HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-03-01 - Orange Coast Pilot!
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MA~ I, 1973
VOi.. M. MO .... I S!CTtoNS. a PA081 ~
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SAIGON (AP) -The United States an-and two West Germans and two Filipioos
DOUn<ed tonight that "the North, Viet· held In the south.
namese turned o.... a list of 1116 A Viet Cong spokesman said the
~-prisoners and two 'lbais to be Ameri~ prisoners ~ for release
released over the weekend. ~them mcluded 26 servicemen and four
But it sajd the Viet Cong bad not yet ctvilians. _
turned over a list of 30 Americans to be The Germ~ are Monika. Scbwmn, a
freed from camps in South Vietnam. 31-yeaN>kl ~. and medical student
The U.S. delegation initially aaid 108 ~ Jljehl, 'ZI, -, were captured
Americans would be freed by North Viet· by tile Viet Cong near Da Nang in 1969.
nam and 34 by the ·Viet Cong, but it was Both were workers. for the Maltese Aid
discovefed later that these figurei in> Socl~ty, a !Jerman Protestant dwity
cludecrlhe two Thais held in the "north semce. . , • . The Filipinos, Candido Badua and
. . . Arturo M. Balagot, were C8plun!d durtog
McG' the Tet offensive in 1968. overn The Philippines sent a military wort
unit to South Vietnam ~ tJ>c higi>
point of the work. To. Med; nte The U.S. 8DDOU11cemeol said:
,.,._., "The Democratic Republic of Vietnam
,Iian.Feud
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Honse~ •• 1 .n Mesa . . . . '
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rep.....,lative on Ille P OW sub-
comm.ission, four--party Joint Military
Commission, pres en t,e ~ to the
U.S. repreoelilative a list' C\)lllalning Ille
names of 106 U.S. POWs and two Thai
WOUNi>ED KNEE, S.D. (.\!')~South POWs~ lloiled Statea has oot been
Iiatota's ~WO senators flew to their home lldvised of-d>e time and place of release.
sta'le tod'1 in an effort to brir)g an end to No new infonnatioo has been:received on
a two-day siege PY militant ~ the .Jfetalnell per30Mel held by the
holding 11 residents of this tiny com· ProVISional Revdutionary Government." •
munlty. hostage. 'Ibis is the government ol the Viet
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Costa Mesa ·poli.ce said the driver of a stolen car
slnasbecl tbro~~ a,'Wllll and intb the kitcheit Ot tliis home early• · · morning while tryin~ tO elude a
squad car, Officer Hubert Hogan chased the J'T·
year-Old yoath · through west Costa Mesa after r...
ceiving a prQwle~ qimplajnt. He said the drivet ,had
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turned off his lights and l'fashed after failing to
make a left turn onto Hamilton Avenue. Police ~re
unable to name the occupants of the home, ho
were not hqtne at the time of the crash. Police r·
rested the youth at bis own home about two hours
aftet the incident.
Sens. George McGovern ana James Cong in South Vietnam. • • •
Aboumt arrived at Ellsworth Afr·.Force · The chiefe· for the. North • Bu« by military jet ;jusl before t a.m. vtetnameae ation, Bui·'nn, u.td the p .-.• , ; , . "
(PSl')'Bnd departed by helicoplel: lhortly POWs would be reed over thew~ eD,a&et@D sergeants '
alterwards In the direc;tlon o1 this em-' lmmedlal<!ly Iller the list wu iii/ned · · '
balded ~et aboul '1$ ll)lles away. over to lhe~Amerlcan cfe'\ep.tloo, it was · 1 • 11 w«s mt clea,r,J>Owever, whether the • trananilted to Wasbingroo so · T M • B· · L ~a;d d
houcopler carey!Jlg t)>e.lwo Demoqala' relativesof,lheAmerl!'8Jlprlsooe111cool .L'•WO· . arines e1ie ' A actually would land Inside the com-be lmmedtately nolifled of Jbeit im-. l . CJ
ll1Ullity, whlcll bas been sealed Oil by Jaw i><\ading rei.ue. ' ·' , · . •
' officials since about ~ l11dians '1(\0~ 0-' Once the oat of kin are . . • . .
its few lilff~s Tuesday night. Wuhbigton will male the list pu c. • I · s · J c C h As IJ#heQcop_ter left the air base at There ...,,, no names released lri n an uan ar ras Rapid City, Ri!pli Ertckaon, a special Salg"ll elthe\: by the U.S. or North Viet· ' I ill · • . '
assistant. to the U.S. attoiiJey geoeral, . llllll01" dli"81tlonl. · , : said be Intended to advise °'!.Je!ultors, · · · · .
presumably by rtdio, to land outside the • • Two Clomp POtllltlOn Martoe cergeanls
<'OmmUllily for leai ol possible gunfire'. n ;_ -d T .;_ .t . ' , ...,,, decapllaled' if\ d high .. peed traffic
"0Ur prime eollcem at thls"POint'lS' to ~ • .uu.ant 8 .....ir-...... lod '1n -J obtain the release ot the 11 hostages; We • , _,, ' "1 ,,.... u an
are partl<Ularly <Gn<emec!'wilh the.facl • • C.pbtrioo. •• "' · '· -
tbal several or these hO&tailes m peojll• M. oth~r Seu!?b. t . Tbe pisty. ain1le-<:ar couiskin occurred .
In ll>eir *•" Eflokaon .. id. In nearby ...., . • , ,at abqljl t:~ •·Ill· and clalrr.ed t"'-lives
Pine Jlld&t. .' • Orange po0ce are lootinf i.,. the of~ ·Sci&. Japieii C. Jooes, 21, all\! ~ Abo!reik said b •Io t e leaving moU... of' a· a~~ baby boy found :Vernor.C. au.B~:M.;llolla men wore at·
wasblngtm be liia· been l88Ul<d ~Y dead .more than two w..b aao In Ille
leaders ol the Amertcan lndjlJI. MoYe-ladleo rte! rbom of a dr\v .. 1n lheal'f.
ment that ...,.. flosleaeo \vobld be ~ have ru1oc1 thal tli>lofmt'I daolh Hun~rs .F.in,d Bpd_ y ~ whel> he anived In lh•--wat a bomJcide • • '°"°"'"'-S6Utli llakota..,.."'aiid said J>Oiioe aaicf jo~est'••"-o( .. Jeb, 1l ........,.,A (•") •
be WU ''iianffdoa! we Clll ~le the• death Indicates thal~ pouiid, elgbl 'wa;:·11o111~ ..... ~':" ~~
rtlealo ol lhe "*'once we gel lllete." ounoe ililant wu born bell1hy llld died -In a ""1IOle part o1 aouthem
'l'hl ilOO (ndJa.• hove demonded -I ol ~ ' , 1l-1laJdt Comly ft" mJl ... IOUth of Et· -Pl* of the llureau oflndian Ar-The bollr WU found by a janllol al the ta•g. C..-lclwan! L Nielson
loin lb return for froolag Ibo. hootqes. Stadium bm.Jn Tboaler or1 Kalella ltlid a.. boclJ' .""*"I Wednetday ·,..., iden-
Mlde• fl1!t!l ooe brtd ~with .an A~ Nico -that lhe cbil4 • tUled 11 thal Wanda K. Brewer lj) !'Jl1 aaeli4 ~~:/, ~·JteprJa11<.!"" waa bom In •-icle at U..driv•ln and .,..,. was topil1td missing from ' he;
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(floe ...... ___ ... ii . placed la.lhe·nlt --bomO ta a.-'!! Jl'ob. ..
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tached to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines,
at the base. .
Highway patrolmen said that the cra!h
occurred in the southbound lanes of the
San' Diego Freeway near tbe San Juan
Creek· overcrossing.
For. reasons as yet undetermined, the
American-made sportscar lost «>ntrol at
high speed and slammed into a coocret~
abutment. Then the auto skidded across
the freeway and slammed 1nto a divider
fence reinforced with steel cable.
The cable, obsotv.ers said, lo\"e tbe roof
from the vehicle and behe~ the two
men. Arter that impact, the Car flipped
onto lls side and skidded nearly 300 feet
in the opposite lanes Of the treeway. ·
Highway patrolmen could give no
reason for the lbss of contiol of the vehi-
cle nor did lheY lmmedialltly determine
which m;ui was drlvinC the car. lnvesti-
gatiOO was continuing, they lllid.
Washington Gets
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Welfare Oiief •••
Of Califorvia
SAN FRANt!SCO. (AP) -R~bert B.
Carleson, California director of social
welfare for two years, today was named
special assistant on welfare matters for
the U.S. DeplJ1ment of Health, Educat ion
and Welfare.
HEW Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger
announced the appointment or CarJeson,
42 •. to the newly created position of staff
liaison between the federal, department
and governors: 0£ the 50 states.
Welnbeiger said Carleson .will be
resJX)flsible specifically for providing
assistance lo governors In welfare
management and reform initiQtlves at
tbe state level1 and giving them guidance
on the federaliiaUon of the adult welfare
cOselQad lo~ aged, blind and disabll;d
pe1110111. .
"He .bu a proven record of ac-
complishment in this fteld •od can beip
govel'h()rs inttlate their own welfare
reform similar to tbe effort he directed
oo 1 succ•fully for Gov. Reagan ill
Ca ilornia," Weinberger sa.id .
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t:Qutt Juclge ..
Cite Flliii :
NEW YORK AP) - A Criminal coUrt
jtldge today · eclared the bard~
pornographic m "Deep Throat" to be
the "nadir of decadence" and found it
"indisplltably / obscene by any legal
measurement-1 •.
Judge Joel 'Tyler found the defendant
corporation ~ty ,of two counts of pnr
motlng obscenity and ruled it could be
fined up to · twice the amount of the
profits the movie grossed since it opened
here last June.
The city brought the obscenity pro-
ceedings against Mature EnterpFises,
Inc., in a test case as part of its drive to
clean up Times Square. 'I'be trial was
held without a jury.
In a ptevious case In Bin~mton,
N.Y .• a jury decided that the film was
not obscene. ·
. At the trial here, Tyler heard experts
take diametrically opposing viewpoints.
Dr. Ernst van den Haag, a
psychoanalyst, testified for t h e pres-
ecutioo that the film ;iis without any
redeeming value whatsoever."
Film critic Arthur Knight, however,
said, "It's not a sleazy film by any
means. There is a real attempt to use
humor aod ·a Jdnd.of sophisticated. fooling
with sex. It is not a dee-breathina film."
Tyler said .in his 'tleclsion that lie found
the dominut theme and "the ooly theme
is an appeal to prurience In aei. IL la
hard-core pornography with a .vengeance.
"This is one throat that deserves to be
cut," he said. '0 1 ~Uy -perftnn the •
operation In finding the defendant guilty
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as charged."
Between last June arid this January. I
tne theater.said lt grossed '!JlOOI $71210110.1
· . !See OBSCENE,· Page II I
. . ' Orange (;out •
Weather
Weother llOUl'CeS today (ll'edlcted
1nore mostly sunny skies for tbe
Orange Coos! m Friday. The fi!gK
will be in the 50s, low tonight aboul
40.
ll'llSlltE TOlti\ V
After 23 'days alongside his
wrecked airpJa·ne in the Arctic,
an injured bush. pilo t ate flesh
of one of '11is three dead passe-n·
gers to stay alive. See story,
Page 4.
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Clt•tlllH lt·J? Nat•.i ""'" 4. 7 c-1c:· H a, .... c..,.., U.UI
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l'iftMce tNl TllMt9n a
l'W tlle RICWll It WN!lltt • • ~ l t ............... ,,..
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~ DAILY PJLOI S -Thursday Marth 1 )qJJ
~MisttndersiaaditlfJ'
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Nixon Backs Off
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On 'Income. Plan
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nii· oo. observing that his revamped social
welfare program already has aroused
0 Jntense controversy and considerable
misunderstanding ," defended his changes
today ln a special message to Congress.
The Lengthy message Ilse.If contaiMd
m :nirprises and confirmed expectations
that Nixon would back away from his
1~ welfare refom1 program that would
have, in effect, guaranteed a minimum
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2 Countries'
Officials Die
annual lhcome fer poor families.
Mucll of tllL emplwls tod8y w.. on
justifying the reorganization and, in
some cases, scrapping of pest federal ac·
li•itles in the are.a of human re&OUr'ttJ.
Pledging that he will display "com·
passion lf.lfl works -not simply com-
passion that means well," Nixon took
credit for a record human resources
budget he put al $125 billion -"nearly
twice the amount being spent on such
programs wbm I took office in 1969.
"This is both a generous budget and a
reform budget," he said.
"The refonns It proposes witl put mus·_.
cle behind the generosity il intends. The
overall effect of these reforms will be the
elimination of program! that are
wuteful so lhal we can concentrate on
programs that work."
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12 Nations 1·
Viet Pact
PARIS (API -Tile londin minlsle"
cl u governments. including the wQJld'•
~ ~initialed a n.i ne·pOID !
d<d.U..tioo -y endorsliig the 'Vletnlln
peace agr<emeol and establlsbing a #
cedure for examining violaUODs.
SecretarY ol Slote )Villiam P. Rcgers
and lbe foreign ministers -of l\ritain.
France, Ollna and lbe Soviet Union were
among those who initialed the document,
together with North and South Vietnam.
1be Viet Cong and the four members of
the International C.Ommission of Control
and Supervision -Canada, Indonesia.
Pnland and Hungary.
WARSAW fAP) -\The interior
ministers of P o l a n d and
Czechoslovakia, whose departments
include their countries' secret
police; died in an air crash ln
northern Poland tonight .
Nixon, who said "the welfare meS3
cannot be permitted to continue,"
acknowledged he was abandoning broad
welfare reform "since the legislative
.ootlook seems to preclude passage. -' .ln
the immediate future."
MILITANT INDIANS GATHER AT CHURCH IN WOUNDED KNEE WHERE THEY HOLD 11 HOSTAGES
Authorities Wtrt Hopeful Th•t tMgotletton1 Would Le.cl to RelPu of F•mily That R•n Tri!ding Post
'lbe declaratioo, pledging Uie Lt
governments to keep the peace and to
reconvene wben any six oI them Jodge a
complaint, is to be fonnally signed Fri·
day al a ceremooY in the lnlernatlooal
Conference Center.
Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp-or
canada initialed the document but
reserved his government's position wilb
regard to continued participation in the
cont rol commission.
The Polish government quickly
ordered a top-level investigation .
Radio Warsaw reported Interior
.Minister Wieslaw Ociepka and his
visiting Czechoslovak counterpart,
Radko Kaska, were flying near the
Baltic port of Szczecin when their
military aircraft went down. All
t~ir aides and crew perisbed too,
but the number of dead was not
disclosed.
Valley Attorney •
Freed in Office
· Machine. Tl].ef ts
Fountain Valley attorney Philip Stein
was cleared Wednesday of charges that
he was involved ln an office equipment
theft ring that led the Orange County
Grand Jury to indict six persons on
multiple counts or receiving stolen prop-
erty. Santa An a Municipal Court Judge
Robert E. Rickles threw out all charges
against Stein, 'SI, or 16049 catskill Ave.
Superior Court Judge James Turner had
earlier returned the issue lo the Grand
Jury after ruling that there was in·
sullicient evidence against the lawyer.
It was agreed by both sides to allow
Judge Ri ckles to rule on the charges
......_rather than revive the issue before the .
Gtand Jury.
Stein 's flcqUittal leaves hls brother,
Larry Stein, 44, Orange, Josephine
Eleanor Marzollno, 39. of 3123 Pierce
Ave .. Costa Mesa, and Frank Marzolino,
43, s8nta J\rUI, to face the charges.
Larry Stein's ~ trial is scheduled for
March 12, while the Marrolinos are
scbedulrd to face trial j.priJ 23. All th ree
defendants are now free on bail.
StjU at large and the subject of a na·
tlonwide hunt is co-defendant George
Lindenstadt. 40, of 9472 Molokai DMve,
Huntington Beach. All charges have been
dismissed against Henderson Steward
Jr .. 44, Santa Ana.
It is alleged that the remaining defen·
dants were invol ved in a theft ring that
processed office equipment stolen during
1he past 18 months from 17 county firms
-m~y of them Orange Coast orgartiza·
lions.
Deputy District Attorney Luis Cardenas
claims all the defendants were named by
a "confessed burglar" in a deal w'hich
gave him immunity from several felony
counts.
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Bill l{eapproved
WASHINGTON (AP) -Co!Jhdent of
enough strength to override another veto
if necessary, the Senate h11.s given
overwhelming approval ~ a S4 .8-billio~ .
vocational·rchabilit.atlon bill that Pres1·
dent Nixon rejected earlier. Wednesday's
86-2 vote sent lhe bill to the House where
action is expected ne.1l week.
OIANOI COAST n
DAILY PILOT
However, he said he is ordering
vigorous steps fo strengthen the manage-
ment of aid to families with dependent
chirdren -a program he described as
"inequitable, inefficient and inadequate"
-through administrative measures and
unspecified legislative proposals.
Po·Htleal ConQ-oversy
As he promised, Nixon again said he
woold uk Congress for a new law "for
alleviating the often crushing burdens
which property tares place on many
older Americans," but did not spell out
what he had in mind .
600 Church Members,
Pastor, Leave Flock
Discussing his cootroversial dl.m\antl·
ing of the Office of Economic Op-
portunity, Nixon· pictured the move as
strengthening antipovery programs by
moving them into Cabinet department.s
directly concerned. ·
"The only major OEO program for
which termination of federal funding is
recommended in my budget is com·
munity action," he said. .
With $2.8 billion of federal fund s having
been spent since the program was
launched in 1965, Nixon said further fund-
ing "no longer seems necessary or
desirable.''
PRISONER'S WIFE
'HAPPIEST GIRL'
About 600 members of the 1,600-strong
Firsl Presbyterian Church of Anaheim
are organizing a separate congregation
under the former pastor because the
United Presbyterian Church is "selling
Jts soul to rifdical 1eft..wing enemies of
Christ," that pastor said.
Rev. Ralph H. Didier said first worship
services of the new C o v e n a n t
Presbyterian Church will take plac;e Surr
day at the former headquarters of Zion
Lutheran Church at 222 N. East St.,
Anaheim.
The most frequ.ently mentioned con·
troversial issue among the Anaheim con·
gregation was a $10,000 grant in 1971 by
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) -The the United Presbyterian Church to the
wlte of 8 Navy nier listed among the defense fund of professed Communist · r · of 1 be Angela Davis, later acquitted of charges next cont.lngent o pnsoners war o 1 ted t 8 shOotout at the Marin County released by North Vietnam today pre>-. Courthore 8 0 . 1970 nounced herself and her daughters ~ 1!1 • Of the
"about the happiest girls in the U.S.A." . ~ The re~ainlng members 103-
0!arlatte ·Christian, wt(e of Navy Lt. year-old First Presbylertan Ch11tch, are
Cmdr. MJcbael D. Christian, wu among con~lnu!ng ri;guiar servifes with cuest
the first POW wives to be notified by the m!?lsters until. a new pastor ls named.
government that her husband would gain A lot of fme Christtae people have
his freedom over the weekend. been misled lnlo leaving, Dr. L .. Ken-
Christian, a native of Huntsville, Ala.. neth Heuler, clerk . of the F 1 rs t
was shot down over North Vietnam Apr11 J>tesbyterian goverrung ~ said
hi r •· th Wednesday of the new church. 24, 1967. He and s wi e uo.ve ree ''Our point of departure bas to do wit.Ii
daughters. tbe deoominartoo itself and whether it ls
dominated by Marxist philosophies," he
added. "J don't believe it is."
Churc h life is like national politics. Dr.
Hueler said. "J don't agree with all of
our nation's policies, but I'm not moving
to Austral la either."
Rev. Didier, 45, already had accl!pted a
position with the First Congregational
Church of Redlands when the splinler
Anaheim group asked him to lead them.
Now preslclent of the m..
terdenominaUonal Anaheim Christian
AssoclaUon, Didier s8id he expects "an
additional couple hundred will be moving
into our membership" soon.
The conservative segment a 1 s o ob-
jected to the Presbyterian affiliation with
the World Council of Churches and the
decision by the ' church's General
Assembly not to join a 1973 interdenom-
inational evangelistic campaign.
Viejo Area Dogs
Given LSD Trips;
Suspect Sought
A dog doper who has fed what ls
believed to be LSD to a number of dogs
In the MlMton Viejo and Laguna Hills
area is today on the "very much wanted"
list at the Orange County Sheriff's Office.
HJs !ates! victim' Wednesday was
George, a four-year.old black poodle
owned by Marlne Corps Col Raymond
Dewees Jr., 51, o[ 26691 Alkante Drive,
Mission Viejo.
Col. Dewees rushed his pet to Laguna
Hills Animal H°"Pltal when Ille stricken
animal began to display all the =s associated with an LSD trip,
1 contortions, panic and inability
to stand or control bis limbs.
Veterinarians in the area are warning
dog owners to maintain a watch on their
pets and to rush them for medical at·
tenUoo at the "nnt sign of symptoms
normally asaoclated with drug ingestion.
Deputies said George appears to have
recovered from his ordeal with the e.1·
cepUon of a stiffened rear left leg,
From Pagel
INDIANS .. !'
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for cement olficttS at a, dist11.nce, a n d
there was an exchange or gunfire
Wednesday morning.
Abourezk and McGovern were ac-
companied by members of the staffs of
Se\!'. Edward M. Kennedy (0.Mass.),
and J. f'. Fulbright ([).Ark.).
The Indians also demanded that Ken-
nedy and Fulbright come to the reserva·
tion to discuss grievances, which include
the gove rnment's handling of U.S.-Jndian
treaties and the way in which the Oglala
Sioux tribe elects its leaders.
"I want to emphasize that we're not
going there to negotiate demands, but to
work for the release of the hostages."
Abourezk said in Washington. "There can
be no negotiations with a gun at anyone's
head."
Wounded Knee was the scene of
tragedy for red men during the 'Wane of
the great westward push of the 19th Cen·
tury.
An estimated 250 fed eral marshals, FBI
agents and BIA police from the Pine
Ridge and other Indian reservations cor-
doned off the valley town. They kept to
the heights more than half a mile away.
along four roads.
Joseph Trim~ch, agent-in-charge of
the FBI at Minneapolis who beads the
federal force here, met witb. represen-
tativ~ of AIM und er a tempor~ eease-
fire Wednesday, but an FB I spokesman
said there was no progress toward.ending
the stalemate. He sa id three other al·
tempts to arrange negotiating sessions
failed.
He SflKI the Canadian govern~ wW
have · to examine the declaration 19
determine whether lbe commission can
operate effectively. He threatened earlier
that Canada woold walk out of the com-
mission unless adequate ·machinery for
reporting cease-fire violations w a 1
established.
'Ille djolcaratiOO was hammered out iD
bactstage expert meetings, with Cl»' cessicm made by both sides.
North Vietnam and its Communist
allies abandoned their previous insistence
that the conference C{)ll!d only be recall·
ed by a majority of the 12 delegati~
This would have given each side a veto.
In return, the United States and its
allies agreed to mention the Viet Cong's
Provisional Revolutionary Government
as a full.fledged conference participant.
To appease the Saigon government, lhe
final article of the declaration states that
the signatories do not necessarily
recognize each other.
Because of vigurous Communist o~
jections. U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim was excluded from any active
role in the pea~ping arrangements.
fTo9aP .. eJ
OBSCENE ...
ApproxitlJai.ly 1.700 penons baVe ""'°
the film daily in the 320-seat New Mature
World theater in midtown Manhattan.·
A beari1!!1 will be held to detennine the
amount of the fine once the judge ex·
anUnes the corporation's books.
Martha Miffed
'Libber' Working in White House
WASHINGTON (UPl)--'Jill Ruckelshaus, a RA!publican women's-
lib leader, is working as a White House staff member -and Martha
Mitchell resents it.
Mrs. Ruckelshaus, wife of William D. Ruckelsbaus, admitllstralor
of the Environmental Protection Agency, began worlring last week
on a "parttime" basic for counselor Anne Armstrong as a liaison as·
sistant with women's groups.
Her appointment was not publicly announced. She ·will be paid
about $18,000 a year.
In a tele phone call from New York where she is living Mrs.
John N. Mitchell, wife of the former attorney general told uPI:
. "I'm going to tell you something I resent like bell1
• I resent that
Jill Ruckelsbaus is in the White House with Anne Anmtrong and all
her liberal id~as. l don't know who placed her in the position."
She descnbed. Mrs. Ruckelshaus as "way out."
Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LITTON -is Best!
U,.IT .........
ISRAEL'S GOLDA MEIR, PRESIDENT NIXON TRADE VIEWS
Two Leaders Oisc:uss Peace in Middle East, Relations With Arabs
WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
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011 Middle East Situation
\VASH INGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on and Golda Meir, Israel's prime
minister. ronfcrred today on Middle East
issues · after exchanging banter and
mutual eompliment!. -...
Sitting in on the session in the Oval Of·
lice for the United States were Henry A.
Kissinger, Nixon 's assistant £or national
security affair~. flnd Air Force Brig.
Oen. Brent Scrowcrofl, Kissinger's depu·
ty. . ~
With Mrs. Meir were Yitzhak Rabin,
!IOOn to teave Washington arter service as
the Israeli arnba!!ador here, and his
designated succes!!Or; Slmcha Dimitt .
While photogniph<!rs rfCOrdtd the
opening of the 8Csslon. Nixon and Mrs.
Meir exchanged chlkhat, none of It
touchlng on substantive lmles.
The President tr txpected to Ill)' the
United States Is ~etermlned to br.at the
dtadloct In the Middle Eut -Uld tbal
Israel II especled to help.
•
Mrs. ~1eir says both sides can help by
making compromises. There will be oo
concessions, she Wd, but compromlses
arrived at will be at the negotiatine:
table. a procedure the Arabs still do not
accept.
U.S. offklals actnowledge that the
seMes of visits from the MJddle Eut -
first Jordan's KIJl8 H...,..ln, thel Cllro'a
special emi.ssary Hares Ianail, and now
Mrs. Meir -have brou&ht no tangible
progress in the search h a aett1emenl
Wednesday, ahe was quoted u 11yln4
that direct peace negotiations wltll Egypt
"BR I poalblllty," .
Rep. Tbomu H. Morgan (0.Pa.)
chairman ol the House F.,.Ian Affaln
Commltt .. , Aid Mrl. Mtlr told the com·
mlttoo In ~-.. ....... th1t obe ..
opllmlltlc bocaUle tltero hu ·been M lhoollnc over the 5uel Cini! for 18
montlts. ,
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1815 NEWPO.-r BlYIL .Downtown Costa .Mesa -PbGne 541-1788
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'DU11i't K~k Me'
-
Marine Admits Lie
A Marine Corps private Crom Camp
Pendleton , says he lied in making an
earlier s w o r n statement that bis
sergeant kic~ed him. ·
The unexpected tesllmOny cam t
Wednesday during the gener'ill court·
martial trial of Gunnery Sgt. Miguel H.
Tostado, 41 , of Topeka, Kan., who is
charged with maltreatment and con-
spiracy to assault Pvts. Alan L.
Forguson and Harold E. Bradley.
FQltuson, 18, er Huntington Beach,
sbo"1e<t up une:zpectedly Wednesday after
being absent without leave since Feb. 16,
a Marine spokesman said.
The privtte said Tostado stumbled into
him rather than kicking him as charged.
'Forguson said he was influenced by Cpl.
Gury G. Hutton In writing the earlier
statement that Tostado bad kicked blm.
Hulton, 21, ol ,Pboeol1, Aril., la to lace
a less severe apeclal court-martial on the
same <barges.
Toltado, a 22--year veteran who was
-..led ..... Umes In Korea and Viet·
nam, It aecu.sed of ordering Hutton to
organlu ...,.king patlles last October ror
t~ purpose of beating F........,. and
B~. who liad gott<n toto trouble at
lbe!A!e.
Bradley, 19, ol . Leadville, Colo.,
tellified earlier that be bad a career
counseling sessklo with ~ sborlly
btlore being 1>eai..1 and dldni,bear the
sergeant glve aoy·orden for the beating.
Alter testifying, Bradley returned to a
Rams' Marliii McKeever
Will Lead Viejo P·arade
Los Angeles Rams linebacker . M'arlin
McKeever will be Grand Marshal of the
fourth annual St. Patrick's Day parade
M~ 17 in Mission Viejo.
~eever will be accompanied in the
grand marshal's car by his Rams team-
mate, offensive guard Charlie Cowan.
The parade route will wind through
Mission Viejo and end at the Mission Vie-
jo Golf Course, where a traditional corned
beef and cabbage dinner • will be
available for $2.50 per person.
A St. Patrick's Day queen, selected
from Saddleback College students, will
preside over festivities . Preliminary
judging will Uke place Saturday at a
luncheon at the Mission Viejo Inn.
The queen and her court will be an-
nounced at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at a
dinner at the Inn.
Parade participants include the U.S.
Marine Corps Band , the Costa Mesi col-
,,~ guard, the ~ission Viejo and Dana
}!ills High School~' March Bands.
Area clubs, indi~iduals, organizations
and businesses can \enter floats in the
parade. Entries are being taken by Tom-
my Mitchell at the Mission Viejo Golr
Club. ,
Awards will be presented by a team or
judges including Jack VaOarga, Orange
County Tax Assessor; Rep. Andrew
·Hinshaw (R-Mission Viejo); Ronald
Caspers, F.Uth District Supervisor; Jim
Cooper, interviewer at Channel 50; J. T.
Beagle of Irish International Airlines.
Dave-Desoto, KMPC radio aJl!lOuncer,
Not Prostiture,
Just Doin.g Favor
BELO HORJWNTE, Braill (UPI) -
Rita Pen!ira Goncalves, 30, told a judge
. she spent one night with a neighbor as a
, favor to her husband. But that, she said,
. was not grounds for charriina Goncalves
; with forcing her into prostitution.
Mrs. Goncalves said Wednesday her
husband °loaned" her to neighbor Joao
de Almeida Coutinho ror "only ooe
night."
But Goocalves only did so, she said,
bec<u!Se he w'as drunk and IU .
Authorities said they are still in-
. vestigating the matter.
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School Pact Okayed
: PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
· Philadelphia pubiic school teachers today
·.overwhelmingly approved a four-year
. contract and agreed to return to classes
later in the day for the first time in eight
· weeks. Noisy rati1i£3tion by voice vote of
the '69-million contract package ended a
-l:Jllter strike which affected 28.S,000
: students in the country's fourth largest
school district.
..
will be master of ceremonies for the
parade.
The day's celebration Is sponsored by
the Mission Viejo Activities Committee.
Services Friday
For Bank Official
A. G. Meyer, 63
Funeral services will be held Friday at
11 a.m. for Archibald George Me~r. 63,
vice president and general manager of
the Laguna Hills Leisure World United
California Bank.
Mi:. Meyer was round dead in his hotel
room In Santa Ana Tuesday. The cor-
oner's office said he died of naturar
causes. .
$ervices wilJ be held at the Waverly
Chapel in Fairhaven Memorial Park with
intennent to follow in Inglewood Park
Cemetery.
Pi-Ir. Meyer's body was discovered by a
desk clerk who checked when the bank
official failed to answer his telephone.
He bad resided at the Royal Inn since
January after fll'e destroyed his apart.
ment in santa Ana on Christmas day. He
was on vacation at the time.
A native of Montreal, Canada, the
deceased served in the U.S. Navy from
19':1 to !Sill.
He first was employed by United
caiilornla Bank in !HJ and wor~ed in
vartous other SOulbem 0 a I i I o T n i a
branclie• untll appointed head or tbe
Leisure World branch in 8eptember, 1963.
"·Survivors include a brother Russell of
Anaheim and a sister, Martha Singer or
Florida.
Funeral arrangements are being handl·
ed by the Donegan Funeral Home in
Orange. '
Mr. Meyer was a member of the
Rotary Club of Laguna Hills-Leisure
World and a past member of the Sad·
dleback Valley Chamber of C:Ommerce.
Quentin to Get
Female Guards
SAN QUENTIN (UPI) -Women eor·
rcctional officers will soon w o r k
alongside male guards in gun towers, on
gun walks, in performing search duty
and supervising inmate work Cn!WS, San
Quentin Prison has announced.
PrisOn spokesman Lee OeBord said
Wednesday women will work. all jobs
"with a few exceptions," such as
supervising inmate showers or working
in the maximum ,security adjustment
section.
llWi>T roam aiiif resumed playing cards
with aeveral .of the Marines who te:stifled
Ibey beat him oo lluttoo's onters.
The prooecutot, Maj. Micboel Rieb.
contended in hta clOISing argument that
Tostado, whom he called "• super
Marine," was ft\l!trated with Forguson
and Bradley and decided "to knock aome
5ell$e into them."
capt. Rlcbanl o. Ziegler, the doleme
attorney, maintained Huttoo bad ordered
the bel\linp of hiJ own and was trying to
lhilt Jbo blame.
"What did Lt. Wiiliam Calley say?"
Ziegler said, drawing a parallel with Hut·
ton. " 'My superior ordered me to do
It.' "
Tim Leary
Gets Writing
Materials
,SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) . -Over
government objections that they might
be used as weapoos, drug advocate
Timothy. Leary won the right to paper,
pens and a typewriter in bis cell at a
state prison near ben:.
wry appeared In court ehalDed and
guarded by seven men, and Bsted
Superior Court Judge Richard F. Harris
for permission· to mingle with othet"
prisoners and to write in his cell.
"I don't see why I should he punished
when I baven't been coovicted. I have
never been a violent maa. I've never us·
ed viOlence. In fact, my escape .. , was
represented as a walkaway," Leary told
the court. ' Lecµ"Y's request to mix with other
prisoners was denied, as was bis request
for a tape recorder. He ls scbedu1ed to go
on trial here for escape from the prison
in 1970. He also faces drug charges in
Orange County.
Girl Held 14
Years for Dad:s
Killing of Tot?
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Rachel
Verdin was 8 when her father told police
she tilled' her smaller brother 1"1.b a lea<!
pipe.
Stjon afterward, the little girl was sent
to ColwnOOs State Institute, a hospital
for the mentally retarded. The.-e she has
stayed for 14 years.
Now 22, sbe is being considered for
release. Authorities have -learned that
her father, not she, was responsible for
the death of her brotller.
Mrs. F.dward Verdin of Hamilton, Ohio
told police last month that her husband
fatally struck his +year-old soo with a
pipe when he cried for a drink of water
in late 1958.
She said she bad not gone to police
before because be threatened kl kill her.
Edward Verdin, 47, has been charged
with manslaug.her and is to appear in
Hamilton Municipal Court Friday.
Four Cows for One
SERULE, Botswana ( A P )
Caletwaselwe Mosei, 50, was convicted
Wednesday of stealing a sacred cow.
'Ibe court ordered him to deliver four
head of cattle to the president of
Botswana, Sir Seretse Khama, for taking
ooe of his herd.
Mall Readied In Laguna Bills
Construction foreman Bud A~ of C.plstnno stores, lncluclll!°i'~ Buftwru' ~d Penney's are
Beach walclteo placement of stA!tl g I rd e r 1 for planned. The ant, Sears BOebuck, LI due ID open
shopping center mall off El Toro Road. About 45 next monlll. Collllructlon LI by E. W. Haber Co.
• \ •
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Mechanic
l{ills Sell,
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His Family
FAIRfAX, Va . (UPI) -A mttllanle
vohose boss sa id was "a steady, seven-
day-a-v;eek y;orker'' shot and killed hls
wife. mothe r-in-law and infant 900 before
shootif18 himself to death ln this suburb
of \Vashington, aulhorities saKI.
Fairfax County, Va., police said Harry
~1c111 illan. 36, shot each member of tht
fami ly in the chest be.fore killing himseU
\\'ednesday.
Neighbors in th/ series of six motel-
style cabins in J converted restaurant
said Mcl\1illan was distraught over the
break-up of his ..marriage to Dolores
McMillan, 31.
GEODESIC DOME TO SHELTER A VACATIONING FAMILY
Fire-retardant Sphere Can Pack Into Station Wa90n
Their 21 ~-year-old son, William, died 35
minutes after the shooting, at a hospital.
The man's-mother-in-law, Ruth M.
Pair Use Domes
Shennan, 53, was in the one-room cabin
and also was killed. She and her husband
'lived next door , and most of lht
neighbors were.-.Telatives.
Geodesic Spliere to Be Marketed
J\lfcMiltan's boss 'at the nearby National
Memorial Park Cemetery said, '1He wu
a steady. seven-day-a-week worker with
money in the bank."
Relatives. who reported the shooting to
police, said his wire just returned from a
trip to West Virginia and th.at her divorce
action upset' him.
By JOHN V ALTERZA
or ttoe a>.it1 .. 11111 S19ff
For the artsy-craftsy crowd and the
growing element wanting to build that
cheap structure in the wilderness, the
geodesic dome is suWosed to offer the
practical alternative.
The plans -and mathematical concept
in the construction -are deceptively
simple. ·
The theory 'holds that all you have to
do is make a bunch or triangular sec-
tions, attach them the right way and -
voi.la -you possess a space-age sphere
suitable for habitation.
But for those who have tried the little
theory, it's more like instant madness.
Rarely does a homemade dome work
out.
ff the builder retains his sanity, he'll
find that his arty bubble leaks like a
sieve. ·
-John Merrill of San Clemente and a
partner, Miles Ambrose, kne~ all the
dra,wbacb of a dome but set to work
anyway.
Their mlssioo, however, wa:m't simply
a dome for thetn!elvH.
TheY' wanted to design a dome for the
masses,,
Arni Merrill thiJ week lnslsts that they
have fOWI<I, It
It'll soon hit the market as a rv;w ap-
proach to rec'reation and a pc&ible
answer to emergency housing or struc-
ture needs in government and deleQSC.
Merrill said be and bis partner set our
in a small shop in San Clemente's in-
dustrial section, trying to apply modem
fiberglass techniques to the d<lme theory.
1bey came up Ylilh a kit.
It needs no tools.
Two persons with an average IQ can
build it in a half-hour and suffer oo men-
tal damage.
Once th~y finish. the builders have a fi~retardant sphere with a sk3dight,
roo( vent, tntry door, ventilation boles at
the base and enough rwm to house a
whole family on .a camping trip.
Collapsed th e dome stacks 18 inches
high in a pile less lhan five feet across.
The oomponcnts can fit in . an average
station wagon.
"And it doesn't leak ," Merrill said.
For the two young men , the dome pro-
duction is their first attempt at creating
a new product and trying to sell it.
"It's something we've never really
done before," Merrill said.
The concept of a geod esic dome. first
of all, is eminent domain.
"You just don't go out and patent a
geodesic dome," he said. '
But the pair did find something that
they could patent, and protect their
''invent.Ion."
It is the peg-and-hole locking system
that allows the pieces lo stand rigid
wilhout~y special fasteners.
'""' ''That just about drove us crazy," li.ter-
rill s:aid.
Once the assembly system was worked
out, the two men had to refine the
"shingle" concept of each multi-cornered
section.
·"We had to do that so it wouldn't
leak." ~ Now that the tly and frustrating
research and dev pment is complete.
·tbe two men ·still have months of anxiety
left. f
1o introduce their new concept, they
have booked space in vacation-products
shows in the Southern CaUfomia area to
see if the public is yet ready for a plastic
bubble that could dOuble as a cabin, tent,
storage house or backyard conversation
piece-cum-playhouse.
"We're awfully confident it'll catch
on," Merrill said.
After. all, a young surfboard maker
from Dana Point thought he had a better
idea a few years back and built a tiny
catamaran.
"[A)()k what happened to the Hobie
Cat," Merrill said.
The li.fcMillans lived in a 5emi·rural
residential neighborhood about eight
miles west of Washington.
A11ction Slated
To Aid Foreign
Exchange Pupils
An auction of merchandise and
artworks_ from local businesse1 and
residents to pay transportation cost1 of
foreign exchange students will be
sponsored at 7 p.m. April 7 by the
American Field Service (AF$) chapter at
University High School ln Irvine.
Sherman Crane, a professional auc-
tioneer, will conduct the bidding on
furniture, clothlng, gift ltema and
certificates from local mer c ban t 1.
Macrame hangings, palnUnal and
decoupage by Irvine residents aJIO wlll
ht sold. Foreign deaserts and btverqeo
will be served.
Admission to. the le<OJ1d IDDUll AFS
auction is $1.50. Tickets CID be twebased
at the door of ~e IChoo1 muitl-JIUl'POle
room April 7. They also can be obtained
from AFS members, auction coordinator ·
Mrs. Richard · Bartkus at 833-1684..; and
chapter president Mrs. George Hlleltl 1t
833-2384. .
The auction will be the final event in
what AFS officials hope the Irvine city
cpu.Q_Cil will officially declare AFS Week,
Apr1f\l through April 7.
AFS sponsors foreign students at-
·tending school locally and American
students who go abroad for a school
year.
Anyone wishing to donate merchandise
lo the AFS auction can contact Mn.
Bartkus or A-1rs. HuetU.
$399. sofa bed sale! ~w
. queen size • • •
. .... --... --
dual size ..• $349.
• These are very comfortable sofa beds
for sitting and sl ;ng.
• A wide selection ot fabrics and
colors to choose from.
• Reversible ba<k. and seat cushions. ;~~
1-1.J.GAl\l\Eff fURNlTtJRE
PROFESSIONAL Opon Mon. 1115 HARBOR BLVD.
......,,'~N=TE=R=IO=R::=D:ES:IG:=:N:ER=S==T=h="'='·=l==~=i.=Ev=o=1,::=C:O:S:T:A:M::=ES:A:,:C~AclC11IF.~~~~~~~
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4 DAil y PllO'T ~, Mardi 1, lffl
Arctic
A1gony of Cannih·ali.s·m
YELLOWKNIFE. N.W.T. (AP) -
MW 23 days aJooplde hll wrecked
alrpiw In Ille Arctic wilderness, an lo-
Jami built pOo! ate Ille flesh of one of his
tbree dead puaengen to 'stay alive.
'•'Tbere WM no way out but to eat
-., llelh and 11111 I did," Marten
Rertwell aa:ld in a ltatement be read at a news conference Wednesday night in
Edmontoa after his action W&J ftftlled
at• inqDelt in Ye.Ooftnife for the three
-killed In Ille crub. Hartwell was flying tllne ..,,....., a
British aune. a prepant Eskimo woman
and Llf.)'tar .. ld Eskimo boy, to a
hoopllll at Yellowtn!le when his plane
craibed m Nov. a. • ,llAllTWEU., WHO BROKE both
anldes and a kneecap In Ille crash, sald
he ale tbs fleah of Ille nune. Judlib Ifill,
afw tbs boy died and he had no one to
lorage r.. him.
"II d!str<Mes me and probably others
to talk' moni about this," said Hartwell.
"Alter David Kootoolr dled. I rea!i7.ed
that J, too, would 8000 be dead because 1
was loo weak and injured to move
around."
At tbl c:orooer's Inquest. Inspector
Stanley Venner ol Edmonton tes!ified
WOMAN LEADS .ATTACK
ON EQUAL RIGJITS
Frvm Wlre Services
A woman member bu told the ~ad.a Senate that women 1;are
no created equal." The aenators then voted Wednesday 16-4 against
the eqUJl rights amendment to the Constitiltion, which would forbid
d:isc:rimination against women.
In Augusta, Maine, the Senate voted 16-16 "n the measure. That
means the issue still~ alive for possible consideration next week.
In addition, the measure was reintroduced in the Illinois general
usembly. It passed the stale Senate last yeal>, but was !dlled in the
HOUM.
A total of 38 stat.s must •PP""" the amendment before it he·
comes • put of the Constitution• So far, 28 h~ve •pproved it.
Nevada was the ninth to reject it. .i.
State Seo. Helen Herr, (D-Las Vegas), told her fellow legislators.
"This act deliberately undermines the family which is the corner·
stone ol IOciety. We are not cz:eated equal. God made us different."
After the vote, she said defeat of the measure marked "a great
day" in the state biStocy.
Two Bo•pitaliz~
Racial Fighting Erupts
At Honol.ulu Army Base
HONOLULU (UPI) -A racial me!ee
bu erupted ot Ft. Sbalter, headquarters
of the United Slaleo Army In '1>e Pacific.
At 1ea51 tine penoos ...,..·injurdl, and
-.... balpltaJhed. An Army 8!JOkemnaD reported early
today that 8 oeries of "ooofrontatiOM"
-blBcl< and whlte l!Oldien bad sub-
aided" but CUIOeded that although the
situation was under control, violence
"could break out again."
Iolormatlon olftoer Col. B.E. Sawyer
said military police were Investigating a
..,;.. ol fighta Wednesday after ·two
wbllea W<tt badly bealen by a group of -SAWYER SAID Ille Incident was •J>
parently prompted by an earlier fight be-
tween a white ncn-commi5sioned officer
Paper Fight,s
Ne ·w Subpoena
NEW YORK (UPfJ -The New
York Times says it will lake "all
legal steps" to quash a subpoena
served on one ol. ita ~rs who
covered the Watergate bugging
"""· The U.S. District Qiurl gave
permhsion Monday lor t h e
issuance of 11 subpoenas to 11
reportm and executivea atemmlng
from the bugging of t b e
Democratic National Committee
headquarten In the Watergate
complex In W asbington. 'lllose
served, in addition to New York
Times reporter John ·Crewdtoo.
were uaoclated w i t h the
Washington PM; the Washington
Star~News, and Time magazine.
and a black soldier in which lhe black
"got beaten ."
y\n Army spokesman said that early
We4nes<fay the black soldier entered a
room in which a "party was tn progress"
and got ;nto a fight with the wltlte NCO.
'The NCO was suspended from duty and
is under investigation. The black received
medical treatment for head woonds fol-
lowing the fight.
Lale Wednesday, a melee erupted
when a group d black.! entered an or-
dedy room and badly beat 1two whites.
The 1vhite soldi ers were taken for emer-
gency medical treatment and ooe was
hospitalized.
NO NAMES WERE released, but both
whites were reportedly suffering from
racyil wounds and other injuries.
Military Policemen broke up the racial
fight and Sawyer said it was not the re-
sult of any previous racial disturbances
at the strategic anny headquarters. ·
Hartke Attacks
• Skyjack Search
NEW YORK (UPliil. -('The actions ,of
the Federal AviaLion AChninistratioo in
failing to recognize the privileges and
immunities of a U.S. senator constitute a
grievous violation of . . . the U.S.
Coostitutioo," declared Sen. 1 Vance
Hartke (IHnd.),
He ·was referring Wednesday in a
federal court suit to the fact that he, like
other passengers, was obliged to undergo
a search before being allowed to boa.rd a
plane at Kennedy airport Forcing a
senator to do that, Hartke maintained,
violated the constitutional separation of
the executive and legislative branches of
government.
/ ,
tbet he had asked Hartwell alter the
pilot's rescue on Dec. 10: "'Old you eat or
COMUm• the fle!b of Judy Hill?"
VENNER SAID the '*year-old pilot
replied, .. Yes. Nobody else \lid. David did
not because J atarted eating flesh after
David wu dead.,. 1'1le nurse and the
Eaklmo woman died within hours of the
crash, a"""'1ilng to testimony at the fn.
quest, but the boy remained alive for 23
day a.
Hartwell's statement read at the in-
quest gave tills account:
For the first few weeks, be' and the boy
lived on food Jrom the plane's <merge.ncy
kit -coffee, sugar cubes -,m cans o~
corned bee! and mashed potatoes -an«
sandwiches the pilot bad·brought tlong.
1bey set snares for rabbits but didn't
get any. The boy left to fish in a lake that
was visible from the crash site but
returned, saying he couldn't find it in the
SDQW.
ON mE 21ST DAY, when their
meager supplies were ·gone, l~e l'wo ce1n-
sumed all the drugs in the nurse's
emergency kit. Hartwell thought this
might kill them, but it didn't.
The boy began to weaken, and by Nov,
29 he could not move. He died about mid-
night on Dec. 1.
The next day, Hartwell continued;
"I crawled out of the tent, got my
, 1 crutches and 6tumbled to the nearest
tree where J expected there would be
lichens. 1 was completely exhausted ,
witb aching feet , trembling from exhaus-
tion and pain. \
"I chopped off the lower branches.
tucked them under my ann and crawled
on my knees back to the tent, I recogniz-
ed that I could not continue .•. I knew
that since I could not get enough lichens
to live, I could not make it to~the lake to
fish .••
"From here on, I think it is clear to
everyone what I did. I'm still trying to
forget this and will probably never suc-
ceed."
A 1TORNEYS FOR BOTH Hartwell
and Miss Hill's estate tried to prevent
the reading of this part Of the statement
in open court, contending that it had no
bearing oh '1>e purpose or the inquest
since it concerned events occlirring after
the three deaths. Chief Justice William
Morrow of the provincial supreme court
denied the request after a lawyer far the
Canadian Broadcasting CQrp. contended
that the public bad a right to bear the
fuij. statement.
It was the second case of cailnibalism
this winter by surviyors of a plane crash.
Some of the Uru~ football players
who survived a plane crash last October
in the Chilean Andes ate parts of the
bodies of dead companions before they
were rescued 69 days later.
fn his statement in Edmonton ,
Hartwell quoted trom Dr. Kn u d
Rasmussen's book "Across Arctic
America:" ..
~any have eaten human · flesh, but
never from any desire for it -only to
save their lives ... but we woo have en-
dured such things ourselves, we do not
judge others who have acted in this way
though we may find it hard, when fed
and content ourselves, to understand how
they could do such things. • • We only
know that every one of us bas the same
desire to Jive."
WICKS
>{ct.. '-
Rain Spreads to Rockies
Gak Warnings for Pacific Go l11to Effect
.._ ... ,. ..... -..._
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lo.oo · tfJJ lo.Oo 30.1• ~~ ---..[\
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ASTRONAUT CONRAD <LEFT! TALKS WITH UTAH SEN. FRANK MOSS
Commander of Skylab (model shoWnl Discuues Aspects of Flight
Skylab Crew Learns How
)
To PUil Teeth in Space
WASHINGTON (UPI) -ln hopes of
setting space endurance re'COl"ds, Ameri-
ca's Skylab astronauts are being trained
to pull te.eth and stitch wounds to avoid
the possibility of having their flights cut
short by health problems, according to
veteran astronaut Otarles "Pete" Coorad.
"We'll have to be pretty sick to consid·
ec..,coming down."' Conrad told a news
briefing Wednesday. Conrad, the third
American to land oo the mooo as com-
mander of Apollo 12 in November, 1969, is
the comander c:J. the first Skylab flight
crew.
Skylab Is an crbitiog science labora-
tory the size of a five-room house en-
cased in the shell of a third stage Saturn
IV-8 rocket and a three-man command
module similar to the Apollo spacecraft.
THE UNMANNED LAB is to be h1unch-
ed May 14, and the command module
carrying O>nrad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin
and Paul J . Weitz is to follow into orbit
and dock ·the next day. Two other crews
of three astrooaut.s each are scheduled
for separate 56-day stays in space dur·
ing Skylab's eight·monih flighl
The huge crbiting lab will carry enough
medical equipment to wtfit a s m a 11
emergency ward and the crews "are e
Jot better trained in first aid than the
average policeman of fireman," Conrad
said. .
''They've been pulling teeth" in medi'
cal training at military bases.
In case of an engineering emergency
which would prevent-a Skylab crew from
returning to earth, a resdle operation,
for the first time, is possible.
A BOOSTER FOR the following shot
in the serres will always be on the pad
at Cape Kennedy when a crew is aloft,
Conrad said, .and it could be flown to a
docking with Skylab by a two-man crew
to bring their·stranded fellow astronauts
back to earth.
The Skylab will carry sophisticated
science experiments designed to tesf such
Jl05:5ibilities as maki.Jig a perfect weld in
weightless conditions.
The llights will also test ·u;. effect ol
prolonged periods of weigbtlesmess on
the astronauts themselves.
"If we could launch tomorrow," Con-
rad said, "the crew would be ready to
go and to do a credible job."
Pzi§hers Facing
. Mandatory Term
SANTA FE. N.M. !UPI! -The New
Mexico state senate . has ·yo t e d
unanimously for mandatory life im-
prisonment without possibility or parole
or suspension for drug peddlers.
One senator called the legislation the
"toughest of its kind in the United
States.''
It passed 40-0 and now goes to the
house for consideration.
The bill imposes life sentence for fll"Sf.
and subsequent drug JM.1Shing offenses.
The bill , however, does allow a judge to
grant an exception to person charged oo.
a first offense if he agrees to offer
testimony leading to conviction of
another pusher.
DAILT l'tLOT
DELIVERY SERVICE ~ o;;
Dtlivtry of thf Daily Pilot '
is guarantttd
Mof>UY·Fridn: 11 Y•• ff ftfl h•~t y-,..,.,. 9' ,,. jJ.ll'l.. Utl and y..,r """ Willl
... '"'""'' 19 }'Oii. Cll!~ ~re i.k• ""''" 7:Jt p.fll.
S.Olvr.Uy a.nd S.1111~: If ,..,, • Mt -•lve
,....,.. ..PY Dy t &,m, S.IW'ffy. w • '·"" S.-Qy, c.tW 11111 I <•PY .ill tom ~ 19
YM. C..111 .t•t !Meoo "'"'ii If•·"'-
Teltphont~
Mott Orlnte COU!'ltv Al"ff1 · · · '42-4J21 Nor1hwesl Hvn!l1>11fl>ll 6,;,di
ll/>d westmlnst•r ...... . .. 540·1121
San Clt:ment•, C•plUr•no Rudi.
San Ju1111 C4opltlr1no, Olin• Point,
Sou!fl laounll, L.asluna Nll!Uel .tJfZ-4.tJtf
Guverrwrs
Hit.Nixon
Am Pinn
WASHINGTON (API -Democratic ~ _, YOled unanimoully to
oppose President Nisoo's plan to revamp
federal -· aid Jl"08)'lllDS .until '1>ey get more informatioo cu tow it will af-
fect their states. .
At a breakfast meeting, t h e
Democratic state executives decided &c
-tbe p...,;-·· Plan to switch
( IN SHORT ...
1
)
many programs from direct J to IO-\
called .. ~ ..... sharing!'
·'"The Democratic governors a re
~tisfied with the kind of infonnatioo.
that bas been given us." both about JX'O-
posed budget cuts and the shape and size
or special revenue sharing, Gov. JolJo ·J.
Gilligan of Ohio told reporters. !
l • l.911elt Ai.res Leuing
DUBwf (AP) -The cooot started in
the Irish RepubJic's na~ ~ectioos t<>
day aDd first ~ indicated a strong
showing by tllne members of Prime
Minis1<r Jaclc Lynch's Cabinet despite a
small gmeral trend toward the cip.
pos;-
Justire Minister llesmoo(! O'Malley,
34-year-old attorney known fot"-ht! tough
stand against the northern gueriillas of
the Irish Republican Anny, was unof-
ficially reported to be at the top of Ille
poll in East Limerick. where eight can-
didates were fighting lor lour seats.
SEAITLE (AP) -Convicted sky·
jaclcer Frank Markoe Sibley baa be<o
sentenced to 30 years in prisoo.
Sil>ley, 44, broke down in tears alter
the smteocing Wednesday and said, "!
pray to God everybody will forgive_ ..
Sil>ley demanded 1Z mill!m ran9om
last Aug. 18 alter oommandeering a
United Air Llnes jetliner in Reao and
forcing its crew lO fly to V aocouver,
B.C .. and then to SeatUe, where the FBI
captured bim. "-
• l.eruk9 Co11.,ieUd •
•
MIAMI (APJ -A federal prooeculc<
says the convidioo of reputed un-
derworld financie r Meyer Lansky on a
contempt charge sboukl c o n v i n c e
organlled crime that the U.S. Justice
Department Strike Foree me a 111_
busines.s.
"We've been trying to get the !lleSSaie
a""5.'!.'' Asst. U.S. Atty. Dougald
Mdlillan said Wednesday after a jury
found Lansky, 71, guilty ol willlully
disobeying a subpJena to appear be.fort a
federal grand jury in ldiami in March
1171.
e Israel C....,..!Wtl
UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (APJ -By a
vote of l~l . the International Civil Avia·
lion Organizatioo bas coodemned hrael
for shooting down a Libyan airliner over
the Slllai Desert last week.
It was the most decisive roll call
against Israel ever reo:rded by an agen-
cy of the United NatiOM. Since t b e
Jewish state was born in 1949..
Israel cast tbe looe -against Ille resolution, adopted Wednesday by an
assembly of !CAO. Colomma and Malawi
abstained from voting on the measure.
OPEN
SUNDAY 12·5
the ENCINO
collection
..
·a: chrome lounge chair
in heavy lexfvred nylon,
c~oice of fabria
and'colors .•••• $169
b, 84" sofa in nylon~ chrome
frame, choice of fabrics · '
and colors. • • • . • .. . • . . $259
~ .
c. chromi lounge chair in heavy
textyred nylon, choice of
fabrics and colo".. • • . . . . $99
matching otto~n •.••.•.. $59
i t19 s.turday 11/6 sunclay 12/6
-··
. '
•
,
t
pit. fio48.5518 • tal m. 546,1262
• I ----. -
•
•
•
I
'
•
.... ,, ... ....,.. ,.
j
Socialite BoOked
In Murder Cas-e
LAFCOkays
Boundaries
For filectidn
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
Local Agency Formation Com-
mls!iion bas approved boun-
daries for an incorporation
election on .the Palos Verdes
PeninsWa.
Ciounty supervison n o w
must set an elecUon date but
cannot alter boundaries for
•
'. · the· lkquare--mile-ar~ U is
~ Oil the north by the
city ol Lomita, oo the east and
south by the city ol Los
Angeles and on the west by
the common boundary of the
AtrrBORITIES ·said t h e
body was-found in a bedroom
of the house on the 600-acre
River Valley Ranch owned by
Niven and three others. 1be
death scene is aOOut 16 miles
east of Springville.
· Palos Verdes Peninsula and
Los Angeles Unified school
dislttcts.
Und ... the package approved
by tb'e commission Wednesday
the proposed city would have a
population of about 37,000,
19,000 registered . Ooters and
more than 9,500 living units. It
would be Los Angeles County's
78th city.
Deputies said the slaying
was reported in a. telephone
call, and that the victim prob-
ably died during the three-
day period beginning Sunday.
No motive had b e e n
determined, authorities said.
·Bingo R _aids?
Police Lobbyist Strtmped
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An you're suggesting that if we
Assembly C!Ollll'llittee h a a legalize it we're going to bring
PoStpoDed legislation to in organized crime.
legalize bingo for churches Somewhere you lose me on a
and charities after a police curve," be said.
lobl>yist said It would attract Under quesUoaing f r om
crgani1.ed crime. committee members, Eustis
The legislation, authored by .• '8id be was unable to name
• -Assemblyman L eT o y F. the last time· any law en-
Greene, ({).Sacramento). forcement organization in the
would allow bingo on a local -Slate had .conducted a bingo
option. Min<n could nol rai!L
·;BiR1Farr
Suit Nixed
By Judge:
r
•
I
,,
Titutsday, March l , 1973 DAILY PIUII. -§
• •
SUPER
CHROMAC.OlOI
16~0RTABLE .
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Four members of a nomadic
clan that once followed --tJ: * *
Charles Manson have been •
Deluxe supe'r Chromacolor portable with Zenith
High-Performance Chassis. Super Video Range
.J~~. ~~!; Fine:Tu~ing ~o.l)~r:_ol._E~_sy:t~·read_
spotlite dials. Compact, Big Screen Color. \tile Bedroom ·or Den.
25" .........
ruled sane and wm be subject • Bar, M edm
to prison sentences. ju~ ::~w:':d'e!'~·~ Panel .Eyes SUPER(HmAil_ •~ #AIAR .•
Wednesday after deliberating ' !\ ....... ,~~~
less than two hours in tbe Review Bi,J, Tltln 101 Chassis--90% Sci~ Chromatic
sanity phase of a trial fur · Ono-Button Tuning witfi Sclid.state Super GoklVideo
J\enneth Como, 30; Lawrence SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ Guard Tuner, Automatic Fine-Tuning and Spotlite panels.
Bailey, 23; Mary Bruner, 29, The statewide ·Joint Bench, ..._
328 88
·· ·· -tii!fusiable7;iiiihF · · · ····· -'
swivel base optional
and Catherine "Gypsy" Share, Bar, Media Comillittee bas .1!_~111abk $_4 _9gofJl'UJ>iial 30. deci~ed ii will nol pass judg-•-_ _ .
All had · been convicted-ment on news media, bar or !£,\
earlier on charges of robbery. judldal grievances. ":!\,,: !'1':~=~::~ ..;;:e .. ~~.ri..~.:r. Sare NOW on these ra ctacular '11 buys!
store and Covina beer Marin CQunty SUperiol' ·Court · . .._
dlstri!Juting' finn, ' Judge Wilaon said at the com· ':--lm!l--------------'":"'---'"'!!~~~~~!!"!!'!"'!~~---t
The prosecution oontended ~·s annual meeting here ABC COLOR ' TwD LOCATIONS TO SERVE money and weapons taken .., qday. · • t021 Al-. St. 1'"6 Ira,••• Sh •
during the robberies was 14 be committee voled on the · """'"''" -; "' .....,,.
used 14 1ree Manaon 1rom J!8ue a11er Los Angeles at· . . :J£Lr_u ISION·· -......... , .. , "-_.
the. f de! tome Thomas R.. -Sberidin ~ S.. 10.1:30: Cto.ed s.-.., I ~..S: lf!M!•FrL ll-f prison. Bot our erl-Y Sot •. IM; ~ IJ:S
dants were later captured asked members , to consider t'2-Sl5t -tll-3J2t
participate, liquor could nol be
served .in the bingo area, and
ony proceeds would have to go
to charitable organizations.
after a gun battle with police. his complaint alJoul ,a news ~~~!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AN IDENTICAL proPosal.by The jury found the foor sane, story concmting a L.os
Greene won Assembly ap-under the McNaugblODriife 'Angeles trial The story ln-
proval last year but died in which says a person is legally eluded a bench conference
the Senate. The proposal in-sane 11 be can distinguish rigbt · belween attorneys ond a _Try Saturday's News Quiz
' !
I
{
f
f
I
GREENE'S BD..L is an ex-
lemion ol legalized gambling
that would attract-organized
crime to california, said Jolm
Eustis, lobbyist ' for t h e
California Peace 0 f f i c e r s
clud<s both a consUtutional from wrong. judge, Sheridan said. · amendmentandastatuteto-~~-=-~~~~~-'-"-"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,.-~~~L..~~~~~--~~-
Association. .
Committee chairman Leon
Ralph, D-Los Angeles,. ap-
peared angered by Eustis'
argument.
"It's going on now and
implement the amendment.
Greene displayed a sheaf of
papers before the Assembly
committee on Government
Organization Wednesday 'and
said tbey contained 1,911
places "where bingo has been
played, is being played, and if
you defeat this bill will con-
tinue to be played."
LAST 3 DAYS
SALE ENDS SAT,, MARCH 3
PRE-INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE
AT BALBOA ISLAND STORE ONLY
For Ibis special event our store hours will be
9:00 a.m, le! 5:00 p.m, We Ito~ these hours will
help the admittedly difficult parking situation
and allow you to take adyantage of a RARE , sALE AT BARRS! -
EVERYTHING IN THE-
BALBOA ISLAND STORE
1/2 .0FF
-This Is our own stock, regul•rly told In-our .. Own 1klre1.
U• Yw 11 nl-l'lilanl er M•tw a...
No a..n, Ad '"'!! ~·
' UMllllft • , • IWIOl..151.AND STOll ONLYI
• Jll MAllNI. IALIOA IUAND
C,HARLES H. B,A.RR
J ..
~--."""
-_,
•
silve1Woods 2
lets y~u ·save s5!iUlJ
on a-newq·spnng-Wardrobe !
I 1 t SUIT, 1 SPOR I COAT
+ 2 PAIRS~ SlACKS • ,
'
4-Pleces In newe8t 8Pl'lnil. styles and cokn.
Mix and match 'em for a variety of
handsome spring outfits.
Yl!Ull CllOICE If 1111'} I WOIEI! fUllCI.
Your c:holce of:
any suit at-. ·-· • 120.00
any ~rt coat at • • • • 75.00
ariy pair of stacks at •••• 25.00
'' se<;ond pair of stacks at. -~ • 25,00
0 Regular price 245.00
You save 56.10 3 All youri for189.90 • &
4 _,.,.. ....... .._
\ f'T' I CMD.llAITmlCJMMm.
• ..... CMDJIW '-
•
• 45 FASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER ~ NEWPORT BEACH -
' • -·------• --,
[
•
•
\
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
•
Is< ~veryhody . ~eady?
Orange County residenls must have been somew~at
bemused last week when a colorful, !&-page slick t.b-
loid tilled "Community Emer~ Plan" landed in the
mailbox ol oome 475,000 hoU$OliO!ils.
like an echo from I.be pa!lt, I.be booklet advises dti·
WIS what I.bey should do in ttiMo resultinf from eattll·
quakes, fire. flood,· air pollution or nudear aUack.
Public falloot shelters in ·eac1i oommunity are listed
by poota! zip q(lde and -•ral pages are devoted w in·
strootions on improvising home shelters. Basements are
line, says I.be bookie~ but you can make do by getting
into the vegetable cellar lin Orange Coonty?), crawling
under at least. 10 bales of bay. or heading out to sea
in )'Our boat (much more appropriate), to a distance of
200 feet o!!sbore in at 'le.a 5 (!) !eet of water.
RA!sidenls of several oounty :zip code areas are ad·
vised that their ottlcial public shelters are McDonald's
hamburger stands. This is no jolte, say officials of the
Office o! Emergency Services, which produced I.be book·
let ·
The hamburger chain builds all !ls food stanas with
basements, certified as safe shelters by survey teams
of the 11th Naval District, San Qiego, which rules on
such matten. .
Some zip code a.Teas seem to have a plethora of
shelter flaclliliM. Irvine. for example, has just about all
the buildings on the UC Irvine campus. Newport Beach
-resldents·can ·ehooae bei......,.. the Balboa Bay Club or the
Stu1't Shirt Restaurant, or any of sevel)ll Fashion Island
buildings. Coota Mesans, on the ot.ber hand, have but
two hamburgel"' Stands to shelter them in the event of
nuclear attack, while· San Clementeans are adviSed to
head for I.be sewage treatment plant.
Last year about 12 <OUD!ies, including Orange. were
surveyed at a stated <1lSI of '77 .000, of wblcll '5(),000
went for I.be widely distributed Orange County booklet.
The figure• ..... low !or such a large malling. RMllzinF. that popular panic over nuclear atladt
probably isn t what It used to be, producers of the Call·
fomla booklets were given permission to 1nclude a large
section. ooverlng earthquakes and ot.ber moce lmmed·
iAte diSastera..
The Oxnard earthquake, which sbook I.be 5outh-
Jand right after the booklets were handed out, appar·
enUy was ooincidental.
Whatever the intended validity of the publication
may have been, it very likely found ils way into I.be
wastebasket shortly alter its anival.
Economy Hits Home
Presidential impounding of funds appropriated by
Congress for health and education will have a direct im-
r.act on Orange County, according to UC Irvine Chancel·
ed Daniel G. Aldrich.
A budget cut from $750,000 to $4-0,000 will virtu·
ally end the county's Regional Medical Programs which
provide continuing education for doctors, says Aldrich.
Likely to be terminated are a new program to co-
ordinate cancer radiation techniques; a' pro~a.Dl··to train
volunteers to help rehabilitate stroke victims; and the
Orange County Medical Center's neonatal ambulance
and .intensive care unit for infants born with health de-
feels.
The OES in Sacramento explains that the Com·
munity Emergency Plan Program, funded by the federal
Department of Defense, has been under way since 1966 ·
and just now is winding up. wit.b Orange County .among
the last coonties in the state to r~ve Its instructions.
The local RMP, based at Irvine, has served all of
Orange County Wld parts of Los Angeles County. Un·
less money can be found to replace the federal fund
c11tbacks, this major medical fonvard step apparently
will come to an abrupt halt as the adminM:ration's econ·
omy wave reaches down to the local level.
'Gee, fella, you're in such rotten shape I
suggest you quit work.'
•
Travel Plan For Statistics
Shake Myths
Of Welfare
_) Many Initiatives Open to Nixon
Presidential Independence
Lo,yal Americans
Mr. Nixon has once again devalued the
dollar in order qnce again to discourage
otherwisttloyal Americans from buying
imported cars or traveling aboard. Once
again it won't work.
The trouble ii that slatut -oonscious
Americans -from the Volkswagen
)\<'ocilen-tweeter set .
"' the middlo-qod
poppinjaya Ill their ,.
Tttumph . siap -wouldn't -~ c!'*l>I ~ deedlna~ln :
anything but an Im· A. ""111111
""'in~ 0
:\ ... ;.ung -~ \
abroad hasn't yet
discouraged Americans from traveling
abroad, nothing wUL
TIIE ONLY thing that's gong to wort
Is my Uncle Manny's plan.
';'The fint thing we got to do," says
Uncle Manny, "is start building imported
cars in Detroit. God forbid we shouldn't
provide more jobs for American working
men."
When it comes to the more di£fioilt
problem of travel abroad. Uncle Manny
raises a triumphant finger heavenward :
"Walt Disney, may be rest in peace,
showed the way!"
TUE HEART of Uncle Manny's plan Is
the construction arowid the country of
variou9' Francelands, JtaJylands, Mex·
icolands (where you can't drink the
water and so fcrth).
(. ART HOPPE )-
houri out to sea (selling watches ahead
or back) and then five hours back to land
(setting waldles back or ahead).
nos JNSVRE., that the tourist ar-
rives in Burbank's Franceland properly
sleepless, agitated and not knowing what
Ume it ill: . . "
lie iS •met · there by the irritable
cu..toms Guards who demand to paw
throogl> every ooe of his hags. That's
when hesoores his first triumph. For the
rur line's lost bis bags.
A surly cab driver then drives him to
the ·wrong hotel, which is all right
because the right one's lost bis reserva~
tions anyway. The haughty concierge
then changes each of his dollar! into 75
cents, so that he may ask what prices
are worth "in real money" -which,
these days is tbe mark or the yen.
The hotel bas only sixth · floor rooms,
becallSe the elevator doesn't work. but
offers telephones and private baths,
which don't work eithe r.
AFTER TWQ weeks of walking round
downtown Burbank, while being cheated,
insulted, and pulled this way and that by
incomprehensible guides, he boards his
plane at 4:45 a.m. for tbe IO.hour flight
back to Los Angeles -loaded dow n with
expensive junk for relatives who had the
good sense to stay home.
After a month, bis health and sanity
return. And after a couple of years, he's
out of OOck again. And America hasn't
lost a nickel!
Let's agree that the whole welfare
system is . a mess -that it's cum·
bersome, expensive, and ineffectual -
and that something better must be found.
But, having said that,. let's not repeat the
dreary 'old myths about the people on
welfare themselves.
Matter of fact, not
many people know
that the Nixon ad-
ministration itself
distributed a pam-
phlet last year to
100,000 seJecled cit-
i1.ens called "Wei·
rareMyths &
Facts," in which •
most of our conversational stereotypes
were demolished by statistical accuracy.
WASHING TON -In the first month or
President Nixon's second temi be ended
the Vietnam war, opened dfplomatlc
relaUons with China and reordered lm-
p.m.anl sectors of the naUQna1 economy.
This evenUuJ month witnessed the
return of prisoners of war, a stop sign on
federal spending, a
withdrawal f r o m
unsuccessful social
and economic p~
grams, and a reor-
ganization ol lhe Ex·
ecutive Department
and the Ca~inet.
Such event<rOWd-
ed · months are rare
and this one was no-
thing short of amazing for ill scope and
depth. This period, in fact, Is equal lo
Ni.Ion's usual hyperbole and it will be
atypica1 i! be doe& not seize an opportun-
ity to define his new beginnina: in the
·grandiose tenns it probabfy df.Strves.
MOST aoo-welfare Americans seem to
believe ttiat wellare families would only
use additiOOal cash assistance to buy
"more bocrre and bigger cars." Not true, h · IF IT IS NOT the "new American discloses this careful survey from t e revolution" he onee talked about, jt is at
~ r least an advancing action along a. wide
_ _front which has bewildered his o~ SYDNEYJ ~ position. !n most or these undertakings • Nixon cannot lose, certainly not in ending
~ the Wat, bringing prisoners home and "----------~ establishing a diplomatic relaU~p
Dept. !?r Heallh, Education an,sfWelfare. with China. _
\V e also prefer to think that: Nor can Coogreu make. him spend
-Most welfare children are ii· mmey ii he does not wish to do so or
legitimate; prevent him.from reorganizing ~t of ex·
-The welfare rolls are filled with able-lStence SOCJal programs which lack·
bodied loafers; general public support, as so many of
-People on weHare are cheats; them do. Much less can Nilon be
-Most welfare families are black. prevented from juggling the economy as
None 9f these mythi is even close to he sees fit. He cannot even be prevented
the truth. While the report does not at-from goJng ,ahead with ~ kind of aid
tempt to justify the shortcomings of the to North Vie~ even , if congressional
welfare system1 it does effectively refute authorilation is lacking, as m~ as ·the
these and other ~oceptions about the very thought of bis doing this enrages
poor.
(rucHARD WILSON)
some of the Republican liberals.
THE REALITY is that a framework
has been created during the past quarter
of a century in which a president can
operate in large ·affairs with many
billions of resources pretty much as he
pleases. Of cOurse there are JTlaDY im·
portant restraints upon him. But in any
given set of circumstances he usually has
such a variety of options that he can ac-
complish most of what be would
reasonably wish to do.
President Nixon has entered into a
peace treaty, without Senate r~tificatlon,
ending a war which was never declared.
Secretary of State Rogers blandly ex-
plained to the Senate Foreign Relations
Conunittee that it was deemed unwise to
submit the treaty to the· Senate to avoid
spelling out many of the terms which
should remain ambiguous.
This explanation waS readily accepted
aJKI. nothing could be more symbolic of
the immense powers which now reside in
the presidency and the relative com·
plaisance with which this fact is
recognired.
TALK ABOUT bridling the President
is mostly wind and responsible leaders in
Congress know they cannot effectively do
so. They can suffocate new legislative in-
itiatives, but this is not of. great
significance because Nixon's "plate is
full," as he so often says, of initiatives he
can undertake himself.
Perhaps Nixon is thankfu1 now, in the
light of the last election, that his own
welfare reform did not get by Congress.
At least, the Presiden~ did not renew his
plea for what he once considered to be
the keystone or his domestic program.
The search for reasons why Nixon can
act so independently of convention.ally
liberal standards docs not lead far. At
least a part of the ansY"er can be found
in what Americans think about
tbernselves. 1
A current Gallup poll shows that a
mere 23 percent of the population con-
siders itself fairly liberal or very liberal,
which is a decline of about 3 percent
from 1971. The vast majority swings to '"~
the other sid~ of the s~trum from mid-l
dle-of·the·road to very conservative, with 1
the coose rvatives outnumbering the mid-
dle-of-the-roaders by 10 percent and
gaining.
OVERALL, Nixon's independent ac-l
tions must be considered in step with {
moderate and conservative opinion and •
this is at the base of his political ~
strepgth, a fact which exasperates and 1'
perplexes the liberal community and con-
tradicts the public attitude it creates in ;
. the capital.
i
This obviously delights the President \
and he m~kes no pretense of hiding it. )
but rubs it in a little bit as when he told ~
newsmen he knew it gagged some of ;
them to quote his phrase "peace 'wjUt i
honor." Torrents or criticism for being a ~
recluse Wash off his back as he emerges
as a chatty president going to the ~
theater, dining out, attending banquets ~
and making his own brand -0f witty J
remar~ even though his sallies may not o;
be considered uP to the Kennedy or Kiss--,l_ inger standards.
, The second month of the seeond lenn )
1s oow under way and it cannor be ex-~
peeled to duplicate 'the first month. Nor d
bas what was begun in the first month !
1
•
yet been proved out. But it is a change ~
and som~thilig new and it may prove to
be very important.
I
With the rooperation of the air lines,
Uncle Manny will offer 23 different fare
structures depending on length of stay,
departure date, Jett -handedness and eye
color. This gives the tourist«>metbing to
occupy his mind during the idle months
before he takes off.
The fare, however, is always $$43.12
between any two points, such as Los
Angeles and Franceland in downtown
Burbank . This is because the planes,
Y•hich deparl only at 12:33 a.m., fly five
.. Al last," says Uncle J\.Janny, happily
waving his cigar. "we'll break up this in-
ternaUOnal monopoly."
What monopoly?
"The monopoly," says Uncle Manny,
''these foreigners got off being the only
ooes to offer us Americans the joys of
travet4 abroad."
WHAT THE survey shows, for in-
stance, is that some half oC wel!are
mothers would (by necessity) spend ex·
lra money primarily for food , and
ano.tber fourth on clothing and shoes for
their children.
The Mail Service Furore I
Postal service is a giant operation and i
needs executives of that caliber. Jn my J judgme~~ it doesn't have them. 11utt's
what this investigation is all abou~ We ~
wan,t to find out what's wrong iind why. ~
We are not out to create problems · my '
emphatic intent is to find answers t~ lhe t-
problems that exist." ;
That, of the more than . 7 million
children in weJfare families. well over
two-thirds were lx>m in wedJock.
!RS 'Quotns' Charged
That fr;1ud occurs in less than half of
one percent of the nation's total welfare
case load-can the affluent say as much
about their income tax returns, either in-
dividually or corporatt:ly?
WASHINGTON ...: If you are irate
about the malls (and who Isn't!), the im·
pending Senate Investigation of the
Poslal Service will bring no comfort.
Two palnlully unpalatsble realities ""' certain to surface:
(I) Flrat-clus po11lap
creased -despite
' wlU be ·In· when prior to the postal cxirporation
takeover, only six supervisors were mak·
Ing that kind of salary. 1i)e decline of the
service is obvious, but it's not the
employees' fault. 1be fault rests at the
top."
WAS~llNGTON -Senator Joseph Mon-
toya , D-N.M .. is investigating complainu
from taxpayers \\'ho claim · they have
bern hounded. bullie<I and browbeaten by
h1x collectors whose methods would put a
10110 sMrk to shame.
r..Jany a ,~·1do"'·s IRsl mite has beE>.n
snatched from her by an overeager In·
ternal Jtevenue Service. Men have been
stripped ol. their livelihoOd and. along
with it their only means of paying the
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
~ the "Let 'Em Eal
0....0" edllbrlal Web. 2&) -...
In home food """'1mpllon coots
were said to be up a whopping 2.l
percent while restaurant !Oocl .,...
sumption COfrtR are up only 0.1 per-
cent. How dare yoo give my wife
more ammunition for the "can't
we go out In dinner lnoight" bottle.
-.I.RC. ..,... ........... ,....... .........
~., --., .... ==•• ..... ...................... 0.., ....
'
That fewer than one percent of weUare
recipients are able-bodied unemployed
males.
AND, most surprisingly, that the
largest racial group among weUare
families is white, not black. (lt is maln.ly
..(]le cfen.1ity or population in the black
governmt'lll ghettos that makes It seem otherwise.)
Montoya will t testimony that For 3 n..ition to denigrate its own poor
agents are trained to presume the tax· Is as revolting as a bird fOottng Us own
payer bas cheated ; that they are en· Dest. And to still believe, in \bis day and
couraged to claim the taxpayer owes too age. that the poor remain that way
much rather than too liltle; that two out because they choose to be, or because
· of every three dollars in IRS auditors' they lack the talents and initiative of the
cl.aims tum out to be blllCless ; that a more advantagtd, is to add moral
those 500~ ...
surances that s not
contemplal<:d. Thore
is a lot more wishful
thinking than sub-. •lance behind that
sweet talk. "'
(2) Improvement
In the postal .. rvtce
Is not In the lmmedl·
ate offing. Numerous plam, Innovations,
mechanlutioni, etc., etc., are In the
worb. But Ibey will like time and mon-
~ - a lot ol both, , wblcb Is why a hike
In rales is definitely In the can!s. taxpayer's appeal varies according to obscenity to 1.ntellectUaJ hypocrisy.
where be lives and how much money is N"ot until wt understand our poor, and YOU WIU. also hear a Jot during the
involved ; lhal wealthy taxpayorS don't why Ibey stay that ,..y. can we gen-probe about high po11lll salaries. It's
appear to reuive: as close scrutiny as do u.inely JD" them, And not until we are 1 I t ~ lax .. •m·. and ""I people ol ~ qu te a P um m . .-... ~ u:w willi(lg to know them -which me.ans or I 43 · id promlnftlce or polillcal pull ..-e given discarding 'our ...,,fortabl• myths _ can 159 lop execut ves, are pa
sp<clal tttatment. _ . "" begin to ~d them. between $16,000 and 1611.000 a Y•I< Thero will also be testi-y Iba! the -(Postmlttu General E.T. Klassen gets
IRS oeu a .. quota ta'llel or plan" ror Ibo '80,000), IDd Ill -$30,000 and
squeezing money out of tarpayers who ~--B11 George ---. f411,1IOO; or that IVOUJ>, st draw be&W«D
8re selected for audit. Last year'~ $35,000 and $40,000.
figu,... il will be alleged. called for Dear t:eor1e: coul Tbeno bas been niuCh bipartisan cm-
audlrora to bring in S68 to S'll for each I've been readtrfg your nm gresalooal sputtering abolJl t be se
audited Individual making 110,000 or Jes.~. for several weeb'811d I'm not sure alratofpberfc wage scales. Illustrative o(
$926 for .individuals in tht SIO,fMX> to what you're driving at. lhls seething indignaUoo are the folio•
$30,000 Income bracket and 11.000 ror T.O. Ing:
amAll bus-. In lhe 111111.000 to De~,Ti?you·' find out, let me lmow. liej). EJ....ct RUHi, R.·Ilid., member ol
REP. Uonel Van Deerlln. 0.Calif.:
"The Postal service is top-heavy wlth
hJgh-pajd brass. It is not the lean, trim
1 org8.nitatlon that was expected following
the widely .. heralded switch to private
management. If hiring all these officials
(more than 1,tw:J<r of lhem making more
lhan $1.5,000 a year) were producing Im·
provement ln servke, t would tend to be
for It. But larnentaDly, the opposite Is
true. Now you . have to wait ,until next
week for the letter that once would have
been delivered lbe next day."
Sen Gale 'McGee, O.Wyo., chairman or
the Post Office Committee, who l11unched
the lnveatlgalldn, doesn't see ft that way;
the numerous , high salaries don't
particularly disturb blm.
Says McGee: "Yoo've jot to tJl1JI good moner. to -gt! flrst-dasl pe~I. The
lroub e with the Pottal Servloe: Ii not
that a Dtlmber o[ .....,uveo are ID the
high-salary bracl<e~ -bur lhat the ...
-aren't really top.oolch. They are largely dia:ank from privato In·
duslry who have 1'lnded "!' !be pqelal
pa,yn>ll and don' me\ 111 llt<dl.
'250,llllll range. • ' the 'fOll Office Commlt!M: "We ano Tu _., •Ill be quoted as boaltlng I've been w~~f. 11 !or .. veral paylJlg more llJld &ett!ntl lea I want to "MY OOMPl.AINT • 11 DOI · Ill.It OW ~ cu !ind "'"'°" In .11.t peroent of yeant, and 11 """es me more than tmow wey ...,. lllO pmlAI "'POMIOn Setvlo! la paying high salaries, but that
Ill la1.ntums U ,..._,... 1o,n_ -• ,.;-:.1.,.' ___ you_._..;···:_ ____ _,,, are gelling l!IOte lhan $111,000 pa. year~_lhe ellOllflleurtn'l l!!D!Al! tmll. T!ll!
McGee shoul dn 't have any trouble un-I
covering one major problem. All h~ ~s !'
to do ia ask the' man slated to be the fi(st
wilneSSt-Postmaster General Klassen. I
. At a conference of 85 district managifS
(lll the $30,000 to 139.000 pay .range) In I
Washington early this month, Klassen I
frankly admitted, "Mail service has slip-
ped in recent weeks.''
Qne thing Is sure: He can't be ac~ t of ext\ggeraling.
r----:----L,f'
ORANG I COAST
DAILY PILOT
I
j
/
•
T
LOS
1'h~ J
Paper
decide
Jeslj
and
whet~
Hanoi.
lnro
hope ,
terly
power
Adm.
Wedn
LaR
Jitnes
or
An tho
charg
·and
TC>
dealt
porta
ty ..:.
plona
ecuti
gener
In
with
Rocq
after
seven
plann • w
feder
diet
and o
of nu
the F
conce
bom
Tho
were
false
mort
cllig
bu yin
torne
Tra
Robe
with
decei
mosl
•
Testimong • . •
Pentagon Papers
Kill.er,
E_apist
To Die Useless-Admiral
LOS°);NGELES !UPI) -
Th~ , j""Y in the Pentagon
Papers trial will have to
decide between the conO.lct in
lestlmoay of Anny generals
and a Navy admlral on
whetlier the papers helped
Hanoi.
Infonnation in them "was
hope~y out of date and ut-
terly wi:eless to a forelgh
power in 1969," relired Rear
were sold -'° he coulcl get
. mpre fiBanclal backing on
another tract.
e Aetlt!ist Reid~
SAN DIEGO (AP)
Antiwar activist P e t e r
Bohmer, a former San Diego
state Univ.,..uy teacher, an<i
six other per:som were ar-
rested W-y for In-
vestigation of possessing
marijuana, police ~id.
Officers said a plastic bag
BOSTON (UPI) -• A -
teenager convicted ot raping
and murdering a 57-year..old
woman ln 19'12 WaS senteliced
Wednesday to die in the elec-
lric chair.
believed to contain marijuana ( J waJ found oo a table. in a BRIEFS beach house by two deputy marshals about 7::.J a.m. The
'----------'""-marshals had come to the
Adm. Gene LaRocque testified
\Vednesday.
LaRocque is the first
yitness called in the defense
or Daniel Ellsberg a n.,t
Anthony Russo, who have blen
charged with espionage, theft
·and conspiracy.
To· sh6w t'h'at-..tbe papers
dealt with Information im-
portant to the national securi-
ty .....:. a key element in the es-
pionage charge t h e p~
ecution c a 11 e d two Anny
generals as expert witnesses.
In reply, the defense opened
with the testimooy ol i....
Rocque, who retired last year
alter 31 iyears in the Navy,
seven of them as a strategic
planner in the Pentagon.
e Brokers Held
LOS ANGEL~S (AP) -A
federal grand jury has in-
dicted 13 real estate brokers
and one developer on charges
ol filing fraudulent claims with
the Federal Housing Authority
concerning a tract of new
homes in Omar<!.
Those charged Wednesday
were accused or turning in
false forms to the FHA to get
mortgage insurance and fman-
cing on propertles they were
buying iUegally, the U.S. at-
torney's office said.
Tract developer A I v i n
Robert Stitch was charged
with filing t~uments to
deceive the FFfA into believing
most of the homes in a tract
hoUse to serve a Warrant on a
man accused of letting his.dog
run free without a leash,
police said.
Bohmer, 28, is on three
years' probation after being
conVicted of obstructing
railroad tracks during an an-
tiwar demonstration. He lost
Ills job as an assistant
e<XlllOIDlc9 professor last year
after taking part Jn other
<!eniolstratloll!.
eSt•rkbt
eAetorDles
HOLLYWOOD (UP!Y
Character actor Cecil
Kellaway, long know for his
Irish and British roles, died
Wednesday at a conval~ent
home following a !en~ ill-
ness. He was az.
Kellaway was nominated for
an Academy Award in 1949 for
his leprechaun role in "Luck
of the Irish." One of his most
recent films was "Guess
Who's Coming to1Dinner.''
"THE U.S. Sup!'eme Court
decision June 2. 1m, on the
constitutionality of Lhe death
penalty contains e x p 1 i c i t
language in the apinions of
three of five justices com-
prising the majority that in·
dicates that these justices
were addressing themselves
only to statutes that give the
jury or the judge discretion as
to whether the death penalty
should or shook! not be im-
posed," he said.
. Spring J)ecoraling Valued
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scrubbable, fade-resistant Tools clean
up easily in w1nn soapy water. White,
16 ready-mixed colors and 32 speciaJ.
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We Ar• Yovr
Locel True V•lue
Merchant With
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9 A.M.-9 P .M.
SATURDAY
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'-----+•
2 &111$8' 11r -.
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AmlZlnr wasllability. aood
hldlne-rt One i:oat usually covtrs most porous: surlaces.
Tools clean .., In '"'PY water.
Clloose whits, pntty pasllls.
••
I
---· ._.:.. •
Expert.s Identify
Bormann Skeleton
BERLIN (UPI) -Author-
-Illes said Wednesday they
have identified "beyond the
shadO'W ol a doubt" a skeleton
dug out of Lhe Wocld War lI
rubble of Berlin as that of
Adolf HJUer's missing deputy,
Martin Bormann .
stitute that there was no doobi
al the ldeoUty.
But he said Bormann would
be lle<:lared legally dead ooly
alter the last bit of evidence
had be«> '"bmitted.
"Everything points to the
fact that the skeletoo found ln
Berlin Dee. 8 is that of Hit-
ler's deputy." Metzner said.
Tho medical report sent to
Metzner from Berlin said Bor-
mann was tdentlfled through
the skeleton's teeth, measure-
ments, skull shape and a
m"ended collar bone.
THE SKELETON'S teeth
were like those in a sketch of
Bormann made from memory
after the war .by Bormann's
•
DAILY Pli.aT 1
~=====· •
JUST SAY
It''
"Brt' bl• ---
llMlnol!lijii-
B.D. HOWES and SON
PINI JEW&LEH roa. ntllE& GUIWTIONI
MU VIA UDO
KEWPOln' llUl:ll • mml
dentist. The report said Bor-•MQEJ.~ PASADEMA SANTA BARBARA mann broke his right collar LOS ,.,.., '"'"" •
bone when he fell from a ho~rs~e~~~~PHO~~EN~l~X~·~SCO~TTS~~DALE~~~·~~HONOLU~~i~~U~~~ in 1939 and that the skeleton
had such a mended break.
'·
Ma~y Imports that come to Amerfoa c/o Dodge. .
come with one very real problem: how to The COit It tJOld and aerv1ced and
provide parts and service on a nationwide backed to the hilt by a netwo'rk ol Dodge
basis. . --Colt Des/era that stretches from one side
. Put another way, once the car gets of the U.S. to tha other.
here. who's going to take care of 117 Which ~ans that though the Colt
'Til now, Japanese Imports have may be built dVer 5,000 mlles away, It'll
pretty much had to rely on the de&ler-be cared for by a man who's right around
ehips they themselves set up In the U.S. the corner.
But now comes an Import with a dit-And speaking of being built, wait'll
ferent way of doing things. An import you see what Colt comn with as atan-
that cornea from Japan ... to America... dard equipment. .•
•
'
e FrontdllObrlkH
0 ~
CHRVBl.Elt ---
e RoctlnlngbuctlotHltl(OXcopl .. Ollllpl) • o.-d .... -ong1,,.
• Four·ill)Md tr1nsmlulon(w11hlnkft'• the-lntho lndullry)
eHlddtnrodloontlmll
e Euy.lo-car•f«vlnyt upholltlry
• Pluta lot of othtrthl"Q9 you'dexplCI
on111ntecar. ~
Cott •.• from Japan to ~
America ... c/o Dodge. Dr: ~ DIG II!
W*'* -.
r
SEE YOUR DEPENDABLE DODGE DEALERS
--~-;-..
•
\
•
"
..
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•
•
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1
-
•
• i•
~:: . " !:, • •• + . • • •• .. •
·! ..
l ~)
~;
·~ ~: 'tt· ~:~ f!. lit!•·
I
•
·~ :z. . ' .
~ • •
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• 11 DAILY PILOT Th""'1J. Mri 1, 197>
.State's No-fault ·Insurance Looks Pro~ising Fai t, Thoro..i ql.i , Cu1•ro'1,Ct'd
Real Estate
!it•'f•\ and Of 8rolrr:t-· L•<t.''1\•·
,
t. ~ ~ ·-'
Ctpll<ll --tlon Of CtUlornla T r I a t Auemblyman John Knox
SACRAMEN1'0' _ 'J'be .!II>" '1.itrytrt A.-lallon Pr.aldent iD-Ricilmon!fJ, who voted
fauK loourlnce juggem1lll'"ll Herb lf/'lll. againll Ibo blll, allo q..,.
rolling again (Iller being sloJ>-tiooed Ibo """'1tullonalllY ·of
ped In lbe Senale last ...,loo) HE IN8IST8 the rale redtic-the rale r;<iuctlon ~·
and 11 headed «or t b e tion man d a t e is un-F~ Aslen!blyman
Assembly Door, where victory COOltitullonal laying "You Michael AntonOviClt' ( R.
isprobable,attbougbsomeno-can~t ltttslate decr'ea1e1 Colorado}, had illl bap(lsm ol
-fault troopo~ lo be _wl=olboo==:ul;beEvl:O~E!!P!:. :_· "---=-=fire:::..::•::.t :c'thil:'' c'.lirli~~-~~·:_! ::the:
deserting the cause .
Aasem~ Jack Fenton'• QUEENIE
1973 no-fault vehicle is AB 50. r-:::::-.... T-:::-::::~~-B:;y!..:.P.:.hi;:il~ln::,t:.er:.:l:::a:,:nd:::1~·
•
<omm!U... lie :tried lo let
throuah an amerxtmeot tfiat wou14 make lhe ettire no'lault meuur• jlwl)!d • U lhe rale _. ........ ..._ .... found un-;,\~ ..
' -
TRAINING
Plione for Free I older
..
R'f1aul or penNIDll!nt'-will be p'l)'ing from a to to ioSUrance commissioner, a190
r.W.. 11,. AB'IO "II'" ...,. percent ..,.. r..-. tulo in-testified In !"pport of IW bill 1 "°"" SCHOOLS
Jorrelonnofourl!riotlngaulo ~•urance next year un1 ... rV> and pqmriied t~.., co , "-' ~ system/' --which be fault is enacted. misslonei--'.i Office wotJld ha~ MAUOI CINTll
Call:l ''tmibly inelflcieftt.!l He ~ no problem enforcing Uwtrate c:: :=:-'c~;;,,
.primlleB Ibo b111 'Will uoure THE NO-FAULT batUe lines reductioo provisions with ,llit ~ t1141 t7t·2lll
100' pt*9t ~ for•in-were pretty wdl defined Jut existing stall ,~,;.,, ,: 1no1111um ''·
ONLv•·10 ,ttE Republican.. IUl"ed Jo auto ac cj. &t:'D t 1, year. and 1!!.,P!Opooents. and · .. • ...... 11t1m. c.L ,... ~JI ~~.\Y~ Maoilattan reprdlcn ofi111io W. al fiull; -nents were l>ack agam at REPJlESl!:NTATIVES of \h• : : . "'· 11141 776·1100 ~" •N ~ DemoCrats, tliOr~le!l-wtll· "the 11<artng;--~ ~ ~ Association-"'ol-.ll.•1 e n.s.e '!! ! . _
Comn)itµ!e Chairman Wadie be petJaii~ jJ they don'fpay Amoog tli06elospeak inSUJ>-Counsels o! Soulhem and
Oeddeh ot Cliuja Visla, Bob up .wllhln 311 .days of pi:oof of port of the bill was John T. Norlliem California . a I 5 0 Sunda'' i's
Wilson of San Diego and John dall)ages: that crowded court Kehoe, director of the Depart· voices support of the Fenton · ;'
Francis ~ of San Fran-calendan will be relieved and ment of Consumer Affairs, bill, as did represe~tatives or rlltllnA'"f Apparently convinced it la
what the.voters ~ant, 13 or the
( NEJJ"S .ANALYSIS~
ci.sCo, supported Ant.onovlcb's that inefficlencle;s in handling who called on all parties to the Northern C a 11 for n l a Ult
move. The other eight amaller_ clalma will be "get it all together this year" Automobile Asslr.::iation and .I! __ _
members present voted to re-1-~r~eli~'ev<d~.~~~~.,!!.~_'.a~nd~pu;:_t ~oo~t~a~n<>:la~ul;t~'bl~U~.~Jthe~~A~ulo~mob~~ile~Assoc~=is:t:ion:!J~:'.:::'.:~i;n~the~l~11~41~d~ij~l!~1\~IJ· jeet the amendment. Fenton predicts the pubLic Larry Baker, chief deputy of Southern California.
11 the Fenlon bill ls enacted, v .
19-member Assembly Finance
a. n d Insurance COmmlt~ ·
vot~ approva~ sending the a..
bill to tbe Auembly Door. , '
THIS YEAR'S Fenton~Song
Motor Vehicle Reparitlons
Act sp:irtf some acceuorjea
not; offered' ~In lest · year'e
moilel. .N•w P<OYislons wllUld
make It iJJeaa! for an.aulo.Jn.-surance compan'y to refuse to
.issue OJ;' renew a pot~
because> of "" ..... martial stahu, race or occupation. ..
And, In an atlempl to,lna!U.'e
lower insurance rates. F. lidded a profision that wiiiild
~ insurance compaJiles to
rOdUce l'\llel·bY 12 perCent Ille
fll:ot year #IA!r· 'JIOofault la l;.i3~-J~&:::::l enacted. The reductlcio would be baae4, Oii rales in effect In ;,io,..;....;...-..;..,_..;...;....;;;~;;:;:,;;;;.a
·December, 1m. ~ ''Pure phoney," is lhe ,...,. "'Our office .la•definitely bugged-flu-bugged."
It will mean eyery'bod.y who
~s auto insu?ance will be
bUylng n o -f a u I t insurance.
'lbere's no waiver. lt is man-
datory.
Fenton says Ali 50 would
establish a "partial" no-fault
lnsuranee system. Under it.
the acqdent. victim would
receive·u~.ooo t_rom. his
insurance c·o m pa n y for
medical eXpenses, "kiss of
wages up to $750 a month, and
loss of services up to $15 a
day. After payment of the
$5',000, 100 percent of medical
expenses would be paid up to
$50,000.
IN EXCHANGE !or these
benefits, lnsured motorists
would relinquish· their right to
sue to recover damages for
pain and suffering· unless their
medical expenses exceeded
$1,000 or their injuries are
~111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
I FAMOUS MAKERS I
! WAREHOUSE SALE f · ----§ 10,000 DOUBLE KNIT SUITS AND SPORT § ··
~ COATS! We've done it again! The nations third
: larg!l~t ma.nlifacturer of quality mens clothing
§ ~~S _Q"gal~ s'l!lected our stores for this very
:: ,important . evenf. liere's brand, new fashion
~ styling for you, AND unpr~i!dented savings.
--
:: Just ask any;of our customers! -· .. ---~ ::: ,, ' -. ----·--
------· --
----------------
DOUBLE.KNIT
· DOUB.LE KNIT .
.. .
Famous Maker . .
Factory rresh
· Vast Selection
.PRICE
Special Credit Accounts available
or BankAmericar.d & Master Charge
575 Coats ........... 37.50
580 Coats ........... 40:00
585 Coats ........... 42.50 .
s95 Coats ..... ; ... :. 47.50
sgo Suits ............ 45:00
5100 Suits ............ 50.00 ------5125.Suits ............ 62.50 -------
l
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----,;.., ~ .
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------·OELSCHER'S~. -----' ---;: You're th1s clo'* to being much bltttr.dressed it half the price! -----------
COSTA MlSA
.1.JJ3 81'1stol St.
$OUfh Coest Ptara
(71•1 s.:M9<IO
ANAHEIM
W North Loara
An1helm Cenltr
t7l4l nU2P1
ORANGE
210.t N. Orange Mell
Mall Of Orange_
fn4) 998-2261 ,
'
HUNTINGTON BEACH
n Htsntington Center
B.each & EdlDger
• (71•) 892®4
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--------------------------------------------------------------· -------------------------------------------=
= -----::: -=· .tOS ANGlLES PASADENA ALHAMBRA ,. GLENDALE RIVERSIDE :! ~1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 •• :~· !lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJliii
)
4
Bike sale1 ~· ""' ,..._ .
Hurry -in · and
wheel -out . big savings!
3 days only!
-sate-6998
Re9. 79.98
Men's Deluxe 27" 1().
speed racer. Center-pull
h~dbrakes front ii.nd rear.
'Th&top of the line.
"
\
Sale 49°8
Reg. 55.08
A. wome_n·s 26". 3-speed TOuring bicycle,
Ltghtwe1ght, with ha'rtdQrakes lor frOQt
and rear. '
Girl's 24" coaslar Reg.~4.98 Sale 35.91 •
.• ,,
Sale 5998 .
Reg. 69.98
•
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<?'Jr wo.men's 26" 5-speed Touring
hgh~we1ght, wilh white walls, luggage
earner and handbrakes lront and rear.
Sale 49°~
Reg..55.08 -,-
A 3-speed To~ring bicycle from our
lightweight line, the 26" men's model.
Handbrakes front & rear.
Men'.'26· 5 speed Rog. 69.98 Sale 59.98
' . . ' . Sale 4488
Reg. 54.88. Women's 2s-1~Speed Alicer. Has sid&-
pull caliper brakes, rat ·
trap pedals, alid many
other s leek and stylish
racing features.
•
"
Sale4488 .
Flog. 54.811; ~··· 26" 1 o-so...i _.IM Racer. S1cf9:-pull caliper braw.
. rat. rrap pedals, and many ea.
Other plolessional·slyle racinn .features. ··-.
~CPennev .
We ~!lW what you're ~Ing tor,·
• -. Shop S~nday noon to S.~,M. at tbe following stores:
• •
•
FASHION ISLAND, .~wport BHch 17141 6#-231).
HUNTINST~ .CENTER, 'Hunti119ton S..ch (7141" 8'12·7771.
,,
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r
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~-----t i I ----,------; ) ,
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'BRIGHT ' . · Wf!l'TE ; .;.-•• ,v •....
: CQL'ORS .
. "
COMP.
RET·~IL
.r!' ~ '
·GAL,
AiiitfiiRS '
~ ,llMl20lnl. UIUVB, . •
etfAND'SA:NDEli •READY TO PAINT OR $JAIN
~ ' • L • e-ADOl~ONA.L SIZES AVAlLADLE
. ·ouR.PlllCi: 7•20!~ ).09 • $<291N... f.t!I '
&%?< 131~ • 59c 7>24 IN.'• 1.35 8>32 IN .--1.99-COMP' RETAlt 7x261N. 1.45 S.361N. 2.32 ;,.... • EA. 7>291N. < 1.61 !lt2QIN. .1.45
-?!<3~1N: 1.79 9,24 IN':'~ 1.69
7.-36 IN. 1.99 ~1126 IN. 1.85 1
··-
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EYERYTHINB ALWAYS SOLD WITH AN UNCONDITIONAL MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
R·PAINJ; fo f . ~~~~y~~~!~D; ~A~~'~··
•SATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M:
• SUNDAY 9 A. M . TO 5:30 P. M •.
• ~~=~~~*-EXPF;RT SERVIC~AND ADVICE ............ .
' QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN. • ,
. *LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ........ ON EVERY ITEM: EVeR'( DAlY
*VARIETY ........ 8000 PAINTING AND DECORAT.ING IT .
ax10,1NCH 'COMP. RETAIL 391 OUR PRICE
88. :. FRAME LOOKS LIKE HANl!l CARVED!!!
oMADE OF STURDY MOLDED PLASTIC!
. ~UR CHOICE OF MODERN,. OR ANTIOUE FINISHES'
.Mil
/ -BLACK
. tAS:TIC ~®\'ERS
•8X12FT .. ,. 49·
-'0UR-PR'ICE. . ·EACH
COMP. RETA! L 2.50 .• 2 9
h-15 FT. OUR PR.ICE ~A
eciMP. RET~IL3.50 -
~ . ·PROTECTIVE :. COVERS
EACll.·
F\)R EXAMPLE: '.
COMP. RETlllLS FROM 23c T0·1 .. 20
NYLON FLATS
1/8 IN ...... ,_ 23<=
1/4 IN ......... 29C
318 IN . M•••••• 33c
5/8 IN.-··-· 49C
NYLON ROUNDS
No. 2 ---.• 33C
-NO. 3 -•• ::::::;,:34c
No. 4 ........... 35C
No. 6 ........... 39c
" ~· Wnm& SllMR ?-;.. t. . .._ .
BIAll MPHALTUM
s ·GALLON SIZE • .,
• WON;-f c'RACK OUR PRICE 10.;;\ii~ . 3 5 9 I C~MPi REl'.All ~ . s·
, .~.50 . OALS.
• FORM MANY • e COMPlETE LIN[ OF MOLDS &·
DECORATOR ITEMs RESIN COLORS AVAILABLE . .
·OIL PASTEL SET
• NON-TOXIC OUR PR1ce: 1 e 9 •TOP OVA(ITY
COMP. RE1'AIL 75 SET
Vi~'fl LJ\TEX
SEMi· GLOSS ...
F~AMEL :
CLEAN IJ"P
Wlfa4 WATER!
SPARKLING
WHITE AND._WORS
Vi.NYL ACRYIC -·
iS ONE PAltt~:FOR
BOTH iNSiDE
& OUT ·· .
LASJS 8 YEARS!
D.AR . BRANDS.
l!L MO#fTE POMONA I ONT ARIO VAN NUYS WOOOLANO JllLl.8
MN ,ICIC fllD ,, I ..... No. tr V1IJtr COllHIHI NbLT a M'IW 1201 IDULVIDA ILVD, • :r2ot0 VIHTUU. •LVO.
$AN BERNARDINO RIVERSIDE c-r 1"'1,.• 1 Ii.et 16111" ot Vl4teq 1 91kll We.tel T<>Mn1• c e...,-
. LA HABRA Wl!ST L.A •.
COlllNllll WHITlllll I IDAHO 14fl S. llOIElllTION BLVD. a llootrl !111 ot ••-.:" l lloc:k1 lowlfl ol ''lco
MONTtlREY PARK LONG BEACH
12,1 W. IUOOIH IT. 2401 LONO IEACH ILVO.
1" Ilk. Mor1r. of Rlttlll aftd i.tlotlllt 8owlh ot Wiiiow
GRANADA HILLS/ ANAHEIM
NORTHRIDll• CORMIR llMCOl,N • l!MOtA'f 111H IALeOA l11o¥O. l llocll btt ot l1oot1hu1tt l\ llock &Hit! .. Do.....-,,. !
> • ' -
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Thunday, Mardi 1, l q7J
-Air Force Models
Dougla& Fl5 Jet Gets O~ay
WASHINGTON IAl'l -The
Air Force bu received a gO'-
~ for pr<>dudloo of Its
new FIS air superiority flghte/
plane, but 1pendiog waa llm·
ited until ao engine problem
is cleared up,
Top Pentagon o(flciali
· euthotit.ed the Alr Force-to
buy the first 30 production
models of the FIS. The Air
ordered that the fwldi!WI be days ago. It bepii to li'OTk
Umlted to a~D inillioa and wu tba&~dowft. llCl&ll'Cet
until "11.1ccessful, completiofi of sa1d. ·Jt ooUld not be detennbt-
the 100-hour endurance run on ed Whe$bet lh1a probicm wu
the . . . engine now in proe-the cause of 0e.,-adion.
ress." An earlier edjlne , rn.llN.p
THE Am FORCE prov"·-' . Fd>. 5 WU blamed ... ·~ weu error," aq Air Force
no information Wednel<lay-oo spoieaman-said. •
Stakeout
At Hank
ls Foikd
See,.. ....... Sct9d '"'"--Sp1;t1c-i'r . .
"THE MANY FACES OF INDONESIA"
,_-tod on the mall Fashion Island by .
HOllAND AMERICAN tR~ISES
FRIDAY NIGHT MAR~ 2 FASHlotQ.SLAND ~
FrM Showings: 7:30 A 1:30 P.M.
.•. •::... , · ·· · :''".~:::~, Force'a ultimate plan calls for
~1f~·~: ;. · · . \ · ~: ' . .;;;"·~ purchase of 749 F15e at a cost
the specific nature ot the prob-
lem which caused Clements
to order the funding limitation
pending outcome of <the tests.
mE Fli, developed by the
McDonnell Douglas Corp. oC
St. Louis, ia billed by the Air
Fcrce as capable of~
ing, QUt ·maneuvering and
out-speedin& "any llll>dol MIG
you might find in tbe next
decade.''
IJi"" .~.,;·q·, :!'~·:;. ... ~-;.~:-~ . of about f7.8 billion. ~ ... :tt~'.tti.r-'.tf.,.~~ However, deputy secretary
of defense Wdllam Clements
Air Force sources have said
that a.n FIS engine was
damaged &n a test stand two
•
WIGWAM
Tlllllll IOCllS
P_..G.ailn;r•~
HAIDWooO
Rllllll PRUS .
ldHI for tr1wtl.
Heldt r1cktt, liall1
d t(COlteritJ.
~~WILSON
T3000
LADIES
TENNIS
DRESSES
Mr. "T" f1diitM wltti
-'dilnt nyt.n p1nty.
7 88 REG, 10.DD
IAYI ova :l.K
-mSTAG.
''ll'DDO~'
WAia.UP SUITS
2.,ltct outfitt In
•sstrttd ceSorL ·
Si1ts S,M,L,IL •.
TENNIS RACKET '•••r with control,
lnt1rt111titnal nylon
stringint. Astorted
weighh and si1e1.
With Wil11n cover.
HEADMASTER
llNNll RACKET
"1"!-............. "-· ~ ....... .
39!5
' ' · Sil LDING ·
•PIED SHAFT
TINNIS RACKET
filitr1ll1s 1enstruction.-ayton
··~ str"'9hig. Gutlity made.
==--' ~~399s . ~
L & G RESTRING
SPECIAL
Racket need restringing?
Hurry to L & G and let us
restring your new or used
racket with fine Victor
products pt big savings!
VICTOR •LUI YICTO•
TWll1' MYLOM IUPll• GUT 299 .999
nl(D lffKTIVI THIV MAI.•. lfTJ
TRETORN TENNIS SHOES tlwtfMf,_.,,.,.,._ ....... ,Wll ... ,., .... ..,.,.. 1495 ---~ CDllYIRSI
SKIDGRIP TENNIS OXFORDS
,....,tluta..AWc.•...,...1..wlrftrhllltti.-.irtr.. 685 ............... lfG.1.15
IAVl2.00 Pr.
SIOIH HOURS MON THRU flR 10 AM 10 9 P M
\Al ANDSUN lOAM TOtiP M
STORE HOURS : MON. THRU FRI. ID A.M. TO t P.M.
SAT .• IUN.10A.M.T08P.M. • r
LA MIRADA ORANGE TUSTIN SANTA ANA
SttOP,ING CfNTER ltlirt NlWPO"T AVl.. 3357 S. IRISTOI. ST.
~ .. ~~c-1 N. TUSTIN '' ""ITST"lfl 11M1tARTHUR
PhOM: 121·1161 Pf'lowe. eJT•ltlO Pflo'"'; ll2·Ntl PhoM: 1111.JJIT
NOW, 4 sTORH IN ORANGE COUNTY
-.-·
The first production order
will cover 30 FlSs financed~
der this year's defense budget
at a total cost of $421.6
millioo.
Under President N'ixon's
budget for next fiscal year
starting July 1, an additional
71 Fl5s would be buih at a
tollll oost of $801.9 million to
CQiiiplete U1e first win& of
Fl5s. .
THE~ called the Eagle, is
intended to replace the F4
Phan jet whose design
alre y is about 15 years old.
Ul"IT .......
The production go.ahead
from the Defense Department
follows a test period in which
prototypes have been flown
more than 270 h o u r s since
July.
The F15 contract is the first
major pro~ tmder the Nixon
administration's "fly-before-
you-buy" policy aimed at
avoiding cost overruns.
N~ President
Dr. John E. Corbally,
Jr., stops to chat with
a liberal arts student at
the University of Illi·
nois. Dr. Corbally, at 38,
is the 13th president of
the schoo1.
Chalkn'ge the News Quiz
. ~.on Saturday's Family Page
·-.
THESE SAVINGS ARE
WORTH ROARING 'ABOUT!
YASHICA
~~.,,TL ELECTRO
with F2 LW & CASE
e Auto Y11blnon-OX !0...11 F2 Ltns
e ln-Bltw.•111 Shutter Speeds
• Focal Plant Sb.Utt Spuds up to • 1 s.c to 1ooou11 s.c.
e Thnrtbt-LAns CdS Srste11
• Ovtr/Undtr EJ:pos•e''Hor111hoe"
Visible 111 Flndtr 17 9. 95 RE& PllCE 229:95
•BONUS OFFER • TOUR CHOICE
SUNTAR OR SUITAR TELEPHOTO WIDE AllLE
ii.EIS LEIS
WITH PURCHASE or TL-ELECTI
P~CES EFFE~Tl!E THROUGH MONDAY, MARCH 5 --
METZ 1970 AUTOMATIC
... ICTRONIC Fl.ASH 1
• Swivel C11111ra llount
a HO!~ If P.C. CoalltCtlM
• lll:oUc::eltr Buldo No. 15
• Kodaclw-.Gulde Ne. 52
eA11toutlc: Of .,nual Op1rallon
• C1mplete wlti PC Sync Cord and
.120/220 Volt C~ttr • A.C. Cord
&2.22
REG PRICE 99.50
2 YEAR PARTS &
. LABOR GUARANTEE
-. · HANIMAR
AUTOMATIC 13SM M F2.8
TELEPHOTO LENS
WITH PENTAX MOUNT
• Focus Ran11 · flom lnllnlly to 3.7 Feet
e Fltld An1l1 11
• 4 Lons Ele1111n11
33.57
AUTO~~~~~C 135MM 19,5_ 2811 F2.I
--~ 59.95 VALUE ___ .........
AGFAMAnc 100 MPE·x
MFG LIST 59 .95
CAMERA OUTl'IT CASSETTES
• :~T·~·.c.'r':~·,~, SENSO R c..... SERIES 362-EXTBIDED HIGH FREQUENCY
•four· Flash ll.111icubt /"jft
• Metal. S01ftt7 Strip \.4U
• A&lacolor CNS Col6f PTlnt Film 119
RE& PRICE 1&.83 2.32 . C90 9Dfl1N 2 49
4D Ill
PLAYllG TIME .
MFG LIST 24 .95 C60 ID MIN 119 PLAYING TIME :E;J PRICE
______ .__.. PLAYING TIME IEG PRICE 120 MiN 2 97
BAUER E16r. 3.04 C120 PLAY ING TIME REG PRij:E
LECTRONIC -SER-IES_36_H_HRO"""'M-IU_M_D_IO-XID_E_ 4 64
l'LASB
•CompVI••'"' LI&hl 001pV1 C'" 41 1• I '•E9& PRICE •Gulde Numblr 45 f'or W
........... II ••• ,, PUT• TIME . 3.25
•ftoeye:lln& Tlmt: uttt1ry 4.~10 ... 4. AC "glee 5 C60 ID Ill " .... m . 'PLAYING TIME 6 1
4.E.8
25PllC£ C90 90 MIN
PLAYING TIME
1!949
ijlREG PRICE
RE& PRICE 56 .95 •
SOLIGOR
90-230 ZOOM
Automatic LENS .
T4·MOUNT
N I
-, . -
• 11 Etomont ZOOll
• An11• 21:11•
• Bullt·ln LAa• Silcl•
129.95
IEC PRICE 117 .95
KODAK Fl~M
SPECIAL
-·· -
. 5.65
~
, STARS & STRIPES ·GLASS
WITH EVERY ROLL OF PROCESSING
LEFT-FOR THIS SPECIAL
12 2121 .. A I BIPIRIB1212121Rl218IE ..
COLOR FILM
OCESSIN
llCLUDIN6 12 JUMBO COLOR PRINTS
From •nv 'Standard Size Kodacolor, Fujicolor, or GAF Film
._..,.__, -------•
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·~ . --TOMORROW .CAND SATUR ~ --.
Exhil>its ! __.:.. Prizes!-Entertainment!
Join us qn the mall.for .a tittle Traveling Fun
Free Prize Drawings:-----------------. . . .
Free Round Trip for Two, Flight to Acapulco
(Courtesy of Aeromexico Airlines) ·
One Midweek Party Cruise For Two People To Mexico
(Courtesy of Princess Cruises) .
$100 Travel Gift Certificate
(Courtesy of Ask Mr. Foster Travel Service)
Free Travel Books, Records and Flight Bags •
Pi.ck up your free entry coupO'l'l.8 from Exhibitors and.
deposit in special drop box on Mall . . .
Friday Night Special:
"The Many Faces of Indonesia," presented by Holland American Cruises
on the Mall. Friday Evening at.7 :30 P.M., and 8 :30 P.M. . .
\ •
''Exciting to Yisit-Delightful to Shop''
. .
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NEWPORT CENTER .
/ Pacific CoHt Highway-Between Jamboree and MacArthur
. . -· I l
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DAll.Y ""1 . 11 -I
• • t · .. . .
