HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-01-30 - Orange Coast Pilot,
DAILY PILOT Badioactiv_e -Partic-les
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TUESDAY AFTE.RNOON, JANUARY 3.0, 1973
#n ·Cigarettes Bla1ned
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• • • • • • • • • • •
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• I
'D d' i ea : -Marine on· POW List
Radioactive
, .
I ~ k r:. ~..l ~n .\Atrn... ,
1 hi. Tobacco
• By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lfle Delh' Pllet Sltff
'
Possibly the bl'ost damaging ~ thing
smokers do to their lungs is deposit with
~b puff' small radioactive particles.
The radioactive particles in turn produce
dangerous, alpha-emitting particles
w~ in SUfflCient quantities, may cause
lung cancer.
The renewed link between radioac-
tivity, SJDOking and lung cancer, was the
subjecl of a piper preoented Tuesday
night before the Amettcan Chemical
DA.IL YI PILOT Slifl. • Societ~ I division of nucl~r chemistry
PROBES TOBACCO. RADIATION and Iechnolngy. The ''°"P" meeting In
Chemist E: A.-MOi'iett---the Newporter.lmLllti! week.
•Dr. E. A Martell, 54, a nuclear chemist
with' the National Center for Atmospheric
Leary Whisked
Back w County
To Face Court . t -
By TOM BARLEY
Of tllt o.lly PllM Slllf
Research In Boolder, Colo., told fellow
scientists about his three.year effort to
explain the presence of radioactivity in
lungs of smokers reporled by other
researchers. ,
Martell, Who quit .smoking 11 years
ago, believes his new hypothesis may ex-
plain why cigarilte smokers 'gel cancer
of th' lungs. As a scientist interested In the pollution
of the atmosphere, Marte1l's real concern
is the effect of nuclear power plant
radiation on humans who may be es:·
posed to other forms of nuclear energy.
The pollutant associated with tobacco,
., ·-
~. ;" , ,• . ' .• ~-~h .. ,, ,., . ·( .. s-.. ~•-· _at, T~e ~gain . ' ~ . ~ .
....... .:·~.;. ... 1...-. • • ..... '
This .was the line outside state Department of Motor
Vehicle offices in Costa Mesa Monday as m$ri.sts
faced the Feb .. 2 deadline !or 1973 auto registration.
Actually, department offit;ials said, the rush to DMV
DAll.J PILOT J11ff PMolt
offices is not· necessary. Under a ne)V Iaw;-1 all car
owners have to do is mail in their money and regis-
tration slips prior to midnight Friday.
,A long day In Orange C:Ount)NSuperior
COurt loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent LSD cultist, flank~
ed by three lawyers, again cHallenged the
legality of his arrest Jut· 'mcuth tn
Afghanistan. 1
'
however, is a natural product of radia· H s u.;;e~~=edi:~~l!'.ihaJ -eis __ man tar Rodgers Democrat Poses
Home Bte'v Bill
For California
. Judge James Turner denied a series of
1'!iliollll bo(ore ohockin&_lbe..jlobe,tro~
ting guru and his attonieys by · himoeti
ruing a plea of innoCent' on ~half of
Leary -an action that· ti'rotlglit. lm·
rpediate protest from Costa j..Mesa trial
lawyer Geoi'ge Chula, Ld.i'y's chief
cOunsel. , ·
, Judge Turner switched the aession to
the courtroom of Presiding Judge Bruce
SQmner o{ Laguna Beach after also de-
r&ing Leary's renewed plea that he be
aJlowed to supervise bis Oifll defense on
multiple drug charges contained in an·
Orange County Grand Jury indJctment.
•.Leary, 52, stood open-mouthed in
istonishment as Judge Tumtr also told hbn 11ti! morning that he might have to
. IO on trial Wednesday with a numbet of
defendants sim.llar)y indicted In lhe
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug,con-
8'-racy.
••111'1\at's crazy," Chula aaia. 4'T!ils,
all have to be thrubtd out before J~
sumner aod I "'nt to .......... now that no court baa Ibe rfibt to try .
Leary oo any charg• ID -.lew-<lf IM--ny
be ftB tidnaped."
Leary, whisked overnlllht under..pan!
to orange County Jall from hls •cell at
San Luis Obllpo County Jail, smlled,
winked and .waved to a crowd of ad-
mirel'1 in lhe court room whtle Jlldp
IS.. LEARY, hi' ll
\
,l
1
an "uncaDRY" ability to attract very
~ "almost invisible" patlicles of
radiation. The particle& accumulate In -----~~:~~IbeUpsofunybailion . _D, rafie.' d by' San Diego
When the· tobaccoJs burned at Ille tip
• of a · clgatette, "highly lnsolllble" ra~ctlve paitldes.8boul tlie sae 'of a
smoke ,particle are formed.
"Each !mob ·):fVltcle which ln-
(llee CANCER, Pal• I)
f
TOPLESS DANCERS'
ARRESTS UPHELD
LITTLE· ROCK, Ark. (UPii , ;_ 'hie
Arkansas SUpttme Court baa upbeld' the maecent exposure convictions Of two
topless dancer> who contended tWr.,.,.
victioos _. dlscriminatory -ban><bolled men are DOI IUbject to ar-
rl!ll. , •
Mondale Justice J. F..,i -
-the•-' JK; • ..,, .....
.. Ibe male species ol homo -... , DOI physlmUJ OQ\lipped for cafl1lh8 oat
Ibe spectflc aldblUon wlth wtdcfl lht II>"
pell.anti are charf'd Jn lhll mR."
'Ille c;ourt lel . -'1ICl flnel ipblll Lorie RobinllOO and Shirley Mcrrla. '
•
From Wire Servlets
NEW YORK -The San Diego
Chariers today 'dr'afted Heisman Trophy
winner Johnny Rodgers of Nebraska in
the National Football League's annual
player draft. d
He. was selected on' tbe 2Sth ro by
the Chargers, who obtaioed the dral Ing
spot in a deal that sent quartert¥1ct Ml<!Y..Domrts 'Io' Ballhpe, The Colla
earlier gained tbe spot in a deal with
Washington. ·
The Los Angeles Rams do not have a
pick In the fint round, havinC traded it
awfj.llst year. John Matuszak, a &-lool-7, 280-pound
tadde 1rom Tampa, wu cbooen by the
-Olien u Ibe first playtr In the c1ra1t. (see story, Pace 11.)
'l')le -Olien ea~ the No .. 1 pick by
flnllhlDg with the -sl record In the
leape (HJ), It was the tecond straight
year a lineman llu picked as the fi!lt
choice. I
'Die lllltiplore Coils, picking second,
• •
took Louisiana Stale quarterback Bert
'Jones. Jones 1s expected to fill the void
Je·ft by lhe trade of superstar John Unitas
to San Diego.
Rodger.s' selection was obviously
delayed because he weighs only 173
pounds and stands just S-.9.
He. is expected to be used as a wfdc
receiver and kJck retur.ner by San Diego1
although he occasiorially was used-u 1
running ha~ In collece ellber fro\n his
Danker position or from Ibe MormaUon.
Rodgen, the top career an,purpo,.
runner In college football history, caulht
SS paue1 last seaJOD for Mi yards and
finished third nationally In all-purpose
nmn!ng with 18U·y!fds ~ &lll!lf!· Re holds 29 Nebraska rttordJ, seven
Big Eiiht Conference marb and four na·
tk>nal standards and was a star in his
final game by acor!ng four touchdowns
and passing for 9' fifth as the
Cornhuskers slammed Notre Dame in the
Orange Bowl. •
SACRAMENTO (AP) -calilornlans
would be pennitted to legally brew their '
own beer in the comfort of their own
kitchen under a law proposed by Assem·
blyman Larry 1 Townsend, a Torrance
Democrat.
Townsend told the Legislature l\1onday
that his measure ls "atrlctly for moms
and pop! who like their home brew. Right
l'IOW, you Can•t make anr beer 'tn yoor
home, and ·we found uiere're a loi of
violators." '
Townsend aald ~"became awar-e of the
problem alter an eXpiollon occurred while
a cons~tuerit waa maklnc , beer In his
kitchen. When police arrived, they told
him he waa breakln~ the law.
"Then this guy started talklng lo his
neighbors and found pne of them were
making bre.'ft', too," said Townsend.
11'le lawmaker added he had never m9de any •4home brew" hlmsclr.
CUrrtntly, it ts leg1tl to make up to 200
gallons of wine a year at home.
• • •
No1·th Viets
Say GI
S"iill 'Alive
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Defenoe
· Department said today a A1arlne listed
as killed and returned to this country for
burial has turned up on North Vietnam's
list .of prisoners of war.
He was identified as PFC Ronald L.
Ridew8y of Houston. Tex.
He is the soo of Mrs. l\1lldred A. Ridge-
. way, who in 1968 was listed as living al
7926 Fulton SI., Houston. She could no1
be reached immediately for comment.
~laj. Gen. Daniel James, Pentagon .
spokesman for POW matters, said author·
ities believed Rkteway was among nine
Marines kiUed Feb. ZS, 1968, in an am-
bush near Khe Sanh.
Remains identified as Ridgeway's had
been returned to the United States and .
buried at Jelferson Sarracks in St. Louis .
James also said (wo men on the POW
list provided by Hanoi bad been canied
by the Pentagon as deserters and 15
others Lhe Conununisls said d1ed in cap-
tivity had been listed as killed in action.
The two previously considered desert-
ers, James said, were Marine Pvta. Fred-
erick-Lewis Elbert, who Hanoi said was
alive in prison, and Earl C. Weathennan,
who Hanoi said died)h capUvlty.
James did not provide the hometown
of either mart.
James said Ridgeway was a member
of a fo.farine patrol operating near Khe
Sanh while that outpast was under Com-
munist siege in 1961.
"There was a patrol that was ambush-
ed" he said. "There' was a casualty
count made. ExacUy bow It wu made -
{See POW1, Pare %)
'
C:.ut
Welidler
ll'll be partly cloudy on Wedn ...
da y, ·with a slight increase In t~
perature, according to the weather
. service. Hlgbs of 60 at the beaches
rising to 62 inland are e1pected.
Low.s tonight 41. • INSIDE TOltAY
A .tmall wwn newspaper's edi·
to.rial about the local judicial
•Y~ pron1pted ajud,ge_to../ife
a contempt citation oaoinlt tlu
,,.,,.,. -th< /irtl ..., fil<d
011er Oil edi£orial. ·6tt . •torr on
Poge 5,
'
• 2 DAIL V PILOT s T'ucsd.1,y, JaruJIJ')' JD, 1'97l ...
Viet · Battles Taper Some-But Still -Raging
SAIGON I UPI) -The lnlen~ty ol
lighting ln South Vietnam lapered off 10-
day, lhe lhinl day ol lhe olftdal ceue-
fire, aeeoa'ding to P')ilitary ilOUrttS, but a
big battle was reported belwetn South
Vietnar:nese n1arines surrounded by COn1·
n1unist troops in northern Quang Tri prov-
ince.
The IO\'CI Of fighting -altbo~h lower
th.1111 SWlday und l\1onday -s1ill \\'9.!I
higher lhftn at 1nany times during the 12.
years of rlt;hting in South Vietnarn.
Governn1ent troOps and Comn1unists
tilso 1ikirm1shed arow:id two provincial
capitals cut off b~ O>mmunists Ind
lhe SOUtll Vlel!WrleSO drove CommUll!atl
out of seven! twnlets near Sal&oll.
The South Vietnamese command
reported 765 ba.ttleOt'ld lntldtnts between
the start or the cease-fire at! a.m. Sun-
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1.111 Communists and m
South Vietnamese toldiers killed and an
•ddlLional 1.070 South Vietnamese wound~
ed. Several dozen tu\•e been listed 11s
n1issing.
. l\iilit&ry sources rel)Orted heavy
fighting between South Vietn~se
*
marines and Ccmn!Unlsts ntar tlie mouth
ol lhe Qia Viet River, northeast of
Quana Tt1. Martnes rushed tllroqgb the
art• about tile time ·of the _...nre,
rec1pturlng a naval base held by the
Communists since spring. The marines
hllve sfnce been surrounded.
1be sourcts said t.bere was .one spon-
taneous display durlog lhe llgbtlq. At
one point. troops. stopped shooting brief·
ly. stood up cheering and approached
each other to shake bapds and exctiange
embraces. Fighting cootlnued. farther
llOIJth, ~~.
The command said the hl.ltbways
leading out of Saigon, except for tlie road
to the former belch J'tlOl't of. Vq Tau,
· hive been rtopeoed a n d Communists
driven out of 73 hamlets in the Saigon
arta.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived
In Salgon today to deliver assurances of
tonUnued American aupport for the
Thieu· government.
Agnew dined with President NgU}'en
Van Thltu at Independence Palace and
1ssued a statement saying the United
Statea recogn!zeQ Thieu's goverrunent u
lhe "sole, le1lt1mate government ol U.S. officials ezpect no trouble meel!ng
South Vietnam." the deadline at the cumnt wJthdr1w1 I
-force• w.,. not l!'volve<I In rate. •
today'I fl&btinc. Tho ,Jaol AmoJIWt There have been DO report& of
!lgl\ltNlomher unll In Vietnam, Mlrlne ~ Americana cauih~ up, In the battl~ since
Alr·group II from Bien Hoa air.baa& ll ~Y anti for th• moat port U.S. of.
mll&I northoaat of Saigon, bqan pulllnf-rlcers have told their men to take • low
out Monday. pro!Ue. .
U,S. IJ'.llopa"'lltl aolni hoU>,._•t .. lboJ'aJa_ . °'1• American l>e~~r J!llg\, WOltlld·
ol aboUt 400 a llay. 1ltm .,. about ed leas lliJlc tWQJiours· Iller the .. _...,
21,000 Am.erlcana Jell in l(leilll:Dl ml all lire ll'tpt Into ell!ct, died Monday,
mlL!I he out o! tile country bi' the end of becomJn1 tile flat American casualty
Man:h. • 11nce lhe official end,ol Ibo war.· . -
l 111111i9ratio1a Dis paat e Santa -A na Deal
Squabbles Hold
Peace Forces Up
Officers Break
I
·Auto Theft Ring
SAIGON ( UPll -Oiplrmatic squab-Ninety Communist Vietnam e 1 e Oranfle detectives arrested two men
Mondly in part ol what ls believl'd to~ a
nationwide auto theft ring dealing in lui:-
ury cars.
fiscated another 1972 Cadillac driven by
Sergeant Ealman. It was reported 1tolen
in New York.
bting bet\'1een the Saigon government and member3 · of the Four-Party Joint
Communists ass igned to help supervise Military Commission set up to inspect
the Vietnam <:t!ase-fire caused another the machinery for the cease-fire arriv~.-
delay todty in plans that woi.;ld have had Monday from Hanoi aboard two U.S.
lnvfstigators Dennis Dahlke and Bob
La.Barge assertedly made a deal for a
tm Cadillac El' Dorado ln East Slnta
Ana and paid for tll• car witll 14,000 In
the force 1n the field by now. C130 transport planes. f'l'0111P-.el
f'ro111 P age 1
POWs ...
\\'hether by a ground observer, or from
the air, or what -is untown. The count
reported nine bodies."
James said there was a period from
·Feb. 25 to Aug. 16 that recovery forces
could not reach the area \\'be.re the vie--
tims lay.
'·During this period , the area was under
bombardment by mortars and air
strikes," he said. "There wa.s also the
normal deterioration from the tropical
environment. Positive iridlvidual identifi-
cation of some partial remains was im-
possible.
"When they did get in there, they felt
they had the remains of nine individuals.
"The remains of what "'as believed lo
be nine members of the patrol were in-
terred in a group burial at Jefferson
Barracks National Cemetery, St. Louis.
Ridgev.·3y v.•as believed to be in that
group of remains." .
James said the Jellerson BarrackS
Ceme1erv was selected by the families
of the r\ine because it w~ the ''most
central location" to the various towns in
v.•hich they lived.
Ridgew.ay's relatives were notified that
he WJl.S alive within 24 hours after the
Hanoi list notifications began Saturday
night, James said.
James said the Commun ists reported
in providing their list that Ridgeway was
captured Feb. 25 -the day of~the am-
bush. He did not say where the Marine
\vas imprisoned. but presumably lt was
in South Vietnam.
James gave this comparison of the
North Vietn_am prisoner list with Penta-
gon records:
-Of the 555 listed as alive by Hanoi,
the Pentagon previously considered 508
to be prisoners, 45 to be mis.sing in ac--
tion, one to be killed in action and one to
be a deserter.
~ tht 55 Hanoi said died in eaptiv-
Hy. the United St.ates previously li!ted 27
as prisoners. 11 as missing in action. 16
as killed in action. and one as a deserter.
Fullerton Bank Hit
For $990 by Gunman
A man shoved a note at a teller,
simulated possession of a gun at a
Security Pacific National Bank branch in
li~ullerton and escaped with $990 tn
currency Monday, police reported.
The note demanded the money in $100,
$50, $20 and $10 bills, officers said. The
bank is located at 101 N. Harbor Blvd.
I
OIANM COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
TM Or ..... c.eet1 DAtt..Y ,IL.OT, '*111t 'fllftlr;tl
IJ. ~ tM ~ .. pUOOshd lrt
ttle or~ Coest "-'blhhlnt evmo.nr. s.p..
r•ll ed!llDN l rl pUtlllllltd, Me!IU'f ~
Frld•y, for Ont. MIN, Newport lie.cf\.
Hunll""IOll hedll r:-.tn V1lity, L..-.
•Mdl. lr.olM/S-..ltMdl w ..,, Otrntrrtel
~ Jt11tn CtPls"-A 1lngl1 1"19klMI
edltioll 11 P\lbHlhtd Stfvrd~ tN Swill..,..
The prlnclllft Pllblltl'llllt pllnt h ti bl Wftt
INY Slf..t. Costa M-, Clllflmll. ....
Roh•rl N. We.d
Pr111den1 tnd Pllbllll/ltt
Jac:k R. C11rft y
Ylct Pm1c1 .. 1 tnd Glr!enl M..,..-
Tiioma1 Kffvll
EOltor
Thom11 A. Mur,,Jilnt
MIM!tll'll f:dllo<"
Ch1rl11 H. loot Richtr4 P. Ntll
Alllsltnl Mtnttlnl f:dllof't
°"'"' c:.tl Mfta: U0 WIST a.., 1ltlft
..........,, 91ldl: :Ill) NtwPOrt lou1f\litN L&9uN llMdl: m ,-.,.., AWtflut
fflJllll ... Mlfll &Mell: 11Vf a.ell ~
$tl'I C....._tt: as Norlll 11:1 C&mlnt ....
Ttl ....... 1714, '4Z .... l21
C'-"W .......... '41·1171
,.,_ c:..1111-1 .,..., '-"' ., ...... ltldl
491-4421
.,... ,_,. Or._ c....ty CMl-llltt _, ...
COpyrlfl'lt, ttn., Orll'IOf CO.st h&lltfllnt CMIHny, Ne -.· Jf1t1M, nMtra11oM,
tdllOrlll lftttllt 1t ~1...-rtl lltrllll
IMY .. r~ wl"""" tlllCltf ,.,. mlubl DI' Uflt"ltrll' -.r.
llcond ~-11ttl-llfld ti COttl Mna. C.11'-"lt. IWKt!Pllon ~ carrW UM 1'IOflllll~f ~ !Mii il,lf mtnll\Nl mlJ!I'""
•i1T11tllont UM IMllllllJ,
• But I.hey remained on them overnight
at Saigon's Tan Son Nhut Ai r Base In
protest of the government ·requirement
that they fill out immigration fonns
before entering the country.
Soun:es at lhe airyort said lhe 21-bour
sit·in ended today when the Communists,
SO North Vietnamese and 40 Viet Cong,
finally left lhe planes and wero taken to
Cam p Davis on the base where other
Corrununist and international delegations
are staying.
There was no explanation of what com-
promise, if any, was reached that enabl·
ed them to disembark.
The Communists insist they are
citizens of Vietnam and do not have to
fill out immigration papers.
Thirteen North Vietnamese a n d Viet
Cong wbo arrived ln saJgon Sunday
registered the same complaints and
stayed aboard their aircraft for 22 hours
before deplaning Monday.
The South Vietnamese foreign ministry
allowed that group to leave Ute plane "In
order lbat the .. _ commission may
begin to carry out its resp0D5ibilities,"
but warned lbat the decision did not
"ronstitute a precedent."
The military commission -composed
of North and South Vietnam, lhe United
states and the Viet Cong -its to work
with the four·member International
Comission for Control and Supervision
(ICCS) to superviJe tile cease-lire.
The two groups met separal<ly Mon-
day and today but acting ICCS Chairman
Michel Gauvin of Canada aakl today he
was still trYJng to arrange meetlDga wltll
tile military group.
FronaPagel
CANCER ...
corporates the • • • (tobacco hair) or
Craction thereof, will contain a relatively
high concentration of lead·210 and its
radioacUVfi daughter, blsmutb-110," Dr.
Martell said.
Now, the emissions from these
particles do oot happen to cto much
damage to twues. When they were
isolated sis: years ago further study of
this possible source of lung cancer was
abandoned, Martell explained. The im-
portance of Martell'• new work is the
compleUon of the chain of events
radioactive materials undergo.
"The larger and more insoluble of
these smoke particles will persist in the
bronchi sulflciently long to allow for the
growth of polonium-210," be said.
Polonium 210 emits the alpha rays
which.may damage tissues nearby.
"The actual distribution of lead-210
radioactivity on tobacco leaf surfaces
and in smoke particles. and the
persistence of the particles in the bronchi
remain to be determined ," he added.
Counting the incredibly fine hairs on
tobacco leaves Is very difncult and time
consuming. Further, because of the half.
lives of the materials involved, it will
take at least a "two year researeh ef-
fort" to know "whether these insoluble
particles bold sufficient radioactivity pe~
particle to be of biologicaJ significance,
Martell said.
Ul'I T ..... 19
Hairy Coverup
Four members of the Texas Army National Guard are shown outside
federal court in Hquston as they Sought permission to wear short-hair
\vigs over the~ flOfi,ng Jocks during weekend duty for the Army.
-Except l~r Tames Doty, 23 (left), all wore wigs to court. Others, from
left, are James Williams, Daniel Durerstetta and Darrell Hammett,
all 20.
Watergate Attorney Says
Liddy Headed Operation
LEARY •••
marked bills. Turner advised biln of hll rights.
Arrested on tbe scene were Johnny Among the courtroom observen: who
Jcnes, 37, of AUanta, Ga. and Anny staff acknowledged bls cheery waves and who_ serg~t Marvin Eatman, 42, of Carson. were warned about tbefr conduct by Five men were arrested ln an, in-cluding two U.S. army sergMnt.s aod a court bailiffs, was Joanna Haroourt-
Marine sergeant. The only Orange Coun-Smith, the British socialite who bas been
ty man jailed was Larry L. Thorson, 3.1, Leary's constant companion since shortly
of 14! Queensbury St., Anaheim. before his arrest in Afghanistan last
Orange police said lheir investigation month.
of the ring began last November when an Miss Harcourt-SmJth, rt, the niece of
infonnant told them that blgh priced London publishing magnate Simon
stolen cars were being peddled here. Harcourt-Smith of the Harrourt Press,
Military recruiting sergeants were told newsmen today that she is Leary's
assertedly used as contact men by the wife.
ring. They handled commlll!katloos and She displayed letters from Leary In
drove cars across state Unes. which the former Harvard phlloaopher
Some of the stolen cars were taken assured her that be regarded her u bis
directly from Detroit factories before spouse despite bll Wstlng wlion with
tlley had been registered. Mrs. Rosemary Leary, 40.
Dahlke said the going price was '3,500 "Tb.is letter (written In Orange County
but the local officers offered $500 more to Jail) froni my perfect love is all the
gel a delivery in Orange County. Usually legality I need," she assured newsmen.
the ·stolen cars were so(d at major She attended all Leary's court ap-
airport parking Jots. · pearances in San Luis Obispo where he it
The two other military men. arrested charged with escape following bis fiigbt
v.·ere U.S. Army Sergeant Joe Taylor, 42, in September ol 1970 from the geriatric
of Lynwood, and Marine Corps Staff Ser· ward ol. the men's colony in that com-
geant Gary Dalessandri., 33, of Haw-m= was at the time serving a state
tborne.. prison term of one to 10 years for bis
WASIIlNGTON (AP) -A Watergate ageD! Allrel C. Baldwin m, who i,f1..;ivj:,~,'. ':~~~ ~:u:".S cooYlctloo In Orange .~ty oo charJlea
defeme lawyer oonceded todlly that Nix-testified that Uddy w a 1 present in conspiracy. of p•e11Mla of D)ari,_....
an campaign official G. Gordon Liddy a motel room in which Baldwin was Tbe car sold to Dahlke was stolen Jan. He Wu tried lffth .bis wife, Rolemary,
headed a political Intelligence operation, monitoring calls !mn a tapped telephone 21! in Atlanta and driveo hero by Jones, anti !IOll, John, I!, following lhe arrtll of
but denied Liddy had anything to do witll In Democratic Party headqµarters. police allege. 'fbe officen alao ooo-the trio In Laguna Beach OD Dec. 28,
burglary and wiretapping. Maroulis said Baldwin's testimony was 1968.
He spoke in the closing stages of the "something less than crystal clarity," Leary was not allowed today to stage
trial which grew out of the break-in and and declared, "Mr. Ba1dwin was worried the impromptu press conference that
alleged bugging of Democratic··Natlonal about his own Well being." A1iti-abortion preceded his appearance laat week In
Headquarters in tbe Watergate building Liddy is one of two remaining defen-JuJ,~: ... ~ =~~ar tbls mom-
complex: in Washington last June. dants in the case, being tried before ""6. he dis 1 ased with h f
"We don't take issue witll lhe fact that District Judge John J. Slrica. The other . Bill Entered ~ l::r!rm.u'fy t11af !.1e....i Into mtb! ~ Mr. Liddy was the boss," defense at-defendant ls James W. McCord Jr., who raigmnent 00 Leary'a last appearance.
tomey Peter Maroulis said. was security chief of the Nixon cam-Leary was not allowed today to discuss
But Maroulis argued tllat Liddy, palgn. WASHINGTON (AP) -A con-hll caae witll newsmen and he was not
general roimsel for the Finance Com-AicCord's lawyer, Gerald Alch, COD-stitutional amendment to prohibit allowed an interview with MlD Hartourt·
mittee to fte..Elect the President, ·was ceded that his client was caught in the act abortions in most cases was pn> Smith.
engaged in legitimate information of burglarizing the Democratic bead-posed today by Rep. Lawrence J. He is one of nearly 50 penms Jndlcted
gathering, including a warning of poten-quart.en, but said McCord was Hogan (R-Md.). by the Grand Jury on drug charges stem·
tial violence which led the Republican justifiably motivated by fear for the He called the U.S. Supreme Court ming from what lawmen cla1m was the
Party, be said, to move its convention safety of the Nixon campai~. -c.. "morally bankrupt" for Jts ruling multi-million dollar activity of the
from San Diego to Miami Beach last "Mr. McCord was iosrae tile •triking down most antio)lortion Brotherhood of Eternal Love.
summer. Watergate, tllal'a a fact," Alch said. "But laws. It Is alleged that the organization had
"It was a very important decisioo to Jim McCord Is not a burglar. His motiva-Hogan said enactment of a con-links throughout tbt world and was tn-
move lbat convention from San Diego to tlon and intent were not that of ."Si stitutlonal amendment would be the strumental in Importing vast quantitle.s
Miami," Maroulis' said. "And that was burglar." only effective way to oounteract the of illici t drugs into the United States.
done on information from my client. Alch said that his defense rested in court's 7-2 decision last week that It is alleged that much of that dnig
"'Ibat wu not the recommeodatloo ol "trying to distinguish his state of mind states may not forbid women to traffic originated in several of the 11 na-
a burglar," Maroulil said in his closing from all others" and establish that have abortiom durinf. the first siJ tions visited by Leary during the tour
argumenls to the jury. McCord was driven by a reasonable months of pregnancy. t\la:t followed bis escape from the San
The case was expected to reach the concern. Luis Obispo prison.
Jury later today. . I~~~==========:'.=::::::::~~~====:::::::::::::::::::;; Maroulis also attacked the reliability of
the two principal prosecution witnesses,
saying t b e y offered "fabricated and
embellished" testimony to protect
themselves.
A particular target of Maroulis was
Thomas Gregory, a B~ Young
University student, who testified . that
Liddy attended meetings to plao a.hreat-
in to plant electronic bugs at campaign
headquarters of Sen. George McGovern.
He said Gregory offered his lestimooy
because "he was afraid for bis own
skin."
h1aroulis also challenged former FBI
AROUND THE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
we HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFf THE BEATEN PATH."
LBJ Autopsy SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. RRSTL Y, THE COST OF STORES
IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WER E
ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH UTI'LE TRAFFIC CONGESTION
LEADING TO US. Disease s Prevent,cd Operation
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Four doctors who treated former
Presidenl Lynd on B. Johnson for heart ailments said today they de-
cided against performing coronary bypass surgery oD Johnson be-
cause of extensive heart dama ge and a seriously diseased colon.
THE DOCTORS, IN A statement Issued· at Brooke Gen~ral Hos-
pital, said an autopsy of the former president's body conflnDed their .
diagnosis that the colon was extensively siclcened With diverticulitis.
His heart suffered damage In an April, 1972 attack.
:'Numerous tllUicult decisions were faced in the medical man-
agement of President Johnson," said a one-page statement. 11He en-.
dured his tllfficu!Ues with courage and resolved to enjoy life as much
as conditions pefmltted. Hts lamUy and physicians w!)l!)d like to re-
affirm -his passionate commltrn!nt to more researclllii combatting
our major health enemies!'
TOM JOHNSON, FORMER AIDE to Jobnson but not relai.d,
cleared the stateD)ent with the family of the late President. He said
it was issued "In order to clarify the eV<?nls which preceded the death or former President Johnson."
..
THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY. THAT WE HAVE
INCREASED OU R VOLUME EVERY YEAR FO llSJXTEEN YEARS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
ALDEN'S
IM
COSTA MBA
lfNCI 1tf1'
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CARPETS eDRAliES
1663 Placentia Awe.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
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Land 'Jitle
To School
Due Soon
Title .to 12 acres of !ind In Top of tbe
~ World may be In lite hands of tbe Laguna
Beach Unllted School Dlltrlct wllhln a
month.
The land buy -tn ...,,.. for tbe put
14 months -will C<>St the dlshict
118(1,000, all of which ba3 been budgeted
this year.
It II located on undeveloped land jual
beyond the west end of Alta Laguna
Boulevard.
Tile pareel of 2S lots, a~ to Dr.
<llarles Besa, -.. 1 .......-i
for business, now is owned by Prudential
Savings.
Approval lo Piircbue tbe site wss
granted by the board In 11171l, but WIS
delayed unW acceas, grading and .-
ment details could be worked oul.
Cloalng of escrow wlll be ooollngenl on
city of Laguna Beach acceptance of an
easement for extension of Alta Laguna
Boulevard.
The city council wlll act on the ..,..
ment acceptance Feb. 7.
\ The c!l'.., allo ll expected lo deed back o ~ I district an eaaement once
earmarked for an. eztemlon of Tyrol
Drive. '
One. the UUe lo the parcel 11 llllled lo
the dlllricl, tt will be up lo !fie ocbool
board lo decide bow and wbeo .the land
wlll be developed.
Al the Ume the purcbele WU atarted,
board memben talked of uae of the prop.
ertl' as a ...... non ·fadllty, Including
teonll courts lll1<j a pla!'lng lltld.
The first task, however, wlll be' lo level
a hill on the site. The dirt wlll be "5ed to
fill lower areas of the parcel, Heaa noted.
Development of the land II expected to
reduce the number of motOreyclllts
wblcb currenUy ride there. 'Ibo motorcy·
cle problem now is being curbed by the
Laguna Beach Police Department at the
request of local residents.
The scbool dlltrict currenUy owns 63.6
acres of land. AcquisiUon of the Top of
the World 1lte will raise that figure to
more than 75 acres.
.Tustin Schools ··
Face $4 Million
Suit by Parent
Tustin Elementary School Dlltrlct
trustees and 11c11oo1 olllclals have betn
sued for IU million In Orange County
Superior Court by a local resident who
claims be was maliciously proaecuted
when he sent his children to a private
school.
Sterling S. Sbarfar Jr., a former can-
didate for a seat on the school district
board, claims the damasea for "JOSI of
reputation and friends" suffered by tbe
prosecution last year of btmself and bis
wife, Kerry.
Action taken in Santa Ana Muolctpal
Court under provlsiont of the state's
Education Code was dropped last April
when school diatrict officlalg learned the
identity of the private school in which the
Sharrars enrolled their cblldreo, Cynthia,
10, and Steven, 8.
Both students bad alteOOM Sywnore
F;lementary School. Dlltrlct offlclall aald
they P""""ted the Sharrars becauoe
they bad failed to comply with provlsions
of the code by relu.olng to state the name
of the private scbool now being attended
by the children.
Corona Retrial
iMotion Delayed
: FAIRFIELD (UPI) -Ooovlcled mass
!slayer Juan V. Corona's plea for a new
trial has been postponed for a week by a
~Judj:e who found "some algnificance" In ~the defense argument that a sheriff's
'matron improperly dbcussed the case
·with i l!u'<>r.
Supertor Court Judge Richard E. Pat-
. ton delayed the hearing Monday to give
"the prosecution time to study Corona's
.. 14-page motion fOJI a new trial.
~-'Ille judge ·allo-announced that be will
sentence Corona next Monday on 25 counts of first-degree murder. The Mex·
' lean farm labor contractor faces life [m..
pri~ent, with po!8lb!llty of parole
after seven years.
D Ov DAILY PILOT Stiff l'Mto1 R ER (LEFT) AND STUDENT COMB IRVINE RANCH SITE; FOR CLUES
Summer of 71 Dig Led to Dlacovtry Placing Cultuntd People In County 11 5,000 B.C.
Only 5!!000 . Years Wro~g
. I •
Class Seeks 1910 Remains, Finds 5,000 .BC Objects
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of 1119 Dalff' Plitt Shift
No one could bave lr:oowo at uie Ume
tbe DAILY PILOT coverage of a Cal
State Fullerton archaeology class "dig"
above Upper Newport Bay in July, 1971
lncorrecUy stat.ci the date of the
suspected Inhabitants by 5,00ll years.
At the Ume, Cluis-
topher Drover aod
students 1n his sum-
mer school antbro-
pollgy class were
looking !Or traoes of
the Luisano Indians
who were believed to have encamped
~., 1,000 years ago with-
.._. In the 80 by 110.loot
area first logged as a "midden" tn 1910.
Drover, now 25, of Laguna Beach, onJy
1ast week announced the results which
sprang from that initial exploratory dig
and a subsequent investigaUon paid for
by the lrviDe Company.
.Remajos, not of the Lulseno culture,
but of some previously WlSuspected
"sedentary" society of earl,y Orange
County residents were uowtbed by
Drover.
The Wlusual clay.fired ceramic pi~
40 of them -decorated witb pointed
tools and PQ.SSibly a wheel·like object
date from 5,1'17 to 4,227 B.C.
Precisely' because the objects have no
utilitarian put'J)OSP. such as pottery bowls
or cups have, they are believed to be
evidence of the first inbapitarits of the
Western Hemisphere who at that early
date in man's lime on earth bad
dev'eloped the "teclmology" to create
decorated objects 9f fired clay.
The objects, dated by precise carbon·l4
dating of orgartic materials found near
them, suggest the unknown early J'.fSi·
~ents lived "at the site. for nearly I,000
years.
"Wben we talk about early cultures in
Southern Califoma we are usually talking
about crude cultures, peoj>1e._ who were
seed grinders or hunters," Roger
Desautels, presi9ent or Archaeological
Research Inc ... of Costa Mesa, explained.
"There's oevel" been any find whicb
would indicate. these early peoples had
sensitivity or creaUvity/' be added. ARI,
a llOD·profit scientific firm, bolds the
Irvine OJn;ipany ~tract to map sites on
the Irvine Ranch that are of
arcbeolQglcal ~ paleontologlcal value.
The finn also regulates the scientific ex·
pJoration of these sites and ooordinates
tbe land, development C<lmpany's phasing
of construction wbicb otherwise might
bury histori·~ally meaningful real estate.
The summer. 1971 rese<Jrch was un-
dertaked · to fulfill Drover's master's
degree requirements.
It resu1ted in concl1:_1sive evidence of
tbe earliest known intelligent human be-
ings in Nortb America. The artifacts
unearthed in Orange County are 2,000
years older than any previously
discovered in the U.S., are 6,000 years
olde r tbaq any found before in California.
Further, they are only 2,000 years
younger than the oldest recorded find of
similar objects anywhere else in the
world.
Materials found in Greece date back to
6,000 B.C• •and others unearthed previous-
ly in Turkey date .to '7 ,000 B.C. The
significance of the find is twofold, Drover
noted.
Not only.does the find prove there were
people living in Orange County around
5,000 B.C. who were capable of creating
them, "but the date is a relatively early
one for ceramics anywhere ." In Jap8n,
where the art bas developed to standards
of excellence,in recent times, the earliest
artifacts of ceramics date only to 2500
B.C., be said,
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.~ f
l11t•d•y, Jinu.ary JO, I</7) 5 DAILY PILOT 3
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CURIOU.S COLLECTION -Fired clay objects suggest early Irvine
area residents were among first people in the world to discover pot·
tery techniques. "Decorations" on most pieces were believed im·
pressed in wet clay before firing. Pointed tools were used on most,
lone pottery shard, lower 1eft, shows traces of design possibly placed
there by "wheel-like" object. Were these the first to use the wheel
and leave. tracks on ceremonial ceramics?
X-rated Movie Actor
Charged in New Jersey
PATERSON, N.J. (UPI) -An ac tor
has been charged with "tending to d~
bauch the moraJs and manners of tbe
people" through his role in the X-rated
film "Deep Sleep."
New Jersey's statute on obscenity was
struck down last year beca~ a panel
of three federal judges found it did not
conform with the federal standard that
matter must be "utterly without redeem-
ing social vaJue" to be obscene.
Authorities said it was a "criminal
pr~Uon" and not an attempt to cir-
cumvent oblcenity laws.
The actor, Joseph Rose, SO, ts one of
three persons wanted by authorities in
connection with the film, which report..
edly grossed $10,000 a week at the Little
Cinema JI in Wayne until seized by order
of Passaic County Prosecutor Joseph
(}ourley Wednesday.
The film's producer, Alfred Sole, 30, an
interior decorator reportedly oo VacatJoo
in Paris, and a woman identified only as
"Kim" still are at being sought. Rcioe
was . released on $500 ball followlllg ar·
ralgoment before Muolcipal Judie Wli·
Uam J. Rosenberg, who set 1 hearing for
Feb. 8.
Price Cutting
Charge Facing
Milk Supplier ' DeDJonstrator SME •
State action that could cost a Mission
Viejo dairy comp21ly $500 on each viola-
tion U cbargea of price cutting are prov·
ed has been filed by the Department of
Agriculture In Oranie County Supertor
Court.
It is alleged In the action that mUk
supplier .Gonion Baker delivered mUk to
a Mission Viejo homeowner at 58 cents
per half gallon, 8.5 cents below t.be state
mlnlinum retail price of 66.5 cents.
State lawyers allo ask that ao In·
juDctlDD be granted to prevent Baker aell·
Ing·mllk below state mlnlmum prices 1n
the MissloD \liejo and Garden Grove
areas. No date bas yet been set for the
necessary bearing.
It la alleged that Baker showed a
"complete-disregard· of-amt-lndUfereoce-
to oe<ttoos of the Calllomll Agricultural
Code" relaUog to llllnlmum retail and
wholesale pfices. It is alleged that the
violations occurred between Sept. 14 and
Sept. 29, 1972.
. Service Station Bid
For El Toro Nixed
A rezone peUUon which would have
allowed two more unrice statiooB on El
'l'oro-lioad baa.been killed.by .the.Board_
of SuperviJoni
The properly, at the aoutheast comer
of El Toro and Mulrlands Boulevard,
called for a remne from apartment use
to service station.
..
HU
FIRST SALE OF THE YEAR!
Capri~s
to •
• • • • •
CAPRI
MARQUIS
MONTEGO
COMET
CONTINENTAL
e STATION WAGON
Continental~s
Y FOR YOUR
Fields Follies
CflOICE Ol' THESE
LOW MILEAGE,
FIRST TIME
OFFER ON 1973's Fans Insult Children,.Kick Dogs
\ PHILADELPlilA (UPI) -Desplle a
severe case of stage fright which made
him wet h1J Pants, Palrick Patrick, tO,
beat 10 otben to wtn 1 contest for the
• best Imitation al W. C. Flelcll.
Bii victoly came Monday at 1 pvty
,_..i by the Sbackamason Society, a
group of civic boolters .wtllcll does not
-toietate aorJokes-a-tbt cllJ tbt
comedllo IOathed most.
11>er were teVeral other cootelta baled
on Fields' favorite dlsllkes.
Craig Rini, 21, """ the doll·tickiog coot.,. I• which th< object ll to boot a
stulled toy the lartbt&
Bruce Blumenlbal, 21, a Ttmple
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Univcrslly student, won tbO child-in-
llllllng contes~ which featured a live
cblld.
Cl>erle, Troylen, It, allo a Temple stu-
dent, WU nmnlng I elooe -uoUI Ille ,.., dtoquali!led for brelklnl 1 mo·
jor rule. She tot eirrled away and -
ed tbt clld,. -
William Claude Qukenfield UI, ID FBI
qent who prolen to go :i::me of
Wllllam Fielda UI, wat an pest. .
Fielcll waa bit -t-uncle. ~'° oo band waa Elwr Duanfleld, a brother ol Fields, wbo9e real name was
Wlllllm °tulle Dukenlleld. .
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Jlomt Of The New CAI' , • •
"Goldea '.l'Ollell.'1
2121 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA • &40·5630
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Nome Of nu.1 Ne• Car • • •
"Goldett r-cA"
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DAILY PILOT
Jost •
,,,.. ~ (
""' ' witli
Tom
urphine
~ ea111 Pla)ing
~or a Change
: \\'AS}llNGTOS C.lU.J~G: During re-
f t'n! rites al the Cap!~ \\-herein ~tr. '.\ix-
bn launrhC'd his Next Four \'ears. some
~epublican shakers and mo' ers gave a
)111le r('{'eptlon for the ne"· rongres.Smen
p. ho 11 ill be representfng our Orange
Co.as! region. Reports h3ve trickled back
bere 1nd1Cating it was 3 success.
' Our neW representative!! "·ho \\'ere sub-
~CCls ol the gathering are Andre"· J.
Hinsha11·. the former Orange Count~•
assessor TIO\\' of the 39th Congress1onal
D1stri,rt and Clair Burge1~r. the former
siate senator of the San Diego regton.
no1v of the ne"· -Und Congressional
District.
THE IDEA OF TIU: GOP brass from
our area \\'as to get some key
\Yashington 1~-pes over to hft some
glasses and shake hands with Hinshaw
and Burgener. Thus. they vrould be able
to associate a face "·ith the ne"· con-
gressiona l names. So~e \\'bite House
staffers sho"·ed up too. like Herb Klein.
the communications expert.
All Lh is was :i good notion be<'ause eren
fllr µs home folks. it is a touch difficult to
keep track of "·ho our congressmen are.
This comes about because of redis1rict-
1ng, "'herein the politicians jiggered all
the district lines aboot.
Orange Coun1y now has a piece o(
about half a dozen congressmen. I think.
Along the Orange Coast. \\'e ha ve three
principal ones noW -Hinshaw in the
central secuon of Costa . 11fesa. some
.\e"'POrl and on dO\\ll to Mission Viejo :
Burgener from Corona del Mar
dO\\·ncoast to San Clemente and l'.n.ig
lfo5:mer in the Huntington Beacb-\Vest
Orange County SC'Ctor.
SO THIS IS OliR coastal delegation to
the new 9Jrd Congress. hopefully with a
little help from friend Richard T. Hanna.
the Democratic Congressman from
Westminster.
The GOP trio. however. aU got there
by slightly different routes. Hinshaw
defeated incumbent John G. Schmitz in a
surprising primary victory and then
breezed home free in November.
Burgener \\'as a shoo-in for election fn
the ne\\·\v created 't2nd District. Hosmer.
an old r;lend of our coastline from Long
Beach. came to represent more and
more Orange County territory through
the redist ricting process.
Anyway. getting organized as a coastal
team may take a bit of lime for the
Republican threesome. Simply pot. they
just don't know each other too y,·ell. And
iii the past. \1·e haven't had too much of a
team effort back the re in the hallo.,..·ed
ha lls of Congress.
FOR O~'E THING. \\·e had John G.
Schmitz. \\'ho. "hen he was a Republican .
tended to confuse fellow party members
in Congress. He did this by knocking the
President's budget. fla ying Mr. Nixon's
China trip and peace efforts and finally
"declaring \\'ar'' on the White House.
Indeed, as our congressional delegation
tried to mo\'e in concert to get things
done fo r the coastline. Sc hmitz seemed to
be marching to a different drummer.
.-\II of "'hich gets us back to the recent
\\'ashington tea party for Hinshaw and
Burgeller. I'' hen Congressman "°5mer,
the veterit.n .,..·ho suffered through the
Schmitz era. sidled up to one of
Hinsha\\''s top advisers and asked, '"Tell.
mt'. is Andy going to be a team man'!"
"YF.S," TIIE ADVISER replied. "Andy
"'iii play on the team."
.. WeU. that's going to be a1delightful
change,'' Hosmer concluded.
Craig .flos;mtr is rtght.
' . -
Cirilian Option
Care Offe red Unless POWs Talk to Pre8s
UPtT .....
l!rst1s Horribilis
So \\·onder they're grizzly. These bear cubs, two pounds combined,
are called Crsus horribilis from birth, even though they don't become
horribly disposiuoned until grown up. Tbe_y are the newborn of "Gus"'
·and .. Tessie.·· residents of the St. Paul, Minn .. Como Zoo. Keeper Pat
Gallagan examines them.
Nixon-Bi1d get 'Has Guts,'
Call ed Meat Ax Approach .
CLAR1t AIR BASE. F!iil"1"* (AP) -
CMJllD prili>oen ol war~llom Nortll Vietnam wW be 10< Ult
"()ponlloo ~· ml
pcydlolop:ol tnl--bul DOI ii lhey ~ 10 laJ); .. -100 ~· en wallln& lhem hon, a Stale Depart·
ment ... ecman said tDdly.
"U -Of Uie mµmlJil d.Ulana qols
10 hold I press coo1e-be IJ\IY do ...
but ooly by opting OUI ol the ilomealm-
'f:r * * Johnso~ Knew
Of Cease-fire
At His Deatli
' AIJSTIN, Tu. (AP) -Fonner Pmi-
denl Lyndoo 8. J-died knowing
th.al a cease-fire acreemeat bad been
reached !or Soulb Vlebwn. bis wlilow says. . .,
Jobnsoo was told persmaDy by ~i
dent ·Nii:oo that a cease-fire accord had
been agreed upon, Laclybinl Johnson slid
Monday.
Furlbermore, lhe.!onner-"""t wu
in the process ol preparing a statement
Io be released when Ille ...... fltt ....
fonnally -· Mrs. Johnson laid in a statemenl
Jolmoo dilld of 1 beart attack oo Mm-
day afternoon, Jan. %2; the cease-fire
W8.! anDOllnC'ed by Nixon OD TUesday
nigh!, Jan. %3.
•
"SO MANY HAVE e...-.ssed '°'"'"
... that my husbaixl bid DO knowi<dg<
of the c:ease-fltt agreement In Souu-t
Asia," ).fn. JobmOD said. "l think bis
frierxh should be toJd that fate wu kind.
Lyndon did IQlow that peace had comi."
Mn. Johmoo said "" husband was kept "continuously informed at every
stage ol !be long ""l(lllatioos" by lhe
Prosidenl, Dr. Henry A. Ki3siDger and
others.
"He followed -proceedings very
closely and said be was 10 pleased when
Pr<sidenl Nixon bimseJI ca0ed 10 roport
the . !ioaJ breakthrough." Mrs. Johnson
said.
SHE SAID 1BAT thnoe days beloft bi!
death Jolmon asked his long-time frieQd
and assislan~ 11once· Busby, 10 begin
preparing a statement that Joboson io-
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llw. Jll'OClam." .,..wnaa 1rwtn Tewn
uld. "Bui -be opll out, be 11111 not OOllDe blct. It
Tevto'I -I -the ftnl --Ibo 5111" D<partmeol ......... 1
be-tbe-mlnturoilwd.W-.
'l'be depormenl la dwJed wfth looking
.,,., Ibo dvUIMa wblJe lheY ire In "()p-
ttat1nn~~/'
MILITAllY ol!ldals al Clark said ear-
lier that the pr<u ...lid DOI be lllowed
COllllCI with ftlumlna mllilary J!OWs IOYWboft In Ibo Pldllc .......
Of tho :D dvilllu the North \'lellWn-
........ ldmilled boldlne. rl ... &.......
lcens. Te-lllld II Je.ut nJne of them ,..... U.S. ,....,,_t employs 11 the
lime ol llltir ......... but lolomulllon
.... ..._..le .. Ult olllor " Amer!--. Tbe n,. foreJ&ners -t..., Filipinos,
two Wee& Germans and a Canadian -
also ... e.pected 10 be ..cumed 10 Clark
Air Bue by Americu planes.
MANY or THE dvilllu ...,.. cap1w-·
ed in Soulh Vietnam and 'will be lumed
· ...,. lo U.S. olfieialt there. Then they
Will be a... Io Clart for procossing.
•'Offidal dvlllans -U.S. government
employes -wlll be u.aled !be same u
lhe military. They att a port of lhe -·in& Program," Tevea lllld. He--the . policy oo ...,.. contact _
1witb noaomcta1 civiliM POWs wu based
OD the need for "full parity" between re-'
lurnin( dvllian and military Pll>onen.
"SUCH A avwAN DIUll d e c i d e
wbetblr be wants to be a full member
* * * POW Families '
Pref er Letters ·
WASllJNGTON (UPI) -Those wishing
10 -relief and ._.... lo families of U.S. pri3ooers ol war and missing
llilould do .. by lel!er .. Ielegram rather
than by direct lelepbaoe .calls lo the
famllle<.
'!be plu WIS made Mcmday by the lla-
lioolJ League ol Families ol Prbonen
and Missing In Southeast Asia.
'"Ibey .,. dellgbled by the coocun ol
people but lelepbone calls ""' inlerlering
with the job of obtaining an accounting of
all of them men," a spokesman for the
league said.
' ot 'OperaUoo Homecoming' or not, 11
said.
Ht said roporten would no! be •bl• 10
contact civilian POWs while they atti ln
the Clark Air 11.&ae hoopltal but added ,
''I can aafely aay t.boy 'lf be nUlde aware
of pro .. ·intere•I In 1hem ond ol the Op-
t.ions open to them ."
Eadl· dvillM wlll also be •llSJCned a -State Department e8COri wbo will accom.
pany him tbrouah the Hom-">& pro. aram, Teven sald. Thia policy lllo ap-
plles Io military POWs.
UPIT~
OLD NEWS -Lt. Col. Thomos
Sturgess of Scott AFB, Ill .,
thumbs through a news digest
prepared for returning prison-
ers of war feturning to any of
31 hospitals in the U.S.
•
WASHL~GiO~ <UPI) -Treasury
~tary George P. Scbu1tz said today
··yoo·ve got to have the guts·· to stop
federal programs that don't v;ork, and
that this is what President Nixon pro-
poses to do. •
SCHULTZ SAID many of the pro-1~ to make when the cease-fire~was Ii
grams., ·such as building hospital! and SI Aide. Tom Johnna said the former srae
getting electricity to rural areas. had president !old Busby Io write a
been highly successful but were DO looger ment that •"OUld "upress bis gra ·
needed. . . tion' tbal peaCe ~ O(llDe and t DC>-
ShuJIZ, Nixon's chief economic body wlMed pace more or tried D •
Planes Reported
Away by Syrians Some D!mocrats in Congress, serving ,
notice of a probable bitter ba'"t-v.ith Ute
administration .oo alls ol -.111an $'1
billioo ~ b)' Niloo -1n sodiir pro.
grams in the flSClll 1974 budget, accused
the President of a meat ax approach and
of tearing down "humanitarian govern-
ment."
In the budget submitted to Congress
~londay -to be followed Wednesday by
his annual ecooom.ic report -Nixc:ti call-
ed for scrapping numerous programs of
past Democratic administrations, in-
cluding antipoverty projects started
mostly in the Lyndon B. Johnson era.
Wi«!l<S
The Vietnam observer
uniforms are ready~ sfr_ '
spoileSDlllll. said, "What this is all ....... _ to get ii -be hid." nven ...... Aides iald -did not_ ... the is, you keep ~ ~ thb spending oo
programs deemed Io be -led and ,.. Sia~ wllich was never compleled.
impose aiu incrWieOO u;e AiilUican-
people."
·"The ones that haven't been working .
·we've been willing to CUI. And if it
doesn't v.·ork, let's have the guts to say it
doesn't wor~ and stop,"he said.
.. PEOPLE WHO CAN do for
themselves shou1d do for themselves."
said Shultz. "And communities that can
do for themselves should do for
themselves."
Shu1tz made the statements on the
NBC TV Today Show.
House Speaker earl Albert declared:
"The President proposes nothing less
than the systematic dismantling and
destruction of the great sociaJ programs
and the great precedents cf humanitarian
government inaugurated by Franklin D.
Roosevelt and advanced and enlarged by
every Democratic president s~-"
Assistant Senate Democratic Leader
Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia com-
mented, "There is a determination, it
seems, to tum b3ck the clock insofar as
the federal commitment to better health
for all Americans is concerned."
SENATE REPUBIJCAN Leader Hugh
Scott called the budget "reasonable,
responsible. but tight." and added:
"\Yhile I find it difficult lo be compatible
with a nwnber of the cuts in social
services programs, it is apparent that we
must get bold of willy nilly spending by
!be Congress."
Red Dye Attacked
" '
By Nader Group,
Consumer Report
WASHINGTON (UPll -A con-
troversial red dye, uied in everything
fnlm lipstick Io aoft drinks and pill
coatings, was under attack today from
two fronts that claim it may represent a
threat to human reproduction.
Consumer ReporU Magazine in its DeW
issue published a lengthy repcr1 on the
subslance -called Red Dye No. 2 -and
recommended that it be banned until"a
complele study can be made.
The reoommemlatioos came as !be
Food and Drug A-Ilion began
reviewing a petition from the Health
Research Group of Wuhlngtoo, a Ralph
Nader-backed crganization wbkh asked
the FDA to atop certifying the substance.
IN BOTH CASES !be critics ciled
shldies which purported to show that
animals red Ihe d~ suffered impaired
reproduction and increased infant
mortality. .
Last July 4 lhe FDA propooed that
limits be placed on the amount of .dye in
food inciucts, and allowed a period time
for comment on 'the idea. That time
period expired last Seplemb« and no
fmal decision has yet been anoouoced.
By Ullitoll Pr<sa 1*rullouJ
SyN saJd Israeli planes tried to viclate
Syrian airspace today, OOt were driven
off by l!YNn war planes. An J.sraell
military spolcesman said Israe1 would
have no reaction to the Daml9CUS report.
Acainllng 10 Damascus Radio, Syrian
warplanes acnmbled and inlercepled the
charged Harry Fletcher Kempt of
Baltimore with arson only )lours after
fire roared through the old twwtory
( IN SHORT ..• )
Israeli planes attempting to penetrate aooc1.en building of the Streets Sheltered
Syrian, llnpaoe near the Syrian-~ Home. occupied mostly by residents
Lebanese border. Jt was the fh'st placed there by local welfare ofllcials. reported air action since Jan.. 8. .
ecru1o.Kui.:n
NJC051A, Cypnis (AP) -Seven
Americam and 3J otben aboard an
Egyptian jeUlner from Cllro w.,. killed
Monday night wbea the plane a1ruck a
mounlafn ridge while approaching
Nicoda allpClrl.
-· the EgyplJan airline, Aid !be -..... Mi'. and Mn. Richlrd
Dodge, Mr. and --Samuel Burne Miller, llo)'mood Jeanne,.,_., Woods
and Am V-Ilne. bometowna linknown. . ' e Drq Snc-et ...
NEW YORK (AP) -An Argentlne na-
tional described. by the t.denJ govern-
._ .. "Ult biggeat -traf-
ficker ever brought to jUltlce in the
United 811181" bu ..... --lo 20 years In p<D'and fined $211,000.
Augusle Joaeph Riconl WU the klngpln
of an international ring respomible for
routine 1 loo ol heroin (!600 mllllon
worth) Into Ult Uni led Sllies amiuall,y,
!be govemmenl charged.
e Rlclt•rtbo• OK'fl -
WASHINGTON (AP) -Elliot L.
Ricbardsoo took O\ler as JeCretary of
defense Ioday amid fUll mllltary honors.
'lbe Senate· confirmed Rlcbard8on Mon-
day.
1'be nomination of Peter J. Brennan,
New Yori< City's "l.!t. Hardhat" labor
leader, as secretary· of labor bas been
unanimously approved by the Senate
Labor and Public Welfare Committee.
Approval by the fu!J Senale Is expected
WedneSday.
.DAIL 1' i'tLOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
' ~iw'J .of the DJily Not
is~ttd
Mlllilla1'""""'= " -.. -...... .,_. ...... , .,. J:M "'""" Ull ,.. ,_.. "" w1M .. """"" .. ,.. '"" -,.. ...... ,,. ,_,., .
s.-.., -s....,: ., .... --i.e
Freeze Sti.ngs Deep ~outh ..... c.w"f "' t 1.M, ............. • I IA ,.....,,( ...... ~ ............... .. .,... '* -...... mlll .. IJft,
One FDA official &aid new information • r~1e11c C••r9e4 has been coming in continU(lusly since -..;
SeptOmber. including ...Wis of tests the PLEASANTVIILE, N.J. (UPI) -A 22-
FDA llself has been making oq animals year-old palleot WIS -god Monday
and the results of a oew Rawian study. wtth aettiJW' the ~ which killed 10
It was a study from.UMLSoviet J]Dion in penom: at the rest nDe where be U.,ved_·~-l--'::::',_,,,•c!i~fllll!~ = ... ''Min
S1ioiv Covers A p palacliiaus; Wind Batters Seaboard
r • •
•l4ht 1;~;~a~ rrm'*-" ~ .t?w
' .
c ... c.iwect~
FMr llidrf', \.lllllf -lalM 'llCfllll ...., ..... _...... ,_,.. .........
-lefty 1f lit . k-. !fl .,...IWG
...,.., .... ••• J •· ..... ,...., .,,
1 C-tlll ....... "...,... '""".
.. N. ......... ··-··-·,..... "-• flt ... Wtfiff" ...,..,.._,. JI.
S1111, M-. !'Wes
TUftMY
S.COl'ld Jil.011 .... •• fl'.$) ...... ~-4
S«wd ._ •:• •"" ,,, WIOfilllM'f ~"'' ""-. . .• .... '7!.. e.m.. S.1 Fll'SI IN ...... , '~f:Sf e."'' t.I *°"" 1110!' ~· :"'\.. -1;1t .. ll'L, ~ •• s.... ._ ..... 1:4' ....... u
5'191 """ ' u """" ..., s:n °'·"" ~ RI• •·IS e.1'11. s.ft 1~11 ""'-
ha .. u ~ ~~~ 111o--..-.---..11ose -... ······· ........ ... 1970-t '~IJOI 'f -. -1-•bl~~-----''lfll-1~ n.~-three weeks ,..s.n C,~,.!!-· C. ............. M~O .. . quesUon. • ~ '"LI;' u .._,. ~ ~ ..............
The FDA could ctter no hint on when a away. . so.tt1 L89\N, LttVN """'' 4t2-4Ut
decision milbt be coming. State ~ delective James Schlssler
Extortion, Cap_ture Foiled
JACKSON, Tenn. LUPI) -Bant chair-
man Char\8 Artnda.Je twice lect $200,000
ransom beside 1 bus)' blgjnqy Io ""'
bis tidnlped wile Mondly ml each lime
a -by picted It up before the fruo-
trlled -caWd .. och It. --
Amldale --and ....., ... harmed.
Pollce !Oday """""' • J-tDl!I fO< questlOlllo( •
Tiie bqled utartioo otlempt begin
.-i, belGlt --Arencllle, c:hllr-
l!lllt of the boon! of Ult -SlllA!
Bink, received 1 ..U Iellmc him tha1 hil
'IJfo WU belq held ~ ..
1be eltOrtion.lst; ''dftlled ln a wig,
blgh-beeled .._ and a pair ol bl..,l
women'• alacU." bad enlered tile Men-
dal< home wllile .., ..,. wa lboft, Polloe
Otlel Han>ey Marcum said, and '"'*" I
\
Mn. Reltec:<a L. Al<odale hosiage wben
sbe rtturned.
I BA.NI. OP'FICIALS aaid AmK1aie oe--
gollaled with Ult can.r ml agreed Io
leavo '8,llot, -of the $11J0,1Jot de-manded, 1t a drop on a biilnnY about
ltmileo-olJ-.
Mor aotilJltts polic<. llaman ~
Artndale pat Ille -la • -llld di.,.,... It 11 the-'°91 -
Sborlly Iller !he -._ -put an tae 111f ,.a., a~ depart· ---.wbom--CUID diolJned IA! ldmtlf1, ltofll'Ollld aloog
and Jlcbd up the .......... Wbeirlto found
-itllfdo, Ult Mp laed -lum-
ed Ult --,, .. , to •uthorlU.. Md .......,... ttlutt~ lo his rombllng, l'lllCb.
style bome 10 •Wiii further -·
While the lini drop wu be!n& made,·
-said, Mn. Ar•ndale had rmd
herseU from the "belts and ribbom" with
which •be was bound and eoceped !tun.
!be unlocked cloatt ol a parll11ly "°'11"
pleted home in a new 1Ubdiviskn
By the lime Amldale rocdved .....
ond call from the extort-. Maraan
said, tbt banker wu aware that hls wiis
had eocaped unbanned, but bu ._.
-llJ -DOI. Authorities 11lempted to set 1 lnp for
'11« -and wben the bonk« left the JuileUe of mltofcy Git 1he rood, ctlll-•
cers ...,. waiting !or the pldtup. •
But lbe auilc;ttoe '™ picked up by •
"curious motod:st." who was tmmedlatt>
ty tWTOUnded )>y' I w enforttmcnt om. cm. De had no <OM<ctioo with lhe c ... . -
\ ,
I
I
I
' I
•
Pentagon
Trial Eyes
'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
newly "'-oeclloo of the Pllllqon JlllJll!l'll . dOterlbeo
Britail\'1 attempts to mediate
a vtetMm wai' 1etUement u
"sometlmee em~11 Ht
the United States by spotllgh~
ing a~t C'Olltradlctlona tn
Prellden't Lyndon B. Johnson's
~Ing elforts.
The study uya the United
( BRIEFS )
' Slates btoocht Brilaln Into the
neptlaUng pr....., In llM-
11117 Gilly to help Britllh Prime
Mlnilt<r Harold Wtlaoo politl· ..Uy and becauae ol the Im-'
porj&tlCe ol Britlah IUpport fbr U:S'. Vietnam )IOllctes. .
~-·· secret dlplomaUc elfcirts from 111111 tO 11168 .,.
deecribed In ,.... prevlOUlly
WU'eleued volumes of the
Pentqon war 111,.fy tnif1Sc111e •.
ed 11 evidence In ·tho trtar ..t Daniel Elbt ond Anthony n._. cbarpd with f!IPl<¥l-
age, tiJlllptrlCY and theft in
connection with the teak oC the
study to lleWI media.
' ti Rhino Dies
SAN DIEGO (AP)-A S()Uth-eri\ Wbill rhino. ~ ol Gilly
five bo'ri11n capUvliy, has' dted
ol a bacterial condition In the
-be~rt_ valves. -
The 200-oound rhino. which
died Moodav, was ill s Ince
birth last Dec. 14. it WM the
•
I .·
L
Tuesdiy, January 30, 1~73 qAtl Y PILOT $ . ---
Just ·11ia1ik
·CarolDoda
1 Judge Ha$Small _Newspaper to Court
·SAN ANDREAS (AP} -The preued," said Mellln, wbo ii Blewett r e 1 em &I e d a ulN OUR VIEW/' tti, the Publilhen Auxiliary in pu~lJber of a amaU mountain alao a lawyer. 0 We're going to "kangaroo court.'' The· editorial said, '11tbls gives Washington, o.c. and was told
newspaper goes to court today figbt this. If you dorl't fight ediforial was algned by Mellin. credence t?. some local · his was the first case on
cited for contempt In con-
nectiorr with an tdllorial. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -n a baseball player
ver gela '300.000 for hlt-
.IOll or a loolball
player ever maket $8,000
per touchdown, they can
point to 5ao Fran<:ilco
lopleas queen Carol Doda
.. the plllneer In thla 11yl•
ollabo<relatlom.
to tlght. a contempt citation , lhe litUe fight., you lose the The editorial apedfically laW)'ers' op1n1ons that. our Judge Blewett could not be
reached for corruocnt. luued m connection with an ~ crJtlclzed the baridllng· of a local judicial courts ~ve a record of a newspaper being ~tc;'1al be wrote criUclz.lng ' ••• t•ta fl"e• ere• cue ln whlc;:h Judge Blewett ~tarongnaroog "co'uertsm .• ~ 1 a,n c e to iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
ocat judge. • den..e to •ome lo-ordered se11ure ·. of a dog • s.... "-" ..
The case ts the flnt ln the --·· fcU...-s• .... trespassing on his property, ''Desplle the fact that th~ AUCTION naUon 1n which a newapaper aw ~ . -.. ~. op then broost!t chatgeS against case &hows the ludicrous ac-
'has been ~lted for contempt In _f.o..,.\lhee .. ,. loql the dog's oWner and presided ti-OM.._of tbe court from a le~al ·
<QMectlon wlllf an li!llcirla), .Jiicflcfal e • 11 r £ s liVer the • ~lat. ~ ~tandpolot/' the edltOrlRI ·,,.--,...=1"-"''1y Wit"" -.. ..
Mlil ))oda'1 sllicone-
enlarged boeom n)fasures « Inches. She renegotiated
her contract with Condor's
for urn Monday and got a
raise -frorn $36,000 to
f«,000.
said Oscar A. Mellln ,--i.,._.,. '• •tNKfJ re• even though be himself was adds, "it is one of the ~tmnlest of Rare Valuable Stock
publlsher of· the Calaveras bl 4 _ •~ the complainant. 'shaggy dog' stories we hav_e PERSIAN RUGS
Oral Okay
Gets Test
ln.'Court
Enterprise, a weekly lenl •llff..., KGll• Mellin'• editoziial described heard in years."
newspaper in thb old Gold 9•roo COM rt•.' it as a 11ludlcrpu;i situation l\tellin said he was served
Rush county wh1cb was made ~ where the Judge deliberately with the contempt citation
famoua by Mark Twain's story big ones," be Hid. had a heigbbQt's dog trapped Sunday and ordered to appear
of "The c.elebrated Jumping 'l'he Enterprise printed an and tben ~ed Pie owner in.to at 11 a.m. today. He said Jie Fros or Calaveras County." editorial on Jan. 17 in which It bis court, Mt lhe ball and then would be there with llis
suggesled lhai' ·• tlie local tried to 'it'!.' In Judgment on tawyer. _
uWE WON'T BE sup-justice court of Judge Howard ~ case." Mellin said he had contacted
' Governor Readies T~ Surplus Plan ~
SACRAMENTO (AP) -five to six cents per dollar in Aa,tembly Revenue and Tan-Equalir.ation by making the
Gov. Ronald Reagan will pro-most of the state was part of lion J)>mmittee and sent to the tax increase start at the
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) pose a q:>mbinaUon of Income the school finance -tax shift Wli1 and Means Committee,
Four chudreii virtually cut tax relief,, a postponed• sales plan successfuDy backed last bur the author, Assemblymah
beginning of # a calendar.
quarter. Starting on June 1
would mean extra forms for
tl}e board and businessmen, be
said.
' , . tax hike and caocellaUon or year by Reagan an4 Assembly o.le A. GonsalVes (0..1..i Mira-
out of their father' w11l, were bonds to soak up $11 billion Speaker Bob Moretti (0-Van daJ, said his bill was not in-
awarded his estate of about $4 • · Nuys). That plan was ap-~-Srimaiily as tax relief.
million to M.5 million by the · budget . surplbs, 18J~ t~ proved before It was disclosed It woul delay the sales tax in-
Cillfornla Supreme Court author Of moat .of '"'i:agan s that the state would have a big crease only one month, until NONE'111ELESS, Gonsalves'
Mond l .l\lljor tu bills. surplus for the next ' fiscal July 1. / . bill would eat up $50 million of
1b a~. . "If you're going to put a year. Gonsalves said it was main-· the surplus.
a·nd other Orient•! Rugt
A CMlpltte .Alp111t11f of 9t1111i11t ht11clwovt 11 Ptt1it11 tn.d tfhtr
Orlt11ftl Rut• orciltrtcl for tht prt·C"1i1f1J1t1 1tlt ftr tht 1fort1.
Tht1• t'ecf1 4lil •of t rriv• 011 till'I•, t11d iho1t fi11t11 cltlty rttpOll·
tlblt fo1 Hio·t111p•ld 1hip111•11f htw• hulrucfod their U.S. •tt11t1
fo dltpott of fflo tlllir• 1hlp111tnl 11 Auctio11.
fli l1 dlrtct 1hlp1r1t11f, in our opi11io11, it th• fi11tli colloctlo11 i11
dt1!111, cr1fi.1111111h lp tlld colon of h•lld111tclt ctrpott, 'Vf' •'"'
"'""'" wt hl¥O owtr 1t111 in tll our v•1r1 11llhi9 t11ly th1 r.11.1t
C111tllty Orl•1t1I J.u91 tncl C1rp1t1.
,Fir ytur con¥011it 11ct th• 9ood1 h1vt b1t11 111ovtd fo:
•
TUESDAY,
NEWPORTER INN
1107 J•••'" 1"41 ............
JANUARY 30 8 P.M.
. vt.wl .. .iMI i.s,.cHH fr .. 6 ,. .. utH ti• of HCtlH
I....._ Ntte a...., of Lec.tlo• el .A ...... I
l11clud1d In 1mtll 111d11r9• slttt 1r• 1trlctly tht fhtttt 9r1d11 .of
MERMAN, IOl(HARA, ISfEHAN, TAIRIZ, IELOUCHESTAN,
·NATURAL SILK, QUME, HUNT·ING SCENE CARPET, ICESHAN,
SHIR.AZ, NA.IN with 700 •nots ptr 11tu•rt In, KURDISTAN, IA.IC·
THIAAJ , PRAYER RUG, ARDEllL, lNDO.SAVONNEIE, 011d 111tny
oth,rt 111 tll 1l1t1.
A•"....,: JOI SA,AU.DT
s,.~ •Y GLOll TRADI DCHAH•I COMPANY T...-: C.. ., Ca.od: •
b e Los ion upheld 8 ruling package togetlier up here, you The first bill that would ty designed to ease a book· ,Un4_er other bills pending In
Y . Ang_eles C.OU~y have to put It in a pretty delay the boost waa approved ·keeping burden on business-both houses, the hike "'.ould be ~per1or Court Judge Ben-, package and tie It with a rib-~1~1-~3 _'!_Mo~nda~y~~b!_Y_.!.f ~b~e~-~~and~~the~S~ta~t~e _!Board~~ol~~d~e~la~yed~u~p'._'t~o~tw'."o'.:y~e~ars~. _ _l!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!I
Jamin Landis enforclng an boo," Assemblyman William
oral agreement between Joe T. Bagley (II-San Rafael),
Crail Sr. aQd his wife, Lucille, said. M~Y· "You'.v.e .~ to
that whoever-·SUrvived would have a combliiBfOn of com-. ponents in order to move a leave all their property to bill."
their children.
4 only female "mong three born
at the ~ Diego Zoo's \Ylld
Animal Park. ,TM> oli\er• have
been. bo!n .Ill i ~~· and • Texas.'SOJrr.'}_. ,;.:-4 •· ·
Crail, an attorney and
former president of Coast
Federal Savings, and his wife
had made mutual wills in
April, 1953 and at the same
time made their reported oral agreement.
ROY M. BELL, uslstant
director of the state Finance
Department, said he could not
confirm Bagley'• prediction.
"We're worll:Jng on
alternatiVes," Bell said.
Bagley, often regaided as
Reagan's chief Ualson with the
Assembly's . O em o c rat i c
leadership, said a Reagan pro-
posal for lnConle tu n!Uel
would probably 1 run into trou-
ble from Democrats.
If you haven't
seen the new Fords, tl A.,tor s,..,.,..mb•
HOLL VWOOD (AP) -A cl or
Ludwist: St<mel, 89. fl\mOU! for
his portrayal of '"I1u1.t Little
Old Winemaker -M"!" in a
television commercial. died
Mondllv. He appeared in more
than 50 films and In the 1950s
was in several television ser-
ies. .
Mrs. Crail, according to the
court, took her own life in 1962
and her estate went to her
husband.
Shake Head Reagan has aaid be favors
returning at leut part of the
It.I billion surplus by cutting
F A •:l income t.u:es but would leave or nswer: detail.I to be worked out in
negotiations with legislators .
• Flit Easing SACRAME;NTQ (UPI) -Le~tive Analyst A .. Alan
California Gov. Ro n a I d Post and Sen. George R.
SACRAMENTO (AP)-State R<agan says a good form of Moscone (1l-San F'rwlcisoo);
.beaJth olflclals say Loodon flu birth. control is just "shaking have proposed using the
bas hit about ~ million Cali· your head." > surplus in,1 place of oosold ,.......,~"I"""• ll'-!t o1 , .i ''1lirU..~ really. sboul4. r '6\te i tte"riis. · thus . '!''inf
the .U~e's populaUoo -·and beiln M:\r..:.... piior td' mat-' inilliorls tn future ~ .
-~ taken the JiveJ of at I~ tlge -saY.ing no__," ReagMl _ ~rzn-~nts; '. _ . __
383. told a group or high school InBdilibon, DemOCfiU: Ur
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l
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I
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Vince Vandre. a spokesman students Monday. both· houaes have introduced
for the state Public Health De-The statement came during bills to delay the on,e-cent
partment, said Monday thRt a question and answer session sales tu hike scheduled to
the epidemic appeared to be when the governor was . asked , begin June 1. Authors say that
easing. Last week's death toll by a girl why he vetoed a bill would be the fairest way to
from the virus and from pneu· last year that would have return the money whlle.tglving
monla complications was 118 pennltted minors to obtain the poor an extra benefit.
-up. by nine from the week contraceptives without their
before. parents pemllssion.
Otlly Coast Qffors .
· 63 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art Llnklettet
The "lnakftrs Club: A new
way to beat inflation. Its
memberthlp card permits
you to buy nearly evtry-
thing you need from the
finest closed-door show-
rooms at substantial sav·
inli:s -appliances, furni·
ture, steteo equlprtient,
sporting goods, draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy cars
at the ''fleet" price and
mobi te homes and motor-
cycles at. substantial sav·
Ines. Jhe lnsider-S Club
' .
Effective Annual MAIN omcl: Earnings 9th & Hnr, Los Anreles • 623-1351
5.00%-5.13% ~~~:~~ GMMUCY 1"1.AClr Passbook. No Minimum. 3933 w11111fre 81'11:1 .• LA .• 38&.\2'65
O/ LA. CMC CENTtlt: 5.75 ,..5,92% '"" •• .-., '.,..1102
One Year Cert ificate HUNTtN~ IUCH: $1,000 Minimum, 91 H11ntin.ton t.flter
6.00%-. 6.1s·~ ""' ,.,., .. , JC MNTA MONtCA:
Two to Five Year Certificates· 718 Wlllhlr. Bl¥d. • !93'0746
$5,000 Minimum. SAN "'°"°=
Up 10 90 days loss of lOth' PacHlc • 1Jl-2l4l
interest on amounts WEIT eovtNAf withdrawn before maturity Eastltna ~n1 ctr.• 331·2201
orrall certifiC'atticcounts. "'"°"AMA cm:-. -
J---''-------l . ChaM & Ven Nuys &Nd •• 892·117.l
also proyides bi g dis-
counts on tickets·to sport-
ing and entertainment
events .. , plus a whole
list of free · services: safe
depaslt boxes, mQney w-
ders, tra\lelers check,t,
and notary services.
Membership require·
ment for savers·-$2,500
minimum balance. Coast
borrowers now recelve as·
soc:late me,mberships en-
titling them to all outside
referral services. Ask
about joining at any Cont
office.
r
TAllZAIW
11751 Ventura 8MI. • J.4!Hl614
LONOe1ACH1
3rd & Locust · •37·7481
UST LOI ANQEU:I:
llh & SOl:o • 2~510
&, DIAlllONO &Mt:
328 s. Oltmona.ear-
17141 5~7525
TUITI"' Utwln IQuar• Shopplnc Ctr, (71•)132.Q~O
LAM,_
u Mlmta Sh0ooln1 Ctr. 171•1 522-6751 .
IAN UllMILJ •
Oii ~., lM'Tllf'IH . 217-9941 •
Dolly Hours, -t AM to 4 l'ltf
NA_._Clwtc """"'· _ _,. I AM to 'I l'ltf
~:.new for 73.
' I
Ford Ga1ix1e SOO 4-Door 11.nto,
Options shown: S!tt.l·belted 11dial Pb'
white sidewall Ii.res. deluxe bumper aroup,
whed cown. bod)1ide a!Ml_rocker i:-nel
moldinp, vinyl lop aiMI Ford MOI« Com-
panyoclusive Power Mini-vent Windows.
•
Ford LTD ilroupjm 2-Door ""'*"
Op1ioru lhown: Power.opattcd Suntoor,
WSW steel-belted radial ply tita, remote
conirol riaht·hand mirror, rront corncrin1
lamps, delwte bumper lfOOp, dcluxt wlwll
COVttS and vinyl top.
-.
l ~Ihe doser yoU look, the better we look. ' 'llloanl•nndp-.llci.UO AcloselookshowswhyrestyledFords apatl bJliadaaelook . (LTD's and Galalie SOO's) woo top alllltbe:'Dcars. iwards. Motor~Trcnd said, "The ·
'l:lkdd1mldianiA_ cliocbcr was Ford's stock in trade : Bmcl. llDnlll dlde: ' super-quid interior, isolation from
.--road noile:."
fm:l~ofdlth"ln Ford -hmria drew \:Om. bll!D .. .,dMIM. .-..JSI V·8, automalictnnsmiaion,
fm:l IJD -steering. power brakes, po-"11111 llie Setlmof":,,_.111, mitlotioa, bodl""k moldinp. more .
U'D••t ..... 1111 ...... , ... ,. _____ ..,, ..... ,... .....
In addilioa, Ford's Front Room.
AmplesJ>OC<mn for1it·footcr1. Futl-·
lcqth door a-. Color·Jtned
plush carpeuns. AU this is standard.
o,tioal lldtcr-add todriving
and interior comfort: Fingertip Speed
Control aUtOlllltlicolly moiotaiJla pro-
'
-"""' ... ~) "' . J ' .... I "4t-, /•.
' ,,
"'spoed:SelectAlre Conditioner with
Automatic Tcmpmture Control for
preferred year-round climate. AM/
FM Stem> Radio witlt TajlC Play_ei
and dual &pClken front and rear.
fO( your liatcnbiJ. piesaure.,
""' ----............... -M-Mort doll's noJ1r -· A bin-typo glo,. bo• larfu thin any of l'ord's
lllnclard·liz< """petlton. And new
options. A ranoto control rigllt·hand
mfrror you adjutt from the driver's
at. Power Mini·vtntl on 4-Door
Fords for bolter ventilation and less wUid DOilo. Aa doctric rear window
ddr...., for.......,_ rilibililJ.
-..... A.,_S,.._, ~.... ,.,....._
For *itltts-el-, .. opCional
st«l·belttd ndill ply 1im taled to·
give the 1vmge driver ~.en> milts
of ttad life under nOrmal dririns
coi.lidoas.
Sta..,.rd safety features ibcl*'"
Eoer17 Aboorbios Bumper System,
and more. And there's a new optioul
· Anll-thefl Alann-S)'ltcm.
·· New styling. festum, opllona and
coinfort. That'• .w!ly we lnritc roit
to take a doset look. And that '\nay
be wl1y Rood Tat calls the 73 PO<d
· "the G...i family car to be found at
Its price bi <owrooall ioday."
Quiet is the uni
cla 'ldknade ca
FORD
FOROOMSJON ..
To see what's new for '73, see your'Ford Dealer.
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D A D .Y PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE
'
Cooperative Effort '
Orange County's new Intergovernmental Coordina·
Ung Council of!iciall,y opens for business Feb. 7. Eighteen
of the coun ty's 26 cities, along with the county, will par-
tici pate in the Initial meeting.
To date only one city, Westminster, has voted not
to join the new body. The remainder apparenlly are
still undecided. • · Some seem to share the doubl.!i· ~ one C<>sta Mesa
dty co~ncilman. A. L. Pinkley. Wb.o Ji,u liec\u.ed him·
sell. fl nnly opposed to any additional "layer of. ~vern·
menl" {Costa b1esa has not yet taken a posttion on
joining.)
The council, under discussion fOr the past 18
months, \\'ill be made up of the five ~~y supervisors
and elected representatives of. member cities.
It is seen as a fo rum for discussion of mutual prob-
lems "'here city and county eUorts in many areas of
government can be oooctlinated.and duplication of effort
eliminated. . .
The ne\V body grows out of -and will ~lace -
the informal Supervisors and Mayo.rs Conference
tSA MCO) which has met monthly. It differs from the
Orange County League of Cities by 10cluding county
gover nment representation. Sch~ districts ~d speaal
districts will not be members, whi.cb. some critics see as
a weakness. The IGC came into being officially when the county
and cities representing a majority of , µie county's 1.5
1nillion population ¥Oted to join. . .
Membership is voluntary and decisions of the coun·
cil will not be binding upon· individual members, who
'''ill contribute necessary funds to mairitain oU.ice oper.
ations estimated at $17,000 for the first six months.
&,.n as likely areas for discllssion by the IGC are
such items as preservation of open space, public tr~s
portation, recreation, communication and co~tywide
planning, which frequenUy must be geared to city plan·
ning. ta). . Though fear of still another governmen . orgaruz-
ation is understandable, the JGC could conceiv1;bly save
local government•. and the tupayers,. both time and
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
1UOneY if Ila alms can be achieved.
With 26 cit! .. now functlonlng u separate entiti.. ,
wilbin tho county/ there ls a real need to coordlllate the ,
growing volume o overlapping effort. •
Since membership, renewable annually, carries no
obligation beX!>nd a rather mod~ conlribuUon to,-ard J
operating ei'penses, Ute experiment seems worth f' try1
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Wa sting Experience?
As Orange County's 26 inco~ted cities grow
steadily by annexing chunks of · M!Jll:1mt county land,
county superviaors find themselves in control of cor·
respondingly less territory.
Hence their apparent concern ovir the make-up of
the Local Agency FormaUon Commis.<1on (LAFC) which
has final approval ol all new incwporaUon and annexa· tion moves.
The concern was manileoted, Jut weet in an unsuc-
cessful mo.ve to oust focmer Saa Clemente City (;ouncil·
man Stanley Northrup from the commlaalon, which is
made up of two supervisors, two dty repreoenllltiv .. and
one SO<:alled public member.
The theory appeared to be that Northrop, named
to the LAFC public member pOst shortly after !Je failed
to win ,..,..lection to his council seat, was still too close
to city government to have acquired the objectivity d.,.
sired to represent the public in annexation issues.
In a split vote, the commissioners finally agreed
thal future public members must not have ,aeivecf in a
city pool for at least five years prior tO their .LA}:c ap-
pointment, but that this will not apply to Notthrup.
I
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With municipal governmmit often a ~t\'!.°' stone to pools covering wider geographical ireu, f~Ula
if generally .applied ~d )le ~ulte discoliraling to politi-
cal aspinnts considering cutting t!Ielr teetli on the bot·
tom rung of the ladder •• :not to mention gaining nuts·
and bolta experieece _in government that could serve
-them,.and the·people, weIJ·athighttlewb. • .• · • • ·
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., "--"~ ~1'.'fKUS!-Hlf AVE~SION .TO ;WELFA~E APPLIES ONLY TO IN~IVl~UALS.' .: . ~-~.i...,.: ... ,.,;J;, • ··-• • • -
P,eotJk, Not Govertnnenr, .f;nded ivar .. ' . ' r
Lessons· of -th~: Peace.·'..'Movenient
' .
Some People
Should Learn
To Quarrel
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Who's listening to motorcycle nolae
on tbe desert? (GUS, Jan:-25). Il
isn't the rabbits, birds,"' tortoile,
coyotes, born toads or even the
lizards or ratUesnakes that are Ji.s-
tening on the desert. They've all
WASlnNGTON -Until the man got on
the air and said the words, until he made { )
the .announcement that on the 1ttb hour "IT.ON HOFFMAN of lan. %7, the guns would fall -silent. i T ' . . · · ·
1here was a hlack, joking auspl-·that · •
on ' was lbaiiking PeoPle for being
patriotic :~ sacrificing, he didn't men-
tion the flier.I . "But the deserters, the
qia!t· dodgers. the rer ........ the defiers
and the diJobeyera served their country
b<tter than those of us 1'bo got drafled
and went . overseas inll fooght or who
stayed. home and paid our taxes, lt also
takes more guts. A man like Captain
Howard Levy, lhe Anny doctor who was
courtmartia1ed for refusing an order to
train Green Berets, has as much going
for him as any POW, more maybe
because when Levy went to his Federal
prison CJmlp here be had no President of
the Unite:d States awearing he'd move
heaven and earth to get him out. He was
alone.
McCarthy lent the Movement respect-,
ability, is how the thought is usually
phrased. Actwlly, it was the other way
around. The only respectability in polltics
Tbougbt1 at Large: .
It is easy to see tha t quarrelsome ~
pie need to learn restraint; wha t ts
harder ti> acce pt. is the equal truth that
repressed people oeed to learn bow to
quarrel. • • •
Since "success" in society is measured
largely by material
achi~ent, an d
since in the slums
material achieve-
ment is possible only
through force or
fraud , it should not
surprise anyone that
in such an environ-
ment the biggest
crook becomes the
most admired and emulated figure.
• • •
Hatred and envy are the most difficult
or p<Wion.s to relinquish -because their
abandonment might force lll to the·
distasteful admission that our lack of
fulfillment is rooted in ourselves, not in
external circumstaoces.
• • •
been scared away!
-EJ.B.
Tlrils ... ,.. ,__ti rMllln" 'ltMt,, ..,
-"" lh9se et .. --· ,... ""1f lilt -1'11 GliloM!r Oft, DlllJY l'llilt,
more we get of one the less we )a" of..
1be..other. (This, in extreme f~ II Ille
banal tragedy of the perfonne~-.wtio1 craves !'hange, popularity and aj .. 'ii
on the one hand, and ye1n11 !<it
-digoity md oecl-... Ibo other.} • • •
The hypochondriac goes from doctor to
doctor, not seeking one wbo wU1 make
him better 'fas he imagines), but one who
will agree with him.
• • •
The present so quickly becomes the
past that, in Hozlitt's wonts, "by despis.
ing al\ that has preceded us, we teach
others to despise ourselves." • • •
The Idealist is long on Ideas, bot short
on program; the rea!Wis long on pro-
gram, but .short on Ideas; and neither
can comprehend that he is half a person,
desperately in need of the other half to
complete hJmself. • • •
')le mii!It have ooe mo.. doublOCrus!I In '-----------'. ·
him. He could have gotten oa lbe tube to
tell us North Vietnamese torpedo boats
bad attacked our destroyers .in the Gulf
of Tookin.
He dkln!t, ao take
peace and run. He
said it II peace with
.booar, blil by this
timeJhe· mt cl llS .......1ml peoce ls
honor. Yet for maey
l!bo haled this_ -8ie moot, """ fwgbt . • . tile fJg h tl ng tbe
most. the groat and -' ,.,., IIlt tile
war has stopped doeartelfClt~Partly this is ao becaUle aM1\I» th ol
the last four yeirt· , and
tbankfu1ness are as happy an e mouon as
a sane person can feel.
PART OF IT i!: him, Nixon. Aftefwhat
he and Heriry Kissinger have done, there
are some who retch at the nolion that
they should be thought of as
peacemakers. It will take time for us to
learn to modetate our feelings toward
our officials. For the better part of a
generation now, some millions of
Americans have looked oo. anybody and
anything connected with the Wblte House
as war criminals. ·
But more than that, for many who
tomd war and lite men who ~ it
de!jlicable, the smug assump~oo ·In .his
speOdi -thet be was ending UMi war -
inust have beeo inlurtallog. In truth, he
was fon:ed out because be bed riext to
nc6lng left lo light wit!L 11>e war slid
oat from mder·bim•u il·OIIce·alid down
on tapol ,.. .
'Ille Arrti1 Iiad qUil on him a couple of .~non Ol[O. lie cialma he pulled ball. a
mlllioG ~ OU\ -as though he bad a
cbolce. Hod· he ~t tbem there, .by now
they' woold IIllve been in an open state of
oplmn addictkln and naked mutiny.
NEXT CAME the fleet. Sabotage, race
riots and desertion. 1be Pacific fleet Was
beginning to resemble lhe JasLdl!Ys of
the Imperial Russian Navy, with the
carrier Kitty Hawk as the American
ve:rsion of the: cruiser Potemkin. A seago-
ing Watts.
The last to crack was the Air _Force.
They're the moral robots, the fiy boys
who tell yoo, 'Look. I don't lr:ill anybody.
All I do is read these litt1e dials and put
numbers in tlilil litUe book." It finally got
lo them, and they started cashing in their
pilots' wings.
In hiJ speedi tho other night wheo Nix·
1'BIS WAR should not vanish on us
without it being writtllU somewhere that
the real American heroes were not the
ones decoral.ed by this gov,emment but
the ones detested by it. The marchers,
the protesters, that rabble, they're 'the
ones who served honorably. It will be a
long Orne before you hear anyone In the
White House say that. They will conUDue
to repeat that the Movement bad DO. 'ef·.
feet on them, that while the peacenib
marched they watched the Washington
Redskins, but don't you believe It. They
were peeking through the curtains.
Likewise, tbe late-joining, more con-
ventional anti-war sorts will say that It
was your Eugene McCarthys and George
McGoverm who made the difference.
is power, and men like McCarthy got it
by hitching on to the peace move:ment.
NOTHING WRONG With that so tong
as some or us remember that you don't
need a U.S Senator or any sort of official
approbation to work political mifacles.
The peace movement showed that it is
still possible to challenge this govern-
ment even in the bloody foam of a war
frenzy.
That may be the only useful lesion V~
nam bas to teach. Certainly there are.
miIIlom ci us who will be just as marted
by It as men like Nii:on were marked by
Munich and 3ppeasement. Vietnam has
gone on for so long that we have come to
regard the war there as a species ~
normality . The thought or an America at
Peace is almost unnerving. Count up the
nfunber of people whose adult lives have
been taken up with the fury and weeping
of Vietnam. How much easier it is for
them to see •1another Vietnam"
everywhere than for the Nixon crowd to
be seeing new Municbs,
A better moral to extra ct is that as
long as you have your A.J Mustes, your
Dave Dellingers, Paul Goodmans, Martin
Luther Kings, Joan Baezes, and all the
rest on the enlistment registers of the
Movement, the governmen t can. make
war, but finally, we can make peace.
Unhappiness does not so much consist
in being thwarted of our objectives, for
'A'e can become retoociled to that;
rather, it consists in having contrary ob-
jectives at the same lime, so that the
lt ii not that we IOR our il1t1Sions as we
grow older -we merely cllaqe them to
flt our diminlshlDI expectations • .. The Sad Story of a Happy Misfit
U.S. and 'New Europe'
British Prime Minister Edward
Heath's trip to Washington this week
may well launch a series of exchanges
between the capitals of Western Europe
and the UnJted States. London fears that
protectionist fever in Amerlra is rising,
and that the Heath-N°LXon talks will tum ·
out to be a llialorue of the !leaf. As the
London Economist put it, "'Mlere are
dangl!ni ri a series of political and
economic disagreements be t w e e n
America and Europe in 1973."
11IE FRENCH, in particular, believe
that the structure of postwar transatlan-
tic relations is due for re-examination.
Heath views the situatlon aomewhat dit·
ferently. Speaking at Hampton Court
Palace on the occasion q( Britain's entry
into the Common Maritt\, he said: "Our
aim in Europe must be to build up our
own · strength and our own convnunity of
purposes across the whole field or poticy-,
so that Europe can emerge as a valid
partner" of the United States.
EDITORIAL
RESEARCH
The idea i! to tCft:Stall unnecessary ran-
cor when the Uine comet td overblul the
W"Or!d monetary system. The United
States then will discover that an ei:·
panded, nine-member Common Marttt
wields considerably more clout than did
the original Six. •
West German Chancellor Willy Brandt
agrees 'with Hea'th on the need for
friendship witb the United St.ates. In a
speech llISI June matting the 25th an-
niversary of the Marshall Plan, Brandt
,.id: "lo this phase ol change,
America'• presence In Elb'ope la more
necessary lban ever .... The forms of the
American commitment may change, but
an actual disengagement would cance:I
out a basic law of our peace." Jean Monet, the 84-year-old French~
man who Is regarded as the rathtt of IT IS POSSmLE, all the same, that the
the Common Market , says that ' "It ls era of European-American cooperation
essential that relations bc!tween the will degenerate into a rivalry breedl~I
United States and Europe should be on suspicion and distrust? Andre:w Shonfteld
the basis of equality, therefore Ettrope suggested in the Reith Ltctures on BBC
must speak as one." Such equality will radid'"that Europe: "may even be driven
be difficult for America to accept -and more 'rapidly into politlal cohesion by
for Europe to create. Bonn. Paris and the sense o£ an un!riendly intemaUonaJ
London cootlrwe to operate on different environment in which Its needs wjll not
wavelenaths. be ttadlly accorded a high priority."
• Shonfleld, dlroetor ol tile Royal Institute
FRENCH PRESIDENT Georges Porn-of lntemotlooal Affairs, added that "The
pidou fears that Improved relations world of more compact regional blocs
between Wuhlngton and Moscow will be whlch seems to be opening up may not be
achieved at Western Europe's expense. a comfortable place to~uve: In."
Thus, Parl! is wary of the proposed For a tlme, at least, Washington may
mub.Jal and balanced force reductions by find it easier to patch up its
the Unfttd States and the Soviet Union. disagreementa with Moscow than to
A recent Newsweek cover story is on
the cheering subject of "Coping wtlh
Depression." '
The art!cle says depression baa become
"virtually epidemic" and quotes various
authorities as recom,mending, amOng
other things, anti-depressant drugs,
lithium salts, psychoamlysls and elec-
troshock therapy,
Nonsense.
Take the case of
my friend, F r e d
Frisbee. Frisbee,
who had been grow·
ing increasingly de-
pressed la\ely, woke
up one morning and
said the bell with
leeltng gloomy.
