Z.Wll Clltotntcolor tube.
100" Sotld-Sttte Titan 200 Ch1alt.
an.Button Tuning. AFC.
THAN
DUNLAP'S ,.... ....
90 DAY: Momlltr of
Calllornl1'1 Lal'JOll CASH m Cooporatl,.. luyl.. wtiit """om
Group Wllh Tllo CIQIT
Vol ..... IUyln, .
• 'o ...... _ ,_ of 110 s-m· m ---\ 1115. NEWPORT BLVD. Dawnt1111 CISta Mesa -PhOne 541-7718
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Your Hometown
Dally Paper
•
. VOL .. 66, NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, 44· PAGES ' . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~HURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1973 TEN CENTS
• •
-
.. Flood Plain .Foes Discu·ss Laguna Annexation
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of JIM Dllf'I' P'li.t Sl•tr
Some were disiJIUJioocd, some were
a-ngry and some were thankful for ap·
parent compromise. All were against ap-
pllcatior. of nooc1 Plain zoning in Laguna
Canyon. •
-""'"I was half way down ltle aisle when
they closed the pubJll"' hearing,'' Don
Schoenleber, presldenf of the Laguna
qmyon Property Owners Association
ljlid t<illiy.
h·~. *·~*
.Superv1s.ors
•
OK Zoning
Over Pleas
1 Despite nearly unanimous opposition of
Laguna Beach and Laguna Canyon
representatives the Board of SuperviBors
Wednesday unanimot1'ly adoJ!ted flood
plain zoning along the canyon road from Et Toro Road to the city limits.
Stuart Bailey, assistant planning direc-
tor, explained that the rone was an
Overlay on property now zoned for
agricuJtural and residential use, that use
pe.nnits for build.Ing wouJd be required
Ind that Lulldlng would be restricted.
Laguna Councilman Roy Holm said he
!ivOred Oood plain zoning for un-
developed areas but no< those developed
such as the canyon. He said the county
and Oood control district should develop
&od. protection. He suggested use of
revenue sharing funds.
Laguna Mayor Charlton Boyd said zon. in& would solve nothing. "Jt just says
build a Noah's Ark and ride It out," be
Camplain<d. .
"We ari uldng )'OU to· belp us dig a
ditch first," said Boyd. "We don't need
an Aswali ·Dami ~ aeed_cbanneJs and boldirill bulns " -
Bill Leak, a· i.aPna businessman said
he bellm!d the COUDty plan was based on
a "non·publlc" report by the U.S. C0rps
of Engineers which proposed a dam at
Big Bend, a dam at El Toro Road or
complete channelization of the canyop_,
0 All a flood plain r.onlng says if 'Here
comes the flood, jack up your house and
bead for the h,llls,' " said Leak.
Leak said additional channelization
was needed to handle normal runoff prob-
lems and agreed that regulations on
devclopment were necessary.
··supervisor David Baker agreed that
the zooing w<>uld not stop Ooods but only
provide lov.'er Insurance premiums. He
pointed Ol.l1 that the floods of January
and February 1of 1989 caused $470,000
damaie in the canyon. He called for pnr
tection measures.
Board · Chairman Ronald Caspers
moved that the flood zoning be classified
as an interim action and called !or
Cooperative planning to be completed in
six ·months involving local citizens, plan-
ning, flood control, the city and the
county r'oad departmeni His motion was
approved unanimously.
•
µiguna Lihl'ary
lJlocking Water
Flo.w ID. .StQrm . .
The new Laguna Be.cti bn!nch of the
county . library, whlctr 1t1me residents
"')(ave damned !or Woe~ a Park Avenue
1fiodoW to the sea, It doing some dam-
ming or Its own d'*'8 ri.ins.
'"'lbe new bulldln1 bas swung water
around the bend to almost a total ex-
tent, 11 MS.yor Charlton Boyd said. Around
tbe ~ mean1 down Glenneyre Street
8nd"Ql1 to Forest Avenue and Into stores.
· "Jlefore, large pottk>ns of the water
•ere dispersed on ·the lower part · of
J;'ark.
"The drainage sy!ltem along Park and
Fore1t Js not able to accommodate nash
flOods," Boyd said. This has accounted
lbr tJie recent Ooodiri& of Fo.!fSt during
!leavy ralnJ.
·Thi, mayor aald both~ Rose. cfty
manoger, and Al 'llleol public works
director ,.-.have been dlrecied to study the
altuallon and come up with iome aoh•
Unn. •
• •
POW Educatio Bill
;PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP ) -:J'he lllte
Jlouse Ech.atlon Oommittee Wedneaday
Llf"'nlmousl)' endoroed a blll that would
&!ve the cblldr<n of all Arlwna's
pttsoners or war and missing in action a
tulllon·free cOllcge educaUon. Jolin King.
l!llorney fO< thf. Art.ona IOCtlon of the
l'lallonol lAalu4 ol Famllles of POWs ""1 r.ttU. ulcl the leglsl1tlon would COii ¥lzooa '4.JOO lo 15,Gtlll annuolly for IO
,..~. .
"lt really was.n'I a publlc hearing, it
was a pu51ic farce," G. R. Ekeberg, a
canyon residenl, said.
8)1 approving application of Flood
Plain Zoning tFP2J over parts of the
rounty t~itory in LagU11a Canyon, the
county • Board of Supervisors set new
standanb for construction In the areas
designed as_a)lopd plain.
Those ~ call for new develop-
ment· to be "floodprOOfcd," that is, llrted
i;ibove the -Water ·une of a standard proj· . '
ect flood, the highest flood that can
reasonabl:· be expected to occur in the
fUture .
Development would be rnade on stilts,
pilings or oo land fill with channels cu t
through. Not only would such standards
be applied to new construction, but also
reconslrucUon of existing dwellings or
businesses destroyed by natural disaster
or lo additions to existing buildings.
La'!un."'. Beach May9r Charlton Boyd
was one of those thankful for some
mitigation In the application or the zone
-a declared six-month study of the
area by officials from the state highways
department, the cobnty and the city.
Boyd termed the imposition of FP2 an
interim measure and said as an interim
measure it was sati!factory to him "as
Jong as it is understood that upon
development of a solution (to the flooding
. problem) that this would be withdrawn."
He said the City of Laguna Beach
would continue to ''press strongly" for
such a solution. The city has in the past
advocated extension of the present flood
control works to the El Toro Road in-
tersection of Laguna Canyon Road.
The mayor said he did not blame can-
yon residents for taking a ''ahow me"
stance in response to the flood zone
because too many times their problems
have been met by a "flood of words" and
little action.
Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy
Holm pressed fur cowity-city cooperation
in achieving the ''opl imum solution" to
controlling the Oood waters.
lfolm, the councilman, specialir.ing 1n
the .natural resource area of city govern-
ment, stressed technical measures that
may be taken for flood protectlon, rather
than application of the 1.0fle.
The city is roncemed because it Is
situated at the end of the flood plain, and
is subject to flooding unless further
tSee REACTION, Page %)
Laguna
.
Cost Set
School Firings
$40,000 .
•
at
• WJaee
.cbarles-Nauman Jr., 14, of San
Clemente was en route to pet
shop for i beak trim for , his
parrQt Pedro, 4-ye.ar-0ld Mexi·
can yellowhead. "He can fl y,"
said Nauman, "but nobody has
told him . yet."
U.S. Announces
Ena to Vietnam
Orders for Gls
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
States today swung into high-level
diplomatic talks leading to a Vietnam
cease:fire going .into effect Saturday ..
(~related storjes, Page 4)
All sides hurried prepar&tions for im-
plementing (he complicated peace s~t
t)(;Jllent, including a stop order at the
Penlagon on virtually all American Gls
previously ordered to Vietnam.
Otlly some1 soldiers with special skills
are to travel to Vietnam during the final
three da ys of direct U.S. involvement in
the fighting.
Also in Washington, Secretary of Slate
William P, Rogers met separately with
Canada's foreign minister, Mitchell
Sharp, and with U.N. Secretary Gen.
Kurt Waldheim.
Representing one of the four countries
supplying -contingents for the in·
temaUonal control group supervising the
Vietna'm cease-fire, Sharp uid Canada
will send 176 absilnlers and'l12 support
staff for a total of 288 among the 1,IllO
total.
He said Canada, which has long ex·
perience in often unsuccessful peace-
keeping jobs like. the one in Vietnam, will
(See PEACE, Page I) -
War, Heavy
I
As Peace
Approaches
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. warplanes
striking throughout South Vietnam and
the heaviest Communist shelling in near·
))' 1 month IPdlitl!!'l ielU,P on eit\!<{<lcle
today With an oftlcUtl.'Vietilam ceate-lirt
less than three ·days away.
Neither U.S; nor Sot.Ith Vietnamese o!·
!cUals 111ade any secret of their 1-to
keep fighting until the cease-fire takes
effect ·at 8· a.m~" Sttn<laY 14 MJl.-,J'ST
Saturday).
"Until Sunday w_l[ll do anythtng we
wan~ to," said a Vietnamese official.
''There has been no cbatige in mission,"
said a ranking U.S. offi~.
UPI rorrespondent Alan Dawson said
North Vietnamese gunners fired 4,000
artillCry and mortar shells on South Viet·
namese paratroops and marines between
sunset WedneS<!_aI ancL!_llllJi!e toda7
near the destroyed city of Quang Tri, 435
miles north ol Saigon. It was the heaviest
shelling this month anywhere in SOuth
Vietnam.
U.S. rommand spokesmen said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 B52 bombers hit
Communist positions in South Vietnam in
the 24· hours ending at 8 ..1.m. today. It
was the first time the figftter-bomber
raids dipped be low 300 since President
Nixon halted the bombing .Jf Nort h Viel·
nam Jan. 15 .
Rumor of around·lhe-clock curlews for
South Vietnamese cities as the cease-fire
approaches have beet. spreading for days
and the first such curfew was announced
today. To no one's surprise, it was ror
Binh Dinh Province in the Coastal
Highlands, which statistically has always
been the least "pacified" of South Viet-
nam 's 44 provinces. ·
Orders from the province chief, Col.
Hoang Dinh 'Ibo, were posted throughout
the province keeping all people without
curfew passe!, meaning nearly everyone,
at home from 8 p.m. today until 6 a.111.
Sunday.
, Four Ametlcan ·Diers sbot down in
Laos were a1Rled ·today to the official
Indochina death toll, briilging total U.S.
battle deaths in '12 years of Indochina
warfare to 45.937.
•
DAILY "ILOT ltafl ""'"' A · ~tar is Bona ..
Actor Michael Callan cu ddles a lion cub at Irvine's Lion Country
Safari during a break in the filming of a new movie, "Frasier the
Sensuous Lion." For some exciting scenes from the filrii, turn to
Page 3.
Rites for Ellen Brahams
Slated in Newport Beach
Tradilione.I hymns of comfort will
sound Saturday through St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in N'ewport Beach
at funeral rites for Mn. Ellen Adair
Brahams, ~rganist and wife of its former
assistant minister.
Services for Mrs. Brahams, who died
WeCioesday at 72 after a loog illness, will
be at 3:30 p.m., followed by interment at
Pacific View Memorial Pai'k.
The Brahams family is well·knoiAn
alona: the Orange Coast !or years of con-
tribution to its spiritual, musical and
medical service.
The Rev. Dr. Raymond I. Brabams
was 'founding minister of the., Community
Presbyterian Churcli of Laguna Beach,
where the ramily lived fo r 25 years.
She taught at Laguna Beach Elemen-
tary School and also served as organist
al the Art Colony church as well as St.
An drew's Presbyterian Church where her
husband retired last year.
The Rev. Bra hams was inst rumental in
organizing a campaign to build Hoag
J\.femorial Hospital, where a multimillion
dollar expansion program is now Wlder
way.
Family friends said today he asked .
that contributions be made to its Long
Range Planning Program in his wife's
memory to continue the Vt'Ork he helped
start.
Besides the Rev. Dr. Braharm. of 2575
Tustin Ave., Costa Mesa, survivors in.
elude four sons: the Rev ... Harry G,
Brahams of Yakima, Wash.; Edward A.
and Richard A. Brahams, of Newport
Beach. and Raymond I. Brahams Jr., of
Tennessee.
Proble111s Never c~~nge ~1 Blair, 86,
Teachers' Complaints Voiced iii Lagu~ Beach Dies in bg1ma
One... teicber wgg~sted birini of a
"professorial upediter to explore the
financial mxt efkiency possibilities from
all possible ongles."
Another complained that Laguna Bead>
High School wu 11hea vy with ad-
ministrators."
'If you could pay each penon ade-
quotely, and you could g<t people that-
were interes\td 111 working and not aftUI
to work, you could eLim.blat .. qulto a (d
(Job<) " wrote onother staff .......... One \sakt U.t while 1111 11 irnportlllt. &o
ha~ J'DIMfeRM!"t, do we have too mM1
manage"' iritb too few """°"" under tlCh aae!" ,-·-;r---
"In my opiAkio we. arc iM"l'ttte where
•
there are too many chiefs and oo ln·
dlans," echoed anoiller employe.
Others were concerned about "rooltr
buses" which one staff member sald
"provide ootbklg but thrills, opportunity
for immorality and unncessary expense."
"Somolhl!ll ls "'""II wltb the cuslodlal
atafl." complalntd anothtr lnstruclor.
"With C811odian& 8lllUlld. Ille IChools
lhould be opoilm and Qpl Jn Up.top
sltepe, bo1 th"7 ~on not ."
Ot!lers Ucktd all Ute ~ Items:
.... rtmont Ind -Ing." .---~r supemalaa fl custodians.":
-"AtllleUc a:pmdllures ,..m to take
fir too DMlch aut of the buclget.''
.l.."Rln a lille stuct):'-on the work bellg
dane." ~
~-1'1lttter check on teachers" sick
leave."
-"I belie\'e the Board of Education
memben have been influenced too much
by ant boon! member whose philosophy
seemt to be: 'lt's a privilege to Uve tn
Laguna Beach, I.e. 1 should live oo
sconet)'. I find this impossible." -•·u1ve members or the board visit
the tchoola and introduce themselves to pcl'lllftfltl II Thi reinarltl came to the Board of
EdUc•tlon In t954.
1"(ou ace, your problems. aren'l any.
dWerent than in the past,'' Dr. Cha!Jes
He11, bu.sl.neu manager, told the 1973
llotrd of EducaUon Tuesday night.
Funeral services wUI be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at Forest Lawn Mort uary,
Glendale for .Pearl A. Blair, a Laguna
Beacb resident who died Tuesday. She
was 86.
ocnclatlng at the Rrvlces ln the Uttle
Church of the Flo...n will be Dr.
Edwai;d Bloomfield of H 111 er es t
Congregational Church, Whitlier. Burial
at Forest Lawn will follow lhr rites.
Miu Blair, of 5SO Mountain Road. is
IW'Vived by a sister, Mrs. Mildred M.
McCandliss or Laguna Beach and several
nieces .
Miss Blair had been a resident or
OaUfomia (or: 50 years and ol Lllgunn
·Beach for the pqt >1ll )'tllrli. Be.fore her
rtllttment, ahe-was a teache.r In the San·
ta Monica School· Dlltrlct.
r
District
Must Curb
Spending
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of 1M 0.llf ~llet lll ff The firing of the three top ad-
ministrators of the Laguna Beach
Unified School Dis trict may end up cost·
ing more than $40.000 -most of which
is nol included in the present budget.
The costs will not cause a deficit by the
end of the fiscal year, June 30, but will
force a-reduction in spending In a
number of other accounts.
The only blidgeted amount ls $12,836,
the remaining salary due Dr. Wl!Uam
Ullom through June 30. Ullom, under
tennt ol a11.. l;!greeQ1ent with the board
accepted a leave-of absence throug~tfe"
end of his contract. He was fired Dec. 18
and roncluded work Tuesday.
Items not budgeted include the follow-
ing:
-$6,107 in .. ccrued vacation and
severance pay granted Ullom .
--$8,500 in accrued vacation due Assfs.
tant Superintendents Dr. Charles Hess
and Dr. Robert Reeves, who also were
nc.tified Dec. 18 their contracts wouJd not
be renewed.
-~foney that may be spent on a con-
sultant to advise the board on procedures
for selecting a new superintendent.
Consultants usually charge $100 per day
of service.
-Any funds spent for the employment
of an interim superintendent.
-Any salary paid to a new superb>-
te:ident if he joins the dJstrict before the
start of t~e 1973-74 fiscal year, July I.
-Any stipends paid to members of the
screening committee to review ap-
plica tions for the superintendency. '
While the exact cost depends on future
actions of the Board o! Education, Dr.
•less, the district's business manager
said the figure could climb to nea;
14<l,OOO, 127.000 of which Is not in the
budget.
Another cost, he said, Ill the decrease
in the efficiency of emp!oyes In a time of
change in leadership of the district.
The district, !less Ollplalned, has a dal·
ly payroll of 113,00. A decreue in elfi.
ciency of 1 percent eosts the district Sl30
a day, a 5 percent decrease, '650 a day,
he flgure>.
The round o( admlnbtratlve firings ii
but one stress on the district's general
(Set nRING, Page %)
Orange Coat
Weather
Somewhat cooler on Friday Is
the way the weatherlady reads it,
with .most]y au.nny skies following
overnight cloudiness along the
Orange Coast. Higfis in the mld-
GOs. Lows tonight in the 409.
I NS IDE TODAY
Flow are the11 Qolng to ktep
fle11ry Kissh•ger down on th•
farm after he'• 1en Parer-and
llamn1ertd out Viett1(lm peace
accord? Ste 1tory, Paoe 4.
. ' •
DAILY PILOT l B
Tie Halts
Northrup's
Ousmrltid-
...
A move to OU.!t a ~bllc mtmbtt of ihe
Local A I ency Jl'orinatlon CommlS11lon
·Wednesday by Third District Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich failed in a tie vote.
The acUoo was :.imed at Stanley
Norlhrvp, former San Clemtnlo mayor.
named the public member after the
death of Charles Pearson mote than a
year ago.
Northrup bad served for fi\•e years as
a city representative bul be k>st \be post
when he was defeated for reelection In
San Clemente.
Diedrich, who emphasized that his
move waa oot aimed 18l Northrup
personally, said lhe public member
should truly be ooe, ~t a former city
r<pttsenlalive might be prejudiced
toward a municipal side of disputes.
Councilman Louis "Red" Relnhardt
immediately jumped to the defense
saying, "a man who has aerved ln
government knows the problema." 1;1e
pointed out that the alternate public
member )In. Ree Burnap of Fullerton
bad never held public office. He said
1-trs. Burnap ha& sat for Northrup on
many occa.!lMll.
Presidetatial Widows
Northrup, defending his position said
that Diedrlch's rtasooing could be ap-
plied to the board of superviM>rs with a
,ru le that no former city official "·ouid be
eligible for the county's governing body.
D .drich is a former Fullerton city coun·
cilman. \\li th the death of Lyn don Johnson, the nation bas no li ving ex·presi·
dents. Surviving chief e.tecutives are {clockwise from left) Bess Tru-
man, i\1amie Eisenhower, Lady Bird Johnson and Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis.
Commissioner Robert Battin who has
urged that the public member be without
former city and county ties said a former
city councilman would .!hofl bias toward!:
cities. He suggested that futtae ap-
pointees should be from unincorporated
Max Rafferty Rejects
areas.
Diedrich's move was recommended by
the 1972 Orange County Grand Jury.
Northrup said the grand jury recom·
mendatioo was idiotic.
Lagiina School Rumor
In the showdown vote, Diedrich and
Battin mo'(ed to oust Northrui; and city
repres~taUves Reiohardt and $airman
Clifton Miller, may<r of 'Iu3Un supported
him.
Have you heard the persis tent rumor
noaling around Lagwia Beach that Dr.
!\1ax Raffeny might become superin-
tendent of the school distdct? Don't
believe it.
There's "no truth to it." Rafferty told
the DAlL Y PILOT this wee.k, when con-
tacted for comment at Troy State College
in Troy. Ala.
The former California Superintendent
JlromPqel
REACTION. ••
works are developed in the canyon.
Concern ror those residents now living
in the area was voiced by Schoenleber
who asked what happens to the man who
has new development pop up higher on
either side of him.
··The channel would be pointed at hidl
like a cannon.'' he said.
ft.lost canyon residents contacted today
said the count y's action has given a push
to possible annexation of the oounty lands
by the city.
"l think the city went to bat for us
above and beyond the call of duty," Dr.
Ekeberg said.
She said she thought annexation v.·ould
be favored on ly "if the city continues to
push for channelization, if the city con·
tinues in its very positive attitude."
If the area were to be annexed lo the
city. the county zone could be removed .
Schoenleber sald he would not "be so
brash as to tell a man" to annex. but that
"a man can be heard at Laguna Beach
City Hall.
"An individual in this county is just
absolutely wasting his time by going to
any county meeting. I can go to city hall
and I will be heard. They ntay not agree
with me. but I u·ill be gl\•en some con-
sideration." he said.
Harry Hedges. a \"OCal opponent of
Oood plain zoning called the supervisors
meeting a "railroad."
OU.MfSI COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
TI!• on,.. cent t¥.ILY PILOT. Wflll """ld'I
fs C'DIYOlllntd tt. ,,._Prn1, It P'ollMIJl!ird ll'f'
h ~ c .. 1t Pllb!Wlll'l9 ~ny, ~
r11e «lllJoM •re P\lbllsllld, Mondi~ Ill~
Frltlly, tor Colll M9M, Newport 8~,
H11n1Jngt.n INCl'l/F-.t.;11 V1tl.y-, L1g11M
B11dl0 lrvinc/s.odltlbick olftd S•" Cll,..tnttf $•,,. JU'•" C1pl11T•no, A ~!"flt reoglon1I
ecmlon 11 publlshfll ~turd•~ ftM 1vM1y ..
TM pl'lrlc1pa\ publ\~tl\rit pl1~t It 11 lJO W~I
l•r s1rttt, eo.11 Mn1, c11110n11•, mn.
Rob.rt N, w.,d
Preskltlll Ind PwbU1n ... ·
J1c.lt: II.. Cw11,.,
""' PnsldSll '"" ~•I M1111,_,., lhoM11 Ktt•il .. , ...
Tito111111 A. Mwrphl11e
M.ttltf~ £Cl1TW
Oi1rle1 H. Loos '-lch•ttl I . Nill
lallt.tl MIMlklli £Wllllni
i., ....... Offtq
121 F.rett A'9ft•I
Melfi1t9 ,YJ,..11: P.O. lex''" •t6St
-°"""" CMf9 M-: Jllll Wftf llJ' Strwt Mdl: UD Nt'#$Jll1 lovlft'tfll H lwctl: I 11'1 l•dl lcl!M¥•nl IMI i.: JlS Merill El (tftllf'O llMI
ftl.,.._ 17141 64JAJ21
Ct.HIH A4nrtlll .. "42·1671
....... IHclt All Pe,.......,:
Ttl••lt111 4f4·f4U
C""'1tfll, 1'71. OrlllOt Cff•I l"vMftlllftt C.,,....llY, No _, •torltol, rnvt1r1llona,
.cllfllritl ll"lt"• .,. ld""'lk-11 'hlnlll IN( M ~ w!"-1 lt!Klll ,....
l'l'llt•"" ., '*'""' -· ~ C.1'1t ""''"' .... ., COit• ""'"9, CIN,.,,..._ IWlcrlllfloll llf' Ctl'l'IW l!M
f ll'MIM>r lw !NII SJ.I. n.illllYI 11'1111'11'1'
otttlnttltllt u.tt mom111,. • •
said be is "delighted" with his job as
of Public Instruction (from 1962 to 1970)
dean of the school of education at the
small liberal arts college.
Jn addition to his deanship. Rafferty is
Diedrich followed with a motioll that
future publlc members should not have
held appointee or elective office for five
years previom to appointment to the
LAFC. This motion passed S-1 wtlh Miller
supporting. t~ corpora~ bead ~f Ra!fer:tJ Educ~-Deputy county counsel Victor Dellerue tio~ Sel'\llces, which syndicates his said the action would not be binding on
tw1ce-~eek1y column and handles guest futur~ coIIUiliuioners.
lecturing appearances. ~
In addition to overseeing operations _of"'-.,
tbe school of education, Rafferty, who Poch S £ • holds a full professorship In education, is e ur mg
teaching classes to students about \o
become teacher trainees.
He assumed the post at the Alabama
school afler being defeated by Wilson
Riles in hls tild for a third term as state
Superintendent of Instruction..
Rafferty said be wasn't aware of the
fact Dr. Ullom had lost his job, or of the
current strife in the local school district.
"But I love Laguna Beach," the
educator said. "I have a lot of friends in
Laguna Beach and have spent many hap-
py hours there."
"I know one thing, though. Superin-
tendencies these days are like unground·
ed lightning rods.'' Rafferty added.
In 1959, Rafferty, tben superintendent
of a school district in Needles. was one of
three top candidates for the superin-
tendency in Laguna Beach. Al Artuso.
VJJom's predecesso r, was hired, however.
Rafferty subsequently was employed
by a La Canada school district, before
running for tbe state superintendency in
1002.
From Pagel
FIRING ...
reserves, which at the start or the fiscal
yea r amounted to Si62.000,
Charges against the account have been
~.000 for improved counseling and ad-
ditional athletic personnel at Laguna
Beach fligh School ; $9,s:n for the Dec. s
.reca ll_el~tion; $1.27S for the hiring of an
1nvest1gat1ve accountant, and other small
expenses.
Last v.·eek, Hess said, the district l~arned it may lose $19,000 in transporta-
tion subsidies from the state, because of
large state grants to olher school
districts.
Hess stressed the district won't go lnto
the "red,'' Several capital outlay, con-
ference, malntenallCe and custodial ac-
counts which have not tSeen expended will
be lapped, he said.
Pilots Warned
About Autopilot
~11Ati.1J, Fla . (APJ -Eastern Alrli nes
has warned ii..! pllota that the autopilot on
the Lockheed L!Oll Tristar jumbo jct,
one of which crashed in the Everglades
with the loss of tot lives, may be
disengaged "v.'lth a very Insignificant
bump."
The bulletin for Tristar pilots did not
mention the Dec. Z9 crash, but thert has
betn .speculatlon that crewmen o:'\ the
night may have inadvertently disengaged
the autopUot while lnvest1g11ting t1:
malfuncll onlng Jnslrument v.·hlch shoy,·ed
the landing gear hnd not lowered for
touchdown.
An Eastern spokesman said !he ease
with which the autopilot can be d!scngag·
ed "doesn't mean thtre Is anything
wrong v.•llh the system . •1
Beach to Become ,
Public Strand?
Poche Beach -• popular surfing
beach in county territory near the north
end of San Clemente -might officially
become a public strand, San Clemente ci-
ty councUmen heard this week.
The imperiled beachfront bad been
earmarked fcir private development
recently -projects which if completed
would mean no public acctss to the
shoreline from Doheny to San Clemente's
Estacion Beach.
But City Manager Kenneth Carr told
councilmen Tuesday that county
supervisors are considering a feasibility
study on purchasing the snuill secUon of
beachfront wruch offers good sport to
swiers.
Councilmen agreed unanimously to
support such a county study,
There are complication.!, however.
In the center of the beach sect.ioo Ls the
Shoreclllls Beach Club, and lhe only off-
s•reet parking in the beach zone belongs
to members of that private club.
Spokesmen for the Shorecliffs
Homeowner'.! Association told coun·
cUmen that members are extremely con-
cerned about the fate of the colony's
private parking lot near the corner of El
Carnill<' Real and Camino Capistrano.
Al present, several stretches of the
beach are accessible through a su~
terranean series of stalrways and
catwalks installed along a flood control
drain.
Tbe uact jurisdiction of the access,
however, Ls confused, aM ownenblp
aloog lbe Web is complex u well.
&ipervbon Ibis week agreed to a !O-
day delay on any decl.sion on the
f..,lblllly study -a delay brought about
tn· part b•· their desires for an opinion
from lhe city, Carr said.
He added that thert seemed "a very
strong chance" for a joint application for
federal grant funds -the city and coun-
ty bei ng the applicants -for enough
cas h to buy the 1,500 front feet of beach.
Equipment Worth
$6,000 Stolen
At Monarch Bay
Office equipment nlued at nearly
$6,000 was carried off Wednesday nl,ht
by a team of burglan who broke into all
four offices in a 1-lonarcb Bay complu.
""ange County Shertff'1 ofOcen 11ld
tha big&eit loss -typewrlten,
votcewritera and adding machine.a valued
at $1,SSO -was aufftttd by doctort
rtoba n M. Proctor Ind Francis J,
Williams In Suite 109 at 3 Monarch Bay
Plata.
Addlng machines, typewriters and
calculators valued at $2, 112.25 'o\'trt
taken durtn& the same breakln from the
nearby off\ces or Development Manage-
ment Associates.
. .
Investigator Fired
Drug Execution
Intrigue -ProlJed
GAILY fll\.OT SMif'I ,....-
RETAINS LAFC SEAT
St1nl1y Northrup
Jlrom Page l
PEACE .•.
stay for the 60 days American troops are
withdrawing.
After that. a eonlinued pres,nce will
depend on "whether we will be ef-
fective."
Waldheim said any pea ce-keeping by
the United Nations in Vietnam \\'ill de-
pend upon whether the "partici~ts
wish us to play such a role."
He is to take part in lbe 12-nation in-
ternational Vietnam peace guarantee
conference due to be held within a month
of tbe Saturday signing.
Rogers has also slated a meeting later
today with Adam Malik , foreign minister
of Indonesia , another of the International
Control Commission members.
Under the peace agreement, U.S. troops
are to be pulled out ol South Vietnam
over a 60-d.ay span and the Communists
are to free American prisoners.
U.S. medi cal evacuation t~ms were
poised to ay into Hanoi to evacuate the
first bfltch of POWs as soon as they get
the green light following the cease-fire.
U.S. negotiator Henry A. Kissinger
says the prisooers are to be brought out
in roughly equal..sif.ed groups during each
l~y period of tbe 60 days while
American forces are coming home from
South Vietnam.
From Wire Servlctl
New lntrlgue ls emerging tn ttle ex·
ecutlon murder of a Laguna Stach man
who allegedly hijacked a planeload of
rilarljuana f \1; years ago, double-crossing
his boss In a 164.000 d<al wllh lhe Hell's
Angela motorcycle gang.