" ,,
1 . . • • ,,
M ... ~ • ·i " ... . ...,. ,. ·' -:" I
60 Fine Stores ·
To Serve You •••
O,pen Monday and
Friday Nlg-\ :•
Exhibitors:
Ask Mr. Foster
Travel Service
T radewinds Tours of Hmll
Aeromexico
Air Canada
Continental Airlines
Eastern Airlines. · •
Braniff lnternatiailal
Korean Airlines
UTA French Airlines
S.A.S. Airlines ·'
NorUtwest ~Airlines
Holland American Cruises
Princes$ Cruises
Royal Viking Line
Amtrak
Club Mediterranee
Vacation Villages
Contlnuanlnles: .
(Iiland Hmm on tAI Mall)
"Many Faces of Mexico"
Aeromexico
"Heritage Highways''
Air Canada
. · "lnvitatiOn.toJ«iuth~ ~
Braniff International
'tu re of the Bahamas"
Eastern Airlines
"Welcome to Korea"
. Korean Airlines
"The Possible Dream"
T radewinds Tours/HaWlll
"0 Tahiti Tele"
UTA French Airlines
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• JI DAILY PILOT -.-1.1m '8·5 Miiiion
-Palm Springs 2 Ei.ilisted Men Guilty in Bribery
LOS ANGELES (AP) that oold ~ lo Ibo
Retired Set. M1J. William 0, clubl. The firm .'>m porlly
WooldrtdRe, once the Ann, .. , owned by the defendants.
Ille artpial ~ "' -.,....., .. dlltMd Clio-•·
meat.
top enllJted man, bal pleacea FORM&R s..sa+
guilty lo ace<ptlog bribe• in D. s-, 38, pi..d..i ~ '111111 -.n:IG>AHl'I ...S
coonectioo with the operallon Wedneldly 1o gtvlng a lt,IOO JICller ..,....ts Involved In
of servlet!men's clubs in Viel-gratuity to a club aploye who JUDlllnl -u. eollated ma'•
oam. purchaaed goods-lrom lhl-..-<'.l!!l>L..I~~
Another fonner sergeant company, Maredem, Ltd., ol Hon& Kollg, a~edly as a
pleaded guilty Wednesday to Fullerton. benell<lary oC ldckbocD ln>m
giving a bribe and a third to Wooldridge and Ba 11 aalel, to the clubl. comp~acy lo delTaud the originally bad _, charged Jn relul9 for Ille rpduced
government. with conspiracy to defraud tbe cbarlea. tbe trio qrted to
AU the charges had been government but after lengthy cooperate with a U.1. Ben-
reduced in eichange for the negotiations with the praeo. ate pennaaeot m~ttte
delendants' guilty ple8'. ecutlon, agreed lo guilty pleu which In 1111 bepn kJ..
Wooldridge, 50, p I e a d e d on the k!sser dw:le&. vestlptln& ICCOlltkm of
guil1y Wednesday to lwo The third defendant, former lrlud in the operation of the
counts or receivin~luitles M.Sjl. William E. Higdon, 44, NCO clubl. During the probe, _1rom=-=·=Ca=li=·ronua'==·~~='"=llon=-~Pl:c•::4ed::..!gull=ty lo 1 portion of Woalridp and Higdon ct..
.
2641 Harbor-Blvd.·
COSTA MESA
We Help You Celebrate This
T raditionel T r..Plonting Dey
with • •• ,
FRUIT TREE
Plantiqg SPECIAL
You select tho tree, We
cli9 the hole, add tho
~•ntor mix, ·and plant
th, tree.
All This For Only -9 o 98 Each
Select from these 5 ~fruit' Tm Favorites:
• Apple • Plum • Apricot • Prune •. Peach
"HEY Co f me in or your
KIDS!" F1REE TREE!
Uo parent or purclwe necessary
INTERESTING
GARDEN
CURIOSITY
DICHONDRA SEED
For a truly beautiful lawn, sow Dichondre
Seed now. Be the envy of the neighbor-
hood. Free Instructions on How-to.Plant •
.... 2.tl NOW 1,69 lb.
TUBEROUS
BEGONIAS
Count o• Outslonding Blooms
From These Largo-Sized Bulbs
UPRIGHT ond CASCADING
TYPE S IN ROSE, RUFFLED
ond PICOTEE FORMS
1.79 Each 6 For 9.98
\Ve'll Show )'ot.t J:low-t<>-Plant
CYCLAMEN -
.in bloom
Now 1 s the time to
.b ri g h ten low, shady
a re a s with blooming
Cyclamen plants.
R19. 1.49 • 98
Special Prices thrn
lVednesday, March 7
TAMARIX
JUNIPER TANIS .98
Attroctive, popular shrub of dense, blue·
9reen foliage ond low spreadin9 habit.
.. I' Excellent for parkways o• plant in clumps
~~::::~
FLOWER SHOP
in Sunny Y eUow
-DAFFODILS
• 98 A Do1en
l'IW~ o1tyl
"Sm>itt ond Qualllv SiOlCe 1946"
I
PHONE 546-5525
'
Supports Bond
' .
..
• I
Of the big 3 mattress makers •••
Ortho, Simmons & Sealy~ .. only Ortho
-sells Factory-Direct to you ..•
1-fulliine :-of Sleep Producls ••• with
Never -a~Middleman •••
through our .own nationwide chain
of over 50 factory Showrooms.
KINGS
ORTHO EASE Full king-size Shetd'Mllt
room-6-ft.wideby7-ft.klng-ata
\ fabulous low Direct-lo-You pricel Wllll
handsome Sctolt-Otlilted cover. '
Complete wtth Mattress. 2 Bait Sprifvli, '118 ~ak&~e-I
QUEENS
INS or FULLS
Ortho P1oducbt-are
ManlifaCtUred by Ortho
and Sold only through
OriM> fackJPJ.Showrooms ...
'
ORTffO EASE Al this sensallonal k1W
price you get rilmarkablo quality I
Touches like Cotton-Felt fllllng tor
added cushioning & aisal padding
8 foundation. And it comes complel:o wtt1'i
• -Box Spring &Double-.1
. .:·. *118
CROWN Aapectacular 9-pfece corner
Qroupl Comet~plete with 2 Mat-
-2 Box Springs, 2 Coverlets, 2 ~6.~l9hW1lnui..gralFMldcomer
table.Just On&of many Ortho corner--
Of'OUP models nllllablel
FREE ...
DELIVERY ...
'
•
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALIS
SANTA ANA and ANAHEIM LAKEWOOD . 50 Star.. .. to Serve y 1111
24'45 N. Tustin AYL FOUNTAIN VALLEY 18 II West Lincoln Ave. 4413 C•ndlewood A••· LOI ANa11.1•
161l1 H1rbor Blvd. l•tw••• E:111Hcl •"' lr•o•hunt C.•dlowood Shop• UJI llllaMtlCllCO
l1cro1• fl.OM 0t_,. M .. IJ
..... ..
A..-uo• 1.,, .. , tr.. L•hwfftl c.itftf)• -SMll IOll
""°"' .,, .. , •• ,..,., .t Lllf't#, N..+ .. M '• Jm o..t of ,_ M•rf UCllAMIMfO
"*'-r IJtM7t .... .....,.., ,, ... ,,'° ..... , .J ..... IJ4 ,,_,.,, .
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,.,
Politie«I Notu For the Record
' n~ .... olution Pl•M. F°"'"'•ln ..... u • .,, girl •
St. Joseph Hospital Benefit
' ' .,.,00 S N\r. tnd Mr•. J•tt..,. Hlnktt, "' E•st
lYfh $trMT, COflt ""-• llOy, ~ /tlarri Mr. Mid Mn. J•-II. T"°"""°"' U!' age Wl'I Wat 11th Str..t, C•I• MA•F girl, ' ~ "*"""' ,, •1t1n11ry t
Kickoff Features HEW Aide
c,-~... , LJ, I/Ill Rota.In E. Mr.•nd Mr1: (r-411ft R. St-1, l?l , Cr• 1 . tlld 5hlt'rv p ""' St-1, ,.....-1 &elodl. 11Lrl. gff1otr~·J;~ll~~·J:~r1 G. M;··~~ k.:::'!_ ~C.~°"=: c•rio. ~ Roi.e Ind Geotve Rot.• tiov. By O. C. HUSTINGS would amend the Ul)i!onn St~'lnl~ Cllr11 •nd H•tMie. Mr.1no Mn .. O.rtn •ttw1, 1.fm Call: Of .. o.ll'r Hit ..... Time Act or 1968 to make tti];~~1r1: w. Ind w1111•m K. ""'"""~ Lrv1~, Patricia lfitt, ass Is tan t Dayllght Saving Time the o{-a ' ~~oiic."=-~wo it. W. ""'· flH ~ R'*"1 ~. •561 fieial time tbnlugbout the
F•N111M111, Pim.I• 511$9!'1 •nd G•rv COl'lilndtr Drlw, '°''• ~. bo)v., secretary ~ the U.S. Depart· y•••, Wl\IM Mr.•fld Mn. K.lrl Storri., fnl VCIY"9tf' ........ ~~IJ W•rnn c. Jr. #nd P•ll'kl• J, c1rc1t,H1111t1nototi a...dl, 00y, ment of Health, Education and '* * * now•ra, L.•rry E. •nd L.UCIH• .. .... M J •-•· ''"' ~McOCrwetl P1trlck 51111 •nd J\Odllt! A11n "''· .... rt. -....,_, Well ·"" be the f "--• •II. w~ ..,,.. •1'111 Sttl>tlen "u"' c11111wi~o L.•nt. Hunlll\110n ltKh. are, "UJ eawn:u 'REP. ANDREW Hinshaw
l!ll:r.tbllll L. '"° l(lberf 0. bay. "'°" Frida • ki "·" V' ha ked
lion (ADA) says
The lowest support figure
went to Republi ca n
Asumblyman Robert Burke of Huntington Beach, with no
favorable votes.
ORANGE COUNTY
Whl11. Olrl•r.e ci.iora •no c11ane• Ml. •nd Mr1. Cllnton ... ,. v:i1 speo.u::r Y a. a CMJU (R·Miasion tejo) s as
O.W1Jn T•ekwOCld SlrMI, S.nl1 Mt, gl11. J~ llNVmnv-ina the first r....,-..SS to extend to all un~ ·~r.~ Vlctorl1 L.oube Ind JGH Mr. •nd Mr1. Wllllt It. P•rlitr, 21)11J: ---......,."6'""
11 drp Ktnworlh Orehi, HuntlflQfon hlcll,, annual Bob Hope beDefit for m.aITied individuaJS the full Situ, Frri G. and AIY'Oll A.. G!tl. St J ph ~ Ital of Or Llr1w11111 0 111'111 M. •!'Id 0..111d G. ......,,,..,., 4 • 08e 1eu,.ap ange. lax benefits Of income-split-
T1rr 01, J•ek A.llim Mid l<•tl!JI Rtnee Nv. •nd Mrs. Rov NlcllGb, ,..., S.nl• Mrs. Hitt sald she will tina DOW -"yed by ...... -ied
Scholarships Go
WGfl!QfMnl, Wllm1 M. •rid Frink A., Cl-.rt Clrde, Clltft Mesi, girt. UoU6 --r ...._' ~~! 18;'.':a!·,•::: ~~ r Mt. •nd Mrt. 0-11 L. Rtlg19, ltff'l discuss the role Of the individuaJS filing joint retums
S """' 1 "" "' ... "' E O.I Amo, Tllll1n, bQY, ' te ~ 'ta[' ~ ti-·• fed aJ , '•• tic1n1olh, '&,~~ ;Jch1;-!nc1 c'vntM• Mr. 1nd Mrt. 11:-1<1 s. 5"1Ftll, lt4'1 pnva laX:IJ>l m uro-na ur.~ on er mcome -...es.
D•Y Slerr• Chui• lt:Old, Irvin., 11lrl. health care picture. "We taJt 8 -,.t deal about Prlc1. E11Mr J, tnd J0stph H. Fllll'wry S &" ....
l.•mtr. L•.,,,.,nc• ind Pl!Hlv 5119 Mr. _, Mn. R1c111n1 L.. Grou. 1s1s 'The noon meeting Is equal treatment, but this is an
WllMlll, #Mrltl M. tncl Cl1r1nc;e ••--•• c ' --
To 9 J ournalist,s
' . BOWll'ltn. 11111 .. P ... nc1 wan•r 1:. .... .... , •· °' • · .... ,. scheduled for the south wing e c~o mi c area where OeMuJnl•r•. •-•o-• ··-·-,... Mr. •nd Mr•. TllfTY K1lrn.n, MS Saulb Ballroo , ·'-~ bein Mlol'l .. r•t Ann"' '"' "' ,,_,... ..... WOOdl•nd.Ol>Mlf', girl. of the Grand m at the di · · lion again:a1. g a V•r~t. lttllllMn A, •nd EVCl«lf-R. If'. Ind' Mra, ltn \/t.l1tnlll'lt. uo C•l'll9' n;.,.._,;land u-·-·. Anaheim.' single per-bas' been prac-SA~A ANA, -Sch.olarships A.d•lr. lt:\llh P. •ocl t.t1111o11 s. St,.., A.pt. 13, Cos!• Mlle, bO'f. ..,,_,,..,.~ V\a ~ Winners include: Steve He~·
and Darrell Santschi, both of Lac;i:kG, G•ll o. •nd 0•11ld J. Mf. •lld Mr~.Geor119 M.,...,,, m Mull.r Hospital officials said It will tieed urmecessarllty for_ too 1 ... 1 .. 1:....... •1 r:tll\ have been Shullz. ROblrt J•mt1 •lld S.lly Street, 105-8, Antt>elm, glrl. • w-....ia ,. ,_.,
Tarr•1.,01y ~Ind .t.111on1o Mr. Md Mrs. Pllrlck A. W•l&h. «114 be followed March 31 by a din-many,years. n•s Dot right and presented lo nine ~ni Cal State, Fullertm and win· oi;e~. ~n'~~~rvs:ci,,o wen Flllht, s.111 An., 11r•. ner ......._,..,i to raise. -.ooo 1 think it's time. ·we did • Obr11z..L111111 M. •1'111 -ooert JGM l<•tNwrv·• ._ ~ ~ students b)'-the Orange County ners of $300 each~ Tim N•t1...en. t1nda and Ectwlri..M. Mr. •1'111 Mr1. JCISIPh E. ur1d11, 101' for the hospital. something about it," said
S•n1lllt'lln. M1ul'ffn autkMy and Kfflt soutf'I Ar1pa11o ortv., s.nt• AM, 01r1. * * ·* Hinshaw. Press Club. Ferguson of Santa Ana High WIUl•m Mr . lrid Mr$. JlfTY...]ll. kotlller, s...11 ,,,,;_ ·
Mor•I ... Jae end Debi'• M•rl•ll'lf si..,.. Vtrde, 1rV1n., 11111. A l\ESOWTION .... tvll\ ... ing I troduced as HR 4245 his ·1op awards.· were $ 3 0 0 School, $2SC> an,d Mo 11 Y Clrlll!lfer, Ellen M. Ind H•nrv E. Jr. Mr. Mid Mr1. PFllUlp E. C•r1wy, f2I . ....,..,...,,, \ D • w~ J11n1 11:. 1nc1 1t1c111oro L. lootn Plte9. Atw11t111m. boy". pro"""AA U.S. le"'i .. 1 .. ..i ..... that measure bas ·been refelftd to awarded to two collegians Maloney · of Villa Park High Cl\aCOll, ~r•nclw:i C. · •nd Ml, '*'"l'Y 1 l"""""" ~· K~~·~iiv, N•dlM, •lld Edw•rd Ml, •net Mn. e .. 11 E. u11-, t7lr would establish daylight sav· the . Committee on Ways and placing tops in the annual · School, $1~.
ct1vton ,., S.f'l9PIPlf 0r1 ..... '°''• ~t-~· i.ngs time 12: months a yee.r Means. Others incl .. ~....1 Steve Doll ~Ill« Robert J11'1'1ff end Shlrl111 A. Mr. •nd Mn.l1n ColllllS. IV1l Get: . * competition. . ~ , . ninc1111. s1r111r1 J, 9Cld 11:ov F~ IY,tbllr'st 0r1v1, HIHltlpltlofl .JNCh, has been endorsed by the . * * ing ol ~ QOUeg~. $1 '15,
ou. JN11M'Chrt111n1 •!Id 1ueh•nt J1v bOY. N port ff rbor ~-~-f • --• • POSITIONS •"' F~,.. T•n'llr• c. 11'111 P•ti"kk J, .. _ ..... _ °""" w e--•• -•• ew a .-\AilWWCl" o ~ on THIS -~ISTRIBIJTION or-Susan N"•tiuiigale of 'CaJ C'.-., W •l'lllt ~-"' !)wight Lee ..... '"" -•· • mn n. "" gisl (ur u , -'-"iil"' '-'--~ -HirWJ .., ..... 11 .... IN MMY"' e. MHol!!_ lAMiw, N"'1!0rt.,Bu!;0 "'"'..,·, c.ommerce. 'lb&t legislation. issues in tbe'state Le · a e State, ru lenOO, j115, Steve
Lirt111, °'" Leltll •nd Alchlrd Htnrv r. ''"' rs. Douol•... rw. pushed I by Rep I l f __ .....,. b scholarship funds brought to f F I viww. Jin1t 11:. •nd i::mnt c. Mltnol••· H1.1nttnai a..m.1111. or years · as year were 8TU1cu. Y Harbour o ul erton Com·
Y01kum, Lindi J1•nfll 111!1 M1••v R•v Mr. 1no1 Mn. wtirr.ft L. Cummins, Craig Hosmer ( R -Long Democratic lawmakers more $10,375 the assistance give munity College, '75, and FU11Ck.,, JOln •nd John TJ nu, •• .,. Strwt, Hewpart a.ldl, boy, •
Pontlll. P•trlci• LM and ohn 11:. M~. •rid Mr•. Gtr•kl c. ll•sH•nM, 1521 Beach), is C()o-IUtbored this than twice as often as by Uieir young journalism students by another $75 to Sara Enunons
-'
DAILY PILOT J:J
Anaheim Suspect
Cets Trial Delay
SANTA ANA -llt'rnuin Lee
Clouston's Orange Co u n Ly
Superior Courl murder trial
has been delayed to enable a
team or psychiatrists t 0
determine if the Anaheim man
wa.s sane v.·hen he allegedly
shot and killed a Buena Park
detective last Sc~t. 21.
Presiding Judge Bruce Sum·
ner set l\farch 26 as the date
he will accept the report on
Clouston's sanity. lie can-
celed the trial initially
ordered and scheduled a tenta·
tive trial date of April 2.3 for
Clouston, 37.
NEW 1973 AUTOMOBILES -ON
DISPLAY AND READY FOR IMMEDI·
ATE DELIVERY -COVER OVE1r20
ACRES OF SPACE ON COSTA
MESA'S HARBOR BOULEVARD OF
CARS,
friend~ e Reliable • Convenient
LOOK FOR THE EMBLEM AT
COSTA MESA DEAURS ON
HARIOR ILVD. IETWEEN SAN MOGrt. JIY MlllOll '-nd Und' Ice ~\Hrs. *'""' OrtM. c-de! Mtr,.boy. ..._ ...... ,,_ Clair Qi-u .......... 1;..., .. ___ ._..... the th f ' al edi Atverldo, Jol1ndl GIMldtl"" • "" Mr. •nd Mr-. ROblr1 8. Oilman, 17w ~...__ u3 .....,.. .-...a ...... • • ..,..,._...._.. ~..--. e pro ess1on news m a of Cal Stale Fullerton and M~.1C:. AL=• R. ~l•rlan •lld MIX-l ·_:f·~~~·~·~,~~~lo~M~, ~·N~·~~~-~"'~· ~:_J(~R~·-;~;-;!·~F~e~)~'.~amoog~~l~Sou;~thern;;;Ca~li~'f~onu~· •;;dla;~pter;~of~-org~~aruza~· :tlon:_:in:_:the=-~pas:~'_'.17'._JSher;:ry:.~An:'.ge~I ~·or~eos:~la~M:··:·~·g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lmllLltl'I J Mr. •nd M". Jtck 8. HCICllldel, flS thers ff ' bill HR -~ ' for ~-tic A •~ WITfoth, H 'l'tltt• P. •nd O.I• 0. TUii!" Wf(f, cor-Gel M•r. gJrl. 0 • osmer a • _.., Americans ~'l-G ~ years. ........ Peetft' M.~r A.l•~•nd,.... Jr. • n d ~
M•rltll H•YH ' Fltnn1rv, Ol•n• Lvnnt •nd OOUO I'
H:~1~.. Miidred El•ln• Ind llr,\ICI
s~l~;•voorothy Mae •nd Denlld
6,t;~~~l~~eyl Otvld •nd Ol1n1 LOCY Eadehl Collffl\ G. ind Rooer M. Conred'.'N.lell"I •nd Ju•n• WFllll, Fr~ni ltJ.Jdol1>h •nd KIV Frtncls eraulllelle, oi.e1>1l Ed',qnl •nd Crvsl•t
llr~i.nan, JM!\lolll M1r11 tM ROOll'
P•lrlc ---' k W Scllvnem1nn, Do<Y'I" M. •na Fr1n · ourrw1chi.r. 011M I.. and T1!0m•* Ii.
.lllBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTIIARY
U7 E. 17th· St., COiia M,.. ·-mrz.sLGERON
.Jl'UNEl\AL HOME
c. .... deJ Mar -Costa Mesa • HUUI
BELL BROADWAY
MORTIIAllY
-
Ill Bnadway, Cosio Mela
L!Mm • . MeOORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTIIARY
11• Laguna CUyon Rd.
lt'-1115 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemtttty M~
Oaptl
llOI PacU!c VleW Dtlvt
l'I-llt1•'· CaWonla ' '""'":·....,,.. • Pdlt PAMILY ~~\
-"'1'111>1!1 A•
WIOllDlmt«DWZ .
-~· . 6MlTllll' MOllTUABY #I 'Mila lit.
~8d<la .....
I
OPEN
Niles
Tll 9
A•
Low
LOWEST
PRICES in
' ... ·TOWNI
;
COST A MIS.A. _ .... """"" -c~•--·&HMtlw)
' 17141 .. , .....
.,
flJI"°" ... , ...... -
ER70/14
..............
QAl!.DEN GROVE
1 .... •4* PT
(urw ..... hrtw•l4..,urll)
1'7141 Uf.IJM
t••-• ••licy i1 .. kttlr
,..,..,. yo•. If Y•• heT• •1rt1ti11 c••·
,, .. ;ltl ''"'-''' •r """ic:" ... _ ""4 ,, . .,.., ;i, .. , coll "r
fH et c--· Aff1"1, Mr. s; .,rMi •• (213) 17f.)7l1'"' ,., .• u •.
If we 1Mof( l!l1f .... If ;..r •iat, 1
"l•i• CMc•., will "-i••••• •••••· i:¥.. 1 ..... •ll•try ., tlrlt •••trti1ff
'"''·
,,,,,
(011/14) (NJl/14)
(P11/1 S) (071/11)
LA HABRA -~,..., .. '¥M""" ....... , :~Et:!::i~
'744"6
I-
'~" l.Mclf11 • KMtt) 17141 _.. ..
r -,..
•
FULLERTO~
1J21 $.Mt\ lltdW •' ( .. ta. IL M •fff\'l4t:J'wy,J ~
17l41 170Jl1 .. ',
... ~ , .... ;c..: .. ......
6.50113
7.35115
7,75115
G78/15
E78115
f78!15
WHITEWALLS '2.00 MORE
8.25115
6.95114
C78/13
6.00115
,, , ORANGE
4l0 N.·T .... ""· 17141 UM>lt ... , .
" I , --
95
or
12"
each
7.JS.14 1.13
7 .1s.1c 1.90
1.2J.J4 2.29
1.SS .. 14 2.42 or
f 511
Ea.
l .2S · IS ... 2.12
1.ss.1.s 2.31
9.oo . 1s 2.99
HEG(JLAR .Drum Type
f , h111•ll """ llen4rd
1111 111 e• ell 4 wh1el1
2 •1ll11illll 111 4 wht1I
eyUndlft
I l. l•,ack tto11t wh,tl
ll1orin91
4. l••fl ' ll'lt(hi111 111
' •r•lllJ s. ''"Ill ' ll111h u .... ' • thtch whttlt for
• ~l•ite•
BB
Fufl ·
Size U.S.
Cars
•· 1111,.ct llr•k• rttwn
ond held C1w11 ••rin,.
& ... ,,,
7. Arf 1ri11lll ell llrokt
1ho11
I. ln1ptcl fr••t 1r1•1•
1t1f1
9. Frt• adi1nl11111111 fw
lift •• li11i111
10. Aa1tl t111 ,., t9fety
W.-Rec•)nttnend
t1et1' .tpring• & 1eal.t.
OPEN NIGlfTS till 9-SUN. till 6
I
•
• ,.
• -14 'DAILY PILOT Tl""""'· ,._ 1, 1'17l
Second Union Approved C.U Girl Ca•~
Newport Woman
Giyen Jail Term
Fair Board
Names llead
For Events Superior Court Clerks Okayed--Despi~ Opposition
• Mrs. June Wimer or Garden
Grove has be_en ~~ted
special events directof\.!Of lhe
1973 Orange County Fair.
·BY JACK BROBACK ~ Of ... °'"'"' ..... ....,
SANTA ANA -The """""1
uniOO to represent a small
seginent of Orange County
employea wa1 approved
Wednosday by the county
Board of Supervison.
Despite opportlion f r o m
county Personnel 0 i re ct or
William Hart and J o h n
Sawye r, gcnchtl manager of
the Orange C.OUUty Empioye.s
~iation, the supervisors
approved 9+tcognllion a n d
granting of bargaining rights
to the Servi« Employes
E:mphysema
Club Meets
SANTA ANA -Dr. R•Y. mo8d Rosa, a chest and lung
s~alist, will be the featured
speJker 'l\iesday March 6 at a
meeting of the Emphysema
Club of Qrllnge Coonty. •
Dr. Roos't.lop!c will be
"Chronic Obstructive lAmg
I>taease." The meeting Is
scheduled for 7: 30 p.m. in !he Sa~ Ana Community H~tal audltorlwn. ·
11ie club, sponsored by the
Lwjg Association of Orange Co&mti: invites all afnicted
with respiratory diseases and
their friends and relatives to
attend its meeUngs.
r..u Sole l•IMl1;.,,,-4
!lfylol CC)ft.-!ible ,..,
..i.;itM po-11111 or
l)tJPQfll Zecloll l<N~d
t ... d:;. $leep5 2.
o.s~·n9 <.0nlem11.:ua•1
011een Sore con-111> ..
w11" imal! ""'°"" n;oc• •1Yl"'!il-S!"k'"9 H91"C\llo<1
pitod w!lll dehl,.. q"'!le<!
0.-S.rt matlrft5
lntematiooal uruon. Loc11l ut,
Af'L.C!O.
THE NEW UNION w i 11
represent only Superior Court
clerk.s. T:wu wffka ago the board members recognired the
lntemadonal U n i o n of
Operating Engineers Local
501, AFL-CJO, The engineers'
unjon tt:preaenl! 11 employes
who Work in the county's cen·
b·al utility facility and at the
Orange c.oonty Med l ca I
Center.
The unim certified Wedneo-
day representa about SO coo,t
clerks.
As Wednesday's hearing
opened, attorney LeQ Geitner,
repreienting the unioo , called
for a delay of aeveral weeks to
attempt to lnrlude municipal
court clerks in the petition.
I-le wu told that the coun·
ty's emoloyment __regulations
do not allow a mO<lificatkin of
petitions after thev bave been
Oled. 'l1le cOUllty's personnel
resolution is strict on pro-
cedures for entry of new
unK>ns. Petitions may only be
presented in Qc1ober.
Ge!fner's request called for
a 40-minute delay and a con-
ference vdth Countv Counsel
Adrian Kupyer to clarrily the
regulations.
GEFFNER SAID the union
was anxious to include the
municipal court clerks, but
had not been aware that they
were regarded as county
employes until receiving a let·
ter from the ~ <lePert· cler'd .,. unique ooly as all
mcnt oppotin& r«osnitton of other clerks are. He said those
the union. • in the useaon'1, treasurer'•,
He said It was not true in . and tax collector's offices also
m o s t ol. the s&ates1 the have special duties.
ORANGE COUNTY municiF.l court clerks being ~Saw)'er. said the employe3
governed -by dllliierit lapi association had m a d e 8 that the superior• c o u r t
workers. specifjc survey each year on '----------' Geffner argued that superior the clerU jobs and pointed out
court clerb had 8 "cotn-that in 1972 the court clerks
munity of interest'~' . re-go& a 7 .6 , percent raise whereas the general county in-
quired by the "°'""l' I crease was s perceoL
code. He protested, ~ ~ ~ 'lbe employes association
were now bunched with all manager then read off a long
clerical employes despile hav-llst of fringe benfeits his
ing jobs requiring special groups has obtained for all
training. empl.oyes.
HE PROTESTED th8t the
clerks had made thelr, own
salary and working corWtions
survey last spring but had
been ignored in negotiations.
He said they were paid as
much a1 $258 a ~ooth· less
than Lo.!! Angeles County
clerk• who have their ' own
separate union.
sawyer argued at length
again~t the union r,ecognftlon
but without success as wes lhe
case Jwo weeks ag& with-.. the
engineer's group.
He warned that such
recognitions would lead t() a
"great proliferation or unions
representing c o u n t y em~
ployes."
"11le county has 9,500 em·
ptoyes and 850 different. job
classifications," Sawyer ex·
plained.
HE ARGUED that court ..
TIIESE INCLUDED fully
paid medical in su ra n c e ;
overtime, on<all and call back
pay; additional vacations bas·
ed on years served and 10 paid
holidays.
J-!art ex_plained that the new
union had already b e en
ret0gnlzed by the county
personnel department and had
the right to meet and confer
on ,wages and benefits but not
the right to negotiate.
"f~the argument that special
duties require s e p a r a t e
recognition is followed we
could have unions f o r
stenographers because they
must take shorthand ," he
ar11:t1ed.
Recognition o! the union
came on a motion b v
Supervisor Robert Battin. It
was approved :J.l with
Supervisor David L. Baker
dissenting.
Canadian
Gets Life
' .
For Murder
SANTA ANA -A Canadian
immigrant was sent to state
prison for life Wednesday for
the strangulation murder of
his wife in their Garden Grove
apartment.
Orange County Superior
Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
Rutter imposed the maximum
term for John Bruce O'Leary,
28, and rejected a plea by his
law31ier for reduction of the
penalty to second degree.
O'Leary fled to Canada Oct.
12, 1970, shortly before police
found the partially clothed and
strangled body of his waitress
wife, Debi, 20, in a clothes
closet.
Royal Canadian Mounted
Police picked up O'Leary in
his native Toronto in February 1m and returned him to
Orange Coonty !or irial.
~viera of Costa Mesa
PHONE
979-5040 3015 S. Brlstol Street
Costa Mesa. Calif.
(Corner of Bristol & Baker)
15"1ft 91' 5111 DllVt l'rwy.J Free Gifts
&
refreshments
""-for everyone
FREE
DELIVERY
and
SET-UP
STORE HOURS
Weelcd.ty1 9'.30 to 9:00
Satutd•Y• 1:30 to S:OO
INSTANT.CREDIT AVAIUBlE
Sundays
11 :00 to 5:00
!2Jli • V• ""'"'"''"•••cc ... ,. ... .-; ··~····-···-.. ---
ii Ne"JJO'I Beach ~
tabbt!tl by lawmen who ar·
restlld her as a member ol a
prostiwtioo ring operating out
of a Santa Ana bar pleaded
guilty WedneMay to lesser
charges and dttw a 45-<Jay
Orapge eounty jaU term.
superior Qf1r1 Judge Ken-
neth WU!iams onlered the jail
time for Sharon Readdy. 2:5, or
303 * Fernando Ave., after she
pleaded guilty to charges of
coospiring lo c:ommit proo-
titutim.
In announcing t h e ap-
pointmeni , Fair M a n a g e r
AU. CHARGES were earlier James E. Porterfield sald
&.lrs. Wimer wlll,.be respoosi·
dismissed against Edward D. ble for the organizalion or
Bryla, 23, Tustin, Raymond _F. family-oriented activities, pro-
Buice, Z8, and Ernest AustUl , viding cont in u ·o us en-
35, both of Santa Ana. tertainmefll and coordinating
Awaiting tria1 April 30 on contests and pageants.
charges that they w e r e Pt1rs. Wi mer for the past two
members of a ~itution ring years has been Qirector .of
working out of the Bristol children's contests for tbe fau"
Gardens bar are Jeannette The theme for this year's
Jones, 1.8, Tustin and Patricia fari is "Good Old Days '73"
Linda Binkey, Tl, Ga r d en and hi .. ~H ... hts colorful periods
tendon e.icept one -con--
spiracy to commit piostitution.
Grove. &"''6 h BER AC110N left former Two other women named in of American history , sue as
football player Willie Cril· the indictment have been lined the Gay Nineties and the Roar·
tendon, 21, a Santa Ana and handed jail terms arter ing Twenties.
College security guard at the pleading guilty to I es s e r The to-day fair begins July 6
time ~.his arrest, as the only charges. and runs through July 15. remarnmg male member or an _:::::~:::_ ________ ::_ ___ __c ____ _
alleged prostitution conspiracy '* * that led the Grand Jury to in-. *******~~**********
diet eight persons. *
The former guard agreed to *
let Judge Williams rule on his / *
guilt or innocence on the basis
MERCURY SAVINGS *
'"'"'~pan1d111oa1n a~~1.·at11ion..,"!'!I ..
l'\IUVV u.-.:;1'11 of the jurist's reading the
transcript of lower court ac-
tion against the grQUP-
. Judge WUliams said he will
issue his ruling late Friday.
The prosecution agreed to
drop all charges against Crit·
EVERY SATURDAY
J~'::!:.1 0 A . M.-4 P .M . ~,
LJ
,.,_ ~~! ~
()pen Mon.·Thurs. 9 ain . .C p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. " .7 ~
IUDIA PW Mercury SavinQs-Sldg., Valley VIN at Uncoln -*
GoodDeed
make the scene
&mays
l1tjltlijl!1ll
HIAfTIKTOll IEACK Mercury Savil'JS Bldg .. Edinger at Bead! * * lUSTUI Mtrary Savings Bldg .. Irvine Blvd. at Ne"NpOrt A.YI. * * lA HAIAA.ftlUBITOtl Mercury Savings Bldg., Imperial Hwy. at Hdor * * CARSON Me.rc:ury Savings Bldg., Avalon Blvd. at San Diego Frwy. *
in the **********************
....
. .
su~11tu1 A..,.,,., come• grou11 wtt~
moc>ern d""9Md mM·....,lltrll
f>afMllM laok DU(l(lflf.Zeoel .i1•11
'""'Slatol quo....., -complo'le
•..!ti :2' ..... : ...... ~ ~ 2 bo-
1,,.,no;iioons .. 9 p.ec. ~
. .• Medi.e<••oe.,, si...-come•·9'"0Ull
WU'h mitf·fftlShnl ca.Ii •·11...ri I•~.
Slftat"l, IOll!f _.,, t-ie•culon pl.>o4
-ertels.. CornplC'fe Wilh ~
mMtoesMS Md 2 bol SQ<•~ 9 _ ...
R<V>l!fll lii·P•"'"
...,B.atih"-~ !' ...0
m.my ••JS. P"lll ovl
ind up to beCDml 2
s.ngle bedf Gr"
<l(>l:blL ln<:luOe!i :2' ,,.,.,.....,_
17'~2bed-..
'
.._, =,..,...,, ... r.;-,7_-~,_,,==-n 7Jie~VIEgA-tfrfCATIC
~~?.~~,~~~~f~~~ts
ALSO CELEBRATING GRAND Ol'ENING SALES AT
SANJA ANA BUENA PARK LONG BEACH
121·s. MAIN Ult STANTON AYC 425 L 4 .. ST.
1474519 127-4400 43MJOt
JllOM LA. UO.fflf
DRAWING WINNER Of RIVIERA RECLINER CHAIR
MRS. PAULINE JASPER Of COSTA MESA
lfl(:l\ldlt:
• 1("'9 .s;,. ~· .. loJi: lprift9f
• hoUllfvl Qull!l'd &idllpftOd
• 91o.,kt1, M•o4boord & fro..,.
plua. •. 2 kl1191ir• 1ht11i. o,.. flol.Ofl• fft.
• t•d, lwl pillow co1•1, 2 pltlowJ. SA.Vt
SfO 0...-&It• Mlgh11J 1111
RIVIERA
COMlllRT QUILT $~ I .;,7-:-:.
lncludeo All -
13 Pieces
n. ~...,..tor-reading.
-1"""'11 ''~ f'fll•••llCI. f~~ Of ""'"""9" F~I
hAnd c:nllld "'"'-·-"'II •nd -lftln kif ...... ,.,.. ... tom!Olt. ut.
Iii.led l;:(ltflp()Ole<•tf -~ ~.
lllOlorl lul!y ......,.eec1. s299e5
Q>mnl.,ln w1!11 ~f'ldbD•'tl
•ll•Chmenl. 111ame-;~. oo, ,P"llQ.
m~ld! !•a~."''~" a"~'llt>l.o on
Dueen S11e ~60"~!0") ·
...:=~ ----..... ·--
•
•
..
s s
e
c
3
. ,
L. JJI. Boyd
. ·Best . Salesmen
·Stash S~vings
. . .
·Slwckley
Court Bid
Def eared
REDWOOD CITY (AP) -
stanford University Pr o f •
William Shockley, con-
troversial rot his theory that
blacks are genetically inferior
to whites, has lost a civil court
-case to a black attorney.
. . .
I
DAILY PILOT J 5
Problem Drinkers to Get Electric Jolt for Chaser
REDWOOD CITY (APl -
,,_ -will bo _.,.
ed • mlld -jot! "" • c:lm<s'lnu~pn>
gram county oflicl.ab bope will
leach bea')' -ellhtt to
quit or 01! down.
San Mateo County
SUpervbon BJIP'OVed the lw&-
year ezperimmt Tuesday for
120 volunteers who have been
..
""1vi<t<d ol drunken driving
Sn the Sooth San t'ranctsco
ma. '
T1IE PARTICIPANTS •'lll
meet weekly tn a tavern-like
Rt.Ung with a Jl6YChologi!t ac-
ting as bartender. said Dr.
John Marquis or Behavior
Qwige Corp., a private Los
A I l o s firm .assisting tbe
COW'ltY health and welfare
departmtnt in the project.
From ~ a lw~way mlr~
ror, rosearehml wlU · apply
smaU electric shoe-ks to ~
bands of per.;ons gulping 9
stead ol sipping drinks, Mar-
quis aid.
Each person wiU be given
five to seven drinks at the
first meeting and smaller
amowat.s in following weeks.
he aald. The county will
restrain participants r r () m
driving home until they are
sober, bo added.
dr~ he erplaJp<d.
Marquis aaut B e h a v I o r
Change Corp. has bet.n suc-
c.ssful In red\leing drinking in
about 70 per~nt of the people
it tested, but the sample is loo
-THE VOLUNTEERS alsO small to be reliable.
will be taught how to estimate County psychologist Dr .
their ~.alcohol level, s~ud Charles Faltz will direct the
Marquis. Most p r o b I e m program. which he estimated
drinkers don't realize when will cost SZ7,620 in state fund5
they have had too much to the first year.
.~~~~~~--~~-
What three. personality trails do you figure the best
salesmen have m common ? University of Cbicago scholars
--say they've found out, and their findings, I think, -werm't
pl'edlctable. Moot top salesmen, Ibey r<pc>rt, marry early,
handle f:helr own checkbooks, end quickly stash a cash
cushioo 1n savings. Interesting, if true. In general, the re-
searchers say, these characteristics..._~em to describe a
fellow who runs a little bit scared rig1tt fro m the outset.
The ease, beard Tuesday in
San Mateo Courtly MunicipaJllr...,..__...,._...,...,..__
Court here, involved $4.500
YOUNG . LADY, are you sufficiently liberated to ask
~ ~me stranger co go out
with you on a dinner date? When a
national magazine recently put that
q~ry to 11,000 lady readers, j~ 61
percent said yes, they wouldn't hesi-
tate. Remarkable! ~ 15 percent ac-
tually said they'd be perfectly Willlng
to suggest a little m o r e than that,
downright physical romance, if they
felt so inclint."<i. Our Love and War
man is appalled.
PFJlS()NAL QUERY -Q. "Looie, did you ever quit
smokingt ~·if so, how?"
. A. Or.ice. !"or n!Jle days. Substituted candy. The Lady-ijr1en~ IQ\Uld U cunous that I kepi grin~ the wrappers
· ""11 <lillb my loot. Al any rat.!, managed tt then• by JlOlll· ·
~UW 11\0 6rst clgarel!e eodl succesoire day by one hour. · •ft.~ 81>00\ a dozen days. to slop. I! worked. Intend to try l1110''i~ly. . -'
lf ~ WfiY BLACKS develop far fewer brain tumors .than whita -ls anolheT medical my-y, doctors say ... FEW
CITl,Z.ENS realize the OOmicide rate is now 70 pefuent low-
er than il was in 1933, the robbery rate 30 percent lower
. . . SCIENTIFIC STllDIES repeai.dly indicate that in·
!roverts seem to be l!et!er able to bold their liquor than U·
troveru ... DID I CALL !hat -Klondil<e proopectar
Sweetwater Bill Gates? A typo, sir. Be waa known as
Swiflwaler Bill ..• M(!RE PEOPLE eat .Quid worldwide
evecyday than eat ola!ns, Ol'slers and !hrimp put togelb<r.
TAIL PEOPLE -Any woman over five feet 10 tnche8
!all should be allowed a 'll'cial federal Income tax exernp.
tion. Likewise any man over siI feet 4 inches tall .. Why?
Ex~~ tall c:ili2e/Ja ~ .~ ~ and. • !hey 11Bt more than ont1ruirj< people. Wai~ that's Roi my
contention. It's the claim ~ Werner Schneider, e. 6-foot-&
inch •llOliceman in Fronkfurt, West Germany. He has
foon<j\!d a tall peo[ll111 d\Jb there to IOOby for a tax break
,&ddress mail to L. M. BOl/d, P. 0. Boz 1875, N.,,,.
port Be~h, CaJif. 92660. .' '
YOU ARE
ALL INVITED
TO;A
charged to Shockley ror repair
of his 33-foot sailboat by !he
Palo Alto Boal Works.
'l1IE FIRM, repreeenled by
attorney W. Jam es Ware of
Palo Alto, won the full amount
ii asked plus court costs from
Shockley. •
Shockley conlQl<led l h a l
boat repair worli: was too ex-
pensive and took too long.
J_udge Thomas hf. Smith
tool: less than one hour to
reach the verdict.
STAMP EXPO '73
The West Coart's Fine1t
Exposition
THI INTl!llNATIONAL STAMP COl.LIECTOllS SOCIST'Y
G¥W• •Pa.th
Miiiion dollar r•rlftl$ h'1ln! h
Sm!HKanl9n lnalltutlllft; U.S. ~1i.
tfllc MU5eum1 Janey; Ll«ti*91•ln Mu..,..,; Cr-"9er1,.., L..ondoft.
Poat otflc:ts d Brllbh Vlf'llln Is-
lands, C.~, GrHI Brltllon, J..wy,
l.i.eltl-ltilft. Ntw 1 .. 1and, P'9'IU" Nft Gvi-. Unlltd SHtw.-U.W._,
N•tlonl. Con\lr•10t•IM cwM .. lklnl. FIRt °'" c-s. *· ... _ ...... _ ........ .
Sit-A-elm Hot81
.." llMll lb1I IS.ntli AM l"W'f. So\lltl)
Kff1*' llW. hit
fS.nll AN l"wy. Nortrll
Marc~ 2·4
Adulf\ u.ooi Kl•h ~
l"lllE• PAtll:ICINO
1 (Tick.ts 9CIOll tof' •II tllr,. d•\<IJ ' • Fri.I S&t., 10 e.Jri//9 p.rn. •
Sl.Wll'f 10 •.m...' p..m.
Kids Like to
Ask Andy
of Jack La Lanne's COMING AnRAalON!
NOW S~RVING THE
COSTA MESA/
SANTAANA
COJ"MUNITY.
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COSTA MESA/SANTA ANA
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,
J
r
I
I
•
I
•
•
I
If DAILY PILOT • . ·w ~alth ~ ol Porno at Liq~or Store
•
By ROBERT CAREY . ll'1 not ol1"1 tlJol JOU find 1 liquor
IJTTLE ROCK, Ark. (UPI) -There's
•. nothing quite so spiritually uplifting,
dtlaon&, as a walk through the locll
"Deviate jlook Stl>re."
'*""· .... llalld, card aod gilt lhop aod -'*""-· ,,,. -" the place Is lairly straight, as are eections of the rut. But 10 down
the far left side, pest '"" stocSod copies
ot 'Ille New York 1lmes, Men>j>bls Com-
mercial-Appeal, St. Louis l'Wt-Dlspotcb,
aticago Tribune and L.A. 1lmes. Keep
moving.
Keep moving, Ind ol ..,.,_ the
blgllme girlie mags, Playboy, Pentboo!e
Ind Gallery.
That's not pomo, you say? Don't tell
your Fint Baptist Church tithrr that, but
yoa're prob<bly right. You'd win the 1bat's not feally its name, but that's
what most of Lhe downtown Juncbtime
crowd caU it.
court decision. •
Straight ahtad. Now we come to the
hair dryer map, the kind that you never
recognize because the froot cover'•
always missing.
Actually, H's a news mart when! yoo
can get oot-ol-town papen, other kinds of
books, gel-well cards, bric-a-brac, junk
souvenirs, candy and gum.
ALSO, TI:IERE 'S cold wine, 1r you're
tha! type, chilly six packs and the hard
stuff, too.
NOii', 1lN YOllll lower rlglt~ you paa
Cavalier, Cinema X, Stud, Ace, Wildcat,
Jaguar, Rogue, Dapper, Sir, Esca)>ode,
Gent. Gala, Man's Pltasure, The Swing-·
er, Mr., Knight.
DON'T LET the titles fool you. True
Story, for inltance. Headlined' on the
cover of the March issue is, "Dear God,
11 My Son a Vampire?" Who oould resist.
Not I.
·'
All f\ttS1 QU~l\111\lE
NO oEfEC1S S''
ol''SECONO
-·-· -----... "---· --______...
o I
DQ IT YOURSELF
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our bMllne Is ll>out to leave oe 'fdate
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645·1126
STORE HOURS
OPEN SUNDAY -11 a.m.·5 p.111.
MONDAY, FRIDAY _,.· ,8 a.m.·9 p.111..
TUES., WED., THURS., SAT. - 8 a.m.-5:30 p.&
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'ALWAYS PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
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Ca
chi
G
d
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p
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eman: New Image, C ang ing Roles
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llT'OIWlll ift LAllllm !CASPER
Of ... .., ,...., , ....
Oh woman, do yoo tnow bow com--
pllcated YOtJ've become? '
YGU've damaged, 11 oot yet dealzoyed,
Ille ..,,.. nnd public Image of wbat every
woman sboold be llke. '
You're probably not one of those
"women's libbers" pictured in the papers
or -oa lelevision--newscam-tiurstUI -C!UJ"-
ing the last few years espec;lally, y°ou•ve
questioned your life's role.
Who are you? What do you want out of
your life? And, why do you want It?
That these questions exist among you
ls proven ,by the number of university ex-
tenllOn clilsses, conferences and women's
ceotm ll'bleb bave been lnilla~ na-
tionally ·as well llJI In OrlUlge Coun(y bY
women "Who feel otbei women's need for
the faltb and inspiration lo find some
;;;,r~ROVEN
And the need is proven by women who
fill the enrollment of classes $UCb as tbe
one called Motherhood Mystique ollered
through UC! extension last sPr'lng. It is
proven by the 1,000 contacts made in 28
months at the Women's Opportunities
Center, another part of the Universil)'_ Ex-
leriiloii. -.
And more proof is seen in the fact. that
250 women would leave their homes, even
in a recent cold rain, to attend Something
for Every Woman, a piogram spobsored
by the Huotiogtoo Beach and Newport-
Mesa bran<,:hes of the American Associa-
tion of University Women and OrQQge
_A>ast College and geared to offer ·women
r.Ome aJternatives.
· '1 think the need was obvious," nid
' BEA ANDERSQN; Ed)tor
,. ... 11
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Valerie Hum~ chairman' of the program.
She !ell the parUclpants. moot ol whom
appeattd lo be in tbelr mid-00. and older,
were "'ioot1ng for something but they
didn't know1 what"
The progt_am offered speaken whose
goal seemed to be to boost a weman'3
feeling for bersel£ and panel dlscusslOPS
which included more practical tips on
jobs (rnnat popularly atteoded), return-
ing to~scboal,..volWJteer opportunities and
a fuller life at home (second most
l'(lpular panel). It also offered smaller
panels on more speci(ic topics as politJeal
action, writing, the liberation movement
and medical and health services.
ICEBERG'S TIP
Ail!ioogh pleased with the turnout,
i,lrs .. ""111i le\t tboee who.attended could ·
only be counted as the "Up of Ille
·iceberg."
According to the evaluation sheets,
everyone feJt it was worthwhile and
should be held again. All but one woman
said they would return. The exception
hoped she wouldn't need such a prOgram
later.
Tbe suceess of such conferences,
clasSes and centers is women's response
to Ule many changes taking place in
Its
today's society, according to Edythe
Peters, director of the Women's Op-
portwdties Center. " '
"There isn't one area in Ule that isn't
changing right now," alle explained.
Blacks, Chicanos, lndlans and even
retirees al.so are uniting in their search
for something better.
But the female reapo!IMI la both com-
plicated and Individual,' abe said. The
woman ls reacting to social pressures
with lhe feeling "Uiat 1 must do
somelhing for mysell and I want to be in
charge of it"
Even the AAUW, an older and more
conservative national group. than tbolie
which have sprung up from the women's
movement, bas set up a study group call-
ed Women's Search fCf'·-self after noting
a irenif·of people going In two opposite
direcUons.
TWO p~CTIONS
~eople ~ going outside themselves
with ~ desire to Wale to other peoefe
and tbinp, noted · Shirley Kerins,
president-elect of tbe 11\Ullington branch.
Bl.it fn ll)e other, ne~ direction,. people
are· turfilna: inward with a desire to ex-
amirie tbeJPselves.
Mrs.' Kerins s u i 'K e s t e d that
•
technological change has arfected all r1age, she traditionally U expected to
people, giving them more leisure toques-start giving birth and ralaing a famil)1
Uon and at the same tiffie givlng them a soon after. Toddlers take time and at-
less fulfilling Ufestyle where one no tentlon in the mother's ~?ribut the
longer foUows his creation through use. children soon are sent to , leavtng
Perma-press, alooe, has certainly mother alone a good porii9f'o of day.
eliminated hours of ironing from the And then, again it haj)pels soon. the
housewife's work. And she no longer even children grow up and move out on lhclt
has to combine the ingredients for a own. leaving mother more alone.
simple meat casserole -it r.an be found 'Several of the women said this is why
ready for the oven in the market's they aUended the program. One wu
freezer section. bored now that all her children were In
Technology also has offered women a school. While another is not bored, she
longer life. Earlier in the century, one of just doesn't feel needed.
the program speakers noted, there was a Neither kne\V \\'hat they could do to
~t chance of death during childbirth soive their problems or how they could
so 'lbere was really no point in a woman go about it.
preparing for anything else. A woman whose only life is her home
Now that a woman can expect to live can lose touch with the world, Mrs. '° her 70s, she can also expect 35 to 40 Kerins admitted, just as some doctors
years without children and the demands know only medicine and some teachen
they ipay place on her life. can talk only education.
But this depends on the individual, she
LIFE'S CHAPTERS said. "I know enough women who do no\
''l.Jfe is kind of in chapters.'' noted (lo.se touch).'' For her, just being in tl\6
J.frs. Kerins. And won1en seem to have home was "like 8 period of rest" when
dJ(ferent and more chapte~s than the she ct1uld do the tblngs she enjoyed, like
men who, for most of their hves, are e~· reading a couple -or books a \Veek and ~~ to work and support their painting.
families. -""" While a \voman may \vork before mar· (See WOMEN FIND IMAGE, Page 18)
"It's not a man's world."
. At least that's · what employment
statistics.say, a~nting to Franc.es Jane
Kapsch, employmetit counselor with the
Orange Count)'. 1>epartqi~t o[ Human
Resources.
"You just can't get awaY from the fact
that women today are working and in
large numbers."
In April, 1969, 48.9 percent of all
women between the ages of 25 and 54
were in the labor force. But in April,
1972, that figure rose to 51.1 percent.
AOO..t 7G percent of all divof'Ced W¥Jen
and 50 percent of all separated w&nen
are working. And even 40 percent of the
married women who have a husband in
the home are members of the labor
force.
The birth control pill, increased
numbers of two-car families, changing
folkways and· mores. economlc needs and
opportunities, television exposure and
changes in the law might be considered
"-t.:, .•
World
reasons behlnd these statistics, she said.
. Teaching, oleric8I and nurSing a~ still
three very good .'fields for women. Both
education and medlcine are expanding
but "there's no getting out of it. If you
\vant a job, there's a ]ob (in the clerical
field)," Ms. Kapscb ~d.
Clerical jobs might be considered for
their potentials. "Many a top manage--
ment level (woman) started in doing the
most menial job."
But \Yhen the decis1oo to return to
\\.'Ork is made, she 51tid, the most I""'
portant thing is "Do something. Don't
just do nothing."
She suggested a personal inventory in
\\•hich the person evaluate her' abilities
and ask. "Do I like to work wlth persons-.
places or things?"
Then she , suggested, a person should
research the job she is interested in to
detennine ·what it takes, where the op.
portwlities are, lf it involves having pec>-
pte around, if if would· mean traveling a
distance from the-home, the hours or
work. trainiru! reQuired and Jr it would be
~onducive to the woroan:s life .
~ 11iio she •din)!.... is a "big Mt\muciatt~toetd~1~·but it would
also offer "• good P!Cture .ot wbal the job
market ls." ;):I . ' She also suggested, Mwever, that th•
job seeker look to J>rlvate agencies, the
want ads. lrieods, tm! tel~e book and
community colleges !or bilp In llnding a
job. • -! -.
"Don't be afraid to take• job.'' she ad·
vised women ~attendldg a program
sponsored by the Huntington Beach and
Newport.Mesa branches of the American
Association . of University Women and
Orangt Coast College, beeause a person
learns more about the good jobs
available when they are Working. -She also suggested that tb;e women not
tell a potential employer tbat tbey are:
willing to do "anything." Her stock
ariswer to that , is, "We don't have a job
(called). anything."
Illustration
By
Staff Artist
Tim Petersen
A job, she said, will do certain things
for a' woman ..• give her pay, keep her
busy. fulfill a desire. Yet, she cautioned,
"llon't expect II to meet all tbe needs of
your life."
OPEN DOOR
"We open the door for you to a new
world," said another speaker in the
discussion, Ruth Erban, a Kelly Services
manager.
She offered. temporary employment
through an agency as both a means of
gaining experience and a way of working
only when the woman wants.
Another field. untouched by the other
speakers, was offered for ct1nsideration
by Barbara Shirley, educational
resources coordinator-for the Probation
Department's Community Services Proj-
ect and a member of the Garden Grove
School District .Board of Trustees.
POiitics t ii( <:lialltitging, exciting and
scary, and public employment, she said.
is a chaQ~e a'nd contribution to the community!
Return to · SchOol Opens New Doors
Govemll!e~, .sbif said, is tryine to meet hum&ility.'s needs.
She suggest~ that ·interested women
become ln'v'.o1vtd with people and
volunteer-in politics, PTA, AAUW or
other orgahizatlons. ''You have to be
where the aotion is."
Public emptayet need to know wh~t
makes the system wotlc, but politicians
aJso have to "be a little fearless and be
willil,)g to be scared once in awhile." SChooJ Ior the woman and mother?
"I juot think it really puts you in
anot.bet' "''Orld ... YQU feel that you're
more thtm Just a boUsewife." Mena US8 Gregg was one of four
women -all of Whom have chHdrcn and
have returned to co1fege -speaking dur·
ing a J>lllel discussion on Going Back to
School during a program spomort'd by
the Huntington Beach and Newport-Mesa
branch<! of the American Association or
Univeritty Women and Orange Coast
College.
They were encouraging -while warA·
Ing d. -· problems -olhers to ~· to school alto.
"W.._ ace wa11te<1, '' said Margot
Clr1,BlilJI • UCI llludent Md mother of ax
chlw,11 aged II to I.
GROWTif RAT& Tbf rote ol w<>wth in ootlegts Is
de<rellllqJ, said I,ynn Hlltullel!> oq;; In-
structor and ~. Site up1ain.<l the P"""""° !or yd<\ri(l\<oPle to go to <ollege Is of! becatue lbe draft II of!, nmillln& In
a "drastic change" on the college cam·
puses. ~
'Bl.it the twe>-ycar community college
bas about 1,000 women \Yho are 21 or
older. .. ·• · ..
Mrs. Gregg. a mother of five children.
returned to school in hopes of ge}ting
better employment than working nights
in a factory as she was forced to do when
ber' husband was laid off from the
aerospace industry. ·
After looking at the job mnrket, she
decided upon computer courses as the
best way to find a better job. Allhougtt
she ~.ed all As in her counes; she said,
"It just wasn't my happiness."
Now, she Is a sOclology major loo\lhg
at UCl's social ecology program and
part•timc employe at the state unemploy-
ment oft_~.
Sbe feels school hns helped her beoome
; better person to live with, ll'\Ore un-
derstaiidlng of her children and more
aware (J( herself... •.
Slill, she gets all of her "'Ork done by 5
p.m. so it doesn't interfere with her
family \Vhlle she. makes an effort to be
involved with her children.
TWO WORLDS
"You can have two worlds and develop
it into one world," she said.'
Betty Pilger always wanted to be a
nurse but she didn't even finish high
scboOI before marrying.
After she raised her family and lired of
organizational activities and television
soap operas, she tciok a course in How to
Survive in College and set out to get her
hlgh school education.
' She•recentty earned her diploma and
now hopes to get Into Golden West
College'• nursing progr3m.
Scbool1 ahe sald, not only "saves your
sanity," it bclps a woman meet "nice
~\e-··
Edyiht Peters, "bombod out" as a
hbrhe cc ~for in 1942. But ~ 1966, wticn
•
her oldest child waa a hli!h adlool llOPho-port is most lmportan~ U..y all agreed):
more,_ .. I decided that I would do 80me-and Persevere.
thing for myself.'' -Women, aald Mr& IWttmen, often have
With the 1Uppo. rt of her busban_ d and to deal with finding and then paying for . . suitable child care. 'lbey also often have
children. she became a ceramics ma)Or to budget the cost of books.
and earned a ~cbelors degree ln 197l. • Bul, she said, an • •emotion a I
But she had noticed a.t Qillfomla Stste psychological tblng'' ts often a bigger
Universtty \ Fullerton, there was no one problem. The problem Is simplified in a
roncemed about the mature student. question, ~ "Can you compete with
.' younger students?" ~
COONSEUNG But studies have proven. Mrs. Peters
She talked her way into the masters sakl, that the mature student Is in-
progrem 1n eductUonal counseling and vari•bly a good student. While she may
began volunteer oounsellng •t the UCl hive gotten Cs in high school she now
Women's Opporttmltiet ~nter. Just gets As and Bi in college. '
recently'· she wu named dltector of the Also, st.e L!i often 11 challenging student cent~r. • .~ " in t~e claS1Iroom. "'She baJ a quality of
.Go1n1 back to school was scary for seelc.mg," Mrs. Peter,•cxplalned. She is
Mrs. Carlson. not afraid to ask the .. cfumb questions"
She adYlaed other women to follow the wtuch are oftCn on other students' mlnds
tbree Pa. -Prepa~, develop skll1t as RlJ well .
speed r<ading and bettor voeablllariea; The roaoon, ahe belleV<!s, Is thRt older
Plan, tell the husband and children what women students have a motivation they
and why acbool is desired (family su~ never had before.
OPPORTUNITY
One advantage of government, she
said, is that often the job Is In a new area
providing "the glorious opportunity to
carv-e out your own role."
Although a public employe is criticized
for feeding at the public trough. she said .
"Those of us \\•ho really care better get
in and make It work."
\fhlchevcr kind of job is being sought.
said Jan Dunlap. a management con·
sultant, "Don't take no too easily."
She suggested the women would have
to develop a completely new approach
whlch l'l'Ould get them what they waot.
~lis.'I Duolap told how she once was
told there were no openings at a firm so
she called on a Saturday when one of the
execulives was working and ,suggeated
tMt if he had to work on a weekend then
they did need lo hire her. She got lhe job,
worked up in the company and "t
bt'Cllme my boss' boss overnight."
.\
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JI DAJLV PllO f 1 hur~ • .Mirth l , 19/J
r ;, ••
•
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Many Faces of Eve Displayed Delaney Bros. Seafoodi
= , ... -~ ..• l(S < -·· -.. =n .
f'RUM -WHOLE ROCI COD .::. ··What 1 am 11 me. I'm Wll· general po<U&e> -that Aptitudes and mttrem -•r<
que. I'm the ooly me theft prttented to the outlide world. two different resource.a wblcb
Is.·• and that preJeOted to benelf. may rtlUlt lo a third, skllls.
But Ph1llil Bulle, uaoclat.e ''At home you are m•0 •atng And the community, public
protMlor ol. eaJOOmlcs at a blg lwlneJI.'" she aald, faciliUes and p r l v a t e
Oranae Cout C o 11 e a: e • noUng that a family wUI pro-bulinetael. l.J a source of in-
demoostrated that bet aelf blbly Jpend betwet:n a half come whlcb combines with the
wu 1tveral penoos, ac-million and a mlll1oo dollars other rtlOW'Ces in tmns of
cording to tbe way !he was £urin& lta life. the direction the women would
"pacbged. ... Moat women, however, alao take.
She walked ln wearing tht are pbllliclanr, economilta, The simple fact that they at·
black academic robe& fitting social workers, psychologl.sta, tended the program which of-
her role as a teacher. biological scientists, nurw. feted different alternatives
But then she pulled It off to hlatori.ans, technJctans. • Jn was a first step to decision
1how a $4.tl• l11111111inf robe, their families. rilaking. The dec~lon making
revealing herself as a smart And an executive, lhe e:r· proceas, Mrs. B a 1 t l e ex·
conaurner 111 well as one who plained, gels paid the tnOflt plained, involves two lhlng1:
enjoys relaxing al home. money for hi! skill in decision awarenesa and 5 e e k i n g·
B•kod Stvffod Fllh
1 °"""" ,l\ll BA .. lhlfl'llll Salt 2T Mlllll ... , .... ow ·-c ...... ...,. a •l'Y tllll. ,,...... ..... ...,. .,.. .,.. a ....,.....
PIK1 NII .. • -~ INk9 & -·~' ~rat)". IMf ftlll llllttr. BflJtil fllfl wltll ftl ....... 111111!'1_~
iw, 4' .... tlllft. ......... t11 tlloh tiau. ..... .,. -• --.
"
And then she 1lld out of this. making. ''You are all highly alternatives.
·She was finally garbed ln the akiUed declsloo makers," she Quo""" Fr•-'• B 1 c 0 n, 2800 laftyetfe -N•w, po'tt •••.c:h dreu of a career woman and said, "You're so used to mat-...., ........ 11peater at a program ing them that very often you ''The way lo the top la always 61J-J450 .,-145.2111 o,.•:·•4 M••1·s.t.1 t.t:iio •·
Something for Every Woman, don't realize It." throogh a winding stairs," she ·.-
spon.ared by the Huntington Economics, the economlst suggested that the women try ~ .. :h.·4.:..!·~.~
ooted, is not only applied lo ,,. _,. ·~
money. "It is the 1tudy ol get-
ting the most out of the
Women and the college resources you have." herself from the television :J~ · . ~ .II;.
The demonstration aiso was Time (of which everyone photographers who said, "Just •_::_. o. 'A ;!\.··~~,:~
rittlng of her role u co-star bu essenUally the same) and remember, there's nobody in .._. "' ~
and instructor on the Great energy ("some people really the world like you ." •~ . If:':
ConJUmer Contest, a televised have more energy t h a n And she prodded her -eu-f: ti'
college credit course. others") ·are tWo of these dienCe, "Go to it, unique ones, ~~··;, YOUR ONE~STOI' FABRIC SHOP ~
But each woman ha! two resources. and make the most of it.'' :. ~ ~= Come in to see our large selection of beautiful ~
• ~ knit and woven fabric,. .;'fs.
From Page 17 . Women F-ind ~New Image, Roi.es~ •QIANA •TREYIRA f •
Still, for many women, the
probtem of just being a
homewlfe ta "very real. ll's
not a nebuloua thing," said
Mrs. Peters.
It is "a rather negative Job
in the fint place," .she said.
"Everything you do, you have
to do over and over."
Her husband understands
now that he helps her clean
the house, she said.
As a construction executive,
he tells his supervltors never
to give a man a job he has
done before because it doesn't
give him a reward and
diminishes him lo terms of
self-worth.
A woman continually
repeats her jobs. She always
ha!' beds to make and diahes
to wash and furniture to dust.
HOUleWork also b r l n g s
negative reinforcement from
th~ family because It Is never
noticed until It isn't done and
someone uts, "Hey, what
happened?"
However, Mrs. Peters said,
women "do want to continue
• ~ • DIOLEH ,
in the basic role of a motfier." the need for employment is be a way of remaining close to of general lnfonnayon such as 'f!!': ~
And Mrs. Kerins said, "All part of a divorce package. their children .mo seem to be writing skills and c h i I d dJ e PENDLETON Wools .;;;
(the women at the program} AJlmony is no longer 8 con-getting more education than psychology. ~ ~ """not unhappy just because tinuous '°"""' of support for themselves. The Idea, bow.ver, would j. • l1'nen • Cottons ._. they want somel,hlng else ln the divorced woman need support of the ad-., ~ ... addiU~~. to what t h e y , re Under the new div~ree laws, But a college provides more ministr.ation ~ho !'o~l~ have .... ·: ~
doing. The women did choole I . ·• L H'lt OCC than a formal education, as to reahgn their pr1or1t1es and ~ etc ~:; the panel on a fuller life at eip aJn,.;u ynn 1 unen, was pointed out during the find space on · lhe crowded ~ • ~
home over others on school c~unselo_r, women often are program at OCC. f th t ~'~; .,.-.. g•ven 1ust two years to campus or e cen er· r. .. ·· FREE LINGERIE ~-and volunteer opporturut1es. bee' 1 bl UCI's women's center is noc "We as women on campus -~ ome empoya e, for students. Rather, it ls ' ' .-=.: WORKSHOP Y,
INDIVIDUAL REASONS Still others look to a job as gear~ for the commwu'ty haven't commun.lc~ted . the,, .,,,,> 9"0• ••
d I t.'U d t th d t t nl9I l classes actual work· .~ "Jt's a highly indlvi ua lheir ultimate goal because of woman whether or not she is nee . o e a m.1rus ra ion, ~-h S h ch f i ·' thing," Mrs. Peters said. "o_ur own American ethic •. " . A..i • in admitted Mrs. Hiltunen. B~t ~-s op. ee ow mu un . ':" ..
F h II mterestcu in return g to another problem she n-•·• 15 . it is to sew your own rom er counse ng ex-said Mrs. Peters. "In this school. • '-M:U, ..._ .-.
perience she knows that every culture, st~tus means mo~ey." The ~~~a~. ~~.~!!: e~;n a com-~ lovely lingerie. ~
woman has her own ttason for A housewife, she <>Tnlamed, women f 8 c u 1 t Y ···~"'' '"".'"&'"• ·~ th,. last ~ T•k• PKttk cNst Hwy. 10 ... di -Harth ... ••lldl ~
seeking something other than may feel deficient ~:Use she ~~1 s ~:! ~Jactrk: a~ place women go tor help. . ·-. 011: Ad•im to a .. c11, Norfll on •••tll " -, 1 ,..
what she has. ls not paid. women's center 00 their cam-Somethlngp r o gr •1 m Ev•• "'wch II ' 18512 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH j.
The problem of the center's Since many of these women . or try cman, ·:: ;-.
counselors is to determine lack employable skills, they pus. bnng the~ w~men to the col-1i w:E~~·~~HTEo T;;::1N&._c3~~:_:zls~::i:1;:&c~:z:• ~
what the woman's real need is return to school often as a The center they envision, lege. Mrs ... K~r1n.s saw the pro-~-• m ,aj;.
and how bell she can fulftll it. means to an end. Yet, there explained Mrs. H 11 tune n , gram as br1ng1ng the people • ~·:.
Some women are reacting to also is a significant number of would give women a ipecific who have the answers to ~ tlii, Phone 968· 1200 ...... ,.. i::.:
more than social pressures. women whose return to school direction in seeking help by pie who have the 9uestlom. .,,~ «
Thelrs is an economic need. is the initial end. providing knowledge of com-But she also thinks lhe. pro-.;\; .. ·... -~· . ~"~" ··~· . ~~-· ... ~-~-.' munity resources. gra~ played a supportive role, ~ ·· ;&;~' ·.· -_· .. -~•.:: ' •·.· ·· ;~~r ,.. . .-·· ·l
Many women in the county COLLEGE OFFERS But, she said, the center lettmg women know they are ~ ·~ • Ati V!! ~;:.~ 11 J4ll.
have had to find job! to com· A college education may be might also eliminate reglstra-not alone in their desires.
pensate for a husband's layoff th' the , 1 lion problems for the women "This gave them courage." N l E from the acros~ce industry. some mg y ve a w a y 1 ho ~., to tak · t ear y veryon e ,... wanted. It may be a means of w wQ..11 e Ju s ooe "They felt a lift knowing
An increasing number or filling spare time. Or, it might course at the college. And, it their feelings were shared
\other women are finding that might offer non-credit courses with others." • Listens to Landers
D'l'ERY
'BETTER
··scHCXLS
AIR STEP -BERNARDO -
SCHOLL SANDALS -PAS SPORTS
MACD~SIAN -MISS AMERICA
VINER CASUALS -HANDIAGS -
HOSIERY
Edw•rcl• -G1rb•rich -Robi" Hood
PF Fly1" -U.S. K1d1 -S11mm1r1H11
C1p11io Dtnct Sho11
D•"c• W•1r by 01n1ki" c.n.ctt.e ~for an._
225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
541 -2778 e BANltAM•llllCAltD e e MASTI• C"AllOt e
Look Smart, FHI CHu1I
in an easy-livin' wrap skirt.
100% cotton denim stitched up In white
· w i1h block lefter monogrem in any·
color you choose, s1m,l, 20.00
Monogram, 3.00
Pair with cotton/polyester
sleeviless blouse, contrast piping
on collar, 8 to 16, 12.00
Monogram It tOol
Carry• bright calico quilted
tote 11t 11.00. , • and P.O.C. says
yov've got• beaut iful start
on Spring , •• lhru Summer.
the
best buys of
th• week •••
anywhere!
Ot1t1•tofllonfh f11t11r1 of
ouhf111din9 hoM1t-to·9ood1t9l1
btr91in1 j111t for H1111ftn9fon
C111ftf c111f.orft1r,, Now thN S•t.,
Mir. J chick tht 111por trrl1t91
list 111 tho ci11t1P of M•ll· Worth
• 1p1cltl trip ••oty flllllfh to
l1•ch & E4!n91r &.f tht
$111 01190 fwy.
See the brighter
side of life
•the
Or.lige Coast in
(~nr:astJ
One al tile fmns tMI
.. Stnlly raoE>Ar
• sll•g·back
platform
"Fredo," shop;ng up olong cleon ond
casual lines for Spring and Sum mer ...
playing up your best sport swear
looks. By Miss Americ a, in a
great selection of colo rs end
materials, 17.00.
Jun;or Fosh;on Shoes, 75
•
__ ____.5U9~ cIDtt ttIJo.@ IloIPCID8!JGilw&~
. ,
ANAHEIM N~POAT . HUNTINGTON IEAC ..
ii 1111 4'4 N, (utlld 17141 SJl·l121 47 f1•hio11 hl•111~ 1714) 644·1212 7777 ldlt1t1r A~~u1 1714) ltJ.J))I
0RAN9E. \4>.Ll OF ORANGE . CEllUTOS
OAllY PllOI NIWPOlT llACH e 3400 VIA LIDO e 6711-7110
I
I, t
I •
\ 2300 N, Tu1tln Str•tt 17141 t91°lltl 100 L.1 C1rrfto1 Mtll IJIJ) 160"°411
sHh• 10 A.M. fo t 1JO P.M. MONDA'!' THROUGH FRIDAY. SATUkO~Y 10 A.M. to''·"" SUHOAY 12 NOON ...... .
•
I, • ·' -
•I
'
•
"I
----------
lhursda~, Marth l , lq7J DAILY PILOT 19
Cold Left Out·
. Manne .rs •• • 1n
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This Is ml a
very appetir.ing subject, but l nt.ed in
answer. Please forgive me for being in-
delicate, but is It proper to blow one·s nose at the table? ·
I mentioned lhia to a friend who did it
sev~ral times, and it wasn't just an
ordinary blow -she sounded like she
was calling a moose three miles away . I
gave her a_ sour look to indicate my--
disapproval.
She asked, belligerpitJy, "When a
person has to blow her nose, what is she
supPQSed to do?" I replied, "She can ex-
cuse heiseU from the table and go blow
it."
I was fold in no Wlcertain terms that it
is considered perfectlY. proper t.9 blow
one's nose at the table and that I am
wrong. Am I? -OlD SHOE IN
LAFAYETI'E
DEAR SHOE: It is proper to wlpt
one's nose at the table, but for blowing,
especially the moose call variety, a
person shou ld excuse himself.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My younger
sister passed away in May. Mary Joan
was only 10 years old when she died -
1uch a pretty, lovely, little girl. 1t seem--
eel a t.rrible shame to lose her. He
death 1'U oot sudden. We knew for five
years that Mary Joan bad lenJc:emja
We are devout Catholics and we live
· two blocks from the cbwcb. Mom is over
there praying three times a day. She
ordered a large statue of the Blessed
Virgin for the grave and it was placed
there the day of the funeral. Since tben,-
Mom bas placed two more statues at
Mary Joan's grave&ite and has changed
the headstone. we c~ get her to give aWay any ot
Mary Joan's_clothes. She wants to keep
her bedroom and closet exactly as It was.
I loved my sister very much, but I'm
afrakl Mom is going to drive beneU
ctiLzy if she doesn't get her mind on
S()l'J)Jtbing else., There are four." other
chlldren who need her attentlop, but she
is completely preoccupied witti the child
she lost. What can be done! -NOT
LOOKING BACK
D,EAR NOT LOOKING: Your mo\ber
is un ndably grieved, but she must
accep be (.Jct that life ls for the living.
Her lest Is tbe logical penon to bring
her 0 t or this de_eresslon. s~ to him
'
'
~.l~ -· ;.
about your mother's obsession and rm
sure be will offer to lpend some time
""Uh her.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was
dlsgus~ with your answer to Fat and
Mlserible. You owe an apology to every
overwelgbt penon in the world. llow
dare you say, "If you hate what ybu are
-be sorDething different."
Don't you know that many fat people
have a glandular problem -a malfunc-
Uoning ijlyroid? Others inherit their
obesity from their parents.
If lbese unfortunate heavyweights
can't live their lives without being
thought of as "blobs." or weak-willed. or
piggish, sometttlng is wrong with our
society. -A TEEN WHO HAS ADVICE
FOR ANN LANDERS
DEAR TEEN: Ann Landers say!i
thanks for the ••advice" ooi I have a
'
nash for you. Any pbyslcian will tell you
that ts percent ol the beavywei&bts have
no lbyroid probleai.
The .. maUunctioolng" gland Is their
mouths. It's overworked. A ltadency
toward obealty may be ioberlttd, but peo-
ple who have thlt inherited tendency
aeed not be fat If they watch lbelr dh:t
and ei:erclse regularly. The real problem
Is the learned eating habH1 that children
pick up from their partnts.
Going to a wedd!ng? Giving one! Or
slanding up in one? Even if you're
already married Ann Landers' com-
pletely new ''The Bride's Guide" will
arlswer questions about today's weddings.
For a coW, send a dollar bill, plus a
long, se1£·addressed, stamped envelope
( 16 cents pa8tage) to AM Landers, Box:
3346, Chicago, Ill. 60654.
.
Horoscope: Steady Pace Set by Virgoans
FRIDAY,
MARCH 2
By SYDNEY OMARR
Tt1e-sag1ttarids1Woman may
like the '••outdootr'type, u but
she really .is-fascinated by the
man With, ib.te1lectual in-
•
terests. It is best to be hones
with the Sagittarius woman -
she can forgive a 1 m o s t
anythiDg, but not deception.
she loves to read and travel -
she is frank and spiritual. She
can break the rules but she
usually learns them and knows
TJ!AYED-MEAT SAUCE-Hut & Serve 69¢'
MOSTACCIOLI DINNER R;:~ .
COLUMBUS -SLICED TO ORDER
HARD ITALIAN SALAMI
SLICED TO ORDER
SWISS . CHEESE
HOMl!M!'OE -'Lorge 1'12 lb. loaf
BUJTERCRUST BREAD
Reg.
1,99
Reg.
I.SO
R~ '>9¢ 49'r'1
ITALIAN DELI
RESTAURANT
8AKERY-GROCEAV
•EEA-WINli
-
how to wO/k· with . them. The
Sagittarius ~oman is drawn to
the Aries man, often marries
Gemini and can make money
with Capricorn. She will be
having· a high time socially in
1973 and September may find
her embarking on a journey.
ARJES (March 2l·April 19):
Powerful emotions dominate.
Relations with opposite sex
are intensified. Nothing hap-
pens halfway -know jt and
don't start something unless
you intend to finish it.
Caprico~ is in picture. Money
picture is bright.
TAURUS .(April 20-May :IQ):
Government papers, special
tasks are featured. Now you
find out where you stand and
what to do about it. Best to
finish .rather than begin proj-
ect. Maintain 41self-esfeem.
Refuse to back down from
principles.
GEMINI (May 2I·June 20):
' tive to opportunity which in• persons. Gemini and Vlrgo arc
volves travel, study. involved.
CANCER (June 21·July 221: 'SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 211:
Obtain hµlt from Gemini H~e, personal environment,
message. "Accent now is on \ ultimate secw1~y ...,,,,;. -these
. 1 • . . areas are spothghted. Take teaching and leartting. Ke.y 18 nothing for granted. Prepare
to apply lessons, especially iind build -deal with Taurus
those related tO _property, and Ubra. What appears .a
legacies, bequests.' Concern setback is of t e m p o r a r y
with hidden matters is em-nature. Know it and ride with
phasized. the tide.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Be ~AGITIARnJS !Nov. 22·
flexiblei Stress versatility. Dec. 21): ,Yon may be trying
Don't try to push views. to do too much
Laughter now gains more than simultaneously. Key_ now is to
threatening grimaces. Accept be selective. One who ·ma_kes
social invitation. Welcome new promises may not be able to
contacts. Leave details, flne fulfill them . Choose quality.
poini:s for another time. Put a halt to relationship
rediscover mate. l\1Rrrled or
single, you can build toward .a
more secure future.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).feb.
18): Ymfr humanltarian ill·
stincts find constructive
outlet. Yoll gain .added
recognitiott. · Personality is
spotlighted. Many p e r s o n 1
seek your opinion. Reach
beyond current expectations.
Get finger on pulse or public .
PISCES (Feb. I9-March 20):
Light is thrown on previously
darkened area. You gain 3c-
cess to privileged information.
Leo and Aquarius could play
prominent roles. Secret con-
ference i$ featured. Maintain
balance and poise.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are sensitive,
appreciate mu.sic, loyp.I to
19): Settle financial matter. -family. During u p coming
Get what's coming to you -months, however, you will
~ ~tive, direct and ha·ve to make clear that you
which drains . financial and VmGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): emotional rcsow-ces. Pace may appear slow but you
are going in direction of goal.
Key is to be steady, sensible
and mature. Those who ad-
vocate otherwise may be
sincere but are misinformed.
Be thorough. Be familiar with
details. A void excess.
CAPRICORN (Dec.. 22.Jan
• responsible. S p e c i a I rela-do have a .life of your own to
tionsbip is highlighted. If live. October could be one of
single, there is talk of mar· your most imporlant months
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): riage. If married,_ you of 1973.
/,
Hickory Farms. ."Group Tours..-
For Women's Clubs, Church Groups
And Other Orqanizatlons
H• .,.., .,.., ... ,.no. I•'-" .. Hie "FUN·' .... ,... ... of Ollt
t-11t HICIOIT PAIMS TOUl17 If ro• kwe Of ...... Ht,
. wo ... 1t1 Ilk .. ofhf yo• ttik• .,,..,__.,. t9 ..._ ....., tor
ro•r '"4Mty oH ""' u ••loy.w. .at• •• llt tM .,.... tlrM.
CALL TOD.Al fOI lOUl Al'POINTMINT
OUI J COHYINllNT LOCATIONS
WESTCLlFF PLAZA
01'": MoR .• frl. 'tll t -Set. 'tU 6 -S11•. 'tll I
17th & llYINI -NIWPOlt IU.CH
TOWN & COUNTRV SHOP, ING CENTE• -ORANGE
A,{r05s trom !i~n!a A"" FIOShlon Square u PAIHIOH sou••e-u. l+At•A
AMERICA'S LEADING CHIUI SlO•rs
Dalf·Sizes
SIZES
14 Y2 to 24 1/2
Nol.hing beats cotton
for lhat 9arden-fre1h
look. see our now crOP
of cri1p, no.iron
beauties. They're
k1tc:hen·Ri:lced
but too pretty to
stay ot hom•.
from $11 .00
Sunday Shopper?
fullonon &
Huntington leach
Open 12 to 5
f:!;({a . ~ Nor'sHAl,F-SJZE SHOP
COSTA
MESA
1101 NEWPORT ILYD.
INoM et llltl Stffetl
HUNTINGTON
BEACH
14 HUNTINGTON CINTll
INnt to a.tH •os. I
fULLllTON-224 Oto"90falr Moll, at Orcrtttet'o;p. l Harbor
Hoim: Mo•.-Ttl11n •• frl. 10.t -THS.•W .... Sat. 1114 ....
Bonkainerlrard • Maaterchnrge
•
-Price• Good U11IU cio.1"' ll7/7l
Express yourseU; permit
creative juices to f Io w.
Hi gr I i g b t independence,
originality. Deal with Leo. You
could receive communication
from foreign land. Be recep-
Significant changes o c c u r' .
Curb tendency to be ex·
1
____________________ _J!r;;;;;;;;;;~
travagant. You accomplish
mission. Personal magnetism
soars. Your ideas are creative
and 1ou profit by putting them
to use. Cooperate with young
OP.EN
ABRIC CENTERS SUNDAY 12-5:00
Prices Good Thurs. thru Sat.
·Print I 000/o ' Polyester
ZZllilnnfi \ '
.
sliver and turquol8e
handcrafted" treasures
Come explore the excitement of authentic
American !ndion jewelry, blazing ne w
fashion trails in Sterl ing silver ... rugged
'
• chunks of turquoise, shells, horns, and "
BEAUTIFUL WARP KNIT PRINTS . IN WARM
VIBRANT COLORS FULLY WASHABLE 60l' WIDE
,ON
BOLTS!
'
YD.
. DOTTED SWISS LACE . . .
I
DESIGNER LENGTHS .
GOOD SPRING COLORS
YARDS·& YARDS OF
BEAUTIFUL LACE TRIM
AT 'THIS 'LOW PRICE •
fabrifie
ABRIC CENTERS
'·
2 c
yd
Now In Costa Mesa
841 W. 19tfi, at Placentia
Colli Mal e Phono 64$.7832
Open Sund1y 12 'Ill 5 •
•
ANAHEIM NEWPORT
pottery ... in t~cate strands of Hi shi beads,
silver tubes, and stones. Our sweeping
collection of rings, earrings, bracelets,
pendants, and squash blossom necklaces
is available in all of our stor;s,
By Dhorma Mercantile. 6.00-450.00.
Fo shion Jewelry, 20
Dhormo representotives will be qlod to tal k
with you about our Indian tr0asures
Friday ond Soturdoy', Morc.h 2-J , in our
Newport s.tore.
-4~ N. EucliG 11 141 515·1121 41 f1th1011 1.r.11d flll) 644 .1212 HUNTINGTON BEACH
1711 Edi1191r Av•r1t.1t 17141 ttJ.Jl)I
ORANGE, MALL 01= OAANGE
2100 N. T~1ti11 Str11t 11141 991.IJI I CERRITOS
100 lot Cerrito• Mill 12111 160·0411
SHOP 10 A.M. to f :JO P.M MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY. SATURDAY' 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON to s p M.
),
2fl DAILY PILOT Tllw1dq, -], 1'173
New Zealand Inspiration
Women Join • Prayer
When women of. 168 nations Oreserve World Day of Prayer on Friday,
March 2, Chureh Women United of the Newport Harbor area Will wo,.bip
at 9:30 a.m. in St. John the Baptist Catholle Church, Cosla M .. a.
The ecumenical service and choir music, supporting the theme, AJert
in Our Time, will be OOllducted by the Rev. Anthony McGowan, asiii!Jted by
the Mmes. Frank Forbath, P. F. Baines and R. /\. Nelson.
1'his year'& service was prepared by New Zealand women, encouraging
olhen w avoid the temptation 'IW watch the outside world go by on rele-
vision screens."
Instead, Protestant, Catholic, and Orthodox women join for fellowsblp,
study and eooperallve -on.
World Day of Prayer will emphasize the 1973 concerns: making health
, service adequate and available to all persons creating more interacti~n
with Asian·Arnericans and beooming alert w world trade problems.
In the 96-year history of the event, the latent has ehanged from pray·
ing for the world to praying with ¢.he world oto solve such problems as
hunger, population explosion, fear of nuelear war and Pollution.
PIJlll.IC NOTICE
PICTTT'MWS •"11 .. PS PtCTrnCIUt Miii..... H<ilf ... Mllt•tlt ._. "ATUlilWf ...... tTAT....... ...,.. ST.ATSMl:.W'r
Tiit ~ ..,._ -9ol11t , y._ ._.,.. ..-11 ..... bid!-,,~.'-tl:lll°"'"" ~ b oo&no boitl-W.I,_ ••~ e1 ,... l"t..IP •LICT•OHttl, 11'1S ~Hfll 'OJ .OS'S OLD FMH!Ofil&O IC£ J, C. Oll'TICAt. CO .. Sl21 '8" !. L•
Clrc ... Sv!le I(, tr"I"', Ce. nit' ' CRfAM. (21 THE OtUGINA.L 8o\...,.,MA ••Im&. ANllelm. C...lf. tJI06. Ptillll• DMll WM•, 'lnl IMwi V.,Oe ROI.LIA: llOAMEll:, 13) IOI TfLLER Jotwi J, C_....,•Y• Jll N. l'•rll> L-.
Df ....... 1'203, C.•l• MeM, C.,,,,.,. EJrtTEll:PIU!.E5, '211 ~ c ... 1,r Or.,_, C.llf. ""1 ~Ml'*' HurliOll Wtlltt, 4 Hlf'mll-ot Or, $111'9 tll, N........., a..et!, (•, f1..o Thlt 111,ool-la <lll'ld.KIM b'J' all kl·
UM,,.....,.. a-ti, C...... ilt...-i ~ T .. i.r, 1~12 AnliiWI di~. ,.,,. ,.,._.._ Wfli1of, I H...m1.. W•V•,,....,..., 1MC11. C1llf. J<lflft J. c:.nNw~ ~. ~ h~I!,, (.fl, ,.,... Thi• ~ I• «inOIKled ~ •II In Thlt 111i.m.nt ,.,., 11i.cl wt1't! the C-
Tllll ......... I• condut;led lly I ,...... .. ·~-IY Ckttt ot Or .... C-ty Vfl F.V.Vl'Y
_._...,.,_ llOlilWf H, T.iW "-•• Jfn
. Mi-11, WNi. Thlt 111 ....... t Wll fllM wtth Ille Covn• f'USJI Tlll1 t/11.,._I wll fllN with ttw C ty Clffll of Or•""" C-ty Oii Fet>rV•r'I' PllO&I,,.,, Ot'.,.._ (-1 O.!ly ,-1"1!,
ty Clffk ot 0.•1114 County°" F""IH'Y S, J ltn. M.lrdl 1, I, U, :tz. ttn llJ.ll
lf7l. ' ~·· Pmt6 Pvtlfl"'9d °""'" co.at o.llV flt101. PUBUC NOTICE
Putlllff*I ~ ... C09" O.lly Piiot, F*-'l 1..-U .i'l. .--Mardi l,_lfll!l--------------11
FetinMry •• IS n. w Mimi l, Tm sn-n l'ICTITIOUI Mn•••••
;Mf.13 lllAMI ITAT1¥1t1T
PUBlJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Tlw talloWlflll ,.._ i. .... ov.i-. 11 ___ _:_.:::_:;:,::.:..:_:.::::.:_ ___ f----::::::::::=:":::::=:=-~-1 1•: l. A fl II: V'S GOl.OEH FJUIO
P'ICTITIOUl •Vlltllll PIC'TITIOUI IUllMlll CHICICEN, llS 8 lndlln•jlQll1 Are.,
"AMI JTATIMllfr lilAMI ITATIMllfT Hlllllll!OtQll ~'CA '24*
TM followl119 ""°"'' ••• dOll'IJ T1'll tollowll'l9 WMIR It 40ll!ili Ml-t G-.e C. 11-irt, 21?n C"°"'~ L11 ..
blilln .. I •1: • ii: HuntltllrtOfl lffdl, CA '2W. HOlllE HIWPORT -Tl1E llOAT THE ION TOH. m 30th St .. Htwport Tiii• ....,."'"" •• condUC'f..:I IW lfl "1·
ITOltE, 17!l0 w .. t COii! HIQA.,..•y, &Heh. c.Hf. n.NO dlJ\dual ' N.wporl llMCh, C•Ufonil• nuo 1111 E. s-1..u:. lG H•rm<lM Ave.. G.or" c $t-1rt
WUll1m katl M_....,,.,., Jf., lOIS i::"=. ':,11~~0nclvclN by i n Tllh .t•l-l
0
"'t•.fllecl with 11>9 Coun· ll•r-r• Tlt .. Kt, NtwpOrt llHCll. llldlrldUal. . ty (1"'1l of Or'Mll<I County 111'1 Ftt>n11•y
C•lll. 1111 I! ~oldt tt, 1'13.
R•lph Vin Oor111 a.oltr. :ms L•will Thi• t tir.m'.e...t lll-1 wtlfl 1119 COUfl!V lflllll L•n•. Co.It-., (Ill!, Clerk of Orenoe COU!llY Ofl ' Ftbr\ltry 1, Pvell!lltd Of'~. Col•t Ditty Pllof,
Tiii• bl.llll'ltH II ~onchKled by • Glntr1I Im. WIUIAM E. ST JOHN, COUHTV M1rc11 l, I, IS, :n, 1tn 60.,_73 P1r1,,.r~".1pV. 11~ •1'11 CLERK, •w Thtr ... M. Wtrd. Otpvty. PUBIJC NOTICE
WHll1m ~ Mnll'lll!er. Jr. l"1h3I This it•lement w•• "ltd"''"' the Covn-f"ubllllllcl Oftngt (6111 DtllY l'Hol .. 1--------------11 '------~--------------------------------' ly Clerk of Or1t1111t County on FeD. f, !t7'. Fl'bl'u1rv· n, •nd Mircll l, .. l5, P'ICTITIOUI IUSlllllSI Mc:~I a Mc:O..w.l lt73 50:S-n NAMI! STATl!Ml!MT '7
) D'S Wlltlll,. a1w1 .. " ... ,... TIW foltowll'IJ ..,._ •r• dolllll
March May Be Off beat ~:.~:;;r;S;'"· PUBLIC NOTICE "'".;1",:~0TO<lO.,HY .,o conOM
,,_ COLOR LAii, ti! Forni Av1., L•gun• 1"1~ P'ICTITIOUS IUSl"ISI 8.-dl "651
PIJDllU.CS Or•fllll Co.,1 O•lty PUot NAMI STAT.MINT Jerr'I' L. 81.>rthtltold, 947 Gtvl011. &pl.,
Mtr<ll 1, 1, n, 22, 1m •17-73 Th• following 1>«aon •• dolr-.o bullr>!n a , LtgVl'lt Btteh n.'1
, • -------------11" Mtrll P. Chlmberl•ln. 1550 Glt11MYr1, PUBLIC NOTICE AMERICAN MINT ING, ~ N1woort LIQIHI• Beach '2651
I f L 0 f / D d 0 ___ . _ __ ~:'i~~r 92~v•, Ho. no. N~"'port 81tch, Pl~~~:r!1:i'i~n••• I• being conducred by a • t NOTICE 01" MARSHAL'S SALE Douglas S. Warren, 500 Newporl Jerry eurchfleld
I e S r U m m e U Ho. 11'-2'S Center D,lve. Ho. 520, NewPOrt 8Hch, Tiii• staltmtnl rlltd wiltl tile counry
. MAWA H. •ACCO"R. '"'°''"· '" C.OI .. ~4'0 Clo" o• 0""" C~o~ M• ·~· >>. om fJlf OEIUCK FALCONER, Otftlld1nt Thi' lluslnes1 11 Dllng cortdutlied by 1n WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY·
11) ERMA-soMllEC!t ·~
rm bored.
Every day when I tako a
ahower, I wub the left arin
.first, then the right arin, the n
my face and neck and wor k
my way down. Every day .
Every -k I buy five
pound& of hamburger, a chuck
"""'· two feym and a
package of choPJ. Every
wee~
LORI COLE
April Rite
Planned
JUDGMENT OATE: F•l:lr'Ulry 7, 1tU, lndlvldl.lal. CLERIC, by Tlllrftl M. W•rd, DIPUtv. ~ lly v1nve ol •n IX~UllOl'I l11vecl on OOl.>Qlts S. W1rr111 ,.ma
Ev.ry -~In•, ~en the J•RUMY :u.. U7J by "'-&uperlor court, of Thlt 111tefnll\1 tnW wlltl · tM cou11ty Publlshld or•no• Coett D•llv Pllol
'""' 11 a wu C1llfornl4o Counl~ of 0rtnQo9, Stell ol Clffk of Or•t11111 (oonly on: F•bruary 5. Mtrtl't J I 15 22 1'1'3 60J n kids leave, I •elf lhe oame old C1llfornl1, upon • ll>darntnt enllrl'd In ltn. WILLIAM •. ST JOH", COUMTY ' ' ' • . , AT 11vor f1f MARCIA H. FALCONER 11 CLIRK. 17y ltten•• M. W1'4, Deputy. PUBLIC NOTICE thing, "Got your ] u n ch l~m..,1 cr.ciuor 1nc1 • g •In 11 '22141 FREORtCK FALCONER, ti IUOOment "1,1bll1M<1 Or•l'IQI COii'! 0111~ PU01,.l--------------ll
money? It's a long day." WIT'S deblor, lhowlrig 1 net blltfltl of $2,1"3.0S Ftt>ru•ry •• 15 22. Mid Morch '· 1~73 PICTITIOUI •USIHl!SS
Every momm· g. 1c!u111y due on uld luclgment on 1!11 d•te JM.n NAMI STAnMl!HT of the l11u1nce ot 111'1 •~.evllgn. t ~1v1 Tiie followlna ,....IOI! 11 dol119 bVslneu
I 'nd lb END llVlllCI llPOll Ill the right, lltt. •nd fnl.,..nl PUBLIC on 11: . __ WI e vacuum sweeper of Wkl l\llkl ....... I dtblor In""' prlll)ll"IV In N CE _ PHVSICALS UNLIMITED. "' All>ert
cord counterclockwise in a 11>11 c-iv ot Or•nge, s11i. of c1llforn11, Pl1ee. Co.I• Mes1, C•HI. tt•27
fl·gure elghl . • • a I way, c1t1erlt>tc1 11 IOll01n: P"ICTIT1ous •u11111•u C•rl c. erown. t16 Al!!fl'I f'.19 coil• ,Lot •• lllOCk'S, TrlCI 161, 11 illOwn on NI.Ml tTAT1!MilMT Mew, C1!1f. '2627
counterclockw ise. I n e v e r e•pectanl mo·Lers who are • m111 1Mrw rKord..:I In boOll: 2• " Tn1 1oi1ow11111 eorpor111on 11 o:101ng Thlt Du11nn1 11 ((Jftduc.ttd by tn in-" Ul ~gn 22 •nd 23 of MIKtllll'l.OU. Mtp1, bu1lnu1 •1: -dlv!du•I.
answer the phone on the first not married, lll11eord1 o1 uld Or1nve county, In '"' ASTECH, 3030 Swlll RMI HUI Av•~U<I. C••• c. erown . office of tM C1;11Hity flKonter. S111t1 A111, Ctlltornl1 tt10S This 1t1tem•11t was fllld wnn the coon-
rmg. Watching Jae~ LaLanne and Commo11ly known ••: 2:ll02 StrHI of Tool R .. HrCll I nd En;lllftrl119 ly Cl1rk of Or•l\Qt County on f'fbru1ry t never read my horoscope t1>11 v1oi1t L•nt1rn, 01n1 Point, Corpctf'1t1on, • oe11iw1r• cO!'POt1t1on, "" 1tn. ,
until after coffee. I say the secreUy wishing s 0 me 0 n e ~;~~~·is HEIREev GIVEN t11t1 on ~~f.~~~r• Boulevird, t.verly HIH•, Publl•lled O••ntt c°"" 01uv "~1~1'
Sam e dumb Ihm• g lO lhe dog wouJd put ilarCh in hiS little Thursday, M•rch 22. ltn, 11 l0:00 O'CIOl':k Tlll1 b\lllMQ b Conduc!N by I (Of• Marci! 1, I, 11. 2:1:, 1913 sw,.J3
bl j ull W d . A.M. II M1rill•I'• Ottlc., Courlllou.w porallon.
everyday "How's o 0 g g y ue umps · O n e r 1 n g 301'3 crown v11i.y Pirkw.... c 1... ~ Atr°" L. 1Co1orn; PUBLIC NOTI
• what it ls wltti me that I can't L1gun1 NIQuet, COUflty of Or1-.;o., st~'~;; v1c1 Pr111c11n1 CE today?" (He never answen.) . C•U1or1111, 1 w111 "'" 11 P!Jblk auct1C111 10 T1111 si.tM'lfflt w11 rn1c1 with tti1 Coun-l-~------------11
Wear false eyelashes WithOUt the hlQl'l~I bldd..,, for ,,11'1 In tiwtul tv CIMk of 0t•f191 County an Ftb<v1rf ,.ICTITIOUS IUlllllESI
Every d ay I call up some-faWng asleep at 8:30. ...-v o1 ""'un1rtd s11r.., 111 ,.,. r111111, u. 1tn. , ·-NAM• ST•T•M•NT
one and tell the m I look 1111• •rid lnlernl of ••Id ludi;tmefll dtbl()r ·-Tht followlng l)ef:Klll II o:lolhO Duslness
l'k "You don't understand m e In the ebo'ol• deacrlt>td PfClpWtf, or to STl,.HI" .... SCHN•IDIR, Atty. ti: 1 e a cumulus c loud and am much thffl'OI •• may w ne<:•u••Y 1o tstJ '#111111 ... 1w11van1, Sutt."' llROADWAV LIQUOR , 278 gr~dw•Y· going on a diet. (I never do.) et all," 1 said to my husband Mt11rv uld IXKllllon, w1111 occrllld lit-kwfl<t "'o .. C•I= ttz12 L~u,.. 8Hch, C•llt. '2&51
When I wash dishes, I last night. "I'm in a rut 'and it~:_:~.=;y 27, im P11b1l,htd Or•~ cour o111y Pile>1. ::!~u~~ =~ l:f{,. ~~':'' Alt•
I I'm young. With a few ac· Dlvr1lon: $0Ulh ' F"'rua.,,u,221no11Mirchl,1,1m 459.13 Tllli. t1t1sln•s3 11 conducttd ~Y •n In-
a ways wash the g lasses first. • DILLARD 0. WILKIRSON ----dlvlduml.
I t I ch d and cessor1es I could be sensuous. M1n1111, ~ ..... c°""rv PUBUC NOTICE ••vmond w. M.llfllr
ea my un every a y I want to live. I want to say lly M. L l rowri, Oepvly Tl'll1 i 1111m111t w11 in• wltti.,,. coun-
watch the • "Soaps" a n d hock.i rcb 1ik 'The La t Rkfln s. "iw. PICTITIO\ll auw.-iiis ___ tv C11rk ot Oran~ Coonty on Februory 1,
mumble, "Who watches these s ng WO Reed. sd :w:.:.M.::.~:foml NI.Ml ITATIMllNT
1'12· P't)141
things?" Tango, Rex a n PJ.alatlff'• Attllmtv • Tiii 1011ow1no per1on I• o:1o1111 bu11Mu f'ttbtt~ftl °"•• CNtt O.lly Piiot
Democrat. Publl""9c! Orange Co.i.I 01lty Pilot, 11: LEE ANO (OMP'ANV, :1(1.1 Alvarado Ftbru1ry I, 15 22, Ind March 1,36179~
When I drive the car, I "I want to do something Mir'" 1. •· u, 1t1J 61G-7l p1., P.O. Boll: .. ,, 11, 1ooa, 91661 ·
always stick my hand over the Ch1r1 .. II:. Lee, AKA Dkk Ltt, ~ PUBLIC NOTICE outrageous, different .. _ un-· A1~1rac1o PL, B•ID01 nM1
passenger seat when I stop predictable and c razy like give PUBUC NOTICE 1..J1~~:.~•lnt11 11 be!"" condue1e11 oy 1,. iricTiTious •us•N•s•
suddenly ..• whether there's
'anyone sitting there or not. a par,tylheonl Mondad ybamot• "'u!i.ing, 111oric• o.' sC...~ 0,. ll:IAL Th11 ''~~:;::, ~i!i~nn cwn1v c1erk 01 TM '°11!~.;:• P!~~~:~ 1M.111n11s or pu aven er I' ssue PROPIRTY AT OrAr>Q'I County on: Fib. u, 1913. ~s: I say the same insipid thing in the red bathroom Can't you PllllVATI SAL• WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY ECLIPSE SUN CONTROL co .. :nu
I th b k II · I · Ne. A·74117 CLERK, By TMrtu M. W•rcl, OeP1Jty. Ch1n1111 II.cl .. B•IDo1, (1. 112661 o e an te er ever ytune understand that?" 111 1._ Superior Cai.wt of the State of Fnnt Ch1rl•• D•vld Let>rec111, 2211 c111n111t
go in. "Giving away any c1u1ornl '°' .... "'-·-i -· 0 P~blblltd or1ng1 Co.st 0111y Piiot, Rd .• B•ll:>ol, C•. 91661 , "I understand," he said In t111 1M,,1111~.,.of'"'ii: yl!'~j11;1:tjULIA Febru1ry U. •no Marett 1, I, r5. Thl1 buslnn1 Is 'onducltd by •n ln-
samples today?" evenJY.. "It's March again." MARY ALLEN, Otcustd. 1973 S06-n dlrlc1i11•c111rle1 o.av1d Lebt'Kl!t
I always put the milk out too "O·d· I l II ·1 NOTICE •s HEll:EBY crv!'N ~' ™ PUBLIC NOTICE Thi• 1ta1-1 wit flied wnri 1111 coun-1 e you my ma1 man unc1eri1gMC1 w1u .. 11 1t Prlv••• •le. 10 ,., ciert. of °''""' CouMv on F•bri11"' soon for dinner, forge t to put looks like Robert Redford?" lhl bl1hltt •nd 11111 blddtr, 1u1111e1 to l• 1m. "
tht,11 the bl ---·-t "I know," he ··'d sofUy. COllll.zntH~ 'of llld SUDftl"IOf' (Ol,lff, °"' FICTITIOUS IUJINl!St • ~ F2U27 e on ta e, U.llVW OU iKU or ... .,. .... Sftl dty Of Mardi. tm ti ,.,.,.. STAT•M.IMT f'ubllshtd Orange COii! Dilly Piiot
""• offim of Nonn111 G. JUOll'trt, "SS TM following PtrlOn 11 dlMl'lll 11u1lneu Flbr111ry 22, •rid #Nrch I • is' th morning paper before •t1r '"'"'· C••• MIN. -c-.., of 11: 1m ' 491_,3
Ol',tnge, Sitt. di C.ll~/1, 111 tr.. right, EGG ANO ALE, 2531 E11tbl~lf Dr '----=:::::-:-::-=-:-:c::::c=c-----=11
anyone gets a chance to read ~--------==I""• «Ml lnler"t of ttkt d.aitlild •I 111e N1wport Betti!, c1111.. 9u.50 "1 PUBLIC NOTICE
it and can be counted on ,,. u FF EL L'S llrne of dllftl tlld •U ... right, tltl• •net Flylf'lll Butler In.: .• '1000 Fl•mlnoo Or '"" lnttr .. I flit! "'9 fttli. If .. Id OtottMCI Coslt Mt$1, CtHf., t:?•U "1-------------
say every night when my bus-h•• •cqulrM .., GPtl'.tkln of ••w or Tlil• bu1!111u 11 ~Ing eorwct1.:1 DY a ltPofff
ha olhltwl .. otMr 11\tll Dr 111 HcllUon le ,,.., torpor'lflOtl. "OTICllE TO Clll•DITO•s
band s just fallen asleep, UPHOLSTERY of wld dec:ffsed, •I flit""" ol ftllh, 111 FLYING BUTLER INC., e, SUfll•K>11: coulllT o,. TMI
"Did you lock the back door ?" ._.. __ ••• -· •!Id lo •II the c1rt1l11 .... pt"(lplrly Elllabe~I! s. Zimmer STATE OF CALIFORMIA ,09: , ..,....., lltu•ttd In the City of Ntwoort Suell, S«raltrv alld THI! COU"TY 01" Olt.ANOI
( find myself picking Up TM lest Caunf'f of Ort1"'9, St•lt ot C•llfornlt , Trea111rer No. A·75SG Lori Dentse Cole and Mark movie magazines and envying 1tJI Heritor ltn. Plrlku/•r•v dntrlbld •• followi. hl-wH: Thb 11atemen1 111ed wun tht county E11111 of LEE II.OBERT VIGARIO, '''° McKenzie are planning to c-~--_ 541.0llt Tiii w11t l'lllf f1f t.ot 3 In llOCll: 1 ot Clerk ot Or•fllll Covn1y on: Feb. 16, 1973.. known a! LEE R. VIGARIO, •IM> known -Tr1et No. 27, aoulevtrd AddltlOl'I lo WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, COUNTY '11 LEE VIGARIO, Oe«tiftd.
marry April 14 in the Mon· ii~""""""~:;;;;:~""""""~ N.....-i>orl Htfgtlh, IS'*' INP ~ In CLERK, llv Arthur E. ICtlillf, ~lll.llY NOTICE IS HEii.EBY GIVEN to the ti cello Clubhouse. 1 r=c======-==:o.:==:;I llook '· PtDt 2• of Mltcll/lfllllJUS Mtpt, l'U32J crf!(!ltora of .,,. llbOve ... med cllcldlnl
Parent. of the betrothed are
,I rtcttn:b of Ort1191 Cou!lty, more com· PvDH1he<1 Orange Co.st Oalf'f Piiot, that an 01r$Olls narlng cl1lrn1 tg1l11st tllt monly kllown ": iast lrotd Stl'fft Ftl>rutrv 22, arid M.ln::h 1, 1, lS ukl dec~nl ltt r.<it.l(r9d lo flit llltm, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Cole of TIRED OF WAITING NtWQort &Mell, C•ntornl•. '1973 •ff.r.i "'1th the neceuary vouc11er1, 111 the office
( nd · · ) Tile wl• II Wb[IC1 hi CV!'rent r.x .. , of the (lerk of 1111 tDoVf tnlllled ~rt, °'
Corona del Mar and Mr. and a wa1tu1g... • Nl:W coven•nt1, ,onc111ron.,. r11t rlct1o 11 ,, PUBLIC NOTICE '" present them, wlrh the 1111Ceutrv
Mrs. Arthur R. McKen:r:le of FOi YOUR PIESCll'110N @.B.'RALOC'ASSTIOM RJ.'Nt'(J rnerv•tlons, rlahls. tllll'tl• o1 w.,. ,illd vouc/ltt,, to 1"11 undenlgned 1 1 TO IE FILLIDI ttMll'lll'lll ot 'itcon:i, "'9 Pllrchlstr to 010 RODert!!011, Howsel" & Ge,ltnd, Attor-Costa Mesa. 11..um• a11y tnevn'!brtne• of f'll;Dtd NIW~O•T-MISA ney1, 4lo!O CBmpen cr1r1, P.O. Box 2201, Miu Cole is a ~raduete of TIY US -NO WAITING-Tern,. of ute c•llll!l l•Wfl.ll monfv of UNIP'l&O KHOOL DllTIRICT Newport a.1ch, C•llfornl• 92660, which 11 !he Unli.d Slii* on conflr1TWllOl'I ot 1111 "etlct l11vlHflt lkll the pltct of buslne11 of The IJl\dlr-lgned In
Corona de! Mar igh School , ... w. C.11 TroM'9r Dlttl•tfM 5'"" Gr pert Cllh Ind blltnc• .... ~ oY II NOTICE IS Ht:RE8Y GIVEN that the an m111er1 perta!nll'IJ lo the n ltle ot ltld
and allended Orange r-asl Yfft ~-"••••· w-·-1oy nol1 ncvrtd b'f Mlr1Nat or T!'Vlt Oetd Nrd of E:dvctllon o1 llM NtWPOM·Meae deceoent, wlthl11 tour monim. tlltr fl'>I "" ~,._,. on In. pr'O(>trty IO IOid.-Tllfl PW Cini of Unlll«! School O!ttrkl of Qr•l'IJe County, flrll publlctllon ot 11111 nOllc.,
College. Her f i a n C e , a [ I e Norm•n Wl•tt amount bid to ~ ""°"Nd wlftl bid. C•lllom1a, will rec•lve se11ec1 .bid• up to Dllld F*1.larv t, lffl.
ey • be rtctlvect •• 1"11 •fOrlllld ofl'lct 9t I f tn1 qffice ot .. Id k/\Clol Dl1trlcl, Ex~1,1trh1 of 1"11 Wlll of graduate of Costa Mesa High ·~ e Bl I e1c11 or ofitrs hi w Jn wrlllnt ll'ICI win 11'00 A.M. on th• 1llh d•Y of Mlrch 1973 BEll:NICE TUll:NE'll
Sc:bool and California State NEIJIC!•E OP Allo Golf W"r time.,, ... the f!rtl OUDIFc1tlon ,...,.,, :: loc•llld I I 11$7 Pltcltn!lt A-... 1111. C6111• the llMIVI n1m.ci dtcedenl
University, Lon:!c, Be a ch. _ M . 3127 1.,1 c ... , H-. bltor• 11111 of ul• Tiii l.llldlnl(tn.ci ........, c1ntorn1 •• •• w11k:11 time .. ., bid• •0•1•not11, MOWSEll: -· , ... rVM Ille rlgl'tt to ;lfu11 tny bllh Jlrlor wHr IM llUblk:ly ooentd •nd road lot: & OAll:LAND teaches s t Ran San Joa-JtO I. 17tll St. et T11fi11 Aw. Cero11o 4e4 M• 10 enrry of 111 orWr conllrmtng .. ,. s kelcM..lr. EqulPl'Ml'lf-E•ttnda Hltlh IS4t C•mM!I Drive
quin Junior High School. Hen to lalpltl Miit. -671•4741 01ted '"'' 21111 c11y °' FttH'.,•rv 1fn. ... ~ir.c:'ld 1111wpw1 ... ell. e1111om1a
C .. M • 2 10 Egcuror of ... _ "nil ' 1 ' 1 lrl to bt in «eof'd•!ICI With Teh Mt-5119 OI Ma 4 .. 4 Miid De<:~', .. "' 0 .. o:I 0.:..0...t. C:ofldlll-, I n. Ir u ( t I 0 II.' •nd Altonltys ..... EX~Ulrlll: ir------------dliii~M=M~. ~~~~~·~·~1. ~·~"~ ... ~·~·~1.~·~·~·~~---~~~~==~--.. Ntnn•~ 0 J.,...rt ~1~r:"""'· ~ ••• now Ofl fll• Ill f'UbllilMlcl 0••"11• Co11t Ottty P!lot. !UJ 11111.; Slrwt S ·-'• DI' '!_lcitl'le P1.>n:1'111lng ......., of .. Id Fl9bfvt!'Y 15, l2 1rid Mtl'dl l, I, ·~,. A c''-1 '". • IU1 PltCllllll• Av.nvt, ltJI. 151)..n
c I llS I M .... c1nroni11. · 1·------------;i;; T" • ~. C1llfontl1 E1cll bidder mwt Mrt>mlt a f>ld ._Ill
LAST 2 DAYS!
CONSOLIDATION
OVER 2,000 PAIR TO CHOOSE FROM. ALL
FROM REGULAR STOCK AT THE UNBELIEV·
ABLE PRICE OF ••••
FAMOUS NAMIS:
• DOMIM lt ROMANO
• AMALF!
e HILL & DALI
• Reo CIOS5
• AM'-HO
e St:LaY MA~Y OTHIER lllAHOS
1 GIOVr
BOOTS
...... $10 TO 111 .,.... Jr,
00
Per Pair
Values To $40
I FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY \
ALL SALES FINAL
NO Rl!FUNDS
NO EXCHANGES
9 l'ASHION ISLAND
OIJAmal • BankAmerfcard
• Ma1t•r Chere•
• Paul Allen Chorge
•h '"'' t7t«n In the form ol I •rtifltd or ~tr1 Attem.y for ••~ theck or • bid bOncl equ1I to nve Otrcent
MPublllt>W °'""II• Cotst 01Uy Piiot, (5'19) ol the 1mou11I of fhl bid, midi
•rel! I, 2, •· ltn •11-n p1y1bl1 to !ht orcttr °'""' ~-MtN -----,----------1 Unified Scllool Olstrk:I, A ,...,fOl"RWl'll:• 8ofld m1y be reqyll'ld II '"' dlKP'lllon of PUBLIC NOTICE IM Ol1lrlcl. In Ille 1wnt of l•llurt to
--;;;;;;;:-::cc:=::::-,,.-===---l 1111tr lfllo •ucll COlllTIC1, Ille Pfoeffdl ol t!NVIRONMINTAL RIVll!W IOARD thi c/\eoi;k "'HI bl forftllllcl, or In CtM of Holle• I• hlrtbv olwn by • bond, II•• lull IVM lher1of Wiii bl
Envlronm111tal Review eoord City": lorfflttd to wld SellOOI Ohtrlcl of Ortngt
HunllngtQl'I at~h 11111 the 1o1'i-i Counly,
vlronmenlil EX~llon O.Clirilt flit .,,. Ne bidder m1y wllhdr1w hl1 b!d fOr •
q1,1f1t1 .,...,.. lenl•ll,..ly tPPrO..:'J r• p.rlod ol forty.fl.,. (45) di.,. •lier !tit F1tbru1rv 27 1m· on dale set for the openlrig !hertot.
ED n-11 1t'1"'°"i.J ol '.«ID TM Board of Educ•ton ot tnt Newport:
TT 8~ to Mllbl!lh LMJI ii'::n dl".f !(for Mtu tJnllllld Sth<d Ohtrlet restrvn fhtl
aru t>y L• Sol•l'WI Corp. ""' "II rlghl to rel«I any or 111 bld1, •lld not
EO 13·11 M11nldHI Wlfff well -ftd llfCH~•lly fCCll)I ,~. !owe•! bid'. Ind lo Murdy Clrd• 200 fllt _, of } ___ II 'Wli\19 tnv lnlorm•ltly or lrr~ultrlly 11'1
SIT@f!I b Ille Cl ""'""''d IMY l:lkr 'e<:•lved,
EO 13-1J rec 22')~:.::.:;1: at.ell 04ttd Ftbruary :n. 1'71 1tn11on I p rly Ill• NEWPOll:T-MESA
SITttl ~ e:1':::i' AL-fr~ Ahlrtcll UNIFIED SCHOOL OISTll:ICT
Hunllnoton l•"Ch v•nue "' CllV of of Orange CQ\!nfy, C~lllornit
ED 13·:U !AH FP ,11)) Conitrud north By Ooro_thy HlrYiry Fl$Mr
1ld1 of S!~ltr AVfllut 1 G h Purcn11ong Agenl
Street 10 ll«I •• II rorn '' •m 6-U-1100 boll culveit b•ldo~ :~ l~Mr c':111 I Publl,l)ld Or•np1 Coed D•lly Piiot,
II Gr•ll•m SITMI OJ City:. ':;untl~:: Febr~"~ 21 ll'ld Mar(I) 1, 1913 S24-7)
fl••ch P\.lBLIC NOTICE
A (OP\I of ll'ltll repor-11 l•e on flte with IUPEllO" COUll:T OP TMI 1;; ~~~ Cl,rt, City of Hunllnotoft lllKh, ITATI 01" CALtl"Olll NIA 1"0111
.., in, Hlll'!ll"OfWI htctl. C•lllornlt, TMI (OU"TY 01" o•AHO•
lll•IOll wlt1111111 to COfl'\mont on Mo. A1MU
,,.,.,. rtpor!I m•r .do ~o Within 10 otl:Dl:R TO SHOW CAUSI
dlf' of th!J nollct In wrHlng bY P"o-lfOR Ci.AMOE OF NAM•
vldlng • COPY I<> Iha Dlr..c:tor of In !r..t M•ll•r of Ille Appllclllon of ;~¥lrrim1n11t RISOUl'ee., In C•ri of ff11 JOHN STEVEN THOMPSON fo, c11.,ng1 I y trk, II no COM"'9nl •• flttd Within of N•,,..., ' /:: ,i0 1•1 Pt•lod flW loen:t't tCflon tlli O WHERE,.5, '"" 1ppnc111on of JOllO n1 ' , • C<:!"T'mtfll 11 1!11d, Ille lo.re '""'II T"°""'"°n IOI' ,,,.,..of nl!IW wlll 1con,ldtr tr.. lnformttlO!'I 11 ~Ir ffflt bllfl duly !!ltd with the t'it'.rk of, fhl ~:u ::,_11rnffflno telfa.!119 ••Plr•llOll of Courl, and I! 1P91trlnt from uld .,.