•''The way to be happy," he said with a
nash of divinely lnlplred insl&hl, "la lo
be happy!"
So once his hacking oougb bad subold-
ed, he loolt a good look .at hlmseU In the
mirror. "I may he 1o6iJ1i halr and
galnlng a pot," be &aid. "I may anoke
100 much, drink 100 much and eat too
much, but, by George, I'm alive -and
the thing to do Is enjoy IU"
WIDSTUNG "Penrues from Heaven ''
he bounced down to breakfast. "We;ll
hive to have-macaroni and cheese again
'9l' dinner," &aid bis wlle Fellda, fhunly.
"Ground chuck's gone up to 1.09 a
powid. And the man fixed the garbage
disposal. bot he cherged $30.33 !or ten
Quotes
Jim Brown, u frld 1tar1 Holl)'ft<ld 1c-
tor -"The cause thing bas alwBys been
a big lhlng for Hollywood stars to call al·
tcnUon to Olemselves. Everything Jaoe
Fonda's said has been said 100 times." The French are equally 1us-plclous of any resolve its differences with the Common
••erand American design" tor lhe new Market and Japan. But that l!hould come • • •
Europe. as no great surprlae. rt Is an unwritten ' Gary Kalamlaur, Pait Al&o-"Ana·
Pompldou ls said to want cl•dflcaLullooon.._..1a"'w-"f-inter111tl0!1al relalionr-thaHl-;1-uon•a s lfej[gth and health Ilea tn the
or Prmdent NllOll'• •lllfUcle toward the dlificult to malt• new frlenda withoul of· quality of the lives of Ill people, not tn
Common Market as an economk powu. fending old ontS. how loudly It can rattle its Jabera."
' -. ..
( ART HOPPE J
minutes w<>rk. Isn't that awful?"
".Well, I suppose tanners have to eat,"
said Fri!bee cheerily ... And rm sure
glad American working men are making ,
decent wages. They deserve it."
'"Are you feeling all right, Fred?" ask·
ed Felicia.
Al the boa atop, Frlabee ran Into his
old neighbor, George llludger, who was
holding a bandkerehlef to his streaming
eyes~ "Beeutitul day, eh, Mudge, old
boy!" said Frisbee, clapping him ot! the
bact. "Ei:ctpt for the smog, of course,
but you can't have everything." .
Muc:tcer's response was lost in hill
hfndlcercblef. And when Frisbee pointed
out, after their bus was stalled' for hall
an hour in a trarfic jam, that he cer-
tainly did enjoy getting an extra 30
minutes to 'f'ead the paper standing up,
Mudger· didn't reply at all.
UNDAUNTED, Frisbee hustled to his
job on the assembly line and, humming
"Life Is Just a Bowl of Cherries," he
eagerly began screwing widgets into
gudgeons, a job he had been doing the
past ten years. "Send me some more
gudgeoos, Al," he kept calling gayly up
the line. "Got to keep the old ball roll-
ing." •
At lunch Ume, his shop steward called
him aside. "You starting a speed.up,
Frisbee?" he asked suspiciously.
"Oh, no," said Frisbee. "I just like
screwing widgets lnto gudgeons. The
more the merrier, J say.",
When he got home, satisfied from his
full day'1 work, hia daughter:, Francine,
was in tears. "Oh, Daddy," she said,
"we're !till, killing innocent people in
Vietnam, the government keeps lying to
us and things are in l!IUch a terrible mess."
S pe~king of Billions
By State Senato<
B. L RICHARDSON
U with sinking heart and 1 shrunlcen
J)oeketbook you 've Witnessed our state
govemmeot growth over the last six
yearsr you are not alone lo your con-
fusloo. Promis,., promises -U.. road to
Hell may be paved with good lotentlo!ls.
but aome of lhe gravel comes from
crumblt'd cement around politicians'
feet .
LET'S TAKE a look al the budget for
the 1971 legtalatlve session that bu Jusl
bt<n preatnted to ua. A budget o\ i.26
btlllon dollars.
n.ere are a llltle more than 20 million
people lo the llate of catllomla, .....
le.,, wblch meana that a 9.lf billion
dollar budget adds up to a lltU. more
than 14$7 !or every man, woman and
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child in the state. Those are oot city, not
county, not federal taxes. Just stllte. And
for an average faoUly or five , It's ap.
pipximalely 12,285 plus.
AND WHEN you lake out the loafers
and the non-productive, lt ge:t.s word:.
The bn!odwinncn cl C.llfomla, the pro-
ductive cltit<ns with Jobe only total 1\0
million people~ That meana that u cb
productive wod<er bu to pay IP'
proximately lt,1157 apiece l'1 keep the
state runolns for one year.
Do you lmow What • billion ts? Just one
billioo? U In the year 1, the year Christ
was born, wneooe fQll..DXI a bUUon dollars
and 1pe111 It •t the rate of 11,000 • day,
day in and day out, seven days a week,
U WttkJ a Jt•r, even on SUnda;ys; It
would take until the year rm -7111i
years from now-before hi• dtlctndanLI
had managed to spend It all.
"Now, now, dear," said Frisbee,
chuckling, "l'm sure the President knows
what he's doing." .
So Francine ran sobbingly off to Join a
commune. And when Frisbee, looking on
the bright side, said she'd probably be
happier with her own friends, Felicia
called him "a heartless wretch" and
went home to mother.
"Well, at least I've still got the job I
love," said Frisbee. And he did until the
next day when be was fired as a born
troublemaker.
"INTO each life," said Fr I s bee
philosophically, as he walked borne that
night, "a little rain must. •• " Bop! A
mugger relieved hinl of hia last •to. But
as Frisbee told the police with a grln,
"He probably needed ~ IDOfe-lhan [."
Naturally, be was sent to the
psychlatric war<f for observation. But
there's a happy ending. After lengthy
treatment with drugs. psychoanalysis
and electroshock therapy, !\le doctors
pronounced him cured and certified sane.
So today he's as depresoed as·the rest
of us.
ORANOI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wetd, Pl&bli1her
Th-. K<fui~ Editor
Ba rbara Krtibfch
Editorlot Page Edi1or
The t'dlti>rlal 1•~c of the Otlly
Piiot $HkA to Inform !!ind 1t)mu· Jatt readto" by 1JrC'llcnUn1 th\1
ntw•i>tPtr'• op inion! and com·
mtntary un tnpirt or ln1-0re~t and
1lttnlfle1nce, by llt'fl\'ldlna " forum for the expre11tun nf our rtadcr11
()pinions, and by f'lrl!len tlng the
diveru vlf\l•polnL• of Informed ob-
ttrwn 4nd spokesmen on toplCI
of the dk)'.
Tuesday, January 30, 11173
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Warning: The Surgeon · General Has Oe19rminedl
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangeious~o·Your Hnlth'·
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PNa 21 mg. 'W. t4·111J *9ill. tiC 20 ~·"Ill". t!' mg. ricolinl. WJ*
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_. I DAIL V PILOT Tundaiy, JontWy ,0. 197l
QUEENIE B l!htl lnterlandl New Post
Assigned
To Peale
Fnlm WIN Sen'l<'t<
DI\. Normu V Pelle
has been e senior
mlnhler by the, <oomtory ol
the Collegiate Re form t d
Protestant Dutch Church ol
the City of New York.
Peale, pastor of the Marble
Collegiate Churth and author.
of the book "'n>e Power of
Positive Thir\kini," succeeds
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!Who Can You Trust~·-
__ Uncle ..Sam..Se'Ua M{ln. 'Hot Car,
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. 1-3'.l ;
~01."!oio-~\-~._ .... ..,.;w,........;..;.,..
"rn tell you v.·hat lhe v.·eight problem. is. 'We problem
Harbor, Realtor•
is -..·ailh\g for a man .... no doe,sn't mind YI?' '!\'eight."
L. M. Boyd
San Franciscans
10 Percent _Gay
If the young larly beoornes a widow ~t>'een the ages
of 21 and 2$, odds only nm three out of tt she'll ever re-
marry. A surprising statistic, that. no? If ~ is widowed
between the ages oC 31 and 35. cha!lces are\ty two out of
15 sbe-'ll i-emarry. And if she's left a wi . between the
ages of 36 and 40, there 's only one possi~ in IO she'll
remarry.
NO WOMAN WHO intends to step CJt!tdoors in zero
. weather should wear a ~le, contends
a medical expert. Say!\'tt impedes cir·
culatioo. T\lal's bad.
. STAJllCASES in '\11'."land are al-
most invariably built W\lh an uneven
number of steps. Llke'fflse an uneven
number of rooms, win41!Ws and doors.
Matter of superstition.
INSTITin'E for ~ R e s e a r c h
claims San ancisco· has more bomose~s per capita
than any other town in the cruntry. About Jt percent there,
it's said. NaUonal average is four percent.
QUERIES -Q. "In those MiddJe Easl places where
some sort of slavery is st.ill practiced, wl\ich is worth
. more, a strong man or a good-looking WOf1l§n?"
A. The woman, if she can bear youngsters. Cor1~spond
ents from thereabouts say a grown man iq good health is
worth about 10 camels1 a fruitful woman al!Qut 20 camels.
BEST MOMENT in the hockey game is \fle occasional
violent brawl. Wait, that's not my opinion. 1\'s the opinion
df 3i percent of the hockey enthusiam ii\ Caiiada. 'l1>ey
so told the survey takers.
TROPICAL FISH -What the psycliol°'l!ts are trying
to figure out is why so many men colle<i @\Jmps wbJle so
few women do likewise. It's a puzzle. l1\ \tml hobby, the
genUemen outnumber the ladies by 50 ~ .~,\~~t. Arna·
teur ~PW is another mostly ~1· stime. Also, the coifeding or [ancy booze btttl" • . . . JlU!le.
Only in the raising of tropical fish do Ui . -lijme on
as strongly as the men. The majority of · ~\larium
keepers are female.
Addreu moil lo L. hi. Boyd, P. 0 . !!!Ii Jitj, ftiifi;
port Bea.ch, Caiij. fi2660.
Evening College
Offers Lectures
Reellor David W. Myhre,
owner of Heritage Real Estate
in Costa Mesa, was named tm ''Reellor ol the Yeer'',
and nollor Ch&rlea E.
aii aUOdite ot·Roy-11
Reel Estate in Coata
• Let Us
HOME-
DEUVER
YOUR .
Jilli i11U;l1t
Frosh Muts
Liquors & Wines
Fresh Produce
CALL
IT ISN'T THAT I WANl TO -GO CONTRARY · TO
THE TRADITION THAT SAYS I SHOULD HAVE A
FUNERAL SERVICE, BUT I CANNOT CONVl..ci
MYllL~ THAT IT HAS A PURPOSE. WHAT DO 'tO\I
IA 'f AIOUT THIS ?
l """'°"YICHOOU
MAllOI CltfTll
19 MMtitr Cl!!twt e..tt ..... Ctllffflllt
;;;; 17141 f7'4JIJ
1'1t '· ..... kllttnl It. AMlltllft, C11, ..,...
Pll. Cn41 716·1100
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fl ~y IUelNli O. IPllRON
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Batt:·Bergeron Ft1net,9GI BOllle
COSTA MISA t COIOllA Ml MAI
64'-2424 2 LOCA IONS 67J-MSO
l
THERI! ARE OVl!R
---ilOOO USED CARS
l'OR SALE
ON c;OSTA 'MESA'S
Harbar BaulltVlll"d
af Cara
LOOI POI THI IM ... AT
NABERS I UNIVIRSITY CADILLAC, INC, OLDSM091LI
HARBarBLVD. HAR.c.:'BlND,
..E
AX RETURN
EPARATION-
FP~i Will6' deposit $3,000 to a new or existing saVi.ngs account at Pacific Savings aild reoeitl
PllBB preparation of your penOG.al Fed«al and State tU returns. Some people will save $200..to $300 c
more JD. accountiDg fees. ('lbil_offer d~sn't app~ tq corporaUon, pitt~rship, bu.\l.neu..or tirnilarretw,na.)
Professional -~ied tucoynsttors~ii;·P"P;'"Y~:;;~~, .. ~.;,.
~ ae that you receiw every possible benefit under the fµ law. Eayh return will then be triple~hecked
for accu11cy by highly·trtined specialists. All work is done in the privacy of your Pacific.Savings office using
the trained personnel of Tax Corponlion of Americt', formerly Skousen Tax &Mlvice, Inc. This firm, starled in
1946, ii the second largest tu company in the United States. They cur(eqUf tmPJoy over 4,500 counselors
and hll'C prepared more than 1,000,000 tJ,X returns. -·
-Work Guarante-etl--by Tax C'11\!illiilll" of Arnedca.
Guaranteed · Accurac7.~\I' triple-<hecked ror accuracy
~~'11\~~~ \l,/ri'ii1~1'1'\1'i~':'lcs or reproduction, the
Guaranteed Protect1on.11 your reJurn i• quesuooec1 by the
Government, they will handle all the details at OO· charge Iii conlormily with n!gulatory procedure.
Bring 6r Mail -your deposit Ol'')'OW' passbook 10; a savings account to
be transferred to Pacific Savings. We will immediately let up a specific appointment for you to meet a
tax counselor at a time most coovenient to you.
A}SO -you get a liREE Safe Deposit Box, service charge FREE Traveler's CheckJ,.FREB
Collection of No tu, FREE Notary Service and FREE Financial Counseling.
And ··~ your d~it e:S 6% per :nnum in a t~~ to ~~~ear ($Sp(x, minimum) etr5acatt-
account -S~% per annwn in a one to five year ($1,000 minin?,um) Certificate account or 5% per a.QJlqmJna
regular puobook account, all compounded daily. . . .
Rem ember -•o qualify ror \hi• rr .. 011 .. y:.,,, .. d only to m.x." your d~sit.1Dd
have your c:ertificlte vilidatlld. If you have an ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE. bring us your paubook and we will
tranafer you{ money to Pacific for you. Offer good until revoked bui J10t beyond April S, 1973. '
So Hurry -mab your deposit TODAY -or call 01 slop by.our neare!I offi<e for
more information.
Plus -
FREE Federal Tax Guide
-THIS OFFICIALGOVERNMENT PUBLICATION OFFERS
, VnllL INFORMATION FOR EVERY TAXPAYER
• Additional deductions for greater return on your tax inveltments! '
_•...)lo.w....t.o~~pl1111eturn on investments for you and Y-'ll!l;ifun"-!!!!iln_ ________ _
• Depreciation uplanation and what it means to your return I
PACIFIC SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION has purch11ed a 1imited supply of these valuable booklets.
The booklet is available claewhcre it retail prices, but is FREE TO ALL at your nearest office of PldRo
SaYilJll and Loan Association. This offer good. only while IUPP.IY lasts.
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OPEN NIGHTand DAY '
Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M,
SOutH COAST PLAZA
lrillll lt.11 Seo oi. F,_y, C1111-
PHOIE 54041H
~· . --.-
THE MALL OF ORANGE
Tlllin A.,. 11 llloU A .... Ola•
• PHONE 137..QIZ
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fueld~, JM\u&ry 30, 1971 OAILV PILOT 9
L PUllUC NOTICE P\IBUC NOl'IClS PUBUC NOTICE · -;~~ ••• >CTfTMMK;;;;;;;;;;";;,;..,;,n•n•ns•o~~~1-..,::::1<;:;•;-;o:•,_;,...,.::::-:,~ .. :t:::=",:,~,,c,.;:,,-i~~~,~,"cr~1T~10~u~s_::,•:..,~,~.;.;,:,~~-i
ltAMI nATIIMltfT lllOllu h ...... ·-!Mt W. ...... 16AN ITATIMllllT JtlOlf~'• Worth . OVER THE COUNTER
'-l-__ B_11gh te1· Futures NASO ll1tlnv.-f-o. Mond1y, J;.,U•'f 29, 1973
I '!"-......... ,.,.. 1' ..,.. MIM9 .......... """ "" .. -iDM ... Mr ''-flllowl111 ,.,_ .. -.. blitlneH
DYttlo<MAAfffl "'* • ~6lltll"" corrtr~ lrt ~ .. ~ 1 ·~"IN. 1Q ~!....,.· .. Ulll ...,_~ t,•tl'~Jlll. .. e.. TAYL01toMAD9 IAll.I, lUI l"OtNN ta~ f'MM • -.....,, aNdl. O."" tNt ~ itf Ja-y, lfn A.....-. c.ia ,,.... hW .~!_ . .v-?1 ~~i.' i 11t1 "\Milli ~~ .__ -~ :r:·A~~ ·=~ __ ..,, """""'tcwl I• I C II , Cel .. .,,..., CalM, t'lllH ,.,... ~.~"" .... ~ Pvll!IWM Or-.. CO..t Dtlty '41111, lN!i 8util'IN 11 1M1f1g clllldYCIM !Ir _,. IMl'MlleJ w .,. J~ •• )t ""' """'*• ~ lth *'" llldl~.
I. ,,. = C:."'.., .... ·--~ l'UBIJC NOTICE ""• :~..::.~ .... w1ltl lllt County c.•_.,-of ...... "-·--·• Cttrt of Or.,._ c:-ity Oii! Jan. '-1m. ....,..., ...,..,,.. .._,ty "": .,,...,.,., 1~1 WILLli\M I" ST JOHN COUNT._
',"" ... •''Ll.IAM •• ST JOtUI, COUNTT PtCTmOVI IUll•nl a.lllK.. .... ••tty J ...... ,,...;, DtcMY. "' IV lttty J • ...._...._ Offuft, MAMI tTAT.IMINT • l'tUJf
Pniil Tiie tollowllll l*'tOllt ar• dolll(t ''*'"*' Or•• COllll O.lly Piiot. l'lillll/NIH Ortr!IM co..t Dt.llV ,ltot, Mlnltt .. i J11•11i.1ry t, It. J), )0, ltTJ ... ,J J~-. 30 ,1111 ""'"*" " 1:s. lf1' 11110'1'11 1ocuc--e•i.u.1t. 20n1 I---==:--:-~===---
-lt2'7' Cllllmt u., "'°"''1""°" l...:ft m... PUBLIC N-•~ ~ ~ Cnift T"°""""' •1ft CtUmi v 11....,
"'UBIJO NOTIC.,. t.•'"'· .H111111,,.1• '*" t264Ci 1----:::-:::=::-::C-:'.==o----I r .,. DOMl1I W•V'"' ThomllM, io711 Gollme fl'ICTtTIOUI IUllMll5
laM, Hllflll'l!llofl hKh tu.. tlAMI ITATSMINT
nATaMIMT 101' .t.IANDONMINT Th11 Minta It Mll'll COllOv<ltd W • TM toltow/111 PffW!I 11 ~119 bllllftfft o• utl OI' "'1ittr~ ": Pt(TtTIOjM IVllNlll MAMI Arietfl Cton TPlefftlOfl PATCHING SPECIAL E\·, nJl
FINANCE
V19, lollowlfll ,_,._ II.I~ lllMl«IMd Tllll 111""*'1 fllM wllll the CIM!ty Woodl•!'I" Dr1v1, Hunt111g1on 8..ch
... UM DI ..... fie"''-111,1,ifteM """" Cllrtl: DI Ori/ICM CM!ty Oll1 Jin. " 1m ""' "1'1'1 Ct41LOlllN'I IOOIUHOPPE .i »0,1 WILLIAM I . ST JOHN, COUNTY Roe.ti L. Ol.111111, 1$'1 WOGdl•Wll €h ki I . CO.ti Hwy,. eot.. dll MM, CLt:ltK. ly lltfof J. lg1 .... Dcwtw.:.__ __DrllM,..._1Uirl1111-. ~ '°"oi-~' ec . ng CllllWllll. , . nn. Tlllt IMllllll 11 bllng cendllclld by .n
I TM fkltllolll bllallltM -t~ kl PuMI"*' Orlo"'9 CoeJt Dtlly l'llot, IMIVW~. ~ .... n1tct Otl Jl,lly "· lt12 In fM ,_,., '· ,.,U."1D.-tfn •1·7' hbffl L G11H1n C.-tv of Oftl'IOf, C.llfort4e. Tlllt tl•ltt'Mff flllO Wltfl 1hl Countv •1or-. 0 . "'""· '15'1 T ..... •oc''"" _,.,.. T,, NC11'1CE Cllfk Ill Or•• County 00!: J.., ... 1•n . Accounts so, L-.vnt Cllll &""It.I~ WILLIAM £. IT JOHN. COVNYY
S.rt I' 'lr'111 1'11 Vllll NtwMrt CLEllK. I'll hlty J, a11t11 ... ~-a..dl. cttlt ,,,... . ltOTIC• o• OISIOlVTIOM ,. DJoll
TNt lvtit.... w11 canJUd9d by Oii" l'AaTNUSNIP Pl.lbfl~ Of..... C•1t O•llY Piiot,
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'"""°' o. M-.,w MIO S.rt '· ., .... ,, ~ 11'\IMlc ~ hi llll'eb\' tlwn !Mt Niii ,_.,..., ,, '" u ••• ltn O·n 0.-tt P~I W. HwfW, l.IU!t O. l'•litart, O..V.•1----,:cc=-,,,-,,-,==---I 'lorlfQ o MV1r c11111r, _. I.Olli• A. Wit1t111111rt. PUBLIC NOTICE
'TMt tlt'-1 Wtt Hltd Wiii\ tilt C(lljll-fllflllhlrl OOlfllil t111$1-S uno-tN 11<-,l---------------0
ty C.llfl DI OrM09 c-iv Dll Jaftlllt'1 2', "'*"firm -end tt)'ll DI Con ........ I ••CTITIO'" ., •••••• 1n:a. flleoctt (.omplny, '' 1:JUt.Newp0o1 ,............., ,.,. ~ City., Tu1lln. Qlunty or Or~. Sl•N DI NAM• ITAT•Ml.NT
p 1,.. Ct1J..,.111t. did .. tM 22nc1 o.v TM to11oW1111 ~ '' ltolnt 1111•1Mu BOSTON (AP ) -In seven ..... I ........... All\' J_,,., Im."' l!'Wiltuft eOl)Mflt, di ... \'I IS: · b '" · •II -.,...... . ltM .. Id P.,-llllftlllp •rid •mlflltt ~Ir HARNl!Y ..... Ill( Wl!ST, lllllS "''"' months, ,,avrngs 80"3 tn
L• -ca111 .. ,, ,...,,,.. u 1111itn«t;"'*rtl11. d•ak•, 1r11111, c1111on111 ~. Ma husetts have attracted .. ublllhtll Or • COllJI OIH Ill._. Stld ~ ln'1tlt' flll\orl wlll bl con-H. Pavl 9rtl\m, l&:m M1ndr1kt, !:iS8C .
•• Y ""' 11111et1c1 tr v M o.e.i1o •nd L111111 A. 1rv1 .... C•llfof'nl• tUM. 20,000 customers for their new ~r )0 Mid l'lbnlery "' 1~1:; WtlM!\Mf11, ~· WUI N'I' •nd d1Klwil'09 Tllll IMI-•• btlng COflductld b'f In ba 111 lkiblllli• •nd dtbh of t111 !Inn .,. 111111viou.1 checking acoounts t t pay in-
1'9("•iw 111 rnonlff ,.,.111. It 1ti1 tlnn. H. '•~ erlfllm terest Commerc1·a1 banks a~ PUBL!C N011.CE further no1ie. 11 Mr.OW o•-!hit tlll Tiii• 1t1l11Mnl filed wllll ~ County • • '< ---==~,-.,==~o----1 vrldlf'llonM w111-no1-t.1 nspoMlt>ll; '""" CJark_ of_OtafGI c.ountv on;. J•~r¥-11. increasingly worried about the
ttOTICI 1'0 CUDtnMtl 11111 IS.ly Oii for lllY otlllp1'°'11 lllCIK!'tld 1t73. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY competition. ,..,, •• ,Oil COUltT OP TM• b'f lhl ollllrl In tMJr -lllllM or In 1111 CL£1llt.. or .. ,IV J . &fi111l1n, Dlpvty'.
st.t.T• °" cA~lflOllllA POlt Mll'M of..,. Hrrn, ,..nm Custo mers are rece1v1ng THI c;OUfilTV 0-OllAN•• OATED AT Coron.I"' Mir, c.1111or111... ,ulllllhlcl DAllU• CNll O.lly Pilot, more than 1150,000 m· •·rest a .... A ,,_ 11111 1$111 di¥ of J1-ry, 197', J1nu...., 23, )0 Md l'•bt~ry t , 13. u::
E11tot1 of ~ALO 0 , ANDREWS. lllO LOUIS A. WEISEN&EltG ltTS 111.n month o'n the total of . $30 ~..:. DOMALD DELL ANDllEWS. J::,.,,"";:~. i~""-'°"" o111r &1~ PUBLIC NOTICE miUJon Invested In. the ac-
NOT1c.1 II HEllEIY GIVEN to ..... ---~~-~-----! counts, Il()W offered by 70 of
cr11111+.ir1 of '"' ..... Mimed dlmdlllf PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITtous IUllNISS Sta · ""' IU """"" "'"'"' Cllllnl i•IMI"" NAMI ITATIMlllT the 167 Bay te savings
u.,• "' .. ldtft' lfl r~~ -, .... -... --PtcTITIQ!JI IUSllll:SI Tiii f(lllow1ng penol\I •r• doll!g banks. 111 '*_., \IWC,,...a. I\ .... tT T.,._WT bu .. M'll u : i': ~ ~.-:;: 111~r11111 ,:"'"~ ,111 1o1: ~ .,., 40lno 1v.1.Ns FOR11GN CAii JtEP,r.IR , _. EACH CHECK costs 15 ~ ..... 1119 ~ 111 wre Oil lltnlnla ••: lotllrbor ll'i'd., Collll """51. C1llfor11L1
Jlrftlt ~ ·~ Jr Alltol"nlY •I Uw COSTA MESA TENN1$ CLU8. f10 ...,.. nw. cents, in contrast to the free
... V'. ......:.... ·• ·-· ........... • iftot011 o.. .. C•t• Mn&, c .. ..!!. m» lt•Y">Ol'ld Vlflelllt, Jn 1tiwn1G1 Aw., ,..._A1..:-g offered by many --•-.-· -~ tltobtrl J9 ..... _.. •II Elmlf Newport•8ffCll, C..lllvtnll '26tf. \;UIO:YWI c1111ono11, nMD, Wflkll h t111 ~ DI rom1 ........... '' 1v1r1 Ardt1"«1. _, H1rb0r e1Y111.. commercial banks -usually Ml,_. pf lhl ~ 1tl •It -tlwl HuntlfttlOll &•Id!. C.int. r'f ml H C•I• Mnl, C1lllomll '2611
per11lnll'IQ to "" "'' .. DI Mid ~'· Robtr1 L" Moono, •1. 1 ra. t,n. Tiii• bualroffl " bllflf cOlld1Xled by • on the oondition that a $100 w1111111 1our ,,_!tit •flw the !Int pu1:1111u-11"11'°" euc:l'l. Calll. """ PilrlMflhlp. bal•-;. m a ,. n t a ,. n e d , !lot! DI t1111 111111m. .~lcllHI Tlrnotr1y Atlbotl, 105f Prnldfo, ...., ..... c.. Vlne.ot ......... ... °'"',"-• ~ 1ti1 c~1. =~~'l!· :;:· <Ondl.ldld iw '• ni1a 11111m1n1 1111c1 w1t11 1111 c °"ntv ilChoUgh some commercial -·-1 .DWI nfll Ci.rt. o1 Or•• c-tv on: J1n111ry 11. '---1..-.i ..... •t even -wr· e ••·t Adri\lnlltrltor DI the Ett•M ltln'fl Aotie~ Jilr:tn. ~ lttt. Wlt.:LIAM E". S:T JOHN, toUiilTV lH:UlNI UV14 ._, UUI ·
JAMIS t ":u:~ ,r;:rMd *"°'"1 Tiil• 11.1..,...,1 11tec1 w1111 t111 Caunty CLERK. •v llltY J. ••f'I"'"' o.puty. But commercial banks are ... , _ • c11r11; Oil 0r1noe County on : Jan. 12. 1m. p.iua prohlb1"•-A from paying in ~ o.;;t; WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY Pllllll1hld Or1nge (Ollll 0111'( Pllol, M:U •
N"""'1 had!. c.wi .• ft'6t CLE•K. ey '""'" ,..,. W•r«. o.p.,,ty. J•f'llllrv u, '° •nd F.iwu.ry "' u . terest on their checking ac-
T......,... lnO '1).4112 P 215M 1m la.-n counts, aod the savings bank .t.tW•Y ti.r Mrnlllktr•IW P111Jtlillld CW.'* C011t Delly Pllol,
p111:o1itl'llll 0r.,... coeit o.ny Piiot, J1n111ry 1t. n. 30, •nd FWvary •· PUBUC NOTICE accounts pay interest at up to
J1-rr n , :io 1nc1 Ftbl"111rv '· }3, 1tn lts-nl---=======o---51/.t. , percent a year . A 1'73 20f.n PICTITIOUI IUllMl!SS PUBLIC NOTICE NAMI 1TATIMll.MT deposlter who has a large
Tri. 1o11ow1119 ""'°" 11 doing butl1111• balance and writes few checks: ,~-m ii11 .Dl.c. '. c•.I DITOll SUPlllOll cou•T OP TM• JACK TRYON .. AJSOCIATE"S, V:N s. comes out ahead at a savings ST.t.TI OP CALlllOlllll.t. l"O• R1r1111111 Or., S•11l1 An1, fll111, b nJt OP IULK Tll.t.tllPI• THI COUNTY 01' OllAMff JACK TltVON lo ASSOCIATES, :J72f 5. a · ·
1n 1<ton1•11C1 w1111 1r.t pr<W11111111 of ., • k rtt• """'· n101 "W fm' d that the people us S«llOll '101 DI "" C•IUOn'll• Ulllforrn NOT IC•· 01' ".Ati::C: OP PITITIOM TillJ blnlnn• 11 bll119 eonOuclld b'I' •n e • Cotrlmlrclal Codi. 11111lc• 11 Mr.OW 91....., l'Olt PIOl.t.TI OP WILi. AND POii 1norvkko1I. ing the accounts are either the
""' 1 bulk tr1111t1r 11 •l:lolll '° bl midi L•n1•s TISTAMINT.t.llV J.a L. TryOrl young adults or the older ~ bl'-IM plf'10lll Ind In l<COl'UACI Etllll DI · TAl(IVO T ... NAMACHl Tllh 1!1llf!leftl flied wllll 1111 C-.ty w1t11111e .. ,,.. .nd eandltloM ••follows: O«:ffHd 'c.11r1r. DI Dl'"1• COi.iniy on; J•n-12, lm. pie," Elliott Carr of the Sav-
1. Tiii -IN l:Nlllllll lddrtM DI 1111 NOTICE rs HERESY GIVEN 11111 WILLIAM Ii. ST JOHlol, COONTV . Bank Sassocia1· of 1rlftll«or II OICK CU.Jtl(; ..,., Nortl\ TATSUO TANAMAQHI lllS flied i..r.ln • C.LElk, ly Thtrt$1 M. Ward. Dlopuly. 1ngs ion
N1-..rpCl'1 1ou11v1rc1. Hewpon auc:11. Pil'r"°" '°'" pro0.11. ot wn1 •nd for " mtt Massachusetts says. "These
c..111oml1. '111 ldclr••-~ lrf the 11o1uanu o1 Len.1 T1to••"""'•rv to ...,1-Pllbfllhld Dl'"•not COllll 01"" Piiot, people generally have high a c· 1r...,.flrar wllllln "" lllrH Y••rl llolllr ~e to wtllcll 11 midi fof J11M111ry '"' 23, 20, Ind Fltll'111ry 6,
pr1e.u,. 1111a iMtt •• 1.r " ~ '" 111rt~ Pilrtlcul•~ •nd t111o1 1111 11rne and 1t7,1 131-n counts and low outpµts." k.-lo lhl tr-llrH •r1 11 lowl: pll(I of '-'fllll fill' $111\e Ms blln Ml The b Ja 1205 ~~1 A-. wu1 u. ior Febl"Mrv 2D. ltn. •I•:» •.m., i11 lhl PUBLIC NOTICE average a nee per ac· ~;.4:· "•...,_, .. , o1 '"' "'-"' c\ll.lrtroom ..-~1 No. 3 o1 $11c1•1---------------1 count, he ooted, works out lo ._ ~._._. I OV STERNl!ll 2111ti C8\111, 1l 1CO Civic Cll\let. t>rlw Wesl, In NOTICE 0, llllT•HTION TO"•lllO.t.O• II 50() " ,. U ....,...... ' 1111 Cit'( of 5.IMI AM. C..11*"1•. IM TM£ SALi OF ALCOH<N.IC ' · , 1n1trno L•""· Hunnntton IHdl. O.ltd J__,.,. •· lt73 1•v•11.t.oe1 The competition began after c!11~1iou.nen _. ____. c1nctlp11°" "!!!.'=".!..AM,,_~ st JOHN, Janu.ry 1"' 1'73 the statE:: Supreme Court ruled .. ,...,-,~ .._.,, ..... To Wllom It ~Y Conc1rn:
If the procwty .. "" rr1Mtffred ., ... OllAYIOM AND ••OSs, INC.. SWJect 1(1 I•-· DI !I'll llctnll IP-last May that savings banks follOW11 4N Nortll ~ loulevlr'd, Ml If..,._, c ...... , Plied tor. notlcl h llltftoy gJwn ""'' 1111 MIWPOl1 IMdl. c..ntom11. '"" ......_ ......,.,._ unc1trt11n1c1 prapoMi to 11911 •leflholk could offer "demand deposit"
Oft'lee -..nittvr• Ind tldlna. Tf\ICM LM .,....._ c..,...., ,..... 111 ..... .,,.. '' the Pf"'l!Tll11" descrlbld 11 accounts. The savings banb lftll ~p!Mftt, ftt•"""''"' 1uP(llllL .t."9n!IYI lilr: .....,....,. lollowl: •• TM-..: ..... ,.,., II lo"" COl'llUrntMI· PUMI....... Ol'"lll'IOI COil! Dilly Pllol, lt»n ,,1(11\111 Aw .• COlll WM actuaDy art p r 0 v i d i n g
1c1 Oii F•brvllY '· ltn 11 ti.. offk• Oil J-rv 311, 31 Ind Flbr111ry 6, ttn u-n Pv,,_,.1 to IUCll 1n1e1111on, the un-withdrawal slips that don't JOSEl"H A. Gl!.NOl/ESE. AltorM'( •I cMrllol'lld II 1pplyl"' to 1111 o.p.rlnMnl
Law. 2'11 N. Twlln 11re11, Or•,., PUBLIC NOTICE o1 "kollolk 1 .... .r., c.on1ro1 tor 11•u•n<• need· to be presented at the
c111rorn111. o1 an Mohollc bl,,...IOtl 11c..,11 for 111111 bank, but these "negotiable t1;0V STEJtNEll .... 1114 prlfTll1u 11 follows :
Tr1111terM ON SALE aEER orderS of withdrawal" on what Pllbll1111d Ort ..... CNll 0.11'( Pllol. • su,•1101 cou•T OF TH I W1U11r c. Rau J1rw1ry 30, 1m 2"·13 ST.t.TI OP CALll'OllMIA l'Oll · Publlsllld Or•llll9 Cotll C»Hy Piiot, the banks call NOW accounts
THI co~:?1.~0Jt,..NG• J1nu1ry 30, 1rn 306-1J look jus t like checks and can
Pay Off
PUBLIC NOTICE
llll'M -111'-l •lly Mrt $1\lt Sl\11 Otlu.-• C :Ith '''• Niii...., 8 76'111710 G d l"'PP!lld O'I' llM N 811~ I lda 22 %21-Of.om Cr\ 1311 t4 NOl'dllf :1$\0 :ti • tion1l Anoclltlotl DI 111111. 1111 31\!o Jl'llo 011m Hd 12.IO ll'• Nw1 NIG ~'o 1011 ra S *lll'l!lft Ot1len , l1rlll$ H ).I lS Q;di A a 311•0 31.\it lolo.o•ll • "'°" N'• 1rt llllh l<ld Dffln l:rll F JI'!. 3'1,(, Olvr1 Sd :H\lt '°"' NK!r 1 ~ • ~11111 D'f' OYI!',.;,.; 1w1•1 x20\~ M Ooo:ulel ~ ~5 O.kwd H ~~ H Viewed £01·
Dy SYLVIA PORTER
The Job outlook for engineers, sclenUsts and technicia ns
is brigh(enlng. The prolong ed overall economic upswing In
the U.S. ls now expanding career openings, pulling up sal-
ary levels. ·
Major U.S. corporations r eport they plan to hire 42 per·
cent more graduates with bachelor de-
grees in engineering this June than In
J une '72, ~percen more gra(fu.
ates with master 's degrees.
AVERAGE STARTING salarie s,..ac-
oording to the annual poll cooduct.ed by
Dr. Frank Endicott of Nfirthweslem
Unive rsity in Evanston, Ill., will be
$90S a month for newly graduated engin-
l>OllT•• eers with a bachelor 's degree and $1,0S&
a month for those with a master's degree. The8e are sub-
sta ntially above the levels of 1972.
"The acute depression is over,' says Or. EU Ginsberg,
director of Columbia Unive rsity 's Conservation of Human
Resources project and a nation.ally respected authority on
the nation's manpower trends.
lf this is the c areer of your choice -or if you know
a .m a n or woman Involved in the engineering, technical or
scientific fields -here are the key trends and areas where
job opportunities will be brightest.
jt A real need 'has developed for those trained in the
apphcatlon of aerospace advances to earth problems·-rang·
ing from Ill health to poverty a nd problems of the deaf and
the blind. * CROSS DJSClPLINARV'' specia lists will be In much
greater . demand than those trained in a narrow s pecialty,
and this will apply particularly lo careers relating to en·
vironmenfal protection. For instance. a combination in
ever-lasting demand might be for those wilh training in
the social sciences and law as v.·ell as the usual basic
fields. ·
;-l•r 6"llf'1 l• Inti P 4!' S\~ Doll• Gtn 15\1 1' .X••n Dr •,",' MCI\ ollllo" •1 DI 1•111 Co 1014 1~ Oornilclt ,»I.I 311• 0Ce1n E• ..
"°'i 1 lf11f1rn 81nlly L1 331.o :Miio Daw J-Jill.. )111 ,xnor Ml t 1n1.) T"°' QUOll· Ml Prd 5'¥o 51,,_ ODyle 09 11 \• 12'• 011111 Lqt IS\.'i Ill• I 111111 do not lncludl lfll L1a "°" 41" Dun!<!~ O Sf1, Sh ,,11111~• M J9'• 311'. •ll•rt markup. !Mrk l lbb MID t ,.._can Lt D :tt"' .O'it Oii Ftfro !l" • 3_own or cGn\1'111 .. 111 Drm 1n.11•.,, .. ,, ,, P, ~••"c"• ~211'• 110111 •nd do llOI Bird Sorl5 'H\.i 1'14 , "'-p ""' 'h jf:' r1pr111nr .Clu•l aoti E~111 31'.14 33'-'> e aso lJ'll. '' • rmont 1 l'r-< .,. lr11111c:llon1. gooi11 Np 2f~\ JOi E11trgy C 10 1011 v•m•• t~• I~• Monday fll\c:O I 20.,., 21 • E~ &L lll\ 3110 g•••• N,r. l~o lo J1n1111y 19, 11n e11n1c5 Jn lO\' 21 El n " •!\lo .. .,., 1111 C•o 1~ I • Brown Ar • • ·~ Euc11 I" I' 1'-P"Dll Br )6' ll'' llNDUiiiiALS 81/dtbt 1Si~ 15!• El Pel"r 11>4 121'6 P1cc1r d\i •l•• AHO UTILlflll vck.., I~ l"o Felr Lne IBo 114' Pac G1m lO lOlo Bid Ask eurr.p SI ~ ]()!! Farlon El 21'h 2f'• Pee Lum JI'" • 'c111111n1 2t 30 eull•r M «!\It 41\ Ftrm er 2111 21" P~ Bro I VJ u 1, "•• Alli 21\l 22\:i. C..m er~ J2l\ l2'• F1y1 Dro 16\1 u..., P1n OcOI 15"" 1• ~ll<O Lnd 11._ 11~'o C•m TH 21'11 191., Fiim Co Ulio !•Ioli P1ul lf'lv I t« 11U
4UIM T• 21 .. 21\oo 1p1 5ow . ~-6'11 intr"" U Pt1.1ltr. ~ r.t ' '11'ftl 81 ... 6h C•s N GI IJ\\ 1,.. Fs! l!IOlln HI,, 21 P1v1I I 1°1 'm ... Pl'li, lfh 11 "" VIPS 17"' Jiit Isl '•Fl11 JI\,, lJ~ PvlH C11 2 I'> 211'. ' At!Cm 11 ,,..., Pimp Pl t•V. tiV. I•• W1tF No 3 .. ••cN Sv 171..i II'•
'met LD l... ~!Kt A 22"1 ll\t FIKO ll!C XI\• ~ ::1 ~ .. : ~~ tt1'(!' "" !•Pr 6J'dl 6.1llo "-"I Co 19~ 20 Fl• Rack n~ 11\lo Pllro Lw 100. Am Fll'lcl 11\t 111~ llfm Co .,.,,, "6'lo F11 TtWo 1m lt\11 Pholn Inc 3:i,;, ,,, Am Furn ' hi e r I• t3 Ml't Fllctor XI ~ ,.lcN S1v I• U•r ,r.m G•H •11'1 M '4 !>rll $1C 161 111 Forest OI ?•lo 2' Ponkrln ""' &f~i '"• l~ s,1 16'4 16\lo lllr u A ~I 41V, Fo.1 Grnl 201..i 13 P'-lf w \~ 16'• ,.191 \J 1$'6 IWPI< 1'1'1 16\"-Frank El 1Ht 114. Piotr INJ lflt. 11•t Am Tll1v l3 :M low Crp ll"o 11"' Fr1n1l1 1t't 79~ Pllnd Mk JI Jll • ,r.m Wild 1°" nv. aclC u 24l.< lih Frlend It 31"1 :n Pooll llro j'• s•. """'-r 50'6 Jl\4 °"" s~r 20 Jl F•l1c~ A m o n'li Poll _ Cp I 1.\ *''• Ankln In ,.. J m\lfll P aU"o !1 .. Fro1 FGE 15 IS'IO Prol Golf rllt •'4 ,r.pe<lll E 13~ 14111 111111111 p :io ~Flier H 111. J~ Pr_.,. h n1.
"PJ.i Inc 21 21"" OU1ln1 .,.,,., v i,. Fllftlo. SH n m. ~~~ ~ .. 11~
r.r MV1 ]\'I )"' tOll Co 2!l.O 211a 11:.y C 1111) 11\'t Full! C!o ~ !l:
"rro ""' I~ ~ rlllcn R to 101, Jbrlll 2"1' 11v. f;"'' 0 Il ,,,. ,r.rr-Hr 22 tllill Curl Noll 2J"ll 24.... 2ll .... • -.rte~ Hb IP\ ljli "·-I '"'' " ,.,k o '' u1~r h 1'111 • ,,. ,_., ""' _., LrJ 12 11\.t "'"" 1 h I•~, "'"'' I I 0.11tv M 1011) 11 o Cp 1 ... lf~ •lnr Cll 16 16"° '4M Col• st'4 :n Dirt Dr'll 23\'t lA ,r.urm •71'!i •v. 11. ,r.11 Gt; lf I~ IS\6 0•11 0.1 • 414 AvloP ll 32 IYtm i: 'l! r.ura l rn 15 \Jl'I 0.1• Gen lfl'> 121\'t Cruo1 39•1 OO¥t R•ymd "/rd Alo •l'I 4% Olch 01 JO ll ln$1 11\, U Al!M Pr: ~ 9't ea rd w 10.., 21 r 0.Clll' In st·1 11. Mt<! 2•, l'• Ate.ca o »Jlilo 61• 8111• Fl JI\.\ 3'1~ Ollc lb ,r.R $JV. llm M1 114 11<. ll.1tet1 p 'Iii l•h &lawln L Ml~ V V. Otlllt 11111 71/o 1 aon x 141-i.11 ll.19 flt<. ll'• •---;,;;--.;:;--,---:---::----l~;•Y A.dv 161-. 1711,i lttll rnc:o \to 11•1 I If SMt 1~ 16\.11 Rill IJnlv 1111. 11\< 10 it.Ost A"tl••e H&eh Ch Ja :tt A•~ "'I•• U.\4 IJ'r ... Helin EW 311'1 33"" A•vn &II: 41• ..• , ... l-70,,-,,,=~~~~-----Hall Fnk 19 19~ Rlv1I Ml 111~ 26 NEW YORK IVPtl-Tht 10 moll acl!YI Html! Br fll'Ao 41 Ri;wod E• l7'h 31'• ll11Clla lteded an the gTc m1rk1t Mond•Y H1r1~n p 1..:. t tl II.Obi"! Oh 11 11>, 11 111110llfd bv H"'S . Hirpoor II. 9 9.., RaUl11t 8 ll 70
1191:11 V•u/"111 Bkl Al•e4 Clltl. HIWlll Fr 12·~ 11~ ~= ~~' :i .. ~ :·,~:
KMS Ind 1•7! '"'' "'-.. Hi'C:hnQ C 1111 ~· Ruckr Pl\ •ti 5 P111f10t~hG•1 e 1n· ,,, ,1,+ '""•11111 Ml 1J\lo 14\.f ll:ust s1uv 211 ,. ·-,, ,, ~" 11•-•• fUf(lll 2914 ~ aql A.dp 111. 15'< 1110 I~ 6 -1 Hl•tfl C •ltV. 2111.4 •l•m ~P t.-. 10\t ~:lit= c:oA ~m ~1. 26~ .. 1+omwtt H 1$1.0 M>1nn i.•. u'• Huolllf, 'roDI 12,IOO 'J\l 4.S'•+ 1\4 HOOVlr 32\lo l)\\ •ntllri J\11 ""' NoClfll ,r.lr' 61,100 ... •!. UOll To-I •SI> "51\ lllr•r JJ J7lo llntl rnef CP '9,900 ~\· Giii-loll unt Mlj;! 111':> \II.I; lloll Ill J7\1.. ,. ... 011nkl110onu1, O.JOO r~ ~ Hv1n C 26 761'1 Pit Inn n .... 13b ~11n11r G.ss .tl.100 n~+ ""Ylllf c 26'617\li. ILG I'"" 11" lndf Wit 20'-o 11 .... rl-H 21 fl-I. lrNll NVCI :llfi~ 2'"'° loro I 2~ JI)
11\forlll 11\'o 11 I Wrlcl ~fl' l~l:~c c~~ ~ sl~ ,. ~en "" Xl~ lnlml G1 I~ lHlo s:m111r "!' 311.-o Gainers & Losers 1"' A•111n 11~ 10 s~ gg W ~:~
*Indus.trial hygienists will be in demand to develop ,j--;;:::-;""'""-':-"'>7:""'"'"'°"' :~,~.~we: ,~.~ 2~J~-11: ''• health prOg:ra mS throughout the U.S. workplace and to find N'•w vo;t (Cf Pi> ..:--y;., tiiiloWffiil'"Oi"f rt"fid · R-"" ni. !N.";T'o1.-l1~ llt .,_TM HOC:b ""'' lllVI 111lno-d TheJanwsD 11•11t'l!o !lrN1 Ptp ti• 11 ways 00 eliminate major occupational hazards and diseases. ,..., •rNI 1011 th• n'W>lt Nlld on Plfcent Jott Alt-Fr ~ J\li oc.,.1v ~ 2,9
Ai · d d ·u o1 ctt.onu• on 1111 o-·n..<01.1ntv 10Myn M 11 1tu pee tr a '° "' 1 so in eman w1 be specialists 00 help protect man m1rk•t 11 Quoled ~ NASO. 1Jt1r st 1oi.. 1~ s11MrJv 1 12%1. n 1-,
f the h rd of · d" · Ntl •ml 1>1rce" ClllftOl1 •rt l'hot K11v1r C ''" llo!I Sid II.IOI• 11~ llh .rom aza s excessive ra 1at10n exposure. dllt1r1nc1 bltw-Y 11•1wrOU1 l•tr bid Keirn Tk '"' '"' s1k N ,r.11 ..ov, 41 prlc1 •net '"" cvrren! t111 blG orlct. IClllWO<I ~ 2P4 ~••N a .... It'll. 10•~ * The ever-stricter health standards being imposed by GAI NER~ K11t1 co11n """ 26.\lo s111k N s 11 n~.
federal regulatory ag · ·u · I 81 ff , ·-, , k ... 0111 1g11 10 .. 11r1:1r rte. 11~ 111, eoc1es WI reqwre arger a s to 2 ~,!;1°wn, • •,~ ..., VP 1,•j k'n" Fb 111 .• 11~ uoer Et 12:~ u11 f h d test. · · le · d lrl · • .., 1 ar p .,. " Vp S ktv (U$1 120,, 12~ lvntlr (p 11" II' per orm researc an mg 1n pnva Ill us es pr10r to l s-11 Re11rc11 j v, Up 14.J l(~vtt In' 11•1, 11\lo ••bo Fd 1 I'> ...,
Sale Of new drugs and Cheml.cals to the -ohl>'c. A "'I TS lncorn 7'11 to Up 11.1 ~MS nd l'4 61~ 111v Cro l \4 llli Y'-"" 5 SoluMIEQ .IOi:I IJ~~ 1.\'1 Vo 11 ,s l(n1oe VI 2• 26 T1ma.• ' Pl11t Proo:tuc11 ~'Iii Up l .I k_, Pr 761/i 271' 11J 11• * FOOD SCIENTISTS and technok>gists will be sought { f=~~..!'r i~ tt e: ~;f ~rT~f~n'/ ~6"'i 1~ t·r:~~ w f'!,,., tr;~
in larger and larger numbers to find new way s lo: store 1: ~~1~;nr1n"l 1Jl? 1\ ~g tjl ~~m,~, Ji.,., 1!ll l:.,:n¥oc 1 10:;
foods sarely·, apply computer techn>'ques to food proce""ing 11 M 8 A11ocl•1• 4>t ~ uo .1 L1f'IC1$1 l2"' xi" 11n f" \,, .,., U W1!tl90llCI Inc •~Ii "" UP 1.1 Lenci 1 :JI 1-11 Ml 14 14'1li
and marketing operations; develop new foods for dieters 13 variiv1mt co 4\> ;'!' uo, s.t L•"'111r c . •7l> ,.,., r1n Co• s~• ''• 1' Trllon 011 G11 '"" ., Cl S.I L1r~ l!lo~ l6 l6\lo T•n G1tP 11 111, and others· test food add1·11·ves ••ch as !iavo m· d u A~11on ' Pa11 4\1 1. uo s.6 L_,1 Pl 1~ 1...,. Jrn 0c.,. '°'" 20,, ' "u r J>I'. 16 ll1mbt1nctt Ent 2~ lo Vp 5.j LJl>ertv H 4io ~ rnoft Fn ~l.io 1A .. scrvatives for sNety and e ffectiveness: devel ne nM 1'B.rk1l e 10 En '""'°!"" uo s.•L11 c~mp 101.io ~u111 C1pt • l4l• l""' H s-Of" EG!V ]VJ " Vp 5.3 Linc 8d1t n•.\ 14 I.Inion 5c>I ,, •• products such as "meats:" made from soybe and fortified 1t MO•lll llldu'ttr 2'n 111 uo s.o 1.1on Cl$• 1v. 1" VnA" rn , 1·~ 20 6191;n Pllolo S , 11 I~ Vp •.t Llovd• El 24\li 1$ VS ,. 't' • •• cerea ls for the undernourished. U Adv1n Ml<rao · u~t '• vo •.s UKtl" •1·~ •"' us r11 ll'• 10, ff X~• COio 11"6+ ~ Vo •·•Loewi Co &I~ ff\ol Univ ~dll 1•\.o jl'• * Ther e'll be many new and far out specialties. For in· 74 ~' PO:M~: .!t~ ~'•+ '• ~g :·~ ~:"1 A9.~· 1 ;~ 1;;. ~:M~ a, .. 1m
stance, in need will be indus trial oieteorologists to probe 2s Ntw•H cos ..:1 11~+ ~ ua 1.2 M& tcu Jh r.t v."" Sn •" 1·,
th I. '· het the if" LOlf•s M•rll ,,,, n•1 Yan OY-'!'• ,, ... e 1ni.:1 wecn~wea r and spec 1c human activities -M•rv Kv ~'h v.., s~t 1 ,, r••· · I ' k1r1d1l ""' J'•-'l Otf l•.1 '.le Cnx• ~·<i ~ Vlctarl st lj•,. inc uding biologica1 functioning -and lo apply such know· 2 •11r L 11t Cp v.-• 1 11.s ""'ou•v 19 1•.,. Vidlo s.ri 1 l, u
led to 'cul l ,_,.irq__ .so I -l'o U lj.J ~"' u ll'ii v11....i Sc lj"'! ge agr1 tural and industrial operations. • 111e°"' EGl;I• s\ii-... 1 1 .s Mf<I"'" s•'\ .a•:. vo1 s11o1 J ..., ! " . ! Mocllll' H1 Sl"I 1 -l o II 11,I N,frld In 7V, I~ Wadi NG 1•\ol •'• * Fina11¥. a recent ·"skills conversion" study by the I c-PI< C•o ''~-'• t 10.1 "'~~,,, Fr 10 .. 111, •sit Mt >fr-.o:o. COlllH11r lftrod l.\4-1 111.l Mlllloo• . ~·-, <41<> IUl'lfl I '"' I)'> National Society of Professional Engineers in Washington • Kl<ldv D41nHa '"-t\lo t.6 .. .,., C..t• 1.i1 1~v. Wet>O "' ''• ""
t ed he loll I ~llll'ldA .lie 2H'>-21.!o t .J Minn Fab 7 .. tit Wllllll\ 11~ 12'\ urn up t owing 11 fields oow eagerly searching for 1 · v'"" Inc ~ '• 11 1.s M«iuJ ra ~ 35 w..io1 WI 1S4' ,.,,
· 1· and · · the · edla I -'---11 S 11 Coro 2\'.o-'Iii I t.1 Molex rn "° "°" WtllllQ Nt '! 1111 sc1en tSts e ng111eer s 1n years unm te y AUl;)dd. l! 11v1r c.o 11 ..... ~ •' l·s Moo<• 51 '"~ '111 W.tc'lt l't 1 Iii ,.,., i::rus can be an e1ceeciingly valuable, money-making guide. 14 'l'S1
" ~~ 'fa= 4~ .1~"'c:1 ~ l~l:? ::~:~~ Lu. i''
Heavy coostrucUon (bridges. skyscrapers), resJden-U E~.t"'c&: 1~ • .:: 1v. Ii ~r ~;~ ,~ 1J~ :::i:I"~: f il~ ~
tial construction, r~arch and development, environmental 11 1n11 .... 1v Coro 101~-I' 1.0 Htt Lt~iv 11\w i~·o win ,.~ » U Am EIKI Liii l -VO 7.7 .. 1 11'tl(r 1"• l?'t WIK l"L "'-
Systems, forestry, m ...1;cal teehnology, electric power and 1• xon1c1 n """ 15\'>-,,, 1~I', 1.s "'' P11.n1 '•'~ 11 wooc1 Liii 111~ =-¥ :IO Monfort ot Cal '~•-~• 1.4 .,_..,., U 2'I World sv 23:i,;, ,, t Utilities. 21 C011ll D\ionlm fft-~ 1.\ N""ll Co 181~ 1•u ~<loft! W ti~ t\~ ~ OlntoMICI Ind 10 -~ 7.G ,.F:,,., G" "~ ,.. '<t>mX Co tl\I 121, •Others include industrial sa.fety; tran<mnrtation planning·, ,r.uoc Trut .49 lol~-·~ I·' 1<J N•t G 11"0 1110 ''"l•o Frt 41a,, "'' '"'I"' Mlcroct1t1 Cp ,~ ~ ,I 'ol•r<>l•I '" ,.,., .,,,, 1'tQlr Co 131'> 10'• law enforceme nt and traffic engineering. 2s P1"'1t1b 1n11 -,... 6,1 Niel.en A 15a,, 1611 z1an1 u111 11 2ti:.
PUBUC NOTICE-, NOTic.~a OP HaA1.1No OP PITITloN•---P-U_B_LI_C_N_OTl __ CE ____ , be used 1·ust iike checks.
----------'---1 FOk ,llOIAT• OP WILL AND PO• c t F. ·a1 u "t 8 •1111 L•n••S T•ITAMINTAllT 1--------------' oun y 1nanc1 m suP•110• coun OP TMI E11111 ol' CHlllSTINE E MOllSE, o.-l'ICTITlou1 1us•N•ss £N SEPTEMBER, NOW ac-.
ST.t.Ta OP CALll'OllNl.t. FOil C"•lld. NAMI IT.I.TIMI.MT counts spread to the New MUTUAL FUNDS
THI COUlllTY OP OllANO• NOTICE ts HEREBY GIVEN Iha! TM follow\119 Pl"Wf\ Is doing M inns 111 .. .t. iMll c11.11• c. MorM 11n 111tc1 11er11111 1 Piii-u : Hampshire Savings Bank in
llOTIC• OP "l.t.tlNO OP PITITION 11oii tor Prot>1i. ol' Villi and '• IUUlfl(• ,r.cE AUTO LEASING. nu Alll v111. Co d H A . th t M t ,.. .t.UTMOttlTY 'JO IOlllOW ol' Litten Tul-11"' to 1111 Plfllloner D•., No-0 o-•. -wo IlCOr · ea1-s u or a ee Ntw Yark -Fol· Ort• .. E 13.13 tl.13 •nUI Fd 11.n 11.n llll111r1 15.01 1!-" ..... _ . ' . n..... ~-" •• ··1 h It ba 1..: . lowL1111 11 • 1111 of OBEI l'US o•' JH1n !"' f.Ool t .IJ S1<1 rt1r J.~ .OS MONIY AllD TO IXICUT• ,.._ r1~ to wllk:ll 11 mtde for fllrtllw kenton I'. lelrlort. 22U Alt• VIII•, a assac use s TIA.log 1n-bli:I '"" •iktd prl-rvf Fd 12.ll IJ.JO JH.,1 Iii t.n l.tCI k iwi Fd 10.111 ...
1sto11Y NOTI s1cu110 1v SIC· Pilrtkulln. •nd t111o1 Ille tlnM •nd ~ Nrwixort eeec11, f2l60 terests say some federa l Of· IE °" Mut1111 Lv 16.62 11.21 Jotwi•tn a .ft 29.$t S<llVI s1 10.1, .n OMO TaUST 01ao Oil hlarl11g 1111 11/M lllS bHn "' ..,, Tllll bullllftl 1, btl ... eondvcltd bY' In 11111 •• ouofld by l!lll'lem • '° '·" •fYSTOMli• KUDO • ,.DI.
Tiii Eitlft a1 111.ueY c. fl:UEBLE•. F.twv1ry 1. 1m, 11 t :oo 1.m., 111 t111 1n111v1c1ui1. ficials are concerned that ii tho R ti NASO fnc. Jri Clflt 10.10 11.13 11 e1 UA1 fif. ~[ 1nv \'.., ,t.14 c1«N...s. cour1 r_,,. "°" ~..-1 No. 3 of ·"11d klilton 8ffllor• h . b k •··k· An au rity on building and eserva ons are necess~ry Ml>Mlr i:Ci 'g~ ~:: ::t: :: 11 1J~10:1f :m-1r.fl lf·ft
Notk• 11 t.rWI' ""'" 11111 w1LMETf,r. court, 111'00 Civic cenr.r Oflve west, 1n T~l1 1111'"""'1 111911 w1111 111e county I e savings an Cu~; 1ng development wlll address a and may be made by calling J1nu1rv "· 1tn 11'1~" a . 1 kl I·" I·" ~11 :w.a JfA3
;bt!:E=· ~~ ~~1;:.:11.:,.~~ 1~;1: ~~~ ~~11torn1•· ;:::.1.~°'"'':.' _c;t""'1~~,t,·"·c~'u~~ system expands, it could meeting of the Orange County (714) ~3075. --,11• .t..i. ":1"l'n"'':: 1~.a 10.M 1:1 !~ ·u-llil-~,.. s .;J~ITY r.r,i4.ff
-· -··-........ !or 1Hvt1 lo P.Kutl. WILLlllM E. Sf JOHN, CLE•K. e, Tlllnw M. W1rd, Otpury tnreaten the stability or s mall F1'nanc1'al Soc1'ety 00 Thurs-,r.119ran (I) (1) Gwtll F lf.tt J.ll US! 2 12:&1 . 11-f JAi 1· ,_ """ CM!"" Cleftl A~l.AL TYt !ncrf\I 6.fl Al US! l t lJ 1 , llr1 F t.31 1 . ,.~ .. !IOl'l' Mot9 MC:und b'f I 5lcoftd •• . fl' Ul)f commercial . banks. They d rwl~ 5.0f $.lol !P«ll F '·• 10.14 1151 M J 11 ,. llLICTIO "°';'
Trwt °"" llPGI' tlll real ,,..,...... of
1,.. MILYIM P. COHiii Publl$Md DI'"•• C011tt 01Uy Puot ay • E , v _"!:', ,•·."r. ,•
1
.:!ln ~"'•J," '•'i·",, •jlj·" t.r.'"•l', j'··ff ,·~ '!:rm ',",' •'f"J 1,Ji·.", 111111 11ert1n.tter Onaibldi Mill 11111 *' Cl\'k CM1..-°"" Wnt, Wtt "' J1n111rv >0, •nd t'lbfu•rv 6, ll. 20, re ason that these commerc ial M S ··-· , J1
'--'' om oO •·OO 'u In '"' Santi bl. C•llflnllll; 1m 2'2-13 banks -;gbt fimd themselves aCO tewart, president and arn•ngs p Advlllr 4 ~ & I ·~ 2 n dr.r . 1 Sllr1 1 1 . ~--· • • • ..... Tll 1nu f'N4n .... ., "i''" H 1~·os 1 g 1ri11 •P1 KMr "' •.» 10. s.n111111 10.49 I •,,· P,""'°' ..._c.ciu,." ,~.!.~ ~·~ .. -,',91~!: ... nc:n_Y ,.. ,.r11i-r PUBLIC NOTlCE s•··t of cash if customers sud-chief executive officer or " uru... 1 ·~, . 1 QfY '"" 1, • t1 Lffl• Fill 6.14 Mntrv F 11_11 11.n ,.... ._,.., V'"' ~·· P ... 1...... ........ c • o I"' Piiar •IUI: Stewart I f tio Se I AGE Fd '· ,. Qty Pr 3.n ~.111 Lt,;:011ouP: IKAllHLD o•P :
rnen1ittier.o1,111o•t111nflKld•1111e 11,,.,. ""'""""' vr•flll• °'' e ., ··--~== denly shifted the ir checking norma n rv ces A D la •,,u..,.111i.,, '••'u,'--11:::'!,,'wm ,,•-,•,,•,.o oL!dr 1,1·~1·1-.~ 1-~.!!. ,•~ ,"l'1 and pllC't for the "'•ring DI wld ,.,11'°"· ,.,,..,...., n. M, :io. ltn n.i.7.li · l'ICTtTtous =,=.=.,=.=,=,=,---1 is a noted author and lecturer. t F •• ' .so " ·~ '' ,_ "
w'llln •nd whll'I .,,, ..... IOl'll lnllrnled In --. U OTlCE N""' •TAl••••T a-·-ts to savings banks. Oltg s ""'~' '-~5 rt \!·'' tVCll 1'.11 I Fd $It J-'1 -· PUB C N ..,., ..... vw.• His writings 1·n "Sanct'1ty of Arn ..,., II. lj ~" ti !"' ~Otor ·Fd 1•2 Hlttlr • 44 !·" t111 lld1ti rn.v •PPM r •1111 1Mw wuM, 11 Thi 1o11ow1111 ptrllOn 11 ool11g 11u11,...s5 Savings banks, whic h can't · Am CllY s. Ml'llY' 12. 1 .s.i ,.~,,. 10 ~ 11 L•I L 1.•1 :Jl 1nr 1111v ... .,,., Wllv tM • ...,. lllould "°' -11: Contract" have received w ide AM •.1u•11111 wr,., F t. 1 .21 L,. rw 1.1 1. P1e1 Fd 11:19 12
bl mtde. . . l'ICTITIOUI BUSIMllS AUDllEE'S COIFFURES .. BOUT IQUE, offer regular cheeking ac-acclaim as have his numerous NEW YORK CAP) -"c~~tl' l.IJ '!I F~1:rr1 n.i: l~ ff b~ : 1::11 II.' 1~::~·011~u-H ~ II "'"*' fl'llde fo "" lllcl KAMI STATS:MEMT 267 e . 111t1 St~ COlll Mt$1, C11ll. counts contend that there is fncom t.32 10 F~ILI y LOOMIS lncon\ IO 55
pt'll" '°' fUttlllt ,.r11eularl\· Tll'I rouow11111 ~· •r• <1o1111 Audr•r M. M•tt. 1tts S111rl11gt011 Pl., G ' · articles dealing with cily McDonnell Douglas Corp. !nv11m 1.tcr '·'2 ouP1 s.t.VLIS: 1".,..1' 1 ·~ ·I' s11111 ,. .. ,,,_,,., I• '""'I" '" 1111 bus'""'" 11: 110 N.wport a..m c1111 room for both commercial d 1 . f peel 1.u ',... nd ab t w io.• C•n1d n,. 32" lh 0.111 n . 12, ·s coun of°""'°'' s1111 of c11 1om11, •nd THli 11A11E attt:t:o, mo NtwPOrt Tiii• bulll•n 11 0.11111 ~itci by .,, checki'ng accounts and NOW eve opment. A recent review. reports its 1972 pro Ila came 1oc:k '·" 1~ 1o11111 u '' 13 93 c10 ov 1•.00 IA oo fde Fd J· •.10 11 Ibid•• toll1wt, 11 wit: Bl'ld., CM.II MINI '2627 lncllvkluel , "To Save Our Cities", was 1 llfl _ .111 ., 52 Am Grlll 1·20 ' ontr1 '·'! t.n M111u1l 1S4l !Al SIOMA ,, !'
Lot n of Tract No."',, --non• tC91'1l!ell\ J. w111tn1y, 210 w. w111011. ...,Ver,.., M Hirt accounts. They argue that 8 o ·"' m1 on or ,,,, a Arn 1~11n ·u I .. 1s.c •. , 1.11 LO•D A••• t •o s11r f· 1·1'
fl'llP l'IC:Ol'dld In 1oo11 21:1. Plllf 14 °• CHll M111. / Tiii• ,1.,.,.,..., · fl11111 w1111 1111 county customer might well want a published in the Journal of t~e share; compared to $80.91 :;: M~' 1:1 11·00 ~" 11
11i · · :!:i11i1111 J-~ !' r.'3 ~~t 1;1!~ 1 :J MIKllllMOUI MllJ6, recordl ol Or•nu• Sllvtlfl c . FIKlllr./210 w. WlllOI\, Cost• Clllrt. at ....... .,. Coun"' Oii: J•11. ,., "''· American Ba • ····i ,. iili 12 63 ha f 'NI Gr 2 ,, ... ,.. 1 )? n ti 8nd dttl 10 t ' ·-··-' ... COU<'11Y,C1111or11I• M.... • w1LLtAM""i. ST ·•JOHN, couNTY commti:cial account to write .~~a10n.. m on or • as re or N~i• · l'und 11~'ftftur111rn 1J; 11·•~i'r'11~e 1f1•t "1• ,,s.1':o/';!J11~ N~~,. kn:;: Pil~.::,::'."" 11 btl11g tondlXlllll iiv • CLE1tk, '' Tftlr1u M. w1r111, D~'fiu. checks for his routine, smaller The Or,ange County Finan-1971. o1~,' t.IO 7~ f1"C!:: F 'l:~ 1,j, M'A.~1r1~11,u'~ 11 ~i \,.~ 11 :7t can~ si......, c. FIKtwr Put11IM11111 Or""' C0111t Dilly P1101 bills while using his NOW ac-cial Society's meeting will nie 1971 profit figures were NJ11t"" I.Hi!. ,,~_.IKIALM.131'.l2 f-ot.i 5.0/ l·R :-11,.1nt 'a.I .21
0.19di J"""'91'Y u. 1t7'. Tll!I 111•1rnent fllld wflll 1111 County J111111ry 20 •NJ F•u•rv •• 1], 20, begin with a "no-host" '"led to fleet 3 t ~om 1.02 . 'M~•AMI: .. ~"' il.H 1113 Tn '!E ·~~ Wit.METTA c. l'EEU.GO, c11r11 tt or111111 c-tv Oii: "''"· 12. 1m. 1rn 2'3-7.1 count to save up for major ex-c ock'·ll "···· at l I ·.30 a:in. 1.n res... re a percen 1ur 11~ 'j·°' F n Oyn ·~ '-" MIAS:1~ ,_.. !·'J 1,1 , 1 EMc:ulrl• ol the Wiil of WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY -----~--------> h WI uuui-stock dividend ·n 1972 I H•ll l ~ ' 1~ ·~ ... 1 """' Gwl ).45 • ., p lnD 1 1 ... ~!!..,'·.icueeLE•. CLERK.,., Tlllrtw M. wn. Ol!Wty• ,,...· PUBLIC NOTlCE penses sue as taxes, tuition, the Monaco Room at the 1 · Attr• 4 •. l'n nc ' 6.31 M.t.s1 co: ITAT• aHD ·0,. :
-or vaca·t1·....... The aerospace company said A1111'"" "" 10 ""' v..i j· 4,n Fr""' 1.11 t .<11 tom "" s n •·P. lll:OlfAL.D ,., "'"'""'• PVtllllllld 0rant1 c111st 0111y Piiot, ''" Airporter Inn In Newport ua 111FI v1 1 . 1i"' 111C10 F J 41 '·" l'rYff.11 , 14 ._~
A"'"'""" Uw Jll'IUl..Y 1&. 21, " •nd Febr'llllry ,, NOTIC• OP llllT•lfTION TO •MOAOli •------------Beach. The luncheon m~'ng sales for the year were $2.73 ~~1-... 1.111rJ11r. ~ZO.S· .:'ls'l l1Kt:"1'·14 'rt'"-· .. 1' l
llJ ..... ni.-. ltrwt Im llf..1:1 IN . THI l.t.ll OP ALCOHOLIC PUBLIC NOTICE ~ bQllon, up from $2.07 billion in fiSl • ll .d R K Fd ~ii Im MIT 11.JI 13.ff It F~ rric ~.\\ I "P,
s.llhlAM,C•M--tUll Ll _,, llV•ll.t.Dl:I begins at U:l5 p .m . The 11n. Filly-seven per-nt of!~' k.• .~]t t.1' r~ .. "i :;l,1 ~ =i& lt' ... '.!.1 !•M•DM'"••51 to 5 ·. T.,.... <n•I Ml""lll PUB C NOTI"• J1nV1ry n . im fl'ICTITIOUs 9USIMl!s1 bl' I I lied nd . h '" L • !NI 1' Tli ,,. l"WI!"*' °'"""' COlll o.llr l"lfol,1--------~~---I To ~ It MIV C011C1r11: NA.Ml! STATl!MIMT pu IC S nv to atle Wit the 1972 totaJ represented -.ori 1 '19 "t: 4 J:f ~~~I f1J s.:. ~g \, 11 jml ~..,1irc, i:Y i:.;!
J&nllffY 3f Incl l'tbrlllfY '· 1t11 M-,l l'ICTITIOUS IUSINISS Sllb/«.I lo lt1Wnc:• "' the lie-IP-Tiii foll.-fl!O ~ II dol119 bull/WU I.he price of the lwicheon $5.00. t bu . the...... ~ i "M •• 1it,;,.l Ml•IS Iv JI-ff I Ff!Nao , .... '" 11.t.M• ITATIMIMT PllM lot, flOlle1 II lllrltby OIYlll the! the n · govemmeo SITieSS, 1vrll Wj .• . FM 1i.!: ll.2t M1tlllr u:& U ITllN •oe FDS i
PUBUC N011CE T111 followlne PlrlOl'I$ .,. ooi111 llrldll'".itlltd Pf"llPOHI 10 "'1 11e0Mlk H1T.1.c TAPE co .• ~ c.mpus or .. 1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~.\s•s0c~iiArTii••m;il cpmpany said . Merl 1 t ·'l It·~· ~· Fno 1T.:lf, J:f ~~ 1t:"'.J ,~, ~::mr ?l::f tt:;1
-------------1 IMlnH• ••: 111¥«'!" .i "" Pf"lf'll ... , tJntrlbfCI " Suti. No. llO, Newport 11-.11 II ~ For the fourth quarter, -• ',· ,· '"' 1J ""tt~ •,«I, u .111,1:. '• ""• •' ou•u.os" :! • t1m MULf l·TEL INOU$Tll;l£S, 2111 "(" '· loll~. Monl9 VI I A Cot! Mew Jlf'l'lll: M. Ottldl. "31 a.~ ... SI., CQllll ~ J.lt 1ir M !-" n " I
llOTICI o-aAL• 0" ••AL ,_ ......... "'111 AN, c..n1. mo. '• ve., • """· c1u1. m21 a-t'., 1111tt tlpll!ICMt '"" tKclt-McDonnell Dougla_ • s Usted pro-, ~~ 1 : 1J 1 0 ~t~~·s M Gro1 ·~ s._n rwlll ~ ,,'·." P•Of'•TY AT 'f'llV.t.Ta 1.t.ll A. 0.... Sfl'lllll, 2391:.1 JllllllM A~.. f'V{MIMll lo lllCll Lnlln!lon, 11\f -Thh bu1lrll'u It bll11g conduc lld by In 11111 ,_.... .,_,., m.I, """' ,..,_. fi o/ H O 78 ili $1 ()6 ~ o l'"" 5 :1 neotn ! ~ 'I .... A ~ MllllOll v1eio. c.111, nus ~ 11 1PP1vl111 to tM o.ii.r1rn1n1 1n111v1otu11. .. ... .,,1,,.,. ..,._.., Clfl'lm-· tls _.. OU on or . a .f""~K 4· • .JI r= '{:,•i• ~~ 1 ·H lo·;J :;".,:.\ lit~ 1J·' In tlll SWllrkr Cwrt "' 1111 Still DI • .,.. LIP1ll, an Pr~lon Dr .. CDlll DI Akallolle l •Y11"191 Conl'1!1 for luwnc• Jlrnes M. OkMll 111 -Ill.· ,._ """"'Ill" "'"'"" &hare on &ales of $802.50 Ulll ' F ,..,_,., .)~1 ·11~ Mull Trs J~ f.1! Vft( .. F I u '·~ c111,....._ tor 1111 c-ry ot °'".,.,. Mtw c;.itt. ~ DI "' 1kallolk: Diver.... ti-tor Thl1 tl1"'""'1t fllld Miii 1111 COUlllW mill' A be( the ~ d U.0t 1•Bs F SOltH I .t 1 ]i Nit tndu 11 s1 1 .Ji MR Ao 1 JJ l'-
., ...___ Plrtl'lln:llJp ON SALE IEElt .. WINE (M>f<IA WILLIAM E S:T JOHNJ COUNT'f ..._ • " N .,. °'' .... j ' In f 127 38 v 4.00 • A• Ll.f't . ~ •) 11.l• ll'llol G ' '1 111 1111 .IMlttr of IM E:tttM ot N°ELLI Tt11l bu .. M.1 It lltllt'IO tOl\dllCtld by • llclr!Mll .., ""-" 111"""11ft 11 totlown : Cl-tt Or•nve County oni J1n. 2"' 1112 '"''" wotllmll .. 111terMtll!M1 •11111' ton. year ()rt d "-'I 1j F~F 10.M 1 A MAT SIC If!' ll<llr• l j I·
=E•1COL-&0•ov...-;;r1ffil -~&ml.lb--B.Q!.~U&LJC .EATINOPLACEI CLEltl(,l_yTMt,.._M-..W•rd.~ly .,., ' •. ,._, ty lgW'l':SWt:rcearn gso . 1101'11. c "c · ll'I Sr '·jl Olftr c 6 ~1·
• 1 •....,. """ T1111 a11em1n1 n111111 w1t11 t11t c-'Y GOtbek.'EIHnar P. ' Lloyd " :mu minion -f ('!ll\fl'I' M ·~~ 1,! -·~ , tt.'I:· i -,. 111. 1:a :: s r•YI <If!' 1!. 1~:1: ~~~~~~~i, ;i;~~::;~~ .:~:;.~. ;:;~" ~;~ 1~:~~u~:~~~c:·!·,,,J1~D~~e~.~_!n~~t~J1~~r~e_~.~ ..... ~.~.H-~..:~.v::'.:'.'.'.._e_ ntion 1r.~.J~11~,xii~!.H :!~t~:·1~il~ ~i~(.~~~~
Siii• " C•llfol'i\11, all tlll rlglll, H"I Ind NAMI lTATeMllllT FICTITIOUS IUSINI SS ~t lt.~ IJ.ft ii,, 14:n lf.tt Ntu Cfllf .~ t~4 M.11 'I f~ 1*·:t
NI f111 •l&t. of Mid dKMtld hi• IC'" OEVElll!UX l"Olt LILLY PUL.ITtlll;, Mlntll IS1 . UUppen'' and 14l.owws'' ~I -~-·.~t":'. .. ~~~&Maf .i •. !! rwlll • j· 1· E • f.11 N1w.Wld '-36 1!,.., 0 I' IN l ~-~ :1111"" ~~ti:!==-= PUBLIC NOTICE ti!~ -:i~r-1119 ~ •r• dOlng Tlll fol~::-.: 1'.!:~:!1"!r. dolfll F•r , ...... with ' •.. '· ~ h Irt T~· 1Y: ~·no:°' 1l:fi 10:.! =~~ 1't:n l.:~ II r l4. ~-1!
......... DY .... 111111 of llW flt "'*""'-MOT'ICI TO CllOITOltS MOO VIII Ooorio. Ntwf)Ort l ffdl, C1I Nl!WPOllT SAY CLEANEt/:5, 21W • an:: C» ..,... """ """"' I ... · .JI J,n Nkhlll fl-" ~ A«-t:li °"""' •• Ill' In ..wl!lon IO INt or .. 1111 IUl"••m• COUIT Oil' TMI ""°' NIWllOrl BIYd., COlll """""· Cal1lonll1 The nciirr:tl thins In h•Ying vour and chewi111 j· . llOUP SI .., IW 1·· 1· """ Fd ' ---. •!'the Time ol' dMtl\, Ill 1M t. ff.t.Tl.OF C.t.LlllOlll:lfl.t. ffOtt Ml"I. A-CflltrllOll, DI VII Orllfllo, "62t. · .,_.n \Ctlh Q. poMit)!1 DOW trilb I With . F1X~i..'T mMr ~tun tn 1 t • IJM =_. , ·~ 1.1'1 net .01 • (ont crw 1 ' I .,. n. C'lfillfl NII PfD"''Y ai~'" 111 TMI couNTT Of" OllUH MIWPOrl •Ndli c.at. n..o. Mk111et c111r1a weow. JI' t>l3f~ mnni dltc0''trr th111 actu· •cartr1 mar n t. ~tieak, laulh. with ~N Nr ~./~ 1l:i1 'ii! "J::h Id n.~~ I :n ~=nc: 'Ii I, .. =., °"""""· ,, ... .., c"nar'fll1, ,.., A-ntll Mn. 1111111111., McUnctff, no vt1 Min-Hllll'rWOOd 0r.. NflWPGt1 ••1e"' •Hy hold• ftoth "ur,pcr1 .. 11nd tlttJe tr~ry otdl-'nturmeornln1 1ooK.. ,.,. Mn"·fi 111 ,,<;,; s..u f; w111 114 '-" · ~!'
-
~-........ --~.. ''''"' ... All:TMU• "· COSTELLO, ,_, N-IHCh. (Ill,.,..., C•llforllll nue. .... -··· . I I f Oii • •• .. Ill Incl n•~i :JI llllNM " l •!IN • ·'• All ...... -~II !MIO .HWl.d!;'"" o.c..wd."' OMlcii ..... of Atl&otll-lollttl (arOllnl. J.uWll K•""-&pr..... '11 "lo .. cn" u l!e'lft' .,,.. OR u.:. Oac •PPhC8t on may .l or Tr I ' '·I u.rcr 8 . 1f. Oil' Alm II. ·~\ISM C• I . ...
C•I• ........ s.nr1...., Olltrl(I, ~ NOT Kl IS HE•EIY GIVEN to "" A.lldrlWI. s.c. Hol,,.,..., Dr.. NPW(IOrl l e1<ll, l \'1 •dUM\"tr)' cal~ FlltOOO..,.. hourt. Dttrturu lhtt lit II.ft. t'iill'll• i=· '1 11~ ll:I :: ~ t.4.1 JI~ 8: f~ :.,. 1·~· ~L.eltSLl~i"°, ·ri ~ "'"'*" Dblfkt, City or ~ton of Ille ""°"" 111mld *«dllll Tiiis !Mlfll'll II btllll ~ltd W • C.lltortol• ""'-lnr dai!r home U'-C {U .S. P,1. till to healtfl. See your denti1t OLorro L ~r.; ~ ,01 ore we 11::\!1 1 . v11 ~ til "ll ......,.,. IHcll. dl:l(tlbld -~ L.11 lS .. lllltt all~"'"'"' cl"rnt ltalntl tll9 C'Ol"llWllJOI\. • Tiii• bulll'llllf II IMlno ~-"" I .003.~6) t nd It h:t• rc YOIU· ?CfUbriy.Cetc;i1,v-to-ut11P1X00&h-r UNOSt I .111 ·'~Pit-I • v.i II( • J
Trkf ... U1J, IJ "-" .. """ 111111 diKedlnt M• ......,,.., 19 i'llll """"' Mn. ..... c. Cl\1tlH011 INlrlMlllllp. ·---' _,_ . ... .. A_ '"-...... _ ..• ,.~-iEf ~~ ·m •rt .. .. .21 ~ Rrt • . Liv Ill l' .. ~!ft.,_ 111. P191S 11lllill 1 wttll IM"""""""........,.., In lhl olflc. Mrs. SI""' Mo11ndtr MkM11 C..51M"lllUI lilJl.l,...uiculU11:WUJ1lll.r ~N"T, usulllfe.-...-\1t .... --. (.j 'Ji 1 Mui ttl Yll !I( YJ ~:lJ
ot MIKlll....-,.,..., , •eon. d " !flt cl9rtC a1,.. tto-ie tftlltlld o:r.in. IC nil Jl&tt;?::' lllM w1~ 1111 Cwntr t/11• t11i.n.nuu.i ..na~-~ 1 1 · f ~ . . YAIKl
.....,...., hlcfl. Cllllonll•. If Ills Altorl'lly1 1--. YOlkllfl'I, ,~ .., Tlllr-Ho. WM4. ~. CLERIC. •r lklly J, ''""'lfll· Olpuly. s~ ,~:tt 11 l""'.9f.' i :sf :.1. ~"'" :ti •. I ~OI (fl'I 1
= =· .. ~n'r.'"Mo,~11'::: ~ .. ~ic::.:,,~ ~m-IAM •· ST ~:roullTY'lli'.~ tti;r--:ii!.=~.°"';f' J~,t,··~ ~ 10 41 : :=f' 1 '.ft f ; :•\I d I : I :Jf 'i:.o :,,s11 rn
Tlnhl d 111t tltft In ......... -.., 9' ~M 1111111 He+t1'. fll Wat Sbt11 Slr'Mt, l'mN ff<DQI ' MWL'fft lllC ~ lt<Q IJ·; ~~ ~11 il:9J t,11 v , .1 1tlt U~llPf Sltfrtl 11'1 aM!nt\ltlon If AM. 11111'1 ,,.__. l'OI. L• ....,....., htill ..... Orln(ll C.11 ~llot, PllMW>td Or.,._ C-1 O.lly l'llal, JA lif I:-F.....: 4.16 i ~J;r 11 ~fi u· ~!:°' IM ~:..i:::::::: .. ~.;.===~:..~-::.;:IH=.i:;-'" lt. n. .. IN' ,,._t1;;;-v ».a 9l>d MrVlrY "'1.Ji -g ~111 ,,1:Jil ~:~ Jt.~q:E ~~·1x·~~)t4:~ ,a.-' .ti
lit ~ 11 IM *"'Id ot .,.., """"" '°"'" fnwltlll 1fttt 1"' first PVfllkao j -s.t\ ~ nv t k ~::; ~~ ~t • /l: I \!I t1n11 .-"" 11m •tcel*I ......., .,.. .... "' tl'lll flOtb. • ~.... t:H, '. 1:'1v ~ .. o~o,,."•'~-o.i w '4': ·. ' , w.~illo0 •'Illa, , .. -=-... :s.:r;:;.~er.r~i1m. l>mfi!&:~.=:""' Nearly1 Everyone :t"•nv 1111! 1 ~1~ "1 '·~ S ffi11 '~l. '1 l~ n. n.e
-
-••UM, Ol'l!t , t, SNCt l'Tvd SI' Ttlin"JV 1tOll.ll'T 'Ill, CCM.l~OVI flll ..... 1u11N11 .... I • COIT ~~·~ 1·~ ·; 1 u1::1 it.~ 1t.u •~vcr 'oi l:S I .Jl Je!.. B. tbt
,.,._UL DO\IOl.Al HUOf411 lvt. . ·-Olll C I . lj• •21.,. 2:J.U ~II.All U.1, TN•I 1 · ll'!j ~ d,,.,. • .. .... , ..... ""° MTCN. .... • iA!! .7' • ~1~ t.1010,:4 ivTMAM w.rr.tv :n ~.::.W\Wt:-:c:,::,. E:-!1!'.£'""' Listells to Lande1·s c:r-~ ..• ti:,t 1~i~~ .. y tJ'tn 1~· 1~3 1;'·" ~ .· 't~ ·--""' -s-·.... -.. o ''~··"~· ·.~ ~~r 0 ~·1 f.~ -11~'· . WW ~... • 'Mfl •.=.:i:~n,..-1_ , . ..,_....., c-• 011 ... P1tot Am "91 " "' T11 v1 /-I G.. :. ·1! " "' -~. 1"1'". Hd ill •· i· K-t :11 .IP'\lllt ...... ar-te_Coltt o• ..,"""· ~.,_..,"1 Jii 3f M Ffllr'v.lfr ·~ ... ~' :t '. \Ivy t.:= . 1p..t1 ~a:. I" h'. :S. ~.g I ' . ,....,.,.,, Q. 14, a , ,,.. • 11.41 1,.4 P C..!~ I ,,. 1 .9' Jt-1 F I "' 1•-1
I I . . .
I
• l
10 01.JLY PILOT 5 Tut Wdy J#'lullry Je, 1971
DETROIT (API -Alter first time group assembly his
nurly 6$ years. the lnslltu)on been trlfd in m o d e r n
that pul Detroit on the m11p 1, American motor ~de ln-
uoder repealed attack by auto dustry, although It is widely
workers, labor unions and used ln,some foreign counlrles
psychologists. such as Sweden.
the assembly line, a pro-LEX duetlon method rec-orded as A C. P.tAlR, general
early u t909, I! accused of manager of CPi1C Truck & Cooch, seeJ Jhe group ap-
causlng boredom on the part prooch u one alternative to
or autoworkers and is almost Unlled Auto workers' com-
surely to be a bargaining point plaints of boredom, while
when labor·management ron· cttating • 5 e n s e ol.
tract talks begin later this togetherness .
. )·eor. J.1ajr. -Aiii.-m ..member
TIIE ISSUE has been at teams are '-rtspon&ble for
least part.lally responsible for body trim and some fitting
a series of strikes against operations, while t b re e
C.eneral ~iotors recently, member t~ are assiem·
Lengthy strikes at U:>rdstown bling and fitting the cbusis.
and Norwood': Ohio. plants -In normal assembly line
the second a 174 dav walkout , work. an employe is gi\.'tn a
the longest in G~t ·history -single task and repeats lt
\\'ere followed by t>very Ume a unit passe3 his
"ministrikes" by st\'eral local point on I.he line. For exam.pl,,
unions. ir ari assembly plant produces
At issue were working con-60 cars. an hour, an employe
ditions -alleged line would tighten a bol~ or connect
speedups and layoffs -at the ? a headlight 60 ~ each
highlv automated facilities of , hour.
the General ~totors Assembly ~AW workers have com·
Di\·ision (G MAD ). But spark· ~lained of boredom In such
ing the strikes was t~ Jobs and group assembly has
widespread disgust of a new been .suggested as an
bretd of young workers at the altemativ~.
boredom and pressure of the ~ ~t Mair and,otbe.r a~ ex·
assembly line. ·.tcUllves aren t optimis~c
Thus it v.·as no surpri.5e a1>4?ut the group systems
v.·hen General f.1otors eo·rp. chanc"9 ol survival
recently disclosed it was ex· THE FEELING is the group
perimenting with "group. method can't keep up with the
assembly'' at its Gr.fC truck • almost limitless demand for
and Coach Division in U.S. cars.
suburban Pontiac. v.·here the Using speedier assembly
Jinn is starting prod~!J9!l or . line me~ aoe p1ant can
a new motor home. produce a1mf;JQ l,<m cars a
Jl v.·as believed lo be the day or 2:00,<W a year; higher
A
R
B
0
R
B
L v
D
100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR
CAR ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevard
af Cars
LOOI IOI ntl IMIUM AT
CONNELL I JOllNSON & SON
CHEVROLET Lincol...Mercury
282' 2626
HARBOR BLVD. HARBOR BLVD. ,......,,c. ..... .......
NEWPORT BLVD.
New-our utl1'f of\~tlG6 ~~ff\C6 f\e.G'o":3i•'"~o \f "\A J . 15 special is" in construc-
11on and long-term financing.
FHA, VA, and conventional single-family
homes. Commercial, industrial, and residential
income.producing property, $100,000 up. Joint
ventures, $250,000 to $10,000,000.
23 OFF1CES IN I STAT£S
17671 trvlne Blvd., Tustin 92680
Executive Office: 505 Shatto Pl., Loi An;elet 90020
(213) lts-3111
Sin Femando Valley (213) -.2500
SPEED READING COURSES
TO BEGIN IN
BEACH AREA
Atr•119•m111h h•"'• b1111 m•d1 hv Am•tlc•11 R1•di119 F.1111·
d1tio11 fo co11il11cl • 11 -1.011' co11n1 111 1pe1d ,,lltll11t. Tli• co11n•
;, op111 lo •11vo11t 1bowt the 191 of ll •11d 91,11r•11t111 •¥1ry
lll'1d111f1 lo lripl1 lh1ir r1•dl11g tp1ed with •11 iftCr1••• 111 com·
pr1ht111!011.
Afl1r th• ''"'" w11• pro9r1m, 1 per.011 c111 r11d 1:.V
•••••9• book i11 1111 #1111 •11 ho11' 111d 11Ml1rtt1!1d It btlt•P-111
eddltlon to 1p•1d r••di119 th• cown1 elto 1mph11it11 i"'p10 .. td
1tudv t1ch11lqu11, b1tt11 t11I t1lti119 ••ill:, •lld i11ct111..d co11c1n·
lr•tion •ltd r•i1nlion •ltilili11. •
Th i co11r1e req11l111 • p1rio11 to ett.nd on• cl111 p11 w1tk
011 tM •¥111i119 ef lh1i1 choic1. For lho11 who would II•• more
l11forrn•!ion, without oblig1tio11 to 1n,olt, 1 11ri11 of f~EE •n•
howr 011111tlflon l1c-.m1 h1w1 bo1t11 1th1d1o1ltd.
11111• "'11ting1 1r1 fr11 I• the p11bllc erid the COii"• will
b1 t•pl•ined i11 c•mpl1t1 cl.tall l11clvcli119 111tr111c1 r.qvlr-tllh,
cl111roOll'I proc.clur11, luif1011, cl•1t 1ch1d11le 111cl locetion. Yov
111td to •ttt11d only one me1tl119 which i1 tho t11oll c9flttnlt11t
fof vo11. Th111 Irie 111111 ho11r orlenl1li1111 wlll bt h1lcl •• fell11•111
Thu"d~y. J•nuary 25, 7:10 P.M.; Friday, J•nu•
cry 26, 7:10 P.M.: 2 mc•tin91 on S•turdey, Januery
27. 10:1 0 A.M. •nd 2:00 P.M.; and on lin•I mtei·
In c; on,Wedn•~day, January )I, 7:30 P.M.
AU MEmNC.s WILL •• HnD AT TKI
LAGUNA HOTIL -THI GAIOIM IOOM
421 S. COAST HwY,. LA•UMA llA,CH •
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOfK UST
\
I
1
In
Lr
·~ m s
~ w
sh er
II> -
. '
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• '
, Jo1nu4'Y , 1'91) . . '--r-
Monday,-s Closing Prices-CompJete New York Stock Exchange List
-· -~--...:.Dc:.Al.LY PILOT J J
..
7
Jt DAI\. Y PILOT
Fo1· the'
Record
Births
Jlt\Wl'Y 11 ,,\r. 1tld Mrs. 1!:1M'"IO s. ll:')Clacle. ;111
P1rl!; SI•"'' We1•m•nster, ''"1" txl¥1 /\\r 1>\d Mrt LOUii E Mo~tt, ~111 EK U0.'11. frvlM, Oirl
Death l\'ati<-es
....,
Tuesday, Jantll')' JO, 197'
ORANGE COUNTY •
Cou11ty
Facing
Lawsuits
By JACK BROBACK
Of lf!.t o.!IY l"lltl Sl•tf
SA.\'TA ANA -Orange
County is the defendant in
lawsuits totaling more than
$34 n1illion , a rtporl by County
Cqunsel Adrian K u y p e r
reveals.
Topping the list are six
separate lav!'suits by 949 plain·
tiffs alleging $28 million in
property damages caused by
jet aircraft noise from Orange
Coun1y Airport.
The first suit. involving
5195,<XXJ in damages is set for
trial beginning April 23.
