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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-01-07 - Orange Coast Pilot7 ea Massage S.pa Raid Leads to Arrest On Vi~e Charges ' Frigid Grip On County Nears End Old ~1an Win ter will loosen his icy grip on the Orange Coast in the nex few days, forecasters predicted today. with clear skies and gusty winds con. tinuing through Friday. 'I'he ne"'S was particul arly welcome to cilrus and avocado raisers,· whose or chards have so far escaped with no apparent damage in the cold spell . A \Varming trend will set in Sa turday rind last at least through ~1onday, ac· cording to predictions by !he U.S. \Veathcr Service. Northeasterly \vi nds continue<! today. \l'ith familiar jetliners setting do'>'-TI at Orange County Airport on approaches from offshore inland. The lov;est temperature forecast for early today in Orange County was a shh1ering 25 degrees al San Juan Cariistrano. "'hile El Toro had a blue-lip- ped 26 reading. Ncwporl Beach -v.•he re lhe sea creates a slighlly v.·ariner index in \\interlime -had a 30 degree low \\lednesday. The ocean temperature is only 5~ degrees, but that's like a warm bath v.·hen vou considrr the inland air runs near 2o degree~ lo\vcr. No orchard hc<itin,e. ,,·;is required loday. nccording to the Fruit. Frost Service \l"hich has operated from Pomona for four decades. Citrus and avocado raisers in most Inland valleys, however. v.·c rc fir ing up the smudge pots as the mercury dropped to 20 degrees in Imperial Valley today. Masseuse Held In Lc,vd Conduct An artcrnoon raid al a Huntington Beach ma ssage parlor W r. d n e s d a Y resulted in the arrest of a female operator on sex misconduct charges. Vice squad dele<:tives arrested Grace ?-.Tiura, 35, an emptoye or Beppu Massage, 315 3rd St.. on suspicion of lewd cond uct, prostitution and operating as a messeuse v.·ithout a permil. Lt. BerL Ekstron1 said the parlor had only been open for a few dayll and had been operating without benefit of a city business license. Mrs. Mlur1, a resident of 306~"-3rd SI., was booked into HunUngtob Beach ' City Jail. Star I-lits Streets After 6-<lay Strike WASHINGTON (UPI)' -.Th e Washington Evenlng Star hit the ~ts loday with an SO-page e<HUon -plus last Sunday's comics -aft.er being 1.dled six days by a strike of truck mechanics. A i;pokcsman for the newspaper said It was tile longelll ti me "people have het'n without the Star." Twe>-<lay !trikes Ahut down lhe paper In 1958, lMll and 1969. I ~ilA\r:r; •• w w !IW 'SYHl:'iPp'P·il!S'"..&: •.'Wf!l\!f,. wz+"ffA'' t11wce K *'' "''1 ~ Together Again ~ ~ Art Jover admires self-portraits by two of the art \vor ld's most tem- pestuous n1en , Paul Gauguin (left) and Vincent Van Gogh. Paint- ings currently are han~ing at Detroit Institute of Arts, whic h re- cently acqui red the Gauguin to ~o with its famous Van Go2h. Gauguin pictured hiroseli· in 1891, several years after a rguments wh!ch ended friendship with Van Gogh, who painted himself short- ly before his death in 1890. ' Nixon .May 'Warm Up' In Palm Springs Trip President Nixon may interrupt his Work-play 'san Clemetlt~ stay foi a jaunt to' war111er Palm Spr~ and the exercise the doctor ordered. .The Nixons hope to spend a couple of ·days at Jeaat at the elaborate-desert estate of Walter Annertberg, ambassador to Britain. · The P.r~•nt worked Uuwgh 1Jle· ~Y. ! Widneiaay at San cib.nie and <111en: relaxed wllb some '!ell-knpwn djnner guetls who fl ew in to Sim Clemente by helicopter. Western White Jlouse dinner guesl, Included comedian Bob Hope; goUer Arnold Palmer; Ce.raid R. Ford of Miclligan, Houae Republican leader; and Henry A. Kissinger, lop foreign policy adviser. Nixon Ls ei:pected to do • good deal of golfing if he if>eS to Palm Sprlnp. Palmer might join. him nei:t week. Palrntt preeently~ is entered in the $110,IXKI Glen Csmpbell-4» Angeles Open tournament. Day-time tetnperatures ln P 1 I m :sprJnis have.'bffn' CONlderablf'balml<j' than San Clemente where highs hive been In tbe SOS. The chill has put • crimp In the ?resident's recreation plan&. The President's physici1n, Air Fore~ Brig. Gen. Walter T,ka,ch said last week Nixon was in fine · health but should ge t more exercise in sunny climell in ordtr to 1tay tlu!;t way. --- Nixon ·Planning Vaeation Visit To Pal111 Springs Crossfire Of Opinion Generated By BARBARA KREJBJCB Of .............. The Laguna Beach. City Council aat 1in a crosa-fire of criticism Wcdneaday nlght as representatives of all elements ot the· community, from hippie to eslablW!tnent,' m~ a$ City hall to post·mortem lhe Christmas ''happening." The . cquncU chamber wa1 filled to its llS-penon capacity well before the 7:30 p.m .. meeUJlg opened and an equal number of interC!led citizens shivered In the chill night air outside Jlatenlng to the proceedings over loudspeakers. A motion by Counc ilman Charlton Boyd to move the meeting to the larger high school auditorium died for Jack of a second. The council later was castigated for this "cavalier" treatment of the citi zenry. Though City Clerk Dorat.by r.fusfelt reported that most letters addressed to the council complimented the council on its handling of the rock festi\·a l that lured 2\1,000 persons to the Art Colony, few words of praise ~·ere voiced at the meeting. Tu'O persons volunteered positive praise. Chamber of Commerce President Bernard Syfan commented the c i 1 y staff and police but noted that ''an illegal , illicit gathering" had been allov.'- ed and urged a review of policies lo avert a repetition. Artist Andrew Wing .. who had battled the council over the Woodland Drive housing inspection program , a l.~o stepped forward to offer "a big pat on the back to you gentlemen, and particularly the po:ice." 11\e rest of the hour·long exchallge, following reading of a formal statement on the •·happening" by City 1.-fanager Lawrence Rose, was largely criUCal. Complaints ranged from establishment attacks on the city'~ failure to avert the entire event before it got under way, to Testivll organizers' charges that food and medical suppliet were kept from reaching the site, i-esidents ex- prused Irritation over failure o( the city · to keep the public informed and failure to e.stabllah a citizen-manned disaster council as provided by law. others spoke of breakdowns in com- munication that led to increased con~ fusk>n. .Mayor Richard Goldberg commented. "It's easy to be a Monday morning fJUlrtetback. We are just five human ~Inga wilh ·human failings and we did .wt.at we thought waa best for the city al the Ume." Bill Greenwooct. a y9"11i, long.~ LagUnan who had stej>ped into the festival picture to help with tut-minute crganiution, opened Ibo procttdlngs by announcing he weuJd be 1 candidate at the ne:11t City C.ouncll dectlon beeamt, "t Und a . need f0< all . the peoplt .to be repreanted ln city government" IL , W. K.-1hupl1 • O'ltidzed Jhe city . for .• not 1 breskltte. up .the.. feltltlal btfor.e tt &ot' Ntb!d. "Idltetld;'"he said, "you wolt 1D1Ul 28,000 peoplt come, puU -prolectlon from other dtlet and create an enorntOUJ cost to lhe CO\mty wt)lch I tubmit will be in ucess of '250.000."' Councilman ·Roy Holm turned O'illciam back lo the organiztrs when Larry Dunn (lite HAPPENING, Pa~ II • . .,. . DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, ~ANUAllY 7, '1971 VOL .... *t. &. 1 l•CTIONI, * l"AO•I No L01ul.speuker Fiery Preacher Gets"· March qK By JOHN VALTEllZA Of ,... ~ ...... ltaft ~ Fiery fundamentallllt minister the Rev. c;arl Mcintire will be able to lead hls flock ·in a march in San Clemente Jan. 30, but· city cOLmcllmen· here Wednesday agreed he would have to exhort hill followers without :K>Und equipment. Mcintire. the controversial man of the cloth whom one couricllman descrl~ as a "supcrpatriot," will lead a march through streets near Old Plaza Park calling for a "lotal victory" in the VieL-- nam war. And despite the obvious far-rig.ht tenor of the appearance, Mcintire even won support fr om the South Coast segment of lhe An1erlcan Civil Liberties Union at th e meeling Wednesday. Tom Wert . a college instructor and head of the local chapter of the ACLU. told counci lmen he V.'OUld take the mall.er to court if the min ister were not given pennission to conduct the San Clemente march and rally. "I personaUy find Reverend r.1cintire Countian's Deatl1 At Rock Festival Not'J)rµgRelated A F0untain· V.alley ytMJih wbOse bc:idy , was .(ound. nf;!ar, the slie ot the Laguna Beach ~ (qtival. l!! · not known to ho;' ···tii:fiO.-Of-Mi 61<1dboe . '<Jl-4'up ank no · emplJ cOntalnei' Was fciuna nfuo ~ the· rcorpSe, the Or a i;a g e , :eounty : Sheriff's OfOce has conflr'med. Sheriffs Sergeant Ben Ox&Jfdaboure wta~ Wedne.srlay that · earUer in- formlili on re\ardlng .the death .of Grant . Weidenh&.mmer, ·19,1 of rrm O~k St., was Ip error and based on hi.! confuJlon of similar reports. "We deeply regret thiJ error and l have apOloglzed to Mr. Carl Weldenham- mer (the dead youth's f1thei') for any distress caused to the fafnlly ," Ox· andaboure said. 'ibe etact C'IUJt: of the youtb's death wm not be known for tome two I to tbr9e weeka· wheft coroner'• intettig'alclrs eomP.tete • seri" ti. toxitolOt:ieal test.s on the·yout11'1 remalti1. · Weldenbamrner'1 bddy W'll found Svn- day nbr the 'iop 'ol a small hill ju.It e.i ol Lquna ·~ •!load by four -""' "11-• -fOr the youth. 1be deaCfyoutb' .. Mandoried car was found nearby on El Toro Ro.cl. Ou11dabt!ure C!JftfimJc\I W~<Y that tbl',...U. le/i home Ill< ... -.ig a dlspule with bis girlfriend. His four male frlendl orpalled the Lquna search six dly1 lllter;)le uJd. "There la no evfdmce r to lbow U..t the boy ati.nded lhe rock ~lval earUer and we accept the .f1&bt,r'1 atatement that he did nol do so." Oundaboure said. , revotUng, outrageous lni:I potenUaDy ' dangerous ••. but 'the cou.ocJI can't put the U.S. eonBqtutlon be.neath our own desires," said Wert The council, actually; had the recourse only on the matter or allowing aound equipment at the march and rally. Councilmen finally agreed to deny the New Jersey mlnl ster's request to use an amplifier plugged into the clgaret lighter of a natbed truck.. The parade permit already ha! been granted for the affa ir by Police Chtel Clifford Murray under pollcles set by the council. Councilman Thomas O'Kee{e, who said he espoused neither "Lhe far left •. nor right," voted agairuit denial of the soWMI equipment request. - O'Keefe stressed that he also voted against denial of th e Peace Action Coun- cil's req uest to have a parade and rally in San Clemente months ago, resulUnc in a major demonstration. "~ey went ahead and had it anyway,•• he said. Fellow councilmen, however, seemed conce rned that neither the fiuy minister. nor any aides were present Wednesday, to answer quesUons about ,the event. . The major roncern, said Councllmaq Stanley Northrup, would be the nOi.M e.ma~tlng fro171 the pJirk to ne'1'b7 homes.; · 1 • · "f think we ha ve subjected.these~ kl enough nOise and disturbance :arOund • I.be park, .. he. ~·Id. 1 ' ' L'.ee., The winds wiU die· down FridQ, but the a~ a1r Will stay ari>und for another d1y, keepiJll high · temperature• at 55 and low;a ranging froin 38 to (bm) 21 de- grees. INSm.E TODAY Orcnogt f ounlJ/.' ll<allh Off~ ioLs are J)lafining a ma.tdoc onii- nbtUa 1c.,.,,,.,..,...,..,J am\: j>qign Jan. 31. To .fiMI out whef't, ' tnoaaatamu """ be at'\)iloble, st:e l'OQe 'l1. -" c.111111• • ~ .,.. 1t ,_ ... -.. ,_ .. DWtt ....... 11 DI.,._ 11 ~'-' '•""'1--... .. n """"'" •>1 ..... '!llFI II ..... .......,.. '' --I • ..._ 2 Dlft.Y PILOT S Tflunday, J1nu111 7. lCJ71 ~est Out "Jt lffa1 J l! ~ ' I I Viet Withdrawal - .. Completion Eyed ,. ~, ... 7' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Only a few to pre.sent top.level wlthdraWal plane, ~thouaand American aimbat troops will Nixon Administration llOW'eet said today. rvnain in Vietnam past May I -and Cootinuing troop wilhdr1wb this winter ,,Uae in a restricted role -according -and in early spring ·wUl.oamJkta Pn!ai· dent Nixon'• plan fer turnlns over the ··Sen. McGovern Clearing Path To Candidacy WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. George S. McGovern of· South Dakota resigned :'-.today as chairman of a ~mocrat)c: ~P1rty Reform CommWlon as a first atep toward bttominl an active Can· didate for President. McGovern told newsmen that ll was · __ "a fairly accurate" assumption that he • : would announce fo r the Democratic '" P,..idential nomination later thls month. ~ He allO wu a candidatt for the nomlna- ".: _ tion in 1968. enterin& the race aft.tr • the assassination of.Sen . .Robert F. Ken· -_nedy (D-N.Y.). -Tilt reform commission that he headed -: -and which generally was referred ···to as the McGovern Commission -was • one of two create4 by the Democrata : a1 a result o1 the tumult at the lMI .. Nationa.I Convention. · Ntafly all of the McGovern Com· , Jnia{on's wori so far has involved writing 1Uidelines for selection of ddept.es to future conventioru. !. · E1plainlnf: bil decllion to resign the · chalrmanahip, McGovern uid h i s achedule was becoming too heavy and that he might be a pruldentlal candidate. Slncf: he might become involved ln trying to wln deleaates, he aald he felt he should not be telling them bow they 11hould be chosen. McGovern described the 1968 con· vention as a ''traumatic lhock" to the party. He predicted that the 1972 con· • vention, as a result of reviJed pro- • cedurts, would be 11l he least boss-ridden" ·.ever. . He said that in getting st a t e : Democratic organizations to comply with : commissions' proposals, Lbe g r o u p already was "al least half way home." · By July 1 mo~ than half of the states '. will be in compliance and most others ' will be near the goal, he said. • As a ruult of the commission's work, r McdOvmi said, the 1971 cOnvenlion will · have more delegate.s under 30, more women, more representativea of minority groups and more from the modest in· come bracket&. -: IJl anootilOCing hl5 resignation as com· • mission chairman, McGovern recom- • mended Rep. Donald M. Fraser of Min· ne.t0ta to succeed him. Democratic National C h a i rm a n "Lawrence F. O'Brien irronedlate\y ac· cepted McGovern'a ret:ommendation. Elvis Facing Paternity Suit HOLLYWOOD (UPil -Elvis Presley will undergo a lie detector examination and blood tests in a paternity suit brought by wa itress Patricia Parker, %1, under an order by superior court. Judge William P. Hogoboom orde.re.d the. te.!lts at a hearing in which Miss Parker claimed Presley, 35. is the father of her son, Jason. born last Oct. 10. She aske.d medical cosl.5 and $1 ,000 monthly child support. Presley, currently at his home in Te.n· neuee, was represented in court by his attorney who ag~ed that the. singer would !lubm!t to the tests which Miss Parker a!llO will undergo. Presley is married and the father of a dau1hte.r. DAILY PILOT U.S. grOWld combat role lo the Scull> Vietnamese, the aourcs aald. · Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird mentioned the May t goal for the first time publicly today durine an Informal neWJ oonferen~ on arrival at Bans~ok, Thailand on lhe second le.a: of a roulJd..the- world trip. He goes on to Saigon and top-level conferenct'.S on Friday. Laird said most U.S. troops "with combat res:Ponsibllity" will be withdrawn by May I. Those that remain. Washington sources said, will be used as advisers with South Vietnamese units or will be kept in a reaerve sta.lul to cope with any emergency 11ituatlons posing a "threat to the security of other Amerk:an person· nel. During an interview by four lelevlaion network repruenta.Uves Monday, Nllon spoke only in general terms of a con· tinued measured withdrawal. In Patis on Tuesday, Laird menUoned a mid..1Um· mer goal of ending U.S. combat responsibilities. This and his reference today to May J represented the first move by the administration toward a acheduled withdrawal timetable. The.rt wu 101De speculation the timing might alao be designed to bud off new student protests about the war, which reportedly are planned for the 1pring months. The May 1 date has been aet , govern· ment &OW"CCS said, unless the ad· minil~aUon'a troop withdrawal plans are upset by 19me unforesttn contlngencle.s. The end of the U.S. ground COf!ibat role \\ill not end the American pruence tn Vietnam, however, nor will it end American casua!Uea. A signifi~ant number or U.S. combat advisera will remain for a time with Vietnamese uni~, and American lroop:i will continue to conduct air operatio.s and, probably, long-range artillery ac· tivities. The next phase of lhe. American withdrawal wlll involve h a n d i n g artillery, logistic and aircraft ~upport over to the Vietnamese, perhaps by late next year, the sourcea said. These sources also predicted the ad- ministration would beat its own publicly· stated estimates of total withdrawals by May 1. At. the time ·of the Cambodian invasion Jast spring, there Were approximately 3&5,000 u_s. lroop!I ln South f letnam and Pre!ident Nixon said that 100,000 of them would be withdrawn within a year. The present level is approximately :145.000. The sources aaid it is hoped that the goal of 100,000 could be bettered by at least 101000 to 15,000 troops. l.aif'd pr-edicted Wednesday the United States would "meet or 'beat" Nixon's withdrawal plans. He asid tha:l by June. 30. t.oop strength would fall to 229,500 or less. He noted that when Nixon took office two years ago there were M9,500 U.S. troops in Vietnam. Chavez' Union Asks Moratorium Of Lettuce Buys LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The United Farm \Vorkers organizing committee \\'ednesday filed a suit in U.S. District Court asking that the Defense Depart- ment be prohibited from buying lettuce from a Salinas. Calif., grower for three years. Cesar Chavez' union charged in the class action that Dtfense Secretary Melvin Laird and the grower, Bud AnUe, Jnc .. conspired to break up the UFWOC. The UFWOC asked $15,000 actual and $30,000 punitive damagen from Laird and the firm. The. suit alleg:ea that the Defense Department purdlaaed more than three tirru the emoont of Antle lettllCe normally bought since the. union began boycotting the fifm last summer. The. suit said the. amount of lettuce purchased from Antle for the mllitary went up from 1.3 percent In flttal 1970 to 29. l percent in the first quarter of fiscal 1971. The action also charged that tl'le Defense Department bought nearly 25 tena of Antle lettuce al $S.M a crate la1t Dec. t& while the prevailing rate In Loa An1ele1 thlt day wa1 '3.50 a crate. At a news conference after the flllng o~f tbe suit ...,Jerry Cohen, 1eneral counae.I for II> on, char&od that the •ll•aodly purchuN of wlnt« lettuce weri an at.tempt io "IUbvert our boycotl aod deatroy our union. The allegations, he uld, wert "another u ample of a Republican AdmlniltraUon uma ill pawtt·to·dtprtvo mlnortty.,..ap -le. .. of their rJPll." Fire Hits Business A rtuh rire that erupted In the painting area ol a Garden Grove auto body thop caUHCI an t1tlm1ted $41,000 In dam11e Wednelday. "Ire offldals 1ald the bl-al the Smlll> For<! Body Shop, JJtli Main St.. datroycd eight cars beJoaalng lo CUJtomers. Policeman's Hepatitis 'No Danger' Orange County's expert on lnfecliow; diseases today assured anyone who ha! come into contact with stricken Laguna Beach Police. Officer Kenneth Brumagc that their cha nces of picking up ht& hepatitla bug are "extremely remote," "And it would have to be extremely Intimate contact ,"' said Dr. Thom a ;. J. Alber!, chief of lhe county healt~ department's infectious disrases deparj ment. '"! just can 't see that any fello\·, officer has the slightest need to 'A'orry." Albe rt explained that the germ J;: absorbed by swallowing or through 2 cut or scratch. ''ttlany victims bccomr infecled through the use of surgica : needles and this is how many drug-using hippies pick up the germ," he said. C: Rations for Sale '"But if I were the doctor on the &pot I would limit my inquiries to those who had extremely close physlca! conta c with this officer, such as the immedia te members of his family," Albert said . "Any talk of an epidemic is unjustificu and pointless." Women stack cans of U.S. Army C rations in the central market place of Da Nang, South Vietnam. Such American-made ~oods are stolen regularly in Vietnam in large quanLilies and are sold openly in various market places. "The best public health measure Ir: the world is soap and water," Alber- added. "Anyone who still feels that he might have a chance of picking up hepatitis should use plenty of bolh.'' Circumnavigator SmWJhes Record; Home for Work SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Maurice Rosen arrived home today on time to go to work after traveling around the world in r~ord time on his day off. •·1t"s good to get away from home for a day," said Rosen, who managed to read only 75 pages of a book on lhe life of Beethoven that he had taken along. The SS.yea r-old businessman spanned lhe globe in 41 hours and 30 minutes aboard regularly scheduled airliners. changing planes at London, Moscow and Tokyo before getting back to San Fran· cisco aboard a Pan American Airways flight. According to unofficial records th e previous record was 43 hours and 31 minutes. set by Harry Martin, a San Diego disc jockey in 196'.J. Rosen's wife and two daughters picked him up at the airport at 7:20 a.m , in plenty of time to open hls bar stool business at Millbrae, just across the freeway from the airport. He new around the word on Wednesday because that is the day his store is cclosed. He 11aid he may go around the world again next week on his day off. "I had a ball. I recommend it lo anyone,'' Rosen told a dozen reporters on hand to welcome him home. Alt he had to check through customs were two rolls of film , pictures of airports and the world as seen from 30,!XKl feet. "I saw a lot of it from the. top," he said. "The Moscow Airport was the most interesting place because it was so drab and dull. There was no activity '' Besides getting started on the book about Beethoven. he said he did a lot of contemplating. "Life can be great if you s!J:lp and think about it." he said . "I guess J did It just for this kind of excitement." He said he expected to be called crazy for spending his day off the way he did , but "l have been called that all my life.'' County Leaders Slate Meeting Orange County supervisors and the mayors of the county's 25 cities will meet Saturday Feb. 8 at Los Pinos Boys Camp on Ortega Highway for an all~ay talk session to hopefully Improve relations between county government ud the communities. The session was proposed by the Oranae County Chapter of the California League of Cltie3 and brought to supervisors by new Supervisors Ralph Clark, a former vice president of the league. The site was suggested by County Admlnlsl.ratlve Officer because "the league officers thought lt would be best to meet in a remote site where the mAyors cnuld be free. of telephone. l.n- te.rruplion." The ca mp waa taken ove.r from the Federal Youth Corps laat year and now boast!! a high school for delinquent boya. Board memben were enthualuUc about meeUng with. the city leader1. Fro... P.,,e l HAPPENING • • compl1ined of hit Inability to contact the city manager. "All the councilmen have !lated phonei," aald Holm, "YoU ntver called ta. lNtead a l1st-mlnute. ll1t of demands was prt1entttl to the city With a threat to break down the ~ barricades if It was not aruiwend In 4S minutes. I fail to set how you coWd erpect tht. ci ty to provide water, nrewood. medle1I 1upplle1 and unlt3ry faclllUN. Thia w14 you.r-ruporulbill~y." • t '.We're at Wai~ Witl1 U.S.' Brumage was stricken Christmas Eve with what wa s at first thought to be stomach flu but i! now dia gnosed in- fectious hepat itis. Leary Says From Algeria Dr. Albert said today that the disea se can also be spread through contact with human excrement but lhe carefu, washing or hands and cleaning of bathrooms i5 "quite suffi cient to take care of this poasibility. from Wire Services NEW YORK ;;-Fugitive prison escapee and drug advocate Dr. Timothy Leary exho rted increased violence against American institutions here Wednesday ~ight, in a brOadcas·t telephone intervie~i. The institutions he singled out in his forecast for Weatherman violeoce. include ,beloved sports figures and entertainers, who would be kidnaped. •·we·re at war with the United States government," Leary added. speaking from Algeria to radio station WMCA"s Alex Bennett. He said the time is past for more ROTC unit bombings. calling for hi· jacklng of airliners and kidnaping to force the . freeing of imprisoned radicals ';Id militants. Lost Sailboat Skipper Hunted Three U.S. C.oast Guard helicopters are searching the waters from Newport Beach to Tijuana looking for a Navy radioman missing on a 21-fool sailboat si nce Wednesday morning. Coast Guard spokesmen in Long Beach said I.he sailor, Michael Wallace , of Shaker Heights, Ohio, had pulled into Newport Beach Monday due to rough. weather. Wallace left Newport Beach aboard his newly acquired boat, "G 1:Jss Slipper," Tuesday at 4 a.m. and was expected Jn San Diego by midnight. 1\1.·o choppers searched the waters between Newport and San Diego Y.'ed4 nesday and three are in the air todav, scouring the area as far out as 5o miles. Dr. Leary was serving a 1 to 10-year term imposed in Orange C.ounty Superior Court 10 months ago . .,.,•hen he escaped last fall from Los Padres Men 's C.O\ony in San Luis Obispo. He told the radio persona lity he is \\•riting a book about the rclalively si mple escape, allegedly engineered by the Weatherman, and his subsequent fl ight to Algeria . The onetime Harvard psychology pro- fessor who pioneered LSD research issued a call for mass guerrilla action. "They should escalate the violence ,'' he said. "They should start hijacking planes, they should kidnap prominent sports figures and television and Hollywood peo- ple In order to free Bobby Seale ... "i\i'y advice · to the Weatherman when ''le left was that they should not continue just bombing the ROTC!,'' Leary wn- clu'cled. He and his second wife Rosemary. 34, who is with him in Algiers. and son John, 2<l. were arrested Dec. '29, 1968, in Laguna Beach and convicted last March of possessing marijuana . Judge Byron K. McMillan at that time declared the. 50-year-0ld gu ru of the psychedelic set was a menace to the society his antics had enraged and sometimes captivated. Sailor Off Africa BISSAU, Portuguese Guinea IUPl) - Lone yachtsman Sir Francis Chichester in his Gypsy Moth V dropped anchor off Caio al II p.m. Wednesday, Portuguese naval authorities said today. Chichester was escorted up the narrow channel to this port northwest of Bissau by a Portuguese naval frigalt and numerous small naval coast.al vessels. "Look al us in the health department ," he said. "1t1any of us. doctors. nur.;es and technicians, handle these patienL<;, talk to them. have them breathe on us and treat them intimately. But none of us has ever caught the disease and it is extremely unlikely lhnt any of us will since we all ma intain simple cleansing functions." Brumage's illness raised the possibility that he might have contacted the disease through a spell of duty at the Christmas rock festival in Laguna Beach. Some 400 coun!y lawmen were en camped at Laguna high school during lhe happening. But il was pointed out today that Brum.age was believed to have shown sympt oms of the disease on Chrislmas Eve and that the infect ious hepatitis bug must have been contracted by the officer long before the rock festival open- ed . Sex Education Bill Introduced SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Se n. Albert S. Rodda introduced legislation Wed· nesday to relax the restrictions on the teaching of sex in public schools. The Sacramento Democrat's bill would allow sex education courses without parental consent so long as a mother or father could inspect the claas' materials during or after the course. Currentl y no sex education course can be taught unless a parent or guardian gives prior written permission. The Rodda tt1easure. similar to unsUC'· cessful legis lation of last ses~ion, would also delete the provision allowing the suspensio n or revocation or a teacher's certificate if she or he fails to notify parents of a se x education course. 1eventeenth • • • f , We Invite you to ottend H. J. Gorrett's 17th Semi • Annual Clearance Sale. Each year at this time, we offer our re9ular 1tock mer- chandise at fabulous reductian1. It is an oppor· tunity for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from the most comprehen1ive collection of truly fine furniture and accessories in the Harbor area at a reduced price. The sale be9ins now thru January 30. R19ular store houn wlll prevail. Fair traded items excepted. HERITAGE • You are corcllally lnvltecl 1howroom1, dl1pl1yln1 ••• to vi1lt our DREXEL e CENTURY • KARASTAN PROFESSION~.J. GARRFJT fURNlllJ~~ HARBOR BLVD. Opn M ... Tllu,._ • frt. ..... COSTA MESA. CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646-0175 6'46.0l76 ' . I . I • -· ... -. Huntington Bea~_. EDltlON Today's Final . . ... N.Y. Stocks • ' VOL. 64, NO. 6, 3 SECTION S. 40 PAGES ORANGE c.:>UNTY, ci.i.iFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1971 • TEN CENT S Valley Boa1·d Considers Freeway Resoli1tion By Al.A N DIRKI N 01 1~. cuir. ,.;i.1 s1111 The Fountain Valley S<:hool Dislril·l n1ay call For the stale tn hold ne\\', public hearini;:s on the Huntuigton Bctit h !<'ree\Yay (Route 39 ). 'fhe trustees \\'ill con sider a reso lution ;it their n1eeling, beginning at 7:30 p.nl. Thursday, urging <1 re -evaluation of the route adopted by the state Highway Comm ission in 1968. The resol ut ion, prepared by Supcrln- Hu11ti:t1gto11 Cop's Wife Testifies By RUOI NIEIJZ IEl.SKI 01 !~t D•ll~ l"ll01 Siii/ The wife of a Huntington Beach police officer fired for his alleged mishandling of dcpartn1enl store n1crchandise said she v.•as un:iwarc of a store policy re- quiring that the items be give n to the Police \\l ives Guild . "Whenever the Guild had a rummage sale, t would take the items there." teslifc<l f\1rs. Janet Cocrpcr before the city person nel co1nrnisslon considering the rc·instatcmcnt or her husband. "Al other times \\'e got rid of them as fast as v.•e could ." f\1rs. Cocrpcr. one of the two founding members of the Guild, said she and her hushand Gilbert had received damag- ed or marked-out merchandise from tifontgomery \Vard since 1967 without ever being questioned by store personnel about the destination of the goods. Her explanation appears lo contradict the testirnony of Se\'cral store employes \1•ho clai1n lhat the Cocrpe:rs had spcci rically been given the merchandise for charity activities or !he Guild. Cocrpcr. according to an in-house in- vestigation by the J·lunlington Beach Police Department. kept son1c or the Jnerchandise for himseU . f\1rs. Coerpcr cited a "b~g !'llisun- derstanding" about lhe destination i;f the goods as the basis for her husbands difficult ies. She said sonic or the toys and applian- ces they harl recch·ecl v.cre passed on to a neighbor for transn1ittal lo poor ri.1cx- ican children. 11·hile others "'ere gn·cn to a rcpresc11t..1\i\'r of a church group :ind othrr police officers. She said she "·as surprised \\hen 11!s. . Ja ck Hcinhollz. an officer of the Guild, telephonrd her to tell h<'r that the slorc \\·anted "!hank you·· notes ior 111crchan- di11e donated in l!liO. .. , told n1 v husband that they v.·antcd in kno1v 1vhPt \\·c had done 11'ith ii. \\'r had kept no recnrd s nf 11•herc il had gone and I \\las completely wn- fuscd." she tes!iiierl. J\lrs \ocrpcr s11id !'arlier 1hnl n1orc th:it1 h:.iH c1f the ilctn<; 11crc u11usable bccausi· 0f d:1 1nn'!e or rnissing par1s anrl hild to be thrown ill the trash. "It \\':lS inos!lv iunk," she said. Later Hl hcf lei>tirnony. l\1rs. Cocrper oHerrd an rxplanation for her husband·s alleged lying during a police lie detector lcs1 , "lie lied Lo protect other fellow officers In v.•hom he had given some of lhe lh in~s. ~fr. Wal)l;er <the officer con· ducting the investigation\ said . he had enough evidence to arrest him and anyone else he had give n merchantliSc to.'' The hearing continues al 5 p.m. next t-.1ondav '\'ith lhe testimony of four more (iefens~ "·itnesscs. Both Michael fl1iller , the prosecution attorney. and Cecil Ricks. Coerper's attorney, said they expect to wind up the testimony at th11t tin1c. Beach Officer Hurt in Crash Huntington Beach Police Office r !vu Neal ~·as injur ed th is morning when his motorcycle collided with a car at Mansion Avenue anti f\fain S1reet. Details of lhc 7 a.m. accident arc still being 1nvei;ligated by \he Calllornia lfighway Patrol but officers said thr. collision flppa rently occu rred when the car executed a left turn in front or Neal. Neal is in satisfaclory contillion at Jlunllngton Jntercommunlty Hosp it a I where he is undergoing trt.alment for an injured kneecap and seven cuts on ,hi s hands. Jluntington Beach lrafflc" oftlcers said he was saved from further J Injury by his safely helmet and leather jacket. 'llle name of the other driver \\'8S nol· immediately known. lcndent tif iehacl Brick, points out that the adopted iine -called the orange route -will cut through the district's education center, "'arehouse. an d maintenance facilities al Talbert Avenue and Newland Street He also clai ms that the present al ign- ment will displace more homes. schools, pa1'.kS, churches and com1nercial parcels than any other route. The resoluti on before the board follo\VS devylopments in H.untington Beach \Vhich • ' • • ' lt'et UJtd lt'ifd \ focused new a!lcntion on an old Con· lrovers)'. The Hu11tington Beach city counC'il has or dered a study on the route and a proposed alternate. This study is being carri ed out joi ntly by the city's planning staff and the Urban Land Institute (ULJ) transportation conunittce. Their report is ex1>eeted Feb. I. Larry Curran. an attornl":y and hl":ad of !he Concerned Citizens Council which opposed the orange route at the public • • .,t.: • •\ ; ~ \ ( -. t•·-~-, )' < ~ • J·luntin~ton Beach fire1nen scurry around and through fountain of \Valer in effort to shut of! fire hydrant that erupted late \Ved nesday afternoon. Hydra nt on Walnut Street between 5th and l\1ain Streets '"as J\nocked fl a t by a hit and run motorist. Fire.men \Vere a ble to shut oU the water about IO 1ninutes and 30,000 gallons later. Scl1ool £01· Ha11clicappecl Cl1ild1~e11 Dealt Setbaclc • By TERRY COVTI,LE 0! lfl• D•!I' l'llel Sll!I Pl:ins for a SI 2 mill i!'>n cripp\rd r·hildren's school in Founl nin Vullcy h;1\·c suffered a severe setback. Slate t'dUl'n- llon officials said this week there is no mone y to build iL TI1c school is supPQsed to serve or1hopedical!y handicapped youn)'.!s1ers from Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley, Ne"'port Be a ch . Costa f\1esa, Wt'slminster and Seal Beach. "\Ve're going to ask for special leg1sla· lion to release money for lhe school," Mike Brick, superintendent of the Foun- tain Valley School Di!trict, said today. Brick already ha.ci launched a letter writing campaign to twu stale senators and four asse mblymen. of a~c . anrl classrooms for 300 regular S!Udl'lllS. • .. l':1rt o[ the school phil~ophy ls to mix the crippled ch ildrrn \l'ilh nlher studcn1s 11hC'11 possi ble," llrit k silid. "\l,'c don't fe(•] !hey should be 1solatctl fro1n socie!y .'' The cos t of the orthopedic program .. vould he shared by Brick's district and the Huntington Beach Union High , Ne"·porl·fllesa Unified, Ocean View, J!un· tington Beach City, Westminster and Seal Beach school districts . Total capacity of the school ls planned for 120 handicapped students. "\\'ith this setback we have no idea or \\'hat ~·jll hap peh, or when the school rould be built." Brick said. "There ar( no alternatives lo state aid." hearings, "'as !he first to reopen tht' issue. lie has suggested that instead of the ~reeway going down NeY:land Street to the Coast Freeway it could be sent -from a point near the San Diego Freeway -over Beach Boulevard tu Gothard Street. a less developed area. Curran said recent actions by the llighway Commission indicated that the 'state may lake another look even al an adopted freeway if all the ci ties aHected mnke a joint request. The path that Curran suggests would bt•ing the freeway in Jlunlington Beach on a line referred to as the red route during the 1968 hearings, a route backed by Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach but opposed by Westminster. It is believ- ed that the proposed change would not ;il\er the line th at Westminster accepted however. 1'he possibility of a new look al the route coincides with nioves to push for speedy conslruclion of the free"·ay. Hunt ington Beach and Fountain Valley councils have postponed resolutions call- ing for the state to set a high priority on the freeway, but Westminster has approved such a geslure. The freeway is scheduled for con- struct ion in 1978·79 but Huntington Beartt Planning Director Kenneth Reynolds recently said he believed construction niight. be advnnced three yea rs if a conrerted campaign for a speed·up is n1ade. Sex Trial Drama Injured Woman Points Out Mesan By T03.f BARLEY Of IM 01111 l'llol S11U A I luntinglon Beach ,.,.·oman '~ho underwent surgery '"'O weeks ago as a result of injuries allegedly suffered at the hand s of accused rapist c:ary Hnrold Phoenix toda y in Superior Court testin1011y identified the Costa Mesa man as her attacker. The 46·year·old victim , unable to sit in the witness box because of those spinal injuries, stood y,•ith a microphone in her hands and pointed lo Phoenix as the driver of a white Thunderbird <1.uto "'ho came running from his car last July 17 to grab her as she entered her home. She told the jury in Orange County Superior Court Judge V.'il\iam f\.1u rray's courtroom that the encounter ended after Phoenix hid dragged be.r down the drive.,,•ay ~·hile repe atedly warning her to stop screaming. He then ran back Downtow11 Plan lo his ca r and drove off taking her purse "'ith him, she testified: The injured woman became the third or five prosecution witnesses to thus far identify the 29-year-0ld Phoenix in teslin1ony as their allacker. One of the three victims told the jury that she \vas kidnapcd, beaten, raped and fo rced to participate in ac!s of sexual perversion with the tall husky b:ichelor. A 25·year-old Costa Mesa wa itress gave niuch Lhe same testi1nony late \Ved· nesday but could not posit ively identify Phoenix as the abductor who forced her into hi s car at 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard and subjected her lo a nightmare ordeal of rape, beating CJnd sex perversion. Deputy District Allorney titichael Capizzi, v.•ho v.'ants the death penally for Phoenix, also put a lfJ·year-0ld Foun- tain Valley i;:irl into the witne!'I! bdx to tell. how she W9i saved by l'!er falhQr after struggling and screatnina outside \ Business Association Urged for Huntington Ci1y officials are suggesting that businessmen and property owners in dov.11town Huntington Beach form on a.<1sociation lo help create a specialty shopping district. Harbors and Beaches Director Vince f\foorhouse has v.·ritten businessmen in- ronn1ng them that su rti a riistrict <"Ould he rstablishcd in the arc:i from \\'alnut to Olive Avenues fr om Third to Fifth Streets. The C'ily 1\·ill make :i presentation nn !he pmpos<1l during the first "·eek of February, ~1oorhousc announced. !11 previous reports. the city has sug- r,cstcd Iha! n Roaring Twenties Village coul d be created tlownto1\.'t1. It \.\'Quid involl'c closing ~1ain S1rccl from Olive Avenue and cnnvc rting it intn a mal l. The proposllion ls tied to the city's intention to err.ate a l,800-space parking lot adjacent to the spCC'ialty district. 'fhc parking lrit will be the first step in the Top of the Pier plan and the specialty sho p!ling the secood. Moorhouse sa ys that market analysi:i; Indicates "a very lucrative specially potential." He said thal !he city is preparing a plan to tap this potential, but ttie project re<iuire.<1 the ,.·combined efforts of all involved." "I( there is enough interest after the presentalion, thea we would recommlnd that the businessmen and properly o"·ners within !he confines of the project rormulate en association thal could work · \'Cry closely "'i!h the city st.a ff in arriving at final plan." r.1oorhouse explained. ti1e:inwhile. the C'ily is continuing nego!iations "'ilh property O\\"ners from \\'alnut Avrnuc In Coasl Highway on !he sale of their property for the parking lot. Jtoadblocks remain on 1his project , ho\\ever. The city has filed 4a compla ints in Superior Court CIS part of eminent domain proceedings to acquire some o! ~See OOWNTOWN, Page 2) Cha1nber Slates Freeway Sc1ninar The Huntington Beach Chambrr of Commerce has scheduled a highway and free"'ay seminar Jon. 19 for West Orange County business and civic leaders. The mee ting is set for noon al the Sheraton Beach Ion. The latest developments on the Hunting. ton Beach Freeway. the Coast Freeway and the Orange Freeway ~·ill be dis- cussed, according lo Bill Wren , chairman o! the chamber's transportallon commit- tee . her home y:ith a man tabbed by the prosecutor as Phoenix. Capizzi says he will put nine women victims into the witness box to support charges or kidnap. rape, robbe ry, se:t pE:rversion and assa ult with in tent to com1nit rape against the for n1er assistant ntanager of a Hu ntington Beach health spa. All lhnse charges sten1, he says, from a 2B·day Cl'in1e spree which began late last June and ended wi!h poliee in silt 01'ange County co1nmunitics looking fur Phoenix. They rlid not have to look \'Cry ftir, Phoenix 's attorney is expected to testify. The Costa ti1csan \1•alk ed into the Hun- tington Beach polit·e station last JuJy 25 to ask police 1f it was true that he was being sough!. Officers assured him that It was so and immedialely lodged hin1 in the city jail. Nixon Denies McCor1nack News Charge By GEORGE LEIDA.L or t~e 0111, l'lkl! s11U Rending his morning news summary al the \\'estern \Vhile !·louse in San Clemente upst'l President Nixon today, \\'hen columnist Jack Anderson alleged the Presiden t \l'as somcy,·hat l"'o-faced abou~ Speaker or the House Jolm f.1eCormack. \\'hite llnuse press secretary Ron Zirglcr told ne1\'Smcn in La~una Beach: ''1'1n denying Anderson's allegation that this administration is lrying 'lo pifl criminal charges' nn House Speaker 1-leCormH ck .'' Ziegler ~.1id President Ni xo n lolr:I hi1n lo tell 1hc press: "I am nlost ap- preciative and have a lasting debt of gra titude 10 John f\1cCorm rick ror his slatcsm;in-like v:ork and cooneration with this administration ove r the last two years. Ziegler satd the Presidrnt maintain'.'11 "the highrst respect and admiration'' fur lhe man. Anderson's syndicated column ap- pearing in new spape:r:r; across the nation this morning and included in its "usual spot" in l.!Je President's daily news sum· mary said that Nixon had publicly prais- ed lt!cCormack. Oraage Coast I-tis district planll to build the school \•:ith the state paying for 00 percent of the construction cost. Those plans were knocked ajar ·when the slate nn - nounced it has used up all available money for building !ipcclal schools. Cause of Boy's Death Loca l street and highway plans and mass transit deve lopments also will be reviewed, Wren said. "It w\!! be R purely lnformaUonal meet- ing," he added. "It won't take the form of a publi c hearins on any one particular freeway." l\'enther ln 1952 the California Legislature said that on}y 3.S pe.rce11t o{ state school constructlon bond money could be spent to crea~ special sc hools. "We'll ask our representatives to waive that 3.S percent oeiling or Write ne1v legislaUon covering special schools,·• Brick extilained. Th e orUK>pedic school ill designed with ~ial facilities ,to .serve crippled children, most of ff6om are confined to "'heel chairs or crutches. At least 95 handicapped studl":nl.s from seven Orang!': Coast $Cbool districts v.'ere scheduled tO atlend' the schooJ in 1972 when it W•s to open. The Fountain Valley School District will provide the i;:tudie1 and ~t of the teaching staff. Orange County will prov ide orthopedic teachers nnd a medical st11ff i• the 11e'hoo1. In addition to orthopedic cl&Slj('S. plans for the school include an out-patient clinic for indlvlduals from 3-21 years At Happening Unknown A Fountain Valley youth whose body was found near the site of the Laguna Beach rock festival is not known' to be a vic tim of an overdose of dfl!gs and no empty container wai; found near the eorpSc, ·the 0 range Couilty Sheriff's Off ke has confirmed. Sheriff's Serg(!ant Ben O:undaboore stated Wednesday that earller in- formation · regarding the death of Grant \Yeidenhammer. 19, of 1ne1 Oak St., waa in erNlr and based on his conflL'llon of similar reporl1. "We deeply regret tbb error and I hav e ap0logi1td to Mr. Ctrl Wcldenham· mer (the ~d youtjl 's fattierJ for any distreSll caused to the family," Ox- andaboure aald. Ttte e1act cause ot-lht<youth's ·dtath , will not be known for aome two to three week.a when coroner's investigators com plete. a series or toxicological tests dn the youth's·remains. Weldenhammer'a body was found Sun- day ne11r the top uf a small hill jWlt ea!lt of Laguna Cinyon Road by four friendJ who organized a search for the youth. The' dead -youth's abandoned car was found nearby on El Tore. Raad. Oxandaboure c:Onfirmed Wednesday that lbe youth left home Dee. 28 following a dispute with his girlfriend. His four male friends organiied tbe Laguna se.arch sis days later. he said, "There Is no evidence lo show that lhe boy aUended the rock feslival earlier and. we accept lhe father's statement th11t 1 be did not do .so." Oxandabouri $aid. \ ''· Masse use Held In Lewd Conduct An afternoon raid al a Huntington .Beach massage p11rlor W e d n e s d a y rtsulted in the arrest of a female operator on S'eX mlsoonduct charges. Vice squad d~tectivts arreated Grace Miura, 35, an employe or Beppu Massage, 315 3rd SL, on SU-'plclon o( lewd conduct, prostitution and operating as a messeuse wJUlout a permit. Lt. Bert EllStrom said the parlor had only been open for a few d1)'1 and ti11d been operating wllhout benefit or a city bu,Jneas Uctnst. Mrs. Mlw'&. ·a n:Mdent of 308\~ 3rd SI .. w.u booked Into Huntington Beach City JalL . , • ~ The winds will die down Friday, but lhe arctic aii-will stay around for another day, keeping high • temperatures at 65 and lows ranging from 38 to (brrr) 28 de· i,:rees. ~SIDE TODAY Orange Cotu1tv health offic- . WJ.s are plm111in11 o m031ivt" atit.i· robtlla (German nitwits) cam- paign Jan. 31. To find ouc whe:re inoculations will be ovoUoble, see Page I I. l lrftltt ,, (•111W111!1 • ClllU;lfle U• ll Cll'otltl4• ft•• c-1c1 t> Ci'Ml .. N t) 0.1111 NGll<•I ll otnre" n Sdlllri..1 l'lti ' 1~1•1111ft-nl t .. 11 l'ln1ne• •11 ~ 111 """~ .. 1, MllllMI ' ' DA.Tl V I'll OT H ..--·- -'· ... . . . . .... ,." ... I . . . ,., -: . ' ... '·"' .... ··.,.,..-: Teachers' Salary Battle Leave s Both Sides Hurt By TERRY COVILLE 01 ,.. DtllY P'llM 11t tt IT TOOK AN OUTSIDE man -UCLA law professor Edgar Jones -to settle the long sizzling salary dispute between teachers and trustees of the Huntington Beach City School District. The scars of that baUle may remain for a Jong lime, but Jones offered a few cryptic comments in his l l·page report telling both sides what they did ~·rong. " I ... ,.... He started by telling the district that its negotiations • held ~larch IS to May 1, "had they been in the private sector would have supported an unfair labor practice charge before the National La bor Relations Board." '~J.i :! I ~'!: .... ~. "When serious economic proposals ha ve been put forward, the most minimal sta ndarda of good faith negoti- ations are not satisfied by a proposal that the union's package be entirely withdiawn," Jones wrote. ,. JONES A~O slapped the district's request that negotiations be "continued until several months ha ve c passed and people feel Jess tired." He was referring lo the fact that salary negotiations were stopped during the summer and resumed last September. "At best this was an ostrich posture," Jones charged. "It is Mt a negotiating one. It is incompatible with the existing public res ponsibility to ti egotiate in a good faHh effort lo resolve these complex matters fairly to all concern~. including not just teachers but the taxpayers and the children as well." llE FIRED A few comments at the teachers' side of it as well. '"Teachers' representatives can no more cry impasse when the negotia- tions do not at the outset produce instant submission to their demands than the district representative can sit in passive attentiveness and not offer bona ride responsive and material counterproposals." Jones wrote lhe co mpromise which wa s accepted Tuesday night by trus- tees. He. unlike the teachers or trustees, was able to find a midpoint. TEACHERS WILL get a s.ix percent salary increase plus extensive fringe benefits. The board did balk at giving 100 percent dependent coverage on medical insurance as Jones recommended, but at least 75 percent coverage was granted. When they stalemated, teachers were asking for a nine percent salary boost, plus about three percent increase for fringe benefits. The district was offering a six percent increase with no fringe benefits added. Jones chopped three percen t of the teacher salary request and tacked the three percent in fringe benefits onto the district offer. He accomplished whit they could not. Fountain Valley Rejects ':Relation s Council Plan Fountain Valley Is turning thumbs liown oo the proposed Orange County 0Relatiom Council. , Led by Councilman George Scott, the f;:ily eouncil Tuesday night agreed llnanimOUJ!y to cast a n~ati~ vote on the relations body when,, the QrJllle County League of Cities meets Thur,day night. . Fountain Valley's action is contrary to neighboring Huntington Beach which has agreed lo support the Human Rela- tions Council. "On paper il looks like a good idea," Scott explained. "But there are too many deta ils I don't like about it." Scott's prime objections were lhe coun- cil's power lo subpoena, the fact that two similar councils already exist in Fullerton and Santa Ana, and the lack Building Fi1m's Move A11nounced The La Cuesta homebuilding finn is movin a; its offices from Newport Beach to Huntingtnn Beach. The Huntington Beach city council granted the company a zone change to buil d a lwo-story office building al the corner of Brookhurst Street and Atlanta Avenue. The zone fo r a parcel 150 feel by 110 feet v.·as changed from residential agricultural to an off ice-pr!>- fess ional district. The firm's present headquarters are at 6000 W. Coast High way. . DAILY PILOT QaA>IG!: C.O.UT "UaLllHIN() alM"AN'Y Ro \i•tt N. WoM l'rnloH!!I •M PllMllMf' J •c .. R. C11tl•y Vkt l'tf'lldtnl •~d Dtntr1I M~lll.-r' Tho111 •• K •• .,;r EGllor lhom11 A. M11r,hl•t M 1..-1ln; Edi.tr Alen Dlrkln Wt.t Or11119 C:-1~ !dlltf" Albert W. 1•111 ... .OC:lt lt l:dltor H1.tl11t .. • a.-• Offk• or elected off icials on the council's ruling body. The' proposed Human Relations Council would handle complaints of racial pre· judice, investigate disputed hiring and firing practices and study o t h e r discrimination problems. ''It's creating another re gional govern· ment setup. We're getting too many," Scott said. Baker Renamed To Shore Panel Seccnd District Supervisor David L. Baker y,·as reappointed to the Shoreline Planning Committee Wednesday by Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Robert Battin. Tuesday Battin pushed through a m~ tion to declare all posts on committcts and commissions, vacated for one week so they could be studied. This left the shoreline planning group vdthout a county board member and new Fiflh Dis trict Supervisor Ronald Caspers \Vas named. Battin \Vedncsday admitted tailurc In reappoint Baker was an "oversight." B;iker 'i; and Casper's districts are tile onty ones with coastline. Valley Man Dies In Work Misl1ap A Fount.in Valley oil field worker was a-ushed and killed Wednesday in Torrance when a truck load of drill pipes fell on him. TOJTanee police sa1d Raul AlRnlz, 21 , of 10482 Warner Ave., was helpin g unl oad the pipe in an open oil field when lht load shifted and the entire load of pipe rolled on top of him. He wes ldllcd Instantly, police said . l'Uneral arrangement! are pending 1t Smtth's Mortuary in Huntington Beach. FRANK CURRAN AND WIFE, FLORENCE , AFTER HIS ACQUITTAL WEDNESDAY San Diego Mayor Clea red of Charges in Bribe C1se Involv ing Yellow C1b Contracts Scholarship Set For Jolin West, Scl1ool Official A special college scholarship will be set up in the memory of Fountain Valley resident John 0. West, SJ. psychologist for the Westminster School District, who died Tuesday. The family has suggested that checks be sent to the John We6l ~1emorial Scholarship in care of Westminster School District, 14121 Ce d a r w oo d . Westminster. Fune ral serv ices for ~tr. West, 10462 Warne r Ave., will be held at 4 p.m., Friday. in the Pee k Family Colonial Funeral Home. Burial follows i n \Vestminsler Memorial Park. Mr. West served six years as the school psychologist in Westminster and six years prior to that v.-ith lhe Orange County Schools of fice. He lived in Foun- tain Valley for l6 years. The scholarship "''ill read: "For 1 male student with a sensitive and loving nature who plans a career y,·nrking direcll y with mentally re t a rd e d child~n." Mr. West is survived by his wife Alie; his mother, Mrs, Hilda West; a daughter. Mrs. Lois Iverson of Philadelphia, and a son , William, a stu- dent in Portland, Ore. Youth Committee Will Take Ove r Guards' Station The old lifeguard headquarters near the municipal pier "''ill be the new home of Huntington Beach's Youth Coalition Committee (YCC). Beaches and !!arbors Director Vince Moorhouse said the building is used by the junior lifeguards. but \\'OU!d be availa ble Thursday evenings as a meeting place for the youth group. Moorhouse's suggestion solved a pro- blem raised al the clty council meetin~ by Miss Barbara Nelson, ricw president of the YCC. San Diego Mayor Ruled Not Guilty of Bribery SAN DrEGO (AP)-1.-tayor Frank Cur- ran was found innocent Wednesday of bribery and conspiracy in alleged payoffs from Yellow Cab Co. for his influeire in pushing through a fare increase three. years ago. The verdict came after nine hours of deliberation by the jury of nine men and three women. Curran, 58, was indicted by the county grand jury in October along with eight other pe rsons including seven public of- ficials. The separate trials are scheduled through February. Curran's was the fir st Valley Council Defers Freeway Work Resolution to end -exactly a month afte r it began. On the stand , he denied the claim by Charles A. Pratt, former president of Yel!ow Cab. that he gave Curran checks for 3,500 as "campaign con- tributions" to push the fare increase through. The two-term mayor told the trial that he once accepted an envelope from Pratt and delive red it unopened to his re-election can1pa ign headquarters. Before the in dictments (Were handed down, Curran indicated he would seek a thi rd four-year term th is year. The verdicts of innocent on all three counts-two of bribery and one of con- spiracy-v.·ere read at 3:16 p.m. by Superior Court Judge Robert Conyers. Spectators went up to shake Curran 's hand. "[ can't eve n talk now ," Curran said, crying. ''I'm too overcome." F rom Page 1 DOWNTOWN . •• Fountain Valley·15 City Council Tuesday night followed the lead of Huntington Beach and deferred until Jan. 19 a re solution ur~ing the state lo speed up work on the Huntington Beach F reeway . the parcels. Jndivi duals in l·lu ntington Beach are Today Robert Te rry, chairman of the trying to gel a route change of the novintown Property Owners Association, Freeway C Highway 39) which touches said his group would contest lhis action the western side of Fountain Valley. charging that the city does not have The current route would travel down lhe po'.l·er to acquire the land under the crest area between the two cities. the California Parking Law. wiping out several expensive homes an d "The law says a public agency may eliminating the headquarters of the Foun· acquire the land for parking H there lain Valley School District. is a need , but so rar lhey have shown An alternate proposed recently would no need," Terry commented. swing the freeway av.•ay from Fountain Terry added that his association is Valley at Alagnolia Street and bring also planning lo resubmit a suit claiming it \\'est to Got hard Street in Hun tington $8 million damages from the city on Beach. a less developed area. the grounds that "'Oppressive land use Fountain Valley leaders ind icated they regulations"' prevented owners from "'·ould v.·ait for Huntington Beach !O developing their property. complete studies of the proposed freeway The suit was withd rav.·n recently by change be fore urging the state lo speed the association's attorney, Arthur Gu y up construction. or ;\e"·porl Beach. for redraftin~. 1--.------ Fri gid Grip On County Nears End Old ~1an Winter will l005en hi.! Icy gr ip on thf Orange Coast in the nut few days , forecasters predicted tod•y, with clear skies and gusty winds con· tlnuing through Friday. The news was parliculii.rly welcome to citrus and avocado raisers, whose orchards have so far escaped with no apparent damage in thr cold spell. A warming trend will set in Saturday and last al least through Monday, ac· cording to predictions by the U.S. \Yeather Service. Northeasterlf winds continued today , v•ith familiar jetliners setting down at Orange County Airport on approaches from offshore inland. The lowest temperature forecast for early tnday in Orange County was a shivering 25 degrees at San Juan Capistrano . v.·hilc E! Toro had a blue-lip- ped 26 reading. Newport Beach -"'here the sea creates a slightly warmer index in winte rtime -had a 30 degree low \Vednesday. 1'he ocean temperature is only Si( degrees, but that's like a warm bath v.·hen you consider the inland air run.s near 20 degrees lov.•er. No orchard heating v.·as req uired today, according to the Fruit Frost Service 1vhich has operated from Pomona for four decades. Citrus and avocado raisers in most inland valleys. however, v.'ere firing up the smudg e pots as the mercury dropped to 2Q degrees in Imperial Valley today. Swamp Murder Case Delayed On Mes a Man A further delay was ordered Wed· nesday in Orange County Su perior Court action against a Costa Mesa man believ- ed to be one of "Candlelight Killer" Robert \Villard Libert y's companions in the swampland kill ing of a homeless drifter. Judge Byron K. McMillan set March 3 for trial setting and the heari.Qg of a motion to dismiss murder cMrges against Randall Greg Allen, 2&, of 3SO A\'ocado St. He will also mull the validity of kidnaping and conspiracy charges filed against the defendant Allen was arrested and accused of being one of three men who shot and killed Thomas C. Astorina, 25, lasl March 13 in a quarrel that erupted over dispos•I of a stolen $30 television set. Astorina 's body was found in a boggy area near Sunset Aquat ic Park in Hun- ti ngton Beach and a search was im- mediately launched for Liberty who ha d recently been released from a mental hospital. That search ended June 10 in Colorado Springs, Colo , with the arrest of Liberty and his paramour, K'endall Ann Bierly, after a 100 m.p.h. chase and gunfight. The couple was ma rried July 31 in a jailhouse ceremony. Both face murder charges stemming from the killing June 7 in Sa n Die&o of male nurse Robert Irion, 52, wh08e strangled body was found in his apart· men! surrounded by nickering candleii and the legend on a mirror: "The Candlelight Killer Strikes Again.'' •·our members £eel we are disorganiz· cd v.•ith no place to go." she said. pointing out that the group did not have a regular meeting place. .JJ. J. Qarre ll ~ seven t eenth • Jt seems administrative annex. was not alv.·ays available, the hall in the recreation center y,·as too large, and the Lake Park clubhouse was usually rented . "That's good ," she said. accepting the offer to use the old lifeguard station. Cold Fails to Halt .Lndians' Cer e mony TAOS. N.r..t (AP) -Suhfreezing weather failed lo stop a group or Taos Pueblo 1ndians from performing their annual buffalo dance. f , FURNITURE 1711!i l 11th l t11l1wtrd Mtllint Adcftou : P.O. a.. 790, t2"41 OtMr OMa. LA.--a..ci.1 m ,,_, ..,_,. CO... M-: :bl W•I .. , I!'°" Industry Fleet We invite you to ottend H. J. Gorntt's 17th Semi • Annuol Clearance Sale. Each yeor at this time, we offer our re9ular stock mer· chandise at fabulous reductions. It is an oppor· tunlty for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from the most comprehensive collection of truly fine furn iture and accessories in the Harbor area at a reduced price. The sale be9ins now thru Januory 30. ReCJ11lar store hour$ wlll prevail. Fair traded items excepted . .. ....,, llKJ!r 11'11 Wt1I .. llltl -...i1w1~ .. °""9'1tt: • /'IOtlll ., CtmN a.I 'Come On' Ambassadors Request.ed Huntlnlton Stach may have a fleet of ambuAdor1 ln the future -industrial ambauadorl tr1v!llng about the country. encouraging good commercial or in- dustrial prosptdl to move to the city. The local chapter of the American Atloci1Uon of lJnlvenlty W o m e n (AAUW) sugge3ted Monday nl1ht that the clty council consider auch 1 m8neuver to Improve the clty'a economic balance. The AAUW wrote 1 Jetter to councilmen urging them to establbh an lnduttrlat DeveloPJnent Commilllon and UH travel· tn1 buatMsamen to carry city literature 1nd lnformatlon with them on trips. City Councilman Nonna Glbbl II.Id the traveling ambassador idea waa spark~ by husband!: of AAUW members. A letter on t.he subject to M1yor Donald Shlplef was signed by Dr, Ralph Bauer and Edward Burnes. Bill Back, the city's I n d u I t r I I I coordinator. said th la mom Ing tie would 1ppreclate "111 the help I can get." Baell: said several members of the chamber of commerce already do similar work by distributing Information about Huntington Beach to out of town ftrms. The city council withheld action on the AAUW request until a report cnn be prtpared by the chamber of com· merce which hes an Industrial com· millet. HERITAGE • You 1r1 cordl1lly Invited to vlalt our showrMms, dlspl1yln9 •• • DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN P ROFESSION~. J . GARRETT f U RN 1111 ~ ~ HARIOR ILVO. OpH Moo. Tlon. I l'TI, lnL COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646.0275 646-0276 . (' I I I i " -- ltlost 011t by May Viet Withdrawal Completion Eyed WASHINGTON (UPI) -Only a few thousand American cornbal troops \\'ill remain In Victnan1 past ti.1ay I -and !hose in a restricted role -accordi11g to present top-level \\'ithdta\\'al plans, Nixon Adminis!ralion sources said toda y. Continuing troop withdrawls lhis winter ·and in early spring \\•ill complete Presi· dent Nixon's pl<.in for lurnini; O\'er the US. ground combat role lo the South Vietnamese, the sources said. Defense Secretary f\lel\'10 R. Laird mentioned !he ~lay I goal for the fi rst ltme publicly today during an informal news conference on arrival al Bangkok, Thailand on the second leg ol a round-the· v.'orld trip. He goes on to Saigon and top-level conferences on Friday, Laird said most U.S. lroops "with combat responsibility" will be 11i·ithdra\\l1 by ~tay I. Those that rrmain, \Vashington sources said. will be u~d as advisers with South Vietnamese units or \1·ill be kept in a reserve status to cope "'ith any c1nergcney situations posin& a threat to the security of other American person· ne1. During an int erview by four television network representatives Monday, Nixon spoke only in general terms of a con· linued meas ured withdra,val. Jn Paris on Tuesday, Laird menlioned a mid-sum· mer goal of ending U S. combat responsibltllle11. This and his rt.ference today to May I represented the first nlO\'C by lhe administration toward a scheduled wilhdra.,..•al lin1et able. There was some speculation the timing might also be designed to head off new student protests about the war. \1hiC'h reportedly are planned for the spring monlhs. The M1y I d:ite has been set. govern· men! sources said, unless !he ad· minist ration's troop withdraw al plans are upset by some unforeseen contingencies. The end of the U.S. ground combat role will not end the American presence in Vietnam, hov,.ever, nor will it end A1nerican casual ties. A signifiC'ant number of U.S. combat advisers \\"ill remain for a lirne with \'ietnamese units, and American troops \viii e-0ntinue to co nduct ai r opera llos and , prob.ibly, long-range artillery at· tivilies . The nexl phase of !he American \rit hdrawal "'ill involve ha n d in A arlillery, logistic. arid aircraft ~upporl over to the Vietnamese, perhaps by late next year, the sources said. These sources also predicted the ad· ministralion \\'ould beat its own publicly· stated estin1ate.s of total wilhdrawa!s by ?-.fay I. Laguna Council Caught In Happening Crossfire By BARBARA KREIBICll Of 1111 01Uy ,.llal S!1U The Laguna Beach City CouncH sat in a cross-fire of criticism \Vednesdav night as representatives of all element's of th e community, from hippie to establis hn1cnl, ma.~sed at city hall lo post-mortem I.he Christmas ''happening." Desert Vi sit A Po ss ibility For President President Nixon may interrupt his work·play San Clemente: slay for a jaunt to warmer Palm Springs and the exercise the doctor ordered. The council chamber 11·as filled tn its 115-person capacity v.·ell before the 7:30 p.m. meeting opened and an equal number of interested citizens shivered in the chHI night air outside listening to the proceedings over loudspeakers. A motio n by Councilman Charlton Boyd lo move the meet ing to the larger high school auditoriwn died ror lack of a second . The council later ..-.·as castigated for this "cavalier'' trea1menl of the citizenry. Though City Clerk Dorot.hy f\\u sfell reported that mosl letters addressed lo the cowicil complimented the council on its handling of the rock festiv<1I that lured 2tl,OOO persons to the Art Colony, few words of praise were voiced at rhe meet ing. I The Nixons hope to spend a couple I of days al least at the elaborate desert estate of \\'alter Annenbcrg, ambassador Two persons volunteered positive praise. Chamber of Commerce President Bernard Syfan commen~d the c i t y s!aff and police but noted that "an Jllegal, illiC'il gathering" had been at101v- ed and urged a review of pol icies to avert a repetition . to Britain. I The President v.·orked through the day Wednesday at San Clemente and then relaxed "'ilh i;ome \1·ell-knov.11 dinner guests 1vho [Jew into San Clement~ by helicopter. Western \Vhite House dinner guests lncluded comedian Bob Hope : golfer Arnold Palmer : Gerald R. Ford of ~lichigan, House Republican leader ; and Henry A. Kissinge r, top foreign policy adviser. Nixon is l!Kpected lo do a good deal o( golfing if he goes to Palm Springs. Palmer might join him next 11·eek. Palmer presently is entered in the $110,000 Glen Campbell-Los Angeles Open tournament. Da y-lime lempera!UrC's in P a I m ~prings have been c:on.~1cterably balmier than San Clenit·ntr 1\·herc highs hav e been in the 50s. 1"hc chill has pul a crin1 p in 1he Prr~ident '~ recreation plans. The President's physician , Air Vorce Rrig. Gen . Wal!C'r ·rkach said last \l"C'P.k Nixon was 111 fine health but shoul d get more exercise in sunny climes in Artist Andrew Wing, v.•ho had bat11ed the council ol'er the \Voodland Drive housing inspection progra1n, also stepped forward lo offer •·a big pat on the back to you gentlemen, and particul arly the police." The" rest of the hour-long exchange:, following read ing of a formal statement on the "happening" by City f\·la nager Lav.Tence Rose , was largely critical. Complaints ranged from ~slablishment .attacks on the city's failure to avert the entire el'ent before it go~ under way, to festival organizers' charges that food and medica l supplies y,·ere kept from reachi ng the site, residents e:ic· pressed irritation over failur e of the ri1.y to keep, the public informed and failure to establish a citizen-manned disaster council as provided by Jaw. Others spoke o[ break<lov.•ns in conl· n1unic<1lion that led lo increased con· fu~ion. fllayor Richard Goldberg co1nmcnled, "ll"s ea~y to be a Monda y morning qua rterback. \Ve arc just fi ve hun1an beings with human failings and v.·c did \11hal y,·e thought was best for the city a t lhe lime." McGovern inlst Step On Presidential Drive WASHf NGTON (UPI ) -Sen. c;eorge S. McGovern of South Dakota resigned today as chairman of a Democratic Party Reform Con1mlssion as a first :.tep toward becoming an active can- didate for President. McGovern told newsmen that it was ''a fairly accurate" assumpUon that he would announce for the Democratic presidential nomination later this month. He also was a candidate for the nomina- tion in 1968, entering the race after the assassination ol Sen. Robert P'. Kerr nedy (0.N.Y.). The rerorm commission that he headed -and which generally was referred tn as the J\1cGovem Commission -was one of two crealcd by the Democrats as a result of the tumult at the 1968 National Convention. Nearly all of the ~fcGovern Com· mission's work so far has involved writing i;uidelines for selection of delegates to future conventions. Explaining his decision lo rei.ign the <'halrmansh!p, McGovern said hi"' BChedule wa s becoming foo h<.?avy and U1al he might be a pre!ild~tlal candidate. ~ he mla:bl become Involved In trying tn win delegates, he said he felt he should not be telling them how they should be chosen. ~TcGovern described the 1968 con· venlion as a "traumatic shock" to the party. He predicted that the 1972 co n- vention, as a result of revised pro· cedures, would be ''the least boss-ridden" ever. He said that In getting 5 I a l e Democratic organizations to comply with commissions• proposals, the g r o u p already watt "at least half way home." By July 1 more than half of the states will be In compliance and most others will be near the goal, he said. As a result of the commlsslon'11 work, McGovern said, the 1972 convention will have more delegates under 30, more women, more representatlve.s of minority groups and more from the modest In- come brackets. In announcing his ~.slgnalinn a.~ com- rrti!sion chairman. Mt'Govern recom- mended Rep. Donald M. Fraser of ?o.1in· nesola to succeed him. Df.mocral.lc National Ch a I r m a n Lawrence F. O'Brien immedltllely ac· cepted McGOYem'• recQmmcndatlon. S gnlhed:er Dr. C. Jr. Li. director of the lformone Research Laboratory at UC San F'rancisco, and his staff have isolated and synthe- sized the bonnone that con· trols hu1nan growth. IL is de- :1cribed as a major n1ectical breakthrough. See story, Page 5. Nixon Keep s Busy Signing New Measures President Nixon spent much of the hrsl 11..-0 days of his Califomia \'acation signing bills enacted by !he last Congrc~~. press secretary Ronald Ziegler said \.Vednesday. Deadline for signing the new bills into law is Jan. 14, Ziegler said. and there \\'ere about ft2 remaining unsigned when the President lefl for the \Vest Coast. Tackling the job early Wednesday. the President affixed his signature to a wide assortment of legislative acts , ranging from such weighty documents as the Special Foreign Assistance Act of 197\ and District of Columbia Revenue Act, to a miscellany that included: -!·louse Resolution 1420, which authorizes speaker John \V. ~1cCormack to accept and wear a decoration lrom the Italian government. -HR 7311. •itkh provides that the rate of duty on parts of stethoscopes shall be lhe same as the rate on slethoscopes. -J1R 14695. which prohibits <'ertain uses of the Great Seal of !ht United Stales and the presidential and vice presidential seals. -HR 19857, which officially names three Federal buildings in Boston, Baltimore and St. Peten;burg, Fla. -Hit 16745, which exempts American fishing vessels from duty imposed on repairs, repair parts and equipment purchased in foreign ports, H Nixon Signs Aid Bill Cl em ente S ite of For eign Fufld A pproval. One of the first major bills aigned by President Nixon during his current stay at lhe Western White House was the ~ milllcin Special Foreign Assistance Act of 1971, whiC'h provides for military and economic assistance to Cambodia, Korea. Jordan, Indonesia , Lebanon and Vietna1n. In addition to this support , the bill authorizes an appropriation of $15 mUUon or contingency fun ds for disas ter relief in East Pakistan . The bill bans U.S. troops in Cambodia but 11i·ould not restrict U.S. 'air action over that country. The long embattled bill is the second step in the President's $1 billion request lor foreign aid fu nds, the first step, a $500 mill ion credit assistance to Israel having been authorized earlier. Under the measure, $195 million is earmarked for economic assistance and $340 million for military assistance. The Cambodian allocaLion provides $85 million for additional military assistance and $70 n1illion for special economlc as· sistance. "The bill ," press secretary Ronald Zi egler said Wednesday, ''contains three provisions regarding our involvement in Cambodia. Flrst, no funds authorized here may be used to finanC'e !he in· troducUon of U.S. ground combat troops in!o Ca1nbodia, or to provide ll.S. milit:iry advisers·. U.S. economic advisors can continue in Cambodia. ''Second, the assistance to Cambodia should not be construed as a U.S. com· mitment to Cambodia for its defense. "Third, and this is normal legislative procedure. the President shall not use emergency authority to give additiona l aid to Cambodia without notifying both the House anti Senate 30 days prior lo di verting funds." "The: United States," Zieg I er rC'lterated, "does not intend and Y.'ill not introduce ground troops into Cam- t,· Nixo1i Chilly, But Likes Sun Asked by a correspondent how President Nixon had reacted to th e frigid weather lhat greeted him in California . "and did he wish he'd gone to r·1orida instead?" press secretary Ron Ziegl er hedged nimbly at the Wednesday preS3 briefing in Laguna Beach. "We'll probably take that matter up in lhe Stale of the Union message," quipped Zfegler, who was sporting a long-sleeved sweater. "But," he added amiably , •·1 can ray that we always enjoy !he beautiful California sunshine. We haven 't had much of !hat in Washington and the sun seems to shine every day here." bodla." Co unt ry-by-country appropriations authorized ln the bill sig ned by the President \Vedn esday include in addition to the Cambodi11 allocations: -$100 million for supporting and military assistance programs for varlcus c:ountries to replace funds which were transferred for use in Cambodia. -$1~ n1illion for military assistance to Korea. * * * Not a Certainty -$.'10 million for military asaistancx. for Jordan. • -$3 million for military asaJ~ for Indonesia and $10 mllllon to replace (W)ds transferred from forieign aid prO- grams for other countries for use lit Indonesia. -$5 million for additional militag assistance for Lebanon. -$S.'i mill!on for additional economic assistance for Vietnam. Ziegler Casts Shadows Over Dole Appointment Presiden tial press secretary Ronald Ziegler said \Vednesday that appointment of Kansas Senator Robert J. Dole as ('hairman of I.he Republican Nationa l Committee is not as certain as Wednes- day -..;•ire service reports indicated. Dole was reported as confirming that he is "President Nixon's choice" for the post. Ziegler said at the Laguna Beach brief· ing that he would prefer not to comment on Dole's remarks but added, •'f un. derstand he did not say that in those words." He said a nom inating committee has been appointed to recommend candidates for the position to the national committee at its meeting in Washington late nexl y,•eek. "Senator Dole is one or those under consideration," Ziegler said, but he declined to name other possible can- didates. The nominating committee. he added, ''will consult with the President prior to making its recommendation." He said the President has not talked to Senator Dole "on Ulis matt.er.'' Under intensive questioning by White Jlouse correspondents who asked, "Are we just going through a charade here?" Zieg ler replied. ''No, \\'e are not going through a charade. The President will consult with the nominating committee and the committee w!ll make its recom· n1endalion to the full national committee when it meets toward lhe end ol next y,·eek. '' In respo nse to a qucmion , Ziegler said it was ''possible" Uie President might appear in person at the national com· Arn1 y Se ts Discharge Of Helicopler Pilots WASJflNGTON (AP) -Pentagon of- ficials say about one-fourth of the Army's helicopter pi lots will be disC'harged April 1 -belore their Army terms are com- pleted. millee meeting. Ziegler said a committee headed by outgoing GOP Chairman Rogers C. '· r.Iorton would consult with the Preslde't on its choice for parly Jeadershl p. 11'le meeting will give the President a chancm to mend political fences for the 1912 pre5idential elections. · Sen. Dole said he has not received word from President Nixon naming hitn chairman. He did, however, say wh,t he will do when he gels the job. , Dole said I.he re-election of Nixon ln 1972 11i•ill be his primary role in the post. •·1 will be the Republican chairmau, not any ideological chairman," said Dolt . He minimized opposition from some liberal and moderate GOP senator5. He said the President had not call~ hini but he left the door open on lhe possibility that some other administration source had. Boots Still Roll After Suit Fails LOS ANGELES -An appe llate court here has confirmed a federal court's ruling lhal a Goodyear lire version of NanC'v Sinarta's "These Boots Are Made For Wa!kin' " did not constitute unfair competition. fl1iss Sinatra sued the tire makers for more than $1 million after \he airlog: of television commercials that led many viewer~. lhe singer claimed. to read her own voice into the message. She also asserted that Goodyear made "many millions of doUars" by their takeoU lit'hei' number. The appellate panel ruled that J\fisi Sinatra did not own copyright to the .. Boots" song although she could have purchased it had she so desired. Stressed in the ruling was the argument for "free competition in Ideas which do not merit or qualify for patent pro- tection." NOW' LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. Loo Angelos (Orengo county, Palos long Beach to V d WU I T ) San FranclM;O s1a er es, m ngton, orrance, etc. , Including tax. long Beach Is llke having your own private Leave Long Beach: airport. You don't have to tight the free- Now you can fty PSA from long Beach 7:40 am way traffic to L.A. lntemalional. There's Airport to San Fr1;tnclaco. Four limes a day. 10:45 •m eesy parking. And the crowds haven't More on weekends. More fltghts than 1 :30 pm found It yet. Ne xt !!me you head north any other alrllne. Connections to Sacra· .4:30 pm (or sou!h), head for long Beach Airport mento. Or, avoid the freeway and fly to Mon thru Thurs & Sat by way of your travel agent and PSA . San Diego. If you live ony place 80Ulh of .__M_o_ .. _1_11g_h_11_F_r1_&_s_u_n_ ..... PSA ..,,.. ,... a llft. .., . l I r OAILV '!LOT Ul"I Te'"""' FLIES TO JERUSALEM U.N. Envoy J•rrinv Jarring Visits Israel in Bid To Speed Talks UNITED NATIONS,_ N.Y. (AP) - Special envoy Gunnar v . Jarring flias to Jerusalem today in an effort to ~t hi! Middle East peace talks moving. Diplomatic sources said the Stri'tdish diplomat bowed to Isr1eU .demands after aincluding that 5Uhetantive discussicns COi.iid not begin at U.N. headquarters un- til he conftrTtd with 1 .. aeJj Foreign ~finistt:r Abba Eb111. U.N. diplomats e1preHed belief that the Jerusalem vitit would be brief and that Jarring's talks al U.N. headquarten with representatives of Israel, Esypt and Jordan would start again in two or three d11ys. Jarring decided to make the trip aftfor Israeli Ambl\S$ador Yosel Tekoah urged for the second i;:uccessive day that ~e IC· cept an invitation extended by Eban in a m~sage Dec. 21. Arab 8(l.ln:tS charged prjvately lh11t the proposal was a !tall to delay the peace talks, but Weetem diplomats said Jarring believed the Jerusalem visit was neressary to get the taliu off tht 1TOUnd. It was not clear why IMael placed ao much 11tress on lhe meeting, but 90me observers speculated Ehan might ~k to shift the siU! of the indirect Arab-I!l'aeH talks to Cyprus or some other location c\Mer t.o the Middle Ea&t. Eban in hl11 invitation l.o Jarring &:aid be wanted "to rurvey the situation. to ac· 'JUBint you with the ha.sic views of my government and to discuss steps neces· iiary to ensure t.ne fulfillment of your mis· sion for the promotion of agrtement on the establishment of pea ct." Moscow Repri•ab Russians Accost American Envoy MOSCOW (UPI) -0 .S. Embassy sources aaid today three Ru51ian1 grab- bed. •n-·American diplomat by hit Jape.I.I outside a theater Wednesday night and asked him ''how v.-ould you like being treated the way Zionist thugs treat our diplomats in America".'" It v.·as the first report or physical reprisals in the new u .s .• sovlet diplomatic war of nerves, kicked off Tuesd&J 11.·htn the Soviet s announced they c.ould not guarantee the safety or Americans in Russia in view of "Zionist" attackJ on Soviets in America. For the first time in more tha n fou r years Soviet authorities \Vednesday even. ing permitted a •·spontaneous demonstra- tion" Jn front of the embassy. About 20 young persons stood before lhe gate and chanted slogans for 15 minutes. l\1ore delegallons of Soviel citizens entered the U.S. Embassy peaceably to deliver letters of protest against the haraaSment of Soviet officials nnd performers in the United St.ates. Three men and 'a woman from the lst MeQical lru;titule; one of the men a Soviet Jew, delivered such a letter to firs( St!:cretary Sol Polansky about noon. Polansky received lhe first such letter! Wednesday from worker a representing two ,_loscow factories. Another ccntingent of four delivered a similar letter later on behalf of the First State Ball Bearing factory. This party got as far as the 9th noor anteroom to Ambassador Jacob D. Beam's office before being met by an embassy representative. The sources said the Russi ans Wed- nesday night approached the diplomat and his wife outside the Taganka Theater, l\fosrow 's ehowplace for avant garde plays, and grasped his lapels. "They just shook his lapels a bit and asked him how he would like being treated the way Zionist thugs treat our diplomats in America," the sourees eaid. The incide nt ended in a few minutes when the dip lomat and his w!fe entered their car, they said. The embassy circulated a background guidance sheet to the American com· Mighty Blasts Rock Gas Plant in Texas l\l!NERAL WELLS, Tex. (AP) -E:t· plosions "that looked like an atomic bomb had gone off'' early today wrecked two storag e tanks at a bol!led gas plant and wrecked a. house, Surprisingl y onJy one man was 11!ighlly injured. The loss y,•as put at a ha lf million dollars. Officials sa id Roberl Crowley. 65, night operator of Hie plant, was treated for cuts &nd bruises and dMc.harged. munlty on the situation today, stating, "The U.S. goverment , •. expecta the Soviet government to take necessary sleps lo guartntee •• , (safety) for American officials and private citi:M!ns and organiuUons in ~ Soviet Union." Red Gunboats Sink Vessel Of S. Korea SEOUL (AP) -North Korean gun· boats attacked and sank a disabled South Korean fishing boat with 11 Koreans ,aboard Yt'ednesday night, the national police reported. Officials said they had no information on the fate of tho fisherman. '.The Counter·lnfiltratiop. Command said North Korean gunboats fired on t\-\'G fishing boats in the Yellow Sea off the north11.·est co3.:it, but South Korean navy craft rescued one boat, The other was seen in names, the command said. Police officials at Inchon said the cap- tain of the missing boat radioed about 4 p.m. that he bad to stop fishing because or engine trouble. The police said the North Korea.M attacked about IO p.m. near the seav.·arrl extension of the armistice line between North and South Korea. The North Korea version was that its warships sank one "U.S. imperialist armed i;py ship" and destroyed another because they v.iolaltd North Korean ter· ritori al "''alers to conduct "espionage and hostile acts." Pyprrgyang's official Korean Cenlra\ News Agency in a broadcast said •·the U.S. imperialist aggressor troops perpetrated malicious military pro- vocations by secrelly infiltrating armed liPY shipa into the coastal waters or our slde in the lower reaches of the River Namdae..chon north of Changsan Peninsula on the v.•estem coast al around 7 p.m. Jan. 6 to c:ooduct espiooage and hostile acts." General Surveys 'Deterioration' Inside Cambodia Series of Explosions Rips Ammo Depot iri Vietnam PHNOM PENH (UPI) -The second ranking American commander in Viel· nam flew to Phnom Penh today for a meeting v.·ith Premier Lon Nol and a first haFld look et what military sourres have called a "deterioration" of the n1 ilitary situation in Cambodia. The me eting betv•een Lon Nol and r.cn. Fredrick C. \\'eyand preceded the "'eekend trip of U.S. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird to Saigon for talks \\'i lh Pacific na val commander Adm. John S. J\fcCain. SAIGON (AP ) -A !~hour ser ies of e:ic ploslons today \\'recked a blR allitd ammunition dump on the cc>nlra! coast of South Vielnam , ktll ed three Soulh Korean employcs and destroyed more than S.000 tons of munilions, officials reported. Se\•en Americans and nine SouUi Koreans v.'ere re ported injured. The Koreans \~ere employed by a Korean c-ompany 11.·orking on a ronlract at the dump. LIGHTER SIDE CO~UMN WILL RESUME MONDAY It Y.·as the wors~ ammunition explosion in South Vietna m in ne<irly two yea rs. A South Vietnamese spokesman said the cause hoid not been determined, but an invesliga1ion 11·as under Y•ay. The spokesman said the b 1 a 1 ts destroyed at least a Uurd or the muni· tfons in the dump :11 Qu i 1''hon, 27~ miles northrast of Saigon. field reports said 15,000 tons or ammunilion of all types were in the ~tockpile. including arlillery shells, mortars. hand grenades and small arms ammunition. Th e depot is on the side of a mountain about a mile and a half ~·est of South Vietnam'11 fourth largest city and is well aw.11y from the city's re~dentlal area, Windo\~S two miles away wett broken by the erploslans. MiHUl.ry sourC"es said ~lcCain hart bc'n summoned to Saigon specifically to discUM the Cambodian situation. in· eluding setbacks at the hands of Com· munist forces who hold parts of strategic highway 4 soulh1vesl of Phnom Penh. The U.S. Command considers sl11bilil v In Cambodi a essential to s11ecessftil "'ilhdrau.·al of Amer ican forcts trom Vietnam. Tht> U.S. Embassy in Phncitn Penh described the meeting as •·routine," The seiz.ure or Highu.•ay 4 by \1iet Cong and North Vietnamese rorrcs ha~ cu t off Phnom Penh from Cambodia s only deepwater port, Kompong Som. and brought ga.soline "ationing in the capital. Border to Border, Brrr! Arctic Air Continu es Across the Land C•llfenol• UtlDlllLWIA1MPIU'llCl1'17:"A.lllST l •&•ll r-pnwt11,..,. • ., UIOT•D ...... IMT•ltMATleMA\. 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Falrbtlllul Hotllilutu ,,_ ._..., l it ""•I lotA,..lft. l...,ltvlllt Miami Mll*'a\111:11 Ml-POlh N"°"*"' N ... Yort. ........ C*i.,_.,1 CllY "fl"" "''""' ,._._ Pllllldel"'li Pln""'11~ ,wii.nd. Or.. •••Id'"" ·-l>tc•1,,,.fl"' St. Loul• .5.tll l.-1<• (111 $1!0 Dleto 51~ F°fill(lt(O Soetllll s-•"• 'l'h,•Mll Wa•MnGIOfl t4!111'1 ~ '""" " .. ot ·11 • p " .. " .. ll ~ 21 12 .ot .... '' JG . " " '4J .. ·11 .. .. n 4' _. n • ·" ... J1 I.OS .... JS IJ " " 25 11 . ,, .... M •1f T ~ . .... ~ . . " ... " ,. " .. ,, (II ,, " " .. ,, ,, " " .. 16 01 T " " " .. " " " " " .. " ~ ., ·" ' , - ·-- a monumental • occasion 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Anaheim Savings Is proud to celebrate Its 50th Golden Anni· versary. Founded In 1921, Anaheim Savings is the oldest locally owned Savings and Loan Association in northern Orange County. We are celebrating 50 years of security, but more im· portant, 50 years of service to our savers that has taught us many things. We have learned that people want more than a place to keep their money. They want a smile and a personal greeting when they come in. In this computerized world of today, they want to be more than just an account number and a dollar amount on a file card. At Anaheim Savings you are treat- ed as a person. We are interested in you, ever striving to give you complete satisfaction, because ••• your smile Is important to us ••• and we hope to remain Important to you. ALWAYS MORE FREE SIRVICES AT ANAHEIM SAVINGS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES FREE with account balance of $2500 or more PLUS: FREE MONEY ORDERS • FREE TRAVELERS CHECKS FREE NOTARY SERVICE • FREE PHOTOCOPY SERVICE Earn the highest Interest in the nation on Insured savings. 5% to 6%, ask for details. ANAHEIM SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION MAIN OFFICE: 'J 187 W. Unco11'1 A~ A11ahelm. Caltlornl• PA2·1532 A11 Malill Stl'Ml Hul'ltll'IQton Beadl, Callfoml• LEM6G1 710 S. Bru !!vd. lret. CtUfomla JAM871 101eo Magr1e11a A~•iiu• Rlvt1rs!de, Cal!fornlt 687-2211) --- 1921 -1971 I .. Crop• Ruined Nation Star·-·ers ' Reseru·ch Team Duplicates Human Growth Hormone From Big Freeze SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -l..\bor1tory, estlmaled It and ftmalt sex hormones. Unh•ersity of C 2 I if or n fa would take 5 to 11) years for Dr. Philip R. Ltt, chancellor researchers have announced commercial drug manulac~ of UC hailed the test tube By United Pre11 International .in a (our-county area for vary· the snythesis of the human turers lo provide large quan- Except for southern Florida ing peri~ Wednesday. growth hormone _ a develop-lites of lht synthetic hwnan and the Pacific Ccu1st, e<1ld Jn southwestern Kansas, tnenl they said could provide growth hormone (HGH). Arctic air covered the n;ition ranchers had to Ct'lnlend with a major research tool tn the Li, director of the UC t1nce again today. The cattle rustlers who moved in treatment of cancer, heart hormone research laboratory, economy was aff ected. and following the big snowst.orm disease, diabetes and pro-said a long ruge goal of In partg ~f Omaha, Neb., it which hit the midlands earlier S bl ems assoeiated with growth. his research was possible Was frozen shut. this >''eek. Coor s tarting The hormone. secreted by development of 111 modified Residl"nts on Omaha's north· Fl)ur Lincoln, Neb .. the pituitary gland. controls hormone which would inhibit W@SI side had returned lo rl'sidents heading homeward R ecycli~ng· Plan body grnwth. sizf' and shape. lhe growth or breast and ot her lhe bartering system in the after a vacation in Colorado regulates product.ion of cancer.;. \l'ake of this week's heavy said they helped 211 snow· mothers' milk and has been He said several apparent al· snowstorm. With snow-clogged boond motorist.!: a r 0 n g in· GOLDEN, Colo. lUPI ) -used successfully in the treat· tributes of HGH would be duplication of the complex hormone as ·•a great basic researc:h breakthrough with possible applications ranging from the study of growth and development of human beings through the possiblt tt·ea l- ment or cancer and arter- iosclerosis.'' lls first beneficiaries will probably be lhe 10.000 Lo S0 ,000 children suffering each year from h yp e r ·p i t u it a r y dwarfism. They could grow lo normsl size with iiGH !'treets, neighbors had been terstale 80 west of Lincoln The Adolph Coors Co. an· ment of a form of dwarfism studied when sufficient quan· forced to trading -a pack durjng Monday 's storm. They d which afflicts thousands or lilies of the hormont' are nounced Wednes ay a aew of cigarettes for a q u a r t said they arrived in Lincoln youngsters each year in the available. These t n c I u de treatment. of milk , baby food for late ~1onday after "checking program to recycle empty United States. repairin~ bone fractures, pro-Li. who ha s spc.nl 32 year,;: bre11kfast cereal. · · every car and truck" between beer botlles. Coors will pay Dr. C.H. Li. 57. v.ho he;ided moting healing, lowering blood stud_ving the plluil.ary gland It has been so cold in Lincoln and the Waco in· the research team wh ich cholesterol levels. enhancing and its hormones, likened lhursd•1, J.uuwy 7. 1971 delivered treasure for ·pleasure 1eventy-one1 at ~~~L~ ~ HARBOR BLVD./ COSTA MESA 1714) 640-9100 DAJLV PILOT S I • \ A · th t 't · d t one cent a bottle for all Coors he h h r1znna a c1 rus in us ry terchange llbout 45 miles west reproduced t nrmone int e res istance to infection, and _im~a~kl~·n~·~H:G~H~t:•_:•u:;J~d:;n~g-a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ spokesmen say fruit cro p er Lioe&ln. beer bottles that are returned. UC Hormone Re s earch improving the actions of male highway. !Of'lse:i;: there may run into•,----------------------------------------- several million dollars, The cold wave put a heavy 11train on supplies of natural gas throughoul the West. Magma Cooper mine at San Manuel, Ariz., announced lhat its underground operatinns woold be shut down because ef a gas shortage. Near Franklin, lnd., a 69.000-volt transmission lir'- gnapped, leaving thousand! of homes without electric power 'Long Hair' Tells Jail Punish1nent LOS ANGELES ,(AP ) -A bearded, long-haired convict say11 he has been kept in solit.ary confinement for 10 months because he won 't shave or have his hair cut. He insist~ God gives him the right to slay shaggy. "I have no reason for refus- ing to shave," said Steven Robert Winsby ... All I can say is it is God's will tha t I don"!. A man ha11 a reason for sha ving. A man doesn'l have to ha \'e a reason for not sha ving .'' Winsby, 2B , spoke Wed· nesday in U.S. District Court. where his lawyer has filed a petition for his rPlease from solitary confinement at lhe federal prison at nearby Terminal Island. Pair Claim Jet Noise Ear Injury SAN .JOSE IUPI I -A U.S. alt.omey insis ted Wednesd&y !he government w 11 s n ' t re.;ponsible for any damages suffer~ by a couple who claim buzzing. by Air Force jets c111used a hearing loss . Clyde and Naomi Wh ite. of San Jose seek $90 .0 !lO damages. assert in,R: White 's hearing was impaired when the jets swept low over their car in Inyo C.ounty in 196.1. U.S. Attorney She Id on Deutsch said if the planes v.·ere military Aircraft they would have been acling on official dut y and thus exempt from litigation. U"I Tl..,.,.. Bontlre• Bannett Craig Capehart. a slu· dent at De Pauw Uni· versity, has splashed water on plans by In· dianapolis to b u r n thousands of discard· ed Christmas trees in annual ceremony. Cape- hart, the .l(randson o! !onner Sen. llomer Capehart. obtained a restrainini order to prevent burnlni or trees in the face of mountin.I( air pollution. Fires also would vi~ late c i l y ordlnAnC• aitein!!l outside burn· in.1:. 5%% says it loud and clear. Your money earns high interest plus maximum safety. Stability counts for a lot these days. And what could be more secure than Bank of America? h part of our Personal Choice Savings, we have three types of Investors Passbook Accounts. All are high yield plans. And all offer passbook convenience. 5%% Investors Passbook. Leave your money with us for two years and it will earn 5%% annual interest Computed daily, compounded and paid quarterly. $500 ~AWUMTAI', ~ minimum deposit And you can add to it any time in amounts of $100 or more. 5Y2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you 5V2% interest The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. ~ay matun1y. And you earn 5% annual Interest Again, a $500 minimum opens an account Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. • Of course, our regular savings account pays 4%% annual interest Put your money in. Take it out Any amoun~ anytime. You can see talk isn't cheap at Bank of America We mean what we say. High yield backed up by the security of the world's largest bank. Obviously, there's a reason why so many people seek us oul Must be we give you more help with the business of living. BANKoFAMERIO\ m for the business of living er1ca. • DAILY PROT EDITORIAL P AGE Shift Freeway Route? Talk has started on whether \Vest Orange County communities should push for a OC\I.' route for the Hunt· lni::ton Beach Freeway, an issue many thought settled in 1968 after a series of lengthy public hearings. It has been suggested that instead of the: freewa y going down Newland Street through Fountain Valley and Huntington Beach it run along Gothard Street. a Jess developed area. and link up with the C~ast . F r ee- way at a point near 11ain Street. The reasontnli( IS that the state highwav commission might be amena bl e to such a route cha"n~e if all the affected cities -J~unt· in£ton Beach. Fountain Valley, Westminster and Gar· d en Grove -can agree on a Joint request fo r a realign· men! c;ainin.e such ai:?;reemcnt \Vtl1 prove difficult. Al· ready n1.any int erests in all the communities are call· in£ for ea rly c:o nstruction of the freeway. . Nevertheless the lluntineton Beach council wa~ wise to order a study on the Proposal to see wJ:telher a new r oute is feasible. The chances of a realignment v.•ithout lo~! construction time may appear slim at the moment but '''hen the question is one of tea ring .d?~" homes and businesses every reasonable poss1 b1ltty should be explored to insure the best course is followed. Grass Roots Politics T he seed of _i::rass roots politics 11•ill be planted Jan. 21 '''hen f ,)un tain \'allev holds an experimenla l town hall meeting-at Fulton School. The plan is for all city department chiefs and at least l\\'O city counci!1nen to attend the school's popular PTO meelini and open then1selves up for questi ons related to c ity government. pect 200 people from the school area to altend. Small card s will be handed out at each meeting for written questions or criticisms. The idea is to get the people - a lot of people -involved in city goverrunent. Fountain Valley offictals are to be commended for seeking new methods for communi catin,I?' with citizens. Too many politicia ns take tbe stuffy attitude that if the citizenry· won't come to city meetings, why bother with communication? Fountain Valley intends to prove an active phi losophy of grass roots ~ove rnment can work. rt·~ an admi rable effort and we hope it succeed s. Residents should nnt ignore thi~ chance to commun 1- cate with th ei r leaders. School Salary Con1promise Teachers in t he llunt1ngton Beach City School D i~: tric t can rinally relax -their paychecks wi ll be comin~ in with a bigger amoun l. For nearly nine months teach- ers have been fighting with the district over salary in- creases -it took labor arbitration to settle the issue. The compromise -a s ix percent \\'age increase plus several fringe benefits -has now been a ccepted b.v both .sides. The only 11Uestion remaining is why they couldn't 'vork it out among themselves \l.1ithoul lhe need of outside help. The ballle started last May when the board of trus· tees refused to raise it s offer OI a six percent wage in- crease ,~·i thoul fringe benefits and teachers 'v6 uld nnt drop their request of a nine percent wage increase and another three percent in fringe benefits. .. ,. ···I " "(·~ ;)l 1 .,, ~"·~· ~I..~·~ If the Fulton School experiment \\'Orks. city ofJi· cials plan a to\vn hall meetin.e at each school. They ex· Relations between teachers and the administra tion certainly 11,erc not improved by the necessity of call111g in ou tside arbitration. but the conununity can be ilad the needlessly p rolonged dispute finally has ended. H • 'TH EY ~A'{ THt FIRST TWO WHK~ OFF CIGARE1Tfl ARE THE HA~PfS T." Iii Spite of Social Progress, There Is ••• Mindless Blaming of Nixon WASHINGTON - As 1970 came lo an end various exponent! of the Nixon adm inistration sought lo justify the Presidenl"s first two years as having 11uieted down 1he nation in spite of certain noisy events during the con· gressional ca mpaign. It dot:s seem true that the campuses ;i re quieter. the ghettoes <1re merely sn1oulder1nf,!. an cl the older genC'ral1on ~re11-1 accustomed 1n their thilclrtn and grandchildren 1:ot up a,!: 1f fnr a fancy dress ball. '11le b1jZ,l!.C'St flu.le of 1970 pro1'C'd, ;.'1 anv ca~c. lo be 1he v o u ! h re\"r.ilut1on The 1-1'orkless clhic began lo look silly in :i nation with breadwinners vainly seeking 1\·ork. A large !'Urptus of lrt11ned leaC'her~ and lechnolog1sts. and a plethora of Ph D's, untr;:i1ncd rlreamcrs. cn- \'1ronmcntahs1s. mor!llists. clC'ctric guitar players. organic food faddists, h1ghl1ghtrd the shnrt cnm1ngs 11[ lhc new con· ;r::r1nusncss as a \1ay to suslriin hfc . Thcrr rna~· he. ;is rCp<lrted. a couple nf thou.c;and communes "'here the flowe r children ftnfl ~hrl!rr 1n s11bs1anda rd hnus· 10.e. t)111 !hf' i;:lainnur 15 ""Parin~ thin <inrl thf' nallon as ;:i 1~holc has been unmn1·cd excC'pl 111 re1•11l~1011. C.ETT J'\r, [lO""\; TO 11h:i1 rf,.lly h~p­ p('nerl 1n "\r~nn·c; fir~! f\\n ye<ir~. the Ol'Prbln11n rhr1nr1r of 1hr \rh1te l{ntlSf' nnrl 11 .~ unlihC'I\' hC'ralrl . J)r. 0.:1111rl P:i\rirk \\.,1n1h~n. can h4' ii:n,..rrrl At hand arr hnl11 nr '.\1(11"n1ha1fs C'mnt1•1nn l farr\\C'll and 1he man:V thow.and "orded (' Ri chard Wil8on i apologia superint ended by presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman. The simple statistics tell the talc bet· ter Here arr a few : The ratio of expenditures for national rlcfense and hurnan resources programs, balanced heavil v in f<1vor of national dC'fenl'ic in the ·Kennedy-.lohnson years. has been reversed. lo 1961. 1l y,·as 48 perrrnt for na tional defense. anrl 30 rcr<'cnl for hu man resources programs. ln the turre nt fiscal ye;ir. 1hr figure 1s 37 percent for na!iona/ defense and 41 percent for human resources. SCHOOL DESEG REGAT ION in the South has been nothing shorl of scnsa· 1ionaJ. Jn 1968. 6.1 percent of the South "s Negroes attended school in desegregated systems. "fhe fi gu re is now 90 percent. it is pointless lo ignore the fact lha t· many of these Negroes attend schools in .,.,.hich a n1ajo rily of !he student.'