HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-26 - Orange Coast Pilot"
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• Ollles·t Artifaets '•' • •
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Found •• lr\rine ID
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1972 --RIO'A y ->;fl'Ef{NoON, ';J;1;'"44;t.11y-:i
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~POW ·O·pftrati~:ns -i . .. ' ,· 4 ,;
-' ' . 4 • •. I ~ ASHINGTON· (APl -secretary ol in ouUlning terms of tbe peace agree-
D91ense MelVin R. Laird said t~:( OJ)'.er. • •ment. a~ !or bringing out u.S. p~rs· or~ ''' Trfunt'PJclM:do ~can ror a stOJf iii ~
vtV 'from Hanoi "will start thl! next Vienti8ne,l' Lafrd said ·.
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Artifacts
In Irvine
+k," with more thap-100 to ~ home -No~-Vietnam ~U p~de Amer~ WiUti,D t"·o weeks. -• off'icia1I iD Parts with a list of 'POWs Gia By GEORGE tEIDAL ~_ird said the rows· will bt Obwn ' saturday. A 'r ~kMinan for the U.S. Of .... O•lty .. 1i.1 Si.ff ~p ffbm Hanoi w.·.aark ~ Force delegatJon .in_;f'8(.is said the list will 'not The oldest man-made. fired, clay
B8Jle in the Philjpp)nes )Over a round-be made public 1n'"-'Paris, however.
a*t route that '!ill-~t ~· the.in " ~entagon j)fficialS ~~· ·-~iPI!• artifacts ever unearthed in North otlr Vientiane to Laos. next.of-kin wou]d be notified before ttie America by some 21flKJ years have been
'9.it, he said, the.re would ~ no )anding · li$t j•-,na~ public unless· the North Viet• discovered on the Irvine Ranch by a
in Vientiane as indicated Wechksday by · ilanf~ tnake 'If ~bllc Wbeo the}' tum'it team ·:of ·Cal State Fu 11 e.r ton
presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger, over to U.S .. officials. archeologists.
· .... • · Indications were that the list would be. R9ger J. Desautels, president of Costa f ·: fr 1;r .. ~' ' • inade public early next week if next-of-Meiibased Archaeological Research
&
J ,ti:-p IJle" ,. kin are notlfied1flrst . ~Jt, 1wis not clear Inc. today announced at UCI the n'l71l ·ei tvn \Vhetber Under $Ch circwil!tanceS aµof Significance· of the July, 1971 digs above
· ~ / ~r) \ · lie 1 names !'woul<I• ".be. refeised Upper Newport Bay. ~ .. " • • • : •. ·· ' sir;nul~Y· • , • i . : • "The discovery is an arcbeological 1I ospital . Rea4 y.. ·. -s~t:!~~~er: ~~: :~; f~~~ =:::~~ew~~hpr~~~rfc· :~~~e~
· ,,.. • ·' landfDrot·U.S. _flanes In 'Hanol and left ' North America. -y· t POW unclear·wh«:o t'*first trbc*>trs '*"'OUld be "These artiracts have. l)een l'OO· . or . ie -s " gtVeg ~heir freedom. .. elusively dated by Carbon-14 tests
• , • ~ .. 1 • X • U.S .. ~ <ifflcla~jworking on, the POW performed• at-UCLA and Gakushuin
·)\'A$81$TON (~) .,..._ The · Delenpe . r~altf ~, this was. ll~hly to oc~ · University, Tokyo. ~be tests have placed
0epartmeM today Orn~ ami>unced a ' so~e_tl.i:De ~ ~ end, ~',tile two-week the ag~ or 11the artifacts at more than
UJ f 31 ·iita hos ·t'.als in the United penoC:t foDO.uig the sipmg of the pe~ 6,000 years-. ~utels ~ys.. . . M o m1 ry P1 . agreement. The exact location of the find is being slates wh~ retu~ U.S....m 1 ~~t ~ 1 ANed~iu.Jhf}.Jlt11rvie~, ;'\;\'hen can we kept secret to prevent amateur pot will be brought for exam1natiobl ~.nu expect the firlt Ame"rican~ prisoners' tO'\· 'btmtk:rs from destroying t.be site's
treatment after they are ~eed by ~ return home?'' Laird re·pned that Project historical signllicance. ~Qrt4 . Vietnamese. one. , is at Camp Homeoominc ""1ll start this E_e:r:t week." Desautels said the Irvine Company will
p;Mlet.O . . • _ . BUt latt9' lri * progam, when queir protect the site against trespassers. ARI
tln ,addlt.ioni the Pe~tagon anpou~ liooe(i'·&pe:<::iftcally<as to when the·POWs holdi:: a contract With the land develop-
ttia't ,Clark,4J.f .Base .Ill ~ Phil~ppines can~ u.pec;fed back~ Ws country, he ment ·arm to· Insure the .protection and wHl be the in1ti8l rece!Ving pomt f~ ntused to give a ~ dlt.e, saylni .oo-~ mapping of significant historical sites
Pbws whO will travel from Hanoi In iJ.o. . -. (ilff !OW1, ,..11 located on .the 13,000 acre ranch.
medical e~cuation pl~I:· ' , Christopher Drover, 25, of Laguna
• M~ Clar~tbe returned men will be able Beach, now a lecturer for UC Irvine Ex-
t mak£ ~Jibone call~ to famlll~ ln the · ' tension. led the student group from Cal
stit.es at¥1 be fitted wiQI new s·~ks Dro. p Slate Fullerton in the six week dig during
ornu,, in addition to receiVing' •a 1.-(A.;. the summer of 1971.
PttliJ!ll~acy mpdlcal checko~~r. , , 'I,'he ol~est pi;evious,expmples bf North
l Whlt.ei House aldea ate 41'cukah\g the B Z ' }' 000 American ceramic objects ever to be
pOuibllity of a Ca1ifon\ia._ trip by Prl)esl· e ow ' unearthed are estimated to be 4,500 years ~ to\'futetJ~\{il'st freed .S.... • r. ' ... • old and were found in the eastern United ~ntrs-or-war Ori 1-Y l\Omelt'om_-;---=NEWJJllllk(~ -The Doit States __ ~
J:ii>Ftli Vl~\"f!TI" The .W"'!!J"iton Pos\ • .IOOff ·-of .30 .. induatrial • , "1e thimble sioed objects decorated reP:;rted tciday. ~ • . ' • -sUdl', wbldi · t,unt: above 1:000 wilh designs le~ by sharp point ln-•• Tbe newspape; said there has been no points at the close of trading Nov. strumenls have no apparent relationsrup
f.iMl deci~ for ih~ President to make 14 amkl !Ware, dropped below to similar items of a lat.er date fround in
t:lti trip v-fravti Air FOrce.--Ba~. •bot.rt: ~that mar!: ~ring midday tra~ing North America, whose origins of &:tyle
l!o'mn .. south of San Frans:Is<o. Tl\< f'iill fud.yJ Al -'Ille Jlo<v 'W8I """""' ':.can bf tr"':e<! to Alia and Mexico, f$1rpcea a~. expected to arrive at lhe s.79 to •.ao. . Desautell said~'
Ii"!< in about two ....U. lllotwa cited inveotor conceru
•.Factors )>eing ~ "1 Ille While *" ~ and tl¥ U.S. trodo H•use • iri maJctng a decision lnclude>tll< ...,. •• _.,, ractots _.,
'flOt Uuit ,Ille , tjl•Ulll and , Omotion Of I ~
prtSidenll•I welcome may be too much _,,..,. Ille Dow --
qcilel'1enl• (or the rtlur!IOet, the l'lllt l -:. -...... n • Id It Id there Is the prosyect ol..,.. 4.07 to 1~.~. •..-.-.. I ltGCa
'" · !~able ~ r..... tho markell '""9ec!-!'tn 'obla +wk•
Icemen ' • ol • ~ al -.iidaf·IOI'
• I~ Navy bolplta!J are: tbe 1tte pnoldeOI ~ 8. 1olio-
, Dal Klloll Noni BJ .I. IN!gd; -' I
, , !Ste. PENl)Ll!TON, Pip I)
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Composer Succwnhs
STROUDSBURG, Pa. (AP) .l-George
"' Griff, •, who compolled the ~'Ol'ds to the .
aong "When llilh Eyea AN Smiling,"
bu died' ~t a hospital near !\ere. He had
written more than fOO songs, but "Irish
Eyes" was by far the moet succeuful
llld lroqhl him about 110,000 a year In
"1)'lltks.
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Huntington Beaeh
Explorer Marries
•cannibal~ Chief
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No GOP Denial
Re~election Violations Alleged
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's re-election finance committee
loday declined to contest eight charges of violating the new campaign spend-
ing law-all involving Watergate defendant G. Gordon Liddy. The committee
was fined $8,000, the maximum possible.
THE OUTCOME OF THE case left in que stioo what Liddy did with $26.500
in campaign funds. .
A spokesman said the committee could not have thrown any light on the
matter even if it contested tbe charges. He said the committee had no idea
whllt Liddy did with the money and could not question him because he is on
trial· in the \Vatergate case. '
JN A TWO.MJNVTE ARRAIGNt.fENT before U.S. District Judge George L.
Hart, the F.inance Committee to Re-elect the President pleaded nolo contendere,
or no contest, to an eight-count "criminal information" flied Jan. 11 by the
Just.ice Bepar1ment.
No individuals were charged. .,
Dowry: II Pigs
Hu·ntington Explorer
Weds 'Cannibal' Chief
\Vyn Sargent, an explorer and an·
thropcilogist. from Huntington Harbour
who has been studying the sexual life of
tribes lil West Irian, has married the
chief 1of one of the tribes, the West Irian
military command said today.
Miu Sargent's 1ocal address is 4001
Moming Star Drive, Huntington Beach.
The 42-year-old divorcee married Chlet
Obaharok Jan. I In a tribal ceremony,
giving him 11 pigs and five cloth head·
dresses as a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjono
sald"ln West lrian. a remote province in
Indonesia.
Chief Obaharok, who was said to have
several other wives, rePorledly beads a
cannibal tribe.
-... tbe=ptlot~""""l<kjoomaliat~
Sargent left Huntlnetou Beach in October
to study and photograph t;aMibel tribes
io the Baliem Valley, a jungle area in the
beart of West rn..
She has traveled extensively in the
SoUth Pacific aod Jlther lands. In 19611,
she found • ])yak VIiiage 1n the
Indonesian JUDll:les of Borneo In need of
medical, educational and agricu1tural
help.
Coming bat< to the states. she locally
organlu<' tbe Sargent-Dyak Fund Inc. 10
get rellel for the primitive people.
In -cargoes ol plga, KOatJ Md ch1ckens. she wa·sl'Cported to
have taken 1lx tons of mcdiclne, three
motorboat&. and agricUltural equipment
to the vfilage.
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Upon her return to Huntington Beach
in early 1970. she spoke ol her adventures
before a class at liarbour View Eiemen ...
tary School.
··1t was an incredible drtam and an
impossible journey," she was quoted In•
Lbe DAILY Pu.or.
"We stwd a very 1ood chance ol mak-
ing the ugl,Y'Amerlcan respected again ,"
she told the children who had helped
purchase 5,000 books for a sister school
in the Jt111gle.
Re;>orts that after her most ~ecent
marriage lo the tribal chief she vowed to
ihed bcr Weste.:n t)lothes aod dress only
In strings and atrape ol the nalives
~bL.q1~k OOjcct.iona..from oUicialsJn. Wamena,tsl IfianlieaCl{iuarters. -
They said that her actions might upset
lheir Pfans to •iclvillze" the.tribe's people
tSte WEDDING, Page!)
Corona Kin Speaks
SAN FRANCISCO !APl -Pedro
CQrooa, Who ine:lst1 hie older brother
Juan was innocent In the slaylngs of ~
rr.lgrant fann worken, siY• local
authoritlel did not give Juan Corona ''the
presumption ol lnnocenct. I tlndcrsland
that •n al't'UtedlM!rson tn this countryls-
innoctnt until prove~ guilty," said
Corona, 31, speaking mostly In Spanish
through an interpreter Thunday.
ru s
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Westminster
Trap Nets
2 ~uspects
By JOJIN ZALLER
Of 1M blolly 1"1191 lt9ff .
Westminster police t6day claimed to
have seized $1 1nillion worth of am·
phetamines and arrested two S1>3nish-
speakin g men in what officers termed
the biggest narrotics haul in the city's
history.
Police said two anonymous phone calls
led to the arrests Wednesday night in a
truckyard . in the industrial sector of tbe
city.
OffiCer! asserted the rfild netted 3
million amplletnmine (or ··upper'.') pills.
which police believe were brought ·\l
from 1t1exico.
Four Westminster officers and two
federal narcotics agents had been staking
out a truck &:tor.:gc lot lit 13612 Millon St.
for more than 20 hours by the lime the
arrests were made.
The two suspects. one of whom is a
Mexican nationa l, were being held today
in Orange County jail with bail set at
SIOO,ooo each. The med were identified as
Juan Manuel lternandez Garcta. 38, of
(See NARCOTICS, Page %)
Orange Cout
Weatller
Continued sunny skies is the
projectl'd . weather picture for Sat-
urday. with slightly warmer tem-
peratures. accor.ding lo the weather
service. ltlghs in the mid-00!!. Lows •
tonight in the 4Ds.
INSI Dt: TOD/\ l'
Mick. Jaggtr brottght· h.i.3 Holl~
i11y Stones to Los A11{1tle1 la&t
week for a co11cert benefittt11y
Managua. Nicarog11a. He con1e
a11d co1H1uered. See photos. Wkn1
by UCI freshnuu& Audrea \Va·
rers. on the cover of toda11'•
WeekC""11der .
l.M. .. ,. I MU-.1 ...... 11
... llM t ·111111i1MI....,,. •
C,1llfttBl9 J OnM4 C-ty 11
Cl•nlfltf n-• aMt-lflh ll·• C1111lc:• t4 trllrll ,.,._ It er....... ~ • ...,.. ~ , ...
Dfflll Nelle•• u ... #otffl:ttl Sl·tJ
ltl,.,111 ,_ • T~ • ,._ ll·U "'-""' tNI ,._ ... a--4 14 WMlllw 4 --.. 11. w_.._.._,.,u
AM Lllllen. 11 W..... ..... C ~.... ' w........ 214\ Mtorrtt tN1
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2 DAILV PILOI s
New Plant • Ill
By RUDI NlEDZIEl..5Kl
01 llW 0111'( ~11.i '""
Negollot1ons <'lrt' almosl C'Qrn1>lete 10
bring a nlultl-rnilliou doUar in surance
l1t>adquarti>r8 cn1ployin& up to 1.100
\1•ork<'rS lnlo l'o:sta ~tesa. U1<' DAlLY
PILOT learned today.
Sources said the sale of 20 ncres of
S.:~ers1ro1n filrnily land north of the San
J)ic~o Fl'f>t!\\·:i.y to Stair farn1 losurunt>t·
tur 1111.s µ1-uJN.'I is i1nn11nent.
1'ht' insur;111l'l' conipany pll111:; to rllO\"t.'
11~ r1·g1onal {t:\'i~ional hcadt111nr1~·;·s frorn
Sa111u \n:.i tflH) th~ new f:ll"llll}' adir•l"Cl!l
Leaves for Pa1·is
.
to Hyland Laboratories by 1974, the of·
licials dlstlostd.
Tbl8 v.'ill n1tan employment of 300_ tu
400 llf'\\' wor kers because plans by State
F'ann ca ll for a significant expansion
t..'Ompt1rrtl to th~ existing Santa Ana
racBl t~·.
\'. t), Shields. regional vlct president of
StRtl" f.';irm, said his firm had only an op-
llon on the Segerstrom property but wi1h
~t'\'er:i l t'<lnti.ngencles y,·hlch make an-
nnunce1nent of the proj<'Cl ··;i tittle
preinature until all the problems have
t I'll SOJ\·ed ...
Rogers to Place
'X' on Agreement
Hy Uniled Press lntematlonal
SC<:rctary of State \Villiarn P. Rogers
left today for Paris to sign tht agreen1erll
ending the \:ietnam \\'ar <ind said he
hoped the accord v.•ill usher in a genera·
tion of peace.
Th e v.ar Itself raged on and t\1·0, po5-
sibh· three, more Americans and hun·
dreds of Vietnamese died todav. ~See re-
lated story and pictu re. Page.ti
Rogers 1\'ill sign the agreen1ent in
l'aris Saturday at the heavily guarded
Hotel 1il:ucsii c with the foreign ministers
of J'IJonh and South \"ietnam nod the Viet
f 'ro111 Page 1
PENDLETON • •
Ba!l>O<i \';:n nl Hosplt<1L San Diego; lh c
i'\ava.I Hos pital at Camp Pendleton; the
t:reat Lakes. !II. Naval Hospital : the
Philadelphia Na val Hospital.
Also. Bethesda. 1 ~·ld.) Naval Hospital:
!he Portsmouth, Va ., Naval Hospital: the
St. ;\lbans Naval Hospital in Nc1v York :
the C'ht'l;;ea Xa\·a\ Hospital in Boston:
the J<1cksonl'i!le. Fla. Nal'al Hospital;
!ht' .~aval Hospital at Canlp Lejeune.
. ~.C .. the .\\ernphis. Tenn. Naval Hospital
and the l3 n.'n1erton. \Vash. Naval
Hu~p1tal
The JO Air Force hos pitals arc:
~lalcolm Grow t.1edical Center,
.'\ndrews Air Force Base. t.fd.: the
\\'ilford !!all 1\-1edical Center, Lack.land
Air Force Base. Tex.: 1he David Grand
:'1\edieal Center . Travis Air Force Base :
ihe Air Force Regiona l Hospital at Max·
v.t·ll ,\1r Foree Base. Ala .: <he Air t-'orce
Hf'gzonal Hospital at Sheppard A i r
l"nrce Base. Te:i:-.: the <A.ir Force
ltcgional Hospital , March Air Force
Ha~e. near Biverside; the Air Force
Hl'g1onal Hos pital at \Vestover AFB,
.\las:;.:· and n1cdical centers at Scott
AFB Ill.. Keesler AFB, Miss.; and
\\"rignt-Pauerson AFB, Ohio.
The Arrn y eight installations are:
Brooke Arn1y t.1edical Center, Ft. Sain
I lhU:-.ton. Tex : Letterman General
llosprt;;i l, San Francisco: Fitzsimmons
General Hospita l. Denver, Colo.; Valley
Forge Genera l Hospital, Pbocnin'ille,
Pa .. Tripler Gcneral Hospital, Honolulu :
Jrclancl Anny Hospital. ft. Knox, K~•.:
Patterson Army Hospital . Ft. Mon1nouth.
~.J .: a11d the Army General Hospital at
F'L Cordon, Ga
* ti * From Pagel
POWs ...
Jy thal "more than 100 prisoners 1vill be
back 111 th r l"nited States 1vithin the first
h~·o 11·eeks"
Thr sta rt of Project Homecoming,
refe rred to by Laird. could mean the ar·
nval of a small group of Americans, in·
t:l uding specialists to se t up com·
inunication links from Hanoi to U.S. in-
st allations. These men are expected to
arrive in the North Vietnan1esc capital in
abou t a \vt•i•k.
' ORANGi COAST
DAILY PILOT
Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Gov.·
crnme nt. The 12-year--old "'·ar is then lo
grind to a halt at -i p.m. PST.
Rogers said "y,·e hope and c.xpec1 that
shortly the ceasefire will be in effect in
Laos and Cambodia. too. and that finally
this long and difficult \\'at v.·ill come to
an end."
Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma of
Laos said today in Vienliane he thought
there \vould be a cease-fire in Laos with-
in 15 days after the one in Vietnam but
that l l.S. bombing would continue if need-
ed.
In Cambodia, Prime il-1inister Hang Tun
Hak said Thursday his government v.'ould
suspend offensive operations after the
Vie1nam cease-fire to test the Commu-
nists.
But the fighting v.'as heavy today and
surged to within 10 miles of Phnom Penh.
In neighboring Thailand, site of many
U.S. air bases. there was concern for the
future . Gen. Prapass Charusathira, the ,
deputy Prime Minister. predicted trou-
bles in Laos and Cambodia that could af.
feet Thailand after the fighting ·ends in
Vietnam.
The \\fhite House announced that Pres--
ident Nixon is sending \rice Presid~nt
Spiro T. Agney,· to South Vietnam . LaOs •
CambOOia, Thailand, Malaysia. Singapo re
and Indonesia for "substantive discus·
sioru;" on the posty,·ar state of Asia. Ag-
new leaves Sunday.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said Agnew ·'will reaffinn our
desire fqr peace and self-determination
for all the countries of Southeast Asia.··
\Vhile the principals in the Vietnam
peace drama gathered in Paris. a key
figure slipped quietly out of that city to-
dav on the eve of the signing.
Only a few dozen newsmen and officials
_ were on hand when Le Due Tho the
Hanoi diplomat who negotiated the airee-
ment \\'ith Henry A. Kissin ger , bade fare-
well and new to Hanoi.
The 62·year..old silver-haired Tho.
Hanoi's top theoretician. an intellectual
and .poet, spe.nt fou~ years in bargaining
sessions. mainly with Kissinger.
Pledging North Vietnam to stick st rict·
ly by the tenns of the accord , Tho said :
'·Tomorrow the guns will fa!J silent and
peace \vill return to Vietnam .
''Our people are to enter a new era
1,l'ifh detennination to ra ise high the ban·
ner of peace and national conC'Ord and
to carry out strictly the clauses of the
agreement"
Rogers with his counterparts. Tran \Tan
Lam (South Vietnam). Nguyen Duy Trinh
I North Vietnam ) and Mme. Nguyen Thi
Binh /Viet Cong ) are scheduled to sign
the agreement Sa turday in twin cere-
monies. The first will be at 11 a.m. (2
fl.m. PST ) and lhe second at 3:45 p.m.
t6:45 a.m. PST).
The peace machinery already \vas mov.
Ing into place . Delegations fro1n Canada ,
lfunga ry, Poland and Indonesi a v;err
leaving immedialelv or alreadv en route
to Saigon to fonn ·the supervisory body
I hat is to. detect any violations of the
ecase-firc .
Spokesmen in Paris for the Viet Cong
and South Vietnam indicated that repre-
sentatives of the tv:o sides \vould meet
within days, possibly \\'ilhin 36 hourS of
the signing ceremony lo discuss the future or Vietnam.
G<ive rnment sources in Saigon s aid
President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered
300.000 civil and military officials to go
into villages and hamlets after the cease-
fire to counteract expected Viet Cong
prop.1ganda teams .
A spoktsman for the Segerstrom fan1i·
ly today cont'lrmed the negotiations but
said that the property Is· not yet in
escrow but that it could reach this stage
"aoy day."
It \\'rts disclosed by tOUrces hov.·ever
that preliminary plans for the P.roJect are
expectt.>d to be fUed with the city by Feb.
7 and that these wlll reach tbe planning
commission level sh<lrtly afteNi·ard.
The building, designed by a St. Paul
architect, will be one story ln height. Its
151 ,000 square feet of floor space will
n1ake It larger lhan the adjacent JTyland zonlng regWatfon.s. A study ts ln proa:rtss
Laboratorlt1. 'to expand tho lt•l llOOt deflnltlon to in·
___Mtboua,IL tbe euct Ya.llw .ut tbe -elude suctrnonotn111ufacturinr uses~iis-buUdlng was not available from sources. •
It Is expeeled to ht approxlmalely 11.l to lhe Stale ·fmi> bllilclln1.
$$ million. State Farm 11 · the second insurance
One of the ''eontlnceneies" cited by fll'Ol to enter negouaticw wtth the
Sblelds appears to ctnttr on the M·l Sqtrstroms for permanent headquarters
(mahufacturing) ione on the property.' In Cotta Mesa.
Uses such as office buildings are The other flrm, a medical insurance
prewntly not .permitted under1 ~lstlng group, Is Interested In localing oo the
A1·1 deflnllions. east side of Fairview Road between
City officials have i.n the past deviated sunnowcr Avenue and the San Diego
from a strict Interpretation of t.be M·l Freeway.
Santa Cruz
Woman, Bo)'S
Found Slain
SANTA CRUZ (AP! -The bodies of a
woman and two young ·boys who had
been stabbed and hacked to death have
been found in a borne just outside Santa
cruz, a sherifrs officer said today.
The bodies of a woman about 29 and
the boyS, about 3 and 10 years old, were
discovered by Stephen Ho u ts , a
._Jldghoor on Mystery Spot Road In bills
just norlli of town, pl 10 p.m. Thursday,
said a Santa Cruz County sheriff's state-
ment.
Lt. Kehnelh Pittenger said the bodies
bore stabbing and hacking wounds.
1be victims' names were not im-
mediately «leased.
Pittenger told 11. repOrter that an all·
points bulletin ha'd been issued for an
unidenW1etl person.
"An extensive.investlgation is being
conducted •by the sheriff's investigation
bureau'' under Pittenger•s' direction, the
statement said. 1
l'H• Pllff! J
NARCOTI~ . • •
Mexioo, and Alal Mq:allanes, 4.8, uf
Buena Park.
PoUce said ~ men , neither of wh-0111
spake Englilh, said ttiey were oot awart
they were apparent1y dealing In con·
ltabJWd Moi•· The raid was made ubout 8:1& p.m. Six
officers char;ed wllh their suns drawn
on the two su.rpeets, who offered no
resistance.
Roth men were unarmed.
Police had tarller watched as the tw11
men n:portedly entered the truck atorag<'
lot about 8 p.m. The 1uspect1 alltgedly
went directly to one 3$-foot Oatbed truck
and began removing wooden boards 011
lhe trailer. revealing a hidden storage
area.
Police sllid the two men quickly
n:moved about 40 black plastic bags,
each containing ~.ooo pills.
0 \Ve urned ~ rald just right," said
Del Rick McKinney ol Ille Weetmlnlter
force. "They had just finished unlo1ding
all the bags and so there was nothlng left
for us to do but make ~he arreKls."
McKinney said the yard is leased by a
third man . who Is no! believed to be in -
volved In the allegedly Illegal operation .
McKinney also said the two suspecls
claimed to be innocent.
•1niey said an unknown man had of-
fered t\j pay lhem $100 each to do the job
and tbit they didn't know what they were
carrying ," McKlnnty said.
McKJMey added that the tnick's hid·
den compartment seemed to have been
in place a long time. He also noted that
the pill bags had been soaked in vinegar,
which would contuse dop used at
border c&eks to snll! oot lllegll drugs.
McKinney said Investigation would COO·
tinue ln an effort to Ond accomplices.
FrottaPIJffl 1
WEDDING ...
in a program called Operation Koteka .
The &.lm of the two-year program is to
put clothes on the natives, introduct
them to a money~ economy and teach
t.'tem to speak, read and write the
Indonesian language.
A Jakarta, lndooesia, newspaper.
Farewell to Husband
The bod.lea were found in what was
tenned an older house on Mystery Spot
Road, which dlaWs its name from a
tourist attracuolt.
"Berl ta Buana, '' reportedly ran a
pholog ... ph of Ml.. saraenl and Chief
Obaharok. She was wearing jeans and a
shirt and he a kotei:,, a kind of G-atrlng .
The U,S. Embaat In lndoneoia said It
bad no lnfonnatioo on the marriage.
Lady Bird Johnson wipes a tear front her eye at the graveside serv·
ices for the form~r president Thursday in Stqne~all, Texas. See story
on Page 4.
II was al.5-1, just auWde Sanla
Cruz, wherl'IVel!thy eye lllll'poll Dr.
Victor Ohta, bis wife, two eons IDd a
secretary were slain Oct. Ii, lll'IQ. Boys Drown in Ice
Nixon Discloses
$268 Billion
Federal Budget
' \~ ASHlNGTON (UPI I -Prtsident
Nixon disclosed today that the fed eral
budget for lbe next fiscal year will total
$268. billion, and said he would discuss
details in a radio address to the nation
Sunday evening from the Florida \Vhite
House. A $12·billion .9eficit also was
forecast by a Senate le'ader.
The President gave the budget ngure
For the year starting July l following a
meeting with congressional leaders of
both parties, and while greeting a group
represenling ,prisoner of war families.
Nixon also said the final budget figure
for the current fiscal year will be f250
billion -the ceiling he demanded and
one which roused some members of
Congress who feel the cblef executive in·
fringed on legislative prerogatives.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the President already taped
the II-minute radio program on the
budget which will be broadcast from Key
Biscayne, Fla., at 3 p.m. PST Sunday.
The President briefed congressional
leaders on his fiscal proposals before
flying to his Florida retreat to spend the
\veekend working on his State of the
Union message to Congress.
Meeting with reporters on Capitol Hill
following the White House meeting,
Senate Democratic Leader Mike
Mansfield and House Speaker Carl Albert
said the actual budg~t figures for fiscal
1974 1\·ould be $268.7 billion, \\'Ith an
estimated deficit of •12 billion.
~1ansfield said the deficit for the cur·
rent fiscal year would be $25 biUion.
Of the $268.7 figure, Mansfield said,
$'202 billion would be in fixed outlays not
subject to adjustment.
Albert renewed congressional otr
jections to the President's impoundment
of funds to meet his budget goals for this
fiscal year.
"It's a question of whether they (the
\Vhlte House) are legislating or we are.''
Radio, TV Chief Dies
The bodies w~ found by firemen
summoned •4'hen the Ohta mansion was
set afire. '-
Bearded . long-haired John Linley
Frazier. 2-4. arrested i!l a. qearbf . bills
cabin, was convJcted ofl'l\e slayirles Nov.
CHICAGO (UPI) -t'our '°l's. chuing
ducks on the Wuhlngton Park lagoon on
Ille city's South Slde, !ell through thin Ice
Thursday and drowned Benjamin
Barfield, 9, hla bro1-ulle, 7, Rober!
Bennett, 10, and Isaac Nl!.,.9. were dead
on arrival at Woodlawn HoSpital.
ENCINO (AP) -Earl Ebi, 69, veteran
radio and television producer, died
Thursday. 29. 1971. -
• c~ear~nce ) Annual ~
SA.LE
•
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUA~ITY
•• NOW~AT ' SALE PRICES
NEWPORT . STORE LAGUNA STORE
OVER 70 SOFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
Sofas Sofas
Rig. SALi R•g.
I ' Cut Velvet, 689 I' LI j nt.
Multi.Colored. 790. Hon 799. I' Creteent Sof•, 549 I' Tux -A~u1. Gold V•lvet. 690. C1nen, 'I. I 570. I ' Hl·B•ck Texture 599 Sherrill 689. I' Whlll/G.-.
'1• Print -O.ld .. 911 Sherrlll. 679.
Orange -Henrlldon 1072, I' "Int -lteyal I' Velvet Strlpt -579 Cooch. 619. Sherr Ill 695.
Chairs Chairs
''· 0.14 Volff!.
''· Ch1lr1 ,rlnt 139 ... Shorrlll. 205 •••.
Wooclm1rk 159 .... Pr. 'rlnt. Pr. ,Ch1lr1 -Gold Velvet 189 ... c • ..-. 224, ... Mlrge Carton. 209 ....
SALi
659
465
589
589
179 ...
185 ...
1n1 Oranoe Co1\t O• IL Y PILOT, whh W!!l(h
·~ cornl:lll\Cd 1ne Mewr Preu. ,, S>Ubl•5'1«1 bY
tnr Orange Coast Publl'h;n9 (Om1>5ny. '-·
•••e tdlti~n' are 1"'bll•ne<i, M-•Y 1~•°"'9h
~rlday, IW Coil& M~A. NltWODf'I •e•ch.
Huntino!on lleacn/F'OllnMln Va11ey, L,tgun•
BNcl>, lr~in~ll>•!ldltbl(k ar>d S•n Clernen!el
SAn J1,1an C~p!,!rano. A single rl!';l-1
<'!llHon •S puoll~hnl $a!ul'll1'(1 and Swr•Uys,
r~e p•lnciP!ll llllbllshln9 p!1n1 la 11 :uo V.111
B•t" Str~et, CoSI• Mell, C1llfornll, t1'11'6.
Rob1rt N. W11d
Prt1lOenl •nd PvOllM'let'
Jae~ R. Curley
Woody Wedding Pr. Chelro -Y1llow
V1IY1t. Drexel. 259 ....
lMther Ch1lr1
and Sofa1 ALL
199 ... Wl"I Choir. 189 Rutt. 219.
20%.11 Pr. Oehl 179 ... Volvot.
V•<e Pr•ti<lent end O!'!\er1t M•<1t1Nr
Tkom t1 K11vil
EOllQI" '
T~ortl•i A. M1,1rphin1
M1n~o•no f:llhor
Ch11]1, H. lllo1 Rith1N P. N,/I
Anlllanl M1n191nQ &ll!fo•I
Olfk"
Coit~ M-1•: ua W•1t ll~v Str"1
NtW'tlO)<! 11•~\:cn : Ull Nt'*PO•t BovltVftd. l.a9u<1a llt•dl~ 122 F'o,11! A~ue H~n•in911111 lh~cll; HllS ll•~c~ lou1ev•rt1
,,.,, Clt!N'n!11 )OJ Notti! El C1mi110 AIYI
r.ie,h•11e 111•1 4'42.-4Jll
Clottlfled Ad•1rthl"t 4'41•S671
~r•m C••11t111 "'"' ''"'"' Gf u,_ •••tit ••2-4420
1'r1m N'1'111 Or•"" (ltt11ty Clm-lllft
140.1 220
(OC1"io111, 1"t Ora~ Co11t • 1'1,1~tt11tty,q
Com1>-1ny No Mw~ •l0tlt1. l!h1urt!I0111,
Ml!orltl 1r1111tr or 111v1r111.,,.111i., lllf'1i11
1 ..,,.., Dt repr011111etd w!ll>O!,lt IPtdll Ptr·
m11'*'" 11 apyrf0!\1 OW'fltf,
~ C!lll -l••e H id II (Ml• M9u. C1111or .. 11. $ut1t<rt1110n bv uo••lsr n .u
""''11111v; b'f men u .u "*"'lllV1 mlllttrY
<ltllllll!IOf'll l ' • .S mGll!lllY.
Here Cornes Bride-Fro1n Kitchen. •
Joyce Gregory and Gene Jones of Hun-
tington Beach married Thursday night,
exchanging vows where they had met one
year ago. In front of the hearth of
\Voody 's Wharf in Newport Beach.
"They met over a cup of tea," asserted
\\'oody l'ayne. proprietor of lht popular
bay front night spot, \\'ho shut his doors
to the public for the first time for the oc·
casion.
lie said he did it for ~1rs. Jones. his of.
flee manager almost ever since he
bought the restaurant nearly eight years
ago.
The marriage was l)(lrformt'CI 1 by the
Rev. Arthur K. Grant. a non-denomina-
thmal minister. P11me.la Brown. a former
\\'11Hress 'at Woody's, was maid (l( honor
and Robert Jones was his brother's best
mar1.
The cerenK>ny was supposed lo be
rest ricted to "employes and relatives,"
Payne !laid , but the brisk bar bUiiness
gave an indication that a few extra
guest~ had slipped in.
Folk singer ~1lke Murphy, perched on a
stool behind the wedding cake, played the
wedding march as the bride entered
from the kitchen.
Jones, a Buena Park car saleaman,
later admitted the cerenl<ll1y almost had
a major hitch.
"I couldn't lind the weddina ring," he
said. "I'd bought It at the tame time as
the engagement ring, but I had hidden It.
"l spent all da)' lookln& for It before 1
rcn~embered that I'd 1tuck It In an old
tennis shoe.''
The couple plan lo bone:ymoon at Big
Bear Lake.
"Oh, yes, I'm a skltr," Jones said,
"but 1 don't plan to do any !lk.lina."
209 ....
Unbelievebl1 v1luos in qu1lily Softs ind ~hairs. AN l-w1y h1nd·tiod. Most Scotch9u1r<l1d,
.Some down ind I.others. AN true qU1llty ~nd •t vary ..tl1fyin9 prices.
S1loct1d groups from Honrodon, Horit191, DrHtl, and others, now 11 1111 pric11. Stop in now
for bost soleclion.
DREXEt.-HERITAG~ENREDON-WOODMARX-kAWTAN
INTEllOIS
WllDlYS• SITUIDlTS t ;OO to Sill
PllllAY '111. , ...
NEWl'ORT"l'1-CH e
1717 WISTCLIH OL.
'42·1011
·LA&UHA IEACH e
141 NOlnt COAST HWY , .........
TORRANCE e
IJMt HAWTf'40•NI ILVD.
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e
Rec~ll End of WWII?
-Then They Celebrated
By' JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ,.. Dlfly "" ...,,
HANGING IN our office we have some front pages of hlltorical editions
of variOUI newtpapers.
One of my favorites is the front page of the San Francisco Chronicle of
Aug. 15, 1~ -the day Japan agreed to an unconditional surrender.
There is a seven-inch high headline which proclaims
' PEACE! and a series of stories which detail various air
pects of the aurrender. ·
But the best part of lhat page is a story by a man
named Oiarles Raudebaugh lhat -Opens, "The end of the
long haul came at 4 o'Clock yesterday afternoon in San
Franciaoo -and the city went wild." ... RAUDEBAUGH '.S STORY in the "Victory Extra" edi·
,.
nooncemenl
lion details the incredible community sense of joy and re-
ieC and the wild celebration started by the surrender an-
He tells how the word "was Uashed from the White House and tbe cele-
bfation started. .
''It swelled and surged and mounted through crescendo upon crescendo
into a demonstration without parallel in the city's history."
Raudebagb tells of the peop'e nmning out of their homes and offices and
converging oo Market Street, causing a massive traffic jam.
He erplains that a citizens committee bad decided the thing to do would
be to have a parade up Market Street led by a band, so "immediately on the
announcement of victory the band was dispatched to the Ferry Building for the
parade -but to all effect It was lost. '
"THE PEOPLE DID NOT. require a band to lead them. They formed their
own parades, and there were probably a dozen all go~g at once -in difrer-
ent dlrectioos -the length vf Market Street. Anyone with a Dag automatically
found himself at the head of a llne of march.
"City and federal offices closed for the day, without waiting to be told to
do so.
"As a matter of fact, no one was quite sure of anythtng that would hap-
pen later in the evening, or today."
AFTER DETAIUNG SOME of the confusion over whether President Tru·
man would or would not declare some kind of a holiday and the problems of
declaring one wltOOut the state seal, Raudebaugh adds, "No one seemed to
care, however, Whether there was a proclamatRm issued or a state seal. All
tbat mattered wu that the war had ended -and the days of 'blood, sweat
and tears' were over."
Saturday will mark the end of the longest and most devWve war in the
hiatory of our country. Our loog haul is over. Our days of blood, sweat ~d
tears bave come to an end. But there will be no parading on Market Street,
no wild celebraUon. Only an honest ellort to see that it never, ever bapperui
again. •
" .
·· Laguria W omanGets T~p
f'South ~~j'X1'f <;A f:~s~.
~ JoAnn Redick has 'been chosen
:·chairman of the board for the South
: C.Ocut YMCA for 1973. She Is the first
: woman to hold tbe po5ltion of cbalnnan
-•
i wtlh the South Coast Y and only the sec-:
: ond woman ever to hold that title of all
!the Orange County YMCAs.
• Mrs Redick is a real estate broker
: wltb Mission Realty in Laguna Beach.
: Sbe, ber husband Fred and three children
:live in Laguna Beach. She ls a member
I of the L(lguna Beach board vf tultors :anc1 has served u a direct« wllb that
:board . ~ At the YMCA, she is past """'!My of
:the Gra-Y council, and chief of the
.. Blackfeet Tribe of the Indian Maidens
: Program. Her children have been in-
: volved in active Y~tCA programs and
; her husband is a member of the South
: coast y finance s:ommlttee.
: Other officers or the South COast YM·
:CA board are: Joe Armond or Laguna
:'Niguel, vice cha~n; and Jess
:Merldew of Laguna Niguel, secretary·
l treasurer.
• Members of the South C.Oast YMCA
• :board are: Gary Archibald of Laguna
:Beach, Daldre Burridge of Laguna
·:Beach , Tom Doherty of San Clemente,
·:Bob Hench or Laguna Beach, Carl Kegley
: of San Clemente, Ken Kinsey of Dana
·: Poin~ Lewis Leebw'g of Laguna Niguel,
:Bob Warmington of Laguna Beach, BiU
•Edgington of San Juan Capistrano, and
.:. Bill Stewart of Laguna Niguel. • . •
CHAI RS SOUTH COAST Y
RHltor JoAnn Redick
:j Sunday Issue to Examine
)l Thor Rocket, Buddy Ebsen .· ••
(. Here's a preview of some of the stories :! and photographs DAU.. Y PILOT editors
:: e1pect to be among "Sunclay'j'Best":
~ SOME SOUP CANS -Workhorse of ~ the Western world's space program has ~been the Thor rocket built by McDonnell
;!-DJuglas In Huntington Beach. Likened to
:: a pair of soup cans stacked end·to-ald ~with a motor at the bottom, the Thor is I( Sunday's Best J
~ exr>eeted to conunue to be Important Into ~ the llMIOI, Sundoy Special by 5lall Wrltor
: John Ziller.
:: ADDITIVES -Jf w1 are what we eat,
:: we're ~ming a pretty artificlal peOple.
~ Staff Writer Candace Peanon In-
..: vestlgatei the growing amount of food
' additives the average American con-~ sumer gel.I in hls dlti1 lead article In l; YOU Section.
••. BUDDY EBSEN -Newport Beach
catamaran &allot Buddy Ebstn ls hick
on the tube with a new series previewed
this week in TV WEEK. Neighbors who
haven't seen much of Buddy during film·
Ing can get a look at him In full color in
tbe magazine.
BLIND INJUSTICE -Many slghllesa
persons,_amlo\11 to earn their own living,
are finding prejudicfd employers reluc-
tant to birt W<1rkm with thelr kind of a
handicap.
LADY JN WAITING -The once-prnud
oew> lln<r QII<en Elizabelh lllill 11 .. on
her side in Ho111 Kong Harbor a year
after being ravaged by fire. Illustrated
feature shows site of what will be the
biggest Alvage )ob in history when the
reclaiming of the &1,000-ton lady am
under way.
•J\&ELECl'ED' -Evelyn Bruner hu
been 40tlrst lady" to a college campus
twi<e Jn her lile-by remalnlng morrled
to the same man. Her husband IJ presl-
dtnl of Saddlebock College and II former
president of a -Nebraska coUere. Jttr
Jtory Is told w!lh words and pictures by
DAILY PJLOr stlllers Allilon Deerr and
Patrlcl: O'Donnell.
•
Construction IJnder Way
Artist's rendering shows appearance or Saddleback
College's second permanent facility, the Science·
Mathematics Building. The $3.9 million facility will
be a multi-level structure with classrooms, labora·
tories and instructors' offices. The target date for
occupancy is 1974.75 academic year. The structure
is being financed by local and state fund s. Archi·
tects are Ramberg and Lo\vrey of Santa Ana.
.Topless Dancer Chile's Allende Cites
Rules Attacked
By Tavern Owner Aim to 'Ration' Liquor
BATON ROUGE, La. (UPI) -A New
Orleans French Quarter bar owner says
the state Alcoholic Beverage Control
commissioner's proposed rules against
topless and bottomless dancen carry the
is.sue to "a ridiculous degree."
ABC Commissioner Virgil D. Jorfrion
held hearings Thursday on bis proposed
regulation that would prohibit topless and
bottomless dancers or waitresses at bars
and other placea tbat seU liquor.
Berulrd Ireland, Ope.raror or lbe "Liv·
ing Room," a 'bar which featurea go-go
daoc:m, said the 'tough proPoOOd regula·
tlons were not needed anyway because
there were no bars in Louisiana that
featured totally topless or bottomless
dancers.
But Joffrion said he bad personally
seen a toples.5 dancer in New Orelans.
Ireland said the dancer Joffrion saw was
probably wearing "pasties."
"I din't check them out. I didn't touch
them. But they sure looked topless to
me," Joffrion said.
LBJ Secretary ID
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Bill D. Moyers.
press secretary to the late President
Lyndon B. Johnson, bas been hoopllallud
here suffering from chest pains. A
spokesman at Geor1etown University
&I~ ._;d TIJ?lay that the 33-year-
old Moyen' ailment has been diagnosed
aa Tiet&e'a ~ a painfuJ in·
~-~aOon11',~~ dbs and cartllqe of
UM ,,
VALPARAISO, Chile (UPI) -Presi·
dent Salvador Allende says his socialist
government will ration llquor to combat
drunkenness in Chile.
"Housewives will erect a monument in
my honor," because of the measure,
Allende told a rally in this pert city, 65
miles west of Santiago.
Allende gave no details or the' alcohol
rationing program he intends to imJ>Ose.
The government has nationalized the
beer industry but produ ction of liquor
and whisky remains in private bands.
The government two weeks ago an-
nounced plans to ration 30 basic foods in
an effort to ensure fair distrubution and
combat the black market.
Allende has frequently urged Chileans
to cut their drinking. He .c,<>mplained that
hangover-related absences vf workers
Police Prove
Public Serva1its
MORGANI'OWN. W. Va. (UPI) -City
police ~eir duty to uphold the
law. But they ~re perturbed when they
had to uphold something not defil)ed in
the police manual.
Police were taking a heavy woman
from jail to police court .to answer a
charge of inlOxicatioo. Suddenely, bcr
slacks sUppe<I but sbe was not able to.
adjust them because she was handcuffed.
Police had to bold up tbe slacks dur-
ing the proceedings.
crippled production at some industries.
The president said that 300,000 vr
Chile's 10 million citizens are chronic
alcoholics.
"This is a disaster for the economy,"
he said.
Allende said that Cubans were rationed
to two bottles of beer a week.
"But you can go to any bar here and
order as many boltles as you can drink.
There is no limit. other than the capacity
or your Stelmach. This is g o i n g to
change," he said.
Allende sai d he intended to "harass"
his countrymen "in order to extract the
alcohol that you have within you."
American Dollar
Holding Steady
LONDON (AP) -The U.S. dollar held
its own on Europe 's main money markets
today and dealers reported les.s nervous·
ness over the American currency.
In London, the pound was quoted at
$2.3602 in Al.idmoming dealings, slightly
better than Thursday's closing level of
$2.3606.
The dollar was steady in Zurich at
3.6687 Swiss francs at noon, unchanged
frOm the ·opening. Dealera said trade was
slow and volume of transactions small.
"The public is getting more relaxed
and uaed to the fact that the' Swia ftanc
ls now floating," one dealer said. ~
s OAJLV PILOr ;f
Press Club
To Present
'72 Awards
A selto]JI audience of 300 ~s expected
Saturday night at the 18th Annual Orange
County PrC'ss Club Awnrcls Banquet nl
the Airportcr Inn. Irvine.
~faster of ceremonies \\Ill be KEZY
radio newsman Ed Nix. as 73 awards for
excellence in \\'riling. photography nnd
editing arc distributed among 14 new~·
gat hering organizations in the county.
A cross-country innovation ~·as added
for the jud ging or the 828 en tries in 40
categories. T h e Orange County, Fla ..
press club has exchanged annual coni c.st
judging duties with \be Orange County,
Calif .. Pres.s Club.
Saturday's event inc I u des an·
nouncement and presentation o[ the
club's highest honor -the Sky Dunl ap
Award. Los An geles Tinl('S editorial page
editor Don Angel \\'ill m'Ake the prcscn·
tati on to a county ,ioumalist sC'lccted by
club directors for recognition.
Honored guests ror the evening include
Orange County. Fla. press club presi·
dent. Todd Persons and his wife, and
former Orange County. Calif., club
presidents, Truman Myers and William
Farr.
Persons is assignments editor ror
\VDBO-TV. Orlando and ti.t ye rs
represents Walt Disney \'1orld.
Farr. now a newsman >n'i th the Los
Angeles Times, recently was freed from
an indeterminate jail sentence for con-
tempt of CQUrl. Farr \vas jailed for refus-
ing to reveal the sources of a news story
he wrote.
Minister Says
Sexy Pictur_es
Not Pornograpl1y
NASHVILLE. Tenn. (UPI) -A San
Francisco minister testifying in a
pornography trial said he wouldn't mind
t<:k.ing home some of the evidence.
The Rev. Robert T. ti.1cllvenna, direc·
tor or the National Sex Forum of the
United MethOOisl Church. said Thursday
t11.·o magazines and a poster which are
the subjects of the trial are not
pornographic and b ave l•se:xually
enriching qualities.''
He said he especially liked the poster,
called "Fancy Footwork."
"I'd like to tak e a copy of it home and
bang it in my office," said M. F.
Mcllvenna. ''It has a great appeal to me
-there should be some humor in ser."
The testimony came in the criminal
court triaJ of three men charged with
possessing obscene material.
' De1nonstrator SALE
FIRST SALE OF THE YEAR!
e CAPRI .
e MARQUIS
e MONTEGO
COMET • • • CONTINENTAL
• STATION WAGON
Capri~s
to
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HURRY FOR YOUR
CHOICE OF THESE
LOW MILEAGE ,
FIRST TIME
'
OFFER ON 1973's
Home Of The New Car , , ,
"Goldea :r'OMcA"
POrcmVt' Covnty't 7o:tnl?y o/ Tlnt Cart"
I I ''·' I I "J
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21211 KARtiOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • 640·5830
'
ltome Of The! Nt'W' Car •••
''Golden :l'oMch''
1 -1 QAJl.\' PICOT r ' ~ Boekets Bit GI •Short TiIDers~
Beyond ~e
Flooded Plain
THE RURAL LIFE DEPT. -One of
the last bastions of bucolic Orange Coun-
ty of yesteryear lies in a deep cut of the
coastal hills in an area between the San
Diego Frttv .. ay and the town of Laguna
Beach.
BIEN HOA, South Vietnam (AP) -
Jim MooN!l will never (orget bia last
nlibt lo Vietnam.lie thQslebliLWO<lld. he~
his lut on earth. ~
"When thatL;t rocket bll; l tried to
get under the . , but I was too blg, '·'
said the ~ warehouseman from
Macon, G11.. '\The second blast blew me
right under the bed. It wiu ihc loudest
cnsh l ever heard. 1be doot blew out,
and the windows blew in." •
Moore looked at his cloct radio on the
(\!>'.Or beside him. It wa 1:ts ln the mom· lnl· The barracks nei.t door was a torrent
of orange. flames and blaclc.-11noke, and
he cwld hear people eeylng out in agony.
"l COULDfln' TELL if our building
was still trembling or if It was me."
Moore tripped over the luggage be had
neaUy piled up for the trip home to
Georgia and ran ouLside. In the
moonlight rockets were . still rumbling
across the cloudless sky, making a sound
"llke a runaway freight train, then an
e&Nplitting slamming crash."
One landed in front of an aircraft
repair hangar, its molten white shrapnel
killing a young U .s. Marine on guard du-
ty at a concrete bunker. He may have
been standing outside the bunker because
the night was 1nuggy.
Pole just across the rood from whart the
%2mm rocket left 11. two-foot-deep crater.
Seven houn later, the ~rttn wooden
barract·s building where nloo Air.Forte
men and 12 Atnerlc:an clvl~s were
wounded by a direct hit wu 11tlll
smoulderil)g.
Ar. flrtme1l I.ought the flome s, Jiln
M,oore told the story thnt "the boys bnct
at the fl.shing canlp better get used to
hearing."
Mnny ol Moore's friends were arnong
the civilians wounded next door.
Uke him, most of them were "short
timers" Y.'ho had come to Vietnam under
three-month contracts to help assemble
and calilog I.be supplies the U.S. govern·
meat ruihed ln for the Vietna1tiese air
force before the cease-fire went into ef·
lect.
Wicks
ON HIS LAST NlGllT Ill the country,
Moore and his buddy, Bill fktghea of
Oklaho1na City, went to sec "Pretty
Maids All in a Row," a mild skin flick
playing at the .base theater.
"We forgot to take the usual PoOI we
1nake every night abOut wbnt time the
rockets will l'1lnie banglng In," llughes
recalled. "The' next thing you know , 1
\V&S on the !Joor, with 1ny hand.is wr11ppe<.1
around rny head . l thought for surf! this
was It."
Huber.I Onvis, a tillppl,y mnn fron1
fi.toco.n, Ga .. got under f.tte bed when tilt'
first rocket stanuned onto the /.awn
outside. \Vhed lhe seeond round exp oded
the building next door "'as in ••flames
&nd flying glass. I ran out across the
Ueld. 1 don't know where I was going, but
I just ran. I figured l wasn't going to
gi\'e them a sitling'target."
ENGINEER AL DAVI$, o( S a n
Anlonlo, Tex .. had the come? room In the
barracks thnt took the dlre<:t bit.
"Luckily, I was in the other end,'' he
said. "The who)e WQrld shook. Every llav
on I.his base you pass bulldlngs that hnvl·
been hit in previous attacks, llke tha t
shack up the rond that's been hit three
times. You never think It will land 011
your hootch."
Davis hefted R smnll airline bag.
"Tonight," he said, ''I'm sleeping in
IO\\'n."
Tum off the freeway toward the Art
Colony by the sea and you almost tum
bttck lhc clock. Abruptly. you are on a
, ·winding. rural road, the hills sv•ttping up
on either side. You can still \'iev.· cattle
and horses grating. Sycamore. gro\'CS. A
coople of little lakes. Sometimes wild
flowers or even wild anlmals. Old homes
v.•ith rural mailboxes out front.
His guard post was under one ot the
re\¥ r'emaining signs in English on the
huge .Bien Hoa base, now almost totall y
occupied by the Vietnamese air force. It
" read: "Structural Repair: You Break 'Jt.
We ~lake It."
Indeed. this is Laguna Canyon. the
place where once the stagecoaches from
Sanla Ana to Lagwia followed the
ty,·isting trail that has become the road
today.
THE PEOPLE WHO li\'e and \\llrk and
make their li\'eS in Laguna Canyon are
proud of their happy acres which have
preserved much that v.•as good about
Orange Counly in times past.
Any area v.•here you might chose to
live or work, hov.>ever, will have some
problems. Laguna Canyon has one big
one. Yi'hen the rains come, that steep
gorge becomes a place where the
floodwaters run to reach the sea.
Sometimes those waters have stormed
through the canyon as if shot from a can·
non, sweeping everything before it.
For decades now, people have puizled
over Dood control and means to alleviate
that rush or water that }\as done hea\')'
damage every rew years.
111E LA TEST NOTION mulled by the
Orange Coun1y Boan:! of Supervisors has
been labeled ''Flood Plain Zoning."
Yet after much study by canyon
residents and Laguna city official!. about
all that could be said for Flood Plain
Zooing was that it would get things1~t of
the w&y of a flood. But it wouldn't con-
trol the rush of water.
~As a matter of fact, the flood· zone on
property would mean that if your ex·
iseing building got flooded out, you
.®uJdn't rebuild unless you put your new
home or business on tall stllts or pters;-
Noihing ne'v would be allowed unless it
~·a. jacked up in the air likewise.
THUS YOU'VE SOLVED the problem.
see? The next time it flood!, the water
just rushes underneath you, goes on down
into Laguna Beach and floods somebody
else.
Yes sir. beautiful, bucolic Laguna Can.
yon woold sure look nice all built on
stilts.
Fearful of this picture, the canyon
folks and Laguna townspeople all rushed
to the Board of Supervisors lo protest.
\Ve don't \\'ant stilts. they pleaded. \Ve
\Vant some decent flood control channels
so we won 't flood anymore.
The Board of Supervisors. howe\'er. in
its infinite y,•isdom, y,·ent ahead and
adopted the flood plain zoning anyv•ay .
They also issued many soothing words
aboat "interim measure" and "more
study needed .''
OR. G. R. EKEBERG, a vetinerian
and long-time civic voice in the canyon.
commented, "The supervi sors didn't give
us a public hearing. It was a public
rarce." She added Laguna city officials
"went above and beyond the call or duty"
in trying to help the canyon folks beat
the flood plain zone.
·So now there'.s a lot of talk by canyon
people about getting out of the county
and maybe annexing to Laguna Beach.
IF IT llAPPENS, the supervison will
of course be angered and amazed. They
will declare it another city land grab.
Obviously, everybody knows you 're
better off under county control. Tbe
supervisors always know what's best.
u,., ........
MARINE INSPECTS REMAINS OF SOVIET-BUILT 122MM ROCKET
It W•s One of 27 TMt Hit Huge Air B•se on Outsk irts of Saigon
LBJ Laid to Rest
10,000 Mourn ers 4-ttend
Solemn Burial Services
STOl\'EWAU., Tex. tAPl -The burial
or former Presidebt Lyndon B. Johnson
reflected the things he cared about :
religious 90Jemnity, milltary pageantry.
dee~felt oratory and the gathering of
good friends .
In near-fretting weather Thursday
afternoon . a crowd estimated at 10.000
gathered out~ide a waist-high stone fence
to get a better look at the SO.minute
ceremony which took place in the family
cemetery on the LBJ Ranch. ·
Hundre:ds .fl! others stood across the
Pedernales , River to listen as the
amplified e\ilogies of' evangelist Billy
Graham and.former Texas Gov . John B.
c.orulally echoed across the rain dam -
penecl pasture.
"HE LOVED THIS hill country.'' said
tbe Rev. Dr. Graham, resplendent in a
dark.robe edged neat the neck in red.
The evangelist quoted the former
president as saying, "I love thi s counlry
where people know \vhen you are sick.
love you wbile you are alive. and miss
you when you die."
Johnson. 64. was fatally stricken with a
heart attack at the ranch Monday af·
Mrs. 01tassis'
Photo s Okayed
J\.ltLAN, Italy (AP) -A ~Ulan
state attorney ruled Thursday there
"'·as nothing obscene in an Italian
magazine issue whi ch carried
photographs allegedly portraylhg
Jacqueline Onassis in the nude.
The attorney cleared the
publisher of a charge of issuing an
obscene publtcation and lifted the
seizure of the November issue of
Playmen.
Public prosecutors had ordered
the magazine seiz,ed in various
Italian cities. claiming its oontent
Y.'RS "obscene."
The pictures purported to show
l\1.rs. Onassis bathing in the nude on
the isle of Skorpios.
ternoon. He had had major-beart attacks
in 1955 and 1972. -
His grave, filled at dark after the
crowd bad dispersed on foot and .in buses
and cars. was guarded · throughout the
night by four military policemen and two
Secret Service agents, "'ho sat in a car to
avoid the cold. •
l\1P.S. JOHNSON and the families or
her t\lo·o married daughters. Lynda and
Loci, visited with friends afterwards• at
1he riyich hoilse. just up a narrow park
road from the cemetery.
Johnson's body was borne back to the
family cemetery after funeral services at
the National City Christian Church in
\Vashington, the capital's last farewell to
the man who bad served in the U.S.
11ouse and U.S. Sen<\te and as vice presi-
dent and president.
t.-1ore than 40,000 persons filed past his
clMed casket in Washington oo Wedfles.
day. and another 32.000 paid thejr
respects at the LBJ Library in Texas' ·
stale capital, Austin. on Tuesday.
Johnson's body was flown back from
Wastungton to Bergstrom Air Force
Base. near Austin, aboard the big \Vhite
House jet on v.·hlch Johnson was sworn in
"'as president Nov. 22, 1963, shortly after
John F. Kennedy \\'BS assassinatt'd.
A MOTORCADE CARRIED the body
6S miles to the cemetery, making the
final turn down the park road that
sweeps across the Pedernales and1passes
close to the ranch house before cutting
back across the river.
Among the mourn ers who gathered
here for the burial \\'ere Sens. flubert H.
llwnphrey, \'ice president during
Johnson's administration, Edward M.
Kennedy (Q..Mass. ), George McGovern
(D-S.D.). Edmund S. Muskie (0-Maine).
Strom Thurmond (R-S.C.), businessmen
and lawyers \Yho had tieen associated in
Texas with Johnson 's political career and
those ~·ho Connally called the ''Plain peo-
ple he loved -the silent people -who
mourn him the most. He gave them all
he had for 40 years." 1
Smoke billowed Crom the blasts of
105mm howitzers and drifted acre& the
river, and l!lhots crackll'd in salute from a
seven-man rifle team.
Weather Generally Mild
·Rai n Dampens West (:oast; Texus Has Fr eeze
MAllONAL WlAUMt Ut>n(I f<>ll(ASI +•'""'Ill I -1 1~ 1)
_!O..._____
(Coast.al stul'1111~r11 and
daol data appear iodau on
Pa11< 8.!
(Another American died today when
his helicopter crashed of unkno"'ll caus-
~. They thwi may have beeome the last
U.S. cas4,1alties of the Vietnam War.)
A BAN-THE-BO~tB sntBOL was stcn-.
cil~ in black patnt on the concrete light
W hat did you do in
the w ar, Daddy?"
Model At"rested
' . BOSTON (APl -Stale pohce arrested
a 20-year-old California model as she
allegedly tried to pick up three suitcases
containing 110 pounds of marijuana at
Boston's South ·station.
• Ill Beloved Hill Country
•
.. _
U'I T.......,.
FORMER PRESIDENT l YNDON B. JOHNSON BURIED UNDER GIANT OA K TREES
Ceremony Was Marked by Solemnity, PtgNntry, G•thering of Friends
Iceland May Ask
U.S. to Bomb
Volcano Craters
Nixon Acts to Abolish
Three Executive V nits
VESTMANNAEYJAR. le<land (UPI)
-Authorities said today they may ask
American military pilots to bomb vol:
canic craters on Icelan<t's Hcimaey Island
in an attempt to divert lava flo""-s and
spare its main tOY.'ll. · 1
As they pondered such a move, volcan.
ic sparks as big as tomatoes rained over
the island located off the c<>ast of Iceland.
Pulice officials .said U.S. military aut~
orlties at the Kcflavik base outside Reyk-
javik would fly to Heimaey island today
to see if there is @f ·cbance tb bomb the
eastern crnters or the volcano to divert
ils h1va flow 8"'.llY fr;om the town and
into the sea.
\VASfONGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on proposed to Congrw today that it
abolish three organizations in his execu-
tive office.
In a message to the Q>ngress, he said
the action woold pare 389 jobs from the
( I N SHORT ... )
eXecutive office, wilh an estimated sav-
~s .of '2 millloo in the budget.
JTQpOled .fqr abolition were the Offlce.
of . Emergency Preparedness, the Office
of Science and Technology and the Na-
tional AeronauOcs and Spoc.c Council.·
e ·llproar·on A bortion ·
WASIUNGTON (UPf) -In reaction to
EAltLY 1'.0DAV, ASH.KS and sparks the Supreme. Court's most recent abor--
showcred over the almost deserted town. lion decision. a society of Catholic lay-
A thlck layer of ash covered streets and men today called lor the excommunlca-
offtci='lb warned It-may soon-become im· tioo of Justice Wllliam..llrenn.nn..
At the same time. a L'oou1Ut\ee of passlble to drive small cars into the town. Catholic bishops said lhe court had writ·
Polite said bulldattrs would push sand ten a "charter for abortion on mfUC$l."
walls today In ~n attempt to stop lava On Monday the Coon struck 00..1'
flows threatenlng the eastern part of abortion law. In Georgia and Texas a.nd
town, ruled tb&t a woman Ms an absolute right
A logl id -~-Iba ••• during the lhtt l~ree mootha ot preg· geo st sa rnU•~Y t "~ MOCY to decide whether to bur her child. HelgaljtU volcano, which erupted ,...,,,
day after at Jea!l 5,000 years' calm, ·~ e Con1utt1er Agenq
pc11rt"<l to have lost some of Jts intensity. WASJU.NGTON (UPI) -Wltb M m..
"Tiie _,. eruptions seem to be tlon<ment lrom Rslpb Nader. threc .,.._
.tJVtir,'' &aid ceologist Svcinn Jacobson. ators I.Oday laWlChed a renllwed dHve to
"&t shoUld the erupUons ~lnue wltll rreote an lndepmctonl r«1oral •ll'RCY that
the same intensity as now\ one-fifth or ~ would 10 to bet for the consumer.
the lslotHl's houses risk behig d .. tn>yed."', Sen. Chari .. II. Ptrcy1 (R·lll.), an-
\ nounced that he and S<ns. Abraham A.
BUT POLICI!; SAJD new eralen could
burst open on the ea.!tem 1id& ot town,
threatening about 300 homes in tbe ares
wtlh ~1..,, lava no ....
Rlblcofl, (9-0>nn.), and Jncob K. Javlls,
(R·N.V.) would lntrodll(O legl!latloo -
probably next week -to from an Inde-
pendent cmsumer protection a1ency.
e Ba11ker Se11te11ceit ·
ROME. Ga. (UPl l -A (cderal judge
sentenced former bank president Lamar
B. Hill to 10 years imprisonment for em-
bezzlement Thursday arter hearing a line
c( character witnesses praiS<' t h e CX'-
banker for his generous acts of civic duty.
-Judge William ·c. O!Kelley gave Hill.
one-time president of' the First National
Bank of Cartersville. a maximum five
years each on 60 counts of fraud original-
ly involving $4.7 million: All.but two tenns
were to run concurrently.
9 I' I 4 l'•·obe Solfghl '
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Nnvy b~s
told the producers Of the troub~ed Fl4,jet
fighter that the craft's testing prog1!.3m
h a ·s "deteriorated · to nn unacceptable ·
point," Sen. William Proxmire says. J
The W:isconsin Democrat, while rel~
ing copies ol ap internal Navy memo on
Thursday , asked for nn investigaUon by
!he 11ouse on<I S<ntti. Aone<LSe..--
commtttees.
DAICY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtli~ ol tlle Oa1ty Pilot
;,-9\WMlttN
ftltpl'lonts · •
•
•
.. _,.· ....... ""~ ,,._,, ... ,J DAILY PILOT !)
-~~~~~~-'
They're Oftl Fund Set
To Aid
Corona
Santa Anita Sets
Pu.<Jsyc~tt
Stripper?
LA Airporflni1J osing· Own
.Tough Noise R est1·ictions
SAN FRA NClsco' (AP) -
'Ibt N1tlonal United Com-
mittee to Freo PollUcal ·
Prt10ners, which had raised ·
money to defend An&ela
Davl1, is joining In a fund-
ral1lng drive to aid convicted
mas1 murderer Juan Corona.
Political Fund
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
-Data Devi~s Inc.
wnnted to introduce a new
product.. a tape stripper
that cuts and destroys
co1ppuler tape.
\V ASHll\GTO~ !i\l'I -Lo.~ 111:.; :.iny :ill'µ.~ Li rc»fll\1> :;11"\s r·1r ill1Traft noi-;~{' levels,
The group and the Juan
Corona Defense Committee,
made up of Cttona'1 frlend1
and relatives, 1ald 1'lur9day
the money would be used ln an
attempt to overturn the Jan.
(...__B_RI_EF_S _)
11 verdict that found Corona
guilty of the 1m hacking
deaths of ts IUneranta In Sut-
ter County.
Allred Montes, who has
uolttod Corona lllnce be was
arrested :ao mooilll 1110, said
at a news conference that
earlier f\lnd-ral1lng attempts
were un.successfuL e •-Tro11llle
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The
95-year-old Mlsllon Inn has
beeo forced to cut it1 staff by
60 percent after It was denied
a loan request, a spokesman
jor the hotel says.
'Mle cutback came after the
• fmancially troubled Inn, a
state hlltor:lcal landmark. was
denied a $375,CMXI loan by the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
Sandra Hartness, manager
or the 250-room hotel, said
future operation of the inn was
in Jeopardy but there were no
immediate plans to close the
eatabllshment. e BAR-T C•lef
OAKLAND (AP) -The Bay
Area Rapid Transit District's
chief englrieer and assistant
general manager bu re11gned
to tall:e a $.15,000 a year posi-
tion with a Los Angeles transit
consulting finn.
David G. Hammond, who
decllned to name hi.I new
firm, told BART directors
Thursday he is leaving March
I. e Slll09 Derief!s
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The
first use of retrofit automobile
emission control devices in
Calilornla will bealo here Feb.
t, the state Air Resources
, U,I T .......
l..f!et11re C•t1ttlled
A lecturn Thursday in
San Francitl» by No-
bel laureale William
Shockley was cancelled
be<ause ol. plans by stu·
dents to bold a demon·
stration. Prof. Shockley
has controversial views
on ncial aspects of in-
telligence.
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Santa Anita Racetrack has set
up a S320,0oo poUUcal fund for
state senators and
assemblymen, the racetrack's
lobbyist has told T h e
Auoclated Press.
Lobbyist KeMeth A. Ross
Jr, said Thursday that the
$320,000 wW be distributed
over the coming four ye.a.rs on
a non-part!lan basis. He said
•he fund dooble1 the lm•el of
1pendlng on political cam-
paigns by Santa Anita
Consolidated, operator of the
Los Angele• area racetrack.
ROSS MADE 11IE com-
mitments for a total of
$320,CKX> ln campaign con·
trlbutions in letters mailed
Tuesday to each member of
the state legislature.
The pledges boost Santa
Anita up among the top
political spender s in
Archbishop Links Up
Abortions to Herod
LOS ANGELES IAP.l -The
Roman Catholic archbishop
here has is.sued a statement
condemning abortion in which
he oompares the U.S. Supreme
Coul'I to Hen>d, described In
the New Testament as order·
Ing the death of the children of
Bethlehem two years and
younger.
ARCHBISHOP T I mo I h y
Manning told 1.8 million
Catholics in the four-county
Los Angeles diocese Thursday
that the high court'• ruling
Express Bus
Larie Opens
ForBigCity
LGS ANGELES (AP) -The
first completed section of the
SM million San Bernardino
which says states can not in·
terfere with abortions during
the first six months of
pregnancy, is contrary to the
court's ruling against the
death penalty as "crui!l and
u nus u a I" punishment by
decreeing "the death penalty
for innocent, unborn children."
"Thls new slaughter of the
innocents 'out-Herods'
Herod inJP cold and immoral
disreganr'for the sanctity of
human life," Archbishop Man·
ning said.
The Roman Catholic Church
holds that abortion Is immoral
for any reason or at any stage
or pregnancy. -
5 Women
·Arrested
HAYWARD' (AP) -Five
California. Top honors now are
held by the CaliforniA
Teachers Association , which
boasts of a $600,000 a!Ulual
political fund, and the con·
servative • • Un It e d for
California" fund, which spent
an estimated $250.000 last year
on state legislative ra«s.
Ross said none or the con-
tributions would be cash. that
each legislator would be
granted credit with a Los
Angeles firm, Computer Ji.tail-
ings Inc .• for ~ices such as
brochure printing and com·
pulerized mailings.
Because of volume purchase
of those servW by Santa
Anita, Ross sakl, the actual
services donated to legislators
will be "about double" the
figures quoted in his letters
and that the contributions ac-
tually will be worth more than
half a million dollars to can·
didates.
ROSS SAID TIIE contribu-
tions were being fwmelled
through the Democratic and
Republican caucuses of the
Senate and Assembl y on the
basis of $2,000 for each of BO
assemblymen and $4,000 for
each of 40 senators.
The letters to indi11idua l
legislators advise them that is
their share of the fund , but
that it will be up to the party
caucuses to actually divide up
the money.
The Republican and
Democratic caucuses in the
Senate each were given $80,000
credit for services, Ross said.
In the Assembly , Democrats
were given $102,000 and
RepubHcans $58,000, renecting
the S0-29 Democratic majority.
Angeles Jntcru<ttioru1J Alrpnrt :11qx1rt . Pro b _l t n) \ Ly he ~/lid. thl' Lo~ A11~eles
plan~ to iniµo st· toui;h nc•v _!~!:1~ts111ng_ nntt"l!l,1!_ st.ind--~ll.J<1.1r't 1.s nctin~ \In its 01v .
restrictions 011 alrcrii ft tratf1c And where do you go to
unveil a slrlj>pel'?
Right. A strip clu b. The
product was introduced
Thur!!duy at a party for
the trade at the Pink
Pussycat, a toples.s -bot-
lomless club.
irl an attempt to n:dut·t.'uo1~1:f
irritation lo s u r r 1• u nd 111 J:'
residents and 111 st;11 e off
possible ln11 su11s. say s
manager Clifton 1\. ~loon.·
MOORE TOLD a n1eetin~ of
the.......ttviation·Space Writers No Airport Association hl•re Thursda}
that recent cuur1 drcisions and
other de vcloptnl'nls related to
G · d F u1 the ail")Xlrl h:l\'e incrca'ied the uar ,,,,. ' citr's liability (' x p 0 s u re '
possibly 10 as 1nuclt as $5
C ·z S billion. OUUCl UJS He noted that ;n wie suil
against the ei1v a Los Angeles
FRESNO (UPI ) -The Superior Court judge has terr·
EXPERTLY
CLEANED
CAREFULLY
PRESSED
MOST
PANTS,
SKIRTS.
SWEATERS 49¢
Fresno City Council "'on't tatively ~11\·arded Sb'SO,ooo to the Tre""SUry transfer funds to pay for sta~ owners of :1llout 5$0 properties ~_.
tioning police officers at the near the airport. anrt this ORY CLEANING
airport as required by a reder-month a\.\•ardl"d d~n1ages or I
$34,860 to another 49 uther GRANADA H1llS 1''1\1 I ·l~~.r:~St. ~ORRAK(f ~' ~-•f'' : !It~ ·~
al regulation designed lo pre--homeowners north west of the wooolANDHILLS tl~vOV•l\.ir)8'iC tAKIWOOD C111,nl' i!JP. ,, .•1:B vd.
vent hijackings. . IUVlRSID( J.,20 h ·~ b~. flUIHA PARK 8··.' ·~J 01.iri '•. •'' The council voted 3-3 Thurs.. airport. SAM1A ANA J!l\){/ ;;.,,th B··,~jjjl:j1 ORANGf Gault"~ !l!t •~ B .~ ~nj Mj: rt.llf
day on a motion to traJJSfer Since the federal govern-011tn wtekday' 9:3 010 9:30 -Sunday~ 10 to 7.
$27 ,938 rrom the general fundJ_m_e:-nt-.d~oe-s ~"11°'..~· '~'l!i"S"m'~0-ihW,e,.",.'kii·~;;;;;;~ii-.iliiili-... .iiilli..,;ilt .... ~-...... to the police budget to malrY. ..
tain an officer at the Fresno
Air Terminal 24 hours a day,
seven days a week.
Five votes v.'1!re required to
transfer the funds. The federal
security regulations go into ef.
feet Feb. 6.
Observers noted that t h e
,·ote may be different. or
funds may be appropriated
from some other source, "·hen
the councilmen consider the
matter aga in next week . rr not, transportation di~·
tor Wilmer Gp.rrett could be
fined as much as $%2.IXIO a day
or the airport could be-shut
do\vn entirely.
VINTAGE CARS
this weekend on the MALL
South Coast ?taza
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JAN .. 23 -24 • 2~-26
-annowiced. .J • lllltal.laUoo of tbe"'"' dnicN
~=iy buawflY wW be.11:ln. yoUlll women were arreeted ,r •' . ' Y. ·art yntlptJon of sol.Idling it ·~-•'1 WJl'!il'd flir 'a lewd act aft.I! ~I f
Los ~lei · rMonday, tlM ~ RlJIAcJOtbes "officers vhlted '· Southern~ California Rapld nlnf · ma11age parlors in a
Trahslt ~~District has 1f crackdown litre, iutbotittes
Harbor Baulnard
af Car• .Magnificeat Astra-so nic ®
Stereo FM/A M
Radio-Phono gr aphs
will be nqund .. 1111-'19
model automobllec clw!g!og
ownership or being ndstered
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Theae devices will be re-
quired on most IM6-70 cars
through out the slate by July
I. e Gr••t Fr•11cl?
ROHNERT PARK (AP )
nounced. 1ald Thursday,
A s!Vtn-mue -express bus Hayward pal!Ce Identified the women as Theresa Ann
lane rrom El t.-Ionte west to J.ac.ksqu, 29: Linda I}ebra
the Long Beach Freeway will !J?•,. Ill; Alexis Aruksar, 22;
by-pus regular freeway tral-unoa Pappas, 20; and PJ"nle
fie. Tbe buses wlll then ute Pl'Ol.Utt1 ·1a.
regular freeway lanes into Los
Angeles. _
SCRTD officials said limited
uR or the express lane will
SEE PAGE 46 OF
TODA~'S DAILY PILOT
FOR DETAILS!
At lea$i' 30, and poulbly hun·
dreds, of Sonoma State
College's students might be
Improperly r«eivlng federal
and stale grants b)' lying
about their financial qualifica·
tions, concludes a state audit.
The audit released Thursday
covered 64 of 700 students here
receiving aid and round that 30
voere at least partly un-
qualified ror the aid're<:eived .
oontlnue until June when the
El Monte busway station is
completed, alloWing additional
llneS to be routed onto the
busway.
Orlfy Coast Qffers
1be 11-mile busway is
scheduled for completion in
mid-1974.
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• •
• DAD.Y PILOT EDlTOBIAL PAGE
•
.
A Park for People
Reconsideration of Laguna's Msln Beach Park de-
velopment needs to be don~ along forwanl-thinking
realistic lines bearing in mind that this park b and WW
be different from any other park in the city. Further,
the public ought to be involved at every step.
lion with Interest~ the committee should avoid the poss!·
blllty of penizy-wlse, pound·foollsb Judgments.
•
Poor Time for Bluff
A new look at tbe park deiign 11 under way by the
clUzens' i»mmittee ·whkh first drew up the park goals
and objectives. CoostnKlion bids for the development
came in at about $327,000 over the arcbilA>cts' cost ..U-
mates of $619,000, a bite do'l swallow.
Dana Point and other Capistrano Bay communities
filld themselves faced with threats of a construction
freeze this week brougb\ oo by bickering and stalling
over arrangement. for sewage treatmenL
I
\ ' The committee has highly critical of the life-
guard tower an ocaUon and what some mem-
bers feel is excessi of paving 1n the park.
The ·term t•wt'ndow to the sea11 is a popular one
when deliberaUons about the park are being made. It
adequately Jle.\cribes the esthe\ic pleasures the park will
provide for a certain part of the citilf:nry. However, the
Maio Beach Park is more than just a window. It is an
Ul"ban park in the renter of town and will be subje<t to
heavy use. Estimates are that more than 3,000 persons
may use the park daily during summer.
• The Dana .POlnt Sanitary District's poor-quality ef.
fluent being dumped near Dana Harbor is the root of
the issue. The San Diego Regional Water Quality Control
Board staff bu threatened the. construction freeze un·
lHS Dana Point books up to a new .reg!Onal plant only a
few weeks away !tom completion.•
. • • ' ,
• ' Dana Point lnlUally tiad proposed·to share the use
of the plant built ioll\11¥. by several South Coast agencies
banded together as SERRA (South East Regional Re-
clamation Authority).
In view of such use, proposals such as one made
during the committee meeting, that vast areas be planted
1n grass and people "be kept off of them,• are patently
absurd and show a lack of und/l!'Slanding about what
this park should be.
But In recent weeks Dana Point has refused to stgn
agreement. allowing it to use the plant . ,
Critics Insist that Dana Point wants to make other
agencies "sweat" for a time to see if they might agree
to pay more for the use of Dana Point's ocean outfall.
. The· game ~! bluff _by the m_averick Dana P9int dis-
trict may be an mteresting exercise, but the pubfic inter-Design steps are needed to cope with tbe crowds of
tourists, day-visitors and Lagunans who will actively use
the park, not just look at it. Those steps will be more
cosUy initially, but should pay off in decreased main·
tenance and personnel costs i~ the long run. "
est is not being served. ·
The district's effluent is poor and the odor from its
old plant disgusting. ~~-. . --
In view of the $3 million acquisition cost i$6.7 ,mil·
Nothing New
In Student
R ebe llions
g through all the journals and
publications that have piled up oo my
desk the last few months. and trying, to
decide what to file away and what to
throw away, I came across a fascinating
piece I should have mentioned inmtbs
ago.
It is called '!Rowdies, Riot!, and '
Rebellions," and a~
peared this p a s t
summer in "Auteri·
can History Wustra-
led," published by
the National Histor-
ical Society. Written
by Lowell W. Hani·
son, the article
serves to remind us
that lhe 1960 decade
of unrest on the campuses was by no
means a singuJar event in our history.
FROM THE per:top of the American
Revolution right up to the Civil War -
the lint as years of our national ex-
istence ·-student unrest "was more
prevalent and more violent" than In any
other period of history prior to the 1960s.
By 1800, we are told, "students were
becoming more insistent upon being
treated as 'gentlemen' and upon receiv-
ing their 'rights' ... This new radicalism
clashed directly with lhe traditional con-
cept of students' status and the rigid
disciplinary codes which college officlals
had fonnulated to control their charges."
l\IOOT DRAMATIC of the Incidents was
the "riotuous Commencement1' at
Columbia in 181 l, when a senior student
delivered an inflammatory address, and
was refused his diploma. His classmates
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Why DOI put Tun Leary. and Gig
Peters io the same cell? They c.an
liCk envelopes together.
-A.D.
TWt ...... rdllCtl ,........... ........
.........., ....... _ 1tle -...-....
.,_ ... "'" ta $11111nW Gtt. 0.llY Pltll.
pushed him back on the platform, the
pmvost called !be city manbal, but
students overwhelmed the police, the
racu111 wat pjlt• into lull lligbt, and stu-lllld ')OlseSSioo of the -wbett~"Wrim~cement toot place.
P!~,Wheelock of Dartmouth ln-
kllled, "lfmncboly must ht the prospect
of the future state of our country when
those of the rising generaUon . . . un-
dertake to llllult bumaniiy and justice, to prostrate ibe laws and overtom the
social order." ·
IN -1151, .tie University of North
Carolina bad an enroll~t of D>; dw'-
lng the year the faculty dealt with 282
cases of delinquent behavior. In 184.l,
Yale students defeated New Haven
firemen in a brawl, destroying their
equipment. tn 111117 at Princeton ball the
student body were .suspended. Twenty
years later the University of Virginia
was the scene of student riots, wilb arm-
ed and masked studen!s patrolling the
campus. College presiden1s were abot,
stabbed and bombed ; a Yale professor
armed himself wi~ two pistols for an en-tire summer. -
Student unrest Ls as old as the earliest
of medieval universities. The only things
new are the reasons and rationalizations.
'nlis is why those who are Ignorant of
history are overwhelmed by current
events.
Onl y a Few Give Blood
It happens every year at about this
lime -the nation's hospitals and blood
bailks report that their supplies of blOod
are numing perilous!~ low. The reason is
simple enough, aceo_rdlng to Marian G.
Afahon, public relations direclOr of the
Richmond. Va., Red Cross. During major
holiday and vacation seasons, she says,
"There Is always a shortage of blood
coupled with a greater need -car ac·
cidents, fires and other emergencies." A
major disaster suet. as a plane or bus
crash can lead to emergency imports of
blood from other areas.
THE I.I MILLION pints of blood that
now annually through this country's
complex channels of acquisition, ~
cessing, distribution and use are roughly
suffJclent· to meet day-to-day needs. But
there Is little ~ of safety. A Na-
tional Ra .. rch Qluncll-panel described the SllllPly-demand situation 'tio yean
ago u.one of '.'critical balance." WbOJe
blood ls perishable, even . t~
refrlgmted. It remalDs usable ho ioacer
than three weeks. 'hence lt canoot 'be
stockpiled indelinlttl.Y' agalnsi future
needs. '
Another huard ls tha! of conlarnfnated
blood. Of all lnlectlolll that might ht
tnnlmltted the pules! COllCOJV in re-
cent yean bu been over tbe risk of
hepaUtis. a liver di.lease, especially when
fr<Sli whole blood b used. Some 30,000
ca)es of transfusion<Onnected hepatitis
occur yurly In the United States, and
bdw-l,l!Jlll!!!i 3,000 <'them are fatal. Because reportltii -.. the ifLsease i.
known to be lnCl>mplete, the Incidence
and mortilll)' a<tually may be much bJcller. II ii poolfble that there are as
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
many u fJve "subclWcal" cases -
cases without manifest symptoms -for
every case that is identified.
THE MAJOR advances In blood
transfusion and banking are of relatlvely
recent origin. ft was not until 1901 that
Karl Landsteiner, ao Austr ian
physiologist, di.scoVered that there art
different types of blood and that H the
donor 's type and the reclp\ent's are Ill
matched the red cells clump and
disintegrate. This solved the mystery of
why aome tranafuslons bad been '""' cesslul .wblle othen resulted In deatb. Jlevelopment of-ID~ls to pre-
vent clotling came Jr. 1114, and dilcover7
of the Rh llctor In IMO. The aclckllrlte
and. deltnlle mixture now uoed to
l'l'eotrVe -blood -coooOcted dur-lns World War IL
AltboucJ>,6".el'Y person 111"1 at -. time be .1n, acute ne<d of a blood
transfusion or a medication derived from
a human blood componen'1 only a '1ny
fraction of the populajioll ever llllfts a
blood dcllatlon. It Is believed that one-
half of the American people are qualified
by age and health to donate blood. Yet no
more than thiet mlllloo a year actually
do ao. Th....tourtbs ol them give
rew.~._Thus, • major_ooncem.. 91
bJood.banfdna olllclals Is llndlng llOIDt
way to awa~en in more Americana an
obil&•tim to 1lve blood at least Oll<e a
year.
And our orean is suffering. ~HE S~YS HE 'l«JP.KS HERfJ BUI HIS ACCENT AIHi' Vf P.Y GUTTURAi:.• s
New Emplaasis on Work and Self-discipline
Outlook for Nixon's Second Tel'm I . ~ I
WASlllNGTON -What will Presideol
Nixon's second term be like? Imperial?
Remote, withdrawn? Uncommunicative?
That woold be the <ase il most of the
current commentary were to be believed.
Laying aside such subjectlve and pro-
bably emmeoos judgments, the primary
elemen!s of Uie se<Ond term are three-fold: . _
First, projection ,.._..,,
of the cease-fire in
tndocbJna from a
static phase of no
war inlO reconcilia-
tioo ~ ~ruc
tioo bUed upon mu·
tual Uduesls.
Second, an execu-.
live -impoled reor-. -~ gaD i.t atl on of IOdal )Wm and
govenunent aid pro-""' lllvolYing cut·
bicb of funds a~ aDcf to be
appropriated by Coegmsc ·
Third, the creation of an American at-
moopbere ln which businesa and labor
will meet the grOwing cballenge of world
compeUtion, and the tradltlonal values of
wort. seU«11fidlmce, ltlf..dbclpline will
be reemphasized in everyday life.
IP TIDS proves to be very uciting, it
will be a 'diange for presidential !OCOlld"
tenns. They are Often a let-down. 1be
momentum ba.5 usually been lost. Nixon
. ' BUT IT IS essentially a wrong reading fann lobby, the health lobby, and e-veryl
of Nixon that be is riding such a tide or other group which has a vested interest:
reaction in order to dehumanize and in generously administered ·federal pro-I
finally defeat the noble purposes which grams. .
have inspired humanitarianism. But since when has Nixon demanded.t
It cannot be denied that a com· an end to educational .aid,.an,end to aid!
recognized this prospei:t by making passionate concern for the human con· for the needy, and end to federally :sup-
numerous changes at the top in the dition, and the political rewards to be ~ housing, or, for lbat matter, anl
governmental administrative·~ structure. gained therefrom, have motivated the end to the effort to create a desegregated!
But be included in those cbsnges no liberal Democratic moveinent which is society? I
glittering figure Ute John Copna1Iy to ex-nl)v: sa~.ot be at ebb tide. .THE FLIMSIEST pretexta1ate seized:
ell. public m. te--~. 110 soann· 1 concep1s But it cannot oe denied, either, that the 1 •=• Ni the ha been upo1. to create the impresaioll tbat Nixon Ar thrillm· g panoramas. "' xon programs as y ve h becom lom I • t"" to and ,_...,. b r-.-as e a mega anic fed.use in Acconling to one interpt<lation a presen_,,._ ' ""'""~ y, ~ ... ess the White Hou .. plotting·the'deslrllellon
nationwide tide of_..,...,,_ ,i--predicted are j~ • ,;nost advanced, and in some of human liberties. n..... columnist calls ·--~ ~ cbeit""'l!ldical, remedies ever presented Vl""i' Has set in. 'Ibe liber~ tide of 40 _years is bJ'r'8.cooeervativ&-based Republican presi. bin. the "mad bomber"; a cOn-
.fimllly at ebb as f8,Jth ~ been Jost by •t" Nixon, in fact , bas absconded with gresswoman equates him with Hitler.! averag~ .. people m . die worth of • \nanf ·ol the ideas long advanced: by the Gentler critic!· say be biis~ no one, U..:
hwnanitananism as 1t has Ileen Im· ·bounanltorians, aid 11 they are , eluding tbe ·general,pOblic to whom btl
plemented by . faulty laws, sloppy pro-, sometimes hedged by conservative • will no~ impart bis int.en.ts nor explain bisl
grams, ~ windy advocates. Tbere . ¥. iestraint81 they are i long way aown the purposes. ~
some evidence to support·t.bis ~USJon., road from reactionary. M"'cb of this will come to an end,
lo recent Gallup polls. People have lost course, with the Indochina cease-Dre
faith in the New; Deal, Fair Deal. New ... _. 11IE ARGUMENT is not so much over Nixon would not talk about while•
Fr..iotie:r, and Great Society approaches what shall be doae as bow it shall be it was being negotiated. It will end, too,,
which dominated governmental action done. Nixon is trying to change the way when the commentators recover from
for 40 yean. Welfare, penniss ive coo-welfar_e Is administered, how funds on their annual alarm about freedom of the! ~ crime, racial excesses are education are ,pent, the method for Im· press, and when ii is dlacovered that Nix-,
'ated with the frame of mind lbat proving health, on the basic p_remlse that on will spend huge sums on welfare andj'
for very shortcoming in American the spendthrift and sometimes corrupt reform. Nothing has betn said so far
society there must be a federal program, methods of the past have not worked. which cannot be dlspelled in one press
however loosely financed, badly ad-r This exposes him :to the most virulent conference or TV broadcast after ttte!
ministered, and off the mark. attack from the education lobby, the cease-fire. _ · •
I Nudity and Eco~ogicaI · Disaster I
To the Editor:
Some time back you carried an item
about Ortega Hot Springs, explaining bow
the cqunty worker& were clearing the
underbrush .JW_ay to discourage nude
bathers from swimming in the bot pools
( MAILBOX J
planned. : As a citizen concerntd abou~
I live on 5th Avenue and,.we've t.d welfare of my community ind the
more than our share; «;>f trucks, and am· and effectiveness of its police force,
bulances (some wi~·sirens blowing ). ?Je , want aSsurance thit.they entofce the la
have co~e tot™: pomt that we would bke ;: in an legitimate aOO equttahle--tmaDner~
tere. to ~~w if there lS a chance.that after the When there· ls (iuesfion -aboht theid
building, 5th Avenue could be clO&ed off adherence to these standards .;::.:a
11118 WEEK 1 went to see the results,
and was sickened by the wreckage of a
once natural if not beautiful, landscape.
Letters from reader! are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
measa.ges in 300 word.a or less. The
right to condense !etter.s to fit .s?ace
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
lettt1"1 must i1tclude signature aM
mailing addre1s, but names may be.
withheld on request if sufficient
reason is appo:rent, Poetry will not be
publi,,hecfl'
except for emergency. I feel ~ all our should be criticism. However, l~t•:'""no)
streets are opened up for traffic to the allow good motlvatfon intended to ·Inf. ho~ital and if ~be h~Jsldes lose out ~ the prove and hum.qnlze our police services ~~dders we. w.ill re~ly be caught m the to lead ·to ,criUcfstn without cause. This I fall to ... the logic of the project.
histead of protecting the citizens of
Orange County from the imagined
oblceniUes of nude bathini, ciur county
worten here opened the pools to full
view of the motorists who pass by. This
wo~ 8etlJ1: to greatly increase the
cbarfces of offeDding sensiUve citizens.
~ ... u.e~ze. This is not JU~t .a 1etter. of. cam-will not help you 'OI' me, oor wi.11 it en-
pla1nmg becau . the C1y1c Assoc1at1on. of courage our law enforcement officers to
South Laguna hu a General Plan which perfonn their jobs better U put int? effect, would give all of us a ·
compromise to work with. PERSONAU.Y, 1 agree with the
JOANNA LINDEN discreet use of unmarked cars and plain
clothes officers to serve traffic warrants.
I believe this procedure results in a
higher arrest ratio tbpq if unilorrl!Od of.
ficers driving regular. patrol cars tbould
attempt th make arrests after an-
nouncing each scheduled v.isit 'i'dth a
timely telephone call. Aller .all the BJ>
prehension or these individual! ii the
policemen's objective. ·The dilcreet
methods are furtbe.• justified aa pobrted
out by Chief Kelly since the &rrest ii less
embarraslng to the suspect and ls less
likely to involve violente.
' s~, who. still frequent the small homes and h:1.rger homes where
poota in large Dtlnlben. are. Q,OW made families lived and were proud of their To Ute Editor:
law breakers by I.he \ack. of sec1usion. homes 8lld yards.) Now quite a bit of ili.s For years 1 have felt Laguna was an
The need for police patrols in the area turned over tu just• making as much rent innovative political society. We reacted
,must, therefore, ha~ greatly lncreased. as possible. to many of ;esterday's and today's social
What has been galbed ls not at all ol>-THE R~PITAL for one thing has been and ecological problems well in advance
Vioul -what bas been Jost. ls. Ortega a good example of something that is get,.. of our suburban neighbors. Playing an
Hot Springs has become an ecological ting carried awa~ with ltseU. When it active role in -~ community has been
disaster, paid for by the cllizens of fl-1 t'-·• t d 1• 1 f Charl~on Boyd, a aincere man and an • ... came '-'VUfo an m sure a ot o astute politician. But recently acting in Orance County, people ffilt it would be a cammunity his canaclty as mayor, he ....... _licly tug.
DEAN H. LUXTON hospital for people In thts area rt seems ted" 1 ch f b"'"' li that's how lt .started but .ever since ge,s to oµr po Ice ie t at our po ce R e•W-ts' R lflats department telephooe those persons in -.._ they've got In t.bey've been pushing to be our community 19ho were about to be ar·
To 'the Editor: bigger; it's Leen ,thrown up to us thal we refiled on traffic warrants and inform
As a lC)Oitime resident and home need this expansiDn t~ and time again. ' them ol lbe forthcoming visit.
ownerJDJiouth Laguna,. J. woulcUllt to The ~ or mo~p;irkil}g l!IQr.e add my voice ID the many who feel all bWldlng and no•, oflle<s. 1 have a feel· 1T WAS'llrougbt tOtl!e "fllll)'Of's at· ~ge ls not ~ and that people Ing South LagUija is btinc take!\. We ~· tentlob tJillt prccedfng any arrest related. •
abould bave IOIDe rights to decide ~ be.lng told how1 we~ more roads, big~ 'to a traffic violation, .even! written
and why cballi~ are made that affect ger waler pipe!, more bullding!, more' notices are provided to the aU.ged of·
the way ,re live. . . _ use of hil11k1ea. All thtt Is supposOO t<r be . remer., However, our mayor inferred
· · growth but what .it all amoan1s to me II ' that ' thc department's proceduMS -• 21!_~8B•ameAl'!Dto~'~!"'1b .~~ thcthe (ill my_..,) that' money wants to " 1scttcs aimed at invadinll the.privacy of
--' -· --•• mate moaey IJ> 11190t thinga go through cltluns lo male• na1co.llcS arresls.
P o lk!e P o Hcv
WAYNE BAGIJN
o-.-coASt
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Ptfblisher
Thomos Kttoil, Editor
B•rbo"' Krtlbi<k
tditonat Page 'Editor early &Os. Since 1 came thete have been whether or not they are the best for the Adm1ttedly. there WU an UflUIWll I
many many changes. Most thinp have people of South Laguna who make it number o( n&reotles arrats .-cleled Tho ed.Ut1rtal p&Ra' ()( the Oeil>'
com
1
e m
11
lngtbe way ot.
11
ghlmprovemcnt.s for lbelr home. with • receh ch·nt series of lralfte-,_..at P1 oot aee~~ toblnfom ~~-!tlmu· _ us er v : stop ts, sewen, more arrests w i I certainly""" dMl!l•ts ate rtaUlln )'. "'""''~~ thli
1boppblg ueas, bilaer pa stalionl, 80UT8 COAST Community Hospital ls study from M!Vcral angles. N~ ncw•pcr·, oplfrionlt arid com·
more ctocton. euppoeed to be a nonprofit 9111t'V1ce and ln mponse to the allegation, duet KelJy ~:i7t~i!. i~ ~di~~~~~~
For everything we pin we loee not IOmeUting that takes OVtt our small lodlcated that the trarnc warrants were tor Ule expreullm nt our ~· ,....thine •nd people have Clllly to stop viii.ct roads. 'l1lty no• have plans for served in the normal mamer and "'"""""' •nd by _.,.,.. 1-. , and_~k ~see that now we have done,,._~tlie~ ir docton' oflicft:.t...,.-~ _use 5th Avcoue narcotics arrem were made when it wal dlvt"l'l1: vlCoA•Vo&nta Qf lnformtd ob--
away wl.tb .. mucbofilie charm "·* •• -'"'1to~ Ult hoopltal 'rbey pl\yslealif appan:nl Ulil a viOli!Riii .... ---..,,....,,.., .......... m ...... toPlcs
Vlllage to change along with the u-. I alrea<ly havt 7lb Aveoue wltb 8 llght,Mh occuring. His oflicert were merely dollli ol tlw day. .
know we can't go back to the way 11 w• AV1!llue II 1 namnr mop atnet and not their job in ma~inl an arres1 which was Friday, January 26, 1973
(a small oommunlty of beach lxluses, made for the extra i<allle Ibey have obviouolY jusl~led.
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QUEENIE
• •
• . '; ~ i!!~,.,_......., ...._ 1t1s. w-:i....,.._...
-. .
t i !if: B!'rl •
.
· ·Sqqinting Dog
Is Emhar_,?Ssed
Why the homebtlldeni think so litUe ol entrance halls I
_ don't know, but it's a fact that approximately haU the
houses they e pot up since World War JI do not have
same. Knock knock, and there you are; right in the middle
of the livingroom. What gripes complainants in this matter
is such constructJon makes much of these living rooms
llleless for anything exceJX, wal~ays.
' •
IF YOUR DOG looks at you with his eyes half shu~ pat
the liUie fellow on bis head. He's em-
barrassed. Or so contends one canine expert. .
AM ASKED HOW many ol lhe 56
original sigJl<rs ol tile 0ec1..,.i;oo .of •
lodependehce \W!l'e born in America.
Just 48. Three were born in Ireland,
tYIO each in England and . Scotland,
and one In W'1es.
11 , a motorcyclist is 20 times m:>re apt
:i to get killed than a car driver, estimates Professor JOOn
J. O'~tara of Ute University of Iowa.
~ QUE~ -Q. "What's a shadow roll?"
;, · A. That's a roll ol sbeep6kin many a racing man puts
, , over the oose of hi& trot.tire horse to keep said beast from
,.. spooking al the~ of its ownsl!aQow.
· ' · Q. "WBEllE does the Unit.ed states raftk among the
top wine _.Pl'OductDg countries?''
·; ' A. Jes No. 6 .. ljebuicl Italy, France the &Met Union,·
• Spain and Argentina, In tllat«der. ~ '' .-'! _, •
• IF A MAN'S ~ aren't broader than his hips,
and ,a woman's hips aren't broader than her shoulders,
:. somethlng'a wrong, say the medicos. But it's pretty bard
-:i. to fix.
", · BABY NAMES -What lhe researchers ace looking for
n now is some infant . named in honor of President Richard
~ M. Nlxoo, So far, theI:ve turned up nonesuch. Odd. Studies
·i d ,birtb. reaxds st.nf\bere are literally tmusancts of citi-
r,· zens named after Franklln _D. Roosevelt and John F. Ken-
• nedy. Some alter Dwight D. Elsenh>wer, and H8lT)' 'lhl-
a man, joo. But Ille pattern stops short of Lyndon B. John-
• sou. And It did not begin again with Mr. Nixon, not so far, ~ at any.rate.
,.
"
Address mail to L. ltf. Boyd, P .. 0. Box 1815, New.
po1'< &O<lr,Collf. 92660.
This Week at
ROGER'S ,GARDENS
20% Olfota
F•inotd Bro-l ·rwd•1t ~ P•tie F11ritisfd1t9s
Now you can save on the •ntir• molded aluminum
rust-free lina: order the chairs, tables, chaises, seating
: 9roups and umbrella fables you 've been wanting!
Ch_oose from a wide range of colors and fabrics, Also l: si1ve~20 -;. on Tam iami, ICailua and Regent II lines
! before \the ,price
~ increasa.
i.
r
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'
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C091'A MllA' ~ 221\ Fairview Road
1Pllone e42-eea8
MISSION YIEJO
24741 Chrlsanla Dr.
Phone 837·7811
SAVE 2°1 •••
. IRON SALE 5so·
OUR RIG. 7.S7
Proct•.r S :1.:.~ qu.c~. ~1:.1L•1~
non. r:t:D: scil!C'll.ln tlH Jtl
tab:!r.<;. Wh ite ha'ldlc .
!1 fl WU tlfl!IU
tfrutlllllMI\, !I :Jb(,{
DRY ROASTED
PEAMITS
2 JA RS $
FOR
DISCOUNT PRICI
·Tasiy, cle\1ciou!: snac1.s. Dr /
roasted bla:iched peanuts
S. ~o;·.olar ~~r:Mcv.er ~i:eds.
SAVE 15-
SLEEP BAG
199
•••
)VHITI FRONT'S
RIG. 16.97
Roomy, J~,7 7" Slumber.
jack with v.11at1er-resistant
«i~er, Dacron "88" fill.
-"" ..
' Fri~, Janu1;Y 2b, 1973
'
DAILY PILOT 7
2 QAYS ONLYI SAT. & SUN •
BOLD PRICE SLASHING ON MOST WANTED ITEMS
THAT EVERYONE NEEDS ••. -DON1 MISS OUT ON
UNBEATABLE VALUES FROM WHITE FRONT •
SAVE 9Bc •••
FlATWARE .
SAVE 1.11 . 4-PC.
BATHROOM SET
.
24 PC. 6>99
SIT I.
OUR RIG. 3.97
Si·: 1rc~.:.a.:..: ~,;ti .. ~·""''
~-,f:S, l~f·S, sptCi~., s.,•.iQ
fc.1·~, ~ .S 8 :e.iS!itiCrll~.
DECORATIVE
WALL CABINET .
1~~·
WHITE FROMT's
'lOW PRICI
Usi:fot. r~ady-lo-iin1s~ c;·~·
i~ets, 15" cu~ !Ir 2.!" ®J·
tic ~lid1rr Jutr r1c ~e1.
10W400R
20W30 OIL
4 c
·qt. . .
.. WHITl*.aONT'•
REe.1l9c ' ·Pennzoil. Oftlla~irol. foltil.rd
wilh ~eciill adqhve, 101 ,11\.
seaso~ enginf'I protect1on.
I
3as
OUR RIG. 9.99
Plwsh. acryftt: bl~nd pile
,.,;, Z iC. tJn•. Cll'>'cr, hC
cc·1e;. ~4AJ6" 11~..i 1u1'..
KINS&.liN
BEDll!REAOS
·810 ...
' . WHITI FRONT'1
lOW PR[CI
l ~•Jr/ !-.oredd~. lully quill~
to 111e 'loor 111 rich prints,
s.1h11~. :.irletas, oottoos.
SAVE '1 ...
SANDALS
288
pr.
S~C 7 sUntb;,t.,L: /P~~lr"1r ff'o/~:. wiln Dr<1S~ b.ic•lf!
t<:ii. CJ~n;oned 111nerw;t.
Silr· .. tu 10.
NUT IN LONC llACll/TDl•ANC£
'
"
STOCK UP NOW AND.SAVE
ON HOUlEHOLD PAPER GOODS
SUPER ABSORBfNT
JUMBO TOWELS IN
DESIGNfR COLORS
3 ply, face[le Royale.tow-
els "' S-Oil & absorbent
lor handy household use.
Hi-fashion color~.
STOCK UP &.SAVJ>
'SOFT FACIAL OR
BATH TISSUE
Solt "SJn Cou nlry" balh
.!Ji
4 FOR
tissue in f.ish ·on sh;des.
twin pals, or 3 ply facial 5
tissue in pastels.
FOR
OUR
RIG.
411,3'
•OUR
HG.
S/1.40
!iHDP WHITE FRONT FOR !iA\/IN6!i ON EVERYDAY FAMILY NEED!i
STORE HOURS : MONDAY.FRIDAY NOON TO 9 P.M. •SAT. & SUN. 10 AM TO 7 PM
1.ses
.-~~~...,.-~--,,--~~~---,
3088 BRISTOL ST. ~coSTA MESA SAN DIEGO F.REEWAY AT BRISTOL
V,!"-11, j CMARGl iT-.W{CHDITCARD ~J =~ ...... tllf.lt-. I ~J_,~\ ;::.; .......
l' ~ Ml"MC•llRTtltllllttlS
•
•
ll DA IL v_•...:IL_:_OT ________ r • ...:"c:".:_· _J'-'"-'".:....:2.:;•·...:lc.97..:..J
Cape to Rio
B1·itish Swop
Gains in Race
l0 \PE TO\\'~. &1uth Africa
<. 1 \!'1 -\\'1th 1.6 13 rnilt>s to go
1<i !hi' l0:JJ)l•·tll·Riv Yfl <'ht r!lC'<'
'J'ln1r~ll:1\ Tht' Hritii;h slt)()p
\\;1ll'h\e~" had pulled up 10
four th :ir!ual position and Stc-
un<l ov.;rull in the fl eet ol 37
i;hip~.
:-,1;11C'hless led tn· handicap
pv!'.>1\lon for the first week of
Oc·ean Race
Fleet Picks
5 Dh·ectors
Fi1-e n<.>\\' directors \\'ere
elec tro Thursda y night at thr
annual meeti ng of the Ocean
Racing Fleet (ORF ) of
Southern California. The
tnteling was held at Long
Beach Yacht Club.
the race that slarted he re Jan.
13. She then dropped back,'
aJffi(l~l inh' obscurit)'. until
\\'ednesday Y+'hen she pulled up
to second overall and ISt.h on
actual.
The leader ln actual and
O\'erall posi tion for the thlrd~
straight day v.·as Stormy of
&ychelles followed in actual
position by Jakaranda of South
Africa and Dabulamanil,
South Atrica. nil.rd on overall
position was the Soutbwe.t
African entry Omuramba.
The . American favo rite
Ondine maintained 14th actual
position and 30th o·oerall l.710
miles from Rio.
Weekend's . ,
Yachting
Action Nil
The ne\\· directors are liugh
Rogers. Los Angeles Yacht
Cluh : Ed Sundberg. California
Yacht Club: Robert A. Collins, Yachting activity in San Diego Yacht Club; Jack Nev.•port Harbor is nil this
r.1a!linckrodt. Balboa Yacht weekend . The only competitive
Club. and Davis Pillshur' events are scheduled in the
f'-'ewport Harbor Yacht Club. Los Angeles-Long Beach and
Rt'tiring directors are Jack Snnta r.lonica Bay areas.
. . Los Angeles-Long Beach Ba 1!~te, BYC; Donald Barber. HUNTINGTON HARBOUR
LA l C; Steve Deskey. CYC; YACHT CLUB -Invitation.a l
!Tarry Nye, Jr., NHYC, and Regatta. Saturday and Sun-
Gene Trepte, SDYC. day.
, Others on the board '1:ith CABRILLO BEACH YACHT
unexpired terms are Dick CLUB -Winter Series No. 3,
Dea,·cr. BYC; Allen Puckett. Saturday and Sunday.
CYC: \VilliaJ]l Ra\'enscroft. Sallla Monka Bay
SBYC ; George Thorso n. CYC: CALIFORNIA YAC HT
James C:Owie, CBYC: Hamey CLUB -Cal-40 match races,
Flam. LBYC, and John Saturday and Sunday.
.\luchmore, LA YC. WINDJAMMER YAC HT
Seamanship
Class Set
By Squ.adron
A series of seamanship and
small boat handling classes
will be offered by the Hun·
tington Beach Power Squadron
in conjun ction with the adult
edu cation program of the Hun·
tington Beach High School
District starting Tuesday, Jan .
30 at 7 p.m.
The weekly classes will be
held at Marina High School
located at Springdale and
Edinger.
, Regi stration will be taken at
the first session. All boat
CLUB -Winter Series No. 3.
Saturday and Sunday.
KING HARBOR YACHT
CLUB -$pring Series No. 1,
Saturday and ~nday.
Coastal Weather
Mo.tly tunny tod1y. l it l!I v1111D11
winds nlg.hl l<>d "10l'l'llng noun b«om-
lno -1 .. 1y • to 13 knots 1~ •fl••-•
1ac11y &NI SlturC11y. High loday £$.
COll!tll tlmptfaturts r1noe trwn ~2 to 6.J. 1!'1111111 1 .... oer1!11,... r1noe from
3f lo U. W1tlr l...,,Ptr1tu,. 59.
Su11 , !lloon, Tide•
l'alDA'W'
SM:Ol'ld l!l9h .. . ... .. . 5:15 p.m. 2.6
Se<:ond low -·-. 1:23 p.m. 1.5
SATUIDAV
f-1...t hlOh .l.. ... 3;U I .II'\.. ~.1 Finl low ll:$J 1.m. 0.1
Slcond nigh , , .... 1:01 p.m, 2.7
~ tow f :S& p.m. 2.1 'suHDA'W'
First hlall 4:53 1.m. C,f
Fl"! low \1:CS p.m. 0.3
Sl<:DNI Moll •.. ''' ... 1:tl p.m. 3.2
Slc:ond low ..... ll:U p.m. 2.7
Svn 1u1n •:u a.m. h's 5:1t P>"'-
Moon a11n 12:11 a.m. sm n :or '·""
owner.s. incJudlng men and ~-~=~·~-~~~~~·~·r~·~•J v.·omen are invited to attend . r
Techniques applicable to
both -power and sail wlll be
discussed. The class is design-
ed to b('nefit the novice as \\'ell
as the experienced boatman.
•
KIDS LIKE
UNCLE LEN
Mr. Electrician!
Mr. Plumber!
L·O·O ·K
NEW Mini-Work Truck
for Electricians and Plumbers!
No. 217911
IN STOCK FOR
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
AND MORE COMING!
only $3599 NOW
• Brand New Japanese-bui lt ISUZU cab
and chassis
• Short 102 1/2" wheelbase great for
co1111sted areas
·•Generous storage compartmentation!
Y' Check these additional specifications:
,,,, Powtrful 1,817 ct engint
,,,, fiYI! 6.0Q. J4t/6PR Tirti
,,,-Oil ond Air filttr$
.,., 12-Voll EIKtr](al SyMtm
,,,. Syr.::hromesh 4-59red Tron,.
t1' Chrom~ rront Bumptr.
Y' Heottr/Oetro,ttr ., Obie. octing f & R Shock
/.bt«bert >' Stor09t Areo &tllind Seol
" Bock-up Lig;hls ord O/S M!l'f'Of'
ACT NOW AND $A VII
•
Coast Y achtS-Re.ady Fancy G-Oldfish-
Sirius , Dorotli y 0 E ye Puerto V aUarta COLOlf
BOATING
Race Opens
New Season
The Bahla Corinthian Yacbt
Club will kick off Jts 197S rac-
ing season Feb. LO with lhe
first race of the Angelman
Series for Pacific Handicap
ltal'ing Fleet yachts.
The first race of the
Angeln1an Series will send lhe
fleet around the Emmy oil
island off Huntington Beach.
PENNZOIL
__._MOTOR
"" OIL __ ........ -,. &30
WEIGHTS
"-•••'"" 41 t l'n'
Q ... 11
Tu·o Newport •taroor Yacht
CJub yachts are listed among
' tile 23 tntrics scheduled to
start in the M(lrina de! Rey to
Pu~le> Vallarta race Feb, 10.
The Nll\'C entries are Bob
I.~nth 's ll2·foo1 cutter Sirius fl
and Bob Beauchamp'is Colum-
bia--57 Dorothy O. Both were
entered ln the inaugural race
t\vo )'tan ago. Sltlus 11 •·as
first to finllh the 1. 125.tnile
rat'e In eight da)'I, 10 hours,
five minutes and IS seco nds.
But SirlU> · 11 Utis lime
around will be matobed
against the Long Beacb YC
syndicat&-0woed RactJ.mt, the
62-loot sloop wblcb beat ber in
the recent l.M Angeles to
hfazailan race .and set a new
elaps<d lime record.
Other notable contenders in
the race are BUI Wilson's ~
foot yawl Rascal from Santa
Barbara, also a veteran of the
first race. and Irving Loubc 's
Columbia-57 Concerto from
·Richmond.
, ...........
CHECKER 38c ANTI·FREEZE ~UAR1 a:?.~;~_ Car 1 ~~
I
......
•••
DUPONT
BRAKE
FLUID
Foo-Di1c
& Drum
6rako1
Meets Or
E;0:c•..d1
'Nft F1d.
Reg11loiti•
DOT 3
STUD
OIL
TREAT·
MENT
Cuoran!Mcl
Ta Mut Or
Ewc•t<l TM
B•U KnOWll
Oil Tr'"111Hnt
Cffc.kr
H~t• 79t
49~ ..
BABY MOON
HUB CAPS
DUPONT
Fi~!~~ COOLING SY STE~l
""'1llllltl ANTI-
""WIP" RUST
If ,,,..., ..
C..lloo s,w. .. ,,_, .........
R••t &
I Lulwlccrt.a -.... . .... •• • fUlllp
-
49c
DUPONT
GAS
BOOSTER
lonpnmia Go1
Ml11<191
R•alw11 &
Ma inta in•
Hor•1pcl'lffl'
Ace1l-;on Compt•••'°" Pr .... ri11 F,.I
Li111 Ru1tf119
FULL ACROSS
FLOOR MATS
Flu Mo1t
o-•tit c.ar.
A1iorttd
Colar a
179
NYLON FOAM
SEAT COVERS
Bud111
Salid Or
Spilt S.ot
Chalc• Of
Calors
399
Phone
645-8264
The following Is a com· Raymond Flandley, St. Francis
plete Hst ol entries es an-VC.
nounced by the :sponsor ing Del Querida II. Columbia~.
Rey Yacht Club: James Feuerstein, ORYC.
Class A Aleani, P J-43 sloop, Jol;\n
Sirius IJ , 82·foot cutter, "Bob Alllster, San Diego YC . ·
Lynch, NH\'C. Sangvtnd. C&l-39, Jerald
llagtinie. 62·foot sloop,. Jensen, htetropolttan YC.
LBYC Syndicate. wuterly, Cal-40, Bob Cra ne,
Doroti\y O,'Colwnb!a-57, Bob Anacapa YC.
Beauchamp. NHYC. a.11 c
·Rascal, ~root yawl, Bill Lo!a, Ntwport-41. \Vhittler
Wilson, SBYC. 0.'111, Coronado YC.
. Concerto, ~lumbla-57, Irv· PericUI, EtlcsorMl, Jahn
mg Loube, Richmond YC. Wiiiiamson, Labalna YC.
Spi,rlt, 11..foot sl~p. Ro.bert ~ 'Dakar, Newport_.l, \\'illiam
E. 0 Brien, C1Ufom1a YC. Cloodlt• DRYC Ob 1 eulon, COlumbla-82, '~ •
R I c h a rd W I 11 i a m s , Viva Cruz, Erlcson-39, 'fony
Melropolitan YC. Cruz, Call!ornla YC.
Cius .B ~Vixen, Ericson-S9, Charles
Sandpiper, SO.loot sloop, Cheyney, SDYC.
Dean Brown, Santa Barbara .tlayate, SS-40, Stephen
YC. Valensi, DRYC.
Samarkand . SS.foot sloop, Si.game, Cal-36, Sid Renkow,
Ja1nes Flood, St. Francis Y.C. DRYC.
Robin1 Ericson-46, Carl Aglncourt. E r I c s on • 3 S ,
Robinett e. SBYC. Lawrence Bradley, California
Robon Ill. Columbia--SO. YC.
• le4 c., . .... ' 11.U
• 1114 ' White .... .......
e C•ll••
ORANDAS 79¢ to $50.00
~
AC.ClSSOllll e 'PUMP'S e Ll•HTS e FOOD
BANKAMERICARD WELCOME
Pacific Goldfish Farm
14700 GOLDENWEST, WESTMINSTER
Cillllft TlllMl'f (N•rth af tll& SI• Oltta ,,_l>y)
Open Dally ,... Ph•n• 803 7105 Open Sunday 12--S 714 -•
SA VE 30% • 50% AUTO
PAR TS
TIU! 11'ES'r8 MOST COlllPLETE
Do.IT·YOllRSEL>'
AIJTO CENTER
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU
JANUARY 30, 1973.
OIL FILTER
'WRENCH
OR
OIL POUR SPOUT
YOUR 29. (.'llOICH C
EA.
BATTERY i TERMINAL \
PULLER -
Lift• Va11r ..
c~i.1e~ 99t ,,,. dJ Wi!hO\tt
Ftor Of
Do map
DUPO RALLY
CAR
WAX
99~.
SUCTION
AUTO
COMPASS
99<
IUll'lll'.
·-All A.1111tif;ll "
ff "\
RllAK E
ADJUSTMENT 29' TOOL
BATTEllY BRUSH
.t TERMINAL POST
CLEANER
C'-~·" 99.' Efflci•"I EA.
Plug•
lnta 99c Cltarlfl•
Lipht«
G-1••4 J,OOOMilet
SET OF 8
REBUILT
SPARK
PLUGS
GREASE
GUN
MOOEL 10
Rt·F illo~le
Fw F•a.
Shop, H-
E•ty·To-Optnmt
32?.
.;.:.. c... 99 99c ~... "-~t· J.J, C Fo r Ma1t
EL~IC~E~N~S5E~==~ '.,'.,· ~W.cl!"~' ............................ ~A119led Co•t•••
PLATES ,_..--+., t-e WESTJNGH~~i~ F«E••1 Mol>ili1y
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J
On 1l Clearance .1)ay •••
. . . ybu c an ,se e thin gs a nd more
things ... at pri ces that w ere mad e
td pl ease even you, th e most sel ec-
tive shopper. It's o ur grand January
Clearan ce. Thi s one bi g w ee kend
only. All 90 sto res have th e fines t
I
a rray of m e rc h a ndi se f or yo u t o
c hoose from. Al I stores ope!') at 1 0
a.m1 and close at 9:30 p.m. S atur~ i'
day c losin g is 6 p.m .. So me star.es
o pen Sunday. In ad ditio n to sa les,
se e Vintage ca rs Fri . & Sat.
•
'
Ftlday, January 26, 1q73
;
,J ' . 1 "~
'
OAJL Y PILOT
\
'
•.
i outh Coast ?taza
I ... BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, cosTA MESA
OVER 85 FINE STORES AND SERVICES ... DEPARTMENT STORES ... May Co. • Sears • WOMEN'S APPAREL ... Albert's Hosiery • Alroe •Mr. Elliot 's • Chris' Fashions
• Finn's • Gene's • Greta'S • House of N ine • Hubbub • Judy'S •Lane Bryant ·· Lillian's • Joseph Magnin • Marlene Fabrique • ~iss Hawaii • Sabrina •The Wet Seat • Young
Maternity ~ Zelig's Casual Fashions • MEN 'SAPP~REL ... Carat's • Chasin's •Gentry. Ltd.• Harris & Frank • Hoelscher ~ • Prep Shop • Rebel Shop • Tie Rack ,• CHILDREN'S
APPAREL ... Bergstrom's Baby News • FAMJ,L Y SHdES ... Gudes-Garnet'.t •Innes Shoes • Thom McAn •WOMEN 'S SHOES .. C .H . Baker • Cameo • Field's • Joyce Shoe . ' Tree • Leec's •CHILDREN'S SHOES ... Cabot's • HOME FURNISHINGS ... Golden Needle • House of Fabrics • Singer • tJdoff's •VARIETY-DRUGS .:. South Coast Drug
• F. W. Woolworth • JEWELRY-GIFTS ... Chic A ccessories • Galleon • Jewels by Joseph • Keven Jewelers • George Murray • Pace Setter •Raj of India • Raj International •
Sunset House • Weisfield's •FOOD-CANDY ... H ickory Farms • Lindberg Nt:Jtrition •See's • RESTAURANTS .. Coaches Corner • H arvest Ho use • Hungr}Tiger •Kaplan's
• Lef'l!'t it P<ife • Rivi~ra •SPECIAL TY SHOPS ... A t.a Card • Cline's • Decorator Line • H ousetlf"Terry • Pic kwick B ookshoP. • Rooten's Luggage • Sports Plaza • Tinder
B ox • 'l'oy Center • Wallichs ·• Westen's-Camer as •SERVICES ... Bak Portrait Studio • Better Barbers • Bun Nichols Opt ometr ist • Crowning Glofy Beauty Salon • H ouse
of T.ai loring •On t he Go Tr avel • Regis B eauty Salon • FINANCIAL ... A vco Savings & Loan·• Bank of America •C rock er Bank • Fi rst Western Baok •Household Finance
•Pacific Savings • U .S . National Bank • THEATRES ... South Coast Plaza I and II Theaters • United Artist Cinemas I. II and Il l.
' f •
lfJ. DAil Y PILOT •
Cl earanc e Sal e Da ys Spark Plaza ~pecia en ts
Inflatable
Structure
Show Set
The roof literally will be
raised at South Coast Pina
v.·hen the Chrysalis Corp. sets
up its portable. inflatable bub-
ble houses on the lower mall
levels for an 11-day e.xhibit
starting Friday, Feb. 9 and
lasting through Washington's
birthday on Feb. 19.
T hey Care
Cousins to the soap bubble, ·
these thin-skinned enclosures
may rejuvenate the entire
building industry. 1be number
of air·supported buildings is
growing. More than a ball d""'° bub-Members of May Co. Young Adult Career Council who joined with La Habra Chamber of Commerce and the Nicaraguan Emb=y to send help lo Managua
ble buildings will be erected in earthquake victims pose wi th canned foods and medicinal goods they collected
the Plaza, complete with bub-from May Co. employees. From left: Chris Broderick, Westminster High School;
ble furniture. Susie Mulholland , Corona de! Mar; Mary Rolfes, Mater Dei ; Pam Grau, Newport
Irv Silbennan, spokesman Harbor; Kare Falstad, Costa Mesa; Debbie Brower, Estancia; Karyn Kitson, Es-
for Chrysalis and exhibit tancia; and Marye Holland, Corona del Mar.
chairman, indicated that the -------'------------------------
:::t~i' fo~~":e=ucLA H d C . h Plaza and i~ the first of its ea oac
kind to be tailored for a sho~ . ~ Speaks
Tradi tional
W edding 'In'
The brklO of Jhe '?O's bas~
wide range of choices when
planning her wedding. She
may opt for a church
ceremony. And ai percent
c~ to wear the traditional
long white gown.
"Viewpoint '7 3 : The
Wonderful Wedding", May
Company California's ,,presen·
talion of bridal fashions for
1973, Illustrates that tradition
is still an Important con·
slderatlon of the modem
bride. Satin with seed pearls
and chant.illy trim are still In
evidence, but the bride may
also cbooee from a wide seli»
lion of fabrics such as
organza, pique; eyelet, cotton.
and even polyester. Rufne in·
terest is important, as well as
genUe touches of soft color for
a wonderfully romantic feel-
ing.
May Company's bridal
fashion shows will be
presented in the following
stores:
10 Angels
Greet Fans
Ten players and <.'Oaches or
the C~llfornia Angels are
scheduled to meet fans, band
out printed honte gan1e
schedules and other memen-
toes, Including au togra.phed
pictures ol players. at South
Coast Plaza on Saturday, Feb.
17.
Scheduled lo man the meel ·
the-fans tablea at the shopping
center's C&tou5e.I Court are:
Vada Pin so n, Bi ll
Grabarkewitz, Clyde Wright,
Bill Singer, Rick Clark.
Manager &bby Winkle-;,
Coach John Roseboro, Coach
Tom Morgan, Nolan Ryan and
Rudy May.
Their appearance is scbedul·
ed for 11 a.m, to I p.m. and
the public ls invited to OOtnc
and meet them free of charge.
·Army Exhibit
Tells Story
Downtown on Monday, Jan. The story of the Army·~
29 at 5:30 p.m.; Topanga on leadership schools will be told
Tuesday, Jan. 30 at 1 p.m.; in a special indoor exhibit en ...
South Bayon Wednesday, Jan. titled "U.S. Anny -Road to
31 at 7 p.m.: Buena Park on Leadership." It will appear at
Thursday, Feb. 1 at 7 p.m.; South Coast Plaza Feb. 12
South Coast Plaza on Friday, through 19 as part of a na-
pi11g center.
The bubble houses, the big·
gest of which will be erected
\vhe n collapsed will fit into a
42·by 60 by 12·inch box. The
hemisphere house to be
erected in the Carousel Court
\\'ill be 25 feet in diameter.
UCLA Head Coach Pepper
Rodgers will be the keyoote
speaker at the fourth annual
South Coast Plau. Player-of·
tile-Year Banquet to be held at
the Santa Ana Country Club on
Thursday, Feb. 8.
this year will be C.l.F. Com·
missioner Ken Fagans.
Feb. 2 at 7 p.m.; Eastland on tlonwlde tour.
Valley; Bucky Bond, Paul Saturday, Feb. 3 at 2:30 p.1n.; VlsltoNJ to the exhibit will
Fiskness and Hugh Roberts, San Bernardino on Monday, see color pho tog raphs,
'fhe dome homes can be
rected on the desert. by the
sea, on a mountain slope.
Some schools have taken to
erecting them <Jn the campus
where they serve as tem-
porary classroo~. 1be "ad-
ded room" is seen by i~
manufacturer as a playroom,
party room <Jr artists' studio.
The dome is made of
polyvinyl1 chloride (PVC) and
arriveS complete with Door
and the pump which blows it
up and keeps it inflated.
A hollow border around the
dome can be filled with water
lo hold it in place, or a rope
incorporated in the rim may
be used to stake it down. It
has an opaque roof, with clear
sides. Sealed from the outside
atmosphere, the dclme creates
a dust-free environment.
A total of 54 athletes from 18
coonty schools will be -'Ibe event is attended each
year by the winners' fathers,
bead coaches, principals, ac--
tivities directors and by sports
writers and other key figures
in the area.
Three athletes from each
school are selected by the
respective student bodies of
the 18 schools and each "foot-
ball season the schools
responsible for the players'
selections wte on a Player-of·
the-Month for 'September,
October and November.
At the banquet the winners
will be presented with large
actioo photo blowups of
themselves together with a
Certificate of Award.
Making the presentations
Keynote speaker Rodgers
and Fagans will be joined at
the head table by County
Leagues Commissi<lner J<Jhn
McDonough; Joe Hartstein,
president of the South Coast
Plaza Merchants Association :
Gene Robens, general
manager, South Coast Plaza
and Town Center; and Tom
Fears, pro football Hall of
Famer.
Spider MacLean, director or
sports and news at K\V[Z
Radio, will be inaster-of·
ceremonies.
Winners of the award in·
elude the f<Jllowing:
Joe Tosti, T()t1\ Pole and Bill
Mohr, C.Orona del Mar High
School; Mark Schrupp, Dennis
Delaney and Frank Fregllsi,
Costa Mesa High: Fred
Hernandez, Craig Way and
Joe Demetrakos, Edison;
Scott Gaynor , Dan Princeotto
and Mike Magner, Estancia;
Les Beche, Bill Hatfield and
Dale Peterson, Fountain
--
Huntington 'Beach ; Dave Mar-Feb. Sat 7 p.m, transparencies and a slide Brides who attend the shows presentation as well as hear
riner, Bill Robertson and Jack are eligible to win <Jne of three and SCllve a taped "tactical
Millard, Laguna Beach ; grand prizes. problem" as presented t<J <Jf-
Mark Stanbra, Jim Gardea First prize is a honeymoon ficer candidates during their
and Steve Martindale, Mater week at Y<lSemite National training.
Dei: Dave Caldwell, Rick Park, courtesy of Ticketron. TRADITIONAL GOWNS READIED FOR SHOW The exhibit explaim the Curtis and Kevin Eat<Jn, and the use of a Chinook teader1hip selection process in
Mission Vieje; Kevin·· Reeser, Motor Home for tW<J weeks. This One is C•lled 'AL• Mode' the Anny and the training. Jim Swick and Warren Ray,-----------------------------------'------
Newport H a r b 0 r ; Jim ·:!JI II II II II II II I II II Ill II I II II I II I II II II II I llll II II II II II Ill Ill II II llll II II 1111111111111111111111111111111111111.!!l Cochrum. Don Mahany and --
Eric Heffner, Saddleback = w·· I d • • I = ~~:~:~:t~~~~~~~~~:: ~-e ve one 1t again. ~-
Di!chner and Dave Steven: _
Santa Ana High: Rodney = :!
E~i:~!·~~;d1:~ ~ Suits, two for the price of one §
Green, University High; Jay = :;
Craig, Gary Templet<Jn~ Ed ,....= :
Medina, Valley High; Brian = Etery one of our Fashion Park, and lilorsted-Tex 11its is Ifill offered at two, for the price ot -
Hester, Randy McG inley and :E one! Here's a~solutely top quality clothilfl, first class t1ifori111, and 111 suits are line 2-ply wor-= ~;;~n x=~d~~~;: ~·i § sleds. A coldeo opportunity lo cet two crut 11its fw tlJe ,rice of ooe. ff JOU dOt't need two,
c:omando and Gary Ma\fdocks, -brinf SOlleone to sh!ll 101r 111in(L
Westminster High SchOol. =
:: FAMOUS MAKER-2 Pl Y WORSTED
-------------E 5145. Fashion Park Suits •••••••• 2 for 5145. ------= 5128. Worsted· Tex Suits •••••••• 2 for 5128. ------§ \, -------------DRESS SHIRTS -
oun1ing -----' --------
Mest fa...t•• ••ktr Ptrm•
,ress fabrics
...... ,,, $1.50-10.00
Short Sleeve ....... 4. 99
------------------CLEARANCE SALE -----
Loni Sleeve •,• •••••• 5.99
'2 FOR 1 ·sPORTSWEAR --='
';:
25°/o OFF ON
ALL MOUNTINGS
Hund M s of mounti~1 fO dtoo•e
from, All different a nd unlcive.
Some ore semi·set with smaller
diomonds. All they need is your
cherished solitaire.
All I .C K and 18K men's and ladies' mountings~ l•wels by fOl•ph
ore r~duced 2.S.,,. to clear owoy eJtcess lnYentory. Prices ore
effective from Jon, 25th to Feb . 2nd only.
Ovr ••!Nrt ,...,,..,., 0.1lg~11
will 1111111 yo. IR vtlll1ing y1111r
dicli-.!1 to .... b••• 11d ......
log•. Y-C01111l1•IH •In; .,111
b• 111 lfulk>ld..,. • 1W Ott.
A!I -• ot jewel1 .., ftM,h ii cor•fvlly orul
1lillf111Uy don, by ••114't 9014.-lltu olld 4io-
111onlll 1e~r1.
Yo111 wll1 ,_;,.. o wti'* °"'"'ltot• -pAtt.
wl*' o lo..,_'°"l' qvolll'f 0M111l1 of ,,_, 41o-
"'ondo ond o color '"'*lotfOpfl of 'pOltr '°"".
pl•i.d r;ng.
~ti ol oll you• dl0Mond1 will n•....,. i.o-.e
I~• ''°''·all -k ol 1 ... 1, by ioHptl
ii don• in °"' thop, Of> the ,.,.,.;,,..,
jewels by joseph
Dolly 10.9, Sat. 10..6, Oosed Sunday
South Coast Pla za • 3333 Bristol St.
Cosio Mesa• Phone: 71 4 540-9066
W.STER OiAAGE • AMERICAN EXPRESS
DIAMONDS
A 1jNclal pvrdlOM ol
1111oll•r. qualify dia111ond1
f111I !or lhh ,,.,.nt. J•-ll by
JoMph will 111ppty 011y qvolif)' of
dio"'ond1 11p to '!. torot •ii:• fll 1,.cW-
, I red11<td p.l<•l.
'
fVll'f
O/AMOl«J
SOtO w1r1f A CUA~ANrlt,
A GfMOtOCI·
CAL OUAUf'r
ANA lflll ....
A.l'HAISA,,
'!. tflmf dio"'Ol'Hh , .. .., brllliont,
••<•llenl q11e1lil'f, i11 ll1t1lt.d fl"'o11nt1.
5100
'h tflrol round dloMOnd1, fie..,,
good color ot>d dorlfy, whil• lhrf
toil, •
$145
y, <"Orot ....... a dio-.ond1, pl«110nl
gncf .,.,.., o!lroctl.,., onl)' o l•w left,
N•••• og'oin will -b• obit to
off•• lhi1 qwlify ot fhl1 ptlce. 5325 •
,l()..,90 corot ~It;,. 1h11ped nhd
peor 1h11ped d la111ond1, S.11utih1I
fgn~ dlo.,.ond1 ol o •P'cdOI ptlt•.
5600 to 5750
Cn·ole you• own blrtl'UIOll• ting,
ltwtll ~'t' ltM,11 ho1 o IOfll• ••I.e.
1;e.n el 11111111.,. ''"' 1to"•1. Oo•·
nel1. 0111elhyth, aq\IOlllorlne1, •"'·
-ld1, nrbiea, ,.rl4ol1, 1opphl,.1,
_,..,,..., opol1, tovt111onn., io.
pO!., dlflll•, !off, '""" .i,_,,
n1ltvr.tl ....,,.,, an or ,..u.11c prlce1.
l•I -•~pert! onbt J'OY In 11111b·
"'' .,owr difl"'"41a lo tM\t a dlt·
tl1Kti<r1 pi.ti ol l...,•lr/ !or 'fOlt
alo!l1,
-------
--
:::: --------
--
HUNTINGTON BEACH
VELOUR SHIRTS
Y•lue to 22.00 2/22
WASH PANTS
Most fa111au1 111aker
Perma-Press flares
Waist sizes 3°'31
l11ulorfy$1l~ 2/11
JACKETS
llntll Cor4•roy
•••• 32.00 2/32
l lntll Nylo11
11--.IL.' -~ EJt'~~-C.\U~a.,_. 2s._oo _:2::.:/2=5_JOO
--
-------------=' -----------· ----------------------------:::: ---· -------. -A~AHEIM COSTA MESA ORANGE ::
HOflSCHEll'S Vondt'fl'l"IOS!S Hl)(LS(HUt'S \londerrno1b HO[LSHER'S HOElSCl~(R"S =
77 Hun1ing1on Cenitr ,47 Notltl looro 3333 Bristol SI. iJ04 N. Orange: Mall :
_ koeh & Edit"'l)lf Mohtim Cen•er Soul~ Coasl Pla1a Mall of Orang e : § -~-1-'_"_1e_'_'·-ll-"~~~~~~~"-1•_1_11_•_·8_~_'~~~~-'-11_•_1~~0-·•_9_•n~~~~-l-71~41~9~98~,1~16~1~ ~.
-
:E S PASADENA GLENDALE ALHAMBRA .RIVERSIDE :::;
: HOELSCHflt:'S ' HO(lSCHt:•'S Kirl'i HOflSCHfR'S \londtrlfios•i McG<ol~ Olwn = •
: 6 l S lost Colorodo 81:,d, ?15 Horth Gi.noolt Avt. ?'5 (o't Moln S1reet 383S Moin StrHI -
: Down1own Jo~l\I.· to Downtown E
: 677-03S9 796-0?t.~ 741· 1175 111~·"4W (714) 6.83·0710 -~1111111111111111111111111111 1 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111~
•
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•
* DAILY PILOT J /
f--~~~~~~~~~~g·~~~~~:~FatHUf Cfreu
Intemationai'lfisterling ~~~ Did Indians Depict Star Breakup?
' '
spe9ial-to-order
service
on these 26 classic patterns
' .
It's here. An opportunity to "modernlzen your service
in the pattern you chose so proudly y~ars ago.
' Up date it with fill in and add an pieces to
·complement today's more casual but elegant way
of dining. PIQn wha t you need today!
ALL ORDERS ACCEPTED FROM JANUARY 2 THRU
MARCH 1, 1973 FOR FALL DEllVERY
Pol!•rl'I no;imu 1rodeMOrl 1 of
INTfRNAllONALSILVER COMPANY ~fl!'
SOUTH COAST PLAZA •
l ri•tol •t S "" Diego Frwy., Co1t11 M111•, Ph·, 540-2627
'
,..The second fork i• there in case you drop the first
. " one.
Real Expert
Bellies Her Specialty
LAS CRUCES, N. M. (AP)
-An mtromer says Indians
in the Amerlcan West more
than 900 years ago mi&ht have
recorded a noted star ex-
plooloo oo tbe walls and tell·
lngs ol their living areas.
Or. John C. Brandt, chief of
the National Aerona utics and
Space Adminis tra tio n
laboratory for solai physics at
Greenbelt, Md., told the
( SCIENCE )
). m e r t c an AJtrononllcal
Society's annual meeting that
renmant.s of the star still can
be seen today as the filamen-
tous Crab Nebula in the con-
stellation Taurus.
Brandt said the Chinese are
credited with having the only
record of the star explosion,
known as a super nova, which
the Chinese dated July I, 1054.
But he said Indians in
Arizona, C&Ufomia and New
Mex.\co at that time drew
· ures losely resembling the
solar system, saya a UC San ' 'A'llll an eSlimaled 10,000 . this year Q.ut 15 brote out last
Diego scientist. persons killed, depending on yea r.
"'Ibere 1s now reaS<ln to the time of day, they 5'd· e Dry S11bject believe that comets may, at e Pri•ota Lal'er
On. stage·, dissolve al• .... ether Ca pitol News Servll~ -• FRONTERA (AP) - A into an immense number of fence of laser beams has been RIVERSIDE -Investiga·
small meteors, wh~b become installed to prt'vent escapes tors in the Archcologlcal Rc-
the meteor streaw," Dr. D. from the California Institute search Unit at UC Riversido
Asoka Mend.is said. "Su bse-for Women. are trying to disrover how man
quenUy, these meteor streams (){ficiala said that if some-will live in dry areas in the
_pick up new materials from ~ 000. passes through the future by studying how hu~
space and possibly regroup to harmless beams an alarm is man-; adapted to envirorunen-
form a new comet. sounded and guards can reach tal changes in the Calllornia
"ThuS we have a kind of the location within 60 seconds. deserts ove r the la.st 10,000
celestial version of the hen.egg The $25,000 system was in-yeors.
riddle. We don't know which stalled four wteks ago but Biggest problem facing the
came first . . . but we have there are still some bugs to be investigators is the vandalis1n
reason to believe that each worked out. ,jf ~ and destruction to important
derives from the other in a No prisoners have tsc:Aped archaeological sites. continuous cycle of birth,,---'-'-'_:.:..'--c:..._-..,,.'=+----
degeneration and regenera. ~'· ..-~
lion," be added.
e Quake Toll
BERKELEY !AP) -A
maMive earthquake in the San
Francisco Bay Area probably
will not level any city but
could cause up to 10,000 deaths,
say two UC professors who
studied earthquake -ravaged
Managua.
. -
Iii• BIG
•soGIVE·AWAY!
o . "We will not have a level ed l city in Sa n Francisco," flC e architecture and design Profs.
LA JOLLA (AP) -The Henry J. Lagori and Karl
comet of one century may be Steinburgge told a news con-
SCOTl'SDALE, Ar~. (AP )
- A policewoman in this
fashionable winter resort city
bas found a new way to spend
her off-duty hours -teaching
housewives how to belly
dance.
the meteor shower of the next. ference. · Scottsdale branch of the and the mysterious space . Of an -estimated 400 high
YWCA, where the class is wanderers may hold a key to rise buildings, only "one or
held. the formation process of the two pe~t will collapse" Miss Shaheen aays the roadl,---'--"-'--'--'--------'--~----'--1
"My chief says he's the only
police chief in the United
States who bas a belly dancer
began in Lebannon, where her
Michigan-based family spent a
year when she was 16.
"I LEARNED it from the
Bedouin tribes, the nomads,"
she says.
as a policewoman," says After reb.rning to the
Lillian Shaheen. United States, she continued to
perform the wedding dance at
DESPITE THE initial im-private parties and did a short stint dancing for pay at a presaion, Miss Shaheen says fashionable resort hotel after
she isn't trying to teach her becoming a policewoman here.
students how to perform at 1
local nlgbt spots.
"Strip-f,.e.ase artist dancing is
not the true belly dance," she
says. "This is an Arabic dance
which is danced in 13 dHferent
Arable nations; it's a sacred
wedding dance."
The !ortylsb Miu Shaheen,
veiled, beaddressed and bound
into a tight black costume,
soon bas old and young alike
rippling their arIM and
agitating their torsos ln the
approved manner.
"KEEP tT up girls," she
says. "I know i1 hurts, but it 's
good for us."
The dance obviously had to
travel a loog way to reacb the
Troubled
Tlieater . .
Goes Dark '
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The
financially troubled 0 r f
Broadway Theater has closed
down for several months,
owner Vincent Miranda say s.
"We have found that it is
fmancially impossible to be
open 52 weeks a year," Mirali·
da said. "There's been a Jot of
money lost."
n·oom
Additional Reductions in our
Semi-Annual QualiCraft
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
were
7.99
and
8.99
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
This is such a 1er11hc opportunity to save, 11's almost a give·
away! For a 11m11ed 11met we·11 give yO\J at least an 8000
!rade·ln on any machine Iha! sews (no ma11er what make or
conC11tion) when you buy the new Golden Touch & Sew• sew·
ing machine. Model 750 w11h 576 carrying case. The Golden
Touch & Sew sewing machine has leaiures like the exclusive
filrlgfil• posh-button bobbin that rewinds right in the machine.
There's a lull range of stretch and fashion st!lches plus the
Singer exclusive soil-touch fabric feed sys1em. You can
chan'Qe presser 1eel easily , .. they snap on and on.
On some used fil!!9!!! sewing machines, such as Model 640,
the trade·ln allowance can be as much as 175.00.
ANO LOOK WHAT'69 BUYS ! THE FASHION MATE'
ZIG·ZAG SEWING MACHINE BY SINGER.A LOT OF
MACHINE FOR THE MONEY.
N0~69 R~G,"s799s Currying cJce e~11a
This versatile machine sews slra1gh1 Jr> 1 Z•JT-18'] Sl!IChC'~.
Does but1onho11ng and decorative s<>w1n11. Ha<; ttlf! exch1._,~,.
Sing!U !ronl drOP·1n bobbin, MoOel 25 7.
SINGER
Sewing Centers
iii[ .,:F;,::I N:,:A::_:L;.,:SA::,:L;_:E;:_I .:;F;:_:I N::A;::L;,,:,:SA;::L;,:E;:,I ;,:F 1:,;;N::;A:;L.;S::;A:;L,:El:..;.F;;;IN::;A::;L:..;S::;A::;L;;;E;,,,I ,,;,F,;;I N,;;A,;;L;,,,S;oA"'!LiiiE.,I i THE DOWNTOWN theater,
a converted burlesque house,
opened in March, 1971. The
were
9.99
to
12.99
and participating approved dealers
Learn lo sew knits and tash1on dressmaking!
5 courses from 14.50 to 29.50 plus
a new Fashion Tailo1ing Course-8 lessons-29.SO
Now even bigpr savings on America's besl·stl!lna:
plays have been mostly stand· fashion shoes! Stlll lots of great styles to 'pick.
ard Broadway fare, with the Hurry in to enjoy the best selection In :youi size.
t Oller e~o1res February 3, 1973 ; 3 BIG DAYS-FRl.-SAT.~SUN. :
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cast and director the same
each lime except for one or Handbag group 1/2 or more ·off COSTA M'ST-aritlol .. Sllflfltw, Soul!! c~·' ,. .. ,1 .... ,6JJ
two stars who were brought in Stockih117e:-small sizes, 81h & 9;-12 pr. $2 c011" Ml!s~ H1,.. •w• .. H1r111r c1n1er, K• ,.11H
For address of store-or dealer nearest you .
see lheyellow pages under SEWING MACHINES.
for each play. .... NUNTl,.GTON llACl:t-h"'91r II 1.-ell, H•lillttlll l lKll CIOllll', lfJ.\MI
The theater closed Sunday BankAmerica rd or Master Charge 01tAHG1-i1 SM-lNft, ·~ City'' c11111r, w2.19u night after the end of a four·
week premiere nm for "Storm I ____ .....'.•.:O.:UTH::_C:::O~A::•::T_:P.:LA::IA:::::....:C::O::ST::A:.M:::.::ES::.A'------'---·-"-'-'-"~·-"-·-·--'-; -"-·-~·-· -"'-'"',.._.-'--~-·-•_u_, ---"---in Summer," a Rod Sterling!·
"----.;!!· play·written-for-television:-
z The nut 8Cheduled pro-~ duction, "Here Today," was STOREWIDE CLEARANCE
SALE
ALL SALE MERCHANDISE
DRASTICALLY REDUCED
FOR FINAL CLEARANCE
SAYE! SAVE! SAYE! IT'S YOUR LAST CHANCE
TO PICK UP GRETA'S lj)UAUTY AT THE VERY
LOWEST PRICES OF THE SEASON!
SPORTSWEAR
Blouses, Skirts,
Tops, Capris
•7;,~· $4.$5.$6
DRESSES
Misses & Juniors
. Long & Short
'7;,T• · $8-$1 Q.$12.
SWEATERS &
BODYSUITS ....,. $5 SU
COATS
·~· $25
.. ALL SALES FINAL
SUNDAY
HOURS
12 P.M. to5 P.M.
-. , I
( ... " -; 1/1 . ~ .
•
Use Your
Gr.I 's Charge
B1nkAmeric1rd
Moster Charge
cancelled because of a
\: shoulder injury to star Betty
,.. Hutton. mll~===================I .,,
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Give the Gift that
"Keepa on Givint'.
Back. to YOU I
• ..,...,_ tlllt ..... ..... ....., ... .,. ........... .. ............ , ... h-....... ... beet ........ .... ...... ·~· .. ·----· 91111twt ,,1-.,toNWd
JOI fwJOW llAll'lllltJ. You .......... _" """" c:-.... plus tht of• tll~W. ant. llt ••• ,.. M't tM up ... __ _ .,.. __ _ .,_,... ....
.Alllll•JOllhl---....-Wl'I ..,,... __ _ ,, .. _,,_ -T'Mll,·-lft ....... to llfolld:,... _ ...... -.,.. _ ..... _....,,..
• ..... °" """" ..... ----•--....... .. Jllll'kil. II t ...... Ind
...... todolOllOClifor J::: :..-::..-r
llRt Ill CAii. for r... .. ---~ ~ 64~
rs rl11tot ••• --1'--K.St•-
Hoq M1111ori1/
H111pit1/ Pnlbyt1ri1n
301 Nnport_ ....... 4 H--CA-
WALL FURNITURE ••• SPACE ORGANIZERS
--
i I
"
-
a practical way to
creative designs for
Study Centers
Library Walls
Office at Home
Music Centers
Curio Displays
Decorator line offe rs the
widest selection of Cabinets,
Chests, and Shelves in more
Sizes, Color~, and Fi n ish
Choices . There ore over 46
sizet and more than 156
differe~t components ••. All
avoilo bl'e in fo ur rich wood
tones, plus six accent colors -
All complemented w ith
durable hig h pressure p /ostic
tops.
Expensively Styl ed.,.
NOWTWQLOCATIONSTO SERVE YOU ... Reasonably Priced.
Mallo( Orange
221 0 No. 0fOl\Q• Moll
T""IWI Ind MtolsA"' 0rqe.,37.7777
·~ 2~411. V P~LOT ________ r._rd~ay_Ja_n_"~"l_26_, _19_13
Political ~otes
Sc4ool Vote Liberal
Hy tl.\. JIUS1'1NGS
QI ll>t O•Ur ~~I lt.H
from !he tv.'O major UC lrvioe
prt>eincts -hte.sa Court and
Verano P,lact support !ht!
trend St'I forrh in the study.
Ille state unlversltie.$ and eol-
leges voted for tho nicasure.
according to the study.
<i>mhined voter allies of
resident students Rt UCI
{1'fesa Court and Verano
s
ORANGE COUNTY
I
UCI Med Facility on Reagan Budget
By GEORCF. LEIJJAL
Of ""' °"" ...... ...,
UC Jrvlnt's flnt perm1t1ent
medical scOOol buUd1ng has
brtn budgeted by Gov. Reagan
and could be built within '"'0
yeara lf the 1.Aglalalure ap-
prove.s the allocation.
Fllin•lew Stale llospltal, ai..ta Nelson aald. , UCl.caJlfoml1 Coile&• of
?.teaa. The agreement brine• to a . liftdlclne programa. These are
The three-year agreement total of 32, &he number of ln-!n ad<Ullon to tht 64 medknl
creates two re1ldeocy opoo-tern• and residents btlQi studtota enrolled each year at
ings at UCI for doctors traloed at'Mf me time by the Irvine.
•peciallzlng In pedlatrtcs _J ...:==-=-====;_-'---"-''--------
.,..iment of children. The
mental hygiene department
Would p/l1 to support theJe
doctors beginning with the
1973-74 school year.
Dr. Thomll N~lson,
Stu d e n ts atl e nd ing
1 ':ilif<1r1ua un1\ r"n1it ies and rol·
lrges gnve ht'il\'Y n1a,ll}r1t il'S lo
liberal c-ruKiid:1t(>S nnc1 causes
1n lhe Noven1tx>r i,:1•11eral cle<:·
!Ion. :irrording lo fl study
n:l<':t!lcd tlus \\'N!k bv the Stu-
<knt Lobbr of tht' i\i;sol'inted
S1urlrn1s ()f lhl' Unh•t·rsity cif
l':1lifor11111
l"ltl':SJ OENT NIXON
d1•ft'att!<l Dtlll'IO('ratlc can·
1iida1e r.eorge MC'Govern by a
11'ide margin in Orange Coun.
I~.
But in lotesa .Court. an
under graduate student
rrsidence area at UCI, the
'ote v.·as Nixon, I 0 5 ;
~lcGovern, 251.