Kuyper also anticipates
personal injury suits ariSing
from noise. soot and other
nuisance type factors resulting
from jet operalions. The coun-
ty has received its first claim
in such a case. \\'ilh $200.000
damages sought
Tv.·o sui1s againsf the county
1•1t1t1•T charging the Orange County
Henrv 0. B•rr!•t. f.qe u ot nn ,. p II ,. Co trol o· tr•~ M1rt11ret Dr., NtwPOrl h.c:n. D111 cl Ir 0 U !On n IS h.•
aea111, Janu1rv 8 . 1'13. Survived bY wife, have been filed b.v the Edison k•t,.,.N ; d.IUQl\\tlr. STtll• Barrll!. boln of Newoorl Bt•tllJ unelt. Charles Bw<I•-Company and the Western Oil moril. R~ Be.tell. Servkn Wed· MS!lay, 11 AM. ee11 Br<:>.idw•v cnu>el. and Gas As.wciation. The lat-e111om1>rnenr. F•frf>avl!'n Memotlt! Park, I I ee11 &roodw1v Mor1u1ry, Oirec:tor.. ter .case coocems the _ega ity
1u 11r1 of the district's regulations
Dr. J•m•• G. ere!n. Pastel' o1 NrwCX>rt con-·ru·ng lead content 1·n litrbor L1.rr"-rtn C11Ure11; rftiMrl! ol 3109 "~ 51•v s1 .• NewPOrl Bt•cll. 0111 01 oea111. gasoline. The Edison case in-1nu1rv 29. 197l. Survtvtd bv wilt, LOrtl·
11; tl'lr" 111'1• Je11r..... J1_, •r>d volves the construction of ad-c11r11topher; lleUOlllfr, S1r1/\; mo!tltr, ~.~...,~1VT.i:.1•(.";K1:1 ,.-~::."1~; ... 0c~~'':f.i ditional facilities at Hun·
w ~o Thu•..S•~. 11 AM NewCX>n H1•11r1r tington Beach. ;,~fc:~',f::U.cnu~~t.~'!;. Or. "~~~~d Fv'~": The county is being sued by
:!:I con~~::,,.,,.,"~~~" oe =·~ tbe Young Construct.ion Com-
111r Jemes e11.n M~111 ~uM. N""'°"" no for $855 710 I damages H.>rbor lull\fr~n Cl\urcn &ell 8roa<1w1v pa l • n
MOrtu•rv. Oll't!Crors. arising out of the construction
Ll'A11Y • of the new County Jail ~~-Li~~~. 'b':116301ote1t~~ f. .. !~ A rwmber ol lawsuits seek-
?L rtr.t. 5......,1..., bv wli.. C1rolene: IWO ina <-w reJun<fs ar Oil the -. JolWI LtAhy •nd llon11d &Hsi.tr; ~-e l4A e
0.llQl'IMr, 5!'-ron L•MIV; five trtn«.1111-books. Assessment of the Ol"tt\. S.rvoc:11o, Wednetd.ly, 7:30 PM. , •• ~ F1m11r CCll<lr41 F.....,.., Home. possessory mterest held by oil
VINCENT Paul D. Vlnc•nr. A<I" IJ. of 1U1 T"ry Ro..:!. Laoun1 BtKI>. Dllt o! dellh. J1...,1ry 11, 1m. survlvtd hy W)ft,
M!rl1m; MYer11 nlec11 ano ~wt. Mr. VIPKoenl. w11 1 com<nerclal 1•!1sl in L.ciun1 BH<l'I 10< 30 v11r1. GrtVft\de lir<"Ykn . Wed,,.KllV. 1 PM. El Toro Ctmeltrv, will! Or. Alber! 0 . Hlotriw of tile Lao1,1n1 Btecn { am m u " 1 t v Pl"ftOyl..-liln (hvrcll, o 11 I c I I I I n g ,
McCormick Uoun1 BtKh MorlUlr'r, Olreciors.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF l\fORTIJARY
4%7 E. 17th St., Costa l\feu
&46-4881
BALTZ-B,RGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 173-MSO
Costa Mesa '46-2'24 • BELL BROADWAY
l\10RTUARY
J 10 Broadwny. Costa Mesa
·LI 8-3433 • McCOIUUCK LAGUNA
companies on. l~ public
lands amount to $4 million.
Bottling companies have suits
for $67,000; computer firms
for refunds totalling $205,485
and Anaheim S t#a d i u m ,
$412.202.
~liscellaneous other tax
refunds suits total $245.000, in-
cluding one for $100,000 by
South Coast Plaza Inc.
l\1ayor 'Tops'
For Orange
ORANGE -~fayor Jess F.
Perez has been named 1972
Citizen of 1he Year by 1he
chamber of commerce here
for his involvement in youth
and community programs dur-
ing the past decade.
Perez. 36, has served as a
councilman here since 1968
and as mayor .i;ince April. He
is a partner in the architec-
tural firm of Perez and
Hurtado.
Polltktd No~•. •
Cory~Tops ·state." Spenders
By O. C. HUSTINGS
Of ... ~ .........
Assembiymon Kenneth COry
(().Garden Grove) spent more
to retain hls 19th Dllttict •t
than any othor AJilembly can-
didlto In Ca!Uomla, ae=dlni
to SectttBJ')' of State Edmund
G. Brown Jr. eo.;., who was opposed by
Republkan William Dan-
nemeyer and American
fndepeOdenI Party hopeful
Donald SWen300 in the
Npvember election, t o I d
Brown he spend $90,473 in the
campaign. Cory received
i9,9'21 votes compa~ to I>Jn..
nemeyer'a 41, 9 9 9 and
Swenson's S.558.
Brown said victorious can-
didates in the state Senate.
raised and spent more than
their challengen. Winners
. reported raising an average of
~7.113 and spent an average
ol $56,761, while Io.wn raised
an average $27 ,913 and spent
an average $29,192, Brown
reports.
Brown made a penetrating
ana),ysls of campaign spendng
when he observed 1 that the
financial reports filed with his
office by candidates "clearly
prove that money was an ex-
tremely influential -factor in
the 1972 elections."
* TO~I FUENT~ has achiev-
ed another first. He bas been
elected chairman or a newly-
formed organization o f
-· -
1og1s1a1on• ~u... ... ~~hi .,., Mn. --cam '°" ..,._., 11u ...
lfltanU. • ~. 11Uflertao; Mn. -pl1111 '°' • ,,..,polfr.
Fueot ... w11tan1 to Ronald w1111am !larvln, Irvine; Lll>Yd qalnll the poo11ne ratlonfnc
Caapers, cllolnnoA of the Or-Slocktr, S.lllfa Ana; Qilp procram. fl'OllOIOil bl' the
ange Ccunty Boan! of Super-Cleary, ~ ¥";"; lloy 11ec1eral_Envlromnent.al Pnile<>
visors, wged a 'splrlled cam-Knilodl, Jr., Yoiba Linda; lJoo.APncy (EPA).
pafgn for .... t .. tl)e11epub-Wllllom .... , Andenon, ---Pit . Geary , YAF 1tato
Ucan Central Cmrunlltee last Ana; Rol>ert 4 W~ton, cbalrman,. said t~e root ol the
year and -· Orangt, and 'llmalhy L. prqblem Is ·that tho 1tandards theneworganhatlon Stradu,NeWJ'OrtllUch.' tel by 'ljle Clean·Ak·Aet•of
ii I con ulna com· * · · 1970 are 100 high and the m.unicatlon .federal, OEL, CU\¥SQ_N has an--colts to the ~ ·of ,
state and county Jlceholders. llOlqlCed hlo· .elg)>t appointees Southern C.Ufornla of en·
The l!?1l<IP plans I meet semi· to the ·Reppbllcan State· Cot>-fatting. tliose 'standards would
monthly. Attending t be Inf Conl<pjttee. The -be too gr e • t. , YA F
organl!atlooal session ,.... gremnan, whose . 13 rd niember1 favor Corigmalonal
aides to county supervisors. Cohp;taionaf D11trlcl co1...., review of tllooe atandirdl,
and staff members of federal portfooi . ol Orange aacl Loi which Ibey con s l 4 e r
and ~le legislaton. ~ Coont!oo; .nanied: , unrtlllatlcalfy It r I DI•. t,
A wori:tng cmurilttee ol one ~ ~ rash e a rs , Geary aald.
reprosent.aUve frun each or i'.uffertoo; 'lknry Freele; La. YAF memben are p1 ...
the tbn!e 1ev.i. otiufernment Palma; Georg~ R o'd n ey, nlng flllbllc protests durln(
was named to draft pro-Garden Grove; Mrs. I>Orotby bearings on the proposal tn
cedures for the new group. Beaver, Fullerton; Rlchard la Angeles Jn February and
Servlng are Carlos Galindo, Franks, Cenitos; Mn. Sara March, plus an education
field repre!<fltatlve for Rep. Evans, Anaheim; Mrs. !Wei campaign "to alert the flllbUe
Craig Hosmer; Gerald Block, Friend, Bellflower, and Frank 'to the disastrous consequence.
administrative assistant to Gasdla, Downey., . which would result from lm·
state Senator Jama \Vhet.. * plementaUoa or the EPA pro-
more, F..d W a rd, admi.ni.s-CALIFORNIA Young ,Ameri-posal.11
trative assistant to Auemblf-rliiiiiiiiiiilPiiliiiiiim~iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiRi~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;~I man Robert Badbam ,and
Fuentes.
CONG~ Andrew J.
Hinshaw, of the 39tb DiStik:t,
has named eight Orange Coun-
tians to the Republican State
Central Committee for the
im.t974 tenn, ·which beg!ns
withanorgani za tlon a I
meeting 1n Sacramento thia
weekend.
Committee to Probe
Flood D(!-mage Threat
SANT A ANA -Robert Fin-
nell, president of the Orange
CoWlty League of Cities, plans
to name a committee 'Feb. 8 to
study the threat of flood
damage tO clti.!S aloiig 1be
Santa Ana River, . ·
Finnell said the committee
will try to find out why the
U.S. Corps ·or Engineers has
not 'C'Ompleted a long standing
study of flood peril along the
river.
1be move was triggered by
a r.ity of Fountain Valley
resolution which criticizes the
Corps of Engineers apparent
Greenspan
Court Date
·Scheduled
lack of action.
Finnell has named several
standing committees, in-
cluding:
;
Criminal Justice Council
League representative, Fred
Sorsabal, C.Osta l\!esa city
manager; County P a r t 1
Advisory Committee, Gary
Davis, Fountain Valley parks
and recreation director. I?·
Also named to the parks ad-~ .•
visory group was Ken
Reynolds, Huntington Beach
planning director.
Thomas O'Keefe, Sa n
Clemente city councilman, has
been reappointed to the Coun-
ty Ocean and Shoreling Plan-
ning C.Ommittee. Gabrielle
Pryor, Irvine city coun-
cilwoman, has been named to
the En \'ironmental Enhan-
cement .Committee as have
l\filan Dostal, Newport Beach
councilman and Frank Sales,
Seal Beach councilman.
Two to
Jewish
Lead
Fund
'
..
\.
DO SOMETHING BEA:UTIFUL FOREVER
Hore art rlngo·of t.tity to rast as long
a life end light a tife of love: six ·
proclamations of eternal kwe in 14 karat
yellow gold. A. Man'i five-diamond
wedding band. $175. B. Lady's five-diamond
matchNig wedding band, $175. C. Macram8
style weddijlg set with pear Shape
diamond, S22ff. 0 . Overlap multi-diamond
wedding set, with· pear shape center
diamond, $350. E.·Muftkjiamond wedding
set. $275. F. Overlap florentined wedding
set With eleven diamonds, $450,
Do SorTieth'inQ Beautiful .....
(llll'lt A-h lll'fittd -Af'l'trkitl ••Pl'tu
IMkAl'lerlunl Miii M"'tr 0\11"91, ""·
"So Good ..• It WiU
Haunt You 'Ti1 lt8 Gone.,, BEACH MORTUARY
1705 Laguna Canyon Rd.
494--8415 • Campaign for Arthritis Spiral Slltt!li
Whole or Bfllf
e Rudy hi Servo with HQnoy 'n Splco Gino
e Spiro! Sllc:oil From Top to Bottom
PACWIC VIEW
l\fEl\fORIAL PARK
Cemetery l\fortuary
Chapel
3500 PacUic View Orl\•e
Newport Btacb, CaJilornla
l«-!700 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7801 Bolsa Al't.
Westminster 893--3Si5 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
6!7 l\1aln St.
Huntlne;1on Beach
53'""3!
ANAHEIM -Act~ Claire
Trevor (P.lrs. P.lilton B'ren) of
Newport Beach will help
direct volunteers who will
march to collect funds for the
Arthritis FoundaUon and ap-
pear on the annual Stop
Arthritis Telethon.
The "Neighborhood March''
\viii be conducted countywlde
Feb. 1 to 4. The telethon will
be held in the Sky Room of the
Grand Hotel here and 1n
studios in Hollywood and wlU
be aired on television from
midnight Feb. 3 to untll 8 p.m.
Feb. 4.
l\1iss Trevor will be joined in
FR~E Demonstration µeeting
BE YOUR BEST SELF
Dale Carnegie Course·•
Presented b11 Ki11g Associaus
IN THE COURSE YOU
W1LL LEAA.N HOW TO -
• c.:-.1op 9r11!1r •• 11.
confldt11r.t
e Comn'lu11fctt• 1H1ctlv1ly
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· •-o.ercom•:,.any 111d
fenllon
• lmpro•• yo\lr •blUty to
dttl wittl p•opl1
2415 S, MANCHISTIR
ANAHEIM
f 11ttr t~1 Holldty l"n et
Chepma11 J Men~htd11 111
Or11191J
WED. JAN. 31
7:30 P.M.
PHONE 633-419! '
e Wo Pac~ ... ilnd Ship from
Cutt to Coe1t
• Full S.rvlu D!llcatesHn
• lmport..i ChoeHt and Wino•
e Catorl"9 ···A Spociolity
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medlcal weight red.udion
Lindora's unique program is-"a safe and. practical methoc!.lor the
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Income tax refund for
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8ACRAl4E!lTO :. FfnuCI ~.IN DOW predk.Unr a
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retuadWill,o to Califomia tu·
1111on. ·'l'H wjndfall nsulted
!iom ihoStatowlthholding too
much ,. .. ., lrolll Oallfomla
tupayen In 1972. Many of tho
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year.
...... ... .. 'SWr income
: (ax prepared
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The earlier you file the·sooncr you
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c.Ameriea•, one of the nation's leaCling
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returns strictly confidential. You can
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Make your appointment now and .
receive free, an INCOME TAX
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*Certificate Accounts earn ~96 for l year or more.
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llOo.-iio!Mor
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
and Loan AsaociatJon
2887 E. Coast HIQhll!OY''. • :· ·
3 bloci<&-t of MacArthur Blvd.
Phone: 675·5010
Mon.·ThU< 9AM4PM; Fri. 9AM-6PM 1
•
ll!A ANDIRSON, ldltor
"""'"· .......... lf7l . , .. ti '
~ommon
\Scents
Aired
,•
UPIT .......
A giant poppy. and coarse veil trim the
floral pillbox by Dior (above). while
J, C. Broueou suggests a romantic
wide brimmed hat adorned with ·roses
' and ostrich _feathers (right).
•
'
" .1
DEAR ANN LANDERS: U that fellow
·who signed hhmeU 0 Polecat Plthol''
lives In ElcondldO, and calls the SPCA,
the sherlll O< the police depon-i al!ll
uka for help In gettln& a skunk oat from
under bis porch, be wW be told,.as I wu,
·uoni.at11 your problem, Buddy."
It was a lr1endly neighbor who finally
gave me the advice I oeeded. I wu lold Headli ·nes Brimmjng
to put a dozen mothballs under the porch,
about slx inches apart. Sure, enough. the
skunk left quietly and quk:kly and be did
not return. Please print this for readen
who may be plagued with the problem. -
C!'MMON SCENTS IN SUNNY CAL
.DEAR SUNNY: Al I ctllf..tweller la
Ille lleorl of -, I Cll~ eva Imape
die prelllem, bat my autrJ Hmlal
u•e me It'• .., joke, 10 tbab for tM melul----· DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our daughttt ls married to I nice young mlli. 'l1ley
i->th have bu.sy careers and do not care
to bring children Into what they call "lhll
crasy-mlud-up we<ld." My lmlband and
~ of couroe, are sad that we wW ....,.
~ grandparentl. (She Is our only dllld.)
But we have never aak1 a word about our
dlsappolnlmenl
Whal I am writing about Is: "IF the
put lour years they have lelt their IWO
large dogs -., !or two ....ti. while
they went on a winter vacation. Their
bouaekeeper takes her vacation at the
same ume and they say their dogs
become depresaed In the kemiel and d~
oat eol<1iell.
My husband and I don't want the dogs
again and told them so. Our daugber
a.11 we are eelfish, that lhe bu ot.ver
beard of parents like us, and she closed
her llltle tpeeCb with, "What are parents
for?"
Now I !eel guilty allh>ugb I know I
sboald not. Pleaae say aomelblng, -
ALBUQUERQUE PROBLEM •
DIWi AL: U ,.... dal)ler _,
bellnel ....... .,. to lem> ..... -· H"JOll•welltUtllleud..,1'olll>ml
cloa'& bl.Ye any dlildren.
Doa1 collapoe lo her oellllll --
II Ille doen1 want to pat Ille dop 111 a
tMDel, let ber lllre • l1Uer.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Thts lelter 11
a pn>leel. Please c:lwlca your advloe.
I reler to the answer you pve the Wile
whose busblnd won: the All-City 8qla
bowling cbalnplooslllp -' a 11,tltlO pane.
In the pul bis !tam bad bad an un-
deralanding that · an· prtJes would be
divided equally among the membera.
The wile .lelt be WU under DO ol>i1g>
lion lb divide bis prize money, that'tt be
tool< his teammates and lbelr wives out
!or dliiner aftd an 'evening ol !Un, II would
be a . nice treat and they sboald be
satisfied. !llJ teammates protesled. You
said, "A deal II a cleaJ, and U the !tam
wanls to chance the deal f0< 1uture,w1ns1 OK-bul llHl-boaor bound·lhll-llmel'. --'-------1.----~-
Sbame on )'OU !or sldlng with lhooe
gr.edy grubbei..: ll!a wlaninc had
nothing to do with bis team. They -
lril>llted nothing. Reierva the .....iict,
AIM. -coliNING ~·
DEAR OORN: -of ,..,.. -
ti 111 I "" .,..,. 8lme .... me.
tlaOod tbe ulry fee-lie,... Ill of 1'11m,..w--.11oe--1·
CMCMe lM nlei ...... llll ltWI ... , -·-·•Ills•• ... ....
111111 • ......
There ls I big dJll4nnco bolWWW cold
and cool. Am Londen -,.. .... ..
plar 11 cool wllhout ~ ....... out In
her bool<lol, ,.,._ So-Tm Wa11
to Cool It." Sood IO cents In coin and •
long. 1ell-addreuecl, atamped envtlofe to
the DAIL'{ PIL(JI'. , ...
J
•
Rome showings are (above I
pleated trousers
with swe·ater, layered over
halter end (right I o tennis
sweater over flippy skirt.
Brimmed hots are
the big news
from the Millinery
Institute of
America. A big
cobboge rose
trims o straw (left I
by Miss Alice.
Fronk Olice prefers
o bondonno tied
a round the crown
(right).
·-
Sensibility Returns
By MARIAN CIUllSTY
ROME -Y0$1erday's beadline-grab-
blng laablobl are on lhe ....,., The
faabion world, a spoiled little mishmash
of deslpen-manulacturen-promoters,
baa been lon:ed Into a mood ol sensibili-
ty.
What bappmed to turn the tables and
make women less silly puppets and mere
Independent elegantes!
It WM the mua rejection ol the mldL
Psychically liberated women did what
their sheeplike predecessors never dared
-they laughed at comic clothes and
didn't buy. Jt was an effective gesture.
The pangs of a waning business was
enough to make couturiers everywhere
recogni1.e that women weren 't putty and
they, the couturiers, a·ere no longer dic-
tators.
Italian high-fashion designers opened
their spring-tummer 1973 coUectlons and
the prediction is that all the senseless
ploys of the past two or three seasons
will be shelved in Cavor of fashions that
are pretty instead or pretty ugly.
Rome designers, easily on an even keel
with Paris, are expected to advance
some influential ideas based on
wearability rather than planned sensa-
tiooalism .
HEMIJNES
OJrrent. and future hemlines are
around lhe knee and even sometimes
above. But if, the midi desenchanted you
on the subject of fashion , in general,
keep an open mind this time around. The
best way to approach the pleasant
distraction ol lashk>n Is to observe trends
and buy only those which are une-
quivocably right tor you.
How can you "buy" fashions that are
European "originals" and individually
cost about the price of a car? Admit·
tedly, only a few auper consumers can
s tbousandt on one Dior coat or one
Chane suit or ~or.e Gtvenchy suit. '
What people generally don't realize
about the business of couture is that
America's tolf manufacturers haunt the
aa.loos to handpick" certain clothes for
mass productlon In the United States. 1 --What Rome a.od"'Parll salons represent
is a think tank, a center for fashion ldeas
meant to explode into tnau translation.
What is bein1 shown. btre could ultimate-17 end up In your local shop and, more
:;:1'0:.,~· on your back In the oat lew
'"1i.s realization makes the world Of
couture a bit leoa foolbh than It appears
on the lmmtdlate lllrface.
American manufacturers, sometimes
though! of aa "leeches" by EU1'9pe80
designers becauae the dishonest ones do
overnight coplet of clothes lrom sketches
or phOioarapbs coming out of a salon,
have been welully p0Uced ncently.
I
All must pay steep "caution rees" -
up to $3,000 -which allows them ONE
seat in a salon and the chance to vi&w a
designer show. Happily, the red-hot seat
fee is applicable to fashions bought for
copyiiig -so, in tbe long run, it's not too
bad.
How do fashion trends happen? There
is a sea of clothes floating out of each
salon. What makes a big seller?
American manufacturers rely·on sharp
instincts and . their knowledge of the
American woman. But, irr the end, the
fashion business is a little like chancy
horse racing.
If manufacturers bet on clothes that
are losers, they risk ~nkruplcy. If
they're able to buy a few Items that are
repadured at affordable prices and sold
coast to coast -they are millionaires.
or course in fashion, a~ ln any big-
money_ game , there are contradictory
variables that pull manufacturen ln op.
posite directions . Manufacturers have to
be decisive.
, For exampl e: Valentino has expressed
the Idea that pantsults have had their
heyday and are a dead ia.u.
PANl'SUfl'S
Valentino, who makes regular trlps to
New York 10 .absorb the "average••
American Woman's tastes, believes
trousers have become oommoopl.ace and
must be discarded in favor ot attractive
.J!tesseL.Valentioo, like BW B~u•Ui•W
York, has been Insisting that women are
tired of hklden gams and want to pue
their legs on display, t
Since there's no one loot -but many ' . -in fashion . designers are attempting to
circumvent Va1enlfno's oo-panll dictum.
The Rome pantsuits, trpecttM to staf"
tie fashionable women, are cul and cuf-
fed 'above the knee. These are geared for
daytime wear and are usually topped by
coordinated sweat.rs. Knee-high pantl
are a leading 1973 look. You'll see them
ln many variaUqns.
Some Italian designers still belltve ID.
pantsuits for evening -especilllf lbi
swishy palau.o types that .,. bard lo
di!ltinguish from sklru. Daytime pants 9'
the traditional var1eti are more likely •
com• equipped with SWlliten rather lllA
lhe now-too-familiar tunic or jacket.
\ \
\
.l
Return to Ele gance
Sampling a t.ouch of elegance in anticipatiQn of the Southern California Council
of Delta Zeta alumnae luncheon fashion sho\\' are (fro1n left) the l\trnes. Louis
Rayer and Don Berry. Sorority members \\-ill gather at the Beverly Hilton Hotel
Saturday, Feb. 10, and proceeds \\'ill aid a can1p for diabetic children.
Stains
Removed
Paint. heavy oil and even
heavy grease stains that often
show up op indoor-00tdoor
carpeting as a result of spring
housecleaning needn't be a
cause for despair, says one
carpet manuJacturer.
These seemingly difficult
stains can ~ally be cleaned
away in minutes by acting fast
and following simple pro-
cedures.
First, scrape up the excess ..
'Then apply a household sol·
vent sparingly and blot up, us-
ing an absorbent collon cloth
or towel.
Follow with a detergent and
water sol ution. if neces sary.
The same procedure can be
used to remove chewing gum,
shoe polish and asphalt from
indoor-outdoor needlepunch.
Ne\'; ...
CAiieo Print
Pinafores &: Sunsuits
Uy Bet!! Terrell foe
Infants & Toddlers
I~•,..,, oleM1h1l~ll,-•~••••I
dolldHR'o olo .. IR l~o •OltOh! •• J
Fashion Island
Newport Beach
'4<-8808
'l'own & Country
Oronge
Iii~) 5~9593
Huntin gton HarboQ'f'
1114114'-116'
Center of Attention
Giving decorations a final pruning before the Tem-
ple Hillel Si sterhood fa shi on luncheon Sun day, Feb.
11, ln the Golden Sails restaurant. are Oeft to right)
the ~Imes. l·Jarvcy Singer and Ed Farber. Elegant
day and evening \vear "'·ill be modeled.
DIRTY CARPET CLEANUP
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flllflOLITRY
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s40-eo1) 645-1313
1740 SUPERIOR AVE.
Newport ond 17th St., Costa MHO
lat. 1tl5
·. . . .
'
,
l
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Aq~a.r.ius: ID namic Approach Helpful
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 31
By SYDNEY OMARR
Llbra J)efSOna often are
dominated by emotions. Logic
takes ~ ~ mw
times when l.Jbra attempts to
make a decision.. However, the
Llbra intultloo Is sharply hQi).
ed and dec::isions are more
often correct than otherwise.
ARIES (March 2l·Aprll 191:
One you respect pays mean.
ingfUJ compliment. A i m
toward goal. Don't sell
yourleU short. YOO are given
more responsibility. Rewards
are greater as result. Older in·
divklual figures prominently.
Heed voice oC experience.
TAURUS (April 26-May 201:
You now can complete pro-
ject, assignment. Aries person
is likely to be involved. Seek
better meus Ill dlltrlbilllon. now Is .,...1er !ban you might leave meaages. Strive ior
Wrltt, publllb and advertlae. Imagine. ExpoJld borilonl. gr<ator understanding of pro.
Gt! -"""""' You will. Healtb, vltall\J piab """"" blems--ting loved one.
be provided with necessary back. You will know It and be Don't CUI lir•I stone. Ta .... 1,
material, WormaUoo. iul~Y· Ac<epl IOClal 1,,. IJln ponon1 might rlgure
GUllNI (May ti.June 20): vllatloo. promloenUy. Be versallle
Obtain lllnt (rom Taorua VJRGO (Aug. !$&p1. ~22):-l"lth®1-1Cllterlng forces.
volved. Your •wn. style opells
tul!Ulment.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you recently went
through domestk: adjustment
or cba,nge of re1idence. You
now will go through period of
self-recognition. n1esaagi. Strive for grea ter in-You can break throulb maze SAGmARIUs (Nov. 22·
depeodeoce. New project is of restrictions, confuslon. Key Dec. 21): Check flow or
likely to sue<eed. Bring forjh now Is to utllJJe natural ability money, Don~ fall Into trap of
creaUve ablUUes. Let others to perctlve and anlyze. What "catch ~p." Means don't==,...,.,.,,,..,,.,.,,...--,,--==
koo1r ·you do lulve style of appears insurmountable Is ,.""'-fUtanclal mistakes. UffEll'S
your own. Lead rather than merely a healthy challence. Plldlf ptnQrl can offer corr
imitate. Loot at It 1n that manner and struct1ve guidance 11 yoo are UPHOLSTERY
CANCER CJUne 21.JuJy 21): you succeed. receptive. Elamlne ofiers and .._ "" W•
Caution sboula be your LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): don'I Jump •t first one. lttt ~ -·
lulllmart; teke time to ..,. Cluulge occurs in domestlc CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. e-- _ MMHt
cumulate ln/ormaµon . Base area. What appeared settled U): ()ppc>rtunlty for gain 1'11i.ii/iiiiiiii~iiiiiii actions on factJ, not impulse. comes up again for dl.scussion. highllchted. One you thought
Be analydcal .Aqurlu Wants Gt~ Virro may be in-• ~t shows you that past to ~ . OUI DUH
to aid. Know it and accept. volved. Obtain estimates. Do e!lorta, faYOn will be repaid.
Heighten sense of public rela-some double c b e c t t n g , You feel 1ppreciated -fman--MANNJNCl'8
tions. · especlally where basic costs clal and emotional security CoL.1.ECTORS
LE& (July 23-Aug. 22): You are concerned. are fortified. Get sterted SHOP "tib:'
may be in mood to celebrate. SCORPIO (Oct. ZS.Nov. 21): toward goal.
Slict to principles. Potential Faml.ly members visit, write, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Any Way You Slice It,
They' re a Cut Above
18): Study Capricorn message.
.You have chance to broaden
spectrum of interests, appeal.
Aries person could play
significant role. Dynamic ap-
proa ch helps you overcome
secret doubts. Exude con·
fidence . Don't wait to be told
-do what must be dane.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
New contact could spark
creative, romantic interest.
Welcome chance to express
yourse.ll. Look to future in-
stead of brooding about past.
f.eo individual could be in-
.q}:.,
FRANCIS-
\i ORR J
FINE STATIONERY
FOR
By ERMA BOMBECK
Boy. if thls l!n't a sign of
the times. I got my YWCA
bulletin this month and there's
a new class being offered caJJ.
ed, "Ask the Butcher." (How
to get the most out or your
meaLdollar.1
Ever since a woman asked
my butcher in a toUd voice one
Friday. "How's your rump to-
day, Fred?" l've been in-AT ,
trigued with the butcher's WIT'S new·found intimacy a n d
· .YALINTIND C...•-
JIU l.CIAlf •NAY 111-1111
CHIU IU IAI ·Cllvtlt(lf '-'Riii ,~~~~
status. END
11 usec1 to be that doctors LOS were the darlings of the E· W llG HT =llbam~er 1:!pedW: ner'?" I asked Fred the other TH1s-wEEK
89 cents 1"J)OUnd. I wu at 8 day. ~i!"ICMlltfpY'Ollhcomelhetrl~ -~...,-~ __ ,.., ~1-. ...,.__,_,. ""°",,._ID lit. °"'""' o
t' ... V """ Ur.m::l" W5l1• WUl::Q .. ""'6"""• -ilfnybblltlncf•ltJIWlllOWed,Co1t-
}ooked up and aaw the head 0 Wbose?" l.llnenod•"llfOClldrup. No starvlnf,
butcher of the Attica Market. "It was an anon.,;;.,.,,. No •Pltbl ulfdlt. Get rid of excess CURREN:r
FASHIONS "Why, if ,it isn't Mr. donor," he said dryly. ;,Tt;i;''j; 111 •nd UY1 lonctr. Odtlnex "" b1eft
Sawsill/' I said, coroetlgg him tri .. be -'d holdin uted ~lul!y bylhouslnda 111 ov« to myself. "You koow, l hate -pe,-lHLI ' 1 up 1 llMCOUlltryforl4)'111a,OdrinexPlan
. al
DISCOUNT PRICES
to bnn. g this up at a ·-'al carton. cotts Sl.25 •ncf t1111l111eet0nomy 11z1 aiow "I'll say," I said -A'-1y. 15 '5 y ~. gathering, but I W¥ w~ .,.~ · · • oa mutt -. uafy lat oc )'OIJr
dering if Vt\11 would ""'"'""be "Have you ever tried pig's monlfWillbirlfundeclbyyourdnrulst
.3-r~-·· feet?" No questions Uied, Accept no sub-something for a toQgb sirloin "You never know where 1Utubs, w; w1f1 this ,uarint11 by: tip. The meat thermometer they've been." THRIFTY '"" ... registers normal and I've "Chicken?"
already given It tlrO teble-"I'll pretend 1 dido" •---Ir=================:::; spoons of meat tenderizer." ' -
He looked up tiredly. ·~ th~~;. ••• always buy 1 BA R GA I N S GA l 0 R E !
D•'-• PL~l ~TOR(O,
two aspirins and call me in the r--J Cl morning," he said. "Now u pcnorhouse on lnstallmenta. I a_nuary ea ranee
'll I ·-to can make out the pasabook M . I St you excuse me ue1ve get and by Easter you•ll own It er1or 1 imper ••vs •••
back to Mrs. Beeman. Sbe bas outright" SEE OUR STYLISH COORDINATES
a sty In the eye of her rowid." I motioned to Fred to come FOR WOMEN ON THE GO!
I stood there in a daze. I
Someho •t did Id 1 c oser. "Listen, Fred, do you w ' me a wor 0 remember lhat little chuck
good just shaking the band of roast I m8de the last payment
the man who had touched a 00 Jast Wednesday? Well ,
standing r ib. when you trimmed a little of
Lately at the meat counter I the fat off it went ' into deep
take a number and am shock and ... "
ef +fie -
FashioJJ.]£>utique
445 I. 17rft St. e '41ol3JZ e c ... M...
depressed when it comes up. l "I don't make hOuse callil: ·:11r::;~~==:;=;~::;;;:::;;:;:===~====~ even find myself looking over he said stifi1y. '
cuts of meat that .I used to ~fark my word. It will only I GoJden Needle's
l111kAm1rie•rd M•1t1r C1'i1r91
think belonged in bottles at be a matter of time before
Harvard. but chers take Wednesdays off S ~1"4t ,,.j d,e 1(/"'
"What is Iha! In the cor· to play golf. ,...-'7 · ·
Genes
Genetic counseling is the
"most significant ~urce"
we now have for direct in·
tervention in choosing our
children's genes. says Harvey
A. Bender , Ph.D., professor of
biology, University of Notre
Dame.
Counseling may be divided
into diagnostic, educative, and
decision·maklng phases. The
co un s e lor · ass um es
responsibility for diagnosis
and education, actual cho ice Is
left to the individual.
Traced
There is a vital need for
society to absorb counseling
costs and to support basic
research if genetic problems
are to be approached ef-
fectively, Dr. Bender em·
phasizes.
Ski Clothes
Wear warm, windproof
clothes for downhill skiing.
Wear layers for cross-coun try.
P~hos
100% wool
reg. 9.98 ea.
Now Only 5.97 ea.
Golden 'needle FABR1cs
IOl.ITK COAIT PLAtA • CAllOUllL LIYIL
OPU rvatlNGI I ~UNIMYI
THE GREATEST SALE WE HAVE EVER HAD.
COMBINED MERCHANDISE FROM ALL OF
OUR OTHER STORES, ASSURES YOU OF
GREAT SELECTIO-N . . • FANTASTIC SAV-
INGS!
-1-l _om;m:;. 7 2 AND MORE SALE
e COCKTAILS
Sure beats the hecllo pace of city living. Enjoy a beautitul protected environment
with lots of room to roam. Best of all, the price from
e CAPRIS & COATS
e DRESSES
Ju•1Sl9.91G ~. !
$1,000 Down, No Closing Costs.
.,
•
e FORMALS
e COATS
e AT-HOME0WEAR
a.,..c...w-
EWPORT BEACH
. .
•
'
• AMBUR
TUMILEWEEDS
MUTT AND JEFF
.FIGMENTS
..... n.. .......
__ .. _
NANCY
'I----;-..,....----..... : ' . ' I WISH YCJlJ WEREN'T SO
• FUSSY ABOUT EVERYTHIN~
:
: . :
:
.
I AM
NOT
FUSSY
TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 A lot:
Informal
6 Witchcraft
10 Shed cuticle
14 Endingwith
·pan and cu b
15 Actress -:-
VerduQO
11 ·· ·· ebout:
App1oll-
\ m11tely
17 Canines: 2
words
19 Kind of lily
20 Burned
21 Before
22 Did the same
23 Warn
25 502: Roman
numerals'
26 Snarl
30 Epoch
31 Lofty goals
34 Was under
th• weather
36 Bustled; 2
words
38 Tit tor·-
39 Midwest city:
Jwords
42 Vim 1nd vigor
43 Footblll shoe
te1ture
44 ••••• Flynn
:~ ~=~':urt
ll•tur•
"9 Landlord'•
concern
50 Rocket
launchers;
Abbr.
51 California
county
53 Ca~lomil
valley
55 Marsh
56 Sounds
61 Mel&I
62. SuperftuOus
tollege
64 Cl111sililld 1d.
heeding
65 Austrian
province;
Var.
66 Menul&e·
tured articles
67 Sheep
68 Where
Wiesbaden is
69 Fu" of years
DOWN
1 Drilling
machines
2 City In
lsrMI
3 P1r1sitlc
~-· 4.Seperete
IOl'celully
5 lnterf&fe
6 AbbftNiltad
Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
11 lt'sworth J7Unit ol
1000 words: 2 capacity
wordl 40 They: French
12 Theater area 41 Hockey's
13 Went on foot Bobby ···
18 Asian export 46 Certain
24 Expunge growing
25 Thick things
48 Prickly 26 Quebec ten1ation • peninsull 51 Entertain·
'l'1 Gunpowder ment fo rm
ingredient 52 Negelive
28 Serving many word
needs 53 Historic river
29 Old eu10 54 Lined up
31 Evil: Prerix 55 The two
s1;ue 32 1969 Can. 57 State
58 Booty
59tleison d'-
60 Sttllcture I
63 Radar
7 Businesa Open champ
V1Ps: 2 word• l3 Looo·legged
8 Lifeless bird
operltors:
Abbr. 9 Container 35 W1ter
10 Tile de1ign conveyotS
•
•
by DoUCJ WUdey
by Tom K. Ryan
'f.l'?_i rf IS A Pl1Y 'ttlU
· DIVN"I PREl'ARe mxJ6ff
FOR '«XJRSIU' 100!
--·---··--...
,,,,.,., "'
TERI! ION&. ~-~vr.
0 '
L.ET'S NOT
ARGUE-I'U..
BUY YOU SOME GUM
PEANUTS
MISS PEACH
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emi• hshmRler
OKAY, BUT I
\VANT THAT ONE
~
\ \ ', '1:'--· .. -,,.
-: • '/%
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
.,
by Charles M. Schulz
.-~~~~~~~
Wol/ID 'tW BE I~
IN CCtlllN61
by Mell
•, ' •• . , ,,
•
Tuesd.ty, Jany.iry JO, 197} DAIL V PI LOT 15
by Roger Braclfleld
By Charles Barsotti
r::::a;;;~~ri
Fl50 ~ ·.·
THE GIRLS
.. _ ,., Ille dlllkult part -lryto& lo decide what 1 ..
Ulp u lllltallment oa tbil moadi &o pay for IL'"
DENNIS THE MENACE
0 • • •
•
.....
OAlLV PILOT
3 Trojans Picked in 1st Round
NEW YORK -'lbm memben of the
University ct Southern California nalkln-
111 championship team 'o\'ef'e selected in
lhe first round ol the Naliooal Football
i.e.guo draft today.
Philadelphia's Eagles picked All·Amet·
lean tight end Ow.rLes Young. New Eni-
land seleclcd 212-pound running back Sam
€unninghan1 and Cleveland t.abbed olftm-
sl\'e tac kle Pete Adanu.
Young is a 228-poond blocking and pass-
calchi.ng st11r while CUnningham scored
a record four touchdovons and was nam-
ed tht> outstanding player l.n the TrojfM'
Rose Bo\rl rout ol Ohio State.
Adan1s is a !~pounder \.\'ho started for
three seasons ror USC.
Defensive tackle John Pilaluszak of lhl'
Unlver>ity ol Tampo wu the top pick In
the drafl. He ~.., Jelectod by ll)O Houston
O!len.
'!be 6-7, m.pounct ... """"" 17 rounds or dranlng that ..... to provide 441 rook·
io f>l'OSP'CLs for lhe M NFL dubs.
Ex-Sant. Ana High ai.r Isaac O.irtls
of San DI go State )'U 3tl<Ctoct by Cin-
cinnati. CUrtis, a wide receiver. <'.aught
<44 peSSfS tor432 yard!: end seven touch·
do"'l\S this past season.
The Balt.lzn<ft Colts, picking second
behlnd Houston', tabbed L.SU quarterback
Bert Jones and Phlladclpllla Jllen chose
Jerry Sizemore. a 260-pound two-time All
American offensive tacile from Texas.
Other draft siek>ctions included Ne\Y
England -John Hannah. Alabama . of-
fe-nsi\·e tackle:.. SL Louis -Dave Butz,
,Purdue, deleml\·o ia.tle: Burralo -Poul 4rallr!:f ~lion In 1 IWlp with Dolroll,
5e)'1DOW', Micblpn, olfemive toctle: peddl Jo New Eh&land for "°"In>
Qllcqo -Wally Chambers. Eulem • verslal n/nolng bock Cir! Gomlt o1 tbe
Kentucky, t1eret1$1ve end: Denver -Otis Patrlols. •
Armstrong. Punlue. running back. 1be l'llrlcll Ilion toeltmd wide rocetv-
Other> selected Included: Baltimore -er Dorey! StJosley, ol Punlue. Oooclud-
Joe Ebnn-Syracuse. cleleosiv~ t.ck· Ing tbo deal with the Bears, Dolrolt "'"
• Je: M....,_!a -Clulclt Fol'.tmon. Miami tJght eo<I Craig Q>t!Clll lo.J:bl""'°. 'Ille
cl. Florida. running baclc : New York Jeia Bean abo pvo It. lhlrd-roond drolllns
-Burg.., Owens. Milllll ol Florida, do. plcka to the Lions.
feosive back: Houston -George AmWld· In other first round StlectJpns. the Dal·
""'· lo...a Stale, nmniq bock : Cleveland lu O>wbcya picked Mlchlgan Stale Jlght
-Steve Hok:len. Arizona State, wide re-tnd Biiiy Joe OuPrtt, a wide receivtr.
ceivtr: Detroit -Ernest Price, Texas The Green Bay Packers then selected.
A&!. defensive end. •1dc """'Iver Barry Smtih ol Florida
San Jo'rancisco, picking 18th, selected State.
defensive back Mike Holmes ol. Tes:as 08kland pulled 1 mild surprise by tak·
Southern. ing Ra.)' Guy, tbe nation's leading coDeg.-
Olicago, which bad obtalntd Ille 19th iale punier from Sootllern Mississippi.
Salt Lake Citv Sports Clipped Sliort Controversy
Mars Quarry's
.. Title Victory
•
Withdraws Bid
For '76 Gam es
SALT LAKE CIT'( <AP) -Salt Lake
City, designated. as the U.S. entry in com-
petition to host the 1976 Winter Olympics.
"ithdrew its bid as a prospective ~ite t~
day.
Oil City Golf er
Takes Early Lead
Sandy Gailbraith of Huntington Beach·
shot. a sis:-under-par A 1.tonday to take
the first-round lead in the rourth Western
Tournament Goll Association 36-bole
tournament .,at Yorba Linda Country
Club.
11le 27-year-old Gailbnith. a pro only
J\tavor Jake Garn. "tio had spearhead-
ed ~ city's entry into the competition.
said he notified the International Olympic
Committee in a telegrlll1l of the city's
Y.ithdra"-al. · · tter Utah's two us fi \'e month.!. shot a 33-33--66 o\•er the The decision l'ame 8 . · · 7 0$.yard course. Local pro John
senators informed Garn a commitment or -'Beetham Yi'as second with a 35-33--68 and
ft•1cral funding for the games "·ould be tied for third were Moe Hyland of Yorba
impossible-before the international com-Linda and Ri~k Carpenter of Misooula,
. ' Sunday to select a site-J\ionl .. both w1tb 69s. m1ttee me-es · .
G d other Utah officials tiad in-Fonner Yankee pitcher Ralph Terry .arn an was tied with three others at 70. 'lbe
sisted that city and state government $25,000 e'lMl p{J'en $5,000 ~r firs!.
funds \\'OUld not' be applied toward the
estimated $30 million requited to host
the games
Ga rn said the telegram to the lOC said:
"Salt Lake City expresses its great re-
gret that the lac k ol financial aid guaran-
tees makes ii impossible for our city to
issue an invitation to the IOC to hold
the games here.''
He said he also sent a telegram to
Clifford Buck, president of the U.S. Olym-
pic Committee. expressing "great regret
that the brief time between our selec-
tion as the U.S. candidate for the 1976
games .and the Feb. 4 meeting of the IOC
y.·as insufficient to obtain any assurances
of financial aid from the government of
the United states. We therefore are wilh-
drawing our bid."
But he told newsmen. "We still believe
that Sall Lake City is the best site in all
the world for the Winter Olympics. We
hope the opportooity will come again."
Garn had said hlonday he planned to
meet today with bis Olympics Steering
Committee. but ~ disclosed the tele-
grams today "·ithoot a meeting being
held.
Awaiting Salt Lake City's decision was
Lake Placid , N.Y .. another of the cities
that competed to host the games after
Denver ">ithdrew as the site.
Lake Placid Mayor Robert Peacock
said Monday : "We have never given up
hope.''
YOUNG GYMNAST
I N NATI ONAL MEET
Estancia High School freshman Kyle
Gayner has qualified for the national
seniors gymnastics championships to be
held in SeattJe. May 3.
Mi ss Gayner placed first in her
specialty, the balance beam. recording
the second highest single event scoring of
the qualifying meet, P"hich was concluded
last weekend In Was61ngton, 0.C.
She had a 9.35 while Olympian Debbie
Hill recorded a 9.4 on the uneven parallel
bars. .
Miss Gayner placed third in all-round
competition, behind the Olympic duo of
Pi1iss Hill and Nancy Thies after leading
the fi eld at the. conclusion of six evenls.
A low score on the bars dropped her to
third in the final standin&s.
Lakers Tackle
Bulls Tonight
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The record
'doesn't show It. but the Los Angeles
Laken probablr are in for a tough time
\.\'hen they-meet lhe Chicago Bulls Turiigf11
at the Forum.
The Bulls haven't beaten the Lakers
since Oct. 22. 1971, but the IO meetings
betv,.een the two clubs since then have
not been one-1idl'd. 'l1M: games have been
tight, down-to-the-wire affairs.
Although the Bulb have been sliding
lately -they've Jost five of their last
eight games -such .!tars as Chet
Walker, Bob Love and Jerry Sloan could
make things tou&h for Loi AngclC.!1.
Even the Bulls' siltb.·man. guard Bob
Wels.s, ba1 riven lhe Lskers trouble,
seemlng 10 play hlJ best games agaimt
Los Ange.lea.
The Bulls will be lac.~ln the service'!
of center OUford Ray. , who Is out
with an injured knee. c'll be replaced
by 6-10 Denn is Awtrey.
Chica.go, 5~ games behind Milwft ukee
ln the National Baaketball Association
mldwesl. has a IJ.J~ reconl. Loo Angci..
Js.39.U 111dl<ads tlle.l'aclllc.Illv~l-On.
Switzer Named
NORMAN, Okla. -Barry Switzer,
architect of OkJahoma 's record-breaking
Wishbone offense, wa s chosen Monday to
succeed Chuck Fairbanks as the Sooners'
head coaeh.
Switzer, 35, was the unanimous choice
of a search committee named by Dr.
Paul Sharp. school president . to choose a
successor for Fairbanks. who resigned
Friday to bf'corne head coacb and
general manager of 1he New England
Patriots of the Na tional Football
League.
Bulaich Goes
BALmtORE -The Baltimore Colts,
wheeling and dealing in advance of the
National FoclbaJI League draft. traded runDing back "'Norm Bulaich to the
Philadelphia Eagles Monday for "un--
di9Closed draft choices."
It was the sixth trade in seven days by
the Colts, who will pick second and IOl.h
in the first round of Tuesday's annual
draft of college players.
Bulaich, plagued by injuries during his
three years with I.he Colts, carried the
ball only 27 times during the 1972 season
before being sidelined with a groin in·
jury. ·
Newsome Tra<led
NEW ORLEANS -The New Orleans
Saints traded their No. 1 draft pick to the
Baltimore Colts for defensive tack1e-end
Billy Newsome and the Colts' fourth-
round draft choice, it was announced to-
day.
Newsome, a 6-foot-5. 250--pound
Grambling graduate, was the Colts' fifth--
round pick ~ 1970. He became a starter
in the third game of his rookie season
and has started every game for the Colts
·for the past two· seasons. He led the
team defensively last season with six
sacks. 48 individ'ual tackles and 25
assists.
Shy Dies
EUGENE -C.A. "Shy" Huntington,
University of Oregon football great and
fonner Republican state le1islator, is '
dead at the age of 81.
After quarterbacking the 1917 Oregon
Rose Bowl team that defeated
Pennsylvania I~, Huntington remain~
at Oregon as football coach until 1923°'."
He entered the fuel oil business with C.
"Skeet" Manerud, who p I a y e d
quarterback on the 1921 University of
Oregon Rose Boy,•l team that Huntington
coached . The partnership lasted ootil
they sold tbe business in 1965 and return-
ed.
Huntington also served for years on the
State Racing Commission.
He died at his home Sunday.
Tean1 Canada
TORONTO -Team Canada 's games
against 'Russia, Czechoslovakia ond
Sweden lut fall brought-a profit..of about
$900,000, Hockey canada announced Mon-
day.
Of that, $500,000 "''Ill go to minor
hockey development through Hockey
Canada and the Canadian Amnteur
Hockey Association.
• The remaining $400.000 will go lo the
National Hockey L4!ague Players·
As.o;ociation penstoo fund.
Chief source of re\fenue was the sale of
television rights in Canada and the
United States, wllh major tx~s ln-
volvin& travel, aC(.'OmmodnUon, equip-
ment ~.and Team CMada saalrlef.
FSU Football
FRESNO \.... J. R. Boone has been nam-
ed head football coach at Fresno State
University, the university announced
Monday.
Boone, 47, becomes the Bulldogs lllh
grid co•ch. replacing1)Arryl Rogers. wllo
WM named head· football coach at San
OU COACH, BARRY SWITZER.
Jose State University last week.
Boone come.s to FSU from Reedley
College, in nearby Reedley where he
guided the tea.rn to the state junior col-
lege football tiUe in 1971.
Gonzalez Falls
DF.5 MOINES, Iowa -llie Nastase,
tbe world's No. 2-ranked tennis star and
Pancho Gonzalez, defending national
champion, withered before perfonnances
by a German and· a Greek Pifonday in the
Des Moines International tennis tourna-
ment.
Nastase, the Romanian who was seed-
ed No. 1, was upset by Carl Meiler of
Germany 7-6. 6-3. Gonzalez was seeded
No. 2, but, fell before the attack by Nick
Ka1o of Greece 7-6, 6-4.
Two other seeded players advanced .
No. 3 Clark Graebner cruised · past
GavreHe Marcu of Romania 6-1, 6-3.
No. 4 Juan Gisbert. of Spain whipped
John Cooper of Australia &-0, &-1. In other
action, Szablocks Baranyi of Hungary
beat loo Tiriac of Romania 6-3, 6-2;
Jaime Pinto-Bravo of Chile beat Peter
Szoke of Hungary 6-4, 7-6 and Ian
Fletcher of Australia beat Jorgen
Fassbender 6-4, 0-6, 7-5.
NHL All-stars
Clash T 01right
In New York
NEW YORK iAP) -The National
Hockey League prepared Monday for
Tuesday night's All-Star game -but
without President Clarence Campbell.
campbell is recuperating from gall
bladder surgery in Mootreal and will be
missing lbe AlJ..Star game for the first
time since he became NHL President in
l!M6. That we.s a year before the All-Star
Game became an annual affair. _
West coach Billy Reay will have. five of
his own Chicago Black Hawks in the
On T\I Tonight
Channel 13 at 7:30
starting lineup. 'Ibey are goalie Tony
Esposito. center Stan· Mikita, right wma
Jim Pappin, left wing DeMis Hull ana
defenseman 1!1ll Wlil!r.' -
The only non-Black Rawk starter is
~finnesota defenseman Barry Gibbs. It
will be Ille third All-Star game Cor
Espcs;Jc, wllo baa allowed three goala
over 4\i periods of actk>n.
The East team will have Boston coach
Tom Johnsen behind Ille bench with
Boston's Bobby Orr and Montttal's Gu,y
LoPolnte oo tleft11Se, PhU EaoosiJc or the
Bruinl ..et center, BuHalo'1 1\ict Me.rtin
on lefl ,t;ng and YVan Cournoyer of M.,.,.
~al on rlthl wing.
The goalie will be either Gillet
Ylllemure or Ed Glacomin, both of the.
New York 'Rangers. Glaoomin wu nam-
ed to Ille team Jc rtplace allillg •Ken
Dryden of Montreal. ·
This \1 only. the scmnd time that an
All-Star team has drawn both II• pall ..
from the same team. Giacomln and
Villemure abo .!bared tht East nets two
1em ago when tile Woll won lht mltl-sclson game, 2·J. ...
Alike Quarry ~sn't think Ray White
is a boJ:er. White doesn't think be lost his
match with Quarry. And the" possibility of
a rematch ls stW up in the air.
'!be conllOveny and ·confusion followed
Mooday night's 'Anaheim Coow>tioo
Center state Ugbt heavyWeljht title bout
of 12 .rotLO<b: between the two battlers at
different ends of the age spectnm).
Quarry, 11, was declared the winner
unanimously. He. won on cards of 8-3, 7-3
and M by the. voters. But White, a
balding 34-year-old V~tura carpenter,
\Yas the f~vorlte. of the crowd and some
of the press corps covering the bout.
AC COUNTANT, BIL LI ARDS FAN WAYN E NORCROSS.
Top Billiards Play er
I
Later, Quarry, 175, wu angered by the
applause for White.. Quan')' lives in
·Anahe~, ·et -Wasn'tllie IXlmitown·--
favortte.
J! untington' s Norcross
"Ray White's not a fighter, he's an
entertainer," 'fumed Quarry in his
quarters. Aaked 1f he'd like· a rematch,
Quany said, "SUre, I'd like to earn some
more money." ~ he turned gleeful,
apparently rememij_ring that he. had ad--
ded the state UUe to Di! North American
light heavy crown. 1 White, 173, using !cog, loping left jabs.
kept Quarry off ba.lanct until late in the
fight. ms jab puffed Quarry's face but
later White said be probably hadn't done
enough damage with his left.
"l trained to throw 10,000 left jabs.
When I saw they weren't doing the
damage, 1 got discouraged." But the man
called "Windmill" said Quarry didn't
burl blm.
"He baa no punch. lo fact , the body
punch didn't burl as much aa the bead
punch," be said. "Actually, I tbougbt the
fight was a draw.".
White's repertoire. of tm.usual punches
was untapped and he credited Quarry for
stopping the display. He said the younger
brother of Jerry Quarry rushed him
every time be wound up to throw one of
his patented punches.
Walton's Cool
Ke y Factor,
Says Wooden
I
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bill W~llcn.
the key to 46 of UCLA's 61 consecutive
basketball victories and a kJd who hasn't
lost a single game in five years, is gel·
ting better aays his coach.
. John Wooden told basketball writers
Monday that Walton, the. 6-foot·ll
redhead center of the Bruin team, is
more in control of his emotions and can
divert his anger on the court into steildy,
dedicated play.
Wooden was asked about his center's
reacUon to the bumping and shoving be
gel!: because he's the. target of special
defenses. Wooden said:
''He's matured a lot emotionally since
a year ago. 1 thlnlt he takes a 'grin-and·
bear~I' altitude abool Ille jcstling he
. takes. I thblk that's true; I don"'t know 1f
all of our opponent! woukl agree . . . "
Woctlen said the poondlng taken by his
agile center Is bard to describe.
"I think it's amu.i.ng that he. can go
through some games and not shoot free
throws," be. said. "I thlnt he's fouled an
enormOU1 number of time.a. But I think
he's maintained fat more. emotional
st.bllily than Ile had and be Is a great
competitor.
"I think Ille Jcugber tho game, the
more. riled up he gets and wants to play
and yet be can play with blt emotions un-
der conllOl~l\'hM.be_wu aJl..ilman..J>e-
used !Oitrlke back. He'd get pusbocl er
held and Ile mltht posh back and that's
the 1111)' who always geia caugbl"
N-0 J ohnny-come-lntely
By DENNIS CAMPBELL
Of *' o.ii., ,. .... staff
When it comes to shooting pool. Wayne
Norcro5s has always been good. Just how
good, it see.ms, wasn't apparent until last
Friday. ,
On Friday, the slender, dark-haired
Huntington Beach resident beat sev~
time event champion Irving Crane in th;?
first round of tbe World'.! Invitational
pocket billiards championships in Holly·
wood.
Then, as if lo silence any doubters.
No~ returned to the toumament
Sunday and beat last year's tourney run-
nerup, Lou Butera, in the second round
of play. In that game, the 27-year-old ac--
cotm.tant ran off 109 balls.
Norcross finally lost in ttie round-robin
tournament when Jack Breit beat him
1~102 in the third game.
"He ran 90·balls on me, and that made
it a little difficult to beat him ," Norcross
says. The tournament, ruming through
Feb. 17, is being played at American
Legion Hall at 2035 N. Highland.
An employe. of the United Can Co.,
Norcross earned a bid to the invitation-
only tournament with a fourth place
finish In the Stardust Open at Las Vegas
last March.
"I had entered the tOW'Ilament a rou-
ple of years ago and finished 13th," he
recalls. '"lben I entered again last year
and finished fourth, and on the basis of
that I was invited to this tournament."
It puts Norcross in elite company. The
tournament has 19 of tbe 'l\'Ofld's finest
pool players.
• Norcross is no Johnny-come-lately to
pool. He's been pJaying since be was
seven years old and has played In various
city tournaments and exhibitions. But
he's never before given himself a real
shot at the professionals.
"Right now I'm doing this aS a kind of
a second profession,'' he says. "If the
game becomes popular from a spectator
standpainl or if television picks il up, I
may take a try at it. But the chances are
slim.
"I do want to give myself a couple of
years, and if I'm still improvin~ and wiD·
. nieg l'll c:ontinue to play. I don t 'feel that
I'm anywhere near my peak yet."
Fol' awhile, Norcross rarely picked up
a stick. He averaged aboot an hour and a
half of play per week.
"But playing professionally has been
something in the back.of my mind.all my
life," be says. "I rea1ly wanted to find
out if I could do it."
Norcross prepared for the current
tournament by practicing about l lh hours a day. "But remember," he says, "those
other guys work at pool like someone
else works at an eight·hour-a-day job."
Norcross is confident after his first
three games. He expects to play again
tonight and says: "I feel real good right
now. I've won two of the toughest games
in the tournament and I think I'm in good
position."
A win or High finish £Ould eam him a
bid to the Nalional Open in Chicago, and
if the invitation comes Norcross won't
have to consider very long. "I'll be
there," be promises.
Players Swarm on· Floor
As Iowa Stuns. ~ichigan ·
10,VA CITY, Iowa (AP) -In .a game foul on ?.tichigan forward Enrle Johnson.
marred by technical fouls and near chaos The foul was Johnson's fifth , ousting
on the court, the Iowa Hawkeyes h.im from the game, and Orr had to be
defeated Michigan 75-e8 in a Big Ten restrained by assistant coacbea and team
college basketball contest which ended members.
with one second left on the clock Monday Only moments before the game-ooding
night. incident, Kunnert had achleved a new
Iowa center Kevin Kunnert drove for a Iowa career rebouod. record of 785
layup and was fouled by Wolverine erasing Don Nelson's old mark of 784 aei
forward John Lockard with one. second in 1960.
remaining. The Hawkeyes earned their second Big
Lockard's foul swelled Kunnert's Ten victory by hitting on 10 of IS free
cbee.k, brought the partisan crowd of throw attempts tn the final 1:23. Guard
12,914 to Its feet and sent players from Candy LaPrlnce connected on sh of
both. benches swanning out onto the seven, guard Larry 'Moore. on three of
Door. four and the .7·foot Kunnert on one of Kunnert never got a. ehar.c~ to take his two.
two free throws, as the officials deemed Kunnert led all scorers with 14 points
lt.-prudfn,.lo llall the-game ,,.thel point-. -as-Iowa-bad three playero In double
Two secoods earlier, Michigan coach figures. HoWhooting. Henry Wilmore Jed
John Orr twice lhrew a towel at referee. lhe Wolverines with 20 pointa and
Jamea Robinson. when Robinson called a forwanl Campy Russell chipped In fl
Anteaters ·uost Cal ._.oly
· nne crucial pmeo with CCAA op.
ponent. beCIDnlnl with Jcttlglll'• -· er with Clll Pl>lY (Pomona), face coach
11m nit's UC Irvine buktlbaU team lhls
-l. All un.. dueli are. ll ucra
<nwforu Hau wtth Upoff at I o'clotk.
Followlng Ille three home pmes, the
Anlealen lake lo •the road for lbne
1•me• al Chapman, UC Rlvmldt and
Cal Stale (Northrldge). Aller IM! 1111
Chapman al borne and Cal St.le (Ful·
l!!f1o!ll ~ IQ c~ o U I lfle. reaular
season. """
It's the lime of year again when NCAA
college division playoff hopes tpring allve
and U.. Anteaters' marlt of 11-7 m\1$1 be
. Improved with 1t leut rJve vktories In
the final eJght (llllel Jc enhance UCl'a
playotf chances. .•
Tift feels Ibo Pomooa Broocoo could be
Ille toughelt cl lht lhrtt roes lllla week.
"They are 1 good team despite their
record (M)," TI.ft 1ay1.
1'They have a tenactous defense a~
they like lo pcwer tile ball lll$ide to \heir
big men.'! ~
Getting the ball Inside 1he utl moVlng
\
" .
'
zone could be Ille key to the game. •
Wltb Soott Magnuson (6-11), Dlve
Baker (H ) and Jerry Maru (H)
around the key, guard& Harlan P<et
Gary Eubanka and Sam Bunch r .... tht
outside &hcia. Ricbard Clark i l-5) It the
first rUerv~ oo the tn>nt Une.
Pomona baa Alan Smith (!-7) al
center, Gary Andmon (HJ and Oeor1a Thom~ il-S) al lor1'1nls. •
Andirsllo II the~eam's leading 1COrer
• with a 12.1 average While Smfth la hitting
al 10 points a pme and ~bb••• ~lno rebourida. · °' r-...
'
• '
I
.
I
!
••
•
I
•
;
'• .I -_ TutscUy, January JO, 1971 DAILY PJLbT J7
A1amitos
Racing
Entries
Monarchs Duo.Tops
.
• Area's Scoring List
W onaen Golfers ·c~llect
Mater Del Hlgh's one.two
&COring punch . of George
Herold and Greg Green con·
tlnued to dominate the Orange
Coast area prep · basketball
sooiing list as compiled by the
.OAILY PILOT.
The Monarchs' duo has ac.
counted for 740 points and 2{1.3
and 18.S averages in leading
their mates to a 10.10 overall
mark and H Angelus r<cilrd. ·
Marina's Vikings have three
play<n amotJi the. top 10.
which lJ .based on total points
.......i. The Vlkea have been
lnvQlved In %1 gaJD<S and that
puts Afan: Adams , Bob Losner
and Mark Ford ln the select
list.
Adams is third with a 14.8
average, Losner follows with a
15.8 norm (three less games)
and Ford is ninth on the scor-
ing list. .,....
r-_ Former LPGA Open chf.mplon Shirley Englehorn ment at Irvine Coast Country Club. Club president ~~~. ·~·'1,u:~,,m, W:"r.t '•=,H ·= 1 :ll.1 I (center) presents the ~rs checks to Carole Jo Woody Smith, left, and !CCC club pro !Ucbard Mar·
New to the list are Newport
Harbor's Brian O'Flaherty
and Corona del Mar's Casey
Jones.
O'Flaherty ts sixtll with 294
points a:nd a 16.3 average
while Jones edged out Foun-
tain Valley's 'Scott Reider by
one point for 10th place.
""' -"......,' "' Sbla (2nd left) and Marilynn Smith (4th left) after tinez,_ right, ISl!i,sted in presentations. The event ~ :=. •;~) ~: the pair posted par 71s for low gross honors in the drew 145 entries, inclWUDg 29 LPGA professionals.
~~~~/..,. Jl~3_r_d_a_n_n_u_aJ_l_a_di_.es__;p_n>~lllllC-·_ed~-amale~-"'~~golf~-to-u_rn~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
J Corona del Mar's Jett
Wharton is 'third in scoring
average with an 18.3 mark. "''"" ~· =-w ":'I ~'l'Nf" ~'::" ' · i Vanguards
·~lj=;,' i~ Lose, 73-55, ~It~ Ct:: IHI 121
Olddv !Hartl llel1169 us ·In Arizona
f.•-W.: !J > '" Speclal to Ilse DAILY PILOT
Laguna, Mater Dei
Eye Circ"!Lit Leads
A couple of teams still through the season with a 21--0
e n t er t a i n i n g champion· record to date and are 8-0 in
hi ho head l t ol the Q-estview League.
6-2 Victory TOP 11 P•. 'I• ... ~'" 1. Herold, MD XI 20.l
2, Grten, MO 11 U1 ":I F R ]. u. ...... #Miii• 7.1 327 u or angers t ~H:.C°" ~ ~ 1i1 t. ~':"'td~ \1 I!! · 1i:t ~ Coast Ra I. 8-, Mlnlort I ifO 16.1 ngert1 soccer .,. t. Pon1. M1r1.,. tt 21~ n.~ team ran its string of con-10. J-. CdM 11 w 1s.1
secutive victories to five Sun· c1ron. .. ~r 1u.f1
day aftemoon at TeWintle WMrlor1 · :, 11 i m ll~
i ~ 'l
' ' l!dlMNI (1·111 J 11 tt tp .ive.
" 13 n 206 11.1 1~ n !t m ll :l lIHn"t~ lt t~ ,; ff lJ
l!llllU
U7 •111.! •S71P•. ~ 1 Q I l.
1!1!1111:111 U·l•A
11 Ill ~ Tu 'iti
" " .. 190 11.1 II .0 15 l•S •.O 'ln"~u l ltlf •. ,
10114 1 " ' • ' 1 1,5' 1 0 I OJ
1'01.111t1lft VIUlf tU·JJ ... ttlp l Vf. " 113 •1 ,,., 14.0 lt lDl 2• ,,, 11 ,f '' n 21 ,,, t.1 " S1 1, llO 6J 11 34 :u. 94 s.s
lf 16 22 1• !.I 111226).2
10 12 1 li 2.1
' ,. ' Jj •. 46J!640 ••21D J.S
3 l I ' 1.0
Hv11tl1111011 IH<ll C1'-4)
• "' fl ,,. I ..... Wtlr 20 111 lil1 296 U.t
ronrr•r•' It 10f lJ Ul l J.7
1111!1-. '! " ,,. '·' Teti 1 .SS UO 7.1 llll'!kln l SJ 32 1:11 1,1 Nt!ll 'I •2 24 12J I.$ AQlson 1 !.'! n 121 !·' C1rhan 11 ii I 41 .f
HIMlll' 11 1S 6 U 3.0 Allrtn1 6 10 J :tt l.~ Cowdtn 2 I O 2· 1.0
La.v111 IH<ll (l~S) ..._ "'"' 11 ~. l! '.e.. ·,~ Allclt•lG!'I SI 1it 10.S
·-11 16 " 61 113 11.• L!lln!fom U Y 411 .IY '·' G,,_. 'I ll • "I ,, l<'-lbldl I SI 14 I .I ·-'!'11 3.6 MCN•l•un I I U 1.7
C:lwl,110-J I 3 5 1.6 P1l~k 4 70 •1.0 ~"' JStlS:t
Ca ge' Poll
I. UCLA 33
Mlr1 ... 116-71 • .. • '' 1v1 • Ad•ll'I• " ,. " tt7 14.1
Los,..r " '" ., :I02 1 S.8
·~· " "' " "' "·' Fie-" "' " "' 10.2
Swint.on " " ., '" •• Rou1r " u " "' ..,
Shllov " " " .. ..,
Hilton " " " ~ ,..
Grffhl " • " " u
·~ ·-• • 'f""'.\1.• :ir.:u ' ' ' ...
' w-w••d ' 1 I I i!
Matlf' Del U•11J • " • "' ...... tl•told :lft ''f lil Cil ...
GrM" 11 u Pai 'l:l Ad•mt :lft '9 IJ #Mrtlnd1t1 • ., v '" ~~ ~llllheV " t1 " ,.,
l1 'l ft u OellntY ICl'ltzlrl ' ' ,,_, .. ' ' l ~mlll'I !rltltfuu R1lu
klilrl
' • • l •• • ' ' '·! l ' ' I '· ' • • ••
MluiM Vlele 11NJ
'""'''""'· 11 'I! ~ m l!:l l( ~ 3.1 lta h:l
l: ll 'I ~ !:l
~'12Jf:l .,!·1··· t I o.s
! I il
NtQort HI,..,. C•1tl
lfllnlPIVf.
11 111 51 "" l•.J " " ff "' 10.1 11 '' '" 1.s " l! ' 151 '·i " 44 l« •. ... ,.,,
" 'l ' ~ l' ' 1 ' 21 .1 \llOIJ!j» ' ' . .. •5717 4.J
S111 Cltmt11tt f~l41 . .. " ,, ......
16 " :u 1•1 n.i 1~ " -n 1n 1~:. 11 " :lft 1)1 , •• 11g31u10 ll!'fi':'
:J
1
1 i ft ·tl !ll'" 1 o , 1 I:~ !\<!!..~ ...... ~. :."'i7· '11.::0 • ·=
II • :!f. 1 · lff PHOENIX -David Payne -1..• 1 7 scored 23 points and Pat Quinn
t::'rJ.iQi) :*'' i<lcfeGlS-bOt tr-wasn"t enough
s P pes a s 8 e. While !Catella was beaUng
. baaketboll games lnvolvmg Mission v .. jo 64-Q Friday
or a n g e ·O>ast area-high --nlgbl-bebilld-big-lnlntllnen
schools tonight. Jell Welshans (M ) and Mike
Park in Costa Mesa with a S-2 ~ ~~ '° ~' 2'21 1)-G
win over Decca '70. · . ~~Yi ~~ ~ 2! :; ~:~ 2. NorTll C1rol!M S!.
3. M1ril1nd
4, LOflll Btl~l'I S!.
, .....
1•"4 Stt'
1'·1 411
16-1 """ lJ.2 3S2
13-1 2&.I
1'·2 731
U-3 %)1
12·2 199
14·2 ltS
13·1 187
12·2 I.If
13"1 14.1
1).2 14
14-l 4]
1•·2 •2
U.J 40
IJ.J 11
1.1-2 2•
1)-4, ·11
..
u~'', l' I II 1111 ~oct .. 1w1Y:lin1 , , for the SoCa Co e g e
N1te Flklht cs~~w. 111 Vanguards to defeat host
Mld "'°' .. fL~rri 11', Grand ""'""OD College Monday Go Ml1tv Jc. (Kn I) ..-..Y ~:~-. '= r&-.:::r--1 ll~ night 1n an intersectional · basketball game played here.
Grand Canyon posted a 73-55
decision to grop t he
Vanguards' season record to
IH.
Tonight SoCal will play UC
San Diego In the Border City
to complete the brief two-
game trip.
"We didn't play well to-
night," a disaDoointed coach
Paul Peat saiit. following the
game. "We toot a number of
bad -. and they also out· rebounded us ...
Grand Canyon moved In
front 38-27 at haUUme and
held the lead· throughout the
final period.
Racing Results
(.
(
(
(
}
l
). . ' CCJFEESHOP ) ,
OPEN 6.:30 aM I
( ' )
'
)
" VV.\.o"V '"'V V ..... VV v.
The schedule: Laguna Dunn {6-6), San Oemente was
Beach at Brea, Saddleback at losing to Foothill, 68-58. -Orange promises lo give Uolvers.ity, Dana Hills at El Mission Viejo an it can handle.
Dorado, Mater Del at Pius X, The Panthers are 5-3 In league
San Clemente at Katella and play and feature a tall front
Mwton Viejo at Orange. line built around &-7 Brad
Laguna Beach and Mater McPherson.
Dei are the only team.i still In
the running for league liUes.
Mater Del lJ In '"""'1d plaee
lo the Angelus League at H . a
game behind c o ~lea d ers
Servile and St. An-, (3-1 ).
while the Artists of Laguna
Beach are 6-J: in the Orange
League, a game behind El
Dorado (7-1),
Mater Del lost a 5H3
shocker to Servile. last week
and will try to get things
together against the Warriors,
who reside in last ptace lfith a
1-3 record.
Laguna edged Sonora 74-73
lo stay within sight or El
Dorado, and will be favored
against a Brea team that Is u
in league and took a 71-43
shellacking from Saddleback:
in its last game.
Meanwhile Dana Hills and
University figure to be in for
difficult games in t h e i r
Orange League contests. Dana
Hills, 1·7. tn league, gained its
first clr!uil win with a 5MI
win over University last week.
Unlvtnlty will be malcbed
against Saddlebact, an off~
and-on team that hm little dlf.
ficulty with Brea Friday.
San Clemente's game Wilt be
the most challenging. The
Trilons will visit the CIF's No.
1 ranked 3-A team In Kalefla.
The Knights have romped
CdM Third
In Ratings;
Colts Fall
The CIF I.AAA prep basket·
ball poll remains bulcllly the
same w i th Morningside,
Verbum Dei, c.r..a de! Mar
and Pasadena qaln leoding
the pa.ck after two more
triunqll>s each.
The major change In the poll
came in the AAA division
where the )ftviously uoheaten
Covina Colts fell !run 81COod
to a tie fur fifth after a pair of
narrow Sierra League set~
backs.
Aside !run Corona de! Mar
(third). Orange Qlast area
tearm Fountain Valley (mth)
aod Huntington Booch (nlllth)
aJao 'jleaned apots In the
AAAK top 10.
, TMER~ARE OVff ~-EDCARS FOR SALE -• ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbor Baul11YC1rd
Df ear.
LOOI -Tiii UIWl,AT •
TMEOOORE J UNIY111111TY ROBINS FORD OLDSMOllLE -. -· HARIOR BLVD HARIOR BL VD. • ·-
-'f.he-Rangers-~··a·-s-o-=m: ,:1• 1~ : ~ l:
halftime advantage on goals 01ukas 9 4 n,, '.'• , • Stew1r.1. j ' ! bf J 1mnue Taylor, Maoolo McCma• 1 2 4 .J
5. lnol1n1
6. Al1b1m1
1. Mluavrl
Sindoval and Colin West.
West increased the lead to .C·
0 two ·minutes Into the second
half when he took . a perfect
pass from mate Burt Bums.
Coach George Harrison was
high In his praise of Stan Moss
and Glen James in addition to
the three scoring stars.
In a preliminary CODtest
Rangers reserves won U over
Deportivo Mezico with Steve
Zurcher acorlng three aoaJs.
~ ......
4~PLY
CLEAN SIDEWALL
DESIGN
RADIAL DARTS
ON SHOULDERS
,
TRIPI.I TEMPERED
NYCON CORD
CONSTRUCTIDN
AllAT
Tml RI $ .... 111: 1l"
BUIDl1
3 WAYS TO CHARGE
118 l'OWll 'lllllE'
11'111 ..
HUNTINGTON CINTIR
lloodYM!" -...... m•-•--.. -. ..... .fri. l t .... rlll S.. l:tf.l tM
WESTMINSTER
Ip l"I.
17• 10.2 'S •.• 1 1 '·' I I·' I ,.1 ~: ii ' ·! ' '·
I. North C1ro!IM
9. M1nnet0t1
10. IM"'11tti.
11. Hou1111n
12. ProYldtfKt
lS. SW LoulallM
u . sr. Jolln'I N.V.
15. JKklanvl11t
16. S111 FronclKO
11. Mtmofll1 St.
11. Kin-ti.
It. 0!'11 R-11 ,,..
2CI. S. C1llfornl1
··PRICED
NCORDTIRE
....... U!Mc.._!I
...-p1w1Ln '"-h , __ ... , ..
OTHER
8iZES
LOW
PRICED
TOOi
·11~
......... "'l ...... ~---.-·-
PROFEUIONAl AUTDllATIC ···~ ---7'7. 1211
..,, u.s ... ''"' ports 11--AdtllUw ~··~ c ·---I Adh1tl kaJ. JU~
• Ch1111t 11111.1. oll • 0..fl or
• ttpltee liht1 II Mtcled •New
Ptll tulc•i • 511 H111t111
COSTA MESA
1 Yo·•ng 'A Lane JUST NORTH OP
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
011dyMr Tire C1nter
11t6 N•wp•rt lhll. -f41.tJtJ MM • ..M. 7;JO ,_ l1H1 W . JlJt t9 JIM
1)61 .................. , LAGUNA l lAC H
tJf.JMJ Qoodp1r s.m .. Ston "n w ... ' ,,, •~ -,,...,,,, ................ ..... -M ...... 61001 .... 1100 .. 4:00
Young & laM
4UO-A..-
4f44U6 ., 4M-UJJ
M. "" f 1"1 S.. '* l rtf MM.•Pfl. lift .. l 1M; W. 1.:tt .. t •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
• •
•
,
' • OAILV PILU I lueMS&)', J~ JO, 1~73 ' .
'\ Superb M~zart, Sub-par Stravinsky by LA Philharmonic-TODAY'S
TV IDGHIJGHTS
By TOM BARLEY
Of -..,., Hit htH
lt was ml.led grill oa the
Oranae Cowuy Pbllarmon.lc
Society's musical menu lut
weekend with the digestible
portion or the Los Angeles
PIUlarmoolc Orc:heltra '1 iludy
In contrasts being a $Uperb
performance of ~1ozart's 39th
cer1aln 181111 belln I coped.
ty Orange c.n.,. ·-· ·
KHJ O 7:30 -"Nol as a Stranger." Robert Mil·
chum plays a struggling young doctor who \\'eds
Olivia de Havilland to help further his career in
thi s 1955 drama with Frank Sinatra, Broderick
Cra\\'ford , Gloria Grahan16 and Charles Bickford.
(Look fo r Lee h1arvln 1n a bit part). • Symphony.
The "°' Is tbe ~el ol thtte symplloniet that Moaart
incr<dlbly t<Ored In just alx
weeks. And 1\ contains, ror-us.
a movement that carrit!I the
Moramne.ge of joy-and es·
ultaUon more ckrarly than
any other passage penned by
the great master -th.e
gracious, Oa.wless-minuet that
comprises th~ third move-NBC 0 8:00 -"Balned." A race driver bas
flashes or ESP during a race. revealing that an
actress and her daughter are in danger. Leonard
Nimoy. Susan llampshire and \1era htiles star.
ABC 0 8:30 -"A Cold Nigbl's Dealh ." Robert •
Culp and EH \\'allach, isolated in a snowbound
mountain laboratory to study tbe effects of altitude I ~ on monkeys, ~con1es victims of a terrifying ex-
periment
('BS 0 9 30 -"Birds of Prey." A helicopter
pilot on traffic duty \vitnesses the escape of three
bank robbers and takes off in pursuit. David Jans--
sen. J~alph ~tee kr.
KTT\1 m 12:30 -"Tonight and Every Night."
·Rita J-la}'\IOrlh and ~e Bo\\·man in a musical rom-
dy from 1945. -.. ...,.y • .,.,,,.-;
TV DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Eveni ng
JAfri!UA.RY 30
,.,ooommmm-
cr~"m O Bo11111.u "Tht De1d1y One\"
11} Ce! S.atl
0 Wild WI~ Wat m TII• Fli•bSolla
IDSta1 Tm
Ei) Mi Oukl [11.•mortdt
£D Hoc111pollp loci&• . m Thret stoo11s
l ;JO @ Htp1'1 Htrtts
D Movit: (!Dl "Situ"-' Nl1ht
tnd Slliiclay Mofftill(' (com) '6! -
Albert finnr,, Richel Roberts.
([I CIS Ntn Walter Cronkita
d9J Mtf'I ;ri1f111 Sllow m...,,_
fD DEIUT l'Tad HtltsMI Start o1
1 te11·ltsS011 course ill modtn1 con·
vtrJl1ion1I Heblt•. m IGl•ae C.1111 Sllow
!ilil """' m Dot 42,.,. w littie Ruuls
,.,ern om-·e.....,,., Dalllfl --
00 ,~. Ctm•-··--(1) llfll'I 11 "*"'1!fl
OWW• MJ Uill1 ., .... ...,. .,_ .. _
Ill ...........
fDT!larmdCW
CJ El A111« TltM Clfl dt M., CiS ¥1rttded
EE Spttd 111etr
it) (90) "A C1hl Nllif• Dull•
(du) '72-Robtrt Cul11, Eli Wallldl.
T .o 111t11 isol.11ted i11 1 snowbound
. 11101.1ntain labontCHJ lo study tl\e el·
ltcts ot i!ht\Klt on monkeys beco111t
the 'llC1.1ms ol a 1et1ilyin1 uperi·
meat. m Mt"° Criffia Sbft' m htt:COll JuactiD• m Ila ... ,,. Jutnal
fII El £4lfidt M Ellren\t
!ilil"""'
t:GO EE l'iM
ED ltllind tfle UMS
t :lll
IJ 2 helicopters fight * i.t out tor a fortune
in stolen bank money
in "BIRDS OF PREY" fJ 1IJ CIS T-_, IC) t'Dl
"linb ti '1'Wf' (dra) '72 -Dl'ticl
11~11. Ralph Met~\,· DlyfMI lkil·
ftel. A ht!icopter pilot ni1' on tral-
tic duty °"' Slit Lake City witnm-
es the escape of three blnll robbtn
ind takts otl in pursuit. e o. Sllf ..,.1141 o-m .w MtN1 "The Rta1 Powtr'" m 1msta 11nicaf m Festini lltlica•
U:OIB !li!DUC -,,,_"""
I MtricU. Mi1it•IJ Ill the 7r1s" J:O\lf
U.S. Senators. thrH memben of the
~ ol Rlfmenlat.iws. and WO-
r1Mint offars of lilt 11'1Md forca
1i&llrl Importantly Jn tb1 llCOlld ll(O-
iJ&lll In the two·Part "And -When tht
Wat Is O'ler. ~ em m-o rn oo m "'"" •• ,.,, .... "The Problem wllll Cflarlll" Dr.
Welby lltlps 1 J'(Hlnl In student
This critic has long COD·
o.ncled that maestro Zubin
~tehta has no equal In terms
of lnterpreUng ~lozart and he
proved Iha.I point .in no un-
OID$ TON16HT
"VANISHING
WILDERNESS" .... /GI ........
"WITH SIX YOU
GET EGGROLL"
PLEASE NOTE -
THERE WILL BE
NO MATINEE
WEDNESDAY-
n. 1'1lewtTe • .,.... fHtiecl ... .... ,., n. ......
••1•11wt of
Dr. Katz
ment. ,
MEHTA NEYER fails lo Jn.
C.YooGot
CHANNll 307
RN MM• cmlw.-sl
DOCTOR
ZHru\GO
7:00 P.M.
(Frl. & s.t: 7i00-4 10:Jtl
CALL THli.ATElt l'Olt
SUNOAY ICNtl OULE
(il~trongBrothers
" riow thru Feb. 8
at fiieu~ort J7Restou,ont ------
l~ 0 lotlbJ CeldliM sai.. Tht Lin-1111111 an '11lctr find a nlW 1ppro1cll
non Si'!ers 1utst. to 1h1 p!Obltms uL1$1n1 It. Doll 615 Sttnf._. Slrwt
(J) tto1.1111's lkl'MI stroud and El1ine Giflos 1uesl Cosla M-.' 54~33152
O PoliCI 5u11"11 Dr. Simon locli;e Q a.ns ,lllntff PmHts PLA~~llo\'s flMU
disco>lers tllt seem ldt11tity ot Dt· fE Nu1e1 Tt h rdoun ,.,..,,11. 11111
ltcliVt Otn Ptlmtf'1 liftl'r fir\· m f .. CW,.., "Grtnd \1!11Sions" WUllllOS
trl111d when lier lift i1 tfl111t11ned bJ' (Rl !~~~~~~~~~~!;~~~~~~~· ~· ~·~!;,· '~
a crim1 syndiute. Cl Mlldlldlt ltlli1111 0 Mofie: (C) (Zhr) "The lentud· ~
1t1" {'ll'H) '55 -Burt Lanwt11, lt..lll 8 Tllk lldl
Walttr Matthau. (D BiU Cosby ShR
@T1 Ttll lbt Trirti a:l Nln/s,ortt
(JJ Ttlls II Tour Litt -O""'-. -._ 0 Mlllit111 $ llO'lit: (2hl') "tllet n, ll:OO 0 go u:,. ~""',.....
Str1111lf"' (dri) '5s-Jlobtrt Milch· -~ ~ ~ !Id
um, Olivia de H.ll"llltlld. a-. M -•• ~i"'• tfQl }lollyWtitll $qvtrll \..•.J 1'~' "111 II m Tlllt ;!rt 0 ll0t1r: Anlllftd Attad" (dia)
(i) NHL All·Slll' Ci• (2!.htil') Us1 '43--0ana Alldrew1, Allnt Baxtn.
vs. west rrom Madison Sq11111 611· .m!: ::,:;nsequ•11ta &Ji. Mtdlt Odlll @') ;amlf T td ~r11stron1
G) Cll~w1tctl111 '1'111 Chrbtitn a:l BtaQ RMew
Movtment on Colle11 CampllSIS." 11:15 II) Q11t1111 34
8D Sl•nlf Up alld Cllnr CiI:) Comedy ll:JO tJ (j) CIS l* Mowlt: (C) "TM &J tt Is Writttl MMsl Thtt Sctt111ed" (dr1)-lHN
EE Addams Fa•llJ Patmtr stirs. B ~ m Jo111111r Ct11C111 SllllW .ler·
Li!O IJ fl) lltlllh ry Ltwis is substitute host throulll 0 cr§i m flBC Tlllldlr lrll'rlt: (t) Feb. 5th.
(2llr) "••!fled"' 1c1111 ·12-t.•ard en. llfOll
flimoy, Sus.111 H1ml)Ulr1, Ytrt D (]) (j) Cl) WW. WMW If Ell-
M!lts. A IKI drh11 Ills Hashes ol tellll111eirt "HontylllOOll SUilt"
ut11sensorr 111n:111tlon durln1 • Morey Amsttrdam and Rost Maril
race rnt•llfll !hit an Ktrm tlld 1111 n members of 1 posh bottl 111
her daugh ter .1111 In 1r1wt danKtf. three mlni-(Omrdy/d1111111: "Con· D (}.)@ m T1111pntllrt1 ltisl111 llnental pjd.Up," "lettln1 Go, MtJ·
"lnteriupltd Milady" °'· floltnd be," ind "Death Takts a HoneJ·
1ets admitted n an ulm patient to mtJOn."
win bat~ $200 Lefkowitz Ille ordl!IJ m To Tell tllt Trulti
ltm to , tud·11!iyl111 p1tienl m Ho11n'1 Heroes 12:00 at Allred H~ Pfesenb
fE H1rm1n01 Co111t m Stttrt tt Mtlftb11t
£D [JI ti [JI "A Book of M•Mls" ffi J1n1kl
{R) 12:JO g ' Nein
€I') Aju1 con Plporn at Movif: '1.,.!pt and [ttlJ
c::m C.•b• Ibero AiattltaM Nl111t" Imus) '45--Rll• H1yworth
(D Movlt: (21!f) "EK.lpl Mt Nntr" let Bowman '
(rDl!I) '47-lcll Lupino, G!1 Youns. m Coulltry Mlljfc
Errol Fl)'nfl.
1:30 8 fl) Hn•M nw..o Rkbird 8151· l:OO rn DD Cl) Nm
h1rt 1uests 11 lh1 m1stermlnd be· 1:30 II Movie: "lwtst ot fate" (sut) '54
hind 1 40.mllllon doU1r conspiracy -Gin1er Ro1en, Jt(1111H 81r111ac..
to roll tilt Honoluh1 stock 1u11&n1e, but 1 iucctlSio!I of murde11 th1t Z:OO m All-Nltflt Sllft: "Mlllilt Bise
1'4111 not In his plam: puts McGarrttl M THIH," '1111 MIHll SIGIJ"
on !ht trill ol lht co111pi1tcy. J:OD II frllorie: "ltrptdo Allay" (dr1) 'Sl o CD (j) a> AK r.-.., lilffit: -fl!1rt: sttvtni. Dorothy M11oM.
W•dnesday
OAmME MOVIES
l:JO U "TNy C.n1 Maq N1" (111)1)
'56-Ttr1nce Mortan.. 0 (C) "SIMlly'" (dr.11) '57-Rilpti
Ridl•rdson, 1ohn 11ceenum.
J:OO(l)(C) ·-Cood. '13-l:JO O "Aafll * Ult ......,. (wtl) Che1tton Heston. "1111 Mt!: flt Mt"
'47-Jollft w.,,.., Gill RllSMll. Ptfl I (drt) '59-Cllrt: G1blt.
10:00 Cf) "llfltnltnt IWfr" ('#d) 'ff-a "lfttllrnlllld" (dll) '49--John
Clint W1lktr, EU BY!lllL • Holi1k, 'Ven ,lolln11C111. O "Kini 0111111111"' (ld·ll) '55-9 WO. Vim H.tvt THM ,,.,....
em 8rpnL (dra) '•&-Edward a. R011i11sot1.
1Z:G09'"R•• Dul" (mys) '48-Clllre •:ooe (C) '1Mt ld •• Mhlt" (dll)
lrt\IOI, Otnnh O'KHft. '5t--4todl H11d10n Je•n SlmrllOM.
U:IO m "Ne Sid Sollp ftr Me" (d11) '
'r.G--Mat111tt su111v1n. t:• (fl S.. • lOMI ,_.
I
SHOWING NOW! UP
BARBRA THE
SI REI SAND
"llVElY AND FUNNY
. IUHA ITll/IAND
11 IXCllllMTl"
BOX --~
-CUE MAGAZINE
AfflS! U>l~!Sl'U ;(~•l(IO
•!W>JA)"f.•,•J
A!Ollllla-IO"f...,11~1'11tn.CI~
.$~~r1'IOSAIClf<"ll'TW......,-
Q) S T~ c:ac Kl.I¥ • SCl'f_[O#\J# ,,, """-7'a l • &<St OCJI ~ "(Ml .. _.,, lllll0"'1lttD/ O()Pl1[ (q.(!(Olf~l"'-"'"<l"• P<Q)..ClD8" w. .. -.£R #Q"Ca"Fl'TQW!Uf ·IK.t<tCnCfl'
• 1..io.oi.cv.cAA.f'C1\ff:s~· fR ! •• .._..!:OJ
s....,.... • ...,.oll..--·-"-·112 .. 1
JACl:llJilliON
''WAI llfWlt•
Ml• & WOMIJtM
® " " .. --"'-~ ...... ww1n
G!J<fH QU.,;
"Pl lMIC.r" 'llUW.nSoPfN,._.l ,.M.
W£1tj'~(l"91 I ,<S,)ll
.. 'SOUNDER
IS A
MUST .
(0."ITI
GfN! l'IA(l(IAA.N
"JJllMICUf"
EDWARDS
1/\l \I\< l\l!R
COWARDS
11\f \ll<l\lil( . ··~·" ... , ..... "''"'" •' .. '"' ,. TA ''+ A' J'•••O' ' • '" •. •.'..!.-4'"
• •
"A SEA FOR YOURSELF"
'-fof•1n1ft 7~0 & f :JO
lad lwul1t -All S..ts SJ.00
--__ . .-.
STADIUM I }' " ..-r. . .......--.,-~...,
HnD OYER
"ILf llA MADl•AN .. ... .,..,._.u._. ....... .. ,...,. .... .e.t
b1111tt.1..W.
11 Wltor(' --·-Also
D. H. U.wr111c1'1
"THI YllGIN I
THI GYPSY"
NOW SHOWING
SPECIAL LIMITED
ENGAGEMENT
SOUTH COAST PlAJA a 1
Cotta Maia -546-2711
UA. CINIMA.
Orang• -5lJ-67Jt
HIGHWAY lt DJllYl·IN
Waitmi111!1r -SJ4-6Jl2
SO•llY--HO .. ASl•S
Exe:~ Or .... C-ty
Na lt_..td SMh
""' 0'1'1111 -Sattllol ~
"MAM 01' LA MANCHA"
ii.Jc('"'" £119~1
..--... .. l AcMarny Awar11
"FIDOLElt CH>I THI! 800fl"
"SLAUGlfTEltMOUS& S" • "CATCH ll"
- - -Tl STADIUM ? '.'.
" _.....' ~rtr:".• -------
"ELVIS ON TOUlt" • ~;;;;;;;;;;;:==;;:.--_:"SICY JACK•O" fl"O)
"JUOGl ltOY ll!AN" --. -~-·· "' "'THI! ltEVENGl!ltt" SfADIUM 'J .
"~~~ --. -:.'·•· •• ""ETE 'M TILLll!'" ... SfADfUM ·! : ..
" ~ '1'1r•~~ ""UY IT AGAIN, SAM"
UA CfTY CllllEMA. • SAT & SUM • n:• I I:• .. ..M.
"J:E•RA IN THE KITCHEN" CG) COLGlt
111111• HMU Wllll tlll "l'1111l" 1ftll "11 ...... 'I
111111 Hiit "l'INAL COME OOWM" ''TRICK IABY" lolll lft Ctlorl 1111
lleldOVtrl
2ftllW-.lll
''THE
VALA.CHI
.. A?EltS" ..... ~
"THE QlllS.-
SOM GA.HS" 1111! ho C110r
"'
1'72 e-"""' ..... "'! "Sl.AUOHTl!lt-HOUI§
l'IV•"
"CA TCM·tt" . 11111"' Cllll' ,.,
"The ~ble." It
-1d have been belier en-
tlUed "The lnnplicable" in
1erm1 ol !Is vague, bt'Wy
ICOl'!ni an<I tile docielon of
Mehis lo ·again lnIDct this monatroslty upon us.
It wa14nlmstl!>f""l¥blle f
was astonbhlng to note that
the program writer ectually
compared thls obscure Darush
compo.w" -with the--gmt
Sibelius. ·
There Is nothing In this bor-
ing, unlmat1lnatlve Foortb that
~Id possibly per s u a.de
anyone with a knowledge of
NATIONAL GENERAL
THEATRES
I HILD OYll
"BROTHER OF
THE WIND" (Gl
._...,_,,1t-1.e:u
U:•i1l11+11•l:IM -··
musk to detect 1 smattering
of Sibelius at any point In the .......
TONIGHT!
INNER-OF 1
GOLOEN GLOBE
NOMINATIONS I
• ~11ll .. l',lonH~U --• CAaOL IUINm ..........
e SllALDfNI PA•I• --... _
"Honeymoon s I
over ... i f '1 time
to get married.·
'\Jllalter
Matthai•
B~t
LID 0 NI W PMI
f!EflCH
lltll.A"C'I •o L >CO I'•'
~ •1 ~}\~
To witness the
perfect crime
you must come on Ume
MAJOR STUDIO
SNEAK PREVIEW
WEDNESDAY JAN. 31
PREVIEW AT
9:00 P.M.OMLY
:·~O.Ul "'"· .. , IUCARflWR '1.vO. • "THE GET AWA'('' Will
NEW'°JIT BEACH • 644-0760 SHOW BEFORE & AnER PREVIEW
DELTACO
WEDNESDAY NIGHT*
M1k1Wodnndoynlghtrourn'9hlloMlout. Al DtlT-
Wedn•9dlJ night It Taco Ntghl You gel six .. ,ty' Del Tacoe
for Juli $1 .501 This Wednesday, drive thru tor• l•mlly 11n
mPI JOU won't torg•L At Pficet JOU'll llnd hlrd IO but.
NEWPORT BEACH
Bristol (P1ll11d01) 1t
C1mpus
SANTA ANA
4th St. ind
Newport Fwy.
TUSTIN
Red Hill near Santa Ana Fwy.
r
McQUEEN/
MacGRAW '
~EGETAWAY .,,......,,, .. _ .. _..,_,,. -............. """"'_ -·-11111•1--•
"""rap H.t.TIR JWll-·•• 1'Ulll"l411111 lo
"t• ••• "fWI• ..., ... ,,.,......
IOI-I , IDW ... A08
HARBOR ,~:.2 ..... «" .• , ""tO• ,,(, C01l• ,..,.. .. t WI ,
' '
1
..J.
••
' ,.
Tut5dl)', January JO, 1?71 OAILV PILOT f9
Ev11yon1 Has
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT -C:LASSl ·FIED ADS You Can Sell It ,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad' "The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5G78 for Fast Results
--..