! are black E:ven so. schoo l desegrefo!alion in lhe South has advanced during the Nixon adminis tration at an unp recedented rate. Ar anotht'r fla sh point, the number of young men called in the military draft has declined from !13,000 in the first quarlrr nf 191\!l to Z7 ,000 in the fourth quarter nf 1970. And . on anothl"r lighting front. \\'hen Ni~on came into nfhce 2.9 miUil'Jn persons got !hf' hcnrf1t nf lf">Od slamp.c; Today 1hc f1~ure 1s three times as great, 8.8 1n1lJ1nn. THESE ST\TISTlCS are chosen ror iliustrat1011 bfeause they tell Lhe story o( what ha s happened in those. areas where N!xon had been criticized with such en1otional bitterness, l'n othe r fields lhe record is not so persuasive -the standstill in national economic i::rowth. the increase in unemployn1ent. the conlinuing rise in priers. Rut where the heart and human com· passion are concerned the statistics !ell a story of accomp1ishmC'nl readily overlooked b.v those 1-1•bn !'hcrish their prC>concc1\·cd nnllons of Nixon. This makes It all the more difficult lo understand \\'hy so many Negro leaders, so n1any welf erists. so many patifists. so n1 any environmentalisll'i and so many of 1he young simpl y di!mis.s Nixon as beyond redemption. THEY rt1 1NDLl:-:SSL Y prefer to blame him for events with which he had nn connection, like the k.illings al Ken t St;:ite, l ike th e pollution of the ::iir and w11 ler, and. beyond all reason, \\'ith comph c1ty in the "military-industrial complex'' 1-1·hic h he has denied $7 billion thi! year. Why doesn't he rire J. J::dgar Hoover'.' liow come he stands for Spiro Agne\\'' \Vhy doesn't he sym pathize \\'ilh and inspire the young ~ And so on and so "" Thercrorc'. in spite of the steady social progress 1n the Nixon administration, in spitr or the v.·1thrl rawal from Vietnam. in spite nf lo\\'ercrl defense outlays, in spi1e of gains in :he Senate and un· ennlnlnnly l{lw losses in the !louse. 1!1711 is no! deemerl to have been a i,tood year for N1:w:on. Then• 11'111 he lhosr v.•ho wil! s11y the same Whf'n ~1xon ;idds economic pro- gress 1n his la~t t1vo \·ears to the social progress of his fir st tv.·o years. Military Poi Use Growing Pol has herome so prevalrnt amnn11: American military personnel in Vietnan1 thal Bob H0p!' 1ncludcrl gag~ ahou! 1t during his ani111al Chris1mas lour of the Y."ar zone. As Hope launched into n scriC's of one-liner.;; about 1nanjuana, r;ome Gls in his audience ill up their 011·n 5!iC'kS. A top-lel"r\ Pent agon lt1sl. rnrce stu- dying lhf' use of drugs 1n the armed forces told Congress last. sun1mer there ha~ been ··an atarrn1ng increa!it' of case! invcstiga!ed in Sou1h Vir tna1n. thP cnn· linental t t.S and l\'Orldw1de " One v.•1tncss. Dr. Robert \\'. Ra1rd. \\'arnrd· "Unless y,·r t::ike flec1s11·r steps, 1-1·e are going IO ha\"C ii prolJlrrn f11 I' ye11 r~ frorn no11.· we are not gP1ng lri be t1 ble to co ntenri with." The Pentaj!on task forri· ma1ntalnl'd that "the nature Qf th(' problrn1 r~ not 8UCh that at !his point military re afliness ----- Thursday, January 7, 1971 Th~~ditorWl fl/lge of the Do ily Pilot seeks to 111/orm and slim.· ~late reader• bu presenlln(J thi,s ne wapa ptr's opinion.i ond com· mt:nlary on topic• of 11Ht!rest and. sior1if lca11.cl, by providing a forum for the expression of nu r rttJders' opinions, and by pre!lcntin11 the diverse vie«,_ points of in formed obst rt'PrJ nntl spokesm'.n on topics oj the d()IJ. Robert N. \\1eed, Publi.sher . ' " Editorial ·Research ' Is considered to be endangered." But a study by an Anny phy•ician bas disclose d that nearly one out of f1ve front-line soldiers surveyed in an elite combat unit in Vie tnam smoked mari· juana at least once a day. \!ICE A0~11RAL \\'1lliam P. ,_lack, depu ty as.!listanl s.rcrtlary of defense for 1nanpower, has sairl the problem of drug use. by men assigned to critical areas is undf'r "pretty good control." Such are.as include nuclear-delivery system s. nuclear power plants and in· telligcnce operations. Each of lhe services has un covered about 20 lo 30 cases Qf off-duty drug abuse by men in lhese specialtieii, he reported. All were promplly removed. Estimates of marijuana u!le by men tn Vietnam range from 30 to 80 percent. ,._iariju ana grows '4'ild in Vietnam and experts say the strain is twice a! potent as thal available In the United Stales. ln all the service!, lhere were only 522 in\•esligations of marijuana use in 1965. By 1969, the number had &rown to 19,139. More than a third of the cases. or 6.490, were in Vietnam. Hard drug cases totaled 3,357 last year, with 83J of l~m occurring in Vietnam . The Navy, which had taken the hardest line, discharged 3.808 men in 19119 ror drui;: ;ibuse. Only 30 had been l<'t ~(I 10 1963 for thal cause.. Na vy disc:harges in 1970 for rlrug abuse m1y reach 13 high as 4,500. TREATING DRUG users in !he service rather than prosecuting them is being enc:ouraged under a new policy. The idea is to build on experimental pro- grams already in operation in the Army and Air Force ::ind to make them official policy. Emphasis is being placed on rehabilitation and education -not pWlishinenL EmbOdying many or Uie recom· mendations advAnCed by the Pe ntagon task force, lhe new plan allows amnt;:sty for drug users ff !hey come forward voluntarily for l realmenl. Under old regulations amnesty was not aliowed, and di~honorable <li~charges precluded addicl.! fro1n getting treatment at veterans hospil::ils. If 11 drug user has potenlial for rurther useful military service , attempts are to be made to rest'?re him lo duty. Dear Gloomy Gus: As a lfunHngton Beach resident, my pet i:ttve Is the person who takes out his tax frustrations on Ute sc11ools, our greatest hope for future !lanity in government. Never mind educationa l standards nr I~· gal requirement! -just no O\''r· ride rn miller what the damaRe. -D. t... G. T~lt llflU" tl ftK'-tlN tf•' ......... lltl ... , ..... 11 .. """' ft "'' ........ , __ ltfHI _...,.. 111 _,,, "' Gio.mT 010, 0 1117 P'1i.1. 'Taxpayers' Desires Are I g nored' ( l\failhox .. To the Editor : ~1uch has bren 11Titten and said about why we musl have another election in the Hunti ng ton Bcarh Union High Schon l District. What is diffiC'ult to understand 1s whv the nff1l'ia\s of the district are so toial!y ignorant nf the desires of lhe 1axpayers. The previous defeals of their lax override attempts should cle11rly indic11te Iha! they ;ire. being <'lsked or !old, in erfecl. to 1nake a sincere effort lo rind a way to <ipcrat.e wilh the n1on1e~ that w1!J be available from a lower tax ra1e. THEY AR E NOT being asked lo con- l inuc to waste our tax dollars for addJtion· al elections. If the present officials can·t set their mind s to finding a wa y to operate 1\'ith t1 reduced budget then they shoul d resign and let people wilh a rnore positive attitude lake over. Tn date all they have hr.en able to do is lo threaten the elimination of thin£S they know will generate the most emotion among parents. WHY NOT LOOK al every aspect nf the operation of the di!trict? There may be areas where contracting for services may be less expensive. Maybe dividing the dislrict into smaller ones y,•ould help since size in this c:ase doesn 't seem to create efficiency. If all else rails, the least they might do for the benefit of the overburdened ta:xpayer~ \vnuld be In call in an ou!side consultant who migh! be better able to spo l a tree in the forest. D. R. PARSCH l •tll " '''"" •••••l"f •ti w1!c•m•. Hernial!¥ wrll•'"' 1ft1ulO ctnvey !Mir ""''"'"' 1n >M -lh •r ltH. Tft1 rlt ftl HI co.OtnM 11111<1 HI flt •••<• •• 111rnlnllt 11,.1 h rt H r..,.... AH lt!!tn mutt ln· cl.,.1 1l•nlf11'9 t!MI "''!ll"t ..,.,..,,, IHI! "'..,.' "''' lie •llllftl lt .., rt t u-11 It ll,lftlclenl rN Mn ~ .... ritnl. !"Miry Wiii Ml M •11•nlll11I . Air Pirates I Press Comments ' t4 r. ; l • ' Rall1, Texa1, BanMr: "Onct there WI! a lime when viciow pirates roamed the high seas, seizing ships and getting their cargo. But under present day economy. the greatest pirale! of all lime are the air pirate&. They hijack huge jet planes each worth mill ions •.. We should drop all air traffic with any country that will permit a hijacked plane lo receive prc>- tectlon In their country, and we should demand return of airo'aft and passen· ger1 In good condl Uon within 24 hourL ThLs makes een!le." N"' Rockfonl, N.O., Tnn1crfpt : "Th< American ta"Ip1yer is really a n unUJUal animal. As the old aaying goes, he's the only &l\imal that can be 1kinned more than once. When you hear all the talk the.1e day! about 'new IDUl'Ce$ or rtvenue' and 'lax relonn' you can bet your bottom dollar that our tax bill will soon be goln1 up. When • study reve•ls that we could save a half mill ion dollar by eliminating county welfare boards look out-by eliminRtinJr the local board you"ll lose what they're saving you by knowing every welfare client personR11y. Reg ion11I b()ard:ir would lo:iie that much by nnt knowin11: each client. When tax. dollars are !laved Ii always teems to rost morl!." Words: Weapons Of Obfuscation As a language grows mo re "sophisticated ," in 1he modern sense. it seems to accomplish t\\'O opposJte things al once; it clarifies expression and confuses it at the sa111e lirne. In ";idvanced" societies. words :i re as c1f!en uscd as sm0ke·scretns as they are used as smoke signal/\ This ref1ccl t(lfl 11ou~ prnrnptcd h~· a little n e w s item our of Swaziland. the new . .o\frican ~late wh1rh has established its own natinnal airline. rrcently, the ai rline decided to print tirk· el5 in S1-1•azi instead or E:nghsh. ··and ran up against s11n1c tricky J1nguist1c problems," the story noted. TECHNlCAL AND legalistic terms are none•lstent ln this tribal tongue, and the official translator of the tickets finally gave up tryi ng to lranslate such phrase~ as '"unless expressly so provided. nothing here.in contained shall \~'<.11ve any limitation or Jiabil1ly of carrier . ," Eve r.v passenger has sccn thi~ ,:?obbledygook on his ticket. ;;ind not one nut of a thousand E:nghsh·spcak1ng lravclrrs can understand 11 ~Ul'h language is devised las 1l is 111 hou~eholri leases) to give the carrier :ind 1he landlord all the. best or it. while l'nnfu~1ni.: the layman. In our sociel) 1111 111111!~ uf people agree to or sign thing" thry haven't read because !hey cnuldr'l°L understand them even afte r rt•;id1n~ THIS IS 1''0T TO make lhc arroi::ant assumption I.hat tribal la nguat;cs a re ( ·~ .-:-~~~ Sydney J. Har+ill ' 1 \V~ I .,"-} ' .,.v <·hild1sl1. assn 1nanv uf us dn Prof. ~1ari• Pe i. in his bot)k. "The Story ot Langu;1ge:' points ntll tha! the twn pn11r·1ral Afriran \nn_g11C'~ Hau~a and ~11'/1hil1 . art· far from crude 1,r s1mple- 1n1ndcd $\\Uh1li. indrcd. hr !ell!'. us. h<i!'. rri1ched t>ut·l1 ;1 sl agc of devplopmcnt tha t lhe l"11111Prl1f's of ~lo!it'rc have bee n ~·U•"l't•ssJul!y tr<1n~l;ited intn i!, and prc,rntrd 1111h an all-African ras1 And lhP Bantu la.ngua_ge~ inf '''hJ<'h f11m1ly thi~ !~ <1 n1rmbf·r ! arP termed '"rnf1n1tely c~rre~s1vc ' by !h1 ~ professor (l f l1ngu1st1rs. FOR 1:-..'STA .\"CE. Enghsh ha~ no \\'Ord like "rnumagan1agamil."" wh1t:h means .. 11ne whn lose" oLhr.r people's things," or .. muwav1 ,"" mean1n~ "11 good-looking 11nn1an \\hu l'an t c 0 o k. '' or ' rnu11·andoloc1.'" mearung "somerine who gr01\\<; 1-1h('n awakened in the morning."' nr "mutol;l!oli,"' 1nean1n~ •·one 1l'ho Is l'•1nstant ly divorcing and re1narry1ng." Bantu evrn ha s a Y.'Ord for a •·yes.man'' -''n1 u\'Um1zi." The terms and phra~t·s 11·e havP. dr\"f'ln pcd. whi ch art' lacktn_g fn Swazi :ind other nati\·e 1oni;ue... are nn! so ll•U• h ton), 111 e11n1mun1cal1nn aK weapons nl nhfu~c-a!1nn -mean~ nf ronfoundin g, 1n!11111dHlioi.: Jmpres~lnli(. frightening or f•\hl1n ~ pc11ple. \Vhrn vnu are Joftilv to ld 1hal \fllJr ndn1f'nl m~v be ··1slr!")j!"~nic," \\ h;i1 that n1can~ 1~ ·1h111 1Cs probably i.on1e!h1n~ ~ou picked up from the doctor. De terring· Drunk Driving Driving nn st reel~ and h1p.h11·a~ ~ 1" dangt:"rous tnough these davs \11thn11t motorists being required to contend \\"ith drunk drivers. Yet the statistics on traffic fa1alil1e!I keep telling the: liame old stor.v: An jncredlble number o f death-dealing .accidenl.5 are directly linked to drinking drivers. It ha! been impos sihlc tn keep these hazards to lire and limb o(f 1he highways . The Govemor't Aftnmobilr Accident Study Commission. after 21,,, ~'C'ari; of study, has reco mmended th;i t California impose mandatory jail sentl!nces or fint>.~ for first offense drunk driving. Anyone convicted .a second lime would br. requi red to su bmit to a me.d ici1l board for examination and rehabil italion. IT IS QUESTIONABLE whether rven a mandatory line or a short stay 1n jtt1I are adequ11te deterrenls lo drunk drivin g. A motorist who has been drinking heavily more than likely has 11 tendency to forget the possi ble Cfln!le<jUence~ i;hnul d he •ltempt lo we1ve his car home wa rd or to another tavern. But •·t least thi! would be a s!ep in !he right dlttcUon. People have got to be made to rtal11e tha t drivi ng an auto mobile while. drunk poses a n unacceptable risk to the lives of others who i re using the high1-1•ays in a Je1itlmate manner . Cili1.ens should be •ble to drive lhelr cars ""'ith s0me aS5Uranct tha t they won't (111! victim to a lush who ltUnks he's entitled to \\'ea ve over three lanes of traffic on the rree1-1·ay. THE rt10ST INTRI GUlNG asper! of the cnm missione r"s rrcommendaUon IS it!!'. propos;i l for handllna s l" c n n d t I n1 e offenders. By requiring rehabllilat ion of ' Guest Ed itorial l I lhe offenders, there i~ grealer likelihood the rool of the problem can be reached. .,.inl"$ or j;iil 5entences aren"! cures for drunk drivi ng, merely monetary penaltie1 fnr d1snl>ey 1ng lhe l;:iw. llntil ~omethlng is done to treat tha drunk dri~r for his Illness rather tha n repeatedly punishing him for hi~ crime, the-trRff1c death sta!isl1cs aren"t going 111 imp rove. The commission's proposal! contain seeds of hope that this might be done. The Dally Ca llfornlan La Me1• By George ---· Otar Goorge: My husband h::is one bad fault -extravaRance. for my birthday he bought me not one but THREE 1vigs -red. platinum and brunette. Am I justified in nagging hi m for being a spendlhrift? DOT Dr.ar Dot: I don·t think you should. There are more e;<travagAnt things than the cost of three wig s -red, pl alinum and bruncltt For in· ~1a11~. a real redhead , blonde and brunette. i Senrl .your problems to Georgt. 11nd face t.ach day by turning your b~ck on It ! 1 l l I r· Fountain .Valley E:Q:IJI P.N Totfay's Final . : N.Y. Stoeks . ' / . VOL 64 , NO. 6, ~ SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE C.:>UNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1971 TE N CENTS Valley Board Considers Freeway Resolution By ALAN OIRKIN Ot '"* 0 •111 Pl:•t i ltlt The Fountain Valley School Distriel rnay call ror the stale lo hold nC\1', pu blic hearings on Lhc l!unti11glon Beach l•'ree\\·ay (Route 39). The trustees will consider a rcsolu\1on at their n1eeling, beginning at 7:30 p.n1. Thursday, urging a re-evaluation or the route adopted by the state I llgh11·:iy Comn1ission in 1968. The resolution, pl'eparcd by Superin - Hu11tiI1gto11 Co1l 's Wif e Testifies Cy RUDI NIEOZJF:l.SKI 01 l~e Df11J POol St•rf The "He nf a fluntington Beach ro1icc officer fired for his alleged mishandling of department store merchandise said she 1~as una\\·are or a store 1>0lic}' re· quiring Lhal the items be given to the Police \Vives Guild . "\Yhcnever the f~uild had a run11nage sale, I would take the itcn1s there," tt>slifed tl1rs. J anel Cocrper befo re the city personnel commission considering the re-instatement of her husband. "Al olher li mes \~·e got rid of them es last as we could."" htrs. Coerper. one of lhe tv•o founding members of the Guild, said s~ and her husba nd Gilbert had rcce \\'Cd dan1ag- cd or marked-out merchandise from Montgo1nery Ward since 1967 without ever being questiooed by store personnel about the destination of the goods. Her explanation appears to contradict the testimony of several store employes \1•ho claim that the Coerpers had specifically been given the merchandi!c (or charity activities of th e Guild. Coe rper, according to an in-house in- ''estigatton by the Huntin gton Beach Police Department. kept so1ne of the merchandise for himself . Mrs. Coerper <.·itcd a "big rni sun- clerstanding" abou t the destination o( the goods as lhe basis for he r husband 's di fficulties. She said sosnc of the toys and applian- t•rs lh'..'y had received \\"ere passer! on to n neighbor for transmittal to poor ~fex· ica n children. \Vhile others were given to a represen tative of a church group ;:inrl other police officers. ~he snid she \\'as surprised \vhen 1\1.r~. .J ack nrinhol1z. an off icer nf 1hc Guild , 1 c~ephnnrrl her to 1rll lier 1hAl the store 11 anted "th :in k yn11" notes for 1nerch t1 11- disr donated in 1!170. .. I told mv hu sband th,11 thry wnn\erl lo knu1v 11 hat v.e had done with l1 \\'c h<irl kepi no rrcords of \1 here 1l had i!Olle ;u1d ! 11as completely con- fused," she testified. tl'lrs Coerper said rarlh·r 1h'1t rnor.- th,1n haH of the 1lcr11S ll l'!"l' tlnusablr bC<'.111~•' nf d;in1 D!'.C' nr n1i ssin~ p:irls ::.nrl h;1d tn be• t111·n1111 ]11 lhc lrnsh. •·11 11 ;1s rno:-tl~' junk." she s.1id Lall'r in h(•r tr:stirnony. r.·lrs. Cocrper nifrrcd ;111 expla11:ilio11 for her husbancl's :'!llegcd lying during :'I pol1~f lie tletcctor trsl. ··11c lied to protect other fcllo1v off icers In whom he had gi\'Cn some of the things. r.lr. \V:dker tlhc officer con- durlin~ the inl'csti~ation l said he had cnflugh evidence lo arrest hin1 and ;inyonc else he had give n n1cr rh:1ndisc 10." 1'hc hearing co ntinues al 5 p.m. next f..1onday with the testimony o( four more defense v•il nesses. Both !\lic hael Miller, the prosecution attorney. and Cecil Ricks . Cocrper's attorney, said they expect to 11·lnd up the teslin1ony at lhat time. Bea ch Officer H1ll't i11 Crash Hu ntin gton Beach Police Officer Ivan Neal was injured this morni ng when his motorcycle ro\lided with a car at !\1ansion Avenue an d !\1ain Street. Details of the 7 a.m. accident arc sti ll being ill'Vestigated by the California lligh1vay Pat rol but offk-ers said the collision arpnrently occurred when the cn r executed a left turn in front of Neal. Neal is in satisfactory L'Ondition at Jluntington lntcrcommunlty Hosp it a I where he is undergoing 'trcntment for an Injured kneeca p and severe clJ\3 on his hnnt:ts. Hun tington Beach traffic officers said he was saved from further Injury by his safety helmet and leather jacket. 1llC name of the other driver w11s not lmmcd.Jately knoWn. tcndent P.lichacl Brick, poiots out that the adopted ilnc -called the orange route -will cut through the district's education center, warehouse, and maintenance faci lities at Talbert Avenu e and Newland Streel. I-le al so claims that the present align- ment wi ll displace n1ore homes. schools, parks, churches and con1mcrcial parcels than any other route. The resolution before lhr boa rd fol1 011·s deveklp n1ents in lluntington Beach \llhich focused new attention on an old con· t1·oversy. 1'hc Huntington Beach city council has ordered a study on the route and a pt'oposed ulternalc. This study Is being carried out jointly by lhe city's planning staff and the Urban Land Institute (UL!) transportation comn1iltee. Their report is expected Feb. I. Larry Curran, an attorney and head of the Concerned Citizens Council which opposed the orange route al the public hearings, was tbe first to reopen the issue. lie has suggested that instead of the freeway going down Newland Street to the Coast 1''reeway ll could be sent -from a point near the San Diego Freeway - over Beach Boulevard to Gothard Street, a less developed area. Curran said recent actions by the llighway Commission indicated that the slate may take another look even at an adopted freeway ii ,all lhe cities affected niake a joint request. The path that CUrran suggests \\'ould bring !he fr('eway in 11untington Be11c.h on a line referred to as the red route during the 1968 hearings, a route backed by f ountain Valley and Huatington Beach but opposed by Westminster. It is believ· ed that the proPQsed change would not alter the line that Westminster accepted however. The possibility of a new look al the route coincides "'i th moves to push for speedy construction of the freeway. l luntington Beach and Fountain Valley coun<:ils have postponed resolution s call· Ing for the slate to set a high priority on the freeway, but \\'estminster bas approved such a gesture. The freeway ls sched uled for con- struction in 1978-79 but lluntington Beach Planning Director Kenneth Reynolds recen tly said he believed ronslruction 1nigbt be advanced three years if 1 concerted cam paign for a ' speed-up is made. ,It; .. ' ' .. Sex Trial Drama • Injured Woman Points Out Mesan By TO~f BARLEY Of !~1 01111 !'Jiit Siii! A Huntington Beach woman 111ho \l ndcr\\·ent surgery t11·0 weeks ago as a result of injuries allegedly suffered at the hands of accused rapis t Gary llarold Phoenix today in Supe rior Court lestin1ony identified the Costa Mesa man as her attacker. 1'he 48-yea r-old vicli1n, unable lo sit in the witness boi.: because of those spinal injuries, stoOO wi1h a microphone in her hands and pointed to Phoen ix as the driver of a v1hite Thwiderbird auto who came running fron1 hi~ car last July 17 lo grab her as she entered her txnne. She told the jury in Orange County Superior Court Judge \Yilli en1 l\turray·s courtroom lhat the encounter ended after Phoenix had dr11ggcd her down Ille driveway ·whlle repeatedl y 11.'arning her to ~ screaming. Ile then rim back { ' ' ' Downtown Plan to his car and drove off taking her purse with him, she testified . The injured woman became the. third of five prosecution witnesses lo thus far identify the 29-year-0ld Phoeni:c in testi mony as their attacker. One of the three victims told the jury that she was kidna ped, beaten. ra ped and forced lo pnrticipate in acls of sexual penrcrsion \1'ilh the tall husky bachelor. A 25-year-old Costa Mesa waitress ga ve n1uch the same testimony lute \Ycd- nesday but could not positively identity Phoenix as the abductor who forced hcl' into his car at 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard and subjected her to a nightmare ordeal of rape, beating and se x perversion. Deputy District Allorne y ?l-1ichael Capizzi, \\'ho wants the dea th pen:11ty for Phoenix, also put a· I9-year-0ld Foun- tain Valley girl into the witnes.~ box to tell how she was saved b)' her father at~er strugsling .00· ICl'eanltn& Oi.atsu:te Business Association Wet mad Wild Jluntington Beach firemen scurry a round and throu~h foun fain of \l'<l ter in effort to shut off fire hydra nt that erupted la te \Vednesday afternoon. Jl_ydra nt on \Valnul Street between 5th and J\1 a in Streets \1'as knocked fl at by a hit a nd run 1notorist. Firemen we re a bl e to shut off th e '":ater a bout 10 m inutes and 30,000 gallons later. Urged for fluntington Scl1ool f 01· Ha11dicapp ed City offi cials are suggesting !hat busine ssrnen and propt>rly owners 111 downtown lfunllngton Beach form an association 10 hel p create a specialty shopping district. Harbors and Beaches Di rector Vince Tlloorhoose bas written businessmc11 in- rormi11g them that such a district could be esttiblished in the art>a from \Yvlnul lo Oli\'e Avenues (rum Third lo Fifth Streets. Cl1ilcl1'e11 Dealt Se tbacl\: The city 11 ill ma ke a presentati on on the propostil duri ng the first \\-'eek of February, ~l oorhousc announced. Uy Tl-.:RR\" Ct)\'ILLI-.: or ""' OtUY 1'1111 SI .. , Plans fur .'l $1 '.! milliun c-rippl<'d c·hih1 rcn"s scl1(1(1] in FounL1i11 Vall(')' hal'c suffered a severe scl hflch. State ctlut'.'l- !1fln officials .said this 11cek there is no money lo build il. The school is supposed lo serve orthopedic.ally handicapped )'oung~ters from Huntin&ton Beach, r·ow1lain Valley , Newport Be a c h . Costa Mesa , \\l cstminstcr and Sea l Reach. "\\l e'rc going to ask for special lcgis!a· lion to release money for the school," tllike Br ick. superintendent of the f oun- tain Valley School District, said today. Srick already has launched a letter writing campaign lo l\.\'O stale senators and four assembl ymen. His dislrict plans to build the school \\'ith !he slate paying for 90 percent of the construction cost. Those pluns \\'ere knocked ajar when the state an- nounced it has used up all availabJc money for building special schools. Jn 1952 the California Legislature !\aid that onlr 3.5 percent of state school co nstrucuon bond money could be spent lo create special schools. "We'll nsk our repre sentatives to waive that 3.5 percent celling or \\Tile ne1v legislaUon covering special schoo ls."' Brick explained. The orthopedic school is designtd wit h s'leeia\ facilities to serve crippled children, most of whom are confined lo "'heel chairs or crutche1. At least 95 hftndlcappcd students from ~en OrRnge Coast school .((lslricts were scbeduled to attend the ~hool in 1972 whrn It wall to ppe.n. . , , The Fo'lldlabi Vallt~ ;><hool Dlstr;c1 v.·nl pro•r.ft-U. stu41t.1: and. most of tht teaching start Orange Coun ty \viii provide orthopedic teachers and <i medlcRI star! In !he school. In add ition to orthopedic classes, pl ans for lbe 11ehool tnclurie Rn out-patient cUnlc for individuals from S·21 ytars .... or agt>. and classrooins ror 300 regular :-turlrnts. '"f>vrt or lht• s1:hool philosophy is to n)1~ 1hc cri ppled children ·with ol hl'r studcn1s 11he11 possible," Urick s:1ld. '"\\'c don't frcl lhcy should be isolated fron1 sucicty."' The cost 11[ thr orthopedic program 11·uuld be !iharcd by Brick's district and the lluntington Beach Union lligh, Ne11·port-l<.'IC'sa Unified , Ocean Viel\'. !fun· tlng lon Beach City, Wcslminster and Seal Beach school districts. Total capacily of the school is planned ror 120 handicapped students. "With this setback 11.·c have no idea of what will happen, or n·hen the school could be built," Brick said. "There arc no alternatives to state aid." Jn prcvioos repo rts, the clt y ~s sug- gested that a Boaring Twenlics Village could be created downtown . It v.·ould involve closing Mu in Street from Olive i\l'enuc and cnnverl ing it into a mll ll. The proposition is lictl h.1 the city's in1cntion lo create a l,800-space parking lot adjacent to the specialty dislrict. The parking lot will be the fi rst step in tbe Top of the Pier plan and the specialty llhopping the second. !\1oorhouse savs that market analys is indicates "a Very lucrative specialty potenti al." He sa!d Iha! the city is prrparing a plan to tap this potential, but the project requ ires the "combined efforts of all Involved ." "If there is enough int<'rcst after the prcsentalldn , then we would recommend Cause of Boy's Death At Happening Unknown A f ountain Valley youth whose body ·was found near the site of the Laguna Beach rock festival is not known to be a victi nt or an overdose of drugs nnd no elflply con~\ner was found near the co~~ the 0 r a n g e County .Sheriff's Office has confinned. Sheriff's Sergeant Ben Oxandab<iure stated Wednesday that earlier in.: fo!'tnatldp regaraing ti.e death of O~t 1 Weldenhammer, 19. of 17781 011k 'St., l was in error ind bftsed on hls•contuilon • of ~lm~IRI' repOrt$. ' "We deeply regret t.hiJ error 11nd I have apologlifd to·Mr. Cati Wcldcnham- mer (\lle .dead y_outh's father) for 1ny dislre~ cau~ed lo· the· family," Ox· and&boure said. The ez11ct ~ause or the you\.h'1 death \\:ill not be kno111n for some two to three weeks when coroner's investigators complete a series of toxicological tests on the youth's remains. Weidenbammer's body was found Sun· day near the top or a small hill just cast o[ Laguna Canyon Roa d by fou.r friends who organized a search for the .youth. The dead youth's abandoned car was fOU n'd nearby on El Tor" Ro1d. -Ox"andaboure cOndrmed ·. ~8dnesd8)' tbpt,tbc youth Jen hgme ~· 28 ft>llQ'f'lng a dispute with his girlfriend. 1 HJs four male fr\Cnds q_rga~~j!le~ J..@guna search six da )'! {.Iler, he said. "There ls no evidence to· show lhat the boy attended the.h>ck f~tival earlie,r 'and we accept the father"s statemenl · that he did not do sO." Oxandaboure said . .. _ .. .,...._ ..... ----- tha t the businessmen and property ov.·ners within the confines of the projccl formulate an association that could 1vork very closely with the city staff ln arriving at final plan," Moorhcnise explained. ~teanwhite. the city is ronlinuing negotiations with properly owners fron1 Walnut Avenue lo Coast Highv.·ay on 1hc ~nle or their properly for the p;irk ing Jol. Roadbl ocks r~main 011 this project, hnwever. The ci ty has filed 45 complaints in Superior Court as part of eminent du1nain protCl'dinRs to acquire sonic of !Set 00¥.'NTO \VN, Page 2) Ch a1nbcr Slates Free,va y Se11rinar The Huntington Beach ChamlJc r or Con1merce has scheduled a highway and rreeway sem inar Jan. 19 for West Orange County business and civic leaders. TI1e mee li ng is set for noon at the Sheraton Beech Inn . The latest developm ents on the Huntin g- Ion Beach Free wa y. the Coast Freeway and the Orange f'rce\\'ay will be dis- cussed, according to Bill Wren, chairman of the chamber's transportation commit· tee . Local street and highway plans and mass transit developments also will be reviewed, Wren said. "ft will be a purely informational meet- ing ," he added. "IL won't take the form of a public hearing on any one pa rticular fre eway ." Masseuse H eld In Lewd Conduct An artemoon raid at a lluntlngton Beach massage parlor \Y e d n e s d a ~ resulted In the arrest of a female operator on sex mi.!lconduct charges. Vice squad ~tettlves arrested Grace Miura, 35, an ·emfl!Ofe of _Beppu M-gf, 'l~S·3rd St., 10n 'sGspicion of lewd con<tu~t, prostitutibn and' operating as a 1neYeuse without a Peimlt! ' , · ''. · Lt.' Bert fis(rom said the perlor had only, bttn !>(>Cl\ /or .a few .~ ~nd had bttn ili><ralini wlthbul benefit of a ct{y buslnfss l~nst. ' · . Mn:. Miu.ta, 1 "f'tSldent of 306't! 3rd SI.. '"' bOOl<Cd inlo lfuntingtcln' Beach City Jail 1 • • • her hon1e with a man tabbed by tbc prosecutor as Phoenix, Capizzi says he will put nine women victims into the witness box to support charges of kidn ap, rape, robbery, set: pt:rversion and assaul t \vilh intent to {'ommit rape against the former assistant manager of a Huntington Beach health ~pa. All those charges stcn1. he says, from a 28-day crin1e s pree \\'hich began late last June and ended with police in si:<: Orange County communities looking for Phoe nix. The y did not ha1•e lo look very tar, Phoenix 's attorney ls expected to testily. The Costa Mcsan \valkcd into the Hwi· linglon Beach police station last J uly 2~ lo ask police if it y,·as true that he wa s being sought. Ofricers assured hi1n that it \\'as so and immedialcly lodged him in lhe city jail. Nixon Denies McCor1nack Nelvs Charge By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 lh• 011r, !'11o1 si.u Rea ding his morni ng news summ ary at the Western \Yhitc Jfouse in Sao Clemente upset President Nixon today, 1l'hen colum nist Jnck Anderson alleged the Pres ident was somewhat twi>faced about Speaker or the House Jolu\ f.1cCormack. \'ihite House press secreta ry Ron Ziegler told newsmen in Laguna Bca<:h : "I'm denying Andrrson·s allegation that this adm inlstra lion is trying 'to pin criminal charges' on House Speaker f\>1cCormack." Ziegler sa id Presiden t Nixon told hi m lo tell thi: p;css: "I am most ap- prcciati1·c and hill'e :1 lasting debt of gra!itudc to John l\1cCorn1at'k for hi! St-..tcsman-likr work and l'OOpcralinn \\'i\h this admini.stratio n over the last t1\"U ye;r rs. Ziegler said the President ma intain!f ''the highest respect and admiration" for the rnan. Anderson's syndicated column ap- pearing in newspapers across lhe nation lhis morni.ng and included in its "usual spof' in the President's daily news sum· mary said that Nixon had publicly prals· ed McCormack. Orange Coast \\'ealher The. wind!! will die down Friday. bul I.tie arcUc air will slay around for another day, keeping high te1nperatures at 55 and Joy,·s ranging from 38 to (brrr) 28 de- grees. INSIDE TODA 1' Orange County ht alth of f ie· 1 ial!I are planning a tna.t6ive anti- r1ibella (G erman 1ne03lts) cani.- paio,1 Jan . 31. 1'o fit1d out 1chtrc inocula tio1u will be available, sec ,Page 11 . •1t1111 11 Mtwlt\ .lt". (~111~1111 -~ •• "l : l>Wtltl' P!llllt1 ,.., CJl.tcilllli ·v• , , , ....... il'-1 4, Ciillll\W-., *14' 'ori• ~w n Ct!lllcl " ' " 'S'MI l'C!Hit ' )I c,.....,.,.. sa ,.,...,. 21.tt C>H111 Nifktl 11 SMll Mtl1uils •JI . ~ II "'""b!" " ... ..,i.i ..... ' ~ ... , . '"""""""'"' """ w..,... • · "1~ 1'-J1 W!llM WMll t1 M..-11 W ...... 1 !'I ... "''' • AM LH>fln 11 wwtt ..... fol Mel•• ' ' \ ;. ~ ~ DA ILY I'l l.OT " \ Teacl1e1·s' Salary Battle Leaves Both Sides Hurt By TERRY COVILLE °" ... 0.llJ ...... '"" IT TOOK AN OUTSIDE man -UCLA Jaw professor Edgar Jone!! -to !eUle the Jong sizzling balary dispute between teachers and trustees of the Huntington Beach City School District. The _scars or that battle may remain for a long time, but Jone.!I ofrered a few cryptic comment.!! in his ll·page report telling both sid~ what they did wrong. I . He slatted by telling the district that ll!I negciUatl00.!1 held P.tarch 15 to May I, "had they been in the private sector woold !'lave sapported an unfair labor practice charge before the National Labor Relations Board." "When serious economlc proposals have been put forward , the most minimal standards of good faith negoti· aUons a re not satisfied by a proposal that the unJon's package be entirely withdrawn," Jones wrote. JONES ALSO slapped the district'!! request that negoti ations be "continued until several months have , passed and people feel less tired ." He was referring to the fact that salary negotiations were stopped during the summer and iesumed last September. "At best this was an ostrich posture," Jones cllargcd . ';It is not a negotiating one. It is incompatible with the existing public responfilbility to negotiate in a good faith effort lG resolve these complex matters fa irly to all concerned, includi ng not just teachers but the taxpayers and the children as well." HE FIRED A few comments at the teachers' side of it as well. "Teachers' representatives can no more cry impasse when the negolia· tions do nol al the outset produce instant submission to their demands than the district representative can sit in passive attentiveness and not offer bona fide responsive and material coonterproposals." ' Jones wrote the oompromlae wh.ich was a~pted Tuesday nigllt by trus- tees. He. unlike the te11chers or trustees, was able to find a midpoint. • TEACHERS WILL get a six percent salary increase plus extensive fringe benefits. The board did balk at giving JOO percent dependent coverage on medic.al Insurance as Jones rerommended, but at Jeut 75 percent coverage was granted. When they stalemated, teachers were asking for a nine percent salary boo.e l, plus about three. percent increase for frinae benefits. The district was offering a six percent increase with no fringe benefits added. Jones chopped three percent of tile teache r salary request and tacked the three percent tn fri nge benefits onto the district offer. He accomplished what they could not. Fountain Valley Rejects ;Relations Council Plan Fountain Valley Is turning thumbs "'down on the proposed Orange County :.Relat\001 Council . , Led by Councilman George Scott, the city council Tuesday night agree:I ·ananimou!lly hi cast a negative vote on the rela!lons body when the Orange Coun ty Le1aue of Cities meels Thnrsday high t. -Fountain Valley'! action is contrary to neighboring Huntington Beach which has agretd to support the Human Re\a. 1ions. Council. ''On paper it looks like a good idea," Scott ell'.plained. "But there are loo many delails l don 'l like about it." Scotl"s prime objections were the coun· cil's powe r to subpoena, the fact that two similar councill!i already exist in Fullerton and Santa Ana, and the lack Building Firm's Move Announced The La CUest.a homebuilding firm is movini its offices from Newport Beach to Huntington Beach. The Huntington Beach city eouncil granted the company a zone change to build a tv.·o--story office building al the corner of Brookhurst Street and Atlanta Avenue. The zone for a parcel 160 fett by 110 feet ""'as changed fr om residential agricultural to an office-pro-- fesslonal district. The firm's present headquarters are at 6000 W. Coast Highwa y. DAILY PILOT Oii.ANG!: COAST .. UILIJHING GIJMP'AN'I' Rob•rt N. Wttl Prnldtf\I t r4 P11~!1tller Jtc~ IL Curlt 1 Vitt Pr.,1<11111 tr.d GM.1r11 111.,....,_, lhom •1 Ktt•il Eo,,..- lhemtt A. Mwr,.hint Mll\lllf>I Eto .... A.1111 Oir.<11 wnr 0••"111 c-•v I!"*" Albert W. ltt11 Alooc19tt E<lllltr H ... l1tttM .._. Offfce of elected officials on the council's ruling body. The proposed Human RclaUonl!i Council would handle compJaints m racist pre- judice, investigate di!!puted hiring and firing practices and sludy other discrimination problem!!. '"It's creating another regional govl'm· ment setup. We 're getting too many," Scott said. Baker Renamed To Shore Panel Second District Supervisor David L. Baker was reappointed to the Shoreline Planning Committee Wednesday by Orange County Board of Supervisors Chairman Robert Battin. Tuesday Battin pushed through a mo- tion to declare all posts on committee! and commissions, vacated for one .... ·eek so lhey could be studied. This left tile shoreline planning group without a county board member and new Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Calipers .,.,.as named. Battin Wednesday admitted failure to reappoint Baker ~·as an "oversight." Baker's and Casper·s districts are the only onel!i with coastline. Valley Man Dies In Work Mishap A Fount.in Valley oil field w~rker was crushed and killed Wednesday in Torrance when a truck load of drill plpes feU on him. Torrance police sald Rau1 Alaniz. 21. or 10462 Warner Ave., was helpin1 unload the pipe in an open oil field when the load shifted and the entire load of pipe rolled on top of him. He was killed lna:tantly, polke said. f"Uneral arrangemenb are pending at SmJLb'a Mortutl')' ln HunUn1ton Beach. I Frigid Grip On County Nears E1id Old Man Winter will loosen his Icy grip on the Orange Coast in the nex t few days, forecasters predicted today, with clear skies and gusty winds con- tinuing through F'riday. Tiie news wa!I particularly welcome lo citrus and avocado raisers. whose ()rthards have so far escaped with nn apparent damage in the rold spell. A warming trend will set in Saturday and last at least through Monday, ac· cording to predictions by the U.S. Weather Service. Northeasterly winds continued today, \\'ith familiar 1elliners setting down at Orange County Airport on approaches from orfsllore inland. The lowest temperature forecasL !or early today in Orange County was a shivering 25 degrees at San Juan Capistrano, while El Toro had a blUC·liP· ped 26 reading. FRANK CURRAN ANO WIFE, FLORENCE , AFTER San Diego Mayor Clea red of Ch1rge1 in Bribe Cai• HIS ACQUITTAL WEDNESDAY Involving Yellow Cab Contracts Newport Beach -where the sea creates a slightly warmer index in wintertime -had a 30 degree low \\l ednesday. Scholarship Set For John West, School Official A special college scholarship ""'iii be sel up in the memory of Fountain Valley resident John 0. West, 53, psychologist for the Wel!itminster School District, who died Tuesday. The family has suggesled that chec ks be se nl to the John West Memorial Scholarship in care of Westminster School District, 14121 Cedarwood, Westminster. F'uneral services for Mr. Wel!il, 10462 Warner Ave .. will be held at 4 p.m., Friday. in the Peek Family Colonial Funeral Home. Burial follows i n Westminster Memorial Park. f\.1r. \\lest served six years as the school psychologist in Westminster and six years prior to that ""·it h the Orange County Schools office. He lived in foun· tain Valley for 16 years. The scholarship will read : "For 11 male student with a sensitive and loving nature who plans a career v:orking directly with mentally re I a rd e d cllildren." !\tr. We!lt is survived by his y,•ife Alie: his mother, ~1rs. Hilda West ; 11 daughter. Mrs. Lois lve r11 on of Philadelphia, and a son, William, a slu· dent in Portland, Ore. Y outl1 Committee Will Take Over Guards' Station The old lifeguard headquarters near the municipal pier .,.,.Hl be the ney,• home of Huntington Beach"s Youth Coalition Committee (YCC l. Beaches and Harbors Dirrctor Vince Moorhouse said the building Is used by the junior lifeguards. but \YOU]d be available Thursday evenings as a meeting place for the ~·outh group. f\.1oorhouee 's suggestion solved a pro-- blem ra ised al the city council meeting by Miss Barbara Nelso n, nC\\' president of the YCC. "Our members feel ~·e are disorganiz· ~d with no place to go." she sa id, pointing out 1hat the p:roup did not have a regular meeting place. It seems administrative annex was not always available. the hall in the recreation ~nter was too large, and the Lake Park clubhouse was usually rented. "Tha l's good." she said. accepting the offer to use the old lifeguard station. Co ld Fails to Halt Indians' Ceremony TAOS, N.M. (AP) -Subfreezing weather railed lo stop a grt1Up of Ta os Pueblo Indians from performing their annual buffalo dance. San Diego Mayor Ruled Not Guilty of Bribery The ocean temperature is only 54 degrees, but that's like a warm bath y,·/Jen you consider the inland air runs near 2G degrees lo"·er. No orchard heating was required today. according to the Fruit Frost Service \rllich has operated from Pomona for four decades. Citrus and avocado raisers in most Inland valleys, however, were firing up the smudge pots as the mercury dropped to 20 degrees in Imperial Valley today. SAN DIEGO (AP)-1.-1ayor Frank Cur· ran was found innocent Wednesday of bribery and conspiracy in alleged. payoffs from Yellow Cab Co. for his inf!ueoce in pu shing through a fare increase three years ago. The verdict came after nine hours of deliberation by lhe jury of nine men and three wonten . Curran, 58, was indicted by the county grand jury in October along with eight other pe rsons including seven public of· ficials. The separate trials are scheduled through February. Curran's was the first Valley Council Defers Freewa y Work Resolutio1t Fountain Valley's Cily Council Tuesday night followed the lead of Huntington Beach and deferred until Jan. 19 a resolution urging the state to speed up work on the Huntington Beach Freeway. lndividuals in Huntington Beach are trying lo get a route change o( 1he Freeway (Highway 39) which touches the western side of Fountain Valley. The currenl route would travel down the crest area between the lwo citie~. wiping out several expensive hon1es and eliminating the headquarters of the Foun· la in Valley School Oistritl. An alternate proposed recently Y.'ould sy,•ing the freeway away from Fountain Valley at Magnolia Street and bring it west lo Go!hard Street in Huntington Beach, a less developed area. fountain Valley leaders indicated they "'ould wait for Huntington Beach 10 complete 3tudies of the proposed freeway rhange before urging the state to speed up construction. --------- to end -exactly a month after it began. On the stand. he denied the claim by Charles A. Pratt, former president of Yellow Cab, that he gave CUrran checks fnr 3,500 as "campaign con- tributions'' to push the fare increase through. The two·lernt mayor told the trial that he once iv::cepted an envelope from Pratt and delive red it unopened to his re.election campaign headquarters. Before the indictments were handed down, Curran indicated he would seek a third four-year term this year. The verdicts of innocent on all three counts-two of bribery and one of con· spiracy...:' ""'ere read at 3:16 p.m. by Superior Court Judge Robert Conyers. Spectators "·ent op to shake Cu rran·s hand. "I can"t even talk now ," Curran crying. "l"m too overcome." From Po11e 1 DOWNTOWN. said, •• Swamp Murder Case Delayed Ou Mesa Man A further delay was ordered Wed· ncsday in Orange County Superior Court action against a Costa Mesa man believ- ed to be one of "CandlelJght Killer" Robert Willard Liberty's companions in the s~·ampland killing of a homeless drifter. Judge Byron K. McMillan set March 3 for trial setting and the hearing of a motion to dismiss murder charges against Randall Greg Allen, 26, of 350 Avocado St. He will also mull the validity of kidnaping and conspiracy charges filed against the defendant. Allen was arrested and accused of being one of three men who shot end killed Thomas C. Astorlna, 25 , la11t March 1.1 in a quarrel that erupted over disposal the parcels. of a stolen $30 television set. ·rooay Robe rt Terry, chairman of the Astorina's body was found in a boggy Oownto .... ·n Property Owners Association, area near Sunset Aquatic Park in Hun· said his group would contest this action l.ington Beach and a search wa11 lm· charging that the city does nol h:.ive 1ncdiately launched for Liberty who had the power tn acquire the land undC'r recently been released from a me ntal the California Parking Law. hospita l. "The Jaw says a public agency may That search ended June 10 in Colorado acquire the land for parking if there Springs, Colo .. with the arrest of Liberty is a need . but so far thrv have shown aAd his paramour, Kendall Ann Bierly, no need ," Terry commente.d. after a 100 m.p.h. cha.!le and gunfight . Terry added that his association is The cnup!e was married July 31 in also planning lo resubmit a suit claimini a jailhouse ceremony. S8 million damages from the city on Both face murder cha rges stemmin~ the grounds that '"oppresshe land ust-from the killing June 7 in San Diego regulations"' prevented u.,.,·nrrs from of male nurse Robert Irion, 52, whose developing 1heir proper!~·. stra ngled bod.v was round in his apart· The suit was \\'1thdra.,.,·n recently b.v ment surrounded by flickering candles the association's attnrner. 1\rthur Guy and the legend on a mirror: "The rif Newport Beach. for redrafting. Candlelight Killer Strikes Aga in.'' lllllliliiiliiiiiiiliiiiiiiliiiiiim seventeenth f , 11a1s lucli 1 • ..,1, .. ,,, Mtlli111 MGrnti P'.0 , a... 790, !2"41 --1.....,.. B•cti~ m ,._, A- C••'• M ... : »D Wttl &ty srr..i Industry Fleet We invite you to attend H, J, Garrett's 17th Semi • Annual 'Clearance Sale. Each year at this time, we offer our re9ular stock mer· chandise at fabulous rHuctions. It is an oppor· tunity for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from the most comprehensive collection of truly fine fumiture and accessories in the Harbor area at a reduced price, The sale begins now thru January 30, Re9ular store houn will prevail, Fair traded Items excepted, ,. .......... ell: zttl Wftl 8tlllll1 .......... ~ A9ft CllfMnTt: al HOflfl Iii (Mlllnt ~ ·-. OAll.Y "IL.OT, ""'"' "°""" • _....., .. .................. II '°'lllflll"llCI •1'1 -.;.• ~ ..., "' ...... ,. Ulll ........ U9llM ..... ...._.i hKll, C.0.tt ~. ,.........,. 9eodl '"' "_,,.., "•iltr ....... 'lltftl hr• , .. -...1 """"""· o...,... c... ~ .... ~y ..... lllftlll •I--•I UU ...., .................... par, .--. '"' ..... ..,. &fret!, c.tt M-. T1•:1t111 cn41 ••Mtl1 1'M WAtw ' t:r Cal 141·1UI a-HW ..,,.,. ... Ml-l•n CW,..19111, """' 0-...... c..t ,........,. '""""· ,.. -I ......... ltlmlrtl....._ M t...W ...._. w ....,.,..._.., ........ _,, " •• t 1..i ...... _. ,.,.. ..... -.,,...... -· __. dtitl ............ ......,. ... .... ""'• Mfto, ~. ~ .,. ~ttlff '1.11 .......... , .,,._llD.7J --t)>I nlllll•rf .., ... ~ ... """'""''" . 'Come On' Anibassadors Requested Huntington Beach may have a fletl of ambaaaador1 In the future -lndiulrlaJ 1mbusadon traveling about the country, e:ncowqing good commercial or ln· dustflal proapecta to move to the city. Tbe '4xal ch1pter or the American ASloclaUon O( University W om e n (AAUW) 111gg .. ted Mondoy niaht that I.he ctty council con1lder auch a maneuver to Improve the city's economic bal1nce. The A.AUW wrote a let~r to councilmen urglng them to establish an tnduatrll.I Development Comrnila'°" Ind UJe travel- ing bullneamtn to carry city llt.er1ture and information with them on trips~ City Councilman Norma Gibbs 11ld the traYcling ambassador Idea was sparked by husbands of AAUW members." A letter on the subject to t.teyor Donald Shipley was signed by Dr. Ralph Beuer and Edward Burnes. Bill Back, the:. city's Indus t-r i a I coordinator, uJd this morning he would appreciate "all the help, I can get." Bock said several members of lht chamber or e<lmmerce already do iilmllar work by dilltrlbutlng information about Huntington Beach to out of town flrm.1. The city council wJLbhcld 1cUon on the AAUW request u11tU a rtporl can be prepared by the chamb«!r or com4 merce which h11s an industrial tom· milttt. HERITAGE • You ere cordl1lly Invited 1howroom1, dlspl1ylng .•• to vl1lt our DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN PROFESSION~ .J. GARRETT f u RN 1TU ~~HARBOR ILVD . Opto MM., Tinn. & l'rl, lw... COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 6'46-0275 M6-0276 I I j • I I I , r ' I I ' I I : I I ! \ I ' I I I ! . . ---, .... -. Newport B~ae)l ED I T•i10""N ~ VOL b4, NO, b, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES > • rv1ne Loave1•s Boona Riles Shuffles Rafferty Aides SACRAMEr\TO AP -\Vilson Riles, California's ne\V superintendent of public instruction. n1oved quickly lo co nsolidate cont rol ove r the Slate Departinent or Education \Ved nesday, announcing demo- tions or re-assignments for six top of- ficials. And he named lhrce long-time depart- ment offic ials to LO\l interim ap- poi ntmenls. The announcen1ent can1c 48 hours after Riles took uver fron1 i\·lax RaHerty , whom he defeated Nov. 3. Riles said F:veretl T. Calvert. a cnn- lroversial deput y supcrin tendenl under Hafferty \\'ill kee1l his title only because he has a four-year contract granted by the Stale &lard of Education. C,;a\\·eri"s annual salary of S29,000 will be cut lo less than S20,000 and he \rill be given "Liu ties as <lesignalcd," W £1,r11i Tre11£l Predicted 111 Cou11tv " , Old ?\fan Winter will loosen his icy grip on the Orange Coast in the ne>.l fe\v days, forecaste rs predicte d today. \1·ith clear ski es and gusty v,,jnds con- tinu ing through Friday. The ne\l'S \Vas particularly 11·elcome to citrus and avocado raisers, \\·hose orchards have so far escaped with no apparent dan1age in the cold spell. A warming trend 1vill set in l:iaturday an d last at least through f\.tonday, ac· cording to predictions by th e C.S. \Veather Service. Northeasterly v.•inds continued toda}'. with fam iliar jetliners setting do11'll at Orange County Airport on approaches fro m offshore inland. The \011·est temperature forecast Fnr early today in Orange County 1ras a shivering 25 degrees at San Juan Capis trano, 11•hile El Toro had a blue-liir ped 25 reading. Nev.·porl Beach -11'hcre 1he ~l'a creates a slightly v.·ar1T1cr inde x in ~·intcrtimc -had a 30 deg ree \U\Y \Vednesday. Tele1>ro1npter Okays Purchase Of Cablevision Pending City Council approval or the franchise transfer. Te l e p rompt e r Corporation of New York has agreed to purchase Newport Beach Cablevision, it 14·as learned tod:iy. Tclcpron1pter, the l:irgc~t C /\TV franchi~e hold<'r in the U.S., operates lll olhcr cable tcle~·ision stations in California, Riles said. Calvert \vould no longer have a policy-1naking role, the new superin- tendent added at his first news con- ference since becoming superintendent. Edwin Klotz, Y.'ho also served as a deputy superintendent. will be demoted to a civil service position as a consultant to the Bureau of National Defense Educa· lion in the Department of Education.-- Rlles said the jobs of George Gusta fson as speclal consultant in education in- novation. Collier f.1cDermon as assistant in charge of the Los An geles offi ce and Waif Ogelsby as speci al assistant ,.,.ill also be terminated, although the:-." n1ay remain in the dcpa1·t1nent in civil service positions. The new actin g depu ty super inlt'ndent L~ Milton Babitz, 54. \vho 1vas assistant chief of the Division nf Compensatory Education. Riles headed cotnpensatory education before tak ing a lea ve of absence to campaign successfully againsl n afferty's third term bid. Tom Shellhammer ~·as named by Hilt's as acting deputy state super intendent For programs. The 53-year-old Shellhan1 - n)Cr, like Babitz, had \~orked in th e con1pel)salory education division. Allvin J. Schmidt, fil , was named as acting assist.ant state superintendent for ad· minislralion. He has served in th e department for U years. In answer to question!'! from ne,vsmen , Ti iles said he did not regard some t"lf the outgoing official s as competent in lheir positions. "I don't lhink it's any secret that some of the people v.•e are term inating or re-assigning thought so mu ch about their philosophy that they forget about ed ucation,'' Riles said, "I think ,,·hat I'm talking about is a team approach to solving California's educational problems rath er tb an a divisive approach." A ne11·sman asked Riles if he 1\aS hr.ginninG to surround hin1self 11,·ith "yes 1nen." "Yes men can·t help 1ne," Riles rcpli£'d. "That's why I've surrounded m1·sel f with these men." Rilts sr1id he had informed How<ird D::iy. president of the State Board of Education. of his appointments "as a courtesy.·• Student Injured In Mesa Accident A Chapman College st udent !>Uf(ercd L1cial lacerations Wednesday. wh en his e0stly British sp()rt <.-oupc collided \l'ilh an An1crican luxu ry sed an al a Costa fllesa intersection. Bijan Nalninajad, 26, of 1525 Placentia A.ve .. ~ewport Beach, was trea1 ed at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and released. ~ Pol ice said he was southbound on fl arbor Bou/e\'ard when a car eastbound nn \\'ilson Street entered the intersection, From behind a van which apparently blocked Naininajad's view. Mrs. Sharon L. Garret. 25. of 10132 Bismark Drive, Huntinglon Be a c h, escaped injury in the gl8flcing collision. QRANGE COUNTY, CALIFOl!{'llA j'HURSDAY, JANUARY 7, ens it 00 NIXON GATHERING -President and Mrs. Nixon gather in the liv ing room of the Western While I louse y,.·it h their \Vednesday evening dinner guests. From .left are Bob I-lope , Tricia Nixon, l'vlrs. Nixon, Gerald Ford, Mrs.. Ford. President Wixon , Mr s. Hope, Dr. tlenry Kiss inger and Arnold Palmer. Psycliiatrist Dr. Carpenle1· Succu1nbs at 45 Dr. Stewart Carpenter, 45, oflt of tht first child psychiatrisJs in Orange Coun- ty, died 'Vednesclay al his Balboa Island home . Dr. Carpenter. born in Dougie~. Atiz., opened his pf.actice in Santa Ana in 1958. Most recently, he had offices both In Sanla Ana and Newport Beach. He was instrumental in organizing the Child Guidance Cen ter of Orange Coun1 y in 1960. · he v.·as first chai rn1an or Lhe cli nic's professional commitl et'. Dr, Carpenter served as acti ng direc· tor of the center in 196£-67 <!nd served on the board of directors un til hls death. lit' was appointed by Governor Ronald Reagan to rhe Coinrnission for the Pre- vention of Juvenile Delinq uency and also the Cornn1ission of the Ca!ifornias, a pant') forn1ed to fu rther rela tions between California and Baja C'-alirorni;i. Dr. Carpenter, a graduate of the Un i- versHy of Texas Medlcal School. wa s actil'e in the Ora nge County Medical As- sociation, !le was also on tht pl anning committee. for the psychiatric wing of SL Joseph Hospital and was a membe r of the credential commitiee at Hoag Me· n1oria l llospital. He al so se rved three years as clinica l instructor 1n child psychiatry at the Neuro·psychiatric lns tiltJte al UCLA and \\'as ass istant clinical professor anrl di· rt'ctor or the Psychiatric Departmen t of the Student Healt h Serl'ice at UC Irvinl'. Not •Two-faced' Writer's Story Brings Reaction From N·ixrm ly GEORGE LEIDAL ' Of rt.. it•llY 1'1 .. 1 Stllft Reading his morning new9 summary at the Weslern White flouse in San Clemente upset President Nixon today. ll'hen column ist Jack Anderson all eged the President was some"·hat two-faced about Speaker of the House John J\1cCormack. While House press secretary Ron Ziegler told newsmen in Laguna Beach: "I'm denying Anderso n's allegation that th is administration is trying 'to pin criminal charges' on House Speaker 1'1cCormack." Ziegler sa id President Nixon tol d him to tell the press: "I am most ap· preciati ve and have a lastin g debt of gratitude l.o John McCormac k for hi::: statesman·llke work and coo peration with lhis administration over the last l1vo years. Ziegler said lhe Prt'.~iden! n1aintains "the highest respect and admiration" for the nian. Anderson·s syndicated column ap- peering in newspapers acr<>as the natlDn thi3 moming and Jhcludid' lit Jt6 ''U!Ual spot" in the Prl'sident's daily news sum· mary sald that Nill:On had publicly prais· cd 1'fcCormack. Citing two ever.ls attended by Nixon. a Capitol I-Jill reception and a luncheon, Anderson charged that despite public praise for tht Speaker, lhe Nixon Administration was seeking to "pin criminal charges" on him . Ziegler tod a.v denied that the Attorney General's Office wa s investigating ~1 cCormack , based on a telepho~ con· versalion to Wash ington today. He said he didn't know whether the President had checked with FBI Director .I. Edgar Hoover to determine if he b involved. Anderso n's column which ap peared in \Vcdnesda y's DAILY PILO'f is the first of t1vo probing the veteran FBI head 's personal and private life -using such nlethods as sorllng out his Lrash. Hit-1·un D1·ive1· Described Services v.·i ll ta ke place Friday at 1 I a.in. at Pacific View Chapel in Coron a •· de! ~1ar. To Police )Jv Wit11esses ,; Ne w1>0rl Beach police said toda y they have a description of the hit-run car, 11nd its driver. that ran clo11•n an 18-year· ·old Costa Mesa motorcyc list on the Pacific Coast J1jghw;iy about 10 p.m. .Monday. Ncw p6rt Beach, and Michael Kllfoy. 24, 129 1 ~ 44th St., both Newport Beach, gave chase in their own cars but were unable .to catch the driver. The fami!v suggested memor ial dona- tions to the Child Guid ance Center of Or· ange County, 171 E. 18th St .. Costa Mesa, or the Harbor Area Olympic Pool Foun- dation. P.O. Box 800, Costa Mesa . Or. CarptfuJcr is survived by his Wifl'-, ~tsy. fi ve sons, Nicolas, Terry, Stewart 11!, Andrew and Hadley. all of Newport Beach: his father. Stewart Carpenter. St .. of . Santiago. Chile: a brother, Gordon .Carpenter of La Jolla . and a sister, Mrs •. Susan Murphy of Falls t'hurch, Va . Police said two \\'ilnesscs to the ac- .ci~ent gave chp se to the man who lied the scene after stopping, getting out. .then saying he was going to move his car .. John Burton, 18, of 111 Via Koron, Daniel S. Chan1bers, 158 Tulip Lane. Apl. A, Costa Mesa, the motorcycle ·operator, escaped !>erious injury. He was 'treateCI at 'H~g Memofial Hospllal for !llbrasioos and ·a· conwssion and later released. The KC\\'port Beach sta1inn recently \.\'on an extension of its franchise for 11 additiona l yE'ars from 1981 through 1992. At the tin1c, station officials in- dicated they were attempting to make the franchise n1ore attractive to pro-- spect ive purchasers. Courtroom Drama Unfolds Police said Chambers had· betn. travel· ing westbound on the Coast Highway just east of Tustin Avenue when a white or light yellow 19&5 Mustang struck his Vehicle from behind. Witnesses said the operater appeared to be about 50 years old, S.7. stockily built with gray halt. ' \Vayne Hauser, vice president and general mana ger, said this morning that ih e station, currently owned by Foote, Olne and Beld ing, a New York-based advertising agency, v.•ill i;eek the Fran- chise transfer at 1'fonday·s city council meeting. Hauser decl ined\~o disclose lhe terms of the sa le, saying only •·the price was substantially Jess than the original in - ''estment." He said there are no chpnges In management or personnci con~mplated bv the new O\l'ners. The station curren tly hfis 12 employes and services nearly 1,200 homes. The station originally obtained lhe non· exclusi ve franchise in 1967. Jn a letter to City Manager lfarvey J,, Hurlburt seeking the franchise tran!ifer, J{auscr said the sale would result in "et1ntinuous and even improved serv!Ce to ~ubscribers 8nd Potential 1ubscribcrs." Injured W 01nan Point Out Mesan as . Her Attacker By TOM BARLEY ,ot "-D•llr I'll" Sl,ttl A lluntlngton Beach woman who underwent surgery two weei." ago as a result of injuries allegedly suffered J)t the bands or accused rapist Gary ll!ll'\ld ,rwix ,today In Superior Court te1timooy Ulintl!ted tlJe; Colta Me~ man as htr attacker. ~ The 48-year-old victim. unable to sit In the witness box because of thollC spinal injuries, stood with a microphone in htr hands and pointed to Phoenix as the driver of a wh1te Thunderbird auto who came runnlng fr om hl:i: car last July 17 to grab her 811 she entered her home. She told the jury In Orange County Superior Court Judge William Murray's , courtroom that the encounter ended after Phoenix had dragged her down -the driveway while repeatedly warning her to stop screaming. He then ran tiack to his c•r and drove oft taking her purse with him. she .testified. The injured woman became the third of five prote(Ution wltnessa'-'(o'fUtus ' far ldentlf3 the 29-year-old • Phoenix In testimony as &heir attacker. ·0nc of the 1 three vlct11111 told the jury lhal the ' was kldnaped. btalen, raped and forced to participate in acls of sexual pervereion with the l.811 h.W~)' bachelor, A 25-year-01d Costa Mesa wa1tttss gave much the 116? : t~ , :lat'e \fed· I nesday but cOOkf nol PQISltively kleritl(y · Phoenix as lht ,~:""!! "~ ••• ' • ' her .Into his ca r at 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard anti 11ubj(!Cted her to a nlghlmare ordeal of rape, bealirrg and sex· perversion. Deputy ... District Attorney ~1Jchotl CapiUI, who wenls the death penalfy for Phoenix, also put a HI-year-Old f'oun- -talil : Valley · grrr into the · wltl'I& tiox lO te ll how sl!e was 1amt by her father after struigllng and screaming outside her home . with a man tatibed by tbe ptoseciltor 'as Phoenl:x. Capiid· 11ay!I he will pu·t nine women victims lnlA:i the witness box to support .c::hai'ge~ of kidnap, rape, robbery, sex JM'rverslon and assault wt(h intent to .comrnlt.:rape against.the ·former astisltl'll manager of a Jluntington Beach htalih ·~ ' . . ' . /! , " t ,. •pjJ. ' . ' J Police said several person!'! h8d. seen the spor.tscar traveling .erra.!tcaJly for a long 'distance • along Coast Highway before the actident. . niey obtaine,d , the fitsl lbree let'!r~ on his llcense plate, ~zw. a~ police are · checking reC(lrds lri Sacr.amento to match it '9lth the description of the ·car. New.port Mari Loses F1·og Full of Money Jame~ L. 5elb)', ol MO 1j.y1ne Av~nue, Newport Beach, lost hla fr o g full ol money Wednesday. • ScrttY called police shortly after' p.m. .to report he h8d Just.. reblrned home and found 'bls1two-fOOt1hlgh repllea of a frog .sma'shed'tq bill 'on tits llvii')g room noor ana I~ contentl,'t'3i5 'in billi and coin&, mktslna, I , ' J. Today's Final , • ' • 1971 TEN CEN'l'li ' ; • I Plan Draws : Santa Ana Oppositio11 ' , ' 1 ' , Ry JACK BROBACK 01 ''"' 0111y ,.1i.1 si.11 I ' Proponents of the new city of lrvlnJ took their best shots Wednesday blf0Jt the county's Loca l Agency Fonnafioft Commission (LAFC) and then took cover while the City of Santa Ana attack~ the proposal with vigor, After the three and a half hour se!$~ arguments were continued until 2 p;rh. next \Vednesday with additiona l op. ponenls of lhe proposed 17,520-acre citj- walting in the wings. Wednesday 's main action was pre" ceded by the type of byplay whictl followed the installation of two new cQW1. ly supervisors Wednesday. Supervisors Robert Batlin , Rona!(! Caspers and Ralph Clark appeared as new members of the LAF'C. Clark is an alternate member. LAF'C vice chairman Charles Pearson, acting in the absence of chairman William Phillips who had been ousted from the post by the three supervisors, followed tradition and nominated San Clemente councilman Stanley Northrup, the senior city representative, for chairman. Battin quickly nominated Fullerton ; eouncilman Ulu.11 ~-"Red" Retpllardt. Reinhardt was elected with the votei of the new members. Next move was by Council of Como munitles of .Jrvine (CCI) attomty Robert Smith. He asked for dfsqu.alification ~ Battin 11.nd Caspers · becaUle the·1 represented areas: concerned in ·the bear- jng, Commission counsel William McCourt ruled the request out of order, but Smith riled a legal motion to disqualify wit& the commission claiming that both .Battin and Caspers "have demonstrated pr .. judiC1!: against the new city." Proponents of the new city. which is largely south of the Santa Ana f'reeway and includes UC Irvine, were represented by R1chard Reese. Irvine Company vice president; T i m o t h y Strader, attorney representing 80 fiTTJ'll in the Irvine Industria l Complex, an4 Dr. John C. Bollens, a UCLA political science professor and an expert an Government agencies. He called the pr&- posal "an exceptionally strong in- corporation.·• Also favoring the incorporation were UCI Chancellor Daniel G. Aldri..-:h. Jr'.; architect William Pereira, who drew the orig inal plans for UCI and the first proposed city of 10,000 acres. and Eric Vorsan ger. a financial consultant hlr~ by UC! to survey tbe future clti'r economy. Vorsanger said the ne1v city could develop sufficient rev enues the first year with a $1.30 tax rate. Expressing concern over the proposah but not outright opposition, was Angelo Vassos. Corona de! Mar High School. teacher and chairn1an of the Concerned Residents of Irvine. fie said he represenltd 20 residents and called for further study before ap. proval by the LAFC of an incorporation vote. Crlticism or the presentation of j,Stt IRVINE, Pa1e %) Oraage Coad The wind! will die down Friday, but the arctic air will stay around (or another day, keeping high temperatures at S5 and 'lows ranging from 38 to (brrr) 28 de- grees. INSIDE TODAY Orange Cowntw health offic· ial$ art prmining a ma.s~i"' anli· rubello (,Gemi<m ,,...,,.,) .com' , paign Jan. 31. t'o '/ind 01tt whert inoculation1 will be ooofloblt, ·11e PtJge 11 .... • r· ,, wl DAILY PILOT N Thur1d•t, Jaftll.l'i 7, ltn ' I Getting the Frigid Word 'This is Floyd D. Young' By THOMAS A. MURPIUNE 01 11'9 Dtltr ,.lltt 11111 I CAN REAR IT NOW DEPT. -Chilly times have come to our Orange Coast in recent night!, when evening skies are cJear. smog iJ only a n11ty memory and icy winds whine through the eucalyptus trees. Never does such weather come to our region but I think of Floyd D. Young of the United States Fruit Frost Service. Indeed, my memory scans back lo those many winters ago in pre-tele....:islon da}'.S when our litlle family would hu~­ dle around the homestead fires and tune our trusty radio to Clear Channel. St3tion -KFI. We would likely be listening to a program called, "One Man 's Family." But about 8 p.m., it would get cut off the air a bit short and the moment we had all been wailing for arrived. AND THE NEW voice on the airwaves would Intone, ''This is Floyd D. Yourig from the Fruit Frost Service in Pomona, bringing you the frost warnings for 1.onighl." "', . Now, as our radi~ set crackled a:ut .the words of YoUI_lg. we were. i:Oing. to learn what the night lield forth and 1f indeed our posterior sect.ions were·lo be in a frigid coodition. . Actually, the Fruit Frost Service broadcasts were lo·w~rn citrus gro~­ ers if their crops were imperiled by the night'! freeze. And 1n those day! in Orange County my friends, the main crop on all our acreage wam't three- bedroom housing tracts. . Young was blessed with a clear and resonant voice. but he chose to de- liver the good or bad news on frui t frost in a talher Oat monoton.e. Actually. come to think of it, some radio an<I TV commentators of today might do well ID emulate. him. . · 1 · ht " "FROST WARNINGS are general across the entire region on1g •. Young would inton~. "Smudging ·wlll be n~Sfary for oranges and lemon~,in almost all locations alter midnight and In some areas a:ii early as 10 p.m. Oh bof, we're in for It tonight . Then Young would continue with point-by-point tows fur the evening : Lemon Cove: 29 Orange Cove: 28 Exeter : 31 Strathmore: 29 Oxnard: 30 Chatsworth: 31 AzuM : 28 Cucamonga: 30" WE ~AlTED, Pretty soon, old Floyd was goin& to get to us. "El Toro: 29 San Juan Capilltrano: 28 .... " Wow! Twenty-eight in Capo? Drag out the extra blankets, mom. Y.oung never gave lows for our coastal area like Laguna or Newporl or San Clemente oi--Huntington Bea'ch. We weren't quHe in the citrus belt. But when he gave you Capo, you got the idea . ; Actually, Young did little forecasting himself from the Fruit Frost Sta· tion In Pomona. District forecaster! called in the e)('J>ecled lows for the night from various stations down !he state. Young started with the service in the 1920s and actually began to get short-range forecast! on the air with some guy named Uncle John who normally read the funnies over the radio, or something. THEN YOUNG started broadcasting his freezing news from his Pomona home o~r KNX in 1931. He hit the big-lime on KFI -cutting into One Man 's Family in lstl. ·Later, he waa cutting sh ort ·Che1terfield.'s Perry Como Show and ·the sponsori ng cigare tte people found out about· it. They complained loudly. So KFI owner Earl C. Anthony said okay, we'll let the listeners decide . He held a postcard poll on what the folks out there In radiolend really wanted. And that's when every Southern California found out. he wasn't alone as a tloyd D. Youn1 ran. Floyd bell Perry Camo to deaOi: In th• postcml poll. He stayed on the air. THAT WAS the only time I ciin remember !I note of ltvily when he closed the next night's rruit frost report. ", .. And thanks for all those cards and let- ters. folks," he chuckled, "and good night." Young's intonation! of all Southland cold places even won nationwide f11me when comedian Jack Benny picked up his "Anaheim, Azusa and Cuca- m~ga" joke from the fr06t lisUngs. Young retired from the Fruit Frost Service In 1956. He died in 1959. BUT F-OR THOSE of us slet.ped in Southern California lore, it's nice to krow that the Fruit Frost broadcasts from Pomona-live on. A nic~ding man named Dale Harris broadcas~ an expanded version of Young's origina l frost warnings with 120 weather stations reporting to him through 15 districts, You can hear it all on KF'I al 7 p.m and a taped rebroadcast at 9:05 p.m. from November through Feb. 28. "0( course, I don't have a voice like Young did," Harris admits. ''I even have some tapes of Floyd's original broadcasts." That's okay, Dale. I don't have to li~ten to them . I can hear him now. Newport Judge Assigned Riverside Bribe Trial Orange County and Riverside county superior courts have traded judges in 1 movt lo provide a neutral jurist for the bribery trial of a Riverside County DAILY PILOT (IUHGI COA$T PU8ll,HING COMPANY Rob•rf N, w,,d P•llldtnl t nd P11llt!Jh.I< J1c\: ~. C11rl1y Vk• PrnldMI '"" Gt"lfll M1n1gtr n.0,.,11 K11vll Edl!or ThomtJ A. M11rphi"' M8~1~1"9 eoho• L P1t1r Kti•t Ntwport &•1cn Cl!y Edllo• H_,_,, IHclll Office 22 I I Wnt l1IM1 l 1wl1v11d M1ili119 AUt1t11 P.O. In t 171, 9266) . ' --Calta M-1 UO W"f llty llrwt ut-8Mdl: tt2 ll'll!'ttl A_...,. 1'1unlln0,_, e.ctl: 1117S 1119<11 &ou11¥11'd S.n (i.->11: JIOS ~ l!I Omlrll RM.I Dit.R..°f lllLOT. wlttl wflktl II aomt>lllfd ~ H_,..,.., Is OVMl"*ll Ot lly P CIPI klfto ,,.,. !fl ..,.,.It lf!llOnf "r Utlunt IMtl'-N....,. -..ell, C..11 MMt, HUl'IUllfllWI It.Kt! W F-111!1 Vt !"1', t loftl Wllll •- ,_i-1 •HW.. Or..,._ C..11 l'ullll1~!nt ~llY 1Wlllllt11 1>11nt1 ••• 11 nn w111 .. ltlOI IMll., ............ llldl. 1"1:1 UO W•I ..... ,,..., QI• IMtt. T1fssl II (7141 '42-4)21 ~ .W.11fllM1 •42·U71 c.trllllt. 1fl'I. Ontll" COit! P'uallllllfll Clrnpeny. lff """"" '""'"· tllwtr.,...._ ......... , """"' "" lfVWI'--" """' IMV M I• I , c.I' wtlW tjll(ill ..... ll'\IMllfl • .,,.,..... _._ ..... $9_....llll .. "N~._.,. "' C..11 ""-· C.1....,.11, ""'"''""'" ..., urrlw O.:l:S _...,.,.,, tr INlll U.7S 1Mt1~ty1 '1'111111'¥' .......... .,,. Wiii~. supervisor and four co-defendants. Judge Robert L. Corfman of Newport Beach is commuting to Rlver3lde dally to preside over the trial of Supervi5or Norman Davis, Riverside County Plan- ning Commi.sslonir T. Milford Harrison, Greatamerican Land Con. pa n y ex· ecutives James P. Edmondson and David Seager and attorney Michael Rafferty. He is fulfilling the assignment dtspite injuries suffered Wednesday in Corona del Mar when his auto was struck from behi nd by a car driven by a young woman rilotorisL. Judae Corfman wen! on to Rivenlde In his damaged car after :suffering what court offlcials said was a se•ere whiplash. He i.s being replaced on his home bench by Riverside County Superior Court Judge Francia Esludillo. It ls exp-ected that the trade will last about lhree weeks. The five de(endants ln the ruvcnlde trial were indicted by the RJverside County Grand Jury after Investl.lalfon of a $50 million land development In ""1cb <Ollllly officlall allegedly wen! br1bed by GreaWnettcan offleiall and persu*d to gr1nl approval of the pre>- ject. Edmondson Is presldehl flf t h ~ Great1merlcan lf'OUp, located i n Anabttm. St.11er Is an officer 1nd Raf· ferty la the organiZltion'a lawyer. Orthodox Christians Flood Holy Shrines BETHLEHEM (AP) -The oouad or Betblehtm'a church bells echoed 1cros., tho Judun hills today II lhoulondl of Eastern Orthodox pilgrims celebr1t.ed their Christmu. D19 • Leary 'At War~ With U.S. From Wire Services NEW YORK -f'ugiUvt pri.'°n escape£' and drug advocate Dr. Timothy Leary ei::horted increased violence agalnsl American institutions here Wednesday night, in a broadcast telephone interview. The institutions he .singled out in his forecast for Weatherman violence include beloved sports figures and entertainers, \.\'ho \vou1d be kidnapcd. "\\'e're at war with the United States i::overnment ," Leary added, speaking from Algeria to radio station W~fCA's Alex Bennett. He said the time is past for more ROTC unit bombings, calling for hi· jacking of airliners and kidnaping lo force the freeing of imprisoned radicals and militants. Dr. Leary was serving a 1 to to.year term imposed In Orange County Superior Court 10 months ago. when he escaped last fall from Los Padres Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. FRANK CURRAN AND WIFE, FLORENCE, AFTER HIS ACQUITTAL WEDNESDAY Sen Diego Mayor Clee red of Chara•• in Bribe Ces• Involving Yellow Cab Contracts He told the radio personality he Is writing a book about the relatively simple escape, allegedJy engineered by the \Veatherman , and his subsequent flight to Algeria. From Page J IRVINE ... Richard Turner, LAFC execulive direc- tor. before the commission was voiced this morning by Andrew May, president of the newly.formed Citizens for a City of Irvine New (COIN). fl.lay charged Turner was biased in his presentation of material, pointing out the director read "only the one negative letter" he had received. May said Turner had received some 55 letters favoring incorporation "which he told the commission he had misplac- ed." Santa Ana repeated its familiar attack on the proposed new city. City f\1anager Carl Thornton charged il would "plare an intolerable burden on our cily \\'hich now has 85 percent of the blacks fnd 35 percent of the fl.·lexlcan Americans in the county ."' He said he heared Santa Ana \.\'OUld become ''!hC' downlo\1'n urea of Orange Counly ," indicating he referred to the decaying hearts of many large Anierican cities. Thornton also called attention lo a 1963 agreement \\'hith earmarked 9:t7 acres o( induslrial property east of the Newport Freeway for annexation to San· ta Ana. He threatened legal action if this agreement is not. carried out. A letter from Irvine President William R. J\.1ason admitted 1hc existence of the agreement and asked the LAFC to exc lude the 937 acres from the pro- posed new city. In related action Wednesday, the Orange County Planning Commission reorganized and immediately voted tn rescind previous approval nf the lrvine Company 's development plan for 32.000 acres which includes part of the new city. The commission al so dispatched a let - ter to the LAF'C asking that incorporation of the DC\1: city not be approved because of the impacl on agricultural preserves on Irvine land. Leading the planners' action were new commissioners appointed by CaspC'rs and Clark, the t\1·0 new county supervisors. Arnold Forde of llunl!ngt on Beach was named by Caspers and f"rcd JC'fffrson of Ana heim by Clark. They _r.·ere joined by new\y-electl'd CommissTon Chairman \Voodrow W. But- terfield of Santa Ana, Batt1n ·s appointee . Burglar Busy On Linda I sle Clothing and other personal belongings valued at more than $2,500 were reported missing from a Linda Isle home Wed- nesday morning , Newport Beach police said today. Harry D. Smith, ·105 Linda lslt, called police at 10 :15 a.m. to report the theft. He said 1t apparently occurred Tuesday afternoon while he v.·as a"'ay from home. lie told police entry must ha\•e been ga ined through the front door. wh ich he left unlocked. Among the Items taken, police .said, were a $400 electric typewriter, a $200 telescope, a $300 console radio and tape player, five .suil jackets valued at $750 and three suit pants worth $100 each. Rabies Clinic Set in Newport 'I'he annual Newport Beach rable1 vac- cination clinic wUI take pl11ce Jan. 12 from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Fire Department •Ieadquarters, 475 32nd Streel . Dolt licenses. which musl be obtaintd by Ftb. 1. wlU be available at lhe cllnlc. St.an Hirschberg, liceMt suJ>'rYlsor, noted that Ucen,,es not renewed by t.he end of the month are subject to a 100 percent rine . 'I'he dog license fee ls '6. Tlic cost or vaccinations is $2. San Diego Mayor Ruled The onetime Harvard psychology pro- fessor who pioneered LSD research issued a call for mass guerrilla action. "They should escalate the vio lence," he said. Not Guilty of Bribery "They should start hijacking planes, they should kidnap prominent sports figures and television and Hollywood peo- ple in order to free Bobby Seale." SAN DIEGO (AP)-Mayor Frank Cur· ran was found innocent Wednesday of bribery and conspiracy in alleged payoffs from Yellow Cab Co. for his innuence in pushing through a fare increase three years ago. The verdict came after nine hours of deliberation by the jury of nine men and three women. Ne,vport Woman Mrs. Joan Smitl1 Succumbs at 7 6 J\.lrs . Joan Colemao Smith, 76, of 2215 16th SLreet, Newport Beach, the mother- in·law of outgoing Oklahoma Governor Dewey Bartktt. died Wednesday in 1-foag Memorial Hospital 11fler a long illness. Mrs. Smith had been admitted to th e hospital Christmas Eve artd lapsed into a coma the next da y. The governor's wife flew lo Newport Beach Thursday lo be with her mother and othe r members of her family . The governor and the three Bartlett children will attend the services, ac- cording to Douglas r·ox, Bartlett· s press secretary. Services will take place with a rosary at 8 p.m. tonight and a Requiem Ma'.'IS al noon Friday, both at Our Lady Queen of Angels Church in Corona del fl.lar. Burial will be in Bainbridge Island, Wash. Mrs. Bartlett's family formerly lived in Seattle. ~1rs. Smith, a resident of Ney.•porl Beach 15 years, is survived by her husband, Edgar: two daughters. Mrs. Bartlett and Miss Constance Smith of O!ympla, Wash.: a son, William B. Smith of Manhattan Beach: two sisters. hfrs. t.1an!ey Clark of Newport Beach and 11rs. lw1aurice Mcr..1icken ot Bainbridge Island ; and six grandchildren. Curran, 58, was indicted by the county grand jury in October along with eight olher persons including seven public of- ficia ls. The separate trials are scheduled through f'ebruary. Curran's was the first to end -exacUy a month after it began. On the stand. he denied the claim by Charles A. Pratt, former presidenl of Yellow Cab, that he gave Curran checks for 3,500 as ''campaign con- tributions " to push the fare increase through. The two-te rm mayor told the trial that he once accepted an envelope from Pratt and delivered it unopened lo his re -election campaign headquarters. Before the indictments were handed doy.·n, Curran indicated he would seek a third four-year term this year. The verdicts of innocent on all three counts·two of bribery and one of con- spiracy-were read at 3: 16 p.m. by Superior Court Judge Robert Conyer9. Spectators went up to shake Curran 's hand. "I can't even talk now," Curran said, crying. "I'm too overcome." Collins Radio Gets Data Order Collins Radio Company said today that Delta Air Lines has placed a $400.000 order for data transmission equipment for use in its reservations system. Company officials said the equipment, the TMX ·202 data modems, wi!l be manufactured at the firm 's Newport Beach plant on MacArthur Boulevard. A Collins spokesman sa id the equip- ment will make possible a $250,000 an- nual savings for the airline's system operating costs. Dchveries are scheduled lo begin e:irly 1his yea r and to be completed by next summer. "fl.fy advice to the Weatherman when vie left was that they should not continue just bombing the ROTCs,'' Leary c<1n- cluded. He and his second wife Rosemary, 34, who is with him in Algiers, and son John. 20, were arrested Dec. 29, 1968, in Laguna Beach and convicted last March of possessing marijuana. Cyclist Injured In Headon Crash 011 OCC Campus A tcenaged motorcyclist was in critical condition !.Oday, after a headon collision y.•ith 11 car on the Orange Oiast College campus sent him flying 50 feet headfirst and bouncing like a rag doll, Costa ~1esa police probing the accident scene Wednesday said Uie tachomtter on his motorcycle was stuck at 12,000 revolutions per minute. He was wearing no helmet. Thomas R. Marlin, 18, of 2700 Peterson Wa y, Costa Mesa, underwent neurosurgery to repair severe head In- juries and multiple tiealp lacerations. He was admitted to lhe intensive care unit at Costa Mesa fl.femorial Hospita l following t.he lengthy operation. Officer Harlan Pauley said Martin wa" accelerating on a campus service roar! when an oncoming car driven by Leslie P. Hester. 18. of 1730 Port Abbey Place, Newport Beach, began a left turn. Hester said he didn 't see the ap. proach ing cycle before imp.act. Witnesses said Martin 's body hurtled to the pavement <If> feet down the road headfirst, after which he bounced again, landing on his feet and finally som- ersaulted onto his back, ''He bounced like a piece of rubber \•:hen he hit.'' said OCC student Spenctr Sarlat, 20, who ran to call an ambulance. seventeenth • f , We invite you to attend H. J. Garntt's 17th Semi • Annual Clearan(e Sale. Ea(h year at this time, we offer our regular sto(k mer· (handise at fabulous redu(tions. It is an oppor· tunity for you to pur(hase (arefully sele(ted ple(es from th• most (Omprehenslve (Ofle(tion of truly fine furniture and a((essories in the Harbor area at a redu(ed pri(e, The sale bec.ilns now thru January 30. Rec.iular store hours wlR prevail. Fair traded items ex(epted. You are cordlally Invited to visit our showrooms, dltpl1ylng ••• HERITAGE • DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN PROFESSION~ .J. GA~~ETf f u RN 1TU ~~ HARIOR ILVD. Opn Moo. Tkn. & hi. IHL COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 641>-417' 641>-4276 " ' I i' I I I I I -· -" 7. 1971 Crops Rained Nation Staggers From Big Freeze Research Team Duplicates Human Growth Hormone SAN FRANCJSCO·(U Pl)·-Laboratory. e!!timaled It and female sex hormone!. University of Ca Ii f or n I a would take .5 to 10 ye.an for Dr. PhillP R. Let, chan~or researchers have announced commercial drug rnanufac-of UC hailed the test tube ' By United Press lnteraational in a four.county area for vary-the snythesis of the human turer! to provide large qua~ duplicalion of the complex Except fnr southem Florida ing perioWI Wednesday. growth hormone_ a develop-tile• of the synthetic human hormone as "a great basic and the Pacific Coast, cold In southw estern Kansas. ment they ,11ald could provide growth hormone (HGH ). research breakthrough with Arctic air covered the nation ranchers had to contend with a major research tool in the Li, director of tM UC possible applicatio ns ranging once again today , Th e cattle rustlers who moved in treatment <lf cancer. heart hormone rese~rch laboratory, from the study of growlh and economy was affected. and following the big snowstorm disease. diabetes anlf pro· said a long range goal of development of human beings In parts <lf Omaha, Neb., il which hit the midland.'! earlier S blems associated with growth. hi s rtsearch was possible through the possible treat· was frozen shu t. this week. • Coo1·s tarting The hormone, secreted by devel<lpment <lf a modified ment of cancer and arter· Residents on Omaha 's norlh-Foor Lincoln, Ne b . , the pituitary gland, controls horm~ which would inhibit iosclerosis." west side had returned to residents heading homeward Recycling Plan body growth. size and shape, the growth or breast and other JLs first beneficiaries will the bartering system in the after a vacation in Colorado regulates p r ()du c ti on of cance rs. probably be the 10,000 to 50,000 wake of this week 's heavy said they he lped 211 snow-mothers' milk and has been He.said several apparent at· children suffering each year snowstorm. With snow<logged bound motorists a I 0 n g in-GOLDEN, Colo. (UPJ) -used successfully in the treal-tributes of HGH wou1d be from h y pt r ·pi I u i t a r y streets, neighbors had been terstate 80 west of Line<>ln The Adol ph Coors Co. an-ment of a form of dwarfism studied when sufficient quan-dwarfism. They could grov.· forced lt> trading -a pack du ring Monday's storm. They which afflicts thousands of tilics of the hormone are to normal size with HGH nounced 1Nednesday a new of cigarettes f<lr a q u a rt said they arrived in Lincoln youngsters each year in the available. These i n c I u de treatment. of milk, baby food f o r late Monday afler "checking program to recycle empty United States. repairing bone fractures, prcr Li, who has spent 32 year~ breakfast cereal... every car and truck" bttween beer bottles. Coors will pay Dr. C.H. Li , 57, who headed moting healing, lowering blood studying the pituita ry gland _.,. delivered treasure fo1(plea·sure 1eventy-ones al ~1!~~ 2&00 HARBOR: BLVD, I COSTA MESA (71•) 540·91 00 DAIL V Pllllf S .. It has been so cold in Lincoln and the Waco in· the research team which cholesterol levels. enhancing and its hormones. likened Arizona that citrus indu stry terchange about 45 miles west , one cent a bottle for all Coors reproduced the hormone in tht resistance to inff!Ction, and _Jmaki~~·n~g~H~G:H~to~b:oi~Jdi~·n~g~,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ spokesmen say fru it crop or Linc<lln. beer bottles that are returned. UC Hormone Res ea r ch improving the actiof'l.'I of male highway. losses there may run into,----------------------------------------- several million dollars. The cold wave put a heavy strain on supplies of natural ga,11 throughout the West. Magma Cooper mine at San Manu el, Ar iz., announced that it,11 underground operations would be shut down because ef a gas shortage. Near Franklin, Ind., a 69.000-volt transmission lir# snapped, leaving thousands of homes without electric power 'Long Hair' Tells Jail Punish1nent LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bearded, long-haired convict says he has been kept in solitary confinement for 10 months because he won 't shave or ha ve his ha ir cut He insists God gives him the right to stay shaggy. "I have no reason for refus· ing to shave," said Steven Robert Winsby. "All I can say is it is Goers will that I don't. A man has a reason fdr shaving. A man doesn't ha ve to ha ve a reason for not shaving." Winsby, 28, spoke Wed- nesday in U.S. District Court. where his lawyer has filed a petition for his release from solitary confinement at the federal prison al nearby Terminal Island. Pair Claim Jet Noise Ear Injury SAN JOSE (UPll -A U.S, attorney insisted Wednesday the government w a s n • I responsible for any damage,11 iuffered by a cou ple who claim buzzing. by Air Force jets caused a hearing Joss . Clyde and Naomi \\'hile of San .Jose see k $90 .0t)O damages. asserting White's hearing was impaired v.•hen Ole jets swept low over their car in lnyn Cou nty in 1963. U.S. Attornev she Id on Th!u tsch said 0 if the pl::1nes v.·ere mlhtary aircraft they would ha ve been acting on official duty <ind thus exempt from litigation. Ul'I T1'"MN Boaflre• Banaed Craig Capehart. a stu- dent at De Pauw Uni- versity, has spl ashed water on plans J;>y In- dianapolis to b u r n thousands of discard· ed Christmas trees in annual ceremony. Cape- h•rt. the grandson of fonner Sen. Homer Capehart. obtained a restrainin$t o r d e r to prevent burnin~ of trees in the face of mounting air l)Olluti~n. Fires also would vio- late c it y Ordinance against outi;ide burn- In~. • 53,4% says it loud and cleat Your money earns high interest plus maximum safety. Stability counts for a lot these days. And what could be more secure than Bank of America? /ls part of our Personal Choice Savings, we have three types of Investors Passbook Accounts. All are high yield plans. And all offer passbook convenience. 53A% Investors Passbook. Leave your money with us for two years and it will earn 53/.1% annual interest Computed daily, compounded and paid quarterly. $500 ~OFAMEIUCAN.tls.A. MEMBEAF.D.l.C. • minimum deposit And you can add to ii any time in amounts of $100 or more. SY2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you 5Y2% interest The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. 90-day maturity. And you earn 5% annual interest Again, a $500 minimum opens an account. Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. • Of course, our regular savings account pays 4Y2°/o annual inierest Put your money in. Take it out Any amount, anytime. You can see talk isn't cheap at Bank of America We mean what we say. High yield backed up by the security of the world's largest bank. Obviously, there's a reason why so many people seek us out Must be we give you more help with the business of living. BANKoFAMERICAm for the business of IMng er1ca. ' , ' ' ' ' " 0 • ' '· • DARY P R OT E DIT ORIAL P A.GE The Traffic Quandary Jl\agg1ng uncertaint ies about the traffic-jammed Paci fic Coast lligh\Vay a nd the en1 ba ttl ed Pacific Coast Free"·ay route emer,ged as the ov errid inJt; concern s Tuesday ni,i:ht in the len~th,v public hea ring at which the Ne"•port Beach plannin~ commissioners voted down a proposed apartment development on Promontory Point, In a three-hou r session . the commisslon voted 4 to 2 to recommend against the 620-unit comnlex proposerl bv thf' lr\'11'!(' Con1na ny on the prime bluff site south l"f <'n<1 .~1 H1,gh11 ay bet"•een .Jamboree Road and Bayside nrivr T~e c1 tv coun cil 1\•ill decide after conductin~ a pub- li c hear1ni:: on the matter later this month. Th rouJ;?h a ll the earnest d iscussion of "density'' and "u·indo1,·s lo the bay" and "vie\v parks." one stronRer strain kept rec urrin,l!" -lhe fear o~ worse traff ic jams than alread.v bedevil the area most \l'eck ends yea r around and virtually every day in sum mer. Balboa Island residents vigorously expressed thei r fe ars about \\'hat the project would do to t raffic to and from -and on -the i.'\land . But the three t raffic ex- perts con sulted a ll said the only significant t raffic effect wo uld he to the already-o vercrowded Pa cific Coast lll.c;h,1·a y. The concernc:; repeal edlv e xpressed by the public Bnd 1hc> con1n1issio11ers lhe1n ~elves conveyed the pret ty clear unp ression !ha t. there just might nol be a ny de- ve!onincnt th...1t 11•ill fil a cori sensus definition of beinl! •·right" for thi s locat io n -or any1vhere alnni; th e coast- al hichway -un til the c ity breaks out of it s decade of relat ive inaclion· on traffic planning and find s some solution to coa st tra ffic problems. This sha rply point s up the need for this city to ex- pend e'•ery effort to expedite its planned traffic s tud!' a nd move promptly to\r ard a positive. cohesive a nd firm pro,1?ram. It is very unfortunate that no results of this study can be wailable in time to j(ive citizens the broadest possible information upon which to base decisions when the anti-freeway referendums come up in March. So Ion~ as the long-standing tra ff ic proble1n s in· vo!ved in the freeway question remain unstudied and unresolved. meaningful planning will be im possible. not just in the coastal strip. but in much of Newport Beach. And the plans of countless private citizens, businesses and ind ustries will remain under a cloud. For Winter Recreation F requently unheralded . the Ne\\'port Bea ch Re- creati on Departm ent continues to provide its services to the residents of this com munitv. The d epa rtment. in addition to its responsibilities for pa rks and beaches, also a dministers scores of sport and craft programs throu.'!;hout the year. Its win ter schedule. for instance. includes no fev.•er than 15 activi ties r angin.c; from sail in.lr to ceramics, from yoga to dog obedience. Registration for its v.•inter programs begins Satur· da y Crom 9 a .m. to l p.m. a t three locat ions -Marin- ers 'Park m ultipurpose room. the PBR office on Balboa P eninsula a nd the l.c;land J·lous e at J<'ashion Island. Por t hose una ble to appea r Saturday, staff will ;icccpt registrant.~ Monday through Fri~ay from 3·5 p.m. at Island ~louse. Detailed broC'hu res tellin,l!: the meeting ti m es a nd places of al! of the pro,grams are availa ble at the Re- creation Department offi ce. Most will start the week of .Jan. 19 and continue for 10 consecutive weks. Jn addition to th ose listed above. pro grams a re also offered in tennis. oil painting, modern dance. fish- in,2 . ,2ymnastics. bridi;i:e , collage, decorative weaving, sv.1imming, jewelry makin,g and sculpting. t;'°l . ;1 N Iii Spite of Social Progress, There I s ••• '_4ct 011 t he Filtliy Fun Zone Me ss' Mindless Blaming of Nixon \VASHI NGTON -As 1970 came to an end varinus e~ponents or lhe Nixon admi ni.~!ratio11 sought lo Justify the President's first two years as ha ving quie1ed d0wn the na11nn in sp.11e of cerUtin noisy event s during the con· grcsslonal campaiE!n. It dfll'S seem true that the r.ampuse:i; are quieter . 1he ;!heaoes ari> merely smouldl'ring, a n rl the older generation ~rew accustomed to lheir children an d grandchildrrn )?OT up C:::..-' ~· as 1£ fnr a Fancy ' ,. · drC':-s hi;\I -...i The bi,ilgl'sl fizzle nf \!liO proved. 1n ::iny casC'. In hi' the ''nu 1 h rc1·olu!1on 'i"hC' 11·nrkless Pthic be~an 1o look silly in a nari{1n "'1th breadwinne rs vainly sreking work A l;:irgc suqilus nf lra 1nud te;ichers anrl 1 1'ch nnlog1.~ts . and a plethora 11f P h-D's. untrained <frl'amcrs. en· \·1r('lnmcnt<il1~1s. mor;:i li.<;ls, electric ~u1 t;:ir playrrs, organir food Fadl'lists, highli ghted th£' ~hnrt con11ni;:s nf 1hc new ron- sciousness as :i 11ay In sustain \1 fr. Thrre may hr. as reported . a couple of Thousanil C{lmmuncs 11·hC're thC' fln1~er ch11r1rC'n Find shcllrr 10 sub~t andarrl hous- in g hut th1> ,glamour is wearing th in and thr nal1nn as a 11•h(lle has been unniovPrl r~rept in re1·uls1on GETTl \f; 1)0 \\''\ TO 11h:11 rr11llr h:i!'l- pcncrl 10 \1~nn·s firs1 l11·n 1·ears. !hp n1C'rhln11n rhrtr.r1c nf !he \fht!C' Hnusr anrl 1!.~ unllk1·h hrra!rl nr llr1nlf'I r;itrirk ~1 n1·n1h.1n. ran hr 1gnnrf'rl At hanrl ;ff" bl•!h nr ~1n1n 1h11n s cn10!1nnal (are11rll and !hi.' m:iny thous:tnd "r1rdt>d ("°·-.. -..;---' Ri chard Wi1'on -. apologia superintended by presidcnt 1al aidr J ohn D. Ehrl ichman. The simple st.alislics tell the talc bet- ter Here arl' a fl'w : The ratio or cxpC'ndi1Url's for nationa l defense and human resources prn~r:uns. balanced he;il'llV in ravor of natinnal d<'Fen~ in lhe Kennedy·.Johnson Y<'il rs, has been re versC'd. In 1961. ii v1as 4R percent For national defense. and :io percent fnr human r!'sourcf's programs. In !he currl'nt Fiscal )'l'ar. the figure is 37 percent fnr national drFcn se and 41 percl'nt for human rcsourcl.'s. SCHOOL JlESEGREGAT ION in !he Snut h has bC'en nothing short of sensa- rional. In l9fi8. 6.1 percen t or !he South's Negroes altcnder1 school in desegr egated S\'Stcms. The figure is now 90 prrcrnl.. lt is pointless to ignore the fact that man_1· nf thes!' Negroe~ attend schools in 1vhich a n1ajority ol 1hc students arc bla('k Even so. school clesegre~ation in the .~u1h has adva nced during the Nixon adm1 n1slr.<1t1on at an unpreceden!ed ratr. Al another Flash poin1. !he number nr ~nung men ca!lrd in thr military r1 raf! has derlined from 9:1.000 in !he first quar1 cr of Jfl6!1 lo 27.000 111 the fourth Quarte r of Jti;o And , on ;inolher fi~hting Front. \\hen l\"Jxnn came into nlftcc 2 !I million persons ~ni thi> !xincf1t nf fond st:imps Tnrlay 1hr figure 1s thrC'e timl's as great, 8 8 111!1!1on. TH l'.:~E STATISTICS ;irr chnsrn fnr 1llu~trat1on because they le ll the story or whal has happened in lhose areas \\•he l'e Nixon had been criticized with such cmo t1onal billerness. In other fields the recnrd is no! sn persuasive -the standstill in national economic grow1h. the increas<' in uncm ploy me-nt. the. {'{)nt inuing r i~e in prices. Hut "·he re thr hrart and human com· passion are con('ernf'd !hi.' s!atistlcs trll a stnry of ::icrom plishmen t readily ovcrlookcrl hv those \\'hn <.:hcris h their preconceived ·nolions of Nixon. Th is makes it all lh e more difficult to understand \\-hy so many Negro leaders. so many "'·e\fari sts , 1;11 many pacifists. so many env iro nmenta lists and so many of 1 he youn~ simply dismiss Kixon as beyond redemption. THEY rt lfNDLESS LY prefer lo blame him for events with which he had no connection, like the killings at Kent State, like the pollutio n of the air and water, and. beyond all reason. with complicity in the "military-industrial complex" \v hich be has denied $7 billion this year. \Vhy doesn't he fire J. Edgar J-foovero:> liow come he stands for Spiro Agney,•" \\'h.v docs n'L he syrnpath\zc v.·i1 h and inspire the young" And so on and so 00. Th l.'relore. in sp1!I' or the steady social prQgrf'ss in the Nixon administ ration , 111 spilr of thr 1\tthdra\\'al from \'ietnam. in ~r11t> nr lowered defen~e outl ays, 1n sp1!e-of gains in the Senate and un· c(lmmnnly ln11" los"e~ in lhe House, 1970 1s not 0f'C'm"d !o ha \'e been a gon<I .vr;ir For Nixon ThC'rP 11ilt llf' thn:i><> ."ho \\•i\I say the ~'!me \1•hrn N1xnn ;irlds eronomic pro- gress in l11;o; l11st twn ~·rar;o; tn th~ social progress or his first {11'0 years. Milit ary Pot Use Growing r nt has h11c:ome sn prevalent among /\mencan nl1l1tarv per~onnl'l in Vietnam that Hoh !lope included ga gs about 1L durrni:: his ;innual Chnstn1as tour of the war 1.nnc As !lope launchC'd inlo B serirs flf onc·l1 ners about mariiuana , sn n1P (;Jc;, 1n his audience 111 up their o"·n sticks A ln[l'lc1·el r r-nl a11?nn 1a~k rorce stu - dying thr usr of rtrugs 10 thr armed forces 1olrl Coacrcss last summpr rhcre has tx>cn ";in 11lann1n,!! 1nf'n.•;i"c nf cases in1·est1.i;alc1t 1n Snulh \'1ctnan1, the cnn- 1\nenta l I S anrt 11orld111dr.'' One "'itness, Dr R.nhC'rt \\' 8a1rd. warner!; "Unless 11'1> takr drc1•11 t> s1rp~. we are going 1o h,:i1·r il prnhlrm t11r yc;irs from now 1.1·r arc not going to he able lo contend wilh .'' The Pentagon !a~k lorcr 1naint aincd that ''lhe nature of thr pl'oblc.m is not such that al this pou1l ni1l1!;iry readiness ----- Thi.Jrsday, January 7, 1971 Tht editorial page of the Doily Pilot set k.J to inform and 1tlm- ulat~ reader• bv pres.in11ng this Jll'Wspaper'.1 opinlonJ and com- mrrttary on tcpfc.s of i~l~rt.tt and a1gnificanct, by prov1d1na n tor11 m for tha t rprt$Ston nf 01.r rrrl(1.t r.1' opinions. a11d bJJ prrs r nting tht divtr!I! uiew- r1td111..s fJf ff'lfOnrtf!d obsert'{'I'$ a11d,1pokt.sTMn on topic.t of tht,' ""'· floh~rt N. \Veed, Publisher \ • Eclil9rial Besearch Is considered to be endangered." But a study by an Army physician has disclosed lhal nearly one out of five front -line soldiers surveyed in an el ile combat unit in Vietnam smoked mari· juana al least once a day. \'ICE ADi\flRAL Will iam r. ~1ack. depuLy assistant secretary or defense JQr manpower, has said the. proble111 of drug use by men a~~igncrl to rritical areas is under "ru·e!ly Roo<I conl rol." Such area!> include nuclear~el ivery system~. nuclear power plant s and in· tctligence operations. Jo:ach of lhe se rvices has u.ncovererl aboul 20 In :m cases of off-dut y drug abuse by men il'I these. specialties. he reporttd. All v.·erc promptly removed. Estimates of m11rijuana u5e by men in Vietnam range from 30 to 80 percent. Marijuana grows wild in Vietnam and experts say the 15lra1n is twi~ as potent as that available 10 the United States. Jn all the services. there wer_t only S22 in\•estigatioos of marij uana use 1n 1965. By 1969. the number !it'd grown to 19.139. P.iore than a lhird or the cases, or 6,490. were in Vietnam. llard drug case~ totaled 3.3S7 last year. with 833 of thl.'m occurring in Vietnam. The N:ivy, which had taken lhe h11rdesl line, discharged 3.80.1 men In 1969 fnr clr111{ abu!>e. Only JO had hten ltt go !fl 1963 for thal cause. N11 vy di~charge5 In 1970 fnr drug abu!!e may reach as i,,gh as uoo. TREATING DRUG users i.n the service rather than prosecuting them is being encouraged under a new policy. The idea is to build on experimental ~ grams already in operation in the Anny and Air Force and tet make them official policy . EmphasLs is being: placed on rehabililation and education -not punishment. Embodying many of the recom- mendations advanced by the Pentagon !ask force. the new plan allows amnesty For drug USC'rs ir !hey come forward voluntarilv For treatment. Under old regulal ioris an1nesty was not allowed, and dis honorable discharges precluded addict!! from gelling treatment at veteran.! hospitals. If a drug user has pote nt ial for further useful military service. atlC'mpt.s are to be made to restore him to duty. Dear Gloomy Gus: Regarding r.. G. P.'s oomment rGus. Ott 311 lhat1he low·lncome housing at lrvine will look like e ~·eryone else·s · Betcha H won't stay !hilt \\'ay. Prob11bly will look like West Cost a f\.trsa In short nrcler . That's oot "a fact made up tn SUll A bigntry .. -I'm JU.~t :t snob about :iesthet ir~. -L. T~ll l•tlUft t•flt<ll tfO<lon ' Yl•w1. ..., "'~1111rlt1 II••.. 11 tho llCWI''''' '""' rlwt •11 •lfvf le OIM••IY 0~1, Ot!l'f '1111. / r I ~ •• -'' •·~ Mailbox Tn lhe Edilcir : 1\nent ''our recen! ([)C'c. 16) noslal1::ic l'd1t11r1al ·regarding the possible demise nr lhC' Balboa Fun Zone. permit me as a neighborhood property own er lo add my hearty "good riddance." During th e sum merti me. particularly in the evenings . it is a miniature Haight· Ashhury, and a frightening place for a "square'' !o pass th roug h. The beach in front o( the zone is a disi:race tn our city. It is the spot visited hv mos! tourists. and \\·eek after week and month after month the: year aroLind there is never any attempt by the absentee landlords to clean up the mess. THE BEACH and usually the sldewa\k are litter ed with garbage . corn cohs. lin cans. h111f-eate n sandwich es and papers and the usual trash associated with a garbage dump. IL is amazing tn me 1hat lhe city can force property o"·ners to remove "'Ceds from their lots, <and yet cannot do something about this filt hy mess. I 1vould lhink. that our city council could take some action. JACK TOON Pelican Egg• To the Editor: We think ~·e should get all the pelicans we can and when the y lay egg~ "'e can put them in an incubator so thty won 't gtt squashed and can hatch. Because their mother 's egg s don 't harden because or DDT. KATHRYN and JANET PRICHARD l•t!