,.... l'l!:I period, PllCtllO!I !Ml ••Id •ppllc111I dftlr11 to
ll•w Ill• n•mt Cll'1ntlld to tM ~
Nollet 11 1111•.0y glv1n that '" E'llv!ron. 11•rnt of John 51'9vtn H.ndtrloln. •:;o.,.111 1mp1ct Sl•l1men1 ~11 btW> ,...., NOW, THIEll:.lf()fl.f;, It It Mrlby
m 1'r !No foll0Wlt1111 proftcll' ordt!10CI •lld dl,..IM 11111 •II ""'°"' lfto
1er .. ~ In the uld meittr ot cMnlt or li!!i~ (T•tct 7110 Consiruc!lon ot 4.50 n•mii tpptflr l>tJDI'• Ibo.,. tntl"ed C"OUl1,
on 10 2 ~rn Of land IOl;•!W In °'Pfrtmtint S l""9of1 ICC•lllt ti 106
!"'"'n Mt!fl Sll'ffl, 17th StrHt P•lm (IJI~ Ct11!9r Otl\11, w"'· llftll AN,
M-.I 1n<1 ~ Wt.it suf.1 .... c.n1orni. f'2702 on 1111 ~h day of Morch. 1n1 on<Hell CDr110r1rt011 . -, m, at ""' hour o1 t:OO o'cloelt A.~ ••
lllln 11'11 thlrt to •lltlJol c.11111. 11 tn't lhl1.
Thi E11vfron"*'ttl R1 view Bo.in:! '"' lltre. why Ille IPllllCtllan lor Cfutntt Of ~I to Prf1>1r1 l!nvlronrnentl!t Jm~ lltmt 1hooJld not ~ gr111led.
IObrtl tor 111(11 prol~t1 •!Id JOlltlb . IT 1$ FURTHl!:lll OlltOEltliO 11111 I ;'flm '"" public •l'ld lllltrts'*O P<t•!IH 111 tOllJ of thl• orcNr bl P11bll11Md 111 tlll ()rmttlOfl •rid c:omme..11 In w,11 • Oll ... NGI COAST DAILY PltoT,
r•l•ll.,. to '"' lm,..et 01 !llt P•~ • ri-w1J1111tr of '1•n•r1 I cit•
Ptoltc:tt VDOll 1119 llflVlronmt111 ind 10 •11'1 tlll•f1on 'prlrrttd t lld pllblllllfd In
""''nOdt !l' 1l11r11•11.,.. by whlell 1111' ~ of Cott• NI-, Colll'lty of
ldv•,.... ~nets lo 1111 •nvlrOtl~ Or•.,; Siik of C•llforlllt , (111(1 IKh
'"4V Dt •l'llldH or mlllO•tttt S I'! .,._ ..-fir fovr 14) lllK~llye -u pr!OI"
lo•motlon ....., com,,,....,_ ,,.,11;t :: "*' to fhl Otte 1t1oye HI tor tlll hffrl1111 of
'ff:,'"ln thirty ()f) d•yi lrom thl "'• ., Uld epilllc.tlon.
I I :fltt• Copltt Of !lit fll'llf'OflmtflfN 041• f'lfb.. " 1'13, cT"~ 111111111~11 ••• Oii lilt '" tf'll Cltv -ClAUOe M. OWENS lf'll I oltkt. locotrtct •I .tto llt't( H\lft. Jvftt ol tllt SVJit,lot Court
ll1t111111 11~11. C11!torn11 lor lfl. M'· ~IONAllO H. WOOOARO
,.,,...,, P:o/io¥1tng '"' i pU " ............ tt ~ thlrlf lal>j Ny llffl(l(I ~: ft•llOl'I Of tlll atJI ...... . .,
11 _,,, •11 rn~lronn'llflf!rc1 I'!.~ ~ •• c.i1 •• -. ll'l'Qft, .. _, Tth !alt> U'•lWJ
~~ k'ttfl'll., Slcr1t1rv -~"~,,...._
•
..,... ........ Ot, 11,. ......
.... -
And then rrad Boner's
Ark In the DAILY PIL01'
Su!ldav cotnfca.
)
When ..
a
Family
Needs
a
Friend ...
' Sylvia Porter
Do high food costs cause you to cut
down on the quantity and quality of
company dinn ers ? Do you find yourself
slighting your family 's nutritional needs
in order to meet financial needs? You
cap find help ".'ith these and many other
problems of family finances 1n Sylvia
Porter's column several times weekly in
the financial pages of th e DAILY PILOT.
Yes, Sy lvia Porter can be a fr ie nd of
YOUR family. Her nationally syndi cated
column, "Money's Worth," features im -
portant ideas which can relieve your
concern over monetary matters. For ex.
ample, she will tell you how to save a
considerable percentage of your gro-
cery dollar despite spiraling food costs,
Let. a friend
Syl via Port er
pages of the
drop . in on you tonight.
can visit you
PILOT DAILY
from the
delivered
ri ght to your home. You will get your
money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col-
umn and all the other special features in
the financial pages of the
DAILY PILOT
THE ONE THAT MEAN~ BUSINESS
I
NEWPORT BEACH ,.ubth,: ronmentel R.-..i.w 8oe•~ ~ Or•nee-cout O.ll~ ll'lldf,
1--------------------------------------.J I M•rth I ,,,Jor•noe Co.11 O•nv !"!lot ,...,_., ' IS. 21 '"" Mff'dl '· 1mllL.--------:---,.lllL_,;.. _______________________ ~ . 613-7! 21fl-1l
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by
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DAILY ,lLOT Shlff PIMI ..
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DAILY PILOT %1
Beach Opposing Gas Cuts
A rederal proposal .to cut
gasoline use by 82 percent in
order to meet Federal Air
Quality Standards by 1917 met
strong opposition fron1 Hun·
lington Beach residents Tues..
day Oighl. I
1be anli·rationing faction
showed up during an in-
!or:malioo. meeting oo. the 1970
WHAT TO DO
Clean Air Act, sponsored by
the Huntington Beach
Environmental Council.
THE MEETING drew about
25 residents. Some crilic11.ed
the gas rationing plan as
aoourd.
"We have it on the hightst
authority that we're winnlne
Winter Festival
Closes Sunday
The tenth annual Laguna the last weekend, Campbell
Beach Winter Festival heads said.
tht war on pollution -AstOCiatioa of callfomia abo
probably wllh booor," f.n\"l' ·..was shown, uplaining the lnl·
ronmenW Council m<mb•" (jar provisions of the Clean Air
Dr. Diet Olurdilll said. >lot aod the allmoatives p>11l·
''How are we going to ration We for final implementation of
gas! Tbr: economy would the plan. .
come to a screeching halt.·· be The gas nuon plan would
said. only be enlott<d botwoen the
months of May and October -
tbe peok ...,. mootbs. .. We'd have 10 million peo-
ple Oil relief in tbe South Coast ' Air Basin, with just barely
eoough ga s for them to pick.
up their y,e lfare checks and go
to the grocery siore ...
He said If the gas ratkHling
proposal is serious, it should
be established before 1m.
"LET'"S 00 IT now and
have a showdo"4TI ," he said.
"Then someone ,,.,..u see bow
foolish their id£'a was."
A slide p r e s enta1 ion
developed by the Tuberculosis
and Respiratory D i s e a s e
'l1ie ,.-....-~ l
include more efficient :
emission control d e v i c e s • ·
strict vehicle in!pectloos, use
of nat.µral or propane gas for
Oett \•ehicles. and better con-
trol of statK>oary sources or
air pollution.
iiiiiiiiiiiilmiiii
MACl'S ElPllT CAIPIT
I UPHOUlDT CLIAMIM&
$10 u.,.;.., R-111. $5 Wroom.
$15 1' Coiteli. $7 Ctieir.
After 4:JI • 114:1U..fJll
Hospital Nearing (:onapletion
Saddleback Community Hospital, lr:inied by the paring for the first baby born at tbe Valley bospi-
branch of a tree, is seen growing into itifiDaI shape laL They are soliciting merchandise donations !ram
into its final days thi s Sunday, the Festival's final
day, will feature a sandcastle BOUTIQUE weekend with sand sculptur· sculpturing contest at IO a.m. _
at 23561 Paseo de Valencia, Lagµna ff!Jls. The new area businesses to celebrate the event. For more ing, a beach run. an auction, on Main Beach with a beach
and the continuing crafts show run scheduled earlier, call' ._ 1 1LEANERS facility Is stheduled to admit its first patienta in information, call tbe b06pital office at 837-2881. at the Festival grounds. lifeguards for details. ...., July. The hospital bOard of diredors is already pre-
·I> AL111ATIONS • llllTYUN$ TURNOtrrS HAVE been one TENN1S PRO G e o r g e FOi PAITICULAI LADIQ
Saddleback College Trustees Okay
California Assistance Resolution ·
third higher than last year and McCall will head a free tennis Wa.;...aer·D-•-,.-,..._,_
sales are doing well, Festival exhibition at 1 p.m . Sunday on • • Dae: ._,c;;•• ~·
coordinator Larry Campbell the Laguna £anyon Tennis Corner of W•mer & Springdale. H...,.lngton a..da
reported. Courts adjacent to I h •1 842-2050
Twice-daily presentations of _'F':'es~uv:::a~l~groul'.'.'_llllnd"'s~·----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the International Film.·
Festival at the Forum Theater
will conclude Friday wfth five
award-winning films. . ••••••• ••••••••
-A resolution hquesting that IF SUCH a change is made,
Califo.rnia law.tnaTcers change college officials maintain that
the method of calculating ' the duplication of expensive
state assistance to community vocational training classes
colleges from that of student among the \'.ommunity col-
residence to that of school of leges will be reduced.
enrollment has been adopted Presently, large numbers of
by Saddleback Community vocationa.J. classes are offered
College trustees. by area community colleges,
Suggestions~
High School Needs a Name
Community suggestions for
the name of the new ""high
school to be built in El Toro
are being solicited n o w
through March 9 by the Sad·
dleback Valley Unified School
District.
, Saddleback trustees ha.;'e
approved preliminary plans
for "High School Number
Two," which is scheduled to
open in Sept., 1974.
A name for the school is
sought Oecause ils first
students will be · allending
Mission Viejo High School in
1973-74 on separate sessions
from Mission Viejo, students
and need a school name for
identity.
Residents may phone or
write their suggestions to
school district o£ficlals.
Saddleback Unified School
District officers are at 24611!1
Cllrisanta Drive, M i s s i o D
Viejo. 1be phone number is
586-1234.
9own & Counlnj J<nil Shop
OUR
FIRST
ANNIVERSARY
*BUCILLA
SUPERWASH
however, many' c101''di'.Jt ha\.-e
full enroJJmeqt, and colleges
could send district students to
another district without pay-
meit of the intenlistrict fees,
if the ·law change were made.
Saddlebact pays $735,000 in
interdistrict fees. some of
which would be eliminated as
alocaltuexpense!ltbelaw
is changed.
--agreements in-
volve payment by one district
to another to make up the di!·
fereoces between the cost of
education of a student and the
amount of funds provided by
the state.
FRED 8. BREMER, district
superintendent and ccllege
pn!Sident sa;d that t h e
passage of the law would en-
courage colleges to provide a
wider range of occupational
BEFLECl'IONS ..
Reyn
Sheffer
·w-1o.,1yttoo-,,, weak Mindi .... the: .......
.a.y "',.... ... .. ,.,._..
programs and would meet lhe
needs of mQre students at
lower cost.!.
The 1:30 films will cover
Tahiti and salmon fishing. The
3 p.rn . selections will take
viewers to Japan.
The resolution was presented PREMIER SHOWING of a
at a previous board meeting in final award winning film will
January when trustees voted be Friday at 7:30 p.m. in the
to table it withoul action after Hotel Laguna.
disagreement over use of the A flea market will begin at
term "regional planning" in 10 a.m. Saturday at the Boys'
the whereases of the £irst res-Club. Sales prices at the crafts
olution. Some trustees felt fair, open eaeb day 10:30 a.m.
Joc8I control was being lost. to dusk, will be reduced for
~~~~
FURNITURE
for the
RY ••••• •••••
•
Ira all°"'· You'll /#Wet h8" 1o go dwough ii....,...
No more halJ.sizea, no more ... ,atiuR ..... no
rnDN•H~no ... pez' ••
You know W9JghtW•lclaaworb. YOUW '8lld..
you've heard and you'Ye...., lt-lorJUUl'fllondr.
relatives or neighbor down the str9et.
Howtololew.lghl •• ,nallyilMllzplW' I
Your real problem will be to cope with the excitemllll:
of being thin. Which new clothes Wiff you buy? Which
.new hairttyle will you want? WfliGh dates or partl•
wlll you want to go kt? What new sports. social and
family activities will you get lnvolYed in?
It's awhole.,.ondthrilllng llle ••• ond If a all_
All you h...., lo do lsto-to mokethe otfol1.
Thousands of doctors and millions of members ha¥9
proved that WEIGHT WATCHERS is the way kt 1oee
weight And the way to lceep it off too~ Recause'-
WEIGHT WATCHERS MAINTENANCE Pl.AN ond
.LIFETIME MEMBERSHIP ant right there wilh you.
the time, to help you enjoy life to the fullest without
worrying aboutyourweight
-I JOU do'""'• to '-lollolng-You .,_to
leam to thin le thin to go along wflh your new flK:e and
figure. Being thln means an en~rely different life
style, and Weight Watchert will help you get reedy
for It lt'1 a greet Dla:-UVE m
ti
·~ .~
Knitting Worsted.
Machine We•h•ble.
* BUCILLA
PERLETTE
.... 89' Sl.10 st•.
One fairly accurate measure
of a man is what he does
. when be has no~ to do.
Too mimy of us may look
fOA.lll'd to the day when our
woi'k is done and we have
nothing left to do. Fortu-
nately, few of us ever reach
such a plateau, for, if we
deserve to be thought of as
"·orthwhile, we wouldn't en-
joy a state of compl~ Idle-
"""'-Men have been driven insane
by being Imprisoned with
nothing to occupy their
min&. Probably only the
imbe<:ile can l't"main content
with oo opportunity to ex-
ercise either mind or hands.
1l1e tasks which fate has
given us should be done
joyfully; the alternative ...
idleness • • • is far less to be
COME TO OUR FREE OPEN HOUSE !1
I • 1. r , .
• •'
I
!.
,.
:·
P•rle Twist•" Y•rn.
Machine Washable.
-t; FLEISHERS
Knittin9 Worst.cl.
83 Colors.
.... $14' ..... SI.If
e W! CARRY CONE YARN• e NEEDLEPOINT and STITCHERY e
Come in check our many values
Register for our Free Drawing!
e STUOtO ltNITIING MACMINI OIAlll!I e tHST•UCTION IN MACMINI. ANO HA.NO KNITTING
Op•n T11•1. 'Tll I p.m.
llllZ IEACH ILYD. fot .._. oM Elhl
HUNTIN•TON llACH. CA. tJHI t6Jo400S
•
FROM Fash ion Island
Newport Beach
'!" '
-We serve families of all
faiths in dignity and good
tast('. ~
RB MEANS FURNITURE AND THEN SOME!
FREE DELIVERY.
Tha look and feel of the famous designer original at
a tiny RB price, Our luxuriously tufted big swivel
rocker in the softest black
vinyl with rolled arms
and swivel pedestal base. ties complete with matching 'I . • ottoman. Striking good
looks, divinely comfort-
able and superb quality
.(read our famous warranty).
•
NO OBLIGATION. BRINC A FRIEND IF YOU WISH.
IN LAGUNA BEACH
AT THE BOYS CWB OF LAGUNA
1085 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD
MONDAY, MARCH 5, 6:30 P.M.
FOR INFORMATION AND FREE BROCHURE CAll 835-5505
STEREO ·sou NOS OF THE HARBOR
\
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• .zl DAILY PILOT
AMBLER
. .... .... \ "'\ ~, .... •
Th~, Marth 1, 1973
• •
' ' DOOLEY'S WORLD
Q.1"!
CA'T! I '¢J1:f'.
-l
•
TUMBLEWEEDS • by Tom K, Ryan ·
NON WAtmJM CHO~!
] l NON !.IKUM I.fl .. MANS! ; t HAilJM POTS!
" ·aNlw NI 11s1MaH.:JV;llU. ofll!J.l!V ;JifOW ;{J.JW V ~O
-3W05 dVtt I 15N3ddlll/ .LI r;v
VAL<f
WAi'ITl'I>
J~,_,, VA1-1'f
WAllTEV
J
VAl-~f
WA~P
•
"' .... t.::_::. ::.-::.::::;-:::::-:.::< .. ~.&d.t:'
MUTT AND JEFF
WELL, IF MY EL.EaR:IC HE,.aJ'm
U"DEl™'/>R AIITT PRN::T1CAL FOR STREET WE.AA. rrcouLD
BE WORN IN SEO,
COUL.DN'T IT?
FIGMENTS
I"',,. ... ·~ ,., .....
NANCY
... /
HOW GOSH,ITFEE.l.S
DOES NICEANOW. !
IUTRY
IT/
DON'T BE SO
LAZY--CHOP A
HOLE IN THE ICE
AND FISH LIKE
THE OTHER BOYS
AW, ITS
TOUGH
WORK
CHOPPING
A BIG-
. HOLE
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 54 R.ver ol Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
1TyorleeJ. Russia
5 Tarry
10 Gon~ by
14 Ripening
agent
15 Curling
surfei:cs
16 Instrument
17 Wh1:ue funds
ere kepi
19 Immunizing
agents
211 We•tod on
21 Trucke1
23 State
forn111lly
25 Lai1<~ B.C.
~11lmon
76 611!1<.I ~11 .. .,
30 O!lcn•!
55 Dance of The.
lslilnrls
59 Se1 of four
GJ Ankle
64 Geishwin hit
66 c .. niral
:>1•c1ion
67 Arahian
ch1ef ta1n:
68 Toronto's
Cas<t
69 Pronoun •
70 f\~akes loans
Jl English town • 13 Rush
headlong
OOVVN 18 lutkv
' Fehn~s numbers
41 Inker
44 Tropical
Asian pl1nt1
47 Washongton
I
34 Ctiarq1'd
ran,,-i..
:'.' Cn1el person '2 Male humans city I ~ BoLk 101 one 24 Ex1ons1ve 49 A"o!o·S••on
35 Shon sleeps
J7 V\leJthrr
fl'\~11 ~ 'AO•d
38 Fa~tr11rr
39 Con!1lle1110<1I
>nforma11on
.t2 E>p!fl!
43 CcrtJrr> deer
45 P~n of tl'le
loo
46 Ao\·I!• of
rr~nf.e
48 · ·-\vater:
T101,1Jled
50 PeJl!"•Cd
52 Come to 3n
•nd
I
"
17
20
"
"
" " ••
" "
'" •
I
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I• ,.
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" ..
"
·'• ..
" "
.) Swa>igrring
r1ts1ilav of
'('lurage
5 Ovo>rly
rnode~t
peor!e .. . 6 L1oh1 •• bree11.>
7 M<ht~t"
5Qll.1fl
Slypnol
11.1nshoot1ng
9 Author
1(1 H .. y~
" "NntOri· , ..
12 Pa1r1fwt
I' ' 7
"
" 21 •. ,. f';
" ., " " "
,'. " .. ,.Mli'°
" ..
" " '
"
la1m lelle•
26 Island of " Dissuades
l1alv 53 Fe;i!her
27 Con1h1na11on 55 Imply
28 Having !.J6 Nevada'l
wrinkfe5 neighbor
29 South S7 Son of Jacob
American &8 Wo•dof
lnd•an a91eement
31 Preposition 60 Debauchery 32 R IVl!r OI
fu•OPP 61 Ammun1uon;
'.'i3 Sun fabric 1'11ormal
36 1(1nd of (,2 l\1~n ul !he
1nsl•tU\10n tlnt11
40 1 ho rnarr•'3Qe 65 Mt'd1cine:
cerP.monv Abbr.
• • 10 II " \)
"
' "
"
" '~1~ JI, :,,, JO " 32 Jl
" ' 37
" "
i'i .. "
" .. . ~ ·;..
CL " .. " " " ~ ..
' n
by Al Smith
JUST IN CASE
lT GETS TOO WARM !
by Emie Bushmiller
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
I CAN'T,
STAND
LAZY
BOYS
WHAT ARE you
PEANUTS
FISH/NG
FOR'?
by Charles M. Schub: r-r------,....-....:.
'11JU'RE 60JN6 70 HAVE 5Q\IE
l'KET1'I ~RON6 CIWJ'ETl11()'(
i.JM.«r MAKES' '<tXJ 1'!iNK
'OOU CAN WIN?
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
AlrTHUlr, AS BULLETIN·
MA~ MON/TO~
DON'T YOU HAVE /Ny
~Ut.E$ GOV~IN& '--=~ IT$ USE?
_,
.I l
! •
DICK TRACY
THE SECURITY MAN AT THE 6A1E'SAID
THAT 50MEONE'.S 1N THE CAR WITH
ROCKY! WE'LL STALL THEM UNTIL
SAM ARRIVES! HE'S
ON HIS WAV!
by Harold Le DolllC
I COULDN'T UNDE~TAND YOUR ~ll58AND'S
PtlONE ME55A6E lo ME, LYNN! HE WANTl;D
YOU PACKED AND READY TO LEAVE!
WHY? HE. HAS HIS OWN PLANE! IT'S
HOT M TOOUGH HE MUST MAKE l:<~l,. I
A CER1Alt' FLIGHT!
by Mell
by Chester Gould
1'14EREI OE\.111£RnlE
STUFF ANO RE(ONNOITeR
TME PLACE. 'TMEN WE
WI~ RUSM IT:_ • ...-...
I.
l • '
•
·'
by IOCJ« Bradfielcf'"'l •
By Charles Barsotti
~-------~ ~~
••
' by Ferd Johnson
by Roger Bollen
THE GIRLS
DENNIS THE MENACE
• ll ![ . ' !1 •• I
•
•'
the
J
-<Id
• ers
1>1'0
plu
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TONIGIIT'S.
•
TV IDGIIllGHTS
KRJ fJ 7:30 -"That Cold Day in the Park.
• l,landy Dennis and .Michael Burns star in this ro-
mantic drama from 1969.
CBS e 9:00 -"Honor Thy Fatber." A atocy of
the "real" Mafia from the book by Gay Tales,.
Joeepb Bologna and Raf Vallone star in this In·
side view c4. underworld family life.
NBC El! 10:00 -Dean Martin Show. Gingw Rog-
. ers Is the special guest star on tonight's program.
KCET flll 10:30 -"Fighting." A documentary
·probing the causes and m.ethods of man's violence,
plus some of the ways fights are reoondled.
ABC 0 11:30 -"Haunts of the Very Rich."
Seven people artive at an idyllic tropical resort
1 after receiving a mysterious invitation and find
their. dream of paradise turning into a nighlmMe.
.. .
~.TV DAILY LOG , .. . ..
.... ~ .. " :~ ..
' .. .. .
...
•
Thursday
Eyening
· 1 Tiit f'lhttstolls 9tlrTl!ll ' fB Ml hlu Eumorldl flll""""'"""' mnnestri.,.
t:OO D (J) CIS """"" "°"". It (2bt) "tttllOf 11ly FltlMif' {d11) •n,
.loHpb lkllop1 I nd R1I VtlfOM ,..,
spect'ivtly portrtf Salv1tor1 H8ifl"
-Bonii'iiiO-;-lhT Mfflppittnt, 1r11l -hil
f1ther, .louplt "Jot 81111111s'' eo.
n111no. 11le11dlf onct the he1d of 1
powirlul .New Yort 11n1. An haldt
view of underworld l1mlly Hie within
the fr1mework of Jot Bon1nno's 11·
ll1ed kidneplllf ln 1964 to tile Im·
'ptitonmtnl of 8111 In 1971. Br1nd1
Y1cc1ro 1nd lllthlrd C.st1U1no 1lso
""· B 9 m lro111ide "Another Shell
G1m1" Chilf lronsidt mHts 1n old
1dvt11'11J who ctlebrlta his rele1se
llom pnson bJ pllnnin1 1 $2 million
e1per. Din O'HtrllhJ 1nd Skye Au·
~ .......
0 MO ONE LIKE HIM! * POWER'MYSTERY'LOVE
EXCITEMENT KUNG fU
fJ Cl) (l) EFJ ltlln1 F11 "King of
tilt Mountain" (R) Un1rmtd, Cline
fices 1 boonty hunltr determined
lo t1kti hi111 kl-4t1d or tU\11,
fl)"'"' fJil Al Alllrican Falllty ht dllddtS
to lilt for 1 divorce whlll Bin II
aw11 on l>uslneu.
t:!O" n. "'"' ..... ,.. "Putrto V1l11rt1,. • o-liID ...... LIMt
10:00 o 9 m 0m ..... 0..11 •· comes speci1I ruest Glnpr Rop11.
7:Jt II'""' DJ • .iw.re .. Duttl ot
lnnocenbH Kilde11 befr1ends two
omm-
O lllrJl i!!l"""'~ .. -dlCt "T11t Kouse Oii ~JOt Streif'
Lew Ayres auests u • lidtll) ,..
-duse who is 1rTtSted Git • c:fl1rp of
rnunlering 1 bCI}' who IHOl!1 lllto l'tl1 ......
0 ..... """" -&J lluAa; Tt Penlool111 youn1 bomb blatt victims, bolh SUS· EJD Wlltd Press
~td to bt r1¥0lut1on1rlu. ID lllucbdta ttallNI
~tttau'•Htnn ;?G Th Mve11bli1r "Maki It I Mii· lO:JO If T11k llcl
Mbil" Gtnt Blny rtt1.H'ftl from lhdll (I) C:INl•pila!Up Fbhln1
itt ctbcOwtr tt11t swlndleii hnt ttt fJi) S.1 ffPdlel Mil ''fl(hlinl" ~~ I perletl doublt to t.lkl O'flf his probes th• UUllS Ind methods l)f
•Mft. man's viollftCt, plus some ol th• '!:e 11ow1r. ·CC> (Zlr} "'t11•11, 1'11 ways firfib 11'11 rec:olldled.
•!-u.r Whit" <""J •&g......t,M Meri-GS ""''s,ortt
l
!!'.1'1thef, Robtrt L1nsina. !•(l)Tt TOI"''"'" 11:0080.DlllSl l!!l"'"' ::CE ""°' "-llJ IJ) Iii"'"' :~Dlll ... 1-'tcl llJll)"ntt DOM"'' -. <-c.N .., hi h P14' (dra} !6' -00 Mlr&UI DU• ;e .. · $tni1J Denltb, Mlch1el Bw!ii. " Mrtll: (C) "'fmd: If ~ Cit'" :=:·9Ltt"s Mab 1 Diii' (wes) '54 -T1b Hurittr, Tarna /!:~IDllllt Ctn Wrlfllt. ~.·~IDDncnrt mrrutti er Coa11q11111c:11 : .. "m-'Jiik"' m""' -;.,,~ .... wtr Ef)C11Mf T .. ··---· ,., · ~ m Je11u ·~4 ~m,... s.rr-""'a.st -"'-"" 'm_,,..., ~
1.111 11:15 GD a. .. •
8THEWALT0Ms-ASHOW u,lOf>IJ)CIS Lott M""' """"' t1
*FOR All THE FAMILY '1110 1,,.,.-(dr1) '64 -""'~
IJtl} TM W11tOn Ned 8eattJ 9urtOll, Av1 61rdMr, Otbof1 h Keir.
IUesh IS Curtis N<Jrton, I shJ, sllent B 0 m Jollftlly Canon Show
tyPt wllo convinces Ann tt1rril, • g The P'tholllf
romentlc city 1lrl, to ml"' him-0 (]) (j) m Wide ~ tf h-
uslnc lovt letten wrltt•n by .klhn· '*rblh1•Ht 'lfftu11b of th• Very
9oy n tht COllYindri& touch. Rich" Smn people errive e:t 111 ... ~ ·· D 9 m m, : W1bo1 Sllew Joe 1c1y111c tro11ie1t ruort en. . rectiv-
1~ •• Ha!Nth, Tlm Oonwer ind PIPI -. Inc 1 mysterious lnvtt.tlon ind find
Jolln Cmch 11111t. t111l1 drum of P1ritdl11 turnln1 Into a {l) Cl} m .... .... "And • he11bh nlsfltnlltl.
Once for MJ Biby" Tiit 14utd b Gt Tt Ttll "91'.d
tipped to 1 $1 mllllon hlbt belttl
; • -mlltlfmlnded by 111 ex.con whose U:QO GI Alftld Hltdad: """"'* ~ pr1pant will h •n ui\kllO'lll1ni vie· m Sll1rt .. AllMtUJ9
( tlm of cancer. Ed ""'°" ind Und• lZ:JO O Nl'll
Marsh Pl~· m Mnlt: "Slc:nt If Cetrwkt LIU"
( CD lltclfl • "',.. (dr•) ·51 -bChll'J Scott, GtrM , . 18 llldlll "'"' tbt OtJaplc Tlerlllf, Glenn Forti.
+' fB lttnllltn Cera!I m I ll ,,_._ ... ~ fD Tiii ...... __ ,
I 111"""" -l:OO (l)OOCIJ "'"' . m""-,......,. ... ! l!fl"""' (!lu) -ltl' 1,io • .-. ... ,--(dr1)
t (wtt) '39--tlumphrtJ Bo1art, J1mo '5~1lpll MMllN1 Maril £nclbll.
~ CllMJ. ~1::..--
•
I
·~~" Friday ·
DAYTIME MOVIES
%:00 m All-Mlpt ltlfir: •Jeutter:
"OlllptHI ,,.,..... .. .......
"""'' .....
U>IOID~" 1111 W t..,J '41-
Vktor Mtl"'1. Sftli"1 Wlnten..
" 1:»9--..-l""l '37-ioel MllCh~ Mlrll111 Hookfl'l'-
0 (Cl ...... ""' IJW' (""') !~ Andenon_ DMR .ltl•
pr, .ltff Rlctllfftt
t<O(l){C) ,_L laq. TWJW-
(•dvl '66 -TOIW bnll1ft, Stntt
8eraer. 0 (C) "tall .. ~ (dr•) 'II-
.... DNn.Jufle Hami.
~(CJ "ftt -· Cond. (~D 'U --"'""""*'-
LIDO NiWPOqJ
BEACH
l1"4TU~~· '0 l 100 1•1t
'., ~l~Q
c-t. S., I S.. "-a :r
2 ACADEMY
• A9vARD
NOMINATIONS
-~-1"-·-·-·-··· "Pete'ft'Tillie"
--Al ..... ,...-'--...~'"" ·~"'1••·'tl"""'"""·~· !!!] ... -..
,......,. Do.ti• -..... "ONE IS A LONELY
NUMBER"
ntrS IS M 816. OM'I
_.JUl!Ufl.Y (RI~
llUS t COUil _
TWQ LAN• ILACKTI>P
JlllMJAH
JOHNSON IPG)
+MALCOLM McDOWELL
.:ONG AGO TOMOllOW
l [n(oln A•e .
.. e•l of Knatt
S27·222J
NO OM UHDO It UMm1D1
LOVI UNDER 17 (X) n'" SENSUOUS TllNAGU
' JIRIM " JOHNSON IPGl • JWCOU. McOOWfU
LON& AGO TOMOUOW MOMAtL Oflt.i•e Pt I WH 12NCIOM
. '
Ttwl"ldlY, March l , 1973 DAJI. Y. PILOT p -
ff OM THE JUNGLE TO lllE &Yll ••• ME'S THE &lEATfSTI Movie Hall of Fame to Honor Seven
DOOlll OPEN h U
l,1"11111 M1~1.00 tfl ,,,. , ......... ·-~ ..YOUNG WINSTON,. tl"O)
1-l:JW:u-f:U
_/:') fOUNt AIN VAlllY "'~"~n ~~;0~';;;;:;;\j ";~f·I •
........ MllllllM C.i.ty 1111»41.• "(tOLOlllW'SHOUL~'T l"l..AY
WITN OIAO THINGS" (l"Qj ...
"lODV STliiALl!RS" (f'GJ
0... """" Gllv6'CEC. scon
IT.AC!'"
BEACB .
A fa!ERT OiARTOFF· -~ l'AOillCTlON 't8EWEW
CBNTIJBIONS
_,,__"'JOSEPHW~ ll!l--
511ow n..· 7:00 I 1 O:JD -. .......,. ""'""" PETER SEUERS • GOIDIE HAWN
~·~z..t . """'I:;;
CIX.CR· f/1111 ~ P"dlrts •!II
1:45
Call llwatre fw Sn. $cffd1le
2
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS
2
&cepti ... 1 ""''"" 111
•Mr -• 2941 Fe.hire
AT STADIUM
"THE STERILE CUCIOCS"
2l!CI ,..,.,.
AT MIS.A
'"THI HOT ROCll" ---;;~ ST401UM J '!. flt..-_., ...... -·:-
I
seven oew members will be
1nductod Into the Mollco Pic-
ture Hall ot Yam• Friday
night . 1t w::is announced this
week by Dougla!I Wright,
dtre<::tor of the A n a h e i m
showplace for c I a s s I c
_,._., _, .... Il .
STADIUM • I ;;;.,
IL ..a•u11•1:1t1.l 1t! ~-•
-'·'.1. -··""' STADIUM , 2 .";'.:,
.. ..:•.l..l l!•.11: LU IC' nr:-•
.-... "·-··~·· STADIUM •3 ;::;
..._ ..!!..'..l.l!U1'!~~ -. "·-··"~'' STADIUM •! .':ii.
t. ..-•ll<!•_.l_"l.UIL'·l':7
TV BROKEN?
...... ••>•216) for ....
lnTll IUSINISS IUlU.U
,_,, ...... TVw.tchMJ.
,1 s,.nMf'ld by
HART T. V.
NO'# Al l>Oput•r l"rlcn
"Man of La Mancha"
NO 1t1•a1t.VID Sl!ATS
Now At ""'l•r 'rk" "Flddlor Oa Tiie Roof"
"Lady Sings The llues'"
and (a)
"Hannie Couldtr"
''Deliverance''
.... 1•1
"McCabe & M"· Miiier"
"thorttH• 11c1• ...
"Sterlle Cuckoo"
''Poseidon Adventure"
and CPOl
"Fuu"
OMINATED FOR10
-AC-ADEMY--AWA-RDS
INCLUDING llST PICTUIE • llST AaJESS LIZA MINNELLl e
MST IU'POITtNO ACTOI JOEL GREY un DlllCTOI BOB
FOSSE.
"LIZA MINNELLI IN 'CABARET'
-A STAR IS BORN•" -New•woek . • Magu.lne
---··dMd ... _...,. .. _w!!1 bl.
--· ..... _ .... , .. ,. ... [.
(di:>' '• ::+.t ........... ~"-··· .."" •• a::·.:: •• 'l'N "' .....
PJ.t'S · \f .\lJt:)!\'
.\\\' 1110 ."10'11'\f;F:
BtsT SllOKT Sl'BJECT
"SOLO"
ll•1.i.·~li 1M•i'\t11<•K" l~M' llllW1QW"''11.-..
tU,llJ\l•Wl1t•N••~IUIJ1'jA(:I!,~ Sf!t \\Phy:
The most unusual boxolflce
/ • · • ccess·of all time!
' '
cinematic achievements cl.an Mu S&eirw.r.
Tbo8e lo be hOIJ<lf'e<l .,.,,
actor O.rlle Chaplin, actress
~tary Pickford, dir(l('tor D \\'.
GrUfith, t In em a t og r tt p-
her Billy Bitzer, special eJfect
man Willis O'Brien and rnusi·
€ertlfic atea wll a
presented '°the J:lelf 1•-tlM•
of their it!pieunWh9 al I
o'clock ln 1 ceten»OQY op1:a.,.
ly to tlall of Fame memhfl 1
and invlted gaesll.
EXCLUSIVE
HARBOR AlfA
SHOWllS
"HIGHEST RATING" .••
N.Y. 0.lly N ...
"INCISIVI: lfli ! r ''""''"
'MY NIGHT AT MAUD'S ' in t:;eg:;::rio s
I
--~-JEAN-CLAUDE BRIAIY • ··-ERIC~
CLUU:"S~
--~
W/Ms,..,.. L.ittitoa. Mklillll I de a'* -lltl) yv.11~ GAAf'ld pllllE WINNlR Al Jk:. ~fiillll I~
}uliE CHRiSTiE /AlAN bATES
T~E GO-bETWEEN
I
"Colllflilit. f'1au.5 ...... ~
U.A. CITY CINIMAS LADH!S MY TVaoAY -(All lalllm "-"!' s.....r .Cl"-Ullt a 1:91
lt'tikn•-v-· "(MILOREll
SMOULON'T PLAY Wint ....
TNIMGS"'
"TMI BODY
STf:ALERS"
CNJ ,
I ' PREVIEW IS RATED (PG)
ALSO ''CABARET''
NOMINATED FOR 10
ACADEMY AWARDS
"CABARET' SHOWING 1110.1
& AnlR THI PREVIEW
• fMU.ftl ....
4 ~""' Ui'Ul IDIS
BEST ACTOR ,AOl-llUI
llST ACTllSI
SOUNUER
IS A
MUST
"
~ -...... .....
MICfOI. --
•
'
I
' 1
.z.:1 DAILY PILOT Tlwnday, .M•ch I, 1973
'Prime of Mi•• lean Brodie' ' • ....
Laguna Production -Rich • ID
OODITAINMENT
3 Groups
Looking
For Talent
A comedy-drama in Costa
Mesa, a children's production
1n Laguna Beach and a
musical in Anaheim are on lhe
latest audition calendar.
The Costa Mesa C i v i c
Playhouse>-ha9 9~ h e d u I e d
tryouts for Neil Simon's first
and only serious play. "The
Gingerbread Lady,'' on Sun-
day afternoon and Monday
evening.
At Lagima a special pro-
duction of "Snow White and
the Seven Dwarfs" is planned
( CA.LLBOA.RD)
bythe YoullrTheaten>Hlle
Laguna Moullon Playhouse,
with readings carded for Mon·
day afternoon.
And t h e Ana-Modjeska
Players are in the market for
a choreographer for their next
suntmer musica l, "The Music
Man." scheduling interviews
£or March 14.
THE COSTA Mesa show will
be directed by Marthella Ran-
dall. who staged "Night of the
Iguana" at the playhouse last
season. A cast of three men
and three women of varied
ages is required.
Auditions are scheduled for
1 o'clock Sunday afternoon
and 7:30 Monday evening at
the Community Recreation
(',enter on the Orange County
Fairgrounds, Costa Mesa. The
play will open April 27 for
lhree weekends.
AU. AGES OF talent are
welcomed at the Laguna
Youth Theater for "Snow
White" and director Llsa
Surette says no theater ex·
perience is necessary. Mon-
day's tryouts will be held from
4 to 6 p.m. in the playhouse,
606 Laguna Canyon Road,
Laguna Beach.
Performances of the
children's show are schedu1ed
for some time in May, with
rehearsals planned from 4 to 6
p.m. on Mondays. Further in·
formation is available at 494--
0743.
level of quality, but in its im-
pressive depth of individual
characterization.
Given the immense dimen-
sions or the Laguna stage,
Tans"'ell has chosen to cOlr
dense the play's many stag·
ing areas into a compact, two-
level unit set. 'This decision
magnifies the immediacy of
the show and speeds the many
scenic transitions, resulting in
a smoother flow of dramatic
activity on stage.
THE ADAPTATION or Mu-
riel Spark's novel Set in a
Scottisb girl's school in the
1930s has been lovingly ac-
complished by Jay Allen. who
also performed this function
on "Forty Carats." Here.
however, Allen has some red
dramatic meat with which to
work rather than a frothy
comedy of youth-age gim-
mickry, and his script is as
strong and resilient as its
heroine.
Jean Brodie is one of the
most interesting s t a g e
characters of recent viewing,
a strong-willed teacher of
singul~ purpose: to mold her
young students in her own im-
age -even to the JXlint of
grooming one of them to take
her place with her former
Jover. Her oft-repeated
remark, "Give me a girl at an
impressionable age and she's
APPLICATIONS are now
being acapted r or a Walter Sings
choreographer for the Ana·
Modjeska production of "The HOLLYWOOD (UPl)
Music Man," scheduled for a \\'alter ~1atthau turns singer
midsummer o pc n in g. A!>" with his first recording or the
plications. in the fonn of tiUe songe from UniversB.l's
resumes. are being accepted · movie "Pele 'N Tillie" in
by the players at Box 3354, which he stars with . Carol
Anaheiln, and deadline for ap-Burnett.
plicatlons is f\1arch 12. ro==========-=.I
Interviews will be con-
ducted, beginning at 7:30 p.m.,
on March 14 at the Tustin
Cultural Arts Center, 931 N.
Harbor Blvd.
IS
THERE
Cast Listed 1 A W_.\ Y
For 'Savage'
1
OUT?
A \ray out of pov-
erty. illness, unhappi-
ness? Thousands have
found the "'ay in the
leachings of
The Placentia Playhouse has
announced the casl ror its next
production, John Patrick's
"The Curious Savage." which
will open in April for a lhrec-
Wet'k<'nd run.
f)irected by Jay Conklin, lhe
play will feature V i v 1 a n
1-:nglebrechl as Ethel Sava~e.
Olhers in th(' cast arc ()avid
Bannon, Dorothea Beale, Don-
nn OJndiff, llobcrl. (;off,
Charles llenry, Ann Lapp.I
Katherine Luckett . \Villiam l
Mun1ey and Gordon White.
Performances will be givf?n
April 6-7. J3-14 and 26-21 at RI
f)orado •Ugh School's lecture
hall, JG51 N. Valencia Ave ,
Platentia.
UT'S BE FRIENDLY
It you h.11 vr · ncYo' nelghbon
(II' know of anyone movin&
to our area, ))Ir~ tell ua
ao ttMt "'e may extend a
friendly "'elcome and help
thetn to becmnc aCf)ualntl"d
ln thclr nf'W aurrouncllnp.
So. Coast VlsitOr 4'WS79' . .,..,Ml
"* ris1tar ..-11•
Christ Jesus, as
explained through
Christian Science.
Thev've found that
di scove ring the trutl1
about then1eslves as
the ilna ge of God has
set them free -free
evC'n from those trou·
hies pronounced
"hopeless."
Come and hear
.Ja1nes E. Pike of
The C'hrii:;tian Science
Board of J_,ertureship ,
explain how you ran
find ''our way out. ''nu
and your friend .<; are
'''elcome to his free
lecture:
Life Without Doubt
8:00 P.l\l., F'fllDA Y
,,\tH'('h 2nd
In Flr1t Chur<h
of Chrl1t, S<l•ntl1t
LAGUNA BEACJI
635 lllgh Orlvr
Chlld-c4rc ""ill bi' 1)rQv1drd
•
-
II
Jumbo Spray Paint
in Fashion Colors
Choo1• f,om • myri•d of
I • c q II. r "'" •n•m•I
colon. Jwmbo 1i10 ••ro•
101 can1 • • • 10 1a1y to
"UIO.
lq. 11¢
Versatile
Drill Guide
49'
Pr111enh drill bit from 1lippin9
10 you drill 1tr1i9ht ind true!
Fits 11 drill bit 1i1•1 from 1/16"
to I /J," indi1p1n1eble in homo
worlr1hop . , . drill guide cen't
1lip .•. ind it'1 yo11r b1nt w•v
of e11urin9 ecc11r1cy. Model 04-
~ I J.
• Only 299
Fluidmaster
Toilet Ballcock
Stop dripping toil1t1!
Com11 i11 two 1i1e1 :
11 1/i" end ll". E11y
lo in1t1ll, co11111 corn-
pl1to witlt 111 n1c11·
11r't fitti1191. M o d • I
400.
o.r, 3aa
21" Folding Bow Saw
So h•ndy •.• fold1 for 1!or•11• or tr•"•I·
f,n9. Yet, 10 conw•ni1.,t, do•1 h1•¥Y duty
j11b1 in 11•rd111. ' ·
199
'
.POWERFUL VALUES ...
.YOU'LL REALLY CLEAN UP!
... ~ ... -__ ..... -........ ~---~· .. -· F · '
···:r.:.~: . . ~ ..... ' . '. ....
Save! High Quaity
9 Inch RoHer Covers
Apply point 11noofftly 11td qui.ekly wiHi
tho .. Oynel rolle, cG¥0r1 dftignH to fit
1t•ncl1rd 9 inch roller.
.... 1.49
-.... ~~ ..
2/4~
hkft ""-ctkoe .....
W•J 1J_,, Mord 1
Right or Left
Basin Wrench ~ .. ,. .. , r. De1i9n..d to 1111 011 b11i"
I null, b11llcoc•1. otc. C•11
::::be 111..d in .aher direc-
. ' lion. Drop forged 11••1
-.ah lt1rd1ned t11th. u..-
Standard
Garage
Door Spring
M1lr11 li~i119 •••v .. , •dr• 1tro .. erlfl dur1ht1.
MM1l 110. 121.
159
Famous Glidden
' Dripless
White
Co111•1 i11 whit•
oltd ;••t•I col-
CIA. low•t
... ily •.• cow
e•only. Arty
to~liupwork
will Mt ti.ow!
....J.H
• 2!!.
),
;
2999
. Complete
Black & Decker·
5-GaHon '
Shop Vacuum
Big ftew S 9•11011 c•p•city ¥1CUUl'll h1ndlii1
l•tljO jobs. With 2 Y1" di1met1r ho1•, rec.
t11t9ul•r l'IO~I, o..J ed1ptor to pennit
1111 of l 'h" 1cc"1orio1. Pie•• up durt,
d1bri1, 1 ... 111 wood chjps off 1hop floor.
Ho1 corcl-rep f.oture 011 top, Model
11111mbor 7651.
2999
CllAI
AU
---~------
Clear-Air
Heavy
Duty Drain
Cleaner
E.:tr1-1tro119 to un ·
clog 9r•110 fr•pt.
on4 dr1i111 quiclly,
C.n •'10 bo u1ed to
uitel09 11ptic tin••·
c111pool1.
1~
4-SlleK Metal
Organizer Unit
Stvnf., utilit-, fft .,. d o I
111••••r•• 12"•J'o1'~6·o" ·
hi!h for t:oof,, 1fl~P'
1t01"•9•. •tc.
1r1cL
Conweniently locoled ••• Eosy To Reothl
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
-IN COST A MES.A
•
HOU•S1 WEEKDAYS 9 TO 9
SATURDAY ANO SUNDAY 9 TO 6 PM
' • '
• ••
.
Glidden's New .
Exte~or Stain
Com•• i11 'h•nchom•
1olid •nd I I 11'1 j •
tran1p1r•nt colort.
Eicell•nt wood P••·
11r .. 1tiw• ••• •nd
a great w•Y to
be111tify 1idi119 and
f1ncin9 ••• or any
outdoor wood.
519
Deluxe Color
TY Antenna
E:rlr1 -ru991d 111-•luminum Ill•
tenn1 co•ted with winyl to p••·
"'"' c0f'ro1ion. Pr1 -111embled,
tole1copin9 model i1 e11y lo in-
stol~ 9i .. 11 1xc1ll1nt r1c1pt;on
of Blick l White color end F~
b101dca1h! C-600.
888 ,
C111plet9
50 Fl Antenna Lead-In Wire
lrin91 ~ln • b1tl•1 picture . , . con be ~·~ii lo 'hoo~·11p roof ant1nn1 or to, mowe
r1111d1-hou1e oult•t. Co11111 in brown or
cle•r color1.
The Famous Baby Ben Clocks
Iv W11tclo1 ••• one of tli1 mo1t fomo~ cl~~· of •II tim• .•• ••v wind •let111:
!Ji1t work •ffortl•1sly,
-
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the
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. Thund;iy, Mm• I, ~7) DAILY PllDT Z$
U.S. Skate~ Liven It Up With Walkout, Falls
A Present
For Ryun:
Twin Boys
SANTA BARBAJµ -Ann Ryun, the
wife of distance runner Jim Ryun , gave
b~.Wednesday lo twin lliI·pound boys,
the eouple'• second llJlCI third d!ildren;
The RJUllll also have a daugbler,
H .. ther, 3. Names of the boys were not
im~ately anDounced. Ryun is now
"'°°tracted lo run Jor .the pro1 ... 1ooa1
"'1tematlonal Tiack Associatioo.
[Bids Accepted
> KANsAs CITY -'Ibo Nalianal
Collegiate Alhlelic Association today an-
. ced four teams accepted berths in
· National Collegiale Basketball Qiam.
• 'p playoffs.
Accepting were Providence, with a ZH
l'.(I; Syracuse, 21~; St Jqim's, l~S,
lind South Carolina, 19'5.
. The NCAA said Providence, Syracuae
· d St. John's would enter the Eastern
~ooal playoffs as at-large entries,
"1ille South Carolina woo1d compete· 1n
the Midwest regiooal. The regional
playolfs will be ~. 10.
Wills to TV
•toi. NmEWie. YORK -Maury Wills, the
• r Los Angeles Dodger shortSlop,
has iol!!ed the National Broadcasting Co-, ~ a ooriimentator for the television
-twork's coverage of major league
seball this season, it was 1DDOW1ced
ednesday.
Wil!S, 40, wbo retired last yesr alter 14
ears with the majors, most or them
with the Dodgen, replacd Sandy
oufax, his former teammate, who an-
ced bis resignation last week.
Wills will team with Jim Simpson oo.
's beclrup Game of the W e e t
!:telecasts and handle pre-game in-
terviews, according to Carl LiDdemanD
l Jr., vice president, NBC Sports.
sRams Hire
,l LOS ANGELES -Jack Faulkner, 46,
.(BDd Jim Wagstaff, 36, wet'e named assis-
t coaches Wednesday. by the Los
geles Rams.
Faulkner, who bad served as a Rams'
~ will be the defensive line ooacb
-.it Wacstall. an ·aasisW>t .-11 at
Jiobe Slate eoneg. In Idaho, wlll -the clefmaiVe llo<kfield,
fill out !m,oeyitHnan "'9cbing
named to assist 'Chuck ~. new
coach or the 'NailoDal Football
team.
Gridder Guilty·
CINCINNATI -Cincinnati Bengals
ebacker Al Beaucbamp was fomd
ty of waull and ·batterY apJml a
w truck driver Wednesday in Hamilton
.OOU.ty Municipal Court.
BeaUChamp was dwged In ~ oom-
lalnt filed by truck driver David Harris.
, Harrla said thst be was a<cooled as be
to tow Beaucbamp'A auto any
, a department store loading clock
.last Dec. 20. The .-bad asUd
the car be moved.
Harris, 125 pounds, testified thsl be !"liad told Beauchamp, wbo 15 S.loOH, 211,
. would tow .the car if Beaucbamp
Woold pay a 110 lee !or his -Harris' -
me. . He testified lhst Beauchamp shoved
lo the gfoond
. psets Common
HAMPTON, Va. -Upsel5 ousted the
secoo<keeded foreign and domestic
layers Wednesday in the secood round
the $35,000 Coliseum Mall llivitatiooal
em.is totqnamenL
1 Brian Gottfried, breezed by Sandy
ayer, the second-ranked American, 6-1,
· and Paul Gerken of East Norwalk,
., handed Karl Meiler of West
~y. the second seeded foreigner, a
M, IHI defeat
Mike Estep ousied third aeedecl Juan ·
isbert of ,Spain, M, s.6, 1-', while
ed Sherwood Siewarl of -· x., surprlaed !ourlh-ranlted llaroJd
oloroon of Silver Spring, Md., S-1, &-7, 7-
LAKE FOREST, 111.-Brian Falrlle of w Zealand waa upset ·we<Jneaday nlabt
)lit three other lop aeecls a<ivanced Into
· qu8J'tU.linala of the !$0,000 Komper,
ln•itatlooal tennis tournament; ~
Fa\rlie was upset, by ...-,Jec1 ·Ray ·1,!oore.ol-llt>Olh .4lrl<a. r-e,,M. . . Defelldlnt' Koper clll/nplon> Tom Ok· "'t,er o~ Holland defeated 'loJ>l'Ollked Sovie!
"J'l8Y" Aleunder lletrevell In llralgbt
:Jllb, s-3, S-1 while Arthur Ashe
tllmlnated -Tanner of the Unlled lllates, 7~ 6-2.
'lllird aeedecl Rocer Taylor of Great
Britain defeated Yugoolavla'a llcco
JevaniC, 7-6, M.
Evert Wins
FORT LAUDERDALE -Oirls·-
macle 1Jer Jc;q-awalted pro!~ tm-
nlJ debut a ,_ Weclno9clo1i • lbe
opened the !$0,000 5'dl a.._ •• 'l'ennla Cllllic with a S-1, 14 ~ owr Mlcbele Gurdal of BeJaNm.
l
' / •
•
UPIT .......
Militanos Stalk Off Ice;
T.wo Spills ·wreck Lynn
BRATISLAVA, Czechoslovakia (AP\ -
Two spills on the ice by blonde Janet
Lynn and a walkout by the brother·sister
pair of Melissa and Mark Militano
wrecked U.S. hopes while Russia's Irina
Rodnina, with a new partner. won the
pairs tiUe for the fifth Ume Wednesday
in the World Figure Stating Cham·
-pionships.
'Ibey were forced to s~te the last two
minutes without music f o 11 owing
mecbapical failure of their eqllipment. 11 Today Ondrej N e p e I a of • Czech-
r o s I o V a k i a captured the gold medal
in the compulsory figures and moved
toward bis third straight men's title.
Tbe modest Jaw student traced the
three school figures with near perfection.
Sergei. Cbetveruhkin of the Soviet Union
was second and Jan Hoffman oC East
Germany was third.
Franklin Nelson. head of the U.S team.
He said he knew of no disciplinary act.ion
contemplated.
While Melissa. 17. sobbed, the pair's
father, Orlando P.1ilitano, an adverti!ing
illustrator, ex:plained that Mart.. 18, bad
beeome angered because spectatcrs bad
thrown thlngs on the ice.
"Mark is a creative type ol person who
has got to have things his own way, .. the
elder Militano said. "Otherwise, be woo't
perfonn."
Thie Militanos were given eigblh place
in tbe final rankings.
Russia also won the silver medal when
Miss Rodnina's former partner, Alexei
Ulanov, and his bloode wife, Ludmilla
Smimova, p)aced second.
Third place went to the East German
pair ol Uwe Kagelmann and Maruiela
Gross.
Ol YMPIC BRONZE MEDALIST JANET LYNN FINDS IT SLIPPERY WHEN WET.
The U.S. champion, Gordon McKellen,
Jr., made his best compulsory showing in
three world events, placing fifth.
The Russian gold medalists had just
completed their routine when the
Militanos, a sensation at the Sapporo
Olympics, took to the ice~
American hopes for a gold medal had
been shattered earlier Wednesday when
ace solo skater Janet Lynn fell twice in a
shoct program and ruined ber cbances
for the title.
Robinson Says
Winkles' Style
No Problem·
HOL'l'Vn.u:, Calif. (AP) -Outlielda-
Frant __,, starting hs 18th big
l .. gue .......-says California Angela
veterans who want to win will ~
rookie llllUla&"" Bobby W'mldes' ral><ah,
nm-nm lllJle,
"Real prol....iooals 00 the boD club
care about the ball club and winning,"
says R<lbinson, wbo signed a hro-year
coob'act !or a re)IOl'ted !300,GOO before
leaving foe spring training this -.
"I doo, think they'll bave any problem
with Winkles or anyooe ~·· Robimoo said of the veterans. "You don't care
wbo your manager Is, wbe!ber he's a
blgh acbool coach or wbalever,.as loog as
yoo respect him lw·his·abilily and know
wbat he's talking about.
"The main IJliOg Is respect, and-I think
the players as far as I know nspect him
very big!lly."
Winkles, a college ·coach at· Arimla
Slate before-joining the Angels .. •
coacb fas! ......... -Del Bice u
llllUla&""lbiswintel'.
"I'm not looting at W'mkles as a col-
lege c:oacb. rm looking at him ... an Jn.
dividual, as a big league manager Ibis
ooming seuon which be will be.''
Roblnaon 'Said.
"As far as I'm conoemed, wbaiever I
can do to make tt eas;,,r r.r ,him. rll do
it. I really dOn't think fie'll bave any (nb-
Jems with the veterao playets wbo have
the ball club at heart."
Actually, Robinson said bis first im-
pr<Ssion of W'mkles was that he was not
as rabnb as be expected.
The 17-)'ellNJld Robinson, fladed to the
Angela alter ... ....... with the Los
Angel<s Dodgers, said ,jbal aqyway be
WIS J!f'P&'"d 'to -llldei' I gepperpol
type.
. "I spel!I a r... yead. under Eart
Weaver," he said of the lla&imor..
manager. ••ffe'a a :-eUer, a cheerleader.
He just doesn, lei 1"11 ail still ac be .aatisfied. •• ~
' Robin!oo Isn't elaleil aver the
American League's dtsipoted bitter
rule, prefering lo play in the field ... not
at all. Bui he bas agreed to be the "DB"
• (IQ • occasion.. '
"'lbe first time I met him," Rebimon
says of Winkles, "he said the Angela
made the trade lot me to p1ay every day.
He asked me bow many ball games I felt
I could play and .I made the statement
tba~ avoiding lel'ious injuries that WQJld
put me oot of the lineup for a length of
lime, !•could play from 125 to L10 Gr us
games.
IO ROllERSOH, (LEFTI SAM WEST. ..
UPIT ......
ERNIE '1NDIAN RED'' LOPEZ DECKED BY JOSE NAPOLES.
Napoles' Right Uppercut
Deuwli,shes Indian Red
• INGLEWOOD (AP) World
weltenreigbt boJ!ng champion • Jose
Napoles dispelled any tbougbts be migbt
be a candidale for a rocking chair when
he smashed a wicked rigbt uppercut tO
the. beat! OI Ernie "Indian Red" Lopez.
The challenger first "'°' up lnio the air and then Oat oo ·bis bact for a full
two minules -a tnoctout victim of the
CUban . refugee in ooe minute 36 seconds
of the seveoth round.
They had beeo Ucteted le>r IS before a
Forum crowd of 17,176 w1licb paid a
-$18S,117. Lopez had opened two cula on the
Napoles face but the man who ..., Will
be. 33 ,.... old didn\ worry. Be bad
Angelo Dundee, the trainer of Muflam-
mad All, In bis comer to treat the cuts
and ~ did bis job.
In.the aeventh, Napoles exploded a left.
-ths~ put ball of tbe Lopez face to
sleep and tben eame on 'llilb i.... quiet uppercut& .
"I D!Vel" saw po'l""I' lite that," marvel·
eel Ilawie Stelndler, the 68-year-old
111811111!1' of the cballenger.
~-would like lo meet Garbo
-of Argentina "" the mid-~ tiUe but M°"""' suffered a bUDet W9IJDd recently SO, says the
nabnli7.ed Muican citizen, "I doo'I
to.,.. lliout that fight. I still want lo keep
the welterweight title."
Lopez came Olll boxi!Jg and opened a
cut over tbe bridge of Napoles' nose in
the second round and another alongside
bis right eye in the third.
still the veteran from Meiioo held tbe
upper band.
"I didn't know if I was ahead after five
rounds," Napoles said through an in-
lerp'eter. "But J tnew I was in controJ.
"J was surprised be came out boxing. I
thought be woojd be slugging like tbe
first G.lne we mel.,
Three vesn ago Napoles stopped Lopez
in the 15th round in ooe or bis five
previous title defenses.
"I made a big mistake," said Lopez. "I
wu watching foc the right uppercut but I
dropped my bands and got a litlle
careless with the right, ..
Lopez said he may figllt three or lour
more times and then retire but doesn't
thint he'll get a third tiile sbol For thia
cballenge be received !20,000 while the
champion eollected $75,000.
"I was never in troubJe,'1 said Napoles
wbo claimed a butt opened one o! bis
cuts.. "He did hurt me with some single
abots."
Neither !lgbter bad been down, nor In
serious trouble, when came the abrupt
tlldlng. Wlll!n Napoles connecled with bis uJipen:u~ no ooe llgured Indian Red
would be able to get up.
They .bad skated only a minute when
they suddenly stopped and Mark com·
plained that the music was tooo(ast. They
starte:d again, but this time, after a
minute, they quit abruptly a second time.
Ma~ uid there wu too much litter on
the ice.
Tbey then stalked lo their dressing
room, leaving the crowd of 11,000 in the
Bratislava Stadium confused.
Skating officials and the youngsters'
father surrounded them and sought to get
them to return. Finally, they relented.
"A repeat of their routine is allowed
under international rules," said Dr.
(
At(] .. of Kansas
Canada's Karen Magnussen appeared
to have the sing)es title au but wrapped
up after sbe W<ll the compulsory school
figure event TUesday and the short pro-
gram of free skating.
"I wouldn't wish what happened to
Janet on my worst enemy ... the bktnde
Canadian said after conaollng the .....,.
ing American in her dreSsing rocm.
Miss Lynn, the li\'e-time U.S. cham-
pion, told a newsman she could not ex-
plain her fall.
"I don't know wbat happened," she
said, admitting that her chances IOI' tbt
title had been washed out with her
surprising falls that stwmed the c::n>wd.
Sayers Gets His Wish:
Helpin_g Young Athletes
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -Gale
Sayers, the ~at running back of
the Chlqgo Beaci, waa bact on the
University of -f<ansa8 c-'l'Ueoday
and bubbling with enthusiasm over the
prospect of a new job be hopes even-
tually will lead him back into p~
fessiooal f-11.
Sayers, oow 'an assistant athletic direc-
tor at the school where he skyrocketed to
All-~rican fame, said some day he
wants to become general manager of a
pro football club.
"The administrative end is my
career," said Sayers, an all-pro star five
years whose playing days were cut short
by a knee injury. "I want to learn all
.00. o! it -budget, personnel, every-
thing.
"No college offers a course that
prepares you for this . . . for being an
athletic administrator, and you have to
get it at the college level. In this job, I'll
be involved in all sports."
Sayers admitted be bad beeo offered
other jobs, much more lucrative jobs,
including coaching in the pro ranks. He
dido~ elaborate,
"Money was not a factor, not a con-
sideration," Sayers explained. "I made a
lot of money in pro football, and I saved
a lot of moo.ey so I could do this. 1bis is
what I Wanted, for the last three 4X' four
years ... just as sodfi as I was through
as a player.
"I want to work with young people. I
think I can belp them. 1 think I can belp
the Kansas athletic program back to
topfiight competition."
Wife Did Not
Shoot Monzon
SANTA FE, Argentina (AP) -Carlos
Monzon, the world middleweight boxing
champion who had a bullet removed
from bis righl foreann, was reported in
satisfactory condJtion Wednesday.
Monwn dipllllted earlier stories that
he was wounded Sunday night during an
argument with his wile.
"I was In my house getting ready to go
hunting when my .22-caliber pistol feU,
firing as ~t hlt the Door and a bullet
struck me In the right fore.arm," said
Moor.on, who ls known to be an avkl
hunter. '
"I've aJways told Carlos to be carerul
of bis · weapons," ,hls wlfe, Mercedes
BeatriJ: Garcia.
''l want to ·tell them the tnitb," be
said : "I can tell them that every player
is not going to make ii in proleosional
•P'>'b-I can tell them tlley aeed to get a
college education. I hope l/le7 tali:e ...,.
of my advice.
"The young atblele can. gEt a very
distorted picture of pro athlellcs. 'Ibey
think everybody makes $100,GllO a year
and plays 15 years. 'Ibis Is DOI true. 'Ibey
think everybody can be a Gale Sayers.
This is not true.
"I can tell them they can get hurt.
maybe when they're a senior and if they
don't get a college degree it's bact to the
street. Even Winning the Reisman
Trophy cloesni mean tbe guy will make
pro foot.ball. It doesn't work that way!'
Sayers noted that more pro f09lbail
players "are getting into more trauble
today than when I came up in 1985.
Players come out of college saying, 'I'D
play five yean: and I'll get out.' 'Ibey
haven't even made the squad yeL
"Tbe big trouble 15 that players today
..• some players ••• are DOI playing !or
the Jove of the game but for the •lmi&htY
dollar."
Baseball Odds:
Dodgers, 7-2;
Angels, 8-1 ·
STATELINE, Nev. (AP) -Harrah's
T"1loe Raeebook bas made the WO<ld
champion Oakland Athletics $-$ favorites
to repeat as winners of major league
baseball's American League West.
The New York Yan.tees, ooly 1972 non-
division winner among this seasoo't
favorites are picked at 9-5 to win the
eastern division over defending cbampioft
Detroit.
In the National League, Cincinnati 19
even money in the west and Pittaburgh is
6-5 In the east. .
oatland Is . favonid f.5 to win tho
American League . playoff with the
Yankees given 3-1 odds.
Pittsburgh ia Usted at 3-2 lo win the
National League pennant with cm.
cinn.ati's odds put at ).1.
National 1.eague division odds, West:
_IJ~I Trae~ .Coaeh Designs
Cincinnati H; Houston 2-1; Los Angel<s
7·2; San Francisco 5-1 ; At,la.nta J~t : San
Diego 60-1 ; East: Pittsburgh 6-5; Chicago
Cl;bs ~2; New York Mets 4--1; St. Louis•
I; Philadelphia ICH ; Mootreal 60-L
National League pennant ' Pittsburgh 3-
%; Cincinnati 3-1 ; Houston t-2; Los
Angeles 6-t ; Chicago CUbs S.t; New York
Mets S-1: San Ftancisco J0-1: Atlanta 20-
1; St. Louis %1>-t : Philadelphia Ile-I;
Montreal 100-1 ; San Diego 150-J.,.
-·--·~ .--.-thrower at Cal Poly (Pomona) and last
summer was a member of lbe athletes In
actlm tract team that toured Africa as
goodwill.ambas:!ad<n in atbletlca.
He is an Orange County product, hav-
ing graduated from Valencia High in
Placeotia and gsined his degree from Gal
Poly in J,1111.
He -in Costa Mesa. Rol>er>oft bas been studylna !or his
doctorate for' IOme time a.a ncenlly
told the DAILY Pll.()T:
"I ba .. -!ortuna~ in my athletle · career. NOJJ it11 up to me to ib-Ucture
my future to be able to communicate
with the tlds and adviae them to the best
. ·' .
of my ability.
.. A man oeVer knows what ls going to
bappen and I want the knowledge to be
rudy for the unespected I have to
belleve this will give It. a sound
phlloeopby and I know we are structured
by higher education."
In addlilon to working on bis doctor 's
degree, Roberson is al9o seeking a l..i
degree and .will be required to spend
counU... hours in study and ~
A silver medalist In the long Jump In
the 1960 Olympic Qaniea, Robenon
played pro football for six years in the
Afl. He 15 a graduate of Cornell
University.
American Leaiue division odds: West:
O&kland 3-5; a.icago White Sox H:
·.:ali!ornia 8-1 ; Minnesota 3-1; Kansn Ci-
ty Z0.1; Texas 60-1 ; East: New Y«k
ankees 11-5 ; Boston 2-1 ; Detroit 7-1;
Baltimore 7·2; Cleveland 30-1; Milwaukee
Ckf.l.
Amtrican Leaaue peonant : "'tlaotl •
5; New Yor~ Yankee8 :1-1; Chicago Wblte
Sox 11-2; Boston H; 0.trolt f.I;
Baltimore S-1 ; Calirontta :ID-I; ~a
20-t ; Cleveland 60-t ; KAnsas CllJ llt-1~
Milwaukee l!I0-1; Teus •t. ·
·-
'
,·
• OAJL Y PU.OT T-. ,._ l 197)
lleleaguing
For Jaycees
S~t in May
Sea Kings' Playoff Foe Changes Image
Releaguing -a sometimes . haled
llc>rd in junk>r college athleliC$.Z i5 right
around lhe comer.
Recommeudotions will be made lo tbe
state athletic board in May oJ. thU yt.-
with tM final approval coming a year
llttr. ·
So with that lo mind. Orange Cowlty'1
JC athletic dired« and admlnlstrative
representative met last week to dhcuu
:C among other things -tbe poaibili!Y
Cl all ol tbe coonti"s two-year colleges
CCllDpeting in one coolerence.
. Three t'Oflferences were rrepr.,,.., .... ..mnted -
South Coast !Orange Coast, Fullortoo
and Santa Ana). Southern California
\Colden w .. 1 and Cypn!lli and Mllsloo
( Saddlebock).
All of the colleges -with the .-ptloo
CRAIG
SHEFF
-----
"' Saddlebaek -said they would Ilk• lo Pe part of a county ccnference.
~ SaddJe!>ack athlelic dlreclor George
Banman feels that the MWioo Viejo col-Jece Is just too small lo compete with
-county ochools. Meanwhile, the South Coast Coofen!DC<
has seut a letter to the state board rec-
,omrnending that the slx-lenn aetup stay ;u ft is. But if the conference has to ex·
panel (the state woold like to ,.. eight
·feam leagues) then Golden West and
Cypress are the logical choices to come
in.
.. There has been some discussion of a
~ed super conference involving OCC.
Fullerton. El Camino, Pa s ·a den a ,
Bakenfield, Ccrritqs and possibly Santa
Ana -but right DOW it appears to be only
~k.
• -. OCC'1 Ven Waprr hu been
............ "-... -Calral r<gloo '9 ... Slole JC .....wag ceadt of ... 1ear. Ti. a.er d lie ........:ect tlU
-al ... --•• FllllerUL :' w.,.... pl4e<I ... Plnllel ........
'of ... -c.ut c.ai......,. ...... ~ wttlo Cttrttel ul bis OCC team
--la ... r<glooals bdl1ocl •CJproa.
u .... OCC'• -.......u.c -phz Npdw.e UIL
Aad w..,... Ml added ..... , ...
-lie pi.. lo marry N-,.
'IWplo of Boo Diop A!ri I la Cannd,
-wm-,_ lo ... West hldlel .Euler week.
, "['m • top of 0. wwtd rfglat DOW and
l'm a preUy Uppy py," says tlle wmer F ... taia Valley lllgb wreltllag
.... b.
Cal and Stanford meel in rugby this
weekend apJ three ot the game's stand-
huts will probably be Dave Gleason and .!JOO Oury of Cal and C1aig Zaltosky ol
Staolord.
Both Oury and Zaltosty play Jell wing
fer their schools with Craig l<adiog the
,Cardinals in !<Ol'i!li.
' Cal is rated No. I oo the West Coast
and recently 9COl'ed a 7..t victory over
UCLA -a team Jed by Bruim football
star Rob Schribner.
1.altosky was a standoul in Stanlord's
recent 30-9 win over USC.
By ROGER CARL!ON
or-.~,. ... , ....
UlNG BEACH -Saturdly'1 OF
AMA quartttflnals baJketbell m>kb
which 11 ldledultd a< Loog Beadl Sport>
Arena betw~ Irvine League cha.mploo
Cofona det .Mar and Moore Leape run-
nerup Loqg Beach Poly is a rematch ol a
preseuoo ICl"immage -but Corooa'1
adversary bas changed it& image con-
siderably.
Poly earned a shot at Corona del Mar
by upending Cal High. ~. Wednesday
night at Lang Beach City College.
Coach Will Foe:rster's Poly JackrabblU
SoCal Boosts •
Top Shooters
In Playoffs
Wbel1 the Southern Calilornla College
Vanguards basketball team tangles with
Westmont College Saturday night at
Biola College in first rowid oompetition
in the NAIA District 111 playoffs, coach
Paul Peak's squad will have the best
field goal percentage figure of any of the
four teams competing.
The Vanguards 8re hitting at a .490
Ogure from the floor this aeasoo while
Westmool isn't in the top five. Azusa.
Pacific (.479) and Whittier (.463) are
rated third and ftfth and wUI meet Moo-4-aY night in fU'St round action. ·
Much ol the SU<CeS8 ol the Vanguards
has come with the addition of David
Payne at center at the quarter break.
Payne played in the final 17..games 8!ld
hit at a 21 . I average per tilt. '
This is second only to Cal Lutheran's
Steve Jasper who is averaging 21.C per
ganie for' the season in District 111 com-
petitkln.
Payne Is also fourth ln the district in
rebounding with 11.fi per game while
teammate Jack Causey has been gra~
bing 10.2 per tilt ror 33 outings. Causey
rates seventh lo the district.
When the Vanguarda play Westmont ,
however, they will be facing the top re-
bounder in the district in Fred Devaughn
who ia grabbing 13 per game.
Payne'! individual field goal percen-
tage figure is .601 for the 17 games. This
is second in the district to Fred Cox of
Pacific Cbrlstlan College. Westmont
doesn't have anyone in the top 10 in
district statistics in this category.
Another avenue of superiority for
SoCal College is in assists where John
CUrtis d tbe Vanguarcb: is averaging 6.7
~r game, second best In the district.
Peak traftled to Santa Barbara Tues·
day night to watch the Warrion against
caJffonliA Lutheran College in theJr final
game.
"They are big and they rebound well
but the big thing about them is their
bench strength." Peat says.
The Vanguards have little or no bench
strength af'ler the harrowing regular
season.
Russell Dickens, a 6-7 sophomore
center who was averaging 11.6 points per
game for the first 18 Vanguards tilts and
Mike Walters (7.5), a junior guard, were
suspended at mid-year. Both were
starters prior to their departure.
A third starter who opened every game
through the first 25, Pat Quinn, is sidelin-
ed with a brokt:n jaw suffered in a game
at UC San Diego. He was averaging 12.2
per tilt when sidelined.
This means that the three lap reserves
for SoCal have been forced into a
starting role although several alternated
until David Payne's return in January.
Bear Valley Hosts Pros;
Skiing Tops in Southland
By l'tl. R. SNOW
DI lllol ~....., Shff
One of the big events in the Far West
for the 1972-73 ski season debuted this
"·ee k at Bear Valley. scene of the fmal
raci ng for the professional stars. who~
ly a few years ag•"i started out humbly to
boom into a big deal
Sponsors of pro racmg have made it
.-orthwhile finanC'iall}' for the big stars o(
the sk.i scene, so much so that the
Un ited States ski lcf!m has been losing
Jl.8 best racers, including the California
lad who surprised friend and foe two
years ago, Spider Sab1ch . .
At the conclusion of the racing at Bear
Valley Sunday, the top skier will get
$40.00J for lhe series. That 'll be in ad·
dilion to the money already won during
the various ind1v1dual racing.
And the overaJI winner will also
Golden West Nine
In Tourney Action
SANTA MARIA -\.olden West College
will race Cut!rta of San Luis Obispo in the
qpen1ng round of tM Allan ltancock
tournament ht!re Friday al 2 o'clock.
The tournament was· .Originally set for
feb. lS-17, but wss pcdiponed becau.w Cr
rain.
ff '°""" Fred Hoover., Golden w .. 1
RuJtlers win, they'll med the De AnZll-
1!.ucock vldor al i S.lw'day. If they
looe f'rid>y. lltey'll play a oonsolalion
nNnd game at JO a.111. Saturday.
The dlfmpi<Qhlp ...... Is ... for
I o'-Sunday With Lbe -lallm Ulle w1 to pn•l<dt It.
receive a 1973 Lincoln/Mercury.
The pro Grand Prix has been worth
nearly $500,000 this sea.son or double
from a year ago . Interest in the com·
petition was built up when the format
was changed from racing against the
clock. as had been the custom in Europe
for years. to head and head, or man
against man.
The latter type was tried almost by
chance. Jt happened in 1968 during the
U.S. vs. French team racing. The
Americans won that first competition.
Jean-Claude Killy who had been busy
becoming a milliona't.re after his tremen-
dous success in the 1968 Winter Olym-
pics, agreed to appear in four Grand Prix
events.
His comeback injected new interest in
the pros. But despite the notoriety ol
Sab1ch and Kill y, the surprise has been ·
unknown Perry Thompson, a young
Californian Crom Mammoth. Thompson
astounded everybody. He finished lhlrd at
Vall last December and then proved it
wa."> no fluke by scoring another lhlrd and
fourth al ML Soow.
50UTHl:•lll CAl.ll"OAllll.t. crou.,-AldOt -,,._ ~of -""'"on,_. f0.1111 loot o.M, °""' Oollh• t•I r•tM •.oulleftt. Ml W•~,...11 -Sb! lto<htt ..... -.. ll'OW -riv, "' -fOcrf llftt, -ThurldolY fflr-" Svn-°"'' cti.I"' r-.ulrlld on fQilld1. Ml 8•klv -E•Celletll lkllnq °" tlll ta ..... , ...... Of -.,_ 0 ...... fOl,w" 10 ... klol llfM. L. Ill -
ltlrOUQl'I lflrM -M l\'· liO!oMv Hiit -T-llCl'lff of ... ._ o.....-IOU!' IO ,1. loof IMM, QOo!I $fWll'IQ titllno;"'Ollfft d•llY. S.-\1911tv -TPltH to ti~ ~ ot ,.... ,,_ Oii
'"'"'"'"'ld .. ·Pl•ll lo 11.-....ct"*""'ll '-' ot O-CllN NM. C."-ln• ,_,1•9d Of'I lillllfl°"' .._,..,_
T•l>le M-ltlt1 Ooifn W~nndn ll'll'OlolQl'I $11!111•'1' wo!l'I ~ .,.,.. • lltlf tro Ill '"' of ~td biM.
11Ulnt •• ..., .,.,., llOIXI. c;,..,. Vtll•Y -0ot-n JtlvrtltY fld klrlcf•'I' wllfl two aM • ,..!! to fl.,. fffl 01 *lifd. bull. Good U H"" wl!PI ~orl"O ~onoalflon1. Blw ltld9ll -II,,. lo Ill lndloN of Nill' ~
-11.,.. lo •leM loot beM. Sl!Ung r1!0ld •w(tflll'lf.
Gold M nt -Two to II.,. '"' of INldllld ~. •l«lltnl lollfll'ICI. ·-:::z.-°""" ... kNY ""'-" s.vM•Y .-1"' lwo J~ ----lo ltlrM fMI al Ptelllld bew. )lllllQ t•ted oood. s-s--111 -OOOd to _.., oood 111:11"9 -~ ... lfldln OI """ ""°""' on two to ti• loot !MM. ~ rtOU!rW Cit! •II f'OOldl,, s-.. _, -oo.n WMt<ll'ldl, •llllllQ ••led .....,., .... M 1--MW • .,.;;J JO fwr fw! OI .,_, ~ -~-""'" of -ltlO'lfl' OW" "'"' ""• tltlt. All t1wn111tt -r•lllW. "*" OMfl '"" tN tit ftllllUl•Old
' .
were a1llllltd downed i,,. CdM In tbe
scrimmage -but at.ft from that
workout wen: two plaJ'ft"I who now
figure~ in their-.
Gword Anthooy Hill lwbo wu busy
d•rectin& the Jackrabb!ll' fOOlhall team
at quarterback) aad M Lester Hopn
ltbe second leading """"' !er PolyJ
,. w~·~,~i~h Saturday and its
the imertlon of Lbelt two lbal. have
catapulted Foenter's outru Udo the
quarterfinaJJ with a ZZ.7 record.
• "Oar gsme bas changed COllllderably
since that aaimmage and 1 'm aare
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MOTOCROSS RACER PETE MALY OF NEWPORT BEACH.
Takes Up Motoeross
College of Hard Knocks
Beckons CdM Gradual£
By RUDI NIEDZIEl.SK1
Of ,,. ~ .... st ...
.. Imagine how you would feel if you 'd
unloaded a fre ight car full of concrete
bags, endured a ooe-hour handshake with
Cllarles AUas, and then completed the
Camp Pendleton obstacle course in
record time.
A motocross rider feels that way every
Monday morning. Motocross is the most
physically taxing sport in the world , a
modern version or medieval punishment.
the true C.Ollege of Hard Knocks.
That's why Pete Maly, 19, with an I.Q ..
of 180, enrolled six months ago.
"I just didn't like high school very
well," the Corona del Mar High School
graduate confesses. "And the school
sports really didn 't interest me because
lhere was too much military discipline."
"There seem to be so many things that
are much more fun to & than going to
college. So the money my father would
have s~t on my college education be
put into this business."
The business is a small motorcycle
shop in Costa Mesa. Its stock consists
mainly of powerful motocros.,: iron from
Czechoslovakia, native soil of the Maly
family.
There Pete, 800 Bison Ave., Newport
Beach. has learned enough about
business management and motorcycle
mechanics to earn his "college tuitk>n "
-palj.s. tires. oil and entry fees, all for
the Sunday races.
Pete hasn't graduated from school yet.
but he bas earned some pretty good
grades: a waJJ of trophies, $1,800 and the
right to wear the AME (American
Motocross Enterprises) No. I plate.
When he does get bis diploma by suc-
cessfully assaulting some European
Grand Prix, he may earn between fl0,000
and $50,000 a year. It may not be quite as"
much a.."> the earnings cf his sister when
she completes medical school, but it
nevertheless is a sizable income.
One race consists of three 20-mimrte
"molos" or heats with short breaks to
catch one's breath in between.
"I usually race every Sunday and two
or three times a week 111 go to Sad-
dleback Park fOf' practice. I usually ride
two to rour hours 'tllltil I nm out ot gas.
Then I push the bike back to the truct."
he says.
"To keep myseU in shape I also IP> ;.,.
ska ting and nm four miles three times a
week. Between that and the won 1 do
here at the !hop wreoching the nuts and
bolts 1 get really good mwde building "
When be fint began, bridling the bike's
(2 bucking hones covered Pete's hands
with gigantic blisters. "I have callu9es
now but my bands would get 90 IOf'e
after just one moto that I'd have to
t111wrap my hands from tbe ban ooe
finger at a time," he remembers.
N.,t step along the way toward
graduation, is for Pete to mroU al the
bike factory in Prague. II will be an Uf>'
per diVision course, in a way.
"My father wants to seod me ibe:re ID
1 can work as a wrtoeh and gel to Ude
the factory racers. I don't ba,. any U. ·•
lusloos abool going to Cxecboslovatia
and I doo'I expect a plush bolel or fancy
meals." he says.
There will be no mortarlloanl lllCI
tassel when l'Ole graduates, but ~ a
.... helmet and • pair "' _....
700tb Triumph
Floyd Wagstaff, tbe wbmlngest JC
basketball coach In hi.story, .....Uy
pa.wed another miles--...,..,,In&
the fint JC llll!nlo<. to Will 700 times.
Wsptalf ooad>H T)ltt, Tez. JC and
bu ~ a 711>-ZIJ J'OCUd in • yean.
C:lfi''• No. J Team
Tbe Poly coach Is unhappy with the
afternoon game (2:30) and citn the poor
auftldaooe usually U!OCiated w\th al·
ttmOOO games as a factor.
...... ._.....,. Ctl-1)
'' l011'1tQ ,, 10 S.~-St .. w......,. sr
,. llltelll .,
,. l9 MllllUll Ill'
1' Santa~ • ,. ,.... ~· ll V..,l\lfl SJ
Jt s.n Marcos r•
" s. l011'"'1U .. •1 SI. Mit.ly ~
100 J'otll•M J1
11 V\ctol' V•llty Sf
11 S... &w'MrOIM 5'
51 l"tclflc
,. 8Jlhop ""'"'''
• ff
a1 c;.....,.i. "" .. ComplQfl )t .s U~•wvod « a1 uwn-.,
SJ L.I Jord1o11 •I
,. Mllllu.n a.J
4 Complotl ..0
ts Uk.wood •.S
" L.11 WllWlt> .. u La Jona.n a1
rs l • MILii.Un ..
11 Huntl ... ~ kt! .,
6t C.t H1911 '6
Morningside Hoop Coach ·
Eyes San Clemente· Joh
Lut year at this time Tmy Stillson
sut]riaed a lot of people by leaving a
successful record and a blghly organized
basl:dboll program at Morrovia High
school to take over at Dana Hill& High.
It appears DOW that another top coach
from the LA area Is ?Udy to make a
limilat migr.ltlon, and San Clemeote
High is a poaible llopping pla<e.
Jim llarrlcS, ccacb •• Honilnpide
High -Mooareb.. llnlsbed the ......
as the CIF'• No. I rated team, says be
HANK
WESCH
bas 'IJ<Jll bis last ...... at the
lngJewood fdiooI.
"I... ..;oy.d H here, and I'm sure
wre•d have ........-W teams nest year
and beJmd," Barrick .. ,., "But rm
dellnltely Iooklog to -· possibly -here In orange Olunly."
Harrick's team marthed through the
regular aeuon undefeated in :ZS games to
lake the No. l rating and the Sky league
champiombip then loot in the CIF's aec-
ond -In four ,..,.. .. bead coach
Harriet's teams have ccmpiled a lQ.1..11 --donn't -CJD the ,.,,. -lnfOlftd In bis dedslan to leave M«nlaplde, but feeb be can build a ...,.
cessfa1 l*CCitm ebewbeft.
"I'd like .. fmd • -where the
baskethall program 15 progreastng in the
right direc:tM!n and when! lbOy're ln-
lm!oted In building ii further,'" Harriet
says.
"I don't have any ideas about
l1IOOOflO(izing things -I'm the albletic
dittctol' here so I know the value of other
spor1s -but I know bow to nm a good
program and feel I oould do ii
elaewber'e."
llarrict only mcently learned of the
San Clemente opening, bit said be ...
cielinltely w.....sted in the position and
mi.med 1o apply there.
Evm-with Harriet amoog the ap-
pllcants, there remaim a great poaibili·
ly lbal the San Clemellte administrators
will choose a SUCttSSOr from inside the
-distrlct. ID that case Fred
Newhart.. who bad previoWI """""""' Oil
CIF Cage Sites,
Times Released
LDNG BEACH -Conlna del Mar
High'• CIP' MAA quarterfinals baskel-
ball maid> against Loog Beacb Poly
Saturday afternoon wraps up the four·
game ... al Loog Beach Arena ~
-'f' Coach Tandy Gillis' eoronl( de! Mar
Sea KiDp meet Poly at Z::llJ, which
follows the V e r b u m Dei-Oeotennia1
matdq> in the 12 :l:i TV game (Olannel
t).
Friday evening'• actiaD f e a t u re t
J>asadena and Laoi Beach wu.on at 9,
-f.U.... the Nortb Tomnce-lloover club al 7::l0.
'l1le 111<1: .,.-.ze.-
......., .,. ffe. Ttn'IMlf -7!JD p.m. ,.......,..,.LIWU..-f.-
V.,.... Dtf "' ~ -1tr• •.m. C.-.. Ml/I w LI !'!fl -:t:a p.m.
IC• .... w SI. ~ ....... Hfoll; {lttuflltY
•I II ~;.~~:;;;.~:~fl
..... oe... ................ ,., ..................... ~ ... Ill
the sophomore level before moving up to
junior varsity coaching status lut
season, ii the Utely candidate.
Tlie CIF has begun prelJminaly in-
quiries regarding its scheduled releagu--
ing for the' 187l-75 seuon, but at this
time there's no indicatk>o of the possibili-
ty ol forming a league cl south Orwig•
County scbools.
Conversations with athleti<1 dirt!Ctort
show they generally fawr forming nne
sudl league which would possibly include
San Clemente, J;aguna Beach. Dana IIllls
University, Mlssion Viejo, the new El
Ton> scbool and one other member.
Dana Hills IIJglt favwed ouch a league
on a recent questionaire put out by the
CIF office, San Clemente athletic of.
ficials havt long sought refuge from the
Crestview League. And another ad-
vocate, Jerry Red.man at University pin-
points the following reasons :
-The size cl the schools woold bt
similar.
-Tbe !Chools woold have the aame
roles and regulation! r e g a r d i n g
recruiting (DODe) and enrolbnenl
-ll could be • betlel' """""'"""
financially since previous uperlence bu
shown 1be worst crowds at -... valving distant league schools.
All the schools involved would have a
'(.'Olllmoo p-oblem -the beach as a
deterrent to athletic participatioo. -a
problem they doo~ sbare with tnl8lld
scbools und<r the cwmit league ar-
rangement.s.
Dons Notch
64-58 Victory .
Over Cerritos
By CRAIG SIIEl'F
0i .............
'Ibe third time was not a charm for
Cerritos College'• basketball team.
1be Falooos, beaten twice by Santa
Ana in regular !lea30D South Coast
Coote.....,. play, leU a~ain to,the lloos,
64-58, Wednesday nig!it m a special play-
off till betwem the circuit ce><hamploos
at Orange O>ast College.
Thus coach Bill Oates' Santa Anans
earn a trip to the !late JC tournament,
facing City College of san Francisco a
week from tonight in the opening round
at Ventura College..
Santa Ana won It with 1: 10 to go when
the Dons' Mike Adams hit a free throw to
give his club a 59-5' lead. Wbell be ml•
ed the secood attempt, teammate Bobby
Angel grabbed the rebound and banktd It
back in for a 6L·56 advantage.
Santa Ana had almost blown tbe game
seconds before Adams' free throw when
Angel failed to inbound the ball in the tt-
quired five seconds.
But Cerritos, with a chance to Ue it at
58, miJsed a shot to set the stage for the
Dons' big three-point plsy.
Cerritos appeared out of it with 14
minutes left, lrailing 45-35.
But with the Fa!cms' &-5 forward Ron
Kntl<lol leading the way, Ceniloo batUed
bad< to take a 54-53 lead 1111 Ed Cmey's
two dlarlty. tosses.
But Santa Ana rtgained It 20 seainc11
later (with 4: 10 left) CXl Jim Keyes'
ba>eline Jumper and the Dons held the
advantage the rest of the way.
Cerritos guanl George . Rodriquez, an
all-south Coast Conference fl11t team
selection, got In !!arl)' foul trouble (be
bad three fouls in the fin! tine
minutu) and was JneffectJve the rest ot
the way-finally !oulln• oul with r,..... mitlutestogo. • ...
ffis . father, George Maly, senior
research associate for a major oil com-
P"llY, believes that bis soo wiU ultimately
decide on a more academic punult but
meanwhile Is supporting hiJ sm's ac-
tivity wholeheartedly.
Orgill Top Jaycee Scorer
The Czech immigrant, 1 former
motorcycle racer hlrmell, admits that
Pett didn't apply himself well in school.
lfe says he was largely unmotivated until
he took up motocross.
On Sundays the aenlor and the junior
Maly travel to the races together. Often
they take along two blk<1, one foe thc ZlO
cc class and cue for the 500 cc class 10
Pete can get double the eitpCl'!enco.
Riding MIY one clw Is ""rd .......,,
because motocr= racing inwlvea radng
at breakneck speed through rutted tuma.
mud, land, and up and down hill• whlcb
wooild be dlfncult to negotiate "' fool.
Gol.t.n West Collqe'• Gary Orgill bu
captured the rm.n area ;Jl!icr eo11ege
bosk<tbaII -v.c crown. ~ to
llaU1Uca compiled by the DAILY
PIUYI'.
Orgill talllod C1$ pointa lblo pul
seaaun for a 1U IYa"arge. Teammate
Jell St. Clair !lnilhed aecond Jrilb ..
points and • 1J.O ps ...... mart.
Tnm ()unt wu orange Coast'• top
........ with ., points (IJ.4 ·-> whU. Ridlle Price led Saddlebact (114
points).
All three milqts compiled JoalD&
r-Golden Well WU U.17, 0CC bad
I IJ.17 mark¥'! Sdf(<back WU 7-D.
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Swimµiing Results
Solll'*1! CM ( ... le,_1 lllelfYi
Al(yPtft> 400 medltiv fel•v -I, cv11r1u 2. ~ Wt)! 1cstor11. wnn1m1, N011h ;;U o. •l'dm•1 3, lA Htrtior, Tlme:
<IOt fr" relty -1. CYP<'~ 2. Slnl• Monlu 3. Golden We11 (ilrowrie, ~urir-.fl. MtAGtm) •nd Mtlfby}, T!..,.: 3•;ie,1,
a Dll~k relay -1. Cypre11 2. GokMn West (We$le<-~dr R-.d, M.1Ut'11MI Ind Sto<-11) 3. e..u ..,.. Time: •:ot.~. ,,'.'!', lly teltv -1. LA H1rbDrl Santi mun t•, 3. lOt AnQelH CC. No 1 rne. IOO lrff reiav -l. (Y9f"HI 2. !•nl• Monka l. Goldetl WMI (Will ami. MU."-ll'll. Orcieu 4fld MatlbvL Tl~: 7~44.9. G brNs! r!'lav -l . Golden Well !While. Moore BrOWM .vi<! WllU•rrul 1. Cvrness l. ~l's! LA. Time: •:79.S. 400 IJld. med. rel•v -I. LA H•rb0<-2. Go!~ Wt1! (No.II, Rffd. Moort
a11d Browi>el 3. CYDres~. Time; 1:01.7. 100 ,,... relay -I, CVPrH• l. S11n1a Monica 3. GoldM W.,..f (M.:AC111ms,
fqftby, Whitt-•rid Ctrc!MtU. Time: .J;.3'.t.
Final tum scoring -Cyprn. 102,
Golelltrl Wes! n LA Harl>Ot 14. Rio MOl'OdO si;, u cC '· s1nt11 Monie• ~, East LA .12. vanur N-poo1 tt1rilor (51 (2t/ WKltrll 200 M<!dl•Y Rtlav -, NewPOtl. Time: l;.SO.•
200 Free -I. Hain \Wl 2. G1111ler INl l. Fults 1NL Time: :S5.9 200 11\d. Medley -1. ()o.l)rott· !M\ >. Wlllflev tWJ 3. Chall iWl. Time: 2; 2.B 50 Free -l. Sml1ti (N) 2. Wall (N) l. Wall {W). Time: 24.1 DlvlnQ --1· N1Wl)Ort woo tlV forfeit. 100 Fly -. OoOrott /Nl 1. M, Samo tWl 3. Cllotl !Wl. Time: 1:58.9 lllO Free -·1. Hain (Wl 2. Wtll (NI 3. ~rll1t tW l. Tlmt: ~:11.9 100 Back -l. Rei1t1n (Nl 2. C. Samo CW) 3. M. Samp (W). Time: •:17.9 100 Back -L ReQan iNl 1. c. Samo (W) 3. /!IA, Samp IWJ. Time: 1:02.S.
100 Brer.st -I, A.obi~ IN) 2. Wl11 IWl ]. Cllotl tWI. Tlmt: 1 :12.~ ..ocl Free Relty -1. NewPOrl Harbor, Time: 3:'3.8
Ju111or V•nltv
2'00 11\d. M6tlleY -1. M•CLltll !Cl ). Nv1 (El 3. l'IO third. Tllfll: 2:13.1 ) SO F.-.e -I. O.R..,.1111 (E 1.
G•llaolllr IC) 3. Ovrtond tC), Time:
:U\l,o Fly -l. N¥9 IEA t. POll•rd {C)
3. no third. Time: 1:01.Moo• <<y 2 100 Free -I. ar . W1$NrdtN IE) 3. Tomlin !CJ. lme; ,,,
lOO Fn11 -1. Grollev (C) 2. 8111~ (C) 3, no third. Ttnw: •:U.l.
llXI BK:ll -1. C11rpen11-r tel 2.
~ugt1a CEl 3. Wlttcll ICI, Tlr·111:
:1ri BIHd -1. Wesltrdllhl !El 1. Du••nd (Cl 3. Tomlin (Cl. Tlma: 1:14,7 <iQO Frei Aelav -J. Cotlt ~. Time; 4:00.l ·--Costl M-l:ttl (DI Est.di
200 Mtd!IV RllllY -l. Dqtll It.Im$ ~~~:~led.:.. 1. W•rd !Cl '· c-••nd {El 3. little1'll1 (Cl. Time: ?:09.6 .so Fr91t -· 1. s-(€) 2. l(n1~
(C) 3. Green (CJ. Tim.: 2S..5 I 100 Ind. tr...:ll•Y -I. OemtJe<;k. (C ? • So;r1ntom (El J, Peterson IC}. flme:
1:01.0.
50 FIV -I. l(lllzner \El 2. Ltll(.Oln (() 3.. Andffson !El. T mt; 30.2.
100 Frea -I. Wtrd IC ) t. C-land
(El J Dar~ (CJ. Time: SI.I 50 Beck -1 Scr1nlom (El 2. Rice (Cl 3. El)lle (CJ. Time; 30.• so Breast -1. P•ltr-1 (Cl 2. Mlll1•
IEl 3. Hox11,1e1. Time; J.'J.6 100 FrH R llY -I. Est1nc:l1. Time:
\:41.( V•nlty L"u111t 8111dl IJ11 fSll Saddleffcl ?:: Medi? Relav -1. SIKldleback.
,T 2ll:'F~:-_ 1. l.~fler lSl. 2. Welstrv
{L), 3. Pickett (S). Time: l :Sl.3 200 Ind. Mldley -1. Schooo ($), 2.
Luchav (S}, J. WILll'C• IL). Tlme: 2'~·°Frtt -1. Morton (LI t . Strona
!Sl. 3. M. Bvrrlll CL). Time: :tt.• Oivlng -1. WI,.. (LJ, 2. Cllri.otl IL
:J. Potier (Ll. 100 Fly -I. Awrev (SI, 2. Morton IL~0o3i=l.::~. '?t~"ni, lj~(MlwlU
ILi 3 S1>it1lerl Ill. Tlme: S&.•
Fn>il t(J J, Gorri. IC) Tl1r11: t:l•.1
.SO F•--1. Tur.,.~ CCI 2. Hlm-tnell:tl<ller IEl 3. H-1 IEI Tll'l'tl; u.• lQO Fho-1. Del VllM {Cl 2. a-lllndham !El l . JOMS !SI .,-ime: l :OS,2 100 Fr-1. Twntr tCI 1. "'°'~ (El 3. lrvl1111 (El Time; ll.l ~ Fr--1. Mlrlno !Cl t. Froit !CJ 1"1'&11l~i!..T.1Ti~i',;-!:,;l (C l 2. Crlmct
ICI 3. Pk:klord IEJ Tlmt: l•Ol.1 100 8raes1-l, Nawm.n IE) 2. Gorrle CCl J. /llAl;Slrov (El Tlmt: 1:11.t «Ill Fr.e Rel11v-1. Coronl def Moir "Tlme: l :.:1.6 ·--EdlMll ~J!I t•l CllM 100 Mtd"Wf R'",ill'-1. Edl$Oll TllTllt
1 :s•.s 200 F.__I. Ut'ldel'ISt.tt CEI 1. S.yer
{Cl 3. Orr (C) Tlmt: 1:09.t llXI Ind. Med!ev-1. WortP1 CEI t. W-IC) l . lbor,..k IE) Tlmt: l :Ol.7 50 Free-1. LHCll {fl ?. Torvdl lEI 1·~1~'A1=~lf·\. sa--<<:1 s.
Undln$ladl lEI Time: 2t.2 100 Frff-1. Mulllll•\IM'f" (El t. WllH"ry ((I 3. TorOdl (El Tlme: S.-9.
)(I aKS.-1, l.escll !IE) 1. Walk1tr /El
3. Smllll {() Tln11: JOA 50 BrHsf-1. Wetter (C) t. Worth (El J, lbOrnak IEJ Time: 33.6 200 Free Retav-1. Edison Time: 1: .... 4
Van.It) s-. ou n•I Dua ttuas 200 MldllV Rel1v-I. S-11 Time; 1:S3.0
:J. 2r'L~11·J~d 2liii2. Bf'\Q tD.I
200 lfld. Medley-1. Rel~Wh ISJ 2. Kench 0 3. Mavman ID) "Time: 1:16.0 50 Frff-1. Davis (S) j· Underdal IS) 3. Bomln IDl Tlmt; U. 01,..lro-I. Judd (SI t. Wllltf ISl 3.
Jack"°" 15\ 100 F'lv-. T•vlor !SJ t. Mek>seh (01 J. Nel$0n (5) Tlmei S1.S
100 Free-l. HOUMr IS! 2. Boman (0) 3. Mannat1 ID) Tlm1: 1:01.A I/XI F,__I. Chlln:I (Sl t. aruce,(Dl 3. tJncleolal \Sl Tlnw: 4:ZU llXI Back-, T•vtor \Sl t . McCartl" (0) 3. Coak (S) Tfnw: :11:1.1
11 ... tdly, "'""' l , 1973 DAILY PILOT ff
Area JCs
In State
Mat Meet '
Five i,e:rcstlers each from
(}.')Iden \Vest and Orange
Coa~ colleges will compete
Friday and SatUtdny in tht!
15th annual stfttc JC tourna·
men! at Fullerton College.
Act ion begins at 1 p.m. Fri·
day with first round match's
on five dirterent m 8 t s.
Saturday's schedule a\ so
begins a.t 1 with the cham·
pionship round set to start at 8
p.m.
Wrestling for Orange Coast
"'Ill be Paul LaBlanc (142),
Jefr Noon (150), Dan Lewig
(167), Gary Casey (In) and
Tim Bande·I (190\.
Golden West wrestlers in·
elude Ron Vaughan (134), Pat
81.1000 (142J, Rick Masters
\167J. Dan Rollins (177) and
John Suter {heavyweight).
Casey, Bandel and Buono
captured r e g i o n a 1 cham-
piooshlps last Saturday at
Cypress, but all wi ll face stlf·
fer tests this weekend.
N......-t tt11"b0r I•) 13) WKl1r11 200 ~tev Relay -L N-l)Or1 Hart)Of. Time: 2:<W.l
400 frH -l . P!cllell !SI, 2. W .. llf"IY (Ll 3 LOllffler ISi. Time: 4:11.2 t6o Back -1, Awrey (S/, 2. W11H11ee (Ll. 3. Worm111411le.. (S). T me : \;Ql,I 100 fl .... SI -l, M. aun-111 (Ll t.
1IXI Br1111l-I. Ken.eh IS) t . Retden-
bluoll CS> 3. Jove• (DI Tlme: 1:11.0 'l!'iit,_,. lOO Fr" Rel•v-1. Sotlora Time: :· 3:SS.4
Band!l's toughest com·
pe,tltion will come from San
Jose City College's Rich
Calderon. Bandel has a 29-1
season record. Casey (27-41
and Rollins (19-15) will get
their biggest challenges from
Mike Schantz (Chabot) and
Rick Crossland (Butte).
200 Free -1. Dlckev (N) 2. Sllt>GlbV (N J 3. Canee-r jN), Time: l:OS.9 lOO Ind. Ml!<! ev -I. Dobtotl IN) 1, Loomis (Nl ]. no third. Time: 1:2s.• 50 Ftff -·1, ll=d (Nl 2. t+or/Mn
Lud'MY IS), 3. C~,,..le (SI. Tllm': 1:16.3 ..oo Free Relay -1. SeddlebKll.
t~lio'·Ffyell_!~~· ctz~,:11~~) 2. Loomis
IN) 1 R:agers (Nl. Time: •.1113.
Time: 3:52.0
llXI Fr<!e -1. K11arl11" tN) t. Bell (Nl 3. Horrn.n (Nll Time: 1:113.t I/XI free -1. s lnoKil (Nl 2. s.,,,,.. meral IW) 3.. no ltllrd. T me: 4:59.0 llXI &Kk -l. Dlcllev IN) 2. LIPl)Oid (N) 3.. Caftffl" (N). Time: 1:07.3
100 Bret1sl -I. BradSlrHI \"I '-· Prlld'lard (N} l. no third. Time: : fi,J «Kl Fne Rel1y -1. Newparl HarllOr. Time: <i:».7
Fro.h-Soph N-por1 Nlr90r tlO) (I) WHlern 700 Ma<lley Rela1 -I. NewPOrt
H;Qotxw";:.!!,""'...:._ 2l~'eradslrffl {Nl l.
Dl!Motl {N) l. Mc~I (N). Time :
2:~~ Jnd. Medley -1. Newl1nd IN) l. Smlll'l IN) 3. Iverson {N), Time: l ;Qll.l
SO Free -l. OwsMrv (NJ 2. M1r1ln-dal& (N) 3. Wllk1 IHI. Time: 2.5.6 .. ,..0 ~ "! -1. Br~lreel (N) 2 • ..,.,fe (Nl 3. kin ..... (N). Time: 29.12 M rt• 100 Frtt -'· Dwslev (N) ' II n· d1le (Nl J. OeMott (N). Tim.: Sli.3 so hc:k -1. Wlll!e (Nl 2. AnOenon {N) 3. Youno IN). Time: )2.3 so Bre111t -1. Newlar.d (NJ 2. Gele (NJ 3. Hornet {Nl. Time: :w.s 200 Frtt Rel1v -1. NrwPOrt Harl!OI'.
Tl,,,.: 1:45.S
Vanllv S111 C'9lflell'-UI I (S.U Fllllllllll 200 Mtdley Relay -1. San Clemonle. IFootti:IH dl1<1uaUfl1!<1/ Tl,,,.; l :S5.3 200 Fr.e -I. Wll 11 IFI l. S1ra<.ll1n (F) J. Ll..eblck (SJ. Tim•: 1:0 .9 2 200 Ind MedltV -1. Sll'ad'I""' (F) · S1>Uriem °(F) 3. M.. Wilson tSl. Time:
2:01.9 w oo 50 Fr" -1. F1,1rnls1 (~ 2. D. son
{Sl l. Smith (F). Tio~',,,-',_ O •-Hh DIV!l'lg -l. i-11111 n¢ll. • · "'" {Sl 3, B. H11klns \Sl. Po!nts2"cs·~~-oo 100 Flv -I. Arie n50ll ($) • llr""' o "/ 3· no tlllrd. Time: 1:01.2 0,0 2 00 Free -1. D. Wll~on ~ · BonePreak (Fl J. Daniels tF). Tims:
SIJ» Frtt -1. 'lrtem CF) t. ~ (5) l. Palchlkotf F l. Time: 3:S1.l 0 •. 100 Baell -I. . Wll$Clll tSl 2. ~m '" (Fl J. e . H11kln$ (S). Time: 1:02.0 100 Breeit -L F11rnlsS (Fl 2. Alklnton ISJ 3. C~ (SL Time: !:G7.9 100 B.-1111 -1. Ft.ll'niu (Fl 2. Al~lnSOll ISl 3. Cade (SI. T\me: ''°'·' <iOO F,_ Relay -I. f'OOllllll. Tlmet
:J::M.0 Ff"Oflt-$0JI\
sin c..,_11 I•> 02) ,•~,"".,.".,,, 20G Medl!t)' R41av -• " ·
Tlmt: l:S'l.l \'k j c•· 200 F'"° ~ l. ~I .... w
(FJ :J. Ducon tSl. Tl~: : · (F) 2 1(1(1 Ind. Mtdlev -I. Ralt\IM · H;Jrtn0n (F) 3. Griffin (SJ. T me: 1:09. 50 Free -I. Go:uelln {F) 2. Seymour
lFl l. Drveker (Fl. Time: 255 00 ''' so Fl¥ -1. S«:or (Fl 2. Diwl 3. Ovra" !Fl. Time: 211. • 100 Frtt -I. GoMelln tFl 1. R:athl~
(Fl ). Chaw {F). Tlme: S71>2 O ' SO Bock -1. ~or (F . rvc f1"
IF) 3. M. HaBlns (S). Tlrne: 30.~(Fl 2 SO Breast -1. Bl!rl)&um . H11rmon (F') 3. Davits SJ. Tlme: 3'.D 700 Frtt Relay -1. Foott.IU. T!me:
1:~.· VanHy Valeot<lll I•) {~) UfllwnilY 200 Mtdlav R•lllY -1. unlY'tl'slt~ Time: 1 :$1..5 1'00 Fr91t -1. Cosqrove CUI 7. Delon (VJ 3. Sll>Ultnblil"Q (U). Time: l:Ot.O
200 Ind. MNlev -I. Oliver <V\ '-McClinklV CU) 3. 8onuk (U). T me
t:~.l Free -1, TirrnQl,llSI IV\ >..
C11ml>beLI IU) 3. Caullef" (U). T rne:
23~1v1no -'· wr•" ('I) 1. Revnckls (Ul 3. SChraNer Ul. Palnls: 166
100 F=lv -1. PhtlUPS I"\ 2. M. Thomlll IUJ, 3. J, Triom11 U . Time:
511i'!.o Free -I. Camllbell CUI 2. Delon
IVl 3. UtlreU (U). f l!M: S2.S (ICl'loOI r~dJ,:1911 -1. cosoro,.. I UI 2. Borsvk
{U) J McKee119r (VJ. Time: •:19.A
(KlioQI ..COrd), 100 Back -1. Glluner (U) 2. Ollver
IV 3 Stoutenburq (UL Tim•: 1:05.5 1110· BAllSf -L Turn<:tulsl (V) ,, M.
Thomas IUl l. McClu~kev (01. Tlm41'
1 •06 • • · .00 F'rH Relay -1. Unlvel"llrv.
Time: ):37.I (Khciol ~d). ·--Vlllln¢1• 1m 14') U11lwnlty
100 Ml!dlev R111v -I. tJnl.,.rsltv
Tl~; ~~.S -I.· Oonekl$00 CVJ 7.
Vane• tVI 3. J. C11~LI tUl. Time:
2'\1&11nd. Ml!dlev -1. V1nnlce !Ul 2. Mooilln IVI l. Lvon1 (U). Time' l:Cll.J 50 Free -1. S!evlflj (UI 1, M'Cormlcll IUl l . Jol>n50ll V). Time:
15£ Flv -1 SltVh>I CU} 2. J,
C•mllbllll (Ul i Tvrnl>Ull (Vl. Time:
28i~ Free -l . Oona1d!IOn IV ) 1. McCOnnlcll (UI J. Vence (Vl. Tim<!:
"\1 a1ck -l, Moulin (VI 2. Vannice
!VI J, Hoflm•n (VT). TL~~o'tVi·'2 '~' .... B,..1111 -1. ..... """' . (Ul 3 Lvdns (U). Tl'"'9: 3'.0 100 'Frff 1111111 -1. Valtnela ThTMt :
l :'3.t Frts1'1mMI
v111mcl• 1n1 !JO u~n.,
700 M9<111Y Relay -1. \11lend 11
Tlm.t: 2:ll.I • OVO 2 G (VI 200 F=ree -1. II,.,_ . arv
3, Su~r (Ul. Tl..,1: 2:03.3 ~UI 2 100 t11d Mf'dln" -1. H1l5lll . Qvl!rurfft CUl 3. L-e CV). 1me;
1 '~·3..rea _ 1. Canpbell fVI 2. Brook'
(l/) J Wetdl (U). Time: 21.S ,so Ftv -l. H111nt1!UI1. lltttce !VI
). Sltvtr IUJ. Tlmtc ; 34~. tV• ··'-··-· 100 Frft -1· 1mo..... • fU \ 3, Stltliar U). Tim'!: l:OS.2 SCI Baell -1. Sl!Wn (VI 1, O.Cot fUI
3. t.eonBrd (UI. time: 3'111 (V 2 so llrMlf -l. l•~· l . 0"9"1°rNI CU! 3. Gr11l!n (IJl T(,,,_:
31~ Fr .. lllllV -l. V•ltne1t. T1tT>t:
l :5t-' Vll'ttt'r
c"•• """'"' 1Ml cm l'stlft.Ci• 700 M ... 1tv RellY -1, (CK!• ,..,. ••
lltn4!: 1: .... 2 I .... rto •El 2 •L-10Cl F'" -· """""' n ' (l!.l 3. LUnd' fCl, Tllftll 1:SS.J. 200 Ind Mlldt•" -1. C!\.llc;on (C) 2. Webti'e<' iE) 1 ROH (CJ. Time: 2:Cll.I
50 Free -1. ri:n,,.,.,,.. 1r; 2. llrMIO IClu~.:V..!~.16.11:.:C: .~ t. llell fEI
l .10'T1! ~J.1. Mcetr1t 1g1 2. J,
... ~, i1n 1 ~MMv 1'1· 1"1mt: ~.o • l~ Fr.e :_ I G.tl•• C 2. L" !El
3. GllJ'OV (€1. T~_t.1!·1c11.1.lno !Cl -..... -,_ ............
3. Wiii" un. TllM: ''°'·' ''' 2 100 flK~ -l , Wotbs~r • • S...,nMWI IEJ J, 'Mtltmore IC). Tlme:
1'fcJ 9,.."I -I. Soontnl• {fl 1. M~,...tbllrV Cl '· OttoH11 fl), Tl-;
$eJltlOI I IOI I 1...-e .. q. 06) 111) StcMieNdl 200 MldleV Relay -1. Ul,lv,.. 9etocPI. Tlnw: 2;16.4 • 200 Free -1. Plll""Y (t.l, 2. Bll!'l!lne CLl~_3. Potter (L\; Tl,.,,; 2:03.J tl• • lw Lnd. Medi•! -1. '"'mmonJ ,. ... Newton CL), 3. L Hy (SI. Tlm11; 1 :02-6 .so Free -1. K. aumn ILi, :t IWK· real1 \LI, 3. NO'lella (S), T1tm°'N21.!l_,0 50 F v -1. Slmmcn1 (l ' 2. ov .. II l'/l..3' Chrl~la-tL • T me: ~2H w Frie -l. N..non (L), 2 . .., lltll L), J. Jollnson (S). Time: 1:00.0 SO BKk -1. Pe1111e1 (L) 2. Ande"°" (LI 3. BunllllQ IL). T me: 30.1 5Q Br•ast -\. OrlKOll lS){ ~-Chris-tia~ (L), 3. Al\der5on ). Time:
:i..i~ Free Relay -1. L.a!lun• Baach.
Time: 1:56.I ,-res11m11t
La.t~'llll Bf.ch 114) C6J\ Sadd(1lll<ll., 200 MedllV Reay -• Saddlebe(o..
Time: 2:14.4 lJ l tt• 200 Free -1 D'Mara IL 2. 01 1r
tSlt..l· Kane !Si. Time: 2: .6 loo Ind. Medle-y -I. Encinas (Sl. 1. Ball (SI. no third. Time: 1:19.3 0 .so Free -I , kKll tSl~.:t Grinde (LI 3 Ma<k10X fSI. Time:""'·' 51i F0lv -1. ~1 ISl.i 2. O•Har• tl ), 3. Bri!t>ln tSl. Tima: ~-2 100 Frtt -1. Be&<:h \S}~ 2. Grindle
(Ll, ], K-\Sl. Time: :w.O ··-~~ 50 S.et -, EnclnM \SI. 2 .,....,..o~ (S l 3 Loeffler (SJ. No I me. 50 'Bre1S1 -1. Sprln!ol11 (SJ, 2. Trnsler (SJ, no tl!lrd. Time: ¥1.l 200 Free Relay -1. S~tebllek.
Time: 2:11.• V•nl!y
WHlml,.lltl" ('1\hl (,UV,) HlllltllltJIDll
200 MedlCtV Relav -1. W111lml1U1•r
Time: l:S.CA 700 Free -l. o. 1(1nyon !Hl 2. o•Toole (Wl 3. Paee (W) Time; 2:0t(A) 100 Ind. Me.:tley -I. M. Keyon N
2. MullltdV (W ) 3. Goldlllin (W) Time:
2 '~·},ee -1. Weir(~ 1. J~ (WI
J. IAtnd{11~" ,!_H,J, ~~ (-:..} 2. WOl$Mf"
IW 3. Golds le In CW) Tlrn1: I :OCl.O l Free -I. O'Tooll (WI l. W•lr (HJ J. TrlngPlam jWI Tlmt: $3.0 ..oo Free -1. \>Ides (W/ t . D. K ....
11Yon !Hl :J. Bu~ W) Time:
''l&i.1 Back -1. Wonn&r IW) 2. C1,1shnllln (HI 3. Mvlllldy (WI Tl,,,_:
1 '~8 Brfflt -1. (tlel TrlnoMm !Wl
1trod Solcw {WI 3 . ....._., £HJ Time;
..00 fr.. Rel:Y -. I ... v me. 1:14.1 n-·
wntmiim.r 1,n (1 \ """'""*'· 200 M~le1 R.elltY -• Weslmlnstef" T l;;:F~~--I. Hunttev (W'l 2. Holda!'