Gener••
-w ..... ·-........ , .. ,
--.. --..
Gt ntral
__ ...,
Q•n•r•I
Gtntr1I
""411.14-$111/d,
~ lllllSSOam.S
REALTORS
2828 l!AST CCMST HIGHWAY
COllONA DE. MM, CALI~.
644·7270
$32,800 -*
4Bdnn.! L I I kt, Sed,dod rear living rm. OVe Y to 00 8
•
3 Bdrm. -
No Down!
$M,'1SO. No down G.I.'a, 2
baths. PaUo, dlnlng rn1.
Move-ln condition. 1'"1lmily
rm. Quiet cu l -de-s a c.
College Prk home. ~1720.
F'ireplace, 3 baths, Family •
,nn. Dining r m. Dishwa&her, ID the Bluffs
Shorp 3 Bdrm. I
$36,900. Cathedral cc\tln£.
Quiet cul-de-.ac. Beautiful
landscapiJI&. Dining rm.,
built-ins, dlahwaa b e r .
Fireplace. 540-lT.!O.
built-Ina. I mme d ia te
posse!i!iion. New solariwn.
540-172{1.
.Pool Home!
$37,!00. 3 bedrooms, 2. baths.
Patio. Extra storage rm.
Built-ins. 2 fireplaces.
Family • rm. Beautiful.
541>-1720.
Gener1I Gtner1I
Spcinish 4 Bdrm.! 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;;;;;;;;RA;:;;;RE;;;;Fl;;;;N;;;;D;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
$43,400. Beautiful home.
4 ldrms.-
$30,900! Large covered patio. 2 full A real CdM charmer, on the ocean side of
Lovely home. In di r ect
lighting. DWng nn. But\1-
lns .. Extra storage space.
Well·maintalned. S40-17al
baths. Tile root Fireplace Hwy., yet walking distance to all &hopping.
in family rm. Buil1-ins, This 3 bdrm., 1 lh bath home has additional dishwastier. Exper tl y I · · 2 h th laOOscaped. 54~1m. s eep1ng room in car garage; we ave e
key -give us a call. Offered at $64,500
2935 HARBOR BLVD.
. -"COSTA MfSl . -5(0:1720
General Gener ii
I
A GOOD MORNING IN MORNING CANYON
3 bedrooms and downstairs den with fire--
p lace and wet bar. This one is exciting!
Ocean and canyon views; dramatic living
area with tall windows; open beam ceilings.
In Shoreclilfs at $135,000.
UNltUI HOMn of! CO•ONA DIL MAI. 67WOOO
• A -of M"'1«lo -
Ul'llll()Uf tl()MfS
REALTORS -----------· General
RANCHO
LA 9UESTA
$45,500.
Beautiful 2 story San Miguel
mode1 w/f\ill patio across
rear of home. 4 BR, 3 BA,
large family room w I t h
fireplace, garden kitch,
formal dining r o o m .
Upgraded carpets Ir: drapes.
One mile to ocean. co: Ts
WAL LACI
REALTORS
• ·'62-4454 •
Open Evenings
"PANORAMIC
VIEW"
NEW LISTING
Eastside Costa Mesa 3 BR-$31,000
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
General General
ONE IN 1,400 ••••
TOPS IN THE AREA
Betty Burkart
TOP SALESMAN
IN
VOLUME
Betty Burkart
TOP SALESMAN
IN
TRANSACTIONS
General General
****** *TAYLOR CO.*
CAMEO SHORES-$117,000
GreaL ocean view from this lovely 3 bdrm
home with family rn1, formal dinin g. 4 baths.
Pool in front court-yd. Fireplace in living
rm & master bdrn1. Separate bonu s room .
4521 ORRINGTON Open Wed. 1-5
"Ou r 28th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RH lton
2111 San Joaquin Hilla Road
NEWPORT CENTER, N; B. • 644-4910
General General
Waler/,.onl
Exce ptional 5 bdrm., 3-story home with pier
& slip. A1agni!icent South bay view from all
3 levels. • Realistically pri ced at $225,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR·
341 Bayside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
General General
Recluced-$18, 900!
2-Story-Pool
Used brick fireplace. Chef's
kitchen. 2 bedrooms. prjya,te
pnlk:l! SWIMMING POOL!
Pll!ME LOCATION . BIKE
TO BEACM! Assumable'
Joan 01· buy Fl-TA on one or
2 low down progran1s.
Crispy clean to1vnhouse.
Call at once -645-0303.
I Ol!l\f .L' Ol \O\
H£A~TORS
-•"'Solo 1[11!]
General
VACANT
INVESTMENT
SITE $39,500
Zont'd R:4 3000 • 29,700 sq.
It. s1utable for 10 Units. An
additional 19,800 sq. fL may
be available for 7 nlON'
Units. Qy. rwr Ma,y Carry.
Call Anytin1e, 641>0555,
VACANT -C-2
BUILDING SITE
$2.50/S9. FT.
100,650 sq. ft. Do\vntown
01ino Business Oiltril'1.
Next lo P\'.>mona Jol'ceway
Offramp. Nr'ar On!ario Jn.
ternational Airport. Owner
J\lay Carry. Call Anyti1ne,
646-0:15.''i.
d&ll
YOU ARE
---A---
WINNER
e \VESTCLIFF ·3 bdrm ..
family rm. and heatl'l"i
"POOL " New carpets &
pain!. Reduced to $57,500.
646-3928 646-4543 eve. e BAYSHORES • 2 Bdmi ..
den, firepl. New $51.500.
646-3928 961-5429 eve, e COMMERC I AL ·
Restaurant & a p t s.
r~airview SI., C.J\1.
Drastically r<'Clured to
Sl:Il,000.
646-3928 675-1827 ••••
There is a reason
18 years same locnllon
Lachenmyer
Re ilto1
FORCED SALE
$15,750
FULL PRICE!
Jn fof'l>Closure! PRICE JN.
CLUDES WASHER, DRY·
ER and REFRIGERATOR!
Larg<' dining room! Cozy
kllChl'n. Private patio. l.ots
of storage. SWIMMING
POOL! Immaculate k>wD-
bouse! Call ~. ~ ·-· -
I 010 \I I. Ol \11 \
P f " -o <
WXURY
TOWNHOUSE
located 'oo Harbour Lane,
Huntington llarboi;. 4 Bed·
room, 2 flreplaces. Xtra
large pe.lio. Everylhlnrc u~
graded by dccorator/owller.
Aleo included 11 Your own
boat slip for up to JO' boot.
Full price now only $55,<XXI.
CAIL S41).1151 Open Eves.
~::? HERITAGE
REALTORS
I
I.
' '
. . . ,_ •
OAILV PILQT
--.. I~ f --~ lli'!l 1 -·-I~ l -· .. J~ I -·.. ~I -·.. I~ I I · ~ -I• ~~~~---~
Corona Del Mar
2 on 2
Near leach!
Hullll!'f!On looch·, .. lrvlno T.,reoe ~~ -•u•I""' !'!!!!!!Ll~ 1uo1-
VETERANS ONLY DIVORCE BEAlTl'IFUL hvlne Terrace WINDWARD · CLEAN 1_,,. ~:fii, oent 0p....-1tr 200 """"'· S Br, 2 Ba, lam nn & c M e ~ $199. DOWN e RUSH e dfnina rm. Newly Thb Is Uie benuutul ...,., · · yowner. • · ~-z WELCH'S
Coron1 del Mor Cost• M...
ttmodsl<d Many •""" in Newport -"' be "'(• Inna. 645-:ml 0< 64Hi60. PRODUCTS J!tl'f·'s )OW' opjiottunfty ,, AND NO CLOSJNG COST'S s~~n, ~lhl, c~~':i Prof.~. Low main: t~ to Irvine Ave. A C~l1*'Cll1 8.U11on dollar lnduatry ooedl
·2 BR • TRIPLEX
' $75,000
IBIT
1111!1
,
'
A l;I!O\VPLACE at.old \\'Orld
chanu~ Crackling fireplac-e,
Pitched and ~ Ct-tlina:, La.ra:e family room. Lanai
wilh "'et bar. C U E S 'f
E'ACil.ITY! Ltundry. Plus
ST L 0 I 0 -BACH.EL.OR
UNIT! 5 BI..OC:KS TO
{YT.AN. lmrna{"\llate. Call
last -fi45.-0303.
0 .::1 lti<'M line tripkxt:1 in 3 Bdrm•'". ,000.+ den. 1., bath.II. Railed .. 1a.nt...... & t~. 2021 Altura Or, m~t 4 bedroom, two Property 151 now re&poo.1\ble men and &:ue Ribbon Corona del "" .,. ~.. ......... M"S11161 stoeyawail&.)'.QUr.l.ruipcctian, ~ _""" b4ths. llv rm, fil'ep!ACC ~ patio w/1u BBQ. u••ner, .,,.......,. · .±..• '.5 " • " """ WOOLte-to .wvic'I' ldlb l\lar. 1\1.'0 be<Jroofll.5, eocb ranelt!d laxp e&t-in tdtcb, cau -«m 1 BR.. 2 BA. 1.rc. fel'lefid Sttuutul ~ dee-DOWNTOWN 1.aaun& ntaU \IDlt t..venp rou.tt&. ~;i~ity ~!~~~ walJ·to-wall carpet Ing, ylU'd, plus boat stnraae yrd, ~~ tn e""Y. ~· cau ~..'-pf~ 0: = LIMITED OPENINGS
&Jt6f
-. ' '+-
!ORI.\ I L Ol \O\
" l?[A l T O R .i
Macnab-Irvine
Rralry Con1pany
SHORECLIFFS
Ocean View
3 BR -3 bath + maid's &.
PR. Huge LR. Gate ! Pl\th
to private beach. Elail\{'
Svedee-n 642-8235. (l:(J)
Macnab-Irvine
to wnll t•:u'f'CI• ru:.J drape:;. Jlfltio, dbl pragt-, shake wlk to Balboa lsla~. Some li°'.S,....mo.. 2U ~ · PART OR FULL TIME
\"our n10tk'Y invt.--s!('(! in this root. Mo..'\thl.Y~"M?nt. vu, Must aell. Aikin& 4M-0021. ' w ay. NO SELLING
tnrome pro~ will return about $277. To for a $$,500. ~7689. n.-i...-/U -...... Company ctl•b!llhpe com-
yc 1 a 11.1bit&ntial dividend. VA loan >W must~ -ve a L.,.. le.ch ._.......... ""• f'l)t:ielal or tactot;y locationa.
C1l.ll MO\\' for del.ails and rea!Onably good job record 1111 162 No tnmchtse Jt't'S. CUil• s!lo~·u~s. 673-8550. and earn about $1100. ptr OCEANFRONT ~ete:ly at.>curcd lnvesbne:111
nionth gt"QSS-COMMUNITY 12 UNrrs by owner t3 · OPfN r1L If . /IS FUN ro BE. NICE! The add~SI is 9t6 Cheyenne IUl$lDfAtY Of NM <OlWIU co. +-p)ex bldit> in prirne H.B ASH REQUmED $2,396. ~ St., East of F-&· $1,000 DOWN LCE. fAmfl1 bom•, ocean-* BAYCREST * renlal atta. low dn payt: F"'morulnfonnallon~rlle. ~/o+!I North or Paularino.· Drive troot nci&bborhood. 5 BR .• 3 3 Bctrm&.. 2Wi ba.thl. S!.anten' can d1vkle. $1 5 3 , 5 O O . N. C. 8. C: • ~~~~ by and take a look. The 'lacs.at 3 BR. Assume exilt· ba,. Hup Uving r m ·· Uv. rm. Sep. din. A lami!y 968 .. 15.10, 7100 Ediewater Dr., SWte ns ' ~is vacant IO )'OU. can ht FHA 114" loan payable w/frplc. Formal din rnl. rms., trpJc. Pool. FOR Sale by O'lll')er/ .. ~nt. 5 Oakland C... 9t821 peek i,n tbe windows. at $185 per mo. inc. ta'<es Lge. well equipped kitchen, Open 'lllun/Sat/Sun l .S --· • OPEN ,HOUSE NO PARTIClPATINC > &::: rnaint lee. 2 BA, tpl, w/vi.• centrally JQcated. Jtecrea. · units, 1 '°'* A 2 clu.plexcs Or co.ll ,colleet Mr. Brown
Lo\·cly 4 Bedroom Lusk Har-REALTORS crpta & drps. bltin RIO, FA lion rm. OYer 3,00) aq. tt. on 1927 SANTIAGO DR. Eaa:Wde ea.ta f.1 cs a, 415-568-4188
bor \'iew, fe<-land, n1otiva· ANY QUESI'IONS CALL ht. patjo, $21,000. one ~ surrounded by Omtu M(lntbly rent $158, 644-0030.
'"" .. nor. good v;ew. 185,. Costa Mesa Realty If A-~ " -""'w ... etl IV LARQ: Delum Duplex, 2 ** li'ARTNER ** ~. 1371 Keel Dr., 1-4:30 ·~-1 1Unctional, '1121 Br, 1% Ba each apt. $80,000. Active prefm'ed with $25,000 PO: da;1y, Call m-m;. * SIJ.nll * -home. Room for -=-"""" Q,.ner, 838-4949. eaah" .,.,_ .... , abll1>. ~ E 'd IU-4471 ( =I 546-llOJ pool. 192.500. ~ I I Income P-rty 166 Xlnt ·-Mlary & ebare _...... ••• Ti"~ asts1 • * -* Plofila. Should easily net ~ \ ~ 4 Bed !SD~ Burr Wh itt Realtor COSTA MESA _,. -...., 135 ooo mi(6Jjtr $28.=m ~~f~TE ~~& 2'>11 NT~' Beaob '! ~::~ .... ~~:::: =-=!! ~"'jd:
\usi101~1v °' Jt•! (Ot.Wru co. ~irabl~am~ta hom~ e 5 ~ ~ ~: ~~·z,i~ ......, .. ._..o.w NEWPORT 4 Unlt1 ... , . $60,000 =~.~8't!!
642-8135 6444200 SOUTH OF HWY. .,.;gtoborbood. Walk to .... famlly rm.' Prlced at TOWNHOUSE moat rlgld lnvestiaallon.
1..,.,,..,,..,,..,,.. ... ,,.....,,l ouplu; 2 & don now 2 !<boots andk~~ ~I VAaJ>pn.iaal.SubmHtorm•. · DUPLEX Rel Ex, For peroon&l con-1.:: bdrm. Xlnt location & con-ed for qu1c -... vntb 111ua1 CJ.LL ~ DELUXE .fidentlal Jnterview write: * Investments dition. Lge. patio. Copper 5% down. It won't last~· · This immaculately clean 3 ~k to be'ach d in plex.Newport
3
Cllwified ad No. 603, Dally * 4-PU:.X. EASTSIDE plumbing. A good 1Ny for 1st time advertised. Call bdrm. townhouse, located In m )'Our u Phone 675-6900 Pilot. P.O~ Box 1560. Costa * NEY.'PORT, COMMER· $71.500. 64&-TITI. Laguna Niguel, is practical· ~ l % batps each. CORONA del Mar 4-plex, Mesa, Ca. 9a)26.
CIAL MORGAN REAL TY OPf.N riL" • 11s fUN ro BE HtCEJ ly brand new & just waiting It's super :rn=':i wen located, below Hiwy. NEWPORT BEACH * R-1. VIE\V WT 673-6642 675"6459 ! for son1eone to live in it.
*.002
Lflo , FORAll s~=~rtr~n 1 1' ··~~11lll ---''------''--l~~.~!J~T~k1:n~ ~fill o~nEws. :~~~~;,~oo$-=-~·~~r~~u
CM ARW view. Lusk 4 BR & lge --·-·-----l;ott for Sale 170 old oompaey. Space avail, ' • · • ; • • ' farn rm. Prof clecoraieJ &. Ch·ner desperate, bdrms., 2 ~,,;Jll I for boat aa.les & repairs.
lond,;caped. !1'.500. TRIPLEX l:w~mo. Roar ~ U::; .,/TO~'(ZH, WATERFRONT, 30' boat atip Bl LL· GRUl'!DY RL TR.
'Open daily 1-4. G44-1875 Thtte 2-bdrm. units ln rear yard. ' bm. REAL ESTATE in Balboa. Lot 7 Collins Ial-67>6161 EXQUISITE BY Oi,\'ner, old COM 4 BR & like-new conditKm. Nice $27,500, b 842-2561. and, m-mo. 'Investment
Turtlerock home facing tl1e play Rm home. Ckean & ~. bJt-in raJWe & Owner ferred 4 bdn:ns. ll90 Glenneyre St. NEWPORT SHORES RMI Estate lH Opportunity 220
k 4 Bd f .1 Harboc VU* blk to "'aler, rel<Pi .... in each. u...-unit l lull ba••· ~-•and pa"·'. t!K-7473 549-0316 --'~~~~-!!"""!l.!.---l!!!j;;;z.;;';;::.:;:::;;:--;::::= pa1 . rms., arr.1 y rm.. R 21 t Charm ~ ·-~ 2JA '-'"" y........, ....... .rVOA .., ll;ifffl;,;s,::
formal dining rm.. 21i • ? • • uir;nw, '" bas view of bills • nigbt Re:ir _living .nn. Dining nn. BEST VAWE! Walk to beach. Lti:e. 3 BR. WILL TRADE 3:1% DISC. 1st TD. Seaaoned
baths, 2 lush patios. Perfe.:t Dalhia. ligh.ts. On James St., Over Bwlt·!DS· d 1 s h w as h er. So clean it ~ .. .ol.t .... ! A 2.sty. 2\1, baths. Blt·ins. well, secured.Pays $1a:l. mo.
i:1 every detail. r Costa Mesa 80% loan at 7% can be as-~~· $38.00IJ. brk beautiful 3 BR,·2~ •. -' VIEW, MUST SELL! $42,500 HOUSE FOR-10% due 1m. Box 3, Apple
SSS.500 sumed. Asking $49.950. __..wi.> ~ CAYWOOD REAL TY desert-oriented seller has Valley 242-3144. · · R I IL LO 1 . home in Emerald Te!Tace. $10,500 eq, in bowie at 3615 Unoversoty ea ty 426 CABR CALL '-" '""" • TIRED OF wans of -•-ts •~ bull"··. * SIJ.12'0 * Dr ru 'de lo 2 ,,\::#' """""' "" •u.., ElJiotta ·• ~1 ·Money to • -·n · 240 :ioo1 E. Cst. Hwv. 67~ 10\\INER S4 ,TJO .... .., Custom kitchen. Luxuries OCEAN VIEW Want& to try seaside hvlng. =;;.;;.:....:..;;,.~-:::..-.....:;c;,;
• f 3 BR, 2 BA. oak firs, crps. a£?LTY...., PAPER WALLS? everywhere. $69,500. Modern Duplex 4 Bdrm. up, Will sell or trade adobe 1 t~D l WHY RENT? <'<>Pper plumbing, rov pat;o. • ~-born and NICHOLS REAL ESTATE 2 Bdrm On. V I hou>e for como anywbett S oans • $Z7.000 7% Loan assumable. Ne•r "'"'•rl P••t Offl~• V:W" your own e en-S Coa.a H ., ery arge, . -An> you a \VWil Vet! \l.'e Other terms If needed. JOY the privacy you deserve. 2025 Mi........!. wy. prime loc:ation. $65,000. on ~t.-Frances Dodd,
ha\.·e ar. assortment of *REPOSSESSIONS* H6'e is a good starter, 9 ~·~--HORVM'H·-~n-Bl'illitt, 5738 Oi.rlton Way, 6%% INTEREST ·
honies as Jow as $1.00 down ...... USE YOUR VA...... Thruout Or. County. call far lxJrms on large lot. Only * 3 BR·POOL * Ask tor Dave Les Angeles. ca 90028. (213) 2 d JD l
\v:ilh payments loo>er than Sharp 4 BR. 1% BA, dlx addresses 54&--7739 Bria. $25,500. GI terms. Walker & CUstom bi:1ne on 2 lots, 67S-1972 494.(1615 467-22'Zt ft oans
rent. "'Al.KER & LEE paneling, Patio. 968 I.ans-Fountain Valley Lee Realton, 842-46.5.. Atrium entry, 2 baths'; BY Owner Upper Bay, Rnl E1t1te Wanted 1M
REALTORS, 842.-4455. ing, C.M. KlNGAARD R..E. island type kj.lcb. w/bltm. Medlterran ea n style. Lowest rates Orange Co, * * $32,950 * * &l2·2l22. ~.HO ICE ,, LA R W.1 N REPOSSESSIONS Frplo., open beam cell'•· Spaoish tile root, < BR, 3 * Cj)111ck Cash * Sattler Mtg. Co •
• BR + M_,,,5 or --t _ llfESA DEL !llAR 5 Br, 3 Ba TIBURCS oondomm1um For lnforma"·· and•---""--Covered patio. Immaculate BA Din RM, all elect Jdtch Will ....... ,,,,,.,p ........ ..-. All 642-2171 J.U.0611 cuu e-y ...... immed. occupy. All new resales ~ on market. uu.u ..,.........., thruout. $49,500. Owner & ' Fam RM. prof VUJ .1-.-¥"'"'t""'-Y• • ·
Pecky paneling, shag tarp. crpts & drps. Beaut. To1al extenor maintenance. o1 these ntA & VA homes, w/belp finance ~ped calLM!r2676. cash within '72. hn. Call Sel'Vlng Harbor area 21 yrs.
tfost oufstanrling buy in landscaped. Huge yard, nr total electric builtiM and contact • MISSioN REALTY 4%-0731 .-96U851 CONSOLIDATE BU.LS
N'pt Hts. Better hurry! schools. Many extras. ~nd. 2 to ~ bedrooms. KASABIAN NEW HOME~ «>n 2BA Santa Ana Private DlOfley available
BALBOA BAY PROP. $45900 Byowner 546-DG Quick ~n. Frol!l · ~ • ~ t 2ND TD 'S -ANY AMOUNT * 642•7491 * · · ' · $27,950. VA/111A 5%. We Rael Estate 96M644 -be oeil, ~'· · POOL HOME ·. jlllY.I cat! (n<J 675-4494 Bkr BY Owner -3 Bedroom, 2 knf?w them best because we Owner anxious, l bdrms., 2 ocean VU. $38.500. lnqwre 3BR. 2BA. cust bltlns, 2 a Mort
B.IL--Peninsula bath. Fireplace. Large wall-built ~m. baths. Family nn. Built·in.s, 496-2218 frplcs, $1000 assumes VA Tru-.1 ...'........,
-ed yarn. 2 oar. ~arp! \erw1n ,realty Inc. ,...washer,· dllitng rm. loan, 646-3185, prlnc. oaly. IHIOtWIS INC. -260 ·Cl'::~29B~ . $29.950 (TI4) 9G8--440.5 Patio. Paneling, .$30,IXX>, brk LetUM Hiiis Westmlnster NEED 1900 and noo PLANS $17,SOO 2nd TD, on com-NEW DUPLEX
3 !: 4 BR., beam ceil's., 4 By owner. 3 BR wtfrplc. Owner sacritice . .f. ~.· 2 '842-6691 LAG.UNA Beach Vu home, Prestige Homes. BROKER, mercial property dwntwn
frp!cs. Patios. Posh dccor. l...ge yard w/cail'd patio. baths~uded re'i!ut~ Owne1· must &ell. 3 bdrms .. 2 2BR. den, 2 BA. llAI yr old, NEW home by ovi.-ner • 2 842-1(1.8. San Juan Capistrano,
Quick possess. $101,SOO. 640-01!i6 or 640--0227. ~.-_...,_ ~:.. ·Ul.!l, full baths, dininc rm. Built· custom. $2500 assumes VA story, 4 BR, 3 ba, tam rm & WANT Ocean front Du..i...., payablncld 91~ $1all7>duepem_r 3~~. --GEM--ws w ...... """.. ~e roo ins. Fireplace. Fenced·--'. loan. -mo. PITI. L--·-rm """" ~,. ft ........ .,., .. --· .. ., 'OCEAN VIEW -New F1replaoe m family nn., Large rear 7ard. ~. 64&-3'185._.., · ~IUlileted ·by "M';,y All m: Newport or Balboa. Penn. Owner guarantees con-
161J' w_ Coast Hwy.,"N.B. Custom 1x>me 4 BR.. ~ Ba, $30,000, bric: 962-3865 brk M&--0604 I .;: &: ext. ojidOns ·sun 1 ,~Prin.~· ~only~~213-615-49QO~~~~-~-~I st ruc t ion this year RE/\LTORS 642-4623. tam & den rm, cpts, drapes Owner musl leave. 4 bdnns., '• $ OO e Lido It I open. Much less than goin& w/$20,000 bank deposits,
lndscpd, $49,900 . ..,_5516. 3 belbs. Pool I< polio. Built-20,9 3 BR & DEN price. 2!3/3'1Hl52 aft 5,30, I Iii 15% dlscount. Broker, [ l BY Owner $1850 dn. 4 Br ins, dishwasher. Dining rm. FIXER UPPER • J ust right al • ;i.. hlMCllf • Il4/493-~ ~lrl'JEX Fam. RM. Needs WQJ'k'. Fireplace in family rm. for beginners, 2 Bdrm, elec _Ide tan:i....,. home $40,000 ut-TD, paid dwn to
. ~---.. . $21,900. 833-1103, 54H7"'4 Maoy extras, $43,000, brk, kit., 2 oar· gar. Some paint l~EF~ 'liRl~E~ I~ $20,ooo-covering vaoant II
eves. 846-1383 would help. Ru.sh! Owner ""'" . . • • • ..... ..._ flll acre commercial property -hrs. I~
Classification I 00-124 --]~
C li1ssifieation 125-149
1t1at Estat1, {JI] General .___,..,..____,
Classification 150-184
l"-r._-_· __,][i]
Claisification 200-260
""'-forRent I~
Classific ation 300-3;:j5 , .......... hr-J~
Classification 360-370
[ . -I~
Classification 400--465
A11mtcements ]~
Classification 500.51 O
.......... l[i)
Classification 525-53~
I Lott and fOlnf I~
PROBATE SALE Owner leaving 4 bdrms., 2 needs quick sale. CALL. Home on Lido. 2 BR. +;. 2 Buslw SanJuaneiplstrano, valued
baths. Shake root Built-ins. ~"'"56. baths. Quiet end of the is-Opportunity 200 at ~ 9% int only
4 BR, 2 bath home near Har. fireplace in famil.y rm. land. $58,500. Mobile u---quarterly, all due in 5 yrs.
bu &Wil"m546-1300. Co"'red patio, $26,900, brk, Ll_DO _REALTY F .":'"'"°I 125-EXPANSION FUNDS 10% discount Broke~r ,
The
,
-
DAILY
P'ILOT
ORANGE
962-ffJ66 3377 via Lldo~t Bea.ch or -• n~UM.
Huntington Booch Mesa v!!. Motl' Home Rentals s FOR 1 RETURN
SUPER · Company wilh pn>Ven growlh I _,__ 11.e I
4 Bedrooms & Family 2004 SALES It LEASING Pattern estab. Guarantees l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~~I FANTASTIC -""""=-~=~=-I Baleario Dr, M,.. Vude, full servioe faoillly minimum <>f $5000 at end 0111
Owner transtel'!'ed, thll!lt
leave thiJ 6 month old 2
atory executive home. Enor-
moua aeparate family room
with fireplace & wet bar.
Formal· dining room, 000 sq
fl muter bedroom suite
plus 3 other bedrms. 2~
Battis, custom tie-back
drapes w/ibeers, shag car-
pet thruout. All elec kitchen
w/dbl oven & 90Jarium tile
floor. Step down living nn,
well landscaped & lots of
concrete. Call to inspect and discuss terms. 968-4456.
$24,950
f BR ,2 BA ,all elee bltin
kit, redee in a: out, FA ht,
upgraded crpts & drp8,
patio & lrg Jot all fenced.
Gd. loc. $1250. dn. &: pay-
ml1 Jess than rent.
l' 1llJge ReJI EstJte
531·5111 ( ::1 531·5110
ec: .'!!;. ~~L; '/,t, not ~ .. 1~17 $46,000 (Sat & Damnar Motor Homes ~id: For eaob 11000 in-Hou-Fumlshod 300
~= ii~&ht, ~ Ne~.i:t Beach For appt. tor interview and Corona del Mar
colors. The "latest" in ap-HARBOR VIEW HOMES-2 531•6800 full disclosure detalll. LOVELY 2 BR hse In oJd
ptiances and fixtures. Heat-BR + den. Best buy at ""!!!!I CdM. Sep. tub & &bower.
ed & filtered pool. No money $54,500. Fee. 2024 Port 1~~ Call Mr. Victor (D4) 533{13(12 Fully furn Incl grand piano.
down VA or name your Provence PL Open 1-5 dally. Be h. Salon Lease avail for 5 mo.
tenns. n:m 962-5.5U. ~ or 6#-0396. Cant a:cift st~ $29(1/mo. 557·3227 or FREE RENT NICE bead> cottage ; :rype..riter Sales I< Serv 675-35'6 8115 pm.
·-" FREE ~ whil 1-bdrm. l.ge. patio. 2 Car Ac--. for Hie lSO · GlasS & Screen business Sep. Garage Unit $90. Also """'v•l:e· . ..vuee e gar.% Blk. to ocean. ··-•-HOLLAND Bu1.S•le1 Cotta.r,-e, C.M. $85. And H.B.
you look in our rental Fortin Co Rltrs 642--5<XX> S J C ln6 Orange CM 645-4170 ~ acre utll pd. catalog. Walker & Lee • • (Salesm8.n Needed) Rent·A-HouM 97"'8430 Realtors, 7682 E.d~ Ave., BLUFFS Condo, 3 BR. 2~i H C
8424455, open eves till 8:30. BA, iam rm., almost new, ~rse OUntry Represent1tivn W•nted Lagun1 Belch
DEANE Garden Homes, ls! perf cond. 644-8067 or San Juan Capistrano 1Ai acre Busineu opport. tor whole-
time offered, 2 -, 4 BR, 2 64&-8824. estates. 10 acres. Entire sale retail bus Full or part $l70, Utll 'pd, redec 1 br w/ • ., F~ o ~ 1 · build bl c--u ' . gar, walk to bch/tov.m. BA, 2450 sq. ft., magnl1 4 BR, 1 .-.., 1 n, 2 BA. property i.s a e. "'""' e time. Couples pref. Small $225 1 br nicely furn. Frplc
pool, absolute model cond. bl:i to pool & park. Harbor slopes-with view of vallt>Y. Invest. For interview, call gai, xtn•i loc. Ocean vu. '
in & out. By owner. $48,950 View Homes, $57,SOO. This bone cowttry property 540-0928. '~, 2 "' •PL beaut. ocean ~ or 644--6977 1.::833-::..:3891=·--....,,.---has room for 22 homes and -
WALK to beaci>, 4 BR, 2 BA. ~''"'near the ocean ready for buil<liog or bold· TIME FOR NU~l~ RENTALS • --•·aJ•-i"" tor investment. 3 bed· Choice Huntington Beach es MOnUn. "'"' ..,, ...., 673-4030 or 494·3248.
loc:. Cul.<fe-sac, c:rpts, * 673--856.1 * room older home on proper-I II'" CASH
Drapea, Formal Din Rm, NEWPORT Height" 2 BR, 1 I>· Price $2:15,000. Call QU Cn OCEAN view, secluded, 3
lovely _lan<bcape, i?l.500. BA, 2 oar gar., large loL ~ DMSION THROUGH A BR, 2 ha, 2 levels, all panel·
Pymnts $233 lnclds all. You m ,950. 642-7658. OAWTlt.t • "S RJ(ol10BE f#CEI ed, wooden·deet,.~ furn,
name the tenns. Vacant. TOWNHOUSE, 2 BR, 2 ba. 1 yr lease, _,.,, mo.
Call 833-ll03. patio. new opt, drpo. Pool DAILY PILOT Cardn'r Incl. -1·
OWNER le8ving, " bednns, 2 $.'11000. Owner 642--9506. HOUH• Unfurn.
baths\ patio, dining rm., Put' Utt! "I t" in WANT AD butlt-M, dfohwasher. a • 00 your ,Get.:;;,;'W:;;;:ll;._ _____
1 Fireolace family rm.. Bric. Levis-sell those bJ.uble1 for 1..,
136.i>OO. ~ ~ · Call CJaall1ed D~t .:Ca:'!. Ada have CALL 642·~6 78 , WHY RENT
305
G
L
A
I .\
I
I
F
I
~-E
D
6
4 ·
2
•
5
6
7
8
BY Owner.· 3 Br, 2-Ba, cov\.E:==:·======~;;;;;:==::====:.;-==========1$100 down 'payment and
patio. Choice too, nr Hun-monthly """"""" of S119 TIME FOR $3,000 REDUCTION tington Ootr. 11000 dn. Tolal wW dp ft for tbJs lovely 2
COAST'S Clas1ification 550.!iSS
I
4 Be<!nns., 2% l>Jlths, tri-~~~ $269 per mo. $27,960. C./'iU -0 B\' ,( f)-C ~Q.8 be~ 1 bath home. Gu
level. Ovenl%ed oomer lot . p~ I-'~~),:-~ J;lq·~ ~t-~~" t..dra"":QUICK CASH w/boat gate. Vacnnt. Su~ FOR Sale By Owner, 4 bt-t / noo......,.= Uled brick
m;1 tenm. CAlt. 893-= townbo05e. 123,495. l500 T ne Pun e with the BoiJf./n Chuckle 11re
I~ I d" t..C_l_e.-•• -fi-oa-li-on-57.J5-580 ea 1ng
1-~·-I~
'
S:i~~.:7~ •r:ro:mb~--~ :: ' -notta:i&¥. ~ceJ:;~· T"HIOU8H A
low to fbmt four $1,,.Mrt wordt. -p~;~!~i2 --DAILY PILOT
c1 ... m •• 1,.n 600-699 Marketplace
I ~·· llllJ lrvlno -1-1~ I 6 1~ i cl ·1-W• e~·~
O\\f?.IER 11acriOoe, 4 bednns. ;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j 1 Beach •· Corona del Mu • WANT AD I -11~1 b~~;~ ·;~u~r~: • ~o~RP f.,....,.:.B..;U;....::G.y:.E=--,"-11 It . . . t. ~~rn&"io~ ~ &42~5671
Cl11stfic1tion 700·710
aauifiuHon 800-836 Cw-o, brk 136,500. • SPIC .. SPAN • I I I I . I NU-VIEW RENTALS 846-1383. Thh1 2 bdrm. has been up-,. I ,... __ 11~1 OWNER aroxlou• 3 baths, 4 gradedina!d:UandouLt!"" NE L HI i ·l Tourl&treports,"1 cl 673-4030 or , 494-!248 .,., bdrms, pool, patio. 01nr,,. °"""u' lina, w paandP"f, I ed •a moto1 that hod sign o UPPER BAY
rm, bullt·ln• · oilhw"h'I, • deck!"i more I j j I' ~ side that ookl cl ltlonad. Beautilul fantil¥ """"' In Cl•11ification 850-858 firei>lace in family rm. Brlc Ji9'500 · . ....., ~N ~.900 · ~=:::=:::::::::.:'~T;heyhodabolMloywhocame coun-, " · ear I -J~ !46, . -· . ed h•11 -owr e~ •~ and •~ayed everythfre • 3 • -..::'-~ .~ WARMbome,flnenelghbon, r I I ... , _, ·r· brand now . $GS. mo. or . _ 1'. H.B. nr acto, heh, 4 + 2, FERG U Etheroomwlfhanompty--• $400. mo. tor 2 ,ear 1 .....
ci ... ;1;. • • 90-0.912 flt~. °""'· 00
"'· REA!.TY I I I' I' I . !.ni::: i!'" ..... "'!\"3 .. ~. -m--=FREE r:a:J "'UICK CASH 6 BLOCKS TO BEAat A Comptny With Vldon ·-· ...,........, ftom .-. .,.._ "• *"''""' . -• ... ~.:.is~ ~.!''kit u~, ~.::.~,~~.. \_1 6 PR~~'•sNE~au~Ws'lfmRs IN I' I' I'. I' ,. r I
Cl 'fj ti 915 949 THROUGH A -O;fice "°""a AM to 6 PM ' . . . . . _ . °'" 1c1 on · Pl 0 OWN~-< BR, 2\1 ~ din • -J§J DAILY L T ·rm, 'iio Ism nn, ijit lot. TURTl.>JROCK---f> ~~i~ lmtRS TO I I I I I I
--.. r:i WANT AD Loads ol l!XtrM. $17,950. BROADMOOR . •
I'------'-.... 642-5678 20031 Blillend, -· No. 4 Pion'" !ro'•· 4 Br, 210 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 m>cJ:~!"'~· Clauificetion 950-990 ________ 1s.n !di• l1em1 • . · 642-5611 ·..::Ba:::·..;°":::::,,.:::r.:833::::..;·2389=·;__ 1_.:.;.::.:.;:::::::...=.:..::....:::=:::.;,:.:::=....::~..=..:::..::::::.:..:..=..:..:.:.:..:..:..:....:..::..:.._1'-...~=..==...:~=-
-. . \ ' ' -'
I • . ' I
•
SAYB
(All!
/
.......
'
.. . . .
1 ................. 1 ~~~~~~~~~ ................. 1 ~~~~~~~~~!l~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~l~~~~~~~~Tu~ ... ~~~;~J'~'~'"~~~l~0~,~"~7~l ~~~~~~~D~Al~L~V~P~IL~D~T~2~f~J [ _,,,_ I~ [ ---I~ [ _.,...,. I~ [ -""'""' ]~ [ AOM""'"1«•_. J~ [ AP¥"'"'"'~' .. J~ [ Aom-i.1«""' I~ [ Aoon~'"'M '••t J~ ['--_ ...... ___,]~ i:.:==..=:.~.:::.-..::3o:::5 I ;H~ou~!!.~'·.~U~nf~~·rnii.~~30~5;1 ~Diiuiiip~l•~ .• ~ .. ~U~nl~u~m.~~350; Apts. Fur n. 360 Apt. Un furn. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
I---------:;.E..;u;.;.t..;Bo.;l;:_ul:;.1 _____ 1 Huntl"'"" Buch Huntlntton Harbour
4 BR & DEN STQDIO 1 blk to bdl. dock
lndtvkhtal Komt, ewtt 2,(XO IMMED. OCCUPANCY avl. Wtr. pd. JaC\aZI. pool.
,.•--"INTALl sq. ft. !1nu.ij:Wll larae 4 New 3 Br apt• $2M. mo. $199. tll 15 June .
l)O(b'oom'ar 3 &"den. ftl'l"llly Dbl llQ'll&e, dabwahr ~2,=13:::'592.-=::29TI"'=-. -,.---Houlff * Apt1. room pill¥ lar;e formtl din· 331 Oaweao, H.B. !!!_wport Beach * 141•0111 * IWUL CWUt>ltla ' acy S~
Y+111:\ cncJolM!d rtlt' and trool I""""'""""""""!!!!!!!!.,. $29.50 per Wk il: up. 1 BR, 2 "'ol."W.11"'COITAMllA yards. Lovely garde. No Newport lfffrfh BR le Bachelors. Color TV,
ThH@. Arci Juat A Few Of pelJ. ~75 per monlb. Call maid st·rv., pool. The Mesa
Our MA.NY RENTALS , , . ~673-6008::.::::=· c.:::°'~546-3688"°'""·'---I THE BLUFFS-Spa·cious 3 .\1.5 N, NC\lrport Blvd., NB. * El TorO bdnt11., fa1nlly nn, 3 Ba, =.,.."=""'"'="'=--~~= Sl25 • 2 BR. DUPLEX. Cllr--'--'-'"""------I laundry, pool & yard BAOlE.LDR apt, pool, 1 blk ~e. fe.nced tor klda/pt!l.!I. 3 "BR, 2 ba, blll\I, erptl, drp&, malnte.nance. ~. mo. 1.At ocean. Gar. $1.50 mo. 210
J\.tove Jn Today. lge fncd yard. $260, water & la•t + $150. delKllit. Avail Cedar. ~1131 or--548-1290 * pd, 586-4247. March }At. ~. .~'c;'"':o·:.,----~--
$130 • 2 BR. 1'10US£. Bring Huntington Beach NEW Duplex, 3 br, 2 ba I BLK to ocean, Newport.
lhe Bo.by! Jo?om $285--$310 Yrly. \Valk Kids-pets ok. I Br $175. 2 * NO FEE, VACANT. 1obch. Enclgar.6-U-3188ot Br Sl!t5 -Until Ju.l y !st.
Slt5 • l BR. HO USE. Stove, $237 per month, first & ~642-~79~14~. ~~~~=~I 642-oo55. I crpl'c , drps. Fl.'nced for last. Near new City 2 BR., on the beach/pier,
ch.lld. Park. S BRS, builtins, JIV] W/D. Yearl or winter s~
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
Air Cond • Frplc'1. 3 Sl\·lm·
ntlng Pool.a • 111.:alth Spa •
Tennis Courts . Game> and
Billiard Room. ·
1 BR. From $100
l Bit. & Den fron1 SlS5
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
* BKR/OWNER 962-5511 I Ap111ments forRtnt . mo., prkg & gar. 536·5006. ~. 3 BR, 2 BA. t\ltns, new Prlv. nonic on acreage {130, ~---;;;;;;;;.;;;;; 11 BR. rum llpt. UIU incld. no crp<a It drpt. Gar age. children, nor pets. 2405~ E. Ovei !>00 1111 1,,,1 J:"enced vard, Also 2 Br, $135, $1~. 1150. 16th St NB •-1664
' * Rent·A-House ~ AptL Furn. 360 "'°""'°'.~"·-'-=="·-~ itllCI to strr1.,.i.1•u!h
LANDLORDS I -'---·-'-'-----NEW fw·n. ha.chi. apt. Nr llltr11111i. t"1t1 • Irvine 11 _. B Bay & Bt>ach, & shoppiog rt!1,,ng ~uin1 lcr
S ;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I u.acon •Y · yo11< ~dou' ftt" 1 · o• FREE RENTAL F.RVICE $175 mo. Util incl. 675-1841. 2·btdroom ipaotmeM sm~ll
Huntl'ngton S..Ch --
ON BEACH!
AVAILAJll.E IN FEB.
Uni. 3 BR. Ocean View,
p1·1vale ~k.
Unt. 2 Br. <X.1:!an View. Fron1
l3Q!
t"'w.11~ 2 BR. Jo'ron1 $S
t\JA..KE 01',Jo,1'..:R on Sublease
Of 2 BR., 2 UA F\im. Apt .
Co\."t!n.•d Parklng. Lai i.:t•
Heated Pool. Saunu.s aud
Jlt!<!rt•ntion H.ornn.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
711 OCEAN Ave., 11.li.
171<1) S:!&-148"1
Ole. upt-n 10 asn.(i pm D111ly
WllJ..IM,1 \\'ALTERS CO.
~ MOVE IN TODAY *
$145 A MO.
Spac. 2 & J Br. in 4-plex.
Several avail. ALL £."\:-
TRAS. Pool, rec bldg. Kids
\\"elcome. ~·roni $14:). $..!r
lilgr. 17371 K(.'(.'lson "B" I .
blk \\'. of Beach BJ1•cl. oll
Slatc1< ~-7510, 847-4200.
Huntington Beach
HUNTINGTON BEACH'S FINEST
Spanish Countiy Estate Living
2 Acres. Beautl!Ul park-like su~roundtngs.
Sunken Pool. Sparkltng Spanish Fountains. e Spacious Rootns e Separate Dining
• \Valk in Clo~ets
• Home-like Kit~bens & Cabinets
l BIJRM . Un!urn. $165. Furn. $185.
2 lllJRM. Un!urn. $185. Furn. $215.
'f o\.\•nhouse , 2 br, 1 Yz
ba . HOO s4 fl Furn. $240
ALL UTILITIES FREE
\Valk to Hµntington Center
Adulls, No pets
IA QUINTA HERMOSA
16211 Parkside Lene,. H.B.
714: 841·5441 BEACc:.:~rTALS* 3 BR., 2 Ba .. Sharp? .• S365 NEAR beach. Att"fc· tu,rn I BEDRM. (um-pool -t ::!~i:!ie~r~:,::1&!p!:';.'~~'e * 1 3 BR. & fam . rm., 2 baths .studio apt, 1 Br. Kt, patiO. block lo bch. Single adlt. 10 J·OO. 2300 filnrlew Rd ,
LUXURY LIVING brand™""''· T\u"'Ucrock S375 "n~GO_mo~·~m--""-'1638_·___ i$~'.,='..,,.=c-"""'=·-----co111 ,,...u. l'tloll•= ~i~.2Joo. OVER 62 ? ? (4 blks. So. ol San Diego FN'Y· on Beach,
THE BLUFFS 4 BR., fam. nn., 2% bathl, Coron• del Mar San Clemente • --------1 blk. \V. on Hott to 16211 Parkside Lane).
41! --·----------
* Private Room *
1111"
1\1nbulator)' .... udy or f<.lan
UlllJ(I, llU<l"tUO\IS f00<1,
N lo.:l', 1•11(<cl'lul 11unospne1-e. * L:a.U :HS-4/::iJ *
:»ummer Rentals 420
WIJ..L e:\:change our cute
La.kl! 1\i'l'OWl~ll.d Cttbin,
sleeps 9, tor your 3 bdrn1
UCd..:1l J.01J.i;t.'. CIO!!C ocean.
June lhru Sept. oc lci.s.
l21JJ 2oU-327·1.
bnlnd n<w. TurtlM>Ck $425 --------•-=...c.;==.:____ THE FULL LIFE UNDER 3S ? ? 1..,;...,.;,;,...,,,..;;...,.;.,..,~ ..................... ~J Rtntal• to Shiro ri.neflt greenbelt loe. "Spark· 2 BR .. lh ba., tt/oond. $2.'JO 2 bl.kl to JJ,ig Corona. Bach. 12 BR, 2 BA Laundry rrn. ' IN BETWEEN ? ? I~ -·--~----¥··-.... ........__._ ling" Angel!Ul plan· Vl.'ry -........ & n75. Util pd Yrlv A ..... , t'W"I Have a p!aC(' for everything Apt1., Apt1., l\IAN seeks .Fen1. 25-15 to
430
lo 2 ·, b ......... . ) . .r· nuw S, no pets . .,... ..... mo. I . t ,._ I ces TO 0 0 i! Bit -si 44 Furn. or u· nfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 spac Us bchma., a., ' 1 adult, no pet. 64.)...1.624 1539 Buena Vista S.C. ll us in eres 1"• Pa · " ALL UTlUTIES PAID. sha1·c house or apt, ~/5rJ 1 formal dinln,. rm. Secluded nearby. Our ~arden apart-VILLA YORBA b!w.s f"ood 1 l Chili.J i ·~ I Br furn -1 gar AdJ to Apt Unfu n 365 "'""'' are -··rouod·• by N t B h N rt B ch · ' ren ' e c. I
patio. Adull homt', ron1plet. · ., co... • • • r • '" ,,... no J .,.,,..,~:;::~,.,,..,.~l;;;•;;w;;po;;r;,;;;;:'•;;<~~~;i~eiw~po;~;;";;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Ot\. Don'l call if not ely redccor. Vacant & avail. compl ahop'i area. $175. 602 broad I.awns. putting green, · 842·9622 serklus. ~&-6373 aft :J. Ask
at $550 per nlQ. Heliotrope. 831-1300. 8<1lbo.l . lsl1nd pool and patio. lnsidt': 2 for Harold.
A Cost• MeM ELEGANT 2 hr apt y.•/gar. bedrooms plus den . t'{'flliy ~ll n1i. north of H"""imiin.gton BEACH LIVING -'HArl.t: a nic~ 110111(', Al1.11l'!
'
.;1 .. ,.1 •-''SINCE 1,....,. spacious cntc11aining areas, Be h II~ 2 BR Bl ( N y C Affo d) ' .... ~ 0 steps to 11bopg & bcb. Yrly. ceramic tile kitchen, 2 ac . "N. . Ins, ow OU an r or fcnuilc. )<tu· 1.uo1·n1athJll ~i ~ lst Western Bank Bldg. Casa de ro Dys, 835--M.17, 548--7398 baths. $215. crpts, drps, pool. play yard. BACHELOR (Fu ) Fr $195 call ~-u5:S4 al!CI" .. 11n1 and ( "?J'.!f Unlvenlty Park, Irvine ALL UTlLITIES p~ eves/wkndl!. THE ORLEANS Lndry facil &: carports. Cpl. rn · · · · · · · · · · · · om 'A'et!Kcnd •• >'-. -----~ Days 552-7000 Nights Comp&re be.lore you rent Balbo1 Peninsula & 2 sml childI'<'n ok. No 1 Bedroo1n . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . From $180 fE~1ALE 21-28 to stu1.re ocw ~ .. ~ r ea ly Cuslom dell~. leal\lring: 1141 Tustin " Jl:33-Ml6 pets. Call Stl-4664. 2 Bedroom · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · From $230 duplex in Newpo11 w/samc.
-..# e Spacious 'kitchen "''ith in-3 BR, 2 BA. Deluxe ApL 1 yr -New Duplexes-NE\\'. 2 .f.: 3 Br. apts. Nc11r FULL SECURITY SYSTEM ~1w + u11J. o4o-tl125 c\"cs.
2414 Vista del Oro ~ :~ t~ ::!:· lV: ~: = • ~reet Ila:~~~ ~ase i_ncl.c'fPlc. D~nna'a 3 • 3 Bdmi, 2 BA $29S. :fh & D~~ls. l)shl-~1·sr,cdrpt~, HEATED POOL or the BEACH NEED 2 nialcs~to iihare 4 51· 64~.i~C~~,!~~E i :~: ;\~b,;:::::::.~:; : =~:ai:r::a & e~ o7 ~48. y e i~~rl o~Alnfant ~~-1 ill~Ms so~::~~:~~-:zli'.1: Elevator Adults Only, Sorry No ~~t~al Lease -~-""_-:Uo~ 9b~~~-'_1"_'_•_Bch_· -1
EASTILUFF 4. BR. 2 ba. tam. nn .•• $4.75 e Clo5ed iarage y.·/storage Beaut.. spacious apts -LAS BRISAS 2 Cirl!'I will snare 3 Br apl
lndividuaJ home, over m e Marble pu11man Capistrano Be11ch Fenc...'CCI yards, patios and 1 Laguna Beach "'h><1111e. l blks to beach,
sq. ft., unu.ual large 4 bed-e· eel h·11 • l(jng-u Bdrms qui£>t priwicy. Adults, no 5515 RIVER AVE., fiEWPORT BEACH Cdf\1. ea.u 675-11:.:•<.:_ __
l"Olml or 3 & den. Family . . r I • Pool • Barbequcs -sur-3 BDRMS. 2 Bath, crpts & pets. &l2·4.S37. FOR a f('W who apprecinlt' ('l'he New Place ln Ne,vport) G1r1~-·s~for Rent 435
roon1 J>lus large formal din-rounded with plush land· drps, bllna, dshwshr. Ocean 20olO Fullerton St. (at Bay\ the unusual. l & 2 Bdrn1., 2 Res. Mgr. Diane & Wn1. Sharbaugh 642-2566 --
In Co I t I \'i(.'I\!. $275. 642-11.i.'i. h n 1 • g room. 1np c e pr vacy scaping, 1..:::::.:...::=..::.:::.o::::__ ** 31Sr., 1 y2 Ba. ** ._ cusJom ap\s. ..."U"gc Garage for S1pragc._
With enclosed rear and front Co REALT'lh-V" . AdulUivi?'ll" at its best DUPLEX: New, 2 Br., erpls, 1 n~e. newt., decor. Encl rooms, widr oceru; v_iews, Apt. Unf urn. 365 Apts., l!ll9 l\l11.p1~ Av_e., CO.Sta l\1esa
yards. Lowly garden. No A mpany \Vil u1ion LARGE 1 BP. Sl.90 drps. 5 mins. to Dana Pnt. .__..., ~ _..~ gardens. ~pace ,& pnvacy -='--".cc.::....:_;___ Furn. or Unfurn. 370 h1anagei, Apt. 5.
pc!A. $475 per month. , Univ. Park Center, lr\•ine No Pets t.farina. $195. 646-f,612. patio, bllns, crpts, ........ .,. fur considerate, mature PARK NEWPORT _;c;::..:_::..:;.__;;'"'-::....:::....:c..: Office Rental 440 Call 673-6568 Of' 546-3688 Call Anytime, 552-7500 365 \V. WilAon 642-l9n Close to everything. $170 & adults. Close to beach &
Office hours 8 Mt to 6 PZ..1 Coron• dtl u-r Sli!O nio. 868 Center St. Apt. ~I op ing Selcctio of rugs APARTMENTS Costa Mesa NE WPORT Beac h WEEKLY-MONTHLY ""' l,CMor ca11548..Sli 9. .1 P . n I
Townhouse on Bluffs nr. ,t, y.•allpapt.•rs. Partia Jy h LA f.IANCHA !"'rune.' 1oc. Store or Offices 1741 WESTCLIFF DR.
Hoag Hosp. Spac. 3 Br. 2\.S 3 BDRJ.1, 2 BA, new home In Executive Suitet BACH. ), 2, l BR ~~250 To $650 inonthl,y. On t e bay Brand Nry.• Delux e Units J(Xk) sq . ft. a t 2'lc, ~1 frni
Ba. Frplc. Patio. Pool Turtlerock Area, Irvine. 2080 ... wport Blvd, ..._ "!' Frplc, pools, sccuritJ guards. Luxu ry apal'ln1C'11t living Ren! . now for your con· 1011, IM&, 11.'al pan'!, cpl,
ptivil. $:MXI. AdullS. 548-3993 $355. mo. 544--1373 alter 5. Cost• Mesa "~~. No pet.ii. OCEAN view lease -2 & J overlooking the water. l'.:n-slf1!CIJOn alio'A'IH\Ce of l drps, a ir c...'Ond. Au;() ....
aft S. Lagun• 8Nch 642-2611 ..., HARBOR GREENS BR! 2 RA. Nt'W. Blk t~ ~h. joy STJ(),CKXI ht'allh .~pa, 7 mos h't.:; l't'n~. 1 -BR. 1 B~\ 2 u1.: sui1es, 705 sq. ft. ea. 546-0371 S24;:i UIJ. 494·3383, 494-2339. swin11ning j.Klul~. 1 lighted &_ den, -Bit s .& 3 Bil s or will comoine. Jnclcls util,
Corona del Mir $165, Util pd, frplc, open STUDIOS & 1 BR'S LUXURIOUS ocean apt, 2 tpnnis courts, plus n1ilcs or 1-rom Sl~'>. DishwaslK'r, ah·1l."00d Grnd fir. O'A'n
beams. charm~ JI.!~ blks • F"REE Linens ON TEN ACRES GARDEN Apt . · 2 Br. l~~ Br, 2 Ba,. 5400, ut' Y.'t lurn. bicycle trails, pull ing, shuf-'-!arbagc dispos.1~. ~!l units!. l'nn·. & ~tr. no. Plenty plq;. S~,2 ~l>i bl~:v ~~: heh:· e FREE UlilUles Apls. furn./unfurn. Lease Balb, Large pal.io. \2 block fiTa-1010. · fl<'board. crcxiuet. JunjOJ' l"s Encl, gar, sw1n1 g pool.. Co-Up. fikrs. 5411-~-
l $200 Util pd, 2br. So. Lag. • Full Kitchen Fireplace / priv. patios. shopping, Quic>L Adults no Lido Isle from Sl74.50 mo nt hly: also J BBQ s Pt'ts t1(.'Cl.'platilr. -COR-ONA-DEl-MAR
poo · ·'ti Gar. yd, deck. Children \\"C:L 0 lleated Pool Pools Tennis Contnl'l Bk.1st. pets. 6:12--0-161-211 Cabrillo, 1.;;=...c:.:.:. ______ and 2-bcdroorn iilan;; nnd &12-2007 178 ScoH Pl., C.til.
$295, 2 br, lrplc. gar, lo • l300 Util pd 3 .... 2 ba frplc • Lau....+~ Facilities """ Sea Lan CdM ""~u CM 2 1 1 1 "I Under Nt w 1\r111i\1x. i~ Sii· fl. otfice blk heh. Chlld/~t ok. · Ul, '"""J """ , VT«...., · · UPSTAIRS 2 BR, 2 BA. ·s ory own 1ou-;es. c. ('{"-~ ho G r d h' ••hi e TV & n1aid scrv avall. tM Arlh e •• t H ) 7 N .. ~ h · · spnt:c lailored to your.: dC· $325 3 b 2 ba f I gar me. a: .. Y ,nr ,........ . ac ur nr \,..Ul;ls wy NE\V 1 BR's $1 0. r ..,.,11.c crpts, drps, frplr, Adlts, no ll·ic kucht•ns. 111·ivn10 p.:1 i.~ Management l>•l.11-Full securi.y bldg. yd,' pau:.· 2 blk~ ~.c. ' NU-VIEW ·RENTALS e Phone Service & UP & sbop'g, Adults. no pe1s. _.[)t'ts. st75 ie8.SI.!. 673--382.l. or ball'onit's. ,·nrf)('ti11;;, dra-CASA VICTORIA 1 .. .,1 aniplc pa.rklng.
NU·VIEW RENTALS 673-4000 Or 494-3248 $30 WEEK PREFERRED .area • Priv., ll4 E. Wth st.. C.M. Mesa Verde J>t!nes. Subt~·1·ranean p..1rJ;. 1 & 2 Br. r uro & unru111. i\.sk 101. Lhl'isiule
673-4030 or 494-32-18 L • Studio & 1 BR Apl5. lovt!ly 2 Br., 2 Ba. Crpls, 548-0137. ing _dwil h £>)cv1ttJors. Opt~rlB.: Carpels, drapes, DI\\', TV BOYu IU::AJ..l'CJlt.S &ra-5930
ido Isle e TV & Maid Service Avail drps, bltns, w/priv. gar. * SHAD\'. EL.i\tS -POOL * DELUXE 2 ,\ 3 Br, 2 Ba, 1nru serv1Ci). ust nort o ant. Pool t'tc. Con1e By S.: , _ -
WOW, new Spanish 3 i:eR .. h3 ---------e Phone Service-Hid. Pool Avail now, $250. fi75..4873, e Adults Poolside SI40 up encl gar, Sl60 up. Rental F'ashion Island at Janiboree Inquire ahuu! our f.1ove-in CdAl-27:.0 sq ft '. front corne~-,
Ba., nr. Big Corona ac · TOWNHOUSE -3 Br &: e Oiildren i: Pet Section 673--0937. e Children next bloc)c Ofc 309. }.f :e Ave Mel San Joaquin Hills Road. Allcw;onc<', 525 Vletorla St. 2nd fioor. l:levalor, air
. $400 Alo. owner I a g t study. 21 ~ Ba. Yrly. e Sl.3> Monthly 2 bedrooms each. Bltim, 177 E. 2'lod SL, Cf.1 642-3&15 S4s-'.lll34. a l1C -Tclcphon<' (71•1) 644-1900 at Harbor. Cf.i . 6·!2-8970. co11~. carpct11,
1
drapo
1
s1 ' 673--6.510. $400/mo. Resp on s i b I e 2316 Newpeirt Blvd., CZ..1 for rental information Tit" EXCITING ga age & . park ng lot. •
1 NEWLY decorated, drapes, adults. 673--0844. 548-!:m5 or 645-3S61 carpets &: dttlpes, choice SPAC. J BR, 2 BA, priv Newport Beach PALM"MESA APTS !)rLVitle offices. Large s~no
ad I•· Ad .........i •--"'" k' t locatioa Lease $200 pr. yard, -encl gar, crpts, drps, ----* 2 WEEKS FREE * . reception (former Pacific crptng. 28R. u U'l, Mission Vlefo l!i""" ..,. . ..., on w s ren · monlh.. C&ll 613-8550 RLTR. small pct, adulta only. SlSO y• d I M MlNUTES TO NPT. BCH. Mu1ual oillceal. 38c/sq ft;
64G-03rt El Puerto .. ___ , BR, $155 & I BR .• $110 mo ..... 3176. >lfH43J. OCEAN and ISta e esa Bach, I & , BR. rrom 1145 '"" dMde. 67H"'1. , Ba I ·1 PRU.IE vu lot. beaut Deane lftW>U• ADULT GARDEN HOf.lES 3 BR., ., am1 Y rm.: 1 BR's-$l30 & UP Eastside loc. Nu paint, A1TRAC. 2 Br. Twnhse. ll65 Adults, No Pets. DESK space available $50 xlntpatio,vlcw.$500:\10. HoineJBR,3BA,hugefam, enclscl gar, 644-m9 or Frpl, patio. No HARBOR VIEW Ill.VINE AVE. AT MESA 1561 Mesa Dr. Wl.l J -1 0. Franklin Rltr. 673-2222 form din $4251110 incl Unfurn. & Furn. 548--0378. chi Id re n IP et. 2652-A Mo ve in y.•tdeposita only j5 blks fro1n Nc1vpor1 Blvd.) ino._ i prov•dl'. urn1 ~e gardener & wtr. 586-2912 All Utllltl Po'd ''Rent A Piece 2 B"droon1 cA" """" at S5 1110. Answ.:·r1ng aerv1c..."t' Costa Meu IS 1 ROOMY 3 Bedroom, 2 balh, Orange. ltfg£"1o5'&8-1674. of a Palafrfe" $:100 . ....,..."""" available. rr.i Forest Aw .•
Newport Be1tr;h Pool &' Recreation ground floor. t'KJ\ pr. month PRIVATE lg•. 2 Br. i Ba. . . p 1 VERY nice I BR dplx. Qulct. 1 •nuna Beach. <1111..!:1466, r.-. 1=• •ta I A CM ......, "' El-ant a•"-'rt.rncnts designed Day & Ntgh• Secunty, oo , d 1 -~ • Bachekrr'a Retreat! ~ ~ " Pe w., next to park &. tennis. call pool, rrpk. sundeck. Vater -.. ,,.... "' · R B ct I S<-p. by g11rages. 1 a u t t r.11 ' Private furn. Util incl $75. e OCEA.NJo'RONT? Sp a c Also garages for renl Bailey 67,,._ Agt. & ga' pd. Ba•·k Bay. with a tl1asler "s touch, su· r ountwns. ee. I g. 11• over SO. no pets. S48-l021. DESK space available ...,..
• ,., •900 Bacj•lor "um UtU Incl ~ • pcrb bo"~" ~ • .,, .. rily. '-"CIU· exercise rn1, b1lllnrdt;. C(ll· n10. W1U proYide turnltw-e ALA Rentals .. ~ · .. · ,. · · FOR particuiar people, Oelx 548-7476. ..., ............... IOJ b ho 2BR 11, bn * GREAT VIEW -2 BR. * sive Versailles Club and or TV. E;o. A~t. hus dish-Huntlngton"Boech at $5 nio. Answering service. e EASTSIDE 2 Br. Jo'ncd
yrd. Encl gar. Child1pet.
$150.
4LA Rtnt1ls e 645-3900
ALA Rentals e 64s..3900 mo · me. • '2 ' Frplc, bltns, swxiecks, pool SINGLE lady, 2 Br, 1 Ba, pool 1vith unique Aquabar, 1\'ashl!r, rcfrig, shag cpt, & availabl.:.17M75 Beach Blvd. ~. ~;:~ ~~ 00~: ~10 up. 613-3535. $160. + clng. fC>e. Ideal loc. low1tains and formal gar· prt pa!io or d<"ck. 54tJ.4855 BRANO NEW Hunungton Beach. 642-4321. e STEPS Bay & Beach! 1 adlts. no pets. $175 mo 4 2 BR. Pool. 2 park'g stalls. Safe & secure. 3 10 dem;.,AJI ?art of lhe South Yearly.Bayfront QUO VAOIS Ill --FUU. SERVICE
Br. Stove, retrig. Tot. Ulil "'-n-m ~~ N·-. 543-6332 $195 nio incld'g water. Rochesl<"r St., 6-12-1264. Coasts _finest apartment l Lovel" neiv uniurn. ap!.~. \VESTCWFF BUILDING · cl $125 ""°""' ~ ~,... 1 .r Luxury Gard(>fl Apts. '· in · · • S42--J073 • BAOlELOR, l & 2 Br com111un1 Y· 3 & 2 BR., 2 ha. C'ach. P irr Ba-._,,1,. ... 1 a. 2 BR's, Comer \Vestcllll Drive • Lovely 3 bedrooin un· ALA Rent11ls e 64>3900 1 BR, Furn, 2 h-g. closets, __ ...::....::.::..::=.::,,.~-w/fw-n. avail. Heated pool. l Bedroom/studios fron1_Sl95 &: slip. Many extras. lninied. "''""' • lrvlnc BJvd, Newport Beach furnished honie fol' rent in I queen size bed, priv dres.11-NEW 3 BR & Den. fireplacf! 11~ & "P· Ad··•i·~. ~~-, "/, Bedroon1 from $305 FROM $135 Mr. llow-~ "~"' kl! J BR Npt Hght& Pets ina rm t •·groom• cncl $375 lse. beam clg, no ....,I UoJ " "'... """' • occupancl'. IUQ ~ Costa Mesa Spar ng ·· · · · ~'& • x ra u , "'" Center St. 64.5-8965. Models open 9 A ti1 ut dusk C 11 .73 3663 673-8086 Ev llt.1 ,Pn..il.J11cu:.1zl·Saunas -_, lrellh. Fen~ yard. chil9ren O.K, $l75 Month, gar w/11tora"ge, Aduha only, 510 Avocado St. 644--43-IO ~-· a : ti -1·s. Jk reatl'ln !{(J{lm & t.iore! NEAR O.C. Airport, hoJ,el,
Oiildren &: pets OK. only avail~ Feb. 1st.; Lge. 2 BR. 00 pets. so. of Hwy. 2 BR. l BA, l Bdnn apt w/garage, N.E . A.r\ul!: Jni) . No Pets realaurants. Ob:. space, fm.
$250 per month. phone 2 ba. apt. nr. CdA1 Iii&"h,. 2035 Fullerton CM frplc, lrge patio, sundcck. side, C.l\I. $130/mo. C O!l. IMMEDIATE nled. occupancy, Lowest
64&-9303 betwe<-n Sam & $265 Month. ' • • 644--5859. 548-8749. ·F i·ai~s. 21T.! Ou Pont,
6pm ask for Jen')' or lfal Pinchin Rltr. 6TMJ92 RENT FREE FEB. l-li. PLUSH NEW 2 BR. 2 BA LRG 2 BR, unfum, Sl4J. 158 OCCUPANCY lSJl.3223.
Bar•-* BAYSHORES * Lrg. 2 Br. $160. I BR. Tu!' La c M ·ON THE BLUFFS l!r.Y.12 :·101·u1a St. 1617 WESTCLIFF .,..ra. Bachelor $145. Pool. Yearly Lease. 1P tic, osta esa. AT NEWPORT -c1 ~ blk . \\I. ot ::tarfield
*3 BR·S189 MO * Yearly lease. 3 BR, _2 b11.., &)6..6974. 673-9545 Call for key, 548--5531. Sa n Clement• and Beach IUvd.I 1200 8Q.. rt Crpt, air cond,
. • !am. rm. Cor lot, $450 ~10. C 1 u. ,-N 81 ..• 1 11...;_c.;..;.;.c;__.;____ B ample pkg, uUI, janitor. "C" Thomaa, Rltr. 548-~ • SHADY ELMS -POOL * OS I ....... Dana Point rorn c1i.•port vu., u1·n a Laguna e•ch Baumgardner •l04. 541.50.12 e Adults Poolside $140 up Hospital Road \1 block 2 BR apl. No . l'h1ldren or Large fenced yard, cul-de-sac
street, quiet area, kids OK.
Tenant pays utilities. Refer-
ence required. 64.2-2221 (or
message 646-9666).
3 BR, 2 BA. Din Rm, lrpl, e Children next block Park·Like Surrounding SPECTACUJ...AR \V hi 1 e _ abo\•e P11.cif1c Coast llwy1 to pets. Nero l'f's1dcnl -mgr to STt:"DIO. 1165-$175. t blk to HUNTINGTON Beac~Pvt.
lrg yard. Pool privil. 177 E. 2'lnd St., CM 642-364j QUlEr DELUXE Water Oceanfront VU! 2 entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, n1anage 5 a111s. $1~. lt'S!!I ninin lK'aeh. Lowe.1• CIHI Dr. balh, off 1treet pr}!.g. Util
Harbor View Homes. $39.i l BR. Sl4f'.l & $l3S. Large. 1, 2 & 3 BR AP'I'S BR. 2 BA. $23S. Lease. Newport B ·uch, Ca. l:l2liti0. S;itJ. for mgn1~ or " apts. • 644-IM78 • ~t~t.j. PO. Mr. I.an&,
833-3894. Ideal for Bachelors. Adults Pvt Patios * I-ltd Pool Crpts, drps, stove, reirlg, 'feleptlOne: 1714) &15-0000 83'7-A012, 492--0646. Newport Beach
~BRAND NEW-3 BR.., 2
Bath double garage
Townhouse. Crpts, drps,
blt-ins. Kld1 & Pool. Avail .
now. Days (213) 531-Q!SO or
EVt>s 1714) 842--4538.
3 BEACH houses, 3 & 4 BR, only. 1993 Church St. Nr. Shop'g * Adults only laundry. 837-5370. San .-.uan Capistrano 01-'FlCE sp&ee, 4t~ Old
fpl, patio: $275400 Yearly. 5-18--9633. Also I-"'urn Bach. Apts OCEAN view, new 2BR 2 Ney.·port Blvd, 3 blk1 N. ol
ABBEY REALTY GU-~ M rti • ue Apts. FOR LEASE NF.:W 2 BR Colldo. Wn.ll'r ptl. L. Hwy 1 215 aq ft $85 NICE 2 Bt. 2 Ba. Pool, Nr. G ftlq crplS, drps, dshwshr, dspsl, Crpts, drps, hll in'(. l.>t~,J. 1ve 548-5300 . . , BEAOi. homes. J BR., 2 ba. shops. Utll pd. Adlts, no tm Santa Ana Ave., CM -gar. $al0/mo. 114-333--0086 Luxury liayfn111t ,'\phi. 5195. 32105 Pasc.'Q Curullnn.
2-sty $365. 2 BR, den $315 pets. 1884. M o n r o vi a . P~gr Apt .1J3 646-5542 L 8 h l & :.! BHs. ~ 10 $550 Call 493-7078. CdM. 2400 sq. ft., $500 to $600 Caywood Realty 54g....1290 548---03.16 _!9Una eac George Willi•mson per mo. 7'.lOO sq. fl. Jl~
$140 up spuc. 2 br/l br l~ ba Rultor 2 BR, 1 BA, atow. refrig, b• µer mo. 2411 Coast Hiway & LIKE new 4 Bedroom, 2 Houses Furn. or $120/MO. Fum. Studio Apia. ~I, cpt/drp, bltn, plygrnd. 1 blk beach, frplc, cozy gar dtsp, pool. ~. mo. lg MacArthur. 6771661. •· I r-1a •1 U f 310 Pho · H 1~ I 2 Coll N S 646-4713 bachelor. I adlt. Lse $16a * 548-0570 * --~7916 t • uuUi. home n ....,.. l• esa. n urn. ne sennce. ea.,.... poo . ege, o. ·· · mo. incl util. 49-a-Sln. 4""""'""''• 4,,.,.-, a l a. BETWEEN 00 & 100 ..,., n of-Fireplace, family room 2376Nwpt Blvd. ~'ia5. 1996 Maple, No. 1 ..• 642-3813 1..:=..:::::..::=-=.:.:::.=._ ------~-~IA ~ •·-yards . .-. no rental Balboa lsl1nd M •-·" H 1· "' •-h ,... pts., 1.lce sp !or renl. Sea Lark ...... .,... ~ Bachelor Apts. $118 & up. 3 BR, 2 BA, 011..,.=o un 1n.,.on u.IC OCEANERONT. c.'Ondo, 3rd Furn or Unfurn. 370 Motel %!01 Newport Blvd, fees. Broker 546-8640. No children or pels. 2129 Townhouse. Crpts, drps, dbl Door. Fantutlc vb ocean _. c •t
2 BR. w-3 ca.r gar. $250. Ad-3 G:~:.' ~c:!'1~·r ~~ii;_~ Elden Ave., Apt. 1, crit. garage. Dshwhr, Pool. WALK TO BEACH & bay. Unfurn 2 BR, 2 ba, 81lboa Peninsula I fr $140 o"•"':~"Uxt:'------,.-nc-, 1
dltional stot'aged"' garages s~. mo. be. $375. 673-1488. $100 & Up. Nice l&: 2 Br. Kids/pets ok. $225. 673-6610. Ndcww •'r • '1rpbrl " ,',,p1 1drpl6th" ~".?~~II b/~~'.r°"'1 1y "N'od1h"", ,,· • ~ • D .... I om wall& --~1...rklng 2052 per mo. A wts, no pe..... trailers. Adults, 132 W. e TROPICAL POOL e · • · · 1-"'-'""""5 w -"-"' · 1 BE by )'Wl'>;t'lf. Beach« ..-..r ' ~-r-' · '
6T;)'-16:i,. Condominiums Wilson, CM. M.7-45.10. 2 Br studio, 1'°' Ba, f.rpl, sprl 1A'7.3957, like lt in town! $4.:lS & uill. arvti. 2 Br. Sundcck & Oakwood Is $1 million in ~=rt floor~~l.252~. M ,
NU home, 4 BR. 2~ ha, Unfurn. 320 $125 & Up. Ntcely furn. 1 B:r strcase. Gu .t. -wtr pd. NEW 2 l 3 B:r. AplJ. Crpts, ~~·Bd r t garage. $250. 673-5.132. rec re a Ii on. Swimm l ng OJo't'ICE space & suilc>s Avail ~':I =n.bl~,n~!~"~ Irvine apts. Adulta, 132 W. Wilson. 145 E. lSlh. No. 9· 548-ll6S ~-b~-~~;tg~ ~nt~r.s~~ ~ mo. ;;,~u:in 1~~-afti ~· Me11 pools. Health clubs. by Rlvtnside Ave. Poat Of.
I ... ~M ~ ....... 11 548-6959 CM. 645-45.10. . 2.,•,.3 N~lyl!i() ~.!1.65A· -~ .... ta. Call 646--3186 or w. Bfty-Ne.._...1 Beach. Saunas. Tennis courts:. flee. 2~ Riverai<le, &12-3347. ' .,,,_ e,,,,. •• · ' SNGL 1--1 ~•BR, 2 ba ~ NICE 1• I BR. ~"-. -"'" ·~ vo.n .. --,,... BR E ""'"' ·1 ... ,,..,.., ..... ., ..,.,, 2/1. 7553 Shalimar. ,,.~ 545--0760. Cati 886-4832 days {S.'tn * * * Billlards. Indoor golf driv-2 AOJOINlNG OFFICES. MESA Verde 5 xec, unit. Unfum. $.350, vrly ._ up. Z..1ature ·~·Its. Child ........-v;i+" Bernardi ~--" In lion C -H FIR It. UR. 2 ~· • 9\•u DELUXE 1 BR. gar. qu~t NEW 1-2 &: 3 BR., Beach noJ or -..--~ SPARKLING NEW 1ng range.SandVolleyball. busy tertee .111. ...... '""'· art! furn lease. Avail Feb. 15. 0tU ok. 133 E. J.6tb St. &Q..~ ... ,...e.e. 4 ,..., Wh I I B h A I Ul1'l'• Inc "~ £!gl~':X,,3 ~~. Y · for appt. &rr5982. O•n11 Point area, adults only, no pets. Apll. From ....... /per ":· S b,I p k N fr poo at s. nd ots · <rll"VoNIJ·
"'"' M 'ssi·-'"·to __ $143; 150 E. 21 St. 64&-0016.W blk•100tromTobwlater. n-a1f.:· u St ar •wport rnore . A resident tenn is ~rrEkl
1
$300. Pvt. ofc $80.
2BR. 11,.l BA. Cpl!. drps, 1 -,. _..... LIVE in the abJ new Dana * STUNNING 2 Br. 2 an · n """ ~· 2 Br 2 Ba unfurn. lOp lloo~, BAY SHADOWS prb and activities director ~• 0 c space. $40-$60.
blt ... w, Separate garage. NE\V lingle 11or)'. 2 BR, l Point 1-1~ at the Ba. Garden Apta Pool Rec 846-337l. bcitot . bfty '\'1~ ~17115 who plans free Sunday ~I Ole Servlcei ~3988
Pool. rec. ~trl~ mo. BA. crplg, dt}ll, bllnl. aw beaurttlll Mitina.Jnn Motel, rm. no W. 18th St. c.M. . P~ f:1· ~~ ~ a~t. If no ans .. &4+: x41. Apartments bfun<:hes end barbecues. c;::~Ni:. dfl Ma~il xln~.
Avail now. 963-· patio, gar., use of pOoi.. xlnl 34802 0.1 Obispo St. 2 BR. unfum ,..._ts d Y Y· an " · 0 ON WATER.f'RONT upper Spacious.. Ught .l Chfft')'? 1 S 40 x lharp o ce. ·
2BR n30. c·--. Yard. )oc, $210 mo. fl30..&891. ('96o-23SJ), KttcbcN. ef· . ...... • rps, p('IJ/child. 675-1094 eves l duplex. 2 Br. W/W crpt, ADULT LIVING Starting as OW as 1 .• m.O::..-"m-""'30l8""'-' ---~~1 ~--n.nge/oven, retrig. No pe!JI. Sat · l S I o a d t o .,... 445 Privacy. t;!o,,.pcts81 . 688 B W. N.wport ~ hticie1~1et J ~~mto01t .. 1 $14.0/mo. 968-l45S. 2 BR. , pd 1 hlld ~~,!. ln1. Adult.I, no pe1.1. I BR's FROM $157 b indg ems,5 1nuern ls"h·' wand. Business Rental Wll9on. 64~1 • . ea,_..., .,.,.,., u..u.-=• a , gaa •water . c . "''~'· 2 BR's FROM $In e roo , su
3BR.2ba.,clcan,5harp,.Nltt NEW unf 3 Br. CoNfo, pool, J)ll(nu, televlaion, saun1. LOVELY 1 Br Apt. Near ok. No pelt. Fro1n $140. OCEANrn.oNT _ 2 BR. unturn1s hed. Sorr y no "THE Factory" h&3 lhi?Pll
yard'. 3112 Coolidge Ave. Nr. s. Coai:L Pla.m, Ann 00.th. laUndry facilities, ~ ... ~JIU~~~. pets. Sl.35 !-!!:11652.Came.mn St. or Gar.age. $345/tno. Yearl.Y. 1k11 uliful Appotntmcnt• In· children .or pets. Models •,!.~t l~t/Mhl!Om. all"-~ll{Cf: ·~"·'!Jim' ... ".. •A~ o.,..,--~ eves meetingroom.closetoSM -O't£ Furn or Ualum. Call I d~--r•· 1 d 1 10 1 7 ·~" --~ ~ ~ 54+'«1,1~-, ""''~ Ce.memo and La......... cu ,. """' ...... ror 11C1> Ot't:ic. QPen a1 y o . book at ....... ·-~•-•cart! •--•• ATTRAC new 2 BR, I !"~"'. or Uot•·-.• 2 BR, 6'S-890ll. Sh.. Ca·-lng. Pri''"'' •·· ..,,._. EA~E quiet cW-de-cac. · n ......... Come p'• .. In our ...., ·v""'~ _.. •v•-A " hO et ,_ ~ • 1 ••u D I IJnfu 350 oo.-t1•:011 MY BA, adultl, no pei.. );11u • ...,,. __. •• • ••t inl 1 blk DELUX" 3 n. 2 Ba C/0 Q kwood 5 p, c. .._, ..,._, 3 br, new crpll, drps, up ext• m. harbor -1 urlI n 8 , .......... ..,. • u. • • c. uo·, • · P•Hos. Pool • Jitc-uu1 · a Newport BeM"h. , ...,..,... ...... Q..-_,1,.,_ .~ Ing and Wallace. SU>S. S4&-®4-to 11torcs. From $1:10. m1 bhna, frpl, enCI gar. 2 Volleyball --·-"'11~ ~'ra:aIT;';;e, gar, Belboe Pll'ltnsul• =~ia~',;;"~ and LAR'=GE2,B:~~~~& Eil1tore111 Mgr.SU.l831. ~~$.$.~.no pet1. Lsc BnQ·~. .. ........ · v · GardenApAttmenta TIME FOR
$1.20. rned, kkfJ/ptti. llP. Brtr.-thll· ad and rWei 3 BR oaOOo lor rent, l blk Newport Beach . R~t-A·HouM 9n.t43CI 2 Br, dm., 2 BA. S350. Yr.ly. reoVve ts ort on first S /mo, M8-13l9 from Mach, $235 mo plus BRAND Nuw Ocee.nlront 409 BAY St, Cost• Mes• IMntand lSth QUICK CASH
1359 E. 8'.ltio. Bl~ A. week'• rent. XTRA tra. 2 BR. 2 BA. laurxl cleaning dfP()llt. no pet& C.Ondomi:nhun. 2 BR, 2 BA Manager Bldg E ·103 M$-0550• 6-'2_8170 2 Br, tjUlot. ""'-tlr1tl. pr. ~or :113: Hunll....._. -h lac. carport, no poi.. $160. r.!6-1182. !:!!>~ y.., I• t •'. * 646 3Jl7 *
aduJtJ only, no pets. $165. Cost• Mell •qo•_..• SG-1947. 2 WEEKS F'REE RENT-1 1'""~"';:;:,::~;,,..~--~~ Tu.tin THROUGH A ~or 548-.1405. -4'..t.. $115 -ites , 2 BR. Adtllta. no pets. BAY Bf. f'rplc, ~ ~t. ~ 10 CHOtd ~th t.pla, 2, !I.~£ , .... ,...,.. Br N ... * SPECIAL * 1 BR. draptt:, t'&llf';,;;"• A BACHELOR< l 1 BR, ptl:iol, MEADOWS APT. 381 W. s.:$-1661, H PM. '4 BR. $275 To $6SO Yellrly ~'i"lt;_bld ' pOOI THF: ENRIQUE APTS I~~ hall actt. $1B6 = -· poll. gr'~ 'b:; M:: di :.!:'!.~""·No s~~RM.OOlfullaSLbli;J.~: ~:~:--~~ hll::.~ ~:, :,:i::1U,:i.~f~ ·r~~J''~ Tui ~;,DAILY PILOT
i.RG,:_,=. ~tn Hou9e. No Dan. Point· / .~bl1:· ::.!.. ~lh~ ctu1drtn or peta. NH? 5J5....'tm Mar. old. blk hvm beach A B.1on S.2lT.4. ll t'CI 1 \ pool ., WANT AD
",..-1•1)nut42 NEAR N'ew ~ 2 br, 2 bl, Set fer ~U. lmt 11att1. a... )'llf'd. &t&-1533 NICE 2 BDRM In 4-pltit. ihDp'g. 6irat or~. 2 BR. $1~ Jo~ ulil. ~~~. :~: (acUlik'a:
v. -~--_.,1 ~ bltm, launit. ~. end =-LA. ll blk W. of 2 BR., Dtw cup. A: drapes. sin#le 11.0ry, Ct'Ptt. drpa, PLUSH NEW 2 BR, 2 BA Pool. E •r. Olhwhr. 241 t1•n1111J alt cond. Located :
·-·----gar AM.nl'YI 1 bDt lll, or Slala-). co~ ft'dftor., bhn.s. tt(. RIO. !(a.rap. $140. ~ Ytar~$26.VMo.. AVOClldo . Of 646-ta>t. Q lt"t)ft' of Newport fW)I • 642 5671 r ·· -apt, '""' · ·-· I ~-~·-In =.. fill\. uft a o.'111 J>Uol: StU the old ltldl Bui the new I0-1148 $150 o. Mu 1•-"'IP""•,,,_ For 1hAt tWm Wider $SO, try ~ wanl 110 14 a lt')O(I In-Mchdden on lMOO 1 -t •
C1ailtrlfd Ad. stutt. " eeu ldte nmu ... "2-!liii Want ad l'l!'IUlts . &tJ..cnt the Pt"nny Plnt'btt. "'•nl ad ret:UJts • 64.UiG'JS ~mimt. ' ~''.'.·;1~1.,.~.:".:·"'"·..:!3M2l2.::::c::::....-··---------'
J • ., . •
••
I
•
Schools and
lnstru~tions
• iwrl.::":.v:ar~1;ety~'-Q~'rf1.~~~oo::l.iss~~~~~~~===r---~'l).jt·:. could intrn6uce Is.-... .,..,~'
'.!\ you to an · tomorrow. '
· I " HouMCINnlftl . For fvtthor '"'°""'ll ',NtoNln9 tho Dolly Pllol HOUSI Opt CLE•N School1 oiwl lrvcllon Directory " THE PROFESSIONAL
CAU 5678, m. 325 10~~.~~~ r - - - - --· - - - - -.. ll"''.'."" ___ """"._'.'."" ______ ... 1.--.,.'--""""--------'"'!'"'1! 641-6124 or 646-1127
DOG ~
OBEDIENCE
SCHOOt
I A N!W
I I'll.SCHOOL 1' " I TO MOTIVATE ~·
I
I
I
I
I t t d I omCE CLEANING. TOOi n eres e n D Toda JAPANESE Indy to do
A Real Estate Career? once 1' Y ~-:~ 7··
I YOUR CHILD ~J_,/
IN HIS l(OST
;:-1N FOUR wEEKs for A lovelier .'::';1~~ ~I=·~ ..
PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM c..11 ou<ch ,,1.150!!
"\.-...... I . FORMATIVE
I YEARS!
e A Total I ReadlMss Pro.,.am
~._,,I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
LICENSING PREPARATION FOR Tomorrow! lncomo Tu
• Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers T~~,~~~.~;J';'~ CHILDRENS CLASSES •-"'° •1~ t 6
PRIVATE TRAINING
&
CLASSES FOR ALL BREEDS
Novice Thru Ut ility
Also, Schooling For Dog Train~rs
MARTINCREST
KENNELS
20061 Cypress Santa Ana
Call 546-0989
-~ff.JlRl:LljT ......
.........--~...-~
• School •
for home buyers
Leam how and why •. • • • •
• • • • • • before you buy
One ni9t1t, 3 hour seminar,
By Ed Kasabia n.
7 to 10 p.m. Tuesday & Thursday.
No obligation or charge.
This is an excellent opportunity
offered to the public by -
Kasabian Real Estate
For reservations call
962-6644
l~~I ;;~"";;;;;;I~~,.
Business Renta1 445 Rentals Wanted 460
C 0 MM ERCIAL·Lease/700-tllATURE woman wants
sq. ft. $200 mo. & J:OO sq. srnall Apt, Corona del ?-.far
ft. $300 mo. 2193 & 2199 prel'red. Reas. Re f s .
Fairview Rd., C.!'11. Agt. 644--1608.
646-8811. \\ A1'\TED: Buildin~ for
STORE for lease, corner Thrift shop. Low rent. Call 64&-4988
J.tain & Orange, 1-t.B. 3000 ~~~~~~~~~ + sq ft. Call 536--0206 ;
1_1_nd_u_s_1r_1._1~R-•n_1_._1 _4_s_o_1 L __ ...... __ "' __ ~ll•J
READY FEB. Isl, 1973 _ .
LAGUNA NIGUEL
M-1
1600 SQ. F'T. & UP.
On San Diego Freeway
CaJI 831·Hi00
l!P.'.'INE lndustrir1l Area,
10.000 sq. ft.. dock high,
sprinklers. ~0-7630.
Personals S30
ALCOHOLICS Aoonymous.
Phone 542-7217 or write
P.O. Box 1223. Costa !\Iesa.
Storage 455
S\VING ING SINGLES
Call Jim 3-!J PM
539-3122
960' S1orai:C' Space S50 mo.
217 Avocado, Costa Mesa.
673-1109 or 968-1593
COUPLES PARTIES
Call Phi! 3 to 9 Pl\!
53>-3344
A good want ad is a good i.1.
Sell idle items . . 642.;ifi/~ \·estment.
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
I
I
e A Loaming
Environment
I e f.1ornlng/
afternoon
I Teaching
-Sessions
I
I
I
I
I
THE EDUCATIONAL 1
r:~ READINESS COORE :
I I I 2070 Moplo Avo., Co1to MtH I
646-4334 673-7412
I · Open 7:30 A.M. 5:30 PIM. I .. ___________ ..
are worth training for
• TRAVEL
• ADVANCEMENT
•SECURITY
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS PACIFIC
Learn How You Can Qualify
CGll .543·6655
610 E. 17th St., Sonia Ano
ACCREDITED SCHOOL
SEW-KNITS
HAS MOVED
TO THE CORNER OF
FAIRVIEW & BAKER
ACROSS FROM STATER BROS. MARKET -StiD Offering The
Most Experienced
STRETCH
SEWING
CLASSES
Mornlng -
1nd Evening
2975 FAIRVIEW ROAD
COSTA MESA 540·3268
• Ernp'aumant · Ass1'stance For " · mp1,"..,'°· . ~ ~ • • .... u 1111v Ballet (Cttehettl ll'&ded mt thoCI). Tap, Gym.nu-
. Graduates With Ucs, pr.-school dan.,.. 14, min. Open 9 AM-8 PM
438 N. El Camino Real L d' B k TEENS and ADULT CLASSES San Clemente. 492.m66 ea lllg ro ers. II 1 Jau, Hawaiian, Tap, Ballet, Keep.In-Trim, Belly Ironing
e Day And Evening Classes dancing. Profosslon•I Ironing
••• 645-8875 •••
• B k R fe I P Expert Instructors ... ro er 8 rra rogratn beginne" through odv1ne1d Jonilorlol e $110.full Course / JEFF·s CLEANING A99l1t•r now for n•w cltu•1 SERVICE QualJty cleaning
For Information-Brochure
FrM Gue1t Leetu,.
Newport, 311 No. (Old) Newport Blvd.
548-1192
EDMOND F. JACKSON
Real Estate Education Sincffl64
ACADEMY REAL ESTATE
CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS
GI-Master Charge & B of A
SADDLEBACK
LEARNING CENm
Enrichment Program For
PRE·SCHOOL CHILDREN
Limited to 6 children per class
Afternoon Readiii9 1Classes
Ages 8 thru 12
Individualized Program of Instruction
Diagnostic Testing & Evaluation
Licensed Educational Psychologist
All Credentialed Teachers
27601 Forbes Rd, Suite A
Laguna Niguel
830-2800
CLASSICAL BALLET
CREATIVE DANCE
AH Levels
e Pre-ballet e Beginner
e Intermediate e Advanced
Individualized In struction
ELIZABnH
School of Dance
Two locations:
3107 KilLYBROOKE LANE 1922 POMONA AVE.
(near Harbor and Baker) COSTA MESA
COSTA MESA
Phone 545-8163
Saddleback
Dance Center
Fredericka Mohr, Direct or
25071 Front Street • El Toro
• 586-5422
for home & business.
6'&-6384.
P1lntln9 &
P•perhonglng
CUSTOM PAINTING
lntC'r/Exter. Un/um. inttr.
spec. price, Free color con-
sulting & est. Lie. Ins.
Won 't be underbid. 642-6005.
No Wasting * WALLPAPER * When you call "?.lac" "==================i548-1444 646-lID • PAINTING & PAPERING,
LITTLE LEAGUE NURSERY
--sponsored· by
A11l1tonco Lngve of Newport Buch
HELP FOR WORKING MOTHERS!
NON-PROFIT DAY CARE CENTER for
preschool children, 2111 to 5.
LOCATION: Comer of Bay Street and
Orange Avenue, Costa Mesa (St. Jobn tbe
Divine Church)
FEES: based entirely ·on your income
HOURS : 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m .. Monday thru
Friday, year around. _ _.
PROFESSIONAL STAFF
CALL 645-6570 or 675-0191
20 yrs. ln Harbor area. Lie
& bonded. ·Ref's tum. SU-2356.
PROF. Painter, honest work,
reas, He'd I Ins. Int I ext.
tree est. Reh. 54&-2759.
PROF. Painting, alao roofs,
accous. cell. lnter/exter,
Lie/Ins. Free est. 645-5191.
BIG Disc. -W.P. & labor,
caU for samples & est., The
Hangmt :i 547-5846.
PAPERHANGERS
Reduced rates for the ott
season. 9-5, 646-2449.
-APT....IN.:rERlOR
& carpet cleaning. Ref• -
~·-~r:; ESflMi\TES 642·1059
1 .. fer, Patch, R'!!'.!!,.
* PATOI PLASTERING All types. Free estimates
Call 5<0-<825
P lumbing
Pm.ffiING REPAffi
No job too small * * 642-3128 *
Sewing/ Alterati?nl
Altorolion.--642-5145
Neat, accurate. 20 year• exp.
Tllo
CERAMIC TILE NEW I:
remodel, Free e&t. Small
jobs welcome. 53&-2426.
Lo.I 555 Cement, Concrete NEED help at home? \Ve ::..:.;;;.._______ have Aides, Nu r 11 ea,
LOST Jan 10, 1 pure German SPECIAUZJNG iu patios Housekeepers, Companions,
Shep. fem, 2 yrs, 1 mixed sidewalks & driveways. Lo~ ~~~akers, U P J oh n •
German Shep male 4 yrs, 1 rates, free est. X1n't job I===·==---~
mixed German Shep Fem. 6 done. HoWard, 644-7423 or E.XPERIENCED girl for
mo. Vic: Elden, Del Mar, David 642-9852. cleaning, COB.Stal area.
Nowpt Blvd. 540-8847• PATIOS.PLANTERS Reteren"''· 547-2236.
LOST vicinity or Beach Blvd All Concrete work. Brick, Help Wanted, M & F 710
& Atlanta blondish tan &lumpstone wk. 894-3533. • Accounting Clerk
female dog, 1h collie, red PATIOS ·"·· d Sa ll ••~·~i • W1UN1, rives. w, Beautiful modern ofc in co ar, ~onu · break, remove & replace F a s h i o n Island. Great
REWARD. 3 nftl male concrete. 548-8668 for est. ctr\\'orkl'rs & f 1ne 11 t :::::1~. PJa~':ta & t:~, .c_h_i_ld_c_._,._____ ~~~~ ~e~ J:s: ~
431-5990 CSeal Sch). EXP'D Olild Care 2 yrs & Jan Page, 540-6055, Coastal
1-..i-I~
up. My home, Betwn wuson Personnel Agency, 2790 & Canyon Sehl. 642-780'l Harbor Blvd,· CM.
ACCTS PAYABLE
CLERK-
Additiona Remodeling Must be exp'd. in all phases •••••••••I Gerwick & Son, Llc'd " pertinent to A/P function. oabysitting 673-ro41 * 549-2170 Excellent benefits. For in-
--'---"-----JACK Taulane _ Repair fOmt!J.ll~n, call Mrs, l\lary
BABYSITTING in my home, remod., addlt. 20 yrs. exp. McGmnis, at 538-9631 Santa
24 hrs. Resp. Playmates, Uc'd. My Way \A. 547--0036. "An::,•·==~~~-~
anytime, gd meals exp. iJraffiftl ACCOUNTING Clerk I AIR.
548--0439. For Costa Mesa sailboat
THE Youngset School, ages
2%-6, open 8 am-7:30 pm.