•ll !Nm te6clt... .,. Wl lCll'lll. N1rm11ly wrlltrt tlotlt141 Cll!otn tto.ir mtt .. ff• I" )M -•• If !1U. T,.. rlthl .. CIMl!IM lltttrl 11 flt UM:I 1r t lim ltll!t UM! It rtMr¥H. All i.tt1n m1t1! 1 ... <I"'* •!•"""'' tlMI mllll"t l>CWrtt•. Ml "'"''' ''"' ... wlt~hll<il '" '""''' If 1Uf!ltl1t1l l'M-It ''"r.nl. , .. ,,., Wiii "" M •uMI••· Air Pirates ' - -Press Commen ts \.o • Ralls, Texas, Benner: "Once there was a time when vicious pirates roamed the high seas, seizing ships and getting their cargo. But under present day economy, the greatest pirates of all time are the air pirate.o:. Tuer hijack huge jet planes r.ach wort.h"'iTillhons ... We should drop a!Yaf1""tr8rnc with any country that will permit a hijacked plane to rtceive pr~ tectlon in their country, and we should demand return of aircraft and pamn• 11er1 In good oondiUon within 2~ hours. Thia makes aense." New RGCkford, N.D., Transcript: "Th~ Amerbn taxpayer is really An unusu(] animal As the old saying goes, he's the. only anlmal that can be skinned more thin once. When you hear au the talk these days about 'new sources of revenue' and 'lax reform' you c10 bet your bottom dollar that our tax bill will soon be golntt up. When a study reveals that we could aave a half million dollar by eli mlnal inR county welfare boards look nut-by eliminatLng lhe local board you 'll lo~e what thl'y ·re saving you by knowing every wr.H11re client perM>n111ly. Rei:rlonat board~ would lo.~e !hR t much by not knowln.11: t:ach client. Whtn t:ix dollar!! are saved It always 6cems to cost more." -- ~ . t . ' ' i.:" . ~ . ~ rr l :j\· 1J Words: Weapons Of Obfuscation As a language grow s m o r e ''sophistica ted," in the modern sense. il seems !o accom plish 1wu opposi te things at once: lt clar ifies expression and confuses it al thl' same lime. In "advanced .. soc1ct1es. \\'Ords are as often used ;is smoke.screens as th ey are used as smoke signal~ nus ref!ect1on 11•;is pr ompted by a little n e w s item out of Swazi land, the new African state 1.1·hil'h has establ ished its ow n nation;i l airline. recently, the airline de('idcd to print tick- ets in Swazi instead of En gl ish. "and ran up againsl snme tricky linguistic problems," the stury noted . TECJINJCAL AND legalistic terms arc nonex iste nt in this !~Iba\ tongue. and the officia l lransla lor of I.he tickets fin ally gave up lryi ng lo translate such phrases as "unless expressly so prov1dl'd. no\htng herein contained shall \1·a1ve any l1mitation of liab ility of carrier ... " Eve ry passenger has seen thi!> gobbledygook on his tic kcl. and not one (lU\ of a thousand F.nglish·speak1ng travelers can understand i1 Surh la nguage is devised t as it 1s in househ ol d leases) lo give the ca rn"r anrl rhr landlord all the best of it. while confusin~ the layman. In ou r society, m1ll1nn~ of people. agree to or sign thtnR~ rhey ha ven't read because they couldn l understand the m even after rea d1n~. rms IS NOT TO make thr arrr-.g<1nl assumption th at trlba! la nguages a re • / <'h11dish. as so many of us do Prof. ~1 arin Pei. 1n his book. "The Story {l f Language .'' points nut that the 1"n 11rrnt1 p:1J Afncan tongues. Hau~a and S\\·:th1l1. arc far from (-rude or simple- mind ed Sv:ah1li. indrcd. he trlls us. has rC'achrd ~ueh a stage or developn1ent that the r nn1c d1es of to.·1ol lC're hii\'e b e en succcs~Fullv tr;inslated into ii. and presented ~·1th an all·1\friran c;ist. And !he Bantu lang uage~ 10! which fa mily this 1s a mernbcr) <ire termed "1nf1n1tr l~· expressive'' by th\s profe sso r o f linguistics. F'OR INST /\r-.'CE, Engli sh hrt <: no word like .. n1 umagamagam a.'' which mrans .. one Who loses othe r people's lhings.'' nr "rn11wav1_·· me an ing ":J good-lr•ok1ng "'oma n 11·ho can't c no k . '' r1r •'·rnu1.1 anduloci.'' meaning "s111neone \\•hn growls when ;i1.1·akened 10 lhl' morning.'' or "mu tolatoh," meaning "one "'ho ic; ronstantl y divorcing and remarr~ in g ·• Bantu evPn ha.<; a word for a "yt s·man'' -"mu ... umizi." ThC' terms and phrac;C'<; 11·e ha\'P d<'vrln~d. "·h1l'h ;ire lackin~ in S11'a7.i <ind olher na\1\·e ton~ucs. are not ~o n1urh lonls nf commun1cat1on a<: "<'apnn!i nf nhfuscat1on -mr;in" or cnnfo11nd1n;!. 1nt1m1d<1ting. in1prl'<;s1n,e, fr1gh1rn1ng or f{lnl1ng JX'Ople \\'hrn )OU arl' Jnfr 1ly lnlrl rh::il ~ri11r ailnlf'nt 111a1· be "r~trf'lj.!"l'lir.'' 11·hat th::ir mean.; 1~ th::i i 11·., prob;ib lv somethi ng ~ou picked Up fron. the doctor. Deterring Drunk Driving Drivine: on streets and high1\•ays i!i dan&erous enou&h these days "1th out motorists beln1 required to contend wilb drunk drivers. Yet the statistics on traffic fatalities keep telling the same old story: An incredible number n f death-dealing accidents are directly linked to drinking drivers. It has been impossible to keep these haI&rds to life and limh off the highways. The Governor's Automobile Acc ident Study Commission. after 21, years of study , has recommended that Californ ia impose mandatory jail sentences or fine s for first offense drunk drivini;i:. Anyone convicted A second time wou ld he required to sub mil to A medical board fo r examination and rehabilltalion. IT IS QUESTIONABLE whclher even ~ mandatory flne or a short stay in jail are adequate deterrents to drunk dr ivin,e. A motorist who has been drink ing heavily more than likely has a tendency to forget the possible consequences should he attempt to weave his car homeward or to another t..vem. But at kast this would be A step in the ri11ht direction. People have got to be made lo reallu that driving an automobile while drunk poses a n unacceptable risk lo tbe lives of others who are min& the hlgh\\'BY!t in a Jcgltlm1te manner. Citizens should be able to drive their c.ani vdth some assurance that they won 't fall vicllm lo A lush who thinks he's entitled to \\'Cave: ove r three lane s of traff ic on the freeway. THE MOST INTRIG UING aspect nf lht romm is~ioner's rt"commendaliori is 11~ proPQ~al for hand ling s e c fl n d t 1 m e offenders . By requiring rehabilitation of . -·,_ Guest Edit orial .. the offenders. there is greate r likelihood the root of the problem can be reached. Fines or jail sentences aren 'l cures for drunk driving, merely monetary penalties for disobeying the la w. Unt il something is dont to treat the dru nk driver for his illness r;ither than repeatedly punishing him fnr his crime, the traffic death slattstics aren't going I\• improve. The commission's p roposal~ con1a1n seeds of hope that this might be donr. Tbe Dally C11Uforni111 La fttt1.il 811 George ---, Dear Georg~ ~ly husband has one bad f11u!l -rx-lravagance. For my birthday h~ bought me not one bul TllREE wii;s -red, platinum and brunette. Arn I justiried in n11.ge:lng hlm For be ing a sptndthrlft? DOT Dear Dot : I don't think you should. There are more t xtra\·agant lh1rigs than the cost or thret w1g!I -red, plalinum and brunette F<lr in. ~lance . a re al redhe•d. blonde and brunette. tSf'nrl you r problem., lo Geon1~l' and face e11ch day by turning yoor back on it:) I • t •i I I. I I I. j I f. • I I If I· •) I I l -..... --·--~-.--. -----------"! --• • -· Costa Mesa aoday•s t 'lnal --- N.Y. Steeb vo t:. b4, NO. b, ~ SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA~IFORNIA THURSDAY, JAN UARY 7, 1971 TEN CENTS NIXON GATHERING -President and ~·Jrs. Nixon gather in the living room of th e \Ve stern \Vhitc !l ouse \Vilh their \Vednesday evening dinner guesls. From left are Bob Hope. Tricia Nixon. J\1rs. Nixon, Gerald Ford. J\1rs. Ford. President Nixon. Mrs. IIope, Dr. 1-lenry Ki ss inger and Arnold Palmer. Swa1np Killing Trial Delayed 011 Mesa Man A further delay \\'as ordered \\'cd- ncsday in Orange 'county Super ior Cour t action against a Costa Mesa man believ- ed to be one of "Candlelight Killer" Robc rl \Villard Liberty 's cornpanions in the S\~ampland killing o[ a homeless drifter. Judge Byron K. t.lcti.lillan set l\.!arch 3 for trial setting and the hearing of a motion to dismiss murder charges agaittSl Randall (:reg Allen, 2£. of 350 Avocado St. lie \\'ill also mull the val id!l y of kidnaping and conspiracy charges fil.::!d against the dercndant. Allen y,·as arrested and accll!!ed of being one or three men who shol and killed Thomas C. Astorina, 25, last f.1arch 1:1 ln a quarrel that erupted over disposal or n stolen $30 television set. Aslorina's body \\'as found in a boggy area near Sunset Aqualic Park in Hun- tington Beach and a ~c:irch was in1- n1cdialcly launched for Liberty who had rcccn11y been rele<iscd from a mental hospital. Thal s<'arch ended June 10 in Colorado Spring~. Colo., wi01 the ri rrcst of Liberty and hls paramour, Kendall Ann Bierly, ;iflcr a 100 ni .p.h. chase and gunfight. The couple \~as married July 31 in a jailhousc ceremony. Both face n1urder ch:irgcs stemming fron1 !he killing .June 7 111 l\an Uiego of male nurse llf)berl Irion, 52, whose strangled body \I as found in his apart· mr:nt surrounded by flickering c;:inrtles and 1hc lrgend on a mirror: "TI1c Candlellght Killer Strikes Again." Police Arrest Firehouse Pair For Pcrforn1ancc A pair nr sh;.1pely nude dancers 11crc booked early today. for allegedly lighting matches and cigarettes 100 near corn- bustible materials in Costa r.1esa's F irehouse b.ar. filmy veils were among I.he in- nammab1e goods. Formal charges lodged. however, were Indecent exposure, le\\'d conduct and obscenely performing before an audience -of ;u patrons in this case. Cherie fol. f"leming, 22, of Sanla Ana, and Oa\l'n S. Newton , 26, of Pomona, "·ere booked into Orange County Jail and later rele ased on $62S bail each. Not ~T,vo-faeed~ Writer's Story Brings Reaction Fro1n Nixo1i By GEORGE LETDA.L 01 l~t DtllY ~11<11 11111 Reading his morning ne\\"S sumn1ary at the Western \\'hile House in San Cletnenle upset President Nixon today, \\'hen columnist Jack Anderson alleged the Preside11t was so1neYihat. t\l.'C>-faced about Speaker of the House J ohn tifcCormack . White Hol.lse prtss secretary Ron Ziegler told newsmen in Laqu na Beach: "I'm denying Anderson 's allegatinn thnt this administration is trying 'to pin criminal charges' on llouse Speaker fl.1cCormack ,'' Ziegler said President Nixon told him to tell the press: ''I am most ap- preciative and have a lasting dt·bt of gratitude to John 1.1cCormack ror his statesman-like y,·ork and coope ralion with this administration over the last lYi'O years. Ziegler said the Preside nt main!ain.<~ "the highest respect and admiration" for the man. Escaped Convict Caught in Mesa To B e R etu.rne<l Faci ng California and Oklahon1a pro- ~ccut ion. a San Quentin Prison esc apee. l'ap!urcd in Costa Mesa Yi'as schedul ed tn be picked up !oday hy priso n authorities. John II. Log an, 37. was transferred lo Orange County Jail, per.d ing his later delivery to prison authorities. He may be returned to Ok1aho111a \1'here he is v:anted in connection w1U1 armed robberies and car thefts. The fugitive captured Tuesday night in a do1\'nlown beer bar while playing pool hod been serving a one year to life sentence at San Quentin for robbery. The escape rap -he remained at large since fleeing a work detail 26 months ago --will doublless add a few years lo his California prison term, police noted. -· Logan, a heavy equipment operator ~laying at 115 Del Mar Ave., Costa f.lesa. was expected to be armed but had left a gun and two knives in his car wtren police arabbed him. Ande rson's syndicated column ap- ·,.earing in newspapers acro.."5 the nation lhis n1orning and included in its •·usua l spot"' in the President's daily news sum- mary said that Nixon had publicly prais- ed McOJrmack. Citing !y,·o events attended by Nixon, a Capitol llill reception and a luncheon. Andersi:in charged that despite public praise for the Speaker. the Nixon Admirllslla&.ion-: was ICf!kklg to "pin criminal charges" on him. Ziegler today denieC: that the Attorney (;encral's Officl' wa s investigating J\1cCormack, based on a tele phone con- versalion lo \Vashinglon today. He said he didn ·t kno\Y whether the President had checked wilh FBI Director J. Edgar 11oover to determine if he is involved. Ande rson's column which appeared in \\ledncsday's DAILY PILOT is the first of t1vo probing the veteran FBI head 's personal and private life -us!ng such mt>thods as sorting out his trash. The colu mn provides a novel peek tnsidc the lloovcr mansion in a sedate Washington neighborhood and the crusty old bachelor himself. Ziegler said there was no presidential romment :ibout Federal Grand Jury prr>- cttdings in New York against Jwo of f,lcC.ormack'i assist.ants. The column that angered Nixon doe:oi nol appl'ar in the DAILY PI LOT today since AnderSOfl alternalc s \Yith other y,·r1tcrs. Burglars Loot l\icsan's Honie A pair or burglars got away front a Costa f.·lesa home with $2f,O Jn k>ot \\"ednesc\ay. Daniel L. f.tcehan, 474 llami llon St., Jost his television set and stereo sound equipment, according to Officer Tom Boylan. He was dispatched to the scene when a girl noUced suspiciOU! activity and ~elephoned police, but the burglars drove ay,·ay within moments. Investigators said the rear door had been left unlocked. Sex Trial Drama Injured Wonian Points Oztt Riesan By TO:'tt BARLEY 01 ""-Diii~ l"lllt Stiff A Huntington Beach woman who underwent surgery two weeks ago as a result of injuries allegedly suffered at the hands of accused rapist Gary Harold Phoenix today in Superior Court testimony identified the Costa Mesa man as her a!\acker. The 48-yerir-old victim, unable 1o sit In the wi tness box becau se of th11se lipinal injuries, stood ~·ilh a microphone City Critic Airs Views On Costa Mesa Demanding equal lime for reply lo ~layor Robert M. \Vilson's slate of the city vie\\'S, Costa t.1esan Theodore C. ''Ted "' Bologh rang in the New '\'car Wednesday with a few remarks of his own. "St:irting next meeting, r m going lo be back giving them hell." declared the frequent city council crilic. Bologh said he has returned fro1n a visit to the lloly Land. lie said that some college course work has also kept him away fron1 the fltonday nighl meetings. No matter what rather rosy and bearishly bu sy 1971 Mayor \Yilson foresees for city fathers, Bologh brings his OY.'n belated Bah and Humbug. "l"1n a candida te as of now - for my lDwn --not just the cUy-«lUncll1"' dtcllfed tbt man who h11• rua and lost three times. ''In . t•: ht promised us a nt\V courtholtR near the t:lty hall and now "'e hlYt a -swap meet." he snapped, kicklng off the 1972 council race 14 months early. He also snid M<1yor \Vi!son hinted at progress on a city charter by 1972, appo inting ex-Councilman George Tucker and Vice Mayor Willard T. Jordan to probe ii . "They '"¥!Yer came up with anything,'' Bologh alleged. Ile al.so criticized leasing the onee- unoccupled fourth floor ol the CI Yic Center for temporary use by lhe Orange Count y Welfare Department. "We should house !he city's O\l'n \\•hile collar welfare recipients ," he declared, µre!lumably referring to m u n i c i p a I employes. Bologh ~·asn't unse<1sonably ki nd tn fllayor \Yilson"s vision of city beautifica- tion programs cl\hf'r ··He should sta rt l\"ith the front l)f Council n1an St. Clair"s barber shop:' hr conlinucd. f..1a yor \\'ilsnn sairt in his yearly forecast that he hopes to put to \\'Ork concepts learned al conventions and \1·ork .shops. ··He didn"I accomplish anythi ng bul seminars and trill"f'I. ·· scoffs Bo!ogh. "Me has 12 niQnths In complete what ht' didn "L do in 14 years." Two TV Se ts B1u·gletl Ju Co~ta i\'lesa Heist A burglar who tu rned the locked door knob wi th pliers broke into a Costa Mesa home Wednesday and carried out $385 worth or television sets. Neil G. Passage, 1199 El Camloo Drive. told police two sets ~·£'re taken from the liYing room and bedroom of the residence. in her hands and pointed to Phoenix as the driver of a white Thunderbird aulo who came runn ing frcm his car l1:1st July 17 to grab her as she entered her home . She !old !he jury in Orange County Superior Court Judge Will iam Murray's ('o urtroorn th:il the encoun ter ended after Plloe nix had dragged her down the driveway while repeatedly \\"arning her lo stop :1crcan1ing. He then rar. b:ick lo his t·;ir a11d dto\'e off taking her Crops Spared purse with him, she testified. The injured woman became the third of five prosecution witnesses to thus far identify the 29·year-0ld Phoenix in le~timony RS their attacker. One of the three vic\i1ns told the jury !hat she \~as kidnaped, beaten , raped and forced to partk·ipale in acts or sexual perversion \'.'ilh the tall husky bachelor. A 25-yc<1r-0ld Costa Mesa wailress gav~ much 1hc sa me testi1nony late Wed· (Sec PHOENIX, Page %) lcy Grip Will Loosen. As Warm TJend Nears Old tilan \\1inter will loosen his icy grip on the Orange Coast in the next rew days, f;;irecaslcrs predicted tod ay , 'vith clear skies and gusty winds coll· linuing through Friday. The nC\VS was particularly welcome lo citrus and avocado raisers, wh ose orchards have so far escaped wilh no apparcn l da1nage in the cold spell. A warming trend will set in Saturday and last al leasl through l\1onday, ac- co rding lo predictions by the U.S. \\1eather Service. Northeasterly \\"inds continued today, \Vilh familiar jetlinl'rs setting dov.•n at Orange County Airport on approaches from offshore inland. The lq_v."est temper11\w'.• iOr'tcafit lor tarly today in o-an;e • coUri tY ·w•I I :o;hivering" 2S degrees at San Juan Capistrano, \vhile El Toro bad a blut·liJP- ped 26 reading. , Newport Beach -"Whl re the aca creates a slighr!_v warm er index In y,•intertime -had a 30 de gree low Wednesday. The ocea n temperature is on!y 54 r!cRrees, but that's like a \varm bath when you consider lhc inland ai r runs ne n r 20 degrees lower . No orchard hea ting was required today, according to the Fruit Frost Service Hit-run Driver Description 1'old to Police ~e1r1>0rl Beach police said today they have a description of the hit-run car, an d i!~ dri\·C'r. that ran down an 18-yea r· old Costa i'oles;i motorc yclist on the Pacific Coast lligh\\"HY aboul 10 p.1n. fllnnda~·. Police said llvo v.itnesses to the ac· cidcnt gave chase to the 1nan who fled the scene after slopping. getting out. l/1en s:iying he was goin g to move his car. John Burton, 18. or 111 \'ia Koron, Ne\Vport Beach, and Michael K1lfoy. 24. 129'h 44t h St.. both Newporl Beach, gave chase in lhl'ir own cars but were unable lo catch the driver. Daniel S. Chambers, 158 Tu lip Lane, Apl A. Costa Mess, the motorcycle operator, escaped "t'rlous injury. He was treated at lfoag Memori al Hospital foc abrasions aod a· concussion and later rC'lel'lsed. "'hich has operated from Pomona for four decades. Citrus and avocado raisers in most inland valleys, however, "'ere firing up the smudge pots as the mercury dropped lo 20 degrees in Imperi al Valley today. Cyclist Injured In Headon Crasl1 On OCC Campus A Jecnagea molorcyclist \Yas In critical cond llion today. afler a hcadon collision \Yilh ii car on the Or ange Coost College campus senl him !lying 50 feet headfirst and bouncing like a rag doll . Costa i\tesa police probing the .accident scene \~"ednesday sa id the tachometer on his motorcycle \1•as stuck at 12,000 revol utions per minute. He \\'SS wearin~o helmet. Thornas R. Martin, 18, of 2700 Peterso n \\lay. Costa Mesa, underwen t neurosu rgery lo repair severe head in- juries and multiple scalp lacerations. He \\•as admitted to the intensive care unit at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital fol lowing the lengthy operation. Officer 1-farlan Pauley said Martin was :icceleraling on a campus service road \Yhen an oncoming car driven by Leslie P. liester. 18, of 1730 Port Abbey Plac,, J\'rv•port Beach. began a lefl turn. !£ester said he didn"t see lhe ap- proach ing <'Yl'lr l)rforc impact. \\litncsses said i\lartin"s body hurtled lo the paven1ent 45 feet down the road hC'adfirsl. after which he bounced again, landing on his rect and finally som- ers;iultecl onto his back. "He bounced like a piece or rubber \\'hen hr hil." said OCC .!ltudent Spen~r Sarlat, 20. 1vho ran to call an ambulance. Lon e Old l\'Ja u of Sea Anchors Orr Africa BISSAU. Portuguese Guinea (UPI) - Lone yachtsman Sir Francis Chichester in his Gypsy Moth V dropped anchor olf Caio at 11 p.m. Wednesd1'Yi J'crtuguese naval authorities said today. Chichester was escorted up Ute narrow channel to this port northwest of B~sau by a Portuguese naya\ frigate and numerous small nava l coastal ve.uels. Orange Cout Detectives Dick De Francisco and Gene Norden dropped into the tavern at 177 E. 17th St., about midnight to check the action and said th ey encountered a double dose. f.Jlss Fleming --a prior arreslee at the bar -and ti1iss Nc~'ton both alleged- ly Ill matches and cigarettes for male patron.!! at dangerously close range to their walsllinc veils. Irvine City Plan Scored Police s:iid Chambers had been lravel· Ing westbound on the Coast Highway ju!lt cast of Tustin Avenue when a white or lif'(ht yellow 1965 Mustang struck his vehic le from behind. Witnesses said the operater appeared Ill be about 50 years old, 5-7, stockily built wlth gray hair. Police said several persons had i;een lhe sport.,car traveling erraticn\ly for a long disl.ance along Coa.sl Highwe1y berore the accident. Weather The winds will die dow n Friday, hut Lhc arctic iiir will ' stay arouod for anolher day, keeping high temperatures at 55 and lows ranging from 38 to tbrrr) 28 de- grees. The girls' arrests are the la.lest In 11 series now somewhere around 30 to <10, as police cont inue to crack down on lhe b<ir with both old and new stole la\\'S, Newport Man Loses F1·og Full of J\loney James L. Selby. or 840 lrVine Avenue, Newport Beach, lost hi~ fro g lull of money Wednesday. Selby ca!Jcd pollct shprtly :ifler 3 p.m. lo report he had just returned home and found his two-foot high replica of a frog 1mashed to bits on his llVlnj rOom floor and ils contents, $315 in bills and coint>, mlsslnlj. T Santa Ana Opposes Incorporation lly JACK BllOBACK Of """ ~·.,. l'M91 11111 ProponCnls of the' new City or Irvine tool\, Ul~ir heft ·50011 ,Wednesday· before the rounty's LoCil Aa:ency FormaUon Commission (l.AFO) and thtn took cover whOe tilt ·c11y ' or 81'!1ta :Ilia attacked the proposal with •18'<'. After the three •nd a hell hour session argumentt •ere· conUnued untD 2 p.m. nat Wodn<odly with ~ddltlonal op- ponenlJ of the proposed 17,520-acre city waiting In the wings. WedneNday's main action was pr~ ceded by the lype ot byplay which follQ\\'ed the. lnstallalkm of two new coon· ty supervisors ·Wednesdey. Supe.rvilj()rt1 Robert Dottin, Ronald Caspers and Ralph Onrk nppeared as new members of \he LAFC. Clark ii , an alte rnate member. LAFC vice chairman Charle! Pu rson, acting In the absence of chairman Wiiiiam Phillips who had been ourted from the ~ by lhe three supervlairs, followed tradlUon and nomlnited ·~n 1Cletnehte toWlCilnWh •Stanley Northrup, the · ~nior cfty-· 't'epreuntaUve; ·ror chairman. • Battin quickly nomiriated Fullerton councilman J..ouis R. "Rtd'' Reinhardt. Reinhardt wu elected wttb ·ur vptes of the new members. Nert move was by Council 11f ·OJm- munitlcs of Irvine (CCI) attornq Robert Sn1ith . He asked far dlaquallflcatlod of Battin i.nd Caspers becatise t ti e y represented ·areas· concerned lh the htar· ing. • CommWion cou~l w~ .. ~+rt , I niled the requesl out of order, but Smith fllOO a legal m_olion t.o disqualify with t.he commiuion claiming that both Battin and Casper! "have demonatra.ted pre- ju"dice •gainlt lM new city." PropoMnta ol the new city, which Is largely south of the Sanla Ana f reeway and lnclpdes UC lrvine, were represented by RkMrd Reese, lrvine Company vice president: Timoth y Strader, 1ttorney repmenUng au !lrrM In the Irvine lnduslrial Complex. and Dr. John C. Bollens, a UCL.A polillcal science professor and an expert on government agt!:ncies. lie called the pro- posal "4n e.lceptionally strong in· corporation." Also favorfni -Ule lnc:orporalion \\'trc UCI Chancellor . Daniel Cl, Aldrich Jr.: ' 'lllff IRVINE, ra&c !J \ ... , Ttley obtained the first . three letters nn his llccni;e plate, RZ\Y. and police are checking reCflrds In Sacramento tn ma tch it "'Ith tbe descrlption of the car. Star Hits Streets After (>-<Jay Strike WASlllNCTOj'i (U PI) T h e Waahlnaton Eventna Star bit the 1tttel3 today with en llO-page edition -plus last Sunday's comics -after belng Idle~ six days by a strike of truck mcdlanlcs. A spokeamnn for the newspeper snltl It was ·the longest lime •1periple h•ve been without Ule Star." Tw<Ktly t trlkes shut down tht .paper ln Hl58, 1968 at1d 1009. l • INSIDE TODA\' Orange Count11 heolt/l a/fie· ials are pl(l"l1.ni11a a mM&ille a11Li- TUbel/a rGcrmau m.easleSJ cam- P<JiQn Jan. 31 . To find out where inoculation$ wiU bt availoble1 8te Page 11 . •11r11tt 11 c..tlllrllle • Clllcll11 "'~ II CltHlllH 1).)1 c-1c• ,, Crtn•l"lll fl °""' llMltc.t 11 Olw~ II .. llMWlll I"-6 ••l>ff'l•IMllllll ,._n l'l~...c:• •l• IMl"•tc-1• ...... \...,..t, 1 , AVINll~ ' I \ • . ~ E.jf D.t.ILV PILOf c ' Thu,sd1i:1, Mlf1 7, lm ,, " Getting the Frigid Word 'This is Floyd D. Young' By THOMAS A. MURPlllNE Of lflfl MllY "lltt 11111 I CAN HEAR IT NOW DEPT. -Ch.illy times have come to our Orange Col.st ln recent nights, when evening skies are clear, smog is only a n1sty memory and icy winds whine through the eucalyptus trees. Never does such weather come to our region but I think of Floyd D. Young of the United States Fruit Frost Service. -,.. Indeed, my memory scans back to those many winters • ago in pre.television days when our little family would hud- . die around the homestead fires and tune our trusty radio ' ·' to Clear Channel Station KFI. We would likely be listening to a program called, "One Man's Family." But about 8 p.m., it would aet cut off the air a bit short and the moment we ha.d all been waiting for arrived. , ·ANO THE NEW voice on the airwaves wou ld Intone, • ": "This Is Floyd D. Young from the Fruit Frost Sf!rviet in ' -Pomona , bringlng you the frost warnings for tonight." :\, , Now, as our radio set crackled out the words of Young, we were going to learn what the flight held forth and if indeed our p01terlor secUons were to be in a frigid condition. Actually, the Fruit Frost Service broadcasts were to warn cllrus grow~ .ers if their crops ~re imperiled by the night's freeze . And In those days In Orange County my f~iends, the main crop on all our acreage wasn't three· bedroom housing tracts. Young was b!esited with a clear and resonant voice but he chose to de· liver the good or bad news on frui t frost in a rather flat monotone. Actually, come to think of it, some radio and TV commentators of today might do well to emulate him. . ,, "F'ROST WARNINGS are general across the entire regio n torught.. You ng wOUld ' intone . "SmudKing will be. nere~ary for oranges and lemons., in almost all locations after midtUaht and 1n some areas as early as 10 p.m . Oh boy, we're in tor it tonight. . Then Young would continue with point-by-point lows for I.he cve1ung : Lemon Cove: 29 Orange Cove : 28 Ei:eter: 31 Strathmore: 29 OJ:nard : 30 Ch1lsworth: 31 Azusa: 28 Cucamonga: 30" WE WAJTED. Pretty soon, old Floyd was goin1 to a•t to us. "El Toro: 29 Sin Juan Capistrano: 28 ..•. " Wow! Twenty-eight in Capo? Drag out the ei:tra blanlcet1, mom . Young never gave lows for our coastal area like Laguna or Newport or Sa.n Clemente or Hunliri!ton Beach. We weren't qutte in tht citrus belt. But when he s:ave you Capo, you got the idea. · Actual,Jy, Young did little forecasting himself lrom the Fruit Frost Sta· lion in :Pomona . District forecasters called in the ei:pected lows for the night from various alations down the state. Young started with the service in I.he 192.0s and actually began to get-short·ranae forecasts on the air with some guy named Uncle John who normally read the funnies over the radio, or something. ; : THEN YOUNG st.arted broadcasting his freezing news from his Pomona home over KNX in 193L He hit the big-time on KFI -cutting into One Man's Family in 1941. Later, he was cutting short Chesterfield'• Perry Como Show ana the sponsoring cigarette people found out a?>Out it. They co'mplained Toi.Idly. So KFI owner Earl C. Anthony said okay, we'll let the listeners deeide. He held a postcard poll on what tht follts oat there Jn radioland really wanted . And that's when every southern California fuund out he wasn't alone as a Frofd D. Young fan . Floyd beaf Perry .Como to death in the postcard poll. He '1ayed on the air, THAT WAS the only time I can remember a note of levity when he closed the next night's fruit frost report. ", .. And thanks for· all those cards and let~ ten:, folk.'i," he chuckled , "and good night." Young's intonations of all Southland cold places even won nationwide lame when comedian Jack Benny picked up his "Anaheim, Aiusa and Cuca· monga '' joke from the frost listings. Young retired from the Fruit Frost Service in 1!156. He died Jn 1959. BUT FOR THOSE of us steeped in Southern California lore. it's nice to -kmw th1t the Fruit Frost broadcasts from Pomona live on, A ni ce-sounding man named Dale Harris broadcasts an expanded version of Young's original fr ost warnings with 120 weather stations reporting lo him through 15 districts. You can hear it all on KFI at 7 p.m. and a taped rebroadcast at 9:0!t p.m. fro m Nov ember through Feb . 28. "Of course. 1 don't have a voice li ke Young did," Harris admits. "I even have some tapes of Floyd's original broadcasts," That's okay, Dale, I don 't have to listen lo them. 1 can hear him now. Circumnavigator Home SAN FRA.'IOSCO (UPI) -ri.1aurice Rosen arrived home today on time to go to work after tra\'chng around the world in record lime on his day off . "It's good to gel away from home IQr a day." said Rosen, who managed lo read only 75 pages of a boo k on I.he Hfe of BCf.thove.n that he had t.aken along. DAllV PILOT OU.HOa C:OAAT PUtlllHltfe COMJ'A,N't 'l• .. •rl N. Wteil r .. 1c1 .... r •11111 1""'41tW J,~ti: It c~rley Vim J>ralf..,I 1c4 G-11 Me~r ThDM•• IC11Til E11'9t Thom1t Ji., Muqthin1 lro\-•I• a<llltK c.. .... om.. l JO Wt1t l1y Sh1tl M1llrnt Mite": P.O. h1: IJ60, ,l626 ............. ~ ...... , lltl 'W•I ..... blMYIN ...... ._.,1n ...... t•- ......... '-di: 11111 hKll ........ ~ '-,....._ -N"111 El C..11111<11 ltMI The 5~year-0\d businessman spanned the globe in 41 hours and 30 minutes aboard regularly seheduled &irllners. changing planes at London , Moscow and Tokyo before getting back lo San Fran· cisco aboard a Pan American Airways flight. According to unofficial records the previous record was 43 hours and 31 minutes, set by Harry Martin, a San Diego disc jockey in 1989. Rosen's wUe and two daughters picked him up al the airport at 7:20 1.n», in plenty of time to open hl9 bar at.ool bullness al Millbrae, just acroa the freeway from the airport. He ne·w around the word on Wednesday because that is lht day his store ls closed. He aaid be may go around the world again next week on his day oU. "I bad ·1 beJJ . I recommend it to anyone," Rosen told a dozen reporters on hand to welcome him home. All he had lo check through customs were two rotls of. film, pictures or airport& ati~ the world u aetn from 301000 feet. March of Dimes Month Declared Citing past triumphs of the campai&n against polio and now, with st1hta .et on birth defects, M-.yor Robert M. WUM>n haa proc1abntd January March of Olmts Month In Costa Mell. The hifhlJlht Will I>' the IMUll Mothers Marci! campailn to collect lundl donated ror tl'lt drtve a11ln1t blrlh defectl. through both rtlearth and cart tor cumnt victim•. ReUred CoJtl Meu City Manaier Arttmr R. McKenale, a onetime polio victim, h11 headed the Oran1e COUn- t;wl<Je carnpailn for 11everal years. --~- Dr. Leary 'A t War' With U.S .. From Wirt Services NEW YORK -Fugitive prison escapee and drug advocat e Dr. Timothy Lear}' exhorted increased violence a1alnst American institutions here Wednesda.Y night, in a broadcast telephone Interview. The institutions he singled out In his focecast for Weatherman violence include beloved sports figures and enlertaiflers, who would be kidnaped. "We're at war with the United States government,'' Leary added , speaking from Algeria to rad io station WMCA ·s Alex Bennett. He said I.he lime is past for more ROTC unit bombings , calling for hi· jacking or airliners and kidnaping to force the freeing of imprisoned r1dia!s and militants . Dr. U!ary was serving a I to IO.year term imposed in Orange County Superior Court 10 months 1go, when he escaped last fall from Los Padres Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. FRANK CURRAN AND WIFE, FLORENCE , AFTER HIS ACQUITTAL WEDNESDAY Sen Diego Meyor Clear.ct of Cherges in Bribe Cese Involving Yellow Ci1b Contr1ct1 He told the radio personality he is writing a book about the relatively simple escape, allegedly engineered by the Weatherma., and his subsequent night to Algeria. From l'llffe 1 IRVINE ... archllect William Pereira, who drew the original plans for UCI and the first proposed city of 10,000 acres, and Eric Vorsanger, a financial consullant hired by UCi to survey the future city's economy. Vorsanaer said the new city could develop sufficient revenues the first year with a Sl.30 tax rate. Expressing concern over the proposal, but not outright opposition, was Angelo Vassos, Corona del Mar High Sehoot teacher and chairman of the Concerned Residents of Irvine. He said he represented 20 residcn!s and called for further study before ap- proval by the LAFC of an incorporation vote. Crjticism ef the presentation of Richard Turner, LAFC executive direc- tor, before the commission was voiced this morning by Andrew May. president of the newly-form ed Citizens for a City of Irvine New (COIN). May charged Turner was biased in his presentation· of material, pointing oul the director read "only lhe one negative letter " he had received. May said Turner had received some 55 letters favoring incorporation "which he told the commission he had misplac· ed." Santa Ana repeated its familia r attack on the proposed new city, City Mar:iagcr Carl Thornton charged it would "place an intolerable burden on our city which now has 85 percent or the blacks and 35 percent or the ltlexican Americans in the county." He said he heared Santa Ana would become "the downtown area of Orange County," indicating he re ferred to the decaying hearts of many large American cities. Thomton also called attention to a 1963 agreement which earmarked 937 acres of industrial property east or the Newpor t Freev.·ay tor annexation to San· ta Ana. He threatened legal action if th is agreement is not carried out. A letter from Irvine President \Villiam R. Mason admitted the exis tence of the agreement and asked the LAFC to exclude the 937 acres from the pr<>- posed new city. In related action \Vcdnesday. Lhc Orange County Planning Con1 rn ission reorganized and irnmedlately voted to resci nd previous approval of the Irvine Company 's development plan for 32.000 acres wh ich includes part of the new city. The commission also dispatched a let· ter to the LAFC asking thet incorporation of the new city not be approved because of the impact on agr icultural preserves on Irvine lend. Leading the planners' action were new commissioners appointed by Caspers and Clark, the two new county supervisors. Arnold Forde of Huntington Beach was named by Caspers and Fred Jefferson of Anaheim by Clark. They were joined by newly-elected Commission Chairman Woodrow W. But· terfield of Santa Ana, Battin's appointee. Ecology Needs Topic of Meet Industry's responsibilities In society'it efforts to preserve mankind's en· vironment will be outlined Friday, Jan. 15 under sponsorship of the Costa Mesa Oiambtr or Commerce. Dr. Lewis A. Folt.Binsbee, director of the Oranae Coast Cohege Environmental Center, will speak at a noon luncheon at the Colony Kitchen restaurant. Ruerv1~pn1 m1y be mailed at $3.25 each to the chamber of commerce office according to Ernest F1ecky 111nd Cari Eaetter, orficera of the chamber's In· dustrlal committee. • Yule Celebrated BETHLEHEM (AP) -The sound or BeUllehem 's church be.Us echotid across the J11dean hills today as thousands of E•11lern Ortbodot pilgrims celebrated their Otrlstmas. San Diego Mayor Ruled Not Guilty of Bribery SAN DIEGO ( AP)-Mayor Frank Cur· ran was found innocent Wednesday of bribery and conspiracy in alleged payoffs from Yellow Cab Co. for his infl uence in pushing through a fare increase three years ago. The verdict came after nine hours of delibe ration by the jury of nine men and three women . Cu rran, 58, was indicted by the count y grand jury in October along with eight other persons including seven public of· ficials. The separate !rials are sched uled through February. Curran's was the first lo end -exactly a month after it began . On the stand, he denie d the claim by Cha rles A. Pratt, former president of Yellow Cab, that he gave Curran checks for 3,500 as "campaign con- tributions" to push the fare increase through. The two..tcrm mayor told lhe lrial that he once accep!cd an envelope from Pratt and delivered it unopened to his re.election campaign headquarters. Before the indic1 ments were handed down, Curra n indicated he would see k a third four-year te rrn this year . The verdicts of Innocent on all three counts·!wo of bribery and one of con- spiracy-were read at 3: 16 p.m. by Supe rior Court Judge Robert Conyers. Spectators went up to shake Curran's hand . "I can't even talk nov.•," Curran said, crying. "I'm too overcome.'' His wire, who had sat silently lhrough the trial that included 15 days or testimony, sobbed uncrintrollably for several minutes Then she, too , shook Curran 's hand. The onetime Harvard psychology pro- fessor who pioneered LSD re.search issued a call for mass guerrilla action. ··They should escalate the violence," he said. "They should start hijacking planes. they should kidnap prominent sports figures and television and Hollywood peo- ple in order to free Bobby Scale." "My advice to the Weatherman when v.·e left was that they should oot continue just bombing the ROTCs," Leary con· eluded. He and his second wlf e Rosema ry, 34, who is with him in Algiers, a nd son John, 20, were arrestM Dec. 29, 1968. in Laguna Beach and convicted last Match of possessing marijuana. From Page J PHOENIX ... nesday but could not positively Identify Phoenix as the abductor who forced her into his car al 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard and subjected her to a nightmare ordeal of rape, be ating and sex perversion. Deputy District Atlomey Michael Capjzzi, who wants th e death penally for Phoenii, also put a 19-year-old Foun- tain Valley girl into the witness bor Thomas Devine Services Slated S d I • d to tell how she was saved by her father tu ent llJ Lire 11fter struggling and screaming outside her home with a man tabbed by the Catho lic funeral services will be held prosecutor as Phoenix . Friday and Saturday in Costa Mesa }11 Mesa Accident Capizzi says he wilt put nine womtn for an lrela nd~orn baker who came victims into the witness box to support lo California as a boy and lived in charges of kidnap, cape, robbery, "' 0 Co t r A Chapn1an Collcgl' student suffered range un Y or 60 years. pcr\'ersion and assault with intent to R''tcs lo• Tho as J De ·ne 79 ·11 facial lacerations Wednesday, when his • m . v1 . , w1 commit rape aga inst the former assistant include Rosa ry Friday at 8 p.m. al coslly British sport coupe collided with manager of a Huntington Beach health Bell Broadv.•ay Mortuary Chapel and Re· an Amerlcnn luxury sedan al a Costa spa . quiem r.1ass Satu rday al 9 a.m. in St. flfesa lntrrseclion . All those charges stem, he says, from Joachim 's Church. a 28-day crime spree which •·gen lat• M D . Bijan Naininajad, 21i, of 1525 Placcn!ia uc r. ev me, of 1640 Newport Blvd., last June and ended with police in six W'.tl be b,.,· d t Good Sh h d Ave . J\"ev.·port Beach, was treated al 0 • e a ep er range County commutrlties looking for Cemetery in Huntington Beach. Costa Mesa r.1emoria\ }iospltal and PhoenU. Survivors include sons Ray and James, released. They did not have to look very fa r, of Garden Grove, Walter. of Santa Ana. Police said he \~as southbound on Phoenix 's attorney is expected to testify. and John, of South San Gabriel: }{arbor Boulevard "'hen a car eastbound The Costa Mesan walked into the Hun. daughters, Mrs. Anna Newman, of on \\'ilson Street entered the In tersection, ling ton Beach police station last J ui}' Garden Grove and Mrs. h1argarcl from beh ind a van which apparently 25 to ask police if ii was true tha t r.1essengale, of Santa Ana: a sis\ej, blocked Naininajad's view. he '"'as being sough!. lt1argaret Cahill. of Ireland : I 8 r.1rs. Sharon L. Garret, 25, of 10132 Officers assured him that it .,••as so i:: rand c h i ! d re n and HJ great Bismark Dri ve, Huntington Be a c h , and immediately lodged him in the cit y :g_ca_n_d_c_hi_td_,_,_n. ___________ '_'_'"~P_'_d_i_n1~·"~'·~y ~i'_' ~th~e~g~l~an~c~m~g:.=.co=t=!ls=i=on=· __ jail. seventeenth FURNITURE Wt Invite you to attend H. J. Ga!Tttt's 17th Semi • Annual Cltaranct Solt. Each ytar at this time, we offer our regular stock mtr• chandise at fabulous reductions. It is an oppor· tunity for you to purchase carefully stltcttd pltcts from the most comprehensive calltctlan of truly fine furniture and accessories in tht Harbor arta at a rtd11eed prict. Tht salt btglns now thru January 30. Regular stort houn wlU pNVOll. Fair tr~dtd ittms txcepttd. HERITAGE • You 11'9 cordl1lly Invited to vl .. it our .. howroom1, dl1pl•yln1 ••• DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN f , PROFESSION~.J. GAR REIT f u RNlllJ ~~ HARIOR tlVO. Opao Moo., n.,., & hi. lw11. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DES IGNERS 646-017' 646-0276 I .I I ' l I ! ' J f \ ' I I Crop• Hulaed Nation Sta r·~·~rs From Bi Freeze .. Reseru·ch Team Duplicates Human Gro.wth Hormone SAN FRANCISCO {UPI) -Laboratory, uUmated .-t t and female sex hormones. University or C a I if or n I a, would take 5 lo 10 years for Dr. Philip R. Lee. chancellor researchet'! have announced coriunerCJa! dru1 · manurac-of UC 'hailed the test tube By Unllf!d Prei.1 International in a the snythesis of t.ht human tu~rs to provide large quan-dupliqt.~ion of the complex ExcP:pt for southern F'lorida ing growth hormone _ 8 develop-,lites of the aynthetic human honnone as ·:a great basic and the Pat'ific Coast, cold In thwestem Kansas, menl they said could provide growth hormone (HGH). resear.cil .breakthrough with Arctic 11.ir covered the nation r11.nchers ad to contend with a major research tool In the Li, director of the UC possible applications ra ngi"ng flnct: again today. The s who moved in treatment of cancer. hf!art hormone research laboratory, from the study of growth and economy was affected. and following t big snowstorm disr.asf!, diabetes arni pro-said a long range goal of development of human beings In parts ef Omaha, Neb., it which hit the idlands ea rlier S I b!cins associated with growth. his research was possible through the possible treat· 111•as frozen shut ' th is week. l:oors larl ng The hormone , secreted by develGpment nl a modified ment ()f cancer and arter· Resident.son Omaha's north-Four Lincolr Neb ,, the pituitary gland, controls hormone which would Inhibit ioscler06is ." west side had returned to residents heading omewa rd Recycling Plan body growth , size and shapt. lht: growth of breast and other Its first beneficiaries will the bartering systf!m in the after a vacation in • Jorado regulates prod u c l io n of ca ncers . probably be the 10.000 tn 50 .000 wakf! of this week's heavy said they helped 211 snow· mothers' milk and has been He said several apparent at. children suffering each year snowstorm. With mow-clogged bound molorisl!i; a I 0 n GOLDEN, Colo. (UPI) -used successfully in thl'! treat-tributes of HGH would be from h y p e r .pituita r y streets, neighbors had been terstate 80 west of Ll The Adolph Coors Co. an-menl of a form of dwarfism studi ed whf!h sufficien t qu an-dwarfism . They could grow fnrced lfl trading -a pack during Monday's storm. which afflicts thousands of liUes of the hormone are lo normal size with HGH nounced Wednesday a ntw of cigaret~s for 11 q u a r I said they arrived In Lineal youngsters each year in the available. These I n c I u de t.reatment. of milk, baby food f o r late Monday aner "checking prog ram to recycle empty United States. repairing bone fractures. pro· Li. who has spent .12 years breakfast cereal. · · every car and truck " belween beer bottles. Coors will pay Dr. L'. H. Li. 57. who hl'!aded moling healing. lo\vering blood ~tudying the pituitary gland delivered treasure for. pleasure 111venty-one1 at GNqlJe~ ..._ 'lfcADILLAC 2600 HAASOA BLVD./ COSTA MESA (71•) 540-9100 DAILV PILOT 5 It has been so cold in Lincoln and the Waco in-the research team which cholesterol levels. enhancing and its horn1ones. likened Arizona that citrus industry terchange about 45 miles west one cent a bottle for all Coors reproduced the hnrmnne in thf! resistance to infection, and _Jm~a~ki~·n~g~H~G~H~to~b:";~ld~;n~g_._a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ spokesmen say fruit crop of Lincoln. beer bottles that are returned. UC Hormone Re se ar c h improving lhe actions of male highw ay. losses there may run into,0----------------------------------------- several million dollars.· The cold wave put a heavy strain on supplies of na tural gas throughout the West. Magma Cooper mine at San Manuel , Ariz ., announced that i!s und erground flpe rations would be shut down because er a gas shortage. Ne:ar Franklin, lnd., A 69,000-vol t transmission lirl\ snapped, leaving thousands of bomes withou t electric pow!:r 'Long Hair' Tells Jail Punishment LOS ANGELES I AP ) -A bearded, long·haired convict says: he has been kept in solita ry confinement tor 10 months because he won 't !ihave or have his hair cut. He insist!l God gives him the right to stay shaggy. "1 have no reason for refus- ing lo ,c;ha ve ," said Steven Robert Winsby. "All I can say is ii is God 's will that. I don 't. A man has a reason for shavinf{. A man doesn't have lo havf! a reason for not sh11.ving." Win sby , 28, spoke Wed- nesday in U.S. District Court. v.•here his lawyer ha s filed a petition for his release frnm solita ry confinement at th e fede'ral prison al nearby Terminal Island. Pair Claim Jet Noise Ear Injury SA N JOSE IUPit -A U.S. 11.ttorney insisted Wednesday the government w a s n ' I respnnsibll" for any damages suffered by a couple who claim buzzing by Air Force jets caused a hearing loss. Clyde and Naomi White of San Jose ~eek $9 0 .000 damages. asserl in,i: White'~ be.arin.it "'a~ imp111red when the jets swepl low over Uieir car in Inyo County in 1%.l U.S. Attornev S h el rl n n Deut.'ICh said 'ir 1h1> planes \verP military 11.ircrart the y would have been acting on official duty and thus exempt from liligatinn. U'l<f• ....... Bowllre• Bawne .. Craig Capehart, a stu- dent at De Pauw Uni· ve.rsity, has splashed water on plans by In- dianapolis to b u r n thbusands o( discard· ed Christmas trees iQ: annual ceremony. Cape. hart. the grandson of fonner Sen. Homer Capehart. obtained a restra inln,it o r d e r to prevent burning or trees In the face or mountin~ air Pollution. Fires also would vio- late c it y ordinance aJ?ainst outll ide burn· ln,g. 5%0/o says it loud 8.(ld clear. Your money earns high interest plus maximum safety. Stability counts for a lot these days. And what could be more secure than Bank of America? As part of our Personal Choice Savings, we have th ree-types of Investors Passbook Accounts. All are high yield plans. And all offer passbook convenience. 5%% Investors Passbook. Leave your money with us for two years and it will earn 53/4o/o annual interest Computed daily. compounded and paid quarterly. $500 J ' minimum deposit And you can add to It any time in amounts of $100 or more. 51/2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about right for you, we'll pay you SV.% interest The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term offer. 90-day maturity. And you earn 5% annual interest Again, a $500 minimum opens an account Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. • Of course, our regular savings account pays 4Y2% annual interest Put your money in. Take it out Any amoun~ anytime. You can see talk isn't cheap at Bank of Ame rica We mean what we say. High yield oacked up by the security of the world's largest bank Obviously. there's a reason why so many people seek us out Must be we give you more help with the business of living. BANKoFAMERICAm for the business of living er1ca. I • l • ·' J • D AILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Mesa • Ill 1971 D~l ive rina a· many-fa ceted statement on lhe state of the city, Ma yor Robert M. Wil son has aiven Costa f\1e sa.ns somethin2 to thin k about. His ideas. it is important to note. aren't limited just to 11is home ci ty. Some of them -suc h as a public transportation system -might draw in Newport Beach, a s v.•el! as the unified school ri islricl servin~ both ci ties. Others encompa ss larger areas. or at least topi cal areas. such a s re,gional J!:Overnments. His point -as a foe of centralized go vernment - Is that local forces must 14•ork to.e:ether for common interests and thus pro ve it isn't needed. \Vilson doesn't want direction from as far as Sacra- mento or \Va shin,gton, not beyond certain basics, Ci tizens frequently dismiss lhe organization and problems of city -'!overnment as being· rela tively unim- portant to them in a world of international strife. infla- tion, unemployment. racia l tensions and taxes. Citlzcns. howe ver. are \vhat city government is all abou!. Their \vealth. Their health. Their comfort. Su ch concepts ¥ cont rols on nerve-jangling noise from planes. ca rs and motorcycles are on Mayor \Vil- son'.~ 1971 ai::e.nda. Recreationa l development is envi sioned as a pro- .lee!. \l'hile 1971 \\•ill include some street and high\l'ay improvements. Nol every idea A1ayor \Vil son advances is new. nor \Vil! they a ll be so well-received. A few in the area of tilreamllning local governmental operations to gain cheaper, better service may ruffle some feelings in olher Quarters. "But it'! lime we sa t down and talked about it.'1 says Mayor Wilson, and of course this is the first step in any major undertaking. The others -and Costa Mesa isn't short on them_ in city leadership -a re imagination, initiative and finallY implementation. He Risks the Marine Vote One of the rare birds in the pol itical aviary is the c a !lous-boltomed Council Chamber Rooster . Unlike his noisy cousin. the Calculalin_g Cuckoo, who shows up around city hall only, every other April at election time. he is always around . I-le sits in chambers every other rvionday ...... atc hing councilmen. Tom Manus. 25. an ex-Marine '"ho lost hi s ow n council campaign last yea r, is the J.a tesl. He aJso offers comments, on anything from taxi meters to nois e taler· a nee. Last Monday. il v.•a s billboard bosoms a nd booze, notably those on a s i,gn approved by the city council. !\:!anus \l'a s right-on \Vhcn it comes to the u,gline 5s of billb<>ards on the Costa A1esa skyline and Women's Lib \Vill surely endorse damnation of those ma1nmolh mammaries. lie may be groomin.12: his image fo r another rt,.in at a council seat, and this is one traditional way to do it. Bu t a ttacking displays of fen1inine pulchritude mi2ht cost him the Marine vo!e. c lit Spite of Social Pr ogress, There Is • • . A Cookbook Mindless Blaming of Nixon WASHINGTON -As 1970 came to an end various exponents of the Nixon admi nistration sough t U> justify the President's first two years as having quieted dov.•n 1he nat ion in spite of certain noisy evcn1s during the con- gressional campAign. It does sC?em trur !hat the campuses are qu icler. the ghettoes are merely smouldering, a n rl lhc older generation grew accustomed to their children and grandchildren got up as if for a rancy dress ball . The biggest fizzlf" of 1970 proved, in any case. to be. the y o u t h revoh1llon The workless el hic begAn lo look silly in a na1ion v.·1th breadwinners vainly l!ieeking work . A Jar~c surplus of trained lcacher s and te chnologists, and a plr!hora of Ph.D's, untrained rirf'amers, en· \·irnnmentalis ls, n1nrnlis!s. electric guitar playe rs. organic food fadc!1sts, highlighled the shortcomings of the new CQn- i;c iousness as a v.•av tn sustai n life. There ma y be. as rcpnrt ed. a couple of thousand cornmunes v.·hcre lhe flower children fi nd shelter in substandard hnus- ing but !hr glamour is \\"caring thi n and the nation as a \l"hnle has been unmol"ed except in rc\'Ul~1on C.ETTll\'C. 00\\"N TO uha! rrA llV hilP- penf'd 1n Nixon 's first two years. the O\"f'rblfn1n rhf"loric-of the \\'hil e \/nu~P and 11s 11nl1 kc l\" herald. Dr . D;in1rl P;itrick r-.lnyn1h~n. ran hr 1,e:nnrrd Al hand are bn!h Dr ~1 nvn1han ~ rmf1!1nn;il fa re11pJ! And 1he many 1holJ5a nd v.ordC'd ;• I Richard Wilson apologia superintended by presidential aide John D. Ehrlichman . The simple statistics tell the tale bet - ter. Here are a few: The ratio of expend i1ures for national defense and huma n reso urces pr ogr;ims, balanced heav ilv in favor of nat ional defensC' in !he Kennedy-Johnson years, ha.~ been revl'rsed . In 1961. it was 4ll percen t for national defense. and :10 percent for human resources program~. Jn the current fiscal year. the figure is 37 per cent for natio nal defense and 41 percent [or human resources. SC HOOL DES EG REGATION in the South haS been noth ing short of sensa· 1ional. In 1968. 6 l percent of the South's Negroe.c; attended school in desegregated systems. The fi~urr is now 90 perccnL lt is pointlC'ss 111 ignore the fa ct that n1any or these Negroes attend schools in v.·hith a n1ajority of the studont.'l are black. Even so. school desegrc~ation in thC' South has advanced during th e Nixon adminis tration at an unprecedented r;itc. Al anolhcr flash point. the number of ,roun_g men called 1n the mi li tary rlraft has dC'Clincd fro m 93.000 in the rirst quarter nf 191i!I lo 27,000 in the fourth quarter Qf 1!170 And. on another fighting front. "'·hen Nixon r,ame 1n1n office 2 9 m1l!Jon pers0n.~ prit !hr benrfll nf food s111 mps. Tod ii v thf' figure 1s three times as greal , 8 8 m1tl1on. THESE STATISTICS arP chosen rnr 1tJustraU011 becaust' they tell the story or wha! has happened in those areas where Nixon had been criticized with such emotional bitterness. ln Qth cr fields the record is not so persuasive -1he standstill in national economic growth. the increase in unemployment. the continu ing rise in prices. But where the heart and hun1an co m- passion are concerned the statistics tell a story nr accomplishment readily nvcrlooked bv thnse who cher ish their prl"conce1vrd "nnli('lns of Ni xon. This makes it all the more difficult !IJ understand why so many Negro leaders. so ma ny welfarisl~. so many pacifists. so many environ mentalists and ao many of the young simply dismiss Nixon as beyond redemption. THEY ~11Nr>LESSLV prefer lo blame him fnr events with \\•hich he had no connection, Jike the killings at Kent SLate. like the pollution of the air and water. and. beyond all reason. with complicity in the "military-industrial complex" v.·hi ch he has denled $7 bi!Jion this ye ar. Why doesn't he lire J . Edgar Hoover: I-low cnme he stands for Spiro Agnew" \Vh y docsn'L he sympathize with and Inspire the young., And so on and so on Thercforr, in spite of the stead y social pro_gress in !he Nixon administration, in sPil<' of the wi!hrlra"·al fr om Vietnam . in spit e of ln\\'f'red def rnse ouUa~·s, in spite flf J:tlln~ in 1he Sena te and un· commonly 11•\I' losses in the House, 1970 1s nnt de('mcd tn h;i ve been a ,ll:flllrl }'Cdr for l'i,.;nn Therr \\ill br thosr v.'ho v.·ill say the :o;ame v.·hcn l\·n:on adds economic pro- j!ress in his last r11n ~·e3rs to the JOC!al progress of his ftrs\ tv.·o >·ears. Military Pot Use Growing Pol ha s become so prevalent among American rn1l1tarv iw.rsonnel in Vietnam that Bob Hope included gags about ll during his annual Christmas tour of the v.·ar zone. As Hope launched into a series of one-liner!; about marijuana, r;omr Gls 1n his audience Iii up their own :i;ricks. A lop-level Pentagon task force stu· dying the use nf dru~s 1n the armed forCi'~ lolrl fnngrPs~ 1a:r;t .~ummer there has been ··.:in ala rn11n~ 1ncrct1se nf cases in vesrigatet1 10 South Virtnam . lhe con· linenta l I 'S Anrl worldwide ·• One \l'itness. Dr . R1Jbtrt \\'. Bai rd , warned: "Unless ·wr. take dec1 S1\"e steps. \1·e are i:Oing lo h:il'e a problem fl\'C ~'ears from nov.· \l"f' are not gn1ng to he able lo contenrl v.·1\h." The Pentagon task force ma\nlained that "the natu re of lhe pro hletn 1s no~ su ch that &I this point n1 lhtary readiness ---WWW- Thursday, January 7, 1971 The editorial poge of the Dnily Pilot .tetk! to i nform (I nd srim· ulatt r1oder1 by presenting tht.s t1twipoper'1 oplnion.t and com- me11 tary on topics of 1ntere.si arid lig"ificanct , b11 providing a forum far Ch.fl' £.tprc1s1on. · of qu r rrndtT"s' oplnion.t. and . b'j/ prtst11Hng the diverst v1e1L1· point& of informtd obfervt rs 011d spo kt .smen on topics of th t do y. Robert N. Wttd, Publisher Editorial Research ~ I Is considered lo be endangerfd." But a study by an Army physician has disc103td that nearly one out of five front-line soldiers sur\'eyed in an ellte combat unit in Vietnam smoked mari· juana at least once a day. VICE ADl\1JRA I~ William P. l\1ack, deputy assistant secretary of defense for manpower. ha~ said !he problem of drug use by men assl gnl'd to crltlc-111 areas is under "pretty gond C(lnlrol." Such areas inclurle nuclcar-rlelivcry systems, nuclear power plants and 1n· telligence vperations. E11ch of thP, scrvit'es has unrovered about 20 In 30 cases of ()ff-duty drug abuse by men in these speciall ies. he reported. All were prompl.ly removed. Eslimates or marijuana use by men In Vietnam range from :'IO lo 80 percent. fl.1arJjuana grows wlld in Vie tnam and experts say the strain is twice as potent as that av1i11ble In the United States. In al l the servicts, there Wert only 522 investigations of mariju11na use in 1965. By 1969, the number h11d grown to 19,139. Mo~ than 1 third of the cases. or 6,490. were In Vietn1m. Hard drug cases totaled l ,357 hist year. with 833 ()f them occurring in Vietnam. The N11vy. which h11d taken the hardest lin,, dischargcrl 3.808 men in l9ti9 for drui:: abuse:. Only 3() had been lei RO in 19113 for that caust. Na vy discharges In 1970 for drug abuse m113 reach at. high 11 4,500. TREATIKG DRUG users in lhe service rather lh11n prosecuting them is being encouraged under a new polJcy. The idea is lo build <>n experimental pro- grams already in operation in the Army and Air Force and to make them offlclll policy. Emphasis is bein g plactd on rehabi lilatinn and education -not punishment . Embodying many of lhe re-com· mendations advanced by the Pentaron Lask force, the new plan allows: amnesty for drug users if lhey come forward voluntarily for !reatment. Under old re~ula lions amnes1y \l·as not allowed. and dlshonorPble di srharges precluded addicts: from gett ing trealment al veternns hospitals. Ir a drug user his potenfjal for furthr:r useful milltary service, aUempt..c; are to be made to restore him lo dul y. Dear Gloomy Gu s: On Victoria Slreet nu r Harbor Boulevard lhe city undererounded, sidewa lked. bul kheaded, lighted, ~'ideoed. p~ved, spent a fortune, then !!!riped the slreet so we hlilve the most e1tpcnsi\ie slngle lane traffic i;treet in the c<>unty! -J n. c:. T~!' .. 1111rt •It-II«" ,..••U'1' vltwt, ,,.1 M f t\Jt flll' IHM II I~ ... w1~1..... S- Vtvr ••I -v• " 011o ... , Ou•. OI UY "Ii.I. In the Form Of a Memoir The Bookinan ....... , An c,.;t re me!y pleasant hoo k about food turn.i;; up under the misl eading litl e "Youn,!! and Hun gry:' This title suggesls lo me a rem1niscenct> bv someone \l'ho on ce was young and poor.° Rut the aut hor. Suianne Taylor. was never poor. Just hungry. especially \\'hen she and hrr Norweg ian-born mother left the i r Philadelphia home early each su mmer lo visit grandfather's hous e in Stavanger. The grendp are nl<;; were well-0f f, too. f.lother and ynung Suzanne, or '"Tutti." as !he llbservant young~tcr was called. were met by a "calech e·· with coachman silting nn i.he box . This carrir:d them to the greet Victorian house which, as she dcs cribeg it, seems to have been almost bursting with regional gastronom - ic wondC'rs. "YOUNG AND HUNGRY,'' is ",1 ('OOkhook in the form or a memolr ." a recollection or Norweg f;in places (presumabl y in thc 1920s f. or rela tives , fr iends ;i nd 11•hal cve ryflne ate. frnm Chantercl!e Mushrflll ms ( Kantareller I to Almond Peach Tart 1Flre Specier Fersken Kake ). Suzanne Taylor ·wrilt's with an honest girlish enthusiasm about those happy times, and seems In cvoke precisely !he taste of everything she. sampl ed. Cream so !hick it had to be served with a spoon : 11 newly fried pot;;ito pancake with butter nn it , brown loaves fre"h from the oven , ham and vegeta ble "tcws, haddock mousse. smoked salmon, Ann's quick cookies, or Lcna·s cheese 6TitlpS. At Ule end nf her b()(lk, Mrs . Ta.vlnr ha11 added about 140 recipes from four Norwe2ian regions. The who I e mouthwatering prvjecl carries a gentle "Song of Norway" atmosphere. (Of· ficielly published January 25. but Houghton Mifnin tells UJ it is available in the stores ; $6.114), Notes on the ~1ar1ln -By Dorothy and Martin Blinder of San Franatsco: "The Laattla Borsia Cookbook," favorite reclpn <>f infamous peaple, illustrated by Suunne GUlaspl. Fr led clams Benedict Arnold: Mongolian Firepot Genghis Khan ; Carrot Soup Ben- nie Parker, and the like. (Price/Stem/ Sloan. paperbound; Sl.95). -Nonbook? A 6\1.z'" cube carton. "Tbe Ralabo". Bor," which H1rper & Row labels "a box for all seasons." conlains a series: of four books or poelry , more or less, or thoughts, by J09eph Pintauro. a former catholic priest who worked In depressed area,, of Brooklyn and who Is now a poet-playwright-filmmaker-song writer. Each suggests a s e a so n ' s dominant mood : "The Ra bbit Box," for 1prlng dwells on the Easter symbol as "king of nervous thln1s." Each Is ll- Juatr1ted with daz:zlina: gaphics based on anything from Mtdieval symbols lo old· movie itills -the work of Norman Llliber .. , dac:Tibed as "deliln COO• sultant for the VaUcan Pavilion, New York World 's F1lr. '' There 11 a "Peace P01&er" In the bot. too. all of it al- tempUna to record "the hopes and onx· le Uta of the 11'101." One or my anxleUes 1t the moment la the prke tlg on thll ""'I and dlnce, 115.115. WUll&m u., .. Quotes Ll7.tt ~flnnr.111. L.A., Ulm 5tar danibrrr nr l111e Judy Garland -"I \l'OUld rath('r present 3 first-rate version of myself than a 1econd·rate version of Mama." W o·rds: Weapons Of Obfuscation As a language grows m n r e "sophisticated ... in the modern sense , it, seems 10 accomplish lwu opposite th ings .a l once: it cla rifies expressio n and <:onfu scs i! al the sarnc time, !n "advance d"' societies. 1vords are as of1en u~ed as srno ke·scrce.ns as they arc used as smo ke s1gnrils. This rrflrC'tlon v.as promp ted by a liUle n t' "'s 1IC'm ou t of Swaziland, lhe new African state which has f'stablishcd i1s ,,.,.,,n national ;ur!inr. recently, the ai rline decided to print lick- el!! in ~u·azi inste ad English, '';ind ran up against so1ne cky linguistic problems,'' the story .J•d. TECHNICAL ANO legalistic terms are nonex is tent in lh is tribal tongue, and 1he official translator of the ti ckets finally gave up trying lo I ransl&\e such phra~rs as "unless expressly so provided . nothing hr reln cont;iined sha ll \v111vc any ]1ml1alion or J1abili ty of C:Arr1er .. " Eve ry pas.~engC'r has i;;ern !Ins i.:obbledygook nn his Hckcl. and not one ou1 of a thousa nd F.nghsh·s peaking trav elers can unaerstaod 11 . :\ut'h language ls devised 1 a~ 11 1c; in hou~chold leases) to give the carrif"r and !he landlord all the best of ii. whi le cnnlus111g the layman, In our soci ety. m1t l1nn" nf people agree to nr sign 1h1ng<; thr\' havt>n 't. read becausc !hr1· rnul dn t understand them even after rrad1ng THIS IS /\'OT TO make lhr ;irrn~;inl assumption lhat tribal langu<igr.o; a r e i:hildi!-.h, as so m:iov ()f us do. Prof. 1'-1ario Pr1. Hl his bo0k, "The Story of L:inguaj;!e," points nut thal the two principal Afric an lnngurs. Hausil and s,v;-ih1H. are fa r frnm crude or simple· :111nded. ~"·ah11i. indeed. he tells us, has reached s11r h ;i stage of rie1•elopmrnl that the C'f1mcd11"<; uf Moliere hav e bee n ~uct·rsslully tr:ioslaled into ii. and pr<'s<'nted wilh an ::ill·Af rican rast. And lhe Bantu l;i ngu;.ii::es jnf wh ich fam ily 1h1s i:'I 11 membc rJ <irr te rnird "infinitely t•xpres~ive by this ~ professor 0 r l 1ngu1 stlc~. FUR !/\'.STANCE, Eng lish ha~ nn \\'nrd l1kr ··muma g;:in1ag<1ma,'' 1vhich mean.'I · nn e 1vho losf.s other people's 1hings." nr •·1nuwavl." meaning '";i i;:nod-looking "'Oman whn ca n·!. <-' ('1 o k . '' nr ' rnuwandoloci," meaning "son1cone \\.'hft i.:rnv.•ls \\'hrn awakened in the morning." nr "mutnlatnl1 ," mean 1n~ "one who 1.~ rnns1anl\y divorcini;: and remarryi ng.·• Banlu even has a word for a "yes·man '' -·'n1uvum1z1." The terms an d phrase~ v.•e havt developed. v.·hich are lark1ni;: in Sv.·azi ;ond 11ther native 1nn~Ue". are not ~ 1ni1t·h 1001~ 111 commun1ca t1on as weapons nf nhru~calion -me;ins of ronlnund ing, 1•1r1n11da1ing, 1mpress1ng. frighten1n¥ or fnr>l111g people \\lhen you arc loftily toltf lh;il .111u r ailmrnt may hc "1strogenir." 11ha! that n1c.:rns 1.~ th;i1 it's prnbahly ~omrthi ng yot1 picked up frorr. the doclor. Deterrin,g Drunk Driving Driving on streets and highwa\"s is dangerous enouih lhese days 111i\hout. motorists being required to cont end \\'1th drunk drivers. Yet the statistics on traffic fata li1ies keep telling the same old story: An incredible number of death-dealing accicl.ent.s are direclly linked In drinkini: drivers. Jt ha.s been impos.~ible lo keep these hazards to life and limb off the highways. The Governor's Aulomobilc Accidenl Study Commission. after 2 l1 yc.<1rs of study, has reC<>mmended that C;ilifornia impose m11ndatory jail sentences nr finrs for first offense drunk drivin~. Anyone convicted 11 second time "'ould be required to submi t to a medical bnard ro r examinatio n and rehabilitation. IT IS QUESTIONABLE wh e!her c.vrn 11 mandatory fine or a short slhy in jail are. adequate deterrents to drunk driving. A motorist who has been drink ing het1vlly more than likely has a tendency 10 forget the possible consequences should he attempt to weave his car homeward or to another tavern. But at"teut lh1s would be a slrp in the rla:ht dirtttion. People have got 10 be made to reallie that driving Rn automobUe wbtle drunk poses a n untCCfptable risk to the lives nf olhers who are uslnc the hlghwayi. in a legitimate mimer. Cilium should be 1ble to drive their cars with some assurance that they won't f11ll victi m to a lu!h who lt\ink~ he 's en litlcd to \\'Cave over three lane~ of lraffic on the freewa y. THE MOST INTRIGlllNG :'lSpt"C'I of the comm!ss1onrr"~ rrcorr.mendntion i~ ils rropo!O!al for handling ~ t c on d t l m e oHcnders. Dy requiring reh11billlallon of G·uest Editorial ' I 1he oHenders, there is greater likelihood !he rool of the problem can be reached. Fines or jail sentences aren·t cures for drun k driv.ing. merely monetary penalties fnr disobeying the la"'· Fn!il something is dooe lo treat th1 dru nk driver for his illness rather than repeatedly punishing him for his crime, 1he traffic death stalistirs ;iren't i;ioing In improve. The commission's proposals ro111a1n seeds of hope that this miiiht be dnne The Da lly Californian La Mesa \ ,....J,.--B11 George ---, Deiir George: f\fy husband has one. bad fa ul t -extravagance. For my birthday he bought me not one but THREE v.•igs -red. platinum and brunette. Am T justified In nagging him for being a spend thrift? DOT Dear Dot : I don't th ink you should. There are more. extrav1gant lh ings than 1hc cost or three wigs -red. plat inum and brunette. For in- st ance. a resl redhead, blonde 11nd bru~Ue . 1Setld -your problems to George and fsct each day by turning your h11ck on it! 1 ' ,. I I I '' ,-7 '' Saddlebaek E'DITION Today's Ftaal. N.Y. Stocks VOL:. 6~. NO. 6, 3 SECTIONS , 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUARY 7, 1971 TEN CENTS Preacher's March Ol('d-_But No Loudspeaker By JOllN VALTE RZA Of lh• O•llY 1'1'-1 $1111 Fiery fundamentalist minister lh e H.cv. Carl Mcintire will be able to lead his flock in a march in San Clemente Jan. 30. but city coun cilrncn here \Vedncsday agreed he would ha\'C to exhort his tollo\\'Crs without sound equipment. r.1c lntire. the controversial man ol the cloth v•hom one councilman described as a '·superpatriot. ., will lead a march through streets near Old Plaza ·Park calling for a "total victory" in lhe Viet- nam war. And despite the obvious rar-right tenor of lhe Appearance, P.1clntire even "'On support fro 1n. the South Coast segment of the American Civil Liberties Union al the meeting \Vednesday. Tom \\'crl, a co llege instructor and head of the loca l chapler of the ACLU, told councilmen he would take the matter to court if the minister were not given permission to conduct the San Clemente nuirch and rally. "I personal ly find 11evercnd Mcintire revolting, outrageous and potentially dangerous ... but the council ciin't put the U.S. Constitution beneath our own desires." said Wert. The council , actually, had the recourse only on the mailer of allowing sound equipment at the march and rally. Councilmen finally agreed to deny the Nc\V Jersey minister's request to U!e an amp\!fier plugged into the cigaret lighter of a flatbed truck. The parade pc;rmlt already has IK-1.'n granted for lhe affair by Police Chil'f Clifford Murray under policies se t by Lhe council. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, \Vho said he espoused neither "the far lert, nor right," voted against denia l of the sound equipment request. O'Keefe stressed that he also voted against denial of the Peact; Action Coun· ell's request lo have a parade and rally in San C\en1ente months agQ, resulting in a m;ijor demon:;tra!ion. .. They went ahead and had it anyway," he said. Fellow councilmen, however, seemeJ concerned that neither the fiery minister. nor any aides \Vere present Wednesday to ans"'er questions about the event. The major concern , said Councilman Stanley Northrup, would be the noise ent • res1 is it a llnity llrged Recreation Bond Options Offered In a major change of tack, San Clemente councilmen \\'ednesday agreed to offer a series of recreation options in a bood election next April 20 \\'hich could include a new clubhouse, parks, beach access and other projects for a oo~t of $J ll)illion. The action came 3·2, only a few "·eks l'lfter councilmen had agreed to hold a revenue vote for the clubhouse and tennis court relocation, eliminating a total recreation passage. During Wedpesday's di scussions coun- cilmen exhumed arguments hashed out at several study se'Ssions on the malt.er and diversity a1nong members surfaced once more. Mayor \Valt er Evans, who originally proposed a total package for parks and r ecreation, pointed to disseJ1 t al'l1ong parks and recreation commissioners 011 the idea of a clubhouse-only bond vote, then called for a "united front if we are to hn've a chance to pass this measure:· The pas!c P,l~nS, as sel fo~ \\'ednesday call (or : -An election consolida ted with trustee voting Apr!I 20 for ipembera of school boards in the capiatranO U{lified School District and 'the Saddleback Community College Districl -The offering of perhaps five separate recreation options, of ~'hich one covers the clubhouse alone. -Giving voters a choice of passing youth-oriented revenue projects as well. -The hiring of legal counsel for a bond vote. -The consideration of a financial con· su\Lant for the project as well. Clemente Takes White Elepl1an t From Company Broken down, the bond electon could . therefore, offer voters a breadth of choices. The clubhouse project v;ould CQSl $371.911. FRAN K CURRAN AND WIFE , FLORENCE , AFTER HIS ACQU ITTAL WEDNE SDAY San Di990 M•yor· Cltartd of Char9ts In Bribe Case Involvi ng Yellow Cab Contracts San C){>mente city councihnen deci ded tJn a ne\\' policy Wednesday -never look a gift white elephant in the n1outh. They agreed lo accept a free, life-size ~tatue of a baby \.\'httc elephant from a Long Beach firm. The nexl problem is deciding \.\'here lo put it. The sta tue. asscrtcdly he\.\·n b.v a maste r Jt11lian sc ulptor, prcsun1ably could go into a city p~irk . "Why don·t we accept the gHl and J1ave then1 put ii in Council1nan Sta nlc_v Northrup's back yard ?" s11ggcstecl ?i.1ayor \Vatter Evan <;. The suggestion in jest even \\'ent into 11 n1otion. It failed . aided by Nortbrup"s smiling "No" at voting lime. City staff will exp lore more details before Signkrafters of Long Beach deliver the "gift " A community recreation center geared to youth · activitie.'> a~ the Beach Club \\"o uld cost $3fl0,000. A plan to build nc\v parks and complete existing nelghborhood green areas would (:OS! $1'10.000. Imnroving beach access roules and refurbishing the entrance lo I he municipal pier \\'OUld add $107,000 lo the measure. Under Wednesday night's plan. voters v•ould be able to chose either, all or none of th e separa!c measures. Counci hncn theorized that thr clertinn should give the public ""a chance lo give opinion on all the plans." Originally they had agreed that blen- ding too many measures on the same ballot might seal the doom for all. The next steps, they agreed . \\'OUld be to l'lsk the t .... ·o school dislricts if San Clemente would be allowed to share their ballot and the cosls. Su.ch a blend into two other elections (neither of which has a revenue issueJ would cut the costs or a special vote. San Di ego Mayor Ruled No't Guilt y of Bribery SAN' D!F.GO (1\P)-l\-fayor Frank Cur· ran \\'as found innocent \\'ednesd::iy of bribery and co nspiracy in alleged payoffs From 'i'cl101v Cab Co. for his influence in pu:;hing throujlh a fare increa se three years ago. The ve rdi ct came after nine hours of deliberalion by the jury or nine 1nen and three '"·omen. C."u rran, 53, ~·as indicted by the county grand jury in October along with eight other per.sons including seven pubUc of· ficia!s. The .separate trials are sc heduled through February. Curran's was the first to end -exac!ly a month after 1t began . On the s1:u1cl. lie denied the l'laim by Chnrles A. Prall . former president ()f Yellow Cab. lhat he gave Cu rran checks for 3,500 as "campaign con- tributions '' lo push the fare increase through. The two.term mayor told the trial !hat he once a..<>cepted an envelope from Pratt and delivered it unopened to hh;; re.election campaign headquarters. Before the indictments were handed down, Curran indltated· he would seek a third four-year term this year. · The .verdicts of irmocent on all three counts-two of bribery end one of CQn- spiraty-were read al 3: 16 p.m . by Superior Court Judge Robert Conyers. Piano Concert Free Tickets Still Available Ticketa for the free . concert by noted composer and pianist Elmer Bel'rulteln next , Th~sday night .a~e .still available • ~gh ~ddleback Col.lege's•student af· !airs offict, spokesmen said today. The Uclftt.9, al'e for entrance to San Cletnente High Schbol's auditorium a't , the , popular ~ncert.,. which w!ll begin , at a p.m~ .BeJ;nstein, whose doz.ens of 14 movie.scores Incl~ ''Thoroug h ly · .Nodem ,MIUle" ,and 'Man "(ith • Golden >.nil';', .will .ahare ·his experiences In <Qmpo8itlon wjlh u,.. South Coe8t au- dretce at the evenlfll concert He abo will tonduct a seminar on the Sllddleblck campus earlier in the MIXON .GA'tHERING -J'ftsident and Mrs. Nixon gather in the living room o! the West.em Wb.ite HOUSO'WiUl_;lllelr We<ia~ evening, din-... '!· . .. . . ' ' From left are Bob Hope, Tricia· Nixon, Mrs. Nixon, Gerald Ford, Mrs . Ford , President Nl!<,On, Mrs. !(Ope:. Dr. Henry KliaiuJt•r aild AliiGJd·,P,i!mtr. day. · Reserv1Uons ~n be obtaioed by calling l11M960. -' . ... --- Bond Voting Se t By San Joaquin Sc hool Trustees lly PA,\1t.:I.A llALLA1'' 01 t~t D1!1, l'l .. t S!llt 1\ S\5 n1illion school bond election, the largest amount ever re<1uestcd 1n the San Joaquin Elemcntl'!ry School District. \\'as sel by lhc district trustees \\'cdnesday. If approved by the voters April 6, the bonds will provide funding for schools for lhe next five years. After considerin~ several alternatives, the board voted unanimously for the five-year bonds in order to clirojnate the need for frequent bond electlons Bnd sBve ·the t8Xpaye.rs' . money; th ey sa id. Tbe bonds would fund · purcbasc of school sites and school construction. ''At our rate of growth we probably would have had to ask for an election every year·l'lnd·a-hatf,'' sa id Trustee J'hilip Bradfield . Discussion followed abo ut whclher or not to save even more money by t¥iving this election coincide wllh the 'board or trustees electiOn scheduied for April 20. Tru!tee Robert Dameron said tax· payers fn!Quently1 complain that mOre elections should be combined. Tnmee Ed ~rry' argued tbat a combined elec· lion In "this cue ..may cof\(use th~ Yotb and the ttonds would have a better chnnce. ii it;i a separate election. . ' EXp lninlng thC need for the vote, Rex Nerrson, assl!lt.ant superintendent for administrative services, sold the district ls now eligible \o ae~ '2 mlllipn In bondi. But the d~trlcl hH <inly ll.~,000 In bonds which are av11lable for sale. He reminded the board that <¥•pile the amount of bonds author11.ed by lbe voters. tht d!Jtrict al any time can only use bonds amounting to nve pf:rctnt of thC district's ·a!M!ssed valuation. That leave~ ipprol~telx '475,otlO·necded, but unauthorized. · ' ,~- emanating from the park to nearby homes. "!think \l'e have subjected these people lo cMugh noise and disturbance around the park ," he said. The march is expected to be a mini version of a huge event in Washington, D. C., which created an international incident when South Vietnam Vice Presi· dent Nguyen Cao Ky accepted an Ur. vitation lo attend. lie backed down later, however. Sandy Spa's :Warmer Air Big Factor President Nixon may interrupt hi.a V•ork-play San Clemente stay for a jaunt to \.\'armer Palm Springs and lhe exercise the doctor ordered. The Nixons hope to speod a CQuple of days at least at the elabo rate desert estate of Walter Annenbcrg, ambassador to Britain . The President worked through the day Wednesday al San Clefl1ente and then relaxed with some well-known dinner guests v"ho flew into s~n Clemente by he!iCQpler. Western \Vhite !·louse diMer guests Included comedian Bob Hope: goller Arnold Palmer: Gerald R. Ford of J\1ichigan, House Republican leader ; and Jlenry A. Kissinger, top foreign policy adviser. Nixon is expected to do a good deal ()f golfing if he goes to Palm Springs. Pal mer might join hlm next week, Palmer presentl y is entered in the $110,000 Glen Campbell-Los Angeles Open tourn ament. Occupational Career Classes Sho1v Popularity Saddleback Co 11 e g e 's occupational career classes arc proving to be among the school's most popular among a record enrollment of 2,850 students during · the winter semester. School spokes1nen said at least three of the classes-geared primarily lo oc- cupational training subjects -were among the earliest closers in the latest registration. Thee auto service courses were amon1t the most appealing lo students. The cour9C!! are conducted in SJd· dlebark classrooms, and at Mission Viejo tfigh School's auto shop, wbere practical experience ls available. The entire 14-course curriculum In- cludes accoontirig, airline stewardess tr8ining, drafting technology, bu.sines! cdu rses and police science classes. Ora•ge Cout Wea Cher The winds will die down Friday, but the arctic air wUI ' stay ar~nd for another day, keeping high tempe ratures at ~ and lows ranging from . 38 to (brrr) 28 de- grees. INSWE 'l'ODA'Y I Orange Count-u 1~atth ojjie- . ials are plcn111,ftg 4 mas.tit>f (uiti· f rubella (German nita.sut!') com-1 paig11 Ja11. 3 l. To fi nd out where fnoculation1 WiU be ·available, set Page 11. l lrltl' 11 Ca11 .... .i1 I ''*""" u, 11 , ..... ,... ,, .. Cfllllc• tl c~ tl • Dtttl> MttkM 1 I -n ........ 1 ...... ' ....,, ... ......, ,..,, ""'-• .,, -" AM L...., n Mtl1'N: • • , ' ·f I . .. ~ . . . . -... -. . . -.... ' ,.--.......... --~· _,, .... ._ ~,. ........ . ..... ---... -.. -. ... - ' • f I OJ.lt. y PlLOT SC :~tate Park , ~ Asks Aid .. On Beaches "' Thi!! grave hurdll!!S In development of ... th, San Onofre Stole Park beach recently .. given to the public by the Marine Corps -surfaced before San Clemente City Coun- ._cilme n Wednesday in a request for city ~ ~·1ter and stwcr services. The beach, wh.lch lies four miles from the city limits, would accommodate thousands of visitors, but the nearest services are miles away. Speciflcally, slate parks off icials have asked if !he city v•ould negotiate vtlth !hem on chances of channeling water from San Clemente and waste into the city systems. Councilmen agreed , but there is a hitch_ Tht city's main north-south collector sewage main already ls overloaded. The condition is so acute, in fact. ~hat development in the downcoast por- , lions of the city has been stalled because of a possible burden nn the system. City officia ls have applied for a federal granl through lhe Department of Housing ·,and Urban Development (or a new col· "lector main through EI Camino Real , ·~hich could cost more than a half·million •·dollars. ,.,· If the grant is approved, councilmen : said Wednesday, then the chances for • the slate park waste service is feasible, • City Eng ineer Phil Peter said lhe ex· ·, isling system could possibly handle the • peak-period amount of park waste, but it would require installation of larger .... pumps along the old line. -He said the state might share costs ·of extending some new mains between ·the Western White House and the San • Clemente State Park land. Alternate proposals to haul the raw sewage to the new city treatment plant in tank trucks ha ve been ruled nut ·"beca use of the septic condition of the waste." Peter told councilmen . The news on the federal grant could come within the next few months, he said. Nonetheless. whichever plan is agreed upon. It could easily stall the ultimate development of the valuable blufftop beach land, which marks the first parcel ever released fo r public recreation by • the Marine Corps. . Initiall y, chemical toilets could be used rto a cco mm o da te visitors, but a ·'.permanent system would be necessary · for full use o( the lengthy sl r!p of shoreline. ~, Offlcia\5 of the state agency have • eet the opening of the beach in a roU&h :.atate for ne1t summer. ; Ecology Control : Panel Rejected -A suggestion by the City of Seal Beach '" U:iat San Clemente set up its own en- vironmental quality control board got '-nowhere before city Councilmen Wed· riesclay. Despite a suggestion by Councilman Thomas O'Keefe lhat St'Vetal concerned ('itizens be named lo such a panel, the measure failed 4-1. Seal Beach officials sent San Clemente a copy of their resolution sett ing up such a board . But Mayor Walter Evans said he had studied the idea al lengt h "And 1 can't lhink of a thing they could control here." C.Ouncilman \\'ade LIJ~·er did not care for the plan. either, saying it was "Just another commission with another budget and expense account.·• Co ld Fails to Halt India ns' Cereruon y TAOS, NM. !AP\ -Subfreezing weather (ailed to slop a group of Taos Pueblo Indians from perform ing their annual buffalo dan ce. t DAILY PILOT ,...,.., I•-' H ........ IMdi Lat•• ... ;.. .. ..... ,..., CMta M.wi S-Cle•• OIV.HGE. COAST PU•ltlH1NG COMPAMY 'llobt rt N. W,,, J 1<:k It C111l11 \'It• Prts d1n1 1r.d G-•11 MIM;..- Tlto"'tl K,, .. u Etllfl' 7M"''' A. M•••"'ft• ~MtM91"f l•lttr iclt•td P. M1H SOvl 0••"110 t011nly Edl!Or Offl<• Ctil .. Mtw: UCI W•t ~y 5flwf }II""°'! ... ti\: Jtll WMI .... , t w!Ml'f • I...-••tfll 2ft l'Vtsl A- H11nt""""' tMCll: ~71ts •M«'I •c.u1rttl'4I .. ~ ""'*''" • Jrtvlla l.J 011'111111 a.I TlMwM&Y, ~ 1, lm Incubation Too Short 'Happening' Not Hepatitis Cause The incubation periOd for hepatill s which this week struck a Laguna Beach police officer is loo short for him to have caugh t i t .at the. Christmas hippie hap- pening, Acting Police Chief Frank Schopen said today officer Kenneth Brumage's Ulnes& "was not a direct effe<:t or the Happen· ing." "I'm not saying that we didn 't possibly have some hepatitis out there," Capt. Schopen said , "but the officer displayed symptoms before the happenin~ was over. That's too short a Lime for him to have caught it at the gathering." Brumage. feeling "kind of rocky" while recoverl11g at his home, said today he might have caught the disea"se while .arresting a "hippie·type who was high on drugs a week before the happening," Brumage sa id he fe ll lhe symptoms of f11.tigue and nausea the day following Chri stmas, bu t continued to work the 12- hour shifts called during t.he happening. "'I wa.sn1t out there, so I know I didn't c.11tch it from those attending lhe rock fesUval.'' Meanwhile, other members of the 45 man force today were feeling the effects of the shot of gamma globulin they got to immunize them from the infectious disease. The incubation period for hepatitis var- ies from a few days to several weeks. Initial symptoms resemble those or 1tom- ach flu with cramps and nausea, accom· panied by extreme. faligue . Until lab tests were completed Monday. Brumage wa s not certain he suffered from anything other than fatigue due to the long shifts he was working. Capt. Schope11; said people should not panic since he doubted the .rock festival had brought any great increase in the presence of the disease to Laguna Beach . "Many people will probably think they've got it, although they probably only have a touch of nu," he said. * * * * * * Danger of Hepatitis Epidemic Called Rem;ote Orange County's expert on infectious diseases today assured anyone who has come into cont.act with stricken Laguna Beach Police Officer Kenneth Brumage thal their chances of picking up hi3 hepatitis bug are "extremely remote." "And it would have to be extremely intimate cont.act," said Dr. Thom as J. Albert, chief of the county health department's infectious diseases depart· ment. "I just can't see that any fellow officer has the slightest need to worry." Alberl explained that the genn ls absorbed by swallowing or through a cut or scratch. "Many victims become infected through the use of surgical needles and this is how many drug-~lng hippies pick up the germ," he said. "But if I were the doctor on the spot l would limit my inquiries to those who had extremely cloae phyalcal COOLlct. with th is ofi icer, such as the Immediate members of hill family." Albert said. "Any talk of an epidemic 11 unjwtified bd poinUeas. '' "The best public health measUtt in the world is soap and water," Albert added. ,; Anyone who still feels that he might have a chance of plckina: up hepatitis should use plenty of both." Brumage was stricken Christmas Eve with wbat was at first thought to be stomach flu but is now diagnosed in· fectious hepatitis. Dr. Albert said todaf that the disease can also be spread through contact with human e1erement but the careful was hing of hand! and cleaning of bathrooms is "quite sufficient to take care of this possibility. "Look at us in the health department," he said. ''Many of us, doct.ors, nurses and technicians, handle these patients, talk to them, have them breathe on us and treat them intimately. But none of us has ever caught the disease and it is extremely unlikel y that any or us will since we all maintain simple cleanslng functions." Brumage's illness raised the possibility fhat he might have contacted the disease throu.gh a spell of duty at the Christmas rock fe.lltival in Laguna Beach. Some -0'.l county lawmen were encamped ·at Laguna high school during the happening. But il was pointed out today that Brumage was believed . to have shown symptoms of the dista.se on Ouistmas Eve and that the lnfectiOlL! hepatitis bus mmt have been contracted by the officer long before the rock f1sliv1l open· ed. Viet Withdrawal Plan Target Date Now May 1 WASHINGTON (UPll -Only a few thousand Amer ican combat troops will remain in Vietnam past r..1ay 1 -and those in a restricted role -according to present top-level withdrawal plans, r..1ixon Admlni~lration sources said today. Continuing troop withdrawls this winter and in early spring will complete Pre~i· dent Nixon's pla n for turning over the U.S. ground combat role to the South Vietnamese, the sources !aid. Defense Secretary r..telvin R. Laird men tioned the May l goal for the first , 1ime publicly today during an in formal news conference on arrival at Bangkok, Thailand on the seco nd leg or a round·the· ~'O[ld trip. He goes on to Saigon and top-level conferences on Friday. Laird said most U.S. troops "with combat responsibility" will be withdrawn by May J. Those that remain. Washington sources said, will be used as advisers with South Vietnamese units or will be kept in a re.llerve statUll to cope with any emergency situaUons posing a threat to the 5ECUrlty of other American person- nel. During an interview by four televlslon network representatives Monday, Nixon spoke only in general terms of a con- tinued measured withdrawal. In Par'\s on Tuesday. Laird mentioned a mid-sum· mer~oal of ending U.S. combat ret ibUltiea. This and his reference today to May t rep resented the rJrat move by the administration toward a ached ed ~·ithdrawal timetable. 11\tte was some speculation the ttmlnc ml8hl also be de1tgned to head off new atudent protesta about the war, Shower Costly To Laguna Girl Laguna Beach police are looking for 1 20-year~ld man who m1de a routine shower an eipeMlve propotltlon for a lt-year"Jd LllUfll Beach ctrl. Pollce &&td the girl offered to aha re her pad with a transient from San Fran- ci8co whO told her his name was "Mike." Afttr three da ya of roommatlng bliss. Mike departed for parta unknown with $490 of the younc: woman '• c11h. When ehe stepped from her shower early Wednuday, 1bt dlseovered her room· mate's absence and lfiO left for her ta pay the rent I • which reportedly are planned for the spring months. The ?>.lay I date has been set, govern- ment sources said, unless the ad· ministr:illion's troop withdrawal plans are upset by so me unforeseen contingencies. The end of the U.S. ground comba t role will not end the American presence in Vietnam, however, nor will it end American casualties. /I significant nu mber or U.S. combat advisers will remain for a time with Vietnamese units, and American troop! will CQntinue to conduct air operatics and. probabl y, long·range artillery ac· tlvHies. The next phase or the American withdrawal will involve h a n d i n g arti llCry, logistic and aircraft support over lo the Vietnamese, perhaps by late next year, the sourtts sa id. These sourct! also predicted the ad- ministration wou1d beat its own publicly- slated estlmates of total withdrawals by May 1. At the time of the cambodlan invaslon last spring. there were approximately 335,000 U.S. troops in South Vietnam and President Nixon "'d that 100,000 of them wou1d be withdrawn within a year. The present level is appro,;imately 345,000. The sourtts sa id it is hoped that the goal Of 100,000 could be bettered by at least 10.000 to 15,000 troops. LS,ird predicted Wednesday the United Slates would "meet or beat" Nlxon'a withdrawal plans. He aaid that by June 30, troop strength would fall to 229,500 or lest. He noted that wben Nb:on took office two years ago there were &49,$00 U.S. troops in Vietnam. Lone Old Man of Sea Anchors Off Africa BISSAU, Portugu ... Outn .. (UPI) - Lonei yachtmuin Sir Fr1nci1 Chl.eht1ter in h\1 GYJ»Y Moth V dropped anchor off Calo at 11 p.m. Wednesday, PortuiUue naval authorities uld today. Chtchnttr w.111 eacorttd up Ule narrow channel to thil port northwest of Bisuu by a Portuguese naval frlaate and numerous small naval coastal vtUela. Naval sources said Chlchesttr w111 now on bis way to Bissau, up the. Geba RJver, with his nav.111 escorts and wu expected 10 arrive In late afternoon. ' ' Santa Ana Attacks Irvine City By JACK BROBACK 01 "" 0.1 .. , • ..., '"" Proponents of the new city of Irvlne took their best shots Wednesday before lhe county's 1..-0c:al Agency Formation Commission fl.AFC) and then took cover while th& City of Santa Ana attacked the proposal with vigor. After the three and a half hour session arguments were continued until 2 p.m. neir.t Wednesday with additional op- ponents or the pro posed 17,~acre city wa iting in the wings. Wednesday 's main action was pre- ceded by the type of byplay whi ch followed the installation of two new coun· tY supervisors Wednesday. Superv isors Robert Battin, Ronald Caspers and Ralph Clark appeared as new members of the LAFC. Clark is an alternate member. LAFC vice chairman Charles Pearson, acting in the absence of chairman William Phillips who had been ousted from the post by the three superv isors, followed tradition and nominated San Clemente councilman Stanley Northrup, the ser1ior city representa ti ve, for chainnan. Battin quickly nominated Fullerton councilman Louis R. "Red" Reinhardt. Rei nhardt was elected wilh the votes of the new members. Next move ~·a! by C.Ouncil of Com· munities of Irvine {CCI) attorney Robert Smith. He asked for disqualification o[ Battin and Caspers because I hey represented areas concerned in the hear- ing. CommWion counsel William McCourt ruled the request out of order, but Smith filed a legal motion to disqualify with the commission claiming that both Battin and Caspen "have demonstrated pre- judice against the new city." Fireless Smoke, 'Crippled' Boat Alarm Lagunans There wa5 a lot of smoke and no fire in what looked like a raging boat blaze off Mountain Road beach in Laguna Beach Wednesda)' afternoon. After a call from a resident on Moun- tain Road, Laguna Beach Lifeguards Eugene De.Paulis and Art Smart beaded for the beach to lend assistance. When they arrived, they saw what appeared to ba a capsized boat, so they caUed the Orange County Harbor Department to tow the boat ashore. WhUe the cutter was en route to the scene a Coast Guard helicopter scanning the coast saw the boat with engine difficulties and sent down a large warn- ing fle re which sent up huge clouds of smoke. It was at that point many thought there wa5 a serious boat fire off Laguna Shores. Reporters following the event were told that two crafts were involved - one capsized, the other on fire . The Harbor Department cutter fi nally did arrive, and towed the boat lo the Mai n Beach . ~·here it had bee:n launched earlier in the afternoon by two youths. Charles Raines and Eldon Ulrich, of Bellevut, Washington. wh o ha ve been spending past weeks in Huntington Beac h v.·ith frie nds. They said their only problem v.-es engine trouble. There were no injuries. U,1 Ttl,,Mtl LONG SHORT TRIP Globe Glrdl•r Rosen Circumnavigator Smashes Record; H 01ne for Work SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Maurice Rosen arrived home today on time to go to work after traveling around the world in record time on his day off. "It's good lo gel awa y fron1 home for a day." said Rose n, ""ho managed to read only 75 pa ges of a boo k on the life of Bee thoven tha t he had taken along . The 55-yea r-old business man spanned the globe in 41 hours and 30 minutes aboard regularly scheduled airli ners, changing planes at London , Moscow and Tokyo before getting back to San fran- ('iSCQ aboard a Pan American Airwa ys flight , According to unofficia l records the previous record wa s 43 hours and 31 minutes, set by 1-larry Marlin , a San Diego disc jockey in 1969. Rosen 's v.'lfe and lwo daughters picked him up at the· airpo rt al 7:2D a.m., in plenty of lime lo open his bar stool business at ~tillbrae. just across the freeway from the airport He flew around the \.\'Ord on Wednesday because that is the day his store is cclosed. He said he may go around lhe world again nexl week on his day off. "I had a ball . I recommend il to anyone ," Rose n told a dozen reporters on hand to welcome him home. All he had to check through customs we.re two rolls of film . pictures of airports and the world as seen from 30,000 feel. Mrs. Goodman Rites Conducted Freda \Vilma Goodman, 33862 Violet Lantern, Dana Point died Monday in South Laguna at the age of 81. Services for ~1 rs. Goodman were held today al 2 p.m. at the Sheffer Laguna Beach Chapel with Dr. Dallas Turner officia ting. In terment was at Pacific View f\lemorial Park. r..-trs. Goodman is sur\'ivcd by htr husband Lav.·rence of the fa mily home. two si sters, f..irs. Paul Fortune of Franklin. Ill.. and Mrs. Irma Julien of Evanston, 111. The family suggested tributes in the form of donations to the Heart. Fund. Dr. Leai·y 'At War' With U.S. From Wire Services NEW YORK -Fugilive prison escapee nnd drug advocate Dr. Timothy Leary e.xhort ed increased violence ogalnst American institutlons here Wednesday night, in a broadcast telephone inlervle\·1. The institutions he singled out in hi! for eeast for \Veatherman violence include beloved spo rts figures and entertainers, \.\'ho would be kidnaped . •·\ve·re at v.·ar wllh the United Slates gov rrnmcnt ,'' Leary .added , speaking from Algeria to radio station WMCA's Alex Bennett . He said the time is past for more ROTC unit bombings, calling for hi. jac king of airliners and kidnaping to force the freeing of imprisoned radicals and militants. Dr. Leary was serving a 1 to 10-year term imposed in Orange County Superior Court 10 months ago. when he escaped last fall rrom Los Padres Men's Colony in San Luis Obispo. He told the radio personality he Is wr iting a book about the relatively simple escape, allegedly engineered by tha Weatherman, and his subsequent flight to Algeria . The onetime Harvard psychology prl)o fessor v.·ho pioneered LSD research issued a call for mass guerrilla acli on. "The~' sh ould escalate the violence," he said. "They should start hijacking plane!, they shou1d kidnap prominen t sports figures and television and Hollywood peo- ple in order to free Bobby Seale." "My adv ice to the Weathennan when vie left was that they should not continue just bombing the RO'rCs," Leary con· eluded . He and his second wife Rosemary . :14, v"ho is with him in Algiers, and son .John, 20, were arrested Dec. 29, 1968 , in Laguna Beach an d convicled last March of possessing marijuana. Judge Byron K. r..fcMillan at that time declared the 51J.year-old guru of the psychedelic set was a menace to the society his antics had enraged and sometimes captivated, Tl1ank You Note Sent to Laguna For Field Use An official "thank you" letter for the use of the Laguna Beach High School baseball diamond was received by, district trustees Tuesday nigh~ from ona o{ the most notorious first basemen of !hem aH·Presidcntial press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler was one or the members or the White House staff and White House press corps that played in the baseball games belween the two groups, while President Nixon was vacationing in San Clemente last summer. In the letter to lhe board or educat ion, the speedy Ziegler wrote. "Out games cou ld hardly be called contests, but they v.·ere a sour ce of great fun and ex· citement. , .'' Ziegler noted that the staff and press corps hope to take the firl d again. According to press "athletic director" Cleve Ryan , the staff and press may vie in some tou-:.h football , while here in Laguna . as Nixon va cations in San Clemente through Jan. 15. seventeenth • f , We invite you to attend H. J. Garrett's 17th Semi • Annual Clearance Sole, Each year at this time, we offer our re9ular stock mer· chandise at fabulous reductions. It is an oppar· tvnlty for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from the most comprehensive collectlon of truly fine furniture and accessories in the Harllar area at a reduced price, The sale be9ins now thru January 30. Regular store houn wlU prevalL Fair traded Items excepted. You are cordially Invited to vftlt our .i.ow ....... dl1pl1yl,,. ••• HERITAGE • DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN PROFESSION~ ,JI GAR REIT f URN 1TLI ~~ HARIOR I LVD. OpN Moo., l1Mn. I. kl. IYIL COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESllONERS 646-0l75 44._0l76 ~. \ " 17 I I I I .. ~7 I ,,. Laguna Beaeh EDITION l 'odaiy'a1 Final ~ :\'. Y. Sieeb ' VOl. 64, NO . 6, l SECTIONS, '40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, JANUA RY 7, 1971 TEN CENTS Council Citizen cominenl on Laguna's Christ· nlilS "happening" ran lre!I over ?l;layor Richard Goldberg·s prescril>ed J0-1n lnute time allocation \Vednesdlly night and reflected the ~·hole spectrum of public opinion. Bill Greer11vood, 7 Rockledge Lani'.', :>.ftcr announcing his candidacy for U1e City Council. presented a list of 12 questions, and asked for council ans"·ers by the next nieeting. The statement was supported by a petilion bearing 1054 signatures. Mayor Goldberg promised answers to all questions not cove red in the city manager's official statement Greenwood asked how the city's actions were decided ; bo\'• much money \Vas Hear·s spen t: what was the timetable or city co uncil meetings during the event an d \\'ho attended; whether the City managC'r was in continual contact with fes tival representatives; \vhy city hall \Vas not l!Scd and kept open to the public and \\'hy a disaster council was not set "P· Dr. Eugene Atherton. who said he ""as the only physician at the site durin g most of the happening said he found police handling of the event correct but felt only good fortune prevented a "medica l catastrophe.'' lie said several physicians >1•ere kept from the site, as \\'ei'e. medical supplies,, no phones were avail able and a ''hippie • Varied :imbulancC'" had to be used to transport !he ill. The site y,•as "full of dangers," he said, and roadblock: forced people to \valk over hazardous terrain v.'here striou s injuries could have occurred. JI . \V. Kenne. 