Place) show these figures on
th~ Jnarijuana Initiative, the
coa!tal protection ione in·
ltllili\'C Rnd the fllnn labor in-itialivtl': . ..._ ____ _.. __ _
The healUi sclenc\'1 building
lo serve 01e UCJ-Callfornla
Colll!:ge of ~1edlcine was In·
eluded an1ong a $4.Z fnlllioo ·
a1nount set asldti. in. tbe
Covernor's budget for lhrL>e
new UC 111edic11l school pro--
jects.
thalr1nuu of the UCJ medical
school pcdlatrU:s depoitment,
said ''This ls the first time we
have bad a formal agreement
with Fairview Stllte Hosplllll <
providing tralnlng in 1 t s
!acilitie.s."'
pa ......... ..._
lnm•rallk
11atterlt•ll
11atterllnaer•
11attercap
11atter lte•n
ltatter.Cotch
ltatter nut
ltutterll)'
Tht• ~1udv al~o sho11·ed thil t
l11Jt.•rt1I 1utinJ! 11·ris more
pr l'I alt•nt :1111011,!! l 'C studt'nls
than a1nong thos,· a11ending
orhrr !'t:1gc or pthate i.n-
«r11111ions.
Xo1t'tllbl'r 111tini; tallit'S
Tax C~argc
Plea. Made
FHES'.1\0 tr\P ) -A rormer
Frrsno dentist. now prac1icing
111 Anaheim. has pleaded no
rontesl in U.S. Dis tricl Court
hrrC' to one count of \\'ilUully
attempti ng to evade federal
income taxes.
;.iathan G. Krischncr. 56.
entcrl-d the plea relating to
the charse of attl•mpling to
e\·ade S2AOI of his and hi s
·wire·s taxes due from 1964 and
frauduenlly understating their
taxable income b}' S8.457.
l\irschner. on ho fates a max·
hnum penalt\' of a SI0.000 fine
and or fi\·e vt>ars im·
prisonment praclicfd dentistry
ln Fresno fron1 1953 lo 1970.
In Verano Place. "'here
1narried and graduate UC!
sludents live, the vote v.·as
Ni xon, iO ; ~lcGo\·em, 355, ac-
ro rding · to the county
lteg\strar of Voters.
TR student lobby's study of
the November election shov.·ed
that \Yhile lolcGovun captured
78 percent of the votes in
precincts at UC campuses.
he a\·eraged 64 perce!ll at
!he Ca Ii f orn i a State
Universities and College can1-.
pusC's and 65 percent at
private institutions.
President Nixon carried
precincts at Cal Poly San Luis
Obisbo and Cal Poly Potnona,
the s1udy said.
The same trend prevailed
on the marijuana. coastal pro-
tection and far1n labor in-
itiatives.
AT THE "'°'11\'E UC cam-
puses 1he marijuana initiatl\'e
was fa\•ored by as perctnt.
"'hile 73 percent of the
student s in the 25 precincts at
ANNUAL JANUARY
-~iarijuana-Yes : 6S9; No:
1'13.
66.
-Coastal -Yes: 722 : N"o:
66.
-Farm Labor-\'es : 125:
No: 65.l.
Overall, the Sludent Lobby
study sa)'s, 91.5 percent or UC
students \'Oted Car lhe coastal
protection iniliali\•e. Eighty-
fi\'e percent ..-01ed against the
farm labor initlati\'e, widely
st't'n as an snack against
Cesar Chavez' farm union.
The respectlre fit;ures for
the state universities and col·
leges "·ere S4 percent for the
coastal initiati\'e and 77 per·
cent against the farm in-
iti3ti\'e. .,
Pen1i Sw.te
President
To Speak
Ai.\'AHEl~t -Pennsvlvania
Slate Uni\'ersity alumTii now
Jh·ing in Southern California
\\i ll hear Dr. John \V. Os wald,
the current university presi-
dent. at a dinner here Feb. I.
Oswald is also chairman of
the American Council on
Educalion. A social hour will
begin at 7 p.m. and dinner will
begin at 8 p.m. at the
Disneyland Hotel.
Reservations are being
taken by William F. Snydi;,r,
president of the Penn State
Alumni Club of Southern
California, at the Anaheim
Area Visitor Bureau, Im \V.
Katella Ave., Anaheim, 92002,
telephone 533-553li.
Four Pass
Shorthand
Standards
Four Orange Coast residmts
are among the !M California
candidates who recently pass-
ed examinations supervised by
the Certified Sb o r t h a n d
Reporters Board. ..
Successfu1 at the two-<tay
Los Angeles examinations
"·ere: Lynda Crawford , 9122
Hyde Park Drive and Janice
L. Schneblin, 20541 Paisley
Lane. both ot Huntington
Beach; Joyce Rodger s
Spurgeon, 11596 Carnation Cir-
cle, Fountain Valley and
Dorothy Randall, ~1123S Yellow
Wood, Irvine.
All 9' accepted shorthand
reporters successfully
answered que stio ns on
English, r e a d i n g com-
prehension and leg>J and
medical terIJlloology. They
also achieved · pass marks in
sustained . dictation at 200
words per minute.
plicanls failed the rigorous
Examiners said 171 ap-
plicants failed the rigorous
test.
Pootic Prof
The publ ication or UC
1rvine Professor R o be r I
Peters' fifth book of poetry,
"Coone<:tlons In the English
Lake District." has been an·
nounced in London. Peters is a
Laguna Beach resident.
1'he mont!y comes from the
$155.9 1n\llion C<lrtstructlon
bond measurt' approved by
\'Olers last Nove1nber. ot that
.ilmount. about $37 million is to
be spent ~I UC! tor develop-
ment of the medical school
campus.
DEAN WARREN BOSTICK
said the first permanent
building \\'iii allov.• UCl-CC~i
to expand its enrollment from
70 to 96 students.
UC Regents ha\·e appro\'ed
an agreement "'ith the slatl!
Department of Ptl e n t a I
Hygiene providing additional
doctors' residency lrainint; by
UCI 1ncdical school ut
01airman
Selected
SA~"l'A A.VA -Robert
Snyder of El Toro has been
selected interim chairman of
the Environmental Coalition of
Orange County.
An environmental con-
sultant. Snyder replaces Dr.
Gary Herberson who served
since the coalition v.·as formed
in September to represent en-
vi ronment a I groups
throughout the county.
l-Ierberson left the coalition
to take a position with .i
United Nations environmental
agen cy in Geneva,
Switzerland.
Coed Captures
Farr Contest
AL TIIOUGH THE contract
provides for oo1,y tv.·o residents
lo be supported Al any one
time, the agreement also
means ucr 1nterns and
-resi~enls in other fields . may
beoefit from the experience of
\\'Orking at the slate hospital,
Mort Sahl
To Launch
Lectures
SANT A ANA -Hwnorist
?.tort Sahl will be the opening
speaker here Sunday in a
series of lectures that also will
include politicians George
Romney and Robert Finch,
consumer advocate Ellen
Stern 11 arris and American
Civil Liberties Union executive
Ramona Rlpston.
The lecture series. open to
what about •••••
BUTTERNJP. .•••
tt'• • bllhtul, mlld
en... wittl Jim •
~h of nip..,.vNt
for .-.::kln11nd coolt.•
k'lo T110t I llfn?I•
, WON YoY b.iy t .
REG.PRICE St.Ill t.I.
s1.49LB
Ri~i"'"' -· ar~i: ~ OFIH/llJ LatJt Coast 1'laza
low•t Cerov11I M•ll
~i&tol 1t 5111 Di•9• Fwy,
COSTA MESA PHONE 540.6991
AMOICA'S LEADING CHEESE STORES
the public witoout charge, is:t ----------------------sponsored by the Temple Beth
Sho lom. All lectures will begin;/1111!•••••11!![111•••11!!111•••••••~ ~!E#~~~~£ "'~.1 Qi~~. C jn IA~virf).
of Ho!sing and Urban \)\1 V\'1 ~ '1 '1' 1\Jf/
Develop1nent will be heard
Feb. 4. Finch, former Hea:lth,
Education · and W e I r a r e
secretary and a top adviser to
President Nixon will speak
March 11.
Consumer advocate Harris
will appear March 25, and
Ramona Ripston •. Southern
California director for the
ACLU, will speak May 20.
REDUCTIONS
TO
Dial-a-Pet FULLERTON Suzan
Nightingale, a JUn10 r com-
munications major at Ca l
State Fullerton. ha s bet>n
awarded first place in the
Dante Set
On Sunday \\1ill iam Randolpb Hearst
Foundation writing com-Bureau Ha11ales Cost Dogs
60% By JAN EDWARDS
Of ... o.ily Plkif Sletl
GARDEN CROVE -Al
Hickman has es!ablished a
service designed to save pet
owners molt or the nuisance
and some oC the heartache in-
volved in trying to track down
lost pets. ·-. .1o~ce·
His Bureau of Lost Pets is a
pho.ne number (636-5685), two
filing cabinets and a crew of
four people.
SHOETREE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COST A MESA
UPPER LEVEL -546-4791
The office ts tn Garden
Grove, but serves all of
Orange County. The bureau,
Hickman says, has received
about 100 calls per day since it
opened Jan. 1. Its four
telephone lines are open from
9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Afonday
thro.ugh Friday . • o,.. SHNy, "-t. s , ...
111·'· .. ..., ...... frWrr,
IM SetwMy HICKMAN, A ROOFING
contractor, got the idea for the
bureau after losing his own
dog last year. He failed to find
CLIP THIS COUPON! GOOD AS $5 CASH AT
cu·sTOM·WAAPPED
PROTEIN
PERMANENT WAVES
llEGULAlLY 20.00 TO JS.GO
$5.00 O'FF
WITH THIS COUPON
GOOO AttY .O.t.l'-ON. THllU SUN. Olttr l~prru F•b. 1, ltll
BONUS OFFER
with coupon and 1,erm., any ha irpiece 1n
stod (wig, wiglet, fall , cascade) al 1/2 off!
?· °l¥ BEAL11Jo ~!l~~~ue
SO. COAST PLAZA.COST A MESA 1101 ,..,, fNM tM Mey C•.J o,.. •••· & s ... -....._ S4Mlll
his pet, but the lengthy searct>t pehetitio~ ~lo.r an edofUorial about BUE~ PARK -The 13th
he barked -)al ing newsman "nnual Mar h of Di .em on set him to \v·ir F __ .., c mes
thinking. • ~t~am N. ~inga!e 21 Sant benefit dance will ~ held here
"Until that time, I never 1." ig ' ' . a Sunday by members of 4S
realized there was no central A!ar1a, won a $900 scholarship. sqUare and roundance .clubs
place you could contad to find throughout Orange County.
O;Ut ii your pet had turned up," W k Ok d The program will begin at 6 %
he said. or -·aye p.m. ·at the Retail Clerk" 1.rrt:.t1,,, .f!f'. ~ ilhu,.L llln-·1':
"Uyoulostapet,youhadto Hall, 8530 Stanton Ave. ""' v O\T, \t/,,vf\ rr/tr1ll' go to all the different pounds GARDEN GROVE -A Admission tickets are $1.25
and humane society Offices to S248,449 contract for com-and may be obtained from a 1---------------------1 :duy:C ~i:vS: ~~~ ~~f:OOsto~ t~ai~"t'!fe'~~~ :=.e club member or at the ~~.e/-tt?~e ~[e~Y)c.e,
every 24 hours if its a cat, or been awarded to Edmond J. For more information, call
:v:gthri:a~~!~i~ft~~~e~ =a~~~!eo~~?;t~County ~0.March of Dimes at ,m. ~~t\~£,fic. V4 /£.it't;
the animals are put to sleep ifl--------------------,,-1
no one claims them within
certain time limits.
0 THEN Y O U must po.!!.
cards in local markets and
even place newspaper W .
"My hope Is that the Bun!au
of Lost Pets will do away with
that kind of nuisance,"
Hickman explains.
"Almost any type of animal
is a pet to someone,'' be says.
In the short lime he has
operated the bureau, Hickman
and his slaff have restored
dogs, cats, goats, pigeons,
ducks, turtles and snakes to
their owners. H i c k m a n
charges $5 for each pet
returned to its owner through
the bureau's efforts. He says
the bureau reBlly isn't making a:ny money. .
THE BIJREAU has no.
racilities for keeping animals.
When .!IOmebody calls: In to
report (mding a stray cat, for
example, Hickman notes the
animal's description and tells
the caller to take the cat to
the nearest poond. Then he
tries to match the cat's
description to one In hl1 ·files
that has been rePQrled miss-
ing.
Jf the caller can keep the
cat temporarily, he takes the
addnss in case the owner
calls the bureau looking for
the missing pet.
''This is kind of a test run in
Orange County," Hickman
says. I w<>rft be able to tell for
another six months whether or
not we"re doing any good.
"Tf it turns out we are
meeting a need. maybe later
\\-'E!'ll incorporate. Maybe we
should have a bureau like this
for each county in Southern
California ."
Annual Sale On
....... co. , ........ n.. Serln -... -. s-s.iilte SIM.,..
LU&IA&E
25% Off.
ALL·LEATHER LADIES
QUALITY
HANDBAGS
% ,. °V2 OFF
ROOTEN'S LUGGAGE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA •
San Dleto Frwy. at lrl1tol, -· L •
Costa Mtsa
Mo& tfwtl hf. 10 A.M.·f P.M., Sot, 10 A.M.-4 P.M.. S.. 12•1
VINTAGE CARS
this weekend on the MA.LL
_,
..
'
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Reading
.·1 Problems
•
Attacked
New Chief
Of Staff
Selected
Chessman,
Charged
RIO.DE JANEIRO (AP)
-Brazil's young in·
ternational chess grand
-ANNOUNCING
NEW OFFICES OF
Palisades
Chlropradlc
PENNIS L. THOMPSON D.C.
F'rllla~ January 26, 1973
-~---
DAIL y PILOT I :J . --
.---1 .. ,. °"""""' • .....,,,_ ---------~ONO «ONG
C1111t•tt1 1 ull"'" 1• .. ,,11u"""1 1,, '""'" A11• Jl~..:ir;;;;-N c::;;;;, -I SALE 2 OOUILE·KNll s1 3,,
SUITS ;, SAVE UP TO 50%
I.foll lJl( ~•9· JtOW
°"•&le ~ft•! •••••• ~ 69 Do you have a child with a
reading problem? And while
you'd like to help, you're no t
~re of wbat to do?
Dr. William J. Cowdn, a
surgeon, has been elected
chief of staff at Colla Mesa
master, Henrique Mec k·
Ing, charged that form er
world champion Tigran
Petroslan_. of the Soviet
Union won a recent
2232 S.E. Bristol St. NEXT ffOI APPT, O.....,.. w .. 1 .•. , .91 ·~ TO f}14) •7•·56•1 5110 IMIHll• •••••• 89 •2
On CU11tom Mod• Swlh .
Spor1cooh, S1ock1, Shl.-t1
•WI t'lf ANY Sill s....-i..01~ ••••. ,.9, •• Hl frllt'l'I 1714) t7t-569Z Siii WHI ••• , ••• 88 s9
1
• At}IT STTll COPlfO lll~~~~~~~~~~~~'~J~~~~~~~~l l c,l•..,. ·······
91
'
6~ •fRll AlTEIATION$ !~lrto ...••••.. 10 e
Sollhl .... 92707
Then Golden West Evenln& ·
College, ln cooperation witti
the Ocean View School
DiJtrlct, may have the answer
1n a serlea of courses which
will bl!&in the week of Feb. 5.
CHIEF OF STAFF
Or. William Cowan
' Memorial Ho!Jpllal.
He succeeda Dr. Alan B. tournament using ,"dirty N l E
Barton and wlll hold the poSI !ricks," 5uch ~· jiggling ear y . veryone
for the remainder of 1973. the chessboard with his
elbows and clinking a L • La d
Dr . Cowan has served on lhe spoon in his coffee cup. lStens to n ers
olw oolt•9'1 ' ~"'' -1000 flN ,!t lr.IPO~/ll ~"Sl OAllt 9·9
WOOllNS & KNITS '"'""~' --lAf. 9.7 J!:l:I ~ lUN. 10·)
f o• Appolnlmenf Phon• 833-0211
Newport fcuhlon1, 1IS52 MocArthu• Slvd.~ult• 445-Sant• An.a
hl•••a ...,...,.,1., i.u.,..,.....,' l.i So.1~om y,1.1 1.,~
'"' '" _.._,,,..., ""' on id• o .. vo"' N••PO" fw1
C. ·•~••to I•"' fOll ooil "'""'"bid~ ""'"""'" o c ~""""
Included In the series is -
• ' Developmental Reading.'
which will explain how a child
learns to read and how
parents can assist. The class
will be geared to three age
levels: preschool to grade
three, grades four through six,
and grades seven and eight.
The nine-week courses, taught
by readin g specialists, are
called 1eneral enough to appl y
to all area children, regardless
of what School they attend.
hospital's staff since 1968 and l ==========L_:_~============:::;===::-__ was elected ' to the executlve
1
-: ===:'.... ___________ _
committee in 1972.
McDonald
Picketing
Prohibited
A resident of Newport Beach
since 1951, Dr. Cowan received
his degree at the University of
Edinburgh in Scotland . He In·
terned at Knickerbocker
General Hospital in New
York and ·served his residency
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _('at Pres1?n Royal Infirmary in
Sa . . Lancashire, England .
n Francisco culinary unions
have been barred from SERVING WITH DR. Cowan
picketing McDonald's or any are Dr. George Haddad ,
other restaurants in supJ>Ort of president-<!lect; Dr. E.
AU. SECTIONS of the class union recognition demaDds by Wlllian1 Stump, · secretary.
will meej: on Mondays from 7 a National Labor RelaUons ' treasurer; and members at
to 9 p.m .• with the primary Board decision. large Dr. James ff. Casey and
group taught by Joni Kellogg The order Thursday by Dr. Jerome Snyder.
at Glen View School. The in· ~1aurlce Miller, NLRB ad-Staff chairmen are Or.
termed.late level will be taught ministrative law judge, follow· Ralph Franklin, medical corn-
ed his review of a transcript mlttee ·, Dr. Lincoln O. by Lynn King at Rancho View 1 · •·--d o city uvcu of Permit A~ Sherarian, surgical com·
School, and upper levels by JX'Bls hearings. mittee, and Dr. Sarah '1'.
Ann Peterson at fl.1esa View Th •·· d ed d e UU<lr tum own Hatherley, general practice
School. fl.1cDonald 's request f o r committee. Dr. Barton will re-
ne ' •
"We have long been looking permits to build additional main active as immedi.a.te ~ ..
r
for ways to assist parents inljiihiiaiim~bw-=ge~r=p~la=ces~.;;===-~pas~t;:pres=id~e;n~t.::;::::""iiii"ll their erforts to impi:ove their
cblldren"s reading defi· NOW SHOWING 'Ciencles," explains Ocean
· I View's Woody C'haddick, assis-SPECIAL LIMITED j tant superintendent for educa· ~·ona1 services. "These classes ENGAGEMENT
re distinctl y designed for that
purpose. It's another step SOUT" COAST Pl.AV. #1
we're trying to take toward a Coit• M••• -5411-2-711 ~:r.~hip between home and UA CINIMA r Or•nt• -5J2.67ll
rliANOO'llER CLASS included Hl6HWAY Jt DllYl·IN
the series is "Parent-Child W•1hnin1t.r -SJ-4.6212
~mmunication," taught byl!~~~~~~~~~~i:iii~~'°~'~'~v-No '"ss1:1 ychologisl Ruth Goodman. ~~~J
er course Y:ill stress im·
roving communication within
~e famil y and within the
Classroom. so that mutual pro-
lems can be solved. ~toliva·
tk>o of misbehavior and pro-
~le.m aolving techniques will
explored as well , according
Mrs. Goodman. The class
,meets on Wednesday evenings!
'from 7 to 9 p.m. et Lark View
School.
Tuition fetls for each class
are$&, and are paya ble at the
'time of registralion. For
• further information, contact
'. the even ing co llege office. 892-
, 7711, or the Ocean View School
Dl.striCt curriculum or public
· iDiormation offices. 847·2551.
She's Stripped
FLORENCE. Italy (AP) -
ench stripper Sonia Martin
told Police someone stcle the
tbu from her dressing
m.
THE VIKING
WELCOMES •..
"The Viking" welcomes .•. ell warrenty repeirs,
no metter where you purchased your FORD,
MERCURY o< LINCOLN PRODUCT. All we .. k
i1 thet you give us fhe opportunity to 1•rvli
you ... We Know YO:u'll le Becki
GUSTAFSON LINCOLN/MERCURY
16100 IEACH ILVD. •HUNTINGTON IEACH
14Z·ll44
"The Home of tlto Vlklog"
FREE OIL CHANGE with this Ad ..• our way
of saying '1'HANkS." Alt M1CorMkk
SenkaM-
View
20,7oolbs.
of Co1ive11ience
~ : • f I
l
,
on the Mall at Fashion Island/Newport !:.enter,
this aturday, January 27th, from 10:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.
"Tbe Two-Bit Bus Line" will have a sparkling, new bus
on display. Come and see what 20,700 lbs. of
convenience can do to Ii II your transportation needs.
JOIN US FOR COFfEE AND COOKIES •.•
IRJSUNE
for 1nfonn1!1on or but ICMdulN, write '1'llO Two-18 .,. t..lftl•
11111211 E. WHhl~ton Ave .. Senti An .. Collloml .. 82701 , or coll (71 4) 547.eoo4.
\
A tremendous selection
of wanted styles, colors, textures
.. at incredible savings. -·-~
By all means be here early!
Sale 499 ••. yd.
Reg. 6.46 sq. yd. 'Spartan' is a most
durable short loop carpet of Antron
11 ®nylon. Resists soiling, pilling. ·
Brunslon for antishock. Skid-re-
sistant rubber backing.
Sale 749 .. yd.
Reg. 8.99 sq. yd. 'Heiress·. a deep and
durable nylon shag pile. Available in many
solid decorator colo1s.
Sale 849 ••. yd
Reg. 9.991q. yd. 'Whirlwind', of 100~
Oacron"'l polyester shag pile. with a lush
and deep texture. !n decora101 colors
Sale 599 •• yd.
Reg. 6.99 sq. yd. 'Heritage'. Dacron .,
polyester tip sheared carpeting 1n decorator
colors. ,Te:icture helps hide smudgr and
foot prints. "'{
Sale 799 ... yd.
Reg. 9.99 sq. yd. 'Scire' plush car·
peti ng with 8)(Cetlent resilience,
dense and long wearing. Nylon pile.
Sale 6?:.yd.
Reg. 7.99 sq. yd. 'Sunburst'
d urable. good looking nylon shag.
Just wipe up most spills and stains.
High style multicdlors.
Sale prices· effKU~e thru S1turday.
JCPenney
We.know what you're looking for.
Expert carpet install ation service
available. JCPennf'y has a complete
selection of va lue pnced ca1pet padding.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:
FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beoch •(714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beooh (714) 892-7771.
l:J DAILY PILOT
Fo1· the
(Record
Marriage
Liee1ases
SEGASER4.EWIS -Riv~ F•1nc1t 4S, Dill El E11Can10, 01n1 Poln1 .iKJ
Sin Cl-11~
HU58ANO-VtSHON -WllU1m LtROY, Cl, ?190 Coll9Clt. Apt. 11. COSll Mei incl Marv Elltn, l l. 71.0 Coll-. A111
11. Cosll Me••
COMITZ·flACA -Miiion lff, JI U(I
E. l91b SI., Caal• i\\ew And LYll<ll "\. 11111 E Ulf• SI., Cost• Met•
SUGARMAN·I AOWN -L111,1lt tl I02 f . P ac Uk (CMOS! Hlnl!waY Lona
h 1c11 -r .. e.a G~li'. It llffl Sherwood St , WtHmuuler
.O.HUMAD•·TEMPLE -MI c 111 t I
ROOitn. n . 2171' Minion Odve. """ Ofl>lw M••Y. ,,, Jl3ll Rl<IGt Roult Drive it.o! 11J, El Toro
WISECRAVER ·SCOTT -Uovd Etwl,., ~1. :!O!I New!IO<I Blvd .• (,•<1' .l.\e-M
oJl'ICI O!tM M.a~.Ut1. JJ, floOS Adams,
H1>ntirm!Dn BtlCfl
ll:OBERTS-HUCl(Elt -Otnnls ~. )6, 62.U Wlrntr Av<:. Hunllnolon fte•c" and Carol Al>M. 34. 6?'2 w arner Ave ttunllnal<ln Bti'ICll
TOMIYOSHl·MURAOll:A Ro v Ttl!llro, ~. tm C•IWlle....,.,, H""·
til'ICllOl'I !It.tell a<'\d Mav Mlc!l!e. 21. h!OI W Ortnoerl\Qr"", Al>f 61,
Futltrtoft ) 1
LACY-KIMBALL -Rkl>tr(I LH , li
,361 Grtnd Avt ., LMl<Jr\ll Bt 11c11 •ll<l Delo•t5 OH. lll, U!!ill MaoMlla, I Wn!mln~ll•
SMITH·XITCO -Herbtr! Malcolm, 791 9nG (alendu.I Ave .. We•tmln•ttr a"<! J11collflllM 01nnlellt, ](I, 9170 C1len-dul11 A.,.., Wt•lmlnsllr
SEMOTAN·PALENCHAR -Grl!QO<'V James. 12. 11411 Acacl.:i P11r~w•1· G~rden Grav• llrwl Linda Oltne, 2 , 1t'1 (1s1l1 St .. NewllOrt B11cll
JAIME·TOWNSEND Ltwrf<l<t Clltd~s. 's\ 15192 Chrl1.ant4 Dr!v•. MILiion Vie o llnd Oorotllv Oloa, ,.o, 1>.11 F1Uilon Park SI . A.or. D. Ort nae
PETRElLA·McDUFFEE .Jol\n Antlloliv. 2S. 1IJ.I W Ma....,lu. Soin Clemen!• and Mt ur&eft Pmrlc1a. 24,
70< w. Maroui!11. »n (len11nre
SHIELDS-METZLEUR -FrO<lfrlc~
Michael. Sl. 210-41 •1 St., "'""~' B111c11 1"<1 Junt Rot>lln. d , l'10f M11rc~ A ..... N-N 8ttch
•
JONES·MUEl -Donald ltrrv. 24,
lQ.11 PKltic SI .. \'lellm1MI•• dndl i~~l~lt.~::. ... G.~:. 10i!61 Htn<ltf$Qfl •
•• ••
WAL TON.SHAW -9ur1 11.rrllur. 20. 1571 Ma<ll~n Circle '.\t,•ml~ .. •r ln<I Vtlora LN. 11, ;u1 Bl~M Circle. Hi.mllna•Oll !l·l~ll
HEOIN·FLIPPE'l -ll:>en lf.J #•!·"· 16,I
J\IOI' (O."Oi /••t .. B !~ i l~'>I .ndl Vk•! Jp4n, )l, II! i l(J\011, , ·' 2&,
"'"'"''"' PHILLIPS-PHI LLIPS -\'/I 1ti•m1 f hOnWOI. •I, 11-<>< S~ll 1 ~ ·u•n Hill;. ll:a .. Coren• ~.ii '·'-' .1n1 N .. 1011• Faye, .o, llM!• Stn Jo.·0~1n H•ll• Rd., I Corona ~I Mar
l O"'CKECK-GILOEN -DJ.,J LH, 26, Hl·21 sr .. Act. ll. CO••• M~ ... •M l(are<i SIJ<'. l•, 1Sl·2hl •' .. ,er. 2il. Cc•lil Mtw
BUZZARD·CUZl.\AN -~Q~cr T Cirville,I
.16. 1C1i! O•elllo Or., Ab! '<· Tu ... 11 "'"' f,~1ntG~r1d, •1, 1..SSI .">tlr~·1 lld.,I
IVOLFE·O'AGRELL"--ll:ob t r ! Evoent. 19, 101>1 l(alrnu. Hu111l~o•on l
Bt t Ch dnO Ptfrt l.'tMtl, 20. 1Q1SI I t<timu, Huntill(llon B<~ch
A.IAlTLV·EARL -M1ChH~I Eucion•. ::1,, 1Jl6 S. (0<1>1 Hlclhwtv. L•quna Beacn
•n<l Cu:iordn D~nl!t. Ti'. 1Jl11 s. coo,r Hlollwav. LM1una BtJCll
F°'EEMAN·B •RN.>11:0 -JtHrt> l(tn· l>l'!h, :S. 12•1 W I J;.t'. "-Ot. ( (:,t;
k.o;.:i afl<I D·~n~ '-"" 1/, 11•1 W. B••··· A~T c. Cc~·~ t.·~·.a
TCllll:ELLJONl!S ,.,,11 n k rrc·1,
2•. &:1 "''· c~rcno .,,. l:ar ,,.,.,Lin· oa k\d"t, lJ, ell 1 .. ~. L~rJn~ ~•I .. ~.,
HA'l'MAN.,\LEllANOEll: L y 1 t v1 .. atro~1!1, J\. i•ll Frcntitr Llrcto,
H"""""'Cof1 B~n ~'"' (,,1....,.. L .. , :lO. ;1J1 Fronlltr C"cl•. Hunronq1on
8ti0'1
IAICO"( 1.•.11.~ t eo~:~c· •-• " 1.: S• .. '·"'·~·· : b c ;) :,• ,, 1~t1uorv 1•. IHl. ~""v~J ~ J;m<• C.
::,t;1t;,;•n~<'.'.'1~·.r <.•··f-·' ~i•" ,.:·;~:
"ere h<IU" <I.II B ' ·' ,1 ·Ufl inlirm•nl I' ~dt•!•t V·~ ~" ,, ~ PJrk. Btll er .... a" ,'. Q. r~d', o;r.;ttr.
Ill.UNO Ctiri>rv J Bruno. A9t •9 of /i-1.42 s~nda...c• Circlt. Munhng•on Bet(ll. Oi !t cl atalh,
J•nu~rv U. 1~1) ~ur•1lv~cl ~v W•lt, Intl! •on. 11.cn.ila: o~ucir,rer. K"slln: •r>Olr.or. 1 Elsie B•unc; •·•t•r. !,'.••· Co.nci:io ;,..cart.~ f:·~~~;;:.~d~U:i.;,~·I l~;~,.~1,, l't(.< ~~r.11· I
oon J1rn&1 J, D~I~. RJ>oden• ct ll~WDO<I P.t acr.: d<l'o cl d~.,I,.,, Jo•w.i. v 13. l•ITJ. Survived ov y,lle. T..ere>•' 1cn. Jame~ D. O~!v. Vert• Ll"<li. d~u~hler. Rt nte J. Dctv, cf Ille tiomt: tr;tJll>er. t1a1e( OllOn,
El Monte: brothel', 'Nllll~m I(. Ootv1 of ~an Dit<111; cne arandclllUQtlllr. !>arv1cts, ~i'::a1:11!~t~'· l~~;~~~I ?9· P~?i\t P~/!!; MerN1r;e1 P1rl<. P1clllc View Mortuerv, Olrl!'Ctorl.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF MORTUARY
U'1 E. 17th SI., Costa l\1esa
llHllll
BAL'J'Z.B~RGERON
FUNERAL HO~IE
Corona del l\lar 673-9450
Costa Mesa '4~2424 • BELL BROADWAY
l\10RTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\1eaa
LI S-3•l3 • l\tcCORl\tlCK LAGUNA
BEACH l\10RTUARV
1705 Laguna Can.yon Rd.
"94-9415 • PACIFIC VIEW
l\1E!\10R1AL PARK
Cemetery ~1orh1ary
Chapel
3500 Pacific Vlt \\' Ori\'t
Nt'A'poft Iltacb. Callfornia
"4-2711t ... • PEEK F A~1lL Y
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HO~IE
7AI Bolsa Avt.
Wtslmlnster 813-35!$ • SMITHS' MORTUARY
l!'1 ~tala SL
lfuntlngton Bt1cll -
•
' ,
/ • •
-
, •
=-
"
'Think of it as a six-mileIDgh,
do-it-yourself,just-th~-way-you-like-it
.sandwich.
When you fly United's
Morning New Yorker, you're
going to find something new
aboard the Great Wide Way. '
Oh sure, we begin with a
delicious breakfast ... brunch ...
well, whatever you choose it to be .
Just take your pick of
omelettes or another breakfast
entree. All with side orders of
breakfast meats. Or enjoy
brochette of beef.
But whatever your choice,
pace yourself.
Because at lunchtime, weire ·
putting out a fantastic deli spread.
Filled with lox and bagels
and ere.am cheese. Salami, roast
beef, turkey, and ham. And
chopped liver and cheeses and
four kinds of bread .
It's a unique idea in in-flight
dining. Arid it's all buffet. So you
can make just the sandwich your
stomach desires. Whenever you
desire. Again and again and again.
The big 747 with the
delicatessen inside leave8 dail y
at 8:45 a.m. and arrives in· Ne w
York at 4:40 p.m.
And since we leave Los
Angeles at such a good time ,
yo u have a whole everung for
a good time in New York.
There are three other good
times a day to take a United 747
to New York, too. And each one
offers something special from
the Great Wide Way.
Still, if it's a deli delight
yo u're after, call your Travel
Agen t. Or United at 537-1521.
Ask f<~r the Morning New
Y.orkyr. And get set for a six-
mile-high sandwich.
Fly the ftjendly skies of.United.
Enjoy our Friend Ship Service.
Partnen In Travel with Western lotemationi.l HoteJs.
J
•
l
•
'
1
'
T ' I..
•
• Servi .ce Stocked at --
-.. -· -~ ~ ii·« . .; j. --
L
'
. -
By JO O~N
Of'IM Otlf't Pllid. lltlt
Al ense : relaxed from attention.
Carried. a step further, the definition of
thC military term "al ease" can be feel·
\pg comfortable and free to do as you
please in an unregimented atmosphere •.
At ease is what the patients on \Vard 31
of Fairview State Hospital ar~ not
because of the sterility of their hOspital
setting, but this is what they need to be
to achieve max:imum-happineu-and live
at their highest capacity.
The term "at ease," however, is an apt
description for Al Douglas, a man who is
working for better community and
human relations through several meaps.
As owner of a store named "At-Ease,"
he is seeking to instill in his employes
that customers -and people in general
-need to be treated as the employes
themselves would like to be treated.
SAME A ITITUDE
He is giving of himself lo 'Ward 31 ,a~
Fairview with the same attitude: tbe pa·
tients need to be treated as he himself
would like to be treated.
Judy Bernal, Fairview's pro-
gram directo r, and Al Doug las
look at wa ll.paper samples
for Ward 31 (above). Below,
th e ward waits transfo rmation
lo a homelike atmosphere.
' I
•
Before Nesting
Chec k the · Flock
DEAR ANN LANDERS: How can
young girls who fall in love with
homosexuals tell before they bcrome too
involved? What should they look for?
years old and cannot support myself. Our
children are grown and I "''OUld never
impose on them. I need son1e advice. -
MISEIRABLE
Douglas and his wift.! N&ney aud
children, Cameron and Ju lio. reside in
Newpo rt Beach in a comtortable holllt',
and he has decorated his Newport store
\\'ith antiques from Europe and coin·
!ortable furni shings, so h~ reasoned that
patients at the hospital would like to live
in the same kind or warm and ho1nchki:
atmosphere.
When he called f\.1rs. En id Lat hro1l.
director of volunteer services at the
hospital, to see what he could do for the
patients. the project of helping transform
a OOld, sterile room Into a living room for
Ward 31's 52 teenage boys and adults
who are severely handica pped waa ap-
pealing.
BE'ITER FOR MORALE
''It yo u put the patients in a horn(' at-
mosphere they do bell er." explained '
Mrs. Lathrop, "and it's better for thc-
morale or the em ployes ...
nie room now contains standard 10-
slitutional plastic and metal chai rs anct
has a linoleum floor. \\'hen coinpletcd. it
will have special fire proof carpets. com·
fortable chairs and couches , draperies,
lamps and bookcases.
, "The state provides lhc basics," said
f\.trs . Lathrop, "but we~nt to go beyond
ttie basics."
To kick off hi s campaign of helping
Fiirview ~several years ago. Douglas
donated money for toys and took staff
members to pick out the toys they
wanted. He has run newspaper ads ask·
ing for contributions the past two years
and has encouraged his en1ployes to help.
The 1972 ad brought a response from
many individuals and firms including
ulliver's restaurant, Nev.•port Beach .
ere a $500 employes' gift was matched
by the management.
TWO CHOICES
Douglas was given the choice of tv:o
projects last year, Mrs. Lathrop said.
and he chose the most difficult, working
with Ward 3t
"'lbis ls not blatant commercialisn1 for
him/' empha.sized Mrs. Lathrop. ''This is
Sto re
down to the rritty gritty It 1~n't JLtSI s
fun·tYPl' thing Dllui;la~ IJn.;ut;ht his
children Ul lust yt'<ir You tnu1Cl ~t' hr·
w..intcd lhl.!rn lo be iu~vll'eci
.. This y1•ar he brou~ht two o! t11.-
cn1ptoyt•;; for" tou1· 1'h:11 \\uuld.11'l hu\1'
l>ccn Jlt'(.'l'SS<ll'Y <Jl :ill "
\\'h;Jt kind of 1nau 11oul d spCnd p;.i1·1 r1f
tus prt:<'ious advtrl1s1ng budget to ~1·r·k
hl·lp for a ho.~pital" And ~!It' h1~
em ployes ;.i Chnsunas bonus 1nsh·ad ol a
part) with a hoStl·d bar' And s:iy, "The
greatest thing you <:an gi\·e youn~
pe1·sons is respect for lhl'ir orgaruzat1on"
this 30 en1p!o)es arC' n1ostly 111 their :!u~
and 30s).
_ HISTORY :\li\J()H
Douglas gradutitl'd lrom the Ln1\ters11\·
of :\1ichigan i11 19~.;, wilh a de~l't'I' 111
history, then scrvt.-d 111 the ~la rini.: Corps
wllll 1960.
\\'hile all l•nding !hi' unive rsity h1· hfld
\\'Orked part-time in a cloth ing store. s11
1vhe11 he \\'BS discha rged from th<' ~lari111•
Corps and hcg<>n plaun1ng for his fu1urC'.
the store 011'ner for \Vhom he h:id 1vorked
suggested that he put lus fi ve yean; o!
, exper ience to good use.
This ht• did . and three Yt'<Jrs <11
Atkinson's n1en's store follo\\·ed. l·le then
became a manufactur ing representa!11·1·
for Corbin. and then was named a vire
1 president of the subsidiary of a 1naJor
men's clothing manufaclunng compan y.
Douglas plan s to v.·ork n1ore I"\·
tensively with Fairview because "thev
have an inexhaustible need ror prec\st"
and conscientious contr ibu tions - no old
clothes or toys."
'·We hal'e a !ot or pruie 111 our hun11h-
ty,'' Dougln..s emphasized. "Our rontrihu·
lion is not really very much. It's just
a wa y of life -our business in a h1111g
community ...
Employes 1nust bt.> IX'lter prop le \\hen
they leave th e store's employ, manager
Bill Sousa add ed. "Doing somethinc
within the commun ity is our respoosibil
ity. \Ve can be aw are of certain con1·
munity needs and 11·e can hclp in little
wa ys."
At this moment I know two women who
are trying to . recover from disastrous
marriages to a couple of closet queens.
Both girls arc emotional v•recks.
I might add that in one instance. the
boy's family (rich. socially prominent
and community leaders) pushed lhc mar-
riage beyond decent limits. I'm sure they
knew of the young man's problem and
hoped marriage might straighten him
out
DEAR MISERABLE: A woman who
bas llved with a man 4% years shouldn't
have to go to work to support herself. See
a lawyer about a legal separation and If
you can't afford a lawye r seek public
· legal anil~. Alld good luck to }'ou,
dear.
Criswell Predicts Surpri ses
How can an unsuspecting girl kno\¥
what she Is getting into? I ha~ searched
the libraries fot the answer and have
fotmd nothing. Can you help? -WESTY
DEAR WESTY: ~1any homosexuals
are . actually bl-sexual. In other words
they go both ways. This can be very
misleading because a great many pe<1ple
are unde r the tmpre1!1loo that a
homosexual cannot function sexually with
females. For exomple. they point to a
bomoaexual's ch ildren as "proof'' that he
11 slralght.
I bow of no foolproof Jy11tem for Iden·
tlfy{ng a homosexual The best ~e might
surface If lhe gtrl takes a close look at·
her flance's companlon'i. Rarely do
1tral1bt males soclalile wl1b laf boy1.
Bi rds of a leather Ily log~t~er.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1've been
married to th is man for 42 years. He was
always domineering and critical. Nobody
could please him. Ue bates my relatives
and when he gets mad he doesn't speak
for weeks. We could ne.ver keep ..a.ny
friend! because this one was a phony and
1 that one was ju!ll trying to get a free
meal 3t our house.
1 Attu keeping my mouth shut ror 42
r y@an, t re111ly opened It up last week. I
told him exactly what bad been on my
Jl\ind and It was a great relier. Re lis·
t tenod without changing lhe expreuloo
1 hlJ face, then announced ca.lmly1 ·~1 will L 11eru speak to yOU ag-11n as tong as I·
live." l'rlf sure he meant It.
l don't wanl to live the rest of my life
llke th!s, bot what can l ,do? I am 62
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I've been
reading your column for years and have
noticed yoo frequently say, ·'Talk to your
clergyman ." Such was your advice to
R.C. whose second husbaJld enjoys a cou-
. pie of cocktails on the weekend. The poor
woman said she goes to pieces becau se
her first husband died of alcoholism and
she's scared to death or liquor.
Don't you realize the majority of
Americans don't even KNOW a
clergyman, or they are so irregular in
their church attendance that they are
ashamed lo speak lo lbelr minister (or
rabbi. as !he Cl\~ may be). Moreover.
Ann. if r may pre&ch a short Bermon.
many readers HA VE problems because
they aren't familiar with God, much less
a clergyman. -D.A.
DEAR D.A..: Oftt:a J -utst a
clerR)'man in the hope tMt It will ea.
courage lhe rtader .. W tee, tf be
doesn't hH\'e ont. Awd It'' utaln" Ito•
oflcn they write.ind tell me the)' did jMlt
lhal -and were helped a 1reat deal ....
A nt>nonsense epproach to how to deal
with •life's most difficult and most
rewarding arranaement. Ann Landers'
booklet, "Marriage--Wh" to Ex~,"
wUI prtpare you fur better or for worse.
Send your request to Ann Landen In
care of ll1<! DAILY PILOT enctostng 50
ttnts In coin Md a long. stamped, tel~
addressed envelope.
•
Sttrtllnt evenh
f.,. 1973 ...
fore-by
Crlswell.
,
By BEA ANDERSON
Ot lfte O.llY 1"1 .. 1 Sl•lf
In 1973 there will be some good ne~·s
... and some bad.
Startling events to come, according to
"America 's foremost prophet" Criswell.
include President Nixon serving a third
term as president, three new ap-
pointments to the ~upreme Court. free
public medicine and fixed professional
Tees.
The speaker arrived at the Tuesday
Club luncheon In the Newporter lnn
just after President Nixon called for a
meeting with his Cabinet and announced
he would address the nation that night on
rad1o and television "to report on the
stalus or the Vietnam negotiations."
Criswell said tbab he believed the trea-
ty. at that moment, already had been
signed.
TJURD TE~t
lie predJcted that by year's end the
ConsUlutlon will be changed allov.'ing
President Nixon a third lenn, II would be
successive and he would again win by a
l&ndsUde.
He sala that property rights will i.ko
precedence over civil rights, specifically
along the 1old coast on the Masoo-Dixon
Line where blacks own the property but
have clouded title. "This ckJt.ld will be
ttmoved, '' he aid.
Three new appalntments will be made
to the Supreme Court this year, he said,
and that rn three years, fnstead or nine
old men, nine lovely young women will be
servlog on the beach.
Uefore the year ends the Su'prtm~ ..
Court will hand down a ruling that "all
abortions· •re murder.,, He said that the
recent three-month ruling actuall)' was
the first step in lhis direction.
"We are moving inlo a controlled
economy. For the first time in· histocy
professional fees will have a ceiling."
lie also said medicine will be dispensed
free. supermarket-style. "People w\11 just
go in and pick ioot whatever medici ne
they feel they need and wheel it out in a
shopping cart."
GARRISON LAW
"This is a period of becoming very
serious about our government. We must
have law and order and we will have it."
He also said America will follow Canada
in adopting the garrison law. "A woman
won't be fashionable unless she packs a
gun."
We can look forward to lo\\·er food
prices, If his prediction Is corrt:ct.
"There will be a price war on frozen and
prepared foods.'' Because of a bumper
crop of grains, fruits and vegetables, the
old nwst move to make room for the
new, he said.
Tho6e Ured of d!Ming ca n relax
because ufat Is beautiful. The full fashion
figure will return. By fall , styles w~ll
resemble those of circa 1907.
Unlike tbe trailing gown of
grandmother's, or mother's time. the
gowns of tomorrow will be almo.t
transpartnt and the skirt will be slit
above the knee."
Criswell at.a ,.Id that smog will be
1 eliminated by the use of an electric car.
1JOOO to be Imported from Japtin. "It 's A
new black pearl.··
NE W KING
Other newsworthy events foreseen by
CriaWdl Included "by April .l Ill
Charles Ill wi ll be the new monarch of
England. The queen. because of health.
will abdicate the throne."
Here at homi, he s.1id "WiJconsin.
within the next year. will be the firs!
state to set the cost of a diV1lrte at the
same price as the-marriage license cost
and that the next man who will bf'
elected president of the United Sta tes or
governor of Calllornia 1nust promise fret·
divorces, free dancC' leuon~ and frec-
face-lif1 s.
Predictions abou r nc"·s C'VClllS C\'t'rl
closer to home includ ~"(Or. Timothy1
Leary will be sent up•for a long ti.me .''
and the journalist BiJl Farr will not win
llis case. J
EARTHQUAKES
lie snld the ''tremendous rarthqu:ik~
that has been prtdirtcd tn the n1•nr
future \\·ill not hit u\ Southern
Cllllfomia." Hu did agree there will be ;i
big one bur felt it would be located north
ot San FranCisco ... ··1n On!gon or
Washington .OmC\vhere ··
He tal k«l 3tiout pending qu:ikes, hur·
ricanes, lidal "'a\•ll.11, tornadoes nnd
volcanoe!I filod forecasl lhnt by Sept 27.
1973 "mother nature will have gi\en u~
such a beating tha t tha1 di.\y will lx-
declartd a day of natlooal en,eraeocy ·•
Howevt>r, by Aug. ta. 11'99, the date
predi('ttd by N'oStradamUJ as the end of
the 'Wrld, Crlawell Wd I.hat "we wlO be
nrou lei to SO<' n aQJ1 we •ill be around \.tJ
F.ec f¥: world 11ner that d1t.t.1'
l.n Jhe nea r fulute, he d id. l'cverJlhing
in thf!s coi.tnt('y wUl be dooe by computer.
IS.. SURPRISES AHEAD, Pa1e Ill
J IJ DAILY PILOT .,
...
Space Down to Earth
By JO OLSOS
Of -Dlol~ .... t""'
Amrncaru: complain aboot
the ''high cost"' ol space ex-
rlvrauon unjustly, said John
~ffer Sm1lh. a staff writer
for the Apollo and Skyla b pro-
granu of Ule ~tcDonntl
Doo&las Carp.
Speaking during tbt annual
Amelia Earhart lwlC:heon
sJIOflJOff'd by the Zonla Club of
:\t'ol.-p>rt HarOOr. Smilh said
thn t the spaCf' program is not
as costlv as Americans are led
• to bthc~·r b\' the ~ media
and there ire many ··rall"'°'"'1
bentfi~·· that make tht pro.
eram •wth its cost.
Y.ben ne"'·scasters speak of
Exhibit
Viewed
~lore than 150 paintings will
be displayed in the Newport
Harbor Art Museum Friday.
Feb. 9, as the focal point of
the annual Beneflt Preview
Pa rty sponsored by the Sales
and Rental Council of the
~fuseum.
The 500 art petron.s at.
tendin g ~·ill ha\'e the op-
portunit~· to 5elect favorite!
from the assemblage culled
from prominent Los Angdes
galleries and. for the first
time. Orange County stud.lo6.
Cocktails will be' served at 7
and dinner will follow in a
Bavarian setting. Featured
v.·ill be German food and
drink. ·
The exhibit. continuing on
Saturday and SUnday, will in-
clude lithograph!. drawings,
etchings and paintings of all
sizes, 10 be rented for as little
as $S or $10 for a two-month
period.
"This pro\'ides an excellent
o p port unity for the
homeowner or businessman to
li"e with a piece of art before
makine a frnal p u rchase
decisi::in.'" a com mittee
spokesman said.
Mn. Donald Nunen is
benefit chairman and on her
corrurtiuee are the Mmes.
Alan Andrews. g a 11 e r y
chairman. and John Andreson,
Branch Kerfoot . Charles Loos.
Robert Perkins. W a r r e n
Smith, Robert Halley. Da\•id
Hender and John Cronin.
Anyone iAishlng further in-
fonnation about the party
may call the museum office at
675-3866.
the spact procram ll is
descr:IMd in dollars and C\"1111.
ht said. hll1 oU~ programs
1tre repN"ted in terms of
perN>ntagts of the nationa l
budi:t·t.
· · P~t"('('fllagts are nebulous
:i ud 14'€' rmsi them hard to
unders1and."
S-EW rr&:\IS
Thousands oI nev.· produc:ts.
!UCh IL'! teOon. hll\·e been
g1\'en to Americans as by·
produrts of space research.
Sm1th SJ.Jd.
'"'i''e had to ~\·e the prob-
lem ol. re-ente ring the S$Of)..
degrtt atmosphtre \\'e had to
de\·ek>p a material that would
come 1hrough "'' i I h o u 1
scorching and wilhout dantag·
U\& the ll!!llronaUt.5." '
tor quadraplegics. Spi('t
rtStarch has brought elec·
trically JXl"''ettC:i "'.het.lchairs
that t'an bt optrated b}' .1 ruck
of the tongue or a move ment
of the eyeballs.
raralyzed pt>rsons confltled
to bed can turn pages of the
books by looking into a sensor
which catches 1he reflection of
light in the eye and act i"ates a
pa g t . t urnin g devl«.
Tele\ision cbanntls can be
rhanged in a similar manner.
~l~ITOR SYSTE~1
Coronary palleots enroute to
" hoispitaJ can be monitored all
the "''ay , Smith said, wilh
~
equipment si mllar to lhat
"'tllcb moo.lion ll.!tronaut!I on
tile moon.
1act with tbt pi\'tment," he
erplalnod.
aucomoblle llCCidenU.
GROOVES
JlOlnUng probloma in aewage !wtdling.
"Ttwre are so many
developments In the rrwdicnl
profession that are fall-outs
from the space ttchnok>gical
l'ffort
This Pl'Qbltm was JOI ved
wtth the plaeinc of the small
crovu to divert wattr. as
researched by NASA
laboc'ltories In Vlt&inla ar'ler
many planes smashed on we.t
runways..
Still another can dboo\Ttt lf
a ptf'tOn lJ under tbt lnflut.DCC
of dNp.
Relumhtg lo the OOlll of lhe
space program, Sm\th pointed
out tJiat lhc moner spent on
space ls not actuali,y apent In
spece bot on earth. The larje
p.ayroll yieJds • large lncomt
tu rtYenue, for eumple. .. "'' r.ave scitnusts who are
s('('()f"l(f to none and "'-'e ha\·e
excellent tl'Chn1ciB.ns. ··
The space progranl also h.la
rontribu ted to tht> safet y of.the
IJnitHi Sta1es, Smith added.
In the aru ol fabrics, tM
materl11a devdoped !or apace
uits evenlUa.Jly will eomt ooto
the mar-et. Smith said.
·· Flttmen now are profiting
from the heat resistant
materials."
111e next major space
p r o g r a n1 "'Ill be the
Skyl•b l>"'JOCI. Smith Mid
which will Jt>e three crews or
W-.. m<n orbiting the •arlh
in a 41.1-foot·loog vehicle that
is 21.6 feet In diamettt, the
largest ,·ehicle ever put into
orbit.
"The space pr0gram 11 the
lowest funded program we
have. It is lower than either
the acriculture or foreign aid
progrtms.
Special ne""' groo\•rs on the
frfeway pr.e.\·ent cars from
h) droplan.ing 1n "'l'l iA'eather .
"t\t C'et1ain speeds. 11re
prt!!SW'l' and "depth of water.
v. heels ar'-' Ii fled and lose ron·
Another new device can
detect variations in paint
pigments.. This will be: useful
Ul the investigation of
The: fint CNW will spend •
days In spitee and the neat two
"'ill remain for 56 days each.
studyinf the sun, obser\'tng
"'atu suRfllies on the earth
and ri!h In the ocean and pin-
"Ltt's keep this nation
where she's always been -
number one. Don't get so far
down on the space program.
It's not co.sling you a lot of
money."
Wave of Popularity
Woman Piped
Waterfront The
•
LOS .\~GELES tAP I -
\\"ith a pistol on her hip,
J o elle n Natow walks
gangplanks and climbs ship
Ladden ln Los Angeles harbor.
getting big smiles from crag·
gy~aced loopboremen.
''It's really nice to see
something pretty around here
instead of the same old cops,"
observed a veteran welder as
1'1rs, Natow , believed to be the
nation's first female deputy
port "'arden . passed by In a
trin1 skirt.
Spacecraft
Sewn U~
Mrs. Ann Bieroda's sewing
is out of this world.
She's a s pa ce·age
seamstress who designs,
develops and finally sews the
multi-layered plastic thermal
insulation blanket! that are
wrapped around much ol the
hardware on spacecraft.
The Br oo klyn·born
grandm o ther of four
younpters ha s worked in the
electronics Industry for more
than 15 years .
.. Along the "'·harves and
aboard the ships t h e
longshoremen grin and wave
al me." !llrs. Natow , 29, said
appreciati\'ely. ..Some e\·en
shake my hand."
Harbor offici"als sav r.trs.
Natow is the first ·female
deputy port warden to serve at
any major port in the United
Stales.
In her job, Mrs. Nat.ow
boards foreign and American
vessels in .Jbt: 3.0CWl-acre
harbor.
Flan1mable cargoes must be
inspected for proper handl ing
and all fueling operations
checked to guard against
pollution.
:\1rs. Natow also handles
theft complaints from women
"·orking at a harbor cannery
and teaches classes .in female
self-defense.
Since the ~larbor Patrol
"'ork.s "'·ith the Coast Guard
and other government agerr
cies against illeg<tl transporta·
lion of aliens and the smug-
gling of dangerous drugs, she
is armed with a .38-caliber
revolver.
She is used to guns. She
transferred lo the job after
being a city policewoman for
four years. She is n1arried to a
Aboard
Patrol
motorcycle policeman and
they ha ve two sons. Scott, 8,
and Todd. 10.
\li'ouldn 't a man be better
suited for harbor •wk~
"Not at all," says !llrs.
Na1ow. "f"m expected to
perform the same tasks as the
41 male deputies here . We
palrJ>( by boat. car, -heiiCopter
and· motorcycle.
"But J've always dooe \\-'ell
at n1en's activities. J'm learn·
ing to pilot 1he tioats and I
repair my ov.•n car. I love
riding motorcycles and tinker-
ing "''ith ffi)' SW:uk..i. ·•
r..trs. Natow O"'-'eS her job to
the woman 's liberation move·
ment , said Pat Grutsch, chief
deputy port warden.
"The people downtown said
I'd have to take a woman on
lhe force. -and I thought it
would be great." he said_
Sex wasn't the ooly obstacle
1'1rs. Natow had to overcome.
She had to learn the esoteric
language of the port. "There·s
a camel loose in tt>e channel .
Get a sea gull to pi ck it up.''
she was told by radio.
"A wharf r,ile is anoat," she
translated. 'and we need a
refuse boat to pick it
up."
SUSAN FERGUSON
Graduates
To Mar (y
Air. and ~lrs. Rober t
Ferguson of ~tission Vle}o
have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter. Susan
Lee Ferguson and Theod ore
e1ink·SChuurman. both UCL~
ltaduates now Ji"ing 1n
Newport Beach.
The future br ide be longs to
Delta Della Delia sorority and
teaches at l lniversity High
School in Irvine. lier finncc,
son of ~ft. and 111rs. llendrikus
Elink-Schuurman of Palos
Verdes Est::otes. is a member
of Phi Kappa Sigma .
A June 30 \\"l'dding is
planned in the First Bapt ist
Church of Laguna Hills.
RENT·A·PAINTING -Hanging an exhibit, sponsored by the Sales and Rental
Council of the Newport Harbor Art Museum, are (left to right) Mrs. Robert
Perkins and Mrs. Robert Bonsack. From Page 15
Your Horoscope Tomorrow Surprises Ahead
Wedding
Plans Told
•
1'·1r. and ~1rs. F red
Aquarius: Charige Spotlighted "There's one in Zurich
which computes your health
cell by cell. It is lmp:>ssible to
make a wrong diagnosis and
this computer will be here
very JOOn.
One uncle, a funeral dirr...:-
tor, would ask me "who our
next customer would be, and
invariably I was right in my
predictions."
ReCup ido of 1-Iuntington Beach
have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter.
Marcie Joann ReCupk:Jo to
David Clinton Reeves, son of
Mrs. Richard Crandall, also of
1-luntington Beach. SATURDAY
JANUA11.Y 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
Habit patterns are difficult
10 break for those born under
Fixed signs, which are
Taurus, Leo, Aquarius and
Scorpio. Conversely, the Com·
nwn signs are constantl y
c b a n i: i n g , e.1perimeoting.
challenging tradition. These
are Gemlni , Pisces, Virgo and
Sagittarius.
ARlES (March :!!·April 191:
Dig deep for additional data.
Plenty of superficial in·
formation is available but
generally useless. One who
claims to be psychic may
merely he neurotic. Be aware
of thi s and be cautious. Don't
delegate important duties.
Chettl fine prl11t.
I Soap Off
Poison Ivy
Scrubbing well all over with
brown laundry soop still is
recommended wheh nne com·
es down with pol90n Ivy or
polson oak .
Lel the alr dry you. Do not
u,,e a towel. For best results,
arter the good scrubbing,
lea\'e • layt.r or lalher all
o~·er.
•
T AllRUS t April 20-~iay 2{ll:
Be sure you are correctly
quotl'd. Tendency exists for
others to speak for ~·nu -
without perm ission. Gemini,
· Vlrgo individuals could fi gure
prominently. Obtain hint from
Aries message. Basic change.
involving travel. is due .
GE~1JN1 (May 21·June 20•:
flealth of family memlx!r may
be of some concern. Key is to
maintain balanced. cheerful
disposition. Be diplomalie.
Purchase of gift for speci al
occasion rould lend great
cheer. Taurus, Ubra persons
are likel y to be in picture.
CANCER ~June 21-July 22 !:
Avoid self-deception. Perfect
techniques. If you are borl'd,
so will your Audience a\90 lose
interest. Pisces individual
could whisper S\\'ePt nothings.
Strive to sec situation as ii ac·
tually exists.
LEO (July Zl-Aug. 2%1:
them. Restless relative may
make unusua l request. Sense
of hu n1or "·ill aid. Don 't .panic~
LILIHA 1Scpt. 23--0ct. 22 1:
/\<cw approach now results in
so lid ~ain. Accent in.
dependence of thought, action.
Spotlight valuables, special
collections. Leo ts in pictu re.
Brin~ forth c r e al iv e
resources. De bt owed you "'ill
l>e µaid .
SCORPI O !Oct. 23-1\"ov. 2\1:
Your environment. basic
needs are emphasized. \Vbat
had been an obstruclion is
removed. You ca n find allies
where you thought only roes
existed. Kev now is to take a
chance on }·our own abilities.
You're due ror plea~nt
surprise.
SAGITTARIUS Nov. 22-Dec.
21 1: Ue \\'illin~ to laugh al
your own foibles. Spread
opcr etions; !here i.i no need
now to he limited. restricted .
One Who is fearful n~>ds en·
couragement. Give it and lift
up rnther lhan being dragged
In lu14·er li·~·rl.
AQUARIUS ~Jan. 20.Feb.
18 1: Spotlight is on change.
travel. variety. Gemini. Vlrgo
individuals figure prominently.
Highlight abilit y to analyze.
Don 't be satisfied with hap-
pen ings -find out the v.•hy of
events. Your opinion now is
valued. Kno\Y it and respond
according! y.
PISCES ~ F'f'b. 19--March 20 l:
Your natural sensi livity comes
rn fore -you are able to
understand indi vidual who has
been a puzzle. This will lea d to
s e I f ·rev e I at ion . Your
philosophica l concepts are
stren~thened . You become
better person in sense that you
know yourself.
If' TODAY IS
BIRTHDAY, ~·ou are drawn to
areas that enable you to C1lm·
municate. to dramatize. to aid
those v.·ith problems. E~
lional burden will be lifted and
you will have more fun in 1973.
Your n1ost significant month
chis year will be May. Family
dispute is settled and you
make important move in Feb-
ruary.
"In time, we will have
hospitals where our bodies can
be remade and realigned. It
will be done by machinery, not
by human hands."
He said that another uncle.
who was l'ditor and publis~er
of the ho inetown ne wspepcr,
asked him to write personals
for him. "I was to be paid 2S
cents for three items. When I
couldn"t get the articles, l
made predictions." Again, h.e
said he v.•as rorrect in those ,
loo.
The syndicated columnist,
author and lecturer began hh1
MARCIE RECUPIOO
The future bride is a
graduate of Marina High
School and her fiance is a
graduate of Huntington Beach
High School.
They plan to marry July 7 in
St. Bonaventure Catholic
Church, Huntington Beach.
On othe r medical news,
Criswell said that Peru has a
cancer cure and that it will be
in this country soon, and that
dental plates will be issued 11s
soon as one tooth is extrartl'd. radio career by v.Tillng scripts ,;-;;,--.c::c==::::=
for serials such as "Romanct' UFFELL'S The speaker, a native of ln·
diana, said he began predic·
ting at an early age. "I wail
considered a smart·mouthed
lrid by otMrs, but I was
unaware that I had any
spoctal gift."
of Helen Trent" a nd MANNING'S
··aac1<s1age wue.·· UPHOLSTERY c
He won national acclaim in 1 _.... '" WOllt ~H~~~~S 1950 · \\'hen he began broad· n. lest
easting his predictions weekly 1t22 H_.., It.Ill. :.2T'1 t:::.::02.t..~~vi>.
on coast-to-roast radio. J~~·;-;;;;~";-:;;:;;"~'~-0~2;"~~~~~~~·~~~"~·~·~· ~,.~.,~, .. ~~
M~1lGUERITA'S
MEXICAN RUTAURANT
NOW OPEN
INTERTAINMINT FRIDAYS
Selwdoyo aod SVOMleys from 6 to 10
Femily Nlte, Mondey1 ........ children SOc
Lunc heon Spec.iel -$1.15
UH NIWPOIT II.VO, COSTA MISA
TH! SALE GOIS ON I
FINAL
REDUCTIONS
' MOST MERCHANDISE
Practical issul's dorninate.
\'ou are given more
responsibility. \\rith it comes
greater opportunity. Re\\'llrd
potential also is magnified.
Older individual lends benefit
of experience. Be receptive.
Throw aside false pride.
VIRGO !Aug. 23-Scpt. 22 \:
CA'PRICOllN 1 l.>cc. 22-Jnn.
1 9~:S!udy Scorpio messsige .
Sonlt or your fondcsl hopes.
"''ishcs c11n he ru lfilh.'l'.I Key islfii----------oiiiiiio • 1/2 OFF
Finish project. f ind .,...a~s of
reachin g mor e perllOns. "'rite.
advertise and distributr . Get
around. Put ideas on paper
and take steps to prot~t
to be thorough and persistent.
Accent is on greater com·
patibilily with one who has
your be~ in1eres1s at_heart.
Stop resenting indi\'idual you
really need. __ 1
VINTAGE CARS
!hit WHk1nd on tho MALL l.
South_Coa.st?taza
. .
For A Career .•. NOT JUST A JOB
BE A ''WOMAN IN WHITE~ .
,
NIW ClAISll nARTtNO
Jan. 22 ·Fol>. S
Lifetime Pl1c.ement ·Auist1nc.e
623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 5414461
VlTIMH'I MNlflTS AVA!tAMf
" 0 PANT SUITs-llRISSU-
SWIATHS-ILOUSIS MAXl·DRISSE~ANTS
•Rl!A T SILICTION Of
JIWILiY AT RIDUCID PllCIS
SUPER SAVINGS
~J.....
BIDTIQUE I
(
' . •
'
..
-•
I
PUBLIC NOTICE
1UPllllOJ1(0U.--T-01'-THl"-
ITATI OP CAl.ll'O•NIA l'OR
TNI! COUMTT 0,. o•ANOI! 110 ... , .....
HOTICI! Qf' H•AlllNO 01' PETITION
l"O• ,.ltOIATa 01' WILL ANO l'OR l&TTIU-Tl!S'TAMENTARY
Elllfl ol l EONAMO flElllNARO
GOlOBl.ATI. 0.CMMd.
HOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN rna1
HAZEL GOl..OBLATT M> llltd ""rein 1
pttllloft !Of Probll1 qi Wiii ~rid far I~ o1 Lllll'I Tttllmtnlal'V In ll>t
Petlti-r f'lf.,..nc1 10 wlltrn h <'llldl IV<
lufflle.r 1Y•llcul1ra. 11'1d !Ill! IM Time aM pll'CI of llHrillg the Wmf Ml bten S•I tor fttlnl•l'V 11. 1m,-11 9:DO 1.m., In Int
t;O\l(tr-'! of OtPlw'tmenl Na. 3 01 1.1ill
c-1 •• , 100 Cl¥1c Cet1llr OrlYI Wiit, In
1111 Clly ct $1nl• An1, C11llorn!1,
/•
I
Ft!d.ly, January 2b. 1~73 _____ o_•t_L_V _P_tL_or_~l..._l
-PllBLIC NOTICE I PUllUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ---J., l'!CJITIOUI SUSINISt ,ICTITIOUS tUSIN.I\ N.t.Ma ITAT•.MllfT Jl'ICTtTtOUI tUSINhl 'ICTITIOUS aUSINEll
N.t.MI STATlM•NT te lGllcu,.tno "'""" lt ~ 111111,,.u NAM.I lTATt!MlllllT MAMI STAT I MIMT
fhl lol~ °"''"'"~'' llO!ng ••· Tl>t lollow4,. l>fflOlll ••• eoln11 li• IC!llDWltw;I pat~ .,, llu<D8 t11n1,,.....isr.--r t11n £LlSW01tl1i'S P'ONTC:O AUTO bV•lllHS •1! b<nln.n 11 ~ RFO+t!Ll ~HOPJ>IHG CEHlE • LEASING, ecn SO. An1Mlm l oulov1td, llETlftEMEHT HOM(S INVESTOR~. PECK"'-', Ult$ R..:lnll1 Av.,.ut,
14'US lh•dlllU AYtn ..... T""llrt. C.lltor •• An•IW!m. C1llfof'fll1 fl~ 1Ul Port 11: ... wk;~ ,.,.c;,, NtWIMll'I f14llfl, c .. 1.1or11i. '26'1
l'l!OKAM, I """I" .. po!rlntr Ip. 11:1"1' l!lllWOttl'I l'onl ll ~, 11'1( .• l eKJ., Celltor11l1 t"Cl'l•l'V PWlc+flt, "' P'•lm Otl~·t.
WMW i:i,trll'MI trt: ~C1lllorlllll, IOI S.0. A 11 •II t Im Robtrl Per00111, 11SI Porl tlle11wl!lo: fllVfflY Hlllt, Cltllornll
_ .{l{f!m __ P.tillci!lJ.,(..lU"..e.I :Ju. ltx•~ 6°•t;llllm, Clllflll011 "'lata...ltlWWl._IMtb. _w""nl1 Armuld ,.fl!Jtlnl, Jtll Vin NOOMI ••viffw--unli:-e,i1;omu ··-ll<.li.f1>H• ti Cllf!CIKJ;a f;y • <or· ~~...:--n" Crftt"fl9W StrHt, NorTll Holt.,....._, C1UforN1
,,.,,,.8nd l"Mlfe)tll. 31U V n Moord PO<lllOll. O<lvt. Htw00tl Be..OI Tnit °"~"'" 11 conch.ell" by • 0~...,r•I Sir""'· Horlll HtlllyWOOO, C tornle ·-; -'ltDlllrl G. l'"rlldtl\fll. Pr1.t4'N Tl'lli lllniNM 11 i.!1111 tot1111Klfli lly • ll••l...,,hlp lt~I 11<1,1,...111: t9!1GIKJM I f9nt•ll Tf\11 tteMment wa• lllt<I wll!I 11\t (1)1,11'1• Umllld 11t1h>thlllp ZKllaty Ptdlclnl
P>trlner"1tP • !v Cl••-ol Ota""'" c-1~ Oii J1nv1ry U. 11100.11 P1t.ot11 TIJ!t tt••imenl w•J 111,., w11n 1~~ Cou"" !<1c"~r.V l"t<llelnl 1tT3, Thl1 111tement llllld wl1h Int Coonly ty Clerk o1 0111111t C-IV on Jonu•rv 13. Tllli \lllil~llf WI$ Ill wun Illa COUl'I• GITllSON, ltATf.. Cl.i"k °' Ot<ll'IOt CDUlllV on J•l'l11••v 9, ltl] ,,,3
ly Clerk ol Of•l\UI C y Oii Jenuo~y 23, HOVT 6 l l!LL, Ally.. • bV Tt1r111 M. Wltd, Oe~uty Co1mly t H·OC
l97J JUe Wll1lllr1 llMlll~1r.i, SlllM tl:tt Cit•' l'·tJIJt
tH.OC ' LOI A11t11tt/C1ll1ot1111 tolll f'fl'M OOOOMAH,' HlltfCHll!tllG 1~d KING, OOODMAN, HtllSC 1 111:0 11111 IUNO, "4-0C: Publl1~ed Ot111ye CO<il'I 01lly Piiot, AllJI,
illty1, • l't21S1 J1n111ry 12, lt, lt •"4 F""'utr~ 1, '9if WU1Rlr. l ffi.vard, Sllitt )01
3151 Wlltlll.-. IOU4t....,,_, Slltt ., P1111fl~htd 0<1111,lt Co.If Oi ly Piiot, 1913 11-J) LOI Alltlitl• C1Hfenll1 90011 L~I Allf'ltl .. C1lltorfll1 tollt J1n111ry 10 •fld F1b1111ry 1, 9, 16,1 ---~. -'----Publl,hl!d 01011111 Co.ii O•llv P-!1~•,
PlfftlJC NOTICE -------l'ICUTIOUS SUll#lllS NI.Ml STATaM•NT
l~t loltowlng 11t•lOll• •r• dolfle o;,nrn,... 1,r.· '
VALENTINES HAlll HOUSE, m R~-t• St., "I", Cos•• M•""· C1Hton111
'''" Erk l'lul Hano(ltl, '20 Cotl1 Mfll 9t
(DIM Mell. CtlUarr;lt t2,V
M4r1•r1t l . 11.llMon, ill) Co>ll MU.
SI., Cosl1 MIU, C1ll!Ornl1 "'21
ln(1 bllllM1• 1J IMlllll conOllcftd &y
Pl•lr>erihlp
M~"l!Bre! l .... n~gn
TM1 1111err\flll li llld Wllh 11\t COlllllV
Cletr, of O<lnne COlJnl'f' on J•n. t. ltl'.l
... llLLIAM' £. Sl JOHN . County (lffK, by
Tno•eo. M. W•rd, Dil~~ly, ....
PuO!!IRed O•lnoe Coa11 Cally l'Uot
J•nubl)' q, 11, ~6, i nd F<eblu••Y l. "'J:i
----·
l'·H1ll 1vn . .Jo.. '»'·ll PUBL IC NOTICE Jonu••v 2t, •od l"ebr11ary 1, t, 11. iotJ Or'~ Co1ut O.lly Piiot, -·--~~---------1 !S5·13 _
'"" FeDtua•y 1, '·I•. l9ll PUB LIC NOTICE -------------PUBLI_C_N_'_OT-ICE-,--NOTICI! GI' MA•li+AL'S SAL•
PUBLIC NOTICK
__ _ _ _ _,.._._,, ----l'ICTIT\~~l"lu11HESS ;,,.,;m &. Roc<1uet Club, 1 C.,.p., l'l1l111HI.
NOTICI! INVITING l lDf NAME STATll!MEllT ------~'-Rllly 0. Ptldtmcw-1, Det1nd1nt. Na.'" PUBLIC NOTICE
J Ull'E•IOA cou•T 01' CALll'Olll>llA
COUNTY OF ORANGI
l'llO WKI CiYk Cttllll' Dtlft, 111111 An.i
CASI!" llUMIU ,tlllJ
SUMMON I Ploil11!lll• JERRV AOAM$
Olltnddnh: GEllALO W. MITCHELL, RAYMOND HEROLD, W. GERALD
RROWN, OOES I thro\IOll V, lnc:tu1IY1
Natkl I' hlretiy llYtll 11111 1111 lllllltd of Tiie foll<Mlo1 per1on1 ere c!Ollll,I l'ICTITIOUS SU511111$1 U1
T111sre11 ot 1!W> c ... ,, Comm11nlty Clllleo• butlne•• ··= NAME STATEMENT J UDGMENT DATE; J~flf I. 191t
Obtrlc.t ol 0<111Q1 COllnly, C.IHoml1. Wiii DOllAOO VILLAGE A .. A.TME NTS, Tne lollow\119 perions l •f cloltlQ Iv_ Ylrf\!c et 1n t•~vltq(I IU111":# ."1
rKlll.-. snlect bids 1111 IO \l:tlO 1.m .. Fri-LTO.. lllJ Well C<111Jl Hlghwey, ouilntst .11:· Oac""'tie' 11, 1tn bY ~ N!Uftlcl~ (111,irt,
ct1y, P"•tlrvl"" t, lt1l. 11 1111 ~cn.11l"lf Nt-r l 1ac11, C1Htornl1 9'l66Q.. MALOON ENTERPRISES, 16961 Centr1I Ot•RO* COllnly Jlldlcl;ll Dl1lrlct ~or "Id KllOlll dlllrkt loc.oted .. Tl+E-· ·GRliENWICH ·G•OOP, IN· Go1111rd SI .. Ha.], Hu111lng1on lltilCll, (DUnly ot Or1noe. Still ol c11/toni11 ••
llJO Atll"lt A'fllllle, C<11l1 M1U, CORPORATEO 1 Otl1w1r1 torplll'lllon, C1!1torn!1 fl'-M on 1 ll.ldgm1nr ""'"eel In 11.,.,.. of SwlM 4 C.tlUornl1, •I which time 11ld bids Will be llll West COIJI Hlgllwiy, Htwpor1 Ollnr}a R. Sc ... !!, 16961 Goln.1rd SI .. ra.:<11111 Cll>ll. ii Clll'p. 11 lllClgment c~t
Pllllllcly QJ>lneG Ind ttotd lot: Beach, C•Ulorol1 9lMO No 1. ttun1l1111ton Bncn. C11ltornl1 or and ag.iln~I Rllly O. Prklemor1 •• Purchls.t ol Two u~.a M1oneTk liPI HUNT BUILOlNG CO'tPO•ATlON, • 9'lU6 ""9menl <ll'Dlor, illoWlnG I NI N IIMI DI
Sellc!rlc Typewrl1tr1. Delilwara COl'"potll1on. ']1 Norlro M1kolm H. CllCll.., 2Glfl lft'Perill Ca\l'e SUl.10 act113llv <1ue on ~•kl ludt-1 on All bldl It• lo be In ICClll'dGntt wllll Ftodt<1tlr. S!tH I, El Pi11a. Tex11 I.•,.., Hunllnololl Rt.Kl\, C•lllotnli ll>t dale at rile l1"11rw:t DI wlci e•«UllllD, t
IM ln1true1111D~ l l'ld Coodltlon1 1nd Thi• bu!.1"9A 11 being conduc'90 lly • ~ hlvt levlea upon 111 lllt rltftl, !Ill• •l'ld Ill· Specltk1tlooa wl>kh 1r1 MW on me end Llmlttd Partntontp, Tlll1 ousll'IH• 1, 1;1elng cal'lduct..i ~Y 1 1er.,1 et s.:ikl j~ment dtbtot 111 tll• Pf"""
m1y be """td In Tiii offlt 1 ot !hf THE GAEENWICH GROUP, llltll!ff".sllip Pl<'IY In lllt Cooo1y ot Or1f181, $1111 ot P11rcha1l1111 Allt"nl ol •1l<1 leho.;11 Oll!rlct INCORPORATEO DonM I . Scllt!t Cltllfarnl1, d~erllled ., tollow1:
EKn lll<kltr mull 1ubmlt won 1111 bl.a 1 Tlll1 ~llletMnl IUtd with !tie County Thi' 11,remrnt tiled wlln 111t COIJftl'/ Lot l~ ct Traci SM. 11 per m1p
CIJ.1111<'1 CllK\, c1n !Hed C111Ck, or bid-Cltr~ ol Or1ng1 Coun!Y on Oec. 26, 1917 Clerlo: of Oflilll)e C"""IY Oii J•n, t , 1911 r«orct~ ln lll'Ok 215 ti P~e1 'B lo 71
""'I OllOd m-p1y1bll to Illa 0<der 91't>Y Tntrt•i M. W1rd, OePllty CounlY \VILLIAM E. 5T JOHN, County C! .. k bY lnclu!lve ot M!scelllllltoU' M1ps, 111
Ille Ca.II Community (OlllVC Ol11rfe1 Clerk. llltreu M. Ward, OepWty corct1 of 01111111 C-!y, C1lltornl1
Super Market Purchase
Oilted JlllUI"" 22, 1913
WILLIAM E. SI J011N
Cou11ty Clerlr.
S1UA•T L. G•ANT
l o tl>e 0.llndanll; A clYll tompllint
11t1 Ol:'ell lllf<I by tnc pl•l11Utt -0111111 vw.
II you wi111 lo <lei.no ltil1 i.wwr1, you
rnu11 UN-in 11111 COll<"1 • -111111 116e.Uh-o In rHP0111• Ill Ille compl1l11t (or a wrlfftn
er ortl plaadll'l!ll, U I J111tle• COll•ll wlllllo
JO diry1 11!.i" !Ills '"mfl!Clnl 11 servod on
YO\/, OthffWl... your delault will Ill
entered on 1pplk 1tton by lhl pfalntllf 11'1d
1111! court moy enler I ludD,...,nl -cr•!nll
you for Ille m11ney ar o!lllr rllllf r ..
q""11ec1 In 1ne comPl1lnl.
flo.rd ol Trutlffl In 1n IMll\lnt not leH l'm11 l't2tJI Comm<mly knc1Wn •1: U.02 Grtnw\1
lh1n tlv1 Pt<ceot CS~\) ol lht sum bl<I 11 CALl'AS, CALFAS & WILLIAMS P11bli1111d Orlfl9e Co~SI Cally Piiot, Mlu lon V'elo. Ctllfarnl1
I fllllrlnl1111111 Int blddtr wlH enter lnhl l 'I': E. li!119fM W.itll J1n111ry 12, It, 26 IM<I Ftbru1ry 2, tlOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttlll Oii
ll>t prOIJOU<I Cootr<ld II 111e sctmt h 2444 wnt111r1 slvd. 1•1J 19-13 Frj<11y, Ffllr~•rv 2, 11r13, 11 10~00 o'cloc:ll.
To celebrate the entr y ol Britain, Denmark and Ire·
land into th• European Common Market, Spode Ltd.
"bas designed thls souvenir {rom fine-bone china .
The ceremoqial selling is a rich cobalt blue· em·
bossed with 24 carat gold. The 5,000 European Com-
1nunity plates \Vill sell for $59 eaCb wb.ile the 500
cups will cost $245 a piece.
nt Alnlfll Wey l·I'
H1wporl l tKll, C•Hlonll.o
AttOl'MT for PtllH-
PullUtM<I o·~ eo;r;:, 0111v PU0t. J111U1rV U , 'U and F1bru1rv 1, llrll 2S9-7l
...
PUBLlC NOTICE
PICTITIOU5 IUSINEif
NAME STATl!M&NT
1l)llowL1111 ""''°" It Cloll'l!ll llU1lne•S
ti 10ll wl"1 to ... 1111 lllricl II Ill •I· tlll'nty In 11111 mtller. ~OU Should do U
11romplly " 11111 .,..,., plalellnt, II any.
m11 be tU!ld 111 llmt. 0 Dted OICemller 26, ltl2
SEAL
l werded la him. 111 Ille t\19111 of l1ll1trl to SHll MCMIU, Clllf, "40l A,,.,, at Mt,..1181'1 Offlc1, C011!1llOl.IH
tM!tr ln10 IUC:ll contr.KI, the prot«dl 01 Publllhld Or1n111 COllll 01lly Piiot, PUBLIC NOTICE lOUJ Crown V1llcy 1'11i:w1y, CllV flf
1n1 cl>tck will be farteUed, or In •ht e<He Jt>nu•rY \?, 19, 26 •nd Ftbr111ry 2, Laguna Nl11uet, Coonty ot OttllQt, Siii•
Of • llOlld, ll>t !Ull l!lm 11\ttli>I Wiii be 1913 1~-13 ---DI C1ll!Ornl11, I wltl Mii 11 Pt1llllC lllC·
lorltllad lo 11Jd IChool district. ---------------IC,..fll tlon 10 Ifie h!;hett blddlr, lo• c•tll In No bidder may wl11~clr1W hl1 bid far • PUBLIC NOTICE IUPllllott COUll:T 01' THE l•wl11I rnooer 01 ,,.. Unlllld s11tu, ·111 Wl l.LIAM E. ST JOHN, Cl••• Pl•iod of lorty-llv• {U) d.!iy1 1tter me STAT• o .. CALlt'GllNIA l'Olt '"" rlghl, 11u~ ind lnlffesl ol 11ld IU~
By Hll"rlll l . D<>b3on, Ofl>U!Y doi'9 "' 1111' Illa openCno !lllf"eol. TH I! COUNT't' OF GltAHGE n;.enl debtor In Illa 1bove i:ltltrllled pt.,.
H1n1y V. Clttry The IOlrd o1 Tr111fHi rirservei lhe HOTICI! TO CllEDITOJllS ... A·ISIU perty, or •O much ,,,.,eal •• n11y 1>0
AllDl"lllY for Ptlhtllfl llf"IYlllfll ol relectrnv· 11ny Ind 111 bids Of IUl'l!lllOll COUllT 01' TH • NOTICI! 01' Ml!AlllHO Of' Pl!TITIO N l'llCHPr\' lo lillhfy 111d n:ecutt011. wll!I
111 Newport Cet1l1r Orlvt lo w1I.-. Illy lrr-ouhirltln or 1,,,. STATI! 01' (ALll'O&NIA l'OW: l"Otll PJllO.ATI! Dt' WILL ANO FOi. lctrueG ln1tresr Ind cosll.
Newport Bndl,. CtllfoNlll t11rmoll!IH In 1ny bl<! or In lhe Q.icldlng. THI!: COUHTY 01' OJllANGI! Lllnlll5 Tl!STAMl!.NTA•Y Dated J11RUllry 9, 197.I.
Tll' 1110 '41·11'0 ()pen: 5ebruary t , 1073 . ll;DO 1.m. ) 111 A·JNIJ E1t1t1 of LEE ll08ERT VIGARIO IKI Oivlslon: ~Ill Or1111111 Coun1Y 1~· Al!Onlly for ll'l•lwllfl NOftMAN E. WATSON Es!f!t . el "FRANK CllOCKER, LEE R. VIGAIUO 1Q LEE VIGAll.10, OILLARO O. WLLKlll.SON OllAHGE COUNTV FURNACE &. SUP· PullU•lled Orange Cwst O•llr Piiat, ~ly. Roud of Ttlllltiti; Oe<:eised. Deceased. Miltihll, 0t111oe Counfy
f"LV CO .. JOOS So. H1ll1d<ly St., Santa J1n11ery 26 Ind F~uary 2, t. '" Pll.bll.\11«1 Otinoe Coe•I Cally Pllol NOTICE IS HE•EIV GIVEH 10 !he NOTICE IS HEREflY GIVEN 1hlll By M. L. fl,_.., No, 20, Oepuly
Ane nm lt11 211·73 J1n111rv l6 •nd Ftbru1ry 2, 1'13 ua.7.1 credUar• ot Ille aixw. 11111>td decfdffrl B.,.nke T11rntr 11.n llltd herein • pelUlon 1wh•1 & t111c~t c ... , 1 Cll'J.
D. W, P1y111 Com1Yny. ll C1lllorn!1 -----~~~----1 -------thl l Ill Pl'$OllS l!iYh'l(I t lilm1 19111MI 11'11 for Probalt ol Wiii Mid for ISf.uanc• of c/I Mlllaftmllll ltr'Y4«1 Cl.
corPOttlfall, *5 So. Hallld•Y SI., S1n11 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE stld <lecedlnt 1,1 rlQlllrf<I lo !iii llllnl. !. 't t t r 1 Tesltll"llllt•rv 10 Petltionitr * wnt l'-'11 ''"°"
ANI 92102 wllll fht ntcl Sll<'( vour:lltn, In Ille olflu rtltrl'rlCf la Wftlch 11 made fw fuf1her S111!1 Alla, c111...-..1 Tiiis buslnns 11 Wino cal'lducted llY • --------------of the d trt. o1111e _, eft!Uled COi/ti, or ptrtlcul1r1, t nd 11111 Ille time l lld olece Publli.lled Ori1np9 Coat! 01Uy 1"!101.
CllfllOJ'lllon. fUPEJlllO• COUll:T 011' THI! P"ICTITIOUI IUllNESS 10 prelllll llltfl"" wtlll n,. nect ltarY of Mltll'l!ll !hi 11me M1 been ffl for Jan,..ry 17, It, 26, lt13 11J.'3 C1ll1 M. lynd.11, STit.TE OF CALIFOll.NIA FOJll NAM• STATEMENT YO\/Chtn, IO Ille unoHr&lgned 11 #II office Ftb<Uillty 6. 1t1J, at t il.m., !n !ht ---
S1Cr1l1ry/lr1•wre< THE COUNTY 01' OllAllOE O:~~eio"'•·"". 11111 Pll""'91 trt clOlng of Ills Anorney Roi*"! L. Humpl'lreyi. courlr-.. ol Oepoirlmen! No. J ol lil td PUBLIC NCYl'ICE llli1 1f1ltmto! llled Will\ Ille County •O No. A·F.a!' 0 1$00 Ac!IMS AYfl'lut, 5ulte Numbet" :11)6, court, II 7'DO Civic Caflllf OrlYI We1!, In
Cltrk ot 0r!tf191 County on JOfll.lo1ry 73, TICE OF NEARING OF Pn'ITION REOMAN INOUSTll:IES, 21SS So. Cbtll Mesi, Cllllomll mu, whkll II the !he Clly 01 Slni. AM, Calllarnlil. -------11'73. By Tl'll!rtw M Wtnl. Oepuly COllDIJ l'OJI OJIOElt OIJl&CTINO COH• Hl lllaway SI., S.n11 AN, C1lllornle pll(I ol busll'lus of llll u!\der$IOl!ed In aU D<tlecl J1nu1ry 11.-1911 l'ICTITIOUS IUSINll!SS
Clark. VEYAHCE OF llEAL PltOPERTY n10s maller1 pertalnl"fl I'll ,,. ellll11 of ulcl WILLIAM E. ST JOHN Iii.Ml! ITATl!Mll!NT
Fl21tl PUlllSUAHT TO OPTION AGREEMENT Cllffor<I Gtorte ReldFno. non w. clecedent, within four ""'""" lfflt Ille (Ollflly Cieri< Tnc foHo;,,·ing persons ••• ool1111 bill
PuDllsntd
J1nU•rY 26
OrlflOI Coll! Cally Pola!, Eslate ot GEORGE IC. KRESS, Decets• Edlnotr, 5'1111 Ml, C1Hfarnl1 fl704 first PllbllullOfl ot 11111 llOllci. MICNAl.L Gl'JllTNEJI 111$1 11:
111d Febr11<1<y 2, t, 16. eel Dorothy J11n lludlflll, 12<162 W. Oiled Jan111ry 16, 197:J ·~ MlwMf"Getland PATIOS WEST, JH51 CMlfM
"" 2S2·7l NOT ICE 15 HE"RERV GIV EH Ill.ii ll>t Edl1'11191'-, S111t1 A111, C.llfarnll '111W JAME5 w . CROCKER Oii (l~I Drive. .. 11 ttlJ C1pl1tr1nC1, Stn Ju1n Caph l1-, tu71
Pe!lllOll ot ~Im s. Fr1nl(ll11 11 E~KU!or lhl1 l>lrSI""'" II btlng CMllllC!ed by • executor • lllwperl Snell, C•lllorllll Hut ICtlloOfl P. Wtlll " M1rg1rtt •. Wlttl.
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlTIOUS aUSL NE51
NAMI' STAT EMENT
l11 e toUowlng per.ans "'' 1101no l)U1lne11 IS: E. I.. PAVHE COMPANY, JOOS So.
1'1111.ao&y SI., S.nl1 An<I '1'1102
O. W, PAYNE COMPANY. "
Calllorn!11 corPQr•!lon, JOO~ So. Hllladay
sr .. 5en11 Ana '1'11112
T~t. bu11ntl1 11 Mlng CO!ic!VC!ed by ..
Cotjl11t1tlon
Cella M. ZVndl
Sec•tt••VI ltelliUrlt
Thi' ~llltml'fll llltil wl!h lflt COllnlY
'"''~ cl O•&•IQC! Cnunly on; J fn. n. 19n. By lfltrts• M War.,, Oepuly COlJnty
Cle••
ot '"' LISI Wiii ot G-9'! • KrH1, UmU..:1 pOrlntnlllp cl the Wiii.ai 11\e Tel, S40·S400 llllO E. C1!•ver11 sr.. AhUet11. 0..CeilltCI, lor an ord1r IUillorlllng illld Cllllord G. Rt1<1!ng aDCNe nllnld dtcedenl AllO!'MVI tor ,.lllllONf C1ll!Orol1, t1001
dlrKUng '""' E•~UIO!' ol '"' Lost Wiii ol Oorolhy J , Rlldlno ll:OIEll.T L. HUMl'Hll:EYS P11bll11'11d Otlnot COISI o a;1y Pilot, Thl1 bUll11t1s Is btlng Cal'ld.icltd by
wld Oec:ea1n1 I'll con"HY thl P•OPfrlY This 1'9l1menl fftlld With Ille Counl'/ ISOf.Adl"'' """IHI · Jllnuary ;o. 11, u, ltll lte-n ltldfvlcluals/Jlllnt T1n1nl1. Mreln1fttr clescrll>lid lo Vk1or Stt>oen Clerk ol 0t1noe Coun1v m J <1nu.arv t. 1973 ~lie Nimlllr 1N K•illlllll P. W•ll1 ~nil M<1r+cn F. Schoen In compUan<;_t wl!ll WILLIAM' I!. ST JONN, COUMTV CLEJll K Cllftl Mt11, Cilllorlill nn• PLJRLJC !':OTICE M1r111ret fl. Wtlh
11'11 !erms ol '""' • Oplton Agr .. mtnt llV Thetffl M, W1r<1, Del)<rly. Tel: C7UI .Mt-OtfO This slttemtnl lllt" wllh 11:\1 C.Wn!Y
fnlMe<I IMIO by decedent In Ills fllttlme, P22'H AllGl'MY for l!JKUl'll• 1 ·--------,_,--------Clerk ot Orefl<lt (OlJnly Oii: J1n. U. 1'13.
ll ~Her, n111 been Ill for hearing In P~blli.lltd Or1119t CN~I Cally PUol, Publlsllld Or•no• Coast Dailv Piiat, II nn• WILLIAM I!. ST JOHN, COUNTY CLEJllK, O~pilrtment J of 1M ill<Wt enUTllJd Cour1 J.1nu1ry 12, 19, :it I nd f1bru1ry 2, Jeouary 19, 26 olld f'tbrlllty 1, 9, l'ICTITIOUI SUSINl!!SS Ry llltr~SI M. Ward, Otpu!y on Ille 8th doiV of FcDtu1ry, 1973 11 t :OO 1~73 74.73 1973 1,1•13 NAME ITATEMl.HT
AM. _ lht toUowl"Q person1 1re ooln11
T11t real proper•y 10 ~ convev1<1 11 PUBLIC NOTICE PURI.IC NOTICE 1>1111n10 •$: lltstribect as t0Uaw1: • MOHLE•, Gii.EG G AHO
""" Publl1ned Or1ng1 CN~! Delly Piiat
Januar1 19, 16 •Md F11Jr11i1ry '· t, inJ us-n Loi S Tract llll I > pet map recorc!t<I ASSOC IATES, N8wport ProteHlcn~I
In Rook 122, PllllfS .u and ,s, S,.4111' • tlP» RuUdlng, SUU1 110, :!II' S•~ Miguel Orlv1, PUBLIC NOTl(,'E
MIK,lllneou• M<11>1, Recorc!s 01 Orenge "ICTITIOUS IUSlllESI , HOTICt TO CJtl!.DITOlll \ Newi>orl Beach. C1lllarnl1 flt.60 .I·---~==~~~·-=---Coun11, C1lltornl1. llAMI! ITATll!MEHT SU,.1!1110• COUJllT 01' THI! lloberl Illy Gr-.IQ, Sltl Ptrk Wt•! l'ICTITIOUS IUlllll!.IS O~led J•n11ery 19, 191J. l lle lollowlng Plftanl 1r1 <loino STATE OF CALll'Oll:NIA ·~ AY11!111e, S•n OllflO, CA. Ni.Mil STATIMll!HT
Wtl.LIAM E. ST JOHN, l>ll•f11et1 as: TNE COUNT'( or: o•ANOE G'°'" w Mohler. 2621 Et Vokill Th' lollawlno Ptl'llln1 ... do!~Q FlU40 CovnlY Clerk SPENCER STREET MANOA, lll3 Ne. A•FJtlr Piece, H.cltnd.J l+el1h!s, CA. buslnt s• i o:
Selim s. Fr1rtllth1 WKt COii! Hlonw.y, N....-porl &eKI\, E1!lllt of ACHILl,E B. CANHIHG. l~I This bullness •• con<luetod OY • general CASA &ONITA VILLAS. 110S J1m,k • '""' l'ublllMd Or~ Co.II 01Uy l'llol,
Ji111u&rv 16, 111<1 FtDtuary '· 9, ,,, 191J ,,,.,,
PUBLIC 1"0TICE
P1tlll-f In Pf'I "'' C1lltarnl1 fl660 ACHILLE BOTRIUNE CANNING, l kl Pirlnttsnlp. II.Old. Colla Mesi, (1IUornl1 lt:lll l.11111 Aa. Ava. Th1 Greenwich Group, lncorporllad. ii A B. CANN ING, Detea~. •otiert Ri y Gregg, l1.,,.ence W. IAldllM, 11(15 JllT .. IC'
'
••
'
.....
'.'" _,,, Delt war11 wr~1tlon, lDl WHI Co.11 · ,,, S H••••Y GO•<• -,.... PdrlMr •o·•, C-0• M•••. <••···-· TPI: !7Ul ;...~ .... . HIOllW~y<.....l!__~ flHQ!,_ CallfarN1 Cf:fil'Of"9.-d1 I~ oemed ~i Tllll lllllf'ntlll ...... tlleci wfl" Ille Coun. ~lie M.:._ s111liv1n, "'
Pubfr"1ed O••fl9t! Co.ill 0•11~ l'llol, ~-_, Ill Pfl'$GRll llaY1no d.in11 ~Ills! "" "' C"'"k of Or•llOI c-•Y on J•n. 2, lfn O•lw. N'wpOrl ll•ACh ~v 10, ,, """ F~rv 2, 19 3 27S-7] J·f.':i'W:.~·: ~:t'::S, C::~~' !;jld dtC8iJfllt 1r1 rtc1111rtd to tiff thefn, ~~·ric.:·11,.AKH 11!~!,i :•:;::.•.~fi, bllnO elll'ldlKleof IJy •
I •1N BL!C OT Thl1 bllsllltls Is ~ col'ldudtd tw 1 wllll 1111 l'llCUSI"" voudtlri. In Ille affke AnOlllllYS AT U.W L•w•en<• w. Mldllll<I SUl'EIUOll COURT OF TH E PU N ICE . Llml!MI Pll'1ntrshlp. ot !'lie dtrk of !Ill lballe llllltttd court, or l ultt lll4 Ulllll la!lll l "'t, 1111• s1at~m1nt Ull!d wllll 1111 COllD!V
STATE 01' CALJFOllNIA f'OI ---THE GllEENWlCH GllOU P, 111 prewnt !hem, Oliltt> Ille ~~l'V SU I llrltl Cler~ 01 Orange Cau11ty on J1n. t , Im by TME COUNTY OF Olllit.NGE SUPE•131 CGUllT 01<, TH,E INCORPOllATEO vaucllers, lo Ille Uf'IOlr&lllfl9CI 11 t s .. Dfete, CA. '2111 Theresol M. Wilrd. O.-·-C---CO-•
'.,., '''''''' ... cl hls 1narnev1. GIB.SOff. DUNN I. ,...., -·., •· NI. it.·7"M • • '"'FOR Tl'll1 111i.ment.ftlld with Ille C-ty CtlllJTCHER, i50 Nawpor1-center Drive, Flll64o ' • -,nelf
NOTICE OF Nl!.ARtHG OF Pl!'rlTtON Tttl' COUNTY 01' OJllANGI'. CllR cl 0.111111 C.ounly on: o-ntier 26, Newport lll\h• Calllomli, wllldl Ii Ille P11blls.llld Or.,,.. COlll Dally Pllol, 1"Ubll11\ed Or1n<1e COit! Ot lly 1"1\ot,
FOlt PROBATE OF WILL ANO FOR H•. A·74t1t 1,n. •Y Theresa M. Wltd, Dll>\lly COllnly -~-of 1>1rtlnes1 ol 1111 ,_._..__,, ln Ill J•-l'V s. u , lt , 2', llJl 10-1l J1nu1ry u. It, 2• I nd Febru••Y !, ltlJ LEnERS TESTAMENTARY NOTICE 8F HEA•ING OF PETITION Clerk.. -.., __ ,.._ to-7:J
Estall ol AHOREW JOSE pH l'OR OROElll OllECTING CON· CA' PAS CA&.l'AS a WILLIAM' m1tlltr1 Olflllnlng to 1111 et:lllt of llld Pl/BLIC NOTICE
''' ' .' •• "' , c!e«dent, wi11..ro tour """'"'' •"'"" f"8 PUBLI OTICE CREIGHTON, 0ec: .. 1ea.. A CE <AL ~tllO..EltTY Sy; ....... W•bll ·-· -·DllcltlOft ol tllll l!llllel. c N HOTICE ts HERE!IV GI VEN Illa! PUJllSUANT TO OPTION AGllEEM!!:NT J'4f, Willfllrw ~. "01li!d January '· lt7:J 1·------.,-c------1-----
RUTH A. CRCIGHTOH. formerly Ru!n Ellare ol WANDA C. Kii.ES$. DetNtlld. 11"'1 Mll!lcl, Cl lll, ...OJ RICHARD G. CANNING NOTIC• 0,.IT~;zTlll!'S IALa l'ICTITIOUI IVllllESS Thoner. na1 flied 114trtln a pet!tlon far NOTICE IS ttE AEBY GIVEN fllll 1111 1'22211 of toe Wiii of NAMI ITATl!Mll!NT
Stable Occupation
Prooall ol Will aM ror is1uaMe ot Let• Pallllon ol SELIM S. FRANICL!N Wllo Publl$htd OrlftOt COMlll Ollly Piiot E)( .. K~-'-·"' -O •-' ..... "'57 OO o'<O T~e tollowlnQ person 11 <lolno DUlllltU '''' Teslan;.enlary !a m1 petitioner 11~1 pelill°" 10 Ile appelnroo 1~ E•K utor J•~" 12, 1t, u and f'ebrua" 1, I ........ 111'""" n "" lbru•rv t7, 1m, 11 2: OCk 11 r•ttrence ro whlrh I• mac!e lor tur!ller of !he Last Wlll or u !d O~nl, !or en 1913 1QS.13 GISSDH, DUHN I. CllUTCHD f".M .. II 1111 IOlllll ll"Ofll erur1nce of the . JAV'• TilNI< SERV1CI!" ANO SUP·
o.rllcutar1, and 111 .. 1 the time and place order aurnorlllllQ "nd cl!tecrlllQ the E•· IYt '#1111-A,,...._ old Or1110t C011nly C011rl~ tocared In PLY. 1~0 AnahelM AVllnue, Na. 1411,
of hH•IDll 1n. \.lime he' l>C'en lei tar ec11tar of tnc Loni Wiii ot W8flda c. PUBLIC NOTICE UO New,art C...., Ol'IYI 1111 200 block ot Wed Slnl• A111 BIV<l., CO!t!I Mela, Cilllornlt '2621 .
. , K'"' o-··-,, ,_ .. _ ··-' Newport INclt. Clll"'1111 ""° (lorm•rly W9'1 Sixth Slret:t>. "' S11n!D Joy "'"''' ··-· ,,,, ·~_ ..... _ abruarv IJ, lt73, et 9:00 a.m .. In lilt ' "'" ' ~..-~, '"' proper V Tth {114) "'4-!tfl An•. C•ll'··ol•·· EOUl"AO<E T•USl '" ,... ..,,_, .... '" courlroom at Oep8r!men1 Ho, J of uld htre!naf!er "eKr!becl to Vlclor Schoen •tt-·" ~ •--••-·~ '"' ' Ave11ue, No. Ufl Cosl1 Me11, Ctlll«lll•
A Shoe-in for Gals
TUCSON !AP~ -They s hoe
horses, don't they?
Zip Peterson runs :i school
here to train h orseshoe[.§:. And
gir ls are usua lly his besl
s tudents .
"Girls \\'ho ha\'e the talent
do a much bette r job than
fello ws," P eter son says •
"They don't want to hurt th e
horse and a r c m uch more
m e ticulous.·•
Stude nts altcnd hvo, three·
hour sessions a ~·eek fo r e ight
\veeks. T hey \\'ork w ith live
h or ses only during t he last two
w eeks.
100 M•rlo ' s,--I •• IO O ''''' ,. "'"'" ,.. ..,..., ., COMPANY, 11 ciUly 1Pl>04!lled tnr.:Ut~ ..,,,, courl, at IOO Civic Cini~ Orlw. Wast. In ~ " · ,.....,.., n com lflCI w II f"ublltlled Ofl l'IOI Co.1! OlllY Piiot unOtr n,. delOS °' trUlf d"led February ..
ti.em a nd m a ke ti.e m Start a ll rhe City cl S<!lnre An<1, C1IUarnl.1. Ille lermi al file OPilon .lll•Hrnenl enlrrld HOTICI!. TO C•Et>ITOllS ,, •• ,,,, ll· lt . ?I IM l'tbt"Uf" L •• I '""''' < ·-"" .,_, Thl1 llutlntH I• 1>el119 Cal'ldllCled by 1~ Oell!d January 2J, 1913 Into l!Y <lteeclenl In her lifttlmt , '' 11ller, IUPll•ICHI: COU•T 01' THI! '"' • ''" Kt, mlldt by · L"'"' •llCOl'"u••" lndlvldu1I. over . WtLL!AM E ST JOHN, na5 l>ee<I .. , '°' l>tarlroy lo Oepar1 ...... 1 l STATE 01' CALll'O•NIA FOil 1913 101·n 1111 March 3, 1'69, In boot HM, PIOt ,13 ot Jey o . Peper
T , ha <-·"y co-1 of TM atio¥t entllltd toorl on Ille 1111 111, TH& COUNTY o,. OllANGl!i Olllclel lltcard• 111 11'11 o1nce o1 ""' Coun-Tiiis 1111emr111 flied wl lh lilt_ c-rv •• 0 .uale. n.o o ne s e ver. TllYGSTiD & 0Di:L1. of Ff!Jr111ry, ltr.I II 9;00 AM. .. •• A . ,.,,. PUBLIC NO'l1CE tr RICordtt of O•l ntll County, C1Ufa.rnla, Clerk of Ora"" Counl'f' !HI: J.nuir, u .
crippled -a live horse, and that n• we11 Olympic Blvd., suite JH Tiie re11 property 10 be conviryld b E11at1 o1 LIU. F. SHANNON. 11so bV reason of e1e11w1 111 ,,,. paymen• or 197.1. WI LLIAM c . ST JOHN. COUNTY
. . " LIS All9tlll, CIUI. MOU dei<rllled as loll~: ~nown 15 MltS. LILA F. SHANNON, porfarrNtllCI ol otillgllllon1 IKUted CLERk . By Thl!rn1 M. Wltd, l>ePu!'f'.
includes a Jot of girls. says Tll: ~lU) 417.JNO lo!~ TrKI 2531 II"'' rr'llP •Korded tormerl'f' --11 MRS. LILA F. 0 • •.411::,.ITGJI• !hereby, • Nollet ot Oel1ul1 ~nd EtKlioo ... mn I B 122 O'ICELLV 01C1fftc1 N TIC T C to Sell Unc!lf DHd of Ttll51 11.iYlng beell P11bll•l\td OrUl·Vf Co.11 ()e(ly l'llot, fa rrier who Anarlll'I'• tor : PllUI-• " °"" P1111n • " •nd 4s, • · SUPEtlllOfl COUJllT DI' Tilll nocor<1e<1 1, ... ovtded 1ar by iaw and mor~ P11blf1111<1 Oronoe CN~I Cally Piiot Mlsall•-1 M1ps, Rtc«dl of 0r•fl9e NOTICE IS HEJllEBV GIVEN to Ille STATf: DI' CALll'Olllllit. l'Olt lho11 lhrN ;;;..,,,.., 11av1,. elJPled \Ince J•n111ry 1t, ,, '"" Febfwry 2, '·
started shoeing hor ses 25 Jan11<1•y "-· 11 ar\11 F'bn1.ory l. 1913 counry, cautorru... c..aa w1 ol 1111 IOoY9 /\lm1ld aec_,,, TN• COUMTV 01' OllAHOll SU<'.h recarda11ort, .,.,111 w n 11 Pllblk •uc· 191l 1t0-n
h he 16 Jo!l)..13 Oaled J111Uery It, 19/l !NII all P«IOM 111¥11111 d alms IOillMI 11111 Ne A 7...,, years ago w en was • w i1.LIAM e . ST JOHN, •Al" a.na1111 are •tciul•ed ta 11i. 111em. • • !Ion to tne hlgltnt l>ldller tor cMh, PUBLIC NOTICE
Ill ,1 h st d ls -> ooo ,,. --· o , .... ....,_ E11111 ot WOODROW W. Wl.HIClEA, PllVll>lot In lawlul -y cl 1119 Unlll!d
-o.st 9' t e u en a re PUBLIC NOTICE se1 rm 5 c~ev~1f~e•k :; 1"' ,.;::~~ ~~tn.:'c. ;.;f''ij; O.C.HM.-· s111e1 ot Amtrkl 11 ume 111 r.;le, w11r.ou1 ---.. ,CTJTIOUS •us1111:ss
horse fanciers . Shoein g a l'tlllioMr In "l'ro Pe• IO ll'll'Mlll llllm, wlltt 1111 neces;.ry NOTICE IS HEREBY OIVEN-•o 1111 (QYtn;IOI or W&rrBnly e:opres"!d or Im-NAM• tTATIMl!NT
OT f OF PUflllC NEARING he lo !Ill llftdlrl,igned I Ille Olflc credllars of "" i-e ll.lmecl I (lllld IS IB lllle ~ CO ~ TIW Jallowlflll ,.nctrll It• ~ horse can run $12 to $14 an N 'iow TENTATIVE TltACTS s ~:,.s::;:. A~ll~y~ ;,ouo:...,.'';nlll'lllY GEORGE .GAAONE•' 11111 Ill --lltYlng clllmt 1011n1t llll Clllnbrlf\Cfl, IN lnier.,, ton\l'eyed IO ilnd bl,l\llHlf' II:
anima l m l ..,. ... Tl! OU) ~-~ n'"° VI• Alh-.t.r1. l~ Hm1: u kl dKfdenl •re required lal • .. 11• """"--Mill lly 11 lllldtr Pkl ~of l•lfll, 111 CASA BONITA OALV (ITV, 1'°5 · ' ' P o. c.ntarnl whk.lt 1 1111 pt,ce of M in.ff• won fflf nteellltl'V l'Ot.ld'!enl. n • •l'ld lo 1111 pro;ierry lft Orll'IOf COV11ty, J1"'4k' Reotd, cos11 Mell, c..i1toriWo ''Any horseshoer w orth his NOTICE 15 HEREBV GIVEN 1nat • ubllih<!d "~ Co.SI (Milly l'llot. ot !Ill .:.nJo....: In u tiers : of Ille c•er-°'II•• 1bowe tf>llHtd ciwrt. or $1111 ot C1ll!Ornl1, dncrllled 11: L•wtel>Gt w. Mlclllftd, llOS J1m11k 1 ~<>Il can m a k e a good livin g '' ~l~on=~~glle~:~ ':Nr':1~ 1:: c11t;: Janu~ry 1e. 11 ano FeDtuary 1. 1973 11&-7.I l<llnlno to 1111 nr111 o~ P'"C: 0ec..t::i, •o prewnt i:;em,nd "'"•n ..:..i11e t ~ Loi s ot Tr.ct :ius 11 lllf map ll:Old, c11111 """'· c111tor1111.
-' I ' · · I · B within foor mof>lhl lfter lilt 11.._1 11UbllU1· vouc11e<1, to f 1 11 ers • I recorded In book loM, P'l)el .. tnd 47 Ill ~ A, S111Hw n, 2S11 CrtslVltw he sal'S "'T WO h u ndred dollars OI Munl 1111ton 'acn '0 'lie A<lmin •lrahv~ PU LIC NOTICE ,1 -• -1 ,. .. , ol ll&r 1110r11ty, MILO J. WESTRUM, 4S20 MllCtllaneous MllP' In the olfk• ol Ille Orlw, Newoorl Bticll. Calllorlll• . Anne•. S)J Main Slreel, tluntl!'l(l!Ofl on"' "'I "' . E ,,,,,_ •-o·-... _ ' . d ·1 ,, Oiled J1111111rv " lt7:J Oii ~· ... ~ ~· ..... ,~. teenier of ll ld County. Tiiis bulllllSI 11 11111111 Conductld ..... a day tf he-Ca ll stan 1 · BN<:h, Cilltornlt, ~! 111" hour ol 1:00 pm SCP~ VIAOINIA McooHALO C11lfar11l1, wltldl 11 Int lllKI ol bUSI-The 11 .... 1 lddrtn and otlle< cOll'lmon tlmlled 111r111er1hlp
on Tuelodiy, F<lbr11ery 6• I01S, lor Ille IN T1'tE SUPERIOR. COU•t 01' THI! Exl(!lllrl1t ot Ille Ul'ld!OIOned In i ll millerl Ptr· 4"ltl111t!lllD, II lll'J'. ol lilt rtal prOPerfY l1.,,.ence W Mld'I~
DU'llCIH 0' conilc!erlrog '"' EnYlr~menlal STATE 01' CALIFOJllNIA IN AND l'GJI of Iha Wiii ol lh11 111"1na IO ll)tl fltllt of wtd dtcldtlll. OllCrfbed •boY• ,, PllfPOl'lld ta bit' Thll 1i.temenl !!led wltll Hie '-"' 11'.::f:''T.!!~!';o;;r,'~J11!:11~. Oii Ttt1-THE COU NTY 01' ORANGE .. llOV. named dte.Oenl. 11111;;. i;:.~· ::r':· '"'"" lhe flrtl PllbllCI• 136'1 Olympk Avenue, Cost• M•~·· Cler~ 01 Or11no. CO\lfllV Grt JlllW!fY 9,
All lnlernltll porlOm 1r1 Invited fO ii· NO. A·llflt OEO•OI! 0At110ffl!ll: I Oft 1 t • C1lltom11, 1'7l, bV Thort JI M, W6r,1, OIPlfY Gtuttty
lend llld nenrlnv ~nd 11<pr1s1 !heir OPln· NOTICI OF SALE or: JIEAL l'JllOP· ll...O \111 Allllmbr• Dtltd Jt nu•ry •• 1973 Thi u~ralOnea Tru$IH <11Klnlm$ enr CJt t-
the ve te ran
PUBLIC NOTICE
loos tor or ao<1l,11t 11;d T1nt1tlv<1 Tracll EJllTY AT PRIVATE SALE llfllll' Miiii. Ce"flrllll t11U MARVROSE WIHICLEI. lllllHol\¥ !or tny IP1CDrrectM11al1~8 1lre11
"We h ave a ll the feet YOU e 41.,,, 7111, e,o39 •nd ao.o. 1n tt>e Mlrt•r of !ht e 1111., 01 MA l!tEL Ttl: 17141 w..»11 E•ecutrl• 01 tilt wrn itlldreu <1nd ollMtr common <IHlon•Uon, u
t t' " p l .on •£D•T00$ <CAUSE H M-CARTNE,, -·-o·~. •1-•-••-"'"<I• ol 1hl lbO\'l!M nall>td dKIOenl •ny, alto'rlll """'"·
'Publl!Jll!'d Or1no1 Cll.IU
Ja111111y U, 11, ~' 11\d
......
0111¥ Piiot,
Ftbr111ry '· 1!·7:1 want 0 prac ice on, e er= NOTICE TO c Dated January M. 197.1 .... ~-.. ,_, ... .,._, ..... ...... MILO I WEITllU I _,
b SUP ER IOR. COUIT OF TI4E CITY 01' HUNTINGTON REACH NOTICE IS ttEll.EBY GIVEN !Ml me PUbHsllld Or111111 Caal! Dally Pilot, 4llt £•" Sl•u-.... -S• d "le .. ,u bt midi to pny Ille ·says a s he s h ow s eac n ew STATE OF CALIFOll.NIA Fo• lOf!> s1wr111, 01rec1or undersl;ne<r, 1s e.ecutor of 1111 111t1te 01 Janu~rv 12, 19, 'M. ~nd Fetor111rv 2. M ........ cillttml• 911,. ot>l!cl1ll0111 sacltH'td by 1111e1 died ot uu~t ""
group Of students three THE COUNTY OF ORAHQE Envlronmenl1I Rtsources MA BEL CLAUSEN MICCAllTHEV, wlll lf1l ll7-7:J T~ cn>i so 2UI lncklcltno •II COll'I, tell ~nd ·~pen.es a
d N1. A·750ll Publlslled OrAl'lfll C0111t OAily Piiar tell 11 prlyate Silt to tilt highest 11'1d bttl 1 ftH" E wtri ltt11IM Mid of "" lnll! cr1111C1 by u ld
re frig erators fu ll o f d ea Eslat1 Ill ANNA M. HILL, Oe<e.tsed. Jan!lary 26. 19TJ 27'1·1.i Dldc!er \IPOfl Ille ,,,,,,, Ind corw:UllOO J PUBLIC NOTICE A~ 0::.0. "co111 Olli~ l'llot. dHd of Inn!; ... lllml ••r>tlldld under STAT•-oP. CA~la-
PUBLIC NOTICK
h orses' feel. NOTICE IS HERE RV GIVEN to Ille ------herelflilfter mtntlontd, and ll>b(ICI lo ---January 12 19 ?' tnd February 2 tilt ltrma ol uld dllltcl ot truu, no! ll\ttl OPPICI 01' AtllCMITICTillll crHltars of rne ab0¥e l\ilmld "ecedanl PUDUC NOTICE conUrmallon bV said $U()erlor Court, on NOTICI! TO CtllllDITOlll ' ' l06-Jl •1P11d1 1M ttt.C9f.OO rtm61nlnQ ptlnc:Jpal ON •U<T
The feel are m o unted oo ""'' 111 persons h1v1no delrm against Ille Tllund"'f, Fllbrva.-y 1s, 1m 11 111t 11our su,.•1110• COUltT 01' THI! '"' 01 Ille"°'-llC\lrll<I tl'f Mid dN<I 011r1151, No,t:: ~O ~"oNT•=~H · 1.1ld d«tdenl ire rlQlllr..:1 10 tlle ll'ltm, 01 10:00 a'cloc• A,M,. er lllerHllfi'" within ITATI Of' C.U.ll'OllNIA l'Otll ---wllll fn11r1.i from 04uml!t• I, 1971 15 In SEALED P•OPO!AlS 'llltt bl t«ll\1111 Oy
s tands P e te rson invented lo w1111 1111 M«1lMV >'llU<'.llers. rn ""' c1tic1 1 ,.,.. 1ne limt allowed b'I' 11w, 11 1111 ot1k1 ot THll COUNTY o,. aANQE PUBLIC NOTICE tile! note lll'OVlded. OHie• "' ,,..c1tCtld1tr• attd c..i.ilt1.1Cllon. , I hoe' ho se ot 1no derll. of rtw ~bl'Ne enlilled court. or FICTITIOUS flUSlHESS BAIRO I COFFI N• llC Glaflneyre Strn1 lie. A-74'71 Oiied Jlftllln' II, ltn ...__,_1 of Gt If J.lr'fkl " SIJtlU ate S 1n g a r · la "'O!Wnf ti!"'", wltn the nKe•SlrY NAME STAT IMENT Suite "G':, Laqu111. l uc:I), Cat!lor11l1, "'' E1tete ot PAUL CIR.AC!, DlelHlc! EOUITAILI T•UST COMPANY, ....,.,... ner 1• _..
h ... i<infd I Ille 1n TN IOltowlna Pll'Hlll b 11<>1"9 bll,l .... u r!Qhl lllle tntertst •l'ld esl•le ol said NOTICE IS HE•EBV GIVEN la !ht • 41n• •• TIUltll :JOH, ltll SOUfh lra.ctwey. Lot Al'lellu·
Anatom y o r the 0r:5e· :r:::~;~ .:vn~Lr~~ E. M~E. ~11~~ .,~ MAREL • CLAUSEN MICCARTNEY, ct"tdltorl °' 1111 lboVe Mlnld dtetdtnl SJ;,~1:ft. Tg~::~io;~. BY LEWIS w. McMVLLIN, ~:r":.~·1,u;'~, ~~·wtit::'·i.,,:'t~i
Phy siology and horse handhng l~ Al•mllos 61...ci.. sut1e '°'' I.OS ADACHI NURSERY COMPANV, 9191 <IKllsed, 81 Ille """' of rw d .. 1111, •lld "'"Ill Pot-llltYlllO dllfM l(lilMI "" ••• , ••• , •• , ••• ,,. ••• VICI l'tflloOet!I be P\lblkly ~Ind ••ad In·-lltl
th C Hf 1 111 II 1 ll'M! place ot flolll Avenue. WnlmlJK!ilr, C11!lor1'11<1 811 rigllt, !Ille Mw:l llttef'lst 11111 Mid tsl•I• Miki lllC9dtlll IA rtciulf'ld to flit lller"rl, • -~ ...... _ 4"11 11 llld lddtft• fw:
are t a u g ht even before e ~1.~:':',·o1 ~lie pr~~ :nan maners Ml~l!Hf J . Colby, t1so Got111c. 11111 .cqull"f!'d' by oi:icratlon c1 law or w1111 1111 lllCtlllfT VOUC111r1. 111 Ille ottkl T11E COUNTY Of' ....-.o• -ulllllhtd Orl!IP Coe11 o.nv PllOt AOO OTOO••< OUTOOOO .,GHT•HG II ed lo ~ SepulYIOI. Cllllornlt • ..__i•• .... , Ill.In or tn ...... II'-... OI 1111 ti.rt of Ille lballe lnllti.d court, or .... A•14"J J.,,.,...., 2' Mw:I F.-........ 2, t, If~ 296-ll .. ' students are a ow prac· Plrf•lnlna la Ille H llll ot ukl cleudenl, Thh ou,int11 ll (afldVCled by •n In-,..,. .. -...... '"" "'I wll !flt E'11fe of LEWIS EAIU. HAWK. 61l0 OIVISIOH Of' FAl•S ANO l!X"<»•·
I, th s tands wUnln loltr" monlll1 all« Ille nr11 Pllbllu -dl•klllll. 11111 Ill wld MABEL CLAUSE N ° pr"fflflt lllem. 11 lllCl$lal'V kl'KI-a' LEWIS E Hi.Wk. O.Ctaffll PUBLIC NOTICE TIONS, ;aNO DIST•ICT AGfUCULTUlt· ice on e . • llon 11111111 tJOlkt. Mlcllael J. Colby MacCARTNEY, •1 llll llmt ol lier dttlll, 'fOllC!>trl. I'll 1111 \llllllnlQMCI It Ille clllce NOTICE IS HEAERV GIVEH to lhe AL ASSOCIATION, COSTA MESA. "I harp and jump on t he m a HAAOLO MOll.TONSOH T!\11 ····-I Wll filed wllh Ille c-ln ll1ld I'll Int re•I and ptrlllDll Pf'GPeftY of llltlr •1~ llPPOlO, HEN· dlor ,,. '"' l boWI lletMd OICtdent Oii.ANGE COUHTV, CAL.ll'O•N•A E.-1eutor of Ille WHI ly C.ltrk ol Orange C1111111y on Dectmber <IHCrll>Rd 11 follows: OEll.SONI <Ind OINSMOOR. IAnor"'t'._:• ~I t111Pfl"llOM lln'lllQ d alms fOllml Ille • ..,ns IW. O. Al(l2 OiM (;.Ill IOI •• he says. ol Ille <lbolle Mll>td dKedllll ' ,..... TM re&t prOPtf'fy lo bf llOld h d~serlb-Lew, 50 111 '"" Slf'lll. 51,119 111·...,.. I .. to Ilk' ,.__ HOTICI OP Tll:USTlll!'S SALii 111 IOCOl'd-... , "·-· ... -Ille• ' JIE ' "'' Id •• f011ows· MIJI, C.lltarnl1 "'21 wMdl II Ille plioel u ld dettdffll art r-t ... ........ ,...,,
the lo make WILLIAM E. MOO Dtwff •"' D•Yit The ·-·1riut,11r1y ........ , •• , -..... .of bullnan of 1111 lllldlnlQMd In Ill mtl· With the neces11rv ..oucllerl.,. lfl Ille otftce Ts ..... t'-IMIM4--1ftl••tl 11-ll'ltrtfllr, and •uen ldtlelll&I fl'llr1lo "I encourage m 11110 L• Allm!IOI Blvt .. S~IM 10t """""" II L-N I -1Y 13S Itel ol Lot •"1 ~ •er• P1rlllnlnl;l !0 1111 ""''of Pl<I dltl· ol llW eltr~ ot 1111 ·-· t111111ed (OUl1, O!' On Flbrul"" 1•111. lt7.I. ,, 1l10C A.M •• •t may bl lllWd 11rlor IO Wei 11111n1 ...
mistake!> _they d o anyw11iy . I ,•.-.. ',",,•,11'°!~,',•,~flrnl• tlTll 1•1 A-• o1 "" s11r1, s.i11 • .. ~. ri;:~tw rn c 1 Miu' p" dtM within '-"'°"""" 111 .. lllt llnr 1o pret•M 1111111. w1111 1111 ntOHH'"f 1.e1111>11 111""'"'*" COtpor111on. •• duly dill.
h d ... •• L• At1911fl, C1lltont11 ...., : ':!,.did 1 ":,.,.. 1a p ..... ~ Pllbllcetlan ol 11119 no!k • vouehe<"t. ID ttw l,lllCl!Olqf\ld ., 401 Horth lllll'olllt..:I Trullft i.r!llllf Mid ,,,,,._n1 IO 1n 0-11, llliJ oror.n cornprl111 ,...
don't s top the m whe n l cy o AllOl'MY 1or E.-..:tr1• T• .. ,.__ 111-4414 ' mep r 0 • • o.iw JallUl'fY , 1m · 11r...i Bl\ld,, ~ii. .filO; Gllfld0!1, CA tim Ditti o1 Tru11 ·~ ,.__ 12, vldlno lddl1~1 Olll1IOe' llflttlrlt, In·
SOm ething w ron"', but I let ,,~.','',1y~. 0,,."-,,,5.u,,'y' •0•,'.",,,P:1,0.!: 1'119Jt :::., Ml~~ ~Ori:.,: °(lie•;! BANK OF AMElllCA wllkll 11 ttw pl1t1. o1 tMllltQ ot 1111ltl'll,11111$1. Mo. '1!16. 1fl ~ u n. lllP'I civd'lno blllkllng MOllllltd •~,,...POI• " ·-•• "' " •~ Publlslll<t Or111111 Co.II 01Hy Pll111, Cal1iarnla· also ~tllllid 11 .0\/flilS NATIONAL TR.UST ANO undlnloritd 111 111 Mtlflrl perl1lnl1111 to SIM, of Ollk.111 ll....t1 In 1111 llffl<!e ol l l'ld POie ftlOllflled tlghtt, the m finish a nd then ·~how -2~1•13 J111u..ry s, n . lt, :Ii\, 1973 J'l·7l ' · !>AVINGS ASSOCIATION '""' ntilf of 1110 del;:ecler>I, w!l!>ln !!Kit 1111 Counl'f' ll:KOrdltr ol Orlf!Ot coun1v, Bkidtr• m1v '" p1"" ind IOkllke·
---• -----~~oec!wav, C1•1• ~· ~111::W!.ia 1 E•ICVlor ot the Wiii monttn 1ller !I'll flrit Pllbllullon ot tlllt Sllll o1 C1tllornl1, Will SELL AT lit'IM 11 t•tl l ul!Otr1,' £1e,..... Offl«s PUBLIC NOTl<.:f.: de 1.,:"''":0.1 Pt~ Y 0 $ of !ht 1boue ""'""' dlctd~nl MllU. ~ILIC AUCTION TO HIGHESY 110· l l'ld Conlr3C.t MMllOlrMnl Olflc1. UGI $tll SCI ·~~ti OW•· Lt .. ,.0..0 NINOl!•JOH 0.lllO Jll'IUl'Y '· ltn o e:• l'Oll: CASH (pey1bll If "'"' ol tllf StrHI, s.c;,,,,_1o, 11111 omm "' •=~-------;::;:,;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:====;;::--;iiO;;.I NOTIC& OP P'U.1.IC HEAii.iNG ~I rurnor ·~~l(l~~Pl)ltlf!Cft "ri 1110 OINSMoott OONAlO A. PECK In ll'NIUI ,.,_,, of !I'll Utilllld S!lllO •I A~lll!tc:l~•t Ind Con1tr1Klklll. 101 ~ -a t hOlJll 1 pr-I y JM 1!111 0'111 Stfwl 1111111 111 EdCUIOI' ot !Ill Wlll 1111 rMln llllr'lllCI lO 27'5 Wftf ltll •old Broadw1r, LO. Atl!ltff1.
99'
TAS'TI! TIMl'TINO-SLICED TO OIDI•
CAPACOLA •• 1.2-0. Jl.ft
OUll OWlf "°"'" IAICID MOVTN WATl!JlllNO 99'
9'' l1mOn Meringue PIE 11:EG. ,,,,.
ITALIAN OliLI
ll:ISTAl.lll:ANT
1Alll ll:Y-41tOCl.l:Y
•1111:-WlNli ·-p~ DMtl U11til Cltlflll 1/11/11
'•:,••,~•TY ',",.s Fo'u'~YT••','",',~!L•v°" ~~tad 1111 t~e P<'Oll'i\Hth 1 dflc lbtd c1111 """'·CA ttfu ot Tiii <1bov. 1111!Md dlctdent In Ille clly of A111111tm 111 right, HHt ott'l(j llldc!~rl can ab111n Pl.,.. •fld &Ptellk•
... Plrl()fll pracier r lf'l II r Ttll (1141 """" OONAl.D .... CK !11,.rttt (Oii~ to 9"d flOW l'llltl bY II llom, Pf'Ol!ll!:ll "'""'· Ind •ldd«'• ICl'lll NOTICE IS HEREllY GlVE_N Illa! on l'ltl bten, ®tl:'Y IM 11'-ll'"' 01 1.-ld deO> AllerfllTI 1111' laclllor 41, llOf"lll l \.Md •Ml .. full•.. unc1tr ttld 0.ed 01 Trust In Ille ptapit'IY torm by r~lln; th#n In wrilll'IO frenl
T-1ey, Feor11<1ry a, lf7:J, 811.00 P.M. In dtnt, Ind flOW s, 111.td llPM tl"ld 111 toll-Pllblllllld O<•noe ca.~\ Oilly Piiot, OltMIM, CA 912" iltlliltd In tlkl C1111111y and St1M dffctlb-Conlt&tl Mt"6qt17'!"I Of!k. t ... O. In
Ille Communl1y C1111..-Bulldln(J, 1"200 nkllon whll Ille UM of ll>t rt<1I Pl'Olltl1'I' Jinue"" J, 12, 1,, 26, lf1J 11·71 Teh !21Jl :i4141h .0 ••~ lUI, S«t1-to, Clllfol'nU fS001), II' In
Sltllf AVll\UI, Fou11t1ln,~ v • I I. y ' lbolll dlK•lbed, •l'ld Pict , ... prapmfly AllllnNW" 1111 .... ,..,. • Lal lS3 ol Tritt NII. '1111), I I per person lrom ConlrKI """""""""*~ Olftc*
Cflllotnt1, !hi C!:t. CtllJnr:ll w1H· llOIO 1 mw:1 uld PlflONll prO(llrfV wC U bet IOld 11 PU8Llt .. NOTICE Pl,il>lli'*I Orll'IOI Co-ti Diiiy Piiat, map ,_.did Jn 8ool! u, p~ t1 ¥Jd ln SM-r•mfflto. 1111.p-(tla) m.211,, publl~ ~,,;;:~I ... :~o:llCl~-l'lllJIMll ~1:1:ti!'to~i!:. O: ~,; ~-:ci: ---~;;:tty 12' 19' 1' Ind l'ebr~}; !: ~ =~·=~-:•.:(! ~:c· l1~0::'wf:U1":.~I~ 1"::yfl(//:lfo ':;
1'<111111 ti dil!llfl II paHll11 * ..... Pl'OWll COOt, a 41111 The 11•ftl lddrllt flld OI'* ~ returned.
t1•Ml1tt ..i.i et 1111 s....-111 C•11tll' II~ or ottv1 •re lnY11..:1 tor J.tld rt111 llOTICI! TO ca101T01tS PUDLJ1• NOTICE dltJOnitlon, 11 .,,.,, of 1111 r.11 ll'DP111'1 No bid w111 .. c-'<ltrld llNtl1I 11 b
M l lt!I II Ifie -1llwell c.,._ ti lll<f Ptr\ONI J!"Gllllrly, IS I Will. 11111 SUPl!ia lott COU•T OP THI! '-' illlertbed 1bev. h ouroarttd to bl: "''" 1111 1 l'•-1 torm lvrlllsflld . .-,.
T....,I 1!1111 M411M!N, Allll H•"-'ltt9· LI -""'" writtnq ~ wm lie rtulYICI or STATI 01' CALl,Oll:NIA 1'011 ,,. J11111111, COii• Mell. C.tlfar11I• COl'llYICI ~ OHlcl ...., .. m.a. "'' Lklll0"1. Afff VerllllCe .... 1111 llffla of I AlllO •• COFFIN. -THI COUNTY 0, O•ANGI • tnn fl621 ill eccor.S-1 .... "\flittr«llolll II .....
'· OllOlllAHCI ND, -,.,. G1111neyr1 SIUl1, Sufll "G". L.19un1 .... A·1U>t JIOTICI! TO c••otToas flit ~ TrV'tll dllo(l<llm, 1ny ..... N EICll blc!dll' ll'IUll 111 llc-.d.
OrdllllllCI ol Ille tlly Counclt of , .. Clo 9Mdl. (.allloml<I, A"'°"""' tor Nlct E1l1t1 of MARV •. cow1No. lkl SUl'l.•IOll COUllT °" TH• ll•blll'Y IOt" lflY ....,..IChWU of "" •lf'lll .. ....,.nfk,oflon of ....... II 1111 .... ly II l'-llffl VeHey cor•Klillll nl.1le, or ..,.y Ill !\ltd with llla Clff-flf MOllV COWING .... MA•Y ILLIH STATI 0, CAU,OltMIA. 'Oil ~Kl llld Olhtt c-diSIVll1flon, 1f tiu/rtel. (
On:lllllf!C<I Np1. l•l, t.cl and SIM lo wlct Orlng.e (°""''· ~ C-1, I I COWING Otc.eaMCI. TNI! COUMTY OP OllAMOI lllY• It-. lltftln. ~ CiOddlt INll M!lllll ~ refltd I Tru. Mid Acc.ir1te l tgM lflT Hmt affw !!rat ll(IOllC<lllOl'I of 11'111 NOTICE tS HE•EIY GIV£H to Mte Nt. A44Mt S1ld oMo wCH Of ....oe, DUI W•ll'MIUI blinll at racMred b'Y llW.
o.icrlpolloll fl!' ~ of Pflll*'IY notkw tlld btfel"I l'IWdllO .-kl Mlf, TN creditors flf 11'11 lho¥I nemed dlcedlftl f lll ll of MAB£l C l A US I H ~ or Wltrlftly, .,._1 or ll'llpllf<I, °"""rll'IMlll " DllWrll s-lcl1
ftlll*I ptll"'SU9111 lrt "" ldapl\«! of rlqtlt .. r~ la rwlKI • ..., ~ ti! Illa! 111 jlll'MM lllv1nl clalll'll "'°'"''"" M.lt'CAll:TNEY, O«Nlld. rt0•rdl1111 111"', ~Ian. or '"" -liqh! lo 'll«;t .,,... .. 1n ~
Ii-llrdlMllCll llld h.JHfler dlrlCl\llt triofot. • said etclllll'll WI ,......,.ed II 1111 "*"-NOTICE IS HE•EBV GIVEH lo I'll (Vl'llbrtnc:11, le 111, !ht r.....inlno Pt'ilo-11'1d IO w•I.,. 111Y lr"""'trlly Ill_ 111Y Wei 1111 City C11111 -S«tllff'T 11 Ille file! wi. Ill WI tttt 11111 per-MWMI Pl'• wllll 11W llK.Sllf'f YOllCiltrS. If! lttt offkl C1'l<lltarl o1 1111 .....,_ lllmld· Gk1111ft1 tjp.111 Wiii of lhl noi.(1) HCVted Dy .. Id rotllYld. lll~llt COl'l'ltnhllolt to mtkl fll (lll'ly, .. • llflll, w111 Ill mNi llPOll 11\t of .... dlft; ftf 1'111 ""'°"" ll'lllllld CC.I, or 11\11 111 ~I ""'11'1Q (1&JMs totJ111"1 !Ill DMlf Gt TIVll, 11>-Wft: 11,l'A.aS. Wiii! II'>-Cid! Wiii bl Ollltrlel-¥!~ 111 • M!W ~'Y CV'TICll"" dlanolt hi Thi 111• •aOowtno ltrm•: I'll lll'Klfll ''*"· wllll 1111 ~ llld dtcldlnt .,. ,lfl!A,f'd IO flit llllm. ll<ftl !ht,,_, .. prll"<lldld I~ Ultl tlllYI Niis.
lldll rl(Ol"ft of "" Cit¥ ol l'lunteln CASH. llwflll fl'IOf'JIY Cf "" u"''" YOVC:.....,,'" Ille ........ IOl'led i i 1111 ollkl ""11111111 '*4-Ul'Y YOUtf'letl. I~ 1111 Cfll(f llOlt(•}. iOYlfl(h, If_,,..,.,.... IN ..,,,,. ,._, Ill Sfellorl Int.If "" l.tblf'
\l'lllrl. ,,.: •• or Oii • ..,..,. II(( 1 l•Mt II Ille "'Mi l ltOf'rllY, llOlltllf v. GIBSON, '50 """"' c""11 ol NII ...... .mttlld _..,or "' f,lld Otld ctl Tnlll, ""-'1, ~ ..... llld c-. "" Dt!IWH'Nllf 111111 _,..,._,II-.
lhlH Melllf' 11'1 bl'lnt pr--II~ E.-KIJIOI' lfld .,.-ovtd !tot SWiii Oflolld. Julfl .. l,06 """"'"-CA to ~ lhlrll, wltt> n,. fllCtnlf'( Sll"""" llf 1111 Tnnl1!ot Ind of llll !tlflf'I 11111trtl orrlMllflO rtlol of._.. 111 h
Pllr•uant to 1111 l'llflf\lno La'" of llw lllt Cwrl; !!!' ':"'" tlfll ll~I Cf lllt toOU, ..micll It 11'11 pi1e1 of 1M1MM f//f YOUdltn, lo , ... 11111\111 ... 0ld It ao Oftn• uwltd by Y id Dttd Oii Tf'Yll ~ In ~ 1111 .w1I 11 '9 M *"'°'• It
lltl• vi C1Hlw11!1 IOOV't. COO<r as.aoa " purdllW pr..,. °' ...... lo lllWW•+MT ""' Ille lllllllnlonld In ... 1111tt1n ptNllnlnt 111'1"' Slr .... S11lflt "G''· ~ BtlCll. Tl'll llllllltkltrv """" Ml<I °'"" ctl bt •• llstW "' 1111 °"*'"""'' 1111 "'""le •q.J Ind 1111 FIMlllln Vallty lllnlfli l>ld, trtd 1111 bollfntt'UOOll COOl!r'""Kan al to Ille nllll o1 u ld ~. wllt'llll 1Q1,1r C<lf!fomle fl~I wl!l(ll It llit P'Kt Cf 1l'IJll l'ilrtlt)IOf'I .. kllttd f1rd dltll\1~!1111 Wor .... Ol"'tlon of Ji'°""8" IMllllllt -
llrlllllltl(e. Thi ZOlllllQ OntlMll(f, to1111111 .... or """ l«IOfHlit """' II above "'°""• .. ,II" 1111 tint JMtllk•!lort f//f ""' btlll'*f ot "" ~"""4 "' Ill memr1 lo ""' \IMet'lltloMCI • wtUIOfl DOtt•rlftM l!lltll ·~' "-tlfl ..... .... MIPt. iWld IJ:llllllt:i 111 on nr. hi 1111 "' forth. 11o1tce, _.....,,. te "" .. , ... o1 MIC Clleldlrll of o.t10111 arid Ol<MNI 1111' s.tll. end • °"*"" _,..,_"O ~ llllft.. .. ,..
l"ltMlltil 0.0..rtmtnl 111C1 art 1'16\lt!Q OATEO! J-.ry 1', lf7>. O.lld J-art t, ttn w11t1l11 tailr monlllt 1ntr 111t lltH Plll!fiu: -11-NvllA of De"lllt anct ,Ellclllln to -•• 8'1111 t lld ~!IMI. C..-
t. p,ioil( lft!OIClion .Ind •MmllltllOll, 11.0ll llT I . HE!fotll:SON. ll"O•OYCa v. COWING. ••• llOI< °' 19ft nollu, 1111. Thi '""'"' Mttotd (fllttd wkl HotlCll Ill 11111 .....,., <If•.•""' "" II 1M ""
Ti.& 4"1r1no tu !-.Illy 111 ··-or In (lr1ICVlar "' 1119 Et1"9 of l'OltO v COWING 0.... Jo11111ry :. 1t1i Ill DeflUll Ind !llcllon la Siii la brl Slf"llt, he~ c....-. *"" -OPOOtlllOll 111 l'fll Pl'll!IOMlll wlli bl glytn MABEL CLAUSEN MK(AAT HfY 1illtCltlei ti 1'flt Wiit RO&E•T 11. +tENOlr•SOH <tcOl"Wc! lft flll county -r1 1111 rM I 1¥1Ulbl1 to Ill\' Int.,...., (lltly 111 ,..
I •-h In OJIPl!fltllllly la do Ml. II lurllltr )ft.. ~Mel f1f M'll MoOW-"*"'" lltCeOtflt E~tcU!(lt of lfl6 WIH lll'OPlfly le !Del•· .,_ti, ff11 Ad•m• 11 Magno la, H'ft'tington oeac , IOl"m•tklll I• 011\rld. YGU mey con1K1 IN ••••o t. co•,ut. •o••llT v. 01uo11 ot '"' •bOYI t'llf!'lld ..... ll:l!LIABLE INVU TM£Nl ~'""'"'at 0-11 ... vii::.
OM et Ille If""' Olll D!Nlfllitllt 111 C.liftf'rll9, In ..,_I -U ,...,.._ ,lll\ll1flt OfUrtmdlll It '62·)121 9l'ld ,.,.... Al ...... y ... UM 6• SllJ!Jt ....... llolli. Ill •AtJIO •• CDl'FI" tOltt'OllAT IOf4 Otltff of Artl\lilcM'I •
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·-·Ill V1H-Clll<t M... to lllt ~..w: lletnt. -Offll11tyr1 llrwl ........ ,. La -CA .. ,, ... ...,,. Slrtll4'111M ..... "' .. kl TN!lll. ...llCI ~M«cn
:::: 1. 6M .. 0 ....... ~I\' "'" ' CJTY COUNCIL. M" THlt Lllll!Ot It--. C:lllflnle TIJlt UllJ m.4111 ue-1..cl), Clllflnll.I t1UI I~ Satol'fll L1valf, s.u.ttl., f..a ~\'·A. I, A, \. I. 16ot C'lt OF f-OIJNTAIN \IAl,,l..fT T .. 1 17141 4"_, ...,,.,,... f9r 81tc:!Jllr T ......... {1141 .,._, Alllllorfiarf lltl'll_,. ;Qt_. Atttl!llC'I NEW HOURS ""IL'r 1M:l t-,. • ........ O!l(l\:IO. Dlfill•Y Clly CllA PvtlllWlld Orll\QI coa,1 O.Uy l"flot, P11t:1Ulllld 0..-tnQI c;ae .. 0 11/y l'l\(11, .. ,..,..., .... &Mellllr D1t11 ~ 11. 1•n. T~ (t1'1 DW11•
SUNDAY, .... ClOSID MOHDAY .. llOIWtld 0r-. Cl*! 0.lly .. not JllllUl'Y 25, ti ""' ... ~ 1, J._, 11, It, " •1111 l'tDru.trr 2, l'u!llWltd °'"""' c-1 0.llY ll'llal, ~bll1Pied Or~ c.o.11 D11!9 l"Oot Pllbll1'11d Or1191 Co11l O.lly """ L-------------r--------------•· J1n111rv ll. lm 1~ 11 l•n Ju.fl ttn \ lln-7.1 J _,.., t. 11, It, ''· 1tn 11.13 Jenutrr 'M 111d lltorlll•'li' J, t , ltf) 1•11 J-ll"'f It, '' Ind l'lllnl<lry l. Hrt 1n.n
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I
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Yawn! Streak Now 60-When 'Wi·II It -End?
CHIC AGO IAP\ -Big Rill Walton
\!oeio. it :tll tor toJ>-ranked tJCl.A . And lw
had 10 do It again Thursday n111ht as tllt!
S-Otl'l(l\\'hat·pressurt"d Bntlns nHll(-hed ci1I·
lt'gt b..isketbalrs longest wi,ining su"eak
01 60 gan1ts.
\\ra1ton·s season high of 32 poinls and a
11 hupplng 2~ rebounds stt-ered l'C1:-'\ tu
ilO 87·73 victory over lo\\'IY Chicago
1.£>\'0la y,•hich didn't knoy,· it was lk·ked
l1nill the closing n1inu tt>s of a hnalc oo a
l'hic:\go Stadiuni twin bill.
L'CL\ (·oach John \\'ooden. vd10 take~
h.is Bruins lo Notre D.'une Saturdav to
1ty for tht filAHk' f'o.-61 i>ll'Kight vielory,
said the S.11 \Vallon twiK.'1.1 In "ht11
normal performanct.''
Uut It. IOOk all 11w "'Ondrous \Valton'11
!>hooting and defe:usive skill 10 offstt 27
l'l'W\ tuntovers "'hich kept hus1lln.g
Loyola ln the j11111c until a late spu rt put
the Bnii.ns t7 Polnr.s a.bead at 19-62 \1:iU1
~.41 ren1autlng.
Although Notre Dante lost in ThursdftY
nighrs opetll'r 10 Ulinoill of the Big Tu11
81-8~, \\!oodrn rautiously lookl'd abead to
..
Sattinin)'' nationally telev ised game 1t
Srnttft.·BMd-~~ UCLA~-t111;
defeat. an 89-82 Upsc!l b}' the f ightt11g
Irish on Jan. 13. 1971.
"I know how tough lt is to play before
that Notre Dame student body because I
used to teach os "'ell as coa"h at a South
Bend high school," said Wooden. '.
The Irish no"· have a U' record , ln-
l'luding an earlier 82-56 loss to UCLA .
s!andlng 15-0 for the 8eCl80rl as the Brtuns
aim at their St'veu1h strttight NCAA title
and nlnth 1n tilt> past decade •
Gabriel Unhappy With LA
LOS Ar-;"GELES <AP l -The San Diego
Ghargers. John Hadl and Los Angeles
Rams all are pleased -but Roman
Gabriel apparently is unhappy that Los
Angeles is a t\\1)-<J.Uarterback to\\TI again .
A Los Angeles neMpaper said today it
hBd f!hmed Gabriel. silent since the
Ranis acquired Had.I from the Chargers.
\\"OOld hold a ne"'S conference today and
ask to be traded -prefer ably to the
\\'ashington Redskins where he \\'ould re-
join former Rams coach George Allen.
The Chargers traded tbe"baJding Had!.
their starting quarterback since 1964 and
the National Football League's sixth
leading passer in history. to the Rams
Thursday for defensive end Coy Baron
and rurming back Bob Thomas.
If the Rams trade Gabriel. plagued by
a sore thro"•ing arm during the 19i2
season, it would mean a sudden rhange
for the team whlch fil'Ni its coach of t\\"O
seasons. Tommy Prothro. and replaced
him \\'ith former Detroit assistant Chuck
Knox on \Vednesday.
Rams ov;ner Carroll Rosenbloom said
Ga·briel ·"is a ·fine quarterback:, -but ·he
~vas injured much of the time last year
and ttlis \.\'as a move to shore up the posi-
tion."
Hadl 's departure Crom San Diego was
friendly and expected with he and coach
Harland Svare agreeing the quanerback
"·ould be traded because of the Chargers'
Trades
JOHN HADL
S"'ilch 10 a _grqund-orjenlecl offense.
Earlier San Diego had acquired the
rights to John Unitas. the 39-}'ear-old
Baltimore legend.
Had!, who "'ill be 33 next month, is a
healthy . solid passer \rho has thrown for
n~arly 27,000 yards and 201 touchdowns
ln 11 pro seasons. He hasn't missed a
for Hadl
ga1ne be{"ause of Injury since high school.
Gabriel suffered from injuries during
the early part of the 1971 seasons tht'n
\\'BS hit by a collapsed lung before the
1972 season stared. He suffered from ten-
dionills in his throwing arm during the
season. which the Rams ro1npleted \Vith
a 6-7·1 mark.
Gabriel. aiso A 32-year-old II-year
veteran v.·ho \\'as the NFL ·s Most
Valuable playe r in 19ft!I \\'hen Allen "'as
coaC'hing the Rams. has been officially
silent since Wednesday. After the
coaching change Gabriel sa.id that he
would "lalk to the people upstairs" if the
Rams acquired Had.I because he assumed
the former Charger would only rome to
Los Angeles to be the starter.
Gabriel has been the Rams' st arting
quarterback since late in'the 1965 season
\.\'hen he won the role over Bill 11.funson.
....-ho "·as traded to Detroit in 1968. He has
tv.u years remaining on a no-cut, n<r
trade cootract.
Don K1osterman. assistant to
R05enbloom. said the trade "in no way
should be interpreted as demeaning to
Gabriel. We now have two quality
quarterbacks and I believe this is
necessary to winning a championship."
Svare called the 29-year--0ld Bacon. a
fiv e-year veteran. "as fine a defensive
player as there is in the league today"
and termed Thomas "a young back with
a great future ."
Didn't E,xpect
To Play Well,
Achnits Casper ,
'
PEBBLE BEACH (AP) -Billy Casper
_surveyed the wreck.age of his dismal. I lrustrating 19"72 season and spoke in
characteristic fashion. "Everything was
' on a downward ebb," he said. "I was ! playing bad, svlinging bad , thinking bad.
~ But it will probably make me a better in·
dividual.
"Now everything is on the upswing.''
The 41-year-o!d Casper. who suffered
the poorest season of his brilliant career
last year. had just slogged !!lowly
through rain and mud and 'll'ind "and
maybe a little sleet -juSt about
e\'erything except snow," to a 66 and the
first roWld lead Thursday in the prestige-
laden National Pro-Am golf tournament ,
offering $205,000 in total prize money.
"'I "'as very surpri!led,'' said Casper.
winner of more than 40 tour titles but
blanked from the victory column last
season for the first time since 1956.
·•1 didn 't expect to play this well at
all," he said. "I played \'ery 'll'eli and
putted extremely "'ell."
: Casper. who said he benefited greatly
' from traditional "Crosby \.\'eather" that
had other players talkin g to themselves
; Arnold Palmer called it "miserable as
; hell " -. had a two-stroke lead over Tom
; \Veiskopf afte r his six-under-par effort.
• Weiskopf at 68, was follow ed by
~veteran Don 11.fassengale. now a club pro
f in New York's Westchester Count y. alone
l at 69. The group at 70. tv.•o under par, ,1were big Bobby Nichols, Hubert Green
~and Bob Eastwood. '! All the leaders were at Cypress Point ,
~one of three 11.tonterey peninsula courses
:(being played under the unique format for
"lhis event. It's generally considered to be
"the easiest of the three and is the most
J sheltered from the weather.
l "I think I got a break by being at
Cypress." Casper said On a bad da y. if
, you're playing well, you have the op-
portunity to shoot a pretty good score."
, Jaek Nicklaus. who won this touma-
, ment and the U.S. Open at Pebble Beach
last year, was disappointed and obviously i unhappy after he could do no better than
•a rain·lnterrupted 71 on that layout hard
l)y Carmel Bay. He was one of more lhan
a dozen at tbat figure .
't "I had It lhree under par, and could
have been six when we got held up nfter
ti holes," he uid. "We stood arourn1 1
about 45 minutes and I let it get a"•ay
from me. I played terrible the rest of the
lway. J just lost cOncentration. Tht'
momen tum was gone."
sher No\v Fiftl1
DENVER-Costa Mesa's Barry Asher
is closing in on the top spot in the Denver
Open bowling tournament and ·entered
today's 11emls In Ofth place with a tot:il
plnlall of 5,820, a 11Cant 37 pins behind
, lfader Don Johnson. _
In the m&:Q·&gainst-man phase. the
winner of each game ttettvcs a bnnu~ of
30 pins and the ~h five 1eorcrs will ad· f vance to Saturda)' 1 televised final~.