Prof. teachers. $21.) wkly.
646-3106 ar ~ 1057.
PLANS--Houses. Rem 0 d , manuf. High numerical a~
Room Additions. $50 up. titude & 2 yrs ixper. req'd.
557--0626 557-9695 Oppor. for advancement
within 1 yr avail, For info, Gardening call, 642-0542. Equal oppor. WILL BABYSIT, DAYS, IN E I MY HOME. MESA VERDE. PROFESSIONAL Gardener, ~m=p=O=Y';;'c.,· ~----1 e VERDE tree WOlk, pr u n i n g , ACCEPTING a pplications 979-5294. sprinklers cleanup jobs for graveyard dbbwasher.
al
EXPER. babysitting In my landscaplrig. Geo r i e ; Colony Kitchen, 2 71 4 2
I home. Infants we1come. 646-5893. Ortega Hwy, San Juan
Petton* fdcsa Verde Refs. SCS.-1791. E.XP. HawaUan Gardener. Capistrano. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~I :------~~~~!;;;~;;;;;;;;;~·~;. Complete garden serv. AIR CLERK
Loollnl-Loot .........
BABYSI'ITING -licerued, )camalanl, 6 4 6 -4 6 7 6 , Growing local !Inn offers -------••I good ret Hot meals. Good 642-13JT. great oppor. to advance. Personals 530 ·personefs 530 Found (frff ads) 550 Lo1_1 ______ s_ss care. Any time. 968-0887. LAWN •. maintenance and Look at the beautiful yacht
_*_H_l_N-DU_S_P_IRl_TU_A_L-!Sf--* VERY tired, starving, THIEF: Wasn't much then! Builders hauling, free estimate, ~el!~~~~:
WANT baby grand or con.,
!>ale. \Vil\ trade 1966 Kar·
mann Ghia or '6.S l\IC'ycrs
~faruc dune bugcy.
Let this ad change )'(IUt fR£E! \vell-tralned, G e r man to begin with le ewn less WllL build « repair 638-99.U. Coastal Personnel Agency,
TRADE 5 acres in Cleve-whole outlook on life for ..... Shepherd fbund In EastbluU. now. Thanks for no thin ho -~ ~---rol •-rvlCOI -H ~-Bl·~ C.M I d N I. I F "~ ·~-N rt Be h mallc~us dam•~. Please aey g your me ·~s. -, -.. ,...., ar...,.,· vu., · an . a sona orpst for better Professional advice Hasic Boating Course Contact 1.uc ewpo ac "' ..... ~ Gene E·-s ·~ J838 -7-:j-;:-::-:-:-::--:--l;ii;iii;iii;iii;ii;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;•I
54.~-3625
'66 Toyota Crown 4 dr. 0 .0.
R.H. Ex. transp. Trade for
jewelry-or -anylhing nf
value. T:ii \V, 19th , Ci\1.
-548-6318/642-8277.
\YlLL trade either S20.000
seUIOned 2nd TD; $15,000
or $12.000 2nd TD 's for
cqt.iily in unils, N'pt arrb.
Coast Properties, 673·5410.
ORANGE Co. Silverado
rapeh k acreage. Ideal syn.
dicalion, Church, spa, ecol·
ogy group. Consid exec hm,
dt$ert, boat or 'r 838-4651.
$1001 equll) in 1% acres
l)f choice Antelope Valley
property. FOR -Boat or \
~!?
hou~ in Ne1.\'port Beath or on life. Lie. Readings dally. ~farina High School. Jsg?t Animal Shelter. Rive lamily chance to • ., .... ' ""':-· naih Guttens Installed. ASSE?.mLERS ~ .. :.i~~ eo_ sla ~1esa. Owner. 10 AM·lO PM, 492-9136. .Springdale, l-1.B. Tues. Jan· F"OUND small white female ransom chair. Sentimental C1rpet Serfit• QUallty work. Reaaonable. URGENTLY ~ ~~ 492~" 312 N 1 "· 30tl value. $200 reward, no ques---.. ~-·< ~· -~......,.., o. E U:tmino U11J1' 1• dog, approx. 10 weekl old, tions aaked 613-1901. JOHN'S C"-* .. Upholstery "'"-.::: e""'"" e.. :ioo-.wuo LAP.GE Ocenn View Lot, Real, San Clerl\enre. 7 pm red collar. vicinity Orange ... I"",.,. Haull!!!
rrade ., f ' Cour~ conducted bv I-Junl· la M wsr. reward! One .,.. old Dri·Shampoo tree SCotch-'-~·-· -~-----~1 NEE DID equ1 y or 1nrome • 8t 23rd St., Cos • e58., ,,. ard (SOil Retardants) 1 · rnwrrtynrwn~11111veyou? THIEF: Wun'! much there ington Beach Power Squad-~64>--0643::.o=:...· ---,--..,..--min Schnauzer, lalUpep-gu • LOCAL ·-.i ..... abauU-.. ... .....,
lo begi l'h & I · ron Wo """,.,~A ""r CRutusl No ........ • .. -De~rs &.. all color ........ ,._ -... "$ 646-0854 n w even ess · ;;iuo-uio.n. ..-• • --.....,., brlgh,.hers & 10 m!nule student. Ulfle '1'\fek. Reu. now. Than.ks ror 00 BE a Hotllner at Home 2 Tone, grey stripe, long at Warner & Springdale, btach for white 'cat""'l!I. 5J4..l846 or $.2l&i ~IOBILF. Home 24x5.5 2 Br. malicious damage. Please haired female cat, about 10 H.B. area. Jan 6. Call -r ,... YARD cl 2 Bn. + Dt>n in Driftwood give family chance to The Center will train you wks old . On ,Santiago, near 846-5686 daya, 846-3169 after Save your money by .aving • · garage eanups. e
, Beach Club. H.B. l'or 4 BR ransom chair. Sentimental cau 642--0377, lOAM-IOPM Irvine, N. s. In a tree. 2. me extra ttlpt. Will clean DrlRemove ~~Ing·' dir:,,1 ,!2· ~
I'" • al s-ard " 54&-0709 living rm .. dining rm . .l vewyt, •·~ . ~ --. e . ll•f' or mcome property. v ue. .,..,.,, rew ' no que..-Social Clubs 535 ~-=.c..,-· -.,,,=-,,.==,; LOST: Charm bracelet with hall SlS Any rm $150 S LO ER d
5J&.OUt. !loT\!I asked . 673-1901. ---------BLACK & white longhaired medical charms . couch $10. Olair ss:lS Yrs'. KIP AD I: ump truck
PIT Bull,' She.v.erd. '64 l\lAGAZlNE editor & author. f'lND YOURSELF kitten wearing flea cellar REWARD! I ....... t .....,,.,,,. not work. Omcrett, 8J!pba.ll
B k "" t nd ,., Neptune _,.. l!:'fJ:._,,....-, exp. 1 w...,. -·-. aawing, br'fa.Jdn .. , 84&-nlO. ui~ or R11mhlrr for lu1n-age !'J(I, wlll house ol" IN SOMEONE EI.SE OU u........ v•.rv... method. I do wotk myself. • ...
Unskll.led
ASSEMBLERS
PACKERS
Wol"k when It where
)'OU want!
her. plaster, mOtorcyclc largeboat sit lor rent & utU. DISCOVER Fountain Valley. 96&--3422. SMALL tJ'1¥ mother dog,, -i'Good='-'rel=.-"53\"'o-01-=0I'-".'---~-lu_n_ln~u._ __ _
rlishwasher or 7 ' in NewpoM area. Local refs. DISCOVERY W\UND: . male Whippet, c•--) · Al V'· " ~ lnt...:111
C 11 '° W . Cl 'fied Ad N 611 -, __ ,._ •-pups V>e. ta ~<a. :orpentor Dtdlco·~ CINnl--' a "'11-5027 rite au1 o. • ..,,4 .,. -· 213 _.. .,,,.,. well trained, Tatoo ullUl.ft' ' .. _, .... Fri ~"7 ..,. ...
·n HONDA rn "'°· 45.000 Daily Pilot, P. o . Box IS60, J:"~~~-~~~~~~~·~ hlnd ieg. 83H830, or -··-· • ··~~ · All .,,,.. ot * WE DO EVERY11l!NG * Penonnel Service ~J ILES. \VANT V\V OR C.osla Me111., 92626. 6'13-«)70. LOSl' black female poodle, 6 •'CARPENTRY* JWI. Free est 6*-2839 778 W 20th CM .=,;~-'-;--:==-;:= mo. old vie. 22nd, C. M. • • • • DATSUN OH ' .
1
Jal FND male Whippet bet GIS-0095: -. Ir. & om. 5)6-1648 Xlnt Houoecleanlng 642·7SU ~2592 CALL PROBLEM Pregnancy. Qin-• --_. _ w11a•-on a•·me•h. V c. ~. ~ Own ---rtatlon • $40-9T19 • ndentlal, s y mp~ th e t t c .,_ 0~ Aparbnenls N. B. GOLD Weddina: Ring, tiny Cement, Concrete .,,. ._,..._ ~T Equal Opper. Em~
pregnancy cou~lltlg. Abot-o ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ -"""· ' roM!buda. Vfc. Balboa Jst.1----------SJ.500 eqty ln 3)' Olag Sloop, ACTIVE DENTAL OmCE lion & adoptions r'l!f, AP· ~,., ... v ... v Re rd' 6'73-9164 * \VAU< Oft Concrete, Nol JAPANESE lady to 1k> ASSEMBLY worken Boe.t
nu paint, e&nva f.'OVr, 4 cyl .!OQG...-Tradr. for Boat . CARE. 642->k16. F f R I · SSO BLACK &. gold female pup. wa ' · MUD. Call MM, Cement hOu&ework. Own tralllSl.k'.l'~I\· &Membly. No exper. ftect •.
inbrd q, 11~ 2, for van rust Deedl -or Real PALM & CARD READINGS ound ( rM 1 Vic: Enlign SchooJ.ctiff Dr. va~nc~ cost money! Rent Contractor, 64+-0687. non. 54().-1332. 3rd shift, llpm-7.tm. Aoply
car. 'T.O.P. of ~ at tate,,._ • 646-7000 Tells Put, Present Ir t'ND. Dach&bund, fml, blaclc Ne'W'POf't Heights. MIH56'9. ;your ~ •. a.pt . ., store CUSTOM ~ WORK Like to...'J'nde!_OUr Trader's aMt ~le at Upm or~·
S07.68 ml). "94-s&'W, m.-. IU"'I" • 8 P.M. Future Cll3) 694-1350 Fully \vith silvel"-brown fett. Vic. N"eed a "Pad"T PIAtie an •di bl(la., etc. thnl 1. l>l.1ty Pilot brMs. WAL.M~lol. ParndlR cdumn ii for youl lh .. -urtge)l' Yacht -...
··-... •••••••••••••• Ile. JoAnn st.. Cl\!. 64.'>4374. ~Cl=ll-"642-56ll.==----CluoUlld Ad. ~ Pool deeb. Doo. 4. 5 llnos, l da/'! toe 5 buckl. 1631 Pla.,..lla, CM • . , • . .
•
•
•
(
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I
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I .
I -~-~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~!'~,~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~ r,;,a;,, J""'>' JO,"" OAllV PILOT %3 I .......... I[)]] [ llt ... J-l!Ill I I ;Is; • l[Il) [ ..... ,,;;.. l!Ill I "'"" .. 1[11)1 ~1 ~,. ... ~, .... ~1[11)~1~1 ~,.~ ..... ~ •• ~l[ll]~i~ ~[ ~-~--~l~~I ~-~~l~~I
HoipW..,led,M A, 710 HolpWonlocl,M AF 710 HolpWontoQ, MA F 7lt HolpWonled,fo\ AF 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help Wonted, MA F 710=•-ut 818 Ml ii ' Ill
FUU. Time Dependa'ble day ·-1ce I n.out
A11t. Mono .. r r. $IOO
Well "known . C0111-lt'fk•
lbarp a.mblUola indiv. who
hu eye on career. Ten10c
bt>netit1 &r xln't oi,>por. here. cau 1..&LACe Scott, 8Jl.2700,
Dt-nnla I: Dermll Pel'IOllnel
~ency ot Irvine, llJ82 ,,._ Dr.
• Al1l1t.nt Manager
Womeris apparel. Need for
our So, Cout Plaza atQrc.
Muat hav~ 10lld sale" Cxpcr. Please wrhe lntom1al
ruwne to llubbub, 2241 No. Ora.nae Mall, Oranac, Ca. 92665. Attn: Prnident. •
AUTO WT BOY. 5~ days. 8
to 5 Mon. thru Fri. 8 to 12 Satt:. Good benelita. vaca·
Uon with pay. See Vic
Snyder, ATLAS Chrysler·
Plymo<Uh, 2929 lllll'hor
BJvd., Costa Mesa.
AVON CALLING!
To .help with t~ alter-the-
Mikla.Y1 blllA. A splendid
earnlna: OppOrtunity in your
own neighborhood.
540-7041
BABYSITTER, cxper.
Refined, rella., happy for 2
children. 1 sch! age & l lod·
dler. 7:30-6:30 Mon thnl
Fri, Own transp. Lite
hslrpng. $50 wk to start. Call
aft 6:30, 64&-0616.
BJ\BYSIITER, days, my
bouac or yours. In NB area,
for 2 g!rls, age 2 & 5, 6'13-4192
Denture Ttch $20K Dlahwl.llher, ~ply RJaier L99al S.Crlt•ry SECRETARY • WHO WANTS TO WORK! Fair Weather Friends STEREO. l9TJ Garr a.rd
Marvtk:M.ls Polit.ion tor tal· RL'ltaL1t'lnt. 16 J'uhion Exper. 6444610 9C Inspectors-Adminbtrtttl~. The T. M. DkIVE A CAB? Anybody can b.· lru:ndly model. Systembed au t 0 ented lndlv. wbo .rtkl Center Newport Bcb bet 9 Ii: UFEGUARD w/1enior IUe T" $4 ptr hr Comtnu.nicaliona C.0, A CHOOSE )'OW' houn, Y.'Otk \l•hcn you are a1vlng lll1.<11\ changer, 200 ntt am/fm
above avtraae e-= U or 31.5. -savmc card. 1$ hrs per NO FEES Sub&ld.i.ary rl. the Times ?oflr-tor )'(M.lnlill. be your own business. But voice a 1.'Clm· re<~lver-. Jen a en air ~~.0~i1oo~~•b l A :_:! ~'!it T"'9 will = l~P&,•lnt~ Min. 1 yr exp<?rlenee ~~it~8fo:'!t e~~~~t: ~-~t!d.or s;r;llp~'. ~~t~r.' t!'1~r~~~a d~~~~ =r.n~~U1 brti~1ra !w taro
Denni. PtC'IOflnel A&eocy of pick. 11.11 ~ ~tut. FOR.EST 11 ' COUNTRY rn!!: ~ ~ l~lion. bll'°'-i• secretaey to work Sup'pl~ •nt · )'QUl . 10 · • srn111.'.!!i drop to fi'O'>l'n.s • OOx. \Vas left unclaimed on
ltvige, D2 Mlcbebon Or. Learn va~ facet.I of lhit CLUB. 24152 ~edo W~. -,.. .. i • wor n me area directly for lhe Presi~!'.ll ol Drive 8 ~ f bJ'1.pr ~r!'~ "-onl5 bec<Jmo s~uts _ lsynWtaf. Now. $134. O'edlt
DENTAL Rec11p l lonl1t 1t1mulatinr co. Call Klm El Toro.~. II t~ls Cable T:V. ~· day. Apply ur µe rson, somellrnH. At AL S CAR· do:•111. t 141893-0SOl.
Newport Beach Orthodontic Clark 833-271'.Xl Denni.& Ir; LVN ,exp..-r, pttf'd, 7-3:30. \\e att loo~ing for a lief YeUov.• Cl'b O>., 1~ ~:. 16th Pl-:J', u.·e like lO be friends SPECIAL &l\asc carpet uJe .
Office. Top NJuy. Llbtral ~ rer.onnei Agenc ot Me<l~atlons & team ltader. tctarter wtvi l!I mature, pols-St .. Co&la h1esa. "'Ith our cu.slomers, t:ven Frorn $2.~ yd. Can Install fr~ berietlt.. Plcuant 6'" Irvine nt Mlehelm rfr. Jmmed optnln&. Park Udo f'd and ~s exce~lcnt typlfli WIG Stylists & managen for 111 "stonny weathf'r. ·· Is Rens. Guj:\r. fi.12-TIOJ eve.
vlrooment. Dtntal exp req. ' C.onv. Hmip, 4ti6 Fltij!shlp Si & shorthal1d Skills nnd at Oran Counties flnt! \\'. !«ln1eth1ng \\'tona! Tell u.~! NE\V batlery charger 12 volt
Age 25-35. No amoldnl. G enlr•I Ofc Work Rd, N.a. No phone calls • l" leru1:t 3 yn recent ~x-store ge cba.ln. Call o.!nn:. WP.'ll n1ake it right -without cornp;icl. :'>lany use 8 •
Mi-2626. 1882 Reynolds St., S.A. please. l·fllna tc6 ~~nceC:O:~f J'!:· ·rt~1; t213l 96&-465 today. fl. hgAhtL. 'S CARPET 5-f~-5966 aft. 5P~t
DENTAL AuUtant, exper. GELCDAT TOUCHUP LVN & EXPER soi...00 ' WORK al home-phooe sal<1 ~IREWOO"'D--.96"'2"'-4"'"22~3,...
chairs1de w/lulow~ of Ex'pc__!... Coo.stal R.ecreation NUl:llCI Al4cl M:!-3001 500 Newport Center Dr. T. M. Communlcationt Co. Exper. pno:fd, Call Colleci .&. RUG · WORKS Stacked &: Delivered
t1e1k. Salary open. SeOO. Inc, 642-0542. Eq, (fppar. MAIDS lor motel work Apply N Suile 5a> SJJ..3861 An Equal Oppty Emplo)'(!r. {714) 823-3438. 293 _ S. r.1a1n St., Orange Miscellaneou1
1-eaume lO Box 1799, 1A& En1ployer. in pel'50ll. No pttone ca.ll8. ewport Beach 1375 Sunllov1er Ave, Costa 542--6400 • ~-9909 W•nted
Bcll. GtRL Fri~, 1 Ji.rl ofc for Sea Lark ?t1otel 2301 Mesa, ~4li. PRIVATE party mu st ________ 8_20_1
DTE1N
0
TNAI
8
LT
/ 0
RFEFCIECPE· bw:y re boat ~. in Newport Blv., Costa Mesa. Real Est•te Sales An equal o1pporhmity I -11 1~ sacrifice fine art collection. * WANTED * Newport Sch. Bkkpng MAINTENANCE man (han-FREE emp oyer . ~I V All items 50".k or Jesg or ap-
AtANAGEft...Fut mo v l n e necess. Ap1ily, 3502 So. <b'manl part time lite Secretary praised value. Chinese Trailer for it Jt. boat. Must
aroop Pl'tlctioe ln El TOro Greenville, S.A. paintmi, carpentry ,;, elcc-Purc hes Sec'y to $9K Cluisonne 12" de-ep brown be in good condition A rea-::a ~ lnt!tjfi~ llAMBURGER Han1let ia jrlcaI. Requires toobi. $3.~ LlcenH Train Inv Take l giant JJtep, I.his is a Antlqu•t 800 ~~ 11~~!~ in r~~1~~ sonabll', Call 1137.5003 an
tutive ~ Muat en • looki ng for outstanding per hr. Call Mrs. Tillotlon Limited Time Only real career marker. Jndiv. lantern. Teak hue. $3((). 6 pnt. !bu~ to cqanb.e bet 0.: cooki, mW!ll be exp'd, cleaJl,. 557-8300 lor appt. ' FamOUJ1 license coune now chosen for labulous spot SCR «M LETS Pair of siglX'd JaPflnese col-Office Furnlturt/
ctl U ,,_ shaven. no moustache, MANAGER TRAINEE avail.ab.le lhn1 Tarbell Com· stands good chance 10 tie-H • ... E I a .~ 8' a 11 um e exp'd In ..-pin• food & ,,_K come ........ has;....,.. og•nt or p1·1nt.s 14"x6" $75. Sidney qu p. =billtlel of otlloe r•~ .,.. _ _. ~Y· Appuur.ull fully re-r~~ M~ • ANSWERS Yard se"~"a ...... 11'"·'5" $100.
824
'" • broiler Ir: -in, Al80 i,....i,1 .... ......,, a management ~r "··-ed -"" t'-Great benefits & 00........ """" "'" ""
open. call ~1333. tor ou~ wai~ in local branch ol na~ally ::'"or ~=ri~~c~:~ here. Ca.Ii Marlon M;;;, Large modern oil palnting
DENTAL Sec'y-Bookkeeper. in the field of food and known co. Earn whil e you people. Openliils available. &'J.3.2700 DenrUs & Dennis $.ll5. r.1any other misc.
Exper. or college. Call cocktail. Mu.st be over 21. leam.-AP(>roved Q[ job Complete traitllng program. Personriel Agency of Irvine, Cu<IJcl -Begun -Linen -Items of Clolsonnc, glass
546--3(0). Come in or ca.111545 Adami, tra.lrnng. Call Bob Stark, Future manaa:ement oppor· 2082 Michelaon Dr. Rcfu&"e. -BUG GlJ!:' silver, etc. Must see to aP:
DISHWASHER 54&-7392 aak for the 54().6000, Coutal Pel"llOllllel tunlties. Call 1.!r. Sloan at Tounst reports: I stayed preclate. Call &1~1. ~
M be cl A 1y nuU\agef Mr Ben Hagan or Agency, 2190 Harbor Blvd. 832-5440. SECRETARY at a motel that had a sign * AUCJION * . ust ean & neat •. pp Mr Len V~tta. 0.1. ' • ou1s.ide that said a.ir-condi·
~I'[) DESKS UJ.$70 wk/asmb
brnches $20·$50 file stor cir
i1. 867 \V. 19th CM 64,_3408
Pi•nos/Or:g•hs 826
ORGAN HOBBY
in person, Surf &: Sirloin, · TARBELL $:;.oc\ • f"ree tioned. They had a bell-boy :Fine l"umlture
5930 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. f HOTEL desk clerk, exp ~y. MrolANJC \Y/exp. 10• Young e_xecu~ive net'd~ bri~ht \\.'ho came over every du,y & Appllancei Don't buy any <"-gan until
DISHWASHER, exp'd. Part apply in person. Jamaica manage station, mu.st have REALTORS attracuve g1rl to assist lum. and sprayed the room with Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.n1. you can play! Non·player.:;
time top pay. 1JH01 Warner Inn, 2101 Pac. Cst. Hwy., ref's, Permanent. UNION Irvine. nn empty BUG GUN." Windy's Auction Barn weloonic to attend tree work
A ' Eut F tain V1y Corona del Mar. R E TRAINEE AlllO Fee Jobs ":· ' oun ' OU.. 393 E. 17th, C.M. • • RIVIERA EMPLOYMENT GERMAN grandfather clock. 2075~ Newport, CM 64G-8686 &hOps. For information
545-3726. HOUSEKEEPER. Uve in I: R.E. Broker & Developer AGENCY, INC. Dark Oak. 7 feet .tail. Behinrl ""'""'s BIA .. , 1.fat'I Contact: Tom U\elerlch
BEAlJI'lCAN·Hair Stylist 1 ~:::;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; companion who drives & ••-..1• I n.ck Of will train A sponsor for Ornate fa and ghJs;[;i'::::;::;:;.,c·2-vc=-"'C-""'~""-6412851 needed wlth cllentele, top C<>Clb. Waterfront apt, $300. m.uic• Piii c licenee. Call 56-1124. 2082 Business Ctr Dr. Ste 290 $675 642-1~ wei 2 DESK S 41-nd BOOK· Coast Mu~ic Service cx:muniailon or rent space. EDP SENIOR per mo .. Reply Box 753, Bal-Wonderful doctor seeks neat Irvine 833-9410 . . SHELVES .SU IT ABLE
Newporter Inn B e au t y OPERATOR boa., calll. 92661. friendly assistant. IAvely <Orange Co. Airport Areal ANTI~UcTu~li $Sae ~rap h FOR CHILDREN or else Nt!wpo'f:!tl:dM.!!aHlll'bor
Salon, 644--0040. Housekeeper lO live-In. To ofc &: beautiful location Recl:pt,l'I'ypist $500 SECRETARY mac · , , · Santa "'OU.Id be ideal tor extra ~~=~~"=':.:=~I
BEAUTY Operator, t/t:ime Newport Beach Financial care for 2 children & home. 8"'llits kind personable in-General OHlee $450 Do you have administrative Ana Ave. 8 • C.!\f. storage space In your gar-*PIANOS.ORGANS
shampoo girl & aaststant. Services lnltltuHon has lm-Rm &: brd salary East div. Call Norma Sands, Exec. Se<:'y to pres $700 ability? Pres. of land age. PRICED FOR li\1· Going Out .For Business •M• w "---i H N 8 mediate ~nin&:-You will bluff "-" • ~-Bo. u · 833-2700, Dennis & Dennis F/C Bookkeeper $750 developing co. needs you, ~e_pll•nces 802 MEDIATE SALE. 1212 s. Best quality • prices • suv. ~.w • .....,... wy, • • 310 · ......... ...... eau, Personnel Agel'V"V of Irvine, Secretaries t irl!llfl -0 -hh St 0 -· 1 Ana ~-BOAT BUUDERS _TOP irir operate cc.mputeni 644-4917. · 2082 Michelaon-Oi-. Prope' -· Casu-•ty o -..v Relaxed atmosphere. Start AUTOMATIC washer $50. !~3,..., ., .-.1 a , nawai-Stelnw11y-Baldwinl et~
" on a 3 day shl!t basis. can-0 U SE KEEPER mid • ~ .... $l5K $600. Call Helen ti ayes, Electric dryer $45. Portable ~~=.c=-=· ------I Player Pianos &: Ro! s
Serious, amb!Uous, career didate m\151 have minimwn H · , · • MEN wanted f/time Jar Underwriter ~. Coa.!ltal Personnel dlshv.'asher $40. 64&-584&. M AN u FACT u RE RS Rentals .•. , .• , We Buy-SeU
leadeni ln trades & mgmt. 3 yean heavy IBM OS. dle-qed to care for aeml various car wash duties. u Inventory Clrk $500 Agency, 2700 Harbor Blvd., . Closeout! All new ladies Dally l(}.6 Sun 12-5
Let'• talk! (213)831-81m. 1.M experience plus aood invalid lad)'. 6 day wk. Mllit you're reliable & looking for A/P Cleric $450 C.M. ~ 1 YR. guarn, del & 1n-sportsv:car, fantasti c FIELD'S PIANOS C•shltr~ar W•sh kunot"'"::~. e ot JCL and have car. Newpcrt 6T.Hl917. steady work, apply in AIP &: Payroll $475 s=ARY w ed stall. Late mod. all cycle ............... , Lat t tyle , 10 C.OSta Mesa (Il4l 64&-lZO w~ ·~ u I 2 Cost Acooun!ant SL1K t..t..:K.t:T ant , Exp'd Kenmore washer. 839-lm ._.,. .... m . es s s. Laguna Beach 644-4460 Hou~~"""'"' ve-n, person to llli!'• Lldo Cat· $500 Yacht Broke~c. Phone · to 5 Sat., Feb. 3, 12-4 Sun *PIANOS*ORGANS*
CARPET SALESMAN Unique working environment cdablldreHn,B~" ~· TV, 5 Wu~ 481E.17th SL, C.M. ~~~f!'s (P.LJ $500 645-6600 -e DISH\VASHERS, \\"ashers, Feb 4. 1866 Tustin Ave., Hammond, WurlltJer, many
A: top bene.flta. ys. · · ~ MW.. FOREMAN C $550 · dryt..on, reblt, ' guarn & Newport Beach, {across ~·10~~~ ~an~·~ HOME ASSEMBLY 5 yn min exp, Furru1ure JVP 0N1wPORT SECREI'ARY, good typist, delv'd. 839-7620; 546-5218. Imm the Boy's Clubl. ~h~~! ~u':Zt ~~~~
wanta lO earn $12,00l 10 A~ply 9-12, Mon. thru WOO. Need man w/garage space cue goods. Great future for Personnel Agenct perm.anent, iJ,ullS. 1 i me · OVER 200 y,·ashers, dryers, LRG Norge Frostrree re[rig al\\•ays at
S23.500 comm. Car expeMe, ACIFIC MUTUAL & pick-up avail. to assemble DotoP _,~ T-~·~--bene1~1!; 833 Dover Dr N s'EtartingRVICEat ~ · Tl.,...O . 15· _ 51ro,!rl~?tors· from $39.~. S25. APT. Sz range, $23.50: Wal/ichs Music City
profit sha.rlng, career op. 700 Newport Center Drive met!l)_pmduda-at-home. ul.11AJ__ ~OCl>o '"'" ·• • • p •A N Al· ,,....,,,.ov. Nu RCA TV antenna, cost
port. with Calif. largest ex-, Newport Beach Will earn In excess of $100 Armstrong, Irvine, 557~. 642·3870 tendanl, Full &: part time, Rent Washerl/Dryert $74, make offer. 2 chest ol South Coast Plaza MG-2.830
pa.nding carpet ch a In . per wk during next 8 mo·s. MOLDERS-Fiberglass, ex· 40 or over Gentleman W· $2 k drawers $10 ea, Nisorted PRIVATE PARTY WANTS
Carpeteria, ask for Gary, Equal Oppor Employer Phone· Gordon G i 11 e Y, per. & trainees. ~tor 3 Service Sta. Exp. Apply '':, ~~ m:mt· lamps pictures frames so TO BUY PIANO FOR
64&-?Da'.l, -====~ ITI4) 842-4488. shifts. Apply at gate, 7am, Receptionist Chevmn Station, 664 S. forth.
0
Deadllne °Feb. 3·Hur-CASH 835-2178. ="'=~=--~-~ • IF you work at a plant or 00 3pm, &: llpm. MacGregor Leg•I to $500 Coast Hiwy, Laguna Beach. Whirlpool Washer ry~ 536-3200. ~h~~2 1:~· ~ AElectrobnl ic ~~fum~oye~ ~than~ ~l Corp. 1631 Placentia, P::tiv~fc =~ ~ery ~l s~~;, d~~ir~t~~~ c.~r;:·:s. 54~72 1-""~-'~;::1 "".,"'o ""=;:~~1~~y-64~c,_~L,~;,~s-1~1:1~~ A~~Rd Sp=: ~~~f req. wn trans. Ssem en cash, call (714) 646-9760 aft NEED reliable adult woman client.s, answer phones, etc. Station, 3000 Fauvlew, C.M. E l nt 8081--"::,..:=::__;:....:o:_::::;:_. w/s.ac. $650. 540-9030 PM.
SoldererTouChup ti :30 & wknds. Days (213) for hou sekeepina: &: Attorney ll a real" gem. SERV IC E S ta tion qupme Cla.ssWed Ads ... 642·5678 Nttdn·"Pad"~Placean ad!
Clerical Temporary * Typlall * S.Cret•rl1s * Bookkffporl * PBX Oparor.n * R ... ptlonl1t1 *Siano• * Office Clark•
NO FEES
Immediate Short & Lo'ng
Tenn Temporary Assip.
menll With The Service
That Workl For You .••
Sigmalic6
S02 N•wport Cent.r Dr
Suite 5XI
Nowpori Baach 133-3161
COCKTAIL WAITRESS
Exper. only. See Penionnel
manager. Balboa Bay Club,
1221 W, Coe.st Hwy., N.B.
COMMERCIAL leaalng agent
for new ollice building in
Orange Co. Salary + com·
mtssk>n. Real Estate license
destrable. C.Ontact Mr.
-Willlams, 9 am-11 :30 am, -C OOK/Houaekeeper.
Bayfroot N.B. Uve-in. Adult 1-y. ref!. Salary open.
&n-24.19.
COOK, ff!m, 4 half days wk.
must be able lO prepare for
25
COOKS, f/time, 1 yr exper.
$45().$52.5. Park Lido Conv.
Hosp .. 466 Flagahlp, NB.
COUNTER >LADY
to Work In new dry cleaning
agency In litg. Bch. area.
Musl have good knowledge
of business. 842-2000.
CUSI'ODIAN, part time/full
time. Call 842-4461 for in-
terview. Community United
Methodist Church
Data Proceulng
Temporary-Keypunch
All Shlfll available
throua:hout Ora~e County
NO FEES
II
Siplatics
500 Newport Ceiter Dr.
Suite 520 Newport Bea.ch
-133-3161
\Vire wrap 587-4223. childcare. Varied llrl. for 4 Terri.fie oppor. to break into Sal~Top pay -fringe ASAlll Pentax (spotmatlc)
PC Assembly I?>.IMED. o-nlngs tor 11>-15 \Wll behaved cblldren ages this stimulating field. Call benefits. Exper prefd. f'ull Super-Takumar 1:14 lens
Day & Nite Shifts Avail. ladies full°br p/time. Paid 3-16. Greenbrooke tract, Debby Dugan, 833-2700, Den-& pt time avail. Apply Shell Vlvitat Tl"le-:r.oom ssmm:
NO FEES \\.'kly. Eam xtra money or Fountain Valley, Good pay. nis & Dennis Personnel Station, 17th &: Irvine, N.B. a!Smm. Phone. 642-8970 Must have refs. For tn-Agency of Irvine, 2082 t ~-~-~~--"-'= [-"==-"'="-'=='--I start a p!nn. career. For ie-"ew __ ,, ~°''· Michelson Dr. SERVICE Station Attendant inlervlew call, 892--5333. ,-.,, \:0,11 o;ll""...,.... Full or pl time. Apply Furniture 810
836-787.6 or 64&-0882. NEED enerptic, &xible. Receptionist $450 Brown's Shell, 990 E. Coast ---------'-' Jrlendly &irl lmmed Jor Cute, outgoing girl needed by Hwy, N.&. 644--031. ORTHO matttt11.. box
multi clerical duties, good Tustin Co. Type 50. -SOBER. t 40 ke 1 1pring!, sheet.II, pillows &
typist & aome SH. 641>-1410. RIVERIA EMPLOYMENT ma ure + nne spread. Paid $350, u&ed very
AGENCY, INC. ~~~per ti;· ~~~ ~ little, sell for $23). 58&-0996
•,
Sigma tic~
500 Newport C.enter Dr.
SU!te ~
Newport Beach
INSPECTORS, 1 ai l boat
molding &. assem. In·
spection. Some prev. inspec-
tion exper. helpful but, not
mandatory. 3rd Shift, Apply
bl penon. MacGreaw Yacht
O>rp, 1631 Placenlla, CM.
Nurw Needed m Busloen Ctr Dr. Ste 290 . y ap llllil .::al:::tc.:6:,_P:,_M::::,. ~-~~--1
11·7 & Other ShKfs Irvine 833-9410 Mesa Drive, C.M. AN T I Q U E W h 1 t e ;
T ..&.oho (Onngeeo. Airport Area) TAILOR· Breakfront, desk &: ml!c. op pvt. ~·1 ~Y· I Fro $15 to 1•=
For an 1d In Woman's World
C•ll Mory Bolh 642·5678, ext. 330
Immed.. JNl.)' for fioOrr duty. Restaurant _ ~ m · """'·
EXEC SECY/DENTAL " ..,... ¥oA ,.,_ Couitty·wlde. Nttd RN • A FUN PLACE RECEPTIONIST LVN -rude.. Interview• MENS WEAR CORNER group comp!
Intl'lligent a: creative in· IRYJNE DCDC',......._rl Mon-Fri, g.5, Lescoull e TO WORK w/twin beds & bolaters. dividual . \\'anted for r U\.)\Jl"ll"ll:L XI t nd $90 673--7654 permanent managerial posl· SERYJCES•AGENCY Nurses ReiistrY, 351 Hos-Now accepting applications ~ co " · ·
tion with progressive dental pltaJ Rd., N.B. (Lobby Park :J le. for perm. f/time position m 2· piece sectional, very nice, Fee & Free Positions Lido Bldg.) 642-99:>5 or ~ t the •-"-r .~ of our mll!l sell. $65. K off.ice. Future limited only FIC B"" or ••-o -·-• by inlliative & ability to .... pr. c '6' pen 56-9954. '1 eu en NEWPORT STORE 89H1D3 Sales Secretary $600 lJRSES Immed as sume re1po111ibility. Girl Friday to $500 N Aide-open-1-fust be exper .in the tailor-SPANISH family room 4
Salary open. 979-6510. 1 Girl Otnce to $500 ing 7-3:30. & 3-11:30, f1 {J ing & fitting of quality men's vinyl chain & Slate top
Exp Molders & Tooltr1 Sec'y/Prop Mgmt $500+ J/time. Parle Lido Conv. L. ~e fashion.I. Appl.y In per900, table. f.l!O. 548-4244 ~ ...
Coastal Recreation, 940 W. Purc¥s Clrk/pkgng S600 Hosp., 466 Flaphlp, N&. " ***Sofa a: lovtseat, never ..,
17th St, CM, 642-0542. Equal Recept/Gen'lOfc to$500 OFTICE N~LVN or Now Hiring DESMOND'S used~ both for i1so, usually 1 ~
Opportunity Employer. Asst. Bklcpr/EDP $500 medical aa.iatant. Starting home, 96&-7910. =EXP;:ERJ=c°'EN"'=CED=~d'?e"nt"'a1~.,.-1 Inven. C.Ontrl/Trne to $450 AlaJ'y $500 mo. Mon-Frf. BU5BOYS NEWPORT HIDE-A-BED couch, orange~
1 h l!Ultall Loan Clrk $440 ~. vinyl. 0 ··" cond, $1". '· alstant w t x-ray license. T 11 $A"" .....,.11.1 'N
Sl8-88M • "' ~ OFFICE M...,.r for -· DAYS ONLY 832-SIOS alt 4p""' ·
............................. 1 A/P Bkkpc/CoMtr 15.i lab. o.,,., Ulline. Pe....,. N 3 Fam~ I 1 d 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM nel Dep' H.., Hoap, NB 0• n ll an OLD WOODEN DESK I\
S I 224 u• 1470 ' A-~ .. '5 dA" Newport Beach EXCELLENT CONDITION .,.
Bright Scarf
..
-------
Factory
Tempor•ry Trainees
NO FEES
Short & Long Trm
Assignments In S.A.
'' ......... 1f,..:ie ...... overlock. Zippenetter. Top 151 E . Coast Hwy. TELEPHONE WORK ** s· cha! and tabl
u te -.£• OPERATORS, lin&le bl!'edle yyy ,,. muY $25. 586--0998 alt. 6 PM. 1<:1~· .
J>a>', exper. only. Rolf's _._ Exp'd lady lO set ap-ligh ! .. i.vv. n1 """ e, 1 JOBS Mfg., 865 Production Pl, Newport Be•"" polntment1 by telephone 1 ........... any . ..,.,. Phone t·•
URGENTLY NEEDED . NB. Equal Oppor. Emplo)'er with previoull customers of M5-73S7. '-::-::-::-::-::-::-,..-~" . .J, e Auembly Workers OR'IHOOONTIC FRONT our company. Evening CURTIS-Mathe• Color TV t: e Solderen OffiCE Exp REPRO Pasre Up artist, hours & ~ Sat. Costa Mesa Walnut cabinet. Good cond
•
1
_.f_?_mputer Trainee.,AILAAUI ~ auallfled only. Writ e, location. Bue salary & $150 cul\. 962-4098 •vu.., .....,..........., Oasaitied ad No. 602, Dally liberal bonuaes. Call Mr. Gor-Sole 112 Anaheim 53>-'322 PAYROLL CLERK Plwl, P.O. Box 1560, Co"8 Wood at 833-374L , 1;;;:;,;;:-r:;;,_;;:::;_ __ =1
NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO Good tigure aptitude & Ute Mesa, Calli. 92626. TELLER 5rARTS Wed. 1U Mid. LoAd11
Tempo Temporary Help !yP~ng will land this position RN' LVN' Pracf al of I c • 1998 Ro
JUNIOR Sole-en·. •• ••. 1415.·. Fee Paid/Alao Fee s, a ic a Beautiful modem savings &: Pl mC s ·· ternary ..... ..,....., Call c .. 11.. (male &: female), Private loan needll bubbly type in-" .M. 646-7510.
Earn $20-$40 per .,.eek set· Positions. ~ Hart, duty &: staff relief needed. div. Some exper. a plus. J•welry Ill
ting new ew1tomen for the 54G-Q65, Coutal Personnel Undsey N u r • e s, Reg., Salary to $475. Call Sallyl "'""""'-----..:.::i DAILY PILOT. 'This ls not a Agency, 2700 Harbor Blvd., 830-8500 or 646-4816. Hart, 54()..6(l6, Coe.lltal INDIAN Jewelry, 1Uver &: I
newspaper route and does C.M. RN Supervisor for small Penonne.I Agency, 2790 tu r q uo 11 e. Reservation
not include co=:to or PBX Recept. to $475 nursing home In beach area. Hlll'bor Blvd,, C.M. prices. Rings, bracelets,
delfverin(I'.. Tranaporta n ii Lite Typing . Call Lorraine C&ll n4: 49iH07S for appt. TRAINEE htshl. Jquash blostoma. In-~ed. We work four Fee Relmb/ Abo Fee Jobe RN Supervisor lor smaU dlan jewelry repaired.
Irville & Costa Mesa. areas
Sigmatics
500 Newport Center Dr
Suite ~ Newport ~ 133-3161
for FoWrtalllBeaVailhey &: South {Mark Ill Center) Csll TI4: 6H075 for appt. VOLT ~chine v 1116
Belted Topperl
Filo Clerk r. $400
Bright beginner will snap up
this teniftc apot. Attractive
indlv. soughL Will hand1e
recepHoatst desk, answer
phones, etc. Fun po&i.Hon
w/xln't firm. can ~a
Mac, 833-2700, Denni.I •&
Dennis PertOMel Agency o1
INine, D2 1.fichelaon Or.
Sa~W~ ~J.: Pe,.,::1c1~-nuning home In beacl'r ..... ASSEMBLERS ~·=. Blrr:·b~· .. iiJ 2 ~ ·1
~;~onmlllt c be~: 0:,1; 542-8136 R.N. relief ~t shift, 11· ln1t•nt Personnel 1;,;;;:.;;;;.;;;;o;.ry:....---=
school by 3 PM to * PIZZA Plll'lor help, must 7:30. 1:;5~ anor Conv. Temporary Service COMPRESOC>R for aale. 9431 Colorful, coey a t·o p
=cl=n p~;-'. ~~r \veekenda A: eves .. HospROOM (LERK N~~~Dr., SU~ 5~ :ti~gts. 2 mos old SIZES8!-J H~= ~~a~1:at~ ~~
FORMS ANALYST
Our home office la &II·
ualed on a bluft over-
looking the Pacillc Ocean
A Newport a.-. U
you qU&l.ily. 1'>1! offer you
this unique work en-
vironment + a challena:· Ina proteutonal oppor.
tilnlty.
968-9641. POWER machine open.tcr, bptr. 3 PM-1!:30 P~f. 6 F.qual -Oppor. Emp&o)-er Mlscetl•MOUI Ill '-· 11TMiMt 111'-"'1'.,.. topper. )take easy 4-inch
Jr. S.Cret•ry experience abiolu t ely nltes. calJ BW Schnelder, TRUCK Driwr. Deliver and , "'J l{J'&f\ny IQ.u.lret while you
Great oppor. to grow w/well necessary. w~ges: ~ ~P-2 pm..f pm, Newporter IM, pick up pull. for area Ford *SWIMM.ING POOL* YOU'RE IN ORE.1\T watch TV. Use knitting
est.a.bibbed firm. Ca:sWll at-ply in pencn. Ondino N.B.-&M-1700. Dealer. ·s dl1 week. Good Local pool buUder wtll 'take FOltM in a Jow.wat1t 1kim· worsted. P11itte1·n 70 00 ;
mospbere 1 Feat ce>work-Interiors, 1733 Monrovia, SA.LES clerk. part time, benefits. call Mr. School'. 11n,ything of value In trade. mer with 1\de-plcal zing. mlues' sizes 8·16 lnchMi~.
ers. Start '500. Ftt Paid/ No. E, 0.ta Mesa. prdrr drugltol"e exptt .• 10-SG-9&U. 100% Flnanctna on the Bright actu'f play. hlde-and-PY~NTY-f"IVF. ~~ A1lo Fee Jobi. Call Sally 15 hzVweek. "Busbatd'1 T\1I'OR I« 3rd &'fldt boy. 2 balance. No paymentt mttll leek with the yoke line. Hur-ror each pe.ttem -......... ,
Hart, 54().6(l6, Coastal Per--PRINTING Pharmacy, 494-1059, Hours AM Credentialt &: May. Ask for Mr. Rhule, ry, 11Cnd now! centa for each pnttern for
llOb2'lei. Aaency, 2790 Harbor -494--0145 exp, Send ~e A. Hayes, 586-1450. Printed ~attem 943.l : NEW Air Mall and Speci1111 Hondl·
EXPERIENCED Box CM Mlae • Slze1 8 10 12 14 16 lnl(; otherwise thlrd<IMI Blvd., CM. SALESMAN, Ex'p _hardware, P.O. 746, • -DRAPES, cu1t. tot a I 1 l2 tbu' _.' "~)· ~ dellvt!ry w!ll take !hree
KEY Punch operator mM nHta Mon thru Fri. Apply in TYPISTS 30'x7'6" It sreen anUque 18. Size •• '" weekl or more. Send to ~ ap'd on IBM 401 &. 084 BINDERY GJRlS penon Kenn R I ma u.tln ' w1cuemfnt un-1 'I/I yards $4-lnch; acart S/8 Alb Brookll, the DAILY
Sotttt tielpf\11. Full Ume llardwart, 2686 Harbor VOLT derdl'f.ptS. perf cone!. Colt )'&I'd. , PILOT. 105, Needlecraft
\Ve a.re aetklna: a St. days. Newport Beach. Ray Blvd. a:.ta Jina ln1t1nt Personnel ~ Mii $.235. 567-8071, ,:::::, 1 ;,;= _ ~ Dept .. Box J63, Old Chel,e_11
Farms Anal,yst w/rnlll. 1tenka 66-3934 13'.tO' e s.crttari8---$&504800 Temporary Servlte · centa for each pattern for Station. Mew York, N.Y. 2-3...)11'1. aper. in -lorm1 For nlatlt 11'11 e F/C Book.~pen • $~ 3848 C&mpus Or., SWte 106 SEARS l,Q" Radial Ann Saw Air 1.fa\l and Special Handl· 10011. Print N11ne. Addr85,
design. control A ann-labor Tetmpar-y pm.U: 10 am> tn larJe e Lea:al ~·r• MTST to $650 Ne~ Beach 54&-4iT'1 with drawer cabinet Ir; exln. lna; otbe:rNlte lhlrd-clau Zip, Plltlt!rn Numbcf'.
tysis. eou..., d..,.. .,.. 111 volume print-· * 1000;0 FREE * _ t;qu&l OJ!J!O'· Emp1¥r bl.,,.,. Incld• Dodo S.t A deUvery will Joke ~ N EE D LE CRM1' 'T.l! ferred. Salu7 will be In UNDERGROUND C&bLe. TV molding head. s.ll1nl: for wetk! °" more. Send to Crochttt. knll. <'IC. F'rtt
aecordMCe w/rxper. & -Genen1 Labor Apply In Ptnon th Rrinder'1 AacncY Irutallet. Elq)'d or Tr&tnee $340 at Sc.,. tor ale at Marlen t.111.rtln, the DAILY dlTTCtiona: 50e.
0.IHI Trne to $600 qualilicatlona. For con-.ForltlJtt OriYen t500 Campus Or. cohsidered. A»PlY mt w. $7l5. Npt Bch 64+-47CI )>n.ar 4u, PJttem Dool., l•tttanl ~l•ct11nH' fk"*. ~ indlv. w/good mech. sidttaHon, please Mnd ..MacbilWl Optntcrn Marlee M6-21l8 Newport Beach Coast HI~, CARPET t..ayer bu acceu 232 Wert 18th St .• N"ew Bti.1lc. tnncy knots, pat.
ap tudl! IOU~t by ll"OWina: ~e A: ~ hiltory NO FEES ME FOR TELEPROMP'l'm ())RP. to 100 rolls ot carpeUlli' YOl !t. N.Y. 1.011. Print '~::'.!:~.ri-·oor-,hel Book _ co. WW learn all pbMea In-tong .l Short Tmn R d. 1. Tl An Equal Upptr Emp&o)Yr bek>w wholesale price• llllO NAMT. ADDRESS with Learn b~ piel\l!'!S! P•t• ~1~~ ~~·~ Claalfted Ad No. 598 t:JCnmentl-..' Orqe epro uc ion QUICK CASH ~~ f::t""pm"'.t :i:a~. ~~; •1
•· ~:re: .,,. •TYLE 1:;:,-J.!t, ; •• t ... 01• _ ~ ~~?~ r.os:~~~lotS'JO&• II ·1n·C Sun <1t ~ Appq, ACOUSTIC m au itar SEE MORE ~a111ck _ more than 100 .1iftl -Mimebon ne. • :Kranwr'1 ,Cbloolal JOtcfltn, ampllncr ._ ltkt new. Bert of-F'uhklns and c,.....,,... one [ $1 .00.
Dr. F.quaJ Oppor. Emplo)v THROUGH A 512 W.19th St., C.M. fer! 7 toot IU?fboud , aood pall~~-Sum~er J!j!J()j[. ~1j 1r1 o001nplf'tt1 .Al1han Boot
DELIVERY of DAILY 1sn Plactntiil Aw. WAITRESS, exper., C.off, toe ~t:a.""'Mmor•~-~IT..:,~2-3963 :l!'~i0n1 5()(. , • .1i1fJ, ""' Boot ... 50c:. :=:m'~LYn: FRY COOK. l Siptatics Nowpot'I llooch, Co. DAILY "PILOT ~· Alr!rly ~J;: ~ SP. ·-~. . fNST;;;{ SEWING BOOK I""'' or u """' .,,. .. ,, wh the UM of a $ff.lion OVU 21. Muat be dean A E'-··' n.-Em..i--m/f dally, • WHEELCHAIR (fold111gl, MW today, wttt lomom>W. 30c, Wagon or Van. Conta~ Mr. neat. Apply In penan, Suri 500 New'JIC)l't ~Dr '""""._. "'l'l""'' .-P"" Hwy, N.B. Vacuum cluntr, Double: S'l. Quilt ht I ;;. 16 P{lltm11.
H ~w~n •• • S1rloln, !19.10 W Cout suii.53l "Mr' Beach WANT AD WAl'.l'IWltlne<ded.A:,Wty ln m•-hox;,gnn,, De ... rNSTANT FASHION '°' arry .)11111 • -'"""' .-., · • a•"' -.. "Weed tt I: Rap" ~ •-·ff Wood nA. (Total under }, ~66. BOOK -Jtundreds o I >1:-·m "-flt Boot I -51-, °"'° . Hwy •• N.B. •P--~-., _...... ---· ~
U .. 1 "'toor'" .. "'™ .. --Q\1111, JM8 Bria~ CM. DOY'S~ blC)'Cle. Pen-fuhioL f..'\Cll, U. Me. •
Vacandn COit l1lOoey\ Rent Put a "t . m JOUI' llave IDme'th!rw )'OU Wllll 10 tum thlm lnto cub jtj2 5171 W~ • Food • n c re• l rc!f'rla./fmmir A Jood want ad IJ a Rood In-Qllllt tor T«laJ' • Uvt.c ~ tr: ... ~thiu:Yitty= ~~ba.=i: RUT~ W do It CAU. DAILY PllDT ft• OxttiD fXP!l'· anly. Sld't w/aulOm. l cemake r . \.'CstmenL 15btauutulpalterrt!!1.!!0I:-.
ClaullledAd.-MM81L ..U.c•LllNOW -CLASSlFIED ,,,, ... -Blueem.IT.H904. J_<9'r~1!!46.1.~---~~-lt---------------I
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San Cle•ente
' Today's Final
Capistrano-..
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks.
* * --·-VOL. 66, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1973 TEN CENTS
R·adioactive Particles • Ill Smoking Get Blame
a, °'o~~rte,;.~!~~
Possibly th~~st damaging thing
smokers do lo lungs is deposit with
each puff small radloacUve particles.
The radloaclive particles in'tum produce
dangerous, alpha-emitting particles
which, in auUiclent quantltJes, may cause
lung caricer.
The renewed link between radk>ac--
tivlty, smoking and twig cancer, was the
subject or a paRtr presented Tuesday '
· Aiit~abortion
Bill En f-erei1 1
WASHINGTON (AP) -A con·
,.,,. stitutlonal amendment to prohibit
abortions in most cases wu pro-
posed today by Rep. Lawrence J.
·Hogan (R·Md.).
• He called the U.S. Supreme Court
. "moraUy bankrupt" for Its ruling
• ltriking down most antiabortion
Jaws.
Hogan said enactment of a con-
stitutional amendment would be the
on1y effective way to counteract the
. court's 7·2 decision la!! week that
·states may not forbid women to
have abortions durin~ the first sis
months of pregnancy.
•
Judge Denies
Leary Plea
For Defense
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. DlllY ""' , .... . ~ A loog day In ~ County Superior
COurt loomed today lot Dr. TimoU>J
LWy as tbe eloquent l.SD.cultlst,Jlank·
ed by tine lawyers, apln .-.ir"'81!1 tbe
IesaJity· ol bis . arrest lut mcioth In
Afghanistan.
Judge James Turner denied a series of
motions before shocking the globe-trot-
ting guru and his attorneys by blmself
filing a plea or innocent on behalf of
Leary -an action that brought lm·
mediate protest from Costa Mesa trial
lawyer George Chula,. Leary's chief
counsel.
Judge Turner switched the session to
tbe courtroom of Presiding Judge Bruce
Sumner of Laguna Beach alter also de-
nying Leary's renewed plea that he be
allowed to supervise hill own defense on
multiple drug charges contained in an
Orange County Grand Jury indictment.
Leary, r.2, •tood open.mouthed in
astonishment as Judge Turner also told
hhn lhls morning that be might have to
go on trial Wednesday with a number of
defendants similarly indicted in the
"Brotherhood of Eternal U>ve" drug con-
spiracy.
. "That's crazy," Chula said. "This will
·all have to be thrashed out before Judge
SUmner and I want to emphasize right
now that no court has the right to try Dr.
Leary on any charges-in view of the way
be was lddnaped."
Leary, wl!islted overnight under, guard
to Orange County Jal! from his cell at
San Luis Obispo County Jail, . smiled,
winked and waved to a crowd of ad-
mirers in the court room while Judge
Turner advised him of his rights.
Among the courtroom observers' who
acknowledged his cheery waves and who
Were warned about their conduct by
court bailiffs, was Joanna Harcourt~
Smilh, the British socialite who bas been
Leary's constant companion since shortly
before h,i! arrest in Alghan~tao last
month.
Miss Harcourt.smllh, 'J:l, the niece of
London publishing magnate Simon
Harcourt.Smith ol the· Hareourt Press,
tOld newsmen today that she is Leary's
' "1!e.
'She displayed . lettero from Leary In
' (See LEARY, Pap I) . I
night before tht American Chemi.ctu
Society, division or nuclear chemistry
and tecboology~ The group is meeting in
the Newporter Inn this week. ...-or. E. A Martell, 54, a nuclear chemist
wit~ tbe Natjsinal Center ror Atmospheric
Rer;earcb. in Boulder' Colo., told rellow
scientists about his three-year effort t0
explain the presence of radioactivity in
lungs of ~mokers reported by olher
researdlers. -
Martell, who quit smoking 11 years
ago, belleves his new hypothesis may ti·
plain why cigarette smoken get cancu
of lh'J lungs.
As a scleoUst interested in the po]lution
or the atmosphere, Mart.ell's real c.oncern
is the effect of nuclear power plant
radiation on humans who may be ex-
posed to other forms of puclear energy.
The pollUtant associated with tobacco,
however, is a natural product of radia·
Uon normally associated wilh soils.
He explained tQ.iit the tobacco plant has
an "uncanny" abWty to attract very
smalJ "almost invisible" particle! of
radiation. 1be particles accumulate in
large numbers on the tips of Uny"bairs on
the tobacco leaves.
When the tobacco ls burneG at the tip
or a cigarette, "hlgbJy insoluble"
radioactive particles about the size of a
smoke particle are formed.
"Each smoke particle which in-
corporates the . . . (tobacco hair) or
fraction thereof, will contain a relatively
high concentration of lead-210 and its
radioactive daughter, blsmulh-210," Dr.·
Martell said. ·
Now, the emissions from these
particles do not happen to do much
damage to tissues. When they were
isolated six years ago further study of
this possible source of lung cancer was
abandoned, Martell explained. The irn-
portan~ of Martell 's new work is the
comp letion of the chain or events
(See CANCER, Page !)
·' ·~
Fighting Tapering Off
On Third Day of TruCe
$1.4 Million
Agents-,Awaiting
,
Niguel Inventory
Bf JACK CHAPPELL
Of .. _,..., Pia.I Stiff
FBI agents iri Los Angeles today awa1t-
ed receipt of an inventory of the Sl .f
million in .negotiable securities stolen .
from tbe Laguna Niguel branch of United
California Bank last spring and recovertd
over the weekend buded in a suj.tcue oo.
an Ohio fi:nn. . r
·~e baven1t miewecUbl Ult yet, We
don't pow euctly what wu loond, The
lllDCIUDI ol IU million 11 acc0rate," FBf
Chargers Draft
Reisman Winner
Johnny Rodgers
F...,. Witt Services
NEW YORK -The San Diego
Chargers tod•)' drafted Helsman Trophy
winner Johnny Rodgers of Nebraska in
the National Football League's annual
player draft.
He was selected on the 25th round by
the Chargers, who oblained the drafting
spot in a deal lhat sent quarterback
Marty Domres to Baltimore. The Colla
earlier gained the spot in a deal with
Washington.
The Los Angeles Rams do not have a
pick in the first round, having traded it
away last year.
John Matuszak, a 6-!oot-7, 280-pound
tack.le from Tampa, was chosen by the
Houston Oilers as the first. player in the
draft. (See story, Page.16.)
The Oilers earned tbe No. 1 pick by
finishing with tbe worst record in the
league (1·13). It was the second stralaht
year a lineman was picked as the f1rst
choice.
The Baltimore Colts, picking second,
took Louisiana State quarterback Bert
Jones. Jones is ·expected to ml the void
left by the trade of supersta.· John Unltas
to San Diego.
Three USC p!Jyen were sleeted 9" the
rim round : tight end Charles y ouiii 'tiy
the Philadelpbla Eagles, back Sam CUn·
ningbam by tl)e New England Patrtots
and tackle Pete.Adams by the Cl~~
Browns.• #
Rodgers' selection was obyWilsly
delayed · ,becivse he weighs GJlly 17S
pounds and stands just 1>9.
agents said today.
"All the properlf. We have recovered
will be held u evidence and after the
trlal wi11 be returned to ils ·owners at
direction of the coui1,'' an agent said.
Value o1 property taken in tbe "Mll-
sioo lmpoaible" breU.-in ond burglary
of the -.:ca ao,-. f!oi!t' book . vlUlt
bal .......... :~ •• s:;~ (which'~ •• tbt ........ _
robbery) 8nil 13.l milllm.
.Three penons tMwe been convicted or
the burglary, ..,. ;. awaiting crimJnal
trial and ODf more is sought by author-
ities ln connection with tbe ·crime.
Harry James Barber, ~l, is still at
large. His brother Ronald Barber was
arrested in mid-January by FBI agents
in New York.
Agents today refused to comment on
speculation that the loot buried. on the
Ohio farm had been left as baJt to attract
the one man still free.
The securities are be.arer bonds and
are negotiable by the persons who pos-
sess them.
Previously, $1 million in registered se-
curities were found in· a gunny sack stuff-
ed under a bush near the Laguna Niguel
bank.
Investigation also turned up 1 o m e
Sl28,000 in cash, some of which has been
traced to the Niguel banlc.
Still missing are the large quantities or
valuable jewelry, rare coins and cash
tucked away in the 500 sate depasit boxes
rifled by the thieves after they blasted
(See BANK, Pap I)
Woman Struck
By Car Better
Helen Katherine Todd of San Clemente,
wbo was struck down while crossing a
San Clemente street last weekend, wu
reported improving today at South C.oast
Commwtity Hospital
Nurses a.aid the 73-year~ld woman su.f..
fered two broken legs and multiple face
cuts and remains in the intensive-care
ward. She lives at 156 W. Alessandro.
The accident occurred Saturday af-
ternoon when a vehicle driven by a Camp
Pendleton Marine' hit her at the tn-
tenectioo o! S. Ola V~ta and Avenlda
Granada.
It's Really
A. Dog's Life
"Lady" Is a black Labrador
Retriever and each day her owner
lets her out into. his Laguna Beaeh
neighborhood and Lady returns
with something. Once it was a
neighbor's shirt and another time it
was a beer can.
Monday, she returned with a
shopping bag aod in it were 12
plastic bags all containing mari·
juana, about SlOO worth. Lady put
the bag down and ate from two of
tbe baggies.
Big Battle
Reported
At Province
SAIGON (UPI) -The intensity of
fighting in South Vietnam tapered off to-
day, the third day of' the off1Cial cease-
fire, according to military sooretS, but a
big battle was reported between South
Vietnamese marines surrounded by Com·
munisl -ID nortliem ~Tri prov·
"Dog ha!' not been observed
sioce:-ilog poaslbly "alldJW aroond
'high'," .the police report read. 1be
ntrleved 1191~ ll&f -over to police.
~. .
'!'be .J,..i ol fighting -•lthciltllh lower
•-than SUnday and Monday -11111 ....
higher tbao at many times during the 12
years of fighting in South Vietnam.
Three Advisory
Groups to Meet
With Councilmen
San Clemente's city councilmen and
members of three advisory commissions
will meet in a quarterly study session
Wedneeday, ond downtown parking prob.
lems ond the building boom will be tops
011 t.heir agenda. '
GoTemment troops and Communists
also akirmi.shed around two provincial
capitals cut off by the Communist!! and
the South Vietnamese drove Communists
out or several hamlets near Saigon.
The South Vietnamese c.ommand
reported 765 battlefield incidents between
the start of lhe cease-fire at 8.a.m. Sun·
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1,761 Communists and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
additional 1JJ70 South Vietnamese wound-
ed. Several dozen have been listed as
missing.
Military sources reported heavy
· (Set VIEJ'N.Ut, Page !I
DAILY PILOT Slaff !"Mii
PROBES TOBACCO RADIATION
Chemist E. A. Martell
Aliens Captured
Aronnd Cle1ne nte
By Patrol1nen
San Clemente police and border
patrolmen arrested several more aliens
Alonday in what has become a standard
sequel to whopping weekend totals at the
roadblock at San Onofre.
Palrolmen there arrested five a1ie~ on
Afonday and one more be!ore dawn to-
day.
Late Monday artemoon San C!ementt
o!fictn detained two immlgranU! found
strrnded deep in the hills-near the TRW
Systems plant at the end of Avenlda
Pico. Several others v.•ere found in other
parts of the city Mondey.
But the small figures for the check
point and the city came nowhere close to
the y.•hopping numbers of aliens seized at
the checkpoint last weekend.
More than 300 nationals were delaincd
by federal officers over the weekend and
one youth was fatally injured In a trafrlc
crash directly related to smuggling
opi.:rations.
The 16-year-old boy died when a
truckload or aliens slammed into the rear
of a station wagon a few miles south of
the roadblock.
The parking Issue Is a frequent oubject
at the joint swioOJS at the city goU
course clubboule. 'lbe group will examine
progress in JOlving the controversy over
Ide loss of curbside parking if new traffic
control mea.wres are launched.
The growth issue was-a suggested topic
from Councilman Paul Presley.
The city's residential and commercial
construction last calendar year amounted
to more lhan $111 mUUon and set an all-
. time record: --..
Two Capo Trustees File
For Di strict Re-election
The session Wednesday, although
public, has been termed by members of
the cowtcil u a rare opportunity for all
the of!k:lal> to gather for in • depth
disCUlslonS.
Presley had uked for the scheduling of
the topic so that the oou.ncilmen.
rhembers of the planning .c.ornmission,
tbe traffic-parking commission and the
parks and recreation commission could
discuss future patterns of growth In the
city. .
Nude Photogs Fined
OXFORD, England (UP!) -Two men
who publlabed nude pbotographl In tbe
Oxford University newspaper were fined
$2.35 each Monday. Model Chloe
Armstrong, who posed for the pbotoe,
was expelled from college, -
Capistrano Unitled School District
trustees Robert Hurst of Laguna Niguel
and Stephen Smith or Dana Point this
week !lied tor re-election.
And thus far the two incumbent can-
didates are unopposed .
But three weeks remalo ln the filing
for the three board seata coming before
the voters April 17.
Hunt and Smith both had said they
planned to see k re-election.
Smith, ironically, has only held his
position for a abort time alt.er being
elected to his posiUon last summer to rill
tbe wiexplred term of Robert Dahlberg.
He is a lawyer with 1 practice ln Mls!lon
Viejo.. '
'!lie thin! position, that ol retiring
trustee Fred Newhart Jr. of San Juan
Capistrano, as yet has no fonnal can-
didates.
He cited higher campaign costs and
larger time ·commitments for a cam-
paign throughout the entire district.
Before the issue was forced onto the
ballot by the C'ounty Committee on
School District Qrganizalion the CUSD
was the only district in the county which
did not have at-large balloting.
Observers of milny local races predict
that the incumbenll are certain to face
some opposition at the polls.
The deadline for fl.ling as a candidate
in the district is Feb. 18 at the offices of
the County Registrar of Voters at 1119 E.
Chestnut St., Santa Ana.
oruge Coast
Weather •
Coastal Sample. 'Permits Developed
•
Newhart, who baa served on area
school boards since the early 19505, said
recently he will not seek re-election to
the board.
HJs d~rict covers S&n Juan
Capistrano, parts of Mission Vle}o and
rural areas 1tretchlng into the Ortega
area . •
It'll \>< e~Y cfoudy nn Wednes-
day, with a sUibt increase in tem-
perature, according to tbt weather
service. Highs of &O at the beaches
rising lo 62 inland are expected .
IAws lol'ligbt 4J. By CANDACE PEARSON
Of tile tHfff Pltltt Sl9fl
The state Attorney General's Of!ice
bu developed a sample seven-page a~ ~cation for bulldlr« permil> to be ob.
tilned from slate and reglnnal coastal
mne conservaUon commlllkms.
This is the first time p..,,...iy owners
ean have-• klu what wlll be nqulnd
m bUlldlng permits In tbe ooutal ..,,.,
The proj)Oled appllcatloo IO<m will be
di>cuaaed by the South Cout Qxmnlalon
~Orange and Los Allgelea <OUOU..) Feo.
I aod bf the state ~ Fell. 7.
All proje<ts ~ within l,llDD
yards ol the mean blah' tide line must
come_ before a coastal commiulon
mated by the pwage of Proposltloo IO
ln the Novembe:r aeneral election. \ -
• ,
Part of the attorney general's form ix-
p:lains that the new Jaw, the C&lifOrnia
coastal 7""" Conservation Act, says that
developrnents can't ha.ve ad verse
ecological e!lects and must be consistent
"Ith pmervation of coastal ._......
lo addltJon, projects · must allow con-
tlmed -ol all living oqanllml
and mllll -Ire the coastal lliM u a
valuable ..-..... beJongln« to all people.
On tbe lut pace of tbe po"""'""' ap-plicalloo, lllUi' lines are provided to write
-.the project ;. .,._ with
-nqulmnent.t. "Use addltionaJ paper lf necelUIY," I
statement on the form suggem.
Uniltt a section called, "detailed
description ol proposed work," a -
. ' I
of nine questloos asks if the project:
-Involves dredl!lni· filling or altering
1 bay, estuary, mer or lagoon.
-Reduces beach or other public acceu
to Udal and sybmerged land, beaches.
-lnterfe~ with line of slgbt'l<lWanl
... from nearest slate highway.
"-Advenely af!ecto 11'.ller quality,
commercl&J or '*1 fl1berle1 ,
1grk:ultiiiil -ol latld.
-lncroues -to publicly owned or
used -· Dlhnl ....,. ... . -Alfeda 1111 ll'M.Jlia• could bt used for ncnolloa « wlldllfe preserve&.
-Has tlllde provllloas !or treat"""!
ol tlOlld and llquld wutes to minimize ef·
fects .. coastal.-es.
-Ha• m.ocle provisions to minimb.e 11·
f ects on acenlc retources, and mlnlmb.e
•
dar.ger of Doods and landslides from land
alleratlons.
1be 1evtn-page form also a.ski for a
brief summlU'y of the project, names and
phone numben ol adjacenl property
.;.,,.,.,, list of other permits heeded and
graoltd, ond 1ttachments ol portel
l!llpl, U.S. leolorllcal Mll'Vfl' mapt and,
II "!lltlnc, on eovlroomaJtal Impact
lltotement.
)/ I project it I r<polt> « lmprivemtnt
costlnf 12$,00D ot ..... lbe Clllllllllaloo's
uecuUve director Is alio..d to let on It
under regulations allO erosi11ed by the
Attorney Genorll'1 O!Jce. ·
Omwlon or mllsta-t.«:\lii' In·
formation l'!qUeskd cm tM lorm is
groundl for ilenytna Ille permit.
Some speculation has risen that op-
ponents to the fS.15 all-year-school pro-
posal.t being aired In the district will seek
to run a Candklate. The nucleus of the
formal opposUloo It In tbe southerly por-
tions of Mltsloo Viejo, In the Viejo School
attendance aru.
Thole candlda&a who choose to nan
thll ~rlnl will find that things have
chanced 1n tbe d111r1c1. 119 llqer 'l!lll theJ leek Ollfy votet in
lhelr tnllt<o .,_, '
Voten lut !Ill •lllftd that at·larp
ballotlng woWd be tbe rule In the district .
Previously, only voten residing In a
trusttt'1 area elected lhal represen-
tative. ' ·
lfurst, 1tronal1 opposed the al·larg!l
ballotlna, lnslatlag thlt It proves •
hardship on Cllldldalel.
,
INS IDE TODA.'\'
A tmaU ~ ntwA"paptr'1 t di·
torial about the local j udicial
1111t1m promptt d a Judoe to file
a ccn1tt mpf Cifa tion agairu f the
paper -the firat evtr flltd
over an editorial. Set Storti Or&.
· Page S.
...... "" ' """"" ' ClaUffllill l,_24
c.Mlia 11 ..,_ " 0..111 NttkH II ··~ ,_ ' ·~MW! If lllJllMtt • f.11 ...,. ..... ...,.. 11 -.. .. ~ lJ
,
I
From P .. e l
VIETNAM ..•
fighting bttween SOlfttr-viehwnew
mar1t1es :ind communists near the mouth
ol the Cua \ti cl Rivtr, northeast ot
Qutn.!I Tri. Mari.., rushod llnuah Ille
area about the tlme of the cease-fire.
rece.plur111g a naval b~ held by the
Commun1!tls since spring. The nwinfs
lun•e since bet'n surrounded.
The sources said" there \\'BS one spon-
taneous display during the fighting. At
one p01nt. Lroops stopped shooting brief·
ly, stood up rhe-ering and a_pproached
each other to shnke hands and' exchange
rn1bra('t:S Fighting ccntlnued farther
south. however.
The command said the highways
leading oul of Saigon. except for the mad
to the fo rmer beach rrsort of Vung Tau,
h:ive been teop4!ned a n d Communists
driven ou1 ol ~ hamlets in the Saigon
a re a.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived
in Saigon today to dtllver assurances of
eontinued American support for the
Thieu government.
Agnew dlned with President Nguyen
Van Thieu af Independence Palace and
issued a statement saying the United
States recognlted Thieu's government as
the "sole. legitimate government of
South Vietnam."
I
American forces were not involved in
today's fighting . The last American
fighter·bomber unit in Vietnam, P-1arine
Air group 12 .from Blen Hoa air base ia
miles northeast of Saigon, began pulling
out Monday.
WATERGATE DEEENDANT G. GORDON LIDDY ON WAY TO COURT
With Him is Susan Tousley, S.Cret•ry to His Attorney, Peter M.rouli1
-
U.S. troopa are gomc borne at the rate
of about 400 a day. There are about
21,IXKI Americans left ln Vietnam and all
mwt be out of the country by the end of
Mareh.
Watergate Attorney .Says
U.S. officials expect no trouble meeting
the deadline· al the curttnt wilbdrawal
rate.
There have been no reports of
Americans caught up in the .bfitle since
Sunday and for the most part U.S. cf·
ricers have told their men to lake a low
profile.
Liddy Headed Operation
One American helicopter pilot, wound-
ed less than two hours alter the cease-
fire went into effect. died Monday,
becoming the fist American casualty
since the official encl of the war.
T·wo Prisoners
Of War Have
Viejo Relatives
\\1A.SmNGTON (AP) - A Watergate
defense lawyer conceded today that Nix·
oo campaign official G. Gordon Liddy
headed a political intelligence operation,
but denied Liddy bad anything to do with
burglary and wiretapping.
He spoke In !be closing stages of the
trial which grew out oI the break-In and
alleged bugging of Oemocralic National
Headquarters in the. Watergate building
complex in Washington last June.
'"We don't take issue with the fact that
i\fr. Liddy was tbe boss." defense at-
tomey Peter Maroulis said.
But ft1aroulis argued lbat Liddy,
general COWlSel for the Finance Com·
mittee to Re-elect the President, was
engaged in legiUmate inlonnation
. gathering, including a warning of poten-
Two men 1dentined Ibis week as tial violence which led the Republican
pri!loners of war (POWJ ba.ve.relJltJves..in. -.-Perty;-be-said, to move it,s convention
Mi!!lon VlejO: --··---·-----from San Diego lo Miami Beoch last
Marine Corps Capt. James v. di summer.
Bernardo, captured in I9Sa, ls listed of· "It wu a very important decision to
fi all move that convention from Sao Diego to id y BS living. His wife, Sharen, lives Miami," Maroulis said: "And that wu in Mission Viejo witb thelr five cblldron. Prior to Sunday's news, when only di done on infonnaUon from my clJent.
Bernardo's name and ~ his borne city "That was not t.be recommendation of
was listed, the Marine captain was still a burglar," Maroulls said in his closing
rated missing In action (MIA). arguments lo the Jury.
The lnlllal group of POW names pro-Tile case wa.s expected lo reaclt tbe
\Oded by the North Vietnamese following jury laler today.
the ce~fire agreement aoo included Maroulls also attacked the reliability of
Air Force Captain Jerry o . Driscoll, cap-lhe two principal prosecution witnesses,
tured in April, 1967. His home town was saying t bey ottered "fabricated and
given as Hinsdale, Illinois. embellished" testimony to protect
Aceording to officials at the POW·MIA them.selves. International office in Tustin, the parents A particular target of Maroulis was
o {the 3'l-year-old Air Force captain have Thomas Gregory, a Brlgham Young
moved to Mission Viejo alnce be was University student, who testified that
taken prisoner.
Miss San Juan
Contest Opens
Democrat Poses
Home Brew Bill
For California Entry blanks tor the 1973 Miss San
Juan contest will be avaHable begiMing
Thursday at the Chamber of Commerte SACRAMENTO (AP) -Californians
ofrices and many sto res. would be pe.rmitled to legally bre".l' their
Single women between 18 and 21 years own beer in the comfort of their own
(or high school seniors) and residents of kitchen WKl.er a law proposed by ASl9em-
San Juan Capistrano are eligible for the blyman Larry Townaend, a Torrance
title. Democrat.
Miss San Juan and two princesses will Townsend told the Legislature Monday
Liddy atlalded,~ to plan a bruk-
in to plant electronic bugs at campaign
headquarters of Sen. George McGovern.
He said Gregory offered bis testimony ·
because "be was afraid for his own
skin."
Maroulis also challenged Conner FBI
agent Alfred c. Baldwin m. who
testified that Uddy w a s present in
a motel room in which Baldwin was
monitoring calls from a tipped relepbooe
In Democratic Party headquarters.
Maroulia said Baldwin's testimony was
"something less than crystal clarity,"
and declared, "Mr. Baldwin wu worried
about hil own well being."
Liddy Is ooe of two remaining defen-
dants In tbe case, being tried before
Di."1ict Judge John J. Silica. 'lbe other
defendant is Jame.s W. McCord Jr., who
WU security chief Of tbe Niml cam-
paign.
McConl'1 lawyel', Gtrald Alcb, COi>
ceded that his clleot waa wigbt In !be act
of burglarizing tbe Democratic bead-
quarttts, i>Jl said McConl WU
justifiably motivated by fear for tbe
aafety of tbe Nlml campaign.
Frotn Pqe l
CANCER •.•
radioactive materials undergo .
"The larger and more lnsoluble of
ttese smolce particles will persist in the
bronchi sufficiently long to allow for the
growth of polonJum.110," be said.
Polonium 210 emits the alpha rays
wtuch may damage tlssuel nearby.
"The actual dlslrlblllion of ll!lld-210
radioactivity on tobacco leaf surlacea
and In smol!e part1c!t1, and tbe
persistence of !be particles In !be bnmchl
remain to be determined," be added.
Counting tbe Incredibly fine hairs on
tobacco leaves ls very difficult and time
consuming. Further, bec>UJe of !be half·
lives of the materlala involved, It will
take at least a 0 two year research ef.
fort " to know 1'wbttber these lnlOluble
particles hold sufficient radli>actJvlty per
particle to be of biological algnlilcance,''
Martell said.
-he dl05en-March-a-to represem-the city--lh>t •hls-m<SSUre is "strict!)" lo• morm -D a1·---f ' -.. L------·r
during the coming year. They will be and pops who llke their home brew. Right ea me Or .tUJSe~
presented h1arch 11· at a ohampagne now you can't make any beer in your
brunch and also will ride March 24 on the hom'e and we found there 're a lot al Balloting Announcedi
chamber's entry In the Fiesta de las vioiahirs."
Golondrinas Parade. Tuwt18end said he became aware of the
Complete infonnatlon, available at the problem after an exp\Ol"llon occurred while
chamber office at 493-4700. a constituent was making beer ln his
kitchen. When police arrlved,i~y told
Citizens 'J?\lble to vote Feb. 20 in the
Capistrano Unified Schoot District elec-
tion must submit absentee ballot ap-
plications by Feb. 13. ..
DAILY PILOT
Tllr or ..... C..I DAn.v l"ILOT. wllll MUdl
is (lln'IOil'>N I/WI N-l"l'UI, 11 M l .... .W
111e OrMte c-.n fl'llblblllftt c..,_.,. s....
rll• N ltloM ••• pu1111~ • .iMnll1y 111......,.
Ft'IMy, fW CMll MKI, N_,.,,. -..0.
Hullllf!lllNI B•KltlF_,llln Vi l'-\" l ....... 1 .. c11, irflnellolcNllNdt Mii '-" Clrme!lt.J
Siii Jlilll C.pl1t,,_ A 1f~i. re!!loMI
l'dlllo!o .. fllllll~ llllill'dl'fl end , ........ ., ..
Thi prl!!t-1 P..-lltl\1111 ""11 ti 11 Ult Wtll
l lY StrHI, CO.le MtM, Cl1119m1e, t»M.
loberf N. We1d
Pr.tidll'll Ind hollt111r
J eck Ill. Curley
Vk• l'r.IOMll lf'ld 0.-el Mlfltf't
Thom11 Xe••il '
l.otOor
Thom11 A. M11r,hin•
M11119lf11 Ea11or
Chetlt1 H. Leet a11liie'4 P. N•ll
Aul11an1 MllltllNi Ill"" s.. c ....... Offke . ]~5 Nertt. El C1111h10 Reil, f261'2
OIWO!tluo
C..le "'-= 1JI ~::r s""' ......,.., hld'l1 :lm N h\I ..... •••
H\1111 ..... ttlt &ucfli 17111 lffefl llOui...1H L.....,.. tltdll m ,_, A-
T ........ 1714l MJ-41Jl
C'-Hietl A'-tt .. MJ·S671
S.. C ..... tre A• Depat•lfU
Telepll111 4'2-44H
~t, tttt. Ori• Cot1I ,,.ltltl1"11 ~y. Ht MW\ 11trla lllwtt1l""'1,
ldllWlll INlttfl' or HYW!'*'-'h Jllrtlfl
l'l\t't' M ,.,,..ll(tll WI"""' NllKllf Mr•
rnlllloft ti ctnrfthl ''""'·
S1Ctr11t tllM ,_.,.,. NW If Ctltl Mhl.
C1lltH11la. IWKTktl..... 1W te1Tlitt U ·~ '"'°""'''' .,.. IMl• A.t i ""°""'"' "''"'"" ... un.1• au m11111Jri1,-.
. ----·---=-,~
him he was breaking the law.
'"fhen this guy started talking to his
neighbors and fotmd some of them were
making brew, too," said Townsend.
The lawmaker added he had never
made any "home 6rew" himself.
Olrrently, It Is le11al to make up to 200
gallons of wine a year al home.
Fonns seeking the ballots can be ob-
tained from the school district office,
28161 Vlc1orll Blvd., C.plalrano Bea<h,
and sent to the Registrar of Votert of-
fice, 1119 E. Chestnut Ave., Sant3 Ana.
Three trustees within the district will be
eleeled, ooe eacb from Laguna Nl&Uel,
San Juan Capistrano and Dana Poiol.
LBJ Autopsy
Diseases Prevented Operation
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Four doctors who treated former
President Lyndon B. Johnson for heart ailments said today Ibey d ..
cided against performing coronary bypass surgery on Johnson J>&.
cause-of extensive heart damage and a seriously diseased colon.
THE OOCTORS, IN A statement issued at Brooke General 'Ho,:
• pita!, said an autopsy of !he former president's body confirmed !heir
diagnosis that the colon was exte~vely sickened wilh divertlculltis .
His heiit sullered damage In an April, 1972 attack.
"Numerous dlfficult decisions were faced in the medical man·
agement ol President Johnson," said a on .. page statemenl "He en·
dured bis di!!iculUes with courage and resolved lo enjoy life u much
as conditions permltled. His family and physicians would like to re-
alfirm hi• passionate commitment to more research In combatting
our major health enemies."
TOM JOHNSON, FORMER AIDE lo Johnson bul not related,
cleared the statement wllh the family of the late President. He &aid
It was !>sued "in orllor lo clarify thee.vents which preceded lh1 death
of· former President Johnson." (See related story, Page 4.)
Rep0rted Kiiied
For Board ~Dead' Marine
Elections Shows u ·p Alive
Only two penon.t so far have taken o\lt
papers lo run loo: trust.. )losts In ibe
Saddleback Conununity Colltge District
election April 17, with sllihllY lllOnl than
two w-lefl bef ... ibe fllinl deadline.
Feb. 11 Is !be last cloy to file to qualify
as a candidate f<r one of three trustee
seats open.
James W. Manhall of 140-A Avtnida
Majol<a, Laguna Hills, has llbn papers
out to run ln trustee a.re~ five. wbicb in-
cludel Lellure World and small parts of
El Toro and Laguna Nigltol.
Marshall Is technlcally the Incumbent
in the atta. He wu appolnted to the
boanl I.St November alter voters a)>'
proved an upanalon of tbe boanl from
five to seven members.
Tru!li" .,... two and four allO m
open in the election.
In area four, which includes San
Clemente, Dana Point and Capistrano
Beoclt, Ronald Mincher hlls taken out
papen.
Mincher, of 34522 Callo Plrtola,
Capistrano Beach, is an electronics
technician.
He will be challenging the lncwnbent in
aru four, boan1 prtSident Patrick J.
Backua if Backus tries for teelection.
ln trustee area t"°, Hans Vogel is the
incumbellt.
No one tw taken out papers in that
a~a. which covers the southern portion
of Tustin. •
There is no filing fee in a sclxiol boa.rd
electJoo.
For more information, CODtact the
Registrar of Voters.
Rosary Slate4
For R. Merchant
In Capo Beach
Rosary will be recited Thursday for
Raymond James Merchant in Capistrano
Beacb -died Mooday. He was '9.
Mr. Merdw:it wu a retlred rea:I estate
broker. He wa.s a member of !be San
Fernando Lions Club and a Ille member
both of the San Fernando Elb LodJe No.
15111 and of the Knl&hll of Columbus San
Fernando Couodl No. !Oil
He lea ... his ..Ue, Alma, of the family
home at 13811 Ctmlno Caplslrano, Spl<O
11, San Juan ~; a IOll, Ray·
mond James Mercllant, M.D. of South
Laguna; 1 brother 1 Harold Merclumt of
San Fernando and Dve grandcblldron.
The rosary will be lteld at 7 p.m.
Thunday and Mau wUJ ~ celebrated at
9 a.m. Friday, both at St. Edward's
Catholic Church In Cap!Jtnoo Beach.
WASlllNGTON (IJPI) -The lle!W.
Deportment laid today a Marine !ISied
a.s kUltd and Rlumed to thls couutry for
burlal has turned up oo North Vietnam'•
list of prisoners of war.
He was Identified u PFC llCllaid L.
Rldeway of Houston, Tea:.
He i> the aon of Mrs_ Mildred A. Ridge-
way, who ln 19Sll was listed as living at
7926 Fuhon St., Houston.
"l always had a fe<lln( my aon would
turn up alive. I never gave Jn to the
fact my '°" WU dead. It WU faith in
God," Mrs. Ridgway, a n...,.. aide, told newsmen.
"My sympathy goes to !be parenl& o!
the boy we buried because I shed quite
a few tears for him," she added.
Maj. Gen. Danlel James, Penllgon
spokesman for POW mattf:rs, sald author-
itiCl!I believed Rldeway wu among nine
Frot1tPqeJ
LEARY .••
wblcb tho former Harvml pbllosopher
assured her that be regarded her u his
spouse despite his . existing union with
Mn. Rosemary Leary, 40.
"Thia letter (written in Orange County
Jail) from my perfect love ls all the
legality l need ," she assured newsmen.
She attended all Leary'• court ap-
pearances in San Luis Obispo where be ls
cllarged with escape following his fllght
in September ol 1970 from the geriatric
ward of the men's colony ln that com·
munlty:
Leary WIS at the time serving I st.ate
prison term of one to 10 years for bl!
conviction in Orange Q>unty on charges
of possession of marijuana.
He was tried with his wife, Rolemary ,
and 900, John, 2S, following the arrest of
the trio In Lquna Beach on Dtc. :IS,
1968.
Leary was not allowed today to stage
the Impromptu press conference that
preceded his appearance last week in
Judge Turner'• cwrtroom.
Judp Turner made It clear this morn-
ing that he was dlspleued with much of
the informality that entered Jnto the ar·
raignment on Leary's last appearance.
Leary was not allowed today to discuss
his case with nenmtn and he wu oot
aUowed an lnlervlew with 'Miss Harcourt·
Smith.
He ls one of Dtll'ly 50 peraons indicted
by the Grand Jury Oii druc chari" attm-
mlng from wllal lawmen claim WU tho
mullknllllon dollar actJvlty of tho
Brotherhood of Erernal Lo ....
It II alleged that tho organlzllUon bad
11nb tltrougbout Ille -Id and waa In·
ttrumenlal In lmportlJli vut quanuu ..
of illlclt drugs Jnto the Unlled States.
It Is alleged that much of that drug
traffic origlnated In several of the 11 na-
tions visited by Leary during the -
that followed his escape from the San
Luis Obispo prilon.
Burial will follow In AactnSlon
Cemetery in El Toro. New Signal Set
Kickoff Dinner Set For Capo Beach
By South Coast 'Y' A traf!lc aijnal ww be Installed at the
Program dlrectora and volunteers of lntmectlon of Doheny Parle Road and
the South Cout n!CA wUl bold a dinner Victoria Boulevard In Ca~ Bfacb,
Feb. a lo kick of[ ils 1973 fund-raising the Board of Supervlaorl decided. Tile county Traffic Commllfff reported campalgu and ..U of plans for !be com-that traffic counl& and acddeot data at
Ing year. the lnrenectlon make necwary !be ln-
The dinner wW be held at 7 p.m. al the atallaUon o! atgala. The committee also recommended that Outrigger Restaurant, Laguna Beocb. U Camino Caplalrano IJ extended as an
Entertainment will be provided and artertal blghwJy west of Dohei\y Part
youth of aeveral South coast com-Road, a signal would be .needed at that
1nunities wl:l1-be-holmed;---------4ro1lenecllo&.¥----
Marin.a killed Feb. =i, 1168, In an am-
bush: near Khe Sanh.
Remains identified a.s Rld11eway'1 had
been tttumed lo the United Stalea aiid
burled at Jeff,,... BlrTICkl In SI. LouJa_
James al.lo a:a1d two men Cll the POW
list provided by Hapril had been carTled
by I.he Pentagon as deserters and 16
others the eommuruts aald died In cal"
tivily bad been listed u tllled In action.
The two pr<vlously considered d.,.rt-
en, Jamea aald, wert Marine Pvts. Frod-
erkk Lewil Elbert, who Haool llid waa
allve ln,prlsoo, and Earl C. Weatherman.
who Hanoi said died In captivity.
James did not provide the hometown
of either man.
Ja.meS said Ridgeway was a member
ol a Marine patrol operating near KM
Sanh wtule that outpost was und«:r Com-
mwiist siege in 19$8.
"There WU a patrol that WU ambustJ..
ed.1' be said. "~ wu a cuualty
count made. Exactly how It wu made -
whether by a ground oblerver, or from
the air, or what -is unkown. 1be count
reported nlDe bodlel. ''
James said there wu a porlod from
Feb. %li In Aug. II that rtCOYuy forces
could not reaclt tbe area wbere the vic-
tims Jay.
"During this period, the area wu under
bombardment by mortarl and air
strikes,'' he said. "There wu also the
normal detmoratioo from the tropical
environment Poaidve Individual ldenU/~
cation of some partial remalol wu tm.
possible.
"When they did get In there, Ibey !<It
they bad Ille remalna of Dina lndlvlduals.
"'!be remaim of wllat WU believed lo
he nlno members of !be patrol """' In-
terred In a group burial at Jeffenon
Barracks National Cemetery, St. Louis.
Ridgeway was believed fu he In that
group of f!J11llns ...
James said t he Jefferson Barracks
Cemetery was selected by the families
of the nine because it was the ''nmt
central locaHon" to the varicus towns: In
\\'hich they lived.
FronaP .. eJ
BANK •.•
their way lnlo the vault.
The Obla fann loot ,... llllWlhed aoJy
alter federal men tore up the five-acre
plol !<r a -t. -idnl with bulldawa,
and o\her heavy equipment u well u
-altd picks. 'lbe bucollC otuhlnJ place IJ located In
Mahoning COunly, 20 mUes aouthweat of
the Ycnmgstown area. Acenta decllned to
say what led them lo !be bldeoul
AmU Dlnslo, 36, convicted of the burg·
Jary an dnow serving a ZO.year tenn, Is
from Youngstown.
Charles A. Mu11J1an, 38. and PbllU.
Christopher, 29, are alao serving time fol-
lowing trial In t.oa Angeles lhl! fall.
It was not known whether !be trial of
Ronald Barber would be held up unU/ his
brother 1s capWred.
New Business Ownen
Invited to Chamber
Owners of new buslneue1 in town are
lovlted to ask questions about the ac-
lMU.. of lhe Sin Juan Caplatnoo
Chamber of Commerce group'• luncheon
at the meeting Wednesday.
1be event will be at noon at the El
Adobe Restaurant. Luncheon tlcketa wlll
coat '3 and will be available at the door.
For-mote-information;-call dS-4700:
AROUND THE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SEVERAL ANSW~S POP UP. FIRSTI. Y, THE COST OF STORES
IN SHOPPING CENTER5 IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE
ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LlffiE TRAFFIC CONGESTION
LEADING TO US.
THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL . TO SAY THAT WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR SIXTEEN Yµ.RS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
..
COSTA lllSA
tlNCI 1tlf
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663. Placlfttla Ave.
COSTA MISA
646-4838
• • • • '
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ltlone 11'• Wort h o· VE , .. R THE COUNTER
Br:ighte1· l\utures NAso Li•li"90 for M.nd•r. Jonu~rr 29, 1913
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Cler\ ti Ot•nee CWlll'I' M! JM111ry M Cltr\ Of Ot ...... c-IY 1111 hi!. 4 1tn.
I Im, Wl~l.IAM •· lf JOHN, COUfrfT-i PtcTITtoul IUSIMISI WIU.IAM E. IT JOHH, COUNTY CLEll;lt, IV httr J. llf"litM. °::ri ltAMI •tAT'SMlltt CLCAJt, Ir &tH~ J. h r91len, ~
"lilOl!lhld Or"'fl9 CM.i Dilly ,.llot~ ~ 1:':~ftl fltl'HM ire ~ J ,llbllwr I OrMfll C-t Otlty ,llot,
J11111t,.,. Zl. it and ,IO,_.., •• 11. lt13 tlt1DV't to(IK IAL\.U, 20111 NlllffY ' 6• t3. l0. lf7J ..0.111
tn.n c.11.l'M L_, H\H'ltlllfto11 Midi tz"4 PUBlJC NOTICE ---::c:7e:--==-ccc-----/ At'IMll Croff Tf\olnto!I. 20111 tollm.
PUBUC NOTICE L-"~ """ tM ·1----,,,,----~-----I ' ~ 1 -~ Tl!Oit.on; 2Dn1'Collin. JlllC'TITJOUI IUllN:lll L.,-~ii.itl1J1111011 IMefl f»M JllNlll ttATIMlfiT ITATIMINT 011' AIAN:DONMINf 'rlllt IMll'lttl 11 liill"I eotlllvclM by • TN folloWlnt Pt,._ 11 doll'IO ~lne.1 Of' Ull O' P4lrl111t111fa. 11; JlllCTfTIOUI IUliltlll NAMI Arlffti Croft 'rhOnltOll llATCHING 1,ECIALTl!I, ffJ1 TM f(lllowlf'llll IMf'IOlll 11.tYe ·~ Tfllt 111~ flled wllll 1111 County Wooc111"'" 0'1¥1, HUll!lf19IOll l tldl
' 1111 -of tllt fktl!IM MIMI$ 1\111'11 Cltrk of Dt'•net CounfY Ol'I: Jtll. ... 1tT.I. """ THI CHILOIUIM'I IOOICSHOl"P'E •t )101 WILLIA.NI E. ST JOHN, COUNTY ltoblrt L. 0~111!1, .,51 llflllldllWtl l !.. Cont Hwy,. C«Oflt Oel Mt#, Cl.Eltl(. Ir lttl'Y J, kf1itl .... OilctUIY, Otfw, Kll!lll1111_1a11 hlCll '1..W C•lllonll•, P'ttMt Tllh Ml,,.M 11 bel111 COfldllCltd by In TIM llctO~ bwl-1 NI,.... tlftrted to l"Wlltllltl °'""' C011! O.lly l"llot, IMl1¥ ..... I.