685 Buena Vista, disagreed v.·ifh the offici al view that there y,•as no way to slop the happenin g. ''\\'hy didn't you call a press conference, call In the media, tell them this v.•as going to be an illegal gathering, a trespass. and try to discourage people from coming'!'' he a~kcd. "Ynu a1)0,1·ed them to set up housck<'eping and now you tell th!! penple they·re lucky the lo\vn didn't burn down. l!'s like the \Vil d West." said Kan ne. Councilrnan Edw':lrd Lorr noted tht: city did not kno1v the propcised site of lhe. happening until Dec. 20, when it was "too late" to stop it. Kanne said he would like to know what the event cost the city. Goldberg sa!d the figures will be con1pleted and n1ade public within the month. Larry Dunn. 31681 Mar Vist a, a festival organizer, said city ofHcials had been friendl y and cooperative priot to the event but he mainlained police had refus· ed to Jet a truck with 80 portable toilets reach the site., He scoffed at the city's appointment of writer Jim Va n Jlensselaer as ·spokes man during thl! happening but concluded, "I thought it ·was all beautiful, just perfect." \Vriter Arno ld Hano said he felt both Lagunans 111 Debate on tr * * * * ti State1ne11t Told Manager Reports on 'Happening' At the request of the City Council. Laguna Beach Clty tvlanager Lawr ence Rose prepared a forma l statem ent on the' Christn1as ''happening'' in Laguna Canyon, covering ""'·hat led lo it, what happened and how il happened ." Fol!o\\•ing are some highlights of Rose's eight-page report. "Aboul three or four days after I assumed n1y duty as city manager, U1e police chief came to me wilh a poster in viLing people to come to Laguna Beach for an event or celebration. It prnm ised free entertainm ent, food and shelter. It represented the town aJ belonftng lo those who would come. j'Tlie· poster bad been prOduced with (jUality printing. It was our underslanding th at 135,000 had been printed. , .the poster showed up in Portland, Toronto, Vlorida and elsewhere in the nation, Newspapers and radio and eventually television began to pick up the story ... our immediate problem was that there set: med to be no control. . . we could not !ind any evidence .•. or formal or even informal organizatio n ••. no plans for enterta inment, food or lodging •.. "The most substantial th ing we could come to grips with was the smoke of an idea. , .we had to accept the fact, two weeks before Christmas, that many people from many parts of the country might end up in Laguna Bt:ach on Christmas Day expecting someU1ing they \rould not find. and v.·hat then? •'The extreme (eventuality ) would be a disorganized and frustrated crowd of considerable proportions, roaming the streets, blocking traffic and bringing to a standsLi ll all legitimate activity. Such a crov.'d. either by the purest ::iccident or most deliberate intent , could be turned into a mob that no one could control. Our objective had t.o be. first, to prevent a crowd v.•lthin the IO\\'n, and. second. to conta in i1 if it occurred and contro l i1s activities. "The councilmen insln.Jctcd me on l>1·0 basic policy positions: the city and. its people \\'ere lo be protected against personal danger and da mage to properly; peace and tranquility were to be main- tained to v.•hatever extent was possible." The statement then outlines ar· rangements for callin~ mutual aid, block· ing entry to lht: city if crowds threatened to bu ild up, selling up a command cen ter and co1nn1unicalions network and assur· Orange Coast 'M'eather The 'vinds will dle down Friday, but the arctic alr will stay around for another: day, keeping high temperatures at 55 nnd lows ranging from 38 to (bm) 28 de· grees. L .. SmE TODAY Oronge County healtll offic- jalJ .(lrt p/a'f111i11(1 a1nasslvt 1111tf. rubella fGer111a1i n1casu cs) cam· ·paign Jan. 31.· TO· /ind out whert iuoculotio11s will be aooilable, see Page 11 . • ...,... 11 C..Uf-W I cc-••• ..,, i t CltHlllM Jl•H Cemk1 n c.......... 21 Deel!! NlllCH 11 CNW<.Cft ll Nteritol ""' • •Jltef'l•lfl-1 "'" l"le-• •U --.. ............... 11 MIUM• ' Mt..tw :..11 Mlll11•I rlll'lfl • H•litM>I liflWf •,J Or-~ 11 sr1v11 Pwter • ,_h J'1·2' Slldt M11.--1tt »-II Tt""'I''°" Jt TllM"" •u w .. llltf" • Wlllte. W1t1t II ·-·· ,._ ,,,,. Wlf"' ,._. ... lng security of the city's sanitation, \rater and utililies. First heartening ney,·s, says Rose, \Vas v.·ord that an ident ifia ble group of people \\'as attempting some organization of the event and had decided on the Sycamore Flats site. "It should be emphasized that the owner of lhe land never gave pertnission for bis land to be used. Jt could be likened · to a takeover. Nonetheless, recognlziag wbat the corisequences might be for the town of Laguna, should the owner force an eviction and turn this still-inlangit*. crowd back on the town, he did not ·force the city to act on the tresp8.sa. This is of supreme im· porlance. " The city never permitted anything , •• we haq no entrepeneur, no promoter. no social organi zation. We had poster printer, rumor and future probability to deal with, and that wa.s all." At this point, says Rose, Police Chief Kennt:th Huck, "who had ex hausted himself with constant preparalion and surveill ance, was struck down by ulcers, complicated with an attack of influenza." He was ordered to bed for an extended period of lime. A tactical team v.·as made up nf Police Captain Frank Schopen, fire Chief Jim Latimer and Public Works Dircctnr Joseph Sweany. The team later \1•a;; assisted by Dr. \V.il!iam !Jerman, a psychol ogist and membe1-of t he California Coun cil on Criminal Ju stice and the police chief of San Clemenle. Laguna Canyo n was closed, he reports, "so as to pennit a free condUll for the flow of emergency equipment and visitors to the gathering . . • and to prevent a backwash . or sud(len reversa l. bent on returning en masse. for \\'hatevcr reason.'' On instruction of the tounci1 , say::; Rnse, "we \\o·ere not obstructing the flow of food, water and persons In tile gather· ing . . . v.'e wanted no confrontation, no provoca1 ion ... '' By Sund ay , he goes in. the city sr:irf was reaching the limi t of its enduran('(', the crowd, which had be ell peaceful, was grnwing restive and it became ap- parent the. g'athering must end. It was decided tO terminate the evt:nt, ~·ilhout violence the crowd was so ad· vised and most left peacefully that nigh t. Those wl)o i't:mained on Monday mom- ing also left peacefully, but urider police control. "There was no harassment, there was no undue forct:, but the area was t i eared.·• ' The statt:ment concludes, "By evening, the gather.log was gone. Laguna was. preserved from the horrible sort of af· flictions we had prepared to defend i' against Jt will not happen again." Baker Renamed To Shore Panel Second .Dlll lrlct Supetvl.wr David L. Baker was relppOinted·to the Shoreline ·Planning Committee Wednesday by Oran)e COunty Board of Supervisors Chalrinan Robert Battin. Tuesday Battin pushed through a mO"" lion to dec::lare all posts on committees: 11\d commissions, vaca~ for one wetk IO they tould be studied. Thi.' left the thorellne planning group without a county board member and new Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Ctlapers was named. Battlil Wednesday admJtted failurt lo reawolnt Baker waa an "oversight." Baker's and Casper's diatricts are the only ones wttb COUWnl. DE'CLARES CANDIDACY 'Bill Greenwood Not 'Two·faeed~ DAILY l'ILOT 111tl l'ltelll LONE PHYSIC.IAN Dr. Eugene Atherton Writer's Story Brings Reaction Fro1n Nixon By GEORGE LEIDAL DI I~• Dell• Piiot S!1U Jlcadlng his morning ne>1·s summary ;it the Wes tern White Jlouse in San Clen1ente upset President Nixon today, \vhen columnist J ack Anderson alleg:ed the President 1vas somev.'hat two-faced Wintry Weatl1er To Loosen Grip On Comity Crops O!d"Mmi Winter will ·lno~n his icy J:irip on ti}(': orange Coast in lhe next frw days, forecasters predi~.t..-d toda y. wit h clear skies ano gusty inds con- tinuing thrnugh F'riday. The news was particular\ welcome to citrus and avocado ra ise s. who:;e orchards llave so far escape with no 1,apparent damage in the cold spell. A warming trend will set in Satw·day and last at leest thr oug h Mond ay, ac· \cording to predictions by the U.S. Wea ther Service. Northeasterly winds continued today, with familiar jetliners st:tting down at Oreng,e County Airport on approaches CroJTl offshore inland. , The lowest temperature forecast for early todaY in Orange County was a shivering 2S degrees at San Juan Cap~trano, while El Toro1had a blue-lip- ped 26 reading. .Newport Beach o:_ where the sta crea tes. a sliQ:btly warmer lnde1 in" wintertime .-. ,had a .30 degree low \Vednt:sday. The ocean temperature Is only . ~ degrees. but that's like a warm bath ~·hen you cOnsidt r the inland air runs ntar 20 degrees low'er. No orehard beating was required today, atcm'dlng · to~ thi FruJt Frost 5ervice· which has operated, from Po~ tor four decades. · Cltrwi AAd avocado raisert irl m~l Inland valleys, however, were 'fit lng up the smudge pots u the mer~ dropped to 211 ·~egr ... In lmpeilal·Vllley lodly. · about Spea ker o( lbe Jl ouse John f\!cCormack. White I-louse press secretary Ron Ziegler told newsmen in Laguna Beach: •·rm denying Anderson's allegation that Lhis administration is trying 'to pin crimina l ch<lrges' on House Speaker f\lr.Cor1nack.'' Ziegler said President Nixon told hin1 lo tell the press: "I am most ap· precintil•e and have <l lasting debt of gratitude lo Jotu1 Jl,·lcCormac K for hi.'1 statesn1an·like wnr k and cooperation with this administration over the last twn years. Ziegler .said !he President maintains ''the h,ighest respect and .!ldmira.tlan" for the rTian. Anderson's ~yndicated column ap- pearin g· in newspapers across the nation this momiqg and included in its "usual spot" in the Presi den t's daily news.sum- mary said ihat Nixon had publicly prais· ed McCormtlck. ClUng two events attended by Nixon, a Capilol Hill reception and a luncheon. Anderscin charged that despite public praise ror the Speaker. the Nixon Adminiitration was· seeking lo "pin criminal charges" on him. Ziegler todav denied that the Attorney General's , Of!ice w a s investigating Mcycirmack, b{lsed, on a telephone. con- versation 10 Washington today. He said he didn't know wht:ther the· President had chcckett with FBI Director J. Edgar -Hoover lo determine if he ·is tyv~Jv,.eji1. • • 'A'ndersori's 'column which appearid In \Vednesda y's DAILY PILOT is .Jhe first of two 'ptobfng the v,eteran FBl·bead's personal and private life -using Such me~as sortlqg out hia trJslt. , · . 'The column provides a ·novel pffk In-Side the floover maniston in • sedate Washington neighborhood and the crusty old ba ~hotor hlnwlf. ·ziegJer said there was no presldenUs1 commtl\t a.bout Federal Gr11nd Jury pro- Ctedtnp 'In ·New York agalnst two of McCormock's ~sfstants. , The column thit angert.d Nixon does l)OI appear ,In the DAJLy, PtLOT toda~ since . Aridersoa· alternates with other writers. Festival tht polite an d young people at tht: site acted \'•ell, but wondert:d, "why it \Vas necessary to hold secret meetings." The counc il he said, lt:ft people in the dark and failed lo avail itself of "the collective intelligence of the city." An elderly woman wged passage or laws againsl rock festivals and added, "It was particularly unfortunate on this holiday, the celebrallon of the birth of Christ. and if lht:se young people really believed in this they wou!C: have been home with their familie s." To this, a voice from the audience responded, "What fan1ilie s?'' Dr. Barnett Salzman. psychiatrist and president of the board of directors of Views the Free Clinic found it all , "A uniqu: event in a mass collection of peopl! .•. the slgn of a new .age across th~ country .. .I would like to see all th~ people in 1971 gel together for a realf;; spiritual t:vent, larger and involving mor~ people ... " John Shippey, -1021 Gaviota, recalled ,city council meetings he had attended in Be rkeley and Palo Alto "that real.J..y scared me." · "You have no Idea what a genllc. city you have," he told the council. "These are not rock throwing radicals. Genus hippJe Laguna Beach is more· gentle and spiriiual. You seem to b,~ so afraid of them. I suggest you {ry to get to know them .'' 'Happening' All Sides Clash In Post Mortem By BARBARA KREIBICH Of ttlt D1llY l'lle! Stiff The Laguna Beach City Council sat In ~ cross-fire of criticism Wedrn?sday night as rt:presentntives of all elements of the community, from hippie to establishment. masiled at city hall to paet·.fP!tmn th~ ~~,··n~~.&.'.' The <OUncil Cbaptl>Ot wb !Ufed to its llS.Person clpaclty w'ell before the 7:30 p.m. meetin& Operied and an eqUa\ number of intereated cilluns tblvtred in Ille chill nlfit ·air outllde 'lllle>itna to the proceedinl• over Joudiipeakers. A motion by Councilman Charlton Boyd to move tht: mtetin3 to the larger high school auditorium died for Jack of a second. Tbe council later was castigated for t,his "cavalier" treatment ol the citizenry. Though City Clerk Dorothy Musfelt reported that most letters addressed to the council compli mented the council on its handling ol the rock festiva l tha t lured 2\l,000 persons to the Art Colony, few words of praise "·ere voiced at the meeting. Two pe:rsons volunteered positive praise. Chamber of Commerce President Bernard Syfan commented the c i I y staff and police but noted that "an illegal. illicit gathering" had been al!ov.·· cd and urged a review of policies to avert a repetition. Artist Andrew Wing, who had batt led the council over the Woodland Drive housing ins pection program, also stepped forward to orfer "a big pat on the back lo you gentlemen. and particularly the police." The rest of the hour-Jong exchange, follov.'ing reading of a formal statement on the "happening" by City ~tanager La>1'fcnce Rose, was largely critical. Cnmplaint-s ranged from esta blishment aUacks on the city's .failure to averl lhe entire event before it got under way, to festival organizers' charges lha~ food and medical supplies were kept from reaChing the silt:, residents ex· pressed irritation over failure of Ule city to keep the public informed and failure 19 establish a eiUzen.ma.nned disaster council as provided by law. Others si)oke of breakdowns in com- munication that led to increas~ con- fusion. Mayor Ric hard Goldberg tornmented, 11Jt's easy to be ."i~ Monday tnomina: quarterback. We afe just fi ve human beings \Vith human failings and wt: did \11hat we thought wss best for the city at the time." Bill Greenwood, a young, long.haired Lagunan who had stepped into the festival picture to help with last·minu.te orgaaization, opened 'the proceedings by an nouncing he would be a candidate at the next Cily Council election because, "I find a need for all the pel)t>le to be represented In city government." H. \V. Kanne sharply criticized the city for not breaking up the festival before it got started. "lnstt:ad," he said. "you wail until 20,000 people come, pull needed protection from other cities and create an enormous cost to lhe county which I submit v.i!I be in excess of 1250,000." Council man Roy Holm turned criticism back ID the organizers when Larry Dunn complained of his inability to contacJ lhe city manage r. "All the councilmen have listed phones," said Holm. "yoii never called us. Instead a last-minute list of demands was presented to the city with a thr eat to brea k down the barricades If it was not answered in 4:1 minutes. l fail to see how you could expect the city to provide water, firewood, medica l supplies and sanitary racillties. This was your responsibility." Cause of Boy's _Death . At Happening Unk~own A Fountain Valley youth whose body was found nl\8r the site of the Laguna Beach rock festival is not known to be a victim or an overdose of drugs and no empty container was found near the-corpSe , the O r a ·n g e County Sheriffs Oflice has confirmed. Sheriff's 1 Sergunt Ben Oxandaboure etated Wednesday that earlier in· formation regardlng the death of Grant Weldenhammer, J91 of 17787 Oak.. St ., wns In error ~piied on b1s CMfueiOn or similar· repON. · · · ' "We ·deeply regret thlJ error and 11 have .ipblogiz~ to Mf.' Cart W~idinhar:n­ mer (the dead youth'! father) for .111ny distreN·· caueed .. to the family,'' ()x. •nd•bour• sa1d. · , . . The esact cause of the you.lb'• death wllJ not be known for aame two to .tbr~ weeU whep coroner's. lnvut1g1lor11 co~plete a. aeries ol tox:!Coloe.lctl tuts on I.be youOi 's remains. · . 'We1deobarnmer'a body wu fOund Sun'.. day nur the top of, a small h!ll Just east of La&uni Canyon Road ~ IOU{ lrlenjli . who organ\z<!I a :••,,-ch f~r ,the youth, The dead yiiu!b'1 al>and0ned· <I/ w1s found,'nearb7 on El.T.orc, Ro(id. · Oxandaoouri c6n)lrin0d . WedMsdll' th at the youth Jett home Dec. 28 following a dispute with his girlfriend. His four male friends organized the La~ search six days later, he said. "There is no evidence to show that the boy attended the rock festival earlier and we accept the father's statement th11t be dld not do so,'' Oundaboure. said. 30 From, Coast . Become ·Lawyers . ~me 30' Orart;e Coast residents were among nearly 500 newly qualllled at.-. tofneys admitted to the practlce or law . . , tod~ in ceremonies at the Music Center in LOI AJ!jJelet. The 2 p.IJ), ctremcey included ad- mjstJion to l)oth qie State .Bar of Califomla and the Un!ttd Slates Dislrld Court. All lhooe to be swom In pa10$<f the Slate Bar examlnatlon•lul AugusL- ldenileal Slate Bar ....,.i\Oles '(Ill" be. held l!t San Diego, San ~c~ San BernardlnO, Sacramenlo 111d ~" "· I • -----.1 DAILY P!LOT SC $tate Park Asks Aid !On Beaches "', ':t'he grave hurdles in development of ·:the San Onofre SI.alt-Park beach reci!ntly '°'liven to the public by the Marlne Corps aurfaced before San Clemente City Coun- , ~ilmen Wednesday in a request for city waler and sewer services. .: 1be buch, which lies four miles from the city limits, would accommodate thousands of visitors, but the nearest r;ervices are miles away. Speciflcally, state parks off icials have asked if the cil y would negotiate wlth them on chan~s of channeling water from San Clemente and waste into the city syst.ems. Councilmen agreed, but there is a hitch. The city's main north-south collector sev.·age main already i.! overloaded. .-; The condition Is 90 acute, in fact, ..Jhat deftlopment in the downcoast por- tions of the city has been stalled because of a possible burden on the system . City officials have applied for a feder al , gant through the Department of Housing and Urban Development for a new col· J leetor main through El Camino Real . which could cost more than a half·inillion ~dollars. : If the grant is approved, councilmen isaid Wednesday, then the chances for : the slate perk waste service is fe asible. ;. City Engineer Phil Peter r;aid the ex- • !sting system CQuld possibl y handle the peak-period amount or park wasle, but ~Jt would require lnlllallation of larger ·.pumps along I.he old line. He said the state might share costs -of extending some new mains between l.be Western White House and the San Clemente State Park land. • Alternate proposals to haul the raw • sewage to the new city treatment plant ln tank trucb have been ruled out ''because of the septic condition of the waste," Peter told councilmen . The news on the federal grant could come within the next few monlhs, he ea id. Nonetheless, whichever plan is agreed upon, it could easily stall the ultimate development of the valuable blufftop beach land , wh ich mark s the rirst parcel . e.ver released for public recreation by the Marine Corps. ,' IniUally, chemical toilets could be used ..'.to ac c ommodate visitors, but a • _permanent system would be necessa ry ·for full use of the lengthy strip o( : shoreline. · Offitlals of the stale agency have glet the opening of the beach in a rough :1tate for ne1t summer. ; Ecology Control '.Panel Rejected · A suggestion by the City of Seal Beach 'that San Clemente set up its own en· 'Vtr011mental quality control board got ·nowhere before city Councilmen Wed- nelday. · DeSpite a suggestion by Councilm an Thomas O'Keefe that several concerned citizens be. named to such a panel, the measure failed 4-1. Seal Beach off icials sent San Clemente a ct1py or their resolution selling up such a board. But ~1ayor Waller Evans said he had studied the idea at length "And I can 't think of a thing they could con trol here." Councilman Wade Lower did not care for the plan, either. saying it was "just another commission with another budget and expense account.'' Cold Fail s to Hall Indians' Cerernony TAOS, N.M. IAPl -Subfreezing weather fa iled to stop a group of Taos Pueblo Tnd ians from performing their annual buffalo dance. DAILY PILOT N.wpttt le~ L..ieH lte;h Celt. Mn• OllAHG~ CO-'ST PUl l tsHING toMP'AH'i' ftobert N. W1e4 P'rttOlfll1 •r.4 P'WllllMr J,,~ ft Cwrlt 'I' Vkt Pr•''""' ••4 C.-'11 M• ..... M" T~o"'•t K ••• a Elltw 71.o"''' II. lol urplii"' Ml"•!ll~9 1.lttM" t1;;,tt1 rtl P. H1 U l l"U!ll Or•~!l'I (&vn1y £dll0r Offlc• (1111.tll Mn11 >lll Wftf lay llrt>tt ~ ••~: m1 "'"' •• .,. tov~ • ~ •••t11: m ,..,. .. , •·-H""ll"'*' flffdl> INIJ IM(.~ flour•~" .,.,, Cltmt!llt: JO.I Norr~ 111 (.tm!M Atll Incubation Too Slaort , I ~Happening' Not Hepatitis Cause The tncubalion period for hepaUtls which this -week slrUck a Laguna Beach police officer is too short for him to have caught it at I.he Christmas hippie hlp- pening. Act.ini Police Chief Frank Schopen said today officer Kenneth Brumaae's iUness "was not a dlrect effect of the Happen· ing." ''I'm not saying that we didn't possibly have some hepati tis out there," Capt. Schopen said, "but lhe officer displayed symptoms before the happenint was ove r. That's too shor t a time for him to have caught it at the gathering." Brumage, feeling "kind of rocky" while recovering at his ho me, said today he might have caught the disease while arresting a ''hippie-type who was hi gh on drugs a week before the happening." Brumage said he felt the symptoms of fatigue and nausea the day followin g Christmas, but continued to work the 12- hoUr shills called duriJJg the happening. 4'I wasn't out there, so I know t didn't catch it from these attending the rock festival." Meanwhile, other members of the 45 man force today were feeling the effect! Of I.he shot of gamma globulin they got to immunize them from the infeclio~ disease. The incuba tion period for hepa titis var· Jes from a few days to several weeks. Initial symptoms resemble those of stom· ach flu with cramps and nausea , accom· panied by extreme fatigue. Until lab tests were completed ftf onday. Bru mage was not certain he suffered from anything ot.her than fatigue due to the long shifts he was working, Capt. Schope ft said people should _not panic since he doobted the rock festival had brought any great increase in the presence of the di sease to Laguna Beach. "Many people will probably think they 've got it, although they probably only have a touch of f!u ," he said. -{:{ -{:{ * * * * Danger of Hepatitis Epidemic Called Remote Orange County's expert. on infectiou! diseases today .as.!Jured anyone who has come inlo contact with stricken Laguna Beach Police Officer Kenneth Brumage tha t their chances of picking up his hepatitis bug are "extremely .. mote." "And it would have to be extremely intimate contact," said Dr. Th o m as J, Albert, chief of the county health department's infectious diseases depa rt· ment. "I just can't see that any fell ow officer has the slightest need to worry." Albe rt explained that the germ is absorbed by swallowing or through a cut or scratch. ''Many victims become infected through the use of surgical needles and th is is how many drug-using hippies pick up the germ ,'' he said. "But if I were the doctor on the spot I would limit my Inquiries to those who had extremely close physica l cont.act with this officer, such as the Immediate members of his family," Albe rt sa id. "Any talk of an epidemic. is unjustified and polntlw." "The be.!lt public healt h measure In tl}e world Is aoap and water," Albert added. "Anyone who still feels that he might have a chance of plckini up hepatilis should use plenty of both." Brumage was stricken Christmas Eve with what was at first thoug ht to be stomach flu but is now diagnosed in- fectious hepatitis. Dr. Albert said today that the disease can also be spread through contact with human excrement but the carefu l washing of hands and cleaning of bathrooms is "quite sufficient to take care of this possibility. "Look at us in the health departmenl," he said. "Many of us, doctors, nurses and technicians, handle these patients, talk to them, have them breathe on us and treat them intimately, But none of us has ever caught the disease and it is extremely unlikely that any of us will since we all maintain simple cleansing functions.'' Brumage 's illness raised the poss ibility that he might have contac ted the disease through a spell of duty at the Christmas rock festival in Laguna Beach. Some '400 county lawmen were encamped at Laguna high school during the happening. But Jt was pointed out today that Brumage was believed to have shown symptoms of the disease on Christmas Eve and that the infecUous hepatitis bu1 must have been CQntracted by lhe officer long before the rock fe3tival open· ed. Viet Witl1drawal Plan Target Date Now May 1 WASHINGTON (UPI) -Only a few thousand American combat troops will remain in Vietna m past May 1 -and those in a restricted role -accord ing to present top-level v•ithdrawal plans, l\ixon Admin istration sources said today. Continuing troop \\"ilhdrawls this winter and in early spring will complete Presi· dent Nixon's plan for !urnin g over the US . ground combat role to the South Vietnamese . the sources sBid. D('fense Secretary 1.1elv!n R. Laird mentioned the May 1 goal for the first time public ly today during an informal news conference on arrival at Bangkok, Th ailand on the second leg of a roun d.the- \.\'Or\d lri p. He goes on to Saigon and top-level conferen ces on Friday. l.aird said most U.S. troops "with combat responsibility" will be withdrawt1 by May 1. Those that rem ain, Washington sources said, will be used as advisers with South Vietnam ese units or will be 11.ept in a reserve status to cope with any emergency 3ftuations posing a threat to the security of otber American person- nel. During an interview by foUT television netWork representatives Monday\ Nixon spo)te only in general terms of a ct1n· Unued measured wilhdrawal. In Par'is on Tuesday, Laird mentioned a mid-sum· mer goal of ending U.S. combat respons.ibilitles. This and his reference today to May 1 represented the flrst moye by the administration toward I &eheduled withdrawal timetable. There was IOflle speculaUon the timing might also be de11lgned to head off new atudent prote£ta. 1bout the war, Shower Costly To Laguna Girl Laguna Beach police ire looking for 1 20-year-<lld man who made a routine .tiowtr An exptnsive proposition for a 19-year-<lld Laguna Beach girl. Pollce 11ald the girl offered to ahare her pad with 1 transient from Stn Fran- cisco who told her hll: name 1'111 "Mike." After three da)'I of roommatlng blll!S, Mike departed for parts unknown with $490 of the young woman's c1tti. When she stepped from her ahowe.r t1rly Wednudly, she dl!lcovered her room· mate'• 1bsencc and ftO left for her to pay the rent. \\'hich reportedly are planned for the spring months. The Mey t date has been set, govern- ment sources said, unless the ad· mi nistra tion's troop withdrawal plans are upset by some unforeseen contingencies. The t>.nd of the U.S. ground co mbat Tole will not end the American presence in Vietnam , ho...,·ever, nor will it end American casualties. A significant number of U,S. combat advisers will remain for a time with Vietnam ese units. and American troops ·will ccintinue to conduct air operatios and. probably. long-range artillery ac· tlvi ties. The next phase of the American withdrawal will involve handin g artillery, logistic and aircraft support over to the Vietn amese, per haps by late next year, the sources said. These sources al so predicted tile ad· ministration wou ld beat its own pu~~icly­ stated estimates of totat withdraw~ by May 1. At the time of the Gambodlan Invasion last spring, tbere were approximately 385,000 U.S. troops in South Vl.tnam and President Nixon said that 100,000 of them would be withdrawn within a year. The present level is approximately 345,000. The sources said it is hoped that lhe goal of 100,000 could be bettertd by at least 10,000 to 15,000 troops. Laird predicted Wednesday the United States would "meet or beat" Nixon's withdrawal plans. He asid that by June 30, Lroop strength would fall to 229,500 or less. He noted thnt when Nixon took ofnce two years a.go there were 549,500 U.S. troops .In Vietnam. Lone Old Man of Sea Anchors Off Africa BISSAU, Portuguese Gu1ne1 (UPI ) - Looc yachtsman Sir Francis Chichester ln his Cypsy Moth V dropped anchor off Calo at II p.m. Wedne.sday, Portuguese nav al authorl lie.!1 said lt>day . Chlchellttr was escorted Up the narrow ch1nnel to this port northwt.!lt of BilMiu by a Portuguese naval frigate and numeroo:i small riaval coastal vessels. Naval IOUrteS said Chichester was now on his way to Bissau, up the Ceba River, with his n111val escorts and was expected to arrive In !ale afternoon. Santa A1Uf Attncks Irvine City By JACK BROBACK OI fir• D•llr Pli.t iMlf Proponents of the new city or lrvine took their best sbol3 Wednesday before the county's Loca1 Agency Formation Commission (LAFC ) and lhen took cover while the City ol Santa Ana attacked the proposal with vigor. After the three and a half hour session arguments were continued until 2 p.m. next Wednesday with additional oµ. ponents of the proposed 17,526-acre city waiting in the wlngs. Wednesday's main action was pre· ceded by the type of byplay which followed the installation of two new coun· ty supervisors Wednesday. Supervisors Robert Battin, Ronald Caspers and Ralph Clark appeared as new members of the LAFC. Clark is an alternate member. LAFC vice chainnan Charles Pearson, acting in the absence of chairman William Phillips who had been ousted from the post by the three supervisors, followed tradition and nominated San Clemente councilman Stanley Northrup, lhe senior city representali ve, for chairman. Battin quickly nomina ted Fullerton councilma n Louis R. "Red" Rein hardt. Reinhardt was elected with the votes of the new members. Next move was by Council of Com- munities of Irvine (CCI) attorne y Robert Smith . He asked for disqual ifica tion of Battin and Caspers beca use I h e y represented areas concerned in lhe hear· ing. Commission counsel William McCourt ruled the request out of order, but Smith filed a legal motion to disqualify with the commia.!Jion claiming that both Battin and Caspers "have demomtrated pre· judice agaimt lhe new city." Fireless Smoke, 'Crippled' Boat Alarm Lagunans 'I'here was a lot of smo1'.e and no fire in wh at looked like a raging boat blaze off Mountain Road beach in Laguna Beach Wednesday afternoon. After 1 call from a resident on Moun · tain Road , Laguna Beach Lifeguards Eugene DePaulis and Art Smart headed for the beach to lend assistance. Wben they arrived, they saw what appeared to ba a capsized boat, so they called the Orange County Harbor Department to tow the boat ashore . While the cutter was en route to the scene a Coast Guard helicopter scann ing the coas t saw the boat with engine difficulti es and se nt down a large warn· ing flare whi ch sent up huge clouds of smoke. It was at that point many thought there was a serious boat fire off Laguna Shores. Reporters following the event were told that two crafts were involved - one capsized, the other on fire. The Harbor Department cutler finally did arrive , and towed the boa t lo the Main Beach, where it had been launched ea rlier in the afternoon by two youths , Charles Raines and Eldon Ulrich, of Bellevue, Washington, who have been spending past weeks in Huntington Beach \\'ilh friends. They said their only probl em \lo"B.S engine trouble. There were no injuries. U,1 T111,r..11 LONG SHORT TRIP Globe Girdl•r Ro $en Circumnavigator Smashes Record; Home for Work SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Maurice Rosen arrived home today on tlme to go to \\"Ork after tra veling around the world in record time on his day off. "It's good lo get away from home for a day ," said Rosen, \\'ho managed to read only 75 pages of a book on the life of Beethoven tha t he had taken along. The SS.year-old businessman spanned the globe in 11 hours and 30 minutes aboard regul arly scheduled airliners • changing planes at London, Moscow and Tokyo before getting back lo San Fran- cisco aboard a Pan American Air...,·ays (light. Acrording to unofficial ·records the:· previous record was 43 hours and 31 minutes, set by Harry r.tartin, a San Diego disc jockey in 1969. Rosen 's wife and two da llghte rs picked him up at the airport at 7:20 a.m., in plenty of time to open his bar stool business at r.fillbrae, just across the freeway from the airport. He flew around the word on \l.'ednesday because thal is the day his store is cclosed. He said he may go around the \lo'Orld again next week Qn his day off. "I had a ball. T recommend it to anyone,'' Rosen told a dozen reporters on hand to welcome him home . All he had to check through customs V.'ere two rolls of film, pictures of airports and the world as seen !rom 30 ,000 feet. Mrs. Goodman Rites Conducted Freda Wilma Goodman. 33862 Violet Lantern, Dana Point died Monday in South Lag una al the age of 81. Services for Mrs. Goodm an were held today a1 2 jJ .m. at th e Sheffer Laguna Beach Cha pel with Dr. Dallas Turner offici ating. Interment ""'as at Pacific View h1emorial Park. r.1 rs. Goodman is survh·ed by hE'r husband La\\'rence of the fa mily home. t\\'O sisters, f\.trs. Paul Fortune of Franklin. JU.. and Mrs. Irma Julien of Evanston, 111. The fam ily suggested tributes in 1he form of donations to the Heart r und . Dr. Leary 'At War' Witl1 U.S. From Wire Suvlces NEW YORK -Fugitive prison escapee and drug advocate Dr. Timothy Leary ei::hortcd increased violence ag:1 lnst American institutions here Wedne1d1y night , in a broadcast telephone interview. The institution!! he singled out in his for ecast for Weatherman violence include beloved sports figures and entertainers, \l.'hO would be kidnaped. "\\'e're at war with the United State! government," Leary added, 11peaki ng frbm Algeria to radio st ation WMCA:s Alex Ber.ne!L He said lhe time is past for more ROTC unit bombings, call ing for hi· jacklng of airliners and kldnaplng to force the freeing of imprisoned radicals and militants. Dr. Leary was serving a 1 to 10-year term imposed in Orange County Superior Collft 10 months ago, when he escaped last fa ll from Los Padres Men 's Colony in San Luis Obispo. He told the radio periOnality he ls writing a book about the relatively simple escape, allegedly engineered by the Weatherm an. and his sub5equent flight lo Algeria. The ooeti me Harvard psychology pro- fessor who pio neered LSD research issued a call for mass gue rrilla action. "They should escalate the violence," he said, ''The,Y should start hijacking planes, they should kidna p prominent sports fig ures and television and Hollywood peo- ple in order to free Bobby Seale." "lt1y ad vice to the Weathennan when v:e left was that they should not continue just bombing the ROTCs," Leary COO· eluded. He and his second wife Rosemary, 34, who is with him in Algiers, and so n John. 20, were arrested Dec. 29, 1968, in Laguna Be8ch· and· convicted last March of possessing marijuana. Judge Byron K. McMill an Rl that time declared the 50-year-old guru of the psychedelic sel was B menace to Oie society his antics had enraged an d sometimes captivated. Tl1ank You Note Sent to Laguna For Field Use An official "thank you" letter for the use of the Laguna Beach High School base ball diamond was received by district trustees Tuesday night from one of the most notorious first basemen of them all-President ial press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Ziegler was one of the members of the White House staff and White House press corps tha t played in the baseball games bet ween the two groups, while President Ni xon was vacationing in San Clemente last summer. In the lette r 10 the board of education, the speedy Ziegler wrote , ··our i ames could hardly be cal\ed contests, but they were a source of great fun and eJ:· citement. .. " Ziegler noted that the staff ::ind press corps hope to take the fi eld aga in. According to press "athletic. director" Cleve Ryan , the staff and press may \•ie in some tou:h football, while here in Laguna, as Nixon vacations in San Clemente through Jan . 15. seventeenth • FURNITURE f , We Invite you to attend H. J. Garrett's 17th Semi • Annual Clearance Sale. Each year at this time, we offer our regular stock mer• chandise at fabulous reductions. It is an oppor· tunity for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from the most comprehensive collection of truly fine furniture and accessories in the Harbor area at a reduced price. The sale begins now thru January 30. Regular store hours wlll prevail. Fair traded Items excepted. You •r• cordially lnvlt.cl to vl1lt our 1howroom1, dltplaylng ••• HERITAGE • DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN P ROFESSION~ .JI GARRETf f U RNITLJ ~~ HARIOR ILVD. Op• Mao, .n..n. & kl. a.... COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS M6-0%75 M6.0%76 , . • ' I j I I 1 ! I ! I I ' I San f;le111enie . f;apisir.ano . , ED ITl·O N VOL 64, NO. 6, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,. TMURSDAY; JANUARY 7, 1971· · · T~_y's F .. ill N~Y.·S~ ' • TEN CENTS. Preacher's March Ol('d-But No Loudspeaker Hs JO UN \i'ALTERZA Ot lhe D•llr l"li.t ~tilt Fiery funda1nenla list minister the Rev. Carl l\1clntire \l'ill be able to lead his flock in a march in San Clemen te Jan. 30. llul ci ty_ councilmen here \\'ednesday agreed he \\"OUld have to exhort his followers without sourid equipment. fl1clntire, the cont.roversial m;w of the cloth \l'hom one counci lman described as a "superpalriol." will lead a march through streets near Old Plaza Park. callirlg for a "total victory" in the Viet- nam war. And despite the obvious far-right tenor of the appearance, Mclnttre even won support from the South -Coast· ~gment of the American Civil Liberties Union at lhe meeting Wednesday. Tom Wert, a college instruct.or and head of the local chapter or the ACLU, told councilmen he would take the ma.tter to court ·u the minister were not given permission to conduct the San Clemente march and rally. "I personally find Revereod Mcintire revplUog , outrageous and pot.entially dangerous ... but the council can't put lhe U.S. Constitution beneath our awn desires," said Wert. The council, actually, had the recourse only on the matter of allowing sound equipment at the march and rall)·. Courit°ilmen finally alfeed m deny the New Jersey min;ister's' request to use an amplifier plugged into the cigaret lighter of a natbed truck. The parade permit already has been granted for the affair by Police Chief Clifford Murray under policies sel by lhe council. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe. who said he espoused neither "lhe far left, nor tight," voted against denial of the sound equ.ipment request. O'Keefe stressed that he also voted against denial of the Peace Action Coun- cil's request to have a parade and rall y in San Clemente months ago, resulting in a major demons t.ration. ··They went ahead and had it anyway," he said. Fello1v councilmen. however, seemed concerned that neither the fiery minister, nor any aides were present Wedne~ay to answer questions about the event. The major conctrn, said · .councilman Stanley Northrup, would be the noise ent a isit • res1 Utaity Urged Recreation Bond Options Offered Jn a major change of ta ck, San Clemente councilmen \llcdnesday agreed to offer a series of recreation options in a bond election next April 20 which could include a new clubhouse. park.~. beach access and olher projects for a cost of $1 million. The action came 3·2. only a few "'eks after counci lrnen had agreed to hold a revenue vote for the clubhoue and tennis 1.:ourt relocation, eliminating a total recreation passage. During Wednesday 's discussions coun- cilmen exhu1ned arguments hashed out al seve ral study sessions on the mat~r and diversity among members surfaced <1nce more. Mayor Waller Evans, who originally proposed a total package for parks and recreation, pointed to dissent among parks and recreation commissioners on the idea of a clubhouse-Only bond vote, then called for a •·united front if we are to have a chance to paSJ this measure.'' The basic plans as set forLb \Vednesday cal) for: -An election consolidated with trustee voting April 20 for members of school boards ill Uie~~no .Udllled ScboQI DiStrict ioo 1 tile Saddleback Comrrlunllf College DI.strict. -The oflering of perhaps [i ve separate recreation options, of which dne covers the clubhouse alone. -Giving voters a choke or passing youth-oriented revenue pr9jects 11s welt -The hiring of legal counsel for· a bond vote. -The consideration of a ri nancial con- sultant for· the project as well . UPIT•~ Clemente Takes Wl1ite Elephant Fron1 Company Broken do\\TI, lhe bond electon could. therefore , offer voters a breadlh or choices. The clubhouse project "'ould cost $371.911. FRANK CURRAN AND' WIFE, FLORENCE , AFTER San Diego Mayor Claartd of Char9•1 in Bribe Case HIS ACQUITTAL WEDNESDAY Involving Yellow Ceb Contracta San Clemente city councilmen decided nn a new poli cy \\'ednesday -never look a gift white elephant in the niouth . They agreed to accepl a free. life·size statue of a baby v.·hite elephant from a Long Beach firm. A community recreation ccnl<!r geared to you1h activities at the Beach Club n·ould cost $350.000. A plaa to build new parks and complete exiliting neighborhood green areas "·ould cost Sl40.000. Improving beach access routes and refurbishing the entran« lo the muriici pal pier would add $107,000 to the measure. San Diego Mayor Riiled Not Guilty of Bribery The next problem is deciding v.·here lo put it. The s\a!ur. asser1edly licwn by a ma.'>lcr l!11!i,1n sculpt or, pre sun1ably could ~o in1o a c1ly park . ·'Why don't we ;ir.cepl the gifl and have thcn1 put ii in Counril111an Stanley Northrup·s back yard ?" suggested 1.layor Walter Evans. The suggestion in jest even voent into 11 motion. It fail ed , aided by Northrup's smiling "No .. al voling time. City staff will explore more deta ils before Signkrafters of Long Beach deliver the "girl." • Under Wednesday night's plan, vot er~ \\·ould be able to chose either. all or none of the separate measures. Councilmen theorized that the election should gh·e the public "a chance Lo give opinion on all the plans." Originally theyi had agreed !hat blen· ding too many l'(teasurcs on the same ballot might seal the doom for all. The next steps , they agreed, v.·oulrl be to llsk the two school districts if San Clemente would be allowed to sbare the ir ballot and the COits. Such a blend Into two other 'lections (neither of which has a revenue issue) would cut the cosl.9 of a special vote. SA:-l' DIEGO <AP )-flfayor Frauk Cur- ran was found innocent Wednesday of bribery and conspiracy in alleged payoffs from Yello\v Cab C.O. for his influerce in pushing through a fare increase lhree )"cars ago. The verdict came after nine hours of deliberation by the jury of nine men and three '~omen. Curran. 58, was ind.icted 'by the rounty grand jury iii OctOber &Jong with. eight other perl'IOftlJ J.hclud.illg · tevea. public o!- ricials. The separate1riab are schedu)ed through February. CUrran's was the first NIXON·GATHERI~-President and Mrs. Nixon gather in the Jiving" room o! the Western White House with their Wl!d~esday evenini illime[ ,uutl. From left '""' Bob Hop<, ri.f~ illixolihitts: Nilcon, ~Id _Ford, Mrs. Fool. .Pre•ldOJlt NilOll, Ml:•. • IJf. ~lll!Y Kllalagu and Arnolil:hlmer. ' -_,..,... • "•· -" I --· ... ~ ~ ·-·-·· ..... to end -exactly a month after it began. On the stand. he denied the claim by Cha rles A. Pratt, fonner president of Yello\v Cab. that he gave Curran checks for 3,500 as "carnpaign con. lributlons" lo push the fare increase through. The two-term mayor told the trial that he once accepted an 'nvelope frOm Pratt and delivered it unopened to his re~lection campaign headquarters. Before the indictments were ·ha"nded down, Carran ·indicated he wOuld seek • third four·year term· this year. The YerdiCls of inuocent 00 aU three counts· two of bribe ry ·and one of con· spiracy-were read at 3:16 p.m. by Superior C.Ourt Judge Robert Conyers. Piano Concert Free Tickets Still Available Ticket.I for the free concert by noted composer and pianist Elmer Bern.stein n'xt. 11\usday night are . sUll available throuih S.ildlebacl< CoUege'1 sbldenl •[· fairs office, spokesmen said ~y. The hcketl. are for entrance · to Sap Clemente HJih ·School'1 tuditorium at I.he , JJOPUIJr concert, which" Jri)l · btgin at a p.m.. Bernstein, whole .dozens ·of movie ICOl'ff inclllde ' 'T ho r o.u .g b I y Modtm Millie" and "Man wittt'·a Golden Arm'', will share hi.'I ex:pe~; In compos!Uon wUh the Sooth Coest ·iu: dJenoe 1t the evening eoooert. ' ' He 1!JO will <'Onddet • aeininar on the SIKtdlebeck dimpm earlier '" tho ij,.Y '. I . ·:T". '1 ' ' ' ' . . : l\OOervatiOOI con be oblilned by'calllna .~.· ''. .. .-....... Bond Voting Set By San Joaquin School Trustees By PA~fEiLA HALLAN Of 1~1 0111~ l"Hol 11111 A $15 mill ion school bond election, lhe largest amounl ever reque sted in the San Joa<1uin Elementary School District, \\'as set by t/1e dlslricl tru stees Wednesday. . Jf approved by the voters April 6, the bonds will prov ide funding ror schools for the next live yea rs, Alter cOJ\$.ide{ing Several alternalives, the board voted unanimously for lhe fiv,·year bonds ln order to 'Uminate the need for frequent bond elections and save the taxpayers' money, they said. The bonds would fund purchase or school sites and school construction. "At our rate of grOwth we probably 'vould have had to ask for an election every year·and·a·half," said Tru!te~ Philip Bradfield. \ Discus~ion followed abou t whether or\ not to aave even more mooey by havlng this election coincide with the board ·of trustees election scheduled for April 20. Trustee . Robert Dameron said , t~· payers · treq-iy eo111plaln tbatr rnoi:• elccllons , lhobld be combided ....... Trustte Ed, Beery orgued • Uuit a comblneit •lei>· tion ta th!' caae•m11 't.'Oqfut th,e .. Vottr and 'the ·bondl would ,havie · a better .cbau.ce U tn a ~r~te lectloo. _ • El<OiabllilC l/10. ~li>e vote, lte~ tltl'bon, au~ for Admtnnitrallve Jeri1ce11 aaKl ' ·diltrict is now. ellalbl• to ' '!JI 13 mUllon In bonds.' But the cft>tl'lct ~ °"1' ... ~·* ·1n tiolMb which au iVl!libie tor sale, He }~the bOaid IJ!lt deepilO the amount ol ; alllhorl2ed bl' the '°"'"· the dlildc . ar . aiii' un\e· COii Ot\lY'llJj! bohds tJJ19ant1n« .. nve pdtent of llie didrlct'a.U!elsed vntuallon: Thal )eaves •wr<!•tnlall!ly lds,lioo needed, bot unaulhortied. · • · · -· I • emanating from the park to nearby home!. ··1 think v.·e have subjected lhue people to enough noise and dishubance around the park ," he said. The march is -expected to be 11 mini version of a huge event In Washington. D. C., v.·hich created an ln ternaUonal incident when South Vietnam Vice Prtsi· dent Nguyen Cao Ky accepted an in· vitation to attend. He backed down later, bowev,r. Sandy Spa's iWarmer Air Big Factor President Nixon may interrupt his work·p!ay San Clemente slay for a jaunL to warmer Palm Springs and the exercise the doctor ordered. The Nixons hope to spend a couple of days at least at the elaborate desert estate of \\'alter Annenberg, ambassador to Britain. The· Presid,nt worked thro\llh the day '<1\'•dnesday ot Son et.mepte··llld theq relaxed with some well·bo"Wn dinner guests who flew into San Clemente by belioopter. W~orn Whit.-HoUle ~-guats- lncluded comedl.in Bol> llopt: ,.u.,. Arnold Palmer: Gerald R. Ford ~ Michigan, Howe'Republlcan leader; arid. Henry A. KJ!linger, top f~ policy adviser. Nixon Is ~xpecled to do a good deal of golfing if he goes to Palm Sprl.og1. Palmer might join him next week. Palmer presently is entered In the $110,000 Glen campbell·Los Angeles Open tournament. Occupatio1ial Career Classes Show Popularity Saddleback C o 11 e g e ' s occupaUonal career classes are prov ing to be amorig the school's most popular among a rttard enrollment of 2.650 studenl.s during the \\'inter semester. School spokesme n said at least three of lhe classes-geared primarily lo oc- cupational training subjects -were among the earliest closers in the lale:it registration. Thee auto service courses were amon& lhe most appealing to students. · The courses are conducted In Sid· dleback classrooma, and at.Mission Vl,jo lligh School's auto shop, where pract.ica.I experience I~ available. The en~· e lkoul"$C1 curriculum In. cl~des a unting, airline s~wardul training, . ailing tecfulology, ~inUI courses an police scienct ~· • I ' 0r c..n' \ ........... ' The wind! "ill die down Frldan but the arctic air will stay around for anothtr day, lteepiq high ~mperatures at 55 ind lowi , ranging from 38 to (bnT) 28 ._,. grees. INSmE TODAY ' . oiari~<. 9iluntu, llear\}I . of1ic-I . ials ~re planninQ a· tt&a11lut antl·. , rubella (Getman~) "'l"-t.: paign Jan. 31 . ~To ·~ •Out where lnocuJaiion1 Wfll bt 1 · a:oailablc ; see Page Jl. ' ' J r • .,.... rl """"t -...{·' c ...... :. ................ . Clltcllltt Ull n ....... .. W • CIMINIM »·• .,._,~ tt' c .... kt II lffollt ,...,.. • a . c,._,. u ...,.. n• ............ 11 ............ . ~· 11 T ...... a. IHltwl6I .... ' .,.....,,. ..... • ...... , .... ,,. JWl ........ • 4 P'lfMilln »I\ ' St''M.1 • "T , =-~·.. n. ·~ ,,.,, .Mal ... ' ' I .. J DllU PILOT SC Stare Park l Asks Aid ------ ;On Beaches ~ 'The g.rav.e hurdles in development of the San Onofre SI.ate Park beach recently .1l.ven lo the public by lhe Marine Corps surfaced be forr San Clc rnentc City Coun· ,cllmen Wednesday in a rcque.st for city 'W'alcr and sewer services. The bea.ch. wh ich lies four miles from the ('ity limil.'l, W-Ould accommodate thousands of visitors, but the nearest services are miles av.·ay. Specirically, stale parks oHicials have asked if the l'ity \•1ould negotiate ·with them on chances of channeling water from San Clemente and waste Into the city systems. Councilmen agreed, but there is a hitch. The city's ma in north-south co llector sewage main already is overloaded. The condltiOn is so acuie, in fact, \hat developmenl in the downcoast pot· lions of the city has been stalled because of a possible burden on the system. City officials have applied tor a federal grant through the Department of Housing ''and Urban Development for a new col· tector main through El Cam ino Real _which could C-Osl more than a half-million ·dollars. : If the grant Ls approved,. councilmen ~said Wednesday, then the chances for ..._the stale park waste service Is feasible. City Engineer Phil Peter said the ex· bting system could possibly handle the · peak-period amount of park was te, but it wouJd require instal\alion or larger pumps along the old line. • Ht" sllid the st.ate might share costs of extending some new mains between the Western White House and th e San Clemente State Park land. Alternate proposals to hauJ the raw sewage to the new city lrtatment plant In tank trucks have httn ruled out "because or the septic condition of the w•ste," Peter told councilmen . The news on the federal grant could come within the next few months. he said. Nonetheless. whichever plan is agreed upon. It could easily stall the ultimate development of the valuable bluiftop beach land, which marks the first percel ever re)eased for public recreation by the Marine Corps. 1 Initially, chemical toilets could be used to a c commodate visitors, but a -'pennanent system would be necessary . for full U5e of the lengthy strip of shoreline. ( Officials of the slate agen cy have iset the opening of the beach in I rough st.ate for nei:t swruner. ' • 'Ecology Control Panel Rejected A suggestion by the City of Seal Beach that San Clemente set up its own en· vironmenlal quality control board got .11owhere before city Councilmen Wed· nesday. . Despite a suggestion by Councilman Thomas O'Keefe that ::ieyeral concerned citizens be named lo such a panel, the measure failed 4·1. Seal Beach off icials sent San Clemente a copy of their resolution setting up ,suc h a board . Sul f\-1ayor \\'alter Evans said he had studied the idea at length ''And I can'l th ink of a thing they CQuld control here." Council man Wade Lowe r did not ca re for the plan. either. ,saying ii 11•as "j1.1st another commission with another budget and expense account.'' Co ld Fa ils lo Ha lt India ns' Ce rc111onv , TAOS, N.M. (AP) -Subfreezi ng weather failed lo stop a group of Taos Pueblo ln<lians from perform ing their annual buffalo dance. DAILY PILOT "--......... ,.., .. ~ ... 011:.\NOll! C.OAST PUal lnf1MG CQM.l"AllY •ob•rl N. w, •• l"rt1,..1nr t r.4 PU911tMr' J,,. R. C~rl1v 1/1<1 ,.,..,~""'' t rd G_,11 Mll\lltt 1h•..,•• IC11•il lla11.,- fho"'•• A. Muqthi~• l<\11'101111 l~ltw !Uth1r4 P. ~111 SW!ft Or1,._a COVIii~ Edi tor Dffk• c.te f",9': Ill WMI aey ll,._ ~ ... ,111 tm ._, ··--~ loY19W!C • lA9Mf -:::i:m ,.,., "-"' ~ i 1m1"""' ...,r_,.. leri ~ • Mer1ft e t c.mlN ~Ml lnct1f>at(on Too Short ·'Happening' Not -Hepatitis Cause The incubation period for hepatitis which this week itruck a Laguna Beach PQlice ofli~r Is too short for him to have caugh t it at the Christmas hippie hap- pening. Aeling Police Chief Frank Schopen said today officer Kenneth Brumage's lllnes1 "was not a dire ct effect or the Happen· ing." "I'm not saying that we didn 't possi bly have some hepatitis out there.'' Capt. Schopen said, "but the officer displayed sy mptoms before the happenini was over. That's too short a lime for him to ha ve caught it at the gathering." Brumage, feeling "kind of rocky" while recovering at his ho me, said today he might have caught the disease whlle arre,sling a "hippie-type who was high on drugs a week before the happening." Brumage said he felt the symptoms of faligue and nausea the day following Christmas. but cootinued to work the 12- hour shifts called during th e happening. i•r wasn't out there, so I know I didn 't catch It from those attendina the rock festival.'' Meanwhile, other members of the .f5 mart force today were feeling the effect s of th e shot of gamma globulin lhey got to immunize them from the Infectious disease~ The incubal)On period for hepatltis var· ies fr om a few days to several wee ks. Initial symptoms re 5emble those of stom. ach nu wilh cramps and nausea, accom- panied by exlreme fatigue. Unlit lab tests were comple ted Monday, Brumage was not ce rtain he suffered from anything other than fa tigue du e to th e lone shifts he was .... ·orklng. Capt. Schoperr said people should not panic since he doubted the rock festival had brought any great increase in the presence of the disease to Laguna Beach. "Many people will probably think they'v e got It, all.hough they probably only have a touch of flu ," he ,said. * * * * * * Danger of Hepatitis Epidemic Called Remote Orange County's expert on infectious diseases today assured anyone who ha s come into contact wit.h stricken LagWla Beach Police Officer Kenneth Brumage that their chances or picking up his hepatitis bug are "extremely remote." "And it would have to be extremely intimate contact," said Dr. T h om a s J . Al bert, chief of the county health department's infectious diseases depart· ment. "I just can't 9ee that any fellow of ricer has the slightest need to worry.'' Albert explained that the genn is absorbed by swallowing or through a cut or scratch. "Many victims become infected through the use of surgical needles and this is how many drug-using hippi~s pick up the germ," he said. "But il 1 were the doctor'I on the spot I wouJd limit my inquiries to those "'ho had extremely clo.se physical contact with this officer, auch as the Immediate members or his family,••' Albert aaid_ •·Any talk of an epidemic is unjUJtified and pointless." "The be!t' pO:blie health nleaaure ln the world ls soap and water,'' Albert added. "Anyone who stlU fee ls that he might have a chance of picking up hepa titis should use plenly of both." Brumage was stricken Christmas Eve with what was at first thought to be stomach flu but is now diagnosed in- fectious hepatitis. · Dr. Albert said today that the disease can also be spread through contact with human excrement but the careful washing of hands and cleaning of bathrooms ill "quite sufficient to take care of this possibility. "Look at us in the health department," he said. "Many of us, doctors, nur11es and technicians, handle these patients, talk to them, have them breathe on us and treat them intimately. But none of us has ever caught the disease and it ls extremely unlikely that any of us will since we all maintain simple cl eansing functions." Brwnage's illness raised the possibility th at he might have contacted the disease through a spell of duty at the Christmas rock: festival in Laguna Beach. Some 400 COWlty lawmen were encamped at Laguna higb achoo! during the happening. But It was pointed out today that Brumage was believed to havt shown symptoms of the dlseue on Christmas Eve and that the infectious bepatltil bug must have betn contracted by the officer long before the rock festival open- ed. .Viet Witl1drawal Plan Target Date Now May 1 WASHlNGTON (UPI ) -Only a few thousand American combat troops will remain in Vietnam past f\-tay 1 -and those in a restricted role -accord ing to present top-level withdr aw al plans. Nb1:on Adm inistration sources said today. Continuing troop withdrawls th is winter and in early spring v.·ill comple te Pr~i­ dent Nixon's plan for turning over the U.S. ground combat role to the South Vietnamese, the. sources said. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Lai rd mentioned the May 1 goal for the first time publicly today durinli( an informal news conference on arrival at Bangkok, Thailand on the. second leg of a round-the· wo rld trip. He. goes on to Saigon and top-level conferences on Friday. Laird said most U.S. troops "with combat responsibillty" "'ill be withdrawn by May J, Tho5e that remain, Washington sources said, will be used as advisers with South Vietnamese units or will be kept in a reserve status to cope with any emergency situations posing a threat to the security of other American person- nel. During an interview by four television network represenlallves Monday, Nixon spoke only in general terms of a con- tinued measured withdrawal. In Paris on Tuesday, Laird menUoned a mld~um­ mer goal of ending U.S. combat responslbUltles. Thia and his reference today to May 1 represented the first move by the adm inistration toward a scheduled withdrawal timetable . There was 90rne speculation the timing mt1ht also be destgned lo head off new ·atudent protests about the war, Shower Costly To Lagilna Girl Laaun• Btach police ire tookina for 1 20-year~ld man who made • rouUne ahowtt 111 expen1lve proposition for 1 l&-yea.r-<>ld Laguna Beach air!. Pollet aid the girl offered to .. shire her pad with a transient from San Fran- cisco who iold her his name wa1 "Mike.'' After three days of roommatlng bliss, Mlk1 d&parte4 for parU unknown wllh $490 ol I.he youn& woman's cash. When she 1tepped from her ahowtt e1rl)' Wednetday, she discovered her roorno- rnate•s absence and '80 left for Mr to pay the renL wh ich reportedly are planned for the spring months. The 1'.1ay l date has been set, govern· ment sources said, unless the ad· ministration's troop withdrawal plan6 are upset by some unforeseen contingencies. The ~nd of the U.S. ground combat role will not end the American presence in Vietnam, however, nor will it end American casualtie~. A significant num ber o{ U.::i combat advisers will remain for a ti me 1~i th Vietnam ese units. and Amer ican troops will con tinue to conduct air operatlos and. pr obably, long-range artillery ac· t1v ities. The next phase or the American wi thdrawal will involve hand in g artillery, logistic and aircraft support over to the Vietnamese , perhaps by I ale ne1t year, the sources said. These sources also predicted the ad- ministraUon would beat its own publicly- stated estim1tes of tots) withdrawals by May I. At the time of the Cambodian invasion last spring, there were approximately ~.ooo U.S. troops ln South Vietnam and President Nii:on said that L00,000 of them would be withdrawn within • year. The present level is approximately 345,000. The sources said it is hoped that the goal of 100.000 could be bettered by at least 10,000 to IS,000 troops. Laird predicted Wednesday the United States would "meet or beat" Nixon's withdrawal plans. He asid that by June JO, troop strength would fall to 229.frOO or less. lfe noted that when Nl:ii:on took offlce two years aco there were 549,$00 U.S. t.roopJ In Vletnam. Lone Old Man of Sea Anchoss Off Africa BISSAU, Portuaueae GU1nea (UPJ) - Lone yachtsman Sir Fraodl Qllche•Ltr in l'li! Gypsy Moth V dropped anchor off Calo at ti p.m. Wednelday, Portuguese naval authorities said today. Chichester was escorted up the narrow channel lo this port northwest of Bissau by a Portuguese. naval frll•te and numerous amall naval cotslll veutb. Naval sources said Chichester waa now on his way to Bissau. up the Otha. River, with his naval escort" and wu expected to arrlvt in late afternoon. Santa A"° Attncks ' Irvine City By JACK BROBACK Of lflt O.lly l"llll ttttt Proponents Of the new city or Irvine took the.ir beat Jhots Wednesd.11y before the county's Local Agency Formation C.Ommission (LAFC) and then took cover while the City of Santa Ana attacked the propos•I with vigor. After the lh ree and a half hour session argumenl.5 were continued until 2 p.m. nert Wednesday with additional op- ponenl3 of the proposed 17 ,Szt)..acre city walling in the wings. Wednesday's main action was pre· ceded by the type of byplay which followed the installation of two new coun- ty supervisors Wednesday. SUpervisors Robert Battin, Ronald Caspers and Ralph Clark appeared as new members of the I.AFC. Clark is an alternate member. LAFC vice chairman Charles Pearson, acting in the absence of chairman Wllllam Phillips who had been ousted from the post by the three supervisors, followed tradition and nominated San Clemente councilman Stanley Northrup, the seriior city representative, for chairman. Battin qui ckly nominated Fullerton councilman Louis R. "Red" Re inhardt. Reinhardt was elected with the votes of the new members. Next move was by Council of Com· munities of Irvine (CCI) attorney Robert Smith. He asked for disqualification of Battin and Caspers because t h e y represented areas concerned in the hear· ing. Commission counsel William McCourt ruled the reqUCBt out ol order, but Smith filed a legal motion to disqualify with the commission claiming that bolh Battin and Caspers "have demonstrated pre- judice against the new city." • Fireless Smoke, 'Crippled' Boat Alarm Lagunans There was a lot of smoke and no fire ln what looked like a raging boat blaze off Mountain Road beach in Laguna Beach Wednesday afternoon. After a caU from a resldfnt on Moun· lain Road. Laguna Beach Lifeguards Eugehe DePaulls and Art Smart headed for the beach to lend assistance. When they arrived. they 1aw what appeared to ba a capsized boat, so they called the Orange County Harbor Department to tow the boat ashore. While the cutler was en roule to the scene a C.Oasl Guard helicop ter scanning the coast saw the boat with engine di fficulties and sent down a large warn* Ing flare which sent up huge clouds of smoke. It was at that point many thought there was a serious boat fire off Laguna Shores. Reporters following the event v.•ere told that two crafts were involved - one capsized, the other on fire. The Harbor Departmen t cutler finally did arrive. and towed the boat to the Main Beach. v.·here it. had been launched earlier in the afternoon by two youths. Charles Raines and Eldon Ulrich. of Bellevue, Washington, who have been spending past weeks in Huntington Beech "Vo'ith friends. They said their only problem \\'9S engine trouble. There were no injuries. Ul"t Tt11,nt1t LONG SHORT TRIP Globe Glrdlar Ros.n Cir cumnavig ator Sniashes R ecord; Home for Work SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Maurice Rosen arrived home today on time to go to \\"Ork after traveling around the \\'Orld in reco rd time on his day off. "It's good to gl't away from home for a day." said Rosen, who managed to read only 75 pages of a book on lhe life of Beethoven that he had t.aken along. The 5~yea r-old businessman spanned the globe in 41 hours and 30 minutes aboard regularly scheduled airliners. changing planes at London, Moscow and Tokyo before getting back lo San Fran- cisco aboard a Pan America n Airways fl ight. According to unofficial records the previous record was 43 hours and 31 minutes, set by Harry Martin, a San Diego disc jockey in 1969. Rosen's \Vife and t\1·0 daughters picked him up al the alrporl at 7:20 a.m .. in plenty of lime to open his bar stool business at Millbrae, just across the freeway from the airport. He flew around the "'Ord lln Wednesday because that is the day his stare is cclosed . He said he may go around the world again next v.•eek on his day off. ..I had a ball. t recommend it to anyone," Rosen told a dozen reporte rs on hand to welcome him home. All he had to chec k through customs were two rolls of film, pictures of airport.s and the world as seen fr om 30,000 feet. Mrs. Goodman Rites Conduct~d Frrda Wilma Good man. 33862 Violet Lantern, Da na Point died Monday in South Lagun a at the. age of 81. Services for Mrs. Goodman were held today at 2 p.m. at the Sheffer Laguna Beach Chapel wi1h Dr. Dallas Turner officiating. lnte.rment .,.,·as at Pacific View f\1emorial Park. i\trs. Goodman is survived by her husband La\1•rcnce of the family home. '"'0 sisters, ~1rs. Paul Fortune of Franklin, Ill .. and t<.trs. Irma Julien of Evanston. Ill. The family sugi;:ested tributes in lhe rorm of donations to the J~eart Fund. Dr. Leary 'At War~ With U.S. From Wtre Services NEW YORK -Fugiti ve prison escapee and drug advocate Dr. Timothy Leary exhorted increased violence against American institutions here Wednesday night, in a broadcast telephone interview. The institutions ht singled out in his forecast. for \Veatherm:in violence include beloved sports figures 11.nd entertainers, "'ho "'ould be kidnaped. ""re're at war with the United State., government." Leary added, speaking from Algeria to radio station WM CA 'a Alex Bennett. He said the lime is past for more ROTC unit bo mbings. calling for hi, jacking or airliners and kldnaping to force the freeing of imprisoned rad icals and militants. Dr. Leary was serv ing a 1 to JO.year term impose d in Orange County Superior Court 10 months ago, when he escaped last fall from Los Pad res Men's Colony fn San Luis Obispo. He told the radio personality he ls writing a book about the relatively simple escape, allegedly engi neered by the Weatherman. and his subsequent flight to Algeria. The onet ime Harvard psychology pri>- fcssor who pioneered LS D research issued a call for mass guerrilla action. "They should escalate the violence," he said. •'They should starl hijacking planes, they should k..idnap prominent .i;ports rigures and television and Hollywood peer pie in order to free Bobby Seale." "1'.1y advice lo the \\'ea thennan wh en we left was tha t they should not contin ue just bombing the ROTCs," Leary con- cluded. He arid his second v.·ife Rosemary. 34, who is with him in Algiers, and son John. 20, were arrested Dec. 29, 1968, in La guna Beach and convicted last March of possessing marijuana. Judge Byron K. Mcf\.fillan at that time declared the 50-year-old gu ru of the psychedelic set °"'as a menace to the society his antics had enraged and someti mes captivated. Tha1ik You Note Se11t to Lag una For Field Use An official "thank you" letter for the use or the Laguna Beach High School baseball diamon d was received by district trustees Tuesday night from one of the most notorious first basemen nf them all-Presidential press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Zieg ler was one of the members ol the White House sta ff and White House press corps that played in the baseball games bet"·een the two group~, while President Nixon was vacationing in San Clemente last summer. In the letter 10 the board or educa tion, the speedy Ziegler wrote, •·Our games could har dly be called contests, but they v.•ere a source or great fun and ex- cilcment. , . " Ziegler noted that the staff and press corps hope to take the field again. According lo press "'athletic dircttor" Cleve Ryan, the ,staff and press may vie in some touch football, while here in Laguna, as Nixon vac ations in San Clemente through Jan. 15. 1eventeenth . f , We Invite you to ottend H. J. Gqrrett's 17th Semi • Annual Clearance Sale. Each year at this time, we offer our regular stockl mer· chandlse at fabulou1 reductions. It is an oppor· tunlty for you to purchase carefully selected pieces from th• mo11 comprehensive collection of truly fine furniture and accessories In the Hnor area at a reduced price. The sale begins now thru January 30. Regular tl'Ol'e hours will pr9Yall Fair traded Items excepted. You are tordlally Invited te -.ltlt our showrooma, dl1pt1y1,.. , • , HERITAGE • DREXEL • CENTURY • KARASTAN PROFESSl~N~.J I GAR REIT f URNl11J ~~ HARIOR ILVO. 0,00 M-'IWs. & l'rL lffL COSTA MESA, CALI F. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646-0275 "46-0276 " \ I r l ' ' I • ' I I • Start Your Engines! by Deke Hou/gate 1' &2u1tczfiZ¥* 1;wwww,www• Son1e guys drive a race car for years and nothing unusual t ver happens to then1. They should hang around Ron Grable. Like 1969 at Talladega. Ala. Grable <'ontracted lb drive a Javelin in the compact sedan Grand American race that was the first competitive event ever held on the super speedway. "I act ually led 350 of 1he 400 miles." c;rable said. "but about 200 miles in1n the race some car got lntn the wall and scaltered parts on the track, I drove over something and had a blownuL "So I had to rn<ike a pit stop. NO\\', we were averaging 177 miles an houc on the high banked track. l had never run so fast before llr been on a track like that, and il takes some gel- ling used to the speed . •·1 w;isn'I aware Lh11t I \vas con1ing in1o the pits at 150 miles an hour. \Vhcn l tried lo ~top at my pil, J couldn't So I had to make another !ap and come 1n again. ''This cost 1ne !'Dme lime, and I want ed lo get in and out a~ fa.st as I could. So as I "'<ts coming into the pits again I leaned my heart out !he window and veiled tire_ "Well. whctl I didn't knOw was tha t in Alabama the word ls !.ahr, not tire, anrl before I could do an.vthing the official:t had covered the inside ()f my car with foam. They thought 1 \vas yelling fire _ ''I tried lo let them know I wasn't nn fire . that 1 wanted a tire change, and ye lled tire :u:ain_ So they hit me again \\'ilh lhe fire extinguisher again. For the rest of the race I was swimming Jn foam," tl'orst IJi.,nster l 'e t to Cat11e Later in the race Grable'~ ea r broke a valve, putting him nut, but that wasn't the "'ors\ disaster of the weekend for the !Uountain Vie"" Cal., road racing specialist making his first NASCA fl appearance. "That was the \\eekend of the historir Profess ional Drivers Assn. boycott," Grable explained. "All week I had sort af stood by lo find out if I mi i::ht get asked to dri\'e in the 500 , in case , the star drivers went through with the strike they were threat· ning. "\Veil. lt was Saturday night. 1\1~' race "·as over, and \l'e "'t:re ha\·ing dinner back at the motel. \Vord came back from the track that the dis pute had been settled, and 1 figured there "·a~ no reason for me to slick around . So I raught the ne.xt plane back to Ca liforn ia. "Of course, they came looking for drivers tht. next day. I al ready had a ride waiting fo r me. fl \\'BS the car that Rich· ::ird Brickhouse dro\'e to win the race ." This lim£' la st yrar (;rable was Dov.·n Unrlcr competing 1n the Tasm::in Srrirs of road races. He decided to stay h'lme this "·inter and look Fnr opj)(lrtunitics 10 ra ce here that were denied to him in 1970. Gr::ible brlie,·es. ''because I \\•as on the other side of the \\'orld. and while I was gone everybody Forgot about me." His first appearance \\'ill be in th£' Riverside 500 NASCAR I.rand National, driving a '70 Torino. Trust Grable to find not just an~' ride hul lhe c<1r he ctid. 1~ is owned by Del Smith, :i businessman \\'ho l<'aSP~ por!;ibl e ~anitary facil ities known fam ili;i rly a~ Owls and Annies. Smi1h is kno\Vn in the racing busi ness. somewhat endearingly, as the Outhouse King . Rut \Vhile Grable is nnl returning to New Zealand and Aus- lralia f1Jr the lnlcrnational racing series. he'll never forget the !970 experience. "We had just fini shed a race at ln11crcargil. Au ~tralla . which is farthest south citv in the \\'Orld," Grable said. "We had some lime before the nrx't race and thought we ..,,.oulrl rlo some sight- • ~ccing on our 1vay oorth . Rond S11rfde11f Jt DeteriarnteK "So wt put thf'_ race car on the trailer. izn! 11 ro11d map and ·started nu l. The map 5howed \\'e had about 500 mites lo go. hut it was a ma jor hi ghwa~·. "What \\'e should hll\'e realized wa s that a major highway in Australia mean!I so methiniz rlifferrnt than it does at h<ime. for a few miles it was a niee \\·ide road, but H soon dettriorated so badly there 1>1·as n't eve'a B plact where 1't could turn arl)und and j!'O back. "Everv sn man\' milr.~ wr \\'011ld co mr (n a bridge. and tht bridges g~t nar.rowrr and narrower. It "'as ab<lu t 10 o'<'lock and pitch black, and I wa5 drivinl!: \\'hen "'" ni cked tht guardrail on one nf the brid.e:rs with a lr11i!Pr whl'f'I. So "'l' stop pM . got out ou r nashli11:ht~ 11nrt "'ent lo l.ak£' a look at th e damagl'. •·we "'err slandiog alone in the dark, three of us, ~htn we lnoJ!ffi up and saw I hem. \\'e \\'('rt: 5urroundf'd by na1i1 f"5, rings In their nosrs ;ind t'l'ervthin£. "Now, 'l'f' didn't know if we \\'Crt heing rihhtd or not. but the. Australians bad lold us to br\\are flf Abori~inrs in the boon· dock s, that they st ill pra('tict <'a nnih alism In rrmnlt 11rra~ of thr ('ountry. Sn n11t11rally w£' \\'rre s('ared nu! nf nur wils. \\'r, ran for the cab or the Jrurk and loC"ktd ourselves in untll morn - ' Ing . "Next da y ~·p ran nut of ga~. and nf tnurse there arr nn p:as stations. Lurkily, a trurk rame hy a11rl ~a\'e u5 ~ome ,e:as or I don't kno"· v.·ha t might have happened to us." J\11t1tf1e1• Calorl11I C f1011tpior1 &Ibby Isaac is !he latest \n a long Jin<' of colorful NASCAR :Grand National stock car champions. a curious breed who are '.somehow rarely affected by !he fame their victories have , broughl them. Isaac w()O a bunch llf money in 1970 along with 11 races and ·lhe driving championship, but it hasn 't made many changes in .his life, he reckons. . , "It means quil.e a bit of money." Isaac said of the t itle he ·won in fierce rivalry among himself. Bobby Allison and James .Hylton . ''but I won't gel it (lhe point ft1nd MnusJ till Fcbruar_v. "No. J don't see how I will get a lot. of m')ney from endorsem<'nts. I don't know an ybody who m.akes a lot <'If money that wav . No, l don't get any n1ore fan mail as a resulr. "[ wefit after lbe championship, t guess. because I just wanted to be champion . The man who owns m.v car wanted tht champ- ionship. and so we decided to g.o after it ." This season will be diffcrcnl for lhe Newton . N.C., dri\'er who grew up in the sport almosl fender lo fe nder with former ·NASCAR champ David Pearson. "II looks like lhls year r11 probably pit k lhe races T w:int ,to run." Isaac sairl . "I am only going to drive stock cars, be- cause that is the only kind of racing that interests me. My i)nly •goal in racing is lo \\•in as many races as anybody else. I'l l just :go out end do the lx'sl 1 can." • Isaac will drive a 'iO Charge r in the Riverside 500 this :Sunday. Despite lack of success on NASCA R's only road course, lie believes •·1 know my way around Riverside by now, l lhink l can win ." , What Isaac likes most about competing in the West. however, js the opportunity it gives him lo see a lot of the country. AREA QUARTET WINS .. (Continued from P•!!:t !3) Jowly Santa Ana. Westminster's 6-8 ~nk•r center Eric Southw.ick hit on a 12-foot jump sho! ju~t cutside the key with six 5econds left in lhe contest tn provide the wlnners ~·ith their final margin. Santa Anti had con1e fn!o : the game with the. tdea or " ~low ing down fast-breaking Westminster \1.'ith deliberate ball etlntrol tactieir and the Saints did manai<:e lo lie !he !!core before. Southwick hil the winning field goal. Southwick 1'14 ) and junior Terry Mtisenhelmer (10) were lhe. only Llorut scorina in tw in digit.,. • • JACK ROBERTSON-FAN SINCE 1920• Area Prep Basl{etbal1 Results " .... ~ .... ~ HYnl1n1lon 1•11 l "l l(on••d• (.cnl-.•1' !~I F Ill Jon-. Ctor•lll Ill F rn C••t• K..,!on I Il l C r11 W~l•n•v ll•n•ln Ill (• 1n1 Tr"""""' Ro be 101 G 11\ McF••nn S<P'"'~ •ub• flonltn910f>-1"~11 •· r;,•mon~ l, ~',."''"'k' J. •Wlr S. K•nn•OV-T'ft !, ~·0(••<><1nv • Hol!!lm• Hunnn9lon n . l(•nned• •. Ull I'!. Voll•v (on''"'"' 111 I' 1n1 Ho'i,.ld (••••tll 191 F (IOI leno•n •:t eMn 191 ( Ill Vil••<'•I ll•n~ln 13, (, (l\ Mal•n• ll•O• !II G l~I Hill 5cor·n~ ~vb• Hu"''""'on--Wt" 1 Ho llllm~ """'M••• ValltY" ll, ... , .. ,. t1n9hm 10. \.!~ntlnt••• l?f) (U) Voloncl• Con•"'"' 151 F c ••• .,1, rc1 " K•oton /JI llankin I t~I G oll Go11ooln• Ill Hwgt,~v 111 J•n•on ('I /V.on•on llltoe (I) G (O) Oiat Scnr.no •u~' nno• H•llhmo Hunl>nolno 11, V1l•n«a U , Letu"• l t1cll !!!) !JJl lolu Gr•nao l<l•.,tln~cn (llJ F (Ill G•I•• A"M Ill F (" Slu•l'tr Morton (~I c 1!! l(l•t• M•••• 101 G i•1 "•nn•n1"0 B••"oc 1,1 G (JI ""'""' Sco;,no JVt>< L•oun• B•ect.-Oul~n '' Bol'" G••ndt-H•ll 1, GVl<''••I' \ Ho"tim• loount Beien ll, Bo"a Gr1n<:1t 1•. Junior V1,.l1Y Mol•r O•I (Si) (UJ Slddlfbo<k Httoln I'" F (" p;tfOltt•~ Mu•onv 1111 F (fl Ho•A<•~ (">ullc !11• C: i IJ! ll o•• l(llev rn c; il11 G•r<•• Ad•"'' (•) f. l•I Loi•• SC0"1'0 •vb• M .... n•1-Du<•• '· "'""' ), St•nb•• 1 Saddltb•<~ Cun•o • ><•I'''"'' ""•'•' !'•• l< IO Sa" (ltmonto UI) P•l V1!!1 Pa•lr S•el!~~;on illl F <01 Sc~••' N•u 110 1 " (II H~lvk •r• "'""' 1•\ { ll • l •"'"" fo<n•ort~ I•) (. "I Mt/l.''"•n On..,1ono till r, 1;1 F""" Scn•mo '"~' Son (I"""""" ""'' 1 "-'"~I• ) Dun~""' 1. W•••Q••'~ •, (,,.nn•\')n I V•hl P•rl< H ... •Or j, l!'~'n •, Mdhn-.••• I """""'' Son c '"'""'" 1~. \""~ l>Mk ii , U"<v.,'11• !U) M "lllf\" I ll> \.••'" l•I ll•I AmbU••dftt r !11 Mv•o"v r 111 8u•i.d1•M I .o ""' 111 Wel,enbero l~l l l0<•n1t l~I I" 1111 H•"rnoron C. ll) B ••~•~•"' (, l~l Inc• Scnrmg \~b" ll•,.~•lllY -l•""''' •. 11.001• .. ""'"'• 1 H•ll!I""• un,.oro•I • 29, "'"'to•U•Oor "· Oran•• <••) lSt l Miui"" Vl•lt P.e•n•I !XI\ F (ll B•tnnon B•l<I•'"• t<I I' !lS) l•Ci<·~ ~ti"'"'" Ul C (111 No•m•nd•n Wolrl,,..an in G Ill Caol•l••n Neum1n (I! G ID! Mol!ltl Scorono •uto•· Ml,.io" Vitlo--W•I~•"' u)n n. Myrp~y }. O••no,.,_Po111'°n !, SlrVC~ I H•!f!lmt ' Mln •ori v ;olo 21. ()rtno• "· Prep Cage Standings 111v1 .. 1 ll! .. OUI • ' .. • • c.,,on• dol M•r ' .. ~I (Dl!• Mtla • ~ Est1ntlt ' .. Lo• ,.1om1!01 ' • • " EOll(W'I ' ' .. n F!>11n111n Vtll•r • ' " .. M etno•I• ' ' " " S .. VtlloV ' ' ~ " WMMtdlV'• I COrtl (O•lt Mllit 11, Ml9r>Olit ~I (Ol'O'll rftl M1r •1. s .. Vtll.-' ti) l(I• .-11ml!o1 <.I. Founloln V1Tltv 4$ E1t1ncJ1 (I, EdlWln ~ l'rld••'• Ct "'" (orOo'la Ot l Mat t i Edi...., EtttnClt al Cotti Me.I FOl,ll\llln V•lltv "' M•tl'tlli• $A VtlM'r •! Loi .-11mlt(lf. SUNSl!T ll!•GUI H11nl!n1t011 .. fl t'Kll • ' ' ' Mtrln. ' • Ntwl'Qrl llt•belo' ' ' w,.1m1nt1tr ' • .t.nt"°'I"" • ' Loor1 • I Wo1tr1n • $1nt1 .-n1 • WHIMld••'• $(.,.fl .. " .. ~ " .. " ,, " Hun!lnt!"" B••<h tt, l0•1• " Morin• •1 . W•sl•rn ll N•w!IOrt /~. tlu,olltl"" ~ W•lln lnll•• •J. S•nll In• IJ ,rk11J'I Ot ,...S Wn•~•n 11 H~,.,1fn,1on 11*-•C~ 51~!1 .t.n• 11 M•~l"I ,._...,.., Ht rb!!r 1 1 Wl1!r"'"!~l1f I.Oii•• t i ,t.n./\tl"" - " " ,, ~ " ,, " " ' tll Little Lukers Mesa Youngster Uses Wilt's Bands B~· RO N E\' A~S ()I lht Dt !I¥ Pllol Sttll Son1c t1mes th e Lakers' \Vilt Chamberlain appear.~ to h~ a magician and on other oc- <'asions he se£'n1ingly borders on the llr"1m or mediocr11 y. ll (>wevcr. 1h£'re tn u~l be .<;om<' forn1 of thr occu \1 :i t- !<tchrd to 1he f;imous vellnw £'last1cized bands whic.h 1he Big Dipper \\'Cars on hn!h \\'rists during Na1ion::il Basket· baJJ Associat ion cornbaL F'or, nine -yeilr-Old C.: h r i s Ballard. a member of a team kno\\'n also as the Laker~ 1n the f-/a rbor Ar£'a Bovs Cl11 h 1£'ague in C:os!a T\·1eSn. can attes! to i;uc h n1a~ic . Little Chri~ rnnly 4-1 and 5.) pvund sl acquired a pair of \\lilt's old wr is!b;;inrls fron1 a CQusin who toil~ as a ball hoy for the pro l'<'rsion of the Lake rs. The nine-year-old rlash c!nn - n£'d 1hr-m for !he firs! t.1n1e recently In ::i Bri:•s Club con· tesl. again~! the previously 11nheaten Gl obetrollrrs. ing ly accu rate shots from as far away as 20 and 25 feet. Although it \\'OUld ob\'iOusl.v scen1 so1ne"'h<1L bey\Jlld the realm of po5s1bility (\\'ill is 1wo fret taller 1111d WC'ighs 235 pounds more than Chri s\. lht;> Forun1 Gnld b:inds fit arou nd young Ballard'.~ wri sts JUS! as comfortably as thev \\·0uld on the cn<.or1Tious wrisls o/ 1h£' Los Angeles center. C'hris ' moth£'r says. "the bands are knitted in such a \11ay lhal they'!I fit perfectly from the \\'rist up to an y part. of the arm. "\Vhen Chris ROt thrin in lhe mat) from his ('QU S1n h<' just sliJl?ed them on and they fit JU St right." 'J'he imrnediate goal of the Ballard lad is to latch onto th£' Foru1n Gold bands worn around .Jerry West'.~ wr ists. Aftt'r he accomplishes that. J)C'rhaps Chris will be lransfnrming his 20 ;i nd 25- fuolers into 55.footrrs. j11sl like thr 01hcr Laker "·llo v.·ears the golden wl'1stband'$. l\lh;il r~'s11ltr<l Clins' a<lvent of wr 1 ~1ha n d s r£'markable. ::iloni<: with1 1Sport111g !he .-----------'II \\·as truly ' KIDS, 6 to 16! YtllHl.I( Bal];ird's Ir am manag('(I !o sta_1' C\'Pn \\:!t h lhr. powerful Glnbelr<lllcrs 1not In he conf11sPd v.-il h !he rnorr f;irnn11s Harlrn1 v;:in~tv l for a wholr ha t/ before 1h1ni:-.s G•t YOUR f iW.lnQ Tockll' 101 f ·R·E·f! Friday Only brok£' loo.~<'. • I SPORTS & VACATION SHOW llowe \'er, insl<'ad of opening! up in favor of lh£' 'Trol lers, Lhe lc;;id \\'<IS captur£'d by the Lakcrs anrl they wen\ on Ill record an upset 17·13 vic4 1 , tory . a1 A11ahel"' Anrl, providing the biggest C.011\'•11tl•11 c.,.,., thrust in tht> unexpected Ooort Optn ? P.M. triumph was little Ballard, Adm.: Kid1 1i .i 2 V"·-'' who canned nine points in the a11vona ovar 12, Sl.,O second half, many en amaz-11.----------.ll 10' OF SNOW AT MAMMOTH MAMMOTH BUS TRIP JAN. 16 & 17 MAMMOTH MTN. INN. SC[N• IC PlllYATI ltOOMS, 4 rllt ROOM, srLIT LIYll., 2 , •• LIYIL. 134'5 INCLUDES LODGING l TRANSPORTATION SIGN ur NOW DIADLINl-.IAN. 11 • WI'',. llOW OljllippMI for COMplo .. i._. & Mlto rttlll• bllllltf. SKI MART NEWPORT BEACH 2105 W. COAST HWY., NlW,OlllT llACH 642-lllS G•IH 1t A,M. -t 11.M. MOH,· •111., S•T. & SUH. lt A.M .• 6 "'""' DAILY PILOT Oller Supporter Small '7() Deer Kill . Fan for 45 Years ~ Honored by Club For Count}'. ' I , Orange County "'as flt o\ se ven coun11es in the 'state of California showing a small gain in deer kill during 1970 acco rding to a rep<1rt by the stale fish and game depart· ment lhls wrek_ By TERRY C<}L\'ILl.E Ot 1111 DlllJ Patt '"" At 72, Jack Robcr'Lson is still ene of the staunchest sports fans supporting the Huntington Beach High Schovl Oilers. Jn fart , he 's been arou11d so long the bo1Jsler club gave him a pl;.iquc for 45 years of fai thful S£'rvice -even"' though the elub itself is only about JO years old. "I've rcall.v been a fan more than 45 year$, but I thought I'd round uff lhe nun1her" sa.vs Jaek, a raiher shy ma;i. He yarne to Hunt!11gtn11 Beac:h 1n 1921 and i1111nedia1ely began follO\\'ing Oiler sports. "ll \\'as a srnall oil town then and I l'ame to upen :i ('lo1hing S!Ol'f'. I was :!IWil\S a spor!s fan so I went '10 th<' local high schoo l right a"·ay ., "I don'! 1nakt' ;ill the gamei; no1v. I can·r 1\'0bble out there i;o rnueh. But the schno! has had some g(lod !cams _" He recalled the 1922 traek !ca111 that took the s1ale litle with just four men, then went on tn take second in a national mrc1 in Chicago. "I rrn1crnber Eddie. t-.1o rris. I th ink he sill! holds the lflQ· yard dash niark or 9.5. He l'an in the late '30s." And of course he knew "Cap" Shcue, "'·ho began as fo01 ba!1 c.:oach in 1925 and only ret ired a fr."' years ag o. "J n the old da ys the people fron1 Los Angeles had a hard time find ing Huntington Beach -but we had some good teams." "Yes it 's a different lo\vn n<'lw," Jack says. ''The <'lldtimers dn ri'l co1ne downtow11 so mu ch .. , He sti ll has his ciolhing store. Jack is the type who gocs oul of his 11•a.v lo help son1eone -even if the y want lo bu.v a shirt . but don·: have the n1nney now. J ack doesn't like to sav much about his booster plaque exc£'p1 . ""·hen you g<'t one of these ~·ou rea!ly know you 've been around Hun· tingtnn Beach. And he thinks today 's youngsters are just as aCtive and try just as hard in sports as they did in lhe o!d d::iys. "I'll be a fan as long a$ I can wobble." The DFG said a rinal tally of tag rell1rns showed 38.~S deer kill rd in 1970 as coM. pared to 48,268 in !969, a dNIP of 20 percent in the statt. ' ·- The decrease v.·a~ broµght :ibout by reduced hunter efftll'i acco rding to the DFG. "fluntl'r success -ba'.c;ed nn tag sales and the return of buck tags -dropped 'from J J.6 perc£'nt in 1969 to _,.s perrent in 1970," a spokesman said A ma jor regulat ion chBrigt, designed to disperse hUll~Qg pressure and extend ~t)ie avadah!e d£'er over a Y<!i4er segment of the public, redL1gt<f the number of two-deer are-! and i11creased on e ·dee r <!ist ricL~. Successful hunters in q,·tw~ deer area are not perrnKted In hunt. in a one-deer -area as in past years. " .. Offii;ials said a_J,b cu: leL ___ _ season in many pa rts of the state along with early cla!IUre.s <tlso contributed to the drop in the kill. CHAMPION FULL 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRES AS LOW AS ( 1 Bl1tkw1ll Plus t1 .76 Fed. Ex . 1•x 1nd !Ir• off your car. l .ID·l5 •1510 $1 .74 Fed. ll1c•w1ll Ex. tax 7.35-IC •1510 &2.01 Fed. BlKhil1H Ex. ta)(, 7.75-IC If •151s s2 1"-o• $2 .16 7.75-15 B/1U;w1ll f l~:t l .:lli-14 If •1sss $2 8. 1 37 1.15·15 Bltdt:Mll Fed. ex :a" l ,lili·l4 °' 1.45·15 ·2095 S2.50 or •2.48 Fed . ex. ta lC All p1ices PLUS !axes and I"• oll your cir. -· . 'JH ITEWALLS ADD •3.00 H wt shou!d Mii tM of you!' 1!r1, 1 •'rtlnci'leell." will bl 11-d, •••uring lulu•• de!l1191y ~1 11'1<1 ~"'"'•t1 sed p1i~11. USED TIRE SELL-OUT! $6 Thousands of miles .of tl'9Gdwear le~ I ~ ' '. ' ··. , ·,' •. ' ... :!!l!!!!!il ~ ~·~·· lliiiiJ l1Silil l!BIJ lways to t:llarg11.,_,,,,..,...,..d, ;~ ... Cet.tlil Mne flretteM Stor• H111tl119ro• ketch ,.,..,_ Sto,. t!J I., lit~ 11 .......... uo 1'111 llACH I LVD,-fU·•ail l .Sot., I a,m, tt t 11.m. MO\/llS1 Mt~ .• ,fl., I •.Ill. 11 t ,.m.- HOUll!: MM .. J'ri, I t ,m, le 1 '·"'' Sil,, I •·"'· le t '·"'· .. '' ! ~· . ' Ca111M~...n ... .. ,'I HU .. IWl"DllT ILVD,_...,.lt •) MDUllS: I •.m. It t:• ..... ~·'; ~ ttl., I • "'· .. I .. m. .·. /l 30 DAI LY PI LOT SC Thursd1y Janu.uy 71 )f{ll =-~~~~~~~~ -~~~~--'--'--~ --• Yotar Money's Worth Complete-Ne,v York Stock Li st OVER THE COUNTER 'Holde1· i11 Dite Course' Law ·--11 .... '~", .... i., _,.,_ .t -"~""'-'"' ' • '" ...... 111<1,10 l'rkH .. -.__ "1tll ., ""rtl:~• ,...,.,....,. ., ummlulM NASO L11t1ng1 for Wednesdty, Jtnu•ry 6 1971 Mo st Viciot1s of C1·edit Traps "'""'"'"';;;"'"'""""~~~_.,~;i;::::::;::r;<..;O" . .L:O.c.1"-':::!"-Alatll> fd ..;.Zj.:.j+ ,,,, 'J , :r,,e: ;;-.1 E " l'."' ••CZI"' :::=t:i Abotl,.b D A(I' 11\11 1 f(I l'flOt Acmt(ll'v SO '" A .. tf Id .&.(ff'< Ml<! lb -"'lm•E l .. Ad M 1 10 NEW VOAM. (AP lF• lne ,.,. I ' PubS NM '11 ~ 'l lro .. l1(t ,,. 5.... d l Ry SYLVIA PORTER )'.n elderl y won1an bought .a hearing aid for her 5on tnvolv1ng a fat down payment and :.in 111stallmcnt loan ror the balance of her purchase When the de\ ire fa iled to ""ork she took 1l bac k 10 j he !'iC!lcr 11ho ai;rc<'d to send , !.1 to the factorv for re pair But 11hen she returned ag1un ,. lo p ick up the hearing a id ~he found that the seller had gol'l(> out of bus1ncs.'i -and had sold her 1nstalln1enl lo 1n COlllract to a local lender lncrediblv this \\loma n r~ , ni.amed undl't legal ohJ1gat1on to repay the loiln plus stiff mtercsl charges -despite the fa t t that her son slill had no hearing ai d Thi~ legal quirk -cal!et.l the holder in due coursc doctrine -1.s one of the big gest and costli est loopholes rrma1n1ng on our consum er tawbooks as 1971 begi ns Literally rn1Jl1ons of dollars are lost every week because of th is doctrine says Howard Frazier president of the Consumer Federation of 1':ll)er1ca in \1Jash1ngton Holder 1n due course 1s thl' mos t '1c1ous of all con surncr credit tr<ips today Under the hOlder 1n due c o ur s e d o c t ri ne a n U{l';crupulous used car dealer bt '1>ther retailer may I u r e na ive consumers into buying ! a long list of products or • s~rwces on lime I le will then "'1mi:bechately sell the conlr:lct • to )fl finance con1pany The ,...l!f'nduct may turn oul to be a-~mon or 1t may be badly :"damaged or 1t may need : sent1c1ng und er the \\arranty or it may not even be delivered And lhe seller may ~ Clafly refuse to replace or • rrpair the product you have bought • Neve rtheless the owner of \.-Our loan contrAct "ill sternly remind )OU that he 1s in : tfle business of financi ng not repairing furniture or cars ' If you refuse to m a k e • paymenls as they come due )OU may be sued for the re ,.lrra1nder of the Joan payable ~ at once Or as an alternative lfle finance company may repossess not only the 1len1 111 question but also other pel'sonal goods Among the goods a n d services nH1"1 frcriuent ly in yolved 1n holder 1n due course • problems are v a c u u m 1 lc;iners furni ture carpeting sewi ng machuies 1tfet1me ser,res of da nc ng or Judo lessons 111 lJr r 1pph ances • ho111e 1mpro\crncnls Jn n1:iny t 1~£.'S the bao;;1c ~ cnnd1 t1ons under \\tl1ch the "'!':a le ha s been n1 idc -for , ~~~~e ~~111~ h~:1~ \~e~cr~:~ JW (i IX'l1e11c \OU!l t.(et a prod111t free 1f \nu rr lrr a specified nu n1bc1 or other c uslon1cr!i to the ~tller -dre rr audul< nr ; :oo ~OF 01L PA IN~l:GS.._, WHOLESALE WAREHOUSE OPEN TO THE PUBLIC 30°/o off 1(1' E ED NOEA ~•Nl<I, <1,N<I, l'HONE IJ!-1"'1 DEALl!llS WANl ED ,_ MEASURE MEDICINES CAREFULLY " Tllll GlANT *' \t:hr n \nu r ph,i;u 111n In •Jtr1)1 1s ' u lv \Il k a \rr1 1}Kl()nhil r r 11 liquid rned1 .~ibc 111 1n nn" f r )O\J t i do ju~t 1h 11 Jlr has c llru latr\1 ho'' 1nur h flt ,l\r 111 grtd1<'nt \\l\l 1)1 n l hHL tr 11 11io6nf11I f th JI Cl fl ll n ii!'\d la kll!f: TIH 1 r o It <.s V. !II ~1uhly IN. l xi 11d n~ the JCl\r,ttJI 1 f 1hf 11lnt ss he is 'l~ 1ng to 11 rn1 '-Fgllnw nll ti r rl1rC<'llOn~ hn )"our prcs<'rlpt l ln ra< kallc Jor they a1 c th 1 ror \01 JX!rl.ant JCBSOTIS 1 hf' lolxl v.f1l tell \OU hOI'•' llnd ""'" t1._ take.: the rncdlc1nr and )l(Si,f. much to take Some llm~ ll "Ill tell you hn" lo •Wre II "h81 In do 1r )OU 11~ mori> &.s "ell l'lS nny 'llllrm l"htt' your rhY'lclan lhlnks )OU i;hould kno'v ~Vf'r kt!oep a med.lelne bot tha t dot!s nol have an tJ11ilrucllon Jahr! ..,. -YOU OR YOIJTt l)()CTOR CA~ M.fONE US wh<'n you n~ a dt'hvt"f')I We will d~ vr!t prom ptly wlthout ex ctuuire A grt:lll mMY file rtly on u• for their llh nl't-d~ Wt wt"Joome reti.l.l~f~ fnr dt'lh1rry 5Crvlce a l!Ki c.ha ri;e eccounu PAii LIOO P'HAtlMACY 111 H .. r.-..... N..,.,t ..... 64Z 1110 Pr. Dellnry But once your loan contt u.;t JS turned over to a finance com pa ny any rights yuu rnay ha \e to challenge the or11Hnal tcrans of the deal al so go out the w1ndo" Frequently too the finance company 1s f.i r far away The holder 1n due cour.se duclr1ne often leads directl y into a rats nesl of other Je~al f1nanc1al pr o b I em s har rassment by m ::i J t or IC'lephvnc garn1shmC'nt o f \vflges repossession of pro per\\ And all this is on top of the budget bu.sli ng utterly unf;ur obl1galton to pay 1n full for broken or worthless merchandise Why don L we simply oullaw the doclr1ne -;> Sonic banks and fina nce companies claun that thi s would put us oul of business ' ~cause of the resull1ng f1nan c1al risks Dealers fear 1t -Tri. lo 0 ., 1>0 b o Flf\11111~ vy, '"" Pull S NC i 1 .. 1 ~ T •mo>~ ~ 20!, :~m n: o Ind '''"" QUO. n~ n 5;1.. J;. ~~,.~~· ~ • 'ti:~:::·"' ll ll , A•m•L " i '° \\ould ehm1nale a m<LJUr 1~00n•1.r.,1~:1 't,.Jt ~::Ge~~. , , ,~ p Ben""' 71• 76, lv com 1,. 1 , A•1n11u t' 1 r[ I ' ' IP M 19 u Pur i. SI !4 1• Tenn•nt ll'll7tJ A9u re 0 means o inane ng 11t on <>1 ecu '' • e 1 111 ~ouo CP '""' 1,. t~rm A 1 1.i.o Al:r•n 1n, Despite this at least 22 :;-:••,.~~•Inc .,,,.,,,_" ~.i~FY~ l • J~ Qu11 CM '°"" 10, T 11n, co '~ 10, Air Proo ?Ob Ian• bl.I ... l'ftl f c'.119 1!. 11 RT s~., .,. 1 Tllnv tn 6\1 '"' AJ~ Rod We stale~ -most 1n the past r"'"" 1 vo 1n1e Food FP ', 4 ~ Aed o,n 9~ '• r t•n Go ~11 f': ~~1~:.':"i', •• ( h h dtll et pr Ct> ll <.>fF Of\I 0 1 IJ 1Jl R11hll C 1,>, '',','-!,,;01C" >•' •O Al Gii> i 0 CW years Cl! er ave '"" o•lm•••I> >>om 0 J lfli R11n>b El • ... G """ -li:•cnCP 41 10 l !lCnl o ? ,,,.Al••'-• ne • abolished o r s1gn1hcan!ly ,0 ~ ,•, ""' en ~~~ ~~!,, C.rnt 1; : 1: II•~" (p I• , 1 P1r Trnsn o 1 11 ,. Ulo Al!l!':rtoC l1 •• F ( I I 6l Rec!>@ Eq H .... u 1 l Mob 11 ~ 6 A ~r '"$ .l6 rl'S[ru.:tcd the USC or holder ~.v~_. ~,.t,~•A ) ll\l:t Fr~~ln t 10 0 lllo Rtl (tea 4.\ ~ Tr <O Pa ]? ll"-A1<11nA II I?!/ ... ,... ~ l•• J llcldr Pu Ill~ 9 T a•r 1 , l " Alcos ana •• 1n due course prOLectu n of .~ •• •, 1b al ,..,•n~: • ~:.;: ~~ 1 i A itv s10 t• ' TY•o" Fd , .. 9 • A ••na • :ior h G ( 1, 7,1110110 e. J.I J6 Un ..c l • l Alf11 (p "°"' lenders Prc sumablv t tSctun9• tnouon G1>J ~'"" 11011,,JioDn M 11 '' u .. 1111m Xl •»'•AltiiL ud 1 .0 I h t g t f wr tn• aay P 1<0" ,0" "s " 11 11•111.,.e"" j ' Un McG s, ,", 'ol·~',",o 1>!,l a one 1s e p1n o urce~:.11 no1 mZ~~u.,0•G 'A1,;11 ,, 1,,111ovC••t 11~1~·8~~~~1 19 70 ,A i;.,ci.'it unscrupulous dtalers and mo woo ... ., o• com G i.:ne•c I 1°:~:.,s•::: 5 s us s ,1 '-l'>AdM1 n •o f b nnl"" G lt >IJt I o 1 ~odller j, ~'us r"tt'." n d>...A edSlr 1'0 h~nders out 0 U:>tncss .... I Corp l •••• GRI E~t I I !<d In E 1 1 • Uo Pf<IP 1~ JI Al OMI ''" Ho~evcr in most states the:f~"1 ""s 1i'1;;g ~·1~~. ,~,7~"Sc""" •n 1~' lu'•" sLa s l'>All edPd61 d-·1nn" Is still legal and a ",',~' ,.~ •,,', •,. G01~'".,.~0 11 11 ~t 1~ r ~·: ~ ~.11 t~ 1~ ! ~~ ~1 i!°c~"~w u... " ... .... ·~ -' l Seo• SO<'• 1• ,. 'Vance St ll II. A lrlo•A11I I.II Prop-Osed federal J;i w lo I unit ~.~PM •,, •, ', ,~'!~ ccs'' 11 ' u 'S<: ""' 11 11 19 111 a "" 1.. 1 .. A 01>1PC •OI • ...... I] u Sc plo A ?• l •W•cl> 11111 Jl 7µ AICPll IO 1t has yel to net off the "'t1• • n 1 • l Goaw v c 1 • 11' Ma e 01 1'"-19 •1W•d•w P 1• 11~1 AMBAC ~ o lo.cme El 6 6 > l. •O Cn 0 6 ~ ~ (""' I ' I W11ln Ila 1•\ U>< Ame E• 110 uround " 'H • I C ~P!I Sc 15" 15 • !.en>t " • • , w Re•oe l l" Am E• Dn "° Cl Al lndUj, J 7,1..A MO .1 •1 Svc Go •• s W••""' l o •• Aml1e5s 30t The lead cr:;h1p ha:; tu corne A D n f 10-. h • Cr••n Mt 1••• 11 !.e••n UP ~ ' 59 ~iW••" tiG 10 h\ AmeH otl i.o ( h I I Albff H 1' l .,,tn! RE II 19 S-nernlafl • o ~Wa•!I RE 10,• n,, A• F 1 10 rom l e nit1on s ovcrw1c 111 AW, ~ 9 Gro•~ P •, Jloo ~m n M 1 •«w111 1 A A 1 80 f •toac 4 , ,,.G..,.fl 1n & 7 So a5• 5 '>WeDb Re 10 11 "' n 1ng maJOt 1\y o Jeg1!1n1<1tc,. co Lnd 1• i..Gu1dn c J ••sca1 w111 11 1s"2 weo1 n s•• &~Alla~• 0~ A 11 1 2 C.~ In! ! ~ SoNE lel J9 :rt ~W•noM '10"71'J A8 f>Cl>l0 lenders It JS 1nconce1va ble to .o. 8ed 'ftQ 7L! ,,• cv Ddn 1 , 1•. 5., GloCP 1111 1!"1 we F 111 1 111, AmBac11 1 20 th l th r ,..,n Gto J o J"'Henovr S 10 •21 Sw ESvc JI H"W•!C" P 9,, t>o Am(on):IO me a e Jflan('Jflg CUffi Amad lh 2 , 1-ieo h In ' 5 Space > )>,; '~IW>ln NA 4 , •>o A Can o 1! l Wiii C t Am llusn B l)' H~n fl! F 35 :I.I \ ~ndYn 71~ 7!"" w," Mt~ 1~. & • Arn Cemen! nlUfll Y o n 1 n UC Jll "ei ~~" 3..,. ,0 11, r ca 2 2••s<1 111'!' u 10 W•n Pu!> 14 1•.., A Cn•n 1611 d ( l It tttt b A E t > 11 Hda<: 1'> l •St g t 10' l l ~W ng Wh l 'o ,,ACYS~ll 1•0 Clnley Opernl lC 8 USCS 4~ F~o~ 1' 1 'Holme~ 30 JI Slow Cl J•h l!h.Wsc Pl. ll .. 2J"-A(>and 1~ 1vhu.;h occur under the u1n 'G••~' so• 60,Hoo11n 1• 9 ~uD>< l" ,, 1 . 1 wd1w e 1 1,.Am 01.1111 AMflJCI> 1 o ll >oovt 00 •O..,.~uo~ F 1>1 9 oWlpMW 79 ,79 AO s!lel 40• bre!la or the holder 1n due ,,.,, Te. ?O 10 Ho •, 11:~ e, ' •,,• s11!l0 Fd • J:it v dnv e J • ':it ~0 .. 9,u•~r:i! An~tlll II 71 ]&,HOW v O Co course rr1nc1ple "n•en fl ! 8 O > 0"' TI n 11 I 19 ' m W J 10 "''Cl I d 7 1 1 1 _,U<~ Ml 101 ~~ ~ "'i'l)) ! ' ~m:::l!i ~~E~~p 11,"t, "'roen of 2v ~JI Huu G•• 11 • ll A G•nln• SO A~ MoP 1•• ,,Hull P 6> ll AGnn11lllO ~ den M 8 9 'IHuU Pll "" "'owH 3 Jl Hvat (11 11>'1'1 MUTUAL ArnHos!•O A'(jdo >1 11 1 Hvo n! 9 o AHom•l 60 A•CC ll o! •1 •1 1 • var Alh l • A 11ornt "' 1 ~u o Sc J"' )• '"'•9• Sv 5 , •• Am Hoop 16 31 d Ill • ,,, Ind N1>Cl 26 ,, Am •nv.i 50 Auto Insurance Costs !!1•e 1 11 nl 1(1 1 J AMed C•I 12 Bal p1 nl 5 1 6\ollftl C11nt I~ > g FUNDS ~ ~1,'fi:.1~ pl•~ ~!:1';;' ~11 211:2.!1~1'iw.~ s S1 ,.,..., Moto• 11~~••1'1 •l •• l'M MU t I ll' '17 A.N• G<1~ l 10 8i~I~" II 11 , lnl S~I 3Slo JI Am P~ola !6 ""~cnm ?• ?•1 '"' Sr pf II I~ A.Rt>D• 1:le B llnle r I'• 9>o •z...-Tlti:'!!... rn:!lJ!....' "'3 Am ~e1ll119 I 9el e 11 • 1' ' 1 • Am Sn o l>Ot> Higher Than So111e Cars NE\'1 YORK (UPI) -An nual automobile insurance now costs many motorists more than the market value or their cars 1 he $1 000 a }ear premium 1s commonplace for penalized drivers in lhe big cities Rate 1ables of insurance companies show lhe poss1b1hty o f premiums as hi gh as $7 400 1n Philadelphia for m1n1mum protection for very risky drivers Of course no one LS really pav ing $7 400 for m1n1mum 1n su1 ance said the Jnsurant.:e Information rnst1tut c It s JUSt a stat1sc1an s idea of how much a company would have 1u cha rge certain r 1 sky drivers r n)f HerbC'rt S l)('ncnberg v. ho teaches insurance at the lintvcrsity of Pennsylvania s \Yharton School of Finance warned in a recent speech thal in surance ra1 cs are going to keep going up un less a fun damcntal reform is achieved SOOQ An in.depth study made rccent!v Jor the American Insurance Assoc1at1 on by l\-lathemat1ca a Princeton N J .research hur eau reach ed the same conclusion T h e prob lem the Malhemati;ca .r£>porl said 1s that prope rty and casualty in i;Urance 1s a service bu siness that has not fount! any way to in1:rcase 1\s produclrv1ty !ls c ists ke<"p going up and up l l 1 1~0 JS tied to the medical ho~r1tatrzat1on and auto repair bt1~lncsse~ 11h1ch also ha\e bet n unable to increase pro- duLt1~1tv tn offset spiraling \\a~1.:!i and other cos t 1n (fl' !SC'S 1'>£nrnbcrg c 1 I e d se\cra1 priority <1re:is 111 c;;ec.k ing "ays t l lt1\\l'f insurance rates - t u !)11g drunken dr 1v 1ng r• duf 1nR automobile theft and {11 rn Hid ng better automobile <lt "' ~n frnn1 tic industry \. ling a Cnni::r css1ona! report 1h ! n~urancc companies are being ~luck with S8 b1lhon to $10 h 111011 a year for padded rcpau bills he said the Penn'ivlv<1 n1a Ac t 1 on Com n11!\eC' for l-l1ghway Safet~ or \\h1ch he is a member, is dt manding licensing or all a1.11omob11e d a m age ap- praisers The <Mathemat ica said tht' proposed no report fault If Y•ll ore 111ot 1111 .. Tele,lle•t AntwtrtlHJ s.r.MOe l•• .,, 111ot 9.ttl119 All of flHIT c.tk. TELEPHONE ANSWERING BUREAU 835-7777 insurance plan could increase the indu stry s produ C'ln 1ty oo ly to th e extent 1hat 1l wou ld reduce legal costs and a void court de!a)s in n1a1or claims What is needed the report said and what seems 1m possible to develop is re.al assembly hne methods that wi ll reduce the cost or pro perty damage claims substan trally B o th Denenberg <ind the_ Insurance 1 n f o r m a L 1 o n Institute sald that th e sales cost of auto insurance t an be reduced sub.stan11;:illy by sell tng pol1c1es !hrough pa)ro!l deductions Automobile insurance cant be underwritten on a group actua rial basts like !ire in <\elrnMl ••>on ., AS 9enr Mi n lo • 11 I ~ ~OU 32 I l.r· Nf W VOlll K (<1,P! l1>11•ond ! 16 6 11 Arnt::Z11 'n s~ • •~ d l ~~ ~ , 0 , lnr loll°"" no uuo 11>11> y •Sl •96 An Sa 1 flt l l~O •O t > J11u1. n C 0, 0 ' 0 ' 11 "" " 9 4 1~ • • 1~. "N'.. ~~:r1 ;n,~r. l~v "cN0,. u : 11 11 !ms1i1~" 11d Ard .Son 31 ~ J~n~' F l0" 'I 1-ol ~e<v te•lnv Gvd Sll I ll AT&T wr I< • )~ " ~· '.'. 01 ) )l J !I~ Fa< l , ,o~~~" •n< ~'" nvtt Bot 1180 7•6Am -i.t r '•o ' >< '' ~• p tet• ~t wn <~ lnve•lo G <>UP Am WW~ J4 ~~ '<' lol ' ) 1 1 ~ l~, ll In« e 'Kii IH D~ ndl l•• •ll AWW .l<>fl ;5 ~:,"e~.f J:. ! ~"·..'~/ h 11 ~".,d ~.,"·"o~-~7 ~u~g ;J~l~~~:.P:/1 5/l ~"!,,.c;,~P ! g ~~1~" G n 10 i 1n C••"edl Wr<ln1"v S1<1<I; 11 •o19 11 Am 1 nt ,0 > > lld,.s•s~~c a••'>!IAme on OO B nl;s In ~• •• ~ 00 • 1 A~ an 911 1 I> \lor Py 6 10 7 JI Amert~ too R "' 5 ~ 19 • 9 Ke" > 0 ) 'Adn ~ty Fun<!> Inv Re>h ••1 •89 "MF nc 9(1 Bwn Ar 10 10 l(•lt '''''"I c,.,.n 60?660he i968201•Am!& JO R "'" !l• H 1.1 Ke wd I (>fT\ J&O •16 vv IJ1 IJ? AMP tnc SI Bu(~ev 6~ 6 l(pyl I" ,e"' 9 1n\Jr 1 o0 8Mj Hncoc k ISi 811 Amocc tl'lg :u ~""(PS ,: 7~ : ~~:~ [u~ I\ 1! Aav "' I 'H 11• Jot "' n 19 ,. 19 14 AmPccP ... r C e~ ~ • 9 !(o 1 "L • • !c ~ .i11 ~ ~ 1~ ~~ "'";~~" 0" f~"1111' 9 \I !~~e: C~o" (• W Sv 1l 2.5 l;n~ln i,,J Aue 76•1~• Cv1 ll! 661>911JAn> Pf7 65 m!xly • ~•~•""•(I A AmF M 11 l >fl7 1 0 8h 1Cll l>m•~P 68 ''•'•"°•M" M' ', ,", ,~n 'n o:;..u 18 1~ A 5IA •, 00 •"• 0 ~~ Cui B• 8 Q 8 7' A''" ~d 1 .io A n~ <I "" Cu• ~ 'I "10 A ~ e 31 C•n ~d 2 i i<'."> 1 0 .J ~A c•" $8•1 l9c11,i.:i •~l~lllln•con 90 C~o M 9t 111 I! l~n C 'I )GS ", 'An Ru 111 l 49 Cu S I J4 O 6 An ~ H«• C~o 5ow 1~ 7,L• d '<e• ' I .l.n Dv n 10 111 10 Cu• ~1 096 OM An no Svc C•o n A l J l.P'Wn 1 • A Eo r •3l.llS\;Sl 111 ~oAna Cov 1'0 c~~ltn '. L '~" ' ,, A • f •P t\\ Cu• S• • J • s A .... th~(o lS Ca D., 9 9 L•ddV (I (<'IP 181 8N) Pn )Y .i Arc..O 101 .. ~ ~ !l 1 ! L " C9" 7 ) ' I "f o 00 9 "'Kn c<b "8• 7 ~ O.Pl Co " ~r c; I!• ~ L 11 (; IO' f~~! I X! 9)0 1.:nc l '> ">• o l APL pl (~ '.' •' OD o O l~WI ll"'-~II I I ll " L r M ~ ~· • ~o ''' 0.,Lrx Gtrn 8•8 •11 AlllA Svc •o~ ( ~ (~p Lull .. • ' ~ L.. Q rn I< JO I. ~ A <•I• •• ""f" lO,•Q•tn •w ~ : ~.~ t1i t5!l.b~., 5;a 610 Ac•"" o 1 •n """ l' 9 L<> ( v ! ) "'" N-11• I I o.ajl t~ ~~ SCI S5 A(/1 D•n Cen1 l.