1'1e body of Warren B. Hudson, 28, or
990 Ocean Front, was finally found last
yea; in a Riverside County mine stlaft
near Elsinore, mummified. manacled
hand and fool and ldenU!led by d<nl>I
records and a $5 gold piece.
C.liforoia and Arizona authorities who ,
Volcano Spurts
Lava Into Ocean;
Sea 111 Degrees
VESTMANNAEY JAR, Iceland (UPI)
-New streams of glowing Java rolled in
to the 'harbor today, .raising the water
temper.ature to 111 degrees Fahrenheit.
••11>e eea water is so hot, it is hard to·
keep lbe engines properly cooled," the
engineer of a pllo~ boat said as the boat
made an inspect.ion tour of. Y>e Heymaey
harbor area, the thlrd IarJest on Iceland
and a center ror the impottanl flsbing in-
dustry.
Cloud.! ·of steam billowed over the
town, making It dangerous to land at tbe
·tiny airstrip on lbe Island oH lhe Iceland
coast.
Five houses were on fire or bad burned
today, Ignited by lava from lhe Helgafjell
volcano that erupted without warning -
this: week. One house collapsed under
pressure from a lava stream.
The 5,000 or so townspeople were
evacuated late Tuesday and brought to
thJ mainland. Some were allowed back
today rw-a few hours to collect "Yaluable
belongings.
"II is.bani to say how long lhe eruption
may laot. It could take three weeb, or
three yem," said a 1eoloP:al expert
from )he Reyk)avlk University. ·
The filh freezlng pl.a:nt.s, acmmting for
one-fifth .of Iceland's fishing ln<Nstry,
were emptied today of their remaining
stock -tons of dried codfi9h for
Portugal and Brazil wbere II Is uoed for
''bacalhao" stews.
County Planners Approve
El Niguel Terrace Pro·ject
A 74-unit, 9.47-acre multi·family
residential development to be called "El
Niguel Terrace" just south of the South
Orange County C.Ourtbouse received ap-
proval from Orange County Planning
C.Ommlssloners this week.
The Laguna Niguel development on the
northwest side of Crown Valley Parkway
t. plaMed by OMA, Inc., for single-story
duplexes and four-ple:z townhouses in a
price range from 134,800 10 139,705.
Project engineer Hugh Halderman told
the commission that El Niguel Terrace
should generate only a few children for
the Capistrano Unified School District.
District officials had written the com-
mission that the school district has no
funds to build a school in Laguna Niguel
and this tract would add to the
overcrowding in the schools.
1.oning ln the project area would allow
construction or up to t4(f uriits , but OMA
officials reduced that to 74.
Even with that reduction, Com·
missioner Ron Yeo of Newport Beach
lightly suggested that the commission
add a condition of approval on the pro-
ject that "all residents vote yes on the
bond election." The commi.!s.ion did not
do so.
Capistrano Unified has a $25 million
bond election scheduled Feb. 20.
Density in El Niguel Terrace will be 7.5
to 8 units per acre, where zoning allowa
14.
Some of the units will have a view of
El Niguel Golf Course. Pre-"'1es will
start in April and developers hope to
have the area occupied by October, 1974.
tlnaUy obtained murder, marljunna
smug)Jhj ana conspiracy convlctio111
against lhrff men annouoceC Tuesday
ooe key inve.stia:ator In the case has been
fired.
Maricopa Countr, AriJ.. Sherill's Capt.
Ralph M'cMUlen Joined that department
four· years ago, about the time Hudson
vnnisbed. "
lnvcstrgators discloBe now tha t
McMillen worktd a.s a private in·
vestigator' with a firm hired to hunt down
the victim by his coovicted k.ll!ers, just
shortly before hi s 1968 job change. ,
Newly sworn-in Maricopa County
Sberilf Paul Blubaum penooally con-
ducted a two-state probe lnto ex-capt.
McMillen's prk>r usociation with im·
prisoood drug smuggler LalT)' Fassler
and bis ring,
Sheriff Blubaum COlllerred wllh
lawmen in the Riverside and Phoenix
areas before firing McMillen.
"After reviewing the files and di.scuss-
ini past and present inVestlgatioos with
.. , autboriUes1 I have oonch!ded that
Ralph McMlllen cannot effectively serve
the Maricopa County Sheriff's Depart-
ment," he declared.
Dealings by .McP.1illen wilh Fasaler -
who only had drug charges pending
against him at the time -were revealed
last year.
McMillen, a former Phoeni:z, Arti.,
policeman and state liquor control board
agent, denied any wrongdolna: in con-
nection with his alleged dual role in tbe
Fassler case at that Ume.
He has 10 diys In which to appeal his
firing by Sheriff Blubaum, wbo defeated
former sheriff John Mwnmert ln Novem·
ber.
Sherill Mummert bad lnvesllgallld the
situation and cleared the man be hired as
a captain of any connlct of Interest in the
murder and marijuana-smuggling case.
Hudson's wife flied a missing persons
report Oct. 29, 1968, with Laguna Beach
police, saying she feared her husband
had met foul play in connection with a
ni.rcotics smuggling operation.
Informatioo disclosed later indicated
Fassler beaded perhaps the inost far-
flung dope importing ring that supplied
users with tom of contraband Down or
shipped in by boat from Mexico.
Hud3on -1ccordlng to authorities -
was a pilot for the Fassler operaUoo and
hijacked a shipment of marijuana1 aell-
ing It for $16,000 lo undisclosed parties.
He then assertedly met the Hell's
Angelo cyclislJJ from Nortberr California
at the assigned pickup point and robbed
theai ·ol 164,000 Ibey carried.
Fassler, 30, and two alleged ac-
' oornplice! at one time were believed to
lilve burled Hud""1 out o~ a plane high
OVer rugged Santa Ana Mountain ter-
ritory around the Orange-Riverside couo·
ty tine.
Arraignment Set
For .Dr. Leary
Timothy Leary, St, the Harvard in-
structor turned apostle ol LSD, will be
arraigned in superior court Frlday on
charges of escaping from a p-ison can:lp
near San Luis ObisPo 28 months ago.
Leary was arrested in Afghanistan and
returned to the United State!. He ls to be
arraigned Tuesday In Santa Ana, on 19
charges of smuggling and conspiracy 11
the alleged mutermind of the
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love," describ-
ed. by narcotle1 investigators as a multi-
million dollar International hashish and
LSD smuggling ring .
LOW PRICES ARE BORN .HERE ••• RAISED ElSEW"ERE
NEW1?J!I'#
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25 SOU~ATE TABLE MODEL -
Tfte LANGTON 1Mf40W
GralMd w.inut color m.w cabfntt. Supt>r
Chromaoolor Plcture-brlgtltw th&11 th9
tamou1 OffO!nll z.nltl Chromaeolor tu~.
100" SOlld-State Titwl 200 Ctl1111 ..
an.&ut1on Tuning, AFC.
100%
SOLID-STATE
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1llmlnate1
all ch11sl1
tube&
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DNITH
l'Ol LES$
THAN
DUNLAP'S
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90 DAY
Mtmb1r ef
C1lilorm.'1 larg.,t CASH
Cooptr•tlw luylnt WIT" AmOYll
Gr-oup With The CllDJT
Volumo Buying =
"' airAlllAA'9 Pow.r of 1)0 Stor" ...,-.ca. --....-1815 NEWPORT BLVD. Dmtnn Costa Mesa -Pin 541-7711
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'Saddlehaek Your Hometown , -
DallyPa~r
~OL~ '66. No: 2s. 4 secr10-Ns, -« PAGEs· OlfANGE COUNTY, CAOFORNIA '• -THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 19'73 TEN CENTS
Irvine District Hires .3 Top Admini·strators
" " ' ' By CANDAC&-PEARSON
Of .. DlllY ''"' ltd
1n the <first round of personnel selec-
tions, Jl'.l'tne Unified· S<hool District of·
ficlnb Wedae><loy .niJht onoounced the
hlrinJ! ol three.top ll!vel administrators,
au ol wbom are from tbe San Joaquin
Schocil' DbtrlcL --"'---lrvioe Unified wW take over achools In
tbe area ·from San Joaq!Wi July 1. Under
rules or ~ unifiealion . election last June, admliw.traUve~~ from the ootgo-
lng df!..tmta ·~..,;g.;irJ.nte~Cjob! In the ---
new enUties ror two years.
Another new dlltrlct, Saddleback,
Wednesday altomoon abo aJlll9WlC'!d the
selection o~ thrft administrators, two
trom Tustin Uolon High School District
and one from San Joaquill.
8addleback selection!: are subject to
fonruil action by the board oi trustees.
Irvine penonnet were announced follow-
ing a board or trustees' executive session.
Coming to Irvine will be Marilyn Har-
ris;-rioY' assista.pt Su~rlntendent, In-
..
structional service,S; Rei Neriso!l, now
asslstao~ superintendent, admlnlstrative
services, and Or, William Stocb, now
assistant superintendent, educational and
special services, all in San Joaqufil.
Irvine Superintendent Stan Corey
Wednesday announced their Irvine posi-
tions 8J follows: Mrs. Harris, ad-
ministrator of educational-Stlpport
services; Neris on, administrator,
business services; Stocks, administrator,
special services, including persoMel.
Selecting assignment in·the Saddleback
VAll~y Unified District are Jack E.
Schumaker, now interim superintendent
and formerly associate superintendent.
Tustin Union High School District; Gary
G. Shinkle, now director of personnel
services and public information officer,
San Joaquin; and Robert 1.tatthew, now
assistant superintendent, business, Tustin
t:nion High.
Their new titles have not been
determlned yet, althou·gh it is expected ,
they will continue in their present areas.
Although all the administrative pcrsoQ:
nel will continue in lheir positions with
the outgoing districts until after June 30,
they will also double up to work with
~eir ne,-, di.strk:ts.
"There's a feeling now we can get roll-
ing," Corey said Wednesday, adding that
adrlitional personnel announcen1ents will
be made in the near future.
Employes on director and other ad-
ministrative levels will make their
choices next.
Irvine board president Charles
Boulanger added , his congratulations and
!hanks to the incoming personne l.
Stocks told the trustees that he is
"\'ery thrilled to be here. I'd like to
pledge ti' the board our very great sup-
port."
In n1aking announcements or Sad-
dteback Valley personnel, Superintendent
\Villiam Zogg, formerly superintendent of
Tustin Union District, said that he is
;·certainly pleased" about the selections.
He alsr stated that the "caliber of pro-
fessional people in the tv.•o districts is
1Xllh very high and very impressive."
Vi~t Fighting Continues
Both Sides Deal Punishment Before Cease-fire
A Star is Born
SAIGON (UPi) -U.S. warplanes
striking throughout South Vietnam and
the heaviest Communist shelling in near-
ly a month spelled no letup on either side
today with an official Vietnam cease-fire
less than three days away.
Neither U.S. nor South Vietnamese of-
fciials made any secret of their intent to
keep fighting until the cease-fire lakes
effect at 8 a.m. Sunday (4 p.m. PST
Saturday).
"Until Sunday we'll do anything we
\van'. to," said a Vietnamese official.
"There has been no change in mission ,"
said a ranking U.S. officer.
UPI correspondent Alan Dawson said
North Vietnamese gunners fired 4,000
arti llery and mortar shells on South Viet-
namese paratroops and marines between
sunset Wednesday and sunrise today
near the destroyed city or Quang Tri, 435
mile11 north or Saigon. It was the heaviest
~helling this month any\•1hefe in South
Vietnam . ~
U.S. command spokesmen said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 B52 bombers hit
Si~
Communist positions in South Vietnam in
the 24 hours ending at 8 ..1.m. today. It
\Vas the first time tbe fighter-bomber
raids dipped below 300 since President
Nixon halted the bomblng ..1f North Viet-
nam Jan. 15.
Rumor or around-the~lock curfews for
South Vieinamese cities as the cease-fire
approaches have beer. spreading for days
and the first such curfew was announced
today. To no one's surprise, il v.•as for
Binh Dinh Province in the Coastal
Highlands. \vhi ch statistically has always
Angel
Act.qr Michael C~llan cuddles a lion cub at Irvine's Lion Country
Safari dwring a break in the filming of a....new .movie, "Frasier the
Sensuous Lion." For some exciting scenes from the film, turn to
Page~a. · ..., •• 'Fl • •
Flowing Lava
From Volcano
W arniS.,:HarbQr
Dog Quits · City to Oppose Yorty
LoS At-lbEf.ES (UPlj~; n:·q inaY ~ fnMi'.s best friend, bU fOf itayor
• ' t •
Northrup J:Stays
-
Sam'. Yorty, Ange) Goodriian'is a turncoat poodle. -· ' · ·
-~ came-Jo promineoce-about.-..a year· ago when "she" waa· appoint~ a
member of lbe Mayor's CommWlity Advisory Board. Her master, Barry Good-
man, tokf~a £rieod he cOuld get_anyo® a;pRQ~P.> lhe mayoj's coqirnlllion-~ ~ -'
Supervisor Loses Bid
VESTlolAN!IAEYJAR, Iceland (UPI)
-New streams ol glowing lava roJled in
to the bar.bar tl)day, raising the water
temperature to W-degrees¥Fabrenhelt.
"The sea water is so ho~ it is hard to
keep the enginei properly cooled," the
engineer of "-pilot boat said as the boat
made an inspfction tour of the Heymaey
harbor area, the
0
third largest on Iceland
and a center for the important fishing in·
dustry.
HE-WAS ,RJGHT. YCll'ty approved AngeI'i appointment, grousing Inter that -
while Goodman said "she" was a relative, "he dJdn't say anything abou.t her
being a dog."
Yorty Jert Angel on the commission however, noting that maybe "she"
ci>uld carry signs ln an eleclion campaign. To Oust LAFC Panelist ANGEL HELD A NEWS conference Wednesday. Goodman said be ti,. as act·
ing as her spokesman to announce that "she" resigned to join the campaign
of fonner Police Chief Tom Reddin , who is running against Yor ty for mayor,
"a11 official' ma.scot." A move to oust a public member of the
lA>ca1 A ien ~ y F'ormalion Commission
Wednesday by' Third District Supervisor
Ralph Diedrich failed in a tie vote.
The action was :Jmed at stanley
Northrup, 'fonner San CJemente mayor,
nam·ed the public member after the
death Of Charles Pearson more than a
year ago. ·* Northrup bad served for five years as
a city representative but he lost t~ ~
cwben he was defeated for rceleclion tn
San Clemente.
' Diedrich, who emphasized that his
move .. .was not aimed at Northrup
personally said -lhe pUblic. member ~ould lrUiy be one. ~hat a former city
reprpsenfative Might be prejudiced
• tOward a municipal side of disputes.
"'councilman Louis "Red" Reinhardt
Toro Man lnfured . -
,Jn Mesa Aceident ·-· A139-'year-old El. Toro man is in seriolls
1 ,A..iitlon at Qista Mesa lloapital ~oday ,._ ftol:n lnjurks suffered when his ·pickup
truck hit a light pole and overtu~ on N~rt FreeJiIBY just north of Bristol
fi!roet WedaOiday nJght.
fLaw.rence .llaUield of 24002 Eaglemont
·'
1 ve., El Toto, sustained lnjuries to the
ad aad.chellt when bis truck went out
C90tft>l. -Ca/lfoniln lllghw1y Patrol offlcen to-·.~; 1We(.e •t a 1055 to_ e.tplaln why the _
'ifcldent took place.
'" ~eld was alone In the vehicle whlle ·ioin& north on the freeway. His truck
lift the road on a curve, hit a melal
Dt!bt pole Oil the sJde of the r .... way and
· turned over, CUP officers said.
' '!Jelp Line Plannin·g
• Pot Luck Dinner
" II • Saddlc.l/l!l:k Valley Help Line, •
n telephone "CounMllne 1trvlce, wlll hold a
• f!1lucl<diancr1t 1;30 p.m. Ftlday at the
~nl of Ollvm Lutheran CtM'cb, JfT12
• Gllrlsanta Dri.., Mllllon Vll!Jo.
, GutSI ~. Dr. Don.Hayti ol the
'torth Or111ge County Chll1 Guldlnce
·• -C.ni.r, , '!lll 1111' about emotionally
• ll'OUbled ""enllu. A dllcualon period ,, will foHow.
•~'The Help Linell aYlllabte to=
• 14M community for free "bltu•"•· n. number lt •nn
'I
Clouds of steam billowed over the
town, malting it dangerous to land at the
tiny airstrip on the island off the Iceland
coast.
immediately jumped to the defen.se
saying, "a man who has served in
government knows the problem!." He
pointed out that the alternate public
member Mrs. Ree Burnap of Fullerton
had never held public office. He said
Mrs. Burnap has sat for Northrup on
many occasions.
F•ve houses were on fire or bad burned
today, ignited by lava from the Helgafjell
vglcano that erupted without ..warning
this week. One house collapsed under
pressure from a Java stream.
Irvine Company, Council
Northrup, defending his position said
tt.at Dieqrich's reasoning could be a~
plied to the board of supervisors with a
rule that no former city o!flcial would be
elig\ble for the county's governing body.
D drich is a !Qrmer Fullerton city coun·
The 5,000 or so townspeople were
evacuated late Tuesday and brought to
th~ mainland. Some were allowed back
today for a few hours to collect valuable
belongings.
Reach Accord on Tract
cilman. :
Commissioner Robert Battin who bas
urged tha\ the public member be wllhout
former city and county ties said. a former
city councilmarfwould sho·.• bias towards
cities. He suggested that future ap.
pclntees should be from unincorporated
areas.
Diedrich'& move was recommended by
the 1972 Orange County Grand Jury.
Northrup said the grand jury .recom·
mendaUon was idiotic.
Io the lbowdown vote, Diedrich and
BatUa moved to oust ttorthrJt: and city
(See ovst, Page !)
"It is hard to say how long the eruption
may last. It could take three weeks, or
three years," said a geological expert
from the Reykjavik University.
The fish freezing plants, accounting for
one-fifth or Iceland's fishing industry,
were emptied today of their remaining
stock -tons of dried codfish ror
Portugal and Brazil where it is used fOr
"bacalt\aa" st~ws.
"I am as horrified as anyone else over
this disaster," .said Icelandic President
Kristjan Eldjarn, who new here from
ReykjaYik this afternoon .
PoUce and pilot boats patrolled the
'harbor today, keeping shiploads or
(See VOLCANO, Page l)
A "gentleman's agreement" between
the Irvine City Council and the Irvine
Company has eased Turtle Rock
residents' concerns their views will be
wiped out by a proposed Richard B.
Smith Development Company duplex
project.
James-Taylor. planning administrator
for the Irvine Company, told councilmen
this week that a formal change in the
condition of the .itlready approved tract
map providing 150 new attached single
family unit.s would not be necessary.
"It Is time we aperated in a mutual
sense of trust. Further, we will be asking
revisions in the entire Turtle Rock zoning
LBJ 'Character' Eulogized
' . ::. ,
Funeral.'.1He'ld for Ex-president • in Cupit.al
STONEW ALIJ, Tei. (UPI) -Former
President L>'Jld4!n B. Johns0n1 eulogized
in Washington -as the "Lall men with
Johnson came home aboard•-th .... ..,.,__..._..,...>.-tlie..Lord.~ed _krth
plane on Y.'hich be took the pres.idential Joshua ln len d the nation."
oath Nov. 22, J963, after the assassination He said the lonner President had
of Pruident John F. Kennedy. many of the qualities of Atoses -"the
giant charaCter/' came home to Texu In contrast to the sunshine in the na-hardness or dlsclpUne , .. sitting on top
today for burlil in the rain just 100 yards Uoo's capllal, il was dark and raining -of a volcano you didn't create, trying to
from where be was bom 04: )"W:l"ago. steadily at the small cemetery In the control It."
Hondreds of dignitaries, led by Pres!· Texas Hill eoontij. Capitol where he begon bis polltlcal
dent Nixon, paid their ftDAI rtspects to --At the conchWon of the ~hour Wal.Ion, wbose voice broke at the end
the 31th President at funeral ltn'ices In runeral. Johnson's body was taken of h!:i eulogy, said : "lie was a tall man
the n,ation's capital on a bright but cold tltrough quiet city streets to Andrews Air or giant character and when he com-
day. . Force But ln nearby Maryland ror ~ roitted hlnuell. he committed himself
W. Mart.in W•tlOo, a lonctlme 'advlltr tum lo Te:lll. ·' Urtally. And he asked his countrymen to
to Jollmon, said of hit old frlmi 1t the At the rl ... 1! the N1ti0nal City Chris. do the same.
loneral: , ' 1 Uan Church, the lJllllar, Dr. George R. "In "1ctory, he taught us to be
"m.tlry wt11 rtcord tllatln1ho .....,µ. Davis, said Jn itVllCllloo: "We bave magnanimous. In deleat, he taught us to
decade of the JClth Ceotuey, Amtrtca hid come bere to cehibra&e aanrite. Often we be wlthout hate -to leitrn, to rally, to
Lyndon Johnloa when be wu needed." hive walked to tbe mournful sound of acceprthe challe~e and to try again."
At the ..i cl the · one-hour -muflled dnmla. We come here to Johnson's widow, UidY Bird, sa t erect
funeral, JolllDlan.'1 body was flown 60 ~te to the' glorious trumpets of aod uncaJterlng In a pew .acros1 the aisle
Berptrom Alfl. Force Base outltde God." from NtJ;on and hls family as black opera
Austin, Tu., to be llk«I by molortlde · Devil loOt' • the-for the aennon •tar-1.eontyoe 1'1:lc• sang "1ake My
,theJ15 miles to tllc I.BJ Rind! for Ilario! to hil l6nfler Jltl' t': 11111 ~ Old Hand, .PJ:eCI<>us-Lord" and "Onward
In the Pecl<nllel Ilivtr .-itry Ill land, T-~tliO iloalh C)itlltWrSOldtmo"
•
plan and it isn't likely we will abridge
that trust." Taylor said.
\Yhen C(lmmissloners approved the
tract map in November, there ~as a 12-
foot drop £rom existing home pnds to the
new homes. to be built near Univereity
~ligh School oeiwccn Tunle Rock and
Culver Drives alC'ng campus Drive.
Mrs. Lolly Oliver, one of the affected
homeowners livl[li along Alcorn Drlve,
noted she had reamed the final grading
plans show ooly an eight foot drop . With
the proposed roontne1, she told coon·
cilmen who were considering a zone
change to allow the new development,
views will be blocked.
Taylor stipulated the contractor will
lower the grade of the new homes and
revise the roonines so that no more than
five feet of roof rises above the level or
Jots along Alcorn Drive. Th e
.. gentlemen's agreement" between the
city and the developer. he noted, meets
the standards required by the planning
&mmission.
Councilmen delayed final action on the
matter until their Feb. 13 meeting, in ac-
c:crdance with city council pollcy.
La:wmaker Irked
At N. Viet Aid
SACRAMENTO (APl -A Ctllifornia
lawmaker angered by 11udmts who aaid
they would send $1,200 in student fees to
North Vietnam has Introduced a bill to
makt such feet· voluntary -not man-
datory!
Assemblyman Ray JohnlOn, (R--Cblco),
said that he wu "Gn;ively disturbed and
lllJronte<f" by 1tude.nt body ofricers at
Cal Stare Chico.
Under Johnson's bill, iludent fees
would he made voluntary and this would
"tennlnatt the posslblllty of compulsory
fun~lf!i<lnJI allocai.d to cause.s that were
npugnant to unlvel'lity students."
been the least "pacified" or South Viet -
nam·s 44 provinces.
Orders from the province chief, Col.
Hoan g Dinh Tho. \Vere posted throughout
the provincl' keeping all people without
cu1fe\\' passes, meunin~ nearly everyone ,
at home froQl 8 p.m. today until 6 a.m .
Sunday.
Four American fliers shot dov.·n in
Laos '!'-'ere added today to the official
rffiiochina death toll. bringing tot al U.S.
battle deaths in l2 years of Indochina
(See BOf\.1BING, Page ZI
Panel Opposes
Plan11ed Area
In Valley View
Ortlflge County A-:irport Commjssioners
have recommended denJat of the Irvine
Company's proposed planned community
in North Irvine, the VIiiage of Valley
iew;:'l:lecause of the lack of a general
plan for the area.
The Village of Valley View was refer-
red to the airport commission by the city
of Irvine because part of the proposal
lies bet Neen the ~1arine Corps Air Sta-
tion at El Toro and the Mar ine Corps
helicopter base in Santa Ana.
Noise Jrom helicopter and jet nights
"·as a concern to airport commissioners.
But that was overshadowed by the lack
or an Irvine general plan delineatin& land
use in the area.
The airport C(lmmission said Tuesday
it didn 't ¥.'ant to rule on isolaCed develop.
meiits when a picture of the entire area
cannot be grasped.
The prl)posal has been delayed by
Irvine Planning CommiJSioners. who are
\•:restling with high density and trafiic
is.sues.
The 484-acre. to house ll.1181 persons, Is ·
bounded by fl.1oulton Parkway, Harvard
Avenue, the Santa Ana Freeway and Jef·
frey Road. It is proposed for low-income
housing.
Golf Clinics Carded
For Irvine Youths
A series of six golf clinics for Irvine
youths aged 9 to 17 will be ottered by 1he
city recreation ~partment beginning at 1
p.m. Saturday, Feb. S, at Rancho San
Joaquin Golf Course, Univenl:ty Park.
Pro~Joseph Karpiak wlll instruct the
weekly sessions. Each lesson costs $1 and
Includes golf balls. Tnformation on the
series Is available rrom James Wertz or
Karpiak at 552-9153.
Oraage C:Out
--Weather
Somewhat cooler on Frkl•y is
the way. the wealhcrlady reads it,
with mostly sunny skies followinC
overnight cloudiness along the
Oronge Coast. Highs In the mid·
60s. Lows tonight In the 40s.
~SIDI> TODi\V .
Hoto art . &heu Qoi110 Lo keep
1-leury KiA1it1(1er down on the
Jnrm after he's 1ecm Paret--011d
l1ammert<t out Vfetnmn peace
accord1 Stf ''°'11· Po{/e 4..
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New School
Dist rict
Ap pla uded
Dtnnis Sn1ith, trustee in both the San
Joaquin 11nd Saddleback Valley Unified
School Di~rricts, \\'ednesday night cmn·
pl in1enh~t t~ pe.rfonnance o( another
nt'". sel"IOfll district -lr\'ine -and
rt'C't!.h l."d sotne support ln return.
The lr\'ine Unified and Saddleback
Vallev Unified Dlstrlcts will take over
OPt'r8tion of area schools from San Jo.a-
q1tin and Tustin Union High Districts Ju·
)\' I.
· Smith \Vednesday told Irvine trustees
that he had been meaning to came watch
1hem fn action earlier.
Speaking as a trustee in the San Joa-
quin District. said Smith, "I'd like to
compliment this board. l am proud of
you as a board and of ~lr. Corey
\Superintendent Stan Corey )."
Representa•Jon on the board or two
students from University High School is
"real, not token," he said, adding that
Ille presence of a number of school prin-
cipals in the audience was "very
healthy."
As a member of the new Saddleback
board. Smith was wearing a yellow smile
button with the words •·vote Yes Yes -
Feb. 6" on it. rtfening to Saddleback's
bond-state apportionment elecUon.
"We hope we'll be as successful as you
were last November," be told Irvine
trust.ees, speaking to Irvine's passage or
a s:;o million bond ls-sue by an a\'erage 31
percent yes vote.
Irvine board president Charles
Boulanger then told Smith that he and
!he board "wish you well on 1be election .
We know the anticipation and frustration
you are going through nOY.'.
"All the board fee.l s,'' Boulanger con-
tinued, "that iI there Is anything we can
do in public support or the election - let
us know."
Smith thanked the Irvine trustees.
Prisoner List
Appears Today
' In Daily Pilot
The DAILY PILOT today prints on
Page 14 the most complete list available
-although it is knowri to be incomplete
-of American war prisoners and mis3·
ing servicemen.
U.S. officials emphasiud that the mere
listing of a name, or the absence of a
name, does not indicate any confirmation
af the prbooer's status, or any change.
'Ibey noted that tbe list i!1 not a new
one, but includes the fullest information
known la.ken from lists compiled by
POW-~llA groups, newspaper accounts
and Hanoi radio broadcastso
The U.S. and other parties in the cease-
fire: agreement are lo exchange prisoner
lists Saturday. It is not known how soon
the names on the lists will be made
public.
California has the most names in the
compilation on Page 14, and several are
from Orange County.
Gifted Children
Topic of Session
Parents Without Partners will meet at
7:30 p.m. Friday at the Shorecliffs Golf
Club in North San Clemente.
Jeanne Delp, coordinator of Rapid
Learning for Garden Grove schools. will
speak an "Do Gifted Children Hold
lmp:irtant Lessons for Us All ?"
The di!ICussion will begin at 8:30 p.m.
and will be followed by refreshments and
dancing to live music .
Parents Without Partners. Inc. is a
nonrrofit, educational service devoted to
interests of single parents and lheir
children. Inlormatlon ls available by call-
ing 837·3319, 494-2025. 493-6089 or by
writing to Box 1222, Laguna Beach.
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N o_New Gls
U .S~ Ends roop
ravel -t Viet=-
I WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe United
States today swung i..Dto hilh-level
diplomatic talks lead ing to a Vietnam
cease-lire golni Into efleot Saturday.
(Soe1re.lated stories, Piit j)
All side> hurried pr<J)lrilllolls !or Un-
pltmenting the compliClted peace If!\.
t1tment. li1chNling a stop order at the
Pentagon on virtually all American Gls
previously orde~ to VielD,am. ~
Only some soldiers with special stills
are to travel to Vietnam durmg the final
three days I)( dired U.S. involvement in
lhe fighting.
Also in Washington, Secretary of State
William P. Rogen met 1eparately wilb
Canada 's foreign minister, Mitcbell
Sharp, and wilh U.N. Secretary Gen.
Kuti Waldheim.
Representing one I)( the. four countries
J
The llungarian gove.mment voiced of·
ficlal wUUngneu today to take part in
the cease-fire conlrol elfort. Each country
is to send about 290 men. Poland has not
yel made public Ila respi>nse bul Is ex-
peoted to pattlctpate.
. lndoneaian aourees •a.Id a battalion of troops will Jr:ave for Vlelnam even before
Saturday's scbtduled signing of the peace
agreement ln Paris.