•bow \11111 11'-I '" July 11, 1'7t In ""' J-.ry '· 16. 2l. •• 1'7~ 41.n lll•rt L G!illltH COUrlty of Dr'lftM, Ct!llllnlll.• Tl!l1 111._1 fllM whtl t11t C-ty ''°'"enc:• o. ,;..,.,, 31si1Ttblt11;..:k 1111. PUBU C NOTICE C*• 01 0...111111 c-tv Ofl: J.,,, .., Jt1l. II. l.teut111, Clllf. WILl.IAM E, ST JOHH, COUNTY
i..... I". lr•nt, '611 Viti•, Nl'<lfOOrt CLE.RIC, Ir lllty J, llfllltn. OecMlty. -..Cll, C•ltl. nuo N:OT•c• °' OISSOl.VTIOlt " !DH Tri.Ji lMI-Wit conduct... by 01' l"A•TJlllRINI" Jllvblltl!ld 0r.,... (Mal c.nv l"llol. "*""' D. Mrt"r tfld lot•• fl, lrtnl, t• ""'blk not1c1 It llUlllY l l'ffll 11111 Ntn Jtt11,1ery '· 1'. :D, :Ill, lfn 4 ·1> Gtn.'•I l"•r""""'p) W. Hunty, l.lllllt 0, ftll.U'•· Dfnrlkl--------------l'lorll'l(t 0 . Mytl' Cocltl', tnd lolilt ,.. Wlhl'llbtr.. PUBLIC NOTICE Tlllt 11•1-t w11 t!lld "'11HI 11'11 C-. l"lfttofot9 llol111 M lllnl llndw tllt Hc-l':~~ltrk DI Dr•not C-!r on J1n1.11,.., 1'. = ~t~~°'l=l----,-,-CT-1-,-10-..,--,-,-,c,.-1-1-,---I
tn-oc City of TU1tl11, CO\lftf'f' ot Ort1191, 51111 ot NA.Ma ITATIM•NT
,. "• c11lftttll .. ttld on 1111 ttNll d•Y st Tiit followlnt ,...._ 11 clolnt ~111n1 BOSTON (AP) _ lrl seven O•-• • ....... .... Jetl!.11,..,, lfn. by l'hlJtlltt CO!ttot(ll, dltto/W II! ,,eJi.irt. l rMllw•Y . ttll Mid H•tntlllllp-' ltf'lftlflllt ""'' HARNEY ""RI( WE$T, llD! Ml~ months, savings banks in Lii........., c1Mt. Mlt ,..1._..•• ~ ltltl'tln. <111"" lr·\11,,., C..lllorlll• """'· M h tts h tt •·• 'ubll1htd o.11111 cw11 Diiiy ,!lot S11d M inas tn 1t1t ""'""'' wm bl c-H. '"'"' 1~. 113'.15 MIMl'1ke. assac use ave a raci.cu J.-,y 30 nc1 "'°' , 1s 20 IM:ted by v. M. o.c.,1o 1nd Lolli• A. 1mn., Calffof'nl• ""'· 20,ooli customers for their new •m • u.rr · ifo,,3 w.iMnlllf1, whO wm ,,.., •rd dlKtlt"' Thi• bll1t11111 11 bll111 cl!IO\ICMct 1ry 1n -1.--klng a-unts that pay 1-_ all ll•llllltln Ind ctiallll of ""' fl,m 11111 lrldlvklual '-'"''1\: ....... v ,,..
PU BL!c NOTICE ractl"' 111 monlt1 IMY•bl• lo tht ftrm, H. !"tut Brihm ....... ,t Commerc1'al banks are Furthtl' ftOtke It htt.OV olwll 11111 JM Thia 1l1Mmtnt llltd wllh lilt County .,..,.. · -----~~~~=o---111!10ert19~ w111 not bl ,,JPOl!tJbll' ..._ ci.,-of Dt'11111 County on: J1nu.ry 11, increasingly worried about the NOTIC• TO CRIDll'Oll' !hh c11r-on f6'fp.ebll141llon1 1nC,i,,ld ltn. WILLIAM E. ST JOHtt, COUHlV competition. su .. 1•101111 COU•T 0, THI b~,.... ollltr• Ill OW!I -or In"" CJ..ERK. llY ....... J. llf'V$ltn, Dtpuly. STATI o" c•Ltl"O.ttlA"" 11o11n1 'If tt. 11 • '-nw Customers are receiving TH I COUNTY Ofl Olt4Jttt DATED AT CO.Mt Otl ""'· Ctlllorftll, l"vbll111td Or'•no• Cwrt Dlllr Plkll, _,.,, .. e ··--$150,000 Interest • ... A 1SM lhll tllh di'/ of J111111n, 1tn. J1_,.., !l. JO •nd ,,bl'lltf., '· 13. ....... UIQ.11 Et11!1 ol OONA.LO D. ANOll;EWS, 11'0 I.DUIS A, W1!1SEN8Ell;G Im 1u.n month on the total of $30 ~.:.:i~ DONALD OEl..L AHDtlews. J=";:. 1~1111 c"" D•11r :.._~ PUBLIC NOTICE million invested -in -the ac-
NOTlcE IS HE•l!l'Y GIVEN to tlMi counts, now offered by 'ro of crldllor1 of 11\t aOtot• 11o1m111 --nt PUBUC NOTICE •ICTITlous 1us11••ss t11a1 1u ,.,._ "'"'"" c'9lm1 q11n11 "" ttAMI ITATIMEttT the 167 Say State savings Mid dilc:ldetll 1r1 ~Im lo rt .. tlltm, · Tiii foll.wino dof banks w1111 "" 111C•.wry -..c:.....-1, 1n 1i. otlk1 •KTITIOUI l utltt•s• """"' •r• no ,
of ,.... def'-of "" •llOYI tnl1tlld cowl. tr MAM• ITATIN MT bull::.-NS'ioo.EIGN CAR REPAllt, 20lt EACH CHECK -··· 15 to prtwnl "*" with IM MC111try Thi lot1ow1,.,. ~ tl't doing 1 ,. .• , ,. ....., u ¥OUChtn lfl "" ~•ltllld 1n c1r1 of b\11ln1n 11: H.tl'W tvd.. C01!1 Mello, _,Jtotll .. Jtmn L lll ubtl, Jr .. Allomly ,, law, CO$TA MESA TENNIS Clue. '7'11 ...... n:!Yn-ci Vlncl!ll, 521 Rl'*'klt Aw.. cents, ~ conlrast lob the free Jm v11 Oporto, tt.wpOrt IMdt. l1111<1n Dr .. C01t1 Mn.I, C•ll•. nm HtwpOrt l•1eh. Ca1llOl't1ll nuo. checking offered y many c1111on111. HMO. wllld'I II 11w p11e, ot Roblt1 J,.._ Abl:lon, •11 Etmlri. 1 ..... Andtrllon, at H••• 11\ld,. commercial banks .:-. usually bvsln111 ol Hit ~l!ld lt1 •II ft'llttlfl HUl'lllntfllll 9"ch, Ctlll. 9Ml7 COlll MIN, Ctlllornlt '2627 Pl<1•1nlng 11 !tit •tlll• ot Mid dteldtnl, II~.,.~ ~· ~ Etmlri, Hun-Tiii• tN.11111111 i,. 1111119 conductlcl tty • Oll the condition that a $100 wlml" IGl,ll' mMlhl 1ttw the !Int publlc~ '""'°" ' · ffnotn.hlp l.AIA---• • t I d 11ori o1 thf• llOtln. Mlc11111 Tll'l'!Oftly AObolt, '°"' ,.. ..... ,.,, "' R~ c vir1e1n1 lHll.i:UK.~ ts m a 1 n a n e ,
c11t0 J•nv.,.., t, 1rn c.t• MIN, Cttll. t2U6. n 11 •tltlrnlnt ri11c1 w1111 ""' c-tv although some commercial Tom 0 And.-.WI Tlllt lluslntM b lltlng Ulllduclld by I Cltrtr. ol Orll!ll c-ty Otl: J-rr II, 1.--"'-do , . ••• Admlnl1tr1111r ol "" lltl•ll """'" :=....-rip· "'*"' 1tn. WILLlAM E ST JOHN COUNTY ll4UJU n t even reqwre i.&JAI. °' "" "'°"' lllmld CllC«llnl ·-CLERK • ·-,· .. ' • -""t comm-1'al ··-·-are J.\NIES L au1•L. Jll; Tllll ''"-"' mtd Wllll "" Clll,ll'lfy • ., .,,, . l'VI 111. ............. U\.I ...... UAllA.:11 · e..,_ If Dnnot CllllntV on: J111. 11. lt71 .,.._ prohib1'•·• from pay;na m· Alt#My •I Llw WILLIAM (. Sf JOHM, COUNTY "1Allllllld Df'lllO'I cont Diiiy "llol, I.CU -e . ::::: :::::: Ctllr .. t26't CLE ll;K, ,., Tllttflt M. Wlfd; °"""""· J1n111ry D, • Ind ,.11n.1.,.., " u. terest on their checking ac-
T...,....· 1n41 '7M1n " iUM 1'71 iun counts, and the savings bank AfNnlt .W Mnhilttrttw l"ublbl!llll Df'•l!ll Cwrt O.llY Pilot, C
l>vbllihllll 0r1not '"'' o.11Y J011ot. J,,....,, 16. n. •· 11111 Febr!N,.., " PVB~C NOTI E accounts pay Interest at up to
J1nu1rv n, '° 1nc1 F~'Y '· •s. lf1J tu--13 5" percent a year A 1m 204.n JlllC'TITIOUI IUSlltlSl 1' • PUBUC .NOTlcE 11AM1 ITAT•M•llT depositer -who has a large
T"' 1011-1111 pert0n 11 11o1119 bll1111111 balance and writes few checks l"R"22 111; '
-,,,, TO ,,,.,,... _su .. 1a1oa COYlT 01" THe: JACI( TRYON .. ASSOCIATES, im s. comes out ahead at a savtngs "" STATI Ofl CALIP'ORfilA irot: R1mant Or., S1nll Ant. '2101 bank I" O• IULK t llANl,•1111 1 of TN• COUN:TY-O••OltANG• ,J,\CI( TRYON &. ASSOCIATES, l72' S. • 51C!l:e:r:1·~ ,t,' c~:.:i:v ~~'" NOTICI ~ H"':A.:r~·o, l"•TITION S•;~~. ".:'1n'::!'711 bllftO conaucted by •n . "We find that the JM:Oheple us-COll'\mHCl•I CO!M. notlc1 It MrtbY gl¥MI JllOI: ... OIATI 0, WILL AMD flOa lncllvldu11. mg the accounts are e1t r the lhal I bulk lrantllf 11 ibclut to be midi U TTI U TISTAMENTARY Jtck L. Tryon yrama adults Or the Older peo-bllwftft IM pettonl Incl In lttOnl•nc• Elltt. tf TAIC:IYO TAHAMACHI Thi.I 1t1t1111wil rllllll Wllll !ht C-IY v--e wltll the 1•m1 •!Id condlllon111 fol'-t;: Dl«aHd 'Cltr-of Dl'•noe <.'tM.H!tr a11 1 J'"· 12. ttn. pie," Elliott Carr of the Sav·
I. Th! -.and IMIMnHI ollddrHI ol 1111 HOTICE • 15 HElfl!9Y CIVEN that Wll.l.IAM E. ST JOHN;. COUNTY . Bank Sa lat' f lr1n1,...0I' Is OICI( CURil, f'M Nori!\ TATSUO TANAMACHI II.Ii flled hlr~n CL£1ll(, By TNr111 M. Wlf'd. OlpufY, 1ngs ssoc ion 0 N•wport &ou1n1rd, ,Ntwpot'I &Nell. petlllon 1qr problti of w111 •nd tor ' !l"9t Massachusetts says, ''These· c1111onll•. TM ldd•••• uitd by "" 1n1.11nc1 of Ltlttn Tt1t•m....t1ry to Piii· l"ublltllld Orlnll'f Colit O•lly Pilot, people generally have high ac-tr11ns"'OI' wl!hltl ll'll 11tr11 ~· tlontr, rtfto'lflCI lo W!lk1I 11 INlde tor J1n11&ry 16. 23. lO. 1nd Ftbr"'•"' 6, pr1eeo1,. 11111 c1.111 •• ••• '' li'le'f ''! ...,,, ...... ,.r11cui..... ,,... 11111 "" !!.'m..MMI 1m ---w-1:1 andiow outpu~ known to 1M lrtntl«H •~ 11 followl. JMce of ~lllO-.,..•mrllllblln .et , The b lance
11m 11;oe1w1i... """"""· _ 'l!i''-..~ ..,,...,t&Mrv: 20. 11n. .1t t:• •.m.. Ill t11t PUBUC NOTICE average a per ac-.\rOll~. c11110n1t1. c-miom of ·~~Ho. , of .. 1c1 coont, he ooted, works out to •,T"" ~~-"':" =~~~~:"'r~·;-,';; e-1, II 10ll Cl'l'lc Cini« on ... Wu!, In ltOTICI! o• INT•ttTtotil TO · •••ADE 11 500 M I n ""' · ' the City of Sin" ANI, Clllfotttlt. IN TN• I.ALI 011' ALCottOLIC • · tnf•no l.lt11. ~11ng1on hKfl. DetW J-rr t. ltr.I 11v1•A•1s The competition began after ct1~'!0c:111on •nd ,._ .. lfltc,lot\otl ~~~ST J(IHH, Tl Wllom It M•Y Contern~'""""' u. lt7' the sta~ Supreme Court ruled
.i tt. prflplffl' '° 111 tr1mtlf'Ttrlll •~ •• '""'"'°"MID••••· Ill(.. $l.lblkl 10 lswonce o1 "" TlcMH 11> last May that savings banks 'i:'= :.~~.°C':11,:.~ lk!t.llft.,.., :..~-:::.·,_.,., ~~Nit!;=':' ~i" :"did~ could offer "demand depos.it"
·Otfl« 1vrn1i.....1 1n11 rtxtvrn. Trvdlt Lii ......., c........ _,. blwt'lttS 11 1111 pr11111..., llllcl'IDed n accounts. The savinas bankJ •fld ~pmlfl!. PIU!Mfng WPP!U. AftwM)'I "'1 ,...lllMr f110ow1: -1:8 ~. TM 1111-"'""i... 11 10 bl =1tC1u1Mt• ~"'*' 0ra,.,.. c-t O•My ,.11ot. 1"'"12 P11c.nll• Aw .. Cllt"' ":WU actually are pr o v J d i n g
•d on F1t1ru.ry '· 1f1J •1 "'-~ 11 J""'9rv :xt, II 111111 ...,,..ry '-1tn f.t·n ,_Ill 1o ....eh 1"'9ftllon. 11M ""' withdrawal slips that don 't JOSEl"H A. GENOVESE. Allomly It dlnfgned It 1pplylfl9 lo till Dtlllrtmtnl L1w, , 1611 H. Tinlin s''"'' Dr•l'lft· PUBUC NOTICE of Alcoholh: h¥111'111 control 111r 11111111e1 need to be presented at the
C1Uloml1. II Ill •kohotlc beW!'IOt lktt1$1 tor lt'ie5' bank. but .L. ..... -"negoUable llOV STERNEll P!'etniMf, '' follows: u~
Tr111111r" su,.••ioit 'c:,1::T 0, THI ON SALE 1EE11: orders of withdrawal" on what Publ\111111 Or•rQ9 C011! Dally Piiot. .. . Wllfll' C. ll;1u lhe b nk 11 NOW I J1nv••Y 30. 1'71 '91·1l STATI OJll CAUJllOltltlA , Publtdltd Ortnot Co.11 D1llv "llot, a s ca accoun s
Checking
flNANCE
Accounts
Pay Off
PUBlJC NOTICE
Viewed £01·
By SYLVIA PORTER
The job ouliook for entlneers, scientist• •l\d l«bnlcl@lls IS" br1ghtenmg. The prolonged overall economic upswing in
the U.S. ls now expanding career openings, pulling up sal-
ary levels.
?t1ajor U.S. rorporations report they plan lo hire 42 per-
ctlDl more graduates with bachelor de-
grees in engineering th1s June than In
June '72, and rt percent more gradu·
ates with master's degrees.
AVERAGE STARTING salaries, ac-
cording to the annual poll conducted by
Dr. Frank Endicott of NorU:lwestem
University in Evanston. HI., will be
$905 a mooth for newly graduated engin-
fOOllTIR eers with a bachelor's degree and $1 ,0S9
a month for those ""'ith a master's degree. These are sub-
slanlially above the levels or 1972.
"The acute depression is over.' says Dr. Eli Ginsberg,
director of C.Olumbla University's Conservation of Human
Resources project and a nati9Ilally respected authority on
the nalion·s manpower trends.
[f this is the career of your choice -or it you know
a man or woman involved in '™ engineering, tec];mical or
scientific fields -here are the key trends and areas where
job opportunities will be brightest. * A teal need has developed for those trained in the
application of aerospace advances to earth problems -ran g-
ing rrom ill health Jo poverty and problems ot the deaf and
the blind. * CROSS DISClPLJNARV" specialists will be in much
greater demand than those trained in a narrow specialty,
and this will apply particularly to careers relating to en-·
viroomental protection. For instance. a combination in
ever·lasHng demand might be for thOse with training In
the social sciences and law as \\.'ell as the ~usual 'basic
fields. * Industrial hygienists will be in demand to develop
health programs throughout the U.S. workplace and to find
ways to eliminate major occupational hazards and diseases.
Also in demand will be specialists to help protect man
from the hazards of excessive radiation exposure. * The ever·stricter health standards being imposed by
federal regulatory agencies will require larger staffs to
perform research and testing in private industries prior to
sale of new drugs and chemicals to the public. * FOOD SCIENTISTS and technologists will be sought in larger and larger numbers ·to find new ways to: store
foods safely; apply computer techniques to food processing
and marketing operations; develop new foods for dieters
and others; test food additives such as flavorings and pre-
servatives for safety and effectiveness; develop ,new food
products such as "meats" mad~ from soybeans and fortified
cereals for the undernourished. * There'll be many new and far out specialties. For in-
.~e. ~in . ..n...eed~will be inc!u_strjal .rneteQr'OIQgists lo probe
the links between Wectther and speci£ic human activities -
including biological functioning -and to apply sucb know-
ledge to agricultural and industrial operations. * Finally, a recent "skills conversion" study by the
National Society of Prolessional Engineers in Washington
turned up the following 11 fields now eagerly searching for
scientists and engineers in the years immediately ahead.
This can be an exceedingly valuable, money-making guide.
Heavy construction (bridges, skyscrapers), residen-
tial construction, research and development, environmental
systems, forestry, medical technology, electric power and
utilities. •
Others lncllide industrial safety: transportation planning ;
law enforcement and traf(ic engineering.
TH• c~ng~oa•woi J,,....,.., ». 11n a·1J look just like checks and can
HoT1c1 o,. Ml'A11t11to o• PITITION PUBlJC NOTICE be used just like checks. Co F -----~~c-,------1 l'o• PllOIAT• Ol' WILL AttD ,Olt • t ' • ) U •t
• 11111 LnTllll TllTAM•NTARY 1----="'"'°"''°"""""""---1 un y 1nanc1a m 1u•ra10R cou1.T o, TH• E11111"' 0111;1sT1ME E MOA$1!, o.. ,1cT•Tiovs 1usi NEss IN SEPTEMBER, NOW ac--.
PUBlJC NOTICE
NASO Volume Advtnc•i l7J Otdlftl'I 111•
,. , ,, '""--,-·-·~-
MUTUAL FUNDS
'"'l
STA.TIE OP' CALl,Ollt lA 11101 C"'IHCI. NAM• STATIMINT counts spread to the New THI COUN:TY Ofl ORAN:GI NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN 1111'1 Thi follow1119 Pill''°" I• clol1111 blltlntu -, Me." UM:) c11ar1 .. c.. Mor-M "'• 1111111 htf*ln • pe11. ,1. Hampshire Savings Bank in H "' .. -::.-,
N:OTIC I Ofl HIAll;IHO Oii l"ITITIOJll lion lot l"•obtll of Wiii "'" tor l1w1nce AcE AUTO I.EASING, i214 AUi Vllll Concord ears Autho1· ·at Meet N-v .. -. -Fol· Orexll E 13.1~13.13 J•n111 Ftl ... 11.\lt 11.tt f!Enlrl 15.n 'Ml "OR AUT HOtllTY TO lotlllOW II L.ttll<'I Ttsltmtnl•f'l' to tllt Hilt!-Ot' .. NtwpOrt l11Ch, '2660 • •-~ ' •I > • D IT•US GO I •• ' MONIY A1110 TO 1x1cut1 PllOM-rw11rtnc1 lo Wllll:h 11 INdl ,..., 1urt111t Ke11to11 ... 1e111on. 22u •111 vitt1. Massachusetts banking in-bid~•,:.. .. •,., .. ~ Fd u.n 11~ 1~::: If: .:rr ;:~ 11·~d 1j:! , ·" ISSOllY IHJTI SICUll;IO I '( SIC. "'''lculoln. Ind 11'111 1111 "'""' lflll pl.ICW N"'°" lff(h, t26'0 lerests say some federal Of· e•• on Mvru.t Or'vf I.¥ 1, .• l 11.'1 Jof1111ln 11.59 21..ft ht.it s1 1 ,,, 11.tt OND 1'11.UIT 01!10 of lwtl'lno Irle -1111 lotll'I Sit for Tl'll1 bullr11u 11 bl!nt c:ondllcillll ~ et1 Fundt 11 llllOlllll llY ~ll'ICl'JI .~ f·t't l(•YSTDHI: KU OD II; OS:
Ttw Ei1t11 o1 Ru1Y c. KUEILER, "'"""'"' •. 1m. 11 t:oo •.m .. 1n "'-1n111~. ficials are concerned that If An authority on building and Reservations are n-•·ary "' "'~'0 .. •~,·· -IBi&'= 1 :~ 1il3 It::; I~ ~:g ~~~ ~~.~v \'J~ l1r:M clle••Soed COWITOOll'I II °""nmtnl No. ' of SllCI I(~ • ......,... the . bank ........... ;_,. ..... ....,,,, a(ll G • 6t t.il I ~ 'tt 10 \J 11.1' 1 1t Notlu ·1, 1iuttrv 11¥ .. t11a1 wtLMETTA eovrt. '' * C•'lk c..ttr Ort..,. wn1, 1n nit 1111Hn111t fllllll w11r1 ,,. c_.ty savings ~'6 development will address a and may be made by calling J•1111 rv 29• 1•n AT H l · l::1 1<1 I·" J"' ~-11 -MA_,.;.., C. •ee••oo. E•ICV!rl• o1 ""wm of""' ""'City ot *" ""'· CtltfllrTtle. c1trt. 11 °'"'" .. ___ °"' J1t1. M. 1tn. system expands, It could meetm' g of the Orange County (?I<) "°' ~5 -, •• ,.. H9WA•o: 1111 K/ 1 .N s .. u11:1TY l'OS : .bow~ dtc9dlnt, hM tllld ""'"" OtlldJi_,..,11,ttr.1 WILLIAM E. U"'JOHN, COUNTY ~·. I i I ) l!!n.Fj 10fi10H Utl f! 2, ?t·il • .,1,, •01 •·:t
...... ....-lflM pttllloft for ....... lo IXKUlt I WIL.l.IAM E. SI JOMN. CLEllK, ly T"-11 lri\, w...o. o.rtv tnreaten the stability of small Financial Society on 1burs-:l§be•1;ALTY': l r.;(:,::. 11':. 'JJ :1 ti 'i· ltY tr.r,: F :1' ,J:;,
,;,:imll&Of'Y' Hott llCllrld "" • S.C:ond CIM'lty Otl1I ,. nat commercial banks They d rwth S.OI' 5 se ~PICH F JI 10.l• "'' $.I s.11 •. )t Sl!L•CTID '011 T™-1 Oe.i llflOll 1111 rt•I Pf'Olltl't'f ol 1111 MILVIH Jll. COftl lt "'*lltllld Clo'lf!Oe Co.II Diiiy "llol •'--' ay · ncom 4.2t 'l'O Stck Fd 11 n U.2t POtlo '·'l I 01 Am Sllr '·f. 10.•7 "t•lt ,.,...11111n., dHct lbtd i Ind 111tt •1 Civic C•• Dlfft Wttf•Slltt m J1"1.11"' ». •nd F-....,.., " u. ~. reason u.iat these commercial M S E • u llturn '·" lj·'f E~r11d 1 u 11.JD l'ol•r• 5.j s.si 0oo Fo 't "'
fWll«l' lS. 1'73 ff t .00 AM. In ll'll Sit!!• AM. Clltfr9nli. 1m H2-7l banka -'ght fiind the SeJ aco teWart, president and arn•1•gs p A.dvl Mr 4.16 ? E E Spj .f;1? .13 l("lclu' 1, I ,,ff Sol S"r• 1 . \ 11.JJ
lllptrlor c ... r1 of "" s11i. of c1111orn1•, Tll: cn4
J MJ.llll .... m ves chief executive officer of ., .. :J;~,~~.:d l~:~ff U:IJ ot,""~ •.ll~',, ~~ ~ Ml1 10 22 i:;:\~~1 ,. l, r, ll:ft
1" ""' * ·1 ... c°"""" of 0r....,., °'P41•1· "'"'""' "" --""-'" PUBlJC NOTJCE short of casb if customers sud-St rt 1 f Uo Se 1 A E Fd '· •.:ao mt" ,., 1.11 •.01 LIX G•ou'-Y SHAlllEHLo GR, : 1 , llltrlef "'' bltl'I """' 11 tht 11'"' Publtll!llll Dr11111 C01st Otttr "1101, deni bif•·• th . heckin ewa n orma n rv ces "' 1111, u.ff 'f H "' ~ 1.59 , ,1 ~" Lecir 0 tr1 11 ,, j""'t , 00 'l' :::t P'K• for 1t.. hHrlng II said Ptllllon, J,.,....,.., n :a.i, ltl, 1913 214-IJ •·-•r•-·• '''''''' y s u:u eir c g is a noted author and lecturer. A D l Al1'11\1 "I 'i I . ., ''" i \' 26 IJ.50 rw1n 'H 10.11 r."M 1~ ' J
' '~' ~· •• accounts to sam•gs banks t oug as ·~.. . ~· '""' rt !" ""' ,..., 'ti " " ·" 1·n wtitn 11111 wheA 1ny Pl•tonl nltrll ... n PUBlJC NOTICE N:AMI STAT•M•ttT ""'' · H. rilln I ""· Illy f Am Ovrt l ,03 lj S mtrQ 61 j IJ Llbl'I' I'd 6 . .n Ht•tl!' 1.-14 . • ,,. 111111 ma¥._, 1no1 •hew u .. ,... 11 T"' 1o11owmo Pill'ton 11 dot119 t1u1111e11 -s8vings 63nks, which can't is w gs n .xinc 0 .,,,. Am Emb 5.06 lltl'll~ 1 .S4, .s.. Lit. 1n1v 1011111 L~t L f" 2 1nr 11wy 111w. wtw 11w orM• 111o11td Ml 11: -Contract" have rece.ived wide AM IJU11•••s oull¥ " t.J.110 21 Lft. G,w 1.16 1 u PK • Fii 1 .211 u: be midi. · 'ICT11'10til I USIN:ISS AUOtU!:l'l COIFl"UR!S I. BOUTIQUE, O(fer regular checking ac-I • h hia "UNOf: 11rtld 10.SS jl.SJ Linc Cao IQ 1111 16 IHll'A•SON 'On RtftAnt• 11 hff•by mid• ro Thi ••Id NAM• sTATEMl!ttT 261 e:. li'ltl 51 .. Coll• M.s.. c1111. ts co t d th t th . ac~ aim aa aye numerous NEW YORK (AP) -f.::~ :·ti ,1'.ff "flil.u[fy 10.11 o.n l-~J,'$" J'11 · A~~ r. ~ 'ff 1111111on tor f\lrt,,., 111ntc1tl1ra. T,.,.. lolkrwlnl ~· 1'' 6o/f19 A1111..-, M. Htrt, 1145 S""1ng1on "'" G coun ' n en 8 ere .1s articles dealing with city J\,1cDonnell Tlt\na}as Corp ji£v.1m 1:90 .12 R(>lh:· lAYLljS: nveit 11~ I S.ld rNI Pl'OPl'tv It 11iu.11111 In f't>t Mlfw\I •• no N-port 11uc11, c1111. room for both commercial de in .~-... _ _ ~jiiitS~ u:-.,,;.;.-:P -r·i· _ .....-:.. 1 1 ... t . .d ~ Mb •.st 10" ~•na :n H ,, ff 5 0t•t1 1 . Coun!y of Or~. 51111 of C1UIOl'nl1, •nd THE ll;ARE lltEEO, !Ski Newport Tlllt bvt!ntn i. btlnct...i;Qll(l\fdtd bV.-M -·--I. king"'°' . -"'" I -d-,;m.,,f""-verupmen . " l~E!llt"re ... ew: re .... 1;;o1.c; pro I s CBu1c oc-· -l.M ,~ IOI•• 12 1S IJ IO Ov 11 00 1' 00 519 Fd J " 11 delc:rlbtd •• followa._to W!!: 9.l!td..-C°'ta Mtta-~---llldrVwCrir. -\:11ec ICCvul'I an nvw "To Save Our Cities" was $I _ Ill I Am Grtt. •.20-f. °""r--t:n-,: · qt\;1~-~1t:.-r u • st•MA-·' 1;._ 12 .,,-TfarNO: Ml"iit"lh6Wlf"Mfi ICIMllll J, w1111111y, 210 w. wn-Allllrty M Hart accounta """-• arm"' that a 11_ , to 1 l.v1 ml on or 3.52 a Am 1~11n lff 1: v ss.c !·'1 t.,l L 11110 All: c11> '~' 'i '·II
i'M1' rteOl'dllll In &ook 20, PltH' 14 If Cotti Mtu. Thl1 1t1111N1111 ' 1111c1 wtltl IM County . ••igh"':! ·en pub i.:t1hed In the Journal of the Share, compared to $80.91 :::: ~!f' !: 10 i.!x . 11·fi '' :~11\'u• 1':~ j7ti }~~1 11· 1'l:ff M1.c1111-.1 """" r1C11rd1 01 o •• ,,... S'-c. "1""'''" 210 w, WlllOll, cot•• Cl•k o1 0•11111, c_,., on: Jin. :r.. 1m. customer ·m t we want a American Bar Association million or ..., 63 8 share for A~H• Gr ·" 2. ...,.1 1 ,, ll.!f: e"" 0.11 1 ", 01 v1n1ur 1j
c_,,.,, c..111on111 MIN. w1Lt.1AM s . sT JOHN, COUNTY commercial account to write . .• ~· t11itwR unc1 I .if 'ff\' ~!''"''11 1[ 11:' il 1' P,m1111 • 1 .u 1J· j llld ... 1 Pfflllll"IV CllT!rllOMY known Tiii• butlnn• It lll{ng COl\dVt.ltlll w • Cl.EltK. Ir Tl!ltl'IH M. Wini, Dtpvty, hecks t b' utine all 1be Orange County Finan-1971. ~ldl~t ' ·;i .u r~.. ~:ii 'J:sJ IA~ln.~".uAhs: JI • ~F \,:05 / .1
'' 1207 Soulll VI" Niil, llnll ANI, P41/1,,.rlhl,_o. C ~-.. -, tteJI C Or IS fO 'Sm er Ci&) Socfely'I meeting will -.., 1-1 p-fit f1'gureS were I'd I" ·1 I ,r.-,,, 2','3 2t.l2 c, ..... /,',' 1' "• ~ ,',}"G¥ t n I~ 21, c1HIOl'nl• · ,........... hblllllld er.,... C011t 0111v ,11111 bills: while using his NOW ae. 1 u i" , v r1'""' '!f.: o ~ !::i . _ I" D•twct: J111U1rv ''· ttn. Thi• 111i.ment """ ""'111 "" C-"f J1n111ry • 1nd F1t1ru1rv •· u, 20, • begin: with a "no-host'' r stated to refi 1 3 cent om . . ltAMI: p1 rm io.n 11 1" n .53, n w11.Me:n• c. FEESAGO, Cllrk 11°'""''°""""'111: JM\. 12, im. 1,11 263-n count to save up for majOr ti· cocktail hour at 11 30 . e ec a per ve11111r 1 .1 • ~ ll .'Q '·" ':ff Mt":£ '4' s , PIClr• 111 VLi
E1tK11tr1xo1t11tw111ot wit.LIM\ E. ST JOtiN, couHTY penses Such as taxes tuition : a.m. in stock dividend ln 1m. :t~r!111 1•~1,. F" nc :11 :1a~~st"di J.-u 3 ~t;T~n~N~t;~;1 1u1Y c. KUEBLER, ct.ERIC, •~ T,..... M. wi,d, °""""· PtJBUC NOTICE . • • the Monaco Room at the The aerospace company said ~~· , llM 11.47 ...
611
4.'2 '· "'"m 111 ,,,, ~~ Fd l·" I~ •0ttAL~".'~ittN•11; "*'•hid 0rano-C01111 o.rtot" = or vacation. Alrporte.r JM In Newport MOD, 111 v1 12..0 u. lndO " 1 ,1 t.11 r:u " . ,
Al!WNT •• LIW Jet111t1ry 14. n. 30 11111 FllW!Mlry " lllOTIC• 011' IN:TINTION: TO lltOAOI PUBlJC NOTICE Beach The lu--•-·n meet'mg ~li:s for the year we~e $2. 73 ,,0[:j"I0·i~ , .• rJ l 10•11 ,,.'1,f/ INcl1 . ., IJ.1-1 7/?i, t.i11' !·· au W.I TM/11 '""' nn ,,...n ,. Tiii SAL.I 01' ALCOMOl.IC . llUIW bilhon, up from $2.07 b1!Uon '"i: F • ,'· ~IC Fd 7.» ·~ MIT u . u.1111 F~ r"' lO 1 l ·r. .... • ' .. -. ....... llVl •AOll begins at 12• 15 p m ~e M • f lot . 1111 l'CI '05 '" MIG 1' '• 11 11~11 Sir 51.60 S1. • ... YU•• tr.I • . . Ill 1.-.t. Fifty-seven percent 0 • Sci •. . l«:k " 1··· 100. MID 14.11 . TIADMAN P'O J T~'::Zct1"~,.::...w~o 0111y "11o1. PUBLIC NOTICE To WMm ;' ""' Conctrn~·-v n, 1 '~CZ,Z1t0~'.:1u,:~Ji1:s ptJbUc is invited lo attend with 1he 1'12 total represented f~th l~f:'• If:~ l:f '1::.~1 s:ff l:U :~g l!:ll 11 U ~ '1ct ill f:Y
Ji,_,.,,. tM "tllrvl"'"' ttn m.n "'mT~/ ... ~A':::s Ill~ :;,.~~r1e~ ";...!''=, ::, .. ~11e fllffowl111 person '' OoJno w11111n·l1p;;the;;;;;;;p;;r;lce&co:Ofitt;;he;;oliuncheo'Tio;;;n;;$5;;;;;.00;;;,.i government business, the l':~rr:i . f:ff ,<iPurndo'~Jl,~\.70 ~1:,.1~ ,~11J ili.! .~'mvR01• l'~, ..
PUBUC NOTICE Thi i.nowlng ,.,._ .,. '°"" ll•ldtls5tnld Pf'OOlllet ,to .... l lcolloll( H1TAC TAPE co .. UGO C1m11111 or.. company said. IKTI°" I l · tl,~-t ~1~"-="° ,f:n,f·~Jt=.y·~ ·i·u''1'•"*' W'411C 21·,''»:i{ bu&JMM 111 bwtr'!" •1 !ht~ .... cl9KJ1bllll •• 541111 Ho. , •• Nlwporl .. Kit ASSOCIATE I( I I F f, ) ptll 11. 111.H ------c,-,-,-.-.------1 MUl.Tl·TEL IHOUSTll!ES, 1121 "(" $, kl'•o;u·""'"" Vt I A Cost• Mis. J-M. 0-ldl. 2n1 •• ~ ... SI .. Cotl• For the fourth quarter, ~~ . I ~ t. 2 t. =1~ I 11: i:' s r::.ou~j'lll U.
NOTIC• Ofl w.• Ofl RIAL $Utetl Aw .. s.rtl• ....... C.111. '"°' Pur "' lo :.:,_ 'r'itn11on "" ~ MtH, C.UI. 9262' • OWllilf' ..... ~ ~ U<I,. fl.fcDonnell Douglas l~ted pro-"':"~ I :u ,, : ~~~Ills :tnJ" G•:, J:t l'•1 Grwlh .. ~ ,.t• l"ROPUTY AT 1>11;1\IAft IALI A ~ 5mll!I. Dtll J,,,_no A..._, -}t ~ " t11t 0...,, Thi• buslntJI It bltnf ~eo 11'1' 111 111!1 ....... -,._ .... ,...,.... fits ol $33 78 million rr $1.(19 8 ~ K 4.lt 4. Grwtti /·02 6.5' M !" J~ I 11 J;:n lj·f' 1,~1
Me. A *P f!llitloll Vlllo. C.111. tW5 :r.:'C1c 1....,.: ~lrol fror 11S: lftdlv!Owl, t1111e '""1t ..,_... 11 ""'""~'"" -. • ULLA~ fneom I ~ \lllol Mv , '! '!-!! fM:fln1 1 7 Ill""' SUOl<'lor ~rt of ti. Sllll., ,.:::c;:.:~ "'lncltofl DI'~ Cot!• II ... lkMWitk ._,.,.... llMIM IOI' Tiii• .t=.:·r..,.11111111"'"" '-"' ... -N-._....J.t .. A'fVf'M shar~ on sales 0 $802.50 ~~ ~ lS.OJIW:!! ~ rc:'.:,I ,f·~, :ti:t/lr~": 1 ' 11:R nirot, ,,If1'· C~!~llll'tlltll ':~:.',:!":':'ELI.I This IMIM... i. 11111'111 cCWICklcltd llY o l~l~rT£~:'"l-~~:"ii'ONA £.~l:_'MOr?,' CS~J~H~"'·c~~ 1-. llfltl!llhl lllftfU"-1 •1r1t-million. A year ~Ore the d tt.'8 U.U ~mt 11.,. 1 '.3 HAT llC •o ' 1=• 1 : .. 11:n
HVGtl!.S COlEG•ove:. DKffNll. Nr~it.Gtnt lmll!I •101 llUILIC EATING l>LAC£1 CLEll;I(, • ., ,..,,,.. M. Ward, Dtp\lly ~ --..... a.. ,...,., O.Uy ...... figures were earnings of $27.34 V1. ll~" 11:s: "~,t~~o ~ 5' ~ ''·" 'li1' -2 ,:~ :·n ~ 1~11\":r'" oi,.~.:'*~~1o l: c~~· 0:-=' ~ :!~ J:' 1Pr.il ~~=-~,• t!Tr;' 1>110t. "11111'"*' 0r1,. c11111 0.11: =1~'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!'!"!~~m:'."ll~ll~on'.'.._ _________ Ji&T..,: I '.ii l :ff ~ u11 ~·~" 'j:Y .~111: t·~ t, = 1r$ lI:i !lli ~ ~ .... ~ bl-lkltrl ~~ta'" a: Willi~ E. IT JOHN, COUNTY JI_,.., .. tm m.n JlftU.,.,, ..... f~IN,.., '· IJ, ~. Ad_.IMll'llllt . 1111mr ·1 . ,., ncm . .21 tlock Sr f. ,.~;<CG ,: 1'1o1 :~tM!lll<l-;,of.ftllnior ,l'7; •• 1the CLEltK.lyThtrtMM..W~.~ 1m 27>13 Ill 1n-.. • us • i I 10 3'~ t 1,11 Cl ~ ·u
offlc1 of SAMUEL A. 01tWIN1U1tG, m , .•• , .... -.... ,~., .. , .... flltol, PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Dent·u re I nvent·1on :: ~~ Ii I : :t:&sdfMC 11.U "'""II" NO't"' ·1·2' ~1!''1;'., :o ... I{·"
North l.lk• ..... ,,.,., ll:OOM 211, "•SI• J1~"' 16, "'n. 30, •fld "~,.., 4, ,IC'TITIOUl IUllN ISS • ~~~.N~mN_J4.JJ ~~~8111"1 ., ... ·ll lj"'u ~~.1;'"'M• ·'·'.:r.l!' l,,·i~l Jw~ .. ,ra,,-.,~·.·,·~·,',"m'il dllll t\101, ,Cllu"IV of Lot Allllfle1, 1f13 1:1.l-Jl ...... ITATIMO•T T T O ''' DS' . . ~ f • ~~::.:.'~'!:"'~..:'!~",~::..1 PUBucNana Thi fooll";;:i111 "''°"' ••• dolno "~.J-i:~ ... :~~~1n' ,.,....,..1th . ·-·-, ... ,:.. _ .. _ .... ,,,, f,t 'f:y•'!•nu ·'a:"" 1:4:",o:i:~~~.,,, 1v1:Jn~·:g illc~~ t) I:.
clllHI tnd .. , tht ,.
0111
• ~= lnllrtl "':;=.'e'iix 110• I.ILLY llULlntlt . ..!.~ i::~1111 ,.._. • •• ddno "U-'' and ''lewen'' .. -........... IJl'OI.... • . £ S• '" .If -"'""' Wld ' .... UN/m , N ' "', ... !...."".,"-"" ,Tt.n "~ 11w or ~~ NOTIC• TO c•101TO•s uio vii Opor'8,, NIWPOl'I hlcll. c.. NtVt?Cl•T IAY ct.e:AttElilS 2W ..._... bdpa abtoro lhc 11\oclta ol bttinic flCorYI 1. I '" .11 1,. H~"I•• n '" A«vn'\ 'j
-'""" or Ill ldclltlOfl to 11111 11 llld IU,.l ll lOlt COU•T Ofl' TMI ,,._, . , H""'1 11"11., co.11 Mitt. c11l1orn11 The oe::uui. lhln.1 to havtnr your and c~wina , e=• l'H 7 •OU /' 1 N111 lvtr 11 :J f,"' " . !"
"""''" " the time II dHll\, "' .,... lo n ATI OIJ CAl.lfll'Olllll~ ,.. M". AflH c~1IHC111. l'2l VI• Orvlltli, "'''· own t.ol!JI ii 110111ble now with .. \Villi Fn:OQF,1' m:my dmtun ': I . 13'" ~ .. ! ·:! ~:ti Du~tnO ;:., !'n '": ~ ... di ' '1 ·!f Ill !tie C.,.11" ,.., ""°"""' tl!Vlltd 111 THI COUNT'!' °" 09'.t.HI HIWllOrf l..ch. Ctl. nuo. Mldltll Cl'lllrl.. Woow. Jl3 pluOc ttr.\m d11D)wiftNl1 ICl\l· wetll'ftl m11y tl\I, "f1Clllr, btuih. with fli t COm I I · 1.s. N11! Id ,,,,,I ;,, ~ nc . :ti 1111 C'tlll'ltY of Orantt, Stitt tt ta11ton111, ,.., A•ntll ' Mr-. ''~~· JIO Ylt M-HOI,.... Dr.. HtwPOfl '*"' all y holdo bol h "uppert" and liUJg•orr')'ofdr.nturotcomin11ooM.. ~ ~ 'I~ 'i':ll ":..'"Ina ~ :ft ,.1':1#.,.1~~11 ·• ~.Mii · ;·ll -~~"-~~:.. ~~~~:.;. o!:~. el ARTHUll II;, COSTELLO. '-oM7:'jiOI~ ..... ~· C.oOrM, Ct~ ~tt.i..... S,.19111, l1S "klwm" a1 nt\'tt brJore-poMible. One application may la1t !or ITr h .I .iJ •• . 8: "'"' 11;i11.n liS.V.£1 I . " f.:i.~~...., °'O:~'f:· ~~er:~· ,,,1$..,;E:;:.Y !::N .:..= "';:..""'..'~ .. bel"" corwctM ..., • ~:,r.=: ~,.. N"""" lcKtl. ror'tJ:1l~"h'=':':i<'ti~t~ ~'i:ti'o ~.t1~ J!!t~lu~r:i:t ~i1., · lt'SI H:; F {: 1 ~ R"c 1e: ,f:n litn Uba~L1"i'2' t
::.r .. ~."f.""'....:i' -: '.:.:: :::: :.:.:-.~~ -=--..: --:::. .. , , .. ,_ .;:.::.:::r"'· • ..... --" • e..O:.':!!.:::~.'.'··= ~~~-:~ ~, .... J<T ~· ~ ·i ... • '[llJ~~EFI.. '!"J ~ ~ ~~ ~ .:u!! ~ Jll lo.IC 111. ..... 11 ..... 12 wt1fl !tie ,......,., ~ "' "" d'lltt Mn.. ".....,. Mlillldw Mktlllt c. -... !Ind' 1 ii,, ;'), ' ~ :ii '~"' -If Ml---Mllll. It_. II If lllf t*I( M lfW "°"' 11111.-. ~. w T'hlt "ltlmlllt Niii wtl!I lht i:.untr Thlt Ill""'*" Ried wflll IN Co.Mi . 1 • ' m: ' SlllO U1
---c tr talltDml -(""':> " ' ~ IMl'n. w4"' "" ~ Cl«lt. ., ""'* c .. tr Ofl Jarl 12. lf!t Cltrtlt II ~"""" Ofll ~ If, II I J' ~ . . . I m :;ff ~ 'n · zn• ~ It ..................... 4 ••lllllM " Ill Of!ltil wtlUAM s: tT '°'"'· COUWTT CL•!U' 1m. \iwlU..iMi\ •. ST ~N. <;OUNTY v 0 ,;-tt 1i. t mo Gr. : l:U :1~ ~" ' : • ,c"' 1 . '""""°" aNdl. ~.. II 1111 AIWYllY' t~ YMlnilft, I"• W n.r-M. War1I, °"'41'1'. _ CL.ERK. IY tlttr J . ..,,.,._ ~ LlfM 11'11: fdAfl't 14. u:Q' , wi " '-1g 1.n v . . """"II .... <*ti! In ...... """'" ..... 1111 Htldl, •11 W..t Sb;HI ,.,...., • .._ 11' tiw; 90M 1 ffl " I ' ~ 11wUnfltdSlllMOfleotlfl,,_...,.flf...._kiile Nwftblll' 1too. IM MIMtt. ~Dr• ..... CMll D.slfV """· l"ll'llll.,.... Or~_.9'l!!_ __ ~ttr "lie!, t 1 I. li l>WtFArrl ,; •1' PkllV I . 1' ~ T• pwctfll ., _, .... Ill ...... c.11....:1 M\1 ~ 11 "" ~ II ,_., N, n, a. .... """""' .. ,.,_,.., u. JD ~ ~f'l' 4. 11, ~ I l"'f'WI lt 14 lD ~·"""-~ ;;'i.."'1 .. ii
wHhbld ~.-IM,......,...lld1n11t-11m;tm 111-n1m 113-n 1 ·,\~ct .. ~ 'f;'.HJj '~k\Jt 1.,.v~!m, 1 ~ t.~ lkb W ....... •In wrrttlnl '"'Wftt """"""' '9"" _....If M4' ~. j f 1';JI; 4' .tlO W;,a: "'' f .,
... rwtf ...... 11 l!lt """"'"' tftk. tf MIT~ --flll tllW _,. flt'lt ~ , ~ I 1': lot li;ji'"' 14M ~~ ,. 11;;; mi·" AW 1!.{lf 11'""1 tHff !ht ""' •1t.11i. ._.... Ind !ffll of 111111 Miki. _ t' NilT Oi JO~' N"' 1 ~'.s• \lrf ~ 1f.T~
lltftlil"I _.,.. of ""'° .,,.... ~ n ... ,... N J E II· '••'· •,"• ill0 , .. ;:?Ill""• .,, ·~" I ' ff_U Dt*ll ""-lt111 dly of .IM014rW, ltn. HEii. '"'"'~..... ear y· wrleryone .I s"• ,.·v !'HILi" R. COLIOROVI'. (lll(Vlfjr_flf.'!!.... ................ ,.. /' f: I :. , .6' 11::1 .. ::::0 CH • 1 .r. I . ' 1' •01•t1.T W. COL.f:OMWI ,,_ ....,. _ _,, •I ltoe• l"n.wl St!" t:~.?'t:.' "UGffl$ ~'3= =:.i;c... Mfllmn..r IN~ 'H!' ·1·' Stl ., ia1::;~~ "UTNAM~ll.61 lt.41 I • l 141 """ Y• -"' -... -· Listens tn Lan..Jers ... -" ;:,.,'l.1· "" :t: "~"· 1'' ::1 'e' .... r.~ ' · ~-SAMU•l ... .._ • ......,IM • .... ....., ""' y '1 1v .....,.." lktJ .4.~ "~tt ".. ... Ia ,., !'"" 11111 Wlndtt j v:.=.ar•n"' .. ,,. ~";Ji;~_ .... ,.,. ._.,... .rt~111·11·' = 1· J:~ ~ ,'1~· 1· w~" 1· :
T•h 11111 ·=. ..... °'"""" c ... 1 Dtlty ""' ,. ~ lr,"' . ~r~: ~ II, I~ • 11· . ~if~J«·· ·.! Al=-= ~'c...r Olity .. ....., a. • _. f.Wry 4 U, ~ A A tt•r.: _. ... It,. • 11 J-·-....... -"" .. "" • *Ii e 7' • I, Uftd .tr ,. .YOYM 1 :. • ..... -dlll! • • ,.,_, ~ •. Jt,C )f .• <;"fl J "J htt1 F l.•l ~ • ·rr
" I '
I
I '
SC f
e E~onomy Stronger
U.S. Indicators Sliotv 4tli Quarter Ri.se
WASlllNGTON (AP\ -'l1le
aovemment's inde1 of leading
ecooomic indicators. "''b.ich
are. sup~ to measure u~
and downs in the economy,
rose str<ingly in December.
the, Commerce Department
said Tuesday.
The 2.2·pt':rcent rise last
month can1e on top of a
( rs~KIJVc ) STOCK
Noven1ber increase of 2.3 per·
cent, making the fourth
quarter of last year one of the
strongest in the past 13 years,
the dt>partment said.
The report C'Onfir1ned other
l'COnomic reports showing that
the nation's economic
pt-rformance is continuing
strong.
Dr. Peter Ct ?o.1anus. ncUng
assistant commerce 'secretary
for economic affairs, said the
rectnt strength In the in·
dicators •·suggests that the
U.S. economy will continue to
expand rapidly throughout Lhis
year. Th.is is cotl.!istent with
most economic forecasts for
1973."
e Transamerica
SAN FRANCISCO iAPI -
Transamerica Corp. has re-
ported preliminary 1972 net
earnings of $88 million or $1.30
per coounon share, a gain of
42 percent over the previous
year's $61 .9 million or 92 ce'lts
pe r share.
The company said ~fonday
Presley Veep
William G. Thrash has
joined Presley Devel-
opment Company as &d-
ministrative vice pres·
ident. The Newport
Beach resident recent·
ly retired from the
M~rine Corps.
that operating earninp of $81.2
million or $1.20 a share were
its highest ever, comparing
with $SB.5 million or rr cents
a share in 1971 .
The corporation said record
gains were recorded by sever-
al subsidiaries, including Oc-
cidental Lil~ ln.wrance, Trans-
america T i t I e Insurance,
Lyons Moving & Storage,
Budget Rent·i>Car and O..
Laval Turbine.
THERE ARE OVER
100 WAYS TO FINANCE YOUR
CAR ON COSTA MESA'S
Harbar Baulevard
af Cars
LOOI. fOI THI IMILIM Al
CONNELL JJOHNSON & SON
CHEVROLET Llncol~rcury
2121 -2624
HARBOR BLVD HARBOR BLVD. ,.,....,..c.. ..... ........
New-our Ut'~ ~ft.tlGE. cc:,ff\CE. 0 ~otlft.'-,,,_o 1\e.G 832.M
11'\A J 15 specialis!B In construe-
\ tion and long-term financing.
FHA, VA, and conventional single-family
homes. Commercial, indusWlal, and residentlal
income-producing property, $100,000 up, Joint
ventures, $250,000 to $10,000,000.
Phone us -we're lo•nsome. , • ind th•n tom.ii
cAmfacMortgage
CORPORATION
23 OFFICES IN 9 STATES
17671 Irvine Blvd., Tustin 92680
Execu\lve Ollice: 505 Shatto Pl., Loa Ange let 90020
(213) 315-3fifi1
San Fernando Valley (213) 9~2.500
SPEED READING COURSES
TO BEGIN IN
BEACH AREA
Arr•ng•m•t1h h•v• b••n m1d1 by Am1ric1t1 R1•dlitg Foun•
d11ion to conduct • 21 -hour c.oun• in 1p11d r11 din9. 'The cour11
i1 op1n to 1nyon1 1bo¥1 lh1 191 of I J ind g111r11'lf111 1¥1ry
gr1du1!1 lo triple their r11d in9 1p1•d wilh '" lncr1111 In corn-
pr1h1n1ioft.
Aft1r th1 11w1n w11k pro9r1m, 1 p1r.ot1 c:1n te1d •"Y '"'''VI book In 1111 th111 111 hour ind und1rit1nd It belt•t. In
1dd itiot1 lo 1p••d r11din9 th• cou"• 1110 •mph••i111 improwtcl
itudy lechniqun , bett1r le1t +••Ing 1kill1, i nd i11c.r111ed co11c.1n.
tr1tlon 1rtd r1t111tlot1 1billtl11.
The cou"' r1q11ir11 1 ptf1on to 1t11tid 0111 cl••• pit w11•
on the 1•1t1it19 of their choice, for tho11 who w1u1d Ii•• mor1
lnf0tfll1flo11, without obl:91tio11 to enroll, 1 11rl11 of fltEE on1
hour orient1tlon l•ctvr11 h1•1 b1111 1ch1d11l1d,
n ••• m11tin91 ,,, f,.., •• th. public .rid th1 cown1 will
lie 1Vpl1h11d In c0fl'litl1t1 d1t1ll inch1din9 entr1nc1 rtqulr1rn111t1,
tJ1•iroo111 proc.cluNI, tvlfion, cl111 1th•d11l1 ind loc1tio11, Yow
11.d lo 1ttlnd 011ly 0111 m11tl119 which i1 tll1 mo1t c111o•111i111t
for yeu. TIM11 fr11 Oii• hour ofi1nt•liont will b1 h1I .. 11 follow11
TftuNday, January 25, 7:30 P.M.; Frid•y, Janu·
ary 26, 7:10 P.M.; 2 m•etin9s on Saturde~, January
27, 10:30 A.M. and 2:00 f'.M.; end on finel mtat-
ln9 on Wadnasdey, Jenuery 31 1 7:30 P.M.
All MlmNM WIU.. II HlLD At THI
LA•UHA HORL -THl GAIDIN ROOM
4tl S. COAST HWY .. LA•UNA IU.CH
e Rlcllfleld .
LONG BEACH (AP) -Prio.
es oo petroleum products may
rise soon, 1he chalnn&n or the
Atlontlc Rlchfletd Co. of Los
Angeles predlcts.
Robert 0. Anderson told a
Long Beach Cham~r of Com·
meree meeting Monday that
he Is "confident" hlgl\er pric-
es will come.
"The nation has run out of
cheap energy~· he Slilid.
e Boeing Pttet
PIUI.ADELPHIA (llPI )
The Army Aviation Systems
Command in St . Louis. ?i.1o.
has given !he Boeing Vertol
Co. a $565-million rontract to
build and fly a prototype ol
the largest helicopter in the
free world.
The first night! of the giant
machine are scheduled in lhe
summer or 1975.
Weighing 2~ times more
than the Armv 's Chinook (Ch-
47..C). lhe copter \\'Ould be able
lo lift up to 30 tons, including
containerized cargo.
e llnlota OU
LOS ANr.ELES I AP\ -
Union Oil Co. of Califom1a has
reported ilet earniilgs for 1972
of $121.9 million. up 6.3 per·
cent compared lo ~ast year's
earnings I!~ $114.i miilicn.
Preliminary net eamil'!&S fer
the year on an average com-
mon sha:-e outstandill6 basis
were $3.4! in 1972 and $3.21 in
1971 , Frt<f L. Hartley presi-
dent , annoJnced. Fully diluted,
the per share earnln~s were
$2.98 this past year and $2}1 in
1971.
There were no extrao•d1nar;
items 1n either period
elRSProbe
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP\
The Internal Revenue
Service has launched an in·
vestigation or oil companies
which have hiked prices dur·
ing the national fuel shortage,
a Cost or Living Council of-
ficial .said Tuesday.
J<Ulle6 W. McLane, the
council's depu~director, said
the IRS wi!. complete its
probe Friday and bearings
with the major oil companies
will begin next week.
The probes, McLane said,
"will be show-cause in-
vestigations."
New High
For Food
COMPLETE NEW YORK-STOCK UST
•
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•
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·'
•
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..
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•
-1'uesday's Closing Priees-COmpleTu New Yor
Market Still .
Showing Worry
mw YORK (AP)-Prices Wtfd allghtll' down.
>ftl'd ln the stoclrrmarket Tuesday ln an otherw!Je
IJidA>clalve seaslon. Ttadlng was moderate. '
Qp the New York Stock Eichange, declllilng
btlufs"pulled IJito a small lead over galnen during the afternoon.
·Stoc
luesctay, J1nu1,.,-3o, 1'7i SC DAILY PILOT .I J __ _c ----
Exchange .List
•
WASHINGTON -The Alr-
Forco hit• 1warded a •1 million contract to McDoone.U
Douglu Corp., st, Louls, for
production of 124 F4E PhaDo
lorn jetllghten.
A IOlll or 48 ol the phaJ>.
toms will go to the U.S. Air
Force and the remalnJng 7S to
other countries .
•
-
\ .
•
or tlie
Record
Blrtlas
Death Notices
VINCENT P1ul 0. Vlnottlr AlHI 8J . ..,1 2"7 T•rrv Ro.d, LaotlM Bt1Cll. Oat1 DI CIHlll,
J1nu1ry U. 1m. Survived Dy wilt,
Mirl1m; wwraJ n*n I ncl ....,,_,. Mr. i'.'.:i e~:!;,. 1 for co;"';~~~ ~~~~':
M>rVlcn. Wl'df>ndey, J PM, !!I T«"O Cf"l'Wler•o, win. Or. Albef't 0. HI-of Ille Llqvn1 t MCh Co mmu n l 1y Prftbrtt<i•n Cllurc:l'I, 0 111 c I • I' n'. McCormick LMl\HWI &MCl'I _,,,,.,.,., "~
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. Iith St., Costa l\1eu -BALTZ-BrRGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del 1\.1ar 173-MSG
Costa Mesa Mg..zru • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa
LI 8-3<33 • McCOMDCK LAGUNA
-Tutsdll,)', J#IUll')' )0, 197)
County
Facing
Lawsuits
By JACK BROBACK
Of 11M DellY Plltl Sl1fl
SM'TA A.!'.IA -Orange
County is the defendant jn
lawsuits totaling more than
$34 million. a report by County
Counsel Adria n K u y p e r
revJ!als.
Topping the list are six
separate lawsuits by 949 plain·
tiffs alleging $28 million in
property damages caused by
jet aircraft noise Crom Orange
County Airport.
The first suit, involving
$195,000 in damages is set for
trial beginning April 23.
Ku yper also anticipates
personal injury suits arising
!tom ooise. soot and other
nuisance type factors resulting
from jet operations. The coun-
ty has received its first claiin
in such a case. with $200,000
damages sought.
Two sutts against the county
charging the Orange County
Air Pollution Control Di!trict
have been flied by the F.dUlon
Company and the Western Oil
and Gas Association. The lat·
ter case concerns the legality
of the district's regulations
concerning lead content in
gaso line. The Edison case in·
volves the constru ction of ad·
ditional facilities at Hun·
tington Beach.
The county is being sued by
the Young Construction Com-
pany for $855,710 in damages
arising out of the construction
of the new County Jail.
A Dlm'.lber ol la'it'SU.its seek-
ing tu refunds are on the
books. Assessment of the
possessory interest held by oil
companies on leased public
lands amount to $4 million.
Bottling companies .have suits
for $67 ,ftOO; computer finru
for refunds totalling $205.4&;
and Anaheim St ad I u·m ,
$412,202.
Misci!llaneous other tax
refunds suits total $245,000, in·
eluding one for $100,000 by
South Coast Plaza Inc.
Mayor 'Tops'
For Orange
ORANGE -~1ayor Jess F.
Perez has been named 1972
Citizen of the Year by the
chamber of commerce here
for his involvement in youth
and community programs dur-
ing the past decade.
Perez, 36, has served U-a
councilman her e since 1968
and as mayor since April. He
is a partner in the architec·
tural !inn of Perez and
Hurtado.
P~tlealN~~~.,.....
Cory Tops ~ta.te · Spende.rs
r
Exl1"G $250 mllllon dollar lnco.•••• tax refund for ·
Callfomla taxpayers. By o. c. llUS'l1NGS legislators' admllllatraU,.. u-The elght are: Mrs. Harold cona for Frt«tom, has an-
Of *' '*" "*' "... sLstants. Nieman, Fullerton; Mn. nounctd plant for a compall:n mad ....,. tr. C'.Wffonda
(l).As..Gar<lmblymanG Kennelh Cory . -·-ntes, __ ,_._j •-n--·Id Wiiliam Marvin, Irvine; Uoyd ·-•~-• the auollne rallool•• SACRAMl!lNTO -J'touelal -~m ln1m.Jlu)'ollhe .. rov.) •-1-•-E~ ~~· W ~~ ... --~ ·-•• ..... H•~ -~-·~· C&apets, chairman of the o.. Slocktr Santa-:Ana: Clilp I>rolram-projji>sed by the ....,.._"" ••• p • ........,.. • to retain hla nth DistrJCt seat a.nge County Board ol Super. Cleary, ' Costa 'Mesa· ·Roy federal Environmental Protoc. '260,000.000 ttat.-fnocee ta 1ame iaxplf•rt are al10 tJt•
lhan any othtr As&embly •!"'" vl!on, waged a sptrlled com-Knauri, Jr., Yorba 'Uncla : Uon Agency (EPA). , ""'""'will I!> to Califwafo tu· ~ to -Ive Fodera! .Jo.
didate In Cal~ornla, aCCQrding paign for a seal 00 the Repub-WUUam L. And•-, Santa Pat Geary, YAF slate payen. Tbe'wm>!lall "'ll!ted oome'!Urelw>dtlorlhelltDo t~ Secretary of State ~und .Jlcan Central Committee laat Ana; Robert L. Walton, ~ c~.rman.,sald tbe..root..ot the trcmtheStatewlthholdinctoo y_ev~
G. Brown Jr. Yffl' and w.., Orange, and Tlmotw L. pro~lem·lt lhal the standards Ill''•-------------.. -~. Cory, wllo was opposed by llesaldthe~worganizaUon Strader, Newport Beach. set by the Clean Air Act o1
Republican WUllam Dan--is aimed at continuing com· * ·1970 are too high, and the
nemeyer and A m e r I c a n munication among federal DEL CLAWSON has -an-· costs to the econotn)t of
Independent Party hopeful state and county offictbokters'. nounced his eight 1ppointees Southern California of n-..
Donald Swenson iD the The group plans to meet iieml. to the Republican State Cen-forting those standards would
November election, to Id monthly. Attendjng t be tral CO(Mllttee. The con· be 10() great . y AF
Brown. he spend S90,il7' in. the organiJ.ational sess\on were gressma11, whose t.3 rd members favor Congreatonal
campa1gn. Cory received aid~ to county supervisors. Congressional Dblrict covers review of those standards,
79,92I v°!'e.s compared to Dlt~ and staff members of federal portions of Orange and Lot which they c o n • I d e r neme)'f'~ s 4 8 • 9 t 9 and and state legislators. Angeles Cowl lies named: amreallstically st r I n g en t,
Swensoo 5 s .• 558. , A worting committee ol one WUllam B r '• s Ii ta rs , Geary said.
Brown sakl victor10us can. representative from each of Fullerton; Henry ·Freese, La YAF nlemben are plan-
didates in the state Senate the three Jew.ls ol government Palma; George Rodney , ning public protests Cturtng -
raised and spent more than was named to dran pro-Garden Grove; Afrs. Dorothy hearings on the propogal In
their challengers.. Winners cedures for the new group. Bea ver, Fullerton; Richard Los Angeles in February and
reported raising an average of Serving are Carlos Galindo, Franks, Cerrito,,: A1rs. Sara March, plus an education
$67,113 and spent an average field representative for Rep_ Evans, Anaheim; P..1n. Hazel campaign "to alert the pubUc
ol. $56,761, while losers raised Craig Hospler: Gerald Block Friend, Bellflower, and Frank to the disastrous consequences
an average $%7.913 and spent administrative a.Wstant ~ Gasdia, Downey. which would result from Im.
an average $29,192, Brown state Senator James Whet· * -plementation of the EPA pro-
reports. more, Ed W a rd, ad minis· CALjfORNIA Young Ameri· pasaJ."
Brown made a penetratlngt trative assistant to Assembly·rl:i~5riii~iliilil~iiF::::;;:::::::;;;;;;;:;;:;I analysis or campaign spendng man Robert Ba'dham ~and
when he observed that the Fuentes.
financial reports filed with his *
office by candidates "clearly CONGRESSMAN Andrew J .
prove that money was an ex· HiMbaw, of the 39th District,
tremely influential factor in has named eight Orange Coon.
the 1972 elections." ti ans to the Republican State * Central Commiltee for the 1'0)1 FUENTES has achiev-1'73--1974 tenn, which begins
ed another first. He has been with an organ I za ti on a I
elected ch31rm;in of a newly· meeting in Sacramento Utis
formed organization 0 r \\'eekend.
Committee to Probe
Flood Damage Threat
SANTA ANA -Robert Fin-
nell, president of the Orange
County League of Cities, plans
to name a committee Feb. 8 to
study the threat of flood
damage to citi.:s along the
Santa An a River.
FiMell said the committee
will try to find out "'hy the
U.S. Corps of Engineers has
not completed a long standing
study of flood peril along the
river.
The move was trtggered by
a city of Fountain Valley
resolution which criticizes the
Corps of Engineers apparent
Greenspan
Court Date
Scheduled
lack of action;
Finnell has named several
standing committees, in·
eluding:
Criminal Justice Council
League representative, Fred
Sorsabal. Costa A1esa city
n1anager; County Part 1
Advisory Committee, Gary
Davis, Fountain Valley parks
and recreation director .
Also narned to the parks ad-
visory group was Ken
Reynolds, Hunlingtoo Beach
planning director.
Thomas O'Keefe, San
Clemente city councilman, has
been reappointed to the Coun·
ty Octan and Shoreling Plan-
ning Committee. Gabrielle
Pryor, Irvine city coun-
cilwoman, has been named to
the Environmental Enhan·
cement Committee as have
l\-1ilan Dostal , Newport Beach
councilman and Frank Sales,
Seal Beach councilman.
Two to Lead
J ewish Fund • •
DO SOMETHING BEAUTI~UL FOREVER
Here are rings of beauty to last as long
as life and light a life of love: six
proclamations of eternal love in 14 karat
yellow Qold. A. Man)S trve-diamond
wedding band, $ 175. B, Lady's five-diamond
rnatching wedding band. S 175. C. Macram8
style wedding set with pear shape
diamond, $225. 0 . Overlap muftk:liamond
wedding set. with pear shape center
diamond, $350. E. Multi·diamond wedding
set, $275. F. Overlap florentined wedding
set with eleven diamonds, $450.
Do Something Beautiful ....
C~1'9e AC~tl l'"llM -AIMtklll b,.._
lll\ll.Amttfu ........ MQtltl' Cl'l1r91, 199,
"So Good . -. lt Will
•
Haunt You "l'tl IU Gone."
.. _.. "t' •Hr Income
tax prepared
·free at
Wutual savings.
The earlier you file the sooner you
will receive your refund. Your income
tax will be prepared by .:Mr."lim of
cAmmica', one of the nation's leading
income tax preparation firms. All
returns strictly confidential. You can
save the normal cost otan individually
prepared inoome tax return; as much
as $SQ or mor.c
The FREE personal income tax
prep<1ration at Mutual Savings is avail·
able if you add to or open a Certificate
Account for $4,{XXJ"or more~You will earn
the highest interest in t!!e nation on
insured savings. (Sorry-we cannot
provide this scrviee for corporations, part·
nerships, business firms, estates or trusts.)
Malec your appointment now and
receive free, an -INCOME TAX
ORGANIZER. Helps yo_u in collceting
the information you need to get your.'
proper tax deductions and refunds.
'Certilica.tt Acc.ounts earn s.M96 for l year or more.
696 for 2 to 10 years with $5,CXX> minimum.
~ r .
' ~ .4 iii THE BIG M
C.-llellllr
MUTUAL .
SAVINGS
and Loan Asloclation
2tle7 E. Coast Highway
3 blocka W.St or MacArthur Blvd.
Phone: 875-5010
Mon.-Thur. 9AM-4PM; Fri. 9AM-8PM
BEACH MORTUARY
170$ Laguna Canyon Rd,
414-tllS • Campaign for Arthritis S11iral Sliced
Whole or Dall
• Ready tb Serve with Honey 'n Spice Glaze
e Spii:al Sliced From Top to Bottom
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cc!mettry Pt1or1uary
Chapel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach, Calllornla
144-t108 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7111 Boba Ave.
Welllmlutermwl • SMmlS' MORTUARY
• C%7 Mahl St.
Huntington Beach -
ANAHEIM -Actress Claire
Trevor (Mn. Milton Bren) of
Newport Beach will help
direct volunteers who will
march to collect funds for the
Arthritis Foundation and a~
pe ar on the 8MUal Stop
Arthritis Telethon.
The "Neighborhood March"
will be conducted countywJde
Feb. I to 4. The telethon will
be held In the Sky Room of the
Grand Hotel here and in
studios in Hollywood and will
be aired on television from
midnight Feb. 3 to until 6 p.m.
Feb. 4.
Af iss Trevor will be joined in
Anaheim by a . lion cub
fathered by Frasier of Lkln
Country Safari, Atrs. Harry
Dalton, Mrs . Al Campanis and
other celebrities.
The 1973 goal for Orange
County is to raise $180,000.
The telethon center here will
be _, to the p<Jbllc. Tllo
center telephone number wW
be 956-9800.
Celebrities In Los Angeles
will include Bob Hope,
Rosalind Russell, Jim Nabors,
Bob Crane, Gloria !Aring and
Anna Marla Alberghettl.
For more Information, ca11
the foWldation at 547-5591.
FRE·E Demonstration Meeting_
BE YOUR BEST SELF
Dale C'arnegie Course"
Pre1enUd by Hing Associatei
IN THE COUl.SE YOU
Will lU.l.N HOW TO -
e O. ... lop 9r•1ltr ttlf·
collfl4111ct e Comm1&11lc1t. ,ff1e:tfvtly e lmprowt your mtmory e OYttcomt worry •nd
tenllo11 e lmpto.,.• your ability to a •• r w11h p•opl• I
241 S l. MANCHISTD
ANAHllM
( "'•' ~. Holld1y ln11 tt
-... C~1pm111 I M111dttdt1 111
0,1119•) --_.,.-
WED. ,JAN. 31
7:30 P.M.
PHONE 633-4191
I
e We P•ck-,. and Ship from
Coast to Coast
• Full Service Delicate11en
9 Imported Chetf.e1 and Winn
• Catering.·· A Speciality
J7M L C.... l .... w•J• C..... 4el M• -67l·toot
1 1-.m W• ef J C...-ltfffallrMI
631-2461
ARE YOU SER-IOUS
ABOUT LOSING WEIGHT?
medical weiglit ireCluction
Lindora's unique program is a safe and practkol method. for th e
entire family to' lose weight ... under the strict supervision of
Medical Docto rs.
UNi»ORA+
MEDICAL CUNIC f
NEW OfftCE HOUIS
Monday thru Frldoy
la.m.to6p.m
lllWPOIT llACH
P•c• P"ref111i1••l lhl1.
404 'W11t•l11t1r 645·3740
•WPOn IUCll GA-. GIOVI LOllG IUCH PASADlllA SHllMAI OAKS
, -645-3740 534-2051 426-6549 796-2614 719-71 03 '-'"'"••lit ii ....... QPt f1'!lt'111.. cr.fttr • ·~VMD.,I ...... ................ ..... ....aw,. """" ........
LA NAiil · FUWITotl OUllGI WOODLAU HIUS
694-1029 170-9501 531-2395 347-5647
MllHttt "'°''c.htt Tw•(.....,_ w.,_.v~ MtA•lkft. MHllllllWt. '""""""'1Ut-. IWlt.t.W,.
, ..
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Laguna Beaeh
EDITI O N-
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VO(. 6&; NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL FORNIA TUESDAY, JANl/ARY 30, 1973
A$1.4 Million _Niguel Heist Inventory
,,
By JACK CHAPPELL °' .. Dllff' ...........
FBI agents In Loll Angelel loday await·
·ec1 recdpt ol an Inventory ol tho fU
million In nerotlable .,.ur!U. 1101m
rrom the Laguna NfCUel braocb ol Ullltod
ciluornla Bank lut l(lrilf ... -..i
over the-wee.tend Nied_ ill 1 •'II CJ'<' 11
an Ohio farm.
HWe haven't reviewed Ole k f . • ..
4on't know exl<lly what •• 1-. 'l1le
•
amount of tl.4 million is accurate," FBI
agentl said today.
.. All the property we have recovered
will be held as evidence and after the
trial will be returned to Its owners at
dlrectloo of the court," an agent said.
Value °' property taken ID the "Mis-.... lm'""8ible" break-in and burglary
el lhe Monarch Bay Plaza bank vault
bal been 1ltemately placed at $5 million
,i•hkb WOl.lld make it the world's record
robbery) and $3.2 million.
Three persons have been convicted of
the burglary, one is awaiting criminal
trial and one more is sought by author-
ities in connection with the crime.
Harry :James Barber, 31, 1s still at
large. His brother RonaJd Barber was
arrested in mid.January by FBI agents
in New York.
Agents today refused to comment on
speculation that the loot buried on the
Ohio !arm had been left aa bait to atira,ct
the one man still free. _
The securities are bearer bonds an4
are negotiable by the persons who ~
.... them.
Previously, SI millioo in registered •
curities were touod in a gunny sack stuff.
ed under a bush near the Laguna Niguel
bank.
Investigation also turned up 5 o m e
$128,000 in cash, some of which has been
traced to the Niguel bank.
Still missing are the large quantities of
valuable jewelry, rare coins and cash
tucked away in the 500 safe deposit boxes
rifled by the thieves after they blasted
their way Into the vault.
The Ohio farm loot y,·as unearthed only
after federal men tore up the fi ve-acre
plot for a week, working with bulldozers,
· and other heavy equipment as well as
shovels and picks.
The bucolic stashing place is loca ted in
'Today~s :ftaal -. N.Y. S-web
' .
TEN CENTS
Waited
~fahoning Count}", 20 miles southwest of
the Youngstown area. Agents declined to
say what led tbem to the hideout.
Amil Dinsio, 36, convicted of the burg·
lary an dnow µrving a 21),.year tenn, is
from Youngstown.
Charles A. ~iulllgan, 38, and Phillip
Christopt}er, 29, are also serving time fol·
lowing trial in Los Angeles this fall .
Jt was not known whether tbe--trial"'()f
Ronald Barber would be held up until his
brother is captured. 1
• l _as1n
,
~King Chauvinist'
Laguna Libbers See·king 'Pig'
A hunt for the "biggest male
chauvinist of Laguna ·Beach" Is under
way by National Organization (or Women
(NOW) whJch will rete the rrran selected
at the Susan B. Anthony birthday ban·
quet Feb. 15.
The contest is open to all male
chauvinists-In the Art Colony and votes
are 25 cents each. Voting boxes a r e
located at The White House, Reef Liquor,
North Tic Toe, Monarch Bay Safeway,
Earl's Forest Avenue Mal'ket, and Bill
Thomas Camera Shop. Ballots may also
be mailed to NOW, P .0. Box 1474,
Laguna "8ea$!h.
"For the benefit or the unenlightened,
the -word -chauvinist ~comes from a
soldier in the army of Napoleon who was
named Nicholas Chauviri. He was blindly
enthusiastic and belligerently zealous in
his allegiance to Napoleon and patriotism
for Napoleon's cause," Delores Ferrell,
NOW spokesman said.
The contest is a fund raising event for
NOW and should "be a consciousness
raiser for the citizenry of Laguna
Bench,"' she said.
Slayton Named to Lead
•
Joint · Space Venture
• SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -
The boss of the American astronauts, a
~time space veteran and a rookie
will rorm the U.S. crew for the
American-Soviet joint space Bight in
1975, it was learned today.
Sources said the American crew will be
Donald K. Slayton, the astronaut chief
and the only ooe of the original seven
U.S..astronauts who bas never flown into
space ; Thomas P. Stafford, commander · J'I. Apollo 10 and a veteran of two other
•Pace missions, and Vance D. Brand, a
civilian astronaut who has never flown
into space.
Officials at the space agency refused lo
eonfirm or deny the formation, but it was
piown an announcement was in prepara·
tlon. If Slayton, 49, heads the crew, it will be
the climax of a IQ.ng road back for him.
Slayton was named to fly the second
MerCury mission, but ii heatt condition
grounded him. He was later grounded
from flying airplanes.
A doctor suggested medication that
changed his Irregular heart beat. On
Marcil 13, 1972, Dr. Charles Berry, chief
space agency surgeon, returned Slayton
to flight status.
U ,will be the fourth space flight for
Stafford, 42, an Air Fol'tfl brigadier
iefleral. Stafford was on Gemini 6 in
1965, on Gemini 9 in 1966 and was com-
mander of Apollo 10, the 1969 flight which
orbited the moon.
Brand1 41, a former Marine pilot who
also served in the Air National Guard
and the Air Force Reserve, was the
backup command module pilot on Apollc
)5.
The Sovle~Amefieaii space filgbt, cal~
ed the Apollo-Soyu test project, Is
schoduled to be flown .Jo mid-1975. The
earth-orbit mission will last about 10.
It's.Really
A Dog's Life
"Lady'' is a black Labrador
Retriever and iach day her owner
lets her oat into bis Laguna Beach
neighborhood aod Lady returns
with somethtng.. Once it was a
neighbor's shirt and another time It
was a beer can.
Monday, she. returned with 1
lhopping bag ml in It were 12
plaitlc bags all-oonteining IMl1·
juana, about 1100 wu1h. Lady put
the bag down and Ile from lwe of
Jhe. baicleo. -.
"Dog lw not -..-.... since. Dog poalbly walkin( ll'OllDd
1htgh1, 11 the police report ?Md. n.
relrleved pot was ·turned OM to
police. •
••
days and its primary assignment is to
test a compaUble space docking system
under development by Russian aod ·
American engineers.
The Bight plan calls for the Soviet
Soyuz spacecraft, with two men aboard,
I<' be launched from Russia, to be-follow-
e<f later by the launch of an Apollo craft,
with three men aboard, from the United
States.
The Apollo craft will rendezvous and
doc~;: with the Soviet craft and the crews
will exchange visits between ships.
American and Soviet spacecraft cannot
now dock together in space because of
differences in equipment. With the new
docking device, spacecraft from either
country could serve as rescue craft
should a vehicle of one of the two space-
faring nations become trapped in orbit.
Names af tbe Soviet cosmonauts on the
Russian craft have not been announced.
Chargers Draft
Heisman Winner
Johnny Rod gers
From Wlr& Services
NE\v YORK -The San Diego
Chargi;rs, today drafted HeisJpan Trophy
winner Johnny Rodgers of Nebraska in
the National Football League's lnnual
player draft.
He was selected on the !5th l'Om'ld-by
the Chargers, who obtained tho drafting
spot in a deal that sent quarterback
Marty Domres to Baltimore. The Colts
earlier gained the spot tn a -deal -with
Washington.
The Loe Angeles Rams do not have a
pick in the first round, havtng traded it
away last year.
John Matunak, a &-loot·!, 2a).pound
tackle from Tampti, was chosen by the
·ll-0\!Slotl Oilers o tho fint player in the
draft. (See story, Page 11.)
The Oilers earned tho No. 1 pick by
fini!hing with the worst record in the
league (1-13). It was the aecond >!raight
year a lineman Was piCkeC1 u the first
·choice.
Tbe Baltimore Colts. picking second,-
toOk Louisiana Stale lplatlerback Bert
Jones. Jol'lff la expected to fUl the void
left by the tnde or aupentL· Jol!J! Unltu
to Sin lllqo. 'I1!ree USC ptsyen were ll<cted oa tho
fnl round: llcht end Charlel Youac by
tliO. P!!l~ Eagles, liO«Siin Om-
• ..,.... by the """ Engllllll Pltilols llld tackle P<t4! Adami by tbe ¢lmilllcl
Rodgers' selection was obvlowly
deloy,,d b<cluse be weighs only 1'11
pounds and lllnda Juli M .
'
• • DAILY f>tLOT , .......... ' . • DAILY I' I Lot l'lleW 1W l'•trkll O'DeMtl LEARY'S LOVE DISPLAYS 'TIM' SIGN OUTSIDE COURT
Jo.nna Harcourt.Smith Attend1 H•r Frl•nd'1 Arraignment
BEAMS AT ARRAIGNMENT,
Dr. Ti m0thy Lu ry
Leary Returned to County
Judge -Shocks Guru By Filing Pl ea of N~t Guilt y ·
By TOM BARLEY
01 tM o.l"IY Piie! St111~·
A long day in Orange County Superior
Court loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent LSD cultist, Dank·
ed by three lawyers, again chillenged the
legality of his arrest last month in
Afghanistan.
Ju4ge James Turner denied a series of
moticinS before shocking the globe-trot-
tlng guru and his attorneys by him9el£
filing a plea of innocent on behalf of
Leary -an action that brought im·
mediate protest from Costa Mesa trial
la'D'er George Chula~, Leary's chlef
counsel.
Judie· TUrner Switched the session to
-
the courtroom oi Presiding Judge Bruce
Stnhner of Laguna Beach ,after also de-
nying Leary's 1renewed plea that he be
allOwed to supervise his own defense on
mliltiple drug charges contained in an
Orange Qiunty Grand Jury indictment.
Leary, 52, stood open-mouthed in
astonWunent as Judge Turner also told
hini this morning that be might bave to
go on trial Wednesday with a number of
defendants sltnilarly . indicted in the
"Brother-or Eternal Love" drug co""
spihcy.
"Tbai's crazy/' 'Chula said. ''This will
all Hive to' be thrashed out Def'ore •Judge
Sumner and I want to emphasize right
now that no court lias tbe r!gbt to "try Dr.
~LBJ Autopsy
Diseases Preve nted Operatiori
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Four doctors who 'treated former
President Lyndon B. Johnson for heart.ailment& sald today they de-
cided against performing coronary bypass sureery on Johnson be-
cause of extensive heart damage and a seriously diseased colon.
-"T.t.tE..OOc;?.ORS,-IN...A-ltalement ilsued-a~Brooke General Ho5'
pital, said an aul.opsy of the former president's body confirmed their
diagnosis that the colon1'"as extensively-sickened with diverticulitis,
His heart suffered damage in an April, 1972 attack. ·
"Numerous difficult decillonswere faced tn the medical man·
agement oi l'relldent Jolln&on," llid a one-page otatement. "fie en·
dUncl hil dlfficulUu with courage and resolved lo enjoy life as much
as condltlo111 permitted. His family ·and pbysici>n! would like. tC>.re-~ hll paslionate commltRlenl 1o more research tn combatling
our m1jor lielltlttnemies," -
~ TOM. JOHNSON, FORMIR AIDE to Johnson but not related,
cleared lhe•~tement with the flmlly of the late Preoident. He said
It waa llMoed "in order to clarify the ...,,ts which preceded the death
of former President Johnson." (See related story, Page 4.) . . . ~ . '
-... ~ ... -·--·----.. --:----·· ...•
..
Leary on any charges in view of the way
he was kldnaped."
Leary, whisked overnight under_guard
to Orange County Jail from his cell at
San Luis Obbpa ·County Jail, smiled,
winked and waved to a crowd of ad·
mire.rs in the court room wbije Judge
Turner advised bimJJ.! his rights.
Among the courtroOm observers who
acknowledged bis cheery waves and who
were warned about their conduct by
court bailiffs, was JoaMa Harcourt·
Smith, the Brltiah llOcialite who bas been
Leary 's constant companion since shortly
~See LEARY, Page Z)
Laguna _Trustees
To Mull Choice
Of School -Chief
Trust ... of the Laguna Beach Unlfled
School Distriet will hold a ~lat
meeting at 7:30 tonight to continue
discussion of employment . of an acting
superintendent.
The meeting will be held'h1 the Educa-
tion C'£nter, S50 Blumont St.
Dr. Robert Reeves! '• ts I a•t • n t
superintendent for instructioo, unof-
ficially has been holding the Interim
spperlntendency since las&. Tuesday.
An Interim superintendent will direct
the actlvlUes of the school district until a
pennanent repliCement can be found for
Dr. Wiiliam Ullom. He was fired from
h~ pool Dec. 11 and left "'.Ork lost week,
under tenna of an agreement wilh the
board. -
.. Otber~t s on the ogenda Include 1 tlmetab or budget meeting!, a•recom·
mendat that the cootract of •Pew
Fulmer, bite rtlaUon,, dtrector. be H.·
tended approval of confercrice at·
tendance.
' r ..
•
Big Battle
Reported
In Province
SAIGON (UPI ) -The intensity of
fighting in South Vietnam ta pered off to-
day, the third day of the official cease-
fire, according to military sources, but a
. J?..ig. ba!lJ~-~~ reported ~t!een -~uth
. Vietnamese niarines surrounded by Com·
munist troops in northern Quang Tri prov.
ince.
The level of fighting - although lower
than Sunday and ~1onday -still was
higher than at many times during the 12
years of fighting ln Sooth Vietnam.
Government troops and COmmunists
-also skirmished around two provincial
capitall cut off by the Communists and
the South Vietnamese drove Communists
out of several hamlets near Saigon.
The South Vietnamese command
reported 7&5 battlefield incidents between
the start of the cease-fire at 8 a.m. Swi·
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1,761 Communists and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
addilional J,079 South Vietnamese wound·
ed. SeveraJ dozen have been listed as
missing.
Military sources reported heavy
fighting between South Vietnanfese
111a.rines ~nd_ Communists near the mouth
or the Cua Viet River, northeast of
Quang Tri. Marines rushed through the
area. about the time of tbe cease-fire,
recapturing a naval baSe held by the
Communists since spring._ 1be marines
have since been surrounded.
The sources said there was one spon-
taneou.s display during the fighting. At
one point, troops stopped shooting brief·
ly, stood up cheering and approached
each other to shake handa and exchange
embraces. Fighting conllnued farther
south, however.
The command aald the highways
leading out of Saigon, except ror the road
to the former beach resort of Vung Tau ,
have been reopened a n d Communiats
driven out of 7: hamlets in the Saigoo
area.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived
in Salgon today to deliver assuranCes of
continued American support for the
Thieu government.
Agnew dined wlUt President Nguyen
Van Thieu at Independence Palace and
issued a stslemeftt aar.lng tho UnKed
St11tes recognized 1llieu s government as
the 11sole, legitimate ·11:overnment of
South Vietnam,"
Oraage
Weathr
It'll be Pll'llY cioudY on Wednes-
day, with a lllgbt lncruae in lefn-
perature, accordinc to the ·weather
service. lliibs or eo at the belCbet
rising to 62 tnland are expected;
Lows tonigbt ti.
I NSIDE TeD.o\l'
A .ffflall town ntwspaper'.t ~cU·
torial about the local · Judiclol
syillm prompwt a jwdgt tO fill ~
a CO_!ltempt citadon OOo~t the
poper -th• Jlrit ttlfr /iled
over an edUorlal. Ste •l.Or'V on
Pag1 S.
\
-. --. ... ...,.. ....... 4 ---" ,..,..,.... ... "'"' , .. ,,
lfMll 1Mf11th , .. " ·-. -. -'· -----.
1~. J.nwy JO, 1911 • I
Radioaefive arf1clei 1n moKing et Blame
By GEORGE LEIDAL
ot N Olllf Pu.t lleft
l'<lalbly the mo.•t damaging tiling
smokers do to their lungs is depo:ilt v.·lth
each · puff smAll radioactive particles.
The radioacti\•c pnrticles in tum produce
dangerous. alp ha-emitting particles
which, in sufficient quantities, ·may cause
lung cancer.
The renewed link between radioac-
tivity, smoking and lung cancer._was the
subject of a paper presented Tuesday
night before the American Chemical
Society, di vision of nUclear chemistry
and teclmology. The group is meeting in
the Newporter Inn this wet.k.
Anti-abortion
Bill Entered
WASHINGTON !APl -A con-
stit utional amendment lo prohibit
abortions in most cases was pro-
posed today by Rep. Lawrence J.
Hogan (R·Md.).
He caUed the U.S. Supreme COurt
·'morally bankrupt" for its ruling
f!~~ng down most antiabortiE\on
Hogan said enaCtment of a con-
stitutional a1nendment wouJd be the
· only effective way to oounteract I.he
court's 7-2 decision last week that
states may not forbid women to
have abortions durinl. the first si1
months of pregnancy,
2 Capis trano
In cumb ents
. File Papers
Capistrano Unified School District
trustees Robert Hurst of Laguna Niguel
and Stephen Smit h o( Dana Point this
week filed for re-election.
And thus far the two incumbent can-
didates are unoppmed.
But three \\'eeks remain in the filing
for the three board seats C{lming beJore
the voters April 17.
Hurst and Smith both bad said tbey
planned to seek re-election.
Smith, ironically, bas only held bis
position for a short time after being
elected to his position last sununer to fill
the unexpired term of Robert Dablhfrg.
He is a lawyer with a practice in M.issioo
Viejo.
·nie third position, that of retiring
trustee Fred Newhart Jr. of San Juan
Capistrano, as yet bas no formal can-
didates.
Newhart, who has served oo area
school boards since the early 1950s:, said
recently he will not seek re-election to
the board.
His district coven San Juan
Capistrano, parts of fl.fission Viejo and
rural areas stretching into the Ortega
area.
Some speculation has risen that op-
ponents to the 45-15 all-year-school pro-
posals being aired in !he district will seek
to run a candidate. The nucleus of the
formal opposition Is in the southerly por-
tions of Mission Viejo, in the Viejo School
attendance area.
Those candidates who choose to run
this spring will find that things ha\'e
changed in t~district.
No longer wiIJ they seek only votes in
their trustee areas.
Voters la!t. fall agreed that at-large
balloting .,.,·oold be the rule in the district.
Previously, only voters residing in a
trustee's area elected that represen-
tative.
Hurst . strongly opposed the at-large
balloting, insisting that it proves a
hardship on candidates.
He cited higher campaign costs and
larger time commitments for a cam-
paign throughout the entire district.
Before the issue was forced onto the
ballot by the •'oonty Committee on
School District Organization the CUSD
was the only district in the county which
did not have at-large balloting.
OlANGI COAST U
I
DAILY PILOT
'nit ()nf'lllt CO.St Dt.ILY PIL.OT, Wfllt Mltdli
k <ombfMd ftie N-.Prnt, 11 p,1111..,_ by
th• <moftflC Co.1" Publllhlng °"'"llM'(, ~
,.. «flllonf ... llUblbhld, MondlY ttnwll
Frldlf, klr COsl• M~, Newport 8etcf1o
H1111tin9/oM ladl/Foun111n v.n...,, ~
a..ai. lrvtria/SHdlmd. ... ''" C""-W S•n Juan C.Ph"-A 1rn,1e no-...1
lldltlori b PllblltMll ~l\'S ..-Slll'W:tt~
The pr'IN;lpti PllblWI ... p&lftt J. et UI w.I
hr Strict, c.wt• M-. Clllfemll. ~
ReMrt H. Weed
PralcMnt •!Id l"Wllll\er
J•11:k R. Clllrl.., Viet ,..Id.,, ..................
Th0M e1 K.eyff .....
Tfftn•1 A. M11r,hl11.e -·-Cherin H. t..01 IUch•nl '· Nill
AMI•""' M•n1111"'8 l!dl""9i ---222 Fert1t A¥91l••
M.tJt., AIWrttti l'.O. lo1 t64. flt lJ --(MN """; m WM ...,. &tnilt IHdl: »»111 ........ ~
,..... e.dl: 11111 lwcll '°"""" IM t.: Jll5 Norlll El e.tnlno lt•I
~ ,.,., •••• fn41 442 ... 221
~ Cl•H*I M!Ntlttkt 4<t2·1471
t ............. .,.,., 1•:
I T11:,•us 4t4-t"6
1 ~ Jm. ~ CNtt _-.·at•• ~-,.. -....... nlltiell"ltieolt. ~ _..,. " .....,.._.,,... ......
I IMf ... ~ w1fhollt ...... ..,. ,,........ or _,,....,., ""'""·
~ ~ ,.., ... NW •t C.te Mna, C:.lltwnl.t. ~i.tltrl .., c.tttW-.,....
(
~, 91\' ll'teU U.!J, ,_lfllJ'I Mlltwr
-illllfMtll!!ll IOM fllOnflll'r, .
or, E. A lfartell, 54, a ouclear chemist
wit'-the National Center for Atmocpherlc
Resoordl ID Bolllder, COio., lold ldlow
scientlsu about bis ~ ellon lo
"Plaih the -ol radloaolMty ID lungs of amoken ttported by other
researthers.
Atartell, \\'ho quit smoking 11 )'tan
ago. believes his new hyp:>tbesls may es-
plain wh)' cigarette smokers get c.ancer
or lh~ lungs. .
As a 5C'ietitlst interes1ed in the pollution
of the atmosphere, Atanell'I real concern
is the effect of nuclear powtr plant
radiation on humw who ml)' be e1·
posed to other fottll$ of nuclear energy.
VC Ir vine
To 'Expel'
Its Dogs
Despilt a last-minute attempt by
students lo form a "keMel klub" to con-
trol mutts on the UC Irvine campus,
Chancellor Daniel G. AJdrich 's ban on
free-runnlng dog1 will go into effect as
scheduled 'nlursday.
Students, hoping some altemaUve to a
complete and total ban of dogs from the
halls of academe can be \\·oried out, will
meet with the1r dogs in Campus Park at
noon Wednesday.
Aleanwbile, a university spokesman
aaid the Orange County Animal Control
officers will begin regular patrols on the
campus on Thursday.
'Ibey will "collect and Impound any
animal found on campus."
Obviou.1 ezceptiODS, noted in the
chancellor's new policy, •re aeelng eye
dogs and laboratory anhn-.Is.
After four attempts since June of 1970
to reach a compromise policy which
would allow students to bring their peta:
with them to calllJl".', Ille lale!t policy
flatly states'
"All dogs and other animals will be
banned from an campus buiicttnp and
grounds at all Hmes. 'lbtl includes U-
in patted automobiles or on lea!hel as
well as tbose rwmlng free."
Dogs in buildings ruive mulled In the
obvious problems wblle loose dogs
outside have endangered bicyclista: and
pedestrians aliU.
U the kennel club i.s lonned, Ille New
University student newspaper observes,
students might provide an Intermediate
step lo coolrol offending dogs belor< they are carted off lo the pound.
CbaoWJor-Aldricb is not eJpe<ted lo
be oo ~PL' Wednesday lo meet with
the studentl but a campus lpOkesman
said "be is aJways amenable to new
ideas to solve a problem."
FromP.,el
LEARY •..
before his arrest in Afghanistan la!!
month.