•I> 81 8 L<1<1 F n ~ An NGn1011o !~lnv 10;1 11110.t PSvlDI rna n ? 7 L ~' 19 <1,ntli> G 0.,., ll nc ,..., 981 !0I A l•n' OSt hA I 0 5 ;,1N•<1 Gl ! II II• (di I] l •/1l n9 J9J •JO Atr'l<:cS 60 '~;; ~;~ ; , 95 •'' ,~II I• ~ I 1 .,.. ,. 10 •1 ! •71.."""' • Savle• A. me ol l 10 8 I I "' 11• 66\ C~nad 1119)719 l>m c •IS Ch~• u 10 II IAn .. II l 1 J ... ro ~ l•S t ?' (dp •O•• Ori A"' c~ ftll surance th eysa1d but1[an ch e &1 01 1>t>'IM~"" t. / , Yt"' 34 ,..01 16 /',1u1 1 1 ••n ••"mc~11 Jn Ch" s 1 7 , • NI• "" n. 1• A"""'~ 11• l6Lv•n B" 11S!l7 61 A"' R11l 60 agent can sell a large bloc of en • pl oa 101 I"'''"' r o 9 .. .,,, • 1, , 6i o.1~.,n~ 1n e,. 9 ll A o coo '>II C•ade 6 & M llr.w o ll A• tOU11fl Cn M~nhn ·~ 1111 A "" no policies to be paid for b)c11M 11 1 °0 Mdu l.' o' 1.,<1 A 111s11M•1G ~ ••1a•"•h<10 •:xi II d d h (I• UA ?I 25 M~·~ (J 1\ ,, '""" B 7)1 aa1 ~ .. '"' 10)• 16 A•MO c'1 •0 pa} ro e ucltons l rough a c •' u B i1 7! N-<Ov ii " ~'~~ 1 u & 10 "'~ , inc "~' 16 ro A'"" 6 e., company or a un ion lhe sell c ~·~n /ti' ~~ 25 1:::,;:: M ~ i~ ' 2' R '~ n.,to i l3 : ~~ ~~.~ T" B ~ l~ ;; !::' ~!1G Jol.0 'd d h I C fl•M~• I! I? f'J~an ~· 1 9 ~ 1n1 ot M~· J~ •• A'>IJT •no 1ngcos oes go own s arpy c1non o • • 1Me a 1n 11 n 9 ,."" 17 ,,1 , M~n~, 111917 10 A"o~' '><I This already 1s be ing dooc ,~"."., 'o" ",'·, •,1 • ~ g a,, c~ a ~ eo " Kn! 11' a 79 MDO<lv CP 11 ~· n 61 Al CvF l }8 ~-~ "'" 'l lle•Gn ~ .. oll l~°'<I> i?••ll~)All(EoO I> TheNewYorkpoltcc and c~,·m~~ ~, ~~ z-~n.,.t.c.a~ j 1 1, ~· ~" t i:;::l "'t~d~ !~;~~! ~,.,1~111~ motor vehicle authorities say ,•,,,."',' ,',' ,' .",",',',~ 1~ 11 riu 1" ~1 19• 1 t.11M us c v 10 1• o 10 A 1Re11 n ~a I 7 1 I r 1 1068 ~"'u On{; J l•J A "'(nom that as Jflsurance prem1J.Jn1s Q"1<~ '• 1 "t"1 ~ • • • •Ro ~.-. • 1• • o i"' orn " 10 o o 91 A. ~• en n ""' ( r •V 1 ~ Mn w~ R 'O fl nd~ ~I ll •? • • ~ I '", i. )9 • '9 O.l(,I In< O•• rcachleve/s people cant ar .,,.,c., 1 1 "'""en ·~' 11w r1 1"'11<.1u T•• 195 •\"""'<>"oo oo l• i• './\ IMnn fl r~ " ll~ ,.,.., (8vn I r A 1 ~ o o oo0 A1><>n o~ .. fi:ird more and more people "'•~ " ~ M""~ f •1 A 1 ~ J6J 4oi.,.1 1nd 1om oo Auomn 1n<1 d h j nn P v 1' 11 Ml>'• n ~ <~~ ~!9 106'1'1A I • 117 1eo A•c<1(op rive wit oul nsurance e.ven "'"io n • • ,.,.. Q~ " 10 ~ • 1 n J 1• J •• N•I s.~11 s~ Av<o co ., th h t ( h I (mo (m ~ ••• Mg w ~. • N N ~ 10 l 1 J II"..... 0 8 ,, l\V{O on )~ oug 1 s aga1ns t I! aw er ~ ' 1 • ~·· ~ o <~ ·~ • ' 1 ,,.v 11 1• 1 11 ·~ flon" , ~• S 1'1 Av• v Pd 10 They even buy forged Jn c1~0T•c ~ •1,MMo .• c,tvo 11 n 11 A rd 6 , ~!• Dv •n! •"' """" "' v"· v•-~M i;~ ~91 9 M G wln 818 9/>Q nvonPn n '>Urance. re c eipt s frorn ~~i<i<><~ l.·1; ~~~~Lfr' ,1:,1.L, 1 ~,~~; ~~ro"...'" ~n~~.i°''"'o 13 racketecrs 1norde.rto renew ri',...n~ .. nL 1J 1' ~~c~o"~ d'1 i .~.~ 1';~1~~1,.;"'G',11 ~:~~1tll•DtkW so their cars re.g1slrallons Th e f~ ~ \·~ 8 ; I~~;;" c~ ~ ~ c 11 ;~n"~ r1yr~117 ,,11~;~: ~~ ~ 1~ ~ ~} R:\ 0Gi! 1 ~~ I'-" 1 ' r w~ •ff1 \ll N•w on U!D 1, ll•~<>o Pyn pohee even have found nrop!e. C•w, ,• ,, ,' , ,1 ' ~.... ', "•o ', 1 co"' s1 1 6 tw w d i 13 n ·~ 11. Qt B• so driving with phony reg1stra c .,1c~ Iii t:;, 1 I"" l 11 7A i ., 111 ~IT/~ ~ ~ P 11 ?' B•n<>P "' 1 II On IL ck els an d f 0 r g e d g~~~s~~· ~ • r ~~I &,~ :J , ! 1 ( lf,~ G 6~: 6 8:1~~~·~t 16' JJ 1! ;~ 1:~r~• N{1 3,1 dnvershcenses o •• o •• ··~I"'.,.., f 'Dn ~•1•H°"~0~ 5°"611 110 00 1i1 Do • (,P~ lO !• N ~ •r • • ' I I u;, 1l II// l OO F<t 11 IO 1• '1 AAtd Clil llo D• • n p J 7 Nl n Gl \0 , ~ \~ d 10 00 l J IOl Fd 9 00 '8• 11•> c M 10 "'ll>Fn ~!N J .r. l~l1 •j~o~ a •o O?ljO••Wm~ l 9 l •110,k o1~10 0•• M j \ 15 "'II\ F 6 ~mr\ l1 6!91!0N•I ll !SI I! ll OCI '-0 ., " \,N9\<I,..., (~In~• [~r>Pen~ 1 6'1 1 11~e\¥11l ln~~I> --.~) 3~ N•I II • ro~v ]70 ' 1!01>n ...... 1Cl6 IO fh~ln~ OJ<! • I I o NA l>~r 1... I funn l~"I •1'>TC .s~c 9 3111~1 Ila ~~ D110 Df~• (~ tl •• Nl t N(; II> r "'~ \ 1 61;P•<• Fn<! 1 t 711 fl~~'C!llll llO) n•t r ~"' 1 rr~ 01 I ,. ~~1011"• P'v '1 f n~ rLah 1 llt'I fllf 19 )I) NI>"(;\ I • .,,,.,. •t? 4 A]P•~" \o 1~1 16>111• ~ (Q l.() """'~" F I NW N~> q ~ (o rtn l 061 ·~"~ .... U! ]oo ) .. DP•~~· OAm Cr l&o l6,NW P ~-"i ro II I '~ 1ll"h • ll t'il •6J II••! Fd•I I'> r( ~ .. o""''R•' ,1 } {"""9 ll91 •~1p""" I M •A4 1,·•Fn!1lfl 0 ' H " ( 1 ·~ l 'I" n • .,, l! A !l • ""~""'" ~o Coast l\'lan Elected VP ~~· .'· ,,' ••• ,.,o .""'•~ '1'• I ..... ~I ~·). !n~,. fnl ••I'" ll"l"!DOt ~ '"" "~ .. 111 r,~r • lll'l "o '"<1 111 1J »B•r.:n • ,, "alter ""••fa • H"n :i~n,~~~ 1 n""'n ~1,1 a1•v•~ ,.~,nt11n1R•<o"~ ~" n ,.,. • ,, u ,. ~ ~,..r rn 9"" "'lo" !1Mli1! R"d"ll IO l ngton Beach has b e t n ti•;za ~ 4 ~ ~~nn'~ 1•~,·~11 rw1~u""noiu~;1d".':ow 11.1>b r lec1ed a vice p•cc;;1drot "'lg" " 0 U ' 1 + n 1 ,, ~1 '1 1 • 0 l• 9 ''Ire " .,., ' Vrn"' tl•..,11~t1••12•o l R•\Ct'1 •0 Capital Research and Man;i uc f 1 a ",a ' ' r " ~ B ~ • r n r "~ g 1 ~ .i 11 ~ .. I' ; 11 n 1'\ 9;f'.,rn >~ 7116.~rl men! Compao) one. of the~", ~,:, ,0 • 1 c v r n 1 •• 1~ nv~ • • 11 """" I• 1 ~ ( n Wfl • < ~~ AU P .i'l \" O o 1G i• R~ " nations largest invrstmtnt 1 1 ·~.~~· 1 "~ ~ 1 "ho• 6 • ~e1p ~ ~w... n nr mA na~emcn1 fir ms Prrslden t f 11 sit ~ ~· "'' 9 ~ t,".~~ ~ ~ o": "1 '~j '~ 1 <~ ~ ;• ~.: 1~ 1 so Jon B Lovelace Jr .tn ri ~ ,~ ; • ~~~· ~~ { ~ r>~: 9 111 ""' ;Jo 1r;; ~~,:~~ " d ~...i P o " r Z' ?I p ; 1 11 v• ! 95 r 0 Bt •cv """ nounre\vuay 11 nm ~,·,,•,•,\",'w nou~ln1•V1 •"'l 11~ 1~~.A,.~~110 F ( f d bl ~·• ._, 4 n"'ri•i• 1 ~ 1 ~1 v~v·~ 611 ,~ !l qf~· t.t1 air fl X a cerl11e pu c fl D~n •• ~1 r "~ 11c l 0 • rn 1? "~~~" •svin •~ s ~r• n. P~ a cco unt a nt has becn ~rn:~<1<10' 11, :·1~ir'o 1~• i.' .~i·r;•& 0.,~J11 1 ~;.~:" 1:t• ,1c1~•,1.J1h~~,. lrC:'.lSUrtr pri nClpfll f1nant'I aJ ['~;: ~v I(; ] 1 2; o ~~lld;u:! ~: ~~ ,1 r .:~ l 9 l~ !~ !: ~~:C~• F ~d6l l6 Ill> ~ :~•;:i IJ6'XI Off'cr• aod p•iocipal ac r-n"' •• ••Pnoon ,,' ,1 •r.., • ~111 1 .. 1 nv 1111091 Bo~11 ~ 11 ' ' Eon Co D 1 • 1 IP • I" • \n• 7 60 I ;7 Sn< 3 6 l " 11 ... na Co oo countiog orticer or The l"'e' ','' ,o,, 0 • • Po" t 11 ~ 9 ~ " i1 Ro l"" 11.. •6~ 1•1111 Ro•C~• 1sb ~ • l o P<>[ .... l FN I 4)0\ '''"'s 940940 1\""'1 nd ment Company of America ~;" c.;:: ~ ! ~ .. /~.:!: ~~ j ~ ",., ra ~c 1~~~ ~ ~,"F":.,,:v F11~i, J ,, ::"""~ "1 7o'1 and American Mu tual Fund rn" •v 11"' '1" ""~'' 1 u " , Bo aw~ 1 fno•e Sil ~H 1 '" •l5 ~91 11<>m~ns •Q since 1966 lie Joined Capital .-,, 1. 1•1 S•rc Am •n ••• s..,e.,, 1" Research and fi.1anagemenl in !;:"' ~~ \r, !0:1~:,.,~~~ ':~'9 ~ 00•Ed PllA 196.1 as Quer Accountant of Board Posl ~: :..d "' ;;~ '~'UB~~:~ ~~ ,:1;,:;j ~"'1~~· .. ~'I(~ the F,,_, Accouot1og depa•t " .. °"11,. ••1 n De•n 10 o.s 1••1 B oos1 1.a~ u lN • F.,,.,.,,...,p 51<1" oo,991 B <liv1;t0 m.ol aod 1,ter •-cao1e ASSIS c~0 1 t1J;l1 1Cri .,m• FYrMh A•UM• ol1 ~-] F•l.f'• llN1l'lt Con I?~ ~07 l'l•t p~ •)• tant Treasurer nf The In vest FOI' Si'lllC Ol'll '" 1 ', ,; l3 ~, 1"~"'' io ol 11 ts Br .,., ., ol~ f'O• l •• f 1110 -..0lllo•H••I ment Com pany of America ~1:::, ~:i 1~:= "'~ R 9ot '" 1111wvH~ 011 .od Amc-cao 'l"lual ~·-d Trfn(I 110• 11 095"'' '"v I•• 'J9 e,w~ .... [> "° ,, I'" rw1 F !P o• Sw n-..(';r 61)61' vnUv l T1 John S1mdor n has bcC'n o~~· ~O\ •J1So,vf' nv l!A!!J 'ltl s,·-,.'o-Fatrfax hves with his wi re I 1 ~u\r 361 i" ll<!'c " "'' 6t• wn •o ,, and family al 3978 fi.i istral elected t 1 !he hoard of d1rC'c 1 ~':f;,m ; ~~ : ~i,~: .m 5ci .j~ .; s; g"".,';..5;:.,<t \~ D I H t ( B h " f F'1 F 11• 10 u !\•I S fl'<<lffl•n FUnd~ llu • E 110 r ve in un ing on eac tors or Security '':i e Dff1Qsitl"'11~ 0 , r 1 , , A" tnd i o l 7• a,"" '' "" "~" ~ti 01~ F<lu< ~ ~ 611 ucld Co111S B(lx Corporation 121)2 l\lcC av,r "'' 1 n~ -11 '6' S!•!" R.,. l'1J1, B::1,'l-e .. .,"" 0 I'• M 11 '' !•1 ll~ ~ .. 11 •4 W A\f' Santa An;i 1> fill 1hr1 ' N~ IM l h r ~n OD 126 1'1f. g~o~v•11 110 l t d b th r'..i see,:• 40l n "~1 s11S..:':,d 11/.l 111 " s~~•R n1"1'o pos \Al a e y e rc~1gna r.:~ f .,~ 1, t:, ~ • 1 ,1~ au nn 1 ft) ~~ <;,.. 5•l ~·1 Sum i 0~10 • Bu Nor l1~ they're in take a spin! lion or Le roy 11 Crager Lur1g i:~d G•~ • 111 • 5' 1 "" h 01 r 11J 0Bu _'!,.or fo' > F1>11"'1..,lo G OUll vne< GI ~ 31 9" U ,.,v Beach bu sinessman c wtn ll 7' S01 TMA: All 111• ll ll •'" ,•IJ.t "° fl<""' U6'Ul1 Teach•t t•! 911 u• Unv S d I I t I Mul1I IU 190 Tecl'<.w;t l ~O l 9] 1m orn was a so c er cc ~1 u..., ... 11 TtmP G1 ,, ,, t! S• c "" c 70 Of th Fo11 •<l 9ll10 3'1fowr MR •• .lltc:(lt"''o "" secret;i ry treasurer e F ,..n•1" CrOlll> T••n c... 1 • 111 C• ",,.111 Ol<ITC 111 l "Tr•v E<1 9l1111 1• firm wh ich sells vault doo rs (•"''" s•1 '!lllT11ttor Fd 1Lu 11!ll C• d~n M~" 11venty-onH •I ~1!~~ MOD HARBOR BLVO I COSTA MESA 171.t) 640 11100 U I 6•l J ~TwnC Gt 2 ~1 )ls(•mPRl.-.U ( d bo t II t 11tom i a2 '11 Tw..C nc '°' •4S C•mo So 110 sa e CJ'IO~l l X ins :i a 1ons"r11Ntm 10. t9lu11 1 Mut t lA M • C•ll ~ 11:~ d •M11I •61 •11 u~Ud t ttlOOO (dnlr-.. and l1na.~1al secun1y and IF n11 1o>e: Gro1 , •• un C•o n 1 t1 '• ~i~ :•fnJn'.JOo (mrt ' I ·~ 11/ltd Funds II )"me; '"'Pe<;_ IJJ 101 AC{m 61' 741 Ca"<IA: 110 sur\C'I ::ince s Ml' 1,... r rd 11~ 11 •1 Inc..,,, 11 1•1,13 c1o c eoc111 S _, ~ -"Sr rt r ot ... '" Scltn 711 1-Ca b"" SO 1111uorn ""' J<llnL·u cu 1 ) I"""" Am 1 4 , 1'I "•!Ill 1" , ;; ca 1., 10 --~ fWY 1 fl 9.$1 UFO c,n IM I n c. oe.o.on s In Fcbruar) 1969 as coo G•n Sec '11 • 51 .... ~ LI~ Fa C• 0 PLI' .. C.ll••~ 111 '' V•llln !196JS Co•P ft-(.160 troJler <ind l rC/l~UrCr Pr1or G"'" So< ln(Of'!'I llO su C•tlftCo 60 ~=-· F~ 1' n : ~:i SP! SI! .... ,. J If f:.~.r s:. to that time he hiut \.'ildc ex I c~rn ~' 1 ,,,l 4J ~n~sb~ 1~ !~ c11tuic11 .Mlb ('; l!IFd A I Sl I Illy' r 1 C1tt1lr I 10 penence 1n \he flnane.1111 f1 cld c n '"" 1,ta •1 60 11:~ .... ., ::~;~cc co,. d d ~ • rl<! '')l?•UfVj~ JI> IJI CCI ~ Plll5 a~ \ice prcs1 <'Ill an con 11•'"111"" ~~ 1r 1., , 'll 10 11 eco Coro t0 1roller or Occtdent r?l ~::I\ 1ng~ (. '~ 1' ~ ; ~~r:·~. 't" J1 1l 1] J1 ~~1:::-~~i: ,l 1Ho09 hf°' •n Diii> C 1 ~ an<t Loan Assoc1a1ton ~!sintnn "'~•,""'(.., 1,' ~ 19 ~ f? • .,\' /:~1t{1 c~~0r.,~' 1 111'. ,:..,v ...., lo/'no 96f !n tt<'.•" t<\ltt l •~ and nl an~~cr or lhe nc";.11~~ .. •1~~1{~ •re• '~ ~"7~L•.i;: I<•<>' ?> 7JI 1 11• O •~ll M n o • COUfl!lng (!JI l~lfln ( f l'Jr"'nl\\ r.ocl I fl'• " 1' •l 'l" ~; " l' g, a ~ l~~1~1SE I ~ I " h\mn J II \ W nd 9 !J 10 4f (fnMP"' 1G S;n i ng~ ind I .o Hl t\S.,~O('lil (IO!l ~.''.I Grin! 1 II I l6 Nt•I !1\11 5 n 6 )I C~n ~W 90 I (],,.. :"'° l It 4 ?, ~ !ft. Ii 11 11 Jl C..., .S..V• I l!r hi~ \\JfC' d!ld 1t c1 r 11\n l'l<O"' , t ·~W "'P f:d •M >11t C~nle1u tOb 0 • I T u• JI? Wnlle<I )9) •JCIC""~ l lOI> i l11ld1rn ff>~lflC at !HI r tlOf 1~" ron ,,.. •AIW1c ~d 611 •M C•t •-10 G d ( "'" r $A~ '""" n '" ''' C~t! f(J p!te \\a\ 01 en rO\I.! he I'd & , ~ , Jl l•, •• t 11 o t.1 c1nn1Alf at 1•500 lilt U 11 , •l1 8 • )t \/ 1\1 r# I II " ·~ ' ' " I~ ~! ' ~ "" .. , ..... ~ 16 . ,. JD.\ lfl" •• 16 ~ " •lO Jl ... 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''•-, I• 7}-'o -11" 2~ -o '• 111 J 9 "> ll.1\1; 3 I -1 •1 •'"'*">4'i,.;-•l 66 ~ 6l'lo M'4 I ,., :111 no-, n•• .I 1 .. , " , I•'• -ii , ifJ H IO"' 10'11 -, " 20 ""' ,,... J!O ""' 1!1 IS...._ ... 1# .f': :~:· ::>: t IOCI Joa .. JO't> 3':it + 1 :-0 ' ,... 6\oo ~1:1'"1n I~ -11' = H~~ Hh lG1 I • J 1 .. 1'1 146 ... 1 ..... + I 9, .... fl> t•h.- 10 ~ ...... ''It -? t1 tl ., l. 11 1911 'tll ~ rlO ?S IS 1l !' 700 lS " 6'\ ... J6 . l5 JI<• II 40 ~ ,.,, llJV, ' 1 21,. !1>1 11 • ;i '~I 'l'> 'l ~1.: 1J !lll •I \: llO If._. u~, 1''°' + , 'I!! 19. 71 , 71"1 ••• "l Xt It•• ... -l 'lt I j7 " :n,,, l ?l o SJ•o 2~Ul'l 1-1 " 21 • l' !l'lo -• "ll,. l \o 1\lo -•1 .. 'i·~"·" ll! •• 1 • """ -1 I J~"• 1 Slo !lJl,i. --J·K-n II~ ~ • )l<.o 7 • 10 ""' ,,. ,~, '}~ 1~-. ll lo t:it IOJ :It~ 79 • ll ,,. ,.. ~ l-1:\o .. »h )I 7'J Ill "'"' l2J 6J ,jf /0 JI I JO ... ,1 ri ~ ~ 0 15"' It ~ .. 111 ~?7'\ 1 JI 76" II J.0 • 30\t ... ...... ,. 6 10 "\.'t 1 ~,.. ""' I 1l 1J • X>\o 70~ ~ s~.. r. Jr~ ~~ ~l . l JI JI 1\00 ll 11 I• n,"' 11 "' 4! i l '• "j.l •U~ I ~ o 0 ~ t! ..... ., 11.. ~1:: JO ti , !Ho .. -" .,., ..... i1 • -.. IJ,... ~I JI•. ~· I! • ) Jt\o ... , I J6 • l J II ~ -o-00 • 11 \ -" -'" ,. . '2... 1 ... 11 _, "'· " :~ 11' 51 • ~ f~ 1 ~, ... ~ '" '" " lllt -• l, . .. -\.\ • r I I • ' • ' • ' ' • t • • t • I , ' ' ' M " M M M ~ M M M ~ ~ M ' M M M M M • M M M N M • M M M M M M " M M M M ' N ' ' ' N M M ' ' M ' • ' M M • • • ' • ' • • ' ~ • •• ' .. .. •• ' .. ' " .. .. " .. I" .. •• •• ' " • .. " " • • • ' ~I ~ NI • .. .. E I I • ' I I l! ~! ~ .. IColW lf\111 60 ~:1,:.~ 'JD "...cl• 60 IC•"""' llOll ~:~~°,!~ 1lf ICY U I '11 IC•Mr(;l}(I ICIVI O/'IO 110 IC Clele Co IOI IC ocit 018 + IC Oii pt Al 'XI K mbCk 70 IC <>t• DS ao IC <>nevNS H IC .,,,.., ol• 1S IC nr>ev "' lS IC RMV O'IO IC '°'Co ICLM ) ll• lo.:ngn • lq K(ltll nv 10 lo.:OPP<!' • 6(l "-" . lro ~coro "" I( ,.. co 0 IC ••o•~~ ·~ " .. ., ... ' ~· l •( G•> I •S L1m'n St•t Li nell n el l~no R 1 el LI 00. S l•1 S eg \.II Le1 5g P111l l ••>Co D111 l••10 pl ?O L•• rwe• )0 Lt~•N $11 lf"!Otll •O L•nPC"" ao lf.,VI Inn l •nm" I 109 l!V! F cl (11> l•• F nc 711 lff Co LFE Co o \.0 l bOFn 10 lib oi:-or• n t bbMrN l L be V(P 10 lb<vLn 7311 L bVLn pf 2S l tV My l-50 t.,lgg M p 1 l l •E 10 Lnr<>"'Nt 1 t nd " l l .,g en VI l noTV ,..,.. l ngTV o ~ lO<!f(OP Llonnd~O l l """ c " t on o!87 LO<~<lff'd A LDPW Tne1 ) Londontwn Loni Set"' I l one\ " • 10 L<>ntSG~ '' Lon9 ILi '' t:i.l'co ~ 15 LI Lf!'<I ti lnuv GE ~I t .... l,N,uh •• Low1ns n 90 Lui> 10 111 Luc'• ~r ~b lu<I ow Oii l.,,,.,,5 l umt nc LVO Co<> l •kt1 YnqJI l Ykt• Y1>11 Pl M4c• F XIII M1cOon <I :;o M•U• Co JO M•CY llH I M..:1 Fd 1 Oft Mttt So Ga Maoc (~ oO M•onvO• I XI Mt o •llO tA•nM nd 5.lb Manoow n M•n H•n J l MAPCO 10 M• •!ti ~O M• tO 10 M• O D AJ M• •mon Mo Md 10 M~ onlb l l M•• ~n 2/o Ao OU Com Ma o 10 M1 11Fd O h A nM 1 0 M•Vtt(l/D so No• o Co ?I M•1on I• n MIS•tY F• I Ma ••VF !n Mii t O M1vos1 v.i l>ll•DolO '!O•v W '>Db M•• 10 1 101 MCA nc M) Mc Co a I -1111> "''"• ?O Mc.C 111450 MCcvo!ol6 M<Oe m b Mcl'><inl d Ci> MrOonnD •o Mee> Ed 1 ao McG .. H 6(1 McC.H 01;0 McG"" Don Mein • 1 l M<IC•~ l1e Mcl•an IVA Mclou n S M<N• 1'tl M••d Coro Me•o o Al ao "••tto ll l•n Mt'd11••C ! lQ #'Fvf:: IJ Mev S~o I M'mo •• Co M~ <•n~ •O M <I\ 1 ;>11 Me edl!M .10 Mt•• Pt 0 ,, •• ' 0!110 A. e\oP O!l 10 M"••bT I•• ;:G,,: Mr'l 2 Me omtt 50 Me E c l'l!I MG C nv 10 ~ ~~ y~b~ ' Mclldo ~ MOCO'lf I~ MdSU 101 Mott II ·~ M 0.,, 0 J M ~~sLl!s 10 M Bod !O Mlnn\\M ll A """ lO M "n(o 7 00 M •Fl ~ JP, MoPf( A, ! MP Ct"' ~Q Mol'lllJS "°" Mooo 1•0 Mnn~, l ~ Mnl11U; 0• ~ N"O Oll<I A< ""O "t n I~ """"'" ,., ! "'~"""'"' n<j M "" ~E~ tn hon•n 1~ N'on •c! 171 ~"nOUt r ! A Pw 8 I 0"Y ~ •rlo """ .... c-,, Moo•"J'' Mo • S • I "'lo '" •• .. ) l ThursaiJ January 1 1911 5C Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ·-lhil 1--------------l.MI.) ""*~c .... c... Fi~ ' " 11) ll • ne 11 • , ll'li ·1 t i Il l 11 .. ' ' .. 1ns Jl 11 ~~ I I ll • ., . " 1/ ;" 11 " . " ' " I G 5.1\lw • • 0 •l • <I !I ' l• 71 " ' -L-" . . " .~ ~] 119 • • ' . J t IS o ll l l 11&) ,, l I JO.l o '" •3 7• • . " ' " ' . ll II., •l 1 • ' • " • ., .. 'l " ,. n " , • • • I ' •I ' " " • ' ' ! 111 • , . " " .. • , .. .. " ~ • u " . . , ' , " •• " ". ,_ "' • , , 4~ S I , ' ~, J' . ". J]J •• '" 19l 31 ' " , .. ' " l J n•. •1 7j ... 1 0 36 YI/ JO ' " . " " . . ., l ) 5~ ' oO • II 29 t • • l~J ! • 11 •0 " . •~ S1 ,.. ~. ' "' " • 'l ,., .. "' " 'tt " • • , .. ,i " " ' " ,, " • " ~ " .. • .. '" " " " " '" ' • .. ... " " i~lo • • ' '" "' .. "' : . ' • " • • " " • •s•, j, " ' " ,., ,. l~ • , , • !M U • • • " ,! ••• " • , ' • • '" ., " .. • " " " ' '" " ' 11 ,, ' " • • • " ... i :· ' ' • • . ' .. ' , , " " " " . ' '" • •• " "" " " " ". '" • • .. " . " . , . , " " .. •• • .. ' , .. " . " , .. ' . • , 11•, ,. " ,., ,. ,,,, > ,. '"' '" '" " " " . " " '" ' " '" " . " " '" • • " . .. ,,. '" " . ~; 't " . '" " • .. .. " 11 .. -• " • ' " , . -" ,, . " '. -,, JI' + ~·-16 I + ,, " ' JS• -t JO ' ~ "' +' ' . " " i' " , ' . " . 36 • + ~ + " ' '" ~~. - " • .. .. " . Stoel< Leaden MOST 811ARES '" , . , " ~ • " • , .. ,1 " '" " • , . :in • )0 . ., • • "II 1l ll 70 70 -0~-•• ' ,. " ' " . " " ' • .. • " '" . " " " " " .. " . .. ' • • " , " '" " ..... ... , .............................................................. ! 1a..1 """ "-,_ cia. ~~11..':¥!-"' t; U\Ai n<:t 1J\ .+ 'Ii Stocks Irregular In Heavy Trading !:r.t:J!,,. .. ·-~o" l«h Mir lli -S- '" l l ~ 'I )I•• . ~ ... ~ 11 n 161 , •• . " n1 fJ I " . 31 37 1' 11 • 76 1 • •71 '' ' "' 1" ,, . ' ,. ' " "' ,, ... ?I 6~ . .. ~·1 • ., ' ... " . . ' ol I ' . ' . l I 1 ~ ' . ••• '1 7 • ... 71 )I • " . UI 13.,_ " ~· ll7 1j • ,. 11'- 0l ?J 11' " lll 50 • 7l 11 • 1 n 1 l J " l• "8 ... 00 lo<\ I " ~' ~ ' ' . ' . l l? l• ;a J• ' ' ' .. • • 6) • • ' • 01 , ol 61 .. ,, !' " " " '', • .. • " ~ ,, ; , " tt• . .. • T:~"o:;r;' C11 J :i=v;:,1 Jill l!~v~ "'' t: ...... f '5 THln«I I 3:1 T-wl A. NE\V YORK (UPI) -Profit taking gave the t~ 't'~• 5lOClr market an 1rreguJar lJOk Thursday follo wtng l::a.:~ 1 !l t\VO co nsecutive advances Turnover was heavy t:! ! ru: )060 The 00\V Jones Industrial Average was orf 0 14 t::1~ ~ at 8:l7 83 near the close But advances v. ere leading ;::0~Mt 1./. declJnes a50 to 573 00 1 678 Issues On lhe tape f::J'~ !.o'° A \olume of a rou nd 16 000 000 sha res compared ,::r·Apr: \\ 1lh 16 960 000 shares traded \Vednesday ;~~i.i'1 ~ Closing prices included Af\-1 T&T 5-0 1/2 up 3/8 ll::::JW 1~ Beth St 23 off 118 Chrysler 26 718 off 1/2 DuPont lh' g,;i,. 1~ 135 Ford 54 3 4 up 1/8 Gen I I 91 7 8 nn 1 R Gen Tl1Hw11M •a ~lolors 79 1/8 off 14 and IBM 316 1/4 off 1 3/4 l!~ 1 _: T mken 1 IO The market 1s having trouble gelling up any l.:1~1;~ ~ further Lucien Hooper analvst for W E Hutton ~~~ \: & Co commented I le noted that while there 1s ;o::.. \111 0 f' optimism on \Vall Street over the Ion.it term the lr:~~ ~r, , ma1ket is overbought and many issues are being li~:Z~I~ ".J sprinkled \\1th profit taking Tr•n•m•• s1 • : c... -c \ ~ ______ :,.~.;.;~;.;-,:;,:;.;,.;;;.:,,.,,,,,tciti:ic"'''"''"""'·"'''""-"''·'Q"'••'''-•'"ll''"'fi'" •o .+ ~, J?S 17'1 lli 'o 17 .... • 0•11q IC 21'.l! &I~ " l~=~:!~~on: ' ', l• ]) )&I' )ltveruJ , .io •J 3lV, Jl 'll' -"" T •Vt,. pl ' •Sil • 51• !f'I'>"' --~ ~!:","••<SO I 31 lQ?t ~, o0 _ ,, Tt Con l lh 111 l S•o r ~,,... ¥ J? 1)0 11 1't T l(O" ofllll ",6s U•"'•+~•SolitVC01 11no 1 .. 1J Tr •neMIO !Y o lll:o B o + I n • f • .._ • ftOOllt•n Pd ll 1J • 1• 1• o -• S!Ofl•W 190 ?n TllW N: • .~ •• 1)1.1, 11 + 15 0 1111"<1 511 'IJ ~ 1No ..... TRW pf&lll ...,, 'I• SuttWol ".'11 • oTRWt>!<40 15' II>'• '' f'll -"ll ~v v Dt> Ibo b • T11clnGE n Jt lO • t <. '•S WoA. 00 l 11 000 Ml o -~fwtf'll Conl 19 '• ~ •-~S11buC061 Jl•2 •10\>21'.lll -•TvtCort> 7~~;: j,, ~,: ... ~~~~·""..1 60 l n· 11i: t,1~-• !5 ~' O o -•1 Sun C~tm •O I• I'~ lll:o llt~i'1 •••• -6 6 'o ~ 6 0 ~u~OI b 11 'I •~ -11 ~ T ~ '""'~ ··~ \I 7J 7l'-'o 11 • .+ "-Sun D 1117 lS O •l~, • ~, •I~ -}1 UAL of oO ; 10 b 10 10 'o -+ o SunlMltm IG 1 '6 ~ ?J • 2SO,. -~ UARCO I 10 •Ji l• 3 ~ ~'"''" nd IQ lQ l ~ '°"' 11 +V.IJG Co 21 '1 " &,! .. ~~·· ~ .~~n~~ ~Jri" s' ~'>. I d + UMC ntt 'l 9 l: ' •:, 1 ~~P Y•IY 1 o n 11 , H ~ Jt ~ H~· t~., 't. "I• 7 1 I ~uo 0 •O '1 " 17 lll uni NV l llrt !>-1: t' fl 1~ t , u~,.,~~ ·~~ 2~ 3~' ~ >iZ ~ e~ ~:"1.t,.1 , l• 1 . ] •SW•n• .0• ,, 10 . 10 IQ ~ IJnon (OP .~HT;'!~, s.D a~0 i.o 0 l~r ,.~ ~"'tl..:e~E1"01lIJ 01 6• l> l o -•11VDGn o l oOO 1 !l l<I J! ?•UnOCI l.O '° 1 '• vllOfl Oonn JI l o O o O o -V. UO<:• pr.IJO ': ':\ ';t !; -T-Un P•c(o1 " ' " ' " ~ ' ,. -.11 T• • 11<11 60 .iol 2•, !.114 u 1,, H~i::or!i11 J ,~ l ~ '-T•<ol 10 oOO:IC-"-lO ~Xtvr+l'I UnloMm100 30 • Jf • l~" t• 1..,. IM I) 11'4 O'lo lG!~ -Unl ov•! 10 •• I • -• l •ll YPl8 1 "1~ ,, .. 1'.11-V.Unlrov• Pl l Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List lo/E'6' 'VO P~ 4 r ,.., d1v ' comolt r """ Cl n J OC:.k; E •{hint~ p c11 i•leo l~d1 l k •ft Le,. -A B- ' " " " ' • • ~· • • ' • • " " • ,. " • • • • " ,,,: " • " ' • ,00 ., .. " ' ' . .. • •• • H: I"" '" .. '. , .. " . , " , ' . .. ' ' • , " • • • ' • " . ' " ' . " " ' ' " ' . ' , ' ' .. ,. ... . ' . )11 ~ ,, . l~ r, : " . " . , . ' I~ ~: ,' I l~ ' ' ' . " , ~: l , ~ " " • • M I• . ' • ,) ' ' " ' ', " ' ,. ' • • • • • ,. " ' ' " .. " .. ". .. ' '" • • "" Clld1 ) " ' • " ' " " " ' ' "' " ' .. ,. ' '" "' ' l ' •• '. " ' " " ' . i .. " • • • • , "' " " " . ' " . 1J J; • • "' J ~ ~ ' ..I• JS • ' . ' '" " ' " ' . ,., " .. ' . ... .. ~ • " • .. '" .. , " • ,,, ' . , •• " ~ ' . "' " • " '" • ~ i . '" • " ,, l > I< ' " • ,. " , • ' " ' " '. • ' " , • • , ' ' " ' ' " ' ' ' . ... ' ' . " " . ,, • • • ' '"' '" • ' " • • , • , " •• ' " " • • .. " I ' • 26 l _).. • . .. , I~ :10 " ' . ' . , .. 17 Ju• '~ . " " " " ' " .. " ' ' J' ' , • • • ". ' .. ' ., " ' ' ,' ' " " " ' I • , " " " u " ' " • ' • " . 3 15 • .. jl 79 lH• • l '" "' " • " In 1 " " " '" ' . • '" ". '" '" ' . '" ,,. " " " . .. . , " . lJ ltb • • • " . • ' .. . " l~ ,~ • ' ' I ~~ l' " .. " ~ r. ' " " • l " " '" "' . , "' " " " j "' " n ,1 l !l ~ ' .. • '" " , . ' • .. • .. " • .. ' , . , . • • • ' ll~• ' • . , • " '" ,., '" • ' " " • 'I " , . '" '" Ui.! ,. • ~ l •• . , ,1. "' •• • '" .. '" ,,. 1Ho " "' '" "" .. !• , .. '" • .. • ~~ " ,.. ,. . • H I\ 12•• .. ,., " '. '" •• ,. "' 1 • ..: ' , .. "' • '• '"' ' . ... " ' . • ••• ~~ '' "' " '" • " IO J. 1GW " . , " ,, • ,. ,,_ " l ' • • t11• Nit (Ml ) Mltll LM Cine Cfll • •• Mltll Law Clew C:/11 DAil Y Pl LOT :Jj "" -"" '" " ''" + 1,9 "" + ~ ,. . lllh .. ~ J +I\\ 'l,P DAILY ~!LOT Tlwr ... 1, J .. ,., 7, 1971 ·~.==~~~~~--~---------------------------------""'"""' Everyone Hai Something That Someone Elae Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS The Biggest Marketptace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Fi nd It, Trade It With a Want Ad . . -···-··-···---- JNVESTMENT PROPERTIES 140' Frontage on busy Newport Blvd. Zoned C-2: Lot is paved and has small building now used as drive-in. Total price $84,000. Submit on Terms Navel Orange Grove in Arlington Heights. 10.6 Acres. Good production. Beautiful land for future development. Owner will trade $40,000 equJty for Orange County Property. Recreational Trailer Park on the Water at Lake Elsinore. 45 Spaces plus 6 Motel Rooms. Gross income approximately $25 ,000 per year. Total Price $124.000 Submit $18.000 Down 12 Unit Commercial on Coast Hwy. near The Bay Club. Income over $11,500 per year. Price $75,000 Submit on Down. Good Tax Shel ter. For further information concerning these and olJ'ler investment properties call Geor ge Taber 64«>7171 __ / ·--THE REAL ESTATERS . . ,, .. . ........ ···-·--·---···· ·-·--·-.. . General General READ THIS U yo u are in the market for a new home don't miss this oppor tunity. See these cus· tomized new homes built by Frank H. Ayres & Son located in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach. There are four credit rejections in Unit VI available for im· mediate occupancy. These homes are 4 & 5 bedroom. 2 & 3 bath, 2 or 3 garage & as large as 3000 sq. ft. Selections may be made in our new Unit V II for occupancy in f\.Jay or June. These homes are priced from $28,990 to $43.000 and vary in size from 3 to 7 bedrooms, 2 to 4 baths; with shake or Mission tile roofs, fire· places. underground utilities, concrete drive· ways, bltns and shag carpeting. There is VA/ FHA & conventional financing available. LA CUESTA HOMES on Brookhurst Huntington Buch & Atlanta 968·2929, 968· 1338 ------------------ General General Executive Home ······-····----~----·-· . ·-· -· ·----·-·--··-·· General General NEWPORT H E IGHTS· 3 BDRMS. This sharp 2 bath home is ideally located fo r grammar -Jr. Hig h • 1-farbor High schools. Only minutes from beach areas. This home has been comp. redecorated, w/new drapes, shag carpets: completely repainted in decor- ator colors. Only asking $33.950. See this one before btlying your new home. * * * * * * TUSTIN. TRY 10% DOWN and a ssun1e 6% lfh loan. Ov,,ner trans. & niust sell beaut. Broadmoor Exclusives Gar· den home. Cerarnic tile; \vallpaper, taste· fully draped thruout. Air-conditioned. Land- scaped for mi n. ya rd care. Spr inklers. Short distance to schools. markets, freeways. Will sell at $33,950. Don't overlook this one. CHIL T ROBINETT, REAL TOR 645-0128 General Genera l 4 BIG BEDROOMS $26,500 * 2 On The Lot. 2 Bedroom l~ouse & 1 Bedroom Garage Apt. on lar&e F.-side: lot. Try lO'i~ down. I~ ...._,.,,.,, I ~ I ...._,,,, .. I~ General PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES Newly listed-Lot .;;;60; perfect for the fam· ily \Vho wa nts a spacious waterfront home . 4 Extra lge BR .. 4 Ba., pwdr. rm. Lge. !iv. rm . & den; 3 ca r garage. Beaut. patio/garden \\'/rm fo r pool ; deck & dock. By App't. 833 F or complete information on all homes & lots, please call: BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Dover Dr., Suite J, N.B. 642-4620 ·---------· Costa M•sa BEST BUYI 3 Bdrms., l ~J baths, Custom built. P11ced to 5ell a t S:!-l,000 CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 FHA or VII. Larg(' & moder n 3 BR + huge bonus room. Heavy shake roof, w/s carpets, frp!c, bltn~. fam ily 1"00111, coverrd patio & Iota of brick -...·ork. \.\'hat 1. buy fl t 132.9j()! ! Call 5-15-8424 , South Coast Realtors I !"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'!"'~!"'!"'~~~!"'~~~~~!"'~ I GOOD 5 BR hse on U:in-donb(orry in No. C . i\f , General General Assuine e.xisting · lll'A loan of approx S:!J.750 w/intere.st a! only 6"t $2300 rio-...·n 3 BDRM. SAVINGS ACCOUNT F · & 5 p;iymn1. Chas. C. M!lJ'tin r1. at. 12:30..4 :30 nitr. 51g..119:> * OPEN * \Vanta gardener to ke ep your 215 MARIGOLD, CdM huge ya rd looking Jike 8 Charming 3 BR. 2 Ba. home. BY Owner il.t rl!A appraisal k · I I Virw from lge. livlng rm. $21.m. Nr gramn1ar & high par·? A choice o arge, schools, 3 b•, "'"· drp•. I I I 1 · · St c!uderl patio & sundeck, O\·r y poos o swim In PLUS 60 IT. LOT. garage, patio, planters, \1·ith no 111air11enance? So me. fenced yard. 870 Congress. one rise to l\'orry about the SEMPLE Owner 54S-1086 ou1s1cle ma1nte t1a nce of your Real Ei.tate 675-2101 hnmr~ \\'ant a!I 1his plus 2.115 E , Coast H1vy., CdM NO DOWN! Owner mu~t payn1c nts Jess 1han rent? n1ove. Assume rHA 71'2% Ollts!and1ng Villa Pacifi c Balboa Island !nan, 3 hr + lam, Lri Oen•r•I General liiiii_,_.._ __________ with 6% % YA Loan Dollars at Discount You 1\.'ill agrel' when you sec this chC'ery rt'decorated FOUR BDRr.t Din. Rn1 ., f'arn. Rm. two ba!h home, sparkling Bi l gas kit. \Vilh ceramic tile counters and loads of cabinets. Double garage, large 22·~w· oover. ed & enclosed, v.'ell lit for evening entertainment, cus- tom patio. Located on qiJ 1et cul-de-sac 11treet near·do-...·n· to"·n Costa Mesa. (0 UR Start the Ne.v Year off in your O\l'n 4 llf'rlroorn beaury -...·ith large family room, elec blt.ns, and all The yard your kids can use. \Valk to school or South Coast Plaza tor shopping. Assume 61.~'.;(. an- nual pcrcen(age ra~e loan and have total payn1ent of onl y $183! ! $26,95() Takes i t~ Town House now available ----------cul-de-sac: lot 1 yr flld. with J~' ':M Joan. ASK FOR 3 BR, 2 ba, gar, patio. sm i\1esa \\loods.' S 3 2, 9 5 0. New port f'AT E'AK!N lot. $10.00J do11•n, carry 1st. 1 ="=.'=-="=·"=·======= 138 Topaz. 673--0252 1 • CHANNEL BA YFRONT Here Is a truly fantastic 2 year old hon1e with all 1he features a person could want. Yes, even a high baJ. a.nee, as&um1ble VA Joan payable $31Z pl'r mo. The home hu 4 bedtm5, 2\) baths, formal dining, fa m- ily room, heated and: filler. f!d pool "'ith jacuzzi and aU the extra& from elec garage door opener to outside rad1. ant heating. This is elegant Jiving and entertaining at its be5t. You must see to appreciate. COATS & WALLA.CE REALTd'RS -546-4141- (0p~n E v e n ings) ., Fai rview 646·8811 (anytime) Coles worthy College P a rk Fountain Valley BY O\\INER: 4 BR. 3 Yrs yuung. Xlnt cond thru-0ut. In very fine area. 9655 La Amapola Ave, 968-3730 Your be!t bayfront buy is this 4 bdrm., 31h .,,_th home with 3 car garage & pier plus f1.oat. Call for more great details. It wo n't last at $135,000. EASTBLUFF & Co. Realtor l"-.'e\.\'J'l<)rt Beach Otftce 1028 Bayside Dr. POOL Cab;ina. den. fa mily rm., 3 herlrms, dble frplc, hlfns. S34.950. Assume $27,oon FHA 63~ loan~ Ha rbor H ighlands WILLIAM WINTON, Realtor YEAR END SPECIAL ATI"'""""""""""'""'""""" ONLY $34,950 \VITH FHA AND VA TERlllS). 3 BEDRM BEACH $19,950 FANTASTIC BIG 5 Room for lots of kids \Ve ha\'e 5 lwdrooms and li1ree ba th11. \\'ant 10 11-...·un:' \\le havr a bC'autr rot pool. \Van! to buy 11 boa!~ \\le havl! room ro park off the s!N'et , \~'ant /I. 1'\lo'ing sel? \Ve have roo111 for that too. \Van1 a fine school rlislr1ct :' f'-,'ew. por!-Cnsla :-.:Iesa. \Van ta fai r prier? $52,00'.:I. Phone 646-TI71 STOP READING AD'S JEAN SMITH, RLTR. 400 E:. 171h St, CL\! 646-325:> BY 0\VNER. 3 BR, 2 BA. Bi t-ins. \Valklng dlslanef! i\lariner's school & shnp- ping . Principals on I y 646-7.104 229 Merine, B1lboa lslend 675-3331 6-Mr•I ,YOUR FIRST HOME? ~n you are lartunate in- dHd, for we ha.ve tor you tlM! "little honeymoon cot. taie" in Cnrona de! ~!ar. So .m1ny dtta.m of and so ~w find. Plenty ot room tor expantlon on thi a south-Of· th& highway R.·2 lot and only 1054 DOWl'J • NO 2nd T.O .• NO PREPAYMENT PEN· ALTY AND NO LOAN FEE beca.USe the owner will car. ry a 90% loan. . ONLY $36.SOO Don't Delay Call Today """"' o ·THEREAL '""'-ESTATERS ' ', ' '·1 ~-,,,.-,..,.-----REDUCED $1300 NOW $21,700 WNt a great barga.in. Add Y*fY little do-...•n for a double bargain. Spotless 3 Bed. f'CIOm&, sp&rkl!ng kopper kettlf' kitchen. large living room -...11h white hr1ck fire. place. Q\Jiet neighbor hood. Laree tref' Jin~ grounds. All types tin&.ncing availah!e. Excellent starttr home Bet- ttr hurry.. · 645-0303 FOREST E. OLSON REALTORS 2299 HARBOR COSTA MESA PERSONALITY PLUS This charming 5 bedroom Bar-Harbor Home bu ml ICJ. ft. of Juxuty llvin&: 1p.a~ Oll-.<me floor. The.r,. la e&tinar ~ In the kitchen, • cood limd family room with a llnoloce· Fntohly rtde=· atmd. New carpets in 4 bf'd.. rooms. One of om. Me1a'1 fii)eat. Would )'CIU believe p.\950, MG-2313 o Tl![ Rf.Al, "'-e;TA'J'J :Rs IRVINE TERRACE co: TS WALLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4454 • M . M. LaBarde, Rltr. 646-0555 Evf's: 646-4579 FIRST TIME ADVERTISED A HOI\-1E THAT Ol'~FERS EVERYTil!NG! ! * Custom built * C'jrcular pool * ocean view * private beach * prime location. Call to se~. $79,500. \Ve almost c!idn"t believe: 11 ourselve~: Only Ii ye.us young and loadrd \\'ilh charm. 3 large bC'drooms, 2 baths. All Jatl'st deluxe buJJf. ins, Beautiful pa tio. Pm. fessionalJy landscapetl, $166 1110. pays all. f'11ntastic year end bargain. Don't delay: -And 6<'e this hea ul1 fu] 5 hedroo1n, 3 ba!h homp 1~·i~h Large black 11•alnu 1 paneled family rmm. cl c<:anl lormal din'1nJZ room, con1pe1r!y car- peted. cu s ( o 111 firaped lhroughout_ f.f anicured land- sc;.ping, cnmplete sprinklrr syG IPn1. hlock -...·alls ;ind re~rly fnr Hflppy l'·arnlly L1 \·1ng. Cal] now tor !how. in~ 546-2313 Corona del Mar IRVINE TERRACE Huntington Beach The Best of Everything 1-;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;I D IVORCE 3 BR. with one of lhe most practical & servicable htd. &: Did. pools lr lhe Terrace, Dbl. garage \vllge. cov. car- port, boat storage or u'Ork- .!lhop, On cholce, quiet s~et. Low ma.int. yard. Drive by/~=~=======' I 1820 Tahuna Terra~ & call ~ Coldwell.Banker CRV $33,950 FOREST E. OLSON Call now 962-5583 Custom qua!ily 3 BR, home I 1 on Galalta Terrace. Jn xln t C'Onr! .• \Vil h lhe best ocr.an, harbor & e1ty 1·iew. Triple garage, li::e. pnoL i.AJI\.' ma.int. yard. KJNGSIZE hdrn1s.: storage g a 1 or I:': fa mily rn1 .. hlt -in BBQ & bar: lgc., full vie1v Jiving rn1. & di ning rm. App 't. only, Forces sale ol lhis imm11.cu- la te near-ne1v 3 bedrm 2 ba 1 ll, custo1n1zf'd Ayfes Bu1h Homf'. All bltn11, rJrps, \.\'/w Cl'Ptg, frplc, shakt rool. professionally land. scaped, block \\;all. HEATED POOL U.!1 to show. Macnab-Irvine ..........._ AIUI COii-~ TrK'. nealtilrs Sha1·pest l\1eadow Home in Luxurious Living! Realty Company ~ 19131 Brookhurst Ave ciiy f''ully ca.ry>eted & drap. f&.b ulou11 upgrad~ "Bluffs" THE Huntington Beach· "d, 4 bedrooni 3 bath, 60xl:?ll BOAT LOVERS Solisbury only one mile from Jrunting- ton Stare Beach. Assume 7* lolln a s!tal at $32,990! ! Call' for appt., 968-2929 Brok-833.0700 ~2430 1 ---"''-"-"""-'.C:.:::C::.:...._ fc1u:C'rl lot, heavy shake-roof Angtl!ta. 2 BR. model on SPECTACULAR VIEW l ======~==I TAYLOR co big tr!'c~. \1·eJJ landscaped: WATERFRONT one level. Custom,. profess. Can ht-enjoyed frorn through. • y,•ood buminJ,t' fireplace, 315 l\IARJNE AVE. 673-6900 I !"'!!"'!!"'!!!!!!~!!!!~""""'" dtcorated • move Jn ccnd. out this unusual 3 bedroom 6 U 'ts /P I large kitchen with aU mod-BARGAIN BALBOA ISLAND 4 B d "m.ptoousmstr sulre. ldeaL pi"· ,..,., ...... rt,.bl• d•" born•. nl W 00 C ITY LIGHTS VIEW LI f ti r· * 8 room I d ....,,. .._u,..,. ~" $75 000 ood d bl f'rll bl!n appliance.~ + big \If' al one 0 ie inC's( ma. SPACIOUS HOME \\'ANTED Y situate on corner. Every The 2-story glaS! living room • g s pen a e Prestige Dover Shores. 4 BR, fa n1lly room, covered pat!o rinas in Calif. Huge 2 bed-3j()O lo 4J0o sq. ft. living ' ! 2 ex~a. CA~ NOW to; app't, \iiall add.~ to lhe beauty as Exclusive v.i th us· Eastside! ! fam rm, formal DR A: ~·;, dble garage. · room IHllt with deluxe built-arta. 5 BR minimum. Lge Stratford As ng $4 .:00. Won I last, do the king-sized pool and 2 BR, l BA each, Bl tns, has, Look~ like a modrl ht'I Di111ng roon1. r irrp]il.CC'. !iv & din rm. Corona del Ask for Etta Frteman the two ga! operated fire reJrig., crplg, drps, fen ced hon1e. $124,JOO l' Pr1val r lanai overlooking !ll~r l~igh School Dis!. years old. hll~ pits. The large livi ng roo111 . w com~le!e privary, i;epar. QUIET CUL-OE-SAC your "'"'rl hnal dock. Li\•ing Sti·ess\ng importance on e.l'erytl11ng~1 Only $5fij() format dining room and fam· ;;~ ~:~~~~~: ~~~~~e~t 1f~~~ i\lamt mot~ !1v 3 , , 8 ."R"· Rlso!at 1 1'rl 962-4471 ( ::::.) 546·110J i~ "OOd at lluntingtnn (I.la.. lt>ca11on, constn1ction, size, down 1o S226. tntal G.t, pay- ily room fur!her enhance . ,, G od. 1 , ms r sune, .• m or rina, Pr1o>cd 10 ~r)I now! eond1tinn. Harbor or OCf'~n menl this great family and enter. anc1ng . o erms. pool, S6:J,9:ic> SELL OR TRADE S•lR.:J()(I. Dial 962-55/IZ, view. Easy access to sa1!-MAR INER REALTY 315 MARINE AVE. 673-691Xl tainment oriented home. ··our 2Jrll Year" BY OWNER FOREST (. OLSON ino: Only Pl'OP"l"IY owne i·11 842-SS41 BALBOA ISLAND Please call tor app't. $87,500. Wesley N. T aylor Co. rts[l{lnri, Rlreac!y \\'nrking °"'==,....==~-oc.,,-,.-DOVJ·:r. :>HORES * l:NOB. "'/reallors. Cn.11 673-ti22J i\IODEL llO"\.I E. Builders LIVE MODERN RF.AL TOR.<; STRL"CTE D VIE\!/* Spac-lnr Realtors J UST R EDUCED closMu1 Fully car~ttd & Cu~toni Builf, CALIFORNIA 2111 San Joaquin lliU~ Roar! 101.1~ 8 r'-J()ms + se1-v1c~ 19131 Rrookhuri;t /\\'E', 1n1marulatrly land.sC11 ped, CONTE 642 8235 67.S..3210 Call 64S.3928, Eves: 642-0185 Nr-...·port Cent>'r 6·1-1·4~10 fl(lrr ]l ..L pantry. 14 BR-JIJ Ht11111ngton 8<'11ch LovtJy .'\ .t-rlC'n "' 3 ba1h-Sparkllni;:-rlecora tor colon. r.tPORARY. L 0 w, • __ .:.:.:c:cc:c.:c....:::c:.:::..._ ron!ns. Only 1 1 ~ hlks. to the .' s~room· .• 2 b•llt· .. 1-ic t'llmblinr rock roofed home.I"""""""""'""""'""'"""" V t ' Y RA •, 2 frp!rs, v.·et ba., all 675 3000 " '"'-' ~ " .,. START THE aca IOn ear l0flllll".l !t11rpetedi k11r.hen. .. rx-ran. Hdll'rl. firs .. la!h &· IV 1111 h!tns. ~"' FHAfVA Wrought lmn and block "'a.II HIGH ON A HILL d '·'· ,."''' "' p!11s1rr "'a!Js. Reduced to )\:o Dow" •v,,l,ble, 130.~., , encloses the property com-NEW YEAR RIGHT Aroun \1·111 t1'<1d1" do1vn 2 BR & rirn . , , ,, •·,i; " " "''" Plot.Jy. '"' l•"d•c•pt•g-". EAST BLUFF 1 .__ ... in SiCl.00() rangp or submit Rl'ill E~tatc Sen·1t1e. °'" ,500. Call ~5-8424, South Coast " ... , " ... u.. C•ii !or •• , •p-to tmc•t tA · '""drooms, ope11 ,,..am c111r. 0 L c R I E I I R II "' ...-· " " fnr 1neom(· property, Jn Thf'-lillr!Jor Arf'11. e a n y e a s a e e11 ors 1!sts of lush ev!rgreen Helaht gives view pl us ~-i;ec thl~ I bedroom D"ll 1ngs, balrony, lovely p11.110 I 2s-E c It c ,,--,..,,_~=--=~~I 1 · ta-., " Ca!! 6,1:?.!¥.IIS !Qr show1n11: DOVER SHOR ES "" · na.~t 1''Y·· dLlt V2 MILE T O OC EAN P antin11 . ._,.se cement pa. cJuslon. Ne1vport Be&ch }louse plu.~ 11:uest i'lpar!ment nn the gN"en h111t, n"'!U'bY )')""' fi-1•1·7270 12 t10. fenced ott HEATED most desirable area. \Valls nn /I. bt.autifu l R-2 lot in )YIOI al'ld pu!!1ng green. A .,Q Polaris Dril'e !.!'l1·rly, lfl r_ge one-story 4 BR.1 "~==~~~~~--,• Sty. Cnndo: 4 BR. 211 Ba. AND FILTERED SWIM· of rlass to Jtving room, lam. Corona de! l\·lar. OnlvS32,!)0(J sr:iacious horn .. u1 a beau-1 .,,~r'.""n~re~d~IQ~•~o~H~l~!IS .... 000!!!!!!! 31t h111h home 1\'1!h poiiJ & RUST IC CHARM Bltns. Frplc. Pa nf"lerl 11v. ll!JNG POOL. Optn beamed lly room anrl dining area. '2 • \Viih exrt'!lent 1'" rm s. nrully ma1n1ainrrl carelrl'e l>'rr1f1r 11r1v. Large f;ini. $6,000 DOWN r1n. Jgr natio. 011'ner mov- eeil lng:!I in Living Rm. Din-spacioll.'1 txinns + ma~tr r 673-8550 ~ct!ini;:: In 1he B!u lfs only HARBOR VIEW rm '1 frplc. & ll'e! bar. Corner r1uplcx. belo11' Coas! C'rl $-;inx1c1us Price onlv ing Rm. IJld B/I Electric suite • 21A baths An excel-$16.800, Your numhf'r lo call HOMES $112.~. H\\y_ 2 BR. ell.Ch with room $2~,900 o -...·ner l\'/finance ca kit. with breakfast bar. lent executive home in a tn ~ libera!ed to the easy 111 add. Shakf' roof, hd11·rl . 7';. · Three l&l'le bclnns., Two prestige area. Pro!. land-Ille 673·8550. 4 Brdrooni ~. lami!y room -fi rs.: 1mn1rd. possession. ,<;C'f' Any11n1r ·Call &lS.74.14 baths, cp" & d~pes thru .caping enh11.nces use of i:ardcn ki!chen rtn extra Uni l'f'rsity Rralt~· 673-6310 Fare! Walke r, Realtor out. Localed in ch01ce EAST-gla.u. U:iw maintenance. A larg:e loL Luxury bath "\.\'i!h 3001 F;. Coa.~t H-...y .. Cd :-.! As iume 5J,1,io;0 GI Loan s.IDE COSTA MESA Joca. m111t to let ~-appt, Call sunk('n tuh + many extras. MU~ SEL' , b 1 b , •·ri 2 t1on. A HOLIDAY SPECIAL 645.0303. "3 3 BR CONDOMINIUM S43,00Q. 1'ou ol\'n the land, ,,_ .,,, b. 1·'-'b "'d r.! •• ~ on ., l/l" mi, bath. i;lng)t t 0"1 S3l ~" 'th Gl OR Jn choice sect1on of Mont:tceL.o__________ Phonr. 641)..7171 2407 E. Coast H-...·y., CdM "'" r. a up ex ... ~ story near Douglas Aero. ~ f£ru.f$"'." WI FOREST E. OLSON 1 lo!. P \'I ply. 615-5724 or spare plan!. Exr.ellrn t"'con-lo, to be. completely redec-4 8.droom, 2 Bath & FP DREAM con AGE '=,,'.:,"""~';..'·~~-~=~ dition. PM'!!ent month ly pay. M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. REALTORS orattd including ne1v car-All For ~ 646-05.'15 Eves: 645--4579 2299 HARBOR, C.M. pet11• Priced below markel, In an excrllent Eastside com. ROOMY 2 Bdrm, SpJtt-lev~l ml'nls only .$191 P.J.T.J. Act fast on this one $130 per Mo. munity. Spacious Jiving room house PLUS an income uni t. Lar w in Rea lty, Inc, 2 IN 1 APPUANCE + $20 500 ' Total payment!. AMu~ ~~' °"'~~~""':;:;::::;:== wlth high open beam ceil· 602 Iris, C<IM 962-6988 a nytime LIVE IN ONE TV STORE PERRON ' 642.Jnl annual percentage rate FH_A Just On The Mark•t 2 ing, hu~e. mmodaster bed.rm & Costa Mffa WALK TO BEACH Ulan on thl1 be11uty. AU this $210 !X'r mtti pays all. "~ 1 I ·'•·th DENT THE OTHER Good le-cation, good lease and plua Bi l's and 2 car gan.ge graded, ~uper clean, 3 bed.· g e11.mAtogb •,rn '2~~~, · ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:; Assume 5% .... ~ Loan, 3 Blt, ..:!... -A ~. • ..,._ t S30 Ml\ INCOME I · rooms. c arm ng uo: nn 2 Ba. h~d n-. 1~1c. •i•c rruutable lo own ..• A plea. &""""' ""1'\'JCA ....,p · '"""' · w I k & L fom111.1 dining, family ore•. b t I $27 500 c··" ' -'" .,.. "' auretollve ln! Thi!'bOme la Good Term1. CaU George 2 Furnished hache.lor u~Jt1 a er e·e 1\i hath. Purcha.se ~ubject ~~8~24or on y · • ru.i lmmediat• Occupancy kit ., Jg corner Jot. Immedl. 8 cuatom, luxurious charm-T.W . lnv-e1tment Divi&ion clo11e to beach & ahopplng. 10 6 annual percentage rate Ottf'™ al FHA appraisal of ate po1&f'ssion, tlexiblf' er wi th 3 kina: 8ite bed-~7111 S~.000 Realtors GI Loan. S23.!!50. Lar~e 3 bf.drm, 2 term,. rooms: country kitchen and Georg• W illiamson 2790 II arbor Blvd. at Adams Wa Iker & Lee bath, cib!I' garage, new crpts BRASHEAR REAL TY hllle family raom, formal Realtor 545-94.91 Open 'ti! 9 Pf.1 & drps. Huge fenced corner . 147-1507 · Solisbury Rt'<•l•y "· Realty dlntna:, a&Cludtd living room 673-4350 64.S.1564 Eves. Jot. All the 1\.'ork dont. the Ch Th R I •aye 15T ~ ... PLUS a ,..,,.t, 0""' .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&i $ell L I 11 UNUSUALLY SHARP ll<•ltont p•toe ;, ''•"'· J"" movo io eaper an 801. 9A R AR Cil be>droom money.maker tha.1 1• or ease op on nd 1.a· 1 u · ed 1 7682 Edingt>r WHERE ELSE wilh IO\v FHA down pay. ' I Fa NEWPORT HEIGHTS 4 BR. 2~ ba trplc 2 car a cer in Y we pric A f7J4 l 842-4455 or 540-51-40 men!, Cl.lill 540--1151 ONLY $25,9501 r + m + p reallv reduces those month-gar, j Yl'I. old. 2200 ·Sq. Fl. only $41,500. for this lovely c11.n you get ft beautlful 3 BR Nleiiort Beach. Junior enc. ly pa,ymentl! 545,950 for A·l Cond Vacant quick pos. onf'·story, 4 & family Pa~-ll;IOVE R SHORES & l Ba home with llJ"P 8 . GI/ FHA TE~MSI ·*·.I.am.Uy. Priced under both! f1800 dOwn. See today 2 Homes on A Comer Lot ses8. caii today! &etfer, Many cuslom extras. BRAND new • Quality bit CBrefN'e pool !or 0 n 1 y Heritage L« klt I 11.m'"rm, won't Jasl ! .... •-•" •··•· to 1 .. -Can row. Thanks. 548-2313 A Good Jnvt1tment At Cali P atrick Wood !>4!">-2300 HUIT)'! from courtyard pool, pane.11· $22,750? s.,. thl• MonO<-Uo HAFF DAL REAL TY ----nn. ~,.,--·-ltW,.rm. with corner'Ptb or~ $2t,750 e Bill Hav9"1 Rltr. ( .;:-.... t>d fam rm; wet bar, frplc. Condo for easy )lvinQ-. ,:;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;/rFmeP:l4~2~-44~05~:;:'7,;;/ -Vftde took ~· Si-dotu Roy McCardle Re•ltor 2Ul E. Coa!t, Cdt.t 67m.l OLL'EGER~~~ to sunken liv rm w/vaulted CALL 0 141·2'1' EXEC Pool home on 113 ..sen Jdtcbln with m atch-·1!10 Newport Blvd., C.M. EASTSIDE TRl·PLEX ISXIAdlllall ceiling,M4 br. 2BbRa +U pwclr 9'•~.,. C.0.-C•lllng-C.0 . , Acre, by owner. 4 BR. din. -~-to '--•1u area. 3 541-7729 2 1 '!!~!'!'~""!!!!'!'!~1!!J!!""'"I room, a1ter . v rm, "" ~ Bi1 lot, tna!t l:rffa, quiet ••;,goo...,..,..,... ~ -. 4Lf,..., bath. Pvt I -~~~~~~~~~~J••lm!~!'!!!'!!'!!~ .. .., Br ea, la P-ttlo, e.nc av'•·1• din rm & kitchen all on ;-IALTY-... at, 3 .t Den, 2 ba, $24.950. rm. rec rm,.,.,' · ~•.....v. --• .,. 1 • fpl's. 15!J'O yrly return in In-BEACH SPECIAL y· 08 900 o. w N N .• .. ~-~~·1~. Wall of Hot---"__._ ""~u-rtod SAL•SM•N 1f'w, Sl . . "'-'Y J . ard, ••r ••P•rt P••l otrlt • 51\. Loan GI/FHA OK $1000. L B h -... ~ .., ,.......,..., • .,.._ & & ve1tment 4 Bdrm,. 2 balhL..Xlnt cond. ru ot•"~ 0 D·'I •gun• eac .._ ~ ~Inc Can't JaMp op ~ and We hav, tht tooll, cloted cir. BROKER 646-B226 Stf'P!I tl'.I ocean, Only $33,9SO tr. ........... pen "'Y· Home Shoppir'lf-Stop See Pace 1087 Yellow Pagea. pll!6t and IW'fVl.fe pounds. needJ quiet HJe of thfa 3 C'lllt TV, color alldes, rtlll't GARAGES for rent $20 mo .• Termi. ADULT CONDOMINIU~I Now ~ • d EMERALD BAY 8ea.trburry.C.a11""'303 bd'Oom~and ctlly~ map, etc, REPOSSESSIONS CAYWOOD REALTY Eut of Newport Blvd, 4 Md + family artit. VA/ U·lnfar Just listed! Attr, tradlUon.ll -Rm· E. OLSON block .. new marina and THE HOME SHOW .-~-w r ••• , H NB 11pacioos 2 BR., I~ bft, Ne-...· rl{A Terms $28,""". Excel-3 BR. 3 Ba., IU!P. Uv. rm., r'l!'" Sparkllna clean hOmes. 90mt Ooll.IO • .....,..,, -...'Y., d F A h _, RIAL TY d i & I R•••"""'n•'•-.... ..i.. Su.bmlt Jow, lowdown "Armchair Houtehuntini" r.1a1 290 cpu:. rps. · · · ea1 , lent t;mog.ftte locatlon. SI 1..... n. nn, am. nn, llo<'Uot•vna -..--newly painted & carpeted, 2. .-.. hreakfaat bar + din 'g nn, nc. ~ 716 Em~n.ld Bay $7',000 ~· 2219 HARBOR., C.N~ ~ ;.,~ ¥o: 353$ E. 6~2rswy., CdM 3, 4 &: 5 bdrms. Some wltli H0~1E With inrome. X.lnt patio & flU"Agt. Overlooki~ Walker & Lee ~n .. wn , .... MMa Shown by app't. COITOM flOU!IP[IX paymtntl of $1M. $215:~:1! REDUCED $IO 000 JlOOl•. FHA-VA conv, tenns, Eastaide Joe. \\'al k lO 1hop.o;. pool ,t.r clubhse. Vacant. HAAIOa 642-2991 Biii Grundy, Re•ltar ~Newport ...._ 3 U w lk & L • from S1'7,000 to S40,noo, Fortin Co. &12--5000 •$19,7~. Xlnt terms. Owner. Rea.Horii 833 Dovor Dr., NB 642--4620 ' 6?·3 Bit unJtt. Wal owttl!t a er ee Custom 7 IR. 2 Baths Collln.• lz \Va\\1 Inc. "MAKE Room f or Dad· 54~7 7682 Edlnge.r Li11t with C.Q. Buy from C.Q. BY O\\'NER • 4 br, 2 ba, oe&pted .l tax sbe1*,.,,,. Beaut. •eluded lot, Newport 884.1 Adams Avt.. 962..5523 d y" ' ... c 11' 11 n out the 11 You ad ln thfl claast.tl~ 1 =='=n_<=t ~"-'-·•-•~'5=-='~'~"~~:.::.51~4~0-I CONDO". 3 br, 2~ ha, xtrfl playroon1, fenc-ed )' 111 r d, •9ft1. $9.120 Income, $12,000 Rnlton Stach. O~n Houie Sun, l-5 You don't nt'i'!d ft i;:un to J::a.r&R'f!-.yoor trash ls CASH SECTION? Someone Is THE Fastnst draw 1n !he lge patio or 1m yarrl . fliA hh n5, rrpts, drp5, d!!ckJt., ~. $75.000. 7682 Edln,pr 2420 E. 22nd Street Draw Fast wMn you pla~ "'ith "a Daily PUot Cla.ARlfied W31ch!n11: .for It. D l a I We1t.t . . . O&ily PUol :>'1'1--. S24 ,0CX'.l. Nr Ha..rbor k · 0«-11n \'te-...·. SM.IXXI. -194-3412 "RRON 60-1771 (Tl.fl 8424455 or 540.5140 Agent 675.8800 '-""-'-'-'-"-'bc.....:!J"A_l_L_.Y.,P_I=LO=T1..::'';:;· ________ '•""'=''-..:"';;:;.:'c..'=°"::""::..:.' ----Cla..~ifiea Ad. 642-56il .. Glsler. 213: >17.()!l,() e.lt 4 • , .. ---.. " I ii I I Getting the Frigid Word 'T11i s is Floyd D. Young' By THOMAS A. MURPIDNE ot ,.. .,.., f'lllit lllrft I CAN HEAR IT NOW DEPT. -Chilly times have came to our Or1nge Coasl in r«'tnl nights, when evening skies are clear, smog is only a nasty memory and icy winds whine through the eucalyptus tree.Ii. Never does such "'eat.her come to our region but I think of flO.}'d D. Young of lhe United Stales Fruit Frost Service. Indeed, my memory scans back to those many winters ago in pre-television da.}s \~;hen our little family would hud- dle around the homestead fires and tune our trusty radio to Clear Channel Station KFL \Ve would likely be listeni ng lo a program called, "One f\fan 's Family." But about a p.m., it v.·ould eel cul off the air a bit short and the momenl we ,~, had all been waiting far arrived. . .,, AND THE NEW voice on the airw_avel!I \1101.dd !~ton~. -"This is Floyd D. Young from the Fruit Frost Service m Po1nona, bringlng you lhe frost warnings for IDnight." '\ \ Now. as our radio set crackled out tilt words of Y~g, we \\'ere going 111 learn \\'hat the night held IC>rth and i( indeed our postenor sections \\'ere to be in a frig id rondilion. Actually, the f'ruit Frost Serv ice broadcasts were to w~rn citrus gro"."· ers if their crops were imperiled by the night's freeze. And 1n those days in Orange County my friends, the main crop on all our acreage wasn't three· bedroom housing tracts. Young v.·as blessed \Vith a clear and resonant voice but he chost to de· li ver the good or bad ne\\'S on fruit frost in a rather flat monoton.e. Actually, come to think of it, some radio and tv commentators of toda y might do well Co ernulale him. "FROST \VARNINGS are general across the entire region tonlght~" Young would intone . "Smudging will be necessary f<>r oranges and lemons in almost all locations after midnight and in &ome areas as early as 10 p.m." Oh bov. we 're in for it tonight. Then ·Young would continue with point-by-point lows for the evening : Lemon Cove: 29 Orange Cove: 28 Exeter: 31 Strathmorc: :?!'! Oxnard : 30 Chats\.\•orth: 31 Azusa: 28 Cucamonga: 30·· WE WAITED. Pretty soon, old Floyd Wal! going to gel to U!'l. "El Toro: 2!1 San Juan Capistrano: 28 .• , ." \llov.·! Twenty-eight in Capo? Drag out the extra blankets, 'morn. Young never gav.e 10\YS fnr our coastal area like Laguna.bi" Newport or San Clcn1ente or Huntington Beach. We weren't quite in the citrus belt. But when he gave you Capo, you got the idea . . . Actually. Yo~ng . did little forecasting himself from the Fruit 'Frost Sia· t1on 1n P~mona. ~1str1cl forecasters called in the expected lows f<r the night from various stations dov.·n the state. Young started with the service in the 1920s <ind actually began to get short-range forecasts on the atr with some guy named Uncle John who normally read the funnies O\'er the radio· or so mething. ' THEN YOUNG started broadcasting his freezing news from his Pomona hnme aver KNX in 1931. He hit the big-time on KFI -cutting lnlo One Man's Family in 1!141. Later. he was cutting short Chesterfield's Perry Como Show ;ind thf> spons.:iring cij?arette people found out about it. They co mplained loudly. So KFI owner Earl C. Anthony said okay, \\'e'll let the listeners decide. He held a poslcard poll on what the folks out there in radioland really ~·anted. And thars \\•hen every Southern California found out he wasn't :11lont #Is a Floyd D. Ynung fan. Floyd beat Perry Como to death in the postca rd poll. He staved on the air. THAT Y.'AS the nnly time I can remember a note or le\~ly v.•hen he closed thP next night's fruit frost report." .•. And thanks for all those cards and !el· ters, folks," he chuckled . "and good night." Y,'.lung's intonations of all Southland cold places even won nationwide fame when conicdla n Jack Benny picked up his "Anaheim, Azusa and Cuca- monga" joke from the frost listings. Young retired from the Fruit Frost Service in 1956. He died in 1959. BUT FOR THOSE of us steeped In Southern California Jort, it's nlce to kno\v that the Fruit Frost broadcasts from Pomona live on. A nice-sounding' man named Dale Harris broadcas!s an t>;(panded version of Young's original frost warn ings with 120 \\'ealher stations reporting lo him thrO\Jgh 15 di:o;lricts. You c<ln hea r it a!l on KF I at 7 p.m. and a taped rebroadcast .at 9:05 p.m. from November through Feb. 28. ··of course, I don't ha ve a voi~ like Young did," Harris admits. "I even have some tares of Floyd 's original broadcasts." That's okay, Dale, I don't have to listen to them . J can hear him now. Demotions, Joh Changes Riles Lowers tlie Boom On Top Rafferty Aides . SACRAl\1EJ\IO AP -\\lilson Riles. ·California's new superintendent of public instruction. moved qu ickly to consolidate ·control over !he State Department o( ' Educ a lion Wedne,;day, announcing demo- •Hons or re-assignments for six top of· ticia\s. And he named three long-lime depart· ment officials to top interim ap- . pointments. 11le announcemenl came 48 hours after Riles took over from Max Rafferty, whom he defeated Nov. 3. · Riles said Everett T. Calvert, a COD- : lroversial deputy l!Uperintendent under ·Rafferty "·ill keep his tltle only beeaUle :he has a four-year contract granted ·by the State Board of Education. Calvert's annual salary of $29,000 will be cut to less than $20.000 and he ·v.·111 be given "duties as desl111ated," Riles said. Calvert would no longer have a policy-making role . the new superiD-, .tendent added at his first news con· Jerence l!ince becoming superintendent Edwin Klotz, who also served u 1 deputy superinl.endent. will be dtmoted lo a civil service position as • CONUitant to the Bureau of Nallonal Defense Educa· lion in the Department of EducaUon. rule! said the j<>bs of George Gustlfson .JIS specia l consultanl ·in education in- .novation. Collier McDermon 11 .. iltant Jn charge of the Los Angelts office ..and Wair Ogelsby a!'! ~ia1 as.sistant will tlso be tef'm\n11ted, although they may remain In the dcpartmellt In civil 1crvice positions. , The new acting dep1Jty superintendent S.~ Milton Babitz, 54, who was assistant C'hief of the O!vlllon of Compensatory Education. Riles headed comptnatory education btfore taking a let1vt of .absence to campaign successfully against Rafferty's third term bid. Tom Shellhammer was named by Riles as acting dP.puty state 11uperlntendent For programs. The 58-year-old Shellham· mer, like Babltz, had worked in the compensatory education division. Al1\i n J. Schmidt. 6J, was named as acting assistant state superintendent for ad· ministration. He has aerved in the department for 42 years . In answer to questions from newsmen, Riles said he did not regard aome of the outgoing officlall u competent In their pMilion.s. •·1 don 't think !i's any lttl'"!t that 90me of the people we are termln:11t1n1 or re-assigning thought ao mud! about their philo!!Ophy that Ibey forget about education." Riles aaid , ''I think what I'm talking about ts a team :11pproach to 10lving Cllifornia'a educational problems rather than a di visive approach." A nev.·sman :11sked Riles \'f he was begln nlng to SWTound hhmelf with "yes men." "Yes men can't help me." Riles repli~ "That'a why I've IUITOunded myself~wilh theae men." Riles said ht: had inf<>rmtd Howard Day, president of the Sti.te Board of Education, of his 1ppolnt.ment1: "a• a courtesy." · Orthodox Christians Flood Holy Shrines BETHLEHEM (AP) -The llOllnd of Beth1ehem'a church bells ethoed ICf'OM the Judun hllls loclsy .. -Of E•lllmt Or1hodos pllflthnl c<lebrtted their Christmas. S11nrhesl;:rr Or. C. H. Ll, director of the Honnone Research Laboratory at UC San Francisco, and his staff have isolated and synthe-- sized the hormone that con- trols human 111:rowth. It is de- scribed as a major medical breakthrough. See story, Page 5. Nixon Keeps B11sy Signing New Measures President Nixon 1pent much of the first two days of bis California vacatkln stgning .. bills enacted by the last Congress, press secretary Ronald Ziegler said Wednesday. Deadline for signing the new bills into law is Jan. 14, Ziegler said, and there \\'ere about 52 remaining unsigned when the Presi dent left for the West Coast. Tackling the job early Wednesday, the l>residerit affixed his signature to a wide. assortment <>f legislative acts. ranging from such weighty documents as the Specia l Foreign Assistance Act of 1971 and District of Columbia Revenue Act, to a miscellany that incl uded : -Houu Resolution 1420, which authorizes speaker John W. f\.tcCormack lo accept and wear a decoration from tht Italian government. -HR 7311, which provides that Lhe rate or duty on parts of stethoscopes •ball be the same as the rate on sll~thGScopes. -HR 14695. which prohibits certain uses of the Great Seal nf the United States and the pre5idential and vice presidential seals. -HR 19857, which officially names three Federal buildings in Boston, Baltimore and St. Petersburg, Fla. -HR 16745, which exempts Amerlc:11n fishing vessels from duty impo!ed on repairs, repair parts and equipment purchased in foreign ports. s Nixon Signs Aid Bill '11 ~rne nte Site of Foreign Fund Approval f...it ot the Unt m:rjor bills aigned b:y President Nixon during· his t:urrent stay al the Western White House was the "50 million SpeciaJ F o r e I g n A&alstaoce Act of lrll, which pnmdes for military and economic assistance to Cambodia, Korea, Jordan, Jndmesla, Lebanon and . Vietnam. In addition to this suppOrt, the bill authorizes :11n appropriation of $15 million of contingency funds for disaster relief Jn East Pakistan. The bill bans U.S. troops in C&mbodia but would not restrict U.S. air action over that country. The !ong embattled bill is the second step in the Presidell's .$1 billion request fqr foreign aid funds, the first step. a $500 million credit assistance Lo Israel h:iving been authorized earlier. Under the measure, $195 million is earmarked (or economic assistance and t 140 million for mifitary assistance. The Cambodian allocation provides $8S milllon for additional military assistanC"C and $70 million for special economic as- sistance. "The blll ," press secretary Ronald Ziegler s~id Wednesday. "contains three provisions regarding our involvement in Cambodia. First, no funds auth<>rized here may be used to finance the in~ troduction of U.S. ground e<>mbat troops into Ca mbodia, or to provide U.S. military advisers. U.S. economic ad"visor1 can continue in Cambodia. "Second, the assistance to Cambodia sh<>uld not be ronatrued as a U.S. com· mitment to Cambodia for ita defei1se. ''Third, .and thil is oormal legillative procedure, the President shall not use emergency authority lo give additional aid to Cambodia without nptifying both the House and Senate · 30 days prior to c:i1verting funds." "The United States." Z i e g I e r reiterated, ''does not intend and will not introduce ground troops into Cam- Nixon Chilly, But Likes Sun Asked b:y a rorrespondent how President Nixon had reacted to the frigid weather that greeted him in California. "and did he wish he'd gone to Florkla instead?" pre.ss secretary Ron Ziegler hedged nimbly at the Wt'dnesday press: briefing in Laguna Beach. "We'll probably take that matter up in the State of the Union message,., quipped Ziegler, wb<> wu 1porting.a lon1 -1leeved sweater. •·nut," he added amiably, ."I can . say that we always enj<>y the beautiful California sunshine. We haven 't had much or that in Washington and the sun aeems to 11hlne every day here." bodla." C o u n t f)'·by-coontry appropriations authorized in the bill 11lgned by the President Wednesday Include in addJUon to the Cambodia allocatlon:s: --$100 million for supporting and military assistance programs for Yarious countries lo replace fundJ wh ich were transferred for use in Canlbodla. -S15CI million lor military assistance lo Korea. -& -& ..:, Not a Certainty 430 mllliQn for military •iatllld for Jordan. -$3 million for military 1u1st&ncl for Indonesia and SID million to replac1 funds transferred from forielgn lid pro- grams for other countriea for UlMl Dt Indonesia. -» million for 1ddJUonal military assistance for Lebanon. -$65 million for addlUooal economic assistance for Vietnam. Ziegler Casts Shadows Over Dole Appointment Presidential pres! secretary Ronald Ziegler said Wednesday that appointment of Kansas Senator Robert J. Dole as chairmun of lh e Republican National Commit~e is not as certain as Wednes- day wire service reports indicated. Dole was reported as confirming that he is "President Nixon 's choice" for the post. Ziegler said at the Laguna Beach brief. ing !hat he would prefer not to comment on Dole's r~marks but added, "J un- derstand he did not say that In those v.·o rds." He said a nominating committee has been appointed to rttommend candidates for the position to the national committee at Its meeting In Washington late next w~ek. ··Senator Dole is one or ~ under consideraUC1n," Ziegler said. but he declined to name other possi ble Cfln- didates. · The nominating committee, he added, "will consult with the President prior to making Its recommendation." He said the President hu not talked to Senator Dole ''on this matter." Under inlen!:live questioning by White }-louse correspondents. who asked, "Are we just going through a charade here?" Ziegler replied, "No, we are not going through a ·charade. The President will consult with the nominating committee and the commitl.e(: will make its recom· mendation to the full national committee when it meets toward the end of next week." In response to a q~tion, Zl~gler said it was "po511lble" the President might appear ln person al the ~tional com· Ar1ny Sets Discharge Of Helicopter Pilots WASHINGTON (AP) -Pentagon of. fleials say about one·fourth of I.be Army's helicopter pllol'I will be dlscbarged April I -before their Army terms are com· pleted. mittee meeting. Ziegle r said :11 committee beaded by outgoing GOP Chalnnan Rogers C. B. Morton would consult with t.he P~sldent vn 11.s choice for party leadership. Th• meeting will give the President a chance to mend political fences for the 1972: presidential erections. Sen. Dole said he has not received word from Presiden~ Nixon naming him chainnan. He did, b<>wever, say what he will do when he gets the job. Dole said the re-election of Nixon in 1972 will be hi s primary· role In the post. "I will be the Republlcan chairman. not any ide<>loglcal chairman," said Dole. He minimized opPQSitlon from eome liberal and moderate GOP senators. He sa id-the Pre.Sident had not called him but be left the door open ·on the possibility that some other admlnlstration 50Ur« had. Boots Still Roll After Suit Fails LOS ANGELES -An appellate court here has cvnfirmed a federal court'• Nancy Sinarta's "These Boots Are Made Nancy sinalra's '·These Boots Are Made For Watkin' " did not ronst.ilule unfair competition. !\.1lss Sinatra sued the tire makers for more than $1 million after the airing of television comme·rcials that led many viewers. the singer claimed, to rta4 her ov.·n voice into the mes.sag•. ~ also asserted that Goodyear made "many millions of dollars" by their takeoff vf her number. The appellate panel ruled U1:11t Miss Sinatra dJd not own copyright to tht ''Boots" song although she could have purchased it had 11he llO desired. Sltt!"Sed in the ruling wu the argument for "free competition in ideas wblch do not merit or qualify for patent pro- tecUon. '' NOW! LO Nll BEACH I~ SHORTER TO NORTliERN CALIFORNIA. ...--------~ Loo Angeles (Orange County, Paloo Sa~~.= '=11 Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, 1tc,), Including tu. Long Beach 11 llko having your own pr1Yato L-Long 8-h: alrpon. You don't hav.e lo flght the free- Now yoii can fly PSA from Long Beach 7:40 am way trefflc lo L.A. lnlemallonal Ther1'1 Airport to Ban Francisco. Four 1Jmes a day. 10:45 1m easy parking. And the crowds haven't More on weekends. More flights than 1 :30 pm found It yet. Next time you head north any other elrllne. Connections to Sacra-4:30 pm (or south), head for long Beach Airport mer*>. Or, avoid the treewey and Hy to Mon thru Thur• & Sal by way or your travel agent end PSA. Son Diogo. If you llv' any place SOtJlh of .__M_o_re_n_1g_M1_Frl_&_su_n.__, PSA .,.. ,... a llft. .. .------ DAILY pilLOT Tli11rsday, Juuary 7, 1971 !fo1eeiv llef!l!•I• ·Russians Accost American Envoy . . . ., .. ,,..... FLIES TO JERUSALEM U.N.. EnvoY-Jarring Jarring Visits Israel in Bid To Speed Talks tJN!TEO NATIOl'lS, 1'.V.. CAP). - Special envoy Gunnar V. Jlriing ru. to Jerusalem today in .., effort to eel bl.I 1'.iiddJe East peace ~ movlng. Diplomalic aourcW laid the Swecftah diplomat bowf.Ci t.o isr.e.u demandl after concluding that substantive disculilors coold not begi n at U.N. hudquafun ~ til he conferred with i.adl Forelp ~l.ini!ter Abba Eball.· U.N. diplomata e:1pre13ed belief that the Jerusalem visit would be brief and t hat Jarring'.!! talks at U.N. headquartert \•.'ith representatives c1f ISraef, Egypt and Jordan v.·ould start again in two or tJree days. Jarring decided to niake the trip·after Jsraeli Amba sSador-YOAef Tekoah -urged for the second successive day that he i c· cept an invitation extended by Eban in a message Dec. 28. Arab sources ch3rged privately that the proposal was a stall to delay the peace talks, but Western diplomats 11ald Jarring bellevtd the Jerusalem visit was necessary to get the talks off the ground. lt was not clear why Israel placed so much stress on the meetin g, but IOJT\e observtr's speculated Eban might aeek to shift the 11\te ol the Indirect Arab.larnll talk.I to Cyprus or some other Jcqtlon closer to the Middle EuL Eban In his invitation to Jarrin• 11Jd he wanted "to aurvey the aHuatlon, to IC· quaint you with the bu1c vtrws of my gove rnment and to discuss •tePI neces.- sary to ensure the fulflllmea t of your mis- 11lon for the promotion of agreement on the establl!ihment of pea ce." ~:.----~ . ·MOscow CllPI~ .-. U.8. · 11:1111,.y .. ...,_ IOld ..._, --11•1>- lloil ... ~ -"'1111 ....... -·. theeMJ __ ., ..... ..i ubd him • ._ .• _... 1"11 Ullo beloll tnetod the •11 Ztoolel lbup troot our dipll.lmlts ln America?" It wu the flnt Nport of pb)'lkal reprisab: ia the MW U , I • "S.o v 1 e t diplomade war of nervea. klcbd ott Tuuday-the --!My coald not ... ....-!ht ..,.., of · ~ in Ruuia 111 vie'lt' Q( "Zionist'" •t1ocklt • liovlelll In AmerlcL "" lbe !Int -In ...... -lour "ye&n Soviet authorldls WMne.tay nen- ing permitted • "spontaneous ~ .. tiOn". tn front. of the emballY. About 2e·yoans .,.,--beM the 1ele and cbuted llof.., lor 11- More delegations of Soviet citlzJnl entered the U.S. Embassy puiceably t.o deliver letlen of Jl<Vle8I aplnet the bar--.nt of Soviet ollldalo and perfermtl'I in Lbt Un.11.ed Stai.a. 'lbne -and ......... -tho llt ·MtdatolmtHote;.-ol tlio - a so.iet Jn, dell-welt o - lo flrit ·_....,y Bof Pol~ lbout .mon. i'olQlllJ -Yid tho llnl ~ leUen WedneMlay from w Or Ii:• r 1 ... ,..-;,. two 11-- Another --of lour -a aimiltr llUer later • blbalf Of tbe finl Sta.Ill . Ball ~ fadGn', '11111 party lot U far II thf: 11.b fk)er-........ to ~ Jaoof> D. S.-'1 oftlce bofcn bolne met by .. ..-,. .. -.... 'n. 10UrCe1 Aid tb1 R1•t-Wedo · 11tod.lt niPI -""' tho dtplamat •nd ht. '"'' -the ,._.. Thutu, M-'• ·~ t.. 8ftlll 1erd• play•, and 11UJ*I hCo loJ>elL "They jull •hook hb lapelo • bll ond askad l>tui llow be WOllld lib boblC treatod the • ., -tlNp lreot .... dtplomatr tn Ainiiiea," the IOUl'c. llld. Thi incident ended ln a "" Jnhmta when lhe diplomat aad hil wile IDttted their car, they uJd. 'Ill• embuoy etmilated 1 be<llsreand 111ldanco lheet lo tho Amerkan -. Mighty Blast11 Rock Gas Plant in Texa1 MINE!IAL WEU.5, fez. CAP) -Er. ploliOM "that loo&ed Ub a:n atemJe bomb hod..,.,. off" ..,1y lodaJ -two ltorqe tanka at a boWld IU pliaC and -• --Surprtabl(ly ool7 one man was aUcbtly injured. 1be loA: Wll put at I halt mlJUon dollars, Offtcial! llid Robert Crowley, '5, nil!it operator Of the planl, WU lnlted for cuta and brut.et llld ~ Series of Expwsions Rips Am1no Depot in Vietnam SA IGON (AP) - A to.hour series It was the worst amrnmdUon apb.iia of ex:p\osions today \\rr ccked a big allied ii! 59ulb..Yi~tnam in nearly two y..n. ammunition dump on the central <;9J.1t -A South -Viebiamae-spokesman Aid of South Vietnam, killed three · South the r:ause had not been de~ Korean employes and destrayed more but an investigation was undar n Y. I ha11 5.f()(l tons of munilitlns, officials The spoke8man salQ \ha b l a 1 t I ·, rrported. destroy~ at Je1st a third ct the mmdo Sc\·en Am('ricans and nine. South lions in the dump at Qui Nhoa, 111 Korea ns \\'('re reported injured. The miles northeast of Saigon. Field reports Koreans \1·ere employed hy a Korean Sl id 15,000 tor\S ()f ammuniUell ef aft r-nmpa ny working on a contract at the types were in the. st.ockpllt, lndnCl'W dump. arlillecy ~lls. l'lt()l"t.aa, ban4 p ••• ~od anW! arms ·aftubUUUon. • · -. LIGHTER SIDE COLUMN WILL RESUME MONDAY The d<pot is Qt\ the lido ol 11 ·~ aboul.jl mile an4 a b,M ·1'lri·t1·1 ··•·th Vietnam's fourth lat1est city Mii· • wen away from U, ~·· r1.i 11 Q!d a~ Windows ~ mtl• ..., ._. _.,,.tho ,..i1111r . . . . l . ' ,\ .~ J'"" ...... .. . ·roatdt:r ............. ..... 'Too U.S. lff•-... ~ tlM -..... -.. tollo -ry ote;. lo . ..,_ , , , C~) fer --·-..intt·-.. orpn11stloel 1D tM dcwlM UliOD." Red Gunboats Sink Vessel Of S. Korea Gel,.eral Surveys --. - 'Deteririration' Imide f.ambodia PtlftlN ""' (Vl'I) -'Ille -" ranlilos ...,_ _,,,.,.,. Jn VII~ ..,. 'flp. to. -. Peob tod11 fOf' I .-.. wlt!t -I.on 1'tl llld • lint -laDt ~ ""81 lftlll!lry llOllfe<a hav. called a "deterlentlon" of the military lltu•tlon In C.mbo41•. The meeUn1 between Lon Nol and Gen. Fredrick C. Weyand prec..tecf thc wte.kend trip of U.S. DeftllH Secretary Melvin 11. i.n 1o s.1..,, for talkl wttb Ptdllc naval et1mmantler Adm. Jello I. MeCoin. Mllltary MUrctl aaid McCain had bttn m11moued to Saison apeclfic•Jly to .,_ the Calnbodian 1ituatlon, in- cladile 1ttbacb al the hands of c.om- maalli forca who hold part. of 1tt1tt&k: ldcbway 4 IDllthwest of Phnom Pt:nh. 'l'be U.S. Command COl!liden ,,.bi!lty In ClmboCla uwitial to succwful wttMrawal of """"1'ictn f&r~ from Vlelnem. TM U.S. !:mbapy in Phnom Penh ~ tht meeting as 1'r<>utlrle," The teliiat of Highway 4 by Vitt O:iac and North Vittn.t.nese forces bu • tut off P1uoom Peab mm C.mbodll'• · 111111 doopwat.r .,.i. Kloiflol Som, and ~ p.im. rtlllMN lo Ille clpllal • '• Border ~.to~ 11lor.d~r, Brrr! . ' ·-. . "' . ~· •• '1-, • ·~ .1··~. -.:~· . . .~., :f. ' •:?}· •. Arctic Air·Continuei X'cfoss the LaruJ Calif om&. I Y UNbTeD l'llR!S tNTllMATl9111AI. !lout~-(OlllOr"it Wol ft f, '9itt1' wit~ tonUnu.d cald ,...,.,.,,"',. •...t 1u•!Y winch, <lt<t .. 1!1111 IOl'ltM. ,t, ,,..,,,., w••rnl~• lrtfl(I 11 tred•crt0 to.- Tiit Pt<lad .. lllrMy tltNllfll MM!CltY. l.OI Al\Dtltl .... ¥kl"'"' Wit ltlf Wlll'I lociliY atN!lll, 9UllY ll'llw. tllll ""'' 1 .... -.tw• di•--T•v•c -dlci.d civic ctfll.,. llllfi Wtc ti, fllt Mmt ti ~\'11. Toriltllt'I h1W wltl be • 11 tto+ Clvk (1t1t•r, dr- lliftll to 21 .,u,. :oc1t trot! In tf'I• COlder ... bl.I,.. TIMI ... rM11 ....... Ii frw _,... IJCI wannllf lltul'fW ""'"" ~ ""''"' 11 ..... '""""" .,.... .... ... ""',,..,. ..... 11\t' ........ ....... MttW ... ....,_ .....,. W lfl Ille JOI 111 "" "'""' dttirh , 11lt Air ~oOullofo c.Mrol Dl1!rlct r~ llOl1toll lltlll ..,. lrtll1lloll I~ 1111 t.,,. 1r11 end cottlll Nctlont of tM Liii ,._..,, litln "''"" tM mt•lmum °"-....,.. ,H .,.,.,. -millllll 111rt1 of l it ti'M'WtfloUt . ttie NJlll. Ml'*"-v11l-blll1Y Wl l NII te U ,,,....., ,._. Ill tlte c.....-11 11111 c.1111 t«t*-.....,.,.. ff WM llm1twl ii, •11ct1e111lctl ..,. •• to .rioiit .. ,.. """" ~ ....... INlftw "'""' wtl!I ;.. flltflt _,. SI 1.W fl'll wtlw M. l tc:il '" wllldl _. """"""" MIOlll lfli -· '°"" llltM WWMMI'"° ., ... ......,. toN~ rncllldcd: I.Mii '""' ,,.,,. Mollkt & lwtlenll: "46. Ml, ''°"' JI , ~ lcN S\IM'f ~ •"*Y. Vtfitlllt' wl• -----Mf1111•:1e:ho t •If ti• WI tft611 1•111 ..,..,,,.., ....... .. c:....i ........... ..,....._ .. fl .. INMlll t•11111W :•• '""' .,_ • ,. ... W"6r 1ec:ec:•Ms ~ s-.11-.,..... nu•MY .... lllffl ...••.•..••. 71'41.M. .... rllMT lll'lr,t ............ ··• "Jtl C,M. t.4 Flrt! IN ..... ,. ....... ••• '""" f.J ~ 111111 .................. 111 .... IKoncl -............ !:6'•·""· ., .. ... . ................. ,,. '·"'· -•• l.Jf pJn. ~ 1;11,.m. --,0;~·· ~ I ., .. '='=~,....L., 1'JJWW.. ~------..:..·~ AIM.-a If •=; -" ~n . . ,, • • . .. • • ...... " ,, .. -.. c........., .. 1t ~ ... 0-. ,, .. Diil...... • .. , -.. .. , ....... ,, .... i -.. . ~-e • I ~ : :1 Lt.A..... a • Lwllv1119 u n M"'""I " 7't M...,... • .., ~ :: ·:' ;;;:;;;;;-... °" : : . .. -,, .. ...... itll:: •• ~ .. ·=-,_ .... -.. r. .: f,•.?e;," ~ : ~ Clff M " t -. . ........... . .. ....... • 1t ... ........ ,. ,, .., -... WWII"""' ,. u • • -- . -... , . a monumental occasion · 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Anaheim Savings I• proud to celebn1te Ill &0th Golden An"t- versary. Founded In 1921, Anaheim Savings ls the oldest locally owned Savings and Loan A11oct1t1on In nonhem Orange County. We are celebretlng 50 yeare of HCUrlty, but more lm- ponant, 50 yeare of aervlce to our savers that has taught u1 many things. We heve teamed that people wtnt more than a ptaoe to keep their money. They want a amlle and a peraonat greeting when they come In. In Ihle computerized world of todmy, they want to be more than Just an account number and a dollar amount on a Ille card. At Anaheim Savings you are treat· eel u a penon. We are interested in you, ever striving to givtt you oomplete satisfaction, because ••• your smlltt is Important to 111.,, and we hope to remain. Important.to you. ALWAYS llORI rHD SIHVICll AT .AllAllllll SAVINGS IAl'I DIPOSIT BOXES PUl wllll-l INllance of t2IOO or more PLUI: PRU MONl!Y ORDERS • FRIE TRAVELERS CHECKS PRiii NOTARY BIRVICI • FRIE PHOTOCOPY SIRVICI llfll lhe htgheet lntwwt In the nation on tnaured UY1ng1. 1% to 11%, llkter details. ANAHEIM SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION 1921 1971 , . • Crops Ruined Nation Sta~·~ers ' From Big Freeze Rese ru·ch Team Dupli~t'es Human Growth Horm.on>e · SAN FRANCISCO <UPll -Laboratory, estimated _ It and female set hot=rnone1. Uni versity of C a I i f Dr n I a WQ\lld take 5 to 10 years for Dr. PhWp fl Let, chancellor . rP"t';iretiers have announ«d. commertla1 dnlt manufac-of UC b1~ the ·tut b:.be By U•ited Pre11 lnt.em1t10111al .in a (our-county area rer vary· the snythesis of the human turers to provide tarce qua»-duplication of the complu Ex«pl for southern Flerida ing peri&dtl Wednesday. growth hormone_ 8 develop.. tiles of the 1ynlhettc human hormone as "• areat basic and the Pacific CoUt, cold In southwestern Kansas. ment they sa id could provide growth hormone (HGH ). ruearch ' breakthrouch with Arctic air covered t~ nation ranchers bad i. centend with a major research tool in ihe. Ll. dtreetor · of the • \JC poulbk a~.uQn& ,rJn.&inc: ence again today. The cattle rustlers who moved In treatment of cant'er. heart hormone. research -laboratpry, from U..aWdy or ·growth and economy wa s affected, and following the big snowstorm dise ase. diabetes and pro-said • long ranae goal ol development at human beinrs In parts ef Omaha, Neb.~ it which hit tbt midlands earlier blcms associated with growth. ·his research was posaibJe Urou"1 the poasltile treit- was fror.en shut this week. Coor s ~Startin g Thf> h-Ormone, secreted by development · ol a modified ment .of ctncer and .-ter: Residenl.! on Omaha·s north.. four Ll!l('(l]n, Ne b ., lhC' pituitary gland, contfols hormone which would inhibil ioscler011iS." Wftil 1ide had return~ to residents heading homeward Recycling P l tl ll bod.' gro"'th. size and shape, the growth {If breast and othu tt.s first Mneffci aries win the bartering system in the after a vacation in Colorado regulates p r o d u c t i on of cancers. probably ·be the 10,0IXI to 501000 wake ef th is week's heavy said they helped 211 snow-moihcrs' milk and has been He said several app.arent at· chlldren suffering· uch year snawstorm. With snaw-clogged bound matorisU 1 I an g in· CrOLDEN. Colo. (UPI) -used successfull y in the treat-tributes of HGH would be from h y p e r·-p It u it a. r y slreets, neighbars had bttn ter!tale IO west of Lincoln The Adolph Coors Co. an-men! of a form of dwarfism sludi~ when sufficient quan· dwarfism. They could grow lnr~ t• trading -a pack during Monday's slerm. They \1•hich afflicts thousands tl f tities of the hormone are. lo nonnal size with HGH r · r nounced Wednesday a n_ew o Clgarettes or ll q u a r 1 said they arrived in Lincoln youngsters each year in the available. These i n CI u de treatment. nf milk, baby food r o r late Monday aner .. checking program to recycle empty Uni ted States. - . repairing bone fractures, pro-Li, who has spent 32 years breakfast cereal.. . every car and truck" between beer bottles. Coors will ptly Or. C H-Li , 57. wllo hc<1ded moling healing, lowering blood 5tudying the pituitary gland ., Jd•Hvered ·treasure for .pleasure ' . DAILY •JLOT /J It has been so cold in Lincoln and the Waco in · the research team which choleslcrol levels. enhancing and its hormones , likened Ar11mu1 that citrus industry terchange about 45 miles west one cent a bollle for all Coors reproduced the horm.ooe in the re~istaoce ta infection, and _im~a~king~· ~:H~G:H_:t•~b~ui~ldi:·ng~~·~~§~§§~~~~~~~~~~~§~~ spokesmen say frui t crop ef Llnccln, beer bflllles that are returned. UC Hormone Re s earch improv ing the actions of malf ~gtiway . lrm;e.'1 there may run int11,---------------------------------------- several millian dollars. The celd wave put a heavy st.rain an supplies or natural gas t hrnughout the West. Magm<t Ceoper mine at San M_anuet , Ariz .• announced that its underground eperations would be shut down because •f A gas shortage. Near Franklin, Ind., a 69,000-volt transmissian Ii~ snapped, leaving thnusands af b&mes witheut electric pawer 'Long Hair' Tells Jail Pu1iisliment LOS ANGELES (AP) -A bearded, Jong.haired convict 11ays he has been kepl in solitary confinement for 10 months because he won't shave or have his hair cut. He-insists God gives him the right to slay !lhaggy. "I have na reaso n for refu!-- ing lo i have," said Steven Robert Win!lby. "All l can gay is it i!l God's will that I don't. A man has a reason for shaving. A mAn doesn 't have to have a reason for no! shaving ·· Winsby, 28, spoke Wed- nesday in U.S. District Court. v.'here his lawyer has filed a petition for his releaR from M>llta ry confinement at the federal prison at nearby Terminal Isl and. Pair Claim Jct Noise Ear Injury SAN .JOSE IUPI ) -A U.S. attorn'y insisted Wednesday the government w a 1 n 't re!p(lnsible for any damages suffered by a coople who c\111im buu.ing by Air Force jets caused a hearing loss. Clyde and Naomi White of San J ose seek $9 0 .tl tl O damages. asserting White ".!! hearing WA.'I impaired when the jet..'\ swept low over !heir car in Inyo Cou nty in 1963. U.S. Attorney Sh e I d n n Deul.sch said tf the planes v.·ere military aircraft they would ha ve been acling on offici al duty and thus exempt frnm litiga tion. Ul"l 't ....... Benfire• Banneol Craig Ca pehart. a stu- dent at De Pauw Uni- versity. ba5 splashed Water on plans by In- dianapolis to b u r n thousands oC d iscard- ed Christmas trees in aonual ceremony. Cape- hart. the .11:randson o( fonner Sen. Homer Capehart. obtained a restraining o r d e r to prevent burninl" of trees in the face of mountin.11: air pol lution. Fi.res also would vio- late c i t y on:tinanc1 against outside burn- inst . I 5*%says it loud and clear.Your mon~y earns high interest plus maximum safety. Stability counts for a lot these days. And what could be more secure than Bank of America? As part of our Personal Choice Savings, we have three types of Investors Passbook Accounts. All are high yield plans. And all offer passbook convenience. 5%% Investors Passbook. Leave your money with us for two years and it wiD earn 53f.i% annual interest Computed ~compounded and paid quarterl:,c $500 ( minimum deposit And you can add to It arrt time in amounts of $100 or more. SY2% Investors Passbook. Jf a one-year maturity is about rightforyou. · we'll pay you 5Y2% interest The sama$500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in ·artDJl'D of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passbook. This is our short term olfet 90-dayrnafurll}' And you earn 5% annual inlarest. Again,_a $500 minimwn opens an accourt.Add to It in amounts of $100 or more. Of course. our regular savings account pays • 4~% annual interest, Put your money ir\ Take It out Ar'fl 111110U11t, anytime. You can see talk isn't .cheap at Bank of America. We mean what we say. H"igh yield backed ~ by the .. security of the world's largest _ bank. ~ there's .a reason why so many people·seek us out Must ·be we ti19. ~.more help with the businessrl~ BANl(a=MfERICA Bl for the busineasrl ~ • -· ----. -- ' • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE 'Happeni~g' Questions Ft\\' events in Leguna 'Beach's history have gen· erat.ed ao much local conversation, rumor, conjecture and commentary as the fo ur-day Christrn11 i•h1ppen- Jn1" at Sycamore Flat1 in Laguna Canyon. You may accept one o{ two extreme vf ew1 -drug· crazed anarchy or a beatific "coming together'' -or atrlke for aome 1ort of ml4dle stance. This wila no 1pontaneous, locall.Y gener~ted event. Jt was given widespread and-IOmelimes expensive ad· ''ance pUblicity as early as October. Police intelligence reported posters circulating in We&t , Southwest and h1id"•est states a nd even in such unlikely spo ts .a1 Shasta Calif. and Toronto Canada. Advance publ!Clly wa s b~oadcast by at Jea1t one New York City radio 1U1tion . Under~round newspapers ran expensive ad1. Youths lnlerviewed on the festival grounds .cave home· tov.'nJi In OreR;on. Florida, New Yo rk, Ohio. f\1o·rth Caro.. Jina, Vermont, Minnesota, Michigan, lndiana, Alabama Ind Arizona. Certainly some observations can he made. -All police a.ii:encies involved deser~e a lar~e measure of credit for their obvious re5tra1nt and dis· cretion. . • -The majority of young people attending can be commended f0r .cencra!Jy obeying police orders and the fact that thc.v did not se ek violence. confrontat ~o~ .or destruction of property. Some of thei r other ac!iv1t1es v.•ere indefensible. -Organizers of the happening must shoulder major blan1e for t roubles that did develop. They promoted ~ huge throng with no proviiiOn for food. shel~~r. or san1· tation. The.v repeatedly started rumors of. big nam e entertainers'' who \vouJd show up, when 10 fact they had no real Arrangements Lo produce them. -\Vh en the event really wa.!I' upon them. Laauna officials acted wisely and calmly for the most part. The city also had a 1tron1 me11ure of food luck. and LI· auna Beach came out of lt phya lcal!y lll!•<•lhed. But the event ia 1oJna to cost L1a:un1 llxpay1r1 and tho•t of neighboring cltlea a bundle In extra 1xpen111. Among the unfortunate ind ne1ativ1 11pect1 of th1 event was the dect1ion of the Laruna city 1ov1rnment not to level with the townspeople and Jive them aomt idea of what appeared likely to happen and what 1tep1 were be ing taJcen to mlnimlze Its Impact on the corn· munity. Police intelli~ence started fllterin~ ln to Laauna from around the county in November. By mid-Decem· her the municipal officers knew they had a problem and were makln)'! plans. A force of nearly 400 police officers v.•as planned and assembled. The highway blockade put into effect Chrlatma.!I' Day, was a pre· planned action -Identified as Code Charlie C. Surely a good deal more lnformation could and should have been given the townspeople In advance. Lagunans are pretty sophisticated. There is HtUe lil<ell· hood It would have created a panic. and some advance word could have 5';ved many more Christmas day pla ns. The city will have to prepare now for ways to cope with future proposals for large outdoor gatherings of this type, Man.Y model la \Vs. setting-down requirements lor permits, sanitation, posting of bonds and medica l and sanitation rules, have been adopted across the United States to cont rol such festivals. Laguna Beach can't rely &imply on a policy d e· claration that no such happeln" wUJ ever happen again, nor can any other coast1l city, Unhappily. there are even toda.v report!' circulating that a committee has formed tor an "Ea1ter Happen· in,I?" ... . s .-O•"I•• ~~.,._. ~ ~THEY 5AY THf f!R>T TWO WEEKS Off Ci6ARETffl ARE THE HA~NST.~ . lta Spite of Social Pr ogreas, There Is ••• Mindless Blaming of Nixon WASHINGTON -As tt'l!l eame to an end various e:tponents Dl lhe Ni:iron administration sou1ht to jwitlfy the President's first two years .as having quieted down the na!ion in spite of certain noisy events dur ing the con· gressiona! campa ign. It does seem true tha t the campuses are quieter. the ghettoes are me rely smou ldering. ;i n d the olde-r gene.ration grew accustomed to their children and grandchildren go t up as if for a fan cy dress ball. The biggest fizzle or 1970 proved, in 111ny case, to he the yo u th revolution. 't.1• c 'r-.}_. ·-~ I ,• • , .....,, .. ~ - The v.·nrkless ethic bf>gan to look silly in a nation with breadwinners \•ain!y seeking work . A large surplus of trained teachers and tcchn oloi;:ists, and a plethora nr Ph.D's, untrained dreamers. en· vironmenla!isls. moralists. electric guitar players. org8nic food faddists, high lighted the shortco1n1ngs of lhe new con- ,;ciousness as a "''<IY In sustain life. The.re may be . as reported. a couple of lhousand communes where the flnv.·er chlldren find sheher in substandard hous. ing but the glamour is \\'Cdring thin and the nati on as a whole has been unmoved except in revulsion . GErrlNG 00\\'N T(l Y>hat really hap- pened in Nixon's first tn·o year.s, the overblnv.•n rhetoric of the 'l/hile House and its unlikely herald. Dr . Danirl Patrick t-to~'nihan , can be 1gnor!'d. Al hand are both Dr. Moynihan 's etnQtional rar«!wel! and the many thousand v.nrdcd t r-¥·"'!'"' ••• ~·.,,, .. .,..,, . ~-~ ... Richard Wileon ' '-. apologia superintended by presidentlal aide John D. Ehr!ichman. The simple slatislics tell the tale bet· ter. Here are a few: The ratio of e.xpetiditures for national defense and human resources programs. balanced heavily in favor ol national defense in the Kennedy-Johnson years. has be en reversed. In 19&1. it was 48 percent for nationa l defense. and 30 percent for human re.sources programs. Jn the curre nl fiscal year. the figure. is 37 percent for nat ional defense and 41 percent for human resources. SCHOOL DESEGREGATION in the South has been nothina 'hort nf aensa· f!onal. In 19611. 6.I percenl of the South'a l\1egroes attended school in de11egregated s.rstems. The fi,l!ure l.1 now 00 percent. Jt is pointless to irnore lhe f1ct !hat many of these Negroe1 attf.nd 1ehool1 in V.:.hich a nlajori!y of 1he studenlS are b!ack. Even so. school desegregation tn the South ha~ advanced during the Nixon administrallnn at an unprecedented rate. At another flash point. lhe number of young mrn cal!ed in the military draft has declined from 93,000 in the first quarter of 1969 to 27.000 in the fourth quarter of 1970. And, on another fijhling front. "''hen Nixon came into office 2.9 million persons got the benrfit of food stamps. Today the figure is three hmes as great, S.8 mllhon. THESE STATISTtCS are chosen for l\Justration because they tell tile slory of what haa happened in thoat areas where Nixon had b1en erltlclzed with such emotional bitterne11, In other fields the record is not sn persuasive -the standstill in national economic growth. the increase in unemploy ment. the continuing rise in prices. But where the heart and human com· passion are concerned the statistics tell a story of accompl ishment readily overlooked by those who cherish their preconceived not ions of Nixon. Thl.s mAkes it all the mor• difficult lo underltand v.·hy so many Nelfo ' leaders, IO many welf•risls , IO many plC'ifists, IO mart)' environmen talists and 80 many ot the younr 11mply dl1m111 Nixon as beyond redemption. TREY MINDLESSLY prefer to blame him for events with which he had no connection, IJU the kllllnp at Kent !tate, like the J>ollution of the alr and w1 ter, and, beyond all reuon, with complicity in t'1e "military-tndustrlal comple1" whic h he has denied •7 billion this year. Why doesn't he fire J. Ediar Hoover? How come he stands for Spiro .Agnew? Why docsn'L he !'iympathize with and inspire. the young? And so on and 10 on Therefore, in spite of the steady IOClll prog ress in the Nixon adminlalratlon. in spite of the withdrawal fro m Vietn1m, in spite of lowered defenae ut11y1, In spite of gains in the Stn1 ,. and un· commonly low losses 1n the Hoiae, 1970 is not deemed to have bem a good year for Nixon. There \\'ill be those who wlll u y tht same v.•hen Nixon adda economic pro- ,zres.'I in his last two ye1r1 to 1he aocJal progress of his first two years. Military Pot Use Growing Pol has become sn prev1lent IJTlona American mil itary personnel in Virtn1m that Bob Flope lnclutlerl gags aOOul it during his annual Chris tmas tour of lhe Y•ar zone. All J'iope launched into 3 se.rie~ nf one-linerll abour mariJ11ana, wme GT~ in his audience ht up the ir cwn slicks. A top-level Pentagon task force du· dying the use of drugs 111 the armed force.s !old Congress latt summer !here has been "an alarming increase of cases investigated in South Vietnam, the con- tinental U.S. and \\'orldwlde." One witness , Dr. Rober1 \V. Baird. warned: •·un!e~ we lake decisi ve steps, we are going tn have a problem fh·e year.oi: from now we are not going to be able lo contend with ." , The Pentagon task force maintained thll "the nature of the problem ill no~ auc.h that al this point military readiness __ •. }. Tburlday, January 7, 1971 Tht ~ditoriol page of the Da ily Pilot 11ctki to inform and stim.- WGU rtadtri b11 presentina thi$ newipoper'• opinWn.s and com· tMntaru on topics of intereit and rlqniJU;once, b11 providing a f orum. /or tht ezpressiO'll of our r eadtr1' opiniom, and b11 JWtrtntfng th• di verit view- pointl of lnjormtd obatrvl!ri and rpokllt7U'n on topict of the 1av. J1obort N. Wood, Publisher • r· ~-----·""' .. '" . ' Eclllofta1 I -~Ch . .., . 4' W.o --L4~... .. - ls considered to be endan1end." But 1 study by an Army pt\y1lciln hu dlliclo.sed that nearly one out of five fronl·llne soldier! surveyed in an elite combat unit 1n Vietnam smoked mari· juana al leasl once • day. VICE ADMIRAL ": Mack. deputy assistant secre ..... , uJ defen11 for manpower, ha s 11aid lhe problem nf drug use by men ••ililed to critical areas is under ''pretty good conlrol .'' Such areas include nuclear-<fel.ivery systems, nuclear power plants and in· telligence operations. Each nf 1he services has uncovered about 20 to 30 cases of off.duty drug abuse by men in these specialties, he reported. All were promptly removed. Estimates or marijuana use by men In Vietll am range from 30 to 80 percent. Marijuana grows wild in Vietnam and experts say the strain is twice as potcat as that available in the United Slates. ln all the services, the re were only m invcstigation.1; of marijuana use in J965, By 1969. the number had grown 10 19,139. More. than 111 third of the cases, or 6,490, were in Vietnam . Ha rd drug cases tolAJtd 3,3.l? lasl )'ear, with 83J of them occurring in Vlelllam. The Navy, which had taken the hardest line. rlischarged 3,808 men in 1969 for drug abuse. Only 30 had ht.en let ,110 in 19fi3 for that cause. Navy discharges ln 1970 tOr dru& abuse may reach as high as -4,500 • TREATING DRUG user1 In the service rat.her than pro1ecutinr them it btln1 encouraged under a new policy. The Idea is to build on e.xperlmenl•I pro- trams already in operation In the Army and Air Force and to make them official policy. Emphasis is belnl pllced on rehabilitation and education -not punishment. EmOOdying many of tht recom· mendations advanced by th.I Pentlplt task force, the new plan allowa •rnwty for drug users if they come forward vDiunlarily for treatment. Under old regulations amnesty wN not alknrtd, and dishonorable dischar1u precll.Mild addicts from getting tre.atment at veterans hospitals. Jf a drua user h11 potential for further u1eful military service, attempts are to bl m1d1 to reatore him to duly. Dear Gloomy Gus: The Christmas rock f11tlval 1~ tracled O\'er 20,000 on a 1hoeltr1na promotion budget. Should LISUM 'I resirlcnt taJpaycrs continue to subsidize. Chamber of Com mtrCI touri 61 1dverli.slng ($38,000)? -B. S. II. T~b ft•tu ,.. fMltoe'1 "....,,. ¥1twt. Ml ~ttt,,.rllY tMN et ~ ---· ~ • ,_ "' ........ ,. ........ ,. ...... 0.111' l'llel. Containing of 'Happening': 'Masterful' W o·rds: Weapons ' ,,_"'f<t_ . . ~~"''*"":~!ill, ' ,. !" ',. !;''.;, ; ' ' . ,,, 'M~i·~~ I • .. ~ I \> ·. ... ,,.,_,., •• ~---1 ..... ' ' ....... ~................. .-· To the Edilnr: Congratulations. As a local resident and nne most concerned about whal might happen lo Laguna Beach as a ruult of "'The H1ppenin1," I wllh lo expreas my heartfelt thanks to the m1yor, city admlnl1trator, city police and othera who did • ma1terful job of conlllnlng the event on lhe oullldrLt nf the cily. Hid this event taken place in the downtown area, It would have bttn a nightmare. I agrtt with the mayor thal the event 1houlcf be the l•tt. For those intere.ted in auing . sue those persons who sponsored and promottd the event -not the. clly adm~stralion. M. J. MONAHAN •c/1kken, Chicken' To the Editor : Chlcken, chicken, lhe sky is fall ing. 'rhe city couneUmen·1 11.ltamenls re1ardin1 report.I lh•t "hud core re volu· tionarlea" Intended to lnv1de the Chrlltrn•• rock fe1Uvll 1n Llauna Be•ch to provok1 a confrontttlon between hi~ ple1 ind police, 1t1rt a rk>t Ind ''burn the town'' are lfOU e1111er1Uon1 o( distorted f1ct1 her1lded by C:OU.ncilman Lorr and city offlcl1l1 for the purpoa• of 1hl1ldlnt an lnqulry by a clllsenfi committee lnUl the blunders that re1ulted in a t111eo. Doel thl1 Herr Goebbe.la ex- pecl u1 to believe tht city of Laauna Be1ch w1s fn peril. at the mercy of youthful mu1lc !overt, rellrfou1 groupa or the m1ny local retldentl who attend· ed, all would unite to burn the city? PEIUIAPI TRIS la the: prelude to fore. ln1 hl&h rile on tht pretut the re1ldenta will find 11tety on the upper floort In the event of rlot1. Or, a freew1y lhroulh our city -will f1 clllt1te ev1cu1Uon to a1fety In our nel&hborlnc communlttea -· !Ny do no1 uperlenco tlleae di .. ordert. Thlt 11 a duper1te attempt by a ccntamptlble aroup of city otfJclall to Jlllllly no1ll1tnc:e al lho lncepllon ol tht tuU'al thlt rll\llt.ed In 1ccldtnta. daoth, prob1bly llabWly and UUonomlcal ' co111lo1 1mlll munldplllty. Huvon holp the taxpoyer: II II wu only -!bit lo tuck th1' COWldl lnta btd lo ~HP unW llldlon d1y. SPEllO JANIU; fAtlu ... •e Pollee To Iba Editor' I hope )'OW' paper wlll write 1 nice ltllclt on the -way our Lquna ltocb Olio! ol Polleo and hil llaya lwldlad UM 11Wallon o1 Ult airtatmu llollday1, I -llow rnan1 ol tho Lasuna ltacll -lo l'<lllia whit 1 woodlrflll poUoo larco ,,. hav1. MAUL A. JAMES Llctt-r1 Jrom rtadnt M• wkom•. N°""4U~ unil1r11.IM>ul4 ~ &Mi,. ..,._, flt 300 IOOtdl ot llu. Th• rloh& to ettnden.se letters to fiC &poet or tlminate libtl is restrvec!. AU let· l.trs must include 11ignoture and tft<ttl· ing addrt.f$, but namtt tnafl be with· htld on rtq1Jt3t if iufffr:itnt reoson i.t apporent. Poctr11 will not bt pub- lished.. Of Obfuscation As a lanru11e 1rows m o r e "sophisticated,'' in the modern sense. it 15eems to accomplish l.wu opposi1e things a~ once: il clarifies expression and conf uses it at the same lime, In "advanced" societies, words arc as often used as smoke.screens as lhey are used as smoke signa ls. This rerlection wa~ prompted by a little news item out of Sw11lland, lhe new African •late whlch ,has e1!4lbl ished Ill nwn national airline. recen tly, the airline decided to print lick· el:'! in Swazi instead tlf English, "and ran up against some !ricky linguistic problems,'' the atory noted. TECHNICAL AND leg1Jlallc term1 are nonexistent in this tl'llb1l tongue. and the official tr1nsl11or ot the tickets finally 31ve Up tryinl lo lrlnsJ1le BUCh phr1tscs as "unless expressly so provided. noth ing herein contained shall \~·nivc any limitation of lia'oilify of carrier. , ." Jo:;very passenger has sceo this gobbledygook on his ticket, ;ind not one out of a thousand English·speaking lravelers can understa nd il. Such l1niu11e i1 devised (as it i!I in household Je11ea) lo 1lve th e c1rrJcr and the landlord all the beat cf It. while confusing the layman. In our societ y, millions of people aaree In or 1l1n lhings thcy- h1ven 't re1d be~e they rouJdn 't undenllnd them 1ven after reading. THIS IS NOT TO mike the arroi;:anl a11umpUon thlt trib1J languages a re \ childish, as :10 many of us rlo. Prof. Mar ie Pct. in his book. "The Story of Language," poi nts nut that the two pr:1nc1pal Afr ican tongues. Hau!a and S\\'ahili, are far [rom crucfe or sim{lle· min ded. S\vahili. indeed, he tells us, has reached ),uch a slaRe of development that !he comedies o/ i\lol1ere have been successfully translated in!n ii. and presented with an all -Af rican cast. And lhr Bantu lani::uagcs (o[ wh ich fa mily this 1s a member 1 arr termed ''infil\itel :-r r>xpressive'' lly !hi.~ professor of !JnguJSIJ(S. FQR, l~STA~CE. English ha s no word like ·'mumagamagama.'' which mean ~ "nne \vhn loses other people's thin1s." or ''1nuwavL" meaning "a good-looking \1•nman ..... ho r,1n 'I cook.'' or "mu1\·andoloci." meaning "someone "'hn .1::rowls wh en a1vakened in the morning ," Qr '"mu tolatoli," meaning "one who i ~ constantly divorcing and remarryi ng " Bantu even ha:1 a word for a "yes·man'1 -"muvum!zi." The terms Jt1nd phra!e!I we h.!ve developed, which are la cking in Swazi and other nat ive 1onguee. are not 80 much tools of commun ication as weapons nf obfuscal!on -means of confound ing. int.1midaling. 1mpress1ng, fri ghtening or fll(llJng people. \\'hen you are Jofllly told 1ha! ynur Bilmerit ma.v be "ii-trogenlr." \vha 1 !hat mean~ 1s that, it's probably sQmcth1ng you picked up fro~ tbe doctor. Deterring Dru1ik Driving Driving on street. and high wa ys is d1n1e roua enou1h these days \l'!!houl motorlst1 btln1 required to conteod v.·ith drunk drlver1. Yet the 1tall8tlc1 on traffic fatal ities keep telUna the •lme old story : l\n incredible number fl f death-dealing accldenll art dlreclly linked to dr inktnJl drlvert. Jt h11 been 1mp<16sible lo keep thtN huarda to Ille and limb off the hlchW&y1. The Governor"• Aulorno bile Accidcnl Study Commbalon, after 21-z years of a'Wdy, bat rtcom~ that California Jmpoea m1ndatory Jall untences or fines for ftnt OlftnM drunk driving. An yone convicted 1 HCMld Ume would be required to 1ubmlt to a medica l board !or U1mln1Uoa 11\d rehlblltlltion. IT II QUlll'JONAllLll: •he!hcr even a mandatory fine or a lbort atay in ja.il are 1dequ1te dtterrenta ta drunk driving. A motorl1t who h11 been drinking heavily more thin Ubly bl a tendency to forget tbt PoNllM contequtnces should he attempt to w11ve bll·car bomeward or to anotblr tavem. But It Jeut tb11 would be a sltp in the rfcht dlrtc:Uon. People have got t& be rntdt t• rtllbt tti1t driving an automobllt wldlt drunt poses a n unacceptabJt rllk to lbt llves llf otherii who ar• ualn1 the ht,hway~ in a l•&tlllnlta mlmMr. Citllens should be abla to drlvt \Mir c1n with some auurancci Uwt they wt1n1t fall victim to a lush who th.inks he's cntiltcd to weave 11ver three lanes ef traffic nn the free w1y. THE MOST JNTRIGUING aspect or the commissioner's recommendation il' it.s propo,al for handling 8 e c • n d t i m e offenders. By requlring rehabilitation of ,. ~ i' Guut F.ciitorial ; . ,, . .. _ .. _ ~ the. nrfendera, there i~ gre11 ler-llkellhood lhe rooL of the probltm c11n be re1tjle.d. Fines or j•il 1entenc.es 11ren 't cures for drunk dri ving. merely monetary pen1Jtle1 !or disobeyin1 the Jaw. lin!i \ something is done In lre1t lh1 drunk driver for hlB lllnellll r111her 1han repeatedly punl1hln1 him for hla crime. the lra r!Jc death 1tat11Ue11 1ren't 1otn1 ht improve. The commihlon ·1 propo11l1 contain 1eeds of hope tb1t thi1 ml&ht be done. Dear Georae : Tbe D1Uy CllHenl .. wM111 fl.1y husband has one b1d f1ul~ -extravagance. For my blrthd1y he bought me not one but THR.!:! wigs -red , pl1Unum Ind brunette. Am r justified tn n1aln1 him for bf!in1 a .1pendthrlft ? DOT Dear Dot: I don'l think you 1hnu\d. TMrt are more rxtr1 v1111nt thln11 tl\ln the collt or three. wlfs -r~. platinum anrl bruncllt !"or ln- 818nce, a real redh@ld, blonde Ind brunehr. { (Send your problemi. to Geor11 and face e1ch day b)I turnln1 your ba.ck on ltl I . 1: . . • . . • . :: Change. That's what it's all about this year. And that's . what we mean hy putting you fint. These are uneasy times. There are major concerns. About pollution. About safety. About the economy. About YOIH'"hard-eamed dollar. We know . For the past JO yea«l:hevrolet research people have ' questioned thousands of people on every subject fr om rising taxes to the size of the glovebox in their cars. We've found that price and maintenance costs, trade-in value and quality have become tremendously important. Your car has to work. It has to last. And each new model must have more built-in value. At Chevrolet, we understand. You want meaningful change. You want improvements that are not just skin-deep, but deep-seated. And one of those, among the man y that you'll find in the 1971 Chevrolets, is new emission controls to hel p bring back clean air. In every new model. we've made further sub· • ' I I I I ' slon lia l reductions in bot h the discharge of hydrocarbons and c~rbnn 1110110:-.irlc . i\11 1971 Chevrolet engines run effi ciently on the new 11n-lracl or Jo,,·-lrarl ga solines, too, \Vhich not only decreases air pollution l1ut incre<ises the life of your spark plugs, exhaust systcn1 a11 d other engine components. Car.rice. The bigge•t, most luxurious Chevrofct even A comp e te change. nignrss in itself is nothing. But if it allows you to lengthen the distance between the front and rear wheels (which we did), then you 've got something, )'ou've got a smoother ride. The idea in t he 1971 Caprice was to give you the looks ;:in cl cnrnfnrt of a six-or seven-thousand·dollar cB r, without asking you to pay any\\'here near that mu ch for it. And cihove all, to build in as much dependability and security as poss ible. T h11r~ay, J.inu-;i•y 7 1'~7 1 -OAfl.'f PllOT 7 So we changed the body structure for 1071 , too. \Ve made it st ronger. An d \Ve made it q uie ter by putting a double layer of steel in t he roo f. Caprice , as yo u can see bel o\v, is a lol of luxury a t a Chevrolet price. -~ Vega. i:he littlest Cht•.)' ever. It wasn't changed from anythrni:. Before building Vega, we read eve ryt hing 11•e cnulrl ge l our hands on alJout little cars. \Ve talked t<) O\vners. \\'e studied little cars up one side and do\vn the other and , literally, tore them apart. We found out what made_t hem tick, or why they didn't tick. \Vhat ticked were gas economy and dependability. \Vhat didn't \vcrc undcrpo\vercrl engines , cramped quarters and getti11g blo\\'O around i11 the wind. Jn our little Vega , eve rything ticks. It's not just anot he r little ca r. You didn't want I/Jal. It's one little car that does everything well. TV Special. Chevrolet preo;ents Changin g Scene II I \vi th Engelbert H un1perdinck • Dnn Adan1s • Barbara Eden • and a hosl of other stars • AB C-T\t, Jan. 7. Consult local lislings for time and channel. Caprice • See what we rnean by puttinR )OU first? Now at your Chevrolet dealeri: • - I ....... ~·.... -. . . ,. . ~, I DAILY PI LOT _ _Tlulf'~_.,, Jatfv.; 7, IIJ71 Davis Case Motions Get Study ,R~ag~n Documents CRLA Funding ·v·eto • ' ' ' . ' •. • SA"i RAfAEL tUPJ \ -An Attorney for black militant , Angela Da\·jg ~ys he may' e1·entually sst that he!'" trial· ht moved to eiUtfr IA$' Angeles or Sa'! Francisco. , A Horney Ho"'ard !\toorf' Jr., of Atlanta. llil'lid \\'ednesda:v lh!'ISC rit1ei; ofter the best chanCf'~ fl'lr ihe avoy,·ed Com- mun1s1 In ,::Pt a true trial b~ ~r peers.'' A1torne' Allan R r n t s k y, ;:inother Da\'tS la11.·yer. said therr was no 1mmed1a!f' plan to ask for a change of 1·enur. 'l1ss D;n·is. a nnellme r rLA raculty member. 1s char,::ed "'Ith murder. kid· naping 11nd cnnspirac.1· in an unscucrssful but fatal f'i;cape ;it!t'mpt from a. ~.lar1r Coun ty ('tlUrtroorn. A 1ud~e-1•10 eon- ''icts and an accomplire "ere kt llNl in thr tr.1 . . \liss D;H·1s 1~ char&ed \11fh bu.1 JTIJ! the i::uns that thf ar- con1plire smug,e:\('d in!n th" rourtroom nr Judge Harold J. Hale~._ All !hose k1ll<"d ex-' Cf'D! th e jud~e "'t're .~e~l'flt's: ~lotions al'king tha1 sht' hr frr>Prl C1n b:i il anrl 1ha1 her ind ictmpnl ht' di~misSf'd 11·ere filed in hrr bEh<ilf. The later motion cnntl'nds I hf' in- d1cllnent ~hould be thrt'll'"" out because of lack of e\"idence. Ski Resori Up for Sale By State SACRAMENTO. Ca lif. (AP > -The Squaw Valley resort area. built by the State of Cahfornia for the Win ter Olympic~ 'has ~n pot on the· :nK'tK!n bl ock. by Gov. Ronald Rragan 's admi~istr<ition. The site 1n the Sit'rra 100 mile""s east ol S3"cramenl0 may ~ a picture postcard won- derland . but .it has been t1 financial headache to the state si nce the 1960 Olympics. The state has been losing as much. -as SJ00.000 ti year on the Squa w \>'alley recr~a­ tion area w h i 1 e con- C"tssionaires \1•ho operate I.ht i;ki iesort under lease from tht' state -leases J:: o i n·g through 1988 -ha ve been turning ti handsome profit. 