'
r i
·~G
1.11"1 T•""'9te
MARK MILITANO, SISTER MELISSA WIN FIGURE SKATING TITLE.
Militanos First at Last;
Janet Lyi1n Still Second
BLOOi\ll NGTON. t.llnn. (APJ -The
impression was left thnt Mark and Nle·
lissa. Mililano 11nd J ane t Lynn, although
"springing" to the top of thei r divisions.
could have done better in U.S. Figure
Skating Championships 111ursday night.
The t.tilitanos. a brol hcr-sister team
lrOln Dix }tills, N.Y .. won the ~cnior paltll
<:hRmpionshlp \\'hlle Miss Lynn. Rockford.
Ill .• the 1972 \I/inte r Olympic bronze.
medalist, took the lend in the women's
division with 1.M1e event to go.
'"Janet probably didn't ~k11te as "''ell as
she could have." iuild Slavka Kohout,
Miss Lynn's coach. "It's n good let. bl.it
a sptingy one. She went up higher than
s~ \\•1tnted, and came down laler than
she w8nted on her double axlr jump."
Miss Lynn finished in second place £or
lhc 8CCOnd Btr8lghl event on the Metro-
Polltan SpOrts Center ice but 1.o0k first
in the standings on her overnll pcrfonn-
6ntt.
She was runnerup Thursday nlght in
th~ compulsory short program to Dorolhy
lhun\11 or Riverside. Conn., the miss on
the whlrllng axle jump apparently co.st·
ing her judge's votes.
Janet is favored, however, to win htr
fifth straight U.S. title tonight with her
strongest e\.-cnt. the freestyle.
f'irst-day le111jtr Diane Goldstein of
Denver dropped to sixth In the compul-
~ry short program -a new event ln the
nationnls consi~ting of a display or 1pim,
jumps and footwork -and to third over·.
all behind Miss Hamill.
Mark Militano, IR, Md Melisaa. 17. •
had flnished 9e«lnd for three strt.igbt
yea rt.
•11 would have liked for us to have.d~
better in winning," taid Mark. "~Jy
fk&tes seemed to be seperated from the
ice. ft \\'SS extremely fast . a Ott.le thin
imd too springy. I had planned on doing
a single axle and did a double when the
k'e spun me around.".,.
~ The Bruins now share tbe i'ecotd of 60
.SUC<..'t'Sli"'-e.. vW•!orlu .seL by Bill Russell-
led sa.1 Francisco ftOJn 19*56 and
\Vooden ~id "~·e are. a \'ery proud twn
in matchlng the record."
UCLA should set a n.'C.'Onl of 61 stratght
wins at Notre Thune ... ven if Walton has
to {'8rry the lOlld a,Bin.
Loyola c.'Ollch Getirge Ireland had a tip
for any possible 1pset of UCLA after his
Rnn1blers kept a partisan Chlc1go
Stadiunl crowd of l&,811 howling for au
upset until.Jate in Ule game.
E1nerson, Laver
Move to Semis;
Lakers Test SF
L.\ COSTA -\\lirnbledon champion
Stan Smith v.·as the lone American ln the
semifinals of the $50,000 World Chanl·
pionship of Tennis Clas&ic today, sharing
the spoUlght with three Australians.
The second-seeded Smith was slated to
n1eet Newport BeaCh resident Roy
Emerson after beating a n o t he r
AustraUan, John Alexander, g.1, 6·2, in
Thursday's rain-delayed action. Emerson
had to battle to be1t fellow countryman
Phil Dent, 6-4, 6-7, 6-3.
The other semifinal match paired
Corona del Mar resident Rod Laver
against Colin Dibley. Laver utilized a
blistering serve in brushing past Harold
Solomon of Fort Lauderdale, Fla., 6-1, &-
4. Dibley beat Tom Edlelson, Los
Angeles, 7-5, 6-l.
Lakers at Home
INGLEWOOD -The Golden State
\Varriors, 1gain playing conslstenUy with
three vlctories in their last four games.
make a direct assault tonight (8 o'clock)
on the Los Angeles Lakers' 4~ game
lead in the National Basketball Associa-
tion's Pacific Division:-
The Warriors and the Lakers, \\'ho
have won four straight, move to Oakland
Saturday rught for the second game of
their home to home series.
Golden State is coming off a runaway
129-115 victory over Kansas City-Omaha,
which saw Rick Barry pump throug,h 30
points.
Gilbert Succeeds
SAN DIEGO -As.!ist.ant coach Claude
Gilbert, 39, the personal choice of fonner
head coach Don Coryell, was named
Thursday nlght 1 to succeed Coryell as
head football coach at San Diego State
University.
Coryell was named head coach of the
St. Louis Cardinali of the National Foot-
ball League last week after posting a 11>4-
19-2 record in 12 seasoos at San Diego
State, a period in which the Aztecs gain-
ed major-college football status and
several top..20 rankings. They were 10-J
last year.
Cage Swap
PffiLADELPmA -The Pblladelph;a
76en traded AU-star forward John Block
to the Kansas City-Omaha Kings Thurs-
day for forward Tom Van Arsdale and a
third-rowid draft choice in a National
Basketball Association deal.
The 76ers also disclosed they had ac-
quired Jeff Halliburton, a forward·guard
of the Atlanta Hawks , for a 1973 third-
round draft c~lce.
Okker Upset
LONDON -Brian Fairlie upset
serond·seeded Tom Okk.er while Marty
Riessen had to fight off Dick Crealy
Thursday to reach the semifinals of the
$46,000 Rothmans Internatklnal indoor
tennis tournament.
Fairlie, a New Zealander, ousted Ok·
ker. of The Netherlands, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2 and
Riessen, of Evanston, Ill., beat his
Australian opponent, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4.
Court Competes
INGLEWOOD -Australia's Margaret
~urt, once the top female tennis player
1n the world, still has more than a bit of
that old fonn in her racket.
Mrs. Court wiJI be playing m· the rmals
of both singles and double!! on Saturday
at the $25,000 Brltlsh Motors Women 's
professlonaJ tennis championships here.
She earned those berths Thursday by
slamming her way through her semifinal
matches in .!traight sets.
In singles Mrs. Court downed Betty
Stove of the Netherlands, 6-3, 6-1. The
finals will pit her against Nancy Gunter
of San Angelo, Tex., who advanced by
defeating .Rosemary €asals of San Fran-
cisco, 6-2, G-6, 6-3.
Tie-breaker
LONDON ....:. Arthur Ashe won e battle
of lie -breakers a n d Marty Riessen
overcame fruatratlon caused by a
disputed line call and advanced to the
semifinals of the $46,000 Rothmans
lntematlonal indoor teMis townament
Thursday. 1
Ashe, of New York, edged Alex
Metre.veil of Rusala 7-6, 7" w1ille
Riessen . ot EvaMton, Ill., turned back
Au!tralia's Dick Crealy 8-2, 3-tl, M.
Cn another quarter-final match, New
Zealander Brian Falrlle upset second·
seeded Tom Okker of The Netherland.! 6-
4. U, 6-2. Fairlie, a 24-year-old Davi s
CUp pJaycr, said the ·triumph was the
best of his career.
Tar Heels Lose
CHAPEL mu,, N.C. -Fmhm~n
Wally Walker, Bany Parlchlll and Jim
Hobgood combined for 70 points to pace
unranked Virginia to an 84-78, upset of
No. 3 North C.rolina Iii collc1c b"'ket·
boll Thursday nlaht, handing the Tar
lieels their lint homecoun dereat since
li70.
"You nl't."Ci two hot·shootlng guards,
blUlng SO or ~-~rcent to w~ U· "
said 1relailcf,Wl'i0Se ttambftrs ·ave an g.
6~U.
Ireland said k was dlftk:ult \o rompare
\Vallon with his UCLA superstar
predecessor, Kartttn Abdul Jabbfl,r, but
cummeoted : ''Tllis guy Walton Is
rousher. He gives it out and gc(s Away
with it."
Before n1aktng Loyola finally throw in
lhe sponge, Walton blocked a half dozen
Rambler shots and was called ror goal
lending five times and for llu!iket in·
IK{qrenc.e lhtce tbnes. .._
1
_
Wa on s ~-evtOti · !Vriiiifllli11 thi :s
seeson was 30 points ln UCLA's fourth
J:ame of th se.a!IOn, a 98-97 triumph ovtr
Santa Barbara.
"\\'e should be sharptir agnln.!!~ Notr'l.'
Dome." said Woodell. referring to .the
loo..'lt! bt1ll·h1:tndling of his Bn.ilns itgainst
Loyola.
'"\li e hod turnover problems earlier in
'the i;eason. Tht!fl we cut the.in down. But
we were back 01 it again against Loyola ,
•
UCLA 'S BILL WA~ TON BLOCKS A LOYOLA SHOT.
Names Pineh·hltters
Winkles Endorses Rule
On Hitter for Pitcher
Bobby Winkles is enthusiastic about the
new designated pinch-hitter rule in the
American League but he is not sure it will
make his decisions easier as a rookie big
league manager.
"I think it's great," the 42·year-0ld
California Angels skipper said in an in-
terview. "I think it's going to help all
teams."
The fOrmer Arizona State University
coach, who jumped to the pros last year
as an Angels coach, already has tenta·
lively picked his DPHs.
"I plan to primarily pick four players
and for balance have two left-handers
and two right-handers."
He named right-handed sluggers Frank
Robinson and Bob Oliver and lefties Vada
Pinson and Jim Spencer.
The rule eliminates a manager 's de-
cision to lift a pitcher for a pinch-hitter
but Winkles said, "On the other side or
Changeable
Salt Lake City
•
Does It Again
SALT LAKE CITY IAP) -Salt Lake's
Olympics Steering Committee decided
Thursday against withdraw ing the city's
bid to host the 1976 Winter Olympics until
it is positive federal funding will not be
forthcoming.
But a request from the city that the
International Olympic Committee delay
selection of a site until Salt Lake City
rece ived word on such funding has been
turned down, .city orficials said. They
ronceded the city's hopes of even en·
tering a bid to host the games appeared
slim.
Mayor Jake Garn· met with the C{)ffi·
mittee members Thursday and told thenf
International Olymplc Committee Presl·
dent lord Klllanln bod Informed U.S.
Olympie Committee President Clif'I Buck
there w1ll be no postponement of the JOC
decls.Jon on the site.
IOC oftlclals ere to meet Feb. 4 in
Lausanne, Switzerland, lo mnke the
selection. Other pliCCll with bids pending
before the IOC are lnnsbruck, Austria ;
Chamonlx, f'rance, and the nation of
FlniJlnd.
Garn said Buck told him Snit Lake 's
bid "UI be the onJy one rrom the Uniled
States that the committee will consld~r.
He was quoted as aaytng if Sall L.ikc
withdraws, no other U.S. city w111 be con·
sldcred.
Oam 'a assist1nt , Jeff Bingham, said
1fter 1buraday'1 meeting, ·•we don'l
have • de!lnltc ncgadve answer yet on
federal nmdlng."
the coin, that dl'Cision is so1nelin1cs easier
to make when you talk about a pitcher
cun1ing up to bat.
"Scrnetiincs it's easier if you feel the
pitcher is gell ing tired, 10 pinch,hit for
him.
"No\v the manager and cooc:hcs arl·
going to need more sc:n1t iny to kno\v
when a pitcher is getting tired."
Winkles said he ex1>1->cts his good-hitting
pitchers . particularly Clyde \Vright and
Nolan Ryan , lo accept the rule.
"I know Clyde is not reel happy about
it, and Nolan, too. but I think they might
get a couple of extra runs 10 \\'Ork with."
\l/inkles is confident the rule will help
the Angels but he's not sure wether his
club will benefit more than others.
"It will be at least the middle 0£ the
year before we know wl\ich team th.is is
going to help nu>St.
"In our sit uation. ll'ith F'rank Robinson.
it should help us a great deal. If he feels
fresh, he ca n play," \Vi nk!cs said of the
37-year-o[d outfielder. "If he is tired he
can just go up there and hit four ti~es
every day, and there arcn 't too many
hitters like Frank Robinson ." .
The Angels acquired Hoblnson this win-
ter in a trade "'ith the Los Angeles
DOOgcrs.
The Angels DPH "absolull'lv will b.i!t
th.ird, fourth or fifth in the. JinC.up," said
"'.1nklcs. "I \\'Ould doubt a designated
hitter lvould hit belo\v fifth !or any tea m.
"\Ve_ definitely lacked punch last year,''
he said . "This could !X)Ssibly give us
a~ther ru~ every other game or so.
With our pitching staff , that's not going
to hurt our ball club n bit."
Girl Jockey
Dead at 26
, MIAMI. (AP ) -Di11nc Werley. who ~as trying to establish herself as a
Jockey at Mia mi race tracks has died
afte r apparently slipping and' falling in
a bathtub 11t her home , her father said.
Diane. 26. rode 17 mounts in 1971 in
New York and in 1'"'1orida, and was em·
ployed as an exercise gi rl at Tropica l
Park 111 the 1lme of her dealh Thursday
F'rcd B. Werley. her father. said Dlane
came home from the park Thursday af-
ternoon and told him sht' \vas going 10 take a bath .
He ~aid he .beenme concerned about th~ quietness 1n the ba1hroom some 30 minutes Int.er. After knocking Md iCt-
tlng no response. be entered and found
his daught!'r partially suhmcrged in the tub. he said.
Diane bad one Winntng ride 11nd one
place _In h<!r brief carter as a jockey.
Her single victory, aboard Dancers Gift
at fllalcah Park on April I, 1972 pai4
11!0. '
·-·
Irvine Fenture
Mustangs. Battle
--corona-Tonight -:
Corona del Mar's unbeaten
basketball learn travels to
Costa Me-sn tonight to take on
the Mu!'tangs iu the flnnl
gi¥Jle of the rirst rouud of
lrvi11e l..ca~ue play . •
A victory for the Sea Kings
would keep them one gaine in
front of F'ounta in Valley In the
ch11s~ to the league title, while
Costa Mesa hns hopes of sn1:1p-
1>ing a two-game losing.streak
and slaylnit wllhln striking
dlsta11ce Of St!<:Olld place in the
league.
In other ga1ncs tonight,
FcJu11t11in Valley is at Santa
/\nu Vall ey, Edison travels to
Magoolia and Los Alamitos
hosts Estancia. Tip-off Is at 8
for all games.
Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona
del Mar team hasn't em-
barrassed anyone in six league
games, but the Sea Kings have
FV Hosts
Wrestling
Tourney
The Five counties wrestling
tournament wWch will be
hosted by Fountain Valley
High School Saturday has
outgrown its title but not its
ability to draw top teams.
Six counties will actually be
represented when 24 schools
converge on Fountain Valley
for a full day of wrestling ln
the fifth annual event. The
fir st rounds will begin at 9:30
a.m., and the finals will start
at 7:30 p.m.
ln the field will be the
defending CIF champions _
from both the San Diego and
ntanag:ed .lo win them all an~
prove pre-.season ranki ngs w r-
rect.
The Sea Kings big~est
margin of victory In 11~ague
acU\11t,St has been 12 Points,
and they 'vere hard pressed in
four of the six games to date.
The classy trio of Casey
Jones, Matt Keough and Ji;!:ff
\Vharton has produced an
nverage of 47 points a game
be tween them and all the
clutch baskets in tight games.
Cos ta Mesa has won all
three league games on its
home court, and lost three
road encounters . The
Mustangs are led by forward
Mike Berry, who' has a 10.3
per' ga1ne average.
Fountain Valley bounced
back from a loss to Corona de!
J\1ar to defe at Costa Mesa
\'lednesday but will have to
handle a Santa Ana Valley
te am which is always
troublesome in its own ,gym.
Center Scott Reider leads
Fou ntain Valley with a 13.7
scoring average while Dan
Malane is maintaining an 11.7
chip.
Edison and Estancia are
both coming off wins Wed-
nesday. Edison has a two-
game streak on the line after
snapping an eight game losing
skein and has benefitt.ed
greatly from the play of
guards Jay Wilson and Dirk
Zirbel in the wins.
Vanguards
Vanquish
Redlands
Southern Se<!tions, and all By DENNIS CAMPBELL
schools involved either were 01 rrie D•l•r itll•t s11ff
league champions last year or Southern California College
placed finishers in the top 10 took another step toward an
in CtF competition last NAIA berth in the District 3
season. basketball playoffs Thursday
Ten tativc arrangements night, v.•hipping v i s i ting
have been made to have U.S. Redlands 78-71.
Olympic wrestling go ld The Vanguards are now 16-6'
medalist Dan Gable hand out for the season and 11-.2 against
the award.8 to iDdlvldual NAlA competition. -They play
champions after the meet . again Saturday night at Cal
The field includes Bolsa Tech.
Grande, Brawley. Buena Park, The Redlands game was
Calexico, Corona del Mar, never really in doubt and the
Fontana, Fountain Valley, contest was more .on~·sided
llelix High of San Diego. Long than the score woul~ md.1cate.
Beach Milikan, Miraleste, .._Southern Cal maintained a
i\1onte Vista of San Diego, Mt. comfortable lead for the entire
J\.ti guel High of San Diego, second half and most of the
North Torrance, Norwalk. first. Only a flurry of
Ontario, Pacifica. Rancho ~dlands baskets In the cl~
Alamitos. Rolling Hills, Royal 1ng seconds . against SCC s
rligh of Simi Valley, Shafter resel'\1es . kept the score as
High i Bakersfield) Torrance. close 3s it was. . T ' d Burly forward Pat Quinn Upland: \Vest orrance an ed the Vanguards scoring \Vestminster. pac . · h '1· h If
Co d 1 M . th de-30 points -14 1n t e 1rst a .rona e ar 18• e and 16 in the second -while
fending Southef!l Secb~ tour-pulHng down 10 rebounds. ~ment . champion ":bile Mt. The Vanguards got off
J\.1iguel is t~e Sa~ Diego Sec· quickly behind the hot hand of
tion defending champ. . Jim Payne. Payne. a "T'h~y're all \'ery fine remarkable leaper w h O"
.... ·rcsthng teams. and there reaches amazing heights on·
should ~ a lot . of great his jump shot, canned 12 of
matches. Fo~ntam. Valley SCC's first 15 points as the
coach \Vayne M1ckaehan says host team jumped out to a 7-0
"It's always a great \l:annu? lead.
tournament for the CIF and it But Pavne Jost his eye aft er
sh0uld be agai.n:'' that and ihe Bulldogs began to
The compelltlon should be narro\'• the gap. pulling to
stl'ong at all levels, but within three at 17-14.
especially in the 129 through Then Quinn silent in the
167-pound weight classes contest up to that point, led an
where CIF contenders abound . sec charge that settled the
At 129, defending Southern game.
Section CIF 123-pound champ First he scored a layup off a
Gus Bendeck f Ran c ho steal. hit a short jumper. and
AJamitos) seeded No. L scored a pair of free throws to
Another CIF champion is at make it 23-17. After a basket
140, 'vhere Steve Barretto of by Jack Causey, Quinn went
J\liraleste. the Southern Sec· on another spree, SC(lring eight
lion 130-pound champ last of scc·s next 17 polnts.
season is the favorite. 1o c11 con.,. 1111
h ltftpl lOc Al 167 Miral este·s Jo n J. P•vnt 1 2 l 11
Jackson. third in the ClF last ~;u'i::v"" ! ~ ,~
season is expected to be hard Curll• 3 2 ~ •
pressed by a well balanced ~~;:;," 1: ~ ~ ~
fi eld and Fountain Valley'i:: H11rron l 0 0 2
J Y d f 'led al 97 TOhh 30 lt II 111 oe oung. un e e H•trt!me Kor~: so~111t.rn C•L ..0·23.
'F'rlda~. Ja1111ur~ 26. 1973
Oilers' Tilt Artists Clash With Sonora
Tops-wop Whal could prove 10 "" lhe leugue and a CIF berth. "'"'~" to. tie fo.-.. c 0 n" Cllar<l oa .. ny . c 0 11 c II •
chedule-most crucial Orange League "l think they wer~ looking place ln the le111fuc standl11gs ftlr\\'.!trd Tu111 1\ntlt'rson anJ
:...-_..,., .gan1e_.of.Uw seM800 roF ·Lfii:una-past us a_ little bit when ~·e with 11 ~-2 mark. ctlllcr Nortll Bedell have mtli Bench Hlgh's basketball team beat then1 up there," Laguna
DICK STRICKLIN
At1other
Crucial
For GWC
WHITTIER -The wild
Sou them California Con-
fereoce ba~ket~ll race enters
round No. 7 tonight with
Golden West College right in
the middle of the five-tea1n
scramble.
Tonight. coach D i c k
Stricklin's surprising Rustlers
engage Rio Hondo on the
Roadrunners court in an 8
o'clock til t.
Both teams are 4-2 in con-
ference action and are tied
with East LA and LA Harbor.
Santa Monica leads it all with
a f>-1 mark.
In other games tonight in-
volving the contenders, Santa
Monica hosts LA Harbor and
East LA tackles visiting
Cypress.
The Rustlers, \vho ha ve won
four straight circuit games by
six points or less, face a Rio
Hondo team that possesses a
tough front line.
Freshman center Fred
Haberecht . (.6-7 ) along with
forwards Jim Preston and Rob
Webb, have all averaged over
15.0 in the six conference
games.
Golden \Vest counters \\'ith a
balanced attack led by 6-5
center Jeff St. cratr, 6-4
forward J.eff Butt and guards
Gary Orgill and Taras Young.
St. Clair hit 26 points against
East LA Wednesday night,
getting 19 in the opening half
to keep the Rustl ers in it.
Orgill took up the slack in the
second half, getting 14 of his
18 points. He canned seven 9£
10 field goal attem pts in the
second 20 minu tes.
Young, a sophomore. has
provided spark off the bench.
hitting 11 points against East
LA, incl uding a pair of clutch
Jong jumpers in the closing
minutes.
Butt canned 10 points (all in
the second half ) in Wed -
nesday's victory with most of
his field goals coming fro1n
the comers.
Saddlehack,
Jfuntlngton Bcacl1 tries to
extend Its sunset League
unbeaten streak when it hosts
Jowly Aneheint tonight at 8 in
the opening game or SCC(lnd
round piny. J
Coach Elmer Combs' Oilers
have clim b ed from a
darkhorse hope for the league
title In prweason estimations
to the position or advantage In
the drive for the title.
In other games tonight, all
stiirling at 8, Marina is ;it
Western. Loara at Newport.
:tnd San t a Ana nt
Weshninster.
.• ~alanced scoring and a
houndin g z6ne defense have
been the key ingredients for
Huntington Beach's cruise
past seven opponents. Doug
•Rabe, Raul Contreras. Jirn
·Teel and J im Weir all avei·ag-
ed better than 10 points a
J?ame in the first round for the
Oilers.
Anaheim , coached b y
former Costa Mesa mentor
Emil Neeme, has yet to win in
league play.
Preseason favorite Marina,
has two defeats on its reCord
ond will have to make
headway this round to secure
a CTF playoff berth.
The Vikings have a high
scoring trio in sophomore Bob
Losner and seniors Mark Ford
and Mark Adams. Adams has
scored 300 points in tbe team's
22 games to date . Losner has
reeovered from a foot injury
to average 17 points in the last
five games.
Newport has been disap-
RQinting in recording a 2·5
1nark in the first round of play
and will miss the services of
forward Jim Swick, who is out
with the mwnps.
Left-handed guard Brian
O'Flaherty has been th.e most
consistent scorer for the Tars,
averaging 15.S per game this
season and 17.7 against league
competition.
Loara has lost only to Hun-.
tington Beach and needs the
win to stay close in the stan-
dings.
Westminster is on a three-
game ~ winning streak which
has caJTied them to 4-3 in
league play.
Monarchs
In Crucial
A major obstacle in Mater
Dei High's An gellll League
basketball championship hopes
is in store tonight as ho.st
Servile await s the Monarchs
in an 8 o'clock clash.
Both teams are locked in a
four-way tie lm--J.irst place in
the Angelus circuit with 2-1
is on tap tonlght when the Beach coach Jerry f"air says, A win tonight would 1nat.ch a Jive-point differl'nC'c in scor·
Artists take on Sonora. ''I'm sure that won't t1appen the Artists' win tot:ll for l ~,St Ing 1otals bl!t\Vrrn thc>n1 Binet"
Tip off ls ~ct for 8 o'clock at again." season and virtually ussure lc:1gllc µlily lx•g;1n. Collen's 91
Laguna Beach. "But whoever wins this them or their fir st v.'\nnlng point" in !!1'\ll·r1 ,~a1n1·~ lops th1•
coach Jerry Falr's Arti1ts gan1e will b:.a\·e a real ad-lieu.son in six ye11rs . 1;roup. Bedell h:.is 8~ and
surprised the Raiders 86-59 In vantage and it's quite posslble Overall bal.'.lnl'C h11s been a Anderson ur.
a road game earller Uiiit they could go on to \\'in the strong point for the t\rll:>Ls Th..,. 1\rtists wi ll to11nl c11
season and the winner of league." this season, tiut three pl :iyers llit·1r full C"ourt pr1'ssure nntl
tonight's game would be In a The first \'ictory over who have con1e to the front in lllan·tn nian dete11st• to tunta\11
good position to maJte a run on Sonora sent Laguna Beach on the curren t wlnnlng str('ak will n S\1nvr:.i <11tack whirli sul -
league leading El Dorado or a three-gan1e Winning streak be counted on heavily ngain fc.ri·d its (Inly other lcue.ue lo::.~
annex the ruMerup 8pot in the which has propelled the tonight. l\J C:l IJor<idu 160-$91.
Backyard Roberson Structures Futiire,
Rivalries S k T C . . SetToni ht ee s op ommunication
g Bo Roberson is a.n appreciative young man "1 figure "·e cun ~o 7-5 ror the balance t1f
Four Orange Coast area \\'ho is planning his fu ture with an intense !be season and be considered for a pl a)'uff
prep bal!lke.tball contingents desire to help the youth of this area in their berth," be s11y11 l'onfldently.
are In action tonight in ac-quest of knowledge and understanding. The Vunguards dP not metl '\'estn1ont this
tivity that does not rigure to Bo is track coach at UC Irvine at the pres-year unless bulb m11ke the distri ct playoffs.
be a factor in Crestvie!f'.' or ent timt, is single at 37 and aware of the Two importunt i::;ames With Azuso·Jlaclfic arc
Orange League championship mark he has made on the sports world as an on the docket lo February.
play. Olympic Games silver medallst in the long * * *
But bolh games ~ve plent~· jump and as a pro football star. \\lord of J\'lyron McNamara's tennis 1.11·0-
to offer as Missioil Vii:!jO's He ls currently doing preliminary work to gram at UCI Is spreading around the \l'orld.
Oiablos play host to natural complete h.is doctorate degree in educational •·t have receivL>d letters fron1 Indi11, Swe-
rival San Clemente in psychology as well as completing work for a den, England, J\il exico, Canada and Australia
Crestview hostilities "''hile Jaw degree. about the possibility of st udying and playing
Uni versity and Dana Hillii Does he plan to turn to other fields than tennis here," Ute UC! coach says.
tangle in Orange loop action. "I really don't know what will develop be-
Both games ate billed for 8 cause we don't have scholarships to offer. o'clock. · But it's nice to be 1vanted for a change."
Coach Pat Roberts' J\ilission ~ The tennis situation wili be cased coo·
Viejo crew. which has lost HOWARD sidera?IY at UC I by summt.'1'. Six. additional
three of its lest four games in courts will be added to the cuJTent six, dou~
league play, is a narrow HANDY bling the sir.c of the facility. favorite to put down the . •t N · ha Tritons of San Clemente coach 1• c amara s dirL>cted a sun1mer tennis
John Baker. ~ camp in Carmel 1he past two years but says
San Clemente has lost five he will remain at home this summer and conduct his own can1p on the UCl campus. in a row and most of the pro-"The first session ! three wcek.s) will start
blern.s have been simply a lack the last week ln J une ;.ind the last one coo. of consistent firepower from coaching when he finishes this work some out!ide. four yean from now? eludes U1e Cfld of August
The Tritons m;iy have a "I have been fortunate in my athletic ca· * * * slight advantage on the boards reer," he says with modesty, "New." it 's up Add Providence 11s a probable opponent
tonight against the smaller to me to structure my future. for coach Tim Tl tt's Antcuters baskelb411
Diablos, however. Mission Vie-"A man never knows what is going to hap-tea m next season.
jo hasn't lived up to ex-pen. I want the knowledge to be ready for If arrange1nents cnn be completed . the Ant-
pecl.ations and the Joss of Gil the unexpected. ealers will play the nationally ranked club
Normandie through the fir st "I waflt to be able to communicate with In Rhode lslnnd next sea&an.
eight practice games has pro-the kids and advise them to the best of my Three UCI date11 wil l be held Ill the Aoa·
ven a key factor. ability. r have to believe this will give me helm Convention Center, including the 1\.\'0•
Coach Tony Stillson's Dana a sound philosophy and I know we are st.rue· day UCI lnvltationol tournament if current
•nils Dolphin s are still looking tured by higher education." plans 1naterlallze. Others would be with St.
for their first league win and * * * Joseph·s College (Jan. 41 and Cal SW.le (Uing
tonight figure to ha ve an ex-Paul Peak, ba1ke&baD coach al Southern Beach) en Jun . 23.
cellent rhance despite the con-~allfomta College of Costa Meta, 11 well into * * *
tinuing absence of starter bis work on his doctor's degree but right L>on l\1cMahon, pre p cage referee from
Mark Schrcy. now he is thinking In terms of post-season Orange County, will relu m to the San Fran-
Scbrey has misae<I the last play for the Vanguards. clsco Giants this yea r. But he will 9CfVlt as
two games with a badly 0 We will be considered for the NAIA Dis-pitching coach, not as an active relief pitch·
twisted foot and l!n't expected Viet m playoffs U we win •% percent of er.
to sult up'. tHlt game1 ln the district. ltJgbt now we are Will mound ace Juan fYaricbal be back?
Coach John Drlscoll's host 11-Z and tbe only ttam with a better mark Is "He had an oper.11ion on his lower back
·Trojans nipped Dana Hills in Westmont. They lost only one game In the and is as sound as ever. He '!J have a great
overtime the first time they district. year," McMahon predicts.
met, 4M7.
Baker Leading Scorer
For UC Irvine Cagers
GRAND OPENING
Sexta1it
Restaurant
marks and a victory tonight Is Dave Baker continues to
vital to maintaining a sha re of pace the UC Irvine beBketball
the loop lead. scoring race with a lfi.3
St. Anthony and Bishop average tot the first 19 games
Amat, also 2-1, lock hom::i with of the 1972-73 season with
underdogs SL Paul and Plus X another sophomore, Jerry
and figure to ease to their Maras, hitting at a 13.4 clip
third .league triumphs. according to statistics com-
of 30, center Scott Magnuson
has come On strongly in the
last three outings.
Magnuson was high man
with 20 against UC RJverslde
Saturday and grabbed 19 re·
bounds.
DELICATESSEN
COCKTAILS
•• BAKERY
.CATERING
Coach Jerry Tard ! e's piled by the DAILY PILOT .
Monarchs ha,·e been working Ironically, the UCI team
over the opposition with a average of 70.l per game is
Against Puget Sound he hit
23 points and against UC San
Diego grabbed eight rebounds,·
both hlgh marks.
·---------.. I
I
I
BAKERY
DOUBLE YOUR MONEY COUPON
50 % off an all Bakery Goods
limit S!i.00
Co11po" 9oocl Frl., J•n. 26 tltr~ Wed .. -J•n, ] I
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I
I
K , h M• tough front line that con!:ists less than its opponents mark vc 1rv1ne n•·n mg ts L~ of George Herold, Greg Green of 72.6 even though the season 6•ker ,,. 12'1 ~r !t
and Steve ~1artindale. record shows 12 victories and ~~~liOll \s 1~1 £ fjf ':'; \l;
·---------·
Breakfast -Lunch -Dinner
Op.fl 7:00 a.M., M••· -Sat.
630 N•wport Center Dr.
Saddleback Co 11 e g e, s d Greego dloch sh. mou'1's1dolshoh!~ seThvene dw~Mfealng"· m''arg1·n for the ~:'~n~• \~ U ~i PJ
Gauchos go after their second ama e wi 15 0 e ..,, ~~~~1e 1• n 11 .. straight Mission Conference and averaged 22 points per Anteaters has been 6.8 per vie-ivncn lt 1{ Ji :~
ba k !ball t ni ht clip through 13 non-league tory. ttaw11 "' 12 1: : :i~ ho!ti~g San gamciiego 0 SitY tests bef?re an ankle injury While Baker leads the stats, ~:.9i.1: ,, 1;,_, ~ 1~
"·! •• ..t !1 '·
College's Kni ghts at · San .,s.loiiwiied;;;;lti;;;;m;;;;upi;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiinciiliiudiiln;;i;g;;aiiiisln;;i;gliieiigaiiiimiie;;;;h;iigiihl ~ 1, MlS 111 1:ie1
Clemente High. It's an 811 jiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
o'clock game.
Coach Roy Steverul' Gauchos
bagged their initial Mission
win Wednesday night .
defeating San Bernardino, 68-
62. .
Saddleback has a 1-5 circuit
record whOe San Diego comes
into tonight's tilt with a I~
conference mark ana a 1-19
record for the season.
The Gauchos are also in ac-
tion Saturda}' night , trekking
to Escondido to face Palomar.
Now .•• You Too Can
Lease· a Lincoln.Continental
N•wport Center
J)Ounds y,·ill also be 1n 1or r~-~~J~~~§~~~~~i.i::----11 heavv competition .
·Calexico ls the defending
I.earn champion hut host Foun-
tain Valley and several otherli
are considered threats to take
the champion.ship this tim"
around.
Call us today for tho exciting new Full
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SEE PAGE 46 OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT
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' ..
~Jl__OAILY PILOT
Alamitos
Racing
Entries
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1 T,11~ C1n Flv lGer:al 111
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A.llD"•J>Cf. Pvru UOOO
c~ CJll<.lv Go 1~moml 11'
Mlrade Mo.Jn (f;Jrt\ II~
Ocro Ld L~ IN1(0<lf1T'UI) 11'
lloc~v Orn...oo ~w .. ..i1 1?2
(~ J B•rs 11(.1111.1 119
Fl~~! OeC•!"'" (lrr11ur~I 117
T•u•v Hot Panf• (olodJorl 111
El Toro P1r,rr lW•1,.,n1 111
~prln!1n' M;11r• (L•J>l'ldP~I !11
'""'~ 'm T1lrnl (Kn•,JllT\ 11• FOURTH It.I.CE. 5-19 war~ •. J v••r
dill & up .1.110;"1!11,~. Pur'-1 ~loOO.
110'••9~ Rockf! (Trea111r~I 111
"ro~°"'""' Oueo! !BlltOf'\> 11•
5.•nl•nn.ill 1Crosoy! 11t
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T~ Cee'> (;l'l<llcl (Myltsl 111
S«oa lli:>harnl l!I
1.;ny Nole u1ie111r 1 117
Tho. Elirno!YIOt (l(an.11 Ill
Or1w Pl•v (Watson! 1?2
FIFT,. RACE. 110 Y'"~I. ' Vt•r ola•
& UP. "'11-a>Kr Pursr ~-
Cl.is.v Roc~tl 1R06ini.on l no • sor,..•t Host (Myle•I 111
. Alam 105 SU>•t (H&rll II!
JO!ft>t C"'r B•r !Trc!s11rr1 ti<
Tr•al lriCtr \A<IJorl !;>()
RuH•lla Bd<S IW•l\.00'1\ !1'
\JI' Chargt lli!>ftaml 111
~IXTH I.I.CE .00 Yd•!I~ l ~PM °'•'•.
Cldim1119. Pur-. 11ao:i. c1~"'"no ""'r """ Slor O.ep IAll•.onl "' N"" S""'°9r I N>cootmu» i Soll<.ly'l Se-er~! (~·vie>)
HoiSIY V•n Bar (C~rdn.:•)
Call Mt 1(1<1 (Vaugllnl L Rov"I Fire Rockt! (All••'i
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Kf! lfe1av ismi111
Sur••• Sandy JPo~el
Tl'le New l>Olc ILoonnnl
!'~!l<!v B!rl ll'H>OM'
~[VENTH RACE. :.so v,,a •. J Vedr
01111. Allcw~ncr Put\f 1.:000
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M1>sl>QO.op Ciiio (IVa!SO"j
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Colar Mr Pink (l•oll~m1
Go c11;c1o.•e Go (l•e.>1u••1
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American Or~m 1("•dGl.J'
SDHO Sc-!O•tyf•'
FHI. Um Geoa IA.l•;.onl
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'" "' EIClj'TH RACE .000 vor111 j i•ar
olds 'lo IJP • .l.llav.ancc. Pu rse l!l'OO f ne
M1d"' 0.1 Rey
Rocket \Vr~t19ffr !~·CO<l•mu~l 119
K•W•lll Bl• 1.1.daor) 1'1 c"""' SiJ CMyltsl 171
Plunotr B1v CROOonSO<ll 116
l=li9l11 109 (L1Pft•mt l)o
Anurl'!I C1111v !War111 111
NINTH II.I.CE. li(I Vire!'. l ~P••
ol1J1 I. UP. Cl8ornlng Pur~ 'llio! (llom-• l11Q Price nJOO
War """rcurv !Lio"'"'' 11;,o Blob (Allain
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Luge-e Clre1111rt
Dons Mear !Ctr<ICl•)
5DOU"' Pele (5m11n)
•
AJa11iitos
Racing
Results
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Frida?. J.anu;vy 2b, )q?:s
El Niguel Gals' Tourney KaraterMeet
~
:ti~~~;uc
Area Hoop Results Chargers Win
In a partner's better b.ill
co111pclition at El Niguel
Country Club, Tina Hal~ and
.lal'kic \\'atson fi red an 8$ lo
\\'in low gross honors.
Sc<'Ond 1011· gross 'vent to
Alil'e ~1cCrl'<iY ttie
Egan \1·\th 8a. thi rd
to Bever\\• Henderson
It wus Jeanne Grlfrln the
winner In B flight w1th 37
followed by Peggy CUn·
ningham (38), Sue Ewers and
lrt'!le Thomas (39). •
:\lidge )lo~;er \\'ith 93. ....___
The C flight victor-was
Shirley \Vetiel with 35 ~1 with
Pat Lackner (37) and Mar-
jorie Thatcher (38\1) follow-
ing.
Betty Blakemore and EUeen
\'raceburn tied ror the top
spot in the D flight with 39.
Jn lhl' low n~t ron1petition,
~laudt' \\'eidman and Helen
Leigh \\'t"rt" the 11'inrn.'rs with 6.'l
rollov.·ed by carol Keep and
r:rt•tchcn Fabian with 73, Jane
Terhell and Dorothy Levy
till. C'ozette Reason and
Ph~·Jlis Quinn 174 1 and r.1Hdred
\\"hite and Betty Hinunclsb.ich
l;-i I.
COSIH .llf'SO
ll \\•as a seterti1·e nine
lourll3ment at Costa ~lesa
Golf and Counlr\" Club this
\l't't'k for tht.-v.·orrien's cl ub.
Ba rbara Lronard was the A
flight winner v.·ith 311.J.!. follov.·-
ed bv \'i Hos kins 1331~L
In ·s Oight, Doris Ball \\·as
the winnt'r v.•ifh 3311: u·it h
1'tar1ou Voss second at 351 ~.
Huth Schilling v.·ofi the C flight
11·ith 30 follo\\·ed by Phyllis
Barnes ;'It 33.
In another toumaITl('nl.
poker \\'as the game. Hazel
\\"ebsfer \\'On A flight "'ith 99
followed b\" Vi Hoskins and
Ann Pappa$ each "'ith JOO.
In B night. Vonda Adams
\\'On 111·ith 93 follov.·ed by Sybil
Foster ::ind Rose ma r ~·
Skiltion\vith 101.
B. J. Ne\rland \\'Oil C flight
v.·ith 99 an:l 1'1ary Clark v.·as
second at IOI.
Rt1ildw SJ
\'irginia Ide 11·on a four par
1oun1ament at Rancho San
.Joaquin Golf CuurSC' this \\'eek
11"ith a score of 34'~. In second
place v.•ere i\targarct DeBach
and Caro!~11 \\'albridge ,1·ith 39
aplt!Ce.
Searlltf
Rosemary Erickson ~-on
golfer or lhe year honors at
Hw11ington Seaclilf Country
Club recently \\'hen monthly
v.iMers met fQr lhe cham-
pionship.
In a weekly tournament.
S('Ores v;ere on a low net
basis. In first flight, Cuba Curl
\\'3S the \\'inner '\'ilh 72 with
~larilyn Celli and Rosemary
Erickson tied for second at 75.
In the ~ nlgbl, Evelyn
Rice w.as the victor with 71
with Eileen Allen (73 ) and
Helen Cowden (76) next in
line. June Doyle won the third
flight with a 74.
JUesa l 'erde
• It 1vas a mini-member-gues t
tourna ment for the women at
~lesa \'erde Country Club this
\\'eek.
Dora Donaldson and her
guest. Inna Haven ot Alla
Vista Country Clu~ fired a
gross score of 72 to \\'in top
honors.
Belle Hamre and guest
Deane Halperin of Santa Ana
Country Club won 5ee{)nd
place with a 73.
Arlene Verfurth and partner
\"i i\1cClellan of Old Ranch
Country Club in Seal Beach,
v.·on firsl low net with 68 .
Five teams turned in srores
of 70 ror runnerup hooors in
the· net rompelition. They in-
cluded :
Area Swim Stars
I
111 Relays Finals
LOXti BEACH -A group
of freshman and so phomore
s11 in1mers from \Vestminster
High School made the biggest
splash among area aquatics
stars during qualifying rounds
for the 28th annual ClF'swim
relays .
The finals \\'iii .begin tonight
at 7:30 at the Belmont Plaza
in Long Beach.
\Vestminster's Lions. sho1v-
ing some swimming strength
for the first time. are the fa-
vorites to ca pture the title in
the frosh-soph di\'ision.
The Lions· earned firsts in
the 300 freestyle. 200 butterfly
and 200 backstroke relays and
qu::ilHicd in the 400 frees1yle
1r1th a si xth place finish.
··1 think we ca n V.'in it,"
says \Vest minster coach Ger·
aid ~lannion. "We"re at least
a second ahead of eve ryone
else in the 300 frct'style and
the butterfly and a half sec-
ond ahead in the backstroke.··
\\'cstminsrer sv.·immers are
. .
..... ,111
• l< 100 inao -11. Ma•l~a ''07.l.
6 K ~ !ree -9. l-ltwp0r! Ma1t>or
2 7'1.,. (l'~l!c~man, Rt11an, Gla1itr,
W8ll. Younq, O~bro!I.
• • 50 br~a•I -S. M;55;0,. Vielo
1·D• 5. (01~mon<1, Howe. Neville.
Cdmp°'ll\
8. Co•t~ Mt1a 1:e&.J ICl\acon, Slower,
S1>!1'1agl~. M~•~•t>urv).
• • 50 fly -11 . ''"'a Metil l:'6.6.
{La"!lllon. Br.iq11, Ml:AMH\fY. CMCon).
•• 50 lld<~ -~-
• • 100 tree -,,_
• • 50 metlley -10. Ne-v<POf! Har·
bor 1·•7.1 (Rrg1n, Ouvndam, Oubart,
Gl11I..-!. 11 C0'11• Mtt• l;•l.I. !Ron,
SPO"a!llt, 'M~Anentv. Whltmor•f. ·--• ' 100 lndo -6. Hunlifl!lfon BN<h
•.n .9. fAN!tlin, CU111man, Yiro, Weir!
6 x 50 !rl!'e -1. W•slmins•t• 2:2'.'-
(Hunlit'I'. Hurwitz. Lewis, Molatr, Ktnl,
Pu!irol. 2. E•lanc:i.i l ll.0 (lee, Wyatl.
Scfl-ltur, Copeland, Scranton. MMI·
aackl. '· Munllngton Bta<;fl l::W.t !An-
<lf!ln, Cu•llm.tn, Fr"nk, lltnno, Wtlr. Yeo).
' • SO Ortasl - l . Ntwporl H1rbof-? ll.,,
' • 50 fly -1 Wts!rnlnlt91' 1;.,,t
(Hurwtl1, Kt'll. Munlley, Wo.11>1r), 2.
CM-<1rl Ma• 1.57.l (Lo,..nz. Otto,
Palmer, B•llWntl
• • 50 b.ttk -l. We1trnln1ler 1 :~.J IH~rwl11. Kent, 1111 ... ney, Woesllff).
• • 100 tree -l. CorOl"a .,.t M1r
3·•2 2 llort-111. P~lmt•. Wat~, Pen·
nh>o!onJ 6. 'Neslm•~sltr l :'6.• tPul.a,'
Holder, .Ltwls. Seul).
' ~ so medley -6, Coru1 d9I M'r
J·!l.7. !LOf"ln<, W•loon. Browne, P tn-
nl"{tl!>ftl. 1'
Collegiate,
P1·0 Scores
Jon Huntley, ~!ark Hurv.·itz.
Bob Lewis. Lloyd Holder.
David Kent and Mite Puleo in
the 300 freestyle, Hurwitz.
Kent. Huntley and Steve Woes-
ner in the butterfly and back·
stroke and Puleo, Holder, Lew-
is and Randy Saul in the 400
free.
Area teams weren't quite
so productive in the varsity
di vis.ion.
fl1ission Viejo's 200 breast·
stroke team was the highest
varsity finisher (fifth), while
Costa Mesa finished eighth in
the same race, 11th in ll)e 200
butterfly and 12th in the 200
. medley. Newport Harbor fin-
ished 10th in the 200 -medley
and ninth in the 300 freestyle
and ~1arina finished 12th in
the 200 medley.
Scott Ca mpbell, Taytor l~ov.:e. Dave Diamond and Skip
Neville sv.·am on Mission
Viejo's breaststroke team.
Defending champion Sunny
Hills and powerful Foothill are
the favorites in the varsity
dil"ision.
·wrestling
Summaries
""'r
'
Cll'llla Mell !HI n1 E1ta11<l1 t -Go:ll•nl&n IE d~. Ur~. "2. JOJ -J-. !C~ de<. lforkk, "4. 114 -Mlll,r r \ aec. r11mm1nc,, w. 1'2 -M••lt f cit(. Ounn11111, M . :N,, -ptron,1~ !El <11<. B•Hanl, t~ .
-Lt''"' !Cl Dlfllltd lltm1r, 3:°'.
1.kilfl_ -Molso !El rilnMd CMrko,
? 1•7 -Tollll~uba (CJ Ii.cl Gr tnlrt, J.
2,;r-Fr.wtl fCI lltnn.11 f>rinclfOtTO,
167 -011111 ICJ e11e P1r...,. •·1 ~,!.7!° -Wt011tr CCI .111/lfled M11rT1v,
lt'l -Jotm1cn !CI llll'itled W•ll!w, •:n. 'SP'-Kitti {F.I dee. Pw1z. 11-l, J"""" \111'1tfy Ctill MHI 1'61 IMI lbf-i. l:4~~ -Eoh\01r<11 CCI Pln"'9CI lem,
10! -S1tw•r1 (C) d«:.·Chrltm111, 11· ••
• 11• -l=ou !E/ l>lnntd M•ulc~. S:G. 1n -o~er El 11tc. lt•'11itr. 2-t. ..
12t -P!TtrKln (E) 11lnMC1 H1llt'1, :1(.
135 -Ktnl>l'!ly \Cl <ltc. Glriflr, 1>0. l:~f.' -Grl .. CE 11lllfllll oW!r1t CCI,
1'1 -Colllrot j</ ci.c. ThvrJ1111'1, s.,,
1 j~ -Wll1<k C olnM<I Ctt.llC8 11!\,
16'1 -McCormle~ ~CJ -":EE'" 117 -S<"-1 t« :J won b\I I ltJ -v ... HcN-ii (C Yl'Ol'l llV forte ,' Hvl -McDor,...n CJ WOii llV (I, , .......... Cnl1 Mtt.11 U51 121J ldMdt
C •1 -NIWl!ttd (C), ........ tt11 ... 1 ..
10'1 -Mlllef" (C)ir: ZllllioeL M. 114 -Sm!lll E) Ml 6-J l~ = =·'~ 1.f*Mr.JA'l$.tl•.tt-1lJ -J~\,iftd' lrr--plfll'IH Jlf-j, :•. :3-AOf'Mi U!~Ote-c-. 104. IY=T= :l -11'1',': t~'
1•1 -fllfllfl'" ( I Q :~ = ~::.-~@.E. .!'r. tt'll -~aov ! ._, ~ •.
J11111W Vanity H1ntllllflw !ti) 141) Wntwll
'1 -"'"" fW> -" """'· 105 -A;um1r tWI lllllMd w'lt11t (Hj I.JI.
l~1·i·il. Tllt1nv !WI olMtd Andtlfro
127 -M1lek1 (WI dlC Oetll\Al'll (HJ ••• l~f'ii° l"r111~t\Ol,IM !W) dee Pk kfonll
s !J» -W11V>1r tHJ ol!IMCI lmltn IWI
Ul -llwtn IHI lllnntd NOl'101111Vl !WI l :Sl,
1'1 -VOOI IH) di< P•lmtr (Wj •O. I~ -1/11\0ewtn 0t) pl""*9 ~ 1"Yl1 '.:..'°t:11.., 1w1 11tt ,~.;:_ CHI\.!,. 111 -L 11111r !WI lllllNd CMw ") _,.~ .
• ;~ -HN!lly CW) lllM!IPll a11rty CHI
Hwt -l \lf'lltlt CWI WOl'I lrY torfttt,
Irvine 'A'.i01holt the fifth an..
nua.J Open Karate charri-p~o (pa SUnday 1n ucrs
Cra lonl Hall with ellmlna·
U s and Kaia bei!Mlng at 9
a.m,
The championship finals and
demonstrations wlll take pince
SU.ndny evening o.t 7.
Entry blanks and tk:kets will
be available at the door.
Admission r... the ctuun-
plonshlps ts 1%.50 for adults
and SI.SO for students.
"1•1Ht" hell-1/1 Ptk• •• Dt1•lep MapoWf
4 Wood1,' lro111, Reg. $311 .00', •.•••• ·.,,.;,, NOW 111f.IO '
Mu·P-ILn t.t5 4oL -A•y 'JJ ,, .... l!l"I". Jl'f• Off
A c0H:;;ui;c°OO;tc~rifB~
IJI W. 1ttk St . .t rt.e11tM, CnN Mae
f'IO LINIE-N•W ANO USID-LAROa ITOCK
LDWll T f'll!Cl!S LOCALL Y--011: .l.NYWHRll
T1 ........ 64!-M»
Ma .. 111, 11-11 SW!. It M 4
,., '"' .......... u
JACI SAINZ, "9. Mtr.
St belted tires.
Wfive got them!
.And at very
sp~ciallow
• prices.
Plus 2.82 fed. tax.
F78-14 whitewall
tubeless.
Ground Gainer steel belled tire in the
wide 78 profile series. Fou r full plies of
polyester cord with two bells of steel
wra~aroun'CI tread design.
Whitewall tubeless Piu•
le-cf. lal!
2.99
3.24
3.08
3.27
3.43
Tire aiz• Price
G78-14 30.99
H78-14 31.99
G78-1!J 34.99
H78-1!; J.S.99
L78-l~l 36.99
Polyester special
1688 •10' 1.Bl •••.
. ta11: and old tire.
878-13 (650-13)
blackwaU tubeless.
Ground Gainer'81 4 plies of
polyester cord. In l he wide-prol1le
78 series.
BLackw1ll tubeless
Tire size Special
F78-14 21 .88
G78·14 22.88
G78-15 23.88
Plus
fed. tall
2.37
2.53
2.60
Whitewalls only $2 more per tire.
Additional whitewall sizes
available at our special low prices.
Autom•tic Tr1n1ml11ion Service
14ss -21ss
(With· filter)
Here 11 what we do:
1. Road Test Car
2. Remove Pan and lnspecl
3. Check Linkage ., .
4. €lean Screen or Replace Filter
5. Gheck Vacuum Modulator
6. Replace New Pan Gasket
7. Add Required Fluid
8. Road Te!fot Car Again
13ss wilh lrade-ln
Reliant 12. Our 12 vol !
ball ery !or !he econon1y
minded mo1orist. Low cost.
but plenty ot power for most
small engrnc cars. A qualil y
pcrforrner you can depend on.
Reliant 12-six vol! battery
10.88 with exchange.
24 MONTH-241000 MILE SERVICE WARRANTY ON COMPLETE ENGINE.r .
{lor pau1nger car appHcaHon only)
This service policy ptovldu you With product p1at11ction a,gairitt d1fec1,ve workmans hip or mater.ill lor
two Y.,1118 or 2<1,000 miles (whlchtl\llf OClCUr11 lirwt) nn all complete passenger en11ines, All olhera ire
guaranteed 3 month9 or 4,000 mile• (whlche\'er OCC\lrs l1r11tJ.
During lhe llrst 3 month• or 4,000 mil&1 (whlch1v1r occur' lltst), tor i.11 applicahoos. intem1I repair or
engine raplacoment labor coatl due to defective workmanthiP or material will be reimbursed al full r1ta.
For all ~plete passenqer englnn, during Ille next 9 mori11t1 °" 9.000 miles (whichever occur1 liRIJ,
labor cosll due I~ d•fect1ve workmanship or matarl1I win be reimbtJrsed al \.!I rate. R.1.tes will be blsed
on flat rale job time. Parts will bl lumlshed or T11!mbu11ed at cost (oor option).
lri 1ddlUon, thl guarantee ror comsilel1 p1uenger enginu excluding lhe repair or replacameril ol lnt•~•
Ind exh1ust "'IYet II u11nd9d oo a pro-rill basl9 lhrough Iha next 12 months or 12,000 mltea (whlcll·
IWr ocour1 fin!). 11 a defect should 1rlee dut lo dtllCliV'I workmanship or meleri.:d, tne 1dju11m1nt wllt
be buad on tha rium blr of months or mll•aQt left 111 tne guanrntee pe1iod, Example: at the i nd ol 18
monlttt or 18,000 mlln, one fourth of the guarantee 1tm rem•lns so_111e adJu1.tmen1 al!cwanca on parts
and !'bor would be 2.5% of lhe 1moori1 ccvered 111hown abo~e. No altow11nce Will be m1d11 tor towing lodging °' other lricldenl1I co.11. ' r-----Tune up I service. 22,4 *
$399 1
" I ~~;!.~!., ... ..,.
WHhyour~tnglntl Ht<e'•--do:
Chtvy 213-327 ( 1957-1967)
ford 212 (1951-1H2)
• Brand neW valves, guides, llfters, valve rock·
ers, push rods
•Brand n·ew ptstons, rings and wrist pins
• Blocks are magnafluxed and pressure tested
to assure.protection
•Blocks re· bored to precision factory toler·
ances
•All new main and rod bearings and bushings
• Crank shaft and camshaft re-ground to preci·
sion tolerances
Install new points,
plugs, condenser, rotor . I and cap; 1djust distributor
points, engine liming
I and carburetor. Our
special low price Includes
I parts and labor.
4 cylinder . . • • • • • 11.es
I 8 cylinder .. .. • .. 27.04 .. ___ _
Penoeys mini bike· A rugged ht!ls
trlil bike. 2' •HP. 4 cycle engine-speeds
up 10 19 mph. JCPenney ;.~:E:~~·~.i~~~~~.-:~;::"~
The values are here every day.
• Many mont engines to chooM lrqn\ at various
prices. Expert lnstollatlon ovalla!M. •
..
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following Auto Centers:·
FASHION ISlAND, Newport BHch 1714)•644-2313. HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin9ton Beech (7141 892-7771.
..
•
I
DAILY PILOT !
Long Beach Makes Wheat Shipment to Japan
! FINANCE · '--....,...--
I Finance
Briefs
e 1 ..... Ore'
SAN FRANCISCO -The
Ja-lradJnc !Inns or Mltaul &, Co. Ltd. and
Marubelli <;orp. •have an·
llOllllCed an qreement w1th
¥trcoaa Coll>. <>I ' San ~ '""° !or C0111ln!clloo ol a 116 mllllm Iron ... ~ Jilanl In Pero. . ' •. Tile ociotrl<I, wblclt ilso
.calls !or lhi aupply ol
Ja-!!Qulpment lot the
JllOject ,,.pr ..... ta the • fbW
SlqO 'Jn I -year ......
menl whereby Marcoba will
...,.iy five major Japanese
llOe1 llnns with 138 milllo<i In
... beifnnlng In 1!175, a Mitsui
spokesman said.
• ou·1w
LOS ANGELES -Oc-
cldenlal Petroleum ' announced
discovery of an estimated 15-
squ~mUe oil field 100 miles
off Scotland in the North Sea.
The diacovery carne on the
third well drilled in the six
North Sea blocks awarded last
March to OccidenlaJ and its
partners In the venture., Getty
Oil Company, Allied Chemical
Ltd. of Great Britain, and
Thomason Scottish A,ssociates
Lid.
e Doino 81111
LONG BEACH (AP) -In
paat ·year•, ahJ.ps Alli~ Into
Long Beach harbor from
· J•l"'• bad to crulie up Iba
cout to PorlJand, Ore. to pick
up a return eargo of whut.
Long Beach port autborJUes
and wheat growers hope to
end that ~practice and turn
Lona: Beach lnto u major s~P
ping point for Aslan-bo~
wheat.
,
The llrrt major shipment or
wheat to Japan rrom a
Ca.Hfomla port was loaded
here Thursday and ottlclals
say 1uch ahlpruen1.1 could
multiply tnto a 11x.to 10-
mlllloo bushel·a·year buslneas.
The IG,000 tons of wheat -
worth •t.5 mlllion-wlll be
shipped to Japan today on lhe
Kastrakl, a Greek-owned
freighter under charter to the
Tokal Shipping Co. of Tokyo.
Defects FOtlnd
Chrysler Recalls
· NewDodgeTruck
DETROIT (UPI)
Oll'Ysler Corp, bas 81lllOWlCOd
10,3112 Dodge 1!'7Z and 1973
Ughl duly trucb are lielng
recalled to dealers because of
OOod laf<b and brake hose defect>. . .
In one aafety campaign.
10,:JOI Ugbt duty lnlcks are
being recalled because 515 o1
'lllem ~ Oolltain a secondary
-latch that doesn't hold.
·At spe<ds above IO miles per
1-. the OOod could PoP open
U the primary latcll becomes
unlatched.. "Q!rysler said .
In the other campaign,
owners ol 61 Dodge 1972 model
Cincinnati .
Safari_.S6
Lliin . Co.ntry . Safari, Inc.
said , it has finalized a
prevkrusly announced' agree-
ment With Taft Broadcssting
Company to build atid operate
an African wildlife preserve at
Taft's Kings Island Amuse-
ment Park· in Cincinnati.
light duty forward control
trucks· are being notified their
vehicles may have 11\tle or no
clearance hetween the left
front brake hose and tire dur-
Jng a full right tum. The rear
brake hose all!> miy be posl·
tlooed to close to )lie tallj>lpe
oo III-cylinder models. . . ;
. If either of the brake l1G8ll
conditions are left unatteliled,
a Ottysler apokesman said,
there could be a loss ot the
frort, rear or . both brake
systems.
Both the hood latch and
brake hose problems ~were
fouod during ~ly oper
tions and there have been no
accidents resu1tlog from the
problems.
Advertising
Sparks Suit
By Datsun
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
·The U.S. distributor of Dat$un
autOmobiles has sued two men
•
The shipment was made
possible by _a r.e<ient Jgr~
ment worked out with the San·
ta· Fe Railroad C1.1tHng rates
for Great Plaint wheat boWld ror Southem CA!lfornla.
Offlelals of the Colorado
Wheat Administration Com·
mlttee say the new rate
agreement, which cut sblpping
.costs 76 cents a too, "creates
a new market'' and "does 11ot
detrfct from present shlp-
~ents through· the Pacific
Northwest."
Growers aay that nearly
one-third of the 50 mdlion
bushels of wheat Colorado
grows each year already gots
to Asia. Colorado growers say
they hope to use the Long
Gas, Electric
Earnings Told
Beach port to expand lheir
1rade.
Jopan now uses about 4.5
millioo tons of wheat a year,
offlclalis say, but the Japapese
have been Increasing their
consumption by about three
percent a y~ar.
Long Beach port ofhc1als
say a single wheat shipment
The Only previous \\'heat
shipments out of Long Beach
to A~ia have been incidental
amounts of Cali(ornia and
government-owned whea t, of.
ficials say.
represents an Income to the i-;::;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;::;;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;;:;;::; Long Beach area of about!~
!50,ooo '" 1a1ior. tartrrs. port Pa r a mou nt Sports costs and other fees.
Fullerton Pro f Gverylfiing iti
::Jenni:J
flATURING All TOP IU.MDS
$JIEC1Allll Studies Brokers HEW OUfrlLOP AUST•ALIAfrl
TE NNIS IALLS $165 CAN OF S (limit t c•n1
-tlll'9""'•1 OTHER IRAND'-11.&J JIER CAN A member of the Depart· assisting Cal State Fullerton HouRs, MOH. & FRI. , ro ,
I F. I Cali! . •Cficials in ' pilot budgetm' g TUl:S •• Wl:Ow THURS. & SAT. 'Tll' ment o 1nance a orwa .,, suHDAY u To 1
State University, Fullerton is ~Y:~~ 1pr:g[a°'s :~t~i~ i? ~h: 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa.
currently working on a $5 ,000 Administration and Econom· (Behind The lntt'rnational House of Pancakes)
contract to study the problems ics, said that the study has two PHON E 642-6886
of small ind e p en dent major objectives. • EXPERT STRINGING & PROMPT REPAIR ERVJCE •
brokerage firms in California. ''The prime objectivts,'' he ~~~
Dr. Gary D. Tuchman, a said, "are th e identification of
San Diego Gaa and Electric lecturer, in finance, wwi guidelines for profit a b ! e
Co.· r~ -~arnlogs df ~ 1 awarded the contrac'l by the operations of small real estate
cents .p,er share of. cornmqn Staie pf California Depart-brokerage firms. und the
stpck,,-;for the ' quar:ter ended ment ol. Real Estate to study development of a practica l
Dec. 31. • 'Keep Ing the Small bookkeeping or accounting
Nearl y Everyone
Listens to Landers In the comparable 1971 Independent Brok~rage Firm system that can be used by a
period ~·company.earned 32 Profitable." brokerage office that has only
cent.Ntihjre. •'i,iiiiiiii~l>i'~·iTuc~h~ma~ni,iwiho~a~lsoi.ii'.itihr~ee~toif~ivie~e~mipiloiy~eeisi."iiiij;ijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiiiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijiijij
BLEMISHED TIRE
CHAINS WIDE TREAD '
,..,.,..--.
CAl,IPERS -TRUCKS
PASSENGER CARS
PASSENGER CARS
SIZIS: 520:z1 J lo t 00.15·l71x15
TIRE
General Tire
SAFE STOP SPECIAL
LOS ANGELES -Ernest
\V. Hahn Inc .. a W Angeles.
based construction firm, will
purchase the Dale J. Bellamah
Corp. from the Da1e J.
Bellamah Foundation "of Albu·
querque, N.M., Hahn officials
said.
Tbe aereftnent provides for
Taft to finance conatrucUoo of
the entire facility, estimated
to cost $2 million, with Lion
Country safari providing all
the animal.s, management,
know·bow and expertise in
constructiqn and operation of
the facillty.
for a half million doiiart over ~
an advertising ciruclar for' •
nonfactory service manual.
CMIPERS & TRUCKS
I Ohl6°S
t5h 16-5
700.17
51115:
700115
175116-5
"750.-17
Complete BRAKE
OVERHAUL
Tl)e agreement calls for
Halm to J'IY the '. f0111¥1atloo
•14~3 million in tbe torm ol
Gll,llf2 shares ol "'Im COi'> mon stock for the BeOamah
c&rpotation, a real es~te and
building COl)lpany.
Irviiie _Fipn
Tells Sales e White .Fro11t
NEW YORK· ...... The board 'VTN Corp. Of Irvine report-
chairman of Interstate Stores l'<I net earnings of six months
sal dthat talks are Continuin g ended Nov. ,30 increas~ ~
for the sale of White Front percent on a 39 percent gain 1n
stores in San Franelsco and revenues over a similar period
.Sacramento. a year ago.
Sol W. Cantor, the board James Trindle, chairman of
chairman, said• there have · the engineering ·apct e~·
been rumors for two weeks ' vironmental design firm , said
that agreemect.was near, but net earnings for the first half
he said the talks have-not ad-·of the current fiscal year were
vanced to that.point with any $.547,700,or55cenlsasbare,on
purchaser. <revenues of $10,6;06,133.
• ::a_'f"'IW ~
Take Choi~e?
Ta x Figures Different -PlfiLADELPHIA (AP) -U figuring your income tax
confuses you, there ls this consolation: it apparently con-
fu.ses the experts, too.
Usi ng the same set of facts, a reporter for the Phila·
ade lphia Sunday Bulletin asked six commercial ffi<.'ome-tax
preparers to figure bis federal taxes. 1bey came up with
five different answers.
The -· James S. Tullnell, then asked two d~ferent Internal Revenue Service agents for help. Their
answers differed by $93.
"So I turned to my wife, wh:>m I drafted to ~esent
the average, 'nooexpert' citir.en who figures out his own
taie.s," reported Twuiell. "After three hours at i~ sfle
came up with lltlll another figtre."
Tunnell said tbe JRS knew from the start what he was
up to hilt ..,,. oil In ita initial clooely .. udlted effort ond
later supplied the "cornet" figure. 1be IRS taxpayer
assistance bureau, on the other hand, made a number ol
ern:n, he said.
•.
THE VIKING
PRCIJDL·Y. OFFERS •• , . "
2000 cc •n9ii1•. C sjl*ed tr1111
f!lit1io11, pow•r fro11t disc br"•'•
ttvl• 1t..I wh••ll, r1di•I ~>r11.
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ORDD YOURS NOW s25a9 . •
Nissan Motor Corp. said the
"false and misleading''
circular was mailed to a
substantial number of the
more than 500,000 Datsun
owners in the United States._
The company claimed trade-
mark .infringement, libel and
unflir compellUOn in its
· Superior Court suJt againl!t
st.even Slavin and Charles A.
Q!li103,
Nissan said the circular
asserted that Datsun owners
have expressed dissatisfaction
With repair service and that
Datsun 's original factory
manual is inadequate-:
·For~Corp.
In Newport
The Forum Corporation, ;.
0 e n v er·based investment
managemenl firm, bas an-
nounced the opening of a bran-
ch office in Newport Beach.
Also announced was the ap-
pointment of Allen 0. Smith as
a Vice President to head the
California office.
The Forum Corporation is
an investment management
company with four no-load
mutual funds, a tax-sheltered
investment subsidiary and an
individual Investment counsel
company, Forum IOvestment
Counsel.
IF •••
IF ••
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We correct Caater, Cami,.r,
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manufacturer's speclflcattone
... Safety check and ad/u1t your
steering!
1Ntr1 Clllll
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OOM HIMC[ ewer FOi CNIS WIT" All COfllOITIOltlflll Oii TOD61111 IAll .
BATTERY SALE
S1ve 20% oft the ev1ryd1)' low
price of any Delco or Wlll1rd Btt· ttry In stock. Ellch1noe required.
'RE!INSTALLATION
FREE BATTERY TUT
~ ti.I ... •botrt your battlfy oonditloftt W.~I *' fl tr.I
Don Swedlund
CO.AST GENERAL TIRE
•
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:!2 DAILY PILOf s F'rlday J.inu.vy 26, 1973
f~1011ey~s ll'ortli
I How to Cl1eck OVER THE COUNTER up NASD Listings for ~odnotday, J .... ..,. u : 1tn . .._._.. __ ._.. ________ -.•II
011 C1·eclit Status
• l th SYL\ I.\ PORTER J ll:u1k I~ , a young l'i1;.:1111•t'r \111h .1 111fe and 111·0 babie~. lost Ii~ Job n1 the ll<'rosp:1C'1.' C'utb:~l..3 a ft'w years back and, m the
6ru1···~s. ht• gol 11110 ~>111(' ~rJ\\US dt'bl trouble. Now , though,
~.u1 k has a g1iod. 11 l•ll p:1~1ng, &.'\..'Urt' Job in lhe ~!idYleSt, and
~'Cl'Tlll,\ lk· .:1pplll'd lur a h,111111 nlvrtg3,!:l". \Vhen asked the rou--
Cnl' que~t1ons about h1~ deb! htstor~. he tired It> cover up
ijl1!-p.1~1 pruble1ns Th1· b,1111-. turnt'<l him do"n.
• ft had. ol CQllr~·. obt:unNl a credit
""111•,1u rt'port oo llank Alt !he mfonna·
~un 1HI Han k for the past ~t'\"f'n yea rs was
111 the rt>pon \\'h:H rounted most against
Q,u1k 11as 1he fa('t that he h:.id !led -
icr th1· bank also kill'''' h1• h.1d lost his job
ilti.·.tu."c.' of fnr<.~s bt•yond his l"tmtrol and
tJl,ll ht.• \li!S JI! H St.'CUfl' job 0011 . .
• ··110\\' 00 I GET out of this
ljanl.. 11ru1e "\\'h.:it should I do'.'"
bind .....
l"OllTfll
ll.1nk ~hould do plrnty -and since hundreds or thousands
4i 111u 1nay bt~ 1n sunilar f>OSitioos. the follo"'ing guides can be
41 lTt1t·1:1l irnportancc to your future. * If .1uu art' turned do"n for credit and if you beHeve
th is is un11;1rrantcd. t:.ike steps at once to have your credit
~1~11us rt·checked and corrected . Under the Fair Credit Report·
b1g Act. cff('C!ive Apri! 25, 1971. you have a_great new array·
qf c!t'fenses against :1buSl" of your credit status by credit
~un:aus. credit granters. etc. For example, among other things.
t ou can no11 .
I * Obtain. upon your O\\'n request and proper identification
ef yourself. fro1n any consunter·reporting agency which issues I report on you. dtSC'losure of all the information in your credit
file -including the sources of that information on you. * GET THE ~A)tES of all 1rho ha\'e received from any
t:1n~u n1cr-repurt111g ;1gency. employment reports on you Vlith·
Vi the p.1s1 111·0 ye:.irs and the names ol all others who have
ret'\'Jll'<I credit rt.>pol1s about YO!.I within the past six mooths.
1 * Arrange for 3 refuvestigation of any it~ about you
\1h1eh yoo question. , * Have that 11en1 delei:ed from your record if· the rem.
yc~11.!:?a!1on finris it To tx-inaccurate or if the item can no
lengt.•r be \'t•rif1ed * File a statement of about 100 v;·ords reporting your side pr the story if tilt' reinvestigation does not settle the matter -
kri 1ha1 your side will ,be included in any future reports COO·
fa ining the item. * SEE TO IT. if an item is deleted or a statement added io your file. that the credit bureau gives this information to
those 11 ho have received employment reports about Y9U ~1thin the past 1"·0 years or regular credit reports about you ii thl' past six months . . : * Have your record explalned to you in detail and have it
te\'ie\\ed "·ithout cha rge if in the past 30 days you have been
&rued credit because of informatioo in a credit report or if
)'OU have received a &iice from a Collection department af.
filiated with the credit bureau. And. under the same· circwn·
~lances. have previous recipients of information about you 00\i·
ied "llhout eharge if an item is deleted or a statement from
oo is added.
, 1'hesc are extremely valuable rights. For the first lime, rou have The nghf under the law to obtain information -
excrpt ml"Cl1cal -1n your file and the sources of that infor-
n1alion. The la1i.• also forbids credit bureaus to send out ad--
Verse info~ma !ion ·which is more than seven years old, although
J>ankruptc1es rna.v be reported for 14 years. There are no time
imils on informa!ion on you if you apply for a loan or insur·
nee policy of $50.000 or more or if you apply for a job with
salary of $20.000 or more.
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Wall Street • • • . ._.
Fifteen out of every 100 Americans today own stock.
seems likely
here in the Or-
every day.
We couldn't prove it, of course, but it
that the percentage is even greater
ange Coast area and it's growing
That's why the DAILY PILOT was
to
proud, years
C?unty to
ago,
bring
super high
be the first newspaper in Orange
' stocks· today" its readers "today's final .
Via
speed wire services. We 're still doing it in every home-
delivered edition and the service gets better all the time.
Wall Street's computers "talk to" computers
trading day at the
per minute. It
DAILY PILOT plant every
more than 1,000 words takes
• In the
rate of ,
only · 12
minutes to move the entire New York and American
the Stock Exchange reports from
Street to the typesetting
canyons of Wall
DAILY PILOT machines of the
right here on the Orange Coast.
', • And when
the
use
technology finds a way to beat that speed
DAILY PILOT, no doubt, will be among the • record,
first to
When
it to bring readers "today's action today."
to financial news, the one t~at means it comes
business is the •
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-. ' . Sunaav_,s
DAILY PILOT
••• It's a
Rather
SPecial
Package
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Some Of Its 'Only on Sunday' Features: ..
SPECIALS
From the front page-lopping Sunday Special, itself, lo other ma-
jor slorie• of and for the Orange Coast, the Sunday e di Ii on
abounds with special new• and sports stories told as only DAILY
PILOT staffers can tell them.
OPINIONS
Columns by Berry Goldwater and S. I. Hoyak1wa, ~ditorial car-
toon by Pulitzer Prize winner Jeff MacNelly, a weekly report on
California's congressmen and on what's d o in g in Sacramento.
Thal'• iu•I Page A7 . Great commentary by great journali•ts ap·
pears throughout the Sunday paper.
BUSINESS
From Orange Coast real estate lo New York'• Wall Street, the
Sunday edition really mean• bu•ineu. The DAILY PILOT covers it
all. "Day-ahead" market news include• o,nelysi• of the p••t week 's
up• and downs •. volume, trend• end new •lock• on both the Ameri-
can and New York exchanges.
PEOPLE
The focus is on you and your neighbors -on all kinds of people
-through several different kinds of "only on Sunday" features.
People/Quotes, Good Deed People, Al Your Service (the column
that fights City Hall) and each week 's variety of feature stories
about people you know -or wish you did.
THE ARTS
From the irreverence of Rex Reed 's celebrity column to the com-
prehens iveness of community theater and live entertainment re-' ports , the Sunday entertainment pages (plus other features scat-
tered in other parts of the paper ) pre•ent lively coverage of the
lively arts. _ ___,
TRAVEL
At leas t one pege of every Sunday 's paper i• devoted to travel,
at home end abroad. Stan Delaplane '• column con take you any·
wh ere in the world . Stories by local readers often toke you along
on a "favorite vacation ." Even th e ad• ore fun to read .
PLUS, OF COURSE, COLOR COMICS, BIG CLASSIFIED . AD
SECTION, TV WEEK AND FAMILY WEEKLY MAGAZINES
•
Sundays are specwl
.~for readers . of the
DAILY PILOT ..
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' I ' I 4 DAIL y PILOT
Audie
Murphy
Day Set
.Je~~ffJ!f.
i~"fHISk -~ ' rm x a·' ,llefot A : · ~, ·~
' . L!'t 1)tEE;:
From Wl,.·Servlc" ~=,' ~. '~fJG!~6:'.
They are going to n1ark an ~ .... ' e .. , .
rxtrn holid11y 111 the No11h -·\t'·· ·-a.~D '"'
•rcxaS co1l1mun!ty of Grt!en-.i~liMP.1; r-'
\11le Ft•b 22. · 'Artl_D:,,e"'4~1~ft
Civir lradl'l'S disrlosl'd plans .• . D re:"'--~
10 obSt.'l'\'t' ii ns Audit' .\lurphy . -.l. .•• ~Ts
Da\' as \ICU as \\'flshing!on·s ·NV
btrihda~·. 46 •
A Ch:in1ber of Cotnn)Ct'Cf!
spokesm1111 snid tht> ar-
rangen1cnts ha\·e be g u n
hl.-cause ~lurphy. the ~teda\ of
( PEOPLE )
llonor 'A'lnner who later
bccan1e a fihn star, bad not
been paid tribute in his honte
state since his death in a 1971
\'irginia airplane erash.
* Sen. Peter Oominirk ( R-
Colo.1 said he rccon11nended
President Nixon as :i ran·
· diclate for the 1973 Nubrl
Peace Prize.
In a Jetter to the Nor"1egian
Nobel Cornmittee. Doininick
counted as Nixon's ntajor ac-
complishntents trips to Peking
and ~tosro"'. the agree'Tlent
on the first phase of the
Strategic Arms Lin1it1ltion
lalks. the beginning of 1alks
about reduction of American
troop strength in Europe ai:id
the Vietnam peace settlcnient.
* Singer Lou Ra\.l·\s. 39. must
pay $-l.500 a 1nonfh to support
his "·if(• and l\\'O children pen-
ding a divorce hearing under
an agreement reached in Los
Angeles.
Lana Jean Ra\\•]s. 30, will
recei,·e S.1.500 a n1on1h a'ld the
t•ouple's c.:hildrcn. Lou Jr., 8,
and Lou Anna. 4. Sf!OO .-ach.
* In the three vears and Sf'Ven
n1onths elapsCd in his third
term. Los Angeles ;\layor Sa m
Yortv has been out of the citv
just 'over one year. accordin.g
to figures released by the
mavor·s office.
-
Ad good imtU It'& not
Oen. SL 1113)-Day
oltu.111y .)lrlbdof.
ST. l'!i;TERSBURG. Fla.
lA l'I The plight of
Slet'l"''Orter Howard Thon\aS.
divorcing his dying w1ft' in a
despeTate ·attempt to reg:un
lost ~-~fare. lM:fll!fils. has
t_ouched people on l\10 L'\ltt;
llnents and brought-$2.300
towards 111edical bills and
thrct: µa rcels or land.
"\\'e'vl! gotten·· nu1il fronl
some saying they can'I afford
10 help out financially, but
would like to give their tune
· msr&LGUV!D
CERAMIC TILE
The figure s sho\.I' that Yori~'.
much criticized for being
away from Los Angeles too
often. \\'aS away from the rity
Ji2 days. including 26 \torking
davs.
Jn white and c:alot•.
Crystal glmed means
looks great almost torever. 4Q=• 1{4"-.4114;' tlle1. Can be.
a..,lled. -old tile. ' . ' 3•
The ma~·or also potn!ed tu
figures indicating tl'!::it a
"typical \(}.~'ear cit,· ernp!oye ..
\rould have been ritf du!~· 4'16
days !n that time.
* Soichi Yokoe . the Jap'.lnese
soldier \\'ho refused to sur-
rend er ~od hid 28 yetirs iri the
jungles of Guam aftt!.r \\'o.rl.d
\Var IL said he v,r1lJ v1s1t
c:uam around Peh. :!O to tl:Jnk
his rescuers and have another
look at his jungle hidcrut.
YokoL 57. said he \\ill he ac-
companied by his \\'ife uf three
monlhs. ~tihoko. ~-4.
\'okoi returned to Japa~ in
Februarv 1972 after he \\·as
caught ·b~· t\4'0 G11amanians
•Nhi\e setting fish trap') near
his jungle hidCQ•tt.
* Josephine !\li\es. J><*.': ard
professor at UC Berkeley. has
been given lh'? t i 1 le
•·uni\'ersitv prole!">'>fl"."
The honOr makes her one of
eight scholars in the state\\·ide
system to be considered a pro-
rfssor at all nine ca1npuses.
She is the first \voman and
the first on the English f;:icult~'
to be so honored.
* !\tarie 1\1. Ralston. 76.
mother of former actress Vera
Ralston, died in a Santtt
Barbt1ra hospital after a long
illness.
The daughter lives in
suburban Hope Ranch and is
the wido\V of llerbtrl J. ''ates.
who was chairman of Republic
Studios.
i\lrs. Ral ston also is sur\'iv-
ed by a son·, movie producer
Rudy Ralston of Sherman
Oaks.
* The Santa Barbara County
Grand Jurv has rirdcred
former enter.tainer Phil Regan
arraigned on three counts of
bribery. superseding an iden-
tical tndlctmcnt by t h e
she:lf's office.
nf iian. 66. was accu:;cd of
trying to bribe a county
supervisor Jan. 12. lie pleaded
innocent to the origi nnl counts
and was freed on $2,500 bond.
Regan then was rebooked and
freed on $10.000 bond .
The once famous Irish tenor 1
is accused or offering 96.000 to
a county supervisor for a
favorable vote on a rezoning
matler to m·ake pontble"-lhe
construction of a ni-unit con·
domintum.
* Think being a mayor or a ci-
ty is fun'! Then talk to the
iTiayor of F.nderlin. N. D.
Bertmje Pelllmu recently
resigned from the mayor's of.
fice. A!ked why, !!he said:
"f resigned because tht"
publfc ts so obnoxious and
overbearing. For $25 a month,
J cannot afford lo flsten lo
the public make asinine corft'·
plaints."
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DECOUPAGE ,
l!UQUEI ~
H•re' • a plac• to 1tick
tho•• National
Geograpbk: c:Upping1
onto. Flnlsh over them
ln real d.caupag• style.
3''xs·· s··x1··
7"x9"
S"xll"
I
·~·. ·60' ' 75•
90' '
HEIRLOOM
BOIBYIOUS
. y·imo.; all "that juDlc
yo\l empty wt of old
llhln .pock .. 11 c;;1ae It lo., ... of ti.,.. lioXH.
8"xl0'' 3.99
8"x20" 5.99
10"x20" 7 .99
14"d0" •••
12"xll". U9
IS"xlf.'... 7,99
&'f Uftl:
COBDLESI
WILLCLOCU
Battery powered and
ha.,. run UP,: to a NU
y1ar on a ' C" flali>l19ht
battery. (probabl,r nm.
lor19er 11, .. didn't look
at thus a1 ohen).
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and .servit-t," ~argar1't 11111. ''l'rn ut ~the end of my
ltvdcn. who 1na1wges a fund ro~."
rOr 1'bo1nas Ill the ())fn-Althou.gh tht). donations t•on-
1nen:ial Bank, said Thursday. t1nue to pour tn. ~1rs. Ryden
~A ~'tlRStt"S·mde-asked if iR\'4.~uU-\old -Mr lhf ~
she eQUld help out In the home • Mtklnt-wtU not.alte1 ~ls p!an,.o.
as ber donatlon. Mrio. Ryder Jle's been drawing front lhe.
said. flWl to ~1 ntL>dical expenSl'S,
Thomas. married lo his $he Jlid.
childhoOd sweethetll't Rul.h for ' tfiRS. 11-IOf\\AS, 111olher of
32 years, was ne::ii-despatr !liX chlldroo. rnnglnff' in age
last week. · · fronl 5 to 30, is conflne<l 10 a
"There is' no other answer." nurslpg home in the advnnct>d
he said painfully of tho divoN:~ et.ages of n1u1tiple ~leroois, an
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D
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0
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· iftt·ura.ble dcbill · ting dlselae.
TIX>ntaa.Ba)'I hi'e not able to
meet the moun1ing nun:lng
home costs ol $500 a month.
·~1f 1 were-rt:t.l-poor Ot J'{IQJ
r.ich I ~d-take care at my
"ife." he. said. "I 'A"Ofk herd
for a living Md ll\ls la what
happens.'' , • He> suld the divorce ~'Ollld
enable his \YUe to OOCome el·
igib'le [or \\1eltare benefit! t.
cause she'd hRve no other
nieans ol support.
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~ aE PROUD nlAT'i"oU Co""'Mt
f ROM A. LON(; l.!Ne o ~
'i1'LJFFC:0 6MIRT""5 I ..
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WOOD CARE
PIHELPOUSH
Now that you rheritl au this -.._ .
gNOI panell,.g, you'll n"d
some ot tbis to kffp it
'1ooktag gnat. Spiij on. wip~
!!· ' 110 .
' . . I , .• f " •
• t
ta:Ll'..JIDBZQfii
SIQll.FPAPD ~
A t .. Porarily . ~ ~unt W9' to 'kMp
· 'W.ln• :tJ· Tb.Y can · ~ 'M -' but•they. ... won't mcwe ecually Ul l'm
, -~-.J>14czH let
mebOw), ;.-:, . 19° TD.
. CLUBIC WCI .
WILL C09ElllHG !Lor· tbi1111\llf 11 really, J*allr· really, real
16oldng, Cl'.lld boUPe
m•. mv.ch. much. much
9Gtl•r to {DtJtetll than
r.a:l brtcL brick. brick~
87?so.n.
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Jagger: ·Sight
ls it sex".'
He strides, struts, st1i ps, strikes at his audience . 1\.n orgy in
mime.
Is it dance? It's vibrant, violent.
Is it music? To some, music at its most dynamic. To others,
it is glorified child's play.
No rnatler. To the 18,000 who were drawn to the Ingl<ewood
Forum last -week, the music, the dance, the sex or the child's play
of .Mick Jagger who is the Rolling stones, was not an•event but
an experience.
And they paid. From $15 to $100 a ticket. For some, a night
spent in the cold. Huddled with freaks and straights. All to
..
Over Sound
share in a high-wire rock ·n• roll extravaganza .
The extravaganza was for the earthquake victims of Managua,
1t1ore than $400,000 was raised.
Irrelevant When Jagger entertains the cause irrelevant.
The perfotmance matters.
ls he dangerous? Sociologists can't agree.
Is he powerful? Yes, fans came, he conquered.
He always does. Next time he appears it will happen again
anotht r sellout, whatever the site. '
It's always that way, wherever Jagger goes.
No matter where the money goes.
DAILY PILOT 2$ ·
•
P~hlic TV Battle Nears Showdown
VICTOR MORENO AND CARROLL · STA~NEY IN "STONE FLOWER"
Cllristian Science Afoni!or Service
WASHINGTON - A bflttle Cor the con-
trol of noncommercial television broad-
casting in the United States is nearing
the final round.
At issue is the ';public" in public
television. At stake is the future direc-
tion, possibly even the survival, of the
four-ye a r -o Id communications ex-
periment.
The only sure conclusion or the mo-
ment is that the old patterns of pro-
gramming will change.
Focus of z:nuch of the controversy is
public affairs programming, which ac-
counts for about 30 percent of public
broadcasting's prime time fare.
The Nixon administration, suppcrted
by some members of CongreM, some bf
the 233 public television station managers
around the--eo~try, and a number of
viewers object to what they see as a
"liberal bias" in such currenl event." pro-
grams. "Contending these duplicate of-
ferings on the the three commercial
netWorks, such critics suggest more
balanced; timeless programs which
would be complemented by local station
addllions.
.Defenders, including the Public Broad·
p:asting System (PBS), which transmits
programs to the local stations and has
made most decisjons on program content
in the past. argri~---that duplication is no
issue since only 2 percent of commercial
prime time programming is devoted to
public affairs. They contend that more
BUCKLEY TUNED OUT
Republicans than Democrats have been
interviewed in noncommercial public-'
affain programs.
They suggest that what the critics are
trying to do is simply eli minate all pro-
grams on public issues that might sti r
controversy and fill the gap wholly with
such innocuous fare as cultural and
Daneers Perfor1n Russian Ballet
A colorful Ru~lan story ballet, "The Monte Qlrlo. Moreno will dance the role Changing back and forth trom a gypsy
Stone 1'~1ower,". by Prokofiev; the e1· ol Danilo, the stone culler, in "The Stone to a lizard, the Queen of the Copper
citing fas de Deux from uDon Qu ixote/' Flower." Featured with him wlll be Mountain tempts Danilo-with 1 perfect
by MinkU4t and the "Pa! de Quatre,'' by CaroU Stasne.y as Queen of the Copper malachite va1e and Jurea him away rrom
Pugnl. wW be preSented by the Laguna Mountain,, Molly Lynch as the lizard and Katerina and lnt.o her kingdom, where
Beach' civic Ballet Compatiy on Feb. 10 Merilee Magnuson as Katerina, Danilo'• she hopes to keep him under her spell.
at a:it p.m. and Feb. ll at 2:30 p.m. at fiance. . However, in true fairy tale 1tyle, love
the La~a Moulton Playhouse. 606 Tbe story concerns 1 barWsOme stone wins out in the end and Danilo and
LagUna J3each can~on ' , Laguaa cutter Jn the UraJ MouotalnA whose driv· Katerina live happiiy ever after.
Btach. -in.g am iitlOD-ii-to create a peffecl or~DOn---q\IOOltePU de Deux 1'Jn be
GUf!lt artist wll Victor Mortno, ment from malachite, a smiJ·preclous performed by Louise Frazer and Steve
foriner soloist with the Ballet Rusae de siooe abundant ln the area. Smith, while Dee Dee Scblirb, Mary
-'
Sayers. Cynthia Tosh and Sandra
Wlnieskl will present the Pas de Quatre.
11>e progrmm -are free to members of
the Laguna Beach Civic BallCt, Non-
members may purchase tickets at $3 for
adults and '2 for children under 12 from
the Ballet Center, 186.1 S. Coast Hwy.,
Laguna Beach, Ca . 92651. Checks should
be made payable to Laguna Civic Ballet
and a aelr-addrtsscd envelope should be
enclosed If Ucket.t are to be mailed. 1-~or
lolormalloc, <all 494-7271.
j
CritU:s See 'Liberal Bws' in Progranuning.
But Defenders Question Mo tives for Change1
children's prog rams.
Validity or the arguments aside, it is
clea rly the critics who are winning the u~
per hand.
Latest move in the lengthy power
struggle ~·as the annouaccment by the
Corporalion for Public Broadcasting
(CPB), a JS-member board of presiden·
tial appointees on which Republicans cur·
rently hold eight seal!,' that it is taking
over full public broadcasting decision
making authority.
• J CPB o£ficials contC!nd lhat the po~·er
was legally theirs all along and that their
~ntentlon is basically to see that local sta·
lion managers and the public have more
over run public broadcasting deeidion
Tentatively slated by the CPB for
elimination from next year's pro-
gramming are such popular programs as
William Buckley's "Firing Line" and
"The Washington Week In Review" and
"Bill Moyer's Joomal." Apparent
survivors in the public affairs category
include Elizabeth Otew's "Thirty
~tinutcs With ... " and Boston-produced
"The Advocates."
ln response {o lhe CPB decisions. PBS
is launching a study of alternative means or rmanctng and asking station managers
whether they wish to abide by the CPB
verdict or opt for an altcmati\'C. Cur-
rently about 45 percent of the entire
public television budgel Is iu pplicd by
Washington dollars and it v.ooJd be no
easy task by anyone's assessment to
make up that difference with more pri·
vate and foundation fwlding .
While some of public television's most
nrdtnt supporters would admit the.re is a
liberal tinge to much of the public affairs
programming. they seriously question
just how much of a bolaf)ct the Nixoo Ad·
ministration has In mind. The White
House argument, in commercial ~II
•
' as pubUc·Tv, has been that it opposes
centrali:l:ed decision making on fpro-
gramming and the like and that it ~tints
to reduce, not raise governn1ent ' tq--
tervenlion in broadcasti ng .
Several points, however, make some
wonder if a deslre lo have a net work to
present government views (a domestic
variation of Uniled States Inform111Uon
Agency work) is not behind some of the
push. Hartford Gunn Jr., PBS president,
has suggested that with the Structural
shifts just made, conddlons are present
which could equip CPB to be a
"propaganda" tool. Some vividly
remember when CPB olrJclals bypa.ued
PBS channels last Call to ask local station
managers if they wished to accept 21
hours of publicly financed moonwalk
shots. Of 70· replies, only 10 were
ravorable.
Also puzzling to some who think the ad-
ministration may have more In mind
than it admils is the fact that the 19-
member board of PBS whi ch has made
programming decisions in the past
already is largely made up of local sta-
tion manag'ers.
Furthermore aa attempt last fall by
PBS president Gunn to gel at what the
administration says It wants was re-
jected by the board. Gunn suggested that
CP~ gh·e k>caJ_ stations 90 percent of the
federil funds II rC'l"eives to enable the
stations..to buy and produce the.Jr own
choice of programs.
Though one may easily ~e preoc-
cupied with the mechanics or the ~bile
television power struggle, there are those
who think ita very survival Is 1D questJon
at lhis polnl. '!be contend that W pro.
grams art largely locally produced as
the White House proposes, tbe operation
wnJ become prohltiftivtly expensive and
fe.,.. wwld be candidates for national.
<Ustribufion.
•
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28 OAILV PILOT Friday, Jl/lu~ry 20 11173 •
W.HA T ___ TO -.. DO _ ·------/
IAN. II
OPEN llOUI~ -JCOCE·'l'V (.l)annel 50. Golden \\'rst C'r.!·
-l ogo, !l!lf 001'*1--W•ol Sf;, 11\illtfngton 'Belich. o.dicn11on
ceremonies for KOCJ:·1'V, (Jw1nel 50 will t;1kl' µlate at 5.30
p.m. Wednesday. The 011e--hour dedication \\!lh Robcl't Fmeh
as a speaker will be. followed by an open hous.e .fron1 7 to
9 p.m. for the pubhc Vi!litors will see \'Jdt'Ot.ap..'CI prograni:;,
demonslratwns. µcr.:>t111;iln1r~ :ind .ill llX' fQu1pn1rnt ust>d.
Adn1issiun frl''-'·
JA~-30
. LECTURE SERIES Social Srtenc.-e Lecture HaU, UCI
--=--campus. UCI communlly lecturt' Sl'r1es entitled "The Chal-
lenge of. Racial and Ethnic D1ff~rences Around 1he World."
Ph.D aslltant professor of comparauve cul11.u? will com-
ment on "India : Problems of Natural Integration" oo Jan.
30. Lectures staM at 8 p.1n. Free admission. 1
• ..
J .\~. t; . !8
ROSE PRln\'lNG -Commuru1y SerYirts Building. Civic Cen-
ter, 8200 Westminster . .\ve . \\'estmu1ster. Tenth annuaJ Rose
Pruning demonstratioo, co-sponsored by the \\1estminster
Parks and Recreatioruo Dept. and the Orange County Rose
Society. at 1 p.m. Be sure to brlng your o\\·n pruning shears.
Admis,,kwi free.
SO.UTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH '----VALUABLE COUPON
"TROPICAL FISH OF THE WEEK"
NEON BC TETRAS
•
218 W. WILSON
!off F•irview Rd.)
R~. l9c ~-
Lim!! I wit~ C'""Poft
Ott•• ~ Throll9h F.o. 1, un
COSTA MESA
548-7961
SPEED READING COURSES
TO BEGIN IN
BEACH AREA
.Art11n9tl"'tnh h••t bten made bv Americ•n R•11din9 Foun-
d•tlon to conciutl • 21 -hour coune in 1p•ed reedln9. Th. coutie
it op•n to •nvone •bo•t th1 19• of I l •ndo 9uara11t111 •~•rv
9retluete lo triple !he;• rt.ding 1p••d wiih tn incret't in c..om-
preht111ion.
.Alt•r lht 1••11111 w11k pro9r•m, t per.on ctn rttd tnv
ever19e boo~ in 1111 !hen 1111 hour •nd und1r1l•nd it belt••. In
tdtlition to 1peed •t•di119 !ht couri• •loo t"lph•ti1e1 i"lp•ovtd
1\utlv lethnique1, b~1•~• 1111 t1kin9 1~ill 1. tncl inc••111ed. contl'll•
lr•lio n •nd rtl•nlion 1bititit•.
Tht cour1• req ·,,, ~ ptnon lo t lt•nd one cltu per ..... ~
on th• tvtnln9 of !ht r choic1, For 111011 who would lik1 mo r1
lnfotlfltlion, without oo!\91tion to tnroh, • 11rie1 of FREE one
hour orl111t1tlon letlur•1 h••e b••n 1tll1dufed.
Tllt1e <11eelin91 ••• fr11 to 1111 p..,bl ic i nd the cour1e ... u1
bt 11pl•in1d In complete d~ltil intludin9 e11h1nc• r1quir1m1nh,
clt1uoo<11 proc1du1e1, luilion, ,1.11 1ch•dul1 •nd loc•tion . You
need to 1ttend onlv 0111 metlin9 whicJ, i1 1111 m91t convtnitnt
for 'f'OU. Tht11 fr11 0111 how• 01i1nt1!1ont ... 111 bt ht1d •1 follow•:
Thur1day, J11nu11ry lS, 7:)0 P.M.; Frid11y, Janu-
•ry lb, 7:30 P.M.; 2 meetings on Saturday, Janu11 ry
27, 10 :10 A.M. and 2:00 P.M.; and on fin•I meet-
in9 .on Wodn111dey, J•nu ery JI , 7:30 P.M.
..
ALL MllTING5 Wl&,L..D-Hll.D-Al-THll-----<
LACJUNA HOTfl -THI OARDIN ROOM
421 S. COAST HWT., LAtUNA It A CH
I '
I
·Channel 50 Opens Doors w Public
JAN. !8
\\'.L'-1D ENW1ULE -Orange Coast CoUeRe auditorium,
2701 Fair\•\cw Ro.ad. ~ ~feiil. OCC S)iijphOnic Wmd Err
St"mbll', diN'Cled by Dr. Charles Rutherford. IX'fi'enls ''A
Four Dimensional Experience" -a contemporary eJ1:peri-
n1t'ntill m1~t featurlng a lheotrScal production number
\\'llh gypsy violin and dancing gypsies.
JAN. !'!
JU~IOH C'O:">JCERTS -Bus leaves Boy,·ers t.'luseum. '200'l
N. ~ta.in St., Santa . .\.nn fo r the Los Angeles Music tenter
\\hert' the Los Angeles Pltilhennonk will present a youth
roorert Program .,..·ill be ''The Musical Time Macl'line" in-
cluding \\'\)l'ks of Debussy, Stravinsky and SChuman. Bus
IOO\'t's nt 8:30 a.m. and returns at 11 :45 p.m. Oli1dren under
hers. $3 for nonmembers.
JAN. !'!
PROSPECTOR'S DAV -Knott's Berty Fann, Buena Park.
Annual t>venl feature!! noon parade ol sourdoughs, Indians,
card sharps. saloon girls. Mrse-drawn calliope. Also, hold-
ups. shoot-OUts 1'nd li\'e m.usic throughout the day.
THROUGH MARCH
U'HALE WATCHING -Annual migration of 2,500 Califor-
Q1iiltittg Bee
In the summer 'bf 1970 Calif or·
nia artist Judy Raffael ·sent
thirteen-inch squares of mus·
Jim to 70 different women with
instructions to decorate the
square however they wanted.
The resulting project is For
Judy Raffael -Four Quilts
by 70 \Vomen now on exhibit
at lhe Newport Harbor Art
Museum, 2211 W. Balboa Blvd.,
Newport Beach. lhrougb Feb.
7. Each square is as unique as
t he woman who made it. Ad-
mission, adults, 50 cents, child-
ren, 25 cents.
. ~~~~.
nla gray whales a)Qrig Southern Califomla coaatllne. Ctuisers
IM\'• at 10 a.m. and I p.m. from the new-Dana Point Marina--
00 Jun. :r1-2a and 1"ob. 3-t. nck•tS, si. Cilnlt'S'l!Ulor m:-
ervations. Pas!lellltr boats abo loave the Balboa Pavilion,
Ne\vport BellCh at t a.m. and 1 p.m. weelrendl only. nc1<ets,
'3 for adults, 12 f0< children. Ros«vatlons, 6'1W245.
JAN. II, PEii_ M
CHINESE NEW YEAR -Chinese New Year Cele~ratlon,
featuring a "t.1andarin Festival," with acupuncture derqon-
stra.Uons. photography contest and art show at 970 N. Broad-
way, L<!s Anadcs, .!lncA.ltl_p,m .. a camlv!L,at !!fil_and
O>Uege S<reel.!. Los Angeles , Feb. 2, 6 p.m.·mldnigl>t, Fob.
M, noon-midnight. aod the "Golden Dragon Parage," wbJcb
starts at Ord and Spring Slree<, Feb. :r at a p,m.
JAN. SI -FEB. II
!IACIU'~J.UL -3111\ annual Bach F'"Uval, feolurlng
lecture-demonstrations---;-5oloisb tlie Catbear&I 'Choir and
Chariiber Orehesb"a conducted by Dr. Lauris Jones ; per-
forming in the Sanctuary and Shatto Oiapel ol First ~
galional Church. Jan. 31 at 8 p.m., Feb. 2-S at 8 p.m., f,b.
4 at 4 and 8 p.m., Feb. 7 and 9 at a p.m. and Feb. 11 at
7:30 p.m.
FEB.l·ll
BOAT SHOW -17th annual Boat Show, featuring some 600
new boats of all types, plua a fllm theater and leam-kHall
classes; at the Los Angeles COnventioo Center, Feb. 2·11,
Piionday-Friday, 2 p.m.·11 p.m., Saturday, nooo-11, Sunday,
oooo-7 p.m.
FEB.1-4
DRAG RACES -13th annual Wintemationals Championship
Drag Races , featuring more than 750 top drivers of. "lllper
stocks" and dragsterg; at L. A. County Fairgrounds, P~ mona . .
Gratad Master
An.dres Segovia \\'ill appear in guitar recital with
two dif ferent prograins on Sunday at t~e Dorothy
Chandl er Pavilion. J_.os .A.ngeles t11uS1c Center.
Tickets available at the usual ti cket agencies.
South Coast Repertory I(eepn1g Busy
When."South Coast Repertory
first burst onto the OranRe
Coast scene nearly eight years
ago.~tile word ·•repertory" was
taken literally by the small
but energetic company whkh
presented "four plays on
alternate evenings during the
course or its first mini-season.
Tbe strain proved a bit too
taxin8 when SCR began moun·
ting more ambitious works in
Its tiny Newport Beach
theater, and the repertory
concept was shelved. But with
the opening of larger quarters
in Costa Mesa five years ago,
the opportunity for a return to
the repertory fortl}at arose.
Over the past couple
season!!, the company h&s
played l1s major attraction on
weekend.S, then -if successful
-moved the show into a Wed-
nesda y-Thursday repertory
slot when the next production
opened. One show, "Tommy,"
did so well al the box office
that it not only played in
repertory with the new one,
"'Our Town." but moved In for
midnight performances. on
weekends.
Judical
Justice
Examined
THAT \VAS ABOlIT as hec· r--------::~ They 'll get their chanel'
tomorrow \vhen ''De:1r
Friends" returns for a singlf'
"'!'~core"' perfonnance at rr
Irvine's Humanities Hall
Playhouse. just two weeks
before the next JCT Sho\\'.
··The Ninety Day Mistress."
takes up a three-weekend
residence in the theater. Tl"!!
not exactly repertory theatl'r.
but it may seem like it lo
John Loughman. whO appear~
in both productions, breaking
from "Mistress" rehearsals
for a last shot at "Dear
Friends."
tic as lhin&s could get
backstage at the downtown
Costa Mesa theater, but Intermission
business isn't exacUy slow '--------
these days with the current
tendem offering, ' ' PI a y
Strindberg" an d "M<>on·
children." Although t h e
theater is busUing live nights
a week, the set is changed
again on Sundays for the
afternoOn performances or
''The Sunday Funnies," an
hour of slapstick comedy for
children.
During the daytime, SCR is
currently in rehearsal for two
new productions scheduled to
open in February. The first iJi
"Magic 11ieater II," a suc-
cessor to last year's pilot pro-
ject and it3 unique approach
"to entertaining children. The
show will open Feb. 4 and will •
take over from "Funnies" on
Sunday afternoons .
The second -and promi!ling
to be the biggest SCR
premJere since "Pueblo "' -is
"The B~ic Training of P11vlo
Hummel ." David Rabe'S
powerful investigation of the
U.S. military establishnJent
opens Feb. 16. This is one the
Costa r..1esa company has bet!n
waiting a long tin1e to pro-
duce, and the results should
be inte resting.
THE PRACTICE OF ex-
tending a show or bringing it
back for a return engagement
al a later date usually is con·
fined to companies like SCH.
which work as a continuing -
unit. Community theaters -----------
generally find this practice
logistically difficult, but ooe
local group will take a stab at
it tomorrow night.
The Irvine Community
Thea1 cr wound up its
December producllon O f
Reginald Rose's · · De a r
Friends'' six weeks ago. It
was a shon run. bct'ause of
lhe in1pending Christmas
holidays. and a number nf
playgoers llidn 't get a cha nce
lo see the drama. ·
Phone
<i42--l:l21
For
\leekendcr
• SALE bargains SALE
MOVING to Fashion Island
•
.
EVERYTHING MUST GO!! Edwin C. ~1or)?enroth \Yill 1
spea k Feb. 6 in Science Lec-1 (even our display shelvesl
~':,';tic~·1~, ug}rvic':,~" ~~~ Home · Accessories -Cocktail Tables
P~ns;, replucing Superior Metal Wall Sculptures -Chandeliers
Court JOOge Bruce Sumner HOURS: 11 to 5:00 Wednesday thru Sunday
who was previously scheduled M A R y R O y E R A I D to participate in the UC Ex· · 1 • •' •
tension I ec tu r e series . at •:the factory" ;:~or~~~; Twilight 1.on• of e 425 30th St., Newport Beach • fcssor of psychology and Mocgenroth, a retired pro-I\~~~~~~~
President, Emeritus of Pacific • · ~
~~~~:=~~:~i; S~:~I~ ::. ~~:.~~ c~s~Ea~e~ow~r~~n~~~ y~~~~IE::.~ t
which resulted In publication be true a we •• 1C1•...t1HJ 500 cartons af oran9es a week In our oran9e juice of the book, ''struggle For Justice."' Nov. 1971 by Hill and room! ll .,.,_we're 91'1i119 GWCI)' that many as our fres)i squeexed orOftC)e fulce
\Vang. Morgenroth, a Quaker, costs us 50c ._.. aM .JOll cu buy a quart of this "fncompara~e" oraftt• •
has held leadershlp po!!itlons lulce fw 4tc whtl COllpcMI ~wl Come He It squeezed while you woltl tf with the Quaker service
organization for many years. IT'S FABULOUS!
He lives In Corona de! Mar. WE'RE CilOWINGJ W~'RE GROWING! 1be extension lecture series
i!I coordinated by attorney
Joseph SorrenUno, award win-
ning author of an
autobiography, "Up From
Ne ver.''
Tickclt...19r JOO l~~e_may
be purchased ~at' the door for
$5.50 ii !!eats a~ a.vallable.
~····························· • fRISH CUT AIRIOINI • COACHELLA. SWEET • FRESH CUT AIRBORNE •
• DAFFODILS : GRAPEFRUIT • TULIPS •
• • • ! ~ -"FM-A-Touc~•r"-• I A9~ • 'l"orA"1mlth"Or-S)lTln1r-m -r _. ~4-&5 ··-•-. .U FM. --. s1 ~99---·...---l' • I e...A 1 DOIH • Limit Sia • e Doi. •
• Limit 2 Dea.. • With Thi• Coupon Limit 2 Doz,
• Wltr. Thl1 CIUltllft • With Thi• Coupon • • • • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~·······••J••················· • DOUILI HIADll • fOR HIAL TH • • • • OUI •AMOUS 8 Wf, WON'T RUN OUT •
1'i'IX 'IM Ufl ••ISH 19u1mo ~Wiik SALE ENDS
JANUARY 31st .1
SAVINGS FROM 50% to 70% and MORE
ELECTRIC
&
LIGHTING
646-3737
222 Victoria Street -Costa Mesa
Sp•tltl co<o11tt1y to lulldert t"d Interior Decortlor1
CONYINllNT
LAYAWAY Pl.AN •
f • • !
T ti" n
~ . •
• ~
,~
,,
~ ~
"" j.
'f ~//i#tl lrt;flie
/i.J..1,gltti113
•
l
•
• !M.t.Ll CILll~Y or • ORANGE • CA LOWER •
: ICDUG Lmucr : JUICE : 300Q Thi• ...... :
• 'j F"'' I ~oo . 49c 9•art • sc each •
• · .lmlt 6 of heh • 11 V1 G•N•• 011ty • Limit 4 •
• !l:h Thia C.upon • LfMft Va G.S. • With Thl1 Cou'°" •
• • WI .. T\k Co111N11 • • w•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
COUPONS EXPI RE J4NUARY 91, 1973 '
.,Orange COM.rtf\''• Mo~£ Populnr Prodiu:e and Flowtr House"
NIWPORT PRODUCE
Open 7 Daya a Week I a .m. to 8 p.rtl.
2616 Newpwt loultvord on the. Peninsula .
.....
•n.t11s
•n.1111 .. ~,,,
"'35 Ytar1 of Produce
Know HOUJ" "'Whe<• Qunllly la the
Order of th.t HouH''
,
1 ' .
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•
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I
I
I
I
I
r
I
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Wine; S(}ng-Round Ta-hie
-=~ =1."l!rry Lambu i · Duo ··ltp.peats aLll.te Black Kr.iig1iJ · ---.. _
lf you haven't .dropped in\o th lack
Knlghl, 330 E. 17th SI., Cosla t.jesa, and
caught the Jerry Lambuth Du6, you've
, missed something &pectacula.r.
These two yo,ung men -Jerry on he
organ and Marty Foltz on the drums,
make more ml,lSic than many a full size
~~'. They kee11: the _elace_jumP:fil& six
n\glit a weelt, playing to a packed house
. most ev~y n~ht (F_riday and Saturday,
Jt's U1Ually standing room only).' When
they break~lnto "Sweet Caroline", no one
can sit still. For a ch'ange or pace, their
"MacArthur Park" Is a-classic. Jerry
has a marvelous. wide.range voice and
gtveS 'lt-all he's got: ·
Along with swinging enterfainment, the
Black Knight serves luncheon and dinner
91.tt 'N About
NORMAN STANLEY
th!s colu1nn before, raving about the
epicurean cuisine served at bolh the
lunch~n and dinner hours. We can onl y
repeat that the' '{J'al ·'Cutlets Snrah
Bernh<J,rdl ($5.95l -the ftoast Be..:f
and features a Seafood Bar for the nib--$3.95, the steak and crab dinner (G.95)
biers. The vecy Congenial bartenders, Bill are. all s.ui.ierb. . _
Llndley and Eddie Needham and owner Germain~ -:--wh~, with the Ri_ck ----. -~--.--Roman-Tr10, 1s-shak1ng the rafters 'vith Sam Falzo~e, make this the !r1endliest some· wonderful sounds. This gal can belt
pla in toWn. You always see someone t a song in the traditional torchsinger
YOll know al the Black Knight. lnejden-f· l1ion -she is personality plus and cao
tally, they are now open Sundays 4 do the ballads and rock tunes equally
to 12 p.m., with Richard A:lon:ro n t IL You will truly enjoy an evening
guitar. with Genpaine. 1'he Mnrquis-R,staurant
w'E'VE TALKED about the Marq ·sin
is located at 1670 Newport, in Costa
~1i!Sa.
St. Olaf Choir to Sing
At Chandler Pavilion
Diners
Take Buses
To Ballet
The internationally known
St. Olaf Choir wlU sing an ex-
clusively sacred music Jl:ro-
gram at the Dorothy Chandler
PaviUon of the Music Center
on Feb. 11 at 8 p.m.
Lectlll'el'
Preview '
Mail orders are now . being leading concert halls, in small-
accepted at The music Center town churches, and in some or A performance of c..'On-
Box Office. th~ most majeStic cathedrals teinpora·ry ballet by the
-'tfieconcert Is part of the in the world. American· Ballet Theater will follow a buffet dinner and tour Choir's 18-day West Coast Nearly a century ago, SL backstage at the Dorothy tour~ and is hosted locally by Olaf College was es tablis hed Chandler Pavilion of the Los
the Southland Lutheran Home by Norwegian settlers in the Angeles Music Center Feb. 17
in Norwalk. !\1idwest. Today, the SL Olaf during an evening sponsored
The choir tries to perform stud ent body numbers 2,700, by the Muckenthaler Cultural the best in choral literature about one-fourth of whom arc
with the highest degree of active in the music program . Center. perlec11·on and artistry The evening is open to the · The college prides itself on the Composed of 66 students public fo.r $15 per person. The from St. Olaf College in high caliber of scholastic at-dinner will be served at 5:30
Northfield, Minn., the choir is tainment of ils students and p.m. at the Center, 119 Buena
The founder and director of conducted by Dr. Kenneth has earned an enviable Vista Drive. Fullerton. Buses
the Claremont Music Festival Jennings. the third conductor repu tation througholit the na-will transport guests to Los
will address members of tf!e Jn its more than 60 years as a tion by the contribution of its Angeles and back.
Orange County Philhannonic touring ensemble. A graduate graduates to science, music. The ABT will perforni
Society and guests on Feb. 8 of Oberl'· College and the education, business. the pro-"Se a Ch a n g e, ,, sel to at 10 :30 a.m. at Edwards Cine-... , r · d th I
I d Un'·vers•·ty ol Illinois, Dr. Jen-essl-Ons, an e c crgy . the four sea interludes from ma Theater, Fashion Is an , -Newpo?'t Beach. nings was appointed in 1968. Tickets are $5.50. $4.50. Benjamin Britten's opera,
Dr. Giora Bernstein will dis· Acknowledged by leactiug '4.00. $3.00, $2.50 and 52. ~1ake ''Pete.r Grimes"; pas de deux,
crilic_s as "The royal family of checks_ payable and ma!J to: "Don n .. ;vote"': "MDnu.ment cuss and interpret lhe music ""'"4 to be played Feb. 10 at Craw-collegiate choirs," the St. Olaf Music Cente.-Box 'Office, 135 for a Dead Boy," and "RO:deo"
ford Hall. Choir has become an audience N. Grand Avenue, Los by Aaron Copeland.
ford Hall, UC Irvine, by the (avorite as a result of its Angeles, Calif. 90012, \l'i\.h self-Reservations must be
Los Angeles Philharmonic Or· United States and European addressed. stan1ped envelope. received Feb. l by the Center.
chestra under guest conductor tours. Since 1913, these ha ve For information phone 626-119 Buena Vista Dr ive,
Lorin Maazel. included concerts in the 7211. Fullerton. 92633, 879-6860 .
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Drea111 Bri1igs
ltlidwi•iter Magic
Zhi vila Roche portrays Her1nia in
the Royal Shakespeare Company
production of a "A Mid summer
Night's Drea1n," directed by Peter
Brook. At right, Alan Ho\vard plays
Oberon and Robert Lloyd is Puck.
The production of Shakespeare's
classic is presented at the Los
Angeles Music Center's Ahmanson
'l'heater through March 3. It is the
third event in the CTG-Ahmanson's
current season. Tickets are available
at the usual agencies.
Frida~. January 26 1q73
'Vi
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: MR. MIKE'S : Q~~ RESTAURANT
• HOUSE OF PRIME RIB • LUN2~c~r~1L~NER • • • • • • • •
S . l c Off • SEA FCOD-STEAKS-PRIME RI B Pecia oupon er • INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.IS
• BANQUET FACILITIES
ENJOY A MEAL
• -1--~-WIT~-CLAUOE ANO JILL
PRIME RIB DINNER •
• Complete with soup or salad.
• Choice of potatoes ~ rice.
s-2--,9-5 .•. Prime Rib e Lunch $2.25 -Dinner $3.95
.,, Paul Bunyan Cut $5.95
• ., (R•9uh1r $3.95) • LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
Vllkl l't!Uy mn1 Tll11ncuy, JtnltMlry 2' mrv Fell. 1 DANCING NIGHTLY
w1111 t1111 cCMljllNI, toocl "• yo11r t11tlrt P<irlY. • Lunch-Mon. thru 1Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
• Dinner-Mon. thru Sat. 5 to 10 p.m.
• Cornplirn•nl•ry &eked Ala1kt for 1111 Birtlid11y1 & Annivenarie1 " • 209 Palm, Balboa 675-5774
• Ct! Ille BllCIM Frrry L•l'>lll11g) •
••••••••••••••••••••••
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CHINt:SE NEW YEAR
"THE YEAR OF THE MIGHTY OX"
SAT. & SUN. JAN. 3-4
DYNASTY CHICKEN SALAD
Special Holiday Complimentary Dish
.Traditional Red Wrapped Gifts
Entertainment on Both Floors
HOUSE OF HYUN
410 BROADWAY-LAGUNA
494-99BP
TO INTRODUCE
2645 Ha~bor Blvd., Costa Mesa 545-9471
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
Lark Room
DINNER SPECIALS
Choic:e of Soup or Seled
Boked Potato or Rice PitoJf e Garli'! Bre...I
Be¥eraqt e De11ert
WEDNESDAY -Top Sirloin Steak ................ $2.95
THURSDAY -p,;me R;b ................................. $3.40
. FRIDAY -Beef Stroganoff ....... _._ .... '. ............... $2.95
SATURDAY -Tournedos of Beef --·······-··-······-$3.25
SUNDAY -2 lobster Tail s .............................. $5.10
Orange Co1111t11'• Top Entet•tah11ne11t
KARG TRIO
FRIDAY · SATURDAY NIGHTS
16782 GRAHAM AVENUE I At WctrMtt
tfUNTINGTON BEACH f7141 846·1186 1213) 192°1954
CHAMPAGNE
SUNDAY BRUNCH
8r"U~fa5t
Lvncn
Dinner
Coc~ra11s Enl«lair\m.,I
. .. In Secluded
Aliso Cctnyon
Food..-Cocktails -Entertainment -Dancing
Now AppeaTing
Good Company plus I
RICK -JIM -JOHN
TueMl•y thru Sunday 1:45-1 :30
OPEN DAILY
Breekf11st -Lunch -Dinner -Sunday Brunch
EARLY BUFFFr DINNER-$3.25 to $4.2 5
Sa lad Bar -ChoicP.of 7 hot entr~l's Sunday1 4 to 7:30 p.m. • Mon. -Fri. 5 to 7:30 p.m.
31 106 Coast Hiqhway R..,...otlollS -<i99°266J
South La9u110, Collf. Ample Ptl•Ot• f'Clf\1119
THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
INTIMATE DINING
COCKTAILS • DANCING
ENTERTAINMENT
r·
I
•
Real
Cantonese food
eat here or
take home
.ST AG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560
Open Year Aro1111d Dolly 12·12 -f,i. 1:111d Sot. 'tll l a.111.
~I C:OtJalb\iG'
Wed., Jain. 31, 1973
Wine tasting & Dinner
1. WFNTF BROS., PINOT BLANC
i. LOUIS MARTINI, PINOT NOIR
3. CHATEAU MAGDELAINE
Steak and Lobster or Crab Legs
Reserv•tions only -Limited to 41 gue1ts
8 :00 p.m. $9.SO per person
OPEN DAILY
11 :30 A.M.
LUNCH
DINNER .J
SHIP AHO'\'
31727 SO. COAST HWY., SO. LAGUNA
(NEAR MONARCH BAY) 499-3900
----:-..:>1----__..the....,,,_New__ _
I -~
Open Daily l 0 A.M. ta 2 A.M.
Sun. 4 to 2 -Lunch 11 :30 to 3 .,. .................................................. . -l(p:.:;;.9 -JERR.Y-tAMBUlH ! --H!.s - --=--l
I Exj)erienee," I . i One entreeatour : =~:d~ : -~
I !Wiie!! Y•• lll'ft8"1 !!lb C9~•1lcl SlllMllY t11n1 T1Hir.i11y '111 l"ltl. ti
I ,,,...._,
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330 <AST mH-STREE --r:_· Ht:\--nnu--i -1..1'•(!-}·:
COSTA MESA 642-2304 \::1\,; '''Al' '1 ~~~~~~I . :
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, r ..... s.t.
ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR
4 to 7 p.m. Mon . thru Fri. ... -:_
Foshio11 Shew by Mllflel'"
12:1S, ThwAdoy. Opeit S.... °""'·
1:.:r~~ COA::;T HWY.
l•I ,,._ 'i•llty P1raw•yl
• 'l'-UIU>. NIGUEL I l~'J/G'' ,........__ _____ __,_
I -f
for th e only
Complete Sunday Buffet
featu ri ng
LOX -CO D·WHITEF IS H·
FINNAN HAOD lf fRfSH FRUITS
GOURMET MEAT ENTRIES
SA LA os.p A STA IES· BEVER AGES
• • . . . . • • . . . . . . . . .
lll! DAILY PILOT
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OH:lf D.AILY 11 .f.M.11 -e ClOS•D M0910A'f
"'
C0~1BI:\"ATION
.,.1'..t'.SCHEON PLATES
from Sl.25
CO!olPL.El'E Dll\'NERS
from .....
PHONE •••• u~ss•
EAST 17TH ••.• COSTA MESA L:. --------
HOUSE OF SEAFOOD
' . .
'Genesis II'. Is Far
111 VDNOl'I SCOTT time and money. lllOR 111111 $} Rdlldeobr.ty is a qlllot 11W1
HOLLYWOOD (liPn miWoo and Ihm mooths "' fiUed wilh eothusluma.. His
. Sctenoe · nctkla. tans will be put hil new show tocelher. eyes ftl1!: bright with images
"The ....i iest ol a aoocl of what migbl become of Ibo
dellgbled 10 -!hat the --•---·~·----~-· ... earth and ti. inbabtWlls hi the ho ............. ..~.. ~ ·~~· ~~ .. ·~ ma.a • ..--.-.._ .-al pow1MUtitl it ctfel'1 1 sat tvent ol~ World War m -
Trff'• is .~ in ~ wllb · down in one week and tz ·in-which wUI be ancient history
a oew show, "Gt:oesis U." dlvidu.a.I stories came to ln the show.
whlclt is farther out than lbt mind," be said. "This is an "SCar Trek" -which e~
space voyagers. upbeat story of how the earth . joyed lhree years on the air -
is ngeoerated and bow m-still is seen ill re-runs aCJ'Ol1 The year ls 2U3 AD azw:1 tbe demit.able mantiQd is. How be lhe coonll)'. ~wld bas atom bombed rtself can adapt. There will be fi\"t ''SW'
mto • oew en ol._lbe~~--~'1Jlistm:y_is thalo1oot .• Trek'' con~ . =:' ~ ol yet ci'"1iratioll beinl ,built oo the year al which fans . w:l>ango
· . • .... _ rums of _aootber. Id lite to aee memorabllla, show segments
. ~ ~berry IS u.: our dviliz.alion prosper , but if cl the ¥f'ie5 and ucbance in--
unacmauve ~tor ol the • it doesn't, all is not lost. formation. pict~ and oex>-tnU:-1''· mo~ ol the Wttt. "I think viewers will be jecture. w~ ts a spiDoff for a weekly fucinated by our mutants, the Roddenberry demooserat.td
~.out seuao.. . Tyranians, who .are· _larger. his shrewdness by setting llis
U rt does become a senes bancbomer, more intelligent -futuristic show in 1 a.
-~ I ~1 hope it will but wiLbout emotion -than iemporary setting. Enormous-
-. Genesis ll will be. the '!'11Y men. ly upensi.,.e sets ol. glittering
soence fiction show m prune "But the centraJ Ugures of cities two ttidUi its beott'
time.,'' Roddenberry said on the aeries are a group who call v;on't be necessan•.
I.be ~t at W~ Bros., the?Melves. Pas.. Th ey "Sonie ol our ~ wlll be
wedhe. re I.be show is being film· foresaw the fmaJ war and like •est.ems.... he ~. stored away the a r t • "It's oot lack of trying. lt's literature. medicine and some ··'fbt bent will be a lmJOf
amazing, but every networl of the acieoce of our current 50Ulft of tramportatan _
has spent a fortune trying to civilization. ··we can age~ ""1~"&5
rome up wilh another 'Star "Some areas of the United and go on locatJom wi!boat
Trel". States have been isolated. New fear oi ~ ~ dat
Out Space ·Show
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH
U:lO to-2:30-T-.. .... fri._ -
Ni9htly Oinn•r-Cockt•ik 4 to 11 p..na.
Sunday 2 to 9:30 pm-Clos•d Mondays
··There is no formula for Yorl is a prison. The great emted at ane time m the ~ul scieoce ftetioo ex-· are ruled by wm_te_ past. But thtft 1rt m3D1
cept that ii must be dooe well Comaocbe savages. Cedtral ITkltt surpfis8 allbt sbN-
and with due ~ for the Mezico has returned to a.a that musa be ste:i. bl bt a~
intelligence rl the audienct. It Aztec cuJture. The coast of tht preciat.td..'. Sc ience fict ion 'fans will be delighted to
can't be tossed rogetber lib a carolinas is a black nauoo. 1be tndy ~ are 1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino Real>
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571
cops and~ show. It re-And women 's lib has run JCi-fi buffs. Ruddtobat] ~""S: .. now that ''Star Trek'' has been re;ncarneted
quires considerable labor, amock in one area v.·llere a 'Scieoor fiction ts • highly with "Genesis II." a farther out space show.
plaooing and researcb." matriarchy has taken o\·er. legitimate -branch al litft'alllrt' ------------------------------
Roddenberry sakl CBS and panJpering men ,like pet which will (UllirDe to grow
Wamen gave him sufficient poodles." andgaininpoflllarity."
COCKTAILS '
. ()p<n 7 Da :'::: :.:::: ,_Ji'~ .
WM 0.,.: 11:10 A.M. te 1Z:JO
Frl _. s.t. 11 :JO A.M. N 1 :JO
~: 4:00-12 MIDNIGHT
NOW APPEARING
Vic Garcia
Duo
9093 E. ADAMS . HUNTINGTON BEACH 9~2-79 11
Have you heard about ,....,.
DINNER AT
lrtt~ E liit:ltm1
SERVED FROM 4 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
-includn uUd from the uUd b.iir
.11nd • gW5 of Izzy'' house wiM
•
RIBS, 1.95
CHICKEN and SPAGHITTI, 1.95
CHI CKEN an d RIB, 1.95
SPAGHETII and TWO RIBS, 1.95
PIZZA and SPAGHITTI, 1.95
PIZZA, 1.40
•
333 BAYSIDE DRIVE -NEWPORT BEACH
·-Prinoo lib
of leef A• Jn
AMON5 lCI
SlLICT
DINNll lNTUIS
VINA
HARMER
DUO
E11t•rl •i11i119
... c..\$~.l.ll.X~
ob~?. P01 ~ ~
' . t ~~R6€>~
Suauloil B .. f from
Cap,,,U. Cook',
broiler. Delicacit~
from U.. Severi S.as.
Magnifianl Harbor
View.·
Cocktels. Lunc:Mon
' •nd Dtnn..-d•ifY
SUNDAY BRUNCH
25001 OoUIA OAIVE
DANA l'OINT. hAlllOft ...... ,"
Off 'ac:lflc Cont HighW.,-Twixt
L.afUM H;,u.I Ind S.n Otmenl•
SUNDAY AFTERNOON JAZZ
JAM SESSION -2 P.M. -SUPER DUD
'Theo' As Anchor -Also Ffftured Tuu. Thru Sun.
MONDAT -VINCCCHENTE .=-"DRUMS"
JIM MAHONEY -GUITAR
Unbeati ble /4. mosphT ri'"VnClff TtM ~m•"
With All The Pe.1nuts You C1n E•tl
HAPPY HOUR -4 • 7 P.M. MON. Thru SAT.
THE GALLEY ON THE
PENINSULA
810 E. BALBOA BLVD. -673-9980
I PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
I HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE -OLD DAYS
Now M• 'n Ed's moblle ovens speed dtliciotrs
plplna·hot pizz1t to your door Jn minutes.
For prom~t torvlc• phono 646-7136 ~..;. :
(Newport B1ach/Cost1 Mna•l7th and Tustin) L /
er 847-J2i4 (HunUnl!IOn Btach-Beach tnd Hit!). ,'If/
(;ft the Pizzi with Pizz1z .~. ~ . 'lnen-tdb ~ ~~
• •
Nightly Dinaer
Specials $3.ff
TAliEc/1kmtE
400 MA!N, BALBOA PENINSULA
PLENTY OF PARKING • 673-4633
LlnLE BIG ''O''
1'4J l'lac-Cosio Mosa 14241'1
pr•sents
CHARLIE ·uy
VICKIE HISCOn
NASHVILLE PLUS
Fine Italian C11isine Corkrall•
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673o8267
Re.serv1tions
Open Daily -5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
CLOSED MONOAY
- - -~ FOR -1-PRllll RIB--THRU JAN;-
THE NU·TWO
Poul O'lrioo & W<lli .,_
SUNDAY IAUNCH
10 AM. to 2 P.M.
IANQUIT FACILITllS
JlJ PACIPIC COAST HWY.
HUHTIN•TON HACH
SU-2555
• •
Carpenters
In Anaheim
Karen and Ri c hard
Carpente, l\lol>-tirne Grammy
award winners and popular
soff-rock duo, will perfonri at
8 p.tii. Feb. 11 at the ~heim
In the Galleries
Mesa Exhibits
Watercolors
Convention Center. COSTA MESA ART LEAGUE GALLERY -206 W. Wilson,
The comedy team of Skiles Co6ta Mesa. Watemilors by Clarence W. Sorenson.
and Henderson also ,,.,·ill ap-ART RE1'JAL GAU.ERV -Muchenthaler Cultural Center.
pear \\"ith·tbe Carpenters: 119 Buena Vista Dr., Fullerton. Twenty-five prominent Or-
The singers' top hits in-• ange County arti.sts are represented in an art rental gallery
elude : ''Close to. You." ··we've 7tiere ~ and indi~iduals are able to bu~ or rent
On! J .. ~ Begun ,, ··r All rom a selectm ol 200 oils, watercokn and prints. Call y U,)~ , or f79-Q,60 for further infonnatkin.
We Know,'' '"Rainy Days and
Mondays." "Sllpe1'tar" and 1 LIBRARY EXHIBIT -can Stale, Full-. Photography
"Hurting Each Other." exhibit produced by 20 communications students, through
Jan. 15. The works of Pat Healey and Don Marshall ~
featured. Hours: 7 :~9:45 p.m. MCl'lday-Thursday; 7:45 a.m.
4:45 p.m. Fridays and 9 a.m.-5 p.m Saturday. ·-
RON
SHY
Relaxed
And Casual
Intimaf'y
Entertainment Nightly
Corner ot P•rk •nd M•rine
BalbO& ld•rtd 67l-4530 •
"Finest fi1exican Food
in Orange Co."
Chtrbroiltr-f ood to Go
Op•" 7 D•v1
Cockt.il1 '
Ent•rt•inm•nt
Ml Cl\Sll
FA~ULV
MEXJCAN RESTAURANT
''OUR J.IEAL'I ARE
A TRJ,TOJ.lt"XICIJ "
~IC FADDEN BRANCB -Santa Ana Public Library, 2627
West J\IcF'adden, is displaying paintings by Robert Qennis-
toun of Corooa del Mar through February. Incliidtit are
oils, acrylics and stitchery pennitting the viewer to follow
the development of the 75-year-old artist fnxn traditional to
abstract.
DANA BRANCH LIBRARY -New works of award·winning
artist Edna Padrick on display at 3690 AUantic Ave., Long
Beach, during the, month of January. Show wlll feature art
of polyester resin and assemblages.
CHALLIS GALLERIES -1390 S. Coa~t Highway. Laguna.
Beach. presents David Roberts, Royal AcademJcian, hand
co1i..ec1 lithographs ol Egypt and !he Holy Land circa 18.19
daily from 11 to 5 p.m .. through January. ' '
A1ARINERS SA VIN GS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Newport
Beach. Waten:olors by \Vayne Orman of Corona del ~1ar t~gh January .
NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 West Balboa
Blvd .. Newport Beech. Paintings by \Val ter Darby Bannard
of New York City. He has been involved with color theory,
transitions and juxtapositkms of l'Olor. On exhibit In the en-
trance gallery, For Judy Raffael : Four Quilts by 70 Women.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE -2701 ~alrview Road Costa ~esa. "~holographs of a New Guin~ People" on 'exhibit
1n the library, Jan. 20-Feb. 18. Sixty color photogl'tlphs
presenting the use of art in everyday Ure. Exhibit organized by the Southern Jllinois University Musel.Im.
GOLDEN WEST COLLEGE -15744 Golden West St., Hunt·
lngton Beach. Paintings and drawings using the human figure
as, the main subjeet by fine arts faculty members Kay ~1or
tenson and Robert Alderestt. Gallery Is open Monday through
Friday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and Wednesday 7·9:30 p.m .
BAXTER ART GALLERY -Baxter Hall , California Insti-
tute of Technology, Pasadena. CUna Indian Art a collection
of Roy and Helen Willman of Costa Mesa, ~gb Jan. 23.
AVCO SAVINGS .(N]) WAN -3310 Bri""I St.. Costa M ....
Oils: and walert'Olors by Shirley Richardson through Janu-
ary. '
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1565 Adams, Costa Meaa. OUs
by Olga Steam through January.
COSTA MESA CITY RALL -77 Fair Drive, c.osta Mesa.
Watercokrs by Soozy West through January.
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -506 Cenier St o.~. u.,.
W1¥!fl:Olon lly Beulli!f'!re1idway Utrougll J~u~~~"' · ·
, €0CKTAlLS, l l~::S2:::::i:J'~~==-g~~ .. ~-IN"fH£1) tJRRO-R1l1llr • ··II·
146 £, 17TH ST., Ult.LOREN SQ.
COSTA MESA • (714) 645-i~ll
ftMEftA
ll£&fAl11tANT
Contlnent•l Cul1lne
• Coclrttllt
Stmno
Luncheon and Dinner
lfcmdav thro"llh Satu"'4\1.
~
· C!osed Sundays
We .tre loc1t.-d ne11t ·to
the Mey Co. In South
Coast Pl111
JJJJ s. .......
I 146-J ... 0
ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK
* HAP HALL DUO
Wlffl 8-WllU. • hM
WID. THlU SUN.
MON, TUI. NITll ~
TONY COLOMIO
AT THI HAMMOND
Tllll,ICI _......._.
fOl IAILY llSllS AND l.ATI l'UYUS
OPIN DAILY FlOM 6 A.M. t. 2 A.M.
TEMPLE GARDENS
~:s::gRestaMNftt
RICKS HA
COCKTAIL
~.!v~.~.~~E IUFPIT LUNCH t11J .. ltH M_ .... _
llMADAMS I• ...... >
COSTA MISA Featurtna Exotic
Tropical Dr1nkl 54D·19l7 540-ltD •
I
TV DAILY LOG
TV HIGHLIGHTS !iti&; 0 h9:00 -''.Burt Bacharach 1n Shangri·La."
s one . our special reflects '1 musical terms the
j1re.ne ~~il~ophy or the Tibetan natives ·m "LoS
orizon . Fifth. Dimension, Bobby Van, Richard
l'larrls and tenrus ace Chris Evert are his guests.
Friday
Eve ning
JANUARY 26
Saturday
Momin!li.
JANUARY Z1
' 1:00 D 0 D Ill m El') m-"'' D """ -(1)9Ntws (l}TYIDallfttll 8 lolWI GJ Ut'1 Rip
(ll Git SINI" 7 0 Q Wll4 Wiid Wtd :00 Su1rise St111uttr O llJ !!J·1'o ,.....,. m Thi fllnlltlltl 0 CD Cl) H.R. Pululll mStar Trtt f!J Ml Dulca ln1•1tid1 m 8"ttier aw . fm Hodppodtt Lldp 7:30 I) D11sty's Tretl'IOllst
{f) Thrtt SIMftl fiJ €tl ~mall Hollcl.,.
1:30 (.iJ H'lfll'I HtrHI IJ A lettlf Worut
0 MM: (C) (IOI "Trt11111t ti 0 (l)@J1tkson Flvt dj) Jnt !Of fllJI
S.n G1nn1rt" (1dv) '61 -H11ry m Movie: (C) "'TH Go1dtn Haft"
Gu11dlno, Senti Bllter. (lcN) '52-Williim Holden, Bacbtit
I)) US Nns W11ter Crot1kit1 Stanwyck.
~ .......... ,.,. m Andy GriffiUi 1:00 8 CIJ l•rs 11111111
fD I IPICllL I Tiit Heart: Attic• fl m The Jebons
First of two pro1r1ms on heut dls· 0 lolln Wayne Th11tre
11st. 0 (}} 00 Tilt Oslllonds
I Jta•1t1 C.l10ll ®l Yl$1on On "Machines"
Ntwtlt m C.1111try Music
rnn• ind Mincy ED Ses1me Strert
Q'J Utile RaKllS 1:30 0 Cl) S.bdlll
7:00 0 CD'D m Nn11 A ~ m Plllll Plftthtr 0 low!Jn1 !Of Dollui fJ (})@AIC Sllpehtar Motit:
(}) TIVUI or C.n11q11tnus "HtnftY Ind th.t Professor" Is 1
{j) Aftlll•I WOfld zany SPJ -1tory will! IM tnlmated
G What's MJ Unt? counterparts of the cut of !ht 11· m I L ..... Lucy cent All~tlime series.
ID I Dn111 tt Jt1nnlt t:OO 6 (IJ Al!lllln1 Cllln fZJ 111tolo B ill 8' UnMnlo&
£l'i) Tiit Uwly Arb "Sylvi1 Fine" 0 Collttt l 11•etb1ll M1rJl1nd vs.
al El Amor tltne Ctr1 dt Mujet Univ. ol Nor1h Carolina.
al) Roller Dtrby 0 Morit: (C) "Holllld ol tile 11 ..
G) Dot 42 PM llmlllt ... (mys) '59-Andrt Morell,
ff) $peed Racer Petu Cusbing.
7:30 8 The World el SUl'Y!¥1I m M~: "Flyint OtllCtS .. (com) 0 Hollrnod Squares '39-l1u1el & Kardy. IJ Mowlo: (Ztir) "Pbanloll PltMr ID Movlt: "Then Tbtrt Wtrt TllrM"
(sci-If) '62~an freduicks, Coleen (dra) '62-Alei Nicol. ffi Mlstrr Ropn' Nei(hborllood ~j, TtU the Tnith €E Cine en Su em
(() Chm: !1:30 0 ScoobJ·Ooe
0 Mltlioft $ Mowlf: (C) (2111) 0 l1i m TH lulltys
"'tf'.a ill tbt Wtr1d" (:ld·li) '6S-@ TIJu111: Window II Ute SOutli
01111 AndttWS, Janeltt Scott 0 {}) llll Indy kids
ǤTllo Mew Prla ls Rlpt Cl) Clrtoofl Camiwal m TUt Girl m StlllDI Streit
(!) Dr1ptt 10:00 0 ®) m NBC Cllildrtn's 1\eltnl
EE Lu Brltrly ~t P1r1Mlll 0 (I) [j) ltWitdltd ED Walt Strttt Wttll m Alttrutim {R) See Thurs., m Unla111ed Wortd 9:30PM. aJ N11hvlllt Musk. IO:JO Q Ci) )1111 aod the Pussyuts
EE The Add11111 flNllllJ 0 @00 kid Power/MultipliUlien .....
l :OD IJ (}) Mlsah111: l11possiblt 0 M0¥1t: "'Tbt leather Saint" Id") 0 ll]I er;'I Siniard 11MI Son 0 CIJ Cl) Q) Tiit lradr Bunch '56-John Oiirek, Cesar Romero. m Hotin't Hen11s (!) CiDSpol Sin1i111 Jubilee
aJ Gomer Pyle USMC ED Mister Roters' Nelahbotllood
€i) Herminot Conit 11:00 fJ (jJ The f'lintstones
ft:) W1slllnzton Wttk Jn Rrilew 0 ®J ID Arcund tilt Wol1cf in 80 o.,. €E Diet So11rlu1 CID Jimmy Btr1tt Show D fohn W1yne Tht1lre
W Movie: {2ht) "Tht Jw Sinaer" 00 Mobile Ko1111 Sllow
(drt) '27-AI JolK1n. 0 (}) FimkJ P111nto11 m Ad·Ub
1:30 0 @) m Tiit uttlt People £D Ststrne strut IJ (]) rJJ G) Thi hrtrid&'I Family UJ Lwcti1 t.ibrt m LIZA MI NELLI ll:lO 0 ®) m Tatklnt rfrtti 1 Gian! * & ELKE SOMMER Cl) MO\lfe: "W01111n at the Town"
Guest With MERV (wes) '43--Clair11 Trevor. m Mtr1 Ciriffi11 Sllow 0 {}) Uduille GJ Ptttie111t /unction m Elemenlary News . -
tt) Cityw1tthers ID Mollie: "TerrOI Is I Min" {mys) CE N~el1 '60--Rithard Den, Gret1 -Thyntn.
!1:00 o (l)C8S Frid" Movi•: {C} 12hr· Afternoon
20m) "The U11sln•ablt Molly Brvwn"
(mus) '64-Dtbbit Reynolds, H•rvt 12:00 g ([)The A hitS
Presnell, Ed 8111ey. · , Wlldl'f Thrt !rt "Wlldl'f b Air" D llOJ rn Cittl• ol Ftlf I I ea I e , 0 AN ENCHANTING HOURI 9 Th• John Woaden Show · 0 00 The Monlets * BURT BACHARACH 0 Mowit: "Wlll!n tht Datlons Rode"
IN SHANGRl-LA (wes) ·~a -Randolph Scan. Kay
Presented by Chevrolet rrancis.
0 @ 00 CiD lillfil!J Burt Bl· ilOJ lnsia:ht
dltnch In Sllan(ri·La This ont·hour (b Sports Cll1lltnft
special renects In muslt1I t111111 th1 ft) Mister Rot:en' Ntlfhbllrtlood
serene jlhil0$0phy of th1 TilMlt1n 12:30 0 (1) CIJS Children's f1lm Futiv1I
natives ln "l01t Horizon." O High Sthoal Blskdb.111
I!) PtJTJ M•MIR 0 UCLA Balli;ttbltl Bruins vs. No·
QJ Nino Ire Dime.
ED M1sttrpl«t Tlltatrt (R) 0 00 G'I Aeuiw Bandstand im LI Cotquilla llQI Mtvlt: "Hold l•d Tomo1row"
t:JO O LM Tmino's Coll (dra) '56-Jahn A111, Cleo Moore.
CJ ftns m IJ!W!LJ WheR tire AdlOll Is A
fil) Prtmiel det 40 11view of Ille Los An1eles DodRH1
10:00 O @J m Tiii lobby llttiR SllOw bastbaH season__j(l 1972.
Dl'lkl St1inlMlr1 111tsl:s. l £l'i) Stu1nt Stretl 9 ID di Nm €!a Sabados A~grn o rn oo m Lm A1111riaR S1J1t 1:00 rn ea111p11S Profit• O loris X.1lon Prtstnb @ fd11 F11lu1e
fl) Nunca Te hrdonart 0 Mltit: (C) "fM Plllllaal'' (dra) tE. So11I '55--Una Tumtr, Edmund Purdom.
0) MllthacM llllltna (f) Far Dtll Flid;s
IO:Jfl 8 ftD; lad. ~Ill Tnl~ lb Nadlvillt Music (!) Nm: '
g) Ovtdoef Sportsm1n f.EI tint tn la Tard•
11:00 0 D mm m Ktw• 1:30 IJ) Touttl Ill Ult 70'• --UJ(IJ!IJ"IO:...---@ Mtvl_e· "Ito Pl"4 to Land" (dr1) O 0111 Slip lepnd '58-Jolln lrtlan , GJ MarsflU Diiion Q MD¥111: "O'lantnd Pldlic" (•u) O Sht1lotk Hol11111 T11eatro '51-.lock M1hon1y. Paa&i• Ca$llt. m Truth Of ConMqutllUI m Ch1mplonllllp lo.Una
Q) PtJTJ M11111 En) Mis!Alr Raftll' Mtli;hborhood
Q) t1mtf Ttd Almlltolll 2:00 I) Dusty's Tm/lollM
EE f1111 Art ol Ciooflllf Oii (}) Skttchboak
G:l Ch~ .loflnlOR Siii'# Q StatlM It Stltlon
ll:lS IE Cl11t1111 34 djllltflltr
11:21 8 hwl m to111b•t
ll:JO 0 ~ B) athnllf t.r10ll fI) Sts.tme Sttttl 0 Mn II t Sv!\Ust 2~ IJ Ships to Luminf
u CIJ oo m "" """ o•• •· (J) o""" U/\'llwS Ill London Khoo! C11Ud1111. O lattrsttldl ZoN
(I) t«ahbllfl e (J) w.,. auutNn Ol'tp m Tt Ttll 1111 T~ St1!1 'I\. OftfOll.
ED Jan•kl m lrildWt'I """ 11:50 0 CIS LIM Mftll: (C) llMool J:OO II T\t Siesta Is Orn
Zatt T .. " (Ki·fi) -.llmt.s Oho~. (I AJrlcalt111 USA
12:00 m Altttd H!tcfl(Od: ""'"° D (I) C!l m Bill& """' Nao.. G> Sal•rl It Mwtnmt II ltfl Tturu•t11t Liw, from Ptb-
l?:JO Q liN'M: "Spew• tt tM Jlo!Ui" b!t8etch,C.!il.
(dr1) ·~tnlY fonds, GIOfl• Rall 0 Mori1: "Slttiltl l tll" (wn) '54
fJ Mtvle: "Y1Mlil .. (dn) '57 --0111 flobtcUon.
Sl1rlln1 Hl)'lttn, Anit• Ellbofl. «"~ Sdtnu Fktlon 1'11111tt m Mmt: (C) "KIM hltw -bit" ID Ml'itt: "l'h111 ,..,. KIM • '•n'"
(drl) '54-.\1111 Ladd. (dll) '37-Sl)tnctr T1acy, f11nchol
6' C.OunllJ Muslt 111111.
l:DO (JJ OUCIJ •"" Gl lM ,_.
l:Jl 8 MIM: (C) ~ollt II Ttc• fJDMlsbl ~am' NtlrJiNehtM
•" (wa)J$1.-Mfr~ SlMM. ll)f~
t.t0 m All·NltM Dir. "TraO. tM Mall J:JO 0 h C.Mpet
-· ~· C.•1t1,• "It ID'--1" m-
TONIGHT !
WINNE R OF 3
GOLDE N GLOBE
NOMINATIONS '
e WALTI• MAnHAU
l11t Attef .. -fl
e CAROt: IUINm
lest Att1111
e GIRALDIHI PAl4fi
In t Su,.portlilt
Aetmt
'~Honeymoon 's j
over ... it 's time!
to get married: 1
Walter
Matthai•
B~:'~tt
LID 0 NIWPOOT
BEACH
lNTlANC'r TO LIDO 1511
~•J ~>SD
#(******** DllVl·IH
SU,EI SWA' MllTS
fOR.fUNI PROFIT!
IARGAIHS GAlOREI
SATURDAY&. SUNDAY All DAT
IA.M.T04P.M.
AT ORANGE l 1 & 1'2
AHO MAllOR BLVD,
********* P"ACIFIC DRIVE-INS
l•'IC'ol .......
"'"" ef 11.._tl $!7·2213
• llfllAL "l lUlJMl.lllD" · DIRTT LITTLE llll Y (If)
11#0110 IN '1'H• SfONI IOI + IAllll'OOT IX•CllTIYI
Mea "'"' f'rl o,o. i ia "'"'-,., ' ""' ,, "--
•
Friday, January 26, lq7:) DAILY PILOT 29
Channel 50 Turns ., .... """ .... Ills lift. "NJ...,,..,. .
County Viewe.rs On
Monday 5:00 SESAME S'rRE-(IO 6 Oii ART'-! . I 4,00 ELECTIC COMPANY _ min) ~• : r1sfS' N AMERICA "Rudy Pou.atti" An ln-
Entertainment, l'IW.lllc, and 8:00 NOW YOUR ANTIQUES dividual portrait of this local
humor to teach reading -Antique buffs Ralph and artist and his creative ~l~~A ,P~Ucwed .. _~Y the Terry Kovel talk about the works. ui~n s orllaliop. problems ol doing the laun-6:30 THE JUST GENERA·
4,30 -MISTER ROGERS' dry in the da •-•---TION "r---1ltutJO• oa1
NEIGHBORHOOD -Vari·e-ys uei:un:: """"
111
modern wuhlng machines. Law" Basic differences ln
ly program communicating The discussion leads into constitutional law are ootli,n..
with young children~ bollted American fabrics and a ed by host Howard Miller,
by Fred Kogen. -history of American textiles. and •kits by the Ace Truck·
5,1)1) SESAME S'rREET 6:30 To Be Annouocec1 Ing Company .
Hour-long program ·ror pre-7 : O o INTERNATIONAL 7:00 MASTERPI EC E
school children, produced by PERFORMANCE "A THEATRE "Tom ONtWHICON•v
Children's TV Network. Tribute to Beethoven" This Brown's Schooldays" Part N "'
6:00 MAGGIE AND THE 1w .. par1 Beethoven concert n : foUo-1 by "H"blo OW SHOWING SPECIAL LIMITED
BEATUTIFUL MACHINE features tW<> sonatas written Mann" See 11.!ting Wed· ENGAGEMENT
-Physical fitness exercises at the. time the composer nesday, January Slst at 8 SOUTH COAST PLAZA •1 Coit• M•s• _ 546.27 l I
for every age group. Ez-learned he was losm· g h1~ p.m. (SO min) U • CINE • Q 8 Oii FOCUS ORANGE COUN "" M"' Or•n9• -532.6721
ercise instructor ~1aggie hearing. Feverishly he : • HIGHW•
Let'
· h TY "M th d M · ""Y 39 DRIVE-IN Wo•tmo·n•t•• 534.6282 v1n concentrates on "t e began to compose one -e a one am-uppe r back." masterpeice after another. tenance Program" See Sorrv -No P•U•l
6:30 FOCUS ORANGE COUN· Two resulsts or this effort listing Monday , January!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ TY - "Methadone Main· are the "Appassionata" and 29th at 6:30 p.m. --~
tenance Program" Host Jim the "Kteutzer sOnata.'' (60 8:30 EYE TO EYE -"A Book Qx>per and special guests: min· ) of Marvels" Magic in art UA CITY CINlMA • SAT & SUN • UtJI & 1tJI ,.M
Sa I
fro the Mlddl A "l l l llA IN TMl KITC Nl!N" (0 ) COLOll '
u Stolzberg. coordinator 8:00 Bi.ACK J 0 URN AL m e ges to to-
of the methadone main-"Death at s 0 u t h e r n day.
'en.need g .b 9,00 FIRING LINE ru use program University" Investigation of oL the Orange County killln Conservative c o l u m n i st
lleparfment of Men ta 1 campus gs. WIUiam F. Buckley, Jr.