Miss Hareoort.Smitll, 27, the niece of
London publishing magnate Simon
Harcourt-Smith of the Hareourt Press,
told newsmen today tl;iat she is Leary's
\li fe.
She displayed letters from Leary in
wblcb the fonner Harvard philo110pher
assured her that he regarded her as his
spouse despite his existing union with
Mnr. Rosemary Leary, 40. _
"This letter (written in Orange Cmmty
Jail) from my perfect love ii all the
legali ty I need," she assured newsmen.
She attended all Leary's court ap-
pearances in San Luis Obispo where he is
charged with escape following b1s flight
in September of 1970 from the geriatric
ward of the men's colony ln that com-
munity.
Leary was at the time serving a state
prison term of one to IO years for his
conviction ln On.Qle County on charges
of possession of marijuana.
He was tried .with his wife. Rosemary,
and son, John, 23, following the arrest of
the trio in Laguna Beach on Dec. 26,
1968.
Leary was not allowed today to stage
tbe Impromptu press coolerence lhal
preceded bis appearance last week in
Judge Turner's courtroom.
Judge Turner made it clear this morn-
ing that he waa dlspleased with much of
the Informality that entered Into the ar-
raignment on Leary's last appearance.
Leary was not allowed today to discua
his case with newsmen and be was not
allowed an interview with Miss Harcourt-
Smith.
He is one of nearly SO persons lndkted
by the Grand Jury on drug charge.s stem-
ming from what lawmen claim wu the
multi-mWlon dollar activity of the
Brotherhood of Eternal Love .
Water District Sued
Over Contract Breach
The Moolton Niguel Waler district hall
been sued for more than 110,000 In a
breaCb of contract 1awau1t rued tn
Or11nge C.ounty Superior Court by a Sant.a
Ana !nglneering Unn.
Lawym for Taymech Corp. claim lbat
the district board unlawl\IUY withheld
1$.1811 In paymenu related lo 1 cootract
drawn up between the parUea on Nov. lS.
1971, for construction' of the El Ntgutl
Rttlamation Pumping Sfatlon. 'rbe
Taymech company nddltionally demanc:b
payment or $5,000 in lega l recs.
I
Tba pollulanl .-ljlled wttb tobaoco,
however, II I Jlltw-al (ltOducl of radJo.
llon aorma1ly .-lalod wtlll --He uplalnod lhalU.. ....... plllll bu
u ·~UDCIDIU'" ability to llltnd ...,.
lmlll "almolt brllllllile,. puUclel " rad iation. '!be part1ct._. accumulate ID
large nwnbert on the tips of llnj' bair1 on
the tobacco leavef.
When the tobacco Is burned at the tip
of a cigarette, "highly ln3oluble"
radioactive particles about the size of a
smoke parUct. art formed.
"Each 11mNe particle whkb in-
corporates the . . . (tobacco hair) or
fraction thereof, will contain a relatively
bla& conooitrallon 'i" lelid·UO and Hs
radloacUve daughter, bWDutWIO•" Dr.
Mai1o11Ald.
~. tho ...,._,. from lbeso
putlclea do DOI ._ lo do mucll
damage lo lllMa. -~ they wore
loolated six years ago fUrtber ,study of
Ibis pooalble ...,,.. ol tuna clnc<r was
abandoned, Martell explaihed. The Im·
portance of llartell'• new wort ti Ille
compleUoo of the chain of events
radioactive materials undergo.
'"The larger and more lnsotuble of t-amok• parllclea wW persist tn the
btwlchl oufflciently long to allow for the
growth of poloolum-110," he aald.
• -
Polnnlum 110 emit• the alpha rays
which may dallllll -noatU. '"111t octual dlatrlbutloa of lead.JIO
radlolcUvily on tobacco leaf 111r1..,..
and In smolta partlcl<t, and the
persistence ol the partlciM In the _.
remain to be determined," be added.
Qiunling th• lnc...Ubly flno balrt on
tobacco.leaves la very dl!flcult and time
consuming. Further, because of the hall·
lives oI the materials involved, It will
tai.e at leut a "two year research ef-
fort" to know "whether tlleM lnloluble
particles bold sufflclenl radioactivity per
parllcle to be of blollJlllcal algnlflcance,"
Marloll aaid. .
A rcia Betu!"lt Heights Pair Fiw
Changes Sought For B.oard
On Sewer Fees · 'Elections DAILY PILOT SllH Plltte
1he Arch Beach Heights Association of
Properly Owners (AJ!A) baa formally re-
quesled lhat the city of Laguna Beacll
modify the dty sewe-CCllDeClk>n fee to
exempt existing dwellings from levies.
The fees involved would average about
$360 per home in Arch Beach Hcigbls
assessment jlistrict 69-1.
An ordliumCe requires payment of a
$200 base f~ and hen add! to that $10
per JOO square feet of living space. A $20
permit is also requlttcl.
contractors cost to desJio and replumb
wouJd favor some lower fee acbedule for
owners of existing homes.
"The borne owners in the Arch Beach
Helibll «<nnnmlty aeek relief from the
fiMncfaJ bardsbjpl that have been im-
pooed upon them as mull of Ille bigh
cost of recent sewer U9e!!Dle1Jts; tbe
cootracton cost lo design and r<plumb
from lodlvidual sewer syatems lo the
public sewer lystein-:-i lncluding the cost
of securing the .._1, and aeplic
tanka; and Ille cost of the compulsory
sewer connectkm ree tu." James R.
Buckley, president pro tem, wrote ID the
Festival Grant
Interviews Set
Graduating Laguna Beach lllgll School
students who are loter<sted In recoivlng
a lcholarsblp from the Laguna Beach
Festival of Arla may disctua procedures
with 1epeseutatives of the festival
scbollnblp committee Feb. 7.
Gfenn E. Vedder, chalrmsn; Helen
Keeley and Hal Alm will be at the blgb
ochool gym lhat Wednesday from t a.m.
lo II a.m. lo band out fonns and erplain
the acbolanhlp program.
More than 111,000 waa alloted ID tm lo
SI worthy students lntemted ID COl>-
tinuing education in the areas ti dance,
art, drama, music and writing.
formal ABA request to tbe City Council.
'Ibe matter is scheduled to appear oo
the cooncil's Feb. 7 agenda.
'!be ABA charges tbat since the resol1>
tiona establlsbing the usessmeot district
predate the ordinance setting the fees,
the law has the effect of being retroac-
tive.
Board Stressing
Understanding
By Community
Cltiuo understanding of the -kings
of the Laguna Beach Unllled School
District ti urged Ibis month In Ille report
of the Board ol Education. ~
Though parents have the bighest atake
in the schools, tbe report encourages all
memben of the community lo learn
more about the acbool system.
Individuals and lll""P' are Invited lo
plan viBltl lo the Individual ochoob lo
meet teaclJen and studeotl and lo see
education u it occurs in the claas:room.
Discussions, demomtra!Qm a n d
special programs may be preoented by
boanl me m be r 1 , admlnistratot!,
teachers and studentl, the report noted.
Information on Ille business ~-of
education, curriculum and legal obliga-
tions also Is provided by the district.
Board policy, the report states, bolds
that specific complalnu abould be
directed lo the """""' of Ille problem first for aallsfactian.
"We not ooly encourage people lo lake
a continued and greater involvement in
these various waya to become better in-
formed. We also welcome suggestions
cmctrning additional wafl to have open
communications between tbe community
and Ille school district," the boanl report
coocluded.
Only two persons so far have taken out
papers lo run I« trustee posts In the
Saddlebact Community Colltge District
election April 17, with sllghlly more than
two weeks left before the filing deadllne.
Feb. 16 is the last day to file to qualify
as a candidate for one of three trustee·
seal! open.
James W. Marshall of 146-A Avenida
Majorea, Laguna Hills, has taken papers
out to run in trustee area five, which in-
cludes Leisure World aruf small plitl of
El Toro and Laguna Niguel.
Mariball Is technlca!fy· the Incumbent
ln the area. He was appQioted to the
board last November aft.er voters ap-
proved an espamion of the board ft-om
five to seven memben.
Trustee areu two and four also are -
O(len in the election.
In area four, whicll Includes San
Clemente, Dana Point and Capistrano
Beach, Ronald Mlnclter bas taken ool
papers.
Paul D. Vincent
Rites Wednesday
Graveside services for Paul 0. Vin-
cent, a commercia1 artist and Laguna
Beach ·resident for 40 years, will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at El Toro
Cemetery.
Mr. Vincent llved at 2887 Terry Road.
He was &1 at tbe time of his death Satur·
day at South Coast Community Hospital
ID South Laguna.
fl.1r. Vincent l5 survived by his wife,
Marian ; and several nieces and nephews.
He had been a commercial artist for 30
years.
Dr. Albert 0 . HJerpe of Ille Laguna
Beach Community Presbyterian Church
will officiate at the services. The funeral
director is McConnick Laguna Beach
11-iortuary.
PROBES TOBACCO RADIATION
Chemist E. A. Martell
Detectives
Crack -Auto
Theft Ring
Orange detectives arrested two men
Monday 1n part of what is believed to hf a
nationwide auto theft ring dealing in lux-
ury can.
InvesUgators Dennis Dahlke and Bob
LaBarge assertedly made a deal for a
19'/2 Cadillac El Dorado In East Santa
Ana and paid !or the car with 14,000 in
marked bills.
Arrested on the scene were Johnny
Jones, 37, of Atlanta, Ga. and Army stall
sergeant Marlin Eatman, 42, of Canon.
Five men were arrested in all, in·
eluding two U.S. army sergeants and a
Marine sergeant. The ooly Orange Coun-
ty man jailed was Larry L. TborSOll, 33,
of 142 Queensbury St., Anaheim.
Orange police said their investigation
of the ring began last November when an
Informant told them lhal high prlctd
stolen cars were being peddled here.
Military recruiting sergeants were
assertedly used as contact men by the
ring. 'Ibey baodled coJ!lllUllllcations and
drove cars acroa state lines.
Some of the stolen cars were taken
directly from Detroit factories before
they had been registered.
Dahlke said the going price was $3,500
but the local officers offered $500 more to
get a delivery in Orange County. Usually
the stolen cars were sold at major
airport parking lots.
Coastal Sample Permits Developed
By CANDACE PEARSON
OI .. Da1tr PUii lleft
Tlie state Attorney General's Office
has de•eloped a sample seven-page ap-
plication for building pemtits to be ob-
tained. from state and repnaJ. ~-taI
zone corl!ervation commissions.
This is the first time property owners
can have 90me idea what will be required
on building perm.It& in the coastal zone.
The proposed application fonn will be
discussed by the Sooth Coast Commission
!Orange and Los Angeles counties) Feb.
5 and by the state commission Feb. 7.
All projects proposed within 1,000
yards of the mean high tide line must
come before a coastal commission
created by the passage of Proposition 20
in the November general election.
Part or the attorney general's form e1-
plains that lbe new law, the California
Coulll 1.0ne Conservation Act, .,Y. lhat
de,•elopments can't have adverse
ecological effects and must be consistent
with preservation of coastal resource&.
In addition, projects must allow con-
tinued existence of all living organisms
and must recognize the coastal woe as a
valuable resource belonging to all people.
On the laat page ol the proposed ap-
plication, four lines are provided to write
whether the project is consistent with
these requlrements.
"Use additional paper 1f neceMary," a
statement on the form suggests.
Under a MCt1on called, "detailed
de9Crlptk>n of proposed work," a series
ol nine questions askl tf the project:
-lnvolvea drodglng; lllllng or alterinc
1 bay, estuary, river or lapm.
-Reduct1 beach or other public access
lo Udal and 111bmerged land, bead>el.
Kickoff Dinner Set
By South Coast 'Y'
"""'8111 dlroclors Ind volunteers of
the Sooth Coast YMCA will bold a dlnntr
Feb. I lo kick off ill 1m fUnd·raWng
<ampalp and tell of plans for the com-
ing,...... .
'nio dinner will be held II 7 p.111. II the
OUjrfaer Rtstaurant. Laguna Beacll.
Entertainment wW be provided' and
youth of aeveral South Coart com-
munlti., wlli be bonottd.
• ,
-Interferes with line of sight toward
sea from nearest state blgbway.
-Adversely aUecl! water quality,
commercial or sport f i s b e r i e s ,
agricultural uses of land.
-lnc:rea~ access to publicly owned or
used beaches, natural reserves.
-Affects any area that could be used
for recreation or wildlife preserves.
-Has made provisions for treatment
of solid and Uquld wastes to rninim1ze ef·
feets on ~stat resources.
-Has made provisklns to minimize af-
fects on scenic resources, and rnlnlmize
<larger of floods and landslldts from land
alterattoos.
The seven-page form also asks for a
brief summary of the project, names and
phone numbers of adJaCent property
owners, list of other permits needed and
granted, and attachment! of parctl
IDBps, U.S. geological survey maps and,
ii exisUng, an environmental impact
statement.
If a project Is a repair or improvement
costing $25,000 or Jess, the commlsskm's
executive director is allowed to act on it
under regulations also proposed by the
Attorney General's Office.
Omission or misstatement of the in·
formation requested on the form is
grounds for denyi~g the permit.
AROUND THE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SMRAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STORES ·
IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE
ABLE TQ OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE AU IN ONE LOCATION. TH IRDLY . .
.THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION
LEADING TO US.
THIS SITUATI ON H~S MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR SIXTEEN YEARS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
ALDEN'S
Ill
COl1'A MBA
llMCI 1tl1
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 P'lac:9ntla ""·
COSTA MISA
646-4838
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Saddlehaek •
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
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VOL. 66, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 48-PAGES ORANGE· COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1973 TEN CENTS
-
U.S. Crew for Joint Flight With Russ ·Named
'. -
SPACE CENTER. HOU3ton fAP) -The bou of the American astronauts, a
three-time space veteran and a rookie
will ronn tbe U.S. crew for tHe
AmertcU>Sq\olet joint space lllgbt in
1975, Jt was learned today.
.Sources said the American crew will be .
Donald K. Slayton, tlie utrooaut chief
Biid tho only one ·of the original 8even
U.S .. astronauts who has never flown into
1p'ace; TboDU!_J P. Stafford, commander
of Apollo. JO and a veteran of two other
space missions, and Vance D. Brand, a
civilian astronaut whQ has never flown
into space .•
Officials at the_space agency refused to
confirm or deny the 'formation; but it was
known an announcement was in prepara-
tion.
U Slayton1 49, beads the crew, it wlll be
the climax 91 a loog road \la~k tor him.
Slayton was named to fly the secpnd
~fertury mission. but a heart condition
grounded him. He was· later grounded
from Oying airplanes.
A doctor suggested medication that
changed his irregular heart beat. On
March 13, 1972, Dr:Charles Berry, chief
space agency surgeon, returned Slayton
to flight status. _
It wiU be the fourth space Bight for
Stalford, 42, an Air Force brigadier
gen~ral Stafford was on Gemini 6 in
Viet Fighting Eases
!Jut Major Battl.e .. Rages in Quang Tri
SAIGON (UPI) -The intensity of ri&ht!iig in South Vietnam tapa'ed off t.:
cloy, tho thlro day of the official cease-
fire, according to military sources, but a
bJg . battle was reported between South
V}etn:amese marlnes surrounded by Com-
111111!1!t troopo In northern Quang Tri prov-
ince.
The 1evel of fighting -although lower
than' Sunday and Monday ---still was
higher than at milny times during the 12
yell!'• of fighting in South Vietnam.
Government troops and Communist8
also tkirmi.sbed around two provincial
capitals cut off by the Communists and
the South Vietnamese ~ve Q}mmttnists
out of sevtral hamlets near Saigon.
The South Vietnamese command
"reported 765 battlefield incidents bet.ween
the start of the cease-fire at 8 a.m. Sun-
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1,761 Communists and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
additional 1,070 South Vietnamese wound-
ed. Severil dozen have been listed as
missing.
Military sources reported heavy
~s a~~::Ou!~thoearV:n::
of the Cua Viet River, northeast of
Proposed Coast .For,..S
.Sample Building Permit.
Applica~ons ·ivailahle -
• •
II)' CANDACE PEARSON . Of .. j .... f'lllt ....
The sta~ Attorney General's Office
has developed a sample seven-page •I>'
~licatlon for building pennits to be ob-
tained from state and regional co83tal
zone conservation commissions.
·This is the first time property owners
can have some Idea what will be required
oo building permits in the coastal zone.
Tbei proposed application form will be
dlacus8<d by the SOuth Coast Commission .
l(irange and Los Angeles counUes) Feb.
i and by the state commission Feb. 7. ·
-All projects proposed within 1,000
yards of the mean high tide line must
CQme before a . coastal ®mmission
ci.a.ted by the passage of Proposition 20
tn. tbe November general e1eclion.
Part of,the...iatlorney general's form e:r.-
plains that ,me new law, the California
C.oastal Zone Conservation Act, saya that
deVe1opments can't have adverse
eeoJogical effects and must be consistent
wJtb preservation of coastal resources.
.. In addition, projects must allow con-
tbwed existence of all living organisms
. . . . 'stal . and must recogillz.e' the coa zone as a
valuable resource belonging to all people.
On th'? last page of lh1! propased ap-
plication, fo!ll' lines are Provitled to write
whether the project is consistent with
these requirements.
"Use additional paper ir necessary," a
statement on the form suggests.
Under a .sect.ion called, "detailed
description or proposed work." a series
ol·nlne questions ·asks if the project:
-Involves dredging, filling or altering
a bay, estuary, river or lagoon.
-Reduces beaCh or other public access
to tidal and submerged land, beaches.
-lnterferes with line of sight toward
sea from nearest state highway.
-Adversely affects water quality,
coITUpercial or sport f i s h e r l e s ,
af!l'icultural l4RS of Jane!.
-Increases ac~.to publicly owned or•
used beaches, nat.µral rese'rves.
-Affects any area .that could. be used
for recreation or wildllfe preserves.
-Has mai;le ,pfovislons for treatment
of solid and'liquid wastes to minimize ef-
fects on coastal resources.
-Has made provisions to minimize af-
(See PERMITS1 Page Z)
.
Radwactive Danger Seen
~ ,
~!n-Smoking o-f-T obaeco-_
Quang Tri. Marines rushed through the
area about the-Jllne of the cease-fire,
recapturing a naval base held by the
Communists since spring. The marines
have since been surrounded.
The sources qid there was one spon-·
taneous display during the figbtiog. At
one point, troops stopped shootirig brief-
ly, stood up cheering and approached
each other to shake bands and exchange
embraces. Fighting continued farther
soiith, however.
The command said the highways
leading out of Saigon, except for the road
to the former beach resort of Vung Tau,
have been reopened a n d Communists
(See VIETNAM, Page Zl
Chargers
Pick Rodgers
Of Nebr aska . ~
'' Ft9at. fie Senicet NEw :YORK -· The , San Diego
Chatgera todp;y drifted Heisman Trophy
winner: ~1 Rod~ers of Neb'raska In
the .Nat1~al Football League's annual
player dr&lf.
He was •fed on the 25th roWld by
the Chargers,· who obtained the drafting
spot ln a deal that sent quarterback
Mirty Dom.res to Baltimore. The Colts
elrlier gained the spat in a deal with
Wilshington.
The Lo.s AngeleS Rams do not have a
pick in the first round, having traded it
away last year.
John Matuszak, a &-root-7, ·280-pound
ta_ck1e from 'I.arnpi., was chosen by the
Houston Oilers as the ftrSt player in the
draft. (See story, Page 16.)
The Oilers earned the No. 1 pick by
finishing with the worst record in the
league (1-13). It was the Second straight
year a lineman was picked as the first
choice.
The Baltimore ~Its, picking second,
too k Louisiana State quarterback Bert
Jones. Jones is expected to fill the void
left by the trade o( supersta.: John Unitas
to San Diego.
Three USC players were sleeted on the
first round: tight end Charles Young by
the Philadelphia Eagles, back Sam Qm-
ningham by the New England Patri<>ts
and tackle Pete Adams by the Cleveland
Browns.
Rodger.s' selection was obviously
delayed because he weighs only 173
pounds and stands just 5-9.
He is expected to be used as a wide
· receiver and kick returner by San Diego,
although be occasionally was used as a
running back in college either from his
flanker po&ilion or from the 1-fonnatlorf.
1965, on Gemini 9 In 1966 and was com-mander of Apollo 10, the 1969 !Ugbt which
orbited the moon. ,
Brand, 41, a former Marine pilot who
also served in the Air Najional Guard
and the Air Force Reserve, was the
backup conunand module·pilot on Apollo 15. .
The Soviet·American space filght , call-
ed the Apoll<rSoyuz test project, is
scheduled to be Down in mid-1975. The
earth-orbit mw10n will last about 10
days and its primary 88.!1gnment is to
test a compatible space docking system
under development by Russian and
American engineers.
The flight plan calls for the Soviet
Soyuz spacecraft, with two men aboard,
U-be launched from Russia, to be follow-
ed later by the launch of an Apollo craft,
with three men aboard, from the United
States.
The Apollo craft will rendezvous and
doc~~ with the Soviet craft and the crews
will exchange visits. between ships.
American and Soviet spacecraft cannot
now dock together in space because of
differences in equipment. With the new
dockinl device, spacecraft from either
country could serve as rescue craft
., should a vehicle of one of the two space-
faring natlo:is become trapped In orbit.
• • , • OAILY f'ILOT '°""' n h trlG O'DMMlt u~·s LOVE DfSl'LAYS 'TIM' SIGN OUTSIDE COURT
· · · ,,...,.., Har.o>urt.Smfth Attend1 Her f ·riend'• Arr1lgnment
'J I •
Leary Return.ed to County
Judge Shocks Guru By Filiiig Plea of Not Guil ty
By TOM BARLEY
'Of .. Da11Y M19t Stiff
A long day in Or~e County Superior
Court loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent I.SD cultist, flank-
ed by three lawyers, again challenged the
legality of his arrest last month in
Afghanistan.
Judge James Turner denied a series of
motions before shocking the globe-trot-
ting guru·,i.ritf his attorneys by .himself
fillngi ~a plei of irinocent on behalf of
Leary -.an action that brought im-
mediate ·pl'<ltest from Costa ?i,tesa trial
lawyer George · Chula, Leary's chief
counsel.
Judge Tllrner switched the session to
the courtroom oi Presiding Judge Bruce
Sumner of Laguna Beach after also de-
nying Leary's renewed plea that he be
allowed to aqpcrvise ti!s own defense on
multiple drug charges contained in an
Orange County GraOO Jury indictment.
· Leary, 51, stood open-moUthed in
astoiUshmenl as JUdge TtJrtler also told
him this morning that be might have to
go on trial )Vedoesday with _a nttn;i~ Qf
defendants simllarly lndicteil m ffie
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug con-
spiracy.
all have to be thrashed out before Judge
Sumner and I want to emphasize right
now that no court has the right ·to try Dr.
Leary on any charges in view of the way
he was kidnaped."
Leary, whisked overnight under guard
to Orange County Jail from his cell at
San Luls Obispo County Jail, smiled ,
Winked and waved to a cro'Yd of ad-
mirers in-the court room while Judge
Turner advi~1bim ,of hia_ tights.
Amopg the · courlrpom observers who
acknowledged bis che~ry waves and who
were warned about their conduct by
court bailiffs, ""as JooMa Harcourt·
Smith, the British llOciallte who has been
Leary's constant companion since shortly
before hil arrest in Afghanistan last
month. ·
Miss Harcourt-Smith, 27, the niece of
Office Eqttipment
Ta ken in Irvine
London publishing magnate Simon
Harcourt-Smith or the Harcourt Press,
told newsmen today that she Is Leary's
wife.
She displayed letters ltom ·Leary in
which the fonner Harvard philosopher
assured her that he regarded her as bis
spouse despite bis existing union with
1iirs. Rosemary Leary, 40.
"This letter (written in Orange County·
Jail) from my, perfect. Jove . ls all the
legality I need ," she assured newsmen.
She-attended all Leary's court ap-
pearances Jn San Luis Obispo when he Is
charged wlt,h escape foUowlng his night
in September of 1970 from the geriatric
ward or the men's colony In that ~
munity.
Leary was at the time serving a state
prison term of one to 10 years for bis
conviction in Orange County on cbarget:
of possession of marijuana.
He was trjed with his wife, Rosemary,
and son, John, 23. following the arrest of
the trio In Laguna Beach .. Dec. 26,
1!16L
Leary wu oot aUowed today to stage
the lmpl'Oll)ptu preu conference that
preceded his appearance lut week in
(See LEARY, Pap I) By GEORGE LEIDAL
'\.. • 01 .. Nh' f'IW Sllff
"That's er~," Chula said. "Thia will
Bul'Jllars sllpped the -lock of an Irvine Industrial Complex construction
firm and hauled away office equipment
valued •t 11,354, poll« 1&id today. Possibly the moot damaging thing -er. do to their lunp Is deposit with
etch puff small radioactive particles.
Tlleoradloa<Uve partlclea in turn produce
dangerous, alpha-emitting particles
'Wblch1 in IUfficlent quanUUes, may cause
-tung cancer.
· Tiie renewed link between radioac--
tivtty, smoking and lung cancer, was the
111b)oct of a paper p,...nted Tuaday
night before the American ChemicaJ
!oclely, division of 'nuclear chemistry
ind technology. The group Is meeting In
the Newporter Inn this week.
Dr. E. A Martell, $4, a nuclear chemist
wl '· _ a.li<>nalConte<-lor AlmOlpberlc-
8-rcll ill ~Ider, Colo., told fellow
ICleniists about bis ~year d!Orl to
upialn the p1...,,.. of radlooctl"11J In
lunp of .-.... nported by Olher -· Mlrt<il, who qult amldni 11 yur1
qo, believes hi• new hypotbells may es·
plala why clprtUe -.. tel ._,.
Of th> 1..,..
As a IClenlls\ lntemt..r In the pillutloa ottbe atmotpbere, Martell'• real ea8Cl!l'l'l
Is the effect of --plant radiation on humans who may be e1· DAll.'t ""'OT ..... """' pooed to other forlDI of nuclMr-.
The lock was slipped, Investigators
LBJ A t said, to obtain entry to the American U O"D~'V Housing Gulldi 17831 Skypark Circle,
• ~ ~ .;_ after an attempt to wrench off the rear ----I-door knob wlat a pair of plieni failed.
Diseases Preve1ited Opera tio1i
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Four ooctots, v.11o treaied former
President L>'ndon, B. Johnson for heart aliments said today they de-
cided against performing coronary bypus surgery on Johnson be-
, cause of extensive heart damage and a seriously diseased·colon.
---THE DOCTORS,JN A statement issµed at Brooke General Hos·
pita!, said an auwpsy of the former<president'• body confirmed their
diagnosis that the colon was extensively slckeued with diverticulitis.
Illi hlart suffered damage In an April, 1972 attack.
"Numerous difficult decisions were faced in the medical man·
• agement of_ Prelident Johlllon," aald a one,page statement. "He en·
dured hts difficulties with counge and resolved to enjoy life as mu ch
as condlUoM permitted. Illi family and physicia ns would like to!~
afflrm bil pUdonate commitment to more research In combattilig
our mjor bealt.b enel!lles." -
TOM JOHNSON, FOQIR AIOI to Johnson but not related,
cleared tbe statement with the family of tbe late President. He said
11 wu lisuecl '1n order to clarify tbe event• which preceded the death
of former President Johnson." (See related story, Page 4.)
Taken during the weekend burglary
were three electric calculators. two
typewriters, Jnd one counUng machine.
All or the equipment \VSS diJcovered
mWlng on SUnday but the crime was not
immediately ~ed becaU8e it wu
believed that It had been taken born for
the weekend by oCClce worken.
Speed Limit Ch~ed
Along Culver D1ive
A new speed limit of 50 miles per hour
has been eitabllshed on CUfver Drl\'e
between 1rvloe Boulevard and Trabuco
llold., a diltance of about one mile.
The pollutant ....ctat<d with -· PROllS TOBACCO RADIATION
..... )" ..... _.J~.~ _,_ __ .,'1llnlh!.LA..'Momlt. .• --._._------:.'----.---. .,,, ... -_._-----'
The -of SupervilOrt edict •i>Plies
only to the norlhem portion of the
roadway and the city of Irvine will be
asked to coordinate Its: secUon near
TnlbUoo Road. 1111 reoommendallon of
the new speed limit WU made by the
"""'ty Tralfic Committee bl<a111e of ln-
crellJed Ide ol ihe road .
.... , .
• ., .
' •
Oruge
Weadaer
It'll be partly cloudy .. w-ctoy, with a sltgbt lncreuo In tem-
perature_. according to the weather
servko. Jltgb.s of Ill at U.. buches
rising to a inland are expected ..
Lows !<might 41.
INSIDE TOD~ Y
A .rmaU town newipapct'1 1dl·
torio:l about th• local jtulic~l
·~•tem prompud • ludil• to tae
a contempt ci&ation ogahut thtr
paper -the 1ir1t ever ,filed
oucr on editorial. See 1tor11 on
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% DAILY PILOT IS
Pair Fil,e
For Board
Elections
Only two persons so far ha\'e taken out
papers to run for tn1stee posts in tM
Sadd1eback. Contn1un11y College District
election April 17. ~·1th slightly n1ore th\Ul
two-weeks left tx>fore the filing deadline.
Feb. 16 is the last day to file to qualify
as a candidate z:or ot three trustee
seats opep.
James \\'. l\t shall of 140-A Avenida
l\tajorca. Laguna Hills . has taken papers
out to run i.n trustee .11rea rive. which in·
eludes Leisure \\'orld and small parts of
El Toro and Laguna Niguel.
Marshall is technically the incumbent
in the area. He ~·as apJXlinted to the
board iast November after voters a~
proved an expansion of the board lrom
five to seven members.
Trustee areas two and four also are
open in the election .
In area four , which includes San
Clemente, Dana Point and Ca pistrano
Beach, Ronald l\lincher has taken out
papers.
Mincher, of 34522 Calle Portola,
Capistrano Beach, is an electronics
technician. ·
He will be challenging the incumbent in
area four, board president Patrick J .
Backus if Backus tries for reelection.
In trustee area two, Hans Vogel is the
incumbent.
No one has taken out papers in that
area. which covers the southern portion
of Tustin.
There is no filing fee in a school board
election.
For more information, contact the
Registrar of Voters.
Detectives
Crack Auto
Theft Ring
Orange detectives arrested two men
Monday in part of what is believed to be a
• nationwide auto theft ring dealing in lu:i:·
ury cars.
Investigators Dennis Dahlke and Bob
LaBarge asserted1y made a deal for a
l!r72 Cadillac El Dorado in East Santa
Ana and paid for the car with $4,000 in
marked bills.
Arrested on the sef:ne were Johnny
Jones, 37. of Atlanta, Ga. and Anny staff
sergeant lltarvin Eatman, 42, of Carson.
Five men wei;e arrested in all. in-
cluding two U.S. army sergeants and a
Marine sergeant. The only Orange Coun·
ty m'an -jailed was Larry L. Thorson, 33,
of 142 Queensbury St., Anaheim.
Orange police said their investigation
of lbe ring began last November when an
informant told them that high priced
stolen cars were being peddled here.
~lilitary ·recruiting sergeants were
asserted1y used as contact men by the
ring. They handled communications and
drove cars across state lines.
Some of the stolen can were taken
directly from Detroit factories before
they had been registered.
Dahlke said the going price was $3,500
but the local officers offered $500 more to
get a delivery in Orange County. Usually
the stolen cars were sold at major
airpo rt parking lots.
The two other military men arrested
were U.S. Army Sergeant Joe Taylor, 4.2,
of Lynwood, and ~1arine Corps Staff Ser·
geant Gary Dalwandri, 33, of Haw·
thorne ..
All five were booked In Orange County
jail on charges of grand theft auto and
conspiracy.
The car sold to Dahlke was stolen Jan.
2f! in Atlanta and driven here by Jones,
police allege. The ofricers also con-
fiscated another 1912 Cadillac driven by
Sergeant Eatman. It was n!ported stolen
in New York.
DAILY PILOT
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Frldly. for Colli M-, N9WPOff kKtl,
H"'"llll0'1111 ~lc.h/FCIVl'ltlln Vlltwy, l..,_.
911cti. lrvlnt/$1ddltblek ind SM Clll'MllfW
S.11 J11~" C~p!111·ano. A 1/nat• "'l!io!lel
..inktn is 1>11Pll1hld s.tun11ys 1f'd Svnlilys.
Thi Ol"i!>cff>tl 11Ublistll119 pi.111 11 11 3lO VttSI
lllY $1tetl, Cnt1 Mt11, C.Mf0nil'9. nQ.
Ro\.1rf N. Wted
Prm"*'! lf'd Publl!Mf"
J1cli: II., Curl1y
Vitt Preldtnl tl'ld Gtllft"ll ~
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MtHtllle l!Clllot
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Ul'IT ........
WATERGATE DEFENDANT G.·GORDON LlbDY ON WAY TO COURT
With: Him is Suun Tou!!_ey_, Secretary to His Attorney, P•ter Mlroullt
Water~te Attorney Says
Liddy Headed Operation
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Watergale
defense lawyer conceded today that Nix·
on campaign official G. Gonion Liddy
headed a political intelligence operation.
but denied Liddy had anything to do wjlh
burglary and wiretapping.
He spoke in tbe closing· Stages of the
trial which grew out of the break-In and
alleged bugging of Democr!ltic National
Headquarters in the Wa~rgate building
complex in Washington last June.
"We don't take issue with the fact that
Agents Awaiting
List of Loot
In Bank Heist
By JACK CHAPPELL
ot .. ~ ... la.ft
FBI agents in Los Angeles today await·
ed receipt of an inventory of the $1.4
million lo negotiable securities stolen
from the Laguna Niguel branch of United
california Bank last spring and recovered
over the weekend buried in a suitcase on
an Ohio farm.
"We haven't reviewed the list yet. We
don't know exactly what was found. The
amount of $1.i million ts accurate," FBI
agents said tOOay.
"All the property we ha\'e recovered
will be held as evidence and after the
trial will be returned to its owners at
direction of the court." an agent said.
Value cit property taken m the "Mis-
sion Impossible" break·in and burglary
of the Monarch Bay Plaza bank vault
has been alternately placed at $S million
(which would make it the world's record
robbery) and $3.2 million.
Three persons have been convicted of
the burglary, one is awaiting criminal
trial and one more is sought by author-
ities in connection with the crime.
Harry James Barber, 31 , ts still at
large. lfis brnther Ronald Barber was
arrested in mid-January by FBI agents
in New York.
Agents today refused to comment on
speculation that the loot burled on the
Ohio farm had been left as bait to attract
the one map. still free.
The securities are bearer bonds and
are negotiable by the pel"SQns who po_,.
sess them.
Previously, $1 million in l'fgistered se-
curities \\'ere found in a gunny sack stu ff.
ed under a bush near the Laguna Niguel
bank.
From Pagel
VIETNAM ...
driven out of 7: hamlets ln the Saigon
area.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived
in Saigon tbday to deliver assurance! of
continued American support for the
Thieu government.
Agnew dined with President Nguyen
Van Thieu at Independence Palace and
issued a statement saying lbe Untted
SIC'ites recognized Thieu's gov~rnment as
the "sole, legitimate government of
South Vie tnam .''
American forces were not Involved In
today's fighting. The last American
fight.r-bomber unit In Vietnam, Marine
Air group 12 from Bien Hoa air bue 15
miles northeast of Saigon, began pulling
out Monday.
U.S. troopl are going borne at the rate
of about 400 a day. There are about
21,000 Americans left in Vietnam and aU
must be out of the country by lhe end of
March.
U.S. officials expect no trouble! meelln8
the deadline at the current withdrawal
rate.
There have been no reports of
Americana caught up In the batt1e~sJnce
Sunday and for the "'°"t part U.S. of·
fi t:ei'S have told their men to t;.ke a lo.w
pro!Ue.
Ont American helicopter pilot, wound-
ed less than two hours after the ctase-
flre went into effect. died Monday,
becoming the fist Americ.an caaualty
~inc~ the offici~I end of the 1fai:,. .
~lr. Liddy wu tbeDoss," deleme at·
torney Peter Ma.roul..b said.
But Maroulis argued that Liddy,
general counsel for the Finance Com-
mittee to Re-elect the President, was
engaged in legitimate information
gatbeting, including a warning of poten-
tial violence which led the Republican
Party, he said, to move its convention
from San Diego lo Miami Beach last
summer.
"It was a very important decision to
move that convention from San Diego to
Miami," MarouliJ said. "And that was
done on information from my client
''That was not the recommendation of
a burglar," MarouliJ said in bis closing
arguments to the jury.
The ea>e was ezpedEd lo reach the jury laJer_Joday,
Marouli! also attacked the reliability of
the two principal PtoSECUtioo -......
saying they offenod "fabricated and ,
embellished" testimony to protect
themselves.
A particu.lar target of MarouliJ was
Thomas Gregory, a Brigham Young
University student, who testified that
Liddy attended meetings to plan a break·
in to pJant electroo.Jc bugs at campaign
headquarters of Sen. George McGovern.
He said Gregory offered his testimony
because "he was afraid for his own
skin."
MaretJlis also challenged former FBI
agent Alfred c. Baldwin m, wbo
testified that Liddy w a 1 present In
a motel room in which Baldwin was
monitoring calls from a tapped telephone
in Democratic Party headquarters.
Maroulis said Baldwin'• testimony was
".something Jess than crystal clarity,"
and declared, "Mr. Baldwin was Vt'"Orried
about his own well being."
Liddy is one of two remaining defen·
dants in the case, being tried before
District Judge John J. Sirica. '!be other
defendant is James W. AfcCord Jr., who
was security chief of the NiJon cam-
paign.
~.1cCord's lawyer, Gerald Alch, con-
ceded thal his client was caught in lhe act
of 1>urglariiing the llemocrallc head-
quarters, but said McCord was
justifiably moUvat.ed by fear for the
safety of the Nixon campaign.
"Mr. McCord was inside the
Watergate, that's a fact," Alch said. "But
Jim McCord is not a burglar. His motiva·
tion and intent were not lhat of a
burglar."
· Alcb said that his defense rested in
"trying ~ distinguish his state of mind
from all others" and establish that
McCord w a s driven by a reasonable
concern. 1 "That chief factor was his job as chief
of securlty for the re-election com·
mittee,.. Alch said in his closing
arfUfllents. _ -
Alch read off lo the jury in rapid-n..
fashion a list of violent demonstraUon1
which occurred across the country in the
spring of 1972.
Two Prisoners
Of War Have
Viejo ReUi!,ives
Two men ldentlfied this .... t as
pr1...,.,. of war (POW) have relAUves In
Mission Viejo.
Marine Corps-Capt. James V. di
Berna$. caplured in 1!161, ta USled of·
ficially u llvtna. Rb wife, Sharen, lives
In Mlssloo Vlf!o with their flve chlldr<!J.
Prior lo 8Unday"1 news, when only dt
Bernardo"• nime and not hll home dly
WU listed,. the Marine captain WU ttill
n ted ~ in acllon (i.liA). 'Ille inlflal group of POW names pro-
vided by lbe llortll Vietnam,.. following
the cea90'flre a~I a1'o • tncluded
Air Force O!P.ttln Jerry D. Drilcoll. cap.
tured in April, 1967. ltls home town was
(liven u Hlnldale, Illino1s. ,
According to olflcl~ta at the POW·llllA
lntemaUonal office bi Tustin, the pareota
of the 32·yeM'Old Air !'orce caplaln have
moved to Mtulon Viejo tlnce he was
.. t,keo..Rtlmer---.... ..
•
UC lroine Reported Klfred
-To 'Expel'
Its Dogs
'Dead' Marine
' ' Shows. Up --Alive
, Despll• a last·ll)inule attcmpl by WASlltNGTON (UPI) -The Defe ...
students to fonn a "kennel klub" to eon-Department aald today a Marine listed
trol mutts on the UC lrvlne campus1 as killed and returned to ·lh.is country tOr
Chueellof Daniel G. Aldrich"• ban on burial has turned up 00 North Vleblam's
f-nmnln1 doe• wtll 10 inlo effect as lbt of prtsooeri ol war.
acheduled Tbund83. -. -He was Identified u PFC Rooald L.
Students, lqilna aome altem1Uve to a Rldeway of nowton, Tex.
complete and total ban of dogs from the 11 la the ol A1rl ,_.11 ... _ .. A RJd halb of academe can be worked out, will e soo · ·ua.u~ • g~
meet with their dop 1n Campus Park at way, who in li6a waa listed u Uvlng al
._, Wedne!day. 'l91C Fulton St., HOU3ton.
Ateanwhlle, a university spokesman "I always had a feeling my son would
said the Orange <:ounty Animal Control tum up alive. I never gave In to the
officers will beflln regular patrols on the · fact my son w~ de1d. It waa faith ln
campus on 1bursday. God," Mrs. Rid.!Way, a nurses aide, told
They will "collect and lmpound any newsmen.
animal found on campus." "My sympathy goes to the parents of
Obvk>us excepUons, noted in the lhe boy we buried because I shed quite
chancellor's oew policy, are seeing eye a few tears for bJm," she added.
dogs and taboralory animals. MaJ, Gen. Daniel James, Pentlgon
Alter four attempts since June of um> spokesman for POW matten, saJd author·
to reach a compromise policy which itiea. believed Rldeway was among nine
.:'vould allow stljdents to briag Uleir pets Marines killed Feb. 25, 1968, in an am-
Wilb them to campus, the latest policy bush near Khe Sanh. flatly states: . Remains idenUfied as Ridgeway 's bad
.. All dogs and other animals wiU he been returned lo the UnlteG Stales and
baMed !roll) all campu.t .l>ulldinp and burled .at JeHeraon Barracb In St. Loull.
grounds at 1ll times. 'l1lis includes those . James al.lo said lwo men cm the POW
ln: parked automobiles or on leashes as list pro•ided by Hanoi had been carried
well as those running free." -by-the Pentagon ~ deserters ~ 18
Dogs in buildings have resulted in tbe ~ the ~unist! said d~ m ~a~
obvious problems while loose dogs tiv1ty had beep listed as killed 1ft action.
outside have endangered bicyclists and The two prevlously ~ered desert·
pedestrians alike. ens , Jame! sald, were MlllDe Pvb. ~
U the kennel club is (onned, the New erick .Lew~ Elbert, who Hanoi aald was
University student newspaper observes,_ alive 10 pr~n .• ~ Earl C. ¥?eathennan,
students might prQvide an intermediate who Hanoi . sa1d died in captivity.
step to cootrol offending dogs before they · James -did not provide the hometown
are carted oU to the pow:ld. ol. either man.
Chancellor Aldrlcb is 001 expected lo James said Ridgeway was a member
be oa campus Wednesday to meet with of a Marine patrol operating near Khe
the student& but a campus spokesman ~ while that outpost wu under Com·
said "he is always amenable to new munist siege in 1968.
ideas to solve a problem." "There wu a patrol that was ambusb-
ed" be said. "'Ibere was a casualty
CANCER .•.
however, Is a natural product of radia·
tidn nonnally associated with soils.
He eiplalned thal the toba<:co plant has
an "uncaMy" ability to attract very
small "almost invisible" particles of
radiation. The ~particles accumulate in
large numbers on the tips of tiny hairs on
Lbe tobacco leaves.
When the tobaeco 1' burned at the Jfp
of a cigarette, "highly insoluble"
radlOactlve particles about the size of a
smoke particle are formed.
"Each amoke particle which ~
corporates the ... -(lobacco hair) or
fracUon thereof, will contain a relatively
high concentraUon of lead·210 and Its
rad!oactive daughter, bismutb-210," Dr.
MarteU said.
Now, the emissions from these
particles do not happen lo do muoh
damage to tissues. When they were
bolaled six yeals ago futtber study of
this possjble source ~ Jung cancer was
abandon<d , Martell explalaed. '!be im·
portance of Martell'• new work ls the
completion of the chain of events
radioactive materials Wldergo.
Irvine Trustees Eye
Priorities of Action
A revised schedule of actions that must
he talion before July by Irvine Uoified
School District tnisteea wilt be discussed
at 7:30 p.m. Wedne.may in the lecture
room at Unlv...tty High School, 4771
Campus Drive, Irvine.
Su~ent Stan Corey will present
action 'ps1QrJJies and a proposed school
calendar. Irvine Unified becomes fully
operational July 1. )a.
count made. Euctly ho_w it was made -
whether by a ground oblerver, or from
the air, or what -b unkown. 1be count
reported nine bodies."
James saJd there was a period from
Feb. 25 to Aug. 18 that re(9Very forces
could not reach the area where the vic-
tims lay.
"During this period, the area was under
bombardment by mortars and air
strikes." he said. '"nlere wu also the.
normal deterioration from the tropk:al
environment. Positive inWvidtial klentlfi..
cation of some parliaJ remaw was im-
p;ossible.
"When they did get In there, they felt
they had the remains of nine tncUviduah.
"The remains of what was believed to
be nine members of the patrol ere in-
terred in I group burial at Jefferson
B~rracks National Cemetery, St. Louis.
Ridgeway was believed to be ID that
group of" remains,!'
. James said ~he Jeff/racks
f'rom Page l
PERMITS ..•
fects on scenlc resources, and minimize
dar.ger of floods and land.slides from land
alterations..
The seven-page fonn also ets for a
brief summary of the project, names and
phone numbers of adjacent property
owners, list of other pennttJ .,needed aod
granted, and attachments of parcel
maps, U.S. geologjcal survey maps and
if existing, an environmental impaci
statement.
If a project ls a repair or lmprovement
costing $t5,000 or less, the commlssW>n's
executive director ts allowed to act on It
under regulations also proposed by the
Attorney General's OUice.
Omission or misstatement or the In·
formation requested on the fonn i.!I
ground.! for denying the permlt.
c.me1ery was aetected by llJe fomlll"
of the nine because It was the 11moet
central locallon" to the various towna in
which they lived. •
Judge Acts,
I
Spurs Flurry
Of Motions "
A delermined bid by the prooecutioo lo
put Dr. TtmollJy Leary on trial Wednes-
day with three co-defendants for his
alleged masterminding of t h e
"~rotberhood of Eternal.Love" drug· con·
sp1racy ran into four equally determined
defense laywers today in Orange County
Superior Court. ·
Presiding Judge Bruce SU!Mer toot au
four lawyers into JlJs chambers for an
ott·the<Ocord dl11CtW1lon afle~ falling In •
long court hearing to reootve lhe flurry of
motions flied on behalf of Leary and
three fellow indictees.
Judge SUmner took over tbe action
after Judge James Turner realized at
Leary's earlier arraignment um momlng
that much more was involved in the
globe-trotting guru's appearance than a
plea of guilty or innocent. ·
Judge. Tumtr shockEd Leary and
everyone withln eanbOt Wlin be took
care ol that iaue hlmsell by eotering a
plea of innocent in mulUple drug chargea
against Leary in the court record.
Judge Sumner was expected to return
to the courtroom late today for a bearing
that may determine if Leary ts to go on
trial Wednesday with three fellow iJ1.
dlcteea.
They are Michael Boyd Randall, 29, ar-
rested last month 1n Laguna Beach, and
Calvin Lany Delaney, :io, and Ronald
Ctawford, 15, both arrested by Honolulu
police on the Island of Maul and both
listed in the indictment as tramleotl.
Leary and his «><lelendantl are four of
nearly SO indictees named by the dlstrict
attorney's office following three years of
invudgaUon --into the alleg-ed
Brother!lood of Etemal Love drug cull
II is alleged thal the orgamatioo had
links throogbout the world :!'Jd was iJ1.
strumental in Importing vast quanUUes
of illicit drugs lnlo the United Stales.
* * * FrotllP .. el
LEARY ..•
Judge Turner., courtroom.
Judge Turner made It clear tbl! morn-
ing that he was displeased with much of
the informality that enlered inlo the ar-
raignment on Leary's last appearance..
Leary wu not allowed today lo dlscusl
bis case with neW!Dlen and he was not
allowed an interview with Miss llattourl-
Smith.
He is one of nearly 50 penons Indicted
by the Grand Jury oo drug charges stom-
mtng from what lawmen clslm wu the
multi·million dollar acUvity of the
Brotherhood of Eternal Love.
It is alleged that the organlzaUon bad
links throughout tbe world and wu iJ1.
stnurumlal in importing -quanUtles
of Illicit drugs inlo the United Stiles.
It is alleged that much of that ·drug
traffic originated in several of the 11 na·
tlons visited by Leilry during the tour
thal foUowed his escape from the San Ltiis Obispo prison.
AROUND THE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
• WE HAVE BEEt-4 ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRm Y, THE COST OF STORES
IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE
ABLE TO OBTA1N MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM . . OFFICES, ANO WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC CONGESTION
LEADING TO US. .
THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE ANO
WE· ARE PROUD ANO GRATEFUL TO SAY THA-'f-WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOL"UME EVERY YEAn FOR SIXTEEN YEARS, ANO
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
ALDEN'S .
CARPETS e DRAPES
1UJ P1acentfo Av•.
COSTA MESA -646-4138
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Duntlng1on Bea~h Today's· Fi nal
Yalle N.Y. Stoeks
* *
VOL. 46, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ·tALIFORNIA • ' TU.ESDA Y, JANUARY 30, 1973 TEN CENTS
Aide Says _ Harbour Dredging 'Not Harmful'
By JOHN ZALLER
Of tllt CNlll't 'U" Sltll
A city-hired consultant said Monday
that the dredging of a proposed new
channel In Huntington HarbOur would not
barm water quality in' existing channels
and might even help it.
But lhe consulting firm went on to
report that the 4&-acre condominium and
private lagoon complex proposed by Hun-
tington Harbour Corporation might con-
tribute to severe overcrowding in the
'Ocean View elementary and Huntington
Beach Union High school districts.
These comments were the highlights of
a preliminary critique of Huntington ·
Harbour Corporation's environmental
impact statement. They were prepared
by VTN Consolidated Inc., of Irvine, and
presented to Huntington Beach coun·
ctlmen A1onday night.
While the report by the city hired
consultants seemed largely favorable to
the ptoposed development, councilmen
refused to discuss it until the fina t report
by VTN is presented to the city this F.ri·
day.
Also, the council delayed for the third
straight meetirlg all consideration of a
tentative tract map of the development
proposed by Huntingl.On Harbour
Corporation.
That action means that Huntington
Harbour Corporation's $20 million
development plans -which will include
dredging of a new channel, a private
lagoon, 42 boat slips, plus homes -can-
not be-approved before Feb. 1.
City officials noted that Huntington
Harbour executives have been pushing to
beat that deadline so they won't need to
secure a permit from the newly created
Coastal C6nservation Commission, which
Will become a legal entity Feb. 1 due to
passage of Proposition 20 last November.
Al Coffer, an attorney for the
developer, denied his company was af-
fected · by Proposition 20, but he
nevertheless pleaded guilty with COIJD.
cilmen to approve the tract maps before
the council's next meeting. · ·
"I think we've had an unusual amount
of del~ already," Coffer complained.
Construction or the development bad
already begun Inst November when the
city stopped all work pending completion
of an environmental impact sta~ment.
When Huntington Harbour prduced that
repo rt , the city then turned it over to
VTN and asked that it be critiqued.
VTN made its preliminary comm~ts Monday.
"fte impact of partial channel -
strucUon on existing channel areas w d
not be adverse," the VTN reports states.
"In fict, cil'(Ulation may be improved
slightly. Studies or estimates have not
been made to quantify these effects,
however."
It was not clear whether VTN would
attempt studies later this week in an ef-
fort to verify that statement. A key area
of contention has been whether con·
struclion ··or further channels In the
backbay area of the harbor would con-
tribute to degradation of the existing
channels.
Another key issue is whether street
!'WHlff from new homes should be allow-
ed to run into the harbor, as it is in
already~completed sections of Huntington
Harbour.
The VTN recommends that runoff from
the new development , although it would
constitute only-;2-percent of all runoff in
the harbor, should be pumped out ot the
development into a nearby storm chan-
nel. ·'
Viet Fighting Eases
But Major Battle Rages in Quang Tri
SAIGON (UPI) -The intensity of
1 fighting in South Vietnam tapered off tir
day, the third day of the official cease-
fire, according to military sources, but a
big battle was reported between South
Vietnamese marines surrounded by Com-
munist troops in northern Quang Tri prov-
ince.
The level of fighting -although lo~er
than Sunday and Monday -still was
higher than at many times duripg the 12
years•of fighting in South Vietnam.
Government troops and Communists
also skinnisbed aroWld two provincial
* * * Leatherneck,
capitals cut off by the Communists and
the South Vietnamese drove Communists
out of several ham1ets near Saigon.
The South Vietnamese command
reported 765 battlefield incidents between
the start of the cease-fire at 8 a.m. Sun-
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1,761 Communist! and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
additional 1,070 South Vietnamese wound-
ed. Several dozen have been listed as
missi11g.
Military sources reported heavy
fighting between South Vietnamese
marines and Communists near·tbe mouth
of the Cua-Vlet~ River, iloriheast ·of
. t ' . -'
This was the line outside.state Departmenlof Motor
Veblcl .. offlce.-Ilf"C-OS!ll Mesa thls morning as mo-
torists faced the F,eb. 2 deadline for 1973 auto reg-
istration. But these folks CoUid have saved them-
s_elves tbe trouble of standing in ,the rain. Under a
new law, all car owners '"have to do is_m_aj.I _i'n tltfilr
money and registration slips prior to midnight Fri-
day. (Read the back side of you'r registration slip.)
Once 'Dead~'
On POW List
W ASH!NGTON (UPI) -The Defense
Deparuiients:aKI tOOay a Marine listed
as killed and returned to this country for
Chargers Draft
Heisman Winner '
Johnny Rodg ers
From Wire Servicts
NEW YORK -The San Diego
Chargers ·today drafted Heisman Tropb'y
winner Johnny Rodger's of Nebraska in
the National Football League's annual
player drift.
He was selected on fhe 25th round by
the Chargers, who obtained the drafting
_, spOt In a deal that sent quartet,"back
Marty Domres to Baltimore. The Colts
earlier gained the spot in ·a deal with
Washington.
The Los Angeles Rams do not have a
pick In the first round, having traded It
away last year.
Jotm Matusiak, a .S-foot-7, 28G-pound
tackle from Tampa, was chosen by the
. Houston Ollers as the fttst player in the
• draft. (Seo story, Page t6.)
• The Oilers earned the No. 1 pick by
ftnlahlng wii.li the worst record ln the
league (l..Jl). 1l-was..lhe..1econd_.lt:a!ihl
year a lineman was picked as the first
· choice.
The Baltimore Colts, picking second,
took Louisiana State quarterback Bert
jones. Jones Is expect.ed to nµ the void
IeR by the trade of .Upenta.· John Unltas
ID San Diego. · • 'lbree USC playen were sleeted on lhe
first roWld : tight end Charles Young by
the Philadelphia Eagles, back Sam Cun·
(See FOOTBALL, Page ZI
Anti-abor.tio11,
Bill Enter ed ........
WASHINGTON (AP) -A con-
1tlluUonal amendmtnt to prohibit
abortions In most cues wu pro-
posed today by Rep. Lawrence J.
HOian (!l>M<l). · ..
He called the U.S. SUpmne c.urt
Hmorally bankrupt" for Jta nilJng
.rtrlldnC down moot anu.-.
law•·· r Hggan aald ~.ol a .,.._,
st11iiuona1 amendmerit woold be the
only elfecllve way to ..,.._ tjle
court's 7-2 deobion last -tllat
states may not ~ women to
have abortionl durln& the flnt III
month! of prqnancy.
Beach Council Opposes
Study on Airport Deal
burial has turned up on North Vietnam's
list of prisoners of war.
He was identified as PFC Ronald L.
RideY!'ay of Houston, Tex.
He is the son of Mrs. ¥Mred A. Ridge-
way, who in 1968 was listed as living at
79'l6 Fulton St., Houston.
"I always had a feeling my son would
. tum up alive. I never geve in to the
Huntington Beach councilmen voted 6--0 Duke. ''So why should we cause prob-fact my son was dead. It was faith in
Monday against funding a feasibility !ems, why enlarge it?" COO," Mrs. Ridgway, a nurses aide, told
stUdy on a proposed joint city-County The audience cheered both Duke and newsmen.
· dowl k Airpo nd . Mrs. Gibbs. "My sympathy goes to the parents of ,purchase of Mea ar rt a its Councilman Jerry Matney, the only the boy we buried because J shed quite
neighboring goU ~· councilman to show support for the a few tears for him," she added.
~·Henry Duke'interpreted the (See AIRPORT, Page Z) Maj. Gen. Daniel James, Pentagon
action as "the deathknell for the airport" spokesman for POW matters, said author-ities believed Rldeway was among nine and safd its Viability as a money-making M F } d Q • -Marfnes killed Feb. 251 1988, in an am-
operatlon would now be "nil." C ar an UltS bush near Khe Sanh.
Othei: COWlCllmen, while More cautious Remains identified as Ridgeway's had
in their remarks, later voted unanimous-H • p been returned to the United States and
ly to ask the planning commi~ion to Ulltlllg lOll OSt buried at Jefferson Barra<ks in St. Louis.
James also said two men on the POW
begin "1>1oring alternate uses for the Dan P..1cFarland, 30, chief land use list provided by Hanoi had been carried
EMl~Y: -fl.OT lftff,...... airport land in the event the airpor:t technician 'for the city of Huntington by the Pentagon as deserters and 16
operation fails. Beach, bas Tesigned his post to accept a others the Communists said died in Cai>"
'However, John Turne~, who bas ~n slmHar'positiOL in Corvallis, Ore. · tivity had been listed as killed in action.
BEAMS AT ARRAIGNMENT
Dr. Timothy Le1ry
operating the ail!J>ort·/Or n~e years, vow-~cFarland will leave the city Friday . The two previously considered desert-
ed that he would continue bis oPeration He will become chief zoning ad· ers, James said, were Marine Pvts. Fred-
di f ell tlo minlstrator for the city of Corvallis, a erick Lewis Elbert, who Hanoi said was Am • S •
re ar-..!!:' ._ COUil ac n. Jligll<r l!!!§l alive in prison and Earl c. Weathermah encan· OVle t
"They think I'm gotog to fol(laiiilgo-John Berliens, "building direetor for -wmr11;norsaid-dted m-capttvt . '--~ -
away," he said today~ "But l'm going to Huntington Beach, said no replacement James did not provide the hometown J , Fli h
'"°Y because I was bet;e before ti!< bc)use3 has yet been picked. IS.. POWs, Pap I) Olllt . g t were."
It -was Turner wb!> originally pro~ ~~~~ ~ ri:.111 .~ ~.:. LB" J Autop~y Crew Appointed county. At that llrpe, he said he could ~
not continue to make money with his SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP )
present operalion. • Tfte boss of the American astronauts, a
"I've been doing some planning since three-t1m·e space veteran and a rookie
then," Turner exPlatned this morning. "I v · p ted Operatio1i will fonn the U.S. crew for the can stay in business indefinitely by in-tseaseS r eVCJl Amerlcan.SOviet joint space ~lght in
creasing lhe number of planes that use 1975, It was learned today.
the airport, and that's aomelhing 1 don't SAN ANTONJO,' Tex. (UPI) -Four doctors who treated former Sources said the American crew will be riee<' city appro•aUo do." · d tod lb d Donal<lK.._Sla)'toll, the_ai!l ..... ut chief €ooncutDen spent lea than 15 minutes President Lyndon B. Johnson for heart ailments sal ay ey e-and~tbe only ooe of the original ocvcn
Monday night in reaching a decision. cided agaihst performing coronary bypass"'IUI'gery Otr Jobnson~be-U.S. utrooauil who has never nown into
Alt.bough council Ctwnben were crowded cause of exte_nsive heart damage and a seriously diseased colon. space; 1bomu P. Stafford, commander
with citizem -moat of them apparently of Apollo 10 and • veteran of two othtr
In opPOSIUon to the cJty-<OWlty fllll'Cha"" THE DOCTORS, IN A statement issued at Brooke General Hos-space mlulons, and Vance D. Brand, a
of the airport _ Mayor Al Coen 'began pital, said an autopsy of the dormer president's body confirm~ t~~ir civilian "ti'onaut who bas never nown
proceedings by announcing that no public diagnosis that the colon was extensively slekened with divert1culit1s. into space.
teJlimony woold be taken. His heart suffered damage In an April, 1972 attack. Of!lclals al the space agency refused to
Coaiicllwoman Nonna Gibbs began 11Numerous dillicult decisions were faced in the medical man-confirm or deny the formation, but It was
by urlng that she would support a stitdy agement of President Johnlon," said a one-page statement. "He en· ~i~~n an announctment was In prtpara:
ol tlle alr:pott, but not oiJe limed at_ex-dured bis dlttlcuIUes with courage and resolved to enJof life as much ~·
pandklg It: as condllioc• permitted. Bia family and phySlclans wotild like lo re. tf Slayton, 411• beadJ the crew, It wUI be
"U wt don't want a bigger airport, affirm bit. passionate commitment to more research in combatting the cllmu of a lone road back for him.
thl!I wby .tlloWd we """ a-llludy "8sed our majo~bealtb enemies." Slayton wu named to Oy the second on that preconceived ldcsf" abe asked. Mtteury miJsiofl, but a heart condition
· Mn. Gibbo Ont ~ for an in-TOM JOHNSON,' FO•""R AIO E to Johnson but not related, grounded him. He was later groonded dependent studY of the airport, but tileJ\, """' ' d from flying airpbnea. changed her mind and made 1 --1on cleand the state~! w\th the family o'f the late President. He sai A doctor suggested medlcaUon that
ag8ltW any lludy at alt It was issued ·~n order to clarify the events whicll preceded the death chanacd his lrnlgular heart beat. On
"The airport ts not compatible with lhe of former f'l'esident Jobuoa:' (See nlated story, Page 4.) Msrcli t3, 1m, Dr. Charlos Berry, chi<!!
'"'""'"'1lng area," said c.uncllman , (SH CREW, Paa• I)
. -· ............................. .. , ·-·······-·········· . •. ~ •• t •..
•
•
Quang Tri. Marines rushed through the
area about the lime of lhe cease-fire,
recapturing a naval base held by the
Communists since spring. TI1e marines
have since betn surrounded.
The sources said there was one spo n-
taneous display during the fight ing. At
one point, troops stopped shooting brief-
ly, stood up cheering and approached
each other to shake hands and exchange
embraces. Fighting continued . farther
south, however.
The command said the highways
leading out of Saigon, except for the road
to the former beach resort of Yung Tau,
have been .reopened and Communists
-(See VIETNAl\1, --Page !)
Judge Denies
Leary Plea
For Defense
By TOM BARLEY
01 tll• DlllY -lie! ll•ff
A long day in Orange County Superior
Court loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent 1.50 cultist. flank -
ed by lbree lawyers, again challenged the
lega1ity o! his arrest last month in
Afghani.tan.
Judge James Turner denied a series of
motions before shocking the globe-trot-
ting guru and his attorneys by himself
filing a plea of innocent on behalf or
Le8,ry -an act ion that brought im-
mediate protest froln Costa Mesa trial
lawyer George Chula, Leary's chief
coonsel.
Judge Turner switched the session to
the courtroom o~ Presiding Judge Bruct
Sumner of Laguna Beach after also de-
nying Leary's renewed plea that he be
allowed to supervise his own defense on
multiple drug charges contained in an
Orange County Grand Jury indictment.
Leary, 52, stood open-mouthed Jn
astonishment as Judge Turner also told
him this morning that he might have to
go on trial Wednesday with a number of
defendants similarly indicted in the
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug con-
spiracy~ _
"That's crazy," Chula said.' "This will -
all have to be thrashed out before Judge
sumner and I Want t!l emphasize right
now that no court bas the rlgllt to try Dr.
Leary on any charges ln view of the way
he was kidnaJ)e<l. 11
-b!ary;-wbisl<edhovwe"tnlnlgbt-andiercRUant---
to Orange County Jail from biJ cell at
IS.. LEARY, Po1e I)
Oruge
lfelitller
It'll be parUy cloudy on Wedn,._
d>y, with a alight Incruse tn ten>
perature, tttarding to the weather
ICl'Vice, Hlglls of 80 at-the beaches
rilling-to 62 inland are expeCled.
Lows tonlghl 4L
INSlltfl ~lti\ Y
A ttnaU town ne10apapcr't'tdl·
torial about the local judicial
svstem prompted a judge to file
a conitmpt dtation again.st tht-pa,,.,--th< flrll ..,., /Iii over an tditorial See 1torM on
PaOf 5.
L.M. -• -" .,_ • ........... " -... .. --• ·-.. --II ·-" Sl>'M1 ,..,.., • --" ._,. tlf •••'-' .... • .... ...... 1, ··-" T-N ·-· .,, -" ....... lltarf 11 w..-• -M ............... 1>1.4
AMI Lf'IMR 11 -·-•
I ............
I
MOtions
Spurred
By Jt1dge
A detennined bid by the prosecution ~to
put Dr. Timothy U!ary on trial Wednes-
day with three co-defendants for his
alleged masterminding of t h e
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love" dru1 con-.
spiracy ran into four equally dettrmined
defense lay\\'ers today in Orange County
Superior {;ourt.
Presiding Judge Brtl{'(' Sumner took all
fou r la\\'}'ers into his chambers for an
aCf·the-rt'COrd discussion after failing in a
loog court hea ring to resol\'e the flurry of
motlons filed on behalf tif Leary and
three fello"'· indictees.
Judge ... Sumner took O\'er the action
after Judge James Turner realized at
Leary's earlier arraignment this morning
that much more y,·as Involved in the
globe-trot ting guru's appearance than a
plea of guilty or innocen t.
Judge Turner shocked Leary and
everyone \\'ithin earshot "'hen be took
care of that issue himself by entering a
plea of innocent to multi ple drug charges
against Leary in the court record.
•, Judge Sumner was expected to ret~m
to the courtroom late today for a bearmg
that may determine if Leary is to go on
trial \Vednesday wi th thfee fellow in-
dictees. .
They are l\lichai:,l)Boyd Randall , 29, ar·
rested last month 1n Laguna Beach, and
Ca1vin Larry Delaney, 30, and Rooald
Crawford, 2.5, both arrested by Honolulu
police on the island of Maui and both
listed in the indict ment as transients.
Leary and llis co-defendants are four of
nearly 50 indictees named by the district
attorney's office following three years of
investigation into the a 11 e g e d
Brotherhood of Eternal Love drug cult.
It is alleged that tbe organization had
links throughout the world and was in-
strumental in importing vast quantities
of illicit drugs into tbe United States.
Frot11 Page l
LEARY ...
San Luis Obispo County Jail, smiled,
u·inked and y,·aved to a crowd of ad~
mirers in the court room while Judge
Turner advised him of his right...
Among the courtroom observers who
acknowledged his cheery waves and who
v.·ere warned about their conduct by
court bailiffs. was Joanna Harcourt·
Smith , the British socialite ·who has been
Leary's constant companion since shortly
before his arrest in Afghanistan last
month.
Miss Har«>Urt-&nilh, 'El, the Diec<! of
London publishing magnate Simon
Harcourt-Smith of the Harcourt Press,
told newsmen today that she is Leary's
wife.
She displayed letters from Leary In
which the former Harvard philosopher
assured her that he regarded her as bis
spouse despite his existing union with
h-1rs. Rosemary Leary, 40.
"This letter (written In Orange County
Jail ) from my perfect love is all the
legality I need ," she aS5Ufed newsmen.
She attended all Leary's court ap-
pearances in San Luis Obispo wh<re be Is
charged with escape following hi! flight
in September of 1970 from the geriatric
ward of the men's colony in that com·
munit».
Leary was at the time serving a It.ate
prison term of one to 10 years for bis
conviction in Orange County on charges
of pos.session cf marijuana .
He was tried with bis wife, Rosemary .
and son, Jahn, 23, following the arrest of
the ttio in Laguna Beach on Dec. 26,
1968. Leary was not allowed today to stage
the impromptu press conference that
preceded bis appearance la.rt week in
Judge Turner's courtroom.
Judge Turner made it clear this morn-
ing that be was displeased w~th much of
the informality that entered into the ar·
raignrnent on Leary's last appearance.
Leary was not allowed today to discuss
his case with newsmen and be was not
allowed an interview with Miss Harcourt~
Smith.
OIANM COAST D
DAILY PILOT
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'
.•
Radioactive liia11al1r:QJlon 1HTpt!l
.
Uiik Cited Squabbles Hold
UPIT .......
WATERGATE DEFENDANT G. GORDOlj. LIDDY ON WAY TO COURT
With Him 11 SUMn Tousley, Secret•ry to His Attorney, Peter Mlroull1
. W ate1~gate Attorney Says
Liddy Headed Operation
WASlllNGTON (AP ) -A Watergate
defense lawyer conceded tociay that Nix-
cn campalgu official G. Garoon Liddy
beaded a political intelligence operation ,
but denied Liddy had anything to do with
burglary and wiretapping.
He spoke in the closing stages of the
trial which grew out of the break-in and
alleged bugging of Democratic National
Headquarters in the Watergate building
complex in Washington last June.
"We don 't take Issue with the fact that
l\1r. l.Jddy was the boss," defense at-
torney Peter Maroulis said.
But Maroolis argued tbat Liddy,
general counsel for the-Finance Com--
mittee to Re-elect the President, was
engaged in legittmate information
gatberlng, including a warning of poten-
tial violence which led lhe Republican
Party, be said, to move its convention
from San Di.ego to Miami Beach last
summer.
"It was a very important decision to
move that convention from San Diego to
Miami,'' Maroulis said. "And tbat Was
done cm information from my cUent
"'111at "" DOI the .-irm""'<lati«l of
a burglar," Maroulis said in bis dosing
arguments to the jury.
Tbe <"'< was e.pected to reacll the
jury later today.
Maroults also attacktd the ttllability of
the two principal prosecution witnesses.
saying t be y offm!d "fabricated and
embellished" testimony to protect
themselves.
A particular target of Maroulis was
Thomas Gregory. a Brigham Young
University student, who testlfied that
Liddy attended meetings to plan a break-
ln to plant electronic bugs at campaign
headquarters of Sen. George McGovern.
He said Gregory offered bi! teStirilony
because "he was afraid for bis awn
kin " s .
Maroulls also challenged fonner FBI
agent Alfred c. Baldwin m, who
testified that Liddy w a s present in
a motel room In which Baldwin was
mooltoring calls from a tapped telepholle
in Democratic Party headquarters.
Maroulls said Baldwin's testimony was
"something less than crystal clarity," •
and declared, "?.,tr. Baldwin was won-led
about his awn well being."
Liddy is cne of two remaining defen·
danls In the case, being tried ~ore
Di.strict Judge John J. Sirica. The other
defendant is James W. McCord Jr., who
was security chief of the Nixon cam·
paign.
~.icCord's laY.'Yer. Gerald Alch, con·
ceded that bis client was caught in the act
cf burglarizing the Democratic head-
quarters, but said McCord was
justifiably motivated by fear for the
safety of the Ni.Ion campaign .
"Mr. McCord was inside the
Wa_~ga~...JP.at'a •fl~." .\lch said. "But
Jim McCord Is not a burglar: His moliva·
lion an$. intent were. not that of a
burglar.'
Alch sa id that his defense rested in
"trying to distingu1sh bis state of mind
from all others" and establish that
l\fcCord w a s driven by a reasonable
concern.
"That chi~ factor v.·as his job as chief
of security for . the re-election com-
mittee," Alch said in his closing
arguments.
Alcb read off to the jury in rapid-fire
fashion a list cf viclent demonstrations
which occurred across the country in the
spring of 1972.
"Mr. McCord discerned a link between
this violence and the Democratic cam-
paign," Alcb said and argued that bis
client was only seeking information
which would help members of the Nl1on
Republican campaign to d e f e n d
themselves. "ls it so unreasonable to infer that
perhaps these groups would call the
Democratic NationaJ Committee and say
'We're coming to Washington tomorrow,
three and four thousand strong'!' " Alch
asked.
'"Ibis tnfonnatioli wOuld ·be invaluable
to Mr. McCord and invaluable to the
Republican Party."
E. Howard Hunt, a White Reuse con-
sultan~ pleaded guilty on the third day of
trial. Four other men, Bernard L.
Barker, Eugenio R. Martinez., Frank A.
Sturgis and Virgilio R. Gonzalez of
Miami, pleaded guilty a few days later.
'
School Flooding
Study Approved
Trustees of the Huntingtoo Beach City
School District have passed a resolution
aimed at getting more money for a study
of flood hazards along the Sanla Ana
River.
The resolution, which was sent to all
school districts and governmental agen·
cie~ in the_area.around the Santa Ana
River, was proposed by the Founlain
Valley School Dislrlct.
It asks Congress ~lo appropriate .. suf.
ficient ft.i.nds" to complete the study of
the hazards from a standard. project
flood .
The resolution also asks that funds be
appropriated for implementation of flood
control projects that the study finds
neces5ary to eliminate Oood danger
along the river basin.
Frotn Pqe l
FOOTBALL. • •
nlngham by the New England Patriots
and tackle Pete Adami by the Cleveland
Browns.
Rodgers' selection was obviously
delayed because he weighs only 173
pqµods and standl jus~ 5-8 --lie is expected to be used as a wide
receiver and kick returner by San Diego,
although be occasionally was used as a
rurming back in colle_ge either from bis
nanker position or from the l·for:mation.
FretltP,,.el
Rodgers, the top career all-purpose
rUnner In college football history, caught
55 passt!s last aeuon for ta yards and
fi nished third nationally in all-purpose
running with 182.8 yards per game .
, .. He holds 29 Nebraska records, seven
Big Eight Conference marts and four na.
tional standards and was a star tn his
final game by scoring four touchdowns AIRPORT •..
putttwe, 'WU oot present at Monday's _tin,,
At ooe point In the short proceedings,
Tumer and cne other unidenUfled man
hegan upbraiding the CO<IDcil from the
floor.
"ff,.,.,.... bullt hou,.. too near the
beach, would you condemn the beach' for
USfl 11 recreation?" Turner demanded .. ·~t's the-same principle ,.1th the
airport."
Mayor Al Coon angrily ruled Turner
out of ordtr, telling him, "We aren't
responsible for a commitment • (t.o
airplane owners) you're unable to go
forward with."
Tiie CO<lncil'• •ctloo does not directly
alrect Tumtr, however. He atlll bas two
yea rs l'!maJnlng on his le11se from
ownen o( lhe airport land and can con-
tinue his operation as long as he CBn
secure renewals of the lease.
•
'
and passing for a fifth as the
COrnhU$kers slammed Notre Dame In tht
Orange Bowl.
Buffalo made the 26th and final first·
round .. 1ect1on, getting the rlgbta from
Miami ln a deal that sent wide receiver
Maritn Brlacoe to the DolpbJns laJI year .
The Bills, In their -choice of the
roond, libbed offensive guanl Joe Do-
Lamlelleure of Michigan State. ·
The first round ttqulred ' hours, 22
minutes, compere<I to a Dat two hours
last year. The lonC'fl em -t : 16 in
1967 the fin\ year, after the NFL merg·
er with the old American Footbafl •
League. • Of the 26 play..., plcked. 17 were of·
fenalvt perfonnera, ei&Jlt deltnalve and
one specialist. Five wide recelven were
grabbed, •l""i with four l'llMinl backs,
seven off..,.Ive linemen, lndud!nl a Ug!lt
end, five delenolve bocks, 11111 klcilna
·specialist and just one quuterbock" .. . . . .. . .
-1n Tobacco Peace Forces Up
87 GEORGE LEIDAL -SAIGON (UP I) -Diplr matic squab-
.J>f .. DMIY "191 11•" bllng between the Saigon government and
Poss ibly the mollt damaging thing Communists assigned to help supervise
smoken do to their lungs is deposit with the Vietnam cease-fire caused another
each putt small radloacUve parllcles. delay today ln plam that woi.;kl have had
The radJoactive particles 111 turn produce the force in the field by now.
dangerous~ alpha-emitting particles Nlnety COmmuuist V t c t n a me s e
wblch, in sufricien t QuanUties, may cause memben of the Four-Party Joint
lung cancer. l\1ililary Commission set up to inspect .
The renewed link between radioac-tho machinery for the cease-fire arrived
tivity. smoking and lung cancer, was the l\1onday from Hanoi aboa1d two U.S.
subject of a paper presented Tuesday CISO transport planes.
night before the Am erican Chemlcat But they remained on them overnight
Society, division of nuclear chemistry at Saigon's Tan Son Nbut A i r Base in
and technology. The group is meeting in prote:it of the gov ernment requirement
the Newporter Inn this week. that they fill out immigration forms
Dr. E. A Martell, 54, a nuclear chemist before entering the country.
wit'-the Natiollll Center for Atmospheric Sources at the airpor:t said the 21·hour
Research In Boulder, Colo., told fellow slt-in ended today when the Ccmmunists,
scientists abou t his thcee-year effort to 50 North Vietnamese and 40 Viet Cong,
explain the presence of radioactivity In finally lefi the plaoes and were taken to
lungs of. smokers reparted by ·other Camp Davis on the base where other
researchers. Conununist and international delegations
l\1art.ell. who quit smoking 11 years are Staying.
ago, believes his new hypotpesls may ez. There Wis no explanition-of what com-
plain why cigarette smokers get cancer promise; if any, was reached lhat enabl·
of th~ lungs. .1 eel them to disembark .
As a sc ientist interested in the pollution The C<l mmunists insist they are
of the atmosphere, :t.1artell 's rea! concern citizens cf Vietnam and do not have to
is the ·effect of nuclear power plant fill out immigration papers. "'
radiation on humans who may be ex-Thirteen North Vietnamese a.n d Viet
posed to other forms of nuclear energy. Cong who arrived in Saigon Sunday
The pollutant.. associated with tobacco, registered the same complaints and
however, is a natural product of radia-stayed aboard their aircraft for 22 hours
tion normally usociated with soils. before deplaning :t.fonday.
He explained that the tohacco plant bas
an "uncanny" ability to attract very
small "almost invisible" particles of
radiation. 'Ibe particles accumulate in
large numbers on the tips of tiny hairs on
the tobacco leaves. -
When the tobacco Is burned at the Up
of a cigarette, "highly insoluble"
radioactive particles about the size of a
smoke particle are formed.
"Eacli amoke particle which fn-
corporates the . • . (tobac¢o hair) or
frect.ion thereof, will contain a relatively
high concentration of lead·210 and lls
fadioactive daughter, bismuth-210," Dr.
Martell said.
Frot11 Page l
POWs ...
of either man. Jame, said Ridgeway Was a member
of a Marine patrol openting near Kbe
Sanb while that outPoSt was under Com·
munist siege In 1961.
"There wu a patrol that was am~
ed" be said. u'Jbere was a•. C81U1llty
count made. ExacUy bow it was made -
whether by a ground observer, or from
the air, or what -is unkown. 'lbe count
reported nine bodies--:''
James said there was a period from
Feb. 2S to .Aug . .U.:that ncovery forces
couJd not reach the area where the vic-
lims lay. t
"During this period, the area was under
bombardment by mortan and air
strltes,"~be said. '.'11tere was also the
normal deterioration from the tropical
environment. Positive individual identifi·
cation of some partial remains was im·
possible. -"WOOi they did get in there, they felt
they had the remains of nine individuals.
"The remains of what was believed to
be nine memben of the patrol were in-
terred in a group burial at Jefferson
Barracks Natiooal Cemeler)r, St. Louis.
Ridgeway was believed to be in that
group of remains."
J...,.. said t h e Jelfenon Barracks
Cemetery was aelected by the families
of the nine because it was the "most
central location" to the various towns in
which they lived.
VIETNAM ...
driven out of 7: hamlets in .the Saigon
area.
Vice President Spiro T. Agnew arrived
In Saigon today to deliver assurances of
continued American suppc>rt for the
Thieu government.
Agnew dined with President Nguyen
Van Thieu at Independence Palace and
issued a statement saying the United
States recognlz.ed Thieu's government as
the "sole, legitimate government of
South Vietnam." . _
American forces were not involved in
today's fighting. 'Ibe lut American
figbter-bomber unit in Vietnam, Marine
Air group 12 from Bien Hoa air bue 15
miles northeast of Saigon, began pulling
out Monday.
U.S. troopo are going btme at the '!lie
of atiout 400 a.clay, 'Ibero are,~itut
21 ,000 AdieriCans left In Vietnam iOOaJI
must be out of the country by tl:f enJI. of
March. . • •
U.S. officials expect no troubfe meeting
the deadline at the current withdrawal
rate.
There have been no r·eports of
Americans caught up in the battle sioce
Sunday and for the most part U.S. cf-
ficers have told their men to take a low
profile.
One American helicopter pilot, wourld·
ed less than two hours after the cease-
fire went into effect, died Monday,
becoming the fist American casualty
since the official end of the war.
.
From Pagel
CREW ...
space agency surgeon, returned Slayton
to flight status.
It will be the fourth space fight for
Stafford, 42, an Air Force brigadier
general. Stafford was on Gemini 6 1n
1965, on Gemini 9 In 1966 and was com-
mander of Apollo 10, the 1969 flight which
orbited the moon.
The South Vietnamese foreign mlniJtry
allowed thal group to leave the plane "in
. order that the . . . commis.slon may
begin to carry out its responslbiliUes,"
but warned that the decision did not
"constitute a precedent."
The military corvmission -composed
of North and SOulh Vietnam. the United
States and the Viet Cong -IS to ws:irk
with the four·nlembe1 lnt<!rnational
Comlsslon for Control a11d Supervisio11
(ICCSI to supervise Lhe cease-fire.
The two groups met se parately Mon·
day end today but acting ICCS Chairman
Michel Gauvin of Canada said today he
was still trying lo arrange meetings with
the military group.
l:
Oo\U.Y PILOT Sf9ff .....
B-•'• BeHHlf
Mrs. Harriett M. Wieder is the
new .chairman of Huntington
Beach's Environmental Coun-
cil: She -is an--:admhllstraUve
assistant f o r environmental
matters for Los Angeles Mayor
Sam ~orty.
·Hun$gton Auto
Crash Injures
Coast Woman
\: r ..
A Newport Beach woman is in guarded
cood.ition today at Huntington Intercom-
munity Hospital following a traffiC ac-
cident Monday afternoon.
Candy Lampert Mouyious, 23, of 1600
Park Lane, and her two companions,
Donald L. McMechan, 39, of 1289 S. Coa!t
Highway, Laguna Beach and Randy
Smith, 25, of Santa Ana, were all injured
when their car struck a telephone pole on
Talbert Avenue between B e a c b
Boulevard and Hartlund Street.
Police said McMecban was driving the
car and officers could give no reason why
it struck lhe pole. TraHlc olflcer Orva
Akin said investigation of the crash ia
continuing today.
The trio was taken to Huntington
lntercommunlty Hospital and McMechan
was transferred to Long Beach Veteran's
Hospital where he is listed In satiJfactory
c)ndition today. Smith was transferred to
Orange County Medical Center and
released this morning.
AROUND TIIE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP •. FIRSTL Y, THE COST OF STORES
IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL SECONDLY, WE WERE
ABLE Tb OBTAIN MORE SPACE~ WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
.THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LlTTLE TRAFAC .CONGESTION
LEADING TO US •
THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR SIXTEEN YEARS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
'" CODA llllA
ltNCI ttl1
. .
' .. -·· ·······-.....
' •
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAP~S
1663 Placllltla Ave •
COSTA MISA
646-4831
·•..... . . . .. .. . . ..... .
•
\
~
UC .Jrvine
To 'Expel'.
Its Do
Despite a last· atwnpt by
students to ronn a " t klub .. to eon--
trot mutts on the UC Irvine campll,
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich'• ban on
tree-running dogs will IO into effect u
scheduled Thunday.
Students, hoplng some alt.ematlve to a
complete and total ban of dogs from the
halls of academe can be worked out, will
meet with their dogs In Campus Park at
noon Wednesday.
Meanwhile, a university spokeamap
said the Orange Co\Dlty Animal Control
otncen will begin regular palrola oo the
campus on Thunday.
Tbey will "collect and impound Ill)'
an1maJ. found OD CIDlpul. ''
-Obvloua exc:eptlaoo, noted ID the
cha1•••llor'1 -pollcy, are teelD& eye doll and llboratory anlM1l1,
An.r lour attempts since J,.,. ol lflll
to reach a oompcomlse policy which
would allow atudentl lo bring their pets
with them to campus, the latest policy
fiatly ,iai..: ·
• H All dogs and other anlmala • will be
bannod-lrom-all -campua bulldll!p ·and
grounds at all times. 'Ibis includes tboae
in parked automobiles or on leashes as
well as Uae running free."
Dop In buildings have resulted ID the
obYious problems while too.. dogs
outside have eodangered blcycllsta and
pedestrians allke.
U the r.meJ club Is formed, the New
Ulllvenlty student -_,,.,.,
-might Pmicle ID lnltrmedlale
llep lo caotn>I otteodlnc doga -. Ibey
.. carted olf lo lbe poimd.
Cbancellor Aldridl ti llOI apocltd lo
be oo campua Wodnoadoy to meet with
the atuclenta but a campus l()OktamlD
said "be' ti always amenable to ntW
ideas to aoJve a problem."
··Agents Awaiting
List of Loot
In Bank Heist
By JACK CHAPPEIL
Of *' D11tr Plllft Stefl
FBI agents In Loo Angeles today await·
ed recei pt of an Inventory ol the $1.4
million In negotiable securitlee lllnlen
"""' the Laguna Ntcue1 brln!h of, IJniled
··California Bank last spring and ~ered
over the weekend buried in a IU1tcue m
an Ohio farm.
"We haven't reviewed the llst yet. We
don 't know exactly what was found . 1be
amount of $1.4 mlllioo ls accurate," FBI
agents said today.
, "All the property we have recovettd
· will be held as evidence and After the
trial will be returned to Jls owners at
direction of the court ," an qent saJd.
Value of property taken m the "Mis-
sion Impossible" br<alc·ln and burgllry
of the Monarch Bay Plaza bank vault
has been alternately placed at 15 mlilloo
(which would make II the world'a l'<COI'll
robbery) and $3.2 mlllioo.
Three perao111 have been coovlcled of
the burglary, ooe Is awaiting a1mfna1
trial and one mere Is aoushl by author·
m .. In connect1oo with the crime.
Harry James Barber, 31, la stiD at
large. His b<other Ronald Barber Wll
arrested In mid.January by FBI agents
in New York.
Agents today refused to comment on
.speculation that the loot burled on the
Ohio farm had been left as bait to attract
the one man still free.
The securities are bearer bonds and
are negotiable by the persona who po.
sess them. .
Previously, $1 million i n re1i9teM'.l se--
cwiUes were towid in a gunny aack stuff-
• ed under a bush near the Laguna Niguel
bank.
, Investlgatiul aJao turned ap 1 o m e
: $128,000 In caah, aome of wblcb bas been
traced to the NJiuel bank.
Still missing Ill'! the large quantities of
valuable jewelry, nre colna and cub
· tucked away In the 500 sale deposit boies
rifled by the thieves alter they blasted
---their way Into-the nalt.
The Ob'° farm loot was unearthed only
after federal men tore up the five-acre
plot for a week, working with bulldozers,
and other heavy equipment as well as
shovels and picks. ,
The bucolic stashing place is located in
Mahoning County, 20 miles southwest of
the Youngstown area. Agent! declined to-
aay what led them to the hideout.
...
"
' '
CURIOUS COLLECTION -Fired clay objects suggest early Irvine
area residents were among first people in the world to discover pot·
tery techniques. "Detorations" on most pieces were believed im-
pressed In wet clay before firing. Pointed tools were used on most,
lone pottery 111"!!1 lower left, abowa traces of design possibly placed
there by "wbeel·u.<•" object. Were these the first to use the wheel
and leave tracb on ceremonial ceramics?
• •Ki~g f;hauvinist'
Laguna Libbers Seeking 'Pig'
A hunt for the "biggest male
chauvinist of Laguna Beach" ti Wider
way by National Organization for Women
(NOW) whicll will lele the man oelected
at the Susan B. Aolhony birthday ha!>
quet Feb. 15.
The contest is open to all male
cbauvinins in the Art Colony apd votes
are 25 ""'11 Ollcb. VotJnc hons a re
located at The While ltouse, Reef Liquor,
Detectives Nab
·2 in Santa Ana
Car Theft Case
North Tic Toe, Monarch Bay Safeway,
Earl's Forest Avenue Market, and Bill
Thomas Camera Shop. Ballots may also
be mailed to NOW, P.O. Box :1474,
Laguna Beach.
"For the benefit of the uoenllghtened,
the ward chauvinist comes from a
soldier in the army o( Napoleon who was
named Nicholas Chauvin. He was bllnd1y
enthuslastlc and belligerenUy r.ea.lous iA
hla allegtanc"f' to Napoleon and patriotism
for Napoleon's cause," Delores Ferrell,
NOW spokesman, said.
The coateot ti a llDld raialng event for
NOW and allouJd "be a OOMCloUlllOU
ral.ter for the citizenry of Lquna
BeLcb, II abe aaJd.
•
H DAILY -PI LOT :J
Centuries W~ong
)
' .
Class · Sought 1910 Relic, Found 5,000 ]JC
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of Jiit Ot!IV; ,.ilef tltff
No one could have known at the Ume
the DAILY PILOT coverage of a C31
State Fullerton archeology class "dig"
above Upper Newport Baiy in July, 1971
incorrecUy state<i the date of the
suspected inhabitants by 5,000 yt;trs.
· At the time, ChrJs-
topher Drover and
students in his sum-
mer school ant.b.n>
poligy cl.ass were
r.l!~t looking for traces of
the Luisano Indians
who were believed
to have encamped
1,000 years ago wi~ D1tOV•• ln the 80 by 110.foot area first logged as a "midden" in 1910.
Drover, now 25, of Laguna Beach, only
Jut week announced the results which
sprang from that initial ei:ploratory dig
and a subsequent investigation paid for
by the Irvine Company.
Remains, not of the Luiseno culture,
but of llOme previously unsuspected
"sedentary " society of early Orange
County residents were unearthed by
Drover.
Aliens Captured
Around Clemente
By Patrolmen
San Clemente police and borde6
patrolmen arrested several more aliens
Monday in what has become a standard
sequel 'to whopping weekend tolals at the
roadblock at San Onofre.
Patrolmen there arrested five aliens on
l\tonday and one more before dawn to-
day.
Late A1onday afternoon San Clemente
officers detained two immigrants found
strr nded deep in the hills near the TRW
Systems plant at the end of Avenida
Pico. Several others were found in other
parts or the city Mondey.
But the smaJI figures for the check
point and the city came nowhere close to
the whopping numbers of aliens seized at
the checkpoint last weekend .
More than 300 nationals ~e· detained
by federal officers over the weekend and
one youth was fatally injured in a traffic
crash direcUy related to smuggling
op.;ratlons.
The IS-year-old boy died when a
tniekload ot aliens slammed into the rear
of a station wagon' a few miles south of
the roadblock.
The unwiual clay-fired ceramic pieces-
40 of them -decorated with pointed
tools and possibly a wheel·llke object
date from 5,177 to 4,227 B.C. '
Precisely because the objects hav~ no
utilitarian purpoSP. such as pottery bowls
or cups have, Ibey are believed to be
evidence of the first inhabitants of the
Western HemiSphere who at that early
date in man's lime oo .-earth had
developed the "technology" to create
decorated objects of fired clay.
The objects, dated by precise carbon-I-I
dating of organic materials found near
them, suggest lbe unknown early resi.
dents lived at the site for nearly 1,000
years .
"When we talk about early cultures in
Southern Califo ma we are usually talking
about crude cultures, people who· were
seed grinders or hunters," Roger
Desautels, president of Archaeological
Research Inc. of Co:.ta M~, explained.
"There's never been any find which
would indicate these early peoples had
sensitivity or creativity," he added. ARI,
a non-profit scientific tirm , holds the
Irvine Company contract to map sites on
·the Irvine Ranch that are of
areheologlcal or paleont-Ological vaJue.
The firm also regulates the scientific ex-
ploration of these siles and coordlnJtes
the land development company's phasing
of construcUoo which otherwise might b<Jey. historically meaolngful real estate.
The summer, 1971 research was Wl-
dertaken to fulfill Drover's master's
degree requirements.
It resulted in conclusive e\•idence of
the earliest known inteUigenl human be·
ingS in North America. The artifacts
wieartbed in Orange County are 2,000
years older than any previously
discovered in the U.S., are 6.000 years
older than any found before in California.
Further, they are only 2,000 years
younger than the oldest recorded find of
Similar objects anywhere else in . t.be
\Vorld.
ld.aterials found in Greece date back to
6,000 B.C. and others unearthed previous-
ly in Turkey date to 7,000 B.C. The
significance of the find is twofold, Drover
noted.
Not only does the find prove there were
people living in Orange County around
5,000 B.C. who were capable of creating
them, "but the date is a relaUvely early
one for ceramics lmywhere." ln Japan,
where the art has developed to standard s
of ei::cellerice in recent times, the earli!!St
artifacts of ceramics date only to 2500
B.C., be said .
Proposed Coast For11is
Sample Building Permit
Applications A vailahle l
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of ltlt 0.llY '1'-1 ll•ff
The state Attorney General's Office
has developed a sample seven-page ap-
plication for building permits to be ob-
tained from state and regional coastal
zone conservation commJssions.
This is the first time property owners
can have some Idea what will be required
on building pennits in the. coastal zone.
The proposed application form will be
discussed by the South Coast Commiss ion
(Orange and Los Angeles counties) Feb.
5 and by the state commission Feb. 7.
All projects proposed within 1,000
yards of the mean high tide line must
come before a · coast.el commission
created by the passage of Proposition 20
in the November general elecUon.
Part of the.attorney gmeral'1 form ex-
plains that the new Jaw, the California
Coastal 1.one Conservation Act, says that
de•:elopments can't have adverse
ecological effects and must tJe;ton.sistent
with preservation of coastal fesourees.
In addition, projects must allow e-0rr-
tinued existence of all living organisms
and must recognize the coastal zone as a
valuable resource belonging to all people.
On th~ last page of the proposed ap-
plication, four lines are provitled to write
whether the project is consistent with
these requirements.
"Use additional paper if necessary," a
statement on the fonn suggests.
Under a section called, "detailed
description of proposed work," a series
of nine questions asks if the project:
-lnvo\\'es dredging, filling or altering
a bay, estuary, river or lagoon.
-Reduces beach or other public access
to tidal and submerged land, beaches.
-Interferes with line of sight toward
sea from nearest state highway.
-Adversely affects water quality,
comm'ei'cial or sport f I s h er I e s ,
agrJcuJtural uses of land.
Orange detectives arrested two men
Mcoday ID part of. what ti believed to be a
nationwide auto theft ring dealing In lua·
ury cara.
' De111onstrator SALE
lnnstlg1ton llellnls Dahlke and Bob
LIBlrge asaertedly made a deal for a
1m Cadill1e El Dorado 1n Eut Santa
Ana and paid for the car with $4,000 In
marted bills.
Mmtecf CID the ICOlle were Jolmny
Jaoea, 17, of Atlanta, GL llld Army stall
serieant Marvin Ea!man, C, of Caraao.
Five men were arreated In al~ In·
eluding two U.S. army. -ti and a
Marine sergeant. The only Orange Coon·
ty man jailed was Larry L. Thorson, 33,
of IC Queensbury SL, Anaheim.