111.2·18 ANAHEIM CONVENTION COOER ,.9 SIG s 'HoYIS i · COMBIN&DI . . fUtl FOR THE WHOl,.E .FAM\~\ PLUS EllTERTAlll•EIT Ill THE WATER&·Oll TBEITAIE :.nOUTflSHING:-/ C.IMC CE.II ··-· : ' CATCH 'CM k I IOATS • : AMOK7L /~ ~ : : ;~:_ TAClUDM.Jf ;~'Jiii: y~r::T:W : . ~ . . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • : P<l-OP w g 1141DI ~~ ~-• TUY&. ti ~ -· • 11 : ··UMrm .. , " u.s -: =t=b TUrLDS ~ 1W.11S : ~. . . . ................... ····iii···~~··· ..... . "' •2-10 s !Jji~ ::;.. T, l w ~l:i:~ \fll .. YS 2 I' .M. . . ~ • 5,4.~ (AP) ·.T Gov. Beqan~. has reve~ t .«XI pUc.s '·cir doc\IJ'nen~ ~ staff s•'ys shOw wkle-rang1ng abuses b~ attarneys with the feWtJIY • fliode<l C.!nqrala Rural J..ee1 Msi&lanct, Inc. TM: ,dcitumen~. backlng a 23.l-page report filed' b y Reagan _ _.,des in Wuhlpcton WedMsdly, cite abUses rang- ing from threatening wit- nessts lo coml'lliL perjuy to tilW!cln&, ()Oli!l~ came~'!" and 1 Ce!af -0.avez:-·tarm labor strike with federal money. ~, one month to study the ~ The bulky documents and • Reagan veto. Wed n es d a y report are .part t f an attempt Carlu cci"s staH asked CRLA to convibce Fnink Carlucci, officials to answer specific acting director of th e Off ice charges in the Reagan papers. f?f , EcoMotic OpP,Ortunity,; to Contacled in San.+"r11ncisco. uphold the. R eip.u b I i c aJl }.iarty Glick. CR~ dtte1:tur governor'• ~ontroYersb:I veto of. litigation, called ttie ~port of ·I SI.SS million OEO grant "an attempt to estal}lisb .R:u ilt to ~'CR.LA UUs year. by aSSQ<:jation, Ther.e are a Carlucd. whose permanent lot of aflegations about people appointment has been tied up that a re Unpopular v•ith the by iReagan critic Sen. Alan public." ~ ~ ~ Cranston (D-Calif.), in a move Glick quoted former St.lite to f()f"tt ·• ft.to oVerrid@. has All~ Gen. Thorria.s .. Lynch'&, ertended the CRLA program pra,ise of CRLA .attorneys as cooperative and elfeet lve. ad- ding some of 1 he Reagan report charges 11o•ere new to him . "'but I'm sure they are hk~ the old ones -jij,'it not true. •• The report charged the CRL.A favored ri.1 ex i can · American poors over white , poor'.Jlnd that its attorneys were more interested i n ~-idrologlcal warfare wit h the poor as ammunilion '' lhan -wiUvw111ning cases for clienl.!l. It added that CRLA political lobbying and class aclion su11s against the R e a g a n ad- ministration have caused the stale government "grave con- cern .. but y,·ere "1rrelevanl conllidereHons'' in the. governor's veto. , The report recommended CR.LA be replaced with some privat~Jy funded legal aid fOr poor or a ,legal equivalent of Medicare. Alleged abuses listed in the report and boxes of documents included printing brochures Fountain Valrey ' . ................•.. ~ ............... , ...................•••.••••••••••.•...•. JANUARY 4 lo 1JANUARY 30, 1971 and bumper suckers ,or-- candidate for the 1 ta Assembly, supplyiJlg post ror a United farm Worke Orga11izing Committee 'stri and defending their ewn s on criminal charges. Other Reagan docume descri be aJleg~ inlirniOatl of a Soledad prison inm to suppress evidence or ' worst, commit perjury'' in criminal case that CRLA charged wilh entering in vio lion of ils grant re!trictions. I "" .............................................................................................. VALUABL.EJFREE iPRIZES No-obligation-You need not be present lo win ' 'l I '· Pan<isonlc : FM/ AM. rind FM Stereo Radio Panosonic . Digital C10<k AM /FM Radio Panasonic FM/AM 8 Trock Stereo Tope Player Plus ofhervaluable gifts-Drawing held.Jon. 30, 1971 FREE ,.GIFT ;FOR ~EVERYONE ~ INSURED SAVINGS RATES *JOIN THE FUN*-.' See Fountain Valley's newest financial office. .. 63 2-Y"' C'11ific:a1e ~ kcounts wit~ mi11inram ., SS.rol Balance. · Annoll yield 6.18% I-Year Certirt e Accounts ~th ' mum l l,000 Bala Annual yi1ld 5. Oar c.t1rmlt anoml rate on Passbook trith intert:St ptid day · Monday·!Mndoy 9!00 AM to ~:00 l'M, F"4ays 9:30 AM to 6:00 l'M " :UNIO-N FEDERAL SAVIN AND LOAN ASSOCIATION 17<!00 Brookhunt Str.et,.Fountain Valley, Cal ifomia,""-: 17141 962- 3·M<Mltll C"1iflc:a1e Accounts with minimum .$500 Balance. Annu1I yield 5.39% •• Re~""' officts in Los Alam~os • t.n1 Beocl,.llixby ~ • Ga'deoa • Mafiba • Malo Off1<1: 4211 s..tli Sprin( S!reet. Its Alleles . ' ' • " .. ·-:~ ·: :· ,• ·~ .• • l ,. " ·~; ' • . , ;. •' •' 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 0 FOAM PILLOW 100 ••• 16 ONLY 0 FOAM CHAISE PAD 100 11 ONLY 0 FOAM STACK PILLOW 1ocr I ( ONLY ••• 0 FOAM CHAISE PAD 200 l ONL'( ... 0 CHARCOAL CADDY 50~ •. 11 ONl Y 0 PICNIC TABLE CO~E:NLY 60~. 0 TIKI TORCH WICK~. ONLY 4Q~ •. 0 cLAMP-oN uMBRE~~" 2 o~.. I 0 B.B.Q. TOOL SET "ONLY 10~ .. 0 CHAISE PADS lO ONLY 1 '~. I 0 CHAISE CHAIR PA~oNLY 30~•. 0 . FLOATING POOL ~!T!NLY 60~ •. 0 TIGER TORCH .. ONLY 10~ •. I HOUSEWARES I 0 BRASS ANDIRONS 'ONlY 30~. I 0 3 PC . TV· TRAY SET 1 200 I !00 0NL1' ... I 0 TV TRAYS " ONLY 42000~.. I ~ GLASS SETS, 8 PC. -40 ONLY IA. 0 6 PC . GLASS & CADDY 1•0 Jl ONLY ... 1so ••• 0 TEFLON SKILLETS IJOONLY 0 IONA ELECTRIC MIXER 5 ONLY ·~·· 0 7 PC . BAR SET 0 FONDUE SET 0 FONDUE SET lO ONLY 4° 0 ... , 900 1ONLY 1 tzoi' 4 ONLY IA. 0 ROASTER RACK a ·oc J6 ONLY U.. 0 15 PC. CUTLERY SET 200 2J ONL 'f U.. 0 ~~ •. ~~-Dl$H SET ·"' ONLY 20~ •. 0 ~~~=;~ ... ~.~VER RA~~ONL; 2so ... 0 DISH SET JONLY 9~ •. 0 ~1 ,~~~.,~~~IG, ~~"ONLY 20~ •. 0 2 9T. CONTAINERS ac · ho ONLY ••· • D~LY llLOT f n.11 ii tlte big g•t·rld-of-of.too-much Inventory Sale. Everytltin9 i1 priced low •• the law allows, I and then 1em• l le come In earty and ta~• home stuff for a lot S... titan we 1eU it for any. other time. I Watch It, titer• are a few reqular1 ttirown. iii to checlc your ll)emory;)_ SALE STARTS TOD.AY LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND AND IN THE WAREHOUSE End• January 13, 1971 or if an lt .... Js sold out sooner. ' ' ' ' GRAB THE. BABY AND YOUR LOVELY BRIDE AND , HITCH UP THE HORSE I SEE YOU DOWN · AT THE STORE. 0 STEAK KNIFE SET • ONLY 30~ .. 0 6 PC . FORK SET • ONLY 3'~ •. 0 5 PC. KNIFE SET • ONLY 3'~ •. 0 CARVING SET 2so I ONLY ... 0 WIG HEAD $TAND" ONLY 30~ •. HARDWARE 0 GLUE GUN ' ONL '( 400 ... 3~ .. Tu•~•• 0 PROPANE TORCH -40 ONLY 0 TURNER TANKS soc \OJ ONLY IA, 0 BENCH VISE 'ONtY 3°~ •. 0 MAIL BOX WITH L1?~:Y 3'~ •. 0 SAWHORSE BRAC1~~~LY 88~. 10~ •. 100 ... 11 '' 0 HACK SAW BLADES JOO ONLY 0 CHEST PULL EXERCISE 10 ONLY 1so ... Zl''" De 0 CIRCULAR SAW BLADE 11 ONL'f' 200 21 ON LY IA. 11 ,c S.AE ••USS 0 TAP & DIE SET 0 GRAVITY GATE LA.~~~y 29~ •. 0 SNAP l'ULLEY "ONLY 70~ •. 0 SHEPHERD CASTE~~ ONLY 50~ •. 0 SOLDERING GUNS I ON LY 60~ .. 100 ••• lo bee 0 SAND & l'OUSH KIT 10 ONLY 0 11'.Aci<' CRUTCH TIPS 30' 100 ONLY 4 ,IC. 1000# 300 0 HEAVY DUTY HOI~! ONLY ••. 0 WOOD MITRE BOX 50' J O ONLY IA, 0 PLASTIC TOOL BOX 50' Jl ONLY u . 0 UTILITY KNIFE 20' 40 ONLY IA. 0 HACK SAW n ONLY 45~._ 0 29 PC. DRILL SET 800 W/1111t1t 111411• lJ ONLY IA. 0 DOOR RUNNER ... ONLY 1·6~ •. r ••. 1 ""~"''' 200 0 WEATHER STRIP Ji ONl '1 IA. 0 SPRING DOOR STOP Wlr• Cl•••t 0 COAT H,OOKS JOO ONLY ·121 ONLY 0 ILK. DRAWIR PUL1S . 11l ONLY 5c ... 7~ .. 10' . ... 10c ... o ~i: 'D'IM soci'm 1/2 0 ·., 0 WEATHER STRIP.PING 20' " Jl ONLY IA. 0 POCKET KNIVES "ONLY 40~ •. 0 ENTRY LOCKS-B~0A0~~Y 3'~ •. AUTO l(ift• el •~• lte1tl 60' o 01L ADDmVE ,., ONLY ... 0 u9uiii' WRENCH 80' 58 ONlY IA. 0 PT. U9UID WRENCH . 60' 44 ONLY IA. '°ONLY 4.0~ •. G 1r191 Fleof 0 CLEANER 0 HI WAY FLARES 15' •oo ONL 'f ... 0 1 GAL GAS CAN 5 ·0C 24 ONLY I •• 0 WATER BAG lO ONLY 100 ... 0 TUBE REPAIR KIT "ONL Y 20~ •. t l 01 0 GAS ADDITIVE 0 ADDmVE ?l ONLY 20~ •. 100 J9 ON LY IA. 0 OIL CONDmO'NER, 70c 21, ONLY I A. 0 AUTO UTIER BAG 40c ,, ONLY IA. 0 AUTO DRIP PAN 200 1& ONL Y .... . 0 !~~,?, "~!R BRUSH " ONLY 220 .. . PAINT · Me.i c.,1.,,. 0 SPRAY PAINT 7'0NLY 70~ •. 0 CASTING RESIN 11 ONLY 3 75 G ol. 0 SAY· A· BRUSH 2~ .. 11 ONLY 0 WHITE GLUE '°ON LY 20~ •. 0 MASKING TAPE "'ONLY 30~ •. 0 ENGINE ENAMEL ti ONLY 40~ •. 0 ANT19UE KITS U ONLY 2°~ •. 0 CLOSE-OUT Z SPAR 50% o" 2so tt ONLY IA . 1/J 0., Oil Ce111r 0 PAINT SET Cle••·O uf 0 EXTERIOR STAINS 0 ~,P0°XY GLUE s~oc 20 ONL'( ,, IA. 0 tATlx c;.liN:r· 8 00 I ••L 0 Nt~ON .PAINT BRUSHES 7!0C ' 60 ONLY IA. 0 7 PIC. SANDPAPER ·1c . ..... 0 AMIRIC~N F~~ DICAI: . t oc '0 WO~D ·scurit 48~ . ~ILDING ,MATERIAL$ '"'''". ' 1 '' 0 4xl PANIUNG tO ONLY U.. M•11 ,,, .. ., 0 4xl PANEUNC. ( ·4'' H ONLY IA. 4'' -4 1 ONLY IA. 0 4xB · PANELING 0 BRICK PANELS t ON LY 99~. 0 WALL PANEL ADHESIVE 49c 10 ONLY IA. 0 CARPET TILE ~~~"'"ONLY .. 18~. o c.lit'PE+'~" ;"' 27''°· ' -4 11.0LLS ONLY TD. o.... 1400 0 POLE LAMP & MIRROR 6 ONLY U., Wi11~11w e• ~eer 0 WEATHER STRIPPING 110 60 ONLY ... 0 VINYL BLINDS )] &11. 0 TRASH CAN LINIRS 1/20 .. 3c • •OO ONLY ... ?•JI 0 GARAG~ !>OOJ $PRING; 149 ... 9,.~1.~. GUTTER 7 7 C 10,010 JT. ONLY IA. o ~oo~'"i>iv10Eit ,. ONLY 6°0 ... PLUMBING Chre19111 lt1c111 7 o· 0 SOAP & CiRAB " ONLY . .~. · o -ro.LIT IOWL cwNER 90' l' ONLY .. U.. 0 TWPHONE SHOWER 600 1• ONLY IA~ 0 TOILET BOWL CLEANER soc 100 ONLY ' . . .... 0 ~R~~Nb°CLEANER 60'. ' . '' ONLY , u,, 0 ~RYER VENT PIPE ~ oc '!It ONLY 'fill IA. 0 ~:~.C. SPRINKLER PIPE. • 2 .,G~H. ""•IO' 0 P.V.C. SPRINKLER PIPE 3"~~H. ·~ .. •: ....... 0 SPRINKLER RISER 110 ONLY 0 BASIN WRENCH ,. ONLY 60~ •. 0 TUBING CUTIER .. ON LY 40~ •. 0 HARCRAFT FAUC~ ONLY10·~. GARDENING 0 FAN SPRINKLER •• ONl Y St;u•t• ~ 0 SO'xSO' SPRINKLO J• ONLY Cle1e •tjt 0 SWAN ·HOSE 0 HOSE REMNANTS 90' 100 ONLY IA, O CULTIYA~OR FO~K 4c , !1 ONLY IA'. D RPO.LYING -SPRINKUI 60c. ll ONLY U'.. 0 iuss CumR 160 J I ONLY IA. B.ECTRICAL on4lr•R'1 1.D 0 SWITCH ~TES ....... c..+t91 r 0 ,s,yt~H CORD ' .. 111 ..... , ..... 61111 0 DUK UGHT llONLY 90~ 120 . 41 ONLY ~ I A. 11 ONLY l~LC, " I l ·' .~ ••• DAJLY ,IL.OT ' l ' ' Hearing Set Ca1nper Ir es Horn eo1.vners TUSTIN -An issue thal h .. s alrt!ady provoked biller diacussion tnd lftll'Y IQlnet fU1'\0ng resldtnll oC 'T'u&tbl '• n~est p!1nntd developfMnl will be aired 'It I hefrinJ Kheduled for Jin. 14 ln. Orange County Superior Court. .Judge Harmon G. Scovil!t- has Mt lh1l d1te I n r d1!'.CU~Sion of lhe ar&ument by Broadmoor Park As.9X'i1ttiC1n lnc. represenlatives l ha t rt"Sident' , Thomas J. and Florence M arshllll ~Id nt'lt be alJQwrd to keep their camper lrut:k on I.ht prtmises. The Mar11halls aftd Broad· JnOOt -.VtlopNI IUc!Urd 8, Smith 1 Jnc. were aued by I.he 11Wlci1UOn ln a 1twtull which poln~ ciut that 111 l'elidtnt.s of the planned community at 1111 E. Fi I'll ·St . 1r1 es~ted to abide by the rule lhat boals, cam~rs, trei!eni And tntell:1 should nol be pa rked In the area. INCREDIBLE HARBOR CLOTHIERS DOES IT AGAIN! THUUDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MIN'S Y•lue1 to S135 formerly Gentry ltd. Phone 540-1500 H.,Mr CHttr e Harbor •t WllMA, COSTA MIS.A ON THE Ml.LL I • I i Scholars Named At UCI Agencies Squabble Court ]1ul ge Cools Cy press Wat.er Fight IRV1NE -ltYe" UC ltvll'll itludt.ntl trem •Ion& th 1 Orange Cout are amona U oulslantffnt underir1du1ta selected to be jun ior fellows. ~ social 1cience majo" adYise UCI f1cully •nd •d· mlni1tr1tion on a c a d e m i c malters through the proaram t,1·hich is be&i nninf it. fifth year. Junior fellow• attend faculty meetinp. cive nplnion1 on fact1ll)I hiring and promotioq, aelection of the dean, cr•d1na policies and curriculum l'lf· ferinjJI and help develop teacher eva lu11ion1. Area young pecple 11erYin1 as Junior Fellows this year are : from Costa l\1e~a : Patti Lunde ot 20.M N. Cape.Ha Court and Tom Mo1:1ley of 3025 f'illmore Ave. Freil Irvine : Mike Oka· jima , 2833 Verano Place; '-1iguel Parral. 121 4 Veranl'l Pl;ice , and Rich Yensen . '43H Seton Road. From L.a1uoa Beac h: Peter 1iarri1, 2M Calliope SI. f'rem New,.rt Stach: Kay M11ilavy, 1405 Cla y SL Easter Seal Employ es Slate Talks ORANGE -Professional reh1bi \ltalietn worker• anrl board members from the Eisler 8 ea I Rehabilitation Center for Crippled Oli\dren and Adult.I of Oran1e County TAKES UCI POST (04JM1l•r H1r¥1y IRVI NE -Jerry H1rYey h11 ~en appointed esecutive dir~tor or counseling services at UC Irvine. Hit respon!ibU ilie11 include the coordinalioo of counseling actiYities on the campus and1 !he organization of a counseJ.I ing center. I A gr1duale of Amherst CoUe1e • .H1rYey eamed twn1 m11ter'1 dtJreet al Harvard University. He came I.ti C1Jifornia in !Ml 11 1 UCLA Administra- tive Fellow. THINK SALE Va OPP WllTCl.I'' PLAZA l1lfl • 1 .... i-....... ,, ••• ,~ -, will .111in make themse!Yes av1il1ble for ' pea k in g en111ements to c i v i c, .1~ fr 1terna !, businc$.~. church, and 1t1ei1l org&n lzations thi s year. Accordin1 to Easter Sea l Rt:ti1bllitatlon C t n I er ex- ecuti\Pt director Praim S. Sinah , t he speaker• w i 11 preJent tal k~ aimtfl al ac- qu1intina area resident~ with the retuihllitat1on 1erYice:i;, lreatmenl program~. an If f1cillOe1 available to them al the center. Groupa: interested in ar· r1n1in1 for 1pe.akers without charp from the Ctnter should contact Mrs. (Oinny Read at the E11t St-11 Rehabilitation Center, 1800 E. La Vo!lll, Oran1e, telej}hone t71 4J 633· ~ 7400. Q,ly o,. Pinal 5\ock~ in fill homt edi· tions. That's a biR deal? It ls in Orange County . The DAILY PlLOT is lht nnly 111w1paper tha t deliY1rs the l)ICkl&t. OMCJGA THE MOON WATCH Of 1n the fine witches in the world from which to chooee. this is the one the Aatron1uts wore to the moon . The Omega Speedmaster Profesaional Mich II Chronogroph with tochymetre bezel. Soundl fmf-"essive. And isl St•inloss stoel band, 8195. Cll• .... .l.<<•Unll IR~Hllll, ....... ric.•R ll,.,tM, ••~11.1. ... •rlc•l'lll •IMI ¥••1•r Cll•rt•• tM. SLAVICK'S ,}1"11·1"lo>ri; Sir1CI' 191 7 It FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEA CH -•44· I l l O Open Mend1y & Frid1y U"til t :JO p.m. • . . .. SPECTACULAR JANUARY II •• SAVINGS so~o1o~o AND FROM TO MORE • ON ALL OUR INTIRE STOCK OF> FAMOUS IMPORTED and DOMESTIC • CHANDELIERS • HANGING LAMPS • • WALL FIXTURES • SCONCES • FINE TABLE LAMPS FREE $995 DIMMER With Purcheu of Crystal Chandelier • • Use BankAmericard or Ma1ter Char'll• or Our Convenient Layaway l'lan • > ' Yl(l t •A '' Phone 646-3737. ELECTRIC & LIGHTING 222 Victoria Street, Costa Mesa (A cross from Greenhaven Nursery) Special Courtesy ta Builders & Interior Decorafoi's The Big Mis big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's highest interest on insured . savings ... 5% to 6%. But equally important-cares enough to give you very personal service. ' . CMefta • ., Mw allM1 IMJ Int c..t HlrlftwlY I e1a.ao1a Other offices In Covina, West Arcadi ~. Paudena and Glendale ' . For The Record Birth• M()tl"tlAL o~-.., ,, M'· W Mr.. I-rt J. 1(1uut1, :' ICHWk k S!., 11uMl ... lon lt1dl, HOA• M'M01 14l KOl ,.lfAL Dff..,.N, H Mt -Mn, llt-rl A. 11•111111, ~1 c1111·h'-11 .. c ... 1. Mn1, -· O.C11n1Mf II M r. 1tMI Mr~, Wiiiiam I ••-· 1111 l uH•lr LI M . Hl••o•I l l l fll, t irl. htlil'!Nf" Mr ..... Mtt. a ........ M. Ceo~. 1J11! Lit NulM•. w1,1mln1!or, bev. DH...,Mr • Mt . lnll M.,, Marlo l'trntM11, WI M1rlt<1l<1, Clt..,f f ol Mor, II&•. D ea th Not lre• ,&L.1.Nlf IMI A .. Al111l1. Alt !l, ot 10 • ., Warnor J.v1 .. •1ul\11 l<'I V1ll1v. DUI er <111111, J111u1,..,. '· 11 .. •l<H lt<'tdl"t 1 1 l mltrlJ M(trlu1 .... OIVINI Tnom•• J. D1v1111. A11 "· ft! 11«1 N-- Dort lllvd., Cllotll MHI. 0.11 ~ IH!ll, Ju 1Uuy I. l urvlvlll llv """ ,.,.,, l ov '"" J1,.,,.1 0.vlnt, Otrcl111 Grov11 w 11i., 0...lnl, l l nlt A1111 JftllO\ 0...1111, 1...,111 Son G11k11l1 lwe dtu11111 ... Mr<, ilinnt H1wm111, Glrtlt n Gr.,..1; Mr1. Mtrt1r1t Mt111MOtlt . Son!• Ano; b•olf>••· Wllllt m 0.v•n•, Gt rffn O•tv11 11111•, Ml•I •••! Colllll, lr•lt""' II 1r111ttlllld•tn1 10 ''""'"'••»dc1111drtn. ltOlfno, P'rlClt •. t ,,M, llt ll l'l ....... I V 0..INI. 1._1111"1 M•••. S.,urffv, f AM, SI. Ju cM"I (Mntllir C1!11•Cll, lntt r"ltnl, 0 -llll t- llerd Cemt lt rv, Hunrlnt lon l 11cll, ltl! llre1dw1v M"'lu••v, Ol•td"''· lt'IODl l ,,.,., Edn1 Mot l(ldd•r. Aff II, ft! 7'1 f:m••t ld llov, Lt111no ltfcll, D11t t i det•ll, Jt nut ry J. Survlvtd IW oon. Wll· 1;om; trondMftl, Dr. Wtvn• t(l•dl' t»d 1'!11uell t<ldd.,1 '"ll·t rond•..,, 1'l1111d lrlddO<_ Prlwt lt C11t H ! u rwlct "•ldtv, W••lmlniter Mt m•l•I ll1r• Morl111rv I nd Cemo!erv. Pt1c• F lorene• S. l'•lct. HU StMt Ant Aot,, Co•T• Mut. D111 ol dlt lll. J t nul'v •· Survived bv d1111M1rt. Jf.ln"t l rt olln •nd l'lor...,ct H1!cll1 ""'"'· l lcll.,d V. •~• J•mtt H, l'rlrt1 t nd t lt M ''"""· tMldtfn. Pr!v1ll u nolc" wtr• llfl~ 11 P1cillc View M9mOl'lt l l'trll 111 Wt11nt1• <11 v. J1nu1rv '· I'l l••• Clt rt D-,,,1111. All 11. llf .1111 I! !till !\I, (DJI• Mt ... Diii el dtolt!, J1n111ry • Sur.rived bv 1lu1b1•d, f1111l1 d111e111 .. , ....... Je•• Kelly, Cet•• lri\111 1 fwO ,1,,.,,, M r>. ,t.nnlo Fl!<lltr l fld M1'1ll• S•••t'· "•"•I 5•N lc•• wl+! t><t llt ld F"rld1V, ? J>M, 11•11 11r .. dw1Y (~IHI .... 1111 ll•v. l V lO'llflw ofllcl1ll•• f.,11rm~n1, I-<•" b<i• 11u1 M1mor!1I Por~. ltlf ll•ood••V Mortu1rv, Oirerto" llODlllGUI Z tlen•n•I• llO<lrit Ufl . Ml M1•on1m Or, .. unHtit 1""' lle1c1> Survlvtd bv ~u1b1nd. "'~""' '°"· y.,...,, V lllldrlouu ; •wo llouolllt ro. Mro. llo••mt rlt ltOtl" 1nd Ml•• ttDKct ltodrl1u11; 11111 t •t nd· c111!<1r11t1, t oot ... 11,.11111. Thu .. d1w, I flM, l'lft l'•mll• Cal..,111 l'"unt rtl H-•- lle<111i..., MI U, ~rlltY. 10 -· 11. l tnl · "'"'"'' C1111o111: C:hu•Cll, 1-<unllntlil" ~!ICll. l'tf'll "t m l!v Co!Onlt l P'untri l .. omt . D!rtc!or\ IAUllDllllOll l•lt Mtt S•u•n1r1<1<1. llut J twtll, l&ulll Loa11n1. 0•11 of dooltl. J1nu1r.r I Su•• v lvtd bV d•uollll r, M1r1u1rl!I Hooklo<l<I, 1io, L1au•o; thrH O••Md1111ntoro, Norm• J11n Mt!>llt n,,.,., S1nlt Anti 11111¥ C. ~<nodtf, l!I Toro/ M1rv L11 Dunn. 11•· "" t tfl"ICll""'I' IObtrl Net,..t n Mc!D11!1n<1, c ..... " ,. .... OIH I"' J1tk ...... a ... 11n. T r1cv. Cttll.J 1l1t1r, Min•!• lH l.1•111m. l ""'"'i U 1rH!·1•••dcnll•••"· 5orvlc••· l'rin•v, Jonu•no I.? PM, 111.tll' L•ocon• 811<.1'1 c11 • .,.1. '"'~'"'""'· I I Te•• DI .. .,;u c~,..tl•rl' S~•!!•• L11un1 II••<~ Mertuano. O!•KI•" IM ITH J .. n Col•"'•" 5ml1h . .0.90 a . el l"/1J Ut!I II., N1w.or1 81•C1'. Dolt •I tlH •ll, J t Ml•l'\I '· lutvl~td B• 1'u1BIMI, 11111 ' E. I'"""' fwo ••ut h!t rl, Miu Ct<11ltMI s ... 1t11, OIV!'l'lflt, -·"'"''<In' M•o. c ..... I'. lt•llt tt. Qlll1Ntm1 Cl!V t °""• Wll1!1n> 11 S"lllt!. Motillt llt ti IH<ft t !wt 1l1ltfl, Mr1, Mt •lt • Cltr1o, "ltw•or• lt•tllr "'"· M111•lc• MoMlt~•"· w 111'ln1l&n1 ••• 11•u •Othlldron llo•or•, '""''"'· T'1<1,.d•v. I J'M li'"'ul•m ,,. .... l'•!de•. 11 "'"""· Mt>! of Ov< L•d• 011••ti or 1 .. 1011 C:1•~ "'" C"u•r" !•IC""""'· Wl••I•'"· W1•ll· lftolO• llel•! Ce•!• M<ll Men11•1v. O•• Wf,T .)""" D. WH I 1111 "ll1"tlnt1l1 l •t , """"!fin Voll•• Dt tt ol d111n, Jt nuor• J 511rvl•td Ov ..,111, All H I IM. Wllll1m ; ""'''""'· Mro Leto lvf'"""" "'""*" Mro. HUd• WHll .. 1 .... MrJ. J'1!rl<ll l ulllYl ft ~orvltH, ,rld1v. • l'M. l'tl~ l'tmllY Colonlt l '"""•' Html. l'tmll• 1u11t11t '""'' wl&Mtit lo mo•t mom~""' cent•I· bu11on1, 111111 <Mlrlllult 1e ll!t J°"'n O. Wed M.,,..,,111 lcMllflhle l'un<I lo• • ,,,1i1 111111..,1 wll~ t •IMlllYI 1..0 l1vlnt "''"'' w>!e pltM 1 '"'"' -•Wint di· '"""' wll'1 m ... !111• r t ll rdld Cllill•tn. Wtotmln1!1r 1<1'0ll DIOlrlct, U111 C.:11•· w!JOd, WHll!ll•1ltr, Ct lll. l'H~ ~ll'!lllY (l)lbf\111 1'11,..r1I H...,..I, Dhe<ttro ARBUCKLE 6 ION Westcllff Mortuary 4J'7 E. 17th St., C.0.111 Mttl -• BALTZ MO~TUAIUEI! Coron1 dtl M•r .... OR a.HM Coll.I M111 ........ ml a..uz.4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY JIO Broadw•y, C:.0.1• Met• LI 8·3433 • Mct:ORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 11•s IA11u11 Cu yn J\G4. 4M-HIS • r Acme VIrll' MDIOlllAL PARJt Cemel.lry Monury Chpel 3SM Plldllc View Drl.o Newporl -· Calllonll .... .,. • nu FAMILV COLONIAL FUNSllAL HOME 1111 Bellli A.we. wemnllsttr .... 11141U • l!MITHB' MOllTIJARY Ill M• II. Hull> .... lllu - ) DAILY 'ILDT l f Rubella Immunization Sites Indicated SANTA ANA -The loc•· tton1 of 4(J spe«ial rubella im- munllation clinics scheduled Jan. 31, h•ve been announced by Dr. Lyle Vcge, president of the Or•n1• County Medical ASMIC:lltlon, •nd Or, J. R. Philp, Or1n1e County He•llh Offlc1r, The cllnlC's will bt Ht up •t .c:Oool 1lte1 lhrou1hout Or1n11 County , FrM rubell• lmmunl1•tien1 wlll bt av•ll•blt to boy• 1nd &irl1 aae1 I lhrou11\ 12 frem 11 •.m. to 4 p.m. on Rubtll• Roundup D•y. The C'tinlc• will bl m1nned by .-oluntter ta•m1 ef d n c Io r 1 , ph•rm1et1t1, nur~e~ ind cem mun i ty worker~. "II is extremely important thar parent~ realize the dif· feren ce belv.·een rubella and mea1les," Dr. Philp pointed out. "Rubella I• •lM known •• 'Germ•n measles' or "three-- d•y measles.' It should nnt bd' confused wllh 'red .' 'hard ' or 'IO~a y me •1l111 .' Rubell• It • mild dl1e•ae which IA~l~ for •bot..it three d•y• and eoosiatl of • fever •nd • Iii.ht rash." Although childhood com· pllc1tlons ire r•re, rubell• c•n tragic•lly effect unborn btble1 if it ls contr•cl11:d by an expectant mother during the first three montha or her pregnancy. The reault could bt a b•by with btrth defecta which could include deaf ness, blindness •nd he•rl defects. Parents can brlnt their children •gea 1 through lZ lo one t1f the followin& loca· Ilona !or the free rubell• lm- munlt•tion1: A111belm -Anaheim Hi&h School, Ill West Uncoln Ave.: Katella High School, 2200 Wagner Ave.: Magnolia High School, 2450 Weit Bill Road : Western Ht1h School, 501 Sout h Wealern Ave. Brea -Brt•-Olinda High School, 803 E•at Birch St Buen• Park -La Palma .Junior High , &8&~ La Palma Ave., Buen• Park: Buena Park High Sch~r. Magnoli • al 10\h, C1pl1tr1110-D•n• Pnl11I - Richard Henry Dan• Elemen- l•ry School, 28482 S1cr1mento St.. Dana Poi"l. Cost.a l\te1a -Cos!a 1'1esa High School, 2650 Fairview Rnad. Fountain Vallry -Lo!I Amigos Hig h School. 16~ Nev.·hope St.: Fountain Val ll~v High School, 17816 Bushard St. Fullerton -Fullerton Hlth SchMI. 201 E11t Chapman Ave.: Sunny Hilla High School, 1801 W•rburton W•y. G1rden Grove -Bolsa Grande High School , 9401 \.Vestmi nster Ave.: Garden Grnve H1gh School. 11 271 S!an - fnrd Ave.; Pacifica High School. 81151 L•mpson Ave.: Ran chn Al•m itos Hlah School , 113!>1 Dale St.; Sentl•gn High School, 12.142 Tr•1k Ave, ff11ntl ngtor1 Bea rh -Edi~('ln High School, 21400 Magnolia Ave.: Hunlinfton Be•ch Hi1h School. 1905 Main St.: Marina Hi1h School, 15871 Sprin1d•le St. Llpn• Be1tlrl -L•gun11 Beach High School, 625 Park AVf'. La Habra -La H11br11 Hl&h S1'hool , 801 We~i Highlan der Ave . La P1I m• -.J. Jo". Kennedy High SchMI, SUl l W•!ker SI. (,fl~ AlamilM L ,. s Al•mitos High School. 3591 Real Estate Man F a ces Gunpla y Rap SANTA ANA -A SeRI 8t1ch re1I estllte m•n ac· cu~ of 1hootlng and woun· ding an •tcountanl in what b 11: c • mt • bullel·ridd led bullne11 discus1ion has been flrdered to face tri•I April 26 in Orange County Superior Court. , Judge Jamc,1 F. Judge set th.It d•Ut for Joeeph l"r1ncls Bolduc, IO, of 241 8e1J Beach Blvd., afll!r rt•dln1 1n Or1n1e County Grind Jury In dictm ent that accuses the real estate man of assault wit h intent t.o commit murder •nd IMI Uit with • deadly weapon. Bolduc pleaded innoctnt. He ls free on $25,000 bail. Ht wa1 arrested l1:rt Nov. 30. Al the horn• of Mr1. Eleanor Sarnoff. 1 • D 2 1 Mariner Drive, Huntlnstfln Harbour. and ch1rged with lhe lhooting of publlc ACCount. ant Gerald DuWayne Byrd, 34, of Garden Grove. Officers said Bolduc enM.d A sqwibble between th"e two men by aoin& intfl Mrs. Sltnotf'1 bedroom and en'\M'I· ll'll wtlh I revolver. Ont of I.he two lhell 1Ue1"1IY !Ired by &lduc struck Byrd In the thest. Cerrllot Ave. Ml1slon Virjo M!:'i~Jon Viejfl Hl&h School, 2 6 0 2 6 Chris•nll Dr ive. Newpnrt Be•t h -Newport H•rbor Hl&h School, 800 Irvine Ave. MARKC. BLOOME, '-UJ-- IST.1924 l1<•111-11dtd ~., ROAD TEST MAGAZINE (lr•n1e -~I Moden1 ~U1h 000 North Br•dferd Ave. School. 3920 S1111n~ SI . ; S.n (.1r.me.nte S .a n Or•n1e Htih School, 525 North Cltm"-ntt: Hl1h School , 700 Shaffer St. AvAnlda Pico. Placentia -1-.:1 DoradQ lf\gh Santi Ana -Saddleback &:hool, 1851 North V11lencia ~ lllgh School, 2802 S o ul h Avr.: Valencia High School, Flowtr St.; Sant• Ana High DATSUN TOYOTA School . UO Wut Walnut St : V•lley Hl1h kheot, !IOI South Greenville !It. TlsUa -T\iatln H I 1 h School, 1171 Llsun• Road. VIII• Park -VIiii Pa rk Hl&h School , 19'M2 T•ft Ave. ··L\--~9 Brand New Full 4-Ply YOUR CHOICE 5.20x13-5.60x1 3 6.00x15-6.65x15 5.60x15-5.90x15 NIGHTS-9 PM SUN.-6 PM 'We11ral11ler -La Quinta Hl&h Schoel, 1om MrVod· den St.: We.rtm lntltr Hi(h School. 14325 Galdenwest Sl. Yorba Uad• -Yorba Llnda Hiah School, 4rn Ca11 Loin• Ave. TIRES ' ' Uniroyai1TUBELESS 7.75x14 7.75 x15 (F78/14) (F78 /15) -~ .. 7.00r.l J J .JS:a.14 l .2S:a.14 8.2Sx15 1&111141. 1&11n s1 95 . 'IS!s '17. '·"''""'"') MARKC . 6.SOx13 M 7.3S i l4 (17111 4: (871/1 J) 1 .1 s.1-4 !171114: .. • 1.11.1 J (171115) l .SSxl 4 l .55 x15 9.00 xl 5 8.85 xl S ·e ··"·"'"""' '22!' •.SSil-4 8LOOME _8 (H78/14) (H78 /1 5) (l78/l 5) (H711 l-4) 1.00.1 J 1.2s .1 s s .JSr15 95 • ((71/1 3J(Ci11115J !H111 1SI '24~5 S.I Sol -4 '26:5 9.DOI ( J 1111 4) 9.15.tlS •.I Si 1 S (J 7111 SI (l71/1 5) All Ji;., h<L • 11.ltto IJ,l l l;i~. h . T•• 1 .. lt,to4'011~·•11r,, "lllUWJ.LU II.ti l•i<t A PRECISION JOB •••• llEG. S7.9-' PllE CISION JOB ••• WHICH CAN COST MORE ELSEWHERE INCL UDE S: Co rre ttini c 11ter. cam brr. 111-111 intlud in1 air-c111dlti1111d c1rr, plus ins,ect ion al ttttrin 11 sus~tnsi an sy1tem. WITH ANY 2 TI RIS PURCHASED OH U.S. CARS !oar,1!~,s 1::..•!:.~! -~~J /1j 11 he ••• CRAGAR Super Chrome Wheel s ••• SNOW HAINS AT All ITOlll vws MOST CARS •• ·• $29.,$ 3005 HARBOR BLVD • CORNER OF BAKER & HARIOR COSTA MESA-NEWPORT IEACH ARIA 557-8000 ' . \ I WHITIWAll( World'li Finest 1, t•A ND NlW" 1.D.MI Milt GUA•A NTllD IONDID LINING J, l AIDI & INSTALLATION INCLUOID 3. MICRO·MlAIUll AllC DIUMS C. ADD llAKI PLUID AS NllOIO .S . A(C.Gl lNO llNIWG 6. l t llD SYS TIM & CLIA" IACXING PLATI AS Hl lDI D J, 0 11 111 & rACl WHllL llAllNGS I. ALL CTLI NDl•S INSPICTID IN• . CLUDI NO MASTll CTUNDll f , UTATI WHllll & ADJUIT llAKll U. IOAD TllT YIHICLI TO I T.INOAIDI ••1111•uucuun eUAIUUITll ••• tf l !NOIO It 11 W11r101t l 1!1rt 21.NI Miles Pl11t St l'lic1 C~1r1t GAllD I N GROVl-1-llrMkh urst-530.3200 ANAHllM • IUINA PARK 61162 Lincoln llvd.-12•HSO ,ULLlllTON-U21 lucll4 l t . ...a70-0100 (J78/15) 95 MOST CARS IVVhl ~ ----·· ........ . . . . -. J% OAILV PILOT Tllur.\11.i.1, January 7, 1971 CHECKING •UP• Sno"' Unusually Hea''Y Storm to Result in Good Water Y ear ' Wives Walk Oi1t, Can l(eep Going RENO (UPI) -Stvere l)e. lions in the lower mountains on the ground, with the re- cember storms have left 1he and \'alleys. main1ng fi(I pertPnl coming in Sierra Ne\'ada mountains 11·11h Jan. l measurements shnv.•-(.he January -~larch period. 90 percent oif the no r n1 a I ed the northeastern range has This means that a no rm a I yc;ir's snow paci.., aL'(:Ordlng a :;.110\V pack of 130 to 150 ()(:r· )'ear for lht 11ci..L tl1rte 1Tlonlh! to the Soil Conservalion Serv· cent or normal for the date. would !eave a snowpack 150 ice . The pack on the headwaters percent of normal. This means an excellent wa-or the Snake River was 150 But McAndrew wanted tha l \er year if snowfall remains at percent or normal. lhal on the ranchers and otheNl mu st keep or near nonnal for the resl of Ov<yhee drain'Bge are11. 140 per. a close eye on the snow dur· the winter. ce nt, and on the Upper Hum· ing the period, because care. State const>rYationlst Chflr· bolcll, 1:10 percent. fu l planning ~·ill be neerled. Y our QUtstlmt! and com· nntl'l\'nrthy aMut tft.,. forego-les Krall saicl the December Don Mr Andrew. snow sur· both if tile f'Xtra--ht'avv bl;:inkrt n1e11t.s are welcomerl anrl ing is not the phil nsophy, but storms not on ly blanketed the vey supervisor, said that usual· occurs and if snowfa'n tapers I 1 u:11l bt ustd in CHECKJl\lG the fact it (Inly contains Dne hlgllf'r peaks, but also brought Jy by the f1 r!l t of the year only off and normal snowfall does L·p • bl •-~~G~ii~===-=~~~~~~~~~~~--'~~~1~"..~~'...:::"~~':_~·~i'.~"'.~~1~~·~~~'.'.~~1~.'."'."~~"'"~-·~"<J<"'':· _____ ~~,.~ ........ ~:"~"~': ... ~·~"·:"~"~·:·~'°"'':.':~:'~·~"'~":""':'..:.'~'llO~%~•":":·~·:-::":_:"'""=· w erevtr pos.t1 t . ve~·el. namely o. unusua y ea\' y accumu a· percen o e snowpac s " '"' Please address 11our letters to L. M. Boud. P.O. Box 1 875, Newport Beach, Ca lif. YO UNG LADY. IF you 're thinking about walking oot on your husband, don 't expecl him lo go looking for you. Sorne .:lo, sure enough, some do. But by far the most husbands so desertC"d don't bother. A pol ice statistician ~·ho has :;tudied the divorce records sa~'S so. "When a. \\-"ife lakes nff .'' he elairns. •·1rs usually because her husband h;is shnwn he dflCsn't want her. She ma y hope to hig h heaven he 'll chase after her. but the chances of th em are slim.·· TECHNI CALLY, ONLY that car more than ~even vears old can be termed "a ja!Opy.'' ..... !UST 1.1 PERCENT nf a !ypist's work is done with the first finger of I~ right hand and the first twn fin,i:crs nf the left . . . THE MOST POPULAR flavor on sugar· cnaled pills is orange, don 't forget that .... THE ONE TO"'N in the Uni1ed States !hat employs a professional skunk hunter ii; Los Angeles KNOW A N YBODY named Fraser? In F'rance, all lhe nrigina l FrRsers, spetled variously. were hair dressers. \VH ERE, OH WHERE is he nt>w. my old fr ie nd Spero Galanoupulo. lhe be a r d e d Greek t>f Wes1 Berlin? A rad io news correspondent in those roughest year~ right af1er Werld War II ~·as Spero. Not a Waller Cronkite. nnr ;i David Bnnkl('y. not ;i Hn\\'ard K . S1nith. he was no1 that kind of dig nitary. Spero was an informal hero. For in· stance. as he sat do11,·n to the microphnne every night lo begin each broadcast, he undid his belt. A re ;i the d deeply. Spoke w.ith intensilv. Personalized everything. Arid as he got up from the microphone every night al !he end of eac;h broadcasr. his pan!s fel l off. It was ritual. CUS TOMER SERVI CE . Q. ''What proportion of !he /:i~t 3,000 year~ worldwide have we been "'ilhnut some snr! of "'ar?" A. Ju~! 8 percent of the 1im~. the his!orians say .. , • Q. "What's the ~purl ~peed of a i;wift sna i1~·· A. Spurt speed? Three inches a minute. IT HAS BEEN REPORTED frpq 11,,ntly !hat the ::11·era~e blondP has ;ibout 180,000 ha irs on her head. !he hrunelle about 120.000 and the redhead fJnly about 50.0f)(I It alsn has hren sa1 rf th;it norn1ally the hlonrle gel.~ gray earl1rr than the hrunette ;ind the hrunel!e Parlier 1ha n the rPdhead . ~nw let ii fu rther he Known that rrd-h;iired men rRrC'lv m;irrv red·h;iired ~'omen. ·tilthough "·hy is a m.vs!cr~·. YOU DION'T K ~O"' the llnion Army during the Civil \\.'ar had an Air Corps. did ~·oo? Neither did I. Such i~ repnrled 11l have bt.oen lhe C'ase. hnwever. II manned e fleet nl ~even b;illoons .... ··oo 1''0T BORROW from tomorrow, df, no wrnng so kno"'' no Mrrow:· What <>ur Lang u a g e man find s Area Men In Service Cout Gu.an! S e a m a n Recruit Steven A. Scott. son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh A. Scott of 60l2 Shields Drive, Htnitingt.on Beach, ii currently home on holiday leave from the Cout Guard '!'raining and Supply Center, A J 1 m ~ d a , Calif.· He has unde'1onf! recruit training and will retum ta the center Jan. l to com plete th< lllllructlon period. • l e rid~.1~r. ~cld !:Jr a•a re~e.it ba11c rt\O\em•nt. FAMO.US HEAVY-DUTY EXERCISER-LOUNGE Hfav~-i!u!y aluminum fram~s brace d witli a1uminum tubes. 3 porn\ base. [)tra !!Pavy nylon plas· 19 9 7 tic slinR. Folds !or s1orage. COMPARE AT 39.95 DELUXE POLISHED BRASS "FILIGREE" FIRE SCREEN Put1.Q.fft.~1c p~.I 0 ,. ~ rprra\e:; black mesb curtain:;. Pol· i>o•d tmo lcro t11·ta'1 ""'' 18 9 7 has ··oval"' pa::"ln t11 grro;, 1 85 COMPARE AT 24.95 • • OUSTCOVEA •Bl.ACK l WALNUT BASE Cnmpact stereo component and 1eidy lor use witll 111ost amp· lifiers and tun- ers. Ceramtc cartridge. (OM,111At1'.tl Tutn mu~ic jour way, g~t time·al· a-glance at 1he loucb· of a lrn· ger! Wake ta music or regular alarm. Walnut gr;iin cabine t. ....... 1991 Dl5COUNT ,.t(( 24.t7 ·"·· . w .. MOTOROlA "QUASAR" SAVE 170 COMPARE AT 449.97 ~0\0Wll ,11<1 fVrJ 0-I ~GU.lS.ll" 1'10 ... i.1~-l·DllW!t .. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRO SUN., JAN. 10 PACKARD BELL SAVE 170 I COMPARE AT 449.97 COLOR TELEVISIONS 23 IN (PICT. MEAS. o DIAG.) Come up lo color with big screen viewing. fine tu ning system1 fo r perfect color on all VHF and UHF channels. Snlid state.component 1e liab1 l1ty. Olympic or Pa ckard Bel l Contemporary cabinels or Motoro la table mode l compact. YOUR CHOICEI $ SAVE 170 ON EACH SET! '"I I ll'.:!1111 ., ., '• " !""• I CHOOSE YOUR FAMOUS BRAND APPLIANCE! ADMIRAL 524 LB. UPRIGHT FREEZER ' 15.5 cu. II. capactty. ''Circula ting Cold Air'' dt'"ign 5 "pi!Ckage·deep'' door shelves plus 2·piece shelves. 3 full·width fr eezing shelves. Key lock. $199 NORGE 18 ,LB. LOAD 2·SPEED WASHER 2·tored 4 cyc le wa~her wil~ extlu~\ve Turros1oi''P 3£1la!or. Gentle for deli· tale fa~r1rs &~ermanent press! Water ~~ver co~trol. $111 GaHlll'I I Slt1l8r SBll·CIBll RANGE 30" gas range with modular control cen1er. lift.up cook lop, 1111-ott even door. Signal timer, clock and 4 hour timer. Seti-clean oven. SI gg YOUR CHOICE M•rin Pvt. bit:~r W . N..-. 11011 ol Mr. •nd Mn . 'tfCHARGE IT* c 0 s T A M E s A 1:·STORE HOURS-~ !loa(l• N. Nowmon of &Oft . 3088 BRISTOL AYL • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVL Prildlla Drive, JiunUngton • UNU.MlltlCAlD Daily 12 to 9 p.m. Be8Cb, •• lfldu.1ted from e WHITlftONT CAID BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. Sit. 10 to 9 p.m. baalc hiafht It the M•rlne e MAITUCMA••I Sun. 10 to 7 p.m. eo.,. RecnJK Depot, s111 1 1=================-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=================::'...I illefO. L HEADS MASONS Mes•n M•x Hil11 Mesa Man Installed By Masons Costa ~ie1a re!lid ent ~lax Hiles will be inslalled as Wor1hipful ~fa1ter Of the Seafaring Masonic Lod ge No. 708 during ceremon ies 10 be held Saturday at the l\1asonic Temple, Newport Beach. l\1ex Owen of Costa l\1esa l\'111 se rv2 as instal!lng officer) and Vernon Peck of Hun~ tington Beach wlll act as maste-r of ceremonies for the installation. Other new officers to he installt!d are Robert Speth, Senior \Verden ; Ralph Enz. Junior \Verden ; Glenn Beeler. Treasurer; Howard Trissel. Secretary; Byron Kem per. Chaplain; Lawrence Eldon. Senior Deacon; Alfred J. Vass, Junior Deacon; \\'11\iam Free- ly, Marshal ; Dixo n \Vebb Jr., Senior Steward: Do n a I d Charle Jr., Junio r Ste1'1ard; Randall Miller, Organist; and Bob Decamp Jr. , Tiler. Coast Sets Registration In January Registration for s pr i n g t'vening classes at Orange Coast College "''ill slarl Jan. •• Registration on J an. 9 'vill be for students witlt ap- pointmenta and continuing 1tudents. Regi stration for all others l\'lll begin Jan. 11 from 6 p.m. lo 8:30 p.m. at the Oran ge Coun ty Fairgrounds. Newport Bouleva rd at Fair Drive, Cosla l\fesa. Students will be registered accordl n~ to the first letter of th e last name: Jan. ti, A.C; Jan. 12, D-J '. Jan. 13, K-Q; Jan. 14, R·Z ; Jan. 20, 26. and 28 . opt!n registration for all. Registration wil l then con- 1\nue on campus. vacancies pennilting, fl'om ti p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Feb. 1-4 and B-ll. Deadline for registering: in credit classes Is Feb. 11. Students should bring their student idenUJication number v.ith them if lhey ha ve previously taken a c!a~s. Registration at Golden Wes\ will begin Jan. 21 for con- tinuing stud en ts. with alphabetical registration ac· cording to the f o 11 o w I n g schedule : A-G. Jan. 25; H-0, Jan. 26 ; P-Z, Jan. 27; open for all , Jan. 28. PerlOflS wi~hing additional lnformaUon should call 834--· Area Me11 In Service ...... ..__..,... &;9~ Marine Pvt. P1ul J. St1un· lGft m, son Of Mrt. June Staunton or 334 Victoria Sl., Co&ta Mesa, was graduated from bulc train ing at the Marine Coll>-' Recruit DePot. San Diego. ~tarine Cpl. ScQtt L. JacklCNI, husband of the fomer ~fiss Carol D. Cruse of 1519 Jack~ Ave., Mllway City., is aerv1ng with M1rine Llgfll Helicopter Squadron 317, First M1rtne Aircraft Wini in Viet· nam. Israelis Most Soaked by By PHJJ.. NEWSO:-t UPI Fonlp News An11ly1t As a result of wiMlng the sit:-day Arab-lsraell l!J67 ~·ar. ·the citizens of Israel have wan the d.iatincUon of becom· Ing the most heavily taxed people in the wor ld. The Isra eli finance ministry has disclosed that in 1970, lsraells paid out I he equivalent of 41.2 percenl af the country's gross national produ ct in taxes or com- pulsory loan& ot bonds, pulling them ahead of Sweden which had been the .,.·orld leader. through a per10CI al iievcre tu re tltre<iltnuig Lu bccon1c The Swedes paid 39 percent , recession. Cl lJOLlt, the rnonth~ of ceru.c the British 32.8 percent and The recellSion ended wlth lite ;,il~o pcr1111ttcd labo r the UnllL'<I Slates 27 percent. the ~·ar, and was replaced un res t to brc;.ik into !hr open . And as c.Uendar J971 open. by an CL"Onomic boorn brought Strike~ interrupter! s u l' h e<I, .fo'inance t.linister Pinh ai; on by defen.st? spending and cssent1ul services as elec· Sa pir gave Jsraelhi the further accompanied by higher living tritily and !C'lcphones. Another bad news that military spen-standards and i n c rea se d strike clos ed ~econ d a r y ding for the 1971·72 fl!K:al year civilian consum ption. schools. running from April 1 lhrough \Vith both the govern A recent c1·ecl1! of $500 Mnrch 31 would come lo $1 .5 and the citizenry li ving yond n1illio11 aul11onzct! by !ht' billion or 40 ~rccnt of the their rneans, the man on tht' nih'd Stales is rn:iking 11 national budget. s1reet 1nusl pay nearly $600 po~sib le 10 eo111H1ur 1 he w11r It is four tin1cs whet the for a black and w h i l r l'fforl. lsT"aelis 1~ere paying before television set and $5,000 for But even <1l cornµorau vcl.v the 1967 war. a Volkswagon. lo\\/ 1 111 ere~t ralt'S ll is 1no11cy Taxes docsn 't la.st long when It In· eludes such Items all Phantom bombers, 17S-mm. long-range artillery, tanks and air-to- groond ml5$iles for u s-e' agalnst Soviet-made S AM missiles. The Phantoms, for example, sell for SS million per copy. Finance Minister Sapir has declared that if I a r a e I • s military needs are met , she will have to spend $1 bill ion on defense imports this year . $200 milllon more than In 1970. As to where the n1oney will C(l!Tie from: ThurMlty, Jtnutry 7, 1~7"1 DAILY PILOT J:J ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS and loan association BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., Va lley View at Li ncol11 HUNTINGTON BEACH Mercury Savings Bldg., Edinger at Beach TUSTI N M11cury Savings Bldg'., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Ave. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~e fore the war, Israel wenl Adding to an economic pie-Uuil n1us1 br reµa1d and ~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~ --~ ~~~~~·~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' VITAMIN SALE 1/2·'PRICE ·sALE '. VITAMIN A-BOTTLE OF l 00 15.000 USP units; bottle '"'"'· 49c Dll(OU-1 ol 100 capsules. '"er''' DAILY MULTIPLE VITAMINS CH.EWAB.LE l MULTIPLE 'WHITE.FRONrS OWN ~AND FULL POTE°NCY @ ~ITAMINS -- Daily rn inimurn 1equ1 re -ou•n~. 49c 111\tOUNI rnen!~; bottle ot JOO. r11ctn. CHILD'S CHEWABLE MULTIPLE l~Ultip le Vl\alll1n !ablC!S; DUI U~. 5 9 C · VITAMINS 11 L~:::~:JJ _,.l SCOPE MOUTHWASH 11111 1J Ol. FAM/l~ SIZE 0 DIUOU~T bottle of I O. ,~1ci 1.11 MULTI VITAMINS With IRON Daily requirement plus ou• 11~. 69 c needed i1on. JOO's. ~;~~~~~~ .f~ VITA.MIN E !\."•v~·• CHILD'S MULTIPLE PLUS IRON Chewable rnu lt1v1tamins ~u• 11&. 99 c I • DllCOUNr \vi th 1:on. 00 s. , 11c11 ,, THERAPEUTIC WITH MINERALS 149 LIFE SHAMPOO BATHE 'N GLOW BATH WITK lEMOH GLEAM£~S t1J OIL COMBO 16 01. beauly sham- poo iels hair silky Ltl "ctrve tnoulh 11 ~~n~ner Jnd g:11 • £le. Get yr;ur ~ n1'"' "' \av1ng~ ln·'hirlcs pr11.~ all !abri l. ' ...... and shrny-lry ii and see. Now at savings. OUll llG. OISCOUNT ~.! __ ~~ R,.,li,.l lrorn d1~. 1tr.l1'( .JI ._ f1utll,., /1 1,., v,,111 p111· ~-•1,.n. G.,t;101 1•11:,J: , ~1/IV ~ " ' " ot t· . ~ rt. I t:Y ' n,,io . DUI ll(G. OllCOUNT PRICE 1.24 79c SEALED BEAM HEADLIGHTS OUI RIG. DISCOUNT I'll!(( 1..64 R ~c l.1 c e I .. ro~d out l.1ITI D', - ( ~ 11 ~ i! :.p~1 e in y~ur 11un~. .,11 dOOl · •IOfl'J PlllCl 1.•• 129 WHITE FRONT MOTOR OIL Non -d•I• r- Rent oil at ·.11v· ings. I np oual • tly; 10 '" JO wl. I Q1.orl tan$. NOW ON l Y 21~, POPULAR LIME SLICE PATTUN -SERVICE POR I Good looking casual d1nnerwaie is dishwasher safe. 8 each; drnners. salads, soups, cups and· saucers. I each; platler, creamer, covered sugar, vegetable dish. White front has it at savings! I v<', I ou11111G. 01scouNr I L, ....... ,. Piii(( l.•• ......... 119 ~·· -, -. ~ FURNACE FILTERS CHOICE OF SIZES (, ' ! ! l ' I I ' ' ' .. ' J l;1 J _ i11 J j ! " ' ' /• OUI ll(G. DISCOUNT PlllC£ 4q c COMPARE AT 17.99 . ~ .... FIFTEEN MINUTE DISTRESS FLARES lt.· ,. ti ~h 1111"11 .11~ t, • . :ii ~ :l·I I~'.· I' 11 •11.,J · ·~. 111 o1 11.1 rr·1 t1!l• <111. ~····11 ,j \.--- : u11P' I 1•1 I · .' I u1 " J • • a1~ or ""g. l J'~H! OUR RE' DIStOUNr PRICE 1D !1r 110 G.E. ELECTRIC HEATING PAD \\ (~ \ \ ·rhre e heal <,rllmr,, pu~.h ­ bu!lon runtro l ~nd li ght· rd OJ.1"1. W"lp!oo1 rnnrr f'lVP! and wa·,Mableoulr.r 1 1i~er. P5:J. COMPARE AT 7.95 L=.....l"~" 6 DR12 VOLT BATTERY CHARGER ,,,,, .... One imp model for i charging car batler ies. 1 ~NCE 1929 WHITE FRONT ····· ······· (~~·· . '•·..... . . ~ ····-... eff7 .... ., 0,,,1on'C,•,,1,11~1·1'q,,.i1 11 1 1·· hdntl '·d."I \', ''Ir U!l!OU' ','.•H.111 ! dli01•". A li\,.i1111r 1· '11·,lm•,n1 11 J i',1' .ii tool. M1,~~1 h 1 COMPARE Al 3.95 BIG PlASTIC HOUSEWARES \ ' ' t I ... IJ.11 I l 1iu~ofo! n.1,1µr• 1 6 . ~ .. 1. n .• , 1 t 1111 \'.tR nt'•, j ' ~d l. ' I.ill)! ti.(l !.,111 p• r, J8 Qt. ru~od \l'c1,\e COM P All( AT l .'18 OpPn tac'! ',oin rc,.,I w111'! hdt!l P.nr d ',!,trn)rs~ Slr•'l 1oller and conven ient an!t· 11•ve1~P. sys1P1n. # 8 l 0 Diii f(C. DISCOll'1T PRICE ~'I Plug s in1o regu la r: r d•n: In••', "" household el ectiic 1 '""' • ,,,, . '~ 1 ~oup .8lr•· · , oullet. # 700 -C 1 '"'"' ,, I COlll~A~I Al •.• s WEBCOR RECTRIC CAN P1• 101 ~11~ ~o!di:ring _Rl!!I, ] QQ 3nd J '10 w~IL l ip~. Ca"e 1n· ctud,.d. 8200PK. OPENER • Die~. ~tr VOYf car w+th tr.e • ~~:ry Ch10"1e f1~1ShPd hub1 dO~. Srt~\ l•Jt nio,t wheel,. #40) 401 J .It. 0111 I[,. DISCOllNT PllJC[ I.II OFFICIAL SIZE BASKmALL NBA Playe1's Associatin~ ball is built lo hold up ~nder toughest play -on indoor or outdoor rnurf<;. Rr.~ulation s11e ;ind WN~ht OUI llC. DISCOUNT Pll(l 6.•7 -~CHARGE IT* e IANlAMlllCAID e WHrTIPIONT C.AID ! e MASTIRCHAIGI COSTA MESA I 3088 BRISTOL AVl e JUST OFF NEWPORT AVl ., l!'ETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY end BAKER ST. i'.tSTORE HOURS* Dally 12 to 9 p.m. Stt. 10 to 9 p.m. Sun. 10 to 7 p.m. Navy Seaman Apprentice GlrJ W, Ecele1to11 , son of fifr. and Mrs. John D. Ee· cleston at J040 Donnybrook , Colla Meaa, 11 serving 1board the guided ml8slle cruliier US.Ii Chicago In the We..1tern Pa- cific. IL.:=========----------------------------------------------------==========::..t , -- v . .... ............. .. .. l 1-1 OAl\Y PILOf Th11r$day, Januar~ 7, 1'171 '• Too Cold t'o1· P11ps roo(·h ai>pcars tn have the 1niscries as thern1 on1c lcr lock~ 1n al an cv_cn zc~o 111 r h1cago. ·rhc .\nti-l'rucll\' Soc·1cty has \\"arncd aJJ dog O\vncrs that their pe ts can really suffer damaging Cffccts fron1 the cxtre1ne <'ol d anci that dogs "'h1c ll arc aC"custon1cd !ti \1"ar1n homes should only be exposed to th e clcinents tor a maxi· mum or five minutes. -·------------ Praise Overflo,ving 1Uo y nilu1n Salutes Nixv11. \V,\SH!i\'GT0:-.1 <t'Pl l -A few )Cars ago .Jack Valenti. no\v president ot the J\loliun Picture Association . said 1n ;:i speeeh lhat he ~lcpl bc!1 C'r bt·c;iuse Lyndon Johnson v•as 1n 1he \Vh1tc House. E:vcryont· laug hed. But V<.dcn11 's he ro 11ur .... h1p ()f the former president 11 a~ nu less extravag<1nt th:in \\'hi1c House Counselor D.iniel P. l\loynihan·s S\\'.'.ln su11g. In a vuledictnry lo the.- f'ab1nel at a t losl'd n1cetin~ in the East l1<¥Jrn. l\I Uy n1h<1n. "knov.·n as lhe hou s e Dcn1ocrat."' d e l iv ere d a p11negyru.: on P1·e~1dent Nix- nn·s tenu re at lhc h<11fway niark. The \\1hitc J louse un- dcrstandablv triter inadc. !he text ol. 11\oynihan'o; rcn1arks a v ;i i 1 a b I r \11 reporters. I Ir 1s rctur111nB to hi:-> pru- h•ssor1<1I pO'il al ll;irv;1rd l fll\'Crsity . h:iving rc;11·hrd 1he dc::idhne on his t1\o-ycar sab- batical. ln his h1re\\'Cl1 addrcs.;_ i\·loyni han rt' c a l 1 c d lhP President':~ inaugural Spft'l'h \1·1th its lhcrne ol rc1·on- <'1li ation and rc s1rc11nt And s:iid 1ho.~e \1 ords of J:1n . 20. 1969. \\'·ere and rc1n;111i th e n1os1 con1manding call !o ~nvcrnHnt·c lhal the nation h;i~ heard in lhesc troubled tin1c~. l ndcr ~1xon. he said, "rn:1...;s urban violence h<is all bul dis<1ppeared. C i v i I chsobe- diencc and protest h ave receded. Hacial rhetoric ha'i caln1cd. The. great symbol of r;Jc1<11 subjugation, the dual ~chnol :;ystem of the soult1 . virtually in two year" h<i~ 11u ietly an d f1n;1lly b een disn1antlcd. "llrnv, by lh:il s1a nd~1rd . 11ould on!' n1e;1:;ure lhe tv.o years pasl '!'' asked J\otnynihan. ''not. I 1hink. unkindly, 1'11 \he contrary lhc ;u·h1evcn1en1 has been eons1dcr<ible. even rernarkable ·• stop by for a try illoynihan .satd in foreiRn af- f;11rs. the na11on h;1i; ;isscrted !he limit of its po1\·cr and I i1s purpose. has bc~un to d1 <:111:1111lt'.: the 1..uld ..,,·;1r ;ind had mo 1· t' d 1·on1"1ne1ngl} to11·:ird "'!hr pros11ec:1 of a gl'nrrallon of pt;:ici•" Nix· un "ufl-<JUotr.d prrd11·t1un (Jn the d11n1t:slw ln1111 , '\l 11~·n1han -.,11d lh;il ;\1\011 li.1 .. 1 ''[111]\'t•d Cl(1 lu llt'W 1'11111 I 111 1ln11•n1 ~ tu j.!f'llUP" ;.ind purpose~ 1h~tl had hecn Inn' n1u(·l1 1g11np·d dunn ~ lh;i1 penod and h1·y0nd !h :11 to n1· lt~r a crit1qt1l' of ,t:(iVc·rn1n(•nl 1hr like nl 11'h1ch h.:is nu1 hr1·11 hrard in \\l r1sh1n~lvn .~IOl'l" \\'ood!'ow \\11bon " seventy-ones at _I i~~~~SA ~ Fl•) .540-9100 Jj HAMMOND Organ Studios ... -~GiUr i1r1itffio• (M-89:~0 CORONA DEL MAR 8egi1111rr~ J·:nr11ll i\10Jrr for clttl's lt•ii:iso n .~ '''t Iii.~ HAMMOND ORGAN Y«;:!I; our ini;lru••lur. LuH11y ru• ,Jfl Y.!!1011. '''iJI ll'ach you l.o play lh•· llt1n1n1ond Or::inn in 6.wCt'ki;, You do not huv1• 111 0\\'11 an or~iln lO h1kr th~Sl'uuriu·. \.l'Am to play ..,;th thr e.11 rK'w Hammond OrgAn Coursr. \.\It' plan 1,0 havr 2 difff'n-nl ~roup.">­ IWglnTlf'r "nd lnl"l'mrdiu tc.!-, Ont' of lhest' 1:n1ups "'ill h1• 1dral fnr -cl-l~tTIOl'f evt"rynnc. If you 11rr r1·1•n ju:.t 1.·u1•ious stop by on rrglstratlon day. l .. trh'•ti"" Hltht: Tun., J•n. 12 •I 1 fitM HA.ftlMOND ORGAN STUD IO 2854 Ea•l C.ua.•t High wa y Corona dcl Mar ' Tultfen $12.11 fer I .,..t• ,1u1 m•terl•I Su le11 • Re nlttlji. I llfi l r n('t ion • Ser" i1·r Area Men In Service P-3'1l 0 CERTlFIC .. TE OF 11\J\INESS, ~ICT1T10l.IS M•M[ t~ .. un<1r,.1qn~ <IOC'• c .. t1!v h1 h •on~ucllf'Q 11 bu••n••• ftt •l l w ltlh, (~'t" ~·, • ..,, C11llforn1•. undo• lh• 1icl11•"'" lltrn nam• ot MAC 1111.T PRINTING COMP ... NY 11nO !ll~t •llld llrm " comoo•l'd of th• rollowino "''"°"· whll><! n.omt on !VII "nd nl11C• of f~id<1nc1 l• <1> IQll.,...., Jenn P M<o..'.,nltv. lO•~ Hd•d•n9 w .. y, ( 1"!11 M~.,., Oa!l!d o~c. 16, 1910 Jolln P l,.cKonl"" ~Mlt "' c,.1;1orn••· O•~n<i• (ool'IY On Oi!'C. 16. 19/'0, l>f!fOr! mr . I No!1rv P11b1:c in and !or \aid Sla11, Pf.,onallv <lftPr11•1!d Jolln P McKinlrY known lo me lo t>f !he """on wl>o'f n•rn• II >Ub•c•I~ to inc wahln '"'"'"''""' 1ncl dC~n-~91!d II~ ~••<ukd The '""''· !OFFICt •L SE,.LJ MP.l,Y IC. HENRY NoM•Y P1,1bllc. C1 1ilornl1 P ril'tc1 pa1 Ollie• In o'~nor c.ooniv MY Comm•>>10<1 E•1»r., Nov. 1•. un PVtll'~ll~!I Oronq• C0<0•I 0~1lv P ilot O~tmbtr 11 1A. JI. 1910 nnd Jnn110•• I, 1971 1J~l-lll l,EGAL NOTICE P·lfl01 CEllTIFIC:ATE OF allSINl:S' FICTITIOUS H.t.MI! Tiit unC1tr11onfll d!M'• cr•111~ ~• h col'lrl11cll1>11 • b111ff!f11 •' Hunllfl91ori H"•l>O• Motin•, Slip F-1, tl~nllneton Be•ch, (&lilornla, under Ille llcl!rlol/1 l)rm n~mP o! .1.0UTt-tWESl ,t,l'IATION MAR!Nf fl\rl !h&I •~Id 1;,,,.. 11 UHl'\POltd 11! Tiit lollowlflq ""'son. '""°" ntme 11> tUn a!>d P1act ol resld~~ Is &I lotiow.: ~ .t.nthoo.v 1-<~lb!ln<;i Jr , ]111 T!ot rl1ll °''""· l OI Al•mi!O" (olll \'011'0 •lfd 0.-cfl'"l>t• 77, u10 I Anl-• Htlbllt111 J•. STAT!!. OF (AllFOA;NIA, OJlANGE COUNTY : On O«""bllr n. HJQ, bllforo ""· • Not•,., Pul>llC In •l'Ml '"' '"'" S!•lt, ~"°"•II• '"""''"'° .t.n•h011¥ Hplbll,.. Jr. known rp ,,... to ~ r~ Pt"°" '"ttt:>•t n•m• I• •ubur!,,..11 to 11\f' wflhln 1nslru,..tnt •nd tc~M\f'lfd11fd ht t•Kut.O I~• s•mt (Qllki•! ~~·ll !ltt•"" E•dthl Jo• NOi••~ P~hllc • Ct!llorn!• O••nt~ Cot/fltv MY (nmm1,.1<111 E•Pi~I 0c1. 11. i.n "•1111,.~•ll Or•nq~ Co•ll Otltv P Uo! O•tr ... ~•' ''· )1, t'10 •'14 Jl"Y••Y r, H. !UI 1JU.10 I , ' UPI T•'-•~•No Thunday, J1nu1ry 7, 1'171 DAILY l'tlOT J /i Autos Without Any Roads Russians Long Way From Getting on Wheeu MOSCOW (AP) -The Sov-few places to go. development of 1 netW<>rk of let Union is belatedly plung-Leu than 80,000 miles of automobile servl« stations ing into the automobile agt>, the Soviet Union's roads are lhroughoul our whole coun- But it will be quite a few try," Tarasov aaJd. "Do-it- b I I I I Paved wJth asphalt or con· years e ore cover ea s, yourseU repair, wben the m I I d IC 'lall,..n.. crele. The rest 11re little more o es an serv e """' (lwner of 1 car lies under dot the Soviet landscape. than dlrl tracks . Gas stations "Avtomobili zatsiya," as the are scarce and as much as lt for hours ll1lng It, steals dawning of the auto age is 100 miles apart on major 11way too much precious time ca lled here, reached a highways. There are only (rom 1 min ind 1oclety.'• a folding 1teertnr wheel and tryin1 to develop an enstne that will cul dOwn on or eliminate toxic eWust fume1 . But Moscow air 11 ltlll freaber than that In New York, Paris or Tokyo, and tbt: tr1Uic 1itu1tlon is 11111 nuld enough that you ctn arrive 20 minute!'! before • performtnct of the Bolaboi Ballet and park rta;ht Jn front of the lbeat.r. milestone last month when the about !50 repair gara&es in To cut down on accident slate planning ch a i rm a n ' the entire Soviet union, eight Injuries and r><>llution, Taratc1v Nikolai Baibakov. announced of them in Moscow. said, hi.a dtsleners 1re padding that motor vehicle output in ''We must think ttul !he an auto's rigid part.a, te1ting 197! will lop the one-million-----------------'------"---------~-- mark for the fir st timt'. Truck production, at ~.\)()(). still will exce<!d that of passenger cars. at 513,000. The first stage of the Toglial~i auto .... ·orks has gone into operation. II is aiming for a ta rget of 160.000 Zhiguli cars in 1971. Your savin gs 11re insured to $10,000. K1101vs Just lfhat to Do The plant on the Volga River 42fi miles southeast of Moscow was designed and buill with the help of the Italian automaker F i 11 t . ~Ian's best friend. ill'ft\ nnd he's fast "'ith the b uck. ting's and Sons Garage. anct !r ight) gives change to Prin('c, the friendly Grrn1an shepherd dog. takes 1notorist \vhn hart JU.St bought g as. No, he doesn't __ b_d_l _c_·h_,_n_g_c_r,_·n_n_1_1_1i_s_o_w_n_e_r_K_-_e_n_R_a_"_' l_in~g~s_a_t _R_a_'_'_-_ __,_p_u_1n p gas, for the present a ny\1·ay. Zhiguli is a Soviet version of th e Fiat 124. The plant is e xpected to produce about 660 .000 ca rs a year when it hits peak capaci- ty in 1972. Wife of Ky Ge1•mans Repla~ing l J.S. Seeks Choice . ··we need a sturdy, speedy and C{lnvenient car for mass use," the automobile industry 1ninister, Alexand er M. Tara sov , say s in Literaturnaya Gazeta. Viet Land SAtc:o:'1 1rr11 -The 11•1fc nf \'ice President t\gu~·cn Cao l\y is in a dzspult' \l'llh the Sou!h Victnan1csc govt•rnn1cnl <ind !\.'lontagn:ird 1ribcsn1er1 because she 11a11t.~ 3.ti[lil :HTt'S nf choice f<1nnland in crntr:.il \'1etnam free of charge. Paul Nur, minister for devclopn1ent of ethnic groups, said , "I h11ve prescn1cd the case to t h c prim(' minisl cr !Tran Thien Khicm) and he is settling it." Turkey No ·w Depenlluigon Uncle Hans A:\'KARA . Turkey (AP) -\Vest Germany h;is surpass- \\'cst Gcrrnany is replacing cd the United Stales in private lhe United Slalf'S as !hr pnmc investinent in Turkey. For !hf' foreign influence in Turkey. )Car.~ 1966-69 Germans in- As one columnist puts 1!. vested $9 niillion. \l'i th LT s. l inl'le Hans is supplanting f b Ln{·!e Sarn. 1rn1s ri nging in SS 6 n111!1on. i\'lore than !iQO.(l{}{) 1·urks. The Truman Doctrine in , \vorkcrs :ind tht·ir fan11lie s 1948 started sending soldiers, now live in West Germany. experts and aid to Tu rkey. The United States continued As they return, most nf almost 2(1 years as Turkey's then1 impressed with \\'hat No. l trading pa rtner. they have seen. the workers are disciples of German kno>1'-Three years ago Germany h I , I look over the trade lead. The ow, cu ture an ... anguage. l'nited States has continued Last March, when an ear1h- h I quake killed 1.0R9 and left ;:i~ t e chief supp ier of 18 ,000 hnn1cless in the Gcdiz n1ilitary and economic aid, but Germany is challeng ing this. area. a German airli ft poured Last year the Un i!ed States in relief supplies \1•orth $1.7 supplied SSS million in million. That 11·as f~r more economic credits. \Ve 5 t than other countries con· !iml' 1,1·as trained and virtually "Specialists rightly feel that in this class of auto , the cornmandl'd by a German g I L S d Zhiguli holl'.is one or the rirst cnera , 1man von an ers. places in J he 1,1•orlc!.'' During those yea rs Turkish officers a nd officials \Vere But the Hussian masses v.·ill trained in Germany. Gernlans h11ve a long .... ·ait for their built t he Berlin-Baghdad Zhigulis. '!'he Soviet Union ranks IO!h in the world in railwav acrt1ss Tu r k ey , TurkeY relied on Germany ior auto production. There is only arms and other supplies. one car for every 2 3 4 Turkey was neutral Jn World Russians, compared to one for \Var Jl but ruany Turks every 2.4 Americans. personally r av ore d the The Zh igul i costs 5,500 Germans and others retained rubles, or $6,105. a 11•arm feeling despite disap. The government promises proval of Germ:i.n actions. tha! "a personal car "'ill Because \Vest Germany is become a com m on p I a c e prevented from h av i n R thing" in the next five years, overseas bases, the United but the prices throw doubt States is the pa r a m o u n t on this. foreign military prese nce in Turk e y . About 10.000 Even if the cars were American soldiers are sta-available and Russians could II build s your mdil. 4 reasons why you should save ata bank: It helps when you apply for a loan. You earn a hi1h inltresl rate. And, if you save at Fi11t Nationtl there are 7 other convenient 111SOt1s. Our location~ -··~----··-0'16 ORANGE COUNTY f,,>1 inf',,_,,.11f .... Aio.1,,.,,.._.! .. w lttN ' Nur said l\·lrs. Ks v.•ants to develop the !and, but about half the acreage near Tu Tra village in the Centra l Highlands tradllionally has been occupied by the monadic l\1ontagnards. No.,.,. the pro- perty is in Comn1unist hands, but the area is becoming more pacified and may be available soon. Germany S60 million. tnbutcd. U,S. military ai d f 0 r Close Turkish-German rela- Turkey's 500.000-man armed lions are nothing new. Turkey forces has dropped in recent and Germany fought on the years to about SIOO million san1(' side in World War I annually. Jn 1970 w e 9 1 and !he Turkish army at that tioned here : the Germans -•~f~fo~c~d'_'.'lh~e~m~,'_'.'lh~e~ce~w~o~u~ld"_'be~__'=================================~ have only military attachesl- in the embassy and an oc- casional visiting group or &f- ficers. The chairman or the 1'u Tra village cou ncil said his people want to return to the land \Vhen it is free and they will flppose !11rs. Ky's proposal. Under the land-to-the-tiller !land reform) program, Mrs. Ky is enli!lcd to 2 4 ::icres of free land, as arc all Virt- namese, In drvelop as ~he ~ees fit. It 11·as uncl~<ir why she was den1ariding so n1uch of the land. except that it is located in a lush /arming region. Germany gave $65 million,1~~~;;;-~-;;;;~===========~~~~1 double the previous year. 11 DOl'J MISS THIS "She has a right lo ask for the land,'' Nur said. "But \1•hethcr she will f!C't It or not is another question " \Y cddin)! Jlinb 'l P''c t" Tri<·ia \\' \~111\!;TI)~ ti Pl 1 \\'h11c 11011''' ;"J1{!f'• ~.nd Tnl'1:1 t\ 1\f\n I~ .l bll UP'('! :11 n.'p<1rts :-.h1' 11 ill n1 a r r y l!;1rv;1rd la11' i:;turlr·nl l·:d14:ird F1ni·h C(I.\. but 1iu' ald(•s d1Jn I drnv il. The Dnl.v offwia! \\'h1te l!nu~f' cnn11nrn! ,\1ondny 11·.1:;: "I dnn·t r:.:rcc! ;in <in· n nu n l' c 1n t' n ! over ,'\i•w Year'~,'' ~pokcn hv Connie ~!u;irt. P;.it 1\1.~on's staff dirt•ctnr. THE BEST lle~der1~i p poll, PfOV~ "P•A · "uh .. ;, 0~1 of ti-• world'• moil Pooular comit 1trip1. R11d it d~ily ;" !ho DAILY PILOT. Cal Student Pajler Goes Off Campus BERKELEY IUPI I -The Daily Californien. stu d e n t newspaper at the University of California Berkelcv. Is mov- ing: off campus to bCcome in- d('pendent. ! The mO\'e is part of a ne\\' J a~reemenl reached by the nc11spaper staff, ca m p us publications end the chan- l'f'llnr·s officr. The move "'i!I bf' cfrerlive 1 11h('n re,i::cnt s apprn\'C' gu1df'lines for the ne1,1·spapcrl J . I ;q 11~ rncr!tng . an . 21-22 Jn [; !"an Francisco. 1'!:111s <'all for 1hc Daily Cal l to he sold beg inning next fall nnd to cstabliflh a nrw publishers' board that will have a s!udent n1ajor1ty . L'ndf'r 1he guidelines. the bo;i rd . the 11aper·s senior staff. lhc fl ~ociale publisher. ancl. a special critique committee 1\·i ll r!Siew copies of the paper. Jlowever, the paper will re- t<un campus ties a nd receive some student fee money tm!il it can support ltself. There is no timetable. ready to ride with pride seventy-ones at ~~~~ 2&00 HARBOR BLVD. f COSTA MESA (714) 640.fl OO DOUBlE THERMOMETER Check Indoor AND outdoor temperatures even at night or when windows 1rt frosted! fi'le·foot liquid-filled tubing connects to outdoor tempera ture sensing bulb. Easy-to-Install, rustproof mounting bracket holds 9x2" desert gold plastic case, Brown scale has bold, usy-to-rtad wbj!t numerals and rr1duations. SUN, 10 'TIL 4 JL@@~Ilooo and we love it! Locally founde<l , localiy owned, we're part and parcel of the co=unities we serve. That's why we plow back all of our Orance County savers' dollars right here in our own Orange County. It's time to plant ... time to save ... at Laguna Federal! This is the season to save at Laguna F ederal. Plant your savings here and now. Watch them grow and multiply. No Association pays you higher interest on your insured savings. No Association offers you more varied ways to save. Plant your money with us ... and we'll give you Money Plant seeds to growl It's our way of saying thanlcs for saving at Laguna Federal. Open a new account, or transfer your funds. Come in for your packet of Lunaria seeds-a purple-flowering money plant for your garden-plus a complete, helpful and informative Flower Seed Garden Guide. ANDLOANASIOQATION Orange County'• Lar1eal, Finl and Slro1J6Ul httU~ FeMml 3 Monan:b Bay Plaza Sooth i.-. C&llf. 111'1 N.EI ..._.,a.I S.0 0em I I , Olllf. I I 16 OAIL V PILOT QU_,.E By Phil lnterlandi .. • '. ' T~...0~· •t'l ~ ........ , ..... .,._,.. .. ~ w .. 1~ w .. 1~ .,.h, •• _ ... Populatio11 to Dooni Area Citriis Groves fi lVEHSIDE IAPJ -Th e citrus groves l11at once ca rpe t- t>d land from the Sa n Bernar- dino Moun!ains almost lo th e sea will virtua lly disappear in lhe nexl half century. doo1ned by the population. says an ex- pert. Out of all the tens of thous· ands of acres !hat once border- ed !he course of the Santa Ana River only a few pockets are expected 10 survive. reports Dr. Gerha rd llostvold. His projections for the Santa 1\na \falcrshed. 1970 -'.!020, \\'f're in a report by !hr Clare- n1011! firm he heads, Urbano- 1n1cs Hcsearch Associates. Sa rnple projections : Red - l<inds area citrus will decrease <1! the rate of 1,000 ac:es per fire years, vanishing in the 20 10 -2020 decade: East Sau l3crnurdino · Riverside -High· P s)'<:holo ay, tl. La"' Classes Set for TV A pai r or courses i n psychology and Jaw '>''1!1 be offered on television for col- lege credit by Orange Cnasl and Golden \\lest Colleges !his spring. ··r.;nv for thl' i()'.~·· ;i nd ''!nlroducl1on lo PsycholOb'Y'' \1 Ill hoth begin Jan. 2i E.1ch f·ourS(' wil l Ve "'urlh !liree cnllegc• unit~ ··taw fnr th(' l(fs" i1•ill bt- sccn un r-.1on tlu\'. \\'edni•sday :ind Friday al i <1 .nl. on Chan· n'.•1 i ''Introduction IQ l's~<chology" 1vill be seen at the sumc tin1c :ind nn the ~ilnir l'hanncl on Tue sdays and 1'hursdays. 1'hc law course "·i ll be repent('!! :'11onday, \\'cdne!'day and Fri1!:1y a1 noon un Channel 28 starting }'ch I .Sludl'nts 1na.v rcg1s1er :it r 1lhl'r O;angc Coa.~t ur (;o ld~n \\'c:.I Colleges dur1ni:: 1he regular registration periods, !or both day and e\·ening col· lcJ:r Per.~ons 11·1i;h1 nA ad· 1J1 t1on:1l 1nfonn:i11on niay call 8~4-5i:Jj, land gr o v es will dwindle about JO percent every ti v e years, ttisappearing by 202~; Rialto and Upland groves will disappear by 1995 ; the Irvine Ranch in Orange County w i I I lose two thirds by 2000 and disappear by 2015: Orange , Tustin and Fullerton, disap- pear by 1995 : Anaheim 2000; Yorba Linda 2010. Persisting beyond 2020, the report said. will be groves in the Riverside -Corona, Wood- cresl -Lake Mathe\VS and Te· ni e s c a J Canyon -Elsinore areas. Acreage has been dropping ln most areas since W o r I d \Var II as housing tracts take over. In San Bernardino, home or the National Orange Sh11\V, they're worried because grov.'- ers are departing and dairies are taking over. So1nehow, the National Cow Show just doesn't have the old zing. Orange growers are moving lo the San Joaquin Valley, no- labJy Tulare County. The Or· ange Show peopl e, a 11 are of !he decline here. are tryini:: to perk things up by inviting northern counties to enter ex· hibits at the annual affair. \Varrcn A. Burr. statistician and inspector for the San Ber· na rdino County Department of Agriculture, says: "\Vhen I carne here in 1945 the groves came ahnos t to !he city limits. No w you·ve got to drive miles to see a grove." The dairy business is up be· cause milk men forced out of Los Angeles and Orange coun· ties have relocated in the San Bernardino -Riverside are a. San Bernardino County now produces more milk than any other county in the nalion. In 1970 the county had 20,300 acres in citrus, compared '>''ith 311,:n5 in 1945. There now are JOO dairies in the county, Citrus growers say they are ~queezec! by soaring taxes. la· l>ur problems and a1r pollution that harms their crops. S£11·s Burr: "Li ke the 'mom and Pop' store, the da y or the guy \1·ith a 5 or 10-acre orange grove Is gone, He can't makl' 11 !lC''s gnt to ha\·e some OU\· ~1de intome." EARN with daily interest Passbook Thrift Accounts ol any amount earn 5.5% per year, paid lrom day Invested to day withdrawn. Yo ur lunds always immediate ly available Interest c redited and compounded quarterly. Now 85 offices throughout Ca1ilor nla, backed by 55 years or proven management experience and a pe r fect record of regular interest payments. Funds invested by Jan. 15 earn fro m Jan. r. ' Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport ISeech-l700 Newport 8oulev1rd Russ Leaders Develop Case of Jitters 11.Y WILIJAM I.. ll>"AN A~ 5'«5-1 C-1 \\'hat sort of year will lt be for ~ lop Soviel polil i· clans! Judging from lhe way they have been behaving or late, lfll for lhem may prove to be a 1ood year ror ulcers. lnstcurily at the top of the political ladder is a chronic ailment in Moscow. Testimonv to this ls the fear Sovie't leaders e:r:hibit about "'hat poets and novelists might write, the harassment of Jews and anyone else who might \\'ant to len\·t , the panicky dread Of foreign i d e a s pene trating Soviet borders, the preoccupation \\'ilh "enen1ies" of the party. Periodically, 1his insec urity brings some sort of upbea\'al, as it did with Stalin 's purges and with the major post-Sta lin shakeups of 1953, 1955, 1957 and 1964. The year 1970 produced signs.that the co ll ective leadership is getting a bit less collective and is hardly ooe big happy famUy. ~fore may be known about what ails it after ~1 arch 30, when the Soviet C.ornmunis\ pa rty holds its 24th congress. A congress is supposed to be lht ruling body Of the party, though in practice it is nothing of the .30rl. But a oongress does pr<r vide a p!atlonn for the launching of changes or for major announcements. 1'hat was the case in 1952 when rnajor changes we re made in SLalln's last dayi, and i,n 1956, when Nikita Khrushchev used the 20th congress to destroy the demigod myth surrounding Stalin. Pays yo1rr bills for you. Now !he re's a s ignificant d ifference between savings and loan associalions. The bill paying savings account called MaslerPay. Only Avco Savings has it. Here 's how It works. Every payday, deposit all or part of your paychec k in your MaslerPay account. All of your funds start earning inlerest immediately. The highest possible interest. Then send us your bills. All of them. Phone bills. Department store bills. Gasoline bills. You can even make arrangements to have you,. fixed-amount monthly expenses (mortgage, auto payments, ere.) paid automatically by us. After we've paid your bills -we even pay all postage -the funds remaining in your account continue to grow a t the current high annual rates. An Avco Savings MasterPay account can be combined with other accounts that pay interest from 5% all the way up lo 7Y.z % per annum. Nobody pays more. Some furu1y things ha\'e been going on since late 1969, leading an outside r to wonder why 1he 241b congress dale see1nOO to be diff icult for the leaders lo fix. Tiic cont:ress, by statute, should have been in 1970. Indications arose or sharp differences In the I I-m ember ruling Politburo. This mad~ the question or Nikita S. Khrushchev 's memoirs an im· portant one. An unconvincing repudiation failed to dispel a look of authe nticity. Who in authority connived at gett ing out ol Russia material which could embarrass some of those who are still in the leadership'! The answer may some day be found in the fonnidab!e di!Jlculties be.setting today's regime six years alter lt overthrew Khrushchev. As usual, economic troubles cm- tribule to others in the soda! and political arenas, As usual, the blgg~t Soviet economic difflculti'es are in agriculture. In this area striking sug· geslions or l0j>level divisions are found. Politburo member f.l ikhail ~.t Suslov, long an arcb con s ervative and Stalinist lheorteUclan, sud· denly and fOf reasons not )'eL clear finds himself, on at least one question , on the liberal side anti seemingly in conflict with the party chief, Leonid I. Brel.hnev. Suslov in a Novembe r speech deplored continuing meat and other shortages and then proposed that the private sector of Soviet fanning be encouraged .and strengthened. • • Pays maximum interest on your savings. Accoun t Min. 01po1it Min. Te rm 5% MaslerPay $ 500 None 5¥" % Cerlificata $ 1,000 12·23 monlhs 6°/o Cerlificate $ 5,000 2-10 years 71/z o/o Certificate $100,000 5-10 years Keep your balance high eno ug h and you don'! pay a penny in service charges. Doesn't it make sense to have sll your funds working for you sf/ the time? MasterPay does just that. It pays your bills. It pays maximum interest. It saves a lot of time and trouble. Drop by any Avco Savi ngs office and open a MasterPay account today. We'll get your i nte res t up in paying bllls. · Only atAvco Savings. •• ' Avco Snlng1 1nd Lo•n A1aocl1t1on: Bell-Maywood -6250 At!Sritic Avenue• Coste Meso -3310 Bristol Street ,. Los Angeles -4925 Wilshire Blvd.• Soulh Gale -4240 Tweedy Blvd.• Studio Clly-12457 Ventura Blvd.• Ventura Headquarters -250 South Milla Road • Main Offi ce -2650 Zoe Ave., Huntington Park • • • BEA ANDE RSON, Ed itor Tltun.N1• ~MUiry 7. 1t11 ..... 17 New Blueprint Made for Home A new direction \\'ill be laken by officers of the F lorence Critten- lon Hon1e 0£ Orange County during their fourth annual meeting Tuesday, Jan. 12, in the Royal Coachman. Anahein1. With changing trends evident in the handling of out-of-y,redlock preg· nancies, the board of directors has deci ded to postpone construction of a re sidence home in El ri.1odena and concentrate its efforts toward offer- ing counseling and referral services. Accord ing to Mrs. Edgar R. I-l i!l , president. fevver girls are seeking the traditional services of a maternity home. although the number of out- of-\vedlock births and the number of girls and \vomen of childbearing age are increasing. The reasons for this a rc varied, she pointed out. They include a more per missive community attitude toward the u n\ved mother , in creased use of contraceptives a nd the ne\Vly adopted abortion laws. To begin carrying out the counseling and referral services as rapid- ly as possible, a recruitment drive for an executive director has begun on a national basis. "Members of the corPora tion \V i!l be osked a t the meeting to ap- prove the change of the \vo rd 'home' to services' to more accurately de- scribe the area program," Mrs. liill said. '" Keynotin,g the noon luncheon meetin,ir \Vil! be Mi ss Jeanne Olander, d irector of Single Parent Services of the Florence Crittenton lI01nc, San Francisco. , A graduate of the University of South Dakota. l\1iss Olander h olds a masters degree in social work from the Uni ver sity of California, Berke- ley. She has. after a two-year research project studying the needs of un- n1ar ried mothers who keep their babies, developed a service program fo r use in the Bay Area. The speaker \Viii outline her program \Vhich in cl udes individu al and group counseling, a monthly newsletter. a clothing and equipment ex- change, assista nce wi th vocational planning and housing, clay care and re- ferral to needed resources. PERSPECTIVE CHANGED -The picture is different no1v for young g irls faced .with an out-of-\vedl ock pregnancy, according to Mrs. Edgar I-t Hill (left), president of the Florence Crittenton l lome of Orange County. The new alternatives and trends \\'ill be explained d u rin~ the follrth annual meeting of corporation n1crn- bers Tuesday, Jan. 12, in the Royal Coachman, Anaheim. Gavels Change ' Hands A festive mood prevailed during a holiday dinner dance which was planned in con- junction y,•ith the joint in· sta llation of Orange County Veterinary Associ ation and Auxiliary. The annual event took place in !he. tllile Square Golf Club restaurant, Fuuntain Valley. licading the auxiliary for the coming year will be Mrs. George Clinton of Anaheim, and serving v:ith her will be the l\1n1es. Leslie Mallo, and Larry Kester, Garden Grove, vice presidents: Eldon Bain- bridge, Fountain Valley and James Ilich Newport Beach, rccor;ling aOd corresponding secretaries, alld \V i I I i a m R ober s on . Anaheim . treasurer. A c cepting chairmanships ;ire the l\lmes. Wayne Aspin- all. his torian ; Paul Wise, representative: Ross Dean, parliamentarian; Nathan Gab- bert, telephone: R o b e r t Grosse. membership. an d Charles 1-lcndricks. education. Winter Meeting ·Town, Gown to Visit Africa's Little Folk Jean-P ierre Hallet . noted explorer and best-selling author. \Vil! des- cribe· his life among the Pygmies for m embers and guests of UCf To,vn and Gown Monday, J an. 18. The winter meeting of the group will be.gin at 3:30 p.m. in the F ine Arts Vill age concert hall , and UCI faculty members and students \Vil/ be welcomed among the guests. 1-laltet. \Vho lived in the ltur.i Forest of the Congo for 18 months, \Viii sho\v slides to illustrate his experiences Y»ilh the natives \Vhere he participated in the11· traditional nomadic way of life. While sharing their diet. custom s and daily activilies. Hallet taught the Ba1nbuti P ygmies to cultivate the soil, read, write and build houses and schools. Twice decorated by King Baudouin of Ilclgium for his remarkable work among ap- proxi1nately G50,000 African natives of 17 different tribes. l·Iallet is the onl.Y while man \Vho is a member of the Bwame Secret Society, a blood brother of the Congo's Banade and Baleg a tribes and an initiated Masai warrior. The explorer's collection of African a rt a nd artifacts now is owned by UCLA. 1-lis best seller, "Congo Kitabu," was a Reader's Di,gest Book Club selection and an American Library Association Best Book of 1966. 1-li s second book, "Anim al Kitabu," has been described by naturalist Ivan Sapder· son as "one of the m 0&t vivid and recil istic contributions to natural history and zoology" he has ever read. f-lallet 's third boo k, "Pygmy Kita bu.'' FRIEND OF PYGMIES Je•n-P ie rre Hallet Dr. Bainbridge accepted the association's gavel, and on his board are Ors. Hendricks, Colton Boyle and Arthur Stone. Dr. William Huntley of \Vestminster will head the Southern California Associa~ tion. SERVICE IS THE CAT'S MEOW -Finding volun- teer work pleasurably r ewarding are new leaders of the Oran,ge Couny Veterinary Auxilia ry. Accept- ing leadership of the group is Mrs. George Clinton (center). who will be assisted by Mrs. Elden Bain- bridge (left), recording secretary and Mrs. James Rich , corresponding secretary. \Viii be released soon and reportedly will be "disturbing to m ost orthodox anthropologists.'' Pitches Called Foul by Student Who Won't Play Game DEAR ANN LANDERS. T'm a sophomore at lhe University of Arizona. Age 19. Height 5'10". Weight 160. I dress like most of the guys around here -and I look Uke a normal 19-year· old kid. I like girls but I don't date much because I'm too busy wor king a part-time job and hitting -the book!. For some unknown reason l've been proposiUoned by queers three ti mes sl~ce September. This bolhers the Uvmg daylights oul of me. Last night I WB!I having a botUe or pop at the Student Unlon and this creepy kid came up to me and said he was a photogra pher. lie handed me a card with his name and address on It and asked if I'd like to model for some pic- tures. He said he'd pa y me well for ANN LANDERS '1 my time because he v.·orked on com- mission for a.couple of advertising agen- cies. Of all the cornball junk th is has got to be the crummiest line yet. I was so doggone mad l oearly punched him in the mouth, Pl ease tell me why a straight guy would attract these kooks? What can I do about it? -SHOOK IN THE DESERT DEAR SlfOOK. ff you'll cbeck wHh your buddies you·a di1C11ve.r that almllst all of tltem get • few passes now and the n. You seem to be 1ett1Dg more tbaa yOGr share, however, and lt'1 pro- bably because you are prettier than mo!I cuys. Ttfy advice Is to ktep your cool. Tell the crullers to 1bove olf. Yoa don't need to pun ch anybody ln the mouth to get the Idea across that you're not latere1ted. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am stJll burnJng from your lousy advice to that poor girl whose in·laws hounded her so ui-imercifuUy to have a baby that she finally decided to fake it by putting a pillow under her dress. Why in the \vorld did you tell llER to see a psychh1trlst? It's her in-laws who are nuts. 'The girl was merely seeking a solulion to her problem. I know wha t I'm talking about, Arul, because my crazy in-laws were the same way.• They were so obsessed with the desire to be grandparenls that they drove my sister-in-law to the divorce court and they pressured me Into having four kids J didn't want. Tl was the only way to shut them up and get them off my back. So please, Ann Landers. get with It or turn ln your typewriter. I'm begiruting to think you are the one who should see a psychiatrist. -MONTREAL DEAR MON: YOU bd. four kJdt you dklo't want Jmt S. •t year bMaws up and 1et them off year beck? And I sboald tee 1 psycblatrlst?? Tbaili ''' wr1t1n1. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here's how I solved the non-stopl>orklng-dog dilem- ma: After three sleepleu night. I got out of bed (at 3 a.m.), drove my car out of the garage, parked In the drfveway right under our neighbor's window and leaned on the horn. I kept the horn going for 15 m1nutes without a let-up. The neighbors came out wUHyed - Acreamlng threats about having me ar- rested for disturbing the peace. I told them I was not making any more noise than thelr dog, Within three minu"1 they toot the mutt in the house, SI~ that night we've never heard a sound out of man or dog. ..':. BEAUTIFUL DREAMER DEAR BEAUTIFUL: Thanks l>r wrltfq. Yoa're lileky lbe rtelgbbor1 o• tM cKllel' 11de dido 't call the police! tf you have trouble getting along wilh your pa rents ... If you can't get them to let you live your own life, send for Ana Landers' booklet, "Bugged by ParenU? llow to Get More Freedom." Send 50 ttnta in coin with your request and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelopt In care of the DAILY PILOT. . ' JI DAILY PILOT ! • I l I I i . • - Horoscope Cancer: FRIDAY JANUARY 8 By SYD1''EY O~IARR 1''1 er c u r y , fa1t·movh1g planet In lk Hlar system, is of spe.cial Interest to astrologen. II always 11 fairly c:iese lo the aan, 11 associ•ted with the zodiacal slglu Gemini and Virgo and bolds sway O\'er ~mmunicalions. idea5 and quick journeys. A w e I I • aspected l\1ercury la a horoscope could ht indicative of writing, reportin.1t talent. \1ercury also is a!isoeiated with teacblag, pbotovapby Officers Give Tips On Defense Crisis, Communitv Involve· ment and Law Erlforcement will occupy members of the South Coast Chapter of the Association of ',\'omen's Active Return to Educati o n (A\VARE) tomorrow evenini.;. Stick to Rules and the abi.llly-ta com- municate complicattd con· cepu. ARJES l~iarch 21-April 19 ): Fine for exchange of ideas, new contacls and short trips. You are active ; circumstances turn in your favor. Many who were indifferent now are enthusiastic. Go ahead. TAURUS !April 21J.May 21JJ· ~toney. penonal posses."lion~ spotlighted : you can make some signif icant gains. Key is to follow through. Too n1uch procrastinalion Y>'ill defeat basic purpose. Let inspiration be ~·our guide. GEi\lJNI 1r..1ay 21-June 20 i· Your kind of day. Team up "'ith Aries indi\'idual. Op- portunities abound. Yo u r natural versatility comes into plav. New starts in new direc- liot1s are favored. Sense of hurnor is ally. CANCE!t (June 21-July 22 1: Take one step at a time ; adhert to rules. regulations. No time to rock boat. upset tradition. This is lime to work through channels. Established patterns now are most con· structive. stand tall. Remember Golden Rule. SCOR.l"IO (Oct. !3-Nov . 21): You can make satisfactory purchases, especially of clGthing . Gel money's worth. Utilize past experience. One who has admired you from distance could make ap-- pearance. SAG l'ITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 1· St ress public rela- \lons. dealings wllh mate or busim'SS partner. Strive for greater appeal. Spr ead message. Sign a g re em en t which finalizes be ne f i c I a I polirv CAPRICORN {Dee. 22.Jan. 19! Some rnental l'<lnnicts are resolved. Situation changes ; decision is taken out of your hands. Be ready for the new , for broader concepts. Stress originality and independence. AQUAR1US !Jan. 20.Feb. 111 1: Rec reation is accented. There 1s relief from ~cent pressu res. Welcome cha~ce for romantic interlude. Gn·e full play to creative processes. Your personality irnprin t is strong. PISCES !Feb. J!l-r..1ar ch 20): SOPHIA LOREN, GOLOIE HAWN AND JANE FONDA SHARE HONORS Guest speakers R i c h a r d Bauer, senior special in- vestigator of the U . S . Treasury Alco hol . Tobacco and Firearms Division. and Lt Susan Roley, public affair.~ offi('("rs. 11i·i 1J address a 6:30 p.m. dinner meeting in the Airporter Inn. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Ac· cenl on your p e r s on a 1 magnetism . showmanship and charm. ~lany desires are f ulfilled. Improvement in- dicated in rela tion! "'ilh End of affairs -that is, tern· po. You finish rather than begin. Important to build on solid fou ndation. some are en- \ious. Remain aloof from pet - 1.y gossip. Keep goal in front of you . youngsters. opposit-e sex. Good l,.==::=..::;-o... __ _;;-~-:;-::..;;-=-;;;"i Bauer, a veteran law en-Dubious Honor for change, travel, variety. VIRGO I Aug. 23-Sept. 22l : forcement officer, attended Blackwell Issues List the University of Cincinnati and is a firearms expert 11nd specialist in federal la11i· and illegal weapons. Push ahead toward~basic goal. Stress diplomacy. good will. Something you want is ob- tainable. You rould receive it as a present. Be optimistic in thii; area. c:ain is indicated. BOUTIQUE January Clearance To avoid disappol.Ilunent, prospective brides are r eminded to have their v.·edding stories with black and white _!?lossy rboto-- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the ~·edding . Pictures received after that time "''ill not be used. For engagement announcements it i.5 imperative that the story, also accompanied by a bl~ck and v.•hite glos sy picture, be sutr mitted si x \\'eeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not inet, only a story v.ilJ be used. HOLLY'i''OOD I AP J -fash· .Ion designer Mr. Blackwell ls. 1ued his annual "w or a t· dressed " list thi.s week . blast· ing not only some top celebrit- ies. but the whole world of fashion as "·ell. Sophia i.Aren was first on the list. Blackwell said her clothes look like ··costumes from a 1930 B movie.'' Blackwell, who doesn"t use a first name, issues his picks annu ally as a blasl at \\"hat he calls "phony, contrl\'ed best· dressed women" lists. This year. he also took a iswipe at fashion itself. He sald 1970 was "the worst fash- ion year we've had in 15 years. He did have some pr;iise for a few people nol normal. !y in the f<Wtion spotlight. Among those he said belong in the 'ol-'ell-dressed department were Princess Grace of Mona- co, Nancy Reagan, Lauren Ba- call. Julie Eisenhower and .\1erle Oberon. Following P..1iss Loren on the worst-dres.sed list were Angie Oickell90D, toeiali~ G I o r i a Vanderl>elt Cooper, Shelly Win- Lt. Roley, a Laguna Beach ho J resident, is a graduate of the ters. aut r acqueline Susann. Carries n 0 d g re 5 s, Defense lnfonnation School at Jane Fonda. Gnldie Hawn, California State College at 'la,10 Thom.' a"d Faye ......... Fullerton and is JislC'd in " l.llJ"-Who's Who in American away. Women. ,\liss Dickenson was dubbed ------- LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 ). Accent on education, travel : ~'OU have chance to test some of your ideals. Whal appears far away may be closer than you think. Stick to principles. SALE 30°/o·S0°/. OFF 28 ! 7 Lt F•~•H ,.N,,..porl B,ecl. 11 75-7740 "Venus covered in a fish net"' and r..liss Hawn. the b I on d c pixle of films and television 's ··Laugh-in:· "'a!' 111led "a shaggy dog on stilts.·· OU• 50 ~".... CaliforniaColle9e Blackwell also had an hooor- able mention category. He ~A\'e the duhious prize to comedian flip \\'ilson. citing him for his portrayal of ··Ger- a ldine" in blonde wig and Mother Hubbard dress. "Looks likt a basset hound in " ~ONG lf.lCH Of Commerce ""''"""'••OH;.,.,''°,;.,,_., I Sl -!55 ''"' •••nut Lo1>9 lto!h, C•lifor•,. 90811 CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT TELEPHONE' 436-9767 or 435-S367 To help fill requ irements on both wed· d ing and engagement stories, fonns are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered bv \Vomen's Section staff members at 642-432°1 or 494-9466. Uncle Officiates Couple Selects NB Residence drag ," said Blackwell. Helpful Hint For Homemaker "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" I TWO-YEAR COURSES l u1i11n1 a4 ... Hti1rr1li.11 H~hor •cc•w•I"'' ,l,cc1u11tin1 -Otlt '•t<t ni119 (J..,wli•• Sttrett •it f SHORT-TERM COURSES St11109ra,hic Cit"''' K-v,w•<~ 1~1+11111 Mich'"'' 0 ... ,.1 '"''""' Mt,icel Tra111o<rip!it111\I fulJ.Ch or9 t look~••P'"'l lrw1h-up Cl111t1 Shortito•' '"' Typi11q CG•ott •• •!C Shorth111~) ONE-YEAR COURSES I lt<jol St<••!•rial MtOo(ol Sure!o•it1 St"•1o,,ol (G•199 or AIC Shorlht11'). Junior '"ou11tint Sharon Middleton Now Mrs. Robert Greene An early evening ceremony in lhe Church of Our Savior, San Gab.-iel linked in mar· riage Trudie Christint Fletcher and W i I I i a m Robin.900 Mann , both of Newport Beach. Tbt Rev. Joseph fraggiosa traveled from \tississippi tn officiate at the "'edding of hit neph~·. ROOtrt Grl!('f)e who claimed Sharon Lee \l!d- dleton as hi.!1 bride. The nuptial mass took place in St. Boniface C a t h o ) i c Church. Anaheim. The bride ls the daughter of Mr. and r..tn . Kenneth r..1fd- dltton of ~ewJXlrt Beach. P arent.! of the benedict 11re Dr. and \irs. Robert Greene Pore nh Club Orange Coast Ch apter . Parents Without Pa rt n e r s 1ponsors a pancake breakfast the Jut Sunday of each monlh in Costa ttiesa City Park from I a .m. to 12:30 p.m. Annual Clearance s A L E '• of San Gabriel. ESCflrtcd to the altar by her father, the bride asked 'llss Sharon Kay Luther to be maid of honor. Ser\!ing as bridesmaids were r..irs. Tim O"Brien a nd ~iiss r..l imi Oog- ~eu fl<J'Wers were carried bv Rhonda Romo · John Christopher Grtene :'<t'rved a~ best man. Seating lhe guests were Bob Mid- rl leton, David Greene, Lee \"ander Stroom . Owen Kupfcrt anr1 Tom Robbins. The nfw Mrs. G re e n e graduated from California State College al Fullerton and teaches in the Anaheim School J)1strict. Her husband attended lCI. following a Haw aii an honeymoon, the newlyweds are making their first home in Tustin. 1'he Rev. ~rge W, Curn · mings officiated at the Episcopalian rite for the daughter of Mr and Mrs. Charles R. fletcher of San Gabriel. Parents of I he benedict are Mr. and ~1rs. \\'illiam I.. Mann of \\'hillier. Escorted lo the altar by her father. the bride asked ~frs. Douglas Scott to serve as matron or honor. ! PfRQl4AC.f<..'( 'ASHION CLOTHll fOll IOYI JANUARY SALE co. ... s..i... °" ~-Slllttw, s ........ .... V-Ko~ w. S.I• lt•rt1 rrW•y, J•"· I. II•·"'· 20f MAllfNI AVI., IALIOA Come & Save At SABINA'S First Annual storewide clearance OF GIFTS, JEWELRY & HOUSEWARES Ft11lt1+:c bt •g•;,., i11 t it ••ptrl101t 11!• ... m••cl.•ndit• 101t •••d down fro"I rt9ult r 1loc• lo ''"~' <Oom for 1pr:n9 purch11•• , • , bt!o .. ••• 011lv • l.w t ••""P'••: l o.ty...-1 ... 14.ti ...,__ i.p. l"'IOMITllS • , •••••• S ... LI t .tt 1 ~. JJ.tJ c...,1. WIATHll STATION •• , ,, ,, .SALi 15.99 I D.tr-let-J.H ~ .... ,,.. .. ••ncos .......... SALi l .9t e BEL TS, •II typo• e ROPES, CHAINS 112 PRICE ClteMe tT.111 7 •fffet STAINLESS STEEL SERVING PIECES ...... '·" ... Yovr ci.1<1 $3.99 10 Mty-1 ... 2.10 TMletl L.atMr llRrTS ............ SALi 1.SO .... J.H-ZODIAC llNGS, _, •itln .... , •. , , • , , .. SALi 1.00 .... 1.41-111THSTOHI llNGS. _, _,.,. • , ••.•• , , .•. SALi 99t 7 ONLY-ht. t.H N•,_,., ANIMAL U.Mf'S , •• , , . , . , ,SALi I .II I OMLY--a ... 14.91 ..... MUSIC IOI .......... , ... SALi 9.tt e MUSHROOM DISIGN u.c9u11w.u1 •• J c.t... e IMPOITID CRYSTAL e MONm POD lllYIN• PllCll ALL 10% Off J ONLY. MI SC. D£SIG NS FONDUE SETS Serl• Priced 9t 1/J . o•• Still • ft lr 1ele,tio11 of '"Amt1ict11 1Dr1tli1191" IOXID CHllSTMAS CA.IDS & CHRISTMAS Q.lllT WU.I' 112 PRICE Sure To Check Our Bargain Table For Additional Buys I ~JlCARDS e COSTUM~!i t04t Aft_.. Awe.· 9' M .. Hll• • H ......... a.-11 Next ta NIW Lid,., -l'H. f61.011 I IANIAMRICAID WILCOMI ·oz MM.· Set. 1 .. 6 SPECIAL! GRANOLA CEREALS 1 lb. ~;~· . 69~ 3 lbs. ~-~ Sl.79 LECITHIN CAPSULES 10G c.,.,1 .. 1.,. SI.ti Sl'ICIAL JOO C.,•ln .... Sl.6t Sl'ICIAL VITAMIN B-12 $1.59 $2.95 Sp11cit ! proc•n•d for doubl e ,boo•b+:o" of !~t v;1,,..; .. 8-11. E•c~ Tt bl.t 210 MCG. ............. "-" $1.49 ll'ICIAL ----RICH LIFE Mint Flavored PROTEIN TABLETS 250 T.a.ts a.,. SJ,65 Sl'ICIAL $1.98 -------NU·LIFE 6·lfll11ll!'I Wht•I &1•"' Oii C•pi11lt1 1M C.,11111 .... S1.2t 99• Sl'ICIAL ... lSO C.,.las .... SJ.JS $2.29 SPICIAL NOW-IN PAPER BACK ADELLE DAVIS ''letl Eat Right to Keep F-it" ''lets Cook It Right'' 10% OFF REGULAR PRICE ! Thi• Month Only e ONE PLAN e Super C ap plu, Ba la nced 8 Compleic with Solubili1ed O il Soluble Vit amin• for meximu m .b,orbtion levels, 30 TABLETS 60 TABLETS ·~· ••• ·~ ••• R'EADY·TO·EAT •O• ,,. PUMPKIN SEEDS 11.49 VITAMIN C SPECfAL- 2 IOTTLH fOR 1 THIE ,RIC'E 0 , 2.38 4.38 2 STORES TO SERVE YOU COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS COSTA MESA 270 E. 17th St. 541-9.537-ln Hlllgren Squar• TUSTIN 104M Irvine Blvd. 5"-71~Neer S•v-On Fun Night Mont e Carlo Awaits DAILY PI LOT JD Lifestyle Becomes no Model !l'DlfOlt'S NOTE -T"' I~ .. ol • m-l'I lilt II OM OI 1111',., gl•"'°"''' l•no;Y cloll>l1 • .,.,llK •NI lvn. 1111 I• 111 W1'11'1 lnvot~e<I In "'' ...... cl•Y Of '"• 11!• ot 1n 111>1r!no ..-1, btfo•• fftt otf!e<;I 1'1PllY IKI l llPll 'I on • m••••lnr covtr.I copywriter to decide how lhry teleYision residuals, s he ' 11 In 10 minutes. she's fini.!hed. wa.nt the picture set up. make close to »0.000. But /-{('idi leaves, getii Into "Listen, Heidi , the headlu1e that's not without expenses another ('ab, then realizes her ls. ·vou put so 1nuch (If -she sometimes spend.! $20 next appointment is only a yourself into it , don't you think a day for cabs and Wilhemina bloc k away. Gray Advertising By DEE WEDE~lEYER you deserve a Singer '!" SO gets JO percent of her salary. is one of her ravorite agencie!( give us some expression," Meid t never turns down a because she did her first work NE\V YORK {AP \ adds t>.1rs. Ne I s on . "1lie television audition. Residuals there. Tomorrow she may be the .,.,·hole shot depends on you from one frequently used na· "Don't get tOo fan1oul!:' next Suzy Parker or Jean lleidi. Without you y,•e've got tionwide commercial could someone calls out, as Heidi Shrimpton or Twiggy. nothing." easily gross $5tl,OOO. enters. Heidi lries on six out- But today she is lleidi Secunda. atop an aluminutn Which ill what brings her fits. "'hlch she will wear for Goldman, a fashion model \\'ho ladder, shoots photograph11 to a Madison AYenue ad-shooting th e next week e1ud has neYer made a magazine and the art director and the vertising agency, for an audi~ is out of the agency Jn a cover and "'hose most sue· COPY\\Tltcr exclaim o \'er tion ror a shampoo com-half hour. cessful television commercial Heidi. mercial. "It's 3:30," she says. ''but so far shows only her feet. Heidi"s nex t appointment is The casting director . .Nancy I feel like it's 8 p.rn.'' At And today is another da y for a cover try "'ith Bill 1'-tarquand, says : "'State your a ne1Ysstand she buys a (:opy of auditions and "g1>-sees". Cadge, a m u s ti a c h i o e d name and then we want you of r.-1<1clemo1sclle so sh e can But she mighl make the cover photographer and the art lo flirt \l'ith And y, the see the ne w Ciairol ad she of Harper's Bazaar yet. direct.or of Redhook magazint'. cameraman and fling your dirl She's up early . Sht has a Cadge places Heid i on a ha ir like crazy." "'Another dAy in the hfc busy schedule with ( o u r stool in front of a floor length The cameraman blushes and of <i model," she s<iys. separate appointments, She window tha t runs across the stares at his feet. "Glamorous?" gets a head start on he r entir(' length of the rooni.1------------------------ makeup before her first ap-They break for lunch and sit pointmenl at 10 a.m. lalking about photographers. A. waifish 111 powuis. 21· models and Heidi's career. year-old Heidi looks like she Af 1 p ter wo year~ at arsons Slep p in~ inlo the role of ho ~l s fnr the annual r\1 ~ht 1rr J\lon1c larlo pnrty <)r'e 1lcf\ !•1 righ t f J\lr~. Ruhcrt Flcischl1, J\·Jr. <Hld J\lrt.. f\·like 1\l <1rino i:llld J1oiJl:'rt ~tcvcn:i. Se rvin~ \~·ith then1 durin,g the Saturday, .Jan. JG. :.:ola 111 the Balboa Bay Club 1\'i\I be !Vlr. and i\Jrs. Al Kruka:i, i\:lrs. Stevens and Fleischli. couldn 't lift a bag of feathers. School of Design , H e id 1 But she easily slings a bag answered an ad for a house filled ll'ith 20 pounds of model for designer lla!ston. makeup and ha irpieces on to While there she was discov-hcr shollider. She s t u r f s ered by \Vilhen1ina. the Ger-several sweaters in a satchel. man niodel y,•ho has launched the "in thing" at Nabers The Tee Tattler r::::L. L. IEao•o<'t No•e: A tolumn o• wom•n' loo QOI! "ortt will ~01,.~• ~•<" Wff~ In ll>t OA.llY P ILOT In ,.....,., "°''' IOr mt w•PI<. pit••• m~d •nem •o P 0. Bo• IWl ("'t" lie'~ lney must tJe rut••ra bv l.\oraav 1 LAGU POA IEACH THREE I I.IND MICE A f '""' Ille Mme>. Wllttr Olvo>on. •I Jo• PGOr. •9; Corn•hu> Toomcv, \1 P f llaM. 1ne Mmt> I~• Wt.,mo•,.•~~·t 31; W1lll•m C~•i>Arl,, •~. Cn.i<l1• Morro..,n 5•. IE5T GOLFER OF MONTI'! ILOS fJ~OB55Jr;o,;"i, M",.,."~;;,t;;,,, r~;·· P""'· AC[ OF MONTH 4LOW NET) ,. f'llaM, Mro Poor, 65. B f hnhr, M". Wt•lmor<lu•d, !9 PUTTER OF MONTH -A Fl<oM M,., Pnor . '1'/, 8 F »i~r. Mr,_ 8"~ T~&c~out, )J, Pro s Out smarted Brains AT WIT'S END By EIC\1.\ BO.\IBECI\ Tl11· Sl'tt:n11s1s <ii l l1 r lns1iH1tl' of llu1n<1n Dr11'iop- l!H:nt ;11 llt·r"eley Just i·;i111t• i1lll \VJl!l ll'h<JI thry ICl'llll'fl <J ··~11rpn~1ng st<1tcn1cnl " ,\llt'r !11ng-r<Jnge :.turlies lh"Y h;11,· concl uded 111 ~·1 11011:.l'lll \'L'S h;n·r highrr JQ ~ 1h;in 1York1ng won1cn. \\'ho·;;; !illl'f)!'lSt'rJ 0 f{adio <ind IL'kl J.:,iun ad 1-erlJ:i111g 11·h('I h;1 vc opi'ratecl under ~he 1hi'nr\' 1 ha I ho11:ic1111 (';;;arr rllng 0rlnni:s <infl v.•111 hi•l1r1 ,. "1111h1ng .1· .. 11 !i•\I them~ tAn~t hing !ron1 ;i l11 r- Chairs Scarce CHI C'A(:O -11 w:.s ra~irr (n find 11bn 1 .. 11 !ht' hnll"L' 111 thf! ~1iddlr A~e~. lho.~c u1 'folUlhonty go! !o s1 1 Hl ch;Hrs. Survive in l'Ollt·t expert wilh a slopp,1· S11·rd1.~h accent lo a d'.uy hlond t' 11·hu runs around 1n hrr !r<ick ~Ult to pro1·e her dc(lclornnt 1~ f'ffe clive ) \Vhu's surprised'.' Thr gn;:: 111.~11 !u\l' l\'hn for years ha1·•· h1·<·n husthlll! lho~l' Urrd old 111k1·s on . "~1v 11·1rc i!' nnt n1vk111)! .1 lclt:hAnd 1ur"'. Qt . l1crr Shf''s dr_ving her nails" fir n1;1ybc Jl·s tht' y,•omen 's lib group.~ 11•ho h<11c basrd lht'lf rnovc1T1enl nn the stupldi- tv Of lill' liOllSC\l'ifl' y,•ho IS l;P111g (•xpl o1!f'd . made subscr- 1 +1'111 and I" ;1n underpairt "h:1by n1nchi11c ;ind 111istrcss" Or perhars it is the i11- d11~t ril'~. !aw n1ak Jng bodies. <·olli·gt'-~. hospitals, lall' c11- f,11·tcrnt:nl grou ps. hous ing h11;1rds ;ind cor1111111n1ca11011s 1ncd1a 11110 nt'Vl'r trusted a ho11sr\11fl' In know y,·hcrc lo uut !Ii!' 1-ey Jn her 1·ar lPt .1l11nc hill'f' " 1•01ce in 1he1r :1ll;11r~ You 're a l111lr l;1te, lrirnd.~ Thi' ho11sP11•1!r has been a s111'ler1or animal for yl'ars no11•. Shf' mc1v be bored. drpressed. nc11ro1!c: ;i nd unfulfilled. but shf.' 11-;1' nf·1 er dumb. New Board Anno unced Image Our image is our 011'11 faul t. \\1e let our s el ves b' seg regated at cocktail parties so no one 11."ould know we read a book or a newspaper. \\'hen census takers asked us \\'ha t 11·e did . v.·e snuggled our heads in our chests and mumbled . ··I'm Just a housewife ." \\'e apologized to o u r childre 111 for going back to school. Or y,•orse, "'e rilled our lives \Yith busv \\'Ork 1 Hebrew Dressma kiiig and Making Your Own Confetti for Fun and Profi t) instead or doing y,•hat 11'1' were really capable of doing. She is e:<pectei lo bring her her own n1ocleling agency. Oll'n clothes fol a cover shot "She came down al lunch and knitting materials for the one day and asked me to long hours she has to wail t:ome with her. l said no. for the p ho log r a Phi n g I \l'asn'l ready. Then after sessions. !hat, e\•ery \l'Cl'k she called An hour later, she is al me. Finally she called in the studio of fa s h i on January and asked me to do phot o gr a p her Sheldon the European collections. , . ·• Sccuada. Heidi stayed in Europe for Secuada tells Heidi she ha!\ 16 day.! in "'hich she made lo be an All-America n girl pielures in Linea ltaliana and for a sewing machine ad test was photographed for Itali an that is being proposed for use Vogue. in South American publica-In y,•eeks, her salary tri pled . lions. Heidi combs her hair, She now makes $60 an hour . adds more mascara, blush-on just shy of the $75 lop fe('. and lip gloss. She back combs She niakes $400 11·hen hired her eyebro1\'S, by the da y. teventy-ones at ~~L~ 2600 HARBOR BLVD. f COST A MESA (714) 5'0-11100 Ai<la Nelson, surveys Heidi. Th. · 1 d li,;o_;;~'~'~Y~'~'~'"·_;'~":O:'.:.:"~~i~e~gh;:::::::::::::iii;;;;;;:;i;;~:;i:iii;;;;::;;;;;::::::::::; "Bangs. I "'ant bangs and ____ ~ __ ___ __ _ _ _______ _ take off the print scarf. 1 t "•ill fight y,•ith the materia l." "Art directors always say they \\'ant someone who looks! like the All-American girl, real folks . They don 't mean it.": says Secuada. "They mean, real folks that could be a l model.'' It Lakes almost an hour for 1 the art director and \Ve resigned ourselves to the fact that anyone can rais' child ren and keep house in- stead of asserting some arc good al it and some "'ome111 lr--~---------1 are lousy. \\'e never organ ized THINK so that oo one really kne1v SALE 1vha1 we felt. 11·hat v.·e "'anted or 11·hat \\'e really are. 1 1 , OFF In another way, it has been l 12 interesting playing the role of the dumb housewife. ~1 any mornings r ha ve watched the "professiona ls" gulp down cof-: WISTCLtrf ,LAZA LOOK WHAT WE'VE ADDED TO OUR ALREADY FAMOUS YEAR -END SALE ... HUNDREDS OF ITEMS THAT SHOW ONLY WHEN YOU TAKE YEARLY INVENTORY. SAVE UP TO 75% CAROLIN~ COLLADAY To Ma rry 'Llnurs 11cn' Mi ~ca rl'e then. ;1ccOrd1nJ: to Enc?cinred1;1 R1j1:_inn1 rn. th;il e1·1·r1 1n .1 lal'µr hHtl~" 1l11·re might hr eh;.11ri' tnr onl y !ht lord and hl '\ II 1!(1, fee, stomp through virgin snow. clean off the car. call the garage to jump lhe bat- lery. fight traffic for 30 miles, put in a 12-hour day and right their way horn e again "'hile I si t over a cup of coffee/ and muse. "\Vhat a shame "'~ • 1,..1.,.,_1110,..,.11 '"'" illrs \l1i;h;irl Skibb;i will bl:: c~r~e:•~n:o~t~s~':'~"~'~':'~":o::::....:..._ _ _;_t=========:=:::~· sc;ilt·fl a~ prc~1dl'llt of their -------------1 Couple Set April Date 1"hr l"'ngagc1nl'nt of lhl 1r daugh1rr C;1r0linr roll.111.iy !I) Capt. Donald Hl'nZI' h11!' lr'l'll rr1calcd by '.\1 r :1nd ,\]rs. ll1 cupation nf <1 t·ha i. lonl! s1 1nOO!i1.cd ;iuthuri1.\. t·.·r r>f lh•· 1111rrl "<·h:11rn1<111" 1" ;i rcllcct1<1n of tlu s pracl1t(' Reunion Plans John Coll;iclay ol Ba lhoJ 1'1;11•, li•1· .1 in \1·;1r rl·u111u11 I 'resent II teach111i.: I 11111·1 h 111;-th•· r\!1.>:-.~1 1:11. I, L;1kr11 oorl Rradc u1 !hr Ft111nt;11 11 \':dl!·1 !l ti~h ~(·11,,,,1 11111 111' rt1'"il''•'d S1·hooJ D1slr1et, .\\1ss Cull.1d;iy 1hir1ng a nwt·\1111.; ;ot J .'HJ p 111 I'' J.~" gr<idllilil' 11! !hi• 1·n11er:i1!v 'I lJt·~d:1v , J.111 1 ~ 1 ot Southrn1 C1-11iJ(irr11a 11h•·rc An1nt1t: .,..1~h1ng infnnn;i\1011 I ,he 11;.is ;df!l11i11•d 1•1111 IJ1-l1 ;1 Hll lf1t' Tlll't'lillf: nr lht• 1·11u111011 1 Young Soph1~l1tatcs \\'omen·s Club S11nd;:iy . Jan. 10, during f'Cr('mon1es 111 Ports O'Call resta urant . Sl'r1 in~ 11 ith her 11 ill be lhe 1\llnl'~ Stan Broberg and .John Stcveni.on, 1·ice µre~idenl~. \\' 1 111 am i11cr-, rilicl<I. s:!trct;:1ry, and John r.1r1rn~111 lrea1'Url'r \ spcl"Hll 11ward will hr J.!lll'n 10 lhf' o 11 l ~land in g 1•·01n;1n-ef.thc-yc <1r . I .) .-.. . 1.00IJ"'.; OF OIL ,AINTINGS WHOLES.Alf WAREHOUSE Ol'EN lO THE PUILIC 30 °/o off { Jft'lt:1 Dr.11.1 !.or11rll .1 11!i1lli t~ \Clll'dulcd tor .)Ull(· 111 1 f!cr 111111,·r i;nn ol ,\lr ;111d 111 tlif' D1 ,1·1·1i·1nd /l1 •lt•l 1na1 ''1 1611 E.EOl1iGER.~•"T.4AN• ' ' . · j r PHONE IJS...01 , :-.11·~. llarll'Y 11!'11/\' of '\inlt• t:illl i\fr~. H1)bert. (l;lar-tc11. i.----Dl:ALeRS W.t.NlED c .,,.,. Ccnl1·r. 1011-;1_ 1;; ;.i gr <1du:1 tr --------------''-------------·1! nl The ln11·cr:i1l\' of lu11:.i. lit' 1·11rrr.n1lv i~ ;i i\ian11r JCl pilot 1 stationc{i al El Tor(1 I Thr April ~ 111•t]d111,i.: 11dl lake place 111 Newport lieai.:h. OC Si ngl e Bees The secl)nd and four1h Frirlay nf the month Orangr County Single Bees gather in Plonecr To11n, Sant.a Ana . Activities brgin <it 8 p.n1 . Yoga 1s ' .. Coed Brin g The Old Mdn! Yo9 e is The SCIENCE of Vitality & Harmony. f'Rlf INTRO CLASS Te•ltlrt et I P·"'· I -~-cl11tlft 1t••t Sot. 111 1G '·"'·• Tee._ et 2 P·"'· 1.-TIUilf'S., J ... 14, et 1 P·"'· YOGA "CENTER C•lll MIJU ...... ANNUAL SALE 1/2 OFF BRAS GIRDLES LINGERIE Veta's 1m1Un UPAIU ................ ......, __ _ ' PHONE 642-1197 TREMENDOUS SELECTION FAMOUS MAKER SPORTSWEAR 1/3 t• 1/2 OFF REGULAR PRICE PRINT AND SOLID JUMPSUITS AND PANT SUITS 11:-.uklr to $45.00 . $15.00 to $23.00 LONCO AND REGULAR LENCOTH lt991dor to to $40.00 ... JEANS. REGULAR STYLED ... ., .. .. $25.00 WOOL AND ACRYLIC DRESSES .. , $8.00 to $19.00 PANTS . . $5.00 to $12.00 SWEATERS AND TOPS ...... •• $20.00 ...... •• $12.00 . ........... $ .OO to $9.00 TABLE OF V LUES $1.00 to $5.00 USE YOUR WET SEAL CHARGE. BANKAMERICARD, MASTER CHARGE Wt Prlcft lffectlwe el 7 Storft 204 Mwlu A••·• ......_ lsk11MI 10,... svn'•' o ,. •• 270 E. 17 .. St. c .... Mno JJJI llrlstol, S-c-"°"' 121 Mala Strut, II S .. •cl• 7171 lolhltor. H .. 11 ..... c .. t., The 240 -.oy. ,,.._ ·-· 4000 Ch.,"'•· The City, Ornt• 10,... '-"'' n 1w '' ALL IA.Lii rlNAL il/J • • \Villian1 lloldcn plays an American prisoner in a .Japanese prison camp in "The Bridge on the River K\vai," shown in two parts, tonight and Friday, on the CBS Thursday and Friday night Movies at 9 o'clock. Channel 2. ~~~~~~~~~~~- JANUARY 7 I '.' I '~ I ~, 1:00 II Tiii li1 Nnn (C) .i.rry D11nphy B MIC tt.wwwic.-(Cl (60J Tom Sll)'!ler 0 Tiie Allin Show (C) (90) 0 Sia O'Dlc-Mft"lt : ''Capt fttl'' (dram1) '62-Gre2ory Peck, Robert M1tcflem. Polly 81r1111, Lori M1r1in, Mar1in Balsam, Jack Kruschen, Telly S...va!as, earrie Cllai.e. Q Okk Vtn Dykt (30) tD Tht Flintstones (CJ (JO) Q)@CIJ Sltr Trek (C) (60) ffi Frltnd1y liii1nt (CJ !291 CI) ces Nna (C) (30J €Il) Fisher FtmllJ (30) gm Noticitro J.4 (C) (liO) rnf T1ue Adffntu11 (CJ (30) a!) l a Hert Fa11111tr tDll Ptlllcll tJO) CD"''" ift tllt ~011nd (CJ (30J 1:1 S ffi Clla1lie'1 Pad (CJ l :lO 0 Candid C1mt11 (JO) ID Tht r1,1n1 Nuri (C) (30) ll Ci) NBC Ni1htl1 H.w1 (C) (30) m HodeePGdtt ledp (C) (30) tR) 127 00 M1 flVOfilt Mtttiln (30) (ID Socitl Slcuril}'/Mllliclll (JO) rnf The lkwrt Reptl't (t) (30) CE lot 01vic11dos 1301 fl) ABC Ewtnin1 Ntn (C) (30) 1:001J CBS Ewtnln1 """ ft) ()0) w1U1r Cronklt• 0 e?2f NBC NifhU1 N1•1 (C) (30) O•~fd Bri~kley. r1111~ McGtt, Johnl Chancellor. 0 Wh1b My line! (C) (30) tD @@I low1 l11q (30) @ @@ D111nrt (C) (30) ED Eastern W"rldo111 (C) (JO) (R) !'W (jJ Tn.rth or Co111C111111Ces (C) EE Christ !ht liYinr Wo14 (C) (JO) @II Rourio (30) CE Si111plt•111t. M11l1 (5~) (i) MDWit Gtme (C) (30) 7:30 fJ Q?, (IJ F1mily All1ir (C) (30) He1rrng S1s.s1 Ill~ about m11ryin& Gre21: •II lhe dtsh nl futur e. Bully d1nck hosts 1 muilcal-w11ieb rt'l'Ut, 1IM1 luturln1 IPf(iil 1uesl Don Adams, Barbafl Edtn, Tht Osmond Brolhtrs. Tht Mike Curb Concret:t· lion, Jud Strunk, Hansel Terry, C1I W1l$0n ind Yvonne Wihl1r. • m "LOVE STORY"-top * flick of year. See star Ryan O'Neal with fr05t ID Dl'rid f1'911 SMw (C) (90) Gi;ests.: Joseph MtnkitwiCl, Ry1n O'Neal, L!ilh Taylor Youns. Mel• bt MOOll. ,:00 I lulnt: HifllliPU (C) (2 hi) ~ (C) (30) (R) ''"'"' ftf lirlnf (30) 11 GREATEST ADVENTURE * OF ALL: "BRIDGE ON THE RIVER KWAI " Tonight and Tomorrow fJ ~ Ci) CBS T1111'1d11 Mowi1: (C) "B11d11 tn tht River lwti" (R) Part I (dram•) '57-Wiliam Holden, Alec Guinness. Jtck Haw~lns. A c1ptur ed Brltls~ Arm1 otfittr dirtcls the pri1- oner coristruction vf 1 /unlit n llw11 bridle lor lh• J1p1ntst in !ht 11.wai River prisori t tmp. BtKd on lht besl-lfllin1 nowtl b1 Pitrr• Soulle. 