Health: Ed Garcia and AJ 8:30 BOOK BEAT -"And debit.es topics of national
Wearing, both in the to Each Season. • ·" Rod and international interest
methadone program for con-McKuen, probably the best-with guest newsmakers. (60
trol of heroin addiction _ selling poet in hlltory, will min)
discuss methadone , and ho\V join host Robert Cromie to Friday
the new program is work-di.scll!S his newest collection 4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY
· · Oran r-·-of poems. 4:30 MISTER ROGERS• mg m go ~,ty. 9,00 SPECIAL -"Even· NEIGHBORHOOD •
7:00 SPECIAL OF THE WEEK ·-"The Death God· ing at Pops: Night in Old 5:00 SESAME STREET (60
dess" Shin Ikebe's con-Vienna" See listing January min )
temporary Japanese opera 29th at 9:00 p.m, 6:00 BOOK BEAT -"And to
version of a classic Grimm's Wedoelday Each Season ... " See listing
fairy tale. A beautiful girl 4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY TUesday, January 30th at
bestows upon a poor un-4:30 MISI'ER ROGERS' 8:30 p.m.
dertaker the ability to NEIGHBORHOOD 6:30 MAKING THINGS GROW
restore the dead. His new 5:00 SESAME STREET (60 -"Bromellads" Thalau.a
powers make him rich, but min) demonstrates how easy it is
everyone he saves beCQmes 6:00 FAMILY GAME to care for this exotic plant ·
a killer. When he refuses to "Patritotlsm" Through the _ and lapees into her own
use his powers, his dilemma device of an opinion game brand of jungle fever as she
worsens. Presented in cooducted by Dr. Gerald advises the indoor gardener
Japanese with English sub-Edwards, the program to be adventuresome.
titles. (60 min) focuses on a young girl and 7:00 SPECIAL -"Internet
8:00 A SKATING SPEC. a young man whose opinion! Law and Order" Com·
TACULAR -Janet Lynn, of patriotism differ sharply. parison of the dtuies ol
the Ladies' National Senior 6:30 FRENCH CHEF police officers in the United
nn C•Mn FHm Aw•nl!
"ILAUGNTIEll·MOVSt
"IVIE" "CATCH·ll"
lolft In C-1•• (Ill
Figure Skating Champion "Gallic Pot Roast" Cooking Slates, Canada, England and
and Bronze Meda.I Winner in techniques explained and Australia . (60 min) !-::====================: the 1972 Winter Olympics,
1
demonstrated by Julia Child. 8:00 FILM ODYSSEY -1-
heads an all-star cast or 7:00 SOUL -An evening of "Grand Ulusion" Erich von 1T-""".'."." .... -------•••••••.,.-
Olympic skaters. (60 min) entertainment with all-black Strobeim and Jean Gabtn l I
9:00 SPECIAL -"Evening at personalities. F e ature s star in Jean Renoir's French SHOWING NOW! UP
Pops: Night in Old Vienna" established artists, auttxn, masterpiece about World BAR
Guest opera star Roberta poets and playwrights. (60 War 1 -8 remarkably cch-BRA. TH E Peters siogs an aria from min) temporary antiwar state.
Mozart's "The Abduction 8:00 MASTERPIECE ment, examining life in 1
from the Seraglio" and the THEATRE ' 'To m German piton camp. <2 STREI SAND
Boston Pops contributes a Brown's Schooldays" Partr __ hr_•_)::;;;;;~~;:~--1
medley o( Strauss waltzes. 11 ; followed by "Herbie , BO~ (60 min) MaM" 'nie bully F1ashman "LIVELY AND FUNNY . ll181A STlllSAND
Tuesday continues to persecute Tom, IS EXCELLENT!" "--__,
4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY however, hia miseries are Ice -CUE MAGAZINE
4:30 MISTER ROGERS ' tempered by the reform NEIGHBORHOOD measures of headmaster
S. HUROK pruentl
THE VIENNA
CHOIR BOYS
World's Most Beloved Choir
Tw&performances
(
matinee 2:30 O AH,MANSQN
evening 8:30 THF.All\E
$6.50 / S.50/ 4.50/3.50
Sunday, Feb. 11
TICKETS NOW! At Mu110
C.nler: . .il Muw1l Agenc!11: So. Cll.
M~1le Co. I! 637 S. Hiii: W11Uol!1
11'\d l iberty, INFO; (213) 82&-7211.
Arnold and achoo! captain lr ,...ti 9,~roo~D VOC A TES 81'.d og
Courtroom-style debates on
important national issues. i'.11.Dryday.
(60 min) "'" • 'lhnday
4:00 ELECTRIC COMPANY
4 ~El~=ii:io:;g G E R S '
5,00 SESAME STREE:l' (60
min)
•• Where To Go MBA q111 ... oi-, ........ ...--,,,,, ....... _~
Look
. I SHOPPIN• CINTll '-~-....11.1:.J ... 1 ....,_,,,,,._,to,
mg or somewh'3e to 2701 Herbor l lvd .• t Adt1111 JAC .. LlMMON l .. t .. .-cry,..,,.
go, something to do ? No (lne Co1t1 Me••· c.ut, 92626 "WAIHYW11• ..,11M1ctl"'
-------~ fl'l'<I\•!'
\..._t:.'7 (1 .. 1 ·~~ --.. -o.<·-·-·lllt
, CO.Mitt
GIN! HACKMAN
"'llMICUT" gives you better tips than the Tel. (714J t7t .... O Mu11woM1r ::i:;;,s:i~1•1~;1~~
WEEKENDER. It's publish-Ill~~~~~~~~~~===========~=::::::~ ed every Friday in the DAI·
LY PILOT.
" .
IN CONCERT
THE ESTANCIA HIGH SCHOOL BAND
I AT
3141 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
Saturday, Jan. 27 Noon to 2:00 p.m.
COME HEA R TH~ 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.
. -"/
•
f t1d/\y, J,1nuary 2b, iq7j ----:JO DAILY Pl LOT . '
'Heifetz' Returns to TV Vi~i to Solo 1 --------------~----.,,.-,·~
"Heifetz ," Rn hour·IOn~
color s p e c i 11 I. \v1ll 1_be
broadcast tt.1onday at 8 \J..111.
on KCET, Channel ~ com·
munity supported telE'v ision
fflr South('n1 ('allfornia.
The progran) focuses on the
~f'nius of H('ifetz in reht•arsal
at tb.c rren,cb nauonal
11:levision ncty,·ork in Paris.
•
and during the concert al the
elegant Theater des Cha1nps-
El.Ysees. Early in the prograrn
Wit olish Ensemble
/
viewe_rs are_.sbown ~ _oL violinist Shony Alex
Heifetz as he strolls on ~1alibu will be the featured
Beach near his ho1ne. plr1~·s SQ!oi in a program of In·
ping-poog and \vorks on his te ational and gypsy
custom-built electric car. f orites on.Saturd•Y when his
\\1ilh his able accompanist, ontinental Festival appears
Brooks Sn1ith. ti e i f e I z at The Dome of the J,.ong
perfonns "Ro9do " frotn Haf· Beach Elks Club, 410 l E.
fncr's "Seren~de," the tilan::h \Villow St.. Long Beach, at
frotn "The Lo\'c for Three 8:30 p.m.
Oranges" by Prokofiev, "The Braun will head a company
Girl with the Flaxen Hai~·· by featuring accordianist Nick Debussy, "It Ain't Necessarily So" by George Gershwin. Ariondo, pianist Jlobert Z.
"Chaconne" by Bach. and Braun, song stylist Alma
~lax Bruch's · · scot t is h 011 Sroge Piazza, and a ·· special ai:r
Fantsy" which featur es lhe pearance by the f!olish Folk
French National Orchestra. Actor Paul Tripp "'ill Dance Ensemble of Krakusy,
KECT will repeat the pro-portray the incompar-a company of 24. Curt Pwlatson
gram Saturday at 7 p.m. bl Will R · is master of ceremonies for "Heifetz" was produced by a e ogers 10 a
,,
I
Paul Louis. directed by Kirk special program tonight the evening.
Browning and narrated by at 8 p.111. in the Louis He has appeared in motion ,p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Francis Robinson. Executive E. 1 Plu1nn1er Auditor-pictures, night clubs, hotels ~
IP•r·od;;;;uc;;e;;r;;w;;a;;s;;Le;;;;st;;e;;r ;;S;;hu;;r;;r .;;;;;;;;;;i;;~;;~;; •• ;;i~;;: ;;• ~;;~;;'.;;~e;;.• ~..;~;;.";;. ,•;;•;;• ;;• .:.:.:;:. ·;;·;;·;;· :~~::~;; •• :.:.:t.c.:1~:.~:;s:io:'::,H:O:W:::'G=:;";-c-_ 11 ~t ·~'*
MMIRI,'i,~~~L l WALT DISNEYS l . NOW! =5-f, >;:;.'.::' .c:t·~:;r·
Mo1111ta·i1a Maia
Dick Robinson stars as a lonely man in the Ca11a·
dian \vUderness who rescues four \volf pups and
raised then1 as pets in '·Brother of the \Vind." now
playing at area theaters.
" TlllATll •l
3 'OlDfl ,101(
AWAID llOM11•no1s
BEST ACT RESS OIAIU. ton
1111 •IOMISlllG lllW(OMll
BEST MUSICAL SCORE
D<ANAROSS§
B<WEHOUM>'
"A Rm· HOT
SllASHI" -.....
.
·~·''\,/¥ -S<NGS THE BLUES
·-"'-@-PLUS · ALAN ARKIN IN
IN
TH ~ATRE #2 ,.-. . ~
1973 GOLDEN GLOBE
AWARD NOMINEE
BEST FOREIG N FILM
BEST ACTRESS 111~~1111
The
Emigrants
l PGIEQ> Technicolo1
Warner Bros
~IARS·MAX VON Sl'OOW
LIV UtlMANN
-RATIO (PG )
NOW
EXCLUSI VELY
"SOUNDER"
2nd W08! R(OIORO "'"NOT llOCI"
"NOT IOCI" \\'ILL NCI StfOW
fRIOAY AND SATURO~Y
ulU I:'!IEW'
The1oyfu!, wonderful story
nd music ol Johann Strauss!
1973 GOLDEN GLOBE
AWAR D NOMINEE
BEST PROM(StNG'
NEWCO"MER" M•ft COITA
", M USICAL • :+t .,,, .
! . ~
WINN(I
Of SSOlD.U•
llOIE MOflltNlTIONS
the cab.ula ....... Rl-nr
DOCTOR
ZHl\1\GO
7:00 P.M.
I Fri, & Sat. 7:00 .ct 10:301
CALL THEATER J'O•
SUNDAY SCHEDULE
MIRTHfUl!
MAGICAU
MUSICAL!
SHOWING NOW!
WAII DISNEYS
WALT DISNEY'S \BBwwo
(RI D1livlr•c1 'MUI DOG 0, THE NORTW
w •• w;,y, f~ ,,,. ,.M.
Set,' s... ,,. .. 1:00 , ...
A~N iooftMAH fLlll
~t=: . .-.;i JON VOIGHT · BURT RE':'NOLOS • PANAl.~SION9
6th
RECORD WEEK
NOW AT ALL 3 IDWARDS CINEMAS
1973 GOLDEN GLOBE AWARDS
NOMINATIONS
BEST PICTURE -ORAMA
ACTOR· JON VOIGHT
DIRECTOR-JOHN BOORMAN
SCREENPLAY
SONG '0QIJ!LING BANJOS"
D~liu1ranc1
.t ~N llOOflMAN '" M (R)
11.,.;.,, IOll ¥01111f •IWlf llfllOlff•••NAYlllOll (II
TECHNtCOlOll (It). from '."'Dll'ltl" Bro~. A Womer Cbmmunkatibni (omplll'IT
Ir. llA"SOlt SllUH'ING C(HTflt
EDWARDS
HARBOR,,';.';1:.1
1973
GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD
NOMINATIONS
BEST PROMISING NEWCOMER
BEST SONG
"MARMAlAOt MOLASSES
Al(D HONET"
"I truly topnotch comic per1ormance by Paul
Newman. A i ood time is what you will have " Ko1111""cC11To1I, • New York NeWJ
I \'lMJ® ~ ~~IFEAND
__ :-hr~~~ OF ~ •
•
BARBRA'1~ )
STREl'SAND
!Rl BOX .
PLUS· LEE MARVIN
GENE HP CKMAN
"PRIME CUT"
6th GREAT Wftl
IVh:(llJEEN/
.1v1a1:GBA\Af
THE GF.r.AWA'f
STM flltoQUlVl/AU MKGllAW IN ,
''n1£GlTAWAT"
1llH ~N~;~;::i~Ull t.#0
~ .... , ...... ®
lft~ tOf' fEATUIE
JA(l lEMMOll ·ANO
IAllAIA llAlllS i11
"THE WAR lfTWfEN
MEN AND WOMEN"
1973
GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD
NOMINEE
BEST MUSICAL SCORE
QUINCY
JONES
SltVt r.itQUEEfol /All MillCCIAAW ll'."l'H( GETlWAT"ll r" ·,~· '< ~/.'1'"(""
• '~·:·"ll'">j ' 8E1I .IOHH!ION • Al.. lllTIElll N~' $AllY SlltlJTl'lfltll t. 1fl.i.">j
, '
·: -
• '
• • ' I
• •
•
l
I
I
I
THE ONLY ORANGE COUNTY EtjGAGEMENT N"Utweod., Comrnonw.11th
----Fuliet't0n'>11-f:!i!!l1
Lincoln A...,,u1W. of Knott '
Btllflr11~1>arr.t12~01cr <-••~-
(IN THEATRE #21 (IN THEATRE #1 )
• • • • I ·~·· ••••••••• • • • • . . . . ~ . . ..
• •.
1:
CINEM,\\ CENT£Jl
HARBOR AT ADAMS
COSTA MESA • 9794141
• •
•I •
2nd at CINIMAWIST If 1 AND VIEJO
. "'McCABE & MRS. MILLER"'
IN"·M1s·sroN Vll!.JCT-·
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
<;lM 111rr.n rv.Y •• , • ... , ~1011~nrr
11111 f'.~'tO
'
NO W EDWARDS
CINIMA CENTIR
1i.,. .. .1,,.,,.,
h•to,,_•., •1'•141 ''SOUNDER''
"A TlllR lflCAlll.,
MOVING f lPtRllNCI".
CHARI.ES CHAWl..IN
11n Al'l!ltltt Tirnu
''SOUNDER''
PANAVISI ON . lATID (G) IN COLOR . ····~
•
\ 2114 PRIMt CUT lu Manin. 2nd WAii BETWEEN MEN & WOMEN
1973 GOLDI~ GLOBE AWARD NOMINEE
BEST ACTRESS · CICELY USON ""' BEST PROMISING NEWCOMER '"" ''SOUNDER''
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---CINFUUMI ?I .... c•.;:-::1 1 .•·:~e· ....
----···· SIAOIUM•3 ,·
.. -.:' '~.C.l ...
·-
"SLAUOMTllMOU .• I ,,. • "CATClot ,ll"
"ILVtl ON TOUI" • "SKVJACklO" !JtOI
"JUOOI llOV l lAN" ...
"THI l l VI NOllll;S"
"PITI 'N Tlllll&" ...
"PUY IT AGAIN, SAM"
2.M LlSI
COMEDY
FILM FESTIVAL
• W.C. FIELDS
• CHARLIE CHAP\.IN
•CHARLEY CHASE
• UTTtE iASCAlS
•SETTY BOOP
• lAUREl A.ND HAROI'
• W!Ll ROGERS
• MACIC ~ENNETT COMEDY
• SUlll'fffSE COMEDIES
OLD MOYIE Theatre
TIOIPKTUlE MAU OF FAME
AlfAHEIM
(714) 956·4070
A N.w S•rflllf NI•
by H•I Jeple11
Performacn 7:3f & t :lO
EIKh E""l9g -All 5eoh SZ.00
AN AISUlllD LOOI( AT MARRIAGE
"PLAY STRINDBERG"
ey °""""~'" NOW ttir11 JANUAlY 21 -I P.M.
IN REPERTORY-WED., THURS.
"MOONCHILDREN"
Fiii" CMlllren of AM ~ ...... 1-IYI In JI Milry-1,IO PM.
· ' "THE IUNDAY FUNNIES"
.Mi511R
:iJC
"· WINTER C.LEA·RANCE
" · Thru S•nday,,'January 28th
'
ALL MERCHANDISI FROM REGULAR STOCK
ALL REDUC.TIONS 40%· 70% OFF
ASSORTED $2~ 00
PANTS & TOPS
Were $7.00 -$11.00
BELTS 1/2 •
. SKI
'SWEATERS .
Were $16.00
.
OFF
$22.00
FAMOUS MAKER
MEN'S JACKETS
In Leather, Suede, Wool
1/2 OFF
'
GIRLS • LO RISE PANTS f,ROM MALE
10 Colors. Were $8.00-$11.00
AliL
'599 NEW SPRING UTOPIA TOPS FOR HIM
Were $9.00-$13.00 .
ADDITIONAL
10% OF~
WITH THIS AD
INCLUDU ALI. 30 DA'Y· MllCKANDtll LAY~WAY " ...
-,
2 FOR
11.00
MISTER BRITCHES
600 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
!N't1~ To Mc.0011•14'1/
-642 ·8074
MOM.• SAT. l .. t : IUM. 11·1
HELD -OVER
"ILYllA MADIGAN" ....
OrlfllMil Uitocirt -. ..... .
, .. ,....,. .... MOit ....... -· I le-'-. N-Yorfc•r
Also
0. H. L•wr•11c:•'1
"THE YIR&IN &
THE GYPSY"
Both Colo-r I R-l
...
SECOND NAfuRE
DORIS DAT IGJ
"WITH SIX YOU
GET EGGROLL"
!ft. Si.ow $forts 7 P.M.
Cowt. s.t, & $11. fro• 2 P.M.
"
I
F_"c:''::-':_' :_J'c_"'_:"c_'Y__:2c:hc_, :_19_7:.c) '--------DAI L V PILOT SJ
Un.derdog Prices .
MAKE YOU HAPPY
And Giants Crazy
-@SANYO ~c:vvu:vuJ
SANYO Model DXll 5110 AM/FMtfM Stereo Receiver, FET front End·Tuner, Sep11ate Sitding Basl. Treble Conlfols, GARRARD Model JO Automatic Changer with Diamond Cartridre and Base. Two
s.,,, 360' ''""'" s'"""· MFG'S LIST $170.4-0 $117
COMPLETE ~*'"· ClalVl.<:Vl.J·UNDE~DOG SYSTEM.
45 Walt AM/FM Ste1eo Rective1, GARRARD 408 Dehne Changer with Viscous Damped Single Lever
Cueint. Base and Diamond Ca1tridge, two ELECTRO.VOICE C03xi al Walnut Speaker Systems.
@PIONEER"
PJONElR SX525, 1-2 watt AMJFM SterJO Receiver, GARRARD 408 Deluxe Chanler with Viscous
Damped Single Leve1 Cueina. Base and Maanelic Diam ond C1rtridge, two Elac 10-Voice COIXill
s"""' with .,,,,, ""'''· MFG'S LIST $399.4-0 $2 8 8
l.ijquf!,f kardon J * LDL * DUAL * ll121¥1fiii I
. • • i .
$ 7 3----,3-...: .. '!. .
MFG'S LIST $879.25 .
HARMAN KARDON'S FAMOUS TWIN POWERED MOOEl 630 FM/AM Stereo Receiver 30/30 RMS Watt s.
Both Channels Driven •.. Gives Ya11 crisp reception •.• A New Expttlence in listenin& ... The LOL 749 rellectin& speaker syslem, fetlutln1 nlnt speakers will tum a room Into the concert of
yoor choice lrom rock to Bach. The DUAL 1229 it DUAL's lop ol the llne and will treat your records
wilh lovin& kindnets for years ol e11t1 pl1y ... cgmplete with Base alld SHURE M91( ... Ell iptical
Oiamond Carlridge.
features:
• Automatic: level control
• Mixil'I! t1cllity
• Push utto n 011er1llon
• Separate volume 'ontr1ls
tor 11cll thanntl (will adapt to any • "''"' '""'" • 2 Iara:• VU 111eters receiver or amp) • •• , .. 1, ...
MFG's LIST $99.95 --$69-
I SCOTCH 150
I MFG'S LIST $5.55 Scotch
}.. !)fl _,__ml $177
SHARPE HA 10 A
HEADPHONES
Consumer 1 ·
Best Rated!
J SCOTCH 203 <1197 MFG'S LIST $6.85 f
1800-FT-.-_-,-"-R[_[_l fft7l-.
l .0 MIL Polyester backing: I.
W[ GUWNTEE IND SEIYICE WHIT WE SUL a EAST CREDIT a TERMS ARRANGED • IA!AWA!
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DAILY PILOT jan11i\fy 1973
1973 DUSTER
\
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Set. No. Vl29-CJ B.25b689
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" 1973 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
$
Ser. No. PP4l-M1D.J29575
.. c~t>1i~ '"' ,., .... -. ... , ·~ JANUARY •£\. ""''"'' f ... sw. -
. "'' _1utD • bf"""'' 4 •fl.'
·-,1 .. '~l 5 ' ' ~:. 11,.C1l 519 ~· :}"'."'
>. RED -
TAG '70 DOD.GE"
f4 TON PICQp .
VI, ilUIOll'llllc, !'Mill, lle1tw, htilV'f d~ty -c1mPtf' tqu~t. '.(tlitOIKJ •
USED $2195'
CAR 11.oMEO 'li'I AL'FA .. ,,. ...
'4el114• ~ '"'"' _.ippacl "_SPECIALS -' ' . •°"~~·' .~'""'"-$2695
..
1973
GRAN
SEDAN
4 DOOR
HOT.
. '
D\SCOUNlED
LUXURIOUSLY
· EQUIPPED
OFF MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED LIST PRICE
'68 RIVIERA
12 DOOR HAIDlOP va. avi.iMtk. PG'"" ttffl"illl &
11r.hs. WSW, lilt ~--tilt w.._.1, vlrl'f1 lotl. {WXKll6)
' $179$.
•
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'69 MER'CURY
' Nll, ~~}.,ONy PARK :!"'•• ., ... ,,,, '°,,~'""· , .... 1 ·~Ji. 1u1cx•tlf'..i.;.., •s~re,., $•aos · ....
'68 OLDS
LASS J Dl. H.T.
CUT ; "H''"' v.. r..ste, ""~Xe 911 WSW, •illYI MP--$99
)
1973 ,lfl TON
l~TIRNATIONAL PICK-UP
POWER PA~KEO
···BEAUTIFULLY
EQUIPPED
.
OFF MANUFACTURER'S ~STICKER PRICE
1) •i.t .• ) ' '!/~ .... ' ' . .
GET,',EM UP SC.9UT
IN THtS RUGGE.Q
1973 'SCOUT
Ser. No. 3SISICGD12390
..
D.'' . ,;. .
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N ER STl=J ' IJST' PRICE ·-<--Si . ..,&7 .4 L ,1 &, "'---
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1 " l
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;I
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BUICK LIMITED.• DDD• 1 7 0 loodod m<I. ""'· •oo•. f~f"Y ok ""'' $18 8 8 tioning • .powtl' Sletring. powtf windows, tilt .
. wlletl, decor options. lie. Mo. 328AGH · • ,
. GALAXIE 500 '69 2DOO•NAIOTOP V-8, auto 1ron1. loctory 1:m tondirloning,
J>DWtr•lttring.1owm.1~,No 132879
. CAMARO '69 y.a. loctory offconditl(Ml'"IJ. po.,.tr steer-ona.1oclio 1ieo1tr No 544427
MUSTANG
$1485
1 71 Ao•. "oo• .. pdW~. '"""'· "';'· """" $18 7 '6 buc:kll stalS. lM:tnSI No. 225(fH . .. ..
· · PONL · s -~
• ovtll. tront~ power Uewing, radio, <lleof«, . -169 " • . . CUSTOM $· 1 089 -~ ~No.4128NH. -
..
:, ALL
; NEW . •
.
' -.,.
-
1973 PINTO
~ Sp...d, ,..,, bumpe• gua,.h, v~vl itlte-
rior. bucker ••<l!S, iorr•d "" he<I!••· •II;.
JRIOWl .f l 197
·.$:·
•• 1 ~ •. ' I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .
I • .-.
' ~:::e:::19~73 PIN~~.d~n~~~.!~~!
QRAllD
NEW
air heat, bucket seats, fully carpeted.
(3R11W1J 9744)
. ~
1973LTD 2 DOOR
HARDTOP
. ..
' ..
T A-ftE YOUR -C.HOICE ---:
'60 MERCEDES 2205 ·
••
(GYK-567)
'69 TOYOTA 4 DOOR
I (XRX-1441
'65 DODGE SHORTY VAN
(21I12AI
~70 SIMCA WAGON
(3 10522F)
'69 FIAT 850 COUPE
YOUR
CHOICE
(VCV61 8)
I "Super 111" 0 DODGE 7 V-8, outo. Irons .. powtr 5tetri"IJ. rodio,
lleoter. License No.
'70 2 DOOR MARDTOP $ 2 Y·B, oulo. Irons., powf'f sruong, powef
brakes, rodio. heo1e r, wh+!ewoll l+re,,
whffl CO'ler~ licet!st° 709;50H -
-~ · GALAXIE -500 170 4000RMARDTOP Auto. Irons~ lottory oir conditionillg.. pow«
'leering. radio, heater. UB2·AQl)
, COUGAR '6 9 .... ~--"''''" f«Oo~ ,;, ,,.;;,.., .. , , powei-s1eerinv, rodio, lleot«, \tioyl roof,
{YWS-390)
FULL
PRICE
1973 ESCAPADE 20' MOTOR HOME
COMPLETELY SELF CONTAINED
PLUS:
e PUSH-BUTTON RADIO
e FRONT DIVIDER
e TINTED GLASS
• FRONT BU NK
e AUXILIARY BATTERY
• MED ICI NE CABINET
• STAINLESS STEEL
RANGE COVER
AND MUCH MORE.
1B4B0668)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
.
BRAND
NEW FORD MINI MOTOR HOME
· RED-E-KAMP CONVERSION ,.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERt
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CRUISE·O.MATIC' TRANS .. POWER STEERING,
POWER BRAKES, V-8. ENGINE amt~1s 10 PlY
TIRES, 70 AMP. BATTERY. 1 JON CHASSI S,
EXTR.&. Coot.ING RADI.&. TOR SLIOlNG CARGO
DOORS, flXED TYPE PASSl:NGER SEAT, RADIO, ,...
OUTSIDE MIRRORS. TINTED WINDSHIELD
-{t-"34GH8"4819Jl
$
•
Friday, January 26, 1973
'71 FORD WAGON Counl•~ Hd.tn, VI, •u1om.tic. POWet 1tttrlOQ, taclory 1lr, rild10, he.iTer,
(l15EHBI
OAll:I PILOT 33
~79
·-. FORD LTD . '71 V-8.AoOo.rroo• .• pow"'""""'«'"Y°'· $1997 rodio, heoter. (J.1625154058)
$1488
PLY • Duster · 17 0 00~. '"'"· ...... ""'~· • .,, ··~~ .... 27523
DODGE WAGON
Y·8. OY!O Irons. Otr tOod1!1ooiog. pOWtf '6 9 CDOONIT SOO '
~lff••ng No 104914
'
PONT. EXECUTIVE '70 HARDTOP Auto. •rans., fOCIO!"f oir conditioning, full
, power. radio, heoter. l ic1n1.1 No.
OYM4SS
PLYM. WAGON SPOIT SUIUIBAN
Auto. Irons., loclorw oi1 conditioning.
power sttel'ifig, rodio, lieoter. lictflie No.
73240G.
T-BIRD
lANOAU
Allio. h'anL, lood«I incl., loc!Of'Y oir
condirionlnv. full powlf, rodio, hloter.
londtlu 1o9. licen11 No. S64EAZ
$1687
FORD COURl.ER
1 /2 TON PICKUP WITH A NEW
LITE LINE CAMPER SHELL
Compl.ete
Package
$
IMMEDIATE PELI VERY
LEAS.I
NOW
A BRAND NEW 197-3
LTD ••••••• ~5 121 3:
COURIER • • • • 559'~
PINTO • • • • • • 5589~
Gran-Torino 5 103'~
MAVERICK • • 57290 -· SQUIRE • • • • 5127'! F:25o PU •• ~. 596 1~
OPIM IND llASI
AS• POI
llU SPlllllllG 01 PIT YLAMAl1S
' ' (SGTAM617866~
$299~~~
\1419.85 ii the lotal col.Ii P!OCe 111el. roi & IK. O.-
le•red pric e \3032_60 inc l. lo 1 lie, & oll 1111ance c~org11. lor 48 'month\ on opp1o~e!d credit. Al'R •
1718°.
WEEKEND
RENTAL 'SPECIAL
RENT.A .
FORD PINTO
FROM 2 PM FRIDAY
TO 10AM11\0NDAY
PLEASE CALL --
FOR' RESERVATIONS . '
$f595
PLUS~Mllr~
FIRST 100 Milts: FREE •
•
•
•
:t I U41L ,· PJL01 ~ricMy J1nuary lo i ,
A MB~ER
&,..,.LER
ANO JOCr< BLACK HAVE BEEN HURRIEDLY
RELEASED
FROM
.JAIL, ... ,,
-------
\
TUMBLEWEEDS
,, (.,.'-~
.; .. ' .; ,.,.
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
MIJTT. 80'( AM !
GLAD TO SEE Yo.J .1
SOMEBODY IS
FOU.OWlNG MC.1
AUNT FR ITZI , IT'S
SNOWING AND
THE SUN IS
SHIN ING···
I OON'r ~aw!
I COIJL.OHT S&li
HIM ~I l(N:)W
rr's A MNV
MAYBE WE'LL
HAVE A
SNOW BOW
PEANUTS
TODAY'S CRDS SWDID PUZZLE
• " .:: <;Jll
~ f. '.:.
-' l!J t, ... n.,~ e
I,. "'
14 M '''"'° lS He!lOll
"·"' . 16 Go·t i1a1.1<i.I
1 / lOnt~
43 r .. nant
45 1-11qh Ro"'an
oft• ... •al
1.1 1(1tchen
•uoi.ances
48 Show
1nau1sitiveness '=
49 M11ttarv
tra1,.,ing
group
Ye•lCr<la{s Putzle Solved:
JUDGE PARKER
by Doug Wild•y
by Tom K. ltyan
I ·1
J>y Doi. Hole
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
"°'o ·~""~!
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
.A BOUllCe!'l ? TH•Flels No
CUS'!t>MEflS TO 'RISS OU r .'.'
llO~ J IT'S ALL I~ lHE
't.\ltll> )!Fru;.
by Roger Bradfield
1
' !
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By Charl•s Barsotti
by Gus Arriolo
by Ferd Johnson
W!;LL, Ho COULC> STANC>
OUTSIC>f' ANC> BOCJNCE
SOM!" IN .. ..------
f'lroue Jr!
by Roger Bollen
I w1u. / uusr TOO MUCll ts
!MOE ()'-1ilf,
Plll'61CAl-6itll!
CIF FUilllG J
~AS A ~ 'r"crr---_,I
hlalrl>l ainca:,
A5 GOOll AS
MY cAsT I ca.es OFF. HE C/llJ Fl.ii ! (~
by_ Charles M. Schulz
1;-~~"·~·""'::-:::::;;-~~~~, ··"·-----NEXT
NINE
EXITS
r,1,'.,_. lb1Ut:r
18 q•11r·.l1
t J•~J-~!~
50 Ice cream
conccx:tian
!,J K•lf.f1Cn
u1ons1I
54 Sound • 0 ~B~-~-!!l'l!!'!!l'!!!~!!lllq'yjiS,J>A;'j MU,NWMILE ... I'LL 6E eACK IN A
COUPLE OF 'DAYS, LYNN! I HAVE TO
ft.UN UP TO l'IEW YORK ON e\.151 NE55!
l\TMINK. YOU'LL 6E ALL eETTf~
;ii. ['1'tl
J. w ..,,yh1 o1
A " 23 +:-, ~ nf
ro· '""' 2J E 11u dnd n<>41J
~u Move qu•f::llly
; : Lu•rd ::v flm.:r•· in
::.: ( ,. ·' l'illl
1 ... tl~SS!llil'l
JS I\ 10
Zu f1n1 on .i
J I lllghsh
rnrnoOSi'I
JS Sll'l·11 o" ~
nerch
'40 Son ol Leah
~1 Bon
!;n1,irt s.iy•ny
41.:!"H'"'
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"
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1)8 Snoo~~·
tt •µC!IS
"' Sm~ltq1ou11
LL lfl J Utl<llO!l
63 B•oallwav
1nonev man
64 Made !oana
65 T df8
"6 !11\u
1,7 Cauµle
DU\VN
' lo ltrl
Mov•l'lllil~tr J "l 1.~nno11ell
3 Sh111 s
dt'5t1oa1ion
4 S1111e ot
bPtn11 alone
!> M illClll
fi Rii111oved
7 F11111
8 Ro n1H l1
higliwey
9 ~Uldl
I' • 7
'
'ff, "
'·
' 22
--
• -
• --
"
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l·~ " ' -
• , .. .. .
• R .~
10 Fashions of 33 Mi~es
lh ~ d,,y 35 l11taot
" [_. ~<)"\ 39 C.in.prov.
12 Nnlll~man: 40 In 1 dormant
Ahln nlanner
13 Chui• h 42 0PCISiv9
' . --· '" '"-'Is
l'J l".)rn~ll' ·I~ Gr;i.n spi~rs
• .;rr·'h .;u Dulll I •"dk8 :;>I \',, " "' ,, ""'' .. 't J1 fAoncvman
J'i l·hw 1 .ievoc:c 49 F1e111t11
)• C•u~'•e., 50 [j<'t;I
':1 Pu,, oflire " Magnet•c ·-··
""'" 52 Be oeprrved (8 t-11~1~•1.' "' ,''·I l\JU~fl pr.ct 53 React 10
JO Pu~M!S!.'~" 0\lf'!{'~"rtron
Wu!!! ·55 Mount11in
31 l11rc;r! in lh1• Con1b h"m
..... '" 56 ~o~kt.V J«'n8
32 'U•1<1e• 110 L 1 L '"l
l."' '"" "'"a .... ,,~
~t.,n1.e1'" i,o Snca•v
• It> " " ,, ,,
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"
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"
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•
MISS PEACH
t.IND.i'I ,
W~NT TO SEE
~ PllTU!tE
OF MY N~W
80'IF°ll1END?
DICK TRACY
YIS!
'
~i' THE TIME I 6ET BACK!
•J'M NOT IDIM;TLV A
COLLl~'Of ARTIFICIAL Ll-S
BUT·OICAV:
.-~~~~~~--.
by Mell
l'D INTll:ODUCE
YOU TD MIS
SROTHE~,
8UT >ilS
81lO'T~flt IS
NO'I' AS
GCOD·l.OOl<ING ...
by Ch"'9r Gould
~ TMll ""'' ONCE A FINE
ARTIFlctAL LIMB.
WHE'RE OIO YOU
GET IT?
"You caa just bet when my time cumes llarry will
be bowling."
DENNIS lHE MENACE
l
-
DAI\ V PI LOT 35
Everyone Hai
Someth ing That
Someone El,e Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find II, T rode It
With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
I~.,;;_~ ..... ~,~~, -~ ... ~ .. ~
Gener ii Gene raj
oflnJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
38 Linda Isle Drive
Long water view fro1n finest & last 50 ft.
Main channel Jot . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $150,000
-'J Linda Isle Waterfront
B4iautiful, new 4 bdrm., 4tf..a ba. home on
lagoon, with living rm., family rm., lge. game
r111. or 5th bdrm. .. . .. ............ $255,000
53 Linda Isle Drive
EJej!nt 5 bdrm., 4'A! baths ; on lagoon.J'kll'_
carpets, drapes & wallpaper. Lge. attic
storage area, 4 frplaces . LOvely garden &
large slip. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $212,000
25 LINDA ISLE DRIVE
Custom 4 bdrm., 3~.i baths, or 3 bdrm. &
\ge. game rm. Facing Harbor Island . Mstr.
Bdrm._ has adjoin. study, Mstr. ba. bas ja·
curd & sauna rm. Slip for lge. boat. $265,000.
For Complete Information
On AILHome1 & Lot1, Please C•ll :
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
c..neral General .
General Gener•I ..
.. READ THIS
Immediate Occupancy
Made Available by Credit Rejection!
A New La Cuesta ''Valencia Model''
One story, 4 BR, dining room, family
room, 2. baths, carpeted in living, dining
room, master bedroom, master bedroom
closett;--1865 Sq. Ft. home In La CU.-s ta
unit 11. SAVE $1450l Being sold •t unit
11 prico. MUST SEEi
La Cuesta By The Sea
S.e the Models at
Brookhurst & Atlanta
Huntington Beach
c.11 962-1371
l 341 B•y1ide Dr., Su ite 1, N.B. 675"'161
c. F. COLESWORTH y & CO.l!!!!Gen!!!!!!!onl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~Gen!!!!!!!!•r•l!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Just Reduced-Bluffs Condo
Reduced for a Casl sale ol the vacant and
ready Bluffs Condo. This home features three
spacious bedroo1n s, Cormal dining area, and
21h baths. It's move in condition with exCel·
lent financing availa ble. $58 ,500 and worth it!
Baycrest-Best Buy
Spacious FIVE bedroom, th ree bath family
borne in choice Baycrest area. Center hall
plan on large co rner lot which afiords max·
imum privacy with ample room Cor pool.
,Large family and Jiving rooms have Palos
Verdes stone Cireplace. Lowest priced five
bedroom home in the most wanted area at
only $72,500.
640-0020
General General
M-1 EXCHANGE $4$,000
140xl40-M·l-Prime Industrial Land-cor·
ner of 16th and Pomona-Costa Mesa-For
exthange-into commercial or industrial irr
come property. Land is free and clear~all
M6-!600.
OPEN T1f.. " • rrs FUN ro BE NICE!
I ~
****** *TAYLOR CO.*
BIG CANYON -$117,500
An unusual contemporary home on a pool·
sized lot. Lge. rooms. 4 Bdrms., family rm.
& formal dining rm. New & ready to move
into. J..Car garage. A great floor plan.
29 AUGUSTA LNE. OPEN DAILY 1-5
LIDO ISLE--$77,500
Superb custom-built home w/4 bedrooms,
family rm., lormal dining rm., game rm. &
41fi baths. Pier/slip w/accommodate 65'
boat. Bftn. vacuum, steam & whirlpool ba.
LIDO ISLE -$77,500
A re.al family home on this island of fun &
activity. 4 Bdrms & 3 baths. Storage area
for boat or ? Spacious patio, 40' lot near
good beach. Submit duplex exchange.
CORONA DEL MAR "OWN-YOUR OWN"
On the water! Fantastic view & pride of
ownership bid~. Private marina, pool. ja-
cuzzi & security guard. Adult occupied. 2
Bdrms., 2 baths. Vacant -immed. poss.
$89,950.
"Our 28th Year''
---
w ..... ·-..........
$27,250 • 3 Bdrm
2 baths, Patio, shake roof.
Dining rm., dliJ1wa&lwr.
f'irepla~. New paint inside
& out. Ck>$e to schools &:
.shopping. Shade trees. Brk.
&40-172l).
3 Bdrm -Family
$32,950. 2 baths. Patio, dining
rm., built-ins, dishwasher. 2
fireplaces. Cheery l\ome,
carpeting, drapes. Nicely
landscaped. Brk. 540-l?'m.
_,,,_
Gener ii
4 Bdrm -$30,900
2 baths. Patio, dining room.
B11i1t.!g1 cu.stom drapes. in·
direct lighting. Extra stor·
age space. Like-new home
wilt\ wall-to-wall carpeting .
Brk. SW-1720,
3 Baths + 4 Bdrm
$32,800. Pool, patio. Dining
Rm., built-ins, dishwasher.
Fireplace in fa1nily roon1.
'Rear living room. Contem·
parary home with solarium.
Brk. 540-IT.!J.
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
540-1720
General Gener ii
SMELL OF A l'IEW HOMEI
Ever catch the scent of a new home? Thick
shag carpets; clean, white paint; shiny new
appliances. Got the picture? OK, now com·
bme it with the smell of salt air and lofty
pine trees! These are the ingredients of this
Unique 3 bedroom, den, brand new two story
soUth of the highway in Corona del Mar.
UN19UI HOMO OP CORONA DlL MAI, 67MOOO
A lfsthtt 9f Lyteu lwi ..
U~l()UI: ti()MI:§
REALTORS
General General
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHltors
21 11 San Joaquin Hiiis Ro.ad
NEWPORT CENTER, N. B. 644-49IO Gen•r•I Gener ii
General
•••••••••••••••••••
.....,...,.....,...,.
1 **FOR SALE**
* Open .JJou6e6 *
Sunda'! 1-Sp.m.
58 Beacon Bay, N.B .............. $69,500
M Linda Isle Dr ... 5 BR/Fam/Waterfront
2752 Bayshore Dr ...... 4 BR/Din rm/Den
17710 Oak Tree Ln ................. $56,500
17946 Cedar Tree Ln ............... $63,500
1847 Pt. Margate PL .............. ~.000
* * * * * * * * * * HARBOR VIEW-PORTOf lNO
Former model homes at
''THE RANCH''
in the City of Irvine
Plan 3G--San Miguel $47,400
DISCOUNTED $2500.
4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, 2250 sq. ft.
This home has upgraded shag carpets thru-
out, drapes, wallpaper, wall paneling, air
conditioning. Good financing available. Quick
occupancy.
AYRES REAL TY
••••••••••••••••••• Gener•I General
Meredith Gardens
4 Bedrooms
2'12 Baths
====
Salisbury
~~ ,, . '
Penif1'1ufa Poinl
2104 mramar
Open Saturday & Sunday 1-5
4 Bdrms., family room, buUt-in kitchen
'Al Block to bay & ocean. $79,500
DAVIDSON REALTY
5801 W. Coost Hwy., N.B. -7767
l116 ~wport Blvd., N.B. 67:1-9060
A Triple A Country Clam
Available, attractive and Cozy 2 Bdroom Home wl.th.
awfully nice. This truly Massive Brick Fireplace.
l>eautltul home features Large Kitchen with Gas
qUallty througllout. 2 story, Bil and many CablnetJ.
4 bedrooms. Located in Extra Large Front Yard.
prime Huntington Beach Zoned for Additional Units.
location. Assume VA k>an. $28,0CO. call Arl;ytime,
$189 per month total ~.
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5. 1847 PORT MAR-
GATE. 3 BR.. lam. rm .. 2!h ba's. Large
used brick, cov'd patio. Near pool & play-
ground. $09,000 . Howard Wells.
60 FEET OF BAYFRONTI
Spaciou s & elegant home in excellent con·
dition. 5 Bdrms.1 4Y.i baths, study & fam.
rm. H&F Pool. P ier &.Slip. $175,000. Triona
Berg·1n.
3 Car Genge
Look nt !he combination ·of
ft'll.turetl in this home! Huge
walnut.paneled family room
'""'lttt Stone fileplice, fonnal dinine room , f:n:&hly P!Un~ inside and ou!Aide. l..oc'at@d
ln prestige neighborhood,
very close to elernenl.ary
school, park, tennis courts
and beacn. Prefer to sell
quickly. $19,900. Please
pllone ~2313.
g~~ 1=ii11UIUI
item.in xlnt location. ~~~~~-~~-~-~-~-~-~·-~.,,~ _._ .. _510lAl1'0f IM(COf.wa&.CO..
OCEANFRONT ESTATE
Enchanting view & sound of surf. Exclusive
area w/privale beach. Lovely & luxurious
!-level home: tiled pool & therapy pool w/ja-
cuzzi. Nothing else like it. $350,000. Carol
Tatum.
NEW LISTING-BAYSHORES
Newl y decorated, cute 2 BR cottage with
extra guest quarters. A .J,!UST SEE. At-
tractive leasehold. Fast pOssession. Won 't
last. Call Bud Austin.
LIDO ISLE-4 BR.--$76,500
Investigate t he Lido way of llCe, with priv.
beaches. club & tennis. Fun home with pan-
eling, beams & good mast<!r suite. Near tho
action! Charlene Whyte. 1
133-4700 /--. Coldwall,a.-
-2430 ~
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B.
~~m •·rr>~~~-~
GOV'T TRIPLEX
REPO
Rllre opportunity for t~ ln-
vntor. Here'a a VA rcpo on
exCPUent Income property in
BALBOA ISLAND
542 So. B•yfront
Open Sat/Sun. 12-1:30
Exclusive; lge. hOme in xlnt
cond. We also have 6 other
bQyfronts for sale, avail . to
""°"'·
301 s.pp111r.
Open S•t/Sun. 12-1:30
Corner Duplex
Salisbury
Re ,1lty
!15 MARINE AVE.
BALBOA ISLAND
CALL 673-'900
desirable area. Doct require !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! !.!;: =.:'0:."""'1y 11 Big Opportunity
::: .'. ,', 1 I< f . ', I \•\
HOUSE Hunting? Watch the
OPEN HOUSE col umn.
9 Unita, groa over $13.IXX>
yr. Try 10% down, !,lW'net
wtll can')' 2nd. Make money on rnts one. Atk11'11 $98$:1.
LIDO WATERFRONT
Exeeptklnal S BR, 3-sty.
l\ome with pier &: slip,
Magnlfioeht So. Bay view
from all 3 l eve l s .
Reall&tlcally priced at
"'5,000.
Biii Grundy, RHltor
34 l Ba-. N'f t Beach 675-616
Newport Hell)hts
HURRY!
3 Bedroom, 2 hll.th, 2
fireplaces, den, electric
kitchen, 2 cai-garage O[f
private alley. Very best
school dlltrlcl Only $4.8,900.
CALL
COBY .,
THE REAL ESTATERS
JJI M•••unm
COIONA OIL MAI
673-8550
To Buy, Sell or Talk Abowt
Rea l E1t1te
I _ .... -........ I~ I _,..... I~
General
TREES & FLOWERS
Lovel y 3 bedroom CAMEO HIGHLANDS
home witb den, convertible to 4th bedroon1 .
?t1agnificent, private yard with lots of taU
trees. Spacious gourmet kitchen with eating
area. Immaculate thruout. $69,500
UDO ISLE
DeLightiul 3 bedroom, 2·story home. Com·
pletely remodeled. but then, the O\vner "'as
transferred ! Terrific location, close to pri·
vate community beach. Den, spacious en·
closed patio, beautiful parquet floors in the
li ving room & forma l dining room . An excel·
len t value at $76,500.
VACANT COMMERCIAL
132 Ft. X 300 ft. on Newport Blvd . in Costa
Mesa. Prime location. $125.000
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
..Selling Rul Estate in Newport Harbor
Since 1944"
673-4400
General
Without a doubt this magnificent property is
the best· built home in "Old Corona'', Four
giant bedrooms, 3!h baths, formal dining
room, fantastic den, over 4000' of gracious
living. Situated on two lots just steps from
the beach, with massive patios and balconies.
Outstanding au wool carpets, luU drapes and
sheers throughout. May we have the pleasure
of showing you this masterpiece. $186,500.
By appointment. Call our CDM Specialist,
Evelyn Smith--675-7225.
General General
Corona del Mar I ;;;;;T;;;A;;;x;;s;;H;;E;;L;;TE;;R;;;;;;;;
Beach Cottage Two l·lxhm units In prime
condl!ion & local.ion on lovt"-2 bedroom, beach oottagfi', ly Newport Island.
R-2 lot, 40xll8, prime loca-PricC'<.I at $M,500
!Ion. $45,0CO, Hun')' this call: 673·:1663 673-6688 Eves. won't last!
~ associated
BROKERS-REALTORS
ZOZS W Balboa 673-3663
You'll find It ln CIMal!led
Gener•l General
MACNAB
IRVINE
FINER. HOMES
NEWPllRT BEACH TOWNHOUSE
•
3BR, 2!h bath. Large LR. spacious dining
& breakfast area. Z.Car garage. Patio
faces pool & greenbelt. Gloden Fay
64:1rl1235. ( Zll)
"UNUSUAL BAYFRONT"
On the Big Bay. View of the coastline.
Custom designed & decorated. 3 BR -3
bath -formal DR -pier & slip. Harriet
Perry 642-a235. (Zl2)
in ACRE VIEW ESTATE
3 loveiy BR's & delightful FR. Gourmet
ltitch"n, formal DR. bar & extras galore.
Helen Wood 64+6200. (ZL'!)
BAYCREST
l BR = 3 baths -2 fir~pla_ces -lovely
yard. Close to schools. $79,500. Frank I'e-
_ ralta ~ (Zl4)==
CAMEO SHORES-OCEAN VIEW
2 BR. den -perfect for couple. Recentl y
redecorated: $99,500. Tom Queen 64+6200.
(Zl5)
NEW BAYFRONT
Owner's floor contains LR, DR. kitchen &
master suite; guest's Ooor contains 3 BR's
!t livi,ng area. Pier & slip. Sweeping bay
VIEW-in the heart of Newport Harbor.
$236,350. OPEN DAILY -1653 Baysid e
Drive. (Z16)
NEWPORT SHORES-LOT
Canal lront-30'x80'. $25.000. Uberal terms,
no subordinallon. Gloden Fay 642-8235.
(Zl7)
[ lrvine:l _.,_, .. 1.,."·"1"""'•'"'
IDI Dower Drlff t 42-12.S5
1144 Mac.Ar1hur 14' .. tzoo
Newport '"ch, Cllitomle 12.llS ~
Ge neral
WE5TCLIFF
.\ iruly 1•lrgant :; l>d rn1.
l111nll" 11/hunily nn. .!ii
fur11u1.I d111111g. Thl' bi:!autlfu!
l.ll'l J•iso l'"llfry u~n~ 11111,1 a
sunkt'n h1 1ng , :u't'a v.·Hh
fuX'plnce, all looking out on
tlu: landscaped ya1\I "&
putio. ;o,urruund1ng lhe Aid.
& fllt"1I. pool. All the
rtrllt•nlllc~ one would exp•:Cl
.u't· h1•n•.
OPEN SUN. 1-5
1927 SANTIAGO DR.
EASTSIDE
C\HTlJJlctely l't'fUr bishl.'d 3
hdrni. hon1c in Costa Jlilesa.
New sink & dishn1aster ,
n .. 1v d1·aprs & carJX'ts, new
paint .lJlS.[dC-.&. out. Cov"d
patio & l_ge., dec.•p back
ya11I. Quin street in 1,:ood
ure;1.
OPEN SUN . 1-4
. 2693 RIVERSIDE
9:f21
Burr White Realtor
2901 Newport, N"pt Beach
675-4630
3 BDRM HOME
:: BDR~t hon1e, enclosed
patio, large pool. AU fresh-
ly painted, new carpel! and
1ile. Move in today! $26,500.
J::-Z tern1s.
* * * * * BACK BAY AREA
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 14
2401 i'rru1cisco, N e w po r l
Bciach joff Irvine).
Cuslom hull! 5 BDRl\I home,
3 full baths, fanuly room,
ort1ce or den, 2 firepla(~es
+ indoor B·B-Q, la1"ge pool
& v.•ading pool. i'>1any 111ore
splendid featUl"l'S. P rlcC'd
right at $87,500.
* * * * * 4 Bdrm., 2 Bath
Ne1>.' 1·1trpets thruout. :.! car
j:aragl'. Bastside Cos la
l\1C!>lt. $28,950.
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Nc1>.•port Blvd., C.M.
548-7729
Corona del Mar
Investment
Your golden oppon unlty to
own. Prin1e tripk"'Xes. All
two bedroom, one with
rlreplace. 1 ~ baths, bullt·ln
o ve n ran ges a nd
dishwashers, newly painted
Inside and out. Private
bfth:onics pool. Sensibly
priced at $75,001 call
673-1<>50.
OFF SEASON
SPECIAL
WE!:.'"l'CLIFF ~ bedroom,
lamily room and healed
poot REDUCED to $57 ,500 .
Buy now 11.nd save. Tbe
very l.M.•st of tenns. Cilll at
one<' to see.
-· 646-454l .... Tht're is a rcw;on
18 years iwne k>calion
Lochenmyer
RC"a ltor
One Look and
We Gotclia
Lovely {'"ll!itom·built large <I
l;l:droom OOmC' in Newport'•
finest location. Designed for
family living. Completely
!1Cparate family room with
fire-11la<X-, 2~); bath11, new
shnK Jn F'R. 3 bedrooms, 40
foot pool. Beaut ifully
l1u1dsc1t1ied. Asking $84.500.
Call 673-8550.
OPfH Tll 9 • IT'S FuNTD BE NICE1 lfi~liil
CUDDLE &
-SNUGGLE
Little house on bi!?: land . Best
E•u;LSI"°-"""· Good •uplox lot near St 108.cliliili'"l'l~l'i!
ty of frrstt oranges &: sttade. Ju:1~ $1 9.500 oner takes JL
C!\11 f111t! -w WALKIR .~Ill
~nltors ~!M91
Open EY('s.
BIG 5
FIVE • l bedroom ~.
fl\.'t' gar~. 5 separale fen.
~d y ar ds, on bli:;
strHt·1cr-strce t kit. Income
~"'°"'""'-month. AsklJIE
* * $l2,9SO * 4 BR + Maid's or ruetl
""""' panclina ..... ~1ost outstanding buy
N"pl Ht1. Belter l\u!f'r!
BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642-7491 *
Netod a "'Pad"Y Place an adl
"
... ' . ... . .. . .. . . , . . . .. . . , . . . .. .. . . . .. . • •• • ...
36 DAILY PILOT
,·~'---1~~-·~l~~'---b~~~1~~,,l~--~-~~J~[;J~~-~b~~J~~,'~~m;;;;~~~~;1 ~~~1~-~-~~~l:;:~l --~~
Generol General General G...eral -al ~ .... ,..,1....... Colla Mou -........ llM<h
The Area's
' Top Profe11ion1l1
Since 1949
OPEN SAT /SUN . 1-5
611 ACAC IA, CORONA DEL MAR
2 UniLS -\\'ell desig ned 2 bdrn1. "honey·
n1oon cottage" plus "bachelor" unit for the
··i dle roo n1er" 111 the gJ r:ige unit. Priced only
$6 1,500.
BUY NOW -SAVE MONEY !!
Be thr landlord until Sept. 1st., then take
over tlus lovely 4 bdrtn. & ra1niJy rm. home
at lo<lay's price. S64 .500
BAY & BEACH REALTY 675-3000
Invest . . .
I . . in your futur
You'll enjoy living in this :? story CONDQ..
MINIU~t. 3 Bedroon1, 2 1.~ baths. stone fire.
place. family room (or forn1a1 dining room},
built·in kitchen \1·iU1 private patio close to
the pool & recreation rooms, and it's on fee
land in the BACK BAY AREA. $34,500. -
COATS
&
WALLACE
REAlTORS
$411141-
(()pon Evanlngs)
• Rrer Upper
• Thl'ff Units
NEW DU PLEX
3 .L 4 BR., bo;;i.ni ce!J'a., ..4
trpl~. P1ttios. Posh, da'Or.
Qu.ick ~. $101,'11).
-GEMM--
1e10 ''" Coast Hwy., N.B. R£ALTORS 642-4623
VE.TERAN$ OHLY * D-·-* AND NO Cl.OSINO cosrs ..... • ...... $33...... / POOL, heated, llllon>d. 3
S lldtnia, + clfu.. Ill Bdrm, Ill bath, 20'lC1"
bo.tba, llv nn,,/ tirip&ace ftnllhed boma. rfu, t.or IJ).
-1ed ..... t!et.in -· ......... tenalnlnv_ld walJ·to-waU ca r p e t I n 1 . ~ believe appralW ol paU.. dbl ,..,..., ...... ""'000. ..... ,...,., Call
roof, MOl)lhi¥ payments 988-4456 ..._
abo"l 1277. To q""11JY 1"' a * VA IO&.n you muat have a
l"Oll.IOnably IOOd Job 1'0COfd
llfJd earn &bout $llQO.. per
month aroa.
'Mle •-II 916 ~ St., E .. t ol l"alNlew A 4 BR, POOL, VA
North ol Paulutno. Drtw ~ ranch style 4 BR, not
by and take a look. The far from ettM. F'reshly
hoo1tt l:s vacant '° ~ can dcooratcd 111 llJ:l)t wllJ'm
peek In the! vo'indowL Howe oolori. The "latest" In ap.
will be open for Ullpedlor.-!'41-,ffl and fixtures. tlett.1·
and purcbllJJC S U n d a Y 1.'<1 I ti1 t-pool N January ~-11 AM to 4:30 ' o money Pt.I down VA Gt' nanie )'OUt
NO PARTICIPATING tenns. 8KR 9G2-55.U.
ANY Q=/6'~ CALL REl'OSsESSIONS
Open S.... 12-4
41.1 Cros•
Quatnt, coq coltqt. Some
ocean view. t Nice bdrmt., dinlns nn .. utll. rm.; hth"CI. tln. Covtd ceiJ'1. A trick
{tp!t, in UX17 l!Ylre "'1·
!.&<· b<ck f"nl w/hlah bO&ni terlce. challellglf to
nitu1bi.b or add onto.
.141,500 ' Bu t Buyl $49,500',
Great ocean view. S Bdnn1 .•
2 ba'1., 2 frplct. Rec. rm.
s(ep-lll\ltr kitchen. Bia
"''Ofklhop. PMvacy. Occk1,
wlllled patio w1aareaate
Or. Fruit tret'I. Within
walking dlatlU'.IC9 or tuah
ocbooL
* located on Jarre EutBidc General I General C06ta ~lesa lot with roon1
l-E-N_J_O_Y __ G_O_O_D_ AUST IN·SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES :;:.~~h'f',!i,'~'\':~
PENINSULA POINT
CUstom Built Drea111 HouBe
5 Bdnns., <.lt-n, fonnal difl..
Ina:. pool, sauna. A truly
bcauliful home at $159,500
Costa Mesci Realty For lnlorma1.1on IUld location * 541-nJl * ~~~~-F1lA A VA hornet.
MESA DEL MAR ' "'· 3 Ba KASAllAN
F11med Vlctorl11 8ffch
F11cln& the rolllna; 1UJf; S
bdnnl .• open btamed oell'a.
Cm;y flill c., 2 dedca. F.A.
fUrnace. E!ec. lar&a:e· Ju1t
feet from the 1talrway to
l..a(runa'1 nMJ&t famou1
be:aeh. S59.500
'94-15$1
1000 N. Cst. Hwy., Lq\uJa
j GORGEOUS 1~R_E_A~L-T_O_R_S ________ 644-_n_70_1 tlal. Home,_,,, ,.,.,.,.,.1•
NEIGHBORS General Gen"a1 ;.,., so br;ng,....... •anuner IONFS 1i1~:11 ta111lly hQ1ue \\ith _;1 GLEN MAR _.__ Fa ·1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ ==t d=. ~~t1 ~1-r§~REAll'Y~;."!"";uc!!_!i!oJ.. 1x-t1room~. 1ar}.:t' rumily $29,75-• -, + . rru Y M V d won't tast toni. I
imn~. oceu,py. All new ---1 I I ~ 962 ~• crpi. A drpo. Beaut. ~-' a.. ~
landacaped. H""" }'a\'d. "'
' ' ;)' (. "J"' ~
rr ... 1tr achoolt. Man,y extra1 . COME AND SEE
--S<S.!IOOCBy -~ 54&-""6. l7.thll='...,,='~oharo'c'-'=;c1ccora-=o.:tec1;c.,..'4 ' =="°N"'l"'GUE=::i;:=...=-=""-
T'OOlll \Vith fiN'p1a~. formal Simply one or the greatesl Bonus + Dine esa er • 54&-588J (Open Eves.) (714)973""8210
duu111.; and :: baths. Relllly l1u1n.•s offL'l'l'd in Huntington p I $39 500 I -Magic -200IW.-..a.111¥d.
Dana Point Bdrm., huge lot, next door
to $«),000. homes, !or EX CEWNCE 1•hvit'(' \1x·a1ion on quiet-cul-Rt'ach. Fantastic covered 00 -, ., " """*ta..crt~tM&O •k··~l'. close to school!!. patio surrounded by raliied UNBELIEVABLE VALUE! 3 lx>drooni -2 bath, 3 years --.~:-HERITAGE ADORABLE 2 Br, 2 Ba $28,fXX). CALL !WZ-1418,
rirepl"ce. bltins, beams. PA'""'l WALKER R E Prlvttte community with 1
sh<1pp1ng, \.J.>arh-and gt'<'llt decking and loads oI Screened pru1-ico entry. young. Super roomy at Coron11 del Mllf
llC'll1,hbors loo! Priced to &'ll flagstone ,\ con c r l' t e. Ik><'Orator sunken living below market. $.17.500. REALTORS $31,900! 10% dn! No 2nd! 1
' • • manr, recrt'll.Uonal faciJllle1
Abo, cbanulng 2 Br on a \VALK to beach, 4 BR, 2 BA. aval ble to you & the whole
11uickly At $-10.900. Plea&' Perfectly laid out tor leisutt rooni, dining 1vom and tam· Duplex Nr Ocean !:::::::::::::::::
!)hone 5't&-Z\13 for info. -low maintenance living at Uy room! 4 huae bedrooms. 3 Bedroom upper, 2 Bedroom'.
OPEN HOUSE
Lovely 4 bedroom Lusk
Harbor View, feeo_ land,
motivated seller. iOO(I. view
blr &.2 lot. Just $11,!MXI! Choice Hwi.ti-ton Beach family. Thls home la In
Sa le 'Ow~·'"""'4"-.l:NV\ .. '5 "move.In'' condltloo , me mu. '""'' .nr--toe. Cul-de-sac, Crpta.
F ~ >' nnal In Beautl!Wly laOOacaped. Call oPEN TIL P • 11s F/JN ro 8E NICE• its best. A su~t' sharp 3 Breakfast area in bri te IO\ver. Only steps to sand & VA • IEST BUYS
f ~ bedroom home w Ith 1C:tn:hen. tarr;e pantry. Mes· shopping. Garage. $63.500. 3 BR. Io.m rm.. it~A.~ ount11tn V11ll9) 0 D Rm, crtckelt Taul. $42,900 landscape, S37 ,500.
flreplaee comes v.ith this sage Cflller. \VASHER and _.. '""'
outdoor living combined DRYER INCLUDED! Con· Newport 4 BR, nunpus rnt $39,500 -185.500. LITLE RED BARN Pym"" 1233 lnclds all. Yoo ~,,,,!.
Hu al.ump stone fireplace namt• the terms. Vacant. ..,,/T'Q4 ·~ ._ \\'ith nearby ()('('an. park and vertible BONUS R00:\1 3 BR, pool $28,500
I shopping. and/or garage. All paneled. 11t 3 BR, !amily nn $29,900
1327 Keel Drive 1 • 4:30 p.m.
daily. v.•\fh n1antle and rsJaed Can 83.r1103. V Hl'll'
......,,, g;.,. .... wa11pa,.., Decorotw'• Delftht REAL ESTATE Call 6T;r 7225
di.ii warm carpets, deron.ted in By ov.·ner Prof. redeonated, 1190 Glenneyre ll)a~Uqll~es youf ilv.'On't bel~ve. 3 UR, 2 BA, (rplc, 1hai 4~73 M&--0316
x am Y rm, 4 crpla, Nr Huntington *SHARP* bednns. TraMfeJTed to Harbour, Atsume FHA
Chlcqo. No down VA or Loan, $240 mo. incl. all 2
1,,1:·& pa2 Ho~8:uy~
I' h l"d J '!rd \\1Tll -I BR, din nn, pool $39,950 I
•
COA n ig t an ti · F11irview 1..e1 us help you with eligibili· I~ & BAR! Pano. SP,Ulhl.l~G lY and ...,,.,I;" .. ;,_ kit VA
PENINSULA POOL: Boat "'"~''" S"P" 616-1111 fi"·-;~ •-"'-• WALLACE value at S39.~~ cau new.• . ·-...... ~ POINT REALTORI 645--030.l. (anytime) Call 00-1m
Open Evenings
• 961-4454 •
K•p tt.11 ltoJMfy directory wl,. ro• rilll .,..._ •
r•u 90 ho11,....u1tl ... All tM loc..,.._ JhtH .....
.,. d.scrlkd I• ,,.....,. dmll m., -*-'hl111 ehe-
whffit ht rodo.,·1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS • .....,._
ahowht9 opetl hoaws for ac1l1 or to rftt -. lfrge4 to
ll1t sue• l11lon!IC9tlo1 11 tllb colvm11 eoc• ffldoy, 5ot-
11rdo, • S1111day.
HOUSES FOR SALE
2 BEDROOMS
714 i\1arigold J-\ve .. Corona del Mar
675-8583 640·0030 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
1 BR ond FAMI LY RM OR DEN
58 Beaco n Bay (Iieacon Bay) NB
644-2430 569.500 (Siln
3 BEDROOMS
2811 Bayshore Dr. (BayshoreJ NB
&l-1-2430 833-0700 (Sat 1-5)
627 Zeyn. Anaheim
778-5700 $27,950 !Sat & Sun 1·5)
3 BR and FAMILY RM OR DEN
810 Govenor Sl., Costa l\lesa
548·7729 $26,500 !Sal & Sun 1-4)
1847 Pl. Margate Pl. (HVuHomes) NB
644-2430 $69,000 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
17421 Sanla Suzane, Fountain Valley
842-256 1 $35,750 !Sal & Sun 1-5)
18455 Santa Yolanda , Fountain Valley
962-1373 542 ,000 (Sun 1·5)
2527 Vassar Place. Costa l\1esa
540·1720 534,750 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
4 BR and FAMI LY ROOM OR DEN
25061 Ericso n, Missio n Viejo
5464141 $32,950 !Sal 1·5)
1816 Marapata (Irvine Terr.) CdM
673-6900 1Sal & Sun 1-4:30)
214 Dahlia. Corona del ~l ar
673-9403 (Sal & Sun)
2752 Bayshore Dr. (BayshoresJ NB
644-2430 833-0700 (Sun 1-5)
17710 Oak Tree Ln (Uni v. Pk.) Irvine
64~·2430 $56,500-(Sun 1·5)
1878 1\laui Circle (Me sa Verde CM
540·1720 $65,000 (Sun
*1613 Sandle1vood (Mesa Verde) CM
540·1720 $37,500 (Sun 1·5)
2846 Chios Rd., Costa l\Icsa
540-1720 $47,950 (S at & Sun
HOME AND INCOME
S BR HOUSE AN D STU DIO APT.
*240 I Francisco (off Irv.) Newport Beach
548-7729 $87,500 !Sal & Sun 1-4)
**#54 Unda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB
644 -2430 833-0700 (Sun 1-5)
CONDOMINIUM POR SALE
l BR HOME AND APT.
301 Sapphire. Balboa Island
673--0900 (Sat & Sun. 12-4:30)
4 BR and FAMILY RM OR DEN
**542 So. Bay!ron~ Balboa Island 673.eooo (Sat & Sun 12-4:30)
* .... *"' W...,....011t * * * Wetetfn• & '"'
IORl\J [ Ol'O\
,.,, .. " . ' 0 ,.
A Laughing Place
There is a place where
everyone and his family can
be happy. \\·c·ve just listed
thls professionally accented
-I bttlroom home with a
large bonus room and coun-
try kitchen. It al9o leatUI'l's
a Ux<lO completely self·
cleaning pool, fantastic
landscaping, and a double
car garage with \\'Ork bench
and built-In cabinets. Priced
at only $."i>,900. It's a must.
Call 842-2:>35 now.
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S l'UN 10 BE NICE/
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Like Ta
Play Ar.ciund?
~
Well. there's plenty or room
in this :> bedroom, 3 bath
home. Extra 'llirge lot for
the klrls to run around. Plus
covered and enclosed patio
for outdoor fun. Prie<.~ for
quick sale at $36,500.
847...0010.
' .
Ol'£H 7JL ' • rrs FUN ro lJE NICEI
~ !
Distinc:tively . . •
... Different
4 large bedrooms with sitting
room off muster suite,
formal dining, h1 rgc ramily
rm. 3 baths. Merbll' entry-
way -must see to appre-
clatl' S55,2!i().
GINNY MORRISON *** ·REALTOWJ.. •* *• 15ffi Mesa ' ,..,..M. •Verde Dr. East.
.. ~. Costa P.fesa.
••••• 557..(130
(Open ~ven\nis)
Eastside 4-Plex
~21 THE BLUFFS
3 Bd1m., 2 1~ ba., fanlily rm., I=====;: tlramalic.-f9rmal dining rm.;
2-sty. Very lge., private HOME AND
patio. E.xquisitely decorated. INCOME Greenbelt frontage. Xlnt .
value a1 $62, 750. Eastside Costa Mesa Duplex.
~ Choice location, 2 bedrooms
0-;~'Q.,,. e.ach. Chvner's unit has
[. ·: ~~ .Ei.eff' fireplace plus i 1 ~ baths.
t s t Aaking ooly $39, 150. -,s ~ .·/ Call 540-ltil Open Eves.
-, realty
~) .• .. HERITAGE
lllUfOIAl.l (!" tMI (C)tWB.1 CO.
NEW-NEW-NEW
GREAT LOCATION
Below ""'Y· corner. Exciting, splitJeveJ 4 bdrm., 3 ba.
home + 2 bdrrn., 2 ba.
apartment over 4 car gar-
age. lnspl'Ct tbe plans to-
da,y! {$98,500)
University Realty
3001 E. Cst. Hwy. 613-6510
*DUPLEX*
One of the best txys in
town! 2 & a den & 2 bdrm.;
So. of Hwy. $71.500.
MORGAN REAL TY 67~1 675-6459
name )'OW' tennL Just ~or 846-4659 d&•-, #'-listed BKR 962-55U .....,.. old. Priced fer Immediate
CHOICE . L:ARWIN DIVORCE Forces Sale - 3 sale. $.18,000.
"TIBURON'· condomlnlwn Br. 2 ba, lam nn. Prof. * INVESTOR'S A'JTN. *
resales now on market. lndscp, new shag, t,; mi to Medical bldg. downtown
Total exterior maintenance, heh. Xtra 1harp. Cul4e-sac. location, adjac<'nt lo lie.
total electric bullUru and SJ.l,900. Day 896-5129. Eves city p&ritlng lot. Grouinr
ait--cond. 2 to 4 bedrooms. ~53&-""'211='7'-. --~~-~ Sa'.l,400. Priced at S176,IXX>.
Quick poue:11lon. }'rom OWNER transfered. 4 Terna oUered.
$17.950. VA/FHA !\%. We Bednna + pool, 2 baths, ENGLUND
know them beat becau1e "'-e patio. Dining nn. built:ins,
built them. dlshwulre•, llreplace In REAL ESTA TE larwln realty Inc. family nn. Brk $35,900, 318 THALIA 494-3093 <nc> ~ '°'00>-""'13'13='". -~~~-~ OWNER Sacrifice. 4 bedrm.s. OWNER leaving, 4 bednnl, 2 WATERFRONT
2-.11-1 Vista d<'I Oro HARBOR VIEW HllJ...S Ne111port Beach REALTORS
3 baths. Covered patio., balhl1 patio, dinln& rm., Beautiful Spanish ctt&te.
built-ins, d Is h w a• he.! 1 bullt~111.1, di s h w a 1 be r . Rambling 3 bd.nn. home,
fireplace in family nn. \.."W ~pla~. family rm. Brk. lorma1 dining nn .. wet bar,
de sac, brk $36,500, ~2561. $36,!IOO. 962-8865. nuwh·e frplc. Lots of wood.
OWNER dnp@ra~. 3 baths, FOR Sale By Owner, 4 br alasa & tile. Prtv. boat dock
4 bedrooma. Patio, dinfne townhOO&e. $%1.4$. $500 below Jie. view paUo. A real
rm, built-ins, dl&hwaaher, under 11IA approval. SWi.m· jewel. at SlU,OXJ.
family rm with fittplace. pool, tennis crt, basketball * 499-28» * 644-1133 A.~'fTI?-.IE Spectacular harbor & ocean
---------1 ''Think of Things'' =·nn~Profi dr:!ra~ed~ Tri~level, bkr S 3 8 , ~ 5 0 , & park. 962-$10 aft 6.
~-O\\'NER sacrifice, 4 bedrma,
9 uality Bu1"1t '0" "°"'t havo, th<'" h""" to tambcaped. $1!!,500. Huntl ......... -h see the home that does. 3 Open daily 1-4. 644-1875 ...... ..
Me sa Verde Home bedi:ooms, 2~ baths, large ..B'i 0'>171Cr old OJM 4 BR & l---''------
J baths. Covered patio,
built-ins, dishwas he r,
fireplace in famil rm.
Cul-de-sac, brk ~.500. Beautilul 3 Bdroom 2 bath ~ room, and l.antastic play Rm' borne. Ocean '& SUPER
\.\1th hard-to-tiod Jeatures d~ area. You must take Harbor vu 'il blk to water, FANTAmC 11<&-1383. BEST VAWE!
like large rooms, doubl the time to see thl.1 -one. R-2lot Charm 613-9403 214
brick fireplace, plaster Don't make a da:lsk>n until Dalhia' . ' ' Owner trandel'ftd, mlllt
leave thil 6 month old 2
story executive home. Enor-
moUI sep&l'ate famlly room
with firepla~ & wet bar.
Formal dining room, 600 sq
ft muter bedroom aulte
plus: 3 otber bedrms. 2~
Baths, custom tie.back,
drapes w/!lheen. lhag car·
pet ttui.iout. All elec ldtchen
w/dbl oven & solarium tile
floor. Step do1,1,·n living rm,
well landacaped A lots of
concrete. Call to inspect and
discus& term11, 968-4'56.
OWNER anxious, 3 baths, 4 So clean It sparkles! A
bdrms, POOi, patio. DininR beautllul 3 BR, 2 BA, VIEW
rm, buflt-lns, dWawaaher, home in Emerald Terrace,
ftreplace ln f&J!lilY rm. Brk Walls of clt'8etl & bulltins. $48,900. 962-8865. · Custom kitchen. Luxuries
BY OWNER 3 Br, 2 BA,. new everyv.•here. $S9,500.
walls, shingle roo!, separate .YOU do. Only $40,500. Call DUP~ u .. _......-te
laundry rm & large covered now 842-2535: on .. ._6 ..... •• •
patio. Great location on beaut. cond. 2 & 1, 3 & 2,
quiet tree lined street close OPENnt.1•rrSM10BENICEI $610. mo. income. Prine. on-
to schoolS. New: on · tbe Ill , , I ly. $79,500. Call 837-2447 By
market, eo call-qwck. , ,,,""""=,.,'·~-.,,--,..-,==
f>l&-5880 • (Open Eves.) • 1 cozy 1 Br cottage in CdM.
l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I OJ) R-2 lot. $38,500. By
paint, cpU, dabwht. 5222 NICHOLS REAL ESTATE
Callente. $26,950. 968--0140. 20'15 S. CollBt Hwy.
6 BLOCKS TO BEACH 194-72'lO
4 BR & FR + DR CHOICE LOCATION -~ HERITAGE Owner. Prine. on I y .
. . R ~ALTORS 673-4169.
NEWPORT 2 BR, channing Cape Cod.
$36,500 * ~ * BKR On quiet cul de sac. 3 BR {or
BEACH COTTAGE, down 3 BR, den/office), 2 BA,
town, R-2 lot. $25.000, w/w cpt.g, drps, frplc,
a.ssume 7% GI In. 968-8273 bltlns, elec. s t o v e ,
Bkr. dlahmaster, dbl a:ar. encld
A PRESI'IGE HOME _ 4 front patio, kwely l.ndacpc,
BR. 3 ba. 2300 sq ft. 3-1:1.r 50' x 138' lot, 2 blka to
D'UPLEX $59,500, n <.Mangold Ave.
NEW WITH C<L\1, 675-8583 or 640-0030.
Walk to ...m in Newport OCEAN VIEW trom '°"' •"•1''" , ,_c_ost_a_Me_ .. ____ _
H , A .. ___ bedroom, 1% baths each. Eastsi"de * "" ooo. """' ~ b.iehachool· One of the bet· ere s your ~-.:: to see Upgn.dcd wtth many xtras. ~'O~r CU!lOm \'\eW home n•s super sharp. Priced at
· being . constructed and $85,000.
t'hoose )'OW' own color 540-1151 Open Eves decor. 1,800 to 2,400 sq, ft. of ·
lu.'\:ury \\-ith spacio us
bedrooms and 3 balhs, razw·
·jng in price from $43.000 to
$53,001. Floor plans and
a r chitec1ural l'('nderings
available in OUI' office.
C WALl<EH & LH
·.' .. HERITAGE
REALTORS
HARD TO FIND
. .. dupJcj; on Peninsula P1.
Comp. redecor. inside; 2 BR.
Realtors ~nu 1 ba. each unit. Live In up.
2W3 Westcliff Drive per, lower leased $265 month
__ O~pe_o _'till_' _9_P_M ___ 1 $72,500.
Call: 673-3663 675-8886 Eves.
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
1025 W Balboa 67l·J66)
3 BR· Like new
Ready to move Jn beauty .l!!!""'KA~"'!l!OO!""!OM~~l~I...,
huge livirig: rm & family rm, • ••
modern kitth, lots ol cup. New on the market!
board space, huge master WestcWf -larie 4 bed. 4
bdrm, bean1 ceilings, low bath-d1nlng room and -Oh
dol'l'Tl paymt. Yes! Pool! Owner tranater-
645-7221 red. $89,000 HUl'l')I!
1733 \\°estclifi Dr., N.B.
JUST RIGHT!
.. .• ........ ~. -· "" bWlt -In Laouna 3 Bedroom 'rtARM home, ftne neighbon, at $19,950. By owner, .B. nr ICh, heh, 4 + 2, 4M-2l16 eve, wkend.
Great 3 bOOroom, 2 bath. 134.SOO. Ownr, "° aat 3 ARCH BAY
family room home, low , .,,__,_,_,._.,._,iii "-=-==c.· ------maintenance yard. Owner I' EXTRA SHARP -An attractive, newer con-
arudous and ready to move. lrvlne temporary home with P1eu-
JW<t 12 ,,,.,., old. Painted 4 BDRM ht&""'""' views. Opeo 1'eam inside and out just a year ceil'~. throuout. TllE'tl entry.
,... 131.000. Fo• IW'ther $24 950 G. I. LOAN i.a,.. family rm.. S
details call 646-Tin. 1 Yea, YOU can usume exl.sl· bdrm1.; cha~ Inner
Thia immaculate 4 bmnn tng G.I. loan on this highly patio • $135,000. [i.lif IBi ~~01~~~~~ ~~~~JJ. ll~?~~f~~i~
home today. Call f9r •PPt. work. Tastefully decorated 2 BR. &: den or 3 BR. 2·sty. 2 TRIPLEX I' w/pod u~· of wallpapers. Frplcs., liv nn. & din. 8.1'1!1
Three 2-bdrm. units in !pm•M9I ~~~~I: :=':t ;'~loce~~n.vle;i!:. ~
liko-oew coooifo". Nice 53l!'i'lll ( ;:) 531•5111 l""' $30,950. INCLUDING d,..pea, "''I" thntout I carpeting, bit-in range & TII£ LAND! Ba.lcony view decks. A rare
retrlg. In each. Upper unit $ find at $43,950.
haa vtew or lill!S& rught 26,950. MISSION REALTY, 494--0731
llghta. On James St., Over R al ~"~·--Cl N~• HOME • -2BR =• 80% loan at 7%: can be aa;. e ..,,,..._,........, · eim, .c,• .... ,., , --no !!harp, with many xtru. exposed beamed cell, frple.
1umed. Asking $49,950. Lovel.y carpets, drapes, ocean w , $311,500. Inqu.tn
CA.LL (9 •••·1414 shelving. Overalzed lot w/ 496-2218 "'"'*" room ~~~trailer. "SINCE ™6" ~~~°oru;~.OOJ~Z: r.IA.LTY lJt W.iem Bank Blda. HL11bel Rltr, •99-1731 or
416 CABRILLO Days 5.!1·7000 Nftht1
Near N1wper1 P••t orrfct * Unlvetllty Park, Irvine llJ3..1356 .
OWNER 142.150 Laguna HUis .
ExeculiVf.' Westcll!f 3 bed., 2 l BR, 2 BA, oak tlrs, crps, y •.L.• f I OWNER De bath on manicured corner copper plwnblng, cov patio. du 1UK11U or t Spl!l'B.te, near new
lot. Plush ·cupets, drapes, BY OWNER $27,lXKI 7% Loan assumable. $2 O Maater bdrm • .Wte wttll fltt. lovely 4 bl', faro, frplc,
"!Ill'"", d1"ing . room -ldoal..l'amll.Y-hoona. °" CUI· J>tll'r. 1e.,,,. u_....,_ed. 4, 95 • place. Living room aoo di"' patio. Now Wm-Id, $31,IOO.
private yard WJU\ heated De-Sac Street. 3 Lra BR 2 SPACIOUS 2 sto 2 BR. 11\ 4· Lrg Bit 2 BA. all mod Ing room ovtrlookincireen·' ;C23622c;::c;LC'lf'po::.ri::.· .:58&-=1139=·=.::
pool! Priced by eage.r owner BA Fnm Rm, 17x27' Scre'en BA . oondQ. Bl~ins. trplc. bltin kit appl's, recently belt. Terrific location near 1.Lido 11111
at ~;950 -Subnul )'OUr porch A more! Nr 2>lh ll Separate garage. Pool, I'f!de(:orated. Xtra Ira lot, pools, tennis, bike tni.ii> and 1---------1
tenns. · Irvine. Wik to Woodland recreaUon room, lau:ndry ovenbed dbl pr, ~tlo, tot lot1. 2500 sq, It. of lwc· 3 BR. & DEN
Schools, $40,950. 642...f.t12. facUIUe1. Qujet adults only. ldacpd, Ira trees. FA t rd ury llvlni for the tam.Uy re-Jdr.al family home
OWNER anxious. 4 bedrm, 2 No chlldten under 15. 2400 Joe. With mln dn paymt. qulrlna: 4 bdnns. and lam· '5 Foot tot . $79,950
baths. Pool & patio, deck· Elden, Of 963--2187. p&fmts le11 than rent. lly n:iom. See by app::iint· LOWEST PRICID •..•
Ing. Built-Ina, dlshwuher. 5 BDRM, 2 Bath, lam nn, ' ment. $54$:1. Home on IJdo. 2 BR. +; 2
Fln!plat.'t' \n family nn. nr. So. Coast Plaza It 8 ed h II bl,lhs. Quiet end ot the a. * BEACH ·* o";;;·,:';.,",:; ::'~~"""-· ~t:;,1'0..:,~~:00'.J.~ 1"!!!!" .... "'!"_,lllll_'!!'! r i '•""i.1Wb500
REALTY . LEX * ' l>ntba. Pool A patio. ;. I: ••• 3317 Via Lldot N'pt Beach Catalina .It Bolsa Chica State W DUP · Oinlnr nn., built-in&. i'aml· BACK BAY-$29,!a> FOR ule by owntr -~ REALTY 67). 300
Beach. Iron gates rmMde e.:dustve and Jta.t llsttd 2 ly nn. brk s.tr,950 S.TJ2>. BJ owner, 3 BR w/frplc. ~ ~~ ~'d.Jn: A O:wnpany With VI.Mon REDUCED $30,lXKI. for quid!
court yard privacy. Unique Bedroom Md I bedroom OWNER d c 1 per alt. 3 Lee )'tl'd w/ccrv'd j)l.Uo. w-1.. Univ, Park Center, Irvine •• 1. VI Udo
ki1rhcn & family room. SUr· with massive ftrepla~ bedroll, 2 bathJ. .Pool 6: 6l).4lS6 or M>-0227 ~tcbr:1 :h:iah~ Call Aeytlme, 562-'Ml ~t, okr It allp. ~:t
rounds this lovely 4 hdrm formal din!ni. sun-deck & patio. t)Wng nn:1._buiii.-tna, OCEAN VIEW . Ne• Olltom panetirv I: trplc. Ownlzed omce hOun I AM to 6 PM SBA. 2 yr old beauty. Wa'.I abode. Priced 10 llf:ll at 'dl'.luhle garage. Pciced [or dllhwalhtt. hmuy rm. bric home 4 Br. 2-Wi Ba. fam I lot, water toft.entr a. -..tOOOI) ~
Hl.900. Submit your terms. lmmed. sale at $65,!ICO. Call $21.500 540-lm. dtn nn, cpts, d r a Pe 1 purifier. M&.01 ~ TUR'M...EROCK ... ti"'~ n':cible: 11m: · ( e h.11iiiild M.5-8424 SOUTII OOAST l11lbo.t l1l1nd Inda:pd, $52.000. ~6. teeturu. Fut JJOWak1n BROA.DMOOR Call WALLY McCOY,
-·-·--·-REALTORS. OWNER tn1,..ro""'1. 3 BR., PROBATE SALE 50· $17,!llfll. Ootn No. 4 Plan In ISO's. 4 &, l\l l:':mo-O=ll6=·=24=:bn.""'°'=-=,.,.
R.coJtors 545--0465 11\ BA N I d t-.a 4 BR, 2..bltb bomt._DeU Har-• nnt Bil' Bml l.n. Ba, ~833--2:389. OPPORTUNITY. 3tm. TD.1.
Ope:n E""'· • WANTED • ·IA1.1 Or ~ha~. W.m bor • wu.on 546-UJO. Irvine Terrace DR. Ja:e ~· S71.rioo."Ui
HEY, LOOKI itpcricnt-00, IU1l Ume Real sn-1as. <>pen sat.sun. 1-4. F.ASI'SlOE _ CLOSE IN fORECl0$URE s BR., 2 BA. trr. fenced Via w Open 1. ~-l~I" ~i" ~~ ~~ E»tate Saleipeop.le. 70% 81lbN P1nlntul11 3 bdrm, 1 bath Sll.500 yard, plu1 boat 1torare )lf'd, ~2S1B. Commlssi~. m E. Mqnolla v .... t • -~-.. -Wik ., Balboa ltland, Some "'UICK CASH l Mi Bo.tJ1i, rlll'J>. k ttr111Jt1.. CA ... ·~· R nd Broktr-Owncl' ~ _.,_,..,,. -v-.,.. cov'd. J)tl tlO; widt" Int for • ~ I I VOUI this Wff:k can atop :siroceed· Vu, MUil 1111. A.sk!ng THROUGH A
privacy. Yaur11 for $2il,250. =--------Condominium 3 SR., 2 BA, l,e yard. $29,500. Inga. 2 Story,~ tO ocean. $59,500. ~'1$89. MORGAN RE AL TY S."10. down to al1)1)ne & t~e Top Ooor. 2 Br. 2 Ila. frplc, 2 ll4~ Paularifto. CM, _opt!!. Windins ataircue led• lo Vacanclils COit __,., Rent DAILY PILOT
673-6641 675-6459 ""' '"''"· 11111. av1u Feb lfUD•• , .... ., "''"'IY -s.v&in 1-4, MHI08. maattt au!t• wt th h111• •"· --· ~' "°" W •NT AD J, CID, w11hr, dcyet, re.fr bld1, elevator. Fa.ntutfc Llke to tndet Our Trader'I Hna: rm. Two vanJt)r btthl, blda., etc. thrd a Dally PUot "'
.1 .. blt·IM. 3 BR eo-OCfolrVl•w. !60,000. L.W. p"'"'"' oolwnn Is... I glau kllcheo. o~ .... ~.:. Clusllled Ad. Sell ldl• Items CALL 642-1671
96Hll5. flrlas Roltor, OTWllO 5 nn... 5 Cill eo:rJml!Oiil -
•
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Every classified want ad in the DAILY
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all along the Orange Coast : ', • all the
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Frli'ay, Janunry 26, 1C)7J DAIL V PILOT 37'_
L;;.; __ ,;;;.s.;;;;;;;;l~~e I -'°'.. ~·ii:!:~~:·"~~~• iii;! iiii"''""iiiiii'·' iiiiiljl~iiiiii• I -Ior.... !~I _,.,... I~ I -"'"""" I~
Me1a Verd• Newport Be1ch Income Property 166 Maney to loan 240 Hou1es Unfurn. 305 Hou1es Unfurn. 305 Cottdomlnlum1
Unfurn. 3'20 146.000. s, 0w'"'" BLUFFS eoodo. 3 srr. 2•; ESTATE BUILDER 1st TD loans Costa Me.. trvln•
JUJt ()ff Multiple 4 BR, 2~~ BA, fan1 rm., nln10!i!I /')('\I.•, •l UNITS 10'1li 00\.1/N c.~l 'I-"---;.;..;-----· I SPACIOUS i Rlt, l '-: BA.
Ba, d@n, form clln rni., nu pert t'Ond. 644..S007 or µ111111 ('tin bf:' upgntded & 6*% INTEREST e CRASII PAD' Pl'iv(li;y 3 BOH~t. 2\~ BATll. Bonua Cpt.s.. drps, .i.t'pl.t;, blt~ins.
al.Ulf( crp111, Jg 11'.Jt. 20'.M 1 ,.,•~1!<.SS2'-'=·'~· ~~~---11!nU ls1i.:1-cn~1xl. 2 d TD l furn. Utit lnC't. $11~. room. $360 b'IO. VILLAGE Pool, rl~r{'atil>ri rooni. No
Bale:u-ic Pl'. 557-5343 or Newport Heighh $49,000 Ml..oo30 n oans ALA Rentals e 645.3900 111. Call !ill-a5i!! children under 15. Avail
lc•ve me~c at545-4577. 1--.;;.c;:;.;;..:....;.."'-'"'-CC.--L 8 h now. E. Custa Mesa. 2400
Newport BHch FRESH AS A DAISY. Lnwe!rt rateit ora.ni::e Co. •D?UJ-J~USi'~! Ji Br· a9una eac t:Jdon No. ,9. 1210 mo, lit
3BR 2 bi, frple &-lrg yard, Sattler Mtg. Co. ~(~!de. lan.I for smJ {>l:t. $IG~. Util pd, lrp!i.:, open nud 10~1. 963--2187.
VALENTINE'S DAY $42,950 by owoer,645-1446. 6424~171 545-0611 ALA Rentals • 645.3900 :fi~11. chn.l'n1! l'~ lliks La guna Beach
West N'p~~a;~~idt'I\(.'('. 2 IS_a_n_la_A_n_• ______ 13 \VELI. bit. upts. Nr. shop. Sffving H&.rbor aret1. 21 yrs. $25!>-BH.ANn NE\V 3 .. fllt. 'J 1$:.'0U Ulli pti, 2br. So. LHS!· !:1 BR. Ne\\'. Rl.'nut vi~w. On
BR, l ~ba.+ Sw@dlsh(rpl.. *CUSTOMW/POOL* 11ing. Lo\v vu.cuncy. b1igbt liatb doul;ll! ii;lit'a~l'. Gi!r,yd,tlcck.Cbild1·cnwl'I. ~vll C'l.!.urse. ,\u· oond, IJlt·
Only 18 nlo.~. old, A rrul fJrlme lil'ea! Spa(•ious, cx~·hi:r.ni.:1~. t•ottin C o· 1 II fl! l 'l'o\\'nhou."" Ct11t.s, dq1s, $300 Utll 1xl, 3 bl', 2 hn lrph· 11i~. $:\.l0/1110. l-52S-Z177.
"heart throb," $37.9".iO. !Jcxible flt· plan .AiC. Healton. HouusforRent . blt~i11~. J\tds & Pool. Av1t1l. hon1t» Gar, ;.J,nr h1-i>rhl. Mission Viejo
Sav. & Loan says only 107; G~2-5CKKI 833-2220 now. l)ays t:ll :u 5:U~11 ur NU-VIEW RENTALS
JONF.s
REALTY INC. "" ...
(TWJ 673·6210
dn al $44,000! 542-5020 Lots for Sale 170 , J::ves \714) 842-4:'.138. 67:H030 Or ,19-1-3248
University Park ' Houses Furnished 300 ME~A Ven.le 3 BP, 2 BA. WOOD'S COVE, 2BR, l'C'frig,
ANXIOUS OWNER S26IJ 5 ·liR, ne\\· ca1'(Wl1ni.:-. stve, lrplc, steps to Jx·h,
e 5 BR home w/CI1>ts & \VtJJl located 67.5 x 145 ft . Balboa Island $2"J() 3 BR. 2 Ba., lrg. bk. S250mo, Avail 2.t. 21:1-
drps. Beaut Ind 8 cpd, il1·1 lot. Industrial area. 38R, 2BA, rent by nio. or y~I. ~225., ~ .,, c3~9~2.-~29='°0"-~~~---'-
G r renbelt w/swhnming Costa Mesa, year, Pri patio, balcony, 11r CEN2 UH.\ 21 5.16-9~l $'125/MO. Fabulous ocean,
pools, l.ennis & volleyball fl'rry. 213-429-928.11 Lll\E nc1v ·I bt.'dl'oon1, 2 ba.Ut harbor vie,v. 4 Br. 3 Ba,
courts. Nr UCI. $10,000. 3 B l lf: b · I ho nit! in Costa illesa. Frni 1·n1, 1''/P, cpts, dps,
552-9035. r., . l a., yr Y· 1''lrcph1cl'. f''an1ily n"iom BBQ kit & palio. 675-7414
Nl~\V ~\ng!e :dory, 2 BR, l
H1\, crptg, drp:;, bltns, l'OV
pULio, gar., use of pool, xlnt
loc. $210 rno, 8.10-5891
Newport Beach
ON BLUFFS m-. Hoag Hosp.
:1 Br, 2 l:ia. split level. Pool
µrivil. $300. Mlts, Avail
'LI 1. 5-18-3993 alt 5. Westminster 673·l488 largt' yards. $300, no rental BACK BAY Corona del Mar '"'· Brokoc, ""'8&10. CONDOS NE\V home by O\l.'fler • 2 . . 2 BR, ""3 car gar. $250. Ad·
SPECT~\CULAR cu s 1o111
hon1c, 3 BH., 2 BA. 2 levels, I ·U'-n~iv_e~r~s~ity~:...;.P~a~r~k'---·1 decks, coastline view. $J50
n10. Rcrerences. 49-1-9350. story, 4 BR, 3 ba, lam rm & Se['l. Garage Un1.t $90. Also dilional storage garages $'!5.
Carefree Uv!.ng In large 3 and bonus rin. 2700 sq. ft. Cotta[:11, CJl.t. ssa. And H.B. per 1110. Adults, no pe ts.
4 bedroom homes. Excell Completed by May. All in· 1,~ acre utll pd. 67:,..7G51. Laguna Niguel
area, priced !rom $32,950. to terior & ext. options still 1----------Rent·A·House 9794430 "S2'"l~ll-~$~2'0""'3'""B7,.-, ~.~.,-8~,-.. -,~,11 "-'=='-""-'""'----
SNGL level 3 Bit 2 ba end
unit Unfurn. $350, yr!)•
l('U!i<'. Avail F&b, 15. Call
fo1· appt. 675-S982.
Duplexes Unfurn. 350 $33,950. Big kitch, tml din, open M•,.·h '"'' tha" go'"'" itr OCEANFRONT LDT C M EXCEPTIONAL oc~·,-v<·"w front 1·m w/Ci"""I. 2 car · "" " " Ma<,nifieent view, for sale' or osta esa l'Onveniences, close to schls, ·"'" " · ,_ ·-.. kt il price. 213/379-ii952 aft 5:30. ., sOOii'g. R edeco rat ed. Ncw3bdrni.Exclusivegate Ba lboa Peninsula gar, u g rec area, coc a trade, South Laguna. Laguni Beach 54&-l}J6g John, :>45-9491. guan:led section of Sea Ter. l ""'-;.;:;o..;..o;;:.;c~:.:..--.I lounge, billiard rm, Olympic 493-3429 * • J:&-7'764 race. ~paratC home. ~lonth
pool . 10% ON. West side of ][1 ifi'~l \\'ATERr~RONT, 30' boat slip $170, Util 11d, t'edcc 1 br \\'/ NcU home'. 4 ~· 2\.S ba, or lease $500. 493-5769.
Back Bay, Santa Isabelle & MoblleHomes . in BalOOa. Lot 7 Collins Isl· gar 'l'o·t1lk to lx·h/to\vn. rpts, drpi;, blllns, bar. yrrl. Lido Isle
Irvine. 1.:;iiijiiijiiijiiij;;;iiij;;;;iiij;;1 nnd, 673-7770. $225.'1 br, nicely furn. Frplc, ~~tof$~~n. $4~ ~~'-5~9& ----------1, gar, :i.:Jn't loc. ()c('an vu. · ' eposi · '· CHARMING 3BR, 3BA, DR,
Mobile Homes Real Estate $2:J(l, 2 br apt, beaut. ocean 2BR Sl:W. Garage. Yard. Jrg patio, Nu decor, Best 531 .. 5181 ( :=J 531 .. 5IOO For Sale 125 Excha nge 182 \'U, ll·g dPck. Privacy. No pets. 688 B W. Joe, 133 Via \Vazlers, Open
EXTRA SHARP
Peninsula Duplex
3 Bd.nn. & a 2 bdrm. Block
to bay & beach. New ly dee·
oruted. Furnitu re incl. at
$62,000.
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1.5
1810 W . BALBOA
JONF.S REALTY INC.
"'"" (714) 67:l-62ID
2001 W.Balboa ll!Yd·
HewpOrt SUiofl·calilomill 92.1160
50' Alma
Mobile Home
2 Bedroom, fully equip!, ba1!1.
roon1, washer. Must sell.
$2150
OR
MAKE OFFER
TED'S MOTORS
2Ql4 Harbor Blvd.,
Coslu Mesa
645-6644
Motor Home Rentals
\I/ILL TRADE NU-VIEW RENTALS \Vilson. 642-filSl. daily l-5, $475, 67~2518.
HOUSE FOR _ 673-4-030 or 494-32-18. 3 BR. 2 ba, clean, sharp. Nice TO\VNl-IOUSE • 3 Br &
df'sert·orient~ seller has Lido Isle yard. 3ll2 Coolidge Ave. ~tudy. 21~ Ba. Yrly.
$10,500 eq. in house at 3615 1295. Call Jlm642-94l1. $400/mo. Re!'L pon sible
Elliotta Dr.. Riverside. FOUR BEDROOM . 311; 3 BR hse nr Boy's Club & adults. 673-0814.
•\I/ants to try seaside living. bath. NiC<.'lV furnished in· across st. from j:Jark. Fncrl
\ll'ill sel.! or lrade attobe eluding · pilino. $450. per yard, no ~l<1. 548-{.046.
houSt' for l'Ondo an)'\\•hcre monlh til June 30th. Or can EASTSIDE quiet cul-Oe-sac
on c'Oas~ .. , ~·r~nces Dodd, I)(> 2 bedroom, 2 bath at 3 br, ne\V C'tpls, drps'.
Brokl·r, :i7,,S Carlton \Vay, S32..i. PETE BARRETI' garage $225 548-3085
Los Angeles, Ca 90028. l213} RF.ALTY 6-12-5200. ~~~~-·--~--467_2223. 3BR, fenced yard, $220. mo.
CONTEMPORARY 4 Br, 3 2"o48 \Vest.minster Ave C.M. Real Estate Wanted 184 Ba, D/W, w8.sher/dryer, 64:>-&J.19. '
$485 mo. Avail 2·12 to £...12.1----------* Cj)uick Cash * 67'""611 or 624-7100. 1-E_•_••_B_lu_11 ____ _
\Vil! buy your property. All Houses Unfurn. 305 4 BR & DEN
cash within 72. hrs. Ca!! Individufll Hoinr, over 2,0CXI
962·8851 General sq. ft. Unusual large 4
I..;.'---------· I bedroom or 3 & den. F<1n1ily
Mission Viejo
PRl~f.E vu 101, beaul Deane
Honie JBR, 3BA, huge fan1,
form din $425mo incl
gardener & wtr. 586-2912
Newport Beach
• OCEANFRONT-Spuc furn
Ba('h. Util incl. $00.
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
e BALBOA Island! I-luge 1
Br. encl gar, pc1s. Util incl
2 BR, den, 2 ba, i,J blk heh A
hay. $325 mo. yrly. 1359 E.
Balboa Blvd., Apt A
ldwnst rsl. 536·3518 or
213/863-1008.
DL'\ dupl1•x :! Br, 11,i Ba,
bHns, ept/drps, encl gar,
frpl, lndry rni, no p ets.
838-49-19.
Costa Mesa
$160 r.10., 2 BR., stove
J'('f., carp/drps. aose
10 cost. Agent 646-2414
1 BR, clra~s. range, refrig 6
r nclosrd garage. No pets.
644-0030.
Huntington Buch
IMMED. OCCUPANCY
New 3 Br apts $250. nw.
Dbl garage, dshwshr
3.ll Oswego, H.B.
536-8360
NEWPORT SHORES SALES & LEASING 1 · room plus large formal din· 3 BR. 2 BA priv. yard,
rooni. Complete privacy d bl · 2 lull service facility "ith enclosed rear and rront rapes, carpet!'L, Uns, s1nall children O.K. $185.
$200.
ALA Rentals e 645-3900
\Valk to .oeac11. Lge. 3 BR. Oaninar Motor Homes eRoKERs 1Nc. Hou•••* Apt1. ~~s.s4~~~ ;~~~~· c~~ NEw rnnEE BEDROOM alter 6 p.m. 536-3638 wor1c
2·Sty. 21,i halhs. Blt·ins. l '~~~~~~~~~I * .45 _0111 * 673..£568 or 546--36&~. CONOOMIN!Ut.-1 with it's 847-3541.
MUST SELL! $42,500 531 6800 • owo boat slip, """"'"·
CAYWOOD REAL TY ·""~""'"""~·-,-==-;ccc 1 ~ 433 w.11th COSTA MESA1.E_l_T_o_ro______ df'\uxe extras. OPEN SAT & Newport Be1ch * 548-1290 * ·~,,~ld2<'0B\RVest:, 2·Blx60, dl~~e ~inancial • 0Th'M"ANAY,.eRJE"Nst~LFSe1v o r 3 BR, 2 ba, bltns, crpts, drps. ~~~~ ~~).~~~B~ at 4111 THE BLUFFS-Spacious 3
OCEAN VIEW '" · ' -a, · 1:.iiiimmiiiimm.;;;;;ml Ur I A • • • lge fncd -yard. S260, wate..r bdrms., lamily rm, 3 Ba,
f;1odern Duplex 4 Bdrm. up, dswshr, C'pls/drps, lndscpd. * pcl. 5.S&-4247. BL F S '"· d I laundry, pool & yard
2 Bdrm.,· on. Ver" large, Adult pk. Sa.n Juan Capo, Business SS5 -1, BR. Furn Col\age.l 'H'c'-u-n~ll'~n-g~to~n-"'B-e-ac'h,---u~·. ..:Vn °· 3 llrJ.:e moinlenance. $750. mo. 1st
•J o\1·nr, 493--0258. O • lOO All U!tl Pd. Coop!" or Illa· ·---''---·---bedrooms, built-in kitchen, & I $'~ d . il prime location. $65,000. pportunity " -pool privileges. 2 car ust + wu. epos1t. Ava HORVATH REALTY' LIKE new 12x60, Expando _ ture single ok. NO FEE, VACANT. garage, good ,gTecn belt March 1st. 833-86li.
Ask for Dave living rm, 2 BR, 1~~ BA. TRAVEL AGENCIES 1150 1 BR *cozy C 1 $237 per month, first & view. Tovrn · house design. NEW Duplex, 3 br, 2 be. 675-19:z2 494-0615 adult park, nr ocean, ot age Lease only $335 per month Fm 1~~1310 y 1 Walk 5.~l-7232. T\vo Cully approved, in 2 : Id \voN''R.I.Asl" . last. Near new City Broker 640-0020. • m """" r y. BY O\\•nCT Upper Bay, Oran~c Co1:1nty. H~ve l>Cl'n yis 0 · * -"""l . · Park. 3 BRS builtins 'lo bch. Encl gar. 642...3188 or
M <'di terr a n ea n style. 3 BR. 2 BA n1obile hon1p in est. in hus1nrss Hk18; own. ' Sl' 3 BR., Npt. Hghts. Pel-.. I c•~t=2.-c7=91~<~. --~~--
Spanish tile roor, 4 BR, 3 ocean-front park, Laguna rrs rrtiring. $220,000. Sl!ia . 2 BIL NE\V Crpts. BKR/OWNER 962·5 1 children O.K. S275 ~tonth, UPPER duplex, 2 Br, wtw
BA, Din RM, all elect kitch I c""~· ~·~c~h.:..,::122=.000=·~"~94~-~82~39~.'-drps, lrg gar, fncd for kids/ 2 BR, 2 BA, elec RIO, FA n
2
"h'·1. Feb. lsl.; Lge. 2 Bihl. crpt, Urps,. b,ltns, dock. No
& Fam RM. Pro 1 24x55', 2 BR. + D e n , 2 pets. ht. \V/ wcrpls & drps, dbl a. npt. nr. CdM Hl g , children-pet!'L. 673-4921
landscaped, call 540-W16. BA. in DriChvood Beach * gar, fncd, lndsepd. Xlnl Joe. $265 J\.1onth. l ~~~~~~~~~~I J1ARBOR VIEW lTOMES.2 Club, H.B. $7,950. 536-0321. )ONF.S $175 . PT?IVATE 3 BR. hsc. $210. mo, AGT: 962-44TI or Hal Pinchin Rltr. 675-4392
BR + den. Best buy at 2 BR & paneled cabana. REALTY IM:. A Real Find! Gar .. Fncd !or 546-$10.1. * BAYSHORES * I ll•J
$5-1,500. Fee. 2024 Port Newport area. Partially fStl!M6 kids/pet!\, $300 -4 Br. 2 Ba f/R. Yearly lease. 3 BR, 2 ba., ApartmlntsforRlnt
Provence Pl. Open l.S daily. furn. 642-8302. (7l4) 673•8210 * Crpls, dl"P$, drps. Patio. 5 fan .. rm. Cor lot. $450 Mo. ';iiijiiijiijiijiiijiiij;;;~.;1 644-6249 or 641--0396. LANDLORDS I mos old. Bushard/Adams. "C" Thomas, Rltr. 54:-1·5621 I
BAY SUNSET VIEW [A ) ~~:=i2t~ F RBEEEACROENNTRALENSTEARVJLSCE 968-7ro2. 4 BR, F/R, $450. 3 BR, $395.
For discriminating cou ple. 2 Rt!'n~~~te, -t I -~=======~-I DUPLEX. 3BR, or 2BR & Frplc. Self c\e&.n oven.
BR, 2 ba. $500 •. f'eb. 1st. 'imiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.;iiiii;; NEWPORT BEACH * 645-0111. * Den 2 BA, new, fenced ynt, Dwhr. C.Omm. Pool .
644--7037. • fl.1arine Conti;"acting Firm WHY RENT ~~94~536-2914, 54.8--3446 "1133-=-=3~89<,c·~~~-~~
4 BR, F/R, D/R, 2 BA. 1 Business Property 154 Finest e q 111 p ni en t & LIDO Sands, 3 Br, 2 Ba,
blk to pool & park. liarbor \vatertront location. 35 Yr. $100 down payment and WALK to beach. 3 BR & frp!c, Jrg yrd, nu crpts,
View Hon1es, $ 5 7, 5 0 0. TWO LOTS TOTAL: 104'x209' old company. Space avail. monthly payments of $179 DEN . Dshwhr, 2 car gar. drps, d.shwhr, b It. Ins .
833-3894. CHOICE LOCATION, 1-iun· for boat sales & repairs. will do it ror this lovely 2 Big yard. No pets. 968-2365. $330/mo. 646-7586.
Duelexes near the ocean tington Beach, ZONED BILL GRUNDY RLTR. ~~~,' ~~s ~°.1di-a.~ Prlv. home on acreag,e $130. BLUFFS BAYFRONT
Miles Larson. Realtor B US IN ES S • PRO· 675-6161 and 0 v e n has a Also 2 Br, $135, ;145, $150. Exec. one-level 2 BR .. 2 ba. * 673-,(1563 * FESSIONAL OR OFFICES INSURANCE AGENCY floor-to-t-eilin" used brick Rent4A4Houte 979-8430 din. rm. ~25 Mo. 64~89. PO H · h 2 BR 1 $17,500 ea. TERMS write: " NEW RT e1g ts, ' KANPAI<. 19'J3 Kihei Rd ., Livt' & work in one or beaut. fireplace. Full price $20,000, Irvine 3 BEACH houses, 3 & 4 BR,
BA, 2 car gar., large Jot. Kihei Maui, 11awaii. Colol'ado's smaller towns. Don'! delay, phone today. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;:;; , Ip\, patio; $275400 Yearly. $26,950. 642-7658. 11 ABBEY REA.LTV 642-3850 CLEAN income prop. cent For local interview. send 3 BR 2 B Sh ' $3'0 The full details of desires, ability " a., arp. CHARMING 3 BR, 3 ba. C.M. By 01vncr. $45,000. E-Z & h kgro d "-t do 3 BR. & run1 . rm., 2 baths Pr>·vate bearh Ul•'I paid trms. &15-2020 or 642-£56(1. ac un to: ....., ora Realtors ~ brand nt?W, Turtlerock $375 · · ·
Agency, 10773 Wheatland LA DLOR SI 4 BR f 2 '"th $475 Mo. Agent 645-4400. Dupl.x •• /unl.ts S I d c·• I 91"'" N D " am. rm., ~.,.. s, 16l Ave., un an • wi · ll'tV. • brand new Turtlerock $425 San Clemente DAI Ly sale . Beauty Salon. \'Ve Specialize in Newport 2 BR. 11i!i bii. rur/cond $250
I -Card & Gill Store Beach • Corona del Ml.I' • ' ·• · ~~OR Sale by owner/agen . :i Se units, l house & 2 duplex('s Typewriter Sales & Serv & Laguna. Our Rental r·
Eastsicle Costa Me s a, Glass & Screen business vice !s FREE to You! Try
Monthly rent $758, 644-0030. HOLLAND Bus.Sales Nu·V'iew~ "I lnli"I \.llil.
2 BR & den, newly decorated
le&.se. See Sat, 407 Santa
Barbara. 213-4a.1957.
HouHs Furn. or
Unfurn. 310 •M 000 !Salesman Needed) 673-4030 or 494·3248 Br, 1~ Ba each apt . .,.,.,, . Balbol Island ---' i l 1·1illi1r
Apta. ~urn. 360
Balboo l1l1nd
WATERRONT!
2 BR., l batb, l·car garage,
Utillt !es incl. $325/Mo. yrly.
Dona Chichester
642-8235 Agent
3 BR. Bay• View. Modem,
$250/mo. Winter. UtU
lncl'd. 673-3184 or 675-5838.
LOWER Dplx 3 br, 2 be., yrly
$225 mo. Garage avail.
673-9749 or 673-9466.
Coron1 del Mer
2 blks to Big Corona.. Bach.
$160. & $175. Util pd. Yrl.y.
1 adult, no pet. 645-1624
1 Br. furn., encl g&.r. Adj. to
compl shop'g area. $175. 9ll
Heliotrope. 831-1300.
·costa Mesa PI LOT LARGE Deluxe Duplex, 2 1TI6 Orange, cr.1 £45..4170 NU.VIEW RENTALS
O\vner, 8384949. HEALTH Food Stol'E", Clean, FREE "SINCE 1946 ..
I · p t 166 Neal, Good business. O"•ner . J BDRM h l l BR, Furn, 2 lrg. cloae
ORANGE ncome roper y has other inlcrests. Mus t Rental Book with many to 1.111 Weste111 Bank Bit.Ii. ome, new crp . queen size' bed, priv dress·
SA sc!l. Lo dwn paymnt. 128.'i5 choose b'om, Stop by and University Park, Irvine Garage, Lots of charm. 18 lng mi. xtra lrg rooms, encl COSTA ME E. Chapn1an. Ber. Harbor browse. Days 552-7000 Nl9hts rno. lAe. $315. sn-t488. gar w/storage. Adults only,
12 Units
4 U~its
4 Units
.... $156,500 Blvd . & Hasler. 55S-0242. Balbo. Ptnln1ul1 no pet9.
COAST'S $86,000 BALBOA Isle Rtore for rent 2 BR, 1\4 be.., air cond. $235 ~ 2035 Fullerton, C.M.
... $60,000 Incl. soda fountain, pl1.7.a or 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adam 2 BR. 1~ ba. Air Cond, $265 Home 0 ,. Point $135 mo dlx mob h~, moe
baking oven, 7 ft. cooler, Costa Mesa 545-0465 3 BR. 2 be.. , ....... $.1251365 1• patio, comp tum., w/w
etc. Bldg. ovmer. 644-5793. EASTBLUFF 3 BR. 21h h11 .......... $385 NE'\V PAINT iii and out, 3 crpt, midd1e age cpl, no
Money to Loan 240 Individual home, over 200) 4 BR, 2 ba, ram . rm ... $475 bedroom. 2 bath, palio, tlotJ. pets. Pooderosa Mobile ~-sq. tt., unusual large 4 bed· blr. garage. Walk to Elitate!'L, 1991 Npl Blvd, CM. I de Phone 675-6900 0JNSOLJDATE B1:LLS room or 3 & den. Family i eel h•11 oceanlbRy. One or !wo 646-8373. ea 1ng Pnvat~ money avail&.ble room plus large formal din· . r . I 1 ~'~,~·~"~'·~·~"'~·~~··~oo~·~m~o~.B~A~R·, _F_R~E~E~,~.-,-,-.,-11-F-,-b-. -,,-,-. -B-R. FOR sale hy 01vner. 2 2ND TD S -ANY AMOUNT ing rootn. Coniplete privacy RETT REALTY. 642-5200. bit"•, pool, q">'et at· '·o••a. Corn"' lot. 2 BR. Call (714) ~ ""' Bkr -'" " '"' "" " 0 '..........,.. \vilh enclosed rear and tront ~.... ..... $J= dul-M k I $315 income. 90% fin. 1229 REALTY mosp .... re. ->->. a .... ar etp ace ~la~'al"e St.. Huntington Vacancies cost money'! Rent yard~. Lovely garden. No "Wloed It & Reap" 64H974, your bouse, apt.. llore pets. $475 per month. A Company \.Vith Vision From treuure9 to trash
Bch. $2.850 dwn. bldg., etc, thru a Dally Pilot Call 673-6568 or 546--3688 Univ. Park Center. Irvine turn them Into ca!'Lh NICE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pool, Nr. -;==::===::====~Se=ll=ld=l•=ll=•=m:='=·==··:""':=":='':..;;· ::Cl;:"':;:::;'"~"":::;A:;d:;:·::64:=2->678:==::· ""' R Call Anytime 552. 7500 y LOT shops. Util pd. Adlt!I, no .. CORONA DEL J\.1A Ortlce hours g ,.\p..f to 6 PM . CALJ... DAIL P! pet&. 1884 Monro via.
2 Bal room. I bath, good:l'!!~~!!'!!~!!'!!~~!.!:!L.;Cl.ASS~;;;'F~l~ED~=· ·~·~· ·=· ~·642-~5678=::.!.:"':=--0;336;;·====== J
$@\\~lJ.-.lG 'Blr'~)
The Puzzle with the Built-In Chucl<fe
O Rearrange letters ol 1he four, Krombled words b.. low to form four slmple words.
I LITL R I t ' I I' I I I \. II-~,;;..~ _,.U,..;;.G°"IE""'A~, -fl .! ~U~nbe_,.o..-<ur~ifu~I ~bo~b.Jy: ~ .. I was
_ _ . . . . "' born of horn~, but when my ~~-~~-~~ ~ mother first ww me she went
I H O 8 S I P j'• 10•~" ~-T;....T~T:,..T,ri-1 0 Comci!ete tJie diuc:i:!e quottd
I I• I' I'. I by ,,lfing rn tho mlul119 wotd. . " . . • • . you de~elop from lftp No, 3 below.
8 PRINT NUM8EREO I' lETTERS IN SOUAtES·
C) UNSCRAMSlE LEl!EIS I FOR ANSWE R
1·1·1·1'rl'l'I
I I I I I I I I
.SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION BQO
-'
local.ion -$225. mo. Colwen 1
Prop. Rltn. ~7225.
Corona del Mir
$715, 2 br, blt n11, new crpt!I,
drp!I, dbl carport, deck,
pool.
$29:i, 2 br, trplt':, gar, yd, 1
blk bch. Chilrl/pct ok.
$.'J25, 3 br, 2 ha, frplc, gar,
yd, paUo, 2 blk!I bch.
'NU·VIEW RENTALS
61J...4030 or 494-32-UI
\\10\V, new Spanl.!lh 3 RR., 3
Ba., nr. Biv; Comna Beach.
S400 l\lo. ownerfagt
673-41510.
IRVINE Terrace 3 Br, 2 &,
lovely ga.rden. Lc~Sl!. $425.
Gardener Incl. Avail. Feb.
J~th. 67"'~.
3 BR,, 2 &.. family rm.:
xlnt patio, vle\Y. $500 Mo.
O .. Franklin Rllr. 673-2222
Costa Mesa
t.rg cleen 2 Br home, 11;<1t,
$120. fll(.'{!, klds/pl"tS.
Rent·A·House 979-.8430
CLE;AN 4 Sr, l 'ii, Ba ho\l11t ,
blt·ln 1tove, rdrtg avt. StlO.
mo. 226 Sierk11 St. 543-6680.
2 Br. 11ulet, crpl, drpJ, a:nr,
arl1lllll only, no peta. $163.
548-UH or 548-1405.
LIO J.?.11 JULY lJ ~~AuG.11
() 1 .... 9·1
\1462.
• -.
•
38 DAILY PILOT
[-.. -1 ~· !~~~'
Apb. F1.1m. 360 Apt1. Furn. I'-"=.;..;.;.;.;:. __ _;;.;;.
•
[tJ 1.;;;I ... ;;;.._;;;,..;;; .... ;,;I ~; 1,:-I ··-· .iiiiiii. ·--~lltl;;;;l ·;;;;-·;;;;;-.... -;;:,;l ~;;;.1 ~l --._ .... -~J 1'J;;;;•:.:.[ --·""-"" ,,._ ... ·.:.;;;l ~~l.;.;;1---;;;;;;.;;;"'. ... ;;J;,;;'.!'.~l l[~L.._ :=--::--:;;;;~· ;;;;.;1~~1
360 Apt.-Unfum. 365 ~t. Unfurn. , 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts., AptL, , A.pita., Ortlce Renl•I 440
Furn. or Unfvrn. 210 ~~"'· or Unfurn. 370 furn. or Unfurn. 210 '" ------BEACH 1 l"'°'n Ap11.1Costt Me,. New~ llwh Newport 8ooch 1------------------1------CtJRuNA DEL MAR t..:)($100. \'earl,.\. Ulll ~;;:;:;;;;;:;:;;;:;::;;;;;:;;::;:; l• _ _.,_ _______ ....;.;.;;.:;.;;;.;...;c:.;;.;;..____ .. ..,,..w.., ·"""""' ~· Ii. ottk1·
.._ coSt1 M.tt
LIVE LIKE A KING
Aj Budget Prices!
}lJR~'TSllt:n .
UXl"Ul!..t\ l:.\lll·~O
* POOLS
*ENCLOSED
GARAGES * CONVENIENT
TO ALL liJ::.\Clll:'.~
FROM $140 MONTH
ADULTS PLEASE
VII.LA POMONA
PHONE 642-2015
t 1760 Pumon~ ,\\"t'. I
Casa de Oro
. \LL L'TILifIES P.\ID
Comparr Ix-fore y1lu l't'nt
Cu.slon1 desij:nt-d, ft>aturin,i.::
e .Spacious k1ft·hr11 11 iih in-
dtrl't"I l1gh1Jn;:::
• ~para11• clin'i.: .:irea
• Hon1e-like SIOl'IIJ;l'
• Pr1va1c-pllt~ls e Closed gnrn~l' 11 .st.:irnge
• ~larblc 11ulln1an
• h:111jt'-SZ Bdrn1s
• Pnol • Harbeqllt's -s.ur-
round<'tl I\ 1111 Jl\ush l:i.od-
Sl'l!Pllle.
. \thll lt1•111~ ut 11s !>.-st
LAJ:L:t: l i..;r: Sl:.:0
l\o Pets
::S.i \\". \\"tlson Gt:?-l9TI
-$30W EEK & l.)p-
• Stud.JO & I BR Apts.
• n· ..., .\laid Scr\'ice ,\\'ail. e Phunc Scrvice--Htd. Pool
• Ouldren ,., Pt>I Section
• U:111 :\lonthlv P.at~
:?J;6 :-.. .... 1 po11. Blvd .. Cl
5-l..'-·fi~ or b-U-3967
.\rl o;:o-..d !ur S5 U!l wk"s rent.
"'d'ri. ST.HU!, 6T;r""8. r * * * WHY PARK NEWPORTERS 1 ..;.;.;;.;....~,;_--_.;.----,..,,==·1-.....:.......,.----1 , .. ._ ..... w"" IU , ..... "'1-Bl::AC'H Iron< b!i<-tif"lor •flt· 11 .. 11. ,. IUI WC\l.rl.y bl~.
""'· ,., •. Furn.; Ulil !"'· SP'n~11Nc NEW STAY HOME oN L1·ve '""' "'"'"· ""'''""· 6:!01 iXll.....nlr.:int. ~. ! IUU\L . ~ 1(11• ~tUIC • * ''t:arly, u11p..•1', Tlt'Y. :.? WEEKENDS dVYiJ a..W~Ll\JI ' till-~
l1H, giarai.:e. crpu, drp::., nr BAY SHADOWS • · . • CdP..1-2750 ~It, front eor~r.
""""· $'.!.'Ill. ,.,..:.soo. A WOULDN'T YOU? b•1g 2nd fioor. El"•tor. •u· '! BR .. 0,1 fht" bt>•u:h/plt'r, partments c:t.ir11.1, cri1'i.ic1~. dr1tpo1,
.. >= 5pal'ioUli, Lh.:ht .'< Cht·~·l')'! i:l!tllKl.' & 111.u·kuig lot. 14 \\'ff). Yl'1trl cw \\lfltt'r _,., AoL·1.~· l.l\'IXC It's aJJ here tor you to enjoy Saturdays and p1•1\'1tlt1 0Ui1.."•· Large ll\\:IJU
nio., pi'k.I:; ,t· i:::nr a36-5<0>. 1 BR's FROM $157 Sundays and all week long, too. 1't'CCJllkin {lor111cr Pucillc l ~!::\\' f11rn, bachl. 11pt. ~r 2 BR's .FROM $In t.1.itwil otrlct-Ml. 31k/M:I ft :
na_v & Bearh. & .~hopping $750,000 health spa, 1 swimming pools, 7 light-fr $140 ctin dlvldci. f!n.4"12{1. I
Sl7:l roo. l'HI inrl. ST;,-\S.11. Cd tennis courts, bic•-1c trails, putting green, om U[.!:).i\ ;"''l'C 1n:.1Ja t.1lc S~ Of'E':..\XF'RO~T lu:\1Jf')' :? l'lwl~· 0c.'(1r1111,1· rll't'pJl:l .. -es. sbulfleboard, croquet. Spacious junior t 's 1111.. \. 111 J>fV\'llll· 1u1·111tu.il! ---· .~ -I BR-open for ios!>t'('tion sun Shag c.·a.rpcum::. l't'l\'8tt'. from $174.50 monthly, plus~ l .or ~-bedroon1 Oakwood is $1 million in u. ~ h\O, Aotla\1<.l'llij; ~'VICC
t .... i pni. iOltl \\'. c.x-.._~nnfrunt. l'A.hos. 1"1..ul · Ja{'UtLi · plans and 2-story-tow_n houses with 2 or 3 bed-recreation. Swimming U\'.,.i111uh.:. --" Jo"urcst Ave. •
.:'l'BLET P.\RK XE\\'PORT rnUl·~ball \'Ol.t·i,_ -G3i; rocuns. AU Wlth electric k.Jtcbens, private bal· pools. Hea lth clubs. Llt.l:wm Uc!ach, 4!H-M&ti. I
Jo"urn1shed Bachelor. BBQ's. ti tin cir S b Saunas. Tennis courts. l>t.-l., space' PViUlo&ble S5o " 6J-l-ii00 a!1er 6 P.~1 . • j cony or pa o, carpe g, apertes. U ter-Biii' d I d II d • nw. \\ow provide 1w·n1lw\• 409 BAY St, Co•t• Mua l rancan parking, elevators, optional maid ser-1ar s. n oor go riv-ut ~ ino. Ansv.~ri!J¥ servioc
San Clemente I M•n•g•r Btdg E·103 vice. Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, lngrange.SandVolleyball. "'·uil..tul .·.1 .11751.kachl:Uv..t.)
317 beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur-Whirlpool Baths . And lots 1iun~Lv11 &·ac11. t:i4"!-c21 . 2 BR. 2 B~\ Laundry nn. 1 • .,.,.,*.,.,.,646-J.,.,.,.,_.,*.,...., 11.ished models today, 9 a.m . to 6 p.m. Other more. A resident tennis I-FULL SERVICE -
Adults, 00 pets. $3ll n'IO. t ' b · tm t J F h' pro and activill.es director \\'ES'l'CL11'F liUlilllNG 1:>.19 Bui:-na \'is.ta s.c. '·---------u11es y appom en . ust north of as ion Jsland at Jambore and Sa J · H"ll wtto plans free Sunday Corner \Vestcllff Drive & Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 * NEW * e n oaquie 1 5 brunches and barbecues. lrvlne Blvd, Newport Beach
Balboa Peninsul1
3 BR, 2 BA. Delu.'te Apt. 1 ~T
lea-.e incl. frplc. Din rn1, l
balC'Onies. Close to both Bay
!.: O<-t-a.n.
6Ta-2306 or 673-8148.
Corona del Mar
Road · 1'.tr. tloward · ~l YlllA NINOS PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS ""'C1t•uuvn'l"Torr1 .... 1... Slaning as low as St 40.1fuNTINGTON UEACJ<-3ltl °"t soo ,_ Md ~o tttt•tM c:N••• • ..ia11lna un1119. WOOd Singles, one and two-& 900 sq. It.. cpt"d, pv1.
2 BR, 2 BA APTS
Super-Co111lo1·table-Quil'"I
?\eru· Nl'"'JlOM Ba~·k ilaJ,'.
Gal' & \\'ah'r Paid. ~to. to
.\lo. Nntals Sl"1-$19J.
Suprr for 2 \\u1'ktH\.: ;.:at .
Children Welcome
J·m 4 Elucn .~\ •. v ~--··-1:'.\!I
Oft the bay Oitc:U, two ~toe. brlrlO Iha Hl91\ S .. ,,. .. Into )'O\lf n-•oacl-bedrooms, furnished and buth, Jll·lq;", Ul ll i>d.. Hd.).
1. or 2·bedrOOll'I ttrdeft 1pan11•11111. Poot: u11nH,·lae11u:1 •nd bll· u nl urn i 5 h ed . Sorry no J-'.O. SOO-Sll-0. f\11". Lang 114 :
relephone (7141 644-1900 for r•"t•I information. ll•rcllt. Sm•ll pelt o~. Ft0m Sl6$. Furnllur. •..all1bl•. Mod••· Opell Children or pets. Models ;>.i! .... l:ill. ________ I
A t U I -365 --A -U ,-J65 9:00 to 1:00. 2300 Falrv!lw Ad. In Coat• Maia. P11o111: ~. ----.e..:.._ n urn.
1
pt. n urn. .,..-.,-------------------1 open daily 10 to 7. Nt:Alt o.c. A1rpo11, hotel,
A.ph., ,..:J,t5., . restaurants. Ulx. spucc, li\l-
O•n• Point Lido Isle Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 Oakwood t11cd. occupanC)'. Lowest
----------, 11.11t·:1. 4l •-0u1~ont ,
UPSY'.<\IRS 2 BR, 2 BA, Huntington Be•ch Huntington Beach Garden Apartments l'W-:Stil
crpts, drps, trplc, Adll.5, nu -161 7WE5TCLIFF pets, S275 lease. 673--38'1.a. Newport Beach LITILE PEOPLE Irvine and 18th uni sq. i.. 1. .. :.qn, air L'Olld,
Mesa Verde HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST 645-0550• 642•8170 omplc Pk<. "';I, i•ni>o•·.
,:;. 'Et'TACUL\R \\'hit c.
\\'ti,ter Oc.-e&11tron1 VlJ! 2
BR, 1 RA. $235. Lease. I Cl:plS, drps, stO\'li", refr~.
l&wklry. ~-S3iD ..
LOVE US i:inun1garww.•r •1U4. ~1·5il1:~
OX TE.'l ACRES Yuur chtldrt-n dl•SC'J"\'C a I Huntington Buch DELUXE 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba. S ·s11 C lry E Li • Tustin_:;:~:::;;:-:-;:;:;:-1 '~~~··!':!~~-~:!~~·~lc.__;~~S~I A I ! , ~ encl gar, $160 up .. RelllBI ·paru 8110 state vmg PIS. um . un Ul."!1. LC3Sl' hVlllt') f\U~pht're -OW' --· ··-.... -.. --ore, """'" !\Ia""" ., •. I TIIE '"'Rln E ·~s FirepiaC"t' p%'1v. pa.nos. hil"~ • :f llaJ; a . .JU;L> """' un "'U n..-• "THE Jo~ .. ha sbo Pools Tennis Con1nt'I Bkfs1. (' • .,,..n s SCi:: i.:in OVER 62 ? ? 546-1034. ADULT liviru:-no pels. actory 1
11 ps ~ Cd place to play p.lU;; pleniy 01 1. 1:~ . .: , , 2 Acres. Beautiful park-like surroundings. SJWu .. 'Ous 1 txh:n1 l\fll tn.>m aviuL 111 the rna 1,'llnai~
"'.II! Se.1 Lan. :\I 6-l'-'.!611 l"OOm 10 hv, .. :: b1.'(Jltl0fll:>, wNIJ n. ,._. • • Newport S..c-h l S kl . Sl<l5. !K'r nw:i. Uhl pd,. frum $..l!Ofl\10. _Ideal fo1
•:\!acArthur nr Coast llv.·yl s1art~ al 5202. IN bt: I Wt:.t:M ? ? I Sunken Poo. par. ing Spanish Fow1ta1ns. he1nl'd !.""'in1i11g pool, 'I. book stu1"t'. s~1alily card
lMJ Anaht>in1 .: oK. -~..-. • Spacious Rooms • Separate Dining patios, l&wKil'Y facllllics, sho~, etc. -125 30th St. El Puerto Mesa PREFERRED area -Prh .. ·., l THE VENDOME I ,\U... U1J.J..ll'U:..;:, P.uo. OCEAN and • Walk in Closets central air cond. Located: t'icv.port Heach. 6TJ-OOOO.
1 BR's-$130 & UP lo\.eiy ? Br .. 2 Ba. CrptJ, I c· u 11-J Ph.illi :>-l0-07M I VILLA YORBA HARBOR VIEW .. • Home-like Kitchens & Cabinets COJ,1l<'r of Newport Fwy & c 0 l'of l\1 EHCIAlrLcast.•/700-1
Unfurn. & Furn. dtps. bll.M. u•Jpnv. gar. a • n:. Pl 1 BDRAI. Unfurn. $165. Furn .. $185. J\1eFaddt>n on 15660 Tuslin sq. rt. Sax! n10. & l:o'.l sq.
All Utilities Paid ~ mw. S2.l0. 6Ta-4813. $145 & UP 1---14_2-.96•22____ ''Where Congeni•lity 2 BDRM. Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215. l~~V~iU~og~•~\~Va~,~··~=~~-~~1 11. $300 ino. 1l!JJ & 21~\l
Pool & Recreation
1
" GIGA.:\'TIC l & 2 BRs • }.1Vv.r.. .l.N "fUllAY * Pr•v•ils'' Town·house, 2 br, l lh ~88if1w Jut.. .l\I. AgL
:: BR. llt'lu\\. lli\l•a). Frph: .. y &1 ·1· underpncC'd' $ J9 A M Elegan1 apartments riPslgned ba. 1400 sq ft Furn. $240 I~ ··----~~~ 1"'91-),faplP Ave! .. Ci bt'an1 ,·eihn;:s, gar. Adults. .;;;.,.$ 'v.·hy1 stJ1i.s npt i1nn·i 1· U. i1·1th a fllaslcr 's touch, su-.,..,.. & lliUJ S,\NT,\ A/\,\, C.i\. Adj.
A so l;'i\I'"o:1ges or ff'llt $2SJ. lo-t!-5.:lJl e\"~S-or \\Nk-. I Spac. "J. k 3 Br. m 4-plex. ""'rb house securit~.·. exclu-ALL UTILITIES FREE ,. 1'ic-Toc across r r o Ill
FOR 1>ru1.ica1ar .--...1;,-Delx J I last. Jong.CplS, llr!J:>, sto\"c & ' ~vcra.t avaJJ. A.i..L .:..-..· ,~ 1;~------~·;1 I b I 'B~R-·· JI .... enc;;. l'l?lJ'lg. Lors of gre.:n la\\'ll. 'J lt./l.:>. Poot, rec bi""· h.M.ls sive Versailles Club and I Walk to Hunting!' OD center , Buildt'l'S l::rnpotlUlll. ~al'k· mo · lOnlt'. ~ · ~ .,,\, 2 bedroonl:> each. Bltins, Co,·er'd gar~'t'S. Adults, llO ._ (JOO! \\-"ith uui<tlK' Aqua~:ir, ing. 6-12-alWI. l\/V• crpl t'\'t'ry rn1, con1p 1 & d bol ~~. ,. U 1 1 1>c1'-uu1c. r f\.1111 ~·~· .:.cc 1 1 1 . Adults, No pe,ts R .11\1\ ---------funt dsh/\\'Sh htd pool carpe s -rapes, c ce pels . ..,..., u erton ; ve .. ~ Mgr. riln Keelson "B" 1 buru a ns etnd orn1aJ gal'· ooms ~ co~1r.t.t:RC LAL . J11dusti·1nl
di s1-~ location. Lease $200 pr. Hlk. E. or Ne\\p!lfl 81\'d. & IJUI. \\. OJ Beacn Blvd. oti dens. AU p:ut or lhe Soulh lA QUINTA HERMOSA" ------· ShoJJ or sloragc ;iro to 2UOO ~-· t.s. '~..J:,ts. ia==•~•-;o·i J month. C"all 671-8550 RLTR.
1
1 Blk. So. of Bay, C.~l.l :-ii.a.tei· '3-ii~ Coast's . finest apartn1ent I Rf!OA!S Sl8 wk up ~/kit. sf, $05. to Slh'.l.. San ~asons ...,_ "'P11• ~ • 6-l'>-8600 · · conun11n1ty. S30 \\'k UIJ apts. Children c.temcntl' 496-1840
CH'' R ~I I :-i G 1 BR. ~~;~ Joo~np1~ 2n:~~ • . OONUS S-IO of1 J an. rent 1 Bedroo1n studios lrotn $195 16211 Perks Ide Lane, H.B. Bl& .':" •. ' ""cMtio. n. s"•'s'-N,•w, '°'s ''.1BA=.=LBO==A=;=.=,~,1=0.1-,-,,.-,.-r-,-.,-, 1 OL"PLf'_',; Slli Lm·t'l\" e · . I 11.1ln lius ad. ;! bdrm iam. 1 &>iiroom fro m $3(}5 ~ .. ~a rd en l' u ITOUl'IClill~s. ~~'" .. :u _pru,?: ~ [~!U~s. call ' -New Dup exes--I uuiis, O.:rpt.s, cl.rps, • blUlS, Mode l.ii open ~ .A.~I. til dusk 645-3961 incl soda lc/nnta1n, pl:Ull 01" ~lahlll' adults 0 n J y &!~':! ti1~.\_1. ___ •. l Bdr111 :l B.. ~:!J.i I j.IJ.JU, pio._,.grounci, no !Jt:lS. 714: e47 .. 5441 ---. baking oven, 7 Ir ct•>ler, Ck:.
:Hs-6920. :l BR: 2 ba upper apt. Frplc, 1 T~·nag~r or Inl~nt UK. Uu1u1°l'.'11 \\'a.cxnne ~~ \~~~~v':i':Y ~ .... ~Po~\~~~~ Bldg. O\\'lltl", &14-il7'J_3. __
.-SHADY £1...\IS _ POOL·• bltns, 2 su~. Nr shops, I• :l f:kb111. I B.\ Slli.j. , hw·wr til"eeze AplS. (4 blks. So. ot S8n Diego Frwy .. On Beach, hon1e. Kitch('n priv. $75 mo. Industrial Rental 4$0
• Adulls Pool.side $140 u ~-s.32.1. 9Ei2-2'liO or &•aur., "'i><'l'IOUS itpts _..,11 Heil Avt.'., ~~t. Bch. 1 bl.k IV H II l 16211 P k 'd Lan ) >l~.
• Oi.ildren next block P SJJ.-~03 t Fenced yw'!.ls, p:uios and iil-ll 8-16-1800 ON THE BLUFFS l ..,.,.,.,.,·.,.,.,·.,o!!o!!!!!!o!!!!""o"'"'"'"'"'"'"'ar"'"'"'·s.,1!!e!!!!!!!!!!e!!!!. "'ILO"°""VE=L"'YC--~-m~f'oc--re-0-1"'1,-or READY FEB. 1st, 1973 ,. m E 22nd St C11>1 &12-3645 I* GREAT \1'IE\r -:! ER. •) tJUll·i pn,'al'). Atlu.Jl~. nu * FRESH AIR AT NEWPORT A working woman LAGUNA NIGUEL · . .. · -;-F ..... lc, bltns, sundecks, pool l":lS. 6-1'.-4.S.":7. ~ts.. pts.. M 1 NEW 1 BR s lroni USG-~. S:lo up 673 ~-~· 20!0 Fullerton St. 1.11 Bay1 \\alk 3 blocks to Beach Fum. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfum. 370 ;,.Ja....5Wi -Adults, !-Or beach &: shop·\?. ..,.::_ -· ia-...::....:i. -----I --,,.----.,.-0--,-~ 1..rg 3 BR. AplS. l"Oe.,.,·ly Fro1n 1'l'11 port Bh,d., tum at _ _;_,:.:.:;;....:;.....; __ ;.;__..;.. __ . ________ LRG, ni~ly furnished roon1, J600 SQ. Fl. & UP. 11~ !'.:.. 20th St.. C.'.\I . '.\l." :! BR., 2 BA., lx1~v·~"1. NEW VILLA PAULA deooraied, wf11.· crpts, dtps, llosp1ral Ro:.:.d j l block Newport Beach Newport Beach adults 35 or; Pri\'. ba ..1, en-On San Diego ~'ree11ay ~--01.."7. Y o:;il"l)' k·:~~!;(,.t-, ~ Dr., 1 l:S... r t'Onl ~1 . .u. bllru;, except r e trig. abO\'C Pacific Coast ll"'Y~ to I ;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:,f ~t~ry~.~C~a~ll~613-~~l~""Ol:.· --~ Call lGl-1600 __ _
I BR. Sl10 .I. Sl:W. ~e. ___ ___ t"A.\llU.l:.::; \\ LU:::OA1.... ~/nlO. No singles, oo cnt.rance. 900 Cagney Lane, BEACH LIVING ROOlil for rent .,.,·est side FOR LEl\SE 1\1-1 unil.s, 1100 Ideal for Bat·hl'klrs .. \dult~ 1 Bit. Pool. :! park :; stalls. :'lu(J("r !or :l 11.urk'g ~Is. I ~Ls. a:&l7ll. Newpo1t B •arh, Ca. 92ti00. Cosla P.1esa 2 mileK from & Ml Stl ft. Santa Ana
only. 1993 01urch S1. ~l:.t.J n10 1neltJ'~ 11•alC'r. .511..og cp1 dr~ .. l'auo. Ocan1 .1 Elt Lux . --.--.-. -Tetephone: "' . c ffor ) OOich, 646--8527. 0\\'11Cr~4/982-3190.c;,·=~~ j.IS-963J. • 642-:mJ • (""lun.,:.. l.i11r""'Jl'S. -• Ul'KM.l>L plS. urn (Now You an A d ' -
6LL lluntihun, C.i\l. ~-2AJ62 °~ Unfw·n. 2 ~R + Den. I-~~-*:_,===~=~ g Guest Home 415 C.r.·r. · 111-1 corner 127'x00'
LRG. 1 !Jr. \\"/\\' crpr. priv. f Ot:LUXE all elect. bltins So.:, i\I". ~Ir -L\lrs Hoban \\et bar, b.'PIC. :sawia., Pool. PARK NEWPORT BACHELOR (Furn) . . . ........ From i i 5 I;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;-;;·_ \\'/h!clg. 991 \\'. 19th St.
patio. 81\\·n OCC & UCL tncl dsh/\\'Sh, dbl gar, -' _.,i . · · ·~-'-·---Jacuzzi. t'ull recreation. APARTMENTS 1 Bedroom . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . From $180 S22:i. li-l:!-34!XI.
si:;:,. 6-16-8226. I OC"t:an \1l S.150 per. 673--Qm. 'l .~1"1'\\"LY DECOR1A1~~~\' facilities. From S~-2 Bedroom . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . From $230 p , R * IRV!NE lnclus!rutl Are11. Sl3Ul~IO. run1. Studio Ap!s. ~E\\" 3 BR & Den, fireplact' ~ .. o N 11.·/c~ri~rt. zi:ri .. u'·~ tJARBOR LlGHTS APTS. on the bay FULL SECURITY SYSTEM * r1vate oom 10,000 1111. 11., dock h!t.:h.
Pliorw· scr..-iLi:. H(•ntOO pool. S3iJ lsc. beam elg, no pet · 1 r SC:)OOS, 16700 Saybrook Lane, HB. HEATED POOL or the BEACH Ior sprinklers. ;l-10-76:\0. 2376 l'\\\'Pl Bl\"d. 3tS.$I:;:). .i!O A\-ocado St. &H-4340 Plai......:-ntla ~\\'l.'. Call l:icl l & 846-3341 Luxury apartment living ov-E An al L t\111IJ11latory Lady or }.tan
5. 636-<111{1. '.i: inl. north of Huntington erlooking the water. Enjoy levator nu· ease Good, nutritious food. Rentals Wanted
:\"!CELY furn. Ir;::. I BR.' Sl'ACIOt:S 3 BR & Den, 212 • SH,\QY LLl\L;; ·POOL • 2 BR l S750,!m heaJlh spa, 7 S\\'hn· Adults Only, Sorry No Pets Nice, cheerful a tn1osphcrc.
encl ga!'. Quiet. Arlull'I, no I B1~. Bit-ins. ~{n10. 617 • Adul!s Poolside Sl·IO up Heacb.~41). 1 1 · B Im, ming pools, 7 Ill hied ten-LAS BRISAS 111 Call ~r.>3 111 \.\"AN1'1'.D: Bu1ld\ug-
'f hrilt shop. Lo\\• rent.
460
pets. 2tl2 Elrlen 6l6-2i61l. lru;, Cdm. 6-l-l-TJ58 . • Children next block ~ facil ~i:Jo~is~(:~: nis courts, plllll miles of
1 Bdrm $1.'i0-n10i~l~Ulif I Costa Mesa li7 E. 22nd St., CJ\! 6-t2..1&15 &: z sml children ok. No bicycle trails, puttiJ1g, shul-5515 RIVER AVE., NEWPORT BEACH i .l'"'""'""'""!'"'"~"'""'"~: Call 646-l!lSS Call 673-lb74 a ner j pm ____ D_E_L_U_X_E ___ URGE 2 BR, 11:: ba. studio pets. Call 842-4664. • fleboard, croquet. Junior l's {1'he New Place ln Newport)
\l"kdays or anytime \Vknds. Sl115. Adult.s only. l Blk lo WALK TD BEACH lnnn $174.50 monthly; also 1 Res P.1gr Diane & Wm Sharbaugh 642--2566 ~ Summer Rental• 420 liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiil
2 BR. Tr:uler n25. t BR I APARTMENTS 7 I · and 2·bcdroom plans and !!!!!!!!!!!! • .,.,,,.,·.,.,.,.,.,.,!!!!!!~!!·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.,.I WILL exchange our cute I .:,____ I ..,... Tralh'r. $120. :'\o child/pets. Au-Cone! _ r·rplc's. 3 S\\'im· 1 th St. shopping. nquire NC\\• l .i.: 2 br., Cpli drp., 2-story to ..... •n houses. Elec· Lake Arro\\·head cabin, ,.. • ....,. ... ..,,,..,,. ••
64&-IM, 6-12-l.115 ining Pools • HeaJth Spa . AP.:I'. •\ 26-l lGlh PLACE d \\'hr.. trpl:-316 16th. tric kitctiens, private pa . 1s Ap~. Unfum. 365 Apts., sleeps 9, tor your 3 bclrm f '••···--~~~
NICE 1 BR F'UR:'l DPL',; Tennis Courts _ Game and SPAC1. 3 1BR, 2~~· dpriv 841·39a7. or balconie$, carpeting, dra-N_ewport Beach Furn. or Unfurn. 370 beacn house. ('Jose O«'an.11 ., 11 1 Roo yan, enc gar, ..... !"'" rps, NEW 1·2 & 3 BR. Beach perics. Subterranean park-June thru Sept. or less. A 500 Quiet. adult, no pt•ls. Sl2U. ul iarc 111· &nail ,..,..t. adults only. Sl.80 Costa Mew 1213) "'3--4. ~~~-~!~~!1_t_• __ _ mi ~ 16th st &12·3693 I BR. from Sl60 ,,... Apts. From $155/per 1no. 4 ing with ele\•a tors. Optional ...,. .u1 ---------------
2 BR. t:11ls prl. Sli;i. 1110. I
1'" 1iets. 2277 ;\t11pk SL
5-IH913
Oan1 Point
! SR. & Oen F'rom $185 nio. :>-16-3716, :>ID-4-131. blks from water. ~igr. n1aid ~rvice. Jus1 oorth of FOR LEASE TllE EXCl'!"ING Vacation Rentals 425 EDWARD H. Crall£'. Jr. 1'10 MEDITERRANEAN I Bft l pcrM>n only. Sl.35 nio. \Vanted. Tobin Realty, Fashion Island at Ja1nboree PALM MESA APTS .,.,·ishcs 10 anllOUllCf' th<'
U!il pd. SIO\'e, re.frig incl. ~337l~•cc..· ~~--~-ana San Joaquin liills Road. l.u.'tury Bayironl ,\pl.Li. . . • !..ACUNA &ach. Luxury 2 0111.'ning of his offjcf!' at VILLAGE 99a Valencia. Nr. OCC, NE\Y 2 &. 3 Br. Apls. Crpts, Telephone l71-I) &14-1900 ~ BRs.~_to .$550 MlNUl 1::8 TO NP',l'. BCl-1. BR, 2 BA, furn. Avail. 3 181 <!~ Culvl'r Dr .. Sultc D,
Baker/f.lendoza. d bit · 1 blk •• S 0 for rental inlormatlon rge I ramson , FU.RN. OR UNI< URN . mos ...... ._ Feb. 1. Ocean lr\"lne, ca. 9'.!66.I. PractiCc 2-100 Harbor Blvd C :-.1 rps, -ins, w • • 1-c":O.,,O:~~'=~"='---Realtor Unbelrevably lA...,e &pl• -•
471,11 557.aoro .. . 2 BR. Crpts, drps, patio, Fl"\\')·. & Hntg. Center. No * 2 WEEKS FREE* ~.,. ' View & dc.'tks. $-150 mo. 1i1ni11..'f.I to car, J'I08(' &
bit E I • A I -1·. Call "~3~" or * ~S.0570 * huge pool, Jacuz::i elect bit-494-2742. throol, oye and erx:loscopy. HE?\TAL OFF'ICE 2 ns. nc afgarag • v ,,... .. ,,....... •ou Vista del Mesa ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna B, •PP l . p h 0 11 e
OPE.'i 9:30 Ai\l to 5:·30 P i\f ~!,!0;,..,.,,=.· l a pm, !>-15---076(). ADULT GAHDEN HOMES etc .. Adults, no pets. R.ent1ls to Share 430 714/a;i?-825()
P k 1 ~~""="'0'=-~~~=,-= 3 BR condo for rent, I blk SHARP! 2 BR·D/R.-Brldsl. SINGLES From $150 ~·-1~~~-~~-~: ~~~~~ ar -like S.urrounding 2 BR. S155 & l BR, $140 h'Om beach, $335 mo plus ffiVINE AVE. AT MEsA bar NE\Y carpets, paint, 1 Bl::DR1¥t. 1''roni $160 SHARE rent, young woman ::
QUIET DELUXE, Easlside toe. Nu paint, cleaning deposit, adlts only, P.Iove in2 .';!deposits only drapes lrg. yard. cov. gar. 2 BEDRM. f<~rom $180 needs yOung, Single girl. 4:: I 1~~
l, 2 & 3 BR APTS cnclsrJ gar, S44-22il9 or no pets. 5 . .?.&-IJ82 ocdroom & extra pkgn. S250 lease, Unfurn Apts A1ail l'rom S10 2 BR apt, $70 mo. + u!ll. 2 PtrJonals
Pvt 1-'al io~ • Htd Pool ~18--0378. FURN. or Uofu .... _ 'l "I',, Du N;,.,1S~--. p 1 3207 Broad St. N'pt Bch. to $15 U:SS . blocks to beach. By Feb.1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:,;;~~I Nr. Stio1>"g * AduHs only .... -.._. Y & 'b'1t '"'·'';urtly, oo, Sbo r '/Sat/&S y · · It tbe · ·• '·t N :·.c.,..,...,, "ll' 1 Bil b d' •I'"" •-t'g & '.ll·t· .... I blk ,. Bldg / w r 1 un. OU re r ig 1 , y re Uuoer-...., . ona, JJ<r''""'· 1\lso Furn Baell. Apts " ·1• • gar A.ge tsp, .._ ..... ,.. ...., ountalns. Rec. . w · d' 1~1 11 Dr po h k ,13 to 1tore• From '"'tj\· m1 · b'lli ... 1 NEW 2 Bdrm unfurn. apt. pn<:t! · "" 'esa. · WILL share 3 br townhse 530
LIVE in 1)1e all 1M.•w Dana
Point Ha1·bor at U1e
hC'11utilul ~lu.l'ina Inn Motel,
34902 Del Obia-po St.
14!.l&-2353l. Kitchens, cr-
liciencies & aJ><u1ments,
heated pool, direct dial
plw:incs, lt~ll.'Vbiion, sauna
bath, laundry lacillllcs,
n1eeting roon1, ('lose to San
Cll'mente and L;1:,::una !: Beach. Come piny in our
harl'l()r ~urf !ng.