Rogers Je.ve1 Frfday morning for
Paria to join ln the !llgning with his
counterparts from North Vietnam, South
Vietnam and the Viet Cong's Provlslonal
Revolutionary Government. Hanoi's
foreign mlhlster, Nguyen Duy Trinh, ar·
rived 1n the f'l'encb capital today.
h Paris, speclalllla from lhe United
St.ales. North Vietnam, SoUtb Vietnam
and the Viet Cong met on cletaUs of
applying the ceue.fire arrangement. ·
BUBBLING LAVA ERUPTING FROM HELGAFJELL VOLCANO' IN ICELAND TURNS NIGHT INTO DAY
Houses 50 Y•rds Away From the Mouth Burst Into Fl 1mts From the Radi1ted Htat
, supplying contingents 'for the ln-
.ternational control group iupervlslng the
Vietnam cease-ftre, Sharp said Canada
will send 176 observers and llJ support
staff for a total of 288 among the 1,160
total.
In SalgOn, President Nguyen Van'Thleu
predicted that It the ·O:lmmunJsts violate
Ute cease-fire and wage new war, many
nations will jaln South · Vietnam ·in
lig)ltlng them.
The faal....vlng" diplomatic and
milltaq movea ·fit Into Ult · Intricate
scenario aet forth Weclnesday In I U-
page pea~ agreement, plus lour lllde ac·
cnrds, made public by W ubJni1on and
Hanoi. San 011ofre Plant Critics
Will B1·ing Up Evacuation
Opponents to plans ta build two new
nuclear reactors at S· t Onofre today
\'owed to resurrect the i,ssue of emergen-
cy evacuations v.·hen federal hearingt on
the plant proposal resume next i\farch in
San Clemente.
~trs. Lyn Harris Hicks, the leader af
the South Coast opp:inenb to the billion--
dollar reactor project, said that evacua-
fl -::r fl
Scientists Say
Bi g Earthquake
l s11't Probable
S.\~ DIEGO (AP) -A major earth·
quake is unlikely to occur near the San
Onofre Nucltar Gen,erating Station in
.nortb San Diego Countj, two nuclear
scientists say.
The scientist. called as malerial
witnesses in an Atomic Energy Com-
missian hearing on two proposed ad·
ditions at tbe generating facility, both
discounted an AEC safety rep:irt which
said that offshore faulting near the plant
was still "aclive."
But the AEC, which has continued its
hearings until March 13, did not allow the
testimony on grounds that the joint
operators of the San Onofre station, lhe
Sout hern California Edison Co. and the
San Diego Gas & Electric Co., had ac-
ce pted the AEC report as the basis for
the hearings.
The AEC findings disclosed this week
said the San Onofre offshore faulting was
linked to the Inglewood-Newport fault to
the north and the Rose Canyon fault to
the soLilh -and was still considered ac·
tive ..
But. Siewert Smith. professor of
geophysics and chairman of the graduate
program in geophysics at the University
of Washington, contended in his prepared
testimony thdt the offshore faulting ·
y,·ould nol sustain a major quake because
it consisted of short folds and faults.
There must be continuous faulting along
lengths of at least 10 miles to generate a
large quake , he said.
Irvine Leaders
Ge t Plan Briefin g
Irvine planning commissionen: tonight
will be briefed by general plan con-
sultants Wilsey and HaiTI af South
Pasadena in a study session set for 7:30
in city hall, 4201 Campus Drive.
Commissioners will hear the general
plan P.n>gram orientation given Wednes-
day ni ght to members of the council·
appointed citizen study group~ assigned
to work on phase one of the plan.
Dale Beland and Larry Morrison of the
urban planning firm v.·ill" discuss the
outline af the program expected to lead
to adoption of Irvine 's first general plan
by December.
Ch~irmen Rober_t \\'~st said today the
ren1a1nder of tonight's session will be
devoted to discussion of commission
p:i\icies and procedures.
,,...,,,. Page l
OUST .•.
representatlv~s Reinhardt and chairman
Clifton Miller, mayor of Twtin suPPorted
him.
Diedrich followed with a motion that
future public membe:rJJ ::;hould not have
held appoinlee or eitctlvt office for nve
yea rs previous to appolnlment to the
LAFC. This mallon p8!1Sed ;:.J with Mi ller
supporting .
Deputy county counsel Victor De.llerut
said the action would not be blndlng on
futur..: commissioners.
tion times and specific population
estimates given by utility witnesses last
y,·eek were "way off." ' Specialists testifying for Southern
California Edison .Jnd San Diego Gas and
Electric ~paniA told the Atomic Safe-
ty and LiCensing Board that lf a nuclear
"incident" were to lake place at the
plant that required evacuation popula·
lions along the South Coast could be
moved from harm within two hours.
"No one took panic into account in the
projections. But instead they forecast a
smooth, orderly evacuation of thousands
of persons. Co.nmon sens.: says that it
just doesn't happen like that y,•hen
radioactive materials\are involved," said
Mrs. Hicks. '
The moving of the hearings to San
Clemente, she added, would mean that
citizens most a f f e c t e d l:iy the
developments at San Onofre could more
easily follow the progress of the intricate
hcc.rings. The first sessions took place in
San Diego.
Earthquake design standards and o~her
safety. matters will be taken up by the
board during lhe hearings along lhe
South Coast scheduled to resume March
13 .
Several weeks after the-cl&Ga. of that
phase, the same panel w1ll return to San
Clemente and take up the eovironmenlal
impact aspects of the licens1 applicatian
for the reactors.
UT AH REJECTS
WOMEN'S RIGHTS
SALT LAKE CITY iAP) -Lilah's
legislature has dereated a resolution rati·
fying the federal women's Equal Rights
Amei1dment while the legislature. in
neighbor ing \Vyoming has become the
23rd state to ratify the amendment.
The Utah lawmakers Wednesday voted
51 to 20 against ratification.
Utah Rep. Eldon H. Barlow (D-
Clearfield). called the amendment a
"vicious. divisive instrument to dest roy
the Christian basis of this nation -the
family."
Railroad Safety
Cost $27 Million
Il would cost $27 million to make all
Orange County railroad crossings ac-
cident proof. County Road Carnmissioner
Ted P..feO:mville told county !lupervisors
this week.
He was asked lo make the su"ey
following a fatal accident in December in
which an Irvine grocer ,was killed .
McConvil le said over or wider passes
had been completed on El Toro Road,
Osa Parkway and La Paz Road. He said
"'ork was slated on Alicia Parkway and
Los Allsos Boulevard .
He said the Santa Fe Railway would
pay 10 percent of the CO!lt with federal
and slate grants helping to make up the
difference.
Mission Hospital,
Physicians Sued
Mission Community Hospital and six
phy!liclans wbo 11Se the MIM'°n Vte}o
fact.Illy have been aued for ,1.5 million In
da mages by a former patle:'.~ who claims
!hat ,.rdy diagnols led ·to the lpr<adlng
oC. a cancerous rondltlonJn her body.
Mrs. Ellen E. O'Conntll clatms in her
Orange County &iperior COurt malprao-
tice action that she had to undergo three
operatkms where one would have. been
sufficient U her condition had bttn p~
crly diagnosed when abe was flnt
treated .
Slle names the hoop\,.! and On.
Robert M. Amato, D.,Randall , S. R.
Blachunas, Wiiiiam Lyon.. Arturo L. Fon--
lanes and Dsvld Kawa1akl as defendants.
' . VOLCANO ...
He said Canada, which bas long ex·
perience in often · unsuoces,,!ul peace-
keeping jobs lLl<e lhe one In Vietnam, will
stay for the 60 days Am'erican troops are.
wllhdrawing .
After that, a continued presence will
depend on "whether we will be e.f.
fective." curious tourists from the mainland aV(&Y Waldheim said any peace-keeping by from the risk atta. Landing by bGat and
aircraft was restricted, but telephone the United Nations ln Vietnam will de-
conneclions were restored
1
again toda y lM;nd upon whether the .:·participants
after being partly down since Tuesday. , wish ~s to play such a role. . in-
A Jong volcanic rift opened acrosa the Hf! ~ lo tak~ part in the 12-nation
21),-mile wide island but was partly filled tematiooal Vietnam peace guarantee
w1th Java by this afternoon. One ~nference. due to be .held within a mopth
crater and several small craters were onhe Saturday slgiung.
still active, spurting out flre, smoke and Rogers has also sla~ed a mee~ later
Java today with Adam Malik, foreign minister
· of Indonesia, another of the lnternational
Carpenter Bill
Would Reduce
Criminal Age
Fn>m Wire Services
SACRAMENTO -If 18-year"lds are
now adults in variOU! cl.vii matters, they
should be · in crirfilnalactivity too. ac-
cording to State Sen. Dennis E.
Carpenter (R·Newport Beach), who is
pushing for it.
A bill introduced by Sen. Carpenter
\V edncsday would force several changes
in connection with California Youth
Authority (CYA ) reguJations and pr~
cedures.
"If these young people enjoy all lhe
bene fits of adulthood they should also
share the responsibilities as adults,"
Carpenter commented.
The legislation would make 18 the
maximum age for CY A commitment on
misdemeanor charges i.rudead of 21 and
reduce from 23 to 2:0 the age at which be
would come under Adult Authority con-
trol.
His bill would also raise the age £ram
22 to 25 for convicted felons under CY A
jurisdiction.
Carpenter wa s against giving 18-year·
olds the voting right.
Wa llace Surger y Set
MONTGOMERY, Ala . (UPI ) -Aides
said Gov. George Wallace will enter the
University of Alabama Medical Center in
Birmingham today for "elective" urinary
tract surgery.
Control Cominissk>n members.
Under the peace agreement, U.S. troops
are to be pulh!d out of South Vietnam
over a 60-day span aod the Communists
are. to free American prisonen.
U.S. medical evacuation teams were
poised to fly into Hanoi to evacuate thet
first batch of POWs as soon u they get
!he green light following the ewe-fire.
U.S. negotiator Henry A. Klsltnger
says the prtsoners are to be brought out
in roughly equal-sized ~ps during each
lS-<iay period 1 o( the 60 days while
American forces are coming home from
SOuth Vielnam.
The four nations sneding 1,190 truct
superv isors to South Vletnam. are ti·
pected to get their advance contingents
ori the scene within 48 hours af tbe cease-
fire , v•hich is to begin ·at 4 p.m. PST
Saturday.
Hungary and Poland are the other two
members of tbe inlemaUonal policing
group.
From Page I
BOMBING ..•
warfare to 45,937.
The U.S. Command also said today the
guided missile frigate Preble was hit
Wednesday by Communist shore bat·
teries while on an offshore operation sup-
porting South Vietnamese troops in
Quang Tri Province. Damage was Ught,
nobody was hurt and the Preble ~
mained on station, the command said.
As the cease-fire neared, South Viet·
nam's cities blos30med out with red-and-
gold natlona_l flags at the request or
President Nguyen Van Thieu. More
police, tncluding national police in
camoufiage unifonns, helmets and Oaci:
jackets, were in evidence.
State Drug
Program Hit
By Red Tape
SACRAMENTO (AP)-A major Reagan
administration program to halt the. Dow
of barhlturales to lhe Illegal •tree!
market luls !ailed to get olf the ground
even though necessary laws were passed
in 1970 and federal funds have been
available for two yean, interviews with
state officials show.
In a series of Interviews wilb Larry
Stammer, Capitol correspondent for the
San Jose Merwry·News, state affiOals
said lnterdepartrnenta1 wrangling and
red tape have stymied a computerized
program to closely monitor the
legltlmate trafflc in barbiturates 90 that
narcaUct agents could quickly move in
when supplies are illegally diverted for
the streel market.
'l\e project -originally to have begun
July J, 1971-sun is not fully operatiooa,
State Board of Pharmacy otaclals
acknowledge.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate sub-
committee on juvenile delinquency
reported that barbiturate use among
teen-agers have reached "epidemic" pro-
po rtions in California and seiiures of il-
legal barbiturates by stare agents have
climbed to three million dOsage unlls a
year.
The law setting up the computerized
monitoring system WM passed by tbe
Legislature and signed Into law in 1970,
after a congressional tnvesUgalion 1n 1989
created nationwide headlines.
It disclosed that U.S. pharmaceutical
companies had been shipping pills to an
address that tu.med out to be~ the 19th
hole of the Tijuana Golf Course hi Mex~
ico. The pills then were being smuggled
back into California.
The purpose of the new system was to
make !lute that legitimately manufac-
lured pills bro;ig)lt into the stale did not
end up ln tbe illegal market.
LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE • • • RAISED EUEWHERE
TM LAHQTON D4740W
Or1lf'led Walnvt COior mtt.i cablrtat. Super
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ILS. B~,fs Fnrewe.11 to Lyndon Johnson
. WI Tel9"'1oto
PATRICK LYNDO~ NUGENT SALUTES GRANDFATHER'S CASKET
Ceremonies Held for Ex·Pre~ident Johnson at Capitol Rotunda
leel,and l' oleano
-L-ava Flows-Into-HaPbor· '
Temperatur lh ~
VESTMANNAEY JAR, lceW!ci (VP!)
-New streams of glowing lava rolled in
io the harbor today, raising the water
temperature to I 11 degrees Fahrenheit.
"The sea water is so hot, it ls hard tq
keep the engines properly cooled," the
.. engineer of a pilot boat said as the boat
made an inspection tour of the Heymaey
ha~bor area, the third lar'gest on Iceland
and a center for the important fishing in·
dustry.
Clouds o( steam billowed over the
town, making it dangerous to land at the
tiny airstrip on the island off the Iceland
coast.
Five houses were on lire or had burned
today, ignited by lava from lhe Hejgafjell
volcano that erupted without ..tarning
this week. One house collapsed under
pressure ·from a Java stream.
The 5,000 or so townspeople were
evacuated late Tuesday and brought to
th.:-: mainland. Some were allowed back
today for a few hours to collect va1uable
belongings.
"It is hard to say hoW long the eruption
may last. It could take three weeks, or
lhret years," said a geological expert
from the Reykjavik University.
The Cis!t freezing plants, accounting for
on-"?-fifth of Iceland's fishing industry,
were emptied today of their rem~
stock -tons of dried codfish for
Portugal and Brazil wbere Jt is used for
"bacalbl\()" stews. e
"J am as horrified as anyone e1~ over
this disaster,'1 said Icelandic President
Kristjan .Eldjarn, who flew bert from
Reykjavik this afternoon.
Police and pilot boats patrolled the
barbQr· today, keeping shiploads of
curibus tourists from the mainland away.
from t~ risk area. Landlng by boat and
aircrafti wu restricted, ·001 telephone
connections were restored again today
afler being partly down since Tuesday.
Orange Ceast
Weatlae, .
Soo)ewbal c:OO!er on Friday ts
the WJY the wealherlady , re;idi U,
wilh .-ly lllllllY lldu.fo&wlng
ovemilbf. clou..diness along OM;
Orange Cout. Hlg)ls in the mid-,.
60s. Lows lonlChl In the *'· INSUtt: TODA l' llotD art 'thtll aoma to keep
Htnfll K;,singer down on tile
farfn ajter 1lt'• seen Paree-and
hammered o"L Vietnam peace
A Iona vdlc8hic rift opened across the
2'h·mUe wide ls1and but was partly filled
wilh lava by this afternoon. One main
Crater and several small craters were
stil! active, spurting out tire , smoke and
lava.
U.S. Announces
~End to Vietnam
Orders for Gls
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Uniled
States today swung into high-level
diplomatic talks leading to a Vietnam
cease-f.ire goihg into effect Saturday.
(.See related stories, Page 41
All sides hurried preparations for im·
plementing the complicated peace set·
tl1:ment, including a stop order at the
~entagon on virtually all American Gls
previously ordered to Vietnam.
Only some soldiers with special skills
are to ttavel to Vietnam during the final
three days of direct U.S. involvement in
the fighting.
Also in Washington, Secretary of State
wmlam P. Rogers met separately with
Canada's foreign minister, Mitchell Sharp; and with U.N. Secrelary Gen.
Kurt mldhelm.
Representing one of ·the four counfries
supplying cOOUngents for the In·
ternational control group supervising the
Vietnam cease-fire, Sharp said Canada
will send 176 observers and 112 supp:>l't
staff for a total of 288 among the 1,160
total.
He said Cattada, which has long ex-
petience in often unsu'cce1.1lul peace-
keeping jobs like the one in Vietnam, will
stay for the 60 day s American troops are
withdrawing.
After that, a continued presence will
depend on ''whether we will be ef-
fective ."
Waldheim said any peace-ke«:_ping by
the United Natlons in Vietnam ;wlll de-
perid upon whether the ••participants
wish us to play such a role."
H~ Is lo take part 'in tlie U.naUon in-
teroatioDal /Vietnam peace guarantee
conferellce d"' lo be h<ld wllh!n a monlh
of the Satul'day signing. .
Rogers bas also slated a meeting lafer
today with Adam Malik. foreign minlstµ
of lndooesia, wdher ol lhe International
ConU'OI Commlsskrt members.
STONEWALL, Tex. (UPIJ -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson, eulogized
in Washington as the "tall man wilh
giant character," came home to Te.1.as
today for burial in the rain just 100 yards
from where he was born 64 years ago.
Hundreds of dignitaries, led by Presi-
dent Nixon, paid their fmal respects to
the 36tb President at funeral services in
'the nation's capital on a bright but cold
day. I
W. Martin Watson, a longtime adviser
to Johnson, said of his o)d friend at the
funeral:
"History will record that in the seven1h
decade of the 20th Century, Ameri~a had
Lynd~n Johnson when he was needed."
At the end of lhe one-hour church
funeral, Johnson's body was flown~ to
Bergstrom Air Force Base outside
Auslln, Tex., to be taken by motorcade
the 65 miles to lhe LBJ Ranch for burial
in the Pedemales River coun~ry he loved.
Johnson came home aboard the same
plane on which he took the presidential
oath Nov. 22, 1963, after the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy.
In contrast to the sunshlne In the na-
tion 's capital, it was dark and raining
steadily at the small cemetery in the
Texas Hill Country.
At the . conclusion of the one· hour
funeral, Johnson 's body was taken
through quiet city streets to Andrews Air
Force Base in nearby 11.taryland for re-
turn to Texas.
At the rites at the National City Chris·
tian Church, the pastor, Dr. George R.
Davis, said in invocation : "We have
CQme here to celebrate sunrise. Often we
have walked to the rriournful sound of
muffled drums. We come here to
celebrate to the glorious trumpets of
God."
Davis took as the theme for the sermon
lo his former ~rishioner the Old
Testament words : · \Vhcn after the death
of ti1oses , thC Lord . God , called forth
Joshua tr lead the nation."
lie said the former President had
many of the qualities of Pt1oses -"the
hardness of discipline ... sitting on top
of a volcano you didn't create, teying to
control it." ,
Capitol where be began his politlpl
Watson, whose voice broke at the end
of h:~ eulogy, said: "He was a tall man
of giant character and when he com-
mitted him.self, he committed himsell
totally. And he asked his countrymen' to
do the same.
"ln victory, he taught us to be
magnanimous. ln defeat, he taught us to
<See JOHNSON, Page Z)
Viet Fighting Continues
Both SUles
lnwnsify
Shelling
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. warplanes
striking throughout South Vietnam and
the hea viest Communist shelling in near-
1}' a month spelled no letup on either side
today with an official Vietnam cease-fire
less than three days away.
Neither U.S. nor South Vietnamese or-
fciials made any secret of their intent to
keep fighting until -the. cease-fire takes
effect at 8 a.m. Sunday ( 4 p.m. PST
Saturday).
"Until Sunday we'll do anything 't\·e
waft•. to," ·said a Vietnamese official. '~~-.\•'fJ:ilW9Nf llU in 1J( I 4' ~ saiil a ranking .s. officet.
UPI cornrpondent Alan Dawson ,.Id
N6rtli -VJttMvm gunners fired 4,IQ) artmerr Ud mertar ahelJs oo Sooth Viel· nantese• panitroops and marinea between
sunset Wedbesday and sunrise today
neilr the destroyed city of Quang Tri, 435
miles north of Saigon. It was the heaviest
shelling this month anf\'lbere in South
Vietnam .
U.S. co1nmand spokesmeq said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 852 bombers hit
Communist positions in South Vietnam in
the 24 hours ending at 8 .J.m. today. rt
\Vas the first time the fighter-bomber
raids dipped below _ 300 since President
Nixon baited the bombing Jf North Viel·
nam Jan. 15.
Rumor of around-the-clock curfews for
South Vietnamese cities as the cease-fire
approaches have beer. spreading for days
and the first such curfew was announced
today. To no one's surprise, it was for
Binh Dinh Province in the Coast.al
Highlands , which statistically has a1w~ys
been the least "pacified" of South Viet·
nam's 44 provinces.
Orders from the province chief, Co!.
Hoang Dinh Tho, were posted throughout
the province keeping all people without
curfew passes, meaning nearly everyone,
at home from 8 p.m. today until 6 a.m.
Sun'day.
Four American fliers shot down in
Laos were added today to the official
Indochina death toll, bringing total U.S.
battle deaths in 12 years of IndOchina
warfare to 45,937.
Tbe U.S. Command also said today the
guided missile frigate Preble was hit
Wednesday by Communist shore bat·
teries while on an offshore operation sup-
porting South Vietnamese troops in
Quang Tri Province. Damage was light,
nobody was hurt and the Preble re-
mained on station, the command said.
As the cease-fire Deared, South Viet-
(See BOMBING, Page II
* ·* * Prisoner List
Appears roday
In Daily Pilot
The DAILY PJI,01' today prints on
Page 14 the most complete list available
-although ii is known lo be incomplete
-of American war prisoners and mis.s-
ing servicemen.
U.S. officials empbasiud Lhal the mere
listing of a name , or the absence of a
name, dcies not indicate any confirmation
ol lhe prisoner's status, or any change.
DAILY ,It.OT PMIH ~W .ltl• i.tl9f
GLEN VIEW CUSTPDfAN WAGE"IEJI. TURNS TE,o\Cl'tER FOl.LESSON ABOUT BAKING BREAD
Part of the Message: Brud 00.sn't Graw on Trees, Fully F9rmed ind Wrapped in Plastic
Pupils Ba~e Their Own
Pattie Cake, Pattie Cake These Students Can
By JOHN ZALL.ER
OI !ff DtllW l'li.t St•H-' ~
Education took a giant step backward
this week in Mrs. Sue Chin's third and
fourlh grade classes at Huntington
Beach's Glen View School. Her students
learned a skill that children of two
generations ago grew up with -how to
bake bread.
But for all Mn. Chin's students tnew,
bread might grow on trees, fully fonned
in loaves and pre-packaged in plastic.
Tuesday, they found out differently.
Bob Wagener, their school custodian
with years of prior experience as a baker
for the ·u .S. Army and the Santa Fe
railroad, introduced them to the ancient
art.
"This is I~ way your grandparents
and great-grandparents had to do it." he
told them . "I hope you 'll find it in-
teresting."
With the children crowded around a
small table normally used for math and
reading. Wagent set to work.
Combining the nour, milk, sugar. salt,
oil. and yerist. he stirred everything in a
huge silver tub and then turned the
sticky mixture out for kneading on the
study-ta ble-tumed-br Jadboard.
"Kids are used to seeing bread on the
shelf In the supermarket and not wor·
TYini about where It comes from,"
Wagener Says. "Most of them never see
it in a state like that, so this was one
le910n they really pakl attention to."
Flop Oop Oop. Wagener slapped, beat,
and kneaded Lhe dough wilh bis practiced
fingers. Then he rolled it in fresh flour
and flopped it some more.
. ' RAYMOND SNYTSHEUVEL, i , SAM!'t;5S THE-PllODUCT
For Th ird Groden, It Waa wmh Staying Aft...-School
Altogether, he worked over the bread
steadily for ten minutes. bubbltt to make the bread lighter," he "Oh no." ~frs. Chin suddenly rullfed.
1---1-•"'°DIZ Su.,JtOfl/..h{/<..f, _
Uoder the peace agreemen~ U.S. Lroops
are lo be pulled out of 5'?'1111 Vieu':'m
over a 86-day span and tbt dOmmunuts io·nofftt"Al!iOr. · .
'Ibey noted that the list is not a new
one. but includes the fulle!l information
known taken from Usll compiled by
POW·MIA ,_, newspaper accounu
and Hanoi radlll broadcast..
"Everyone figured I'd just mix explained. "n has to rise." "My third graders go home 11 2 o'clock.
everything up and throw iUn the oven."_ !Lls-~l\IUhnt students undmtood~-l~l}' !,.JIUllfl-.llllU<UOL•l!lll...!!:~h~
he' aald. "No one figured how much real that rather 1bltract explanation, but bread.'' U.S. medical evacuaUon toms were
poiaed to Qy into Hanot 19 evacuate the
first,beLcb of POWs •...,.,as Uloy &et
tbe green Ught foDowins: the cease-fire.
U.S. negolialor Henry A. KJalnger
say• lhe prlooners '""Lo be brought out
In ~gbly equal-siud li"JOP' dUtlna each
J:;&y J>Oriod of tile .eo day• while
(S.0 PEACE, Page II
The U.S. a~ partiel in the cease-
fire agreement are to exchange prisoner
JJst.t Saturday. Jt it not known ho• soon
the names on the , lblt will be made
public. •
California bu the most names In the
cotnpllaUoo on Paga 14, and several are
from Orange Co1Jot1.
work there is. But you've gDl to keep whtn the dough was brought baa fnto Not &urprislngly, nearly all the
working It until it feels right or the bread the classroom an hoUr later rully doubled youngsters chose to stay af~ tcbool for ..
won't come out wilh tbe right texture In in ~lz.e, the. lesson qf rising suddenly \\118 the bread. This 16'1M may not he:ve beta ·
the end.'' cl~r. very important to their report ~rds~•Dd
The students \\'ere surprised when, But twice more. thtl bread bad to be ll may not help them p.'t. lnto college, but
alter all the kneading, the bread still plUlChed down and allowed to rise back, it wall one of the few tbnts they woukl M
wamJ ready for baking. so lt was I :30 p.m. before the dou11h was Able to eat their wort. And theJ· weren't
"The yeast needs lime to 'form the air rtady for biking.' about to miss It. ~ -
( , I ••
•
I
'
I
:l DAILY PILOT " TlwrMMy, JJnuary lS, t91l ---
,.,.... r.,.. i Investigator Fired Officials PEACE... D .
_....,..; ... ro.-ore <omln( IM>me-l!om -•-1'1 {»
South Vietnam. .I. ""
Tun1iey Not
-JlP-Ca:ndidat,e--1--11 11n;.,~Obtain
The four naUoas IO<dina 1,160 truct MONTGO~RY, Ala. (UPI) -":' aupervtson to Sooth Vietnam ore ex-
pecled to pt th.it adv .... cootln(entl~nt • -
00 the -wllhbl 41 boun of tho -.... ..,gue fire, which Is-to beCie at-4-p.111; . ~
S.turdfy.
· Sen. Jolla TtaontJ (!).()all!.), .. ya
he woUt4 Mt •ocepl the '
-0 e in 0 c-r a I I c vlCO-pr"'1denUal B eh.l...,.on( ' -tlOfllinaHon--.in l9'1t,-even-U his--· f-.
fonncr college roommate, Sen. . """""
TAKES OCEAN VIEW JOB
Marine Biologist Vogt
Vogt to Become
Science Counsel
For Ocean Vie'\'
The Ocean \'ie"· School District ha s
hired a new en\4r-Q_nrnental science con.
sultan!. Dennis Vogt. 25.
Vogt "'tx> just graduated from Cal
State Long Beach. holds a bachelor's
degree in marine biology. He will serve
as consultant to all the district schools
for environmen1al concerns.
He replaces William Gaffaney "'ho left
the district to work in Humboldt County.
Vogt said be plans to emphasize
marine biology because of the district's
natural relationship to the ocean. He
hopes to establish an artificial tide pool
at one of the Ocean View schools.
Huntington Con
Escapes Prison
In Washington
From Wirt Services
SEATI'LE. Wash. - A Hwitington
Beach man facing 18 more years behind
bears bas escaped the McNeil Island
Ftdentl Penitentiary here wit.L a
manhunt now centered on populated
Puget Sound areas.
Curtis R. Michelson , 33, who has
already served six years of a 23-year
tenn, was last seen Tuesday.
He was sqrprised by Andrew W~trom,
'lO, caretaker of a resort on the east side
ef the sound when the elderlf man~.ir
rived to make some repairs on a cabin.
Tbe FBI said Michelson overpowered
Westropl, tied him lo a bed and drove off
in his gray, 1949 sedan.
Authorities did-hot disclose Michelson's
olfense that led to a 23-year prison tenn
and Huntington Beach police detectives
could not be reached this morning for
possible ·details of his crime.
Board Enacts
1% Stare Raise
SACRAMENTO jAP I -The State
Personnel Board has carried out Gov.
Ron:ild Reagan·s recommendation lo
grant a t percent pay raise to siate
workers \vhose 1972 salary increases
were reduced by the federal Pay Board.
The OOard acted \Vednesday after 8
message from Reagan recommending
the money go into the Jan. 31 paychecks.
The raises "·ould affect 85,000 to 90,000
civil service emp\oyes and cost the state
an extra $4.15 million during the re-
maining five months of the fiscal year.
••
DAILY PILOT
'"'9 Ontnge Olllsl DAILY PILOT w!Th ""!di
Is CO!Tlbh1ed lflt News·P~s1, b Plitll15hed by
flle Or•nve <o•SI Pulll1s.hln9 <Off!Pany, s~
r11e edlllons ire pUOllshed, MO!'ldly Throuoh
Frid•Y. klr Cos!t Mes•. Nr.<1110rt aem,
H11t1tlngton Beteh/Fountain Valley, U9unt ••8'1'1, 1 ..... rn11~10dl1blltk and Sin Cle"""n!t/
S1n J'"" Cftphtr100. A s!ngle tt'llonal
td!llon Is PYDll1htd S1!un:l1ys Ind Sunctayi,
Tn1 P<"IM1pel publlslltnv pl1n! Is 11 lJO w,st
a.y $tNtl, <••• MQ.I, <1!f1on11.1, m2'.
Robort N. Wt1d
l"rlsldtlll •flO PvbllrJler
Jod R. Cut/1y
Vict•,,.'il"'I .lfld Gel*'lll M.....,.
lhotn•• K1wil
Editor
i1iom11 A. Murphi110
~_,.Editor a.a.. H. L.01 Rich•rd P. twn
Aatlttnf MIM!llnl_ EdllOn.