(W) 3. WllKO (H) Tlm11: 2K::00l ·', (W) 2 100 Ind. Medley - . en . Hurwitz (W) 3. L•ls \w>T,l"ll: ... 1 :0'w"• 50 F•tt -I, Puleo Wl . "a"' J Kettler (Hl Time: 1•.2 0 "50 Ftv-1. Hurwitz (WI t. Lew•
(W) 3 T1'omtS tH) Tlml: 27..5 100 °Free -1. K'°"t IWJ 2. WhlCJl)ll (WJ 3. APl>leo111e IHj T me:,S?.OH-50 Baell -1. Hun leY IW ...
1"':d 3&r~-{Hi. T~ ,_·l. IHI t.
Pul..a (WI 3. WhloPll 1wR1me: 34.0 200 free Rel-Iv -1. W11tm!nstar
Time: 1:31.2 VarMIV
l dlson 1•> {60 CdM *Medi" R .. av-1. Corona del Mtr
Time: 1:~7.2 -2flO Free-1. WllQ!l\'r IC} 7, P~mer 1e:1 3. fl0Vo'-,cc1 ,Tlfl'llv : J,:?...J,.. ''' 2CO 11\d, Mid e-v-•· an ....,. :1. Lor1nx (Cl 3. hnn!ngt0f1 (Cl Tlm1:
l :!O.JF_...l. Blldrls IE) 2. otlll (Cl J, C~~~r ~~I 22~2o.tuc.1 I El 100 Flv-1. KnJITIDllOIJ {Cl 2.,,V'" Gor6an !El 3. Pennington tCl mt:
54i~ F'rM>-1. w...-(Cl 2. Walson IC! 3. Del.u<I IEI Time: 51.S «ll) Fr-1. \.orenJ (C) 1. BoullhfV !Cl 3. Petersen tEI Tlnw: •:07.7 llXI 8ack-1. ICrumpholr (Cl 2. p,.1_ !Cl J. Pelamar CE.l. Tln11: !9.2 tao Brest-1. 6udrfs \fl t . Watson
{CkJ· ?'.: {~~1:~: loro!. del Mir
Time: 3:'3.5 J1111llll' Vartlty
1Elllson (t4VloJ 161"") CdM 100 Medlev R•l&Y-L Tie Tim•: st.• 100 Fr..,,_L M,.rl.-no /Cl 2. Oil Valle
{Cl J Sanbo<"n !El Tl"'e' 1: O.J 100 · Jl\CI. Mldlev-1. Crlmo CCl 2.
·Area Net
' . Summaries
Ulllllfl West1~ Se11t11 Altll
Parker (Gl ell!. I !l), 6-C, M . Tenda1 (GI oet. Sktol" ( '6-1, , .....
C. ~~i!.,~ l~i)~.KJ::' 1t~!·t:: :J: 6-
0.W.lomlll'" (Gl d•I. Poirier ($), 6·2. ..
1"0n11vlros (51 def. Antlkmln IGl, .. ),
H
''"I ·a F....-i lttllY -1. (O'dll 1'\111.
f lml: J:JO,J '""*' V•""V
C•t• fMt9 l4'l l.MI l•t~.· _, !CIO ~ ltllav ·-1. ,,.,....,.
ll;;:,.1~.o-1. G,....lt <Cl 2. onoUt
iel J. no 1ri1r0. TTrM! 1~os.
Banquet Set
08na Hills High School wm
~ it> lm ..,...lllng team
with • sports sword blnqud
tonlgjlt In the school mall
beglnn~ ,at l ::ll.
SMorl fm'Tn°'.;.1111 Hllh 200 Medley Relav-1. Sonora Time: 1:02.) 200 Free-I. F'IJ(Ofl (Sl 2. Hemsley ($) J, Kuhn (SJ Time: 2:25.1 100 Ind. Medley-1, Cltll'llll (SI 2. cys Ii) 3. Robll'll(lfl .. 151 TlrM: l:Ofl.J .__1. ttc:i11in. is1 t . ~~wenkfne't'er (S) 3. l(!Jtln ( J Time:
50 F'lv-1. Muller II 2. Sc.111•111 (DJ
3. Worrell !S/ Tlme; 29.9 lOCI F'r-. DeYOlltlll !SJ t. Pence (Sl 3. Sellwenllrnever (S) Time: 1 :Oll.O SO Back-I, Oil Young IS) l. ChOVlf <>j,3· FUOl'I tSI Tlme: l2.0 B•Msl-l . Adams 0 2. Rollins IS) J. Hovt !Sl Time: 36.0 «Kl Free Allay-I. Sonar• Time:
I ;<M.3 Fl'9$h-Sillllt
S-. C7SI CU D1tN Hiiis 200 M.atev Rttav-1. Sonora TllN': 1:!U.2 200 FrM-1. Ebll• (Sl t. Sutton (S )3, Ren1 {DJ Time: 2:13.• 100 Ind. MNl•v-1. Mltcl'l(>ll (Sl 2.
Anderwn IS 13. Gaud 1s1 Time: l:ll.7 50 FrM-1. Morrow SJ 2. Hemld>el IS) 3. CWlck.show (51 T me: 29.5 50 Fly-1. T1v\or (Sl 1. Salm.try (SI
3. Glluel O Tlmeo l:t.2 100 Free-1, Ktrw:ll \Sl t . MJtcti.ell 1slo1ah'r~. !J!~'"!~1 2~t. .. tsi ] . ttentscllel ISi. Tlmt: 11.5
50 8r11t$!-1. Tavlor (SJ 7. Satma..., (SI 3. Ander$0fl (SJ Time! 35.2 200 Free RelaY-1. Sonora Timr. 1:5-1.9 -Virl.ltv Sllnta Ana II» <'41 Marina 200 ~dleY Rel1v -1. M.trlna Time: 2:00.I lOO Free -I. Sc:nDlft (Ml 2. Culllnuie (Ml J. G!JQelt!• IM) Tlrne: l :Slf.O 200 Ind. MtdleY -I. F•b11tn (M) "Tlrne: 2:11.1
SD"'" -I. 8uckner IM) 2. We!ICI'."" (M) 3. R:ollln!t (Ml Time: :u.o DIV!flll -1. Gerson !Ml 1. WUver (M! 3. Cllml>beH (S) 100 Fly -l. Scholes IM) t. GU!lelf'I" IM) 3. Sllf1111 Alli Time: YJ.• 100 F'ree -I, Buckfllf" IM( 2. Flobi11n
(M) 3. Edwards !Ml Time; $].O 100 Back -I, Rollins tMI 2. Wenotf" (Ml 3. Sanla Ana Time: 1:05.7
1'0Cl BrMsl -1. Lown IM/ • WI ... tM) 3. Santa An.a Tl!N; 1:1 .I
..00 Frei Rf!l•v -I. Maorln1 Time1 3:UJ · J__. Vanity Salt• AM II) (741 ,...,... 200 Mldlrt Rtlay -1. Maori,.. Tlmt-: 2:0l.5 200 F ... -I. E~ !Ml 2. Conklin (Ml 3. Erlduon (Ml Tlma: 2:1M 200 Ind. Medley -l. Wer1Qll' tM) 1.
Hormel (M) Time: 2:11.0 50 Fr'°" -I, Armsh"ona fM) t. W•lsh (Mt 3. lt/bc.'henlCO !Ml Time: 26.S 100 Flv -1. HarrlloOl'I tMJ Time: 1:09.5 100 Free -l. Arms""-{Ml 1. H11toooff !Ml 3. Harrison IN.I TI~' "·' <108 Frett -I. We<Qer {Ml Time; •:21., 100 &lck -1. Easter (Ml t. Erkbon (Ml 3. Walsh fM) Time: 1:12.4
Jl)(I Brees! -1. H11opott (Ml 1. Conklin CMl Tlnw: 1:20.1 «ID Frff R1l11y -1. Marl111 Time; ~:20.S F,..._~ I
5111t11 .t.1111 fUI fH) Martu 100 Medl1v Re av-1. M.trina Time:
2:03.6. 200 F,__I, Qt,111111 (M) 2. Roblman · 1'$1 ). MeC11t1vm !Ml fl"n'ie : 2:07.6 JOit Ind. Medley -I. Hin (M) 2.
Jonnson (SI J. Golol'llta (Ml Tlmt;
1:09.1. .so F=--1. Hin (Ml 2. SelYln (Ml 3. &e<:.ker (Ml Ti~: 27.0 SCI Fly-I, Q'llall1 {Ml t. Shir (M) :L S11nt1 Ana TIME: 30.5 100 Fr-1. Storti (M) t. R:ablm.on (S~38ic'"~r"J~!~l: i?·~llll (SI
J e.eker {Ml Tl,...: 3'.I · 50 areast-1. JOlll\SOl'I !SI 2. Goktnk•
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\:$S.•
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Honor Roll
T* JC Swllft Tl-
«lll fl'l"dle-y relay -1. °""'ft C.-st
3:5'.ll 2. Pll~-J::Sl.I; J, 0..... w.-t J:t4.l1 4. Cyprus J :Slf.3; I. WHt
V11lev 4:00.L
1,o()O tA& -1. Hl"'lf1 {Fvllertonl
\O:ll.5; 2, Jones IRlo Hondo) lO:lS.•;
3 Hall (Ml, SACl 10:311.3; L &alllw rSe..voinl 10:35.A: 5. Martin (Sil11t11
Monlc•l 1o:ss.1. °"*" -1J. F~
iOCCI 11'11.11 IJ, Mattlt)' l~WCI
111lt.t1 It. MllrNll IOC:C) 11:27.1.
200 trite -1. Hll"'ft'V (FullertOl'll
1:52.0; t. Vall (Grossmontl l:S:l.t ; 3.
Roblni.on (Fllitl<1onl l ~S3.0; L Von e.-(Ventul'al J:D.I; s. s ..-..
(Cyprfftl wtlll-(GIN-Wesll
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l:M.fl 11. ~ IOCCJ ltP.5.
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(F1,1!1erton) 22.)1 ), N,...,.. (0C(1,
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J2,J.Olllofr1 -6. C1nt.h ICl'#C) ft.11
7. L. llattel'MM IOCCJ 21.t.
100 Ind. 1114d, -I, RodrlCIWJ. {Mon!.
ftenll'IWl•I 2:01.71 2. Rotllnson
!Fullerlon) l :ot.01 3. 91llftr (StQt,oDlall
2:1)'1.7; 4. Hltlfll1'19 l~llol t :llA; J.
K111t COCCJ ~ i~l 2;11.1.
01111n -14. MN11 IOWCI t '14.J; 17.
M_.. (OWC) t11•.1.
100 fly -1. Rodrk!Wl (Mon!.
PllltntulaJ 1:01 .91 1. H•ys.lett ,..._
quol11I 1":t11.01 a. M#"tln 1$.artl•
Monlt•I 2:10.s1 '-•et11 cv ... rur.1
2:10.t; S. Tayama (El Clmll!O) 2:1.t.&. ~ -1S. N_. (OCCI t 1D.J1 17,
~ IOWC) 1:1'.4,
100.,... _ 1. -~ tf\111.,..1 .ft.$;
2. ~ tP~J •Ai a. bonov ... l"llt'(e), ~ (OW(J Jiii.ti s.
HaNt1 (~) SO.S. OtMr1 -I".
oa-M11 COCCI •·'' lt. l"rMIMl tOCCI ll.JJ 11. MCA c if fOCCI Jl.J,
700 ""'ck -l. 001>r1n.ty (l!I c.a ... 1no1
2:ot.31 2. ffenn'ng iCat:lr'lllol t :ll.Ai >.
I... II.ti-tote) 1111.SI 4.
C""'91M" IOCCh S. Mor1Nt11 (C't'prtBI
2i1J.2. Ol'lllr"¥ -I. ICllrt IOCC:I 111•,11
11. S._,. (GWC) 1iltA.
500 hi -1. Hllf'Vt"r (FlllMtonl S:Ol.S: 2. Pldl!W t"t.-rul S:-..S1 J.
~uni COAST CO.CHAMPl!)NS -Orange Coast
College's wrestling team recently captured the South
Coast Conference championship, sharing it with Cer-
ritos. In the bottom row, from ~eft. are st.eve Joan-
nes, Jeff Rorick, Mike Faragalli, Paul LaBlanc and
Jeff Noon. ln the top row are Tim Bandel, Gary
Casey, Dan Lewis, Kim Blaylock and coach Vern
Wagner. Buono, who bas a 34+1
season mark, is ranked beblnd
Ch&bot's Brent Jacinto. Buono
edged LaBlanc. 3-2, for the
142-pound regional title. Santa Ana
Old Crow
Finals Set
Gene Fason has advanced to
the ftnals of the Old Crow
flight in the seniors golf
tournament at Santa Ana
Country Club while Bert Smith
has also gained a fmals berth
in the 60-69 bracket in the
rain-delayed competitido.
Semifinalists in lhe 50-59
bracket include La r r y
Ridgeway and Lee Ritter after
victories over Bob Hoyt and
Don Shively.
· In the lowtt hruf of the
bracket. Bill Livingston will
meet Bob Conman. Livington
defeated Robert Hurtt and
Corfman lopped Bob Zant lo
gain the semis.
Smith defeated Bill Baker lo
gain the 60-69 bracket finals
after the latter had stopped
M. T. Patterson in the quarter·
finals. Smith gained t h e
quarters with a win over John
Irvine.
Max White defeated Hal
Mogey for a ~rth in the Jower
half or the bracket in the
semis but Fred \Valker and
Sid Blackbeard have not
played lo detennine a foe.
Walker lopped Leland l'"mley
and Blackbeard de 0f e a t tfd
Charles Hollister. (J'
In the Old Crow bracket, Dr.
Phil Sheehan defeated George
Woods and Frank HlldltclJ
stopped Charles Mciver to
gain the quarterfinals. Monty
Brokaw defeated Ho w a r d
Evans and Ralph Mitchell
stopped Gates Burrows. ·
In gaining a fmals berth,
Fason defeated Dick Barry in
the quarterfinals and Al Honer
in lhe semis.
Checking Gals' Golf
ICCC Title on Line
Margaret Rife and Nancy Dalby (15). Anne Keenan {14)
Newland will meet for the and Sybil Foster a n d
c h a m p i o n s h i p in the Rosemary Skillion tied at 13.
president's cup competition at Ginny Stasko and Failyn
Irvine Coast Country Club Fri-Brooks tied fOr ftrSt in C flight
day. with 14 and Elise Stipes was
Nancy Barnes and Dorothy next with 11.
Jo fSwalanson, d defe~ted ... ti n B. J. Newland had 13,
semi in roun action, .,.ay Shirley Ja'ckson tl and
£or the third place position Carnelle Kennedy nine in D
while Joe Hartley and Katie flight.
Gardner will vie for the vice Vonda Adams of the Costa
president's flight title. Mesa women's group scored a
Seat!liff hole-in-one r e c e n t I y at
Anaheim Hills CC w h 11 e
Winners in the second round playing in the m o n t h I y
of the handicap tournament at women• s tournament
Huntington Seacliff Country sponso~ by the Public Links
C!ub this week include Polly Association.
the gross winners. Net awards
went to Kell y Adams (66), Peg
Maul (67) and Rosie
Uchizono(68).
In C flight, Barbara Peggs
(94 ) was the-gross winner
followed by Edie Gow (103 )
and Gretchen Cannon (103).
Low net went to Dorothy
Penzel (70), Jackie Neal (73)
and Dorothy Jones (74),
El Niguel
Members of the El Niguel
Country Club women's club
staged a two-day ecclectic
twrnament this week. Browning, Liz Brandenburg,
Rosemary Erickson and Cuba Meadowlark Low gross honors at 76 went
Curl. Hafriet Granville scored · a to Marion Ausness and Esther
In the second flight, winners 69 to win ]ow net honors in a Nugent.
were Jackie Fitzgerald, Alice women's club tournament at In the low net competition,
Acklin, Cheri Thomas and Meedowlark Golf Course this Stella Seaman and Helen
Virginia Stevens. week with Florence Baker sec-Willard closed wtth a 60 to
Betty Peterson, Roberta d t -d An"t Appleto gain top honors. Other winners Andrews, June Doyle and 00 8 '" an 1 a n
th'.rd at 76 in order of. their fmish by mat-Pierette Croft were the third · flight victors. In B flight, it was Helen ching score cards when ties ex·
tn a low net tournament, Burda fU'St with 71 folloWed by isled include:
Cheri Thomas won A flight Jean Hight and Joyc e Second at 51, Nancy
with a net 70; Liz Bran-Thielman (74), Pat Rood, Dougherty and Wand a
denbw"g was ~nd with 72 Freda Silverman and Harvey Christensen· third at 61,
d M ·1 Celli th'~ "lh Ann Woolcott (76). Ilorolhy M and Fran
Lewis (33-2) was defeated in
the regional final s by Cypress'
Ken Kalcevich by 'a 3-2 score
while Masters (33--9) nabbed
the consolation title. They
figure lo be· the· lop three In
the 167-pound category.
Lewis' only two losses have
been to KalceVich w·h 11 e
Masters and Kalcevlch haw
split their two encounters thia
....... And Lewis holdll·thn!t
victories over Masters.
Vaughn's biggest challengt¥
are Ted Wilton (Cypress) and
Mike Bertello (Long Beach
CC). Vaughan has a 2tHI
season record.
Noon (23-11>-1) is wrestling in
a toogh weight cla,. with Lar-
ry Wllleman (El Comlno).
Del)nl! Bardeley (Santa Rosa)
and Tom Roaeathal · (Cbahol)
all rated ahead of him.
SUter, a surprise fourth
place finisher In the regional&.
well be hard pmse<1 to man
the finals --especially witll
undefeated heavyweights 1~
BUI Van Worth (Bakenlleldl
and Rudy Huarta (Imperial
Valley) in the divilllon.
Suter has a 22-Jl-5 season
record.
More than 200 wrestlers win
compete in the tournamenl
with Chabot College, tllt
defending state champion, ex·
peeled to repeat Its 1972
performance.
Scores an an yn uu WI Shirley Stebbins won C flight Ristc; fourth 61, Beverly
74Mary Vander Sommen won with 73. Henderson and Le.Bon: Hat1-• ••tUtt111111 At&tc:latt.
the second flight with 72 Mesa Verde fifth at 61, Gene lck and ~eos,'!d.li!l.11Gotiif112 ... ~tfT1"'
followed by Alice Acldin and Charlene Cramer. w1uk" u...1.ii.1 . t .
M W k .~11111111 Cltv-Omif\i , P'-ril1t l01 Helen Cowden with 765. ary a n n a m a e r • Sixth place at 62 we to o;,ii,J.~~ ,.._..,'°" ·
ln the third n•""t u was An-Barbara Pegg and Darlene Lorraine lmpey and Jackie Ntw York Hs, ,.,,,.mon11 1• ...._ n-e were ·nne-' · th C•roltNI 1o.i. utn~ " ne Penn {ll'St with 73 followed ~ WI ni in e an· Watson: seventh at 62 went to 1nd111n1 uT san o :;r. lr'
by Nonna Pard (74) and nual Barry Sutherland eclectic Edith Carpenter and Nelle ~r~"'t!~.!1ic:v1 J'
Pierette Croft (76). tournament at Mesa Verde Townsend; eighth at 63 was Mon1r.:1"\t'os .....,..::i.';-r""'
Country Club this week. taken by Rulh ~-h and t~~ ~·. N~{ 2......, • ''' C'osta: Me•a In A class, low gross win-""'"' en o.1ro11 ,, P1111•~1.•s ...
I Midge Moyer. P1tut1urlh 4, st. Loub 2 Members of the women 's ners were Dora Dona dson ""'"""'° • 1. cantornla 1
Club at Cos'. Mesa Golf with 73 : Shirley Kinder (81) The next four reams shot 64 0111v ~~Lti
d Ph II S "th (831 and their order of finish was v1rq1n1' fKh 17, v1ro1n111 u Course staged two an Y s mi · Sovth~1n:i11"1n,Forc111.mn tournaments this week. Mary Wannamaker won low as folklws : ninth -Sybil ~!~11onor1.-1~k:'"JorYl•Pld ..
net W'•th 65 followed by Mart.an McOevitt and Pat Sprigg; Ioth 01t111. c1tv S..021.~111 12 In a 3-3-3 tourney, Betty Jo Air Forc1 u;. 'ft'Vomrna .is Sleva was the A flight winner 6lson (67) and Alice Derby -Millie Johnson and Peg ~~~sh:s:~Ji~.5Jo~ (68) Herten; 11th Doris Syrll(uw n, RutlMI"• u with 301h followed by Hazel . B n· •'t . D I . Handschuch and Marianne Del BowUnq Green •L ClllC!IQO LOYOia " Webster (3l) and Margaret In I&• 1t was ar ene M11m1, 0ti10 t1-uavtan 59
Kunagai (3'l). Bouse (88), Barbara Malick Beato; 12lh -Carol Keep and ~et~.!M~~s.~11~":$•" u
A tie resulted in B flight, _c_90_1_a_rul_Lo_rr_a_in_e_Lo_w_e_ry.c_(_91_1 __ Do_r_o_th_y_H_o_w_ar_d_. ______ g,:.~'-"' c...::.:.~'.:.t•:;;".,.='·:.''l.=--"----
between Rosemary Skillion
VI J and Mary Evelyn Imler at Mission. e O 291(,; Sybil Fosler was third at o~---------------------..~ Men's club members at 31. Mission Viejo Country Club It was Ruth Schilling first in
ed · •·--blend ·· C flight with 28 followed by stag 8 memuo;1 -er Rae Mitchell (29) and Noreen tournament over the weekend.
First place at 116 in the two Grady (31).
best balls of foursome com-Sandy McFarland won the D
petition went to Bob Ramsey, fllg)l l with 3%1(, while Nina
Jim Clari:, Bob Forrester and Danielson and B. J. Newland tied for second at l3. Al Shaw. In a most pars tourney, ln second place at 129 were n b Bill Randall, M.ike Kendal, Hazel Weh!iter, a r a r a Leonard and Barbara Mort.on Dale Porter and Dave Phillips. tied for first with 13.
Third place at 130 went to In the _B Oight it was Jean
Frank SciArrotla. R y b u r n, --:;jjiiii .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\;~-1 Bartlett, Don Sammons andl
Bob Clark. Tom Amen, Dick Th ink
Pickup, Dav• Richardson and ~ bob Joe carrowa y finished fourth
at 131. lyman"s
tn a stag toumrunl"nt. Jerry '
Grubaugh. Alfred Meyer . MENS SHOP
Howard Jenkins and Spence
Vay Cini.r;hed first with 127. NEW
!loo Shiley, Warren Btansby, ARRIVALS Don Samples and Don McleOO 11
were next wltll 129.
~ You can have ~
your dream Home now!
(and you don't have
to move to get it)
Sometimes• fowwell-tllought-out Improvements can Mii
a aeemlngly oroln1uy home Into something very speclal.
An additional room, •completely .....ieslgned kitchen er
bathroom, a swlmm1J11l pool-tt>ere.,,, hu-ol
ways you can upgltlde your lamlly'a m~o.
The Am Nellonal Bank of Orange Counly can help malul
your dream come true. We..., boon providing prompt,
low cost home llllp!O'l8ment loeno to local residents
since 1906.
So use your lmaglnallon. Docldo wl!at l'llllOll811ons 11n1
._cy, 1hen eee ue for-f!nlnclal 838lstance
)'OU require; .
M<Contlllf (Vlll'ltvrtl Stl0.21 •. '"'*-
ICy,,,_\ StlS.11 S. Vtlt I~)
S:l6.J,
Mlssi-On '<iejo will be tbe
scene of the next Western
Tournament GoU Association
event Monday and Tuesday.
for
Sprl119 First National Ba'nk
P8ul Bauman will spice a.
member-guest day loumament
oo Marth llH I alld when he mate.a a per!IOl'lal appearance
lo preseot his trick <hots at approlimaJo1y' 3:l0 ~turday.
-·-Lovl Knlh
A-1 Cuff Fl1lro
"" ·-.. """""' ..... 141•a.dl-••
If 11,lllURm I .......... ,_, ... --~ .._T .. IC*t-... & ... ... Imo............. ··~ --17-•'• WJJ-=w.,••• []ts:!!~ ............... --....................... ~.•·.· ............. ,_,-,~::i::::L.J
I
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f
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28 DAIL V PILOT
What's Doing
Outdoors
. ' JIM NIEMIEC
For the angler the moolh ol March has a lot to ol!tt both
on the salt and fresh water scene. Surface ~ion aiong our
coast line should now signs of lmpn:Mng as warmer water Md
nicer weather replaceii winter time conditions.
't'bere are still lo4.s of yellows around the Coronado Islands
but they have not been too cooperative the past couple of weeks.
Look for botb yellows and big white sea bass to stage a good
comeback during the month.
Catalina end San Clemente island.>t will be gettiog lhe atten-
tion of harbor area boots as conditions continue to impro\le. A
good bite oo large catil:o bass at the islands is erpecte:d this
see.son acanting t.o veteran skippers. Water and feed condilions
are ideal for a banner year all around reported an oJd timer
from the docks down et N~.
Locally it will be up to 'r()Ck codders to fill the sacks for UW!
next couple ol weeks, with only a few lucky anglers getting into
Any heavy bonito or bass actioo along kelp beds.
Bay fishing should reach its peak tn April for croaker, while
bass and halibut action remains good through June. Sk.iff fisher·
men rentiog their boats at either the Pavilion or Art's Landing
will return to the dock.I with the bc!t catches, as dockmen will
point out more productive spots in the bay.
Far1ller up the cout tltero is a good chance for onglm to
lie tnto some nice salmon. The run which began a couple of
weeks ago will get better as the wee~ J>U5, Boats n10ning out
Avila Beach and Morro Bay usually produce fair to good fishing
for party boat anglers.
l'bh Hitting Below Border
Flahlng flnally took a turn for the better South of the border.
Reports from In and around the cape are all good and the es·
pected big run of bllUlsb Is just a week or IO away.
The Ur't good algns were reported off Cabo last week and
before long, MeEco's big game fish will be very acUve from
lhe Up of the.cape clear up to rt1ulege.
Chuck Walters at Rancho Buena Vista called In to report
good action on roosters. grouper and yeUowtall with an indlcaUon
that ibe big marlin 11easoo Is just on the verge of getting started.
Tropical wlnfer storms have turned the cape Into a lush green
peninsula th15 pa5t year and vl5ltors are In for a big surprfs~
when they land at La Paz or any of the private air strips on the
Op of Baja.
For a complete update on all fi5hing conditions in all of
i\fexico phone Whitey at Angeler's Center in Newport Beach ac
171-7091.
Lake# Benefil bl/ Rain
Most oC the lakes in Southern California really benefited by
the heavy rains of February and a little more rain won't hurt.
Many Jakes are higher nDW th:an they have been In three years
and as they settle during March fishing will improve.
currently a lot oC the lakes are off -color Wld this effects
trout fishing, .but does not seem to hamper anglers going after
catfish, bass, crappie and bluegil. ,
V,ail Lake has been the hot sp<n for number o{ largemouth
bass end sOOuld continue to be in the llmelight through April .
LxHc for Lower Otay. Henshaw. ,1\tiramar and El Capitan
all to produce bass in excess of 14 pounds, while Wohlford, wtiich
opens later in March, could very easily produce a new state
record.
Trout fishing will be good at Cachuma. Casltas. Piro and
Sherwood for 'lnglers using cheese, salmon eggs and floating
cheese bait. Closer to home, Irvine and Anaheim Jakes will be
extmnely productive as long as weekly trout plants continue.
..
• .
•
""'1<• °" ~"' IAL9 ~ ,,_. c. ,........,... ......... 'ft. ....,. MOTK• TO calOf'l'Oltt
e.. ~ ~. Nitt. r> • • '""'•IOlt coutt °' nee JIJDGM&Ht OATI!' OCJotlW r, lttt Sl'Aff O" CALlll'CMl.llllA ..oil
•v vlrf\HI °' "" ~tton lttued ot1 ni• cou•TY Oii' OAM••· ~-Ko 1m w n.. superior '-'· ..., A ,_,
Irvine Spike Roundup PIJBLlll NOTICE
CorOtla lfel llfar
Coaeh John BlaJr't · Sta
KJngs have the Irvine League ,
track title to defend, and
enough skilled athletes return·
ing to make them t h e
preseason favorite to do lt.
Corona deJ Mar nearly
doubled the second place
team's output In last stuon's
league finals, and although it's
not expected to be that easy
this season the Sea. Kings have
some big plusses in their
favor.
One performer COWlted upon
heavily is senior Joe Tosti,
who runs the sprints, a relay
and also put the shot. Tosti
was second in· the shot with a
personal best or 56 feet, and
was a member of the 44-0 relay
team"which went to the CJF
finals. He has a 10. l clocking
for the 100-yard dalh.
Underclassmen John Walden
(junior), Daren Bordie r
(sophomore) and Bob Wilson
(jwt!or) will back Tosti in the
sprints.
In the middle distances the
key man is Doug Knapp, a
fourth place finisher in the
league in fhe 440 and 2nd in
the 880. Knapp has a 51 flat in
the 440 end 1:58 in the 880.
Mike Austin and Mike Mess-
inger give depth in the 440,
while Austin and senior Jim
Baker are prime candid~es in
the 880.
Hurdling experience comes
in the person or Mark Wynne,
a . fifth place finisher in the
. lows in last year's league
meet. Wynne, returning let·
terman Joe Denger a n d
either Greg Ruzicka or Bill
Russell wil lcompete in the low
hurdles, Wynne, Denger and
Mike Minna are in the highs.
In distance events the Sea
Kings aren'C quite as strong.
They will count on Steve White
in the mile wilh Knapp and
Austin in the two mile. Knapp
has a 9:41.0 two mile,
Senior Jim Brown will push
Tosti in the shot put with Eric
Flemming and Glenn Miggs
expected to follow Tostl's lead
in the discus.
Denger, Greg Ruzicka and
Russell make up a good high
jump contingent with Denger's
6-& effort the top in the group.
Ruzicka and Brent Jeffries
ere both at the 2~ mark in
the long jump.
ln the pole vault the prin·
cipals will be Kerm Rima, Jim
Phillips and Russell, who
all can clear 13 feet.
~ tJ O, •"It, ii... af i<lt o1 OUADAl.UP'E CRUl, 0.0..-
4.l. • c..11""1'11•, uP011 • \~ tftfwW In «1. ln the abot and dileu!, Santa Ana Valley • a blJ season ends: include Mib ,,_. of J-c. Hllfl'IMn •• llldlmlll'lf NOTICE IS HllllllV OIVIN .....
•--1or Don J-•----a.il d ,...,...,..,__ er"""" .,.. ... ""' • ..,. e. fll""'*"' uM11.,.. • ,,. ""°""' Mf1*I ~ .xii U11uwu 'I ........ ._.. , Bilc:ho(f in the m I d d 1 e .. '""""""" .,_., .,_ino • ""' ttw1t .u P"Wllf n. .. 11111 a.JIM •1iut..,. :1(:~1~"fetf~~ The Baruis eipe« to be ~btlnoe1 and rel.,,,, nm t=.!nf' .. ~4:.:':'t t':"'9 .. ::: ~ =~ = .. '°1t1
11J:. =• adeqU1te lD every eWtrt,, and Stromberg in the distances .. kl u«Vtklfl. 1 .,..,. .. ,, ... V!)Otl 111 tiw °' tM c:1.n. of ""' ....... 91\lltlM cwr1 • ., the varsity trio. Jobruk>o has a strong 1n the lturdtel, long rlOflt, tltl• 1n11 1n,_,.,, of Mid l\ld9mlnt to pr•Mftf "'-· With ""' -·~ -
put of 514 on record and '-"a jump and pole vault and Ed Cox in the shot and .... In tM prflJll'rlY In tM Col.lr'lly of \'OVt!Mrl ... !! rtw undfn.ltl'ltd, .. •' " I ,.,.. Or.,,.., $111• .. C1llfwlll1, llaetlbtd 11 fW#pot1 ....,.,.., Ori""' No. Ii-f, ,.,wport
thrown the dl!ICUS 138, both top . discus io11owt· ••M;ll. c1111 .• "*°· wfW<:h 1.t tt-p19e-1 °' ·-T' -.. -t.a Return1no league champion • T'"' IOthM•mtv" t.• '"' of lot a 111111-ef ... ~In •II~ ' mar.a. 1m 1numpson, wuu ls · -.. . ii E .... __ .,_. .. , ., Lcit u w. ai.k T. o1 P9rt.Wf'lll to t1111 ,,,., .. of Mk!~'· primarily a Jong jumper may Rlchard Lenga the man to ... _.., w•flltM'• AOdlt1on, &klkltl • .. wtthtn ,._. inciialhL•IW tt. t1t11~1u-
•'-a beat In the low hurdles and l..,,.. C\ltt.. In IN tllY ol t.90Yftl tlOfl of ltllt ,,_kl, . abo work out-in we weight Incoming coach G o rd o n h!Kll. ~,., "' 0r-.. 11.t• °' 0.1«1 '*"'"' r. 1m events sophomore champ st eve C•U•r>ll. It IW fl'llP (Kordld In~ JA.V w. HENDERSON · Reiland . Is a thtt:at in the Fltzel inherits a young ttam 1 peoe " o1 Mlac•I~• ,,,,....., In n. Mmlllktr•tor o1 ~ ._. .. .,
I h otflc9 ol trle COUftt)' .-dlr of 11ld tht ~ "'"*' ......,, Estanri• bigh!:. 1n the pole vault, Scott wt much poteoUal ·at Edi.son CO!lftty. c~ known 11: "" 'AY w. MlilllDatJOM
Robuclt M gnolla t 'f '"-bu h , , .. ,..._ LA9UM ·~· C1llflWl'lll. U .. • a.k T-' It's a rebuilding year at • 1 rans er uu:J season. t one t at Jsn t NOT1c& ,, Hl!Reav 01ve" 111a1 on ,,, ........, c ... 1w Dt ..
E tanc. aft lb Eagl BUI Jenkins ana aophomore e.1pected to make •• ~ -at Thuirto.y, #Mrc:lil 16, 1m. II 10:00 o'clock kll!e 1i-11 ......... s •a er e e.s John Bosanko all predict bet· •J &""' A.M. •t c_,.._., N¥tML'• Offk•· • ..., ...ca. c. . .,._ dro..-..i to the bottom of the 1_ than 1• loot mar•-. inroads Jn Irvine Ltague •1a er-v1111')' J'ath'•Y· city o1 ""'""" "' ~lllldnc"' .,-.,.,.... ..., .J --1.. l. .. UM N!fUtf, C-ty ol 0!"1"09• iU•lt ol Publl-'*I ..,._.. Old .,.,. "Uot, Irvine League standings last trau... C•Ufwl'll•, 1 w111 ..i1 ,, puou.; 1001on 10 '~ 11. 22 w Mll'sh l, ._
season. And pre.season rains But the long jump could be T h e Chargers• strengths ::,._ ~""''~111~ ~~11 ~ •:;::~ im. "1·n
which hindered p r a c t i c e the most cansl!tent point pro-should be Jn •'--· ... ·d 11t11 .,.. 1ntereit of .. ,, 1"'""'*1' ~or PUBU ~--
d"" RJ-• Ca . . . di dlsta =nd•pnn~. '1 nuth • '" "" ..... _ .. .,. -. -~ C 1~1-• haven't helped things any. .....er. ~ se IS Ul'OOli m e nces a poss1b y e muc:n thlfMll' .. ;;..,Y .;-:;--.Ma.;;. fO,J------------
But -ach Don B"-· has on the %2-foot mark. and Dave shot put. But 1·0 m~ even•· .. tt11y Mid ••ew!ton, w11t1 1ccNH lri· f'ICT1T1ous •utlMtu ... .., ....... Kreutzer, S(eve Reiland and ..,.,. 1.:1, 1-1 •NI alflt. NAMI STATIM•NT the nucleus of a first place Burt Kato aren't far behind. they'll have much to prove. 011ec1 Ftbn.o•ry ,,, 1m. Thi taiowlno 11tr10t1 •• ooing """''*-
freshman team Of l .. t ....... J . Ma k E' hert and Olvlaion: SOUth ••: I ~· Broce Moore is also in the pie· un1ors r IC OtLL.AJtO o. WILKIRSON c It IM' NA. t. Ju$ T' c e: IN· and some promising incomlag lure and several others are Dan McPherson are the basis Mll'tflll, 0tanoe county VESTJGA.Tlv& CONSUL TA.NTL 11u.s I
r h ' ho f bulldin f t'mi In th Int , .... _ 8y M. t.. •rown HO. 20, DtpUly Forti.i Ro.cl No. 20,, LNvnt Nlglltl res men 1n pes o g around lhe 2()..foot mark. or op 1 sm e spr s, -•.wta a.)"111 mn
a better record ! .. _ time both . th .. ·1 f 10 2 fllel•~ """""" Rotllrl L Sllll•l••n Ufa l!!I ,_ .. , 1113 • C are U1 e v1ctn1 Y o . • "· c....t Mwy, Ste. "'O" lo. M!utot1 v1,1o c11itor1111 tu1s .,,.,
1 SophOmore Steve Adams iA ta'~ nas returned to Foun-rot the 100. Senior Mart L= ~-C•m.wtll Thi• MIMN I• 'conc1uc:t..s by'" 1,..
Oil •. Of theSnc(I I. a~ .. t we 1g.h1 in a ey after transferring Weth be Is also top &t1N ..,.,"Of eo.11 Dally Pllo1 dlVlduel • u, out last year, and his presence er e 'a can· "'~ 2:1111c1 March 1, 1, 1,n 531.n Roti.rt L. Sheridan
returnees an outstanding will also be felt in the -ints. didate in the sprints, 81though Thl• ,,,,..,,~, w••-"'" w1111 th• I
prospect in the sprintl and A lO.l lOO-yard dashtn ~n. his real real value could be is PUBLIC NOTICE ~:Ut.Z~,., c~~~9,t °'1"" COUl'ltv ""
hurdles. Al~en Liddle. ~as Case will be·pressed by senior the 440. fllOTtC• TO c11IDJTCH11 PubO•l>td oranQe co.•t o111y '=~ I shown, pro, m1se for a JUDtor Bruce . Hernandez, M 1 k e Junior Paul Parker, a su,.1•10R cov•T o• THI! Feor .... ,1 ls. 2:1 •M Merell 1, t. ''"· STAn 0, CAt.lf'ORHIA '0" 4#-n j
sprinter and letterman Mark Tabone and Kreutier. The transfer from Huntington THI couHTV o, ORANG• l
Stanlow heads a~othe~ -group ;:.me trio is slated in the "'";o--..,-:B;each, and freshman Tom Ett•te of c~:L:s~ ••RNEs, JR., PUBUC NorICE ) or hopefuls which mcludes . -. ~ oy, the league's frosh 600 DlcoMd. , Pete Hess, Dave Parsel, Dan Retllf!IUI( letterman . Jorur c p last season, are also NOTICE IS HEllE8Y GIVEN to Ille NOTI CE IS HERE8Y GIVt:N 'll•f Sayles 1s the top man th crec111o11 ct tile •bow 119mtd dee9del'lt copl•• o1 ,.,. s""°" of Ill• Chtirtff o1 ""' Princeotto and Roy Butteling. . tn e did.ates. in.1 •II Ptrl«ll lltvlng d11m1 11111n1t 111e City o1 s1nt• ""' propoM11 10 111 •merld· The middle distance a ........ p ,., 440 and 880, havmg recorded .a w1c1 dlcWtlll •r• rt<1U1reO to flll t1111m, .ci by 11111 c11y counc11 of .. id citv .., I ""'"''" 50 3 in th f M Gordoo Linderolh a junior wlltt 111e nec:.,..ry vouc11er1, In tM ot11c1 prOPOSlllon +o 111 w~lli.t •t"" o.,_11 led by Bruce Bishop, who may · e ormer. oore ts ho the Joo-660• till . tf ""'ci.r11 «IN •bove Mlltlld court, or Munlc1pa1 E11etr°" on TVl'dly, ,.,...11 a. double in the 440 and 880 with ~he backup man. Case ma.y go w won ,.., e is to pr-.it 1111m. w1111 IN MCuserv 1m, m•Y bl 'Md by :r1c1t10fl ttwrllfor
the likes or Lew Lauritzen in the two events on occasion. the~ entran~ in the 880, with ~:-~~~:,:~ 'k~,.,~1C: :~ m'.c.E~h~ ~1ow. ~.:' ~fo I
Randy Rofr'"• Steve n----y' Leading the distance run· Charlie· Jenrungs the backup DAVIDSON, INC., 1010 N. M1ln SlrHt, Clllle Ctftt.r ~.Sent• A.I'll. c.Jltornla. I ... • LWUUl:I':: man uc• 9ulldt1111, SUit• 510, S1nla "'"'· FLORINCI I. MAI.OHi!
and Sam ward also prime ner~ is Jerrr Pull, a letterman · c•111om11, w1t1c11 •• 1111 Plec• of tiutll\fll ci.r11. of ltl9 '°""'u . 1
Candi.dates. senior .who 1s e~ted to show Denni! Wilson and freshman oft 1 "", ~gntd in 111 mitt.,.5 H•· Putt1111t1ct Dl"lllP '*' D•!ly P'ltot .. ,,...... • n 118 to lhl Hit!• of wld <llCldent, Ptbl'uery 20 21, t2. n. 2.e U :». :if 21.
R ff . ·great. improvement on a 4:45 Colin McConnell bead a group ;;:'~ ~ =._1111111r""' 11,,, pu1>11c1· end MITdl i.,; 1. 4 s. ,; 1. i. ,, 10; 11,
o Ina is a stronger mile time of . Jast season. of distance runners, whlle Joe o11ec1,.,,.,.rv·7. itn 12. 13. "· u. ''· 11, 1•. it. JO,''· u. a.
possibility in the mile and two Moore and Mike Brunson add Troxell, Cal Garo and Eric :~:i~~s J~·~~1 1AANEs ~1~ u. 21
'
21
' 2', >0.
31
and ""'"~li
mile. Ward, Bishop, Steve depth in the event. In the two Johnson are the top hurdlers. °' ttw •tiovt nernec1 dlct0"1nt i
Shapiro and Lauretzen arc mile Richard Wethersbee and Troxell and :McPh,..... .... wi'll ~ ... i:L.:••"":.tv'1~-. '"'· PUBlJC NOTICE ·' 1' likewise candidates in the "''"""' ..... · Ed Jennings are returning let· be 1-2 in the high 1'ump and •"•".,",·,-, st .. UC• •111111111 • • 41m .distances. Jeff Bosun and Lar-t me hi! Bob A ta . I . hil w w--· ... , SUP•RIOll COUllT Of' TM• t ry Godrrey add depth in the er n w e cos is a buryong Jumdp!Jw de J a~e ~ r11:• :,~·, c~':',': ITATI Oil CAt.1,0IM•A 'Oil events. sophomore hope. , an oy ennmP. give A~ ,... ••1CU1r1• nt• co~Nri:,, oa.ut•• .'
Rounding out the squad are the Chargers a potent pair in F Pti"bll•llfld Or•~ CCMt•t O•!ly Pllof3 MOTIC• 0, M:AalNG Of' PmTIOM Letterman hurdler Dan high i·umper Steve Re1'land the shot put • ru1ry •· 15, tt •l'ld Mlrch l, 1t1 ,o• PflO•ATI o, lt0t.OOllAPM1c Granite is the top candidate . 39:1·13 WILL AND '°. L. TT ••• -· . h. ia1ty . h . . and Temple City transfer Ron Jennings will double In the PUBUC N. OTICE TISTAMINT.utY • in IS spec ' Wit 1un1or Ross, bolh expected to be over discus .th G Leo d .. ,_ Esl•ll (lf MAROARl!T H. •ENl'ORD, Kevin Wellingham, and Randy • Wl uy nar w.3 •k• MA.RGAAET HELEN •ENFOltO.
May other possibles. 6-0. Si-t~p competitor. Sophomore oJ~":~T~v.,·:~o~At?~:lN1A O:O;~e 1s HEREBY 01vEN ,.... Underclassmen expected to Jim Hammond heads pole IN AND flO. TH• (OUMTV 0, RAYMOND M. IENFORO .... fl'-
Sophomore Ken Conner has make the ir mark before the vault hopefuls ORAM•• 111r11n • petlt1ot1 tor '""°"'" If
Cleared •2 to rank the,\;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiii~ii:iiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.! Mo. A1Mn Holoor1p111c wiu •ncl tor 1m11M.1 or Let-o-as O•Dllll TO SMOW CAUSI ,... Tfll•m~t•ry to tht pttlll-. leading high jumper, with A.pPllc•llon ol lllOllN J"MES SWIN· •itftlflll(I to which II m4ldt for '"'~
V•---KJ nd Fr B FORO, '• Cl\lnoe of Heme partlcul•r•, •nd ,,,., 1111 lime 11'1d ~ ,ul\;e ees a ank Ur· WHEREAS, ROBIN JAMES SWIN· ol llll1r1ng 1111 MIN ,... llttfl Ht fw andt backing him up. Newport flDfl:D, Plflll_., • me•• -21 y11r1 ct Mln:ll 11, ttn. 11 t:oo 1.m.. 1n n.. 191, 1111 111..:11 1n 1ppUc.111on wlllil IM eourtroorl'I OI O.SS-rtm.rlt No.. i-of MN transfer Ken Halliwell is a-c1 ... 11: ot thb court tor '" •der enano1no court, 11 mo c1v1c Clflr... ~'"' WHt, II• strong threat 1·n the long i'ump pet1tlot1tr'1 n•m• h"om ROBIN JAMES 11111 CllV of s.n11 Ml, c111tornll. SWIHFORO to CHRISTOPHER SWIJ'f· 0.1..:11 Februlr)' ZI, lt1l
with Princeotto and Parse) I S b Tod 'f Fo1to1 WILLIAM e. ST JOHN.
I ' 'd . ee y a s IT 1$ ORDEREO lll•t 111 PtrlOflt 1". County Clerk a so m cons• eration. ttrutld In 1111 1bo..,.. .nlltled m111.,. •P-suv1TT. 1oaLM.tM ANO w11111: David Read is the only Pffr t.11or1 thl' court ot1 Mllrch 20, 1t11, 1r1 Atty .... _. l.. Miottw 11 t:OO 1.!'l'L, In 1111 Courtroom of Olporl· UA WTillNn ......._ Slllte 1'31
senior prospect in the shot put, Want Ads ment 3 ct tlll •bow el'lll!Md Court. 70CI a.wrtr MIU•, CllH. Mll . Ci'llc Center OrlY'I Wist, S.!'11 AM, T.i: (tll) .,,,.7441 with Junior Rick Webb and c.u1orn1a, •rod mow c•llil. o •ny, why AttorMyt fWt r111Nenet
sophomore Brad Green also it.• •PPlk.lnon tor c:t11ng1 01 "'""' a11ou11 Pvbll•hfd Or•"Dt CCM11t 0111y ~
working out. Mike Hewell, "fT ~sw~"J:THEA OttDERED in.t 1 Flbnl~ 211' ~l'ld Marc11 i, '· 1'~ W-1'
D 'd Bl ck M'k Ed -" e ~••" B G t11t1Y of this orar 10 Mow CIUll bl PUBIJC NOTICE av1 a ' I e wa1us, • .,.~ trr Ml HTY·-llW!lthld In Thi OAlt.Y PILOT,. newt. Joe Schilling and Jim Gair 1969 MG Mf-t-t \.\ith P<'Ptl' « ,_, .. ctrc"4ttlot1 prln~ In tile 1 _
When the ice clears rrom Big Bear Lake shore anglers fish·
tng with red salmon eggs and marshmallows will bag easy Jim·
its off rocky points while trollers will do well for big trout trol·
ling l1asfting blades and huge gobs of nightcrawlers. t Id
"6"-C-IY of 0rlftDll, Sl•fll of C.111-1•, once "'"• a so cou work into the pie· 23,000 miles and a hard. • wn11 for tour aueceu1 ... °"'""'' pliOf' to su,•1t10R cou111T o• TM• Costa Mesa ture in the wei .. i..t events. and 1111 d•N ... 11or n.1r1ng n.. 10P11c111on, sTATI oil CALtPOWNtA "°111 W' soft top. Make after. 0.1..i tt.11 Jth dey of Febr\Nlry, lt7J. TM• couMTY o' otAMtl
Costa Mesa's Joe Fisher can . The Eagles are without an cu.UDE M. OWENS, .... ...,,....
look to the distance men experienced-pole vaulter. Ker-JAMl1 _'L"".:t~.J~1orcourt N~~e'"=.l~""~:•wi?t:fo'Ti
developed on his league cham· ry Ewing and Herb Candel are • 1971 ThlPALA tor sale. ::,;:; ::=::-C•IHwlli. mMI ~~~';.'•·Wt~~ .,,.:•::TUT
•pionship cross country unit as the primary varsity can-It's a 2 door hardtop wit.h T•h .ln4.L.Rr4tn: E1tat• ot LORR,..1He: ROOT, 1>1c:ut111. Tennis Results
we 1n11~• 10 U) use
Andre ... s <sc:>'J:;?.1'Cnap11111 !11. 6 •,
l·S. M•tnette !SC) !!el. Jeblonlkf (ti, •·l,
"~•rn&hfn !II def Holliday (5(), 6·3,
1"6. 7.J. SchntlGer (I) !!el. W1vm1n ISC), 7"6, 6·
'·wrlohl II ) !le/, Bu•elll CSC>. 6·1. •6.
"~•rCtOll" (~Cl !lfl_ Crl!le {ll, ,.,, I~-Doubl11 Andrewl and M1cllllt!! !5Cl !let. ChaoPl!lt and Schneldec, i,..i. 6 1. 8urolfl .>~d Holl11111V {SC! def. Jabt11111~I and Carnallan Ill. 1-S, t+ ~
• Wfloh! 1nd (rlDf ll) !!el. W~vm•I' 1nd Mtrooll01 l~Cl, 6-4, 1-6.
(0$11 MHI flJV.l tUV.l Fullerlon ~lnQtfl l'l•rrl1 !Cl LaJt 10 Mortell 2-6, 1011 10 Jo/\n$Oll t ·?, !lrf. T•'llor 6.C. def. Mllflla" .. L -G1n111r (C.l 10l! ~"6; won 6-J, 6·1, 6·1 Browl\Ml!'I Cl Ii»! 0-6; tied 1·7: won
6·2H:~°" (() 1111! 0-6; won 6·2, 7·1• lost
H OOUbll\ Mulrven·Kr!ke<l&n (Cl s11!1t wlTh wil,on·H•llmt" ~~-~]: loll 10 Hori·
o~oood 0·6, ·~· SMallwoa!l·Mertollno ((1 111111 6·2. J.
'' 10~1 ''°'· S-1 Ju!\lot VtNllV (Ollt M-11e•111 /lift} Fllll••lon s1,..1., werntt /cl d~f. 6ur~1ldt 6'1, o~r. Tuckfr l·A. Hunll!'lllton (Cl woii 6-1, 6-l L'litne !()def. Pll(l'IK~ 6.J, 11111 !O H!>f'nltk 3-6. C~e11111y (C.) l~tt;. won 6·3.
llhler-Gerdner (C l !mt to Pe~tQt!· Even• 0·6: def Goh>0·Grow t .1, w .. ohl·MCOonal!I (Cl won 6.C 6 1
Vtrtl!Y Llkt•OOd tU\.'J ) 01V.l W11tm!nll1r Slnqlet JOl'lt ~W l def llrlce 6·?, dtl Jn~n•on 1011111, del, Hlc~etl •·t, de! Wla"ec•I 6·
3• Ca!1•h•n (l 1011 l-6, 3·6, wnn on
lorfefts. Armo• jw\ wnn ~.o, loJI J 6, won 6.1,
~o<> on 1or1ell 1-1111 (WJ won t .. o l~rleltl, 1011 6·1,
the team's strong pom' t didates. power··-~-. and brakes, Afllnlly .. A#lklld NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN """ · c=•u• J'Ublllhld Or1ftD9 Cotil Diiiy Pilot B"ll8ARA ROOT 8A.ltN ... AD Mt fl"°" J11n1or v1~11v The Mustangs will have a factory air, 35,000 miles. F.iirv1ry 1, 1s. :ti •l'ld Mlr<:h 1, 1tri hlriln 1 Pllltlon for Problll or wm _, N•wPOf.l~/:~11 cu youthful group, and as few as Fountain 1' alley ood lll---.,,-=~-----...:.":::J..n tor luuanc. ct L•tt•r• ct Mmlnl1tr1t1on N~10HI (NI IOI! lo $h!,ld• 6·1 g ,rubber and 1n good ' wlltl-1119-wlll ·-.Qlf to !hi Plll"-0'Rel1111 !NI d~ SMr1ev t-l. five seniors are being counted Irvine League runner up condition. PUBlJC NOTICE ••1
•rtne1 10
wfll<l'I I• m..i• tor 1urt11tt ~1;1~~~ \~/> ~~A~ir.l~r,~ 'i~. on heavily, but they should be Fountain Valley should rank 11---,,,==.,,.~-:.:::=---l:i.n~~~: ~ :'rr!. "':.:1i:.:M..:~ o~vl• !Ml det M.ercus 1·3. among a number of teams as one of the leagu· e CO"· lfOTICI TO CRIDITOIU M1rc1t 20, itn, n t:oo •.m .. '" IN ll e1rd0fl !Nl 11»1 to Verllocl 1·9 .,-SU,•fltOR COUllT OP TN• cout1room ct DIP1rlrn~l No. i-of Mold Sourr (N) df'I Wins!~ l •l, fighting behind Corona de) tenders again, but Whether the $TAT• efl C.U.l'°RNIA ,0111 courl, II 700 Cl'lle Cen!.,. Ori.,. Welt In ver"o" fN l <1e1 AIOftn •·L M d S 1 A V II . Barons can 0 v er 1 hr 0 w THI COUJO'Y o• ORANG• 1111 c11v ct S•nla ""'· Cl'Mtomle. • Doubl" ar an an a na a ey 1n .... A·Tm2 O.tlld F•bf'u•rv ,., ,.,,
O'Rfellv·Nelner !NI !!ti Klnq. 7-.!.":"~~~~~~~~~i~~=::=======================·i Ell
0
., H R ., w ... 11ns1o,1 1-0. lhe league race. favorites C.orona de! Mar and__ • • "' •1s WILLIAM AN· WILLIAM E. ST JOMN. FI t 1 l mm 0 n•·Siom•n (Nl df'f I OERSON, •kl tlARltlS W. "NOEASOJ'f, COUl'lty Clll'll: Blbl>u:Kl'l·SIPl1n t-1', Senior Mike Ho! iday heads lkl HARRIS ANOER~H. D.a•Md. flOSIRTSON, NOWs•• & •All.ANO
lltda·Bli!lwtm IN) dtf Euban•· the d1'stance contingent, he's a NOTICE IS HEit.EBY GIVEN lo ·lhl •YI Atty, Mkllllt '· ""''"" c~~ter •·•. cr..:llltor• ot thl •t!Ov• flll'l'lld dlcld~I 4Mt C•mM °""' Ju"ltr Vtf'Slty top hope in the mile, and may 11111 •II 11tr10n1 111v1ng dt1mt 9ftlM1 ti. """'°" Illa. c111r. nw.a Fount•ll'I Y•H•Y 111 111 (il'll Lot run 1·n e'ithcr !he "" or oon Mid dl.::"°'111 ,,. requlr.ci to ntt flllm. T•h 11141~'*"* Am'9fl 't'111 Q<N wilt! llM ntcflstry vouc:Mt-1, In tr. offk:t A""-" Mt1 htll...,. s1111111 also. Tim Gollnick, Nick of n. cMn. ct '"" 111o.,. 1n11111d court, or PvbUlhtd Or.,,g, C011t D•lty ~ttt.
1rioe11 CFt .,,, Eller 6·2: 11e1 c1111nesv Priest and Kevin Gallagher ~ports Since 1924-''We do it Better'' ~o ;::mu'11c1e~'.'!...... tn.,, ~ ... ,-",. Flbruery • •11c1 Mlrdl l, 1.1m ._,.,
6·2: IOSI la Berrym1n 4..1; dtl Caron 6· ,_ of hlr ._.... "' l. are also mile candidates, and AND D:~"Ti~fl.~NK A. OLOMEN PUBUC N011CE
Srlrtfblte .. IF" 'l'tOl'l 6'1, ,,,I lost 2·~. ~· all will be near the 4:30 mark. ea B I.aw. 1151 0r•1111• ... ~:.~· ~~· ---;;;:;:=::::=-c==~---1'o•aoosuno !Fl wari t•1: IQ1t 2.6; 11~ In the two mile. Priest, Cillfoml• '2627. Wllkll 11 1111 Plec• of ''CTITIOUS •USINISS
1
•
1
, won 6.,, ,_ IJuMntN °'the Ufldtrtl(lntd In ilf m•ll'1't T fQI NA.Ml tTATEMmWT Sweer (Fl lied 1·11 won 6·•1 lo•• l·t·. Holliday and Gollnick are all pert•lnlno to 1111 lflllle of .. Id dl(edtftl, ·"' /owing per"" II 001,.. buil!MIM
I h 24 HOUR SNOW wllttln follr mon11111 •tltr 1111 H~t -""'I ••· !ltd 1·1. possib es wit s 0 p h 0 m 0 re llon of 11111 no!lct. ....... c• HEWl'OltT ll'OOt. SERVICI!, * Dovb1.. David Smith and M i k e 01ttd F*"8ry 15, 1m. L11K11t.,. Drlv•. Hunt111t10t1 ••Ith. Oorm1n·Hamll!Ofl !Fl def ~~mJ· EVELYN MAlttE A.NDEllSON Cllll. l'26D Gravit 6.tl, 6·•; de! Pepltone·Sctvgg1 6· Stutzman other hopefuls. REPORT PHONE "d"'lnl1tr1tr1x. ct 1ht E•t•t• oi H D~i'ld1 w. ,NorQ11n, 1!02 L•llCl•l•r Ot ..
3' 6-0. I th · ts th M I 1 I I • fllfl •low ntmed CllCtdlnl un 'Ill ot1 MCI!, C•UI. ~1 Sllreno-Belo•n (F> won 6·l, 6.C; won n e spr1n ' e us angs 4 IUPIR """""A ot.OM•M AND Tnli tmlna• la being COllllucitd by. 6·•, ~1. best is Paul Desmet, a 10.2 ••i JHo•I DAVID '-TINCH.a• 11oc11vldu11. JU"lor V1r1lly . !h llJO d h h -r 547·2545 A""-Yt ft Uw Devld W. N•olll'I Wltlmlnsler (I) {21) LOI Alemltot man ln e as W 0 !JM 0....... 4,,. T/\11 tlll•mtnt flied wit" 11M County s11191" Fisher expects to go under 10 c.t• Miii, c.i1ftnlt1 t.Ml1 Cl.,.k °' Or.ngre county oru Jarmry 11
Meller tWl 1os1 to st&1n11rom o.6, 11»1 this '"'ason. Art Wendlandt T.~1.,"•.,141!,.-, ... , ~~.:!'b'y'~r:W ~. w"•"-",'°":'.'l.oacout1.i'I
to Burver 2-L tied Sl\arier J·l, lo•t To "" .. -.... •• "' ... "' sn:~:a:~w1 1osi l..i. 1.6, '"'· 11e<1 3.1. and freshman Mario Fontes ,=~ 12°'-;,: ~,-:11 °:.u' ,,Pl~t ,::'!~1111 15orai_:r CCM11t D•tt'I' ,.11.,,
wm11m1 1wi 1011 2-6, 1-6, °''· 1·6. are both promising sprinters. Im ,15.73 1m ' -•!Id M9rt;I\ 1, a.
Grode {WI lost o..i. G..i. G..s. 0·6. Transfer l\1ike Lewis is a · UWt
0011t1••• hope in the hurdles and , PUBUC NOTICE Mllducfa·Joh ntcn (Wl tc'I to CO!yd•d· Crum 1..s, l-6• •o!lt wllh Oennlt· freshman Jeff Babbitt Is '
De1'11t•Y 6-1, 2·6. I Gaylord·A.rmour (W) IO'll 10 Oennit· another pCISSibi!ity if he
oea11sey 3..1, 1..i. doesn't s pec i a Ii z e in the Junior V•rttll · 1:11111111 12u 1s1 L• twOOd sprint s. sr1191u . In other field events, Tochi EUier IE) d•I, fthlbp 6-3; dtl, FOik
.. ~·' , .•. ') THE
'
PUBIJC NO'l1CE
lotl •..!. .. ,: 11.i. Strlbb1n11 &ot; c1111. C•t1l• 6.2. Toschilrubo and fellow senior Dl>Ubltl M-1•1 tsbel·John•~n !Wl ,p1 11 o·~~ullth· .,.,r 11""' 1-1i won.,.,, .. o. 6·2. John Bull will carry the hopes
• '
GIANT Grav 1-6, 1·6; ID•! to Hvo<·M~llhew• •· M1h<:ell (€) won 6'1, 6·1, 6•1, 6·1. 6. 1...i. D'""v !El 1os1 1..1, ,.., 2-6: won 7·J. in the pole vault while Hen·
l'.',','.'•'.',";,Ma•t1""' (w) 10s1 1·6. 1·•1 DwtllM dricks "nd frcshn1an Art Price Lynott ~od Saller(£) def, Wlt<:kJ •nd "
Lik..-1 {Ju~1,1)111't,')'!,/{,,1"'1n11,r ~::~'~. ~. 6-31 <"'· GUleJPI• 61\it are the ranking high jumpers.
s1nt1tn Wtbblr 1r>11 Hardin cEI Ktllt H . •-6; Toschikubo ha s cleared 13 feet F :i-:~;. tw) IQ•' 10 P~~10, 1~, 11~1 won 1-s. 6·1. in the vault. Hendricks has
ernue• CW) 1()1,t 1-11. won o·O Fn1Sh·5•" r. II · th h'gh · wuuam~ 1w1 11a• s1r1t111no 4·4, O"tl.l __ _c'c'c'M='::..:':''~"~';'~'~'~•~·ooct~~~~~g~o;n;e~~~~m~~c:..::c' :::_J~u~m::.".p~. --1 Ca1!11 tor1elt
Grodi (WI woii two lorl~ll~.
Ooutll~s Madutl·Johni.on (w) IOI! I a Blanec~l·Kennedv 3 ~ Qe!, Fa!~v·Mor• rlson 6..:1 Gavtord·A•fl'IOc !W) WQI! bV Jo•ltlt:
WOl'I 1-5.
•
THERE ARE MORE THAN
SPARKLING, DEPENDABLE,
2000
USED
CARS FOR SALE ON COSTA
MESA'S HARBOR BOULEVARD OF
CARS .
SKI SALE J:!
• AND OF COURSE, ALL FIRST LINE MERCHANDISE!
• 3 MORE MONTHS OF SKIING!
•TAKE A VACATION ON US WITH THE MONEY YOU'LL
SAVE ON SllS • IOOTS • PANTS • SWEITW
PARKAS • GLOVES • CAPS
• INSTANT CREDIT •
•
-
--~--------•
Bajlding Industry Mounts
=·~pai2"µ ·in .-Lumber Crisis
~~ S ~ t b • rlso caufl'a ·.,... letter-writing campelgn ::...,ty a Io n e ~lalolJlg
· • g ustry planolng a \o !!resident Nixon iD '.-about the price of lumber"
WHAT IS
"DOCTORITIS"
by TIRIY GRANT. It.Ph
fle'Jf act to ease the lwnber· . . -1
crists. · Gilbert W. ~ Ferguson, ei-
"We'll be mailing almost ecutive director of the newly-
J00,000 letters from Orange forrged Orange County Council
Hii;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;i~-1 on Envtronment; Eoonom1,
SEVEN ADVANTAGES
OUR PAGER OFFERS •
Employment and Develo~
ment, said Wednesday.
Farguson said the price of
lumber bad dool>led-ln the last
90 days because the Japanese,
at the President's urging, have
bought the entire lumber sup--
ply in the Northwest.
"A3 a result, prices have
skyrocketed and we're hiving
to buy tum~r from Canada,"
he said.
•
FINANCE
Subsidiary
.4nnounced
By Collins
•
'
~t ~ recent s_tudy ba.s shown uw.t there are fewer than
half the doctors needed to
serve the bee.Ith needs ot'our
soc:iet;y. M. a result. pbysl-
ci&ns are chronlca.lly over-
worked, and many tim~ un-
av.allable. Hospital emergen-
cy rooms are betog overrun
with non-emerK!ncY sases· Mid lh some areas thetlb. ill
~. doctors at all.
The Japanese have spent
about $400 million for the U.S.
woodi but U.S. builders have spen~ more fban $1 billion for
canadian wood, he said.
Coliills Radio Co. · Wed-
, that yours may not !
1 C[!!MPLm 0l411Gt
COUNTY COYllAGI ....... : ~u. ........
"I don't see how that•a.heJ~
ing the balance of payments;"
Ferguson said. -----
nesday reported the formation
of a new overseas subsidiary
koown as Collins Radio Co. of
Japen Ltd.
Thet,"e is no cure for "Doc--
tm:i.tla" on the horizon. And
by all the data now known,
the situation will become
more acute during the n'ext-
t~ yea.rs. Our pharmacy
wwkJ closely with-the doc·
tors ·tn this community to
dllJver the best health care
posslble to aa many people-
&J" poliible.
s.. c .......... ~t.lu Vlelo,
DoH Po'-t, !f* Wll • Lo1t9 ......... 111t•• of LA. a'"
2 MONTH TO MONTH
llNTAL IASIS
3 NO DIPOSIT 119-UllED
. ON APPROYID CllDIT
4 ONLY 117.00 rn MONTH
TOTAL COST <•ll•ftff ,....,
5 NEW COMPACT UNR
·SID 11'/4x4xl/J}
Robert C. Wilson, Collins
president and chief executive
officer, sa!L Collins a o d
Kyokuto Boeld Kaisha Ltd. of
Japan have formed the new
subsidary to. .produce and
market electronlcs equipment.
Collins owns 57 percent of the
new company.
Initial plans call for pro-
duction of ce(tain amateur
and maritime comm~~Uon 'YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US· when you
nee4 a delivery. We will de·
l.Jyer promptly without extra
cllarge. A great .many people f'#Y on us for their health
~.We welcome request.a
for delivery s er v1 c e and cl?!U'P accounts.
6 YOICI MISU.Gi PAG'EU
ALSO All AYAILAILI
produdo. • •
"
• FULL JUI MAl~ANCI
ORANG£ COUNTY
l!AOI07ElEl'HONE
SERVICE '"'
Wilson said the Japane"
gov~ment approved of
Collins owning 57 percent of
the COOlpaDY In the iDitiOI
stage,
t PARK LIDO PHARMACY
151 Hotplt•I RNCI
-,Ort -h '42·1510
Frw Dellvtry
714. 135..J305
'"''" U111111 BMCfl, MliilM w.io, DlllMI ,._Int, Siii Chfnfntt, S... J~ll
C.pbtr1no, El To,., clll NII ,,..
4t ... Jm
"In many cases," he pointed
out, "J apan has not permitted
,.. ~ U.S. company in a j~t
venture to own more than 50
perceot of a subsidiary In the
·. initial fonnulation period .
.. ,
•
. . FREE
TAX RETUR.N
PREPARATION
DEPOSIT $3 ,000 -.0 a new °' 9'istint oavint1 .-mt et Pacific Slringt.,. -FREE
111epa•don of your personal Fedwal and Sta1B tax returns. Some people will _.. $ZOO to $300 or more in 8CCCMlnti~f-. (Thit: offtrdoesn'tqply to i;:orporation, ~ip, businea or simU. ratumsJ
PR 0 FES s I 0 NA~ -qualified tax couiltolon will prej>arO y-............... """ mike ..... 111 ..
you NOllve rNeiy poss!ble benefit under the tax i.w. Esh n~m will then be trlpte.dteckflll fOf..m:urKy by
h._,ty-tralnecl _..J1sts. All wol1< is done in the privacy of your Pacific 5"'ings offOCI us;ng the -
penor..'141l of Tax Corpontion of America. Thitfinn, ttarted in 1946, is the.second largest tax company in the
Unitod Sii'"" They cumntly employ ovw 4,600 ....,,...,. and have preparod men 1flan 1.000.000 u
~~ .
WORK GUARANTEED -byToxCotpon~onofAmwica. .
Guatanteed Accuracy. iletums are 1r1p1e-dlecko11 1or accurocv of mathernatia ..i
,.,,..,...._ If ... c..,,.,. ..._ • orfw I• ...,..niotks Of' reprocl•ctlo•, It wfll por tflit pwlty ., I•.., d11e
to tWr enw, ltd llCtl' ... ftlCldlfleMI tax "' red.
Guaranteed Protection. If your ntum i• queltionod by the Government. lhey will
~fWe ....... 9t ....... Ill COllfonRlty Wftll '91t1llftOrJ pf0Cd1 .....
ALSO -' you got 1 FREE Sole Oepos;t Box, -iee chargo FREE Travel"'• Ctlldcs, FREE Collection of
Hotel, FREE Notary SeNiGt and FREE Financial Counseling. 1
. ·
AN D -your deposit e'"" 6" per annum In a ..,o to five year ($5,000 minlllMlm) c:e.tm---S!lll
I* annum In a one to five yw 1$1,000 mlnlmuinl Certificate icooun.t or 5" per annum in • r..ur plllbook
account. an compounded daily. TheM are the highest r•tes paid by any Insured Institution&.
RE'MEMBER ' -tv quelify for 111;, f111 offer you nftd only tv make y-deposit. If yvu -.en
ACCOUNT ELSEWHE'RE, bring us your passbook· and w• will transfer your money to Paciflc"'foryOu~ Off• ~
t-'•lttR ....nd. Lolt dar fo¥ flllf19, t1111ess nteMlos II obtaiaed, April 16, lt7J. ' r·
' '
SO HURRY -.,..... .,.;. ci-it TODAY_., Clfl or...,, by ---for-lnla1i•llM.'
Plus -
FREE Federal Tax Guide
THIS OFflCIAL GOVERNMENT PUBLICATION OFFERS'
vri:11l 1NFORMATION FOR EVERlfTAXPAYER
PACIFIC SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION ha& purdlltld a llmitod 111pply of 111 ... nlu&blt book-The
booklet I• IYliilblt •I-It mall pricm, but 11 FREE, TO ALL .. ydUr --gf Podfic: Savingo"""
i.-Aaoclation. '11111 offor good only wflll11Upply -'
•
ALL "CCOUNTII INSURED BY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE C?OAPOAATION TO $20,000
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
' Hours: Monday-Friday 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.
s8turday 10:00 A.M. to s:ool>.M.
SOUTH.COJisT PLAZA
Brillo! St. at Sin Diogo Fnnwy, Cosll Miii
PHONE 540-4068
THE MALL OF. ORANGE
Ttlllia Ave.atMells Ave, Or•nlll
PHONE &37"'511
••
JIGlleJf• Worth
r Casuality Losses:
!IJ SYl.VIA PORTER
=ofl'ourl~ i7I a Seriu J •
In 1m, the Treasur y
redefined the meaning o!
euualty .... 80 thal for tho
first lime, casualty loss In·
cludea certain sltuatlorts tn
which your property Is sin)ply
los~ rather than da1111ge0 or
destroyed -a Uberalixatioo
that could be of great money·
·savin*'-value to you.
As a general rule, you cannot
lske a casualty loss deduction • for' property
that you lost.
But, in a re-
, cent case. a
husband ac-
cident a !I y
slammed the
car door oo
hi a wife's
hand, caus·
Ing the dia-
mond In her r g t oniR· b-b
mond in h4!I" ring to fly
out of its broken setting
and disappear. The TreQury
barred any casualty loss
deduction on the basis that the
diamo.nd was simply lost, not
damaged or destroyed.
llooald A. Mllkr, bas been
named rrumagcr ct Unlkd
Callfornla Bank'• corporate
bankinl ceoter for southern
Orange Coun!y.
He joined UCB In 195t and
was selected for management
training In~ Angele•.
Assigned to. Sonia Ana In 196S
as a commercial lending ol-
fidf,_ he •••-proMc>ttd to
assistant vice president Jn
1165.
*
' . ,
Thilrsdq, Marc.II l , 1'73 DAt~Y PILOT ft
OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Lhtlnvs , ... Wodnetdey, F~ry ~I 1973
•
;/;J DAIL V PllOf s
·Farm Costs Blamed
•
MUldwmenAbsorb Part of Food Increase
WASl!JNGTON (AP) -The ,,,..-------.. AcrlcWtuno Doparlment said ·
Wednudly that higher fann
prices were entirely to blame
Jor list monlh'1 rt!$2f4_.2.§-percent Increase in
supennartet food co~s. Beel
Ind pork prices hit r«0t<t
highs; eggs were up 18 per-
cent.
Middlemeo, lncludirut· those
who buy farm products,
transform them Into retail items and sell to consumers,
aotnally aboorbed part of the
January increase, the depart-
mont lald.
TRANSLATED INTO annual
tenns, a "market basket" of
food -theoretically enough to
feed a typical famUy for an
entire year -cost a record
fl,!7& In January. That war
S37 more than the annual rate
in December.
The 2.5-percent increase was
the largest since the govern-
ment began gauging costs of
take-home groceries in 1952.
The "farm value," or a
FINANCE
farmer's share of what con-
sumers pay for food, was $588
in January, up $40 from
December. The middleman
took f187 in January, down $3
from December.
COMPARED WITH a year
earlier, tho January market
basket cost $102 more, Jn.
Antitrust Suit
High Court Halts
Brewer Expansion
WASHINGTON (AP)
Agreeing with government
"truar-busters " the U . S .
Supreme CoUrt Wednesday
held that the Falstaff Brewing
Corp. abould not be allowed to
boy ui> New England's biggest
beet' 80 long as Falstaff looms u a potential conipetitor.
The 5 to% decb:ion continues
the govermnent's remarkable
atring of anUtrust iUcce.saM in
the high coort. In I& years, it
bu lost only a . handful or
cues, lncluding a b a n k
diapl\te Wednesday, but never
ooe in which the justices
aubltantlally rejected t h e
"merits" of its arguments.
JUSl'ICE BYRON R. White,
• former deputy attorney
general, wrote the court's ~
jottly opinion siding with the
Justice Dep.artment In Its
tangle with the St. Louis-based
brewer....,the fourth largest in
the naUon.
Seeking to expand coast to
coast. Falstaff In !~ bought
the NarTangansett Brewing
Co., the largest seller of beer
In the six New ·England states,
for about $19 million.
The government claimed the
deal may have lessened com·
petition in the area and
there5y violated lhe Clayton
antitrust law. by keeping
Falstalf itself from moving in.
However, In OCtober 1971 U.S.
Judge Edward Day o !
Providence, R.I. ruled the
Justice Department failed to
prove the purchase would
substantially 1 e s s e n com·
petition. , '
Cost of Devaluation
Estimated by Burns
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Jn
contrast to an assessmel1t by
Pre!ildent Nlxon, Chairman
Arthur F. Bums of the
Federal Reserve System says
ao estimate that devaluation
of the dollar will c o s t
American consumers '3 billion
ls ''probably conservative.''
Bums testified T u e s d a y
before the Senate Banking
COmmittee on legislation giv·
lng Congress' formal approval
of devaluation. The bill is
assured of passage since the
value of the dollar felJ as soon
as the devaluation decision
was announced by the ad·
ministration Feb. 13.
e Agriculture
LOS ANGELES (AP)
California's total cash farm
gross ls expe<:ted lo reach $6
billion this year, says C. B.
Christensen, Cali forni a direc·
tor of food and agriculture.
Christensen said Tuesday
fanning is the state's major
Industry and has a 20 billion
effect on state economy.
"When agriculture's total --
economic stlmi..lus is
generated, it shows that one
out of every three jobs in
California -directly or in·
directly -i~ dependent on
agriculture,'' Christensen said
at a news conference.
•~unldst
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Sunkist Growers Inc., of
suburban Sherman Oaks says
it will ship 300 carloads: of
lemons to Russia this spring In
the first shipment of U.S.
citrus to the Soviet nation.
• But a company spokesman
declined Tuesday to say how
much the agreement was
worth.
e CAB Rulfn11
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Civil Aeronauti cs Board
(CAB) ha s rejected
transatJantic fares ' proposed
by four foreign airlines -
Olympic., Lufthansa, British
Overseas A i r w a y s and
Alltalia .
The fares, a part of the
growing air rare war in the
lucrative North At I ant I c
market, were suspended tor
one year in a move sources
said wa3 designed to help
bring a settlement over fares
an1ong U.S. and foreign
airlines,
THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZ-
ED DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON
COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BOULE·
YARD OF CARS.
cludln ga boost or l8S for
farmers and SIT for mid~
dlemen.
Wednesday's rt~ dealt only with retail item>
which orlgjnate on .S. farma:.
Imported products and
seafoo4 are not included.
The department two weeb
ago predi c ted that
supermarket food price• for
all of 1973 may go up a to 6.5
percent, with the pressure. on
consumers expected to ease
later In the year as more
livestock and other products
move to market.
Mean time, Wednesday's
report showed that prices ad·
vancOO in January for most of
the basic food needed by
famU)'. planners.
No Pesticide
In Lettuce
'
Stnte Says
SACRAMENTO (AP) -C.1-
ifomians and the rest of the
n!tlon don't have to' worry
about pesticide · contaminated
Jettuce, insists a state Depart·
ment of A~culhlre official.
David Bingham, asslstant
agriculture director, said Tues-
day none or the Imperial Val·
ley ~ttuce found to have Mon·
itor pesticide in amolUlts above
allowable limits is being sold
in California.
AND NONE has been ship-
ped from California since Jan.
I, Bingham added.
cesar Chavez, head or the
United Farm Workers UnJoo,
has urged supermarkets in the
United States and Canada to
destroy Imperial Valley let·
tuce on grounds it is C<1ntam·
inated.
Chavez' union is conducting
a lettuce boycott as part of a
drive to unionize lettuce work-
ers.
Dahun Records
67% Increase
Datum Inc. or Anaheim
reported continued rec o id
revenues and earnings for the
year ended Dec. 31, according
to Wallace E. Rianda, presi·
dent.
States . for 1972 w e r e
$6.695,842, representing a 67
percent increase over 1971
sales of $4,0131612. Net income
increased 79 percent t o
$.148.511 vs. 1194,381 In 1971.
Earnings per share increased
to 26 cents compared lo 18
cents last year.
COMPLETE NEW YORK STOCK UST ••
I
av
do
sid w
...... •
., .~ .,.
Wednesday's Closing Pri~mple~ New Y Jrk St.ock Exchange List
Technical Rally
Boosts-Market
Jr
,...,,. ,19lJ
---
'
.-
'
Finance
Briefs
'·
'
.... -.. . .. . .. ~· . .... . . . . .. .
•
1% DAIL V PILOT
, Ewryone Hu
Something Thet
Someone Elie Went•
.,._ ··-.. wwwp111t
.. . ... . . •
•~too:
..
Genonl
. .. -
Genonl
;L r.;ll5?'1'1"4tiM_ ~
'fauttu.·~·
REALTORS
28211 EASI' COll8T HIGHWAY
COllONA DEL MM. CALIF.
. 644·7270
' '' . •
You C1n Sell It,
find It, Tree!• It ,
With 1 W~nfAd
••
wmcUFF 'BEAUTY
-10% DOWM--
Move In on· credit approval Large family
room for entertaining. 3. bedroom 2 baths
builtiDs, fireplace. 2 Patios overlooking large
back yard with H & F pool.
1215 Devon L•ne. N:a. Open daily
CALL ANmME
Lachenmyer
Rt~Jh o1
Office 646-3928
EYOS: 646-4543
MESA DEt ·W
4 l,liXURY UNITS
$63,600 .... ~JOO DOWN
gets JOU . ipto a K., ..... ,
$8280 anll!i8l ...... -spendable. We have an _,.,
finn l 0 a D commitment.
Better Hurry!! 646-'D.n.
OPEN 1JL t • m7 RJN 10 BE Heit
•
FORE THAT lf'TH HOLE-Beaultful glass
redwood home wi!h large living room, 4
bedrooms, including master suite, 2 patios
with over 200 sq. ft. of goll course frontage.
Unique detached recreation room with pool-
lable, wet bar aud Swedish fireplace. Uuigue
price of $76,SOO.
.. ·• .
hwestors delight
. · Sixteen Uni ts I '~"""'""a""i """'"""'"""'"""'!!!!G!"'on""or""a""1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
... m excellent rental area close to large "lllEW umNG•'
Flexible .Temri! Reduced Price!
•Mt91fl HOMU Of MESA YU.DI, 54Wtff .. _ ...... .,_
·shopping center. 'IWO SEPARATE BUILD-
INGS. 8-2 Bedroom uu!urnlshed. 8-1 Bed·
r91lm furniBbed. Large heate<I pool. Cover¢
lanai, ping-pong and shuffleboard. WILL ~~cfit':" ~-!. i:..~::: Now just $34.750. Love-U~l()Uf: f'i()Mf:S TRADE. . . . . . . , ....... $220,000.
Prime College Park ly 4 bedroom wtth 2 REAL TORS B iful I I I I
home on comer lot. 2 baths, dining nn., built-jlJl!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ii!iijii!ii!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!I eaut ' •
baths, dining room, ins, covered patio. Fir&-c;..-.1 General Baycrest
You'll enjoy this lovely FAMILY HOME on family room, patio. Lush place family room. 1u1.o.==-----.....:=='------I
landscaping'. Lovely en-Mesa' Verde. Ready for * * * * * * try way. $34,750. 540-1720 immediate occupancy.
1
-R-ea1 Beauty-, 540--
1120
--1 * TAYLOR . CO. *
$36,950. Large 3 bed-J Bdrm-No Do-!
room home on quiet cul -· · · ,
de sac. Fireplace, fam-Easy terms. Very sharp
ily rm .. secluded rear home with room for
living rm. Modern built· boat or camper. 2
ins, d.inlng rm. Huge baths, patio, forced-air
bonus room, covered heat. Dining rm., built.
patio, fruit trees. Own' ins. Fireplace, rear liv-
er transferred -. must ing rm. Lots of storage
sell. 540-1720 rm. $31,950. 540-1720
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 51-1721
I Olli\! L Ol \O\
' RCA £'UR ::
Play 9 Holes Daily
at dawn or dusk
a walk -1nvay from the
country club, immac exec
home, arranged for ex·
elusive dininJ:" & living -3
BR's, in a paradise or trees
& flower!' -owner transfer-
red baCk r:ast, must sell
quickly.
CALL 645-7221
1733 Westcli ff Dr .. N.B .
. WALK TO THE
BEACH
c;.,,.ral
LINDA ISLE--$149,500 .
Best waterfront buy! Enjoy the prestige liv-
ing which this beautiful island offers. A love-
ly 5 bedroom home w /family room, formal
. dining room and 41> bat.M. Wet bar, barbe-
que & 3 fireplaces. Pier & slip.
''Our 21th v .. r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RH!tors
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road
·· '~Onrlooking Big Canyon.Country Club''
NEWPORT CENTER, N, B. 644-4910
General General
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
NEW LISTINGll l
"Quiet elegance in this quality built home.
Localed on a large lot with shade trees.
There are 3 BR.; frplc.; complete electric
kitchen. Prieed to sell a1..f!4,750,
CORBIN-MARTIN
a secluded street. 4 bedroo!Jl, 2. bath, FAN.
ELED family room with double .fireplace
plus many custom features. Large fenced
yard aud patio. . .. . . . . . . . .. .. .. $63,500. • • • • Townhouse
Close to Beach
Lovely 3 bedroom, 21> baths, dining room,
fireplace, nice patio. Pool privileges, close
to everything. YOU OWN THE LAND. Ask-
ing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $37,500. • • • • Condo.
A real buy
-BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom 21>
bath, built-in kitchen, stone fireplace. FAMI·
LY ROOM. community pool & REC .. ROOMS
including billiards. Fee land close to every-
thing. . ......................... $34,500.
Two year old Mesa Vml!
North)nne. 3 _....... 2 ........ ih--Gold shag carpets -~
Exceptional 5 bdrm., 3-story home with ph!r
& slip. Maguilicent South bay view from all
3 levels. Remodeled kitchen & family room.
Has beam ceiUnia tllo!l 'lb"
5% Down-Hurry! t $39.950. . ~
Price reduced. to $210,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR·
341 Baylldo Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-4161
General
UNMATCHED
VAWE
Nice 3 bedroom horn~ in good
loce,tion. Hu family room
and dining room. Close cl
schools and shopping. Patio
with BBQ. Assumable VA
loan, or '1450 down. Priced
for a quick sale. $27,950. &1&-nn.
OPEN TIL 11 • rr'S Fl.JN 10 BE NICE/
THE REAL
ESTATERS
Open House
1215 DEVON LANE
Wostcllff, Npt. Bch.
(1 to 5 Daily)
3 Bedroom, tamlly room,
su.nrdom and heated pool for
only 156.500.
I CALL ANYTIME I
646-3928 or Eve. '46 4543
Lochen my er
Realtor
General
' Rmlty Compaxcy six uNns ocEANFRONT
. . . on large lot, Eastslde TRIPLEX•
Costa Metia. $72,500. 6 me. old -built w/~ ti.
• --· owne111hip. One 3 BRn J BEDROOM bath & Two 2 BRl2 bo11i. Pre9E'rlt inco~ $1100/mo. ••• home, ,2 Bath, double Betty Kerr 64Ui2IXt: (037)
garage, new carpets, fresh · '
paint. $77,950.
Roy McCardfe. Realtor
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M.
. 548-7729
"Custom Dupln".
Extraordinary home ... •
come! Ultrapll.llh.2•den.2 '
BA owner's unit with 2 BR n.intal. Bltns, & mp le ,
ston(ge, he~ shake. E:u:r
care landscaping. Step. tD
shopping. Just releaaed at "'°·""=-
FOUR DOLLS
Hoo.sea that is, on large 15' x
11lY lOt Almost new. Bailt.
ins, carpets, drapes, bddl:
fronts. Sharp, sharp!! Eaft.
side Costa Mesa. .\2*b:w $69.500.
CALL 5!0-ll51
$~1Yl1A-~-e.~s·
,Tlte l'=f; ~111 tit• Buiff.fn CltucHe
.
• ZEEHEll
~ 17 I I ,.
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boons in '1la musfoche ~hd llps --lfln>uOh 11.· e = iho d.odfo . • fllt!:'t .. .... M"'i'J ":::
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DAILY PllOT S3,
174
MOVING
VIEW OWNER..-... s~ .. 2 TURTLEROCK B...-• LUXUIUOUS 1...., ...,.,. , 4-U-UNIQUE
T
TO biilho. Bonus m1, ~. $1,000 UNDER PRICED BR. 211 Ba, Fam/Din/Liv. Bl-cbann<l home + "'"' 167.<m FP !6700 dn. GREEN Valley Lake, Big ~-SWITZERLAND 1 Units dining nn., ~· l>atJo, VACANT Fee Land. Owner 833-2!89. ......., I bdrm lWOllY apt. Near Mad•"""• & Newport Bear ""'"· new 2 •IY. S BR
•• -< u.w;t muit sen thls k>vel;y Open Fri, Sat & Sun large yrd. 51'-down A: move .• mVINE. $950 dwn, lyr old, Pier le alip tor 3 boatl + Frwy, terrilic loc., gf'Olll in-1: loft. Shake roof, ~
4 Dearm 2 balb Mtb del %715 COVE in.,Drk SM.UKl~J0-2561. Asaume 6% lolln, ot ttnance 28R hlle pool, assume GI, man)'. m&l\Y extras $198,fXKI <..'Omt' 18964 bQed upon 3 brick fplc, FAU. llwt& crpU,
M"' homo. G>eal condition CHINA COVE OWNER -· 4 hdrms., 1o .. 11 your pocketbooO. 3 13>-1JD3, ·-.-Willa !L & 546-Tl39. Bed, IZJS, 2 Bed $165. Aller """'Y bltn, compl lun1, inside A oot. New paint, 2 baths. Imm~late. Fa.mi· Bedroom "l beth, special car-IH BL'lJFFS CONDO fixai exp. & bln pymta lake,"' tmall boat priv. Xlnt. tarae cowred patio. 4 1Y nn ., rear living rm. pets, drapes. noor COYt!linp, L•eun• eh 3 Bdnns., 214 baths su;m Schedule cash spend view ot ski •xr· year
Bklcb to all tc:hoola and Fl.replace, r dining rm., elec kitd\M, tlrepl. Pool Warm & Spilcfous Newer Q-Plu which Is 18.47 cash plus 6.64 around roll.ct. fMrM •
.....--~~-. buill-ins.-1..artty-yrd;--brk aizi!rlot;eove'ed pttU&. Clolile l ~ T ba:Ui_·_l blks TED WUBERT It-ASSOC. eq. B. 1J. Tot ~tw:!l 25.,11. Priced at only $32.000.
CALL (Open evN.) $34,500. MS-Q6K to Doui1u Ir;, frw)', CALL fro the• lii.-..-, ,·,.... fami 34n Vta. Udo N.B. fi15..8500 All this & swimming pool Apnt ~3409 . ~ 545-0ISB m ........ ,.. ....... • ' . too! SACRIFICE. Forest: kit in
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-· ' .. HERITAGE llS MARINE AVE. OWNffi leaving. 4 bdnm .. 2 . ly rm. is a comfortable CHANNEL.FRONT I?UPLEX Contact: Richard Van Wert Big Bear. ~r. N·thore.
BAt.BOA"ISLANO bat"'. Cath<mai celling, '"5taD<e trom the Uv. nn. 3 & l BR., P""/!loat, ElMOR[ PLEMENS
CALL 67
"'900 impressive e ntrance. $27,950. Natural brick &: wood $101,fXKI. 11 Owner. tTI4l 645-~ ..
REALTORS -Fireplace, family rm Vacant 3 bedrm 2 bathl, domtnated by massive Eileen Rapp, Rltr. 675-8140 TRADE your beach Pr® b'
Eves: fmt-5016 Dining rm.. rear living rm. needs .xne fixine, or seller bellfWI are youra to enjey as Dopluet1 near b'le ocean 8K1 Dovtt Or. NB 645-6700 PJlm. Sprirwti art'L ow.r,
ISXJ'CUTIVE Duplex-New Llotlnv f:lls:.~· bck $39,500. will roomer >'educiion "" ~ olt A watch !he blue Mi1ea Lonon, Realtor SIX 2 BDRM UNITS f'O Bax lMt. N'pt Beach.
lleft!'S the bpusll! )OO've been .l bdrm A 2 ba. shake root ~. Small cash dn A Pacltic. Sep. et.mu. -Tm., * 6'7'3--61 "* · RHI Estate Wanted lM waitin& fQr ,. CUstom·built plus 1 bdrm rental w/lrplc'. FOR SA1.iE BY OWNER sclier w1U he)p ftnance. coey, wta 2lxl fr1>k. Come J: On a large h)t, Costa Mesa. w~. ~t.!'d Piao Xlnt property ottered for-Beautiful ~taln Valley Immed. poss. CALI.. 545-008 "feel" this home. OUered ::!'Pot' Heights Income ssm. WANTED to buy: PriwiA!
tile, boilt-mo.. iemnc maa--$12.500. 8 year old home In good tor 183.500 OPEN SUN 1 FORTIN CO. ··-with $900 cub -ter hdnp !"""'. May . we MORO.AH REAL TY coodltioq. a.,. to tdio!>Ping '94-7'01 • .5 RHltor 642-5000 ~·, ...,i ,._ l""' thia! Only 174.500' • ,,. 67, ~•t and """"°''· oa..nswn 4 1cm N. C.t Hwy., l.ag\lna 611 TUSTIN to buy bi ~me ';lt\ !\al"' MORGAN REAL TY · 67-2 ~ Br, 2v bath, u ... ,-. roOm. Owner must .ell thla 511per Lots for Sale 170 auuma e oan. · ua l .,. ........ ..,. 4bdr m. 2 ba. Liv. rm.
673-6642 675-6459 Rttsr.tC~l loLwf cozy 1 oversi1.edooblegarage. Jge. sharp! bdrm., 1% baths; and dining nn. and --~;.._,.~=.,.=.-"'-'-'-'ft-_.._.... •At~ By li 'th fi-lace Un. -ntly decorated In & out· •OCEANFRONT LOT 11 ... ·** HOME ' ~:"~ ocl;:.673--4169 ~:i·Z>~' 't;;;,l'are~. I~~ ~ts. drapes &: shutters'. Sell or trade. FabWous view, =:'ew~~te:. 0 ;:n·
CONDEMNED •• _ _;_ cludea two bedrooms, GOR· Quick possess. Youn for South Laguna. taiD Valley, or Hunttngtor(
Owner must 9ell R-2 lot Im' ~· ,,...., GEOU'S weeping willow tree EX9UISITE. • • • $42,950. 49:hW29 ** 329-'Tl64 Beach areaa. Call 557-48811-
x 135' near Newport 12 UNITS in front & fenced back yd.
2
YR YOUNG & , ... family home located In MORGAN REAL TY eB~UT ocean vu, 2 R-1 Sunday thru Frlda.l" ~ Heights. Should be able to ' · Your large family will fit highly desirable 8 re a . 673-6642 675-6459 Al:ti· in S.O. $13,500. ea. own cipala only.
conotrucl t'.tl-1>1ex In thia COSTA MESA here,"'8umemyloan.Will SPARKLING •• Within minutes to BY OWNER W>Ufln,491H58l. * "'ulck Cash ·*
prime area. Only SlS,950. pombly carry S<MX>nd With 4 lrg bedrmr. 'family mr, for-everything .. _Fresh as a Room• JBR. 2BA, bn'ck frplc Mountain, DeHrt;. T CA1J. 56-8424, SO u TH No vacancy problem with good credit. Must see to mal dinii~g. 2-Baths, buUtins, dais dit o Heavenl .. .., R 174 Will buy your property. All COAST REALTORS. these good Eastalde' units. appreciate. $3_1,750. By ap. shake roof, ankle-deep shag vi.eJ rn:n uvin~· room_ 0r: Shutters & lrg yrd. $42,0001_;.:.::"°;;:;;rt.;... ____ .:.;..o cash within 72. hrs. can
ONE OF J'HE BEST t!, ~~t~~r; po?1unent only. 3.11·1218. c~, custm drps. 2~' car you'll never [orget. Im· 645-l446 La Quinta lot , clear •. $2.000 962-8851
Sharp 4 BR&, fam rm North maintenance .. nice pool _ 6 BDRMS +·POOL gar. O>mp f111ced. Asking maculate condition. $52,500. Senta Ana Fk>rida, over 1 acre •. $4.800 1 ~
Bay home. 3 ba, formal din-painted. in the last 6 months. 4 Baths. formal dlnlng, fanti. $4.1.500. & 10% dn. ~/.· S Sequoia Crest, clear • -$6,800 llllY.I
In(, wet bar, much more. Priee$1'15,000. Call 511>-lllOI). 1y nn, beaut. custom pool. •. . e ~-' ·--STEAKS & BILLIARD road .............. 110,<mg . $56,500. INVESTMENT DIVISION. Corner lot, expensive crpts ..,,,_,, 3 Bedroom 2 bath, llU'gf! Shelter Cove -zoned com· _ ·-·---GEM ~ drps. 2700 sq It, only 2 REAL ESTATE lamily "'°m .w/decoraror munity ............ $15.<m Bft()f(ERS INC. OPafTJLf•IT'SRJNJOIEMCEI yrs. old. BKR .. 53&-2551 bar, brlck pat10 w/firep1t, San Clemente Beach Cot· ,
1610 W. Coast Hwy., NB I ~ !i ~·~ 1190 Clenneyre St. tile entry, upgraded car-tqe ............•. $26,960 WANTED : 16 Units, Costa REALTORS 642.-4623 l1J i • ntlngton Beach 494--9473 549--0316 pets, wall mirrors, near Sedooa, Ariz., clear ...,$29,500 Me-. area, prl,i'ld'j)t.l.s on!y.
LAST YEAR'S PRICEti;tJ Fountain Valley 842-2502 Beau:~TEs::~N~state ~.~~t Park. Re<lu~ ~~e·n·t·e·~.~~~ Priv party 644-2404
THIS YEA.R'S VA.LUE YOU'l,L NEVER VACANT R.ambllog 3 bdnn hom; larwln realty inc Cam. City, 21 acres. i-i<.tm --------i
In thia Easiaide Qigta Mesa MESA WOODS GROW OLD formal dining rm., ;,.,t bar: (714) 961 4405 (24 hn) Most of theo< ownen will -------·--'
4 bedroom borne. Family 3 months new -owner enjoying this 30' maslel' bed-Inuned occup. 3BR 28A, masaive frplc.. t;.ots of wood, LADY BE GOOD , = the1r nr.ro:,~~ hwnclal I •
l'tJ!-i. hnght kitchen. lush oar-relocating and IQ.ust · sell at room sµite. 2 st.Ory 4 bed-ttrepl, $21.~. full price. gl8S!I 4-tile. Priv. boat dock 'lf tr dandy ~ · 1 ;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.:·:.• petipc, front courtyard w/ leas than the cost of new nns, 4 baths. Reduced price $1,000 moves )'OU 1 n · below lge view patio A · · • to yourae · • a area re estate.
wmogt:it iron pte. Very •~A nm. , (Plan 40RA) includes lovely "'ag--t•, Assume existing FHA loan. real jewel ~t $119,000. • and~ handy! The utmost ln ~ 675-1225 -·~ " -· te Of _........., ......... .,_ W /w crpt.s & drpll, bl tin * 4~2800 * prestige and the ultimate In Buslnes• OppQrtunlty "~· ,. ..... pnva . • DRIVE 'BY 3392 CARMEL drapes custom. and a pool-R/0, FA ht, patio, xlnt loc. lil. quality., 4 BR, 2~ BA with fend at only fM.,950. TODAY AND COME TO table. B-B-Q. lrg oversized 1, -1.V'i.' •. a..-a-.__.. everythm11 at hand [or CAlL 546-5880 (Open eves.) OPEN HOUSE SUN., MAR. lot w/B-8-Q and patio. ~ u,g~ ~?"1 950 ~ ~ M (j f CALL 968 "'= ""'1' ,..,__,,,._ ~" . 4th, 11-t:vv P ust No. o ........,.,. . ~...,~ Wm. McCabe, Inc. No Investment
San Diego Ft'wy,""" old• EL C..\oJON · '62-4471I::::.154W10J , .,.,..,_""" * 842-4405 * LADY MANA.GER · -.• ... HERITAGE
REALTORS :%F~=J .2500 sq ~ 4 (Means, ''The Canyon'') .....,. ... ..,...~ l,T~.-1--'11'-n_:_:.::..:.::=--"'--I FOR ANTIQUE •
bdnns. 3 baths, tirepl. This is the model you will NEWPORT Wes1, spacious 4 * OCEAN VIEW * ~~~------l;iiiOOf'~Rfi1~VEiiiR.:Fron~~ ... ~.f..~ee~au~tt JEWELRY SHOP
disbwshr. aell clean oven, se~ when you call for appt. Br, 2 Ba, walk to beach', 3 BR. or 2 & den: mstr. suite TUSTIN Meadows 4Br 2BA remodeled home on Colo To open ·m April. Excelleirt
plua bonus room. A 11 2 Stmy-4..bedrm, sep family schools & park, w/quality w/patio. 2 .Frplcs., liv .. l'fll· Fam Rm, cove'.red 'patio: River, 7 mt North of Blythe. lOcation. Must be bondable.
upgraded ~ and rm, fonnl dining, also den crpts, trplc, atrium wfocean vtew. Blht .. kitcb. Plan 15 lo maint, 832-7815, Boatdock,~hlnghut.2Br, Re.lerences exchanged .
Reglt;y omipany custom drapes. Do not dis-or 5th bedrm. customized w/fems, beuut. trees, love-opefl:! to din. area wtocean $38 500 ' 2 ba. huge game rm. I.Ats of portunlty tor part I al
Irvine Terr.ce View . turb occupants.. 1 . thruouL Comer lot, boat Jy patio, glll'age panelled view. 2 Balcony view decks. ' storage. Immed possession. ownerahlp later lor rlP
New List•-Costa Mesa R~lty gate, 3 car gar, covered wtworkbench blbt storage, Carp & drapes thruout. Sell or trade. $.12,500 or sub-party. ~ in pel'dl S.U ""' ·* ·~nll * patio. Priced to sell. CALL heating for multi use as $44,500. I I~ mil. Call Mike Boyd (TI4J weekdays. 2814 LaFa,yett Immaculate 2 bdrm+ den 968-4456. .daytime playroom· or MISSION REALTY 494--0731 lklblle~ lilil 985-182lor985-3453eves. N Be h ~
'view home w/pool. Perfect 8. UNITS garage· at night. Elec. door 2 BR. OWN-YOUR-OWN Fut "results are juat a phone =··ror ~~ 0ou.
8
c '
tar couple. Vlew'from bey opener w/~ · _,.. call ·--1,..., ....................... 1 to Faabion Island. ..,... UV1 n--H ...... 4-Plexes, nr South crpt no Ull'I Will API',. ocean ~e of away ~.,..,o.
'.fprq_ (Neen. 64:4: 6200 -~c;;;;:'"Plaza. S p'a c i o us small ~~~1563. carry highway, choke .a re a• Mobile Homn
w/e.11 bl.tins. Xlnt cond. ground floor. SUbnut down.l :!F~jSa~l~-=--~1~25~1--11111111111 ..... Good financing av a i 1• OWNER qiu..st se.U. 4 bdrms., Owner financed. $32,500.1 . or •
$'19,900 ea.. Prlnc. only. Call 2 baths. Family rm,, Paul Westbrook, Bk r. R ( , .:--c:;;-c:.--'""=oo-=""'~ 642-12:ss '"621111 0wner1Brol<er !fl!'=<'I"· flreplru:e. Dining rm · • 494-5788 Motot Home enta s .~ __ built-Ins. I Patio. Near the BY OWNER * HAtU10R VIEW BIWl * BY ()\mer. 3 BR. 111 ~ 'beacb ~% down. b r k Finest boy and ocean v;ew. frplc. 2 car gar. l.ge ·pa.tio. SJL450 912-5566 LOVELY new 2 Bl-, 2 BA, SALES & LEASING
\ c.om~' .. te_ pri""''""'· 3 Br, wen. landscaped-irrigatiOn. E.leCJant Mans1'on . . ocn vu, Top of World. 21521 full .ervice tacillty ...,... • ......., N CM OWNER transferred. 4 Ann's Ln. Bu;y DOW be1ore
...... -.. 21> ... -1>t!P Q\liet • r • -. -· :1J . . -ltdrmJ. batllL • ·-pritt ·-... ~--· Damar Motor Hames master .,.;te. fam rm, dm. M e..rti r la I R.o Ip 1 tal. . $37 O". ~ · -•· ~ ' ~-· ••• -•1~· alt SPM 1 v. home. u rm .. bUilHns. . , rm, ahake roof, auto. VU""1v.a: ""'" • • ~ • Patio, f · nn. fittplaei! . ._L_t_d_o_l_•_l•------I aprlnkten.#1.,500byqwoe?. wkdyttfor~a •t. $27,500. H.ei;:!..lt 'i&iolks: A two ltory ' 1 • 531 LBOO . 644-.l!I · W•oDR t. 1rg hom1s rm. or l!ear U nn. Lovely. brk * EXCLUSIVES * ,oV Pri.n. only. 14. MESA VE ~-2 3BR up & big BR down $29,950. 1373. I ~===,,...,,,.---=~=
Billbol lsl1nd~ story, 5 bd, formal din. ~. w/Mth, or 5 BR! This D N'T READ THIS 2 Bdrms., family rm. • 2 CAMBnIDGE 24 x 53" 2 BR. new carpeb I: drapes,. ho~ is super !harp in xlnt baths. On street to street lot 2 ba. Uved in l" yrs. >star
· lSLA.ND 4 Br 2 $6,500 dwn, 2-nu GI 7% cond wt.block wall fence & • • • it you are looking to buy $62 500 park ln Ht.a Bch. Peta ok. '6AL80A • • • loan. Asking $47,500. By covered patio. Interior also with a lot of . problems ' · $15,500. 536--5864 ~~~ by owner. owner. No brks/agent1J. has oversized front room ~au~ on this home 4 Bdrms. plus den: 5 be.tbs. COMPLETE 8x20 traUer,
979-0367 wfflrepl &: ltg din rm. See F111anc111g: low down, Qc. 50 Ft. Nord comer. Magni-new awnipg I-shai In CM lavt;ftoNa MOVE QUICKI it today, it's a bl!auty. cupancy: at once, Escrow: ficent, custom home. adult park. Call ~ ~ fa.~t,. Payments: take over $170,000. , \ OWG Nice 4 bdrm. • Ba, block 1• •X'{IUng f!!A, Prlc°' LIDO REALTY STAR Oelu're llh<44 waft fence, hardwood Doors. 1 $19 500. • 1n Meadows. $8900. ~ 2 bedroom &: den ,Asking $28,500. By owner. Wm. McCabe, Inc. 3377 Via i:~L Beach 635-3969
h4rne completely remodeled 'Vacanl 6'15-3589 ' 531·5111 ( =i 531•5111 * 842-4405 * ~·-Clean 12'<fO w/-~ and In perfect condition. The ...,.~ OPEN ;;at & Sun. 376 BEACu BEAUTY TWO CHOICE Near beach. $58)().
ownensputloveandthought BroaariY. Owner packing OWNER desperate. 4 n BUILDING SITES 536-03971.ft:Spm --'__.
ina. bow to make this their up belongings -must eell. bdrms., 2 baths. Top loca· Huge )Sty 4 Br + Fam Rm + •57 Ft. street to atrada LIDO BAY BARGAIN, dbl
home for a long time, but Could :be 3 bdnn "-F.M., Hon. Dinlng rm., built-ins. Form Din area, only 7 blk!I $61,500 wide l bdnn, bl.Y view,
unexpectedly they have to F .P. etc. Big lot, alley. """-place den Won't last to beach.: $36,500. 96IH273 *' -•-It ~ $10 ~ ~·3817 JIIOYe, The owners will car-II: UC '..., soO 962-8865 bkr '"4§'"• tUUU aq, 'O .. Utx~ to ......... Ul.r
ry (OWC) a verylargelst 0~-3 BR, 2 BA, lge long. brk .,..,, • street. Sfll.000 TRAILER space for T.O. ~t 7% Interest and no .-.o;m A .ldl Spao. Uv. OWNER moving •. a-ry l 4 BR, tam nn, lorme1 din l.llWSON REA.L TY 8x35, adult park,
loan.fee. This 1s aomoone'• rm/~c,ckdm.BQrm. = bdrm., 2 bath home. Family rm~.~ ~7':~ •675-4562• 645-3974
real opportunUy' Ca Ii pool BM B ·" rm., dining nn., rear living . NEW LISTING ~+,,.; · bl\J'.~ Pool table mze play rm Fireplace buil~ins.
r-'"'·"Quiet cul-dHac. Nr weiI-deeorated.'brk $29,<m. $29,950 3Btlrma.plusden;abalhs. j~-----.,J~ ~.!!t shopping $38,~. 0842-<691;:::~:0,· ======-Immaculate, well designed, Rul~-. 646-""" or 494·<364. -~NS POOL-POOL-POOL 179.500 ...,...
SPACIOUS ...... v "d. REPOSSESS Our best buy! Jmagltte 4 bed-LIDO REAL TY l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;;I
Home 3 BR. 2 BA, frpl, ·or informalio'1 and ation rm 2 ba.l:hs, elec kitch, FA 3377 Via Lido, N'pt Beach II
w/w, huge. F/R. A steal of these Fll> & VA homes, ht, avocado carpets thruout. 673-7300 Apartments
suuioi.t.1Y Of n1.cCOlWRLCO. $39,950. 557-5346 · ro:-.::act -GI •. hiyre's your chance. N port n~ h For Sale 152 ..::::::;:::.:...::c.:..=.:....--1 . KASABIAN Clostn(cos .. only. CAI.Lu~ 1 '!!•~w!f. ~..!-~1•:!!..--.l::'""':':::::::::-:::--::::-".'"I Co~ del Mar • RE P R 0 s Sharp we can arrange any financ-1-6 UNITS, San Clemente, '-"---=-~~t;yoth~ Real Estate 962-6644 ing 10'1ult. n4-893-85.13. NEW"PORT while Water view, $141,CKkJ.,
st.pS To Big Coron• lor adru:;;;;Bkr. -m. ONLY ~ PER MO. wban HEIGHTS 1539 Buena Visla, #3.
I want IP civ< it away, hot '* BACK BAY. $29,9'i0 .* '°" .,,,,.;,. the $30,llOI). VA i4, SPANISH 2 bedroo 'th lots f li . Cemet.ry my~ won'ld"''""'· She" By owner. 3 BR w/frplc. loan balaocc on this 3 A'°IENDA --. mLargwie ~mu~. ~ Lots/Crypts crazy. Jma&ine," she sa.ys, an! / 'd tlo Bednn country -1e home ...,.. ....---_.,....., '166.50l.'f.oranear-oew,Jge, Lge y wcov pa • .. ..,. · plu:aUvingroomandto.nnal • ·-Harbor tUXtJii<xS Mory, 3 BR. 2 640--0l66 or &ro--0227 ~ ;!'!:i: ~J:.~ S:-v~iata ~!)' 2afl::'~ dlnhw room. Super pnde of .. M~ Park
1*. fam~lt,dining rm, beam Dana Point a new home; located just a ~ =r.,. rm, lonnal ~~a,~~~~ Mesa, 831-2984. ' =', ~c,~' &:au: PEN .HOUSE Sat, Sun 2-5 ~P to ocean. mm.., tutic 'location ~~ tor more info and ap. Commercial
R-2 you~can.conv~ to a 2 Br a..u Lot 33852 Malaga o°"WNER~:::=:;... ~.-.-,-p-e_r_a_t_e-.'°"3 shopping A trwys. CAIL poln~t to tee. Property 151
duplex peanuts. eruy1 2Br2Balt001Zarzirol3<m. bdnno 2 baths. Carpeting n4-BSU53S. """"''""""''"",.,,, * * M·l * * Cati l8Dlf agent, 673-7311. Prox Dn! 50-50'J). ntnine" rm .. bu 11t-1n11: • ~ THE bea~ of open beam El Toro f~place. patio. No down Lot 67xl4> and 1 bedroom
cell'•·· pl~ pile carp., lots · G.L bri: $27,90Q. 842-6691. house with dbl. a:arate.
of wood & glus, w/lge. CHOICE LOCATION A STEAL -Good w.,t O.ta M.,. bednnl., 3 ba's. plus mucb .., hools mktl 4 bdrm 3 ba f tully manulacturing area. Only Whirl here, tberf• more make ·trus-new .,ear IC • ' new ·• ' am. rm, . . _ $23,500 and we have otbera. 3l&""8 everywllere In this ~ ......:U bll """" -bly Laguna Hllla Moll, ~ cptd & dra., e1l bltlns, on NEWPORT RIVIERA 'CALL . '-' . 6U·.l414 r,,, 11f. 11f. ~ eape! ~ most Deaut. lD Corona neigbborhoOd. 3 ~R. BA, cul-de-sac. Owner 847~ BIG CONOOS _ _. from 9\!I, . ,_;:: It'a 1'. naturaJ for 1Pfinlt
del. M 644-«04 cptg, bltiNJ. ~ter. 3 BR, 2 story cm lrg cu1-de-I/ 'l!!l!!!!•!!l!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J · ..,............. · ""'""' -. .... Smart bl add daab to ar. · tlteplace. Pool 1!117.E! Jot, sac lot, fam rm/din rm. 11 $3l,OOO. tO $34,000. Laf1'I: 3' Ir. fd elalL ca cs 1 .u.;
Like to tradll? Our Trader's ~wall enclosure, large Xlnt cOnd. 9l)2,.8070. -JiUGE -4 BR'a; ~,850 .. tt. encl' l l ALTY Ffo~lnt curves shape this ~ :1~'i8fo:. ~~I~
Pan.dJae column ii for ywl· patio. gar. $28.!fOO. 837-1153, SPANl~H VILLA car, 1 &E,1• buac muttr N••r N••P•rl •••I Off le• "Seamed·to..Sllm" Style to -. bulky yyarn, big ...-:.
5 llncl, 5 d-e for 5 buckt. 4M-:W6. Principles oqly. Need a "Pad''? Place an ad! Two story 4 bedroom with .~ teA. "6 fti.'t. area. DANA PoJnt C·l , 18'.>' Iron-create maximum figure Oat-PaUern 1268: fits lG-JB.
tile root, Spanlih courtyard, ·' tage by 128' deep. Del tery. Sew 1111uare . or high 'SEVENTY·.nvE CllNTS ~ largt! den "'1th flrepl~ Obispo Rd. · Nr. marina.. necldine venions 1n knits, for each pettem add
' ST
, ... R G ..,,..,,E_-nlr ·~ piwthugelaq>Uyroomwlth 531·5HD (:;;t) \31·5108 Xlnt olte. $90,000.cotton. cent> for each pait.m .CS. .rA..IU .......,.~ musive brlck ftreplace, Il4/646-lJ31 Prtnte<I Pattern 912l: Air Mall and Special IWldl hardwood floorll, loads of n. .... 1 /U ff NEW Women's Sizes 34, 36, ma: 01 .. a-• .i-th'--•-~ ' ...-CLAI'J. · heavy wrought iron? ln ex· HARBOR VIEW HOME ... ...,.exas n 1 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48. Slf.e 36 ~......,,,.._, ~.
}ff ~v ~ Your,,_,,AdM)'~ ~ wr~rti elusive hllUop · area. BKR Suf* eann;i 3.Br A t.mDy ule 162 (bust 40> takes 3 118 yards weeks or "!:ere~~ to ~-n Attwdl.,,. IA• S,.,,_ oct 21~ 53&-25fil room. Sho I like 1 modtl DARLING d•m>•x lor _1& .... 35-lnch fabric. Allee Broob. ·the DAILY
To ifevtlop ~for Frldoy, • By Qwner-cho6ce 3 Br. 2 Ba, qxne, New crpt, lge lot, owntt 2bdiea w":lk ~ ~Nn·f'IVE CENTS PILOT. 105, Needlec:ratt IMOdwordl.~ingtorurbn l"'4-67 air/cond. many x tr a a. room for pool, q u I e I be ch• abopptni" H B tor each pt.Item -add 25 Oepl. Box 163. Old Olellie.a
ofycuZod5acbfrthslgn. $29,!IOO, s'lfXKI dn. FHA loan. cul~. $69,00) fee. ..,:900• -·~-· · · cenll for each p1ottern for Stauo"n, New York, N.Y. ,
1c.,,, .. , llWMI 61.,_,.,. 833-U03 ev.,64>-2312. HARBOR VIEW -· ·-AtrMallondSpeclalllar<ll· 10Q11.Print!I.--. 1~ ~z ~~ ' -HOMES Income p rty . 166 ~ otberwiM thlrd-clalt ZIPL htw. Nan:dWlt •
• ._ .. -.. ,_ Irvine REALTY 833-0780 COSTA MESA """or"~-~ NE);)DLECRAFr "l'l': : = :~ : t%.. ~ Mtrtin:-the DAILY Crochtt, knit. etc. Fret, r!: ~~ :l~::'" IT SHINES .AND NEW EXCLUSIVE fourplexK Pn.CYI', 442, Pattern Depl, d:=-·~me -.
•-.,., .. ~ SPARKLES 7 NEW Ll5fINGS 232 W"1t 18tb SL. New Buie. fancy knOt5. pat·
to,._ AO... 70Qr New-carpeting well-cholen Bayfroot 4 BR.J..bathl TO CHOOSE m.oM York, N.Y. Jf.IOU. Print le-tll $100 . ll~., :l:V.-~=..._ wflllpe.per a~ frelh paint Pier&: SUp -~cm $51,00J & up NAME. ADJ>U:8S wtth ~ · Oroct.et 8°'* ...
11,..,,,. -43• 135oc' Mw mak1! thla one or the most LI® REALTY CAIJ.. ~ ZIP. mz and lfl'Lll tarn hY plcturest Pt.
,._, .. ,._.. ,... de•lrable 3 bdrm •• 2 bath 3377 Vil Udo, Npt Beach !l1JMllltlL -$1.00. ::~ ::' ~~ home• in t.1nlvcr1lt..Y Park. 67,,.,300 SEE MORE Qulck ~tltllaMGlftllM
Macnab-Irvine
For In ad In Wom1n'l World
C1ll Mory Beth 642-5678, ""· 330
Seamed· Ta-Slim Brene Into Spring
l I
rent.