.l;Jl0l1sfishing, &hopping and
r estaurants. 1j() \\Wk a nd
I • up. Bring this nd and
receive $5 off un rirst
week's renL
Martl"n1"que Apts. re , pr ng area. ,,. • .....,., exerc1!K' im, • ar""', co . I { blks ll'O Nev.port Blvd ' p I "'· 19th St. P lum for Ellis or call Mgr. 842-1831. or TV. Ea. Apt. haa dish· $250 mo. AnnuaJ lease. 511 a m ~ · w/aingle working girl or erson• s Im San1a A.na Ave., C~1 wshtdrycr 673-5729 2 BR • I I I 'Id ~'asher, re.frig, !thag cpt, &: W. Bay-Newport Beach. 546-95..J college student. Pvt rm & -~·-------
" A 3 "·'"""A" ' gas wale!' pc · c 11 Call ~~1832 d•~ !San EXTR" • • ""rl 0 •• New ba. U 1'ntore1ted "all, FREE! ' gi· pt I I ~ NEW I BR'• Iron> 11=11°" ·" No '" 1·-·111 $l,U1 prt patio or deck. 545-4855 oov--.,,. ~ ~\l\.ui:.r DI-... ,.,.. "" ""· pe..,. •u · Bernardino/ or 883--2!'.M3 crpt, naint, heated pool. 507-6621 aft 6:15 pm. ** 3 Br., l Y2 Ba. tt Nr ~nch ,~ shop'g, Adults, 17622 Cun1erou St. ur -Yearly·Bayfront ,...... .
' -ll•l E 2011 SL C i\1 ll·l:Z....16.'>2. eves. E'rom $l40. Matute adulta, YNG working woman will s~"'i" Boating Course .... ,rgc, nt'11 ly dl"-.-Or. Encl · 1 • · · 2 \l'EEKS FREE RENT-l 3 Lovely new unfurn. npts. OCEAN'J'FRONT rondo, lrrl Infant _ok. No . pets. 1887 shr Qll 4BR hse in Mission hi . ...., ,,_Hi h School l58'll
LARGE. 2 BR apt, i;ara~c.
gund<!ck, laundry, 5190. Jn.
quire 1030 S. Coa.-:1 llwy,
Laguna or call ·1~1-68118.
Huntington 8e1ch
LOW WEEKLY RATES
Executive Suite•
n7 Yorktown Blvd.
Beach Blvd, at Yorklowu
SJ&.0411
STUDIOS & 1 BR's. e Full kitcht•n e llcalcd pon\
• Laundry fnc-illtil's
• Frt.'C' Ulllilil'S
• Free linen.~
• T.V. & n1ald $f:I""\'. 11\·11il.
• Bar-B-Qut• e Phone 5e.rvice e I i\11le to Ol't"lln
I SJ"" -1165 I BACHELOR & t BR, p11tk>s,
frplc's, priv. garages -
' Divided lx1th & lots or eac.ew. Ree'. haU , • pXH &
pool tablet, $11.UM baths. See for ~If. 17301
KeeltlOll Ln. fl blk W. of lleadl. l bUI: N. of Slater).
W-7848
;.! BR, 2 BA. Mlux pooUilde IU'
beach. siss.
536--5882 or S.-1777
Ntwport Beacfi
$29.50 pt'r Wk I: up. 1 JJlt, 2
BR &. Bac'helot11. Color TV,
n111:1d SO"t"., pool. The 111t'IW
415 N. NC!Wport Blvd., NB.
I 646-9681.
l BLK 10 ocean, Newport.
Kidt-pcta ok. I Br Sl75. 2 · er $195 -Until July l.~1. j • rA».llS.
I .., ,.
pittio. bHns. ci·pts, drps. 548--0137. 3 & 2 BR., 2 ba. each. Pier ., F 1 .... 1 Monrov1a 645-2174 """ ""~" ar1na g · Clo U 11oor. an a51.JC v ~· ocean ' · Viejo, v.•Jsame. ~ -Spn'ngdale. ll.B. TUl'S, Jan-se 1o l'Vl'L'Y ung. $170 & 3 BR, 2 BA, J\1ontice\Jo Br. Frplc, shag crpt, SJ..55. & dip. ritl:lny extras. Jn1ml'd. & bay Unfurn 2 BH. 2 ba
SlliO 11w. t.&I Center St. Apt. Townhouse. Ct')Jls, drps, dhl 539--1661 9-5 P,.1 l."'CCUpruicy. 1 1 ·.,1 bl · d ' 2 BR. From $175. Free ulil. eves uary 30th,
I C'I II "' '119 h I • · I ...., .....,,., rp c, w l:n$, crpts, rps, Pool. Encl gar. DMwhr. 241 SHARE a "'"e borne. 'l•I• 7 pm . · · or t'a ~ • · garage. Ds "' ir, Pool. 2 Bloc"· be eh 2 BR ....... cal : 673-:>663 61~ Eves. ~Ing ,. /,'cu r 11 y ·-" "" a • • ...... · Avocado St. CM ~1204. 0, lemalo. For information Courae conduc1ed lly llant-BACH. 1, 2, 3 BR Kids/pets ok .. $225. 67l-6610. crpts, paint. $150 incl ulil. hlng like it in town! $425 Be PO\\ Sq
F'rpk, pooia, s.:curity guw'Cls. PRIVATE lt:"e. 2 Br, 2 Ba, call after 6. 53&-9638. &: util. 642.-3392. Huntington BHch :~k~ alter 4 pm and ~1~o~nlo ~1634:cr uad·
1'o P<'fS. pool, frpl c, sun<leck. \\later 2 BDRM cktluxe .apt, poolside 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc. hl!ns, l }T IST
HARBOR GREENS & ga." pd. Back Bay, garde n bungalow w/frplc. old. blk from bt"ach & Yng. Mother ~ill shr honie in * HJNDU SPIRITUAL *
548-1476. ho • _.,_ ......,1 645---024~ Col'ona del llfar t.1se to Let this ad change your 546--0371 Adul ts, S210. 846--0259 s Pg. "'~.tJ-1-or ;). beach. $100. mo. sT:>-3389. whole ouUook on life for the
SINGL!: 1•dy. 2 Br. 1 Ba, 2 BR. 2 BA, delux pooi.ido "' 2BR w/w crpU blllns. S · CASA MONTERREY bette" Pro!o'81onal od"1oo 1';;~'!L:! 1~~bup~r a-pt.~~~~ $160. + clng. lee. Ideal loc. beach. $15.S. fe~od patio, s185. hi & an Juan Capistrano NEED
0
girl lpo S:11are rent. S75. on We. Lie. lteadings dally.
d Sale & secure. 3 l 0 ~or 82!i.17?7 llut, 1003 Haven Place. CaU 1 & 2 BR, 2 BATHS mo, a nn oinf, 10 AM·IO Pl\!. 492-9136. deck, cpts, rps, stove. Rochester St 642 1264 NEW 2BR rondo/water pd. 496-3649
Quiet dead-end st 111·. 2 BR I B " . 1.:...__ KL'W Duplex, 4 BR. 2 BA, ~~~-7382appt : 646-77'23 or Crpta, drps, bltins. pool NEED 2 I •·-4 •-4l~Sa· 312CI No. El Camino \Vcstclilf shop area. Slt.5. • A, cottage sty e llv· .,.,,aJk to beach. pri patio & U'IV'"" $19lt32100 Paseo Carolina. }.'ul'nished & UnlurniAhcd ma es to Sn•·"" DI .....-.... 11 en1ente.
IH&--1112. Ing w/gW'Bge. Nr Harbor sundeck, 968-4187/892-5660. ADUl TS ONLY 400..7078 AU Utilille!I P aid house & utll. in Hnlg Bch. Pi,L\GAZlNE eiltlor & author,
1],\RDEN A131. -2 Br, t~ir Blvd. $JT:>fnio. Coll i'lft j LARGE I BR. $160 • Charmlna F'ireplaces S80 mo. 9G2-S668. -age :J{I, "'ill house or ·
Bath. Large pn lio. "ii lllut.:k 2Pm r;r ~ho..,.,·ii1if:.._8'_!6_:08.'"i2· l "L~•~gu~n~•...:;B~e~•~ch _____ 1 DIU•whr, 111,1c,/}s Im pool. 2g!R.di~p.8.t~~~°1Dt~~~: • Spaclotta Rooma & Closets Garages for Rent 435 !arWboat sit tor 7:::: t u~ll .
sho11ping. Quiel. Adults 110 1& R-Sl30 & $165. S35 FDR bo 20342 Snnta u Ave 49'l-.2221, 496--7916, alt 5. • Gym, Billiards, Pools. 0 RAGE_ "" 1 3100 \V 1n i '"c'l"IOrt nrl'a .... Nu re ~. pets. &12--0161-271 Cabrillo, t cp. NC\\•ly redec. AVA.II a few y,· appreciate I =-="=''="7"="~'='~·= e Pulling Greens A r(lr own , . \\rr IC IM1Ulcd , .. , o. 611 ,
C.t\I. 211. i;,J Shalhnar, 645-0073 ~Wlual,_ I & 2 Bdrm., 2 DbEI LUXE,J,..Br. 21 Bil, CI D,. Apts., LlCnadolt T .... !iv.')'.i,.... N.8.. Far.L.~ Dally Pllot, P. 0 . Box 1560.
--------• STUNN ING 2 Br. 2 cuuoni8 p&I.,_ Large tns, • .,.,., enc g.11r. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 6551 Warner Hntg Bch ..... e . ..,., per. mo. r.A· Costa t.tesa, 92626. I BH. N<>w carpeting & Ba G rd Ls Pool Rec , wide ocean \i'lewS..1-JlaJ""",rlcllts, no pets. Lee ' cellent for · ston!lR boot ATTRACTIVE 1 ~~:!i'e~· N~ldci~ts.1..-0•11\>~10:. rn;. 1fo \~~ ~h S1. c.~I. · 1 ns. __ ~f:lra"'te &: priv,acy '2·t0. ;,.is.....37os. Balboa Peninsula 847-1526 Offgcarl · ..,__R
1
.1.1n da~r will t~ngyo~x~
5"fl':t1m. or co,_,., • ma ure BRAND New Oceanfront ca ent1 ,,,_ latl'St steps for $29.00.
3 BORl\1, 2 &th adults. Oose to beach &: CondomlnJun1. 2 BR. 2 BA BE by your1'elf. Stadt&: Bay Sharon, 1213) .m-mi
Sl40upi>f"lc.21)t·3hr11lb11 Pulk>. $170/l\tO. llhopping. Selection of~ $400/mo, YcAr l ea se . area. 2 Br. Sunrl<!<:k &: BRAND NEW Cd~l.2400sq.ft.,$."iCIOto$60J
pool, ('f)l/drp, blln, plygrnd. TllcM dt'l 1\.ta r. &L)...L'l()g & wallpapers. Pft.rtlRly 67".>-769-1. g~. $2!iO. 61J.-533'i. QUO VAOl5 Ill per mo. 7200 !IQ. ft. S1200
22U College, No. ::. .. 646-tm 2 BR . Aduib., 111.l pets. BA y furn. $250 To $650 monthly. 3~B~R""2""'BA--Du-1--~~h-h-" Luxuryc-~-n AplL per mo. 2-111 C.oast HlwAy I PR ~.
1996 Maple, No. I ..... 642--3813 l\1EADO\\'S Al71'. 3ll7 \V. 494-4653 -.IC. oce. M ~c;_· ~"'..:; Costa Mesa Bachf'.klr(>i42 BR't. MacArthur. 6Ta-1&,. . OBLEM Prf'Rna.ncy • .....,,.
'
1 h Bay St ~ ••.•. ~13 • 'ROE I BR --·-· "• " DE"'·--.... -ljdc.nl.. _.:i ymp a lb ct lc BR. w/gar, lk to bu.5 & · ...... ·'"""""" • ....,. ;-.... ~wvn · nf<l. 21J.t'i 33rt1 St. 8-12--20'J) Li\ r.ntNOr. r R M""'$T35 .... v ..... [. vu''-""· ~"'' pregnancy counBl'ilng. A!Jor.
shopping center. No pet11. 2 BR. unru rn. Crpl.s, drp!, fantastk view, great Old Dlly11; 6461U-4 ~. Brand New Deluxe Units Hid Po._11.Jl:lcuui·SAW\llll Wl\llS, cupet, parking. :!052 tion I: adoptions ref. AP·
Ava.ii. Feb. Jj, $145. rnn.,,ne/O\'t'n, retJig. No pets. \Yorld d\ann, nreplaCX'I, SublH Perk Newport Rent now ·for .vour con-R.: .--etJrni Ronm le Mon:! Nr"'J)Ort Blvd .. , C . M .. CARE. 642--4436. '"2·2818. 11•10/t"'. 968-1"". """~rt. '""'"""1$ ......,.,ndl -"--.J G nd • •~ ·-0
Q-1 '"' ,..,., ·,... , ...... ~ ......... ltructlon auuwance .... I .t.~u111 :>ntEI · No l~l.9 .roo lloor. "1'•.,...~· PAL.\f It CARD RF.AOJNCS
$165 . ~ Hr, C'D, blt na.. LOVEL\' l Br Apt. Near "1t~ nwiy trees, ltePt '9 2 .. f!' 2 Ba untu~:. 10f..!1oor1_;_ mo'" tree rent. 1 BR. l BA 1u.a..a DIATE ornCE "'"°"Cf!•-iuUC!I avail Tells ~,1 ~-01 • Prl\·ate beach tlJ\d rove.. uraul. bay v...-.... ......,... >Oil I 2 BR' • 3 BR' "WT1 ..,.... "" , • ., ' ,.,.~ • red~r.lled. C10St' 10 So. OCC '1 UCl. No Pl"1•· Sl3S Su\KICS or t'jl\Lplcs,only, no if no ans., 644--Ul.2 x47. 4 1 en, s • 1 OCCUPANCY by Ri\'ersldt A..-t!c. Poat Of· Future (2131 69-1-·1~ F\111.y ~~9~.laM. hl&-0-169 John, l'l'I(). Cati !*7'9-0134. children or pets. $385 mo. on NEW 2 BR .. 2 lMI., dbl. gar. ~~eSJ~w=~: 1~2 Fklrt0~ ~leld fice. ZIS Riwt'lkleo, ~CES33<1. "llc.==--~=-~---1
LGE. nrly ~w l·Br. 11,pt. No yiar lcilse. 4 9 4-7 18 9. s~ nlO .. yearlv. I-.)1cl pr, n i nf• pool {~. blk. W. ()f .,1l.-• 2 AOJOINING r "I ' ALC'OltOtTCS AtiOf\)'OlOWI. * • ,\'rt'RAC llCI\' 2 BR, 1 chlldnin or petA. Near 49\--2791 Call m~ BBQ'a ~ a«'Cptable • a.nd Bcadl IUvd.l bu5y lntertectlon C.M. S90. Phone 5'0-7217 'or write
BA, Adults, no {ll't.a. 1970 AIOl"C'I. Let. yard. 64G-95l1 1.GCEAN,:::,:,,:.::::...,~1.,.-.-, .... --.~,-.~3 OCEANFRONT -2 BR. &&2-mi' Tt8 Scott Pl.: c.~I. HUNTlNGTON Garden. UUl'1 1nc. 642~ P.O. Atl)C 1211. Co&to Mesa.
\Vallar.to. Sl!'i>. 548--0804. XTRA lrg. 2 BR. 2 BA, laund BR, 2 BA. Nc..iw. Blk to bch. G!ll'N.Kt. SJr>/mo. Yearly. Under New.. Aptl .. Heil at 8olsa Chica. PROFESSIONAL Suite ready S\VINGING SrNGC.~
LRG. 2 BR, untum, $1"5, l!i8 !nc. carpo1·1, oo pets. $160. $245 lij). t»-3.1§3. 494-.2339. t'um or Unfurn. Call Ma t 846--1323. ComPlln • St.>e lo IJO• Hell at BolAA Ch{ca. C.11 Jlm 3--9 PM
Tulip Laoe, Co!lta ltfeM. ~l!M7. LUXURIOUS ocean nf'{, 2 ~-~~=IA ~;.·re. mlsalng. -Fr. 11.B.. 1275/mo. IW&-1323._ ~
Call for key, 548-05.1!_, --I BR, Crpta, drp8, ulll Br. 2 Ba. $400. or w, rum. JO CJt OICE beach oplll, 2, 3, I Jc. 2 Br Furn Ir Unfurn --· SUITF. $300. Ptl. ore $61). COUPLFli PARTIES
•UNFURN 2 BR · Jl.35 SZ0 furn., Sl-15. 2515 E ldt"n, CM. fm.-1010. 4 BR.. $'l75 1'o $61 Yen.rly C t,, d 0/W iv OELUX£, Apt .• prlv. patio. Otlk/ofc •pace, $t»GO. C11U P':l.1 '3 to !t PM
de!X"lit. ~9 Wallace Nn. C • 6.f)...4413 • Put a little "loot" 1n )'C)Ur ABBEY REA.LTV 642--3&50 ~ rOOi ~~Come Qy &. Music. 6 poolt ••na, tennis t\11 otc Services 919--3988 539--3.144
5-IS-4301 1 Bctnn apt "''/ga.ragt:, N.E. t.....>vis-siil tho9e baubles for Hsve wnclhlng )'OU want to tnquitr ftbOul our Movtt-ln $13). Spo.clou.1 Poolside The fut<!'lt dnw in the West. Any dl!.Y It lht BES'T OA1 to A good want ad Is a good In-'Ide, .l\t. $130/mo. Call "buck•". Call Classified 1e!IT CltUAilted w do 11 J\llow110Cf', 52> Vletori11 St. Bllngaklw $150. 846-01'5&. ••• a Dally piJ,ot a~ run an ad! Don't ~lQ' ••
v('''mcnc. ..548-87~!1. 642--6678. v..-e ll • call NO\V 642-561S. at llorbor. CM. 64J-.8970. Sell ldl~ Item-, . *"'2·56711 Ad. M2--6618. .can b:Jday 542"5678.
• •
• • • •
........ ]~I ;ml _ ........ _-..:]~[g] I~ ---~I~~ I ---I~ I
Socio! Clubt ' Sll Lo1t SS~ Controctor Tllo Help Wonted, M & F 710 1~-<~~,.._~ -"--~~
rlND-\•OtiRSEU' LOSI', reward! One;J,r old Additions Rtmodellng CERA llC .DENTAL R •c e pt Io ti i a I
IN SOMEONE ~• _, In •·h 'Cerwick & Son, Llc'd .. 1". TILE NEW t N l h 0 ,......,r.. nl oc fllluzer, Ul)l.lp-,,_ ..., .. ~ ~1-romodel. f't'OO t'Wl. Small twport ~c. rlhodontit·
DISCOVER per, (fl.uf14), NO t.gx. Lollt 111~ * ,,..,.... .. '" jobs v.'Clcomc. 536--2426. Ofll~. To11 ~ulary, Liberal
DISCOVERY 11.t Warner & Springdale, .lACK Tw.Wane -RL'Pa.ir ~~~~~~~~~~~ rru1xv he'ncfibi. Pleali.IUll en.
Tl ·' D~!< ''""c 21,381 .~3 lf.8. area. Jan 6. CllH runuxl., addlt. :!.I yn. t'XJ>. vi.ro111nent. ~111111 ~xv rcc1.
... ~ .r "'""' ~46-561:16 d&)'s, ~3169 after LJc'd. P.'IY Way eo. 5-17-0)36. I [ll] Age 2'"._>.J,i Nu sn1okl11g.
2. · -• br•ttl nv i ~'!'" ·) IJ c•'-l2'--2\l26='-· ------11·~-------1~ SMALL blk male dos. white ~ •• ~~--~·~~ DENTAL J\s.siHlunt, exper. Lott Md hMn:I ~hctt~lcktr, bard oI bear!~. Pl.ANll-llO\ael, Re 111 o d, I chalr$Ulc 1v/knowledgc of
Utll. to Timmy. Vic. Room· Addltlon1. $50 up. Job Wanted, Ftmale 702 dl'lik. Sullll')' open. SetKI I••••••••••• I Fuirvi;ew t Wll11011 011 Mon· 1'7'"°6213 557-9695 1~aun1e lo lJox l'W'J, '-11"
I' .d a Y. R e w a r d ! Gard• .. lnn SCANDINAVIAN LADY llch. Found lfrff 1d1) 550 "~e-3Tl41"'" ~~ 1--'~-·..::•;.... ___ _ "'" ....., ... !OW Efficient, niature. Can drive, DENTAL Sec'y-Bookkeeper.
YOUNG Cerint1tl ~hephcrd. LOsr rnale cock a p 0 0 PROf'ESSIONAL Gn.rdcnur, do fl'1Tand1i, 1 i n1 it e d Expcr, or c..'Ollei:C. Call
approx 9 n\o, found ln aprit'l'.ll, 6 mo. old. AnswerS ·tree work, Pru n Ing• &eeretarial, Ute housekeei>-M&-3000.
l...aguna Beach. ri.tay be to "BAl\1 BAM". Vic. Vic-1prlnklera, cleanup jobs, ing for.single person. Prefer DINNER Co 0 k &
clalinc..'(\ 11t the: A~A in toria &: Pomona, C.M. lat~IC8plng. Ge 0 r g e • living out. ReC.s. 673-4893 dishwasher. Apply In person
Laa:una, listed under the Reward. 548--1981 · ,6'lf-~_51193.,,_,_~-----())LL.EGE student (0.C.C.) alt 4 pm. Hungry Tiger, 353
nan1e "il:1ppy." LOST Black med size fem COMPLt"i'E garden sci:v. seeka part time ofilce work, East Coast Hwy, NB.
SML. reddl1h Te1Ticr type dog. Old & scraggly. Vic. Lawn11, cleanup, re93. ratC?s. cleric¥!, P.B.X. etc. Costa DISHWASHER
dofi:. r.111.Lc Albany, Ne.,.., CO!lt Hwy/Avocado, CdM. Rella. serv. 10 Yr!! exp. Meiia 8.rl'a. Available aftcr-
York lags.. Eddie Kok!? on LA O:>. lag. $20 rewanl. -"='-~"~"~· ------noons I pm · on and Sa1u.·-
Help Wonted, M & F 710 H 1 w -• • . . o P ant-, M • F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
0.fMEO. 0J)CQHIP Sot l.(1...15 PART ti '-I , __ _._,, __. l~ttkw..1ulJ. or p/tln\e. Pak! 111~ f!' "._..._...,~, i.~ TEACHER. p/t\Jn(', 2::'»-
.,.,.kty. Ean1 xtr;i. n10ney or ~Y· ~7-6 nefl!JI .• fri.11~18 5:3-0. AJso, lo liullsu1ute. E.-:·
start, a perm. career. For 1' • inn, ~un. ~ .. · per. Ov1•r 30. 536-3.\SS. lnlel'vklw call 892--5333 A11ply at !-ntmn"I In SOulh _ 836-i826 or ~. · l..Kguna. 499-16.JO .
Real Ettat• Sale'
·F~EE INSP~~RS; s a i) boa l
Dt<tldllli: • & asaen1. in-
11pection. Some prev. lnspec·
tion exper. helpful but not
11uu1datory. 3rd stUft. Ap1)1y Licen1e Tr1lnln9 !~1 pe1"°~· ~ncGre¥Or Yacht Limited Timi Only
Co1·11, 1631 I Iaceoua, Cl\!. F11r11ou:s Ji cen&e <.'OUl'lle t\IJ\v
JOBS 11.valla\Jic i.hru Tarbell Cun1·
URGENTLY NEEDED pnny. ~ppllcants fully rf'-
e OUJce-Clerlcal in1bursed upon quullflcalion.
• Keypunch Operaton; New 01· expe1·1t'n~d sales
• Assemblers/win! \\Tap J>l.<lplt•. Openinii:s availnble.
e Accounting Con1plete training progi·an1.
lrvioe a40-44~ Future n1anagemcnt oppor-
Anaheim 5.13-2322 tunitie!I. Ca.II r-.1r. Sloan at
TRAINEES
~ull & Part Time
2nd Sh;f1
Workers Needed
No Exper. Nec•ssary
Training P rovided
lf'Accept•d
FULL TIME
$458-640 Per Mo NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO 8.12-5440.
T•mpo T•mporary Help TARBELL PART-TIME
Help Wanted, M'& F 710
\\'Af1'TtESS, ll urtil· for
n•io;idl.'ntifcl c111·1· faculty.
Xl11'1 11orklr1~ l'.'ond~. ApJily
Pai·l..hUl'SI n l' t j 1·" lu lJ II I
R1 ,.,llil';\!"l' ~t!lil l.H Alli·
n1r·da. f.\'.
I -WAITRESSES •
j Lulll'b & D1nrw.•r Shifts Ex·
p<'r. 0111.v. 1\J>pl~ 10 111•rson,
'J'h(• Dl•rliy ll<·ll'.ta111·t1 nt
l:iti:l S.f.. Hri~tul , C?i.T
~ --~ll:x_'.Q ___ ~
I \\'.\l'l'R f:Ss. l'..:per," over 21.
A11ply In 1ll'1~11 after !Oan\,
I ~tr-s. ~la!ool at r-.lesa \'t>rde
C.:ountl'Y <.: I u b , 3(0)
ClubhouM.· lc"~'·~C~>~J.-c-"'°'"°'
\\',\NTF.D EX PER
S.:•:1rn,,11·l'!iS. good 1\•ages,
xlnt 1,·01·king <..'Ond. Apply
I.\.~ Los Molioos San
Clemente 01· call 492-871.L neu tag ft1rs. Ginger 673--0359. EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. 'd1ty5. Call Llnda 546-4418.
~l!Hi461 01· aft 5 -546-IOlS. LOST; \Vhite photo album. O:>n1p.lete garden serv. NEED help at home'!' \\le
V. M' · 0,.,,1. Kamalanl, 6 <16-4 6 7 6. ha"e A1·d .. , N , r.lEDIU!.t ,i;ie young male IC. ISSKln & •u;i,;,Ui Lane, <"A"J337. y "·' u r e !'.
?\lust be clean & nC'at. Apply
in person, Surf & Slrloin,
0030 W. C.00.st H\\'Y·· N.B.
Dl!:."HW ASHER. Apply in
pcn;on 3-5, Carmel's, 628 N.
Coast 11\\'Y" La&una Beach.
DISHWASHERS Needed ,
Beverly Manor Conv. Hosp,
Lttgunn J:{llts, 837-8000
JUNIOR Sales.men: l{).15. $300-$410 Per Mo ~arn S:n-$40 per week get· REAL TORS \\'ANTED n1an, some ex·
ling ne1v custoniers for the SUPERVISO 111·rient..'t', g1·u1·e)urcl shift. · __ , Mesa del Mar, C.M. Reward .,..._ Housekeepers, Con1-panions, dog, brownish OraJlie m .....,. 557--0656. ROTOTILlJNG N I Ho1nl'makars, U 11 j o h n , DAU.Y PILOT. This is not a REAL E °STATE SALES RS Ne11'p(•rt CC'nter Texaco.
newspaper route and does Brokerage firm has openir\gl! $820 & Up 61·1-iiT,jj. ~lde~r\~esttll.~~ ~i~l .::;. sprinklers, t~s e;;n!~!: w~.
Lane, Jl.B. 1n<1) 536-1367. T~r :!i~·v~tal~~t'p~e!'.!°! I•"ree est. 979-22Q:j/979-7848
not include coll~tlng or for experienced local R.E. "'11~.H~Oc-ill~ .• ~,NT=,~. ~TO°"~\\~'O~R~K"'"? deliv~. Transportation is salet1JUan who .,..,Uih to ex-G . B. Industries DRIVI-: A CAB~
i''ND. German Short Hair . I call dead or alive. 642-2687 LAWN maintenance and,
Help Wanted, M & F 710
ACCOUNTING CLERK DOG Groomer, refs required,
write Lona's Pet SllOp, 14423
Culver Dr. ll'VinC, Ca. 92664~
DRAPERY Help, CXJ.IC'l'.
Tabler & 1nachine operators
needed. Good pay. plenty of
11'0rk. Pd hol, vac, hosp &
lire ins. 558-Sl3l. ,
provii:led. \Ve work four pand into the field:s of R.E. CALL (714) 776-8.551 Cl-IOOSE your hotu'!'I, wo1•k
hours after school and 8 on developn1enl & land packag· for you1'SC!:. be your own
can't keep. Plsc idenlify •1 1~C~>~!.~~~~~~~~ hauling, lree estimate, dog 1nisses owner. H.B. I ~~~38-9933"-'=;-· ~-~---Beautiful nuxiern ofc in
Fashion Island. Co. lias
great bcnetits & promotes
fl'on1 >A'ithin. Fee Paid/Ali;o
Jo"ee Positiom Salal'y to
$500. Call Sally Hart,
540-60.1.i, Coastal Per30nnel
Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd,
CM
Saturday. \Ve have openings tng. To ,\1ake Appolntnieiit lioss. r-.ten ur 11·on1cn. Can
(or 1'~ountain Valley & South 1\1. Gun\hlner & J\!l;(JC. \\'ith Personnel Director be slig:hUy hanrlicoPpt.'<I.
area, 536-IS.16. Gener1f Services
L41:ht colored cat w/dark I s.mca and""'*-1~ Hunt1!1&'-on Beach areas Oil· t:i..iO s. Coast H11•11. Call 10 AM·6 P::\I Vis. 1·e1irt'd. 1\{!e 21 to 10.
ly. You n1ust be out of Laguna Beach 4ii.i-!!r'l ~11 pplr1 11l'nT yulll' tneon1c.
ring8 on tail, blk st.ripes on ~ HANDYMAN -all kinds or school by 3 PM to · · · -Ori' l' a 1·11l1 Ii lll''i 01· niore a
pru"ticipate, Experience..: REAL ESTATE-'-~ \I;,~. 1\1•ply 111 tJ('l'son, face .,..-earing wht collar vie I ••••••••••I work, 1mall jobs a Capo Bch. 49f7.3610 I' specialty. 979-4636 546-9723. boys given prior j t y. SALESl\tEN -\Vhy not .,..·ork \'cllo\\" C'ldJ C'o., lSG E. 16th
96S-9641. in the hot!est area Hun. TYPISTS & St., co.~ta ~!('.<;a. OASCHUND ,small red fe-Bebytittint Rain Gutten Installed.
1nale, Identify. 1-1 a.rbor 1------'------Quality work. Reasonable. DRUG & Cosmetic sales lady
exper. See Ji.tr. Powers at
Ramsey Rex.all Drug, CM.
No phone calls please.
LAUNDHO?i.14-T cleanup lite tin g t Q n Beach/Fountain \VIG Styl!s1s & managl'rs tor
.,..'Ork. Ide~! for retired Valley a~ Jet ua train yol!_! STENOS Oninge CountiC'S fint•st wig Estates, Sau Clemente. MY home, .hourly .or weekly Free estimates. 968-2'l08
49J..5168. rates. TIC by dept'l"Kiable Hiullng
mother. San Clemente, 1---"'--------
APT Manager for (6) 1 br
units,' 1,f blk ocean. Hw1t.
Bch. Middle age pref'd. $50
off rent. 53&-3409 or 637-GCM.1
aft 6.
couple. 5-l\Hi694 aft Gpm. ~~~~I Ri:1~ N ;sr1A~: Needed in Bt'arh Al'('<!. store chain. Call Connie,
LADY y,•/exper. lor fashion 962-4471. Long & short te11n C2l3~ 96tH4j.S today.
l-'ND in iluntington Beach 492-5748. Have 32' !-'um. van. \Vlll
Prking lot · lite red nl&.le "°====,-c---~ ELDERLY housekeeper,
Jl\·e-in possibly. 2 children,
12 &13. 642-2622.
boutique. Pt·time. Call as.sign1nents al'111lahle. \\lRE?-.IE:N . to buil<I br~:-ad·
kitten very friendly. denall· BABYSITI'INQ..Motber will clean attics. c e 11 a rs,
ed. !162-4692. S:~;~~e. Hourly or ~ willr m"'a~t s~~ ~i
838-9726 aft 6 pm. Receptfryplst 5500 Ask Fot· Iris boards ,t test fixturl'S. r-.tusl
L.V.N. full time days 7-3:30 Gener.ti OffiL't' Sl50 VICTOR read SC'hen1ntiC!I. Parl &
FOUND grey Clit, niale, with BABYSrIT!NG furn. rum. 548-1862.
ASSEMBLY workers, Boat
assembly. No exper. net:ess.
3rd shill, 1lpm-7am. Apply
at gale at Upm or 7am.
MacGregor Yehl Corp, 1631
Pl.ac.."t:nlia, CM.
EXPERIENCED Shampoo :\.1nt fringe bnfts. Beverly Exec. Sec'y to pres S700 TEMPORARIES t lin1e po~i1ions a\·ail.
Girl · !\lust be good · ri.ranor Conv. Hosp. 496-5786. F/C Bookkeeper 5';":JO 1360 So. Anaheim 81. Xln't f1i11£e bc1l<'lils. 3 wks clear pllllic collar. Near -my home Laguna High School. Call M-F, Hot lunches &: pig SKIPWADER &: dump truck
(TI4) 497-7735 eves. yard. Kathy 3'is..8269. ..m. Concrete, asphalt
$}25.00 weC'k. Apply in LVN • EX ER Secretari $.550 AnaL-i'm 6,.,.31 pd vac. Pd nu.<\. dcntnl & person-Hair Hunters Salon. • P es rqo .u-vv life ins. Pd long tern1 disab.
70 Fashion l.sland. Nurses 1\ides 549-3061 Pl'Opet"ty. Casually Sl"K ius. A,....•pli"'' a1>pllcalions
B thtub • sawing, break~. 84&-nto.
BLOND Pekln1.'llese one eye a r•fN•r
'-"=:====--'-::.-::CI Untlernrntl'r ., ~· ,_ ....
Exp Mold•rs & Tooler• ?.IA INTENANCE n1W1 (han· Inventory Clrk s~ TYPISTS daily, OdC'tlcs, l11c, 1.845 So.
missing ....._dog blind. Vic, __ a._r_ot....,in_i~•h ..... 1n~g,____ ~t~~ ~n':~~~~i \Varner/BcilS!l Chica, Hnlgn 1 •
Assistant Manager
\\'01nt'11s apparel. Need fur
our &l. Coast Plaza stOJ'C,
Mw;t have solid sales eicper.
Please >ATile informal
resume to Hubbub, 2241 ,No.
Orange h1all, Orange, Ca.
Coastal Recl'f!'ation. 9·IO \V. dy~•· pa.11 time, lite Accounting Trns' S4'.Za VOLT ?i.Taneh<..'Sler, An 11 h l' i m .
171h SI, CM, 64Z-05-12. Equal pa.1111\ng, carpentt'y & elec-Recep1, Hunt Bch S·l3.J .. Equal Oppor. E'lnploycr. Beach, 846-6910. REFmISH in .,..,hite or oolor 1 _534-~-184=6_or~534-~~"~"---
in your home or business. YARD, garage cleanups. Opportunity Employer. l.l'icaJ. Requires tools. $3.50 A/P Clerk ~150 Instant Personnel . \VO?\tAN ovl•r 65 v1-s. A!so, ~r hr. Call .i\{rs. Tillotson, A/P & Payroll $475 Ten1porary Scrvi_tX' I )'001\~('r Judy roi· p/tin\(', AFGHAN whitl' &: shaggy 54.1·5470 Tre. Inc. Ren10ve trees, dirl, h'Y. puppy. ~-ound between
Begonia & Aettcia, CdM. Business Service Drivewys, grading. 847-2666·
EXPERIENCED dental as· :i:>7-6300 tor appt. Cost Accountant $131' ~8 Crunpus Dr., Suue 106 Nu exp€•r. lli'L'f'S!t. P/tinie
slstant with X·ray Ji t.'ensc. NEWPORT Newpo1·1 Bc11cl~ 546-4741 hi·s. r-.tust Include days,
673--0835. 1----------Hous.c:leanlng 548·8844 MAINTENANCE Equal Oppo1. Eniployer i;o1ne nitcs .~ 11'knda. Min Personnel Agency
FOUND; Male, blk & white ;ul~~..~a.W*e! l --H-O_U_S_E_O-~FC_L_E_A_N_ 92665. Attn: President. FEMALE no e.'l:p. nee. Full
ATTRACTIVE Slim gu" ·Is _ lime !110 4:30. Resin pnurer
F/tim_e, dependable, gd D N UNDERGROUND Cable TV wui.:c. lntcrei;ll11g work \VI
>A'Qrking conds. & employee 833 over Dr., .8. Installer. Exp'd or Trainee Jll'OplP. Nr. l!oui; llosp. Call mixed Terrier & Poodle, long-hnimJ. Vic. llarbor 493--0407, before noon THE PROf"ESSIONAL & or electronic nssmblr. Women, to <lemonslJ•atc new $1.75 to start. 5-19-02'11 food pl'oduct in 1narkeU1.
benefits. \Vill be Interview· 641.3870 considcrf'd. Apply 262·1 \V. &12-99.i.'i Bl'1wn ~A·8P.
ing betwn 10:30 & 4:30 f'r1 Coast llil\·ay, \VOMAN o\'er 111T vuu con View Homes, N.li. 6"4-8Cl76. CirJ)9t Service CLEANING SERVICE
S1.1ALL w.n female Terrier 10'1~ Discount y,•/this ad Own t1·ans. P/thnc $50 per F I B ERG LASS, hand
wk. 673-6663. · lan\inators, piece. work.
AITRACTIVE h 0 st es s, Helmet r-.tlg, Im Plac..>Cntia,
private club, night.s only, 1 ~C~M~.'----------
& l\1on. 1445 Superior Ave., RESIDENT nig:1., rel. 1..'0u11le Tl.:LEPRO:\IPTER CflRP. earn $60 l)C'r week, P/tlme
N.B. 642·2.UO. to manage 5 apts/San An EquAI Oppty En1ploy('r joh. No delivery with Sarah type q, Dea collar, vie JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholstery 642-6824 or 646-2527
Kaiser School, C, fl'I . Dri·Shampoo f~ Scotch· OFFICE CLEANING, TOO!
548-1948. guard (Soil Retardants). COLL.EGE student will do
MANAGER-Hospital c;µl· c I e In e flt e . 4 9 UJ6.W \VAITRESS, rull titne. Apply Cul'cntry. 962-37_'!0 ___ ~
teen, Exper. in retailing & 8.17-sol2. In person 3-5. Cannel's. 628 WORK ·u1 home-phone sa\N.
SAMOYED, niale. v I c ~asers & all Color house\\.'Ol"k. Afternoons 4 hr.· \Ved thru Sun. 846--1361 FRY COOK roods. 522-2819. Restaurant -fast Food N. Coast H.,..·y. Lag Sch. ~xper. pret'tl. Cnll Coll!CI
Serv. l\liddle aget.1 \\'Uman . <7141 823-3438.
Anahelm lLiocol.n &:
Col.lcge). 6lr'l51•1
535--96-13.
brighteners & 10 minute · · 12 50 State bleach klr white carpeu. rrununum, . h.r. ?.tesa
or. Save your money by saving ~7:.r College Pk. area,
OvC'r 21. Must be clean & MEDICAL p/time, H.B. Call eves. Have somcl~1~g you want t_o ---~'-'C=--...,--z~
To help "·ith thOt.e aftel'·the-neat. Apply in person. Suri 673-6128 sc..1\1? Class1!1ed ads do 11 Sell Idle \leois now! Cnll AVON CALLING!
me e.\:tra trips. Will clean & Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast Secretary/Receptionist . · .... -ell .. call NO\V 642·5678. 6~2-567S No1v~
holidays bills. :i\ splendid H NB lnlell>g" ent .,..•ell cn..v.m--' R EST AU R.ANT-Bllljboyli, l ~iiiilliiilliiliiiiliiijiiiijiijjiiiijjij living rm., dining rn1. & E X P E R I E N C E D
hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, Housekeeper
couch $10. Chair $5. 15 yrs. Llve·in. $87.50 \\'k.
earning opportunity .m •our 1 ,.:;'~'Y~·~· ,,:c·:;:_· ~-~~~ ' •·-c~ C G I own neighborhood. " ruu. Time Dependable day ifrl witlt, niedical back· oo~. Counter ir s. A11ply
54()..7041 Dishwuher. Apply Rigger ground needed immediately Pacific Coast }fwy, HS. --...
FND large young male
Shephcn:f-llke dog. Blk &
tan vie Santa A n a
Heights/Back Bay. 548-5678. exp. is what counts, not • 5'17·1M3 • Restaurant. 16 Fashion lor busy ~p practice. Peg· RN Supervisor for small .-..... ,).\.
metbod. I do \\!Ol'k. myself.
Good ref. 531--0101.
BABYSITTER, la1csa Ve.rdc Cenll'r Newport Bch bet 9 & boai:d, typuig & billing. t'or nursing home in beach a~. "f ~ , ~'Wd S ?.t ALL Dalmatlan·type ~~ ~~housecleaning area, nr. Mesa Verde Sehl, 11 or 3&5. appt call 644-2070. Call 714: 49-1-8175 for a11pt. • 'I~Ali,,. . 11/i
black & .,..·hile male dog ww... MA!"'"••enced, own f1)f" 7 yr old, aftns 2:30--5 W'~ fl; found . CM 675 7739 Ce..-.nfer transporthtion. Call kd al GELCOAT TOUCHUP Med F Of $600 RN Su1.acrvj110r tor s1nall -::-. ~ '//, m . . :r . . r-847-.1637 ~~98 or i~~ .. I 6 pm, Expe.r. I Coastal Re<:reolioa • ront c to nursing homl' in beach area. ~ .,\ . A CONVENIENT SHOPPINC ANO -
FOUND: N'pt Be a ch . All twes of "'-... 642-0M2 Eq Local ........ Call Lo!Taine C&ll 71-': 49-HKl75 for eppl. ~J' SEWING GU1DE FOR TH£ ~ ~
Samoyed, call & identity. •CARPENTRY• """'lcaf9d Cleaning BABYSITTER, n1ature for 18 Inc, · · Oppor. Call ~lrs. ~hn1id! ROOM CLERK ·~· c~ OH THE co.
&16-MSO. * \VE 00 EVERYTiilNG * mo old boy. \Ved & f'ri lD Employer. \Ves!chff . fl_ :.:t'eA..:. ___ _,,,,,,..!!!l!I illl!lllO!:!!e;
MATURE cat, flln\ale, saody lg. & sm. 5.16-l6dS Rcf..!I. Free est. 64&-2839 an1-4pm. Own Transp. GENERAL HELPER P~'rsonnel Agency E~per. -B...'1..:1-1 :3!> P~!. 6
long hair. !lea collar, Mesa Cement, Co.ncrete Xlnt HoUAeCleaning IHO-l7lli .. ==-----to ar;sist in Ule•supply roon1, \~1a.rk Ill Center~ rule!!. Call Bill St:hnPldcr,
Verde, 557-6917. By Day, o .... ·n Transportation BAB--Y-SITI ~ pick-up supplies from ven· 542-8836 2 pm-4 pni, Newportcr Inn, SPECw..IZING in patios, Elt, steady part l h 'U --~ ood 1 --~__:_:::...:c:.:_:_ __ l;iNii.Bii.i;644-ii;ii;l7iiOOii ............. -.1 FND orange & white male sidewalks & drive.,..·ays. l..<J\v I ~~~~*:,.=831Hl6<8::.:=e,;*:._~-tin1e, afternoons. 2 children. tlu~! e wi 1 '"cv 11 •, g ?.1EDICAL Secretary, must 1,
cat on Bal'boa rates, free est. XIn't job Prof. Carpet Cleaning ft . 1~7 ~t~ Ana 1Hgts. ~J~:~fe1~·~t'(. a or ap-~~0\1' Clinsur,~1~;· Send SALES WOMAN
!sland. 675-7i39, dolll'. Howard, 644-7423 or Also windows & floor care. area. -am to pm. 546--9601 •-.eBume ~su ':"-' ad no. Full lime, experience. A1n't
f'ND la.st week In c.r-.t. blk & =D=""'=·=d="~'-985~='-· ----Call Dutch 5.11·1508 ' BABYSITIER needed 7:15 to ----------• 591 cJo Daily Piklt, P .. 0. salary Commission & benc·
wht inaJe dog. CEMENT. \Vork, drives, Income Tax 5:30 ?\ton thru Fri. 4 GENERAL Oftlce-Must type. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca fits. '
walks, patios, desks, ad· l"_;,;;,;..;;_;.,;:;c______ children, 1 pie-schooler. Hrs: 7:31H pm. Banquet 92626. Call ror Appointo1ent
BLACK & white dog 1ound nr d'I' ~-st .,. '705 Sm1'ley Tax Serv1'ce 833-81121. Sales Office. Apply btwu 2-4 l\tEDICAL In s u l' u II c e .. d,, '-'"'·" ""I 30 Beach &: Slater. Sl3-5901. I tons. "'""' t · "'10'""'I • r.1n; w Alrt .....,.............,, ""
SSS
64-4-2921. . BABYSl'ITER, days, oiy pm, II ·1 1•871>00<>n,1 Art'"'h'ler Secretary Receptionist with
Lost ~~==°"'""'==~ · Inn · ote · "ac ur ?.t e d i care. Medi-cal JOSEPH MAGNIN PATIOS-PLANTERS -house or ~'Ours. in NB area, Bl d m~
All ,...___ 7 . e 15 Years LOCALLY e for 2 girls. age 2 & j, \' ' 1 knowledge. New lab in Equal Oppor. E1nployer
SIAMESE Bluepoint, Ton\, ..,.,. ... rete work. Brick, Fee Schedule 67::r-i192 . GffiL Friday for garment Fashion Island. 64(}-0140 Il.lik'l"""""""""""""""""""""I
vie. State Sts & Tecwinkle, slwnpstone .,...k. 894-3533. l\failed On n.,.,.,~t ma11ufactu1-er. ?i.1ust have gd for Jean. SALES --n lo ••II •la-blue c.'Ollar R~· fH0.8843 '""''t""" BABYSITTER, reliable. 2 .,._,,.... .-. · · CUSJ'OM CE21ENT WORK \V. A. SJ.fiLE"Y, C.P.A. hlld D kno\\·lcdge of sewing & be l\1EN 1vanted f/Ume for tionery supplies in local
LOST: Jan 12, i;mall Blk & Drives, WALKS, patios. 642·22Zl I Message fl4G..961i61 c ren. ays, various fashion oriented. Ca I I various car \\'ash duties. II area. Will ti•aln. Beach Sta·
\Vlllte dog. Vic Brookhurst & Pool decks. Don. 642-8514. $4. min. Open 9 Ahl..S PM hours. 979-4289. &16-1910 belwn 9am-5:30 you're reliable & looking for tiooel"ll 1807 Newport Blvd
Indianapolis. 962-0648. PATIOS, walks, driVES. Saw, 438 N. El Camino Real BAB~SI'!;;ER; 5 days per P111· steady work, apply in C.M. ' '
LOST: Gold & Jade Cull break, remove & replace San Clemente, 49Uii66 ivec .,.,, 1 e mother J;:oes to GIRL'S Club of the Harbor ()erson to n'ijit', Llclo Car SALESMAN Ex"p ha.rd t'C
Link. Reward! concrete. 548-8668 for est. Janitorial school. Refs. 645-7!l60. area need!i a dancf' in-Wash, 481 E. 17lh St., C.M. nites Mon thru J>'ri, Ap;i~ i1;
Call 548-65Sj * \VALK on Concrete, Not BABYSl'ITER Mon thru J.~l'i structor !or girl's 6-12 hr.ii ft1ILL FORE?.IAN penon Kenn Rim a
FEP.1 k hnggy ~IUD. Call l\Iax. Cement ·JEFF 'S CLE AN I NG Ior 15 mo. old girl. My per wk, $2. hr, afternoons. j Yl"S min exp, Furniture Hlll'd.,..·are, 2666 llarbor
beigt ~:. a~ed ~y. Contractor, 644-0687. SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL, home Ba1boa Island 673-8881 phone 646-7IB1 ask tor ?i.1rs. case goods. Great future for Blvd Costa P.Iesa
Vic: CdM. 615-0993 64S-9303 Child Care COMMERCIAL. 646-6384. BABYSI'ITER needed front Long. top n1an. ~1any benefits. ' . 2--tipm, in Woodland Sehl GIRL Friday, 1 girl ofc fur Domino Industries 17672 SALES clerk, part time, GOLD domed ring. diamond P1inting & "" ·~· al • l 1 · :~7~., prefer drugstore experienc.-e, M!I losl ioiiday 1119, FOR?i.fER Nursery School P1narhanglng area. vu-~ t 6pn1. busy retail boa1 bus. in ,.r1ns l"ong, rvtne, :>.:> .,.,_, 10-15 hn/wk. Buahard'•
Reward! 644-1595 teacher. xlnt day care, 3 to 1 • ...;..;:,;•"'--;;;;;~°"''----BEAtrrY oPerato;.-I/limc Newport Bch. Hkkpng Pharmacy, 4 9 4-1 O5 9,
WIDE gold brace 1 el 6 )'I' olds. my hon1e, Univ CUSTOM PAINTING shampoo girl & assistant. necei;s. Apply, ri02 So. I Needed Jm1ncdiately 494--014!:1.
Park 552--0623 tGiO W. Coast Hwy, N.B. Greenville, S.A. TRAINEE SALES •lc<k lo le·-••-. iv/broker safety clasp. ,0.,7.'7~-'C',.-,.-,.-~-Inter/Exler. UnfwTI. inter. -~ GIRL 21 30 BaJ Id t " ..... "' R.e.,..·ard. GT.Hi'732. DAY Care, infants to 3 yrs, spec. pl'ice. Free color con· BOAT QUILDERS-12 "-&·1. N·iua • star tionery busincsii;, full tli11e.
$18 per week. Call 646-5788 sultina & est. Lie. Ins. E.'l:.....,r. f'inisll ,.. __ ""'nl"<• < • •u ips. 0 exper, nee. Beach Stationers, 1807
Vacancies cost money! Rl'nt .... r-.._...,,.. " "' 646--9407 ASSEMBLERS your house, apt., store or 645-4302. \1/01,'t be unqerbid. 642-6005. Mlllmen needed tor quality · Newport Blvd., C.P.t.
bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pilot Daily Pilot Want Ads have No Wast!~ sailboat manuf. i!OSTESS waoted, full llnie. SALES girl for chlldre1111
aassilled Ad. bargains galore. * WALLPAP R * WESTSAIL CORP. 1nust be OVt'r n . No phone IJootique, W1..>d/Frl, 11..Q. I ;:;;;;:;;;;::;:;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;_...;:;:;;;:;:;:::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~ calls a"'""'pled appl · 1 Long Tcrn1 Ass!gnmen111 \\f\.en you call "Ma"" l(i;(.ti Ylacentia Ave .• C1\J ..... • Y 11 II Mature JacJy, 644-7897.
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
>• "' person a fter 2 pm. Five Ho day &. Vacation Pay
548-!4'4 646-lTll BOOKKEEPERS & Crowns Rc•taunnl. 3801 E. VOLT SECRETARIES
PAINTING & PAPERING, C.l Hwy, Corona de! Afar. lnsttnt Personnel VOLT ~ yrs. in llarbor area. Lie ACCOUNT HOUSEKEEPER, f/timl' for Temparary Service I t t p I
& bonded. ~f'li ftlfn. CLERKS residential cun> facility. 38·l8 Can1pus Dr .. 84.lite 100 ~.1 an erson.ne
st!-2356. ) ,Xln't world.,.. conds. Apply Newport Seti.ch 54047.U l cmporary Scrv1c..i.: VOLT ·~ o . , 384.§ Campw Or., Suite 106 PROF. Painter, honest work, ParkhurJl Re t l re. n1 l' n t Equal pJlO.I. En1ploye1 Newport Beach ~7'11
rea.s, lic'd /ins. Int /ext. Instant Pertonnel Residence, 9925 La Equal Oppor. Employer
tree est. Refs. 548-2759. '!'emporary Scrvlli.: Alatneda, .r.v.
_ • APT. INTERIOR 3848 t:anipus t.>r., Sullc 100 HOUSEKEEPER • Live ln &: NurMI Needed e Scc'ys, vuriety to $.'ICJO
& carpet cleaning. R.ers. -Nev.·port Beach M&-4741 oompanioia who tJ1·lvus & 11·7 & Other Shifts • P/C Bkkpr 10 $'75tl
FREB ESTIMATES 642·7059 Equal Oppor. Employer rooks. Waterfront apl. $300. Top pvt. duty pay. e Secya Le:al MTST to $6tl(I
p Ing also BUS Driver 21 or over fur per mo. Re.ply Box Th.1, Bal· Immed. 1my ror noor duty. * 100 Vo FREE * a~~.Pa:tn. 'Inter/='. private Christian School. boei, Ca.llL 92661. County·wldc. Need RN -Ll2. Reinders Agency
Lie/Ins. Free est. &15-519J. Short hra. Will train. Good e HOUSl:..'"K.EEPER, J)l)i'L LVN . Aide'!!. lntervlews ~ Dunl>Us Dr.
driving record reqc.aired. AJ>-time, Own transportation. Mon-Fri, 9·5. Lesco u I i e 546-2118 Nl'Wport Beach
For an ad Jn
Call Mary Beth
For Half Sizes!
1·1~
i: :!
'
•
.~
SIZES
9005 IOY,-I BY,
In, 1lf ,..;..., 1lfe..'1'-
WilL take UJI In $20,000.
Boat u part on $315,000.
buslneu p1'0per1y at HOJ•bor
and Newport Blvds.
Quintard Really -&12·2991
DENTAJ...Me<llcal Building,
S'.M.000 equity. WANT
LAND. Submit any area.
Roy Amtaon. Rllr.
Fine Gun Colll'{'tion, trade
for 1Jn1. fishing boot In need
or repair.
BIG Disc. -W.P. & labor, ply in · person. 16835 fi.44-7Sl5. 1 Nuf'lell: Registry, 351 Ho11-SECRETARY /Um H
call fur SIUT!sJr.e• & est., The Brookhurst, Fount a In iillAI ltd., N.B. 1Lobby Park S/H Ge 1 P lit c, i ~u1rit1 fashion plu:s 1..'01nfor1
llang1n1 n 7-5846. Valley. 1-IOUSEKEEPER to OMisl Lido Bldg.) 642-9955 or reo 'me ~ra li<J: :;7· llC~ _ !h.i:it'ic ll'h11t you can <.'Oun•
PAPERHANGERS CHlLOCARE. my home, with elderly couple, live in. a.19--9954 . II . . '1, 11 on \l'ith l)l)lh ili>front
Reduced rate!!I for the ofl Balboa PP.n. Boy 10, girl 6 Call 49&;-2722. ' ' ~Uy Pilol, p O ~~ 1~· 11;1nH1u!t and drc•ss. Nute flnt· H 646-2449 1-IOUSEKEEPER ~ Teacher NURSES' wdct1, cxper. pr~f., Collla ~t~st~. Caltfmna1. t rira: standa.,.,·ay l)ijnd season. • · from 2: :JO-approx 5: 30. 3-1 all ah Ills, excellent Y .. ork1ng 9'J!;l7. c •'11~.
EXPER. pt1ilnh?r, Exter and da.y1 week. tome wkends. needs help 2 day!! per week. roncllllons. liever\y f\.f.anor . nee '"'' • ..
inter. Reas. ratea. Call ref req, 675-6614 bef 2:30 968-9001 Com:. •tosp 24452 Via SERVJCE StatK>n, Grave Printed Pattern 9005: Nt,W
DI k 968-4005 OULD Care-2 lrvinc school IT )'OU M>l'k Ill a plant or co Estrada, Laguna Hiiis yud (ull time, pre.f collea:tl llnlf Slti'-~ 101 ~. J.21~, 1·11 ~. c ' eves. g1 1 3 kl that employes moi:c tha.n 15 S37-8000 · student. P/tlme eves, & 16\s, IS'"· Sl1.f' 14"l lbu!ll 37J
PHONE 67$.1549
Woman's World
642·5678, ext. 330
•
.... '
~
~ .. . .... .... f . ·--. '
,
I Erlj(ly making unu11,1aJ
quill vii\ lhl5 time-savtng
irtethOd!
Qulll 11.11 you lk'W -Ill made
In fl\·c 1hickll('sses and porn.
pon trln1n1ed. No interllnlnl" nl"<.'f'll~tll')'. Ptil. 7079: charts, pat~ patlt'"rni'I, dlrecUorui.
)'1Wdngf'll lncludOO. •
sr:\rt;NTY·tlVfl Oll:!ln'S
ror cn1·h 1mt1crn • ndd Z1
cents for e11.ch patte.m for
Air Mail and Spe<:.i81 Hondl·
ln~: ot~rw1!1C thlrd..c:IUll
dE"ll\'l'fY "'"ill tAke three
...........
'TRADE turquoi!!e Jewt'lry,
lndhu1 nJi-" or antlqut'S,
t'or 1lan p&intifl(I:, Tur·
quoise TePet-, 3355 Via
Lido Newparr--Bt'llch.
TRADE 2'J' Owen V..S, fiy·
hridge bunks. head, galley,
bait tank, depth lind6', val
$2400 for !t (lune bug or 4
\\'I dr. ~7820 days 646-5955
'63 V.\V, Fastback. Excel
rond, re-bit eng. Val. $1100,
tot Truck &: camper, equal
~value. Anabclm. •
Pla1oter, Patch, R•palr hr 8, eves ~49 Ji.lust people & )'OU nt..'ed 1Clra · wkendt, day1.. ?t1uat he exp lllkf'll 2\l yds. OO·inch rnhrlc.
ave own car. . cash. call f7141 64!HmlO aft ~~ .. RS~3:~~e-l~nlt'.'tll-JClf:;, wN~~..!' .. ni~ Arco, 19th & Kt\'l':HTl··nVE (,'t~!lo'TS I * PATCH PLASTERING
All type"-F'l't'e eilimates Call.......,;
COOKS. f/time, l yr cxpe.r. 6:30 I:. wknd1. Days 1213) fi'i1n1c Park Udo Conv ., .. ......, •• '-lllll· for each paltern - a'ld 2.°I $-1~. P1U'k Lido Conv. 587-4223. llOllP ·$; FaA28hlp NB.. ' SERVICE St at Ion renll'l fnr 1•11ch p!lllt"Ml tor
>Attk11 or more. Seft(l to
A!l<..'t' 8l'OOl."!I, tile DAILY
Pll.OT. 10.i, N~h
Dt·pt .. am.: 163. Old Oitl!lta
Statton. New Yorlc, N.Y.
Plumblng
ORANGE Co. Sllventdo 2.IW aCf'el, ideal mobne PmmING REPAIR
raneh A acreage. Ide-al ayn· home site. near ~. No job too smaD
dk:alton, chtl.l'th, 1pa, ecol· ,water A elec, value $11,500, * * 642-3128 *
Oil)' lf'OUP· Coru:ld ex!C hm, ft)r ad c-.r/ bCOme prop-DRAINS Unclogged • $7.50
destrt, boat or '!'. 838-46.'il. erty thb: area. 846-4243.. S.wu line to 100' .. flS.
'67 Chevy Canipcr Spectal WILL Trade Emcnon n·: * 549-Z02 *
w' '71 91.,· c•bovtt <:1rn11k'I', Colnr TV. 6 mos okt coolOlo.-.Roofing
$3500 value. Trade fo~ '70 for Cab-over Camper. 1---:....------
CatllllAc, TD, propcrtt or ? ' Anahclm AtOBIL Home root eo1Un_c & ~ 535-4647 11Calin1. SDecUJ,I Jan I: Feb.
TRIPLF...X .. 2 BR. sharp TR.ADE 5 acres in Cleve.-priot. (n4) 56t-KJe.
unit•. '11-'l'lt &Ide • .E:Kch&na:•· l•nd National Fores\ ror Sewlnv/Alteret1'>111 tor Income or units. $10,(XX) houW ln NewlJC)l't 8tAcll ot 1--.,.,.'------l!ffu1~. Jim Broom", New· E ... lde Ceca Meta. Owner, Alttrat~ ~t1 Mt!!! ~alty. ~u ... 54l625. Nt:t.t. at'Cun.to. 20 ~an: iexp.
~t"'f. ~trn~.: ::· LARGE Oren Vk!w Lot. 1,S;;;i!!!z;;.;•;;_ _____ _
-tracle equity br '"°°"'& mann Chia or '63 M'>1!rs ., ..... ...,. or what hive ,....07 MAGNETIC S I.1 n • ... M'ux dune buGY, -, ~-~ ~ lo ia.d-
Sl!-3625 • • .__ -· $10 .,,. pair. • &<:'>-Ml. 1---~~------,
Hosp., 466 .f1agship, Na .. .. _..... . " • SaJ~op po,y _ Uina-C' Air ~tail and SJ.ll!('lal Jlandl-
COOK. full time & part Ume ~......... 1 OFF'ICE Nul'k-LVN OC' benctlt.1.. E.x:ptt prcl'cl. >Ull I~; othl'rwi.!IC thlrl.l-elAst
tor hospital. media&l--&Mistanl. SlaEtilw A ~ time avail. Ae?lJ ~I tk!ttftry wHI 11'.'kf'-thr-ee
63$-5707 ~ PERSQNNa Alary $500 mo. M~Frl. St•tlon. 11lh Ir: lrvn'le, N.B. 'A'etktl or morr. Se1'd lo
CUSJ'ODIAN. part Umc/f\111 cCm~c .. ArC ... 11""\1 979-56111. SECURJTY iruan:I tor pvt ~Nn ~lartin. the OArL'l ttme. Call M2-Mfil for ~ JIJ'tt3.r-LJ ~~ 1 OPER.All'OM, ~ rftdle r.ommunlty emnnce gate. PlLOT, 442· Pattl'm Dept.,
lt.rv;o..-. Communfl.y Unl!(.'(f Ftt: It Frtt Poallioru. overlock. Zlpperwttt.r. Top UnUonnt tum. F\Lll time. 232 \VYI ,18th St., New
Methodist Church SI.Ire Ortltr Dtsk, ~· r· only •. Ro1r1 Rm 2XI, 2)6 W. 4th SI .. &,._ ~:~ N .1i>o~ ~~U!
OAlLY Maintetwl(..'C lTllln. ·Elettron~ k> $IKlO tfa'., ProductiOn Pl, ta ArlL zr.r '8r.tE •nd !lT\·LE Exec. Sccrt:J:iry Iv $600 NB. • ' " begin 9 tt.rn. S1.9:i hr. AL<o Sal~ SOcrl!tary S600 OPTOMETRIC auilwtt. TELLER xmmm.
Day h0$ttq, begin 11:30 kect'JM/Typlat to l500 part tlme, mature UW: ln NCR PROOF OPR .~"EE MORE Q u t ck
an\. 5 day \\-1', TIK' Ru!I~ Booklu~pcr lo $625 •m. mu.t t.,.,., ,,_Jo ""'.:r • 1.1hlom and dX>OSe one
l>tllcan RC$1aurant. 273:1 \\. Inventory Contrt lrrw: 10 $C50 ~~ ~ por,;; free from our
Coltt HW)" N.8. SU.:W:n . Retept/lltC' l)"l>e S433 ORntOOONTIC FR 0 NT Con1n1ercbll bank e.xpet'. min, SD nr·Summer Catalog. All
DELIVERY of DA IL Y A/P Couib' Bookkeeper $550 OmCE £l(p nee. 6 mo'1 req'd. f'(ewpnn Be11.ch 11 tts! Oftly SOc.
PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, to Acclrui Cln,;J'l)lpe . S4'D 962-.240S 8rta. INSTANT SE\VING BOOK ~'iPf'PC!r carrter11.. ftc. Tellcn: S.il.)5 * • Pllnllng ill txchante M'!W toc.1ay, wear tomol'tt\W. czlrlm the UIC ol a SlsllOO ru1 ·hiu•Clt1<1Pkfng $600 f(ll' apartment, 4 hn a da.y. (714) ..._.7121 Sl. •
\Va.gonorVan,CofltaclMr. tni iall. l.ofui ClJ1c $t40 ror )'OUt.n!:nl. $48.9$. Mr1. Rlo1 INSTANT FASHION
Harry ~t\'Y. :UO Wett tla)' AMI. Bookkt\~pcr $!IOO vacandn COit motlllYI Rant BOOK -J~undredl o t st., Oiltl' Mesa. US L. lfU\ f•I fn.1ntJ 01 )'Our houie, apt.. oCtore Equal Oppor. t:mplo)ler f'11hk». fief-. Sl.
Don't i1Y< ;_t 1ho lhlp! '42-1470 bldfr •• ti<. lliru a Dolly Pilot A aood wllnl d II a aood \I> ~~11~10/~·~lp ~-¥:= ¥a• y.r =~~~;em1A~antad\sap>d i.'l-\'CS\ment. ~·
IOOll. Print N•n~ AttdreM.
Zip, Plltenl Ninnlltt.
NEED I.£ CRAJ'T '72?
Qoocbtt, knit. etc. Free
dltte:dona. SOc.
bit&nl 11.bcrsme 9oat.
Blit\c, fl.ncy knott, p1t-
!('MUI. $1.00.
l"twtl (lrM.ltrt Beolt" -
Letim by pk:ture&! Pat·
t<'rtu1. Sl.00.
Coo1plde l'"tanl Gift 111*
-lUOl"(I than 100 ilflJ -
$1.00. '
Cottl{)kte .tts;llan Boet -
$1.00. J« tllfty ltdl 8ookll • !IOc.
Bclnk of 11 Prtl!) Al& ..... '°"· ~Ill Boot I -16 oanm.. 1'11:. M~ru Q9ut BrM* I • ~ . ...... ,... 'hdQ''• u,,.. ..
IS 1""ulltul pal-~
\
.J ) .,;.1 PILOT f n.1.1y J.iiruary Ui , 197 J . . -
QUICK CASH
THR OUG H A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
-·
-
\'l\•p1-csioi1Jn Gli1,.;s
Ch1ld1,•n,. <"ht'rry lllU':>-"<~n1
I";" Pini. ••h1•!1') \\1•)-~f p._·~.
'1 1~, oth•'l:-. ti-16-Jlliti 1•1·1°1' ,\
"\1•1>d'! -------\, •11 1 ·r;irr·~ Pl'I<'•' ... , .ut'
]~[ lf§J I •a.. ... I~
~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;m;;;;1
800 ~;ct..;iq~u,;;,.,;.__;..._..;800.:.: Appllancn 102 A[>fll•ncet I02 Furniture 110 lowotry 115 Mltcollonoovs
SCRAM-LETS* _ _,_,_R_E_F_R_l_G_E_R_A_T_O_R_* Ron
12
t ~·~~[i•/D1ry•,;· 1 M;e;o;IT;;;;~::;i ::;,::;_::;~;;,_;;;:_1IN=D~1A~N~J;:,::: .. ::;,,:ry:-.-,:::u:::'.'!:,=::" 500 \Y. at~nttor m, VJc.
--:5 yra old, •utomt.Uc defrost, · · ... 11 ma n1. • 1•.r r!, \a'V '""'""' I u r quo Ile. Re.-ervi'Uon cle•ner $7, ladltl l-t:penf
vt!t')' clean. 893-90IJO. * m-m * hutch w-3 gtua <trs, Uke prll:ca. Ring1, bn.cdcll:, bike -like new $30, 2 pc ANSWERS REJo~RICER.ATOR wuhcr NEW Sean dryrr (elect), newcond. noo. Rnd formlcM hlshl, IQIJMh blOMOms. Jn. sect. couch Sa>. n1uple
a1)(1 gaa drytr. titmt .,,u: V.'Ol'kina Frli: washer..free U t~p Dlrlt-tte YM twlvr\ dlan Je"--elry repaired. dreS.!ICr $30, pint d1't'll&'r
0 (N'nly -Trill -GaUlt -Clean. 946 Junlpero, c.r..t. b\Q' dry~r. $100., 493--2>'19, Mha~·· wry t;OO<t cond $M. Nlivujo Tradin(( 2 4 3 2 $15, Lane king 1lze hend·
B111hvp -Jf()$PITAL ~17b'9 Al!TOMATIC wubtt $50. n~e ~~con~o. be~~~ ~N.c•=w,,oor=•__,Bl=vd=;:C"M". &12-=..:== boa.rd $-10. twin IXtX Sp(;S &
Unbf•n utlrul bu by: "I \\'as $!ll l YR. ruarn, dtil .1: 111. EJeetrlc dryer $4.5. Po.rtuble prlmlU~ tt•a cnrt $25. t.ge Ml1cello1neou1 811 mattrt~• SJ~. n1aple swivel
!Jl')rn at honu•, bot when 111y stall. Late mod. all cycle dlahwuber Si(), 646-5MS. Ena:li•h ottoman chair ()id rockl:"r $20. child tlcsk $12,
II• 11· · t ·" .... bl * AUCTIO * nau~. uphols chair $15, ANTIQUE n10 1.-r iii S&\v me .... c Kl'nmore \Vashttr. ~1778. HIDE-A-BED couch. oran"e ~t re-t &. v.-., comtt fl(I. N I I lh HOSPITAL" ·~ 1 ~·~ 1nap e oorte~ tablf' $10, 19" SHOW & SALE l'.(>n ° (_' • OIS~l\\'ASJ-lERS, washer.I, vinyl. ~.id cond, $140. Irv t\f! prt-U!S!! FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. TV m .. IWlij{ lan1p1J & n1llK"
5.J,().}.l,OOJ Diapll\.,V dr)itn, 1-eblt. guarn & ~ al1 4pm. J ANU Items from St, M~3263. 389
100 An11"'u" D:hib1t~ ~pplianc•s 802 delv'd. ~'lti3>; ~UI. C1mer•1 & t TblIQ!JtEOO o,nhalnxture, DR ... ·'lhJ "·· •ARY1.26 Ltt Callllda, Ort.
I .... h A a e -. , c rs $12 eac .. ""*'" ,.... 1too._, Bruns· _.oni,: <><.:ac n•nu RF.l''RIG. F"rtgidiaro, tower OVER '.lOO wuhen, ('i?i"·· Equipment 801 1970 EL CAMINO, Gt!m t~, Ot't'lln & U.ir"\,ilk!H'.h Bl\"ds. f ~ nd ~' 1 _10, ~m n.:. cor chlna cabinet, make of-wick pool table ,Color TV'1,
J ...... !7 ~ l'\.~:zcr, "'........... co . ~· ~ r1ge... s "" ...... fer. Antique V1ctorlan Stenooe. Coffee tab i e 8 , Camper 1hell $175., R A an . ...,,~···-· :..:fi.S-1·1 or53&-231~ ~5---0780. ASAHl Pentax (1potmatic\ 'El, 21". Color 'IV, perter! Thu~/~'ri/Sii.t L.pn1 -JQ pin . . • . SUper-.Takumar l :lt lens, chaise S22S. clock, cedar Chests, Bunk bed$, Bedroon1 :ond PIO N Mt -~'="~""="'~'-""~'=·~·~· ~=1"_'~· --I S.•ll 1rll" 1tl"ms · _ , . 64J.5678 \\ an1 ad rtsult1 ._. 642-MTB Vlvltar Tttle.-m !5mm-cheat, maple oov cleak, aet1. Divans, Ch airs, c · · ear new •
l~I I~[ -l~I l~ I .... .. ta 1
111
....... ......
---.. ...., bookcase. cliett, Span HI-Dlnettet1, Sewing machines, Spauld!Jtlil' i(IJf clubs, woodJ, 970 I A utos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ::l'.6mm. Phone. St2-8970 Boy. Ladlea desk $85, port Lampg, Pictures, Oriental putter & bag. $95. or Brit
Furniture 810 TV $25. 645-25.52: &l4--li8'.l9 cMw table I stools, Eye O!Jet'. &t2-3501
17~-~-----Autos, lmporfed 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmported
-
-OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK-
LOOK WHAT WE HAVE
1973 V.W. BUG MODEL 1111
! Int!. Rt1d io, Heater, Undersea I I
Plus All Ha ndlin g Charges )
TOTAL
DOWN
PER
MONTH
$23)8.]8 ;, 011 !0!11 c•1h price incl. lilt end
l ie. & •It fin1nc• ch1•q11 for '18 month1 on 1p-
p•ov1d credit. A.P.R. 12.1>7 "!..
FOR
YOU
•
1973 Y.W. DELUXE BUS
!Model 221 1. Inc. Radio, Heeter,
Undersea! Plus Al Handling Ch1rg•1l
$23900 rs ALL
YOU PUT OOWN
A MONTH
Sllll.83 ;, th• tot•I (•1li price incl, f•X end Lie.
Oef,.,,d pric e $4774,82 incl. Tex I lie. Al10
•II linen<.• ch1r9e1 for 48 montlu an eppro¥•d
c..,..dit. A.P.R. 10.,7 %.
-BUY YOUR NEW ·Y.W. NOW -
-BEFORE THE-PRICE INCREASE -• -MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM -
Over 250 New & Used Models • 1n Stock
* JANUARY CLEARANCE *
ON ALL OUR USED CARS
'70 PORSCHE 914 $3195 '71 YW BUG $AV ,\ppearance Gl'oup, Stl.'rl'O, /\ [l('rf1-c l car.
· Llut~age Hack. 190:lDU01
l907CFJ) E
I 68• '7 0 ~''B~!~~ti~n CAMPERS SAVE '61 MUSTANw ~29 Auto. 1rans., radio. heater,
a ir cond. Immaculate condition.
tSi·r 120115 ) 5
'71 YA~t•~~.~~~E,8.~~K..'""''· -$2195 '69 CADILLAC CONY. $3~ Loaded with accessories,
l·il>SCill! lik1' brnnd n~·w.
19'.!:\Cl'CI 5
'61 YW GHIA s995 '68 PONTIAC FIREllRD ~19 Hndio, hcatrr. i.:fiod J:11dio, hl'Bt('l", good
transportation. ( SIJD-16·1 I Jooki1li;. l \'I AK928 I 5
I 61 ~~"' B"~~ "' $595 '66 DATSUN PICKUP $99 Gruxl clran truek. lots
1291FEJ l1 or rxtra.s. !REE572J 5
'67 YW BUG s995 '69 CHEVY CAMARO $189 ltncl1n, h••n!rr, rlran insidr Try lt-yoo'll llkc i~
and ttUt. \VAX!l!J3) 1503158) 5
'64 VW BUG s595 '70 OLDS CUTLASS CPE. $169 c:nod transporla1i•J!1. ){11dlo. hcnt('r , ii.i r cond.,
! 71:i.1fU IP. I pn\vcr stccrin~. . i609AGE) 5
.
'65 YW B~G $675 '70 FORD MAVERICK · $109 Dr1\'1' th!~ on1•. Rnclio. hrater. cxcrllent
t!IDH79:!1 cond. t022AYCI
'68 YW IUG $995 '67 FORD MUST~Nw $119 Radio, hrater. Radio, hMtl''f. auto. tmns.,
(715ASX t I po\vrr Kleering.
ITBY7851
'69 VW IUw $AVE '67 CHEVY CAMARO ~19 Ra(ll6, heater. r:i..c1·IC't1! Rndio. hC'tltn:. ck•an car.
t·ond. IX\\'E99"JJ r fTSLB61J 5
'
G S I •12 level stoves, Free r. e r11, SEARS 10" Radial Ann Saw
FINE uaed furniture, all ma-lrag• 1 • Washers & Refrigeratru'!I, with drawer cabinet Ir extra
jor brands. I~r/outdoor, GARAGE Saltt: 3;,o R.e and MUOI J\.tORE!.!.-bla(lc1. lnclds Dado Set &-
•"""""'"'· ••"•""~· Sec-.,... ,.,.,.. w/4X ... ;.:: wwoy•s AUCTION moldfng ..... s.m.,. t•r tlonal sofa Ta 11 a 1 s I en 65 &al. old .sea.ch 1 n1n $340 at Seani for sale at
designed by Frank Lloyd ri F V es $225. Np! Bch 644--47-tl
Wright Sot 27 Sun 28 aqua um, ord -4 eng. C0:0.1E BROWSE AROUND I -,'""""'"'~""I ,..-,;,11""'"'w1°'11""'"'•-llAJl.I lo 4 Pltl si:Jg Avenid~ v.·/ adapt to VW, Ford tra,na 3l751h Nel'.·port Blvd. LOCAL poo bui l er ta ... ., Camp, lhe Bluffs, Ne"·port axle & clulch auembly. 68 Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'ls. anything of value In lrarlc. Be h V\V trans axle, pan &: .front Costa Jl.lesa. * 646-8686 100',f, financing on the
ac · end: shortened V\V pan for . be.lance. No payments until
LOVE 1tats, Cold/tangerine, mid eng. lots of mlsc Fair Weather Fiiends May. Aak for Mr. Rhule.
Table, 4 Captalna chn. good\E!s. 3040 Grant. C.M. Anybody can be iriendly 586-1450.
Stereo. lovely cabinet. Sat &: sun ail day. 5.57-.1656 when you are giving then\ CARPE.'1' Layer hall accea
Mahog desk. R!asonable. TJCKT(X:;J{ER T H R 1 F T business. But voi:e a rom. to 100 rolls of carpetlni
548-0781. SHOP SALE: 120 E. !9th St. ·plaint -and that 11 soother below wholesale prices, also
BEAlIT oval French dlning C~I. Sat. IO-lPM. 7th Grade matter. Polltene11 dissolves remnants &: tihapes at dis·
table, 68", leaf 18" Sl'TS. 4 Sa.le. Ck>thlfl(, books . -amlle1 drop to frow115 -count prices. 979-7820.
Jl.1aple "thumb back" chairs hou.se.hold good$, bric-a· wordt become ~uts -ACOUSTIC 150 g u 1 t a r
$25 tta. Packard Bell stereo brae, toys, games, etc. Free sornellnies. At AL S ~-anlpUfier, like new. Best of-
$25. Irvine 551-4245 cookies A: collce. Don't Miu PE.l, we llke to be friends fer! 7 foot surfboard, good
TRANSFERRED ll It' with our customers. wen shape, make offt>r. &tz..3963 • must se ! · m' ..... ftrmy wealhe•." I• ~ t d •···• II f ""' • alt 5PM or y,·eekend!. vco..vra or l'S05•=> v ng, somelhlng wrong? Tell w r
dining, bedrm fum., rebig.. SUPER FACT 0 RY \Ve'ij make 11 right. without LITE tan, approx. 150 yards ~~'. i::d},~· all xlnt 3~G~te~' F~~t~ a f~'S .CARPET ~;w&ca~~·J\.f::l ~1f:'~:
OFF "'hite Nagahkle 80fa. Bargains, Fri. Jan 26th, 9 &15---1528. ~-cdt. $25. Bllgrn/blk am to 2 pm at MERRY & . RUG . WORKS 2 EARLY Amer. braid n.LJ'~
floral print sofa·xlnt $35. J\.tAlD CO. 1810 Monrovia, 293 S. J\.tain St., Orange 9' x 12' $35 each. 14. x 17'
64.5-77:11 S .M. 642-5320. 542-6400 • 542-9909"1 new It. grttn shag carpeting
* * 1' White sofa, pair
matching club I o u n g e
c h a i rs, greenJblu/gold.
54!Hl94.L
2 D E S K S and BOOK· & pad $125. 962-5988 aft 6.
J\.fOVING, Lady Kenmore SHELVES -SU IT A 8 LE BEGINNER'S set of C.olt ,\Vasher & Dryer, Maple FOR CHllDREN or else
'72 Sony Color TV 12" push
button instamatic port ..
$175. Upright freezer. '72
Continental S•IOO. 842-4253.
~nd &: Coffee Tbls, l\flsc an-would be ideal for extra Clubs $25. Guitar llO.
t1ques & other Items. To be storage space in your gar-MS--3730 alt 3.
sold ~an. 27 at 1969 Port a.ge. PRICED FOR IM-Mlscellaneous
Dunle1gh. NB. 644-5616 MEDIATE SALE. nu s. Want.cl 820
~lOVING Sale! Double bed. Rou St., Santa Ana, 1----------1
2 PIECE s:ectiOnal $75.
Steam Iron $2. China se't ·$5.
ACCE!nt chair $45. Single bed
frame $5. 64~2138
4 MAPLE Captains Chairs,
like ne"'• $50 for all. Call --BUNK beds. coffee table,
sml rocking chair ,
• 53&-27S9 * * • * Sofa & loveseat. never
used, both for $160, usually
home, !llJS.7910.
2 PC Sectional-Sacrifice $75.
Full bed, complete. 2 lamps.
894-5103
DROP Leaf Maple Dining
table & 6 chairs. Good rond! -· FOR sale. 10· Beige
For more Info.
61'-8829.
couch.
Call
PROVINCI1\L rouch. 6 ft.
excellent condltio~10.
645-8121t/'
complele 26" \\'Oman's bike 542-3120. ~/baby ~al: stroller, an-3 ~c=,PC"='.=--,~fr-cu~lar--"'-,~lo-n-a~I.
llque ch8.lr,w1g1, misc. Must avocado green/gold. Ex.
Sell by Feb. lat. 548-5204. <.'Ond. cost $700, sell $150.
li1UST Garage Sale-Liv· Eureka canister v a c. jng-berlroom turn. Daven-cleaner. powerlul suction,
portv-Expando dining 1able all attach. $30. Nrly new
M!l~ld chair, etc. Sat-Sun. man's black recliner $70.
546-8693 642-9188. Westclltt Dist.
GARAGE sale 125 Coral, STEREO, 19'13 Garr a rd
Balboa Island, Fri, Sat & model. Systemlzed a u t o
Sun 9 ta S everything must changer, 200 watt e.m/fm
go. 673-3539 or 633-7542. receiver. J e n • e n air ._..1on •peaken & tape ~JOYING! Furniture, 1 tools, deck. Still brand new in
H &-0 train pans, oooks, box. Was left unclaimed on
dishes, much more. 6401 layaway. Now, $134. O'edit
Sligo Circle, H.B. 894-3069. dept. {714) 893--0501.
G,\fu\GE SALE: 216~a 21st • CLOSE OlIT SALE *
St, Newport Beach, Sn! &-THURS -Sun 10 to 5.
Sun. \Vasher, dryer, TV, i\1ar1anne·s Mtg. l...adies: &
1na11y other guodiM.. Childrrn."I <lre!!ses is mov-
GIANT rummage &: bakl' ing. Sale at 333 Marine Ave,
sale Npt Harbor Hi Jan 291..oBal::::boa:::~"'='~'·:.,,.. ____ _
9-4 Proceeds to Sailor Band CARPET, U3 yards, beige
fund. 1'."00I shag in home. Large
DIA. Sol. appt'OX l ct. $..150. area11. !ine cond. S2 yd.
Earrings l ct. Leisure1,::'~9&-~3'6"".1';_,,--.,,,-,,--
Want ad resu)l1 ... 642·5678 \Vorld. {213l431-1924 G-8 pm MENS suits, 38-ID. new.
Autos, Imported 970 Autos Imported 970 Sales samples. Swis~ im-, __ ..;._-"---------~·-.:.....,..;.. __ ..;..; 1 port1. Below l.'OSl. Pr1. ply.
67::r-'1862.
DOT DATSUN
Why Pay More!
CHECK OUR DEAL BEFORE
YOU BUY •• , YOU'LL IE
6LAD YOU DID!
llEW 1973 DATSUll
"1200''
BRADBURY Seascape $250.
Signed Braque Utho $1,450.
Others. Pvt. Pty 535-559>.
USEC BICYCLES
All types * 642-1272
FlRE\VOOD sale. l20 1ta.cks..
Split. oak & eucalyptus logs.
Brian. 494-26M.
LOVELY bran colonial, 5
lite chandelier, £1ched glass
.shades, S35. 833-2948
SPECIAL shag carpet sale.
From $2.85 yd. Can install.
Reas. Cuar. M2-7101 eve.
NE\V battery cha~r 12 volt
rompact. ~,any uses.
548-5966 aft. SPM
FIREWOOD 962-4223
Stacked & Delivered
C'Jas!;lfiNI Ads . 642·5678
Trucks 962
* WANTED * Trailer for 21 ft. boat. 1.-lus!
be in good <.'Ondltion 4 rea·
sonablc. Call 831-~ alt
6 pm.
\V ANTED: Ladles med ap-
parel, furs, cos tume
jewelery, ctr. Must be excel
corid i quality. Call Tues •
Sat. 10 . 5: :Kl.
544-931.1
NEEDY Family Needs
Clothes, furn. & food
de1perately. 2164 Puente
Ave. CM.
Office Furniture/
Equip. B24
5' \Valnut Credeni.a $250
Walnut office desk $100
\\1alnut side chr $10, swivel
desk chairs~. ~1200. i-6.
WO DESKS $»$70 \11k/umb
be nches $20-$50 file stor rlr
$1. 867 W. 19lh CM 642-3408
Pianos/Organs 826
*PIANOS*ORGANS*
Hammond, \Vurlltzcr,' many
others. J anuary clearance
on no\\'! The best deal!! an
always at
Wollichs Music City
South Coast Plaza 540-2830
STEJN\VA Y Upright Grand
Solid Rosewood, 1879. Good
rond. $450. Spinet Solid
Maple l itU'~n touch, Xlnt
rond $400. pH pt;y. 54s.8007
WANTED: PRIVATE PAR.-
TY TO BUY PIANO FOR
CASH
KLMB~\LL Studio Pia.no.
Nice tone, Ebony finish,
good condition, matching
bench. $400. ~--5384
ORGAN, Yamaha. wllh auto.
Rh y th n1 accompaniment.
Asking $450. 1 yr old.
557-7203
Trucks 962
2-DR. SEDAN
Around JO 111ile• pet" t el1011. recli11in9 buck•t •••h, 4
•P••d tren1., 1ef•ty fro11t di1e brek11, full ¥i11yl i11t.,
whit• well1, wh1•I cov•r• •11d much mO•• 1U 1f•11d•rd,
S.ri1I #411141.
TRUCK SALE!
NO DOWN~~y
$58 5~.
FOi 41 MOL ON APPIOYID CllDl'.f
Def•rr•d p•y111111t pric• incl11dh1t.._ '••· lie.. i11ter11f
SJIOl.9•: A11nu•I p•rc•n+•t• r•t• 1 J.•7 %
-tr USED. CAR SPECIALS -tr
'11 VEDA Ope. 1 ...... ""cno• 0 '
+Jl'llD. MAO WM.-1u I CL.IA.N USID
Wl!M ovul 11,..., rodlo, lllOltr, DAnUN PICKUPS
yellow w~IC:k Interior. 1'l CXI. '6l'.,_7z•1 '1395 I LOW AS
-;atTOYOTA -I '7 99 -
COROW r'lO SUZUll
WACION I MOTOICYCU ace: JI• *'tlltr. ......... ,.,,,.., ,_,.,, L~ Mo. tO tn9 •it's I '399 _ -----1-• .. !!!SUI i 'l I 111~!~! RI 2
.... ~. JlllX 14'. (:ltlM. ' .......... ml .. lbcdllW CMI. .......,. .. ... I UG. ..... '°' ESL
•799 1'2395
72 l"Uf CAMl'llllt Sl'L-Alltlll'lllk, VI, l"wr $4499
Slffflnt, Au• '"*· Air concl. ll•1191r J(LT 17A71 11111" W/llVI Cllllf'lr •.. , -..»I
$4889
$2399
$2799
69 CHEV. VI TON-VI SOU $1799 wllll O.laxlt C•mP'llt ............... lllNO
71 ... :~R ~,.:;~~~-.~~IO~ll~ •····•••·• 6ftJ4.I $2899
72 FORO l'1.M CAMl'liR Sl'L. $3899
YI, A11'9, SINrllll, "Air" .. , . . . "'°''
70 :~":ui:,ist,.:X"~!.:. ~~~~~-,~~~ "'°'" $2199
JJ ,'gy~.~ s~t~ ~ns., 24.tol mllH ...... t211tN $2198
. ... -$3699
88 ~~'!.~,:~.~~~-~~~ .. ~~~~~~.~~.~ ~~ $2199
72 CHJ:V ~ TON-W Awi. $3299 V1, Am, 11.M1 111lllt, "N ..... , ..... lNOIL
.. """' $2999
&a ~~O s:!~~ .. ~~· .................. MJIU $1499
88 .. :~n;: •'-• "Air" .......... " 0'1)1) $12"
19 ::~s:;~,:.'~ ........... f»P40 $1999
64 J•ll' WA.OO"•lll
"A.I,.. "llldi:" Al II .. ,, ...... $799
.. .. :=:i.:!.~,~~ ~~~.~~ ....... .,." SZ211
r
'
•
DAILY PllOf J
I .. $.... ll§J I ......... Ill! ~ I~ I ~ l~I -.. ·~ l[i] l '-™~ J[il I r,. ........ ~ lfiJ I -~.. 1§1 .......... l§l 1~~;;~~1 ;~;~~=~::=11;;~;E~ =m;;;;;;;;;o;;;~1;;;;;m--~~ 3 Llno1, 2 Tlmn, $1.00 ~
Piono•/?'!'"' 126 ...... -•I 900 Boo11, Slle!f~kt flO Cydn, lllkn Motor Hoonet TralleN, Travel 945 Truck1 962 Vent 963
FREE to llOOd hOmos, !I Scooleni 925 Sole/Rent 940 -----·---------1---------1 ORGAN HOBBY SMphml Ii Potnt r pupa, fRlll. SAILBOAT llde1le "' :16'.1-'=-----1.1· '62 •~float ..... """"· '67 Chev 1/4 Ton · ' '68 Chev Van '"'"'llont marldngt. Paid $2.'5 •It. :16' min. Slip tor STOCK Rt<luctloo s.1.,_ w e EXECUTIVES e Slpo 4. 12 •~It''"" propone
tud lt!f'Vlce to thne 6 ll'l:: owr or Ail, $2.75 a ft . apeed bl.cycle• s;s.~ Jn \Vho llkl' bold ldeu. 3 burn 11tv/Ovt"n & refr!g., Pick up. V8, 8.Utome.tlr., fll', VS, standl'.l'd, ritdto, haltt. Don't blq 11.11,Y r .attn unlll w .. ka. """ ....,..., t ' 8u1c Boatina: c00ne $137.50 per D\o. min. 611 orl.il:lntl CH.rton. Aillenibly • Ori"•-Door l'le<: brk1, $45(). 6#-5585 or lllr, 1'1!.dlo, heatt•r, CWllOm 12843781
ycnr cnn---ptay t Non-plt\,Yers ~ ......,....._ Marini\ 111ah Sc.:bool. 1M7l 1Jdo RIJ'k Dr-, N~B-or call 15_, i4.H37.B, J.Mt Placentia, • Rtln~'tlfut pamramlc sky •""'?"'""=3-~8650~.=--= cab. L~11 0 NL Y $ 1695
Wi!lcome to attend free wurk LARGE A.KC C •rm• n 8Prinadale, H.B. Tul'.t, Jan. 5-IR-1608 art 5 pm. CM. cor-19t b St . Dally 1-8, doml' Trailers, Utility 947 ONLY $1795 HOWARD C"-vr olet
&hOJ>I. For Information Shepherd , OCC!da -Cood uary 30, BOAT 11llp • ~· to 416'. Sail Sat. ltHi. Sun 12-4. e htfllt Uvable floor plan --HOWARD Chevro~ Newport a.e.cn
Contact: Tom Dleterlch honw'. cr-11 64f-or 7 pm pref. 1:3e•t raclllty in NB. ru J.O.SPEEOS we're sUll xolng Money can buy. Sl'EEL U'r lLlTY 'l'RAILEn. I " 642~2151 !'>tis.MM n tel. Coone conduc:tld by Hunt-Lido Paric: Or. 6'1M412. out or bualneS1 and have on-e 102 C'U h of Interior slor-New lleense. Spa1-e wheel Newport Beach 1'.iaC'Ai'tnC'" Blvd & Jambort>e Coast Music Service lngton Beach Pow~r Squ11.d· 1 1 1 ft 5,.,. $100. 642---IM? MllcArthur Blvd & Jamboree IJ.)~!!$ ron I.lo -1..... 55• Sllp, xlnt loc. y I e • .o owr cost, aae "'"" 11555 -----Ncwpor~~~dM!,.t lllltbor [ 11~1 ·* · WA-N~TE. D * Newp:irt Harbor 673-7334 hurry. 17412 Beach Blvd., • -16 cu fl. of exterior stor· Auto ·Service, Part1 949 llILl.MAN°";;,2 COMMER! '69 ~·ord ~ Suix•r Van I'm.......... " 8cNt1, !ftMd I. Ski 911 lcHcc·=B'-. -------age C11mpc1·, J-:-300, refri&:, *PIANOS.O'RGANS ~--~---.::~~1Tra1ler tor 21 tt. boll f.fuat ----=....,-----·!Motor Homes • 3 yp111-, 36,000 mile power CADIUAC PARTS • 1959 PANEL TRUCK Equipped slu\.,., JIOl>4loµ. t 0 ~Je t . I train warranty Model · JIAVE GOOD "'Ith Overhead Rack 54i',..;J11j Hll a pn1. Go ng Out For Bu1lne111 be ln aood toDdltion A: rea-16' Flberglau ski or filh Salt/Rent 940 SEE THE 'I' RAN S h11SSION. Affi Interior 11 n e d \\'ith ~~-.,,-1
Best quAllly -prlce11 -serv. Pets, 0.neral U0 10nable. Call 837-5003 att boat. w/trter, 50 bp i-"'-"'-------Sultan-Ex:ecutlve COtlOITIONING u N 1 T , SHELVE.io; . PRICED FO B. '62 FORD Econuline Van,
waJ·Stl!inway-Baldwln, et<'. -;;;;;);;~;;;;;;;;~u";;l~6~pm~. -o.o:-.::-:-.----1 Evtnrude OB. Xtru, $1095. ROADlfNER A new breed ot •"'le, beauty RADIO and RADIATOR. QUICK SALE. brand 1u•w t•rigintJ, 1rans,
Player Plano1 &: Rolll GROOM 6 BOARD, U )ft Boeh Malnt / 6f5.-.8764. f'lt!gance, prtced und er 1212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana I212 S. Ross St., Santa Ana clutch, brukes. l'Xhau!lt, Rent ala ....... We Buy-Sell all breed.I. Free 1'iclrupl •--~I--' 902 112 ba . 5'12--3120 M2-JUI _ tu-..s, etc, $800. Mk for
Dally lG-6 Sun 12-5 ''Sherry'•," Poodle pu,pa _,...,rw MOTOR HOMES .<KXI se price. John. 592-1616
.. ~au --. SEAGULL 6 I ~~ J I" I ,, Fl •-d I _, ... __ , • ti2 ncx g.· StC'p· '11n. ('W FIE'D'S PIANOS Cao"l·
1
"., ••• ~•• 1--------,-------.,. EXCLUSIVELY AT COMPLETE 19'.'I Foro 6 cyl. 1950 FORD , 1 • \ N ~-1a M .... 1714) """"-~~ motor, ip • .._. lhn"I bltleit B'!I motor ..... t runs but out ,, ton. ll!oo.:a s x,., st~. . V 1 t .,0 • ....,. ...... ......,......., 152 15 hp Evinrude $75, 3 hp V >L'-\TION ot car. AlllO, ht>ads lor 352 New clutch, ba t tery, paint. ~'11 1.'UO< cone· ..,.,.i.
Sporting Goods UO J------------£vlntude $35. 4 cyl. Grey TR.A •, ~'ORLD Ford w/roct!nt valve job. re&"Ulator, plugs, starter. !'i~'..,3i7lil.
SIAMESE KITTENS marine~. 11 fL flbel'l:las1 Ci)UAlfTY 5862 UNCOLN AVE., :9> Ford t'1iginc block. Good 6 ply tires. Old but 'AA Dodge-VaJL V'( nulo, air, SKlS, 210 Kill y llOO'S, m Registered, w/ shots. Call boat $15. 10 hp Wi.sconain Cam~, Salt/Rent t20 AND CYPRESS Straight axle S~-544-3417. dependable. Sl75. 534-6996 exp'bl!! top. Posi-rr. nu
bndga, $45; 215 White Star1, Sta-7246 • -elec. atamr SISO. Mi1e. Custom Camrr Shells PRICE 826-7280 TOWABLE Plwnblng van, '70 Chev t/2 Ton paint. fl600. 842-2609. P.t11.rkf'r bndgs $:ll. MS-2573 boat aeu. 2916 Clay St. NB Bens 11helw1 in&kle, $75. No
Pool. Tables WHOLESALE Dogs 854 Boa'-/Mer1ne * $11 * WHY PAY MORE? 173 Pace Arrow lie. aft 5, 9'19-1274 Pick up. \71J,"5;tapdard, radio, Autos Wanted 968 SLATE & NON SLATE \\.'e have sheU. & sleepers he111er. (57241FI
5'11 -3.138 Or • 544-0400 OBEDIENCE cla5I to s~ lqulp. to4 to fil all size trucks. Over 181/2 ft.Moto r Home CHRYSLF,:R HenU Engine, ONL y $ 1995
Wed, Jan, 31, 7:30 pm, in 50 ihelill 1n stock. Financing $6288 $6795 con1pletely reblt, $75. '72 KNElSSEL Red Stars. the Newport Beach/Irvine BOAT Traller, IIW 15 to 16 fl avail. 893-0573_ • 962-5495 after 4 pin HOWARD Chevrolet
205 CM Americana blndlngs. area. Open to all dop: O\lff' boat. $50. 345 .Avocado St , CUSTOM PAINTING Newport Beach * 64f..-07jl * 5 mo. oUt 54&-4928. cC=.M"-. 5'=8--'-1406=-----·~c~ :!i:rn .~~nis:~ $688 DN. $99 MO . '73 Tioga No job too complex [Or ua. MacArthur Blvd & Jamboree
Store, Restaurant# D6G School Instruction New p 906 893-0573 Dodge 318 W f!nilne, auto-181/2 ft.Motor Home l''ree estimates. 89J.--Oa?3 133-0555 Bar 832 Claa&CI starting Tue 1 Bolts, ower malic, power steering, pow-Off S.e'°'1 S.le Price
,9:3()-10:,30am, Wed 8-9pm 6 ll' LYMAN Blk a? er brakes, dual wheels, shai 56795 1967 FORD Plck~up, 1,\ ton
BEER Jnu· t.'Quip, pvt ply. Sat 9:30-lO:JOwn. Martin-bou !Oink bt CycScoolel, 1 '• 925 carpet in cockpit, al 1al· LP • , .. ,,,~-·"· I [~ I truck, new tires, good ron-Refrl" Uat•k bar front bar crest lCennels, 54&-0989. lnbrd runa t. er I, ____ .. _•-•------:I tank, range & oven, 16,000 .. '"' -dltlon. 675-TI02. • ' · '54 m<>del oompl restored t tu ORDER NOW 11c1v l llP co1npreuor, 2 ·ADORABLE puppie1, ball Look. Ukc! new Fa,y marln~ '1(1 KAWASAKI lOO BTU orced alr mace, & SAVE ~-----~ '61 Chev. Corvair Pick lJp
coils, 2 SS sinka, Ibis, beer cocker, will be small, $10 to 4 'cyl model 80 eng Dual GreeJ11treak, ex P 8 n s l 0 n order yoon now. S&8 ls Truck. Good rond. $275.
n1l1cr. S900. ~7845 or loving home11 only. 494-4Tl'9 aide controls. Priced "io sell. chamber, knobbies, llke new total dn. pymt $99 i~ total Crevier Motor1 Gener1I 950 Cub. 894-5l03.
:>45-€!00 after 5. Call 675-4696 to see at 58 $325, 642-4547 mo. pymt. incl. tax, license BMW '64 Chevy %. T. Xlnt rond.
DELI trl -==-7.oo"iC----,,;:-=I &: all can-ying charges on McCO RMICK tractor, 400 $950. n? g c ounter 1, TOY poodles, gorgeous caie Unda Iale, N.B. USED 185 SUz., reblt. 21" appr. credit for 84 mo'1. De-Zl8 W. 1.Jt, Santa Ana 83$.31TI gal. spray ...... , disk & 11n .. ing restaurant equip, i&S piua Au La.It, S mo. Quality bred. 31• CHRIS Cabin O'u1ler top FW, chamber, see at J ame&: ferred pymt. price $9004 • .., ...
oven, wlk In dr &: frames, Beaut. stud to approved -'"·pe ··•n eng ra'dlo J..td .• C.M. Must see to ap-.,· cl. tax • 1, ... -.... AN· PACE ARROW tooth harrow. 63l-GM3. 4~34 13. bitcbet. Pvt Pty 531-7446 :'i:.eo. d;~ flncier, fuii :,P"""'~·~1e"""! o-=:-:;;;--=cl Nu A L ""PERCENTAGE TIOGA
TV, Radio, HIFI, TOY Fox Terrier female galley, llW1)' xtru, sleePA 6 BMW R-15, 19'11: 20 Km; RATE 9.62<fi.
Stereo 836 puppy $25. 6 week! old. In comfort. $8975. 615-85'17. 1Uver: S250 xtra•: xlnt VOLKSWAGEN ·n FORD F-100 pick-up.
Trucks 962
FORD 1!l6'9 F'l50 Pickup, %
ton, $1500.
496-6508
Van s 963 Beautifully marked. J5'0wens Jama1canCruiser, =ikt.~ blu bk+ 10% WHY WAIT?. BILL YATES INC R/H, Air, Gem top. Steel
1973 ZENJTJ1 & RCA's at M8-9'ro2 sips 6, exc. electronics, top •IDTORHOMES belted tires, 12,800 ml. '72 CHF.V'i' Van, mll#!~.
tremt>ndoua savings at COLLIE pups, • AK C mech cond, many xtraa. l.JONDA CL 175, 1971, lo Sharp! Below market value. slereo, CW!I int & paint. V-J:
Orange County's largest registered, sable & white, 2 Belt oUer over SlS,500, Prlv mlleaee, $375 firm. ~129 Instant Credit SanANJDuanCAMPCap!ERS,,_:._ Pvt. pty. 534-1167. eng, high back seats rlealer. Priced leas than the ·'es .... ~~ --n•··" .. ~ ••• pm uauu 847-75.18. m~ · ~~. ~v .~. · COURTESY Alo..,;d• Sao o; ... FNoy. "12 Foro Coudcr w/camP'r dl&countcrs with 3 yr pie-AKC Registered Male I>oxif'. 20' FBRGLS boat Ir: trlr, 'TI YAMAHA, Excellent con-493-451.1 e 499-2261 e 837-48'.XI shell, radio. Western style 1965 FORD Van, ne"' motor, ture tube, l yr parts & 1 yr t''W'I $19. h I ·• · & scrvlt.-c. Cash 90 Plan or Red, 41~ months,.....,. Fantasy. Flybrid,ge. Sleeps dihon. J. '17' TRAVCO m.lrron & vy d~ bumper. new overs zL., tires mags.
term11 to 36 month!!. ABC 9fi8..8007, · 4 Hea.d«ove-clnk, AC /OC * 546-9338 * 0006£ 25, DISCOVERER $190CI. Pvt ply. 837-9382 crpts & drps, $1300. Call
Color 1V, 9021 Atlanta, RARE White Gennan refrlg. l55 HP O.M.C. in-SUPER BUY! '71 Y~aha 20'-22' CONTINFNTAL.S 1964 CHEV. % ton pick-up ,,at,,...,te"r°'S~p;;.m:-. ..,630-254:-7,,9·~=
Huntington Beach, 968-3329. Shepherd pups. $4G & $50. db/outbd. $4750. 988-261'3. 250 OT l w/GYT kit. $525 2888 Harbor Blvd., 20' PRIDE &: JOYS w/8' camper. Good oond. '65 VW Camper-Reblt 1500
POWERFUL •13 Stereos _ re-963-4216 25' BERTRAM or best offer. 837--5813. Costa Mesa VAN CONVERSIONS ~1usl see to apprcc. $1100-w/big bo1't' -1830cc. Ne1•"
ta.i i S219.95 • AZ..1/FM/ TOY Poodlell, 7 wks, AKC, Navy top w/camper, twin HARLEY Sportster 1972. 557.·9220 !:'ales e Setvice e Rentals ~H!I0.1 alter 6 uphol. Best oUer. Call Tin1
Stl-;lreo/MPX/8-track tape, shots, silver, apricot, parti, 1B68 W HP, $5.8.00. Priv. lOCkkc stock. 6,COO mi. Xlhl * Danmar Inc. * '63 FORD % ton pick-up. V8, bef. 3, 536-l060.
head phones, b!g .,.,.a\nut '"'"ta"r"Ung°""~$.10= • .,.5'_,18-8,_71,,,7""'=· l;partyO;-;;;;,;' o;n;;',,' 0548=·98,.,,,1~;-;;;-;:-:-1 rond. Must sell, make offer. Crulse-0-matlc tr an 11 1n, '64 Ford Van, F~f radkl, nu ~ ~~ 1~===-=-,""'-:-;-c-13801 11arbor Blvd., G.G. /8' bed """ ••"72.18 tJ $500 he t ff speakers. January pric~ BOXER puppy, 3 moa Fem. '64 FIBERGLASS 16', 90 h.p. 4"""""""' NEWPORT 20 Mini Motor S3l.SSOO "' · ..,.,,.,, ~ · re1. or • o er
S102.00. UJ1v as SS.00 month-$50. Call betwn 4 &: 6 pm, JohNon, trailer, full coven, 1972 SUZUKI 125, street &: Home-5,lMXI ml. Ford Next 10 G.G. Datsun '65 Chev % T. & can1per 64oH122
ly. USA Stereo Frelitht Li-673-1297. _ xlnt, $135Q. 642-5800 or trail, 961 mi1e1. 'Xlnt cond. cbauis, AM/FM, ctpt'd, ahell. Clean, low mi, aux:. •n FORD Van-Crpl'd in-
quldators. 179 E. 17th St., • Purebred Bloodhound pu~ 673-S826. $:i75. 536--8247 fully self-cont'd. $5950, Rent A Moto r Home ga.s tnk, $775. 646-5621. terjor, V8, auto. FM tap1.>,
CM. 645-2442· ple11, 7 wks. $50 eacb.1'Bo,--1"'1o,-S.=1"'1----;909= TACO '66 5hp, good 5e-0332. for your Vacation icll the old s1un buy tlJP new porthole9. S4D>. 537..[)6.q'7,
HI Fi 'Thorens Stereo 645--0307. suspension $50 or best otter.1's.'-;ll"-i'ldliie"-,,lt-ems-·-.-.-.-642-1618== * 839-4301 * stuff. Claulft«:I Ads . 642·;)'.i7R
T ran.~criptlon Turntable. AKC reg German Shepherd SAIL BOAT Call 545-2735 Autos, New 980 1.,.-,-""-=---=-:91=0 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New 980
lll'at f)(!w TD U4 wffP14 Puppies. R in.Tin.Tin CH~YSLER LS-13 on till-~p LE 1.1ANNS 10 speed, very ~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;ilili•11~~-iiiii arm. Pri party, make oiler Bloodline. $50. 8l7--548l
55
trai
1
~<;9.7 like new $95(1. good rond. $75.
536-734.1. """ Mft-1942
AUTO-Radio AM/ 1'~ JtI BEAUT Irish Setter fem. LUDERS 16 ~ ft Sloop Ex· -==::';0::::;:':-;;;::::;--pups, AKC reg. Sbota &: ' • Schwinn Varsity l.Ospd, Becker Grand Prix -touch .. -rmecl. 714~H .• • ~!~~nd. . with mooring. Id !lo $15 tuner never inltalled. Pri .. .., ,_...---,......, ....,,.-,..vrt 6 mo o~ w, ·
party, make oHer ~134.l. ADORABLE Silky Tenien, •n ISL. Z7 full t
N-" portable solid state 8 1 wks, 2 Malee, l Fem. S12S-' rloy eqp ' ...,.... $150 Call 644-6118 custom teak inte r. Pvt IJ'ack stereo tape player AC ~HAN PUPPIES ply, &a.c-$.5995. M&-il14.1
or OC $50. 675-5258. Champion aired 31' ELDRIDGE 1.1cGlnnl1 in.
'7U YAMAHA 360 MX, xlnt
concl. Expansion chamber.
$525. ~218'l •
REWARD
WILL PAY OVER
Kelly Blue Book
For late model, clean,
low mileage domes-
tics, imports, trucks or
campers.
Call and ask for Buyer
DAYE ROSS
PONTIAC
2401 Harbor Blvd,
Costa Mesa 546-I017
WE PAY TOP CASH
for used cars .l truclcs, just
call us for lree estln1all'1.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask for Sttll"8 i\1nnager
1821 1 Beach Blvd.
1-iuntini,:!on Beach
84'l'-6087 Kl 9-3331
$ For Junked or ~eked
autos.
4!»-1003, eict 008 24 hrs.
LATE n1odcl Novo-Dart-
Plynioulh, 6 cyl, auto, lo
miles, o\1•ner only. 5'111-29:\S
Autos, New 98o
Call 64M560 bo1rd cruller sloop .$12.S~f. 1970 Honda 450, K-3, lIDJ mi.,
~3001. Awry &: Company 675-8990 I _J's HorMs 15' FOR Sale. Hobie Cal 16, like ·n . 350 Honda, Excel oond.
''" to You /trail·• M t II Muat See. $495. 58&-7449. THOROBREDS-REAS, new w .,.. u1 se
-Race breed show 993-4114 now, $1650. 640-0734 eves. 1971 HONDA CB-350 3 LlnH, 2 TlmH, $2.00 · • I' llool• Sllp1/Dockt 910 P.rloct cond. $415. Call
BRAND NEW 1973 MONTE CARLO
NOTHING DOWN .
. HORSES-Back Bay ana,:I---•,_..._..____ 545--0332.
••••••••• Board, feed, cleaning, dally 24' SLIP, Gius rudlboat $60 '·11;;:::,Y;;AM;;;AllA=;-,<'17<5~End;;:;;;;uro=. * 8, mos. old lemale dog, . exercise, 557-1063 ' per nlo. Avery &: Company Clea'lr low mile~. depen-
sPa.Yed. LOVES children, PALAMINO Quarter Gtldlng 615--8990 dable, $375. 84?-5306
Call 54g...1773, •'J"T<::. We1tern tack, $100. l'OOCK~~·-..,~--~-•. -,,-.,. ... --,-,. 1 · .,.,,, £W-.. .., 1970 Triumph Tiger, o m1,
MOVING, pedl~ Siamese I ,~6!7>-44~~17~alt!!5'~30~.!!!!!~~~l 2)'-34'. $1. ~ foot'. best offer, at:t 6:30 pn1. cat, female, IO JllOll. Good . Newnr:rt Beach. 675-.2124. wkdys 496-0138.
with dog1. 642--0584 aft 6. ~ .:.;£..;,:: 970 AFGHAN, mixed eupo. [ _._,.., *" , .:it Aute1, lmpol1ecl 970 Autos, Imported
Homes Only. 54&-8697 aft S. adorable. Free To quallrted 11;.;; .. ~ ... ;~~;·~1'.~;·11
ro -home 10,able ~ 900 GEORGE ZIMMERMAN'S
playful Lab Rctrle...,r, I llooh, Generol COSTA MESA DATSUN nionlhs, all shots. 675-6287. i'SF1. OtITBOARD. 40 h,.p.
FREE-LRG. dog, Iri&h Set-Evinrude, b\i wheel tllt
ter/Lab. Blk. Very good trailer, aH solid mahogany,
""/childrn. Call 830-8154. Glen "L" hull, cover. $600.
GER~IAN Shepherd puppy, • 636-~ e
fen1, S mo. H•brkn. Diana, EVINRUDE 40 elec. w/i:on-
5'10-5400 or 830--8192 trols, 14' alwn. boat. Good
TO Gd home _ 10 mo male car topper; 14' boat trlr.,
med. size dog. Xlnt watch-rollers & winch. AJty or all
dog, loves kids. 838-58Q5. 548-7242
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
IMPORT SALEI
'71 TOYOTA COIONA
Dlx. 4 Dr. Automatic, Landa)! 500CXV
'71 CAPRI. 2000 Eng., Air Cond.,
AP..l·''f\I , Jtadlals. "Sharp." 167DSM
'71 CRICKET. 4 S11et'd
13,000 Miles. "Very Sharp." 079EIU
'72 vw 411
4 Door, Automatic, Yellow. 506GJV
70 VW SQUARllACK
4 Speed. "As ls." 489BED
'70 VW IUO. 4 Speed.
Empl F.quippd, A-lags, Sun Roof. 606BEV
'&I VW IUG
4 Speed. Yelow XTP03
'd VW IQUAREIACK
4 Speed. ~1ags. As Is. •6780
'70 TOYOTA WAGON Corona Mk II.
4 Speed. Very Clean. 627BHK
7 0 TOYOTA WAOON CoroM Mark II
Automatic, Air Cond. 547APW
'6f TOYOTA COROLLA Wagoft
4 Spl't.'d. "Hed." YRll34.2
'70 TOYOTA COROLLA Sprlnttr c,..
4 Speed, 14,396 Miles. 464AQE
70 TOYOTA CORONA Mk 114 Dr.
4 .Speed, "Air," "Blue" 837ALQ
'70 COROLLA lprlnhlr Cpe.
Automatic, AM-FM.
'It TOYOTA CORONA
564FOJ
XSK707
Dix:. 4 Door..&. Automatic.
'69 TOYOTA CuROLLA
Cpe. 4 Speed. "Nice."
'69 DATSUN 51G WAGON
AUlOfll&llc, AM·FM. "Ali Is." ZVCS18
'70 DATIUN 510 WAGON
Air Cond., 4 Speed. "M Is.'' mBxtJ
'70 OATIUN PICK-U P w/Pcrril Valley
' ca~Over, AM·tM.. 251BZ?lt
..-,67 VOtVO-WAOOM -UQE246 Auto., Air Cond "CIH.n,"
••t MG MIDOIT Rdll 4 .Speed,
Wll't'! Wbee.l1, ''YtoW'' '•t MCI MIDOIT Rdll 4 Speoed.
Wlre Whoelt. "Red."
'61 'IAT ISO IPIDlll
Rtbl. "A~ 1, ...
'71 VW '°'·TOP CAMPIR
Westf&lla Eqttip.
.
XV1G641
6S7BQI
xoA96<
,.
•
$Uff
521n
$12" ,,...
$1 ...
$12"
$ 7ff
""" Slltt
$1 ...
$'" ,,.,,
$1 ...
$1 ...
$'"
$ ...
""' "'" ""' ,
'"' $"'
$"' , ... -
ANNOUNCES
FREE
REFRESHMENTS
PRIZE DRAWING
FOR FREE
10 SPEED BIKES
* DEMO SALE *
• Low . Miieage -Exec. Cars •
Jt,417
'72 51 O 4 Dr. Automatic . . . . • $2395
JllS.I
'72 510 2 Dr. Automatic .•... $2195
141107
'72 510 4 Dr., 4 Speed ... ' . $2295
121201
'72 510 2 Dr. Automatic .•... $2195
J2771 I
'72 510 4 Dr., Stick •....•. $1995
AU HAVE RADIOS
'11 1200 2 Door .......• $1595
AM RHlo, Co1uolt , T•cho'"tftf, Vi11yl Roof,
U11dtr1a•I. 8 12,149 l
71 510 2 Door ••...... $1795
AM Ra41., SIJe MoWl119, Lllit Nawl 82643°'
Abowe Prlcn Reflect
Ma11ey $avlngs
FULL PARTS & SERVICE
COSTA MESA DATSUN
2145 Harbar llvd.
1 Mlle So. San DI.,. Freow1y
Costa Mua 540°6410
...
Fu11 Foctory Equ ipped with .Soft Ray
Tint•~ Gloss, Calif. Emissi on Test, 3
Spttd Fully Sychroniztd Tronsmission,
Bock Up LiQh!S, 2 Speed W'9f, v;nyl
Interior, flow Through Ven11lot1on.
Onltr Yours Now
'71 DATSUN 1200 Cpe. ~radio, heater.
'6S Y.W. FASTBACK
4 ~pd. radio, heater.
(SUt. •55tA)
I 6 7 CHEY. 1/2 TON P.U. 3 speed. (1852A) •
' .
'71 TOYOTA CPI.
Rad.Jn, heater, 4 speed
{326EXSJ
'71 YlllA COUPE 4 Speed, radio, heater.
042-08\Y
'63 U.MIUR AMIRICAN
6 cyl., radio, hP.at er.
CF1JU0161
..
APPlOYlD CllDIT
f•r oily 4l ••1fll1, F•ll c•1i
''ice 11 $2240.IO htcl. T•• &
Lie. D•hrn4 ,..,_.,,rice h
s,21n.H lecl. l1t9n1t, T•• &
lie••••· A1111l P•rc••t•1•
l1lt l11t.t7
$1188
578S
5988
51118
51188
$488
,LUI TAX
&UC.
RJU Y IQ\JPPED WITH 3l0 V-6, POW-
ER SHER ING, POWER DISC BRAKES,
BACKUP LITES, SHOULDER HARNESS,
CAllf. SMOG., PADDED DASH. Ol!D!R
YOORS TODA YI
6 cyl., 3 speed. I 64 CHIYY YAN
(REGJrol
011 A,.PIOYID CllDIT
PIR
MONTH
F•r Hly 4' 111•ltt1. fill c111t
prke 11 $2162.41 IHI. t1.1 &
lie. hfttn4 ,."""' ,,1,, 11 Slttl .27 l1tel, l•t•rt1I, t111 &
llc-1111. A111t1I Ptrc1nt•1•
•••• 10,,7
sass
v-a. auto. trans., pou·er steering, '70 MONTI CARLO 52188 radio. 752AGT
I 69 IL CAMINO 51388 V-8, auto. trans .. llOWt'r 1teerlng,
air, radio, heater. (3870E3)
'68 YW IUS 51088 Radio, hea tC'r, .i speed.
(~EKT I
V-8, auto. trans., power at~ring,
I 66 PONTAIC TIMPIST CONY.
air. RCStl'\l
5588
'67 CADILLAC Coope doYllo 51388 run f>OWtr, air, 111dlo,
heater. TTT-866
AU PlllCIS Pl.US TAX & UC. •ooo TMRU JAN. JI , 1'73
a••UDAnA .. tAJL T01'PASUl9AT llAJL T07 PJI.
SE HABU 'ESPANOL TOLL FRO
. -
. . . . . '
•
2 OAJLv PILOl . '
. . -•
-r
I....__ .... _. -_-___,J[S j Auto1 tor Sit• l~I l§J ( ---]§] [ l§J I l~l ---1§: I ~"~'* 1~~1 1:1 -·~ ... l§J
THINKIN.G@
OF A NEW OR USED VW?
Let Bill \'ates \'olks\l.·agen l>rove .To
\'ou That \Ve 1\ppreciate \'our Business
OVER ISO NEW & USED vw·s TO CHOOSE
FROM. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. BRING
YOUR TRADE.
OPEN SL'NDAY
BUY, RENT, OR LEASE
VOLKSWAGENS -PORSCHES
AUDIS -VW CAMPERS
& MOTORHOMES
3 Quick Right Turns Off Freeway
Autos WanNd 968
Cash For Cl4t11n
Used Cars &
Trucks
Howard %hovrijr.\
Now-Boach
AfacArthur Blvd l Jau1boree
133-0555 '
'l\'E l"AY TOP OOtLAR
FOR TOP USl-:JJ CA.RS
II your car is cxtru clean,
see us f\l'!lt.
IL\UER BUICK
:?925 Harbor Blvd.
Coatn Atl'sa 919-2500
IAIPORTS W M'TED
Orange County's
TOP$ BUYER
BILL l!.1A.XF.Y TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv :.
H. Beat·h Ph. 847~
Autos, Imported 970
BMW
LEASE A
1973 BAVARIA
CREVIER BMW
Sales -&>rvlce . Leasing
208 \\I. 1~1 SL. Santa Ana
835-3171
Vli<it our r'l('\Y notne!
Auto1, lmportocl 970 Autos, lmportod
SEE HOW MUCH BMW
USED CAR
970 AU..,, lmportod
DATSUN
970 Autos, t~
FERRARI
970 Autos, lmp0rlod 970 Autos, Imported ?79
MERC!DES-BENZ MG
YOUR MONEY '72 BMW 21(12, 11,000 ml., DATSUNS "8 ronvl l30 GTC, 1t7, "12 Mldi'>t, wtrca, Micbelllll, 50 USED
CAN BUY AM/f'M, $3150. 1t the must selFmo~ Abarth roll bar. AJt 6,
AT DHn Lowis 6-4 or. li4ii-lbl1 -BEACH Call 6 · . -. MERCEDES
'Tl CEWCA .. '.... $7561\ BMW '70, $10Xl. 34,000 mu.. ·n Pkkup, •15 CAX,. .. $)695 FIAT * '118 MG MAGN~ * ON DISPLA y
4 Spet'd, radio, heater,..(963-,71an;-!,*!•_'*]}~~a..~-pcy. ·89 \Y~, Th'\\'744, ·· $1095 Good-~~~~.t""~· Sharp "ew Car EOJl ,._,,,........, '"-"""• '""' '69 Sedan, Ait. z.st231, $.1,l~I-""'."...,-___________ ~ -.,_ .L't
·12 CORONA '"' ...... ,... _ CITROEN -f i • • 1910 850 FIAT SPIDER • Tred.e-Jns A~:iJ)trans., radio, iup 1964-1 _________ ~ lidinntl Good oood. 36,00J ml. $1<m. MGB· ·co.ming In Every Dty
CITROEN·MASERATI ..... ,....... ""'"""' -644-!564. • , ____ ;....;. ___ Ask About Our Unique
'TI'COROl..l..A:?dr .•.•. $1366 ORANGE co·. J{EAI).'~ ........ liilicft Ml-M.Xt 1959 1'"'1at 4 dr sedah 1200 '10 ~fGB Conv. Xlnt body, Used Mtrcecles L1a11
Auto. trans.. tlldio, heater QUARTERS -· • Granluce. $190. Interesting blotor A tirel. 39,000 ml. Plan's
<546BSY1 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '70 Datsun 1600 tranaponatlon '7>-11111 Wire Whl1. 11795. 613->lln H f I ...., '70 CORONA 4 dr · · ·• · $:1166 Jim Sk!monl: Import._ '70 FIAT 850 Spider, am-hn ewt A Wk:nds OUM 0 mporn A1u:m~ns., ntdio, heater u:i w. Warner, Santa Ana · Sportscar 29,cm ml, British raclne: MERCEDES BENZ 6S62 Manchester, Bul'.!na Park
.70 COROlLA 2 dr ••• Sl066 l114J 54&-lll4 Rad\o, Heater, 4. ~. new green, $109;)JoHcr. 66-0TS4 on the ~~Amt Frwy
Auto. trans., radkl, heater CORTINA top, runs like brand new. 191'> Flat UI Spider, air 1971 250C roe. Bm. AT/AC
(SIMBEKl LANDLADY sAYS MOVE tend., 1U8gt, very clean. PW AM/FM low mileage It's a breeze .... &ell YoUr
'69 COROlJ.A Sprjnler s1otf6 1968 4 OR CORTINA At..rro lN 5 DAYS. Must sell. 499-<C&'T. en Onx $6896.00 Dir call Items \\'Ith ease. WM! Dally
' ....... rad<o, lop (~'TUI771 TRANS, GOOD coN'n J41> MUST SELL. MG-<ll< Pilot c1 ... llled. 642-561ll.
'68 CORONA ' dr.. .... 1866 &<2-3573. . . LOST OUR LEASE HONDA Autos, Now 980 Autos, Now nil A,~:;:..~)· ............ ,.,. DATSUN TED'S MOTORS * •n HONDA * , p;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I
~~~:~~~P ·~~ __ 1_9_7_3_D_A_TS_U_N_ 3114c!~~e:vd., 661 ActuaJ ~ c2F0051 OUR "UG-E EXPANSION
DEAN . A~~ ~~~LS ·12 D= Zl~Z *DE,92A6 N* cusrOMISEDURE TROEOULRAr10Ns Immediate Delivery ·Auto. air, mags, extras.
/---"" . $:<1790. call 640--0846. LEWIS iNrmttrt..t ·l!latmnt 1910 250 SEDAN A. T AIC PACKAGE and
.. ~~~--AM/FM 467 DLL $5&;o LEWIS .... ~-...._, 8-:11 MS-MOo Dl.R. Call 546-4ll4
1972 DATSUN 1:m c....,, Z·CAR at tho BEACH
x1n1 1.'0iKl:. ..... •h,•,,.tt 6pm ·n -oatsun ~z. original y,of OTA
Conditioner,. New Mags J\: I d '72 1200, stick, lo mileage, A· Radials, 299CFV
VOLVO & O'ft7"' Green.Saddle Interior. Air
co!:!6 ;:.~~bor -~;303 , =1 ,..'~-=nd=-. ll0Xl-=-'-6<+8507"C.=-,,--., $4195 1966 Harbor Blvd. " iatsut Colla Mesa 646-9:!03 ORANGE COAST'S BEST ROY CARVER, Inc. Vacanc~s cost money! Rent ·n '!O z. low mile,... 1 nmnrt t YoUr bousl!', apt., ~ owner, mags, car cover, ~ { 'TI Honda Car. Xlnt cond.
D •1 p •a & "D ,_., d 234 L lllh St. bid<-. •tc. u.. a Dally Pilot ""'· lmmae. $3995. !T.HmS. ·~".:::":t.::Jo $1000. Call boloN 1 PM a g Y h 0-c: ~ C'l!r!>n'!Jle I Costa t.1ei;a 546-4444 C1asslfled Ad. 642-5618. Need a "Pad"~ !'>lace an ad! . * 646-3128 *
980 JAGUAR --~--980--m--980--980--1 c.;.~;.....~~-~~~~~--~~~~-
' •
..-T ~ · l"I ;. -.. n -~·-•--
.
WHEN YOU STEP INTO HINITUH llYINTT TMID
ELDORADO COUPE
fadillac'.s ilfru~ Elegant Personal Car.
i-i-~ OU s TE p 1 NT O----E-ven-Afor-e G-lanw-ror_,. &-Ex-ci1i1-1g fo-r 19-73 -
l ~Special Mrld oFCadiDae
Nineteen Seve•ty-Three
NAl!IS LU.SING . 1973 . . 1973
Sedan De Ville
Fully (quipped With
LEASE
DIRECT Coupe De Ville
P~lly lqulppod With Fir..-ni11 lini1h, vinyl roof, AM slereo rodio, power onl•1111(1,
1oft ray glou, power 6 way •Ni!, ou!o climot• co11trol oir
conditioning, pow•r door lotk1, electric windows, till & ltlt·
~copic steering, remote co11trol 1run~ lock, lomp moni1on, etc.,
etc., e!c.
IMMIDtATI DIUVllY
fXClUINT NUCTIOH
•tH l'l(l.UP AMO DIUVflT
fllll lOAN CARS WHILI
LIAH CAa SIRVICID
'""' ond o .... Jialf o<•H of IOI~! outhar.
i•.d Cadillac lo<"itMt• dMit,.... to b.rter
V.11yl roof, AM/FM stereo, '°ft t0y glou, 6 ,woy pt/Wit 1-al,
auto dimcile control air condirloning, power daar lockl, l'IK·
Irie window1, tilt & tel.,cop'c st-in-g, twilight 1enlinet, t1unk
lock, reor window defog-ger, crul1e conlrol lomp rnoniton,
rodiol ti1e1, •le., •k., etc.
57444
full Price
ult ar>d tonic• Cadilla< au!O·
OIOb ..... !ID -~ 1'ai!.I and
4.) 1oct11fJ !....,od tothn,dano • ...--~1 7222
1M6s.tl.hYlll•
foctory ai< -.cl~. Vitr!'I
top, cWI< I. IMito..< ;,,,.,, fvll
,_.., i11 wt...1. AM/fM. doof' l S I I IDcU, ••<eplionolly cl.a"."""" argest e ect on
......, ..._ optlott ......._ ISAL of Cadillacs
JJll $1555 in Orange Co.
1--....;;;.o--.'"""--1 o El Dorad11
lvkk '61 Rlvler11
c,..
Factory •it """d~lonkwJ. Fun
powo<, !ill •-!tit. ,,;n,t 1tra••
...,,, ou!a. Ir""'~ •&H, WSW
opart ......io & IU~r •ho<pl
!Ser, f 2flS71 "'-"'ttly IM.-
lfM, s2222
.1....,'71 V12
' +• Cj>o.
ltH tmo~ 7,000 "'lot. fCK!ofy
eN-cO!lilll*'"'9. ,._ •-·
io>g. ' .,.. ... lrO"'·• fvtt 1..,., ..
lf,Mf\or, ....t:ol 1;,.o, ab.olv!1
1111nt co..dillon I" ..,..., "11y.
l6711Af1
IAU Pill.CID
'
o Cpe. De vmes
• Sed. De Villes
0.-er 70
Quality A11tomobll e1
to Choo1e from
S1tlt1-lHo/11• -Stn'ko
Pinch• ••s 1'C'' c,.. 4f----J.M/fM n:ldlo. t..at .. , llft9"90
.... k, leott..• in11tiof, "'"'* <;Of\•
dhicNo & prictd 10 ... IO<fo:y,
(770£![1 s2999
fodDrf air aoll4itiooi;..g. hll
po-•• .,. top, clo•~ """ !-"-;,,i..;,,,_ tilt .....t ~
M.,c •tMMe, AMI'"° radio. rmMS•I $1999
1961 c,.. h Ylll•
f«lo<y oir <Oftol-lllDll"'9, .....,.
top, Ml loolher lft•orior, .n
pa.,...., "-loc~1. Ill all.t toi..
ocopic ""'""'' AN.f'M ,,.,.,
rodkil ~'"" UCEV7941
s2222
1171 II DeNtlti .... _....,__
t .. , !haft 11,000 111~. factory
olr ""'cjj';,,,,i-nt, loalllot-I"..,.
ior. f\111 ~. Iii & i.lncO!llc '""""'°' .... .a, ............ c...i.. -oi. lltM -inot,
lllO•I ..,..,., cllr.. JI,.., 15•.
"°'"" $6222
lt67Cpe. De VIiie
Focwy ,.;, cond'tt;,,..;..,,_ ,..;,.y1 I Mt c,_.. De VIII•
!Oii, ric>+h & leot"-" ;"'.,""· lvll f«to<Y ait condi6oft~ Maull. "°'""'· !ill & tolet<op<c ••• .,. Iv! doth & loo1ho• iM.,io<, lvl
Ing, Al4/fM,-., ~ {TY\UD41 pa-, till & 1.incopi( 1!-· "'a. "'"'"°· d-loc~ •• loaH<I\ $1555 (214flWl s2999
1112 .......... Oki• 169 Dett. II
,...,...., oir, Wit ~ • .,....,, c---.."""· ""IO! .. ..ton -h, taPMlry o...i fl>CIO<y o;. ·-~Klnlnt. f'OW"' lootl!« 11t1or:, ,..,.., wfiop. 11..n..9, bra~oo, vinyl !Op, •in!'I ilffli, .._ loch, Ctwioo <_., lnl••~ o..,.... ffOlll~ radio, hoot• INnll IKL 1611 EAC1 .,, wow,;, • ., olc, fYCU71PI
$6777 · s1aaa
'
1t7111~ 1170 Seti. De VIII•
'9clety •lr COllCl~loftl....,. ""' factort ,.;, cOl!ClltioftW!o. ~1117' .,. .... , ...... , ................ "" top, boautilvl clollo & loather ""' IM1h .. -...,-.,Jllo ..... lotlor, hi ....... .... ... lolto-dock, dNI locti. """t led. ::::= ..... fftijf. , ..... 4-~ !oft, QllOUI ... ek. l12•W11
$5999 , $3999'
YOUR ONLY EXaUSIVE FACTORY AUTHORIIm CADIUAC DEAi.ER SIWVING Tiil ORANGE tOAST, llARIOR AREA
. NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa .Mesa 540-9100 •
SALES QEPARTMEfil!. 0 N
8130 AM to 9 PM Mon. thru Frl.-9·iOO AM to 6 ~ Sot. ond Sunday ,.
_,
full Price
Largest Selec:tlon
of Cadlllac:s
In Oranga Co.
0 -·-· o Coowtrtl~IH
0 Coupe•
'. a ... 11:-.•:.!!a11.,
to ChooM F.-.m
..... -""" ... -.I•""'-
"'""'ff ....... --1.n,"""' )0,000 111ilot, ~
.,;, ...... ; ...... ' tp..d '"""" --._. """"i-i..,-. ................. .-llltn.
""''" •2999
..
foctart w ·~ w.,f '°"'al .......... iol!eriot, flolt pow-
••• Iii & !.!...-pit •-"'v.
•IJrOO, doO< lo<b, V09M l'/fts.
Ok. (CM441Vj
s3999
1170 II Defell9
hdeoy oft cor>dltlot'rift1. M;
JIOW91', ""'J4 lop,-... i.o,
liter ""-rior, rill oncl tMseoplc tr"""9. door IDclf, light ~
""'IS67""*'11
s4333
1Hl'"4hYDI•
~ ... ~ ........ ,....,, Ml ......... li!Mrior,
Al4/f#A, till .. ~ -· ..""""..,._ .. u...... • .-. !YOPl771
•1999
'62 lltk u. 3.8 1. Sedan; Xlnt
Int: $800 cng job. 6/72.
Neecls trans. lront end
Yo'Ork. Best otr. 644-3464, 8-5
M ·F . EXPERIENCE
MAZDA * Mazda 73 Rotary *
$66 MONTH
36 1'10NTHS OPEN ~
\Vill accept trade--lns
CALL MR. F.RY 842-6666
Hunt. Beach
MAZDA
17331 Beach Bl. 842-666
MG
MG's at the BEACH
'67 & '68 B-6T & B
Roadstl'.!rs, 'some 0 ..,-erdrive
& all with \Vires, See 'em,
Drive 'C'm, Buy 'em.
is part of the package ...
Factory Tra ined Mechanics to keep your new
car in top condition, helpful 'es\istance in the
intricacies of Credit and Financing, end hep-
ful assistance in discussing any problem you
may want to discuss about your new car. After
the 1ele is completed we don't forget you. All
this comes with experience , . , end it's ell
part of the package.
"THANK YOU ORANGE COUNTY"
Sunset Ford sold 6,897 c•rs in 1972
"There Mu1t Be a Rea1on"
·LOWEST PRICES
IN SOUTHERN C~LIFORNIA
ON NEW AND USED CARS
SAVE SAVE .$AVE SAVE SAVE SAVE
'72 DATSUN PICKUP $1865 4 Speed, Priced Right.
!903EXTl .
'70 CHEVY CAMARO s2793 Air Conditioning, Vinyl Top,
Autom1tlc Transmission. {314 CAX)
'69 TOYOTA CORONA s1295 4 Door, Air Conditioning, Automatic
Tran1ml11ion. (ZLH 628) ·
'68 FIAT s1095 Convorllblo. 4 Speed. (XXB 538)
'71 FORD MAVERICK $2095 4 Door, Power Steering, Radio,
(57JCAX)
1972 ·FACTORY DEMOS
100°/o FINANCING . ON ALL CARS IF NEEDED
.) .. -e-. --·-............. -~·-·-SAUi HOUIS lllYICI HOUIS
.......... fe ...... ,.... .. .... Prl.7t11,... .... ... ~·--....··~ ..... ,,{ .... ..... CAU i9J.U75 or 831°1375
' .
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~
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' . ..--'
•
-
j DAILY PltOT 43
~ . I ~., ...... ~ I~ I A11101tors11e )§) I Autotforhlt' 1§1 .. 1 · Aulos forU. 1§1 I AutosforSate J§J [ AutQtlorSale,_ .,.,.,.,... ]§) [. • .. ,.,,,,.. )§)
)ftot, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Au'tot,. Imported ..... ~---·-·-~----...... _ 1970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmp'.orted 910 Autos, lmp;o"rted · 970
MERCEDES BENZ _P_O_R_S~H ~ -'fUi.JMPtl ------VOLKSWAGEN VOl.KSWAGEN VOLKSWAG~N CADILLAC
1 -c -"'.ORSCHES · • MER ED ES at tho. 01 TRIUMPH GT6. Good -----. BEACH .... 'Ond. ·\Vire wheels 45,txXI ~-
D Mo 1E971ECUTIVE "!19Solhru •n1; 911, 914, CoUi:ics, ~~1~A11l.Ves 675-3726, days • .
,E & · X nie u r, Son1e 5-spccd, ~~~~_,.·,....,,....---,-~~
I ~LEARANCE SALE S01nc Alloy \Vhct!I~. 1'~rt'Jr :,1 TR-4A. Convel't __ Excel
19,., """ SCOANS W!J289, 118"'. Soe 'em NOW ''"''" low ml., radial tires POP THE TOP
'57 BUJC!\ \VAGON. Nu 1'<1·
di11.ls. ltadiu ll('lltt•1'. No
. iffiOk!!. sriO.
2653 Sanl:1 Aria SL,
Costa ?llcAA, 51().4-17a
CADILLAC
C.\111 Ll,1\1 • '1)7 St-flun d('
\"ill~· i1:-M10. Xhn cond. All :>.!ra~ i·all 6~1..489"1 aft ~!pill '
'li/; CPE-~Vll!c, full pwr,
fat·\ iur. Gd cond. Sl.200.
! to ch.oot1(!. ·t'ul!y cqpt ~ $875. 5'19-2367.
1972 280SE SEDANS rttt .... ]J~ .-..., On this '69 Volkswagt'l'I and I Only one loft' lE'"'I ltlpUun, VOLKSWAGEN you'U fi"'I ''"""'" baski'IO
T d $s . QOO w c.-~ 1 in economy lor only : remen DUS avmg -· ._ .. , . ..o.!1-------11789 ... Juot ""° newt ' , -:-:·-··-'68 VW Bug <ZBV864) 10 DAY FREE
"Priced Too Low To Quo\()" 68 911, ., SPORTAMATIC .. speed radio heater (ZKZ· TRIALGUEXCHSTAANFSOGE. N also 62,000 mis, tangerine., am; 1201 ' '
New Car Trad•ins rntrad. m•"Y xfnui, 6T~1494 ONLY $995 LINC MERC
1910 2.SOSEL , , •• , , . • $5850 '63 PORSCHE 356-C, l'eblt O ~·ut1 Po"•c r, Auto. trnns, Air eng., needs some body H WARD ChevrOlet 16800 Beach at Warner
(..'Qll.dilioning. Loadc.'d! (323-\\'Ork, $1250. 64lr4508 alter 6 Newport Beach Huntlngton Beach
BQRI RENAULT M•cA<-thU<· Blvd & Jamboree 842-1144 e (213) 592.5544
1971 250C ·········-·· SGS95 _____ 833-0555 "Home of the Viking''
r Mt. Slh•er/Blk. Vlnyl 1011, , auto trruis., air cond. Power '63 Renault Dauphine '68 BUG, only 700 mi's on VW't et the BEACH
wlndoiv (392AEPI Good transportation. 1600 Reblt eng. Xln't cond. '66 thru '72, Bus, Camper, ""~ m95 Best oUer. 64H934 $1100 548-5360 B t I s I 11 r! ~ns.:·~i1: ~dii~1~ ROLLS ROYCE ·s8 with ·s:i booy, 1ess Sq~:rei::ck, fro;: n;v°i1M: l & priced to sell now! (798----------I engine. $50. $995. I~ DLI\) ROLLS ·JWyce '61 · Silver 642-1889
1 '12 220 Sedan ....... $5895 Cloud, white, 52.000 111iles, '61 VW .. Good cond, Needs
10,000 1niles, auto. trans., imniac. $12,000. ( 21 3) minor engine work. "I AM, FM . sho1v l'OOm fresh. 4:!4--0449 or {714) 49<Hl332 $250. Call: 847-4402 I (P!l.fl1700l
'70 280SE Cpc S849j SAAB '68 VW Bua, Kombi, blue,
Classical Modi:'!! J\H. Silv1'r ---------I radi9. 1973 tags. Priced to
I w/Black. Wet-kcnd salt..'S '72 DEMO sell. 968-1486. ·
•"'""'· l'l'ZU895J CLEARANCE * '66 V.W. $400 JIM SL.EMONS ·n 99E. AM/FM r.dio, vinyl N-work. 673-733.1
\ top. a7400. 1969 V\V Bug-Very good
IMPORTS $2995 cond. Best otter over $850.
1 120 WEST WARNER .~.B~640-~~~~~llent
Santa Ana (714) 546-4114 cond. Only 49,000 mi. New
·n l\1crccdC's, all pwr, tires, $725. 644-5767
:; am/hn stereo. Xlnt cond. '66 vw, nu paint, good tires,
Below book, 675-4-070. & many xtras. $751).
1f :Z:JO SL, 1964, Convt'rl. 52.000 -=.:_c.===::====o. 536"'685 1 ml .. tnech slnt. S2750/ortcr '66 \'W Sundial Camper.
' 548-3869, 673-3045. ~tech. perfect. Cabana, 'i OPEL Xlnt. cond. 646-2265 eves. 0 BILL MAXEY • '63 VW Convertible !------" • OPEL GT 's
at the
BEAC H
'19705 One Red, One Yellow, 4
' !IX'l'dS, 099BNP, • $1595
$400 • 963-2141
!TIOlvl<)IT!AJ 1;;'66~~-s~,__u_,_~=cRE=B'-cA,o.-CK
V\V Squareback, 'fi6,t-Good
BRANO NEW ·cond. tan, radkl, heater,
19TI VW. Red w/black con-
vert. top. Lo mi. $2150.
Eves: 644-8135
1966 V\V Fastback. Good
trans oeeds paint. $500. or
best offer, Call eVe. 646-9279
'65-Sunroof Bug.
Red & Cute. Ex. Cond.
Sacrifice! $575. 675-5397
'64 V.W. BUS, sliding door
neW tires, good condition.
$875. 645-433.1.
'65 VW Bug, Sunroof'
Fair condition. $400.
675-1291
'71 VW Bus. Am·Fm. New
steel radials, bed, low
miles. Runs great. 673-5953.
•n VW Camper. EXtras.
Financing avail. Priced to
sell. 496-6893.
·72 VW 7 P8.Sli bus, air cond.
AM/FM. stereo. Best oUer.
644-4018. • . ~~---··-···-· ! ~rurf) 1Jmpurtii;
'72 $675. 642-1004
Autos, Used , ~ Autos, ~sed
· a t2iOO w. COllt Hct-Y ~ v NMport 8ellCft &45·M06 ! ---
'71 Opel Spt C p".
\\'hitc/Blue. RiH, \\•id<'
• oval tires, 32,000 n1i. $17j(),
f 516-9292.
~ ·n OPEL. GT, Esc cond & 1 n1i. 4 spd. R&H, new
radlnls. $1595/Best Offer.
*'385.
·PORSCHE
MARK ll 's
e CORONA's e
CARINA'•
COROLLA's
AT
DEALERS
COST
FINANCING TO FIT
YOUR NEEDS
• •
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BRAND NEW
Call 6·1(;..63.1(1.
1973 GMC
VANS-PICKUPS
4 WHEEL DRIVES--JIMMYS
2 · 3 TON CAB & CHASSIS
AT CHEVY. FORD PRICES
Brand New & Used Ope11 Road • Harvest ·• 4 Star
· Slide On Campers As Low As $595
• •
1 PORSCHE ·n 9U s. $jX'cial
i'act. paint, air, Leather
lhterior. Recitro spt see.ls,
slert."O. Very lo\.\' 1niles. Or's
IJ, car, maintain<..\'! in con-
course, showroom new con-
ditlon. Priced $500. bc lo1v
Blue Book a.t $7695. Call Dr.
\\looding, Eves & wknds nl
846-2175 or Joe, days
346-3445
SEE 'EM-BUY 'EM· e TODAY e
AT
BILL· MAXEY ' ,
!TIOJY!OIT!AI
In Con,junction With The Celebration Of The "Harbor Blvd. Of Cars" We're Put-
ting Eaclir.A.nd Every One Of 0J,Lr Used Cars On A Limi.U:d fi!fle Onl y Sale . Near-
ly A Hundred Cars To Choose From. All Discou1ited. All Styfus. All Models.
197i PORSCIJE 911 T. 5 sp.
S/R, S cquipn1t'nt. 5 alloy
1vhls. 14,000 mi. Mt'tallic
18881 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTING.TON BEACH
; gold. Xlnt~ oo~d. $4~ ~1011· book, $6995. hrn1. 673-tl220.
PORSCHE '69 912, xln't
' coral. 5 spd, chrn1 \\'his.
• 847-8555 •
;. '70 Col'olla wagon, 30
miles/gal AM/FM, runs
!:l)Od. \Vhtsl blu book $975.
asking $84.5. 714: 968-7154.
1969 TOYOTA r.tark JI. Air,
4-spd. 1 owner, X1nl cond.
$975. 644--0440
· · amtfn1 S.\\'. + n1any xlr'.is.
$4500. 552-7"'.i4i
'68-912. SUPER clean, see lo
apprec. Blaupunkt,
A!l.1/Ff\>I, chnn rin1s. $3,500.
673-8735.
'64 S..C Conv. All Orig.
Must see! Sacrifice!
$3000/offcr 67~5397
'71 914 PORSCHE
$2956. Pv1 ply. 642-3472
; \VILL Buy your Porsche or
" VW paid for or not. Call
I Kent Allen, 837-4800.
'71 COROLLA, R!H. air, 8
track, 2 nu tirt>s, stick, xl"t
conr!. $1700. 673~121 '
e '72 CELICA-Air cond,
fully C'quip'd. Like new ..
$2775. Pvt pty. 83.S-7352"
1970 Toyota fl.1K Ir 4 spd. 4
r!r, nit· 20,000 mi, Lite blue.
$1795. 642-59j8
i1 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
:i
• • •
l
"
I
11
' '
' I
' (
GUR HU GE EXPANSION
IS DUE TO OUR
"
CUSTCMER RELATIO NS
PACK A'GE •••. and
COURTESY
is part of the package .••
Sunset Ford extends to you an invitation to
shop and. compare. No high pressure• salesman-
ship. Just friendly; helpful service before,, dur-
in9 end after the sale ... lt is gpod-ald fas~1one~
Courtesy ... and it's all part .of th:a...pack,aQt
¥1'.h.!n :JOU buy y~ur new ca.!. from .Sunset Ford.
"THAN K YOU ORANGE COUNTY"
Sunset Ford seld. b,897 cars in 1972
"Th•re Must Be a Reason"
. '
CONTINENTALS 0~=~~LUXURY 'CARS . MERCURYS o~~:R FORD PRODUCTS
'71 COf'.!nNENT AL .
(:~. Full poW•r, a f~ co,ncl., l•eth•r interior, vinyl
ro.of. t-4•7 BSXI
NOW $4575 Wa $4J75
'71 MARK Ill
NOW $6275 .> Wn 56675
'7f CONT~ENTAL
Cp~. ·F;u11 ,poW•r, eir concl., leefh•r inter., Yin yl
roof. l 7t0 GtVl
w. 55075 NOW $4875
'7f CONTINEMTAL
4 Dr. Full powet, air cortd., l•1th•r infer., Yinyl roof.
!519 CPM I
Was 51075 NOW $4975
'69 MARK Ill '
F11ll pow••• eit col'!d., l•e+her int•r., vinyl roof.
IXHW 493) •
w •• $4971 ~ow $4475
'69 CO'NTINF.NTAL
Cp•. Fill! p,W•r, 1lr cond., l•ath•r·inter., vinyl roof.
(641 FYVI ,
';.., n1n NOW $2875
4 Or. Full power, air cond .. Yinyl 1oof. (WXY 640 )
NOW $2275 ' W• SZ-475
·)1 CADILLAC
Saden DeVill•, Full power, eir <:011d ., vinyl roof.
!389 CUC l
Was SSJ75 'NOW. $4975
'68 CADILLAC
S1den DeVille. Full power, 1ir cond., vinyl 'oof.
IJOA 354)
w .. 52775 NOW $2175
'71 CADl~LAC ·
Cpe. D1Vill •• Full power, air cdnd ., vinyl roof.
{81 1 CXW l
w. 55375 NOW $4975
-STATION WAGONS '71 MERC. COLONY PARK Fuu power, air conditionin g,
roof rack. (407BSY) '70 MERC. COLONY PARK Full power and -air
conditioning. (982BIM) , '68 MERC. COLONY PARK Full power, air conditioning,
• roofrack.(\VIl)986 ) • '72 FORD LTD WAGON Pqwer steei"lng & brakes, air
·oonditionlng, !'\\Of tack. (325EKT)
Was$3475 NOW. ?3275
Was$3075 NOW ~2875
W•s$1975 NOW ,$1875
Was$377S NOW $3675
'71 t:OUGAR
Pow•r ~hMorin9 & brak1, automatic, vinyl roof. {359.
BSX I ·'
Wa $2775 NOW $2575
'71 MARQUIS
Brou gh•m cpe. A;r cond., Yinvl roof, pwr. 1t•erln9·
brake1·window1. !SIS CQQI '
Wa SJ975 NOW $3775
'l'O MONTEREY
Cuft. Cl)ll. Air, Yinyf roof, auto., P-1te•rin9 I
brelte1.' 1250 ASX )
NOW $2475
"70 COUGAR
"uto., air cond., pow1r tt•erin9 & bra~11, vinyl
roof, (741 ADLJ
Was 52975 NOW $2875
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"/U MAR(j)UIS
Brou9ham . Full power, air cond., vinyl roof. CZVX.
649 )
Wm Sl 175 NOW $2875
'??. FORD LTD
4 Dr. Sad. p •• t .. •rin9, breke1, window,, air. Yin yl
roof. 1444 DZK I
NOW $3675
'72 f'O RD VAN
Automatic lrensminion.
Wot 51275 NOW $2975
'71 FORD LTD
Brougham. Power window1·d•erin9.brak•1, •ir, •inyl
roof. (463 BZV J
w. $)175 NOW $2975
'70 F"ORD
S1d1n. Pow1r 1te1rin 9 & br•kes, auto., air cond.,
vi11yl roof. i756 AGCJ .
Wet1 $2475 NOW $2275
"!~ !!=ORD LTD
Cp•. Air cond .. Yil'!yl roof, pow•r 1t1erin9 & bralt!11.
1540 AELl
W• SZl75 NOW $2675
IMPORT&COMPACT CARS '72 CAPRI 2600 V6 Automatic, decor grou ,
) air conditioning. (085FVW)
I .. FORD MUSTANG 70 Automatic, power steering,
power brakes. (029ASX) '72 CHEVROLt!T VEGA Automatic transmission.