Tttry Cov1111
Wtll Or"'" County Editor H....,,..._.Offlq
17175 lo1ch l oultYtrd
Mtilint Addr•11: ,.0 . loi 7•0, 92,41
Otller OfHc"
Hungary and Poland are the other two
members of the International poll<:lng group. .
The Hungarian government voiced of·
flclal wtlllngneu today to take part in
the ceale-llre eontrol cllort. Eacll <CUDtry
Js to send abobt 190 men. Poland has not
yet made public Its response but ls ex·
pected to participate.
Irdonesian sources said a battalion of
troops will leave for Vietnan1 even before
Saturday's scheduled slgoing of the peace
agreemtnt ln Paris.
Hagert leavtS Friday morning for
Paris to join in the signing with bJs
counterparts from North Vietnam, South
Vietnam and the Viec Cong's Provislooal
Revolutkma.ry-Governmenl Hanoi's
foreign minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh, at·
rived in the French capital today.
h Paxis, specialists from tht United
States. North Vietnam. Sowb V\etnam
and the Viel Cong met on dttails of
applying the cease-fire arrangement.
In Saigon. President Ng\]3-eo Van Thieu
predicted that if the Co"muni.sf3 violate
the cease-fire and wage new war, many
nations \\'iii join Soutb Vi~tnam in
fighting them.
The fast-moving diplomat.ic and
military moves fit .into the intricate
scenario set forth Wednesday in a 12·
page peace agreen1ent. plus four side ac-
. C(lrds, made publlc by Washington and
Hanoi.
Exuberance over the prospective wind-
up of the loog v;ar was mixed with cau.
titln over whether the settlement will
stick in a land where the figbting bas
been going on for a generation.
President Nixon spoke to congressional
leaders of "a peace. bowtver fragile,
which we have hopes will endure."
Negotiator Henry A. Kissinger pledged
a major U.S. effort for a pennanenUy
peaceful Indochina but cautioned that the
success of the agreement rests also "on ·
the spirit in which it is implemented."
County Woman
Held in Case
On Paychecks
A Yorba Linda woman who authorities
allege wrote out 39 payctieCks lotaliilg
$1.2,000 to non-existent or former con-
valescent hospital empJoYes bas been ar·
rested on e.rnbeulement charges.
Patricia J. Thompson. 29, was ar·
raigned Wednesday in San Bernardino
. Municipal Court, Fontana, on the charges
which carry_ a $!MOO bail.
Administrators or Laurel Avenue 'Ba~
tist Convalescent Hospilal Contacted
authorities recently about lhe case when
checks for utility bill.s providing power
and water to the facility bounced.
Investigators claim Mrs. Thompson
wrote the payroll checks on that account,
then deposilet. them in her personal ac-
ccunts at two Orange County banks.
She resigned as hospital administrlj.tor
ill December, claiming it was· due to
personal reasons.
Huntington Youth
Held in Valley
Assault Incident
A Huntington Beach youth has been
charged with assault with a deadly
weapon following a shooting incident in
Fountain Valley.
Police said Rocky Byron Jolly, 19, of
16221 Eagle Lane, also has been charged
with discharging a firearm at a vehicle
and possession of stolen property after he
allegedly blasted an occupied car with a
shotgun.
Officers allege that Jolly became in-
volved in a fight Monday night with two
juvenile boys, one of whom llved at 10238
Falcon Lane, Fountain Vflley. A> the
pair drove away b'om the home, Jolly
assertedly fired one round of bird abol at
them from a 20-gauge shotgun.
Police said there w_,ere no injuries
reported in the incident.
Jolly was charged with possession of
stolen property when police allegedly
found a stolen motorcycle in his garage
\VhJle arresting him.
Huntington Teen
Dies of Jan. 7
,Crash Injuries
A 17-year .. td Huntington Beach youth
died Wednesday from complicallons or
injuries he suffered in a traffic actident
Jan. 7, according to a spokesman for the
Orange Counay coroner.
Daniel George Dudrow, 17, or-16801
Heritage Lane, was injured three weeks
ago . police ~aid, when his motorcycle col·
lided with a car at the intersection of
Terry Drive and Glenhaven Lane.
l.I0\11'11 8e1Cf1• tt1 FOr9'\I Avtnvt
CO.II Mnt: "° Wttl D•r St•nl H~ Btldl~ :l>n HtWPOr llOU/fVI"'
Un C1tmtnlt: JCIS Htr!h I!• Ctmlno rc .. 1
Ttifeplto1t1 C7141 441-4lZ1
C._ffW "'"""'"' 642·5471 Pl'MI Hlf1fl Or11191 (_.y C:.1111'11111111,..
1~0.1220
~t. ffn, Orontt CM'l Plllllhflltlt Cit._..,, HG -•IOl'ln. 1!1Ustr1•1Mi, ......., ..... ,,, .,...,'""""'.. """"
.., ' • ~ •""Wt .... i.1 ""
He was taken to Huntington lntercom---tnunlty-l~I her.&-he was treated
. for fracturos of his leg and ann and re-
leased Jan. %2, polict S8ld.
,.....,., ~, ......... .
...... a. .... ~ ... w It C.t.1 ~ ·~ ,.....~ "' ( ... ,.., u.u =:.' lit' Nit N.1f ,,.,......,,, mlllt~
-QM tnonltllY.
Coroner's Investigator Russell Greene
said the youth was readmitted to the
hospital D day later and died Wednesday.
Greene said an autopsy revealed that a
blood clot was the cause of death.
Funeral arrnngements are pending at
Peek Family Mortuary.
From Wire SenlctS.. murder and marlJuanl-!muggling case.
Ntw intrigue ts emergtng in the ex~ Hucbon's wlfe filed a missing persons
teulion murder oJ a Laguna Beach man report Oct. 29, 1968, with Laguna Beach
"'ho allegedly hijacked a p)antload or poltce, saying she .feared her husband . had met fOUI play 1n connection with a
martJUlna •~ years ago, double-croaslog n:.rcoUcs sm~llng operation.
bis boss in a $64,000 deal with the Hell'a In!ormaUorl dlse:losed later indicated
Angels motorcycle gang. Fassler headed perbapa the most far-
Tht body of \Varren B. Hud®n. 26, ol ilung dope importing rlng that supplied
990 Ocean Front was flully found.J&st users with tons of contraband flown or
yea: In a -Rlver;lde County mine tbafl alllpped in by boat ffifm Mw<o.
El •-·-=••ed Hud--1ccordlng-to aulhorittts -near Swure, mumiwu • manacled was a pilot for the Fassler operation and
hand and fool and identllied by dental hlja<ked a alllpmtnt of mertjuana, sell·
records and a $5 gold piece. Ing It for $11,0CIO to undlsclolled parties.
Callfornla ll1d Arl2ona author!ties who He then .... rtedly met the Hell's
finally obtained murder marijuana Angelo cycllats from Northerr California
smuggling and conaplr~ convictions at the assigned pickup point and robbed them of 164,000 the)' CUTled.
ag&inst three mm aru:iouncec: Tuelday Faultt 30 and two alleged ac-
ooe key lnvestJgator in the case bas been compltceii' at One time were believed to
fired . have burled Hudson out of a plane high
Maricopa County, Ariz., Sheriff's Capt. over rugged. Santa Ana Mountain ter·
Ralph AfcMHlen joined that department rito~ around the Orange-Riverside coun-
four yea'r ago, about the time Hudson' ty hne .
Vanished. _
ln\'esUgators discbe now that
1-lcl\lillen worked .as a pri\'ate in-
vestigator with I! flrnl llired to_hunl dov.·_n
the victim by his convicted killers, just
shortly before hiS' 1918 job change.
Newly sworn-in Maricopa County
Sheriff Paul Blubaum personally con-
ducted a two-state probe into ex-Capt.
J\1cMillen's prior association with im-
prisoned drug smuggler Larry Fassler
and his ring.
Sheriff Blubamn conferred with
lawmen in the Riverside and Phoenix
areas before firing McMUlen.
"After reviewing the files and discuss-
ing past and present investlp*-wtth
. . . autboritie1, I have concluded that
Ralpu McMillen cannot efftctivtly serve
the lifaricopa County Sberifrs Depan-
meot," be declared.
Dealings by McMillen l\ith Fassler -
"'ho only had drug charges pending
againl1 him at the time -were revealed
last year.
lifcMillen, a former Phoenix, .-Ariz.,
policeman and state liquor control board
agent, denied any wronadoina: in con.
nection with his alleged dual N.>le in the
Fassler case at that time.
, He has 10 days In which to appeal his
firing by Sheriff Blubaum, who defeated
former sberill John Mummert In Novem·
ber.--
Sheriff Mummert llad Investigated the
situation and cleared the man be hired as
a captain of any conflict of interest in the
Scientists Say
Big Earthquake
Isn't Probable
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A major earth-
quake is unlikely to occur near the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in
north San Diego County, two nuclear
sctenUsts say.
The scientist, called as material
witnesses in an Atomic Energy O>m·
mission hearing on two proposed ad·
ditions at the generating facility, both
discounted an AEC safety report which
said th at offshore faulting near the plant
was still "active."
But t¥ AEC, which has continued its
hearings until March 13, did not allow the
testimony on grounds that the joint
aperaton of the San Onofre station, the
Southern Califomia Edison Co. and the
San Diego Gas & Electric Co., bad ac·
cepted the AEC report ·as the basis for
the hearings.
The AEC finding> disclosed this week
said the San Onofre offshore faulting was
linked to the Inglewood-Newport fault to
tht north and tile Ri>Se-Canyon fault to
the south -and was still considered ac·
tive.
But Stewart Smith, professor of
Edward KenneclY (o.Mau.), wm
tile preilaenuiil nominee.-.---, "I $ee my!Jdf-in ·1976 u J~ean-Poche Beach - . a popular _ mufmg
dldate foi ,fC1leetloo to the U.S. beach In county ter~Jlory near the nOtth
senate." Tunney told reporters .end of San Clemente -might offldallr
\Vednead.ay before addressing become a publlc stra.nd, ·san Clemente Cl·
students at Troy State Unlven.lty. ty COW'l~ilme~ heard this week.
"l have no desire to be the ·vtce The 1mper1led beacbfront had . been
president in 1976." earmarked for private development
They \Vere roommates at the recently -projects whleh If completed
University of Virginia Law School. would . mean no public access to Ute
shoreline frum Doheny to San Clemente's
Estacion Beach.
F,...P .. eJ
JOHNSON ••.
be without hate -to learn, to rally, to
accept the challenge iind to-In' acaln."
Johnlon,a widow, Lady Btfd, Ill erect
and unfaltering In a pew across the aille
from Nixon and his famUy u black opera
star Leoi1.tyne Price sang "Take My
Hand, ertclow: Lord" and "Onward
ChrlsUan Soldiers."
Police said 40,00Q Ame.Means passed by
Johnson's Oag~aped cOffin as be Jay ln
state in the vaulted rotunda of the
Capitol Where he began.-his pallUcal
career in the 1~_'._s as a _prote1e of
Franklln-D.-ROO<evelt. -'--·< -- -
At least 3,ooo more gathered outside
the church as government dignitaries, a
group of foreign representatives and
scores_ol personal and poliUcal friends
arrived for the funeral.
Joining President and Mrs. Nixon at
the funeral was Mamie Elae.nho~.
widow of another President.
Mrs. Johnson was accompanied bJ
daugbten Luci and Lynda, and their
husbands. · '
Also In the first row Jolwon family
pew was Johnson's ~year-old grandson,
Lyn Nugent, wbo as the body was carried
from the Capitol, cast a poignant
farewell salute.
The boy paid similar respect twice
\Vednesday to his grandfater -first
when Johnson 's body was placed aboard
the plane in Texas for the flight to .
Washington and again when the casket
was carried off the presidential jet on ar-
rival at Andrews Air Force Base. . -Johnson's final resting place is a plot
under a huge, · nve oak in the f8mily
cemetery at the Johnson ranch. The site
is adjacent to the graves of his parents
and grandparents.
Free Oinic Gets
Buf-CifY-lllanagor Kenneth Carr told
oouncllmeo Tuesday_ that county
supervlaors are considering a feaslbiUty
study on purchasJng the small section or
beachfront wblch offers &ood sport to
surfers.
Councilmen •&reed unanimously tu
support IUCb 1 county ltudy. ·
There are comrllcallona, howevtr. :
In the center o the beach oectloo la tho · Sboroclilta Beach Club, and the only. off.
street parting ln the beach zone belongs
to members of that P,l'lvate club.
Spokeomen for the s h o.r e c II fl s
Homeowner's AuoclaUon told coun-
tllmen that members are extremely con·
cerlltd about the fate of the colony's
private .parking lot near the corner of El
CalnlnO ~I and Camino Capistrano. ~l ~~ ~n.r8l _11<elches .of _the
beach ate acCeaaible through a sub-
terranean series of 1tairways and
catwalks installed altmg a flood control
drain. ..
The euct furtsdlctlon of the accets,
however, is confuoed. and ownership
along the beach ls complex aa well.
Supervisoro this week agreed to a so.
day delay on any declskm on the
feulblllty atudy.-a delay brought about
In part b" thtlr deslreo for an opinion
from the city,. Carr said.
He added that there teemed ~·a very
strong chance" for a joint appllcaUon for
federal grant funds -lbe city and courr -
ty being the applicants -for enough
cash to buy the 1,500 front feet of beach.
FremPagel
BOMBING •.•
nam's cities blossomed out with red-and·
gold national flags at the request of
. President, Nguyen ~ Van Thieu. More
police, including national police in
camoufiage uniforms, helmets and flack
jackets, were in evide.Dce. .
Otherwlse, Ille~ ln_busy_ Saigon, Da
r<ang -iMO\lier 'C!Uei proceeded
normally. ·
Towns Won't Unite geopb1sics an~ ~ of the graduate , ,
program in geophysics at. the Univ~rsily F e;teral Grant
In Saigon, Thieu told a meeting of 1,000
nationaJ police Officers today, hWe must
bO!,_,..i to -tee. 'C:iitiuaimtats in s.lx ~ kl a.•<me-fll:&l!, .one..ote elec-
RICHMONp (All.I,. -~~ lbe C.Ontra c.oitj CoU9ty ruraJ... 'ties
of Alamo, Danville· and San Ramon have
defeated a propasal to hiaVporate. By a
vote Tuesday of 5,623 . to 5,1711, the
merurure to create lhe 15th city in the
county failed .
of Washington, contended m h\,s prepared ~ " ,.
te111mony ..!ILi lhR~ollsllon> 1au111ng. -' • , .iJ '~~c -,. ..vufd not :1tii1>m a ma~~ """""" In a . ..-J. -'' ~ , it consisted' ~ short ·toldi _ Intl_ faults. 1.U.U 1 There must be cobtin\Joqs faulUng .. along -=. ... ~ • "'4
lengths or at least 10 miles to g'enerate a The HuntingtQo Baach" Free Clinic',has
large quake, be said. ' been awarded ~ fl5,000 federal jrant,
* * * clinic directors have-aMOunced.
U:~ ~sM>;, ~llunker, tion.W!. .._
lJCt _ .:W!llf 'l'bliu· M!ildly - a ~iy; ., .~~~se-fiJ;e was announced
1oln!IYJIY:WIS!IW1&1i>n wid Hanoi -drove
to lndepeiidcnce Palace today for
MoJher'meeflng with the president. II
lasted 35 minutes. ~ usual, the subject
was .not dilclosed.
San 011ofre Plant Critics
Tlie grant was awarded by the N'aiional
Institute of Mental Health through the
National Free Clinic Council.
The clinic operates at 222 Fifth St.,
downtown, and receives· $300 from the
On U.S. bases, the clllef order of the
day was staff. meetings deciding who
would go home when. The fewer than
23,700 U.S. troops in South Vietnam have
60 days t9 leave after the cease-fire takes
effect. but most are expected to be gone
wtthln 45 days. Will Bring Up Evacuation
county each mopth and $300 from the ei·
ty to help defray costs.
A new free clinic coordinator bas also
been named. He is Mike Lyon, 25, a
graduate student in e d u c a t i o n a J
p:;ycbology al Cal State Long Beach.
So~e units may leave as soon as Sun·
day.
<'J'P~nts to plans to build two new
nuclear ctors at S· l Onofre today
vowed to r ect the issue of emergen-
cy evacuatio when federal hearings on
the plant proposal resume next March in
San Clemente.
lifrs. Lyn Harris Hicks, the leader of
the South Coast opponent:; to the billlon-
dollar reactor project, said that eVacua.
tion times and specific population
estimates given by utility witn esses last
week were "way off."
Specialists testifying for Southern
California Edison and San Diego Gas and
Electric companies told the Atomic Safe-
ty and Licensing Board that ii a nuclear
"incident" were to lake place at the
plant that required evacuaUon poputa.
lions along tht South Coast coUld be
moved from harm within two hours.
"No one took panic into account in lhe
projections. But instead they forecast a
smooth, orderly evacuation of thousands
of persons. Co.nmon sense says that it
just doesn't happen like that when
radioacUve materials are Involved," said
Mrs. Hicks. '
The mo'>!ing o~ the hearings to San
Clemente, she added. 111:ould mean that
citizens most a f f e c t e d by the
developments at San Onofre could more
easily follow the progress of the intric:;ate
heo.rings. The first sessions took place in
San Diego.
Earthquake design st.ndards and other
safety matters wUl ht taken up by the
Blood.mobile Set
For Huntington
The lied Cross blooc!moblle wtll be· sta·
tiO{led ntar the Murdy Park C.Ommunlty
Center. Huntington 'Besch, from 2:30
p.m. 10 7 p.m., Alonday.
Murdy Park Is east of Golden \\'est
StreeLand.north of Warner Avenue. ~fon
day's bloodmobile· visit is Sponsored by
the city M!Joyes.
City wor all members of the
community t te blood at the
bloodmobile. Mayor Al Coen wlll be the
fll'lll donor.
Appointments for the bloodmobile may
be made by phooln& the lied c..,. at
83$-5331.
• \
board during the hearings along the
South Coast scheduled to resume March
13. .
Several weeks after the close of that
phase, the same panel will return to San
Clemente and take up the environmental
impact aspects of the licens~ application
for the reactors.
Lyon replaces Thomas Cacbaza, 39,
who resigned following his arrest this fall
on charges of marijuana possession.
Wallace Surgery Set
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UPI) -Aides
said Gov . G~rge Wallace will enter the
University o( Alabama Medical Center in
Birmingham today for "elective" urinary
tract su rgery·.
Cachaza's case is sti ll pending in the
West Orange Coun ty Judicial District
Court.
LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE
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Group With Tho , CllDIT • 11 I}] Cooperative lvylnf WITH ;;;a,•• ' '
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•
•
H DAILY PllOf 3
'l:he .. ·chase Is On at Lion C~untry Safari ...
Hollywood came tO Lion Country Safari in Irvine this week with the
filming of a new movie based on the wildlife preserve's most famous
form er citizen, ''Frafiler the Sensuous Llon." The climax of the film
includes that old mcwie standbf, the chase scene, shown here. In this
one. a Li.on Coun~ jeep ~g the Hgood guys" pursues a Cadillac
with the "bad guys ' through the preserve. The Caddie swerves around
DAil Y f'"-OT ....... W l&Nrf 1Ce11111W
a guard tower, the jeep doesn't with these results. ln the tow is vet-
eran stunt man Bennie Dobbins.
Red Tape Halts Program
Reagan's State Computerized fuug Plan Held Up
: SACll~ (AP)-A major Reagan
"dminlstratlon program to halt the Dow
<>I barbiturates to the Wepl street
}narket bas failed to gel off the ground
'l"" though necessary laws ...,. pa...ct
jln lllro apcl federal funds have been
"6vallable fur two years, bdervien with
~te officials show.
i In a series of lnteniews wilb Larry
lammer, Capitol corteSPOQdent !or the
J.51;n Jose Mercury-News. state ofOciaJs
JSlid interdepartmental wrangling and
lape have stymied a computerized
~am to closely monitor the
lbmate traffic In barbiturates so lhat
~irootlcs agents could quickly move in
IWbtn S'Upplles are ·u1egally. diverted for
1
111< sttoet ,,,.,... ..
The pro)ect -origipa.lly to have begun
July I, 1971 -still 1' not fully operallona, ls~te Board 0£ Phartnacf officials
I acknowledge.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Senate sub-
~committee on juvenile delinqu11JC1
l repor1ed that barbiturate ... among teerwwen: bl~e ruched 11epidemlc11 pro-;porllona in California 8l1d seizures o! II·
• / CJ<gll barbllurates by state agents have tcJimbed to tbrei million dosage lllribl a pear. ,
) Tbe Jaw adtlng up the compateriltd
l:mon!torlng system was passed bY the
lure and •i&ned toto Jaw In 11171l,
congresalonal inveatigotlon In lilt
created oatioowlde headlines.
It dioolosed tbat U.S. pharmact11tlcal
companies had been shipplng plll.s to an
address that turned out to be th< llllb 1-~tfiairaw'Ttiiimi::ilrniliS.1n &1 ...
ico. The piU. tben were being smll£iled
!back into Calltomla.
Tbe P"I'* ol lhe ... system ,. .. to
make sure that leglUmately manufac-
tured ptDs bro'.l&ht Into the state did not ~end up In tl!e lllt&al markcL
I The Calllomla Com1d1 Oii Criminal -..UC. (OCCJI obtained 1 $Ul,511
federal g.mnt to pay for the project and
tbe law setting it up called for it to be in
service by July 1, 1971.
Tbe firsl bl( delay came wllcn drug
wholesalers, tbe California
Pharmaceutical Association and tbe
Slate Board of Pharmacy all asked the
Legislature to extend the deadline by ooe
year, saying addJtlonal time was needed
to solve oompllcated inventory re1>0rting'.
problem>.
The second major delay came when
th< slate Finance· Depertinent r<luaed to
accept the fUi,588 federal grant. Tbe
department aald It needed ..,.ran<es
' lbat tl\e lltate woul1fn0t be 'll\ld< wilb lbe
cost of the program in future years U the
federal grint were not renewed eac.b
year.
Allhough tile Finance Department Is a
part of the Reagan adminlstratton and
the project had strong backing from both
the Governor him.self and [rom the CCCJ
on which five Reagan appointees sit, no
top administration official managed to
cut through the red tape.
Richard K. Turner, the Governor's
assistant legal , affairs secretary, told
Stamm er that he Was fru strated by the
Carpenter Bill
Would Reduce
Criminal Age
.delays. ~ I "It did seem to be an unreaionable
:From W"n Services
(... delay In getting o/I the ground &lllce we
.had the federal money and the ltgi.sla-
llon," Turner said. "I suppose k would
, have gone faster if ] had ramrodded It,
SACRAMENTO -II 18-yeaMlda are
now aduJI& In various clvfl maum, they
-d be in criminal llCtivlty tqo, ..,.
cording to State Sen. Dennis E.
C&rpenter (II.Newport Beach). who 1'
llU'hinl for It. . A blll lntn><luced by Sen. Carpenter
Wednesday woold foree several changes
in conoecUon with California Youth
Authority (CYAI ttgulatlons Ind pro-
cedures.
"11 the!< young people enjoy ill lbe
benefila of adullhood they should also
share the rHpOOSlhUU.ies u adults,''
Clirpenter eommented.
Tbe leglslatlon woold mllle It the
maxi.mum lgtl fCl'. Cli oommltm&nl on
misdemeanor charges lmtead o( 21 and
reduce from is to lll1 the ap al which h<
'IVOU!d come under AllWI 1.ulhorlly con-
trol.
His bUl would also raiae the age from
22 to 25 for convicted ftlons under CY A.
)urlsdlcilon.
Carpenter wlis against p.ing II-year·
oldl lbe votln& riCJ>I.
cbuL that's Mt my reaponaibUJty.1'
On Jwie a, 1972 -nearly a Ytoc alter
"lbe project .... to haVe be<n In _.11on
-Finance agreed.to accept 'lhe r-.1
grant, on the conditlorr that the program
would be reconsidered U at any · time
feder1l 11.1pport for It were wtthdrawn •
Work on the computer procnm did not
begin untU July i , 1972 -two days Iller
the ""°"" deadline set by the
Leglslawre paa!Od.
John Drobny, deputy conJUmtr alla!n
dirtceor, ukt the computer system ls
now set up and has printed Olrt
documenla -l!C what d r u gs
pMm!aceuUcal flmiiJlavs reported IMlhd· inC Into lbe •t'!le·. ,,,._ 1111& are lo be
checked agalnst the otber tbts on wblclt
lbe drug purcbaMrs Id! what Ibey have
-1ved. Dro1Jro1 Mid. If any ditc:tt-
cltt tUrn up, narcotlca agtntJ will be
dilpalcl!ed to in~'8l!Ptc.
Tbe computer la also programed to
react whentver a regular dn11 purtbuer
place1 a much laraer order' thin uml,
Diobny said.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dirty Burglar
Hits Sex Shop
Supervisor Loses Bm
To Oust LAFC Panelist
REDWOOD CITY (UPI) -An
X·rated burglar struck a local
dirty book shop and fled with :
-Seventeen sex manuaJs valued
al !JIM.
-Thirty.six movies depicting sex
activists. valued at $900.
-Twelve novelties, valued at: 1 l2l5.
-And $100 in cash.
A move to oust a public member of the
r..ocal A g e n c y Fonnation Commission
Wednesd ay by Third D!stri~rvisor
Ralph Diedrich failed in a ti4-votC .....
The action was =..imed at Stanley
Northrup, former San Clemente mayor.
named the public member after the
death of Charles Pearson more than a
y,car ago.
Northrup had served for five years as
a city representalive but he lost the post
when he was defeated for reelection in
San Clemente.
Diedrich, who emphasized that his
J
.JJ.J. qarrell
JANUARY
move was not aimed at Northrup
personally, said the .public mem~r
should truly be one. :hat a former city
representative might be prejudiced
toward a municipal side of disputes.
Councilman Louis "Red" Reinhardt
immediately jumped to the defense
saying, "a man who bas served in
government knows the problems." He
poinled oul that the alternate public
member Mrs. Ree Burnap of Fullerton
had never held public <1ffi.ce. He iald
Mrs. Burnap bas sat for Northrup on
many oceaslons .
•
f
includes a special collection of
DREXEL UPHOLSTERY
in a generous selection of beautiful fabrics
•SOFA
Rog. $579
·NOW $489
· • LOVE SEAT
Reg. $375
NOW $319
• 15°/0 to 25°/0 OFF on seve ral
DREXEL • HERITAGE
Bedroom , Dining Roo m,
Ocess ione l Coll ec tions
• SAVINGS Uf> TO 20 °/0
on all Floor Sempl e
LEATHER CHAIRS
end SOFAS
• 15 TO 25 .. /0 SAVINGS
O n Me ny Uphol stered
Cheirs & Sofas Now
On Display.
a ';.;J:·' , ·r v . I
H.J.G Al\l\ETf fURNf]lJR E Jii
PlOFISSIONAL Open Mo._ 2215 HARSOR llYD. 646.0275
llITTRIOR DESIGNEAS Thu,., l Fri. Eva, COSTA MESA. CALIF.
'
!
•
4 DAILY PILOT .
Viet . Accord Reflects Face-saving
Giving Power
To the People
By WIWill L. RY AN
U fMcllli OW1u11t1•
Eidt participant In \be Vietnam war,
~or-lndllocl, claims a vlelory .tn
the aense that the Arnericans cot '!lbe
riabt kind of peace."
President Nll'Qien Van Tbleu of SOllth
Vietnam held th.it the Communist> loll
and S.igon was victorious becausa North
VlelnltD had been "forced to call off lb
aumaJon agalnlt tho SOlltb. ..
Lo Du< Tho, North Vietnam's chief
negotlatDr, called the acoord "a veat
victory for the vi.-people ... The
word ''people" in ~untst parlance Is
"
Interchangeable with "Communists.•
'Ille Soviel Unloa, wblch poured
mUltory and ecooomlc aid Into the effort
for years, bol1hloo Jhal.lhe "people" bad
won, due 1n Iara• par1 to "the aal ......
aod support of the Soviet llblon and other
socialist nauw."
CHINA,. Wll!CH • also supplied the
North Vietnamese at consJderablt ex-
pense, professed to see a 11people1s''
triumph.
A popular wumpllco ii lhat f-"'v-
lng Is Important In the Orienl 1bore was
plenty of It In the agreement Henry A.
Kissinger and i... Due Tho reached In
Patil. fulwo, the DMZ bocomea provilloaal -
Tbe Amerlclna and SOllth Vietnamese temporary -by cltllnltlon and nther
...,lalded that the demllltariJecl ...,. at pennooenl ID practice. Face ii aaved all
the 17111 paNllel ,.-..i -a dellnlte -al'Olllllt .
bouDdlry wblcb bad to ba mpoctod by THE AMllUCANS and Soutb Viet·
the Norllt'1 Oimllt1ml•( rqlmo. The ,,..,... aaJd they would not tolonle tbe
Norlb aald lbers could be no permaueot bnpoollkla of a ,coaJltJoo cm the Soulh. 'Ille
clemarcaUoa line becollle Vietnam was North and the 'Natlaaal U-Fnint
mU, all one nation. wanled a coalltlon, with tbe Tbleu
The IOlutlon: Tbe DMZ waa adjudged a coveniment tbro1111 ouL
provisional de1110rntlon pea d I a i The IOluUon: eleclloN to be •rranaed • by a ''natlollal council of recooclllaUon reunJOcatloo of North and Soulb Vietnam and coocorcl" wJth equal re-lotion
by free elections. Since free <lectionJ f0< the Saigon rqlme, NLF and neutnil.
throupout both Vietnams seem an Since thl.s councll muat operate on 11be
un111<,iy proopoct In any foreseeable principle of 1111anlmlly," 111 ouUool< Is for
RICKY 11CKY POIJTJX, When you
gaze in wonderment at all the wheeling
and dealing that goes on up at our Coun-
ty Seal, sometimes It's easy to cooclude
that most of the political machinations go
on at the 'Boa.rd of Supervisors level. nus
can be misleading.
Role Jtlafl C~nge
What Will Kissinger Do Sovth China s.o
Oh, it 's true, when it comes to politics,
"·e get some of our larger giggles out of
the c.'OUJlty board. And at other times,
turns of the supervlsorial corbcrew
aren't really very funny_
For Encore After Paris?