156
7268
llYI
CAl•I
,,.,,_ "1.. 11 ,__ lt'• vacnnt •.. you ct.n JftOVe Fuhlonl and ~ ON -morJ u.n llXI atDI .-
at ;=. aa i 14r7e.JOOd . h·11 . *c~=.L~~!l.~01 2 BR. :·a'!~~"· -~~;:~-~ ~: :~ MPn -
21-. ".,.... ""' I ' $52,5GOI blUll, 11"'1'· -·· Xlnt INSl'Al<'f SEWING BOOK\ .... >:t-., '-' 12 '"' BALBOA. BA.Y PROP. OrallllO locallon. =.cm ll 41tty 8"' _, · IDt:. 23~ SJ..,... tJtW w1$51J,<XX> down Showa aood :"' today, WM!" tooa!OW. ... .. II PTbo .,..,.. ~~·· tr:::-=~ REALTY 613-7410 * 67S.7060 ~a.x--frcc agerxJaNe t!u. ll.lsrANT i' As Ht 0 N *' -
,_ """"-5'0f """"' A CompAny W1th Vlglon Shdm". Prine: only. Bkr, BOOK Elund.rtdt o t -t 8lt'* l ... lfl paltlmt. ~=-la.::::.. ::s=-Univ. Park Cenit'r, )rvlM CLASSIFIED ADS &0-01n !uhlon ..;,... II. 5:;._m qj,J. .0. · 1
.,._ "'¢ " ouci'"cc =1'l"'_w~~M FOR ACTION 5.76 X GROSS tf• •-. . -...a ;o.,ri' 11c.
• JDFlf: ,..,,. .0 -'°a:J: Uhl ............................. I ••• 8 UNITS incolne $990/mo. with ... UMf DIJl1 Qusllta far~·· UNs • ~--a1~·:.J::...~==~~=G=...i=®=~ ;_=()=Jil=;= .. =· ==~~~--...-Sell k!le ,.,.,. _. Call \ 642·5678 Full pri.;_ 167.500. Pilot O.U.lllotl. MW61I. l51-ltlfti! pllllntL !llc. I!! :... ~ _, 1. ED Rl1)0LE, r · -1
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~. Mlrdl 11 1CJ7l 34 DAILY PILOT
----J~l ---I~ I ........ -llllP-.. -lltl p. .. -"'-• 365 -• ~ L-1 -----=:' Bull-fiouaoo Unfum. 30.I :::., UnfvnL JIS ' m Apia. Furn. 1'0Apto. Fum. NO . Unfum. 365 ~· U nfum. 365 Apt. Unlum.
°""'""vnlty 200 .:;a...:;-;;;"'.:;,.!,_____ ---"'-";..;...;......;......; ___ -_ "'_ -.;..-'""_ -c._ c.:._ -----_: ___ ;;.:._ -:;:.:;-~~g~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I~~~~~~~ Nowpori a-II = ~unllngton 11.ich Cotto -~!!'!!! INch .-Cost• -Huntington Bell<il OCEANFRONT condo. 3n1
HARDWARE STORE ~ Hvtns 2 !Jt, 2 noor. Fan!utic view ocean
Ne'l'S IUll na. 2 "' Cndo. Ftplc. ()-pt 3 BR, 2 ba, bit"' £ ""'"""'· IEACH UYING HARBOR l'RrnlS GOING FASTI & bay. Unturn 2 BR. 2 ba, Beauty SOOp • U>00 Down drpll bl Uo cb11drl': New paint, crpts A drpf. a Uft (.hoi~ 2 BR Aptt. trplc, all blUM. crpta, ~rp1,
Card/Gin, $12.,()00 + lnV1.·n A.1t.'Fl;~1~207: n. JWL Contact M.r. Qutta at (Now You Can Afford) SJ4"4/MO. parktng wtsecur1t)C.
c......ic.. Qus A/o' """'°"' ~--* ••t -= F 1-L-~ & ·-~• AID No'"'-• UR It In town! $4Z HOLLAND Bus. Salos .._ ..,. 1. WJ.At !he beach! 4 Br, 2 F~.-.~0~,0-1n-v-.-11-91---FURNISHED u m ..-ALL u•~·-P + ~rtt°'.'6'2-3J9i. I~· o-··•. CM 045-4170 * f41•ot11 * ua. Call "' tor lnlo. Agt. BACHE LOR APART MENTS Unfvmlshod VILLA YORBA . 11
•<0 ·-... Fee. 847·1207 p $I" "1' EXCLUSIVE Wes tc I 1
Rl;ST .• COFFEE SHOP . W.ttlhCOITA MEIA 2 BDRM, 2% Ba. blbw, rom HuntiJwt®_Beacb Townhouse-2 Br, 2'Ai Ba,
F\llly. equip for. sale._ or.. Thcae Art JI.Lit A. Few Of 1J;rv;;,;.l",:";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J cbhwhr, crpb, drps, W/O, ONLY 2 LEFTI From $130 to $215 mo (714)-142 .. 9622 pool, sauna. etc. Quiet area.
lease. At McFadden It Sf.al). Our MANY RENTALS ••• I• dbl gar., m-ttc Tm OVtt FULL SECURITY -svSTeM Bllchefor• • 1 Bdrms l""""""'"""""""""" .... !1 $356/-mo;-644-5-1..5-3 ot
dard, SA. $20,(XX) will ban-· * 2 DR., 1~ ba .. air/cond. '225 'c~u.: .. ~-":ki tenniaaccruep&t HEATED POOL or the &EACH 2 Bd e 3 Bd * litOW. IN TODAY * '~~~'.:.· ,,---,-.=-;;;;• d le Owner/ Brk r i BR 2 •-aJ / nd -~-· El t An al Lea rm1 r m 1 $139 A MO. N~R H••• H-, lg 2BR. 2BA. · S70 -SHARE & S.v~ 2 DR, ., ....... r co ......, .... ,. .. _n & 5tnl p. t, eva or nu se ........ ""'" 114-&42--{l;90. all utll. Paid. Male. BR 2 bath $.135 "'ulUl-.: .. ' 1 t/J or 2 FUii 8 1th:1-Spac. 2 &: 3 BR lfl f.pltx-bltirui. crpts, drpa, palio,
• J_.AUNORY. Coronn dl'I * 4 sn:: 211) bil~ $360 9GIJ.-2500. Adults Only, Sorry No Pet& Several avail. ALL EX-tncl gar. SlBO to $210. Adu1t11
Mar, on CoMt Hwy. Ovmer Sl2S . NEAR Ocean! 1 BR. 3 BR. & fam. rm .. 2 baths _lrv_ino_______ LAS BRISAS P.faster size bedrooms w/ TR.AS. Pool, l't'C bldg. Kids lnq. 4150 A, Patrice Rd ;;ef~.0~i9~500~:r;~sd!fi stove, yard ror kldt /pct. 4 ~'i~:/':;· Turtle~,~ * FOR LEASE * 5515 RrvER AVE .• NEWPORT BEACH n~g be~rnce~p.1*~~ =-~'itis1F~~oo'~;A.~I C!642-4387~"'-''-' ------1
eqpmt. PETE BARRl:'M' * 4 BR., tam. rm., 2'h baths 3 BR., 2% ~ Pool i: ttnnb (The New· Place In NeW}>9rt) '111.wd burninJ'. fireplace . blk w. ol Beach Blvd. oU Apts .• REALTY . 642-4353 $1.65 · LAGUNA Studio! Turtlerock $t25 cloae. AvaU now $330 mo. Res. Mgr. Diane & Wm. Sharbauih 642-2.V.6 Convenient laundry area Slater. 847-4260. 968--7510. Furn. or Unfurn. 370
l'rpk. Open beams. Util Pd. oil lcilcl>•n. Enclo..ct pa-* FRESH AIR
Money to Loan 240 Pel ok. 3 BR. 2 124. Fool i: tennis A._ "-pla.=.:..F..:•.:..•"-;;;;. ___ .:.340;;;; Apts. Furn. 360 tioe. 2 swimmlJlg pools, 'Cost• M ...
1 TD L * close. Avail 3/1. $320 Mo. -sauna, recreaUoo facill-Walk 3 block.! to Beach 1;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;[ St Gans 1175 . VACANT ! 2 BR. End. COf!BIN-MARTINC -.:.ot-.;..t•:;_M::;'"'::;u:;_ ___ LaguN llNch rt ... Se<urily guard. No U'g 3 BR. Apt" Newly dee· * * *
g11r. t~t>ncc<t. Pl't ok, REAL TORS ~76'2 -pets. orated, w/w crpts, drpa,
, 6'14 % INTEREST * Casa de Oro Lt1XURIOUS oceanfront on bluw ""Pt re!rlg. 12401 SPARKLING NEW $210 _ BRING Kids/Pet! 3 "SINCE l!46" * 2 BIDROOM, 1 %. Bath, sand. All a p p 1 i an c ea . Models Open 10 tll 7 pm mo. 'No singles, no pet&. 2nd TD Loans BR !"'' ,1 _, G garage. NEW. SD> per ALL t.rrlUTIES PAID Suitable tor family 2700 pt W CM .,"1711 . • ci., y:uu. arage. 111t Westem Bank Bldg. month PH: 497-1342. Compare before you rent $425/mo tll June 15. can fo; H •r: Bl 'J'a ;~::::;;:.:.::::.·---~---!
LANDtORDSI Da~~ve5~'{.;~· 1tr.;hts L19u111 Ni~ ~ua~~~~ea!:"t. ~ summer rentab. nr •M,';n. v 20~~·~~ ~~~te}~~l ~~ BAY SHADOWS
Apartments
Spacloua. Light & Cheery!
Lowest ra1cs Orange Co.
Sattle r Mtg. Co.
642-2171 54S-0611
Servin1t Jfarhor area 21 yrs.
Money Wanted 250
$.25,000 will pay $640 1m in<:I
10% & assign well M!CUred
$64,000 ll!t on 40 ac In Apple
Valley Bax 3 Apple Valley
TI4-242-3144 Owner.
Mortgago1,
Trust Deeds 260
$5,500 lST T.O. on a small
ocean view lot, Laguna. $55.
per" mo. incl 9% duC 5 ~
10% discount. Bkr. ( 714>
g3().&J60 _..,_
}'HF:E RENTAL SERVlCE 1i==-==~====l 's~~E~A~=T~E~R\iiRjA~cCjEI direct lighting . 17622 Cameron St. or BEACON RENTALS i TOWNHOUSE. 3 BR, 211 e Separate dln'g"'" ROOM & Bath w/ private 54~ na10 .8<2,,-~1;65~2.=----o---,-7' * 645-0111 * 2 BR ., ll,4 baths ······ $225 BA. beaut. lndscpg &: view. •Home-like atoraae entrance JU'. beach, bus 1 V"V sPACIOUS new 1 bd, 2 BR, 1'4 ha., alr cond $235 $.190 mo. rent oi lease Inc. •Private patios shop'g. No. end. 49+-7079. dishwasher, carpets, drps, THE BLUFFS ~ B8R, 22 bbaths • · · · · •• · · · $300 usn. dues. Zl3: 322--558S· • Closed garage w/slorage Newport BMch !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I patio, enc. gar., (213)
4 BR 3 BA 2200 ·• H, a · · · •• · • · $330/$360 alt s 213: J2Z..23J2_ ' • Marble pullms.n 434-8249. , , Sq. Ft. J BH, 3 ba, f<im rm .••• $375 e King-a Bdrrna: 3 Br 2 Ba newly turn. crpt'd $495 PER MONTH 3 Bl<. 2\oi """" , ....... $395 Newport Beoc:h. e Poof'. Barbequo• • sur-& dtp'd. Bltns. U'g priv WALK TO BEACH rounded w;th pt··-'-Ja.... patio. 1 btk bch. $.150 mo New 1, 2 & 3 BR., cpt/drp.,
Gracious home on curving i d h•11 BLUFFS 3 BR. 2 BA. Yearly scaplng """1
.... u-:yearly, til J une 30, Call dwhr., frpl. 12516th. 847-3957 ·,,.~!; t choioe ,,.",rtly ..... ,. . re I vle_ase ... !f"~~..;...., water I Adult liVina: at la best Mike at 28th St. Marina, • 2 BR unfurn. No singles. c...,. o t..'l'l"t:n poo. 1ew . ........., o •r-~. _ , •""~ 1 BR Sl90 ~ •~ F~ hi · t d & h ~ ui~. PINRlttl ,.. .A Small pet ok. $145 & $150 . . ,.,i; y patn e s am-Townhouh Unfvm. 335 • 2 BEDROOMS U1D SEACLIF'F Ma n or Apt. LIYll UP ~ • 536-0430. =r 1111~~1:~sy Vac:t JI REALTY .._Hunt'on......, n-'·h 1365 W. iv:~~!ets """l971 Bachelor Apt. Utll Pd. USO. ~~e','!l~~;,·t·,., 2 NEW lge 2 BR apt, 2 ba. b ..... kt•rsl • A Company \Vilh Vision •·-·· ~ =uu V'tM-Pool. 1525 Placentia Ave. FA he•t, d~hwhr. Clo-to "' Univ. Park Center, Irvine "-k ~ .. t di 1n<1 to sheam' w•th ,, ..... ('i1U Anytinlc, 552·7500 JBR Townhouae.1% ba, shag $30 WEEK I UP 548..~"""" our soount. wa!erla!lstreatP1 ocean. 41114th St. 53&-0869 •-'(~."" II Office houn 8 Al\l lo 6 PM crpts, drps, pri patio, soft • Studio A .1 BR _Apts. re•iu1tt i.ell••1-10r ':! BR, stove/refrig. $190. ·-e TV •-Maid Serv -" SEASHORE Dr. acruss from your spJdou' n~w 1· or I
I BR's FROM $157
2 BR's FROM $177
Beautiful appointments in·
elude Decorator Fireplaces.
Shag Carpeting. PrlvaU!:
Patios. ·Pool -Jacuzzi •
Volleyball court -Gas
BB.Q's. Closed Garages.
Adults, No Pets.
409 W. BAY St.
Costa Mesa
Manager Bldg E· 103
*.6463387 *·
t J&,( UNTOUCHED 847--sr.n aft 6. • Phone Service-Htd. Pool beach, lrg. 2 BR. apt. p~h ok. From'''"· r"rnll"ro Call -893-3278 ·~ ~ .. · II e ~"~n & p 1 Sec" yearly. Privat• patio. Park-' " " $
1~~ water & dishwasher Incl. • lee Avcw. i-bedroom apartonenl. Small Vic Beach B vd. & Yorktown.
" 1$)• By human hand11, is this 2 & JBR Townhouses, newly ...,llluir: e uon ~·•1!dblt. MOiltls optn 9,00 155 . ..fi_ ho I 3 Bd pai n t'e d • wuher/ .. -·er, • s· ") l\Jonlhly Ing. Laundry. $715. 675-3345. lo 6:00. 2300 la1nlew R6.. L1gun1 Be.tch
: ;"!; rca ty super 11•-t' me . nn., d ~ -1 ..,._, 2376 Newpon Blvd., CM AP'J'S, turn, 1 BR, util, gar.J_'''.'."'.'."'_'' ""''~u~. ~'°~'"~'~' '~"~"~'°'~· __ J;:;;::";;;;:;;;-;::;:;:;:;: GIGANTIC $15.5 2 BR ~-2 ba. Completely redone crpts, rpfl, ~•o . -S4S-!i755 or 64&-J967 wshr/dryr $150 FOR f ho la You Bet lt's underprl~I.
2414 Vista dei Oro ~~Iv~ JP1ffi< '!: Duplexes Fum. 345 4d good for $5 on Rent. ~Hg~:;k~ J:: AP~:~~~~TS ~~u~:~~ ~ :P~:~! '[!i1~~n;.byCp~ d~~~. ~~
~~~ii~~E For lease5~i-92',2r. ,c;.;o_ro.;...••;;..d_ot;.....Mo __ r ____ 1 DJIJ>xi' D~AfABR. NEW 2 Bdrm UX!tmo. Ann. AirlCond -Frpk's • 3 Swim-rooms,~ wide ocean views, ~w:f~er!f~ a~ a f::~
B.I .... 111.nd ___ _c..:.::..cc:c.=----'")1\11----mo. util pd. Small • BR furn. apt. flAn. Heated pool. lease. SU W. Bay,~ Newport rnltag_ Pools • Health ~ · gardena. Space & privacy Adults, no pets. 2 O 2 O ;;.;.=:;;:...;.:.=.;;;..----.,..,.,... • 1 ._._ Beach. Call s. B 88&-4832 Te~ Courts • Game and for considerate, m a tu re Hou ... · Furnished 300 Lagun1 Beach upper, quiet married couple, Amp e parkiug. Adults, no days or tf83..294J eVes. Bilhard Room. adults. Close to beacll & Fullerton Ave., (1 Blk. E. of
1 __ ...;.._.;.;.;;c.:.;;;;;;_...:.;;.,; 2 BO, nu ahag crpt &: drapes, no pets. 675--3613. I pets. 1 Bedrm. Frorn $154 shopping. Selection of rugs Newport Blvd. & l Blk. So.
Batboa 'Pentnsuli yearly lease. 135 Opal, In-$235 -UHi Pd. 1 & Den. Duplexes Unfum. 350 lll65 Pomona Ave., C.M. FURN. 4 BR., 2 ba. Yearly. 2 Bedrm. From $200 & wallpapers. part 1 a I l y of Bay, C.M.) 642.-$90.
quil't 130 Pearl, 67S--0158. ~~~-So. Laguna. New & ;c..;.:,..;...;.;.__;._;;;;..;._-.;..; 1 BR, Fum., 2 Irg. closets, Step1 to ~an '!' i:'l!1Y· $350. MEDITERRANEAN furn. $250 to $650 monthly. THE EXCI'!'ING
2BR house, clOlle to ocean, C d I Ma $250 _ 2 BR., % Ba. Garge. Caplstr•no Beach queen sUe bed, priv. dress. ~Mike ~Neil, days 494-4653 PALM MESA APTS.
avail tll June 30. Only $1S5 oron1 e r Yrd Patio Quiet area NEW 2 & 3 B ing rm. xtra lrg. rooms, O; eves 1-1700. VILLAGE VIEW apt, block to beach, MINUTES TO NPT. BCH.
mQ! 213-943-2928 HANDSC!~) 3BR, 2 BA , Child/pet. . • drps, b1tlll in ria~/'i'm a'l(~ onlyencl. gar. w~atorage. Adu1ts 0 C EANFRON'l' Bachelor, 2400 HarOOr Blvd., C.M. new 2 & 3 BR. $245 up lse. FURN. OR UNFURN.
Coron1 del Mar ~~~e. ~ b~ht :;tchi:; 31~~~!.r!':~. ;a:."~ I t~ ~~-~~ Ave 2035 i::i1e.rton, C.M. $i4Je~l'f~~t 0~. pets. ~..:h 55~~CE .::~,: 4~17' ~n~~i~t1)a~~le~1:t:
$100 _ Util Pd. Nicely furn 673----1010 front! 1 BR. Furnished Apt . 2 Br. Upper, walk to beach, OPF.N 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM 1;:;.;;;.;....;;=------ins, shag crpts, drps, sawia
Bach w/cook'g, Patio. 3 BR, 2 BA, din rm. blta, NU.VIEW RENTALS C_o_sl_•_Moao ______ $1$/mo. al39 Wallace Ave, $275. incl. util. yearly, avail ** 2 BR. 1 BA. Upstairs. ;~t~ts, nopei~m Sl50
P.rivacy! pool privl. Harbor View 673-403t1 Cir' 493--3248 BRAND NEW DUPLEX • J C.M. 3/1. (213) 447~. P1rk .. Like SVrroundlng Stove & refrig. Newly I BEDRM. From Sl60
$nl ... Lrg Redec 1 Br. houSe. Homes. $375. 833-3894. Oceanview-executive borne BR, 2 Bath. double garage. Call 842--3&1. '916 Seashore, 2 BR's facing QUIET DELUXE decorated. See to ap. 2 BEDRM. From $180
2 b1k:a l:ieach. Yant. Patio. 2 BR. DUPLEX. Frplc, gar, for lease. 4 Rr, 2% Ba. $S50 Cor. Fullerton &: Bay Sts $125/mo. dlx mob. hm, ocean. view, )Tiy, $275. Pvtl, p2 ~n3 BRHAPTd Poos 1 f!iC~J~·or ~I ._!,err. info. Ul}fum Apts A·.raU From $1D
$300.-New 2 BR, 2 BA, lrplc, crpts, $250 per mo. w/addltional guest apt $650. $295. mo, no pets, or small Comp! furn. Htd pool. 645-8830 or 646-8032. a ..... s * t ui;rvuw u .. .-.u.u to $15 LESS. ~· View! I blk to beach. 620 Goldennxl. 644-7392 499-3464. • I children. To St'e ca 11 Adu1ts. No pets. 4 Season's, Nr . Shop'g * Adults only Mesa Verde You're right, they're under-
. NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 BR, 2 BA, lrph;, carpet.s & 642-4155 2359 Npt, C.M. 548--63.12. Newport Heights Al$J Furn Bach. A~ts . priced! 1561 r.tesa Dr.
673--4030 or 494--3248 drapl's. 414 Fe r n 1 ea f . La1una Niguel Huntington 8eHh SMALL t BR. Trailer. CLEAN 1 2 BR. Adults Martinique Apts .. OLX 2 & 3 Br, 2 Ba. Encl (5 blks from Newport Blvd.)
BEAlIT. turn. 2 Bdrm Mme, $350/MO. 644-0030. $49)/MO. Spacious 4 BR. __ .....;:_ __ _.;.c...._ Suitable for Bache I o r. pets Lgeo~t-$135-$150 ~ 1777 Santa Ana Ave., CM gar. $165 up. Rental Ole, •iiiiiiiiiiii546-iiiim9860iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•I
1 blk to ocean, d'ol gafage & C t M $70,000 hm., beach, view, 2 BR., blt·ins, carpet, drps, $90/mo. E. liJth SL, NB-&f&.lBOI. Mgr Apt 113 646-5542 3095 Mace Ave. 54&-1034. ADULTS
pa.tlo, ij\liet neighbors, 1 or 2 01 a· •U security. 831-1453. frplc, patio, lndry facilities s.um Apt U I 365 NEWPORT Newport Beach
ladies or older cpl. No pets , --I <BR F Rm L k F t & carportsL Cpl & 1 smL 2RMS w!BA, partly furnish. • n urn. APARTMENTS LA COSTA APTS. or children. Lea.!e $225. mo. '""'~" Y • am • crpts, a e ores child ok, oo pets. n 40_ ed $90 ''Roni A Ploco ~1.,.... drps, dsh/wsh, nr sch! & 0~,, _,,,,,,A .,.... • • inc. utilities. Older l BR Unl $l30 1 & 2 Bedroom ~
0 '..-.,.,_... shopping fi-plc, lencd & 4 BR Tri·level in lovely I ='~0-~.c;~=°'·--~---tenant. 645-202)/642-6560. Bllboll lslencl 2 sfL u~ $l40: of I Palace'' e Carpets a Drapes
Costa Mfg patio $300 979--2028 .~edd 'kurrounf I ruBng1•8.:-rascltibc 3Bxt'::,~2BA~shwsmohr, ~~~ N2 BR ruRN. API'. CHARMING, brand new, & UTILlTIES PAID N • PooA1'1 •utBBQJllt .·•, Pao'd •~. 2 BR adul'-fe---~/lkd .. uuu ec ' Pc, u ... , u • ...,. ~ -......,......, o children • No pets. _._ I 2 BR • "~ N Bl d CM OCEA d 111111
DOBERMAN D 0 g would Garages. 424 QH~iil::n I priv. $395 mo. 837--6161 caf~t~"'-'-6 ~•"m". ______ !~Center St. 642-5848 ~~ .. mar:i from s~ :::: .._.,,, ~i~1~ ., an 354 .Avocado St., C.M.
like to share h~ home Extra garag" $25/mo. ~M:.:•:::•:::a_V;,;•:;:•.;:d:.•--~-_Mesa Vo-D•na Point Yrly, adults. 673-1454. 1 --C-AS-A=G~RA~N~A~D--A -1 HARBOR VIEW 642-9708 •
w/older gentle cpl. Furn 2 _6:::15-::..:;165=1·'-------'---------Corona del Mir No Security Deposit Elegant apartments designed ~~~'""'""~~!!!!!!!!!!!!I Br. Gar. Fncd ytd. No •Sllarp 2 BR 1 BA 3 s:, lam rm, 2 ba, new DELUXE 3 BR. 2 ha.duplex. LIVE in the all new Dana iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl.ovely 2 BR apts, with a wlth a Master's touch, au-LOVELY condo 3 Bdrm apt.
children or pets. $175/mo. To nho"•• Pool' paWalkt, crpts, drps, frplc. Dbl gar, frplc, CJ1>ls, drps, Point Harbor at the ki"'"'ized BR, on •--uiilully perb house s)curtty, exclu· Pool & rec area. Frplc. 645-7094, 642-2957. w ...,... -gar -to schools & shopping. washing facil. W a I ki n g beautilul Marina Inn Motel, lan'"l:-ped ~·=nds. Ga• sive Versailles Club and cathedral clgns, pvt patki, dsbwhr -large closets. $275 mo. 642---0177 distance to shopp;ng & 34002 Del Obispo St., (496-...._-!! """'.. eo---pool with ... ;m~ AqUa•--$125-SUPER clean 1 BR. $225/mo. 833-8974. M 'd Cl --hoo'-. Encl -ar yard & ~ incld In rent. Child up to 3 -¥ .. W~ ..,..., crpt, drps, bltns, W/D,
b ho Sto f .,.. 1 way ty .,._ .., ... 2353). Kitchens, efficiencies A N t fountains and formal ""'"· refrig & freezer, dshwhr,
mo · me. ve, re "0 • $14'Mother & child. 1 Br / pa"o. -. No pe•-. 3'"" &: ............ •-h t-• I .. yean:. 0 pe s e.-c~. drps ,_ F..,, ,,.. u •••J ... ~ ""+"'-' .... en..,., ea eu poo. -400 M~mac w' ay 557.""'"' dens. All part Of the Sonth con v en I en t Joe., nr s4f-""t.2o7 · ne•· ""'· nursery. Cprts, drps. Stove $199-for less than $200 you Coral, Apt A, 551-2653 dlttct dial Phones · "''' ~ Coast's finest apartm:nt Back Bay. $.335. unfurn
L
......... -. & refrlg, fncd. Agt. Fee. can rent a 3 Br, 2 Ba. All Newport Buell ~~~'~ill· sauna bath, Jaun: ON TEN ACRES 1 & 2 BR apta, $125. & community. $365, furn. 64S-O:KJ2. ' 19un• _..,, 847-1207. the extras! Kids/pets ok. ....,. .... c tes. meeting room, $152.SO. Covered carports, 1 Bedroom/studios from $195
$125 -Utll Pd, Lrg Bach, full $155-Wbat do you say? 2 Br. Ag!. Fee. 847-1207. NE\Y DUPLEX close to San Clemente and r=i·~·:~ 1:..":s. crpts, drps, bltn range & 2 Bedroom from $30S DleSliB.AU 21
kit Oct"all view! Sml pet ok. Trip1ex. Crpta, drps, stove, Newport Beach 3 & 4 Bedroom ~ :.~~~ c:cim:i~ Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst, c~~~re~J~ lg a~ t6:~ Mod~els open~ A.M. til dusk
11'5L a.-. U
0
tiln ,P,d. Nslcemll B'yard· So.. ~e~~g..f-~ for tot. Agt. BRAND NEW ·I 2 Bath sportsfishing, shopping and 900 Sea Laa, CdM 644-2611 the beach. 830 Center st. restaurants. $50 week and (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) CM. ~7900 or 642-5261
Child/pet. LEASE option -4 bedroo111s, DUPLEX Fir-.pl•ce-G•r• up. Bring thls ad and
$250 -1 BR: O:ittagt?. Frplc. 2 baths, large game room. Ocean vif!W, walk to bch. 3 & Nair Be1ch receive $5 off on first 2 BR" 1 ba.; trplc. Sundeck. NEW Apartments. 2BR, 2SA.
2 BR 2 BA unfurn $205
2 BR 1 BA furn $220
Beautiful apts. w/private
patios. garage, pool, spa.
Lush·garden sE!tting. Adults,
no pets, 151 E. 21st , C.M. * 646-8666 * Beautiful ocean view! Deck, Owners putting in new shag 4 BR, no pets or children. From $295 Ye•rfy week's rent. Garage. Yearly $250 M It-in kitchen, dlshwsher,
lru.VJEW RENTALS earpeting. 546-9521. 1-~=~-;..c~=~ HERSH 645 8400 ~ Mike O'Neil, day! /W cpts, drp•. patio.
ON THE BLUFFS
AT NEWPORT
2 'ocL hou11e wlth attaclx'd BEACH HOMES Huntington BMch eves. 5.51-1700. :Adults only, no pets. From Under New
fi73.4030 or 494--3248 garg. & fncd . yd., $150. 2625 3 BR, " Ba, Z-story $365 N~ ~~~lt, ~!;;.ly~ I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; NR BCH, shops. Upper 3 BR. $185. Nr _CM Mem. Hosp. From Newport Blvd., tum at Ma nagiment
Newport Beach D Elllen Avt!., Costa Mesa, 2 BR. den $315 Walk to beach. Encl. gar. LaQuinta Hermosa 2 ·BA, !rpl, 2 sundecks, 2126 Thunn, CM S45-5!m Hospital Road (1 block CASA VICTORIA
\Valk to wtr . Coch Unit $100
Also Laguna $110, CM SSS,
tJtil pd.
R1nt-A·Hou1e 979-8430
$195-1 blk belt 2 Br. mob hm.
Sngls or families w/teens
ok. Cat considert'd. Agt.
Fee. 847-1207
OCEANFRONT h<ie, \vinter
rental $250/nio. to May 31.
6200 Ocean front. 644-4452
Houses Unfurn. 305
Gen1r11
673-5270.· CAYWOOD REALTY b It 1 3 2 5 abov~Pacltic Coast Cfwy) to 1 & 2 B Furn 642--3188 or 642-7914. 2 Bdrm SIUd;o, l" BA. Furn. n s · · fl ""•_.. 2 Br, 2 BA .tudoo' . entranc 900 C Lan · r. · & Unfurn. DON'T miss lhis, Clean 2BR * "'1290 * M~ 2 711 962-2270/833-1103 .., ... ,..,. ..... & e. agney· e, Carpets dra-s D/W TV ,_ d f 1 ~ Duplexn, _..,. acres beautilul ----~=·----1 Sparkling clean. New crpts, Newport B'ach, Ca. 92660. · ,.... • • crp.,,, rps, rp c. open EXECUT park 1 i k e surroundings. LOVELY 2 ~R. beam drps. bltns, Cat'JXlrt. lndcy Telephone: <n4) &15-0060 ~nt.. Pool, etc. Come by &
hewn ceil, patio, gar, Child IVE horn!! 3 Br, 2~ _F_u_m_._o_r_U_n_lu_m;.;._355:.;.,:, 1 Sunken pool, BBQ's spark!-catherdral ceilings. sundeck facil. Nr. frwys. Walk to 1nqu1re about our Move-in
ok. $165 mo, 548-5970 Ba. 2 frplcs, tncd yd, l blk ing Spanish f 0 u n ta 1 n s, & garage. Util pd. $2$. mo. shops. Quirt 4.pJex. No pOts.1~~~~~=~---allowance, 525 Victoria SL
S298·New Spac. 3 BR. z BA. ocean & bay. $385/mo. Newport Beach Townhouse Living. (213) ~-Inq: 2868 LaSalle, Apt l PARK NEWPORT at Harbor. CM. 642-8970.
Kld'/-I• P•rk Avl McNash R1ty, 642-8400; ALL UTILITIES PAID •••~'" 24 EXTRA LARGE "'" ' . . nov.'. Eves 548-0797. ISLAND DUPLEX Adul'-. No Pet• SPAC. 2 BR., trplc., bit-ins. ~or 549-35 , APARTMENTS ·1 Br. New 1st & last. 557-9409. Sharp!. ... N QlM u1nh ~ crpt, paint, heated pool. 2 BR .~ den, $375. 1931 Port On the water, boat dock, 162ll Parkside Lane r. ~"'6"· -LRG 2BR, lt,iba, shag crp~. th ba From SlJS. Mature adult111, 3 81roo:;.jj T ba~ large Lock.sleigh Pl. Pool Privl. 7 patio, lBR, 2BA, frplc, ~t (TI4) 847-5441 Hal Pinchln Rltr 675-4392 bltlns, frplc. prl patio, on • y Infant ok. No pets. 1887 ~~.' 546-9~~-n beque. am lo 1:30 pm, 64(}-115.5. bar. Yr lse. 675--4421 14 bib S. of San Diego Frwy *1rp1P~0}1_!~ wit. h2PooBRI ~cl~r!'bio~ ~k4 ~~ ~4h~s, t.uxurytook:'thtment livE;ng _M_o..,o,.ro,,v,,;'~·-="~5-'--"ztcc7cc4.~--1 ~"-~~------\VESfCLIFF, lovely 3 BR. 2 eIER & noat. beaut. patio; on Beach, 1 blk W. on Holt c, crp ........ !""• . 548-1941 837--9842 d ' over 1,000 e water. n· 2 BR. F'ree Utilities.
J ~· 2 ba,dctpKtd, drpaoK' frplc, BA, crpt, drps. bllns, beaut Jge. 1-BR., lrplc. Bltn. to Parkside Lane.) $235: 673-3850. (Tony) eves, ays joy $750, health spa, 7 Pool. Encl gar. Dshwhr. 54pn,_v~"1:,,_Y • 1 s · $295. S.175 642-4426 slereo rrv Agent ~:.m9. ~~~~""'!!!!!!~""'"'I DELUXE all elett bltins swimming pools, 7 lighted 241 Avocado St. c M . .wv" year. a. · LOW WEEKLY R'ATES incl dllh/wshr. obt gar. e REAL VALUE! Quiet. 2 tennis courts, plus miles ot S46-l2Q4. * 3 BR, 2BA. Crpts, dq>~. Santa Ana Executive Suites ocean vu $350 per. 67J-im2, BR. Cr pt• Id rps . bicycle trails, putting, shut·
encl. gar. Priv. patio. Lrg. I JIG) C t Meu stove/dsbwr. Pool. Mature fleboard, croquet. Junior l's Huntington Be1ch CASA De ORO R lty yard. S22S/mo. 673-3690. $175-Nr So. Coast Plaza.~ Ap«tmentsforhlt ....,. 727 Yorktown Blvd. 0$ • adults, no pets. $135. 2295 from $189.50monthly;also1
537·3311 * I:>rivatt" palio, encl. gar. 2 31!r·k~!~ :i:. Rfgi. !~~ . . Beach Blvd. at Yorktown VERY NTCE 2 bd unit, Sl75• Pacific Ave., CM. S4S-6878 .. and 2-bedroom , plans and BR.AND NEW
COITT'A MESA -$115 to SIZ!. Blt, crpts, drps. Sl70/mo. 847_1207 53lMMl1 frplc crpt drp blUns AVAIL 3-5--T3, Duplex studio, 2-story town hOuaes. Elec· QUO VA.DIS Ill
I Br. Jlouses. Kids & Pt>Cs. 673----3690 Apts. Fuht. 360 STUDIOS & 1 BR's. tieani ttumP, patio, adultS 2BR, 1% ba, bltins & ref:rig, tric kitchens, private pa,'1s Luxury Carden Apts ="'""::;..-------$200-Big families or singles I -~--------e Full kitchen only no pets Ref 2354 Santa crpts, drps, prt patio, 1 or balconle1, carpeting, drn· J).dults Only·No Pets
tiNtil-fEIM . $125 2 Br. <l·plex. Da ni Point ok. 5 Br. 2 Ba. older home. Balbol Island e Heated pool Ana• Ave 673--0395 child ok, no pets. $190 perlea. Subtemmean park· Bac~Jor, 1 & 2 BR's,
1 child or singles ok. Crpts I,.. 3 BR 2 8 Car. Fncd. Ag!. Fee · e Laundry facilities • ""'"' ·• ' monthly. 548--8154. Ing with elevators. Optional FROM $135. ctrps & bit-ins ' ...... rge , Ii, drps, 847----1207 e ~-·i· · l.JU\.t:fE 2 BR. Carpets & maJd service:. Just north of 18992 Florida St. {% blk. W. · cpts, small yard. $235 mo. Beach Front 1 Bedroom 'r •IC'!' Ull Jtles drapes. Man It wtte. Infant REDECOR.. 2 Br. a Pt Fashion Island at Jamboree of Garfield & Beach Blvd)
F'ULLERTON • 4 BR. 2 Ba. Also large l BR $155. Call Westminster Pri patio, Parking, yrly • Free linens we l corn e • $13 0 Imo. w/gar. Quiet Mesa Verde and San Joaquin 1-Illls Road. 714 : 847--9448
496-7058 -400· South Baylront • T.V. A rnaid serv. avail. .,,.a--area. Qi>ts, drpa, blt-lns. T 1 pho cn•J ;;-=:-,,-,""'"-"~-~ $195. Shag crpls, fc>nced, $185-Slng!E!!I take notice! 3 • Bar-B-Que '1'IO""!..,"• lnlant o~. No pets $160 e e ne 644-1900 2 BR, 2 BA, $195. Adult
gar! Hvntln"gton Beach Br, frplc. crpts, drps, gar. C::ArthR~AG 2 ~R., f bale. Nr. e Phone 11ervl~ BAOIELOR. 1 " 2 .. Br 646-3786 0~ 545-0760. • • for rent&I information poolside garden bungalow,
Pets ok. Agt. Fee. 847-1207 ° ..,..y, ' ear Y ase a 1 Mile to ocean w/fum.. avail. Heated pool. near oef'an. J'rplc. lrg.
ORANGF: -3 BR, $120. Shag 1 3 BEDROOMS1 2 baths, H ouses Furn. or $275 Agt. 675--4000. $145 • SIG5 SU>een..-ASI up. _A~ulta. 853 ~s!s~· ~~-turm:;p!13i FOR LEASE patio. 6 Pool1. Sauna, Ten-
crpts, fl'net>d for kids & pets. 1 electric huiJlins, FA 310 Bllbol Penlmul1 BACllELO ..,_ • 645--11965. • Id ~nR aay-· 1 A eftlll\ nls. 846-0259 11-Unfur.n. R & l BR., pa........ frwya. Carport oi: ry. ~-,, · uvn pt • ....,.,., Also 1 B FUm Fro 1135
cosrA MESA -$140 -2 Br.
\Veter p11.ld. Kids & p<'ls.
heat, w/w carpets & \VINTER. 10 July Ut • % frplc's prtv. garages -$140 up spac 2 br/3 br 1%; ha facRlties. 998 El Camino, 2 BR-Near heach. $395. r. · m
drapes, double garage, Newport Seach block to beach 2 BR, lrest\ly Divided bath & lolll ot (KJOI, cptldrp. bltn. f~ No.l C.M. 546-0W. George Wflll1mson 2 & 3 BR. 2 BA. S160 up.
MIDWAY CITY • 2
l-iooi1e. $145. Fenced
child!
f d Id pd $235 decorated. 67r8531 closets. Rec. hall. pool & 1996 Maple, No. 1 ~ * * STUNNING 2 BR 2 BA RNltor Pool. Mora Kai Apt!!., l8881 ence • SC • ' · J.t'j LfNOO AVE. pool tables, sauna baths. 2212 College, No. 5 .•• 646-4213 Ga.rd APT Poot ' Rec * ... ,.70 * Mora Kai rE. of Beach ou
Bit per mo. Agent, 96~471 , NPw Bayvit·w homl' near 2 BAOIELOR apts on bay See for yourself. 17301 $l6frl BR. house-Perfect Rln en · • ~ Garlieldi 96l-8994
for or 546--8103, I N,H. Yacht Club. 3 Br .. 2% kfeal for retired. Yr. round. Keel.son l_.n. (1 blk w. ot shape I Poot. Gara' e. m w 18th 'St c M SPAC 3 BR 2 BA $209 Furn * ONE BEDROOM Ba 2 C11r gar. Prefer !eas· S65 & S'10/n10. 673-446'8. Bead!. l blk N. of Slater). tidults OYer ~-6t6-3'164. PL.EX. 2 BR 2 "BA: '"-1: UPSTAIRS, 1:11J ~n or Ava.II . 1'136i-A K e~ Is 0 ~
GARDEN 1GROVE • 2 Bit E , ' In~. \\'!JI arraniie furniture Y€:'8rly. 1 Bdrn) $175; 2 Bdrm 842-7848 UNflJRN 2SR. 1'9 bA 'd bl *1•d ""l""'• cpl, No pelt or children, Lane. 847..Q;(). I{ I ds ~. S145. Water pllld. xcellent lo'8on, 2 for qualifil'd tenant. Open S225; Bachelor $125 $135 -ULTRA NICE Apt 6 adults no pets. $150 610 "C': rps~. ~ N ~ • 28R, Ba It 1.i. Jse. $250 mo. welcome. Gar. Fncd for kids & pcts. cer g arage. Ca rpets, Sat/Sun aftn. Manhall Realty 6'lS-49Xl Pools. 4 ·Gardens. Sauna. J An • $48--9573. • w 7 ,._....,...· 0 pc ' . Yrly .. 6'fl-.18&9, 1517'11 W-2;-:A-,3"'=e"R-,$~150~•-1-,-M-1·1
Agt. Ftt. 5.17-3311 d ra pes & built-ins. MR. ROBINSON T . Pr1 · 84&-0259 ° n mo. ~· Balbol BJ\ldi, bb::k ' ""' ~
KE ITH SNIDER. 962 .. DAVIS REALTY 642-7000 Coron1 def Mir ,_~:111!1. smallv. ~~:_._ -t ATTRACTIVE, nu lB R •ONLY S145. includes 1 BR BRAND New ~anfront 1731 Elr:n ~A bank. LANDLORDS! c do 2 ·~· ~~ lBA. Adlll, no pell, 1970 IJ)t. bltna. copper -·· Condornlnium 2 Br ' Ila ,..,..,,,...-~· ==--4471 or 96J..21 07 on m in lums blks to B\~ Corona. Lii· ROOm.s Sll-50 per wk. Apt.I. Wallace SUS. 54.:o&IM J&'.v patio, all uW pd. $400/mo. Year 1•0 4 1 e: Laf\ma BNclt
We SpeclalJ:te in Newport • flDRM , 8 • 11 Unfurn. 320 Ba.chelor. $150/mo. Yenrly. S95 per month. 536--7006. 2BR. _.,1., ~ated, 1150 J.517 or 646-4934 _ -·. • Beach • Carona del M&.r • · -'" ll bltns, l adull, no pets. 645--1624. .,,,,.,..., ~ oi..-.v;n 1 BDRA1 ) blk horn It Lagunn. Our RP.nttil Ser· crpt!I & drpA, 2 <-ar garage. B' k B ••-2 BR furn. J169 I: $l59. Pool. $50 dt'poglL Avall now. No ** BEAtrrJFUL J & 2 BR. 2.=A..:.::3BRS:,;:,,~~2BA==s-1rp-lcs-be ch siM tnain
viee ts .fREE to You! Try IX'.slri\hl<' Glt·n Mar. Walk I C ll Y Costa ..,... Kids k pets ok. pet&. &15473. 153 Shalimar. Con~emPQTat')' Garden Apts. blttnl. l Yf.' Blk rrOm beh i,_ a 644-S-t?i :°~~1
Nu-View! 10 -~hopping, school~, nr BF.:Atrrtl>'UL Condo. 4 BR., NiCE 1 & 2 BR. TraUcn. S85 847·Qi0, ·9&1-7SlO 2 BR. Adultt, J» pets. BAY PatiOl'I, (rplc, pool. $1~, 1 hop.' I• 8:J3.8370/6f!).0245 u:::::'.:'.'i"i."'-'i.:.:.::::. __ , NU~VIEW RENTALS l>f'acli. childfl"n ok. $295· 2~ Ba. 2 car garage. & Up. Mature adult. 133 £. ~UtiJ Pd·Beech &chelor! MF..AOOWS APJ' •. 387. W. Call !IG7-o302 aft 6 New~rt S..ch
.613-«l30 or 494-3248 !l62-{i924. Comr,I. redK"Oratcd. Pool. 16th St. CM. 642-1265 Walk to water! A.gt. Fee. &¥ St. CM. 6l&-007$ NEW 1 BR. $170. Nr beach A NU ~ prlv bch A ;:;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;[
lARMING v 4! fl I 'n I u I a 4 t!~~. 2 N~ 'ri>:::b~1 ~~-ng $ ~~~-mAo~il ~ii $100' UP. N\<.-ely furn. I & 2 .:~:.OR APT. 1100/mo. DEIJC 2 BR.. 2 BA. crpta. sbou· ;i~"' ':s~b'i UC pM?r. 3 BR, 2 BA. $550/mo, WE ~AVE R E NTALS
d11picx (2BR J.BA), .11tove & Atlanta. Crpts, bll-lnll, ft.nc--~23'48. Monthly or Yrly. BR. Trailers. Adult~ 132 W. BAOtELOtt APT. $SS/mo. drps, dllhwllbr, pr. $160., E. " .M. !.~1J .. Ba. $495. 979-0631 or On or Mar thu beach. Yf!IU'r)'
refrtg. Yrly«tuJtHotTY. no «'d , S3l5/mo.. lsl a: Lut, $100 Wif»On, CM. 645--4530 * Call &16-87 * 642-ll74. ~ *2 B(t. 1 1M Mtsa Ve.Ne. Off'1:»U eves wkenck. A twnmer/trinta~ ~ ClOlt' to '110pp~ & clean. dep. A vial late Aprtl. '"'.:\lbol Peninsula BACHELOR Apb. Sl29. No 2BR. unf\lm $151),, earqe, L&rp clcata -kickt!d • EASTBL~. Deluxe 1 BJ\. Call for dftalh:. •
211 E. BalbOI B \Id. 96&-6782. N£W-Excepllonal V~ .. children or pets, 2129 Elden 1 BR. I~ N[_ar pool. '!Vlll no pet!I. ctibdm1 WeiOOl'flf!, $160/Mo. No pet.. 4. Poo'. A l.(;""f+> pets. U8(j, 6'T3-.3663
.Ph. cvet: 895--5822 . S225-Near pit'r & shop'g 4 Br. Rendezvoua on ocean fron t· Avt. A}!t. 1, CM ::::!n~ ~ mJ)Om1ble 64&-2!W4. G&H333 J.,81\. ~ Unfurn. UUL .Pd .. Call 641Hl1:t9 to lff,
2' u.Dr C
1
.M. 1
1
1
1
40
60
• HKi._Bd. 11LI01 .ok& 2 Ba. Ok ror f&mil k'.!8, aa1\ 2 BR. Condo. 2 BA, * LARGE l BR. 1'Um • ._11 H ti -... _--..... t BO· Af-'T. ovu Kar8i<'· NMo r.hl< llAl'tren, ,.,."'J pc0t•5.· 1$59 DUPLE¥1, .3 BRh h' 2. BA. At:
>'a'. m ocn · ·~ee! ~-singl~? _ & pet. Agt. Fee. 8Clt elt"Sn oven, 11ep. din rm. util paid. $135/per mo. No un n ner·.,_,r M•ture idultt Oflb!. &p ~ •• ~ No.' -bltn•., bl• 1., .. · rb )Td,
Rent .... Hou.. 979-MJO M7·1207 s u ode ck b a Ico n y. pets. 61'>1513 Bkr. NEW STUDlO l btk'l 1 $125. month, ~ ** 2 DR.. n«> MO. Carpeil Yr row:IJ, t..fl27..2382.
•LANDLORDS• 13 DR, 2 Bath+ Den. Good $370/m<>ntbly. (1) ~-BEAUT. FURN 2 RR. Bch .. dock • .an. wtr.' JI EHtl W. L'11 2 Br'• t.e~r-· One child Ot<-1 • .'!~bp;•.~-E·plcx,_J~·1'!~'!'!" .... ""iiiii~!l!ii;1 FRn: RENTAL SERVICE locatlon. $250/MO. Priv. Ptt11y. j ut11 Pd HtcL pool. Adll.I, oo J._I pool. _, Sll:I Bl ~--"••I """'•Ide ' -r"-""'--· ~ ,,.,, I:
Call 147•1Jn ' CAil 961Hl!'I. Wanl .ct """'°' . , . 6ITTiii pet-. 54H!OO. '21~: rm.:197T. "'"c. ' ,I\;: ;;n'o,r.;;-p!!I: ~ NMtl • "N "t Pllce IO odl """''"" tCl-S8iliJ) ' _!f=...!==j .. ~.====~~~ l ~---'.-'
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Apt>., "J>h ., lndlllfriol Ront•I 450 Found (frw Ml) 550 S.byolttlng Jenllwl•I Help Wenlod, M & F 710 ~le Wentod, M 1.f 711 Holp"W......i. M & F nt
Furn. .. Uftfvm. i17t Furn ... Unfum. m1------------------1
NOW RENTING FOUND a,.,, flul!J cat BABYSITTING In "" llome. ornCE -· 11 c. d. A e.u ,.. ,,.,..,,,, """1tlon Dr's Assm.t GENERAL ''2.; ~
Huntington BMth Hw.tlnlfon.... LAOU~~IGUEL :~: c":fdeO::ro~~ ~M~.area. =!..Y~_lnarea. uiGi:NTLY ~~::J:'Y,i!~~~~ ~~~~
e HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST ... !ID> SQ. fT. l UP. ~ ~ ~ S::y~ "Jl'., ~-M·Fi LendK1pl119 ' exp. oec. Apply In ....., a.ca -. -.-
SPAN ISH COUNTRY ESTATE L!VlN'G On San Dleao "-idenfity. su~....n. ~tl>Y ~ LANDSCAPING .NEEDED any aft or ""'· 29311 W. GIRL ..,_ SmoD -2 Acr'"' beautllul t f.k like IW'?OUDdin•a. CaU 831·1600 FNQ, small kftt.n, 'l'abby For unique & penonolliod • Cout 11'""· N.B. -. ~,...,. .... WU! Sunken pool. s~· LSp·-•-L 'ountainsp INDUSTRIAL Units lrom w/crooked tail 6: longi.sh BABYSI1TING, my home, 1t,yle ln landscaping in-00 YOU QUAUFY! train ~ "' lob re--~ ~ • SI.,..._ ... ~ co---L-•-bn v•-,._,__ • Meaa del Mar, reuonable. ~-<--plants decorations, & our crews are neat, )'CUl!8. qujremeab. can iJr llPIL
• Spacious Rooms • . •(1l!rate ""'"" room. • .. w -per .... ---·-· • ~. ~--« '1Hll<i4 ·-* MACHINlnt' A * ....,,._ "" •
•Walk in Closets~ ::-'*' ::=s.~ ~ mo..02:. ~~·CM. woek ..,_ Carpet Service ~es~ia;! ..Jl,j tpu':t~.-W1~1doge~~!c~ ~· lak ~.
· • Home like kitchen •-cabm' els ~ cor Uamnton & >'ND --·" ··••t t.-... I: Plant Care C.o. F'ree Complete know!~--of skilled -,. I' o o d °" N land s H B C.all : au..., ~ e ...,.'6 JOHN'S Carpet&:: Uphohteey estimates, 64&-7229 .. ,.... discriminating people. If v..-1 Bedroom Unfum. $165. Furn. $185 s..:91T:i or ~i.9 ' laaired ~ doR ric. a.ta Drl-Shampoo Jr e e Soot· aet-up&. you have pride of orp.abf!I' b' 1 pt om.:..
2 Bedroom Unfurn. $JJIS. Furn. $215 Meu High.~ red ei.auaro !Soll R<tanlan1s1. M.-ry Interim workrnaMhlp, can •'Ori< 6'4-""3
Townhouse 2 Bdrm., l~ ba. 1,400 sq. ft. MARTIN I. ASSOC. flea collar e:t 6. or Deo>o.,.rs • aU color P--n-1 "'--'ce w/oot '""""""" • •·an< HCmL llAID -lo r Furn ..,"" ' 968-5177. brlgbteoen &: 10 minute QUALlTY muoory work ••-••• ~• good paying p!lJ1 timf' \Kri:, hnu:1 ' pa, HoRl Lqml9.
• .-irv 500 DYER RD, S.A.. 6-8 mos old. ttmale White ~ bleach for white carpet.I. brlclt ~block walls. Patios 17511 lrvlne Blvd. APPb' betw~n 11.1 at Jten. GSo.CoutllWJ',LB e ALL UTILITIES FREE e CALL 545-M71 Boxer. <or · Bu 11 dog! SaYe your mDMY by saving a apecia.lty. 675-5370. #l IS Tustln tai Readier, 569 w. 19th St., HCM.JS>.*f»>Ek. a.1b 0 a
Walk to Huntington Center For lew 4600 Sq. fl 3 phue /German Sbart Hair mix) I me extra trips. Will clean P•lntlnt & 13g.5460 C.M. Pftrin 1 dl,y/'Wk. Mabft
ADULTS NO PETS ....,., foll celltnp, tun, Vic. Santa Ana -living nn., dini"' rm. " Peporhenglng Equal ()poor. Empto,..r ELECTRONIC 5IMill ,.. ..._ -LA QUINTA HERMOSA healed, Ooo1a Mesa. Call 9'19-5.164. ball Jl5. Any rm. $7.50, -.,.._ 1o ca... l -2 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I FOUND black & tan tiger couch no. Choir SS. 15 yrs. CUSTOM PAINTING .....,, ...--d> I c. 16211 PARKSIDE IJ:l (714) 847-5441 • New M-1 Space with Offite •tripe Persian with white exp. I.! what counts, not Inter/Elcter. Unfum. inter. AD TAKER TECHNICIAN t.'tc. 3 meals • dl.J'. KM'p 4 Blk. S. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach l.D>-ml ft 3 phue UV bib &: fat.. Yl4'y friendly, method. I do work myself. spec. price. Free color con-Fun time, mUBt enjoy dealing boclSll bNl A dean., )IQll be
• 1 Blk. W . of Holt to Parkside 2540-56 Fairview, S.A. near Atlanta 4 Newlabd, Good ref. ~1.{)101. suiting & est. Uc. Ins. with the publie. Company ~ Good re t 1 1 . I~ Owner: 646-1252, 644-2'l28 H.B. 536-m:t HOUSE OF CLEAN Won't be underbid. 642-f.l:ni. benefits. Apply In penon Good carHr opportwt-Room • boud + .,... of • 1---~ SI'ORAGE space available. Peneysave.r, Ia.t5 Newport • I h p.nd' S275 mo. Sead ftmlllle '° ~ ~ th 250 ft MAN'S Hamilton inscribed Pro!~~sa.rpeo .. ~.9!~lng No Wasting Blvd., Costa Mesa. Olty w t C ox Ring o.amn..t .Ad No. S. Ody I •---·f"R'"' llV] I -11,-1 ~1 mon • sq. , watch, 9th Sl beach, South ~ • U"tO-M.U• *WALLPAPER* ARE )-'ol1 employed & looking r•ng• ounty • Pilot. PO Bm. ID. Cmta
....-.......... <HU'"" Laguna. n 4: 97!Hi960 days Cement, Concrete When )'OU call "Mac" seerch & Menufactu~ Mea .._ · ll~mmmmm~~~ ·~ f " 1 Santa Ana (Jeent. Im for the big money op. Good 1,==:co,;::::===~~--I ~-----~~~ *"""' sq. l -' ' 548-l44t 64&-portunlty outside of your ing Company. HOUSEKEEPER -Company 11 near Harboi' I: Wamer. FOUND, fe:male Qihuahua, PATIOO, walks, drives. Saw, PAINTING & PAPERING • present job"r I have a starting s •l•ry & frinoe pttSided rroeck full time
Aptl., , . ;G~";;:'"'~lff;;;;;;:'°";;;;;Ron;;;;;t;;;;;;;:43;;5;1 Rl252tlpelr mWo. ~· .a£A vk22ndinitystNe~ m:~s~ ~~tere~~Ol'~tlace Inter.~.:_.~_,Exterior. U~"!-P:reghsttge position for .... ~u benefits. Milit•ry trade lady •/o:e«. 2 a.ice Furn. or Unfum. 370 en • t an1--·• .....,.. · · ed, 1.u:uu""' & guaran~ n t man 01· \l.'Oman. va h 1 col'-tr • ~ l 1: 11 I ---------642--0512. CU~M CEMENT WORK Call Hanis, 642-4558 54<r-2270 ac 00 o r ..... ... ~ ~ Must
Self $tor,1~,1rage1 QUIET, mldd1e..agl!d em.-FOUND Alp.an b o u D d, Dr'ives, .WALKS, Patios, PAINTING & Papering, 20 ASSEMBLERS for rmaU t'lec-Ing. Minimum 3-5 yNn be dqtndehW. $3DD, -.d
your next
apt. lllllD¥r
@~~
The greatest rea1on1 for 'moving to Oakwood Garden
Apartment• are the renla.
starting a.a low as $135.
And here are 9 othl1 great .....,,,.,
Mini W•rehouses pol)'ed man with gentle female. Call 9 AM to 2 PM. Pool decks. Don, 642-8514. yrs In Harbor area. Uc/ tro-mech. manuf. co. Perm work experience. Im-on exp«. Priv rm. Hll
Vartoua siies from $25/mo ~ ~tswi~ re.i;~ ~ of Lost Pets. CUSTOM Concrete Work. No bonded. Rels, funi. 642-2356. &: f/tlme. Must havt' good mediate employment. Harlxlar. Call &Km7 ._
U lock·lt -U keep the key yard. F"refl'r Eut Costa job too small-No Delays. PROF. Painting, also roofs., dexterity and, vi 1. I on . Send resume of uper'9 8t& 050 '-' appl.
On site Mgrs. 24 hr &CttSL Mesa 642-5083 YOUNG male long-haired Free est. 638-3325. accous. ce:il. inter/exter. Nonsmoker req d. No exper. enc• & salary requi,.... HOUSIXEEPER. E :11p • d ,
No move in -orange Ir: white cat, Oea col-Child Care Lie/Ins. Free en 645-5191. nee. Very pleasant sm. ro. p O Bo lOTil Ref Jtaa. Salary OfBl. No move 4ut fees RE'I1RED lady, 1 Br San lar, vie Pearl & CentL'l', I . Call 642-8584 for appt. S.R. ments to x • , Wallftronl: Jrik:.,..t ee.ch
Security patrolled Clemente furn apt, up to Laguna. 494-0402. CHILD . PROF. pamter, honest work, Engineering, 834 ProducUon Santa An•, C,1lfforn1a, boml!. D&1iltll .,.....,_
Hamil $150. w/util. care -Anytime -reas Int/ext. free est. Pl NB 92711 An E I Oppor SJ6.10091~N.,..ew~. HB Mn. Grant 49'1-:as:l. MALE puppy blade & white Licensed. Good references. Rei.!'. 548-2759, 551-1455. ·• · " • qua •1 ..:::64HCl==·:.,,.=~-~-
"1 ~ (a~ +-5 mo.). <Part Hot meals. . AVON SAYS t unity Employer. HOUSfXEEPll\ rap w 4
WANTED: Laguna HOUR HmJcy !J Vic: Hamilton nr. 963-<lm w?-~~-pa~~· i1 s. Your Own Boss'' ELECTRONIC dWdml. J ill .dil. Wibts
STORAGE GARAGE FOR w/'riewc:r ~Uif!iO. Pomona.. 54S-9l». OllLD Care any age ney home~zliJ 896-4962. )'OUl' Earn an income of you.-own, . to won at tMiml ,mill
RENT. Vie Costa Mesa, nr. ------·---1 FOUND beautiflll ma I e Laguna Hills home. Hourly . . right In your o \Y n ~rs exp~th Pal 1 ~ alM h Jlld. lfl-:ID.
AJpha Beta. $25 mo .~~~~~~~~~~ICollieaboutl'iSyearold or'W1!ekly.Nearpark. DISCOUNTPainting.Omun. nelghbol'hood.BeanAVON trOnic• co. 639lHOUS»<E8PEllldlJa• ~~.car---. I ~ vk. Saddlebadcarea lSahle1 58&-7412 !'.,,..~7~93lnl &: Exl ~~~otatlve. can now: We1trnln1ter Ave .. week. ...., 01 a I: ~!Mo ,_ a~:=~~ , • collie) M&-2932. -JOW'"IV'I iu•.r • ..._........... ol' 540-7041,. WHtminl~l', 894-3301. trOllillJ .-. m-ftCI w ...,., "' ----· "''u * Cont -~ ~-FND: White dog medium r-rvr Pl I p tch R I BABYSITI'ING In our home. Ex·-~lvo *--,.tory I.!~='"'----~==· I
Beach. 646-3i87 aaytime. ~------~;;;I •'-~. ' --haJr ·•-Ogle & . •• er, a ' epa r 6 Id 3 U beha·-• -u• -E p-• ~ uc:u u..i.-e. "11.: yrs ay. we -vcu Fee paid rio you have ad-ff O U SE KE ~
SINGLE Garage, Costa Mesa ~O Ana Ave., C.M. Addi:::ick &: So~ling *PATCH PLAS'I'ERING children, ages 5, 8 & 10. minimatlve ability• Presi-~ BQJ 1 -yr. Momma
$3) .... -1 or ""~1174 flnonals 530 ......,...,.... . 673--6041 549-21 All types. Free estimates Near beach. Might oonslder dent of research rtrftt need!! W.. W lilwS. ~ 2 ma. •. ~•.J "'""" FOUND 2/24 white Jong * 70 Call 540-6825 live-in. 494-5323 aft 7 pm. your good skill "Salary to Rda. ~ ell.. ,
swtmmlrtQ pools
health clubl • Office Rental Let this ad cltange your male. V1e. Azalla &. Shasta remod., addit. 20 yrs exp. um ng Thurs eves. 5-10 pm, own Helen Hayes M()..8)56, OJast. INSPECTOR · * HINDU SPIRITUALIST * haired recent1y ~, tered JACK Taul'1fie Repair Pl bl BABYSI"ITER needed, Mon-$800. Also fee jobs. Call ......
tennis couna, pro&. pro lhop
bllllarct•
froe SUndar. bnmdl acUviUee d rector .
golf driving range
pony room
Plus beauttful elngJes. one
and tw"o-bedrooma. Fu r~
nlahed·& unfurnished. Sony,
no Chlldren or peta. Models
open dally 10 to 7.
Oakwood
Gardea Al>ortma>ls
Newport 8w:ih SOvla
11th at IMlll ..... ,. ---........ .,.., , ... -FOR Rent Yearly. Furn or
Untum. '2 BR, 2 BA. Ba.y
Duplex. No garage. AduJta.
.. 673-2'706. 223 19th St. N'S.
S•n Jun C•pistr•no
Prestige ExecutiYe .
Waterfrant Olli:es
a to DlO ft. Mo. or t.eUe.
Qualified tenants onJy. .
BAY LIDO BUILDING
3700 Newport Blvd., N.B.
Ph: UM.a Cevola '675-1220
whole outlook on life for the F.V. 531-437'1. Llc'd. My Way Co. 547--0036. L.R. C1I1S PLUMBING trans needed. 642-lUI al Penonnel Agency, 2?90 Min l ,_,. ap llllpKtiaR :i:~. ~=~-~~ ST. Bernard, approx .• 1 year Drafting Remodels &· Repe.ln. Water BAKER'S HELPER, lull H&rlx>r Blvd., C.M. l*f' · t ., mecf*wo pUtL
AM·lO PM. 492-9136. 'g9034, old. Vlc. 19th Sl~ beaten, disposal!!, tumaces, time. Bavartan Bakery, 658 Exper. Gd-coat s.tllS ..ut. ~ mtt&<t-
312 No. El Camh1o Real, Avf!., Costa Call PLANs-House!!, Remo d, dshwuhn. 642-6263 MIC & El CanUno Real, Tustin. Touch-up. mmt. ~bsbib a •
San Cl ~'1758. Room Additions. $50 up. B/A. Complete Plumblng 2l 35, A w w•...-.:.. St--la•d Pre. emente. i' OU N D b 1 a Ckiiila le 557-()626 557-9695 Service. BAR MAID. to eves &: Engine 1natallen ed.Stiftl<iL., !Iii i RutlDr
ATl'RAcnvE )'OW' expert c.ockapxt Deal' BWlWd & Dra-rin -·PLUMBING REPAJR B-1 d~ 2:62 !'~~rt I: Bhd. Simi& Ana, CL 90l2 dancer will teach )'OU the Elli&. Fountam_y~_!ey , ,.... No jo~miall v · "'-Ull .. mesa.~ Hardware Insta.llen Eq .. a l Opportoni t J
latest steps. call Norma Fetn&ary 15th, 961Hf>115.. TAKE Down-Re-hang $2.50 * * ~ * * BOAT As!!embler I: lhop ERICSON YA.Clll'8 Employer. ~213) W-7921~ (.213) FOUND young German pel" ~I. Fa.st Serv. DRAINS unclogged'. $7.50 work -Mutt know sallboal.!I ..... 1 INSURAN<E,=::;o=~=-.... ~---7-Gld=~ She~ pup. 2 collars 64Z-6824,646-Z27. Sewerlineto100'-S1.S. $L8S hr. Apply a! EXPER.!Jquordeft.Mmt put time. Kmsled&t: ~
TUSTIN/SANTA ANA FOUNTAIN OF Yount Pmn area. 615-04S2 aft 5 Electrical * 549-2SO'J * Landen.ft, Mon-Fri, lG-5 have knowl......_ o( ~ .l ~ fire a t.o m e
Prime k>cati«n Save $100 per Cell Therapy I: J}uropean pm. Mn. Parmenper 526 East AU.on, Santa Ana. domestic *· -Ple&Sant owarn ~ "1(:lfa1. '£1..
1IXMl aq ft. til ~ meak even. Technique for' health &. I-'======'"--EL EC'I'RICIAN, licensed, Sewing/ Alter,1fi"'1S B 0 0 K KEEPER F/C. wurillng' c:ond l-Xlnt. Cl'Dml awwa llmitJ, ..U.,
Nu delux au.itell that have beauty. TI4 -~ Ext. Lott 555 bonded. Small jobs, maint. Alterations-642-5845 capable of procedures, bellll!fita. Opportunity kr ad-optQ. •1._ .. _., .,...
everything except tenants. 8. Bblc 3673, TIJtWia. Mex. & repain, ~ 20 delign & 1 n t er lace V&TK:t'ment. 56-4422: ~ 1 w:a. Jnial:,.
We'll hW't until we rent PROB'~· ~--·. ~--SAT-While -~--ool-· Neat, accurate. years exp. aerviee Good benefill!I Xlnt. ca. rw ....., te e.n ,._
uc..m '~ ... ,......,....,. o...uii.. •--, ''""'-~... \r,.., ~-G•r:denlng Tolovlslon R~lr · EXPERIENCED Fry Oxit. " -another«m aq ft. So.e're lident, 1ym p•tbetlc ..... i:ri:• ... ..._ .LlroN ... _ location, ~ area.. Full or part time. Knmerw N1lllllr'-m 1a.
'1lihl"I< the rent til tbe11. .....,,...,,. oounoelln1t. Abor-Placontia, CM. Reward PROFESSIONAL gardener, -B • ~-I & Sa I ~::,i;'"n,.~ .~.,!'.!· Colonial Kitchen. SU W. INlllllWDl -a • By mooth er leue. Courtesy tlob I: adoptions-ttf. 6t&-9463 or Co 11 e ct. tree work. pnmlnJI':. l'prink· ring ,, .. m n ve lnoo-833-2971 .._.. .... ......,... 19th st. CM. Cloeed Sun A PWilaW:id.' ~ -~
to broiters.. 838.Q500. APCARE • 642M36 1-~ Donna. Ien, cleanw jobt,Tundscap. J,lfll Call US for Service • .,., · Holidays. ...._,, Ollllla Ilea w. ~.'-"D"EL""'UXE"'=""o='•='-.= .• =(:=es=-.,...IPREGNANT! Th inking MALE Irish Setter found ing.Georgt.fWG..5893 • REPAIR ALL MAKES BOX boy wanted, Morning EXP'D or trainee NC Drill 60CiDD
GREAT LOCATION, adj. abortion? Know all the fa.eta vicinity Indianapolis & COMPLEI'E eerviee al!IO CSEA Member -Reliable hours. Richard's Marftt. operator for PC Board drill-jj"';i;;;
Allr p orte r ~ A first! Call LIFE LINE-24 Sandpiper. Hu n ting t on clean-up jobs new 'lawns Orange Co. Since 1961. 3433 Via Udo, 1660 Ing. Nite shift. Apply 17195 '911
RHtaurant. 1 Rm., up to hn, 541...fi522. Beach, W-3515 days, planttna", exp. 'reliable. n-ee Rice's TelevWon Sales A MacArthur Blvd, Newport Skypark Clrde Unit K. Ir •
2,W) 11q. ft. -PALM &; CARD READINGS 91D-I034 e'\'es. est 9fit.0832. Service. 1375 Logan Ave., Beach vine. ' ~ PERSClftlL
NO LEASE REQUIRED ~ells Put, -~ SUN eve M. gray/blk -., . Coot& Mesa. U Block S. of CASHIER _;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j CD>lM"tt~ lnulled. occupancy. See at Future (213) 694-1350 r..n .. _....pe ca' • Tip tail wht EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. Baker.) Open 6,..days, S.5. ATTENDANT . -~• * 2 BR CXJNDO w/pool. 2112 DuPon• Rm. 8, Irvine ., -"' ...,, ., . ' Complete garden •a er v. 546-6002 fll"lllft $1*1 mo or lease w/optlon ., •. lie. Eaat lBtb I: Irvine, 04, Kam a la n l , 646-4676, We will train mature, well· M1U -...._ P'a'D to b!J¥; ntA loan. Aft 6 pm 833-..m:J 9 To noon. ALCOHOLICS AOOIO'DJOUL SCS-2837. 642-1337. Tile groomed lndlvidual to work l"EE. IU l~~-!'~~·~<96-6999!~~~~~~1 ·~ ~~ :=-Phone 50-7217 or write PLEASE help find Female EXPER. Japanf!se GardeDl!r. CERAMIC TILE NEW & night .Uft (10 PM to 6 AM) hU1 lbDpa avail. .J'rOm P.O. Box 1123. ~ Mt!sa. lr1ab Setter, .Ans Sarah, Complete yard ma Int, remodel. Fn!e est. Small in our new Coin Op. aer· Announcing ~ $80/Mo. Ideal tor book SwingiQg llil1eles Rewal'd . Lost HB. shrubbery, trees, Free est 2obs weLcome. 536-2.Qi. vice station in Costa Mesa. I -I & '""'· .~-"IY card ..... C.U ''Loeb" U l'l'L S36-1IS850. 64>--0347. Good startlni aalary & ben·
Trlol-.. ~!!
***Sr. l!Joc ,_ ln $12 A
E1oc. SU.. """ lo $12 K -ActJSllllllSllK ,-~ KEY-3344 SUN 2 u1-ladies efits. Apply in penon btwn 11~------' etc. 425 Db St. NtwpJl't · • ......,., room LAWN Servicr, mow, j!dge, I l[Il] 10 AM & 2 PM at 295 E. 17th
Be.ch. 6G-8S3l. Young couples. 13-35 + gas ltation Hun~f:'"" vacuum. Reskl, coii\ni'I. "''*' I i I St., Costa Mesa. Ask for DESK .4..~ available $50 548-3'43 or ~ ter. %13: 9M-435l t. Tree WOl"k, pruning, nl!W .~ 1 . f' Rusa. Rooms 400 mo. ww proride fundtu:re ~ pm Reward. laW'bl, aod, reu. 545-290. I '-..,., ---,,.---' ---====--
ROOMS 115 wk up wlkit !:'> at 15 mo. ---Sociel Clubs S3S PLEASE! SIOO rnd, 2Blk c ... tlvo Gordening GECNAS. OHFIEFRICE wk ~ apll. Oilldm &. pet availalll.!. 17875 Beach Blvd. M/toy poodle. lost nl. Lndscpng, Sprlnklers, Malnt Job W1nted, female 702
&ection. 2376 Newport mw. Hunlinlbm Beach. 6C-4321. 11 Y'l'l want Quantity ~/531r2170 no ques-Yard cleanup. &16-1072 AAA Flnancla.I Corp. otten
CM. 548-9755, 64f>-.3967. l.8lS WESTCLIFF DR. NB DON'T CA1J.. US! ~=-~~~-~--C'°.M"'"'° JAPANESE Gardener . NEEDha·--•~~ a0~.-~e!_.~_e oulltanc:Hng opportunity lor Lux. New ~-r-~ Of 11 lt'• Quality LOST vie. Tustin Ave, . Co pie ·--'-......, • ... ll.JUQI "'"""" uvu....::-bright beglnner. Start $350. 2 Rooms for rent, $90 mo. ....:u.a. ~ucu -You're looking lor blk & whtte female pt m ti! ,._"'"'"" ..:: Ian oonipanions.' Home-Call Jan Page 540-6055,
Women, kltch prlvl. Balboa, fke Suite. 105 Ill· ft. pound Dl&:.'OVER H,..,J,y """• reward 548-4433 cleanup. Free est. 642-llO'l. tnak~ Upjohn, 547-6681. Coutal Penonel Agency,
Nu duplex. 675--1.183 morn-Door, front &. bed:! entr. DISCOVERY ~ ·~ co•~~ La • -Harbo Blvd CM . Ample prkng 5C&-958S SM.AU. lemale siamese lost lncMC.o"""' w n ..,. o...EANING vall. .o1:iu r .. . , inis. . . 'NSomething Ebe" Co. Verd Gardening service. Hauling women a CHllD care needed for
ROOM & BOARD ;.. ..;,..,.. 1617 WESTCLIFF ,._,. ~I\ 1:1~ .. .,.,._!:!.,/\Mesa e & elean-up Jim 548--0405. Mature, own transp i: _,_, ... .......... ........,: n-Frt .w am-10 pm tu.: """'".w · lunch. Experienced. wo.,...ng mothl'r, wkdays. l
quiet home. 12!M 91. ft. Crpt, air cood, n~ 213-387-3393 ~=-~~"'7'~,---;-: JAPANESE Gardening & 870-8444. boy 6 yn, 646-1022/644-8800
----1\dQib--Secy.Om!. ....
~ -~~Ofc lo--°"' .. . . Qodt-.. ....
New Lite IndustrW
Division For Womea
Gm1 Ole-LA. tD -s.on-. ~ .. -Elc. s..,. Blltoc'I .. -Cammi.---NMM lmmodletely ~ G.O. " 111!11 Free I: Fee ftsitba 488 & ITtll <et ....... ) Of
""" _...., ample pq, utU, janitor. N'"'""' .... 11 •• .,.......,.,_~ LOST-very old I em a I e Se · Co pl 1 k >l'W""~ ..5(132 .......... _..,,. ........... _..._.,,, Orlhuah VI Eide & rviee.. m e e wor ' HOUSECLEANING fast & Oerk Typil"l AllO
BALBOA Ialand-Men $1.l.SO Baumgardner #!04. 541 . Delmar.~/28. ~ n • clean-up. Free est. 968-230l. clean. EUicient' -ex-Temporazyo-part time Jl••fal F'a:•.wt
Week until June. Share TV DESK "*" available ~ ..--------, General Servlces pert~. The Irvine Co. seek 1 Tr•lnees For
Sulte:l:M --)f; •• "" •
rm & kitchen. 675-3613. mo. Will provide tundture I Lell ..r ftulll j[g) 893-7913 typllit/llle clerk, for tern· Llte lndustrilil Work Tr•lnee
ROOM for rent, SfKI, per mo., at $5 mo. Annrc!rb:lc llll!5'Yiee I I~ REMODELING -carpentry. --~TY~~N'OG~--porary part time job 5-8 $511 + c.nmlaian ~~ bllc trom beach. Furnish-available. 222 Forest Ave., · ..,.... ,.,.,........... . By contract, job, hrly. M. . Pl . hour per day for a1>-lndustri•I S..lnt We wd an qareaiw, ma-
ed. G75-6441 Lqum. Beacb, tM-Hil6. . . Johnsen Construction Dana Reas. rate!!, qwck service, proximately 3-4 months A Wire Wrappen hft man wbo • ~ ot ruu. SERVICE Found (frw M11) 550 Pt. 49&-5TI7. ' free pick-up " de!. 66-8850. heavy llling and typtna, typ-deiaDal •/the public 1: hu
DELUXE, prlv. bath & en· We1tcliff 8"i&dinn HANDYMAN, Carpentry, Jobs W•nted, M & F 704 ing 50+ words per min. Call man•ct r P Hal Mmt:
tranee. No amoki!!n. Maid Corner w-~•• Dri·.'! • FND black f B1·-t. a.1.1 A-Room -----'----644-3389 between 9 and 4 l"jection Moldiftt be Gftl' _. _ ___. ~ · 6'1>0310 548-7197 Q;\gLLI ..... « · e. puppy. ...,.;a., l"'IUU"' 1 Sliding patio doors, paUos, --·..:u. -·
aervlce. ' · Irvine BIYd, Newport 3 mo, okl. On Fairview rd. REMOOEIJNG patio coven kitchen, faucel.!I, switches, APplART~~·1: ~ ;;pm=·=_,,.,-,,-:-.._,,.,-,.,,-,-e Many usignmenb in~~ ~ ~ ~.
ROOM w/ Fl'plc. Prl ba. Beach. Mr. Howant66i101. lltllt Safeway CM. 546-15.f7. le earpeotry. 'No jobs too etc. 543-<1..16. ~i.. ~ ..... ~~~ lo a..ERK, Liquor Store, Newport Beadl, Irvine • .3llD ~ Jeaft. pUl ..-J:laa • ~ 6':..~ R~E/side. Deluxe Nn-port: Office FND: BllMhort haired pup small or large. Bf'1-8372 or HAVE toolt. rrucl: & talent ornrBeacharea fi83...461T preferably married, steady taAna&OlBtaMesaueu. pronc ....._ ~ ruru.~· room, ~~ ~ ~ ~ :.t:. ~. ~~Id vie. ~by•ittl ~: ~b ,!.:t = Hele Wanted, M & F 710 _!3;._""_s1n._&0_c.u,H.,un;;:t'°,.1ng1on.,' _•P~P_tBe_•_ch. •Po&1~1!.t ~ • t ~..t".;' _:•::. =n. C:U !t~ro: 1 n I· Rea1cpnnlca Corp, 6"66700. FOUND ladiea watch area ol "I _ Apt/Bui. 675-5211. COOK tnp. Weekly ~ CaD s-.
=~~~~---= DJ Sq. ft. 01ftce $$. Bannlng 4 Bu!!bard strftt BABY SITTING RAIN Cutten In 1 ta I l ~. A Better temp poaltion Pantry ~fan w/great exp In a,..._. »-15.
Guest Homo 415 ID> Sq. ft. Office. Kil 96S-'llrl0. My home lunch~ breakfasl Quality work. Reasonable U ntly 1.,.. lnod ope.-ation. Call 206l 8 ,_, __ 11 Ctr. Dr. ~--per ---tiu , __ , .... _,' El T • .c F-e-•-·tes. ~2208. , l'CJ• ,.__f F'red TI4-644-1700 uv•..-.. ~ ... .-
* P I R * AB&. ...._. FOUND: I u~.....:u. Ol'O, L<!Ule .. "., llu.;u.tl ;,uo-........ ' • I I -1~1 u.. new ca· -. ... tbt: r v-:,~ oom ~ Mea. •, &lfr2130. Irish Setlf1' Forest area. 586-5900. Hauling Needed COOK. Xlnt wages &: rv"" -'" DAILY PUDT.,,. a. m1: a
Lad M OmCE 1p&ce I: soi1es Call 979-6364 LIC"D Day care, 7am-5pm. l I ---''------I pleuant wortruw co n d . I '":!!'N~'~· ~°""""~~Co.~~-~:!!"l!...j ~ ft1119 ud .._
A=ato't.t . Y ~ood an awll. by RM!niclP Ave. FND: Irish Setter vSc. N.B. I Chlld, wkly. Xln't care. GET RID OF UNSIGHTLY UnskHled Mesa Verde Conv. H01p., 1: F /C OQM"K PER nat lndadl! ,........ ar • nu UOUs • 1Ut OWce. Z1S RiYenide. 81S-9643 BarborlBaker. S.-1539. TRASH & DEBRIS $12 661 Center St., C.M. 548--5585 B ~ EE dellwwwtsc. TWqtttw is
Nice •• ~~.~~.--c60J3<7"'='· :-'·....,---,,,.-.,...,,-·-u Id! I ~ LOAD COLI:. SfUDENT CUSTODIAN Fo"m!""'1oca· ~Wulln ~ ""'""!'-~We-~ .-... ~ ~·~ WATER .i.w ollloe "'11e Need a "Pod"! Placo an ad! -~ e tem• • • oa--·· 5'H4is, . * ASSEMBLY -= uruK -., ---
SEMI private RoOml, Menor w/coot. rm. ca-. drpt, Util. 32' VAN tor abort furniture * PACKERS Full time. Experienced only. cobempl0ex ~~· ... G~ t!'h4:.·.:ev= ~ ..!:: Women. XI~ n u t u r I o u 1 i Rcu mrt. 2«I) W haut. &: garage cleaning. Apply Maintenance Dept., ne lJ.. .-.ary ..., .,....... A
I nc. . ' • 1862. $155 PARK NEW P 0 RT Abo fee jobs. Call lklen Hunthc .... 8Ndt -....
meals. Comp et• c. re. Cout Hwy. -Trader's Parad1'se· 540-'"o~ when & where APARTMENTS nomer of Hayes -· Coutal 17, Y• -be ... ol GU-9Z1ll. SAN .Tuan Cajilttano, -GEN. llau!Jng. Tree/Shrub w " Jambo'ee & s.n Joaquin "'"°""" Agency, 2790 -117 J PM lo
V.utlon Rentals 425 bldg, profmlonal sulU!. , trim. Gar A yd cleanup. you want! Hilb Roed, Newport Beach. Harbor Blvd., CM ~ Elcpa'5::eJ
.lndll'ect UgbU,., Ul8:I fin. 1 • Elt. 839--2303, s!i7-6904. ~-IUed • U-.J..'"-' boys °"" pr (or It 1. PALM Detcrt TeMls °"" air ...... 213: -Eves. Ines ln"'"•lm DELIVERY of DA IL y ~ ~ -2 BR tsW> SKIPLOADER A dump truck ,., PILOT, SUNDAY ONLY, lo Focl°".1' Help. domtnium. • ou 1 ** ()ttlce " s:tn In amaD v.urk. eoncn:1eo. atphalt Personnel Service newspaper carrle.n. Re-cau 64HO.K. KtIOIDf llittptt, am.Ir.
dlag VU:........ adjacent ~ lh>o'I oertet, Sola I: Be.II, t• , sawing, bretlldng. 846-TllD. quln!s the use of a •Sl,tlon mabft. Me.a V«de 0..... !!!f"~ ";;;dum~y i.e. U.S. a.tm · 1mes HE1.P 2 married •tudeo... 17511 Irvine Blvd. waaon or van. Con!a~l Mr. FIBERGLASS,...-. Must -al ~. C.J<. ~· COM llc r; ft •= hauling, movtll8. ya rd #115 Tustln Harty Seeley, 3:D Wat 81.)' gel ooal, mold 4 ~ LA.UNI>Rf.S..l tD l. llem.
Rentals lo She,. 430 .~.~.(.-~alt~--·-~ dollars cleaning. C.U Art 541<-IM.l' IJl.5460 s1.. eo... Mosa. =Frt_Ai>PtJ~t Sl6 East Ve.de ~-._,_ ta
-.u _.. .... w, ~'"° YARD; garage cleti.nupa. Equal Oppor. Employtr DENTAL ASSISTANT -Alton Santa Ana. Calif. CeRI' Sl. OL 519 UC
l CW. needed lo _,, 2 LEASE (}->, ""'lhl co.ta Remove trtto. dirt, Ivy. E:<fd-I G~l office. No FRY COOK LEGAL SECY, ""' .......
lJR, 2 BA apt on BIL llfea loc.. 1: ;Ji MOO aD Drlvewya., gradlng. 847-2668. Acctg Clrk Jr, to $500 Sat a Fashion l1land, N.8. Over ~ Must be dean .l tralw al. Newpmt 0...-.
Pen"'-$100/mo '1 r I y . -(er put) Alt. ~ FAn!ER & OOf'{S, CrM Accounts 'P/1t Llaht a · 644-1426. neat Apply in pl!tlOft. SUrt &t&-GZI '
6'1t5180 lullnw Rentll 445 BEAtmJ'UJ.. medkal bid., TRAJLEJl for ear or PU. WOl'k. truh, yard & gar. perleoce. Call Lorftlne DENTAL . Offlct> m&nage.r. A S1rlo!.n. 930 w. Coast LJCDmD fin A: ~ MAN, ~ yn old, wants !Oft'leS' loc:atlon, F'Ul.J...ER.. MJ'C. 21' trailer. Will trade cle~up. Free est. 842-8182 We1tcUlf Aareta:J~. cheer tu l, Hwy NB. aotidlan ar ..,ab. WeU
i mate to.ah.are 2 Br apt, STORES J'ON. Ezc::banse for land, new 1tlf cont. ~r. val. Ho 1 1 Pttlonncl Agtnc:y mature \lo'Omn.n tntet'Hted in ' · ecr.hllii!!tJed flna. °'1:r' 2' ~ llJrbor watstn>nl. Maia st, Cl:lwt)vda~ eqWtJ ps,ooo. Roy J. Arn~ s:s,7115, tor ca.r. or ww ad-utee Hn 119 1m1 E. Edinger, S.A. xlnt opport\lnlty. eu.y 2 Dr. GENERAL >'"'" M ~ Co. Said
·_mo. 83&-3'50or5134018 tna 5'lora avail at mod-ton, 41M-n&G. IU&t b1J. 0( value. 9f9..688.4. HOUSE OF CL EAN <Mark m O!nter) otnce. Dental e:xptt prerd. , ruumm~ m Qe 'N at
sntAIGHT mai. z to 35 tO erate rml:L . HAVE 'es J.'Wd Country LARGE ocean view lot ln Floors, windows, walli, car-542-1836. 83.)..6890, Tustin. No. tril). Dd.)' Pial. P. 0 .
shore -2 BR ... , Balboo BALBOA INH Squln SOatloo w..., • '72 l..quna Beed> with ll500 of pe" & mp<s. 1 y,._ ""''· Accounll R-i•ebi. DDITAL Sec'1'"Booklceeper. OFFICE ::..-°""" -Cal.. Ni. Call &mS" dl!¥L lQ5 Mato 9t. Vtga StaUon Wa,gon. Both r;, lncludtd. WUl trade ~ er 646-2527. ~·1ne manufacturing firm ~r. or , aollep, Call l~~~t:,.rem"°: PRDIE =~catlon. ~~n.w==mo&d •=or TDs. or?. Dedluted Cle•nlns =rt~~vtd~wl!!~: :ic Help. Geofae CLERKS ~~:':St!: .~!-ml aft 8. Oo'llfltOWn Cmt:a M e.1•. YOUR ltOJlad home 2\6 ac. * WE DO EVER·VTl:llNG * Input. Call Jan Page, Allen 8)'1&.nd Aatney, lOl-8 , ~-+' I'&. _.. W·~m. Rtllable --air --~ , bclrm -1 hr -bell Trllde Trust J>tod• Rtfs..,..... cot. 646-2839 5"0-GOCl5 Coastal PenoMcl E. 16th SI., S.A. !M7.-. All OH'-Skll'--...... -' -n. ·-n -XI.NT HOUteCleanl"" " .... ncy,' 2790 Harbor Blvd., "'-.: "' ~ w Tl ill n-::.te J\"='~~ ~.' A~ =-=-,.:;•~ it:e~ ny037.0wnTrtn1pofift11on C~M. 0i!c~M~bl~lf C: EARNMNfru-;~mrUS! =:e.~~8::
1"0!1IER wtl cH14 -SEP. C """" bldr + pr, -· <nt) -1248. 83:HIGO + -* AC'COUNT!NG Cieri< for ex. detaU dr&wl'CI, Some PC ! CHAMPAGNE l2!ll, ll<wpo1l -. 1Ji14 lho -for"""""""· ~ .... dr1JI, .,,. NU .. Pl ... San ,_ --Like to tndef Oar Troller'• LM COMPIE!'E HOUSE -publilhlna co. Good can! cMv<lo..,.ot. l1W-tflOO TEMPORARY HELP -ti • -
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v=c::· cad 1'Wlllr11 Rn or M2-&> IO 111 an nu lbop center. 5 lll8 * 646-5943 * ~ * t llftnt and accurste. 35 hr tact Al ~~. ~~ 1:t rr.a ti = • ... lSJ,/Mo S.'!!ITI -· 125fl, ""'-fUll, wll dlll l bllt --Is lor ""'' CLEANING SERVICES. i~ltt ·mus! be lharp, tn-mo. 2--l YTI ~--= 1 -
-· r.flllll ..,.,_ , ..,.,~-6-w-1 ---· Pon4,.. 11m11, 1ar-1-...... _. ~-BAUIOA. ISLAllll sroltE 125,tilCI .. , for ""1 -5 dqs LADY wsn" -•<'111 -~ !0< lnl<!l'Vlew Call !:!!!.Ll9..Ji: '::~=~~~=!~~~~~~~~la;o~O~~-~~~li-1
l-t M-• ------·----------·l' = M!-'3831 ' :..wtnii Adi ... ~567ll 51lneo, 5.\&j.Ml'51ucb. -I -· e, CJ..UWOW ......
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DAii. Y .I'll.OT ~,Mlldil,1973
a u• j I~!-,,, .. I~!''''.' 1~~~';5~; ·~~~·-~i1~·~,~· ~~~I~-~~~~!~!~·~·~·~~~,!~ ~-M~-~-J1~S 1~~~~~=·~U~~
...._W ....... M IF 7lt Help Wonted, MA I' 711HelpW...,...,MII'711HelpW ....... MII'711 AJp!: e 112j1 •• 110 ~ tit J Ll-, ! Times, $iiiiBoott. _, IUI
~~ ORDER DESK -~~ ':.'Q u~ Needed -LIQUID.m<lll 9IW!l * ... u-N * MED ...., O>c1ou1-"''· cOME a GET 1T
•• I
Sharp Jiil with Din and/or n r , 0 I' a a I I! Co u n t 1 e IJSED · s.t • Se. -0-, lN PID "' ._..'IV la ~ Spayed, tbotJ.. aood IJ' GlllNfrvn IBO Mere. IIO,
MACHINISTS customer rel at Ion• ex. Airport ':e,,'.:'!~ an •l· • p...__._ J •-i.a...-~ ~MEW FUR.NmJRE * FRIDAY 7:• P.M. w/childreiL 6'B-'1330 aft
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· Loaded w/xtru. J ncl. perlence. Pleuant vol.,., u tra<tl"' _,,_ __,, • .,, --r-..--.. _,, 6 dlolr $It. ...... MARCH 2ND >'REE to good home -2 ... c11o. Xlnt oond. Tdlr 6
job eot<. much t-tJcnt.t 1or front °"'II'-Mu.t • Ship/be Ckb • """"'Sll9-II<-dlo.ft Divano, C1oaJn, 1.aYo Seotl. ..WI whW: mixed ......... all, l29!IS. ml Wmt OlUt won. Muat 1ype. Some die· type 85 w.p.m. Contact Mn. e Lite FKt. L..-. M.rt• ..... .. ! pc talllit 11tt Sil. ltB'M Diaetta,, Cb e 1 t a. <:ock· 557-o736 o Hwy, N8 66-3880. Top rote of poy
Com meDIUnMI w/exper.
.Prevlou.a work neceuary in
mIIIlnc macbinel. la~.
etc. MUlit do own Jlet'"'l.lpM Ii
have own tool._
CAil For Appl.
llxlustrlal Rel&tions
(714) 494:9401
tation. Ploua,. ""'"''"" ii•""'"""· a:B--ln8 tar ID-...... • .._ t•rm t--: ... Ille....:: ~~..JW,..-:n_ -O>lo:-...._~· *FREE GUPPIES* Booh, Sall 909 conditions In new offioea. wrvlew. ~ AD areu al • *7 ~ ....,. ....., _.,...._ Lampt. ,.--.,.__.,.,..
Appl> In -°"""" ~ --"""" • -~ ~ ~ <:!:, -I'll-. 2 'l'r'ala SeU, Re<rig-549-"1ll WILL """• eq, & all SEMICOA RECEPTIONIST -NO FEE-EV1'R $115:50 .__~ ..,.---w-°"'".& BLACILLabrador-t;;oldeo lum]lh!ng lnEV QmdolO.I:
333 McConnkk, CM FOR APT. COMPLEX Cami? In 1: Register Now NE"t'PORT AVE A MUCH MORE!! Retriewr pupa, 7 wks old, dawn pymnt on c.otumbla
Experienced ln 0111ce Wori<. F08D RD. •rs AlllWl'lllll ...,_.11111_ '!£/or Juger or comparable
PART tiJM rtteptlonist for 4 dayaJ w1t, nwrttbruSun. c<f-'-] -a>STA MESA. s• tcm ""l•n FREE to good homes, feml craft. ~2852. ~.'!' ~~-'f>plngt_aJA Must boo'"'' 25.J(..:J --·.--"-.. _ ... 0.. ~ ~·~ ~ -~-~-• <XlME n~ ·~lJND German Sbeph A Samoyed. HOBIE CAT 1' -·--~ -""""' -C'LL 5'16 50225 _ 'JW -.--,... r~ ~ ~-~"~ ~ Plw call 6'JS--mi alt> pm 0-rfulnna:, stability &: A - -dttb .... ~ dlop-nf ft1nwh, 6 1115% Newpt Blvd. Trailer &. Trapeze. $1600.
veru.Ullty IO\&RbL Top pay WAITRESS • .-, o-•rt taD ~ dllin. table" Behind T_,.• B'*-Matl'a. FREE P'lwies to good home, Niles 673-400I, Days 642.!QS
(!ODUJ)('tt11urate with JklU.. RECEPTIONIST Exprr. Must be O'W!I' n. ~ .-rta I: ..._. ,.m. Good .mad. ms. C.U Colla AINA * 6f&.86Eli bas shots & dewonned, "P"-cat w/trailer Xlnt
Typed""'""" to Bax 21Sl, p!ylnpenon.Sl.ufA-$10f.S0 ..,_11Ma"'IS STEREO: Unet.imed bealtby.l0w'3,613--0883 rond World> ~ l
Mbslon Viejo, Cal. Front otticfl girl to handle ml w. c..... Hwy, H.B. • HERClJl..ON Sofa a layaway ml Garrard design catamaran, $1&. I
PartfThne ~for phone I: typin&. QipperWAITRDS,lllmtbeower'tl --ia9meatw/rewnibleemh. model, •Y•lemized I \ 1lB 841f-3'45-MAID -Motel. Apply Ex-S&llMakertoUM!'industrlaJ MarlrJe O:rp, 1919 E... Oc-Mattu"l'wuma.njlftf.E:l:p'd.. Mliyt..,W_,_. QUEDf BIQEABED, automatic changer, Na~s.,wlla "-' 2Q'WOOD SAILBOAT ;iv:ve, ~=.1 Newport l=mac-h!ne __ . ~6'l5-69111~=-'----ddental St, Santa Ana Call 1or interview. m-wa. ~Ymyl .t.. tables. all AM/FM stereo reof!iwr. . . n $500 ** 544-8292
TELONIC
INDUSTRIES
Laguno,Booch
F.qual 0ppor7 Employer
PBX Operator _ Recep-2 IP!ftl las lbeb. 4 mo '!kl 5lHT12 F\ill ~ air • u a . • ,
MAID, full time, benefits. donlst. Previou1 f!XP RN,..:!~-LYN! ~-•-)Practicals W~ Mman .._ ... bra~ 91 dig'...... 2 Bedrooua full o( Spani5b speaken. tape deck I: brad HOBIE' CAT, 16' "'/trailer n156 ())at: HW)' SoUth desired. Good teleplx>ne ,......,. It e .. ......,. • Private c up. Mt .., ~ I: pmts I: labar Bil Mn. comJI _... (Twin phone plug in jacks. Brand Pets, Gener1I 850 complete. $1600. 67:r'1613 '=l.aiun&,,.;;c:=·===~-~· ~-1 manlier & some typing. dLind1:1t)' I: llatt relief needed. in good health. Paait* $109.50 Ir Kmc~ M1lllt Sacrifice. bN' in lxm. guarantM. . day1 •-UllllTl'UlllC( Front office appearance. sey Nunes, Reg·' permanent job. Apply in DWJd:le aet. Hi I065 Orig. OYel' $DI. Batancr GROOM .I: BOARD, ~ yrs HOWE;, Cat, 14', W/trailer,
llUUl11uvut C.Ontact Carol JllJ'neion. 830-8500Of1146-481& -~"ia: only H.W. Wl"fclt -' rnJllPLETE klng: a.. now $85. CUb IX' small all breeds. Free pickup! 10 months old Xlnt cood..
International Chemical It SALES ·• R.ocbesta-, CM. .u.--bednxn aet,. Si In m 0 n 1 pymbls. 8!l\..4l01. "~11·" Poodle pups Make oHer. 6'ci-4726(pm)
Nuclear Corp., 2727 Campus Nationally known firm oUen WANTED tn&le Ir ~ --r-. Gas o.y.. cr:uc11 be:I.· desk. &: misc. srROLLER $15. Carriage avail. f16=:1848· LIDO 14 with trailer, good
IlrE .. tmne
1 0
, 833-2500. An outstandngcal tralnlng ~ ~E. ~-!"""', -H ~ deeb90 __ otlJc amlrOI ~ $125. Potty $2. Car eeat $S. n-. 854 condition. $950. 644-2.573.,
qua pp or tun It y gram ling on proleuional ~ UM. wy., '-'WR. ...., p&Rllleie Bassinette $8.t pta;y pen end _....,,. · Immediate opening f 0 r Employer. people. Salary to SUllO. Call Apply alt.er 1 pm. ...,. &: Wmr TRANSFERRED, • Saaifice pad SID. want carrier u. PEDIGREED toy poodle. Boats, Slips/Docks· flO
MECHANIC
peT1onwith .. neral pu.n•••~ CLE Bob Stark 54iJ..1io5.5, Coast.al WEEKEND "irl v..o.a-~.--$99.50 almo9t nu tum. qizPng Rm .crtb __ .. mattrea ... " Mal 3" Id~ mechankal ~.1. R.K. billing p "" ir •......, M.'I:, BR)' set, ....--group .,.. · ....... e n yrs. 0 ' svvu C'Om· 28' front mooring $2/ft. 18'
& E."lectrlcal ~ exp Jftf'd Hn 9'--6 M/F enJOnel A g e n c y, 2790 yacht sales otfitt. $1. hr .et. 6G4314 -.711', Guard rai1a SS. IDfant nrl.rw panion 1or -adult. Could ld ri S 1 5 0 I J t
lOty e:xperlenoe. Apply at PHARMAcY DELIVEJl.Y &. Harbor Blvd., C.M. starting, .good advanceuvnt __ $5. Baby clothes 1k-60c. become xlnt. show dog. s e moo ~o_.t~ '
.. SlniNok Corp. 1300 East CLEANUP WORK need SALESGIRL_ tor' Stationary Balboa Marina 673-88tO DINING SET, Walnut. 4 See at 23522 Dune Mear', El $2500. Call bet. 5:30 & 7::1> 646-6966 or.,..,....,._,,
Normandy Place, Santa car, aprrox 2 hrs Pet day, & Otfiet> suppli6. Outside WOMAN -eook 1or anall ,...,. .. Elc D!Jw' c:a. badt chn, tab&e. 2 Toro. &»-43'70. pm weekdays & all day Boats, Speed & Ski 911
Ana. An Equal Opportunity M/F aale1 tn Col!:ta Ml"Sa area. nursing home, s dQs/•1'. 2 lmlp amtnl ave. incl.· pads. ,$250. MUST .ell complete sel vreekeods, 323-3673 .-J.
EmpkJyer. f HUNT JN GT 0 N PRO. Sales exp. nee. beach area.. Call far appt. 9lt da.J' ~ 60-08'19. ' Kalimar movie came: r a 3 GERMAN SHORTIIAiftS 15~' ~unabout ski A filhing
MAINTENANCE -Part time F~ONAL PHARMACY BEACH STATIONERS 494-8075 parts I: lallor DREXEL IOli4 walnut drop super 8 w/l'eflex llXlm It Hunted on wild birds. v.•/trailer. Reblt. 85 hp
• older man P":f~ Ex· 18700 Main St. H.B. 847..fiOU um Newport Blvd, C.M. -"-''-"""'----WRITER==~---$99.50 ~ Harvest dining table. 2 light. An9ooYiDJd automatic Staunch on point, steady tol~J~obnoo~~n~.~Sl~.~000.~>46-0097~~~-!ij Sperlll·~~~45 F. ~~f2Yn l'OWER
1
.ewtngd maclrlne SA~LADY, 40 hr week, no . ~ ~ ~ .... 2~ -~.,.-6 ~_!. ort'ull16 mm projectortrlpodlt ~ shot, back. (800) • .,.~ ...... ...., opera on, exp' pref. Good evening or Sunday. Call in TYPI51' • -=----.--.,..,..,~.L -~..... ...... · uo:.....:u l!!JCl'ftD, 01~
Ialaod, Newport Beach pay . .I: ateady -..'Ot'k. 1733-R person at Costa Mesa Sta· PART TIME f..-... ... · W--L-SOLID inapte hutch. $150. hue. Paid $600, usedooce-i•o0-ALMA"""~TID;,.,.N~7~w~ .. -.~AK'°'c=.1 T......,orbtioft l(•J
MANICUREST I: BEAUTY Monrovia Ave, C. M . tloners, 770 E. 17th SI., 835-9396 AP1' 4:30 PM. •....-_,....-o.t $1..Q nl!'lf. Almost N!'lt' make otter. 6trr'r.'i65 eves. ~ & Females, Black &~;ji;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·::;
OPERATOR, full or part 645--7447 ,,eo.=.::ta~MO::..._=~~---YACHT 'SaJecnv>n, ap'd, Ollkllb Imperial kit.' taYe. 4 chain. $40. DOUGH-BOY Swimming pool Liver, Pet &: Show• Reas.
lime, experienced, for top p • 1. SALES aerk, 19 or o...er, very active Dana Alinl 90 dilly c-rant« 6CJIK'> l'Ai years · old Like new. 846-5TI7 Newport Beach location, r1n Ing must haw own tranA. Harbor ottia!, Kettmburg J8fts • 1abar MODERN bdrm set xln1 18' x 4' with redwood ptat. IAK '~c'-""Reg':'---_ ""s"ilky,.----:T=-e-me-:_,-,..,~. Aircro1# tlS
highest of cllentele. Apply Laguna Beach area. CaU Marine. Call in mafidencr, $124.50 mod. beseer.: M dandS. fmm, filkr cleaning eqUi~ ehampion blood line, asking Aero Oub Mana.gen
in penon Tuel thru Sat, Pressm 4M.0060 Mr. Bromley, 496-402D. bdbd, =t• I amp.. ment, and test kit. Worth oncn. can 644-:"'"""' dys or Rot Wing Tral ~·thr ~ Eastbluff Dr., Npt. an ~1..-.J --· $500 new. Mmt sell, $300, -· . -' or. ner ..... .i:x."U. SALESMAN, Exp Mens YNG man looking tor career -.--,.., 5"~-pl 121B 548-5484 rules. Avail tu clubs. 5.57-5.510
clothing. Retln!d. Weekends potential in sales. Start F~•ire ...__ GM-age 'Sale ~ ROcomYALete..:._~:, ~·-·. ~Irish Setter, 1 yr old Com--S.-lo/R~ 920 only. Call 5'8-2393 ' from bottom le: ..orti: ap. ·-.~·,--~ ..... vr-.. ••"" with papers. Call 675-8TI21;;.;.;...:'c....'';;;_-;._;;...;.;-.c.."--1 MOBILE HOME Experienced in close
roglolor quellty color TRAINEES work on Holdolborg
TOP $S$$ Kord. One man oper0
TOP COMPANY atlon. 'Xlnt, ttompany NO FEES bone!ih. CelFMr: Lo-
tmmect . .Al!lignments for uno for appointment.
Newport Floor CO\'ering BIG SALE. Gange lull. 6 fokling chairs; ~raflsman eve 4 to 8 .,,.,., Ford u ~n Open
Se ' R t T/ b 165' 67>-16.16 "'da,y .....--mua\ sell. codrtail ebair; Ele<; fan, beater & ~ ~ •• Exce~-se~~~s s ~~ :~~~~~~~~ puts I: labor table. 'IV, bi-fi, typewriter, sewing ma c h ; Tape AKC German Shepherd Road-C h assis mount Bkpr-Gen office .,........ $79 50 ~ goodies' books, recorder, Sbort·wave radio, Pups, cha.mp. bloodline, Camper. Shower. 110 ien.
Acct'g/Gen Office $SOO I I[""' I ' toyz. games. ..;,..,_ & ·1.enith B&W 24"ro"'°le TV. wormed & ahots-642-0767 plus n•any other oxtras-
Sec'y, lndw Rl?laL to $600 .. , ' V _ llDftltie&, Mt.Jal MORE! 546-5587 GER. Shep. pups adlta, Stud $2450. 557...fJ603 alter 5 PM.
Acct 'g Tral~ $375 <-;;;;;;-;;;;~-:;: 10'l19 El Centro, Green DOUBLE bedroom 11et, z ni~ aerv. Show/pet. Sound guar. 'TI DATSUN piclrup with 6 NEWPORT , • Frigidliin W_,_. Valley in F.V .. :J1ms. Fri, stands, double d r easer stock, 547·3977/557-4322. pac catxwar camper. Atr,
-
oxpor • 1ra1na•1e ner..nnet. SHUR-LOC CORP.
OPEN MONDAY I >47-8891
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
Personnel Agency An · detme 2 llPd Coppa kw Sat. w(lnirror, bookcaae head· mISH Setter pups, AKC reg. many xtras, $2475. Will ac--833 Do D 8 t1ques. -90 diQ' paramee EST ATE ~ board, very good CDDd, $85. championship blood lines. cept small tent tra.iJer u
ver r ., N. • parts I: Wiar gon. Glass, !ram, china Chain mist, $50. C2l 15" 831 1400. part trade. 496-412l . ,
642..1170_ f,.. 0..-slration $99.50 incl. Royal Coponbagen, lifts w/ ......... $8. 646-52SO. OBEDIENCE CLASSES 8' ROMER Cabover Com .....
Sigma lie~
Ask for Rachel May
500 Newport Center Dr
Suite 520 ;-;po~rJ~B~o~ec~h~l=33-~3;86~1
MT/ST OPERATOR
Huntington Buch ..
High School District
Sa~~J.it :"'~~ siher, Adjmta-bed, wa WE buy old gokl 1: diamoois Novice 6 Advanced Les9ons stove, ice bax, &ink, $400.
SECRETARY AnEasyl:Beautifulws,yto -arimtal.snika.,.organ.e:tc. Sor cash. 0JSta Mf!sa TryOurResults642.4664 ~I00,929Capltal,Oif
For Newport Beach Ad inexpensjvely mab )'Otll' F...:..:.1 .. :-......._ ::.;:-~ ~ ~ \ Jewelry I: Loan. 6t&-714L SD.KY Terria' ~ppies 10 8' Shell camp@l' wlltOr cab,
Agf!ncy. All skill.a including -~ ~ gtasllrt ....n. •..-• _... .,.. ~ em:~Eal.ate:-':ies. · MiscellMMOVS wks. $15. to SlOO. Call J~hn, ~rt beds. table, boot
shorthand. Sharp looks king Antiques of the Wartd eke 4 1e:mp °"""*~ Wanted 820 832-9422. incl, $215., 495--6340
houn, good pay. ' l!ti7 Newport Ave 9J &y ~ GJGAHTIC Gange SaJe, an-Yf C I Bik Send Resume: Cdsta Mesa ~ pm'ts I: Jahcr tiques. glassware, jewelry, PAY 5 to 10% mott than 80 SAMO DS-AKC yen, · et
Wiii pe~r. m Cl 11 $._.SO s:simifu-es. decorator items. called lop ' ..,.....,. on used born Jan 1, 2 males. Scooters 925 high prec1st0n ass it'd .Ad ~· 624 BEAUT l.zg :;ol.id •'al.nut 17 Quality dDtbrs. mud! misc. ......,._... 962-5126 1-"-;_"'-'----'~I c/o Daily Pilot-cllM. Orig h a rd w a re . ans La Cdta., FV. Signs at Oriental rugs. S 4 5 -5 0 1 0 SILKY Tmier, AKC PupS, COME & SQ:.
match1ng work P. o. Box 1.560 Handcarved, Baried panel--wumr bettm Magnolia a: eves. Female $125. with papers. Pete's #1
from plo1nning Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 i.ng, very old. xtnt cond. Frigid.olW. ....... Ne'Wtand. Thurs tbru SaL Musicoll JnstrumMtl m 64t-41JJ6 73-250 CZ • 5 spd.. ~ ~!.ition pr~~·: SECReflRY :_ ~'194 O:.~ chest ommn lmp!NI. O;wakW BEAUT. roulld oak claw FeJlder superb reverb amp 'ST. BERNARD PUPS Fasten MX spedal ~ Great PR lipot for shall> ~ -.,.n.,.,.,,..., . . 911 ..,. ~ looted table, cuwd oak JBL Speakers 12 wb old..."all ll'tnale. up w/all extras now OQ Sale!
quire• h I 9 h dlvldual wilh good skill. ()c. ~;;;;:: ~~ b I~ JllU'tli .. Joablr' dining table, docks. stacked $350 60-6100 ** 493-3755 • • a ~-~ 0
school educ•-casionaUy trawls to sport Spanish d. . $109.50 hnNr291111ra:=,.~St. N~ FRENCH 'Flute, fantastic SPRINGER Spaniel ,pups, CZ »'V' CZ
tl.n or complo-shows In Alcapulco & other ... • irung RJOln ad -°"........ ..-.... •• .Luc lJ • hlt Mal & far away places. <: .. 1 .. -. to ~ perfect. Ph:968-6'KB. Heights (213) ti91-3970. tone:. 1 yr old. Guarran .IV' ver « w e, e tlon of recog-$700. Call SallyH~ T t ANTIQUES WHOL&i\LER -GARAGE sale Fri ~ Sat., -good. $250 or offer. 9fi2..6931. female $75. 548-44'n ~ Nph Blvd., CM. 645-8008
nlud o1ppren-54o-6055, Coastal Personnel ()peJ1 to Public ~1-n e...,· iMire n--. ~ dra quaJity Office F •tu { Sprin9er Spaniels MO'IURCYCLE REPAIR -
tJcelhfp plus 5 Agency, 2T90 Harbor Blvd., .. lb E: Jldi sr-e1ec Imperial, W:-amo dathrs. ~ rug, EqulJ..~1
,. 824 AKC • 8324192 . ~."=·Pi:~~~
to 8 yeo1r1 ex-C.M. Costa Mesa * 645-Jall 9ID daJ guarantee: glugwa:re: tufter, we:tghts. AFGH..WS-AKC. Xlnt. qual1-C.oiut Automotiv;, "'i'i'fi
porloneo on SECR,...ARJES MUST "U. PERS I AN "°""I< labor ..U eqwp_ 5351 B. B . EXEC deoks ~IS' Sllli-140 ty pet or ahow. $75. "' up. Pomona Ave. CM ... -IO 1 RU G S . SW-ED I S H $79.50 ltlr-7689 Kenil~rth. "--'---• Drft "~" N!rO ' • .,..,...,,~ ·vertical • n d VOLT IA:Mlli .,......_ g dl!$s. ............... '65 soo Tri b ~ engine lathes. CRYSTAL, . 7l4-5.12-46ll GARAGE Sale. Mud 31:. 4. ~ swvl chr $8-38 6C2-3CJ8 AKC. 4 yr. ol~ fen,i.a1e black $9». CJea':if P Abo ~~ i
Apply In Person lnst .. nt Personnel 5 Antique Dini.Qg rocm. _ llilr fDrfl. poM!r' mower, P .. nos/Orpns 126 Lab. Xlnt disposition. Call Porsche spdstr convertible ..
Temporary Service awn, 4 in e:xceUent con-bicyde:, camping e: q u i P , 644-5465. frame $75. 545-2738 uk for ~!!!a H~~'::, ~~·tt·. N~~Ca'c~r., SuJ~~ llitioll. S50. total SS-74&5.. Norte, '::e Dryer ~ ~ m 13tb St, Hun-ORGAN HOBBY TF.AClJP pups. Teacup st.uds ;;M;:;"';;;e;;-~=;-;:=,.-.,-:-1
Equal Oppor. Employer Appliances I02 90 dmy ~ PATIO SALE Poodles, Maltete le: Yorlties SUZUKI TS 90. GYT kit Ex·
Production
LATHE
OPERATOR
S
I;,,;==;.;.:::;_ ___ = puU ,. labor Don't btu'" any ~ gan WJtil Some grown. 545-2100 Ira frame, wheels, engine,
I ~ ~ R. TYPISTS FRIGIDAIRE °"""" dolm $79.50 s:.!'-<;.., ~ ~,!' yoa ean play! Non--en IRISH Setter -only 2 male• tank. Super fast, $200 er
NEW CAR get ready man. £ffe8Ci) VOLT washer & Dr)'e!'. 6yn. • ...... ~ welcome to attend tree wicrk W?tt. AKC. Champ line. trade for trailer. 548-8454. g~P A ;r;::, l~nseN.To~ __ , lnsto1nt Personnel presently in Wiii?. $U5. NR ahopL For information Shots. fffi. e-o841.. '72 TRJ TlOOR, like nu. less
-
Tempo-~ Se-'ce 646-5llli. -rv. cnlor: Vacoum, lamp. O>atad.: Tom Dieterich u---&56 than 500 miles, $850, •·-Camino, San Clemente. ·-J • v• Cunera Ir 1;1_ ..,,,, u....n..... ~ --"'"_. ... " ,...,.... ._.,, ..
has an opening for MT/ST
operator .d&)' or niebt &hill.
Starting salary $558 mo. +
xlnt benefils. Must have
taken training course or
ha.ve experience as an
MT/ST operator. Interested
appllcanls JTport for the
skill8 lest March 10th at 9
am. Room 232, Edison High
School, 21400 Magnolia Ave.,
Huntington Beach. Equal
Opportunity Employer.
4.92-3848 Campo!! Dr., Suite 106 Rent Washers/Dryers GE EIK J>ryer ........, -........... ,. -~· ~ evn 645--49"16 ask ll37. A1r. Bear. ~ Newport Beach 5464741 $2. Wk. Full maim.. 90 day~ Saimday. ~ Coast Music Service REG. Thbd, jumping pm: for Bob De Caro Newspaper A SUbsidlary or Equal Oppor. Employer * m.tm * JllU'tli 4 la.bar ll.lrI'RON1C parts. barn Newp:wt Blvd. at Harbor spect 5 yrs., sound. best of-1970 fAMAHA MX !9l Xlnt
T
• The Susquehanna Corp. $79 50 radio gear. T..E.. Must .ell. Costa Me-. fer. 645-2719 Eves & cond. $4fl0.
JPISt Equal Oppor. Employer .• r"nsura:ys, ~een,Gi,.Jr:' 1'00 ~ If~ G~~·u~~k,. 00 • s:mmy only. 288% Eut 15lb *Pl .AUl\C..U'\RGANS* Weekenda. 64i.-0068 aft 6:00
To punch ITS Tape for Lino-REAL ESTATE SALES e Payroll/Billing ;x) ~179.td(3~ -St. CM in allt'y. ' ~QND.~ 'TI% Husky, 8 s pd.• ~~ ~~gc.uenbetnesar:ifl'_ E~e~ QJCCESS CAREER * 1 OOO' FREE * RECOND. APPLIANCES Jewelry 115 Feb. clearance or med 1; f!tg. I I~ showroom conditipn, Seldom "" •v New or experienced. Join the IO Delivered_.,., ...... n..-1~-·., Kenmore Ga Dryer continued model organa. ....::-_.., ~ Jt ridden in dirt. $700. 833-3UD. ning;~rlti.Y PILOT World's largest and fastest Liz Relnder's Agency 1815 Newport,-CMS4s-7iao !11 dQ pannllee R=G:R~~ Many makes, priced fJ'om . . 1' 1971 YAMAHA ENDURO growing resale organization 4500 Campus Dr. ado puts&: Jahr Raenation p:'bl to all. $149.!iD, The best deals are 125cc. Xlnt cond. Lo ml. "° .... '~=-&. yExSt•_ .. £!'f Wltth a network or over 300 546·2ll8 Newport Beach ~~200 ~L dry..i~ $79.50 11llln. Fri. Sat&: Son only, alwaysD chat: a-..a.. 11'!.-norol 900 $41111-53&-3661 ...-......~ ~ o rices and become a Secretary-Junior rev~~ ._:~_...: ... "~"';:.,:;, 11 lo 7 pm at N-:'-~ Trad-Wa i S Music c:..... _,_.. ..,.. '69 HONDA 350-•
Ask for Andy, Paul m ~ I Milllo l M u 16 .LIVID -~ _,,,,_ .,,...,., '' 1
or Dave. o~~""'M~t~lion ;,~1: &:~eh~r:u~wo~'.~~ $tll 1 YR. guam. del I: in--=::~ Nwpt WW. CM. Sooth Cout Plaza ~28.'l) SCRAM LETS $300 Mu~l~~x~.D~~: In = J'=sc~ ~~~~6,~;w:• t,~~ =--~t•w::!-:...-= K-::: ::_o..,... -~ t1' ~A~par\ylor ~b"'. • 1$72 YAM:;34'.!o.. boob
p!nan, l101el Laguna, 425 Excellent sales training. 644-4360 • DISHWASHERS, wuben.. puts I:~ WANTED "' J<Mirr Ir IX' ~2278. ANSWERS ~~':~.~&.f~ $775.