0 Thi FirtiliY• (C) (£0) ED Hollynod TMisien TMttrt (C) (2 h1) (R) "Bir fish, little Fiilll," Mu1h Wh .. ler'1 f1mous B1otdw11 comedJ hit, .Uninf M1rtiM l•rt· lert, Bill Bi.I.by, Jtff Corey, Willltnt W111dom, Sewetn D11de11, Ann B. Otwil ind Lou Gouttl. llD ._ it) (30) mi......., •rw•»M tJ1>1 GD 111t1c11t (60) !:ltJ n tD oo m "*' (C> t3o> .,_. Girl'1 811! friel\Cf." Jitney convincei Ad1m Iha! lhey should keep 1 stray dol that wallders to thtir hMt i11 lht middle af the 11l1ht, bu! lht lon11er "Stir'' slip, tllt lflOtl c~r. ttin Adtm is !hit tilt 111fm1l is 1 111ined circus J)t11orrner. 0 @ (JJ (D Thi IMd Colipl1 (C) (30) '1hey Use Horstrtdish, Dori't They"' Felix needs Osc1r's Mtp •n prep1r1n11 hit entl')' IOI" 1ht 1111111 cf 1 tooki111 contest. 0 C.IMllC C.llllf1 (30) II!) MaitlltJr11Uf1 Desk {CJ (30) i nd }Oljy beg in worry1111 about luw· El) C..dtftt M Al .. (30) lrQ U11tle Bill Ind Mr. f1tncfl alone 10!00 a ID Ci) m DMll M.ru c wh'n !hey. too. 1rv• up ltl llllf· 1 ' ' ( I r•ed i nd ltave homt. · (60) _Bob . ewhtrt Dtnnlt WNVll, Q ~ (J) rnf nip Wll~n (C) (60) Bol*1 _M1rt111 1Pld Kay MldfOfd 1unt lhe Supremes. comed••n 01y1dj with ~ino. C S!tinbe1g ind 81111Crosby 1r1 flip's 0 lit 5 Ntwl ( l. (liO) ll.11\1\ft ,.._ . • S1nd1r1. 81rnty Moms. ~ptt1al 1ut~ls ..... m&dy h1g1Jtl1h! ot O J1I ClJ aJ flit hri I C rht show h•s B1111 pl11in11 1 con I 60 ""· 1 • 8 ~~ ( ) ~enhonetnn1 plumbef out 101 1 ( ) ,,.,nc utry. . en 11 1n1u11d In nishl tn the to wn wheri hi en I 1 du11e bu1n 1cc1dtnt whllt fleelnc ··ounters Burin~ Gt;tl~1ne Jonts •ti 1rom flttcll~r, •nd ~ b111d ol In· lhe Cot1ontll l Club. 1 d11~1 l1k1 him to t~~r dt•r1 11St~· 0 NY'D (C) (30) ~•T1on. Thtrt ht 11 c1n1d lor 11141 his 0 fit {J) m Mill\ lintoln (C) ne"' l!itnd~ plan Ill ~·bof•t• •.•Pl (60) "K1ren.'· Milt help' 1 dis·! route for h1'.". S.l Mineo, Don ll.n111ht 1urbt"d yo11n1 mother to o~e1comt ind P•::J':'nl lutsl. ernot ion1I problems IMtl m1dt n"I 0 It trd "'"' (CJ (60) bet! the child sht !ove1. ID~ P'wbttll (CJ (60) 0 Mill kin S Mow ii: (C) "Dttil ii 4 I() EriulNI •locos (30) O'Clotli" (1dventu11) '6l-Spenct1 G) E*ttlll • tw~ (GO) Tracy, f11n~ Sin•!••. 111nrin Mt· 10:)0 m Ill.._,.._ (C) (30) tnews. A 11r1ts1. aided by lhree «1n· fl) LI f111ili1 (30) v1cts. U¥eS !ht li~e~ ot tile childr~n ll:DO II IHI (j) e ..... (C) Ofl I SoUth ~IS I SI Ind movn!tln Q ~ (I) m ..... (t) top teptr ~lP1tal when I volctoo 8 C-tll YIMI r., Tltit? (C) trupls. O Im lhwl (C) CD Trutlt Of Colllll!IMllUI (C) (30) 0 ..... le. "SNrltct Ntlll&I IN m "'"" • nw (t) (60) TlnW .,,· ._. ,,,,,...,,., ·•1-m Tllntrt lf:lt (C) (JO) "Sprin1s 811il RttllboM Nip! lrwct. .Awaklflln1." m Mtn.: (C) ~ lif \.nr (drt· Ci) Covtrnmtnl F"~111 (CJ (30) mt) '57-Nln lt6d Vir1J11i1 M @II Jh O" t fl IM He•biH !lO) Qt hit tlle Clec:t (c) .,._ 7:55 (ll) Clllltion d1 St1urtdot (55) @Cl) Pll'f'J MIMI• l :OOfJ l3(J)Ji11 Ntbln (C) (&0) II:)H•HUJtCOll ll,..r.Kwa1pl 81Jti111 McN1lr 1u11t1 11:icl 1J 18 ()) Mtr1 Crillitl (C) Tiii II VirPlll lrtMll .. (Cl (60) Ritz 81111. l~--CD T1 Till Ult Trlltll (C) (30l e !D C1J Cl....., CW.. (C) i w.•1 ,... )II .... (Cl flO) ~!holly Queyle 1'1111•- Cnatil• hturdl (C) (30) 8 Tiii ...... .._ (C) v ... r.-o. 1c1 c&01 am Diel CMtt tc> N.Y. COii· 1:05 fm LHi• U. (55) 11elfWOfMlll Btll• Ablu1 is 1111st. l :lOGCitCIJ91'""'9 (C) (60) CDMM: '1111 W.,..,-• Clrl"' ·1111 Qul"'u111." A r.ont1mpor1ry lllo (drll'lll) '51 -M1rcl1 Klndtr10n, cl lolk sin1rr1 wilh • puich1nl 1011 f>et~r _W1!~t1, K1th11i111 B11rttl, h1Uutin1tcry drut:s ltad Chit! Iron· Wh1I &11se lL side 1nd hll &11ff on • sl11n11 lZ.:OD 8 ...it: ''llcMWlip l ·M" (tti·fi) st11th f(I( t ml11ln1 1irt. Dtwld 'Sl-llorf l rffllll. 0.. M111t11. C1rradi111, Miclllel Blod1111 ind @(})Dk.It Cnttl (t) Ctrlt Bottlll 111111. 1%:30 m Al·NllM Slllw~ -r1111 lrB lW. O Chevrolet's "Chancinc w..w1i Die." "llttMt. llM' lllC * Scene 111.'" Enplbert ·-• Humperdinck. Barbara l:oe a ....... ; (C) n. hltctlC" <«t•) Eden, Don Adams '53-.lollri DtrH. Cttlltrl,,. M<:L..._ O @ (I) tm I WWJ QMri•1 Bt1 Coeptr. -It!<"'> r.~.-· OD-«> ':OO B "TN tliW' (drlN) •a.....a... II~ falrtMl\kt Jr .• Mlf\t Montez. "'Hu11117 Hr {dr11n1) "47-M•r- llTtl l.oclwDod. Olfl O'Htf11hy. 0 'Trtlldl C...-6t lfc T ..... !ta1111iy) •SJ.....Of1111d O'Ccrnnot. ,,,,. __ ... _(_ 1"1) '41-Jotn 9"Mtl. II "T'9 Cttlt IDlrt I .....- (11111ktl) '5J-M111rlCll [•& t ......... __ (_, '51-lio,. lrld11$. LM ,._tnl. t.• G IC) "nl ..._....,. (dt11M) ·~ Spwar Traq, Robtrt W•l'Mf. C:Jt 8 (Cl "T\1 Lt11t lf1J Ulll"-Con· ttus1on (dftl'l\1) '5~Tffl)l'lt ~"· Laguna Moulton Plo1Jaouse 'Angel' ~urvives Technical Flaws By TOM TITUS °' ,... 0111, "''-' •••ti ''Look homeward, Angel" may never win an award for technical ex~llence at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse, but even in a flawed pro- duction, the overwhelming dramatic effect of A'ftlOmas "'LOOK MOMIWAID ~~ A 1>1•1 b~ i.elll Frlnui, NIKI vn t111 novtl 111' lll<lm•i Wo!lt. OirKll!'d b1 ll:OW9flt H.-.1, 1Krtnlc.al 111r1C1or w. I . CudeY, oound bY i•uln E. Kim- ber. 1111\!lnt 11'1' Tom Arl\Okl, 1utMnttd TutodeVI lll r-h S..turO..vl uri11! J t n. Jl al In• L11un1 Maullon Pltv· .__., tQ6 LI UUM Ct nYOfl ltotcl, ll- QU!"ll IMdt. THI C•ST Elll• Gani •. .. . . l•ft. l(o•n w. o . Gt nl •••• _ Dovl1 M<:lf.!nnev Euetnt Gt nl •• , . Ml~t HUl>boo•d L•Uft JtmtS • • Ntn Prlrw;t a.n G1n1 ..•.• P11rlc~ 81!"1un He!t n G1nl 8trlon .. Pt m Jonr• Hu., 8irton Jtmtt Gilio Dr. Mtuu!rt •. Otvlcl Ptul Mtdtme Ellltbtlh . •• . l 1t11 Ptut Lukt Gt nl .. , ..•. , , Tom :louth1rcl Ft!hl Pert ..• " Hlldt Alltn Wiii 1"1n!ltnd •••••• .• JKk MtnlwU Jtkt" Cltlt ..•••••...• , lom -'•nold "'"· Clt tt ...•. ,...... Su•lt Scoll l'lorrv M1nvl1 .. ...••. l 1nc14o Krtu~ Mr•. Snowdon •••••• AnMbtllt Qulvltv , Mr. Flrt~I •••.•.••. Sim H. Cl1UOtr Min Brown . . . Mlrl1m K1l.,.r T1rkln!OO ' .. Vlnctnt CIPOIIl1li<I Wolfe's autobiographical saga cannot be denied. There are performances of individual beauty and poignan· cy fused with a battery of lesser characters by the strong directorial hands of Rowena Harwood to create a powerful iUl.l.Slon. Were II not for the fact that the Laguna production is a technical nightmare, "Angel" would emerge 111 the highlight or the county's community Uieater seaaon. Miss Harwood has, with only one major es:ception, (ulfiUed her task most admirably. Her characters. are notable in thelr en1phasis of strengths and weaknesse11 and, again with but a single exception, move with force and determination through the long a n d dramatically exhawiting even· ing. •·Look Homeward, Angel'' has been given loving and mellculous care, with special attention allocated to the often misused art of dramatic silence. Hov.·ever, in l h e presentation of what may 1vell be the longest death scene in local theater, Miss Harwood has comm!Ued an act of theatrical overkill, diverting the playgoer's attention to the production's style rather than lts effect. Individual perfonnances are almost uniformly superior, y.•ith Iris Korn's shrewd, penurious Eliza Gant standing out above them all. Miss Korn perennially pained ex:preS5ion With all Its technical conveying the private misery troubles, how ever, ·' L oo k he has created and from Homeward, Angel" remains a which he cannot extricate rnost engrossing p1et~ of him!elf. theater. It continues Tuesdays Other note w 0 rt h 'I con· through Saturdays until Jan. tributlons in an exceptionally 23 at the Laguna Moullon large cast are made by Pen1 Playhouse, 600 Laguna Can· Jones as the Gants' married _:Y~':::":_R:,::oa::d::_·_:t,a::!gu:n~a~Be~a~c~h~. ,..:=:;;:::;;::;;;=:;:=====---daughter and, to a lesser ex-1 tent, by James Gilio as her unhappy husband. Tom Southard as the sailor son home on leave depict! the brightened spirit o{ one who has "e5Caped" the constricting family atmosphere. COMMANDING Iris Korn It is difficult not to consider David and Betsy Paul as a unit when they appear together, but in "Angel." their roles are widely diverse . David is strong and ronvlncing as the no-nonsense doctor, while Betsy cuts a v•ide swath of both comic and serious ac· is s ti g h I , sinewy and hi ting in her gem-like cameo all respects a co mmanding of the town madam. presence 8S the matriarchal The Dixieland Bo a rd i n g board ing house keeper who l louse tenants are as motley hoards the lives of those a crew as a dramatist could closest to her with the miserly i1naginc -a collection of instincl ·which dominates her n1iniature roles meshing com· business life. fortably with the principals. Doyle McKinney emerges Of th ese back ground larger than life as the lusty, rharacti::rs, 11iriain Kaiser. rum·soaked W. 0. Ganl who Susie Scott and Tom Arnold finds refuge from hi! wife 's (:onvey the most lasting im- l>l.•Mllll INOAOIMENTI All cei.r Pr09r1m "LOVI! ITOlllV" (GPI plu1 e IOCK tlUOSOH "HORNET'S NEST" tGPl '""e>o..-'....., ,_ .... ,_ -93·-~I u...i.r \1 M""' •• ·Wllll P•r•I • 'LITTLE PAUSS & llllJ HALIY' ! plw1 !Ill 11 Ltt M1rvi" e CU"1 E•1l- tt "PAINT TOUrt WAG;OH" (llJP) All Color E~C11111v1 oriwe-ln 1now11111 Pr1nk Sl"llr• "OIRTY DINGUS MAGEi'' IOPI plu' e Elvll Pr••llJ IOI "ELVIS-THAT'S THIS WAV IT II" • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• _ ....... ,.., • .. -......19.o) M l·l'll AIH:olor Premltr E"l•ltmlllll JOh<I W•yne "RID LOBO'' !Gf plu• Lee Ml"'I" I" "MONTE WALSH" !Gl'f •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• --·· --·--111-1161 AU Color Show 'Great Drea1n Machine' e111otional encroachment in pression. roaring benders. McKinney 1s Turning to the technical side immensely powe rful. almost of the production. as one even· Sh a k esp e are an, in his tually must, the lack of desperate quest for inner resources with Y.tlich to ade- peace, and his movements, quate!y furnish a show in "'hich at first appear exag-Laguna's spacious auditorium gerated, are nevertheless true is painfully evident i n Ul\der 11 Mwu 11 With P1rtnl "NO BLADE OF GRASS"' flt) plt1> e Kim Derby "STl!AWIEl•Y ITATIMIJllT" !Il l Un6er 11 Mw1I Be With Plrt<ll '"I LOVi" MY Wll'I"' llll Clift! E••~ ---~- Given Notable Premiere llll•Lu::1-1211 "TWO MULi$ FOi. SISTl!lt SAllA" COP) •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Color Show By CY~'THIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) .....'.. The riublic broadcasting station&, which often are to commercial television whal off-Broadway is to the stage, are involved in some noble experimenting \vith "The Great American Dream Machine " series which had its premiere Wednesday nighl. The 9Q..minute production can best be de5crlbed as a magazlne-formlrt revue. It was devoted to some glimpses of America and ~Americans -laking a hard look . a \\'arm look and a quizzical look. Sa11ta Ana Group Lists Comedy Cast Casting has been announced for the next production of the Santa An a Community Player.a, P hilip King's British fan::e "See How They Run." opening Jan. 15. Christina Carden y.·ill pl ay the leading role of Penelope, the wife of an English vicar, v.•ith Ron Langseth portraying her American GI friend. Bob Paver takes the parl of her stuffy clergyman husband, Others in the cast are Nancy Baloyan as Ida, the maid: Betty fl,lcQure as the pompous fl,flss SkiUon, R~s Anderson and Charles Pait as a pair ot visiting clergymen, ·with Dick Langseth and Andy Hamilton completing the cast. Art Winslow Is directing the comedy, y.•hi ch will be slagcd Friday and Saturday evenings for three \1·eekends at the Players Theater, 500 W. 6th ::;t , Santa A.no. Reservations are being lalten al 543·7647. • Jn one sketch a comical to his character. "Angel." Yet some of the chief mixed up a huge mess The major ind i vi du a 1 yawning gaps can hardly be in a bowl, announcing each "'eakness of the Laguna pro-altributab!e to fiscal failings. component including the duction is the I a c k I us t e r On opening night in Laguna, artificial ingredients -and performance of fl,fike Hubbard one usually is forced to wail came up with a ''modern as Eugene Gant, au tho r 1:i minutes past curtain time lemon cream pie" without Wolfe's alter ego. Hubbard until the fi rst nighters are lemon, eggs or cream. portrays a country bumpkin seated. Tuesday tJ1e first There was a denunciation fraught with superfluous arn1 nighters did the waiting - of drug advertising i n and hand gestures rather than for nearly a half hour while magazines circulated among an unhappy young man vitally the backstage crew worked phsyiclans. As the camera concerned wit h his !uture and to finish construction of the \\'andered over pictures ~or his education. The depth of set, a task never completely beauties in ads for tran-his character is never allowed accomplished. WI \IMINSl!R HI-WAY 39 !>RIVE-I N Ulld1r 11 Mull Bt Wllll P1 ... nt "NO llLAOE 01' OltASI" (IU plw1 e Kim ~rtty "5TRAWllEIUtY STATEMENT" (Ill) ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 0R~N(,t ORANGE OIUVE IN All Color Premlert EftO•ttm91111 John W1yn1 "11 10 LOIO" llO I plUI • L ff Mlrvln "MOHT• WALSH" ilOPI [jll(flttttttktr:t:ttttttltlllllll''*'' ~0\fA Mf~A PAULO DR l"Yf-IN All·<OIOr Premier E"'l1•11mtn11 U"der II mu1t 1H with p1r1nl 'THERE'S A GIRL IJll MY SOUP'!I) plw1 (II"! l<til"""41 "Kl!LLV'S H•ltl01" !OP) ··························••e••••••e $2.00 r1a CAllLOAD HU .. ,,,.(,10" OlOCH WARNER DRIVl-IN w .. ---·· ·--1•1·3,9• AH CO!lr llllW tlnd1r u Mw1t 11 Wllll Pt""! "llOSTOH STltANOLlll:" pl~s • 51ltllt y Wlnllra "ILOODY MAMA" (II:) quillzers, antibiotics a n d to surface, even in his climac· A folding forestage backdrop r in g worm re med i es , tic sc:ene with his mother proved perilously ineffective, 'V n sh in g t on rolumnist v.·hen Wolfe 's overriding state· furniture blocked the doorway Nicholas Von Hoffman rolled ment is made. in cme sc:ene. and actors were off stali!tics about illness and A grippingly be a u ti f u l seen time and again wan- death from adverse reactions performance is delivered by dering about b a c k st a g e to prescription drugs. Nan Prince as the visitor who through th~ pi e c em ea 1 A cynica1 little cartoon discovers a love she cannot scenery, Hopefully these defi-u reature told about a pig v.·ith accrpt. Patrick Birkett is ciencies can be corrected a lovely operatic voice y.•ho likewise memorable as the belore too many performances ~A"llA .f>Nlt. BROADWAY WAl K ·IN AU Color Sftow Un.cl1t 11 Mull 11 Wllll Ptnnl "THll'I IN THI CI LLAI." Plllt • Chrh!O"'l r JI .... ''THRll IN THI ATTIC" \Vent around singing happily skeletal, intense Ben Gant, his have elapsed. but found that people just ---------------'-----------------------------=-• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1vanted to eat him. Among the sketches,. that Y.'orked '''ell was one about two lonely people sharing a park bench. Both were so in- sulated in their own unhappy \vorlds that they never really made contacL Another high point was a heated argument In a Chicago bar over the contributions of Vice Presi· dent Spiro T .. Agnew. Preaided over by author Studs Terkell -v.·ho yelled as much 8S his acquaintances -no one seemed a\\·are of lhe camera and most of lhe time all were talking at once. A satire on torrid literary st~·les in the c onfess Ion nlagazines ran much too !orig. A car-smashing contest before a paid audience "'as obviously inserted lo sho"' the violence of America but failed to make its point. An i1naginative touch came in a mechanical ballet showing computers matching up the lovelorn lo the tune of •·.strangers 1n the Night." PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT flWICl.llQ Pl:!lllS 'l:SOIS • 3RD RECORD WEEK . ACADEMY MEMBERS• YOUR CARO ADMITS YOU ANO A GUEST TO ANY PERf'ORAANCE MONOAV1HRUTHURSOAV .... •COOi ..... ,., ._._. ..... Ill-II-'<'•• ..... 01eo PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT Ali llllC&raw • Ryu O'Neil John Marley & Ray Milland llOlfRT mlCHA•I. J. ll•DFOllD POl.lAllDRAim IRl ~·•100,.. •O•..S. t<"" ... ,._ ""'°'! I•• 1'0> ......................... ,,,..,. "' -~··· .... lml• FAUSS AnD llG HAlSY Al"° • l!orbro S!rei'°r>d - .bc:~N~flohonln "ON A CLEAR DAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT EDWARDS CINEMA VIEJO IJAH DIEQO rm. AT LA l'IU lUlllOW UO·lttO Wolt 3rd GREAT WEEK ELLIOTT GOULD 1~ • o~voo l WOlP!.~ "'"""'""" "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" Redfo•d In "TELL THEM WILLIE BOY IS HERE" '"' A MIKE NICHOLS FILM ·c1n:1:22· A 3 UN11 ALL WALT DISNEY SHOW! ._,.. ·. WAIJ DISIEY -"'·· A PURR·FECTLY WONDERFUL NEW CAflTOON FEA1LJRE ' Aneeta J..ansbury rchearse11 \\"ith director Gowe r Champio n for a new Broadway musical, "Pretty· belJe," scheduled to open later in the year. - Prottaise Broken Loss of TV Time Blow to Cigarettes By RlC'IC DU BR OW HOU..YWOOD tUfll) -The bla televlJlon eve nt ol the Ne w "Year's weekend w11~. o I course, I.he d1~appearance of ei11 retle commercials from the home 11crE:en, in com· pliance y.>ith 1 government ban. The ci f are!tf firms na turally \\'!II allot I he 1 r advertising funt1~ In nther outlets now. And they have made il kno wn that, as an f'Xample, they vo'ill promot e 11uch happeni ng!i as sports e.vent11 tha t will ltkely plua t!woir brand! in a way thal video c11meras could not help pick up . But make nn mistake 11'ooul Ii , ~uch promotion.~ are •trictly small polatoe~. small consolation, when co mpared with the body blow thl'l clgaret1e indusLry suffered as a result of the !elevlslon bnn. There is noting ('Omparable to regu lar network Video ads for mass selling. Past surveys -in En11lanr!, for instance -have made rather clear that a tP.levisioo b•n nn ciiarette CT1mmercials b not too likely lo cause mos t 1mokers to &tOjl bu ying their favorite butts, alt.hough olher latP.r 1tatl1tlcs ind icate anti. 11moking ads ha ve had solid erreet. Therl! is one overriding fa ct, howe ver, that has rttenlly ~en only tlightly remem- bered in the drive lo get cii11rr:tte ads off the publicly nwneri airwaves. And it Is thi~: alihou~h there has ~en an emphasis on getting pe:nple tn quit smoking, the chief underlying aim w<'ls to UH: video techniques, and the ban, tn di scoura.11e youngsters from picking up the cigarette habit. Some years ago, when television's an1i-smnkln1 drive was getting up steam 11s a result of the. U.S. surgeon general"s report no t i n g cigarettes as a potential . ' h"11h hai.rd. ;, w •' Soalied Stn·rs itt Lag1111,o generally agree<! that most smokers probably would stick Ri chard Benjamin and J oanna Shin1kus dry Qff follo1vin~ a dip off Laguna with their habit. or at best Beach, 1vhere lheir forlhcoming movie "The ~1a rr1age of a Young Stockbroker'' cul dow n. an obvious predir.· \\•as filmed last October. The film is due to be released this summer. lion despite the numbers who -==...:......:...c_:._c=_...:...c__...:_...:__...:_ __________________ _ have quit. At the same lime. however, there WIS 8Uppoae<I ID be an alternation in cigarette com · mercial s -a deglamorizalion nf the ads so th1t lhey woold not romanticile lhe attractions of smoking in order to lure potential )'GUnl customers. No Dit"k•Joltnn"' Feud • Carson's Brother Directing Griffin Miss Winters Fails 111 Playwright Debut By GENE HANOSAKl'.:R HOLLYWOO D ~AP l - Dick Carson. ,Johnny Ca r ~ n n '!i. younger brother. says there 's no ram il}' feud involved !n !hf' fact that he's directing a rival 6how to Johnny's Jate-nlg ht ta lk program. from \.\'Ork and has Thursday, ta lk stars compare? "Johnny Fridays and Sat urdays to is a more intense person. He sprnd with his wife and three livrs the show night and day. children. 1\1erv IS n1ore easy -going ; A ynuthful·looking 41 !o there's not the pressurt." .Johnny's 4!i, Oick b P a rs How doe~ .Johnny feel about enough rt.semblanr.e to his Dic k's swllch? '"He says brother to be asked oc-'Great!', he's happy to see me cas1onally b.v strangers if working. l suppose if he had a they're related, As director hr. choice between the Grifrin stages the show and pi<·k~ 00• show and .some other ... " - By WILLIAJ\1 GLOVE R NEW YORK (AP ) -Shelley Winteni, one of show world's I e a st-inhibited performers, turns now to playwriti ng wit h three episodes about the rise and decline of a notorious ac· tress. "One Night Stands of a Noisy Passenger," w h i c h opened last week al the off· Broadway Actors Playhouse, therefore comes equippe<I with a morbid curiosity potential that parti1lly compensates for much rlagrantly aelf-indulaent ineptitude. 8AL90A 673-4041 or1N ,, .. ,.. ......... ...... ,... ....... eNOW-End1 Tuesday• Wl All l'IOUD TO USHll IM THE NEW YE.Al WITH THIS GJllAT FILM- "A SALUTI TO A llllL1" he..-. ..... -. PA'l"l'ON Ill'! --·-SHOWN 1141 ONLY ALSO-IONUS l'IATUll Sh••• 7:01 Oily Nor Ms Min Winters' ned.11Ling ambition been helped by lhe pathetic direction ol. P alricia Carmichael and a. g~nerally inanimate cast from which the author h~ wisely excused herself. Just how much (If the randy, gossipy cont e nt I s autobiograph.ical is secret to tier and possibly to close students of fil m 11cand1I. But the trisected hernine -a dif· ferent actress .appears in each segment -is an ex-mole!, politic1l acUvi.ltt &nd energetic btdhopper from ti40 New York to "Hollywood , Now , just before dav.·n." The first two playlets rttk with cumbersome dialogue , confused purpose and are, wocst of all, tech nically dead. Jn "Wt Stand," with lhe fad ing 11tar audd enly involved in hectic confrontation with a callous hippie, the atage nares with life and perjorative meaning. The pla.ver conti ngent in· eludes, alphabetically, Robert DeNiro, Eli iabelh F'ran:i:, S11\Jy Kirkland, Diane L 1 d d , Richard Lynch and Sam Schacl. Like Miss Winters, almost all are members of the Actors Studio. \\'here the material firs! wa:!> dr1·eloped as a work shop project and wherr it preferably should have re- mained. '"People think he rired me or we had a bi g fight," Oil'k says. "They don 't reali 1.e I lrfl his show on my own 1tnd ha ~'e been out htre t11.·o years.·• Dick recently jolnf'rl Merv Griffin's CBS show here :1., 1he-air cuts among f ou r, ::n:;;::k=k=d=;d='='·=t ="=";='=h=lh='='='="=''::"::'='i·ll cameras. Ir How do the two nocturnal di rector . He had been director B G I or .Johnn:{s show fnr six ttsy llC8 S )·eari-. u.,.,~ ,, M••' •• w1111 , • ..,"' HOLLYWOOD iU PJ ) GI• YOUNGI Y.'hy did he qui! the seeming Martha Raye, Pal Carrell, "LOVllS AND $50,®a·year security of Paul Lvn de . Nanette Fabray OT Hll ~~!ANGll.S"' Johnny's show? and Pit Paulsen have btenl Ll1• M1",111 "It wasn"t all thal secure," set for tv;o guest appearances ! '"TILL ME THAT YOU !aid Dick. "Remember , John-each on the Carol Burnell LOVI ME JUNll MOON"' h d I f . ht ·th C•11t. 51111. I l'.M. nv a a sa ary Lg 'A"I -~·h~n:w'...."th~;'~"'~'~'~'~"·~----_'.l'===========:'il Nee and didn't show up for about a week. Sol never kne\.\· from year to year whether I'd have a job wilh hirn. "The hours were long -10 a.m. to JO p.m., with an hour by car or 90 niinutes by train from home. You could write a book on just gettln,11 lo work In New York. The real reason 1 left wa s that I nP.ver saw 111y family except on weekends," Also, J)ick 1111id, he likes California, where he was a director 11t KOGO-TV, S11n Diego, for nearly 10 years after leaving th"e Navy in 195.l So in 1968 he accepted an of- fer to direcl Don Rickl es' show as a chance to move back to California. Ricklrs' series lasted only 17 u.eeks. Dick free-lanced unt1I. week brfore last. hr JOined ~lerl", who movrd his show here lrnm Nrw York 1n SeptC'mber . Oick now hve~ 10 minutes "M·A·S·H" i' the best A meric~n war comedy since sound came inl" Ao logo Preminger I Product100 ··~ JT'lll•IQ WOVIT. rtOQl)(NI .1J19 _,-""TT• n1P1.11w111w1..,11 ·::;-:;:.-= .. ""'-lftl l!IK1M -M Wol- •al IH .... flltf ICflfll •'-"" -~ 7:00· frtO P.M. IVHYDAY MAT. o• WID .. llT .. & SUN. AT 1 rtO, JICICI & litO PM. ,Tne$1oryof .i tie autiful glrfj li(~time · between the ag~s of 19 and 22.r I ' -.. ' , •NAOONM Gf M"IAl l'tCTI.AfS ,._.,,. 1 ...... _ • ......,,..,.'"" -• Eti_ _ w_111. -Plus· "KIMG OF THE GlllZZLIES~ (G) OAILV PILOT J l Talent Sco1it's Claore 'Find Charlie Chan'· Ry ROBERT MUSEL LONDON (UPI ) -Da vu1 Tebet, the only international talent llCOUl on American television, arrived In London on another of his sorties to the entertainment capitals of the world to find a cable w1iting which aaid, In effect. "Find us a Charlie Chan ." To Tebel, vlct pre'llident r!'lr talent of NBC·TV. this meant two things, fiMllly that the network WU toing ahead with an id ea for a pilot on the Charlie Chan dettttive stories and secondly that he was ro look for a oriental actor wh() spoke English lhat wou ld bf! understandable fro m N e w York to San Francisco. Thal second point underlines one of the continuing changes in American TV and explains why Tebet. whnse job is unique among the networks, 1~ as alert to the emergence of new talent abmad as he Is in the U.S. where he has sign- e<I many of the big names for the Joh11ny C a r s o n "Tonight" show and for other NBC-TV pro~'rams. ceptable. Bur now I.be first Tebet. one of !he best liked chance 11 thl!. role "Ill 10 People In the 1ho11r w~ld, Is !n &n Oriental if one can be repu te! to know ~rsona lly at louru1 who fit.s all the tough least 90 percent of the stars. quallflcatlons for 1t1rrtng in Ht brou11ht Dean Mi.rtln, Flip 11 TV sr.ries. WllllOll, f'rank Sinatra and One of these ia clearly Diah ann Carroll to NBC-TV understandab.le Enalish. and his latest Cflup wa.!I the "So(l'le parts nf our ceuntry I find it hard lo understand John Waynl!: specia · He ii some Br iti11h voitts and ottier a believer In the star 1y1tem. foreign accents," Tebet said. "John Wayne, a number one ··we aet lou ()f mail nn ii . atar in special equals .1: Yet. surprisingly, many people number one ihow tin the in i;how bu siness abroad who ratings )'', he :!>.!id. would J1kr to br konwn io lhe "We 11 NBC-TV don't think' United States mike llltle or In terms of dt.ftil." he said. no eHort lo learn l h e "Monry has never been much. language. or a sub&titute lor creativity "We'd li ke to use Marcello or inventi veness. A bell~ Mastroianni but he has trouble business will cnme out of all learning English. l !!aw some this . TV can create it own inttresting girls in Pans bu t stars but it will not Jose the they don't speak the language. stars who are now turning It's much the same among lo it such as Tony Curlis, promising people in Athens , Shirley MacLaine, J a mes Rome and other places. But Stewart , James Gamer and n1any of our younger artists Glenn ford or lhoee lt already are aware or the importance h d E ... of h1nguages an mMl u ro-l lfiii~iii~i!~~:i~ijli peans, too, are <llscovering lhe whole business ls becoming inlernational." When Chari ie Ch an n1ade I '-::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij"lll his first i n s c t u I a b I e ap-11 pearaoce on lhe si lent screen he was playe<I by a white• actor posing as an oriental. I The silent sc reen ~came lhe tal kies, the first Charlie departed to be f(lllow~ by another Caucasian and then another. In the clim1te ol the times this was perfectly ac· ~do NlWl'Cllf lf.t.CN -•I ""' ·--lo lo\"4•• 11~. 1,1 ••• o•. l -•J!O ,.. Al10 larbra Str•l1a"d "ON A CLEAR OAY YOU CAN SEE FOREVER" NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ollmsllllffElf-_,...., f.~ A.LIO r~IRPDRTI "Anne of the BURT •• ":"" DEAll UNCASm • lllARTlll f ' j Thousand JEAN SEBERG t JACQUWME llSSETj Days" SEORIE IEllEDY 1tarrl11t HEWUYES l lCHAI D IUITON l\.MWlflolM.P"C'1JM: GINEIEYI IUJOLD tt()lllKOI Oll'. llllNE 'Ar'AI ""-•TODO •O• -~-=== . .,, s ... l SMll. o,_,. l 1:4S f rff l'orllitt "l\\010U~~,. f,U,"~!'.' :'.~!A_~~U,S~.~RICINAL " c11••' .. '"' HELD OVER-4th WEIK "' .... "", .. • SHOW TIMU-SATUIDAY-SUNDAY 1-J:ID-414 ...... 1Jo-1:2~11:11 Prkl..- 6:)0·1:20.I 0:10 GEORGE SIGAL RUTH GORDON Istre • 111 C•let C...11 tM J•Y "THI WOILD 01' DUNI au••llS'" W-4.•TIIMrt.·M•11.·T., ... 7 .. t l'.M. ~,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiijjjjjiiiiii';;;J stereo·103FM • • • • • music music music music good music I l I ... " . ~. ~· •• . :.. ., • • .,, . . T)llH'Sday, J•11uary 7, 1971 Dellplte Crackdown ' Mine F atalitws ,Climb for Year WASJ{lNGTON (UPI ) -John.son Administration ap- l"1Witie.1 In American coal poinltt. mine& increased by 26 percel1t The law was drawn up by In tl'To, I.ht first year of the Congress In the aftermath or Iliff new federal health Ind the coal mine disuter In ufely l1w for miners. November, 1961 at Farm· !vtn b:efort 31 miners, were ington, W. Va., which cla imed kiDed in "th t Hyden, Ky. 78 llves. Between I.he timt of disiSter Dec. 30, the 1970 total the Fa rmln~ton and Hyden had s\Jrpassed 1969. disas~rs, .iJK1 not including Accofdinc to 1t.ati11ics from fall.lilies of either, 44{) miners tbt Bureau of Mines. 2M were killed, the bureau Said. ptnon! died in mining ac-From !ht time the law took cidentJ in 1170, compared with effect, the bureau conducted 203 the· year before. No mine 1.746 inspections through the deaths have yet been reported end of 1970, including 128 at to the bureau in 1971. but strip and auger mines. two miners were killed on In the first nine m<>nths of the Jut day ftf the year at the Jaw 's enfor c e men t . rhe Cllrtchfield Coal Co. in !ti.rough Ott. 31, 3.2l7 notices VirSinia. A bureau spokesman ... _ ----·• __ , .... __ ...... . l!!iifi.r. ... = said eight C1inc1Jfield minera of violatioru of the act were were killed in December, in-isaued to coal mining fi rms. cludinf: three al portal "C" The bureau ordered mines of I.be MOS& No. J mine. elated on l,f&O occasions for The !Mt Federal Coal Mine varying period• of lim• for It Pays to Advertise Health and Salety Act went either imminent d a n g e r s , inlo ~ftct April I, amid This half-pa ge acl for the Alexandria School .System in Vi r,c:1nia really aroused turbulence in the Bureau of fa~ure to abate a violation , a great dea l of interest It listed a scheduled of classes ran£in~ fron1 English M1nel following the ouster of or unwarranted ' failure to grammar to c lassica l guitar bu t its se xy looking di splay had the school s ys- dir«tor John F. O'Leary. 1 comply with the act. tern 's phone ringin.E! off the hook in cal ls from ea,c:er applicants. ............................... ~------------.............. ~ "Artistry in Moving" for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway Mauldin' s Own Favorite . • • •.• Still Relevant TW4! ... ,. lot•r, Bill Mauldin'• cartoons still s•y it •II for tho guys who •rt "up fr'eftt" doin9 the dirty work. M•uldin once 1el1et1d the c•rtoon •hove ll one ef his own favorites from World War !l 's "U,:>-Front" series. He .. id:·"Onc• I thought I did• ••ry funny cortoon (ebout) en old-time c•v•lrym1n shooting his i••p ... It his simplicityj it tells I story; it iio..n't ne-4 wotds. It is, I baliev•, the v.,y Ii.st kind of cartoon." Maul<lin is stil Clolng soma of th• world's "v•ry b•st kind of c•rloons." A l•w s!Nkes el his t•l•nt•d F'9ft can make som• of tho most biting ltlfitetUl-.omm,nh to b• found on tod•y's iuU9s. If you 're looking for ..i.v6ocy, loel: •t ,M•ulclin two w•rs ltt•r. · L:ook at the Editorial Page of the I DA1lY PILOT 'tr Hybrid Corn Seed To Conibat Blig lit HONO LULU ! AP ) - The harvest of I.JOO acres of blight-resistant hybrid seed corn soon will be. enroute from Hawaii to the Midwestern corn belt to help combat a dcs!ruc· li ve leaf blight which S\.\'ept mainland crops last year. ing out it s sugar cane opera· lions. Barr sa1<l 4,500 acres may be available soon J\1c1 calf Farms plans cultivate some of lh<it. "We h11d 10 hring 1n trac· tors, corn pickers. con1hines and rnnsr. of lhe rest of 1hc- e q u i p men t from the n1ainland ," Barr said. "There was liHle equipment here-corn had never heen grown in any quant11y here before " The seed corn is being cultiva ted on Hawaii"s "(;ar- den Isle:' Kauai, by ~1 e1calf Farms Jor the Pride Seed Qi. ~f Glen Ha11en, Wi s.. and four other firms which supply 25 10 JO percent of the na1 ion·s1.-----------.. ' seed corn each year. j bli~~~a!~sfro~a~:~he~~ c~~~1 ~~Ai1l.lN1Mhli ( Department of Agriculture for OPl'N NIGHTLY 6:45 P.M. 11 decline in the nation's corn Mati-s.11.t•y •t 1:45 p.111. production lasl year of an estimated 14.7 percent from an anticipated yield of 4.8 million bushels. It was the smallest crop in four years. '"ll's sure going to help. getti ng this winter crop to the mainland in lime fnr spri ng planting." Harold Barr. nfrice manager of Metcalf Farm's operations on Kauai. said Tuesday. ''Here we are harvesting ll crop and on the mainland lhe fields are covered with snov.•," He said the hybrid seed has been tested and is "1 00 per· cent effective" in resisting corn blight. SHOCKING ••. l "NO BLADE OF GRASS" COLOR-RATED R 0,1.N NIGHTLY 6 ~4S P'.M. MotlllH Sw11d•'f crt I :41 p.111. ROO TAYLOR MELVYN DOUGLAS ''HOTEL'~ COLOR-RATED GP Richard ~1etcalf. nwnt'r of ~letcalf J.-arms and presi dent of Pride Seed flew some l~.000 I pounds of blight-resistant corn seed tn Hawaii last Augusl along with 90.000 pounds of ma chinery f.letcaH leased ~00 acres off~==========~ su~ar cane land 1n I.he Wa imea Valley on Kau11i . 100/ mile~ northwest of llnnolul u. from Kilauea Sugar Cn., ;ind expanded the project ;is more I land beca me 11vailable frorn 1 K1~11 Sug11~ ~~~~as~I " ITIY(, DAN • IYlON 'INLIY Lll'I U y .,... -I~ 1111 lrl"'4 V-t fl••"''' -lef Yttri. H•'• ntw 1 ¥fl'V MK(Hlllfi ftlltlU '"" Y'l'\t'rt H t i•• le '" 111111 __,l'lfu11H111, ""' ,... ,,., 111111 " ""' Mcti .... ''"' fl lm t 111.,,., fltM.,,,tflt. II .,...r lllM ... tflt It IN llNMY tllol , ... mt~· ... It trt tfl 1 MM M "" fl1111r. llt Ctll'I ,,.tcOCI 1111 ~IH 1111111 lllt lrMtw. i.e. ... NII tr-h ..,.., ¥1.._ tfllt. Tltt 1-'lt ltt -rttt ,., .._., ... ''"""""'· ,.,. ..... It ............... 11111 ....... llOI .......... ,.._ fllll ....., .. "'"~' -'" ... ..._...,, " ~ , .... 11..,, TIN 11-lh Cft M 11_. ,,_ ,.,... ..., '"" nqll "' .. .,. ...... h .. ~. H I ..,.., tftlt tfltl YM _. lllttltflll' 111 ..,, -Y tflti c• ,,......... .. ___., ... ....,. '" ""' .... "" .. ., .... ,...,._,, " .. 11 ..... ....... -"'" .... ( .......... ..... -' lllM!fly ... lier. "lwt IMt,_ ....... u. ........ -I ll'tlcy, .......... I I ,.., ...,__, ... .t t YllOfil P'INL•'I' 1iilwu1tc•. ,. -... 111 Nwtnllf ... --- I EYES RIGHT . •• Dl. LOUIS J. HASl'Lff.LD "S>cl• Vi1 io11" i1 lh• eb1i:tv lo ••• 1ic/twoy1 wh il t l11o~i119 •lr•i9ht •ht •cl . ln•biloly lo 111 from +h t "c11•ll•• al lh9 a ye" i1 1omtti..,t 1 t •llt d "lunn•I .. ;. 1io11'0 btc•u•t !ht t1•ult ;, 1om1,..h 1t j;~, looki119 !hr11119h 1 lu11111I. You c•n te1t you• 1id1 •i1io., l:rv loakin' 1t•1cl t1w 1! • point 1lr1i9ht •h t~cl t ncl cht d1tn9 ~ow fir b~d1 en t ilht r 1iclt you .,, 1bl1 lo M111 I P••IO"I ''' 11w1r1 ef I w•tgin9 fi"9tr, for 1.-•mplt, •• ih1y lift lht ir h1 ncl 1 full 90 d11 · 9rtt1 to an1 ,;c/, whil1 1011\1"9 1h1•d. Yau 1h11ulcl bt 1bl1 ta 111 11 11111 70 c/19•111 lo 1ith· •• 1!d•. II yo11 f•il thii 111!, lh11t ••• no 9l1u1• +o co,,1ct 11< co"'c"~'"''· Howt~t•. you ••• ••fir wh;lt dri•ing 1imply b1c1 u11 v•u ••• •••r• of 1~1 il1l:cienty. Pr11cl ict lu•nin' both vow• •v•• 11 ncl vour h11<f 1nar1, 11 •e1 wb1t m1y bt "'""'"9 in 011 yeu. W1'U chi ck vour dri•lnt Yh1on durlnt '" •v• •~1111in1 lio11. Our offit 1 ;, ,1 116 11 M1 i~ St, i11 F; .. , '•into C1nt1r. Phof11 147·1)71 . w, pro•iil1 1 le1I 11111 •t•~cy r1p1tr 11•~lc1 , loo. .. .. • Tea~her Wins, Loses~ Nevada School Fires Ne ·w Lawmaker HAWTHORNE. Nev. IAP l -The local scho0l board has decided to fire \Is eighth grade liOCial studies ieacher rather than granl her a leave nf absence lo lake her seat 1n the Nevada Legislature . r·rances · Hav.·k.lns, ~9. ~;11d lt v.·ill be a sad end to the 25 years she has . taught in lhe Ha wthorne area, "But the p e op 1 e '(If Hawthorne voted for rne ;ind now I'm going to the capital to represent them and that's that,'' she told a ~wsn1an !his v.·eck. l\11ss Ha wkin~. a Dernocrat. defeated a local businessman in \he November elect ion. Bui lhe school board unan imously refused fi1onday night to grant her leave of absence withnut pay for the IXl-day legista1l\'e session. saying she \Yill be fired automatically the day the session opens in 1wo \\.'Ce ks. The legislature meets once during her !wo--year term. Pe!it](ln~ asking the hoard In let her .'ier1•e signed hy more than 1,000 prople -half the adults 1n th1~ lown of 3,000 -f<1 iled to change the teflon frypans 10" 218 333 lrtpon griddle Slvck up? Nt;1 woth ~"o l~h re~islon• lello" II ~urfoce' bvndfa1m heav y du,y cake pan G•on! 12·cup co pocity tube rok1 pon !or o 2 96 Yorie1y ol go"'"'"' cokes, iello, ett. board's mind. Board President F I o y d Justus said hls daughter and all the other children in f.i.iss Hawk ins' class will suffer "if they have a part-time teacher Lh<1t comes and goes.'' The board said it considered J\1 1ss Hawkins' legislative absence a breach of co ntract and added thal to hire a teacher for 60 days would be difficult in th is bleak desert town 95 miles southeast of Renn. "We lC1ld the board sure it will be inconvenient if t.1ii;s Hawkins goes because she's one of J\lineral County's best teachers." said Chiq uita Har· nngton. who led the petition drive. "But a democracy is oflrn inconvenient.·• The board also was told bv t.1 iss Hawk.ins· supporters rha1 her students would learn from her f i rst-ha n d ex- periences as a legislator. Even though tired. Miss Hawkins said she would write her students fl weekly newsletter about what's ha ppening at the sla te capita!, Ca rson City. fihe said she ma y Lake legal action because the termination will preven1 her from &etuni some retirement pay. Also.. she said 1he's been assured the legislature will take up her problem. "I just don't think most peo- ple feel teachers should be treated like JeCond class citizens:' she said. "Anyw ay, I'm not going to act like one because I'm going to serve. But I'm scrry I have to lose my job. "When you put ln as many years as I have, it's a littl e sad to be so 1uddenly out or it." High School er In GOP Post CLEVELAND (UPI) -A senior at South High School has been na n1ed Associate Vice Chairman of t h ft Cuyahoga County Republican Pa rty. Arth ur J. Frid.rich, who v.ill be 18 in May, was named to the specially created post following Monday 's Supreme Court decision upholdi ng the 18-year-o ld vote in national elections. ~!!•••mll 4J..,Nec• melamine set YO<J'll gel Mi breok~ lro"' ~Ml b ,oul:e.! Kid·proof dinnM· 997 wore ..,, onorted po:tter~ 14-pi•c• plastic bawl set &owl1 owoy! 5'x ~zei, snoD·tite fi<h 194 . , , two meo~uri"g scoop!, too! compl•t• 0110Nrn•nt zodiac mugs Your gu.ding 1;911 e.,.blnzon.ed on gold on 11 shiny bloclc ,.,u9 . 39~ plosrir: shoe box g iortl cup 'n saucer For the k1ng ·si11 thint ... big, ~-I 12.;nch coHH cvp 11...d 9 ftl molchi"Q IOll(.• wif+i hoM-7 T poOni.d dec:oroti-. assorted pants from 4. spaghetti pot Ponting far pants? !-!ere ore doz- ens of 11>@ .. O:SI populo< lype\ , .• \l101ghl·legl 11~d flo•1S ... 111 cory cottons, e<IOft ocry!•c1.. bon~d l;nots Piel; Y°"' lovonie 1oltd1. s!ro pes ond olo1di .., ol! r olo•~. ~ .. !~ 8 ro 18. assorted blouses from 3. To lop ii oll .•. o bonO"IO of beouti- fu! blouse' '" casuol, lo1IOfed ond d•lll • up 1ty!e1-Conon\, oce1ate~ and c•ep~. solids, 11npe<, p!'inbl rislone 0.1 odditi,. for quieter, imoother· runnong 1ngi11H and qukkw stortino. ~RJ1 0 129 license frame Sty!~ 10 pl1MJ1e 1h1 .;,f.501 m11sl dj1crimino1;ng 4 7~ 1ost1. l11w priced! 199 WOft'I Hip if 'f""-il for s.ovJK m ceoli lor o ~! W <H, "*O fifling ~lid. cutlery tray set Un-jVll'blin .. ~ pesky kitc+.1n tools.. ,« _ _._ --- 127 44• feosol 174 spansules »• llMk't'• ............... ferrous l" sulfate 100'1. ... triamlnlc 139 syrup ......... 4 01. garage floor cal-mlnlc 109 cleaner syrup ... ·--· 4 oz. Cuh griosi and j"SR· 16 iJilllll if llMf UICIT MK<Mtlll Q•mK grime, bl1oche, out 5 9' .,. •••• fll!!!!i•••i!! ••iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiliiil•• spoil. 2·lb. !in. ,. gort•rol •l•ctrlc 1ealbeam Upp.,. & low1• ••· plocemenh for 4 h.odl11mp syt!•""'· oil filter 1 s1 ~Fl · l 232 havollne oil 20·30 wt. 10/30 42~. 52t.. Choowifa•O...... ShM!poo, C,.,.,.. It;,... or a..,bbl. lofia in !+or" Mthtfvl fro"o~.-. table 411 • Win rite .. -,__.. '9 • .., )'OU' CO"IMri9ial11 ,..,.9ftd top n.i,. ,_ k..; yfM too!. ..,,4....... 721 ,,,.,,,..., ........ . ]~'' I rut.PM ... :' "' .. ' ''1"'' ' ' ' I ' ., " "I I ' '' \ ,, • • IA ~I~.\[,\ \11!,P~l lO{. f l 'l lf ~ ,•,.,,\ q , "~I<,\,, .... ~ • •1 > >" t!I 1 ""' ., • 'W l lL1l~Al\l'-!0WARl~(J llO~W ~I ~ !.,II • _..H(l'l llllllOl!rl,i o 1 11 ~I >nJt,'"' '"I •H ' " ' - • , ' • ' -' • ' ' - " . ' ' ' ' ' • • " ' ' • Russian Alarm Over Attacks • Ill U.S. Thr: au thor of th' follow. irt.Q dtlpatch lt n>td ill the Moscow Burtn11 of U11ltt d. Prt>ss /ntt rnut1onal from 1961 until 1965. A Vet,ran diploma t.Jc: corresoonde11t, his CUrT't11t bent u1 \Vruh· ingtan ls the Slate Depurt- ?l'ten L and demonstrations in this cowilry. These a I tac k s have a year ago when the American Society of Newspaper Editors asked him to guide a group of top·ranking Soviet edJlors around the Un ited States. and families. 'rhe Soviet governn1ent . in i!s warning. charged that I.he United States was conniving in continuing the anti-Sov iet tMid€'nls. This charge is most certainly unfounded : but from the Soviet point ~[ view It is understandable. The attacks have been ln· creasing since 1968 when, in February of lhat year. a bomb exploded in the office or the No. 2 man at the Soviet Embassy in Wasbin51ton. The interior of the office was dcmoli.!~ed but no one was lnjar<d. have been organized b y persona protesting the treat· menL of Jews in the Soviet Union. The Soviet mission in .New York has r e c e i ved telephoned bomb threats and the Washington office of Tass. the Soviet News Agency, has demonstrators. Cited arrest of 16 1uapect.s in New York and an undetermintd number in Washington , and the bringing of the.st pen.DOI to trial. In the long run, such steps may pay off. But for the mo- ment Soviet dlplomats will continue to live lh. uneasines.!. DAILY PILDT 22.J By NICHOLAS DANJLorr WASHINGTON 11Jr1 ) The So v i e t government's wa rning lha L il may not be able to gua ranlee the safely of American diplomats in ~fo."\Cow comes a fler a long series of anti-Soviet att acks disrupted official Soviet ac· tivities in this ctluntry. and Tuesday's warning is en olr vious effort by Moscow to make Washington see how deeply its diplomal..!! i n America feel threatened. It also rerlects the Sovlel in- ability to see \\'hy the lJ.S. government can 't si mply shut off the de monstrations with quick trials and long pr ison sentences. This correspondent became aware of the So vlet frustration In New York. San Fran· ctsco, Los Angeles, and New Orleans the activities of th is delegation v.•ere dis rupted by pc rso:1s prot esting the con· dit ions of Jcv.·s. in the Soviet Union. It is ea~~, for this cor· rcspondenl. 1hcn. l o un· de rstand hnw Sovie! diplomats in \\lash ington and New York feel beleaguered and worry about thei r person11I security and that of their colleagues Th is correspondent found in deali ng with an t I-Soviet demonstrations aga inst the delega tion of Soviet journali sts that there was considerable frustration bccauSI": 1 o c a I aulhorities were una ble to quickly turn off disturbances by using some kind of force. In November, the New York offices o( Aero!lot, the Sovil"t airline. and Intourist, the of· lieial Soylet travel agency, wer.e bombed. There ~ have bee n many demonstrations against the Soviet missioo in Manhattan. Many o! the demonstrations Tile State Department said it is taking "appropriate and enforceable steps" !t hope~ will be. effective. These steps Include In· creasing the American guard · outside the Soviet mission in New York and the Soviet Embassy in Washingtori : the . Sm-let ~utborlties have an- noun ced .the cancellation of !he scheduletl tour . t.o the. Uniled States bf the &lsbol ba Uel and opera companies beca tise or incidents directed againsl other 'touring Soviet groups. G/lf Director Dr.'Leon How3rd Sulll· v~l'l has been elected as the first Negro lo serve on the Genera{ Motors Corp .. board of direc- t.ors. Dr .. Sullivan, 48, is pastor of the Zion Ba ptist Church in Phil· ade!phia. They Claim ''TOTAL DISCOUNT'' ••• BUT GROUND BEEF lUCll1' IONDEO fOlt fLAVOR ................... , ................... . Mrs. Gene Lentsch Compared ... and Proved it · She shopped and compared her own shopping list SHE SAVEDS6 59 REDUCING HER 12 3of AT LUCKY • FOOD COSTS • /.~ CROSS RIB ROAST IONflESS-LUCll:Y TOP QUAllT1' IONDEO l!EF ..................... , M rs. Detta Van Nattan Proved it, Too 1 CUT·UP FRYERS 87~ 33~ s12!. Sl1e als o sho pped and compar ed her own shopping list TENO!I JUICY AND PlUMP CHICK ENS ............................. .. I T•BONE STEAK ::~:vED SHE SAVED 7 09 REDUCING HER 14 54.0 AT LUCKY S • FOOD COSTS • o 'lUCICY TOP QUAllTY BONDED BEEF ................................. . FRESH FRYERS U.S.O.A. GIADE 'A' .• ~ WHOLE '"'f.<t IOOY 1 ~:~ CHICKENS '''29c '" r::?:!lk<'allill!"' .. . . :,'0~,. i:'~•,<'.fOODf~,..~ I NIBLETS CORN ~:~.l~::~~~~ ............ 18' ' SNOWDRIFT 1"0111"1N' 79' , O"""' •i.or. <•~ ............ . lADY LEE TOMATOES·~::~ .......... 21 ' tr TOMATOE SAUCE ~::I'm .. 22' WITM tns TOMATO JUICE :!~1r~~!:~~ ............ 30< MUSTARD MOlf"OUll IH.SAlA lt 28' ~ 1 .. 0l.JAI .... , .......... . V-B APPLESAUCE ~!~~.~:~l.1.~ ....... 18• r.' , ... Ka/&;t '\J TOM~~~,.~AUCE 1 oc a.OU NCE CAN BABY FOOD !01:!1r~·;,~:.·.~~~.1.~ ............ 10• OR FOOD ,,,111•s 111r 14 , JUNI 1'l o1.u1 .............. . ETS C.IUll'IOOD IMll\ WMOU 32' O""" BE PICIUO,T•OZ.U I .............. .. GERBER'S JUICE ~T1~!.1::~(IN ... -..... 10· WELCH'S DRINK (l l NU••' 41 ' ~ llOf,l lL ... .. BUTTERNUT ~~·~:1<AM ..... 8S< TASTERS CHOICE :.~'.'..1 1 " l atll 01110 INlllMT (Offll ef' SWIFTS HASH ..... 4S' CO•MIO 1111-111,.01. (IN GREEN BEANS ............ 29' Oil MOMll "IUAN-1 ... 0f. CI M BLAD! CUT ·~~-NED FOOl>f'" ~ DILL PICKLES ~~.~,;~ J(1M1~1.'.~ ...... 39' ELBERTA PEACHES ~:.~~·~,,~~~ ..... 33 • FRUIT COCKTAIL ~:lo~.0;;: ......... :.2s • PRUNE JUICE ::lo~.0;,'l'. .................. 59' POMPEIAN OLIVE Olt:::: ....... 47' WESSON SALAD Oil :~.'~ ......... 87' LINDSAY OLIVES ~1!~~~::.1.~'.~~ ...... 38' r.' , ... ~&;!---. \J DETERGENT 45c lU CICY BRAND 4'·0UNCE BOX PET FOODS CAT FOOD ~~lr~~=M'.1•1.~.~.~~.·~ ........... 15• VETS' DOG FOOD 1~111 o• cN1c•1N1 9, 1!1i'r·Of.(IN ....... . SKIPPY DOG FOOD ~!.'o~'.1c~N ...... 15• RALSTON PURINA i~~~::t~.~~ ..... 93' f'~(,,, LDW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY AIDS CREST TOOTHPASTE ''' t1•llf·li 1~H11 111t••11t 1 rac11•iz1• '' lbt l lfltrlc11 D11UI ln1c11ti11. 66c tPl l(I lll(l. .. Oii) CERAMIC BASE MIRROR lht silt n 1ul1r. lht 11htr silt 111111ilit1. Dtc1r1!1f •111. ID 11cl 1111. BUFFERIN lOO's Uf1ctift p1i• 111111 ll'il~IOI f i1ut111 distrtu. SCORE HAIR CREAM Cr111111 lair 11tu 11ly ••. Rt~er 111•11 1t 1r111r 111ki•1. 4.$ 11. l1ft1 1l11. PRISTEEN DEODORANT 69' 84' CENTER CUT ROUND STEAK lU Cll Y TOP Ql/AllTY BONDED Blif 79 .~ i."t».'fa i ., "' ' LADY LEE BUTTER i~'o~~~~~'.: ....... 82' BUnERMILK ~~~'r.'~~" .................... 20' O'""' IMPERIAL SOFT ~::~.·~;:~ ..... 42' LADY LEE ICE CREAM ~:.~'.: ...... 65' CHEFS DELIGHT i~:~·:;:~~.'.'.~.~~ ... 39c ().' , ... ~&;! MANWICH SAUCE 33c HUNT'S 1 S·OUHCE CA N ""' LAYER CAKES ~;~::.','::.·.~~.~ .. Sl c Q'" ICMOCOL•ll. fUO'l. 60l0111, Cll~IU 1000, VIMllLA! FISH STICKS ~!.':~.':~!~ ..................... 77' SOLE FILLET ~~·:~·.'::!~ ..................... 51°1 CREAMED CHICKEN ~~l::~: ........ 45' BEEF STEAKS i,~~.i';~'o1l~~~·:~~ .......... 73' ROSARITA DINNERS ~:~':•,~.~'.~~.·. 43• CHOPPED CHIVES ~~~.',";:~ .......... 49' FRENCH FRIES ~=.~~~:.G .................. 28< ORANGE PLUS !.1!r~1~ .................. 47' BIRDSEYE , .. ,. ............................. 46' OUlll TMl\11 ltlA(Mfl, l lUfli.tlU, CMl-"111 ().' , ... ~&;! NORTHERN TISSUE 37c TOI LET 4/650 COUNT IOllS BIRDSEYE VEGETABLES ::.~ ....... 41 ' ....... IJ w/llt!lt ... IH -H t ... IJ.u •tM.fo~•M .. >1 JOHNSTON PIES~~ .................. 77' l(MO(. I W it. (MO<. vn VIT, llMOll K IA.II ) PIE SHELLS m~~~ ....................... 37' COOK IN BAG !~~:~~~.~.~~:1 ............ 27' l· .. STANDING r.' , ... ~&;! \J DENNISON CHILI 79c WITH IEANS 40.ouNCE CAH COOKIES :!~G1~~~:~:.~~~:.'.~~.1 ............ S4c rt"' SNACKS :~~~~~~:;~ ................. 39c (I UGlll, MOIC"ll, PIJ ll "l"j, W~ll 1 (MlrS) PREMIUM CRACKERS :~:·:.': ..... 37' ... CIRCUS NUTS MJllOWIPll"Ull 39' Q". •01.101 .......... . SPAGHITTI ~~:1~::.~'.~ ................... 45c tt4 SAUCE MIX \~:':~':,~~~~~'.~ ..... 2oc BREAD MAIVllTOl' Oll\111 35' *Ol/110 IOI', t•or. LOll ............ ~ ••• ... M&M ,\llMOIPll"ll' 72' ..,-CMOC.O I OY l•lll•·or.11c ...... BREAD MllVUTOI' OllU•f 25' IOUMO 101, 1 •0l. llOI ........... , _ .. , rt"' DAINTIES ~:.~:.1,'!'.1.~.~~~ ......... 45• TEA BAGS !~~~~:~':: ........................ 55c r.' , .. l:A(&;! \J ZEETOWELS 27c PllNTEO 110 COUNT ROLL llOUSEllOLP,JTBIS _,. MD TISSUE llSOIYIO TOttH 3S' q-. • • 41411<1.IOlU ........ WHITE KING "D''on1t51MT 58' 4t.OJ. 101 .......... .. a" ZEE NAPKINS !:,~~!~~.~~.·.~ .... 1 Qt .,.+WHITE KING SOAP :::~: ...... 59' .,.+ TILE aEANER :~\. , .. ., ........ 29' WATER sonENER ~'~~~:~~ ......... 57' O"' STA PUF RINSE ~=~~•t.•n. ..... '1 1 ' TIDE DETERGENT:::•.· ................. 82' BLEACH MllA(lfWl"I 53' tJ"' ,owtltto -2•0t. IOI .. , .... Joy LIQUID '"""" ' " · a2· • Jl-01. 11L ................ : ... .. ' " Pr1 ci!!I a re Di~co11nled Extep! o" Foir. Troded o nd Government Con1ro l1!?d lteml . RATH COTTAGE iilrts $1 o,~ IO"lllU ................ ,..................... • EXTRA LEAN GROUND 79c BEEF -ROUND QUALITY "· ~~~~u!~~2~ ................ ,. sac 9,~.~~!.~~!.f.~ ~~~~N 69 c THIN SLICED BACON 7 7 c 01c•1 Ml Tll 11.or. , ...................... . --------~---------, l~~~~~!~~~~'-4_?_~! DISCOUNT nlCED PIDDUC!I BANANAS 1 OOllMt CHIQUITA --:II llAND 9 ( • , GDID!N . C RIP! ' BUNCHES lb. I l ucky f11tures1,attery Ca l· • • il orni1 1wocado1 at low eYery dJy discount prices. I , RU~SET :tlPOTATOES U.5.N0.1 10 l'OUND 38' GRAD( CELlO BAG llOilOOt}Jtt•~ . IVORY SOAP ~i:::.1101 ............. . .. 82' O'""' TREND LIQUID ~~~:r~~',~.~~~.' .... 3l·c SAL VO TABLETS :r:;.',101: .............. 74c C1"4 FINISH ~~;::!~~'.~.~.'.~~.'.~'. .......... S9c CHEER DETERGENT :::.'. .. : ...... ,, ... '1" <f" PUNCH DETERGENT:::.': .... '1" DREFT DETERGENT :ir: .............. St .-4 SCOTT DIAPERS :!~'.l:. ..... ~P' DOWNY SOFTENER li~i.'m ........ .78' ef' DRIVE.DETERGENT :;;:'.: ..... .72' CAMAY SOAP~:':~ .................... 13< ... DUTCH PLA.ITl(KOUllM' 15' tr CllAMll--1 .. 0l.(All .. ., ....... RECTANGULAR SWING-TOP Dtllt lltl1 Ullllf l1111itlftt -1titll (t· 1dor1~1. .S 11, 1h1. PICTSWEET VEGETABLES :~:.'.: .. 40' FRESH DEllCAT!SS!N ITEMS AT LOW EVERYDAY DISCOUNT fRICHI ' WASTE BASKET FllJS 1!1 Ii• II 11111 Y~UI $176 1r1 1~. ••111' Jt1st1c; 1nt1ttl c1r1n . ... 4&,;1. BAN ROLL-ON DEODORANT 73c 1,S OZ. SIZE PLAYTEX LIVING GLOVES lHJ 11Jll 11 .,. U lltal~lt Jll $11 a Ct• JICk IJ I flllt. Siii, Mt•~ Lt. PLAYTEX HAND SAVER GLOVES ll1~1111l 1U. H11i,lt: Jrll ttt 78( '••fl 1111111 ••t ll'lltr. ftlll· 11111. S1111JI, M1.i1•, l1111. ((UICOI• ot llOC:<OU BUI TASTI FRIES r.~::~;~ ....................... 29' (J:J ORANGE JUICE ~~l~~~ ....... 23' KING CRAB MEAT:::.~~ ......... 11" BRIDGEFORD BREAD:::~":::~ ... 23' SWANSON DINNERS l::°.~ ........ 37' 1•-a ,_.,..,...._.....,...._......,WQkil_, MACA•ONI 7¥•.0UNCI IOX Our LOW Everyday Price! ALL MEAT BOLOGNA WUSONCl•TIFllD, 67'' •lGUlAR 01 THICK SUCID,,..G •••••• , •• ; ••• ' • 1•· OSCAR.MAYER BOLOGNA · 49c Slltll IU I CAl tt ML •lf .................... ll. ~. OSCAR MAYER SALAM) . S!)c ~ •••• -.. •• : ...... ; ..... ~.: .. :: ....... ttl ••. • ' PILLSBURY BISCHllS · 9• wnt•11t-lm.I ..... . ..... 1111111' Shop, Any Day •. ·, Save Every Day .•. With lucky low Discount Pricing Policy. Mond~y Holidays Abound By FRANK ELEAZER WASHINGTON (U Pll Virginia has r e I u et a n t 1 y agreed it can tell a lie about Geo'rge Washington's birth . Also Stonewall Jackson 's - and even Robert E. Lee's, So you can see that the new federal "Monday holiday" law is catching on .. Th~·.law took effect the first or the yMr anc1 in most places, J includirig his home state, we. 1 can forget about revering Feb. 22 as the birth dale of our first President an d celebrate this event appropriately on "the thi rd Mond ay l n Feimi~rr..'' That means Fet:I'. 15 this year. And although the great day will move around from year to y!ar, never again will Jt fall on Feb. 22. Up to now , Lee and Jackson have b e e n unaccoontably overlQoked as far as federal holidays are concerned. But Virginia. in the spirit of the new "Monday holiday" law , will memorialize Lee (born Jan. · 19 ) and. Jackson (born Jan. 21) jointly on the 18th -which is reasonably close to both birthdays and, more importantl y, also a Mon day. The "'Monday Holiday" law was passed by Congress more than two years ago, to take effect in 1971. It switches three of eighl existing govern· ment holidays ea ch year lo Mondays and creates a nin th, Columbus Day. Also to be commemorated on Monday. it will fa ll on the secorxi one in October. The. law applies only to federal agencies and employes: and the district of Columbia, and of course the mailman, who won't bring you even a bill between Friday and Tues· day. Bul many s ta t e legislatures, like Virginia's, have acted to bring local jubi laliorui in line. The result is that Jn mo.i;t places, for most people, there wl!l now be at least five three· day hol idays weekends each year. In additinn lo lelllng an an· nua t wh o pper ab o u t Washington'! birthd ay, we will he reafter extol Memorial Da1 on lhe last Monday in Ma y, instead of May JO : Labor Day (as usual ) will be the first ·Monday in Sepetmber: Colum· bus Day (and you can forget Leif Ericsson ) will be noted on the second Monday in October; and Veterans Day (formerly Armistice Day) will be moved from Nov. II (when it meant something) to the fourth Monday in October fwhe n it won!t mea n anything but another three days of( • th< "i<>b). 'travel agents• are among those happiest about the new la w. and there may be more 'buslnee in It also for auto . .npairrpen, morticians aod ambulance drivers. · Some mlddf•liged fogies (well, there ls me at least . and po11lbly , !lop. Richard Pelf, \R-V1.), who took U ·e·1p1 ct •l1y ·hard about , WoUlastonl . INr "°" 1h1t nothlnc 11 llCfOd and thst llfe -thJni! they'll be lnOV• Ins Cbr!M>u. So far, we are assured that . ls, out. Cb(ilb:nall will cmttnue • tO tall oa.:bec. ts. Aloo, l\'1'. Y•1t'1 Doy, In opl~ el all, wW contlnuo to be re:sretted on J in. t. Thoni<l1lvin1 wtll 1Ull be ~lebtated on the f o u r t h Thund•Y in N o ve mber . (Congress can recall how Prwldllll -..u bume4 his fiOl'n loolltig w I t b 'llll!1togMn1). • ~ .... , ........ , .. • ti .......... , •• ~ ... ... ... .......... ' ~ . ..... .._ ..... -....... It Wo11ld11't Bo1111ce R. \V. Smith, man on right \l'ilh perplexed look. rnay not accept any wooden nickels. but he did take this \VOOden check weighing 80 pounds made out by Ross ~'1ann1ng 11eft) for work performed on his auto by Smith. Red Cl1inese Hate Spiel Muted Bouyant 1971 Greetings Replace Belligerent Tones iOKYO (AP ) -Communist China 's greelini to 1971 was less strident than the cliches aboul revolution and the hate of Soviet and American ruler~ continue, but they are muted in the annual policy-statement c a r r i e d by Peking publi· cations. The mood this year is buoy- a nt where in 1970 it was bitter and belligerent. The long, de- tailed indict ments of Soviet ''revisionism" and U.S. "im- perialism" have been dropped and in their place appears an unusual promise that, in its 1 f • c ~ • l I inte rnati onal relatioos. Peking '"at no time .•. ever will be· have hke a super power, neither today nor in the fu· lure." All thi s seems a reflectioa of st.ability following three tumul- tuous years of Cul tural Revolu- tion purge. The third five-ye ar plan ''has been successfu lly fulfille d," rich harvests have been reaped for nine ye a rs running, industry is on the up- surge, prices are stable an d "the ma rket is thriving," Pe· king says . The picture may be rosier I than the reality, but it con· to "political power growing oul tra&ts \V1th the chaos of the of the barrel of a gun," the Cultural Revolution. personal attacks on S n vie t ·Chairman Mao 'Tse-lung's le ad e r s. a n d threats lo campaign 10 mend the brok en ''drown " potential invaders. Communist r a r 1 y ap paratus Even so, il is doubtful that and reassert its dominance ~1ao and his men are prepar· ·1· h d ing to beat their swords into over the mi itary as ma e ricf! cultivators. The old aims progress. remain: to overthrow the So· The fourth National Pl!t'lple's vie! leade rship, de f ea l the Congress and the rou rth five-United States in Vietnam and l year plan began lhis year. It else where. also is to be the SOth anniver- sa ry nf the part '.', formed July ;==T=h=o=D=A=IL=Y=P=l=LO=T"--='i-, 1. 1921. A b s c n l from this year's Tops in Local Sports blueprint arc 1970 references ·:.s. .:'i.· * ... ' "". ·' ;, I 1 :.J. -\ • • •• ;.4t I, . . ·:,4a l(IU >l!M? MOW CAN I ~Ill MIMI ( . .)') • • J . . AND MAKE lT TttE DAILY PflOT JUST CALL 642·4321 FOR HOME DEll\JERY / SEVEN·PIECE DINING ROOM SET 38'' X 60" oak finish trestle table, never-ma r top, 12" le af; handsome carved oak chairs with vinyl cushions. COMPLETE CORNER UNI T 3·piece sofa·~feep set, q uill ed cover· lets and bolsters, and a large walnut finish mar-p roo f corner table. CH ROME AND VINYL CHAIR Ou r classic tufted vinyl 28'' wide chair with steel and chrom e leg s, EIGHT·FOOT SLING SOFA Calfskin vinyl sofa, solid ash frame with expensive walnut pegs. A very contemporary pure design _piec e. 80'' TALL BAKER'S RACK A dream ol a decor piece In bru1hed gold, verdigree n, or black heavy wrought Iron. CHROME AND GLASS TABLES The 20" ultra-chic cube a nd stunning 20" X 60" coffee table. Ve ry now! OCTAGONAL COMMODE Walnut finish mar·proof commode wlth smoked glass top. Terrific! QUILTED CRUSHED VELVET CHAIR Our very own design and make! Heavy ve lvet. Marvelous new colors. WROUGHT IRON WONDERS Three from a fabulous coll ection of clever pieces at giveaway prices. GOLD LEAFED LAMP A light·up·your life tab le lamp with gold trim sh ade. Matching wall i nd hang ing ramps too. Take a sell SLEEPER-SOFA Houndstooth or plaid with viny1 wett- ing, walnut a rms, luxurious bedding. FURNITURE LOI ANGELES: 6121 Wihhir• Blvd. Miraclo Mile; 11 040 W . Pica Blvd.; 88'0 S. We1te:n Ave. ANAHEIM: 1672 W . Uncaln IAKE,SFIELD: JOI 0 Ming An. CLAREMONT/POMONA:·2J2 E. Foothill COVlNAi 94~ N. Azv1a DOWNEY: 94JS E. Fi:e1l one GLENDALE: JJJ N. Ce ntral Ave. GRANADA HILLS: l 0 100 Ba lboa Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH: i 94J 1 leach Blvd. LA HAHA: 1720 W. W hiltier LONG IEACH: 2189 La kewood Blvd. MONTEREY PARK: 4 I 5 S. Atlantic Blvd . PASADENA: 85 S. RoHmt ad RIVERSIDE: l 0,000 Magnolia SANTA ANA/TUSTIN: l 70J E. 17th SI . SAN llRNARDINO: 999,S. "E" St. SOUTH B!-Y: 15533 S. Cren1haw Blvd. THOUSAND OAKS: 244 Thov1and Oak1 Blvd. VENTURA: 3409 Te legraph Rd. WOODLAND HILLS : 22223 Vtntvra Blvd. JHM 7 DAYS A Wfllf • WlfKDAYS 11 UNTii ' • SAWRDAY JO UNltl ' • SUNDAY I UNTii ' • ,.,, ,ARK/HQ e ,.,, DfCOUIOR snv1cr • CONVfNlfNI IANK THMS J J J I J 2 2 z 2 2 3 3 3 J 3 3 ' • • • DICK TRA CY TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF T~ERE WAS ONCE T HIS IRISH POTATO AND LONG ISLAND POTATO WHO GOT MARRIED! JUDGE PARKER MILT Wltl SE W1Tl-I 'fOU IN J.. ~EW MINUTES, SAM~ H E J.1J..S J.. LONG P\STAACE-(J..LL ! WHEN'S 111E FUNERAL? 1·7 HE PIDNT WANT ONE .•. HAl7 A PRIVATE CREMATION ~RLY THIS ~RN ING-... WIMBl-E'S OUT NOW HANPLIN'1HE PETAIL5. SO P RETTY SOON T~EY HAD A LITTLE 6/RLSWEET POTAT O! \'MEN THE SWEET POTATO GREW UP IT SAID, "MAMA. I WANT TO MARRY THAT RADIO ANNo UNCER 1" By Chester Gould NO 'TI-IE INNOC:!.NT V ICTIM 15 ABOUT TO DRIV E AWAY.WHEN- By Al Smith 50 MAMA SAID, "You CA N'T MARRY HIM, .f-IE'S A I'' COMMENTATER. By Harold Le Doux Ll'L ABNER Wl4UTE\IE.'P. TM' cJOa 15 ·AA ACCf:P 'S IT!! AH IS STROMC$AS AOX.- SALLY BANANAS I ww""' -4;.o.> ' GORDO MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS Ci.C lf11 M.<.n.-~~ 9006\ // o ~ _ ........... I DAILY -CROSSWORD ••• by' A. POWER I ACROSS l A nom,)I ~Span ish 1•11t 10 Nat1ow iri It ts l 4 If 'vt• 15 •.... 0" l 6 Arlvaflt a~t l 7 A lon r Jq S1rit~ 10 Cream ol 21 M o~: exor111t~1rt 21 M e1~1 . brar11111 roe ~\ 25 Lil y lb ..... d t.~!h: 2 WOl d S JOT1mt pe1 lorls J 4 Sto• it~ 3S R1v r r 111 Yorkshire 37 Dr in k Ja Leiter J9 Actor Pe ler •·•···· 421t t m ln 1 coll rction ~f ~n!!cdotfl 4J Man'\ nlc.~namt •S Obser ved •b o,tens t c.ivt r in g " 1;1 Inst wea pon s ' 3 48 Pttl!~p~ SO Inform ~2 A"lf' 1(An ln01An~ Sd 0f'l~At S5 Wavf' 5q Po\1l 1vt po lts of bAttrr its bl W 1nr! lns\rumtnt b4 "You art P'lll st a kf'n '"; 4 wor ds b6 Afric an Dlant b 7 P rdum ~ 011 b8 Obta in by labor 6'1 s,,,a 11 70 E nd11r~s 71 Vr hic l1 DOWN ' Ont wl1 o wins hat ~ 10 Answtr 11 Emoty 12 Tu1kl t h offlctrs 13 Ca lrndar abbrrv i11ion I Con lr st 18 Gt n!l t 2 Sitillan touch resort 12 Sel f 3 Ma~l t genus 24 Fial • Brin11 2b Vaoor bac ~ 10 ohast of 11orma l wattr 5 F'ut tht 27 Kind ouc k 1n of Illy the ntt 28 T~oughfarr b To bt 29 Flattered 1n i~ta krn 31 H1kt 7 "Nonsenst !" JZ Asian city 8 Cllffo1d 33 On tht ball ....• : US l b Be gin playwrigh t 1ga in 5 ' 7 • 9 111.-11 • 40 01ilsl3nd ln9 4 l. Gat mpn' '~ Ea st I r1d i an sa11c t 47 S!etps 49 Godd t ss of in fatuat ion 51 Mus lc •I •·••· 53 •·••• CalAl1n 1 55 !11ltrroga llv ~ WOl(I 5b Hindu ft st1v1I 57 Prtss 58 S1 rokt s bO Transae!ion 61 J;111, ••••. Bron!e heroin e &Z Dtllvtr to 1 point &5 Foo1b al1 scort : Abbr. .. . --· PERKINS MISS PEACH . ' ' I I STEVE ROPER l'EANUTS • • • • • • • • • 0 l' CAN'T 6El..JE\/e ~ fNTe'ND i O eE /IN EDUCATION NIAUO._f By John Miles r1n,n ... .,,,.,. ·~' f ri,,. .. •!"'d<a '" "TJ.<EN WOULO YOU SEL.IEVE" L1a fr ENANT ? J, fl'l:.ti... 1-1 By Mell "' By Sounders and Overgard MOF'llEM SEEM l!ICE u-- VErrf NICE PEOl'l.E/ .IF 1 VJEl>E YOU, WWILE -IS SICK. ro .JUST PllT oor 'lllE l'APf• N6> NOT OfflHD NMI·- • 0 0 • By Chari" M. Schull • • • • • ' . DAILY PILOT J3 fr ii !! ,. ' MR.MUM By Al Capp By Charin B_,.I By Gus Arrlolo By Ferd Johnson No,No-t J UST 8/>.tl'<El> MYiHWB- By Ro9er Bollen fl>\)l)<). :t COOLC W.\11! SWORll 1161! WASA a> .. 00 1fi,Cr" FIGlllel<: I - DENNIS THE MeNACE 'lloY,D10 J MAVE Tl!OUlllE Wml A~ M'A SAW AN' 1ll'T WIF~ Of 'lllURS TOOAYI' ' , 1 j 24 DAllY PILOT Thursd.ay, January 7, 1~71 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FAJUIL\' CIRCITS ' -... --.. by Bii Kea ne ''Gee, Mommy , sometimes you're real nice -- jus t li ke a sitter!" L<1i iti Co1111 tries' Sef f Gi elJJ Urgecl \\' \0::!1!'\r ;'/'O\ 1AJ'1 !: "nlt'f'll \', i.1•~ l(r111"t' F•:l· ],.,\' h:111: r. ·• :11111 ndt•d IQ J H'I .d.:!O' \i\·)n [h.i( [ h C l .iilc I ~: .• tl'~ cn11:!1:, 11.c .~t·!f· help prCi;r:tnl,_ in <1!ttrnp!ing lo imJlf'll'C lrat1e .:ind cl')m· nll1 nica11o"s \11 th Lat i n Arncric.:in coun!rie:.. 'l'he ~n:iup hail an l1our-long r<rnf\renr1 \\·1111 Ill(' l'rl·Sirll'nt 1.:1sl lll'Jtl!li 1111 Jh<'ir ;retu rn fr.,m <1 ll1n-·.~e{,'h good \1·1 JI tn11 lo 1·l~~h! ll?!nispht'fll' Chlln· f r:l'~. 'J l1rt·e 11r th<• F4•ll0\1·s : t:d !11 IJ!'•'l'IJ\ \I'S 111al f'1:iion .... J't d 111\h tht•Jr recQrll· t1tl'llt!;d 1u1,s, ''lie Sf'111·rl 1•11 \he idea thal L'.S. cn1·1~,,r:.i!l<Jns c<ln pr()Vide thf'sc f nuntrit•s with the f'lim:itr. (.'f!f\i\al and catalysl lhry n('r'.!, hut they t11":11~rhrs hn\·c tu t.1~·r cnrc i I 1hC? lon ~·r.1n r,p 1·conom1c ~k·•:•l11prnt'nl." ~;11d J. Kl'i!h c·n:;cn, :::n iL s s 1 s I :.J n I to Sc·<'rctary of Co 111 rr. c r c e :O.l:tt1ru·e l-1. Stnns. "The l 'residrnt pickc<I up t-ri p01nt th:it the l'nitfd Stales 11 111·,, 1111rk 111rh, I.at i n 1\tnl'ric.:in (.'ountrics as <'~ual p •rt::crs ;:ind nol lre.:it th(•m \I •h a p<itroni1.1ng at11tudc, 11-·n sub·<.'Orl~c1ou~1~," Crisco ~:Ii 1. f'rl.~<·n, .i ~7 't·::ir-uld ex· r r ut11 c on [l',1\lc frorn Burl· Jllf'ton J 1111 u:. I r 1 ,, s In <;' 1·cr.i.h1lrn. NC., :1111 1 !he t J•l'r 16 j·'r•Jlows :-p<·nt Ille t ,:·~t 111u llt'l'k" 11r IJ,·(·f·rnhC'r '1~lli1 '.:: 1v1th go,>1·rrH11(·111 of· /1,·1:-iii;, la!Jf!,I·/ J ('ii rl c r S• h"~tn,-s.~1n';J>'.".:111d cil11r:1111r" in \r~trn~. 1:r:it1I, C11lon1hia, '\1;,:::n1<1\;1, ~h·xl1·0, Jl>1nn1nn, '1 1·11 ;irut \ f 11('1.11c:l:1. :] l.1· l••\'111\~. :111 "" leal'e I \t 1' 1 ·f ti •1.!:•r 111b~. arc 1 1 , , . r 111i.·r11'>h111 • •·1 ·1. I .1 "1;11,,~ lo \\'\ule , .11 ' 11'1 1 t·1i •r,.t n1rn1· ·• . 'J r !rip \\."IS 111c• !'!'· ,,1 \',,.,;. 11,,.1 F1·!!0·.1~ 1 1al'• n ur r 1111• fl!•l"r;un l· 1· .. dri! 111 1'olH \1\ .!1111:1 I 1, .1.! ' l• •11 .'-.1•<rt·l:1r\ ] 'IL I II ,:H•ll ;1 11 11 \.(•)f:Hi Th1· 1hr1i.: I • 11<111, 1t1 hr~1""':!1! ll•r"!1;-; II '. 1 • ul t • ! 11r • 11" 1 1 'I •·1 .u11n1: 1!;11 1.•n~. 11111'< \ • + I' ;, !I !! I' • I I. ·, '\ I •·rt 1.H, !1! I <1•1d •111p1I ,iJ \'lll!l \l (!.!I !111•1· I \)H !'\t•il I" tit•:. l•rrr t \11th rlw l'rc.<1r!r·11l 1r~·tc·l1t•d i111' ,1,1 )•(!111' Jeong 1:1."lluru1'. •·\Vr illl'I 1, n1 1\h1·n 11r (Jr~t came to the \\'hite House, bul this was the first time we talked to him about subslan· li ve matters," Crisco said. Stressing that the group ls oon-partisan and that Fellows dan't necessarily agree with admin istration policy. Crisco added, •·1 .was impressed to think I cou\~ t.ilk with a Presi- dent .,.,.ho is not only well-in- forrn ed, but also williog to listen to whl!.t .,.,,e had to say." Ronald 0. Baukol, a 33-year old prod u c 1 development superv:sor for Minnesota Mining and i'.tanufacluring Co. in SL Paul, said he was im- pressed by the President's knoY:!ed ge of the diversity of Latin American countries. "There are 20 plus countries 'vi!h 20 cultures and 20 sets of governments," said Baukol, an assistant to Director of Communications Herbert G. Klein. "The President agreed \\'e musl recognize these countries as individuals. Wbat each one wants i.'I an appreciation of its political and economic im· pi;rtance in the W e s t e r n li!:>misphere." . Julla Ann Vadala. a 28-year· old program coordinator for the Western Interstate Com- mission for Higher Education in Boulder, Colo., said she gained a new apprecia tion for rhe Un ited Stal.f!I form of reprCsentative govern rnent. ''\\'e s a 11• governmenls \vhich c;in't res pond to the needs of the prople," said Mlss Vadala, only \\"01nan tri make the lour. "In Peru and Guatemala, the governments :ippc.:ir to be unwitling lo in· tcgrate the Indians into their political structure. "I cainc back more tolerant of the LTnited States because l h:1d th<' pcrs1){'cl1ve of sefing lrLhlrallons Latin A1ncricans farr on il day-to-day basis. I 11 .1~ gla<l to ctime back lo n l'o1·crnment and a President 1\ ho !>Ct>med lo be reachi ng 1•11t to 11:.tcn to us." \Vornen Hirer! SIZ\'GAPORE (U PJ) -The l'ort Authority of Singapore has rec ruited 14 policewomen 10 facilitrate qucstiooing and friski ng of remale suspects hl" rt'sted in the harbor area. T'.1is \\'hlte Arrican rhinci bursts "'ilh pride as she m.a1:1ds prolocli\1ely over hrr ne\r·born baby at the mu In llanovrr. \V. (:crm~ny. It is the flrsl such birU1 jn csplivity. lil:ima rhino \\'as ~rouizht to E<.1retpe from J'rctori:i, Sou th Africa, '''hll e she v.•as cx1>eeUng. Air Bae• Scoured Space Shuttle Landing Sites So ught CAPE KENNEDY (UPT) - The Space Agency I.I Tooling at air bases in the Carolinas, South 1'~lorida and t h e Bahamu as possible landing sites for the booster section of the proposed space shuttle orbita1 transport H it is launcfled here. to fiy bad to an airplane-like landing at the launch sile. alUtude o( about 40 miles, then peel &"2ty and fly back to earth. 'Ibe orbiter would continue into orbit using its own rocket r.ngine. aDd return lo earth several day1 later. Engineers also are con· sidering the possibility of refueling the first stage of the rocket plane in flight so that Jt could use jet engines 'I1le shuttle, as ~ planned, wUI be a two-at.age machine with wtn&s that will be able to take off vertkally with rocket engines and fly back to earth like a jeUiner. Jts booster may be the size of a 747 jet and Its orbiter may mat.ch the Conco rde Supersooic Transport tn size. To enable the booster to carry as much space.bouild payload as possible, designers do not want tO have to launch it with the full load of jet fuel needed lo fly back to the launch area. lt is for this reasoo that a downr:nge 1be boost~ would carry the orbiter on jtg back to an The Ortho-Pak With every King or Queen here's what you get ••• . r~-llO-JOll llilg .. ·0.-Size slle<t • Fieldcrest no-iron King ir ~ . Size frtled b9!t"" slleel • 2 King ir Queen Size boTst;,.·piJTows • 2 pillow cases • TGog or Queen Size mattress pad • K"mg or Queen Size metal frame with easy mlling casters PLUS ... the King or Queen size DOUBLE BONUS i i112 ir Queen Size qWted bedsimd and ~iog ir Queen Size headJoad (not as Ulus!J>t.d) with ,... purtba!e of any l!ing Of ~ Sim si..,, Set! Twin or Full size DOUBLE BONUS Plastic headboard (not as illustrated) and metal frame with easy.roll caste rs! Special ROUND BED BONUS full·Tashioned IDT> sheet and fitted boltom sheet with purchase! Convertible Sofas DOUBLE BONUS Genuine Shepllent• castm and litted"" caps Voucanon/J KINGS Tl!AlTRESS·AND 2 BOX SPRINGS Comfort aod quality Ctrnbined in I lavishly ~illed 21: with ridl., dec«alor ticking. A rreat saving! ~""-"'""""""-s12& '*"" ,,_. --..-... The Deluxe King MATTRESS AND 2 BOX SPRINGS 7·ft. klng ind 6 ft wide! A sp1<:iaus, t leganlly quitttd King. Alt u cepticnM Cltarance Sale buy! i:ru .. ..,.,_ .... , ... _.s179 CDWUTt OITIH'AI Alm l!MlEIOllUS_ MANY UNADVERTISED SALE SPECIALS I ·· ·,_.··The Luxury King MAlTRESS AND 2 BOX SPRING$ Ou' qu1!ity.mfttd ion1 with new "Bed of Roses" tict.in&. 7·fl IOftl: and 6-U. wide! Giant speci1!! ho. -....... u ... ......_$198 toll't.rn llmlJ.I• .. Dtlllf lfllm ... J'he Premium King MATTRESS AND 2 BOX SPRINGS ··-"' - -11Jlsf1<tiol. .... ir.r _ --·•111-----~n·-s249· tOllPlrTI ___ __ Ortbo Mattresses landing or inflight refueling are under consideration. Dale Myers, Associate Space Agency Administrator i n charge of manned spaceflight, mentioned W a group of aerospace engineers rec::ently in Houston that the Ma{ine Corps Air Station at Cherry Point, N.C., and the airpOrt. at Nassau were being looked at•as possible landing sites for the booster. planner at the Kennedy Spat·.: 0-nter, said in an interview that a number of othl'r air bases also are under ton- sideration. including I 11 ,_. Homes\-ead AFB near f\1 i:111ii , the Naval Air Station at Key West, and Air Force landi1t): 'st rips at Bahamian trat•kin:,: stations. 11011. and the Bahamas sites L"OulU be u•fd if the shuttle 1\ert h".U!<' l tu.,.,•ard n n l 'Q'11.11 .. ,;,J orb1 L Dut l 'r.•~lli\ :-;1id U1c inllight r_fLl l'li!IJ 1ul:,1i1 tul'n out to b( n1•1rt pr:.K·tleable fo r n1 i:.:-~t'::~ 11l1"rf' the ~huttle \Youlcl /lal'l' Ju llrilrTY a hca\ y ('Llr~u. lli: ~ .... I 1nlhjjht r1.:tucJ . in:_: r11lJliJ );1' u.~eJ rcgardlL•ss 'r llhl'tl' t:k' :,)1utllt! is launl'h· «L G. Merritt Preston, chief The air fi elds lo the norlh and south could be use-d If the shuttle were to fly tu a polar orbi! Jn either d1rec- QUEENS MATTRESS A D BOX SPRING Lt! )'Ollr new 1970 budg~t rela•, too! This ext1avagantlf- 11uilted Queen wi!h pattern lickin1 is 1 bllJ! Ptict includes Mattress & Box SIJl'ing, s10& COll'LITT OflTHO l'U: ,llftl IJOl/ll( lotn!S ... :~: ... The Super ·• Queen MATmESS AND BOX SPRING A full SO.in. Jong and 6().in. wide for total sleeping' comfort. Rich, diamorid quilting! Speeial value! Prlre includes MattrtsS & Box Spring. $126 toll'tUE ORTllG-PAK .UIO llOllalE IONllS.- ! . The Luxury Queen ---!:~ Ortho's Quality Queen Sizt with decoratOJ·Chosell, diamond-quilled titking. An economy special! Price includes Mattrtss & 8o:c: Spring, $1 7 8 COllPUTE OITllG-1'.ll NllJ DOUBL! ll:wlJS.M MANY UNMATCHED PIECES AVAILABLE Tl!AlTRESS AND BOX SPRING DMorator·designed! 7·1t. diame1er1 Bu!ton·tree, pattern.stitched ticking. Glamor at a bargain price! 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'J Includes Double Bo~us CONVER TI BLE SOFA S FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. ANAHEIM LAKEW OOD (Next to Zody's) Phone: 139-4570 1811 W. Uncoln Ave. (Jun Eaxt of FedMart) Phone: n~2590 4433 Candlewcod C;·. In Condlewood Shops (Acro ss fr<>m Lo kewood Center) Phone: 634-41 34 OPEN DAILY 10 ·9 •SAT. 10 6 •SUN 12-6 •IMMEDIATE DELIVERY• CREDIT TERMS AVAILABLE• BANKAMERICAR 1,.,~'"1\.,,l"iJi"'~'"'"O"':;·a ... l~l;l~:l~tt ~ OAJLY PICOT 25 Lovers o·f British • Ill Radio Rally Face of Threat LONDON (UPI) -This Is the age of television so millions of Americans have never known or perhaps have forgotten what a superlative all-around medium radio can pay. a combiued radio and television license fee of _$14.-40 a year. Al the meeting with Chai.a.way the BBC inlerests were understood to have men- Uooed the possib11ily of a heavy deficit in the immcdiatt future unl~ there was a rise of $2.40 to $16.Stt Go vernment Said R eady to Se ll Network governn'lt:nt li(:ense but coin- 1nertials are hand!~ and the incoma thereof ei>Uected and shared out by a government- sponsored foundation • T h e three netwotU carry a total of 234 minutes of advertising a week. Programs are not interrupted for commercial.s. which are transmitted at fixed times. setu11 but the stations carry commercials -at the end of programs only. In Spaln the govcrnmtnt owns or has a hand in all broadcasting and all stations carry a ~vy load of ~rnmertials. ... The British haven't. They need only twirl the dial to the four national r a d i o networks operated by the British Broadcasting Corp. (BBC) to tune in on pop and cla:iiiical music, plays, Jee. lures, travelogues - everything, in fact, the ears can absorb of enterlainment and education. These deficits could easil y be turned into a fat profit releasing money for all sorts of ambilious plans if the BBC would airee to go commercial. But this it has resolutely refused to do, a decision that Jed t.o the establishment of the Independent Telev ision Net"'·ork and with it the crea ... tion of a cOMide.rable number of "TV millionaires." Color TV set owners, only a few hundred lhowland at present, pay a combined license ree of $2ti.40 a year. The B B C administraUve setup is much admired and copied in Europe but all coun· tries carry commercials with the exception of Sweden, Switzerland, Belgium .and Denmark. Acros.s the lron cur- ta.in, Communist YugOSllt\'ia also bas comme~iaJ radio. This i.! Ult' way radk) treaL~ advertising in I.he rest of Europe: In France the government- Qwned ORTF Network is permitted on I y "general" commercials. For example Citroen cannot advertise its automobiles. but the automobile industry can laud the joys of owning a car pro- viding it does not specify a particular make . Germany'! ten regions run their own stations on Jines similar to the BBC -they are directly operated by cor- porations which. w h i I e technically private. a re :-esponsible to the government. Their boards of directors ha ve to include representatives of all political parties according to their party strength. They do not interrupt programs for the hour or two of com· mercials lhey carry dally. These are transmitted in bloc in the mornings ~·:ith music inter!pened. All radio in Italy is state. owned and the three networks all carry advertising. This is insistent on the firsl and se- cond popular-based programs and limited on the third or serious network. In Holland broadcasti ng is in the hands of a nun1ber of private organizations under In Portugal the government· owned statton does not carry commercia!J but a number of smaller independent sta- tions do. In Austria there is a BBC·type administrative Sweden operates what It calls "the middle w a y • • • Broadcasting is UMi prerogative or a stock cot• potatkln In wh'ich a numbet of political parties, i11dus.try and the press hold shares. The government howevf\r ap- points six of the l l director,. No commercials are car1 ic<i. But even in Bri~in thoser -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- y,·ho listen to radio -when they are not watching one of the three television ch.an· nels -have tended to lake for granted what is generally considered kl be the best BOund broadcasting lert in the world today. Until now. For the BBC fears, and many radio fans apparently agree with them, that the con- servative government o r Prime Minister Edward Heath may be beginning to think about se.Uing one of the radio networks and 20 recently opened local radio stations to private enterprise. · A snowstorm of letters to e d itors of na t ional new!papers, a traditional form of British protest, is one sign ol this apprehension. · In Britain BBC Broad- Casting -both sound and television -operates under a royal charter which gives day-to-day running of the aervices lo an independent body, i.e. the BBC, responsible only to Parliament. It is finan - ced completely by license fees paid by all radio and TV set owners and such s e I f • generated income as sale of programs abroad. Thus it does not need to carry commercials. The only commercial! in Britain are on the Independent Televis ion (ITV) Network, wiich does not share in license money and has to finance itself. Recently a delegation led by Lord Jilli, chairman of the BBC, met with Christopher Chataway, Minister of Pots and Telecommunications, to discuss the future or the local radio stations set up to serve specific needs or small areas of the kingdom. Chataway was made aware O{ the group's concern that his white paper on broad- casting next year would io- \·olve the BBC in the govern- ment policy of denationalizing certain interests a n d in- dustries. There was no official word of what went on at the meeting but the Times later carried a strong editorial headlined: "Leave Lo ca I Radio To The BBC.'' Under the present national network arrangement radio one devotes itself to pop music, radio tv.·o co mbines pop music with variety programs. musical comedy and light orchestra music. Radio three is basically a classical music netv1ork . Radio four i s dedicated largely lo t h l' spoken \\'Ord. All n c t \\'o rks carry nev.·scasts. BBC Radio (and TVI is financed in this v.·ay: Britons ~.Xlt: .-.;.:;.;..i:.:-Y-:::01C" ' . Men • • • Ill , t Service ~ Army Second Lieutenant Michael F. Wels.e. 23. son of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Weise, 1753 Iowa St.. Costa Mesa, recently participated in cabal assault, a five-<tay field training exercise conducted by the 82nd .airborne. division at Ft. Bragg, )1.C. /\rmy Private Keith A. Crewk:y, son of Mr. and A1rs. James K. Crowley. 401 El Modena. Newport Be a ch . Calif., recently completed a wheeled vehicle m e c h a n I c course .al Ft. Ord. Mark C. WltmeA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Wit· man of 1008 Sflndwtle Drive. Corolla del Mar, was among senior cadets who rtcenlly oompkted the U.S . Air Force Academy flight training pro- l'am. Conducted as a pilot In· doc:trinaUon program by the Air Training C:Ommaod and academy personnel, the training included dual .00 solo filght tnst.ructk>n. The cadet., were a1JO provided w i t h clamroom study in weather, navlcaUon, night planning. radio procedures and Federal Av1allon A1ency ( FA A I regulollcn. REG . 1.40 . ,• .. I : . : \ ·1· ·, ' \ I. -I ' ,. ,\ \ : •I ' . . •. ,, I ' \ I ' '. BARE ROOT ----~·-- • '""et • 9111gt: i1ont1 • 911•.• ROSEBUSHES • Hr•lthy bto he1 on1nor11d f1wor 1te• • Pi1r>1 naw for tu!y 1Pfl"9 bloom • T hll !I lhe lo-•I p"ce wt ll•we ••u o!ler1d , Hurry -1a1y'll go fut •I lh11 proct ' ~-~ RIG. 1.SO IA . IMPERIAL DISHMASTER: • Utt•1·mod1•n hy91n1c Dithm1uer • Sor1P91, w111tfl. 11!u11 1t lh& toudl ol 1 bunon! 1 Cl11n COfll1mpo11ry h1111, gl11min1J dl10,,.. finilh • Compl1t1 1imph kit in1t1ll1tion, lit11ll 111ndiord t1nlu ·1ri•n '°"°'' 12260 655 ' EASY. GARVEY NORTH MILLS 3 llOCIS IASI JUST IAST Of OJ S POlllTS lllDIAll Hill llYD . lfG. 34.00 2 IPllD ·11.~ DRILL • Ntw m•n·grop h•ndl• for ttolding comfort • Oo.u....., drilling IOb tut. «a.!r•IMy • lieo111ori1l '"ila.ble for ,.,,, ••rsaulity • K1v cllu.;k llold1' incl~ded REG. 10.00 ~"···~~:.-~ -314 OUNGE · StfOW ROAD . llTWHll SO."l"~T. JUST EAST AllD AllOWNUD Of 605 FWY. • - REG. 30.9S '''rllr" CHAPMAN 100 YDS. UST Of HAllOI , •• . - ed ·skins Hope, Plan \\' ASHLNGTON 1 AP l -All tr Loll Ancelea Rams pttttdtnl Oan Rttvrs tired Gtortr .~lien as l'M!1d coac:h the dlY aftu Chr\1tm1s 19611. thf: W11hington Rtd-'ki~ flOllght him out. Tht)' got him l'<''O years lalrr. The 4z.year-0ld Allen w1s named head · ~"ll:Neh aild 1ene-r1 I manager of the •: Redskins W~nesday night only hours , •~after Washington prtAidenl f,dward Ben- nell Williams firtd Bill Austin. who had a 6-8 rtcord after taking over for the latt Vinet Lombardi. "When Gt0rge became 1va1lable two ye.trs ago, I had a long talk wuh him. lookl na (orward to hav ing him 1n 1969.'' said William.~. "Had he not been rehired by l..tls Angeles,, I think he wnuld have joinfll the Red!kln! then." Two weeks afler he bounced Allen In 1963, Reeves reveraed hi s decision JoHowirtl explosive ran and player reac- tion . 11\ere was no reaction when Reeve.a decided not lo renew Allen·1 fiv e.year contract Dec. 30. Both Allen and Williams declined lo di&eU3• Lerma of the contract u.cept to say it will be for more thin one Brod.ie . Selected • • NFL's Top Player ~EW YORI\ I AP) -John . lrodfe. the \•enerablr San Fr1ncl1CO quari..rback "4ho~e passin~ arm propeJ\ed tht 4~rl! tn th l'ir brst finish in 25 ye ar:s, was named ~1osl V11luable Plaver in the J\11tional FoothAll League today by The As~iated Press. Brodie, peaking as a passer and fie ld J:eneral in his 14th season with the 4.9er,, btat out George Blanda, .fJ..year- -{'.o}d miracle worker of the Oa kland ;_;..~ider1. in a lwG-man race. . ~~The San Fr11nc1sco veteran received :•~)IOI.es. lO 21 for Blanda, in the balloting ::~.::a panel of 7t sport..writers and ;~;~.Kasten who covered the 26 NFL "·""-•· ··~~· ··~arterback fran Tarkenton o( the :,,..w York Gian~ and defensiv• tack.le ~,,l!~n Paa:e of the MillflttOtl Vik.Jn&• • <ihared third place with thret YOlts each ::tt-.the annual poll, which for the first :;.(lfoe encompassed all o( pro football. ~·:Jic previous yt"ars, two MVPs were ·~~icttd -Oflt: each from the National :_:i:od American,..ootball Leagues. ~· The balding. :ta.year-old Brodie cap- ~ • tured passing honors for the first time in his career, pacing the Natio nal Con· ferenct with 2.Hl aerial ya rds and 24 ·• touchdown tosses while le ading the .f9ers ·to the West.em Di vision title -first of anv kind in their historv. He .then eneineered a li-14 upset vic- torv over Minnesota in the conferent·t•s ae~ifinal play-<>lfs before falli ng short with a late comeback. bid as the .f9er'S: bowed to Dallas 17-10 in last Sund1y'1 f\F'C championship ga1ne. • · llntil last season. Brodie's m1}or el1Jm In fame was the $900,000 Mttlemerit he recti\ied a£lr r rel>(W'tedly trying to jump from San f'ranc1:q:o to lhe Houston Oilers during the AFl.rNf'L signing wars. Rrodi e 1nd linebacker Chuck Howley , a kev member of the Doomsday Delense lhat • propeJll"d the Dallas Cowboys into rhe Super Bowl. were named to The Associated PrtSI All-Pro team Wed- nesday. Brodie. who this season won his first passing title: in a 14-year career, heads an offensfve unit dom tnated by Nalional Conference atars in the balloting of sports \I.Tiler! and brol'ldca!ters that for the firs! time encompaS6es every team in prn football . Here's the \lo'I Y the voting went along conference line~: AMERICAN CONFJ<.:RENCE OFFENSE Tight end -Bob Trumpy, Cinci nnalJ . Tackle!! -Jim Tyrer, Kansas City; Winston Hill, New York J ets. Guard.~ -Gene Upshaw, Oakland; Center -Jim otto, Oakland. Wide rteelvers -Fred Biletnikoff, Oak land ; Marlin Briscoe. Buffalo. Quarterback --Daryle Lamonica, Oakland. Running backs -Floyd Little, Denve:r; Hewritt Dixon, Oakland. Place kicker -Jan Stenerud, Kansa! Cily. DEFt:NSE Ends -Rich J 1tckson, Denver ; Aal'Qtl Rrown . Kan111 City. '1'1ckle;s -John Elllott . New York J•l.a ; Buck Buchanan, Kansas Cit)' . Middle linebacker -Willie Lanier, Kansas City. Outside linebackers -Bobby Belt, KanJas City; Andy Russell. Pittsburgh. Safeties -Johnnv Robinron, Kans111 City; Jerry Logan , Baltimore. Punter -Da ve Lew is, Cincinnati. ~ATIONAI~ CONFERENCE OFFENSE Tight end -Charlie Sander!\, Detroit. Tackles -Bob Brown. Los Angeles; Cas Banaszek, San Fr11ncisco. Guards -Gale Gillingham, Green Bay : John Nil and . Dalla!!. Center -Mick Tinglehoff, Minnesota . \\'ide Receivers -Gene Washington, San f'ranc1sco: Dick Gordon. Chicai,:::o. Quarterback -John Brodie, San Fran- clsC'O. RunnlnR backs Larry Brown, \\'ashing ton ; Ron Johnson, !'\t.w York Giants. Place kicker -Fred Co1, M1nne80la. DEFENSE Ends -Carl Eller, Minnesota; Claude Humphrey, Atlanta . Tackles -Merlin Olsen, Llls Angeles; Alan Page. Minnesota. Middle linebacker -Dick Butkus, Chicago. Outs ide linehackers -Chuck Ho~·ley, Dallas; Paul Naumoff , Detroit. Safet ies -Larry Wilson. SL Louis; Spider Lockh11rl. New York Gients. Punler -Julian F11i,:::11n, New Orleans. Cornerbacks -J immy Johnwn, San Francisco; Mel Renfro, Dallas. MassiiniI10 Named MVP 011 All-A111e1·ica Team Fl"rdy ri,1;:iss1m1nn. 1pa rkpluJ1 of the CC lr\·inl' NCAA (ha1np1onsh1p wa ler pn lri team. h11s bee;n named most valuable pla~er on lhe 1970 All-AmerJcan team gelec ted by the w1ler polo rulea rl"lmmittee recenlly .\lassimino ~-as 1he Lop member ol !hi' first team ;:ind \\'as joined by tt"am - rnale Dale Hah n nn the kquad. Paul Btcskshazy and .Jim Fer~uiinn gained a place on the team from L'CLA wilh C.ary Drent and Bob Shu pp of Cal St i le fl.<ln g Beach J al.so on the fir1t squad. Rob J\tonse;es of San JOJ1e Stale and t ·sc goalie Joe Sha nahan c-ompleted the team. ~o second or lhird teams ~·ere namtd \1·11h balan<"e of lhe player1 H:lecttd gh·en honorable mention, The list incl uded Mason Philpot. Bruce. Black. Mike M1rtin 11nd ROi iie Tmy Klein from UCI. ri.~11uimino'1 brother 1Ricky) fnlm St11nhrd was given honorable mention along with Eric Lindroth of t:C L.A, a former Newport Harbor star. Balan« of the honorable rnentinn group Included Ken Belli. Mile Runnel~. frfd Belcher 1San Jor.e); ScoU M·assey, Greg Arth, Andy Dea:eus, Ke vin Craig ,lllDY MASSIMINO IUCLA): Ben Gage:, Phil Snowden. IUC Santa Barbara): Bob Witt, Frank Heck!, Jerry .Nourae (USC ): t r w I n Okumura. Steve Waper. Mike Moulin (CS Lon g Beach ). year and that Allen wlll be in t'OmplPte rontrol of lhf. football operation. in- cluding drafting, trading •nd hiring or ill pe:rS()nnel. They 9.'0Uld not !ay whether Allen would become a stockholder of the Redskins but Will iams .said he is not at the present time. Allen. who rompiled a 49-17-4 record in five years with Lei Angeles, 11B.id ht will concentrate on improving the Re:dski ns' defense in an effort lo ha ve a winning club in Washington. "It would ~mptuous for me ) Quits Again Former Marina High star Mark Soderberg has qu it the U'1iversity of Kentucky basket· bill squad for the second time In two years. In eight games this year he averaged 7.1 points and 5.9 rebounds. Rodgers New UCLA Coach; Morton Sick LOS ANf.ELLS -f'ranklln "P•pper'' Rodgers. head coach at Kansas, ~·as 11p- po1nled head football roach al t:CLA, athletll'.' director J .D. ~1 organ announced today. Rodgers. forn1cr assisl..ant at l'CLA. sucreeds Tommy Prothro who last Satur- d<t.\' became cuach of the Los Angelrs Ham s. Rodgers, who coached the .Jayhawks lo the Oranj!e Ekiwl in the 1968 !'.ea~, had been with Kansas four season.~. Outgoing, eneri;telic. JS.year-old Rod- ,Rers beconies the 1 lth Mad footba ll coach at UCLA. His varied career, both 1s an 1s.,!stant <1nd head man has boe;n m1rked with high sl.'orini;t teams and out•llndlng qu11r- terber:ks including Stevft Spurrier at Florida and r.;irv Beban at UCLA, both winner!§ of the Heisman Trophy. • DALLAS -The Dalla.~ Cowbovs h;irt their signal catle.r at practi~ We;driesdav. But their qu arterback was in bed wiih a sore throat, Dall as opened preparations for the Super Bowl again:>! Balllmore .Ian 17 on a sour note with quarterback Cra1 ~ Morion 1n bed at home wit h a sore throat. Coach Tom Landry. wh o hai; called the plays 1n Dallas ' seve n-game winnin& streak to the Nationa l Confe rence cham· pionship. said ''Mor!l'ln has 11 \'Pry harl lhroet al'ld !he doctor is concerned.'' Morton, v.·ho has bee n plagued vdth a bru ised right arm and a gimpy kntt, guided Dallas to playoff victories over Detroit and San Francisco although he passed poorly. "!rs qucst1nnabll' whe1hf'r Craig will v.•ork out this v.•eek .'' Landry said. "He could use a lot of \\'O rk The more he throws the better off he will be." La ndry said "We've got to hit 50 per~nl of our pas.sea " to defeat Baltimore. "lt will be much tougher to run a1a 1n11t Ballimore because of the experience lac· lor," Landry 1aid. "It will be very dltf1cuh to win just hitting pasSes at the 30 perce nt level like we have for the last few weeks." l..andry said Ba ltimore i.t hittin.11 it.. hiih point right now.~ • LOS ANGELES -Defending ch11mpion Billy Capser, fighti ng a heavy cold, shot a 3·under-par 88 an d picked up $.5l'JO Wednesda y in the pro-am prelude to (See SPORTS, Pate 11) to Win • Ill '71--Allen tn Hay we 'll take the whole ball of wax ." hf' ~aid Jn reply to a quesuon. "There. are so many factors -C<Jm. J>"tltlon , hounce' of the ba ll, injurtes, trades, the rlraft . "But wl'len you come into 1he dressing room after a game. you'll be proud of tbe Redskins and they 'll be proud or themselve1. ·· Asked if he expects to trade for vet.erans, as he did In Los Ange les, or build with youngsters to gel the v.·inning team, Allen replied ; "We hope lo win, plan to win in 11111 T nt\'er believed In longrange bu ildini,::: programs The Redskins' fans ~·ould apprecl&tf' 1mmed1ate success Jn· 11tead of a five-, six·. se\'en-year building prngram"' He also said he does not lhink the Redskins need a young quarte;rb1ck to rtplare the aging Sonny Jurgensen or frank Ryan. '"Thal"s not the Redskins· problem,'' Allen ~aid. "I think Sonny is one of the greatest qu11rterbacks in modern football. He is as accurate a passer r ve seen. "Qlle O( h1s d1sad vanlagt'! With the Redskina is th1t he hun'I been associated with a great defense," he said. "You cen 'l do It all with on I y an offense, "I think Sonny c<>uld have the same kind of year as Brodie and be !he MVP," he said. referring to John Brodie of San f"rancfsco. AP's Most Valu.c1ble Player 5electlon. •·But you can't win big \l.'ilhout a defense. Our v.·hol e thinking is to get the defense riled up." Golden Buffaloes' Meely Too Much for UCI, 68-65 Anteaters Trail AU the Way Before 2,093 ft~ HOWA~O L. HANDY IH 11111 INll'I' •lltt St1H Cliff Meely is eve rything he ~'as ad· vertised to be -maybe even a little more. He paced the University of Colorado Golden Buffaloes to a 63-65 ''ict1)ry over a battling UC Irvine basket· ball learn Wed nesday night in Crj1o1·ford Hall before 2.093 fans. ~leely \.\'as content lo score a single field goal in the first 13 minutes of play with big Ed Burlingham dogging him all the way. But, in the final seven minutes of the first half he crwected from e\•ery possible angle including 20- fnot baseline i;hots to close the half with 13. The ln111 arm1 of thfl Colorado •tar w1r• all<l t!!•cllve tn the reOounding C'lepartme.nt •• kt ind tt1mm1tt Jim Crel1hton controled both board• for most of !he game. Meely several times halted Irvine at· ten1 p~ off thei r m11 rk like swat1ing flies off a wal l. Mee ly even brought the b a 11 down courl on ocr-a1lon ancl it probably wouldn't surprise Irvine follo~·ers if he swept out the gym at home as well. He does every!hing else with precision for the Buffaloes. ""'e gave lhem the 2.5-foot shnts in the early part of the game and that beat us ,'' a disa ppointed roach Tim Tift !la id after the contest. "This wasn't our best game but 1 thought we played well and we were in good 001npanv tonight. \Vithout Clark \\'e can'! d~n the bo ards." The 2S-foor sh&L~ he was referring lo c;ime frOm the accurate shooting hands of guard Dudley Mitchell who hit lour from long range in !he f!n1t el R"hl minutes. then didn 't score ror the balance of the game, Clark. siclelined with influenza and brd· ridrlen for fi\'e da ys prior to the game, playr.rl only a small portion of the clash. HP is the !es.ding rebounder for the Anteaters, Co lorado opf'ned in front on b11skets b\• Sieve Aaker anrl Mee ly and nel'er trailed. t:CI knnttPd the ·count al '21 after 11 111inu1es onlv In 111.ll behind by 1he \\'1flP~I mar~1n' of the game at half11n1e. 39-30. H was a matter of playing catch-u p !he Sf'cond half but tverytime Jr\"1ne closed the ga p to two points. tht Buf- falOfl~ aeored aa11 ln 11.nrl tht m1rgln varied from two to aeven poinll thrnu~hn111 1hf' Sf'COn~ s1anza The Colorarlo derense l1mitcrl thP shoo!ini,::: of Ph il Rhyne 11 nrl Bill Moore anri whPn they did i;.:et a sho1 . 11 wa.c; an arch1n~ 11nempt over the nuti:tre!cherl arn1.~ of lhf' Colorado defenderi;, The Aulfaloe~ hit ~1.4 perc~1 frnm the flfll1r to .f.1 I for the An tr11.ter:;. althno~h LC I scorr.d U rielrt gnal.~ to '27 rnr the visitors. U(I ,__ Oii ,,,,.,,. IW_.,,,.. I t t 11 o ... "' .. '''n &~· Jl •• H'""" 1J 19 Moolor 1 ~ l• 8 '-""C" 11 II I 8 L..,....1\!"' ' 1 ln Hlttl"' 1 ' 8 ' ,....... '1 71 " " Lt ,,_llo ""'"" !Wl ltfl •t i. , l 10 I •II l l I 9 • 0 • !) l 0 3 • ' ~ t ' • 1 ? 1~ ,., 1) 'fl~ ... .,. .... , .. (ull•n '" Mufi••• G•"''" H1t1• To•olo H•lfll ..... U(I f •llO" ).II. l11 ..... 1 ,. UC lrvlM /U l C:tllr'IH (U ) lt ltJl1• ff t'l oHll ........ • ' ' " Jl""tMll' • ' ' ' -· ' • ' " Mite ... !! • • ' • aur11,.9h•m ' • ' • Meo Iv ,. ' "' ,,. • ' .. ·~~·· ' ' .. lllkor ' ' ' ,,,,, .. ,,,.. ' "'' (IA•~ ' • ' Mt u•1bv • ' • ""'~~ ' ' ' ·~· ' ' ' Mo!"'"" • • • T•t!t • ' • ' ...... • ' • r.,,.,, }I U It i,!1 fe!ll• " ' 11 tt H1!f!l,.,1· (<>lt!•otfn J'I, !JC: ltvln• JCI COLORADO BALL CONTROL -Cliff i\!eelv 120 1 of the t.;niversity flf Colorado. ,l:!rabs a rebound from the grasP of UC Irvine's Richard Clark in game \\'ednesday nighl in Cra\rford Hall. In the back~round are Rrad Baker ( 12) and Ed Burlingham. College 6tJi11g Broke Recove1~y Outlool{ B1·igl1t Fo1· Ex-l1·ish Grid Bos s Arparcnl!y high hnJ)('~ ;i re being hrlrt fnr Fn1nk Lriih\''s cnmplrtc rccnvery nf 11 serinu.~ illnes~ wh ich has confined him to a c;i.nctr-Ieukemla clinic 1n Houston the pa11t lhree weeks. Tht 6\-year-old former Notre Dame football coach 1\·a~ i::1ven ;:i slx-hnur leave tri u.·a1ch Noire 0.:imr knock off Texas in the Cotton Rnwl l\'rw Year's Day. His doctor. by lhe wa.1·, is a Teias grad. Al anv rate intimate friends of Leahy report 'that he is suffering from a • -----WHITE WASH herau~r nf th e sr hool '~ ~haky eronomlc situ et inn , In fart. lh e ~ch(Mll ls fare.fl \\'it h l"'ll•sur~ lt relies 1trictly on tuition at $8MI per 11eme~tl'r. per puptl. &lme 110 young1ter1 were re~lstered this p115l se;me ster and finanC'ial ends gl mply are ont meetln •. * * * The $100.000 Grand American NHRA championships are due at Lions drag strip in WilminJ(lon F'riday through Sun· da v. Headin~ lhf' hst n[ compet11ors is Don Garlitz. who supposedly earned over 1 mi llion huck.s as a dragsler last ye ar. C . .J. H;irt. the guy staging the weekend biggie. got drag racing going at Orange County Airport a couple or dec.ades back. He put up $.sn for the; first trophy and is nn1Y h;in1llinJ: an event worth 2.000 times lhat figure . Dope Shadow Covers Liston Death ' ---------* * * Playing ha11kelhall this ye;ar al Cal Poly San Lu i11 Obispo three formtr Oran1e Coast area type;1. LAS VEGAS (AP) -Pollco NY l5Gnl1)I Liston wu found de:ad with htrokl tn hi s home •nd nteeDemarU on hit anns. But hit former ~trf:tll'f the onetime ~avywelght cblW' ' 11tcU1Ji "In my exper wu 1a(111id or nttdln. He would• everything be could tn 1vokl teli:ina lbotl," C. J. Murphy lold new1men W-..clay night 1fttr new teeta wt':re ordertd to le1rn what ki lled the bia borer. ~furJ)hy. 11 retired lawyer from CAsper. \\'\'O,, whn h•d handled Llston·a ltpl aff3 1J-1 •Jnct Ull6, WU ·~ wbtthe.r 11'< l!lhler u...r dnJi1. "Not ID my knoiriedc•." he nopll<d. An lniUal autcplJ)' Wednesday fa iled to unc:over whet kllled Li•l<ln, 38. His wife Geraldlnt found him Tuesday night sprawled on 1 bed in t.ht lr M0.000 home. AYIMtlUn lltrll ht 111)' blYt been dtld for 1& dlys. AutborlUes said a quarter-ounee of hf#ol n wu found In a blllloon In the kitchen of Ll1ton '1 t.ime in the fashionable Paradise V111lty 11ection of La~ Vr:gas. They 11ld a half<MJnCf: or marijuana was In l.Jst.on's trou~r• pocket. bu! that no narenllc 1 paraphernali1, auch as hypodermic needle.. waa dlacovertd. Tiaut and toJolo1tcal e1aminattons ~ere planned by the Clark Counly cor- oner'1 office lo plnpclnt the cause of death. Mrs. Uston 411id !!he and her foster i;on Danitl, T, left Us Vrga ~ Dtc. 28 to \'i!I( her 1lck father In SI. Louis. She said she fie~· baek Tuesday night after repeated, WUIUC«SSfu/ attempts to call her hutblnd 1t heme. and lound hls body. Lhiton had l'IO monty prohM!m.,, Murphy said. Olhe-r than Daniel. whom th" Llstnn8 were In the proce.u of adopting, lhe couple hid no children. Liston will bt buried htre Saturday. Last Thlnklgivi ng D•y, Lllton was Injured in an autcmoblle •ctldent In Las Vegag and WAS hoqiita.UU!d. He was relea~d a few days later bul wa1 readmitted for • time when be com· ph,ined of cheat pains. He wq in many ACr•petl with the law, 1ervina a Ji"'iton term 111 MINOUri for 11 rntaurant robbery IB JIU, a yeAr bef()re he started boxing pr~ fr~~ion11ly. lie was 1rre•tf!d About ~ times on v11r lou• ch1rgM. most rectnlly on Dec. in. 1970, In Loi Ancell':I for drunken drlvln1. pre:leu kemla type dhtorder and are hopeful tUs two month1 of upcoming treatment will a:et him back on hill fetl. H•'s due lo live: ln the Sacramento area. * * * Talttt Paradlu: Collill! .. , oace a pertlcf. pa•l I• tM UC lrYtle ba•ketbaU ............. b•lit-. TIMI ParadlM -a• W In canN:I the rtlDI....,. nf Ill ba,kelball 5t85l>D btt1uM! achcMll lund~ are e:1h111tled. Baalcetball eo•ch Jim ,11ung can't eYtD nime up -1th •1t rent.I lo u&e • chorth IYm for W«kOUll-Lall yur be re.ported· ly ml&9f!d •ll month• of payc heck• On the varsity are Rich Sllckelmalet, e.s-Orange 0 1a11I College and Newport Harbor : '.\1 ike; Jtcksfl n, former Lapna BPach High. And holdlng down a 11pot on lhe fn11h h Skip \l'llllam51 who 1tarred •1 E1ta1ttle High. * * * The Oakland R,:11ders ~·er e ln- ad\·crtrnlly kind In lhelr far\$ on ticket pri<'C!'-f1r lhrir plll \"l"'l ff ~amt against fl.t iami They charged $7,50 per Ucket. But ttley could hin•e gotten much mor~ • _ . ,llke Baltimore did In ita playoff duel with Cincinnati. The Colt.I iOl fl2.60 :· .... • •• •• :! :- .· ... .. . -: .. . . Thursday, J•nua.ry 7, 1971 OAILV PJLOT 27 ,....;.~~~~~~~~_,...:= Amhrozieh Puts GW~ 75-71 Past· Cypress, ' ' ... By CRAIG SHEFF OI ni. O.llr Pllel $lift G<llden West College basketball coach Dick Stricklin summed up the hectic Southern CaU!omia Conference scramble very well a couple of days ago when he commented that most of the Rustler circuit games would probably go right down to the wire. "All th& teams are tough In our con· ference," said Stricklin. And Wednesday night's crucial con· ference opener with Cypress was a good indication of things to come. The two t'e"arroi-&ttled tooth and nail all the way be.fore Golden West put it away in the closing three minutes, 75-71, before a crowd of 550. Stricklin's crew held the Upper .hand throughout the second half of play, holding a six to 10-point lead most of the time due primarily to some cold shooting by the north Orange Countians. Then with five minutes left, the Chargers made a run at Golden West, hitting six straight points to cut the margin to 67..63 with 31/i minutes to go . But the Rustlers, now 15 • 2 for the seaso11, didn't panic, Sophomore forward Brian Ambroz.1ch, after a nice assist from Jiin Anderson, hit a clutch drive shot and scrappy 5-10 guard Rick Barnes followed v.ith a pair or free throws 10 seconds later to give Golden West an insurmountable 71-63 edge. The two teams then matched points in the re maining three minutes with Cypress cutting the fin al deficit to four with a pair of charity tosses with four seconds left. The inability to hit some rather easy jumpers in the second half plagued the Chargers. Cypress attempted 20 more shots than the Rustlers ( 46-26) in the second half but the Chargers could only hit 13 (28.J.. percent). And Cypress sophomore guard Glenn Nygard was far off form in the second 20 minutes, canning only four of 14 from the field. But much of the poor shooting could GolCIH WIS! OS) ~" ,, ,, 10 0 l 20 " ' l 1• 3 1 J I AmbtOlitll ,t..noe1oon Or•~·· B1•nt1 T"'1mP•cm Powtt$ (1rl5Cn ToT1ls l J 2 ' • 1 4 I• 3 0 ? " 0 0 1 0 l11lll7S CyJ,.._, 1111 I• " JI IJ Sto•m 4l 1H E11w~rll5 5 I • 1! Nycum 4 ~ l ,l l Nvg•td 6 J J IS L~ 50110 O"l(1tt1 J 0 1 6 lh<llngtcn C 1 o 1 01rn•ll 1 2 J ~ Tct1ls 7t 1S 11 71 '"•l!Tim•: Goldt n Wnl 41, (YPtt " 3S DAILY PILDT P'holo by Rlch1nl KMhi.r • be credited to a harassing Rustler defense. which helped cause seven crucial Cypress turnovers ln the se<:ond half. Ambrozich, a 6-S jumping jack, led his team in scoring with 20 point,,, getting 14 in the opening half. He canned seven of nine from the field in the first half and along with center Mark Dekker and forward Jim Anderson held Cypress to a stand still on the boards. In the wild first haU, the lead was either tied or exchanged hands on 14 different occasions. Golden West look the upper hand for good with five minutes left in the first half when Ambrozlch hit back·tG-back jumpers from the top of the key. The four points gave Golden West a 29-27 lead and it was extended to six (41·35) at the half. Ambrozich attempted only five . ..tx>ts in the second half. hitting three;. He finishtd with IO field goals in 14 attl!!mpts l7l.4 percent). «··~ As a team Golden West CaMed 50 percent of its shots, dumping • ill 3l of 62 attempts. Cypress finished with a 35.5 shooting percentage, hitting 28 or 79. Do~ Johnson'!