But, you ask, does all the really juicy
poliUcal action center on that august
supervlsorial body? Maybe not.
In recent years, It bas become evident
that the powers of another polltlcal body
up It the County Seat ba.ve aometimes
vexed the Boan! of 5"pervi3ors.
TIDS GllO\JP IS known as the Local
Agepcy Formation Commission, or LAFC
for short. 1be five member.I: art a con-
glomerate of all oor polltlcal groups,
some appointed by cities, some by lhe
cotm.ty board and one known as a ''public
member.''
Anyway, ~'hat the LAFC does fo r a liv·
ing is IG sit up there in the County Seat
and rule on things like ·formations of new
cities and annexation of county territory
to existing cities.
Thus every time the LAFC boys ap-
prove formation of a new municipality,
like the city of Irvine. or they okay ad·
ding a chunk of territory, to. say, Laguna
Beach, an interesting thing happens.
That is, territory controlled by the
Board of Supervisors shrinks. Abruptly,
some city, either new or old, now con-
trols it.
RECENT STATEMEN'IS by County
Board Chairman Rooa1d Caspers have
suggested that he believes we're already
got too many cities messing up Orange
County. ca.pera has sort of sugge.ted
we'd be better off leaving the rest of the
county out of cities. Thus, of course, the
Board of Sbpervi!on; woold take care of
things.
Now, il YOU look back al the LAFC, you
find generally it bas two membt.rs who
WAS!llNGTOi'I (AP) -HBs Henry
Kissinger talked hlmsel! out or a job! •
President N.iJ:on's assistant for
naliooal seourily a/fairs simply smiled
Wednesday when asked that question.
Whal Indeed wUI Kissinger do now thal
Viel.Dam peace, at last., is at band?
Goooipy Washington Is churning ""' an
assortment of. answers wJtb lltUe help
from Kissinger, who has Indicated be
doesn't know himseU.
Judge Rips
Watergate
Attorneys
WASlilNG TON (UPI) -His deep.set .
dark eyes flashing , Federal Judge John
J . Sirlca told lav.'Yers for defendants in
the Watergate political espionage trial
they were "ridiculous" when they argued
their clients broke into J:temocratlc na-
tiooal bead.quarters to protect President
Nixon.
Sirica. dressed down the attorneys
Wednesday willJe rejecting the request d
Watergate defendant James W. McCord
Jr. that he be allowed 16) build bis
defense around the a~t that be
spied on the Democrats to guard Niion
and other Republic.an officials from
harm.
are city~riented and another two who McCORD. THE FORllbl chief or
a_re county aPJ>?intees. How about ~ security fo~ Nixoo's l'Hlectlon com-
f1fth man? Hes the ~ed pu~lic · mtttee, and G. Gordon Liddy a former
member. Now you pl 1111 He ! Ille, l\YlllC--W!iite-~ aide, are being trted on
vote on approvals fof llUlexaU.W-ini1' charges of conspiracy, burglary and
new dtyhoods. wiretapping growing out or a breakin at
NOT LONG AGO, the public member
was fonncr Laguna Beach mayor
William D. "Big Bill" Marlin. Presently
it is Slan Northrup, former San Clemente
councilman.
Since both men had served time in
municipal government, you can see bow
certain \Vrong Thinkers up at the County
Seat "·oul d figure they might be just
lllghtly city-oriented.
Thus it \vas that only yesterda y.
freshman Super\risor Ralph Diedrich took
his seat on the t.AFC and promptly sug-
gested that lhey boot Stan Northrup off.
Nothing personal, he added, it's just th at
good old Slan used to be a city a>tlll·
cilman and ought not to hold that public seat. ,,,...
BESIDES TllAT. Diedrich argued.
even the Grand Jury had suggested the
public member shouldn't be a former of.
flcial. • i
This prompted Northrup to suggest the
Grand Jury 's comments "were Idiotic."
Hah l That's telling 'em, Stan baby.
In the end, the LAFC voted against
ousting Northrup and voted for a policy
of. no more H<Q)UJ]cllmen or ex-
supervisors in the public position unless
they'd been retir!d from those spots for
five yean.
You IUlpt!lCt they figure a former of·
ficial bu forgotten evuything be learned
after five years oil the job.
How wrong lhey are. In Orange County
poliUcs, nobody ever forgets .
the Democratic National Committee of·
fices last Juoe. Five other defendants
have pleaded guilty. •
The three-week~ld trial was in recess
today during the national day of moutTl-
ing for fonner President Lyndon B.
Johnson.
At the close of Wednesday's pro-
ceedings, Sirica ordered the jury from
the District of Columbia courtroom and
called the lawyers before the bench. The
black robed judge launched into a lec-
ture, saying it was his opinion that
ti.lcCord, a fo nner CIA and FBI
operative, should have notified the prop-
er authorities if he feared for the safety
of Republican officials.
DAILT PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
· Deliytry of Ole Diiiy .-uot
is 911ari11ttttd
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~n CJoenttnte, C•pl•lr•no lucll,
S.n Jwn C.1ll1tr1no, °'"' '91nt,
SOutll L111vn., l .. -l\llgvtl 4fJ.44JO
"What can top Paris?" he mused dur·
ing a conversation, refening to the city
be visited 24 limeli in 43 months pursuing
a peace accord.
Kissinger said a few weeks ago that
once. LYielnam..peace_waa wrapped up
be hoped for a 1eisurely vacaUon in Mex·
!co. Beyond tha~ there has been little In-
formation about bis plans.
NO SUDDEN CHANGE Is Jl!IUdp&led
ln Kissinger's role as Nixon'• cb1ef
foreign-policy adviser. But Kissinger has
suggested to friends that the Naliooal
Security Council appanitus he heads
would have a better chance of endurina
in subsequent administrations lf tt bail
someone "'5e at the helm -at least for a
while -beCore Ni.Ion leaves office.
In this way , the Gerqlan.born, fonner
Harvard professor has signaled a desire
10 leave the White House before Nixon
does, probably to write his memoirs and
ret urn to his role as one of academia's
leading experts on global politics.
BUT THERE HA VE been signs, too,
that Kissinger· would relish an 01>
portunity to turn his immense energies to
other world problems -rebuilding
America's European alliances, helping
build a new era in East We!t relations
and perhaps working for a Middle East
solution.
Kissinger has appeared to leave public ·
effGrts toward a Mldeast settlement to
others -perhaps becoule he ii JeWlsb.
But the Arabs themselves reportedly
have shown some Interest in enlisting
Kissinger's talents toward working out a
solution.. \
Kissinger 's timetable for departing
from the White House conceivably could
be influenced by what has been in-
ierpreled u a re<Olll aeries of sJlihls i>y
Nixon. •
Paper Declares
Sniper by Self
At, New Orleans
f\'EW ORLEANS (AP) -New Orleans
police officials have concluded that only
one sniper was involved in the Jan. 7
shoolout at the DownTown Howard
JohnsGo Hotel in which six persons were
kill~ and more than a dozen wounded, a
television station has reported.
WVUE Television Wednesday night
said officials reached the conclusion that
only Mark Essex \\.·as involved. based on
physical evidence at ~the scene, in-
terviews with witnesses and a monitor of
lhe tapes made of police radio broad-
casts during the tu_rmoil.
WVUE said a monitor of the tapes
showed Essex had enough time to set the
various fires on three different Doors of
the hotel without aid.
However, a spokesman for the police
department, oCficer carol Gorman, aal.d
she had no information on any such con-
clusion.
Essex was killed Jan. 7 by police fire
directed onto the hotel roofto9 by a
military helicopter.
Poli ce had thought there was a
J>05sibility of a serond, or even possibly a
thi rd sniper.
SOUTH
VIETNAM
OVINNOH
A-• co•kollod l>y
ViatC0119 .,.d/or
North~ .. ,.,_,. I
U,IT.._....
NEWSMAP SHOWS AREAS HELD BY COMMUNIST FORCES
Rad. Hold L<irgo Portion• of $. Viet, CambOdla and L-
Will Ceme-fire Work? . -.
Peace Querres. Raised
WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The com·
pllcated Vietnam peace accords raise a
number of questions. Following are some
of the obviOU5 questions and the
answeri:
QuesUon: The United Stales has been
fighting to prevent a Ccmmtmllt
takeov,.. In SOllth Vi<tnam and President
Nixon has declared that be aougbt to end
the Vietnam war with honor and achieve
a peaC1! which had a chance d listing.
How well did he succeed?
Answer: President Nixon In an-
nouncing the Vietnam agreement Tue s·
day night said that he had achieved all
his goals. The Vietnam agreement will
gel U.S. troopa ool d Vietnam within 60
days and return the American prisoners
of war. But the future of South Vietnam
still seems uncertain.
Q. WHY IS THE future of SOllth Viet-
nam uncertain?
A: Because the Vietnam peace agree-
ment did not clearly settle what will hap-
pen nm. Tbe accord provides only tha t
the Saigon covmunenl llhould enter Into
negollations with the SOllth Vietnamese
Communiltl to form a "NaUoaal Coonc:tl
of NaUooaJ Jletoonclllalioo and Con<onl"
and eventually to attempt to negotiate a
reunification of Vietnam with Hanoi.
Q: What ii the NoUoaal Council sup. posed to do!.
k lb purpooe Is to brlnf the O\lllOSing
Vietnamese portiea together and to
supervile free and democratic elections
In SOllth Vietnam.
al first U some wlib do not get the word.
Q. Is. there any ,.,1 danger that the
cease-Ure will break 'down?
A: During the 60 days that II will take
for the United Statel to withdraw aod the
North Vietnamese to return the
American priaoners of war, it seems that
both aides will have weniy d lncenUve to
mai.e the reue-flre bold. 'l1le ceue-flre
will be policed by an lntematlooal
supervisory team composed of troopa
from Poland, Hungary, Indonesia, and
Canada. After the United State! is gone
di plomats are hoping that the
supervisory team and world opinion will
discourage the North Vietnamese from
co·mmttt.i.ng violations as they did hn·
mediately after the 1954 Geneva agree-
mel)t ended French Involvement in the
earlier Indochina conflict .
Q: ARE THERE any hidden dangers
.which could jeopardize the cease-fire?
A: The Vietnam agreement permits
145,000-300,000 North Vietnamese troops
lo remain oo South Vietnamese territory.
SOlllh Vlelnam Is definitely nervous
about their presence, and their potenUal
to cause trc;iuble-
Rain Due for Southland Q: Can the National Council really do
this?
A: THAT IS QUESTIONABLE. 'Ille
Naiional Council Is to ba composed of
representatives of the South Vietnamese
government, the South Vietnamese Com·
munlsts and neutrallst5. They are to
make deci1klns unanimously, which
means that If any party has a strious: ~
jectlon It can veto a decilSon. The
Colder Temperatures, Sharp Winds Predicted
Htgn IOdly motlty '°'· Co.11•1 r.inper11!,1res r•• from o
lo '2. tnl•fld femf>er•"''" , • ..,.. ll"Ol'l'I
41 ~ "' W•tw 1wmpff&lvr9 '°'
Sun, /tloon, Tlcle•
unanimity rule could quickly lead to
deadlock.
Q: How abolll North Vlelnam's
delermlnalloo to unlto all of Vletllam
under lb ieadlnblpf THUIUOAY
ltcllllld hfOl't ............ t :ii •. ,.,. 5«W low ............ 1!20f.M. .
l'lllOAY
u A: Tbe Vietnam peace .,,._.,i ......
u video lbal Norlb and 8oulb Vletllllm wlll
,..k to unllY all of Vietnam peacefulzy tiJroUCb neptiallon. But lhere ii DO COl'
lelnty that Iller • ,..,. of war the two
sides wUI reall.Y be able to uqollat< their
,.,,. "''" .............. t:«I •·"" 4.f F!l'$1 '°" , .......... lf;A,j •·"" l.t *°""' llltll . .. .. .... . S:U P."" 2.4 Sttond 1M ..... ,,, •• ,, 1:21-.lfto t.J dWmncea and achieve unlllcatlon. . Svn llltn t:U 1.1'1. leh StU "'""·
""'-lets 10:3'> ··""
For Sport•
Q: wm the 5t, at twt. .top
the l!ibtlng and peace aloo to t.oo
and Combodla which been aucked Jn.
to the Vi<lnam war!
I sood deal of tolk and lltUe ela. MW!wblle, Tbleu'a pvemmenl ...,...,,,
In ofllce. But face ii aaved. -IJlii1ilc the necotlallliia, the Uofle<t' -
Slelel linMIChl up the matter of Ht,000
north Vletnameae troopa II aaJd weno In
the SOlltb. Soulb Vlelnam aald there wue, tn fact, 300,000 nortber,n reautan In
the South and nolblna could happen unUI
they cot out. North '.iietnam aald It had oo ~ In 'the SOllth and anyway, they
wouldn l leave. To the eod, i... Due Tllo
referred scornfully to the "0><alled
'quesUon1' of the northern tniops.
The upshot: Nothing at all said about It
in the accord. Face is saved.
Teachers End
Long Strike
ln 'Chi 0 cag '
By Ualled Pma ln-tloul
A tenlaUve seUjement wllh a 122.6
mllllon price lag !hat allows a salary In-
crease and smaller clau a1zea was
reached today in the Chlcaao teachers'
strike, largt1t of. four In the nation.
The letilement wu sub!ect to approval
by Wte cl the full llCboo board and by
members of the Cblc.ofo Teacbera Union,
( IN SHORT .•• )
wblcb called out the teachers on Jan. 10
to begin the longe.t school walkout In the
city'• blstory.
Walkooto of teachm continued al St.
Louis, Mo,, at Pblladelpltla and at
Superior, Wis.
e •Notlal.._ Per•Ollfll;
MEXICO CITY (AP) -The three 1111-
tians who held U.S. Amba118dor Clinton
E. Kno• at gunpoint until they and 1%
PolUical prisoners were promised escape
to Mexico said they had nothing against
Knox persooally.
Arriving Wednesday night in Mexico
City, the woman and two men said the
-M-year~ld diplomat seemed an im-
portant person whole capture wu mo.st
likely to fon:e Hiilian Presldenl Joan-
Qaude Duvalier to meet their demanda.
Duvall«', In aecure lhe releuo of Knor
and U.S. Consul GelleraJ Wan! Cbrb-
tlanson, freed 1% political prlsooera, new
all 15 to Mexico aboard an Air HaiU
plane and pald them f11),000 In ransom.
e v.s. Deller St.flser•
LONDON (AP) -The U.S. dollat
opened weak on Europe's drlef money
, market today, reaching a record low in
Zurich, bot recovering •llibUy llf later
dealings.
Deafen aald the dollar's decline was
due partly' to a bigger than expected U.S.
trade deliclt for 1972 and to fl'Owlng
doubts In Wuhlngton about the ability to
maintain international monetary ex-
change rates.
e Trllde Detlrlt Seer•
WAS!llNGTON (AP) -Spumd by a burieontns economy, the U.S. Ind•
deficit totaled 16.4 billion in 197Z, three
times the 1971 figure Ind the wonl In
history.
The Commeree Department "'l'O<le<f
Wednesday that Imports list year totaled
155.5 billion, up from 115.5 billion In 1971,
and exports amounted to $49.1 billion,
compared with $-L.1.5 billion a year
earlier.
e Whites Stall A,..11 ·
MEMPlilS. Tenn. (AP ) -The na·
tion's l<n.h largest school system has
coasted through its first day ol.
desegregation bu.sing although white
absenteeism was high and was expected
to-today.
Pupiil who went to school were unruf-
fled by lnteantioo. One labeled It "a fun
day.''
c .... i.r lt'eatfler
The DAILY PILOT is the
netA•1paper for sports along
the Orange Coast. .. complete
slaUsUcs on local home and
away games, staff coverage ,
more exclusive stories on
Orange Coast !iporls than any
olher Io ca 11 y-distributed
newspaper. Chtlttl of ~ IOOff, LllM •tr\· •'* wind• lllgM ~ monllng llour1 --"'f IOUlttMll .. WHt 10 IO ti
lll'IO!t hi t i_._.,. flDHY Ind ,rjl(ljlr. '-----------'
.\: THE AGRliEMENT onlm the blab
commanda d all 1ldei to lnslnlct their
rqu Jar aod !rrqular troopa to stop
fighting aa of 4 p.m. PST Jan 27. Henry
lssi,.,er, In a White House pr'tsl eonfu-
enc:O\ll' edllesday, 11ld be bad a •ln!nS •<J>OC!etloot lltot a similar ...... nre
would come tnto effect shorlly alto In
Laoo Ind C.mbodla. But, inevllably,
t~ ,,. JUt.11 to be minor viololioos
u,,,,.......
'IT'S GOT TO llE A DRIAM' SAY$ POW W"I MARIE RUDLOFF I
Family Heon-. of ~co at Mlramor Navy Air Station
!
I
I
7
I
t
I
•
•
YourBomei.wn
Dally Paper-
., .. • vot:. 66, NO. f5, 4 SECtl~NS, 44 PAGJS
-. ---ORANGE COUNTY , CALIFORNI THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 1973 N TEN CENTS
, -,-r -• -. • lt~·~kg!lidt1 fiOrewell to Lyndon Joh~so-..
UPI Ttltp11ol9
PATRICK LYNDON NUGENT SALUTES GRANDFATHER'S CASKET
Ceremonies Held for Ex-President Johnson at Capitol Rotunda
Iceland Volcano
' Lava Flows Into Harho1·;
, ,. ... ,,..,. .. ,,. •• r ...,........_ -~--..a..!L--,~ --• '
. VESTMANNAEYJAR,. loOla)•d (UPI) alter ~jng partly (!own since Tuesday.
-New streams of glo~ lift• rolled.in · A long volcanic rift openftd across tJie
to the harbor today, ra1aing 'the wa~er 2*:-mll.e wJde island but was p.;rUy filled
temperature to 111 degree:i FSbrenhelt. witb lava by this afternoon. One .main·
"!fhe sea water Is -so· bot, Jt iS hard to crater ~nd several smaJI craters were
keep the engines properly cooled," the still active, spuiillig' \Ut fire, smoke and
engineer cf a pilot boat said as the boat lava.
made an inspection tour of the Heymaey
harbor area, the third largest on Iceland
and a center for the important fishlng in-
dustry.
Clouds of steam billowed over the
town, making it dangerous to ·land at the
tiny airstrip on the island off the Iceland
coast. 1
Five houses were on fire or bad burned
today, ignited by lava from the Helgafjell
volcano that erupted without Warning
this week. One .house collapsed under
pressure from a lava stream.
The 5,000 or so townspeople were
evacuated late Tuesday and brought _to
th~ mainland. Some were · allowed ·back
today !or a few hours to collect valuable
belongings.
"It is hard to say how Jong the eruption
may last. It could take three weeks, or
three years," said a geological expert
from the Reykjavik University.
The fish fi:eezing plants, accounting for
one-fifth of Iceland's fishing lndustry,
were emptied today o{ their remaining
stock -tons of dried codfish for
Port\igal and Brazil where it is-used for
"bacalhao" stews.
"I am as horrified as anyone else over
this disaster," s:iid fCelandic President
Krlstjan Eldjarn, who . Oew here Erom
Reyk~avik this afternoon.
Poltce and pilot ~ats patrolled the
harbor today, kee2ing shiploads o{
curious toi.irists 'from the maiillahd .away
from the risk.area .• Land*>g .bY, boat ailil
aircraft was restricted, but ,telephone
ooMectrOns · were restored again today '
Four Candidates
Fil,e For Harbor
School Offices
\Vith the filing deadline for the April 17
Newport-Mesa school board election just
three weeks away, only one candidate has
filed for each of the four available seats.
But Board President Marian Bergeson
said Wednesday she is no.t concerned yet
about a lack of candidates because most
of those who have filed "are incumbents
whO are well qualified."
The incumbents in three of the four
trustee areas have announced they will
run foe re-election and the incumbent in
the fourth area has said she will support
another dandidate.
Mrs. Beverly Langston. trustee for
Area Two in Costa Mesa, has said she
definitely will not seek re-election in her
area because she and her husband will be
moYing to Newport Beach.
lnstead, Mrs. Langston said she will
support the candidacy of Orville
Amburgey, the city's. communications
director.
_Ambu<gey, 945 .COronado Drive..:C-OsJa
·.Mesa, has ftle<t his papers for candidacy
With the Orange County Registrar of
Vo,ieMi.
Several weeks ago, Mrs. Langston
P. ·• L" l revealed that she might be moving .into . rISOner 18 another trustee area open tor election
J • • this year -that of Corona del Mar Ap. ~li~-8 Today . ~:~~Thomas caSey. representing Area
. r .---I But Mrs. Bergeson said Mrs. Langston
I D il Pil told her recently the move appears n a y· . . ot' doubtful in the immediate future. Casey. 2007 Kewamee Drive, Corona
The ""DAILY FILOT today prints on dc!l l1ar1 flied for 'r~lection to his seat.
Page 14 the roost complete list ayailable which represents portiona. of Ne~rt
--.alihough il cis known to 'be i'!complete ~Beach~ of Upper 'Ne;wpo,rt ·Bay.
-o( American war priaoriers and miss-~ His ~ly announce~ ~nt will ·.be
inc ~ee Corona del Mar llilh SchQol sernor u.S.·O!llc~ ~mpha!lttd.thal\the mere Marg.are! ,Setterholm, who said she · Is
lilling ol ,, l\BlJle or the ·-ol a planriing to file her e•pen soon a!lei: her
' name ·does not indica1e any conlil'plltlon · 18'h birthday, whfch is Satuiday. · oft~ ~'t ltatus, or an:r-dMlnre: -"1rt Tntstee Area Five, f!PreseilJing
' Tbty noted lfiat the list Is not a new Wm Newport, Balboa Peoimula 8'd 0 one bu\ JDdUdes the fullest lnlonnalion Lido tile, lnalmbelll Dr. Artliur. E. ~ knoWn taken from U1ts ~ bY ThOmpion, 87 Balboa COves1 Ls tl'le Ob!Y
POW·MIA groupt newspaper accounls candidate who has nied.
' and Hanoi radio b1roadcasts. ~ Trustee Are~..., Five's Roderick
; The U.S. and other parties In the .. _... Mac)fl1llan" who hu BeMled on the board
fire agrternent are to ucbange prtaoner since the 011trlct w111 rormed, has filed
lists Saturday. 11 is not known bow ..,. for ..... 1ecUon to his third tenn on the
the names oo 1" the list.I wW bt inade IJo!lrd.
public. MacMllllan, a ....ial v-r1cer·who livts
californii-has the most names tn•tbe at 1875 Anaheim Ave.. Cotta. Mesa,
rompilalioo on Pap-14, obd-.. ,.. rqr-11 --CoSla Me.a.and &om Orangt•Ci>anly. port ol w<st •NtwpOrt.
•• r
STONEWALL, Tex. (UPI) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson, eulogized
in Washington as the "tall man with
giant .characteri~ came hojm~ iOOj'exas today for burial 1n tfie rain us yar<ls
from where he was bom 64 years ago.
HWldrtds of dignitaries, led by Presi·
dent Nixon1 paid their final-respects to
the 36th· President at funeral services in
the nation's capital on a bright but cold
day.
W, Martin Watson , a longtime advi!1!r
to Johnson, said of his old friend at the
fWleral :
"History will record that in the seventh
decade of the 20th Century, America had
Lyndon Johnson when he was needed."
At the-end-of----the-one-bour church
funeral, Johnson's body was Oown to
Berg!trom Air Force Base outside
Au'Sllit~Tex., to be taken y moforcadC
the 65 miles to the LBJ Ranch for burial
in !he Pedernales River country he loved.
Johnson came home abOard the same
plane on which he took the presidential
oath Nov. 22, 1963, after the assassination
of President John F. Kennedy.
ln contrast to the SWlshine in the na-
tion's capital, it was dark and raining
steadily at the small cemetery in the
Texas Hill Country,
Also flying in for the burial was a large
congressional delegation, including Sens.
1-fubert Humphrey, George McGovern,
Henry Jackson, Warren Magnusoo, Ed· .
ward Kennedy, Edmund Muskie and
Strom Thurmond.
The original plans were to fly to the
ranch, but wet and chilly weather and the
threat of snow impelled officials to move
the landing to the air base.
At the ranch, early arrivals walking to
the burial site in near-freezing rain turn-
ed the soggy soil into mud.
The open grave was covered with a
black plastic sheet to protect it from the
rain.
The Rev. Billy Graham and' Jolut Coo·
nall:Y, former secretary of the Navy ana-
1ater of the Treasury, were to give the
ej@g~.__ --
Earlier, the nation's capital said fare-
well to Johnson.
At the conclusion of the one-hOur
funeral, Jolmson's body was taken
through quiet city streets to Andrews Air
Force Base in nearby Aiaryland for re-
turn to Texas.
At the rites at the National City Chris--
~ian Church, the pastor, Dr. George R.
Davis, said in invocation: "\Ve have
C()ffie here to celebrate sunrise. Often we
(See JOHNSON, Page Z)
Viet Fighting Continue -s
Both ~ides Deal Punishment Before Cease-fire
BULLETIN
,SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong gunners
sbeDed the big Allied air base at Bien
Hoa , 1$ miles northeast of Saigon, be-
fore dawn Friday. About 15 rockets fell
and flashes of fire indicated some am~
munition or fuel may b a v e been set
ablaze.
SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. \Varplan es
striking throughout South Vietnam and
the heaviest .Communist shellirig in near.
ly a month spelled no letup on either side
today with an official Vietnam cease-fire
less than three da}'s away.
Neither U.S. nor South Vietnamese of·
fciials made any secret of their intent to
keep fighting until tlie cea~fire takes
effect at 8 a.m. Sunday (4. p.m. PST
Saturday).
"Until . Sunday we'll do anything we
wan~ to," said a Vietnamese official.
aald a. . ·~ i'
UPl ,cor,t~pondent AjalJ..lli! . said
Quang Tri Province. Damage was light, :
nobody was hurt and the Preble re-
mained on station, the command · said.
As the cease-fire neared. sooth Viet-
nam's cities blossomed out with red-and·
gold national fl ags at the request of
President Nguyen Van Thieu . ~1ore
police. including na1 ion\ll 1>olice in
ca moufl age uniforms. hehnets and flack
jackets, ,,·ere in evidence.
Olhcr\visc, life in ousy Saigon, Da
Nang and other cities proceeded
normally.
In Saigon, Thieu told a meeting of 1.000
national police officers today, "We must
be prepared to beat the Communists in
six months in a one-man, one-vote elec·
lion."
U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker.
who conferred \'i'ilh Thieu Monday -a
day before the cease·fire was announced
jointly by Washington and Hanoi -drove
* * * Talks Step Up
to Independence Palace today for
another meeting with lbe president. It
lasted 35 minutes. As usual, the subject
was not disclosed.
On U.S. bases, the chief order of the
day was staff meetings deciding who
\\'OU\d go home v.·hen. The fewer than
23.700 U.S. troops in South Vietnam have
60 days to leave after the cease-fire takes
eff~ct. but most arc expected to be gone
\Vithin 45 days.
No More V.S. Soldiers
-;:_<f.a Get .. fliet .nam Orders "Tbe<e.:: .. ==· in~' . "
North· VletnlriJele gunners fl ed 4,000 a~~~ ahells qn South Viel·
namese l&ra,t.r:Oi>Ps'~nd martnes between
sunset .. ecfnesd!'y and · swtrlle today
near \)!e destroyed city ol ~Tri, .435
miles iiotth of Saigon..lLwas tM.beaviesl-..
shelling this monLb anf\'1here in South
Vietnam.
' " WAJ81NGTON (~P) ~. 'l'lle'-un/led
. · ~le• lo\lai' swung tntci . 6llb-Jevel · dtjiiOntat)C talks leading to a \Tietnsln
cease-flri! • going into effect Saturday.
......__'-_,.,..:,_ __ , __ _._ _ ___.....__:
pnivf9Usly ordered to Vietnam.
tln/y some soldiers .-•PeOlal skllb are to travel ta 'Vietnam dllring the final
three days or direct U.S. involvement in
the fighting.
U.S. command sPokesmen said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 B52 bombers hit
Communist positions in South Vietnam in.
the 24 hours ending at 8 ..1.m. today. It
v.·as the first time the fighter-bomber
raid3 dipped beloW 1300 since Presideht
Nixon halted the bombing Jf North Viet-
nam Jan. 15.
Rcmor of around·the-clock curfews for
South Vietnamese cities as the cease-fire
approaches ·have beer. spreading for days
and the first sucb curfew was announced
today. To no one's surprise, it was for
Binh Dinh Province in the COastal
Highlands, which statistically has always
been the least "pacified" of South Viet-
nam's 44 provinces.
Orders from the province chief, Col.
Hoang Dinh Tho, were posted throughout
the province keeping all people without
curfew passes, meaning nearly everyone,.
at home from 8 p.m. today until 6 a.m.
Sunday. .
Four American fliers shot down 1n
Laos were added today to the official
Indochina death toll, bringing tolal U.S.
battle deaths in 12 years of Indochina
warfare to 45,937.
The U.S. Command also said today the
guid,ed missile frigate Preble w~s hit
Wednesday by Communist shore bat-
teries while on an offshore operalion sup-
porting South Vietnamese troops in
Steel Ri1h19
It has a 'lot of steel in it and
it's rising high over the waters
, of Newport Harbor. To see
where all the steel is going,
see Page 2.
Newport Plans~to ·Spend
$ 750,000 on Stoplights
Newport Beach fs planning to spend
$750,000 to help cure the traffic ills that
ha ve historically plagued the city.
The money won 't be going for a
freeway, parkway, :e,:pressway or even
gates at the borders, however.
Public Works Director Joseph T.
Devlin said today there are plans to in-
DOG LICENSING
DE.4.DLINE SET
Newport Beach police today
reminded all dog owners that
Wednesday is the deadline to obtain
1973 licenses for 'their pets.
Dog li"'I""' may be bougl!t at all
cUy lire stations, animal hospital
and pet stores. Purchase of licenses
as <if next TburJda l require
poyment !'-a pena y lee.
stall lrafnc lights at 17 more in·
lcrsections and he 'll spend whatevcr's
left to improve existing signals at 12
other busy corners. ~~unds for 1the work will come from a
variety of sources, includin;-. the federal.
state a~ ·county governments, city gas
tax revenues and the poclet.s or private
developers. ,
Federal aid will actua}Jy account (or
one-third or the total, Devlin said, ex·
plaining that' formal applications are
goit)g in this ~~k so wo(k on some of
the signals can start July I. Others are
scheduled In future years.