So. Coast Hwy, Laguna Please call Virginia Jones SECRETARY/Clerical, ex-drytts, reblt, guam &: $79.50 Drill Pn!:s. 496-m16 ~ 1110MAS CoJor-glo organ.
Beach. ~1~·0 CARPET per. XJn't typing req'd. delv'd. m..7620; 546-Qtll. • u PK. Canett tape ttCOl'der & Tamper _ Clout _ Gounl '·~~~~·c1!llns~S
NURSES AIDES Minor bookkeeping & sh. HOTPOINT elec clotbe:a -Milall...ous 111 Lealie speaker Ir many ex--Wheeze -HOT WATER pm 96H756
Pennanel11 full lime. 7_3 ==~~R~•,,_•l,_,to=r"'•~-= Teleprompter, An Equal dryer, w/penn prea Id· 1-----,,.----' I tru. $650. 5«)-fi675. Epitome of Winess: "It's ' ·
shift. 8'17-3515. REAL ESTATE SALES Oppor. EmplOyer, 2624 W. Ung. $50. 962-Q13 Ka•1IOl'9 Elc Dryer e EST OFFER o 11 CONN Spinet. good O>nd. :0 = 4!::e e:ffort. so f: ~ ~~.1!,~~:g~,
Huntington Beach FREE LICENSE Coast Hwy., N.B. S42-3200. REFRIGERATOR two doon 2 CJde' ~ mo Ids• Maple finish w/bendl. $250. collee beans \n his m"~e MAKE OHer, 646.!i&38
Convalescent Hospital TRAINING SECRETARY I bookkeeper, auto defrost. s years old like 90 dQ' ~ • paillls SlSO. Pigl!m's &: Ca81! 673-214&. \ ""'"""'"
18811 F1orida SI, Famous Real Estate Llttns· Yacht ers= office. new. 893-m>. i-m.scr $211. = 685 Surf. ~ TV, lbdio, Hifl, l36 ~ ~ ... HOT WATER ~ ~~ S:
Runtingto11 Rench. Ca. tog Course now avaUable: GAS STOVE ~· _ ' P" pe.rty Ster.. e u 'KE OFFER e &G-1765
NURSING: LVN •u•~-.,·,.r thru Tarbell Realtors. Free SERVICE ST AT I 0 N Al· $40. 64&-ftTI or =-t_""""' v""'1ites I: c:e.lealaton. m.-. .u._ H for 3-11 !!>hift, 4 d~y',,jwk. Placement Service. Ftte te:ndant. Full & part time, ""' rm -'?)ph1ittta ~ $500. Sell SILVERTONE S )'ft l on I c 15 Ft. Outboard • 40 '"'b.p. mutor ~' beach area. Call fur appt. Training ~. Earn 40 or over. Gentleman w-CartMral & F...:.-:..1 ... :,.. Elec D-$Zil. Caku~ hl!W $651)., ConDe Stereo with 4 spd Evfnrude, big wheel tilt _,.;S,.;•,.;lo;:f,::Ront:::;::._ ___ 940.:::'.I
494-8075 \vhile you team. Call AI SeTVice St. Exp. Apply Equipment IOI • ..---.,. Rll $2'Z5.. ~ reoon1 d\a1¥!'1'. AM/FM trailer, ifass over ·wood. 2
Sloan 1714) 832-5440, on Chevron S1Alion. li04 S. Dmble Oftll ~PPINC Blol:ks,. l Bin:h ndio w/extn .cornr.r ll:l*r, seats, splash well. ~. 71' TRAVCO
NURSES Aide11 P~I & nlght
shift, xlnt friOR:I:! bnfts,
Bevt>rly Ma.nor Conv Hosp
"96·5786.
~'"RYMAN e:xperi('nred
with wholcsnl<' g1uwi ng.
Salary open. Call for ap.
pointment 586-l~JSO
2 OFFICE GIRLS
NEEDED
Radkl leJephonr dla:patch
Must ~ Zi. sbl~ to drive
Appl1_ !n Prl'90n
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 E. 16th, O:>st11. MHa
OFC Nurw-LVN or medical
\Veekends (n4) 832•7000. COllllt Hwy. Laguna Beach. l\.1lJST sell ocmplete RI • ., paralliee '!lio.1•11t"' bigh l 9" thk.'k. 1 .ii in xlnt cond. 847~ 2'l' Chris ,speed tioal W/nu .Z' DISCOVERER
SHA
Kallrnar movie camera pu1SI: labor Olk >t.dt:rl6" .. ~ 1 ft. AM/ -.. ... -..........i 20:·22' CON1'INENTALS REAL ESl'AT& RP girl for office wllite li:Uper g w/n?flex mom l: 5149 Cft .
1
• ._. COMBIN~TION stereo{ ...... ~~ &"""" ,cond, $U100. 22' Xi' PRIDE A: JOYS
SALESMEN. Why not work bookkeeping exp, salary light. Anscovmoo autormtlc ~ lllic*. ~ . FM rad10, ~I to me hl;pe, Ollis Cndaer w/trlr. $1500. VAN CONVERSI:>NS
in the hottest area HuD-open. 645-llWI. )Olld g or 16mm projtdoc A Ame 1UWW table, leDlltlw rnic:nJphMe. Leu 546-f990 all wlcda;tl. Cales e Service e Rentat.
t I hgt o n ·Beacb/Fountaln TAB Answering s er" 1 c e. headed tun screen. . tripod -S!i. Ta* • for rtplng tblJl *-' ~ ~ $llll. WANTED lB or 3> HJ.> John-* Dan-r I J
Val ley arwJ let u.t train you! exp'd PBX operaton fur all baae. Paid $500. UBee onoe _ GE Elect fc a.,.. $1l 1513 CM e e Pl er Evinrude outboard. ,,.... ftC. JI ~~lLLAl PGhEil REALM 0 NE•STmAeTEe I 1hifta,.,.. lfdxlnt bcnefilsc. pdl make offer. Wr7565 n>eL r :;:;::.._ M:Hla ~~2 -~~ "-~ * 53&-0'.B * 13801 JW;,1!°"1 ~vd., G.C.
, vae a)'_ pay, a l I 90 ~----Kll.VINATOR ft:fr;g, ---~· -.:u ... ._. Boolfl Power an... '""VONU 962-4471. Marie, 892•121.2. 5!.t~l, 4 by°'P':: '::: ..;:. A lahar per, $1D _ Coudf $15 _ ~ S&\. ~-' "'°" Next to G.G. Datam
Real E!!tate Sales TECHNICIAN liter cyllnde:r by Kodak; $200.00 bedll $15. Onbge RodacT FOR. 18le, ~ lUdctr 1972 2>' MINI home. Ub nu '11
11,ERITA!ngGE REAL _,~ATE fof check oul on tom· photograpldc thermolne1&. $10. 9SMt56" ~ S:lt pm. Callforn1a. l~ 1°"'' C5hp HoUday on ~. All pwr
IS open a new "'"'·""· We mwtlcadons line:ar ampli· All brand new. AD ... $li. SEVlllAL ll'tSj Of_ ldt.chm r a !IS °'1'>'*r all t ~ tritt, air ht .• baek, comp. .u
are looking . tor a few ve.ry tlen. pa 1 Electrooicfi C&Jl 64M321. EJrt 33S 01 Di, -mMnets 4 ~ tops flw • V.. S Read)' to IO· MIJ'J1' xtru. contlllnl.'d. Sl.6,000 tn I.
DAVE >fYHRE at ..0.1m. w..:mlnller, 84!1-3JOL POLAROID Camera. "'°"" s.lljoct T• Priors.le IW~ oli :.C. I Limo, 2 Times, $2:• cond. Idoo1 .l ttld ~or nu.: WINNEBAGO dlx u n It
RECEPTIONIST ~~RS ~$25..~~. ao-...._ SL 10 <>wner 1a11j •U. Bkr. motorhome . 'I'akq
~ OU:ul~ :~ Co. 6.191 Wertmlnster Ave., or49'1-4Glbtwn9AS. NI 1...,.. ~~~Bmdeo ~*2 .. , 6:$ ':'.~ Excel ~a;;ble. By O•n•r.
Growingfi.nnlnIMneCom· a SUPERvtSORS y.o.Cttl1CA ••• G F .. -•• , . ·~ biiot bat •fftil ADORASlE male-~ &15-271). rnft'Vawl lions. Summ•r·
pll'X, nef'd14 sparklln& j_p. to PnJvkie a credll card con-k;uttOex MA~ n::: -$15. 551-Cn. . SMpllel'd Jq>PY, 2 moethl OIRIS 27' 1Qimdr, S/F, m::i, ~ ~y or
OVER $30,000 ~~ut~, ~~ :n1 venicnce 10 tt.mlllft ln )'OUl' tripod. $100. 6"lS-(IJl3. M _, Ills • i HEW r ftbtqLaii1 utiL bocb' old, ~ bi pod home. Sedan w/bdlop. Bea(IUIUJ '12
1 =· =~:.~...,:;:; "5o:c:1i°JaoPaae~ :°~u~~·.,~.~~; Furniture '10 JWI $15 ~ ..,......._ 0ieae: ~--·• · p •l. ~Ult be...._-· cond~~'.~ .
119.r1a or !he c ountry Coaatal Per10Dnet Agency, ncceuar)I; n .will train. WH ST'ERlX> illili6iOi&; ANGELLA. ..llDL..laL dac, WANTED • Crulatr, I ate lha.n new. All Gtrul
...U:tant. Starting salary
S5(X) mo. Moo-Frl. 979-fi680.
avallable. ?.1uJl be able to 2700 l-larbar Divel, C.M. Write ClusUltd Ali No. 61.3 $50.rrE~wt ~;: Vadklc .lilachtncl. :~ P1"'-'U3', ·auercOanar.. ni:leda niii1e132' nun. TS, Y'B FC,~Dl)it.C?S-163&;-nm
tultl.ln 1tlf for fll'llt three Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1500, 541)-5675.. "' Dav·IS.srown de. -..... mo . • .. attentkm, f"li/S6t, 14. SLP 6, Must, be JCtra clean. ~ . '
-Somo tra,,.J, REC"_,ONIS:r Coota M•1&, CalU. 9'1626. THn~·~~, -$U-IAM•-· LUXURIOUS, -· M•
NO INVESTMENT ...-12 TELEPHONE SALES ~ .. ~E Fr•neh SHAG CARPET·~·· -·• t ·-·v •
Day 0 nl b
• ~-~ ~~ pt~ ~ --~ _,,..,. • ,_ ... ~ ........ w ...... ~-No ~--..... R • r sn"tnotxp.'Oee, Provtnda.I ButfeJ,. good fivmUl9-bt. .. t11•••....,__..-~ .. __ , •• ~ ......... ~ • ..,--Vl --•
.--• • ftqulred. '""'· fun job> Will train, no Pennanent .,. part ttme cond. l:lll-Call s,i..W_ 'lY Ir A ll4 l"-:;p. i'G'.nt11 ~-· -belltl white. 1 yr,·-6 (!,ytrc biltlp Goocl ~ m1111i;f All S. MUil be booda~e. ty<0i>ng or ,~•0 ·•, •le. -rk, morriln-.... --, lfllltW·IS -old i~-ldf IW65 ..... __ -w ' n. a.u Mr. Dunco Apply In II<,;:,•;;; art or GM. ,. ... 11· ro;;_m~i;.; 61> ~ ....,';'~ da. -r-USED BICYCLES m:;,~ ~'I". put iUm..,._ -Ront A Motor ~
COVE RITE CORP. '"°· et 2930 Weal Cll Hwy Angele• T..,.,,, >4().0301. .... 9!8--t -411 IEad ll'lh ~ All 1)ps * 1C-U!2 !Jla .... p.,,,, • lilC. !&lb a.ASSJC ltlO'lOR LAUNCll for your V-'°" ~~-~ve N 8 • Comm<r<l~~ • x P• r •••Sola"'=..:.,._ Coot• --~ ::."• = ;,,';;:;~~44 ~ oxna:..!:~e:" ...:.l ;BlilA~*~~UMIG~~~·;;,;*~-;;j
"'-llJ-7111 RfrREATION director, full • min. 6 mo. t\'qulred. c.n'. u.ed, both for .$1111. -U, 5tll -. --· l3llO IM&-9000 iMS'.lOl!8 1• • -II'
f: -"'JWI '"""· Experi<nee tlnt!loBanl<7l4-<1<6'TI2luk -.B-1910. ~""•• 646-1 -· fr«~-U,lf. · ~ """""'-·••!or -I----=~-rd.~ co n vo 1 • 1 e e n 1 I ;;;;-Mn. RJno_ An ,...i op. s\11• Gl!EE21 --., DIG Oot.flt, Irr -* Ull * '111 llU!ITER $EDAN. Sll>t 6. ~ lootlod ,., • ...,: .ut o 11Ge1 adl do ._ pu .... A'fi415 ·-.-·-~ • -aood condttkm -te. -A.. •• _.., -tet.. .,.... " ....., Jl.18 CAUCO ~:...= ...,, • xn rue., ... · .. st~.?!ta. 1 ...a aolf NOW·--N~ -------7T1ll ,,_ -• 6 -~l •~m4. A....,. --~ ~ ·· ~·· ~•''Pad"! P'lllce an ad! aagJr\fl Ads ..• ta-6811 Sf!I i(if;; ltnna j . la.Sll r ~ &a. • ; • ~~__:.,. a..&lied..Ad.11 r •. &CWm ~-.... • • ~1• ,__
~ ,,.. . -.
n
~
'11 ~ {!,·
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• " . .....
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( An . ,_
l co
l 'cl,
. Au • $4! .,_ I Ru•
" ra ' Sl
-" Ro ,_
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I
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11 •a l·'--;: l ";
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-top
trh
· l;J I ·n I~ ~I
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'·~ I H<
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'10
'.1.£!
: '55
l ne ·;
eu
~r 1-..,
Coo ---
•
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('
• ThunoclAI, March 1, l')i)
~l§J~1 ~1 ~-~ ... ~-~l~~~I ;;;;;;;;----=1~~1~1 ~·_ .. p ..... --~;;1§1
980 A:::."::'.:::o':!.'.;U:;;l<Hl;:::. __ -c.990;.;: I !A~ut~o~·~· .::.u'.!~~---m~r:.:uto.:;;:::-· :=:::::::::;-
_,., .. l§JI l~I ]§) [ ii) [ ........ _ ..... ---
98011.utoo, Now /ilil',.:;N:;l;,;;l-:..:::..,.:;T:.;r!IWl!:_;::--945:.::: 4-W.m.d 961 A_,._. ...
--------~
t 'ti APACHE ~ trlc WI PA 'f TOP •
Near-new, -once. Sl1>1 II. ' '• CASH FIAT CHEVROLET . FORD MERCURY
'J'ul(y oqulp'd. Elec bntkos.
Best on-over $1500. 8Q-6:238
t 20' TRAVEL Trailer, aleepa
, 6, 8xl2 encJ·d cabana, sac. 1699, 67>--0471i alt .:
t Auto S.Nlco, Ports 949 •
ro, u.I <an A ,.,..,q; Jost call ua tor he f!Sltma.ia.
GROTH Cll£YllOL£T
t 2 FlRESTONE 500 tires oo l 6" \\ide mags for chev.palc AU for Sal1t1 M&Nger
{ $40. 544-3417. • U2U Beach Blvd. • -ffuntin&Uin Beath .,.
} 2 SETS wide paddle tires for 841-6087 KI g..3331 'TI FIAT 850 Spjckr COOllt'rt.
I aand buagy SlOO. IMPORTS WANTED RtdJblk int. 18.rKXI mi.
4. 5'4-3417 Orutige Cbuat)"a $1£JO. &n-Dll
; MlJNTZE ( apd with Hertz TOP S BUYER '7t1 11.AT-Uf SPYDER i linkage. SlOO Bill. MAXEY TOYOTA 5 Speed. Radials.Lo mi.
: 646-6U> 18881 8eacb Blv ~-$21']0. * 962-Q8:?. f~ +m x 14 tires in &d cond. R. Bc!Cb Ph. Stl.&D JAGUAR
:" 12 5. Iota I. CALL Autoo, lmportOlj 970 !f. ---=~----1 114-49&-0125.
I ALFA ROMEO '67 Jag-
I
i ( AUtooto.s. ]1'41•) NEW :i:t.:tMEO
Sedan Clearanoe, Demo No. I j jllll ............ 0284~m
~ 111..,;;n_t_,lq;:,;ue;.;c.1/..;~.;.l..;1.;.11..;i<;:;•_..;9,;;5..:.3 $l79S
J COU...ECI'ORS item restored ~!-.... ~~:j' ' condition 1959 Jo'ord Ran-f"'"f j
j, ~~: t~ ·~;., p~~;:i;:. ._...;;·~~ I
XKE
Coupe, automatic,
wire wtieels., lo mile-
ltgt'. Kelley soggesl-
ed rclail, $3220.
BJack1 Blac.k /Blaek
$2899
M80 Hartior Blvd. ea... M..,.
At t'air Drive
5'!Hlll7
1900 PEUGror
good l'Of](lition. $325 or
otter * m-1101
PORSCHE
PORSCHES, '59 TO 71
912, 911 TS, 3S6 Coupe, 91"
Some ~Speeds, Some Air
BAUER BUICK e CONNELL CHEVRO.
LET e COSTA MESA DATSUN e JOHN·
SON & SON LINCOLN MERCURY e
MIRACLE MAZDA e NABORS CADILLAC e DAVE ROSS PONTIAC e THEODORE
ROBINS FORD e UNIVERSITY OLDSMO.
BILE e
CHE."V£1..L£, '67 4 dr, 11.utn
tr-t&N. Rlld, hlr, P/:s, a/t•
pri pty, lo niU. Xlnt cond.
6'>-0679.
Chevy Vega 'TI, Hatrh. " spd
R/I{, clean, pr1 ply,
$1650 &l&-51~
CHRYSLER
NO SADDLE
'&I ~1l':RCtJRY S I n ti on
\~'agon Full P\\T, S595 or
trade fOf' pickup. ~
1F.V.l
'69 ~IARQUIS Convertible,
xlnt cond. full pcw.'er, air.
$18,;o. 64&-1970.
NEEDED! • "69 MARQUIS °'"""''"""· \\'h.-ri )OU s.;allop dnl\'11 th•' -~In! COl'l(i, full power, air.
llll'l'ct in Uus 'U.) Ji'ol'd ~-6'16-15'ZO. '69 CHRYSLER. 2 ar TIT 300. \l11~t/tllg, Big vt1.lut• /l('l'i'. JO
Full poy,•cr wi1h f111·L oir. 1),\ \' ~'Rl':E TflJ,\L EX· MUSTANG
AM Ft.I rudtal rh·l-s. Lllt1· 1 t'JL\NGE. 1---------1 'o l . MUSTANG Mach I '69. Xlnl ( d11u lop. 111• oi~ill'I'. o~v n.11. GUSTAFSON ,:ond. AH xtras. 4 spd. Slide:, Must st>ll. $ l,'\95. 6-1:>·21:HO .. wlds
days, 546-6746 n11es. Uncoln-Mercury :;~1 eu,' P/s, P/b, C1rrs. $lnJS.~
'69 CHYRSLER Newport , 4 1680!1 ~·al'h 11! \farn~·r '6::> :O.lustang, rebuilt, ~ 1\r, ps/pb, air, radio, nu Hunt11tg!on Bt•11ch painl, nui.is, "'1allory ig.
lin.•s & nu baltpry, goo:I 842..a844 * (213) 592-5544 nitiun pis p/b Sharp!
eonrl . $125tl firnl. SIH23.'i. ''Home of the Viking" $700. 497-1648. '
'68 NE\V YOR1..:r~tf:'fUii [-.:.:.:=:.o=,:-c~..c..:"'O=,l '='="""'-:.:'===---1
""''· "'"' ""'"' n .ooi m1. 1 '70 Ford LTD OLDSMOBILE $1100. 67:t-25J j, &4·1·2liti:!. Jj;lrdtop ('Olipt•. Auto.1---------
__._ •.• , lfl.!:. 1'111)1 l'!'JO\, (\.Jl-
PORSCHE ·68, Targa -glass
back Window,
5 spd ,l.~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~I IVATE PARTY
CONTINENTAL tf.11111·, 1111' !'nndillon-~
1971 MARK Ill C\"Z I. """"Y '"ggc>f. • !od J"l'!al[ s21.;i10.
s i 599 A MERRY OLDS M.J/FM, white, xlnt oorvl. PR
32.<nl mi. ,$4350. Call eves. Gleaming 1vlule 11·/v1nyl 1011.
645-1006. Autos,. Imported 990 Rich red lt•11ther i n t .. 21~0 l1;1rbor 131\'d. ;\ .t_'Old(>n bfnuty Y.ith U\AI
sporty luxury look. lG DAY •
FREE TRIAL E.XCHANGE -~~~-,,-:-=;c--::::::;: 1::::::::!...:.:::?:::::=-..:.:..:: I :-.;.;;:;;;;;c..;;=-----Air-rond. Crui~ <'on t ,
I 1<95. • . 979-4575
I '64 VOLVO PIJiOO
ALFA ROMEO,
'65 TO '71
FROM $1195
(RRJ515J
1973
-· 9llT, "'"'' VOLKSWAGEN -CADILLAC St'""° ""'" Till whed. brown FM stE'reO. mag 1 T1·unk releast>. ~·1111 pv"r. .."" .......... ~I whls, lo mileage, 673--0227'1---------$4.995. Mr. Taylor. 644-4!110
aft 5. 'TI VW Cam..,.. FM <"a<-'68 CADILLAC Dcys 67~7957 Eve.,, Som.
CostH :\J,~l>a
Al t'11lr Drive
5-16-8(117 GUSTAFSON
Uncoln-Mercury
J~ Beach ut \Yamer l Runs well, new paint,
•:-radials, R/H, nice interior.
$l050. or offer, 496-1123.
'!!!!~~~~~~~· '63 " Ptlrscbe Conv. clean, sette. 24.000 nti. $2400. Call CORVAIR
' radWs. Wood ""' whl. 6To-5128 alu" 4 p.m. CPE DE VILLE .!,AGUAR XKE '10 $2250 Call BM' • ........,,,, 1967 vw BUS
Recreational
Vohlclu 956
COUPE 642-7238. .EXCJ..'! !.ENT CONDITION rm-:;;i.-,.tn~~.' Air Conditioning, Dunlop POR '66 912, red w/blk int, fl250 * 64>7~ ~1J!. "''f .2Jw't""'4 ~ Radials. Power Steering, AM/FM, xlnt paint/ body., '6.'.i Volkswagen Square back. l 9 ~-~~ :t:. J (.w6 BNNl nu radial'! $2780. 837--0lM. $3.JO. Need WQJ'k. Call
I CORVAIR sandrall & trailer . ·-· $449S '53 PORSCHE BODY r ,;""-""::;=;~1::'.3·:,,-_,==+-=
Full Power. Air Cond. (VVR-
1671 SPECIAL . 3 DAYS
ONLY.
' $2295
'66 Corvair, nu tirl's,
Ira nsp or l a lion,
646-2449
1964 CORVAJ£L
~no([
s1:;o.
RUNS eXC'Pllent, good tirC'~,
brakes $250. J~:i-39().11
~~~~~~ liunlini'(.on Beach
842-8144 * (213) 592-5544
"Home of the Viking''
F:conorny Ii, ~'ttll Can1per
Equipint•nt, Alloy "'heels,
(929 ASJ)
$1295
'69 Toronado
l' deoo. AUSTIN AMERICA ~tadr A.. ~ for Sl50 * 673-3'00 1967 VW Bug. AM/ l· Call 979-6066 .2Jllttlnt" S 90 Low mileage. Xlnt oond.
t 4 .,_-. '63 PORSCHE. uper conv "'1:: 642-1414 N'pt Bch I, DUNE BUGGY, 1964 '69 AUSTIN Amer. w/'71 3f1J ~-~~ AM/FM, silver blue. Good .,,...,. ' •
$950. eng & tram. P-erf corvl. ----rood. SllJO. 673-2384. '68 VW, like nu, mus~ see, ~ ~ am/hn rad. w mi. $900. ..... wh1 O orig owner, 36,000 m1, Nu I ~-UNE n .. -. w/traile,. '68 XKE. 2+2, gm, .._.,.. 5• TOY TA tires. $1ZJO/besl offer'. ® Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
CORVmE 11tuili1ftitPurtii)
-,-73-C-OR-YITT--E -~ -=t~~J
Custon1, po11·~ win-
dows, air ('()ndltiOn-
ing, vinyl roof, k>
mileage, (XJP539l.
Kelley stq;gest.ed re-
tail $2985.
$2499
"u ......_., 548-3849 aft 5. elet-. ign. nu paint, m~ ----------1 675-:m! l' Street legal. Top & chrome com pl. serv. rec. 45M m1. _ "''-==c-==,--~~
.. wheels. 84&-6029. , BMW ~ Pfct rood. Im.mac. Only one SALE 1970 V\V AM-FM radio, San Diego Frwy at A.very
• •-962 like it in c.atiL $3500. sun-l"09f, ..riew tiftos, x-lent Pkwy., Laguna Niguol. . •.-True~ ASE conr:1 $1.tiOO 642--0310 I• SALES BMYrt.E .,,...,..,_ FINAL .CLOSE OUT! !=-";~-~~-==c-49s.G800 831-0800 Service '1l JAGUAR XJ6. like nu! '62 Bus-Reblt eng, new I ~ '& It """ le" to 'leue. ·n >'ully boded, nu tires, Only '72 TOYOTAS -heade.-s & point Mw;t "'" YOUR ONLY
1,.:. • Bavaria 4 dr sedan. PIS. 28,000 mi. Be1ow book S, pJi MOST ALL MODELS soon. $625/ofr. 557--0757. FAO'ORY·
PIH, aic rond., MicheliM pty,m-t500daysonly. 4.4 NEW & 1968 VW Suncoof, AUTHORIZED I XAS ti.res. Choice of colors. ,67 Jag. 43) Sedan. Classic. AM/FM/SW, very good
' WAHOO! :~,~I "'" mo 00 approved Must"'" $2500 or best ofie•. DEMOS rond. Mako ofter 557-{rr.!5. CADILLAC
• Jt'sasuperChhryCheyenne, Bob McLar~n authorized Ph aft~; Sti-3546. I ALL MUST GO '68 VW. Bug. DEAl ,ER
t· a 72% ton with 4 wheel BMW Dealer ·n XJ 6, Red., beautiful con-IN FEB. Stick, ~t, $900. Largest selection of Cadil· f' drive and custom, custom 850 North Beach Bl\'d, La dition, must sell! 879-1600, DEALER COST lacs ill Orange Count)'. l" equipment. Hard to find at Habra ext 63 days: -fi'Tr2006 eves. ** '68 vw Bug. lo miles, 1 Sales-Leasing.
!: FREE TRIAL EXHANGE LEASE A Call 96:Hll6. Nabers
''Only 1,600 Miies''
.. IMMACULATE" Gold \11th
Black Interior. 350 CID V-1!,
Waded, Po11·er Windo\\'S,
AM-FM Stet·t>Q, Steel Belted
"500" WSW Firestones. As-
tro Ventilation (05SGXSJ.
"A BARGAIN"
$6395
0 Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
GREMLIN
RE PO S .SESSE D 1972
G1'l'11ilin Good cond. 2J.OOO
n1iles. C'entinelA Ba n k , &l&-7121 Make offer.
2480 Hai-bot Bl~.
Costa Mesa
At Fair Drive
546-llll7
[ ___ J_A __ VE_Ll_N __ 1·n cuu ... suprem• 4-dc irr.
. 3 9 0 Alr, P/s, • P/wndws, "''hi 1968 Javelin SST · • vinyl top. Xlnt cond. Must
·1-spe(.tj, mags, PS, PB, sel l , $2.700. Days :
$99::i., call 49H928. 2131579--0127 Eves 644-4608.
JEEP 1966 Olds Toronado, Full
Power. Exdellent condition TOY. '70 Landcruiser wag. 4-$1000. 962-22.'W ,. thi• righl price. 10 DAY m-56>1 oc 522-5333 KARMANN GHIA BELOW COST Ownet'. Supe• buy at $7\lO. •
GUSTAFSON 1970 Karmann Ghia, Good SEE us TODAYI '64 vw Bug, Jst $Zill. take~ Cadillac
I· U I M rood. Most sell! $1475 °'of-PURCHASE °' LEASE •""'5'.ID * I:' nco n· ercary 1973 BAVARIA . fer -UP TO 48 MONTHS . Lale '69 v AN, reblt eng, xfot "%~JL.
wh_l drive. Lo mi. )\._1nl cond .• 68 Cutlaas &.!pr. 2 dr. ht
pr1v pty. 673-8585 aft 5 xlnt. cond, only 51,<m mi,
San Di.ego Frwy at Avery 1970 Toyata Land ~iser. $15i00. Eves.(;46::2560.
Pkwy., Laguna Niguel. Cali blwn 6 & 7,30 PM, PINTO
• 16800 Beae)'l. at Warner '60 GHIA DEAN LEWIS cond. l.4'.lb: of xtras. Must 540-9100 Open Sunl'lay i 842..=t*gt(21t,$~544 CREVIER BMW *~* sell soon. $1195. 5.17--0757. ~ 49S..OSOO 831a0800 wkddays 675--1818.
CORVETTE '69 LINCOLN 'PINTO 1971, ~uto, air, debJXI
!nt. .disc br~~ n! Ura. I~ 'tH"Nne of the Viking'' Sales · Service· Leasing MAZDA ITIQIYIQIT(AI ·~=~~b~~~:.pai~~~ I 208 \\'. lst St .. Santa Ana • -= =-=-55•~7 . '10 Jeep 835-3171 1966 HARBOR "11· 1525· ·~•• . • I -=~-"---~-,--I * Mmlo 73 Rotoiy * E•• ~ -• '67 vw Squa,.back. Great Wagoneer custom. V8 Vi.sll our new bame! $66 MONTH COSTA M .--11'-car. The 1st $850 lakes it.
. auto'!'attc, _po wed,' & ' ' 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE '71 TOYOTA lllDlt n ,.,.;s.=.:.7":.:.:':_· ..,.-~--1 LOW PRICE , ateenng, &ll' con • Wiil .. ___... ....__._ •--lllllllft 1-'64 Cadill ._, I I'. tion'"• c~~n.). --r -VOLVO a ac pn~"' ow, .....,.. ·~ CAIL l:fR. FRY 84U686 it should be a mistake, 10 ~~---.... Hint~ Beach • •• %1-:.":e..'=r ~i--------~G~E TRIAL EX-
$3299 ROY CARVER.Inc:. ca.. SALE GUSTAFSON
' 2'80 Harlx" Blvd. . ZM E. ITUt 81. MAZDA $1995 FINAL CLOSE OUT . Lincoln-Mercury
eo.ta Mesa Coola M--'72 VOLYOS 16800 Beach at Warne•
/\t -~:-sowve 1 __ ._C:_O.;_;,R_TI_NA_. _;.:· ,_rum Beech BL ' 8C-li66 MOST ALL MOOE LS 142..=';8'[21i'Js9!2.5544 ... ~l'l"'"Pl'P-~ 1 m CORTINA 2 dJ', auto.. MERCEDES BENZ 6 DEMOS "Homo of the Vikinv"
! · 1 R&H. reblt eog., new tires. AL~ MUST GO '69 l::ad E1do, must sell this
i Reliable le econ.~ 50 USED IN FEB. week, AM/FM, good cond.
. "1211 DaO.oo P/U. Landau tion. J550. Arut 557 San ,,...., f>wy at Av..;, DEALER COST $3395. oc be•! ofie•, days
' top. Alr/cond. Custom wood DATSUN MERCEDES ~ ,_ ___ •r.--1 558-1500, nltes 831-2066. I lrim-C!!!tom cam,,... •he!l1 ---.·-----~---"'iJ1:0SOO BROW COST CHEVROLET •· Many . i!'Xiru! 3700 nu. DATSUN -ON DISPLAY
96l--O'l9'J. •• Sharp New car 71 TOYqrA Corolla Station SEE US TODA.YI I_ ·n DATSUN "plckup with 6 RD/lDSTER 1'GO ~ins Wa;.oo. xlnt cond. Sl<OO. PURCHASE°' LEASE l pae ca.hover camper. Air, ~y ~IA. New 'nres. 642-Gli UP TO 48 MONTHS
many xtras, $2475. \Yill ac-Pin1tJipmg, Radio, T~ Coming In Ewry Day '12 Toyota C.Orolla, Xlnt DEAN LEWIS
I;,: cept small tent trailer as nf'all Cover, Must ~ tbia: Ask AbOut Our Unique cond. AM/FM stereo, Week
. part trade. 496-4123 (341BUQJ UMCI Mo..-L-doys only 64&-JSIL f~
'72 CHEVY LUV. Am-Fm. ~=~rntft--~.,.----Plons TRIUMPH Heavy duty bumpec. Good HCltlSe of Imo-IS 1 ~~~Q. REASONABLE! ~ ,.::,~.=. 6ll62Manchester,~M TRIUMPH '"69 TR-6
-TOYOTA PU with shell, --on lhe Santa Ana Frwy ~lichelin Radials, Super '" mm. a .... !WM 381). 1966 HARBOR ' ll,000 mi., top oondltlon. 1973 DATSUN [-~-&tsuu] COSTA MESA ~303 $1850. 557.wl MERCEDES-BENZ '67
('. '-55 PANEL truck, rt'blt ~ng. All MODELS m--s. A ir Conditioning, '64 VOLVO PlllOO
new brakes, perfect cond. IN STOCK Power Sle<'ring,~~ 1000'11l0.:t::fct Runs well, ne1~ P.·ai~t.
1 646-9083 lmrrMCllete Delivery Auto-Trans... AM-FM·SW, ._...., ~ ._. _ radiahl. R!H. nice 1ntenor.
,· CHEVY % ton ptf, ~·= .. ·-_ Radie>, Spotl~ (VS0118) '63 TR4. Very fine cond re-17Sl=05tl=--~o•~o~fi~'C'''-496-4 __ 1_23-,;.;;;; l custom ca.~per, auto, ps, ;I N,rtttttttrf' labnnt 1 ~.,~ cent overhaul, & xtras $895. Autos, UMCI ·990
' '62 CHEVY 1f.i pu. very good _ ~ = ........,} ~ 54&-<J2.l7. e '58 PORSCHE
"REDUCED FOR QUICK
SALE"
1970 Chev. Concours Estale
three seater station wagon.
AM &. FM s!erro radio, fac-
t<lry-air. heater. tilt·!tl't'ring
whc'"l , pov,.er steering and
power di.~c brakes, 350
engine, lugg~ rack, lighl
olive green bddy with side
paneling and tan i11terior.
GOOD CONDITION! Asking
$2150. Call 557-4861
VEGA 71
HATCHBACK
4-Spettl, Alloy \Vheels, Ne1v
_ Ti~s. (418 $r;s
Metallic 1''1nish , Air-<:on-
dilioning, 4-Specd, AM-FM
Radio, Ne1v Red-Streak
Tires, (193 EAEl.
$3895
CORVEI'ffl '70, 454 4.spd,
P/SJ P/B, P/\V, Crean, pri
party. $3700 5.12-8718
COUGAR
~
SOFT AS A
KITTEN
With the power of a Couga'.'r,
a '67 XR7. Tape too! 10
DAY J<'REE TRIAL EX-
CHANGE
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
142-8144 * (213) 592,5544
''Hom• of tht Viklnsa''
DODGE
1972 OiARGER -Metallic
b\Ue. Mag whls, 3 4 0
Magnum, custom interior.
sleroo f~f & tape. Full
race eguip, 18,0ClO mi.
T.O.P. or make offer.
646-58.18 or 979-7338.
air,lowutilitybed,,546-2535 l .1&~'*'!-ewe.___f HL !.61 ?r best offer. 540-7215. e 'ii9LTOFORD
j· ~~·~·•· o'hauled, um 0ai.unr,:c1<-up •team-~ ~ VOLKSWAGEN :.lll-nn o• 646--03.'7 1 ·61=00:::..,:!lG,::,.E="'Pl"c"'ku,..,.•.-,,,69~383;;;; ~rU.~~· ~d~ .60 MERCEDES 00 Die9el. vws, .. 56 TO 71 BUICK ·73 FORD LTD COUNTRY
engine w/4 apd trans. h--•.,., PYtuaust ...... tom, Dk. blue. 4 ctr ''Class.ic". Beetles, Buses, Squ_arebacks, .. ~,.,. • .,. .__._......., of 'TI '61 EL CAMINO, Vl''"" clean. SQUIRE STATION WAGON
FORD
5.'i7 2562 "'ou T_;:-.:-.. ,,-· u ......... , ~u, .. r.. -· .... -= • ., w/LTO llrougham optlon. -heavy rear sbock:a, extended AM/FM. Radials. Given Dunf' Buggy, Baja ~· B ·ck R" · full ......,...,. Ong. Michelin tire!l, air · i dial A" -~-~ II Ton Ranger bu l · · n-> • O\le!' Sam i 66 !SVC""") u1 1~raJ __ ~; ..--~·· package, Stee Ra s, 1r •v .rum . rear mper, gt" rrum:rs. IOVUW care. oc;-~ ouer p e ""'°. top corvl. :U~.t<I-cone!., R/H, vinyl roof. ap-Shocks-adjustnb\e, Cu.~tom
package w/aJ.r. $~850. Call $2400. Da~: 673-3931; Aft 5 SJllX). 56-4.$. $595 ~ * ,66 Buick Skylark, air prox 55,000 n1i. $ l 1 5 O. J1itch, 400 cu. cng .. p.s ..
968-5)t
7
. pm: 644-85n". 'Tl Men-edcs ~ ~-Im-~~L ~ cond.. pstpb, auto trans, 673-2lS6. P .B.. Auto.. Air, Luggage I *'TI DATSUN P.U.* '71 DATSUN pickup with 6 mac ooly U,cm nu. am/fm ~ $600. 55!-2594 1971 Impala 2 Dr. 1-hltp. Pis. Rtuil, Thh·d SE'a1s, etc. I air, AM/P"M, wide tires &: pac cabover carqper. Air, slcnt> $8700. days 66-0.'ll3, A .,...-1 . 1 nd IJ P/b, fac air, 35,tm n1i . 7.UOO 111i., ~h•)l\'J'OOm con·
mags, $19:XI .. 496-41!3. lnMY xtru, $2475. Will ac-e\'eS 6ti-C976 ask for Bob }II' !* ~~ '71 lliviera, x ~1 co • a C.oo:I rubber, good cond. cJ1i1on. o1·1~in::il O"'ner -
963 cept small tent trailer as 0eCaro - ---pwc, 68,000 mi, $3250. Pri $23Zl. Eves &. wknds, 5.Jl-nioving. S-l.51l0. 832-1596.
ans part trade. 496-4123 MG '72 vw Camper, AM/FM, par1y. $8--1896 7CtJ6. _c(~P.'.C"c.· _,_r,_,1y.:.'.·'--,~==
· '69 CHEVY VAN DAT~tlN '69-510 STA. .... r ndlal&. Porsche 914 CADILLAC 'TI KINGSWOOD ESTATE BY 01ig owoe< -'66 Country
Must sell. Ude weekend! WAGS, Choose from 2 MG-8 & C ROADSTERS <":ngi:ne,_ many extras. $3700. WAG. Extras, 15.800 mi. Squire sta wgn, very clean. %..J: ~b:,,v~~. ~~a~ YNW7« & ~~4Mll)' & GT 67 & 61 .~art ~bacJc 1969 Sedan De Ville ~r1ow blue book. ~b.~P-~~~ ~~~: ~~95. Call att. 5 pm. m-.... '2 ·= (WKW7'8) m;s ~/FM~ "'"':,";'i."7. Only lhe finest"""~ in '55 CHEVY $150 Xlnt.~b:;l~~A:';"'°'
19T1 Ford wind o 'v fU.Uf .:DD ~-£;.: ~ 557-8005. this impressive rid finish 2 door, 6 cyl .. 3 speed, new Exc:cllent condition. Blul'
·van-Camper e q ul .PP e d 9 aao w ~ .:zlWLtNI[ Ml?,ST SEU. '69 VW. ~top ~~';!:~1~11 !°i1 ~ tirl'll. Runs. 54.'l·369l . Boo'< $985, will sell for $i95.
w/alnk A Icebox.. Xlnt cond. ...._,a.di -•-,=. camper. R..~H. refrig. Good M 1 1 t •e•' '12 l\1onle Carlo. Buckt1 962-'Tw.:1. M..... •II' nd •• 000 . . A st--• any uxury ea u" · •~ AM/FM .::c:c:.:==~~~-,-t2700 or offer. ""'' BC , ..._ co . ""· ong m1. -.. t201ABE• S('a.,,, , many ex; '62 GALAXY 500, clean, x'.lnt
84&..s738. 'Tl DATSUN 240 z. 4 speed.. at $1fi00. 645-51.24 $3-~--295 ~~~~r sharp. Owne transport.Htion, air, rad iu.
1971 DODGE, B-1000 Mq. Air. EXTRAS. Call aft '69 MG llidld. 23.000 ml.. '63 VW Bus like nu till ~.,.,.,., P/S, P/B $))(). Call t1!1rr 6
Tmderman Van,
1
complete 6 pm, 673-3110 or 919-UllL bard & d ff:lp. mak2 ofkr. paint. am/ti-n .ra'Uo,' ~rig '68 Cbevelle SS 396 Convt.• pm 5.i7-R70!l.
. w/mqt, custom . palQt, FM ••n DATSUN P.U.• call &T:>-6350. has 14,IXXJ mi no dents, Stt ~~~· Air. Xlnt cond. $1200. ,6~ COli'NTli._Y_SQ_u_i,,,-.-.,.,-"
atrreo/tapt, hltM. Xlnt air, AM/FM, ~ tires Ir MGI to believe. &I0-1916 675--0363, rln·~ & lrnn". air, $l.20J,
• '('Ond. ~ 673-3052" map, $1600., 496-4l23. '69 VW Fastback. Auto, HiQ() '67 Chewlle, 4 dr, r/h, ps, CRll 962·U61J:l tiefore 9 ur
• ;68 DODGE VAN f u 11 '7l . DAtsuN 510. 4-spd. •65 MGI Fuft hajerdion. $UJO, or best orig pain!. V~ry good t'01KI. ·•;:fl•::;•,;5~pm"-.,=-,-::=-
camper. New ttrel. $1350. R&.H, new tlrea. Xlnt o:n:L orftr. 5C8-5380. $800. 53S-343l eve&. ·&ii 1'°'0RD . LTD, 1 owner, can an. 5, 645-'7141 $1450 ....... aft~·-R .. ter '65 vw Van. must sell, best '66 Chevelle Slat Wgn, radio. power, air, A)1 /FM stereo,
Autos Wanted 961 '71 DATSUN 510. kp4. 2 to cboollt fh:m. '-· oa.r. Call 66-5936 alter 6 San Diego JAy al Avery htr. stick shift. 6 1.-yl, Koo6 new tire$, lo1v mileaitc.
RAH, new tin!s. Xloh t'OIXI. spco:t. rlldio aM heat· p,m. Jb-y. Lagmia Niguel. Utts, $600, 54~. $995. M!HJ0\"2. ___ _
$1450. 499-2689 after 5:30. tt. (Pl(CJO), '61 FASTBACK~ ti r c 1, 49$-0800 831-0800 1966 E1 Cruniflo.VR, auto, e 1970 2-i1t' 1-.tA\TEHICK.
~ nice, $1550. n...01;;KH4S.
\Cl. PLY ~~y::=. V~
BIG YELLER auto, p/1, p/b, a IT,
Yeller in color, rich in lu.x· AM/FM. nu lirff. SUKlO.
ury, is thi• '69 Lincoln 4 05<&-~TISO~!...-~..,.--,=~
door. Very, very niCt'!. 10 '70 'PrYrnouth ~-Mi.
DA-Y F,REE TRIAL EX-air, V-8, 318, cchunn atick.
CHANGE $1250. 548-738.5
GUSTAFSON PONTIAC
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
142-8144 * (213) 592.5544
''"Home of tht Viking''"
MEllCURY
2480 Harbor Bll'<l,
Costa MCSl•
At Fair Drive 546-8017
LOVE TRAP
• '69 Grand
Prix
VB, automatic. air
conditioning, ~er
steering. (2'M579Pll3-
86e).
$1999
2480 Hartior Blvd.
Costa M ...
At Fair Drive
546-ll017
All en j ~Old sm obile , lJlJ Cadillac I
'67 Pontlac OTO Sp. Cpe.
auto, P/S, Nu tires. O,o;I
top, SpotJe.uly clean. A-1
c:ond. $1000, 3ee SaUSun.
&12-5112.
'62 Tempest. Good motor A
!ires, Needs ~
$100. 548-7947
'69 GTO 400 cu in eng. 4 spd.
J\fags. Air shocks, New
t\rt"!'i. $1900. 545-8986.
• '69 Pontiac
CntaUna ronvt'rtibre.
Ui, lo mUC'ag~. VS,
automatic, p Owt>r
meering. (841.FLV).
Kelley suggooed re-
tnJI $1555.
$1349
2480 llurbor Blvd.
C<r.1!a Mt'AA
At }'!iir [lrivl"
;)16.flOJj
DATSUN 'ff PICK-UP $599 CoQd loond. $100. S,J6.-6812 or •72 C-ad C DeVilie kflld R&fl, lonneau cov~r. trlr Good l'Ond. 1_,v,1, blue Book. =..if"•• Radio, a.an, -7. w/,otd \or.;. Fully '<'qui~. hitch. Cl~an, 19()(), S73'-0.'.60 MS-71°'· ' EYE CATCHER
$11, MMt ltarb« Bl\td. '15 VW Sedan, 1600 ceng. 1900) ml'a. Pvt pt)t. $6100. ·a; Bel Aire 4 Or. Power & '6:1 MUSTAN G, 6 cy.I nu. ls this red ~1crcury, 'G8"---------·I -, j _ J.Uchelfn X tires. FM/AM !~.'-s/wk:nds 5fl6...1Jt7. Days air. New belted tires, $6.JO, tlr\'8, cnu. Jll!rle<:t. $6.10. 'I'
C.• Mna T'-846-1323 " P11rklane 2 door. Tiif" f)rlc'(• s;wi. '64 S"l'ATION w,.., radio, $'mQ:. 546-S.200. 642-3870. ' 67~2646. iii right too! 10 DAY FRE:F; Good ~unnlng C'OUI. At F~ Orhle "1l. vw Squa-reback, air, "'-' '72 CAOIU • .AC Coupe de '62 BEL.AIRE CHEV. 2 dr, '67 GALAXTE, ll/T, Arr. TRIAL EXCHANGE ,94-9'l27
-
7 _,.!lot, radio, 'Xlot <'On<! Ville. All _x1rU. foe) llereo, R/llnd, ~~~ C!!J:! .~'· xlot. A/C, P/S, good oond. $895. GUSTAFSON "67 Rrunbl.c Rebel·, Y-8·, .U-·, tbNoui. 96).3851 $5!)50. $-71T1. • co . """" ""°""u•. 1 owner. 64+-4987
'12 "' Panel. 5,1»3 miles. '72 CadUlac. ~ll~! mack 1969 OIBV Caprice, atr, '70 GALAXTE WAGON Lincoln-Mercury !~t~r;;,~~~90· Call D4864
brand. new, Landau top. iOl!lded~ $$000. powtt., ditc brma. $1995. 9 pas~. :lO,OO(l mi. . ltiXOO Bf-Af'h Al WRrnf'r T·BIRD 675-ll!I after 4 pm 31-2908. 962-S39S RfltT 5:!it'l wkdayx $26('(1. * * * * 5-IA-7001 Jlu1itl'lf! fin \WA"l'I
1966 VW. $350, EL DO RA 00 'f:!I, eXCf'J>-.68 Ghevy l1n1'1<-lla, 2 <lr, ou!o, 1007 CAL.AXIi-: 500 842~8844 * (213) 592-5544 ---------1
CALL fB.»15 tionaUy deul Many ex1tu. Pl~ PIB, R &. H, air,. prJ CONVEl\TlBL-E "Home of the Viking" .. '6.1 T·BlRO
'91 OpU Rell)le Kdt.. I.-.. liOUSE Htmll""! Watch the Ofie-UW'nl'!l'. $2650. ~. ply, S«--3.11~ rel'l, full powrr, .fnr air, xlnt 1 .~.:.::=. ~_::."=.:..::::C~I IWns. AJ. ia. $100. ~~try, md. liftlll $100. OPEN HOUSE eotumn. w11n1 8d "''ull.ll:: • 642-5678 Srll hUC' items . 642-~ (.'1'111rl. S7W. l!t?-1601 1Y ::_""::::,:>::_< :::'':::"°:.::_":::'":..::Cla=='"::'n:::ed:::__' ___ _:M&-f!9!M::::..='---'~'---~~-'~='-'=e:C::::::::::;:.._ l
i ~ ~ ,, ) -----' ---.,
• •
• •
'
• .. • • •• •
"' .. <
31 DAlLY Pu.w , .., .n .. , 1q73 .L
1'..U9 Cireu •sBHK-
® Jt
"Rob:-rt u~d a bod word! And it wosn't just 0 children 1 bod word, it was o GROWN.UP'& bod
word!"
Senate Claat
3 Walking Solons
Compare 'Feats'
From Wire Services
Three poUticlam who won
election after walking the
length of their states have
compared feet at Senate office
In .Washington.
Sen. Lawto.J Chiles (0.F1a.)
said he remains a devoted
walker and had, in {act, just
taken part in a parade in
Florida.
from the White House, is one
of 2,437 naval officers who
took advantage of an offer of
early release, and will be
separated .from the-service 'on
his 25th birthday, March 21.
He will have served two
years and five months -11
months at sea · -on what was
to.have been a four-year hitch..
* Accompanied by mounted
(
,--------.. lancers, Daniel Pat r I ck J Moynihan rolled up to the . PEOPLE President's House In New
• Delhi in a Rolls-Royce to offer
his credentials as the new
Americail ambassador to
India.
Chiles said he turned his
special bilring boots over to
Illinois 'Gov. Dao Walka,
when Walker began his own Past a line of stiffly at-
"" las tentive Gurkha so Id i er s UIAe t year. hed . Sen. Dick Clark (D--Jowa), mare Moynihan, fo~er
who won a narrow upset "Vic-, Harvard prof~ and adviser
tory · over Republican in-to U.S. presidents~ Then a
cumbent .Jack Miller, said he deep bow ~ a br1~f speec~
wore out four pairs of dress for the bene~t of Jndian PreSl-
shoes. dent V.V. Girl.
Clark claimed' the greatest Moynihan's next assigned
distance, 1,313 m 11 e s to move was to hand over his
Walker's 1,197 and Chiles' less credentials. But he forgot. An
precise guess of about 1,000 Indian official signaled. An
miles. American aide n u d g e d .
All three kept their shoes on. Moynihan remenlbered the
'J;1le subjec_t of comparable credenUals. But he still forgot
feet size was taboo at the what to do with them.
infonnal gathering. So he dumped them on a red * velvet cus.hjon held by Girl's
Actor Raymond St. Jacques aide-de-camp~ Girl discreetly
of Beverly Hills bas been retrieved them and by so
· named in a Pima Cowity doing officially s i g n a I e d
(Ariz.) Superior Court felony India's acceptance of the new
warrant charging him with all-thumbs ambassador.
wriling a $500 cheek on In· * sufficient funds. President Nixon has selected
Pollce say the warTant a 37-year-old former garbage
stems from St. Jacques' man with a Horatio Alger-type
purchase of jewelry at a background to be the new
Tucson store Jan. 19. head of the Action agency,
'lbe actor was there at the which Includes the Peace
time for the filming of a pilot Corps and VISTA. '
television program c a I I e d AdmiIDstration officials said
"'The Boom Town Band and the post would go to Dr.
C8ttJe Co." Michael Pasquale Balzano Jr * . Harold BerUner, a cnttc of
second-home recreational sub-
divisions in the Sierra Nevada,
has resigned as district at-
torney of Nevada County.
The board of supervisors ac-
cepted Berliner's resignation
from tlu! $22,500-a-year post.
Berliner, In office for 16
years, was named to the part·
time job of public defender
which pays $12,000 annually.
He told supervisors he will go
into private practice and con-
tinue concentrating on en-
vironmental affairs.
* His fa ther retired as a
lieutenant colonel after a
who went from illiteracy to a
Ph.D degree after a back in·
jury made it impossible for
him to continue to collect
garbage in his hometown of
New Haven, Conn.
Balzano has been a White
House staff assistant for the
past year, serving as Nixon's
special envoy to blue-collar
workers, especially w h i t e s
with strong ties to their ethnic
backgrounds.
* Andy Dominguez ' went to
work 10 years ago fQr the
Hueneme School District as a
handyman and custodian. ,T&.
day he's a fifth grade teacher
in Port Hueneme. -. military career. And his
grandfather did a bit of
soldiering in his time. But life
in the service is not..Jor Lt.
(j.g.) David Eisenhower, soo-
in-law of President Nixon and
grandson of the late President
Dwight D. Eisenhower.
It was a hard pull that in· .
eluded a stint as a school bus
driver, gardener and mail car-
rier. And night classes at Cal
State Northrjdge after courses
at Ventura Junior College.
Young Eisenhower, ac-
cording to an announceme~t
"I come from a non·
teaching faQ1il,y," Dominguez,
35', said. ·:My father was e
field laborer."
l
· 1 See by Today's
Want Ads
e S?\tAlL BUT hflGHTY -
1969 MG Midget with
23.000 miles and a hard
and eoft lop. Make oiler.
• 1971 IMPALA ror sale.
It's a 2 door hardtop \vl!h
power &leering and brakes,
' factory air, 35,000 miles,
good rubber and In good
condltion.
' '
• YOUR
•
,
Open Dally 9 A.M.-9 .P.M. •
Sat. & Sun. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
Sale Prices Honored Through Sun., March 41
"Your Choice of 2f' Wide-Aluminum or fiberglass Sheers!" , .
Omamental
. • Corrugated aluminum roofing ·
1
• beauty & durability combined!
~ Corrugated fiberglass is
maintenance free!
•
PATIO POSTS . • Natural aluminum color-best
heat & lighJ reflection for a. cool
summer in. y1111r own backyard.
• Colorful fiberglass le!s you set
the style for your n~ighborhocid
for years to come. • Beautifully styled
wrought iron patio posts
with satin black finish.
•Strong and handsome-
put 'em together for a
hanging plant display!
• Full 8 Ft. tall.
Center
Post
REG.
$5.59
Corner
Post
REG,
$9.49
4 DAYS ONLYI
Ready-To-Hang
BAMBOO SHADES
• A strikingly decoralive and inexpensive
way to control sunlight.
•Complete with hardware--easy to install I
4' Wide x 6' High
•EG. $2.59
$199
6' Wide • 6' High
110. $3.7t
$299
8' Wldt • 6' High
IEG. $4.99
$)99
-4 DAYS
ONLYI
Super Size
BULLETIN BOARD
''Gr•af for family Notes or Graflltll''
• For kitchen, workshop,
office, playroom.
• Handsome, sturdy wood
frame.
REG. $1.39
99: .. h
4 DAYS ONLYI
12'fX12''x If: " . ' CORK PANELS
• Cocoa colored panels
insulate & absorb noise.
• Nice for the kids
room~lternote
them with mirror
tiles for a great
look I
REG. $1.19
• One of the ~trongest materials
per volume & weight-thars
aluminum!
26" WIDE : 26" WIDE .
6 n. LONG 8 n. ,LONG
REG •. $2.49 REG. 53.29
• No caulking necessary-simply
overlap panels down the long side!
26" WID~ 26" WIDE
10 n. LONG 12 n .. LONG
REG. 54.19 REG. 54.99
$ 99$ 49 $ 49 $ 99 .
lasy .. Roll
APPLIANa ROLLERS
•Move your heavies the easy woyl
• No-mar Whe&ls won't harm flooring
-high impact styrene.
• Adiustoble to fit any appli«nce.
't
REG. $1.99 99( ~-lil:Ji..~ SAVf $I .001 • S.f I ' • ~ : I
4 DAYS ONLYI ~~
Kld1s
FISHING POLE sn
''fverytltlng YolTll Need
7o Go fishing Wltlt Dadl'1
• Packed in a take along carrying case.
I i"~~,../.;j•. Includes bamboo pole, hooks, line,
I, float-th• whol• outfit~xcept
fo r worrnsl
YOUR CHOICE
9Ft,or 7"'· 12 Ft. • • • • . . 7
' \ "Lets You
Enjoy The Outdoors
Year iRound!"
4 DAl$ ONLYI
Assorted
PICTURE FRAME
MOULDING
~ ''It's loq & lconomlcoll''
• 8 distinctive patterhs--see silhouette.
• Kiln dried pine--ready ta finish
·, and assemble.
RIG. 27c 17~ .....
4 DAYS ONLYI
U.S. Army Surplus 50 Caliber
AMMO CANS
• Water tight, air !ight all steel ammo cans.
• lid closes over o
durable rubber gasket
~oking a moish.lr•
proof seal.
' • 12"· long x 6" wide x
7" high.
69(
4 DAYS ONLYI ,
EASILY, 99( .WORTN
$4.99 loch '
' ' 4 DAYS ONLYI
.I
·(
• ~
I
. •
•
.,
'
7
)
l
t
m
_,
~
w
at
of v
ta •'
le
fr
d
• •
'o
•
--· . . , ..
•• • .. ' '
•
San Clemenie · . Today's Final
Capistrano • .
EDll'ION N.Y. Stecks
*
VOL 66, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES . • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH I, 1973 \ TEN CE!"lS
·Tax ~eform .Will . ·curb Area School Benefits
By JAN EDWARDS
Of ._ Olllr """ stelt
C.pbtrano Unlll<d SChool District
tMl!te.. listened to requests from
t~ Wednesday night that woold
mean, more than $1 million increase in saJarY and medical insurance benefits
and said there was ''no way" they could grant all of them.
Trustees said that because of the new
Reagan-Moretti tax reform measure
wblch puts a ceiling on the amount the
district may spend per student, the
district could not aUord it.
"It js very obvious right now ... there
--------
iJ oo ·way you could ever get all of thls,"
·aal4 'i'nistee George Whtte. "I tblni that
you all really understand that. What we
are going lo do la the best we can with
what we have."
'1'l'us1ees then uked fer a Ilk giving
the H requests In onle!' ol their lm-
portanoe lei the teachers. '"llils woold
give ut an indication of their most preu-
lng needs aod pre~ent ui from focusing
oo the leut important ones," trustee
Gordon Peterson said. •
The lnlomial study leSSion at Marco
Forster Junior ~ began negotiations
which teachers said they want completed
Sa11 Juan Tragedy
Grisly Smashup
_Beheads Marines
Two Camp Pendleton Marine sergeants
were decapitated In a high-speed traffic
crash early today in San J u a n
C.pistrano: ·
The grisly, single-car oolliskm occurred
at about 1:30 a.m. and claimed the lives
of Marine Sgla. James C. Jones, 22, and
Vernor C. RU88ell, 24. Both men were at·
tached to the 3rd Baualion, 7tll Marines, ,1 thebue.
Highway patrolmen said th&t the crash
occurred in the southbound Janes of the
Sao DJego Freeway near the San Juan
Creek overcrosalng.
men. After that impact, the car ffipped
onto its side and skidded nearly 300 feet
in the opposite lanes of the freeway.
Highway patrolmen could give no
reason for the loss of control of the vehi-
cle nor did they Immediately determine
whidl man was driving the car. lnvesti·
gation was continuing, they sa1d.
by the !Int boanl meeting In Ma)'.
It .... the 111* --tnJstees met di:eclly with tead>ers after the t...
llW presentalioa ol requests for the new
fucal year. In the past, tn®lHIJ!POIDted
negotiators met with teacher represen·
ta lives. ,,,
The Rea-Moretti measure (Senate
Bill 90) c;uts property taxes In aome
dtslricta but overlook& basl~d dislrlcla
such as the C.pilltrano district, aooordlng
• to White. ~ '
The dtstrlots' fiscal situation was ex·
plained by Sam allcaa. assistant
superintendant of general services:
"W• will be spending !900.0t pe< slt>-
dent, and underim 90 we are allowed to
spend !165.0t pe< lllldent."
He sakl this allo""M the district to in-
crease preaent taxes only sligblly and the
tow -.Id no1 be enoug11 lo ac-
colllJllOdate the taooher's salary, t...
surance and other rponelary requests.
"We ~·a very poor, wealthy district.
We cannot bank oo federal funds aoy
more. It is not a healthy situation from a
standpoint of plain, old dollars,•: Chicas
said.
Each request was explained by
teachen and trustees asked lew ques--
lions following each pre.sen tat Io n .
Trustees said they basically undtrstood
V(hal-teachers wanted but were now
unabi.e to judge which requests they
would be able to grant.
Teacben said they want an II-percent
salary increase because raise~ in the
~ two years have not been com-
mensurate with the rise of the cost of liv-
ing. •
One teacher said the teachers' morale
was low in 1971 when they received a two
percent raiae.
Robert Knapp, district personnel direc-
t.or, objected, saying that "99 percent or
teachers that come into the district are
For re.asons as yet undetermined, the
.Amerlcan·made sportscar lost control at
high apeed and alammed into a concrete
al>utmeirt. ~ the auto skidded across
the _freeway and slammed lot.o a divider
fence reinforced with stiel cable.
Marin.e Gets
Trial D.elay
In Slaying . ' ' ·. . ""1,......
U.S. MARSHACS°W!nt RIFLES WALKllOWN:"lrcrl'OOTTltAIL lflGHWA\: TOWARD CAPTURED BUILDING
lndlons on Oglala Sl011>< Submltt.d Domonlls!G Federal Agoncl.., Excha"tod Gunfint The cable, observers said, tore the roof
from the vehicle and beheaded the two
12 Governments
Initial Vietnam
Peace Agreement
PARIS (AP) -The foreign ministers
of 12 governments, including the world's
superpowers, initiiled a n i n e • po I n t
declaraUQn today endorsing the Vietnam
peace agreement and establishing a pro-
cedure for examining violations.
Secretary of St&.te William P. Rogers
and the foreign ministers of Britain,
France, China and the Soviet Union were
among those who initialed the. document,
together wtth North and South Vietnam,
the Viet Cong and the four members of
the International Commission of Control
and Supervision -Canada, Indonesia,
Poland and Hungary.
The • declaration, pledging the 12
governments to keep the peace and to
reconvene when any six of them lodge a
complain~ is lo be formally sl&ntd Fri-•
day at a ceremony ln the Internatlooal
·Conference center. '
Foreign Secretary Mlicbell Sharp of
canada inlUaled tbe document bUI
teserved his government's posiUoo with
regard to continued participation In the
control commission.
" He 1ald the Canadian government will
' (Ste PACI, Page I)
Dead .Inf ant's
Mother . Sought
~e police •~ looking for the
mother of • newborn baby boy found 8ead more than two -111 &go In the
Jadiel rest room or a drlve-ln theater.
They have ruled lhal the lnlaot'• d&ath
WU I homlcJde. ; Police aakll~atlon of the Feb. 11
death Indicates Uiat the six pound. eight f!::"."" Inl&nt was horn bealll\y and died
of N!glect. · Tho bod,y wu loul)CI by a janllot at the
Stadium OrlvO'ln Tbeater on Kalella
Avenue. Police theorta that the child
• ...., born ln a vehicle at the driv..io and
placed tn the rat romn.
A three-week delay was ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court ar-
raignment of El Toro Marine Jared Alan
Wallace on charges of fll'St degree
murder, kidnap and assault with a deadly
weapon. Indians Confinu·e Sieg~ Judge James Tumtr granted the delay
to give the tall Marine's lawyer time to
examine a transcript containing allega·
ttons that be kidnape<! a woman Feb. 4
and raped and murdered another five
days later.
Wallace, 26, will remain in county jail
with bail denied until bis March 20 ap-
pearance. He was indicted Wednesday by
the Grand Jory on three felony counts.
Senawrs McGovern, Abourezk Fly w Wounded Knee
Wallace was arrested Feb. 11 in
Mission Viejo by officers investigating
the alleged kidnaping seven days earlier
of Carole Ann Rowan, 24, tp X·ray
technician at a San Clemente bOspital.
Miss Rowan told deputies the man she
identified as Wallace posed as a police
officer and ordered her to pull over near
the Beach Cities offramp of the San
Diego Freeway.
Wallace held a part time civilian job as
a security guard with the Bums Intema·
tiooal Security Company.
Miss Rowan said her assailant ·held her
at gwi.point and tried to handcuff her
wbile warning her that she. was being
(See MARINE, Page !)
WOUNDED KNEE , S.D. (AP) -South
Dakota's two senators Oew to their home
state today in an efiori to bring an end to
a two-day siege by militant Indlam
holding 11 residents of tbJs tiny com·
D\unlty hoatage.
Sens. George McGovern and James
Abourezi arrived at Ellsworth Air Force
Base by military jet just before 9 a.m. '
(PST) and departed by helicopter shortly
afh~rwards in The direction of this em-
batUed hamlet about 75 miles away.
It we not clear, however, whether the
helicopter carrying the 'two Democrats
actually would land inside the com-
munity. which bas been sealed oil by law
officials since about 200 Indians took over
its few buildings Tue,,day night.
M the helicopter left the air base al
'
'Not Enough Money'
'
Rapid Clly, Ralph Erickson, a special
a,ssi1janl \o the U.S. allomey general;
said he Intended tO advise the senaiors,
presumably by radlo, to land outside the
comniunlly for fear ~f possible gunfire.
"OUr prtine oonctrn at this point is to
obtain the release of the II hostages. We
are particularly concerned with lbe fact
that several of theae boatages are people
in their 80s ,'' Erickson said in nearby
Pine Ridge.
Abour<lk said be Io re leaving
W &Shington re bas """' assured by
leaders of the American lndlan Move-
ment Uiat some hostages 1would be
released when he arrived in the
southwestern South Dakota area and said
be was "confident we can negotiate the
release of the re.st once we get there."
Parks' Agency Support.ed
A dlroctor of tbe C.plstrano Bay l'uka clal drain on the association lreasu,Y for
and Recreation District Wedn.Hday the private maintenance each month of
defended Iba agency and said that Ila tbe planted EstrellA Mall
meager, $30,000 annual budget can not A.uoc:tauM Presldtnt Frank Ralney ltretcb far enough to Immediately lm-
J>M'e parks In the Palisades. W~y asked Collini ii the district
Parts District Boan! member Miies would help In the costs for the mall
Collins told J!!elllbors of tbe C.plltrano maintenance, but c 0 111 n ' was
Beach Community -•tloo that tbe peaslm!Stic. ·
lo.cent tu rate clt&r(e by the '1'0Clal "l lhlnli lbat the.mall is more of a road
revenue to elfect a major change ln !Tie main 1 ......iu If the bo&Jil district simply can not generate enoualt sllua~a center ltrip II being
condition of Pines Pork wblcb recenlly · would IO 11." be said.
waa -~ to the publlc In a civil court He ldded, howovor, that the boanl
C891l. WOUid COll1lcler the propooal to lhare the
Collilll uld that the dillrlct aJmcbr -. ..
!lad cOmlhltled '12.G!IO or more In lepl Tho major ctrom .., the opoclal
fees ln the cue which wu molved dlltr1ct'1 IUlall budpt Is the J111M<1lt for
oeveral ,.... ago. the acqUilltioo of ilti Del Oblipo UtUe
"Righi '"''°' we simply don'I hove Loque Fleld, and 8v. more yearly enouib _......., to do much tbe," be poymenta aro ootatandlng oo the ~reel,"
said. CoU!ns.llld. 'lllo money, -$10,000 a
Two prime areu of coocem In the ,..,,_ Into county coa.n.
auoclltlon have hem. tbe poor CGbdltion There an alternatives, b o " e • e r ,
ol the blufltop part u well u the niw.. CoUlnl npl•h!t<I. ,
•
An &ccount filling with accumula~
county revenues from perb feet fer new
development in the special <liatrict area
now etceeds $1),CIOO.
"We bave been io1d that the cash is
available f« purchaae of °'" parka but
unW recenUy we believed that there
wou.ld bt no way to obtain Uk! fimds for
development of old parka.
"In ncu1. dayl hoftwr. Wt'•e beard
that then " • ~ lhat the money
oould .i. ....i for maintenance and
~.'' lie Aid. Rolk\mi. __. the district of sloth
In ""Ina tbe parka 1*Cll of C.platrano
.Beach. -
"I "9n1t -lbe need for-bqylnii any new parkland's In C.p'8jrano Beach when
ti>ele ten't enou(h money lo develop tbe
~ we have now," laid; Mrs. Ann
Rainey.
"W.e do move very slowly," Collini
aid, "and we are the firlt IO>&dmil IL
Wbon Y"" hav& little lllOM)', you have lo
move alowly."
•
The 200 Indians have demanded a
Senate probe of the Bureau ol lndlan Ar·
fairs ln r.etwn for freelng tfte hostage•.
Aside from one brief meeting with an
FW agent. the Indians have kept li.w en-
forcement '"oftlcers at a distance, a n d
there was an exchange of gunfire
Wednesday morning.
Abourezk and McGovern were ac·
ISee ~!ANS, Page !)
Outboard Motor
Taken at Harbor
\
An outboard motor valued by the.
owner at '275 wu stolen Wedneaday
night from a dinghy moored at Dana
Harbor, Orange C.OUOty Sheriff's officers
said.
Yacht broker Henry ~rson, 52, of
23411 Santa Clara Drive, Dana Point,
reported the thelt of the engine from a
dinghy moored at his slip, deputies said. .
OUicen believe an intruder who may
have been responsible for the theft was
spotted Wednesday night by another boat
owner who said he saw a man carrying
bolt cutters and a hammer climb the
nearby fence .
They uld the suspect fled from the
area as their informant ran to the
telephone to call police. J
Lumber Firm Looted
In Capistrano Beach
A telovlslon tel and three portable
welding kits were stolen Wednesday
night by burglars wht broke into a
lumber COIJ\P8ny's Qlplstrano Beach
premlse1, Orange 'County Sber!fr's of·
ficcra aalct.
Deputies aald Intruders smashed a win·
dow lo 1aln entry to tho offices of the
Wan! and llarrlnflloo Lumber Company,
34112 Dobeey Park Reed. The total Jos..
was valued at $m.l0.
not concerned with salary. They lrfl
more concerned with gettinG out of smoc
and out of Los ~e1es schoob and into
teaching in the Capistrano Valley."
Another request was the reductJon or
elementary school classes to 25 puplls for
grades ooe through ttiree and 30 for
grades four through six.
Teacheq; :said that because there If a
new empftasis upon diagnosis of each
pupil's progress as directed by the state,
class loads seem heayier to teachers. A
teacher of 30 students, for example, ls
responsible for 180 student learnJng
areas and classes should be kept as small
as po.ssible.
Viet Cong
Won't Give
List of 30
SAIGON (AP) -The United St&lel an-
noun~nlght that the North Viet·
namese turned over 8. list ol. 106
American prisonerS and two Thais to be
released over the weekend. ..
But it said the Viet Con( had not yet
turned over a list of 30 •Americau to be
freed from camps .in SOUtb Vietnam.
The U.S. deleg&Uon lnlllally said IOI
Americaos woold be freed by North Vlei·
nam and 14 by the Viet COllg, but II WU
cllaoovered Jalot that tbea& ftlUr<I lrP
eluded~ the two Thall .liold Jn l1to 1tO<lh
and t\ro Weat Gomwla and two l'lllplool
held iq Ibo IOUlb. -
· ' Oong spokemum ukl u. American poisoners soheduled !or,.,_
by them Included 28 aervlcernen and lour
civilians. ·
The Gennans are Monika Schwirin, a
31·year-old nurse, and medical student
Bernhard Dlebl, rl, who were captured
by the Viet COOg near Da Nang in 118t.
Both were workers for the Maltese Aid
Society, a German Protestant cbarltJ
service.
The FiLipinoo, C.ndido Badua and
Arturo M. Balagot, were captured during
the Tet offensive in 1968.
The Philippines sent a military work
uni~ to South Vietnam during the high-
point of the work.
The U.S. announcement aald:
• "The Democratic Republic of Vtei.,m
representative on the P 0 W au)).
commission, four.party Joint MWtary
Commission, pre 1 e-n t e d to the
U.S. representative a list conlalnlni the
names of 106 U.S. POWs and two Thal
POWs. The United States has not been
advised of the time and place of release.
No new information bas been -received on
the detained pe!SOIUlei held by the
Provisional Revolutionary Government."
'nils is the government of the Viet
Cong in South Vietnam.
The chief spokesman for the North
Vietnamese deJegaUon, Bui Tin, said the
POWs would be freed over the weekend.
lmmediateJy after the list was turned
over lo the American delegation, Jt was
transmitted to Washington so that
r~i.atives of the Amedcan P,risoners could
be immediately notllled 'of lbelr Im-
pending releaae.
Once the next of kin are notified,
WashinglOD wt1I malte lbe list public.
There were DO names releaaed in
Saigon either by the U.S. or North Viet-
namese delegatkms.
Orange Coast
Weatller
Weather sources today predicted
more mostly sunny skies fer the
Orange Coast on Friday. The high
will be in lbe !Os, low tonight about
4!1.
INSIDE TODAY
After 23 doll' lllonosld• hu
wr,cked afrl>lone fn tAe Arctic,
an in;ured b1L!h pilot ate fl4:&h
of one of hh thrte <!«ad pguen·
ger1 to rto11 alft)t. See storv.
Page 4.
L.M. ._.... IS • MWlll •
C•llfltMe S. 1 MvtH1 ..... • CINllHM II-»' ... ,...... ..... 4rp 1
C91nlu JI OfMM C...,., tM4 c.......nl n SY!otlt l'wiw ,.
OMtll Mollwt U t-'I ....
l1Htt11111 ""' • SIMI!. M.tttittt lt-11 ... ,.,.. ... _. J:>,J( ,~..... .. , .... _ .,.n n..-. »
..... .,. ltlCWll ll ...... ..
I• Ill 1' '""'-'t ..... 1Nt
AMI u..n II W""9 ..... 4,.1
• 2 DAILY PILOT St
2 Countries'
Officials Die
w ARSA w (AP) -The lnlerior
minbtm of P ola od and
Coecbo1lonldJ, wbose departmonto
include their countries' se(:ret
poUoo, died In an air era.sh in
northern Poland tonight .
The Polish govemrnent quickly
orden.'<i a top-level lnvestlgatlon.
Radio Warsaw reported Interior
Minister WJeslaw Ociepka and his ·
visiting Cueboslovak counterpart,
Radko Kaska , were flying near the
Baltic-port-of Szczecin when thetr
milit.-ry aircraft went down. AU
tbeJr aides and crew perished too,
but tbe number of dead was not
disclosed.
• in NY
•
'Minnader•Cateciillf' • •
Nixon Backs Off
On Income Plan
WASHINGTON (AP ) -President Nix•
oo, observing that his revamped aoclal
well1Jre program already has aroused
"in~ense contr0ver!Y and considerable
misunderstanding," defended his changes
today in a special measage to C.onareu.
Tile lengthy m.,..ge Itself contained
no surprises and confirmed expectaUon.9
that Nixon would back away from his
1969 welfare reform program that would
have, in effect, guaranteed a minimum
<1nnual income kw poor families.
Much of the emphasis today was on
justifying the reorganization and, in
credit for a record human re80WWI
budget be put at 1125 btWoo -"nearly
twice the amount being sptnt on such
_programs when I took oflJct in_1969.
11Thls Is both a generous budget and a
refonn budget.'' he sald.
"The reforml it proposes wm put mua--
cl• behind the 1CJM<0111y it lntendll. The
overaU effect of these refonna will be the
e.liminatioo ot programs that are
wa.steful llO that we can concentrate oo
programs that work." Judge
,, some cases, scrapping of past federal ac~
Nixon, who said "the welfare mess
cannot be permitted to continue,"
acknowledged he was abandoning broad
weUare reform "11lnce the JeglBlaUve
outlook seems to preclude passage. 1 .in
the immediate future.'' L b tlvltles in the area of human resources. am astes Pl~dglng that be will display "corn·
passion that works -not simply com·
passion lhat means well," Nixon took 'Deep Throat~ ·
From Page J
However, be .Wd he is ordering
vigorous steps to strengthen the manage-
ment of aid to families with dependent
children - a program he described as
"inequitable, inefficient and inadequate"
-through administrative measures and
unspeeifled legislative prope11als.
, , NEW YORK CAP) - A Criminal Court
I judge today declared the hard-core
porDographic film "Deep Throat" to be
the ''nadir of decadence" and !ound it
"indisputably obscene by any legal
measurement."
Judge Joel Tyler found the defendant
corporation guilty of two cowita of pro-
moting obscenity and ruled it .could be
fined up to twice the amount of the
profits the movie grossed since it opened
here last June.
The city brought the ob'scenity pr~
~ings against Mature Enterprises,
Inc., in a test case as part of its drive to
clean up Times Square. The trial wps
held without a jury.
In a previous case in Binghamton,
N.Y., a jury decided that the film was
not obscene.
At the trial here, Tyler heard experts
take diametrically opposing viewpoints.
Dr. Ernst van den Haag, a
psychoanalyst, testified for t h e pmr
ecution that the film His without any
redeeming value whatsoever."
Film critic Arthur Knight, however,
said, '1lt's not a sleazy film by any
means. There is a real attempt to use
humor and a kind of sopttistlcated fooling
with sex. It is not a dee--breathing film ."
Tyler said in his decisioo that he found
the dominant theme and "the only theme
is an appeal to prurience in sex. It ls
hard-core pcmography with a vengeance.
"This ii' one throat that deserves to be
cut," he said. "I readily perform the
operaUon In finding tbe defendant gullty
as charged."
Between last June and this January,
, the theater said it grossed about $712,000.
Approximately 1,700 persons have seen
the fihn daily in the' 320-seat New Mature
World theater ln midtown Manhattan.
A hearing will be held to determine the
amoµnt of lbe fine once the Judge ex-
aminel the corporation's books.
'Phys. Ed. Bill Dies
SACRAMENTO (AP) - A Seiuite rom·
mittte has killed a measure that would
have made physJcal education an op-
tional subject for high school juniors amt
seniors. The Senate F.ducation Com-
mittee voted ~5 Wednesday to kill the
bill, authored by Sen. Arlen F. Gregorio
(0.San Mateo ).
PRISONER'S WIFE
'HAPPIEST GIRL'
VffiGIN!A BEACH, Va. (AP) -The
wife of a Navy flier listed among the
next contingent of prisoners of war to be
released by North Vietnam today pro-
nounced herself and her daughters
"about the happiest girls in the U.S.A."
Charlotte Christian, wife of Navy Lt.
Cmdr. MichaeJ D. Christian, was among
the first POW wives to be notified by the
government that her husband would gain
bis freedorn over the weekend.
Chri_slian, a native of Huntsville, Ala ..
was shot down over North Vietnam April
24, 1967. He and his wife have three
c!Bughl<rs. •
K
DAILY PILOT
n. Otl"P CM1t MILY PILOT, vrtfll •ICll
'-qlmb'"9d •f'-............. It Ml!"*' "'
fl>e Ot.infll' Co.,,t P11&11t111A1 ~nr. hp.to
rite «llllOnl Ir• pU!ll!ttlld, Morldey fht'OYllll
FrljMy, fOf' C..11 111.,., ..,....,.., llNdl,
Muntll!Qfon 81.ch/FOU111111'1 Va!t.y, l~ a.tn, 1 .... 1 ... 1S1<1c11~ Wld S.n (...,_,tat
S. Ju-.. C1pl1!r-. A 1lragi., r1111Jorl91
mfl!lpn Is Pllbl~ s.1 ...... ,.. ... Suncll'f"I.
T'"-prlnt(NI PllOlitfllllQ plotlll !I 11 1111 W9$1
8-y SJrloft, COU1 MIN, C.llfornl1, ntal,
Rob.rt N. W•M
PretldWlt Ind P~Oll11W
J1ck R. C~rl1v
Viet Pr11k1.,.I Ind C.11tttl M1111Q1r
llio11111 Kt1vll
MARINE ...
held as a suspect in a criminal in·
ve1tlgation.
Sbe told officers she managed to free
hel"lelf and ran from the car when
Wallace stopped for a traffic signal.
Officers who booked Wallace on those
charges added murder to the list when
they searched him and allegedly found a
checkbook and wallet belonging to Mrs.
Nanette Post. a Fountain Valley bannaid
whose body was found Feb. 9 in Hun·
tington Beach.
They claim Wallace is the man who
raped Mrs. Post after she left her job at
a Garden Grove tavern and then stuffed
her body under a juniper bush in a
residential tract.
Wallace was brought to Superior Court
last week for an unscheduled iden-
tlflcstion when a defense attorney in
another rape trial told the jury the pros-
ecution had the wrong Marine in the
defendant's cbalr.
Wallace was onlered to stand shoulder
to shoulder with Camp Pendleton Marine
Mark David BelJ, 22, and was visibly
relieved when a Costa Mesa waitte.!I!
raped in Huntington Beach positively
identified Bell as her attacker.
The jury in that trial is today in iti
thlrd day of deliberaijons.
From Pagel
PACT ••.
have to examirie the declaration to
determine whether the commission can
operate effectively. He threatened earlier·
that Canada would walk out of tbe com-
mission unless adequate machinery for
reporting cease-fire vioJaUons w a s
eslabllsbed.
The delcaration was hamnlertd out ln
backstage expert meetings, with con-
cessions made by both sides.
North Vietnam and its Communlst
allies abandoned their previous insistence
that the conference could only be recall·
ed by a majority of the 12 delegations.
This would have given each side a veto.
Jn return, the United States and its
allies agreed to mention the Viet Con(s
Provisional Revolutionary Government
as a full·fledged conference participant.
To ap~the Saigon govemmtnt, the
final artic f the declaration states that
the signator es do not necessarily
recognize each other.
Because of vigorous Communist ob-
jections, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
\VaJdheim was ,excluded from any active
role in the peacekeeping arrangements.
With word from Saigon that North
Vietnam told the Americans It was going
to release 142 more U.S. prisoners of
war, Secretary of State William P.
Rogers was expected to attend the
plenary session of the conference this
afternoon.
Bill Reapproved
WASHINGTON (AP) -Confident of
enough strength to override another veto
if neCi!ssary, the Senate has given
overwhelming approval to a $4.8-billlon
vocational-rehabilitation bill that Presi-
dent Nixon rejected earlier. Wednesday's
86·2 vote sent the bill to the House where
action is expected next week.
As he promised, Nixon again said he
would ask Congress for a new Jaw "for
alleviating the often crushing burdens
which property taxes place oo many
older Americans," but did not .spell out
what he bad in mind .
Discussing his controversial dismantl·
Ing of the Office of Economic Op-
pcrtunity, Nixon pictured the move as
strengthening antipovery programs by
moving them into Cabinet departments
directly concerned.
"The only major OEO program for
which termination of federal funding is
recommended in my budget is COD}·
my.nity action," he saJd.
With 12.8 biltioo of federal funds having
been spent since the program was
launched in 1965, Nixon said further fund--
log "no longer seems necessary or
desirable."
County Council
Of Governments •
Sets Up Dues
Orange O>unty's new Intergovern-
mental Coordinating COUndl ended lta
secood meeting In Orange Wednesday
night by setting up d1"" and mailing out
bills to the 24 membenl.
Total income for the f 1 t!: d g 1 i n g
organization will be $17,200 with the
county paying 12.500 ln annual d; s.
The assessments for Oran Coast
cities are Costa Mesa, $789; ountain
Valley, $435; Huntington Beacb, 11,071;
Irvine, 1352: Laguna Beach, !206;
Newport Beach, $910; San Clemente,
1221>: san Juan Capistrano, l80 Seal
Beach, 1291 and Westminster, $552.
Dues are based on a comblnaUoa of
assessed valuation and population.
The ICC is a voluntary association of
county and city governments without
taxing power. Each city will have one
vote and each of the county .supervisors a
single vote.
At the next meeting in Santa Ana
March 28 the members plan to elect a
chainnan, vice chairman and second vice
chainnan. At least one ol the three of·
ficers will be a county supervisor, ac-
cording to the tentative bylaws.
A pennanent, full time executi ve
. secretary will be hired to carry out the
business of the council.
Rezone Approved
For Dana Point
A rezoning of property in Dana Point
from group dwelling ~ to commercial
was approved by the Board o f
Supervisors Wednesday.
The parcel located at the southeast
comer of the Street of the Green Lantern .
and Santa Clara Avenue Is occupied by
the Quiet Cannon Restaurant.
The rezone was a condition of approval
of a use pennit assessed by the county
Planning Commission several montM
ago when the restaruant was first pro-posed.
Nixon, Mis. Meir -Confer
On Middle East Situation
' WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
11\'lllw
lliomtt A. M1nph i111
Mt111;lrag E\'ll!Of
Ch1rl11 H, lPot Jtiditrd P, Nill
AMlllllll Mllll(linl! Ei4110tl
on and Golda Meir, Israel's prime
mi~ister, conferred today on Middle East
issues after exchanging banter and
mutual compliments.
Mrs. Meir says both sides can help by
n1aking compromises. There will be no
concessions, We said, but compromises
arrived at will be al the neaottatlng
table, a procedure the Arabs ltW do oot
accept.
'-Clt-•1a Office
lOS Norttt fl Ct1"i110 R•tl, •2672
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T.r.,._ f7l41 '4JAJJI
CS..HIM A""•tW., '4J.U71
S.. C.._.. All o.,_, nltt °t• ..... •111 4tl ... 4JO ~. 1m. °'·~ Cott.t '"""41tto1"g .. °':"~·· Ho -. ._,.., lll11tl•lliPnf,,
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• _......,,-"" bv "'''-' *'·" -.,."'"'' llv -11 '*" mol'lfl\1¥'1 111mr.,., out tlllll **"' MM!lllr.
Sitting in on the session in the Oval Of.
fice for the United State.s were Henry A.
Kissinger, Nlxon 's assistant for national
security affairs, and Air Force Brig,
(~en . Brent Scrowcroft, Kissinger's depu-
ty.
With Mrs. Meir were Yllibak Rabin,
soon to leave Washington after service as
the Israeli ambassador here, and his
designated successor, Sim cha Olmitz.
Whlle photographers recorded the
opening of the session. Nixon and Mrs.
Meir exchanged chit-chat, none of it
touching on 1ubstantlve issues.
TI1e President is expected to SA)' the
United States Is determined to break the
deadlock in the Middle East -and that
Israel is e:r~ted to help.
U.S. officials acknowledge that the
"'r1es of v15111 from the Middle Eul -
first Jordan'• King Hussein, then Cairo's
special emtasary llalez Ismail, and now
Mnt. Meir -bave brought no llngjble p-ln Ille oeatth for a oetUeaienl.
Wednesday, she wa!J quoted u aaytng
that direct jM!ace negotlatlon.s wllll Egypt.
"are a pct1.1lbiJity."
Rep. Thomu ff. Morgan (fl.Pa.)
chaJnnan of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, said Mrs. Meir told the com.
mitt .. In closed-door se5'1on that lilt ii
optimistic because the,. bas beo~ no
shooting over the SUei Canal loi: IJ I montM.
Fair Exchange OAlL Y PH.OT St.ff tl'""9
Two foreign students now in Capistrano Unified
School District and two from the ~th Coast who
went abroad last summer under tluf.American Field
Service program $poke to the San Juan Capistrano
Women's Club. They received gifts at the Ju12cheon .
From left to right are Anrie Brisson, Paris; Katie
Powell, Monarch Bay; steve Keith, Dana Point; and
Regalado Jose, Quezon City, Philippines. Miss Pow-
ell went to Finland and Keith went to Gennany.
600 Church Members,
Pastor Leave Finck •
About 600 members -0f tbe 1,600-strong
First Presbyterian Church of Anaheim
are organizing a separate congregation
under ~he former pastor because the
United Presbyterian Church is "selling
its soul to radical Jeft-wing enemies of
Christ," that pastor said.
Rev. Ralph H. Didier said first worship
services of the new C o v e n a n t
Presbyterian Church will take place Sun-
day at the former headquarters of Zion
Lutheran Church at 2'l2 N. East St.,
Anaheim.
The most frequently meJJ,tioned con-
troversial Issue among the Anaheim corr
gregatlon was a $10,000 grant ih 1971 by
the !United Presbyterian Church to the ~se fund of professed Communist
ela Davis, later acquitted of charges
l led to a.sllQQJout at the Marin County
CAArrthouse in 1970.
The remaining members of the 103-
year-old First Presbyterian Church, are
continuing regular services with guest
ministers until a new pastor is named.
"A lot of fine Christian people have
been misled into leaving," Dr. L. Ken-
neth Heuler, clerk of the First
Presbyterian governing board, said
Wednesday or the new church.
"Our point or departure has to do with
the denomination itsell and whether it is
dominated by Marxist philosophies," he
added. "I don't believe it Is."
Church life Is like natioual politics, Dr.
HueJer said. "l don't agree with all of
our nation's palicies, but I'm not moving
to Australia either."
Boulder Kills Woman
OXNARD (AP) -A 28-year-otd santa
Cnu: woman has died from head injuries
suffered when a boulder rolled off a cliff
and fell onto a camper truck she was
riding in along the Pacific Coast
Highway Saturday, officials say. Cynthia
Marlowe died in St. John's H·ospltal here
Tuesday night, hospital spokesmen said.
Rev. Didier, 45, already had accepted a
position with the First Congregational
Church of Redlands when the splinter
Anaheim group asked him to lead them.
Now president of the in-
terdenominational Anaheim Christian
Association, Didier said he expects "an
additional couple hlllldred·will be moving
into our membership" soon,
Washington Gets
Welfare Orie£
Of California
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Rober! B.
Carleson, California director of social
welfare for two years, today \\.'as named
special assistant on welfare matters for
the U.S. Department of Health, Education
and Weliare.
HEW Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger
announced the appointment or Carleson,
42, to the new1y created pcsition of staff
liaison between the federal department
and governors of the 50 states.
Weinberger said Carleson will be
responsible specifically for providing
assistance · to governors .in W'elfare
management and reform Initiatives at
the state Jevel, and giving them guidance
on the federalization of the adult welfare
caseload for aged, blind and di.sabled
persons.
"He has a prove~r rd of ac-
complishment in this · help
governors initiate their welfare
refonn similar to the effort he direCted
so successfully for Gov. Reagab in
California," Weinberger said.
Weinberger said that in Carlcson's two
years in the state post 265,000 persons
were dropped from Cali!omia welfare
roles, while ~·grants to truly needy
families rose 27 percent."
From Pagel
INDIANS ...
companied by memberS-of the staffs .of
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy (Ii-Mass.),
and J. W. Fulbright (D-Ark}'.
The Indians also demanded that Ken·
nedy and Fulbright come to the reservir
lion to discuss grievances, which include
the government's handling of U.S.-lndian
treaties and the way in which the Oglala
Sioux tribe elects its leaders.
"I want to emphasize that we 're not
going there to negotiate demands, but to
work for the release of the hoBtage$,"
Abourezk said in Washington. HTbere can
be no negotiations with a gun at anyone's
head."
Wounded. Knee was the scene of
tragedy for red m·en during tbe wane of
the great w~ward push of the 19th Cen·
tury.
An estimated 250 federal marshals, FBI
agents and BlA police from the i;>ine
Ridge and other Indian reservations q>r-
doned off the valley town. They kept to
the heights Jl¥)re than half a mile away,
along four roads.
Joseph Trimbach, agent-in-charge of
the FBI at Minneapolis who heads the
federal force here, met with represen-
tatives of AIM under a temporary cease--
fire Wednesday, but an FBI spokesman
said there was no progress toward ending
the stalemate. He said three other at·
tempts to arrange negotiating sessions
failed.
Newsmen were denied access to
Wounded Knee, and federal authorities
would talk to newsmen only by telephone.
'Freedou1' Show Set
At Veterans' Meet
"Freedom· Trail," a travelogue
organized by O.W, .Price, will be
presented at a potluck luncheon of the
World War I Veterans Barrack 1186 Mon·
day ~ the Dana Point Community House.
Price has photographed historic places
involved in the American RevoluUon
from Boston to Yorktown. He also will
give .sidelights on the life of George
Washington and a visit to Mt. Vernon,
Washington's home.
Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LITTON -is Best!
WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
ONLY UTION OFRRS YOU • • •
-k Years of Commercial experience
-k The blggest oven ~ •• 1.2 cu. ft.
fr An easy-to-clean line;. * An easy-open dcfor latch. * Automatic defrost feature.
REMEMBER THIS PLEASE!
BEFORE YOU BUY!
• wltl lnwa,.........,...... tM hlf\9'r....., _, ..._ ..,,. '
• ..,.. lit "ltM-' "'Y' to cM. .uyfk. • wlll We, ....... ......_., .. ,. c•td.,... ta tM ...._ e •Ill,,.,....'"' TY tlh1..., m .... ,,.._,,. "'"· ~I "'4 ~ e Is ......... If tfie chlW.... ti1111. ft " bf' cr«ldeltt.
..... fM ............ ofld tlMl!Mf "'9ftl too,
• h ..., te .,.... .. fttl Utt .. tlWI ,.. O C•ftl.P .... ............ .......... _. .... ·--...... "''"" "'.Jr' .. .. .. ~ ........ ¥ ... ...,_ ... ... _.. ......... ....
• ... , .... ~unoN ._DUNLAP.
~349
I
I
no
to
by
th
' '
' •
---~-.
•
B'uilding 'Industry _Mou.nts
Q.mpaign in Lumber Crisis
•Tho Southern California pui!dlng lnduslry Is p!Jlnnlng a
• • WHAT IS
"DOCTOIUJIS" . '
' ~y TlltltY GRANT, A.Ph
A recent atudy has shown
that there a.re fewer than
ball the doqb)ts needed to
serve the betltb needs of our
"°""ty. ... • result. pbysl-
cilans are chronically ·over.
worked. and many times un·
available. Hospital emergen.
cy rooms are being overrun
with non-emergency cases.
And 1n some areas there are
no doctors at all.
· There is no cure for "Doc·
toritls" on the horizon. And
by all the data now known.
the situation will beromc
l'nQre acute durlng the next
t~ years. Our pharmacy
works closely with. the doc-
ton in this community to
4e:llver the best bee.Ith care
possible to as many people
as possible.
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when you
need a delivery. We wUl de-
l)ver promptly without extra
charge. A great many people
rely on us for their health
$eeds. We welcome requests
for delivery service and
charge accounts.
P-ARK LIDO PHARMACY
151 Hoapft•I Road
,Newport 8-h 642-1510
,,.. O.llwry
mus letter-writing campaign
to President ~ixon lo bol>ts
he'll act to ease the lumber
crisis.
"We'll be mailing almost
100,000 letten from Orange
County a lo n e complaining
about the price of lumber,''
Gilbert W. Fergusen, e:it·
ecutive director of the newly.
formed Orange County Council
on Environment, Economy,
Employment and Develo~
ment, said Wedne'Sday.
_,...,..._.._,,,..,......,,.,.,,..,.._,_,~ · Ferguson said the price of
t~at yours may not !
1 COMPLnl dU.Nc>t:
COUNTY COYllAGI
htcludhtt: Lot11n IMcil,
lumber had doubled in the last
90 days because the Japanese,
at the President's urging, have
bought the entire lumber su~
pJy in the Northwest.
"As a result, prices have
skyrocketed and we're having
to buy lumber from Canada,''
he said.
The Japanese have spent
about $400 million for the U.S.
wood, but U.S. builders have
spent more than $1 billion for
Canadian wood, he said.
"I don't see bow that's help-
ing the balance or payments,"
Ferguson sai~.
So• C......,..., MluMt1 Ylef•, 11-------------o
Dona rolllt, .. -11 .. 1.o.,
a..ch oltd fllfft of L.A. •NG
2 MONTH TO MONTH
RENTAL IA.SIS
3
4
NO DEPOSIT RECj>UIRED
ON A,,IOVID CllDIT
ONLY 117.00 PIR MONTH
TOTAL COJT
C1llfl•ltM ,_...,
5 11EW COMPACT UNIT
SID (1 1/4z4z'hJ
6 VOICE MESSAfiE PAGIU
ALSO ARE AVAIL.AILI
• PULL Fiii MAINRNANCE
ORANGE COUN7\
RADl07EUPHONE
SERVICE IN('
714 • IJS.a305 fr.m Ug\la• B-11, Mluloll v1e1.,
tiff• Hlt1t, sa11 c11~t..i s." JUiln C1pl1tnono, £1 ,..,.., ull 1.u ,,..
4t ... 322J
-
FREE
---
FINANCE
Subsidiary
Announced
By Collins
Collin! Radio Co. Wed·
nesday reported the fonnation
of a new overseas subsidiary
• known a.!I Collins Radio Co. oC
Japan Ltd.
Robert C. Wilson, COilins
president and chief executive
officer, said Collins a n d
Kyokuto Boeki Kaisha Ltd. of
Japan have formed the new
subsidary to produce and
market electronics equipment.
Collins owns 57 ~-of the
new company.
Initial plans call !or pro-
duction of certain amateur
and maritime communication
products.
Wilson said the Japanese
govefnment approved · o f
Collins owning 57 percent of
the company in the initial
stage.
"In many cases," he pointed
out, "Japan has not permitted
the U.S. company in a joint
ventW'e to own more than 50
percent of a subsidiary in the
initial. fi>rmuJation period.
TAX RETURN
PREPARATION
I • '
DEPOSIT $3,000 -t~ a -or existing t1Ylnge t<COUnt at Pacific s..in91 onll -FREE
prepntion of rour personal Fed•al and State tax nturnS. Som9 people will save $200 10 $300 or mort ia
.ccountlng fen. ('This otm doesn't apply to corporati~ partnership, business or simiW retums.:>
. '
PROFESSIONAL -qualified tu coumelonwill -your penonal m11m11nd malce1U191llat
you reoeivl Wt1fY possible benefit u~er the tax law. Eacft retum will then be triplt<hecked for eccunc:y by
h9'ly-tnined apecialists. All work is done irt the privacy of your Paciftc Savinp office using the ~".*I
penor .. ,.. of Tax Corporation of America. This finn. started in 1946, is the second largest tax COnlPlftY in the
United Ste .... They cumntly employ OYW 4,600 counselors and hawe pr1pnd mono thon 1.000.000 tu ..........
WORK GUARANTEED -byTaxCotp0rationofAmeriCL
-Guaranteed Accuracy. Retums are tripl9""ecked for accuracy of' mathemotic:s and
,.pNd1cH01t. ff ttle c•MPMJ flMlbt • .,.,.., hi llMltfl111101k1 or Nptoclitetfoa. It wlll poJ .... ,._..., ., 111...._. d1•
to tMir 9"'9f, i..t Ht rM oddltlollGI tu ...... it.
Guaranteed Protection. If YGUt ........ is qulltioned by"'" Government, ...., win
prGYlde .-lstace llt • dNlrt9 I• a11fomtty witti reg11kltctry procff1,.._
ALSO -you get a FREE Safa D._;t Box. sorwice charge FREE Traveler's Chodcs, FREE Collection of
Notes, FREE Noury Service and FREE Financial Counseling..
AND -your deposit earns 6% per annum in • two to five year ($5,000 minimum} Certifica• ac::count -5%"
per •nnum In a one to five year ($1,000 min!mum> Certificate account or 5% per annum in 1 regular passbook
account, all compounded daily. These are the highest rates paid by any insured institutions.
REMEMBER -to qualify for this hoe offw you need only to.make your dll)Otit II you h ......
ACCOUNT ELSEWHERE. bring us your passbook and we will transfer your money to Pacfficfor you. Offw
tM«I 1111111 ..... H. LGst cloy for flllat, 1111• 1J:tlltdoll k ebt.hted. Aprll 1 •, 1973.
SO HURRY -mike -deposit TODAY -or coll or stop by our ....,offloo for.-I.,_._
Plus -
FREE Federal Tax Guide
THIS OFFICIAL GOVERNMENT PUBLICATION OFFERS
VITAL INFORMATION FOR EVERY TAXPAYER
PACIFIC SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION hu Purchllld a limitod sum of-nluablo booklets. Tllo
bookllt 11 availab .. tlllWh .. at ntaH Priem, but Is FREE TO ALL It your nNNlt office of Ped& Slvinp and
Loan Association. lhlo olfar good only while supply lasts. ''
ALL ACCOUNTS INSURED BY FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORPORATION TO $20.000
OPEN NIGHTand DAY
Hours: Monday-Friqay 9:30 A.M. to 9:00 P.M.
Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M.
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Bristol St. 1t Sin 01190 'fllMl'f, C4sa Mm
PHONE 54lJ.4116S '
..
THE MALL OF ORANGE
Tllitio A111. at Mal1s A,.., Ora•
PHONE 637-4512
·.::.
Monerfs Wort.la
-Casuality Losses:
What Are Rules?
By SYLVIA PORTER
(rounh fn o S<ri<s)
In 1972, the Treasury
redefined the meaning of
casualty_ lea 10 tbal lo< tho
first time, casualty loss in·
eludes certain situations in
whlcb your property Is simply
lost, rather than damaged or
destroyed -a liberaliuitioo
that could be of great money-
saving value to you.
As a general rule, you cannot
take a . casualty loss 'deduction
for property
that you loot.
But, in a re-
cent case, a
husband ""' cident a 11 y
slammed the
car door oo
.ti is wife's
· hand, caus-
ing the dia-
moIKI in her r g t oniR· l>b
mOnd in her ring to fly
out of its broken setting
and disappear. The Treasury
barred any casualty loss
deduction on the basis that the
diamond was simply lost, not
damaged or destroyed.
BUT AFrER the '.!"ax Court
held that bis was inde<d a
deductible casualty loss, the
Treasury concumod, and it
now says that an accidental
lo~ of property can qualify as
a deductible casualty if it
results from an event that is
(1) identifiable, (2} damaging
to property and (3) sudden,
unexpected and unusual in
nature. But oote: this does not
cover the ordinary situation in
which you don't even know
that you lost the property until
you look for it at a later date.
The Treasury . gave you
another assist in 1972 when it..
agreed to allow a casualty loss
deduction for damage that
you, the taxpayer, inflicted on
your O\Vll property.
In this case, a homeowner
wanted to get rid of "quack
grass" on his lawn. A
saresman for a loal feed and
seed company recommended a
powerful chemical which car-
ried a label warning ·against
its use on vegetatkm to be
preServed. The homeowner
either didn't see or read the
label, used the cbenllcal on the
lawn, and thereby damaged
the lawn and killed various
shrubs .
Originally, the~re as u r y
barred his casualty I o s s
deduction on the basis that the
damage was caust41. either
willfully or by gr o s s
negligence. But last year, the
Treasury agreed with the
oourt that, in such a situation
the self-inflicted damage is not
knowingly malicious, wanton
or gross negligence, and is
therefore a deductible
casualty loss. You can easily
extend this ruling to a situa·
tion of your own.
George G. Zanders has been
,,.appointed group vice president
in charge of sales for Bunt.
Wesson Food•, Inc.
He will direct the conswner
sales function for t b e
Fullerton-based food products
company.
* John A. Black, Jr., a 25-
yjlar career man with General
Telephone, has been named
~1';fu .\g_ ~hS:age~~~
·· pany's La·
*
guna Beach
Exchange.
B I a c k
joined the
utility in 1947
as an instaJ·
JerinLong
Beach. ms
Donald A. Miller has 6een
named manager of_ Ualt.ed eauromta Bank'• corporate
banking cenlor for .oulheru
Orange County. --
He joined UCB In 1959 and
was selected for management
training In Los Angeles .
Assigned to Santa Ana in 1163
as a--commeretal-lending ot·
ficer, he wa." promoted to
assistant vice president in
11165.
* Muler SpedaJU" Co~pany
-·
Th.....,, M.wdl l , 1973 DAJLY PILOT 29
OVER TIIE COUNTER
NASD Lhtlnp for Wodnoodoy, ,_ry 21, lm
·-
•
•
p DAILY "LOr SC ,T-, ..... I, I'm,
P u•es '7S Te•t
EPA Cites Mazda
'
For Oean Engine
WASl!INGTON (UPI)
Government test r e s u I t s
ttlwed Thursday showed the
Japaneoe-bullt Muda rolory
engine car mttts the strict
Jm auto emis.!ion standards
-oomelhing U.S. aulemakm
claim they cannot do.
The Environmental Prolec·
lion Agency (EPA) aald a
50,000.mile test of the small
car showed bydrocarboo and
cart>oo monoxide emlsaions
from the rotary e n g I n e 1
averaged about "one-half of
the allowable 1975 levels."
Nitrogefl ol:ide emissions were
"ooe-Uiird lower."
THE ROTARY engine, or
Wankel after its inventor Felix
Wankel, is a radical modi.flea·
Pho M Hike
Hearin g Hit
By Consum er
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) .j_ A
needling consumer advocate
helped Pacific Te I e p ho n e
Company's $301 millkln rate
tncreue hearing oil to a rocky
1wtWednesday.
When b e a r i n g examiner
Robert BarneU of the State
Public Utilities Commission
( 't~KI1Vc)
· STOCK
launched the hearing, be was
embroiled in an exchange with
William M. Bennett, a state
Board ·of Equalization member
and consumers spokeiman.
~t contended a ruling
by ·Bam<U could form the
bad! for state courts 10'
nvene the entire proceedings
later.
Barnett bad rejected a re-
quest from Edward Blincoe of
Los Angeles to be listed as an
Interested party with the right
to cross-en.mine the present
witnesses. Blincoe said • be .._..,led the UUlity User•
League.
e PSA lff".
SAN DIEGO CBW)
Paclftc Southwest A i r I i n e s
praldent Wllliam R. Sblmp
announced Wedne9day thal the
airline has completed its
reorganization by forming a
holding company, PSA Inc.
Pacific Southwest Airtines
and all of its former
aubaidJarles are now
Uon of the internal combustion
dlgin< Uled Oii moot AmericaD cara_
tnst.ad or plsloos moving up
and down .in cyUnden, lbe
engine uses trlangufar nllOrs
that revolv-e in an el..l1pdcal
chamber. The design -lbe engine lighter and qul<ler,
and It uses re-movhlC
parts.
THE MAJOR u.s _
automakers bave urged the
EPA to exlald the 197S
deadline. General M o t o r a
Chainnan Richard C. Gerstelt-
bug said earlier that it wu
impossible for the lndu!try to
make every car ronform to
the staodard. Ford aJl?'!'d.
EPA Administrator William
D. Ruckel.shaus, ho w e v e
denied the industry'• !9«' ~
request for a delay. t Lbe
courts interceded and ordeted
new hearings wh.ich a r e
scheduled le begin in March.
According le lbe EPA, the
thermal reaction e m i s a I o n
control system Uled oo the
Muda le moot lbe standard
did not impoee any fuel cm--
sumption penalty on t be
Mazda.
U.S. AllrOMAKEllS are
de~loping catalytic an-
ve~ for cars in hopes of
meeting tbe standard. The
converters, which I o o k
something like a murner. are
designed ro change elbaust
pollutants into harmless gases.
But the industry engineen
claim.A»ey need at lea!t a ooe-
y~tOelay to perfect 1'le anti-
pollutioo devices.
Ruckelshaus b erpected to
decide on the industry request
fOC' a delay by early spring.
FfC Rules
On Credit
Card Fraud
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Federal Trade Commission
Thursday lllUlOWICOd a ruling
that the "Honor All o.dil
cant" program in California
"was entierty fraudulent in
every respect." .
It ordered that all payments
for franchise fees a n d
membership dues be refunded
within 90 days to those who
became members or fran-
chisees after Jan. i: 1971.
AN 0 R D E R prohibiting
"future deception s or
m I s r e p resentaUons" was
Wued against Universal
Credit Acceptanee Ol<p. and
Continental Credit Card Corp.
•
... Tl II
Cll•rwt!ilRS
HeDIY "W> Bloch, presi·
dent of H&.R Block. is
accusing tile ~ovem
meot ol increasmg the
likelihood tlW 5l1lall
will overpay
their t.a.xes by reintro-
ducing tile 'short form'
tax return.
Shipyard,
Navy Oash
On Payment
W ASIDNGTON (UPI)
The Navy has agn<d le pey
Litten lndustrils' Ingalls Ship-
yard at Pascagoula. Mill. 1911
millioo -amid<rahlY hm
than the firm clairm it is due
for coostructi"1 m n.. .....
helicopter earrien, the com-
pany ,.;.i 'lbundaY-
1.ittm deoounc<d the -.. unilal<ral and said it -.Id
appeal le the courts. It claim-
ed lbe Navy wu refusing le
pay $IC. million in claims the
shipyard l!Ubmiu.d for ex·
ress=ts-
1be Navy declined to com-
ment immediately m Littoo's
....,..t.
Dart Sells
Drug King
LOS ANGELES (AP) -.
Dart Industries [ D C • ,
trancbise< of lleu1J Drug Stores. has tlOld 11 m its II
Drug King stares and lbe
stores' name to a new
~· Drug King Inc. of Encino, compan:r ol-
fidals said.
The &ales price ....
reported to be $3 mIDion
ln a n annourammf:
Wednesday, a ~
said 11 of the atcns are in
California and ooe in
Salem, °"'-e PlaH"4>-f'orll
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
Air Force bas awarded the
Philco-Ford Corp. a $27. 7
million contract to build and
test t w o communication
satellites for NATO.
or Burlingame, International '------------'
Credit Card Corp., a I s o
Under the contract, the
firm's Paio Alto plant will
de!ign, develop and test the
spacecraft. the first of which
is to be launched is the sum-
mer of 1975.
e c 1gerette•
WINSTON.SALEM, N . C.
(UPI) -A 10 cent per
thousand wholesale increase in
the price of cigarettes has
been announced by the R. J.
Reynold! Tobacco Co.
The increase. effective im-
mediately, will boost the price
of all Reynolds bran&. to
v.·holesalers by about four
cents per carton, or four-
tentlu of a cent per pack.
e Telephone
SANTA MONTCA (BW)
General Telephone Co. of
nesday it is orferinsr 500,(KXI
shares of 7.48 percent
cumulative preferred stock at
IOL08 per share to yield 7.40
percent through a n un-
derwriting group. -------
trading as National Credit
Service, of San Matro, and
two oUicers, John Clifford
Heater and Howard P •
Gingold.
The Pl'C said the r<fwtd
order is applicable only to
Heater, which. it s a Id ,
"dominated every aspect or
the progr:im" and created
"the entire unconscionable
scheme."
It said the corporations are
bankrupt.
THE comuss10N said soo
franchises and 6,500 retail
member merchants "were
victimi%ed by respondents'
program. The franchises .sold
for $7,500 and memberships
for $240, in addition to monthly
dues, it said.
"For the fiscal years ending
June, 1967, 1961 and 1969
alone." the FTC ruling said,
"respondents re<"clvrd some
$.1,042,255 from their fran-
chises and members. while the
overwhelming majority of
these franchi see! and
members suffered substantial
losses by reason ol their
participation in the program."
THERE IS A FACTORY AUTHORIZ-
ED DEALER FOR EVERY POPULAR
MAKE CAR IN THE WORLD ON
COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BOULE·
YARD OF CARS.
Friendly • Reliable • Convenient
LOOK FOR THE EMILEM AT
COSTA MESA DEAL!l!S ON
>i A RIO~ 8LVD. UTWEEH SAN
DIEGO FREEWAT AND NEWPOU ILYD.
•
WASlllNGTON (AP) -ni.
sharpest food-pric:e Increase
on record is stirring pressure:
ror President ~..... w slap
controls on bread, bacon and
bee(steak.
But the Administration says
the solution to ~ cnmdl that
saw a Z.5-percent' jump in
supermarket p r I c e s in
January is for farmers to
raise bigger crops for fat~
tening more cattJe, bogs and
chickens.
AGRICUL lVR.11 Se<ntary
Earl L. Butt. an opponent of
freezing food prices, wonts idl·
ed land put bad< le """' and
rarmers lo rely more oa. C3.'5h
prices and less oo government
subsidies.
Q-op-acreage controls have
been e&Oed oo that 40 mUUoo
acres (armers idled last year
in return ror government
subsidies can be planted in
19'13.
According le the plan, that
will mean more wheat and
bttad. A larger com crop will
produce more bop. Plentiful
stiybcans will mean more
poultry and dairy products for
the coosumtt.
BIGGER CROPS alJo ...,
~ le help ulldy • ...,...
Ing exilort demand that ii ...
peeled le siphon oil .........
Ill.I billion ....th m U.S.
farm prodoc:ts this n.cal ,... ..
Somo in the Admlnillntloo.
1ppArently b ~ H
-wives. have IUgested
eating more me-and lea
.... ~ .going 1Jtitle9a ... day • -11 ind pllotbtg vegttable
gardens .. iD World Wor IL
F • r m e r 1 tmt.IUvel:r lo-
dicated they wtll """ ~
•
Devalued
Dollar
•
•
,,
·-T :::m .......
'(II'. EIP 'OIEI ff ~ ... •PGllllll 'rlll'nllld ·~ .. ... , ... ...... . s A. •
"""' ~i! """ 'SEGtlf 'SEG,r 'SEGtof ..... ~Y;ll "J:t: "" ....
. . ~ • .. . -.
•
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SC DAILY PILOT fj
Thursday's Closing Prices-CA>mplete New York Stock Excliange List
Dollar Fall Pulls
Stock Rally Down
.. •
e Wellll Corp.
PHONED:, Arlr. (AP)
The Del E. Webb Realty &
Management Co., a subsidiary
of Del E. Webb Corp., an·.
nounred today that it has been
named to manage and operate
the multi-million d o 11 a r
Marina City Club and apart·
meot complex in Marina Del
Rey.
Wtbb uld currmt ooo-
stnictlon will more than dot>-,
ble the present 300 luxury
waterfront apartmenls and
re<natlonal lacillti .. thtte. e Teledfll•e
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Barry
J. Sbllllto, former assistant
U.S. secretary of defense for
installations and logistics, a In
his new job-pttsldenl o f
Telalyne l\yan Aauiaullcal
Co. ol S&n Deli•.
•
•
I
A
,.
"
•• •
••
. " ••
U OIJl Y PILOT
...... , ...
··-·-fOf ....... ,
•
-General _ .....
General
A l.MtU'. IOt.f
_,,, ..
-Giiierar 6'nir·
:i_ .-:-;f/57~-SMN'
~ llllASSOCllllS
REALTORS
'211:!8EAST allUr HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR.CAUF.
644·7270 • • • • Investors delight
Girier1
-10°!.' DOWN--
Move in on credit approval. Large family
room for entertaining. 3 bedroom 2 baths
builtins, fireplace. 2 PatloS overlooking large
back yard with H & F pool
1215 Oovon U.ne, N.B. Open d•ily
CALL ANmME
Lachenmyer
Re,1ltor
Office 646-3928
Eves: 646-4543
Geiiii'al
FOR!i THAT 19TH HOLE-Beautiful glass
redwood home with large living room, 4
bedrooms, including master: suite, 2 patios
with over ~ sq. ft . of gol1 course frontage.
Unique detached recreation room with pool-
table, wet bar and Swedish fireplace. Unique
price of $76,500.
Sixteen Units !!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' General General
Rexible Terms! Reduced Price!
UNl9UI HOMIS OF MISA YllDI. 546-Sttt
A lhrl91 of htl C:O..,
... in excellent rental area close to Ill.~
shopping center. TWO SEPARATE BU
INGS. 8-2 Bedroom unfurnished. 8-1 Bed-
room furnished. Large heated pool. Covered
lanai, ping-pong and shuffleboard. WlLL
No d.own G.I. Very at-, Now just $34 750. Love-U lo..! l"U II= Ji() U 11=&:' TRAOE. : ..................... $220,000 •. tractive 3 bed.room; 1 -• f""lll ~ L ~L~ • • • •
Prime College Park ly 4 bed.room with. 2 REAL TORS B
home on corner Jot. 2 baths, dinmg rm., built-l~!!!!!""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I eautiful
baths, dining room. inS, covered patio. Fire-General General
family r~m, patio. Lush place, family room. Inl-----------~-------1
landscapmg. Lovely en-Mesa Verde. Ready for
try way, $34,750. 54().1720 immediate occupancy.
54().l'IW
Real Beauty!