(107ELV) '70 VOLKSWAGEN BUS A fantastic family bus with
lots of room . (919BSW)
Was$3675 NOW $3475
Was$2575 NOW $2375
. Was$227S NOW $2015
Wa1$2075 NOW $1775
.'71 ECONOLINE CAMPER
Power steering, power brakes, air
""nditlonin~: 1813DVD)
'68 DODGE DART 4 DOOR Automatic, air conditioning,
pnwer steer., & brakes. (VTU047) Was$1675 NOW $1475
•
•
•
• r
'
..
l!om• Of Tht New Cat , " ,
"G•ld-'.l'..,eW'
r
' ' I
"Orange Covnt~'t Faml,ly of nnc Car.s "
:Im NAlllOll BLVD~ CDITA MESA • M0'6e30
•
·'
}tome Of The Ne• Cat' • , ,
''Golden rouch''
• I •
................ ········· .... . "' . .. . . -~ " . .. . -. ... .. . . ... .. I ' • •, & . . -. . . ' ... . . .
. .
4 .f DAILY PILOT ---1§1 ~[ -~·-~1~~1~1;; .. ;;'""';;""~l;;§J~I .;''".m;'"'';;;"' ;;l~~I
Aulo1, UIO<I 990 Auloo. UM4 990 Autos, UIOd 990 Aulot, Now 9IOAutot, Now 9IO
~""'-" '"-"'"~)§] :..[ .. _ ..... _ ... ~)~~ 1.11 _ .... _ ..... _ .... ..::]§]~.-I [
l•------·990~1 A_utos, Usod 990 Autot, UM41 990 futot , OIJ Autos, U"d ET
]~[
"8
1§1 I ---• -... -
CADILLAC CADILLAC CHEVROLET CHEVROL CHEYlOLET CONTINENTAL COltVETTr i--------'-----1
'71 CADILLAC
CPE. DE VILLE
c,1rpvro.110· J · r l' 1 t! \' :1 r ~
\\,r,.~,·.1r ,., !"" ·1111•'
, \ll'<'lllt'll •IO !1 :'<'1. !" <ljl
['I! ·01.111
Harbour
1\u1ui,,,:!,.;1 l:.. ·•·
CADS at the BEACH
'6:!, l;I. , :. fr• l\•up<' •h•
\·1l1t• ;•!Id ("I'\! .ti \\!lh
\1r (",.,1.\·1H"1•11 • :1:1d .1U
l'<lll•)'lll•'' I :r •
.1 ! \I~ :-:
51 395
CADILLACS
1:1711 l !'"' .'.: ~ ! Dt'\'itk•s
:, '" .. ,1fll.);>.(' f:-orn
PRICED FROM $3795
YOUR ONLY '70 Malibu '& 'Tl El. C.\MlNO, xlnt CON.I,
many extra1. See to •P·
pttclate. moo. pxi, belov.·
blu• book. 979-9TOO a.Iler 6
or 11,·knda ·•
FACTOHY
AUTHORIZED
CADILLAC
VS, automatic, Pl. -.Ir, buck·
~t 1eAt1, ~. vin)il root
l:ll7.A0Cl
ONLY $2395
DEALER I HOWARD Chovrolot
IA'l!".:C'SI sell"<"tion af C'nrlil· Newport &.ach
l11t ~ 111 Ortlllltl.' Counry, , r-.!neArthw· B.lvd & Jambot'ff
PURPLE PEOPLE
PUU.ER COMET
A '67 CAPilARO COUPE priL'"' ·~ Conuit, reblt enc & trans,
..; dcs·Lt·asir1g
~--"~·. Nabers
Cadillac
~'tiOO ilAH.BOR BL.
COSTA ~tESA
J.lfl.Ql(ltJ Optn Sunday
-,71 El DORADO
Uf'nut1ful n1elalllt" bro11'tl
111th innt, h1ng \'ln,vl tap, nu·
.-.~n..1, Sll'!Tt.l, & fully ("(JlllPI
, G.·\A rn 1 •
$6495
•3!ftu.5 l'd to be aone br r-.1aod111y, auto lrllm. i)\\T steer., w -=~=~~~·~·~---1 onb' S989 for lhi! 4 ~pftd lr1& $3t5 or otter. ~.
1970 CHEV. Concours e:itate •. m•XP"'~..,"", 1'0Y oA~hcra~t CHRYSLER Sta \V&n. 3 seat, pwr 1teer,
auto, P"T disc brakes, AM-TRlAL EXCHANGE.
"" """' radoo, till "''" GUSTAFSON \\"llt.>e l. lll.ll:S:llie rack, panel· UNC MERC Ing, a11· l'Ond. Hu 1973
llcefl!le, u.ki.ng S 2. l 7 5. 16a00 Bet.ch at Warntt.
5.l7-1861 Huntln.atoa Bt'aeh
'71 ~tO~TE Carlo, ps pb, 842-1844. (213) 592..$544
,\C. $2&i(J. or trarle for older "Home of the Viking"
u·ul·k or 111otorcyclt' +
111ono?)'· Negotiable . .>IW <tM '71 Chev WCIC)On
'70 Monte Carlo V8, autorriatic, ps, air, {966-
0BA).
ONLY $2195 Cpe.
VS. aulon1alic, ps, ai r, buck· HOWARD Chevr;olet
'68 Chrysler New Yoricer. 4
Dr I-IT, Extra Nice with
Factory Air, P .S., Pl)., P.
Seat, P.W., Redlntr Seat,
AM/FM R&ctio, Cntl1e Con·
trol, Premium Pare:UI Rad·
!al ~.. Beautiful liabt
yellow flni&h. :rwruST SEU..
$1495. LANDLADY SAYS
MOVE IN 3 DAYS. ~14
Harbor "Blvd., Costa Men. ........
CHRYSLER 2 dr Newport.
'69 Fully auto, vinYI· top,
pert cond. will sacrifice
---------'&
Sound of Music
\Vllh thl• lwc:Wiou1 ·n full
power MARK 01 ind radlo-
wUh ~pe . .YOU'll trul.v en,Ja)'
the IOWld ot mUlk. Ser.
UY89A842im) 15789 10 DAY Ji~REE T RI AL EX-OIANGE.
GUSTAFSON
UNC MEltC
16800 BNch at Warner,
Hunttnctcn Beach
142-1144 e (2U) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking"
1969 LINCOLN Cont. HI
mlleaze, lo price. Xlnt. cond, nu ti.res. p.j()O,
83HJ319
CORVAIR iirr Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac et seats. ronsole, vinyl root, Newport Beach
radio. lZYK.105) PttacArthur Blvd I: Jambol't'e .MEOIANIC SPECIAL ,,..,,.._ r---------
I Sao Di••• ""'>'. " A.-,ry ONLY $2~ 833-0555 CONTINENTAL 1962 Corvalr, •ulo lraN, Pk11·~. Lllguna ;.;ijl'uel. HOWARD Ch 1 ·==iCllEv,-S~l°[m,;paaii:;:,:1 • ...=:~:!:~~~~~:_1 radkl, heater, laod ttrH, 495-0800 •_, 831 -0800 ev e i;.:, • m needs enrtne ~ril: but ear ____ ---Newport Beach Auto, full pwr. Xlnt con· '72 MARK IV is clean SlOO. CA MARO I r.1acArthur Blvd & Ja1nbaree dilion. Sparldlna hw'iund.y with a. ~
--------13~555 Best Oller S47-l398 . white vinyl top, Full Equipt CORV AIR EJl,ifine, l~ Turbo
'iO Ca1nn1u 350. air. pis. . <'."<." k '68 Camaro Z·28 ClOlXEG> *-Charge! tral\I A rear end. p/b. \ill top. console, etc. 65 lm~ll!-~Ek 11• cons, •'•~ Alter S, 557-861
San Dlt'go fn1·y at AV•'!) lo11 nu.. l a11 nr, under ~~~~lft 5.;;nr1~ S-00. ~.: :=: w'hs~Ov~~~'. '65 CORVAIR. Good trans-
l 9 6 0 CORVET'fC;.COOrry
OOtlCl. 301 en1, Mlp. 8e1t
ol:fe.r. 87)..1181 alt 5 pm
COUGAR
4&
XR·7 CAWNG
EARTH
With a aouod ay1tcm to
m1tch. Thls '67 COUGAR la
lo&dfd for bear, includlrc
alt. Green and cool, you
M'ln't believe $ 8 8 9 .
CVDY50Tl 10-DAY ffiEE
TRIAL EXCHANGE.
Glt$TAFSON
UNC MERC
18800 Beach at Warner,
Hunilnaton Beech
942-1144. (21i) 592.5544
"Hwno of tho Viking"
1967 PttERCURY COUGAR
XR·7. $1%0. Call attu 6 pm,
~169. .
OFFICIAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23 • 24 • 25 ·26
Harbar Baulevard
af Car•
SEE PAGE 46 OF
TODAY 'S DAILY PILOT
1967 Cougar-Pl•. P/b, •uto. Auto11 UMCI
N•w Urea. Looks iharp. DODGE 990 Autos, Used
$ll50. Evf:s: 644-8135 FORD
1969 COUGAR XR·T
Air, radials. Xlnt cond. '66 OODGE Wag. 383. Auto
call Mf.<1969 Ex. cond . $795. Gary, C/O ------~---1 Box 551, Balboa. or aee at C
St.
'67 Ford 10 P
Wagon Pk11·\. L.~Jn:t :\i;iJt'i. I \\Tnty. ne11' ures. $2600. . P stereo ta~ player, low portation. $275. Call 8-12 am.
49S-0800 831 -0800 4~14-775a. * _'69 CAPRICE * m.Uea. CBY1809l e S.U.3691 e 0
""". -,· . ,. ·. GJ C.\:\IARO :J07 {'n~. auto 2·dr. air. Good (..'Ond: Sl295 SAVE $$$ ... CORV"", Cona. Good 1970 Dod•• ~-"e••er, V .,, ___ F_A_L_C __ N __ 1~·1' l .\D!l..L.\l nJ111t!I. t.ir . R•H 1 011.ner good I or n1ake otter. 546-8539. "" run uWtW ... -.., 1_
DODGE Sharp with all the_ Cll:lrRft
P.S., P .B .. P.W .. au· l.wd~
rack, nt'w brakes.
all", full ?J''' r, lea thl'r. ' ~\~~· ro~'"'d . 'lake oU~r. 931 'TI El Camino 11 ~ HOWARD Chavrol.t lit car, Clean. lttap. auto, P/1, virzyl roof, '63 6 cyl 4 Dr. Runnin& cond.
O.·Rler's Pl'll't:' S.'ZOIJ: :\I\ ,·,. \' h ' ; C \I ual ·1 ~:11 , Nowport Bo--&. A&k:ing Ula. 615-8153 air/cond. $1900. 563-7949. orla owner. Make offer. $795 • • •
pl'ICo' ~liOO. 61j-J9Uf.1 oi--· -1 • o. ... .. ' art mi es ..... power. ~n San Die&o Frwy at Avery 'n DODGE Challen....,.,· Must 54&-8186 .>ti-.~ ;o carnaro 3;,0, air, p/s, 637-I.Di MacArthur Blvd & Jamborff. Pkwy l...quna Nl&ulL CORVmE 1 ·~-· 1""=-=.,,.-;=,-;:-::-o;= '68 Ford 6 Pau · ' ~...:... .... ...;. I--------se I, xlnt cond!Uon, 17,(0) '60 Falcon Wag, 6 cyl, Stick. ·7:?-E:!('!.-1rn1!0 . LikC ne11 , I r10· \'inl lop, .l'0n:1'" C''iC., 19~ Cher? v:a· ~~· 'ioi(O) I =..,,.-=,,·!:-~~5~5..,.,_,_ ·:t'~ -..-vu ml. Prl. pty. 842-S57U l..DOks humble, Runs great.
tulh C'quippt"·rl. 19.000 n1i. 011' ni1. 0'1 ni · u r ~n y, m · pe co · l\o e 0 fer Dally Pilot Want Adi have ·n LINCOLN Cont1enta1, 4 '65 STINGRAY, new eng. & '69 Cba-r-A/C, AJT. -w $90. Buckl. SJ6..8400. Wagon ,
$-.,: .... c· Jl d· . ~·)1.5·30· 11('"' !ires. $1600. 4~-7755. 499-2789. 1o. ....... 1., ····-. d • _ .... _ .. , ·--·-"-••• •f't' '"""· a ays. · • j • I .7''7=.,.-,=~--~ ..... a .. ""'1: r, ~. uuu._'\INlte. trans, AM/FM. Rear nuags, tires. Yellow w/cream top. FORD After 6: 64&-9163. \\'ant ad n>sults · · · &f2..567S ~ttd a "Pad"? Pia« an ad! $4400. m.1m or 54.\-5609. P/W. Pvt. part)'. S52-8504 Beil offer. 963-2225
Autos, N&w 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO Autos, New 9IO ~utos, ..... 9IO Aut01, New 9'0 Aut• New 980 * ,70 MAVERICK *
11•ith rebullt engine & tran~
MAKE OFFER
TED'S MOTORS
BAUER BUICK
AS A PARTICIPATING MEMBER Of. THE
COSTA MESA'S HARBOR ,BOULEVARD ·Of CARS
This Is The Lasf Big Day, Hurry In, You May . Be A Winner
SPECIAL GRAND OPENING PRICES
J973 OPEL GT
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
" 1p1ed Iran<., tinted 1J ltn, AM..,r1dio, 1p1ci1I tport wh11l1, rtdining 111f1, coll •
,,,led headligllh. Opel'< b11I. eti'v1 on1 todey. (10441661.
53399 or $8213 '" M .... ...... Py111t.
1973 REGAL HARDTOP
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
1973 BUICK LE SABRE SPORT COUPE
S_pott ~OllPt. Po .. tr 1l11rin9 , PO!"'•' dist. br1k11, air conditioni119, whilt •t ll
l ir11, l1nt1d q i""· d1lure wheel toYtf1, bumper 9u1rd 1 I 1lrip1. Wo11't l11t 1t
0 111 low, low price. I lC 11188')
54395 or 511 119 '" M•"' leaM Pyint.
1973 ELECT A CUSTOM 4 DR. HDTP:
AM radio, whit1tw~ll l_ir11, ,,;, cend , tinted glen, po:_,, 18et, powtr wi ndows,
powtr b reke1, ~Ylomal1c tr~~I. ()H~79'122 l
55252 or 512925 '" M ....
I.MM ""''·
-•
•
. . , ......
WIN A 10-SPEED
BIKE!
w.1 ovr TMll COUPON ••cl ••f><'lli ;" pri1e l.eo et ••y H•rbor l•ul•••rcl
.t C.,. o..lw ... f•..-, 0 •• 1., ..,;N •••t<I • I0.1p••" l>lcy<I• •• , • ..,. luc~r
wi.-Mdri ••1 l'l'w•1d•y·Wt4"t•clt y·Th.wtul1y·Fti.it y, J•"••"Y 2J.14.11·Z•L o.. .......... , ..... ··~h ., • .,. ,,;, •••• ,."' ...... b. c1.,..111<1 i., 7:)1) , ..... .... 4fir. 'Jew """ ftol I>• p•Ht•t le,.;"· •• , .. ,,~ ... ••cu 1.ory. . ' .
36
NAME
ADDR.ESS .
Bauer Buick along with the other mombers
hne spent more than • year in planning
botter ways to '°'"'' you better through
organized efforts ••. come in during this
big <4 day kick-off and you'll agroo the
emphasis hos bHn put on courtesy -con·
venience -reliability.
r •
. 9UALITY
USED
.
CARS
'69 Buick Custom Skylork $1995 c,.. Auhunttle tr•nt.1 powtr 1ftt ri119,
powtr br•k•1, f•cfofl air, t riramtly cl••n,
I own•r, low 11'1ile1.
' '71 Buick Etloto Wa110ft $3895 9 P•11. FuU power, fethiry eb, roof rtek,
only 11,000 milts. It h•• t ¥oryfhin9 you
cen t+.lfllt ofl 191 7 EXAI ,
'61 Olds 98 $1895 4 door. Full p••••r A feclory eir.
tWXI' 7441
.
'71 Ja9u1r Vl2 $6495 l + 2. Only 19,000 mltt1. LI•• n••l Full
pow•r & f•ttory •Ir. 1711 DFA l
.
'70 Jo9u1r XJ6 $5995 Only 21,000 milos, Like now! f11tl powtr,
f•cfofl air. 1029 ISV l
'69 VW Bus $1695 J s•1t1, Like New! t 172 AKI
.
72 BUICK SKY LARK • $3395 Full po••r a f•ctory elr. Only 12,000
Mlt11. I 125 FENI
.
'72 Buick Rlvloro $4895 F11lly l111:11ry oq11l,. Fvll '°"'a f1ct•ry
elr, 60/40 •••ft, chtoll'l• whools, 1111 tt•rto,
Only 1 •,000 "'Hes.
'61 Oldt Cutla1t $1695 Fully equi,pM. llicl. feetory •ir, powor
1toerl117vfDwor breke1, li111kot •••ft, ewto. tr..... 4J91
'
'61 Riviera $1995 Full po•or I f•etory •Ir. IXIC 0671
•
2-DOOR
Gray finlah, black Interior.
auto. trans., air cond., loo·
milt'I. ~I * $1~*
DEAN
LEWIS
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Met• 646-9303
2014 Harbor Blvd.,
Coste Mesa
645-6644
"69 FORD 8 pa.gs. Chatead
Club \\'agon, long wheel
hase, fully equi pped
~·/radio, healer, nuto trani
fact.. air con<!.. xlnt In!,
fi ne cond .. good tire!. $251:>.
642-8372 Ask far t;Ir. Y~
torn.
'72 FORD Gran Torino, wgn.
351 cng., ps/pb, AC, h·SUS'P1
radio, 1'~, ClSY/irp, tint
glass. knit vinyl seats, g004
cond., 27.000 gel mi. Aski~
S3200. Pri/pty 84H738
66 FORD WAGON
lO·pa&aenger. V-8, auto, R/H,
2·w~ tall gate, good tires. * 5'0-3691 or 544-3411 *
1970 LTD. XJ01 ""'"'· P1s, ___ Ll_N_c_o_L_N_.......,;1
P/B, a.ir concl. Lo mlleage,
watta.nly $1850.
644-2259
'68 GALAXIE .2-dr. Fae air,
P /s, M , 390 cng, \'inyl
roof. Pvt ply. A1UST
SELL! ! 968--4339
CONT'L '70 Mark JI. A
ml'tlculowil,y kept. car. ~ mil~. all xtru. Sad Oruy $4895 (Ser. 74'0). BO\
Call <TI-4) 546-4.114 t '
MERCURY
GOOD Clean '68 Ford Coun·
try Sedan Wagon. Auto trds, P/S P/B, S800 firn1. -'69 LTD. 390CC, 2dr., y,•hJte,
j
blk vinyl top, deluxe Int, FIRST PRIZE .,,,..., !uU pwr. a;r, ou •
tires. $1350. 54&-8843 When yau drive this one ·"ss'""c"ALAX~7.o!E~"s1a=tlo"":--;w;;-"':::-home. your famlly will
500 429-V2-V.S efli. Alr· a11·enl you the flnlt prize.
power. Pvt pty. $1556. Very sn\art '72 PttARQUIS 4
642-3472 door harJJlop. Shimmering
blue. {{&IFQJ) $4289. lO '
1968 LTD W&.£On, alr/cond, DAY FREE TRIAL EX-J
P/S, P/B 10 pus. lo CHANCE.
mile .... rodhtl ""'" XI"\ GUSTAFSON cond. $1250. 642-4412
'69 LTD. A Beauty! 2 Dr. UNC MERC
HT. 400 Eng. f'Owt't. AtC, 16800 Beach at Warner,
Top c:ond. Make olter. Pvt Huntington Beach
ply. 644-1920 942-1944. (213) 592.5544
.. '57 FORD RANCHERO "Hom• of th• Viking" .
New engine &: brake• I · Needs trans. Oller. 645--7697 Sell Idle Items ... 642·58'711 I
Autos, UMCf 990 Autos, Used 990.
CLEARANCE
11 LTO IROUGMAM CPI.
VI Allt9, ,.S. ,,I , Air ..... . .. S4KUlt
11 MAVIRICK
' Crl Ec•nomr l uy .......... . ... KJC,P
70 MAV•RICK
4 CyL J SP'ff, "S ... r' . . , ... , ..... IMIOY
72 GAU.XIE 4 011:.
YI, At., ,S, Air . . ... INl' .. M
89 p~~101;~~C .. CPE .• ~~.~1.L~·E· .. ZUK1U
,.,~~l~'!,,~l~~~:: ............... . 1ttOCJ
72 MUSTANG MACH I
VI, A'tr.., Air, Ul1rp ..•.•.. tltl't:J
10 T·llllD LANDAU
Pill Ptwtr, "Air" , , ..... , 471Cl"U
72 OLOS CUTl.411 IUPRIMli:
L.Mllld, Air, llMI Ml. , .... . ... $44t:LT
11 ',H~~t!.i~U~·li··"· , ........... IUAIO
70 MOYA COUPI
'cr11na.r, A•"" Stotrll'lf .......... 14Kl"L
71 COMTIHIHTAL MAllK Ill
"L ...... ' ....... ~ ....... SlJCl"ll
89 ·~=~: .. ~.~~~.IS ·~--~~ .. Cl"~.l"Hl1t
... ~~0tH~ .. t .~~-~~:.~~I~~ .. ~~~ •ims
69 OLDS CUTLASS COU,I ............ . ....... .. .... n .r_~:,o .~~-'-~~.~~ ... ~~ ..... . ntAOU
72 l'OMTIAC VIHTUll..t. 11-Ut, VI Atlltt .. Air. ''Tiii• Ctr .... 10,Mt Ml ... "'"'u
12 '°NTIAC SAllAll.t-f ,, .. WI ... LHllM
TIIM W I• Liit H-1 .... 11 MU. UfllO
$3099
$1899
$999
$3899
$2899
$2699
$3699
$3099
$3499
$1199
$1699
$6799
$1799
$1299
$1499
$1199
$2 ..
$4411
12 PHTl~t MIM Cft~ w.,... 11Mt lltfllt e•a VI Air lltadl l"I Pl ......... .. .. tfJUt ..
10 POll.0 CUITOM $1.llMlli YI, A--~ ,,, Atr Cllfllll , .. • .... t'110U WV
$199
• •
80
,
•
•
t.,
"'
• ''
u
4
~· ..
'
-~;:.--,DAIL V PILOT 45
JUST ARRIVED . CARLOA DS & CARLOADS OF FACTORY FRESH
BRAND NEW 1973 PONTIACS!
UMlllS
2 Door
HARDTO' COUPI
FULL T EQUIPPED WITH
Ill.. NII
NEW 1973 PONTIAC
YINTUU
HATCH BACK
COUPE
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH
'
DRAND
NEW 1973 PO~TIAC
LEMANS SAFARI
3 S.Ot, 9 Passenger
STATION WAGON
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH
FIUllRD
2-Doo<
SPORT COUP£
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH
Power steering, factory air conditioning, tur· VS, power steerin9, pow er disc brakes,
bo hyCro, automatic trans., AM radio, heater, rally II wheels, console, AM radio, tinted
Automatic trans., power steering, heater,
defroster, seat belts, deluxe steering whe"el,
etc. !Ser. 2D37D3Z100451
Power steering, bumper guards, bumper
stripes, accent stripes, deluxe steering wheel,
etc., etc. !Ser. 2Y17D3l1088291 2 b"rl. 400 eng., bumper guords (front & gloss, v;nyl str;pes. (2S87MJNI 1101 6)
4 FULL $1 etc.(Sec475R3Z19101101 FULL $3425 FllLL
PRICE PRICE PRICE ----------
WE'RE LOADED WITH THE FINEST SELECTION OF USED CARS ! !
'72 OLDS $4199 91 Cp1. load1d. Full power, f1 ctory
1ir. !1 600Tll
'68 CATALINA $1499 4 Or. H.T. F,.11 power, f1ciory 1ir.
t68lCCG!
'69 GTO $1799 4 1p11d, radio incl h11!1r. IZDY5621
'71 MONTER!Y $2699 4 Or. H.T. A11tom1tic, ¥8, power
window1, 1ir c:ond., vinvl top.
! 156COJ!
~~~ p:~e~~:,?.; a~l;o~~r win· $2499 do•• & '"'" AM/FM ,,,., • .,d;o.
IX8Et15) Kelley 1u99e1ted t•lail $2900
Sile price -
DAVE
ROSS
'72 FIREBIRD $3299 0111 rt b1i91 with m•tching interior,
1conomy 6 cylinder, pow1r 1te1rin9,
1utom1tic. l061'EK RI
'70 GRAND PRIX ~599 Gr11n with bl1ck vinyl top. Power
window1, f1clory air concfjtionin9.
(842AU0l
'70 ELDORADO COUPE $4899 Lo1d1d. Miners gold With bleck vinyl
top. !lllBBKI
'71 DODGE $2999 Yo Ton Vin. VB, 1utom1iic, 1p1ci1I
p1int. ()(]7107 )
'72 COLONY PARK $4699 W•9on. Lo mile19e. Full power, fac.
tory 1ir, roof raclr, e•cell1nt condi·
lion. (021FSD J '
MONTH-END
SAL!' PRICES
'68 THUNDERBIRD
Full power, f1etorv 1ir condition·
il'lg. (I 19ASEI
'71 CATALINA
4 Door. H1rdiop. F11ll pow1r, 1ir
cond., vinyl top. (]l llEKSI
'69 JAGUAR XKE
Silv•r, auto .. wire wh•el1, •ir cond.
1412EOMl
'67 RIVIERA
Air conditioning, cu 1fom interior,
vinyl top. (tlSFIMJ
'73 CORVETTE
Hardtop coupe , Fwl: power, f1 c1'ery
•it, cu1to1r1 leeffiet interior, AM/
FM Stereo. 424, VI.
s3999
$1599
DRIVE
DT!
All Sale Prices Effective thru Mond•y, January 29, 1973
l V1 MILE SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
OPEN 7 1>A YS A WEEK
'70 FIAT SPYDER
Ro1d1t1r. AM/FM r1dio, 14,000
mi111. !l84EPCJ Kelley 1u9911t1d
11t1il $1640.
'70 FORD TORINO $179 Convertibl•. Va , pow•r 1t•erin9, fee· 9
tory air, powd•r blue/new white h>p.
t 122ASQ) K1ll1Y uu1911t1d r•lail $2105.
'71 PONTIAC WAGON $3399 'pa111n91 r. va. a utomatic, pow••
1h11rl n9, air cond., low milea91.
! 25245UXlOtl501
'71 DATSUN PICKUP' $1799 Do9 Hou•• camper. M~g whe1!1,
radio, heater.! 141AVE ) K1U1v 1u9·
911t1d retail $1980.
'70 JEEP WAGONEER $3499 4 wh11l drive. Cui!om, VB, 1ulo-
"1itic, P.S., air cond .. like new, ( 762-
BQJ 1Kelley 1u9911ted reteil $1810.
8:30 A.M. to 10:00 P.M. SUN. 11 A.M. to 9 P.M •
;4utos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 ~utos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, sed 990 Autos, Used ''"1-------
1 MERCUl!J.
•
MUSTANG
'67 Mustang-289 VS, auto,
P/s, air. Clean, lo n1i. Call
644-2881
·n l\1ustang, xlnt cone!, fac
air, Am·F'm, fac tape deck.
Electric Trunk? ,,;v. ''"'· $2388. 962-51"5
PONTIAC
LE r>1ANS '68 p/s p/b a/c,
tilt/11h., am/hn radio,
aulo, landau-top, 1· e n r
lender damaged, pri., $815.
847-£383.
VEGA ·
~
EYEBROWS UP
RAMBLER
'6'1 Rambler Station WaJtQn.
Needs work. $275 or best of.
ll'r. Ph. 6'12-1347 aft Spm
wkdan; aft 2 on Sat's,
T·BIRD
T-BIRD
•n T-BIRD
Private Party
Ve• there., pow« io the OLDSMOBILE tru'nk along 1v\th other 1---------
: powerful features on the '72 * OLDS '70 Cutlass Supreme 1 MARQUIS BROUGHAM 2 Coupe. air <.'Ond, am/fin
'67 FIREBIRD -400, by orig
owner, xlnt cone!. Loaded.
Air, sle!'C'O 1ape deck, p111r
brks, s1eering gold
11•/black top. S.lt-4119
Lcr-.fanns '66, bkt seats, auto,
pv.T, nu ti~s. Rill o./c.
best offl•r. 540-4800 bcf 9:30,
f or this '71 G.T. VEGA '70 T Bird, Sunroor, every
hatchback. . Pet;fect , , for factory option, P erfect!
Southf.>rn Cahforn1a dnv1ng, $3200 548-5609
thls AIR CONDITIONED 4 . · '
Dark saddle leather interior.
Spec:ial order walnut lire
body & wheel covel'9 w/con-lrasting 1exrured vinyl top
460 cu. in. engine, cruise
control, tilt steering v.•heel,
AM /FM Sll't'OO radio & all
avail JX)W'er options. $4700.
or make otter. Eves after
6 PM 838-7869. : door hardtop. It's yours for stereo. mint cond. lo
onl y $4389. 10 DAY FREE mileage S2450, 644-2750
speed is only $1499. 1969 Thunderbird, ful l pwr &
t76tDLSl 10 DAY F REE alr. Very good cone!. $1695
· TRIAL EXCHANGE. 644-2566 aft 4. TRIAL EXCHANGE. 499-3969 Classified Ads , , , 642·5678 1~-~~---~=
GUSTAFSON '10 OLDS. 442 PS, Pwc dJ,c RAMBLER GUSTAFSON
LINC MERC bcks. -" "'"'"· SHll """" --------LINC MERC fact 1varranty. Orig oivn. "6-l Rambler 2dr, nu paint &
16800 Beach at \Varnher, S243Cl. H.B. 536-4483 upholstl' .... ' xlnt cond. has 16800 Beach at \Varner, Huntington Beac '·· I' · Be h 142.8844 e (213) 592-5544 '68 DELTA 88 Olds, 1 owner, clu1rh. 962-43156 afl 5~ 111nttngton ar ~Hom• of the Viking'' top condition. Sl~. Like lo trade'.' Our Trader's 842-8844 e (213) 592.5544
1 ~~~~646-8=,'-'l-"48~,_.= Paradise column is for yol!_! "Home of the Viking.:_
PA"" Marcu'"" Sta. \Vagon '68 F'-85, a ir cond, P/S, Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 ~ •.r P/B good tires. Orig I p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ j 970. By owner. $1970. owner. $850. '548-4240 aft 5. II
11Green w/redwood sides, ugpge rack. 34,<KXI local '68 CUTLASS, R&H. fact air,
1 eti. A-1 com!. 548-5703, I owner, XI. cond $!195
S.E. 1'1esa Dr, Upper 683-35217 833--8486
,say ·s.i OLDS 88, full pov.·cr, air, r xlnt tires, dented lender.
·,~ MUST ANG S300 54&-9205
·-'68 Olds Delta 88. 4 dr hrdtp, MUSTANGS air, pwr & stereo. $1150. Pvt .;t the pty. Eves/wknds 54!Hll80.
BEACH PINTO
, thru '10, from RVR 358,
•lonly $9!)5, Why wait.
:' ~it 1Jnqun1s
000 w. C.Qlll ~ __ ... _
mi's,
pale
auto.
QUICK-CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
I 642-5678
PINTO • ·n 2 DR. Sedan. 4
tpcl. Low nii. 2000 CC. Xlnt
cond. $1500/olr. 842-1225.
'72 Wag -blue, like new. AC,
rlh. tntd glass, cust Int.,
tst $2450 lakes. ~
PLYMOUTH
~
EVERYTHING
YOU NEED
Jn the \\'ll)' of power in thlt
loaded '68 PLYMOtrm 2
door. Cl.ean and com·
Jortable, unbe.lK!"·ably prlc·
ed at $889. Hurry please,
our used car !lWlal't wanls
this one for his wife.
(XDX943). 10 DAY FREE
TRIAL EXCJ<IANGE.
GUSTAFSON
LINC MERC
lta:IO Beach at Warner,
ltunrll\lll'.m Bear.h 142-1144. (213 ) 592..5544
"Home of the Viking''
CLEAN 4-<ir Valiant . Prlv
pt)'. C.ood rub. U H, auto.
$400. 548-3613 ·wknds
PONTIAC
'63 cataJJni 2 Dr hd top,
au tom, air, r/h, p/&, p/b.
Good """'· $1195. 49Hl.15.
'68 GTO, air cond.. PS/PB,
vtnyl roof, .. l owner, 1<>'11' mi. &!>--
OUR HUGE EXPANSION
IS DUE TO OUR
CUSTOMER RELATIONS
PACKAGE •.•• and
0
r : ~;._...__~
EFFICIENCY
is p~rt of th~ package •••
Person•I ettention to details, prompt finencing
arrangements, and quick, dependable 1ervice
before and after you buy ... Thet'1 what we
mean by efficien.-;y ... ind lt's all part of the
peclrege when you buy your new c•r frorn
Sun11t Ford. ~
"THANK YOU ORANGE COUNTY"
Sun1et Ford sold 6,8t7 cits in 1971
~ "There Must a. I Reason"
970 Autos, Imported 970
Savings for you
72 DATSUN 510 '70 DATSUN 510
2 Door Seden. 4 1peed, • Door, lilre "'" aulo
r•dlo, healet, vinyl ro of only 19,000 mil•1. Hurry
1eh off the beauty of it'1 011 th i1 one ..._ only
Ora119e bodv, j111f 17,000 $1595 mile1. 1219 FUI
$2095 '70 vw
'72 DATSUN DUNEBUGGY
1200 FASTBACK Re•I mod, e•t•ll111t c.ond,
4 tpd., redio, heal••, vi11y/ 1910 ETVI
roof, 1trilri119 or•nlJ• with $1995
bleck roof, top ~cond.
1910 ETVI 71 DATSUN 240Z
$1995 lri9ht 8rJtl1h Reci n9
Green, He1 me91, bump·
71 DATSUN PU ff 9uard1, radto, h•••••·
A herd to find I ' flatb.d 27,000 mllei. 1621 CZCI
with 0Yfflir1 mirrors, ra· $3895
dio, heat••· Fini for 1i •• ...,
.!11ty WOflr, 169114HI '71 DATSUN
$1995 WAGON
Auto. "'"'" r1dio .....
'70 VW CAMPER heeler -A f111e car for
Fully equipp.d -""' ••• family '"'•' n1t11h
1raet,. Gtt , •• d y lol room. Lo mil11 -Oran9e
vacation trip• 111 ihlt 011e In color.
-only $2099 $1999 '63 DATSUN
'72 DATSUN PICK·UP ~~tr~~~~. heel·
Her•'• e little racl beeuty
wltt. e whit• te11n•w co••
e , roof rt clr, C.nery yel· ... "'" ''••n -runt
low -Ju1t 11,000 ll't il11 9reet -• cl•11ic for only
$2399 $795
75 more fine used cert, campert, P.U.'t
& 1tatlon w•gons to chooM from
Garden Grove Datsun
l:ltol Htr"J!r Blvd., Garden Grova . * 534-1255 *
WHAT'S A MATADOR?
··~· ' Only The Winning
Cir In The Winston
Western 500 -Mark
Donahue's 1973 Matador
I\ Out Powered & Out Performed
All Other Competition.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY n
1973 TRANS-AM JAVELIN
BRAND N W 1973
HORNET HATCHBACK
l Door Fully Ftclory ~qu i pped.
CADER YOURS TODAY W• w .. -Now YM WI•
s2599 Nt Im. CM ... '-
M .. wi..it .... 110a17 ---
BIG SAVINGS ON TRADE • INS !
'71 FORD '70 HORNET '70 GREMLIN
·MACH I MUSTANG A I , co11dlfio11i119, 111 11 cl Me9 whe•l1, ) on lfle
'Y111ry low l'l'li111. ft•cy llwe f.ower tl•1rln9. All ••tel· floo,. l lG 6, jelly 9•1•11
finlth, Me9 wheel1, (791 · ent l>vy. ( 6•1 AFW I fh1l1h. A "Mutt S1111" to
FLWI s1595 eppr•ci•I•. I 541 IEWI
$2695 $1795
'69 CHRYSLER '61 FORD '63 RAMBLER
Town I Ceuntry Stetion PICKUP
W::o.11. f11ll power, air Fir• •ntine tfd flni1h and llDAN
co ., Low low l'lil1111, E1· 111 ••ceUenl condition, E .. :ell•11t Tren1portetie11,
h• nice w•9011, I YID· 1116121 llEG 5921
774 11 $695 s395 $2095
\ '
•
.16 DAILY PH.OT Friday, Janu.vy 26, 1~73 ~--~~~~--'--'--
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COSTA 'MESA'S H RBOR BOULEY . . . t •
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A LOOK FOR THIS . EMBLEM · · .
N AT THESE COSTA· MESA
D
I +-• DEALERS
E + •• . .
G .. .0
..
• Bauer Buick • . .
F
ll
E
·. + 2925 Harbor Blvd.
.,:.. Connell Chevrolet . . ' " + 2828 Harbor Blvd.
E w Costa Mesa Datsun
A 2845 Harbor Blvd. y
A
N
·D ·,
Dave· Ross Pontiac ·. . •• •
. 2480 Halior Btvd. • • • +
Johnson & son Lincoln-Mere. : . t
2626 Haibof ih,d.
·N Miilcle Mam . t • E w
, p
•
21 so Haw aw. . Nabers Ca~
. .
0
R
T
• 2600 Hwbw B1M.
n.lore Rolins hnl -.
• l060H.W ....
-,-University .~ ·
Jeff.Haw M •
•
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START OF SOMET
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1i9tw1een the San Die«JO
levard·in Costa Mesa,
"zed dealer for virtually
in the world. You'll find
models and over 2000 fine
Immediate delivery •• '. over
ice and repair bays •• " over
of parts departments tllClt
lion worth of parts " ... over 500
'automotive technicians • • • and w It's al put tocJether throuCJh a
've effort to serve you better
,,..,_ver been served before. Visit Harbor
Of Cars and experience the epitome'
RTESY e CONVENIENCE
REUABILITY
WIN A l O·SPEID BIKE!
t
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WE HAYE PRICE
PROTECTION for YOU
News Ana lyst's ·predict .as much
us $200 price increase SOO N!
ON A NEW CAR OF · YOUR CHOICE
'
Brand New CHEVROLET 3,4 Ton
PICKUP
8 foot bed, VS en· ............................... ._
, ' 9ine, stick shift, hea· _..
vy du ty c o o I i n g ,
camper mirrors.
I I 35 I 84 1
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
·:::D 1973
IMPALA
CUSTOM COUPE
Tinted 9ass, power disc brakes, 400 cu. in.
HATC HBACK
Brand New Nova
HATCHBACK
VS , turbo, power steering, WSW, air
cond., rad io, clock. TAKE TH IS ON E
HOME. I 128982 1
5.3895 '
3 speed 'transmission, tinted glass,s 209·
emission conrtol devices. YES , IT !S
A BRAND NEW 1973 . ( 154530)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
Brand New ELCAMINO COUPE
Tinted glass. ,;, condi-
tio11i119, power di•t ·
lir•ke1 & •l•erin9, tur·
bo, w1w , ewl1rior di-
e.or. I tl8b62 l.
s 2 ·IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY ,.
'fl
-,
VS, power
1tl!l!rin9, r.•dio,
white wdll l i,,n, d•t or
pk9. !40~028 !
I . ' II 73 s at 1972 PRICES!H---/\(;,
IMMEDIATE
lllELI VE~Y
100~~ Mechanical Warranty · -· 30 Days & pt::~R ON ALL ADVERTISED USED CARS
'68 FORD MUSTANG
Goupe. 35 ,350 careful miles. b cyl., power
steering, automatic, superior car. (XOZ-
153 1
51499
'68 PLYMOUTH ·-b passenger wagon. VB, air cond., power
steering, a utomdt ic, sure nice. (XJH050 )
51399
'69 PONTIAC LE MANS
H.T. CP-f.,. VB , automatic, vinyl roof, power
steerin g, bucket seats, radio, air, power
windows. Nice car. (060AGE )
51999
'67 MERCURY COUGAR
I owner. 49,900 miles. Power steering, au·
tometic, V8. Sure is nice. !YCN086l
51499
~-
'68 MERCURY COUGAR
V8, power steering, air cond., automatic
trdn1., real fresh Car. IX DB72 3J .
51899
'69 CHEV. CAPRICE '72 VEGA GT '67 CHEVY Y2 TON
Cpe .. VS , tape player,_ radio, auto:, power Cpe. 17,000 miles. Mint condition. 4 speed, Pickup. VS, stick, radio. Good truck. (V97.
steering & brake1, vinyl roof, air cond. radio. ! bl I EHC I 460 )
Su per sharp. ! ZPL7b2 l
52199 52199 51299
'67 MUSTANG '70 CAMARO COUPE '71 MONTE CARLO '67 GMC Y2 TON
. • . .,J VB , orange with black interior and roof. C':!upe. VS , power steering & brakes, au-. . , .
VS, coupe....._Air....condition•ng, -powel'--$teer--Power Sli'ii'ing, autcr.;tiir cond. Beautiful. tomatic,-a-t11;ond-;;-vinyl roof, fha-,.p:---1 tb-6-_Pi.ck.up. Yi~.kJ.h.1ft, r1_d10. i miles.
ing, 57,000 miles. !Good ca r.) !UDBI 10 ) (033BTM J . DQ ll IQ9B7b3 )
51499 52999 52 99 , 51699
'70 FORD TORINO
Coupe. VB, automatic, power steering end
brakes. (01 5BEP l
51699
'70 CHEV. KINGSWOOD 'T2 C EVY Y2 TON '71 FORD 1 TON
Estate wagon. Be1t one, 350 cu. in. V8, p· k A t . , d" Duel rear, 14 ft, stake body bO'' stakes · p S p B I k d' 1 2b 000 1c up. u om~t 1c , power steering, ra to. VS 4 d l 7 .1 ' R I ' air, .. , .. , roo rac , re 10, au o, , Sh I VS ! I lbOSK I , spee , 6, 14 mi es. ea strong
careful miles. Showroom fresh. 1141 CXWJ owroom c ean. · truck. Ready for work. I 72304H I
53399 52 99 · 53199
'67 CHEV. IMPALA '73 MONTE CARLO '71 FORD% TON '72 CHE VY 3A TON
6 pass. Wagon. Good miles. This wagon Cpe. 2600 miles. White with maroon inter., Pickup. VB, aulometic, ra dio, H.D. camp-Carry•ll Suburban. 3 seats , air cond., P.S.,
is super cleen. New rubber, a ir, power bucket seats, console, AM-FM, aUto., 350 er equi pment, C!.stom cab, 17,237 miles, VB, cu1fom in terior, radio, like brand new.
,1 .. ,;•iisiJ9 . ~:~-j~;t:ss:~~Ulw•n'"ty, ,;,,r •oof. ls73$GI 9 ' 179539 9 -~ -_44g9 -
* VISIT OU~ SERVICE DEPT. Where GooJI -servict MAKES F11ENDS-: *
r '
'
OA!!. Y PILOT January Jq7)
Join Us During The "GRAND OPENING OF THE HARBOR BOULEVA~D OF CARS" Thru Friday Night, Jan. 26th. Register
FRE E today to win a 10 speed bike. One given each evening at 8 p.m.
·Ail ~EW 1973
OMEG
AIR COND IT ION ING
1 282703_ ----
1969
DELTA
..
lllRAND 19 NEW ·
m---
CUTLASiS
52 66 54
1969
D01DGE
1971
VEGA ' S,&.c,OO M'<llD.~ :i•)!ifllCO r~~
~~ C{lfS'Qlo ~~ · ~10.
TAKE
YOUR
CHOICE Royale. Full power, temp. control air.
1271FBD I
Pol ard. Automatic, fut power, air
cond. 1271 FBD I
Factory equipped, radio, heater.
l 966DLLI
36 paymen,·s of $39.1 1 on approved credit. Deferred
paymen? $1473.96 incl. taz, license cr;d o'I finance
char9es. ANN UAi. FE~CENTAGF. !'!ATE 11.08°0.
T KE
YOUR
CHOICE
1967 .1967 1968 s
l'luslang
L.S. R•d;o, He•+e,, A,to. A;,, R•d;o A,d FULL P Fully factory eq ui pped.
ITYV648 1
fal-.UA L CL~ARANCE
1972 H01NDAS
Come in and see how far we are
w illing to so t o clear them out •
. ORA GIE COUNTY'S
· No. i fto!o nda Car Dealer
Air, Vinyl Top. !TTT 118 ) Heater. !649 BN Pl
'66 ~~~T~~.~ V~, .t, a~toma· $'366
tk. (ZNM 549)
'66 VOLKSWAGEN
Factory equipped. t RV0907 l
'68 f~,E~RT~~~o, heater, air. $866
P. steering. (VVO 393)
'69 ~l!~_' :.~:?!.1ic, P.S., $866
radio, heater. (715 EIM)
'70 TOYOTA Fully factory equipped.
I BI SAUJ I
'68 e1~?0~.~~;,~o~duPE $966 SER VICE --PARTS--BODY SHOP
IWID8771 -oPEN 1 1----------1· '• '69 DODGE CAMPER $1466 11--~0-E~;!;~;~~-PCamp•_'. --I SA TUR D A.
'70 ~~~u~!.~i~,~worllooring,$1266 7!30 'TflL s.•30 radio, heater. {562 BFE) .., If
' I
E
J
-
I
_f_r1d_•Y._J"_uary_2&_. 1_073 ____ O~LY P_ILOT 48~
I >
•
-~
--. "
e::;D _-'73 DODGE .
SWINGER -~ ~·-~.
SPECIAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP
Full Factory equipped
Order Your1 Now
$199 DOWN $73 MONTH $2288 FULL n PRICE
\!9' .. fO<ol<t.: .... 113~ .. ...
......... ..,1 ........... .. .... ..., .• , ... ~ .... _ """"
'-' lt ... OtlHrN ~''"' ,.<• 12'11 old,., I lir.,..
AHl'IU•I rrt(fl(TAG! ~Al!
!G,S1'\
BRAND
NEW '73DODGE VAN
109" wheelbase plus lull
fact ory equipment.
(811AB3V022759).
·-:::r!!:y·· $2688 ~~H:. I. LICfNS.l ...
I
TAKE I
YOUR
CHOICE
'.72 COLT·
2 DOOR HARDTOP ' .
4 speed trons., radio and heater. (787FFF)
COLOR IV
DRAWINGS .
3P.M.
Saturd~y & Sunday
Jan. 27th & Jan. 28th
'72VEGA
HATCHBACK
Automat ic trans., radio and heoter.
(672EHN)
BRAND
NEW
'73-DODG E
TR UCK
FUL LY FACTORY EQUIPPED
Ord er Yours Now
FOR 36
MONTHS
--,,.,. .. , ,., I<"''" ' ............ ...,,, .. _
""·' ••• l• ... , o ...... .
"'"'''~•\1'1 1 ... , ... . a..,,. ~I.I •UICl~INOI
U T! IOtS'
. 2 DOOR HARDTOP
fully factory Equipired
Order Yours Now
FOR 36 $199 DOWN $84 A MONTH· . MONTHS $2 588 ? •-IHt11!otol0•~1 •jil, . FULL l 101o1..., .• ,"~ •Kl ... 1 • .,,..
' .-1 '""'""" '""g" ... -" td" 101 J6 "'"'· Doit<rod . PRICE ..... ,, ... ,,,, .. , "" i;...,,. AIHJAI Pl'C~IACf
IAI! 11-ll ._
'72DODGE
CHALLENGER
2 · Door Hardtop. Fully factory equipped. Low
mileage. ( l 96FFH)
$1388 FULL . _ PRICE
$199 DOWN
$42AMONTH
FOR 3, MONTHS
$199 Ii rollll do p~mt $41 " lotul mo pym1 11d.10•. 1;.:~,. & a~ e'"'Y·
itig d•O•iH M Qllpf, ufd,1 f"' 36 mo .. IHl1ned p~ml Pl''~ $17! 1 11111_
tor i.I""'" ANNOALP!RCI N!AGlRAT£9,90'• \
"72 TOYOTA$
1
•• , .... ~:.~!!~ppod 1388
tS06ESHJ. . PULL PRICE
COURTESY DODGE
The Walking Man's Friend
'70TOYOTA
STA.WAG.
4 Speed transmission, radio and heater.
• (224BXC). FULL PRICI
'69 MUSTANG$ · '68 PLYM.
2 Dr. Hardtop · 7 88 v-a""'"~"'~~fo•"'""'"
V-8, Radio, heater and bucket seots. (XIH729) · (WS0828).
· .. • PULL PRICI
'72DODGE
MONACO
Auto. Irons., power steering , power brakes,
electric window;, air conditioning, 'lpeed con.
lrol, radio, heoter. {S8SDZK)
'70DODGE
VAN
Full fatlory eqipped incl uding radio &
heoter. (93909£)
$1188
'69PONTIAC
\ v.e: oufO. Irons.; oir condilioni~, power sleer-
in11 ond power brakes, radio and heater
\2S2699xl0052\I. ·
·wt • APPRECIATE
YOUR
IUSIN£SS
l
FULL PRICI
/
V-8, radio end heater ond more (WOKI 48).
'67TOYOTA
2·DOOR
Radio, heater, full fac tory equipped. (XSFS31J.
'67YOLKS
BUG
4 Speed trans .. , rod,19. heater. (237fFJ)
•
FULL PRICI
FULLPRICI
$288
.PULLPRICI
' •
'67COUGAR
. 2·DOOR
V-8, auto. Irons., power stetrinv, radio, heal-
er. (903EAE)
'71 PINTO
2DOOR • •
4 Speed, radio, heater. (436BUKJ.
'67FORD
SUPER VAN
ful l facto ry equ ipped and ready 10 11a
(El6AH86821 l 1 ).
'JI.PEUGEOT
2·DOOR
4 speed tnins., radio ortd heotff'. (271 DCK) • I
•
FULL PRICI
FULL PRICI
$48-8
PULL PRICI
~
.• . . . • . .
•
-/
' I
.. x
' '
OVER 100
1973 PINTOS IN STOCK
TAKE YOUR PICK
. $1866 .
4 Spd., h.•ttr, di•. gu•rcll, viny l
trim, b ... c: .. •t •••h. I lR I OW 132959 I
GRAN TORINO 2 DR
VI, com .. •ir, pow. itr., pow. brt,
T/6 ., r•dio, plu1. (lAlOFl741 40l
FORD G~M.
'6'/ CHEVY CAMARO
AMERICA'S
sE C L1:i·s~ATION
WAGON IS FORD
53999
OVER IO
1973 FOROS IN STOCK
BRAND NEW '73 FORD $3499 .
VI, (Clll\., redio, h••Mr, tint. glt 11,
rtm. mirror, ( lJSJHI 0 1715 1)
\II, com., r•dio, lietltr, •tint gl.,
w/1/w, plu1 Mor•. (lJ72SI 115011
IMeORIS
'68 OPEL STATION WAGON .
FRI.· SAT.· SUN.
J.AN.' 26 • 27 • 28
ONLY.
Our truck prices are
so low, you won't be·
lleve it unless yo.u
come in & get it in
writing. See us now!
IRW:KS-VANS --·-·-···---
'67 FORD f..100
. .
'67 FORD W AGON
VS, radio, heater, automatic, pow-
er steerin9 , good miles. I UJC220 I
H.T. V-8, rad io, heater, 4 spd.,
Good miles. IVCK421 I $107.3 ~~~~9 ihi°i""• 4 spH d, good_ miles. ,73 ~:~;~~· 1 J:ol~~~io, h .. t .. , euto· $13 73 .
1------------------1-------------------'66 MUSTANG HARDTOP
R•dio, heater, vinyl roof, good
miles. I SKBS l I )
'71 FORD GALAXIE
H.T. R&H, •uto., P.S., •ir cond.,
vinyl roof, good miles. (996CQLI
'72 LTD BROUGHAM
4 Or. H.T. VS , R&H, P.S., P-win-
dows & seat, vinyl roof, air. !087-
EOll .
'71 T-BIRD LANDAU
Power steering, brakes, windows,
seats, •ir condition ing, low miles.
I 125CCM I
'70 TORIN() 4 DR. H.T.
V8 , auto., P.S., air, AM .FM, vinyl
roof, pwr. seaf & win dows. 1025-
0LJ I
'70 GALAXIE 500
2 Dr. H.T. VS, automatic, radio,
heater, P.S., air, fa ct . warr. ava il.
l85lACOI
'72 TORINO 2 DR. H.T.
Radio, heater, a utomatic, power
steering, vinyl roof, low miles.
l985EOl I
'71 MUSTANG HARDTOP
VB, radio, heater, a utomatic, P.S., $2773
vinyl roof, good miles. {950CID !
....... ---· ~
'67 CAMARO S.S.
'-Or. H.T. R•dio, he•t •r, automat-
ic, pow er steering, vinyl roof, air.
ITYGl 941
'72 PONTIAC GRAND VILLE
H.T. Redio, h .. t.,, .Jto., •ir, pow-s3773
er windows, vin yl roof, low miles. .
I 179E fGI
'68 MALIBU HARDTOP
R•dio, heater, automatic, p~wer $1273
steering, VS , air cond., good miles. ,
IXBH 494l
'69 OLDS CUTLASS
Convert. Radio, heater, automatic,
power steering, air cond., good
miles. IZNV90l }
'69 CADILLAC EL DORADO
Full pow" eod ~eclory ,;, coo· $3673
ditioning. I 142ET8 1
'70 MALIBU 2 DR. H.T.
Radio , heater, auto., power steer-
ing, air cond., chrome ri ms. (879-
BIM I
'69 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Radio, he1ter, automatic, full pow-
er, air cond., vinyl roof, good
":"Iii es. I 348875 ) $2173
TAX REFUND DUE?
Why Wait. Buy Now-Pay Later.
I, •
' .
'70 V.W. SQ. BACK . '70 DATSUN PICKUP
4 speed, radio, heater, lo w miles.
British 9 re en. l377BEV I
$1373 4 sp••d, 9ood miles, new paint,
new tir•s. ( SOOBQG )
-
'71 DATSUN WAGON
~adio, heilter, 4 speed, red. G ood
miles. l471Cl0 )
'69 V.W. 9 PASSE~GER
Wagon.. 4 speed, radio, heater, $1.673
good miles. IZOTl29 l
'71 DATSUN WAGON
Air cond., radio, heater, good
miles. ll690LHI ·
'68 CHRYSLER NEWPORT
Custom 4 D .. H.T. Full power,,;, $1173
cond., good mil es. IZOM4441
'68 CHRYSLER 300
4 Or. H.T. Full power, air con.,
good miles. I WIE359 J
'69 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. H.T.
VB, a uto., R&H, air con d., P.S.,
vinyl roof. IYXV1 06)
'
$137~3
r
I
'69 DODGE Vl~ TON
Picltup. 6 cyl,. J speed, redio,
heater, eppx. 29,000 miles. 1164.
48E I •
•
~573 . '
'67 TOYOTA LANDCRUISER ,
4 x '4. 4 wheel drive, good miles,
new paint. ( 674DZK I
'69 CHEV. 112 TON
Pickup. VS, automatic, P:sJ, heat.
er, new paint. Good miles. 1284-
·:oC I
~67J ·
'72 FORD F250 W /CAMPER
VS, auto., P.S., 8' cab over camp-
er. 1107GBI I
'71 FORD F250
VS, R&H , auto., P.S., 1ir. l319-
2~H I
OFFER
? •
MAKE
OFFER
'72 BRONCO 4 WHL DR.
Sport wagon. Rad io, heater, low
mil es. I 12189LI
@;1: ---·--· '. __ .,. ----
PAIR SDYICI HOU•S ,_ ... ..... ,_ ,,.,, .. ......
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San (;Ieniente
(;apistrano
,VOL 66, NQ. 26, ~ SECTIONS, 50 PAGES
•"
EDl'TION
•
Today's Final
.N.Y. Stocks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
Huntingtoll Explorer Weds 'Cannibal' Chief
Wyn Sargent, an explorer and an--
lhropologlsl from Hunllngton Harbour
who bas been stlidying the se.1.ual Jlfe of
tribes In West lrian, has married the
chief of one or the tribes, the West Irlan
military c:ommand said today.
Ml!! Sargent's local address is 4001
Morning Star Drive, HWltington Beach.
!f'lie U-year-old divoreee married Chief
Obabirok Jan. 8 In a tribal ceremony,
giving him 11 plgs and five cloth head·
dresses a11 a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjooo
said in West lrian, a remote province in
Indooesla.
Chief .Oba.harok. who was'said to have
several other wives, reportedly heads a
cannibal tribe~
lo the past 8 photcrjournalist , Miss
Sargent left Huntington Beach in October
to study and photograph cannibal tribel
in the Baliem Valley, a jungle area In the ."
~art oI West Irian.
Sbe bas traveled extensively in the
South Pacific and other lands. In 1968,
she found a Dyak village in the
Indonesian jungles of BonlOO in need of
medical, educational and agricultural
help.
Coming back to the states, she locally
organ~ the Sargent-Dyalt Fuild Inc. to
get relief for the primitive people.
In addition cargoes of p l g s,
goats and chic.keDs, sbe was reported to
have taken six tons of medicine, three
motorboats, and tigricullural equipment
to the village. ·
Upon her return to Huntington Beach
in early 197q, she spoke of her adventures
before a class at Harbour View Elemen·
lary School.
"ll was an incredible dream and an
impossible journey," she was quoted in
lhe DAILY PlLCYr.
"We stt.nd a very good chance or mak·
ing the ugly American respected again,"
she told the children who had helped
•
purchase 5,000 books for a sister school
in the jungle.
Re;>0rts that after her rnost recent
marriage to the tribal chief she vowed to
shed her \Veste:n clothes and dress only
in strings and straps· of the nati\'es
brought quick objections from officials in
\Vamena , West lrian headquarters.
They.said that her actions might upset
their plans lo "civilize" the tribe's people
in a program called Operation Koteka.
The <.im oC the tv.-o-year program is to
put clothes on the natives. introduce
them to a mo.1ey economy and teach
1'.em to ::peak. read and '>l.'rite the
Indonesian language.
A Jakarta, Indonesia, newspaper.
"Serita Buana," reportedly ran a·
photogr;iph of Miss S!lrgent and Chief
Obaharok. She was wearing jeans and a
sh irt and he a koteka. a kind of G-string.
The U.S. Embassy in Indonesia said it
had no information on the marriage .
Ill ___ ee s_
'Nearest Bmnes' Dana Point
POW s to Arrive To Share
Facility At · 31 Hospitals
An interim solution to a sewage crisis WASJUNGTON (AP) -The Defense and the Bremerton, \Vash. Naval
\'thich had thre.l!lened to halt develo_p. Departll)ent ~r..E!ficlally announced a Hospital
ment in Dana Point was reached this list of 31 ml.lltary boipllals in the Unitea The 10-Air Force hospitals are:
'\\'eek ,,,.hen the Dana Point Sanitary Malcolm Grow Medical Center, D~ict agreed to share a small amount States where returned U.S. war prisoners Andrews Air Force iBase, Md.; the
of''Cppacity in a new regional treatment will be brought for e:xaminatlona and Wilford Hall Medical Center, Lackland
plabt treatment after they are freed by the Air Force Base, Tu.; the David Grand
't'4e solution. reached Wednesday at a North Vietna~_. fl!le is at Camp Medical Ceftter, Travis Air Force Base: m~ng of the South East Regional Pendleton. the Air Force Regional Hostf:etal at Max· R~~mation Authority tSERRA) pro-In addi'...._ ,.tlJe_.-. ..... _..n anMunced well Air Force Base, Ala.j Air Force dueed a temporary comprOmile. ,,_., , ~ ~ Regional Hospital at Sheppard A i r -il:lfd. chanw for Dena Point having a that Cl!rk Air BOoe in the Philippine> !See PENDl.lm)N, Pap %)
permanent solutloO to it! waste tf~t-will be the in1Ul1 rteeivin& p:>lnt for .
ment situation hinge on the passage of a POWs wbo wiB..tra~el from Hanoi,.ip U.S.\> .. \ lt~l"~.:,~mlse invOiv .. ~ srantln' .. ~7~-· "':::.~: .. '"'';~~hie . SUn ' Cle1nen te lo Dana Potnt of 210.llOO-t111R a diy 1. r.--· -l
capacity in a newly femodeled San Juan '¥ ~e ne can. to f~ In the ' capl~ano treatment facfllty which will-. Uniled Stites and !>< filled With new . Tells Heavy' be sliared l!(l(ln With tbe Moul too-Niguel uniforllll, In, lddllfilll to recei1111& a
Water District and the Rancho Margarita ~ rileaical chllc:kover.
Water District. . ,White Hou8' aidel are disculsln& ttJ:e
The Dana Poillt District had been set possibility of a CaBfornia trip by J>res1• Fi"re Losse lo·J9in in tile use of !be regional plant but de~t Nixon to meet the first •freed U.S. S
Wte last year suddenly refused to sign prts0ners of war on their way home from
legal agreemenlJ. North Vietnam, The Washington Post San Clemente suffered whopping fire
Soon afterwards, relations became reported today. 1 •-· b strained on the SERRA .board. The newspaper said there has been no 0~ liuvug Im and an over•all in·
Harli& this month Dana Point was final decision for the President to make crease in fire alanns and other emergen· ~tened with a cease-and-desist order the trip tr Travis Air Force BueJ about cy calls. the. city's annual report shows
from the San Diego Area Regional Water 50 miles south of San Francisco. The first this week.
Quality Control Board. That agency's ex· returnees are expected to arrive at the And the
ecutive officer termed the SERRA base In about two weeks. record.
dollar figure is a mcxlem
Squabbles intolerable and added that Factors being considered by the White-' Acting Chief Burl Hancock said total
Dana Point's effluent was of poor quality Jtouse in making a decision include the ·dollar losses · in ' blazes last year
and odors from the run-down plant were fact that the drama and emotion ot a amounted to more than $190.000. ,
beiM pennitted to spread through the presidential welcome may 6e too much The sum for tbs-year before that was a~ f)ear Doheny Beach State Park. excitement for the returnees, the Post only $47 ,000.
Wednesday's interim solution has caus· said. Jt said there is the prospect of some Major residential blazes formed the
ed .piat threat of a hookup freeze to unpredictable responses from the bWk of the losses-this despite an in·
,. (See SEWAGE, Page Z) servicemen. crease in pennanent personnel and the
.: The ll Navy hospitals are: opening of the new fire headquarters
Oak Knoll .Naval Hospital, Oakland; building.
~alboa Naval Hospital, San Diego ; the City councilmen obtained tbcir copies
Naval· Hospital at Camp Pendleton; the or the depart.merit report on Wednesday
Great Lakes, Ill. Naval Hospital; the but had no comment on the severe in-
Philadelphia Na"'.al Hospital. . crease in losses.
Also, Bethesda, (Md.)·Naval Hospital; ffancock said the department had 40
the Portsnloufh, Va., Naval Hospital ; the g~neral alanns through the year. as O!>"
Qallet Classes
Available Free
St. Albans Naval Hospital in New York: posed to 37 general alanns the year
the Chelsea Naval Hospital in Boston; ·before. Such alarms are sounded when
·~ the Jacksonville, Fla. Naval Hospital ; the entire contingent of volunteer and
_ .. A new s.erles of rrce ballet instruction the NavBI Hospttal at Camp Lejeune, full-time firemenTl.S needed at a blaze.
In San Clemente
clastu ror girls will begin Saturday at N.C.; the Memphi&, Tenn. N'avat Hospital Of these general alanns, a dozen were
San Clemente High SchoOI - a new of· * '1;.r * responses to grass fires Ct.be largest
rerlilg or the Capistrano Unified School category) and 10 were for structural
Dis&lct recreaUoi program. Cam·p Pendb(•~n fires in dwellings, lthe '"""'1<1-largest The classis are for girls from second Ml category). . •
grade through high-!C~l age .. Younger ~ Besides experiencing a major increase
girlS can take ballet mstrucbon. The G ts D'' • · ~ .. ,,...,_• · '"irifires, the departnient also found Itself
ol<!fi:t>UPl!s will be able lo slucly modem e ~ ~StgltA-UiOrt saddled with a new rescue oe<Vice-pro-dance. . · . vlding emergency ambulance protection.
,
•
:
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. t-'~~ . ~
~ ':# .;,·~,·}
:-~'-~-~ ....
OLDEST NORTH AMERICAN FIREO.CLAY ARTIFACTS
Irvine R1nch Fk'td Carbon Deted at More Than 6,000 Yeara
North .America's Oldest
Relics Found in Irvine
By GEORGE l.EID.U.
Of 1!1t Daltr f'lltt St.tf
The oldest man-made, fired, clny
artifacts ever unearthed in Norlh
America by some 2,000 yean have been
discovered on the Irvine Ranch by a
team o! Cal State Fullerton
archeologists.
·fbe program was instituted recently As· POW Center Of a total 5~3 rescue-type calls aent to by the distrk:t's advisory ~reaUon com· the department, the firemen warned lhe
Roger J . Desaulels, president o( Costa
Mesa-based Archaeological Research
Inc. today antlQUnced ~t UCJ the
significance of U1e July, 1971 digs above
Upper Newpoft Bay.
"The discovery is _an arcbeological
fire-milestone-which-opens-an entirely new-
perspective on prehistoric art fonns In
Nert.~ America.
hpsSic:wi tn '!n-effort. to present more ~ ambulance 369 times, be said. -portuhlties-tot-girls.~. --------The-lt:S~Naval-ffospitat-1~-breakdown-in--statlstics-on
Slm11ar programs In the summer have Pendleton-was selected today as one of 31 , (See FIRE, Pap I)
been·ex1rtmely successlul, said district U.S. mllllary hospila!J where ...wmlng
ricreatiOn 4iredor Bob Bouman. prisoners of· war will undergo rehabillta-
~egistration will rrlark Siturday's ac--lion, hl\se spokesmen C!Jvulgt!CI. •
ttv1tle!I from 9 a.m. to noon in the gym. The U.S. Departtn~ of ,Oefe~ an·.
Formal classes will start Saturday and nounced the ded!lon tn a dispiiteh . tbls1
conuOOe through March 31 . morning. OOt no speculation bas come on
BuJiuess License
; '
Fee .peadline Nears
-hft Clemente bultneumeo were Jssutd
mnindeu this-• that the · WI.day lo
poy their 1m bus-llctnle 1 ... ii
W-ay. Allor that date pena1u,. will
be imposed.
Aft busin,.. IJceMe fees were due Jan.
I , but lhe enilre mooth la regarded u •
grace period, city aides aald. Renewal
boliCel We(O maJl<d each i!UallJeam>n
Ian J)ecember. If' a busln<osnum has not
...Celved • notice he ii asked lo qlf cllJ ~al 492..1101 lo orronae for Jll11D'lll.
how many· p~ would arrive at
C&mp Pendleton, nor wtien they wottl'd
beg'" nylng 1n. It is one of six chosen in
California.
Base aides read from a prepared di&-
p11cb froin the 'Peiilagori wbldl ialcl that
<lark AFB in tho Philippines woo)<! be
!lie lnJilal rectlvmg po1n1 for the row .. ~
One< II la establlabed Iba! the llMll .. m 1o ..... ,, they wn1 be .aJ--
clloice o!. bolplLll.
E""'1 effort, tbe. aides said, waulll.be
made lo .,.ign a man lo a h\>IPll-J
clolell hla family.
The boapllll.at the -ii ............
exteNIV& rtmQ\llUnf and ..., -
strucliCln. 11 ,11 ~ In tho ~
PoMIOn ol the -· away hom dlt Clemente area. •
•
Better Get
Friday, Feb .. 2 is the Inst day to
get your car license tags or gel
yOlll'leU tagged.
Henry Rublen, manager of the
Department of Mot6t Vehicles of·
in Sabta Ana. -. this year
~. 114......_lo!I'
February.
-chlnged from Ont Friday In
"It comu earlier usu
• may catch' :ome mo · w
Ulllir cbeckboob down,... qu
Rublen. Fles """lved aflef tth.
19 up 10 pereent Md allet .lllt<h S lliO-lllillll!kl, .
•
"These -artifacts have been con·
elusively dated by Carbon-1 4 tests
performed at UCLA and Gakushuin
Un!verslty, Tokyo. The tests ha"e placed
the age of the artifacts at more than
6,000 years." Desautels say1.
The exact localion of the find Is being
kept secret to ·prevent amateur pot
hunters from destroying the silt's
hlatorlcal significance.
Desautels: said ~ Irvine Company will
protect I.be aite agalnst tre11pauer.s. ARI
hold., a contract with the land deveiop·
ment !Inn lo lnlun! tbe prolectlon and
mapping of significant historical sites
located on the IS,000 acre ranch.
Christopher Drover, 25, of Laguna
Beach, now 1 lecturer for UC lrvlne Ex·
tension, led the student group from Cal
le Fullerton in the 1b: w.U dig during summei-6f 19'71, I •
ol<lfft pttylotls <iamples of North
>eH<an cer•mlc obi..11 ever to be
unearthed are ntfmated to'bc 4,500 years
\
•
ANTHROPOLOGY INSTRUCTOR
Christopher Drover
old and were found II\ the eastern United
States.
..rrhe lblmble s\7.cd object! decorated
with de~igns left by sharp point ln-lln!_~t.s have no ai)parent relaUonsbip 1 to slmilar Items of a later date £round In
North America whose origins of style
can r bf traced to Asia and Mexico.
llelaute~ aaid.
I . '
Laird Says
Priso11ers
'
Fly N 011stop
'VASHINGTON (API -Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird said today ope.r·
sitions for bringing out U.S. prisoners of
\1·ar from llaooi "\11ill start this next
1veek." with more than 100 lo be home
\\lithin lwo weeks.
Laird said the POWs y,•il\ be £101vn
nonstop from Hanoi lo Clar·k Air Force
Dase in the Philippines over a round-
about route that will first take them
over Vienliane to Laos.
But, be said, there would be 110 landing
in Vientiane as indfcated Wednesday by
presidenllal adviser Henry A. Kissinger.
in outlinln19 terms of the peace agree-
menl.
"Present iJl::.ns do not ca!! for a stt;p in
Vientiane," Laird said · ,
North Vietnam will provide A1ffierlcan
oUlctals In Paris with a list of POWs on
Saturday. A spokesman for the U.S.
delegation in Paris said the li!it will not
be> made public in Paris. however.
Pentagon officials said, meantime.
next-of-kin would be notified before the
Us• Is made public unless the North Vi!:I·
namese make it public when they tum it
over to U.S. officials.
Indications 11·ere that the list "-i>uld be
made public early next weelt if nell:t-Of·
kin are notified first. It was not clear
y,•hether under such circumstances all of
lhe names would be released
simultaneously.
In a taped Interview on the NBC Today
show, Lair<t'gave no specific date for the
landing of U.S. planes In Hanoi and left
unclear when the first prisoners would. be
glven their freedom.
U.S. officials working on the POW
release plan said this was likely to occur
so metime near the end of the two-week
period following the signing of the peace
agreement.
Asked In the interview, "When can we
expect the first American prisoners to
return home?" Laird replied that Project
•lomecoming "wUI start this next week."
But later In the program, when ques-
tioned specifically as 10 v.•hen the POWs
can be expected b:lck in this country. he
refused to give a specific. date. say1ng on-
ly that "nlore than lOO prisoners will be
back in the United Statee within the first
IWO '\\'eeks."
The start of Project Homecoming.
(See ~1, P1ge I)
c: ... ,
Weatlter
-Continued-SUM)' skies Ja the
projected weather pk:lure (or Sal·
urday, with slighUy warmer tem-
peralures, accordiiig to the weather
service. Hljhs in the mld-«>s. Lows
tonight in the 408.
INSIDE TODi\Y
'!tficlr Jagger bro11ght hU Roll·
111g Stl1Jll!S f.o Los Angeles last
ivtck fo-r Cl cont.'e'rt bn1efictn1u
J\lnuagua. Ntco.-rngua. He came
and co1iquer1d. See pl1otoa, take1i
by UCf freshman Andrea \Vo-
ter.t, on ihe cotlfr of todau's
\Veekerv:ter.
LM. ...,., 1 M...m ,... • ... ,.... . ........ """"' .
(1'"'"'49 • Or .... c..ty ,,
( ... 1111" 22-• ....... ,..,. u-•
C-IQ 24 IYhil l"wttf' ft
(1'9$1'"'11 ,.. ...,.. , .....
Dwfll Metkff 14 ·--~ 1).1) l•l9rllt ..... I T...,..... tt
Pl-• U·ll ~ JNI ,. .. ~ 11:.atf 14 ...... • • ~-,. *"'""" ...... , .. ,, I.Ml LI.... It Wll'ffl_,.... 4 : ,,...._. I WNk...._. IWI
111\Witt tNI
J
• 2.--PAJL Y PI LOT SC
$1 Million
D1·ug l;laul
-h1-Coul1ty
t
I
'
•
Bv J0111" ZALLF.n Of Tll• O:tHV l"llol Slfff t
\\~:-trnin~tt'r polJr~ !oday Claimed to
)\;nl' Sl'lt.1'd $1 rnillion \1·orth of am.
ph1·1 :u11ull'~ anrl arr'.'sted lwo Spz.tnisb-
six·ai..lng n11'n in 11 tun ofricers tem1erl
lhe biggest nan . .'oUcs h3ul in the city's
histor~·.
1~o!icr s:iid h 1'0 anonymous phone calls
li~d to thl' ;1rrt·sts \\'ednt•sday night ii1 a
ltllC'kya1·d in the industrial sector of the
l 'l!y.
Officrrs asserted the raid netted 3
1ni!lion amphetamine (Or .. upper"l pills,
11·h1ch police bt>lieve were brought in
front !\l('Xito.
Four \\"estn1 inster orficers and l\\'O
ft~deral narcotics agentS'had been staking
out a truck stor..:.gc lot at 1361 2 l\lilton St.
for 1nore than 20 hours by the time the
arrests "'ere made.
The tv.'o suspects, one of whom is a
Mcxic11n nation<'!, v.·ere being held today
in Orange County jail ·with bail S('t at
$100,000 each. The men \\'ere identified as
Juan l\l anuel Hernandez Garcia. 38. of
:r.·lcsiCIJ. :ind Alt•x l\lagallanes, 46. of
Buena Park.
Police s~1id the men, neilher of \\'honl
spoke English. said they were not aware
they v.'ere <1pparently dealing in con-
traband dru gs.
The raid \Vas made about 8:15 p.m. Six
offiCt>rs ch.:i rged \Yith their. guns__drawn _
on the l\\'O suspects. v.·ho offered no
resistanec.
Both men were unarmed.
Police had earlier watched as the tv.·o
men r~µortedly entered the truck storage
Jot aboul 8 p.m. The suspects allegedly
v.·ent directly to one 35-foot natbed truck
and began remo\'ing 1rooclen boarps on
the tr aile r. revealing a hidden storage
area.
Police said the tv.·o men quickly
removed abou t .JO black plastic bags,
each contairii ng 25 .000 pills.
''\Ve tin1ed our raid just right." said
Del. Rick McKinney of the Westnlinst cr
force ... They h<td just finished unloading
al! the b.'.lgs and so there was nothin g left
for us to do but n1ake .he arrests."
htcKinney said the yard is leased by a
third man. \vho is not believed to be in·
vo!ved in the allegec!ly illegal operation.
AicKinney also said tJte two suspec ts
claimed to be inn<><."ent.
"They said an unknO\\TI man had or-
fered to pay them $100 each to do the job
and that they didn't know what they were
carrying,·• l\1cKinney said.
~fcKinncy added that lhe truck's hid·
den compartment seemed to have been
in place a long time. He also noted that
the pill bags had been soaked in vinegar.
v.·hich_ would confuse dogs used at
border checks to sniff out illegal drugs.
~lcKinncy said investigation would con·
tinue in an effort to find accomplices.
---;
Plu1nber Named
Dana Chamber
President Again
Dana Point plumber Marcus Rye will
be installed into his second straight term
as president of the Dana Point Chamber
of Commerce at the group 's annual ban-
quet Tuesday.
-The eve nt wi ll start at 6:30 p.m. with
cocktails at the \Vind and Sea Restaurant
at Dana Harbor.
Other officers who wil: be installed are
Tom Achibold, first vice president; Scott
Fleming, second vice president, and Pat
Ziegler, ·secretary-treasurer.
Chambcr ·publicist Valerie Powers said
the public is welcome to the event. Din·
ner at $6 per person starts at 7:30 p.m.
Reservations can be obtained by phon-
ing 496-£106. Tickets also will be
available at lhe door.
San Diego Gas and Electric ·eompany
Manager Bi.JI Webb will serve as master .
of ceren1onies for the evening. Realtor
Atartha Raye will be tht installing of·
ficer.
OU.NCll COAST IC
DAILY PILOT
The Orl»Oe C.nl DAILY PILOT, will1 which
lt comolntd 1~ Newi·P•ess, is pi,1blisJ1• fW
Ille O••n11e C0111 Pulllllftin11 Comp1ny, S""·
r•t• fdi!K>n1 ••• puOllllltd, Monday l~ro~ll
F•Hl•Y· for tCOlll Mffl, Ne~ l1M:ll,
Hvn!lnQ!Gn lfta<;l>IFO\lf'lr.ln V1lley, l ftO""I
8e.ich, lrvlflt!/S1ddl.O.dl W Sin C~men!1/
S111 Juan C•Pi1tr•l!O. A 1f1>9le reg1on11
~Ilion •S w11H11>M S.lurd1y1 •nd S1111d~rs.
Tne prlncip.aJ pUbtlslllno pt1n1 fl 11 +10 Wei l
811 SlrHt, Cotti M-, C1llfornl1, t UU,
Robart N. W11d
Pre1odent tnd PVOllJl>tr
J1ck R. C11rl1v
Vice Prftkltnl Ind Get1tt1I Mlllftlr
lhotn11 JC11vil
£dll0r
Thomas A. Mur~hln•
M•n•Oinf Edhor
Ch1d1s H. Looi Ric~114 P. Nall
AuJ1t1nt Ml .... 011!9 IEdllort s. ci ....... Offlce
)0$ North El C1mirio 11111, •2672
Othet Offh;ll
(oJI• Me»: llO W11t ll•r Slrttl N1woor1 811ch: 1UJ N1woor 8ovlcv1•0
Hvn!ln<;l!O!I Be1c1>: 1'97$ IMCll IOU11Vltcl L~ou1111 ltl(": m For111 """"""
Tel.,a.e• (714) 64Z~JZ1
Cl•tlflH Actw.rtlsl .. 64Z·l671
S.• ci.-... All 0.,ettlMMSl
Tei.pNM 4•Z-4420
C6otr!o~I, 1;12. OrtllOI (ot1t Publlllllf!f
COl'l"Hllf. No llfWI •!Or~ lll111lr•tloM.
edlltr!ll ~!Mr or ~Vl!'t!ttlN:ftll t11r1fft
tn•f a. '"'""'"'" w11'*'1 tPklN Oii'• mlu loll 01 COll'tfiOlll ow11..-.
$eolftd Cl-Mtltfe P•ld 11 COl!t /MM,
C•1!10m!1. SUbi<flptJon bY Clfrltl' $1.U
"10l'l•ht11 br m.IJ ta.If' mont1>111 ntttltlrr
01:tll1Mttoni R.65 monlntt.
•
UPIT...._M
E11d of tlie Li11e
-:-~~
F,....P~J -. PENDLETON
/ ••
For<e -· Tu.; Ille Air Foret RtafO!lAI lloepltal1 lllidl Air For<e Bo~ near IUwnlde;. tbe Air For<:e Rtfllonal H .. pltal al YIMtovtr AFB,
. &JUa.; aod medlcll ctllltn Al S®Jt An. W. ~ Al'll>Milll.; aud j\Ji~~...-..· Olllo. -~"!JE!~are : . ~ AnD1 ~ C...ttr,.Ft Sam. Houston,. Tex.; Letterman -oaerat
Hospital, s.n FraDCl>co; FIW!mmons
Gtntral Hospltal, Dtnvtr, Colo.; Valley
Forge General Hospital, Phoenixville,
·pa,; Trlpler Generil llospltaJ. •IOnolulu : Ireland Anny Hospital, Ft. Knox, Ky.;
Patterson Army l!ospltal, Ft. ttfonmouth ,
N.J.: and the Anny General Hospital at
Ft. GO<doo, Ga.
From Pqe 1
POWs ..•
referred to by Laird, could mean the ar-
rival of a ama.11 gi'oup of Americans. in·
eluding specialists to set up com-
munication llnkJ from Hanoi to U.S. in-
_stallatiom . ...These men_ are eJpteted to
arrive in the North Vietnamese capital ln
a bout a Week.
Leaves for Paris
Rogers to -Place
'"·~~' o~~Agree.~-oot
By United Press latemaUoul
secretary of Stale Wllllam P. Rogers
left today for Paris to sign the agreement
ending the Vietnam war and ~ he
hoped tbe accord will usher in a a~nera·
Uon of peace.
3'.he war ltseU raged on and two, ~
sibly three, more Americans and hun·
dreds of Vietnan1ese died today, lSee re-
lated story and picture, Page 4.f
Rogers wlll sign the agreement in
Paris Saturday at the heavily gufl:Cded
Hotel Majestic with the foreign ministers
of North and South Vietnam and the Viet
Cong 's Provisional Revolutionary Gov .•
emment. The 12·)"&r-old war is then to
grind to a lullt at 4 p.m. PST.
Rogers said "We hope and expect that
shortly the ceaseflrt wW be In elloct In
Laos and Cambodia, too, and tbat Unally
lhis long and difflcuU war will come to
an end."
But the llahtlng w8' heavy toclny and
suraed to within 10 miles of Phnon1 Penh.
Jn neighboring Thallund, site ol n1any
U 1~: air bases, there was t.'Or1<:ern for the
fu~re. Gen • .rrapass Charusathiril, the
de~uty Prime Minister, prOOi<:ted trou·
ble1In1.a .. and C&mbodio that oould al·
foci Tbailllnd alter the fiuhtlng ends In
Vlel\Jam.
Th~ White House announced lh!it Pres-
ident Nixon ts sending Vic.-e Pr<lSldcnt
Spiro 'T. Agnew to South Vietnam, Laos.
Cambopla, TbaJland, Malaysia. Singapore
and Jridonesla for "substantive discus-
slona" on the ))06twar state ol Asia. Ai:..
new leaves Sund11y.
Pre:Jidential Press Secretary Ronald L,
Ziegler said Agnew "will reafflnn our
desire for peace and self-detennination
for all the countries or Southeast Asia.··
Jackknifed alon g the right of \vay, freight cars rest side by side
across the Missouri Pacific trac ks in 'Vebster Groves. near St. Louis.
Some 35 cars derailed, so1ne tuinbling, off a treStle. No one was hurt.
Under the terms ·o1 the peace agree-
ment to be signed Saturday in Paris. all
American POWs in Indochina are to be
returned within 60 days in roughly
equal .installments at two week intervals.
Laird said that will mean releases in
groups of more than 100 each. The Pen-
taeoo lists 581 Americans c•oUve in
SoutheasrAsta, plua 10me 1,334 lilted as
mllllng In actkln.
Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma of
Laos said today in Vientiane he thought
there would be a cease-fire in Laos with-
in 15 days after the one in Vietnam but
lhat U.S. bombing ~vuld con tinue U need-
Nixon Discloses
$268 Billio11
Federal Budget
_Stocks _ Drop
Belo1v 1,000
!'o'E\V YORK (AP) -The Do1\'
Jones average of 30 industrial
stocks, which burst above 1,000
points at the close of trading Nov.
14 amid fanfare, dropped below
that mark during midday trading
today. At 11 a.m. the Dow ·was
dov.n 8.35 to 996.24.
Brokers cited investor concern
about inflation and th e U.S. trade
deficit as the ma in factors spurring
the drop.
?.'ednesday, the Dow "·as do'WTI
14.07 to 1004.59. Thursday all stock
markets were closed in observance
of a nationaJ day of mourning for
the late president Lyndon B. John·
son.
South Coast 'Y'
Sets Basketball
Meets for Boys
The South Coast YMCA basketball pro,
gram for boys in the fourth through sixth
grades i1 now under way.
Games are played !tom 9 a.rr. to noon
Saturdays at the Capistrano school gym.
In addition to basketball, club meetings
arc held twice a month and each club
takes part in field trips, camping and
other projects.
Further information about the YMCA
activities is available by calling 494-9431.
Clubs will enter into track, swimming
and softball competition following
basketball.
In the just completed football season,
the league winner was Laguna Beach
Roadrunners.
Team members are James Albert,
Kevin Clark, Daniel Golschmann , Kevin
Grahm. Scott Haven. Berry Hench, Brian
I-tench. Jim liess. Richard Johnson,
Bruce Mcintyre. Mike ~tontgomery, Bric
Reasor. Fred R_edick,_Br<IQ_ks Toliver,
Ste ve Weddington and Will Barnes.
Retiring Base
Cl1ief Radics
To Give Speech
Retirlng Camp Pendleton Deputy Base
Commander Col. Emil Radi cs -recenUy
named as the new executive manager of
the San Clemente Chamber of Commerce
-will speak to volunteers of the
Interfaith Serviceman's center at a din#
ncr Jan. 31.
Col. Radics will appear at the annual
banquet sponsored by the center, starting
at 6:30 p.m. at the San Clemente Elks
Lf'dge.
Retiring board member Leslie Putnam
will receive a special award at the ban#
quet along with 25 other volunt1ers
credited with helping make the center a
"home away from home" for local
1nilitary men.
The Rev. Joseph Karp of Our Lady of
Fatima CathoUc Church and the Rev .
Don A. Bassett of St. Andrews Methodist
Church, both will be sworn In as new
directors.
Reservation deadline is Jan. 29 and
tickets are available for a $3. 75 donation.
'fhey ca n be obtained by calling the
center at 49f>.4693.
Policeman Fired
IMPERIAL BEACH (APl -A 29-year-
old police officer was fired Thursday
after U.S. customs officials at the ~lex·
ican border said Jic used abusive
language when they slopped his car.
Patrolman David Vasquez was fired for
Insubordination and "conduct un·
becoming a police officer." Det. Lt.
Donald Zachary said.
He pve no expl8Dltioo for the wester·
ly niute from Hanoi over Vientiane
rather than the more direct easterly
flight pattern over the open sea to the
Philippines.
ed. '
In Cambodia, Prime Minister Hang Tun
Hak said Thunday his government would
suspend offensive operations alter the
Vietnam cease-fire Lo test the Commu#
nists.
WASHINGTON (UPU -President
Nixon disclosed today that the federal
budget for the next fiscal year will total
$268 billion. and said be would discuss
details in a radio address to the nation
yoga Exercise Class Poi:·y Colt B Sunday evening from the Florida White ~ " OJS House. A $l2·billion delicit also was
Healtl1 ·0fficial
To TalK fu Uipo
On Horse Keeping forecast by a Senate leader.
A rounty health officio! expert in codes set in San Clemente s:g11 Up .Tuesday The p..,.Jdenl gave \he budget figure
11 for the year starting July 1 following a
dealing with horses win be the featured A new series of yoga uercile classes meeting with congr4"8Sional leaders of
speaker Thursday at a regular meeting sponsored by the New Neighbors Club Regis tration on Tuesday will mark the both parties, and while greeting a group
of the Capistrano Valley Horsemen's along the South Coast will start Monday official opening of Pony-O:tlt League representing prisoner of war families.
Association. , evening at the San Clemente Beach Club. season along the South Orange Coast for Nixon also said the final budget figure
Kenneth Berbeck, an aide in the e~ Taught by Jean Cotner, the class will boys 13 and 14 years of age. for the current fiscal year will be $250
offer reluatioo and breathing tech-1be registration period wW begin at billion -the ceiling he deman aed and
vironmental health sanitation depart· niques. Complete information is available 7:30 p.m. at Marco Forster Junior High one which roused some members of
ment, will explain ordinances related to bY calling 493-3746. Scibool. Another slgnup will be held Feb. Congress who feel the chief executive in·
the keeping ol horses. A question-answer 13 also at the Forster campus. fringed on legislntlve prerogatives.
period will follow. Boys interested in Pony League teams Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Other events sclleduld for the 7 p.m. Hiuhway in Shambles must be either 13 or 14 years old . Colt Ziegler said the President already taped
· San J ,, league players must be either 15 or 18 the 11·81inute radio program on the
meeting at uan Elementary School INDIO. (AP ) -EastboWld lanes of years old. budget which will be broadcast from Key
include a film on the Arabian Horse, Interstate 10 near here were blocked Spokesmen for the leagues said that Biscayne, Fla., at 3 p.m. ·PST Sunday.
"The Proud Breed." Thursday for more than four hours when coaches, managers and sponsors are still The President briefed congressional
Mem,bers of the Compancros f.ff Club two truck-trailen collided spilling liq· needed for the coming season. Anyone leaders on his fiscal proposals before
also will speak on equestrian safety. uifled tar fro mo n e. Both trucks and wilh offers of help can call league presi# flying to his Florida retreat to spend the
Anyone interested in horses and riding· trallus were destroyed in the fire Thurs# dent Hs..rry Bethke at 495-4354 for com-weekend working on his State of Ule day, but neither driver was injured. -plete information. Union rr.essage to C.Ongress. is welcome to the meeting. I--'-'--------......:'-----'-----------------'--'-.::.'-".:..:.:..:.::::::.:.::. ___ _
Membership information is available
by calling Mrs. Paul Valenzuela at 493-
4201.
Whale Cruises
Begi1f Saturday
' Whaltwat~ cruise! sponsored by the
Dana Point _pwnber of Commerce will
begin Satur~y at_! ~.m. at the docks of
Dana Wharf &Portfishing and the public
is welcome.
The chamber· will Sponsor' the cruises
on Feb. 12 and 24 as well and tickets are
$3.50 for adults and $2 for-children under
12 for any of lhe trips.
Admission for Saturday's cruises can
be paid-at the docks.
Sales for other cruises are being b'andl·
ed through the Dana Point brancbe& of
Bank of America or Southern Callfomi11
First National Bank. Neutronics and
Apollo Television also will be selling the
tickets.
From Pagel
SEWAGE ...
subside for a time.
But the crisis is far from over.
A federal grant application bas been
filed to seek funds to expand the regional
plant still further, and if that grant is ap..
proved, Dana Point then would be allow·
eel to increase Its use of the plant.
Although the current expauslon bas up-
ped the San Juan plant ca pacity to si.J:
million gallons a day, commitments to
the major parties in the agreeipent took
up almost all the capacity.
At Wednesday's meeting of the SERRA
Board, delegates from Moulton Nlguef
and San Juan insisted that they i:ould not
spare a gallon of capacity for Dana
Point.
Later, howeve r, they yielded a bit and
agreed to grant the 250,000 gallons to
Dana Point on a lease arrangement.
The compromise now me1n1 that 04na
Pi:iint tl]:Rhnent will be sp1it between the
existing plant (operating at tolerable
levels ) and the new San Juan plant
nearby.
From Pagel
FIRE ..•
losses shOwed that multiple dwelling
units -apartment houses, duplexe1 and
the like -suffered the wont losses at
$86, 770. The year before the losaes In that
category were only about fl,000.
Sinale dwelllnga were out on the list
with 1o.,., set at 175,215 -literally dou·
ble the 1971 rlgure or W ,IHO.
Commercial losses last year amounted
lo 128,100. Only $5.175 worth was record-
ed the year before.
The annual report also shows a syncpsis of losses over the past nve
yea rS of fire department operations and
lllT.I shows the highest Jou In any Of the
five years .
• 'I
SALE
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUALITY
••• N W AT SALE PRICES
NEWPORT STO LAGUNA STORE
I' Cut Velvet,
Multi.Colored.
I' Cr..cent Sofa,
Geld' Vtlvtt.
I' HI.a.ck Ttxtvre
Sherr Ill
I' Print -Gold I.
Ort"91 -Henrtdon
I' Volvot Stripe -
Shtrrlll
Sofas
m .
690.
619.
1072.
695.
OFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
'
Sofas
SALi Reg.
689 I' Linen Print.
.H1nrHon. 799.
549 I' Tuxedo -Aqua.
Carton. 570.
599 8' Whitt/Gr-.
911
Shorr Ill. 679.
I' Print -Royal
579 CNch. 689.
Chairs Chairs
Pr. Cheirs Print
Woodmark 159. 11. 139 ...
Pr. Choirs -Gold Velvet 189
Ml,.. C•nen. 209. ••· u .
Pr. Gold Velvet.
Shorr Ill.
Pr. Print.
Carton.
Pr. Choirs -Yellow W.1119 Chair.
Vel..i. Drexel. 2.19. u. 1991e. Rust.
205 ....
224 ....
219.
SALE
659
465
589
589
179 .. .
185 .. .
!t'.~e~holrs ALL 20%o11 :~1.'!:.ld .I. . 209 ....
tiJnbtliev1ble v1lu1s In qu1t.ty Sof11 end Ch1iri-All 8-w1y h1nd-ti1d. Moil
Some down ind fH!litrs. AU !rut quality and •I very s1tlslyin9 pr icti.
189
179 ...
Scotchguarded,
S.lectwd groups from Hen..don, Heritage, Or1111l, ind others, now at sale price•. Slop In now
for best solection.
DAEXli;..HlRITA&a...HINHDON-WOODMARK-l<ARASTAN ---------
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WISTCL!Ff D~
-"42·2010
LA~UNA BEACH e
141 NOR.TH COAST HWY'.
4•4·6111
TORRANCE e
tJ64' HAWTHOlNE lLVD.
J71·127'
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Frltay, January 2&, 1'17J DAILY PILOT !f
Long Beach Makes,. Wheat Shipment to Japan
" LONG jlEACJI (AP) -Ill Tile f~sl mojor oblpmenl of The ahipmont w.. made
put yeffS, Ships salliqg into wheat to J4p.an from a possible by a rectnt agree-
'-""'" &ach harb?r from CalJfomla port wms loadtd ment worked out with the SAn·
--+e here Thuradiy and officials ta Fe Railroad cutting rates
Japan had to crube up the say such ahfpn1e11ts coold for Great Pia.ins wheat bound
cout to Portland, Ore. to plck multiply Into a six-to 10-for Southefn Caftfornie.
Beach port to expand their
trade.
percent a year. The only previous wheat
shipments out of Long Beach
to Asia have betn in<:ldental
amounts or Calffomia and
government.owned wMat, of-Long Beach port officials
say a tingle wheat shipment ficials say. represents an lnco1ne to tbe•1-;;;;;;:~;;:;;;;;:~;;:;;;;;:~;;::;;;;;:~;;:;;;;;:;;;;; Long Beach area or ab9utl ,
up a return ~argg of wheat. mWlon bushel-a-ye.ar buslneu. Offlcl.als ol the ColQrado
Japan now uses about 4.5
millloo tom of wheat a year,
official~ say, but the Japanese
have been lncreaslng their
conaumptlon by about three $50,ooo in labor, torms. port Paramount ·s -poits costs and other lee11. Long Beach purf authorities The lS,000 ton.1 ot ~heat -Whta1-~tration COm-
and wheat I_rowers hope fo worih $1.5 mtlllon-wlll be mittee say the new rate
end that Praclloc and turn shipped to Japan today on the o,greement,_whlch.cut shipping t:on~eactrlrrnr1nnajor ship;-:-Kastraki, a Greek--owned--co~ts 7f cents a t~n, "creates
ping point f6r Asian·bound [relghter under charter to'the a ne~.-market11 and "does not
wheat. Tokal Shipping Co. of Tokyo. detra~t /from present ship-
FullErfon Pr~f · Gveryl~in'J in FINANCE-
;pm---... Detects Fo•nd
Finance
Briefs
~Iron Ore
SAN F~CJSCO -'!be
Chrysler Recalls
New Dodge Truck
Japanese trading firms of DETROIT ( u p I ) _ light duty forward control
Mitsui ·& QJ. , Ltd. and -Chrygler Corp. has armounced trueks are being notified their ~ Corp, have '!"· 10 362 llodge J97Z•' and 1971 vohlcles·may have little oc n0 C ~agri°/ 1§:1,.;: uibt duty 1ruc1<s ii1o 00.. clearance hetweeo Ibe ·left
cllco for CllllSliuctloo. of a 186 . recalled lo d9lep \l<Jca'!!" ~f front brake hose and lire dllr'-nillli\10 ti'on · ore proceaaJnc hood inldl and brake hoie Ing' a ftlll right tll1'11. Tile rear ~t in -Peru. defects. , brake hose also may be po6i-
"The contract, wbicfl also In one safety campaj(ll, tioned to close_ tQ th&' tailpipe~
caiis. fof . the -supply or 10,301 light duty U;ui;ks are . on, slJt-<yllnder model!.
Japanea<I equiprilenl loc fbe being recalled because SIS of ll either or th~ brake hose
1")ject ;ePreseQts. the -final them may contain a secoodary cOndlUons are left unattended ,
stage. in a ·&eVeft:Ye&r ~ hOod latch that doesn't bold. a <llrysler spokesman said,
-1-...bereW-Marcona willr-At-spee<ts above 46 miles per there could be a 1oM o1 the
sa_pply five ma~r, Ja!)IDIR hour; the hood could pop open front, rear or both brake
sl<el firms with 136 mllllon in ll tbe primary intch becomes s}'lllema.
ore beginning 'In 1975,.a Mll!UI unlalched, ct>rysler said. Both the hood lalch and
spokesman slid. . ,_ -in. ~tlte~other -campaign, brake hoae iroblem.s ~
• ""'l .,1_.. . owners of 61 llodge 1972 model found during assembly opera-
.,. r nu tioos and there have been no
• LOS ~fiRLES =-Oc--accidents resulting from the
cldental PetfOi"eum .announced c• •: . ti• problems.
discovery of an estim~ted 15-incinna
square-ni.ile oil fie.Id 100 miles
or~J~v~: c:,:i:,.s.riie Safari S~t ...
tblrd well drllled. lu the six
North Sea blocks awarded last LiOo · ~ Safari, Inc.
March to OCcideninl and i~ said 11 hu finalized '
partners lo the venture, Getty previously announced . agrett-
Oil ComPa,ny, Allied Chemical meni wlJh Taft Broi,;dcastln~
Ltd. or Great Britain, and Company tQ build, ~nd ~perate
Thomason SCottlsh Associates an A·frtclin wildlife preserve at L\d· Tait's JGnss Ishp1d · .Amuse-
ment Park in Cilfcinnatl. • Rahn .B1111
LOS ANGELES -Ernest
W. Hahn Inc., a Los Angeles-
based construction firm, will
purclwe the Dale J. Bellamah
Corp. from the Dale J.
Bellamah Foundation of Albu-
querque, N.M., Hahn officials
Aid.
nie agreement calls for
Hahn to pay the foundation
The agreement provides for
Taft tO finance con!tructlon Of
the entire facility, 1 e$timated
to cost $2 million , with Uon
Country Safari providing all
the animals, management,
know-bow and expertise in
construction and operation of
the facility.
Sll.3 million in lhe · form qf I . _ F.
4211,SIZ shares of Hahn com-rvme JI'JD "191 stock for the ,Bellamah
corporallon, a real ·eslale and 'f'I 11_. S ·ii buildtn(J)!IJ111>;my. e, 1 .-J.i'J.D 41 e$
• wii.U h.ltt .. ' ~. ' '
-NEW Yorui:· ~-board-_VTN Con!-ol JMie ~rt·
chaimian of' intei-sta:te StOres ed net .ean;ungs Of SlX mon~
sai dthat talks att continuing en~ed Nov. 30 lncreas~ 98
for the sale of While Front percent on a 39 pe_rc~nt gam In
stores in san FtaDCiSco' and revenues over a sunilar period
Sacramento. a year ago. -
Sol w. Cantor the boar'd James Trin<Jle, chairman or
chairman said 'there have the engineerfug and eri~
been run'iorS'" for two weeks viionmental desfgn firm, sald
that agreement was near, but net earnings. for the" first half
be said the ti1XS have oot ad·. of the current fiscal-year were
vanced to that polnt with any $547,700, or 55 cents a share, m
purchaser. revenues of $10,606,133.
t.::!S~, .......... s .... •~.'-~Lk•f .... ~t~,..,,M .... ~~~-.... tml..,l~P~IMIMll
Take (;hoiee~
Tax Figures Different
PllILADELPlllA (AP) -U figuring your income W
oxtfuses you, there Is this consolaUoo : it apparently con-
'-the exper1ll, too. .
Uslllg tbe same set of facts, a reporter for the Pbila-
adelphia SUnday Bulletin ask~ six rommereial income-~
preparers to figure his federal taxes. They came up with
five different answers.
The reporter, ~runes S. Tunnell, then asked lwo dil-
ferent Internal Reven.tie Service agents ror help. Their answers differed by $93.
"So I turned to my wtfe, whom I dralted to "'lll'esent
the avenge, 'noo8xpert' citizen who figures out bis own
taxes," reported Tunnell. "After ttree h9tzrs at it, she
came up with '1tll another flg\ft. "
Tunnell said the IRS knew from the stut whal he waa
up to but was olf in its initial closely-&1dited effort and
later supplied the "com!CI" figure. The IRS taxpayer
assistance bureau, on the other hand, made a number of erron, he said.
THE VIKING
PROUOL Y OFFERS •.•
191~-CAPRI .
. Advertising
Sparks Suit
By Datstm
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
.The 1.1.S. disbibutdr of Datsun
automobiles has sued two men Jor a half million dollan over
an advertising ciruclar for a
nonlaciory ser;-vice manual.
Nissan Motor Corp. said the
"false and mis I ea ding ''
circular was mailed to a
$ubstantial nwnber of the
more . than . 500,000 Datsun
ownen ip the 1,Jnited States.
The company claimed trade-
mark "inlrfugement, libel end
unfair ·Competition in tta
&ipericr Court suit against
stevtn Slavin and Olarles A.
Colllna, NBsin said the citcular
asserted that Datsun owners
hai'.u1:p..r.essed dlssatls!action
with, repair service arid tliil
DBtsU.n's original factory
manual is inadequate.
Forum Corp.
In Newport
The Forum Corporation, 1t.
D e n v-er-based investment
management firm, has an-
nounced the opening of a bran-
ch office in Newport Beach.
Also announced was the ap-
pointment of Allen 0. Smith as
a Vice Pre!ldcnt to head the
California offlct.
The Forum Corporation is
an investment management
company with four go-load
mutual funds, a tax-sheltered
inVi!stment subsidiary and an
lndivlduat investment counsel
company, Forum Investment
Counsel.
IF . • • ,.., a,.. .......,,.. 111
tecvmu"llll llltMY•
BUT ••• ""_._....,
Ill *lllt ,... ""'·
IF ••
BUT ................... .
C'*'t .....it.I
IF •
"FLEllYESr'
, .. , 11111r H YMr -......... .
VORTEX, 110
\,
ments through the Pacific
Northwest."
Growers say that nearly
one-third of the 50 millton
1bl.llhell or wheat Colorado
grows each year already goes
to Asia. Colorado growers say
they bOpe to ""' the l.ong
Studies Brokers
A member of the Depart-assisting Cal State Fullerton
ment or Finance at California officials in a pilot budgeting
~nni6
.O:ATUllNG ALL TOP IU.NDS
l,.ECIAl..111
Nl:W DUNLOP AUlTltAl.IAN
TENNIS IALLS $1 86 CAN OP J
!Limit 4 cam "' ( ........... ) OTNllt llU.ND5-11.U PEit CAN
Gas, Electric
.--·State Univenity, Fullerton is ~Y:~~lp~a~;~tr~e~h~ 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
currently working on a $5,000 Administration and Ecooom· (Behind The International House of Pancakes)
HOUlll: MON. & FRI. t TO t
TU&S., WED., TNUllS. & SAT. 'TU .. •
SUffl>AY It TO I
• contract to study the problems ics, ~d that the study bas t11.v PHONE 642-6886
of sn'!.all Ind e pe ndent major' objectives. • EXPERT STRINGING & PROMPT REPAIR ERVICE . Earnings Told b~k g r· ,. c 1·r · ------~ ----------...-.. ------...... ~-~ •v era e ll'ms n a 1 orn1a. "The prime objectives," he·~~~----~---._
Dr. Gary 0. Tuchman, a said, "are the identification of
San Diego Gas and Eleclric lecturer in finance .. was guidelines for profi t a b ! e
CO. reported eaptings of 43 awarded the conlract by the operations of small real estate
ceqts per ·share of c:ommon State <1t Califomla Depart· brokerage firms, and the
stbC.k for the quarter ended meot. of. ·Real Estate to study development of a pra ctical
Dec . .31. . '1 Ke e,p 1 n g the Small bookkeeping or accounting
In the comparable 1971 Independent Brokerage Firm system that can be used by a
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers period the company earned 32 Profitable." brokerage office that has only
.c;en~~::a:sha::re:.:::::::::::::D:r:.:'I\l:·:'hm:-:•:n:,:*:bo::a:ls:o~ii~.si.ilbrieeiitoiifiivei;iemipilioyieeisi.'i'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
TIRE
CHAINS
BLEMISHED
WID.E:TREAD
General Calibrated "
DUAL-sTEEIL. AADIAl.:"
• Radial body plies or Poly·
ester Cord absorb shock
and impact for a comfort-
able ride.
• Stro.ng Steel Belts hold
tread firm for long mite·
age, and provide armored
protection for. you and
your family against pene-
tration and road hazards.
Join The Steel Generals Todayl '
CAMPERS -TRUCKS
PASSENGER CARS
PASSENGER CARS
SIZES: 520113 to f00x15·L71115
CAMPERS & TRUCKS
SIUS:
100•16·5 100115
950116·5 175116-5
700117 75h17
12·16·5 10-1 .. 5
70011 6
USED
SNOW TIRES
HEAVY DUTY
RAIN COATS
& RAIN SUITS
N--W:. $.J 95
4-PLY NYLON CORD
llacMWfH .......
II.LT.
W411.
B5SX14
UNIROYAL 800
2 FOR 1111:11 ,, ... ,. --, ...... $19~~
I F70X15 Wide Oval
Wiii"
SllttwtU
l',I ,T. tt.14 ••• ·2i 5l995
GENERAL
TIRE
General· Tire
SAFE STOP SPECIAL
Comp/eta BRAKE
OVERHAUL
1. lnhlll NIW lleovy dvty 11•1119 o• •II 4 wMeh!
2. l9b•ll4 ti. cyll!Nkn 011 oll wtffh!
l . Llffd brelw-htshlll hMYy dwty lmlle ft11ld. ... ..,.., ............... .,,. ..
I. Tira Md trM 911 4 br9e itr.1111. .. ..._..,,..,....,......,,
7. Adlnt ~ .. •d cMct •INffl'llCY ll11tOf11 .
I . lo.d mt yo11r o•fo111obll•
ALL $ FOR
ONLY. ••
95
MOST
U.S. CARS
(D"c braka9 not lneludtd}
Only ...
FRONT END
·ALIGNMENT
We correct C11ter, C1mber,
Toe-In, Toe-out 1o·your car
manufacturer's apeclfrcaUone
... Safety check and adjuat your
steering!
BATTERY SALE '
-S•v•-20% eff tf'l•eY1tydiy.1ow-t--ll-prl0t Of •ny Delco or Wlllard B.tt•
ery In •tock. &ch1ng1 T9qutr1d.
FREE INSTALLATION
,REE llATTERV TEIT
Hoe IUrl about )'OUf b1t19'Yoondltfonf W1'U Mt It trHI
Don _Swedlund
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COMPL!T~ CAR CARE
SINC;E 1959
COAST GENERA'l TIRE
58 5 West 19th Street, Costa Mesa
646·5033
r
540-5710 HOURS:
7:30 to 6:00 Dally
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J?:l D•ILY PILOT SC
ftlOHetJ'S tt'ortfa
How to Check
011 C1·edit Status
By SVLVIA PORTER
Jlank: n .. a young engineer wllh a wife and two babies, ~
his job in the a('rospace t"Utbacks a few years back and , in the
proccc;s Hie got into !KMne §erlous ~bt trouble. Now. Lbough,
Hank i'&s a good.. "'eU pAying, secure job in lhe A1idwest, and
recently he applied for a home mortgage, \\'hen aske<i UK! rou·
ILnc questions about hts dl'bt hi5tory, he tired to rover up
his past problems. The bank turned him down.
It bad. of courS4!. Obtnined a crtdit
bureau repon on ~lank. All the 1nrorrna·
1100 on Hank for the p.1s1 seven .Jl~'lrs was
in !ht· report. \\ll.'lt counted mo.st against
lt:u1k \\'US the fact that he had hed -
f,1r 1hi' bank also kne~· he had lost his job
hN·ause of for~s beyood h1s control and
tl1J1 IW' was in n s('C'UJ'e j~ now.
"110\\1 00 I GET out ot this bind~"
ll::ink "''rote. "\Yhat should I ~ l>Oll~llt liank should d() plenty -and since hundreds of thousands
of you may be in similar positions, the folloWUlg guides can be
of cruc1sl importance to your future. * Ir you are turned dov.n for credit and if you believe
thts is unwarranted. take steps at once to ha~ your credit
status rt>Che<:ked and corrl'cit>d. Under the Fair Credit Report-
ing Act. effective April 25. 1971, you have a great new array
of defenses against abuse of your credit status by credit
burC'aus, credit granters. e1c. For example, among other things,
)'OU can oov.•: * Obtain. upon yOll r oY.11 request and proper identification
of yourself. fmm any consumer-reporting agency which issues
a report on you. disclosure of all the mformation m ywr cre<lit
file -including the sources or that informaUOn oo you. * GET THE NAi\fES oC an who have received from any
consumer-reporting agency, employment reports on you with·
In the -past f\vo years and the names of all others who have
r1?CC1ved C'redl! reports about you y,•1thin the past six months. * ,\.rrange for a re1nvcsliga11on of any item about you
"'hi~·h you question. * Have lhst item deleted from your record 1! the rein·
\e.st!galion finds 1t to be inaccurate. or if the item can oo
longer be 'eritied. · * File a statement of about 100 1,1,·ords reponing your side or !he story if the remvestigation does not settle the matter -
so that )OUr si de ~·ill be included m any futlue reporU! corr
ta1nmg the item. * SEE TO IT. if an item is deleted or a statement added
to your file. that the credit bureau gives this information to
those who have receive<:! employment reports about you
within the past two years or regular credit reports about )OU
111 lhc past six moo ths. * llave your record explained to you in detail and have it
revie11.·ed v.•ithoyt charge if in the past 30 days you have been
denied credit because of. information m a credit repon or if
you have · rt>Ceived a notice from a collectton depal1ment af-
filiated \Yith the credit bureau. And. under the same circum·
stances. have previous recipients of information about you noti·
fied v:1 thout charge if an item is deleted or a statement from
you is added.
These are extremely valuable rights. For the first time,
)'OU have the nght under the law to obtain information -
except medical -m your file and the sourtts of that infor-
mat ion The law also forbids credit bureaus to send out ad-
\'Crse 1nforma11on which is more than seven years old, although
bankruprcies may be reporred for 14 yea.rs. 'lbere are no time
Jim11s on 1nformal1on on you if you apply for a Joan or insw-
ance policy of $50,000 or more or Jf you apply for a job with
a salary of $20.000 or more.
MONDIA
R09ular $400.00
NOW $349.95
Ad Good Thru 1~l1 ·'7l
Balboa Bicycles
673-5051
OFFICIAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23 • 24· 25 • 26 •
Harbar Baulnard
af,Cal'•
SEE PAGE 46 OF
TOOAY'S DAILY PILOT
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Friday's Oosing Prices-Complete New Y otk Stock Exchange List
Market Rallies;
Hit Under 1,000
NEW YORK (AP)-Stock prices sagged heavily
through n1ost of the tr ad l n g sessJon today but
snapped back in thM !ina.l hour. '
Brokers blamed the initial weakness·on worries
•bout the lrlpllng of the U.S. trade dellclt during
1972, and continuing concern about interest rates
and inflation during Phase 3.
.•
SC DAILY ,lLOT JS
( PEOPLE )
~lonor "''inner who later
became a fihn star, had not
been paid tribute in his hon1e
state sirlC'e his dealh in a 1971
Virginia airplane crash.
* Sen. Peter Doo1in.icll. (R-
Colo. l said he reconunended
President Nixon as a can-
didate for the 1973 Nobel
Peace Prile.
In a letter to ihe t\of'\\·egian
Nobel Con1mittee, Dominick
counted as Nixon's 1najor ac-
complishments trips 10 Peking
and ~IOSCO\\'. the agreen1ent
on the first phase of the
S1rategic Arms Limitation
talks. the beginning of talks
about reduct ion of Am erican
troop s1rtng1h in Europe and
the \'ietn1un peace Senlemenl.
* Singer Loo Ra\\·ls. 39. must
pay $4..51.ll a month ,to support
his \\"ift> :ind tv.·o children pen-
ding a d1\'orce hearing under
an agreement reached in Los
Angeles.
Lana Jean Ra\\'IS. 30. vl'ill
receive $3.)00 a monlh a'ld the
couple"s children. Lou Jr .. 8,
and l..Qu Anna. 4, ~each.
* In the three \·ears and seven
months elapsfd in his third
term. Los Aniieles ~1ayor Sam
Yorty has been out of the city
just over one year, according
to figures released by the
mayor's office .
• The figures show lhat Yorty.
much criticized for being
away fro m Los Angeles too
often. was away from the i:ity
372 days, including 26 working
davs . The mayor also pointed to
-ngures indicatin g that a
"lypical 10.year city emp!oye"
n·Ould have been off duty 446
da\'S in that time. . * Soichi Yok"oe. the Japanese
soldier \\"ho refused to sur·
render and hid 23 years in the
jungles of Guam after \\'orld
\Var II. said he will visit
Guam around Feb. '.?O to thank
tils rescuers and have another
look at his jungle hideout.
Yokoi. 57. said he will be ac-
companied by his v.'ife of three
months, tvtihoko. 44. .
Yokoi retumcd to Japan 1n
February 1972 afier he :was
caught by t"':o Guamanian s
while setting !ish trap'> near
his jungle hideout.
* Josephine l\liles. poet and
professor at UC Berkeley: ha s
been given th~ t 1 t 1 e
"university professor."
The honor ·makes her one of
eight scholars in the statewide
system to be conside red a pr<>-
fessor at aJI nine campuses.
She is the first woman and
the first on the English facult y
to be so honor ed.
* !\1arie M. Ralston. 76.
mOther of former actress \'era
Ralston, died in a Santa
Barbara hospital after a long
illness.
The daughter lives in
suburban Hope Ranch and is
the widow of Herbert J. Yates.
who was chairman o( Republic
Studios .
Mrs. Ralston also is surviv·
ed by a son. 010\'ie producer
Rudy Ralston of Sherman
Oaks.
* The Santa Barbara County
Grand Jury has f)rdered
former entertainer Phil Regan
arraigned on three counts of
bribery, superseding an iden·
tical tndictment by t h e
sherlfr's office.
Regan. 66, was accu:;cd of
trying to bribe a CQunly
supervisor Jan. 12. He pleaded
innocent to the original counts
and was freed on $2,500 bond.
Regp.lf1hen was rebooked and
freed on $10.000 bond.
The once famous Irish tenor
is accused of offering ~.000 to
a county supervisor for a
ravorable vote on a rezoning
matter to , make possible the
construction Of a 751..unlt con·
dominium. ' * Think beln~ a mayor of a ci·
ty is fun ? Then lalk to the
mayor of Enderlin. N. D.
Bertnt)t Pohlman recenUr.
resigned from the mayor's o •
lice. Asked why, she said:
"I resigned because the
public fJ ao obnoxtous and
overbearing. For S25 fl month.
I cannot afford to listen lo
the public make asinine com·
pla ints.·•
•
•
·lJesperate
tl ~ -..1.-ST'~ ~URG. Fla. and 'strVlct1• Marg a r' t
!AP) -The· .plight o/ llydtn, -who manages a !Und
steelworker lloward Thomas, ror Thomas at 1he O:ilJ}~
dh·orclng his dytng "'ife 111 a m,erclal Bitnk, Sllld Thursday.
desperate attempt to regain A. NURSE'S elde asked.Jff
lost welfiu·e benclils, ila!I she cou1tl help Out in the hOfue
touched-people-on t\\'O -us her donation. Mrs. Rvder ~inents and brought S2.300 said. · .. 7
towards medicat bills and 1'bolnas, nuu1·ied to/ hts
three parcels ol land. ., ehildbood •weethtarl Rtlth !
"\Ve've gotten mail from 31 years •. was near lties r
sonle sayilli they can 't afford last -~·eek.
to help out fman clnlly, ~ "There is no olhe.I" aMwer,"
would like to give their time he said paintully of the divorce
'
GAF FLOOR
TILE
,
So:me peopt.-who mer-.....
Ibo tum. oo-muat·bo goocl
ttufJ. S.Y9«tl line dH~
tcir graat looking floor•.
4~?BCLn ..
•
11··a1uoa
TW<! bf loan la wllat !her la JMl!y. lllaadmd
or~.
97:..
0
0
D
EJ .
.
0
0
--..
.,
•.Gets Help
I
"I'm Ille end ol IJlY Incurable debllltatln& -
' Thomu 11)'1 he's oot able lo ;U,. ilanaUons' can-meet tho· moontlng nut>ing
· pour In, Mrs, Ryden IK>tne costs ol. ~ a month.
sei as tuld b('( the do-··1r l~-ere real-poor or real
iii -wm not iJreflils plans. rich I could lake can of my
~I~ betn dntwipg from the wtf_t~U he said. ''( WOJk hftii
uod to pay medlcal e!(JK'n!ll'I, ror a Uvlpg and this ts what
sllo Sllld. happens."
~lltS. 'MfOl\IAS, mot~ ol He--sakt. the divorce would
six. ,childfen ranging in agti '-enable hls-wfte to become el-
frofl} 5 to Ill. Is C<>nlincd lo a ';ilble !or wcl!are benefl~ be-
nuriing borne in the advanced cause sht.'d h,ave no other
stages ol muJUple sclerosis, an n1eans ol support.
D
D
•
THOMAS LEA~ltD tbat
former Br(tbh RAF .llihter
pii91, a total stranger, deeded 1,,.i to lhe trust Jund al \ho
ban~·as a recl'(r<K'al gisture
ror a 1mnll tln<Jness llt rece1v·
e<I -from St.,~Pet~•'--
yeara ago.
Vinctnt 'tPaddy " ..Qyrne ~ -
London said he -l•od a lllr .1 ·'
o! ciooldis and candy,from the. -I
St. Petersburg Red Cross ··ee P"Rou6~ATVSLJCoMi
whit' a POW in a Nazi prison f'ROM A-LONC::i LINE. 0,
hospital. 'i'fUFFED 'SMIRi'S ! •
•
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Laguna· Beaeh·
;•• EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
-w~
~_VOL. 66, NO. 26, ~ S~CTIONS, so PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1973 TEN CENTS
f ~
Continent~s Oldest Ceralnics in Irvine
By GEORGE l.EIDAL
OI "'-oallr l'ii.t 11111
The oldest man-made. fired, clay
artifacts ever unearthed in North
America by sofTie 2,tn.I y1ars have been
discovered On the Irvine Ranch by a
team o! Cal Slate Fullerton
archeologisl!.
Roger J. Desautels, president of Costa
'-1esa·based Archaeological Research
1 Inc. today announced at tlCI the
\<>'
sigrificance of lhe July, 1971 digs above
Upper Newport Bay .
"The discovery js an arcbeological
milestone which opens an entirely new
perspocLive on prehistoric art forms in
Ncrt'i. America.
"These artifacts have been con·
elusively dated by Carbon-14 tests
performed at UCLA and Gakushuin
un:versity, Tokyo. 'I1le tests have placed
the age of the artifacts at more than
6,000 years." Desautels says.
The exact location of the find is being
kept secret to prevent amateur pot
hunters from destroying the .. site's
historical significance.
Desautels said the Irvine Company will
protect the site against trespassers. ARI
hold<> a contract with the land develop-
ment firm to insure the protection and
mapping of significant historical sites
located on the 83,000 acre ranch.
Christ~)her Drover, 25, of Laguna
Beach, l'iow a lecturer for UC Irvine Ex-
tension, led the student group from Cal
Slate 1-"ullerton in the six week dig during
the su1nmer of 1971.
The oldest previous examples o( North
Arr.crican ceramic objects ever to be
unearthed a.rr. estimated to be 4.500 years
old and were found in !he eastern United
States.
The thimble sized objects decorated
with designs left by sharp point ln-
strumen!S have 'no apparent relationship
!See ARTIFACTS, Page !l
,. . 2 More Americans Die
I ,. ·:.
'In Last ·Hours of
Special Meeting Set
Board Considers
Interim Director
.By FREDERICK SCHO~IEHL
J"-. Of .. 0.ltf ..... 11.tf
· 'Unofficial action b_x the Laguna Bea.ch
Board o! Education to appoint Dr. Robert
Reeves, now assistant .superintendent of
instruction, as acting superintendent will
be discussed al a special meeting next
week.
Better Get
Car License
Friday . Feb. 2 is the last diiy to
get your car license tags or gel
yourself tagged .
Henry Rubien. manager of the
Departme11t of Motor Vehicles of-
fice in Santa Ana, Dotes this year
the law has been changed from
Feb. 4 to the first Friday in
February.
"It oomes earlier than usual and
may catch .. llme motorists with
their checkbooks down," quipped
Rubien . Fees received after Feb. 2
go up 10 percent and after March 5
tfle rene ::al doubles.
War
Vietnam
Battles
!:eJ te11sif y
-SAIGON tUPI) -The war in South
Vietnam intensified today with the ap-
proach of the cease-fire, and two -or
possibly three -Americans were Killed
and . 25 others \\"ounded in the closing
hours of the conflict.
OLDEST NORTH AMERICAN FIRED·CLAY ARTIFACTS
Irvin• Ranch Find C1rbon Cited ait More Than 6,000 Ye1r1
Laguna_Pollce Crack Down
..
Mann Elected
At the special meeting Tuesday night,
the board appears,· to have two
alternatives. It could formalize an...agree-
ment 'Witll Reeves to continue as acting
superinlendenl or it ,-ou/d i:" acting chld from Oiilliile the dislri l ~ .
": ..Reevei said t¢ay be lea of the in· -·
terim appointment fiedn morning CQaSt W oma1i
Weds Chief
Of Tribe
Bofh the nwnber of strikes by U.S.
planes and ~ ground batlles involving
govemment 'and Vietnamese C.Ommunist
troops feaclfed eight~mOf:!th nighs" with
less' t~an 48 hours remaining until tbe
schedulaj , cease-fire begins at 8 a.m,
Sunday (4 p.m. Saturday PST ). Hundreds
of Vietnamese v1ere killed or wounded.
I .... ~
On Off •r-Qad Moto:rcyclists :..
President
Qf Hospital
-J William I. ~fann was elected presldent
of South Coast Community Hospital at
I~ annual meeting of the South Laguna
facility Thursday night.
Mann replaces Victor C. Andrews, who
bad serv~ as president for 12 of the past
13 years. He will remain on !he board of
iiredors as chairman.
Other officers elected to the board
were Tristan Krogius, Winfield Shiras ,
Arthur Briggs and William White Ill,
vice presidents: Bryant \V. Cannon,
treasurer; David Phillips, assistant
treasurer: John D<nvner. secretary, and
· Jody Uph.am, assistant secretary.
Elected to ,three-year terms were
-Harold HahlbccK, Jack W. Glenn, Harold
Qsbom and James Thomas.
Robert Thatcher and David Whiting
were elected to unexpired three-year
tenns: Dr. Anthony Orlandella, chief of
tie medical staff, \vas elected to an
tJbrexpired two-year term, and William
Halnes, Ruther Schreyer, R. DeWayne
Hurst and Thomas Thornton were elected
Oi unexpired terms tbi-ouih 1974. ;ln hi.t annual report to the board .of
directors, outgoing President Andrews
said the hospital sustained a $44,000
iPeraUng loss in 1972 ~ause or dis~ tiiin caused ·by the expansion program
sWI in progress.
"Contrary to reports, we have ~n
operating to 95 percent of our capaCJty
since the first of the year. and we have
every reason lo believe our occupancy
rate will continue rea90flably near that
. figure the rest of the year." Andrews
cfaimed.
"I am confident we Will be able to
Tneet pur debt obligations and have suf·
ficient revenues to fully cover our
Operating expenses," he added .
·. Harold Eckman, building chairman,
t0td UlOoSe at the .aMual meeting that the
hpspital's nursing tower is now complete
,a.pd, ~ additional poor ~r ,be~ _wi~I be
oj>ened beginning next wee!( _
Radio Gear Stolen
• From Hilltop Shack
.; ... <>ranse County Sherltrs 0!£1cer1 are to-
a.y Investigating the llieft Of C01tly
j:ransmltting equipment from a blll!Op
rlldlo shack In lbe LagWll Nfiuel •""-
. Deputies iald lntrud<n reported by
... properly owneB AVCO Commuaity
'Development broke blto tbt shtck at the
detdomd el Pacific lsland Drive ud car-
.Heel oU radio equipm~t valued at fl,500.
Ol!lcen said lhe buralara smashed lbe
padlock lo gain entry. '"1e brtak-tn was
1'POr1td 6y t local mldent
from William Tbomal, board' president.
Thomas said tbll ~ai'd reached uno(c.
·ficial agreement .,..ng a aecret session
Tuesday to Oeltgate certaTri"-' ad-
ministrative functiOns to Reeves.
Those tasks include preparing meeting
agendas. and making minor dar-to-day
decisons for lhe.at\1001 di strict.
Reeves said • understood the ap-
pointment would continue through Tues-
day, unless tbere Is "officia' board action
otherwise"
Reeves' is receiving no extra com-
pensation for tbe added duties. He was
notified Dec. 11 and later on Jan. 9 that
his contract as assistant superintendent
will not be rtnewed after it eipires June
30.
Thomas said this morning that the
board was close lo hiring a retired doctor
-of 'education fo r the actin& supe.rin-
tendentship until it was learned that
employment would damage lhe can-
didate's retirement provisions.
''He was a nice guy ... it's unfortunate
about this retirement matter." Thomas
commented.
Consideration of employment of an ad·
viser to help the board select a
permanent replacement for Dr. William
Ullom also is expected to be discussed .
TUesday night, Thomas said.
"The feeling o( the board seems to be
to try and find a real good guy as acting
superintendent and let him work as the
adviser at the same time," Thomas s~id.
"It'd save us some money."
Pageant Castin g
Set 011 . W eeken<l
. .; At Irvine Bowl
castin1;; for the 38th annual Festival of
Arts Pageant of the Masters will be held
from 7. p.m. to 9 p.m. Salurday and l
p.m. to 5 p.m. Suhday ~backstage at the
lrvlne Bowl. on the festival grounds_ ln
Laguna Beach .
.-There are some 400 positions to be cast
for th..! summer program which this Y.ear
· wlll run from July 13 lhrough Augtlsl 26
ttt the Festival of Arts grounds. ,
Two co.nplete casts are selected so
volunteer performers may work one
week ·and have one off. The Pageant
re-creates famous art works with !Ive
models.
"We erpecl and hope we will have 11\e
same number u last year -about 500,"
Sal\y .Reeve, festival 1pokesman1 sakl. •
"We hive no way or knowing lhough until
they show up." she said.
Pafwil pnlll;llm has l1o\ )'O\ bten
finallled by Ute 'Board of Directors wl»
Ihle )'tll' wiU decide whether or oot Ii
replKe lbe ''Lest SUpper" o( Leottardo
da Vinci with a representation or the ••t.ast $upper" by lhe master Titian~
oa VinCf>1 "Last Supper" ltu been the
lradlllonal ending or the popular ~
gram since 1131.
•
Wyn Sargent, an explorer and an-
thropologist from Huntington Harbour:
who has been studying the sexual life of
tribes in West lrian , has married the
chief of one of the tribes, the West lrian
military command said ~oday.
Miss Sargent's local address ls 4001
Morning Star Drive, Huntington Beach.
The 42-year--0id divorcee married Chief
Obaharok Jan. 8 in a tribal ceremony,
giving him 11 pigs and five cloth head-
dresses as a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjono
said in West lrian, a remote province in
Indonesia. ·
Chief Obaharok, who \\'as sai(f to have
several other wives, reportedly heads a
cannibal tribe. '
In the past a photo-journalist, Miss
Sargent left Huntington Beach in October
to study and photograph cannibal tribes
in the Baliem Valley, a jungle area in the
heart of . West Ir Ian.
She has traveled eitensively in the
South Pacilic and other lands, In 1968,
she round a Dyak village in the
lndonesian .jungles or Borneo in need of
medicaJ, educational and agricultural
help.
Coming back to the st.ates, she locally
organiW the Sarge11t-Dyak Fund Inc. to
get relief for the prinlltive people.
ln addition cargoes of p i g s.
{See WEDDING, Pagt %)
Military sources said the fighting ap-
peared to be building toward a peak for
the final full day of warfare Saturday.
Three major air bases were sbelled but
a predicted Communist offensive to
snatch contested t~rritory just before the
war ends has not materialized.
Commtmist fo~ shelled major air
bases, killing a Marine sentry artd \\-'OUlld·
ing 21 other American personnel at the
Bien Hoa baSe outside Saigon. {See story.
picture, Page 4)
Another American was killed when his
OH6 observation helicopter crashed, ap-
parently a{W!r being hit by groundfire,
JOO miles east of Saigon.
Four Americans were \\-'Ounded in the
shelling of the airbase outside Pleiku in
!he Centl'a!J:!!gh!!nds and the U.S. Com·
mand said one man killed in that attack
also may have been an-American . The
victim wore civilian clothes and carried no identity cards, military spokesmen
said, so his idenlillcation and nationality
were not immed\,ately established.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers Dew 407
singJe-plane sorties during !be 24-hour
period ended at a a.m. today, the highest
number of such-attacks since the 409
reported May 28 at the he.lght of the
North Vietnamese invasion of South Viet-
nam.
The command &aid more than half lhe
strikes were concentrated in a 10-mile
strip controlled by the Communists
between the Demilitarized Zone and the
Cua VleL, river in northernmost Quang
Tri Province.·
*
By JACK CHAPPELL
01 "'-O•lly "llel Slttt
This weekend Laguna Beach police will
again stiffen enforcement in the Top of
the World undevelo~areas that have
become a haven for ofl·road motorcycl-
ing. Joseph J. Kelly, Laguna Beach
police chief. said.
Police o[ficers in special uniform will
ride their own off-road cycles in the rug-
ged terrain and issue either courtesy
notices, verbal warnings or eilaltons to
persons operating their machines on the
private property without express
permission of the owner.
Residents in the area have complained
bitterly to the city council about the
heavy-traffic in the area , and about the
trash, dirt and noise .::r~aled by
motorcyclists anci off-road vehicles
operated in th e nlily territory.
Last weekend. two officers. John
Saporito and Rick Louk patrolled the
area and issued 19 courtesy notices
Saturday and 17 Sunday for cycle riding
on privalP property. Many verbal warn-
ings were given and two narcotics ar-
rests were made. · -
Kelly said that the officers lo the
patrol were assigned on an overtime
basis and that the idea for using !he
persona] equipment of the oUk:ers came
from Saporito. ·
Wbea the matter came up during a re-
cent city council meeting Kelly said one
of t~e problems with enforce1nent Jn the
Pow -Hospitals Announced
Camp Pendleton Amo1tg Destgnuted Facilities ·
. .
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Defense
Department today officially announced a
llst of 31 military hospitals In the United
Slates whert returned U.S. war prisoners
will be brought for etaminaUons and
treatment aner they are freed by the
North Vietnamese. One is at Camp
P'ndleton
rn add.Ilion, the Pentagon announced
!hit Clill" 'Air"'Baie)n -the Philippines
will be tht initial receiving point (or
"POW• who '(Jill travel from llanol ln U.S.
m<d/cal evacuatlon planes.
At Cla~. the returned men will be able
to make '\.elephorle calls to families in the
United Slates alld he filled wllh new
uniform!f, in addition to receivina a
preliminary medical checkover.
Whit~ House aides are dllcll!!lng lhe
po1s1bm1y or a caii!oml• tr1p by Pr .. 1.
dent Nlmt to meet. the> 111'11 !rt<d U.S.
--
prisoners of war on t~ir way home from
North Vietnam, The Washington Post
reported today.
The newl!lplper said thtte has been no
final decision for tbe Presklent to make
the trip V Travli ,Air Force Base, about
50 miles south ol San Francisco. The first
returnees are expected to arrive at the
baJc In 1botlt two weeks.
Asked about the report, White !louse
Pr<lll -.iary Ronald L. Ziegler .. id
Nlxoo hu DOI made any plans to gr<et
the retumln1 prisoners.
Faclot'I being C0111id<rtd by lhe While
llouse in making a deeisk>n include the
fact ·that lbe drama and emotion of a
president.ill welcome llltlY be ·too much
exelt.ement for the returnees, the Post
said. It lnld Ibero ts lhe prospocl of some
unpredlc!able responses from !he
· aarvlcemen.
I •
, ..
~~ . -...
The 13 Navy t'm:pltals are:
Oa!t Knoll Naval HOlpltal. Oakland ;
l'olboa Naval HosplUil, S.n Ole&o : lhe
Naval Hospital at C.mp Ptndleton; the
Great L.akes. DI. Naval Hospital ; !he
Pltiladelplila Nsval Hosp/isl.
Also, Bethesda, (Md .) Naval llospilal ;
the Poc't&n\outh, Va., Naval Hospital : the
St. Albans Naval llospltal In New York ;
the Chelsea Naval llospll31 in Boston;
Utt JackJonville, Fla. Naval llospllll;
the Nova/ H .. pl11l at Camp Lejeunt,
N.C.; the Memphis., Tenn. N&val llos:pital
and the Bremerton, Wa11h. Naval
Hoopital.
The JO Air Force ho1pltaf1 are:
Malcol.m Grow Medical Center,
Andrews Air Force Bast, Md.: the
Wilford Hall . Medics/ Ctnler, Lackland
Air 1i~~ Base, Tex.: the David Grand
(See PENDLETON, P•J• II
<
f •
' ;. •
area was the inabllity of regular police
units to operate in the ofr-road ar.ca .
More enforcement action is planned in
the future when Orange County Sheriff's
Deputies will be assigned to enforce laws
on county territory, Kelly said.
In the last two weeks. three persons
'-ave broken legs while riding In the area.
One man was deta ined by officers Satur-
day for possession of a billy club. •
Durif\g the council meeting, city fa-
thers suggested the city could investiJ;iate
recreation areas open to motorcyclists
and cordinate with county agencies ta
to create additional ridir1g areas for
cyclists.
George Fowler, Recreation Depart-
ment head, said today he is investigating
the matter and that there are riding
areas available, but that due to the
distance. most local rid ers just use the
nearest vacant land .
He said he didn't reel an education pro-
gram by the department, ·would help the
problem much because few parents
\vould take their yowtg riders to a distant
spot for an all day outing. He said mariy
of the riders are very young.
Fowler said there did not appear to be
any areas within the city limits for off·
road riding. He said he has sµggestcd use
of some revenue sharing funds in a city-
county program to develop a rldlng area
nearby.
Orange Coast
Weather
1Continued sunny skies Is the
projected weather picture for Sat-
urday, with slightly warmer tem-
peratures, according to the weather
service. Highs In the mid-tiOs. Lows
tonight in the 40&.
INSIDE TODAY
Mick Jaaatr brought hla Roll·
lng Stones to Los A11gcle1 last
week for a concert bene/itting
Manag11a, Nicaragua. fft came
and cmiquered. See photo1, taken
by UC / freshman Andrea Wa ·
!er1, on the cov.r of lOda•'• · \Veekt?ilfer. '
• -,.._,.--•> DAil 'v PILOT LB Friday. J&nuaty 26, 1q7) -----------
Water Main
Completion
See11 Soo11
' Construction on the c0t1tro\'C'rsial South
L..1guna waler main of the South Coast
County \\'alC'r District is exprrtt'd 10 be
co1nplc1C'd 'iust afll'r the end of February
as v:ork h:is begun on the last hnk of the
W,0.000 project.
All that rema:ns to be ro mpte1rd of the
tw()-111ile 2~-u1ch n1a1n is a lil~foot Sl'C-
tion of extra hca ,·y p1µc bi,.>nea th Ali~
l 'reek. The maUl runs from Laguna
Bt?ach city limits to l lth Avenue in South
Laguna.
The pipeline has irked some residents
because of late night construction 1,1.·hich
they com plained made sleep impossible,
an d angered some environmentalists \\'ho
charged that the line 1,1.·ould spur greater
growth in the area.
Con1ractor Edmond J. \'adnais expects
to fini sh the understream crossing in
about seven days. Afler that 30 days will
be required for conneclion of distribution
lines and testing of the system before it
is put into ser,·ice.
Raymond C. l\liller. waleJ district
n1anager. said the old line. which is being
re placed by the one Wlder construction.
1~ badlv deteriorated and that two breaks
1n the Old pipe reeently caused a six-hour
disrupt ion of serv ice to about 20 percent
of the district's cuslomers. '
.. The ruptures in the pipe occurred
;ibout ;,ao feet north of Aliso Creek and
forced 1hc shutdo..,,•n of the entire ma in
\\hi le repairs were being made ," ~1iller
said .
.. Since this is the sole source of supply
for our district. we were tmable to con·
tinue water service expcept through
distribution lines fed from our re$en'oirs.
.. No supply at all was a\•ai11ble f~r
users in l.agunita, Blue Lagoon, Treasure
Island and the area above the Alpha Beta
Plaza, since the new tank on the hill
above Alpha Beta is not COMected to tbe
old system," he said.
Glass, Aluminum
Recycle Center
At Laguna High
Ecology Now, glass and aluminum
recycle center, will be located at the
parking lot of the Laguna Beach High
School from 9 a.m. lo noon Saturdays.
No storage space is available, and pick
up of glass and aluminum will be made
by volunteer workers at those hours only.
1'he center will nol operate in case of
rain.
Glass brought to the center should be
conta.Uler only, no plates or broken
glass: clean (label! are okay), with
aluminum and plastic bands removed ;
and separated by color. Coors bottles
!':hould be l..ept separate and all material
should be delivered in a sturdy container.
Aluminum left at the center may be
clean TV dinner trays, plates, foil, or
cans (se~mless) and should be flattened
to save space .
Ecology Now is a non-profit community
activity v.·ith proceeds from the com·
mercial purchase of the recycled
materials being donated to area com·
munity action groups.
Dinner to F ete
Lagu11a's Ullom
A dinner in honor of Dr. Willi am
Ullom. the ousted superintendent of lhe
Laguna Beach Unified School District,
\1•ill be held at the Airporter Inn March 2.
Also to be honored are Dr. Charles
Hess. assistant superintendent for
business and Dr. Robert Reeves, assis·
tant superintendent fo r instruction.
Dinner tickets at S7 .50 per person are
available at Adventure Travel Serv ice,
Gigi's Playthings. Carols Book Shop.
Tickets may also be obtaned by con·
tacling Mrs. Lucille \Vhilaker, 494-7185.
01.\Nat COAST U
. DAILY PILOT
Tiit Or•nge CW'! 0.-.ILY PILOT, wllf'I Wllkfrl
h comlltnftl Ille N ..... Prn.s, 1, PllOll!ollcG ..,.
Ille Or11>9c (0111 P"'61illl1~ CtmcNll'i'. ,..,....
r.it ~U'°n' ""' llUbllsr.ed, Mlll'ldl'i' 111"711!1'h
F"1uv. tor (1;>511 Mn1, ~I "'""'·
Huntln;ton BCM:ll/Fou11,,ln V&ll~L•guna
8~•~!1. l•vine/Sacldlebldl ar1ll 5111 Clem~ltf
51" Ju111 Clpblf".,,._ A •11191• l"fVlonll
~"'°" i) l>Vll!l~ s.1un11r1 "net s...,.,1vs.
1nc po'lnclrM1 pUbl!$hl"9 pl1nt 11 .ti lJO Wnt
lll'i' Str~t, Coll11 Mftl, Cllltomi., fU'6.
Roltott N. W • .d
Pralcll'nt •nd P11b11'fltor
J1c~ R. C11tlty
Viet Pr1$1a.-.I ll'ld G...I M1f11fW _
Titol'l\11 l(•••if
Ed!9"'
Tlio11111 A, Murphint
Mlnltlnll Edl!IOI'
Ch•rl•t H. Looi IUehotd I . H.sll
AulO.nt M1...,1119 E•ltwt I
yt"" IMdi Oflfke
222 Nro1t Avillillu•
M1 iU1119 At1Jr1u! P.O. lox 666, 92:652 --CM•• MM1: )J(l w-:::f Strott NM=lltll: U)J H l....,trll l-llll'll ltlfl llffdl: 11111 a .. c.11 &wlweHI Stn c le! JOS Norfh El ComlM 1t111
T.i.,.._ C714J 642-4221
C""'"'" A~ 642•1671
Let-......... o., ......... : l•le•ll••• ., ... , .. ,,
~t, 1tn, °''"" COl•t PtlM?IJllnf Com!Mnf. Ht ...... llOl'lft, llklltntion..
.ctffWlll ..,.,,..,. ff( a1Yor!!Ml'!'IWll1 '*""'
ll'\ll'i' M ~-wlttlouf "9Clll ,... fftlttlon ., CDP'l""lollt ll'Jl'MI'.
ketl'ld cltM Mttttf M id ti C:"tf ~
C1Htor11lt. SUOKri.tlon b'i' CtfTitl' at.f.I
; "*""''I b'I' mtn U.IJ. rntntl'llY1 m111'trr
( '*'ilwlttt. u,., """'""'·
Chosen
Rev. James H. Cotton, a Prot·
estant minister, h as been
named director of the chap-
laincy program at South Coast
Community Hospital to admin·
ister a non-denominational pro-
gram for patients. Cotton ts a
retired • .o\rmy chaplain.
Main Beach Lot
Opened All Da y
Along El Paseo
An oceanfront parking lot at El Pa!EO
street on the Main Beach has been open-
ed 1<> day-long pari.lng by the city or
Laguna Beach.
Before, lot bad been open only during
summer and winter peak vi.sitor ptr1ods
and then with an attendant. Following
t~ special season.! the lot , which ac-
commodates about 60 vehicles, was clos-
ed.
No attendant will regularly be at the
lot due to personnel expense, but during"
heavy weekend parking demand. a man
may collect fees , city officials said.
On some Swldays, the lot may be clos·
ed 1<> general pari.lng for use by
members of the Assistance League.
1Aayor Charlton Boyd said the lot was
opened due to requests from the public.
Nix on Dis closes
$268 Billion
Federal Budget
WASff!NGroN (UPI ) -President
Nixon disclosed today that the federal
budget far the next fiscal year will total
$268 billion, and said he would discuss
details in a radio address to the nation
Sunday evening from the Florida White
House. A $12-billlon deficit also was
forecast by a Senate leader.
The President gave the budget figure
for the year starting July l following a
meeting l\ith congressional leaders of
both parties, and while greeting a group
representing prisoner of war families.
Nixon also said the final budget figure
for the current fiscal year wW be $250
billion -the ceiling he demanded and
one which rouJed some members of
Congress who feel the chief e1ecutive in-
fringed on legislative prerogatiyes.
Presidential Pres! Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the President already taped
the ll·minute radio program on the
budget whi ch will be broadcast from Key
Biscayne, Fla .. at 3 p.m. PST Sunday.
Main Beach Park
Meeting Slated
A public discussion on plans for the
fl.lain Beach Park will be held at 7:30
p.m. Feb. 13 at the Laguna Beach City
Hall chambers.
The round table discussion is sponsored
by the Lagwi.a Beach Coordinating Coon·
cil and is the first public airing scheduled
on new plans of the Main Beach Park.
Those plans have been crlticiled by
membe rs of lhe citizens Ma in Beach
Park Commit!C'e ""'ho ha\"e charged that
the recorr.mendcd plons include too much
paving. that .. -osts are excessi ve and
disagree over design and locatlon of the
lifeguard facility.
The Coordinating Council ha! invited
project ar'chitects. mc1nbers of the ~lain
Beach Committee as wC'Jl as city officials
to the public meeting.
Wlwle Cruises
Begin ~aturday
Whalcwatch cruises sponsored by the
Dana Point Chamber of Commerce will
begin Saturday at l p.m. at the docks or
Dana Wharf Spartflshlng and the public
is welcome.
The chamber wlll rpon90r the cruises
on Feb. 12 and 24 as well ind tlckels are
$3.50 for adulta and $2 ror children under
12 for any of tbti trlpa.
Admission for Saturday's cruises eta
be paid at the docka. r
Sales for other cruises are being h1ndl·
«I through the Dana l'Olnt branchn or
Bank ol America or Southern C.IUornla
First National Bank. Neutronlcs snd
Apollo Television also will be selling tht
licket.s.
•
$1 Million
Dr~Ha~
InCQU-ntr
•
Fire V olunt-eers
Iii South Laguna
Post Busy Year
,,,. South Laguna Fin Department -
ooe ol the last w!untter lort<a ,._
maiDlng In Orange County -urned ill
ke<p In 19'72.
'l1le lf.tnall lllllt responcled to !!ti caJIJ,
broken down as: follows: fire emergm-
cies, 1%; medical aide, 13; public
aul!tance, 17; !Ille aJanm, 17; wl>
tance to other station.I, lai lt&Ddby at ac-
cident scenes, 14.
The force aho logged l ,llOll boun or
direct training time in~ mu or-ardlo-
pulrnonaey l'tSUlcitatlcm,' uae ol ropea,
fire exttngulsben, ladclen, lordble mtry
and fire 1trategy.
In c:ooperaUon with the South La,,...
County Water lliltrlot, the clepulment
ilUpected all fire hydrants within the
water dlttrlct. These cbecU will COlltinue
during 1m. •
A hou,..to-bouae fire pmmtioft pn>-
gram alJo wu c:onductod by the cleporl·
ment to explain tm'ices avalllbZe, bome
fire prnenlioll' and dlstrtbutloo o1
telephone lllc:km bearinc the fire
department's emergency number.
'l1le department ii entertng Iii 15th
year of continuous aervice ID South
Laguna.
l'ro•PageJ
WEDDING ...
goats and chickens, she wu reported to
have taken six tons of medicine. three
motorboats, and agrtculturtl equlpm~t
to the village.
Upon her return to Hunt1ncion Betch
in early 1970, she !polle ol her aclventum
before a class .at HlrboUr View EJemen-
tary School.
"It was an incrtdlble drum and an
Impossible joun!e)'," Ille WU quotod ID
the DAILY Pll.01'.
"We 1Wld t VttJ p>d clllnct or mU• Inc the ugly American r11p1Ctecf°11aln,"
1be told the children wllo bad balpe<I
purchue 5,llOll boob for • -....... In the Junlle.
Report• that alter lier -recent
IDll'lla1e to the tribal chief Iba -I<> abed her Weti..n clothu tDd drOM ool)I
In 11rihg1 aad 1tripl Gt the ntU-
brw&ht qulck,objectlono fnlm ollldall ID
Wamena.1 West trian beldqllrt.l:rs.
'11ley llld tllal her actiotll mllbt apttl
their planJ to "cMllot" die lrtbO't _..
In a P"'lram :ailed Operttloo. KtltU.
The •Im of the t"°')'eOI' ......... II lo
Pitt clolhet on the .. u..., latl .....
them to I money eot1110t111 tDd Midi
t'iem I<> speak. ttld and wrlll tltt
lndoneliao language. '
-
Domes~
U.S. ·Will Start
P6W 6perations
Unde'r the terms of the peace agree·
ment to be slgntd Saturday Jn Paris, all
American POW1 In Indochina are to be
returned within 60 days in roughly
equal lnatallmenta at two week intervals.
Lalrd uid that will mean releases in
groups of more than 100 each. The Pe11 ·
lagon lists 591 American! captive in
Southeast Asia, plus some 1,334 11sted as ~
missing in action.
He gavl! no explanation for the wester·
ly route from Hanoi over Vientiane
rather than the more direct easterly
fllght pattern over the open sea to the
Philippines.
l'ronePflflel
PENDLETON • •
Medical Center, Travis Air Force Base ;
the Air Force Reglolial Hospital at Max-
well Air Force Base, Ala .; the Air Force
Regional Hoopttal at Sheppard A I r
Force Base, Ttr.; the Air Force
Regional Hospital, March Air Force
Base , near Riverside; the Air Force
Regional Hospital at Westover AFB .
~1ass.; and medical «nters at Scotl
AFB. Ill ., Keesler AFB. Miss.: a n d
-wright·Patterson AFB. Ohio.
The Army eight installations are:
Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam
Houston, Tex.: Lettern\an General
Hoapital, San Francisco ; Fltzs.launom
C.neral Hospital, DenYl!r, Colo.; Valley
Forge General Hospital, Phoenixville,
Pa.; Tripler General Hospllal, Honolulu;
Ireland Army Hospital, Ft. Kno1, Ky.;
Patterson Army Hospital, Ft. Monmouth,
N.J.; and the Army General Hospital at
Ft. Gordon, Ga.
ROUTE OPE NED
AFTER STORM
SALE ·
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUALITY
••• NOW AT SALi PRICIS
NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE
OVER 70 SOFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
Sofas Sofas
R•g. SAU Reg.
I ' Cvt Vel•et, 689 I' LIMn Print.
MultKolorod, 790. Henredon. 799. r Crt1C911t Sofa, 549 I' Tvxodo -Aqu.. Gold Velvet. 690. Canon. 570. I' Hl ... ck Texture 599 Shorrlll 619. I' Whitt/Groen.
I' Print -Gold & 911 ShtrTlll. 679.
Or•"ll -H.nredon 1077. I' Print -Royal
I' Velvet Stripe -579 CHch. 619.
Shorrlll 695.
Chairs Chairs
SALE
659
465
589
589
Pr. Gold Vtlvtt. 179H. Pr. Choirs Print 139u. Sherrill. 205 ....
Woodmtrk 159, ... Pr. Print. 185..: Pr. Cholra -Oofd Velvet 189 .. , Canon. 224 .... Mt111 c..... . 209 .... .
Pr. Cholra -Yellow 199H. Wing Choir. 189 Velwet. Drexel. 259 .... Ruat, 219. I
botthtr Cholra 20%off Pr. Gold 179 ... /IM Sofn ALL Velvet. 209 ....
Unbellevable velves in quotity Sof11 enil Choirs. All 8-w1y henil-lie<I. ~osl Scotchguari:leel,
Some down encl fHtlitn. All lrut qu<1rrty ana •I nry setisfying prices. -
Seleci9d vroups from Htnrtdon, Htrit1ge, Dronl, and others, now al sale prices. Slop in now
for best 11lection.