But in the ool tpo distant £uture, DeVJln
3aid, motorists will be aided -or at
!t:s~n::U: of: with new si&11ali at
-Newport Center and santa Rosa
Drives,
-Irvine A\'enue and J-Ughland Drive.
lrvlne Avenue and Martnera Drive.
-Dover Drive and J6th St.reel.
-Dover and Cliff Drives. -See mtf'lC PO -tl ' ' ,.
'
See related·stories, Page 4) '
All sides hurried preparations for im-
plementing the ·complicated peace set·
tltm!!Jlt, including a stop order at the
Pentagon on virtually all American ~ls
Nucletlr Reactor
Foes Vow Issue
On Evacuations
Opponents to plans to build two new
nuclear reactors at S· l Onofre today
VO\Ved to resurrect the issue of emergea-.
cy evacuations when federal hearings on
the plant proposal resume next March in
San Clemente.
Mrs. Lyn Harris Hicks, the leader of
the South Coast opponenb to the billion-
dollar reactor project, said that evacua~
tion times and specific population
estimates given by utility witnesses last
week were "way off'."
Specialists testifying for Southern
California Edison and San Diego Gas and
Electric companies told the Atomic Safe-
ty and Licensing Board that if a nuclear
"incident" were to take place at the
plant that required evacuaUon popula-
tions along the South Coast could be
moved from hann within two hours.
"No Oil' took panic into accoont In the
projectJM>S: But Instead-they lorecast a
smooth, orderly evacuation of thousand!:
of persons. Common sens.: says that it
just doesn't happen like ·that when
radioacUVe materials are involved," said
Mrs. Hicks.
Hasty Burglars
Miss Big H mil
Haste makes waste, at least IO far as
t~ responsible for the burglary
w~ at the Newport Bea<h home
of Mrs. 'Eleanor ' 1Durg, 2701 Bayskle
Drive. / Pollce aald today that while 1 Ible or
thieves made otf with 43.200 In cash,
jeww ad artwotk I _l!!t dayllght
burglorf, they'd have doubled their take
if th;:i'd been more tbor®gh.
An envel~ containing 4t,2SO In cash
\f&S taken from a drawer of a chest in
the master bedroom, Mn. Burg told
police, but she said that another envelope
in the ume chesl -contalnlng '3.150 in
cash and travelers checks -was un.
distutt>«l.
• Pollce 1ald entry to the home was
made through an unlocked bedroom win~
dow between JI a.m. and J:50 p.m., when
Mrs. Burg wu gone.
•
Also in Washington, Secretary of State
William. P. Rogers met separately with
Canada's foreign· minister, Mitchell
Sharp, and with U.N. Secretary Gen.
Kurt Waldheim.
Representing one of the four countries
supplying conUngenta for the in-
ternational control group supervising the
Vietnam cease-flre, Sharp said Canada
will send 176 observers and 112 support
staff for a t.otal of 288 among the 1,leo
total.
He said Canada, which bas long ex·
perlence in often unsucceuful peace-
keeping jobs like the one in Vietnam, will
stay for the 60 days American troops are
withdrawing.
After that, a. continued preseoe.e will
depend on ''whether we wlll be1 ef.
fectlve."
Waldheim said any peace-keeping by
the United Nations in Vietnam WiJf de-.
pend upon whether the "participants
wish us to play such a role."
HP is to take part in the 12-nation ln·
ternational Vietnam peace guarantee
conference due to be held within a month
of the Saturday signing,
Rogers has also slated a meeting later
today with Adam Malik, foreign minister
of Indonesla. another of the International
Control Commission members.
Under the peace agreement, U.S. troops
are I<> )>e pulled out ol South Vietnam
over 'a 50-day span and the Communilts
are to free American pri90oers.
U.S. med~I evacuatloq '•-~~ poised to Oy into Hanoi to evacuatt the
first batch of POWs aa soon aa they c~
(See PEACE, Pap Z)
Orange
Somewhat cooler· on Friday is
the way tbe wtatherlady reads it,
with mostly llUMY sk!tJ lollowtna'
overnight clOlldlness along the
Orange Coast. lll&hl ID ll>e mid-
llOs. lows l<lnlaht' ID the 4111.
INSIDE TODAY
How ar• th<v going to kHp
Hen111 Kl11inae1 doum on tAI
farm afltr ht'a lttfi Partt-cmd
luimmertd our VllMam pe.C.
accord? St• story, Pag& 4.
,..,...__ '' ,..,.~ 1r
Mell Ill Nr'ftlt " ----. er....-c_, n =-"1 .-... IMJ ;::'!'. .... ,,.., --.
(
• •
'
. . ' •
•) DAIL V Pff_DT " Thursday, JMJu&r) 25. 197J / •
Steel Risi1ag High
Aide Fired
In Coast
~Death-Case
From Wire Servlcts
New intrigue Is emerjjinc in the ex-
&'Ution murder or • ..aguna Beach man wt» allegedly hijocked A planeload of
marijuana 4\.1 years ago, double-crossin&
his boss ln a $64 ,000 deal wlth the Hell's
Angels motorcycle gang.
The body of Warren 8 . Hudsoflt 26, of
990 Ocean Front . was finally found last
yea: .in a Riverside County mine shaft
near Elsinore, mummlfied, manacled
hand and fool and identified by dental
records and a $5 gold piece.
--Gelifornla and Arizona authorities who -
finally obtalned murder, marijuana
smuggling and conspiracy convi<:ilons
against three men announce( Tuesday
one key investJgator in the case has been
fired ..
~1!rlcopa County , Ariz .. Sheri!f.'s Capt.
Ralph A-1cl.1lllen joined that department
four years ago, about the lime Hudson
\'anished.
The South Coast Construction Co mpany's high rise
tondominium near tbe entrance to Lido Isle has al-
ready matched the height of the eight-story Vista
de! Lido Aplrtments just dov.1n the street. \'ista del
l~ido was Newport &each's first high rise, built in
1961 . The ne\v hi g h rise will eventually hit 10
stories and about 120 feet in height. Plans call for
con1pletion in mid-summer.
Investigators ~)me now that
McMWen worked as a private in-
vestigator with a firm hired to hunt down
the vict im by his convlcted killers, just
shortly before hi s 1968 job change.
Rite s for Ellen Bral1ams Fro•P9f1el
PEACE ...
Newly sworn-in Maricopa C.Ounty
Sheriff Paul Blubaum personally con·
. ducted a two-state probe into ei-O!pt.
Mcfl.1illen's prior aS50Clatlon wlth im·
prisoned drug smuggler Larry Fassler
and his ring. Presidential Widows
Sheriff BTubaum conferred with
Slated i11 Newport Beacl1 American forces are coming home from
South Vietnam.
The four nations sneding 1,160 truce'
the green light following the cease-fire.
laumen in the Riversicie and Phoenix
areas before firing Mc~1illen.
"After reviewing the flles and discuss·
ing past and present lnvesUgations with
. . . authorities, l have concluded that
Ratpu McMillen cannot effectively serve
the Maricopa County Sheriff's Depart·
mint,'' be declared,
Wiih the death of Lyndon Johnson, the nation has no living ex·presi·
dents. Surviving chief executives are (clockwise from left) Bess Tru-
man, .Mamie Eisenhower, Lady Bird Jobpson and Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis.
Trad111ona! hvmns of comfort u•ill
sound Saturday· through Sl. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in Neuiiort Beach
at funeral rites for r.1rs. Ellen Adair
Brahams. organist and wile of its former
assistaot minister.
Servit1!s for ~trs. Brahams, u·ho died
Scientists Say
Big Earthcr1ake
Isn't Probable
SAN DIEGO tAP) -A major earth·
quake is unlikely to occur near the San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Station in
north San Diego County. two nuclear
sciei\tists say.
The sclentlst. called as material
witnesses in an Atomic F.nergy Com·
mission ~aring on two proposed ad·
ditions at the generating facility, both
discounted an AEC safely report y,·hich
said that offshore faulting near the plant
was still "active."
But !he AEC. which has continued its
hearings until March 13. did not allow the
testimony on grounds tha t the joint
operators of the San Ono£re station. th e
Southern California Edison Co. and tbe
San Diego Gas & Electric Co., bad ac·
cepted the AEC report as the baslll for
the hearings.
Tbe AEC findings disclosed this \\'eek
said the San Onofre offshore faulting wa s
linked to the lnglewood-Ne .... ·port fault to
the north and the Rose Canyon fault to
the south -and v.·as still considered ac·
ti ve.
But Stev.·art Smith , professor or
geophysics and chai rman of the graduate
program in geophysic" at the University
of Washington. contended in his prepared
testimony th.it the offshore faulting
y,•ould not sustain a major quake because
it consisted of short folds and fa ults.
There must ~ continuous faultin1 along
lengths of at least lO miles to generate a
large quake, he said.
Smith said that even if a quake did oc-
cur along the Inglewood-Newport fault -
some 18 mlles from San Onofrt! -it
wou ld not harm the proposed additions,.
which would have a structural resistance
or 67 percent of the force of gravity.
Ol.t.Nlol COAST '
DAILY PILOT
TM or.,.. co.ti DAIL y PILOT. wtth 'll'N(ll
Is comblMll 111• Ht-Pr•~'-Iii Plll!ll~f!ll by
t!M Oft<lfe C..11 Pv•lkh"'8 (Gmp9ny, S.,..
ni. 9lilltlanl .... '911bi..,._., Mond•f fhnlVOll
Fr!Ny, fOf Collt MfH, Newport &Nell,
H1111Hnfb\ IMChl"-ltlll \t1lley~ ~
ll•tell, lrvlne/S.cldlri-l'k and Stn Cl9menle/
ll•n Ji.a.t C.pltir-A SlnGlt AGl-1
irdtlkln 15 pllbli\lllld $1Md1,,.,. and Sundin.
TIM pf\ncl.,.I Pllbl~llinig p11nl 11 It 3)0 Well
l1y 51'"1, Cosl1 Mtw. C•11fOl'l'll•, ntlt.
Rob•rt N. w •• d
f'r~io.nl •rid P11bl••her
J .,lc R. Curl1v
Viet Prt11dtnl .,., G91'1tAI M1n~11••·
Thom11 ICttvil
"EdllOI'
Thom•• 1'.. Mlfl'phin •
"'!n&l l!IQ fdl!Of
l. Ptttr Krieg
Ntwpor1 llttcll City l::d!!vl'
N..wf*f Inc .. OffJa
3JJJ N1wpor1 lo11l1v1rd
M1ili11t AlildrttJ: P.O. lox 1175, •266J
c..1e Maa: aa wttt •av str ... ~ lletdl: m ,_. ,.,_,.,.
Hurrt"""ttn llucll! 17f1S 1tK11 IO!Jl.,1,. i.n C""9:ltlllti aa.5 North &I Ct ll'llM llNI
tt'l.,S."9 (7141 M2-4JJ1
Clonlfled Ad••rtlli119 642·5671
(tDrt"lglU, ml, Or~t C1111l ~tlllnig ~nw. N11 ntw1 110rlft, lll111lttl*'5,
tflMf'lal n'lltlttr 0< M Yfrl!Mn'llf\11 ""'" "'°'~ M rl0f'Dd111tftl ""'ilflO~I .-i.1 IMf" mlulon II C'flrt'lfht own..-.
~ CltM -1"9f !lilld 11 (Nit MIM, Gtlltlffll.I. ..,.., .. rlt!I tw Clrtlef ll'i
rMnlfllYI t_. 1"V! U ,1$ rnontlllfl Mllittr?
•tlntllollt s:i.U-rnenl!\tJ.
•
\\.'ednesday at 72 after a Jong illness. vl'ill
be at 3:30 p.m .. followed by intennent at
Pacific View Memorial Park.
The Brahams family is well·known
along the Orange Cout for years of COD·
tribution to its spiritual, musical and
medical sen·ice.
The Rev. Dr. Raymond I. Brahams
y,·as found ing minister of the Community
Presbyterian Church of Lagune\ Beach.
where the family lived for 25 years.
She taught at Laguna Beach Elemen-
tary School and also served as organist
at the Art Co lony church as well as St.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church where her
husband retired last year.
The Rev. Brahams was instrumenta' in
organizing a campaign to build Hoag
Memorial Hospita1, where a multimillion
dollar expansion program is now under
way.
Family friends said today he asked
that contributions be inade to its Long
Range Planning Program in his wife"s
memory to continue the work he helped
start.
Besides the Rev. Dr. Brahams. of 2575
Tuslin A\·e., Costa 1\lesa. survivors in·
elude four sons: the Rev. Harry G.
Brahams of Yakima. \Va.sh.: Edward A.
and Richard A. Brahams. of Newporl
Beach. and Raymond I. Brahams Jr., of
Tea.nessee.
Course Offered
In Photography,
A photography class is now being of-
fered on Wednesday evenings at the cen·
tral branch of the Boys Club of the
l-larbor Area.
lass. taught by OCC student a.tark
·ens meets at 7 p.m. at 59-1 Center St..
Costa ~ sa, and is open to all Boys Club
members.
Boys are taught how to takt! pictures
and develop and enlarge their own print!.
Enrollment informa tion is available
from the Boys Club, 642 -8372.
Newport Man's
Trial Delayed
A four-week delay has been granted in
the Orange County Superior Court trial of
a Newport-£each man accused of the
slaying of a UCLA coed.
Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set
Feb. 20 es the date Corliss Kay Ankeny
will now be tried on allegations that he
shot and killed blane Singletoo, 21, in his
suite at the Tower ApartmentJ·l.ut Sept.
18.
Ankeny, 33, or 3121 W. Coasl Highway,
is free on $25,000 bail.
It is alleied that the wealthy,
une1nployed art instructor shot 11-tiss
Singleton in his apartment and then later
dellvertd the fatally wounded girl into
the cnrc of attendants at Hoag Memoria l
Hospital.
She died eight hours later. Ankeny sur·
rl :-.dered to San 1\lateo police !lfler learn-
ing of her death.
Educational Video
De111onstration Set
U.S. negotiator Henry A. Kissinger
says the prisoners are to be brought out
in roughly equal-sized gl'(l!Jps during each
ls.d!y period ol ~60 days while
Supervisors to South Vletnam .A!' tx·
petted to get thelr advance contingents
on the scene within 48 hours of the cease-
fire , whic1'. is to begin at 4 p.m. PST
Saturday.
Hungary 8nd Poland are the other two
members of the International pallcing
group.
The Hungarian government \'Oiced of-
ficial willingness today to take part in
the cease-fire control effort Each country
is to send about 290 men. Poland has not
yet made public its response but is ex-
pected to partkipate.
Indonesian sources said a battalion of
troops will leave for Vietnam even before
Saturday's scheduled aignlng of the peace
agreement in Paris.
Rogers leaves Friday -morning for
Paris to join in the signing with his
counterparts from North Vietnam, South
Vietnam 104. the '{)el COoi'J Pro!l!Sloiial
ReV1llutionary Government. Hanoi's
foreign mlnl&lu,.Jltllyen llJ!Y Trinh, ar-
. rived in )bo>f~c,pjtal loQ1.
I.1 Pari;:~,ipecW{;tl~l ~ United
States, North Vietnam ,· rSoUth Vietnam
and the Viet Coni-met-,,,0 deja.Us of
applying the cea,..fllt. arraogemtDI.
ln Saigon, President Nguy~ V:an Thieu
predicted that if the Comm,imiats violate
the cease-fire and wage 'oew 'lt'lr, many
nations will join South Vietnam in
fighting them. "
Tbe fast-moving diplomiUc and
military moves flt lnto the 'intricate
_scenario set forth Wednesday in ·a 12-
page peace agreen1ent, plus four slde ac-
e<1rds, made public by Washington and
Hanoi.
Exuberance over the prospective wind-
up of the loog war was mixed with cau-
ti.,n over whether the settlement will
stick In a land where the fighting has
been going on for a generation.
Frot11P .. el
TRAFFIC ...
-Balboa Boulevard and Palm Streets.
-Placentia and 16th Streets.
-N.ew 1.,acArthur Boulevard and San
1 Joaquin Hills Road .
-~largeurite Avenue and San Joaquin
!tills Road .
-Balboa Boule vard and 47th Street.
<-University Drive extension and Jam·
boree Road.
-Superior Avenue at Versailles.
-Pacifi c Coas t Highway at Promon·
tory Point.
. -Newport Place and MacArthur
Boulevard.
-Birch Street and MacArthur
Boulevard .
-Campus Drive and Jamboree Road.
-Arches interchange (northwest on·
ramp !or traffic exiting westbound
Pacific Coast Highway onto southboWld
Newport Boulevard).
Singla improvements on the drawing
boards Inc.Jude:
-Orange Avenue and Pacific Coast
ll igh way (total reconstruction ).
-Hospital Road and Ne.'' por t
Boulevard (upgraded for wider Hospital
Road).
-Newport Boulevard and Via Lido
(modernized).
-Newport Boulevard and Finley Slreet
(modem\ud).
llarbor area residents Interested in
educational televislon are invited to
pnrlicipute Feb. l In a demonstration and
discussion of Channel 50.
-Riverside ·Dri~ and Pacillc Coast
Highway (modernized).
-Tustin Avenue and Pacil1c Coast
Highway (mod<rnlzed ).
-Marguerite Avenue and Paclnc Coast
Highway (upgraded to han • Jasmine
Creek condomlnlunu). !J'he progr11.m. sponsored by the Harbor
Area Coordinating OJuncil . wlll begin at
7: 30 p. m. In the Orange Coast C.011ege
Forum . Dr. Nornn1n £. Watson. chan·
ccllor of the Coasl Com munity College
' District. and Wlllian1 F'urniss, telecom·
--&n Joaquin lllU.s R.oad and
fl.tncArthur Boulev!lrd addition of a dou·
ble lefi tum pocket and ne•. signal equip-
ment ~.
-Ford Road and MacArthur Boulevard
(new pedestrian signal•).
Dealings by McMillen with Fassler -
who only bad drug charges pending
against him at the time -were revealed
last year.
McMillen, a former Phoenix,. Artz ..
policeman and state liquor Cttrltrol board
agent, denied any wrongdoing in con·
nectiorr with his alleged dual role in the
Fusler case at that time.
He has 10 days to which to appeal bis
firing by Sheriff Blubaum, who defeated
former sheriff John Mummert in Novem·
ber.
Sheriff Pi-1ummert bad Investigated the
situation and cleared the man be hired as
a captain of any confi.ict of interest In the
murder and mar\juana-smuggling case.
Hudson's wife filed a missing persons
report Oct. 29, 1968, with Laguna Beach
police, saying she feared her bwband
had met foul play in connection with a
ru.rooUcs smuggling Qperatioo.
Information disclosed later indicated
Fassler headed perhaps the mQ$t far·
flung dope jmpqrtlng ring that supplied
·users with ..., ot coDt:ralilnd flown or
&hipped In by l!Oat from Mexjco.
Hudson -accord.inc .to authorities -
w11 !I piklt for the Fassler operation and
hijacked a !hipment of marijuana, sell-
ing it for $16,000 to undisclosed parties.
He then aaserted.ly met the Hell's
Angel!; cycllstl from Nortberr California
at the assigned pickup point and robbed
them of $64,000 they carried.
Fassler, 30, and two alleged ac·
compllcu at one time were believed to
have hurled HudllOD out of a plane high
over rugged Santa Ana Mountain ter·
ritory around tbe Orange--Riverlide coun-
ty line.
No body had been found, but Fassler
was convicted on circumstantlal evidence
and testimony in one of Califomla·s rare
missing-corpse murder cases.
He and his two companion.s are cur-
rently serving time on narcotics smug-
gling charges in Arlzona, while Fassler
faces a Calllornia prlson term upon
release for Hudson's murder.
F,....P .. el
JOHNSON ...
have walked to the mournful sound or
muffled drums. We come here "°
' celebrale to the glorious trumpets o~.
God."
Davis took as the theme for tbe sermon
to his fortncr parishioner the. Old
Testament Y.'Ords: "When after the death
of fl.1oses, the Lord, God, called forth
Joshua to lead the nat ion."
lie said the fonner President had
Poche Surfing
Beach to Become
Pttblic Strand?
Poche Beach - a popular surfing
beach in county territory near the north
end of San Clemente -might officially
become a public strand, San Clemente ci-
ty councllmen beard Ulll week.
The .Imperiled beachlront bad be<n
earmarked for private. development
recently -projects which if completed
many of the qualiUes of Moses -"the would mun no pu\ilc access to the
hardness of discipline •.. sitUng on top shoreline from Doheny to San Clemente's
of a volcano you didn't create, trying to Estacion Beach.
co ntrol it." But City Manager Kenneth carr told
Watson. whose voice broke at the end councilmen Tuesdq thit· county
or hi:; eulogy, said: "Re wu a tall in.an supervilon are CODlldltlDC a feasibility
or giant character and when ba com-sF •-.n fiction of
milted himself, he committed himoeU beil ~~:t g~ to "totally. And he asked bia-~ ,.. autfer .
do file lame. 1 ,,;:: '..,.Colt ~~~y to
"In victory, 1he ~ ti~ht UI .to bC '11P ~.8 'oiunf11tudy."~
magnanimous. In der..~ ha~ Ito to • 'IllelO..,. ~s, ~ever.
be without'hjte _ IO learn lo raJlx._to . !1!._the'<W!Lol~.he;!ch oe«lon la the
accept the challenge aiid lO '!iY again." S&Oiiiclfl(s Beach Club, and the only orr-
Johnson 's widow. Lady Bird, sat erect s•"ttt parting ln the ~ch zone belongs
and Unfaltering in a pew across the aisle to membe_rs of that pnvate club.
from Nixon and bis family as black opera Spo~ for tbe S b or e C 11 t f s
star Leontyne Price sang "Take My a:omeowner I Aaociation told COtul·
Hand Preciou.8 Lord" and "Onward cilmen that memben are extremely con-
Chrisiian Soldien." ce~ about the fate of the colony's
. private parting lot oear the comer of El Police said 40,000 Amencans passed by Camioo Real and Camino C.plltrtoo.
Johnson's nag-draped colfin as be lay in At present several stretches of the
state in the vaulted rottmda of the beach are 8.ccessible through a sub-
Capitol where be beg$n 1his political terranean serles of stairways and
career . in the . 1930's as a protege of catwalks Installed along a Oood control
Frankhn D. Roose velt. drain.
At least 3,000 more galhered outside The e:ract jurisdiction of the acctss,
the church as government dignitaries, a however, Is confused, and ownenhlp
group of foreign representatives and along the beach Is conlplex as well .
scores of personal and political friends Superv1sors this week agreed to a 30-
arrivcd for the funeral. day delay on .any decision on the
Joining President and Mrs. Nixon at feasibility study - a deJay brought about
the funeral was Mamie Eisenhower, in part b1· their desires for an opinion
widow of another President. froO". the city, Carr said.
LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE
,I
~~1wj11NlrN
: SUPER
Cl~llOMA<OlOI
25' SOOD-STATE TABLFMODEL -
Tttt LANGTON 04740W
Otllntd W1/nut color mt\11 c1blntt. Super
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lamout ot1glntl Zenith Chromaoolor tube,
100% 9olld4talt Titan 200 ChaallL
QM.Button Tuning. AFC.
100%
SOLID-STAT!!
'lllNl2DO
CHASSIS
et1 mln1te1
Ill chaMla
tubll
HO OHi
SILU
DNITM
FOi USS THAN
DUNW'S
son 1000 wu11 Dtll'Olll
P1w1r n. M1ctt.I•
• 2 l•••I n..1:w1dl
•AftllMtk D1ttr ... Di.,_.w ·s-.o....tew .,....... ..
·-$159'6
-·-
"'2-Meml>er of U Callfornl1'1 l.ergMt
Cooperotlvw Buyl,.
Group With Tho
• Volume luytt19
90 DAY
CASH
-
WlfH Al'HOQD
CllDIT
mun\catlons director of tho::: di~trlct, \l•ill
explain how the new channel wlll serve
Or1nge County And llow 1'V courSf!S may
be takeo for college credit. ' .
-Jamboree Road and Easlbluff Drive
(upgraded signal to handle eventual
wfdenlng or Ford Rood ).
"'""••--Power of 110 Ster"S§I ., ...... ..,.... .... '
1815 NEWPORT Bt111. DewlitDWll Ctsta Mesa -Phena 541-7711 ·
Traffic Plan.
The consultant preparing NewpQrt
Beach't aeneral plan traffic report has·
told city officials completion ol the
study'• oecond pha,. bas btel1 O.iiYed
between three and a1J weeks.
A spokesman !or Alan M. VoorlleeJ and
Associates told Publlo Worb Dlnctor
Joseph Devlin the d<t.y wu .. uted by
the res1cnatlon ol 1 key d'at1 spectlltst.
Pba .. 2 had ort1lnaUy -odltduled
for co mpletion Feb. I but the conaultant
told Devlin the eitra time Ls needed to
"errectlvely complete tbll slgn!Ocant
step.''
A.H. Krier, Voorhees' regional
manager, said his company baa hired
two specialists to work solely on the traf·
fie dat« generated by the ttudy.
The portion of the traffic 1tudy now
under consideration will llolate possible
30lutlons to traffic problema detcrlbed In 0 tlie first phase of the study.
Despite the dO!ay In Phase 2 bOwev<r,
councllmen Monday nlaht voted· 6-1 to
give the COlllll!tant lllOther 11,000 to
study the eflectl of alternate land uses
on projected traffic pattema. ·
The extension of work came over the
objection! of Councllman PJiul Ryckoff,
who was somewhat critical of Voorhees'
work ..
"Having seen nothinc subslantative
fr:om the traffic consultant yet, l can't
vote to give them more money," Ryckorr
said.
'Ille enu ... traffic study, tncl•dinl steps
and proc:ed.... fO< lmplementlng
change5 ln tbe traffic 1ystem to make lt
most workable, was due to be flnisbed
this summer lloog with the ,.st of the
city's genaral plan.
Estancia Band,
Drill Teams Set
For McDonald's
Customers at the McD onald 's
Restaurant on Harbor Boulevard in Costa
11-iesa may munch to the beat of popular
tunes, dances and drW team routines
performed by Estancia ll1&b School
student.J Friday and S.Uriay.
The ~ ~ ll1&b eooc.rt
Band and drill team will be aeillDg $1
coupons redeeJn.l!ble ,only at Mdkmald'a
to nJse funds to pet fcl 111 In 'ftaon for
the 1.tusle Educators Natlonal Oonf'erence
Feb. 28 to Marcll S.
Coupons wU be sold at the Sl41 Harbor
Blvd. hamburger .stand from 4 p.m. to 1
p.m. Friday.
Saturday the group will march at 11
a.m. from the school ground& to
Mcllolllld's ~ the Mell Ve<de
area and then Perform from 11:30 a.m.
to I :30 p.m. The coupons will be 90ld at
this tlme also.
Their goal• ls $3,000. 11>e group was
selected to represent Southern Calllornia
at the conrerence.
The parade route will be along Estan-
cia Avenue, Mesa Verde West, Country
Club Drive, Geisler Avenue and along
Harbor Boulevard to McDonald's.
A car wash and benefit performance
have been scheduled In February tq rabe
more money for the trip.
~1oscone to Announce
SACRAMENTO (AP) -State Sen.
George Moscone said Tuesday he will tell
California Democrats Saturday be in-
tends to run for governor In 1974. "I'll
make no doubt about It," Mo&cone (0-
San Francisco), said.
Bobby
• I
WlU It Work1
That's what Division of Highways engineers want to.
know about an experiment to reduce traffic con·
gestion .on the Bristol street freeway offramp near
South Coast PlazL This view from Bristol, looking
north toward the shopping center, shows th·ai Bris·
tol has been narrowed to two lanes to accommodate
a non-stop offramp schtme. En1,1ineers believe the
ramp change will smooth traffic now.
Nervous Gunmen
Thwarted in Tr y
At Rest.aurant
Three nervous Ywn& gunmen made the
wrong choice of robbery victims late
Tuesday In Newport Beach -a Lon&
Beach couple just headina: home from an
expen!ive night on the town.
Mr. and Mrs. Chrl.stlan Soe told police
they were walking acnm the parking lot
at the Reuben E. Lee restaurapt, 2St E.
Pacific Coast Highway, when they were
accosted by the three young men bran-
dishing pistols.
"Hey sir, do you see this.'' Soe said one
of the gunmen told him as he nashed his
gun. "Give me your wallet If you do."
Soe, a tiJab school teacher, told police
he banded over the wallet,which had no
money in it, and the gunman gave it back
In disgust.
Then Mn. Soe banded over her pune
without being asked, police said. She ~d
she told the gunmen "There's only $2 in
there " . .
'By this time ob.t<JuslT distre-at the
non-profit robbery, police said ooe ol the
gunmen, bliil!ed "G!Ye the lady her
purse," and then an three ran away and
di!appeared.
Newport Beach Det. Capt. Don Oyaas
said today the bungled holdup is still beg-
Ing investigated but Jt I.bis point, he said
the police don't really know what to look
for.
Homosexual Set
For Oiurch Post
SAN FRANCISCO (UPf) -The Coun·
dI on Religion and the Homosexual has
named as Its eiecutive director the fint
affirmed bomooaual to be ordained by a
major church denomination.
The Rev. William R. Johnson, ordained
amid controversy last June as a minister
of the United Church of Christ, received
the appointment.
Johnson said he believes his ap-
pointment "will enable . me to rel ate to
the religious community as well as to the
gay community."
Seale for
Airport Noi se Sta11dards
Set for Review by Panel
State noise standards as they apply to
operaUon at Orange C.OOnty Airport will
be reviewed by the Orange County
Airport Qmunisslon at Its Fib.~ 13
meeUng, one day after the deadline
Newport Beach city council as set for a
county reply on the· alrport·'s compliance
with that law.
Newport Beach assistant city manager
Phil Bettencourt told airport com·
missioners Tuesday that If a county
response Is not received by Feb. 12, the
city council will ask the state department
of aeronautics for an independent in-
vestigation.
Commissioners said they would review
the state noise law at their Feb. 13
meeting to determine if standards are
being met.
OrangeCounty aviatm director Robert
Welcome Efforts
For War POWs
Not Encouraged
Volunteer efforts to brighten the an-
ticipated homecoming of American
PO.Ws are being·stronglf discouraged ex·
cept by long distance, well-meaning
welcome home volunteers are learning.