$36,950. Large 3 bed-3 Bdrm-No Down!
room borne on quiet cul
de sac. Fireplace, fam-Easy terms. Very sharp
ily rm., secluded rear home with room for
living rm. Modern built-boat or camper. 2
ins, dining rm. Huge baths, patio, forced-air
bonus room, covered beat. Dining rm .. built-
patio, fruit trees. Own-ins. Fireplace, rear liv-
er transferred -must ing rm. Lots of storage
sell. 54().17211 rm. $31,950. 54().1720
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA M.ESA 540-1720 ·
General
1
General SPANl~H ;;L;;A;;R;:G;;E;;B;;A;;Y;:;FR;;O~N;;:T;;.1
MANSIO,N HOME
POOL HOME. on exclusive Linda Isle. 5
Bedrooms, 4~~ baths., bay.
side ramily rm , rormaJ din·
ing roorn, spacious bayside
sund~k. pier & slip, private
community beach & tennis
court. An excellent value at
****** *TAYLOR -CO.*
LINOA ISLE-$149,500
Best waterfront buy! Enjoy the prestige liv-
ing which this beautiful island. offers. A love-
ly 5 bedroom borne w/family room, formal
dining room and 4'h baths. Wet bar, ljarbe-
que & 3 fireplaces. Pier & slip.
''Our 28th Year''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Roed
''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club''
NEWPORT CENTER, N, B. 644-4910
Ge ..... 1 General
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
NEW LISTINGll !
Quiet elegance in this quality built home.
Located on a large lot with shade trees.
There are 3 BR.; frplc.; complete electric
kitchen. Priced to sell at $34,750.
The tiled entry way will lead
you into the home ot your
dreams. Picture yourself
lounging by you r own 40' x
17' free form pool or relax·
i.ng in the large country
kitchen area or just sho,vi.ng
your friends your new 4
bedroom, 2 story pool home
locatl"'d on a large corne'r lot
for easy access. Priced for
tmmrdiafe irale at only
$49,9!.KI. 842-2535.
$189,500. REALTORS can Anytime
HARB OR ~""""""""""""""""""""~""""~""""""""""""""'
IOHISI L 01 SO\ '" REAtTQRj
Play 9 Holes Daily
at dawn or dusk
••
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400
POETRY
IN MESA VERDE
Warm & Cozy,
Nice & Big.
""""'""'""'""''""'""'""""IBuiit-in cabinets,
BACK BAY CUSTOM You will dig.
General
3 • FIXRS
Baycre!lt
You'll enjoy this lovely FAMlLY HOME on
a secluded street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath, PAN-
ELED family room with double fireplace
plus many custom features. Large fenced
yard and patio. . ............... $63,500 . • • • • Townhouse
Close to Beach
Lovely 3 bedroom, 2'h baths, dining room,
fireplace, nice patio. Pool privileges, close
to everything, YOU OWN THE LAND. Ask-
ing .............. " ... " . " .... $37,500. • • • • Condo.
A real buy
-BACK BAY AREA - 3 Bedroom, ·2'h
bath, built-in kitchen, stone fireplace. FAMI-
LY ROOM, community pool & REC. ROOMS
includipg billiards. Fee land close to every-
thing. " " " . " " " " " " " " " . $34,500. :w~x
C WALl<ER & Lf E
GRAB THAT
PHONE
Rustic Hldeaw~
Cozy 'n Cute 3 BR,'2 BA cot·
tage. Newi>Mt Ii e I g ht s !
Fplc, bllnS, rilom for pool.
Country-like Jetting. As~g
$44,500: Low down! SEE
today! 645-8400.
CAMEO HIGHLAN-DS
Im~ <bdrm "1_me. ~· vtew:-Accea lo 3 priVatc
beache•. $73,.500. Open ,.,._
Sun .. 1-5.
CAYWOOD REALTY * Sfl.1290 *
oflJo Water/rant
Exceptional 5 bdrm., ll-story home with pier
& slip, Magnificent South hay view from all
3 levels. Remodeled kitchen & family l'09W.
Price reduced to $210,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
General
Lachenmyer
Realtor
0 W1\L1<EK f, Lll
Realtors 64&-'Tlll
204.1 Westclill Drive
Open 'till 9 PM
CONDOMINIUM
2 Bdnns, 2% ba, bonus rm
E over k8.r garage. Xlnt
cond. $25.000.
Call: 673-2.663 642-2253 Eves
Sell Idle ltema llOWf Call 642-5678 Now!
SIX UNRS
• • • on large lot, Eastside
Costa Mesa. $72,500.
Macnab -Irvine
Realty Company
BAYCREST
Custom 4 BR -S bath lovely
home. Oose to schools.
$79,500. Frank Pe r a I ta 64M235. (0!8)
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235
11 I~ j Pt j T 11 I
I T-ULCO 1~1
Macnab·lr1 1ne
Realty o.a,...,
OCEAHFROlff
TRIPLEX
6 mo. old -built W/Jlllde ownership. <R 3
·be.th & Two 2 BRJ2 116.
Pre!lebl incomt ...._.
Betty Kttr ... -(IJSI)
Macnab -lr~ine
FOUR l,V>llS
flouaei flat is. on lup-Ti'
I'Itl' lot. Almost DN. 811&-ins,...-.........
fronts. ~. til:mp!! E:ild--
&ide Oo&ta lieu.
$69,500.
CAJ.L 51>-1151
.llll'.1f-
I I~ u, G ID o, 1 ·~ too'ep;.:..~ ......... '" ... o1~°!n:..~-:::~ ~
. · . --to make coffee, ao he, puts
r--------~coflee beans In his muslocho
1
1,Z E-E H. E II I l~nd •ips--thro11ghJ1." • I' I I I I' 8 ~~.': :-!hod>~ .. ~ • • • • -• .... dtvolop '""" 1'ep No. J -
e r~~~;gir.~s ·I' ~ r I' I' ~I' r. I
o ~~ 'Oii 1. · • I ·I I I .I
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFfCATION 900
'
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7
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7
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..... .
~agitna Beaeh
--EDITION
Today's Ftaal
N.Y. Stoeks
...... .
• YOl.. 66, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ~THURSDAY, MARpi I, 1973 TEN CENTS .
I " ' ___ ..,___
·council ~ Entire Scope o~ Canyon •
•• • • .,. JACK CIAPPELL ... ..., .......
t..agma Beach city councilmen, plan-
aiag oa11111lrion and city officials sat
-W""""""1 with Laguna Canyon
I • Mis k» disam Che fate of the call-' -~. the meeting was slated as a
di• 111* oa the status of the flood pro-
tectift me:asbres for the canyon and the
city, bdl the session 9000 ranged wide 91
tb8l to include pos.sible annexation of
..-..p:arided canyon territory to the
cily.
Thrown into the hopper were matters
of a new four-lane state Wgbway replac-
ing the presen! Laguna Canyon Road,
fate of the Lagima. Canyon Freeway,
sewage treatment and assessment, and
development lo the Sycamore Hills· area.
"'lbe deeper we dig into this problem,
the qiore facets we get," said Mayor
Charlton Boyd,
City Manager Larry Rose sajd t~
manY needs. of the area were interrelated
and that the county cany.on lands were
tied physically to Laguna Beach. ·
"We are really dealing with a system.
When you talk about drainage, you tallt
about sewage, when you talk about the
~way, you talk about a w8y qi. life.
'!llere is no way of dividing Laguna Can-
yon from Lapna Be$cb. You may do ao
arti11ctany, but ooi realistically.'' Rose
said.
Councilman Phillis Sweeney called for
a comprehensive use plan for the canyon.
"There are as many ideas for uses as
there are people," she said. 0 Wber&does
Irvine fit into the picture," she asked.
A· presentation by the Laguna Beach
Civic League at the start of the meeting
called for the IDD<"!tion of the canyon
by the city. '
A previous annexation attempt of the
wne g~ area extending tO El Toro
Road went dciwn to defeat In the late
1960s and left a bitterness among canyon
resldent,s, "!Id Dr. G. R. Ekeberg.
She said a hlture anneuUoo attempt
coo!d be met by opposition from i:tnters
in the arta, and cited concerns about the
city ZOlling which could be applied to tbe
area.
One primary push toward annexaUOn
to the city from the property owners . .
Viet ·Cong
Won't Give
'List of 30
SAIGON (AP) -The United States an-
nounced tonight that the North Viet-
namese. turned over a · list of 106
American prisoners and two Thais to be
released over the weekelld.
But it said the Viet Cong bad not yet
turned o.ver a., I~ of 30 Americans to be
ire.a froin c¢>pi Iii South Vietnam.
'The 1:j;:i.' del'lauoo ialtlfllT. $8\d 108
point of view is the accompanying
removal of the county imposed flood
plafn zone.
1be city ls encouraging and attempting
to cOordlnate building of new flood con-
trol 'works ln the Canyon wlih a state
four-lane Laguna Canyon Highway plan·
ned for construction in 1976.
Residents, howevec, fear the new road ·
will become a high speed hlghway."and
are also uncertain about the status of the
Laguna Canyon Freeway, planned for
ridgelines of the canyo n.
Complicating the matter is a proposed
sewer line currently under study by the
city. The county health officer bas stated /
that individual sanitary disposal systems
in the canyon are leaching into natural
drainage and present a health hazard.
Boyd said, following the meeting, that
the discussion was reminiscent 9' .the
chi cken-<ir-egg argument -wblob comes
first, annexation to llft the flood wne, es.-
tension of the sewer line t.o· improve
sanitation. expansion.of the flood worts
or construction of the road?
'~~~JJl~~~l\ll'~~ ~~td_ lalol' 1!>"~-~,-~:»~--'0il!ll:\I ~ 'l'b¥ li01<I Ill'. ~-north and'! . est ~·and l1IU l!lllplnOI
belcf bi ,.._ ao.D. ' . . ·
UPI T.._.tt
A 'Viet .<JR ·~.Aid the
Amoi1CJtPfl!Clli!11 licliedulOd· for release by them 'lnclfidM 'iii. serV!cemen and four
civilian!.
U.S. MARSHALS WITH RIFLES WALK DOWN BIG FOOT TRAIL HIGHWAY TOWARD CAPTURED BUILDING
......... on ()gfaJo Sioux Reservation Submitted Demands to Federal ~encie1, Exchanged Gunfire '
The Gennans are Monika SchWinn, a
31-year-okt nurse,, Ind mediCJl} sbldent
Bernhard Dielil, 27, who were. captured
by the Viet COng near Da Nang In 1969.
Both were workers for the Maltese Akt
Society, a German Prcitestant charity
McGovern Flies
Home to Mediate
Indian ~pule
ilooNDED KNEE , S.D. (AP) -South
Dlbta's two senators flew to their home
lblCe today" in an effort to bring an end to
a 1-daJ s;ege by militant Indians
~ 11 residents of this tiny com-
-, hostage.
Sim. George McGovern and James
Abourak arrived at Ellsworth Air Force
-by military jet just before 9 a.m.
(PS?! and cleparted by helicopter shortly
.n:.:. ••• in the directkln of this em-llMdell i.mtet. aboUt 75 miles away.
It was mt dear, however, whether the
""'""'.Per CllT)'iog fbe two Demofu:ts w1n1n, would land inside the com-
.-,, wllldl Im be!'I aealed oU by law
, tf6riak since about 2(19 lndlans toot over
ils few buildiop Tlleslay night.
M tbe belicopter i.fl ·the air base at
lllfld Cily, .Jlalpb EriWon, a speclaJ
(Seo INDIANB, !'age %)
Gray Def ends Sending
,
Files to White Hottse
W ASHING'roN (UPI) - L. Patrick whether Segretti was allowed1 to see bls
Gray Ill, seeking Senate confirmation as own ftle and that there was · little
FBI director, today defended his policy disciplinary action open to an FBI direc-
or letting top White House officials see tor if that happened or ir a White House
some confidential FBI files dealing with official leaked such information to the
sensitive political cases. Press.
Testifying before the Senate Judiciary Gray told the committee be also pro-.
Committee, Gray was q u e s t i o n e d vided the White House with the original
particularly about docwnents related to copy of a controversial memorandum
(1 ) the FBI's investigation into the said to have been written by Dita Beard,
Watergate bugging incident and (2) set-a Washington lobbylst for ITr .
tlement of an antitrust case against . The memo gave the impression that
International Telephone and Telegraph · tOO government agrted to settle an an-
Corp. titrust fight with IT!' out of court after
Sen. John v. Tunney (l>-Oilif.), asked tbe giant .finn pledged to belp underwrite
Gray about allegations that a White costs ol tbe 1972 Republican National
House aide pennitted Donald H. Segretti, ConvenUon tf it were beld in San Diego.
a California lawyer linked to the The· convention site laler was shifted to
Wate11ate episode, to look over in-Miami Beach. formation be gave the FBI previously in "I made the Beard memo available to
order to refresh bis memory prior to a the White Ho.use and I would do it
grand jury appearance. again," Gray told tbe committee. ·
Gray. wbo toot over as acting FBI He was not asked if he provided the
director sbOrtly before the June 17 break-White House any other documents
in at Democratic nati~al headquarters related to the I'M' case.
In the Watergate buililing, said he saw On Wednesday, tbe first day ol Gray 's
nothing wrong with giving the White (See FBI, Page !)
House access to private FBI files on
service. ·
The Filipinos, Candido Badua and
Arturo M. l,\alagot, were captured during
the Tel oUeilsive In 1968.
The PhQi11PlneS sent a m!Jitary work
uni; to South V!etham during tbe hlgb-
poinr of the·m. • ·
1be Qm)Jnunists 1ave no specific time-
table !or: the .POW releases but in Paris
the · ~ortb Vietnamese foreign mlliister,
Nguy•n Duy Trinh, wured Se<retary of
State WIIIWn__P. Rog~rs that they would
be (reed tift p.m .. saturclay Salgoo time.
This is 5 a.m. PST, Saturday.
The U.S. spokesman at the Paris con-
ference on Vietnam, Robert J. McClosky,
said Trinh gave Rogers the assurance
during .a IS-minute private meeting,
The United States announced tbe pend·
ing releases in Saigon.
The U.S. am>ouncement said : 1
"The Democratic Republic of 'Vietnam
representative on the P o·w sub-
commlssioo, four-party Joint Military
C.Ommissloo, p r e s e n t e d to the
U.S. repfl!8<lllative a list containing the
names ol 106 U.S. POWs and t"° Tbal
POWs. The United States has not been
advised of the time and place of release.
No new information bas: been received on
lbe detained personnel beld by · the
Provisional Revolutionary Government"
Tbt,s is the government of the Viet
COng In south· Vietnam.
lmmedistely after the..llrt was turned
over to lhe American delegation, it was
transmitted to Washington so that
relatives of the American pri&oners could
be immediately notified of their im-
pending relea~.
~Hacker Sough:t
In South Laguna
Area · Incident'
.. S.gretti When presidential oounselor John
Dean asked for them. Two Marines Beheaded
~ CaunlY Sllerlfl's officers are to-Mtr ~ an auact on a Laguna
a.di wcman wtio was assaulted
Well rlrJ • she ltft an •Pattment
....... la tbe South Laguna area. n;pa.-. ail lht 4.n 1 u'r & n c e
...,._ -atllCtt<I al 'I Pacific
a.& lfitlliw"1 lacalkll as tile re a d a •••Pl" ~~ sidewalk oUtskfe an tmml ...,,._..'19. ·a. laid dopuUeS her slockily built'
II I $ _,abbed ha around lhe throat __ ....,... ......... .,.~
wto:p • car """"' the aportmtnt hou&e *""'""'~Ille~ '*;! 1!lt!im aid th,..llacnr, -she
dtw>lllol M I -111 ohotll.U to Z0 __... tlm_nn fm1ll lhe..aRa
-Ille NII lilll towardo tllo beach. She
ii 1epwlllll IOOIJ to bo reoo.....s lmn
11or-...i:
Gray said be did not know for sure
Dead Infant's
Mother. Sought
Orange police are klolllng !or the
mother of a newborn baby boy found
dead more thaa two ..-ago In the
ladlta ttSI niom ol a drlve'ln theater.
They bave ruled that !he lrifant's death
·Wal I homicide.-• •
l'Qllce said lnvesUgallon of the Feb. It
death lndlcales-ib>t the six plllllld,,,,..,.
ounce hlfant was born-heallhY and ·
ol neglect. . .
'l'hoJiody was loond by a janitor •! Ille
Stadlum -I>rtv9-ln 'l'belltr on Kalella
A~olice lhecri. tbel .the ~
was born ln a vehide at the dri....io and ·
placed Ill llio real -.i.
In SQn /Ua,n Car Crash
\ .
Two Comp Pendleton Maf!i>e oerge..t. American-made aportscar lost control at
were decapitated In a hlg!Mpeed traffic high •peed and slammed lnln a conctete
crash early today In San J u a n al>uttnent. Theo the auto skidded acro9S
Capistrano. the ~ay and stammed lnln a divider
,,,. lfijly, aingle-car collision occurred Jenee reinforced with steel cable.
at about I ::lO i,p:i. and claliried the nv.. Tile cable, observers aaid, toro the niol
ol l\l.nn. Sgta. Jamta C. Jones, 21, and from the vehicle and beheaded the two
Vl\lllOf C R1111•ll, u.lolh.ma Wtrf at-men. After the~ Impact. the car Olpped
laclied to the an! OOlallon, 7th Mulnea, 'onto !ta s~ and aldd<lad nearly 300 !eet
at tbe liue. • in the qppOilte 1..,. ol the freeway.
HJelnl'.ay patrolmen aaid that the crash Hljhway patrolmen could give no
OCcurr,d .J:I lbe eouthbound lanes ol the. reason for the Joa of control ol the vehi·
San lllqoJ'neway near ~San Juan de !J2I'. lel,Jhey lmmedlalely dttermine
Crtek ov.......,.lng. · Wtildi man ••• drlyin& the car. Invest~
F1ll' ........, •• Ytt undel«mlned, !he ratio!! wa1·C111t1nu1n1, they o.lld.
'.
• • ,
•
' • • I ' • • • , • . , , <OAH.Y Ptl.OT ...........
HER, POSTER WON"J!,RST IN -"JOY OF SEEING". C,ONTEST
~r. i.-,A>ralroll With Secon.d Grader W~ltnoy \Vhlt.'V
Her •Joy" .Top~
Second Grader's Painting Scores
Whitney White, a Second grader from
El Morro Elementary SCbool, has cap-
tured firat place in the Orange County
"Joy of Seeing" art contest sponsored by
the Orange COUnty Optometric Society
and Auxiliary.
Her Painting depicted the pleaSl.lres
seell1g tbie outdoon, including trees, sky,
and gtass.
Wbltney received free admission and
ticket boo'ks to Disneyland for two for
her painting, which now enters state
competition. .
Second and thkd place winners were
Lori Quinlan, fourth grader from
Westminster, and fifth grader Marc
Fraco of cypress.
The "Joy of Seeing" contest, open to
children from 8 to 12, is a national proj-
Book Fair, Fest
Slat.ed in Laguna
Friends of the Laguna Beach Public
Library have set March 31 to April i !or
a book fair and feaUvaf with the plaza of
the new bulldlllg as Its setting.
The group's proceeds from the
weekend-long event will benefit the
library which opened Its new quarters
tast month.
Florence Beane and Jamt.1 Dille;y have
been appointed C<>Cbalrmtn ol the boot
ratr by Friends president Joe O'Sullivan.
DUiey said the. Cltizena Town Planning
AlooclaUoo is building !O booths for the
fair wblcb are beJna _,,,ed by C<lm-
munlty '::lzaUons. Several booths are left, he ,
To reserve a hoolh, call Dilley or
Flortboe Bealle.
. -'-
eel of the A m e r i c a n Optometric
Association designed to inc~ public
awareness of the importance of vision.
"These top three Winners, in the opinion
of the judges, bes£ captured an · ap-
preciation for ·the gift 'ot sightl" said
Mrs. Will iam Buethe, president of the
Orange County Optometric Association .
Entries in the state competition will 'be
displayed and judged at the Calllomia
Optometric Congress in Sao Diego. U the
three Orange County entrants winJ>tbere,
they will have a chance at national prizes
including trips to Florida and NeW York
City.
Orange Coast
Weatker •,
Weather sources today predicted
more moBtly SWUIY sides fer the
Orange Coast on Friday. Tho high
'l'ill be In the 50s, low tonlghl al»ll1 lit .
INSlltt:· TOlti\ V
After 23 d4y• along!l4 hlo
wrecked airpltmt m tht Antic,
on injured bwh. pilot ott flesh
of ... of hlo thr .. cfcod J>ll'S"""
oer1 to •tay alivt. St e 1to,.J', Pagt 4. •
L.M. ...,. '' ,..... tJ ''"""'* .. 1 ~ ..... • C$ffllfM Ja..11 ........... ""'" .. ' -C-kl n Or._ c...., l>H ~ at ,.,..,..,..,.... "
DMlll Notlea '' """' tH1 •fllrlrfM ..... t Sftcll MWbb ~ ---·-.. ,,~ ... ~ ,,_._ .
............ 11 ...... " U• ts?• I• Wtw'I ... W•
-.... ......,.. '' ........ 411 ,
J_• -
f DAil V PILOT ta
Leetures
"Life Without Doubt" is the
subject of a lecture by James
E. Pike of Chicago at 8 p.m.
Friday in the Fint Church of
Clirist, Scientist, Laguna Beaclt;"
635 High Drive.
-
Thursday, Martt! 1, 1973
f!pdptS~
District Curb$ .,
•
_:Benefit Pleas ' .
• -
~ By JAN EDWARDS Of.,,....,..., ...
C.pfstrano UnifJ<d School Di!lrlcl trustees llltened to request. ,_
teachers Wednesday night tlW -.Id
mean more tbaD fl millioo i.Dc:rew m
salary and medkal imuraoce bmefi ..
and said there was "oo way" they Clll:l1d
grant all or them.
Tnl!tees said that because of I.be new
Reagan-A.1oretti tu reform measure
~'hl.cb pull a ceiling on the amount the
di!trict may spend per at.udenl, I.be
district could not afford it.
'"It is very obvklul ri&bt now ... &here
is no way you could ever get all of this. ..
said Trustee G<orge White. "I think that
yoo all really imderstand that. What '"'
are golng to do ii the best wt can with
wpat we have."
Trustees then asked for a llJt givhw
the 14 requests ln order of their im-
portance to the teachers.. "'Ibis ~
•
Cift: as m lndicaUm d their mmt Jll'l!ll-
il>g -and_ ........ Ill -"""'!!!r
DD the feast "'-'an1 00<S," lnDiee
Ganlllll ._.... said.
'Ille inlamll lludy -Ill lllarto
Fed« Jmlor lllsh begaa ..... l•f""'1
..mdl -· said they -comj,I.ted by the fnt boon! meeting In lfay.
It ns the first time.. district trustees
.... dindlJ with -· -the Jn.. itial prewintation ol reqaesta far Ole new
f...,.( ,.... la the post, tnllleHppoiDted
~----Wiws.
'Ille 8---(Smale Bill ., cub popaty lUel Jn NDe
dislrids but owrloob buk>aid districts
such .. the Capislnno district, """"1ling
to White.
1be districts' fm:al situatim was ex·
plained by Sam lllicas. assbtant
suporiDtmdant ol general ,.rvices'
Ballet for the Birds
What appears to be a double exposure in ap\ly
>.. named Mirror Lake in Reading, Pa., is two Canadian
geese taking an afternoon siesta in crisp weatb_er. --
•
UPIT.,....
The. reason they have just one foot ln the water:-~
that it's only half as cold !hat way.
600 'Church Members, "We ..;r( be spending 181111.04 per stu-
deo~ and under SB 90 we are allowed to
~-... ..... -...
'
v ·ietnam Peace
__;;.,j
":11 Endorsed Pastor Leave Flock
About 600 members of the 1,600-strong
':· Pirst Presbyterian Church of Anaheim
rganizing a separate congregation
the former pastor because the
. U Presbyterian Church is .. 'selling
its soul to radical left-wing enemies of
Christ," that pastor said.
Rev. Ralph H. Didier said first worship
services of the new C o v e n a n t
Presbyterian Church will take place Sun-
day at the former headquarters of Zion
Lutheran Church at 222 N. East St.,
Anaheim.
The moat frequently mentioned con-
troversial issue among the Anaheim con-
gregation was a $10,000 grant in 1971 by
From Pagel
INDIANS ..•
assistant to the U.S. attorney general,
said he Intended to ad-t1ie senators,
presumably by radio, to land outside the
·commlllllty for fear of possible gunfire.
· "Our prime concern at lbls point ls to
obtain the release of t:fie,.11 hostages. We
are par\lcularlJ ..,...ned 'Wllh Ibo fact
th at several of tllese host.a&:es are people
in their a>s," Erickson said 1n nearby
Pine RldJe.
Aboumt said be f o t e Jeavl)Jg
IWuhlnston he has been assured by
·leaders of the American Indian Move-
ment that some hostages would be
released when he arrived In the
southwestern South Dakota area and said
he was "confident we can negotiate the
release of the rest once we get there."
The 200 Indians have demanded a
Senate probe ol the Bureau ol lndlan Ar·
fairs in return for freeing the hostages .
Aside from one brief meeting with an
FBI agent, the Indians have kept law en-
forcement olflcen at a dlstance. a n d
there was an exchange of gunfire
Wednesday morning.
Abourezk and McGovern were ac-
companied by members of the staffs of
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy (0-Mass.),
and J. W. Fulbright (0-Ark.).
The Indians also demanded th.at Ken·
nedy and r~ulbright come to the reserva-
tion lo discuss grievances. whic h include
the governmen t's ha ndling of U.S.-lndla n
treaties and !he way in whic h the Oglala
Sioux tribe elects ils leaders.
"I want to emphasize that we're not
going there to negotiate demands, bu t to
\York for the release of the hostages,''
Abourezk said in Washington. "There can
be no negoti11tions with a gun at anyone's
head ."
Wounded Knee was the scene of
tragedy for red men during the wane of
the grea t weslw<1rd push of the 19th Cen-
tury.
I
OU.Hal COAST u
DAILY PILOT
T"9 or ..... C.0..t DAILY PILOT, .:wi .,..lcfl
II combined In• H._Prao, 11 pUbl ...... ..,.
ffl• Or11-.. c .. 11 Pv1>U1hln; Com1>1ny. S.p.1.
••It tdllkw>t ''' PUb!llMo, "'-6y lt'tr1111g1'1
Frk11y, for CO.I•, M..-, H"1JOrt lie.ch,
H11nttnv1on . Bt«ft /FD\11\llln V•llty, l llOll ....
8-, lrvlM/S•ckllel>llCll •""' Sin Cllmttl111
Sa" JU8fl C•plltreno. A 111191• r111~1
ecllllOfl 11 111161iilltd ~~turd••• •I'd s..."""n-r"" prlrw;lp.tl llUDl!tlll.,o P'-flf05 ti lJO Wt1I
rw, Strftf, Cot!• "'-• Cllll!ornl•, m:M.
Rob.rt N. w • ..i p, .... _ •I'd Pllb!llMt
J1,1i l . Curl1y
VJOI l"mklerlt -.ii 0...rt l Mt"'"9r n.,..., ac .... 11 --1"-·· A. M•rpliti111 Me....itllt ~, ....
0.1rf" H. Loot l ich1n4 r. Nill ,..IN-~-fdl ..... ---221 f1re1t A¥111•1
M1iliitt Addr•n: r.o. 101 666, tl612 --Coll• MAI! 2-w"' 8tr"Str1tt N~ IMdl! .tW H"'""""1 lllulewnl
Hul'llirlt1'1f! S.KI>; 1"7S &Mdl tiovlt'Ot rll!
S-ci.-tt: * Norltl .-1 Oll'llnt lltNI
, ......... f7141 i4Za4JJt
~·~'42-li7t
W,.. .._. A• D1p•1 ..... , r...,-.. 494-94'6
(#\ff lOfll, 1'7J. o...... (ottll "llMlahlnt ~fly. No -•torlft, Uh11!r•llan1, 1111'"""'' -tttr ... llllvtt'l........,h lltnllt
""' " ~ ""'"-' lllllCi.i ..,. ......... ~·JeM -·
....... dul ........... " Cllt• ~. <"111111• • ......_ ... ..,. ~ a"
""""""'' llr -" ta.It """"""'' mmruy ...mi.tlont •.M INlllMY.
. '
the United Presbyterian Church to the
defense fund of professed Communist
Angela Davis, later acquitted of charges
related to a shootout at the Marin Cqunty
Courthouse in 1970.
The remaining members of the US-
year-<>ld First Prelbyterian <llllrcll. .,..
continuing regular servic<I with guest
ministers until a oew pastor II namecl..
"A lot of fine Cbriltlan people have
been misled Into leaving," Dr. L. -.
neth Heuler, clerk of the Flrtt
Presbyterian governlna board. said
Wednesday o( the new church.
"Our point ol departure has to do with
the denomination itself and •bet.bet it is
dominated by Marxist phlJolopbiel," be
added. "I doa~ believe It Is."
Churth lile u like national politics, Dr.
Hueler said. "I don't agroe with all GI
our nation's policies, but rm not morinc
to Australia either."
Rev. Didier, 45, already bad...,..,.....•
position with the Fint Conflr<ptlaml
Church of Redlands wbm the splinter
Anaheim group asked him to lead them.
Judge Declares
'Deep Throat'
Obscene in NY
NEW YORK !AP) - A Criminal Court
judge today declared the hanklore
pornograRhiC film "Deep 'lbtoat" to he
the "nadir of decadence" and found it
"Indisputably obscene by aqy lepl
measurement." t
Judge Joel Tyler found the -t
corporation guilty of two counts of pro-
moting obscenity and ruled It oouJd he
fined up to twice the amount ol the
proftU the movi• grnaed liDce it .,,.....
here last June
'!be city broughi the obsomity ·pro-
ceedings against Mature Enterprises.
Inc., in a test case as part of its drive to
clea n up Times Square. The triaJ was
held without a jury.
Asst. Dist. Atty. William Purcell said
the effect of the judg's ruling wu: 10 ban
the showing of the film in the city. Tyler
ord ered that the print of the film be
turn ed over to the Police Oepartmenl 's
property clerk's office, pending any ;i:p-
peal.
In a previous case in Binghamton ,
N.Y .. a jury deci ded that the Cilm was
not obscene.
At the trial here, Tyler beard aperts
take diam etrically opposing viewpoints.
Dr. Ernst van den Haae. a
. psychoanalyst, testified for t b e pros-
ecution that the film "is without any
redeeming value •batsoever."
Film critic Arthur Knight. however,
said , "It's not a sleazy film by any
means. There is a real attempt to me
humor and a kind of sophisticated fooliog
with Sex. It is not a dee-brealhinl: film."
Tyler said in his decision that De found
the dominant theme and "the ooly theme
is an appeal to pruriencf in BeL It b
hard-(Xlre Pornography with a vengeance.
"This is one throat lhat deserves to be
cul ," he said. ··1 read ily perfonn the
oper11lion in find ing the defendant guilty
as charged."
Between lest Ju ne and this January,
the theater said il):rosSecl about $712,000.
· Approximately 1,700 persons have 1een
the film daily in the 320-seat New Mataae
\V orld theater in midtown Manhattan.
A hearing will be held to determine the
amount of the fine once the judge e.x-
amines the corporalioo's books.
From P,,.e J
FBI ...
confinnation hearings, he acknoMedg:ed
that the FB I 's files atlll OIXl1ain in-
rorm ation ga thered in investigatJons of
members of Congress .
But Gray told the Senate committee be
stopped the practice of gatherint in-
for mation on congressmen •hm be toot
over as actl.na: dlrector artu J. Edgar
Hoover's dt11 Ui" last year .
He said be ordered the change i>«ouse
"it could too readily be subject to
misin terpretation and u not needed"
Ile said this allows the -to In-
""""' -..... only lligjdl;y and the total -not he .....,, lo ...
--the -· salary, In-........ -mooetary nquem. -'· • • •
"We an a very poor, wealthy district.
We amol. baoll: 1111 federal funds any
ID(ft.. It is not a healthy situation from a
standpoint ol plain, old dollan," Chicas
said.
" 12 Nations Sign Nine-point Agreement in Paris ..
Each -.... <zp(ained by teachers and lnlsltts asked few ques-
tions following eacb presentation.
Trustees said they basicall7 -what teacben wanted but wen mw
unalJle to jodge -....-they
-be able to "3D1. Teacben said they want an II-percent
salary incrtase because raises in the
past two yean have not been com-
...,,,...., with the ri9e .. the -.. liv-
ing.
\Joe teadler said the l<a<hen' morale
was low in 1!71 when they received a two ---Robert Knapp, -_. dlrec>
tor, objected. ..,.. that "ti -ol
teacben that come into the district are
not <llllttiued with alar)'. 'Ibey are
mare "'"""ued·wilh ,.umc out of llDO(
OD! -.. Los Angoloo -and Into .,. "'• ill tbe Capillrw valley' ..
--wasthenductionol
............ , --to 25 pupils f<r crns -tlnaP tine ..r a fer
grns -tlrqb.... . Tea:has said t1m ha••• tben ia a new e 0 &1 d 11pm clUipoeh ol emcq
pupil'• --.. directed by the state, dass---lo-.A teamer of JD dndrnta, fer awmlff, is
rt:ii•a•l* ,.. lit ltlldmt leam1ng .,..._. __ beR(ltusmaD ..........
PARIS (AP) -'!be foreign ~
of. 12 governments, including the world's
superpowers, initialed a n l n e • p o i n t
dedaraUoo today endorsing the Vietnam
peace agreement and establishing a pro-
eectus:e, for examining violations.
&id'etaey of State Willi!Un P. Rogers
and the foreign ministers of Britain,
Frm\ce, China and the SoViet Union· were
alDlllli thooe -who Initialed the document,
together with North and South Vietnam,
the Viet Cong and the four members of
the latematiooal Commission of Control
and Supervision -Canada, Indonesia ,
Poland and Hungary.
The declaration, pledging the 12
governments to keep the peace and to
reconvene when any six of them lodge a
complaint, is to be formally signed Fri·
day at a ceremony in the International
Conference Center.
Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp of
Canada initialed the document but
reserved his government's PoSition With
regard to continued participation in the
control C<>mmiaslon.
He said the Canadian government will
Transcript AUegations
Delay Set in Arraignment
Of Marine on Murder Rap
" A three-week delay '"' ordered today the Grand Jury oo lhree felony. counl.s.
In the Orange County Superior Court 11'-Wallace wu arrested Feb. 11 In
ralgrunent ol El Toro Marjne Jmd Alan Mission Viejo by officers lnvesUgallllg
Wallac;e OD cbaqes of ~ degree the alleged kidnaping seven days earlier
murder, kidnap and assault with a deadly of Carole Ann Rowan, 24, an X.ray
weapon. technician at a San Clemente hospita1.
Judge James Tomer granted the delay Miss Rowan told deputies the man sbe
to give the tall Marine's lawyer time to identified as Wallace pased as a police County Council examine a transcript containing allega· officer and ord ered her to pull over near
lions that be kidnaped a woman Feb. 4 the Beach Cities offramp of the San
and raped and murrlered anolber five , Diego Freeway. ..
Of Go ts days later. Wallace held a part time civilian job as Vernmen Wallace, 26. will remain In county jail a security gua rd with the Bums Intema·
have to examine the declaration to
detenlllne whether the commission can
operate effectiv ely. He threateoed earlier
that Canada would walk out of the com-
mission wiless adequate machinery for
reporting cease-fire violatk>m w a 1
established.
The delcaration was hammered out In
backstage expttt meetings, wilb coo-
cessions made by both sides.
North Vietnam and Its Communbt
alli., abandoned their previous Insistence
that the oonference could ooly he r<cal~
ed by a majority ol the lZ delegatiom.
nils would have given each side a veto.
1a return, the United States and iu
allies agreed to mention the Viet Qmg's
Provisional Revolutionazy Government
ps a full-fledged cooference partidpaDL
~o a-the Salgui i0Ye111111m~ tbe
inal article of the declaration states that
signatories do not neceswily
~ each other .
1 Because of vigol'OUJ Communist ob-
jections, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim was excluded from aey adlft
iote 1n the pei!CUtep!Jis --With word from Soip1 tillt Nor1b
Vietnam told the Americans It WU au\ng
t9 release -142 more u.s. p~ of ·
-· Seetttary of Stafe Wlllfam P. Rogers. was expected to attend the pl""'l)l 1 _.., ol the oonlerence this
afternoon. :
Beach Park Meet
Slated Tonight
with ball denied until bis March 20 ap-tional Security Company. A forqm on the planned development of
Sets U Du pearance. He was indicted Wednesday by Miss Rowan said her awi\ant held her Laguna's Main Beach Park wW be btld p es at gW!polnt and tried tO handcuff her at 7,30 tonight at the Recreation n-~. while warning her that she was being ~.-. •
Ormge <DmlJ's ..., lnlergoftrn-Original Art Set-held as a suspect in a criminal In-ment, 175 N. Coast Hi g b way
mmtaJ Qutfi.,,111ng O:luDcil ended hi vestigation. (downstairs).
F M She told officers she managed to free The information session ns called at
-._ ... In Orange W........,. Or Laguna 08eOID herseU and ran from the car when the request of the Laguna Beacb Board
mgbt bJ ltllq; op cbs 11111 m•Plns oul Wallace stopped !or a traffic signal. of Realtprs, said Skip Conner, director Gf
bills to the M mrrnh:t1. The exhibition of I.he contennporary Officers who booked Wallace on those marine enyironment department.
Total iname far the f I e d 1 1 in g and old master original graphic art will charges added murder to the list when Fred Lang, Ken Wood and Fred
wganizali• wUI be $17,200 with the be presented at the LaJUM Beach they searched him'and allegedly found a Brigg!, members of the ~ cm.
county paying $l.5ID in annual dues. Museum ol Art from 10 a.rn. to S p.m. checkbook and wallet belonging to Mrs. ~rtium ; Wayne Moody, director of plan-
'lbe aswssnwuts Jor Orange C.O.St Friday by the Ferdinand Roten Galleries. Nanette Post, a Fountain Valley barmaid n1~g and development, and William
cities an Q:ma Mesa. $711: Fountain More than 1,000 etchings, lithographs whose body was found Feb. 9 In Hun-Wilcoxen, a member ol. lhe Ma.in Beach
Valley, $GS; lhmtinctm Beach. fl,071 ; and woodcuts by artists such as Picasso, tlngton Beach. Park Committee will dlscuu plans for
Irvine. $3$2: Laguna Beach, PJS; Chagall, Mieo, Dali, Goya, Renoir, They claim Wallace is the man who the park and answer questions.
Newport &am. $971; Sao Clemente, Kollwitz. as well as contemporary raped Mrs. Post after she left her job at The forum, said Conner, will be similar szm: San Juan Capistrano, SID Seal American and Japanese print work, are a Garden Grove tavern and then stuffed to a presentation made to the Laguna
Beach. $Z!M IDd Westminster, $55Z. included In the exhibition. Prices start at her body under a juniper bu!h in a Beach Coordinating Council last month.
Dues are based 1111 a eombinatkm of ~with a majority priced under $100. res idential tract. The public i.s invited, he said.
aa 1sal Yatuatiaa and pop"Nm 11=========:===:=============================:::;-'Ibe ICC Is a -.., umclatlan ol Settl f = ~.U:,"':m" ...:": Don't e · or Less Than the Best. LITION -is Best! -and_., the CllllllJ _.ms. *'fr:-_ ._ire 111 -. Ana WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
Mardi • tbe mti•oMI• plm 1o elect • ONLY I ..... ON ..._,,., YOU
dllinJ1ln, --and--WI I V~ . • • '
-At-caGlthelhfteor-..A.. y fG . I -. ..;rr be • .-l(f IUfld•llor, ..,. ., ears o omm:rcoa experience
cmling ta the -bylan. .A. Th b. f ,... e 199est oven ••• 1.2 cu. t. A ~ fuD time u:ecullve
_,.,.,, ..;rr be bired lo carry out the * An eesy-lo-cleen liner.
b .. .; .... ., the OQ!Cll * An easy-open door late~
'Folk Americans'
Original. Musical
Set for W eelwnd
* Automatic cf6frost feature.
REMEMBER THIS PLEASE!
BEFORE YOU BUY! ........ ,..... ............... ....., ......... ..... ....... k ........ ..., ..... .,.,..
......... ,.. .............. uW ......... ..... ... ,.....,...,.. ....... ,,_. ............... . .......................... ..,_,, ... . .... .,.. ..................... .....
• la9!!1;•.,...._.U.... .... ,..ec11 .. t1t1
1101111:: ., ....
...................... I .......... ~ ., ...•.. e ...... ,.. •• ; ' hupt*teW, ..... , ..................... '
8 1!0 - -llTTON "' USS,._ IMIMW',
I '\ s349
.
AND wrrH A LmON
. YOU CAN R.OWJ.f •
SEAR AND GRIU. TOO!
·90 DA.Y ~· Mtmbor of
... C1lilornl1'1 L1rv11t C:Mil+-
Gfoup With Tht CllDIT
Pl ....... will ... olfmd hrice •• ch
day II l,. IDd J p.m. al the Forum
'lboll«. 1'lcSdl .... awllabll 11 the
!heal« I« SI fer adlJU., IO C<llll foe
dllldrs.
Pauline K)'llO GI I--dlrecll and ~ ihe !DOdler, lndndq
rn too(ltl'llln Buyl"' Willi -
Volume 8uyln9 ~ -.:.:;:.-r.::::. Power of\'~10 StorHiiiiiJ BB
"SWiac 1-, -Caariol," ·y-
Doodle,. -..... • ... Giber lalk -
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1815 -llEWPORT •vo. DowntoWii Costa Mesa Pirone 548-7788
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.VOL 66. NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, ~8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
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N.Y. teeks
THURSDAY, MARCH I, 19n
F~te 1of Moderate Income IJousing Plan Set
SAHIA FE RR
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--DNLY PILOT tkaaz "' TIM ..........
VALLEY VIEW -A<nage, shown C1'0SS batched ·on map, would be
........i ~ ...i.r lo deptlls from six-inches· to a foot in the worst
PQ1Sib1e a.m Army eorps· of Engjnt!jl?S envision bitting Irvine.
Sbade4 areas of map ue eeotral Irvine ftood plaiD. Irvine C-Ompany
-~ 3-foot, H!'.!!i;_~-lfl!l!!!l protect VaUey View's 212 acres.
Jlajpr: 111>J11•.••-•b. to san Diego Creek Cb~. ~t .• cost of .$7.5 ~ --2 ,., •• ~lo eJiinin•te,pae ~flt ~um.flooding!
el -lo --.,er -foot cm .-...,.ge, county_ flood contro
4i1t1ictcilfirjl11edj1111te niang)es~sdaoola. ~
VallefView ~floo~ ~lam
Mulled by Irvine Council ·
to $700 a foot. 1bat would amount to $7.5
million fer the two-mile stretch of San
Diego er.et between Jeffrey Road and
CW-Drive.
Of this figure, ooly $1:& million would
(See FLOOD, Page I)
• Viejo Area Dog·s
Given LSD Trips;
Suspect Sought
A dog doper who has fed what is
bolie.ed to be LSD to a number of dogs
in the Missim Viejo and Laguna Hills
area is today on the 04.yery much wanted"
'list at tbe Oraoge County Sheriff's Office.
)!is latest victim · Wednesday was
G<orge, a four-year-old black poodle
owned by Marine. COrps Col Raymond
Dr!wtd Jr., 51, df 26691 Alicante Drive,
llissiOo Viejo.
COL Dewees roshed bis pet to Laguna
Bills AnDnal Hospital wben the stricken
lllimll begaa to display all the
~ auoclated with an UD trip,
c:mtarlioos, panic and inability
to -..-cootrol bis limbs. VetaioariUs in the area are warning
dog OWDll"S to maintain a watch on their
~ and 'to nisb them for medical at-
-II tbe first sign of syttlploms 1311f1D111J aaociated with drug Ingestion.
Oop:Ues said George appears to bave
1«oteed from bis ordeal with the U·
cepllan of 1 otlffened rear left leg,
The fate of the <lllly large scale
moderate income housing project
pr<Senily oo file with the city of Irvine
will be decided 00 testlmooy to-be
presented to lrvioe eoubcllmen toniiht.
The bearing is set for 7:30 in Uriiversity
High School, 4771 Campus Drive.
Among the new infonnaUon cowr
cilmen are expected to bear will be data
on the effect of floodiog of De>fly baff of •
the 212-acre portion of the development.
The Irvine Company seeks approval by
the city of a planned community zoning
providing a mix of attached and detached
single falnlty bomes and apartments to
house 4,700 people. The original ap-
plJcation by the -ftrm aska an average
density of 9.t units per acre.
Tbe IrVine PlannbJi Commission
reduced tbb to 7.48 units per acre wben
it approved the zone plan and forwirded
it to the council. That denslty woold
result in a f\lture population of 3,700 on
the land . boWlded by Culver Drive,
Moulton Parkway, Yale Avenue and the
Santa Fe Railroad.
The origtoai ltvine Company propi>sal
was to have provided homes for families
earning from 18,500 to $1%.000 aMually
with aales unit$ ranging in price Imm
$19,000 to $32,000. Company officiala
estimate the revised demities will result
in bomes costing from $M,OOO to $40,000.
The project has been heavily op(JOSed
by residents of neighboring tracts in-
cluding the Greentt.e Homes, Ranch,
California Homes and C o 1 o n y
developments.
The oriainal Valley View proposal was
to have · served families with incomes
nearly equal to the median. income level
of the residents ol these tracts, an
ecooomlc study presented by tbe lnlne
Company showed.
Howev.r, the residents of -
developments wtdcb average about t.S
units per acre. argue that the -
density of t1'e Valley View dev<lopmenl
will advenely affect the --vaRI
of their more tnditional tract bolnes. .
Otben suggest the lll ..... ol porks, in.
addition . to private ~· and
elementary and intermediate scbool -
in Valley View will enhance tbe value of
neigbboclng properties. ·
Prisoner List Revealed
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North VietsNanie106,butCong Mum on 30·POWs
SAIGON (AP) -The United States an-'
nounced tonight that the North Viet·
namese tUmed over a list of 1()1!
American prisoners and two Thais to be
released over the weekend.
But it said the Viet Cong bad not yet
turned over a list -of 30 Americans to be·
freed from camps in SOUtb Vietnam.
The U.S. delegation inJtially said 108
Americans ·would-be freed-by Nortb Viet·
nam. and 34 by the Viet qong, but it was
discovered later that these figures iJp.
eluded the two Thais held in the north
and two WeSt Genn1¥15 and two Filipinos
Standard Oil
~R~~!!., ... Gets AiriDg ... "
An application by Standard Oil· for ex-
plora!Ory drilling'Jn tlie Irvlile Jilaustrial
Complex will be aired tonight by Irvine
Planning Commissioners.
City Attorney James: Erickson has said
that the city can't deny the request for
exploratory drilling because of state
laws. However, plarming commissioners
can control the esthetics of the project,
be said.
The exploratory drill site is proposed
on a two-acre parcel located at the
northeast comer of ~ extension of Von
Karman Avenue and the San Diego
Freeway.
The area is designated for medium ~
dustrial uses within the Irvine Industrial
Comples Planned Commimity. • ,
AJso on tonight's qenda is a request
for a change of zone from agricultural to
commercia). at the Santa Ana Freeway
and Sand Canyon A venue. ·-
The 30-acre site is proposed as a
recreational vehicle sales center to be
called Traveiand, USA. ·
.Planning Commissioners also will con-
duct a public hearing on a propoied city
ordinance regulating billboards. It would
prohibit outdoor advertising struCtures in
an "SR," Sign Restriction, ZQQe within 90
days of the effective date of the
ordinance. ·
City council chambers are in Irvine
Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive. The
meeting starts at 7:30 p.m.
Leaguei-ar~nts Meet
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At Joaquin School
The Greater Irvine LitUe League will
bold a parent. meeting tonight' at 8
o'clock for final registration at the San
Joaquin Intermediate School.
orJentalion on league. plans and pro-
cedures for the coming season ls also
scheduled.
beid in the south. .
A Viet Cong spokesman said the
American prisonen, scheduled for release
by them included 26 servicemen and four
civilians. '
The Germans are Monika Schwinn, a
31-year-old nurse, and medical student
Bernhard Diehl; fl, who . were captured
~Y the Viet Cong ~ar Da Nang in 1969.
Both were workers for the Maltese Aid
Society; a German Protestant charity
service. . .
The Filipinos, Candido Badua and
Arturo·~· Balago~ ~re captured during
tbe Tet offensive m 1961.
2 Countries' . '
Officials Die . .
.:!~-~~-'.!"~ r. ~j -'t ' . ' , ' .. ' . . ~ . ' ' · a:•u;eJr countrleS' ~ ,,OU , di~ ID an air msn in: no and iDnlght. :
1'lii ~ernment qufcl:ly oi'ilmo~ellnviit!PllOO.
Radio 'Wbsaw reported Interior
Minister Wieslaw Ociepka and bis
visiting C7.ecboslovak counterpart.
Radko Kaska, ·were flying near the
Baltic pOrt of Sr.czecin when their
rrillitary aircraft went down. All
their aides and creW perished too,
but the nuritber ef· dead was not
disclosed.
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High-sp_eed Car
Crash . Beheads ,
Two Marines
Two Camp Pendleton Marine sergeants
were decapitated in a high-speed traffic
crash early today in San J u a n
Capistrano.
The grisly, sing!~ collision oceutted
at abeut 1:30 a.m. and claimed the lives
of Marine Sgts. James C. Jones, 22, and
Vernor C. Russell, 24. Both men were at·
tached !O' ihe 3rcl' Battalion, 7tt. Marines,
at the. base.
Highway patrolmen said that the crash
occurred in the southbound -1anes of the
San Diego Freeway near the San Juan
Creek overcrossing.
For reasons as yet undetermined, the
American-nmde sportscar lost control at
high speed and slammed into a concrete
abutment. Then· the auto skidded across
the freeway and sJammed into a dlvtder
fence reinforced with steel cable.
The cable, observers said, tore the .roof
from the vehicle and beheaded tbe two
men. After that bnpact, the car Dipped
ont.o Its side and skidded nearly 500 feet
in the oppiOSlte lanes of the1freeway:
Highway patrolmen .could gi'V'e no
reason for the Ion of control of the vehi·
cie nor did they immediately determine
which man was driving the car. Investi-
gation wu continuing, Ibey said. -
O' The Piillippines aent a military -':
uni". to South Vietnam during the high-
point of the war.
'lbe Communists gave no specific time--
table for the POW releases but in Paris
the North Vietnamese foreign minister,
Nguyen Duy Trinh, assured Secretary of
State William P. Rogers that Ibey would
he freed by 9 p.m .. Saturday Saigoo time.
This is 5 a.m. PST, Saturday.
11le U.S. spokesman at the Paris coo-
_f~rence on Vietnam, Robert J, M~,
said Trinh gave Rogers the assurance
during a 15-minute private meeting.
The United States annoonced the pend-
inc releases in SalgGD.
1'be U.S. annooncement said:
"The Democratic Republic of Vietnam
representative on the PO W llJI>..
commmicn, four-party Joint Military
C.onuniss.ioo, p r e s e n t ~ d to the
U .s. repreieotative a list cmtalning the
nanies of 111 UJI. POWs and two 'lllai rows. The United States bas nnt been
advi>ed of the lime and place of~
No new information bas 6een received an
the detained ponnnnel held by the
Provisiooal Rewlutionary Gov<mment."
This 19 the &Ovenunent of the Viet
(Set POWa, l'llce II
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Arizonan Parker Named
.BnqgHospir. -·.~~-· ...
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A S'l'1eaN>ld-PboeniX, Aris., man to-
~ ,... n!lllled •dlninislralOr of Hoag M~ 'tal in "'·-lleacb. . OOJl1 ~-.-· SoottS. Parker, wbo bas held the posi-
tion of 'vice president and administrator
of Good Samaritan Hospital in Phoenix
for the past two yrus, wlD ~icaed
William R. Hudson wbo resipid under
fire nearly a year ago.
Lou ·Kaa, an assistant administrator
wbo waa running the hospital while direc-
tors conducted their. search for a replace-
ment for Hudson, will be promoted· to the
position of associate administrator, ac-
CQl'ding to A. Vincent Jorg,,,,_ presi-
dent of the board of directors.
The appointment of Parker and the
elevation of Kaa will be effective May 1,
Jorgensen said.
There are 382 be<h at Hoag now, but
that figure will increase to more than 450
beds when the oew $ll million, 11..tory
tower addition iJ completed in about a
year.
Before joining Good Samaritan Hospi-
tal, Parker held the positions of vioet&.': ident and administrator of Sou ·
Hospitat in Mesa, Ariz., where be organiz..
ed and supervised the initial comtruction
of · the new 275-bed Desert Samaritan
Hospital.
Parker also served for five yean as
assistant administrator at Northwestern
Hospital in' Minneapolis, Minn., where be
was responsible fot the operation of that
480-bed private hospital. c
He is a member of numerous bospltaJ-
related associations 8nd last year served
88 president of the Arizona Hospital
Association.
A native of Salt Lake City, Park.er
received bis bachelors degree in bUsiness
from the University of Utah and bis
masters degree in h o s p i t a I ad-
ministratioo lrom the University of Min-
nesota.
Irvine Lutheran
College to Get
Chief From USC
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TAKES HOAG HOsPfTAL JOB
AdmlftSfrotorP-
Jorgensen aaid Plubr, bis wife Sydne
and their foor dliltlfta will reside in the
NewporllleachllftL
He said that duriog tho -two
mootbs Parter la acbeduled to make
several trips lo Newpwt Beach to ac-
quaint bi-11 -tbo hoapital and the community.
Parter is ........ a llolpftal CIOo-
. vention in the. east and could not be
readied for oommeot tllll lllOllling.
Welidler
frraffic Feared With
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Zone Change The Lutheran caiiipus putor at USC
has been named acUng president of the
Lutheran College at lrvlne. which is
scheduled to open ill i;ei>tember. 1'74:
Weather IOUlCOI -, pndlclod
"""" mos1ly ....., -for the Onnge Coast en Friday. The lllgll
will be in the 5lis, ... iDnigbt about
40.
' . . -prqval or denial of the EIS. Commission
chllinnan Rojier Slates of Huntington
Beach ,vetood that idea, saY!ng that he
wanteCI to-follow legal procedures.
Some am resident&, I D c I u d I n g
membon -"' ~ §!lddle!!ack Area ~ti:tl CO!lllcU, have/objected to
Rbiklr's plan becflU8e it adds more
service 1tatioo1 in an am they think bas
too tnany ~-
A OOWllY plaMing ataff report points
out that--..flile elglll ,,_ acres of com-
.....W 10lliDg 19 "relaUvety.. minor,"
studlel lbow rtblrt ls aio "uceativ•
ami>lllll of conunerciaily zoned acreage"
ID El .Toro<-.
The college bas reserved a site in Turtle
Rock, overlooking the U n I v e r • i t y
Regional Park.
Rev. Charles L. Manske will terve 88
vice tirtsident for academic affairs and
acting president ot the IWiourl Synod's
fou,,.year liberal art1· colle«• for which
ardlif<ll:turai Pia"' hive_ beet,! readied
and $2 million autlioiized !..-C011-
1trucUon.
Manske bas resigned bis post 11 USC
where for 15 years he bas aerved as cam-
pus pa$!0r and sill« 1114 as, public rei.
titN dittctor for the l\'l>Od'• Southern
Califomla.oeclion.
Dr. Arnold G. Kunll, pftlllclml of the
· (Seo WTIOOIAN, P•ll
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INSIDE TOUi\ \'
A fin 23 <lap tJlottP<k 'Iris
IDrtCked aiTJl(mle flt U.. A relic,
mo injvred buh pilot •ta fklh
of one of Iris Ulr<t dtod -
gera .,. itar .U... s .. •torv.
Poll! 4.
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J DAILY PILOT IS Thwsd.11, Mardi l, 1973
..
' ~i2Nations
Acting FBI Head Initial -. -'
Def ends Policy Viet Pact ·
WA.~HINGTON (UPI) -L. Patrick
Gray m, ateklng Senate confinnatlon aa
FBI direc:IOt, &oday d<fended bis policy
of letting top White House officials see
aome confidential FBI files dealing with
sensitive political cases.
(1) the FBI'a in...Ugatioo Into the
Watergate bugging incident and (2) aet-
tlemfn&. oC an anUtrust case against
IotemaUonal Telephone and Telegraph
Corp.
Sen. Jolm V. Tllnney (o.c.JIJ.), uted
Gray about allegaliona that a White
House aide pennltted Donald H. Segrettl,
a California lawyer linked to the
Watergate episode, to look over in-
formatioo be gave the FBI previously in
order to refresh his memory prior to a
grand jury appearance.
PARIS (AP) _ The foreign ministers
of 12 govemmtnts, including the wo~ld's
511perppwers initialed a n I n e • Po t n l
decrarition ioday endorsing the Vietnam
peace agreement and establishing a pro-
cedure (or examining violat!ons.
Secretary of State WillillJl P. 11ogers
and the foreign ministers of Britain,
France China and the Soviet Union were
among 'those who initialed the ~ument.
together with North and South Vietnam,
the Viet Cong and the four members of •
the International Commission of Control
and Supervision -Canada, Indonesia ,
Poland and Hungary.
Testifying before the Senate Judldary
Committee, Gray was q u e s t i on e d
particularly about documents related to •
Marine Gets
Trial Delay
In Slaying
A three-week delay was ordered today
in the Orange County Superior Court ar-
raignment of El Toro Marine Jared Alan
Wallace on charges of first degree
murder, kidnap and assault with a deadJy
weapon.
Judge James ~er granted the delay
to give the tall Mai'ine'a lawyer time to
eumine a transcript contalnlng allega-
tions thaj he kidnaped a woman Feb. 4
and raped and murdered another five
day~~::· W , 26, will remain in county jail
with ball denied untll·hfs March 20 ap-
pearance. He was indicted Wednesday by
the Grand Jury on three felony counts.
Wallace was arrested Feb. 11 in
Mission Viejo by officers investigating
the alleged kidnaping Seven days earlier
oi Carole Ann Rowan. 24, an X-ray
tecbn.lcian at a San Clemente hospital.
Miss Rowan: told deputies the man ahe
Identified aa Wallace l)08ed as a police
officer and ordered her to pull over pear
the BeadJ Cities offramp of the San
Diego Freeway.
Wallace held a part time ciVilian job as
a aecurity guard with the Bums Interna-
tional Security Company.
Miss Rowan aald her assailant held her
at gunpoin~ 'and tried to handcuff her
while warning her that she was being
held as a suspect in a criminal in-
vestigation.
She told offic.ers she managed to free
herself aod ran from the car when
Walllce stopped for a traffic signal. Officers who booked Wa.fiace on those
charges aiided murder to the list when
they searched him and allegedly found a
checkbook and wallet belonging to Mrs.
Nanette Post, a Fountain Valley barmaid
whose body was lound Feb. 9 1n Hun-
tington Beach.
Tbey clalln Wallace is the man who
raped Mn. Post after abe left her job at
a Garden Grove tavern and then atuffed
her body ,under • junlper bush in •
realdentlal tract.
Wallace was brought to Superior Court
last week for an unscheduled iden-
tification when a defense attorney in
another rape trial told the jury the proo-
ecution had the wrong Marine Jn the
defendant's chair.
Wallace was ordered to stand shoulder
to shoulder with Camp Pendleton Marine
Mart David Bell, %2, and was visibly
relieved when a Costa Mesa waitres3
raped in Huntington Beach positively
identified Bell as her attacker. .
The jury in that trial ls today in Ila
third day of deliberations.
Frot11P .. e1
POWs ...
Cong in South Vietnam.
Immeeliately alter the list was turned
over to the American delegation, it was
lraMrnitted to Washington so that
relatives of the American prisoners could
be immediately notified of their im-
pending release.
Once the next or kin are notified,
Washington will make the list public.
1bere were no names released in
Saigon either by the U.S. or North Viet-
namese delegattonl.
OIAN•t COAST u
DAILY PILOT
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-
Gray, who took over as acting FBI
director 16ort1y before tbe June 17 break.-
in at Democratic naliooal headquarters
in tbe Watergate bulldin,, aald be saw
nothing wrong with giving the White
Hoose , 1'*51 to private FBI files on
Segrettl when presidential counselor John
Dean asked for them.
Gray said be did not know for sure
whether Segretti was allowed to see his
own rue and that there was little
disciplinary action open to an FBI direc-
tor if that happened or if a White House
official leaked such information to the
Press.
Gray told the committee he alJO pro-
vided the White House with the original
copy of a controversial memorandum
said to have been written by Dita Beard,
a Washington lobbyist for !'IT.
The memo gave the impression that
the government agreed to settle an an-
titrust fight with l'IT out of court after
the giant flnn pledged to help underwrite
costs of the 1m Republican National
Convention if it were held in San 'Diego.
The convention site-later was shifted to
Miami Besch.
"I made the Beard memo available to
the White HOu.se and I would do it
again," Gray toia the committee.
He was not asked if he provided the
White House any other documents
related to the ITl' case.
On Wednesday, the first day of Gray's
confirmation bearings, be acknowledged
that the ·FBl's files still contain in-
formation gathered in Jnvestigatlons of
members of Congress.
But Gray told the Senate committee he
stopped the practice of gathering in-
formation on congressmen when he took
over u acting director after J. Edgar
Hoover's death last year.
He said be ordered the change because
"Jt could too readily be subject to
misinterpretation and is not needed."
Girl Scout Unit
?resents Flag
To New Hospital
JtV Toro Girl Scout Troop 1765 has
presented an American flag to officials
at the Saddleback Community Hospital in
Laguna Hills, which is scheduled to open
next July,
The girl scouts raised filnds for the
nag by collecting bottles, baking cakes
and cookies and babysitting.
Saddleback Hospital board of directors
chairman Frank J. Schaeffer thanked the
scouts for the fiv~foot by seven-foot flag.
Oag. '
Troop members making the formal
presentation to Schaeffer were Pam
Castlllo, Lisa Castillo, Sheryl Digs, Ellen
Dougherty, Shannie Hernandez, Sandy
Hoffman, Leslie Johnson, Vickie Lee
Jones, Kristie Koepplin, Shelly Sanchez,
Alisa Schulman, Stephanie Schulman.
Ann Tarigoe, Kristin Ward, Tracey Ward
and Lisa Goddard.
Dorothy Dougherty is troop leader.
Gail DeSbane is assistant troop leader.
Se11ate to Probe
Soutliland RTD
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A mo"' to
create a special stale Senate in-
vestigating committee to probe the
Southern California Rapid Tran sit
District has passed Its first legislative
test.
The Senate Rules Committee-voted 4-0
\Vednesday to draft a resolution creating
the investigating committee sought by
Sen. Lawrence Walsh, a critic of the
dislrict.
\Valsh called the Rules Committee ac·
tion a partial victory in his campaign lo
prevent the Los Angeles area district
froin using $5 million in state rapid
transit funds to upgrade its bus system.
\Valsh says he favors a "genuine" rapid
transit system instead.
Dead Infant's
Mother Sought
Orange police are look.Jog for the
mother of a new b;Orn baby boy found
dead more than two weekJ ago In the
ladles rest room of a drive-Jn theater.
'11tey have ruled that the Infant's death
W&!I a homicide.
UptT.,_...
The declaration, p}edging the 12
governments to keep the peace and to
reconvene when any sir of them lodge ~
complaiot, is to be fonnally 'Signed Fri·
day at a ceremony in the IntemationaJ
Conference Center.
U.S. MARSHALS WITH RIFLES WALK DOWN BIG FOOT TRAIL HIGHWAY TOWARD CAPTURED BUILDING
lncfl•n1 on Ogl1Jo Sioux Reservation Submitted O.m1nd1 to Feder•I Agencies, Exchanged Gunfire
Foreign Secretary Mitcbell Sha'rp of
Canada initialed the document but
reserved his government's position with
regard to continued participation in the
control commission.
Indians Continue
' Siege
Sen.ators Mc'Vovern, Abourezk Fly to Wounded Knee
He said the Canadian government will
have to examine the declaration to
determine whether the commission can
c>perate ef[ectively. He threatened earlier.
that Canada would walk out of the com-
mission irnless adequate machinery for
reporting cease-fire violations we. s
established. ,
The delcaration was hammered out in
backstage expert meetings, with con·
cessions made by both sides. WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -Sooth
Dakota's two senators new to their home
stare today in an effort to bring an end to
a two-day siege by militant Indians
holding 11 residents of this tiny com-
munity hostage.
Sens. George McGovern and James
Abourezk arrived at Ellsworth Air Force
Base by military jet just· before I a.m.
(PST) and d<parted by helicopter !hortly
afterwards in the direction of this em-
batUed hamlet about 75 miles away.
It was not clear, however, whether the
helicopter carrying the two Democrats
actually would land inside the com-
munity, which has been sealed off by law
officials: since about 200 Indians took over
its few buildings Tuesday night.
As the helicopter left the air base at
Rapid City, Ralph Erickson, a special
assistant to the U.S. attorney general,
said he intended to advise the senators,
presumably by radio, to land outside the
community for ft:ar of possible gunfire.
"Our prime concern at this point is to
obtain the release of the 11 hostages. We
are particularly concerned with the fact
that several of these hostages are people
in their 80s," Erickson said in nearby
Pine Ridge .
North Vietnam and its Communist
allies abandoned their previous insistence
that the conference could only be recall-
ed by a {118.jority of the 12 delegations.
This would have given each side a veto.
In return, the United States and it!
allies agreed to mention the Viet Cong's
Provisional Revolutionary Government
. as a full-fledged conference participant.
Irvine Council Appoints
.Regosin to Advisory Unit
Abourezk said before leaving
Washingtoo be has been assured by
leaders of the American Indian Move-
ment that some hostages would · be
released when he arrived in the
southwestern South Dakota area and said
he was "confident we can negotiate the
release of the reSt once we get there."
The 200 Indians have demanded a
Senate probe of the Bureau of Indian Ar-
fairs in return for freeing tbe hostages.
Aside from one brief meeting With an
FBI agent, the Indians have kept Jaw en-
forcement officers at a distance, a n d
To appease the Saigon govenunent; the
final article of the declaration states that
the signatories do not necessarily
recognize each other.
Because of vigorous Communist ob-
jecti<¥1s, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim was excluded from any active
role in the peacekeeping arrangements.
FromPafieJ
Richard Regosin of University Part
will replace Ed Haworth oo the housing
citizens advisory committee which is
working on phase one of ·the city of Irvine
general plan.
Haworth, who also serves the city as a
paid planning consultant, reslgued his
pogWoo. and oooncilmen Tuesday night
approved the appc>inbnenl of Regosin.
Haworth originally wu suggested, for the
post by Coui>cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor.
In anOtber acjlon n!lated to -six
study oommittee.s, · councilmen
unanimously decided to ·have all citizen
members continue on into the phase two
development ol the general plan.
Mrs. Pryor ~ that Larry Morrison
of the consulting firm of Wilsey and Hain
of South Pasadena, bad told her all 30
committee members could be ac-
commodated in the final plan program.
The phase one committees are meeting
with the consultants guiding general plan
development in the areas ol circulation,
environment, houfilng, population -ec»-
nomics, public facilities and urban design.
As originally set up, only the chairman
of each of those committees was to have
worked on the latter half of the general
plan, along with 17 others yet to be nam-
ed.
A total of 47 citizens oow will wort on
the plan as it nears public hearing stages
in early fall.
From Pagel
LUTHERAN. ••
1be fin a I plan 'is expected to be
adopted by December,. following two
hearings before both the planning com·
mission and the city council.
The document will be the first com-
prehensiVe paaooing document covering
the entire 41-square mile city, altbQugh
the Irvine Compaoy has prepared land
use and drculat.ion elements for the 8$
percent of the city's land it owns.
FLOOD ...
there was an exchange of gunftre be required to construct a natural chan·
Wednesday morning. neJ, an Irvine O>mpany engineer esti·
Abourezk and McGovern 'ere ac-.mated. Park like landscaping, not ordin-
compa.nied by members of the staffs of arily paid for by 6ood control officials,
Sens. Edward M. Kennedy (l>o!dass.), UUe to the property and "'8dway bridges
and J. W. Fulbright (0.Ark.). are other costs Included in the flood eon·
The Indians also demanded that Ken-trol district estimate.
nedy and Fulbright come to the reserva· An Irvine C.Ompany spakesman today
lriine Service
Members Sworn;
tion to discuss grievances, which include corrected the mistaken impression that
,.,,.._ the government's handling of U.S.-Indlan the land development firm was prepared
treaties and tJle way in which the Ogllla to pay the full costs of those Im·
Sioux: tribe elects its leaders. provemerfts.
"I want lo emphasize that we're not Just who will pay for those lm-
going there to negotiate demands, but to provements is a question whlch is ex·
work for the release of the hostages," peeled to bear on the final council
Abourezk said in Washington. "There can decision on Valley View. Tbat~declsion is
be no negotiations with a gun at anyone's not expected tonight, since council rules
head." require at least a week's delay between a Irvine's" new community .s.ervices com-Wounded Knee was the scene of public hearing and the final action.
missioners were sworn in Wednesday tragedy for red men during the wane of Alternatives to channelization to carry
night, but, because of the absence of one the great westward push of the 19th Cen-storm runoff and prevent flooding, in·
member; the election of officers was tury. elude flood plain zoning.
postponed. An estimated 250 federal marshals, FBI In essence, this type of zone requires
The new commissioners will govern the agents and BIA police from the Pine homes to be built with foundations at
city's community services activities and Ridge and other Indian reservations cor-least one foot higher than the expected
advise the city council on parks and doned off the valley town. They kept to level of flooding.
recreation, cultural and leisure activities_ the beigbts more than ball a mile away, For the Valley View project, this would
City Community Services Director along four roads. mean homes would have to be bullt two
Paul Brady will staff the five-member Joseph Trimbach, agent·in-charge of feet above present ground levels, since
panel which will meet on the first and the FBI at Minneapolis who heads the the maxhnum depth in tbe area would be
third Wednesdays of each month in city federal force here. met with represeo-one foot not 10 feet aS erroneously
ball. tatives of AIM under a temporary cease-reported 'arlier.'
O:tmmissioner Sandy Freud of TurUe fire Wednesday, but an FBI spokesman Irvine Company officials do not believe
Rock was absent because of an illness In said there was no progress toward ending the fiood plain roning will be necessary
his family. Commissioners G i I be rt the stalemate. He sakl three other at· to protect Valley View since there is a
Cballet oI the Ranch. Robert Holt o[ tempts to arrange oegotiating sessions difference between the "sheet" type of
Election Delayed
CuJverdale, Mrs. Sally Miller of Universi-failed. flooding expected to occur on the nearly
• ty Park and Miles Peterson of the Rae-Newsmen were denied access to Oat areas of central Irvine and the more
Southern California Dlstrid of the church quet t1ub set March 7 for ~ election of Wounded Knee, and federal authorities ·turbulent floods found in steeper terrain
body and chairman of the Irvine college officers. would talk to Iiewsmen only by telephone. or canyon areas.
board, said Manske will be the college's Ir============================:::::::=:::::::::;::;::;::;::====~ first teacher and administrator. He will ~:::it~r .. :.:; .. ~.!l~~ .. !' ~~ Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LITTON -is Best!
establishing community relations.
U:~ran00&;ei:'at%:~=1.:l WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWA'YE COOKING!
a substantial boost with the acceptance ONLY • .... ON OFfERS ·you by Rev. Manske as Its founding ad· .., 11 • • •
m.inistrator," Dr. Kuntz said.
'li)C Irvine campus will replace the
California Concordia Q>llege at Oakland
as the Missouri Syrod's major western
college. Callfomia Concordia will close in
July 1973 after 67 years of continuous
operation.
Rev. Manske holds a muter of divinity
degree from Cooconfia Seminary, 81.
Louis; a master of am degree from
Washington Unlverslty. St. Loo.l9 and Is a
doctoral candidate at USC ln the field of
social ethics.
He and his wi1e, Barbara, and their
childcen, David and Olrlstlne, plan to
move to Irvine Uri& summer.
Ex-piayor Guill)'
On Obsene Rap
* Years of Commercial experience * The biggest oven .•• 1.2 cu. ft. * An ee1y-to-clean liner.
fr An ea•y·open door latch. * Automatic defro1t feature.
REMEMllER THIS Pt!ASEI
BEF.01£ YOU I .UY! .................... , ..... .....,....., .......... -................. .., ....... ...., .. ............................................. • .. ,......,..,w.....,,,_..._ .. ..,......,_..,. • ........ ., ... dl.._,.,.lt•"•ed•••· ............ ,..._..._.. .........
... .., .. ,,..... .. u.... '"""' '". ~ ............ ............... -' ................ ,..,....
9f P••d• ' . ..... .,... ¥I .................... ... .......................... e •-... UTI'OM .. ua,._ DUJitUJ',
' YOU CAN BROWN,
SUR AND GRILL-TOO! s349 AND Wmt A LITTON
E'l. 90DAY
M<tmbor of
C.lllornl1'1 Lorgftt CASH
Police said Investigation or the Feb. 12
death indicates that the six pound, eight
ounce infant was born healthy and died
of neglect. ·
The body was found by a janito1 at the
Stadium Drive-In Theater on Katella
Avecue. Polloe -that the· child
was born In a vehicle at the drtve-ln and
placed in the l'l!st room. ,
BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A former
mayor of Bakersfield has pleaded gullt'
to three counts of dl!turbing the peaoe
rather than fAce a, munidpal court trial
for exhibiting obscene material.
Manuel Camakis, 62, ma)'Or of the city
from 196! to 1967, .,,,.. -of es·
htblUng tbe obscelle JMterial at •
Bakeralleld theater wbero be b the pro-
jectionist and p1operty """"'" camaki. 1lso .._ .., ib•
Ill '-•tlw Buying Wrill -.om
Group With Tho ' , CllDtr
Volumo Buying ;; ·
• , •• •·neaaTm Power of 1 IQ Stores ._._. {EB ·--· llltlOPORT ·BLW. llnnttwn COsla Mesa· -Pbone 548-7788 Bakeralield City Councll loc more than JO I
years.
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Today's Final
N.Y. Stoek8
,
" ' VOL. 66, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
I OIWllS~ CQ\!NTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH I, 1973 TEN CENTS
k· . .
Uriiffcation Viewed as Hop~e-for ·Huntington ... . . /lf!.J : ., .i.~· ~ \. . \
By JORN ZALLER.
6t .. n.I,, f'tltt Staff
"Unification ls Jike world peace,"
reDected George Logan, a trustee for the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District
"Everybody thinks it's a good idea, but
people can never quite agree on how to
get it."
That w~s Logan's response to the sug-
gestion that unification may be the best
method for coming to grips 'witb the high
school di5tr1ct's overcrowding problems.
School board President D e n n i s
* * * Vietnam Peace
Mangers said after· the defeat of the •
district's '2'I million bond priJpOSSI Tues-
day that, if the higl! school distriot could
be split up into snialler, Uiilllei.:t1lisb1cts,
"But I don't see that the five elemen·
tary districts and Ute high school di!ltrict
are any closer to agreement than JbeY
ever have been." ·
In tl\ll opinion, Bentley agrees with
Logan. But unlike Logan, be ·believes
"the high lcbool. district doesn't have
much choice ab\llit Jlllilicatioo. I don't
know II a.district tbla big Is ever going to
each of the newly created ones might ffigh school trustee John Bentley, ·who pass a blrMl until Jt's broken down into
have betetr.Juck oppeallng to voters for agrees with Mangen that ~~tlo!t units .~I local vot$-s can idenUfy with."
•
school construction bonds. , may now be lhe only boJl\C: fo!J getlln{ Logan s· 10lutioh to overcrowding is to
Counting this week's defeat, the high'" voter support ·for more '!Chool~ also • "distrlbute, our ucess students equally ·
school district bas lost five strajght bond believes that uniticatiort stW races pn»' among all the voters'° they'll all feel the
elections. • lems that couJd be unsurmountable. need ~ more spboots."
"I'm sure ' smaller, unified districts "Everybody has favorec:t It for a long Notiilg tbatFountain Val.ley, where the
could do a better Job passlng bonds than , time," he said. "And if It we'ren't such a high school .has 4,300 students, was the
the large high scho01 district,'' Logan big job, we could have had it a long time only area where Tuesday's hood proposal
said in an interview. ago." got heavy support, Logan said, "Voters •
ree
-*
In FoWltaln Valley aren't any more con·
cerned, intelligent, or aware than voters
any place else. It's just that their kids
are hurting more.
"If you divide up the hurt among all
areas and come back with another bond
proposal. 1 think it would pass ·without
much problem," Logan said.
Trustee R.af Sctunitt declined com·
ment oo unification, but he indicated
unhappiness with Mangers for saying the
high school district ought to be broken in-
to snlaller U{lits.
"U individuals start speaking out
before the board has made up Its position
?
together, it's just going to cause trolJ..
ble." Schmitt said.
•·1 have my opinions, but I don't want
to broadcast them before the board can
discuss the problem together."
Schmitt. a Westminster man running
for re-election to tbe high school board
this spring, sa id he was opposed to plans
that would force students out of the most
crowded schools and into less crowded
ones.
"Students should be able to go to the
schoo ls they want to go to," be said.
Trustee Ralph Bauer was out of town
and not available for comment.
un
'Reds Break
12 Governments Deadlock on
Endorse Accord 136 Yanks
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist officials
brok.e a tense deadlock today and an·
noonced that 136 American prisoners of
war and six foreign captives would be set
free Sunday in Hanoi
PAliIS (AP) -The foreign ministers
of !2 govemmi;nts, in~!Jd!µg the world's
superpowers, iDWiled a n i n e -_» o i n t
declantioo today endorsing the Vietnam
peace·agroeinent· and eatablbbing a pro-eedure fer eJjmjnlng vjoJaffms _
Secrets& of. Stale William' P. Rogers
~rii : ...
To Medial,e
Indian Feud
WOUNDED. KNEE, S.O. (AP) -Soulh
Dakota's two senaiors flew to their home
stale !OO•Y ~ an elfort to bring an end to
a two-day ~ege by militant Indians
holding 11 ~!dents of this tiny com-
munlty hostage.
Sens. George McGovern and James
Abourezk. arrived at F,psworth Air Force
Base by military jet just before 9 a.m.
(PST) and departed by helicopter shortly
afterwards in the direction of till! em-
batUed hamlet about 75 miles away.
It was not clear, however, whether the
heticopter carrying the two Democrats
actually would land ibside the com-
munity, which has been sealed off by law
officials since about 200 Indians took over
its few buildings Tuesday night.
As the helicopter left the, air base at
l\apid City, Ralph Ericks9n, a special
assistant to the U.S. attorney general,
said be intended to advise the senators,
presumably by ndlo, to land outside the
community for fear of possible gunfll'e. ·
"Our· prime concern at this point is to
obtain the release of U,e ll)lostages. We
are i>eUlcularl1 COQ«rDed with the fact
that oeveral of thesa ho!tagea •re people
In their ·80s," Erickson said In nearby
Pine Ridge. · •
Abourezk said b e f o r e leaving
Wasblngtoo he has been 8SSlll'ed by
leaders of the American lndian Move-
ment that some hostageli would 1le
released when he ~nived in the
southwestern ·s.utli Dakbta 1U'el and said
he was "coofldent we can negotiate the
release of the rest once we get there."
The 200 Indians have demaoded a
Senate probe of the BUreau ol,lnd~ Ar·
fairs in return for (ming the bo.1tages..
Aside frorn one brief meetlng with an
FBI agen~ the lndlan.I have ~ept law en-forcement offlcers at a dlstance, an d·
thue was an exchange of gunfire
(See INDIANS, Pace %)
· Ful.ton . Pr~nts ' .
Grant C.oncert · -
Muslc students !\'om l'ulton School In
Fountsln Valley will pre,.nt a concert
Saturday to nlse money for .. summer
music camp scholarahlps_
The~-wUI be held at 3 p.m..,I)
the Fountain Valley Community ctnter,
with UCltets 11 •I for a<lults 'and 50 cents for students. ~..._
I The combined · band and ord!estra
under the direction of Allan Nlc<ola wm
p......,I a ~ at claukal ~
popular music. Featund ioloilll w1ll be
vlolJil'-t -lllkaJdiUt al: RID e.acii:' . .
.. r
and. the f9reign ministers of Britain,
France, China and the Soviet Union were
among those who initialed the document,
together with North and South Vieb1am,
the Viet-Cong -and the -four members of
the_ JmematRmal CommiMjon of Control
and · SUpervision -·Canada, IDdonesia,
fylaiill _tmhs:r: ' _,;.., ~ """"" , qaar '~ the 1J ~ lo;Qop t.rpeloe.and to.. DX. wbea any sll of them lodge a -~t. b ti be formall,j signed Fri· diY at a ~Y In the Intematiooal
C4jolemice center.
., Forefin ·sem1ary Mitdlell Sharp of
Canada Initialed the document but
J'i!served his government's position with
regard to continued participation in the
control commisSion.
Main Street Ma%e
The sudden announcement came aa
U.S." Secretary of State William P.
Rogers and 11 foreign mlniaten -m.
clulllng tbolle of-NOrlll Vlelbam Ind the
• Vie! OO!ig "-mi~ J' ~I•
ment in Paris ~rov~ding ~titeea ·~
Jaallbg i!tic' 1i Vl.&111!\. ''
Spee!& meetings of the 'senior military
......_>:re:<presentatives of Ute four-party Joint .
ltary Comrtilssloli (JMC) Md the
commission's unit on Captt.aed Penons
were set for Friday morning to work out
the details of &be new POW release.
The Baigon announcement ended an
agonizing two-day impasse that arose
when the Communists suspended the
release of prisoOers to brotest alfeged
violations of the month-old ·cease-fire.
The United States reacted sharply,
callIDg a halt to further implementation
of the Vietnam accords until the prisoner
question was resolved.
He said the Canadian government will
have to e:ra~e the declaration to
determine whether the commissi on can
operate effectively. He threatened earlier
th~t canada wou1d walk out of the com·
missicm unless adequate machinery for
reportfug cease-fire violations w a s
established.
Tbe·,clelcaration wu hammettd out in
backstage expert meeting's, with con--
Thjs is Main Street in Huntington Beach wliere work
continues on a $309,000 project to upgrade a three-
block area of the roadway near Huntington •Beach
High School and the new civic center. Traffic lights,
new street lights ·and sijpls, plus new curbs and
gutters are being installed.
U.S. officials here said the North Viet-
namese-tonight banded over a list con-
taining the names of 106 American
soldiers and two Thai citizens they would
release. ·
ceSslons made by both sides. .
North Vietnam and its C.Ommunist
allies abandoned their previous insistence
thot the conlerence could only be recall'
ed by ·a majority ol the 12 delegations.
This would have given each side a veto:
In return, the United States and its
allies agreed to mention the Viet Cong's
Provisional Revolutionary Government
as a full.lledged conference participant.
Parking Contra<'l
For Sunset OK'd
' A 'conlra<I te build Orange County's
Sunset Beach parking facility bas been
~pproved by the Board of SUpervisors.
The SW!y·Milier Conlracting Company
of Orange_ was the low bidder at $542,681
fo1"th0 job to ,pro\'Jde moie "tbiln l,000
parking spaces for \'ehicles in the center
of.. the beach community from Anderson
Avenue .. to Warner Avenue.
lncluded In ·the project Is landscaping
and lighting. Tll~-county Road Depart-
ment 'is to widen Pacific Avenue on both
aides of the parking lot.
'Deep Throat' Receives
,
Bad · Reviews From Judge
NEW YORK (AP! -A Criminal Court
judge today declared the hard-core
pornographic film "Deep Throat" to be
the "nadir of decadence" and found it
"indisputably obscene by any legal
measurement."
Judge Joel Tyler found the defendant
corporation guilty of two counts of pro-
moting obscenity and ruled it could be
fined up to twice the amount of the
profits the movie gmesed since it opened
, here last June.
The city brought the o~ty pro-
ceedings against Mature Enterprises,
Ipc1, in ~test case as part of its driVe to
clean up Times Square. The trial was
held without a jury.
Asst. Dist: Atty. Will iam Purcell said
the effect of the judg's ruling was to ban
the showing of the film in the city. Tyler
ordered that the print of the film be
twned over to the Police Department's
property clerk's office, pending any a~
peal. .
In a previous case in Binghamton,
.N.Y., a jury decided tb~t the film was
not obscene.
At the trial here, Tyler heard experts
take diametrically opposing viewpoints.
Dr. Ernst van den Haag, a
psyc"°'8Dalyst, testified for I he pros-
ecµtion that the film 1~is . without any
redeeming value whatsoever."
Film critic Arthur Knight, however,
said, "It's not a sleazy film by any
means. There is a real attempt to use
humor and a kind of sophisticated fooling
IS.. OBSCENE, Pa1e Z)
Dirt!' Te111pers Flying
Vall,ey Homeowners,' Construction Crew Eorm DMZ . '
By TERRY COVJU.E
Of .... DlllY ''"' .....
Fountain Valley bas establlShed tis own
demlllWl2'd zone.
It's a path about 100 feet wide that separates angry homeowners from a eon·
structlon cnw building a ,.wage trunk
line for the Orange County Sanitation
Dlstrlci..,
Tbe path surrounds two sldts.otii ...
canl lot on the north .... t comer of
Tallle!'l Avenue and Malll'Olla Street.
Rl!&e mollOdl o! lreo\i dirt and billJ of
sand are plled In the middle of tho loL
Tbe dirt WU cl!IC OUI of lroncbtt for the
aewer pipe llnel. Some of fl wltr go back
In the tmlcltd. !)I-Iba~ of;.lho-.. ppGledly
·peact!llf J?MZ .... homM along Rhine
•
•
River Avenile and Santa Cecella Stnet In that, the complaints did die down."
the Greenbrook tract. Tbe city• also curtailed 10nte of tbe Tbe v~rbal war that led to creati/ln of noise of the trucb by enforcing a pro-
thl! t(IO:foot clear zone w.aa launched vislon ln the elty'a noise ordinance. The
about Chrbfm~. after work crew1rpi1ed crews were working at 6:30 a.m.: the
mounda of dirt lllll8Ck against the back noise ordlnaooe pte!iiblts COMtrtictlon
wall• of the Greenbrook Homes. before 7 a,m.
"Soma ~ot the dlrt dumpe4 tnto the HoweVer, at the cue exl&ts with most
yardsj andJD.,.. ca~. a lew blocks were DMZs, oome violationB still occur, says
knocked loose Ill-~ wall,". says Wayne one side. OliliOm•, public worts dfrector·for jlle cl-Two la<lles who live on Rltlne River
ty·. Avenue say the dirt has 90met\mes boon
lo a rare 1\11'11 of events, tbe residents ohoved acrou the line and the trucks
dldn'I fi8ht city bill, bu! Jnateid, called Qlten~the DMZ !or ,a road.
llll ct\)' oUtctals 11 a ~ !llaking ~-"It a a roond-robU. H you llCl'eam and
"We tallced to the $111ltation llistrict yell, they 'll do aomePili>g for awhile, then
and•tbe-C!Jlllractor, and they 111"".d Ill It 8'orll agal *"l'• Mr•, Mary k~ all dirt ....i..au equippient 100-feol~ ~ iltMitre {lb& ..rotation
!roin the· walls," aays Osbl>rne. "After ll!ee MOVlllTAIN, Page %1 . .
\
• Valley Attorney
Freed in Office . .
Machine Thefts
Fountain Valley attorney Philip SteiQ
was cleared Wednesday of charges that
he was .involved in an o(fice equipment
theft ring that led the Orange County
Grand Jury to indict six persons on
multiple counts of receiving stolen prop-
erty.
Santa ~Ana Municipal Court Judge
Robe:ft E. Rickles thtew out all charges
against Stein, 37, of 16049 Catskill Ave.
Superior COurt Judge James Turner had
earlier returned the issue to the Grand
Jury after ruling that there was in·
sufficient evidence against the lawyer.
It was agreed by both sideS to allow
Judge Rickles to rule on the charges
rather than revive tbe issue before the
Grand Jury.
Stein's acquittal leaves his brother.
Larry Stein, 44, Orange, Josephine
Eleanor Marzolino, 39, of 3123 Pierce
Ave., Costa Mesa, and Frank Mariolino,
43, santa Ana, to faCe the charges.
L&rry Stein's trial is scheduled for
March 12, while the Manolinos are
scheduled to face trl•I April 23. All throe
derendants are now tree on bail.
Still at large and I.be subject or a na·
Uonwlde hunt· lo <»<lefendlnt' GOQIB _
Lindenstadt, 40, of 9472 Molokai Drive,
Huntington Beach. All chargea haVfl been
dismissed against Hendenon Steward
Jr .. 44, Santa Ana .
It Is aUeged that the N!mAlning defen·
dAnts were, tnvolved ln 11 theft Mng that
processed office equipment 1tolen during
the past 18 moolhs from 17 county firmR
-many of them Orange Coast organiza·
tiona.
Deputy District Altomoy Luis C•rdena•
ctatms all the defendanta were named by
a "con[eased "burglar" In a deal which
gave him ... immunlty from aeveral felooy
counts.
The Viet Cong told UPI they would
release In Hanoi 28 oddltlonal U.S •
soldiers and lour .American civilians
along with two Weat GermaD.s and two
Filipinos.
The previous Viet Cong release bad
taken place in South Vietnam and there
was no explanation given for the change..
A total of 155 American military
prisoners have been freed In North and
South Vietnam along with eight U.S.
civilians and one Canadian civilian since
the cease-fire went into effect Jan. 28.
Sunday's repatriation will put the
prisoner return program past the half·
way Point. It would. leave at least 2'11
American soldiers, eight U.S. civilians
and one foreign civlllan aun in Co~
munist hands. •
One of the West Gennana: to be Creed
Sunday is Monika Schwinn, a nurse cap-
tured near Da Nang · toUr-years ago, a
Viet Cong ·oUlcial said. Siie ls believed to
be the only womaQ held pritoner.
Under strong presslite from the United
States, . tbe North Vietnameae backed
down on their attempt to Unk the
(See PRISONERS, Page%)
Orange
Weather
Weather sources today predioled
more mostly sunny skies for the
Orange Coast on Friday •. The high
will be In the 50s, low tonight about
40.
INSIDE TODi\l'
Afltr 2$ days alongside his
wrecked airplane in the Arctic,
an injured bush pilot ate flesh
of on< of his three ckad """"" oers to sicy olive. Ste storv,
Page 4.
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In Huntington
' • . ,
Lottery ,Backed -
By Mayor Coen
A statewide lottery proposal might
TM.-eive the support of Huntington Beach
City councilmen Monday night.
Neal .. id Carpenter loels tht W...
ought to be on a state ballot, and If Ille
votm JNW it be would not oppose that.
The senafor would pre.fer to tee any
fund!: raised by 1Uch a lottery directed
toward public educaUon, Neal added.
Support for a lottery was requested by
Mayor Al Coen, wt.o said he peraonaUy
favors such a system to raise extra state
nveoue.
Last week, the rouncil asked the city
staff to ~'rile a resolution supporting an
effort by State Sen. Dennis Carpenter IR·
Newport Beach) to put a lottery on the
ballot.
The re90Jution won't be offered to
councllmefi MoOOay, however, aay city
olficials.
"We checked wilh carpenter'• office
and found he doesn't personally support a
lotter,y," Floyd Belsito, e1.ecutive assis·
tant to the city administrator, said today.
"So instead of offering a resolution
supporting a non-existent action by
Carpenter, we'll just offer the in·
formation and let the council decide what
it wants," Belsito explained.
Mike Neal, an administrative assistant
to Carpenter, said today the senator does
not support a lottery. The confusion ap-
parently stemmed ftom a survey taken
by Carpenter, in which 60 percent of the
750 persons who replied said they suir
ported such a lottery.
Billboard Firms
Sue State Over
·Teardown Order
Two advertising companies who main·
tain signboards in the Huntington Beach
area have sued the state of California for
$1 million and have announced their in·
tention to seek a restraining order that
will halt the alleged planned destruction
of two billboards.
Lawyers for the Pacific Outdoor and
Holloway Outdoor advertising companies
claim the asserted state action is in
violation ol an agreement reached
between them and the state eight years
ago.
At that time, the Orange County
Superior Court lawlJUit fl1ed Tuesday
Dotes, the .state condemned tbe land on
which the signs are located -Pacific
Coast Hiahway between the Santa Ana
River and Beach Boulevard -but allow·
eel the companies to cooUnu:e operations
on an annual rental basis pending
free.way construction.
The companlee c\alm \he a.ate now
plans to violate that. agreement desp1te
tbe fact that there are oo plans for
!urther fr<eway conslrucllon In tht
general area.
U.S., Russ Talk
Of Brezhnev Visit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -With the Viet·
nam peace agreement signed, the UDited
States and Soviet Union have hegwi
dlsCUS!ing dates for a visit to this coun--
try by Soviet Communist party leader
Leonid I. Brezhnev, possibly in June.
Diplomatic aources ttpor1ed Wedlles-
day that Brezhnev woold like his vi.sit
to the United States to be as productive
as President Nixon 's summit conference
in Moscow last May.
But the sources cautioned that failure
of Congress to accord Russia "most
favorit.e nation" trading status co u I d
prove to be an obstacle for the visit.
Tax Slash Proposed
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -An across-the-
board S percent slash in property tax
assessments was proposed Wednesday by
state Sen. James Wectiforth of
Hawthorne. 1'le bill would reduce the
ratio to be used by assesson for property
t.u assessments from 25 percent to 20
percent of the full cash value.
DAILY PILOT
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t·h1t1!l1101on eeac;~1F-ou<1t~111 v111ev. L1gun.
... di~ INlnelSMldllb<ort 1"'1 kn C""-11/
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TM pnM!~I 1111i.Hi,ll!r19 !11111! It •I 130 w.,.1
BIV S!rect, Cott• Me9, C1Hhlml1, fl'Jf,.
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Tt•rt co.:11,
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11115 lt1cli loult •1rtl
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Coen said thls week he still supporta a
stat~ lottery whether Catpenler support!
it or not.
One C01111cili!w\ Henry Duke, had In·
dicated he was hesitant about a lottery,
but other councilmen did no' clarify their
position!.
Huntington
Eying Curbs
A long Routes
Hunti ng ton Beach will consider the
possibility of imposing architectural and
design control!! along specified "scenic
routes" within the city.
Mayor Al c.oen baa asked the city at·
torney to research the type of legislation
necessary for sue~ a move.
It was proposed Monday night as the
city council met in an informal study
session with the council-appointed design
review board.
"l'd like to establish some esthetic con-
trols for certain areas, especially Pacific
Coast.Highway," .. Coen explained today.
"It would help us avoid making rash and
harried deci.siom."
No specific streets were named, though
Pacilic Coa!t Highw11y, Golden West
StMet and Main Street have been men-
tioned as possible scenic route!.
No one outlined exactly what types of
controls might be Imposed.
City Administrator David Rowlands
. says the controls might cover such items
a.s slgns, bulldlng setbacks, and un·
dergrounding utility lines.
High rise construction might al!O cross
the path of scenic conlroll, c.oen added.
Coen saJd the Orange C o u n t y
Supervisors are considering similar COD-
troll along designated cotmty "scenic
routes."
The city altorney's office was not give•
a specific deadline for producing pro-
posed leglslatlon on scenic rout.ea.
Yowig S~ers
To Make Splash
For Aqua Club
Nearly 400 young swimmers w l 11
plunge into five dlfferent pools Sunday in
an effort to raise $2,000 for the Hun-
tington Beach Aquatic Club.
They 'will swim laps for charity dona-
tions ranging from a penny a lap to 50
cents a lap. The club's second annual
swimatbon starts at 10 a.m. at the pools
in Edison, Marina and Huntington Beach
high acbools, Golden West College and
the city gymnasium.
Checks can be made out to the Hun-
tington Beach Aquatic Club and sent to
Nonn Worthy, parks and recreatloo
director for Huntington Beach.
The aquatic club has nearly 400
members and is sponsored by the city
,fecreation department.
A spokesman for the club said the
$2,000 would be used to send qualified
S\vimmers to the short course national
competition in Cincinnati.
Last year, the aquatic club sen t .J6
members to the Olympic trials in
Chicago and three -Gary lfall, Shirley
Babasboff and Steve Furniss -were in
Olympic competition in Munich. ·
FrO'm Pqe I
PRISONERS. • •
American POW return to Issues Including
improved protection and housing for
their people tn Sooth Vietnam. The
United States an&rily pointed otJt that the
Paris peace agreement tic.s the prisoner
release only to the withdrawal of Allied
troops from South Vietnam.
The development followed by 12 hours
an annOtUJcement in Paris that North
Vietnamese Foreign ti.1inister Nguyen
Duy Trinh assured Rogers that all
prisoners would be returned within the
60-day deadline.
Golden Agers
Get Passports
Golden Age PmPorts for admittance
into certain naUonal Pf!rk.s '"' now available for persons 62 yean of age or
older and may be obtained thro<Jgh the
Huntington Beach Post Office.
Jn addition to free admittance Into
liOme parks, pas.!pott holders will be
given 50 percent discount on all }'ederaJ
Special Recreation Use lo'ees In all areas
designated Federal Recrnatton Bureau of
Land Managemen t, Bureau or Rcclama~
tion, Bureau or Sport Fisheries and
Wlldute, U.S. Anny Corpe or Engineers,
TeMcsaee VaUey Authority and the Na·
llonal Park Setvice.
Addltional h1fonn1tion may be olr
t.alned by calling the Po!! Office.
• '
; DAILY ,_ILOT Stiff l"htlll
SOl,IE GREENBROOK HOMEOWNERS GET THIS VIEW OF 'DEMILITARIZED ZONE'
Sewer Line Project Kicks Up Small Dust Storm of Controversy in Fountain Valley
FromPqel
{ .. _
J
Drive~in's
Fate Gets
•
City De"lfiy
Fountain Valley P I a n n I n g Com-
missioners have delayed until April a
decision on whether to outlaw the Fowi.
tain Valley Drive-In and the city's oldest
bar, the Talbert Cafe.
After taking t5 minutes or testimony
Wednesday night. cornmllsiooer!I asked
owners or the two properties to confer
with city starf to work out an agreement
for phasing the business out. of town.
Pfann.ing Diredor Clint Sherrod _had
reco mmended that the drive-in be given
si x years to gel out of town and the bttr
bar one year. '
Sherrod said the two businesses didn't
conform to the city's zoning or
evironrnental criteria.
Several persons at the public bearing
opposed' evicting the two businesses,
arguing tbat they have cultural value to
the city
Both owners. bad lawyers present a.rgu· ~
ing against evict.ioo.
Sherrod said the commission didn't ~
commit itself oo the evictioo, but did in·
dica te that. if the proposed phase-out is a
good idea, a longer amortization period .
should be given. I
FromPqe.l
Transcript Allegations INDIANS •..
MOUNT AJN • • • D 1 s • A • Wednesday morning.
district) very good at sympathizing with e ay ·et lil rra1gnment co~':! b;"!e!::v:,mtliew::f::, ~
you, but that's all." • ~Edward M. Kennedy (D-Miss.),
"At ooe point we asked to have the d J w Fulb "ght (D-Ark)
dust watered," adds Mrs. Dorothy Of M • · M d R ~ ._ anThe ·In~ns ai:: demanded that Ken· :::g:i"!d~y flooded Talbert with arme on ur er ap, ~i~:t:'d~::r;:i:,::,tow:.r::~
Bruce Witcher, an engineer with the A three-week delay was ordered today held as a suspect in a criminal in· the government's handling of U,S.-Indian
sanitation district, has taken most of the in the drange C.Ounty Superior Court ar~ vestigation. . treaties and the way In whlcb the Oglala
complaints. raignment of El Toro Marine Jared Alan She told officers she managed to free Sioux tribe elects its leaden.
"According •· our at•·mey, there isn't Wallace on charges of first degree "I want to emphasize that we're not w w ki herseU and ran from the car when · d nd b t to a lot we can do. Our contractor has a murder, 'dnap and assault with a deadly going there to negotiate ema s, u weapon. \Vallace stopped for a traffic signal. work for the release of the hostages."
Private contract for use of that lot to Judge James Turner granted the delay Officers who booked Wallace on those Abourezk said In Washington. ·~can
store dirt," Witcher says. to give the tall Marine's lawyer time to charge!! added murder to the ti.st when be no negotiations wllli a gun at anyone's
"We don't have that much control examine a transcript containing allega· they searched him and allegedly found a bead."
unless he is actually breaking the law. tions that he kidnaped a woman Feb. 4 Wounded Knee was the scene of
We're ~nn to get him off there as and raped and murdered another five che<:kbook and wallet belonging to Mrs. tragedy for red men during the wane of
.. ,. .. "" days later. Nanette Post, a Fountain Valley barmaid the great westward push of the 19th Cen·
quickly as we can. We don't like this Wallace, 26, will remain in county jail whose body was found Feb. 9 in Hun-tury.
situation, either... wltb ball deiiied until his March 20 ap-tington Beach. An estimated 250 fed.era) marshall, FBI
The dirt began to pile up 1n November pearance. He was indicted Wednesday by They claim Wallace Ls the mao who agents and BIA police from the Pine
as the J.F. Shea Co. planted pipeline tht Grand Jury on three felony counls. raped Mrs. Post alter she left her job at Ridge and otberalllndlan -~tlo~ptcotto-
along Magnolia. Witcher says the ra1m Wallace w&J: arrested Feb. 11 in a Garden Grove tavern and then stuffed doned off the v ey town. &uc~ •ii:i
Mission Viejo by officers investigating her body under a juniper bush in a the belgbts more thin half a mile away,
have slowed up work and it will be at the alleged kidnaping seven days earlier residential tract. along foot roads.
least MlOlber month before Ille work will · of . ~lt A1111.. !Wf!!ll, •. ~. N1 X-ray Wallace was brought to Superior Cpur1 Josepb Trimbach, agent·hH:ha!'ge of -far_. lo lllOVe tho ·-tedmlcl .. ata'!:a!>Clemente!IOSpltal1 last week fOT an un.icboclUfod ·1dtl> the FBI at Minneapoljt wllo ht!tidi the
dmnp site. ~s Rowan told: deputies the man she ttficaUon when a defense attomey in federal force, ~ met wtib nprl9tn-
The ~n a~ com~ thati-·a ~~~~~~da~~:f~~s~~fr ~~!: ~~ ~~ ~~J~the.n; ~~v;!::!Y~rt: :n~~=
least ooe construction crew IJW!Dlberl the Beach c1ties offramp of the Sin defendant's chair. said thete Ws no progress toward ending
on top of his machine, stares in t r Diego Freeway. Wallace was ordered to stand shouJder the !statmJ!te. He &aid three other at.
windows and waves at them. Wallace held a part time civiJian Job as to shoulder with Camp Pendleton Marine tempts 'lo "'arrange negotiating aessions
d if n.-'"A a security guard with the Bums lnterna· Mark David Bell, 22, and /was Yisibly failed. Witcher sai · wwat's the case, wn:: man d ·ec1 Uonal Security· Company. relieved when a Costa Mesa waJtre,,, Newsmen. were en1 acceu to
would be fired. MW Rowan said her assailant held her raped in Huntington Beach positively Wounded Knee, and federal authorities
Osborne said nearly everyone llOOffio-at gunpoint and tried to handcuff her identified Bell as her attacker. would talk &o newsmen only by telephone.
plained around ClJristmas, when the San-while warning her that she was being The jury in that trial is today in il.i
ta Ana winds were blowing, but only Mrs. third day of deliberations.
Rock Bands Vie Nofziger and Mrs. McCarthy have com·
plained recently.
Other neighbors seem to have acetpted
the DMZ, and the dirt mountains.
Foreign Student
Homes So-,.ight
In )lun.tington
Homes are being sought in Huntington
Beacb--Fountain Valley for five to 10
foreign exchange students who will ar·
rive in the area in August for a year's
stay.
The students will live with local
families as a part of the Youth for
Understanding international Teenage Ex-
change Program.
Mrs. Pat Krone, a spokesman for the
youth exchange program, said tht group
woulcf'file to see at least one foreign stu-
dent in each of the local blgb schools.
Tbe students will live with a family for
an entire year, becoming a part of the
family rather than beihg treated as a
guest, Mrs. Krone explained.
"Our idea is more ..of a cultural ex-
change. than simply a school eichange," ehe said. ~
The \:"outb for Understanding program
is not affiliated with the American Field
Service exchange program, though they
have similar operations.
Any families i~ested in offering a
home to a foreign student for a year
should contact Mr3. Krone at the Pacific
Telephone Company office in" Gosta
Mesa,~.
FretnPage I
OBSCENE ...
with ae•. It II DOI a deeJM>reatblng film."
Tyler said ln his deci sion that be found
tbe dominant theme and "the only them<
is an appeal to prurience in sex. lt ii
hard.-core pornogr8phy with a vengean~.
"This Is one throat that deserves to be
cut," he said. ''I readily per!orm the
operetlon In finding the dcrer«iiont sullty
as charged."
Between last June and th is January,
the theater said It grossed about $'112.000,
Approximately 1,700 .persons b4ve seen
the film dally in lh€ 32keal Ne" Malure
World theater in midtown Manhattan .
A Hearing wfil be held to detel'llllDC Ille
amount of the line ooce the judge u·
amines the corporaUoh's books.
•
Board to Talk PRISONER'S WIFE
On Unification ...... " 'HAPPIEST GIRL'
Unification doesn't appear on the agen·
da for tonight's meeting of the Fountain
Valley School Board, but it is expected to
be a bot topic OI dlScussion.
TrUsteet had been pushing for unifica-
tion before the Huntingtoa Beach Union
High Sch~! District called for ·a
1'~ebruary bood election. but stopped
when criticized for complicating the pro-
bond drive with their unification talk.
Trustees will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the
board room of district officies, located at
the intersection of Talbert Avenue and
Newland Street in Fountain Valley.
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) -The
wife of a Navy Oler listed IUDl!'!a the
next contingent cf prisonert of 'lfl!~to be
ttleased · by Norlb Vietnam,. todq , pro-
.nounced ll<rselr.J' and· ""~'"daQ81)ters
"about the bapplest girts in the U>S.A."
Chadotte Cht1Bllaft, wile of Na>y Lt.
Cmdr. Michael D. Christian, was among
the first POW wivea to be notified by the
government that her husband would gain
his freedom over the weekend.
Christian, a native of Huntsville, Ala ..
was shot down over North Vietnam April
24, 1967. He and his wife have: three
daughters.
At Cent.er Mall
'Or>nge Coast aru rock bonds will
compete in concert from 7 to 11 p.m.
Sunday at tht HunUngton Cent.r Mall
under the sponsorship of the Youth
Employment Service and the city'!!
Parks and Recreation Department.
Performing will be Medulla, Timber
Summer, Gazelle, Sy dart ha and Doc
Holiday. ~
Fir9t place prize will be two hours'
recording time at United Audio
Recording Corporation. Judges will be
Janeen Smith and Jolumy Sl<lrbuck.
teclmtcal engineers at the studio.
Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LITTON -is Best!
WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
ONLY LITTON OFFERS YOU ••• * Years of Commercial experience * The biggest oven ... 1.2 cu, ft. * An easy-to-clean liner.
'(:{ An easy-open door latch.
-{:{ -Automatic defrost feature.
REMEMBER THIS PLEASE!
BEFORE YOU IUY!
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e ....... ~ H ........... tw1tt".,.9CdAs11f. ...... ,.. .. "-"-........ .._. .........
... .., .. .,....... ... Litt• .... ,... ••• ., ....
....... k ... .
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9lf, rd• ...... .,...c ' ....... ,... ..... , ........
f;wfflM ........ uoltlftt .
• , ......... unoN ,., ws .... DUNLAP •
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AND WITH A LITTON
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Member of
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-
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•
"
'
•
£ -----------.. -~ _..._ • ---------~ T -------------
9ray Def~ds Policy
Acting FBI Chh3f Backs Files 'P"OOking'
WASHING TON (UPI) -L. • Patrick
Grey Ill, ...tine Senate .conllrvialloo as
FBI director, today defended hi> Policy
of letting top White House ogiclals see
30me confidential FBI mes deallng with
Stnfltlve Political cases.
· Teatilying before the Seoate Judiciary
Committee, Gray was q-u e s t i on e d
particularly about documents related to
(I) the FBl's investigalioo into lbe
Watergate bugging incident and (2) set-
tlement of en antllrust case against
' In~ Teltpbone and Necraph
Cori!-Sen . .Tolin V. 'lllnney (I>Callf.), osked
Gray abo!JI allteallom tbal a White
Ho aldo pennltted Donald·lj. Segrtlll,
a CaWomla liwyer ,Inked , to the Wat~rgate epl80de, to· loot over tn-
ftmnation-be-gaYe-the FBI~ in
order to rui..;ti hi> .inemoa:J1 prior to a
grand jury appearance.
Grar.. who took over as actlog FBI
director shortly be!°"' the June 17 break·
'Misunderstanding'
Nixon Backs Off ..
•
On Income · Plan . . .... . . .
•
WASHINGTON CAP) -Presidenl Nlr·
011, observing that rus revamped. social
l welfare program al.-eady has aroused
. "intense controversy and considerable
mJsunderstftl)dlng," a er ended hiS changes
today in a special me.&?ie to Congress.
The lengthy m....qe ilsell conlained'
no surprises and confirmed expectations
that NixOO would back: away from his
County · c,>uncil
Of Governments
Sets Up Dues
Orange O>wity's new lntergovern-
menlal coordinating Council ended' Its
l!eCOOd meeting In Orange Wednesday
night by seltlng up due. and malling out
bills lo tbe 24 members.
Total Income for the fledgling
organization will he 117,200 with the
county paying $2,580 in annual dues.
· The assessments for Orange Coa!t
cities are Costa Mesa, $789; Fountain
Valley, $435; Huntington Beach, $1,071;
Irvine, $352; Laguna Beach. $206;
NeW[lOrt Beach, $9'111; San Clemente,
'230; San Juan Capistrano, $80 Seal
Beach, $291 and Westmlmter, $552.
'·
1969 welfare refonn program that would
have, in effect, guaranteed a minimum
annual·incoqie for poor--families.
Much of the· emphasl! today was on
justifying the reorganization and, in
some cases, scrapping of past federal ac-
tivities in the area of human resources.
Pledging that he will display "ccm·
passion that works -not simply com-
passion that means well," Nixon took
credit for a record human resources
budget he put at $125 blliloo -"nearly
IWiO.' the amowit being spent oo such ·
prog?ams wb<o I took offic. In 1969.
u'l'Jiis is both a 'generous budget and a
reform bUdget, 11 he said.
''The reforms-it proposea will put mus-
cle behind the generosity it intends. The
overall eff~t of these refonm will be the
elimination of programs that are
wasteful so that we can concentrate on
·programs that work."
Nixon, who ·sald "the welfare mess
cannot be · permitted to continue,"
a~w~ed he was abandoning broad
weUare reform "since the legislative
outlook seems lo preclude passage ... in
the lmmedlate future ."
ID ·It DemocraUc nallonal heldquott.n
ID the Waterple bull~ Nld be •w
nothing -with clVff tho Wblle J1ouse aoceu to private FB1 mes oo
Segnoltl when presidential counselor Jolm
Dean asked for them.
Gra,y asid be did not know foe SUI<>
~reltl-was-allowed to-1e11-hls
own file and that there . WU lltUe
dilclPIInary action open to an FBI d1-
tor ii thjlt happened or il a Wblle HOUie
official leaked sucb Informalioo to the
press.
Gray told the commlttee he ·alJo pro-
vtded the Wbi1e llOUOjO with tho orlilnsl
copy of a coutrovenial memorandum
said to have been written by l>!ta Beard,
a Washlngtoo lobbyilt for m.
The memo gave tho !m[ftllioo tbal
the 'lovemmeot agreed to eettle an an-
titrust filht withe m out ot court alter
the glallt llrm pledged IO help undenrrllo
costs ol. the 1972 ,Jlepubllcan .Nallooal
Conv<olloa 1111 """' llQd In Smi Diego.
Tbe conveotkm site later wu,ab.lfted to
Miami Beach.
. ·~1 made-the Beard, memo -available to
the 1Wblte Hi>use 4ild I would do It
again," Gray told the committee .
He was not asked if he provided the
White House any other documents
related to the m case.
On We<tnesday, the first day o( Gray's
confirmation bearings, he ackoowledged
that the FBI's files still contain in-
formation gathered in investigations of ""
members of Congress.
But Gray told the Senate committee be
stopped lbe practice of gathering il>
formation on congressmen when he took
over as acting director ,tter J. Edgar
Hoover's death last year.
He said he ocdered the change because
"it could too readily be subject to
misinterpretation and is not needed."
,.
ISRAEL'S GOLDA MEIR, PRESIDENT NIXON TRADE VIEV,OS
l'wo Leede,..Dilcuu Pe1Ce in Mlddl1 E11t, R1l1tlon1 With Ar16'
Nixon, Mrs. Meir Confer
On Middle East Situation
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nlx'-the Israeli ambassador here. and his
on and Golda Meir, Israel's primedesignated successor, Simcha Din1itz. ,
minister, conferred today on Middle East While photoerRphers recorded lhe
issues after exchanging banter and opening of the session. Nixon and "Mrs.
mutual compliments. ~feir exchanged chit-chat, none or it
Sitting In on the session in the Oval Qf. touching on substantive issues.
fice !or the United States were Henry A. The President is expected to say the
Kissinger, Nixon's ~tant for national United States is determined to break the
security aUalrs, and Air . Force Brig. deadlock in the Middle East -and that
Gen. Brent Scrowcroft, Kissinger's depu· Israel is expected to help.
ty. Mrs. both sides can .help by
With Mrs. Meir were Yitzhak f.tabin, m king com s. There will be no
soon to leave WaMllngton after service as co · "d, but compromises
arrl ci't ..,,-I be at the negotiating
PoUtleal · C:Ontroversy
table, a procedure tbe Arabs still do not
accept.
U.S. officials acknowledge that the
series of visits from the Middle East -
first Jordan's King Hussein, then Cairo's
special emissary Hafei lsmail, and now
Mrs. Meir -have brought no tangible
progress in the search for a settlement. 600 Church Members,
Pastor Leave Flock
Lutheran Church at 2:22. N. East St.,
Anaheim.
Wednesday, she was quoted as saying
that direct peace negotiations with Egypt
"are a possibility."
Rep. Thomas Ii. Morgan (0.Pa..)
chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee, said Mrs. Meir told the com-
mittee in closed-door session that she is
optimistic because there has been no
shooting over the Suez Canal for 18
months.
About Kick
By Sergeant
I
A ~farine Corps private from C.mp
Pendleton, says he lied in 1naking an
earUer s w o r n statement that m.,
sergeant kicked him. ·
The unexpected testimony ca i:n e
\Vednesday during the general aurt-
martial trial of Gunnery Sgt. Miguel ff.
Tostado, 41. or Topeka, Kan., who is
charged with maltreatment and ton ..
spiracy to assault Pvts. Alan L.
Forguson and Harold E. Bradley.
Forguson, 18, of Huntington Beach.
showed up unexpectedly Wednti3day after
being absent without leave slnce Feb. 115,
a Marine spokesman said. f
The private said Tostado stumbled into
him rather than kicking him as cbarg~.
Forguson said be was influenced by Cpl. '
Garry G. Hutton in writing the earlier ,
statement that Tostado had kicked bim. !
Hutton, 22, of Phoenix, Ariz .. is to r,ce
a leSl!I savere special court-martial on the
same charges.
Tostado, a 22-year veteran who was 1
\voWJded seven times in Korea and Viet-
nam, is Rccused of ordering Hutton to
organize working parties lasl October for
the purpose of beating Forguson and
Bradley, who had gotten Into trouble at
the base.
Bradley, 19, or Leadville. Colo .•
testified earlier that he had a career
counseling session with Tostado shortly
before being beaten, and didn't hear the
sergeant give-any orders f!;>I' the beating.
After testifying, Bradle)' returned to a
nearby room and resumed playing cards
.wilh several of the Marines wbo teslilied
they beat him on Hutton's orders. .-.-"'
The prosecutor, Maj. Michael Rich. ·
contended in his closing argument that
Tostado, whom he called "a super
Marine," was frustrated with Forguson
and Bradley and decided 11to knock some
sease into them."
Capt. Richard D. Ziegler, the defense
attorlley, maintained Hutton. had ordered
the beating! of bis own and wu trying to
shift the blame. ~
"What did Lt.· William Calley say?"
Ziegler said, drawing a parallel with Hut-
ton. " 'My superior ordered me to do it' ..
' '
I' Dues are based on a combination of
....eised valuation and population.
The ICC Is a voluntary associatioo of
~~)1.-and .city .wyerD¥ts without
.1u11&. ~.... l\llCll.-5:1tit• ,.;m i.-o.. ;tOCo.llld each ol the oounly tUpervtWi • •loc1-vote. 1 . • ' • r 1
, Al•lhe next .meeting , lo· Sonia ADii
.Manih· 14 lbe lllel!lbe~ plltt ff>lfi~ a
chairman, vice chairman and_,_ vlce
.chainnau. At least one ot:fbe ·threerti!-
, ficen will be a cOunty supervisor, ac-
cording to the tentative bylaws.
Dead Infant's
Mother Sought
Orange Police . are looking for the
mother of a newborn baby boy found
~ ·~Jllal! ·.n.o • .,.. .... In ,the -liu!lea-roon1 pf~ drtv•ln ~.
About 600 members of the 1,600-strong
First Presbyterian Church of Anaheim
are organizing a separate congregation
under the former pastor because the.