INTlllOIS
wao&n • UMtAn ''" .. ''" ..... , .,., , ...
Ntwl'ORT IEACH e
1n1 WUTCLIH DO.
'42·2111
lA6UNA tEACti e
J41 HOlTH COAST HWY.
~""'"' TO~RANCI e
llMt HAWIHOlNI ILYO.
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Saddlehaek .. ~
Tod~'s Final
N.Y. Stocks
•
VOL. 66, NO. 26, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES • JANUARY 26, 1973 .. TEN CENTS
. ' )'-~ ( ''1 . .J
Coast A.dventuresll~ W~ils •cannibal~
Wyn· Sargent, an explorer and an·
thropologist from Hwitlngton Harbour
who has been studying the sexual Ufe ol
tribes in West Irian, has married the
chief of one of the tribes, the West Irlan
mllllary~command said today.1
M1ss Sargent's local addreS! ls 4001
ilomlng Star Drive , Huntington Beach.
The ~2.-year-oid divoreee married Chief
Obaharok Jan. 8 'in a tribal ceremony,
giving hlm 11 pigs and five cloth head·
••
dresses & a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjono
said in West Irian, a remol:e province in
Indo!tesla.
Chief Obaharok, who was sald to have
several other wives, reportedly heads a
cannlbal Jribe.
In the past a phot~joumalist, Miss
Sargent left Huntington Beach in October
to study and photograph cannibal lribes
in the Ballem Valley, a jungle area in tbe
heart of West Irian.
rv1ne
Santa Cruz AC!tima Peaks
\ ·.
She has traveled extensively in the
South Pactlic and other lauilt. ID !IA,
sbe !Ound a Dyak riUast In. U..
lndoneslnn Jungles or Borneo 'in need bf
medical, educational and qrlculbjral
help.
Coming back to the states, abe locally
organi~ the Sargent:Dyat F.und Inc. to •
gel reUef for the primitive people.
ln addition cargoes of p I g s,
goats and chickens, she was· report~ to
have taken six tons of medicine, three ·'
. •.
~motorboats, and agricultural equipment
' to the Village.
Upon 4er ret.um to Hlllltington Beach
in early !1101 she spoke of her adventures
before a cla!s at Harbour View Elemen-
tary 'School.:
~·Jt· wu an incredible dream and an
impo~ible journey," she was quoted in
the DAILY PILOT.
"We su..od a very good chanet! of mak·
ing the ugly American respected again.,''
she told the children who bad helped
purchase 5,000 books for a sisler school
in the jllllgle.
Re;>orts that af1er her most recent
marriage to the tribal chief she vowed to
shed her Weste.n clothes and dress only
in strings &nd straps of the "ali ves
brought quick objccli~ns. from ofJicials in
Wamena , West lrie.n T1eadc1uart crs.
They said that her actions might upset
their plans to "civilize" the tribe's people
in a prog ran1 call ed Operation Kott>ka.
The oim of the l\\'o-year progran1 if; to
era
··~· ··-.
Slayings:
3 Stabbed
Two More Killed .: ' .
In War Stepup
SANTA CRUZ (APl -The bodies of a SAIGON (UPI ) _ The "'ar in South
Yr-Oman and l\li'O young boys 'vbo were Vi etnam intensified today with the ap-
stabbed to death have been found in a f d remote cabin at the end of a dirt trail in proach of the cease-ire, an t\li'O -or
hillt outside this coastal resort town, possibly three -Americans were killed and 25 olhers wounded in the closing shellff's officers said today. hours of the conflict.
1)e sheriff issued an all-points bulletin Both" the number of strikes by u .S. thii' a man identified as Robert Clayton F'ripcis was wanted fOr questioning. He planes find ground battles .involving
ho ·th I ha' government and Vietnamese Communist wa'!I· described as a ut 30, w1 ong 1r t reached eight-month h.iglls with anti a beard. roops , ti! the -officers declined to comment on his less than 48 boui:s rema!rung un
connecUon with the case. No arrest war-~hedulerl cease-fire begirtS at 8 a.m.
rant wu Issued. f( f( f(
The bodies of the woman, a6out !9, and s
the boys, about 3 ud 10 yean old, .. ere v Cho. . oSe" discovered by Stephen Houll, ·ll,"rieJghbor, ,__. ... •:..-• "
about 10 p.m. Tbqriday, alld • aheriff's " ~
1t;.Qtement. p dl ti. Kenneth Pittenger said the bodies "'n ~ton
bore stabbing wounds. t:; ' I
The victims' names were not released.
But police in Albany, east of 5an Fran·
cillCO, said they were asked by Santa
Cruz authorities to notify Robert· Hughes Of Albany that his son, David, 10, was a
homicide victim at Santa Cruz.
Hughes is a bassoonist with the
Oaldand Symphony Orchestra, and
(See BODIES, Page !I
Stocks Drop
Below 1,000
NEW YORK (AP) -The Dow
Jones average of 30 industrial
.rtocks, which burst above I.ODO
·points at the close of trading Nov.
"14 amid fanfare, dropped below
that mark during midday trading
·today. At 11 a.m. the Dow was
down 8.3S to 996.24.
' Brokera cited investor concern
about Inflation and the U.S. trade
... deficit as the main facton spurring
,the drop.
. · Wednesday, the Dow was down
14.07 to 1001.59. Thursday all stock
,markets were closed in observance
;of a national day of mourning for
.. the late president Lyndon B. John·
60Jl,
POW Center
WASHINGTON (AP J -The Defense
Department today officially annoWlced a
list of 31 military hospitals in the United
States where returned U.S. war prisoners
will be brought for examinations and
treatment after they are· (reed by the
North Vietnamese. One is at Camp
Pendleton
In addition , the Pentagon announced
that Clark Air Base in the Philippines
wUl be the initial receiving point for
POWs who will travel from Hanoi in U.S.
medical evacuation planes.
At Clark, the returned men will be able
to make telephone calls to families in the
United States and be fitted with new
uniforms, in addition to receiving a
preliminary medical chec.kover.
White House aides are discm§ing the
posSibility of a California trip by Presi-
dent Nixon -to meet the first freed U.S.
prisoners of war on their way home from
North Vietnam, Tbe Washington Post
"reported today.
The newspaper said there bas been no
final decision for the President to make
the trip tr Travis Air Force Base, about
50 miles sotlth of San Francisco. The first
returnees are expected to anive at the
base in a~t two weeks.
Asked about the report, White House
press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
(Set PENDLETON, Page Z)
Sunday (4 p.m. Saturday PST ). Hundreds '
or Vietnamese were killed or wounded. .&~
Military sources said the fighting ap--'~.
peaced to be building toward a peak for
lhe final full day of warfare Saturday.
Three major-air bases were shelled but
a predicted Communist offensive jo
snatch contested. t~rritory ju.st before the
\var ends h:as not materialized.
Communist forces shelled major air
bases, i1lllDg a Marine sentry and wound·
in& 21 other American' penonnel"'at the
Bien Hoa base outaitje S&ig\llL (See llory,
picfur!, tPage 4) -"
Allotber ,u..rican -.u tilled when his
Olli obseri~tjm ~r crashed, •t>
pareoUy· lll\er ~ bit by groundfire,
100 miles ~s{ ol SalgOll.
'FoUr Americans were wounded to the
shelling of the airbase outside Plelku in
the Central liigblands, and the u.s."eom-
mand said one man killed in that attack
al.so may have been an American. The
victim wore civilian clothes and carried
no identity cards. military spokesmen
said, .so his identification and nationality
were not immediately established.
U.S. jet fighter-bOimbers new ··407
single-plane sorties during the u-hour
period ended at 8 a.m. today, the blgbest
number of such attacks since the ~
reported May 28 at the height of the
North Vietnamese invasion of South Viet-
nam.
The command said more than hall the
strikes were concentrated in a IO.mile
strip controlled by the Communists
between the Demilitarized Zone and the
Cua· Viet river In northernmost Quang
Tri Province.
U.S. Air Force 852 heavy bombers new
26 missions, each of them comprlslng
three planes, over other Communist con-
trolled areas of the country. Seven of the
missions struck within 35 miles or
Saigon.
Military sources said crew of the
planes began preparations for tbe.ir final
combat flights Saturday immediately
after returning to their bases from
today's missions. •
On the ground, military sources said.
lbere were 150 combat incidents reported
during tbe 24-hour period ended at 4. p.m.
today.
Thi! Would be the highest number since
the 142 reported during the 24-hour
(See VIETNAM, Page !)
OLDEST NORTH AMERICAN FIRIO.CLAY ARTIFACTS
11':'.WIM R1nc:h Find C1rbon Dated·~ More Thin 6,~ Ye1 r1 ---
Westminster Police Find
PilJ·s Worth $1 Million
By JOHN ZALLER
' Of ... ~" P'llet .....
Westminster pOlice today claimed to
have seized $1 million worth of am-
phetamines and arrested two Spani.sb-
speaking men' in what officers termed
the biggest narcotics haul In the city's
history.
Police said ,t~o anopymous phone calls,
led to the arre.tts WednesdB)' night in a
truckyard in the ind ustrial ·iector of the
city.
¥exic'1J national, were being held today
in Orange county jail with ball set at
$100,000 each. 'r.he meo were identified as
J,uan l\lanuel Hemandex Garcia, 38, of
Mexico,· and Alex: Magallanes, 46. of
Buena Park .
Police said the men, neither of lfhom
spoke English, said they were not aware
they were apparently dealing in ' con-
t,ra~and drugs. .
The raid was made about 8:JS p.m. Six
offi«rs charged with their guns drawn
on the two suspecta, v.·ho offered no
resistance.
W alkathon Scheduled
Officers asserted the raid netted ~s.
million amphetamine (or ... pper") pills,
V>'hicb police believe were brought in
frorilMexico. .
Four Westminster OfOcers and two
federal narcolica agents bad been staking
out a truck ator..ige lot at 13612 Milton St.
for more than 2,(1 hours by the lime the
arrests were made.
Both men were unanned.
Police had earlier watched as the tv.·o
meo reportedly entered the tnick storage
lot about 8 p.m. 1be suspect.a allegedly
went direcUy to one ~foot flatbed truck
and began removing wooden boards on
the trailer, revealing a hidden storage
area.
· _.Viejo Students Bo(}St Bond Election Saturday
• About 400 Mission Viejo High School
student.a are expected to gaUier in front
of the school where they go to-classes on
an extended day and in portable Cla>
irooms to stage a walk-a-tboo Saturday --··· . . . u';ill' pubilctze the Saddleback Valley
\!nilled School District's bond election
Feb.~· · Tbei" will be joined on' their llllmated
thre&mile walk to El Toro 8bopping
Center al El Toro Road and Rocklleld
Botilovlld by studellti ln>m Lal AlllDll
...i Lo ~ !Dler!J>edilte s&ools.
5addlel>ii:k-Vlllef Unllled wlJl -over eperotloll ~ Oie' ..-la ·111o *""
Ju11 [,
Tiie la mUl!Gn boiil eledlon. "°""'ed
wil.11 an 111 mllllon slate oppDnlanmeot
.,.....,, is belnc bold to pl ,,.,. to
build etcht elemelltary ICbools, two in-
lennodlol<t acbools ud two btib ICllooll
in the. nut nve y11r1, diltrkt allldlll
say.
Mission Viejo High, the Only high
school in the new district, was built for
1,850 students. currently there are about
3,000 enrolled.
In September, an enrollment of about
~~t<lh is expected at the · overcrowded
school. r '
Student!; ar'! attending classea there
from about 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on a
nine-period day. Mos schools oper:ate on
a six or seven period day. ~
• Both La PM llltelmediate in Mission
Viejo md Loo Ali!OS llllermedlate in £1
Two ... ....,..ting a\ capacity: Loo
Allool ..,ad Ill Seplember.
--.ion -proliibiti tile htcll --t ---.... danll>C tbe -boue or o!lldally '"P' ~ Sltunlay't walk. Memben of the
ttlJdelK: auvt1t1ment ire ~
helping tbe effort.
lleoianlol at 10:30 a.m., ltUdtota will
.,..P la lrant of IM ht1h lchool on
Cbriuntl Drive and walk via Muirlands
and Rocklield Boulevards to 'El Toro
Center.
Lisa M0tbaugh, ?>.fission Viejo High
student president, and Bob Oiitia, stu-
dent representative to the Tustin . Union
High board, will speak ·at Lilt md,of the
joomey. RelresJu\lents will be served.
So far tbh week. about 400 atudenta at
the high school had signed-up to go on the
publicity walk.
SigD'ilPI' oontlnued tOda}'. How> many
more students wUI join thc .mtu·cll at-the
tut mJr.ute, and how inanY will come rrom the lri<ennediltte• !dioolt was not
lmown .by, will: O'larillers· ,
M1s1 wlaUe, pnnt.-C:ampa!pn !bf
BONDS (llalld Our New Dlatrlct'Schooll)
""' ttacJng .... --el· IGrt !rith up IO I,llllO bloct wwkers
~ at each district c'mrs'WJ'
H...ioci by BONDS ~ J'llet' pl •'
G\un> of El Toro, Lilt -iiolirien ore
(See WALKING, Pip II
• -
The two suspects, one of whom is a
Hett.er Get . .
Car License
Poliet! said the two men quickly
removec.: about 40 black plastic OOgs,
each containing 25,000 piUs.
"We timed our raid just right," said
Oet. Rick McK!noey of the Westminster
force . "Tbey bad just flnisbed unloading
all the b11g1 atld so there was nothing le(t
for u.s to do but make .he arrest!."
McKinney said the yard Is leased by a
th!rp man, who la not bellaved 10 be in-
·volved 1n the allegedly i'llcgal operation,
. McKinney also .said the two suspccll
cl1lmed to be lnnoce6t.
"1heY 1Dld an unknown man Md ot·
~ to .,.Y u..n fl!IO each to,do the1ob
and Lllat they dl&J'I !mow what they were
"""1ialJ' McKinoey aid. .
McKllmy ldded Lila!, the truck '• hid-
den OODlpartmoat ....,ed to have be<n
in [llace 1 Iona tlmo:. IJe. alto noted that
the plll "8p.bad bt<n IOOlted ID vinqar,
wbidi wOldd -i.. d!>f• QSed at
--to llllll out Illegal drup. McKinney 11ld lnvesilgaUon would con·
llnue ln an effort to flnd accomP.lices.
pu t clothes on the natives ," in~roduce
them to a mo:1ey economy and te{lch
t:iem to speak , read and write the
Indonesian language.
·A Jakarta, Inioncsia , ~ newspaper,'
··Serita Buanq," , reportedly ran a
photogrl'l ph of ~liss Sargent and Chief
Obaharok. She "·as wearing jeans and a
shirt and he a koteka. a kin.d of G-string.
The l1.S. Embassy in Indonesia said it
had no informa1ion on the marriage.
e
1971 Find
Regarded
Milestone
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 "'' 0.11'1' P'lltl '""
The oldest man-made, fired, clay
artifacts ever unea rthed in North .
America by some 2.cm years ha ve been
discovered on the Irvine Ranch by a
team o~ cal State Fullert o n
archeologis ts. .
Roger J . Desautels. president of Costa
~·lesa-based ArchaL'Ological l~esearch
Inc. today announced at UCl the
sigr iOcance of the Jul y, 1971 digs above
Upper Nev.·port Bay
''The discovery is an archeological
milestone which opens •an ·entirely new
perspecUve on prehistoric art fonns in
Ncrt'1 America . .
"The.8e artifacts have been con-
cl~ively dated by Carbon-14 tests
performed at UCLA and Gakuahuin
Un!verslly, Tokyo. The testsibave placed
the age of the artifacta at more lhan
6,000 years," Desautels says.
The exact location of the find is being
kept secret to prevent amateur pot
hunters from destroying the site's
historical significaJX.-e.
Desautel!tosald the Irvine Company will
protect the site against trespa~rs. ARI
hold.r: a contract with the land develop-
ment finn to inSure the protection ~
mapping of significant historical sites
located on the 83,000 acre ranch.
Christopher Drover, 25, or Lagliria
Beach, now a lecturer for UC Irvine Ex-
tension, Jed the student group from Cal
State Fullerton in the six week dig during
the summer of 197i.
The oldest previous examples of North
Arr.erican ceramic objects ever to be
unearthed are estimated to be 4,500 years
old and were found in the eastern United
States.
The thimble sized objects decorated
with designs left by sharp polt\t in-
struments ha ve no apparent relationship
to similar items of a later date !round in
North America . whose origins of style
can be traced to Asia and Me:llco,
Desautels aaid.
Drover said the importance of this
discovery is related to proof that this
unknown early Orange County resident
had developed the technology not only to
fi re clay but to decorate it wilh pointed
instruments and something "not unlike a
\Vheel."
The 5000 B.C. date of the· ten artifacts
!See ARTIFACTS, Page !)
Oraage <:out
Weather
Continued sunny skies is lbe
projected weather picture for Sat-
urday, with slightly warmer te~
peratures, according to the weather
service. Highs in the mid-«ls. Lows
tonight in the tOs.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Mick•Jaggtr brouoht hb Roll·
'"" Stones to Lot Anoe.Lei lass
wet k for a con~r& btMfltttno
Afdnagua, Nicorao11a. 111 oam1
and conquer1d. See photo1, tok.im
by UC{ frll''F-f." Audrffl.-W"' l<!rs , ·on lhi <bv<+ Of 14doyt
Wt tkender .
--0 ... ...... .._ . or-.. et..rr n --.,..,...... tt --llldl ,...._an -. -..... -. __..,....ts.ft --. ·-....
2 DAIL V PILOT IS Friday J.tnuary 26, 1CJ7)
Hottte Soma
U.S. Will Start
.
POW Operations
\\'ASH INOTON (AP l -Sl'crclary or
Oclense ~lt:Jvu1 R. lNird ~aid today oper·
11t1ons for briJJ~ing out v.s. prisoners or'
\1 ;1r fn.in 1 Hanoi "will 1tnrt lhis next
11t't'k." 111th 111ore 1h1111 100 to be homo
ll!lhi11 (llU \ll!t'kS.
Laird -".'.lid !ht· PO\\'s \\'lll be no\l'tl
non~top fro1n Hanoi to Clnrk Air Force
Ba!>1' 111 th1' Ph1hppines over a round·
aboo1 rotl!c lhlll will fir!lt tu,ke them
01 er V1euu1ne 10 LIOI.
Uut, he said, there 'A·ould be no landina
in \11t>n!ll1ne us lnd1rated \Yednesd1y by,
presidl'n t1al ad\'iser Henry A. KIQ:lnge:r,
111 outlining term1 of the pe•ce •rree·
lllt'nl
"Present pl:m1 do not call for a 1top in
r 1e11tiant>," Yird said
North Vietnam wlll pro'lldt An1eric1n
ofrlcia\1 in Pari1 with a lilt of POWs on
Saturday. A 1poke11nan for the U.S.
delegation in Paris said the li!lt 11·ill not
bf.' made publ ic in Paris. however.
Pentagon officials said, meantime,
fl('Xl·of·kin \1ould be notiried before tho
list is h1<1dt' public unless the North Vitt· . . " ·'
Fro•P11fel
PE NDLE TON • •
!\ixon has 1101 m<ide any plans to greet
the rC'lum1ng prisoners.
Fac1or1 beina conslde™ by the White
House in making a decision include 1he
fact !hat the drama and emotion of a
prl'."identia\ welcome may be too much
excitement for the returnees. the Post
said. H s.:ii1 !here i1 the pro1pect o{ iOme
unpr_ed1r1able r11ponse1 from the
ser\·1cemen.
The 13 i\'.a1'Y hospitals are :
Oa~;. 1\.110!1 !\a1•al Hospital , Oakland;
Falboa :\aval }Jospital, San Diego; the
I\aval Hospital at Camp ~ndleton; tht
Great Lakes. Ill. Naval Hospital ; the
Philadelphia Naval Hospital.
Also. Bethesda, (Md.) Naval H~pital :
the Portsmouth, Va., Naval Hoapltal : the
St. Albans Naval Hospltlll ln New York ;
the Chelsea Naval ~oapltal tn Boston;
the Jacksonville, Fl1 . Naval Hoaplt1l ;
the Naval Hoapital at Camp Ltjtwi.,
N.C.; lhe Memphi1, Tenn. Naval Hoapilll
and the Bremerton, W11h. Naval
Hospila~
Minor Surgery
Center Displays
Wares at Hoag
Hpa: Memo"lal H01pltal In Ntwport
Beach wlll have an open houN Sunday to
formally open the flr1t outpatient minor
surgery center In California.
Built with a n&0.000 Irvin• Jl'oundaUon
grant, the facility will be known •• the
Jame• Irvine Surgical Center.
The 2 to 5 p.m. opening Sunday will In-
ch.de tour1 of the center, which holpltal
offlclals 1ay will pennll nflnbr surgery
too complicated for a doctor'• offict, but
which otherwlae would Involve a two.
night stay.
"The coat for u1e or the factllty w!ll be
about the same as the regular hnaplt•I -
except for bed and lJOard," a spokes.man
explained.
Dr. Dougla1 Neweomb, director of the
center, explained that 111 oper1Uon1 In
ho1pital11 normally require admll1lon of
the patient the night before an operation
and another night'• 1tay tor oburv1Uon.
"But here ," he 11ld , "we will be keep.
ing people for only two or three houri."
The center h11 three operatlna room1.
but is only being used at half.capacity -
about nine patient• a day. Dr. Newcomb
cxph1lned that uae will be atepped up
gruduall y.
"We expect to be in ruU operation In
<ibout two months," Dr. Newcomb 1ald.
The cfnter 11 located on Hoapital Road,
immedtotely north of the driveway to the
m~l n entrance of the hoaplt•l.
OUN•I COAST ts
DAILY PILOT
Tiie Or1nte C.0.11 DAILY PtLO"l, .,,;11'1 'fllhici.
1, """ltlll!!f fllt Newt.,.f'ftl. 11 lll*lltl'lell try tne Or•-Cll.JJI PU!ltl\lllng c~-.,. s.ep.
•Ill ldi!llilll lfl PUtlhl>ed. MDndtY ll'lf'Olllll
Fri111y, NI' C011ol1 Mt,~. N~ •Md!.
H...,11ng1 .... 8tac1111011,111 .. ;11 VAlitv, L-.iun.t
8eacn. 1...,;,.,151,,cU1N(k alWI San cie.n.ntt/
S•n Juan (1pl5h-1111. A 1ln9le re-i;iional
f'lition It (IVltllil\M l•tunl•Yt 6f1c1 l11n<h"r'-
ri.e prfnCIJl.,ll pUllt!illll'lt 1111111 l• II 3.JD w~~I
B1y $1rKI, CMll M .. , Ctlllomr.0 9101.6.
Ro~ert N. w,,4
,.,,,Ml..it '""' l"l/llliUlff'
J1ck ~. C"rl1y
Viet ,.,t11t1111t dr!lll Gw1t'4ll M ... °""'
lho11111 1(11¥11
li!dlfflf'
'ihol'ltJ A. Mwri-t.1110
Mtnl(lklg Edl!Oi'"
Ck.11111 H. Lo•• l t1h1 .... p, Nill
A11ltt.111 Mlfllollfll ltiltn -
•
namese. make it public when thoy turQ It
o\'cr to i.: .s. officials.
Indications "·ere lhilt the list \\-ould be
made public early next week if nut-or.
kin are notified first . It "·as not oJur
whtt.btir under 1ucb clrtWNtance11' 111 or.
tho names would be reletled
simultant0usly.
In a taped lnten1iev.· on the NBC Today
sho11·, Laird gave no specific date ror the
landln« of U.S. plants In Henol 1nd 1ett
unclear "'hen the fir&t prisooen would be
given their freedom . u.s. orncJala worklna on lhe POW
release-plan :1ald this was llkel1 to occur
sometime near the end of I.ht two-week
period lollowinc the 1Jgnb11 ol Jbt re-
agreement.
A1ked In tht lnltrVlew, "When can we
expect the first American priaonel'I lo
return bomeT" Lalrd replied that Projtct
Homl!COmlna. "\\'W 1tart tht1 neJ:t wee.Ir."
But later ih lhe program, when ques-
tioned specifically as to when the POWs
ran be expected back in this country, he
rcfus~ to give a specific date, saying on·
ly tha~ "more than 100 prisoners will be
back In the United Statea wit.hin the first
two wteks."
'"1e 1tart of Project HomeconUnc,
rtfl!Ttd to by Laird, could mean tho ar-
rival of a small IJ'OUP of Amerlean1, m.
eluding specialists to set up com·
munication links from Hanoi to U.S. in-
stallations. These men are expected to
arrivo in the North Vietnarneao capital in
about 1 week. ·
Under lbt tmn1 of the pe1ce ,,.,..
ment to be 1111\0d Saturday In Parlt, all
American POW1 b1 Indochina art to be
rerumed wllhln Ill dl}'I b1 roqhly
equal lnlt1llmtnll II two Wffk lnterv•la.
Laird 11ld lbtt will mun raltue1 In
groupo ol more titan 100 uoh. Tiie Pen-
tagon ll1ll Nl Amerlc:an1 capUve ln
Soutbtut Alla, plus llOll10 1,134 lilted u
mi111Jn&i ln action.
Ht 1avo no e1plan1tlon for tht wutll"-
ly i.ut1 from llano! over Vllntltn1
rather than the mort direct u1ttrly
flight paittem over tbo open 1e1 to the
PhlllpplnOI.
Fro111P.,el
VIETNAM •..
period ~11 May durtna the ~orth Viet·
ru:mtM off.tnllvt.
MOit of th• fllhtlna: wa1 concentrated
on tbe Quanl Trl front and around 1n old
U.S. Marine ba1< 11 An !lot, 11 mll11
southwut of 01 Nana:.
FNlllP.,el
ARTIFACTS. • •
compare• to the datln1 or bone
frapenta or 11Llaun1 woman." That
skeleton 1howod there Wtrt human• llv·
ing alon1 the Oranae Coa1t 14,000 yean
ago.
Drover uld his find provu lltOle eorly
hurnw hid lhe ability to creato objoct1.
Thi only earller Ulmpltl Of Cll'llmiC
technolo1Y archeolotl1t.1 have traced IO
far throuabout the world are ln Greece
an~ TurkeY.
De1auteii pointed oul that Japan which
has developed ceramics to one ol the
highest art fonn1 In the whole world on.ly
began work with eer1mlc1 In th'e year
2.500 B.C. -Z,500 years arter some
unknow'll people in Orange County were
decorating the artifacts taken from tht
Irvine •itt.
l\lichael Manahan, Irvine Company
community relations rnanager. promised
his firm would continue to make sites
available to the scientific community for
investigation prior to their dovelopment.
He indicated thl• company policy would
assure "that areas of archeologlcal in·
terest "·ould be left intact pending sci·
entific investiiation." ·
De&autels and Drover noted the find
raises more que5tlons than It an1wer11.
Amon11 them are:
-"Why In Orana:e County Is this the
first expression or ceramic technoloii:y?"
-"\\'hat h11ppcned to the&e people!
who occupied lhis alte for mort than
l.000 years?"
-"Dldlbey move away?"
-"\V hy ~id they not p1111 on th i•
knowledge to their IUC(!Usors!"
Drover 1pecul1ted that thl1 tribe -the
nral "sedentary" people -came to
Orange County to ~ee the lnclemerit
\1·eather Of the deaertli of the
southwestern U.S. great basin. He noted
the "alta thermal" In the gl'Clet b11ln
date1 to 5000 D.C. the lime that the
lrvtne arl111t1 were making th•lr pottery
above Upper Newport Day.
Drover 1ald fragment1 of 1hel\ Ultd lo
date the artifacts and other materlal1
found near the pottery plecea 1ug11ciil
thl1 people were the fir1t In the county to
stay in one place for period• or time each
year. Other prehlstorle tr\be1 wert more
mobile, preferring to hunt rathtir than to
rum the 1ea1 ror fllh or srow
vegetables.
Frona Prtgfl I
BODIES ...
played 1 ..,...rt In 01kland Thund1y
night.
Investigators here docllned comment
on the Albany report.
''An 11xten1lv1 lnvesll~atlon 11 being
conducted by lh1 llherllf'1 lnvetU11Uon
bureau,'' the 1horlff'1 •tllttmtnt aald .
The area otf My1llry Spot RoRd co~
taln1 acattertd 1mall cablna In which hip.
pt .. lype famlllu llvo, • •h1rtfr1 ottloer
said .
Summer
Programs
Discussed
lrvlnt tlnl/led ic:bool truat"" ••Y lhoy
art! dttennlned to make sumn1er school
197' more relevant than ever.
n1ey arc studying pc'.ltj!llblc sun1mer
school policlea dralled by ocbool chief
, 81ln Corey ond dittrlct principals.
Tnalteea mot Wtdntlday In a two-hour
study session for thelr flr!t look at the
proposals.
Ir• llnlfled wUI OOc:ome fully opera·
Ilona! July 1 Md lo chorsed with edmln·
isterlnc 1ummer IChool th.11 year.
Claaau have been run In the put b)I
San Joaquin Elemontory and Tullln
Union lll< School Ollttlcta, which will
be defunct June 30.
Corty •ua•ted Lrvlno Unified 1wnmer
school detet of July i to Au1 . 3 for grad"
one thro111h tisht, and June 20 to Aus. 1
for 1r1d11 nine through II.
~Let the Sunshitae lta'
Tnlltee1 11id they want to make sum·
1ner school meaningful to children and
their parents. They also "'ant to expand
fine arts offerings to include dance and
n1ore emphuis or1 music. . Studepts in grades one thrquah three at de Portola
School in. Mission Viejo tod•y presented a special
ttac·raising ceremony tQr ttit entire ithool and
some community members. In ·1kits an4 eon11. lbey
honored California as the .. best in the \vest for sun·
shine." Ii.ere the~ are shown signin g "Aquarius-Let
lha Sunshine In, ' complete with su nny faces.
They also defended thei r belief in sum.
mer tchool qaioat critJciinu leveled ·by
June roley, Par1J1t·Ttaeher Auoci"allon
presldll\I al RanS)to Son Joaquin Inter>
l!fedilll• School.
From Page J
WALKING •...
puar,,. oul llteriluro lll1ln& a yu vote
on tltt luue1 Feb. I. Tbty 111< are
d1llvertna "lmlll buttonl" with 1 •losan.
"Vote Ye1 Y1111 on ~·m. Tho double 111
refen to lbt two mitten oo tltt ballol -
tbt local bondl and lhe borrowtna
capadly for 1tol1 old.
Saddleback Valley UltUled Dl•lrlct w11
~ted In 1 unlftcotlon elecUon 1pproved
by votln lut June. Jt will r1P11et IOOn·
to-bl defllnct lion J01qub1 £lernent1ry
and .TulUn tlnlon Hl&h Dlatrlcta.
Blddlablck Volley tlollled will b1btrlt
-e bonded lndebtodn ... !ro= wbt two
outSolnl dltlrlcll, bu! Ill unaold bondt
prevloU1ly aPPl'OVtd In Bin Joaquin and
Tu1Un DlllrlC!s wnJ be 'llJYllld July I.
One of lbt lint actla lbt 111w Sad·
dleback Volley tn11io.a look In lato, lll'll
WU to adopt I Ill ol ro1dy-m ed1
ar<hltecta' planJ for 1 111w lllllt lcliool.
Tiit on!)' IC!lool alto Saddl1beck will In·
btrtt from tlll Tu1Un tlltlon Oltlrl<:t It I '°"'"" 111'11 In £1 Toro. Archltoct f1rm DotllJu.Duhlu>e and
Saddltback Supertotondint Wllllam Zou
are currenUy worldq to rtYlll tlll hljh
ICltool dellp1 to fit lhe 1lto. Tiii)' hope to
be ready to 1ton C001tniclloo 11 ooon 11
)!Olllbl1 lfllr Feb. I II the -1ltctlon -· Al that rato, ~ht new ltlflt scltool would
be opened In fltptambor, lll'I•·
Pageant Caati1ig
Set ori Weekend
At Irvine Bowl
C.11111¥ for the lltlt an111111 FQUYll ol
Artl P1Beant of lbt M11ton wUI bo hold
rrom 7 p.m. io 9 p.01. Saturday and 2
p.m. to I p.m. Sunday blckltqe at the
Jn'lne Bowl on the ftttival lf'OW'lds in
Laguna Beach.
There are some 400 positions to be cast
for lb.: summer program which thi:s year
will run from July 13 throu&h AU£USt II »itbo Flatlval of Artl fl'Ounclt. Two complete Ca!ls are selected so
volunteer performers may work one
week and have one off. The Pajeqnt
re-create• famous art worlul with live
model1.
"We ezpect and hope we will have the
same number as last year -about 500,"
Sally Reeve, festival spokesman, said.
"We have no WI)' ot knowlfta; though until
they show JIP," she said.
P•ge1nt progrun h18 not yet been
flnaJl7.td by !he Board of Directors who
thl1 yw will dtcld1 whllhar or not to
replace lbt "Liit SUppor" of Leonardo
da Vinci with 1 npreHntltJon ot the
"Last supper" by the master TiUan.
Da Vinci'• "Loot &upper" hal boon lhe
rradltlonal •ndlni of lhl poputor pro-
ir•m alnct 1931.
Boys Drown in Ice
CHICAGO (UPI) -!'our boy1, clta1ln1
ducks on the WaahinQ:ton Parle Jlgoon on
the ;i '• South Side, fell throuah Jhtn Ice
'l'llu i nd drowned . JlenJomln
Barrie! , t , hla brothtr Ronnie, T, Robert
Bennett, 10, and Iuae IV)', I, wert dead
on arrival at Woodlawn H01pJt11.
'Day' Pla1ined
, For Cease-fire
KEY BISCAYNll ila. (API -
P"'ldenl NlllO~ !Qd.y proclaimed
"e national Hat ol pr~r and
'l'bank5l1ivlng" 10 wJin wh .. th•
Vletn1111 ~,..t!A 10tf Into 1tttc1
et 4 p.m. PST laJurdly.
Nlllon called on lhl Amorloan
J>OOI'I• "to oi>ltl'ft th1' mom'"t with approprtato ommonlta-IU1\I
acuv1ues. '' •
'1'111 Pre1tdent ll&nlld f1' p...,.
lam1t1on for 1 moment tnifday_of
prl)ltr and thlnk11tv~ In
n?lpoMt to I t'lq\lllt 11$ C41\ .....
for prayer 11 thl tint• of lbt
accord-&lgnb1g Oll'tnt0nl11 In Parll.
. .
lrviI1e Trustees Deligl1t
Over Bo1id Election Price
Irv1'le Unifiod School Distrl.cl trustees
Wednetd•Y nl1b1 expressed delight with
ttl&!:.blll for their !llceessftd '50 million
bond election consolidated \Vitb the
November genr!ral election -it was
$2,000 less than the f,rice oriJtnally
quoted by tbe county rea strar Qf votert.
Tolal C<Jtl ol lbt eleclioo b1 which 81
percent of voters In Irvine approved the
bond!! was only ~-
''It sure is less than tfie $3,000 they
e11llmated," tru11tet Dean Olson 1ald, a
surprlled tone In hie \.'Cloe.
When Irvine tnJS1ee1 fin! propooed the
l'Ol'llOlldtted elecllOfll. county regi1tr1r
of votert Dive Hitchcock 1ctlvely op-
polld the Idea end wnita them a letter
st1tin1 that It wou1d be an eJpe1t1lv1 ec--
tion.
Hitchcock la1t 1ummer told tru1tee1
that bec1u1t1 of extra 1\·ork in\'O)Ved to
· cha111e the ballot.I, the bond election
could cool 13,000.
Staling that it 11·ould be less expC"nsive ,
Hitchcock recon1mendcd a special elec·
tionfor the bondi.
The mosl recent special election In the
counl.J -the attempted r«all of tv.·o·
trustus In the Laguna Beach Unified
School District -cost 1hat district $9,531.
The county officials told Laguna
trustees that the hi&h cost \\'as ~used by
the large number ot po\linc pl1ce1 In th("
election and that V1Jting precinct• were
not co1110lldated bcc11u1e of the con-
troVtraial nature of the Issue .
"Not only did we have •· NlCOrd
turnout,'' Irvine trustee Norm Gin•bul'I
said Wednelday ni11ht, "but It tumed out
we were rt11ht Jn our thlnktng (about tho
conJOlldatlon of the two election•)."
"Ttll me why summer schocl Is so Im-
portant considering the problems you
have facing you in regular school ," l\1rs.
Foley asked.
"Right now I iE!e our iiehoolil on doublt!
ses,ions and 37 children in a class," she
said, adding that perhaps summer sch00J
wouJd be important in fivt years when
the other problemt art eolved.
"I think ather people In the district are
interested . I'm not sure everybody else
\\·ould be so satisfied to wait," s a I d
Trustee Sharon Sircello, addin& that 1um·
mer classes PrcJVlde a "mlcrocoam to e •.
pl ore some new ideas."
Superintendent Corey said a good sum-
mer pro&ram is an extension of the reg·
ulat schooryear and is a valuable 1ervlce
to students .
Trustee Norm Ginsburg said he could
"appreciate the fact that i( you didn't
have a clas1 of 37, you miiht not need
ren1edlal summer school.''
He polnltd out that !be •late peys the
diltrtct money accordlni to ADA Caver·
age daily attendance) in 11ummer 1ehool1 which J):\YS for ltaelf.
"lf we make 1dditionaJ e:s:ptndlturw
for 1ummer 1ehool •nd 1till have claasaa
o( 17. then there will be dlUenrnt opln.
ion1 ,11 he 11ld.
Annual Clearance~
SALE
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUALITY
••• NOW AT SALE PRICES •
NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE
OVER 70 SOFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
I' Cut Velvet,
Multl·Colortd. ·
I ' Crucent Sof1,
Gold V1lv1t.
I' Hl·l1ck Texture
lhtrrlll
I' 'rl'nt -Gold I
Or1n1t -Henrldof'
I' V1IY1t ltrlpe -
lhtrrlll
Sofas
790.
690.
619.
1012 .
695.
Chairs
·Pr. Chairs Print
Woodm•rk 159. ••·
Pr. Choirs -Gold V1lvtl
M1r11 C1t10n. 209. 11.
Pr. Chllr1 -V11low
y,1.,et. Drexel. 259. 11.
l11thor Chairs
ind Stf11 All
SALE
689
549
599
911
579
139 "'
189 .. .
199 .. .
20%.11
I' Linen ll"rlnt.
H1nrtdon.
Sofas
I' T"xedo -Aqua.
Certon.
8' White/Gr-.
lh,rrlll.
I ' Print -Roy1l
Cooch.
m .
570.
679.
"'·
Chairs
Pr. Gold Velvet.
Sherrill.
Pr. Print.
C1r50n.
Wint Chol"
Rust.
Pr, Gold v.,., ••.
205 .••.
224 ....
219.
209 ••••
659
465
589
589
179 .. .
185 .. .
189
179 ...
Unbelievable volue$ In quality Sof•1 •nd Ch•lri. All S·w•y hond.tltd. Moil Scotoh9utrcltd,
Sorno do•m •nd fHlhors. All true quollty and •I very 11tl1fyln9 prices.
Soloc+.d 9roup1 fro'" Honredoo, Horltago, Droxof, and others, now ti 10le prices. Stop in now
for b11t 1tltction.
DRIXl"'-"MHIT Air.-1-i!NREOON-WOODMAU-I<ARAST AN
NEWPORT HACH e
1127 WllTCUH Dl..
Ml-1011
l.A&UNA HACH e
l•S NOllH COAST HWY. . ...•. ,,
TORRANCE e
ll64t MAWTHOlNI ILVD.
171·121'
·-.
\
I
'
Tlaeg're on: Fund Set
To Aid
Corona
Santa Anita Sets
Pussycat
Stripper? '
SAN Jl'J\ANCIS(X) (AP) -
The National United Com-
Political Fund LOS ANGELES (UP I)
-. Data.. Devices Inc.
wanted to introduce a new
product, a tape stripper
that cut.a and destroys eomputer tape. e mtt1AMI to "1"t<e Political
Priloner1, which hAd rallod
money to dehmd Angela
Davis, ls Joining la a fUnd,
r&lalng drive to aid convicted
mus murderer Juan Corona.
The group, and the-Juan
Corona Defense Committee,
made up of Corona'• friend.I
and relative&, said 'lbunday
the morw,y woold be used In an
attempt to overt.um the Jan.
( BRIEFS J
11 verdict that found Corona
guilty or the 1111 backing
deaths of 25 Itinerant. ln Sut-
ter Collnty.
Allred Monlol, who has
-ed Oonlna slooe be WU
arrested 20 montha ago, aald
at a news conference that
earlier fund·nUslng attemptl
were UD1Ucctsaful.
e '"" '.l'rouhle RIVERSIDE (AP) -Thi!
115-y~d Miiiion Inn bas
been !or<t<I to cut Its stall by
80 percent after It wu denied
a loan request, a spokesman
for the hotel says.
Tbe cutback came after the
financially troubled inn, a
slate historical landmark, was
d<nled a 1375,000 1 ... by the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
Sandra Hartness, manager
of the 25G-room hotel, said
future operation of the IM was
In jeopardy but there were no
immediate plans to close the
establishment.
eaA1trc•1e1
OAla.AND (AP) -The Bay
Area Rapid Transit District's
chief engineer and assistant
general manager baa resigned
to take a PS,000 a year po11I·
tlon with a Los Angeles transit
consulting firm.
David G. Hammond , who
declined to name his new
!Inn, told BART dire<:ton
Thursday he ii leaving March
I. e SttlOff De1!1ces
RIVERSIDE (AP) -The
fir•\ use of retrofit automobile
emluion control devices in
calllornta wW begin here F•b.
1, the state Air Reaource!
Board announced.
lnltallation of the dtwlces
will be nqulred .. llM-70
model aiitom:>blles """"81111(
ownmhlp "'beln(~ !w lbe first time In.~
These devices wilt lie re-
quired oo most 1966-70 can .
through out the state by July
I.
eGrentFra•d?
U,IT......,_
Lect•re Cateeelled
A lecture Th~ In
San Frandooo bY N<>-
bel laureate WUllam
Shockley was oancelled
becawe ot. plans by stu-
<h!nts to bold a d~n
otration. Prof. Shockley
hu oonll'oVersW view•
on racial aspects of in-
Uolllgence.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Sant• Anita Racetrack baa s!t
up a $320,000 polklcal fund for
state senators and
asaemblymen, the racetrack's
lobbyist bas !<>Id T h e
Aaooclated Pre ...
Lobbyist Kenneth A. Ross
Jr. aaid Thursday that the
$320,000 wW be distributed
over the coming four years on
a non-pa.rt.lsan basis. He said
the fUnd doubles the level of
spending on political cam-
paigns by Santa Anita
Consolidated, oper'ator of the
Los Angeles area ricetrack.
ROSS MADE THE com-
mitments for a total . of
$32(),000 ln campaign con·
trlbutJons in letters malled
Tuesday to each member of
the state legislature.
The pledges boost Sanla
Anita up among the top
polltlcal spenders in
Archbishop Links Up
Abortions to Herod
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Roman Catholic archbishop
here has issued a 11tatemcnt
condenming abortion In which
he i:ompares the U.S. Supreme
Court to Herod , described in
the New Testament as order·
lng the death of the children of
Bethlehem two yea rs and
younger.
ARallllSHOP TI moth y
Manning told 1.8 million
Catholics in the four-county
Los Angeles diocese Thursday
that the high court's ruling
Express Bus
Lane Opens
ForBigCity
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
first completed section of the
which says states can not in-
terfere with abortions during
the first six months or
pregnancy, is contrary to the
court's ruling against the
death penalty as "cruel and
u nu! u al" punishment by
decreeing "the death penalty
for innocent, unborn children."
"This new slaughter of the
innocents . . . 'out·Herods'
ijerod in its cold and Immoral
disregard for the sancUty of
human life," Archbi!hop Man·
ning S:Bid.
The Roman Catholic Church
holds. that abortion ls Immoral
for-any reason or at any stage
of pregnancy.
5 Women
AfTeSted
$53 million San Bernardino HAYWARD (AP ) Five
~-·· ~·~ w ..... In youni women were arrested «=••Y -•&!/ w "" on Investigation of solicllbig
speedint passengers toward far a lewd act after 18
Loi AnplN ¥ooday, the plainclothes offle<rs visited
Sootherii° ~a I Ra'Jild· . nine musage par Ion In a
Transit -,; :Nitrtci bU an-" crackdown bert, authorities
nounced. , I aald Thursday.
Hayward police idenUfied A seven-mile express bl.ls . the women as Theresa An.a
lane from El Monte west to .Jaekaon;--20:~ ·Linda· -Debra
the Long Beach Freeway will Dow, 20; Alex.Ii AnWar, ~;
by.pass regular freeway traf· I.Jnda· Pappas, 20; and P~e
fie .. The buses will then uae Proultt, 18.
regular freeway lanes into Loa
Angel ...
SCRTD oUlcials aaid Umlted
UJe of the express lane will
•
And where do you go to
unveil a stripper?
Right. A strip club. The
product was introduced
Thursday at a party for
the trade at the Pink
Pussycal, a topleu-bot·
loml ess club.
OFFICIAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23-24-25°26
Harbar Baul.vard
af Car•
SEE PAGE 46 OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT • FOR OET,AILSI
ROHNERT PARK (AP) -
At least 30, and possibly hun-
dreds, of Sonoma State
C<>llege's students might be
Im-1Y r<Ceivlng !eden! and State granl!I by lY1nM:
about their financial quallflca:
tions, concludes a state audit.
The audit released Thursday
covered M of 700 student. here
recei ving aid am found that 30
were at least parUy un-
oootinue until ~June when the
El Monte busway station ia
completed, allowing additional
lines to be routed' onto the
busway.
01l!y Coast Qffers
qualifled for the aid received.
The ll·m.ile busway Is
scheduled for completkm in
mid·1974.
SUPER SALE!
SUITs-sPOlT COATS--
KNIT SLACKS
ALL GREATLY REDUCED
Pre-cuffed
KNIT SLACKS ·············-····.All Now $10.0G
-Rog. $17-$11.
ALL DlUS SHIRTS
• l TIU ........................................ 40'/o OFF
Plus 1n 111ortm1nt of other b1r91in1.
MANT SUITS NOW 1/2 PRICE
MANT SHOES ON SALE
M67 Y .. L .. , Nnrptrt leec.h
•1M511
• 63 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art llnkletler
The Insiders Club: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
membership card pe rmi ts
you tO buy nearly every·
thing you need from the
finest closed·door show·
rooms at substantial sav·
inis -appliances, furni·
lure: 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 $Ubstantlal sav·
inss. The Insiders Club
I
Effective Annual
Ea(nings
5.00%·5.13%
Passbook. No Minimum.
5.75%-5.92%
One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum.
6.00%·6.18%
Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 days loss of ...,,
Interest on amounts
withdrawn befOfe maturity on all certificate accounts.
also provides big dis·
counts on tickets to sport·
ing and entertainment
events •.. plus a whole
list of free services: safe
deposit bOxes, money or·
ders, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership require·
ment for savers -$2,500
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now receive as·
sociate memberships en·
titl in g them to alt outside
referral services. Ask
about joi ning at any Coast
office.
MAIN Offlctr 9th&. HHI, Lot A"11te1 • 623-13!11
Other Ofllel1
WILSHl!lt[ et OltAMDIC'f' l"l.ACl1
3933 wtllhlre lllYd~ L.A.• 318-126S
L.A. CIVIC CENTtft1
2nd & Bro.dwey • 626-1102
HUNTIN8T'ON •1ACH1
91 Hu"tlnirton Clnt•r (714) 1197·1047
SANTA MONICAI
718 Wlllhlr• Blvd.• 393-0746
SAN PfOftOI loth & Pacific• 1131·2341
WUTCCNINA1
Ea1ILand Shoppln1 Cit.• 331·2201
,.AHottAMA crrt':
Chate & "V1n Nuys lllvd. • 892·1171
TAIUANAt
187!11 Vtntuni Blvd.• 345-8611
LOH0•1ACH1 3rd & Locust • 431·7481
lAST LOI ANOl:lU~
8th & SOio • 266--4510
OIAMOND IAfll
321 $. oi,mcftd.lllt (711) !19S.7!12!i
TUSTIN!
Lll"'ln SQu.r1 Shoppln1 Ctr. C7111 '32.YIO
LA WlltAOAt
U Mlrfl11 lhooolnl Ctr. 1111) Stt~7!1t •
SAN GA9"11lr
Del ~r ti Lii TUllll • 217-9941
Dilly Hour. -t AM to .C f'M
AU Otflct .. bupt Civic
Ct""', Open l1turd1ys
tAMtol,M.
ASltTI <MR ONI llLLIOH DOI.I.AM
..
, 1cl.o/ J.'lllMllf~ lu, 19/3 DAIL v PILOT IS
LA Airport Imposing Own
Tough Noise Restrictions
WASl:llNGTON IAP l -Los ing any steps to re~olve ards ror aircraft noise level!!,
Ani;eles Jnternalional Airport airporl pro b I e m 5 by he said. the Los Angeles
plans to impose ·tough new :=es:tab=lishlng=·=="="='i:ona=I =stan=d=· ='=lr=po=rt=ls=a:ct:lng=on=il:s:own=·=
,,. •
•
'
restrictions on aircraft traffic!
in an attempt to redu ce poise
Jrritation"lo s u r r o u n d i n g
residents and lo stove off
poS8ible lav.•suits, says
manager CliftOn A. Moore . EXPERTLY
CLOHID1
.~REFut..LY
PRESSED
'
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PANTS,
SKIRTS,
SWEATERS 49c
. VINTAGE CARS
this weekend on the MALL
5outh Coast ?taza
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Compliance 12·. 811s Woofers plus lwo 1,000 Hz .
Exponential Horns, Deluxe Micromatlc II Record Changer,
1r1a for optional·extra custom modular tape unit and record
storage. They 1110 have a built·l n 4-Channel Sound Decodlf'
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DA.D,Y PILOT EDITOBIAI. PAGE
All Outc for BONDS 1
J
Support Crom the community for the Saddleback
Valley Unified School Diruict $28 million bond -i1a
million state apportionment ele<'tion Feb. 6 has come
f_rom a widespread base -homeowners, developers,
teachers, students, small business, parents and even non-
parents. ~ ~ . ---......... -• ..__ -
It's encoural!lllg that the residents o! the sprawllog
valley rn•JIJ>e able to'rally; a.round a common deoonuna· wr~ c:hMlen and their .need for good school& •
BONDS (Build -Our New Distrid Schools) campaign·
en this week and next .are staging an all-out .door-to.
door effort to get ·out the vol< and convince the puhl\C .
of the signi!icance of the issue. ' ·1
High school students, who are on an extended ~a.1 • ~.
schedule at overcrowded Mission Viejo. High, wDhtaje
their own walk-i·tlion Saturday to publicize the election.
One campaigner recently found a woman in Leisure
\Vorld, the Laguna Hills retirement community, who
didn 't even know she lived in a school district.
This kind of ignorance suggests rocky road ahead
for the BONDS campaigners. Their door·to-door cam·
paign should supply both a dramatic impact and educa·
tional effort for residents of the district.
Council Should Decide
Irvine city counctlmen this week delayed until t~~r
Feb. 13 nieeting action on the mayor's proposal to lurut
the terms of council appointees to one year.
Although the proposal did not specifically address
any particular genre of council designates. the continued
delay in acting on the issue brings into question the ten·
ure of at least one planning commissioner. .
by Countilman Henry Quigley, will notknolf for sure OD
Feb. 10 whether or not he is lo be appointed.
Privately, councilmen have debated the potential
reduction o! the number of commlS&loners from seven
1<> five. By the couodl's Inaction on the term llniitalion Polley~ i! appearz-the :-pla.nniJlg eommbsioii -will have
been ~uced since •Sh11ptrine'1' tmn exp!ru . Feb. 10.
_ WI!lj ODe p~! mmilsloo VllelllC)'~ and
• p,~umab!J two -u • >.;10, uid with.the five -'\llben o( the COlD ''1mceitatn u., fo · con'
tlnU'ation, perhapa the ~ should consider a'fl)ecial
meeting .to}resolff·tlie ·'P!IO.lb.lments policy by cleclslon '.
rather~ by attrition. • -.. MV InVitilno:daI?
The 1973 LA lnvitatl011al Swim Meet will dive into
the pool at the Marguerilellecreatton Center In Mission
Viejo this year, bringing with 11 ·Olympic athletos and
national television. -
The event, scheduled for Aug. 2-4, will attract the
nation's k>p swimmers. Olympic gold medalist Shane
Gould o! Austrailia is expected to renew competition
again.-t Fountain Valley's Shirley BabasboH.
CBS-will televise the production.
In past years, the LA lnvitational has been held in
the older Coliseum pool and has failed 1<> attract large
turnouts.
The change to lrfission Viejo to a classier, newer
facility located in an attractive area, could improve at·
tendance.
. It aloo will give Orange County a chance to support
actively a sport in which many of its residents excel.
•
--
' .
"
..
• •
~~·,...
·+
'
Commissioner Harry Shuptrine, praised for his sen-·
ice by resigned commission Chairman Wayne Clark and
Next would be to get the name changed to the OC
(Orange County) or MY (!.fission Viejo) lnvitational. .
SB ~HE S~YS HE VtOPil<S HERE) JU'T HIS A<CEN1 AIN'r VEP.Y GUTTURAL:
Nothing New
In Studen t
R ebelli(Jn s
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Riffling through all .the journals and
publications that have piled up on my
desk the last feW moilths. and trying lo
decide what to file away and what to
throw away, I came across a fascinating
piece I should have mentioned months
ago.
It is called "Rowdies, Riots. aod
Rebellions," and ai>
peared this p a s t
summer in "Ameri-
can History Illustra·
ted," published by
the Natiollal Histor·
ical Society. Wriuen
by LO well \V. Harri·
soo, the article
serves to remind us
that the 1!160 decade
of unrest on the campuses was by no
means a singular event in our history.
FRO~\ nlE period of the American
Revolution right up to the Civil War -
the first 85 years of our national ei:·
isterice -student unrest "was more
prevalent and more violent" than in any
other period or history prior to the 1960s.
By 1800, we are told, "students were
becoming more insistent upon being
treated as 'gentlemen' and y.poo receiv-
ing their 'rights' ... This new radicalism
clashed directly with the traditional con-
cept of students' status and the rigid
disciplinary codes which college officials
had formulated to control their charges."
~10ST ORMtATIC or the incidents was
the "riotuous Commencemerit" at
Columbia in 1811, when a senior student
delivered an inflammatory address, and
was refused his diploma. His classmates
1 thought I saw you oo TV the other
night , but it turned out to be Nixon
making the cease-fire announce-
ment.
-A.J.D.
Ttlb ... t.r. ~ """"" ...... ...
11«HwrM¥ "'9M el IN --· St9lll retr Mt .......... G..,._, G11i. Dtitr. '°'""'·
pushed him back on the pl~tform, tbe
provost called the city ~hal. but
students overwbelmed the police, the
faculty was put into full night, and
students held ~ion of the church
wbese U. ~ent took place.
~ '1ioelocl: of Dartmouth In-ton<d, '!Jlel-Iy must be the prospect
of the future stfte of our country when
those of the rising generation ••• un-
dertake to insult humanity and justice, to
prostrate the laws and overturn the
social order."
IN 1851, .he University of North
Carolina had an enrollment of 230; dur·
Ing the year the faculty dealt with 282
case.s of delinquent behavior. In 1841,
Yale students defeated New Haven
firemen in a brawl, destroying their
equipment. In um at Princeton half the
student body were suspended. Twenty
years later tbe University of Virginia
was the scene of student riots, with arm·
ed and masked students patrolling the
campus. College pfesidents were shot,
stabbed and bombed; a Yale professor
armed himseH with two pistols for an en-
tire summer. .
Student unrest is as old as the earliest
of medieval universities. The only things
new are the reasons and rationalizations.
This is why those who are ignorant of
history are overwhelmed by current
events.
1'1ew Emphasis on Work and Self-discipline
Outlook for Nixon's Second Term
WASHINGTON -What will · Presideot
Nixon's second term be like! Imperial?
Remote, withdrawn? Uncommunicative?
'!bat would be the case il --of the current commen_tary were to be believed..
Laying aside such subjective and pro-
bably erroneous judgrnen..,, the primary
elements of the second term are three-
fold:
First, projection
of the cease-fire in
Indochina from a
static phase of no
war into reconcilia·
lion and reconstruc-
tion based upon mu-
tual interests.
8ecaod, an uecu-
tive • imposed reor·
ganization of social Nrorm and
govenunent aid programs, iafOlving cut·
backs of lunds apprvprioled' ID!! to be
appropriated by Congres!.
Third, the creation of an Americ8n at·
mosphere in which business and labor
wUJ meet the growing chlllenge of world
competition, and the trad.itiooa:I values "of
work, sell-confidence, sell-diocipHne will
be .reemphasized In everyday life.
IF 11DS proves to be very u:citing, it
will be a change for presidential second
tenns:. They are often a let~wn. The
momentum has usually been lost. Nixon
. .
BUT IT IS essentially a wrong reading
of Nixon that he is riding such a tide of
reaction in order to dehumanize and
finally defeat the noble purposes wblch
have inspired hutnanitarianism.
It cannot ,be denied lbat a oom-
recogniied this prospect by making passionate concern for the human con:
nwnerous changes at the top in the . dition. a.nd the pclitlcal rewards to be
governmental administrative structure. gained therefrom, have motivated the
But be included in those changes no li.beral Democratic movement which is
glittering Cigure like John Ceonally to et· nov: Said ot be at ebb tide.
cite ptifiliC interest,. DO ~ring concepts . But it cannot be denied, either. that the
or "thrilling panoramas. Nixon programs as they have been presented lo, and ignored by, Congress ~cconling to ODe . interpretatio~ a are the. most advanced, and in some nation~ tide o~ reaction, long predicted c~, radical, remedies ever presented
bu set m. The li~I tide of 40 fOI"' Is ~a OOD11UVaUve-based Republican presl-
finally at ebb as fa!lh bas been lost by ·aeot: Nlliln, in fact, has absconded with ayerag~ .J>eC?Ple m the worth . of ~X.. of the ideas·~ advanced by the
b\unanitanarusm as It has been 1m· • • b~tafians and if they are
plemented by . faulty Ii'"!> sloppy p.0. . oome\lmir lie<Ige<i by cooaervative
grams, ~ windy ad~~ ·!,here 18 • rtitratnts; they are a long way down the
some eVJdence to support tlils conclusion road from reactionary. ln recent Gallup polls. People bave lost
faith in the New Deal, Fair Deal, New
Fr..mtier, and Great ~iety approaches
whlcb dominated' governmental action
for 40 years. Welfare, perm.lss~'v con·
duct, crime, i'acial excesse are
associated with the frame of · that.
for every shortcoming in Amerlcan
society there must be a federal program,
however loosely fmanced, badly ad-
ministered, and off the mark.
THE ARGUMENT ls oot so much over
what shall be done as how it shall be
done. Nixon Is trying to change the way
wellare is administered, how funds on
education are :spent, the method for im·
proving health, Oil the basic premise that
the spendthrift and someUmes corrupt
methom of the past have not worked.
This exposes him to the most virulent
attack from the education lobby , the
farm lobby, the health lobby, and every
other group which has a vested interest
in generously administered federal pro-:
grams.
But since when has Nixon demanded
an end to educational aid, an end to ail£
for the needy, and end to federally sup-1
ported housing. or, for that matter, an'
end to the effort to create a desegregated
society?
THE FLIMSIEST pretexts are seized
upct. to create the impression tbat Nls:on.
has become a megalomantc recluse itt
lhe White Hou..e plotting the destructio'\
of human liberties. One columnist calll\
birr, the "mad bomber"; a con·
gresswoman equates him with Hitler.
GenUer critics say be ·trusts no ooe, iD-
cluding the general public to wbom he
wW no~ lm~ bis intents nor explain his
purposes.
M1.1ch of this will come to an end, of
course, with the ·Indochina cease-fire
Nixon would not talk about while
it was being negotiated. It will end, too,
when the commentalorS recover from
their annual alarm about freedom of the
press, and when it Is discovered that Nix·
on will spend huge sums on welfare and
reform. Nothing has been said so far
which cannot be dispelled in one press
conference or TV broadcast after the
cease--fire. "'
Nudity and Ecological Disaster . • . . • • •
To the Editor:
Some time back you carried an item
about Ortega Hot Springs. explaining bow
the county workerl were cle¥ing the
underbrmh .iway to dlscourage nude
bathen from swimming in the hot pools
tere.
MAILBOX ) 'Everybody Wins', presumably as a quote
from the backers of this move which
previously failed in our state. They
wonder where any opposition might OJme
from. One source is from those of us who
don't particularly like regressive taxes
that hit those least able to afford It Of
course one can argue that no one. is !ore·
ed to buy a lottery ticket.
-a .d gaining nothing. I> this money reallj
going to our cause, or just some moll
runds for Gov, Reagan to spend oo
somtthing else? 1
ALAN GA1
Studet1t Smok ing ,.
To the Editor:
Only a Fe w Give Blood
THIS WEEK I went to see the result.!,
and was sickened by the wreckage of a
once natural if not beautiful, landscape.
I lall to see the logic of the project.
h11tead of protecting the cili2ens of
Orange County from the imagined
oh!cenlUea of nude bathing, OID' county
workett here opened the poolJ to lull
view ol the motorists who pau by. This
would leeJD lo greatly Incruse the
chancel of offending sensitive citizens.
Letters from readen are welcome.
Normall11 writers should convey the1f'
mes.sages in 300 words or le33, The
right" to c~e letters to fit $JX1Ce
or eliminate Uber U reseroed. AU
letters mw-t include signature and
mailing address, but namu may be
withheld on requ<st if $Uflidtfll
reason is appar'ent. Poetrv will not be p~blished.
But if the banks, computer industry,
and vendors su~h as supermarkets who'll
profit from lbis, as you mention, do their
job well, tbe glittering carrot will be
dangled in front of most of our citizens
three or four times dally : isn't.this what
'makes' people buy soap and other
Items? The advert.lslng men say so. And
what do we teach our children about
responsibility, to examine the plastic
halos of the legislature that won't. tax
fairly but tosses the problem oVef"to be
solved by human weakness?
h1 regard to one of your articles en·
titled "SinOke BUI Proposed" on Jan. 18,
I feel this bill should be passed just as
m8ny other students in hlgh school feel lt
should be. It happens every year at about this
time -the nation 's hospitals and blood
banks report that their supplies of blood
are running perilous!~ low. The reason is
simple enough, according to Marian G.
Mabon, public relations director of the
'J Richmond, Va .. Red Cross. l)Jring major
holiday and vacation seuons. she says.
.. There is always a shortage of blood
coupled with a greater need -car ac·
cidents, fires and other emergencies.'' A
major disaster sue!. as a plane or bus
crash can lead to emergency imports of
blood from other areas.
ntE 8.6 l\1ILLl0N pints of blood that
now annually through this country's
mnplex channels of acquisition, pro-
ces.si.ng, distribution and use .ar~rougflly
sufficient tO meet day-to-day needs. But
there is litUe margin ol safety. A Na·
llonal Reoeatdl Council panel described
lbe '"!'l'b'-<Iemand sltualiop ·two years
ago as one of "'crltlcal balance." Wb&le
blood la · perishable, cVcll lllouch
refrigerated. It remains usable DO looger
than t1iree wecb, hence it caDDOl-'1>4.
stockpUed Indefinitely against future
nteela.
Another hazard ts tha! of contaminated
blood. Ol all lnlectioi\I that might be
transmitted the greatest concern in re-
cent ytlrl has been ovtr the risk of
tliepalills, a liver disease, especially when
fresh whole blood Is used. Some 30.000
CU!I of transluslon.connected hepaUt~
occur yearly In the UIDted States, and
bet Ween 1,500 and 3,000 c' them are fatal.
Becauie reportJna on the disease Is
known t.o be lncomplete, the incidence
and rnoriallty sctually may be much
hieher. II iJ possible that lbere are rui
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
many as five "subcl.inlcal'' cases
cases without manifest symptoms -for
every case that is identified.
SWIMMERS, who still frequent the
pools lo large numbers, are DOW made
law breakers by tbe lack ol aeclurion.
The need for police patrols In the atta
must, therefore, have greatly lncrea.ed.
· Wllat baa been gained Is DOI at all ob-
vious -what bu been loot. la. Ortega
Hot Springs bu become an ecological
disaster. paid for
Orallie County.
by the citizerus of
DEAN H. LUXTON
StaU Lotter11
To the F.ditor:
The headline for your article on a pro-
posed state lottery (Jan. 17) states:
THE l\1AJOR advances In blood
transfusion and banking are of relatively
recent origin. It was not until 1901 that
Karl Landsteiner, an A us t r i a n
p~ysiologist. discovered that. there are
different types of blood and that if the
do .. , •• type and the tl!cleient·· are Ill Kerouac's Wi"' ..1 World matched the red cells clump and UJ,
disinlegrate, nus IO!Ved ~ mystery Of I If , fl •
why 501t1e transf141ions had been lillCo , , '. ~ • • .~)' • · •
c:esslul ithUe others resulted In dealb. .~wlld..ftecy. Raw. llOa~ U~.
Developinent ol 11!111-<oagulants to pre. , ~ t1ino ·wonlo desdibo a ~ un· -
•ent cloltiiig cam, In t!t4. aod dlsCo\:«J I"'~ ..,el ~Y lhe.li(e ,lade IC<i!>uac
of the Rh factor t~ 1940. The acitk:ltnt. ~ tiliute .to ·h"i• love ror ~~. a
and . dntrose mu:ture now used to Chronicle of lbe countey's C1f41 tr1MI·
preserve _•tored blood was concocted dlll· \IOlll Inctlle !4111 a!Xl "IOll:•V-ol Cody
lng"Worta War n . . (lllQlro~ ·$1.15).
Although every person mey at llM1le · • ! ,
lime be In acute need of a blood WIUTTBN aniund the nme time as
transfusion or a medication derived from hliJegeod.llcy On the Road. -lhll book bu
a human blood comJlonent, only a tiny long had the undergroUnd reputaUoo of
fraction of the population ever mat.es a btinc Kerouac's best work. Seen thn>u&h
blood donation. It Is believed that ~ his eyes, it ls an account of the bope1 and
half of the American people are quallOed hatreds, moods and 1cUons 0( Cody
by age and he•ltb to donate blood. Yet no Por.1tray, Kerouac'• grea&· American
more than tbrte million a ytar actually anti-hero. hls alter ego, bis dread «iem.y,
do "'· Three-IOUrlhl ol lhtm give bl> beloved brother.
rtpeattdly. Thus, a major conctm of The book -a speed-composition wttb
blood·banklng ofllctab Is finding aome tbe power and Impact of action paintinc
way lo awaken In mort Americans an -Is moving and poetic. Cody .and bia
obligation to give blood at least once a friend travel tM same raw road, vlewlnc
yea:. railroad br~ bablld waf'MoulM1 m~
' .
I .• i • (THE Boo~)·
ty dlnm, gr<asy flopbouaes. mouitache-
thin men, smelly subway entr~ and
chest arcadet. •
mEV IJSTEN to the harmony of train
brakes and watch a matlrm set Oil [ire
by a cigartttt. They Uve, they love, they
avidif loot, lhlrlng a time of vibrant
routh, aearchlng, challtogb)i, bopi"i, re-
jecting -lon!IOunclera ol lhe New Bc>t
Generttloo. .
00,.,. -by Jacll Kerouoc lnCludo llbarma Bumi, llool: of Dreams, Satori
In Parlt, T1nm " the City, Sub-terraneans, and Vanity oI Duluoz.
' OAROLINE HAjUCLEROAD
• 11le article asks whether those
churches that use bingo games will op-
pose a state lottery. I don't know. I dO
believe that a lot of church people who
don't care about bingo, but who do care
about people, probably will.
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS, Minister
Cjjt:&e w H S
"l'o the "Editor :
I arq-wthing in reply to the article
Nolt&Aga'Inlit Motorcycle Noise, Jao. 21.
>' J'.I' • BROUGHT Into locus that
mOtdtcycla° ano being banned from
Celltomla deserts. Motorcyc1ists and
olhu ~road vtblcle ownen pJaonJnr 16 "'° ·this ·land are required lo buy -off·
.bJahway ttglstratioo which c:OOs $1$ for"
a twO'year period. This Is su_.i to
belp pay for developlq public tklllI&
parka, lobbyists In Sacramento and other
things IJiat belp the ofl.~clen lleee I
place to rlda.
As far as I can see we are losing mort •
Quotes --
If you wish to tmw what a tnan ii.
platt him In authorilf. · v...,1 .. pn>vtrb
IF IT was passed, it would be a lot less
hasste for everyone. Because i! a student
wants to smoke, be's going to. It's a
hassle fo~ the student because he bas to
sneak off campus or go to his car or even
to the rest-r-oom to..have, a 101oke._ Then
it's a hassle for the admini!traUon to
hire and pay someone to pafrol campus
for smoking.
Then I'm sure the person who is
patroling campus for smoking could be
oU doing iJetter things ·with their time
other than hauling students lnto the of-
fice . So I feel the bill abould very
tfelinitely be passed.
FRANCES McMANN
•
OttANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Pti&li4htr
ThcJ1!!41 KcevU,. Editor
Barbaro Krtiblch
'Editorial Page EdUor • ~. Th<' cdilnrl.nl f~o u( tlll) O.lly
Pilot MtltA to J11fonn and ~tlmu•
lat~ tffdert by prncntlJtc thl•
nnraptper'I" oplnklnt 'Ind com·
mcntar.) •m 1011\C'll nf lnt1n'nt 11.nd •lRnl~ntt. by provktlnr: a fl"lt'llm
fur lhe e1eprns\.1fl t1f our ree.deft•
ln!MI,. and by Jlf'ttenllng rh1•
dl\•ttnt' \it"\\•j!bln.U-ntfnfo'l'fllt'd ob·
Mrvtti snd 1pu1te11mtn on toplcl
<If lht' dAy,
t'riday, Jannary 28, 11173
..
-
Doniing&on Bea"h Today's Finni
., ___ F_ouniaiil ·Y_alle~ N.Y. Stoeks
VQL., 66, NO; 26, ~ SE~ION S, SO PAGES _
•
ORANGE COU~TY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 26, 1q73 TEN CENTS
Continent!'# Oldest Cera1nics on Ranch
By GEORGE LEID.U.
OI 1M ~IW ''* Sllll
'nle oldest man-made, fired, clay
artifacts ever unearthed In North
America by some 2.000 years have been
dlsCovered in the Irvine Ranch by a
team o! Cal State Fu·llerton
arcbeologists.
Roger J. Desautels, president bf Costa
~1esa-based Archaeologici.l ~b
Jnc. today announced at UCI , the
significance or the July, 1971 digs above
Upper Newport Bay.
"The discovery is an archeologlcal
milestone which opens an entirely new
perspective on prehistoric art fonns in
Ncrt'l America.
"These artilacll have been con-
clusively ·dated by Carbon-14 tests
performed at UCLA and Gakushuln -
Un'..verslty, Totyo. The-tests have placed
the aae ol the art~acta at more than
6.000 years," Desautels says.
The exact location of the find is being
kept secret to prevent amateUr pot State Fullerton in the !lix week dig during
hunters from destroying the site's the summer ()f 1971 .
historical significance. The ()iqest previous examples of North
Desautels sald the Irvine Company will Arr.erican ceramic objects ever to be
protecuhe site against trespassm. ~ .... uneru1hed arf! estimated t() be 4,500 years
b<>ldr. .• contract with tbe land dev.elOp-old _aod were found i,n the eastern United
ment firm to insure the protection and States.
mapping of significant blstorlcal sites The thimble sized objects decorated
located on the 83,000 acre ranch. with designs left by sharp point in·
Christopher Drover, 2i, of Laguna strument.a: have no apparent telationship
Beach, OOW a lecturer ror UC Irvine EX· to similar items oI a later da(e fround in
ten!lion, led the student group from -Cal North America. whose origins of style
can be traced lo Asia and t-.1exi eo,
Desautels said.
Drover said the importance or this
disoovery is related to proor that this
unknown early Orange County resident
had developed the technology not only to
fire clay but to decorate it with pointed
instruments and somet hin g "not unlike a
w~I."
The 5000 B.C. date of the ten artifacts
compares to the dating of bone
fragmcntt of "Laguna v.·oman." Thal
skeleton shov.·~ there \\'ere humans hv·
ing along the Orange Coast 14JXXl years
ago.
Dro\'er said his find proves thoSe ea rly
humans had the ability to create objects.
· The only earlier examples of ceramic
technology archeologists have traced so
far throughou~ the v.·orld are in Greece
and Turkey.
Desautels pointeel out that Japan IVhich
has developed ceran1ics 10 one or the
(See ARTIFACTS, Pagel)
Wcst1ni1aster Arrests Bolsa Marsh Ol('d $1 Million Drug
Haul Discovered
By JOHN ZAl,.LER
Of "" Dlfl'r r l.., Sleff
Westminster .police today claimed t1f
have seized $1 million worth of am·
phetamines and arrested two Spanish·
..... speaking men in what Q,fficers termed
the biggesl narcotics haul in the city's
history.
Police said l\VO :inony1nous phone c.:alls
led 10 thf arrests \\'ednesday night in a
truckyal"d in lhe indu~trial sector or the
city.
$268 Billion
Budget Told
By Presi~rtt
•
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon disclosed today that the Iederal
budget for the nut fiscal year: .,.111 total
$268 billion, and said he woWd dJScuss
details in a radio address to· the nation
Sunday evening ·frorn the Florida White
House. A $12·blllion deficit a1so was
forec:ast by a Senate leader.
'.nie President gave the budget figure
for the year starting July 1 rollowing a
meeting wit h congressional leaders of
both parties, and while greeting a group
representing prisoner of war families.
Nixon also said the final budget figure
for the current fi scal year will be $250
billion -the ceiling he demanded and
one which roused some members of
Congress who feel the chief execuUve in-
fringed on legislative prerogatives.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziea;ler said the President already taped
the ll·minute radio program on the
budget v.·hich will be broadcast from' Key
Biscayne. Fla .. at 3 p.m. PST SUnday.
The Fresident briefed congressional
luders on his fiscal proposals before
ffy.ilig to his Florida retreat to spend the
weekend working on his State of the
Union rr.essage to Congress. ~eeting with reporters on Capltol ~ill
lollowing the White House meeting,
Senate Democratic Leader ~like
M4PSfield and House Speaker Carl Albert
said the actual budg~t figures for. fiscal
}gf4 would be $268.7 billion, with an
estimated deficit of $12 billion.
Mansfield said the deficit ror the cur-
rent fiscal year would be $25 billion.
Of the $268.7 figure. Mansfield said, rm billion would be in rixed outlays not
subject to adjustment.
, TRIBAL 'HIEF'S BRIDE
Cont'• Wyn s._. 't
Officers asserted the raid netted 3
million amphetamine (or "upper") pills,
v.•hich police believe v.·ere brought in
from Mexico.
Four Westminster ofncers .and two
federal narcotics agen~_had been sulking
out a truck stor .. gc lot at 13612 Milton St.
for more lhan 20 hours by the lime the
nrresls were mnde.
The tv.·o scspccts. one' ol whom is a
t.1exiean national, were being held today
in Orange County jail y,•itii ball set at
1100,000 each. The men were identified as
Juan Manuel Hernandez Garcia, 38, of
~tCxico, and Alex Magallanes, 46, of
Buena Park.
Poliei! said the men, neither of whom
spoke English, said they were not aware
they were apparently dealing in con-
traband drugs.
The raid was made about 8:1S p.m. Six
olfieers charged with ffieir guns drawn
on the two suspects, who · ()ffered no
resistance.
Botb1men were unarmed. ·
· l'o.~ce bad earlier wa~ as the two m'-!~ reportedly entered the truck storage
lot .about ' p.m. The suspecu allegedly
went direcUy to one 35-foot flatbed truck·
and began removliig wooden boards on
the trailer, revealing a hidden storage
area.
Police said the two men quickly
rem<lvei about 40 black plastic bags,
each containing 25,000 pills. . .
"We timed oUr raid just right ," said
Det. Rick McKinney ol. lbe Weslminst er
rorce. "They had just finJshed unload ing
all the bi:i,gs and so there was nothing left
for us to do but make .he arrests."
McKinney said the yard is leased by a
third man. who is not believed to be in·
volved in the allegedly illegal operation.
McKinney also said the two suspects
(See NAROOTICS, Page %)
T hh1kln9 Big
Doug Herring, 13, (left) and
Art Ashley, 11, race down
Kiowa Lane in . Huntington
Beach wilh eight by six-foot
kite they built during day off
from school Thursday. Young·
sters had no trouble 1Me~ting
mon ster kite airborne. -
Huntn1gton Councilmen
Schedule Extra Session
Huntington Beach councilmen have
scheduled an extra meeting Monday to
take care of excess business.
Mondey's session, will start at 7 p.m.,
in city council chaml>ers. On Monday's
agenda:
-First reading of an ordinance raising
the annual fee on a dog liCense from $3·to
rT. No other sections of the controversiaJ
animal control law will be considered.
-Consideration of the contract with
California Animal Control, the new dog
catching agency ·which wir'I replace the
Hwllington Beach Humane Society.
-PoS!llble d~ssion 'of the proposed
joint oounty-city purchase of ?tteadowlark
Airport and Golf Course.
.Yrihal Cere111ony
Hu,ntington Explorer Wed~ Chief
...
Wyn Sargent. an explorer and an·
thropologist from Huntington Harbour
who has been studying the sexual life of
tribes in West lrian, bu mariied the
cbief ol ooe of the tribes. the West lrian
militacy c0mmandsiid-today.
Miss Sargent'• local addrw I• 400\
Morning Star Drive, Huntington Beach.
The 0-yeaN>ld divorcee martled Chief
Obaharok Jan. a in a tribal ceremony,
giving him 11 pigs and five cloth bead·
dresses as a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjono
said in West 1rian, a mnote province In
Indonesia.
Chief Obaharok, y;·ho was said to)lave
s~eral other wives, rtportedly -bladS i
cannibal tribe.
In the past a photo-journalist, Ml"
sargmt left Himtlngton e.aCh In OctOber
to otudy and photograph <Nllllbal tribes
ln the Ba.llem ValleyJ. a jungle. area in the
heart of we11 :1r;an.
~· She has traveled txlensivtly In tbt
, Soalb Pacillc and other lancb. In l.163.
Ibo f<lund 1 Dyak vtllage tn the
Indonesian jungles of Bomc,o In need of
medical educationa l and agricultural -. .
help.
Coming back to the states, she locally
orpniu<' the Sargent-Dyal< Fund Inc. to
get Wlof for the-prtmlllv• ll'OlllO.
In addiUoo cargoes o1 p I gs,
goat! and chickens. she wu reported to
have. taken six toilS of medicine, three
motorboaUi, and agricultural equipment
to the village. _
Upon her return to HW'll[ngton Beach
ln early 1970, she spoke or OOr adventures
before a class al Harbour View Elt:men·
tary School.
"It "'as an Incredible qi.earn aPd an
Impossible journey,'' she was quoted ln
the DAILY PIUY!'.
"We stt.nd a vtry good chance of mAk·
i111 the ugly Aillmcan ~ ag•ln ,"
she told the child,.. wlio 0.d helped
putchast: 5,0IXI books for a ststcr school
;n the juni)e,
Rc;>ort.9 that after her ~l recent
marriage to-the ln'bal Cblil Ille vtwed to
ahed ~r Weste.11 c~.and d..,. only
• (See 11'Ef>DINll, Pip I)
.. ~ •
Hunti11gton Land Trade Approved
By TERRY COVILLE
Of Jiit O.ILf l"lltt Sltlt
The state Lands Commission today ap-
proved a land swap between the state
and· Signal Gas and Oil Company ~
volving 530 acres in the Bolsa Marsh
near Huntington Beach.
State Fish and Game officials plan to
~reate a natural salt water marsh on
400 of tt>ose acres and develop a public
marina on the rest.
A Fish and Game spokesman saiQ . the
Lands Commission approval was the last
step necessary before the marsh plan·
ning could begin. The commission met
today in Sacramento.
Two More
Gls Killed . l • ' • 1n· Vietnam -
SAIGON (UPI) -The war in South
Vietnam intensified. today with the ap-
proach of the ceaae·llre, and two -()r
· possibly threC-Americans were killed
and 25 others wounded in the closing
hours of the conflict.
Both the number of strikes by U.S.
planl!s and ground battles inv()lving
government and' Vietnamese Communist
troops reach.ed eight·month highs with
less than 48 bout'!! remaining until the
schedule<! ceasl!-rlre begins at 8 a.m.
Sunday ( 4 p.m.. Saturday PST). Hundreds
of VJ.etnamese were killed or wounded.
Military sow:,ces said the fighting ap-
peared to be bllilding toward a peak f()r
the final full day of warfare Saturday.
Three major air hases were shelled but
a-predicted ·eommunist offensive to
snatch contested territory·jwit berore the
\var end!! has not materialized.
Cornmun~t forces shelled major air
base!!, killing a Marine sentry and wound·
ing 21 other American personnel at the
Bien Hoa base outside Saigon. (See story,
picture, Page 4)
Another American was killed when his
OH6 observation helicopter crashed, ap-
parenUy after being hit by groundfire,
100 miles east of Saigon.
Four Americans were wounded in the
shelling of the airbase outside Pleiku in
the Central Highlands, and the U.S. Com·
mand said one man killed in that attack
also may have been an American. The
victim wore civilian clothes and canud
no Identity cards, military spokesmen
said. so bis identification and nationality
were not immediately established.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers flew 401
single-plane sorties during the 24-bour
period ended at 8 a.m. today, the hlghest
nu mber ofi such attacks since the 409
reported ~lay 28 at the height of the
North Vietnamese invasion of Sotitb Viel·
nam.
The command said more than half lhe
strikes were concentrated in a 10-mile
strip controlled by the Communists
between the Demilitarized Z.One and the.
Cua Viet river in northernmost Quang
Tri Provlnct.
_;
Heuer-Get
Car License
Friday, Feb. 2 I• the lam day to
get your car license tags or get
yovnolf tagged.'
Het111 Rublfn, lnll!Uliet ol the
Deportm<nt of Motor Velllcles or-
nce in Santa Ana1 notes this year
the law bu been changed from
Feb. 4 lo l1il! fint Friday In
Febr\l&r)'.
"It eomes oarliet than usual and
""'1 catd> ..,.,. motorltll with
thttr cbtckbooU down," ~lpped
Rublen. F.., received after Feb. 2
go up 10 perctlll antf oiler Mar<ti 5
!he .....,,.1 doubles.
. .
The land swap means Signal will give
the state. without cost, 300 acres or
marsh and loan the other 230 acres for 14
years.
In return. the state will relinquish its
waterway rights to the remaining marsh
acreage. freeing that area for potential
future development. Signal owns nearly
2.!XK} acres in the Bolsa Marsh .
Fish and Game officials have con·
tended that the state's waterway right s
were too scattered to be useful . They say
the new package deal will allow the first
restoration of a salt v.·alcr marsh e\•er
attempted in the world.
The 53<1 acre!! lies in a rectangle, south
'Day' Planned
For Cease-fire
KEY 111SC>. ¥NE, Illa, (~P) '-'
Pre!lident ?'lixon today proclaimed
"a national day of. prayer and
Thanksgiving" to begin when the
Vlebwn cease-rire goel into effect
at 4 P·tll-PST Saturday. ·
Nilon called on the American
people "to oOserve this moment
with appropriate ceremonies and
activities."
The President signed the proc-
lamation for a moment and cfay of
prayer and thanksgiving in
response to a request by Congress
for prayer at the lime of the
accord-!ligning ceremonies in Parill.
Signal Seeking
To Annex Land
To Hunti11 g ton
Signal Landmark. a subdivision or
Signal Gas and Oil, has submitted a re·
quest to annex 263 acres of Bolsa Chica
land lo the city of Huntington Beach.
City Clerk Paul Jones said today he
would ask the city council Monday night
for authority to process the annexation
and file it with the county's Local Agency
Formation Commission (LAFC ). The
LAFC must give approval for all an·
nexations.
An additional annexation request in the
same area wa1 filed by the Ocean View
School District which owns a IS-acre
acbJol site there.
The proposed annexation ls in the area
near Warner Avenue and Los Patos
Street.
A year ago Signal annexed :m acres of
Bolsa land to the city. The company
own s roughly 2,000 acres in the Bolsa
marsh.
Signal is curreptly negotiating v.·l!h the
1tate Fish and Game Department to tum
over 530 manh acres for a marsh
preserve 1nd 1 public marina.
Gal Softballers
Sig1i Saturda y
..-Qfrls who want to play aohball In 'tile
North Hunllngton ljeach Bobbysox
Uague can sign up from 10 a.m. to 3
p.m., Satunlay, at Clegg School, 1311
Latdl-Drive.
The league la open to girls • 1e. A
pairent or &U9rdlan must act0mpany the
.-llrl '° rqlat.ratton aiid proof or birthdate
.... j be presented.
'1beri, Is a $5 slanup fee which covers
the use of a uniform.
Boundariet of the north Huntington
Belch leaaue are the San Diego
Freeway, Warner Avenue, Bolsa Chica
SI-end Seach Boulevard . .
AddltJOnaJ stgnll!!I wlll he held : lrom 7
p.m. to J~ p.m., Feb. 8, in Room .101 01
MarlD& ~. and 1111.m. to ! p.m., Feb.
24 It Clejg School.
. ..
of Warner Avenue and on the inland side .
of -Pacifi c Coast ~lighway, across from
Bolsa Chica State Beach.
The 300 acres becomes permanent state
property . The other 230 acres will be-
come state property , if. in the nex t 14
years. a channel is opened from Bolsa
Bay to the ocean .
In a preliminary sketch es. Fish and
Gan1e authorilies have sho1vn a potential
ocean cut where \Varner Avenue now
e<·nnects with Pacific Coast Highv.•ay .
Thal sile is nol de finite. say fish and
game spokes men. and. even H the ocean
cut is nc\·er 1nade, the 1narsh will be
!See APPROVAL, Page %1
Rogers to Put
'X' 011 Peace
Pact Saturday
By United Press lolemallooaJ
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
arrived in Paris to sign the agreement
ending the Vietnam war and said he
hoped the accord will usher in a genera·
lion of peace.
The war Itself raged on and t\\·o. pos·
sibly three. more Amer\c411s and hun·
dreds of Vietnamese died today. <See re-
lated story and picture, Page 4.)
Rogers will sign the agreement in
Paris Saturday at the heavily gua rded
Hotel Majestic with the foreign ministers
of North and South Vietnam and the Viet
Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Gov.·
emment. The 12.year~ld war is then to
,grind to a halt at 4 p.m. PST.
Roiters said "we hope and expect that
shortly the ceasefire will be in effect in
Laos and Cambodia, too, and that finally
this lonlil and difficult war will come to
an end.''
Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma of
Laos said today in Vientiane he ttxlught
there would be a cease·fire in Laos with·
in 15 days arter the one In Vietnam but
that U.S. bombing would continue if need·
ed.
In Cambodia , Prime Minister Hang Tun
Hak said Thur!lday his government would
suspend offensive operations after the
Vietnam cease-fire to test the Commu-
nists.
But the fighting was heavy tod11;y and
surged to within 10 miles of Phnom Penh.
In neljit:hborinR: Thailand. site of many
U.S. air bases, there was concern for the
future. Gen. Prapass Charusathira, the
deputy Prime Minister, predicted trou·
hies In Laos afid Cambodia that could af·
feet Thailand alter !he lighting end! In
Vietnam.
Orange Cout
Weather
Continued .runny skies i!I the
projected weather picture for Sat·
W'day, with slightly warmer ttm·
peratures, according to the weather
service. Hjghs in the mid-805. Lows
tonight Jn the 409.
INSIDE TOD.4. Y
.Mick Jagger brouoht his Roll-
h1g Stoms lo Los A ngtle1 la.st
week. for o wn«rt btt1e/flting
Ma11agua, Nicaragua. fie capte
a1t0 conquered. Set phol01. 14ken
by UCI fra1hma11 Andrea Wa·
tori. on tlze cover of toda11'1
We1tkt1ul.er.
l..M....,. ' M1tllMl ll'llJ!ft • ... ... • ... ........... • ··-• °'' ... CMlll't " ··-.... " ... _Mlh .... ._., M ·--• ·-M --l)N ..... tk .. .. '** ""!11th JWJ ............. • ........ • ,,_ U•U -... , .. "" ....... .. --. --.. 'WIMtfl''t NflQ 1•11 •M ..,_ .. . ., ....... • ··-• .... _ "" -.....
•
.I
••
' ~2 DAil Y ·PI LOT H Ftld3J, Jan11.l!'y lb. 1973
'GOP~ Convi~ted
Ca11ipaign Vio lc1tio1is Charged
WASHINGTON !UPI) -President Nixon's ~!loo !!nan
today deellned to conttst t'igh t dwg~ of violating the DO~ ca
ing IR·,,..·-all in ,·olving \\'atergale defendant G. G6rdoo Uddy.
\~.'.ls fined $8.000. !ll<' n1aximun1 ~ible.
THE OUTCOi\IE OF TllE case left in question what Liddy d "'ith $..16,500
in campaign funds. . . 4
•
,\ liJ10kl'sn1an s.1id the-c..'01nmittt>t' could not l)ave thrown an hght on the
in:iltt·r C\ en ir it rontcsll'<I the charges. lie said the Nmnlille<' had no Idea
11h;H Liddv did 1111/t lhl' 1noncy and could no1 question hirn bee' se he ls on
1ri:1l in thC \\';ttcrgatc c:1se.
I\ ·\ T\\'0·~11!\i'UTE ARRAJGN~tEfl,1T before l'.S. District Judge {lt..'Orge L."
11,11'1. 1h1• F111nn('(' r.nrn1nl1tce lo Re-elect the-Ptrs1dent pleaded nolo COn!L•ndere.
i•r un l\IHtl'!>t. hi .in e1ght-('Qunt .. criminal 1nfurn1nt1on" fi!~d J:in. I I by Ille
Ju~111'l' D1.·p:irt n11.·n1.
\,1 1ndl\ 1dua!s \I ert' charged.
Hi111ti11gton Police Slate
Bike Safety Road Rallies
The I lunt111i::ton Bt>:.1t·h Police Deµar l·
111('11! 11 ill bt•g1n holding bicycle ·safety
road r:il!Jt':. ~aturclay {or students of att
ol rhe c"1•.r's t•lcn1l'n!ary and junior high
s.chools.·
The~e ~µcc1;1\ se,;s1ons v.•il\ include
blc~l·lL' rt i::i~trat ion for all Huntington
Beach T•'~1dcn1s .is \\'ell as students.
B1c1 cle htC'nsu1g is regularl y a\'ailable
at 1hc Police Department Firing Range
fro1n S a m. to .f p.m .. ~londay lhrough
Saturday.
Rallv and registration times ·will be
from io a.m. to 3 p.m. on the scheduled
dales. Students and citizens are remind·
ed Hurt the bicycle must be present at
the time of registralion.
The License fee is $1 and the registra·
lion expira tion date is Dec. 31, 19?5.
The schedu le for the rallies and
registration sessions is as follows:
Jan. 27. Oak View School . 17241 Oak
Lane. for Oa~ Vie.,.,· and Park \riew
siuden\5.
Ftb. 3. Spring Vie1o,r School. 16662
Trudr Lane. for Spring Vie1o,r, College
View'. St. Bona l'enture students. Feb. 10.
Sun Vic11· School . ml Julliette Low St..
for Sun View. \\1estmont stu dents . Fe!J.
24 Harbour View School. 4343 Pickwick
Cifclc, for Harbour \'iev.', H.aven \1iew
s1udents.
l'rorn Page I
WEDDING ...
in strings and straps of the . n.ativ~s
brought quick obj~tions from offic.ials 10
\\'amenu . \Ves t Inan headquarters . .
They said that her actions might upset
their plans to "civilize" the tribe's people
in a program called Operation Kole~.
The 1:.im of the two-year program L"I to
put clothes on the natives, intr:o<fuce
them to a mo!le)' ccon11my and teach
t'.;em to spea k, read and ,.,.rite the
Indonesian language.
A Jakarta, Indonesia, newspaper,
"Berita Buana ." rcix>rtedly ran a
photogr;lph of ?o.tiss Sargenl and Ch ief
Obaharok. She '>l.'aS wearing jeans and a
shirt and he a koteka . a kind of G-string.
The l'.S. Embassy in Indonesia said it
had no infonnation on the marriage.
l'ro111 Page I
N,i\RCOTICS . • •
claim1.:d to be innoce nt
"The\' said an unknO\\'n man had of·
fcrcd 1~ pay them $100 each to do the job
and that they didn't know 11•hat they were
ccirrying ... ~·,.\cK\nncy said.
1\-lcKinney added 1hat 1hc !ruck's hid·
den conlpar1mcn1 seemed to have been
in place a long time . lie also noted that
the pi\\ bags had been soaked In vinegar.
11 hich 1\·ould confuse dogs used at
border checks to sni[{ out illegal drugs.
ri.lcKinney said invest igation '>l.'Ould con·
• tinuc in an c{{ort to !ind accomplices.
ORANGE COAST HI
DAILY PILOT
'The O•ilr!Qe Co•~! o ... ILY PILOT w.iti wtllcll
11 comOlnc<I lf\e N¥.,.•·Prt ... ,, fll.lbl i>Md b't'
inc Or&n~e Co•~! Pu""'"•nlJ C.oml)oJn y, S•-
ftll' ('llolicf>1 ••e 1>wb\o\llO<I, Mor>O•Y lhrovoll
Frklly, for Ca•la Me.~. Nrw1111rt 6eldl,
ltunHnO!a.tt 6••<1\/~ountd•n V•l',Y. L 8~u"a
lleacn, lrwlnc,Stodltb•e~ And s.•n Cleml'nl•I
~•n Ju1n (AP••tft 'IO. A ~in~ll' 1001...,,,1
l'lll!lon 1, publ111!0KI s11un1av1 •rid Sund•v,,
Tne princlpJl puDll~hlnQ plan! I• "I ~JO W••I
n oy $1rcc1, C01.111 Mne, C.oli!orn1"· 9'i.llt.
Rob1rl N. W,,d
Prn l<ltnl •I'd ~hll1r
J11clr: R. Curley
Viet l'mkltn1 •ricl ~r•I M111991r
lhom111 K11'fil
Elll!Of
Th111'11111 A. Murphin•
Mtn119lnv Edllor
Ch1tl11 H. l.oo1 Rich1rd P'. Nill
Apl1!1nt M111111l111 E<lllOI$
T 1rrv CowiU1
Wal Ortn!ll c.ouritr Edllof'
HntHitt• lffc:h Office 17175 l11ch l oul11w1rcl
M1ilin9 A.lclt111: P'.O. 1011 790, 92,41 o,.., Offlc:n
LfVll!ll BtKll' 222 l'-O<tll A"'"""*
co.11 Mn1: llO Wtll ••Y Streel ,_.....,.,, llt1Cft: ill) N--1 8oult VI,,,
)'11 c ......... , •. '°i Norlft Et Clmll'lo ....
Tel.,MH (71 41 642•4l21
Cltr111fllt1 At1ftttlll119 642°5671
"""' "lnft Or•.,.. CWotlr Clfll_ll,.. 140·1220
CtO'f'1lt111, 1•11, Or•llOI COll l ,ubll~l"I COmM"Y. No ~ 11trlft, lltut!rlllloni.,
tdllortll m•lflt f/lf •c1w1rll1"'*11\ l'lfl'•"' l'!llY bt r~ w1tl'WM.tt "*let Ptf· fftf1~lon ot COfl~rlOht OW(llr.
:\larch 3. \'i\lagc \' i e \V School. 5631
Sisson Ori\'e, for \'illage View aod
Hobin wood students . ~lar. 10. Crest View
School, 18052 Lisa Lane. for Crest \'iew
<ind Lake View students. ~lar. 24, Hllpc
\'ie"· School. 17682 Flintstone Lane. for
Hope \.ic>"'· Lark \'ie\\' and ~larinc V:t'I''
students. :'11ar. 31. Golden View School.
li251 Golden \'JC\1' Lane. for Golden
\'ic11'. '.\lesa \'ie,,..· students.
April i . Glen View School. 6621 Glen
Drive. for Glen \'iev.·. Circle View :i nd
~1eadow View studen1s. April !8, RanC"ho
\'iew School. 1694-0 "8 " St.. for Rancho
View and Pleasant Vie"' stude nts.
May 5, Dwyer Intermediate School.
1502 Palm Ave., for Dwyer Intermediate
and Peterson and Smith students. May
26 , !\revalos School. 19692 Education
Lane. for Arevalos and Lamb students.
June 2, Newland School. 8787 Oolpbin
Drive. for Ne'v.·tand, Waniloy, and Perry
students. June 9. Oak School. 9800
Yorkto"'" Ave ., for Oka. Bushard and
Burke students . June 16 , Kettler School.
8750 Dorsett Drive. for Kettler and Gisler
studenls.
l'rona Page l
ARTIFACTS. • •
highest art forms in the "'hole \\'Orid only
began work with ceramics in the year
2500 B.C. -2.500 :rears after some
unknov.11 people in Orange C-Ounty v.·ere
decorating the artifacts taken from the
Irvine site.
Michael Manahan. Irvine Company
community relations roanager, promised
his tJrm would continue to make sites
available to the sc~ntific commuDily for
investigation prior to their development.
He indicated this company policy would
assure "that areas of archeological in·
terest would be left intact pending sci·
entific investigation.·• . · .;
Desautels and Drover noted the find
raises more questions than it answers .
. .\mong them are:
-"\Vby in Orange County is this the
first expression of ceramic technology?"
-"What happened to these peoples
11·ho occupied this site for more than
1,000 years?''
-"Did they move a'>l.•ay?"
-"Why did they not pass on this
knowledge to their successors?"
Drover speculated that this tribe -the
first "sedentary" people -came to
Orange C.Ounty to ~ee the inclement
\\'eather of the deserts of the
southwestern U.S. great basin. He noted
the "alt8 thennal" in the great basin
dates to SOCIO B.C. the time that the
Irvine artists were making !heir ix>ttery
aOOve Upper Newport Bay.
'
Jury Gjven
Testimony
-OnBuggpig
'
WASHINGTON (APl -Judge John J.
Sirica. presjding at the WJleraate trial.
snving some important informallon had
t:ie'.cn kept fron1 tbc jury. todny read to
the panel testimony that former Atty.
l:en. John ~1itchcU and former Com-
merce Secretary '-1Aurice Stans approved
p.!lvnients tbe government says went to
poluic:il espionage ag~inst Dt>mocrots.
SiricH said he decided to gi ve lhe jury
1i•s1unony by Hugh \V . Sloan Jr., former
ireosurer to President Nixon's re-election
finance comrnitttt, after reviewing the
transcripts and deciding ••mo.n of It is
in1por1ant evidence and the jury should
hea r it."
Slo8n testified Tuesday, but the part
about ~1itchell and Stans was giWl while
the jury was out of the room.. It came out
\1·hen Sirica questioned Sloan dlm:Uy,
but he complained today thal the &ov•rn-
ment should have covered the same
ground when it resumed exiUDlning Sloan
before the jury.
\Vhen a defense attorney objected to
introducing the testimony, the judge said
"I t'xercise my judgment as a federal
judgl' and chief judge of the court to ex-
an1inc the v.·itness."
•
FoLmtain Vallev
Young Athlete
Rod Hunt Dies
Trophy·winnlng sport motorcyclist and
fisherman Rod Hunt, a Fountain Valley
High School seruor, died Thursday in a
convalescent· hospital after a Jong figbt
against cancer.
Funeral services for Hunt, 18, of 17181
Santa Rita St ., Fountain Valley, will be
Saturday at noon in Westminster
!\temorial Park Mortuary Chapel, with
private entombment to follow.
Survivors include his parents, Mr, and
J\1rs. ?o.1orland Hunt, a sister, Sheri
V.1illiams, and a grandmother, Mrs. Ruby
Young.
Besides school and sports activities,
the youth worked at Bert's Arco ..service
Station, Ilm3 Magnolia St., fo r the past
two years.
A friend said be worked full.time until
the fatal illness devdoped. yet stayed on
the job on a part-time basis up until
hospitali!ation last wetk.
''He sure Md a lot of trophies,'' his
buddy remarked today, of youn1 Hunt's
motorcycling rerord, mostly sport and
cros.s-eduntry styk.
He saic1. Hunt was also an entbmiastic
fi sherman and ~ntly booked a 138-
pound bat ray.
Daniel Dudrow
Rites Saturday
A funeral service for a Huntington
Beach youth who died Wednesday of a
complication £rom a broken Jeg will be
held Salurday at Rose Hills Memorial
Park, Whittier.
Rite.s will be at 1 p.m. for Daniel G.
Dudrow, 17. of 16801 Heritage Lane,
under direction of Peek Family Colonial
Funeral Home.
Young D u d r o w succumbed to a
blood clol which formed in his leg, in-
jured in a traffic accident.
Survivors ioclude his parents and a
sister, Denlse, all of the fai,nIIy home.
O&ILY f't\.OT IWI llM• 5'all'ld d t U -l•llf Hid •I Cntl Mtll,
Ct\lfomlt . lllblu'l,ilol> b'J c•l'Tltr U.6'
ITIC'l'llt\I,, "' mtll U .l J mtnflllYf mllJtan -.11,,.11onl n ,u ""'"111rr. OLDESI NORTH AMERICAN FIRED-CLAY ARTIPACTS
lr'Win1 Ranch Flnd C1rbon 01t1d 1t More Thin 6,000 Y11n
OAILY ,.ILOt Sl»ff ~ho
Candle Started It
This is result of fire last Sunday that gutted an apartment at 6401
Warner Ave., Huntington Beach. Firemen pinpointed the cause today,
saying the blaze was started by an unattended candle. Four occupants
of the apartment escaped unharmed, but the blaze caused an esti· mated $13,400 worth of damage.
From Page I
APPROVAL. • •
built. Some Sunset Beach residents have
expressed opposition to the ocean cut
because Ibey fear it would cause erosipn
of their beach.
The 400-acre marsh project might one
day become the home for 109 species of
water fowl, 36 types of fish, and 311
varieties of maline invertebrates, f i s h
and game officials say.
The marsh will feature an ecological
center in one comer and trails around
the entire perimeter. Fish and game
authorities upect the marsh to one day
attra<!.300•1f-•~Y· -
Bloodmobil.e Due
In Costa Mesa
Orange Coast residents may donate
blood on h1onday. Feb. 5. when the Red
Cross Bloodmobile visits Fairview State
Hospital.
Tht bloodmobile will be parked at the
audilorium of the hospital at 2501 HarOOr
Blvd., from 1:30 to 6 p.m .• according to
Blood Program Director George Hyde .
Area residents other than hospital
personnel may call the Red Cross at 835-
5381 to make appointments to don.ate,
says Hyde.
Santa Cruz
-Slayings:
3 Stabbed
' BULLETIN SANTA CRUZ -(APl -Sb•rlll's olll·
. ctrs sou1bt a rovlaj ;'hippie carpenl tr"
today to notlfy him of the stubbing deuth~
of hfs wif(! and her two SOllii id a remote
. two-room cabla.
SANTA CRUZ (APJ -The bod ies or a
\\"Oman and t"·o young boys who were
stabbed to dea th have been found In. a
·remote C'abin al the end or a di rt tr11il Jn
hills out side this coastal resort town ,
sheriff's officers said today.
The sheriff issued an all-points bulletin
that a man identifled as Robert Clayton
f"rands was wanted for questioning. lie
was described as about 30, with long hilr
and a beard. ·
Officers declined tc comment on ~s
connection with the case. No arrest war-
rant wu issued.
The bodJes of the woman, about 29, and
the boys, about 3 and 10 years old, were
discovered by Stephen Houts. a neighbor.
about 10 p.m. Thursday, said a sherirr:s
statement. •
Lt. Kenneth Pittenger said the b<><.ltl!S
bore stabbing wounds. · •
'The victims' names were not released.
But police in Albany , east or San Fran·
cisco. said they were asked by Sa$
Cruz authorities to notify Robert Hughts
of Albany that his son . David, 10, was·~
homicide victim at Santa Cruz. •
Hughes is a bassoonist with Lbc
Oakland Symphony Oretlestra, afld
played a concert in Oakland Thursday
night. ..
Investigators here declined comment
on lhe Albany report .
Henry J. Wedel :
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held Saturday
for Russian·born 11enry J. \Vcdel, wbo
died Wednesday after 40 years as a Hun·
lington Beach resident.
Riles for Mr. Wedel. 79, of m
Frankfort SI., will be at 11 a.m. in
Smith's :r.1ortuary Chapel, with intermCot
to follow al Good Shepherd Cemetery.
· During his 40 years as a Huntington
Beach resident, r..1r. Wedel worked in the
oilfields which were then boom1ng. ·
Survivors include his wire Anna. sans
\Yilliam H. and Henry G. Wedd;
daughters Mrs. Vera A. Runser, Mts.
Veva A. Cosper. 10 grandchildren and
three great.grandchildren.
• ---Cle~rance 1
•
Annual
SALE
•
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUALITY
•• NOW AT SALE PRICES
NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE
OVER 70 SOFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
Sofas Sofas
Reg. SALE Reg. SALi
8' Cut Velvet, 689 8' Linen Print. 659 Multi.Colored. 790. Henr.ton. 799.
8' Crescent Sof1, 549 I' Tuxedo -Aqua. 465 Gold V•lv•t. 690.
8' Hl·Back Textur• CartOn. 570.
Shorr Ill 689. 599 I' Whlto/Grffft. 589 I' Print -Gold & 911 Shorr Ill. 679.
Ora~ -H1nredon 1072. I ' Print -Royal 589 8' V•lv•t Strip. -579 Coach. 689.
Sh1rrlll 695.
Chairs Chairs
Pr. Gold Volvot. 179 ... Pr. Chairs Print 139 ... Sherrill. 205 ....
Wood mark 159. ea. Pr. Print. Pr. Chairs -Gold Velvet 189 ... Car1on. 224 • ... 185.a. Marge Carson. 209. •a.
·Pr. Chairs -Yellow 199 ... Wing Ch1lr. 189 Velv•t. Dr1xel. 259. II. Rust. 219.
Leath1r Chairs 20%.11 Pr. Gold 179 ... and Sofas ALL Velvet. 209 ....
Unbeliev1blo values in quor.ty Solos ond Chain. All 8·w•y hand·tie<!. Most ScotchguordeCI,
Somo down ind feathers . All lruo quolity ind •t very aatlsfying prices:
Selocted groups from Henredon, Heritage, Drexel, and others, now et sole prices. Stop in now
for bast selection.
OREXEl-HERIT AGE-HENREOON-WOC)OMARK-KARASTAN
1etJ 111111/PJUt. " INTERIOll.S
WlllCDAYS & SATURDAY$ t iOO to l :JD
NIDAY 'TIL t.00
NEWPORT IEACH e
1727 WESTCLIFF OA., .
'42·2011
LAGUNA IEACH e
141 NOi.TH COAST HWY.
4t4·•11f
TORRANCE e
1JMt HAWTHORNI ILYD,
J71·1219
,.
H DAILY PILOT 3
Prisoners • Ill Two Weeks
I
Recall End of WWII?
-Then They Celebrated
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of "" Ollt)' "*' u.tf.
HANGING IN oor office we have some front pages of historical editions
of various newspapers. "
One of my favorites ls the Cront page of the 8an FrMcisco Chronicle of
Aug. 15, l!M5 -the d.8y Japan agreed to an unconcliUoaal surrender,
There Is a aeven·inch high beidllne which proclaims
PEACE I and a series of stories Which detail vario115 as.
pect.s of the surrender.
llll!YNOUIS
nouncement.
But the best part of that page is a story by a man
named Charles Raudebaugh that opens, "The end of the
long haul came at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in San
Francisco ~ and the city went wlld."
RAUDEBAUGU'S STORY in the "Victory Extra" edi-
tion details the incredJble community sense or joy and re-
lief and the wild celebration st3rted by the surrender an-
He tens how the word "was flashed from the White House and the cele-
bration started.
"It swelled and surged and mounted through crescendo upon crescendo
into a demonstration without parallel in the city's history."
Raudebagb tells <Jf the poople running out of their homes and offices and
converging on Market Street, causing a massive traffic jam.
He explains that a citizena commiUee had decided the thing to do would
be to have a pe.rade up Market Street led by a band, so "immediately on the
announcement of victory the band was dispatched to the Ferry Building for the
parade -but to all effect it waS lost.
"THE PEOPLE DID NOT requ~e a band to lead them. They formed the~
own parades, and there were probably a dozen all going at once -in differ·
ent directions -the length of h1arket Street. Anyone with a Dag automatically
found himself at the bead of a line of march.
"City and federal offices closed for tbe day, without waiting ta be told to
do so.
"As a matter cf fact, no one was quite Slll'e of anything that would hap-
pen later in the evening, or today."
AFTER DETAILING .SOME of the confusion over whether President Tru·
man would <Jr would not declare aome kind of a holiday and the problems of
declaring ooe without the slate ...i, Raudebaugh adds, "No one seemed to
care, however, whether there waa a proclamatioo issued or a stale seal. AU
that mattered was that the war had ended -and the da)'3 of 'blood, sweat
and tears' were over."
Saturday will mark the end ol Ille longest and mo5I divisive war in tile
history ol our country. Our Joos baul Is over. Our da)'3 of blood, sweat and
tears have come to an end. But there will be no parading on Market Street,
-I~ celebration. Only~ an ~st efJirt .. to see that it never, ever happens
. . . ~' ' l ...,. 1£1' t -~-.:: '
'?Press ClulJ ·w ·Present
~!
~972 Awards Saturday
·= :: A sellout audience of 300 is expected
'Saturday night at the 18th Annual Orange
:County Press Club Awards Banquet at
:llie Airporter Inn, Irvine.
-;. Master of ceremonies will be KEZY
:iadlo newsman Ed Nix, as 73 awards for ~xcellence in writing, photography and
lk!ltlng are distributed among 14 news-
:jathering <Jrganizallons In the county.
:~ A cross-country innovation was added
;for tbe judging of the 828 entries in 40
;Utegories. The Orange County, Fla ..
~ress club has exchanged annual contest
·jlldging duties with the Orange County,
'Calif., Press Club.
·:Saturday's event inc I u des an-
·vouncement and presentation of the
~ub's highest honor -the Sky Dunlap
Award. Los Angeles Times editorial page
editor Don Angel will make the presen-
tation to a county journalist selected by
club directors for recogni.Uon.
Hooored gue!lb for the evening .in"Iude
Orarige County, Fla. press club presi-
dent, Todd P~rsons and his wife, and
former Orange County, Calif., club
presidents, Truman Myers and William
Farr.
Penons~ is assignments editor f<lr
WDBQ.TV, Orlando and Mye rs
represents Walt Disney \Vorld.
Farr, now a newsman with the Los
Angeles Times, recently was freed from
an indeterminate jail sentence for con-
tempt of court. Farr was jailed for refus-
ing to reveal the sources of a news story
he wrote.
~~unday Issue to Examine
.•
?Dor Rocket, Buddy Ebsen
·:Here's a preview of some of the stories
aod photographs DAILY PILOT editors
"ixpect to be among "Sunday's Best": ': ,• SOME SOUP CANS -Workhorse or :Qie Western world's space program has
:Geen the Thor rocket built by McDonnell
:Douglas in Huntington Beach. Likened to :t pair of soup cans stacked end-to.end
.l'lih a motor at the bottom, the Thor ts -·--------...
(Sunday's Best J
.•r.>eeted to continue to be Important Into :lb• 1980!, Sunday Special by Slall Writer
>lohn Zaller. ;.
.; ADDITIVES -If we are what we eat,
•e're becomJng a pretty artificial people.
.Starr Writer Candace Pearson ln-)esti~ates the growing amount of food
~dlhves the average American con-~er gets ln his diet. lead article In 1uu Section.
;~ BUDDY EBSEN -Newpor1 Beach
~atamaran sailor Buddy Eblen ii back
·.on the tube with a new series previewed
!this week In TV WEEK. Neighbors who
!,haven't seen much of Buddy durinR film~
"'g can get a look at him In run color tn th<--·-BLIND INJUS'l'ICE -Maey tlahtleu
'
persons. anxious to earn their own living,
are finding prejudked employers reluc·
tant to hire workers with lheir kind o( a
handicap.
LADY lN WAITING -The once-proud
ocean liner Queen Elizabeth still lies on
her side in Hong Kong Harbor a year
after being ravaged by fire. Illustrated
feature shows size Of what will be the
biggest salvage job tn history when the
reclaiming or the 83,000.ton lady gets
under way.
'RE-ELECTED' -Evel)'ll Bremer has
been "first lady" to a College camp1s
twice in her Ille-by rtmalnlng married
to the same man. Her hu1band ls presi-
dent ol Saddleback College and i1 lonn0<
pruideot of a Nebraska collee:e. Her
story is told with words and pictures by
DAILY Pnm staffers Ani!!On Dterr and
Patrick O'Donnell.
Policen1an Fired
' IMPERIAL BEACH (AP) -A 11-year-old pollce o!llcer waa llrtd Thlll'lday
after U.S. CUstoms orficials 11t lhe Mei·
lean border aa.ld he used ebullve
language when Ibey stopped hil car.
Patrolman David Vasquci was fired rcr
lnsubord.lnaUon end "conduct un-becomlnl a pollco ofricer," Del. Lt.
Donald Zachary said.
Warplanes
Continue
Bombings?
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
tOOay left open the possibility that U.S.
warplanes will bomb the Ho Chi Minh
trail and other rnl.litary targets in ~
and Cambodia after the C(!ase-fire goes
into effect Saturday.
Defense Department spokesman Jerry
W. Friedheim declined to give a direct
answer when asked about this, refening
only to Dr, Henry A. KiMlnger's predic-
ticn of a formal ~fire in Laos soon
and a halt in fighting In Cambodia as
well.
Under repeated questkming, Friedheim
said, "I can't go beyorxt Dr. KJssinger's
words on those two countries."
The agreement negotiated by Ki.smlg er
with the North Vietnamese, says all U.S.
military acUon in South Vietnam and
against North Vietnam will end at 4 p.m.
PST Saturday.
South Vietnamese government forces
Md \he Viet Cong and North Vietnamese
troops ln the south ~ are to cease
firing and remain in place at that time.
Friedheim told reporters et a Pentagon
briefing that a11 U.S. military action
against North Vietnam, including recon-
naissance flights, will halt w h e n the
cease·fire goes into effect.
Pageant Casting;
Set on Weekend
At Irvine Bowl
Castin~ ror the 38tb annual Festival cf
Arts Pageant of the Masters will be held
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Satlll'day and 2
p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday backstage at the
Irvine Bowl on the festival grounds in
Laguna Beach.
There are some 400 positions to be cast
for th.: summer program which this year
will run Crom July 13 through August 26
at the Festival ct Arts grounds.
· Two complete casts are selected so
volunteer performen may work one
week and have one off. The Pageant
re-creates famous art worka with live
models.
"We expect and bope we will baVI! the
same number as lut year'~'::t 500,"
Sally llteve, festival •po . , said.
"We have no ~ ol imowJnt/tbough until
they a!l9lr qp;" .,,. salcl.
* * * * * * P _OWs to Coast
Camp Pendleton Among Hospitals
The U.S. Naval Hospital at Camp
Pendleton was selected today as one cl 31
U.S. military hospitals where returning
prisoners or war will undergo rehabillta·
lion, base spokesmen divulged.
The U.S. Department of Defense an·
nounced the decision in a dispatch this
morning, but no speculation has come on
how many prisoners would arrive at
Camp Pendleton, nor when they woold
begin flying In. It is one of six chosen in
California.
Base aides read from a prepared dis.
patch from the Pentagon which said that
Clark AFB in the Philippines would be
the ~ial receiving point for the POWs.
Once it is established that the men are
fit l'l travel, they will be given their
choice o! hospital.
Every effort, the aides said, would be
made to assign a man to a hospital
closest his family.
The hospital at the base is undergoing
extensive remodeling and new con-
struction. lt is located in the southerly
portion cf the base, away from the San
Clemente area.
* * * * * * Pentagon. Announces List
Of Hospitals for POWs
W ASllINGTON (AP) -The Defense
Department today ·octicially announced a
list of 31 military hospitals in the United
States where returned U.S. war prisoners
will be brought for examinations and
treatment arter they are freed by the
North Vietnamese. One is at Camp
Pendleton.
In addition., the Pentagon announced
that Clark Air Base In the Philippines
will be the initial receiving point for
POWs who wW travel from Hanoi in U.S.
medical evacuation planes.
At Clark, the returned men will be able
lo_make telephone calls to families in the
United States and be fitted with new
uniforms, in addition to receiving a
preliminary medical checkover.
White House aides are discussing the
possibility <Jf a California trip by Presi-
dent Nixon to meet the first freed U.S.
prisoners of war on their \Vay home from
North Vietnam, The Washingtco Post
reported today.
The newspaper said there has been no
final decision for the President to make
the trip tr Travis Air Force Base, about
50 miles south of San Francisco. The Urst
returnees are expected to arrive at the
base in about two weeks.
Asked about the report, White Rouse
press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said
Nixon has not made any plans to greet
the returning pri&:lners.
Factors being considered by the White
J1ouse ln making .a decision include the
fact that the drama and emotion of a
presidential welcome may be too much
excitement ror \be returnees, the Post
said. It said there is the prospect of some
unpredictable hsponses from lhe
servicemen.
The 13 Navy hospitals are:
Oa'.c Knoll Naval Hospital , Oakland ;
~alboa Naval Hospital, San Diego; the
Naval Hospital at Camp Pendleton; th e
Great Lakes, Ill. Naval Hospital; the
Philadelphia Naval Hospital.
Also, Bethesda, tMd .) Naval Hospital ;
the Portsmouth, Va., Naval Hospital; the
St. Albans Naval Hospital in New York;
the Chelsea Naval Hospital in Boston ;
the Jacksonville, Fla. Naval Hospi tal ;
the Naval Hospital at Camp Lejeune,
N.C.; the Memphis, Tenn. Naval Hospital
and the Bremerton, Wash. Naval
Hospital.
The 10 Air Force hospitals are:
11alcolm Grow Medical Center,
Andrews Air Force Base, Md.; the
Wilford Hall Medical Center, LackJand
Air Force Base, Tex.; the David Grand
Medical Center, Travis Air Force Base;
the Air Force Regional Hospital at t.1ex-
\\'ell Air Force Base, Ala.: the Air Force
Regional Hospital at Sheppard A i r
Force Base, Tex.; the Air Force
Regional Hospital, March" Air Force
Base, near Riverside ; the Air Force
Regional J1ospitel at Wes tover AFB,
Mass.; and medical centers st Scctt
AFB, Ill., Keesler AFB, Miss .; and
Wright·Patterson AFB, Ohio.
The Arm y eight Installations are:
Brooke Army Medical Center, Ft. Sam
liouston, Tex.; Letterman General
Hospital, San Francisco; Fil.Jslmmons
General Hospital, Denver, Colo.; Valley
Forge General Hospital, Phoenixville,
Pa.; Tripi er General Hospital, Hooolulu;
Ireland Anny H()llpital, Ft. Knox, Ky.;
Pattenon Anny Hospital, Ft. MOnritouth,
N.J.; and the Anny General Hospital at
Ft. Gordon, Ga.
Laird Says
Prisoners
Fly N 011stop
\\'ASHINGTON {APJ -Secretary of
Derense 1\1elvin R. Laird said today oper-
aticns fer bringing out U.S. prisoners of
"'ar from Hanoi "will start !his next
w~k ," \\'ilh mote than 100 10 be home
"'ithin two wee~.
Laird said the POWs will be Oown
nonstop from Hanoi to Clark Air Force
Base in the Philippines over a round·
about route that will first take them
over Vientiane to l:.aos.
But, he said, there would be no landing
in Vientiane es indicated Wednesday by
presidential adviser Henry A. Kissinger,
in ouUining terms <Jf the peace agree·
ment.
"Present plans Qo not call ror a stop in
Vientiane," Laird said
North Vietnam will provide American
officials in Paris with a list of POWs on
Saturday. A spokesman for the U.S.
delegation in Paris said the list wW not
be made public in Paris, however.
Pentagon officials said, meantime ,
next--0f·kin would be notified ht!!fore the
list is made public unless the North Viet·
namese make it public when they tum it
over to U.S. officials.
Indications "'ere that the list would be
made public early next week if nat~f·
kin are notified Cirst. It was not clear
whether under such circumstances all of
the names would be released
simultaneously.
ln a taped interview on the NBC Today
show, Laird gave no specific date for the
landing cf U.S. planes in Hanol and left
unclear when the flrst prisoners woold be +
given their freedom.
U.S. officials working on the POW
release plan said I.his was likely to occur
sometime near the end ot the two-week
period following the signq cf the ~
agreement. ~
Asked in the Interview, "When can ft
expect the first American pri.!oners to
return home?" Laird replied that Project
Homecoming "will start this next week."
But later in the program, when ques.
tioned specifically as to when the POWs
can be expected back in this cou ijry, he
refused to give a specific date. saying on-
ly that "more than 100 prisoners. wtJl be
back in the United Slates within the first
two weeks.''
The start o[ Projact H:r.lf q ,
referred to by Laird. could me.a~ ~r.. ,
rival <Jf a small group cf Amen:ID8, in-
cluding speclalista to set up com·
municatlon links from Hanoi eo U.S. Jn.
atallatiom. Theae men are expected to
anive In the North Vletoamene capl1al in
about a week.
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.
OAJLY PILOT f"fldQ, ~ 2.6, J91J
~ Just 1:' Coasting,~ J R~kets Bit GI . •Short Ti1ners!>
~
with
Tom
urphine ..... ~';,:.
Beyond the
Flooded Plai11
1'11E lt l'R At LIF E OEPT. -Ont• of
\h<' last bastions of buC"Olic Orange Coull·
1y of yeste ryea r lil's in a detP ru t of the
eoastal hills in an are:.i bel \\'t>en 1he San
Diego Frecv;a) and the 101\11 of Lagunn
Beach.
Tum off the frec1ray to\\·ard the Art
Colony by the sea and you almost tum
b..1ck the c\oc~. Abruptly. you are oo a
winding. ru ral road. the hills sv;·eeping up
on either side. \·ou can st ill vie"· cattle
and horses grazing. Syca more gro\'es. ;\
couple of little lakes. Sometimes wild
£101\.'ers or evt>n v;•1ld animals. Old homes
1rith rural inailboxes out fron1.
Indeed. this is Lnguna Can yon. the
place v;here once the stagecoaches fro m
S;1nta An:.i to Laguna folloY;ed t~e
!\.\ is11ng trail thot has become the road
today.
THE PEOPLE \\'110 live and 1\'0rk and
ma ke rheir lil'es in Lagun a Canyon are
proud of their happy acres which ha .. ·e
'Preserved much that was good about
Orange County in limes pa st.
Any area \\'here you migh t chose to
!i\·c or \\·ork. hov.·ever, v.•ill have some
problems. Laguna Can}'OO has one big
one. \Vhen the rains come . that steep
gorge be<.'omes a place where the
floodv;·aters run to rea ch the sea.
Some1imes those \.\'aters have storm ed
through the canyon as if shot from a can-
non. S\.\'eeping evel')'1hing befo re it.
For decades no"'·· people have puzzl ed
over flood control and means 10 allevia te
that rush of wate r that has done heav~·
damage every fev;· years.
TUE LATEST ~OTIOS mulled by the
Orange County Board of Supervisors has
been labeled "Flood Plain Zoning."
Yet after much study by canyon
residents and Laguna city officials, about
all tbal could be said for Flood Plain
Zoning Y.tas that it v.·ould get things out of
lhe way of a flood . But it \\·ouldn't con·
1rol the rush of water.
As a matter or fact, the flood zone on
property would mean that if your n ·
isting build ing got flooded out. you
couldn't rebuild unless you put your new
home or business on tall stilts or piers.
Nothing new \.\'OU\d be allov.·ed unless it
""·as jacked up in the air likewise.
TllliS YOU'VE SOLVED the problem.
see'? The next time it floods. the water
JUSI rushes underneath you. goes on do\VTI
into Laguna Beach and floods somebody
elst>.
Yes sir. beaut iful. bucolic Uiguna Can-
yon \\·ou kl sure look nice all built on
stilts.
Fearful of this picture. the canyon
folks and Laguna townspeople all rushed
to the Board of Supervisors to protest.
\\1e don't 11·ant slills. they pleaded. We
'''ant some decen t flood co ntrol channels
so we Y•On 't flocid anymore.
The Bo11rd of Supervisors. hov.·ever. in
its infinite \1·isdom . v•ent ahead and
adopted the flood plain zoni ng anyway.
They also issued many soothin g 11·ords
about "interim measure" an d "more
study needed ."
OR, G. R. EKEBERG. a vetinerian
and long·t ime civic voice in the canyon.
commented. "The super.·isors didn 't gh'l'
us a public hearing. It "''as a pu blic
farce." She add ed Laguna city officials
"""·ent above and be)'Ond the call of duty"
in trying to help the canyon folks beat
the flood plain zone.
So now there's a lot or talk by canyon
peopl e aboul getting out of the county
and maybe annexing to Laguna Beach.
IF IT HAPPENS, the $upe.rvisors will
of course be angered and amazed. They
will declare it another city land grab.
Obviously. everybody knows you're
better off under county contro l. The
supervisors alwa ys know what's best.
U,.IT-"'"' ..
MARINE INSPECTS REMAINS OF SOVIET·BUILT 122MM ROCKET
It Was One of 27 That Hl_t Huge Air B•te on Outskirti of S•igon
LBJ Laid to Rest
10,000 Mourners Attend
Solemn Burial Services
STONE\VALL. Tex. (AP) -The burial
oi former President .Lyndon B. Johnson
reflected the things he cared about :
religious solemnity, milttary pageantry.
deep-felt oratory and the gathering or
good fri ends.
In near·lreezing ~·eather Thursday
afternoon, a crowd estimated aL 10.000
gathered outside a waist·high stooe fence
to get a better look at the SO.minute
ceremooy which took place in the family
cemetery on the LBJ Ranch.
Hundreds of others stood across the
Pedemales River to listen 8:1 the
ampli fied eul ogies of evangelist Billy
Graham and former Texas Gov. John B.
Connally echoed across the rain dam-
pened pasture.
"ICE LOVED TillS hill country," said
the Rev. Dr. Graham, resplenden t in a
dark robe edged near the neck in red.
The evan1elist quoted the former
president as saying, ''I Jovl\, this country
"'here people know when ytliu are sick,
love you while you are alive, and miss
you when you die."
Johnson . 64, 1vas fatally strickeii with a
heart attack at the ranch Monday at-
Mrs. Onassis'
Photos Okayed
i\tlL1\:\'. ltalv {AP\ -A Milan ~t<ite alt(lrney ru1ed Thursday there
\1•as nothi ng obscene in an Italian
magazine iss11e v.·hith carried
photographs allege dly portraying
Jacqueline Onas.'lis in the nude.
The attorney cleared the
publ isher or ;1 ch 1rge of issuing an
obscene p\1 hli(':H ion and lifted the
seizure of the November issue of
P\aymen,
Public 11rosecutors had ordered
the magazine seized in va rious
llalian ei!ics. clahning its Content
"·as "obscene:·
The pictures purported to show
i\lrs. Onnssis hnthing in the nude on
the isle of Skorpios
lernoon. He had had major heart attacks
in 1955 and 1972.
His grave, filled at dark after the
crov.·d bad dispersed on foot Md in bu9eS
and cars. was guan1ed throughout the
night by four military policemen and two
Secret Service agents , who sat in a car to
avoid the cold.
MRS. JOHNSON and the families of
her two married daughters, Lynda and
Uiei: Ylsited with 'dt'eliiG aftetirards at
the ranch house, just up a narrow park
road from the cemetery.
Johnson's body was borne back. to the
family cemetery after funeral services at
the National City Christian Church in
\\'ashington. the capital's last farewell to
the man who bad served in the U.S.
House and V .S. Senate -and as vice presi·
dent and president.
More than 40,000 persons filed past his
closed casket in Washington oo \Vednes·
day, and another 32.000 paid their
respects at the LBJ Library in Texas'
state tapital, Austin, on Tuesday.
Johnson 's body was nown back .from
Washington to Bergstrom Air Force
Base, near Austin, aboard the big White
House jet on which Johnson was sworn in
as president Nov. %2, 1963. shortly after
John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
A MOTORCADE CARRIED the body
65 miles to the cemetery, making the
final tum down the park road that
sweeps across the Pedemales and passes
cl<>&e to the ranch house before cutting
back across the river.
Among the mourners who gathered
here for the burial were Sens. Hubert H.
Humphrey, vice president during
Jotmon's administraUoo, F.dward M.
Kennedy I[). Mass. ) . George McGovern
(D-S.0.), Edmund S.' M~kie ({).Maine),
Strom Thurmond (11.s.C.), hustneosmen
and lawyers who had been associated in
Texas with Johnson's political carter and
lhooe who Connally called the "plain pe<>-
ple he loved -the silent people -who
. mourn him the most. He gave them all
be bad for 40 years."
Smoke billowed from the blasts of
lllSmm howitzers and drifted across the
river. and shots crackled in salute from a
seven-man rifle team.
Weather Generally Mild
Rain Dampens West Coast; Texas Has Freeze
NAliOtlAL Wl•IH.1-$1l'f'l(I POttC•$1 1, 1•.1111 $1 I -'J1 -7a
30,41 30.'4 30.... 30.00
(
Mild -tfltl" tnd lllocltr... ._...,..
•Ill.... <Gftf'td "*' ti !tie NllOn -·· '-lt'ht ~ ..,,,,,.ii.. --~
""' W..t '°'" -llW{ll ef JM ,..1 .. lrO!'ll Ttott fro ~I Plor'ldt •1111 ~ .. It-tlllf MrMowL 5-ftlll ,,.... ~
ll'\fdl' tar ... ltf .. ~,. 111 """''" Tt:..• ...
T"""""l tt.lrft ~ ....,, ,.......,
'"'"' " 11 Ckwll-. c-.. '° n et IC-V w .. , Fi..
(CoaitoL 1ummarv aMd
tldol dof4 lij;pear today Oil
/>og• 8.J
BIEN HOA. South Vldnam IAP)
Jim M...., will ,;.,,.... forcet hll 1ul
night In Vlttnam. Ho lb!lol)ll It would be·
his lut on tarth. r
"When that !lnl rocket hit, I lried to
get under the btd, bat I was too bl&,"
said the JlO.pound warebou-na• lnm
Me.con, Ga, '"lbe S4tCOftd blast blew me
right Wider the bed. It wao the loudest
era.sh I ever hf~rd. '111e door blew oUt,
and the winQowa blew in.."
Moo,. loolted at hll clock radio on the
Qoor beside him. It wu 1:25 in the morn-
ing. 1be barracks next door was a tom:nt
ol orange names and black. smoke, and
he could hear people crying out in agony.
"I COUIJ>ln TEIJ., il our hulldlng
was stW trt.mbling or U It was me."
P.toore tripped over tbe luggage be bad
neatly piled up for' lhe trip -home to
Georgia and ran outside. In Ult
moonlight rockets were still rumbling
across the cloudless sty, making a sound
"lite a runaway fttlgbt train, UtM an
e&Nplltting slammlng crash."
One landed in front ol an aircraft
repair hangar, its molten white shrapnel
killlng a young U.S. Marine oo guard du·
ty at a concrete bunker. He may have
been ~ng outside the bunker because
the night was muggy.
His guard ~t was under one of lhe
few remaining sigm in English on the
huge Bien Hoa base, now almost totally
occupied by the Vietnamese air force. It
read: "Structural Repair: You -Break It.
We Make It."'
(Another American died today when
his helicopter crashed of unknown caus-
es-. They thus may have become the last
U.S. casualties of the Vietnam War.)
A BAN-TR&-Bp~IB SYP.IBOL \\'Bs sten-
ciled ln black paint on the concrete light
pole just ICl'OU the road floln Whan> lhe
ZllMI R>Cltet Jen a lwo-fiicJl.doep crat•r.
Seven boun later, ~ areen wooden
bamcks building where nlne Air Forte
men and J.2 Aplerican clvlllans were
wounded by a di rect hlt was 1till
smouldering.
As Otemen fouata tho names, Jim
·Moore told the story that "lhe boys back
al the fishing camp bett.r get used to
bearing."
Many of Moore's frlend.s we.re among
the dvlllans wounded next door.
Li.ke him, most of them were "short
timers" who had com& to Vietnam under
three-month contracts to help assembl e
and catalog the suppllea the U.S-·govem.
ment rushed ln ror the Vietnamese air
force before the cca»Un! went into ef·
l•d.
Wleks
.
What did you do in
the war, Daddy?'
• Ill Beloved Hill
\)N JUS LAST NIGHT In the coonlry,
Moore and h~ buddy. Biii Hughes of
Otlahoma City , went to see "f'r<lty
Maldl All in a Row," a mild akin nick
playing 1l the hase theater.
"We forg¢ to take lhe usual pool we
make every night about what Ume the
rockets wlll come tian~1ng In/' Hughes
re<alled. "The nexl thing you know. I
was on the floor, with my hands wrllpped
around my !\tad. I thought for 1ure this
was It."
tlubt!rt Davis, a . ~upply man fr0t11
Maoon, Ga .. gt>t und<r the bed when the
fl.Qt rocket •lammed onto the lawn
ou~de. When the second round exploded
the building next door was in "Oames
and fiying glass. I ran out across the
field. I don't know where I was going, but
I just ran. I figured I wasn't going lo
gi ve them a sitting target.''
ENGINEER AL DA VIS, or s a ll
Antonio, Tu., had the comer room in the
barracks that took the direct hit.
"Luckily, I was in the other end,1• he
sakl. '1The whole world shook. Every day
on this base you pass buildings that have
been hit in previous attacks, llke that
shack up the road that's been hit thret
limes. You never think lt will land on
your hootch."
Davis hefted a small airline bag.
"Tonight," he said, "I'm sleeping In
town."
Model Arrested
BOSTON (AP ) -State police arrested
a 20-year-old California model as she
allegedly tried to pi<'lt up three suitcases
containing 110 pounds or marijuana at
Boston 's. South Station. .,.
Country
'
UPIT ........
FORMER PRESIDENT LY NDON B. JOHNSON 'BURIED UNDER GIANT OAK TREES
Ceremony W•1 M•rked by Solemnity, P•geantry, Gathering of Friends
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Iceland May Ask
U.S. to Bon1b
Volcano Craters
Nixon Acts to Abol~h
Three Executive Units
VESTMANNAEYJAR. Iceland (UPI ) WAS ffi NGTON (AP) -President Nix·
-Authorities said today they may as~ on proposed to Congress tOOa:y that it
American military pilots to bomb vol.· J.1.'.I' h three organizations in his execu. office. · canic craters on Iceland's Hc.imaey l!!land a message to the Congress, he said
in an attempt to divert lava nows and the act ion would pare 389 jobs from the
spare its main town.
As they pondered such a move, volcan-
ic sparks as big as tomatoes rained over
the Island located off the coast of Iceland.
Police officil11s said U.S. military auth-
orities at the Keflavlk base outside Reyk.
javik would Oy lo Hetmaey Island today
to see if there is any chance to bomb the
eastern craters' of the volcano to divert
ils lava Oaw away ft-om the town and
into the sea.
EARLY TODAY, ASHJ!S and sparks
showered over the almost deserted town.
A lhick layer of ash ....,red streets and
officials warned tt may toon become im-
pouible to drive small cairs Into the town.
Police said hulldO<ers would push sand
walls today In an atlempl to slop tava
nows thrtatening the eastern part of
town ...
. A geoloSlJt .. Id TbursdaJ that the
Helgaljell volcano, which erupted Tues-
dn.v afttr at least 5,000 years• calm, a~
peared to have loot eome of Its Intensity.
'"!be worse. l!fllptfonT ieem to be
overt'' Mid 1eoiollst Sveilm Jacobson .
"But should the ll'Qptlons "'°tlnU< wllh
the ,..,. intensity u l101', one-flllh of
the blao<l'1 hou8et risk being d<StrO}'<d."
BUT l'OLICE-sAIDnew ffilcn .OO!d
hunl open oo the eutem side of town.
tbreaSen ing about XlO homes in the art•
with fiery lava nows. '
'
[ ...... _1N-.--s_H_o_R_T._ .. ~)
exCC'uti ve office, with an estimated sav·
ings of $2 million in the budget.
Proposed for abolitJon were the Office
or Ernergency Preparedness, the Office
of Science and Technology and the Nt1·
lional Aeronautics and Space Council.~
e Vproar on Abortion
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -In reaction to
the Supreme Court's most recent abor-
tion decision, a niety of Catholic lay·
men today called for the excommunica-
tion of JustJce \Vlijlam Brennan.
At the same lfme. a coinmlttee of
C.lholic btsho!)o said the coon had wri~
ten a "charter for abortion on request."
On Monday the Cow:t struck doym
abortion laws in Georgia and Texas and
rufa:l that a woman has an absolute right
d<~lng the rim lhtte months of preg·
noncy to deddo whether to bear her child.
e Cons11mer Agenew
WASlllNGTON (UPl) -With an en-
donemenl !""" Ralph!liil<f, tllree ....
at.on today launChtd a renewed drive to
m11te an Independent rederal agency that
would go to bfl.t for tbe CON!Umer.
S.n. O..rl., IL Pmy. (R-111.). an-
nounced that he Md Sent. Abrahom A.
Riblooff. tu.conn.). oii!Jacob K Jav1ts.
(R.N.Y.) woold introduce legislation -
probably next -k -lo from on Inde-
pendent consumer protection agency.
I
e Ba11ker Sent.....,eol
ROME. Ga. (UPI ) - A federal judge
sentenced former bank president Lamar
B. Hill to 10 yean impdsonment for em·
henlement Thursday after hearing a line
of character wit~s praise i he ez:.
banker fonhis generous acts of Hvlc duty .
Judge William C. O'Kelley gave lU.11.
one-time president of the First National
Bank of Cartenville. a maximum five
years each on 60 counts or fraud original-
ly involving f4 .7 million. All but two tenns
were to run concurrently.
e f' 14 Probe So119h1
IVASlllNGTO!UAP) -The Navy bas
told the producers or the troubled F14~et
fighter that the craft's testing progrpm
b a 1 "deteriorated tO an Unaccepta1>1e
point,'' Sen. William ProlJTlire says:
~ Wiscon8in Democrat, while releas-
ing eopies of an intemaJ Navy memo an
Tbunday, asked for an investigation by
the House and Senate Armed services
committees.
DAI LY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtl!Vtry of Ott Oall~ Pl~l
is 9UM.Wltttd
.. '
I
I
\
I
J
t
1
I
I
,
'l'hef're on: Fund Set
To Aid Santa Anita Sets
Pussycat
Stripper? .
Corona
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The National United Com·
mlttee \Q !'rte PollUcal
Pr!Joners, which had raised
mcmey to defend Angela
Davi.I, ls joining In a lund·
Political Fund LOS ANGELES (UPI)
-Data Devtoes Inc.
wanted to Introduce a new
product, a l§pe slripper
that cuts and dtstroys
computer tape.
.. railing drive to aid convicted
mua murderer Juan Corona.
The group and the Juan
Corona Defense Committee,
made up' of Corona's friends
and 1'1aUves, aald 'Thunday
the money would be used in an ,
attempt to overturn the Jan. 1
( BRIEFS
11 verdict that found Corolla
guilty of tba 1971 hacldng
deaths of 2$ ltineranta ln SUt--
ter County.
Allred -Monios, who has
Ulllted O>rona llnce he ....
arreated 20 months aao, sal.d
1 al a news conference that
earlier funCl·raislng attempta
were W11ucceasful. e Iiltt Trouble
RIVERSIDE (AP) -'lite
95-year-<1ld Milslon Inn has
been fon:ed to <ul Us staff by
60 percent after It was denied
a loan request, a spokesman
for the hotel says.
The cutback came after the
financially troubled inn, a
state historical landmark, was
denied a 1375,000 loan by lhe
Department of HOllling. and
Urban Development.
Sandra Hartness, manager
of the ~room hotel, said
future operation of the inn Wll!
in jeopardy but there were no
immediate plans to cloae the
establishment.
.BABl'Chtet
OAKLAND (AP) -The Bay
( Arta ,Rapid Tran.sit District's
; chief eogineer and assistant ~ general manager hs.s resigned
• Ml take a $35,000 a year poe:i-f Uon with a Los Angeles transit ~ oonsul\ing firm . t David G. Hammond, who
.. declined to name hls new
: firm, told BART directors t Thursday he is leaving Marcil
: 1. ~ . e SlllOfl Decltts
... ,_
l..eetwr e c -11e11
A lecture Th~ In
San Frandaoo by No-
bel laureate William
Sbocldey WU can<elled
beca\118 ol plans by Btu·
dents to ·hold a deinon·
stration. Prof. Sbilckley
bu 0011ltowrslll· views
OD racial llOpecls Of In· telllgence.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Santa Anita Racetrack lw set
up a '320,000 polKtcol fund for
1tate s enators and
aasemblyman, the racetrack's
lobbylat has told T h e
Associated Press.
Lobbyist Kenneth A. Ross
Jr. aald Thursday that the
lll0,000 will be distributed
over the coming four years on
a non-partisan basil. He said
the fund doubles the level of
spending on pollUcal cam-
paigns by Santa Anita
Consolidated, operator ol tba
Los Angeles area racetrack.
ROSS MADE-THE com·
mltments for a total of
!320.000 In compalgn con-
trlbutJons 1n letters malled
TUesday to each member of
lhe 9tate legislature.
The pledges boost Santa
AnJta up among the top
political spenders in
Archbishop Links Up
A bortions to Herod
LOS ANGELES (AP) -'lite
Roman Catholic archbishop
here has issued a statement
condemning abortion in whlch
he oompares the U.S. Supreme
Court to Herod, dtscrlbed In
the New Testament as order-
ing the death of the children of
Bethlehem two years and
younger.
ARCBBIBBOP Tl m o t by
Manning told 1.8 million
Catholics in the four~unty
Los Angeles diocese Thursday
that the high court's ruling
Express Bus
Lane Opens
ForBig City
LOS ANGELES-(AP) -The
rmt completed seC60n oi the Arrested
And where do you &<> to
unveil a stripper-?
Right. A strip club. 'lite
l)r"Q(lyct was Introduced
Thursday al a party !or
the trade at the Pink
Pusaycat, a topless-bot-
lomless club.
OFFICIAL
··GRAND OPENING! . ' ,
.. JAN. 23 ·24 • 25· 26
~ RIVERSIDE (AP) -'lite ~ flnt use of retrofit automobile i em.IJ&ion control devices in
~.<;a!ifornla will beglD here Feb.
1::1. the state Air ··~ t ~~~~ Will be nqulred Olt -1866:70
1 model aulo!Mblleo chanpng
ownership or being reifstered f for the first Ume in California.
,153 mWlnn San ~. HAYWARD (AP) -~ve ~-~~· lr1i! ,.,.;;,;,.;, •)'<l9111 women .were = · · ( . : ... •. ' -~~ qn,l ~gatkib. ot soll 1. ~g. . •. .. r • !<Jr a lewd .act after . I ~ ./. l..cNJ· cJrr' --;tl!i1" pla.lndothes officers vlsfted Southern-'. ~· ' a RaR(d nine massage parlors In a
Tram:it 'Dtstrtci has ·aa~1 crackdown here, authorities
i HaPba .. aaullrvard
af Car•
Tbeae devlcta will be re-
quired on most 1986-70 cars
tilroul!b out the Stele by July I '" l. ( e Grcaat .f'rcaudl'
• ROHNERT PARK (AP ) -
; At least 30, and possibly hun-
nounced. said Thuraday. ·
Hayward police Identified A seven-mile express bua • the women as Theresa Ann
Lane from ru. Monte west to Jacbon, 20; Linda Debra
the Long !load! Frteway will Dow, 20; AIW. Arubar, •:
by-pass regular lrteway tral· Linda Pappas, :Ill; and Pannle
fie . The buses will then UJe Proultt, 18.
regular freeway lanes into Los'!f.!=!;!!i!!! Angeles.
SCRTD ofJ!cial• •aid Umlled
use of the e:rpreas Jane will
SEE PAGE 46 OF
TODAY'S DAILY PILOT
FDR DETAILS!
dreds, of Sonoma State
Collea•'• student. might be
hnproperly receiving fedenl
and state gran ts by lying
about their financial qualifica-
tions, concludes a st.ate audit.
The audit released Thursday
covered 84 of 700 Jtudenta here
receiving aid and found that 30
were at lflast partly un-
quallfled tor the aid received.
continue until June when the
El Monte bu.sway station is
completed, allowing additional
lines to be routed onto the
bulway.
. Orlfy Coast Qffers
•
1be 11-mile busway ls
scheduled for completion in
mid-1974.
SUPER SALE!
SUJTS-..$POlT COATS-
KNIT SU.CU
ALL GREATLY REDUCED
Pre-cuffed
KNIT SLACKS .................... All Now $1 0.00
Reg. $17·$18 .
ALL D~HS SHIRTS
l TllS ·······-································ 40% Off
Plus an •ssortment of other b•rgeins.
MA NY SUITS NOW 1/, PRICE
MANY SHOIS ON SALi
WI VI• \.Wf.t Ne-..n l wh
17M510
• 63 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art Llnkletter
Tht ln1kltl'I Club: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
membership card permits
you to buy nearly ~ry
thina you need fro the
finest closed-doo r sh -
rooms at substantial sav-
lnis -appliances, fu rni-
ture, stereo equipment,
sporting ;oods, draperies
and muc h, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet" price and
mobile homes and motor-
cycles at substantial sav·
lngs, The Insiders Club
i
Effective Annua l
Earninss
5.00%-5.13%
Passbool<. No Minimum.
5.75o/ .. 5.92%
One Year Certificate
$1 ,000 Minimum.
6.00%-6.18%
Two to Five Year Certllicales $5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 days loss of
interest on amounts
withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts.
also provides big dis-
counts on tickets to sport-
ing and entertainment
events •• , plus a whole
list of free services: safe
depasit boxes, money or-
ders, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership require-
ment for savers -$2,500
minimum balance. COast
borrowers now receive as-
sociate members~ips en·
titling them to all outside
referr al services. Ask
about joinin; al any Coast
office.
MIJN OfTICI:
ilh & Hiii, LOI Anrtltl • 123-1»1
"'"'"'"""' WILIHlltl .t lllAMUC'( "-AU!
l9JJ W11.n~ alYd .. u.. • ~126!
L.A. CtvlC CIHTDI
2nd & ll"*'"Y • 126-1102
HUNTIMT'Oft •EACH: 'J Huntlnaton Clntlf c 14) 191·1047
SANTA MONICAI . "'
711 Wl1 N111'9 Blvd.• :JU.0746
UNnotto:
l oth & PKHk • llll-ll41
WllT COYINA1
ll&tllncl Shoppln1 C'lt. r 3ll•220l
l'AHOllAMA CITTI
CMM & Vin Nu)'t B!Yd. • 892·1171
TAWNA.I
1117!1 Vtntu,. 8tvcl. • 34~14
LONG •rACH1
J rd & Locust • 437·7481
EAST LOI ANCIEUS:
81h. SOto . 266-4510
DIAMOND U."1 'I's. 01tmonc1.1ar I 141 59~7525
TUITIHI
~r:r.=r:o~nc Cir.
LAM-L>MI--"'· (714) 1224751. -
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Delly Hoo1>-I AM to 4 l'M
All OH...._ ra-ci.tc c...,o,....._.,.
IAMtoll'M
AUm O¥llt OHi llWOH OOUAlll
•
OAIL Y PILOT IJ
LA Airport Imposing Own
Tough Noise Restrictions
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Los ing any steps to reso lve .,res for aircraft noise levels,
Angeles International A\rport alrport prob I em s ' by ij,e said·, lhe J:.ll.s -Angeles
plans to imJ)Ose tough new -=es:::•:::•b:::l::is=hlng=:::n•:::ti=ona=I =st=a=nd=·=a=ir=po=r=t=l'='='=tin=g=on=i=ts=o=w=n=. = restrictions on ai rcraft traffic1-
ln an attempt to reduce noi se
lrrltatlon to s u r r ou nd i n g
itsldent.s and to stave off
posaible la"'SuHs, s a Y·S
manager Clifton A. t,foore.
thi1 w••k•nd on the MALL
~outh Coast ?tpa
'
. _ . on Magnavox Sterao Theatres, Stereo Consoles and
Component Systems. Also enjoy great savin'gs on Color and
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Exponentlal Horns, OeluKe Micromatic II Record Changer,
area for optlonel-e1ftr1 cu11om modular tape uni! and record
storage. They also hive a built-in 4-Channel Sound Decoder
(merely add two apeal<:trs, fli p a Switch -and you're lil8faUy
surrounded withithrlll!ng mualct). Come In .•• let us prove
thlt Magnavox gives you more I
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i DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
• A Slight Oversigh·f
Ir people w~o Ii"" In glass 'hous~s shouldn't throw
ston ... the city staff in Huntington Beach shouldn't even
touch a pebble.
While the city has put a tight hammerlock on sev-
eral major private projects until the developers complete
thorough environmental impact reports, the city itself
has flubbed on the illlpact law a\\f"'t loflT mlljoJ. tip>es.
Fint, it was discovered the C\li' bad no ~!Jn .to Mite ,
an Impact report oo the propooecl $1.4 million publi~
works project to r.tmM lroublelsome ash treea. 1'!111
was corrected in tfute , and city qfficials said they •wJll
write such a repo\1 before the project begins. ·
student~ to talle ·froln. one to four classes for a period of
three, six or n.J.ne weeks. Formerly, summer IC.boot of·
iered just one opUon: two classes for Ille weeka.
The upanded opUons mean th.~t a student wanUng
to take extra summer cla"l!es during the summer will
have a greater choice. Also, a student wanUng to speed
• progress toward graduation by taking all-year cllSSe$
"Wltt·bave that choice " At .J.he same i6i.e, a student wantinf tq take, time JI! dur!J!l the summer wilt.l>e entirely free to do '80.
'. • The only possible ~~p .L! money. The upanded ~on• \D-i' cosl somewbiVmore, but unless the cost L!