One, Mrs. Darrilyn Oliver, of 3077
Yukon Drive, Costa Mesa, was the
guiding force behind the now-famous
Vietnam Cooklelift programs of three
yean past.
She tried Wednesday to Initiate a
similar gesture for prl800ers who will be
arriving in San Diego but autboriUes a~
flally against it, partlctllMly where food
items are involved.
"'Ibe Red Cross will handle it and they
discourage everything," she ei:plaJned.
Cards and letters Showing Americans
still remember the returnees now that
their freedom appears certain may be
sent to the men In care of Balboe Naval
Hospital, San Diego, Calif.
Authorilles noted candy or other food
Items would have to be strictly regulated
anyway, since many ol the men must
make a gradual dietary adjustment due
to long, simple, prison diets.
Mayor
Bresnahan told the commission that the
airport's noise monitoring equipment is
work ing.
"We're not questionng ir the equipment
is tecbnlcaUy capable of doing the job,"
Bettencourt said. addin,1 that the city of·
ficials believe the county has an unad-
n1itted noise problem above state stan·
dards.
If the county is not Working \\1ithin the
noise standards. Bettencourt said. then
the boa rd or supervisors should apply for
a vnriance from them.
'.fhe Wuc is directly related to the
Air\\·est lease at Orange County Airpor1.
said Bettencourt today. because Newport
Beach Is opposing the granting of any ad·
dilional nights to the alrllne.
Airport Commissioner Jack Harloe of
Fullerton Tuesday moved that if the
county is in violation, the supervisors im·
mediately seek a variance. 'Ibe mat.ion
died on a 2.-2 vote .
Conunlsslone.r Richard Vertea of
Newport Beach was not at the meeting.
In. spite ot the vote~ Bettencourt Said
today be thought his views met with a
receptl.ve audience.
Newport Beach ofllcials sent a letter
on the subject to-the-board or supervisors
two weeks ago.but It wss not referred to
the airport commission. Tuesday was the
first time most of the members had
heard or the matter.
AiJ'l>Orl:~xpan.!ion foe Dan Emory or
NeW)X>rt Beach accompanied Bettencourt
to the meeting.
MacArthw· Post
Meeting Tonight
America 's military heritage and fre-
edom as represented by its namesake
wUJ be discussed tonight when Gen.
Douglas MacArthur Post 499 of the
American Legion meets in Costa Mesa.
The occask>n will be the eve of
MacArthur's birthday, at 8 p.m. in the
Legion Hall , 58S w. 18th St., and birthday
cake will be served.
Special guest will be Mrs. Frances
Chatham, president of the 29th District
American Legion Auxiliary.
N DAIL V PIL.OT 2
--A Full Life
•
Mesa W oman Dies at 101
By tJ\TllUR R. 11NSEI.
ot Ille 0.llW ,Ii.I lten
Friends ga thered closely an>w'td the
willpy·halred little old lady on her birth-
day 18 months ago to celebra1e her IOOth
}:ear as a Methodist Christian , her 63rd
as a Callfomian 11nd her 14th as a Costa
Mes an.
Somebody remarked at the time upbn
her near-constant Bible study .
Miss Louise Emily Higlin Jooked up
with a twinkle in her old eyes that belie
a sometimes-peppery exterior v.·eath~red
by a full century on this earth.
"Bless your heart, I am briefing
myselr for that Great Day," declared
Miss Louise Emily Higlin. "Like young
Produce r , 17
Makes Film
On LA Gang
LOS ANGELES 1AP ) -Slanley
Houseton's film abou t teenage gangs is
so realistic, his shooting schedule was set
back an hour while he convinced the .
police there was no cause fo r alarm .
The plot moves from muggings to gang
rape. and the cast includes a few
bonafide gang members.
HOUSETON IS A 17·\'car-Old black \\·ho
picked up his n1ov1c background at the
public library. He earned $200 selling
pamburgcrs, borrowed an 8mm camera
and shot his half-hour film -"The Gang
Story" -in a day on West 56th Street in
Watts.
His background on gangs was easy to
come by. Houseton is a student at
Crenshaw High -the principal calls it
Fort Crenshaw. Weapons are stashed In
lockers and violence Is said to be com·
monplace.
Houseton say! gang members who saw
his film have told him. "That's the way it
is out there."
Cletus Moore. di rector of Black Pride.
says, "If you can get this film lo as
many people as possible. they can un·
derstand why there are gangs."
llOUSETON 11Th1SELF' says he's left
"kind of speechless'' by the enthusiastic
reception the filwr has had. It's been
shown to several hundred people in high
school classes and community programs.
"People say the fil m is good for a kid
-but will they see the point I'm mak·
ing?" Houseton says. "A lot of kids don't
have a home life. Their parents are
work.ing two or three jobs, or there are
no jobs and their pare.nu just don't keep
_track of them. Education Is inadequate.
There are no jobs, no ouUets for kids. I
was just lucky."
The fdea for the film came from the
death of ~Obert Ballou, a Los Angeles
teen-ager who was stomped to death by a
gang last March because he wouldn't
hand over his black leather jacket.
Houseton wrote a scenario, then let the
actors express themselves. The results
may not be sweet to hear."
After seeing the film , Willis Edwards,
student body president at Cal State Los
Angeles, said he would try to get
Houseton a college scholarship.
HOUSETON SAYS: "~ty main am-
bition oow is to become a professional
producer. The medium of film Is a
powerful thing. I want to make it my ,J:.
pression."
Obscene Mail Charge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A Sau..llto
man has been sentenced to 18 months in
prison and rlned $2,500 for a conviction of
sending obscene materials through the
l!l11ils. Walter B. Dachstelner, 37, wu
sentenced after his conviction on 17
counts.
•
folks iay -'cramming for lbe fin&la.'" ~
she explained.
Monday, her time c8me. t'
Mis., Louise Emily Higlln went on to
meet her Lord, succumbing to the In-
firmities of old age . ...,·ell Into her lOJst ~
yea r. and confined to a Costa Mesa con·
vale.scent hospital. .
She earlier shared an apartment wllh
since-deceased f.1rs. Bernice Taylor, but
then moved into the Rev. Charles T.
Jargenson home at 1613 White Oak Ave.,
v.'hich is listed as her last home add~u. ,
FWleral services "''ere held today In !
Bell Broadway f.1ortuary Chape.11 with \
Rev. Jorgenson officiating.
Hosts of friends were on hand at
services fo r the physically frail but
spiritually steely little old woman who (
leaves in addition .only one brother and
two cousins.
Born to a simple, fundamentalist up--
bringing in t.-11. Carroll. JI!., Miss Louise
Emily Higtin clung firmly to the prin-
ciples of belief in the right and scorn for j
the foolish or wicked.
One thing \'i ewed as suspect was the
inventiOn of the infernal machine known
as the auto mobile, which she recalled
stampeding livestock around Oskaloosa
at three miles per hour when she was a
girl.
During her IOOtb birthday interview,
Miss Louise Emily Higlin decl1red
Methodists in her· earlier days were a
contrast to more quiet worshipers of to-
day.
"There \\'as some shoutin' that verily
brought the Spirit down ," she decla red.
The centenarian who received a
personal telegram from Pre.sident Nixon
that day also offered some good advice
for anyone, l\tetbodist, Hindu or heathen.
And -as you might expect-It was out
of the we1l·bom Bible she constantly con-
sulted.
"Hold fast to that which thou hast.'"
admonised Miss lA>ul.91! Emily Higlin to
those at her birthday gathering.
She, perhaps, held fastest to that which
she had the most of throughout a Iona
life: faith in that coming Great Day.
$15,000 Divided
Arnong 19 Cuts
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Nineteen cat~
will inherit $15,000 from the estate of a
South Pasadena pediatrician, documents
filed in Superior Court reveal .
The cats belonged to Dr. Evelynne G.
Knouf, who died Jan. 9, and were kept in
cages near her office to entertain young
patients.
In her will, tttiss Knouf, who had no
close relatives. deslgnated Willard A.
Allen , a retired businessman and long·
time family friend, as executor. An at·
Tuesday Allen will not y care
·-
• . .
.. •
. • •
.
I ·t i .
.. '
, tomeY handling the pa said
for the pet.J but will ~ Ir bills, pend· •
ing pro~tc of the will. 1'
The cats wi U be housed at a ranch near 1
Victorville where other animals are kept. j
Drunk Motorists
Face Route Curb
• ' I
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Motorists' am-"I
victed of driving while Wlder the hr "'
fiuence of alcohol or dnigs or of reckless
driving could be compelled by the state
to use only a certain prescribed route to
and from worlc, under a bill before the
A.uembly.
Assemblyman John Thunnan, (D-
Modesto) introduced the m~ Tues-
day, giving the Motor VehJcle Depart-
ment the right to restrtct the route
traveled by a motorist coovicted of being
a negligent driver.
Under existing Jaw, the state Is able to
restrict persons who drive commen:ial
vehicles as part of their jobs, an alde to
Thurman said.
Bin.ck Pantlier Leader Seeking Votes in Oakland
OAKLAND (UPI) -Sheathed In a
beige topcoat over a nauy ault, the ca~
didate grips the hand ti. the -· looks intently in his eyes and says:
"I'm Bobby Seale, and I'm runnlnl far
mayor.''
With an entourage of a dozen staffers,
the chairman oC lhe Black Panther Party
moves swiftly about tbe city.
"SINCE 11\]EY NEWTON AND f have
_g~_! out or jail, we have put the Black
Pantller Party on the right lrick," Seale
tolls· an eiudlence at a senior citizens
center.
"Huey and I don't believe In the COD·
cept ol dropping out of the system."
'Ille new Bobby Seale, SS, has moved a
long way from the miOt1nt whose
murder trial In New Haven, Conn. ended
in a hung jury lo May, 1171, and wbo wu
bound and &•aed In the trW ol the
Chicago S..eo. The list CllJca&o cblrges _.. dn>ppod Sept. fl.
Oo the campalcn tnll. the Black
Power ulute and I.be black luther
jackets are l(lne.
"YOU KNOW ALL WB are tbinki!ll
about Io jobs," Selle tella paowby,
black and wblle, In 1 holisl114 prpject, It
the main -loo -WI. and In•
crowded and smokey black bar called
Jlmmy11 Lamp Po..t. _
Stole'• refrain la that the tu million
In federal .. v..,llMlwin& O 1 k l 1 n d
expects should go to create jobs for
llll'mplo}'<d Hvtng In the city.
An elderly ~k "'·oman tells Seale she
needs !llm'ys for tbe holiday season.
"'Take her address," Seale turns to an
alde. "I want )'.(K1 to deliver two turkeys
this afternoon.~
"this is Elane Brown,'' he says in-
troducing a pleasant looking woman.
who 18 29. "She Ls going to be a city
coWICilwoman."
'S_htce Buq 1" e .., t on
•1141 ... _ .. , "' ol f•ll,
we ho"e puC the Bl""k r-t•er ,..,.,,, -'he ...... , ,.....,,. ..
IN TllB LAST YEAR, the Panthen
ban illllt a polltlc:al bue by -•ting I llCh!ol lnlltlut pi'OITIDI, I frte medJW dlr* and ,_ntly a proj«t to tnDllport
aeverll van loads of .senior cltlJenl to the
bani< on the day Social SocurflY checks
mtve -ao they can't be robbed.
Panthm say they have tuted 311,000
people for tickle tieO aotmla and cln:n
away 5.000 15-pound blp of gn1Cerkls,
~n•oced out o(. contributions and profits
from magu.pM articlee: 'lod book•.
EvttYWha';t, Seale calmly states h6 Ls
IOlftl to win by 1 lanU!Jde, but IOIDe aav-
Vy black poUUc:al te1dtrs doubt that he
can come cloae to wlDi>ing la the sJ>ring
elections. They say mkSdle-dau blacks
are 81 unfriendly to 5eale II I lot o(
whitet. '
John H. Rtadlng. 1 rotlred wite
buJinessman who has been ml)'Oll' for 1!1
yean and is nmning for mlectton, thlnb
Seale can attract only ·about 1;000 votel.
BUT SEALE FIGURES that of t!&,000
registered voters, 40 percent are bl ack
and 10 percent are ch.icano.
''We are gO~to regl!tir &O,(IOO more
blacks, and with our orgallizatlon in u ch
of nlne districts we can pull out 90 per-
cent to the polls," be aaya.
Soole to1.mta on btavy support. from mt-
norltJe.. plus 8<llle help from whlte
liberalt and radidcalt. He bu betn
me«l1ll wbitM In mffllnp In private
homea, and ._.,. lllll1kll1 -such u the U-Clob and the Voice of
OUUt J!<v!vll.
Walchinl Seale -k the downtown
shopping area, TobJ Sclnranl>oq, SI, a
white buatnea ezecuttve, 1111: "I ad-
mire him. )t'a sood to tee a man tum
completely lt<IWld and IO mud! helJ1 bia
community, but I don 't know if I would
\'Ole for hfm."
·• DIDN'T 11!:.ILIZE HE'S 10 clean·
cul," Nfl William Clark, 41, • .. bite
watch shop clerl<, aftor Seale ti.fend his
llarid.
•
Three's a Crowd
Nanny the goat and her three ne\vborn kids pose at
Bar ~O Ranch on Cost~ Mesa's Fairview State Hos·
pital grounds, following triple birth this week. Ho.
pita.I ranch hand Shelly Thill notes Nanny was U ·
DAILY ,It.OT ..........
1>ecting twins. Nanny's kids are the !Int big baby ,
nnlm lls born on the spread. part of a planned park
and petting zoo. The rosident sheep, bowe•er, l.s In
a family way now. too .
22 D~ILY PJLOT TluuWy, JMUIO 25. 1973
PllBlJC N!1l'ICE PUBlJC NO'l'ICI! PUBUC NOflCl!l
•
TODA 'S Wallace of CBS
,
TV IDGHUGHTS. Wins_ Top _ Award
ABC U 6:30 --"Samson and Delllah. • Tbe walls w YORI{ {Ai') _ Mike
COil!<I tumbling downin tbe-concluslon·ot1hls-Cectl • "Tw""a11'-,,. bu _, an Allred 1.
B. DeMU!e blbllcal eplc from 1951 starring Vlctor dePOOt--O>lumbll Unlvenlty Mature and Hedy Lamarr. • CBS a 9:00 -'"nle Hallelujah Trall!' Thirsty award for bro• do 11 t
cltiJe11s o( Den..,. In tbe old west attemp~ to re-JoUrnallsm f.,. hill "ootalan-
plenlsh tbeir depleting suPJ>Iy of whisky a a run ~~8'!.,~~~~
into trouble from temperence foroes. Burt Lan· Minutes" "--am. caster, Lee· Remick, Jim Hutton, Pamela Tiffin. "'""' KCET llil 9:00 -An American Family. Bill and . Nino televlslon stations, Pf<>'
Pat Loud attend a dance rocllal In which daughters dudioo unlb and producora .,..., &bo named winners DeWlh and Michele are performing. Tuesday of the fourth IMllll
KTI'V m 9:30 -Alternatives. A dllcllsslon will\ awards, wlllch will be given seven single, divoroed or widowed parents ai..ut
tbe advantages and disadvantagee of raising a cblld
alone. · NBC 0 11:30 -Johnny Carson.Amoog John·
liy's guests is Frances Sayers, a Fountain v,uey
gnndmolher who does some funny things wltb her
face.
TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
JANUARY 25
'"°1Joo111mmm -rn !i-o -
~
t.OI U (I) CIS -~,,;., l<l
(Zl/tllt) "flit twlltlytlll trer (com)
'&S-811rt L111t1sltr, l• RemicA.
Jun Hutton, P1rnel1 Tlffl11. Durln1
ll1t 11rty. Mys of tbt West, Oenwt1
tilizt111 dbc:Mr 11111 tlltir wfllsb1
stodi Is tlmosl depltttd, 11111 com·
tdy mutts as !Pity try to rtmedy
lht SitUltlofl.
WhaleWBtc
Cruises
BaginnltrJ Ian. B
Leaving From the
MLllM PIWILllll
Weekends. 9 am •nd J pm
Adulta $3, Children $2
CALL 673·52•5 11J lot-
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Will" Canel (dr•) '51-HedJ LJ.
marr, VldClf M1ture, leorp Slnders.
(j) CIS Jtm: Wilm Cronkite ;.
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ai) Ttle·Jltwbtl Muslul
aJDotl!PM lil.,...""'
Ltmbttt 111Ci Bany lMnpton lllBSl
D Peace vs Ytolence * Vengeance•Trqody
KUNG FIJ-Nowl u CJJ@ m"'"' •• ... "' "' 1n [rt'' Clint's 1ff0f!S to ttteh his
philOSOp"1 of pea ll'ld fortMness
IO I mtntt·lilltd ftlli1' pltet his °"" Ifft in dtnpr. m_,..,.._
!E ""' m Al Utrk.111 faaitr BiM tnd
)at lD.id 1ttt11d 1 1knt1 recital ill
whicl{d1ucfrtt11Dtlil1ll111d Mlthelt
perform.
t :JCI 0 Tiie """ w...,.,. . .,.wetlty
"irtt Ptln,s" o-11 Mlrulhll fr11icn Fridlt mod·
1r1tu 1 discuss:lo11 with M'ftn other
sin&I• (diwrtl; .or widowed) p.tt·
1n11 tbollt tlll 1cMnt1ps •l!d dis·
1dw'ant1pa of r1isin1 • child aloM. m Llldl• libtl
IO:OOD ~m···· lll1rtlt ... Dun's 1uest1 ire Petula Cl1 rk ind
Joey Bishop. ' um m-o THE STREOS OF SAN
* FRANCISCO-NEW TIME
1:30 I) TWll Dr. KiWtft "8)' This Sien" D CJ)@ m strMtl ti SU frM-
Kildare arid Gillespil tn1t 1 JIOUlll elm ''Tht Stt-Up" All u -hlt m11
l irl tor 1 sti11111t1, blttdin1 GI the tor 1 crhn• kfl\1 •ems to do Gflll
p1lm' ind lorthlad, tlllt has con-ll'IOf'I job, only to fintl hlmselt !ht
founded doctors for 1 thouslnd re11 murdtr t•riel Stuart Whitnlu
Jttrs. tnd JKt Albertson (\llSt. rn ......... HlfMI 0 llris """'" ,,... 0 Thi ~ ''Goins. Goin(' fl NlllCt Tt ,.,.._.
The Mnntartr 1s 1111pectec1 vt 11e-SI WttW ,,_,.
illl I doublt 1pnt whtn • fotllp E lhdlldl ttallu
tcienlist, liven ISJ!um ill Bfttlln, lt.lt 0 T•• ltd
disap~rs. m Clll111pltnsiilp Flsltlot
0 Mwil: (2tw) 'ftlntlll P\lllft" ID Jlont W1y111 (R)
(sei-fr) '62-0un Frtdencb, Col· ail Mtw1/Splrb
een Gray.
(j)T1 Ttll tM Trvlli 11:000 0 fl) fD aJ "•n
(j) Nici SarllH (]) ()) ®J Min
SHOWING
NOW!
Jaq. 3111t theunlven lty.
The seven-member JUI')'
'Cited Wallace'• "continuing
aer1U ot • dlalogues with
An\frlcana who had something
to hlile," Including writer cur.
fO<'d lrvln1, lobbyist Dita
Beard, and l(ylal veterans
Clpt. Ernest Medina aod
Prlvate. Paul Meadlo .
R1cbard Thurston Watkins, -ed fOlt producing "Altlea
.... -Questions" fOlt WAllC-TV, New York, and
Tony Batton or WNET-TV,
New York, for "Youth Ganp
In the South Bronx" wert"the
llnl bltck producers to win
tbt award.
Other winners were:
-Fred Fmd and the Na·
Uonol B!Oldcastlng Company.
tor "Tbe Bl'ue Collar Trap," a
documentary about assembly
line workers.
-Robert Markowitz and
CBS ,New• Jor " ... But What
If the Dream Comes 'True?,"
al\ In depth study ol a well-to-
,. do Michigan family.
-. Westinghouse Broad-
casting Comp&ny for "~
Search for Quality Educa.
lion," a series of three one-
hOur programs on ·busing and
other issues in edttCStion.
John Drimmer · and
WNJT-TV, Trenton. N. J., for
"Towe.rs of Frustration," a
stud,y of the . problems beset-
ting residents of a Newark
hous!"g project.
TONIGHT!
.WINNER OF 3
GOLDEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS
e WALTll MAnHAU -A< ... e CAlOL IUINm ...........
e GllALDINI PAIGE --.......
LID 0 N!W•OOl
REACH
lNll.\."~' 'c .<~:: '''
• • ) ',r,
•
PACIFIC ORIYl · IHS
Done by Dunn
Pat Dunn gets things done.
Throw her your cball~e
and see how she handles It m
Sunday's "At Your Service"
column.
l
l
•
0 MiHIOI $ MIN: (C) (2hrl 0 Jth1 WIOdl11 Slllw/UCLA ... I ~~~~~;;;;;:;:;:;;;:;~~~~~~~~~~~~l:::=========::! "Deldllted-75" (wa) '65 -M h _ hthln B111ins n. Loyola. · lr
Han Jr., Jack later. , CIJ Mlnllal Dilln
®)let's MIU 1 h1l (iJ Mwle: •11111 hi Ovttr '541Kt"' m tut llrl (scl·fi) '64-1.lsa Gtrt, Fem1ndo
0) llnpet Rey.
fl!l Act*' CiicaM m Tnth tr Ctllllllwtm m Rollln' m ""' ....... m Police Sllr.-EE''""" Ted ArllsWlll
'1) Aidllls f11111tJ fEl J1nHI m Chia .1et1•to11 S*fllf 1:00 ~ llTHE.WALTONS-A SHO 11,15 111.....,,.
*FOR ALL THE FAMILY "'"Dl!im_eo ....... 1J (J) Tiii Wlltlls When Cody Mel· D (I) (j) m Didi CMtt saiow
son, OliYi1's NsMtll llftdt, C:OllllS m T Tell ., Trtll
to visit. .Ult Wattons tit him • 1 , r
d1t1 wittl thl a\llllOfOCll ;iwon:et U.'00 9 C1J Cll L* .,..: (C) "Mlf•
CorMlla Hu1111lall Mr Otct ........ (Ml) '71-Jolm
D 9 m Aifl w.. ... Sam· Fcwntbt, 1trt11r1 11111. ,,,, oms Jr., 1.n1y11 NJc*l1 11111 af.,,,., HltdMiai Pmerlb
Elf S11ni¥111 '" fllp's a-ta. m w111 ti~ o rn @ m"" -.... "' tJui W11wnt Mil for OUUI'" A dll' U:JllTio""'
tr1ufhl mm h •rWtt to IDll'Cf 1dll· """: "lld•11 If llrtlmtM"
1n, ...... •lll'M ... lllldlutlon <""U!;;w•l11C1 a..,,..
llllmded lol' hb 'flfft. Howtrd Dufl • .... ii::s.:;"i-!"'L . l<O IJ)DO (IJ -
lll-·-.. -,,,,. _, ~ ...... (d") '08-fl I•:•• ,:-1• Mtflony QulM, Shlf111 Booth, Shir· ED1'1t,Mll "1 MKl.llllt. ' Ill~...,. ., m--,,,.m ... ~~~-,..,-~,<1o."
6) .... (Zlr) ·~ t-1" ''tlll 2455 llldl b'I," °'T'it Male
(1dw) '37 -hi 8'B1le11, GtcNat ....
Brtnt. . 1.«1 11 Mlvie: ~Niii It ........
Iii!"•) '58-bthltr ~ f1itti Dt-
""
IN CONCERT I
THE EST ANC,IA HIGH SCHOOL BAND
AT
3141 HARBOR 1lvo .. COSTA "8A
~aurday, Jan. rl Noon to 2:00 p.m.
'
'
COME HEAR THE ESTANCIA HIGH SCHOOL BAND AND
HELP KICK OFF THEIR FUND RAISING DRIVE. THE MUSIC·_
IS FREE AT McDONALD'S AND THE FOOD WILL HIT JUST
THE RIGHT NOTE. . '
,
' _,
... • •
.·
Your Hometon
Dally Papttr -
/ -'
OL. 66, N,6: 25, 4 SECTtpl'jS, # PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• • • THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, 19-73 c TEN CENTS , -
US •.. 11~4• l(arewell,. to Lyndon Johnso~ -~ .
STONEWALL, Tex. (UP l) -Former
President Lyndon B. Johnson, eulogized
in Washington as . the "tall man with
'giant character," came home to Te1.as
today for burlal in the rain just 100 yards
from where be was born 64 years ago.
Hundreds of dignitaries, led by Presi·
dent Nixon, paid their Jloal respects to
the 36th President at funeraJ services in
the nation's Capital on a bright but cold
day.
W. Martin Watson, a longtime adviser
to Johnson, said of his old friend at the
funeral:
"History will record that in the seventh
decade of the 20th Century, America had
Lyndon Johnson when he was needed."
·At the end of the ontrbour charch
funera~ Johnson's body was flown to
Bergstrom Air • Force Base outside
Austin. Tex., to be taken by motorcade
the 65 mUes to lbe LBJ Randt for burial
in lbe Pedemales River country be loved.
,J ohnaon came borne aboard the same
plane on which be took the presidential
oath Nqv. 22, 1963J after tbe asqassjnation
or Prealdent John F . Kennedy.
In contrast to the. sunshine in the na-
tion's capitaJ , it was dark and raining
steadily at the small cemetery iJf the
Texas Hill Country.
Also flying in for the burial was a large
'--1
coogressional delegation, including Sens.
I-lube.rt Humphrey, George McGovern,
Henry Jackson, Warren Magnuson, Ed·
ward Kennedy, EdmW"Ki Muskie and
Strom Thurmond .
The original plans were to fly to the
ranch~ but Wi!t and chilly v;ealher and the
threat of snow impelled oUicials to move
the landing to the air base.
At the ranch, early arrivals walking to
the burial site in near.free1ing rain tunr
ed the soggy soil into mud.
The open grave was covered with a
b\ac~ plastic sheet to protect it from the
rain .
The Rev. Billy Graham and John Con-
na lly , former secretary of the Navy and
later of the Treasury, were to give the
eulogies.
Earlier, the nation's capital said fare-
v.·ell to Johnson.
At lhe conclusion ol the cme-hour
funeral, Johnson's body was taken
through quiet city slreets to Andrews Air
Force Base in nearby Maryland for re.
tum to Texas.
At lhe rites at the National City Chris-
tian Church, the pastor, Or, George R.
Da vis, said in invocation : "We have
rome here to ce!ebr~te sunrise. Often we
\See JOHNSON, Page Z)
Bien Hoa Base Shelled
Viet Cong DautQ,ge Storage Area North of Saigon .
BUILETIN
SAIGON (AP) -Viet Cong guMers
· shelled the big Allied air base at Bien
Hoa, 1$ miles northeaH of Saigon, be-
fore dawn Friday, About 15 rockets fell
and flashes of fire indicated some am·
munillon or fuel may b a v e bee n set
ablaze. Ooe Amertean was lrllled.
PATRICK LYNDON NUGENT SALUTES GRANDFATHER'S CASKET
Ceremonies Held fot Ex-President Johnson et Capitol Rotunda
SAIGON -(UPI) -U.S. warp] es
striking throughout South v· na and
the heaviest Communist she ing in near-
!}' a month spelled no letup o "lher side
today with an official Vietnam se-fire
less than three days away.
•
Pinkle.11 Objects Neither U.S. nor Soutn Vietname f.
. Mesa Officials . Battling
fciials made any secre~ of the" inten to
kee p fighting until the e kes
effect at 8 a.m. -Sunday (4 p.m. PST
Saturday).
"Until Sunday we.'11 do any~g we
"'an~ to," 5'id: a Vietnamese .offlcial.
"There has been no change in mission," On ColJllcil M~~rs!tjp tJ .s~:...__ JJ,oounces
Costa l\tesa's membersplp in the new
O r a n g e Coµnty lnteraovemmen~
Coordinallng Council appears fpr from
decided 14;1da,y with one city councilman atread)L\oehoimenUy. objecting to the pro-
posal.
The new council was condemned as
"just another layer of government"
earlier lhis week by City Co~ilman
Alvin Pinkley who indicated he would
yote against spending $803 for the first
six months membership.
Robert. M. Wilson, the Costa Mesa city
counc.Umen pushing for membership,
rebutted Pink1ey's remark by saying
tber.U.s nothing in the council's agree-, Jl\llllll uiat says Costa f!1esa must do what
.the council recommends.
''The whole idea is to talk about cmn-
moo problems of cities in the county. It
woo•r11ave.any funds-to-operate except
t~ we give lo it," be added.
cou.lJ Ba114';is11;;0. 2 approved a
joint-powers agreem to create the
council. It became a legal body when 18
of · uranie cQunty's U cities joined.
Membership or only 13 was required to
form the council.
MayQr Jack Hammett joined Wilson in
defending the council. He said it was
worth a try and described the mem-
bership fee as "the ante whi.ch allows you
to take a look at the cards."
f'Aancilmen Willarct T. Jordan and
Dominic Raciti did not comment on the
issue during Monday night's study
session. They will get their say Feb. S
when the 'item appears on a cooncil agen·
da for an official vote.
---End ' to : Yktnain
• .L
Orders for Gls
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
States today swung . into high-level
diplomatic talks leading to a Vietnam
cease-fire going lnto effect Saturday.
(See related stories, Page 41
All sides hurried preparations for im-
plementing the complicated peace set·
Ut:ment, including' a stop order at the
Pentagon on virtually all American Gls
previously ordered to Vietnam.
Only some soldiers with special skills
are to travel to Vietnam dl.D'ing the-final
three days of direct U.S. involvement in
the fighting.
Public Relations Man
Also in Washington, Secretary of State
William P. Rogers met separately with
canada's foreign · minister, Mitchell
Sharp, and with U.N. Secre~ Gen. '-
KUrt Waldheim.
Eyed for Costa Mesa
Representing one of ·the four countries
supplying contingerit.s for , the in-
ternational control gib1:1p supervising the
Vietnam cease.fire, Sharp said Canada
will send 176 observers aOO 11.2 support
sWf lor a total o( 288 'aitlonj; the 1,160 Costa Mesa city councilmen are think-
ing about hiring a public relations man.
nie Idea was advanced by City
Manager Fred Sorsabal earlier this week
to answer "a need in the community to
· have adequate Information diasemina:t to the commllriity."