United Presbyterian Church ls "selllng
its soul to radical left-willg· enemies of
Christ," that pastor said.
Rev. Ralph H. Didier said first worship
services of the new C o v e n a n t
The most frequently mentioned con·
troversial issue among the Anaheim con-
gregation was a $10,000 grant in 1971 by
the United Presbylel'lan Church to the
defense fund Of professed Communist
Angela Davis, later acqullled of charges
related to a shootout at the Marin County
Courthouse In 1170.
2 Countries'
Off~ials .6ie
High-speed Car
Crash Beheads
Two Marines
• A permanent, full time eHCUtiVe
secretary will be hired to oarry out the
bullness of Ille council.
, They have niled that the lnlant•s death
was a1homicidl.
Police said lnft91lgaUon of the Feb. 12
death indicates that the six pound, eight
'OUDCe infant was born healthy and died of .,ejlect. ' .
The body was found by a janlto1 at the
Stadium Drive-Jn Theater on Katella
Aver:.ue. Police theorir.e that the child
was born in a vehicle at the drive-In and
placed in the rest room.
~.rt'~~Jt:
Fottr €ows for Ode
SERULE, Botswana ( AP )
Galetwaselwe Mosel, 50, was convicted
Wednesday of stealing a sacred cow.
The court ordered him to deliver four
head. of cattle to the president of
Botswana, Sir Seretse Kbama, for ta.Icing
ooe of his herd.
A Doil•e for the Masses '. •".
Geodesic Spheres w Be Markewd by Ckmenwans
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tfMo t>.Uy l'llM llltff For 1he artsy-craftsy crowd and the
growing element wanthtg to build that
cheap structure in the wilderness, the
geodesic dome is supposed to offer the
.practical alternative.
The plans -and mathematical concept
in the construction -are deceptiveJy
simple.
The theory holds lhat all you have to
do Js make a bunch of triangular sec-
tions, attach them the right way and _.
volla -you pouess a space-age sphere
sullable for babitaUon.
Bui for tbooe who have tried the litde
theory;' lt'a more like Instant madness. 1
Ran11 -a· homemade dome "'* oul
U the builder retains bis pnlly, he'll
find that his arty bubble leab like a
sieve ..
Jo\111 Merrtll ol San Cl.,,,..le and a
partller, MJles Ambnioe, Jri>ew all the
dl'llibacks 6f a dome bUf .tet..lo work
anyway. • , ~
~l'beir mission, ticiwe.ver, wamLt aimpl¥
a donie fof themselves. ,. • · ~ ,,.
They wanted to 'design a dorile for'..the.
masses. ' • • •
And Merrill this week Insists: that lheY
have found It.
It'll aoon bit the market as a new •fF prose~ to recreation 111•!" pOos!ble
answer to emergency boa\ing dr slnlc-
ture needs In go .. nurient lMCjer...0:-
ln ~''!!lfd at!: ~~ ==~ 01°:! , ' 'OEODE.$1C DOME TO SHELTER A .VACATIONING FAMILY
chislrtal ~1_teylng to •PPl1 modem -Fl,.,...ardant Sphere Can Pack Into Station Wagon
llberglu8 ..._ to tho aome thol>l7· •
They came up with a kll
It need$ ftO ......
Two pmo111 with an ayer""' IQ qn
build It In 'a bal£b>ur and lulfer no men-
tal damage.
Once they finlsb, lhe bullderl line a
fire-retardanl ophere with a lkyllgl>t,
roof vent, ~try door, ventilatloo bolei at
the bise-and enougil room to bouae a
whole family oo a campin1 trip.
COl!aps<d tba ~ alacks 18 Incbel
high In a plle las than !Ive letl acrou.
Tho componenll c111 nt In an •"'1'~
station waaon. -
"And It doesn 1 lfat," llen111 Aid+ For tho two,.,..,..-, Ille dome p,..
• -ii !boil: 1lnt .allelllpl al cnaUnc ifiiew p..duel and trJ1ac lo aell It. •
'"1t'1 -2ling ... ...... nally !
dooe before," Merrill raid. Now that tho costly and frustl'ltlna
The coocept.pf a ceodeslc dome, first meard! and development ii· oomplela,
o1 au; It -I dqmaln. the -1111!1111ill bate months of aoxlely "You just '<!oo'I go 001 and patent a left.
1eodeslc dome," he asld. To· Introduce their oew concept, they
But tbe pair did find 10methlng tbal have booked space.In vacslJoo.produdl
Ibey cou!cf patent, "1d protect their abowa In the Southern C.Womla ma to
"ioveotloo." 1 ! ¥1 U \lie public la yet rl'ldy for a plastic
It ls tbe pog•and-hole locking sYatarl ' b\lbb!e that eould dOuble u a cabin, tent,
that allows Ille pieces to 1Innd r14141 alotlp .bouse or bad:yard COljVersallon
wt!houl "any specW. fasl<oeis. l>~pilyholltt.
"That !Oil aboqt drove us crtlQf," M..,. "We.,,, aY(fully CG1fidt!nt It'll calch
rill Iii~. on." llenill Qld. . .
Once tho wemblY l"lflll .-worllH A,ller all, a l'O!!Df llUl1boanl maker
O!'I, !ht! two meo bad to refine iM ll'oin Dlba Poillt tltoUaht ho bad a helter "ablnSJe" coocept ohaoh mulU......,ered · ldaa 1 few )'efn llett. and bull! a tiny
.Jedloq. IWtnlrln. .
"We hid !<> do that ao lt-WGlllcm.~ "Look what happened to t1ie Hobie
Jeat." Cit." Merrill utd.
•
Th• remainina members of the Jlli. ,_ Flnt Pmbylerlan Qiurch, are
continuing regulat services with guest
· mlniltwa until a new pastor ii named.
"A ·lat ol fide Christian people have
been misled into leaving," Dr. 'L, Ken-
neth Heuler, clerk of the Fir! t
Presbyterian governing ·board, said
Wednesday of the new church.
"Our point of departure has to do with
the denomJnation itself and whether it is
dominated by Marxist philosophies,'" he
added. "I don't believe it is.''
Church We is like natlnoal Politics, Dr.
Hueler said. "I don't agree wilb all of
our nation's policies, but I'm not moving
to Australia either."
Rev. J)ldltt, 4.1, already bad accepted a
position with the Finl Congregational
Church of Redlands when the splinter
Anaheim group asked him to lead them.
WARSAW CAP) -The Interior
ministers of P o I a n d and
Czechoslovakia, whOse departmepts ·
include their countries' secret
police, died in an air crash in
northern Poland tonight.
The Polish government quickly
ordered a top-level investigation.
Radio-Warsa"l,F!porled Interior
Minister Wleslaw Oclepka and his
vtsiUng Czechoslovak counterpart,
Radko Kaska, were flying near. the
Baltic port of Szczecin when their
military aircraft went down. AU
lheir aides and crew perished, with
the total number of dead put at 18.
Two Cam~ P~ndleton·Mirlm l.lr&UD!a
were decaplleted !h ·a litlh4peec1 1,.mc
crash early today In San J u a n
Capistrano.
The grisly, single-car collision Occurred
at about l: 30 a.m, and clairr1ed the lives
of Marl1:1e Sgts. James C. Jones, 22t and
Vernor C. Russell, 24. Both men were at-
tached to the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines,
at the base.
Highway patrolmen said that the crash
occurred in the southbound lanes of the
San Diego Freeway near the San Juan
Creek overcrossing.
For reasons as yet undetermined the
. American-made sportscar lost ron~I at
Wgh speed and slammed into a concrete
abutment. Then ti& auto skidded acrosa
the freeway and slammed lnto a divider
·fence reinforced with steel cable.
soja bed sale!
. queen
now • size ••• $399.
. .::. .. ~
•' ... -. · .. -
dual size ... $349.
• These aro very comfortable sofa beds
for sitting and sleeping.
• A wide selection of fabric. and
colors to choose from.
• Reversible bock. end seat cushions.
H.J .·GAl\l\E1T . f URNlTURE
PROFESSIONAL Open Mon. 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS Thurs. Ir Fri. Evt1. • COSTA MESA, CALIF •
•
I
---.,,-
\
-
•
4 Dilllf l'IU>T l Thw'lday, M.veh l , 1973 • .
Arctic --Pilot Reveal: •
~
• • •
Agony of Canni·halis·~ ·
..
~E. N.W.T. (,U') -
Alla-21 dais alonp1dt his wrecked
··-In theAn:tlti.~ au.Jn. Jard tilllb p11o1 a1e the nosh of one of bla
ltoopjl,tl at Yelloftnlie wiled bla pW!e that .. 1114. eWd Barh..u Iller the
.d,.iw.t "1 -· I. . •• ~ m Dee. 14; "Did y.0 ut or -IWIT'll'E!L;-wuo BllOKE botll-""""°""u.n..i.-.t Jady-ilill?•~----
antlos and a .._..P In the cruh, aal4 VENNER l\m 1be 46-yeir-<>ld pilot ~ dead .,._ .... to stay aliff.
~ was no way out but to eat
-fleob and this I did," Marten a..tw.eD uld In a stattment be read at a
...., amlerenee Wednesday nlgbl In
FAznonW! after his acUon was revealed
al IO inqueol in Yellowknife for the three
-killed in the crash.
be ototbeo..b ol the nurse, Judith mu. ~-'!/ ~ ........ lsedld. Daviddld-an.r the boy died and be had no ooe lo T<P ~ ,,_, e
forage for bfm. not use I started eating lleob aft«
"It dlalreoaes me and probably othen David wu dead• The llUlM and the
to tallt more aholit thb," said -ell. Eskimo wcm8o died wUb1n boUrs o1 the "Afttr David ~ died, I realized -•
-... flying~ .. penoos, •
that I too would aooo be dead because I cnah, a«>Onlln& to testfmoo1 al Ibo !?-
was ioo 'wea1: and injured lo move quest, but the boy remained alive ,... 23
around." day!I.
British DlD"lt. a pttgrmt Eskimo woman
and a l '"year-old. F,lktmo boy, to a
At the contner's inquest, Inspector Hartwell's statement read at the tn-
Stanley Venner ol Edmonton testJlied quest gave thb accounl:
WOMAN LEADS ATTACK
ON EQUAL RIGHTS
• From Wire Services ~
A woman member bas told the Nevada Senate that women "are
no created equal." '.!be senators then voted Wednesday 1&4 against
the equal rights amendment to the Constitution, which would forbid
discrimination against women.
In Augusta, Mlline. the Senate wted 16-16 on the measure. That
means the isl!llue still is alive for possible copsideration next week.
· In addition, the measure was reintroduced. in the Illinois general
-bly. 1t poosed the state Senate last year, but was killed In the H-..
'AIDtai of 38 .tales must approve the amendment before. it be-
Ollliel •,,..rt of the ConsUtution. So far, 28 have approved il
Ne.Ida was tile ninth to re~ it. SlaU Siil. Helen lien', (D-Vegas), told her fellow legisla'tors,
"'!'Ida ad. ddlllerately undermines the family which is the oorner·
aone of lioc:iety. We are not created equal. G<Jd made us different."
Attsr the vute, 8be said defeat of the measure marked "a great
day" In !hi! otate history.
'l'tl'e Bespital.i%ed
Racial Fighting Erupts
At Honolulu Army Base
HONOWLU (UPI ) - A radal melee
bas erupted at Ft. Shafter, headquarters
of the Ullited States Army In the Pacific.
At least -pmoas....., injtnd, aod
me was bospllalhed.
An Army spokecnan ftfQlied eerly todoJ tllat a Rries of .__ ..
bet:wttn black and white soldiers had sub-
_. bat coooeded that altboUgh the
aituation was under coo.t.rol, violence
--out again." Information officer Col. B.E. Sawyer
aald military wli<:e were investigating a
-of fights W-y after two
-Were badly beaten by a group of blacQ.
SA.WYEK SAID the incident was a~
~ prompted by an eerlier fight be-·
tween a white noo-commissioned ollicer
Paper Fights
New Subpoena
and a black soldier in which the black
"got beaten."
An Army spokesman said that early
Wednesday the black soldier entered a
room in which a "party was ~ propesa"
and got Into" tight 'Oi1h tbe wtitte Nro.
The NCO was suspended from dut,y a!lll.
is under investigation. The black received ·
nledical treatment for head wounds fol·
lowing the fight.
Late Wednesday, a me lee erupted.
when a group ol blacks entered an or·
derly room and badly beat two whites.
The white soldiers were taken for emer·
gency medical treatment and one was
hospitalized.
NO NAMES WERE released, but both
\Vhites were reportedly suffering from
facial wounds and other injuries.
Military Policemen broke up the racial
fight and SaW)'e" said it was not the re·
suit of any previous racial disturbances
at the strategic anny headquarters.
Ha1·tke Attacks
'
. For lbe first few w;eeti, be and· the boy
lived on food from the plane'• emergency
kit -coffee, sugar cubes and cans of
corned beef and mashed ·potatoe( -and
sandWlcbes the pi]pt liad bnJu8111 ~·.
They oet ..,,,..... Tor nhblll bllt·dldn't
get any. The boy left to flSb,in a lake that
wss visible frmn the crash site but
returned, saying he couldn't find it in the
snow.
ON THE %1ST DAY, when their
meager supplies were gone, tlJ.e two con-
sumed all the drugs in the nurse's
emergency kit. Hartwell thought this
might kill them, but it didn't.
The boy began to weak.eq., aqd by Nov.
29 he could not move. He died about mid·
night on Dec. I.
'Mle nm day, Hartwell continued;
"I crawled .oot ol ~ tent, ·got my
crutdles Md etwnl>led lo tbe nearest
tree where I expected there would be
lichens. I was oootpletely exhausted,
with acang feet, trembling from exhaus-
tion and pain.
"1 chopped off the 1ower branches,
tucked them under my arm and crawled
on my knees back to the tent, I recogniz·
cd that I could not continue, . .I knew
that since I could not get enough lichens
lo Jive, I could not make it to the lake to
fish ...
'"From here on , I think it is clear to
everyone what I did. I'm still trying to
forget this and will probably never suc·
ceed."
ATT.QRNEVS FOR BOTH Hartwell
and ~s; Hill's estate tried to prevent
the reading of this part of the statement
in open court. contending that it bad no
bearing 00 the -o( the inquest since it concerned events oocuning after
the three deaths. Chief Justice William
Morrow of the provincial supreme court
denied the request after a lawyer for the
Canadian Broadcasting Corp, col)tended
that the public !"'4 a right lo hear the
full statement. •
It w~ the ·second1,~1JI .
this -by. liii$'\U<'I cif· a· .
Some of the Uruguayan football layers
wbo survived a plane crash lasl Ocloller
in the Chilean Andes ate· parts ·of · the
bodies of dead companiom before they
were rescued 69 days later.
In his :datement in E d m on t o n ,
fiartwell quoted from Dr. Kn u d
.Rasmussen's book "Across Arc t i c
America:''
"Many have eaten human flesh , but
never from any desire for it -only to
save their lives .•. but we who have en-
dured such things ourselves, we do not
judge of.hers who have acted in this way
though we may find it bard, when fed
and content ourselves, to understand how
they could do such things. • • We only
know that every one of us has the same
desire to Ji ve."
WICKS
•
... Tlj l_?l
ASTRONAUT CONRAD (LEFT) TALKS WITH UT.AH ~N. FRANK MOSS
Commande1' of Skylab (model shown) DllCUSNI Aspoch of Flight
Skylab Crew Learns How
To Pull Teeth in Space
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -In hopes of
setting space eodunmce records, i\meri-
ca's Skylab a.strooauts are being trained
lo pull teelh Md stitch -lo avoid
the posaibility of having their flights cut
short by health problems, aceording tu
veteran asmmaat c&atles ''Pete'! Olmad.
"We'll have to be p-etty sick to cmsid-
er coming down." Conrad told a news
briefing Wednaday. Ooorad, lbe third
American to land on the mooo as cbm·
mander of Apollo 12 in November, 1969, is
the comander of the first Skylab flight
crew.
Skylab is an Orbiting science labora·
tory the size of. a fiv&roOm home en·
cased in the shell of a third stage Saturn
JV ·B rocket and a tlree--man coounand
module similar lo the APono spacecraft.
THE UNMANNED LAB is lo be launch-
ed May H, and the rmvnand module
carrying C<mrad, Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin
and Paul J. WeilZ is lo foDow into orbit
and dock the next day. Two other crews
of three astrmauts eadl .... scboduled
for separate 56-<lay ~ in space dlD'-
ing Skylll)>'s fi&bl-mmtb fli&bt.
'lllo·bllgo orilltlllg lab.will C81TJ • ....,P
Jnedical equipment to outfit a s m. a 11
""""i""'l' wan! and the crews "are a
lot beUer trained in first aid -dlan die
average policeman of fireman," Qmr~
said.
"T~y've been pulling teeth" in medi·
cal training at military bases.
In case of an engineering emergency
which would prevent a Skylab crew from
\ returning to earth, a rescue operatici:J",
for the first time, is possible.
A BOOSTER FOR the following shot
in the series will always be oo the pad
at Cape. Kennedy when a crew ii aktt,
Conrad said, and it c:ould .., flown If a
docking witb Skylab by a ~ crew
to bring their stranded feUow astronauts
back lo earth.
The Skylab will carry oophlsticated
scienoe experiments designed to test such
possibilities as making a perfect weld iD.
weigblless. coodidons.
. ·
The fllghls will also lest the effect of
prolonged periods of weighll--Ill
the-~
''If we couJd lmmch tomorrow," em.
rad said, ''the crew wwld, be ready to
go Biid lo do a credlhl'!· job.•
Pushers Facing ,
Mandatory Term
SAliTA Fl!:, N.M. (UP!) -The New
Mexico state senate has voted
unanimottsly for mandatory life im-
prisonment without possibility of parole
or suspen.sioo for drug peddlers. ,
One seoalor called lbe Iegislattoo lbe
"toughest of Its tlnd In the United
States."
It passed ~ and DOW goes lo lbe
1iouse f« --· The bill hnposes life sentence for first
and sub<equeot. c1rug ptobing oa ......
The bill, however, does a1lmr a lud&e lo
~ant an exc:ePtiof:i W penrn cbarpd. m a first olfm :If be , __ .,, ....
teStlmon1 "leadlng tu conviction of
another 'pi"1er.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Ddivery of the D.alfy Pitoc.
;, guaran~
hM!Mlar·Fr...,_, If .,.. • .... '-""'" ,.ptt 11"(95:» !l.M.. catt ..., ytolr °"" •ill
................ ,...., Ulb -,__ ... 11 ,,...... .
utwar ... s.ur: 11 .,.. • .. nml.,..'
Y9W aiflt' ., ............... ., .. .... S...y, c.ei .... .,.,,,,, ......... .. ,,.., ea-..,. Mii• _. M..... .
•
•
Governors
Hit Nixon
Am Pinn
WASlllNGTON (AP). = "'~"'*
gofflJlllfS luUy --··--lo oppc.we.Ptellidmt Nhon's .. &o mamp
!edlnl -aid_... mllil tbeJ
get more lnfonnallon, <11 bow tt wiD af-
fect their Jlates.
Al a -meeting, Lb•
Democratic state executives dedded to
-the Pnosideot's plan to switch
'
( IN SHORT... ) ----...., ........ -direci aid lo ,.,.
called "special revmde sbatidg... '
• .. '!be Democratic pamvs are'
dissatisfied wflh the tlnd of -
that bas been ,m.. ..... --in-
pJIOd """"' -and t11n1Jope _. size• of~ """""' ohario(. Goo. Jolm J ..
Gilllpn'<if Ohio told roparters. I
e l.fflH!lt AIRs l.e•1H .. '
DUBLIN (AP) -The count llarted in•
the Irish Rep;lhlic's natitnal eiectianl to-
dv apd first~ ~led a ,gq·
showing by -membml of Prime
MiniMtt Jact ~·· Cabinet despite a
small gf1ler8i -toward the Clp-pw.ition :
Justice llinisler Desmond O')(alley,'
31-year-cld attorney -. tor llls lllllch I
stand agaiml the northern guenillas ol
the IJish Republican AnDJ, -unof-ficially ._w lo be at tbo lop ol tbo
poll In East Umerld: where <iglll CID-
-...... fllhtinlf«-·-
e Slc9faelcer~
SEATI'IE (AP) -Conridecl . ""1'-
jacker Frmik -Sibley bas been
...-lo 30 :rears in prism.
Siblq, 44. -down in lean ..... ~smtencmg Wedqrodq and aald. "I
pny to God eveeybodj wiD forgive me..
Sibley dema!Xfed $Z million nmn
last Aug. 11 afle' ............... a
United Air Lines ~ in -·and
forcing ils crew lo fly lo Vancouver.
B.C .. and Ihm tu Seatlle, where the FBI
captured blm.
........ ~ 1
MIAMI (AP) -A ledenal 1*-sa,. lbe --ol ~,..,.,
denuld finander X.,... LlnlltJ • a
cmtmqit -.. -conY.lbC•
wpniud criine that the U.S. Jliltlee
Deputmeal StriR Force me a.a 1
"•&pm , "".--+ ~ ··'-' , i ~ • .,...,"""'.lop&the=1r r
acroa," ""'-.u.s. Mty. D•11.1•ld McMillan said W~J afl<r.11 .. jury
-, ~. 71, pi!IJ ol willfnllJ ~~ .. bpoeoato--a
-grand jury in Miami in lfan:ll It'll.
• lsrcd e-11elldN!ll
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y: (AP) -BJ a
vote ol 105-1, the Inlerlla!DW Civil Avia-
tiop Organization bas tXOtenmeii Israel
for shooting down a Libyan llrliner over
the Sinai o..ert last wM.
II was the -cledsive roll call against Imel...,. reaxded bJ an_,.
cy of the United -· aiJD lhe -Jewiah sta-boll! lo IMI.
Israel cast the lllle vote against °" molutioo, adopt"!I Wedne!day bJ 8'
assembly "' !CAO. Oilomhia ... Malawi abstained from voting on the lllOOSlft, • I
NEW YORK (UP!) -The New
York Times says it will take "all
legal steps" to quash a subpoena
served on one of its reporters who
covered the Watergate bugging
case.
The U.S. District Court gave
penni.ssjon Monday (or t li e
issuance o( 11 subpoenas to JI
reporters and executives stemming
from the bugging of t h e
Democratic National Committee
headquarters in the Watergate
tOO>plex in Wasbingtoo. Those
served, in addition to New York
Times reporter John Cn!wdson,
were aMOCiated w ! t h the
Washingloo P..t: the Washington
Star·.News, and Time magazine.
Skyjack Search
NEW YORK (UPI) -'"The actions or
the Federal Aviation Administration in
failing to recognize the privileges and
immunities of a U.S. senator constitute a
grievous violation "of . . . the U.S.
Constitution," declared Sen. Vance
Hartke (D-Ind.).
v OPEN
SUNDAY 12-5 ·the ENCINO
·collection
Rain
He was referring Wednesday in a
federal court suit to the fact that be, like
other passengers, was obliged to undergo
a search before being allowed to board a
plane at Kennedy airport. Forcing a
senator to do that, Hartke maintatned,
violated the cmstitutional separation of
the executive and legislative branches of
government.
Spreads to
\
Rockies
a.
a. chrome Joung• chair
in heavy textured nylon,
choice of fabrics .
Gale Warnings for Pacific Go lnw Effect
and colors ••.•• $169
b. 84" sofa in nylon with chrome
frame; choice of fabrics 'Temperatures
~ =. =-._
"'i"""' C:h ....... ' -..... --....,. '* ---i-
1;
Hiii' low Pr, " .. " " " " " "' .. "
" tt .. " ~ ~ ., " .. "
" 3 " ~ .. »
" " 6~ 4~ .n s. •l .01 ., " " " 11 69
41 ~ ~ •1 1J ~
.1 i : J .,
\
U.. Wl41MllH)ifO(.UI.
'
------·--,-----
and colors ••••.•••••••• $259
c. chrome lounge clfoir in heavy
textured nylo~, choice of
fabrics and colors .••• , , • • $99
matching ottoman ••••••• , $59 ••
. doily 11/9 saturday 11/6 sund1y 12/5 ·• pi., 54U518 .• fol .... ~1262
------. --------·--------\ .r
• 1 • •
•
orange· Coast
. , EDITION -
•
VOL 66, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES
•
THU~AY, MARCH !, · 1973
•
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. St.oeb·,
, .
N TEN CENTS j
Newport " to Hire Water. Quality Supe~visor~
'
Pla-nners to Initiate
.
Peninsula Downzoning
Newport Beadl planl1lng commissioners
toolght are expected to recommend 11r ...
tie <dowmooing of dtiplex and aparlment
Iola 00 Balboa Penln8ulL ..
The action Is expected ID follow ·a d ..
ci!ion oo a ,.key porijon of the general
plan that ~ place citywide limits on
density and J>OPl!lati-Oll.
Allo an .the commission's agenda fbr
coosiderattoo are proposals that would
put llght Umlls on lnlne Company, apart-
ni<nl projects and elhilina" three plan-
ned Newport Center high rise apartments.
The tecommended actions include a
pro;cjsal ID ban . residential uses from
comuierclal ione.s and a cutback in Pl>"
tential density of apartment "'mplexes
In lll&.Canyon and Harbor View IIllls.
aiang.,. that 1je ahead for Balboa, il
tbe city couitcil supports the commission,
include' -OJmph!te down-zoning nf all multi·
famlly residenllal lots betw.en MCFad-
. den Place and E Slleet on lhe penin-
aula tO tbe oew R-1.i limited duplex ......
-Zoning of an 1o1s oo Peninlula Point
and Bay Is!and ID ·R·l single family
to 15 units per acre.
Toftight's action on the Balboa Penin-
sula will mark the first effort by the city
to · implement the recommendations
in tlie proposed general plan, which
faces a dozen or more bearings ·over
the next few months before it can be
adopted.
The R-1.5 zooe being considered !or lhe
pel),in.sUla would be similar to One
already In effect on )lalboa Island.
Planners have said they are bopefuJ
the zone will eliminate the large, boxy
cottages on the peninsula and other old·
er sections of the city.
R-1 .5 :i:oning has also been recommen-
ded for West Newport and Old Corona
del Mar but action has not yet started to
adopt these recommendations.
Judge Declares
''Deep Throat'
Obscene in NY status. • _ creation ol a oew Open Space zone al r1
lo COver .-"'lie lands BUCb .. Marina-NEW YORK (APl -A Crimin c;ou .,.... ju~e today declared the hard-Core
pork, the beaches and ...etal llllllll pornographic film "Deep Throat" to be
commi.mity parks. the ;.!nadir of decadence" and fOWKI it
-Con4ensatioo or the core commer.. ~·indisputably obscene by any legal
cial area of central Balboa and lbe elim-measurement."
inalioo of all but a few small ~ . Judge Joel Tyler found the defendant
iaJ zones oo the remainder of the peo-corporption guilty of two counts of pro-
insUla. · moUng obscenity end ruled it could be
Tiie general plan componant that C')I\• llned up lo twice tbe amoPDt er the
t a I n s all t b e • e recomm~tklnl proftts lhe movie grossed since it opened _ The O..klentlal Growth !Jmits Com-h last J
miss! do era. une. . ponent -waa glvm com on en ne-Tho ell b ght lbe obsceni'" pro-~-t at a mee"•• ,.veral weeks ago. Y rou ., ....., ._ ,,....... ceedlnp against Mature Enteq>riseB,
F!nal commission action 00 .,.v,_... Jnc., In a test case as part ol· Ii• drive to
Mute c~ lGOilig will be lhe firot clean up Times Square. Tho trja\' waa
Item 'IP for ~.tonlgbl. . · held without a jury. .
'!be. -Ible ban .on .l'i!lldtntlili,_ Aalt. Dist. Atty. WIWam Purcell aaid
in ~I ""1" II~ l"l'l~ In tbe illl'Cl of the judg's ruling wa.s I<> ban
lbe resldel>llal linilll portion of lbe plan the lbowlng or the film In the city. 'l'yler
and WJ>"ljl 'e!imlnila tine 1 .... t...,. apart· ordertd that the print or Jhe fl\tn he
!Dellll· p!uned far !jewport Ccliter. turned o•er to the Police Department's
OJmrnllsloners have already .....,.. property clerk's office, ptndlng any aP-
mendtd lbe IJiCb. rises be ellmlnated peal. from lbe. general plan and tbe aciion 1n' 1 previouS 'case in Binghamton,
lOO!ght may be a 1lart toward finalizing N.Y., a jury decided that the film WU
11. • • not obaccn .. ~ a~t 51tes, planned !or At tbe trial here, Tyler 'heard exwts
By L. PETBB DIEG Of __ ,__
Newport Beadl plans lo l*e f $11.'ltt-
a;year water qua1itr CDlllral tupa •iaM
who will apend his -ma!riol me Ille
;;· drinkina -~ pl lo tloeJast
'City ollicials ary Ille """" II beillg J:d: because state Biiia tftWals me ~tug them to tab -jW& ... ._
against potential cmtamimtim <I public
drinking water.
CilJ --lhe risk "' tbe cmtf'll pat& ii mtntmal, bul qiaeers
fllr ... Cllllania lloporlmeol of -
tloD ay Ille dly -DOI .... adequate
aarols lo -1hll pollulA!d ar eon-taminated nter~cloes not .get into the
-"'*"!, .... me ip!EilfinQJ canoerned with
... pmibililJ at -in Uie dlJ'• -.·uw.s.Macl'benoln,..,...
mgiJWF with tlle state -· lie said the city rigbt OOW does OOt
adequately inspect \talves that are su~
poeed. to prevent water, ooct it leaves lhe
l7llem. from r<lun>in& lo It.
Main "°""""' al such potenUal con-
tamiMnts are industries and the water
connections at the hundreds of piers in
Newport Harbor, acconling to Orange
County Health Director Robert Stone .
"'Any company that Use! chemicals
tmder pres5Ul'e is a potential sourct,''
Stone said, explaining that if a plumber
were to accidentally cross-connect a
pressurized chemical tine with the water
system, toxins could be released into the
water Hnes.
MacPherson said bay water could get
into the drinking water on a backflow
from any boat tied into city water lines.
He said even raw sewage from pump-out
stations conceivably could be siJ)booed
into the system .
"It would Occur i£ any user's presstii-e
is greater than the nonnal water
(S<e WATER, Page Z) '
Reds to Free 136 -POW s
Communis~ Break Deadlock; Release Sunday
SAIGON (UPI) -0111111mbl oflirials
broke a tense de>dlodt -,. and m-
.........t that 136 American .. -al war and siJ: foreign captiws -*I be Id
free Sunday in Hanoi.
The sudden anooiu11a11wnt eame as
U.S. Secretary al Stale Wi11imD P.
Rogers and 11 foreign ministns -in-
cluding those of Narlh v-.. and the
Viet C'.ong -initialed a nine-point ~
ment in Paris providing guarantees for a
lasting peace-in Vietnam.
McGovern
To Meaiaw
Indian FeWJ.
.
Special '""'"'O of the senior mili!My
iep:t;.,atatiws of the. four-party Joint
Mi1iJMy Qmimissicn (JMCJ and tlle
cmpnisgim's unit an captured penom
Wfft aet for Friday morning to work out
Uie d<lails at the oew POW release.
'Ille Saigon anDOllIICeDlell ended an
qlMizing two-day impa!se that arose
-tbe Communists ~ the rdease at prisooen lo protost alleged
riolations of the mooth<Jld cease-lire.
--States ..acJed sharply,
caJlioi a halt lo furtber implementation
of tbe Vielnam accords IDIW lhe priloner
question was resolved.
U.S. officials bere said tbe North Viet·
namese tm.ight banded over a list con-
taining the names of 106 American
soldiers and two Thai citizem they would
release.
The Viet Cong told UPI they would
release in Hanoi 26 additional ·U.S.
soldiers and four American civilians
* * * 12 Countries
Endorse Peace
In Vietnam
along with two We§t Germana and two
Filipino5.
The previous Viet Cong re1e ... had
t.aken place in So:uth Vietnam and there
was no explanation· given for the change.
A total of lSS American military
prisoners have been freed in North and
South Vietnam along with eight U.S.·
civilians and one Canadian civilian since
the cease-fire went into effect Jan. 28.
Sunday's repatriation will pu't the
(See PRISONERS, Page !)
Accused Killer
Pleads Guilty
Accused mµrderer Corliss Kay
Ankeny al Newport )leach pleaded
guilty to redl1ctd charges IDday
moments be!ore his Orange County
Superior Court jury trial was sched-
WOUNDED~ 8.D. (AP)-&,llb
~~ . G<Orie lolcGoftn fle9 !Diiie
PAljlS ·W't -'!'lie ~ mlnlllel'I ... u pi NJ.,....,,.,,.... '-'il'I .,
uled to commence, . ~~~ •• UoYd.ty~~cc=
uled ..,.4 lot ?4ay I In bis
lndlan Besa•-IQ!lq in ..-ejiort 1o_:-
free 11 I>-' .... -bJ P1ilwil 1&
who ~ """ !Ilia -....... ., -daya ago;--~ ·
Tiie Demqcrall -by ......... at Pine Ridge, scme JD mills ...abw:st
or the embattled bam!a. al!lr 1171n1 to
lheir home state lroiri'w...._ 11oeJ
planned to land at Woandijll Kie, bal
apparenlly heeded tbe advice at ledenl
authorities who advised tbmt DOI lo Dy
over tbe Yillage, wben! Ille FBI ~
"coosiderable gunfire" w-.,.
There was no immafi• wcrd an
whether tlle l)lililanll lri -t -
hoslagea, at Ahourezt said be i.t hem
assured Ibey wooJd wtim lie and
McGovem armed; '1bere -.... DO immediate indiraliQn that a nw«i•IC
between the seoabs and Indian
demonstrators had ...........
Before leaving Ellsworth Air Farce
Base in Rapid City, Ahourezt said be
was disappointed !hat ~ Ille
Interior officials did not •11•1tpa11J1
!hem. Tiie ......_ cwbab tlle
Bureau of Indian Allain, a targ<t al tbe
militant American Indian Mow:w:ut
which haJ led tbe ......,.tion at tlle
village.
.. l called Interior official• last ..... "
Abourezlt said, "and asked If tbey _...
join us. They said they abPihRly _...
not negotiate aa long as .., .--tY
or penooa were beinc belll I Jllink
perhaps wilh lhe lives al people in the
balance, we can' late !bat -" McGovem aid be and Abounot
wanted bi !Dl!<t with Uie ·lndian-.
"not with any prkr notions or an-·
cessions, but to lalt 1rith ADI _..
and oee ~we can' ....,..1or _at
the people they are bohting "
Ralph Erickson, Special asslslanl lo tbe
U.S. attorney geoonl, aid before Ille
senators' beli<opler lefl Rapid Cily !bat
"" would adviae them not lo land at
Wounded Knee.
•
TAKES JtOAG llOSP.tTAL JOB ·~-
lloog HospiW.
Names Parker
Admuwtrator
A :11_,...,.. Plloenix. Ariz., man fD.
., --alminl-Jo< of Hoag -111 BoopiW in Newpo.t Beach.
-s. -· -.... held lhe pooi-tloD at ..., pn!Sidmt and -
,,, Good -llalpilal in Plloenlx
... Ille put ""' yean, will .. _...
William R. llucboo -,...;gned under
lft -'r•,... ago.
Lou KA, an a!3istant admioistrator
- -. the bolpilll while --.,,.,..:.:ii,.: .. search for a r<place-,_ ... u-. will be ,.unoh!d lo the
p>lition al as:oociale adminisllator' ac-
cording lb A Vincent Jorgensen, presi-
dent of the board of director.I.
'!'lie appointment al Parter and tbe
elevalioo al Kaa will be effective May I,
!See HOAG, Page ZJ
Martha Miffed
'J.ibber' Working in White · House ·
~&a, lnitialea a alae~polnt
~ IDday -..iDg lhe Vietnam
-.~t and Ollahllahjng a pn> ~ far.enminlng Yiolalloos.
~ at Stale William P. Roten
and lhe foreign mlnlsters a1 Britain,
France, Oilna and tbe Soviet Ullion were
8JD0111 tliilSe who lniUaled tbe document,
together wilh North and South Vielnam1 tbe Viet Cong and lhe four mOmbers OI
tbe Intemational Commission of Control
and Supervision -Cariada, Indonesia,
Poland and Hungary.
The dedanilim, pledging tbe JJ
governments lo u.p lhe peace and to
,_,..... wllm any sU: of them lode• a
oomplalo~ Is "' be formally signed •fri.
day at a ceremony in tbe Inlematlonal
Conference Center.
Foreign Secretary Mitchell Sharp of
C8nada Initialed tbe document but
reserved ~ government'• positlon with
repnl ID continued participalim in lhe
cootrol commis.!ion. •
He said the Canadian government will
have to examine the declaration to
determine whether the commission can
operate effectively, He threatened earlier
that Canada WGU!d walk out of lhe com-
mission un1ess adequate machinery for
reporting cease.fire violations w a s established.
1be delcaratim. was hammered out in
backstage expert meetings, with con-
cessions made by both sides.
North Vietnam and Its Communisl
allies. abandooed their previous insistence
that tbe aioleience could ooly "" recall-
ed by a majority al lhe u delegatioos .
This woukl have given each aide a veto.
In return, lhe llllited Slates and its
allies qnoed to.,mentioo lhe Viet Cong's
Provisional Rewlutlooary Go•emment
as a fUll.lledged aiolerenoe participant
To appease the Saigon government, the
final article of the declaration stat@' that
tbe signatories do not ~Y
recogniz,e each other.
Became of Vigorowi Communist ot>-
jections, U.N. Secretary-General Kurt
Waldheim wu excluded from any active
role in the peacekeeping arrangemenls.
With word from saugon that North
V\etnam told the Americans it was going
to releue 142 more U.S. prisoners ol
war, -ry of Sta" WUllam P .
Rogers waa expected to attend tbe
plemry sessim of the aiole....,. this
afternoon.
WASHINGTON (UPl}-Jill ill>cblm111, a.l!epubllcan women'• "-• • Tah lib leader, 1s -uag u a Wbite Ho1Ue 1ta11 mem&er-and Karth• . \.AISIDO ID oe MltCbell reeents ii.. .
lira. Ruckelsbaua, wife al WiDlam D. l!nckel!d>aus, odininlstrator U Be R d
'of the Environmental Protection Agency, bepn womna Jut week ~··ay eopene
on a "part4ime'I !mis for COUllldor .Anne Annstronf u a liaUon ...
slStaht With women'• grwpe.
• Her -appointment -Dot palJlid1 ll>Dounced. Sbe·will be paid
abciat JUJ,000 a ,.....
~ .... '
Anktny f8c$ .. possible llate
prism lel'!D al n .. years·lo life on
the voluata~ manslaughter CObvlc-
t!On. " -II• waa charged wilh fi1't degree
murder in the alleged slaying of a
UCLA coed, Diane Singleton, 21,
who shared his suite at the Towers
apartments and who died a few
hours after be admitted her to
Hoag Memorial Hospital.
Black September
Group Abducts
Foreign Env,o)'S
. BULLE'l1N
BEIRUT (AP) -The Saclaneae radio
saya lhe extremist PalestinlU ~Ua
g:rvap Blaet September Hized a group
of !orelp dlpfomats In Khartoam n ....
day algltt. Tbey demanded tbe reJeue
or Slrhaa Sirhan, tbe leadel'I of an a:rbu
pen1lla ~ ID ·we1t Germany and.
and lf Pakeltlaa guerrUlas.
WASHING TON (AP) -The Slate De-
partment said. today that two ranking
American diplomata: and an undetermined
number of other foreign diplomats have-
been seized In Khartoum by a group of
unidentified terrorist!.·
· (United Press In"rnallonal said lhe
terrorists we're f resumed to be Pales--tinian guerrillas.
Spokesman Charla W. Bray said that
newly arrived U.S. Ambauad<ir Cleo Noel
and George C. Moore, who headed the
American diplomatic representation in
IS.. SEIZURE, Page %)
Oraage Coast
Weather
Weather sources today predicted
more mostly sunny skies for the
Orange Coast on Friday. The high
will be In the 505, low tonight about
40.
INSIDE Titlt-' Y
/\fter 23 days 410llgsid• his
101tcktd airplant m tht Arctic,
an injured bush pilot ate flesh
of one of hi.$ three tkcd JXU$en·
f}eTs to stay alive. See .tt<>111,
Page 4.
densitld 1n the IWS units per acre lakt diametrically opposinc m"polnta.
range In Big· Can)lon and .Barber View Dr. Emsl •an den Haag, a . Bilis are llllo r......-.,d !IJt'eut. to )Jll1"1Joanalya~ tesllhl fur t he proo--
In a ~ ealL from Ne• Yort when sbe Is llY!ng, Mrs.
Jo& N. llltcbell, wife of. the former altcf:neJ genera). told 1JPI:
"rli\. &00!& lo !ell JOU something I ro.ent like bell. I resent that
Ttll .Buclrebba111Js in the Wbite Home wllh Anne ArmltioiJg lllld all
~r_ll)Jeral ldeu. I don't bow who pbced.l!er In tbe polilion."
~ lfn. lllM'kel•-u ""'1 oul" .. -
CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -The
State Gaming Con!rol Board says it
....wed a plan lo reopen King> Castle
Holel-Ouino at Lake Tahoe -clOlled a
)'Ur .ago bee-of linanclal problems.
Bootd Oialnnan Pllll llonniftn .. Id
Wedooaday under the plan former owner
Nalhln J-. would he landlord at
tho ..th shore .-t' "1111e !armer Las
V-Castoo owner Judllclnloih would
actiiallJ ""' tbe openllon.
U unlla JI'!" acre. • ~ lllat tho fills "is w!tbo(i\ any ;,
Three apetlmmt. .i&s, planned for redeemlbg •alue w~r." '
'«ii!ties"ln !he 11'._llper ocn;nmg ~llJ!j cr!llc-Al'tbll!' JQ\lght;--, '.In "Jll&-C&!ly9o -llartiOr V.faw HDIJ' aaid, ""!l's 1iil i lleiiy4Um by rtlY ore ibe lieJli& recommended ror mil · lSee OBSCENB, Pagi Z) • -.
L ----• _..,..,l ---
•
-' •
-------,,.--.-i._---.-
I
~..:OAl=:l ':_:_:l'tl::O~T---N
,...._P.,.el
WATER •••
_.-.al MJ PVUI mom..t Ud il !he
vaJva .-ea't wmtlnc property," acne .....
lie aald • mark.od drop In !he dty's
waler _.. wlllcb -... -
• by "l1-.....,. -· -.. nr.o,blinr, could c:rttte • bed!low If
the valves aren't In working order.
The problem ls that Newport Bead!
doesn't have the manpower to ~uately lll8JOd aD tbooe valves to nlake 111re
tliey ll'fl working.
And, Public Worb D~ J06<pb T.
l>evlin ·conceded Wednesday. the city
isn't even sure all those water I001'Ces
have the proper valves -called
"'bactflow preventk>n de•ices . .,
"We anane they do." Devlin aaid,
"but this is an area where the city is
weak."
"There is;' Devlin said, "a possibility
ol contamlnatloo If watu <omlng badt
into lbe sys&em is contaminated ...
He said there are no known C8.lel ol
this evec happening in Newport Beach.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn Is
• critical of !he pressure tho city bu been
getting from !he llate.
Newport Cerater
Office· Building
Construction Set
Constructlno or a lt2.~ mlOlon, lktory
~ h11lldlo1 lo NeWJ1911 Center will be-
gin in less than two ~I Irvine eom-
pany olficiala said today.
The structure, which will stand west ol
the lktclry, mirrtred Avco bujldin& in
the lloancial plaza will be !he filth high
rise in the ceDter's financial plaza. It is
targeted for completioo by April or next
year.
The 246-loot tower .... desi&Jled by !he
Newport Beach an:hltectunl !inn ol Wll-
llam L. Pereira As3oclateJ and will be
built by C.L. l'<ck OmJracllng Company
ol Loo Angeles. ,
Peck built tho lktory UoiCll Banlt
building lo the center, which ts the tallest
structure in Orange c..ioty.
fl,500 for • bulldlng permil Issued
Wedneod•Y· • '!lie building required no public bear·
ings before the planning commisal~ or
city council, Fowler said, becaUJe 1t is
1n an area zoned for b.igh rises up to r.tl
feet tall
Marine Gets
Trial Delay
In Slaying ''They've been afler the city !or y ... to hire a domestic water quality control
Inspector," Wynn Hid. "The Public
Worb Department hu proposed It In Its
budget sev.eral times, but each year the
oouncil has thrown it out.
"It's another silly requirement of the
slate that we have someone 10lely in
charge or the quality of domestic 1t'&ter,"
Wynn said. ....J
THIS IS HOAG HOSPITAL COMPLEX THAT NEW ADMINISTRATOR WILL PRESIDE OVER
Verullles Apartments Are at Upper Left in This Aerial Photo; Park Lido Medical Building at Right
Company spoi<emneo said today the
building, at 660 Newport Center Drive,
will be steel frame with a pre-cast con-
crete exterior to emphasize the grld pat·
tern Conned by the structural steel gird-
ers.
A three-week delay was ordered tc:klay
In the Orafl:ge C.Ounty Superior «Aurt ar-
raignment of El Toro Marine Jared All~n
Wallace on charges of first degret:
murder, kidnap and aMSult with a deadl y
weapon.
He uid he's put the person in the pro-
posed 1973-74 budget, however, because
the council's Water Committee reoom·
mended it
Devlin noted that the new inspector
a1'> will have lbe responslhility of
preparing a muter plan for monlloriIJ&
watu quality u requJr'ed by .... llate
legislation. .
Devlin said Ctlifomia coirts have in-
dlrectly put ............. !he city to ·-utra care in oellq watu to !he public.
"'lbe oouru have ruled thal water
purveyors ""' liable for !he quality of
their water," he aatd. "Any oon-
lamlnatloo-caused problems cannot be
considered u 'act of God,' "he said.
l'rem Pqe I
PRISONERS. ••
prisontt ~m program past the half·
way PoinL Jt would leave at least 275
American soldiers, eight U.S. civilians
and one foreign civilian still in Com·
lbunlst bands.
One or the West Germans to be freed
Sunday is .Monika Schwinn, a nurse cap-
tured near Da Nang !Dur Y<Ars ago, a
Viel Cone ollldaJ said. Sbe ii bellmd to
be the oo1y....,,.. beld pnsaoer.
Under strmg P"""" from the United
States, the llol1h Vle!naWM bocted
down on the.ir attempt to llnk the
American POW ~ to l&sDes lnl:ludina
impiW.d protoctlm and bouslDi for
their J>OOP\e In South Vietnam. The
United States angrily Pointed out that the
Parla P.Ol<O .........,t Ues the lldlQner
rcleue only to !he withdrawal Of Allied
troops from South Vietnam.
, The development folloW<d by II bours
In 8IJllOUJlOeJ1ltt in Patil that North
Vietnamese Fo1<ip Minlater Ntro'll
Duy Trinh 1131Ured Rogers that all
prisoners would be returned within the
IO-<iay deadline.
l'l'OtllPqel
SEIZURE •.•
the Sudan before Noel arrived, were
among thou ltiled at a reception given
by the ambusador or S.Udl Arabia.
Bray said that some members of the
diplomatic community attending lhe re-
ception have been released, but there
were no details.
"The party was attended by a sub-
stantial but undetermined number of
diplomat& residing in Khartoum ," Bray
said.
"At some point In the reception a 1roup
of terrorists not otherwise klentifled to us
toot aiotrol of the premises for purposes
not yet entirely clear."
He said the State Department 11 re-
maining in touch with the American
Embassy. Embassy authorities have been
in a:mtant communication with the Su-
danese government, he added.
Word ol the lncid<nt came from flllll>-
ben ol the diplomatic cmmnunlty Who
had been releued.
OIAHI CO.I.ft •
DAILY PILOT
ffM .Ori .... C.0.11 DAILY ~ILOt, •llh """k'll
II alllftbl ... 1119 N-~ ....... 11 P!i*ll"*I to/
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r1lt .Olllom t <t -II•"""'-M-•Y fllr°""illl
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u....,11,.g!O!I 8e•t!I "ounloin Volley, l.lvu""
•lllUI. 1rvl"tl!o-•-ck 1nd kl! c "'""" .. '
S111 J111n C1pl1!r"'° "' 11,..1, ~lot>ll
fdl!lof> IJ D\Jl:ilkl!td S..lvr01y1 -S\lfld1r1.
riw Pl'll'C'.1,..1 "'*llil'llflO oMn1 1, •t JJt Wnt
lhY Str'9fl, c .. 11 ·~. ~lll'llm<I, n.1'.
Rob1tl N. W114 ,... .....................
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'"-•• 11: .... 11 ·-Thofti11 A. Mwphl110 --L ,,._, Kriot
N""'*1 9ffdl CJiy l:lfllw ---)))) N1wperl l o11l1•1r4
M1lll11t AcUr .. u ,,0, a.. 1171, tJMoJ --Coll• MMI: :al W.t ... , llrWI ...._,, t H<"': m ,.,_,, AVM\OI Hllllf"'9""' "4ocll1 11111 hid! ........,...,
$111 C.,._lt: »S Horii\ l t c.. ... i... ....
T.r.,•1•1 1714J MJ-4J21
C'-HW Mlld1 ... MWfi71
~Wtt. 1f71. Or•• C'-.1 ""*""1111 ~. Ht _. .,.,.~, I""'!"°"'"'· .. ".... ......... ., ~"""""" """"' "*t' M •• I b/ wttlwM .,_... ,... ....,..,~--·
a..-(llM ............ " c.... ~
e.......... ~ " """"' llM ...... , ..... U.IJ ......,., .....,., ___ tlM.......,.
l'rot11 Pqe I
HOAG ...
Jorgensen said.
1bere are sa beds at Hoeg now, but
that figure will increase to more than 450
beds whef'J the new $11 million, JI-story
tower addition is completed in about a
year.
Be/ore joining Good Samaritan Hospl-
·tal, Parter held the poaitioos of vice pres-
ident and adminbtrator of Soul!l!ide
Hospital in Mesa, Ariz:., where be organiz..
ed and 111pervlsed the Initial comtructlon
or the new 275-bed Desert Samaritan
Hospital.
Parker also served for five years as
assistant administrator at Northwestern
Hospital in Minneapolis, Pt1inn., where he
was responsible fQr the operation oC that
480-bed private hospital
He is a member of DWMrou! ho!pital-
reJated associations and last year served
as presJdent ol !he Arirona Hospital
Auodation.
A native of Salt Lake City, Parker
received his bachelors degree in business
from !he Uoivemty of Utah and his
masters degree in h o 1 p i t a i ad·
ministration from the University of Min-nesota.
Jorgensen said Parker, his ·~~' ~dne
Ud -lauicblldroo 1'ill-la the Newport Beach ar0o.
He aaid that durtng the next two
, months Parker ii scheduled to malr,e
several trJps to Newport Beach to ae-
qualnl himself with the hospital and the
community.
Parter is attending a hospital con-
vention in the east and could not be
reac.bed for comment lhis morning.
Irvine Lutheran
College to Get
Clrief From USC
The l.Aitheran campus pastor at USC
has been named acting president or the
Lutheran College at Irvine which is
scheduled to open ln September, 1974.
The coUege bas reserved a site in Turtle
Rock, overlooking the U n i v e r s i t y
RegionaJ Park.
Rev. Charles L. Manske will serve as
vice president ror academic affairs and
actin.J president or the Missouri Synod's
four-year Uberal arts college for which
architectural plans have been readied
and $2 million authorized for con·
st.ruction.
Manske bu resigned bis post at USC
where for IS years he bu served 11 cam-
pua putor and since 19114 ., public rela-
tions diroct« f0< the aynod'a Southern
Calllomla -· Dr. Arnold G. Kuniz, pmidmt or the
Southern Ca111orn1a Dlllrict or tho church
body and chaimwl ol the Irvine college
boanl, Hid MllllU will be the college'•
first teacher arid administrator. He wlU
have broad rea:ponslbililies for recruiting
faculty and . sludents at well .. as
establishing communUy relations.
'•Our hopes for the establishment or
Lulheran College at Irvine have received
a substantial boost with the acceptance
by Rev. l\.1anske as its founding ad-
ministrator." Dr. Kuntz said .
The Irvine campus will repla~ the
California Coocordla College at O.kland
u the Missouri Synod's major western
colltge. C&Jlfomla Concordia will clole in
July 1973 after 87 year1 of continuous
operation.
Rev. Manske boldl a master ol divinity
degree from Concordia Seminary, St
Louis: a master of arts degree rrom
Washington University, St Louis and ls a
doctoral candidate at USC In the field ol
social ethics.
He and hi~ wife, Barbara, and lhtir
children, David and Christine, plan lO
move to Irvlnt thls summer.
Anionist Surrenders
SAN FRANCISCO I UPI l -A lfl.year-
old boy has surrendered to poli~ a1 the
th ird member of the "Flames" -a •ll·
5tyled arton group whlcll boasted of aet·
tlng 15 firea In the city's Fillmore
Dlstttct. 'Ibo 10\llb ..... -w-clay Into youth iUldloce Cllller. Two
other teen-agers ,..,.. ....ted thla ....it.
Tim Leary
Gets Writing
Materials
SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) -over
government objections that they might
be used as weapons, drug advocate
Timothy Leary won the right to paper,
pens and a typewriter in his cell at a
state prison near here.
Leary appeared in court chained and
guarded by seven men, and asked
Superior Court Judge Richard F. Harris
for permission to mingle witll other
prisoner! and to write in his cell.
.. l don 't see why I should be punished
when I haven't been convicted. l ha ve
never been a violent man. I've never lU-
ed violence. In fact, my escape . _ . was
reiresented as a walkaway," Leary told
!he court.
lnry'1 request to mix with other
prilonen was detlled, 81 ·WU bis request
for a tape recorder. He is ecbeduJed to go
on lrial here for escape from the prison
In 1970. He also faces drug charges lo
Orange County. ·
Sernees Friday :
For Bapk 9Q'lctal
A. G. Meyer, 63 .
Funeral services will be held Friday at
11 a.m. for Archibald Geor1e Meyer, 63 ,
vice prnident and general manager of
the Laguna Hills Leisure World United
Calllomla Bank. •
Mr. Moyer was found dead in bis hotel
room In Santa Ana Tuetday. The cor-
oner's office said he died of natural
causes.
Services will be held at the Waverly
Chapel in Fairhaven Memorial Park with
in terment to follow in Inglewood Park
Cemetery.
~fr. Meyer's lxldy was discovered by a
desk clerk who checked when the bank
of ficial failed to answer his telephone.
He had resided at the Royal Irin since
January after fire destroyed his apart·
ment in Sa nta Ana on Christmas da y. tie
was on vacation at the time.
A native of Montreal, Canada, the
deceased served in the U.S. Navy froni
llM.l to ·~-J-le first was employed by United
California Bank in 1M8 and worked in
various other Southern C a I i f o r n I a
branches lmtil appointed head of the
Leisure World branch In September, 11113.
Survtvw1 Include a brother R-11 or
Anaheim and a sister, M&rtha Singer of
Florida. .
Funeral arrangements &rt being handl·
ed by the Donegan Funeral Home In
Orange. .
Mr. Me• was a member of the
Rotary Club of Lagiln1 HULi-Leisure
World and a paat member of the Sad-
dleback Valley Chamber of Commerce.
• Girl Held 14
Years for Dad's
KiJJing of Tot?
COLUMB US, Ohio (UPI) -Rachel
Venlin was I when her lather told POiice
she klllfd her smaller hnllhlr wl\h ii lead
pipe.
Soon aftuwanl, the lilU. girl w11 tent to Columbus State Institute, a bolpltal
for the mentally retarded. Thert'lhfl ha1
stayed for 14 years.
Now 22, she Is being corudclared !or
relea11e. Authorities have lf..AlTM!d that
htr father, not she, wa1 responsJble for
the d(.ath of her brother.
Mn. Edwatd Verdin of Hamilton, Ohio
told police last month that her husband
fatally struck his 4·year-old ton with a
pipe when he crled for a drink of water
lo lale 1958. · ·
She said she had not gone to police
bel°"' because he threatened to kill her.
Edward Verdin , 47, his been charled
with manslaughter and Is .to 1ppou Jn
llamiltoo Municipal Court Friday.
-
PRISONER'S WIFE'
'llAPPIEST GIRL'
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. !AP) -The
wife of a Navy flier listed among the
next contingent of prisoners-of war to be
released by North Vietnam today pro-
nounced herself' and her daughters
"about the happiest girls in the U.S.A.''
Charlotte Christian, wile or Navy Lt. .
Cmdr. Micha el D. Christian.. was among
.. the first POW wives to be notified by tbe
government that her husband would gain
his £reedom over the weekend.
Chrlstiin, a native or Huntsville, Ala ..
was shot -down over North Vietnam April
24, 1967. He and his wile have three
daughters.
W asl1ington Gets
Welfare Clrief
Of California
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -. Robert B.
Carle!Ofl, California director of social
welfare for two years, today was named
special asslataot on weUare matters for
•"-U.S. n......tmt>ntor !Jealth, Education i7d We~r-:crr"!O . « < •'
HEW Secretary Caspar w. Weinberger
announced the appointment of Carleson,
42 , lqJllO newl• craaif,<J.Plilll"1!pf atfff
ilaiscii' betweon' the 'lellei:ll deptrfm<nt
and-governors of the 50 states.
Weinberger said Carleson will be
respomlble specilically for providing
assistance to governors in weUare
management and reform initiatives at
the state level, and giving them guidance
on the federalization of the adult welfare
casetoad for aged, bli.od and disabled
persons.
"He has a proven record of ac-
compllahment lo this field and tin help
govemon initiate their own ~welfare
reform limilar to the efiort be din!cted
10 succeas!ully 10< Gov. Reagan in
caJifornia," Weinberger said.
Weinberger said that In Carleson'a two
years 1n the state po1t 265,000 perJODS
were dro~ped from California welfare roles wiille ."uonts to tnily oeed1
fam.ihes rose rf. percent.." ·
Carrier Comes Home
ALAMEDA (UPI) -The aircraft car-
rier Midway. the flr1t major war1hip to
leave Vietnam waten since the slgnlng
of the ceue-fire, retttrns here Saturday.
The 64,000.too vessel has completed its
hlnth tour ol duty lo !he Tonkin Gull.
.. Overall exterior appearance will blend
esl helically with the three existing Ir-
vine C.Ompany-built towers in financial
plaza," the spokesQJ8D said. ·
The filth high rise -the Avco build·
ing -WBI not built by the Irvine: Com-
pany. A sizth major olflce structure,
PacWc Mutual Life, occupies a modern-
istic low-rise structure at one end ot the
plau.
The new "'-will be equipped with a
lully"8utomated fire sprinkler and lllDOl:e
coolrol aysten that the company N)'l ls
the llnt ol Ila kind In an Orange Qxmty
high rtse. The ay>tem will ocmply with
lhe latest federal lire safety Jaws.
The lire salety system will be moni-
tored by a central computer system oo
the main floor and smote 9ensOrl in the
air inlets or each floor will activate the
system.
Other features, such u emergency
power supply and a 12,000-gallon fresh
water reservoir will also be incorporated,
the spokesman said.
Newport Beach Building Director Bob-
by Fowler said today !he permila and
r,.. oo !he building will mean a ntum to
the city of nearly $65,000 with an addition-
al 125,000 going to the Orange Cowlty
Sanitation District !or sewer aervlce.
Fowler uld $45,000 ol the total will be
In esclse 1ues levied by the city on all
new ccmtruct1cm and the remainder is
divided between other fees Including
O.ptimiats Slat.e · .
Basketball Skill
Co1itest for Kids
The optimist Club of Costa Mesa ' has
scheduled a baskelball skill contest for
bo}'ll aged I to 13 this Saturday at the
Upper Bay Branch of the Harbor Area
Boys Club.
Known as the Optimist Tri-Star
Basketball Contest, It wiJJ coocentrate on
the three bulc llkllls ol the hoop game -
passing, drtbl>llng and abootlng.
Boya wiO compete In six groups against
boys of their own age. Boys Club Direc-
tor Lou Yantom says all a boy needs to
compete ls !he desire and a pair of gym
shoes. .
Competttlon gm under way. at I p.m.
on •the Boyl Club ""'"' at 2111 Tustin Ave., Colta Meu.
Trophies in gold, sliver and bronr.a will
be awarded to Iba flnt three places In
each age grouP and every participant
will . receive his own personalized 1e9re
card.
Eolry blankl are available It the Boys
Club Central and Upper Bay Braochu,
the Costa Meu and Newport lleodl city
recreation centers, or at tbe cootest .site
on the day of the competition.
Judge James Turner granted tbe delay
to give the tall Marine'.s lawyer time to
e:1amine a transcript containing allega-
tions that he kidnaped a woman Feb. 4
and raped and murdered another fi ve
days later.
Wallace, 26, will remain 1n coonty jail
with bail denied until his March 20 a~
pearanoe. He was indicted Wednesday by
!he Grand Jury oo thrff felony counts.
Wallace was arrested Feb. 11 in
Mtsslon Viejo by ~n lnvestlptlog
the alleged kidnaplng aeven days earJler
of Carole Ami Rowan,, 24, JD X-ray
teclmldao at a &in Clemmie lmpllal.
Miss Rowan told deputies the man 1be
identified as Wallace posed as a. police
officer and ordend her to pull over near
the Beacli Cities offramp or !he Sao
Diego Fr<eway.
Wallace held a part Ume clvillan job as
a security guard with tbe Bums Intema·
tiooal Security Company.
Miss Rowae said her assailant held her
at gunpoint and tr1ed to ~ her
while warning her thst abe was being
held as a suspect in a crtm1nal in-
vestlgatloo.
She told officers abe llllllOled to free
benell and ran from tho car When
Wall1C<1 stopped for a traffic algoal.
Officers who booked Wallace m those
charges added lllllrder to the Uri wben
!hey llWched blm and allegedl.y laund •
checllhool: Ud wallet belcqing to Mrs.
Nanette Post, a FOIDllaiu Valley liarmatd
whose body was fotmd Feb. 9 tn Hun-
tington Beach.
Tl!ey dalm Wallace II tho 11W! ,wjlo
raJ*I Mn.~ afla' Ille left hor lob al
a Garden Gi'cWe tavern and then stuffed
her body under a juniper bush in a
resi*tntial traet'.' 1 ··" •·
Wallace was brought to Superior Colirt
last week for an wiacbeduled Iden-
tification when a defense attomey In
another rape trial told the jury the pros-
ecution had the wrong Marine in the
defendant's chair.
Wallace wu ordered to stam shoulder
to ihouldtr with Camp Pendletoo Mmoe
Mark David Bell, 22, and was visibly
relieved when a Costa Mesa wal~
raped In lluolilJlfOo Beach positively
identified Bell u bu attaae.
The jury In that trial la toaay lo 11'
third day of deliberatiGas.
Fl'Olll Pqe J
OBSCENE ••.
means. There Is a real attempt to use
. humor and a kind of aopblsticated loollng
with ses. It ls not a deep-breathing film."
Tyler satd In his decision that be fOIDld
the dominant theme and "the only theme
i! an appeal to prurience in Bel'. It ls
hard-eore Pornography with a vengeance.
"This ls one throat that deserves to be
cu~" be aaid. "I nadUy perform the
operation in lindlng the defendant IUftty
as charged."
Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LlnON-is Best!
'
WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
ONLY UTTON OFfERS YOU • • • * Yeer1 of Commercial exp11.ri•nce
°{:( The biggest oven .• , 1.2 cu. ft. * An easy-to-clean liner.
°{:( An ea1y-open door latch.
-(:( Automatic defrost feature.·
REMEMBER THIS PLEASE!
BEFORE YOU IUY!
• wlh...,..~c•l ..... tllt....,.....,_, ....... .....
• ..,.. " lidt" ..... ..., ....... .,,..... e wlH ...._ y_. uh......_ .................... -. e wUI ,,.,_.,._,..._.,.,_fr.-,. ..... M _. ...
........... ff ................. -., ...... . ...... ,.. ......... ~ ............ .... • lit...., te .,.,... ... Uft9ill ..... .,.. • I I fl IP& ·--..................................... ...,... .,, .... .. ...... ,.. ................. ..., .. ... ,,..,.... ......... ~ e .......... unoM,_Ull.._DUNL».
AND wmt A UTTON
YOU CAN IROWN,
SEAR AND G!\JLL TOO!
. 90 DAY
Member of
CaJHornl•'• Largod CASH
Coope111tlw l"YI"' 'Wl!H "'"°"' Cln>up Wllh The CHt<T
vo1 ...... luyl .. m
m 'arAIMCIA"911Rwtrof110$tw• ~ .. ._......... . .
1815 MEIPORT BlYD. Dmtawn Costa.Mesa -Phne ~770 '
•
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'
Lawsuit
'Award Winning' Attorneys Found Club
SAN P'JIANCISCO (AP) -Two dozen
men are members of one of lhe mott ex·
~W!ldd.__
The common bond In the. Inner Circle
ol Advocates Is not Just that lhoy are
flnanc:iaUy su«esllul. Tbey are lawyen
who have won jury damage awards for
single persooal Injury or dealh dllimJ ol
$1 million or 'more.
Inner Circle had lls lnceplion bere last
July and since tben -by Invitation only
-bas grown from tho founding lour to
24.
0 WE IUD KNOWN each other for
some lime, were opeciallsls In this field
and decided an exchange of views, in-
formation and researcl1 would be of in-
estimable value to our work and QU(
clients," said attorney Bruce Walkup' of
San Francisco.
lacked the uperlence tO be consldet..i a
top trial lawyer i.n our specialty."
Members 3Cattered in cities over the
nalMm carefulJy select nominations of
prospective members. B e f o r e ac--
ceplanct, other COWlselors and jurists
are cootacted to detennine if the person
meets the st.a.odards.
ln addition to trial work. lnner Circle
members also spend considerable time
giving lectures to law groups and
medical and lndustrial meeUngs. They
aJso are setting up law scholarships and
othm-awards from initiation fees and
dues.
"Almost every group seems to have
their advocates today," said Grand. "But
there is no one to represent the injured ,
crippled and blind. That's one goal which
Inner Circle has."
But the three stressed that not only the
individual client benefits from the
awards they have obtained.
"l doo1 knOw what my lee will bl in •
my !alt case, but It will be l<I by tho
court," said Walkup. ''Most of our cases
iR\'OIVe minors ori:no::m~-and-tbe--
""'" deddes r ....
"BUT 'AlE l'otONTR we spent oa trlal
was only the tip of the Iceberg," be ex-
plained. "I lived with this' case two
years, day after day. in the office and ~t
home. Everyone of the 14 attorneys m
my office participated in some way.
There were countless hours spent 1n
research and trav.J.
"Most of us are financially successfUJ."
Walkup continued, "and I could spend
my time lolling on the beach. But it
woold be wasteful when I could be help-
ing someone. Each case is a worthwhile
valuable experience."
~lllnese 11' all' to Fall? ...
..... Walkup, Richard Grand of 1\IC$011,
Ariz., E. Gerald Litvin of Philadelphia,
and James Bocea.rdo of San Jose were
founders of the club.
The first three met in Walkup's offi ce
recenUy to plan lbe Inner Circle's third
meeting in Tu<;son in April. The second
meeUng was. held in Chicago "in Sep-
tember.
"WE FEEL TirE PUBLIC has gained
from our majo r victories," said Grand.
"Our verdicts have been followed by ef-
forts to improve hospit al care. changes
in products such aS Oammable material
or drugs and even changes m highways."
· Litvin said efforts to get something
done about a "killer highway" .in his city
were fruitless Until he won his case. The
street was closed and cemented without
delay.
Merital Hospital
Closures Eyed
By Two Soloris -:ne-Balboa Bay Club apartments may make .
: way for a public, marine-oriented recreation facility
would lose its lease-permanently ~and be converted
into a public faciljty. The club apartments, labeled
by solrie·as the "Chinese Wall," have been ctiticized
for ·blocldng the view along Pacific Coast Highway.
when its lease on city ill!ld expires in 1998. If the
land use element is ~ the entire 14-acre dub Tbe name Walkup would not be
-by many newspaper read-
ers, bul they wooJd recell the """'°'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state's top
mental health official says he lrJt:S: "oo
problem at all" with a propoeed state
law establishing firm local review pro-
cedures over the closure of state
hoopitals. Lido Man Sued
Over Defacing
Of Beach Si_gns
, .\ Lido Isle resident identified by the
Lido Isle Community Association as the
ri1an who damaged and de£aced two·signs
on their private beach property has been
s~ by the ~roup for $20,000 in Orange
County Superwr Court. ·
The association alleged that Robert N.
Wright of i71 Via Jucar and "Does One
through Four" were responsible for
damage that µtcluded repeated attempts
to destroy the signs and the tossing of
one signboard ioto Newport Bay.
Both signs bear the legend: "Private,
beach playgl'QUlld, J,ICA mimben ooty,
doga, boats, (fioiicl (lrohfblled from 8:30
a.m. to 9 p.m."
They are localed at tho jtmctDn! ol Via .IJ<lo Nord and the north .cbannel ol
Newport Bay and at the Intersection or
Via Genoa and Lido Nord. · ,f""° lawsuit dalma that Wrtgbt has ii· """'1 tho aSBOCiatloo's demands thal be
refrain from Interfering wilh lhe signs.
Youth Dies in PE
·SAN DIEGO (AP) -Felix Gutierrez
III, a 15--year-old ninth-grader, collapsed
and died while rwming on the cinder
track ol Pacific Beach -Junior High
. School during a pbysic:al education class
Tuesday. All auropsy was scheduled.
* . ,.
,.
' . : <.
State Officials ·Deny
Favoritism Toward IBM
• headline about a 13-Y!"lf-Old San Rafael
boy receiving a 14<nilllon damage
award. Kelly Niles, paralyzed and mute
u a result ol a llgbl dµriDg a high achoo!
baseball game, won the award. Tbe
Iosen ......,, a boopltal -· the city m San Rafael, the scboOl -and. their in-
surers.
Git.AND, PRESIDENT OF Inner Circle,
won a $3.2--millioo award for a man badly
burned in a rea~ collision. In
upholding the award, the Arizona
Supreme Court said:
The astronomical awards are what
the news, bul In the eyes ol these
they are not excessive. '
all the hue and cry about a $4-
millioo award when nothin& Is said about
payment for a destroyed jeWner or a
ship?" asked Walkup.
"TllE A WARD MAY SEEM large."
said Litvin, "but when you think of it in
terms of a catastrophic case it isn't. Jn
the [960s a man was awarded $400,000
after being left totally helpless. It seem·
ed enough to last ror the remainder of his
life. But Ut years bas shown ii, to be in·
adequate. The money is gone because the
cost of continuing treatment skyrocketed.
Now he's being cared for by the county
and state."
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Reagan
administration haS rejected charges that
it bad shown favotitism toward IBM in
bidding to establish a new '40 million
state computer center.
BUT FINANCE Direetor Verne Orr
slid the giant computer firm doe::! enjoy
"a tremendous advantage'' because of Its
dominance in the field and current
bulljness with the state.
A team of state officials threw out
Univac's bid for the first phase or a new
aystem of consolidated computer centers
a weet agO: Univac failed to meet the
state;.s needs, Orr said.
That ·1eaves IBM as the only bidder on
the center, which wruld serve a variety
of state agencies. The state bas until
March 23 to ~dvise IBM, currently facing
a federal antitrust lull, whether 11' bid
will be •ceeoted• 0rr iala r~ bJ!· testlmooy belore the .<ssembly Waya an~
Means Committee. '
THE CO.MMl'ITEE reyiewing Gov.
Ronald Reagan's request for $25 million
in the 1973--74 ~et for computer
syatema. Tbe $40 millloo coot for tho flr8t
of. four planne:d consolidated computer
centers would be spread over a four-year ·
period. The entire system Is ultlmately
upecled to cost $200 million.
Orr rejected a rePort by the state
auditor general that IBM competitors
were discouraged from bidding on the
project because they knew "of tbe state's
original pteference for IBM."
Orr suuested that if the committee
suspects T.We•ve rigged this .in any way,"
it should subpoena the officials who made
the decision to·reject the Univac bid.
\
Computer Fraud
Checks 'Success'
SACRAME~(AP) -Tbe head of
California's welfare system says com-
puterized lracldng down ol wellare cheat·
.... ·~ to be producing multi. Robert B. Carleson said Monday that
the rate ol "apparenUnud" among wel·
fare recipients dropped from about 41
percent in the last i&ree months Of 1971
to about 26 perrient in the llr8t <(Uarter o(
last year.
Carleson said it would take a few more
comparisons to be sure, but that he be--
u....i the dilference WaB largely because
recipients bad begun giving moh! reliable
information to welfare authorities.
I
"The worth and dignity of the in-
dividual is a touchstone in our society. U
anything Is to be COD8idered socially
unaccepµtble it would be for an in·
di vldual wrongfully Injured by another 19
receive less for pain and suffering that
thal lllllOWll to w11icb be b enUUed."
One Boccardo dien~ bom tho court
said "is among the living dead," was
given a $3.!knillim verdict.
What about the fees?
LA Man Guilty
On Heroin .Rap
Litvin won a $3-mlllion. auto accident
case and before bis most recent success
Walkup bad a $3.&<nillim verdict in Los
Angeles.
But Ille lounda'S note t1iere are other LOS ANGELES (AP) -A Mardi 19
<(Ualillc:atloos for Inner Circle ....,.. seotenclng date bas been set !or a Los bmb!p -l>eoldeo die $1 !lllUloo plm -Arigeles. cabinetmU.e< l<wld guilty ol
award, wblc:b maS! be fly jury and not 'pwessina an Olllmated '1.5 million
a seUlement and for ooe person only worth o1 heroin !or SQje.
· A Su!!<riOI' Court jury Mooday found
"EXPERIENCE, JIEPUTA119N, in-Ri&oberto Campos Enriquez, 29, guilty
tegrlty and the ethics are prime COi> all<!' a -k lrial .. Judge Mark Brand-
sideratlom when we con.sider the ler revoked Enriquez' bail after a ~
qualifications of an attorney ~born we cutor said Enriquez received a telephone
have invited to submJt an' application," threat on his life during the trial.
said Grami "We've lwDed down a pn> Aulhoriiles said the 10 pounds ol 40
specilve member who bad wm a fl,· percent pure heroin wu 1iorth $1.5 mll-
million award because we felt be still Hoo when sold oo the street.
William ~. dln!clor ol the Stale
Deponment ol Menial Hygiene, made
tho statement ht answer to a question
posed by Assemblyman John Burloo, ([).
San Francisco), chairman of a n
Assembly Ways and Means bearing on
bospltal closures ..
Both Burian and Assemblyman Frank
Lanterman, Republican dean on men~J
health matters, said in interviews Tues-
day their stalfJ would begin work
together on a subcommittee bill setting
up a review process.
Tbey said tho bill would spell ou_I jilt!
how local parents groups and menill
heallh organizations woold lei lheJ' ministration know their sentiments
proposed cloltlre:i or mergers ol ell
facilities. ~
In testiJno!!l Wednesday, Mayer aJal/
backed olf IODlewbal from the Reag!;
admlnislratim's earlier stated IOliii
range goal ol clooinll all stale fadllllel
!or the mentally nlanled b y
19112 -calllng the plan "aomethlna .......
lalldng about" nlher llwl a firm gool.
Vatican Scores Film
VATICAN CITY (UPl) -The olllclal
VatJcan nenpaper L'Osservalore Ro-
mano has attacked .-rt Ll.lnu BUCb 1s
"Last Tango . in Paris" for maJdnJ Che
penoo d!solute and dlsmls.1ing ralfon.
alily. An article signed by RaJmoodo
· Manzlni, managing editor ol the news-
paper, did not mention Tango by name
but discussed a movie ''well.known
prejudicially for its violent eroliclam.''
WE'VE GOT
IT ALL
TOGETHER
DAILY PILOT
' *That includes even ·San Diego and Santa
Barbara ch.annels.-'Total Television'
(\
~es, now you can find oUt what's on 5,an Diego's tel-ivislon cha11nels '· 8 and 10
• -and eve_11 on Santa BarbClra's Channel l .. ~n the week's worth of listings tou
get every Sclturday in TV WEEK and in the daily logs in the DAILY PILOT. wall
the lielp_ of our friends at TV WEEK, the DAILY PILOT got it all together. Now
• we offer reader,, especially those in the South Orange Coast area and all others
on community cables who can pull in all the signals there are In the Southland,
'Toted Television', the most c~mplettt newspaper listing of television · f~re available.
'
Every Sunday in TV Week-Every Day in Daily TV Log
' . '
)
• ...... .
•
if DAIL V PILOT
;<
;
J
·AMBLER
.
TUMBLEWEEDS by Tom K. Ryan
NON WAN'TUM CHOIJ! 1 \ HOH J.IKUM I.II..'. MANS!
t J HAilJM PUTS! .
l l .
i vM.:ef
J WA'®>
......... ~-:.--...
6•1
FIGMENTS
DC$[]
~
~n
~
NANCY
,,...~ DON'T BE SO
LAZY--·CHOP A
HOLE IN THE ICE
AND FISH LIKE .
,:rHE OTHER BOYS
AW, ITS
TOUGH
WORK
CHOPPING
A BIG'
HOLE
TODAY'S CRDSSIDBD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 TvorLee J.
S T arrv
'tO Gone by
14 Ripening
agen1
15 Curling
surfeces
16 ln1t1umen1
17 Where funds
ere kept
19 Immunizing
agents
20 Weited on
21 Trucker
23 State
formally
25 L1rge a.c.
salmon
~ ~1;~edn~llev ,
34 Charged
particle
35 Shon sleeps
37 Weather.
man's wo1d
38 Fastener
39 Conl1de11tiill
1r'lformat1on
42 [lpjrP
43 Cena<n deer
45 Pait of the ,,,
46 R111e· of
France
•B · ····water:
T1oubled
SO Pestered
52 Come to 1n .. ,
I ' ..
11"
"' ... ~ 11 . 1l ,.
" " "
" ,. ..
I .. ..
,.·, " ;tt .. " " ..
'
-
54 Rjver of
Rutsia
Yesterdav'• Puzzle Solved:
55 Dance of The
Islands
59 Set of four
63 Article
64 Gershwin hit
66 Central
church
section
67 A11tbian
chieftain;
Var.
68 loronto's
Casa
69 Ptonoun
70 Mike& loans 71 Engltsh town • 13 Rush
0 headlong
OWN 18 lucky
1 Felines numbers
2 C1ue! person 22 Male l1uman1
3 Bock, for one 24 Eittensive
4 Swaggering la1m I
drsplav ol 26 Island of
courage • lla!v
5 Qve•lv 27 Combination
modest 28 Hilving
people t wrin~les
6 L•ght ~ 29 South
lirrl'ie , An1er1 clln
1 M1h!~r\' lnrh<1n
~1111ad 31 Preposition
8 Tvnr of ... 32 A1vl'!rof
11.1ri~hon11ng
'I Author
10 H;",.
11 "l~oton·
•.. 1"
12 P11ntul
s ' '
" II
Europ,.
33 Surf 1au1;c
J6 l<•nd of
ins11tu11on
40 The marriage
ceremony
• 9 10
" 19
~ '2
N
"
41 1okf!r
o44 Tropicaf
Asian pl1nt1
o47 WashlngtOn
city
"9 Aoglo.saxon
lf!ll&f
51 Oi!.suadea
53 Ft!altu!r
55 lmoty
56 N'!vada's
ne111hbor
<..7 Son of Jacob
58 Word of
.Jgreemenl
60 Debauchery
fil Ammunition:
Inform.JI
62 Man oj the
cto1h
65 Medicine:
Abbr.
II 12 "
fi 31 l2 " .,;,. ,.o-~ .
" ,, " ~ .. .. i! .. " -.. Ii ,. " .
" ~· " , iii' • ,. l.,, " .. .. 12 .. .. . . ' . ,. 1'
~[3
~
~il [1[1,~
I CAN'T
STAND
LAZY
BOYS
OKAY,
I'LL PO
IT
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
by Al Smith
.!UST IN CAS<O
IT GETS ~'.4'llllf .;r~!
il
by Dale Hafe
by Emie Bushmiller
WHAT ARE YOU
FISHING
FOR '2 "
MISS SPENCER 15 OUT ON TtiE (;ROUNDS
SOMEWHERE! WE'LL LOCATE HER IH A
FEW MINUTES! WILL 'r'OIJ PLEASE PUU.
YOUR CAR UP TO ~SIPE,
MR. SILVESTER?
t41SS PEACH
.i
I • l •
DICK TRACY
•
' DOOLEY'S WORLD
cto."f'!
a;r! r at:r·
'
r
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
·:
•· by Charles M. Schulz .-..--.....;..--..:.
by Harold Le DoUJC
I COULDN'T UNDERSTAND YOUR tlUSBAND'S
PHOl'4E MES$A6E lO HE., L'r'Nt<t! HE WANTED
'IOU PACKEb AND ReAPY TO LEAVE!
WHY? HE. HAS HIS OWN PLAHC! IT'S
HOT M Tl\OIJGll M! MUST~· A CEftTAIH PLl6KT I
by Mell
' .
-""
by •Chester Gould
~El oet.IVEllTl<E
~AND RECONNOITl!R
TM! PU>.:E. 'TMl!N WI!
WILL RVSM IT. ;,-:....... ......
'
--
by Roger lnsdfleld. •
~!]:!': ~--=-!
-.; , A ly Charles lonolli-. :'
~---'-----..., a!L ~ ~'*"'"" '
by Fent Johnson
lmlE• "TE!>l>Y;:,
You HEAi<!> HIM-
by R09er lol ..
THE GIRLS
DE~NIS THE MENACE
-i I
'
•
l
•
1 .
..
. . .... -.. ' • I
• •
• Oifa~ge 'CC?!0 • i /
Today's Final •
VOL 66, NO. 60, 3 SECTIONS, 38 Pf.GES . THURSDAY, MARCH 1, 1m c
Costa ··Mesa Jubilant Oyer fairview Accord ..
A paidlue _.,.m !or Ille 2$7.....,
PaJrview llegjooa1 Park site l<Jdoy WM
greeted -jubilalioli by Colla llesa.cJ.
ty ol!ldu .
Tbe poet -._.led W-y by
tbe -l'lll>lic . Worts Board and Orwif• County . Boanl ol Supemsan
~ . .,ftoc/ald. W. Caspen in a ........... al Sacramento.
"l t.bink it's tbe' combination we an ·
-IO bard lor," said Cpsta Mesa Jitaycr Jack Ham0>ett. "It's a fait ao-
->
compll oow, but jllere's a'lol of bard
work that went Into tlils project."
um.. Hammett'• 1n1u.11ve. Colla
-city ollicfaJs -llPllOliatlon for .\be SUJlilus land 0.11t to tile county -
local efforts to acquire tile park ap-
peared doomed ..
The county -sold the perl< property aloog· the Santa Ana River for $3.llllS
million, wbiCh is less than one-half the
market value. Conditions of the sale in-
clude a fllD,500 immediate ~ pay· . . .
• ,
' l1lOlll by1he.<l>lmlf, or I\•• -~ wl!h
the .....inlllg ~ lo.""-pold over 20
· ym ln'lll(lllll iwJJINlilr ol$118,U7.
Vioe M0)'6t 'flwitd'I'. Jai<lan deocrll>-
ed tile paq ,. ... mi *" In the -
-of opm space." Ile said that ...
qulsltioo of ll>t propeH1 repr-•
mllestone adllevemerit --bis and the COtlDty government were able· to
agree on in investment for the benefit of
the people,:' '
Councilman Alvin Pinkley lauded coon-
. -
ty offldab !or dolnl •on out-UC
job" In llflCOl!alhlC the purdla-. lie ad-
ded that.belp rocemd -tile &lftia
lfigb ScbOol Ecoloa' O!mmiU... ...
otber mvilw••..maJista was in-
otl "'¥1tal In --tbe --being~-.-. PW. ... In deY<lop the n1tmoper-ti.,,. as a
"low activity" port wilJI bWng tnils, a
wildlife preserve, and to maintain an
arcbeological dig on Ille sit..
·Under a separate qreement between ...
Colla ........ the <OUDly, Ille city will
deY<l\JP aboot X ..,,.. of Ille part; Into a
.. big[ activitY' • r e a wbicb mcbles
playing fields and fixlufta loand 00
narmaJ city parts.
Weib9day's Sacmnen&o lelliDn was
dlalted by l'IDmoe J);nctoc Veme On'.
A!IO sitting m Ille Pulllic Worb Board
Wflte La-R--llate diredor ol genenI services. and Asaemblyman
-Badham, of llewport Beach,
legislative representative ..
Supervisor ea.pen gave Jladbam and
Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (11.-llun-
tington Beach) CS<dit lor aidinC In Ille
purchase of Ille valuable part land.
Tbe oupervbor told 111116 olliciab that
the regional part would become an Jn.
legral part ol Ille Santa Ana River G-plan and the county's master •
plan of parka.
He said it would provide open space In
the rapi<Uy growing urtieniU!d area of
Costa Mesa , Fountain Valley, and Hun-
tington Beach.
ree-un a .
• ' .
Sir-• Beleue Aske.d
Guerrilla Group
•
Nabs H~tages
BVUJ!'l1N
mur (AP) -ne -SM11rse radio """ .... -all-Poteoilnta• .-
--Seplemller ·-• -p .... hrelp .,...... It nart.m nan-____ n.t __ ............ rf--. .. -rf __
---WWII&:~~?'' ,, a •P
'W.allllN&ftll (~ -'De -Do>-
.. -... .,. flllt ~ ~
-dl)hn#l llld .. ·-!dol .. rminOil DUlllbllr ol Oilier ....... diplomats have
been ldaed In Xbaitoum by a grdlp of
unidmtiliodterrorisll.
• (Unlled Pms Intematlonal Uld Ille
lemll'isll, were ~ to be Pal ...
-guerrillaa.) Spobslnan ai.rles W. Bl'l,l' said that -If antved U.S. A ............ Cleo Noel
..... George c. Moore, -headed the ~ diplomatic repreoentatioo In
Ille 8"dan belott Noel arrived_ were
umig -aeised at a reception given by Ille anm-ac1or ol'8audi Aral>ia.
•
Judge Declares
'Deep Throat'
Obscene ·in NY
NEW YORK (AP) ~ A Criminal Coon Jodee l<ldoy dOciared the bani-core
pom:cl•pbic film "Deep Throat" to be
the "nadir ol dec3denee" and found It
"llldioputably oboceue by any legal _ ..
ladce Joel Tylor -Ille delmdant ""porotloo guilty of two 00unls of JJl'O'
motlog oboceoily and ruled It could be
. -up-... -tWlce Ille llDlCIUllt ol ' Ille ...,nw .... -ie p._i-11 opened
b!re-lall June. , .. •
Tbe dty bnJogbl Ille obscenity J>l'O'
-lnp apimt Mature Entorpl!se9,
111c.-In· a test case as port of Ila drive to ~ up 1lmes Squaro. 'l'l\e trial WU
beld WI~ a jary:· ·
AaL Diii. Atty. WilJJam Pureoll said
lbe _,,Ille judg'•"'""' -to bad
Ille -.. ol lbe film in Ille city' Tyl«
......... that Ille print' of the Olm bo
tumed ...,. to Ille' Police lleplrtmeot'1
propaty clerk'• -· pending any ..... ~ • Jftvioul .... In Blngbamtoo,
N.V., o jury decided that the l1lm was --· Al the trial bere, Tyler beahl aperta
taR dlamdricallJ OIJPOli"i viewpoints.
Dr. -... dm Haq, • ..,..._Jyat, leltlfied fm' t he .....
eadloD that 111e mm ''If Wltbout any
~vahae wbatloever."
Jlllm critic Artblr ~ b>We•er,
said, •rv1 DOI' a ifea&J film by any
-11left b • real attempt to ...
llmw "*'.kind "·-ted (ooJ1ng ..... n a oot • doepobreathin& film."
'!'JI« $1d Ill hit -that be -Ibo dalllllllnt lhome and "Ille aolJ Iheme
It an appeal ta JjrUrlence In -. It Ill
bonkono -pb)'Wlth I vqeonco.
"'!Ids it ..,. -t tbat d<serV,. to be cut," be said. "I mdit1 perfoml the
--In liodinCU!e defendanl'&UlllY • dllrpd."
-last June and thll JanuarJ, Ille llleattt aid it l!'med about'f7!1,llllO.
A~ l,'1&1.-baTO aoelt
Ille J111n dall11' Ibo-I New Mature
World llleat« ill mldJawn lllaDbattan.
A ....... will tie liildla-1111
., I ol Ille liAe once Ille ~ el• ........ ,__ ........
"l ' •
Bray said that t0me members of the-
diplomatic <OIJllDUDity alWlding the ,..
oeptioo .llave been released, but -e
were no details.
"Tbe party ""' attended by a sub-stantial but .-temilned number of
diplomats. residing: in Khartoum," Bray
said. . -
.. At llOllli Point In lli ... eeevtloil·i -. -. -'"ii' .... -,.i .....
-ol illo =· 7 ... _...._ -""" "'"" ~ . ' Be said tlli Stale Dopartmesst b ,..
malnJng in lolJdn wHb Ille Ameri<an
Embyay. EmMosy autllQritles have been
In -t.J"""'llUD!Cllon with the Su-
-·government, he added.
Word of Ille Incident came from mem-
bers of the diplomatic community who
bad heeu releaaed. .
~~ ,Whe's C~ing . ~--,~~kfut Y~overn
To Medfute
Indian Feud
Costa Mesa police said the driver of,~· stolon car• turned <nff. his light& ·and ttasbecl after blllng to
stnlssned t.lu'.oilkb·a waJI and into the,kitciien-Ot thia. ·make a· left turn onto Hamilton Avenue. PClllce were
home earl~ this morning while :trying, Ip elud~ 'a wiabfe to ,name tine occupant& of the home, who
squaci ca.. Officer Hubert Hogan chased !hi 17· were not home at tine time of the crash. Police ar-
y~ar-l>Jd youth .through west Co6ta .Mesa. ,after re-~ 1lse youth at his own home aboat two hours cel~g ~ groivJer complaint. He said the ~ver.'had • aftef Jbe incident...
•'Tr t: ........ , "tltr·~ . h--· ! · · · ir : \4.. it -· WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (AP) -South
Daiota Se1755. James Aboorezk and
George McGavern Dew to Ille Ptiie Ridge
Indian -.atlon today in an effort to
free 11 hostages held by militant llidi8Jlll
who took over this tiny· community two
days ago.
. . f ., . . ' ~ .
12. Nations Put Initials
'
'Ilse Democnnls anlved by helicopter
at Pine Ridge, some 20 miles southwest·
On Vietnam Peace Accord
ol Ille enibottled baml~ alter llyfng to PARIS (AP) -The foreign ministers
lb!elr home stat. from Washington. Tbey ol 1.2 governments, including Ille world'•
planned to Ja~ at Wounded Knee, but superpowers, initialed a n i n e -po i n t
-llT ~ Ille advlce of federal · declaratloo toc!ar ·endi>rslng the Vietnam <8~ who adviled lhem. oot to Dy . peace agreement and establlsblni a pro-
OYflt the village, whm! the FBI reported ...iw:e f9r,pamfnln,g violations< "~ble ~" Wednesday.· · • secre1a1y ol Stat. William P. Rogen
There was no . Jmmedlat. word oo • and Ille fortigsl miJsllters .ot Britain, =. !'" ...=i:.udre1.::. = Fr§!lce, Cl)jna -~ SovJet Unloo..were
-Ibey would when he •IJll! . ~ thooe who 'lnitlaled the documell~
McGoveril anlvr;d. There abo was TIO kicdlier with North and South Vietnam,
......Uat. Indication that a meeting Ille .Viet Cong and the four ""'°ben of '5et•-'tine. aeuators and I n d I an tbe lntemaUooal Commission ol Control -.1or1 1>od been arranged. and Supervision -Canada, Indonesia,
8efoiie leHlng Ellsworth Air Force Poland and Bwsgary.
Bue 1n Rapid Ct:y, Abourezlt said he 'l1>e declaration, pledging Ille 12
l$et ll'!DIANS. P!Zie Z) · .1ovemmenta to keep Ille peace and to
Martha Miffed·
·-..
'Libber' W or~ing i,n ·Whiu House
,· ' . )
WASHINGTON (UPl}-Jlll'Ru~elablUI, a Republican women'•
lib leader, Is working., a White Houae llaft me'mber -and.J4artha
Mitchell ,....nta It.
Mrs. Ruckelabaus, wile of Wllllam D. Rucl:elsbaus, administrator
of the Envln>nmental Protection Aten<J', began wortine Jut week
on a "part.lime" basil for COJlllselOr Anne Armstrong u a lillaon as-
lillanl with wome,n'J &fOUJ>li ' .
lfer appointment was not publicly announced. She. wll1 lie paid
about fl8,000 a year. .
In a telephone call.from New York wlle,n"sbe Ii llV!Dr, fdn,
John N. Mitchell, wile of the former attorney general, toll'UPI:
'Tm lolng to ten you something J resent like bell 1 nRnt that
Jill JlllCkelahaus Is In the White House with Anne Armltron& and all
ber Jlbrnl Jdeu. 1 doa't knew wbo -placed bei In U..polltlon."
Siie dmcrtlzed Mrs. Rucl:el&hada u "way out." •
t
reconvene when any sh: of them lodge a
Complain~ ls to bt lonnally signed Fri-
day at a ""'"""'I' in the IolBnational
\:<Xlfereq<e ·Cmter. '
Foreign -ry MitdzeJI SbaJp ol
. Canada Initialed . the document but
resen'ed bis government'• position with
regard to continued participation In Ille
cmtrol comm'scim..
He said the Canadian g..........,i will
bavo to examine Ille declaration to
detumine whether the commlni(Jn can
operat. effectively. He thttatened earlier
thM Canada ,...Id walk out <1! Ille com-
mission unlea adequat. machinery for
reporting cease-tire Violations w a 1
established.
Tbe ·delcarailaa WU lnammered <llll In
backltage ezpert meetings, with ...,.
iN'$nw mde by bath lidea. Nortli \'Jell5all7 and i1s ,,,.,.....,
allies 'beri6!»ed their prnioal: imhlk!ace tlsot Ille ...._ cauJd only bO recall-
"" bY ,., 7llajodl;J " Ille u dele&-' 1'hla ~hit .. lllvm each side a nlo.
;.]~. nlum, the United States md Ila •suet aa..,.i to Jll<lllloo Ille Viet Oq'• Provisloaal RevoJutionlry Gofflmmal
... lblMledPd --partldponL To -au dle..Solp ,...,,.-. the
final artlCle ol the cleclaratlanl 1111 ... that
111e .-11o not nece1•U1
'~--· ~ ol ~ Communi9t ol>-
fecliops, U.N. Sectttary-Oenenl Kart
Waldbelm -adUlled from eny oellve role In tW peacekeepiag ...._ta.
With wan! -Salgm that Noith
Vietnam told Ille Amerialm It ni .....
to relep90 142 more U.S. priooaen ol
-· 5'ttttar)' ol State Willtam P. 1loeih --1ed-to -tine
plenuy -ol the -this ~
Hoag · Hospitnl.
Names Parker
Admini.strator
A J'l·Y"!"-<1111 ~ AriL, man to.
day .... named adminblrator ol Hoag
Memorial llorpi12I in Newport Beach.
Scott s. -· -has held Ille ...... tlon ol vice presidml ... adminblrator
ol 9""'I -Hospital In Pboenis
for the past two yean, ~ -
William R. lludsoss -resigned under
fire nearty a.rear ago.
I.Gu Kaa. .. -administrator
-.... running the holpital --ton cor-.ed their aean:ll for a ~
mon\ for -. will be promoted lo the
positkm of 3S!IOC'iale admJNstratcr. ao--
conlinC =A. Vi ""'-· ...... dent of Ille board di .........
'Ilse a . ol Parter and Ille
elevation ol Kaa will be effectlve May I,
JorgeDOillll aald.
1bere are Ill beds at lloog now, but
that fiore 1rill incre•s~ to more than 450
beds w1zm the -fll mWion, ll.-Y
.,_. addition It allDjllded In al>oul a
year. "
-joiajac Good -llo!pl-tal. Paster lneld the pooltlom ol vice .,._ -t and administratw ol Southside
Borpltal in -. Am., wlnere he ... -
"" and aapenised the Jnillal -
ol Ille .... mbed ~ -
f!oop'tal -
Paster o1so ......s 1or n .. ,...,. .. -... -.ad 11«1lnreslem ltolPtal ln,MJmieai>olil, Minn., wlnere be .... -'Ille !or the -·tlon ol that
-prime bolpltaL lie It a mornbor af """"'""" hoopltal-
l'dated -and last year -
u .. -a( the -l10171'ital Awmdatlon
A -Jll Sall Lalle Qty, Parbr ftlOl!lwil *Md ... ...,. .. lllh71!' ...
"-tile UnlwnltJ Iii IJlab and lzb
(S. lllbAG, Pip JI
I •
•
Reds Break
Deadlock on
136 Yanks
Ceut ·
INSIDE TOD.4Y
A/In '23 dop ~ his
ID!'eck<d cil1'J)laM ia Ille A relic,
... iiljlU'Cd 11111~ pilot ate fl<•h •I ... of Ju. Ultcc d<lad _..
u<n to •tor olloc. Sec story, Page 4. ..... _
H -• c.11 ..... ., --• -.... --.. ...... • .._C..DM -.. --..: --u ---• ----,.,... . ---• ...... _ " -• " ----" --4> ••
, l "
2 DAILV PILOT C •4•-
New Lis~
Of POWs
Released
Ft'Olll P.,.e I
PRISONERS. ••
' tbeir people In South Vietnam. '1'lle
Unli.d Stales angrily pointed out !hat the
Paris peace agreement Ues the priJooer
release only to the withdrawal of Allied
troops from South Vietnam.
'1'lle development followed by U houn
an announcement in Paris that North
Vietnamese Foreign Minister Nguyen
. Duy Trinh assured llog<n that all
prl..,..,.. would be relurned within the
• lllH!ay deadline.
PRISONER'S WIFE
'HAPPIEST GIRL'
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (APJ -The
wife. of a Navy flier listed amoog the
next contingent or prisoners of waJ: to be
released by North Vietnam toclay pro-
nounced, herself and her daughters
"aOOUt the happiest girls in the U.S.A."
Charlotte Christian, wife of Navy U .
Cmdr. Michael D. Christian.' was among
the first POW wives to be notified by tbe
government !hat her husband would gai11
bil freedom over tbe weekend.
Christian, ·a native of Hunt.!Yille. Ala .•
was shot down over North Vietnam April
24, 1967. He and his v.ife have three
daughters.
OUHI COAST at.
DAILY PILOT
TM Or ..... c-f DAILY PILOT, wl1l'I ...,_
It ~ ... ,.._l"nu. Is ,_.lllMill ...
ttie Orenoe c-a Pu.blfttllnl ~. """""
~ ... tdlllont .... ~ ....... _., ~
Friday, tar 0.la ,,...,., M--1 a.ti\,
H~tl"""" 9ndl/,.._11!1 V1111y, ~
9Mdl, lrvlM/hddltlNl<'.11 end -SHI C~'91
Ian JllMI c.ttlftr-. A. 11"9lol f"e911lnAI
lldltkln .. pubtltMd kl\lf'(l•rt -...............
f"9 prlrKip.I PlllllltMftl pl91!1 11 ti ~ Wal
••Y 5tr..t, Col•• ,..,.., Ctlltorl'lil', flt1'.
Rot..rt N. W.ff ,.,.. ............ l'ubl.....,
J•d R. Cwlt'i' Vkt Pm ..... Miii Gtotler1t ~
TH"'•• Kttvil ...... n.-. .. A. M•pliiM
.......... Edi'°'
Ch.'1 .. H. ..... kicltt,. P; N.n ---.,..-~
JJO W•1t l1y Stt••'
Mtlll~ A4d,.1u·P.O. lo11 1160, t2621 ...... °""" N~...ot! UD ~ ...,._.. 1.111'¥ -..ctl; m ~ ..... , •-HIMtlllllfail a.oi: 11'7S hKtl .............
.... C~: JIH Htt1'I El """""' lltN(
_, ........ 1714) "4t ... J21
~........,. .......... ,.
~""'· '"" ~ C.-.1 ,...._... '°""'*"""• --......... • ........... ......... -----~ ... ,_., .......... w ................ ..... ~.,~-·
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DA!l Y ll"llOT .....,_ lrt lltld!Jrll IC ........
• Marin~ Allefations
Delay Ordered ,
-Iii "Murd~r Trial
A three.week delay was ordered today
In !he Orange County Superior Court .,..
raignment of El Toro Marine Jared Alan
Wallace-on charges of first degree
murder, kidnap and wault with a deadly
weapon,
Judge.James Tum~r aranted the delay
to give the tall Marfue•s lawyer lime to
examine a transcript containing allega-
tions that he tidnaped a woman Feb. 4
and raped and murdered another five
days later.
Wallace, 26, will remain in county jail
with bail denJed until bil March 20 ap.-
pearance. He was iudlcted Wednesday b]
I.be Grand Jury oo three felony counts.
Lutheran
Wallace was arrested feb. _ l) , in
Mission Viejo by officers mvestigal'!lg
fheilleged kidnaplng seven days earlier
of Carole Ann Rowan. 24, an . X-n>'
technician at a san Clemente bosp1t.al.
Miss Rowan told deputies the man she identified'~ Wallace posed as a polU:e
officer and ordered her to pull over near
the Beach Cities offramp of the San
Diego Freeway. . . . .
WaUace held a part tittle c1v1han job as
a Sec.u'rity guard with the Bums lntema·
lion al Security Company.
Miss Rowan said her assailant hel~ her
at gunpoint and tried to-handcbff ~r
while warning ber lh&t she was bemg
held as a suspect in a criminal in·
vestigation.
She tol~office she managed to frtt
herself and from the car when
Wallace pped for a traffic signal.
THIS ' IS HOAG HOSPITAL COMPLEX THAT NEW ADMINISTRATOR WILL PRESIDE OVER
Verullles Ap1rtments Are•• Upper Uft In This Aerial Photo; P1rk Lido Medical Building at Right
Campus Gets
Acti~g Cliief
Officers who booked Wallace on ~
charges added murder to"tbe. list when
they searched him and allegedly found a
checkbook and wallet belonging to Mrs.
Nanette Post, a Fountain Valley barmaid
whose body was found Fe~. 9 in Hun-
Froa P~-i
INDIANS ...
was disappointed that Department or the
Interior officiaJs did not accompany
them. The department ~ the
Bureau ol Indian Affairs, a target of the
milltanl American Indian Movement
wblcb has led the occupation ol the
village.
111 called Interior offidalJ last night,"
AhoumJ< lllid, "and asked ii they would
join ... They aald they absolutely would
not negotlaJe as loug ~ any property
0< -were being held. I think perllape With the lives of people iu the'·
baW>ce, we cani take that attitude.•
McGovern ll8id be and Aboureilt
wani.d to meet with the Indian leaders
"no& with any prior notions or con·
cesalom, but ,lo talk Wilb AIM leaders
and aee if we can't arrange for release of
the -ie they are holding."
Ralph Ericbm. special assistant .. the
U.S. allMJey general, aald before the
aenalan' helirqiler left BaPill, City that
be 1IOllld adrise them not 6!> land al
WoundodXnee.
"OUr prime ooooeru at this point Is to
obtlln the release of the 11 hostages. We
... pmticululJ cmoemed -the fact !hat .....-al of these bo&lages ... people
in their ms." Ericbon said m nearby
Pine RldgO:
The 200 Indians have demapdrd a
-p.i.e ull!l&llmeau of -Ar-fain In ....... far freelnl the -.ge..
Aside from one brief meeting with an
FBI agent, the Indian& have kepi law en-
forcement cilfioers al a diSance, a n d
there was an -m:hauge of gunfire
Wcdnesdaymomiug.
Abourezt and McGovern were ac--
companied by members of the staffs of
Sem. Edward M. Kennedy ([).Mass.),
and J. W. Fulbright (O.Arl:.).
1be Indians also demanded that Ken-
nedy and Fulbright come to the ..,...._
lion to discuss grievances. which include
the govenunent's handling of U.S.·Indian
treailes and the ,.., iu wiiich the Oglala
Siouz tribe -ill -Woonded Knee was the scene of
tragedy lor red men during the wane of
the great westward push or the 19th c;e,,.
lury.
An estimalA!d Z50 !ederal marshals, FBI
agents and BIA police from the Pine
Ridge and other Jodian reservations cor·
doned off the valley town. 'Jky kept to
Ute heights more than balr a mile away.
along four roads.
Joseph Trimbach, agent·in~harge of
lhe FBI at Minneapolis who ,beads the
rederal force here , met with represen--
latives of AThf under a temporary cease-
fire Wednesday, but an FBI spokesman
sakl there was no progress toward ending
the stalemate. He said three other at·
tempts -~ arrange negotiating sessions
I all ed.
Girl Held 14
Years for Dad's
Killing of Tot?
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPll -Rachel
Verdin was 8 when her father told police
she killed her smaller brother with a lead
p1pr. •
Soon afterward. the little girl was sent
to Columbus Stale Institute. a hospital
for !he mentall y retarded. There she bas
sLayed for. 14 years.
Now 22, she is being coosidJr.ed for
re.lease. Authorities have I~ -that
her father, not she. was responsible far
the death of her brother.
Mrs. Edward Venlin ol Hamillm, Olllo
told police last month !hat her -
lalally atruclt his 4")1......icl ..., with a
pipe wben be cried !or a drink of nlB
in late W.,S.
She .. 1d she bad ml gone lo poUce
before becaUse be thruloned lo ldD IM<.
F..dward Verdin, 47, bas been chatpd
wllh manslaughter and is to appear in
Hamilton Municipal Courl Friday.
Boulder Kills Wo111an
Washington Gets
Welfare Chief
Of Calif orllia
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Robert B.
cirleson, California director of social
welfare !or two years, today waa named
special assistant on welfare matten for
the U.S. Deportment of Health, FAucaUon
and Wellare. .
BEW Secretary Caspar W. Weinberger
8UDOUDCed the appointment of Carleson,
42, to the newly created position of stall
liaison between the federal department
and governors of the 50 states.
Weinberger said Carleson will be
responsible specifically. for providing
assistance to governors in welfare
management and reform inUialives· at
the atale level, and giving them guidance
oo the !ederalizallon of the adult welfare
caseload for aged, bllod and' disabled -· .. Be bas a proven record ~ ac--
eomplishroe\11 iu this field and can help
fOVd ws iuiliale their own welfare
re!orm similar to the effirt be directed
., llUl."H'Mfu1ly for Gov. Reagan in
Cali!omia," Weinberger lald.
WeinbelJer said that lb Carleoon's two
yean iu the atale post ~1l!OO -were dropped lrom Calll«Dla Welfare
-. 'llhlle "grants to lruly needy
families rose rt percent ...
Optimists Slat.e
Basketball Skill
Cont.est for Kids
Fro1nPagel
HOAG •..
masters degree in h o s p i t a 1 ad·
ministration from the University of Min·
nesota.
Jorgensen said Parker, his wife Sydn'e
and their four children ,will reside in the
NewPort Beach area.
He said !hat during the nell t*o
months Parker Is scbeduJed to make
several trips to Newport Beach to ac-
quaint bimself with the boopital and the
comm~ty. 1
Parker is attending a hospital con-
vention in the east and could not be
reached for oomme11t this morning. ~
Washington D.C.
Trip Scheduled
For Mesa Aides
Three Costa .Mesa ctty.ulllclals will be
In Wasbiugloo D.C. this weekeud lo meet
with cmgressloual leac!en during the
Nalklnal League ol Cities Coolereuce.
Takiug the trip are City Manager Fred
SOraaboll .Mayor Jack· Hmnmett-and Counclimau AhiD Ptntiey: Hammett and
Sorsabal will leave Friday evening and
Pinkley OD 5'\llJrdaf ·
'-The ~erebce lasts through Tuesday
leaving Ot'llyB three-man council for
Monday night's r.gular meeting al 6'l0 p.m. in city ball, 77 Fair Drive.
Both Hammett and Pinkley are ex·
pected to return on Wedoesday but
Soraabal said be would be iu the nation's ~apftol for one extra day to a t t e n d
another meeting.
1be mayor said this momiug that •i>
The optimist Club of Costa Mesa has pointmef).~ bad been made by the city of·
ICheduled a basketball Nill contest fOr ficials with Congressman A n d r e w
boJll aged a to 13 this Saturday al the Hiusbaw (ft,.Misslou Viejo), and Ricbard T. Hanna (l).Cypress) • Upper Bay Branch of the Barbor Area Pinkley aald be also bad a tentative Bi>
The Lutherln campus pastor at use
has been named acting president of the
Lutheran f'..dfete at Irvine which is
scbedUled to 9(>ell in September, 1974.
'Ibe college has reserved a site in Turtle
Rock, overlOQking the U n i v er s i t y
Regicinal Park. .
Rev. Charles L. Manske will serv:e as
vice president for academic affairs and
acting president of the Missouri Synod's
four-year liberal arts college for whlch
archltectural plans have been rea<li.e<I
and $2 million authorized for co~
structlon. ·
Manske has resigned bis po.st at USC
where.for 15 years be bas served as cam-
pus pastor and since 1964 as public rela.
tions director for the synod's Southern
California section.
Dr. Arnold G. Kuntz, president of the
Southern California Dtstrict of the church
body and chairman of the Irvine college
board, said Manske will be the college's
first -teacher and administrator. He will
have broad responsibilities for recrWting
faculty and students as well as
establishing OOll)JllWlity relattons.
"OUr bopes for the establiJhme!ll o!
lAithenm College at Irvine have received
a substantial boost with the ·acceptance
by Rev. Manske as its lowldiug ad·
DJinistrator," Dr. Kunt.'Z said.
The Irvine campu'S will replace the
California Coocordia College al Oakland
as .the ~ l?Yn<>4'• iµajor western
oolloge. Calilonila Collconlla Will clOiO In
July 1m after 67 years ot cootinuous
operation.
Rev. Manske holds a master of divinity
degree lrom COncordia Semiuary, St.
Louis; a master· of arts -degree -from
Washington University, st. Loo.is and is a
doctoral candidate at USC in the field of
social ethics.
He and his wife, Barbara, and their
children, David and Christine, plan to
move to Irvine this summer.
SF Colleges Put
Ban on Lettuce Boys Club. poiutmenl with Sen. Alan Cranston ([).
Known aJ lbe Optimist Tri-Siar ·Californla). U Bastelbail Ooolest, It will conceutrale on 'l'lle'subjects of their meellogs include BERKELEY (AP) -The City Counc
the three basic skills of the hoop game -special federal revenue sharing, the prcr and student l~dersandal lll4 San Francallisco-
passing, dribbling and shooting. tection of high rise buildings with fire area univer~itieJJ co egea baKt: c ed
Boys will compete in sll: groups against sprinklers, and Obtaining federal funds (or a ~an.A~ icehberg lett~,alldegedly
boys of their own age. Boys Club Direc--for k>Cal fre-eWay coostruc&n. Contaminau::u wit . a strong:~"ci e.
tington Beac.h. .
They claim Wallace is the man who
raped Mrs. Post after She lefflier job at
a Garden Grove tavern and then stuffed
her ·body under a jWliper bush in a
residential tract.
Wa!JaCe was brought to Superior Court
last week for an unscheduled iden-
tification when a defense attorney in
another rape trial told the jury the pros--
ecution .had ·the wrong Marine in the
defendant's chair.
W~ce was ordered to stand Sboulder
to shoulder Wltb Camp Pendlelou Mar1ue
Mark David Bell, 22, and was visibly
relieved when a Costa Mesa wait.res!
raped iu Huotiugt<>n Beach positively
identified Bell as her attacker.
The Jury iu !bat trial is today iu ilo
third day of deliberations. .•
TONIGHT
UCI LECTURES -"Urban Family
Sexual Problems," part of aeries !Jving
Together iu Fammes, Rm. 100, Socia!
S<;lence Le\:lure Hall, 7.f,45 p.m. Adm-
$4.'15'. "Maljgnancies bi Cbildreo,'" put~
aerie, "Cancer;, Ellology, Epidem'oloc.
Therapy." Sopb. Lecture Hall Malical ~e I Bldg. 7-10 p.m. Adm. 'ilso .• .,,.,
Theater," part of series Face and Mind
of -lieland, Rm.--10l,--P-by1ical Scleoces
Bldg., 7·10 p.m. Adm. $4.50.
"BASIC TRAINING OF PAVLO HUM·
MEL" -South Coast !!<pertory Theater,
through SUnday, 8 p.m. 'llckets M&-1363.
FRIDAY, MARCH!
"ANDERSONVILLE TRIAL" -Qlsta
Mesa Civic Playhouse, Fairgrouoda, l'ri·
day.and Satunlay, g,30 p.m.
"AOORNS TO ASPHALT" -OCC
EveoJni CoUeae lecture SEries by Henry .P8ntan. ''The Mexican." Science Hall, 7-9
p.m.
"NEW WAYS OF .RELATING -A
GESTALT APPROACH," -5e<ond of
series by Dr. Gerhard Kolm, "How Do I
Keep MySeif from Growing" Science
Lecture Hall Z, 7,30-9,30 p.m.
OCC FILM SERIES -"The Omega
Man" Forwn, 7 p.m. Adm. $1.
tor Lou Yantom says all a boy needs to The United Farm Workers union
compete is i11e desire and a pair of gym c1a1ms 35,ooo,. 40,ooo •crea or lettuce in • Carrier Comes Home
shoes. Tax SJauh Proposed tbellece. Imbemperialllbv~;Y. wer4e spblrablyed,.wt Competition gets under way al I p.m. ": , . r w .. wrutor-, a g y x1c
the Bo Cl b -··~• 2 """·--pesticide which attacks the nervous ALAMEDA (UPI} -The aircraft car-
00 ys u -~~at !JI ·~tin SAC""-~ (AP) -•· a-s·t'· t d 1· . Mid th f' , Ave., Costa Mesa. -~J•&v ""'' '-'""' uc-sys em an 1ver. ner way. e trst ma)Or warship to
Trophies in gold, silver and bronze will board 5 percent slash in property tax The council voted Tuesday for a leave Vietnam waters since the ligning
be ""ed to the r· hr 1 assessments was proposed Wednesday by "moratorium" on. sale of the lettuce and of the cease--fire, returns here Saturday. aw.uu 1rst t ee paces in state Sen. James Wedworlb 01 't 1,,._ . un ting th """ • .1 NU\•-·-~AA1 ha each age group and every participant CI Y a ...... n,.ys were mvesNOa e .iue '"•\111\r""'" "~ s completed its
will receive bis own personalized score 1 ~H;=a:wthoroe===· ======:==:==:'°:unc::::":'s:a:bili:·~ty:to=eof=o:rc~e:su:cb=a;:::ban.;:::=;:::nl=uth=lour=:o:f :d":':':in=fbe=Tonkiu=:·=G:ull:.=:-carcl. I ~~:s;:..;y~s; Don't Settle for Less Than the Best. LITTON-is Best!
recreation centers, or at the contest lite
oo 1be c1ay or the compelitm , WHEN YOU THINK AND TALK MICROWAVE COOKING!
Store Loses ~asks
CINCINNATI (UP[) -Two gorma
masks, two African tribal masks and $12
in change were the only items stolen in a
burglary at ~lurphy's Costume Shop
Ylednesday.
Accused Killer ·
Pleads Guilty
Attuoed munlerer Coriiss lt1y
AU:my of Newport Beocb pleaded
guilty lo redn<ed dwwa blay -~ -... bis Orange ComlY Court jury trial ..... lldJed. -· Judge !Joyd Blanpied acoepled
Ankeny'• gullty plea and echecl-
uled 1tntenclni !or Moy 5 ill his
courtroom.
Ankeny fl'ces • possible ~tate
prisoo lerm ol five years to Ufe an
tht voluntary manslaughter convic-
tion.
ONLY LITTON OfRRS YOU •••
"k Years of Commercial expllrien~e * The biggest oven .•• 1.1 cu. ft.
1:t An easy·to-clean liner.
ft An easy-open door latch.
1:t Autometic defrost feeture.
REMEMBER THIS PLEASE!
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AND wmt A LITTON
YOlt CAN BROWN,
SEAR Af'ID GRILL TOOi
Member of
90 DAY
CASH-"
OXNARD (AP) -A za.yur-okl Saola
Cruz woman has died rrom bead lnjurl ..
suffered when a boulder rolled off • cliff
and ft.II onto a campe.r truct she was
rldiug In aJoog the Pacific Coast
~·y Saliinlay, ollklals .. ,. t:yn1bla
Marlowe dlal In st. Jobo•a Ro6pilal here
Tueoday nlll!~ hoopltal ~ aaid.
He wa.s charged witb rtnt dtgrte
murder. in the alleged slaying of a
UCLA coed, Diane Singleton, 21,
ll'ilo shared bis suite at the 1'owers
aportmmts and 'llllo died a few
--Iller ht trdmllted-bor-lo Hooe -•l lloopilaL Pbane '548:71 ----_. I
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