Orange police said their Investigation
of the ring began last November wben an
informant told them that blgh priced
stolen can ,..,. being peddled beno.
Mllllaly recndtiq aergeaota .....
usertedly 1lled u caotact men by the
rlq. 'Ibey bandied COIDlllllllicllloaa and
drove cara ..,._ llate U-
Some ol the llolen cara ...,. taken
dtrec:tly from Detroit -belono
they bid been reclstered.
Dahlke Aid the pin( price WU $3,IGO
but the local olllcers oiler.cl llOO more to
gel 1 delivery In Orange County. Uaua1ly
the stolen can were aoad at major
airport parking Iola.
The two uther mWtary men amsled
wen! U.S. Army Sergeant Joe Taylor, 42,
of Lynwood, and Marine Corpo Staff Ser·
geaot Gary ~ 33, of Haw·
thorne ..
All live were booked In Orange County
jail on charges of grand theft auto and
coosptracy.
FffiST SATE OF THE YEAR!
• • • • •
CAPR.I
MARQUIS
MONTEGO
COMET
CONTINENTAL Capri~s
to
Contbwntal!s-
• STATION WAGON
Fields Follies
HURRY FOR YOUR
CHOICE OF THESE
WW MILEAGE,
FIRST TIME
OFFER ON 1973's Fans Insult Children, Kick Dogs
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -l>olplle a
~ severe caae of stage frlchl which made
him wet bis pant&, Patrlct Patrlct, 10,
boot 10 othen to win • contest for the
besl lmltttion of W. C. Fteldo.
H~ victory came Mooday at a ~
s-ed by the ShlcUlnUOD ~.I group of civic tiooatero wblc!I doft not
tolerate any joket about U. clt.1 the
C4111edlan loathed moat. -
Ther werie: teveral otber coatfllta bued
on Fields' fa\forttei d!Jllli:u. '
Craig Rini, It, won lbe q.tldlnc
contost In whlc~ the object Is lo boot a . •tufted toy the larlbeal.
Bruce Blummthal, ti, a Tem.,ie
•
I ,
lJamt Of The Ntw Car , , ,
"Geldetl r-eN'
---···· ·-..
v
2121 HARBOR llLVU. COSTA MESA • ~30
•
t. ...... . ~·
\ \
Nome Of Th~ NtW Car • • •
''GoldeK r ... ch''
• _if OAJLV PILOT
' .Just •
·"'\-.• ~
with
To• orphiae
ff ea1n Playing .
iF or a Change
J WASHINGTOS CALLISG: During rr.
lcent rites at the Capitol Y:hereic ~fr .. Nit-
~ launched his :'\ext Four '\'ears, some ~publican shakers and mo\'ers gavt a
reception for thl' nev.• congressmen
'''iii be representing our Orange
region. Reports ha\•e trickled back
lndk:ating it v.·as a success.
I Our new representatives ,,.ho "'ere sub-
~.eds of the gi'lthering are Andre"' J.
insh~w, the former Orange County
ssesso[' riow of the 39th Congressional"
istrict and Clair Burgener. the fonne r
•tali!! senator of the San Diego region.
l(,o.,,.; of the ne1\• 42nd Congressional
~strict .
: 11fE IDEA OF THE GOP brass from
twr area v.·as to get some key
Washington types over to lifl some
gla~s and shake hands with Hinshaw
and Burgener. Thus. they "·ould be able
to associate a race with 1he new COll-
'gressional names. Some White House
staffers sbo1A--ed up too. like Herb Klein,
the communications expert.
_ All th is was a good notion because e\'en
for us home folks . it is a touch difficult to
keep track of who our congressmen are.
Th is comes about because of redistrict·
ing, ~·herein the politicians jiggered all
the district lines about.
Orange County now ha s a piece of
about hair a dozen congressmen, l think .
Along the Orange Coast. \Ve have three
principal ones now -lfmshaw in the
central section of Costa Mesa . some
Newport and on do~n to Mission Viejo:
Burgener from Corona de.I Mar
downcoast to San Clemente and Craig
Hosmer in the Huntington Beach-\Vest
Orange County sector.
SO THIS ts OUR coastal delegation to
the new 93rd Congress, hopefully ~1.tb a
little help from friend Richard T. Hanna,
the Democratic Congressman from
\Vestminster.
The GOP trio. ho""·ever. all got there
by slightly different routes. Hinshaw
defeated incumbent John G. Schmitz in a
surprising primary victory and then
breezed home free in November.
Burgener was a shoo-in for election in
the ne\\·\y created 42nd District. Hosmer,
an old friend of our coastline from Long
Beach. came to represent more and
more Orange County territory throogh
the redistricting process.
An}'"·ay. getting organized as a coastal
team may take a bit of time for the
Republican threesome. Simply put, t~y
just don't know each other too well. And
in the past. we haven't had too much of a
team ef fort back there in the hallowed
halls of Congress.
FOR ONE THl1'G, we had John G.
Schmitz, who. when he was a Republican,
tended to confuse fellow party memben
in Congress. He did this by knocking.the
President's budget. fla ying Mr. Ni%on's
China trip and peace efforts and nnanY
"declaring war" on the White House.
Indeed, as our congressional delegation
tried to move in concert to get things
done for the coas tline, Schmitz seemed to
be marching to a difft>rent drummer.
All of which gets us back to the recent
Washington tea party for Hinshaw and
Burgene r, when Congressman Hosmer,
the veteran who suffered through the
Schmitz era. sidled up to one of
Hinshaw's top advisers and asked, "Tell
me. is Andy going to be a team man?"
"YES,'' nlE ADVISER replied. "Andy
"'ill play on the team."
"Well , that's goi ng to be a delighUul
change." Hosmer concluded.
.Craig Hosmer is right .
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Ul"IT......._
Vrsus Horribilis
No "'·onder they're grizzly. These bear cubs, two pounds combined,
are called Ursus horribilis from birth; even though they don't become
horribly dispositioned until gro\vn up. They are the newborn of "Gus"
and ''Tessie," residents of the St. Paul, Alinn.1 Como Zoo. Keeper Pat
Gallagan examines them.
Nixon Budget 'Has Guts,'
Called Meat Ax Approach
WASHL'iGTON (UPil :-;i' Treasury
Secretary George P. Schulu said today
"you've got to ·ha"e the guts'' to stop
federal programs that don't work, and
that this is what President Nixon pro-
poses to da. ,
Some l:lemoerats in Congress. serving
notice of a probable bitter battle with the
administration on cuts of more than f7
billion proposed by Nixon in· IOcial pro-.
grams in the fiscal 1974 budget, accused
the President of a meat ax approach and
or tearing down "humanitarian govern-
ment."
In the budget. submitted to Congress
Ptfonday -to be followed Wednesday by
his annual economic report -Nlxon call-
ed for scrapping numerous programs of
past Deinocratic administratkins. in·
eluding antip0verty projects started
mostly in the Lyndon B. Johnson era.
Wicks
•
"'"" .
'The Vietnam observ""
uniforms effl' reedy •. 'sir. '
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SCHULTZ SAID many of tbe pro-
grams, such as building hospitals and
getting electricity to rural areas, had
been highly successful but were no longer
needed.
Shultz, Nixon's chief economic
spokesman, said, ''What this is all about
is, you keep 'on doing lhis spending on
programs deemed to be outdated and you
impose a taz increase on the American
people .''
"The ones that haven't been working.
we've been willing to cut. And if it
doesn't work, let's have the guts to say it
doesn't 'A'Ork and stop.''he said.
"PEOPLE WHO CAN do for
themselves should do for themselves."
said Shultz. "And communities that can
do for themselves should do for
themselves."
Shultz made the statements on the
NBC1V Today Show.
House Speaker Caf-1 Albert declared:
"The President proposes nothing Jes,,
than the systematic dismantling and
destruct.ion of the great social programs
and tbe great precedents of humanitarian
government inaugurated by Franklin D.
Roosevelt and advanced and enlarged by
every Democratic president since."
Assistant Senate Democratic Leader
Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia com-
mented, "There is a detennlnation, it
seems, to tum back the clock insofar as
the federal commitment to better health
for all Americans is concerned."
SENATE REPUBIJCAN Leader Hugh
Scott called the budget ''reasonable,
responsible, but tigbt," and added :
"While I find it difficult to be compaUble
with a number of the cuts tn social
services programs, it is apparent that " .. e
must get hold ol willy nilly spending by
the Congress."
Freeze Stings Deep South
Snoiv Covers Appal.acliians; Wind Batters Seaboard
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·civilian OptiQn
Care Offer'!P Vnl.ess POWs Talk to Press •. .
ing program,'' tpOkesman Irwin Tevtn of •0peratlon tfomecomtnc' or not,li ht •
sald. "But once he opts out, he may not said. ·
came back." He said reporters would not be able to
Teven's comment was the firat word contact civilian POW1 while they are In
from the Stat• ~rtment on oontoct the Clari; Afr Base hoo!pltal but added:
CLARK AIR BASE, PbUlpplnes (AP) -
Civilian prl300ers of war retumina rrom
North Vietnam will ~ cared for by the ·
"Operation Homecoming" medicp.l and
psy<hologlcal treatment program. but not
if they decide to talk' lo over JOO report-
ers walilng them here, a State Depart-·
ment spokesmnn said today.
between the press ancs returning clvltlans. ,r.-;·1 can safely say Lhey'IJ be madt aware
The depermeot Is clwatd with looklng -'-OL.~-them~-<>1-lbe oo---t+
after lhe clvtllans whlJe they are in "Op-tlons open to them .''
"If one of the returning civilians W&Dts
to hold a press conference he may do so..
but only by aptlng out or the Homecom-
eraUon Homecoming." Ea.ch dvlllan will also be assigned a
Sta.le Department twOOrt who will accom -
pany him tbrou1h the Homocomtng pro-
aram, Toven said. Thia policy •loo op-
plfts to military POWs.
i:f * * Johnson Knew
Of Cease-fire
At His Deatli
AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) -Former Presi·
dent Lyndon B. Johnson died knowing
that a cease.fire agreement had been
reached for South Vietnam, his Widow
says.
Johnson was told personally by Presi·
dent Nixon that a cease-fire accord had
been agreed upon. Ladybird Johnson said
Mon,day.
Furthennore, the former president was
in the process of preparing a statement
to be released when the cease-fire was
fonnallY"' announced, Mrs. Johoson said
in a statement.
John.son died of a heart attack on Mon-
day af~moon. Jan. 22 : the cease-fl.re
was announced by Nixon on Tuesday
night, Jan. 23.
"SO MANY HA VE expressed sorrow
. .that my husband had no knowledge
of the cease.fire agreement m Southeast
Asia," lifts. Johnson said. "I think bis
friends should be told tbat fate was kind.
Lyndon did know that peace had come."
Ptfrs. Johnson said her husband was
kept "continuously informed at every
stage of the long negotiations" by the
President, Dr. Henry A. Kissinger and
others.
.. He foll&Wed I hose proceedings very
closely and said he was so pleased when
President Nixon himself called to report
the final breakthrough,'' Mrs. Johnson
said.
l\flUTARY'olficials at Clark said ear-
lier lhRt the press would not be allowed
contact with returning military POWs
anywhere in the Pacific af!a.
Of the 32 clv:lllana the North Vietnam-
ese have.admitted holding, 27 are Ame r-
icans. Teven uJd at least nine of them
\\'tte U.S. 80\-"entment employes at the
time ol tht.ir captuf!, but lnfonnatioo
"'as incomplete on tbe other 18 Ameri-
cans.
The live foreigners -two Filipinos,
two West German3 and a Canadian -
also are expected to be returned to Clark
Ai,r Base by American planes.
MANY OF THE dvtlians were captur-
ed in South Vietnam and will be tumed
over to U.S. officials there. Then they
will be flown to Clark for processing.·
"OfOcial Civilians -u.s, government
employes -will be treated the same as
the military. They are a part of the
Homecomina Program," Tuven said.
He ,11:id the pOUcy on press contact
with oonolticia1 civilian P.QWs was based
on the need for "fUU parity" between re-
turning civilian and military prisoners.
"SUCH A CIVIUAN must d e c I d e
whether be wants to be a full member
* * * .POW Families
Pref er Letters
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tbooe wishing
to express relief and coocmn to families
of U.S. prisoners of war and missing
should do so by letter or telegram rather
tlum by direct telephone calls to the
families .
The plea ~·as made Monday ·by the Na·
tiona.I League Of FamUie.s of Prisoners
and Missing in SOutbeast Asia. ·
"They are delighted by the concern ol
people but telephone calls are interfering
with the job of obtalning an accounting of
all of them men," a spokesman for the
league said.
OLD NEWS -Lt. Col. Thomas
Sturgess of Scott AF!!. Ill.,
thumbs through a news digest
prepared for returning-prison·
ers of war returning to any of
31 bospiWs in the U.S.
SHE SAID mAT three days before his
death Johnson asked his long-time friend
and assistant •. Horace Bu.shy. to. begin
preparing a statement that Johnson in·
tended to make when the cease-fire v.·as
signed.
Aide· Tom Johnson said the former
president told B"-Sby to write a state-
ment that would "express bis gratifica-
tion that peace b'ad .come and that ~
body wanted ~ce UIOre or tried harder
to get ft tlum be bad."
Israeli Planes Reported
' '
Aides said Johnson did not see the
statement, which was never completed. Driven Awa,y by Syrians
Red Dye Attacked
By Nader Group,
Consumer RePort
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A cou·
troversial red dye, used in everything
from lipstick to soft drinks and pill
coatings, was under attack today from
twO fronts that claim It may represent a
threat to human reproduction.
Consumer Reports Magazine in its new
issue published a lengthy report on the
substance -called Red Dye No. 2 -aDd
recommended tba1 it be banned until a
complete study can be made.
The recommendations came as the
Food and Drug AdministraUon began
reviewing a petition from the Health
Research Group of Washington, a Ralph
Nader-backed organization which asked
the FDA to stop certifying the substance.
JN BOTH CASES the ~ltics cited
studies which purported to show that
animab fed lhe dye suffered impaired
reproduction and increased infant
·mortality.
Last July 4 the FDA proposed that
limits be placed on the amount of dy9 in
food products, and allowed a period time
for comment on the idea. That time
period expired last September and no
final decision has yet been announced.
One FDA official said new infonnation
has been coming in conUnuousty· since
September, including result. ol tests the
FDA Itself has. been making on ammals
and the results of a new Russian study.
-It wa1 a study from lhe Soviet Union in
1970 that originaUy brought the dye into
question. .
The FDA could offer no hint on when a
decision might be coming.
.By Unlltd Press lnle.rnalioaal
Syria aaid JsraeU planes tried to violate
S)'?'ian airspace today, but were driven
off by Syrian war planes. An Israeli
military spokesman said Israel -would
have no reaction to the Damascus report.
According to Damascus Radio, Syrian
warplanes scrambled and intercepted the
Israeli planes attempting to penetrate
Syrian ainpace near the Syrian--
Lebanese border. ll was the first
reported air action since Jan. 8.
e Crash Kiiis 37
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -Seven
Americans and 30 others aboard an
Egyptian jetliner rrom calro were killed
Monday night when !be plane struck a
mountain ridge while approaching
Nloosta airport./ .
Mlsralr, the Egyptlan airline, said the
Americans were Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Dodge, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel , Burne
Miller, Raymond Jeanne, Thomas Woods
and Ann Valentine, hometowns.unknown.
e Drug Sentencing
NEW YORK (AP) -An Argentine na·
tional described by the federal govern-
ment as "the biggest narcoUcs traf·
ficker ever brought to justice in the
United States" has been aen(enced to 20
yeans In prbon and filled $20,000.
Auguste Jooeph Ricord WU the kingpin
of an international ring raponslble for
rouUng a ton of heroin ('600 million
worth) Into the United States annuallji,
the go~emment charged.
e Patleatt Chal'fJecl
PLEASANTVILLE, N.J. (UPI) -A 11-
yeaN>ld patient was chafged Monday
with 1tetllng the fire which killed 10
persons at the rest home where he Uved.
Among thi victims was a woman whose
1Ct7th birthday was Jes,, than three weeks
away. ·
State Police detective James SChissler
charged Harry Fletcher Kempt of
Baltimore with arson ogly hours after
lire roared through the old tw ... tory
( IN SHORT .•. )
wooden building of the Streets Sheltered
Care Home, occupied mostly by residents
placed there by local welfare ofrtclab:.
e Richardson OK'd
WASffiNGTON (AP) -Elliot L.
Richardson took over· as secretary of
defense today amid fUll .milltary honors.
The Senate confirmed Richardson Mon-
day.
The nomination or Peter J. Brennan,
New York City!& "Mr. Hardhat'' labor
leader, as secretary of labor has been
unanimously approved by the Senate
Labor and-Public Welfare Committee.
Approval by the full Senate ls expected
Wednesday.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtl""1 of the Doi~ Pilot
Is IJUMiAlffd
,,.......,,,.~ ·" ""'· ..... 11--
""' .... 1:• """' c.aM Mii ~ ui.., w111 i.. ......_ "' ,... C111$ .,.. tft• mtii1 ,,,. '"'"· . . s.........., '"' ,....,1 " ,.. ..... -'"' ,..,,. (ff!Y ., ' ...... s.1..-.,., ., • • .....
5-Py, Cll,llllf • ,.,., wla .. '"""''ft
f*j, Cllb 1111 IR"' lllllN 11 L"'-
Ttltphorlts
Extortion, Capture Foiled
JACKSON , ToM. (UPI) -Bank cbab-
man Owles Arendale twice lei! $200.000
Mrs. Rebecca L. Arendale hostage wben
she returned.
.ransom beside ' busy highway to !rte BANK OFFICIALS said Arendale ~e-
hls \idnaped wKe Mondoy and each time gotlated wtth the caller and agreed to a passerby picked It up before the lru>--000 ,_ Jrated utortionist could '1'1!8Cb iL Mrs. leave $200,000, Instead of the,..., -
Arendale !reed bersell and esc~ped Ill>-manded, at, a drop oo a hlaJiway about
hanned. JO miles -ol Jacaon.
Police today arrested a ..IllCUon man Aller notifying poUce, Marcum said,
for Qll<!ltlonlng. . Attnclile put the money In a IUllOUO and
The bm1glcd e1lortloo attempt began dropped It a1 the spec:Kled location.
1hortly before noon when Artndale, chair· Shortly alter the ransom mOO<!y w81
man of the board of the Jack!on Slota put on tho roadside, • highway depart.
Bank, received a call telling him that h~ mcnt maintenance -ker, whom Mar-
wtre was being held hoot.ge. cum dectlned to Identity, ha.Jll>O"ed along
The extortloo1't, "dressed In a wlf, and plctled up the oultcase. When he Jound
high·hcelcd shoe• and a pair ol blnck ml>ney m.tde, the surprilJcd wor~er tum·
women '• alAckl," bad enteM the ~ td the suitcase over to authorlUes and
dal• home. while no one.wu lhere • .P:Oll':!l-...;Armdale returned to bis ramblln(, ranch.
Chief Harvey Marcum said, and took iijfe lionle to await further lnatruc:Uons.
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While the llnl drop ""' being made,
Marcum said, Mrs. Arendale had freed
berieU from the "bell> and ribbonl" with
w!llcb Bhe was bound and eacaped from
the unlocked clooet oLa paJ1laJiy "'°'.
pleted houlo In a -oubdlvlaloo.
By the Ume Arendale roceiyed a ...,_
rod call from the txtortlonlst, Mo=n
said, tbe banker wu aware I.hat h1i wile
had tJCapOd unharmed, but her abductor
apparently wu not. ·
· Aulhoritiei attempted to set a trap for
. he< abductor and when the banker Jell
the BUit<.,. of mooey on the road, olD· con vle\i walUng for the pickup.
, llut the sultcMe WIS picked up by a
"cwiot.11 motorist," who was Jmmedlatf?.
ly sulTOUnded by law enloroemcnt o!JP cers. He had no """"'ction with the ,.,.. '
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VOL. 66, NO. 30, 4 SECTIOl'JS,,-'48 PAGES ----' ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today's Final
'
N.Y. Stoeks
TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1973 N .TEN CENTS
'Newport Population Controls Will Be Aired
~-· . ' " Newport Beach re81dents wm get their
chance to react to proposed population
-..is at a planning comml!sioo public
hellriag next 111Q!)th.
• ,~'lbe Controls, in the form of "residential
4...iiy limits," are to he part of 'the \and ua tlement of the new Newport Belich maater plan of development.
called tough by-City planning experts,
tbe controls drew few specific comments
from councilmen and plarming commis·
sioners at a 1peciil meeting Monday
night.
Instead, city fathers turned the review
session into a preliminary public hearing.
Most residents who spoke chose to ad·
dress proposed controls. over their own
neighborboods -mostly West Newport,
BaJboa Peninsula and Corona del Mar -
rather than talk about city-wide imPJICl.
Gity officials alao.heard.trom develoP-
ers wbo said they see the proposed limits
as threats to their rights-and lo plinned
communities already in existence.
Margot Skilling, of 6610 W. Oceanfront,
a member of the West Newport lmprove-
nlenl Association, told officials some ol
the specific controls proposed for her
area are not feasible.
"You should strongly reConsider any
plans for an R-1.5 (Umlted duplex) zone
in West Newport because of the influx
Qf ~i:manent residents it would
bring," Sile said. "You should be looking
at enforcing the laws you have now."
Corona del Mar architect Stuart \Vood-
ward said the 15 units-per.acre Limit on
multiple-family dwellings proposed by
the planning staff is just one sign the
limits won't work.
"It's a magic number pulled out or the
sky and doesn't do a thing in tenns of
what you want to do here," be said ... It
offers no diversity and the anly people
you'll have Jiving here are multi-million-
aires."
Woodward is the architect for t h e
~dersblp Homes condominiwn plan for
the old dump site in \Yest Newpo.rt.
Larry Moore, Irvine Company general
planning administrator, said the plan is
one "small step" in the right direction
and should receive a great deal more
study and work before enactment.
"I think this will hurt our planned
co_mmwiities which have proven to be a
valid form of planning," he said. "I think
you must consider such alternalives as
the planned community when setting lim-
its." /
One Irvine development, Big Canyon,
calls for three sections of apartments at
a density of 40 units per acre ..
~foore said the company "will be lobby-
ing heavily to see lhat the· planned com-
munities stay th!! way."
.Besides the 15 dwelling units per acre
limit the general staff propmals include:
-1'. prohibition of residenti81 uses in
(See 'CONTROLS, Page %)
Newport May Require Conformity
wi.t'• •• ., ·.u•e r.r: •
Thia ;wu the line oulll4e,:itate Depai:tar111t of lolol<>r
Vehlclee offices in Colila'lifesa this mOrlllng as mo-.
tomti faced the Ftli. 2 deadllhe fett 1973 auto reg·
iStration. But these folii could have ·saved them-
selves tho trouble of standiag "" tlie rain. Under a
new law, all car owners· have to' do is iDaii in their
money and registration slips prior to midnight Fri·
day. (Read the back side of Y<>.ur registration slip.)
\
ames B. Sims,
arbor Teacher,
Rites Thursday
.James B. Sims, English teacher at
Newport Harbor High School ror the past
15 ye~, will be buried Thursday in
private family services at a San Diego
cemetery.
Mr. Sims, 3089 Loren Lan~ ,,.cosq
Mesa, died of a heart attack Saturday.
He was 51.
·Al a teacher, Mr. Sims was known as
an innovator. He headed the first ,black
l)ter&ry studies course al Haibbr 'High
aad was weu·known both on tind off cam· pOs. . . l
Mr. Sima came to th~ Orange..COast
ai:ea from Dover, N.H .• after serving in the U.S. Navy as a pharmacist's mate
ud subsequently completing· his cqllqe"
afUdies.
He has been suflering from arterl~
xlerosls and had to retire from his ·
Jeaching post this year because or his ill-
Diss.
! :sutvlvors include his wit.?, Georgia A.
.Sbns ; 80l1S Jmeph and Jonathan Sims,
and mother and step/ather Mr. and Mrs.-
George Sbolds, Dover, N.H.
Memorial services for Mr. Sims will be
'held at a date to he anoounced by the
!imliy.
Reisman Star Rodgers
DraftRd by San Diego
From Witt Services
NEW YORK -The San Diego
Chargers today drafted Heisman Trophy
winner Johnny Rodgers of Nebraska in
the Nation.al Football League's annual
·player draft.
He was selected on the 25th round by
the Char:gers; who obtained the drafting
spof in a .deal that 1sen( quarterbac~
Marty. Domres to a.Jtimore. The Colts
.earlier gained the spot in a deal with
Washington. . .
The Los Angeles Rams do not have a
pick -in the first round, having traded it
away last year.
!ohn Matu.s~k, a 6-foot-7, 286-pound
Fullerton Bank Hit
Fo1· $990 by Gunman
A man shoved a note at a teller,
simulated possession of a IUD at a
Security Pacific National Bank branch in
Fullerton and escajied with . $990 in
currency Monday, ,police reported.
The note demanded the money in $100, $50, .$1JJ !llld $10 b1U1, •. olllcers said. The
bank Is located at 101 N. Harlx>r Blvd1
tackle from Tampa, was chosen by the
Houston Oilers as the first player in the
draft. (See story, Page 16.)
The Oilers earned the No. 1 pick by
finishing with the worst record in the
league (1-13). It was the second straight
year a lineman was picked as the first
choice.
The Baltimore C'.olts, picking second,
took Louisiana State Qllarterback Bert
Jones. Jorie~ is expected tc fill th~ void
left by the trade ot supersta: John Unitas
to San Diego.
Three USC players were sleeted on the
first round: tight end Charles Young by
the Philadelphia Eagles, back Sam CUn·
ningham by the New England Patriots
and tackJe Pete Adams by the Cleveland
Browns.
Rodgers' selection was obviously
delayed because be weighs only 173
poonds and stands just 5-9.
He is expected to be used as a wide
'receiver and kid: returner by San Diego,
although be occasionally was used as a
running back in oollege either from his
flanker position or from lhe l·f.ormalion.
Rodgers, the top career all·purpose
runner in 'college football history, caught
55 passes last season for 942 yards and
finished third natlonaJly in all-purpo~e
running with 182.8 yards per game.
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
Of """ 0.llY ~Hot Stiff
Newport Beach may force property
01vners to modify or tear down buildings
that don't conform to their
neighborhoods.
City Councilmen Monday night told Ci-
ty Attorney Dennis O'Neil to draft an
ordinance that would set a time limit on
the life or all non-confGrming uses ·in
Newport Beach.
In etrect, it would end all
Vietnam Wai·
Reportedly
Tapers Off
SAIGON (UPI) -The lntamtr'of
fighUng ln SoUtb V,ietnam tspereil off to-
day, the third da)' of the ofliciaJ cease-.
fire, acctlrding to military sources, but a
big battle was reported between South
Vietnamese, marines surrounded by Com-
mwiist troops in northern Quang .Tri prov-
ince.
The level or fig)lting -although lower
than Sunday and Monday -still was
higher than at many times during lhe 12
years of fighting in South Vietnam.
Government troops and Communists
also skirmished around two provincial
capitals cut oU by the Communists and
the South Vietnamese drove Communists
out of several hamlets near Saigon. ·
The South Vietnamese command
reported 765 battlefield incidents between
the start of the cease-fire at a a.m. Swi-
day and· noon Tuesday. ~
It reported 1,761 Communists and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
additional 1,070 South vietnamese wound-
ed. SeVeriI dozen have been listed as
missing.
Military sources reported heavy
fighting between South Vietnamese
marines and Communists near the mouth
or the CUa Viet River, northeast of
Quang Tri. Marines rushed through the
area about the lime of the cease-fire,
recapturing a naval base held by the
Communists since spring. The marines
have since been surrounded.
The sources said there wa!: one spon-
taneous display during the fighting. At
one point, troops stopped shooting brief-
ly, stood up cbemng and approached
each other to shake hands and exchange
embraces. Fighting continued farther •.
south, however.
The command said the highways
leading out of-SaigOfli-except for the mad
to the former beach resort of Vung Tau.
have been reopened a n d Communists
driven out of 1: hamlets in the Saigon
area.
lt is suggested that memorial oon-
tribuUoos be made to the James B. Sims
Memorial Fund, c/o .Regents, Uoiverslty
i\l'canfornla, Irvine.'l'he funds m ·to be
1Hrectecl to Dr. Archie F. Wilson, chlef'of
'.Pulmonary disease, Orange county
, ~lcal Center. Marine Turns . ' Up Alive
• ·rt ..
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,_ Anti-abortiort
Bill Enrered
, WASHINGTON (AP) -A COil-
i. ljitutlnnaf amendment to prohibit
abortions In most cases was pro-
poaed today by Rep. Lawrenot J.
Hogan (R·Md.).
He calfed the U.S. 5upr<me 0>urt
I~ bankrupt'' ftt.Jtl ralbag _ -ruwna down most antiabortion
· laws. . ,
ilollll aid -JI ...,_ stltuOonal amendment~ be the
only effective way to ~ tbe
court's 7-t decision laal -that states may not forbid ....,.. to
ha .. abortions clurlnc the flnl Ii&
months of _..acy.
l
J,,e!J.tfi~rr~eck, Listed Dead, On Hanoi fOW List
WASHING'l'ON ,.(UPI) -The Dele.,.
Department iaJd today a Marine listed
as killed and returned to this country for
burial bu tumed·up on North Vietnam~
. list of prtsonen of war.
He was idenWied as PFC Ronald L.
Ride.way of Housum, Tes.
He II the 1011 of Mn. Mildred A. Ridge-
IVI!', 1lho In 1981 was l~ted as living at
,_ Fulton St., Houston. f '•
"! 'l"" hid a feellal llll' .... -
tum up alive. I never give In to the
fact llll' "" was cleod. It wu faith In
God,'' Mrs. Ridgway, a nun-. aide, told
"""""""· "My sympathy goes to the parents of ,
the boy "' i>orled becaute I 11\ed quite
a few tears tot hlm." 1he added. 'll•J. Gm. Dulet James, P<ntqon
•
spokesman for POW matters, said aulbor·
ities believed Rideway was among nine
ltfarines killed Feb. 25, 1968, In an am-
bush oe·ar Khe Sanh.
RemalM identified as Ridgeway's had
been returned to the United States and
buried at JeUel'900 Barracks tn St. LouiJ.
James also Said two men on the POW
list, provided bl' llaool bad been carried
by the Peil-11 del<rteri and 18
olberl the ~ uld died lh <ap-
tl1'il1 w Wll.liatod .. killed In actlon.
'1'le two jhtlouaiJ' COlllldmd dcaort·
en, J•me..,,atd. ,.... Marino Pvts. Fred-
erick Left Elbert, who Hanoi said was
alive In prtsroft, ed Earl C. Weatherman,
who llllJlOJ ~ died In captivity.
Jamea did JIOi prov~ tbe hometown
of either m&O'f1 I
James Aid llllgewoy -a member •
•
af a Alarine patrol operating near Khe
Sanh whlle that outpOSt was under Com·
munist siege in 1968.
"There was a patrol that was ambush-
ed" he said. "There. was a casualty
count made. Exactly how-It was m:ade -
whether by a ground -.Ver, or lrom
the air, or what -is unkown. The count
rtport.ed nine tiodies." · "'
Jame1 said there wai a period from
Feb. 25 to Aug. 18 that recovery for<ea
could not i'ea<h the area wbe~ the vlc-
ti1111 lay.
"During this perlod, the area was uoder
bomliardment. by mortan and air
atrikea," he uld. "There •u ab<> the
normal cleterloralion lrom ibe tropical
iS.e POW1, Pap"t) ....
..
"grandfather" zoning -exemptions
allowed because buildings were in ex·
istence before current zonirta: was
established.
It also would put an expiration date on
the use of all buildings in violation of
current zoning, even though they were
built with special city permi~ion.
O'Neil told a joint ' council·p~aMlng
commission meeting Monday night that
such an ordinance \You.Id be.legal.
"Amortization ordinances are valid lf
DEAD AT 42' '
Or. James G. Blai~ .
Services Slated
For James Bl~in,
Newport Past~1; ·
Funeral services for Newport Harbor
Lutheran Church Pastor James G, Blain
wit! be held at II a.m. Thursday at the
church, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach.
Dr. Blain died Monday in St. Joseph's
Hospital, Orange. He was 42.
A naUve of In81ewood, Dr. Bain was
graduated Crom UCLA and in 1960 receiv·
ed his bachelor of dlvinity degree at
Pacific Lutheran Theological St.mtnary
in Berkeley. He was installed as pastor
of Newport Harbor Lutberan COO·
gregatlon in 1960 and his ministry
resulted in the growth of the church and
its relocation from Cliff Drive to the
~~i!~l':cttt':S:.ed in 1970 at the Dover
Dr. Blain was chaplain of the
Mariner's Lions Club, and war a member
of the Republican State Ceqtral Com·
mlttee. ,
II) 1971, Bl"in was awan)ed a doctor or
divinity degree from the Californla
Graduate School of Theology in Glendale.
He b aur..vived by hi1 wldow1 Loretta;
three 80llS, Jeffrey. Jason and
Chilstopher, a daughter, Sarah, his
mother, Mn. Elsie Blain of Banning, and
a brother, Samuel 8. Blaln of Costa
~1esa.
Memorial contributions may be ftlade
to the Dr. Blafn Fund of Newport Harbor
Lutheran Cburd!, or id the Regents of
the University of California in support of
·-cancer research at UC fl'\'ine.
2 ~ericans . Rape<l
PORTSMOUTH, England <YPI) -A
Zanziba~ British toldies.-was sen-
tenct<I today to five y art In pristn for
raping two American &iris at gunpoint.
Tartl< Seit :ii,• gunner, pl"ded lnnoc"!'t
le> t.aplng lhe two New Jersey girls who
hitchhiked on Salisbury Plain.
,
r I
I
reasonable termination dates are used
and there is a good return on the in-
vestment.'' O'Neil said.
He said the purpose or the ordinance is
to pinpoint each non-con forming struc-
ture in he city and determine what
length of time would be needed for the
owner to make a profit from it.
After that time, the property owner
would be requirod to modify the building
or tear It down and replace It with a con·
(See CONFOR~flTY. Page 21
~
Judge Denies
Leary Plea
For Defense
By TOM BARLEY ... °""' Hit • ..,,
A Jang day in Orange County SUperior
Court loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent ~D cultist, flank-
ed by three 18.wyers, again challenged the
legality or his arrest last month in
Afghanistan.
Judge James Turner denied a series of
motions before shocking th(! globe-trot·
ting guru and his attorneys by himself
filing a plea of inr)ocent on behalf of
Leary -an action tbat brought lm-
mediate protest from Costa Mesa trial
lawyer George Chula, Leary's chief
counsel.
Judge Turner switched the session to
the courtroom O• Presiding Judge Bruce
Sumner of Laguna Beach after al!R) de-
nying Leary's renewed plea that he be
allc.wed to supervise bis own defense on
multiple drug charges contained in an
Orange County Grand Jury indictment.
,. Leary, 52, stood. open-mouthed in
astonishment as Judge Turner also told
him this morning that he might have to
go on trial Wednesday with a number af
defendants similarly indicted in the
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love'' drug con-
spiracy. ,
"That's crazy," Chula salq. ''Thi! wiII'
all have to be thrashed out before Judge
Sumner and I want to emphasize right
now lhat no court has the right to try Dr.
Leary on any charges in view of the way
he was Jddnaped."
Leary, whisked overnight under guard
to Orange County Jail from his cell at
San Lui> Obtspo County Jail, amUed,
winked and waved to a crowd of ad-
mirers in the court room while Judie
Turner advised him ol bis rights. •
Among the courtroom _,...,,. who
acknowledged h1i cheery waves and who
were warned about tbelr COllduCt by
court bailiffs, was Joanna 'Harcourt-
!See LEARY, Pqe I)
.
Oru1e C.Ut
Weadler
It'll he partly c~y on Wednes-
day, with a alight increase in tem-
perature, aceording_to the weather
service. Highs of 60 at the beaches
rising to 62 lnland are expected.
Lows tOnight 41.
INSIDE TODAY
A 1mall town t1f!to1JX1per'1 tdi·
tmio1 ·about the locol. judkial
·~""" prompt<d a judge to /Ue a contempt citation ooatn.sc the
poper -th< f1r1I ..,., filed
OOff' an tdltorlol. Set •torv on.
Page 5.
• , '
,
!WI. 't PllOT
,...... 1
LBJ Autopsy . .
LEARY. • •
Diseases Prevented 0-peration
r Smltb, tho llrllloll oodallte wtlo bu boon
Leuy'• -t <OlllJ>U)ao ..... sllort1y
before bls l,noSI In Alpo•lstu last month. \ ~
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Four doctors who treated !ormu
President Lyndon B. Johnson for heart ailments said today Ibey d•
clded against performing coronary bypass surg"!)' on Solmsoti !Je.
cause.of exten sive heart damage and a seriously diseased ~Ion.
TllE DOCTORS, IN A statement issued at Brooke General Hos-
pital, said an autopsy of the former president's body canfirmed their
CliagnosiS that the colon was extensively sickened with diverticulitis.
His heart suffered damage in an April. 1972 attack.
"Numerous difficult decisions "'el'e faced in the medical man-
agement of President Johnson,'' said a on•page statement. "He en-
dured his difficulties with courage and resolved I<> enjoy life as much
as conditions permitted. His family and physicians would-li ke to re-
affirm his.. passionate commitment to more research in combatting
our major health enemies."
TOM JOHNSON, FORMER AIDE to J ohnson but not rel1ted,
cleared the statement with the !amilv of the late Pres!dent. He said
it was issued "in order lo clarify the events which preceded the death
of former President Johnson ." (See related story, Page 4.)
Stafford Pick w Lead
U.S.-Russ Space Venture
Sl'ACE CENTER. Houston (AP)
The hos.! cf the American astronauts, a
three-time spac-e \'eteran and a rookie
will form the U.S. crew for the
American-Soviet .joint space flight in
1975. it was learned today.
Sources said the American crew will be
Donald K. Slayton, the · astronaut chief
and the on1y one of 1be originaJ seven
U.S. astronauts who has never Dow n into
space; Thomas P. Stafford, commander
of Apollo JO and a veteran of two other
space missions, .and Vance D. Brand, a
civilian astronaut who has never Down
into space.
Officials at the spa« agency refused to
Judge Acts,
Spurs Flurry
Of Motions
A determined bid by the prosecution lo
put Dr. Timothy Leary on trial Wednes-
day with three co-defendants for his
alleged masterminding of l'b e
"Brotherhood of Et.emal l..A:lve" drug ~
spiracy ran into four equally determined
defense Jaywers today in Orange County
Superior Olurl.
Preiiding Judge Bnl<e Sumner took all
four lawyers inlo hb chambers for an
off-t!Je.reconl discus!ion alter failing In a
long court hearing to reoolve the Ourry of
motions filed on behall ol Leary and
three fellow indictees.
Judge Sumner took over the action
after Judge James Turner reali1.ed at
Leary's earlier arraignment tbls morntng
that much more was involved in the
globe-trotting guru's appearance than a
plea of guilty or innocent.
Judge Turner shocked Leaty and
everyone within earshot when he toot
ca re of that is.sue hirnsell by entering a
plea or innocent to multiple drug charges
against Leary in the court record .
Judge Sumner was expected to return
to the courtroom late today for a hearing
that may determine if Leary is to go on
trial Wednesday with three fellow in·
dictees.
confirm or deny lht formation, but it wu
known an annoutlce:ment was in prepara-
tion.
Stafford was named to bead the crew.
Slayton was named to Oy the second
Mercciry mission, but a bear! ooodltloa
grounded him. Be was later groonded
lrom nying airplanes.
A doctor suggested medication that
changed his irregular heart beaL On
Mareh 13, 1972, Dr. Cbarlea Berry, chief
space agency surgeon. returned Slayton
to night status.
It will be the founh space !llaht for
Staffon!, C , an Air Foree brlpdler
general. Stafford was oo Gemini I 1n
1965, on Gemini t in 1966 and was com-
mander of Apollo 10, the 1989 flight which
orbited the moon.
Brand, U, a former Marine pilot who
also served In the Air Natlooal Guan!
and the Air FOl"C'e Reserve, was the
backup command module pilot on Apollo
IS.
The Soviet-American space flight, call-
ed Iha ApGllo&ym test (llOjecl, is
scheduled to be flown in mid-li75, The
eartlH>rbit mission will wt about 10
days and Ila primary ll!Slgnment iJ to
test a compatible space doddng system
under development by Ruaslan and
American eoglneen.
The !llaht plan calls for the Soviet
Soym spacecraf~ with two -aboanl, t. be launched from Ruasla, to be follow-
ed later by Iha launch of an Apollo aalt,
with tine meo aboard, from the Uolled
States.
l',....P,,.el
POWs .••
eovlN!mdtL Polltlve indl>idual identlfl-
caUon of IOIDe partial remaim WU i£Da
pooslble.
"Wben they did gel In then, they felt
they bad the mnalna of nine Individuals.
''The mnaJna of what WU believed to
be nine members ol the patrol "'"' In-
terred In a group burW at Jelfuacm
Barracks NaUooal Cemetery, SL Louia.
Ridgeway we believed to be In that
group of remains."
James said the Jelferson Barracks
Cemetery was selected by the families
of the nine because it was the "most
central location" to the various towna in
which they lived.
Miss 11-&lhb, JI, Iha -of LondoA puNlehl.. •ICl'le • ~Simon
Han:ourt-S!nltll ol the -Pr-.
told..,.....,.. toda7 that• lo-fAlrT•
"'Ile.
She dbplayed lett en from Lear')' In
whi<h the former Harvard pbllooopber
-her that be·ftlanled ber .. his spouse deaplte h1s exiStins union wllh
Mn. Rooemary Leary, 40.
''ThiJ letter (wriUto In <>r..,. County
J all) from my perfect love. II all Iha
legality I neod," she --1 noininen.
Sbe attended all Leary'• court ap-
pearances tn San LuLs Obllpo where he is
charged with escape following bls lllghl
In September of 1970 from the aerlatrlc
W1rd of the men's colooy In that com-
munlty.
Leary was at tbe ti.me 9erVtng 1 state
pri8on term of one to 10 yeus for his
conviction In Orange County oa clwtea
of possession of marijuana.
He was tried with bls '!)le. &oemary,
and 0011, Jobq, 23, followffig tbe ll1reSt of
the trio In J,.quna Beach on De<. 16,
196&.
Leary was not allowed today to stage
the impromptu press conference that rreceded hlJ appearance last weet in
Judge Turner's courtroom. ·
Judge TUmer made it clear this morn-
ing that be wu displeased with much of
the ln{omuillty that entered Into the ar-
raf&pment on Leary's wt appearance.
Leary WU D0t allowed today to discuss
his cue with newsmen and he was not
allowed an interview with Miss Harcourt-
Smith. .
He is one of nearly SO persons indicted
by the Grand Jury on drug charge! stem-
ming from what lawmen claim was the
multi-million doDar actlyity of the
Brotherhood of Eternal Love.
It is alleged that the organization bad
lints throughout tbe world and was in-
strumenlal in importing vast quantities
of illicit drug> Into the United States.
Pre. P.,.e I
CONFORMITY .•.
fonning use.
"I have been looting at a general
figure of 40 years for masonry and stone
oonstructioo and for wood frame and
similar structures the time would be
shorter -about 20 or 22 yean," O'Neil
said.
He said any onlinance the city passes
wouJd have to ia.te into consideratioo
such things as the profit margin of
owners who buy non-conforming uses
already under an amortizaUon llmiL
"But in general, what we are con-
cerned with ls the estimated economic
!He ol a building and, when that II ex-
baUlted, It mUJt conform," O'Neil said.
C o u a c 11 m e n and c:omm1aioners
geoerally aeemed to fawir an amortiza.
tloa period u another tool to reduce
Potential densities In the city.
At the suggestion of Planning Com-
missioner Wllliam Martin, O'Neil'• draft
will include a section providing for ex-
clusion from the ordlnance of hlstorlcal
sites that are DOD-CODformiog.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn aald
there are strong llJ'llllllOlll.a for such an
ordinance but be said It mlgbt be bard to
enforce in :ome cases.
"In my experience elsewhere, I've
found that in areaa when: DmHX>D-
fonning ""' are exceilenily maintained,
such ordinances are bani to enforce," be
said. "But In poorly maintained areas It
is a slmple matter."
O'Neil told the gathering such an
onllnance ta In operatloa In i.a Anceles,
but beca""' of the long term of amorilza-
tioo, there ls still no way of determining
bow It will work.
'Ibey are ~1ichael Boyd Randall, 29, ar·
rested last month in Lagwia Beach, and
Calvin Larry Delaney, 30, and Ronald
Crawford, 25, both arrested by Honolulu
police on the island of Maui and both
listed in the indic tment as transients.
Leary and his ro-defendants are four of
nearl y 50 indictees named by the district
attorney's office following three years of
investigation into the a 11 e g e d
Brotherhood of Eternal Love drug cult.
lt is alleged that the organization had
links throughout the world and was in·
strumental in importing vast quantities
of illicit drugs into the United States.
_Watergate Attorney Says
Liddy Headed Operation
•
DAILY PILOT
TM Ol'9flle C..t ~ll.Y Pll.OT, lll1!fll Wllldl
It~ 1111 N-PT•n, ii Mllllwd IJf 1'li. om.ae c-st ~blllnl COn'ICIWl'f, Slflit-
n l• .. It._ .,. INlllllMd, MOM.lly """"'9h
Frtlily, fir Qlll ~. NNllOrl 8eeclt,,
Hwttlnl*t lt...:lll~itin V11i.y, L..-
.-lrvti./S.:ldlftldl .. $M ~
SM Juan c.lt~ A W1t1e 1'9!1iOJlll
ed ll\oll is pUblklllill s.tunMys .. ,_...,..
TM prlnc .. I PllblllNllt •nt II 11 UI W11I
hr strwt, c.te ~ ca111on1i., nut.
Re ... rt N. 'WeM
lilrt9likirlt IM t"uelW!tt
J.clo: R. Curley var:.~·.,.. Gt!Mnl ~
Tliot11•1 KM.ti ·-llto111•• A. M11f11hl111 Mlflltlfll IEifltot
L Peter Krf11
HIWpott Ind! Cl!y ~dllor
Mcwpcwt.._.0...
)Jll Newport .. llt Y•rd
MeltMtAIW,..11 P.O. k1117S, t26'J --o.tt ¥$: • w..t ..., '""' u... lleldl1 m ,...., ,,,_
Huntll'MIM!t IMKll! ll'ln hldl ~
SM QINl!ltt: -..... •I QflW a..I
Ttf.,.._ 17141 '4Jo4121
a-..... .Wcalh ... '4J.N71 °"""""'· 1911. °"""' Cehl p ...... . ~. "" -fttrtft, ...... ..... lldt.W ,..,_ er .,_II..,,.... ......
_, M ,...._.. wlf!IOtlt lfl«llil...,.. mMllill tf ...,..... .......
"'*'II dlll .... Mid at C... ~ C!tl"°"'ll, ~IM 11¥ CMTIW a.41
.... """' .. _._ Nolf .......,,,, """'"
··"·--.... "'8fl!M\'. I
t ,
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Watergate
defense lawyer conceded today that Nix·
on campaign o!fldal G. Gordon Liddy
headed a pol.ilical intelligence operation,
but denied Liddy had anything to do with
burglary and wiretapping.
He spoke In the closing stages ol the
trial which grew out or the break·ln and
alleged bugging of Democratic National
Headquarten in the Watergate building
complex in Wuhlngtoo last JWK!. -
''W.e don't take issue with the fact that
~fr. Llddy w111 the boss," defense at-
torney Peter Maroullil said.
But Maroulla argued that Liddy,
general counsel for the Flnanct Com-
mittee to Re-elect the Ple.!ldeot, was
engaged in leglUmate infonnaUon
gathering, Including a warning of poten-
tial violence which led the Republican
Party, he aaid, to move: Its convention
from San Diego .. Miami Beach wt
summer.
"It was a very Important decision to
move that convention from San Diego to
~Uami," Maroulls said. "Md that was
~ on informaUon from my client.
"That was not the recommendation of
a burg~," Maroulls said In his closing
argumento to the Jury.
The CM< wu expected to ttach !lie
jury Jattr today.
Maroulls ellfO attackd:l the reliability of
the two principal prosecution wflnmts.
Sll'lng t h e y offered "fabricated and
embeW.hed" testimony to prottcl
themselves.
A partlcul1r target of Maroulls was
Thomu Cre1ory, a Briaham Young
Unlvenlty studen t, who lettified that
Liddy att<nded meetings to plan • br<ak-
tn to plant electronic buas •t• ctmpatcn
headquarten of sen. Gtor1e McGovern.
He aid Gregory offered hl1 testimony
because "be wu afraid for his own
stm."
Maroulis also challenged fonner FBI
agent Alfred c. Baldwin m. who
teaUfled that Liddy W a I ireotnt In
a motel room m which Baldwin was
monlioring calls from a tapped telephone
in Democratic Party headquarters.
Maroulla said Baldwin'• testimODJ was
"sometfiln1 leis than cryg\81 clarity,"
and declared, "Mr. Baldwin was worried
about his own well bein.1."
Liddy Is one of two remaining defen-
dants In I.he case, belnc tried before
District Judge Jolm J. Strlca. The other
defendant ts Jnmes W. McCord Jr., who
was security chief or the Nixon cam-
paign.
!.lcConl'1 lawyer, Gmld Alch , ...,.
cedecl that his client waa calllbt In the act
of burglartzlng the Democratic head-
quarters, but said McCord was
justifiably moUvated by fear for lhe
safety or the Nixon campaip.
"Mr. McCord WQ tnaide the
W1t.ereate, that's a fact," Akb 111d. "But
Jim McCord LI not a burglttr. His motiva-
tloo and Intent were not that of a
bu tu." ,.a:cb aid that his defense rested in
"tl'}'in1 to dlitingulab hlo state of mind
rrom all othen " and establt.ah tha t
McCord ;, a 1 drivell by a -ble
cuncem.
"That cbl')f factor wu his job u cbiel
of aecurity for the -iectlon com-
mittee," Alch sai d In h~ closing
argum..,t.a.
Alch reacr off to the jury ln npld-fl re
fashion 1 llst of violent demonstrattons
which occurred 1c:rou Iha country In Iha
spring of tm. ·
\
•
fllltalflt:!!lota DilpNte
Squabbles Hold
l!_eace Forces Up
SAIGON (UPI) -Diplomatic squab-
bling betW"een-the-Saigon government an;t
Comm unlsto assigned to hel p supervise
lbe Vietnam cease-fire caused another
del>.Y today In plans that wocid have had
the l01te in the field by now. '
Nlncty Communlat V I o t n a me s e
members of the Four-Party Joint
Military Commission set up to inspect
Reagan Rul~s
Out Running
For 3rd Ter1n
.
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan flatly ruled out running for a
thlrd term today, saying he wouJd not
respond to any "draft" for him to stay on
in the governorship after 1974.
"No,'.' Reagan said when asked wheth-
er a demand from party leaden for him
to run again would force him to change
his mind to serve Ollly two tenns.
"Nor do I think then iJ going to be
such a thing," Reagan told a Capitol
news eonfettnee.
But be declined again to say whether
be might nm !or the U.S. 'Senate seat ol
Democrat Alan Cranston wbo also comes
up for re-election In 1974.
He said again bls decision would come
by the time the snow me1ts in the Sierra,
but be added, with a smile, that IJ\lght
mean the snows "away up high" in the
mountalnJ.
Reagaii said be would oot announce
any such decision at this weekend's
gathering of Caillornia Republlcam: as
they begin maneuvering a m o n g
tbemselves for the chance to succeed
Reagan.
Reagan alJo said today be,,..,.,..Uy
pr<ters using some of the big budget
surplus to cut state Income tues, adding
such a cut probably would be combined
with other tu r<llel element.a.
"I may fee:l firmly that way," the
Got..emor told the newa conference, "but
I !~ flnnly with an open mind."
He said bis admlnlstntion bas not
cleclded bow to rebate the $1.1-billion
budget surplno It will have at the end of
the .next fiscal year and that there iJ oo
~e~dllne. !~~-~~~,o~ .a P"!.~~;_, ... 1
Two Prisoners
Of War Have
Viejo Relatives-
Two men identified this week as
prisoners of war (POW) have relatives in
Mission Viejo.
Marine Corps Capt. James V. di
Bernardo, captured in 1968, ls listed of-
ficially as living. His wife, Sharen, lives
in Mission Viejo with their five children.
Prior to Sunday's news, when only di
Bernardo's name and not his home city
was listed, the Marine captain was still
rated missing .in action (MIA).
The Initial group of POW names pro-
vided by the North Vietnamese following
the cease-fire agreement also lncluded
Air Force Captalh Jerry D. Drlsooll, Cap-
tured in April, 1967. His home town was
given as Hinsdale, Dllnoi!.
Acc:onllng to offlclals at tbe POW-MIA
lntemattonal ~In Tustin, the parent.a of. the 32-year.(I Air Force captain have
moved to Missto Viejo alnce he was
taken prisoner.
..
Monday from Hoool abourd two U.S.
CISO transport planes. ~
But they remalned on lhem overnight
Rt Saigon's Tan Son Nbut Air Base in
protest of the government require ment
tbal t)ley m1 out im"'1gratlon forms
before entering the country.
SOUrces at the airport said the 2l·hour
sit-in ended today when the Communists,
50 North Vietnam""' and 40 Viet Cong .
!inally left the planes and w<re taken to
Ca mp Davis on the base where other
Conununist and international delegations
are staying. .
There was no explanation of what com·
promise, if any, was ~ached that enabl-
ed them to disembark.
The Communists insist they are
cilium of Vietnam and do not have to
fill out immigration papers.
Thirteen North Vietnamese a n d Viet
Cong who arrived In Saigon Sunday
registered the same complaints and
stayed aboard t~eir aircraft for 22 hours
~fore deplaning Mond.iif.
The South Vietname~e for,eign ministry
allowed that group to leavt the plane "In
order that the . . . oommissino may
'begin to carry out It.a responslbillUes,"
but warned that the decision did not
"constitute a precedent."
The military commissiori -composed
of North and South Vietnam, the United
States and the Viet Cong -is to wort
.... with the four-member International
ComiS8ion for Control and Supervlsioo
(ICCS) to supervl!e the cease-fire.
The two groups met separately MCJ!l"
day and. today but acting ICCS Cbalrman
Michel Gauvin of Canada said today he
was still trying. lo arrange m"tlngs with
the mllltary group.
Besides <:anada, lhe ICCS is oompoaed
o! Indonesia, HW!Bary al!cl Polan4.
Under terma of the cease-nr. that took
effect at 4 p.m. PST Slturday, the truce
teama wore IO go immediately Into the
field to begin their work.
.
Huntington Auto
Crash Injures.
Coast Woman
A Newport Beach woman ts in guarded
condition today at HWltington Intercom-
munity Hospital following a traffic ac-
cident Monday afternoon.
Candy Lampert MouylOUS, 23, of UIOO
Park Lape, and her two companldba;
Dooald L. McMe<ban , 39, of 1289 S. Coat
Highway, Laguna Beach and Randy
Smith, 25, of Santa Ana, were all lnjuml
when their ear struck a telephone pole on
• Talbert Avenue between Be a ch
Boulevard and Hartlund Street.
Police said McMechan was driving the
car and officers could give no rea~ why
it struck the pole. Traffic officer Orva
Akin said investigation of the c~ I!
continuing today.
The trio was taken to Huntington
lntercommunity Hospital and McMechan
was transferred to lAng Beach Veteran's
Hospital where he is listed. in satisfactory
c )ndltion today. Smith was transferred to
Orange County Medical Center and
released this morning.
Heath on Way Here
OAll 't "II.OT lllH PM*
Ju.rt•po•Uioa
Meters and signs like these can
be seen along Mariners Mile
section of Coast Highway tn
Newport Beach, where Orange
County Sanitation District is
installiiig new sewer line.
l'retllP..,el
CONTRO~ •..
COliim«'clal and Industrial 20llOll except
with spe<lal permlaafan.
-'llgbteat poalble limit.a 111 deMily of
all realdenllil ~ti with em-
pbasll on abJC)e familJ bom<S.
-Limit.a oa lot coverage and bulk of
new units.
-No variances for adclltlonal unit.a on
unclerl!Ztlj lot.a.
Community Development D I re c t or
Richard Hopn said the pGpulation o!
Newport Beach even wHh the new corr
tn>1s will be more than ~ ,000 people by
1990.
'nlat ii only a 12 percent reduction frou1
the cumDI prod1cted total ol 111,000 but
llopn safd It will do much to change the
face of the dty and rttalli It.a character.
"Even U everything were rezoned to
R·l, we would bit 92,000 by 1990," he said.
The staff plan was also praised by a
number of speakers, among them COrona
de! Mar archited Ron Yeo, who presented
a petition a1gned by reoident.a of bls area
who support the plan's intent to retain
the character of the city.
In addition to the density controls, lhe
staff asked counc~· m and commlaskln-
ers to canaider .i th moratorium on
all residential deve opment exceeding the
propoeed denaily limit.a.
But both groupa seemed to agroe cm-
sideratkm of iuch a moraWriwn, whlch
the staff hopes would prevent a rush of
LONDON (AP) _ Prime Minister applicati~ before the Jim!~ take effect,
F.dward Heath leaves for Washington ~ should be d.iacussed at separate hearings.
day with a proposal for President Nixon The propoaal.,.u sent to the planning
for a new peacemaking approach in the oommissioo for its first officlal public
Middle East. Quaunea British SOW'Cts \. bearing in February. The date will be
said Heath wanta Nl.J:on to put pressure set·'Iburaday and although the neit oom-
on Israel to come to terms swUUy while ll)iaaion meetlna ts Feb. 15, Hogan said
European governments do the same with U>ere is a chance a speclal meet1Dt will
the Arabs. be called.
AROUND TIIE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
..!-OCATEO OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SEVERAL ANSWERS POP UP. RRSTL Y, THE COST OF STORES
JN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, WE WERE
ABLE lO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFICES, AND WAREHOUSE AU IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH lJTTLE TRAFFIC .CONGESTION
LEADING TO US.
THIS SITUATION Hi!-S MADE US MOR!"COMPETITIVi AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY THAT WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR SIXTEEN YEARS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
'{'°~1/1 I S~ ~ ri : ~-.-" i'~t~nLI I: .u . '~ .. -I I I•. ' •I , ~ _. ·:...::,._-II ~ -...._ __ "Cl ....
l ·-·~ -~-1·,
~ ~-IN Flt• ......
llNCI ltlJ
., -··-.
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placetltla Aft.
COSTA ·MISA
64Ma31
•
-·
'
I
Toaay's l'lnal
N.Y. Stocks
0. 30 •. 4 SECTIONS; 48 PAGES ORANGE CG11NTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, '1973 c TEN CENTS
'
\
'Dead' Marine Appears on Red Pris~ner Lis t
.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Defense
Department ,.Id today a Marine llsted
as tilled and returned to lbla country for
burial bas turned up on North Vietnam's
llst ol ¢isonerl! of war.
·He wu idenllned as PFC. Rona1<i L. ·
Rideway of HoustOn, Tex.
Heis Ibo &Oil ol Mra. Mildred A)Rldge-
'YJY' who in 19111 was listecJ.as living at
7926 FUiton St., Houston.
"l always had a feeling my SOJ1 would
tum up alive. 1 never gave in to the
tact my son was dead. It was faith in
GQd," Mrs. Rldgway:,-a nurses aide, told
~wsmen.
"My S)11)P@thy goes to the parents of
the boy w' buried because I shed quite
a few tears for him," .she added.
b{aj. Gen. Daniel James, Pentagon
spokestnarrfor-row·matters, said author-
ities believed Rideway was among nine
Marines killed Feb. 25, 1968, in an am-'
bush near Khe Sanh.
Remains identified as Ridgeway's had
been returned to the United States and
buried at Jefferson Barracks 'in St. Louis.
James also 'said two men on the POW
list provided by Hanoi had been carried
by -the Pentagon as deserters and 16
others the COmmwJists said died in cap-
tivity bad been listed as killed in acUon.
The two;preViously considered desert·
ers, James said, were Marine Pvts. Fred-
erick Lewis Elbert, who Hanoi said was
... Wpt'~ t~ Li~• Fm·:. .
'!'Iii• was·the:'fuie'oalslde otate Departm<!lt of Mqtnr
, Vebides oruc.. la Cella 11111 Ibis morning as mo-
OAl\.Y 'ILOT Sltff , .. ,,.
.{' • ' ' ' . I .!: ...
• tortats faced tJie l'eti c 2 dtadline for 1973· auto reg-
istration. But. these fuiid t,oal~ 1 hav• llWCI ·them·
selves tSe lroutile of ¢andin~ in the rain. Under a
new law, all car owners have to .do iB: mail jn their
-inoney an d registration slips .prior. to midnight Fri-
day. (Read the back side of your registration slip.)
'· James B; Sims,
H~rhor T eache1·,
Rites Thmsday • .
James B. Sims, English tea,cher at
Newport Haibor High Sc)IOoi for tbe past
15 years, will' be buried Thursday in
private family services at· a San Diego
cemetery. ~ .
Mr. Sims, of 3M9 Loren Lane, Costa
Me$"1,-died of a heart attack Saturday.
'He was 51.
As a teacher. Mr. Sims was known as
an Innovator. He headed the firSt black
literary studi115 courSe at Harbor High
and was well known both on and off cam-
Ws~. Silns came 'to the Orange Coast
are·a from Dover, N.H., after serving in
the U.S. Navy as a pharmacist's mate
and subsequently completinu his college
studies. -. ... He has been suffering _fro.m ~~~r1.t?" . acl&osis and had to · retire trOm lils
teacluog post this year because of bis Ill-
ness. -I A :Survivors include his wU.:i, Georg a . 0Sims · sons Jooepb and Jonalban Siins,
i;mtf·tftother and stepfather Mr. and Mrs.
George Sboids, Dover, N.H. . ~, M:i!moilal services for Mt. Sims will be
held at a date to be' announced by tbe
la!i\ily. . I • It is s1.1ggested that .· memona ~
tributions be made to the James~-su:ns
HeiSman Star ftqdgers
Drafted by San n ·iego .
, From Wlre Services
NEW YORK -The San Diego
Chargers today drafted Heisman Trophy
winner Johriny Rodgers of Nebraska in
the National Football League's annual
pla'Yer draft.
He was selected on the 25th round br
tfie Chilrgefs, 'Who obtained the drafting
spot in a ' deal that sent qu~rback
Marty J;>o;mres to Baltimore .. The Colts
ea.rlier gained t!Je spot in a deal with
Washington.
The LoS Angeles Rams do not have a
pick in the first round, having traded it
away last year.
John Matuszak, a 6-foot-7, ~Pound
tackle from Tampa, was chosen by the
Fullertf:>n Bank Hit .
~or $~·by 6 µnman
' . A man shoved a note at a ·teller,
sim~ted possession of a_ .B:!M'l at a
Security Pacific National Ban1t ti'"ranch in
Fullerton and escaped with $890 . in
c\irrency Monday, patice reported ..
1 The nOte demanded it>e: money 'in $100,
$50. $20' and $10 bills, officers said. The
bank is located atlOl N. Harbor Blvd ..
•'
Houston Oilers as the first pJayer in ffie
draft. (See story, Page 16.)
The Oilers earn~ the No. 1 plck by
finishing with the worst record in the
Ieague·(l-13). It was the second straight
year a lineman was picked as the first
choice.
T!w BalUmore Colts, picking second,
took Louisiana State quarterback Bert
Jones. Jones is expected tc fill the void
left by the tr8.de of supe.rsta.· John Unitas
to San Diego.
Three USC players were sleet~ o~ the
fir st round_: tight end_Cbartea_ Young by
the Philadelphia Eagles, back Sam .. CUn·
ningham by the New England Patriots
and tackle Pete Adams by the Cleveland
.Br9wns. · . ·
Rodgers• selection was obviously
· delayed because ~ weighs only 173
pounds and stands just 5-9.
.He is expected""JO be ~as a wide rece'i~i?r and kick return~ bf San Diego,
although he occasionally was· used as a
running back in college either from his
flanker position·or from the 1-fonnaUon.
. Rodgers, the top career all-purpose
riinne.r in college football hlsfory, caught
55 passes last season for 942 yards and
finished .third nationally in alJ..purJ)ose
running wit}l 182.8 yaf$-per game.
alive in prison, and Earl c.' \Veatherman,
who Hanoi said died in captivity.
James did not provide the hometown
of either man. ·
James 8aid Ridgeway was a member
of a Marine patrol operating near Khe
Sanh While that outpast was under Com·
munist siege in 1968.
.iThere was a patrol that was ambush-
ed". he said. ":rhere was a casualty
count made. Exactly how it was made -
whether by a ground observer, or rrom
the air, or what -is unkown. The. ~OWlt
reported nine bodies."
James said there was a period from
Feb. 25 to-Aug. 16 that recovery forces
could not reach the area where the vic-
tims lay.
"During this period, the area was under
bombardment by mortars and air
strikes," be said. "'lbere was also the
norma l deterioration from the tropiclll
environment. Positive individual identifi-
cation of some partial remains was im·
possible.
"When they did get in there, they felt
they had the remains of nine individuals.
"The remains of what was believed to
be J!ine members of the patrol were in-
terred in a group burial at Jefferson
Barracks National Cemetery, St. Louis.
Ridge~·lly \\'as believed to be in that
!See POWs, Page 21
·-tr * *' * 1:i * * * * .
Viet Fighting Eases
But Major Battle Rages in Quang Tri
SAIGON (UPI) -The intensity of
fightjng in South Vietnam tapered off to-
day, the third day of the official cease-
fire, according to military sources, but a
big battle was reported between South
Vietnamese marines surrounded by Com-
munist troops in northern Quang Tri prov-
ince.
The ieve1 of fighting -although lower
than Sunday and Monday -still was
higher than at many times during the 12
year3' of-fighting in South Vietnam.
Stafford Set
l •
To Head .Up
Joint Flight
SPACE"' CENTER, Hooston (AP)
The bots of tbe l,merican astronaoll, a
three-time space ·veteran and •· rooki8'
will form the U.S. crew for the
Amerlcan-SOviet joint space flight in1
975, it was learned today.
Sources said the American crew will be
Donald K. Slayton, the astronaut chief
and the only one of the original seven
U.S. astronauts who has never flown into
space; Thomas P. Stafford, commander
of Apollo 10 and a veteran ot two other
space missions, and Vance D. Brand, a
civilian astronaut who has never flown
into space .
Stafford was named to head the crew.-
Slayton was named to fly the second
Mercury mission, but a heart condition
grounded him. He was later grounded
from Oying· airplanes;
A doctor suggested medication that
changed his irregular heart beat. On
March .13, 1972, Dr. Charles Berry, chief
space agency SID'geon, return~d Slayton
to flight status .
It will be the fourth space flight for
Stafford, 42, an Air Force brigadier
general. Stalford was on Gemini 6 in
1965, on Gemini 9 in 1966 and was com·
mander of Apollo 10, the 1969 flight which
orbited the moon.
Brand, 41, a former Marine pilot who
also served in the Air National Guard
and the Air-' Force Reserve , was the
backup command module pilot on Apollo
15. ..
The Soviet·Amerlcan' Space flight, call-
ed the Apollo-Soyuz test project, is
scheduled to be nown in mid-1975. 'The
earth-Orbit mission will last about 10
days and Its primary assignment is to
'test a compatible space docking system
und er development by Russian and
American engineers .
The Oight plan cal{s for the Soviet
Soyuz ~pacecraft, with two men aboard,
IC' be launched from Russia, to be follow-
ed later by the launch of an Aptllo craft,
Government troops and Communists
also skirmished around two• '-provincial
capitals cut off by the Commuoists and
the South Vietnam ese drove Communists
out of several hamlets near Saigon.
The South Vietnamese command
reported 765 battlefield incidents between
the start of the cease-fire at-8 a.m. Sun-
day and noon Tuesday.
It reported 1,761 Communists and 276
South Vietnamese soldiers killed and an
additional 1,070 South Vietnamese wound·
~ ... j
DEAD AT 42
Dr. J1me1 G. Bl1in
Services Sla ted
For James Blain,
Newpor t P astor ·
Funeral services £or Newport Harbor
Lutheran Church Pastor James G. Blain
will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday at the
church, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach .
Dr. Blain died Monday in St. Joseph's
Hospital, Orange. He was 42.
ed. Several dozen have been listed as
missing.
Military sources reported heavy
fighting betwee n South Vietnamese
marines and Communists near the mouCh
of the· Cua Viet River , northeast of
Quang Tri. Marines rushed through the
area about the time of the cease-fire,
recapturing a naval base-held by the
Communists since spring. The marines--
have since been surrounded.
tSee VIETNAf'll, Page ZI
Jud ge Denies
Leary Plea
For Defense
By TOM BARLEY
Of .. Dfltf' ,, .. , l.l•ff
A Joog day in Orange County Superior
Colll"t loomed today for Dr. Timothy
Leary as the eloquent LSD cultist, Dank·
ed by three lawyers, again challenged the
legality of his arres t last month in
Afghanistan. .
Judge James Turner denied a series or
motions before shocking the globe-trot-
ting guru and his attorneys by himself
filing a' plea of innocent on beh~lf of
Leary -an action that broQght im-
Rlediate protest from Costa Meil trial
"'hlwyer George Chula, Leary's chief.
counsel. ·
Judge Turner sWitched the session to
the courtroom of Presiding Judge Bruce
Sumner of Laguna Beach after also de-·
nying Leary's renewed plea that be be
allvwed to:..supervise hit.~wn defense on
multiple arug charges~ntained in an
Orange County Grand Jury indictment.
Leary, 52, stood open-mouthed . in
astonishment as Judge Turner al so told
him this morning that be might have to
go on trial Wednesday with a number of
defendants similarly Indicted in the
"Brotherhood of Eternal Love" drug con-
spiracy.
• ''That's crazy," Chula said. 0 Thls will
all haye to be thrashed out before Judge
Sumner and I want t'J emphasize right
now that no court has the right to tty Dr.
Leary on any charges in view of the way
he was kidnaped."
Leary, whisked overnight under guard
to Orange County Jail from his cell at
San Luis Obispa county Jail, smiled,
winked and waved to a crowd of ad-
mirers in the court room while Judge
Turner advto!d him of biJ rigbis.
Among the courtroom observen who
acknowledged bis cheery waves and who
were warned about their Conduct by
court ballif£s, was Joanna Harcourt·
1See LEARY, Pa1e !)
Orange Coast " Memorial Fund, c/o Regents, Un1vers1ty
of Cafifomia, Irvine. The funds are ~o .be
directed to Dr. Archie F. Wilson, chief o(
pulmonary disease. Orange county
Medical Center. Bike. WorkshoR Slated
A native of Inglewood, Dr. Bain was .
graduated from UCLA and in 1960 l'iceiv-
ed his bachelor or divinity degree at
Pacific Lutheran Th~logical SemiDary
in Berlteley. He was insb,illed as pastor
or Newport · Harbor Lutheran con-
gregation in 1960 and his ministry
resulted in the groWth of the church and
-its reloelltiOtJ from Cliff Drive to fhe
facilities -Opened Jn 1970 at the Dover
Drive address.
Dr. Blain was chaplain of the
Mariner's Lidos Club, and was a member
!See SER.VICES, Page IJ _ --
Anti-aboriion
'Bill Ent:eted
WASHINGTON (AP) A con-
stitutional amendment to prohibit
abortioM~in_ mosl cases was pro-•
. -posed today by Rep •. LawreJ!C< J.
Hogan ( R·Md.). . .
. He called the U.S. Sup<erne Collrl
''morally barlknp'' for i'8: rulln&
&trlkh!g down most antiabortion
llWI;
Hogan said etUl<tmtrlt' of -a-;-
siltutional amendment wOuld be the
only effective way to CO\ltlteract the
court'• 7·2 dtcilion iul -t that
states may oot forbid women to
have abortions during I.he fU'lt U
months of prqnahcy.
' -
Former Space Engi·neer .to' Te ac li Class in Mesa Da yliglit Barul!t
Gets Haul of $4
• By RUDI NIEDZl!C!.SKI decides to jam it«lf into your expensive
Of• Dt>ltf' , ... ••" lt8lian deriilleui', it's quitf'Jiossible that
l(lhe bicycle in your garage has only you could be in a lot or trouble.
two wheels, a coaiter brake and a To prevent this; Lynn Slier, a 4}.year-
stralght aet of handlebars, the new bike oldbike-shOp owner, now teacheS a four·
rnainleuance course offered by the COsta week workshop in bicy,cle maintenance to· M'esa~Leisure Seniices depattmenLmay aduiis and youths in the Harbor Area.
not be for you. '•Bicycle riding is inhanced by having
But chances are the bike won't. It your equipment in gOod condition,"
llkely bu an intricate IO-speed gear explains &iler. ',I ·tonnar aempace
dlm>ge m<Cbaniam called a derailleur. a ·engineer who ~Unto~ bike bJJSiness
·dynamo llghting system , and dual hand when he w'!'li1d,o(I. .
btldcis on u-sp0rting ram·type ""nle enioyment of tiding " much
blndlebars: ..--· greater when you know bo.w your bike_
.. l(yoo're a modtm genttatloo bicycllst WQr~s MMl tblt It ls 1n good ~dition.
and in good shape, chanceti are that y.our Ba!!1e&lly ·we empbuile !Damtenance
1tp may even b! strong enough to ''gel ta_skl: that the;, avtras-e individual can do
it into lDlh" which means that you could w1tb00l &Dots. he . adds. he iolng about 40 miles per hour. These inclllcle brake adjustment, gear
And if tbe brak<s sbouid suddenly fall change a<Qustmeot. llow 'to rix Dal tires,
while you're aitned at a car, or the chain minor, wlaee1 truing. and allgnmeot of ' , i
' '
front and rear wheels.
'"You'd be surprised how many people
have to.speed bikes ·and don't know how
they work," adds Sandra Mayes, a An unldenillied ~an confronted a
Leisure Services supervisor. -Costa. Mesa woman~rn a supermal--ket
''Some people will buy one and then parking 'Jot Moriday and forced her to
leave it in the same gear all the time. Or tum over $4. ·
they won't even know how to fix a flat Police sald the holdup occurred 11bout
tire. 4:30 p.m,. In .the Alpha Beta lot as Mrs.
un fOll don't know how \o fix a ftatw Ellein Wtldner, 50, of 305 E. 19th St. was
a 10:.speed it earl take-you \IP to •two walldnl' to her car.
hours. But ·If you know the right The man, described about 20 artd wear-
tecbnique. It can be done in 60 seconds," hlg a waist-length jacket and blue jeans,
she maintains. had been sitting on a bench adjacent to
In addition to instruction on emergency the market on t3S E. 17th St. Uf\lll...he
repairs and multt-speed bike mechanics, spotted Mrs. Weklner, in,_vestigators\aald.
the course del~es into bicycle laws In As she approached her car the gunman
ltarbor Area cities and U!e new coastal produced a small pistol and asked her to
bicycle routts. Fttnu are presented Ive him all · neyiJ2fflW-said the
police. officers showing student! how woman tutned>ttel"-all . ha -exactly
(Ste BICYCLES, Pap•!) 14.
• • I
it'll be partly cloudy on Wednes-
day, with a slight Increase in tem-
perature, according to lhe weather
service. --mgna of 60 at ilie beaChes
rising to 62 Inland are ezpected.
Lows tonight 41.
INSlltE TODA\' -
A small town ntw1papc~1 edi·
torial about lht loall judicial
1v<1em prompteo a judge to JU.
a contempt ci!ation agaiMt tlit
paper -tilt fin• "'" fil¢d
over an editorial.. See .ttory on
Po oe 5.
l.,M, ..,. l <Mlttlnft 11
, C&llfl"'lt f . llWNll '''"'' It Cl&Mlfltll If.,. fiil•ti.Ni ,.... ._.
C-l« 11 °'111111 C..My ti -~ II Sy,,_ ,.,,., t
DMlll l'tltltft 11. 12 '""' 1 .. 1J •1111Wl'4 ...... t llldl MA1W1tt 1 .. 11
llJt,.,_IRfll•I tt T ... 11.... ll • ._. .. II Tlle9r.1 II
P" "'-ltM91'111 H W11Mlllt 4
...,._ 14 ·-·· ...... 1-..1• ollllt l.alliftn U Wirt! """ of
I
,,t.
otions
Spurred .
'
By-Judge
A detennlned bid by the proseculion to
put Dr. Timolhy Leary on trial Wednes-
day .,_,,ilh lhree co-derend:lnts for his
alleged masterminding of t h e
"Brotherhood of Eternal Lave" drug con-
spiracy nm tnto four equally determined
defense laywers today in Orange COwlly
SUperior Court.
Presiding Judge Bruer: Sumne r took all
four lawyers into his chambers (or an
oU·tbHecord discussion alter failing in a
Jong court bearing 10 re50lve the flurry of
motions filed on beha1f of Leary and
three fellow indictees.
Judge Sumner toot ovtr tbe action.
after Judge James TUmer realized at
Leary's earlier arraignment this morning
that much more was involved in the
globe-trotting guru's appearance than a
plea ol. guilty or innocenL
Judge Turner shocked Leary and
everyone within earshot when he took
care of that issue himself by entering a
plea of innocent to multiple drug charges
against Leary in the court record.
Judge Sumner \\'as expected to return
lo the courtroom late today for a hearing
that may determine if Leary is to go on
trial Wednesday with three fellow in-
dictees.
They are r.tichael Boyd Randall , 29, ar·
rested last month in Laguna Beach, and
Calvin Larry Del aney, 30. and Ronald
Crawford, 25. both arrested by Honolulu
police on the island of Maui and both
Jisted in the indictment as transients.
Leary and his co-defendants are four of
nearly 50 indictees named ~ tbe district
attorney's office following three years of
investigation into the a 11 e g e d
Brotherhood ol Eternal Love drug cull
It is alleged that the organization had
links throughout the world and was UJ...
strumental in importing vast quantities
of illicit drugs into the United States.
From Pagel
LEA RY ...
Smith. lhc British ~ialite IA'ho bas been
Leary's consl.ant companion s~ shortly
before his arrest in Afghanistan last
month.
~1iss Harcourt.smith, 27, the niece of
London publishing magnate Simon
Harcourt-Smith of tbe Harcourt Press,
told newsmen today that she is Leary's
wife.
She displayed letters Imm Leary In
'\\'hich the fonner Harvard philosopher
assured her that he regarded her as bis
spouse despite bis existing union wilh
Mrs. Rosemary Leary, 40.
"This Jetter (written ln Orange County
Jail ) from my perfect love is all the
legality I need," she assured newsmen.
She attended all t.eary's court a~
pearances in San Luis Obispo where he is
charged with escape following his flight
in September of 1970 from the geriatric
ward of the men's colony in that com-
munity.
Leary was at the time serving a state
prison term of one to 10 years for bi!
conviction in Orange County on charges
of possession of marijuana.
From Pagel
SERVICES •••
of the Republican State Central Com·
mittee.
ln 1971 , Blain w~ award ed a doctor of
divinity degree from the California ,
Graduate School of Theology in Glendale.
He is survived by his '¥\.'idow. Loretta:
three sons, Jeffr ey. Jason and
Christopher. a daughter. Sarah, his
mother, Mrs. Elsie Blain of Banning. and
a brother, Samuel B. Blain of Costa
Mes a.
Memorial contributions may be made
to the Dr. Blain Fund of Ne wport Harbor
Lutheran Church, or to the Regents of
the Un iversity of California in support of
cancer research at UC Irvine.
DAILY PILOT
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'
DAILY "IL01' Stall ,-11&11
Marelaitag for Dinaes ,.
•••••••j ratio•• Dlijiute
Squabbles .Hold
Peace Forces Up
SAIGON (UPI) -Diplomatic squab-
bling be t,veeo the Saigon government and.
Comn1unls~ asslgnt.-d to help supervise
the Vletnnm <.'Case-lire caused another
delay today In plan.. that wol.ld have had
the force in the field by now.
Ninety Communist VI c tn a me s e
mt'.n1bers of the Fou,...Party Joint
~tllitary Con1mis.!llon set up to Inspect
" u•
'"'
TONIGHT
BASKETBALL -UC! vs. Cal Poly
Pomona . Crawrord Hall . 8 p.m.
the macblntty for the cease-fire arrl~ed
Monday. from Hanoi aboard two U.S.
CJ30 transport planes.
But ther. remained on them over.ru.,bt
nl S31gon I Tan Son Nhut A Ir llue In
l>ro\eSt of the government requirement
that they till out immigration forms
before cntr:rlng the country. '
Sources at the airport said the 21-hour
sit·in ended today when the Communists,
50 North Vietnamese and 40 Vi et Cong.
finally left the plane! and were taken {o
camp Oavls on the base where other
Communist and lDternaUonal delegaUon:!I
are staying,
There was no explanation of what cOrn-
prontlse, if any, was reached that enab.I·
ed them to disembark.
The Communists Insist they are
citizens of Vietnam and do not have . to
fill out immiil'atk>n papers.
Thirteen North Vietnamese a n d Viet
Cong who arrived in Saigon Sunday
registered the same complaints and '
stayed aboard their aircraft fur 22 hours
before deplaning Monday.
1.fore than 1.200 volunteers \Viii knock on doors in
Costa Mesa tonight as the 1973 March of Dimes
campaign to collect $11,000 officially begins. Pound-
ing the. pavement for the battle against birth de-
fects \11tll be local l\farch of Dimes leaders (fro1n
Jell) Bob McNuJty. chairman of the Men's March:
UCI LECTURES -"Design of Proj·
ect," p a r t of serie:!I on Professional
Practices in Housing Industry, 1'18
Humanities Hall, 7·9:30 .p.m. Adm. $6.
"Experiments in ho1ale-Female Rela-
tionships," p~ of series on Morality:
The South Vietnamese foreign mini:!lta
allowed that group to leave the plane "In
order that the .. 1. commission may
begin to carry out Its re:!lpcnslblllUes,"
but warned that the decision did not
•·constitute a precedent."
Dom Ra citi, Costa l\.1esa l\farch o( Dimes chairman;
Jack Hamn1ett. n1aYor of Costf Mesa, and ~trs. Dor·
othy Gerner, chairman of the Mother's l\.1arch.
Reagan Rules Watergate Attorney Says
Twilight Zone of lhe Law. Science t,ec..
ture Hall, 7-10 p.m. Adm. $5.50.
''Epidemiology," part of series on Your
Heart and Circulatory System, Soph.
Leoture Hall, Medical Surge I Bldg., 7-10
p.m. Adm. IS. "India: Problems of
Natural Integration," part of seri~ oo hte
Challenge ol Rada! and Etlmic Dif-
ferences around the World. Social
Science Hall, 8 p.m.
The-milltary oommWion -composed
or North and South Vietnam, the United
States and the Viet Cong -Is to work
with the four-member Intematlooal
Combsion for Control and supervision
(ICCS) to supervise the ceue-fln.
1be two gr<>UP" met separately Mon-
day and today but actln& ICCS Chalmwi
Michel Gauvin of Canada aald today lie
was still trying to unnge meeUnc• with
the military group. ~:: :r~";!'! LiddyHeaded Operation WEDN&IDAY, JAN. JI
INVITATION TO INTIMACY -Lec-
turer: Charles D. Levltoo, OCC
Auditorium, 7:30-9 :30 p.m. * * '
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan flatly ruled out running for a
third term today, saying he would not
respond to any "dra:t" for him to stay on
in the governorship after 1974.
"No," Reagan said when asked wbelh·
er a demand from party leaders for him
to nm again would force him to change
bis mind to serve only two tenm.
"Nor do I -think there 1s going to be
such a thing," Reagan told a Capitol
news conference.
But be declined again to say whether
be might run for the U.S. Senate seat ol
Democrat Alan Cranstoo who also comes
up for ~ in 197t
He said again hi:!I decision would come
by the time the snow melts in the Sierra,
but he added, with a smile, that might
mean the mows "away up high" In the
mountains.
Reagan said he would not announce
any such decision at this weekend's
gathering of California Republicans as
they begin maneuvering a m o n g
themselves for the chance to succeed
Reagan.
Reagan also said today he personally
prefers using some of the big budget
surplus to cut state income taxes, adding
such a cut probably would be combined
witl:. other tax relief elemenU.
"I may feel firmly that way," the
Governor told the news conference, "but
I feel firmly with an open mind."
He said his administration has not
decided bow to rebate tbe $1.l·billioo
budget surplus it will have at the end of
the next fiscal year and that there is no
deadline for deciding on a program.
All types of one-lime tax rebates or
permanent tu reductions still are under
consideration in his Cabinet, Reagan
said. The problem is trying to return the
money equitably so that it goes back to
the people who paid into the surplus in
the first place, he said .
\VASHINGTON (AP) -A Watergate
defense lawyer conceded toriay that Nix-
Oil campaign o.(ficial G. Gordon Liddy
headed a political intelligence operation .
but denied Liddy bad anything to do with
burglary and v.·iretapping.
He spoke in the closing stages of ~he
trial which grew out of the break-in and
alleged bugging of Democratic National
Headquarters in the Watergate building
comple..t in Washington last June.
"We don't take issue with lbe fact that
?.1r. Liddy was the boss." defense at-
torney Peter Maroulis said
But )1aroulis argued that Liddy,
general counsel for the Finance Com-
mittee to Re-elect tbe President, was
engaged in legiUmate information
gathering, including a warning of poten-
tial violence whicb led the Republican
Party, be said, to move its convention
f('Om San Diego to Miami Beach Jast
summer.
From Pagel
BICYCLES ...
ride bicycles safely.
Bob Aronson, Costa i1esa's newly
appointed recreation supervisor. explains
that the cwrse was caused by recent
upsurge in bicycle use along the coo.st
and the cqmplexity of modem two
wheelers.
"They've bttome complicated because
of the gear mechanism. Before all you
had was the old single speed. Now you
hive tbe lG-speeds. These are much
more intricate and the racing versions
could attain speeds in excess of 50 mph
with the right rider," be says.
The current workshop sessions are
attended by 24 people, of which about
half are adults. Enrollment is expected
to increase during the next set of
workshops which will be offered early in
February.
"It \Vas a very important decision to
move that convention from San Diego to
Miami," Maroulis said. "And that was
done o~ inror,mation from my client.
"That was not the recommendation of
a burglar," ~1aroulis said in his closing
argument.s to the jury.
The case went to the jury this after·
noon.
Maroulis also attaeked the reliability of
the two principal prosecuUoo witnesses,
saying t h e y offered '1abricated and
embellished" testimony to protect
themsel ....
A particuJar target of Maroulis was
Thomas Gregory, a Brigham Young
University student, who testified that
Liddy attended meetings to plan a break-
in to plant electronic bugs at campaign
headquarters of Sen. George McGovern.
He said Gregory offered his testimony
because ';he was afraid for bis own
skin."
J\1aroulis also challenged former FBI
agent Alfred C. Baldwin llf, 'vho
testified that Liddy was present in
a motel room in which Baldwin was
monitoring Calls from a tapped telephone
in Democratic Party headquarters.
J\taroulis said Baldwin's testimony was
"something less than crysta1 clarity."
and declared, "Mr. Baldwin was worried
about his own well being."
Liddy is one of tWo remaining defen-
dants in ~he case. being tried before
District Judge John J , Slrica. The other
defendant is James W. McCord Jr., who
w8s security chief of the Nixon caril-
paign.
1:1cCord's lawyer, Gerald Alch, con·
ceded that his client wa:!I caught in the act
of burglariz!ng the Democratic head-
quarters, but said ?\.1cCord was
justifiably motivated by fear for the
safety of the Nixon campaign.
"Mr. McCord was inside the
Watergate, that's a fact." Alch said. "But
Jim MCC:Ord is not a burglar. His moti va-
tion and intent were not that of a
burglar."
BASKETBALL -0CX::: V:!I. Pasadena
City College, OCC Gym, 8 p.m. Costa
1.1esa -vs.J!a,n.lll Al)a Valley at Mesa, 7
p.m. Estancia at Corona del Mar, 7 p.m.
Ne!A'PQrl Harbor at Anaheim, 7 p.m.
"PLAY STRINDBERG" -South Coast
Repertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa
Mesa, tonight through Sunday, 8 p.m.
f'romP .. eJ
POWs ...
group of remains ...
James said l b e Jefferson Barracks
Cemetery was selected by the families
of the nine because it was the ''most
central location" to the various towns in
which they lived.
Ridgeway's relatives were notified that
he wit! alive within 24 hours after the
Hanoi list notifieatlms 'llegan S-turday
night James said. (See related story,
Page 4.)
James said the Communists reported
in providing their list that Ridgeway was
captured Feb. 25 -the day of the am-
bush . lie did not say where the Marine
was imprisoned, but presumably it was
in South Vietnam .
James gave this comparison of tbe
North Vietnam prisoner list with Penta·
gon records:
-Of the 555 listed as alive by Hanoi,
the Pentagon previously considered ~
to be prisoners, 4~ to be missing in ac-
tion, one to be killed in action and one to
be a deserter.
--Of the 55 Hanoi !Aid died In captiv-
ity, the United States previously listed rT
as prisoners, 11 as missing ln action, 18
as killed in action, and one aa a deserter."'
Tbe United States Is pressuring Hanoi
through diplomatic channels and by pub-
lic statements to make public a list of
American POW! held in Laos and to ac-
count for 56 other Amerlcarui described
by the Pentagon as koown POWs who
,.,.ere not on the official Communl:!lt roster.
F,....P .. eJ
VIETNAM ...
-The sources said there was one spon-
taneous display during the fig0Unc. At
one point, troops stopped sl>ooliog brief-
ly, stood up cheering and approached
each other to shalt• bMds and exchange
embracea. Fighting continued farther
30lltb, "°""""· The commllld Aid the highways
leading out of Saigon, ucept fo r the mad
to the former beach resort of Vung Tau.
havt been reopened a n d Olmmunllts
driven out of ?: hamlets in the SaJgon
area.
Vice i'Mldent Spiro T. Agnew arr!~
jp Saig~ tcxi:AY to deliver &WU'ances of
continued American support for the
ThieU premment.
Agnew dined with President Nguyen
Van Thim at Independence Palace and
issued a statement saying the United
Stntes recognized Thieu's govermnent 88
the "sole, legitimate government of
So1.ith Vietnam."
American forces were not involved in
today's fighting. The last American
fighter-bomber unit Ip Vietnam, ?.1arine
Air group 12 from Bien Hoa air bue 15
miles northeast of Saigon, began pulliDg
ou~ Monday.
U.S. troopl aro going borne at the rlle
of about 400 a day. There are, about
21,000 Americans le:ft ln Vietnam and all
must he oul of the country by the end ol
March.
U.S. officials expect no !rouble meettna
the deadline at the current withdrawal
rate.
There have been no report& of
Amertcam caught up in the batUe since
Sunday and for the m01t part U.S. of·
ficers have told their men to take 1 low
profile.
One American helicopter pilot, wound-
ed less than two hour! after the cease.
fire went into effect, died Monday,
becoming the fist Amer1can cll!ualty
since the official end of the war.
On Monday, the author of most of
Reagan's major tax bills said Reagan
would propose a combination of income
tax relief, a postpanement in the sales
tax increase and cancellation of bonds.
(Sec earlier story, Page 5).
For registration information, contact
tht. Department of Leisure Services, 834-1j'Oiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiiiOiiiOiii0iii0iiiOiii0iii;;;;i;;.
5300. 'Mley want ta make a safer bike
rider out of you even if you only have a
coaster brake.
Radinactive Danger Seen
In Smoking of Tobacco
_ By GEORGE LEIDAL
..,... 01 ""' C.lly 1"1"1t St•tf
Possibly the most damaging thing
smokers do to their lungs is deposit with
each pu ff small radioactive particles.
The radioactive particle:!! In turn produce
dan gerous, alpha-emlttlhg particles
,~rbich. in sufficient quantities, may cause
lung cancer.
The renewed link between radk>ac-.
tivity, smoking and lung cancer, wa:!I the
•lll>Jecrot-a paper-pn!SeJlted Tuesday-
night before the American Chemical
Society, dlvlslon of nuclear chemistry
and technology. The group b meeting In
the Newporter Inn this Wetk.
Dr. E. A J\1artell , 54, a nuclear chemist
wit'· the National Center for Atmospheric
R<sean:b bl Boulder, Colo., told fellow
scientists about hb thrce-.ycar effort to
e·xplain the presence of radioactivity In
lungs of smokers reported by other rtsearchers .
?tfartell, who quit smoking 11 years
ago, believes his new hypothe:!lb may t.J:·
plain why cigarette smokers get canett
of lhi lungs.
Al a scientist int erested in the pollution
of the atmosphere, ?tfartcll's real concun
ls the effect. of nuclear power plant
radlaUon on humans who may be ez:·
po:red to other forms of nuclear energy.
The pollutant as!tocialed w1tb tobacco,
f ~·
however, is a oaturaJ product of radia-
tion normally associated with soils.
J1e explained that the tobacco plant ha s
an "uncanny " ability to atlr.act very
small "almost invisible" particles of
radiation. The particles accumulate in
ll1rge numbers on the tips of tiny hairs on
the tobacco leaves.
When the tobacco is burned at the tip
of a cigarette, "highly insoluble"
radioactive particles about the size of a
smoke particle-are~fonned;
'1Eacb 1moie particle which ifl..
corporates the • • . (tobacco hair) or
fr1i:Uon thereof, will contain a relativelf
high ~ ol lead-110 and lb
radioactive daughter, blsmuth-210," Dr.
Mortell said.
Now, the tmlssionJ from these
particles do not happen to do much
damage to tissues. Wbtn they were
l10lated all yean ago further study of
this possible 90Ul"Ce of lung canctr was
abandoned. Martell explained. The Im·
port·ance of ~fartell's new work is the
completion of !he chain of events
radioactive materials undergo.
"The "larger and more i1110luble of
lt.e5e smoke J?'lrticle:!! will persist In the
brooch! surfic1ently long to allow for the
growth of polonium-210," he aald.
Polonium 210 emits the alpha rays
whJcb may damage tissues nearb~.
AROUND THE CORNER AND
UP YOUR STREET
I
WE HAVE BEEN ASKED HUNDREDS OF TIMES WHY WE
LOCATED OUR STORE "OFF THE BEATEN PATH."
SEVER AL ANSWERS POP UP. FIRSTLY, THE COST OF STO"RES
IN SHOPPING CENTERS IS ASTRONOMICAL. SECONDLY, we WERE
ABLE TO OBTAIN MORE SPACE, WITH OUR SHOWROOM,
OFFI CES, AND WAREHOUSE ALL IN ONE LOCATION. THIRDLY,
THERE IS AMPLE PARKING WITH LITTLE TRAFFIC .CONGESTION
LEADING TO US.
THIS SITUATION HAS MADE US MORE COMPETITIVE AND
WE ARE PROUD AND GRATEFUL TO SAY TH AT WE HAVE
INCREASED OUR VOLUME EVERY YEAR FOR SIXTEEN YEARS, AND
HAVE EXPANDED FIVE TIMES AT THIS LOCATION.
IN,
COSTA MBA
SINCI ltlf
I
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 llacentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
64
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