: ·'eJteptJonal they should J>e:o,Pproved. ' . . Now city officials say-piey wilt write impact reporl!I
for the $11 million civic ·center, the $5 million cenlr!lj
library and the s2.4 millio• central park. ne,civic ~·. . Meadow.~rtk,_.,lm. pa .. sse __ : ..... , ter and central park are oearl.Y, complete, and~e·1iPQJ:y .. #,.::,.:, . • 1
has been •tarted. . · • • '!be preservation of Uny Meadowlark Airport In
Tbe confus10n over ~rlvate unpact reports came up HunUngton Beach has been a continuoua subject of clis-
late 10 1972, but the EnVU'Onrnental Quality A~t h~ r.. cussioo. Most of the talk Siients-to be -iainst it
quired such reports from government agences smce . Neighboring homeowners have formed an assoc.ia·
1970. . . • . • . lion to oppose a county plan ff»' joint county-city pur-None of the om155:1ons seem ~eliberate, but they are chase of the 8Q.acre airport and ~acre golf course.
the sort _of car~less mistakes which cause the people to Most city councilmen, except for Jerry Matney, seem to
lose confidence in government. be against the purchase proposal.
Expanded Summer School
After a year of painstaking study, the Huntington
Beach Union High School District is on the verge of
adopting an expanded summer school concept that could
pave the \Vay for all·year classes.
Trustees have made clear their intention to adopt
the plan, contingent only on a financial feasibility st-Udy
that is expected by March. .
The opposition looks so strong that the city· pro!>
ably won't even back an economic feasibility study of the county. proposal.
If that proves true, it would he an unfortunate mis·
take. The idea at least merits further stud.Y to &-ee if
it is practical from a dollars and cents standpoinl
' •
•
I
~,;p.,,... . . -. -
• I .
' • t
! • '
The course of action trustees are following so far
certainly seems sound.
An expanded summer school calendar would alIOw .
Under IP• county plan, an airport and a golf COIJ\"SO
could be saved and the runway would he realigned, in-
creasing the safety to nearby homes. The major objec-
tion is the fear the airport would be expanded for com·
merciaJ use. Further study might determine if the city
can maintain sufficient control to prevent that.
Right now, no one knows, and it seems a shame to
make a decision based on a lack of knowledge. H ~E S~YS HE \'f\l~l<S HERfJ fUi HIS ACCENT AIH'r VEl\Y 6UTTU~AL.~ '
Nothing New
In Student
Rebellions
·~YDNEY J. HARRI~
Ri!Diog throogh allr the journals and
publications that have piled up on my
desk the last few months, and trying to
decide what to fi..le away and what to
throw away, I came across a fascinating
pjece I shouJd have mentioned months"
ago.
lt is called "Rowdies, Ri~ and
Rebellions," and ap-
peared this p a s t
summer in "Ameri-
can Hi.story Illustra-
ted," published by
the National HlStor-
icaJ Society. Written
by Lowell \V. Harri·
son, the article
serves to remind us
that the 1960 decade
or unrest on the campuses was by no
mearui: a singular event in our history.
FR0~1 THE period of the American
Revolution right up to lhe Civil War -
the first 85 years of our national e1-
.istence -student unrest "was more
prevalent and more violent" than in any
other period of history prior to lhe 1960s.
By 1800, we are told, "students were
becoming more insistent upon being
treated as 'gentlemen' and upon reeeiv·
ing their 'rights' ... This new radicalism.
clashed directly with the traditional con-
C'(!pt of students' status and the rigid
disciplinary codes which college officials
had fonnulated to control their charges."
l\TOST DRAJ\.IATIC of the incidents was
the ··riotuous Commencement" at
Columbia in 1811 , when a senior student
delivered an inflammatory address, and
~'as refused his diploma. His classmates
De~r • 1
Gloomy
·Gus
Why not put Tim Leary and. Gig
Peters in the same cell? They can
1ick envelopes together.
-A.O.
TMs ~ rwftKtl ruftn' ..,,._, ""' ~ .......... ___ s...
\'Wr ... .,._. N Gi.m, Olllo Dllll'I' P'lt.I,
'
• '
pusbed him back OD lhe platf.l..n, the
provost call~ the dty ~ oot
student.s vec:w)lelmed the poJJce, the
faculty ~ into full fii&bt, ~d
studenU bold ·possession of the d!urch
where the commencement took place.
President· Wheelock of Dartmouth in-
toood, "MelancbOly must be the prospect
of the future state of our country when
those of the risinx generation . . . un-
dertake to insult humanity and justice, to
prostrate the la~·s and overturn the -
social order." .
IN 1851, .he University of North
Carolina had an enrollment of 230; dur-
ing the year the faculty dealt with 282
cases of delinquent behavior. ln 1841,
Yale students defeated New ltaven
firemen in a brawl, destroying their
equipment. ln um at Princeton half the
student body were suspiended. Twenty
yean later the Univenity of Virginia
was the scene of student riots, with arm-
ed and masked students patrolling the
campus. College presidents were shot,
stabbed and bombed ; a Yale professor
anned bimseU with two pistols for an en-
tire summer.
Student Wlfest is as old as the earliest
or medieval universilies. The only things
new are the reasons and rationalizations.
This is why those "'1o are ignorant of
history are overw~lmed by current
events.
Only a Few Give Blood
It happens every year at about this
time -the nation's hospitals and blood
banks report that their supplies of blood
are running perilousl) low. The reason is
simple enough, according to Marian G.
Mabon, public relaUons director of the
Richmond, Va., Red Crbss. During major
holiday and vacation seasons, she says
"There is always a shortage of blood
coupled with a greater need -car ac"
cidenl3, fires and other emergencies." A
major disaster sue!, as a plane or bus
era$ can lead to emergency imports of
blood from other areas.
THE I.I MllJ..ION pints of •blood that
flow 81U1ually through thil>_· country's
cot11ple1 channels or acquisition, pro-
ceuiog, di!tribuUon and use are roughly
sufficient to meet day-to-day needs. But
lbere is Uttle margin of safety. A Na·
llonal -~ Cooneil panOL ~ the aupply.41emand situation ·two y!t!
ago as one bf "critical balatice." Whole blood II periabable, even lbougb
refrigerated. Jt remains usable DOJmtger
than Uno weeks, tience JI .,._ be
stockpil«I indelinJtely againsJ future
oeeds.
Another haunt Is tha or contaminated
blood. Of all infections tba< might be
transmitted lhe· greatest concern In re-
cent year• has been over the risk of
..bepaUU., a..llver-dlaease, especially-when
fresh whole blood Is used. Some 30,000
casca of transfualon-connected hepatitis
occur ye11rly In the United States, and
between l.500 and 3,000 c( them act fatal.
Beca111e rtp<>rting on the dl,..sc ls
known to be Incomplete, the incidence
and motlallty actually may be much
birJw, It iJ poqtblc that there are 11
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
many as five "subclinical" cases -
cases without manifest symptoms -for
every case that is identified.
THE ~1AJOR advances in blood
transfusion and banking are of relatively
recent origin. It was not until 1901 that
Karl Landsteiner, an Aust r I an
physiologist, discovered that there are
different types o! blood and that if the
donor's type aad the recipient's are ill
matched the red ce11s clump and disinte~ate. Thi! solved tbe mystery ol
why IOple ~ons bid been ,u.,. ccssfiil !lobile •resulted In death. ~OlllQenl of ts to pre.
Vflllt dqttlng came In Jll4,.ond dbco.V!O'
of<tbe Rlrfactor in 1940. The adckib'al< ·
and -mhctur. now uaed to
pre&erve stored l»ood was concocted dur· Ing WOrid War II.
AlthoUgh every person may at S>me
tlme be in acute need of a blood
transfusion or a medication derived from
a human blOOd component, only a Liny
fraction of the population ewr maktt a
blood donation. If is believed that one-
half ot-tbe~Alnerlcan pt<>ple are qualHled
by age and health to donate blood. Ytt no
more than three million a year actually
do sii. Three-fourtlu of !bem give
ltpeatedJy. Thus, a major concern of
blood-banklna officials Is finding oome
way to awa~en in more Amtrl.cans an
obligation to aJve blood at least once a
)'<at.
I
,
New Emplaasis on Work and Self-dbclpliiae
Outlook for Nixon's Second Term
WASHINGTON -What will Pres.ident BUT IT ts essentlaUY a wrong reading
Ni.Ion's second te~ be like? Imperial? ~ ~ of Nixon th!Ji~ is riding such a tide of .
Remote, wi!bdrawn? Uncommunicative? RICHARD WILSON reaction In order~ dehumanize and
t would be the case if most of tbe _ fmally defeat the noble purposes which
c t comm~tary were to be believed. have inspidd humanitarianism. ·
La · "de b · b. ti and It cannot be denied that a com-ymg ast ~ su Je<: ve Pro: -..·.recognized this prospect by • making-na••""'ate concern-for .the h•-• .. • con-bably erroaeous Judgments, the prlinary . ..,..,...~ . --elements of tbe secood term are three-numerous changes at the top m the d1t1on, and the pobtical rewl.(ds to be
fold : governmental adiiiliilsttib-ve strucmre. -gained therefrom, have motivated the
First projection But be included in -dwJ&es no liberal Democraiic rnovemeot which is
of the' cease-fire in glittering figure like John Coan.ally to ex-nov1 ~d ot be at ebb tide ..
Indochina fn:lm a ~-cite public interest, no JOaring concepts _But it cannot be denied, either, that the
static phase of no ~ ar ~ RtDOramas. • Nwm, • programs as they have been
war into reconcilia-' According 'lo one ln~lioo a pn>9ftllod to, and lgnor.d by, Coogrcss
t!on and reconstruc-Oatioawide li~of • Ii.. .. ......,.,flcted lrtJ. the most advanced, and in some
tlOO based upoo mu-. . ,_ = . ..,. •·-caa t'ldical, ""'l"lies ever pretentcd
tual interests. bas sc;t m. liberal la of 40 ~rs ls l>7 a ,Qmervatl~biled Repibllcan presi-
Secd!d, an execu·' <: -fuWJ; at ebb . as fallb ·lits been Jost ~y • amt. Nmon, in fact; has aboconded ·wlt!I
live -Imposed reor-• averag~ _people in , 'the ·worth . of many Of the ideas ~ advanced by the
g a n I i a t i o n of sbcial ~fonn and ~itarianism as it bas "been Im· · humanitarians, dnd If they are
government aid p~, 'in~ving cut-ptemented by . faulty laws. sloppy pro-sometimes hedged by conservative
backs of funds appropnated t8nd. to be granu, ~ windy •dV9Cl~ There . ls restraints, they are a lon-g way down the
appropriated by Congress. :50me eV1dence to aupport this conclllSJon road £tom reactionary.
11li.rd, the creation of an American at-m recent Gallup polls. People have lost'
lll09pbere in Which business and Jabor faith in tbe New Deel, Fair Deal, New THE ARGUMEST ls not so much over
will meet the growing chaJl~e of world Fr.:iotier, and Great Society approaches what ' sh:all be done as how 'tt shall be
rompetition and the tradiUooaJ 'Values o! which dominated governmental action done. Ni:s:on ls trying to change tbe way _
work, seU-c'.aofidence, self-dbcipllne will !or to yem. Welfare, ~ve coo-weUare ls administered, how ·funds OD
be reemphasized in everyday life. duct, crime, raclal euesses are education are ~t, the method for im-
associated wilb the frame ol mind tbat proving beal!b, on tbe basic pr<miae !Ml
IF THIS proves to be Vt.f'f e1citing, it for every shortcoming in American the spendthrift and sometimes corrupt
will be a change for presidential second society there must be a federal program, methods of the past baVe not worked.
terms. They are often a Iet~wn. Tbe _ however loosely financed, badly ad-This exposes him to the most virulent
momentum bas usually been lost. NiJ:on-mtnistered, and off the mark. --attact-irom -the -education_l91>by, the
farm lobby, the health lobby, aDd everJ
other group Which has a vested interest
in generously admidistered ,federal Pl'O:'
grams. I
But since when has Nixoo dciµanded
an ~d to educational aid, an eod to ai4
!or the ~y, and end-to federally supt
ported housing, or, for that matter, ai;a
end to the cffortto create a· desegreplod . ty' -T socte . •
THE FLIMSIE.W pretexts arc ocm.j
upot.. to create the impreasion that Niloa
bas become a megalomanlc recluse io
tbe White Hou;e plotting the destructloi!
of hwnali liberties. One ·colurnnlsl canl
him the . "mad bomber"; .a ccd
grcawaman oquales him wlt!I mu!!'i
Gentler crillcs '81 he trusts no. oiic, ~
"•·cludmg the general public to whom he
will no! impart his intents nor e.xplain"hli
purposes. ' -i
Mbch of this will come to an end, of
course, with the Indochina cease-firi
Nlxon would not talk about whill
it was being negotiated. It wil l end, tot/,
when the co~tarors recover from
their annual alarm. about freedom of tbt
~. and when It ls d.lscoYered that Nii•
on will spend huge sums oo wellare and
retonn. Nothing has beeit said so far
which cannot be dispelled in one press
conference or TV broadcast after tbt
cease-ftre.
Nudity and Ecological Disaster ! • '
To the Editor:
Some ti.me back you carried an Item
about Ortega Hot Springs, explaining how
the county workers were clearing the
underbrush J.Way to discourage nude
bathers from swimming in the bot pools tere.
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'Everybody Wins', presumably as a quote a:id gaining nolhi.ng. Is this money reallJ
from the backers .of this move which going to our cause, or just !Ome JDOfl
MAILBOX previously failed in our state. They funds for Gov. Reagan to spend or
wonder where any opposition might come something else? _,..,:.,
from. One source Is from those of us w•M"--., ALAN GAT~
THIS WEEK I went to see the results,
and was sickened by the wreckage of IL
once naiural if not beautiful, landscape.
I fail to see the logic of the project.
Lettera from readers are welcome.
Normally writers should convey th.iir
messages in 300 words or less. Tlt.e.
right to condenu lttters to fit space
or eliminate "libel ts re&eroed. AU
letters must mcLude tignature and .
mailing addf"e11~bvt ~ mav be
withh<ld on rtqu<sl I/ 81.1//idenl
reason U apparent Poetry will not be
publi&hed.
don't particularly like regressive taxes
that hit those least able to afford it Of
course one can argue that no one ls forc-
ed to buy a lottery ticket.
·But if the banks, computer tnjiustry,
and Vendors sueh as supermarkets who'll
profit frotn this, as you melltion, do their
job well, the glittering carrot will be
dangled in front of most of oor citizens
three or. !our times dally: isn't this what
'makes' people buy toap and other
Items? The advertising men say so. And
what do we teach our children about
Instead of protecting the citizens of
Orange Coonty from th.-Imagined
obscenJties of nude bathing, our county
workers here opened the pools to full
view o! the motorists who pass by. This
would aeem to greaUy tncreaae tbe
chances of offending sensitive citizens.
SWlMMERS, wbo still freq~t tbe
pools in large numbers, are now made
law breakers by the lack of seclusion.
The need for police patrols ln the area
must, therefore, have.greatly increased
disaster, paid for
Orange County.
by the dllzen... ol respomib!Uty, to cumine the plastic
halos of the legiJ!ature !bat won't tu
DEAN H. LUXTON faitly but looses the pt®lem over to be
What bas been gained is not·at all ·ob.
vious -what has been lost, is. Ortega
Hot Springa 11as become an ecological
To the Editor: ,
The headline for your article on a pro-
posed state lottery (Jan. 17) states:
solved by 'human •eakness?
The article asks whether those
churches that use bingo games wlll op-
pose a .state lottery. I don 't know. J do
believe that a lot of church people who
don't care about bingo, but who do care aboul people, probably'Wlli.
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS, Minister
.Keroll{Jc's . Wild~ ~·rid .. ~u.t;~~eae woe.
Wlld. -~. Raw. Beal. Uo<lerl""1Jld. · '. ' • • ?:. •· 1. '.~ ~ng in reply to tbe article
'AU 'lliae word<. ~be a ma]or'/,W>-, .... '.i • • ,No~ Motorcycle Noise, Jan. 21. ~novel tiy the ia.tc Jae!< ·KM>Oac THE BOOKMAN : .~.,', IT''lll!iifir-RT loto focm that ._.a ~ ~ bis l..e for A_muJca, a .. • ~.;·"9 beinr i-.i from
cMii>Jci. ~ the COU11tey'1 .,..,. lnlW< caruOrnia c1c .. na. MolOtC)'dllts and
lions in tbe IOI aQCI ~= Vbioos of Cody otb6 ol!·road vehicle owners.._ to
(McGrn-HDI, 18.95). ty diners, grusy nopbouaet, moiistaCf>t. .,. !bi.t land are required lo bu)' -olf.
WRl'ITR!I ITOllDd the same lime as thin mco, llllClly .Ubw-r .......,.. and highway reglstratlcm which """' f!J for
h!J legendary On the Road, lhl• book has chesa atudes. a two-year period. This is ..,ppoooc1 to
long bad the underground reputation of THEY LISTEN to tbe harmony of train help PlY for developing publlc rtdlllg
beliilJ Kerojlac's best work. Seen lhrougb brakes and watch 1 mattress set 00 fire · parks, lobbyists in sacramcoto ad other
his eyes, It Is an account of the hopes and by.a clgaretlc...ll>ey live,..llleyJwe,Jbey_tbmgs tbat help !be off·coaden lreep a n1iJ~=--==>m-and aa•~-f Cod Idly I k -•·-•·· time 'f vibrant pla<tlonde. '~• inuuu:1 IU(q 'O Y av oo • -... 1 · v . As far as l can aee we are loai"''" more Por.1eray, Kerouac's great American youth, aearddftl, cl\llleaainl, hoping, re-''I
anU-bero, bis alter ego, bis dttad enemy, JcctinJ -forcloundcn ol tlic New-Beat
bl.J beloved brother. GeneraUon.
The book -a speeckomposltlon with Other worlla by Jack Kcn>lllC include
the power and Impact of action paintinr Dbarma e.m., lloolt of Dreams, satori
-lo moving and poetic. Cody and bio In P1r1s, '1'0'i!Q f< tbe City, SUb-
frlend travel tbe same nu• road, vleWlng tomne-end Voolty of DUb>z.
railroad brldg• bebiod warchoulcs, muo-CAllOLINE HARKLEROAD
Quotes
lf you wlJb to know what I man lJ.
place bim in ' authority. '
Y•plia• proverb
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To •tor :
Ju regard to ooe of your articles en-
titled "Smoke Bill Proposed" oo Jan. 18,
I feel lhls bill -sbould be passed just as
many other students in bigb school feel It
sbould be.
IF rr WllS paS9ed, It would be a lot less
hassle for everyone. Because if a atudent ...
wants to smoke, he's going to. lt'1 a
hassle for the student becaute be bas to
meat off campus Or go to bis car or even
to the restroom to have a smoke. 1ben
it's a hassle !or the administration to
hire and pay aomecioe to patrol campus
for smoking.
Then I'm sure the person who I!
patroling campus !or smoking could be
off doing better things with their time
other than hauling students into the of-
fice. So I feel the bill should very
definitely be passed.
FRANCES McMANN
OIANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
l!ob<rt N. W•ed, Publisher
Tho111a.i K""'~ .tdltor
Barbare Krtlblch.
Edltoricll Page Edhor
' The tdltnlio.I IA-RC of lhfl. •Dl.lly
Pilot ~ks 10 lnfonn and stimu·
late Tt&ders by f'jrelcntlnJ_ this · new pr 1 opliironr and com·
m('nta.I')' .,., ll'IACI nt lntcmt a.NI
tltnlfk:ance. by IK'flvldlnR a forunl
ror-the'""~xprmhJn of our .rt!1.der111'
np!nlons. Rnd by prl'it'ntlnf( th1•
.dlve""'° viewpoints of lnfonned nb-
.atrvtts and spokatnrn on toplcw
f)f t~ day.
Frld-r. January 26, 1973
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VOL 116, NO. 26, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES . . I
I . , . , . ,
~ . . -~ .;· Continent~s
••
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
"'" ORAN<?E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRfoAY, JANUARY 26.,_l973 N TEN CENTS
ldest , Cer,a1Dics . ' on Banch
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of .. '*" l'li.I ... ,,
The Oldest man-made, ftred, clay
1 artifacts ever unearthed in North
America by some 2,000 years have been
discovered on the Irvine Ranch by a
team a! Cal State ·Fullerton
archeologlsts.
Roger J. Desautels, president of C.OSta
Mcsa-bafi«¥1 Archaeological Research
lnC' !Oday announced at UCJ the
~grUi,eance of the July, 1971 digs above
' .~ ... _.. ·. • I •
Upper Newpart Bay.
"The discovery is an archeological
milestone wbicH o~ns an entirely new
perspective, Dn prehistoric art forms in
Ne rt\ America.
"These artifacts have been con-
clusively dated~ by ~bon-14 tests perform~ at UCM nd Gakushuin
Un:versity, ~~ T1)e ests have placed
the1 age of th&'. :lliifadl at more. than
6,000 yeal's,''~lJlels says. Thie ~xact locatlOJI oC the find is being
kept secret to prevent amateur pot
hunters fro m destroying the site's
historical significance.
Desautels said the Irvine Company will
protect the site against trespassers. ARI
holds a contract with the land develop-
ment fi rm to insure the protection and
mapping of significant historical sites
located on the 83,000 acre ranch.
___cb.ristopber Drover, 25. of Laguna
Beach, now a lecturer for UC Irv ine Ex-
tension, led the student group from Cal
State Fullerton Jn the six week dig during
the sum1ner of 1971. '
The oldest p~vious examples of North
Arr,erican ceramic Qbjec ts ever to be
unea rthed are estimated to be 4,500 years
old and \ve re· found in the eastern United
States.
The thimble sized objects decorated
\\'ith designs Jett by sharp point ln-
s!rumen1s ha ve no apparent relationship
to similar items of a later date found ' in
{Set ARTIFACTS, Page ti
·:(! .... '• '{
War :&,ging Until End
DAILY f'ILOT ll•tf ~
OLDEST NORTH AMERICAN FIRED-CLAY ARTIFACTS
lr.viM-R•nch ~htd C--arbon-Daited-at More Than 6,,000·Y11r•
N,ixon Vnvejls .Budget . . -. t owling ...... _ .... '$268 ·Billion
\IASHINGTON ·(UPIJ -President
Nixon disclosed today that the federal
budget for the l\Cll fiscal year will total
$268 billion, and said he would discuss
details in a radio address to the nation
Sunday evening from the Flor!da. Y'9it~
House. A $12-billion deficit , $0. • was
forecast by a Senate leader.
'lbe President gave the bud(_et figiife
for the year starting July 1 f_o~a
meeting with congressional leaders Of
both_ parties, and while greeting a group
reP,resentlng prisoner of war famlll~.
Nixon also said the final bud&et tlgtire
for the current fiscal year will be $250
billion · -the celling he demande~ and
one which roiJsed some members of
Congress who feel the chief executive in·
fringed on legislative prerogatives.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the President already taped
th'= U·minute radio program on the
bii(tget which will be broadcas~ from Key
Bllcayne, Fla., at 3 p.m. PST Sunday.
The President briefed congressional
leaders on his flscal proposals before ~g to his Florida retreat to spend ~
wei!kend working on his State or the
Unlon rr.essage to Congress.
'Meeting with reporters 'on Capitol HiTI
following the Wttltc House meeting. ·
Senate -DelJ'loc.rntic l,.eader Mike
~iansfield and House Speaker Carl Albert
said the actual budg'?t flgures !Or fiscal
1974 would be $268.7 bilUon, 'with an
estimated deficit of $12 billion.
Maiisfield 'said the deficit for the cur·
rent fiscal year would be $25 billion.
Of the $268-7 figure, !.tansfield said,
(See BUDGET, Pa(e ZJ
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Better Get
tar License
Friday, Feb. 2 is the last day to
get your car license tags or get
yourself tagged.
H~ Rubien, manager of the
nepirtmen.t of Motor Vehicles of-
fice .in Santa Ana, notes this year
the law bas been 'chang!"i from
Feb. 4 to the fir$t Ftjday in
F.ebruary. J
"It comes earlier than usual and
may ·catch :..vme motorists with
their cheCkbooks down," quipped
Rubltn. Fees received after{.eb. 2
go Up 10 percent and after Ji: arch 5
t~e rent' .. cll doubles.
'
):. Official
Arrives
In ·Paris :·
By United Press Intematlonal
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
arrived in Paris to sign the agreement
ending the Vietnam war and said be
hoped the accord will usher in a genera-
tion of peace. ·1
The war. Itself• raged on and two, pos!
sibly three, more Americans ana hun-
dreds of Vietnamese died today. (See re--
lated story and picture, Page 4.}
Rogefs will sign the agreement in
Paris Saturday at-the, heavily· guarded
HoteJ Majestic· with the foreign ministers
of North atid South Vietnam and the Viet
Cong's Provisional Revofudonary Gov.-
eiUIMl!.''nle JZ.Jear-old -ill theD to ~to .•~~-· pltn. 1'81· . .
Rojiera sUl ' we hope and ~!Mt shortly the ceasefil'I wiU be in eff in
.i-and Ca!l>bodlJ, 10o, and !hat . Uy
l lbltj' toil af d .... 111 . war will QtllDe to
an "tnd." l , · \
Prime Minister Souvanna Phomna of
Laos said today in Vientiane !le ~ght
there would be a cease-fire in Laol with-
in 15 days after the one Jn Vletnam but
that U.S. bombing would continue if need·
ed.
Jn Cambodia, Prime Minister Hang Tun
Hak said Thursday hl! government would
·suspend offeflSive operations after the
Vietnam cease-fire to test the Commu--
nisls.
But the fighting was heavy today and
surged to within 10 miles of Phnom Penh.
In neli!l'.hboring Thailand , site of many
U.S. air bases, there was concern for the
future. Gen. Prapass Charusathlra, the
deputy Prin)e Minister, predicted trou-
bles in Laos and cambodia that could af·
feet Thailand after the fighting ends in
Vietnam.
The White House announced that Pres.
idef:lt Ni.J:on is sending Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew_ to South Vietnam, Laos.
Cambodia, Thailand, Ma1aysia, Singapore
and Indooesia for "substantive discus-
sions" on the pMtwar state or Asia . Ag·
new leaves Sunday.
Presidential Press Secre1ary Ronald L.
Ziegler said Agnew "will reaffirm our
desire for P,eace and .self-detennin11tion
for all the countries of Southeast Asia."
\Vhile the principals tn the Vietnam
peace drama gathered In Paris, a key
figure sttpood ouietlv out of that city to-
(See PEACE, Page 21 .
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BJ.ltMAN )!c>E EX/'RESSES FEELINGS ABOUT SEWER PROJECT
· 'Sanitatloft Diltrict Draws Wr1th of Mariners Mile Merchants
• ! ' •• . . , I . SetcetrilnstaUatjon
'' . . ·Mariner~: 'Mile Citizens
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Upset Over Parking Ban
·By L. PETER·KRIEG "They came around here Monday and
O! ""'·~" Plttt •tett handed the switchboard operator a let·
Mei:chants along Mariners Mile, in ter," said B. G. Miller; assistant to the
Newport Beach are, to put it mildly, !Pl· d Ro • I I happy with the Orange County Sanitation presi ent at sans, nc., precis on
District. fastener manufacturer.
Some ,are talking, to their lawyers. District or!icials claim they gave n1>-
0ne. Howard Poe, says he's going to lice on Friday. Work began Monday.
have fp" close down his bait bus\ness. But there was no advance meeting with
lt'.s aUi beefpse the ,San)talion District the merchants to explain what would be
is laying a tiew sewer main from the happening.
Arches l9 the,, Balbt>a . Bay Club. ~iller, It was ieamed, threatened to
Besides_ ,produc\f\g 90me monumental sue the district for St million because
traftiC ·jams tbroUjh the center of · the lhe police were ticketlng delivery trucks
city, the distrJCt arso 10rdelld "no park-stos)plniL out front. .
ing" sips all a~West COast !:!Rway tari~ otsttJ~~fi~·1 S:i ~~ Lt.8Wil:
and rriany of the slnesses don' '}have liam Blue", ~..:...-:. 11.1""'rvt·sor ("r thei ~ ·Tribal Cei'emonr
. • their own parking lo.ts. u ~~ --~ v ~
H E l W ds Ch• f . But bwnnessmeo "Y what Irks them lice depa(tmc!Jt. . untirigton: ~p orer e ie even more ts the short notice they got. te~~..1.r.':':'"~m~:· .:;r,e~/:,f ~\::'.;
.lllf like everything Is going to be all 'right
Wyn Safgent, an -explorer and· an-lndonesl:m jungles of Borneo in n~ of now so I don't really want to talk about
Utropoiogist ·f"Jffi ~Huntington Harbour medical, educational and agricultural Stocks 'Drop lt."But if they start again, v;e'll sue
who has· been studying the sexual life of help. ""' them," he said. 1
tribes in West Jrian, bas married the · Coming back to the states, she locally B z '.!.... '1 OQO ii; Blue this momin1 said he had
chief of one· of lhe ·trlbes tlhe west Iriau organiz~·the Sargent-Dyak Fund Inc. to •e OW ' agreed to allow delivery vehicles to stop
military command said t~ay. get reUef _tor the primitive people. "lo throw off a few package! -lf they
• , · • -· Jn adilillM cargoes or p I gs, NEW VOR1' !AP) -The Dow don't· lie up traffic too badly."
. Mtss Sargent •. local a.ddress ts 4001 goats and chickens, she was reported to J . ~·e of 30 industrial l While the drain 11 ~inc on along the
S Dr H .,_ n. ch ones •·~-,. land s1•' of the hlg ay,, ,Lt. Blue ex-Morning tar 1ve, . imtm6""" ix:& : have taken six to;is of medicine, three stocks, which burst above t ,000 ue: d De
.• The'U-year-<lld divorcee married ChJef mbtOrOOats, and agricuttur81 equipment poiots at tht: clOle (If trading NOY. t aln~h~fd~~se 'llie tr~ne~
'Obaharok Jan. a in a tribal cererDony, to the village. 14 amid 11.anfar,,, aropped below mselves, had to be moved over.·
giving blm ti pigs and five cloth head-Upon her return to Huntlngtoa Beach that mark d~ mi,ictay tradlng "That forced the ~-IOllth lane
dresses as a dowry, Maj. Amin Sudjono fn early 1970, she spoke of her adventurts today, At 11 a.in. the Dow Was far over lbat there isn't 1room to al-
sa!d in.West Jrian, a remote proylnce in before a class at Harbour View Elemen--do9i11 a.35 to •.:u. But the market J w parking.~ Slid.
·-1 · Ury School \ • rallied and qlooed OUI at 1003.54, Men like baitman Poe and )'lcht brok·
. • . ..lt was an incredible dream and all arotera ~cited investor concern Duke Herbst claim their businesses
Chief Oblharok, who was Iii<! to hove impossible joomey," "1e wa1 quoted In lboul iollaU. ...i the u.s. trade aro dying because of tt.
seV<ral oCller wives, rtportally 1leads 1 the DAILY PILOT. tltflclt .. tbe main (adon opurrlng \"I've been here five years." Poe said,
-I tribe. "Wt~ a very good chAnce of mak· the drop. , 'land I can't •land two or three mooths of
In t11a put I ~joufllllllt, Mill ill the ugly American rnpectodlio a~," Wednelday, the Dow w" down parking out in !root."
Slrpnt left Hunt Boodl In Octob<r the told the cblldren w bad iped· II.fl 10 ra,ue. Tburlld>)' all llock Poe h .. put signs In his windows an·
to study and pbotoarapb csnnlbol tribes . ...-<hue 5,000 boob for ~'"''"'lllor'-;=.-"-="-.-I--.n,;,iao<k"·"llnw.,.!!I~ !Jr_,...,.,, . ...l-Jiio<o>Cill· ..:..an...!.'oul ol ••l-~sale
· tbo Batlem V.U.y,-a·Jllnlle-1n lhr 'i 1r1lt<jUll)le. • of 1 oltlan.i day of riiournln• ror •Oiro1r1cedn·ct."Y Ibo Onlnge COOnty Sanitation heart of West Irian. l!Qlrb. that afltr her """" ......,t •
Site hol tltvtltd ..-e1y fn the marrtqe to tbe trlbol clliel a vowed to Ille Jate!,._t L!'ttdon B. John-Herbst who owni Enaljn Yacht Sales,
TRIBAL CHIEf'S RIOE
c..n ""' ........
South Padllc and otller ~ ID 111111, tilled lier w .... .-. clotha llfd d,.... only IOll. claimed he "Rot four or flvo people a day
' Ibo --1 D)'1lt 'vlU.1< In Ille (tleo•WBIJlllNG, Pip I) (See i\IERCHA!m!, Pie• II • • ,
, •
·---· ---· " --·
2, Possibly
3 Yanks
-· bose Lives
SAIGON (UPI J -The war in South
Vietnam intensified today with the ap-
proach of. the cease-fire , and two -or
possibly three -Americans ¥.'ere killed
and 25 olhers wounded in the closing
hours of the conilict.
Both the nu1nber of strikes by U.S.
planes and ground battles involvi ng
government and Vietnamese CommWlist
troops reached eight-month highs with
less thnn 48 hours remaining until tbe
schedule<i cease-fire begins at 8 a.m.
Sunday (4'p.m. Saturday PST). Hundreds
of Vietnamese were killed or wounded.
Military sources said the fighting ap-
po'~red to he bu~ding toward a peU: for
the final full day of warfare Saturday.
three major alt bases were shtOed but
a predicted Communls~ ~ ~ffenslve to
snatr;b contested territory j~t before the ·
\Yai' erxil tw not materiallaed. ~
Cionununist forces shelled mawr· air
bases, killing a Marine sentry and wound-
ing 21 other' American personnel. at tbe
Bien Hoa base outside Saigon. (See story,
picture, Page 4)
Another American was killed when bis
OJ16 observation helicopter crashed, ap-
parently after being hit by groundtlre,
100 miles ea~igon. 1 Four Americans were wounded in the
shelling of the airbase outside Pleiku in
the Cenhal Highlands, and tbe U.S. Com·
mand sa id one man killed in that attack
also may have been an American. The
victim wore civilian clothes and carried
no Identity cards1 military spokesmen
said, so his identification and nationality
v.•ere not Immediately established.
U.S. jet fighter-bombers flew 407
single·plane !jOrtles during the U.hour
period ended aflS a.m. today, the highest
numl5er of such attacks since the 409
reparted ~1ay 28 at the height of the
North Vietnamese Invasion of South Viet·
nam. ,
The command said more than half the
strikes were concentrated in a 10-mlle
strip controlled by the Communists
between the Demilltariud Zone ind the
Cua Viet river In northernmost Q~g
Tri Province.
U.S. Air Force 852 heavy bombers new
26 missions, each of tbetn comprising
three planes, over other Communist con·
trolled areas of the country. Seven or the
missions struck within 35 miles of
Saigon.
Oraage
Weat•er
Conttnued SUMY skies Is the
projected weather pk:ture for Sat-
urday, wit.ti slightly warmer tem-
peratures, according to the weather
service. Highs in the mkl-60s. Lows
ionlght In the Ills.
INSIDE TODA\'
Mick Jogger brought his Roll-
ing SU»1t1 to Los A.ngeJt• laat ·
week for o conctrt btnefittb1g
Managua, Nitarag~ Ht come
and conquered. Set ~hotol, token
bu UCI f1uhman Andrto \Vo-
ters, on th• coper o/ ioda~'1
\Veekrndef'. l-•
LM. .. ,. ,
... 11.,. •
C.llttni't I ,_ ...
_,.. M <,,.....,.. M
DHlll ~ 14
___
,,_ tl.U
, ...... ..,.. 14 -.. ..... ,....... Tt
Mii.... • -.....
~ .
~ DAILY PILOT •
'Day' Plcnuied
For Cease-fire
KEY BISCAYllE, F1a. (AP I -
President tllloo today proclaimed
"a natlonal day ol: prayer and
Thanksgt\•ing" to begln Vo'htn U1e
\'ietnam ~ase-flre goes Into effect
at 4 p.m. PST .,,Saturday. . . ,
I\'lxon called' bn the A1nerican
people "to observe this mon1ent
with appropriate ~re1nonies and
artivities. '' ·
The President signed the proc-
lamation for a n1oment and day of
prayer and thanksgivlng in
response to a request by Congress
for prayer at the time of the
aC{'()rd-signing cere1nonies in Paris.
Jury Told
Nixon Me1i
Ok<!-yed Fzinds
\VASHlNGTON (AP) -Judge Jobn J.
Sirica. presiding at the \Yatergate trial.
saying some important information had
been kept from the jury, today read to
the panel testimony that former Atty.
Gen. John 1'-1itchell and former Com-
merce Secretary ~1aurlce Stans approv~
payments the government says went to
politica1 espionage,agalnst Democrats.
Sirica said he decided to give the jury
testimony by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., former
treasurer to President Nixon's re-election
finance comm1ttee, after reviewing the
transcripts and deciding "most of it is.
important evidence and the jury shou1d
bear it."
Sloan testified Tuesday, but the part
about l\litchell and Stans was given while
the jury v.•as out of the room . It came ool
V.'hen Sirica questioned Sloan directly,
but he com plained today that the govern-
ment should have covered the same
ground v.•ben it resumed examining Sloan
before the jury.
\Vhen a defense attorney objected to
Introducing the testimony, the judge said
"I exercise my judgment as a federal
judge and chief judge of the court to ex-
amine the witness."
'Mle judge added he does not can
about the po.sslbUlty of an appeals court
reversal and told the attorney for defen-
dant G. Gordon Liddy: "Your client is
smiling and I don't care what be thinks,
either."
Strica then gave the prosecution t~e
right to recall Sloan to the witness stand.
Llddy's lawyer, Peter 'Maroulls, said,
"l respectfully move for a m1strlal," and
the judge responded, "Your molloo will
he denied."
In the presence of the jury, Sloan
earlier said he gave defendant Liddy,
legal counsel to tbe linanc< committ<e,
$199,000 at the direction of Jeb Magruder,
deputy d!Udor of the Nixon campaign.
Alter tbe jury left, Sirlca uUd Sloan
H he knew wbat the money went !or, and
Sloin repUcd, "l have no Jdea."
'!lie portion of tbe transcript lthlch
Sirica read to the Jury contained lhll e.i·
change between the judge and Sloan:
Q. You didn't question Mr. Magruder
about the purpose of the $199,000?
A. No, sir. I vertned with Mr . Stans
and Mr. Mitchell he wa s authorized to
make those.
WEDDING ...
in strings and st.raps of the nati ves
brought quick objections from ofHclals in
Wamena, West Irlan headquarten.
'Ibey said that her actions might upset
their plans to "civilize" the tribe's people
in a program called Operation Koteka.
The o.lm of the tw~year program is to
put clothes on the natives, Introduce
them to a money economy and teach
t:-tem to speak , read and write the
Indonesian language.
A Jakarta, Indonesia, newspaper,
"Berlta Buana." reportedly ran a
photogriiph of Miss Sargent and Chief
Obaharok . She was wearing jeans and a
shirt and he a koteka, a kind of G-string.
The U.S. Embassy in Indonesia said It
had no information on the marriage.
01~1 COAST "
DAILY PILOT
11M: °'9"'9 cM.1 01'1L'I' 'ILOT, ""''....,.
k combllled ltle ,.. ... ""' .... pe.tbllshld w
ttlll OrMll C.0.t.I ,...,""'"' ""'-""· ...... ,., • .,"..,. .,, ~ Mofld.lr ~
Friday, tar C.... M-. H~ 8"cll,
Hlot!lllng'°" 8Hdlfll-1.iit Vtlley. U0-
8Ndl. lnii-1~ Miii S.n Clemenltl
S.11 J.,.., C..,111,._ A tlntlt rt0lo!wl
dllion Is pUblltllelll le1UriNyt .,.. Sl.tnoa.,,.
T~ prlflcll'lll l*bllll!lfll »llftf Is tl UI Wnl
lfJ ltr11l, Cotfa M-. <:•Nfoml&. ,-.
Rolt.rt N. w.H ~
1"1'1&11119'11 •Ill ,11111..,...
Jaclr A. Curley
""' ,,,..._,, •lllf °"*'91 M..,.,
TIIM•• KM~I l!:dtllll'
Tho1t1t1 A, Murphi"• MtinltlllO ldl!Or
L Pet_, Krl•• ~ leeclt '"" l:dllW
• ..,,.., ..... Off'-
JJJl N .. port k111l•"•rd
Mtlli1t9 A11Jre•11 P.O. le11 1175, '2MJ --c.ta MIN: -Wftl hy StrM L""1t'lfl ktctl: m l<-t AW!llllt
"-'ltfllrtlft luctlt "''" 9Mdl ~ &aft 0..-te: • Nor1fl Iii C:.mlrle .....
,.,.,._ 11141 '41-4Jn
Cl....W ··~·•ti ... '41'1671
Qlpyfietrl, "72. 0....... COMI .......... ~. Nt ,.,...... tler"9. lllullrlt ..... etltor1t~ fMIM( ~ ~IMrl'ltfllt IW•t. -Y lie r_.111t.. wlllliiut 11*111 ,...
......_ OI """""'' CIWflt{.
S.C... cletl .... Mkf ti C'.olf• MfMo
Oallfllml•. """""'''°" IW Ctrtlft Q. ..
rt1011tr.ty1 w 1r11111 tJ.1$ mon1NY1 '"''"'"
... lrlltloltt •i.~ "'°"""'·
•
Westnaituter Arre•ts
$1 Million Drug
Haul Discovered . -~=-
8\' JOllN ZALLER
01 IN Olli~ rlltf Slitff
\\restminster police today claimed lO
have seized $1 n1illion worth of am-
phetamines and arrested 1 two Spanlsb-
speaking meo ln what officers termed
From Page I
tho blwst narcotics haul In tbe city's
history. ,
Police said two anonymoua ~ ce.lls
led to Ute arresls Wedntsday night In a
trucll)'ard !n Ute illdultrlal ""'°' ol Ute cl\Y. • .
otllcen asaerled Ute nld nelted !
million amphelamine (or "vpper") pilb,
which police believe were brought 1n
from M..ico.
Fovr Westminster olllc:m and t .. o MERCHANTS.
stopping out frorlt.
• • federal narcoUcs qeola bad beeo lllkJnc
out a truct ator "'8e lot at 13'12 Milton SL
for n>or< llwl 2ll hours by Ute Ume Ute ··Now I'm lucky ii l get even one," he
said.
'.'A car will drive by and slow down
but then somebody behind them will blow
their horn and they'll drtve off,'" be said.
Merchants all aloog the strip, while
saying they know the sewer line is
needed, are saying they are taking ma·
jor losses.
And tbey ._unlike Poe and Herbst, have
some of their own off-street parting.
anata were made.
The two llUJl)OCls, ..,. of ~ la a
Mexican national,-....., Mini bold iliclay
In Oranse 0>wity jail.. wi!ll ball oet at
$100,000 .. ch. The men wen Jdentlflecl as
Juan Manuel Hernandez Gvda, SI, of
Mexloo. and Alex MagO!lanes, 46, ol
Buena Park.
. ~ ..... ''\\'e've really been hurt," said Gail
Audlss of the Beachcomber Restaurant, ··we used lo be super busy In the morn-
ing, but now people drive right on by."
Police said lhe meD, neither of whom
spoke English, sald;UteY :f~ not aware ·
they were appmiilly dOaliDg iD coo'.·
traband clnlP. t '
l ' ""
~ DAILY •1LOT llllff,.... DR. NEWCOMB, CHllP N\IRSE DORIS McGAHA AT . CENTER
New 0vt.,,.t1ont s u;:.Jcal Facillty Optn1 ot Hoog
"It's knocked our business for a loop,"'
romplained Florence Weber, manager of
the Beachcomber Shop, a women's ap-
parel store.
She also complained about the fact the
contractor had to tear out the median
divider to move the 1IDtl aver and thll
has nearly flooded ber am. twice.
"We got sand and ...tu iD hero the
other day," she said. Herbst llld he'd
bad tbe ,.... problem.
He wondered why Ibey bad ellmlnaled
the divider, but left a left-tum middle
lane all aJooi the lliglnqy, ntbtr llwl
making tbat a tra .. T lanO and 1enlnc
parking Oii tbe IOUth oJde.
"Wbat would we do i... 1ell blml," Lt.
Blue mmtered. 11bt.re wun.'t much
else we cauld do.''
Blue uUd for tmdentandlng from the
mercbanla and poiDled wt the contractor
has proiDJsed to expedllAI tbe .wk.
The raJd WU made ...... 1:11 p.m. Six
olllcen cllarpl ,.uh -..... dra"" en the two ~; wbo offered no -· Both men were unarmed.
PoUce bad earlier wltebed u the two
men reportedly entered tbe tnJct storage
lot about I p.m. Tbe 1R11P.JCU allegedly
wmt dinctlJ to .... 1$.foot flllbed ll'llck
and began remowtc woodm bouda en
the trailer, ftveallng I bidden storage .....
Police Ilic! tbe two """ qulckly
........: about 40 black p1utJc bags,
Hoag Hospital to Open
New Outpatient Center
each cmt.alning 25,000 pllll. Hoag Memorial Hospital In Newport
"We timed our raJd just Ji&bt," uJd Beach will have an open house Sunday to
Det. Rlcl: llcKlnney ol Ute w-fonnally open tbe first outpatient minor
forte. ''They bid just flnlabrd unlolettng surgery center in California.
all the .,.. and so there was ootblq left :SuUt with a $250,000 lrvine Foundation
for ua to do but mate J>e arrests." grant, the facility will be Jmown as the
· McKlnney llld Ute yard Is leuecl II)! a Jame• Irvine Surgical Center,
thinl man, wbo b DOI believed to be In-Tile 2 to S p.m. opening Sunday will in,
..Jved iD the allqedly Illegal operatloo. clLde lotln of tbe center, which ho!pital
MclClnney Ibo llld Ute lwo IUlpOCll ofOclals ny will permit minor surgery
claimed to be lnoocent. too oompllcated for 1 doctor's office, but
and another ntght's stay-for ob.servation.
"But here," be said, "we will be keep-
ing people for only two or three hours."
The center baa three operating rooms,
but b only bclni tlled at ball-capacity -
about nine paUents a day. Dr. Newcomb
explalned that use will be stepped up
gradually.
"We expect to be IJ> full operation iD
about two months ," Dr. Newcomb aaid.
r .... it .. e .J
' ARTIFACTS ..• •
North Amer!c~ wltoM orlilns ol styla
can be traced to Alla and Mexico,
Deaautet. Hid.
~ ..id tllo ~ ol tlllf
_,,. la ~lo Jrfl<ll 11111 lhla
unknown e~~Coualy mldenl
had deftlopecl the lechnol<>ll' not only to
fl....-elay-but 10 ·decorate lt with pointed ··
lnstnimeotl and somelbina "not unlike a
wheel.''
The IOOO B.C. date of the ten artlfocij.
compares to the dt1Uns of bOOe
lragmenta of "Lagwia woman." Thai.
--.ktleton showed there werti humlnS U\i
log akinf·tbe Orona• Cout 14,000 Y•arf aao.
Drover sa1d hi• find proves those ear)t
humans had the 1bllity to create object~
The anJy earlier examples of ceramte teclmoloa aicbeoloeiat• have traced IP
far throlilbout Ute world are Jn G"""-
and Turhy. '
Destulell polot«I out tbat Japan whicl)
has deveJoeed ceraml<1 lo one of lht
blgbest art fonns In the whole world oolJ.
becan work with ceramics in the yew
2:500 B.C. -2,500 yean after aom~
unknow!rpeople-Jn-Oraop Oowtly .....
decorating Ute artlfaels taken from thi
Irvine Jlte.
·Mjclillel Jllanal1an, Irvine Company
community relaUona manager, prombe<t
bJo llrm would continue to male •ii ..
available to Ute acleolllle oommllllity I<>~
iDveslJiatlon prior to !hair developmeo~
He lndlealed tbJo oompany pollcy WOlll\I
auure "that areu of ~' l!h lerest wwJd ·be left lntacl IC~
enllflc ln-U,atlon." \
Deaaulell and Drover noted the find
ra!Ja more questions than it answerL· Amonf them are: :·
-"Why In Orqe County b this 1116
first expnsaJoo ol ceramic lechnology?•
-"What 'happened to these peopld
who OC<Uplecl this '1te for moro tbai
l,tn> yearaT"
-"Dkt they move away?"
-"Why did they oot pau on UU.
knowledge to their auccenon?" •
Drover opecvlated tbat tbJo tribe -lhO flrat ua,dentary" people -came ta
Oran(• County to ~.. the lnclemtl(I'
weather of the desert. of the
southwestern U.S. great basin. He noted
the "alla thermal" In the l"'lt bulit
dates to IOOO B.C. tbe time that the
Irvine artlala were maklnlJ their pottari:
above Upper Newport Bay. A spobsman for tbe unllallon district told city councilmen Monday the .,..,.
tractor hopes to install and cover about
250 feet of pipe a _Jlay. '"Ibey Aid an unknown man bad of· which otherwise would involve a two-
fered to pay'lbem $loo ead1to11o 111e Job night stay. Boys Drown in Ice
aod tbat Ibey dldn1 bow what Ibey ..... "Tbe cool for ... of tbe facility will be
The center is located on Hospital Road,
immedlalely north of the driveway lo Ute
rr :.iD enlrlnee.ol the hospital.
f',....P .. el carryiug," Mcltbmey llid. abol!t tbe oame u Ute regular bospllal -ClilCAGO (UPI) -•• ..,. boys, cltulng
McKlnney added that ·Ute truck's bid-except for bed aQd !Joard," a spokesman duckl oo the Waablngton Parlt lagoon oii .. ,
BUDGET ... den compartmeot oeemec1 to have been explained. Radio, TV Chief Dies lhe city's South Side, fell through thin tee
in'JUce a loaa time. Be allo noted tbat· Dr. Douglas Newcomb, director ol the Thursday and drowned. Benjamin
-the plll.bap-bad-beeo--..t-iD·mepr, center, explalned tbat-all operatlooriD ENCINO (API -Earl Ebi, lllJ, veleran Barfieldct cbls brother Ronnie, 7; Robert
U which would cmfme clop used at holpitall normally nquire admission of radio and television producer, died Bennett, 10, and 1laac Ivy, 9, were dead
$202 billion would be in fiJ:ed ou ays OOC: border cbecb to miff out lJlepl ctru;. the petWM the nigb1 before an operation Thunday. m aniva1 at Woodlawn Hospital. subject to adj\lstmeol.• . McKlnney llld ~atloo would eoD. 1-_;. ___ _:: ____ .:.... ____________________ r----'----
Albert renewed congressiollal ob-tlnue Jn an effort to flnll """""Pllca.
jectloos to the Pruident'• Jmpoondment ,
of funds to meet bJo budget eoa1o for thll ~ .! ~ ,;
Coupl.e Exchange fiscal year.
"!l's a qveslion of wbeUter they (the
Wh1te House) are Jeglalatlng or we are."
Bolh Mansfteld and~ Hid Congress would oet Us blldplMY
priorities wbicb would ~Y
coincide wltb tbooe ol Ute alloo.
But Mansfield said Con sbould ac-
cepl the responalbllity ol staying wllbln
the $288'7 bllllcn bvdget fig11r< Nlson ael.
Allbougb Nixon gave only broad details
during his meeting with the board of. the
NationaJ League of Families of Amencan
Prisonen and Miasl.ng in Southeast Aala,
other Admin.i.stratk>n offlclall aaid the
budget would cut deeply into "Great
Society" programs the President con·
siden no longer necessary.
These officials said that for one thing.
the Office of Economic Opportunity, the
antipoverty agency, woold be eliminated.
Nixon alto pralaed the wives of
American prisoner1 of ·Nar and mielng
in Indochina for their courage while he
sought to obtain what he described as
"peace with h:>oor" instead of "Peace at
any price."
Nixon said there were "many who
honestly disagreed" with his Vietnam
policy "and they have the right."
From Page I
PEACE ...
day on the eve of the s1gn1n1.
Only a few dozen newsmen and offlclals
were on hand when Le Due 'Ibo, the
Hanoi diplomat who negotiated the agree.
ment with Henry A. Klaainger, bade fare-
well and Dew to Hanoi.
The 62-year-0ld silver-haired Tho,
Hanoi's top theoretician, an lotellettual
and poet, spent four years in bara:ainlna
8e581oos, nuUnly with Kls!ln&er.
Pledging North Vietnam to 1tlck 1trlct.-
ly by the tenns .of. the accord, Tho sakl :
''Tomorrow the suna will ran silent and
peace will return to Vietnam."
• l
V dw& ·at N~port
Wharf !Vigh.t.spot
i .
Joyce Grqoiy and-.Geao "'1ilet ol Hun-
tington -marTleil ............ _. nl 'bl •••m• . ·--, I • e1:c....ug ... g vows where they bad met one
year ago, in front of the .hearth of
Woody's Wharf iD Newpott Beocb.
'"Ibey met over a cup ol tea," asserted
Woody Payne, proprietor of the PoPular .
bay front nlibt opot, who ahvt bb doon
to tbe piblle for tbe !Int time for the oc-culoa..
He said he did it for Mrs. Jona, bil of-
fice man.ager .almost ever alDce he
bought tbe realalll'IDI nearly eilbt years
ago.
The marriage was performed by the
Rev. Arthur K. Grant, a noo-denoqlina·
tlonal minister. Pamela Brown, a llinnr,r
waitreu at Woody's, wu niald bf bonot
and Robert Jones w~ bll brother'' best
man.
•
The ceremony was supposed to be
restricted to "employes and relatives,"
Payne said, but the brisk bar bu.siness
gave an lndlcaUon that a few utra
gvetla bad allpped Jo.
Folk 1Joger Mike Murphy, perebed oo a
stool behind tbe wedding cake, played Ute
weddlog mardl u the bride enlered
fnmt the lilteben.
Jonet, a Buena Part cv salesman,
later admllted Ute ceremony almoal had
a major bitch.
"I coWdn't Ond the~ wedding ring," be
said. 0 I'd baupt tt at tbe. aame ttme u
tbe engqement rtog, but ,.l had bidden It.
"I spent all day loot!ai i... It before I
remembered that I'd ttiidt it Jn 111 old
tennll shoe~"
The oouple plan to boneymooll at BIJ
Bear Lake.
"Oh, yes, I'm a · sider,'' Jones 1a1d,
"but l don't plan to do any skJJog."
•GoP~ Convi~ied
Campaign Violations Cliar.ged
. .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pmldenl Nlxon'1 rHlectloo flnlnce commln.
today declined to coolest eight charges of violating the oew campilp apeod-
lng law_.U iDvolvlni WatargalAI defendant G. Gordon. Liddy. TIM commlllAle
was fined 18,000, tbe maxlmum poalble.
THE OUTCOME OP THE cue lell iD quetllon what Liddy did wltb '28.tOO
In campaign fund9.
A spolte.smu oald tbe oommltt<e could not have thlown a111 IJCht oo tho
matter even U It contested the charges. He said tho commltie. bad no ldn
what Liddy did with tho money and could not question him becauae be ii on
trial in lhe Watergate cue. i
IN A TWO-MINUl'E ARRAIGNMENT belore U.S. llllttlct Judct OtorJe I.
Hart, the Finance Committee to l!Hlect the Prei!ldent pleaded nolo-,
or no contett. to an clghl-<OUl1t "crtmlhal lnlonnatloo" rued Jan. 11 b1 lbe
Justice Department .
No lndlvlduala were char15ed ..
..
Annual
SALE
•
WE FEATURE THE FINEST IN QUALITY
• • •. NOW AT SALE PRICES
NEWPORT STORE LAGUNA STORE
OVER 70 SOFAS TO CHOOSE FROM
Sofas Sofas
R•g. SALi Re9.
r Cut Velvot, 689 I' LI".., Print,
Multi.Colored. 790, Henredon. 799.
I' CNKent Sof1, 549 e• T11JCodo -Aqua. Gold Volvot. 690.
I' HI-Back Toxturo C1r10n. 570.
Shorrlll 619. 599 I' Whlto/Gr.n,
I' l'rlnt -Gold & 911 Sherrill. 679,
Ora--Honrodon 1072. I' Print -Royal r Vol..t Strlpo -579 COi ch. 619, Sherrill 695.
Chairs Chairs
' l'r. Gold Volvet,
l'r. Ch1Jn Print 139 .. , Sherrill. 205, ...
Wood mark 159 .••. Pr. Print, Pr. Chalra -Gold Volvot Mo.,.. c.,_, 209 .... 189 .. , CarlOl'I, 224 ... ,
Pr. Chalr1 -Yellow 199 .. , Wint Chair,
Velvet. Oru:el. 259 .... Rust. 219,
Loath.,. Choirs 20%o11 Pr. Gold
and Sof11 ALL Volvot, 209 ....
SAi.i
659
465
589
589
179 ...
185 ...
189
179 ...
Unbeliovablo values • quality Sofas and Chairs. AR 8-way hond·tioCI. Most Scotch9uorcleil, tn
Somo down and futhors. All truo qvolity ond ot vtry 10ti1fying prices.
Stltcted group< from Honrodon, Horitogt, Drtrof, ond otlitrs, now ot 11lt prices. Stop in now
10< best 11loction.
OROO~ERITAwf>-HENREDON-WoqllMARK-ICAAASIAH
'ltJ., "
NIWPOIT IEACH e
Inf WUICLIPf Ill.
'42·2011
LAwUNA IEACH e
Ml NOllTH COAST HWY.
INTlllORS 4N-Ull
TottRANCE e WMiJAYI I $ATVIDATS 9100 M l!JO llM• HAW!HORHI ILVO. NIDAY 'T1I. 9:00 . J71·127'
'
•
'
\ I
I
I
'
,
1~
I
(
•
'c"="':::":..:J:.:":.:':::".c' .:'.::'·:..:':.:':.:, Jc_ ________ o_AJ_L_Y _P_IL_0_""5 •
Fund Set
To Aid
Corona
SAN FRANCISCO (APi -
'Ille N1tlootl ..\1!1!ted Com· mltloo • to Free Pollttcal ,...
Pr!Jonen, whlcli-had ralMd
money to defend Anaela· '>
Davi!:, is joining ln a· tund· jl
raising drlve to aid e>nvlcted
man murderer Juan c.orona.
The group and the Juan
Corona Defense Committee,
made up of Corona's frle.ndl
and ftlatlves, said Thursday
the money would be used in an
attempt to overturn the Jan. ·
•
UPIT ........ ·c BRIEFS ) J.eetMre Ce~lled
------~--A lecture 'lbursda.y in
II venllct lbat found Corona 8an Franciloo by N<r
• guilty of the 1111 backing _be! .laureote-William
death• of 2> ltlnei'anu t• SU1· Shockley wu cancelled.
ter County. because cl plons by s!u·
Allrod Monies, . wbe bas dents to bOld a demon·
158111ed_ C!111!!1A _~ ~ wu stration. Prof. Shockley
arrested 20 monlhs llgo, aal!I has oontrovenial views
at a news conference that" on racial aspect.5 of in·
earlier fund-ral1lng attempls telligence
were W11Ucoeaaful. -----·------e 1-r ..... hle
They're Ott1
Santa Anita Sets
Political Fund •
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Santa Anita Racetrack hM set
up a ""20,000 poliUc.a.I fund for
state senato~1 and
a!iemblymen. the racetrack's
lobbyist bas told T h e
Associated Press.
1.-0bbybt Kenneth A. Ross
Jr. said Thursday that the
'320,000 wW be distributed
over the coming four years on
a non-partisan basi5. He sald
the fund doubles the level of
spending on political cam-
paigns by Santa Anita
·Consolidated, operato< of the
Los Angele! aru ncetrack.
ROSS MADE 11IE com-
mitments for a Wtal of
'320,000 in campaign con.
tributions in Jetters malled
Tuesday to each member of
the state legislature. The pledges boost Santa
Anita up among the top
political spenders in
California. Top honors now are
held by the California
Teachers Association, which
boasts of a $600,000 &Mual
political fund, and the con-
servative '• U DI t e d tor
CaU!omla" fund , which spent
an estimated $150,oOO last year
on state legislative races.
Ross said none of the con-
tributions would be cash, that
each legislator would be
granted credit wit.h a Los
Angeles finn, Computer Mail.-
ings Inc., for services such as
brochure printing: and com·
puterized malllngs.
Because·of volume purchase
of those services by Sanla
Anita, Ross said, the actual
services donated to legislators
will be "about double" the
figures quoted in his letters
and that the contributions ac-
tually will be worth more than
half a million dollars to can-
didates.
' RIVERSIDE (AP! -The
~)'W'Old Mwlon Inn bas
been fon:ed to cul II< stall by
60 percent after it was denied
a loan requ~t. a spokesman
for the hotel says.
The cutback came after the
financlal1y troubled IM, a
state hiJtorlcal landmark, was
denied a $375,000 loan by the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development.
Archbishop Links Up
Abortions to Herod
ROSS SAID THE coottibu·
tkN:ts wer.e being funnelled
through the Democratic and
Republli;an caucuses of the
Senate and Assembly on the .
basis of $2,000 for each of 80
assemblymen and $4,000 for
each of 40 senators.
The letters to individual
legislators advise them that is
their shate or the fund, but
that it will be up to the party
caucuses to actually divide up
the money. Sandra Hartness, manager
of the 250-room hotel, said
future operatMm or the lM was
in jeopardy but there were no
immediate plans to close the
establishment.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Roman Catholic archbishop
here has issued a statement
condemning abortion in which
he compares the U.S. Supreme
CouR to Herod, described in
lhe New Testament as order-
ing t6e death of the children of
Bethlehem two • years and
younger.
which says states can not in-
terfere with abortions during
the first six months of
pregnancy, iS -contrary to the
court's ruling against the
death penalty aJ1 "cruel and
The Republican and
Democratic caucuses in the
Senate each were given $Ml,OOO
u nu 1 u a I" punishment by cred" for services, Ross said.
decreeing "the death penalty ' In the Assembly. Democrats
for innocent, unborn children." were given $102,000 ~nd
Pussycai
Stripper?
L!1 Airport Imposing Own
' " ·Tough Noise Restrictions LOS ANGELES (UPI)
-Data Devices Inc .
wanted to introduce 1 new
product, • tape sll11>I*
that cuts and destroys
computer tape.
And'where do you go lo
unveil a IU'tpperT
WASHINGTON (AP) -Lo! Ing any steps to resolve arcls for aircraft noise levels,
Angeles International Airport airport p ro b I e m s by he said, the Los Angeles
plans to Impose tough new -::es=ta=bli="shing=· ==na=l=ional==stan=d=·=a=lr=po=rt=is=a=c=ting=on=it=s=o=w=n.=
restrictions on aircraft traff ic·-
lri an attem pt 10 reduce hoise
ii'rltation to s u r r ou nd \n g
re1identa and to stave off
possible lawsuits, sa y s
manager Clifton A. ~toore.
Right. A strip club. 'Ille
product was lntroctuced
Thursday at a party for
the trade at the Pink
Pussyca~ a toplesH>ot·
lomleas club.
MOORE TOLD a meeting of
the Aviation-Space Writers No A:rport AssoclaUon here Thursday " that recent court decisions and
other developments related 00
G d F ul the airport have incrused the uar Ul , city'• liability e x p o au re •
possibly to as much as $5
C ·z 8 btlHon. OUUCl ays He nol<d tha t in one suit
against the city a Loa Angeles
' -. . ,,~
<
ISXf!Et,m.Y
CLEANED ·
cAREFUU.Y
'PRESSED
the re.::tsury
DRY CLEANING
F~NO (UPl) -The Superior Court judge has ten·
F~ Clty O;Juocil won't tatively ·awarded '650,000 to
transfer fund5 to pay for sta-owners of about 550 :nperties
Uc.Ung police oft1cen at the near the airport, and this
ai""""rt as required by a feder-month awarded damages of • ~ "' ~ t th 49 t.__ GIANAOA HILlS 18CO Cr~:s .. ~rlh Sl. l~OllANCI Se,.•l,tGl ... id 1!011tt.t1r11t .I -·••Hoo d-i........i to ~ "'"•"""' o ano er o ncr ~-... r;....... ~ r--"A-AA h •\.A WOODLAND HIUJ 2JS00 VirloJr/ Slit U.KIWOOO C.Wi St. Jij P<?IMIOU~! 81yd. V-• bliAcM"-nutncuwners oorl west of 1..1R:" 8 .• , "· QU ~ ..... ,._ . llVllSIOE 35lGTyl!l"St. IUINAl'AIK e..u1i111~ .... ~get:wrir
1be council voted W Tbun-airport. SANTA ANA 3900 SDll1h Brls\~I St. OllANGl Cacdu Crave Bl~d. and M111thtSI•
day on a motion to transfer Since the federal govern· Opert weelul1r1 9:30 to 9:30 -S1111doy1 10 to 7.
!27,9311 fnim the general fund
1
_ _::m::en::t~does~~no~t~se~e~m~to~be~ta;k;· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:===::: lo the pollce budget lo maJn.
taln an offic... al the Freano
Air Tenntnai 24 hOOrs • day.
seven daya a week.
Five votu were rtqulred to
transfer the funds. The federal
security regulat!Oll! go Into ef.
feet Feb. 6.
Observers noted that t h e
vote may be dilferent, or
ftmd! may be appropriated
from some other source, when
the counclbnen consider the
matter again next week.
If not, transportation direc-
to< Wllme!-Garnlt coold be
fined u much as =.ooo a da3'
or the airport coold be shut
down eotlrely.
VINTAGE CARS
this weekend on the.MALL
eaAR'.l'C•ld
OAKI.\ND tAP) -The Bay
~ AT$1 Rapid Transit District's
{ dUaf engineer and asatstant
geoeral manager baa nsigned
.... to take a $35,000 a year posi-
: tion .with a Lo! Angeles transit
• copsultin.g firm.
AJICBBl8!IOP T I m o I h y
Manning tOld I.I milllon
Catholic'' In the four-<ounly
Los Angeles diocese Thursday
that the high court's ruling
Express Bus
Lane Opens
ForBigUty
"'Ibla new slaughter of the Republicans $51,000, tt:Oect~ng
i.nncunts .. : 'out-Henxis' the 50-29 Democratlc majonty.
Herod In its cold and immoral ,--~=~~~~~~~~~~L=~--.;--, disregard for the sanctity of "'
human We," Archbishop Man-
nlng said .
The Roman Calholic Church
holds that abortion is immoral
for any reason or at any stage
of pregnancy. e David G. Hammond, who 'f decllnecl lo name his new ; firm, told BART dlrecOOrs e Thursday he is,.. leaving March
• !. : e s_, Deeiees f' RIVERSIDE (AP! -The
._ ntst Use Of retronr automotiile
:. emission control devices m ~ California will begin here Feb.
; l, the state >Jr· Resources
O· . aooanced.
.LOS ANGELES IAP) -The nm completed eectlon of the
5 Women
Arrested
$53 million San Bernardino HAYWARD (AP) -Five
Freeway.. bulWay will begin )'OWli wo~ were arre.ted
OFFICiAL
GRAND OPENING !
JAN. 23-24-25-26
Harbar Baulnard
. be '"utt'd~~ ' 7ll · ~auon o1 the~
.i\llOel ,·~. .
on Investigation of sollcttlng &~g. l"'•lleJIPn _-toward for~.• d act after 11 ~'~ ~· the· ~ _ · . officers vtsl · l,,; ~ •l\ailfdi. . .illi!a · sage parlors In · ~
afCa~
' Sii PAGE 46 OF
TODAY'S OAILY PILOT . . Tramit', r has an. trlckdown · ~. authorities
ed said Thursday.
~"'Or_~·r '
l \O!:·the lint Ume In cinta. Ttie,. ·jleylces will 'be re-
qulrid·OO moSt 1966-'10 cars ~ se~en-mlle express bus . Hayward police identified the women -as '11leresa Ann:
.. . FOR DETAILS! • lbrodib oot the state by July
• I.
~ e GNtd hatul? i ROHNERT PARK (AP) -
Jane from El MO!)tt west~to Jackson, 2il; Linda Debra
the Long Beaeh rr.eway will Dow, 20; Alem Anlksar, 2Z;
by·pess regular freeway traf· , Linda Pappas, 20; and Pannle
fie. The buses Will then U9(t Prou.i"?i!!itl~, !!:1!!:8.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~~ regular freeway lanes intO Loi =
Angeles.
SCRTD olfictals .. 1d limited
At leallt 30, and possibly hun-
: · dreds, of ·Sonoma State
: College'• students might be
; In.pi\lpdl)' rocdvillg federal
• and stall! grants by lying
,.. about their financial quallflca·
• lions, concludes a state audit.
' The audit released Thursday
covered 64 of 700 students here
receiving aid and found that 30
use of the npreu Jane· will
cootinue until June when the
El Monte bu.sway station is
completed, allowing add.itionaJ
Unes to be routed onto the
Wsway.
Orl].y Coast Qffers
· were at least partly un-
qualified for the aid received.
'Ibe ll·rnlle buswly is
schtduI.ed. for completion in
mid-l!r74.
SUPER SALE!
SUITS-SPORT COATS--
KNIT SLACKS
ALL GREATLY REDUCED
• Pre-cuffed
ICMIT SLACKS .. -..••.......... ..All Now $10.00
Re9. $t7-$1 8.
ALL DRESS SHIRTS ,
& TIU ........................................ 40'/o OFF
Plus an •ssortmtnt of other bar9ain1.
•· .. MANY SUITS NOW '12 PRICE
MANY SHOIS ON SALE
:1467 Vii LW., tffwport Buch
67MS10
. '
· 63 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
M Llnklet11r
Th• lnsidert Club: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
membership card permits
you to, buy _ nearly every-
thing you need from the
finest closed-dOOr show-
rooms at substantial sav·
inis -appliances , furni·
tUre, steteo equipment,
sporting goods, draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the "fleet" price and
mobile homes and motor·
cycles at substantial sav·
inas. The Insiders Club
Effective Annual
Earnings
5.00%·5.13%
Passbook. No Minimum.
5.75%-5.92%
One Yaar Certificate
$1,000 Minimum.
6.00%·6.18%
Two to Five Year Certificates
$5,000 Minimum •
Up to 90 days loss of Interest on amounts withdrawn befOl'e maturity on au certificate accounts.
also provides big dls!t
counts on tickets to sport~
ing and entertainment
events ••. plus a whOle
list of free services: safe
depasit boxes, money or-
ders, travelers checks,
and notary services.
Membership require-
ment fOt' savers-$2,500
minimum ba la nce. Coast
borrowers now recei\le as-
sociate memberships en-
titllng them to all outside
referral services. Ask
about joining at any Coast
office.
MAIN0"1CI!
9th• HIH, Ult An&WI• • IZJ.llSl ...... -WU.lttlM .. DIWlllPIC't "-"Cai
Ml3 Wlllhlre BIYd~ L.A.• 31&-1265
LA. Cl'ne tlNTDi
Znd &. Bn»Owily • 626-1102
HUHTlH9TON alACH1 91 Hllftlln.ton Ctnttr {714) 197;i047
U.NTA MOfrUCAI
711 Wllthlr1 Bl'td. • 393-07'4& ..........
loth &. PKIOC • 131.a41
lllUICO'<l"" El•tL•nd Shopclfte Qr,• Sll-2201
l'ANOJllJll' Cf1'YI
Cf)Ht,& Yan Nup ll'ld. • ll2·117l , .......
11751 Ylnturli Blwl. • 345"Ml4
LOHOKAC:W1
3rd' Locust • 437·7481
IAIT UM: AMGllf.lt
Ith t. Sota• ~~lO ............ ilf4~·§::.'m't·11'
TUCftNt
Lll'Wtn SQ.Wirt Sh09c>ln1 Ctr. (1141 l3U810
UIM-tf1~:m.Sffrlnl ar.
IAlffrAMllLI Diii Mar M IAI TIU'lllt • 2'7"941
DI Ny "°""-I AM lo 4 PM
Al--Chtc: -.Ope11Sltunlo1' IAMtell'M ·
•. , on MagnaVox Stereo Theatres, Stereo Consoles and
Compoftent Systems. Also enjoy great savings on Color and
Monochrome l'V, Radios, Tape Recorders, and Portable
Phonographs. Shown below is just one of.our many
Magnavox Annual Sale Values. See them all-and save I
""~gniflce,pt Astro-sonic~
Ste,r.eo ·FM/AM . ··
Rad10--Phonographs
(top) 11alian Pr<Mncl•I
tnodel 3985. (bottom) modal 3993
In M.clil«r1Mjn ttyllng. 511E•1001Now•sso
Th• finest of •II Magnevox Sttreo ~onaol11 I Hert ii
matterpiece fine furn iture crahsmanship combined with
aupertatlve sound reproduction: 100-Watt• IHF Mu1lc Power
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area for optlon1l-extr1 custom modular tape unit and record
atOfage. They also hlYe • buill-ln -4-Channel Sound Decoder
{merely add two speakers, flip • switch-end you 're litMallv
turrounded with thrilling music1). Come in •.• let ua prov•
that Maon•vox glvta you more I
UYAllA
2 BIG LOCATIONS
GOLD!NWEST
& WARNER
HUNTINGT.ON IEACH
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401 MAIN STIDT
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536-7561
I
r
•
•-DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
it!
Blue-ribbon Panel ·
I
JllsUnguished, to WI th~ least; ano the seven New· I Scl>ob COml>&l!Y-nJDOfti a $12:7 mllllon lawslilt aplast
porl--1\iicli residents named' :14~-·to .11\e Chartet -111• clt!"anCI~ woy-for the-eompleUon of the
Revision CiUzens Advisory Committee. Venailles project with the ooastructton of 453 more
Men like Les Steffensen , who chaired the freehold· oo~domWWD'rl"' ~ blllffs JUJI west oi H~ Hoapital.
ers who wrote the charter nearly two decades ago. And ~ to .the P"'IUon the city foW>d Itself In
women like Mn. Doreen Marshall, a former m•yor and a coupl~ of montba ago, there ls no quesUon lbe new
planning commissioner. agreement . Ptotid• aubl!intlal Improvements in n>
Joining them will be former Cl!Glldlman anil l:lty , • cl....s ~naity and ~-d!illln for tho city. .
ma11ager Robert Sbelt,on, Richsrd \IJJpooneJ', Mn.· T. , ' ' 'ni<')be usual """'"'· tllt result Is &W>'I tg."be
Duncan .'"Jeny" ste~; Roy ~J woOlsef. ,RlcbU'd v-~ !Ill wne as If~~-to be with IJie V&raillu CltJCasandtb.J:eecitycOuMUnen. •. · 1 • • 1 • • ,a ~~e ot ·1~ are Jtoiu to\bt 1 a~
' They constitute a blue-ribbon..ll>anel,1 to be surti ~ 'I-. _.~,, bly ~ • 1111 on the &lutnlne that
What remains unclear ts. ei:acUy w)f.it will they, be ah ' · ,, • ..,,,....y ~ • . ;!ll lbousand people in 783
lowed to do. eounCilme11 "e"intedly"relused to name a .. " lllW.am u~'-.,.;~ -' -~' : •
full.fledged "Charter Revision Comqdsslon.'I . ",, ·• Bu.t'lllat's a i'iial!diO!l·ol ~ unlla ·~ the orliinal
The term "ad.a.<!!rY committee" :waJ\'e•&t ~m. "',. plllban4·271 fro~ ~~·~~eat
they'H.only to oUer'SUJ"slioni t<>.~cil, ratl\il' ,•.r \jll: tbe ,councll .~ctW ll'°'i'liiiCIDd~ two
than having the authority to place changes before 1he mon'!!.i 't· dea.slt ~.••· nd •·-· f •• d voters. ~ e ~ ,.. w.ru ~ pu.ac o .ue con <>-
Appointment of the charter revt..ion body is a major mlniljll! project he only 21.8 linl~ acre com.
step forward. Given strong qualificationa of the cltilen pared,,:: !~g·q~O:.:~~l~f J!:"··s how .members. an4 the presence of three councilmen on the did . •. • 1
comnilssion the Council should have confidence in the . the cl~ allow it.elf to get mto situation In the
commission\• ability to do the job right and give it the lint 8~~~1 through all of the complex maze of le&al
necessary authonty and resources. problem1, miaunderstandings• and bappenstancos of tim·
The Versailles Lesson
For a time it looked as if the controversy surround-
ing Versailles on the Bluffs condorninlwn project would
develop into one of those classic Newport Beach donny-
brook,s that just go on and on.
10g, the Ovet'all answer comes out clearly: The lack of
a current general plan put the city staff, the planners
and the council In the unha~ poaitlon .of malting de·
cwpns without sufficient gui ce. The result1was. some
short-sighted and; undesinble declalons.
There Still is no general plan, but one ls at least in
the making -and certainly the need to expedite it has
been understood.
•
" i
Now, barring the unforeseen -which may be a poor
bet considering the way things have a habit of hai;
perimg in this community -the council's action 1i1on·
day approving a · new agreement with the Donald L.
Another potential outcome of this 0 learning ex-
perience" .!' that the Versoilles just may be the last
~assive, high delllity apartment project permitted In
•1ewport Beach.
N
--.~~·,...
.HE S~YS HE V«)~KS HERfJ flJ'1' HIS .AC(EN'T AIHi' Vf"Y §UTTum:
Nothing New
In Student
Rebellions
New Empleasis on Work and Self-discipline I
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Outlook for Nixon's -Second Te·rm·
(SYDNEY J. HARRI~
Riffling through all the journals and
publications that have piled up oo my
desk the last few mootbs, and trying to
decide what to file away and what-to--
throw away, 1 came across a fascinating
piece l should have mentioned months
ago.
It ls called "Rowdies, Riots. and
Rebellions." and al>' •
peared thls p a s t
su~r in "Amert·
can HiStory Illustra·
led," published by
the National Histor-
ical Society. Written
by Lowell W. Harri·
aoo, the a rticl e
serves to remind us
that the 1960 decade of unrest on the campuses was by no
means a singular event in our history.
·Doesn't it strike you as funny that
the · City of Newport Be.acb ac-
corded its employes a full day off
on· the death of one president and
only three hours for another?
Seems what was good for the mem-
ary o( HST wasn't good for
• thollgbts ol LBJ. -B.F.D.
'* ........ nfMCh "'""""' •ieWt, Mt ICI ,,..., W ..... -1p1r. SMMI
-"'-'!""' "' GIMl!IY Oft. O.ltt l"JIOI,
pushed him back on the platfom.. the -1 called tbe city manhsl, but
students ..., wbObned the police, the
faculty .... pol into full flight, and ~tude¢1 ~ion of the church ,: __ ment took place.
' · ·~ of Doitmouth in-
< llia'!te.. • • y must be the prospe<t
o'f the future state of our country when
\hose of ·the rising generatlciwl -•• un-' dertate to insult humanity aiiif )istice, to
prOstrate the laws and overturn the
soclal order."
. .
WASHINGTON -What will President
Nilon's second tenn be like? Imperial!
ltAJnote, withdrawn? UocommunicaUve?
1llai would be the case U moot ol the
camnt commentary were to he 'believed.
La)'Bia: aside such subjective and i)ro.: ~.
bably4.errooeous judgments. the primary
el<niiiits, of the ~ term are three-iotd, -.
!Fh'St, projection
of the cease-fire in
lndocbip> from a
statil: pbase of no war klto reconcilia-
tion and reeoostru~
Uon bUed upon mu-
tuat ~ts.
, ~ an uecb-.i , tive ~imposed reor· • . ,
,c_anju t i<>n of '::;:.and
. ~t aid_.... ~·· _.., funds apprtpdl . ait4 to be
approJillltted by COngress. ·
. 'Ihl.n\. ,the creation of an American at·
~ in which busJdess ·and labor
will meet lhe growiqg ~e of world
competition, and tW traditional values of wor-. tell.confidence, seU-dlsclRline will
be r*emptiaslzed in everyday life.
' IP 'DDS PJ'OVes to be very n:citing, It
will be i dlinge for pr<sidenlial second
terms. 4 '111ey . are often a let-down. The
momedtum bas usually been lost. Nil:on
(rucHARD WILSO~
I
recoplzed this prospect by making
numerous changes al the \op in the
govemmenta1 administrative structur.e.
But ~ Included In tbooe chan&es no
gllttuini filure like John Connally to ...
cile public intemt, DO soaring Concepts
o'c thrill1ni panoramas.
A"""1llllg tO ooe Interpretation a
natianwlde tide'of reactioo, long predicted
b&S set tn. The liberal tide of 4.0 years is
ftnaUy at ebb as faith hM been lost by
averagtl ' people in the worth of
humanitarianism as it has been im·
plemented by faulty' la~ppy pro-grams, and windy 6dv 'l1lere is
aome evidence to support fusiotl
in recent Gallup polls. People have lost
faith In the New Deal, Fair 'Deal, New
FrunUer, and Great Society approaches
whJch dominated governmental action
for 40 years. Welfare, permissive con-
duct, crime, rad.al excesses are
associated with the frame of ·mind· that
for every sbortcom.ing in American
society there must be a federal program,
OOwever loosely financed, badly ad-
ministered, and off the mark.
BUT IT JS essentially a wrong reBding
of Nixon that he ls riding such a tide of
reaction in order to dehumanize and
finally defe111t the noble p~ whicb
have inspired humaoitar\anisrri.
It cannot be denied that a com-
passionate concern for the human oon-
dition, and the politicl!Lnwi!!!J t<Llio
gained therefrom, have moUvated tbe
liberal Democratic movement which is
nov; said ot be at ebb tide.
But it cannot be denied, either, that the
Nixon programs as they have-been
presented to; and ignored by, Con111<S'
are the most advanced, and in some
~~itv="it!;,~°t ~ :Niion, in fact, bas abecooded with
m11111 .. .i. \lie ideas 1001 advanced by the ~. and u they .11 ~~ hedged . by conaervatlve
n,trabits,\(\hey are a ·long way down the
road from reactionary.
THE ARGUMENT is not so much over
what shall be done as bow It shall be
done. Nixon Js tryb),g to change the way
welfare Is administered, bow fund! on
education are :!>pellt, the method for im·
proving health. oo the basic premise that
the spendthrift and sometimes corrupt
method! of the past have not worked.
'Ibis eKpO.SeS him to the most virulent
attack from the education k>bby, the
;
farm lobby, the health lobby, and every I
other group which bas a vested l.aterest 'j
in generously administered federal pro-
grams. ,
But since when has Nixon demanded :
an end to educational aid , an end to aid ;
for the needy, and end to federally SUP' j
ported bousing.-or...--for that matter 1 ,n 1 end to lbe effort to create a desegregated ·
society? !
• THE FLIMSIEST pretesta.sre 1eized I
upoL to create the impression that Nixon i
has become a megalomanic ·recluse in I
the Wbito Hou .e plotting the destruction l
of b)untm liberties. One columnist calls l
him the 1·maa ·bomber"; a eo&
gr.5SWOtllall equat.S him with Hiller.
Gen\lor crmc:s say be -""_ ... eluding the gei\eral public to whom be
Will no!. linPan his mtents nor ezplaln ~
purposes.
Mu.ch of this will come to ·an end, of
course, with the Indochina ceaae-tire ! Nixon would not talk about While
it was being negotiated. It will end, too , ·
when the commentators recover from :
their annual alarm about freedo~ of the •
1 press, and when it is discovered that Nix·
on will spend buge swna on welfare and
reform. Nothing bas been said so far j'
which cannot be · dispelled In one press
conference or TV broadcast "Bfter the
1
.
cease-fire.
FROM TIIE period of the American
Revolution right up to the Civil War -
the (int 85 years of our national ex-
istence -student unrest "was more
prevalent and more violent" than in any
other period of blstory prior to the !9811s:
By 1800, we are told, "students were
becoming more insistent upoo being
treated as 'gentlemen' aDd upoo. receiv·
ing their 'rights' ... Th~ new radicalism
clashed directfy with the traditional con-
cept of students' status and the rigid
disciplinary codes which college officials
had formulated to control their charges."
lN 1151, .he uruven;! of North
Carolin.a had an enrollment r 230; dur·
Ing the year the faculty t with m
ca.ses of delinquent behavk!r~ In 1141,
Yale students defeated New Haven
firemen in a brawl, destl!'flD'I their
equipment. In 1807 at Princelcii ball the
student body were suspended.. Twenty
years later the University of Virginia
was the scene of student tjQta, with arm-
ed and · masked studeota \>ltrolliog the
campus. College presidents 1ft:rt shot,
stabbed and bombed; a Yale professor
anned himself with twG,,pistola 1or an en-
Nudity_J·and Ec~l~gical Disaster .J
1'10ST DJt.AMATIC of the incident! was
the "riotuous Commencement" at
COiumbia in 1811. when a senior student
de11vered an innammatory address, and
was refused his dipklma . His classmates
tire summer. ~
Student unrest is as old u .tbe eartieat
of medieval universities. 'lbe ooty things
new are the reasons and raUooallutions.
This is why those who are 'Ignorant of
history are overwhelmed by' current
events. "
To the, Editor:
~ tkne . back you carried an U
a~.~ Hot Springs, explaining bow
the CQUnW workerJ: were clearing the lllKlef'bruib .. w111y to discourage n
bather:a •!rom swimming In the hot
tbete: I •
THIS WEEK I went to see results ,
MAILBOX .
'Everybody Wins', presumably as a quote
from the backers of this move which
previously failed bt our state. They
wonder where any opposition might come
from. One source Is from those ot us who
don't particularly like regressive taxes
that hit those ]east able to afford it Of
course one can argue· that no one is fore-.
ed to buy a lottery tiCtet.
Only a Few· Give Bk!od and wls 1lckened by the wreckage of a
°"""1Dltural U not beautiful, landscape.
I' fall fo , see the logic of the project.
h~ of pn>leding the cltizenl of
Ofaiige County from the lm81ined
obooeolttes ol nude bathing, our county -Pn here opened the pools to full
~ .. the lilolori!ta who pass by, 'Ibis
-_. to greatly Increase the cbltlcel ol offending sensitive citizenl.
Letters fr'om f'eaders are welcome.
Nonnallt1 writers should convey t.lleir
meuagea fn SOO words or lest: The
right to c:ondm!e letters to Ji1 space
or eliminatt ltbel it resenied.. All
letter• mtut (fttlude signature and
mailing addTe11, but namer mou 'br
tofthh<ld Oii r1q1«al if 1Uf[icie111
reaaon is appqrent. PoetTJI will not be
publilhed. ' ~ ·
But if the bank!, computer· industry,
and vendors ~h as tupennarlr:ets who'll
profit from tbil, aa )'OU mention, do their
job well, the glittering carrot will be
dangled in front of i:oost of our citizens
three or four times daily : isn't this what
'makes' people buy soap and other
Items? 1be advertising men say so. And
what do we teach our children about
respqnoibllity, to euqitne the plistlc '
haloo of tbe leglJlature that won't tax
fairly but toaes the problem over to be
solved by hwnan we.almess?
Jt happens every year at about ,this
time -the nation's hospitals and blood
banks report that ·their supplies of blood
are running perilous~ low: The reason i.5
simple enough , according to Marian G.
Mabon, public rel111tlon.1 director of the
Richmond, Va., Red Cross. During major
holiday and vacation seasons, she says,
"There is alwayl ·a ll)ortage of .blood
coupled witb a greatf!f need -car ac-
cidents, fires and other emergencies." A
major disaster such as a plane or bus
crash can lead to emergency imports of
blood from other areas. ~
THE I.I ~UWON pinta of blood that
flow annually through this country's
complez channels of acquisition, pro-
cessing, ~butlon and u.oe are.J~Y
llUfflcient jo meet day-to-<lay n~: But
there Is Uttle msrgtn ol aafel)I, A• Na-
tional ~h Coiincll pant! :ae.cnbecl
the sul>llb'"demud tltuatlon two , ~"9!'
ago u one •of "cl1tloll bljance.''. W\>I!<
blood Is RUflltoble, . -•lhoUjll'
refrlaerated. It -usable no looger
tban tltree -u, biace It -'be stockpi!<d indellnJlel,y' against future
needs.
AMther baurd Is Illa~ of contaminated
blood. Of all Wee-that ml1ht be tronlmltted the pNlat COtl<ml IJ1 re-
cent ,..n ·baa be<ft over the rtslt · of
IH!p1Utls, 1 Uver dlseale, especially when
,....,. whole blood Is Uled. Some 30,00I\
•-ol ~ed bepititls --..-~ In tile Unlted•Stales, and
bet....., 1,ltlll ud i,olio <' them are fatal.
Bee-nporUnc on the dlsea,. Is
known to be ...... to. the Incidence and monaUIJ' 41Ctulily -be rnuch b!Ptr· It ta palllble thet there are-as
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
many as five "subclinica1" cases
cases without manile!t symptoms -for
every case that Is identified.
THE MAJOR advances in blood
transfusion and banking are of relatively
recent origin. It was not until 1901 that
Karl Landsteiner. an Austrian
physiologist, discovered that there are
SWlllMERS, who still frequent the
poola in l'arge numbers, are now made
law. lftabn by the lack of , oecluslon.
1,ltO -i. for polio" pa-In the area must, tllen!fore, have greatly lncreaoed.
· What has be<ft pined Is DOI at all ob-
·>\Oul -what has been lost, Is, Ortega
Hot Spring.I has become an ecological
dilaster, paid for
Orange County.
by the citizeM ol
DI™! H. LUXTON
. si.te Leuer11
To the Editor:
The headline for YQW: article on a pro-
posed state lottery (Jan. 17) states:
The article uks whether thole churches that u.oe bingo games will OP'
plloe a stata lottery. I don't know. I do
believe that a lot of church people who
don't.care about bingo, but who do care
about people, probably will.
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS;Minlster
different types of blood and that If the K ' w "ld w l<l donor'& type and ·tt,e -recipient's are Ill ero" I-~ s .. ""T --matched the red cells clump and • . ~ · • f, ' C7 . . ' d~~ate. 11>11 .~ed the mystery ol .. . .. ; ,my 80Dle tr•nSfdillons had been sue-• 11;.-• I ' , •• ...;...._ ~ut w~ue .. cilJ>eca ruit¥ IJ1 death. W~:-1 '!1'"1· .~"· °.."''uA.,..~·~d.
Oe•eioP,l!jnt of' anu..,.....1ant1 to Pl'.0-~= ,woriJI. ~ • ~-· 'Im· •ent ~ c>me Ir. ttl4, and dilcov.!J · ~· · by tlle !ale Jadr di.uac
ol.'l!Jte,llli factor In !HO. The acicJ.cttiile , ,<."\ o( ~}rll JoW ·1111f AJi!erk:I, •
lild 'delti'ote mixture now UJed to' we: country's crlZY' b'lnll-pr-.e stored blood WIS concocted dur· • U... ln·tlll·'4Gl·lnd 'lit: Yilkm 'ol·Oody
ing World War If. · (McOitw-lllll,• fl.Ill).
u!~b i:·~ "':! :t ~i.: ~ ·-th.· Ame time ..
transfusion or 1 medication derived from bis Jccendary Oil the Rold, tllls boot has
a human blood component, only 1 dny loog bid the underJlound """"lion of
fra.Ftiof> of the ·poputaUoo ever makea a being Kerouac'• belt wort. 8eeD through
blbi>d donation. It la belleyed that one-his eyes, lt Is sn llC<OUllt of Ille bopes Ind
haU of the American people are qualified natreds, moodl and -ol Cody
by age and health to donlte blood. Yet no Par.ieray, Kerouac's pelt Ami~
more than three mUUoo a year •ctually anti-hero, bis alter. qo, hit clrMd .mJ,
do sr. Tlitee-fOurths of lhem ,1ve hi' beloved brother.
repeatedly. Thus, a major c:onctm of The book -• ,spteekmrpalltioo witll
bloocl-banklng official! I! finding 0>me the power and Impact <lf -pOlalllf way to awaken In more Americans an -Is moving and poetic. Cod1 and bit"
obligation to give blood at least once a friend tnlvel the ...., niw rood, vlowlng,
Y•llT. , ' rtllrol!I tirldg• --.-
~~the ~E<ot: r-----.,·-~'"l'"""":..,;., , I am , wt1,t1ng In reply to !lie article
\. '
T:.n, .800. ;~ .. :,::~~. ;. Noise ,\g~ Motorcycle Noise, Jan. 21.
~ ~~,. ,.• • , 1T ' 1"\0llGHT into focus that
-.> .. • • t • --t ~.---l'ri»Orc;etti 'are being binned from
ty diners, .lf';WY Oopboule1, ~
thin men , smelly subway entranm aod
chess •rcsdet ..
11IEY lJSTEN to the harmony of train
brakes and watch a mattresa set oo fire
by a cigarette. They live, lhty love, they
avidly took, oharln( a time of vibrant
youth, oeardllng, chalteng1111, hoping, ...
Jectlng -forofounders ol the New llcat GeneraUoo.
Other worll1 by JIClt Kerouac Include
Dltarma BUIOI, -of Dreams, Satori Ill Paris, Town I< the City, Sub-
terraneant, and Vanity of Duluoi.
CAROLINE llARKLEROAD
•
CaUlomla delertl. MotQICydim and
otller ofl,rood vehicle ownOl:,I .._ to
""' lbls land ""' required to 1>uy -oa.
blghwlJI r.glstratlott wbidl ooota 115 !or
a t"°"year period. Tbil }I IUpPDl!d to
help pay for developing publlc rlcllllg
parb, lobl>)'ista Ill Sicnmeolo IDll -lhln&J that IH!lp the off.-. lteep a
place to ride.
As far as I CllJl see we are losing more
I
Quotes
·Jt you wlsb to know what 1 man Is, •
place him In authorlty.
Yugo lav provtrb
. .
aid gaining nothing. Is tliis money r<ally
going to our cause, or just some more
funds for Gov. Reagan to spend on
something else?
ALAN GATES
· Student Smokl"fl
To tbe Editor:
h1 regard to one of your articles en-
UUed "Smoke\BIJJ ,Proposed" on Jan. 11, r feel this blll 'sboold he passed Just .,
many other students in high school feel it
sbould be.
IF rr was passed, lt would be a )ot less
hassle for everyone. Because l! a ltudent
wants to smoke. he's going to. R's a
hassle ror the student because he bu to
sneak off campus or go to his car or even
to the restroom to have a smoke. Then
it's a hassle for the admlnlstratlon to
hire and pay someone to patrol campus
for smoking.
Then I'm sure the person who 11
patroling campus for smoking could be
off doing better thlnp with their time
other than haullJlg studerita Into the of·
fice. So I feel the bill abould very
deflnitolr be l!'!ssed._ _ _ _
FRANCES McMANN
ORA.NOi COA.11'
DAILY PILOT
Rob<rl N. Weed, MU.Ii«
Tllom4I K"vil, Editor
Barbera Krdbkh
Edltori<zl f'Ggt Editor
The mtt~J ,-.~ ot the o.11y
PUot .et.ks 10 tnfonn and 1tlmu-
lite l'tftck!n by "'1*ntln1 thlt
newspe.per't oSM•lont and com·
mtnt ,,. on to1Ncs of lnttrett and
tiAnUltanr:f!, by provldl_ng a forum
fur t l'le: ~:c(M'\'Ulon of our ttadtra'
opinions.. and by prtwntlng the
diverse vle..1111lntac Qf Informed ot>.
tcr\Jorw ind $pl.lk~tmen on topics
or-th~ day.
Friday, January 26, 1973
' '
•
r-Today's l<'lnal
'
l N.Y. Stocks
,
. I VOL. 66, NO. 26, 5 SECTIONS, 58 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA c TEN CENTS fRIOAY, JANUARY 26, 1973
1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
' Continent 98 Oldest Ceranaics on Ranch
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lltt DetlY l"ll•t Staff
The oldest man-made, fired; clay
artlfacls ever unearthed in North
America by some 2,000 years have been
discovered on the Irvine Ranch by a
team o' Cal State Fullerton
archoologlsts .
Roger J. Desautels, president or Costa
Mcsa·based Archaeological Research
Inc. today announced at UCI the -
sigrificance of the Ju1y, 1971 digs above
Upper Newport Bay.
"The discovery is an archeological
milestone which opens an entirely new
perspectJve on prehistoric art forms in
Nert'! America.
"These artifacts have been con-
clusively dated by Carbon-14 tests
performed at UCLA and Gakushuin
Un'versily. Tokyo. The tests have placed
the age of the artifacts at more than
6,000 years," Desautels says.
'The exact location of the find is being
kept secret to prevent 3mateur pot
hunters from destroyi ng the site's
historical signi!icance.
Desautels said the Irvine Company will
protect the site against trespassers. ARI
hold-: a contract with the land develop-
ment flrm to insure the protection and
mapping of significant his torical s•s
located on the 83,000 acre ranch.
Christopher Drover, 25. of Laguna
Beach, now a lecturer for UC Irvine Ex·
tension, led the student Kroup from Cal
State Fullerton in the six week dig during
the summer-of 1971.
The oldest previous examples of North
Arr.erican ceramic objects ever to be
uneartbed arP. estimated to be 4,500 years
old and Y.'ere found in the eastern United
States.
The thimble sized objects decorated
with designs left by sharp point in-
struments have no apparent relationship
to similar items of a later date found in
(See ARTrFACl'S, Pa1e Z)
2 More Americans Die r
Vietna1n Battles Intense as Cease-fire Nears . -
-DAILY ~ILOT Staff ........
QLDEST :NORTH AMERICAN FIREO.CLAY ARTIFACTS
• Irvine Ranch-Flrid G•rbon D•tec:I .t Mor.-Than 6,000 Years
Nixon Unveils f!iul,get .
•
SAIGON (UPI ) -The war in Souµi
Vietnam intensified today with the 3p.
proach of the ~fire, and two -or
possibly three -Americans were killed
·., and 25 others wounded in tbe closing
hours of the conflict.
Both -Oum r o StriJres-by•,(J,s,..
planes and ground battles involving
government and Vietnamaie Commun1st
troops reached eight·month highs with
less than 48 hours remaining until the
scheduler! cease-fire begins at 8 a.m.
Sunday (4 p.m. Saturday PST). Hundreds
of Vietnamese were killed or wounded.
Military sources said the fighting ap-
peared to be building toward a peak {or
the final full day of warfare Saturday.
Three major air bases were shelled but
a predicted Communist offensive to
snatch contested territory just before the
war ends has not materialir.ed.
Communist fQ...rc:§_ shell~ m~jor air
ba>es, killing a Marine sentry and wound-
ing 21 other American persoonel at the
Bien Hoa base out.aide Saigon. (See story,
picture, Page 4)
Another American was killed when hit
OH6 observation helicopter crashed, ap-
'
* * *
parently after being hit by groundfire,
100 miles east of Saigon.
Four Americans were wounded in the
shelling of the airbase outside Pleiku in
the Cenh·aJ Highlands, and the U.S. Com·
mand said one man killed in that attack
'Day' Pfu11ned
For Cease -fire
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -
President rlixon today proclaimed
"a national day of prayer and
Thanksgiving" to begin when the
Vietnam cease-fire goes into eH~
at 4 p.rq,_!ST Satur~ay,
Nixon caned on the American
people "lo oOserve this moment
with appropriate cemno.nies and~
activities."
Tbe President signed tbe P.ro<-
Jamation for a momenl and day of
praxer , ljnd thanirsgiv_lnJ ii' respoll!e to a l'equeSt by COOgross
for prayer at the time of the
accord-signiq ceremonies in Paris.
Totaling .. ~ Billio'n Rogers Arrives ·in Paris ·
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon disclosed today that the federal
budget for the next fiscal year will total
$268 billion, and said he wouJd discuss
details in a r~ address to the nation
Sunday evening from the Florida White
House. A $12·billion deficit also 1 was
forecast by a Senate leader.
The President gave the l;KJdget fipe
for the year starting July 1 following a
meeting with congressional leaders of
both parties, and while greeting a group
representing prisonei: of war. families.
Nixon also said the final budget figure
for the current fiscal year will be $250
billion -the ceiling be demanded !llJd
one which roused some members of
Congress who fee1 the chief executive in-
fringed on legislative ,.,rerogatlves~
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said the President already taped
the 11-minute radio program on the
blidget whiCh will be broadcast from Key
Biscayne. Fla., at .3 p.m. PST .Sunday.
The Presideµt briefed con~ressionol
leaders on his fiscal proposals before
flying to his Florida retreat to spend the
Weekend working on his Slate of the
UQion rr.essage to Congress.
Meeting 'with reporters on Capitol HUI
following the White House meeting,
SeJi,ate Democratic ~ader Mike
TlllAL CHlll"S IRIDI! c:-r. Wyn .. ._.
•
Mansfield and House Speaker Carl Albert
said the actual budg~t figutJs for fiscal
1974 would be $261.7 billioo, with an
estimated• deficit of $12 billion.
Mansfield said the deficit for the cur-
rent fiscal year would be $25 billion.
For Signing of Treaty
Of tbe ·$258.7 figure, Mnnsfleld said,
(See BUDGET, Pago Z)
Better Get
Car Lice11se
' Friday, Feb. 2 is the last day to
get your car license tags or get
yourself tagged.
Henry Rubien, manager . of the
Depa~t of Motor Vehicles of-
fice in Santa Ana, notes , this year
the law bas been changed from
Feb. 4. to the first Friday in
FebQUlcy.
"It comes-earlier than usual and
may catch .,Jme motorists with
their checkbooks · down," quipped
Rubie.n. Fees received after J<~eb. 2
go up 10 percent and aftec_ i1arch a
fbe rene ;:al doubles.
By United Press Inlematlonal
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
arrived in Paris to sign the agreement
ending the Vietnam war and said he
hoped the accord will usber 1n a genera-
tion of peace.
The war Itself raged on and two, pos·
sibly three, more Americans and hWl-
dreds of Vietnamese dJed today. (See re-
lated story and picture, Page 4.)
Rogers will slgn the agreement in
Paris Saturday at the heavily guarded
Hotel Majestic with the foreign ministers
or North and South Vietnam and the Viet
Cong's Provisional Revolutionary Gov.-
ernment. The 12-year-old war is then to
~rind to a halt at 4 p.m. PST.
Rogers said "we· hope and expect that
shortly the ceasefire will be In effect in
Laos and Cambodia, too, and that finally
this long and difficult war will come to
. an end."
Prime Minister Souvanna Phouma of
Laos said today in Vientiane 'he ltxlught
' there would be a cease-fire in Laos with-
in lS days after the one in Vietnam but
T"-ibal . Cere111~ny
Hu11tirig~ E~plorer Weds Chief
....
Wyn Sargent. an exptorer and an-
thropologist from Huntington Harbour
who has been studying the sexual life of
• -1tlbe!""in West lrlan, has roamed the
clilE;f of o~e of the tribes, the West Jrian
military command said today.
Mid Sa~t's local address is , 4001
Morning Star Drive, Blmtingt.on Beach.
The C.)'W'Old· divorcee married· Chi~! ·
ObUamk Jan. 8 In a tribal cemnony,
givlng ldm II pip and five cloth head-
dresses as a dowry, Maj. Amlo Sudjonl
sai~· in West Irlan, a remote province ln l'hcionesbi. • •
, Chief Obabarol<, who was said to have
sewral otMr wives, reportedly hetda 1
cannlbll tribe.
In Ille F a pbolo-jOUmOllll, Miii
Strpslt 1efl l!untilJ&lon Betd> In Octobtr
to >'tudy and photograph cannibal tr!bet
in th< Baliem. Valley, a iuocla.,.. In tbt
heort ol West lrlan.
Sbe bas traveled tJltnlively In the
Sou1h Pacific and other lands. In 11188,
she -I o,.t vlI1ap in !he
Indonesian jungles of' Borneo in need of
n1edica l, educational anft agricultural
·help.
Coin ing back to the states, s~ locally
orgaril~ the Sargent-Dyak Fuod Inc. to
get relief for the primitive people.
ln addition cargoes of p i g s,
goats and chickens, she was reported to
have taken Bil IO:lS of medicine, three
motorboats, and agricultural equipment
to tbe Village.
Upon her return to Huntington Beach
in early tt70, she spoke of her adventures
before a class at Harbour View Elemen-·
tary School .
"It was an incredible dream and an
-Impossible journey," she was quoted 1n
tbe DAILY PILOT.
"We su.nd a vtry good chance of mU:·
i,. !be ugly Amerl<an respected again,"
sbe told the ohildren who had helped
purcluase 5,000 boob for a sister IChool
In the jungle.
Re;iortl that after· her rnott recent
maniage to lhe tribal chlel silt vowed to
abed ber Westo.11 clothes and dron only
lSee WEDDIN<;, ..... 21
•
that U.S. bombing would continue it need·
ed.
In Cambodia, Prime Minister Hang Tun
Hak said Thursday his govemment would
suspend offensive operations after the
Vietnam cease-fire to test the Com.mu· ·
nists.
But the fighting was heavy today an'd
surged to within 10 miles of Phnom Penh.
Jn neighboring Thailand, site of many
U.S. air bases:, there was concern for the
fu~ Gen. Prapass Charusatbira, the
deput)'"° Prime Minister, predicted trou-
bles in Laos and 'Cambodia that could af-
fect Thailand after the fighting ends in
Vietnam.
The White House announced that Pres-
ident Nixon Is sending Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew to South Vietnam, Laos,
Cambodia, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore
and Indonesia for "substantive discus-
sions'" on the postwar state of Asia. Ag·
new leaves Sunday.
Presidential Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler said Agnew "will reaffirm our
desire for peace and self-determination
for aU the countries of Southeast Asia." ·
While the principals in· the Vietnam
peace drama gathered in Paris, a key
figure slipped quietly oul of that city to-
day on the eve of the a1ptng.
Only a few dozen newsmen and officials
"·ere on hand when Le Due Tho, the
Hanoi diplomat who negotiated the agree-
(See PEACE, Page Z)
'Stocks Drop
Belo·w 1,000
ORK (AP) -The Dow
Jon rage of 30 iodu!trial
1tocks, which bunt above 1.00J
points at the dole of trading Nov.
14 amid fanfare, dropped below
that mark during midday trading
today. At 11 a.m. the Dow was
down 1.25 to lt9S.24. But the market
rallied and cloeed out at 1000.54.
Brokers cited lnvmor coriccrn
about lnflotloO and the U.S. trade
1defidt as the main facton spurring
the drop.
Wedneld•Yt ~'Dow WU down
t4.07 to tOOUe. T!lllridty all stock
marketl were cloeed In observance
ol a oatlonal Cf1y ot mourning for
!be 11,. pA!lldent Ly1Klorr B. John-
""'· '
also may have been a'n American. The
victim y.·ore civilian clothes and carried
no identity cards, military spokesmen
said, so his identification and nationality
were not immediately established.
U.S. jet fig hter-bombers flew 407
single·plane sorties during the 24-hour
period ended at 8 a.m. today, the highest
number of such attacks slnce the 409
reported Pt1ay 28 at the height of the
North Vietnamese invasion of South Viet·
nam.
Insurance Headqt111rters
' Acco1·d Reported Near
For Development inMes_a
By RUDI NIEllZIELSKI
Of l9t DaHy P'i..I lllff
Negotiations are almost complete to
bring a mu1ti·milli<il dOllif' inillrance
headquarters employing up to 1,100
workers inlO Costa ~esa, the DMLY
PILOT learned )oday.
SOllrcell said the sale -ol IO ,.;;.:. of
Segerstrom family land north of lhe San
Diego Freeway to state Farm Insurance
for thls project is imminent.
The lnsw'lloce company plans \0 move
its regklnal d~v11ional headquartera from
Santa Aha into the new faclllty adjacent
to Hyland Laboratories by 1974, the ' of·
ficials disclosed.
This will mean employment of 300 to
400 new workers because plana by State
Fann call for a significant expansion
compared to the existing Santa Ana
facility.
V. 0. Shields, regL>nal vice president of
State Farm, said his nr:n had only an op-
tiun on the Segerstrom property but with
several coi'IUngencies which make an-
nouncement of the project '"a little
premature until all the problems have
t · '?n solved."
A spokesman for the Segerstrom fami-
ly today confirmed tile negotiations but
said that the pr<tp.i!rty is not yet in
escrow but that it could reach this stage
"any day."
It was disclosed by sources however
that preliminary plans for the project are
expected to be filed witb the city by Feb.
7 and that these will reach the planning
commission-1e1..-et"11hortly-afterwanl•-. -~
The building , designed by a· St Paul
architect, will be one story in height. It.a
1Sl1000 square feet of Door 1pace will
make U ·larger than the adjacent Hyland
Laboratories.
Although the exact value of the
buildipg was not available from sources,
It Is upected to be approxlmat4;1¥ ft,5 to
15 million.
One of the "contingencies" clttd by
Shields appears to center on the M·I
(manlllacturing) zone on the property.
Uses such as office buildings are
presently not permitted under exJaUng
M·l definitions.
City officials have in the past deviated
from a slrict interpretation of the M·l
zoning regulations. A study 111 in progress
to expand the M-1 zone deflniUon to in·
. elude such n011·manufacturing uses as
the State. Farm building.
State Fann is the secoitd insurance
firm lo enter negotia!jons with the
Segerstroms for pennanent headquarters
in Costa Mesa.
nie other finn, a medical insurance
group, is interested in locating on the.
east side of Fairview Road between
Sunnower Avenue and the San Diego
Freeway.
Westminster Police Find
Pills Worth $1 Million
By JOHN ZALLER
Of Jiit o.llY l"itlt Sl•ff
Westminster police today claimed to
have seized $1 million worth of am-
phetamines .and arrested tWo Spanish-
speai.ing men in what officers termed
the biggest narcotics haul in the city's
history.
Police said lwo anonymous phone calls
led to the arrests Wednesday night in a
truckyard in the industrial sector of the
city.
Ofrlce?'! asserted lhe raid ncltcd 3
million :imphetamlne (Or "upper") pills,
\\•hich police believe were brought In
from Ptfcxlco.
Four Westminster officers and two
federal n~rcotlcs agents had been staking
out a truck stor..igc lot at 13612 l.-filton St.
for more than 20 hours by the time ~
arrests were made.
Tbe two suspccts, one of whom ls a
Mexican natimal, were1 being htld today
In Orllt&• County jail wltll ball set at
$100,000 each. The men were ldent.lfled aa
Juan Manuel Hernandez Garcia, sa. of
Mexico, and Alei: Magallanes, 46, ol
Buena Park.
Police said the men, nellher of whom
spoke Engll•h, lMlld lhty were not aware
they \\--ere &PJ>a«ntly dealing bl con-
traband drugs. •
The raid was made about 8:15 p.m. Six
olfi<:en cbaraed wltll th<l1 guns drawn
on tbe two suspects, who of!ered no
rttlstMlce.
Both men were unanned.
Police had earlier Watched u tbe two
men reportedly entor.d the truck 1tora10
•
!
lot :ibout 8 p.m. The sU1pecta allegedly
went directly to one 35-foot n1tbed truck
and began removing wooden board! on
(Seo NAROOl'ICS, Pap ZI
Oru•e
Weather
Continued sWlny skies is the
projecJed weather picture for Sat-
urday, with sllghtl)r warmer tem-
peratures, accoi"cfjng to the weather
service. Highs In the mid~. LOw1
tonight In the 408.
INSIDE TOD.\ Y
Mick Jaggtr brooght his Roll·
ing Stoat• to Lo• Anoitcs I.alt
wiek for a co.cert ·kncfittino
Managvo, Nk:oro{/lllJ. Ht come
and eonqvncd. Set photol, taken
b11 UCI fresh.man Andrea \Va-
ttr1, o• the covtr of todav's
\Veeken.der.
l..M. .. ,. ' ,_,__...... • ..... I Na.._.!...... f
C•llftintMI I 0..... C-" ti ctntlllfll ... ............ ,,.. c-ta" M ty1wt1 ,..,_ ft
~ ,. ...,. .,...
o.91 ,...w... If ltldr """""" tM1
........... I ~ " ,..... !I.JI ~ tN'I -----,. ..... . ...,.,,,.. ' '' ........... U.11
··~ , ............ . ,_,.... . . ..... ., ..,., -... ,
I
l
t
Stam, Mitch ell
Nixon Men OK'd
Funds, Jury Told
WASHINGTON IAPI -Judge John J.
Sirica, presiding at the \Vatergate trial.
saying some imµorlant inforrqallon had
been kept from the jury, today read 10
the panel ll.'!ilin1ony that for1uer Atty.
(;en. John Mitchell and former Com4
n1erce Secrl'tary ~faurice Stans approved !
pay1nents the govern ment says went to
political espionage against Democrats.
Sirica said he decided to give the jury
testimony by Hugh W. Sloan Jr., fonner
treasurer to President Nixon's re-election
finance committee, after reviewing the
transcripts and deciding "most of it is
important evidence and the jury should
hear it."
Sloan testified Tuesday, but the pa.rt
about ~fitchell and Stans was given while
the jury was out of the room. It came out \\'her! Slrica questioned Sloan directly,
but he complained today that the govern-
ment should have covered the same
ground when it resumed examining Sloan
before !he jury.
, When a defense attorney objected 10
TONIGHT
"PAN AMERICA.'1 HIGHWAY"
Newport Harbor Kiwanis Travelogue,
OCC Auditorium 8 p.m. Tickets 646-2163.
BASKETBALL -Costa Mesa vs.
Corona del Mar at ~tesa. 8 p.m. Estancia
at Los Alamitos, 8 p.m. Newport Harbor
vs. Loara at Harbor. 8 p.m.
WRESTLING -OCC vs. Sanla Ana,
OCC Gym, 7:30 p.m.
''PLAY STRINDBERG '' -South Coast
Repertory Theater, Friday, Saturday and
Sunday, 8 p.m.
UC! DRAMA WORITSHOP -
Sponsored by School o( Fine Ar ts, Studio
Theatre, Fine Arts. Village, Friday and
Saturday, 8 p.m. Adm. 50 cents.
I SA.TURDAY, JAN. r7
LIBRARY STORY HOUR -Movie s
"Hunchback Of Notre Dame" and "Bear
Country." 10:30 a.m.
ORANGE COUNTY PHILHARMONIC
-· 1.ubin Mehta. OCC Auditorium, 8:30
p.m. tickets ~11.
BASKETBALL -OCC vs Certitos, -oCc Gym. 8 p.m. UCI vs. Stanisla us,
Q-awford Hall, 8 p.m.
SEMINAR FOR SECRETARIES -
OCC Science Hall, 8 a.m. • 2 p.m.
inlroducing the leslimonr. lh(' judge said
"] exercise my judgmenL as ~ feder~I
judge and chief judg11 of 1~ court to cx-
1u11i11e the 1,1•itnes:s.''
The judge added 'he does not cart
~bout the possibility or an appeals court
reversal and told the attorney ror defen-
dant G. Gordon Liddy : "Your client is
smiling and I don't care \\'hat he thinks.
either."
Sirica then gave the proseeutior1 the
rlgbt to recall Sloan to lhe witness stand.
Llddy's lawyer. Peter ,.faroul is, said,
"I respectfully move for a mistrial." and
the judge responded. "\'our motion will
be denied."'
In the presence of the jury, Sloan
earlier said he gave defendant Liddy.
legal counsel to 1he finance committee,
$199,000 at the dlrection of Jeb Magruder.
deputy director of lhe Nixon campaign.
After the jury left. Sirica asked Sloan
if he knew who! !he money "'cnt for, and
Sloan replied, "I have no idea."
The portion of the transcript whirh
Sirica read to the jury contained this ex·
change between the judge and Sloan:
Q. You didn 't question Mr. ~1agruder
about the purpose or the $199.000?
A. No, sir. I verified \\'ith ~lr. Stans
and A1r. Mitchell he \vas authorized to
make those.
Q. You ietilied it "'ith ,vho?
A. Secretary Stans. the finance
chairman, and I didn 't di rectly. but he
\'erified it v.·itb John A1itchell, the cam-
paign cbalrman.
Q. This $199,CMXI could be 1urned over to
Mr. Liddy is what you are saying?
A. Not the specific amount. but Mr.
f\Iagruder, his authorization was
authoriuilion enough to turn over the
funds in question.
Under Slrlca's questioning, Sloan also
quoted Liddy as saying to him the morn-
ing after last summer's burglary al
Democratic Party headquarters :
"My boys were caught last night. l
made a mistake by using somebody Iron\
here whirh I told them I would never do.
I'm afraid I'm going to lose my job."
From Pagel
PEACE .•.
ment with Henry A. Kissinger, bade fare·
""!l,.'11!L!lo1Y to Hanoi.
The SZ.year~ld silver-heired Tho,
Hanoi's tap theoretician, an intellectual
and poet, spent four years in bargaining
sessiom, mainly with Kissinger.
Sc outs to Make
I de1itification
Drive iii Mesa
Scouts will go from house to house in
north Costa Mesa next month to en-
c:ourage residents to participate in
Ope ration Identification, a program
designed to curb residential burglari,es.
Initiated in 1972. the proJram involves
the marking of valuable items wi th the
owner's driver's license or California
identification number and tbi!n recording
the serial numbers on a personal property
record.
These markings will allow Jaw en-
forcement officials ta readily identify
stolen property, aid in prosecution, and
help to return the items to their rightful
ov.·ners, according to Lt. George Lorton,
community relations officer.
Some of the things homeowners are ad·
vised to nrarlc includeTVs, radios,
stereos, cameras, bicycles, tools ,
binoculars, musical instruments, ta pe.
recorders, guns, ty p ewriters ,
lawnmowers and off.road vehicles such SUNDAY, JAN. ti"
0CC SYMPHONIC WIND ENSE~ffiLE
-Directed by Dr. Charles Rutherford,
OCC Audilorium, 3 p·.m. Adm. SI.
Pledging North Vietnam to stick strict·
ly by the terms of the aCC1:1nl , Tho said:
•·Tomi>rrow the guns \\'ill ISO silent and
-peace will return lo Vietnam."
as minibikes. ~
The Costa Mesa Police Department
provides electric etching pencils,
burglary preverrtlolf pamphlets, personal
property records, and "Operation Iden·
lification" window stickers free of
charge. From Pagel
NARCOTICS. • •
the trailer, revealing a hidden storage
area.
Police said the two men quickly
removel about 40 black plastic bags,
each containing 25,000 pills.
"We timed our raid just right." said
Det. Rick McKhmey of the WestmiMter
Corte. "They had just finished unloading
all the b~gs and so there wa s nothing left
for us to do but make .be arrests."
f\fcKinney said the yard Is leased by a
third man . wbo ls not believed to be in-
volved in the allegedly illegal operation.
f\'JcK.inney also said the two suspects
claimed to be innocent.
"They said an unknown man had of·
fered to pay the1n $100 each to do the job
and that they didn't know v.·hat they were
carrying," McKinney said.
McKinney added that the truck's hid-
den compartment seemed to have been
in place a Jong time. •le also noted that
the pi ll bags had been soakej in vinegar.
¥:hich would confuse dogs used at
border checks to snlff out Illegal drugs.
McKinney said investigation would con·
linue in an effort to find accomplices.
OIAHal COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
TM or..-.e C..1t DAIL If PILOT, wlll't wtlldl
I• Clllftllll'ltd tM !rt-~ b MN .... ~
ltlf Or~ COllst P\lbllllllnO C~ny. S.,.
,. .. •Ht• .,.. Pl;l&llihlli. Mcintky ~
Frld1y, lbr Co$t1 Mn.I, N...,.,... ll!Oldl,
H\llltl.,glorl 8Hd\/l"'our'll•lfl Vlllrf, lfSIUM
Budi, lrvl..W~ Mid S111 °""9!111/
Sin Jii.11 c.,i.tr-A •lll!lle r1gloflal
lldltlon It. DUbti"'td i.ilt111111y. 91111 SIN'ld1'1'\o
Tile pr'inc:lp81 Mllsl'llnt pYnt 11 11 l.Jl We,.!
Bly Strttt, C.11 Mew, C1lltorr1l1, fHH.
11.ollerl N. W11d
Pr"kJtflt 1nc1 Puou*""'
J eclc II.. Curley
Viet ..,..,.ktwlt Mid ~I ~
Thome• ic •• .,u
Ellllor '-
th.lftlt A. Murphl111
Mlntllllllll'Edltor
OMf• H. L11tt 11.icheN P. N1lt
AMIRAlll MIM91nt l!dllen
c:.... ..... OHie.
lJO W1it l •Y Street
M1llhtt A44re111 r.o. lo• 1560, f2626 -0-tl...,.ert l1adl' UJl NIWJll'f e..11~1,,i l...ltVrll aHC11: m ,,_, ...__
M..,111191en l11cll~ 1111S IH<ll ..... J...,1N
~n Ci.mtftll; .JDS Horll't 1!:1 Ctmltlo llt1I
Ttl.,.w (71 4J 64Z..4l11
C......W A'-'111., 642·1671
CwyrJollt, urt 0rlnftl Coett ~llbll"'"-11 c:Mic>tnr. N1 """" tlot'ln, llrvtlNlloN, efffWlel -ti• II' fd\'1'11t-ls llll'HI
IN\' !lit ntnlllt.lalll wlff\evt UllCMI ,...
mlMlon of tlll'Yl'ltllt """"·
hceN t llu -"II NN It Cette M-,
ClllflMla. lullrlcrl1tloll 11'!' Cl"'llr U.U "*""'"' br m1111 u IJ morom1Y1 m1lllltf """"'''°"' '2.lS mo!llllt.'.
•
Character Actor
Naish Succumbs
LA JOLLA (AP )-J. Carroll Naish, a
master of dialects who played every
character role from an ImHan chief to an
explosive Italian immlgrant, has died at
73.
A family member said Naish, Jong ail·
ing £rom erilphysema, died Wednesday in
Scripps A1emorial Hospital.
The black-haired . mustachioed Naish
rank ed as one or Hollywood 's most
versatile character actors, easily
switching nationalities with a quick
change of makeup and accent.
Fro1n Page .I
WEDDING ...
in strings and straps nf the natives
brought quick objections from officials in
\Vamena, West lrian headquarters.
They .said that her act ions might upset
their plans to "civilize" the tribe'S people
in a prograr.i ~ailed Operation Koteka .
The ~im of the tw~year program is to
put clothes on the natives, introduce
them to a mo:iey eeommy and teach
t:;em to speak, read and wrile the
Indonesian language.
A Jakarta, Indonesia, newspaper,
''Serita Buana." reportedly ran a
photogr<1ph or f\11ss Sargent and Chief
O~aharok~ She was wearing jeans and a
shirt and he a koteka, a kind of G·string.
The U.S. Etnba!lly in Indonesia said it
had no information 011 the marriage.
The Costa Mesa-Newport Harbor Lions
Club has supplied the police department
with the etching pencils. They are
available on a check-out bi.sis at the
front desk.
During 1972 residents of Costa Mesa suf-
fered $319,225 in losses from residen tial
burglaries. The recovery rate for this
stolen property was only 18 percent
because the property could not properly
he identified.
From Pagel
BUDGET ...
$202 billion would be 1n fixed outlays not
subject to adjustment.
Albe.rt renewed congressional o~
jections to the President's impoundment
of funds to meet his budget goals for this
fiscal ycnr.
''.It's a question of whether they (t he
White House) are legislating or we are."
Both ~1ansfield and Albert said
Congress would set its own budgetary
priorities which would not necessarily
coincide with t~e ol the Administration.
But Mansfield said Congress should ac-
cept the responsibility of staying within
the $268.7 billion budget figure Nixon set.
Although Nixon gave only broad details
during his meeting with the board of the
National League of Families or American
Prisoners and Pttissing in Southeast Asia,
other Administration officials said the
budget would cut deeply inta "Great
Society" programs the President con·
siders no longer necessary,
These officials said that for one thing,
the Office of Economic Opportunity, 1hc
antipoverty agency. would be eliminated .
•GoP~ · Convieted
Campaign Violations Charged
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon's re-election finance committee
today declined to contest eigh t charges of violating the new campaign spend-
ing l~w-all involving Watergate defendant G. Gordon Liddy. The committee
was fmed $8,CMXI, the maximum possible.
THE OUTCO>!E OF TH ~ case ldl in qu"1ioo 'bat Liddy did With $26.lOO in campaign fun<b .
A 5J)Okesman s.iid the committee could not have thrown any Ught on the matt~r even If It contested the charges. lie said the commHtee had no idea \\'~at Liddy did with the money and could not question him because he is on
tr.1al in the Wfllergate ca$e.
• • IN A TW().MINUTE AJ!JIAIGNM~NT belort U.S. District Juda< O.Orae L.
Hart, the Finance Committee to Re-elect the President pleaded nolo contendere,
or no conttst. to Pn eight-count "crlmlnal informaUon" filed Jan. 11 by the
Justice Department.
No individuals were charged.
\'
DAILY PILOT Staff PMfl
Hoag Hospital to Open
New Outpatient Center
Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach will have an open house Sunday to
Connally open the first ou~tient minor
surgery center in Callfomla.
Built with a $250,000 lrvine Foundation
grant, .the facility will be. known as the
James Irvine Surgical Center. -
and another night's stay for observation.
"But ~." be said, "we will be keeP:
ing people for only two or three hours."
The center bas three ope.raUng rooms,
but Is only being used at ball-capacity -
abou t nine paU,enta a day. Or. Newcomb
explained that use will be stepped up
gradually.
. .
""°"' p .. ,, J
ARTIFACTS . • •
-The 2 to 5 p.m. opening Sunday will in--
c1Lde tours of the center, which hospital
officials say wtn J>ennlt minor surgery
too contlilicated for a doctor's office but
which otherwise would involve a 'two-
nigbt stay. . ' "The cost for use of the facility \fill be
"We e:s:pect to be in full operation in
about two months," Dr. Newcomb g ld.
'!"be center la located on 11D1pltat Road,
immediately north of the driveway to the
r-· !n entrance of the bospilal.
Boys Drown in Ice .
about the same as the regular hospital'-
e1cept for bed and Uoard," a spokesman
explained.
Dr. Douglas Newcomb, director of the
center, explained that all operations in
@.~itals~normally requlre-admi&sion Of-
lh? patient the night before an operation
Radio, TV Chief Dies
ENCINO IAP) -Earl Ebi,.69, veteran
radio and. television producer, -died -
'Ibursday.
ClllCAGo (UPI) -•·our boyl, cbasibg
ducks on the Washington Park lagoon on
tho city's South Side, fell through thin Ice
Thursday and drowned. Benjaru{n
Barfield, 9, his brothe r Ronni e, 7, Robfrt
Bennett,---10,--and--laaac _Jvy, t r were dead
on arrival at Woodlawn Hnlpilal. .:
Annual Clearqnce
• •
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Orin~ -Htnr.clon 1072. 8' Print -Royal 589 I' Velvet Stripe -579 Coach. 689.
Sherrill 695.
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"
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INTER 1-0-R S -~4-6111
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Fund Set ,
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ALL GREATLY REDUCED ,
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MANY· SUITS NOW 'h PRICI
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lfMS10
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Santa Anita Sets . '
Political Fund
Drily Coast Qffors
· 63 Guaranteed Certificates
. ' ·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Cl b . .
Effective Annual N OP'1Cl1 Earnin h •Hill, Lo. Anples • 623-lSSl
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WILIH lltf •t UAMUCY !'LACI= Passbook. No Minimum. 3933 Wlllhlr1 Blvd., L.A.• JS&.1265
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Up to 90 days loss of 10th' hclflC • lll-2341
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The Insiders Club: A new counts on tickets to sport-LOHOllACHI
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EAIT LOI ANll:Uli membership card permits events ••• plus a whole a1h & Solo • 266-4510 you to buy nearly every· list of free services: safe DIAMOND llAft: thing you need from the deposlt boxes, money or-328 S. Ol•mond.Blr (714) 595-7!12' finest closed-door show· ders, travelers checks, TUSTIN: rooms at substantial sav-and rotary servi ces. Urwin ~\11111 ShoOJlln; Clr. inis -appliances, fumi· Membership require-(714 13 -6110
LA Ml"ADl\I tu re, ste~eo equipment, ment for savers -$2,500 "' "I'm 'l:r"" Cit. SPorting goods, draperies minimum balance. Coast (7141 •
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~ COAST
FEDE~AL SAVING'->
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. ' f Maay, January 26, 1973
LA Airport Imposing Own
. Tough No~e Restrictions
WASHINGTON (AP) -Les i/g any step« to resolve arcts for aircralt noise levels,
Angeles International Airport airport . prob I ems by he said , the Los Angeles
P,lans t(i Impose tough ne-;r/ t!ittabl)8hing-netional et~irport is act ing on it! own: ~atrictions on aircraft traptc '
ln an attempt to reduce ~ise ,,..,...._..,. --:c. --,=""'.:::-7""0-:'.:"'.'"-:-:-,q-.:;i
lrrltation to s ur ro un,d in g
residents and lo sta\.e off
posslble lawsuits, s a y s
manager Clifton A. Moore.
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•
Magnificent Astro-sonic~
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• D A:D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Me sa Park ·Barg3:iIJ.
Coit.a Me.sans may have been surprised last week
to find out that they got their coveted Fairview Park
property for a lot less money than they expected.
The orielnal pric~ ot $8 million for-the 257 acrea
of state surplus land behind Fairview State Hospital
was pared d'own to J4 million by the state because it "'"
to be used as open space. The second discount was al·
lowed because about 90 acres are.in the Santa Ana &ver
flood plain.
The real ~ is ~t Costa Mesans wW get the
laitil':ldl' Jheir part .for' )'lflually ~oihing, because it Ii tl!e_~uilty o! l>n!\fge" tb"*I will• · picking up the lab
ovtr a 20.year period and not the 'ty of Costa Mesa.
But C0511.1'1esans wbo.ralliedJ>ehlnd Fairview Pwk
nlay aoon ~put 1o, the test to determine wliether they ~11 b\fileve ln more open spBCt!'. by voting .on a bond •
~ect.\oy. -the 111'81 ver In th~citx's ~year history.
S'Uoh an· election for $5 million to $10 mfllion may
be called this year to purchaoe nearly 100 additional
aci'e$ of open space. It's unlikely there will be a discount
.or that the county wil,l. open , its wallet again.
It looks as if COsta Mesans are going to have to pay
at least part of the price· of preserving one of life's rare
amenities in Southern California -.:. greenery and open
space .
Boost the Band!
Estancia High School music makers have been in·
vited to represent all of Southern Californa Feb. 28-
March S at a music conference in Tucson which involves
entries from all the western states.
For members ol Estancia's award-winning concert
band the invitation is-a big honor, perhaps even bigger
than a shelf full of trophies· they already won in compe-
tition during the current school year.
-the. wherewitha.11 lo take tl!e trip. The cost Is about
$3,000. 'I'
During the nextlew weeka the Estancia High School ,
bend will-... l!!>m• "professlonal~certs ·to raise • •
money and sponsor other fund· raising ·o.,.nts, such as
a oar wash, to earn their way to Arizona.
Costa Mesans are Ul'jed to ~ttend theae events and
. tn..aive generously to t~ • •tl'!lenb who have not only
tamed.the number,elll,i achoo! band spot Ip South-
ern Calill>mla bu~ U. · lo' work eveµ harder to hril>i llfper honora to ·<cllool and community. . . ~I ... ···~ L t ';_ ~· , ;; ·{ Qf frampJ . ~p~ugged'
•. " . " . ' . . Anyone who ~. eYl!l' been !)!'Ou gilt lo the-l!olJlng
pomt )?y trafflc.cong~;11.~ ~th .eo..s1.P1111c.dUr-
10g llie ruah hour will apt>rklrte-. new traffic experi·
ment now in progre'l' on·the southbllund Bristol Street
offramp from the san Diego Freeway •
This is" the offramp' on the easll>O\lnd side of the
freeway which takes a~tomobiles throUJh a cloverleaf
and over a bridge onto Bristol Street and >nOrth toward
the shopping center. Until the experiment began this
week, cars had to atop before lbey could merge with
Bristol Streel traffic.
All of this bad the annoying -and possibly danger-
ous -effect of damming up traffic on the offramp until
c~ were lined up bumper to bumper on the freeway
dunng peak hours and of. haltinf traffic on Bristol when
the offramp discharged. 1111 load o cars. ·
Now the stops have been eliminated. Offramp Ira!·
fie is provided ¥1itb ita o~ free-flow lane, obtained
al the expense of narrowing Bristol from three to iwo
lanes. _ 1
•
~ .. ~ ......
But the problem ,is that Southern California ma y
not be represented at.this prestigious high school event
because as of now the Estancia bandsmen do not have
H there is no significant increase in accidents
~aused by autos merging from 1he oil lane and over
into the extreme left lane to enter lbe shopping center,
the city should consider the experiment a success and
keep the hee-flow offramp permanently. c ~H E SAYS HE \'ttl~KS HERfi ~U'T HIS A<CEN1 AIHi' Vf P.Y ~UTTURAL:
Nothing New ·
In Student
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
N~ Enaplaasis _!ft Work and Self-discipline
Outlook for Nixon's Second Te,rm -i
R ebellions
FNEY J.HARRI~
Ri!Iling through all the journals and
publications that have piled up on my
desk the last few moiltbs, and trying to
decide wbal to file away and what to
throw away, I came across a fascinating
piece I should have mentioned months
ago.
. It Is called "Rowdies, Riots, and
Rebellions," and ap-
peared this p a s t
summer in "Ameri-
can History Illustra-
ted," published by
the National Hjstor-
ical Society. Writtto
by Lowell W. Harri-son; the artJcle
serves to remind us
thlt the 1980 decade
of unrest on Lhe campuses was by no
means a singular event in our history.
FROM Till! period of the American
Revolution right up to the Civil War -
the fint 85 years of our national e1-
istence -student unrest "was more
prevalent and more violent" thhn in any
other period of history prior to the 1960s.
By 1800, we are told, "student~ were
becoming more insistent upon being
treated as 'gentlemen' and upon receiv-
ing their 'rights' ... This new radica11.sm
clashed directly with {be tradition.ii· con-
cept of student!' status and the rigid
disciplinary codes which college officials
bad fonnulated to allltrol their charges."
MOST DRAMATIC of the incidents was
the "riotuous Commencemen t'' 11
Columbia in 1811, when a senior student
delivered an inflammatory address, and
was refused his diploma. His classmates
'lbere seem to be many more dogs
'running around. Could it be that
the Costa Mesa dog catchers are
turning them loose instead of pick·
ing them up?
-Z.F.
'fMI .....,.. Nfleetl ~ YMws. Mt __..IY ..... ef Ille -...-. ,_
YW1' ~ ,...... ,. GIMlnY 0-. 0.lfl' PIMt.
pushed him back on the platia1'1n, the
·provost ailled the city marst:mJ, but
students ~lmed the police, the
faculty was pal into full flight, and
st"¥"!•-~ 1>CJ5SOSSion of the church wl\Mt:.# fQmmencement took place.
J. PWofdiloP jfh.elock of Dpunoutb in-• t• ... "M'elaDcboJy must tie the prospect
of dtt ·futin't state of our cowitry when
those of the rising generation . . . un-
.:. d~ io Insult humanityiand justice, to
prostrate the laws and overturn the
social order."
il'j 1851, .be Universily ol North
Carolina bad an enrollment of 230; dur·
Ing 'the year the faculty •dealt with 282
cases of delinquent bebaviOr. In 1841,
Y;ale students defeated New Haven
firemen in a brawl, destroying their
equipment. In 1807 at Princeton haU ~
student body were suspended. Twenty
years later the University of Virginia
was the scene of student riots, with ann-
ed and masked students patrolling the
campus. College presidents were shot,
stabbed and bombed: a 'Yale professor
armed hiJJl.Sl!lf with two pistols for an ~
tire summer.
Student unrest is as old as the earliest
of medieval universities. The only things
new are the reasoos and raUonalizations.
Tbis is ~·hy those wbo are ignorant of
history are overw~lmed by current
events.
.
Only a Few Give Blood
WASHINGTON -What will President BUT IT JS essentially a wrong reading
Nii:oil:s second tenn be like.? Imperial? ~ 9 of Nixon that he ~ riding such a tide of
Remote. withdra wn ' Uncommunicative? RI. CHARD WILSON reaclioo in order to dehumanize and
That· would be the case if mo6t el the finally defeat the noble purpo&es which
current commentafy were to be believed. have inspired humanllarianism.
• ·"'· 'd h b' · .. ..A It caflnot be denied that a com-._,, ... g as1 e sue su 1ecUve Gt .... prcr ~; .. M tho's prospect by maki·ng · bably "~'""'..... .1. · ...... uf>'........... passionate concern for the human con-1errone<>us ) .. "'6 ..... ,ts, uie prunary numerous changes at the top m· the d · and the l"cal ~-t be etemeilts of the second term are three-iUon. po 1U rewa1wi o to~ -governmental administrative structure. gained therefrom, have motivated the
~ projection -But he locluded m those changes' no liberal DemoCratic movement which Is
of ~ eease-fire in glittering figure like John Connally to ex-no"' said of be at ebb tide. IndoddDa from a cite public interest, 00 soaring concepts But it cannot be denied, either, that the
staile phase of no or UVfiling panoramas. Nixon .pi'ograms as they. have been
war into reconcilia-p~ed to, and ignored by, Congress tton and reconstroc-Acrording to cae lnterpretallon a are the most advanced, and in some
Uon b1lsed upon mu-nbation~e tide ollberalf reaction, lorifR predicte~ eaies hdical, remedies ever presented
tual Biterests. . as set tn. The Ude o 40 years!! ...,.~a-tci.ervaUve-bued Republican presi· ~. an eieru· . ~ finally at ebb as f~th bas been lost liy dent. Miion, in fact, has absconded-with
tMi • imposed reor· , ~ ; • aver~g~ _people m . the worth . of ·• ideas lpng advanoed by the ganiza-t f oa .o~· ·Ti!Om{ and humanttananism as it bu been im-~,i. "ians, ai)p if thef .are
govemment aid p . ~".filtt cul· plemented by faulfy laws, 'Uoppy !""°-hedged by ~alive
backs ol funds a and to be grams. and windy ~'9. .~re is • ; they are ~ long way down the app~ted by Congreil. ~me eVJdence to .llJPpcfrt •ttft condu.Sion road Wm reactionary.
Third the cteation of an American at-m recent Gallup polls. People have !ost _L __ ~ in which business . and labor • faltb in the New ,Deal, FaJr Deal, New · 11IE ARG UMENT is not so muc~ over
will rDeet the groWing chi.Henge of world ' Fr.mtier, and Great Societ.y approaches what shall be done as how it shill be
rompetition, and tbr tradJUonal vaJues of which ~led. governmental aclion done. Nixon is trying to change the way
work self-confidenCe self.~ will Jor 40 yeafi, Welfare, permissive coo· welfare is administered, how funds on
be re'.empbaslied in ~veryday life duct, crime, racial excesse\ are education are spent, the method for im-
, _ · associated with the frame of minQ that proving health, on the ba$iC premile that tr•~ proves to ·be very eiclting, it for every shortcoming in American the spendthrift and sometimes corrupt
wW be. a . .cbange for presidential second society there must be a federal program , methods of the past have ·not worked.
t.erms. "me)' are often a let-down. 1be •ever loosely financed, badly ad-This exposes hiJD .to the m6st virulent
momentwn has usually been lost. Nixon nmistered, and oU the mark. attack from the education lobby, the
To tlie Editor:
Some time back you carried an Item
aboUt Ortega Hot Springs, explaininR how
the CCllllty workers were clearing the
underbrush ..tway to discourage nude
bathen from swimming in the hot pools
tere.
TIDS WEEK I ftnt to see the results,
and was sickened by the wreckage of a
once.natur1:I if. not beautiful; land.scape.
I '.fajJ to see the logic of the project.
( ..... _MAIL __ B_o_x_~J
resPonsibllity, to e1amine the plastic
halos of the legislature that won't tn
fairly but tosses the problem over to be
solved by human weakneW ·
other off-road vehicle owners planning to
use this land are required to buy off.
highway registration which costs '15 for
a two-year period. This is Supposed to
help pay for developing public riding
park!:, lobbyists in Sacramento and other'
things that help the off-roaders keep a
place to ride.
As far as I can see we are losing more
ai d gaining nothing. ls this mone'y really
going to our cause, or just some more
funds for Gov. Reagan to spend on
' farm lobby, the health lobby, and every;
other group which has a vested lnteresti
· in generously admlnistertd federal pro-J
grams.
But since when has Nixon demande<t
an end to educat!onal aid, an end to a~·~·
for the needy, and end to federally su
ported housing, or, for that matter,
tnd to the effort to create a desegrega
society? I
THE FLIMSIEST pretexiS are sehedl
-upoL to create..lbe .. Jmpressioo that N~ ~ become a megalomanic reclme ·
lbe While Howe plotting the destructi
of human liberties. One columnist call I
him the "mad bomber"; I
gresswoman equatet him with HiUer.
GenUer ttitics sar be trusts. rio -;
cludfug the general piiblfc lo wliOm
will not Impart bll inteJlla DOC explaia .
purpores.
Much of this will come to an end, o~
course, with lhe Indochina cease-fll'ej
Nixon would not talk abOl)t while
it was being negotiated. It will end, too,j
when lhe commentators recover frotnl
their annual alarTQ about freedom of the)
pz:ess, and when it is discovered that Nix-!
on will spend huge sums on welfare andJ
reforin. Nothing has been said so farl1 which cannol be dispelled' in ooe press,
conference or TV broadcast after thej,
cease-fire. I .
old and has two sons and a wife who lovl
him very much. He comes from a fanill
of aeven chlldren. He never owned a blk
before this one:
Two years a11:0, be suffered a heart at
tack. Was ouf of work for four mon~~
Then last year he diacovered he bad t!!"
dread disease arteriosclerosis (bardenliig
of the arteries). The arterie3 to his heart
were almost completely clogged! He
underwent major heart surgery. The doc-
tor took a vein from his leg and grafted Iustea3 of protecting the citizens of
Orange County from the imagined
obllcenilies of nude bathing, our county
wotkers here opened the ~ls to full
view o{ tbe motoristl·wh;o ~Is by. This
woold aeem to greatly Wreaae the
chanceo o1 offending ....tUve citluna.
The article asks whether those
churches that use bingo games will op.
pose a state lottery. l don't know. r do
believe that a lot of church people who
don't care about blogo, but who do care
about peoj;le, probably will.
something else!
ALAN GATES part of It to two of the arteries leading to
It happens every year at about this
time -the nation's hospitals and blood
banks report that their supplies of blood
are running perilous!~ low. The reason Is
simple enoaoh, 1C<Or;ding to .Marian G.
Mabon, public relations director of the
Richmond. Va., Red Cross. During major
holiday and vacation seasons, she says,
''There ii always a shortage of blood
coupled with a greater need -car ac-
clden\S, fires and olbtt emergencies." A
ma)or disaster sucl1 as a plane or bus
crash can lead to emergency imports of
blood from other areas.
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
fflMMl!RS, who stlll frequent the many as five "subclinical" cases poolJ · I wnbln; · mad
cases without manifest symptoms -for law t!ak:!.e ,,i;. the ~:::f no.:lusion~ ~
every case that is identified. 11ll! need for poHCe· pltroll-in the amt
THE MAJOR advances in blood muit, therefore, have rreotlr lnt:reaaed.
transfusion and banking are of relatively What has been gained 11~ nOt1 ait alt ol>-
recent origin. It was not until 1901 that v~ -what bu ~ • is. Orte11:a
Karl Landsteiner, an Au s trian Hot:!Sprin1s bas become an ecolog\cal
physiologist, discovered that there are diJ¥ler, paid for by the. cltbeni "of
ROBERT JORDAN ROSS, Minister
To the Editor: 1; -
I am writing la ret>IY to the arlicJe
Nobe Against Motorcycle Noise, Jan. 21.
. ' IT BROUGHT into c focus thal
motorcycles are be.Ing banned from
Callfornla ~ deserts. Motorcyclists and
Plea to Thl et
To the 'Editor:
The following is an open letter of 'ap-peal~thal I hope )'OU wiJI find a space for
in your pa~ --·
To the 1bief who stole the Phillips 10
&peed bicycle from the borne oCBruce
Clloe. rut COoway Ave., Costa Mesa, on
tfie ni11:ht of Jan. 20:'
LET ~IE tell )'O'J a little about tbe
11IE •·• ~lllLION pints of blood that different types of blood and that if tbe Orange County.
Dow annually through this country's donor's type an4 the recipient's are ill DEAN. ij, LUXTON Kerouac's w;z :;I Wor' ld complex chaDnels of acquisition. pro-matched _the rect_ ce.Ua clump and • • ~Ii W cess;tnt. d.mtibulion and use are roughly disintegrate. ThiJ,.aolved ttJe mystery of .Rta • _ • .,. · 1
sufficient to meet ~y-to-day needs. But why DDe tta.n.s(ulions hid been sue-~ • _ 1••·t;:c-t't ~iter~. -~j
there is litli' mar1<n of safel~ Na-cessful, while ,.borJ' reoU!ied in death. 'lb IJ!e•tllit.r· '. •• . · Wiid. Racy. Raw. lleot, Undwrot/nd. --. _.,... '".i,.~-------
tiOoal ~areb Council panel !bed ~el-nl ol (_.aU...,.atilanl! to ~ < ·"'-• ••• : .... • • .~:.J rtl '" · Ali these wonlo ·clescrlbo ·• m1j0r, un-. " . ;. the supPI~ ,1ituation 'tWo. ~ .... , cl<*lor'cam~ In 1114 'and dlaco..., u"!""'""" lot,..,.., a de..,. pro-published novel by'llie lite Jaclt'Keroil~. THE' BOOKMAN
ago aa one .of "Critical bat.-." Wliole ~the Rft lictor in IMO . .;;..,add-<i\t!llO · lot\"" ·lfo!!.. tf) stotes: -a tribute !O bis love' for Apierica.,11 · _,·
blood is . perlshable, even tbooP 'ilnd datrooe mlllture now used to · W!M ' ~ a.quote chronicle o1 ~ 'coUnti';'I crazy tram!' "''.;:-'..:w:.;';;""':;.· _.;.· ------J refrlgeroted . It remains usable oo loapo' preoorve stored blood waa concocted dur-from ~ backera • o1 this .,... iorblch t!Onl In the •4111 and 'IOI: Vls!ooa of .Cody
than three -ks. hence ii ~ be llif Wo(l~ wor II prevloalli failed In ' our · state. They (Mo<lraw.fflU, 18.95). . '"!Y dlnen, 'greasy Oophouae,I, m-
stockpll<cf lndeflnlteiy . against future Although every· penon may 11 ,.m. -.r Wbtre any opposition might come • ,. 'liiio 'min; smelly sutnny m-and·
need>. · time be In a'""' need of a blood from. (lni,_.., II frilirf-·tt m who W1UTl'!N a....al the ~ time as ~ an:idel.
Another hazard II that of contaminated transl us Ion or 1 medication derived from don't ~oularly Ul:e regresaift taxes his legendary On tbj! Road, tllu' book haa
blond. Of all lnfeclio!l4 that ml&hl be a human blond component, ooly a Uny that hot tboae least able to afford II. OJ long bad the underground repulallon of ·THEY LISTEN to tlie halll)Oll1 cl tnln
transmitted the greatest cqncem in ~ fraction of the population ever ·mikes 1 co1.rrse one can argue th~t no one la tore-~ Kerouac'• best work. Seen through brake• and watch a J1l8ltrlli • • fin
cent years baa be<n over 'tlie risk of blood donation. It 11 belle>ed 1hat 6ne-ed to buy a lottery ticket. bll'eyes, it is an account of the hopes and by a cigarette. They Uve, they Jo,;e, they
hepaUtis, a liver disease, especially when hall of the American people.,. qualified But ff the blnks, oomputer lnduatry, hatreds, moocll and actions of Cody ovkliy look, shlU'lng a time of -
fresh whole blood ls used. Some 30.000 by flKe and health to donate blood. Yet no and vendors w-11 as supitrmatUtl who11 Pomtra$, Ktt'OUIC'i lf'ttll Amerlc•n youth, searchina. challengina. hoping~ re-
caaes of traDJfUa1on-connected hepatitis more than three million a year actually profit from this, as you menUoo, do tbalr anll·bero. his al&er eRO, hit dread l'nemy, jectlng -J<>refoundcrs of the New Beat
occur yearly In the United States. and do so. Three-fourths of them give job well, the glittering canot wtll be bl' beloved brother. • Generation.
belween l,iOO and 1,000 c! them are falal. rtpeated\y. Thus, a major concern ol dangleJ in front oLm!>st °'-""'-~-The-llooll 1 ·lpee<kompo!l\don wtth Other worll br;l.Cl KeR>Uao11\C!UdC
Becauae ~ng on the .U-Is blOOJ!.l>anl<ing o!Oclais is finding .,me three or four Umeo dailf: lm't this whit the po-aod 111\1*1 of action palntlnl Oharma Bums, book of On>ama, Satori
known to lie lncomplele, the Incidence way to awaken In "'°" Amerfcant an 'makes' people buy IOap aod other -ls movlnc and _poetic. Cody and his In Paris. Town & lhe City, Stlb-
and mortality actualJ,y may be much obligation to give blood at least once a Items? The advertising men say to. And frimd travel lbe same raw road, vte.wtne ternocana, and Vabity of 'Dula. }
bJibcr. It II possible that there are as year. what do we teach our children about nfJroad brldpa bellind·w..-_ 1Dlif. CAROblNE llARKLEROAll
..
I I ' _,
the heart. 'Ibis time be was off work for
six months. Times have been hard, but
he is back to work now. He is a lathe
operator and must stand or sit in one
position all day. ·
TRJS BIKE (the one you recently took
out of his garage) was used in his atiug·
11:le to stay alive! There is no cure for
arteriosclerosis. One can ooJy try to get
lots of e1ercise and a proper dJet. I am
giving him the needed diet, but you took
away his best ionn of exercise.
If you bave any conlrience, or a bit of
good in your heart, pleaae retum lhJs
bike and no questions will be asked.
MRS. BRUCE CUNE
OltANGI COAST
DA ILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, P14bliaher
,L Thoma.a Krivit, Edlt<w
Barbcr11 Krclblch
l'ditoricll ~e Editor·
'
.~
TM tdltnrllt pe~•of lht> Delly
Pllol ~8 lo fnform and atlmu•
lale tttdtra by prtlt'ntln11: this _~.
n1111·1p1Jper'1 oplnloN •nd tOm·
1m-ntary nn 1opit1 of lntt l'Cllt •1'111
illgnlfkfln«', by 11"1Vldlng a torum
for t!W eJCpl't'lt\i)JI ot our re11.dl'ra'
npintona. and by prl"lt'nUn.a: thci
a1v~l'tt' ~~lntt 6nnrormcd ob.
IK'f"Vflnl ind •Pokt'M'M!n on topka
ol Utt• day,
Frldl,y, January 28, 1973
I