It was received favorably by membe -
of the counci!, aome of whom bave a\
Umes commented that Costa Mesa's
,, story is ' not always .adequately told by
tbe local lM!flapapers. . •
• Orlglnany, ·councilmen approved funds
'<:ealt
Welitller • •
for a quarterly newsletter to each Costa
Mesa household, but plans were aban·
doned because Sorsabal said he is not
thoroughly convinced this is the best way
to communicate witP the people.
During a discussion Monday night
councilmen appeared undecided whether
the:· wanted a promoter,type pUblic rela-
Uons man or a communicator.
Whichever type councilmen fmally set-
tle on, a pmition for a public relations
man could be in next year's budget.
Sorsabal told councilmen be brought up
the idea now ror councilmen to consider
before tbe budget is drewn ui-.
Justifying hil~uest for a public rela-
tions program the city manager said~
"We are· a $10 million cofporation now
and we need to do some selling."
Public relations men are employed by
the cities ol Huntington Beach, Garden
Grove, Fullerton and Anaheim.
-Cou1icil Mulls
total. . I
He said Canada, which has long ex·
perience in often unsuccessful peace-
keeping jobs like the one in Vietnam, wlll
stay for the 60 days American troops are
withdrawing. •
Arter that, a continued presence will
depend on "whether we will be ef-
fective .''
Waldheim said any peace-keeping by
(See PEACE, Page ti
* * Prisoner List .
Appears Today
In Daily Pilot
The DAILY PILOT today prints on
Paue ltJbe most complete list available
-although it is known to be Incomplete
-of American war prisoners;Bnd'mlss-
Somewhat cooler on Friday -is
the way the weatherlady re8ds it,
with mostly sunny skies following
ove!"Jibt cloudiness along the
Oruge Coot. Highs In the mid-
fi"~~ltA)'-.
. D , , Mes ing servicemen. "'=l~mse;--i,t.= · . Q;=== !kSoolficials·emphasizedolbaHbe roerJl-
listing of-a ~e •. or the absence o~ a
Ohe of the lint things Colla Mesa city name, ~ not indicate any confirmation How art iher aoing to keep
Htnf"'JI KWingtr down on Ult
/arm of~ he'• seen Par•t~nd
hammered out Vietnam ptBCf, -ocCOrd! See 1to111, Poge 4.
..... -' ..... 11 .... ..
~= • ,....._ " .... -·-.. ...... .. -... -.. --• --" --" -" --......... • -• ....... •' ..... -.... ·-.. -' ......... n.tt ~ ....... f."· --.
councilmen an ·expected to do when of the pnsooer's status1 ~r any cba.nge.
the meet apin Feb. vis to give They noted that the Ii!! Is DOI a new ~ a ra11e. / one, but includes the fullen Information
A c111c101111rr,.rly tbls -k by Clly-knowa taken hom-U...-complled by
AJtomey Roy E. Jw>e that councilmen POW~ '!J"'J"~per .accountt
_. eligible for a five percent poy roil< ...iTbe u s ~ ether -"...:In tbe e<ase-created eoouah enthuslaam to blve tbe · · ,... -ttem placed on tbe qeoda. 0.. agnoemenl aro to nchlnp prlaoner
Juno told tbe <01111Cll that the five per· lists Saturday. It la not kooltn bow ""'"
-Jnen!a,. na authorized by the the oama on . the llstt 1rill .be '!"de
state legislature. Cooncllmen curmitly public. • •
earn $M)O,pet month. • California baa the most names m lhe
._DJq will be eJlaible klr fllo lncroHe-oompllation on Page t4, and several are
after the tf14 munldpal elec:tlOn. rr0m Orange county. -
J
• " • '
said a ranking U.S. Officer.
UPI ~ent Alan Dawson said
North Y.letnamese gunners fired 4,000
1rtWery and mortar shells on South Viet·
namese paratroops and maFines between
sunset .. Wednesday. and sunrise today
near the destroyed city of Quang Tri, 435
miles north. of Saigon. It was the heaviest
shelling th is month any\•there in South
Vletnaq1.
•
U.S. command spokesmen said 298 jet
fighter-bombers and 90 BS2 bombers hit
Communist positions in South Vietnam in
the 24 hours ending at 8 .J.m. today. It
"·as the first time ·the fighter-bomber
raids dipped below 300 since President
Nii:on halted the bombing Jf North Viet-
nam Jan. 15. .
Rumor of around-the--clock curfews for
SoUth Vietnamese cities as the cease-nre
approaches have beer. spreading for days
and the first such curfew was announCed
today. To no one's surprise , it was for
B\nh Dinh Province in the Coastal
Highlands, ""hich statistically has always
been the least "pacilied" of South Viet·
nam's 44 provinces.
Orders from the province chief,· Col.
Hoang Dinh Tho. were posted throughout
• (See B0!\-1BING, Page Z)
' . . . .. . . ""'.,.....
-BUBBLING-LAVA ERUPTING FROM H~LGAFJELL VOLCANO IN ICELAND TURNs.NIGHT INTO DAY
HouNI 50 Y1rd1 AW1y From the Mouth.Burst Into Fl1met From tM R1dl1ted He~t
Lava Burns Island Homes
Volcano's Heat Warms Ocean Water to 111 Degrees
VESTMANNAEVJAR. lccland (UPI)
-New streams of glowing lava rolled ln
to the harbor today, raising the water
temperature to 111 degrees Fahrenheit.
"The sea water is so hot, it is hard to
keep the engine! properly cooled," the
engineer of a pilot boat said as the boat
made an inspection tour of the Heymaey
Sie
harbor area, the third largest on Iceland
and a center for the important flshing in-
dustr)'.
Clouds of steam billowed over the
town, making it dangerous to land at the
tiny airsl{'ip on the Island off the Iceland
coast.
Angel
Dog Quits City to Oppose Yorty
"
F~ve houses were on fire or bad burned
today, ignited by lava from the Helaafjell
volcano that erupted without warning
this week . One house collapsed undtr
pressure from a lava :stream.
The 5,000 or so townspesiple were
evacuated late Tuesday and brouahl to
th; mainland. Some were allowed back
today for a few hours to collect valuable
belongings. •
"II ~ hard to say bow long the eruption
may last. It could take three week1, or
I~ years," said a geological. expert
.from the Reykjavik Unl.vtrslty.
. The fi:s!l freezing plants. accountlni for
on<?-fifth of Iceland's fishlna industry,
were emptied today of Utelr remaining
1tOCk -tons of dried cod(ish for
Portugal and Brazil where It is used tor ~ ANGELES (UPI) ..-Tbe dog may be man 's best friend, but for P.la)U' "bacalhao" -tt,ews.
Sam Y ~..1 Angel Goodman 1a a tumcoat pood]e. ___ .'!l.am..as.bomned-as..anyooe...else.ovu. -•t-came-tO jiriJrillrii!ii=ahOlit a year ~ ''she" was appOinled a this. disaster ,.-said Itelandlc PrelKrent
member ot the Mayor11 Community Advbory Board. Her master. Ban')' Good-• Kristjan EldJarn. who new here from
man, told a friend Ile could get ltl)'O"e appointed to the mayor's commission-Reykjavik this afternoon.
even hll cJoc. PoUe< and pilot boatt patrolled the
• harbor today, keeping sbl)lfolcb oC BE WAS RIGHT. Ym:tY IJIPl'Oved Angel's appointment, grousing later that curio1J3 touriJtt from the mainland away·
while-Goodman iald ."ahe" was a relatlve,''be didli't say anything about her from the rlsk area. Landing by host and
being 1 dog." , airers ft was restricted, but teltphone:
Yorty leflAngel on Uii ·COiil.ifiliiioo However, nottng that maybe "she' connections wm retlored apln ~
could carry signs in an electioo campaign. alter beiOrtlY down since °Il*dly.
A klng volcanic rift optntd ~,.. the
2\i-lnlle wide Island but waa p<rtly-flllod
with lava by this afternoon. Ono main
crater and several &m1ll craiert were
atilt actl.ve, spurting out flre,, "1'Qke al'!d
ANGEL HELD A NEWS cxllference Wedneeday. Goodman said he was a<:t· D,g u her 1poktsman to announce that "lhe" rWgned to joht the campaign
of fofiilelf Poll<e Oil<! Tom Reddin. who Is ninnlq qainst Yorty lor mayor.
..., ~ficlat maacot." _)
. Java. --.... .,.
)
•'
' ..!__ DAILY PlLO T c Thursd~Y. J;,n11.vy 25, 1973
'fONIGHT
L1BJ\ARY STORY HOUR -Fnmlly
movies "The Dentist'~ and "The
Hoosegow," 7:30 p.m.
"MOONCHILDREN" -SOutb Coast
Repertory Theater, 8 p.m.
UC l LECTURES -"Family Llfe in
lht Israel Kibbutz.." part of series on
Living Together in Families, Social
Science Hall, 7-9:45 p.m. Adm. 14.15.
"?\-1alignancies of the Skin," part of
series on Cancer: E I i o I o g y ,
Epidemiolog_v, 'l'berapy, Soph. Lecture
Hell. Medical SUrge I Bldg. 1-lQ p.m.
Ad1n. $4 .50.
: FRIDAY, JAN. H
"PAN --AMERICAN HIGHWAY"
Newport Harbpr Kiwan_ls TraveloKUe, occ Auditorium 8 p.m. Tickets 64&-Zlf.3.
BASKETBALL -Costa Mesa vu.
Corona del Mar at Mesa, 8 p.m. Estancia
at Los Alamitos, 8 p.m. Newport Harbor
vs. Loara al Harbor, 8 p.m.
WRESTLING -occ vs. Santa Ana,
OCC Gym, 7:30 p.m.
OBOE CONCERT -Mere Bleke of
UCLA. UC! Village Cooe<rt Hall. I p.m.
"PLAY STRINDBERG" -SOuth Coast
Repertory Theater. 8 p.nl.
Only 4 Seek
Area SchoQl
Board Seats
\llith the filing deadline for the April 17
Newport-1\fesa school board election just
three weeks away, only one candidate has
filed for each of lbe four available seats.
' Presidential Widows
\Vith the death of Lyndon Johnson, the nation bas no living ex-presi-
dents. Surviving chief executives are (clockwise from left) Bess Tru-
man, Mam ie Eisenhower, Lady Bird Johnson and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. -
Rites for Ellen Brahams
-l're•P .. el
JOHNSON .•.
...
have walked to the-mourn(ul sound or
muffled drums. We come here to
celebralt lo the lloriOlll ttumpels of
God."
Davia toot a.s lbe theme for the sermon
to hlf former norhhloner the Old Tatament -.:-~Wbiii:.tter the death
of Moses, the Lor<!, God. called forth
JOlhua to lead the nalion."
Jfe &a.id the former President
many of lhe quaUUes or 1tfoses -' he
hardness o/ dlsclplino-, . .. sitting on top
of a volcano you didn't create, trying to
control It. 0
Wa!Jon, whose voli:e broke al the end ·
of hl3 eulogy, said : ·~11e was a taU man
of giant character and when he com·
milted himself, he committed himself
totally. And he as1ted bis countrymen to
do the same.
urn victory, be taught us to be
magnanimous. In defeat, he taught us to
be without hate -to learn, to rally, to
accept the challenge and lo try again."
John.!on's widow, Lady Blrd, sat erect
and unfaltering In a pew a<ross the eWe
from Nilcoo and hls family as black opera
star Leontyne Price sang "'I'ake My
Hand, Precious Lord" and "Onward
Cl:lrlstian ·Soldiers."
Police said 40.000 Americans passed by
Johnson's flag-draped coffin as he lay in
state in the vaulted rotunda of the
Capitol where he began hi s political
career in the 1930's as a protege of
Franklin 0. Roosevelt.
Al least 3,000 more gathered outside
the church as ~ovemmeot dlpitaries. a
group of foret,gn representatives and
scores of personal and poliUcal friends
arrived for the funeral.
· Joining President and ~frs. Nixon at
the funeral was Mamie Eisenhower,
widow of another President.
l\trs. Johnson was acccrmpanied by
daughters Luci and Lynda, and their
husbands.
Also in the1 first row Johnson family
pew was J6bnson's >year-old grandson,
Lyn Nugent, who as the bpdy was carried
!rom tbe Capitol, cast a poignant
farewell salute.
l•tvesttpator Fired
i;>fug _ Execution
I ,
ntrigue Probed
From WI.re Servlct1
New inlr\(lle Is ' emerging in the. ex·
· ecution· murder or t I;aguna Beach man
who allegedly hijacked a planeload or
marijuana 41\ years ago, dotl~na
hls host in a IM.000 deal with lht Hell'I
Angels motorcycle png.
The body of Warren B. Hud!on, 26, of
990 Ocean Front, was fmally found last
yea: In a Rlvorslde Counly mine shalt
near Elsinore, mwnmttled, manacled
hand and ·fool end ldentlfle4j. by denial
records and a !$ a<>ld piece. ·
C.Womla end Arllona author!Ues who
finally oblalned murder, marijuana
smuggliDg and conspiracy convlcUODS
against three men announcec: Tuelday
ooe key lnruilgalor In the we bas -f~
Ma'l>ioopa County, Ariz., Sheritl'1 C.pt.
Ralph McMl)len joined that department
four years ago, about the Ume Hudson
vanished.
Inve1tlgators disclose now that
fl.fcMillen worked aa a priv~te in-
"""" r.,., J
PEACE ••• .
the Unlled Natlot11 In Vielnam will de-
pend upon whether the "participants
wish us to play such a role." -
ff• Is to take part in the 12-natloo in·
temaUonal Vietnam peace guarantee
con!ertnce due to be held within a month
of the Saturday slgolng.
Rogers has also slated a meeting later
today with Adam Mallk, foreign minister
of Jndoilesla, another of the International
control C:Ommiulon members.
vestlgator wtth a firm hired to hunt down
the vld.im by bia convtcted kUlers, just
shOrtly before hlo 11168 Job chanae.
Newly swom·ln Maricopa COunty
Sheriff Paul Blubaum peraooally oot1·
ducted 1 iwo-state probe l4to ex-Cap(.
McMlllen's prior association with lm·
prisoned drug smuggler Lan-y Fassler
and his ring.
Sheriff BIUbaum conferred with
lawmen Jn the Riverside and Pboenb:
mas beforo flrinr McMlllen.
"After revlewtng the files and dlacUS8-
lnr put and. present ln...U11tlona wllh
. • • 1Ulbor1Ue1, I have concluded that
Ralph McMillen cannot elloctlvali aerve
the Maricopa Counly Sherlfl'1 Depart.
ment."' be declared.
De.Ung• by McMlllen with Fualer -,
who only had drug charges pendlng
a&•inst him at the time -were revealed
11111 yasr.
Mt!ldlllen, a former Phoeniz, Arll.,
pollcoman and atate liquor i:ootrol boat'd
8illlt, denied 111)1 wl'Oll(dolng In COO·
nectloq ,wl!lt hl1 allepd dUal role In the
FUiler cut at that timej
Ho baa I~ don ID blch al hlS flrina by Sbertl! Bl Who defeated
former aberlff JobD Mlunmert in Nov.m
ber. '
Sberlll MunmHlrt !lid lnv .. tl(atecl the
situation end cleared the man be hired as '
a captain of any conflict ot interest ln the
murder and marijuana·smuggllng cue.
Hudloll's wife flied a mlulng penona
report Oct. 29, 11168, with Laguna Beach
police, aal'lnr •be feared her husband
had met fou1 play In connection with a
m.rc.oUca amuallng operation.
But Board President Marian Bergeson .-_. _ The boy paid similar respect twice
Wednesday to his grandfather -flnt
when Johnson's body was placed aboard
the plane in Tezas for the flight to
Washington and again. wb~n the casket
was carried off the presidential jet on ar·
rival at Andrews Air Force Base.
Under the peace agreemen~ U.S. troops
are to be pulled oul o/ SO.th Vietnam
over a GO-day span and the Communists
are to frff American prisoners.
Information dlacloaed later Jndlcated
Faailer beaded perblpo the lllOll far-
OU!lfl dooe lmportln( ring that auppUed
users wilb tona of contraband flown or
ablpped m..by boat from Mexico.
said Wednesday she is not concerned yet
about a lack of candidates becall!e most
of those who have filed "art incumbeDls
who art well qualified:" Slated in Newport Beach U.S. medical evacuation teams were
··poised to fly into Hanoi lo evacuate the
first batch of POWs as ·soon as they get
American forces art coming home from
South Vietna m.
Hudson ,L according to autborlttes -
was a pilot for the Fassler operatibn and
bljacked a ablpment of marijuana, ..U-
lng It for 111,000.Io undiscloaed parties. The incumbents in three of the four
trustee areas have announced they \vill
run for re-election and the incumbent in
the fourth area bas said she will suppo.rl
another dandidate.
Mrs. Beverly Langston, trustee for
Area Two in Costa Mesa, has said she
definitely will not seek re-election In her
area because she and her busband will be
moving to Newport Buch.
Instead, l\lrs. Langston .said she will
support the candidacy of Orville
Amburgey, the city's communlcalloos
director. .
Amburgey, 945 Coronado Drive, Costa
1'1esa, has filed his papers for cendidacY
with the Orange County Registrar of
Voters.
Several v.·eeks ago, Mrs. Langston
reveaJed that she might be moving Into
another trustee area open for electiori
tbls year -that of Corona de! Mar ..
banker Thomas Casey, rep('esenting Area
Four.
Traditional hymns of comfort \\'ill
sound Saturday through St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach
at fun<ral rites for llfrs. Ellen Adair
Brabams, organist a~ wife of its fonner
assi$tant minister.
Services for Mrs. Brabams, who died
Wedneaday at 72 alter a lcmg Illness, will
~at 3:30-pm., follewed·by lntetlileot at
Paclllc View Memorial' Park.
The Brabams family I! well-known
along the Orang< Coast for years of con-
tribution to lts aplritual, musical end
medical service.
The Rev. Dr. n&ymond l. Br.aha.ms
wu founding minister of the Community
Presbyterian Church Of Laguna Beach,
where the famJly lived for 25.yeara.
She taught at Li"guna Beach Elemen-
tary School and also served as organist
at tbe Art C:Olony church as well as St.
Bui Mn. Bergeson said lllrs •. Lang!ton
told lier recently the move appears
doubtful in the immediate 1uture. ·Nuclear Reactor Casey, 2007 Kewamee Drive, Corona
de! Mar, filed for re-election to his seat,
which represents portiooa of Newport
Beach east of Upper Newport Bay.
His only annoWlced opponent will be
Corona del Mar High School senior
Margaret Setterbolm, who said she is
planning to file her papers soon after her
18th birthday, ,wlrleb is Saturday.
In Trustee Area Five, representing
West Newport, Balboa Peninsula and
Lido Isle, Incumbent Dr. Arthur F.
-Thompson, 67 Balboa Coves, ts the only
candidate who has filed.
Trustee Area Five's Roderi ck
htacMillian, who has served on the board
since the district was formed, has filed
for re-election to his third term on the
board.
lo.facMillian. a social worker who lives
at 1875 Anaheim Ave., Costa Mesa,
represents southwe3t Costa Mesa and
part of west Newport.
OUN•I CQU1' . '
DAILY PILOT
TM Mntt Cottt DAILY f'ILOT, wltfl ~
Is °""bind tti. H....,, .... It pWll"*' W
the Or.not Ottilf 'llM'-hlftt COl'l'IHllY .....
'91'e tdlllOlll .,. Pllbl'-'-1, MOrld•y llwovgh
P'rl!l1y, Toi' Co.t9 Mtw, Hl'llflOl'f a.Q.
Hunll""°" &Mch/"'-tl•llt \l,tllf'I, ~
9•ch, 1NlnWS.CM1tDtctt #Id sari a.ni.n1t/
Stn Jullfl CIJtl•lf1tnO, A 11111.. ,......,,
, ldlllon le PllCllWltd $1~.,. .... knNp.
Th• pr~!pal Jll,llll!"'lrll jll.tllt It el :m W.t
81y $1rMI, CO.I• ~. C.llf'INlle, fJI»,
Rol.•rt N. Weff ,,...klent •ni:I P'llO!ltllw
Jeck R. Curfey Y~ ~I llljil Ofnfnl "*""'
Th•m•1 K"""I
IE!lltor
1liem11 A. M11tph lnt
Mtllfilllll'll lldl!W
Cherie• H. leo1 R!t"'•"' '· Nell #1111/tltlll MllllOll\O 1111""1
Cw. ..... Oflke
1JO w.,t ,,, st.-•••
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N"""1 atK111 SW H~ ... IMN L..-aMCt11 m .._ •. ,., _ _,_
ftwillfll-l..cll! .,.1, •..cti ........... atn Cltmtl'll•; al """" II etml!MI ,._
Tat ...... C7141 '41-4UI
Cl..wlM A4Mfhl11 ....... ,71
~. 1•11. OffnOe Cent ,.\llllllfllnl Conlllltf!Y, HI ,.... 116rlel, l!l111tl'tffoN.
llll!Wlel ~ "' "'""~tt ,..,. .... intY be tWOduc• wltllwt ~Ill fltl"'
rlllftlet'I °' copyrltl\t -.
ltcoM er.,. ,.., ... Hloil •• Co1r1 MtM,
C1Jlternlll. SUbtcfltMllrl llY C•rrl"° tt.U
IMl'lillhrt 1'f' l'llfll U,lf l'l'IOl'lll\!V/ fll1Jlt.,., •Nlflt!llM SUS l'l'IOllllllV,
Foes Vow Issue
On Evacuations
Opponents to plans to build two new
nuclear reactors at S· t Onofre today
vowed to rmurtc:t the issue of emergen-
cy evacuationl when fede~al hearings on
the plant proposal resume next March in
San Clemente.
Mrs . Lyn Harris Hicks, the leader of
the South Coast opponent.:; to the billion-
dollar reactor project, said that ev~a
tion times and specific popu!Bllon
estimates given by utility witnesses last
week were "way off."
SpeclaJlsts testifying for Southern
Calllornia Edison and San Diego Gas and
Electric companies told the Atomic Safe-
ty and Licensing Board that 'if a nuclear
"incident" were lo take place at the
plant that required evacuation popula·
tions along the South Coast could be
moved from harm within two hdurs.
"No one took panic into account in lhe
projections. But instead they forec...i a
smooth, orderly evacuation of thousands
of persons. Common sens..; says that It
just doesn't happen Ulte that when
radioacUve materials are involved," said
~trs. Hicks.
Course Offered
In Photography
A photography class is now being of·
fered on Wednesday evenings at the cen·
tral branch of the Boys Club of the
Harbor Area .
The class, taught by OCC stud ent l\fark
Owens, metts at 7 p.m. at S94 Center St ..
Costa-Mesarand ii opcn ·to all-Boys-Club
members.
Boyt are taught how to take picturts
and develop and enlarge their own prints.
Enrollment information Is available
from the Boys Club, 642-6372.
Flood Plea in State
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan Wednesd.ay proclaimed a s~te of
emerg&lcy ii\ M&rin and San Luls Obl.tpO
counties as a result of flooding la..'11 week.
The action \vas taken Jn response to re·
quests from the bciards of supervisors of
the counties.
Andrew's Presbyterian Church where her
hut:band retired las t year.
1be Rev. Brahams was instrumental in
organizing a -palgo to bulld Hoag
Memorial Hospital, where a multimillion
dollar expansion program is noW ~er
w~. .
Family friends said today be asked
that contributlom be made to Its Long
Range Plannlnr f'lorram ·in his !life's
memory to conllnue the work be helped
slart.
Besides the Rev. Dr. Brabams, of 2575
Tustin A~., ~ Me11:1,-surv1Y0n ln·
elude four aoos: the Rev. Harry G.
Bl'.alWna Of YUIDili; Waah.;''Edwai<I A.
end Rlcbar!I Ii.. Brahal!ll, of N•wport
Beach, end Ra)'lllOIUI I. Bra!Ja!pa Jr., of Tennessee.·~ · .... rf1.~1 ;1o ;? ' . .. >
Poche Surfing
Beach to Become
Public Strand?
Johnson's final re"sting place is a plot
under a huge, live oak in the f!mlly
cemetery at the Johnson ranch. The site
is adjacent to the graves of his parents
and grandparents.
Ecology Confab
Set .for Teachers .
At Estancia High
. The four nations sneding 1,160 truce
the green light roUowing the cease-fire.
U.S. negotiator Henry .A. Kissinger
says the prisoners are to be brought oUt
in roughly equal-sized groups during each
15-day period of the 60 days while
supervisors to South Vietnam are ez·
pected 1o get their advance ·contiogents
Or the scene within 48 hours of the cease-
fire, which is to begin at 4 p.m. PST
Saturday.
Hungary and Poland ""·the oth~ two
members of the -Int~ policing
group.
An environmentaJ-®ucation conference The Jiungarian government voh;.ed f.
it Estancia ~this. Saturday ficial )!ill!!>gness toda~ to 11¥ M !fl
wlll bolt al>ouJ ' Caltfontli the cea!e-flre eontiol elrort. ~ <1'\lllllr
teachers Inter . l in updating their Is to send about 290 men. PO!ilifllllin»t
ecology teachinr ski!Ja. · ~et made public 113 ruponae but Ii ei-
11le Earth tl Media Conference ·is -peeled to participate.
scheduled .from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. and Indonesian sourees said a battalion of
v.11l focus on various media of in· troops will leave for Vietnam even before
formation that are scheduled for display Saturday's scheduled signing of lhe Peace
He then assertedly met the Hell's
Angel:; cyclists from Northel'T' California
al the assigned pickup point and robbed
them of $64,000 they carried.
Fassler, ~. and two alleged ac-
complices at one time were believed to
have hurled Hudson out of • plane high
over rugpd S&nta Ana Mountaln ler·
rltory around the Orang&-Rtvenkie coun-
ty line. · -
No liody had been found, but Fassler
was convicted on circumstantial evidence
and testipl.ooy in ant of. Callfomla'a rare
mlsslnc-corpse, murder caeef,
He and .his two . companlolll ere cur·
rentty se,rviM time on narcOlici .fJl\u.g·
gling .char~ Aiil.ona, while--Fllller
facer ~ · = tenn upon ielein;lor-· '• llfd6r. ' i ..,.. . ' • t
.FNlllP .. e J'-
B0 MBIN G .••
by more than 30 vendors, publishers, con--agreement in Paris.
serVaUon groups and go.vemmenLal agen-rlogers leaves Friday morning for the province ket~ all people without cil~~h II is bein; sponsored by the Paris to join in the signing with bis ~rfi:;rc:· r p.m. ~:~!rnur?~'.
Orange CountY. Environmental Educa· counterparts from North VieLnam, South Sunday.
tion -·Council in cooperation with the Vietnam and the Viet Cong's Provisional Four American filers shot down in Poche Beach - a populer surfing Ecol Revolutionary Government. Hanoi's beach in county territory near the north ogy Committee at Estancia High foreign minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh, ar-Laos were added today to the offlclsl
end of San Clemente -might oUlciaUy Sc~c\ers will have the opportun1'ty to rlvfet in the French capital today. , Indochl ina death toll, bringing! toldalochUln.S. become.a public strand, San Clemente ci· 1 p is . 11 f th U batt e deaths in 12 years o In a ty ccruncllmen beard tbia week. view new environmental films, slides ;i ar ' spec1a sts rom e nited warfare to 4$,937. The 1 riled and diaplays, to investigate new cur· States, North Vietnam, South Vietnam The U.S. Command also said today the mpe beachfront had been rlculum gw'des, books and ·ther and th'! Viet Co"" met on detaila of h earmarked for pr! ate d el • ·~ • guided missile frigate Preble was It v ev opnitnt resources for classroom use. applying the cease-fire arrangement. Wednesday by Communist shore bat·
recently -projecta which if completed Highlight of the day will be the presen-In Saigon, President Ngu•en Van ~'eu t · h'I ffsbo · would mean no public access to , the J 1111 er1es w 1 e on an o re opera hon sup-
shoreline from Doheny to San Clemerite•s taUon of the County environmental predicted that if the CommunislS violate porting South ·vielnamese troops in
Estacion Beach. awards to out.standing student ecology lhe cease-fire and wage new war, many Quatl8 Tri Prpvlnce. Damage was light,
But City Manager Kenneth Carr told projects. Winnen will compete for 11atiol)s will join· South Vietnam in nobody was hurt and the Preble re-
il T statewide honors this March. fighting them_ : malned on station, the command said.
couoc men uesday that county llr"~-=~=--~~~;::~-::O:~~~~:O:~~~~~----------..i~~,iiii;iiiiiiiii:i~iii;i~iiii:iiiii;;iiiii~ supervisors •re considering a feasibility ~~~f~~niu~~~~n~r:~~:~: ";°~~~ ~ LOW PRICES ARE BORN HERE ••• RAISED ELSEWHERE
surfers.
Councilmen agreed unanimously to
support such a county study.
There are comrlicatlons, however.
In the center o the beach section is the
Shorecliffs Beach Club, and the only off.
s•reet parking in the beach ZOlle belongs
to members of that private club.
Spokesmen for the Shorecliffs ~omoowner's Association told coun·
c1lmen that members are extreIDely cOn-
cemed about the fate of the colony's
private parking lot ne.ar tht corner of El
Cam!nri Real and Camino Capistrano.
At present, several stretches of the
beach-are accessible through a sub-
terranean serlu of stairways and
catwalks Installed along a Oood control drain.
The exact jurisdiction of the actest
however, is confused, and ownership
along the beach is complex u well.
Supervllj>n this weelt agreed to a :IG-
day delay on any decision on the ~easibility stud>: -a delay brou ght about·
10 part b•· their desires for an opinion
from the city, Carr aaid.
Educational Video
Demonstration Set
Harbor area re.sldentl interested ln
educational television art Invited to
participate Feb. 1 ln a demonstration and
discussion or Channel 50.
The program. •poMOrtd by tht Harbor
Arca CoorcUnatina CoWlCH, Wiii begin at
7:30 p.m. in the Orange Coa!l College
Forum. Dr. Norman E. \\·awn, ch4n·
ccllor or the Coast Community College
District, and WUUam Furitlts, lelecotn·
munlcati-Ons dlrector of the1 district, will
explain how lhe new channel will serve
Oran&e County and how TV courses-may
be taken for college credit.
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