> Chargers went 15 for 33 (45.5 percent) in the o~ning half. ~ Two other players hit in double •ures for the. Rustlers. Anderson had 1Kwhile guard Chris Thompson contributed 14. All of Cypress' starters were in twin figures with Nygard leading ths.i_ way with 15. p · Golden \Vest returns to conference ac- tion Friday, hosting Rio Hondo at Otanga Coast. Former OCC Athlete •'• ., New Pro at Rancho SJ ,•. Bob Bailey is the new professional golf instructor at Rancho San JoaquiA public golf course in Irvine. Bailey attended Tustin High School where he was a star football player and later was an outstanding lineman for Orange Coast College. lie is no relation to the first baseman· outfielder of the Montreal Expos who spent his undergraduate days at Uing Beach Wilson and signed a pro contract directly out of high school. Bob Bailey the go!( pro is the son o( a career Marine and began his partnership with the links sport-at the El Toro Marine Base course, He really became interested in the sport while serving in the Army at Ft. Leavenworth, Kans. where he gained valuable training in teaching and golf course management. Football coach Dick Tucker et Orange Coast recalls Bailey as 8 member of the 1964 and 1965 Pirate teams. "He was a good football player for us and a very fine young man. He was a starting guard and he did all of our kicking." Ray Rosso, golf coach at Orange Coast Bob Bailey also remembers bim. "He averaged between a five ~ a seven handicap and was a real ,aice guy and a fine athlete." J 1 BARON TALLIES PAIR-Fountain Valley's Dave Lynch (52) sails in for a field goal \Vednesday night in opening I rvine League setback against visitin,g-Los Alamitos. Griffins defending are Vaughn Barker (left) and Bruce Roeland. \, ! ' SPORTS CLIPPED SHORT • • • (Continued from Page 261 the Glen Campbell·Los Angeles Open golf tournan1enl. Casper played the Ran cho Golf Cl ub course. site of the $110,000 tourney which gets under \\'ay Thursday. In play at the neighboring ~rentwood Country Clllb, a!so par 71, Cay Brc1ver and Ed Sneed each had 68s and collected $463. One stroke back on the san1e <:ourse \\'ere Roy Pace and Ron Cerrudo. They 1von $350 each. Back at Rancho. on a sunny but co!rl, . 'vindy day. 11-'C Trevtn'> and Don January had individual 69s for S400. • PHIL!\f'IELPlll 1\ -\\.11h 1heir mos!. stunning victory of 1!171 -and their only one or 1971 -under the ir bells, the Los Angeles King,; take on the Phi!a- ' dclphia Flyers 'h!'T°e tonight in the second liame of an eight-gatne road trip. The Kings' Doug Robinson bounct!d a shot past Chicago's Gerry Desjardi ns for a big second-period goal that snapped the Black Hawks' l3·f:ame home·ice win· ning streak, 4·2. Robinson's goal gave Los Angeles a 3-1 lead and forced the Hawks to play catch-up the rest of the night. They never caught up. • ST LOUIS -Charley \\'inner. v"ho survived a ·1·9·1 season in 1969 and returned lo niold the St. Louis Cardinals into a 1970 ti tle contender, was fired \Vednesday as head coach of the National " Football League team, ' The di smissal of Winner. whose con· tinuous tenure of five seasons was longest In club history. was announced by Cardinals President Charles W , "Stormy" Bidwill after the two met at noon in Bidwill's office. .. Winner. 46, reorganized the Cardina ls · between the 1969 and 1970 seasons and steered them to a · 7·2 recQrd at midseason last fall before the club faltered and finished 8-5-1. "We felt, that this action had to be . taken in the best "interest or the team," ,said Bidwill. "It didn't come as something that was spur of the momen t. We've been discussing it since the end . of Uie season. • RJVERSJtiE -David Pearson of •. Spartanburg. S.C., powered bis 19"70 Ford Torino to 105.977 miles an hour Wed· nesday in practice runs for Sunday's •100,000 Motor Trend 500 for grand na· •'tional stock cars. Pearson toured the 2.6-mile Riverside lnlcrna tional Raceway road course In cne minute 29 seconds. six seconds slower than the track record set by Pame\11 ,Jones last year. Jones' speed was 113.~1 0 m.p.h. Sixty-eight cars 1vi\I attempt to qualify for one of the first t:i spots today. Further qualifying, for lhe second 15 places, will continue Friday and ·the last IO positions will be filled Saturda'y. • ~tlfu\11 BEACH -Flord Patterson. lhe n1an Sonny Liston defeated to become \\'orld heavyweight boxing champion. said upon hearing of Liston·s death Wed· ncsday, "Jfe \vas :i i:;real lighter." Patterson. in Miami Beach for a Jan. 15 boul against Le.vi Forte of ~1 ia1ni, said he \>1ls told of Li ston's death just before leaving New York \\lcdnesday tnorning. "I v•as shocked. J couldn't believe it. Sonny Liston, to me. was a great fi~htcr. J got to know him personally after our t\'IO fights and I rather liked him. I just can·i belleve now he's gone." Gauchos Drop Opener, 59-'58 EL CAJON -Bill Helander hit a jump shot rrom the free throw line with six seconds remaining in the game lo give Grossmont College a 59-58 basket.. ball victory over Saddleback in the open- ing Mission C.Onference tilt for both teams. Saddleback enjoyed a five-point lead with six minutes to go, but Grossmont capitalized on a ra.sh of Gaucho fouls to cut the deficit in the waning minutes. It was a nip-and-tuck affair all the way with Crossmon! holding a 25-24 advantage at the halftime break. Sadfileback took the lead early in the second half and remained in front until . the Griffins made their closing spurt. Belanger, a 6-2 guard, led both teams in scoring with 29 points, including 12 field goals. He was the only Grossmoot player in double figures. Saddleback's Eric Christensen canned i1J poinls while teammate Tom Gardner had 14. Christensen hit 10.. of 17 shot.I (58.8 percent ). The Gauchos' Pete Henderson led his club in rebounds. gelling nine. Saddlebaek returns to conference ac- tion Saturday, traveling to Riverside. s.tlflttotc:• fNI o,..,_, lffl ""'''' """'" (~rlll•n~n 10 I o ll 8tl•nMr 11 S l :19 EO*ll•01 0 0 5 0 141l1n 1 2 l • G•rdnt• $ 4 J U Cummln1' 1 o J 1 HtndwMll Ol •tD11D<t l Ol• M111hlfl J OllWll~ J l\1 l !!i..o •031MU•IH'IV l llt Tct1h 17 14 lt $& M•dlllOn C J o ? · lot•i. U 1111 It Hllttllllt: "'°'""""'' 15, $.lddl.0.5: J4 Los Ala1nitos Outlasts FV Cagers, 46-45 By ROGER CA RLSON 0! lhe DlflY Pllol S!tll The unbelievable balance of the Irvine League was reflected by seven points separating four circuit g::uncs \Vednesday in opening round basketball hostilities, and it was no different al Fountain Valley. where invading Los Alar.,;tos made oH with a 46·45 decision, Coach Ezra Van Horn's triumphant Griffins scorched the nets from the free throw line at a 10.for·IO clip and survived a pair of outside s hots by Fountain Valley the last six seconds to hold on for the victory. Los Alami tos had taken the lead with 1: 42 to go, regained JXISSession and stall· eel until coach Dave Brown's quintet got the ball with 29 seconds left. The Barons came down court, looked for the good shot and Rick Power fired away from the corner with six seconds left. The bal l was in and out on a heartbreak shot and in the ensuing scramble guard George Gerber of Fountain Valley suI· fcred extreme leg cramps. Timeout was called by the Baron& for the injury, and Brown wasn't able to call a second consecutive timeout lo regroup his forces. The Barons inbounded the ball to Bill Kristinat, who took a quick shot from outside. But it hit the rim and bounded away. "We just had to throw it in and shoot," lamented Brown afterwards. Gerber's brother, Pete. was also helped off the court with an injured ankle as rugged play took its toll. The score was tied or the lead changed hands 20 times during the hectic play . Fountain Valley was whistled down for foul s only 15 times, and through three quarters Los Al had scored only three points at the gratis line. -+- But the seven-for-seven effort in the f fourth quarter -the last four by nu-rid· a den Rick Qujnn -paid off handsomely t for Van Horn's crew. ~ ,_11111 v.-n..,. 1u1 Nn •I • l 0 I 6 ' 1 4 ' 1 4 l 11 Shlbt!t lvP>tll G. Glrti.r lttlotr ,. Ct·~· P-tr l(rlOl""t 101111 1 0 ' ' 1 c 0 J l 0 0 ' 1 0 1 1 1'0 J ' •l L .. Alllll'lllM IU) ''"l'f'-~ 1 2 ., OulM B1•~8" Rclotllft(I 11-r\/k M illtt Tc!~ll • 2 0 10 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 , 1 • 1 lt 10 1 .. Sctrt ir, 0111r .. n F..,nltln V1t1ey ll 1' IJ LN Alamllt• 11 16 t • " I I i EARLY Tl 'ES ''. AllllOUllCES ' A COST OP LIVIllG DECREASE QUARTS -NOW OllLY '849 One small victory for the consumer. ,. . ·, ' .•. ' •' ~· ' ' ,•. .. " " '·--. ' ; ..,~,, ,, ": '·. •. '":t .. :, .... .. ' .<; ,i'f"' =-·~· • ., . .. -. " . I 1 (::ollect s, ' . ~41-40 .•r'· BY GLE.'IN V.'HITt: 01 !~1 D1ll1 ~lie! S!l !I · :-.earona de! Mar High's disc1pl1ned Sea Kingi; 1()(1mcd jC\ a big earl.v lead thrn held ~.Jor dear hie tu subdue . ._~i'a Ana Valle~ H1gh 's ,alcons. 4 I· 4 O, \\'f'rlnesday ·nigh{ in the Irvine League Qasketball hd·l1Htr played in 'tfte'"''inners' chilly confines ', n took ~lark Gr1gsby·s free thro1.~1 ..-·ith 22 seconds Jefl °"'lh"ttte game. ho1,11evPr. In keep "i!bacll Tandy Gillis' troops "ffOm going to overtime. ~ 0 Santa Ana Vplle~· had faded 11t.f·li022-IO halftime drf1c1t and ·.l'aS still limping badl y early .ttt•lh~ third quarter, 21\..12 ~.,rt'hPn. howrver. th e Fal cons "Came lo lift> as f nrnn;:i dcl 'MQr suddenly "·rnt colder "'<hair ils s.vm 1n shooting lrnrn •the.~flnor. h1ttin.'l 16,6 pe rce nt ·af field goal tnes 1hal IX'rlod. That. and San1a An a ~'titrilcy ·s classy Jim l\cyes. .-t:!Ombincd lo turn about the .::001nplex ion of hos!il1tie:i1 and Corona del 1'1ar ~uddenly •f•und its s eem i n g I y in- <Olll:r rnountable lead in jeopardy MP :being overµken .,..,~it.h Keyes hilling from everywhere and canning free •throw!! with unyielding ac- curacy. the visitors closed the bulge to 4D-38 with 57 seconds left in I.he game. Cor:ona de/ Ma r had l he ball but W8S' under a pressure def11~ne which eventually <it1gsby. He made his ~ gratis shot after being u/ed with 22 seconds to go + Pie winners had breath-,..m. µey made a play to Keyes d he scored with two conds showing on the C'lock, t it wasn 't enough. Actually appeared to have been hit a Corona defender on the ot bu! no foul was ~alled . . ' ' .. . ' • .. " " Huntington, V ikes, Newport Li~ns Log Sunset Triumphs Oranae Coot 1re1 .... 1re11Uon1 enjoyed an abun- dant 1mount of • u c c e • • Wednuday nlaht ln 1 nurry of Sunset Le1gue basketbtill openers. Coach Elmer Combs' Hun· tington Be1ch Oller1 traveled to Loara whe~ tbty hung I 99-55 bereavement en the host Saxons lo highlight Sunset 1ctivitjes. In other loop lid lifters, pre· season title favorite Marina eased past the visiting Western Pioneers, 11 • 4 3 : Newport Harbor's Ta r 1 st1yed at home to but the Anaheim ColonisU:. 70-M ; and Westminster stopped host S.n- ta Ana, 45-43, The rapid transit OU City crew wenl at • breakneck pace in swallowing up in- experienced Sunset n c v i c e Laara a.! Combs yanked hi! starting five with 3:31 left in the first hall ind Hun· tington up by 47-li. Huntington, which. h o s t 11 Western Friday night, 1aw 111 of ii.! starters hit in double figures with junior celiter Steve Brooks canning SS and p1cln1 the squad to a blazing ea.a percenlqe (3.1 of '8) from the noor. Oiler mates Wes Thomas (ll), J~m Worthy ill), Garth Wise {II) and Tom Crunk (101 followed in order behind Brooks. Newport h.ad little. If any trouble subduing an Anaheim team Which l!! picked to finish in the Sunset's lower climes. The Tars of first year coach Dale Hagey broke quickly to 11 20-10 first quarter edge and were never headed. BespecLBcled guard Taras Young, who ended up with. a game high of 24 point.<1, accounted for 10 of those markers in the .initial st.anza. John K azm er t l3 ). sophomore Jim Swick t 12J and center Bill Jones (10 ) all join- ed in double figures for the Tars while tht-6-5 Jones also yanked down 12 rebounds. Jones appeared in his first game since suffering a stress fracture ln his ankle a month ago. Next on tap for the Sailors is an I o'clock contest Friday night at Westminster. Swedish Olympian Lives, Trains in HB By PmL ROSS and I've been swimming since 01 "'" 0111Y 1'11e1 11111 a very young age." l l"s approximately 565 mile!! Larsen didn't pick up any from the Baltic seaport t1f Malmo, Sweden to lhe budding gold, silver or b r n n z e Bavarian m e t r 0 p 0 11 s 9r hardware at Me:11:ico City in Munich in southern Germany. '68 but he did manage 10th Co~~· ~0re! c~~~f~~nlora,~~~ r.'~~~~~~hesfr~~s\~~e 400raac~~ and was a member o f d istance wlll be most 1 im· Sweden'• eighth place quartet portant one in his life when in the 80()..meter freestyle the Olympic Games come t• relay. Munich In August of 11172. The subject at hand con-"The middle d i ~ta n c e cerns a young Swede named freestyle and medley races Gunnar Larsen. who is cur· are my favorites." Larsen Marina's ea!)' wln "u lrli· gered by a ~point outburst in lht fina l period to bury West.crn 's hopes for an upsel. The c lassy Vikinis of cnacn J im Stephens iol balanced ef· forts in the rebounding depart· ment with Ron Rewe l d t leading with eight. Three others -Kipp Baird. Bruce Miller and Bill MG uire -had five apiece. Baird led the Vikes ' scoring column wit h 19 on seven field goa ls &nd five gratis shots while Rewoldl and Miller had 10 apiece. The defending champion Westminster Lion~ m1de it a clean sweep of non-area Sunset entries. getting an unexpectedly hard time from ~See Area. Pare !IJ HUftll"f! ... Ito<~ " • W>• C•un~ Wotthv l!lroo~• Thcm11 o,., ..... Whllll•ld w.1~1r 1!1111 M1<1e!N '"' II •I t• J j 1, f~•I• JMn'IO" "-H.....tord Hu"'!"''' 0..U9'ill Harv•V Ml>f•- ·~~ Ml~ltlll $C1'tKe,.,_I TC111!1 ' ' • i 1 I~ ' 1 11 ' ' t I JJ 0 l 11 ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' , . . ' " ' . ' D Z ff LNrl (JJI " ' , ' ' . ' . • • ' ' ' . • • ' . • • . ' " " ,, ,, , . ' ' ' " • • ' ' . , , . ' . ' " ' ' " ll I-• .... ONrt.'1 Hu.,!. BtlCh ll ff ll lc.r1 1 I' 11 D•WIO" .. ..., . ...,, B•vte1• t.1,.,.11(><'1 llQVI> "'""' G1•roll , .. ,.11 To!1l1 ft " llol I• 1 I l I 4 I 1 U I 4 1 11 J I J It o a J o I 0 l a e o 1 e I I J J 0 0 1 II' lll1l'IM pj,_,, 1ot 1•bor C?'lll G•nletl YGUnt 1(1rmu Swick Jon•• Clln• MclC:l""'v l-lolt Scnn1l11t• AOI• 11111""""1!' Tolol• 1cor1 'v 0111rt1n It H •I I• 1 l l J I I I 1f • J J 1] l ~ J 17 I l S HI 0 0 1 0 a o 1 & 1 1 0 , 0 l I ) o o 1 e 0 0 1 0 ll !1 1610 ,1.....,~,lm 10 11 11 \._~ N_..t H1rbof :HI 1'(I 11 !~10 There wer'e a number ril y plays-one being Sc:ott meron 's bt1ltseye from the p of the key for Corona ith &ne .second left in the If. EAGLE SANDWICHED -111ark Jlarrnon (left ) and John Fisher of Edisofl' seem to be treating Estancia's Gary Org1JI like a piece of lunch meat as the Chargers' :-Olike Arus (2.i ) watches. I-lost Edison dropped lr\'ine League opener to the fei sty Eagles. rently living with the C. confides. adding, "lhe pool in Edward Hardy family ef Hun· Mexico Cily and the one in tington Beach while attending Barcelona, Spain are the best classes at Cal State (Long ones l've competed in.'' 81l•d ill•Wfllei 11!>1101" Mc Gui" r~v,.,, WAttont t Sm•!~ Mill•• 31...a• .. llun e•aO"'•~l It II 11 t1 1 J J \t 4 1 ) 10 l 0 I 6 1 l 0 J I 0 l I 0 l 1 , 0 0 ' 0 i , 1 to 0 0 1 I 1 a 1 I 0 1 " l n11u 11 Sant11 Ana Valley had t\.\·o asters in 1he third a~-one y,·hen a player e•a cripple. the other being t a traveling violation d a bucket. ey never led and y,·as in scoring by Keye!' ""· Grigsby was high for the sis with 17. The Falcons sho! 43.3 per- n! while lht Sea Kinis can-~.6 ~rce nt of U1eir field al tries l~\D~ '" '"" " t• .. , "" "'~'Oft 010•1 G•••"• Gtl Mtr \"' ' ,, ... ,. I ~ ~ II l ' ' l ' ' . 0 ~ 1 0 l ~ J : I I I Tl OI s ~ ~111,. 1401 1-67 "1i11 or Mesa Coach Err.II Nf'r me ·~ rapid ans1t 0-1s1a ~1ts.:i i'o1uMan11~ d to thr ron1p nf Ill<' n1gl1t opening round hn~1 1 l111r~ in e l r\'in~ lA'aJ::UI'! with a l l-fi7 ~kelball triumph n r r r siting ~lagnolia. The Jos1nR Scn!1n<'I~ l<'d nnh· cl' -bri('fl_v 1n the third JC Hoo11 Standings SOUfHllllH CAL COHFl!llEHCe W L l'F PA Co<lldt" W111 illlo H&r>OO l A H••OO• L.o\ SO)U•~wo>P (YPl'UI L.o\CC o rs 11 ' ' 0 0 ~ " 0 ,.. 51 " 0 " • • • I 11 IJ E1•t LA ' n • 1 H o.4 w"'"••d1 v·1 ill1kllh O:.olo•n W~~· IS, Cvo,.n 11 illoo Hondo !II';. L.ACC 11 LA M1•t111• ""'· E••I L,. SS ~•ldlY't Gl m•• Q ,, '"''"'o 1• Gola.., we.1 l Af( ol Cvoreu l.t .... ~!~w•o! •' E••t LA ( ..... W L "' • " v ". "'"" ( ,. ' f•''"~""' ·-·~' .. .,. "• -~·· a ••• ,.,. < .. n •••OO•(! nn ' " ' " • • ' " " " •• " " • Wlldft•ldt"'' l!frnl" 0:.•P""'°~I JO. ,..,al•l>telr. 5' (~•''•• "· Son 81tnt •d"'a nl 'uurd1''' 0 1rT111 S •~a••l>•rW •' illlv•"l(!t "1u'~"'"''"'~ ti (~tlfev r "'" •' """ e"""'"'roo C.r""'"'""' ol P•lom&r SOUTH COAST CONFEllENCE .. • " " • .. " " " ( " . ""' W L P~ "" . " .. " n••no• (0•11 \•" o·~~o ~." 0<"00 ,.,,.~. ' ' • • • • 0 " . .. • 0 ' .. ' " ' n " • " .. .. rind -a.~ ~lr~a·~ prr~~ Welf"••d•¥'1 '''"' rc!"d 2.1 turnn\'rrs tn kn(l('k c~""·" n . !o•n O·~ ,.. ;:.gnolia rechnf.! F .. 1: •• 1,,... u. sa~ 01~" Mt•• 11 Doug ~·larl..ean and ,Jon ~""'• ""• !•· Ml se" AMonoo 11 archiorlatti if'd 1h<' halanri•cl sa1urd•v·1 G•m•• uslang offrnse with IR :1ncl F""~"o" •• O•enae c .... ,, po ints "h1lc malr~ Chuck M• S•" """''"0 •• <e,,1•0• S1n11 .o\h$ 11 Sen OoH O M•11 idges and Tnm Sarnp~nn S•n 0,~;o, bv~ ipped in 12 and lfl ~ln~t ------- ,_.1archiorlat1i ·~ lall1r~ "·ere result of hi~ hall ha~·kin$: d suh~equent layup~. Dan Reed was a key r i~u re r Neeme's troops. hauling Beach). Offering a diplomatic tip nf Larsen didn't just come le the hat to hi~ adopted home Southern California as an here he further adds, '"Bel- t1rdinary sludent y,·ith a whim moQ.t Plaza (Long Beach"!i last February. Olympic-sized pool ) is also one But he was encouraged to of the best p60\s." enro ll al the Long Beach in· Larsen's two elder sisters stitution by 11nother Hun· competed for Sweden in the tington Beach resident. Don 1956 Games at Melbourne and Gambril. swimming co11ch for at the ·so Olympics in Rom!", the 49ers. bolh as swimmers of course. By JOHN CASS on both one-and-flne c.:hari !.v rnan. D;ive r..1rih~. Gambril was working in hi!!: In fa ct. the entire Larsen 01 1~1 0111~ 1'1101 s11n trlcs. A tip·in by Edison 's Each te;im rea!ured a 1.2.2 sidelight job as mentor of lhe brood is !lated to make the G"Y Or"il l and Craig Ha ys Mark Harmon at the final zone defense with Estancia's PhilLips 66 swim team when all-day trip ivla ferry and ' · r 1 he first met L.arsen. a partici· automobile ) from Malmo to of Est.ant;, each hit a pair buzzer v.·as iust a maltC'r o pan ln counteract a :11.'t-inch l · the Swedish Olympic Munich in the summer of '72 of charity losses in the fina l conjecture. h<'ff.!h1 di sadvantage ap-pan in 1 1 · swimmin' •ggcegalion at and young Gunnar c aims he 26 seconds Wednesday night :'\either team got further raren1 Y turning out sue· ca•'t w•.>l. f 11 t.1exico City in 1968. .. to prrserve a 47-46 victory l:l\\'ay than five point.~ frnn1 ccss u y. Strong supporters of the '"I mean, that 's my goal for the Eagles in an Irvine the othrr v.·ilh Edison on the E111nd• 1u1 11. 1· _ lo have m.v famil.v see L b k tb 11 I d t · t 21 Jf; in ,, 11 o• 1• Phi 1ps 66 aqua 1ci; program eague as e a o Pen er ong en w1ce a · •ho..,81 1 • 1 • .;ind owners of a backyard me competing in the. Olym· ag;iinsl the host E di son the scl·ond quarter and 40-35 rJ·Q111 1 1 l n . ., h · h · d · d Moo•t ~ g 1f pool. !he Ha rdy!!'. were happy pie~. C argers. int e thi r penn · ~~~':' , 1 , 1 to provide Gunnar y,•ith 3 1em-He concludes. '"if everything Estancia venlures lo Costa The l'.:agles' biggc~I :o:pr<"ad 10'111 i ai. ... ~.._1 11 u ' '1 porary home-away-from-home goes well in '72. then I guess ~\esa fnr its next matC'h Fri -.,.,,as 40-39 ""'ilh ~·OJ lcfl in 11 11 •1 1• \\'ht" he enrolled 11t CSLB. I'll retire from swimminR: and 11 h W••n~• I I 1 • " day night while l::d1son .,., , l e contci;L t<••mo~ ~ o 1 10 As Larsen put.s ii. "l like finish studying ta become a be ho~llng anothl'r \Vednesday Acluall\', the rl'al Jll:ltrhup ~~~~(><'! 11 ~ ~ ; It in California and J get a coach." . C d 1 M b '11 l r I hcl "'u' •, ', ,' ", ~inner -orona e ar \l'as a a c o "1 .~ v.crn 5.,.11~ chance to relax by the As onP can see. 565 miles -1n se.:1rch of the Ch:i r~ers a pair of the c:ounty·~ hnghtrst ~1'lf.k ~ 1 ~ t backyard pool. can m11ke quite a bit of dif- 1n1fial loop y,•jn on the same yot1ng cage n1r11tors 10'"11 ,, •• , b• o .... ,.~! 1 11 ~ "We also have a ponl at rerence in some people's egos Estancia Gets by Edison In Circuit Opener, 47-46 Totol• "''"'"''" Noul ... r Don" LOii•• .o\co•tl Emdl Pon• Jvr•lr Gulll•n !lrowtr St•O• To•oi, It 11 11 I• a J J 1 l 0 1 ' ' ) J !• J 0 1 ~ 0 I t 1 . . , ' 0 • ' , ' . . , . . ' n o i o 1Jll 1tU Scort '' Ou1rtt•• IJ ~ 1l )~l 10 11 10 n• .... n w .. 1 ... 1~•11" !4JI M•l1e<'ht or•,..,., l•Mtl! ~out~w•c~ l!ll•~•l•y JMn•Qn Mo< row MeM1<>1~ rott io ,, " •' ,. I e 1 IQ ' • ' ' " ' . ' . . ' . ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' . I ti l j J111!1 An• !IJ) .. ,,,,.~ Mt•<! 1'•11t1 W<!CI<~~ ~ 10·~· 11 .... , "•rrf ll l("•oo..- Ta••I\ ..... b• .,.,,1m.01•., l•nl• An• ''""" • • ' , ' ' , • ' ' , ' • ' . • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' . . ' I• H 10 ll Ou1r1..,., ' t It J 11 11 11 -•l ·~" evening. Rookie Eagle conth ('arr £•1•0<•• 10 B 10 '1-•1 my pa•e•ts' home in Sweden -especia lly Gunnar Larsen"!!'.. d d h d E<"'"~~ n u 1a ,_,. , " \\'ilh coa ch Gary Carr's an Edison's sccon year. ea 1 f_;~::::.--:;;~~~---~===========::::::::::::::::::~~~=~-~~~~~~:::-1 f.aglcs on top by a precarious -_.,_,.,,,0-,.---:;;-,,...., II 4:1-42 rd~e an~ Zli seconds to ~ I ~'.> --. - 11:0 1n the :iffa1r. Org1ll .bro~c NOW THRU ... .. bc1ween the Chargers Bill lft ~ ~.1111 .... 11-111.- Thomson and Mike Smith for ANAIU ccwVooa COOIR ;1 <:lral 11[ "" ;1H!'n1plcd in-IG S ....,5 bounds pass. '9 9 ~ HO WV The tic:idy S-1 I ~l'tllnr Jet-• fOR. TH~1=1Ll f .. t'A~\ lrrn1an \1';.1 ~ 1nln1ecl1atc!y foul -~·~"':..'.""'-"'=""'=::':'::: !'d by Thnmson and proceeded 1'tllE'1ElrAll•EllTllm 10 ennvcrt both ends of a ".~~~.~ !!...~ •r!u ~ L.'_ nl.J:;.il'f I It Hf}I' ; onc-and·nne gratis ~ituatinn lo .,.,•;;.._ pump J::stanci:i's margin lo 45--42. /\ dn\·1ni:? lay-in hy Bob \Vn!!ht broui;:ht ~:d ison back lo 45-44 \l'ilh nnly I~ seC"onds rema1n1ng and liay~ was cli p· ped by 1he ChArgers' Sm1th six seconds later. Baseball Shoes · 9.95 to 21.95 Soccer Shoes -8.95 · 14.95 Track Shoes -10.95 to 24.95 Tennis Shoes · 7.95 to 15.95 Basketball Shoes 8.95 -11.95 -18.95 Workout Shoes -12.95 Champion Handball Gloves 3.95. 4.50 . 5.95 . 6.50 Table Tennis Paddles 95c to 7.95 Hays. Estancia·s f>-S junior playmakcr, also made good Paddle Ball Rackets 6.95 & 7.95 Paddle Tennis Paddles 2.50 to 10.95 10 rebounds in lhc lln81 riod after ~pelling Al ,..loore. ho had fouled out Sampwn had I 1 rchound:i; d MacLe.en hit thrre field als In the vital four1h TlC'rlod keep the Sentinels off ba!- seventy-one for everyone SunJ~TRAVEL FILM FESTIVAL Davis H~point Racket Strung Nylon -16.95 Davis Coronet Racket Strung Nylon -14.95 Dunlop Fort Racket Strung Nylon 19.95 Tennis Dresses -10.00 to 26.95 Mens Tennis Shorts -5.95 to 12.95 Mens Tennis Shirts 4.95 to 8.95 Tennis Hats & Visors The P.tustana:s hil 21\ or M om the field, good for 43.8 rcent. c..Tt Mtu 1'11 ICDlo '' Ou1r1on ,, I! ,, •• I 1 1 Jl I 1 0 I ' 1 J I• J 0 j • • • J ' ' 0 ' ' l 1 J 7 )71!11•1 ....... !IA-.,, 11 ,, 1&-4"1 M!lvnollt 1' 11 " 1'-'' Kramer Autograim Racket Strung Nylon 19.95 Wilson T200 Steel Racket Stru~ Nylon 32.95 PennsylYania Xtra Duty Tennis eans -Doz. 7.50 Bikes -Tires -Tubes Accessories OPEN 9 TO 6 CLOSED SUNDAYS White Stag Wannup Suits 12.95 & 19.95 Swat Sox 59c -79c · 95c -1.25 • 1.50 BaslletbaHs -Backboards -Goals VoOey BaHs Soccer Balls Playtround Balls F oatballs -Basebafts -SDftbaOs 518 CENTER ST. 646-1919 • Start Your Engines! by Deke Hou/gate nn. •iWfWAfli QI ,,I Some gu ys drive a race car fo r years and nothing unusual Pver happens lo then1. They should hang around Ron (;rablr. Like 196~ at Ta!laciega, Ala . Crable contracted to rlrive a J a\1elin ln lhe co rnp;ict i;edan Gran1t American race that was the firs! ('1Jn1pe t1!1ve evenl ever hf'lrl on lhe super speerlv,.ay. •·1 artu;.illy lc>d 3;HJ of the 400 rn1les.'' Crable said, "but e lio11! 200 mill's 1010 lhe race sorne car got into the wall anrl 11r.allered parts on the lrack. I drove over something and had a blowout. "So 1 h11r1 10 ni;1ke a pil .~top. /'>nw. v.·e ~·ere averaging 177 1111lcs an bour on the high banked track. I had never run so fast Defore fir brrn on a track like lhal , and ii takes sonic get- ting usc11 to 1hc ~peed. "[ 1\a~nl aware lhal T wa:" cominJt into the pit s a t 150 n1i lrs an hour. \\'hl'n I tried to :"top at· my p11, I couldn 't. So I had to n1ake ano!her lap and come in again. "This co!<t n1e :-.'lme lime. and I v.·anted lo _i.:rl in and out as fast as I could S() as I was coming into the pits again [ leaned my h£';u1 out the window and veiled !.i1·e '"\\'ell. v•hti! [ d1dn"t knO\v w;:is tha! in Al;:iba rna \111.• wnrri 1.~ !ahr, nn1 lirr, an1l bl'fo re r t•ould do anything the officials had C"(l\'Crc<t the inside of my car with foam . They thought l \\'as yelling fire . •·r lrie<I tn lr l them know I \Yasn'I on fire. that I wanled a ti re rhangc. and vclled tire again. So they hJt me again v.·ilh the fire ext1ngl1ishrr again. for the rest of the race I was , s•1·unming in foam." Lalcr in thf' rllCf' Grablt.'s C'ar brokf' 8 valvr, puttinl! him nut, but lhat wasn't lht: v.·orst disaster of tht: v.·eekend fflf" the l\lountain Vie"·· Ca l., road racing specialist making hi.~ first 1".ASCAH appearanct . "That wa s the v.·eekend of the historic Proressional Ori\·trs Assn. bo)'<'Oll," Grable f"xplainrd. "All wttk T had 5ort of 5lood by II) find out H I nli,l!hl J:l!I asked to drive in the 500, in "ase the litar drh·ers v.·rnt through with tbt strike lbty wert threal- nin,e:. ""'ell , It v.·as Saturday ni~ht. M~· ra<'f' wa~ O\'er. and "'t "·r.re ha\•ing dinner hark at th t mott:I. Word cante baek fr nm the b"11clt: that the dispulf' had been uttled , and I fi~ed thtrE> "'as nn reason for mr lo slick around. Sn I caught the ne>:t . pl ant. back 111 Ca lifornia. "Of c11urse, they t'ame looki n,e: for drh•trs thr ntxt da~·. I . already had a ride "·aitin,e: for me. It was thr car that Ri ch- , ard Brickhouse drove to v.·in the race," (,;1·nbl e Drit·e~ ni Rit0 f"rsJde Th is timr !as1 yea r Grable \1'as Down Un der cnmpet1n,i:: in lhe Ta sman SC'r 1cs of road races. He decided In ~lay hon1e thi:i; ', 11•intrr and lnok for opportun ities In ract here tha1 were rlenir.d to him in 1!170. Cr;ible believe:r;, "because I via~ on th<' n1hrr side of lhe wrirld, and while I v.·as gone everybody for,e:ot about me " 1-fis fir s1 appearance v.•i ll be in lhe Riversidr 500 NASCAR (;rand Nat ional. driving a "iO Torino. Tru.~t Grable to find not ;ust any rirle hu1 the car hr did . I! 1s owned by Del S1n11 h, ;i businessman who lease.~ pnrtahl1> sanitary f11c11i11es known familiarly as Owls 11nd Anoi('s. Smith 1s known in 1he racing business. somev.·hat endearingly, as the OuthouS(' King . But while Grable i:" ml returning to !'ew Zealand and Au:"- lralia for the international racing series, he"ll ne ver forge1 1he 1!170 experience. "We had just f1nisherl ;i ra<:E> at Jnverc11 rgi1. Aust ralia, which • 1s farthest south cit.v In 1he "'orlrl." Grable sairl "\\'e had some !lmE' before the n<'xt race and 1houghr "'e v.•ould tin some s1ght- ~ec1n,i: on our v.·ay nt1rth. llt•ntl S11dde r1ly f)ele rit•r·nf es "SQ we put the rare car on thr lrailt r. got 11 mad map and sl;irted nut. Thr m11p sho"·ed \\"! had abou t 5oo miles to go, but it was a major hlghwa~·- ''\\'h11t wt should ha\"t realized \\"a~ that II major highwll.\' In Au stralia means ~nmelhinx different than it d~s al h<tmf. For a few miles it was 8 nice wide road, but ii soon dtleriorate<l so hadly there wasn"t e\'en a pl11ce R'herr wr could turn around 1tnd ,e:o back. "Evrry sn many milr~ \\"<' would 1·nme tn 11 hridgE>, and !hr hridi;:r s got na r.ro"·r r and narrnwtr. It v.·as about 1(1 n'clock and pit ch black. and I was drh'in.I[ \\'hen v•t nicked the guardrail nn -(lne nr the hrid.l[e~ with 1t lrRiler v.ht.tl. Sn \\'e stoppeil, got out nu r rlashlii:hts and ~·ent to tal!r a look 111 thr damage. "\Vt v.·t>rr slandinll: alone In lht> dark , tbrre of us, \\'hen v.•t )onkl'd up 11nd sa"' thrm. \\'e "·rre ~urroundt>d by natil·c~. rin,e:s in lhrir nnsr~ and r1•ervthin,e:. "\'nv.", v.r didn't know if v.·r "·ett bl'in11: ri bhtd or nnl, hut tht Au~tralian~ had !old u.~ to tw n·are nf Abnrigints in the hnnn-rlnck~. that thry slill prarlirt l"annibali.~m in trmnt e arell~ nr thr rnuntr1. Sn naturally v.t "·r rt ,.carf'rl nut nf nu r "·it,. \\"t ran for tht rah or 1he trut'k And locked oursf'll'tli in unt il morn- ·inJ:. "~rxl r\av wr ran nu1 nf RRS, and nf (·our~t th erl' arr nn .iza~ 51alinn~. ·Lurkily. ;:i lrur k came hy and gavr u~ somt ,l!il' -Or I don 't know wha1 might he vr heppt.ned to u ~." A r1111l1er Col11rf11l C l1n111plo11 , &lbby Isaac is !he J;:itc st in a !nng li ne ?f colorful NASC1\l1 :Grand Na\ionri! stock rar charnpinns. a cunous brrerl who art' ~omehow rare ly aHccled by the fa me lhe.ir victories ha1·e ·brou.1?ht them . · Isaac won a bunch of money in 1970 aloog wi1h 11 races and :lhe driving championship. but ii hasn"t made many changes in his life. he reckons. "It mc<1ns qui1e a hit of money." Isaac sa i~ nf thl' tillr he \..•nn in f1rrce ri1•;ilry among himself, Bobby Alhson and James :11vltnn. "but I v.·on't gt>I ii tlhe point fund bonus\ till F'ebruar.v. ; · "No. [ rion'I see how I will get a lot of ITlllnt'y from '.e ndor!'emenL~. I don't know anybody "'ho makes 11 tot of TnlllleY :thi1t way. No. I don"t ,!!e l any more fan mail as a rrsult. : "I went af!er the championship, I guess. because I just v.·anted :to be champion . The man who owns my car v.·anted the champ- l ons hip. and sn we decided to go after it ·• This season will be rlifferent for the Nev.·ton. N C., rlri 1·er :W hn grev.· up in the .sport Almost fendt:r to fender with former :NASCA R champ D111·1d Pearson. • "It ](V'lks like this year I'll probably pick the racei; T wa nt ~n ·r un ." Isaac said. "I am only going to drive stock cars. he- :Cause th;it. is th!'. only kind of raci ng !hat interesL'\ me. My only :go;il !n rac111g I~ lo win as many races 11s anybody eli;e. 1·11 ju:"t :.:o nut ;inrl rlo the be:"l I ca n.,. ; Isaac will rlrive a '70 Charger in lhe Ri verside 500 th is ~unday. Despite la ck of success on NASCAR"s only road course , )le believes "1 know my way around Riverside by now. I think ' can win ." Wha l Isaa c likes m9sl about competing in the Wesl., howeve r, js the opportunity it gives him lo gee a Jot of the country. AREA QUARTET WI NS .. (Contlnutd from P11e %.II lowly Santa Ana . Westminster's 6-8 senior cenler Eric Southwick hit on 11 12-foot Jump shot jus t ou lsi de lhe key .,.,.·ith six r;econds left in the conlesl to provide !he winners with their final manz:in Santa Ana had rorne lntn the game with the idea of s\oy,·ing down fasl-breaking We.111tminster with delibera te hall cnntrol tactics and the Sainl'I did manage to tie the score before South.,.,·ick hit the winning fi"eld goal. Southwick (14) and junior Terry Meisenhe imer (JO ) were 1he only Lions scoring in twin digi ts . • JACK ROBERTSON -FAN SINCE 1920s Area Pre1> Basl{etlJa1! Re s tilt s r rt1km•n l<unl,"J!~n IOl (It) l(~""•n• (n"""•' •I f 11 J~~~• C••r•ll1 11' F 11 (•"'° K!'f'!IJ." ti•I C I?' \Vn,rnn>' l>•nkon '' ;, !" l"m••"' "~"" lrl (; 111 ltrF•'"" ~'"""" '"~' H"nho~'"" N't111 •· O••moon • ~O•'"""~' ~ ""''' ~. ~"""""' To" I l(nr1•~<1nv 1 "•llHmp f•un11.,o•o<> '7, ~ """'''" o, Hun!lnolon US) (nnh•••\ 111 C••·•llo 1• (11 1 rl Voll•V '" ... u .• 1n r ""I '"'"'~ O:••lnn ltl ( '. v ........ . "'"''"" r. f' MAI>"• 11•~• I 1 (, ' '' I ~(•r•n~ "'"° ,. ..... ,,.,,,,,.. ,• • • 1 ""'"'"'" Fn.r•"''" V•"•• '' "U"' """'"" 10 l<~tlhnO!O• !Ill !7<1 v ....... . Cnt11••• •• 11 i: (••·~"· jt\ K••lnn n· l>on>•n I 6 r. • 1 C.•' •a•n• Lil >'V"'"" ' ""'"" " , ....... ,. R~,,.. 1•1 (. 1• O••l ~'"""" •!Ill< •nn• ""'"'"'" "!'"'""''"" 11, V"•"<" I• lotu"' e11c11 !HI OJI eo!Jo Gron~~ !(."""'~•<" l''' r •11• ( .• ,., A•'n' Ill F !"Sit""'"' lll·•"nn .M ( 1,1 I(·••' ,.,.,,,. 1n1 .-. "' r '""""'"" A>•"nn 111 o;; 111 """'"' ~"'""" '"n' ~•nu•M 8•~'"-Q"'"~ • Anr.• C.r&na• ><•" 1. foUl'T'&~ I H•lf!""' ~•oun• fle•<I> !'. Bnh• C.•1na• II, JUf!oOf VIC<dY ,,, .. 1,. O•' 1l1I 1•11 Std~>fbt•~ l+ornld P l ' ~ l.'u• ""' , I 11 r \"'""'/!lo t K, •• '" r. 11 ....... "l (. S<o••no '""' M•'•r ... ,.. 1. ~·· .. ~·· ! "' l',11n •"'" I " HnrO"• •J• """·• ! I"' f.•• · • 1•1 l o'e' {1« rlt1••I 1, ~•a~l•n•'~ ( U""" ' Son (If"""'' IOI !:Ill \loll o l'l•W \ ....... .., (Ill ,. •1ou llOI r ._ •• ~. " r f n•n•n.•n '1 r. 10. ;, ..... ' " " • \ • t ' ' ' ........ '? ... , \' ... 0~"'1''>0 111 r. I• t ••·~ ~'"''"~ ...... ~.. . ........ ''• 1 "'""'" 1 n .n~•m l ·1•'"'"" •· ( • .,., .. ,~.. \I • ,.,., ~· I.I df~ • ,,. •i ........ """''"'' \•n (""""I' 1' \. • r.,. ·~ IJ"'"'"'" !Ill !IOI AmbOU•dot 11.1 ....... ,, 'Ill ,. 1' ' ,,~·· (.1 ... 1•1 ~,1,.,,., Ill W•"""~··• "l I'"'""'""' '" p., "'"'"'" 111> ><••""''"" r. l 'i !\'•"""" (, '"' ..... <'"''"" ''J"'' l••,~•-.. •v-l•~••'c •· 11,d<!lr 0. llu<' II l fl•"'""" Un••or'·''V 10 Amf\Ot'•<ln' ,. Oron,1 1u i lH I M'Sll~n V.olo lll•n•I IXll r Ill II''"""" llol<!•"•"I I 1 '\JlO<~'~ S!•mM>• I?• r (Ill No•m•nd l~ We•dn>•" 11 t• 111 (•""'' •n N•um•" U l c,. 1n1 Mn!"ll Sondna !ub< M•n•nn y,,,., w,i~t~ '"" l). MU•<I.,, '· 0••~0~ l>oul•nn ), S!•uc~ ' He llllm e. M 1n •C>r'I V1e<n ;l!, 0•8not "· Prep Cage Standings lltVINI! ("'ono d•I Mor (!>\to Me'O l'Oonclo lM A10..iHn1 Eal1"" f ........ i .. v ..... "'•""""• SI\ Vol'•• LE.t.GUE . ' ' . ' . ' . • • . ' • • • WffMldtV'I Seer•• ., " " " • .. ,, " • Co<'• M•'" 11. l,.•annl•o 11 .. • "I " ,, " ., " " Cn•nno n11 M•• •'· ~· \'oil•• II'! lo• Alt ...,l+a1 -Id, Fo...Mol~ V&llty ~ Etronclt ti. Enl\04\ .. '•ldO Y'I c;,1mt1 (11<.,..t dtl M•r •I E0111Jo11 E1•o"Clt 11 Co.•o MoJ• r.,,,. .. ,,1., vo•ltv 11 Mo-II• s.o, V•ll!'v ol to• ,l.laml!ot SUNSET !<~"!Intl"" ll•Mll Mt••ne NfWl>(!<I lle•bof w "tmlnoltr """"""'"" l o•or• w,,1.,.., s .......... . ll!AG\JE . ' ' . ' . ' . ' . . ' . ' • • " " ., ~ ,. " • WHllftdlV'I sc .. t l "'•mllnt1Dn 111ocn "· Lil"'' .U Motlno 11, Wf.O!Orn •l No .. ..,..1 10, .O,""°l\tlm S6 W"'"'l"'1:or •~. St<>•• A ~o 11 F•ldov'I Ot ,,..I Wn ••rn ot ""Mln••nft l!••t., l•n•t Ano o! M~lno N"""1111r! Ht•M• •' wu1m1ni!t• L.,.•t 1! '°'"'~"' " • " ., " .. ., I Little Lakers Mesa Y oiingster . Uses Wilt's Bands R.1· HO'\ E\'.\\S 01 !he Otol• Polol S"ll Snn1rt1n11'.~ \lie l.;i k rr~· \\'Ill Ch;1n1b1·rla1n ;1ppc11rs to h'." a rn;ig1,·1;-in ;11111 ~·n r1thrr Ol'- c·;1~1orls IH' :-<'f"ll11Tl!;I\' h11rdrr~ on 1lir hrun "' 11v·d1ol"r11y. Ho11P\t'r, lhr r•· n1u~1 h" l'tln1e fnrn1 n{ !h" 01 •·ull al- !;1t·hr11 \n 1h1• l.1n1•)U!' '''llnll' rl;i st1c11ed h;i ud" 11 h1l·h !hf' R1~ f)ipp1•r >11•,1rs • n hnlh 1·.r1~ts 1l11n ng :'\:1!1nn:il Hasket- b:i ll Assnc1;:itinn cn1nbat Fnr, 11111r 1ro1r-nld t " hr i ~ Hal!arrl ;i n;rrnlwr nf ;i lf"illll knn11n :il~n ;+:-: !hr l.;ikcr.' 111 111,. Jlartxir Arra nn1 ~ C!11h l1·ag11r 111 Co.,1;1 \lc ... ;1, CIUI ;1111''' lu :-iJ1·h 111:1~1!. l.111lr l"lir 1s (onll' 4 I ,1nrf .;:, r<~1111d~1 :H·q111rf'rl ;1 pair nf \\'ill's nld 11'!"1 .. 1h.1nd .. fron1 :11·11u<.t11>1110 IP1I<. ;1 ~ :i hallll<11' f1)r 1hr prn 1cr~11\n of 1hc l,::1k1"r:;; Thr n1nr 1 rar-nld fl.1~11 1l11n- nrd !!1"111 fu r lilt• lir~1 t1n1r rl'•· .. 111!_1 1n .. h•'\!< ("lun 1011· tr~! :i~.1111s! 1h•· pn•11nu<.l_11 unhra1rn (;Jnlw1rn11r'!'.~. il1gl_1· atCtl r<l le shn!s fr(im as f;ir ~111·11~1 ;-is 20 anrl 2.1 fC'c t. Al!houj!h it ll'Ou ld oh1·iousty s1•1'nt sC1n1rwhat h£'yon1! the ri•:d1n ur po!\.~Jh!IJI~· ~\\'ill is l1.i1 f11f'I 1:tl1P r ~nd 11•r1ghs 23.i riiu1uh n1ore th:in ("hnsl, 1hr 1'1in1 111 t:(\ld h<lnd.~ fit <1r•nn11t ~·011n,i:: Ball;i rd "s v.•rists Jllq as <·nrn lort;ihlv as thl'v 11011lrt no the r non rlOILs v.·risis of thf' Lus Angrles L"t'nrl'r, !"hri!\' n1othrr s;-iys. "the h:ind.~ are knirt crl in s11ch a 11•;1\ 1h;it th<'.1•'11 fit perfectly frnn1 thf' 11·n sl up to any p<1rl tlf Liie :irn1, · \\"h1•n Chris g11l th<'m in 1t1r rna1f frnni hi.~ cousin he J11~t sl1pp1'11 1hem on and thl'v flt JllSl r1 gh! " - Tl1r 11n1nrd1atc ~n;il of lht> Hall:1rd l;id 1s 1o latch onto 1h1• Fon1111 (;0111 ht1n1ts worn ill"•llH1d ,)('ITV \\'('st's V.Tist.~. 1\i1cr he •H:t'on1pl1shrs th;;it, prrli;ips ('hris will b c 1r;1nsfor1111ng h1~ 20 and 25- fr1111r rs in to 55-fnolrrs. ju.\1 llkl' the n\hrr l.akf'r who 11 £'ar:r; thf' gol1l£'n v.·n:i;tbilnds. \\ ll:it rt·sul!!°d ('hn~· a1J\rn! rof 11 ri<.th;1nd~ rl'!l1!Lrl..;1hlr ;:ilon~ \111h 1 ~p11r1 UH! thr r------------•1 11.1~ 1rur~· \"111u1p: R•1 1 1,,rd·~ t r .1 111 111;1n.1crd !n .. 1:i1 f'\'l'tl 111lh I hi· p•111 •·rf,rl J ;loh•'T r•it Irr .. 1110· t11 hp 1'n11f11~rri 11·11h lhr 11)1 11i f.1!!1"11~ IJ .1rli tll 1;1rl"ll I f<l!' a 11luil1· h;1 lJ h1·l"rl' tl11ng ~ hr"~" l•>i• .. 1· !111\\{'\('f, 1n1,fr;u! nf nrrn1ni,: Ill' In f;11or o( !ho' 'Trl11tcr<.. llo•· IP;id 11:i" (',lfllllr"rl h\/ lh r l..'!f..l·r~ ;ind thrv 11 r n t un "' rrrord an up.~rt li-1.1 11r- 1 r1r1 _ And, prnvid1ng lhf" l)ig~c~\ KIDS, 6 to 16! 6irt YOUR F i~hl"q Tac~le Bar F-lt·f·E! Friday Only SPORTS & VACATION SHOW at Aftaheim CaftYefttian Cenre• lhr·u~! 1n !Iii' 1111r~prf!('d Oaot1 Qpon 1 P.M . t1111n1ph v..15 li111r Ball;irrl, ,..,d .... · Kid• b-1 1 yn .-l l 11hn r11nnrd n1nP poi nts in lhr oftyon• ov•r !2, $1.90 !'rcnnd haH, n1any on l'lmAz-1._ ___________ ~I 10' OF SNOW AT MAMMOTH ~ MAMMOTH BUS TRIP JAN. 16 & 17 MAMMOTH MTN. INN. SCIN· IC 'RIVATf: IOOMS, '4 'II ROOM. 5'LIT Lf:YfL, 2 rr• LEVEL. $34'5 tNCtUOES LODGING I TRAN SPORTATION !IGN U' NOW DEADLINE-JAN. 11 e We"re 11ew 1qtlpped fer complete ~ & H9e rl'fl11· l1lli .... SKI MART NEWPORT BEACH 2105 w. COAST ~wv .. NlWl'ORT IEACH 642°lllS Ol'EN I~ l M • t "M MON.• 'Ill .. SAT. & SUN. 11 &.M • I ... M. OAILV PILOT ~ Oller Supporter Sinall '70) Fan for 45 Years • Deer Kill Honored by Club ForCounf)'; Orang~ County was ope M sel'en counties in the ~ .. tat• of Cahrornia showi ng a ;mall gain in deer kill during 19711 arcordin,i:r: to a report by the slate fish and gamt: depart· ment th111 week. Ry TERRY COLVILLE 01 Ille Ool+t 1'119! 1"11 At 72. Jar k Rober1.~on ls stlll one nf the staunchest !port.~ fan~ suppart1np: tht'! Huntington Beach lhgh Sl'hool Oilers. Jn fa r!, he·.~ b!'en ;irou nd so long the bo>nstrr cluh ,..;ave hin1 a plaque fnr 45 yea rs of fa ithful srrv1re -rvrn though the cluh itself 1~ only about JO yl'ars old . "rve r('ally been a f11n n1nrl' than 45 ~·ears. but I thQught J"d round off 1he nun1brr." says Jack. a rather shy ma n. Ile c;i n1.e to Hun!1nJtlnn Beach in 1921 ;ind in1n1edi11te\v bf'gan fnllo11•ing Oiler sports - "ll 11·11.~ a s n1all oil !n11·n !hen and ! l'ainf' to open a clothing s!on:-1 was a!wa\s a sports fan S(I l 11'cn1 "ru the local high sl'hool right av.·ay" "I dnn ·1 n1akr 1111 the g;1111e:" nn\v. l can·! wnbblr nut 1here so niut:h. Bllt !he st•hool h11s h;id snn1r gMd tra rn~ '' He ree;illed the 1922 track te<1n1 that 1ook lhe ~!ate litle wi!h just four men , thl'n went on to take sernnd in a nilllonal meet in fh1r::iAn "J rernember Eddie r-.l orris. r th ink he still holds lht: 100- yard dash mark of 9.S. He ran 1n the late 'JOs." And of course ht: kn ew "Cap" Sheue, who began as football l'Oach in 1925 and only retired a f<'w years ago, "In the old days the prople frorn l..os Angeles had a hard lime finding Huntington Beach -but v.·e had some good tran1s." ,:Yes it"s a diflerent 1own now.'' Jack says. '"The n l d tim ers don't come dov.·ntown so much." He slill has h i~ clothing store .. Ja ck i:" !ht type who goe s out of his 11·ay to help snn1eone -f.'ven if they wanl In buy a sh.ir!, but don·: have the money now . .lark doe sn"t like In say n1uch about his booster plaque except. "when you gel one or 1hese you really know you 've been around Hun- tington Beach. And he thinks I o d a y 's )'nungslcrs are just as acl 1ve and try jusl as hard in sports as they did in lht old dayt, "/"It bl' a fan as lo"l\g 8$ t ran wobble." The DF'G said a rinal tany of lag returns 11howe<f 3A.S~.S deer killed in 1970 as com· pared lo 48.2311 in 1969. a drop of 20 percent in the statt. The decrease was brougbt about by reduced hunter effort accnrdinp: to lhe DfG. "Hunter success -based on tag sales li!nd the re1um of buck tags -dropped from· ti Ii percent in 1969 lo §.!I percenl in 1970," a spokes~ said. A n1ajor regulatiori chanae, designed lo disperse hunlinic pressure a n d extend tM al'allable deer Ol'tr a wider segn1ent of the public, redue«t thf' number of lwCHieer arn.t and increased one ·dttr districts. Successrul hunters In a ,twbo dee r area are not permitted to hunt in a. one-deer area as in past years. Officials said a s ho r I t 'r ~eason in many par!~ of tke slate along with ear!y clorurM also contributed to the drop in the kill. CHAMPION FULL 4-PLY NYLON CORD TIRES AS LOW AS 7.lli-14 11-..11 •1510 ·1510 $ 1 .74 Fed. Ex.W< $2.01 FMi. Ex . tax. 7.n.14. 7.71-ll 11-..n •151s .t 2.14 or •2.15, Fe-1 •"(. 1eic . l.~Mw I.Ii-II 11""""1 l .li5-M If 1.45-l!i 11.m.111 •1sss 6232orS2 37 F1d. 11x.11x $2,50 or $2 ,48 F9d . 4x.. t1x All pricel ,.LUS t.xe. •~d l•r• off 'fCll" cer. -· WHITEWALLS ADD •3.00 If-8hould H t! 0\11 DI 'f'O'o't •iie, t '"11\rd'lec.k~witl be i••uod. lllllfi"ll tutu•• ~llVOf'f ~t t11e ~rlver111el.l price. USED TIRE SELL-OUT! Thousands of miles of trMdwNr left I .·· 8wayBIO Cotto Mete Pire"•"" Ster• t lJ I . 1'lfl ll,-t4f·1Nt I•• , I •·"'· It I 1.m, "OV ll:S M ....... Pl. I 1.m. 11 1 1.m. M•11tl99to11 h•• pt,..t_ Stol"t 0111 l lA(I+ ILV0.-10·6*11 HOUISt M11.01'rl., t 1.11'1 ... I ... 11'1.- 111., I t .M. 19 l 1.m. CMt9 M1t• >1"1 H• ".' _ Hit Nl"l'(llT l \.¥0, ............. 1\ ,,; HOU1ll 1 e 1,1\11 ... 11• ....... .. JI! .. e 1.m. ti I '''"' U DAIL Y f"lltlf 5 Your Worth Motaey's Complete-New York Stock List OVER THE COUNTER ' . ... .. 'Holde1· in Due Course' Law ; " I ~ 1•1" Nfl Nf~WvZf'~-~·'.:=•:..rJr•'' l•111t I Mr• LN C*' C1111 •-rr,:r .·-::~:. ·::r-:: :,:: ... ::::::.. ·.: :.:r-....:""11 tit::,"""' L .... " ... c1: ~ft-uY""1 ~ ~: !ltl n~ 1~1 _; ~~UT fr!' 111 -·r... n l t1• ,:~ )f' ... , .• F~ pl1 N " . .. ' . . ~· -. HAID Ll1tl"I" f•r Wtdn111d1y1 J1nui1ry 6, lf71 -4-•:V~1 f 61 ~'' l' .. Fooct FtJr t0 J H IJ 1•1 fl 1~ 1t1 71 l11; !j.,Z :F:f:'~in"° V f C I • T · 1 ........ ,.. ...... .., .................... ., ........ ""'"*""""-'""IC.$•i.i.1 iW~,. l• 31.i '11' ' "" ~ .~,~~# :~ 1f1t. ·~ ~ l :i ~=~i1', ~0 M t 1. c1· 0 us 0 re{ It 1·a· pc. ,It.. ,,.., .1.t.m.t.1 •• 11 f,t, t. l 1,~ 1 ~ M1~,, ., ,; u~ ll~ lll. ~or~CK1 ao Os 0 11• ..._I I• .... _. •• I I• =f\'11.*' t! f<I""-fft: f1., I 'frf.1 3, , 1•1• 11, 111(. ; I~ "McK Pl 10 _.,:: ~i:r..1·:.vr.:.:::-1 'r~ ~~~;:i.:· .. 'Jll-11,ij~ ''~ ~~i"' 'fl·"r w.:m·i.11·· ·~ rnj 1p: 1~: 11·~ ! ~ ~fil~r~b? .~ :n :i~ ::1·~ 1 tt!li~i::··~ .. . -l y lllYL\11.t PORTER An eldt:rly 111 om111 bought : -1 M1nng aid for ht!r ~on, ··, ~ ln"olvln& a f;it dtw.n pl)mrnl , and an 1osl•llment loi111 lor !11 -the bal•ncp or her purtha~e .. . ... • Whl'n tt'lr dt\lt:t' failed tu "ork :i;hf took 1t bacli lo I.ht ioeller who agreed Lu send JI 10 lht' factory ror repair : ,S ot when she relurned aga111 lo pllk up thr hearing iud ihe found U\at tht 5!1lf'r had gone ou t of business -and had Mid her 1nstallmen1 loan tt1ntraC't to a loc;il lt!nder Jncred1bl\ lt\i.s v.on11111 1e 111a;ned undt!r legal obl1ga1 1on to repav the loan plus stiff .fnlerest charge! -despJ1{' the •' .fa<I that her son s11Jt hetd ol)O hfo;inng aid Thi~ legal qui rk -called "" • :the h.nldt>r 1n dur cou rse • ~ ~trint! -1s nne of the bi g aesl and rnstltest loopholes ren1a1n1ng 011 our con!umer lawbook[I; as 1971 begins • ' . .. Lt!er;illy m.ilhon5 of dn llar s are \oat e\lery !4et!k because of th is doclr1nl' say5 Ho"ard t'raz1er pre:~1dent of the '-,:Onsumer f'ederat1on o f 'Amt!rlca in W ash111gr.on Holder Jn dut! C'ourse 11 lhe n1051 v1c1ous of all con gumt!r Crt!d1t traps tnda v t;nder lhe hn!der Jn du~ r ours t! d octrine an ·~ Un&Crupulous used car dealer ·~· or other retailer may I u r I! ftt1ve coosumer1 mlO bi.lying : « long list of products or -ArvJ~s on lime He will then ~ 1mmtd1atel y .ell lhe. contract • -la a f1nanot compltny The •. -pr-Oduct m1y turn 1>1,11 t.o bl! ~· .; lemon or ll m1y be badly ., -1',am1gt!d or 11 m1v need ·~ '1$erv1c1ng under th! w11rranry : : <flr 11 may not e"'en be • .de hvert!d And the sell.tr mily "' flatl"' refuse to replace or repair the product you have: ;. bought ' t\evertht:les1 th!! f)Wflf'i" of 'our loan 1on1ra cl will !';tern1y remind ) OU thA1 he IS In f r tbe buslnt!1S or f1nanc1ng no! ~ repairing lurnilu re: "r cars ' ~. Jr vou rerusi> to m a k e ' 4 P•ymenl.1 11 the) come du e J• : \:OU may be sued for lhe re _ Jiliunder of lh11 loan payiible ~ &nc• Or 15 1n altem1l.iv1 ~·:: ,,_. t1"anc1 comp•nY may !• gpone•A not 11nly the Jl~m '"' •lili quesllon but allO olher ;! ijtr-50n1I 1oods 0 .. Amooj tbe 1oods • n d -erv1ces mo,~t frequ11:11tJy in wilved 1n holder In due: course ! ~problem• are v.a c uu m "'' -r.Je1ner1 furn1l ure carpel1ng ~· _ sf\liln& mtchtncs ' hfef.lme •' 'itrie~ or d11ncJng nr Judo ,, -•, -~essons n111i nr apphanceli home improvement s -~ In many fa ~es thr bai;1c. cond1t1ons under "'tuch the: f;a)e ha.r; been made -f()r "' insta nce using the. rtft!rral • • S<'hemt tfl ~h11 h vou t rt led tn brl+e\'r ) ou 11 gt! a -produtt rree 1! )OU refer a -specified numbf'r of oiher • Custon1er~ 1n thr ~eller -are. .. : fraudulent Bui once yoor loan i;-011triicl J ~ tu/ ned o"'er lo a f1na l)ca 1 on1pany any r1_ghlll you 1n;i)' h;,i\t! Lo ch.11lh~nge U'lt original Jerms of the deal alS-O go out lht! window l' requently too the finance cornpany is rar fa r a~a> The: holder 1n due cwrse doc1r1nt! oflen lt!ads direclly into 11 ra! i; nest of other legal hnanc1al pr o b It! m s • har r<1s1'mtnt b} 111 a J J or telephone garnishment 0 r 11i eges reposi;css1on or pro· pert\ ,4nd ;ill th1.! u on lop of the: btJd&t!t bu1llng utterly unhur obhg•t1nn Lo pa y 1n full for brok.1!11 or worthless 1ncre::h;indlse Why don I we i;1mply outlaw the-doctrine' Some banks and finance con1f)Oiln1es cJ;i lm thal lh1s 11iould pu t us .-iul of bustnes.s ' because of the resulting hnan c1al ri.ak! Dealer5 fear 1t ~'111 .... Ill 4UOlf t ... rft 'i'; w flZ t lr.t 1' ~~·· .... ~·.t · •,•, I "'' .~ j~ .. ~ ''•'!.llfl \ 10 , l~'J 1 l;-~oFrt.,.1$ul Ill """Id •lom1•al• a n1aior lflt J111111l1tcJ ~tJllf 1011 i •' u'!'• 1rtJ.:!' I "" j -.)f .. ft ... , .. .,, "• 1r, 1 -. + 1.Fr.a1>• 110 ...... " t NUlelltl ...... 1:1. F1IG lttl I;..: 1 :~ ~ ...... ·:1111 fr· ~Ill v c~,. ...; \\ ift" . ~ l ... 1 ,f~ "1r .. ~· ~~=· ... r I I' • I' • I F,,,.-ut 111 di meiilnt of fJll.t1nc1ng m:? 1t1 IKurllln~tlP 1•111 , .. ll!fP0..1 t:(' ~ I• ~r"1J: llo \lo 2 "J"'l°"' 1 lflo 'j • 11 ..! hrYslr 1111 ~ I ti~ '"" " Despite. th1~ at least 22 r;rf'!~ur•'~ •• ,,.~~·frf~,.~~ 1)1'· 1!~ ~'•r./t' 't:li 1 ,.: II~~ J~ 1r1·n :' .~~~,.·,r.. 11 ,~, 1,, !"' i ~~l~t~(Ltf ~ ;;~ nt ;;i.; .... .,.1 1:£~:.:1 s1a1es -most tn the: paal ~i,1At'vr, .,. 1iit.': F:t:'1, 1!• :r·~ :~,1rv{:• 1r.:: 4'! ,1, c~ .-:t,.ion• f t IJ, fl• ff1>1 I nG ~ •;TJ '!! "i 111 +1 ~ "~corr • few ye:airs either hav1 11:,~1:.~:/:v •• ~~:i~1t1°'1 1111b ' •~ ;~I 1 ~ ,,. .-.,'1••.~:)"1!',~, 11 1 1~;1 ~·, \;=:11'1 I~ 01:/J 1 ~1 JI!. lo !ml~! I'• bo Ir I • -'' ,. •• ,.,,. ''l!i.Girnf l1"r ly<ll • t! I 1" ' 1 "-Iv.. Jt '' • " ~ -•·~'''ii;'" < iii! • -'" Omj P 1 t5 a l11h1:d Or Slit! 1Cinty '"11111 w•c::..wfe f:! 1~ 11111 'l.C: ;rt." :-" t ':k~~!\ ff ~ It f t:: 1'f;l~1 -I• 'j 11 u ·~ 1m r I MI •est•••lcd the "'' or hoide~ = """ ... , ,,., cl I " I 1 ;1,_,,, I' Yr ,. • l,. 'I '' •. ~ I t. .. >,:, IT .. u IQ • 10 7 101\1 1' 1nnr1 ... ;n du~ course protecl1on o; r.!C u.fl:k:.it~:T. ~::: n~ )~ '1,: l it:: l'~ l~ I t ire·.. ~ (: :if~~: f~ .~I L#. n~ ~ ,;; !!ti~~; tf'4,: 1ili, ~/'~ ~ff~ 1' 1t. ~ ·~· ~:r~i'; *4 lenders Presumably th 1 s cti-• ttir.1119" 11 Cmo !\~ 1• l~fn J JJ ~ u~ 1~um XI~ '!)l" t11 Lu• 1 , ,, ·,~· uv n "'1J1 l " 11• °"' Ill• a1y lffl<t• '''"~' 1 '• !)'11 A I f • I 0 11 tC.11 J :ll"Lj' r,1 nl rt.. jt., h ~ I !lty 51•• II ti ml!' Ca~ alont! 15 helping lo force n .• I NII ~~!~~· "•1~;.~ 1f; 1u: -::· [••' l'~ u1: 81 ~~I it • ,g ••••• ~.~~ ••• •. "' l'. I ~ I" +' • 1:;t ~n lJI i1' I ~. u~ l1~ j ,~ ~r1~~n + I U ·--u louo dealer• and •·-o com klne•+c i i . , , Au• 11• , ''" u ,\'i' ~ U , olM ~; " '"" , • ,,, <111 110 ~· , 51 , sa , .+ 1 • •mo11 1 ""'""' pu :::r:~11";:°"'" ' Ltl)llr l'o 1•~ R'/1) Ko U 1 loo -'/~Ml! /lb ' f'a., r~ >,, Clr•Ell ll 1 :1• r1 l9 39 11 • c1.1,.n 1 oO lendt!rs out nf business ,....,, ••P 1~ • .+1 111 i11 1 • .,, ~ ... 1·~ E !~ li, tJi \"' i.. 1 "I tell "o 1 11 "'· 1%0 .. "' 1• Cj•• p1111 , o 1 1~, 11t1 ~ ~ -i,, !'" If"' • it h "f,"' ~ 'I "I' lo... I . t•· ·r·1 '" 11· I ~ •" ,, ,, l" ''ll"P• pf) i '1 ~!~ 1•,, ! DO• lr i1 ri. u. ll . '· "c' • '° oweyer Ill most &lilt!l!i I t ,\J IM • 111111 i~' l ' Dir .. I' ~· 21" 'm ',', ','"1 .. C.,'° JI I .,, .. I ' ... w lu1ttP11 .. If! j • ,,,! ... -'• '" (lg 1 JO d I d •I ' Jnc • ' I . r11n w I • ll"-' lnO ,,, J ~ t i LO ,, d -~· ll '" OI '" l~Pl!P "' • '!' 11 no ....... 1 :t1t oclnnt! IS slJll lega an •"It •M It 3"" lib ftub l, ,01 Son• 74 j•l>V•nc• ,. 1 ; 1 1 -'!HI c~ a,, 111 16 • Ulf 11"~ • "' "'" ,1~1 ,a ~1 11• "I ill~ -, '" D~n1n1 l I • I 'old C~'l"'f"'u pp1Hlj tV!.rrOll l ... ""i'••l•~t Y 'l l'"f"'f "'''NA pl•111 nt.-l'1 11>t -1 ••""1t<)~O proposed federal aw to 1m1t,v PC• ,~ OOCI LS 1 I ' (<IPIO,. i , l'•W•ch 1111 ll;'l~Al>l!al'C '°' ,~, J ll ,..,1 $IC.I• II •111 .... •0'1 -'o nFlrrp J .. II ha' Y'' t" .,1 ·rr the ilbe•!• in ,, i: oc1 ... ~ 1, " l" •• ,,. ,, 1Kt 1r•1w.~1 .... " 1, "" "'"'' 1 ao ,., 11•1 111~ ~ , ,,15c;.1 .11 11 1 ", 3i:i,, sJ , • ", ... Fq1 1 00 " .. " itn'll " I I" ru••• • h "' •'• Cmo 1' e •lll IG ]l !il ·~ Am1•~a ,"' 10 1f I 11~. ., ~ Coc1 C~I I d ll i)I~ IJ 11-11 +1•1 ·~ Holl ir-••d tfl I• 'lph < I I lih int1rn •~1 1 INll• ! .. )\t """A SD HI \ll.o Ji"' H~ 11 C1><1 ill!• u 11 fJ 111, 2111 ~ '' tn ln•I llll ,_,, 'I' /lllUJ " I M18 l • ~. ~( C.•• l \1 3 1ri.ll.,.. ~f '" ,l.l'(lf/ I 111 !t !6" ff., 4' o (<II'' I.. 11J ~9 .... H"l " .., I tnln•!r olJ 1~, leadorsh1p has 1• come • '''" • u lo 1 • ''I" Ml ji" " ••• uo 11 ~ ff 1 Willi Nj If ~ u:io •m E1 oil 60 1 \;! ' '• <o1g " ptJ "° 1100 11 JJ ~J ., 1 tn M 111 " " AIPt• H '"' ftf !•" ·-• fflW h " 1°"11 ,t.mH111 JOr JH 1.1 .. '1\, ·~ '0 collin•AI•! 80 39~ 31'• 1' -\' Miii /"' from lhe nation s over"helm "I"'" I: ', rovt "' i , j• mllh M f~ !''"w:I lr 1 · '" Am1.i r,11so 13' 100 101 1~ -I • co1uoo Rtll lb ''l 11 1 U\1 + '• tnMo l~r ACoffC lo l"i fW!ll In ..... oll!ISt' \i lWtllll •• ri 11 •AlrFl!r IO 111 il• 1~ • .. -1 •co101""1 1"' 111 JJ, ll •+ \o 1nMo!Ji>ll !Iii n)ajOrlty Of lfli:J(Hnatei11c1LNll Ii l•>t ~~1dr,C 1'"' 'ii? ~t'E°'v.lt ll u~:::1f.1•n M ~i'1;:r~~zll~Oi:o Jn tt,1 llo l~~-i.~t~~lrisnoJ1pr j 'rt !fl :i,, t~~1!~ ~ri:c".~,J/io )enders JI 15 JnCOntelVllb!e IOA,,.d·v~ JU' 1:: ~~Odtl ft 'I,.. G1C• f"'jOW•ll~ II 4 '•-' rl'ICl11!0 100 «lo U\1 4'11 -••cou In Pl~)! J •I ll fl "GPubUI I'° " G J :R• Htnovr ' :IO -'! JI VJ .. l!1$v( ! 1 "'WI (!I ·:-• z I t( •m ~Ci! I Ml •• u 11 ll'' l'" ' '• cas 1 •Ob HI! n ... JO 1 ?1.<o ,~. f,g"" ll1l11d me that the f1nan c1ng c11m .J:~( •• 1;•1 l \t 111111 In f>;, J P•'"Y ,!" ,,'I w",','•" ~','g 1•, 1•,•, ,••,,,'",!,",, "'J '•°" •1•1t •.1• ~ lo r.:a s ~f i o 11 l', 11 -1 1 1 1n$slin1 110 " t n 111 11~ 1nr1G F J~ '4 • l1l'ICIV" ,. -J • CoJu ·~IOI ll Jl , 1 ,, ; •1 •n jnlp! • mun1ty 14111 c 0 n t J n u e 11n ,..mt:I t :11 ~' llo 1•11 C:D 4 1!• Id 11111• lt. 1CI wrtn u "1·· •,••,, ·.·,.",·.1·1. I 1i, '" ~. '"Col!"" II• JJ,O 111< II'· ~,, ... C.fn II Ina d r t I •• I h b • ''' O 'Jj '°' 1111 '1 j" 1••11 tr ltt.1i"'W"I Wh lj .,, I l}l, 1}~ l • 1.,,, '°" '" ll . l''' 1.0 1 11 C.nlt1EI Ill t IOI e Y w permJ l e a USl:S ,:;: F:ra 1 , ;l 011!110 J r1w Cl )I\'> U1t,o Wisc l'L I i.t Jl"t ,\Cr,luj 1 Ml I Jl'.:o l:l Cm f n 1 » 1'l 'il'l )' l l ; 1 GTll~J <>'1 SO which occur under the um 4 o .. ,, f'" ~':'!' 111.., •, 1• .. uo1t Tl I'" ,.., ~'f.1"' S. j J"• ,t.(v•"'r1 1 U 1~ tt.· ff , -• Com•~a1v «1 , 11' 11 -'• C.TFJ• Pfl 1! -'Mta/10 n'" >!. oovrr l0'4tllJ.. utdl l '• • •thl l ~ .-.m D\1111 •'' -111T •com1Salol 90 t ]j'> 1~1 I} C.TFl~p!I JO breJla or ltu! holder In dut Ml T1 • ~Harli Jldl r: ~!! llDO ,.. l ~ Vrony I '• o, :~1'gJ11V":t'i l' '1t: ')~ 1'.J .; : Com wE 1 lilt> SJ JI' J1.,. ll ~ !"n T rt I~ 1 11~ n.; 17 ' 19 l .; l•o I A~t~I • p.. 1 ii •. /1""'d ljl1 n1. ,1.0~VI "' 1~ ' Iii: tt. lffi . . ComE •".. 1' \!6 ' l!} !16 ' tn11te I 10 I? JI • '1~·· ~ ' t • course pr nc1plt "" ·~ 1~ f tj-•m ..!~ 01.< 1,,,, --·.•-.,•-11_ ,t.mt:J'"' 10 S:f ~ ,. 1 1 comf "11 •l to 111., !', 11•, hi •"l!u ~o 11 10,.., 0 • ,.00, • • :;2::: I~ Jl J,~ ~~= ~:, i.\t ri,,: ---·~----~~e.!• .:1. fh U~ I~ ~Ii,;~ J: ~~~f~:O~l~ .0 n! :!~ !.~ :t,i :'_I: :11>~1~1f' 1Jg l ~J, i:•: f1,1 ~ 0 = ,: ..,,, /NJ" f:111 .1,H~•11 " '" • MUTUAL ~ &~r~"r'11'% 11 l!~ !tf! " .. ,con• M11,1 •a n. i , 11 ;.•.g:~~::: ::~ 11, ,••, •·-A I C '"0"' H f' ~ H~• 1 C1 'J'~ ':i, ,t.rn Holl lO II i.t t\l 'I ., >1 ConnMlg lllg lQJ ?• 13" ?• , G~•D•r 110 J 56 SI ~~I, -t • t a Sls l rv!11 1 ~ (I HYlll Int ~ ,1. Homt 160 lli 1141 1~ -, Con1~c .0 11111, IS 15<. l , Gill 8 IO.-a~ I I > 11 • '1• -'• U 0 nsur nee 0 ••c 101 .1 ' •• Hv41 "{; J•., f' .., !;om•,, 2 1tl 10s\, 10 i.; con Ed , 1111 n i"' I' , n , 1 ~. i::,11~ PIT 10 ~ ~11 6111• t8'1 '"~o l d ~ 1 lml91 r '!'' 0 ~ li m HOIP fi 1 o ll l (~ -•Con Ed ' pf I 6 ! 1 16 I GI• •< O"'· 11 11 .._ 11 ,, '' 11• 11 nd 1<1uc .,, • •m iiv•I JO u i: , » T , con Ea, 01 1 11 u 6JJ ~ 1 1 !I'''" ,,.... JI iJ<. 1r, D l -• 11,1 11•,11 i 1n1t1ra bJI., •"~"'''" ~'', j"'aconEa1c115 11011 • •• -1 ~ ll l"'I n .. +, '• nr .i1 .,.. "' Con• 1 "'1~° FUNDS "' .O }4 lllr j -t CM Fd• 110 Joi 11 0 11 , ti "" l twl1 lit ., !Ho + , H. h Th s c :.m Ill! 1oi,11•z•1111'm '" "' : ""lfi~.111 "' tl~ 1'1'1 t i Con FOaf'5D 610)'rl0) 141 ~i~i:!1 J•o, llll d n~1 O'h-. el. an Orne ars 1'1n I" ll• •' I"' IWNO 11 , '" j • ~llrl ~ •• I j 4 .+ , COii F•f'9h! 1 •l ll):I, JO, )\lo j 11 ~, • •• Jl~o .. J.6'-.-lg !•,•,•,,,',' '11'0•, '1'•• ,",'-/"•"•'",' !', ,•,' l<ltl 'f "! Ol I ~. I 1 fo Con Lt•$l"I 'J 111 l, 1 1 " WI> Inc .i. II 11.,, 11,1,,.,... 1, ... -""' P a 1 10,, '• liM'i ., • CenNuG 1 I 11 Jtl , Jo , 311 B:~" /1~"''; > fl 1•, All 'Ii tf'~'T' • '""' i"! • Q 1 1, ';J -ll=~ .. -11 .. !l!l•l•"! v He t ") • _. d •, -•Co~• l'owr• 1 161 35"" lJ 1 Jl , GI b 1~~ 51~ !l ~~·! J> -• Nl!W YORK 1UPll -An nual au1nmob1le 1nliW."ance now cost~ m11nv mnl or1sts more lhan the market \l&lue or their cars The SI 000 a )ear prcn11um 1s commonplace for p!!nahud dn\111rs '" tht! big c11111 Rau tables of 'insurance companies show lht! po111blllry Q l prem1um5 as h11h 11 $7 tOO 1n Pl11Jadelph1a for minimum prole:cllon for \lery r1tky dr1..,.er1 or cour$e no 1;1ne 15 re:1lly paying $7 400 for m1n1n1um 1n 1ur1nte siud the Insurance lnfnrmatlf)n Jntt.itu1e ' Its 1ust a statlsc1an 1 1de1 DI how much a eompany would h;ive to charge Ct!rta1n r 1 ! k y d1 IVCf~ Prof Herberl S Denenberg whn 1raches 1nsura ncP at the. l 'n1..,.erstlf nf Pennsflvan1a s Wh11rtnn School of ~~1nance. v.arned 1n a rect!nl spttch !hat 1nsuran<'e ra tes are going to keep &Otn& up unless a h>n damental reform It 1Hh1evt!d 1000 An 1n-dtplh study madt! rt!t enOy tor the Amt!rlc1n lnturance Association b y M•lhemal1ct a Prtncet.on N J , rt!ttarch bureau reach ad Ole ••me conCIWi1on The pro bl em , !hr Mtth.emallca report ii1d, 1~ thtl property and casual!)" In 1ur1nct! 11 I 1itrv1ce bus1ne~s lhat has not foond 11ny W•Y In increase 1ts product1VJty !Is cosls keep going up •fld up It also is lied lo the mt!dLcal hosp1tahzat 1on and auto repair bu~1neso;;e~ '>l:h1ch tlM h11"'1 b,.111 unabl~ to 1ncrta1e: pro duL!1vll v 10 o/fset 1p1rehn1' 11 ages ;ind otMr ct11t 1n creases 111(111• j ! n,., I .' "'"' ~,.1,,11 1 10 II .. II ll'•j 1CaoiPwoU$1 ZllO f l , ••• +1'11(~U "" • l•o ... s • .,_. !J,lrnnd ~",.on e• J l ,t.mSnp60~ 111 7~,;1 l~Conf'wo/IUil!IO'J U i 61\• '! "'° 1J'•l •~tlJ 1 -t-'-lnSUranct! plan could 1nerr.ase ilent M111 16 ' 11 1~ ,,b°u'~ ~ ~: NtW vo•K 1,1.•11 ""!"' ''! 'JI , Jmr11 90 is1 1! 71'• 11 , Co111 .-.1. Lin i•o lllo ll!'P ,.1, ~ ~I =•lch 1: 1:.. 1' l,''' J14~ ~ , !J•I! H~ •D>'1 1~(' llo 1 , Tn1 1011owln1o~olnd1 rv I' 'l'"m~o,!l.I 10 ~111. •"-•l -1(0111C1nl.O 1'a JI'~ J'' ll o "-, orJ~r 1'1 u, \.\~, lhe1ndustrysproducl1v1lyOn l!•U L•b «1•,•l 1J•ounwc , , 1 ~11ons •uPDIJ-a bylNT N ''' lAmS•a 1 119 JI • 19'• 1" 11 .. c:aoiroa JO• lf ''' 7~, 1.,. 11 cr 1;;1y,1.11 10 1''1 l•o 11.,,,.,_,,_ I h ld !Jl vP>W 9 10 J"m M ll 31,m•N~tionol Auoc••nv Coli H•l lJ llAS!dol41\ ,1 891 A0 1 19 111(ont1 C0<p1 1 g6l7~in Jl~o Du n<lj~ !l lJ'1 J),Jl""j '• y to the extent I at Jt WOU 81rd San 31 l JI 'J•.,.,•• F 8 ( 9 • 111on a1 Stcvr r •• +n~ c.u d Ill I ll .. m s1.,. 1 •I JI ;. , 1• , 11 , • , C! C1 a11i1 J.Q 15 ~!"' n" •l ••ct 110 1'11 ~. 71'" «io 1,, d I I I d d ll•!Chr ),J,J•m•D• l •'D••le'l Inc a,.ln>,,&a1 ll loll•••11.1,.1 1u lO o l0 1 l01/,(!Coof!ll SO l l •~•1>•l,,~'c.'•nYl loll l<l ll&ll•o '-4>, re Ute t!ga COSS an avo1 !Jl•t~ HI 31'>JJ,Jtt• Fd> 34 •,. •h• 0,,1, •t wh1<hlnv•1lor1 G•OUP Am 11.1 100 llll °"'' •9 IO -~'•Con!Mtg 1oa 16' 11 1 11 18 0 ••notln ao 08 16 . 1t>1 "'"" di I noiu•E• l l••IJnn•n Pd ,., lhtu u cur!lt• ID"" l 96 •l•1.mWW...U lll i lJ\\lJ .. -1"'11011.lO J.i~ll~J0•:1,:t1;'?.,',~/,",,'st1 ll!Jlwll~ ~ ... ,: court e ays Jn maJor r a1n1s eoo•~· c 11,, ll ·1"•1,., S• t:.~ l1J (ouia "••• """ M~• t Jt 10 1~ ,1.w , 101 1 o llDCt 10•, 11! o 11>, • , ont 011 01 1 1 u 43 j " t , " v • I IJ l• • u 11t, _.,_, 60111 AH U ol•'·"e"St Pl ,.~,0 ~1e1a l D1d l Of bDO!lillll P•IHI )10 •ll li"lll~c l 1\0 lloo 1 .. -\.Canl\!ISll Ml 1 II• I~ 11 ') ;:nbw ~~ ~1 •I'll ,.\ fili t" Whal I! nt!eded lhe report =a•aC•P : :~~:'~"G•n '"' ,,<••~"') wei1~dYAO ~~;;~, 1;:r1 :~:~:1:; :t. ,, :t· :~. /!,~ ~~:.!rlo!?. u~ !l'o ~~: ~ .. -t l ~·,!.f"'','' •10 11~ u~: jlit n 1 .i ... , 1a1d and whal St!ems 1m B•"n~":' 1~ •• u K"''"' 1~' 11 'l•n• d" 1 •1 111 V1r Pv 110 111 •MF inc 10 1 ~ 11 11<1 1 ~onwm 1 ~ 11 ft 1 »~. lj" + ~~ .. 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I 10 h'llt 701 +" ~r1 y d•megecl•1ms .substan c-1cLe•• "1 ,,,KevstPC: 1, 3 1.1111 .10 •t61 SJI 11i>Ol10 1111 11,1...,,10 0,,,. 1 ,, ,,, ,, ,C00>wldSll 1B 11 IJ'• 'l"., j\•21Wt•ti'" .10 10 no 1 1:11+, ,..-C•I w s~ )I 11 I I( no Int •tu!tt I ~· I" c~· 81 1114 19 .......... iea 1 •O n l• JO )(l • ' •• t'or l,.,!hl .lOe '' lt11 l ~ ,.~ 'o ·~ G "" " ~ Jt • u • 111· -1-•• (lilly Cn>t><!U N 91 !"IK•I\•• El 11 ' ,\ll ,t.m F b6 11 C~1 117 !ll61011 Amt<! l/ •'' 1 1 1 : '> CorGIW 1 5Q~ 10111 II• llSJ1 j2•n S~oo 1 10 U Jt,.'. !,', ,,"-;--.•, !•""" M 15 7 l(lr~ (p ''' 10' 'l'jltl•lr 10 !?11010KI Cul 6• •ol au .. "•~Of' 90 It JO .. 10 -I ,Coron~•ln 71 l•I J~ 11 i1 , _, '• "•~aund ltl l ·~ ..-_ B •th n -n•oberg and the'•'"••"•• "o ',',•,,•r,,,voi 1,; 1'-'phl f d 10 .. 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I c:harQ"t i ct.ounll ' Sa\ In i ll and LA an Allsocl.:illon ""' " w:"Cfi' I 1 12 ~~~db~1 • 1'., 't:"•, 1 p •i: • • • 11n1 111!11 1 u I -11 M ' ' 1 ' , •• -PMAIMACY Of • .... • Grri• ••• ,. l1111il"' 1 ''! r~ .... ~r I\ 1'1•· .. I • l•I COlll ,, • " -11 111°.7, ,, :IO 'l' r~ ,, :t ••. -,PAI..,_ -~A.JlllOl't!L\IDIC r 11rhls w1rr11ndthc1rtv.n 1N:':!,, l 11 111 111,,,J .. d •~s c~Artt•Nvt •"• •1«10«1!''!'•!i,,,.. 'U "I"' ~~ .. ·~d•!i6' I • 1•· II~ .... C71f) 6'0 9100 L' I ,,-uAll i u 11 .1i.1~ , •l , r~8•rM~ 1,. \ '"! H • • '• ~w 1 u ,,~ J1 i ~ttll'Wfllt ~~ I '• • , -ti ... .-.: ........ children re~ldt ... , 9101 ... n0t1·· a'p •ff •it lfllC r• .,, • c~ .. ,..T ,,, "'31'1 ~· I -'·'/"r.'I I" II"'.,~ r • •• ·~~"'It 11r '• 'I • -G -• "' 1" 1 1 .. ,,.~ 1 •• t , Ch'l<l.r Mor · 1 ''"' '"' •1 .. 1 r • 1 -· 1 ' 11 11 vr"' ~ l • , ' , ~1 ,, ,,,. ....., Way, G1~11 rove ,,. 1 .. 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DAILY PJLDT Thund.ly, Jantl&l'Y 7, 1971 Everyone Hai Something That Someone El ie Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Wo nt Ad The Bigg~st Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial . 642-5678 for Fast Results I~ . . . --. -. --------------------------. . . .. -.. -. .. -. . -... ---· ------···· ------------· ------------------------- Genera l Gener•I Costa Mesa INVESTMENT PROPERTIES 'READ THIS NEWPORT HEIGHTS . 3 BDRMS. BEST BUYI J Bdm1s , 11., baths, Cus tom hurl! Pricf'd to s~u at $24,000 140' Frontage on busy Nev,1port Blvd. Zoned C-2 . Lot is paved and has small building now used as drive-in. Total price $84,000. Submit on Terms If you are in the market for a new hom e don't miss this opportunity. See these cus· tomized new homes built by Frank H. Ayres & Son located in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach. There are four credit rejections in Unit VI available for im- mediate occupancy. These homes are 4 & 5 bedroom, 2 & 3 bath, 2 or 3 garage & as large as 3000 sq. ft. This sharp 2 bath home is ideally located for grammar -Jr. lligh • Harbor High schools. Only minutes from beach areas. Thi s home has been con1 p. redecorated, w/new drapes, shag carpets: completely repainted in decor- ator colors. Only asking $33,950. See this one before buying your new home. PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES CORBIN- MARTIN Navel Orange Grove in Arlington Heights. 10.6 :\cres. Good production. Beautiful land for future development. Owner will trade $4-0.000 equity for Orange County Property. * * * * * TUSTIN · TRY 10% DOWN * * Ne\':ly listed-Lot .!t60; perfect for the fam- ily v.•ho wanls a spacious \\'alerfront home. 4 Extra lge BR .. 4 Ba .. pwdr. rm. Lge. liv. rm . & den; 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden \1·/rm for pool; deck & dock. By App't. For complete information on all homes & lots, please call : REALTORS 644-7662 Recreational Trailer Park on th e \Valer at Lake Elsinore. 45 Spaces plus 6 Motel Rooms. Gross in co1ne approximately $25.000 per year . Total Price $124,000 Submit $18.000 'Down 12 Unit Commercial on Coast Hu•y. near The Bay Club. Income over $11.500 per year. Price S75,000 Submit on Down. Good Tax Shelter. For further informa'tion concerning these and other investment properties calJ George Taber 646-7171 Selections nlay be made in our new Unit VII for occupancy in May or June. These homes are priced from $28,990 to $43,000 and vary in size from 3 to 7 bedrooms, 2 to 4 bath!!; with shake or Mission tile roofs, fire· places, underground utilities, concrete drive- ways, bltns and shag carpeting. There is VA/ fHA & conventional financing available. and assume 6% % loan. Owner trans. & must sell beaut. Broadmoor Exclus ives Gar- den hOme. Cer amic t ile: wallpaper, taste· fully draped thruout. Air-conditioned. Land· scaped for min. yard care. Sprinklers. Short distance to schools, markets, rreeways. Will sell at $33,950. Don't overlook this one. CHIL T ROBINETT, REAL TOR 64S-01 2& 833 BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 General 3 BDRM, SAVINGS ACCOUNT General * OPEN * Fri. & Sa t. 12 :3!1-4:30 fl IA or VA . Lar~e !-moder11 .1 BR +-hug(' bonu~ room. llravy sh11kl' roor, w/s carpets, frp k, bltn~. IRmily /11Qtll , l'UVCl"Cfl p.etio & lots of brick 11 Qtk. V.'ha! a buy 111 S3l9;xJ! ~ Call 545-8424. South Coa.s1 Rrallors GOOD 5 BR h~e. on Lon· rlonberry 1n NQ C . t-.f , A~sun•f' (''.'Cistin~ Fl£A Joa n 11! approx $2:,,7511 11·f1 nlf'rPst 11! only fi•'1. S2fl00 do,vn p~y111nl. ChRs. C. Martin Rltr. :AS-1195 LA CUESTA HOMES & Atl•nta 968-2929, 968-1 338 2 On TI1t Lnt 2 Bedroom Ho11sr & I Bl'rlroom Gar11gr Apr. on large F.-side lol. Try 10% down. Newport Want a gilrdener to keep your huge yard lflC1k1ng like 11 park? ,\ <'ho1ce of large. Jo\"ely ponls lo swim in \1·1th nn n1a 1ntrnance? Some. rinr r.lsr rn \\·nrry about (hP 011t~1(tr n1a1n1r1mncr nf ~'our hnrnt~ \l",.,nl a!) 1l11s plus payrnrnts Jess t!1ci11 rent? Outstanr11nt; Villa Pae1ric Tn1vn 1 lnll~f' now A.VIHl11ble "''llh 5a,·~ loan. ASK f"OR PAT EAKIN 215 MARIGOLD, CdM Charn11ni;: 3 BR. 2 Ba . honie. BY 01'ricr at YHA appraisal V1rw rron1 I~!'. living rm . S2J.!XXI. Nr J;:ran1ma.r & high Secludf'd palio & sundeck, St.:hools, 3 hr, r rpts. rtrps, PLUS fl() ~-r. LOT. J!tll"agc. patio. fl J 11 n I er s, fencert ~·<11·ri. ~70 CongreSll. SEMPLE t Ow nl'r ;;.48-4086 Real Esta te 675-2101 -------- 2515 E. Co11s1 Hwy., Cd/'11 Balboa Island NO DO\Vj'IJ'. Ow~r must 111ove , Assun1r FHA 7 1~--:, lnan, 3 br + lam. Lrg i·ul·rle-sac 101 l yr o!d. ~lesa \Voods.' S32.9 50. 3 BR, 2 ha, 11:11r, pa.ho, ~m Jot , $10,000 rtown, ('arry 1st. I o:5.'i=l=-7=6=j3=.=======o 1;\g TOPAZ, fi7J-fJ252 I" CHANNEL BA YFRONT Here is a truly f11nt11sl!c 2 year old home with all thr fe atures 11 person could \\'ant. Yes, even a high bal- ance, assumablf'! VA loan payable $312 per mo. The home ha.! 4 hedrms, 21~ at Fairview 646-8811 (anytime) Colesworthy ~==-========I Fountain Valley I Col lege P ark BY O\\"NER: 4 BR . l Yrs Your best bayfront buy is this 4 bdrm., 3112 b.ath home \l'ith 3 car garage & pier plus float. Call for more great details. It v.·on't last at $135,000. baths, formal dining, fam- I .''IJUng Xlnt r•o nd lhru-Oul. POOL In \'Pry lint ar,,;:i. 96:,..') La Cahana. di'n, family rm . 3 1 Am11po!a /Ive. ~~730 h<>rlrnis dhlr frp lc hltni:.. j- S.14,!l50. 'Assume S27.cioo f!IA Har bor H igihlands 6~. ln11 n. WILLIAM WINTON, Realtor 675-3331 ily room, he11ted and tiller- ed pool with jacuzzi and all the ex?ras Crom ('lee &arage door opener to outside radi- ant hearing. This is elegant living and ('n\ertain1ng at its best. You must r.ee to JEAN SMITH, RLTR. BY 0\YNE:R. l BR, 2 BA, n11-1ns, \\'alk1ng rl is tanre :\>!nriner's school &. shop- p1n;. Prlne1pals onl y li·l6-j\fl.1 229 Marine, Balboa Island General YOUR FIRST HOME? Then :,..-ou are fortunaie in- rltttl. for 1~·e have 1or you the '"little hollf")'moon cot- tage'• in Corona de! Mar. So many dream ol and so frw find. Plenty of room tor expan5ion on th is s0uth-<if· the high1v11y R-2 Jot and only 10% 00\\'N -NO 2nd T.D .• NO PREPAYMENT PEN· AL TY AND NO LOAN FEE because the owner will car· ry a 90':1i loan. ONLY S36.500 Don't Delay C.1ll Today 6i3-S.3.io REDUCED $1300 NOW $21,700 \Vha.t 11 great bargain. Add very little do.,.,·n !or a double bargnin. Spotle~s J Btd- roon1s, ~parkhng kopper kettle kiichen Large living room v.•l!h "'"hite brick fire. place. Quil't nC"1ghborhood. Large tref' linPd grounds. All Types financing availsble. Exct llent starler hon1e. Bet- 1er hurry. 645°0303 FOREST E. OLSON REALTORS 2299 HARBOR COSTA MESA PERSONALITY PLUS Thill charming 5 bedroom Bar-llarbor 1-fomr has 200:1 sq. fl. ol Juxury living space on one floor. There is eating space 1n 1he-kltchen, a good sized fan1ily room "'".ilh a fireplace freshly rcdecor1 11\ed. New cafl>'ls in 4 bed. room~. One of Costa Mesa's linl?"S!. "\Vould you believe SlS.850. 546-2313 10THEREAL '·"'\.. ESTATERS 11 ·. "'· .. _G_e_n_e_r_a_l _______ 1 appreciate. IRVINE TERRACE COATS WAtLACE REALTORS Open Evenings • 962-4154 • J BR. \1'i1h one of the most practical & serv1cable hid. & fltd. pools ir the Terrace. Dbl. garage 'v/lge. CO\". car- port, boat storage or v.-ork- shop. On cho1C1", quiet street. Low ma 1nt_ yard, Drive by\~~~~~~~~~~ 1~ Tahuna Terrace & call us 10 show. Macnab-Irvine Luxurio us Living! ~aHy Con1pany Fabulous upgraded "Blulls'' THE Angelita. 2 BR, mor!el on SPECTACULAR VIEW one leve"l. Custom, . profess, Can be ~njoyed lrom throuth- decoraled • mo\'e in cofKt. out this unusual .1 bedroom sum_ptuous mstr sll!te. ldeaL pills convei1 ible rlen home. ly 8ltU11ted on corner, Every The 2-story gla.1;.5 living room f'X!ra. CALL NO\V, fo~ 11pp"I. \Vall adris to the beau!y as Asking S42.500 ·\\on I Jast. do the king-s12erl pool and Ask for Etta freeman the t"·o gas opera!E'rl fire ··Salisbury Really pit!. The largr Jiving room, form111 dining roon1 11nd l11m- ily room further enhance this greflt fRmily and enter. Jl5 fl:IARJNE AVE. 673-6900 tainment nritnled home, BALBOA ISLAND Please call for app't. SS7,500. LIVE MODERN Macnab-Irvine FIRST TIME ADVERTISED A HOME THAT OFFERS E.V'ERYTiilNG!! * Custom built * circular pool * ocean view * privatr beach * prime location. Call to stt. S79,500. ~ Coldvvell. Banker \\'~ almost d idn"t bf.li eve !I ourselves: Only 6 ,years )'OUng and Jo11rled v.·ith charm. 3 large btdrooms, 2 baths. All l111est deluxe bu1lt- ins, Beautirul pa!io. Pro- IPssionalJy landscaper!. Slli6 mo. pays all. F'a.ntRs!ic year end bargain. Oon't delay! Call now 962-5585 FOREST E. OLSON Inc. neallors ~ 19131 Brookhunt ,\ vc Hunl1ng1 nn Rt'arh 644-24301 ---~----833-0700 TAYLOR CO. 6 Units w /Pool ClTY LIGHTS VIEW $75,000 good spendable Prestige Dovl'r Shores. 4 BR, E)(cluslve v.'ith us· Eas!sidc'. !. ram rm. forn111J on &· :p, 2 BR, 1 BA each. Bltns. ba~ .. Looks J1ke t1 model re[ri~ .. rrplg, drps, !enced horn!'. Sl24,500 w/c:omplete privacy, sep11r. QUI ET CUL-DE-SAC ate patio~. 2 Blocks to l~th l\Jammoth !iv rni., isolated St .. s~pping_ ExcelJl!'nt tin-mstr suite, 3 BR. Rm fnr anc1ng. ! Good terms! pool. S6!J,9j() Lochen my er Realtor "Our 2Jth YeRr" Wesley N. Taylor Co. REALTOR~ 211 1 San Jo;iqu1n lli!J<. Rnart CRV $33,9SO Shar[l'f'~t J\·lr.arlnw Hllm,, in r11.Y t"u!Jy carpc1ed & rlrAP· •d,' bedroom 3 b<'h, "'""' BOAT LOVERS ft>ncrrl Jnr. hravy sli11kto ro11f. bl,g rrer~. "·eJJ Jandscapt"rl. WATERFRONT wnorl burning frrepl;irr, BARGAIN Jarg .. kitch!'n 1v11h RIJ n1rnl-. . "'"" hlln llpp!ianrr.~ + hill:, L1\'p at nnf' nf lh" f1nr.ct ma. lan11ly J"O('lni, coverl'<l patio_ , rinas on C11!1f, Huge 2 hPd - tlblr gR.rai;r. 1~nn1 unit w11h rif'!U.'l:r hutll - 1n.~. D1111ng rr-1m F11"<'plRr<'.1 Pn1•a tC' l"'!Ull nvrrlnok1ni::: yl)ur fl" n bo111 rtfJ£'k L1v1nl?' I~ goo.I II! I [11nt111gr1111 :-Ol a.. r1na 1~rll'crt 1n ~rll no"': I' I illage Real Estate 962-<4471 C ::::. J S.6-81 OJ I S•11'1.:l(l0 Di<1l 962-:l.)ll~ SELL OR TRADE BY OWNER FOREST E. OLSON Salisbury Realty 315 :'11/\RJNE AVE. li73-6900 R/\LBQ,\ ISLAND SP/\CIOUS 110,\!E WANTED j ;i~o()fl In 4~/l(l s(j. fl, J1v1ni:: ;irra. 5 Rlt m1nimu1n. LJ;:" li1 Sr rl111 rm Co1~na r!rl :<.l1<r ll1gh SrhOOI Dis!. Slr'"""lng 1mnnr1 anre nn [(1(·ar1n11 rnn~rn11·11on si7.r. e,.,nrlit1n~_ llarhnr nr '°''"1111 \'If'\\". E11sy RCT!'SS In p;;itJ- ltiJ< Only prop,,rty n1vnrr.~ r"spnnrl .. a 1 rcnrly ll'nrking 11 /1"f'al1nrs C11lt F:i.~..fi2~.1 J UST REDUCED "" $1 2 4 Bedroom Stratford ) rar" n]d has r1·r r)' I h111i::' ' Only S.'l6:i0 dn.,.,·n 10 S226, tnl11I G.T. pay. mr11L MARINER REALTY 842-5541 :'1100F.L J!D:'ll°E:c-. -,,Ac-,,ccllri7,-,.·l Cus1nm Bi.till. CAUFORNTA CONTE:t!PORARY, Low, 642·8235 675-3210 Call 646-3928. Eve!: 6-l:Z..(118.i Nev.-pnrt CPn!cr 1'44--4!110 DOVJ<:R :"HORE:S • LJr-;OB- STP.L'rTED VIE\\' • Spar- 1nu~ R r"f\ms + !<f'l"\"i1·t I P')n"h .1 pantry, l•I BR-Jl i t 8 1\ 1. 2 frplcs, 1111'! ha.. 1111 frirlll l\'R I Cll.rf)('tf'ri I kll•·!iPO \\"111 tnuiC' o;io\\ n 2 BR R. <l,,n in Si0.000 rang,, nr .!iubmit lri1• 1nrn1ne prol)'f'r1.\', I Ca!l fr12-!l:n:J ror shl)w1ng 1111' Rralrl)r~ 1'11 11 lt1.,.....khllr"I /\1·r lh1 nl1ni:lon Bfi!rh [p\rly .t ,(· rlrn 11· .I hi11h f"Y\111~ nnl.Y 1 1 ~ hJks 1,., 1hr ,.,, <':in H1h11I fl 1·~. 1~111 1, r1~~1 .. r 1,,.IJs. P.r-dUC'"rl !" rlnsrou1. Full.v rarpett<I & 1111n111cu!a1rly lanrlsClllpetl' ~p:itklai~ r!ernr;iiror col~. :l R"•!r•lolm.~. 2 htlth~. frpl r I:.· nil hl1n~. :'i'f FHA/VA ="" riow11 /11"A1lahlf' S.10,900 C1ll :i1i-R~24. So11 1h Coa!;I llf'11t .. r~ rambling rock roofed home· I""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' I """''""' "°' "' block w•ll HIGH ON A HILL rncloses thP. properly com- pl!'tf'Jy, ;ind 111ndscap1ng con. EAST BLUFF si~t.~ ol lush evergreen lfei&"ht i:i\'l'~ v1t'w plus SP· plantjng~. Large C('mrn! pa-clusion. Ne"''JlOrt Bf"ach 111'1, fenCT'd olf HEATED most desirRhle are11. Wal ls A.'1;0 FILTERED S\\'I/'lt. of gl~s to living room, lam. /'lll1"G POOL. Open heamed iJy roon\ 11nd d1n1ng area. 2 ceilings u1 Living Rm. Din-~paclou.~ bdrnl!i + n1astl'r 1ng R m. aJ'ld B;f Electric suite • 21,l hatll!; An exc('l· klt. "·irh breakfast bar. Jent executive horn~ in 11. Three large bdrms., Two pre11!1~e arl'R. Pro!. Jand- hRths, cpts & drapes thru scaping enhances use of oul. Located in c::hoice EAST-glass, Low mainten11ncr. A SIDE COSTA Y..1ESA !OCl'I· must to see by appt. Call 11on. A HOLIDAY SPECIAL 645-0303. •I Ooly tll.950 wilh GI OR FOREST E OLSON FHA TERMS. • M. M. LA BORDE, Rltr. REALTORS 646-0555 Eve1: 646-4579 2299 HARBOR, C.M. 2 IN 1 LIVE lN ONE RENT THE OTHER APPLIANCE+ TV STORE START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT Va cation Year Around Call for an appointment 1o 4 hcdroon1!. npen bfo11m crt_!. ."t'e this 1 btdroom Dnl l 1ngs. bRlrony, lovr.ly 1)11110 nn lhe (;'rt"en h<-11. nr Rrbv pool and r u111ng green. A spacious hQmr In a hrt1U• lifullv ma1n1111nrrt r11rt'lr"e Hou!le plus gl1"81 apartmeni rin 11 beautifu l R-2 lot in Cortina de\ /'11ar. Only SJ2.000 • \\'1th excellent terms. 673-S!M 1-0' THE REAL ~ ESTA!E_i3,S 3 BR CONDOMINIUM 12'26 Pnlan~ Ori \'P. f'nl'rrt ro sell S!lll,000 ~ctti~g 111 111" Bluffs nnly I HARBOR VIEW S46.ROO. Your 11umhc1· lo rall HOMES lri ~ l1ber11terl to rhe e.a~y . life fi7:1-8550. 4 Brrll'ooms, fam ily roon1 - 1-0' THE REAL \~ESTATERS '-. "I ' '''·" l f ~ 675·3000 Rr •I 1·:~1111 r ~rrv11'f' 111 Th" lli1rl10r Arr·11 DOV ER SHORES Ln1•C'J\!. 1~11'1' onr·!>lnry 4 BR. 3', h11.th tio111p "1rh ~I A· trrnfw \ lf'I\. l.an:r lam rn1 " f1'pl r. & 11er nar $112.~lllO_ ' ---; --• -.--1 IBBAI & lltAl.ll 1 ' REAl:r\' I ~r' I , (ST 191q 675 100~ ' ~--------- '" .. '" I D11lanc y Real Esta te ~?!i t , ('l'l,)~I lh1·y., l'ri\1 "11 i1•n -R~U~S=T~ICCHARM- 16,000 DOWN 1/1 MIL E-T00CEAN : 1'1_,. Crond,,. •I RR 2 1~ Ra . RHn.~ Frp\1• P11nf'lrrt Ii\' i-111 , li:P pa!on. 0 11 nrr mo\."- C"nl'n"r rl•1plr.>., bf>ki" Coil~! ,.,1 ,f, h!l.\1n11~ r11~ ronl.v 1111, 2 131~ f'<il"h 'l'l\n r()(lm $2.l ,!l((l Oll'nrr w fu1a1lt.:'r @ In ,,.(h! f:h ,,.kr 1nof hrl ll'd , I 7'', fir~. 1n1n1rd. pnssr.i;<1n11 !'rr ,\rlvf•Jlll' · Call f~l&-7411 Un1\'f'r~11v Hralt\" fii:l-li~JO Far11I W a lker, Realtor I :i1io1 E ·r11 .. ~1 '111"v .. Crl\I A ssume 53/1°;;-Gl-Loan l\IUST SELL l hr. I ha on 4 hf-rlrm, 2 h"'!h, 11 1niitle :.M07 E Coast H\\'y .. Cit/'11 k 1 l•r, 1 lia rtupl"'"· 4:-;· i;tur,v nrar Dnu~l11i:. APro. In cholce section or 1'1onticel.l-,--.,.------,---o ==~~~-----_ lfl! !'vt p!y. 6i:t-~724 or spR('" plant. E"C'"llent c~n- lo, to bf! completely redf'C· .. Bedroom, 2 B•t h & FP DREAM con AGE : f1i.'>--O!Jj2, 1!1t1nr1 PM'~f'lll tnflnthly p11y- i>i!rdrn k1tche11 nn !'~lrll Ian.:" Jot. Luxury hath 11 Uh ~unkt'n 1uh + many c.~1n1.~. I $4],fXIO. You ""'" !he land, P hone &16-7171 ora!l'd Including neiv c-ar-All For Jn a.11 cxttllrnt Eii.~!.~ldr c,.,111. 1 R00.\1Y 2 Bdrrn. Split-Je.,f'I nirnts <Jnly S l~I P.l.T.f. pets. Priced be.low market. $l30 M c . "LI"' . 0 L · R It I Act fast on thii nnt. per o . m11 n1ty. ~pacious liv1n.1: mom r~·u~e ,. ,., An income uni . arw1n e.a y, nc. $20,SOO Tnt11.I p11yment~. A.s.<rumt' ~.v,. 1v1th hi!.!h npen hrRn1 reil-1;(12 lri~. Crl:'ll 962-6988 anytime PERRON 642_1771 11nnua1 pr~n111g" r111e FllA Just On The Market ing, huqt tnfistrr lll'rt rn1 &. ==='======= 1 -.w=A~L~K~T~O~~B~E~A~C=H~ LoAn on th1~ tlf"aut)'. All this S210 J>f'r mlh PR.V~ alt. Ufl· 2 1tle11n11niz mnrt('rni1rd ha1h-Costa Mesa Good location, good It'll~ and good Service Dept. $30,000 · Good Terms. Call George Taber. Investment Division -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; l /\i:..~un1p 5·', "'~ l.n;;rn, ~ BR, INCOME I plus Bi i's And 2 car i;?"arage. graded, ~uper clPan. 3 hed. mom~. A t'harn1lng 2 berlrm I• 2 Ba. hl"\i·rl fl~. lrplc, ,.Irr '::0/~~!1~\~ ~n~'\ii~-h~~~e~; :i Furnli;hed bactiei."r u~its Wa Iker & Lee ~~n;~1:.1n~~rc~:11~u~1;:~t ~7~·,,~rir only St.1.500. Call I Immediate Occupancy kit., !;: cornrr 101, 1mm1>t1J. close to beach & shoPP"I· • al · • , o rrr rcrl a1 Fl!A 11.pprn1~1 ol 111r pos~c.~~ion, n@x!blr 11. cu~tom, luxurious charm-to" 11nnu pcrcenlsge ra!P. · 646-7171 l28.000 ReA.11ors G I $23.!1511. l.11ri::t> 3 brrtrm ;I lrrrn~. ~r y,ilh 3 king sizl' bed. Georg• Wllli•m•on 27!1(1 Harbor Blvd. at Adams 1 Loa n. \ h;i1h.rtbtri;:arage, newrr.pt.~ BRASHEAR REALTY room5; countr)' kitchtn and Re•ltor ~j..9491 Open "Iii 9 P/'I! Wa Iker & Lee /,, rlrP~-Hur.:e fe nced cornl'r I 847·8507 h~e family room, formal 673-4150 64.S.1564 E lot All 1h" "''ork dClnl' thr j .--~~7 1 dining. ~ecludtd living room . Y••-UNUSUALLY SHARP Real!()N I pr:1·r IS right. Just moVr in Cheaper Than Rent! BAYCRESTAREA .. ,PLUS A separat~ one1-..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii S.11 or Le•S•/opfMM1 nd . . 700 Erltngt'T WHERE ELSE l\'1 1h low F'H.A riown pay-bedroom money-maker tha.tl• 4 BR. 2~ b f 1 2 CAr a eerta1nty wr!I pr1cl'rl at ... 4 Ir + Fam + Pool c NEWPORT HEIGHTS · a .• rp c. o"ly "1 ~ r--,,,., 1.,.,1, f714 1 M2-44:>.l or 5-I0-5140 ..__ .1 l BR ment. Call 540..11.~1 ONLY $2S,9SOI rt'ally redu~ those mont~ Jt 3 Y Jd ~Sq Fl " .., """'· '" · " · 1 -~==-=-==---c11n vou i::et 11 • ...-aut1 u!. ly "'"""(18nts! $45.950 Jor A~1"eon .. r11v,· •• ·., qul-k·nro,: (lnr-story, .. & r11 n11ly Pare-DOVER SHORES I & 2 Ra 11{lnle wllh IR.r<"'(' s GI/FHA TERMS I Newport Beach. Junior exec. ,.....,.. " " " ... .-11 M o •· ' H "f I kl ' r · 1 + family. Pr iced Under bolh! ;46()0 rlown. See today 2 Homes On A Ctlmt.r Lot ~61. C..Ji loday! &l' l'T. any CUI om e.'l:ullS. BRAND OP.IV -Quallty h!1 rR rrfrr•• pool 1nr n n I y erl age ..g 1 "' R1n rn1. wnn 1 a~!! Call now. Thanks, 546-2313 A Good Investmrn1 At Cll.11 Patrick Wood 545-2300 H.WT)'! from cour1y11rd1pool. panell-122,7~~ &t 1hl5 Mnn!ief'Jlo HAFFDAL REALTY area. Arcade !tads to luge ~ S4' 5110 •~•LT0~1 I 842_4405 living nn. with corner Palos or 64&-Tin. $29,750 e Biii H•ven Rltr · ed f;im rm: "''el bllr, lrplc -Condo for t'Asy fl\•ing. Verde rock fp. Spacious Roy McC•rdl• R••ltor 2111 E. Coast, CdM 673-lm o(LE'c:ERe~T~ lo ~unken liv rm II.' \'AUlted CALL e ., .. J.lf I EXEC Pool homt on l i:\ modem kitchen with match-1811) Newport Blvd., CM. EASTSIDE TRI-PL EX ,._ll....._CIL ceiling, 4 br, 2 bR + p11'flr 91.• ~ ~ C .0 .-C•lli,,g-4:.Q. Rrn>. by owner. 4 BR, !!in. 1111 her to 'family Arl!a, .J 541-7729 2 Br ea, •· l>'tiO, f/11(: ..... .-·s. room. r.111.'ller BR, !iv rm,h'Cr Big lot, fruit tre~.1. quiet rm. rt'<' rm. s•~.!01. fl.l6..7!Wt. JtL b8lh Pvt '4 .~ din rm & kitchen 1111 on REALTY ~1. ~ & Ol!n, 2 ha. S2-l.950. lartf/ bdrm• • ,. • tp1'1. U 'iti yrl.y return in In-BEACH SPECIAL View, Sl08,!IOO. Roy J . \\'11.rd, Nt•r Ntwport P••I o rflct 5·\. LM.n r.1 t f"llA OK Sl!XXJ. Laguna Beach ::m' ov!J~~· ~I~ c~·~~::•P=::!~nd \\'e x.S~t'heEt~~~~oaed cir. 9v~~~;1. j s-ts-&226 45~;,,m1~ ~=~~O~;~~~ Rltr. fi1fi..~'i0. Open D11lly. Home Shopping-Stop St'r P11.gr 1087 Yellow Pages. pool end prl•ate groonda:, nHdi quick s&lf/ or thli 3 cult . color liider., rellrf GAR.AG~ for ff'r\f S2'l mo .. Tl'nTl!i. ADULT CONDOf.IINTU:il Now G • d EMERALD BAY Beth:r hurry. Cati 64S·0.103 ~m beeutY lll'ld tmly ~ map. etc. Ea1I of Ne11tpor1 BI v d. ·I bed + fllmlly A~ll. VA/ u In tar Just !Isled! Arrr. trarl!Uonl.l ~Ql£S'T E. OLSON block lo ·new marina and T~ HOME SHOW REPOSSESSIONS CAYWOOD REAL TY ~paciou~ 2 BR, 111 bll.. Ne11o• FHA Trrms S2R.5CNJ. f:J<OO. l BR. 3 B11., iep. llv. rm .• S-~'lnr clf/t1n hOme•, 10mt 6306 \\'. CoaJit HW)'., NB <pl dr' FA h I I •--I . ltl!ALTY d in. rm. A lam. rm. park. Submit}ow, Jow down " ch11lr J{ousehuntlng'" .,...,.. .SU.1290 ~. P · · · l'll • ent smog-u .. -.. oc11tlM'ln, Since 194' . REALTORS 3M5" E Coe. CdM newty p11lnted A carpeted_ 2, bn'Bld&St bl.r + din'a rm, w lk & L 716 E:1nerald &y $75,fXX] 2'l99 1-IAR90flt. C.M. !Incl·~ 1t1bjttt to LOW . 11 Hwy., 3, 4 &: 5 bdrm&. Som" wlth 1'1710~M=E-•-·;-Oh_l_""'_m_,-.-X-l,-1 patio &.-r1r11a~ Qv('rlookinir a er ee ~w"town c .. t• M... Shov.·n hy app't . • CUSTOM FOURPLEX INTERFSI' gov'! l03n. Total 67>7225 pools. F11A·VA conv. ternu, Ea11tslde \{IC. \\'alk to ahops. pool & clubh.~('. V•c11n1. 71 642-2991 Bill Grundy, Realtor J>AYmtll1s of $198, $25.~! REDUCED $10,000 lrom Sl7.000 tt'I S4Q,OOO, F'or!ln Co, li42-tN\ft 51 9.750. Xlnt terms, Owner, Rrallnr~ HAltlOR I 113~ Dover De., NB "'A2-46-• Qolce Newport arra. 3 BR w 1 k & L ~ "' ~ a, 2 BR unilJ. Jdu.l ~r a er e·e Custom 7 BR. 3 Baths ColJINJ & W1t1J1 Inc:. "/'llAKE Rnom For Dad-}1&--6607 7r-K.? f<)hn.i.;er Lt!i1 1111th C Q. Blly lrom C.Q. BY O\\"NER _ 4 br 2 Ni occu:plf/d A-tax abt.11.tr prop-Be1ut Sf:Cludrd lot, Ne11o'J)Ort 8843 Adimtt Ave. 9fi.2.5!,2J d y "' ... c Ir 11. n out 1hr la you 11d In t.he class1f1~ f7l-tl R·l2·44.'ii or ;,.io..:il IO CONOO -3 hr, 71-, hR, 11.t"rR playroor"n, ft"11ctd 'y 11 rd: ; .erf¥. $9,Ul Inmmt:, $12.000 Reeltors Buch. Open Houte Sun. 1·5 YciO"°don'I need I ~n to garaae •. your 1rash \JI CASH SECTION? Somtonl' 1 s I TIIE fRsles! draw 1n lh" 1,c;r pa tin nr ~m ysnt. FH •\ blrns, rrpt~. rlrps, d~k1.. , Down. S75.oOO. m2 Edingtt 2<iaJ E. 22nd Strttt Draw Fas! whtn YOO phu:e "Ith I Daily Pilot Clanitied wslrhtng fl')T It. D I 11 I Wrst Dfl!lv Pilot ~'·1'~. S24.IWXI. Nr Harbor t.-oct>an v1e1\', ~.000. ·194-31:12 PERRON 642-1771 r":"t,11 1142-4455 or ~10-5140 Ati:c::nt 67a.8l'IOO 11n 11d 111 the DATL'' PTLOT 11.l'I . ~:..!-.(;7!1 tnd8.YI Ck1!s1f1!'f1 Ad 61?.;vJi8 / t~1~lrr_ :Zl.l: ;i.1;.(Y.n) 11f1 4 ----------1 ----------·-----~---~·------------------ I ' ' ' ' • y • ' D.AILV PILOT ~----'"_'_"_·_J(~J I tkwiforU• -~------------~-~·------------~----~ Raal Estate Wanted 114 Houwt Furni1Md 300 J Hou .. , Unfurn. 305 Houses Unfurn. 305 Apt•. Fum. J60 A,ts. Furn. 3'0 1 _A_,_p_h_._F_u_r_n_. ____ Ml_ 1 Laguna Beach Univer1ity Park PANORAMIC VIEW TENNIS ANYONE? lS ACRES General 'Balboa Island Laguna Niguel General Costa Meta Newport Beach Mobile Home. Pa.rk ;~;';-,-~~~::;--;:;:;I==========;; 1"-';,;c,;;.,;.,.;;:.:-;;_ _____ l'-""-=-'"-"-'-"""----1 L'nohslrucled oc·t'an \' i e 11• frcun Rll roonis. :1 RednXJrn~. ptrchrrl on 1:1 ~f'l'ludt•d f'11U , \\'alkin_g disrari tl.' tn hcach, Sevrn1I rlri:k~ & large 11•1·. 1·acPd yard. Bu1l!·111 k11!:hc11 & Mi -~'i 1iy~1rn1. Garagr_ S42,500. C"rttl. This bcaui. 1ownhouse is near l-S Act'eJ : R·l Apts M 0 V'fN G-TRANSFERRE[). 3 BR. 2 BA, lorcffi air hlg, 3 BR, 2 BA, view, t·ptcl. $1S Per Wnk & Up LIVINO 1J11• tcn1Hs els.&. pool, Over. T1rtd or J1ghtjng w i ! h bltn ~lovf', ri•lng, rlr. drpcl. t:xtra l)l!Vt'd p11rk1n11: PALM MESA APTS. BACHELOR & 1 BR, Luxury 81lJ'dl'l1 ap!s, 0Uerin1 luokln~ large greenbelt. Lots L.A., Oraiige_ & tl'll8nt~·~ CaU thfl' prohlrm Crpts, drpll. 2 r11.r gar w/ ror trailer & boat , 3 ,vr:i TV Jr maid aerv allail. compl pri11acy, ht! a II I · ~~.~~~a~~11~~~~1rlit1:!er~:; \~~~. D~~:r~~~~. ~~~arr:. -P~~t;oa~~!~:~ 1 lndry rn1. $29~. 67?.-2431 ~~~24~. In t co11d. ~280. ~a~!!..l~~R~"·,!~~~~"iOd ·~ Victoria, C.t\·1. ~:~.~~ion.a~ tac~~:1::a.1~~1e:I }'OUrsrll & I his 4 BR . 2\.v cR.E. Brokersl 5'15·7166 nitnt Dill. Corona dal Mar tix:~ ;i..0.'"''"" FURN lech•lor & 1 Br. L'Oun1ry eluh •tmo11ph~. Ila. 114Jrnl'. t J.'i,!E-0. Quick HAVE $5,000 for dwn on J 545-8424 Lido Isle 2 BR llPls $l7:-; lrlo. Exceptionally n ice I F'urn. or Un'-t-lodP l8 open oc't'.upanty f hr/2 ba Mt. Will aaau.rne * 1 I BR houSf' lurn1shed , NO .:.;o;:__;;:;_c:_______ 2110 Newport Blvd., CM JO 11m-8 p.n1 , Rent! from (i. eel h 11 6'la Paper. Send &ddreu Ir. $125 * 6P'7~''.n•~$165. Yrly. Ph : 3 Br, crpls, drp11, b!lns. lrplt• • '1:~~lQ, OK $7~Bachelor, for q u i " t . $145. . • particulars to: p 0 Box NICELY Furn. l BR. wlw ...... ,,..,,. Adults. $300. 673--l'IBS, 142 •SAUNA permanent tenant include~ OAl(\\IOOD GA RDEN -r I 1142, 'NB. 9l660. c.rpt,, c:onv. localion, Toi ok. 2 BR. w/frplc, 1tv, relr\r. l ==v='·=:U=""='M=o·="==,_=·"'='='=·===I • JACUZZI util, No hippies,' no pell. APARTMEN'fS .AO tan 4 BR bouae, in aood rtpair, BLUE BEACON aar. 702 Avocado Open Sat l:l6l l\lesa Dr, C:O.ta Men M8--0059. 1700 16th St ., NB located nea r San Dlqo * 64Lil111 * 10-3. fi73--7949, fil>.7299 Me•• Verde Phone 111.1. -1.-. =-=~=~~~-~ 642-81 70 REAL ESTATE L _.,._ l BR. ft25. Pool. Spacil)u~. • * $l50 MONTH l~eway. Will pay ~ash. • 4 BR. 2 BA. Nt"' r rplll RE:AUTlf'UI. I. n d s <:pr d Aduli.. Ideal for BaC'htll)rll. 11!)(} C!enneyre SI_ I Univ. Park Ci>n ter, Irvine Call Anytime RlJ.()82() Write Box M·24 Daily .Pilot. B•lboa lsli1nd & rlrps, I hlk to bell. Adults, home in Mesa Vl"rdf', .l Br. ..,. 1993 Church, 548-96.~3 apt, ulll ilif's P11 itL :\30 W, Bay, C.rvt. SJ:l:i. 673--020:'!. 2 ba, lncd, rlbl gar, frpJ,·. 1 BR. furn. St.2.1-utilin. I ===*=""=='=3":1.=·.=":· =·== 4fl.1.941:1 ;,.19.():11~ I · FOR ~IP or lsr/0pt\on hy "11·nrr (k'C';1n v11, pno!. :-1 hr, rt.-11, 2 ha. $4~1.000. 494~l:tl:\. Lido Isle JOJO SO. Bay!ron!. 4 RR..1 ============ 1~1 & las1. $2;.(I n10 + ~rnall P roperty Mi1n1gement eluded. No chlldren, no Jll"IS. 3~1 ba. wa1rrfroo1 horn" /.·I Costa Mes• draning rlf'poi;_ 642-3391. Spec ializing in home s * ~18411 I ~r. 1 ba garage apt. ;;;==;;;=;;;====;;; HENT-LEASE or lA"11.se op. & smaller units, trrlL Pd. Garage, pvt yard, '----------"· Bill 'Grundy ru tr, 642-4620 J BR. HOUSE rlon, 1 BR freshly p8in1rd ~EPH.ENS 1 KA~'E quiet arra. Cplr , no pet~. .. ·--···----··----~-- 2 BllthJI _ t'ir!'place I in & oui , $i'l5/n10. ~.'>-40R~ 645-0ln Sl.15. ~1405, 646-6762. Lrir Bal ls attr furn hs" Gardening provided ruRN 1,l(e t BR. 11:p1_ Sl:i(I ON STRATA CENTRO f t•• Business nr wa!tr, patio rov'd lencd Chlld~n &. ....,1 o.K. Newport B•ach """""""""""""""""""'I Arl 11 548 98" 2•so 4 B;-rlroorn~. 3·'~ Baths Acr•ag• __ o!,_,_•c•clcec__c~C'-200 3 br, 2 ba frpl. 673-6267 a .~ , nio, u ~. -...,, ~ ~~ 1-'t --t Lot Opportunity ose 0 1·rH F: BLUF'FS-3 hr, 21l ba, HOLIDA Y PLAZA Eldf'n AvP, c~.M~-~~-= · ·' · -GOV'T LAND $~ an arrP. I 4 BR. !urn. Avail Fl'h Isl. ~r·hool11 &. shopp1ni;:; Df'l l/"f-" I I BR * * BAO~'ELOR APT. ~I 1 ( Str !a I · N , 2 level condo. Cr·pts. 1!rps, , • ·' "' .--.pac OUJ ~ • r<'r "• a \\11 ile Land Pat'kagf' 118j A1TEN1'10 $400/mo yParly. Ga..~ & w1r Just off lrvtll(' AvP . ._1 1 1 2 ,,,,.,, ""' 11" H••t-" -1 1125/"'" C·,·.'I w3,"g 0,. S7'.!,:i()() A11owhrad A1•e, '5,, D;otributorsNe•ded ! .. ins. rp<'. -1·11r gara~r. "'' ·'·" 00\l """' V'I<>-"" L Do REALTY INC I IX!. 646-2130 Avail, mid·.l~nuary LraSI' S37~-Call 11:grr1t , An1ple pa1·king. No childl"f'n 67>-3767 I • Rrr11arr11no, Ca HUNTS nr"'' multi-million $ $200 t-lonlh 1 1965 p 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 I I arlveriisi>rl sru1.ck pac pro-Balboa p.,,1n1ule I 1~22:18 ur 4!l!t-3103 . .~,..;10 J'.W' ~. t.niona, 1 BR lurn apt • UCf-o 14 •00 '.!\;) Apartm•ntiforsale1S2 duct~NEEO NOW ~ reliable., , 4 BR.1211 ba. 4l slry. Adult-" onl.Y. no pets Sant• Ana FREE TV ' MOVE IN BONUS 1 OR 2 BEDROOt-1 1 In1m11 l'. F'rPshly p11 i'nteil. Crp1s, dr·r~. h!1ns, fPnCf'd in pno!_ I or 2 r hilrlrtn -0k, No Pf>!". 1410 E. fruit ~t.. S.A. 10H Gran(! Ave .. 111 t l'or. npr -01 R"11JWn Buick), 11:-1~>-281!1 R.r.n · · ;'I • m•" "' '"""''",.,So Calif. 4_.., BAY ~RONT R a I bo a /d 1 Clbh All :'ipm: 5"48--2080 Ravrnl\a, \lrll furn . snu1ll ,. ~" · · ~ BR B · c~ts rps, Pflfl · SI' Bi1lboa Island 1 S.19)1) \1•' 2 RR un11s, Nr>11'por1 Bch. 10 .!ll'rvu::e ta&! molling coin Penln, ·•. , 4 11, p!t r, Pr1v. Lie S:t'iO/mo. ln1metl j Apt. Unfurn. 365 , 11;;:'.s~.0:~~. s~r1~~1~~r0ri7;-i~~(;:13,' (;oorl l0<··, 1·11nd, 1·ei'{lrcl. at-OJ>l"f!l.tl'd products in co, .st>. Ooat, winter or yr111 r!y. Occ. 642-3242 DAl\LINC 2 BR. $18;1 incl ,Dc•=•c•-'-PCoc;c""'-----I ------------11'lil'Tivr_ Rox !·17~1. Nc"'port 1 cured Jocatiom. Comm,rcial 673-2039 ut1l111rs . \Vinlrr" rPn!11I. Call SINGLE TV 1 k G•neral * * '10' Jot-Clean 3 hr, 2 Reh or 6·12-~>900. Sant• Ana n1ornio,1:~ ot• rve~. 673-1928. 1 · S~ I<· • ~' pr~~~A ;;;=;;;;;;=;;;====;; l)a_ Nell'ly rlcc·o!'alrd. L11r1:1•I ~·0~;~~~,1:,!~wo:tk~~otis~l~: Corona del Mer ,;~: ---------· up w Y. 1 171500 Kl 5-2.l2 C ... ~ NPw 2 BR housf'. A"ult,11 SM ALL S1urlio-typP. apt with fllarina Inn 3411 1 Coast VENDOME PR 10 · •• • '1 emetery in~-C A S H REQUIRED. VIEW . VIEW . VIEW 1 1 " oo rookin.i: h1cilit\r.ll. Hwy. alir>r ~ni. Lots/Crypts 156 ( $1900·$3900 Writr for person. Ol I" 1 I" b 1 I Lt:ASE OR OPTION, sparkl· only. No pf'!s. Sl60 mo. Call 675-12.VI =========== IMMACULATE APTSI * * 40' Jot • Clean .l hr. 2 · · -· · 11" ocf'an rom "1s cou · 1 -3 B 2 t 1 · l 11 • &l&-2:i4'J • ADUJ.T and " " d GR AVE SITES (2 \_ Rraut.! al inicrview. ,1:ivuig narr:c, 3 BR, 2 Ba. !urn. ho n1e.1 rn,1:' r, S?rY, rl·l'VI' Huntington Beach hf!, i••·ll'ly rrurrorate · allrlres~ ,t, phone oo. to Dis-.. 1 1 1 1-h w/lormal cl 1n1ng hug" 1 U • , Balboa Pffinsula rAMILY Section La ., flRlio s71 }t)O !111110µ Paeific .\'\cn1oria! .b · · h' 0 . · •1 p 0 ,.v111 no"' ! 1ru . une al . f -1 &. 11 !lb 'S'\00 MO I n1vers1ty Park i r . . " . Park. 67.1-77i4. tn u!or: ip i~·. :i ' . , . Call: 673·366..1 675.8886 F.vl.'.s. am1 Y II ~s-.' . BEAUTIFUL r~u~N. APT~. Close to 1hoppin9, Park KI ;i.2;112 aflPr h prn Br.x 31.:i.\ TorTanCf', C11.ltl. or a.s~_u':1e lo"' 1nle1esl lnan I. _JOI F:rlgew11.1er Rayfront $1C0.$165. Qult!t, pr1v, patio. 2 I* Spai•ious 3 BR'~ 2 ha 9tfaO:i. 11·/ 1n1ntmum rk1\\'n. Cal! :.! Al t ! halh .••.•....• $:l:\:i 111''0 lM-11.utfful units. Choir" wardrob@s, frplc, dre~s.ing * 5 .. ,,,, -i. , .. ,1· ;,,.,.,, ' d Condominiums ,, • h C I l t" ~ BR 2 BA FPL " ,,,_, u e·~ M111sa Ver e for ••le 160 GF.:O LOGJST !"l4.)-R·1'.ol So1H o a s I 3 BR, 2 bath.~ ........ , • .s:11:i oe11. ion. · • , · rm, locked 1ep. gar. P ool. * Frpl lnrliv/Jndry fac'lt Rrallors 3 BR 2' b t 1~"') Priv111e be11.ch. F'rom $2;)(1 Sa R ' * ,.0 ,. ".· •. , .. Ry 0 1 .. 0 ,, * rlrvr>!npin6 Exotic hi<>h ros1 ' · 1 RI 1~ ·' • ·'' ·' '"" ' una, ec rm. 1845 Anaheim Ave c ·""'' • I " 2 3 BR I' 'J h S32' inn. \Vinler. Mr. Robinson , \7301 Kr.elson Ln. (1 blk w. · . Ca!'rlrce C<>nrlon11n[um r:x.·1·r1BURONTO\\'NllOUSI'.: Rc· m1nf'raL GITal Po!ential. VER\' SHA RP .1 hedrm, 3 BR.· pcl1~sr;t:,·, ~n~1,··:...,,_·n1·,' 64'.!-70!XI, ol Bear h Bl vd. on Slater). COSTA MESA 642.2K,!4 rlusivt• i\lrsl! Verde . .<;air, 2 Redroi, 2 balh, onl' 54ll-33:\l bath hoine 1vilh dlllf' i::arage '"" C.hri~ima!; hnuse !"I'd <:arpel .<;tory, i·arpel~. dra.nr~. love.I C t M ,f; !Pncffi yard. A1-·11.1~ monlh 2 ha1h.~ .............. $3;l0 BAY t'RONT. \l.'intf'r rl.'nfal * 842-7~4it $l 7S NEW APT. 1;.rn!nient golrl .~ rrrl rlr~pc.~ 1.v pri1·atr patio, dble gar., Busin•ss Wi1nted 210 OS 11 •s• In rnont h for 1200. t am1!il.'~ 4 BR ., fa ni. rm. zi,, ha. s.11:1 lq: 2 Br lo\vl'r. Vif'w. {;11; f'URNISHED Bachtlor flpt, r·rplt. ail hl!-ln kilch .. 1 11ir L'Ondi~ioned , Take ovl.'r 1 . _ . . . FURN. Bungalow .,..1 1 lrii; I only_ Agt 54&-4141 7 BR., 4~ b11th1> ········ S4:it:l & util. Arluhs. no pet~. \\'11.lrr lr. iBll ptald. Adult.~ • 2 BEDROOM • Rr., 21~ tia _ Pr>0I. Spanish Cr loan with only $2·150 cash WANT!-~[), Small bualflf'S.' 1n Bdrm. Bltns. G1trb. displ., 3 Br. crpl!!, frplc, lencf'd \\'E J-IAVE OrnERS $2.ll/mo. 673--2760 only S80/mo. 536-46 7 8, e BF.ST LOCATION e rlesign. [Avrly it r n 11 n rl;;. -i-low .t:"losing t'flsls. • th~ r-;ewporl-Cnsl~ :-01eAA palio, Iner! y11,rd. wrr rlp. y11.rrl . Kids & J'.W'IS ok . 6:1<"k i -sii \.\'K-OCEAN ~'RONT I _:__'136-4979:. ~18 Pain~~~ Buill·in~. shai::-ce rpel~. Prrfl'~'I adttlt l11·1ng. C~ll l arw1n Realty~ Inc. I 111 c11 .. Pr·e,fi>r_ ma.II :rdi>r Adu lls onl.v. No pe1.~. $1.iO ~a.y 11 rl.'a nr srhool. S2:l0. Lo111•Jy B11:1·hrlors, ! -BR. 1 BEDROOM. n"-.r b<:h, Sl 30 ' draprs, ~riv. p11.tio~. ~arage~. _ 51!1-0917 962-6988 Anytime rlrclrl <: fix~ur r bu~lrw>. s "1 per mo. lJO sec dep, t>.lature I 5411-494:'! eves. Maid M!1'11ice. Pool. Uh!. I per mo. Trade"'inda Rea!ty, 356 Jo: •• 20lh St. , -------I "!lanuf'Rctur1ng levf'I or alon couple prf'f'd. 548--1 2111 3 BDRM 2 Ra 1 bonus e 67:Hl740 e 847-~:lll Cosla. j'vJrsa 642-4905 1 HURRY * HURRY LAZY LIVING 11™;,11 or opr.n /or oiher pro-CllARMJNC. 1 B;::--hous11. N~ rn1 , drp~, crpt~. ~11.ns, lg , • RACHELOft-11pt Utilitif'~ Sl2;>.Sl 35. LGF:, mOOi>rn 1 br i\~~llnl(' '1-4r, l(l<1rl oil illl5 2 Bt>drrn, 2 hath single ~tQr\I, du 1.;ls, ;..11nl lull d"~np11on h'ld 11~1 In ·rl yd $270/mo I se P••'d, 1-. Im", JIO E, B•l"-" i nr h"h.· -:mt~. d•p•.' ""· .. . I r -11 ' d -• I to· Rile o· Li IP Rox 4642 c I rf'n '"' mo. <: ' ' I "" u -VV<I ~ ,.. .. ~ spa.rkllng :1 hc<lrn1 & ran1ily Jll'O rssiona Y e co r at. · ' · • Call 642·R":U • 546-2344 ''StNCt.: 1946'" Bh·rl, Balboa 409 Calif. 5.16-4261, 847-5169 hnr11r, I r11n1At' Inds<' pg. O"•n- 1 rd. Low down f}l!Ytnl.'nt, 111.ke _ Gltndal"· Ca. 91 2(12· • ~. BR . + ho nu .• 1st \\'ll's1f'rn Bank Bldg. [)f.l.UXF: BaC'hl'lor l!nll~---: er rnlfs! sell 1mm <''d, Takr n\'r1·;:ov'tlo11nwithnoqu11.l.IHAVE $15,0!XI 10 1n~·I.'~\ in SllO MO. l BR furn hnu~f'. ATIRAC. 4 U . pk RENTAL FINDERS ; Fr•• To L•ndlords ; _ ·r . N . 0 . 1 , 1 -1·2 m11 rure fldul~~. No pel~.. room. near :.choo!s. & a.U ~ ni~ers_!!Y ar , . Coronti d•I M t .r _. \VJ!..I~-to .Oi;ran.-lJJ.i! P.<J. S "l l I ovPr pnyn1rn1~ of SJG;, a 1 ying. · l'al · nrw. 1~ncr ' l\rll r sl.. s 1 ah "· non· 6-42 ,~hop'£ needs, $235/rno 3:16 Days 83l-0101 N1ght1 l.INOR011(; CO. 53&---2579 ·• 64· --J n1onTh inf·I nrirw, int, 1;ixr~ tr<1nsf('r!"rd dPfPnse husines~: a.~ 64 81 c 8hriJ!oCi\1.12131 24J-.R9-J!? I Pvt. bach. rm & ba. -~-------AIJJW.lttii,CMt•M•• ,t i n.~. 0Qnly S2R,7:xl. Call ll~y Larwin Realty, Inc. /ul t ownrr nr working L Nicf'I V furn 'rl. No LUX 2 Rr, 2 Ra. l BR-~ep ' ~~==::_,~~~~~~! (;aul1. :i-10·11:11, Hl'rJ1ilSI' 962·6988 anytime Par t n er -~1t1.<1 sland eguna Beach i /'-.,-OELUXE :1 8~2-R-; I DON'T DELAY I C'ooki.nJ,!' 673-.6!ll-I ~ho1.ver 11 t 130.l \\'alnut. See ,:- 1 · -' 'I' oh' •11 hlr"· -1 CALL US TODAY I ---. M••· 21• 1.'fh .,1 ·•10 LGE., romfortahle 2 BR, R'"I ,-,,, .. ,,._ 1 horouf i 1nvrs111Z.at1nn_ · "' ~. " ~. '""'. ,,. .. , ·', r . . ,., " n RENTALS 2 1 8f'rl1wm r·urn 11pt v.·/ • l'lect ki1 ch, lirepl, pauo. ,..r I====-======· I p t 166 NB-C1'f arr~. PO Bnx rlbh~e. 1225· 5 4 ~-5 10 • 4l BR. 2 balh,11 ........ m: •.... ,e. $175/mn. 0('1.'lln &. bfly. $195 ydy. I ncome roper Y ;..!-20~l Daily Piiot, 330 \\'. 1. Ch11rm. old redwd. house !!33--3540 Lagl.M1il Beach Newport Beach al Victoria Be11eh. Ocl.'an vu 4 BR . 2 hR . ~:1 Toro .... $200 * Call 67;....'i;;:;~_ • £7.1-74:12. r --~--------1 Investment Opportunity 1 811.y S1, C.:-01. VF-RY Pv1 . 2 br hon1.-. Fl 1 ~ R 21 t SJ7~'4:.t:i ------==========ol B LBOA COVES ..j l'111ls 2 .-Juplexr~ shakf" -===========I ·~· p11th le11rl to bea r h, Com-11·/~tOl'I" dbl . rJ.!an , r !'ii JI! , , e F'llRN 11111 For 3 rno $30 WK LUXURY -A ' In vestment plrlrly furnls h1'11, fTrPplaer ' 116·.·,, 'm,, l<llf, ll'i;:: ,.I'd . I Afl, '.!'2 hnlhs .......• s3:,11 s11.·1 1110. :.o~·~ Arari3 Al.'f': Balboa Island WATERFRONT roor. hllns 1nr! relng''· 1•, I p 1 fl 1 27 ' 1st .~ a~I. J RH rno 10 nifl s~·i0 ,,7., '(""' t 11p. R11i·ht•lnr~. ~ing!r.~. I 0 t 't 220 l'i;fo!r< !JO!', ".·asrS' :,,lo. 6·[)-\!69, .. , . .······ '" "·.....,"'·~ Primr lnr J RR , 1 ha. .s111i:::lr h:1, 2 I~ l'f'rlflTI\ ~undrrk ppor uni Y 2. 2 bdrnl. furni~hed 8PI. 11 1 :l Rn_ 2'~ h11!hl'. .,., $'.\0()..$.Tf.i l=========== Bdrn1 , s1 rp.!' to h"h. a.II util, 12 BR, prl!y rur11. Rltn stovf', i;101·.v \\'r"t.v drcnr Frn!'l'rl tll'rr pnv gara~r~. 1-ontTrlP Shopp;ng Center Site \\"ood~ Covr , l;(l ,vd~_ 10 :1 BR hous,, fi~Olea~e . I 3 BR. 2 Ba, 1nhouse ,,,,$.'WO Coit• Mesa hTd pool, l intn~. rf'•· rn1, I rrrng, !'It·. forrf'd 11ir ht, ,\d Slip !or ,';(t 11. hQal Only d1·11r.~. n1al1ogany nanrl1 1n.1< s ACRES btach. l.gl.', trep !ihadPd pa. $2;)() mo. 3 hlk .• 10 o•'('llll, I i)'· .. red hill ]'l'~l!l:UJ'llnl, eo<:ktal!~. r1anc· I !'rfll.~. dr11~. Pfll'. ~unrleck. S7i:;oo .t· intwh mnr·.-. Sho11·s ,;lnl · , _ 116. M !n.-1 s1nvp & rp fr·;g , Ff'nrrd ni;:MAT!l(Afil.Y ini::. !/ti! pd. J1~:1. 673-24:11 r ·inw !&;alion w I srr.'k r tio. '-""'6-"" ·1 1 0· V'll I I! ~~--I Bill Grundy, Rea ltor .v1rl d on sr,:,.r.oo p1·1r". Top 1 , p 3 LR;e olrlrr 2 hdrni II•\. yard rlbl g11ra._gr \'"rant ll NB~:LI F:VAlll.V 1 ag~ !In oi.-1 Ap111 I.SF. 2 AH, '2 Ba unf. 'Stove, 8.)3 0ovrr nr, N R. fi12-11i20 1 ]rwalinn 11l,1av< rrntrrl sta;ion ('Ofnl'r •. arrnrrds ·furn 'unil (•]o tn down.! OQ11•'673.74!1!1 ~ft ;, [ E XTRAORDINARILY 4~-!l.1.~fi I !'f'fl'ig,(·f.Jl.~.'drp~.lleat.Arllt& Rk () , •1,. '+ .spl1l1ng St1bord1na11on cog · · ~e --------Bt,'•U'/ll'UI, I I 122-67-'''" ONE OR BOTH I r l\llf Sil\~ srl! .r ,,, • ' huyer . SACRIFICE• 714 ' to,1n. t·1 rPphH'P, \\' w ""r 3 BR/4! f11ll ba, f/yrrl I HEAi.TY " ('HARM ING l 11· 11p! in 0n .1·, .i_ ,,. • Herr'.< .voui• «harlf'P fo>r 1 or pav poinl~. Ph-011.-· .:i36-8S91 I -· E pf'!S \o!~ nr "'ond p11.11rl1ng S21~1 Univ. Park Center. lr.iine Val D'i1er• Garden Apt1 r ~ ~idl.'n!l11I r>PIR"hbol'hnod CoZ\·-1-R~apf-.-,~d-y.~N~,· I <>r fi4224 l6 S4ti-l266 Day~or VI'S • ('fl ,.~-·,oc r,4-n·n° 1 1 Clos!.' to 1:>1'111ch & tn1vn 1 I R ' 2 duph•x ... ~. Sl(lr ti,v .s1r!e. i\p. Va<e $2'J() Mo 1 _:-a __ "".:.:.'.:._""_,o:..._> a...:__':.... Call An.vtime R.11.0820 Ar 11 is, no 11e1~ · pels. Sq1111res on ,\', tr 1. rirnx. ;, .Yrs flld _ 3 HR . 2 ha , r, UNITS Money fo Loan 240 4. 3 bdrm. unfurn, twu.~ .... 2 3 BDRM HOUSF.: tJTJ.. PD., P11H1nR" R'ff'en, "'a.rrr f11:ll & Snl11:1! but ro7.y, ,\11i!uN.' I $16:! + uni"~. 67~.J:J()3, · b h I I II h " "'/rPferrn1•r.•, Sl 15 i n C' I ra(·n, par!iall.v furn ldral 3-1 Rnn:-.1.s ., 2-2 Br!rrrt~.. 11.t ~. JIN'p ace, LRr. pa_rio , No pel~! S215/mo. strf'11ni. nwl'r.~ !.'very"' rr·r, PeTlln. lo<". (ioor! r111a11«. J 1 fJ;if'h., gOl'l<:l l(lf';ition 1·lr11n. I 1 t TD Loan ~alk 10 bl.'a ch & shopping. I • ·~~3;-i~~· • 4!i' pool, rec. room, billiard~. uti!itie~. 494---8~92 Balboa Peninsula MORGAN REALTY nn ,\1a.u1 s1. fll'ar hrArh. $ )early ~8SP. S~ ~~· 2 Br. Nt>w crp1. Nn prts. 2 Apirtm11nurorP1ent RRQ'~. SeL1na, furn ,·tinlurn, Bn, fireplace, privatt 673-6642 67S-64S9 Pr'I('" ~4f;,{l()O phone :i.16-6~·17. I 71.-:~. INTER CST MISSION R~.ALl\ Childrl'n OK $1 ;}() -!-r!PpO.~. Si n_gle~. I BR, 1 AR I den, I p.alio, \\•alk bea<:h. Sll.'i n10. l an. 2 b11 upper &Ill Vl'ry .,.. u 98.'i So Co11:sl H'' l aguna I 2 BR. From 11.1: •. Sf'~ ii '. incl. uril . Pve~ 21 .1; 944-5717 nice. 1• blk In b<1.v 1 hlk \!UST-SELL RY O\\"NJ::R p 2nd TD Loan ' ' ' . Pho~(' 4!\-;~7~1. 646-56.l7, 5'18-61.11 2000 P11.rson~ Rd ., 642..11670 or 691l-7.l12, In <)('f'Rn '{rly l$f' $225 mQ, Brand nr11, rr,. si1nnlr , 1 Industrial rop111rty 168 I . 2 AR. N;\\' crp!s, drp~. pa.int, Ael wce11 HllrbQr & Nl'wporr.'. '~~~======= 673-9217 ' • hlk hearh, 3 hr, 2 h~. 2 -1 2 BR/l"4 ba. frp!r, patin., gan1~P. SJS:./1nn. Cple only. Condominiums 2 Rik N. 19th. lido 111• OF:LUXF: l hr, 2 ba. Ytarly, !rrlr hea.m «cilini::~ 11 111, )\1-1 C(lt'nrr, 1·Wx140. J6th & Trrn1.~ baser! on eQuity. 3 Blk.s lo bl'11(')1. $2:iCl/mo. No ..... t~. 5411_140;; 646-6762 , Unfurn. 3 20 ;o;c:;.:c_o;;c.;c_ _____ _ <"ar~1 , hugr r1hi .'r.11 r . Pomflna, mu.st he YJlrl tn l 642-2171 54i5-0611 CA.ll11fler5pm.4!\4-:l().l1 ,... · -CASA de ORO ON the &y . Btflulifully Wa.ter Yirw. Ava il Fl'h 1· &12-7;121 sr11 Je ,.~!11Tr . Lenn Vibf'rt, $1'n 1iog Harhnr 11 rea 21 yrs. l BR housr . 11~ Ra , Frncrd Costa Me1a furnisher! 11 pt. 2 hr, J hfl, s:roO mo. 57:i.-.i_l2'_•f.'__7_p_m_ I Rl1r .'>-JS--(IJ,qfl <'\/r.~ 673-6~4. I Sattler Mor tgage Co. lido Iii• ~·llrrl, S2'l5/mo. s2JO/mn yl'. -----------I CASUAT. C11.llf. Livi ng in 11 lirtplll<"f'. J>A!iQ. Call co!jecl OCEANFRONT Z BR $235 FOR SALE BY 0\VNf:r. I J,.11.~e. 646-1246, 646-6961 . NEWPORT RIVIE RA warm Mrdittrr11ne11n atmo~. yrly .. util '& tu rni~herl, Ph: 5 h!'rlrmni~ or ; ;l h~1hs FOR HC'nl i\11 ,.,.hop 20 x , ==='='='=E=. =1='='h=S="='='=' == < RR 4' h r ph<'re, Spaciou.~ ('O!or co· 1 :·~·=·•:':·:'~':''~'"~-:IO~l~'==== 1 ,~1g."~7~~========1 '·· ,, • 1 a . "'11!er rnnl 3 Br, nrw c111·net~, tW'W pe1nl Adult Cnndominiun1 ·r<O !unc•f11)nal h.-11,.h tinn1r. P1•L ~o· 1!).'\0 P!aecn11~. Annrx home w/dork, 011 Lid(l I d 2 8 nrrllnatf'rl 11.pt~ • rle~i~llf'd & rn11111111111ly, ~:17,0tYl Ry 11ppl i\n. :l Sflrl .. }.1~-L'i.J:.!. Money Wanted 250 N,-•, II"""' ~fnnrh gar r nf'r. $ lO nio, 19 Sl.l RR, 2'• Rf\ ~·rrt>pl11r·r furni.shPrl tor ~''·'It & i·om· Newport Beach "' .JVV '' Pomon11, :>40-9001 Flltn~ Drlu;\r 1nl er1or Ohl :..;;:.;."'-:.c;_.:c:;:_o:.;_ ___ Carone del Mer onl y f\42-1'11-tl : f\7,)...~fi~O . 3 RR 3 Ba otf.wa1rr homt -----fart e Hr11tPrl pool e Klich-:~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Lot. for S.I. 170 col\1r.1t:RCI AI .. STARL E.'l ·1 · -1 , ~'"' ,1 1 LG 4 An 2 FIA tw'1v p111n1 Rllr Ava11 no\\, sus/mo. , · 1. h Just f * B11yrrr.~t ,J ht', :l b~. (' -k j urn1 ... 1€' .,....,..,,,01111 1 -· ' . ! I l'n II' lnrl irl.'Cf lg'. lir\IZ. •, or fnr mnl r11111nc rn1 , 1111.:1• II\'· ·~nstri.:r•inn · perni~nrn 811] Grund1• RJ1r. 6-12-4620 I 1R pll\,V Y11 rrl. \~11. k 10 ra~r_ Dl.'luxe RIO. Adult,&only. No "'' rni. 1111111h. rni, r.:.,.iri• oct:AN JrnnL tn Coast Hwy 101oanr1nR !;!rrled. $3.J,000. ·• I i.chonls 1100 park, 5.~7~~9~. STEPHF:~~ .t-2 KAYE f>('!s. iSi"ngfe Adults P.-:', pro[l{'rl_v , 11.ppro.'i, J2,000 wner 673 .<k':r9 g I -64-,..012 lr:r 1 .. 1 nn ~rel11r1. rt "tn·1•1 · · Newport B•ach 2 R. l lnfurn Dup f'X. CrpT ~. ~====·======I 1 RR,-$115 turn , 171.IOO Ownrr, fi.u:; .. ;,J:~l 'sq _ ff, Xlnt hu ... 1nrssorhom"I I rlrp.s, EldPrly "Ill Da v~ -t iTILfTJE.S JNCLlH1f:D ~ ~!~~- Santa Ana Heights ~--- {1\\'Nl::H 11t!iNSFEl1R!·~ri $1000 11.~.sum""' 71;' r. 1 morh:a~P 5 HR !11 r:1ily 1·111 noo Ml -rL :~r .. 2!1!1~ San Clemerne I po~.s1hd11~-. So. Laguna, Mortga9111s, 1'0\Vr.'llOL'Sf;. beaut. mild· 54S..~~~. evr~ 548-0422 • I Huntington Beach ~.r,:, I.Ii, \\'i l!<On 6'1:.!·19j1 s110,noo 121.11 2·14-1197. Trust Deeds l60 3 b 2'-b f I ------ - (;0[1'\(; nvrr~r.~~. Rc:i11t 1t11I 'IP\\ lflt, Cn n,vnn l...ikC', S~"•'•lir•' 1\/1 Ii. filf...;.1,111 e.rn, r, .,.. a, rpr, pa· 2 RI{. 1 ha , Crpts, rirp~ VILT.A rACIJ'IC: 3 RR 1 '~ t10, poo!. 2-c&r faragr, al[ I Ya.rd , C11ra$tP , Slli:./rno, 377 Ra. nltn~ 2 ;·;i r r loAArl' R'Rf for ,..111,.. bltns, crpts, rl rp~. J...rase I E' JRlh SL 642-!!(]2!1 , ~·i·pis. rJ~P-~. ehild r~n/pe:~ $.125 I mo. Mr Rup['lf'rt ---------+ (a.ll 67~7~~ • 5",.7)0 "".5991 , ' 2 BR w/gar, crril-'. ,r,, rtrr~ \\f'l«n•n" 9!12-47~9 2NIJ TRUST DEEDS t~~~iiiliiiliiil~~~iiil~l,;;~~';.;;:•:•:__:•:m::·~'~':':'_':'" I rh1lll ok, S140 21;2.~-C R -• F \\'knr:ls, anaies, arm1, F:ldPn Ave, li7j.;)270 n"'rwr. I T own house Unfurn. JJS B1'a11t1f7i'I I f, 2 Flrt f11rn pr 1111l1Jn1 apl,\. Of FERTNC . si>lr rlr11n, oven~. l1 \\' 1 In 2 Hr ~ rl i.~pl~. ~111lR' <"rpt.~. rl rp~_ j~1·uz1.i ,f, S-auni:r ha1h. HuRe Pool, FOR AD ULTS MERRIMAC WOODS Groves 180 I I~ 4 Br. 2 h3 , tg.,_ h<>11~e off . Homa' flM'Pleonl ~ hf'ftch. 7101 Seashnrt. Avail 3 Ar, 1 ha. bltn rRnge &N I Huntington Beach J,C)VEJ,Y a a"n' hor.sr renrh. 1 '--------h J 10 S?tr 2 3 ov,.11, r1rrpl11<·*'· <:Pl" Bri:r11t1ful , <[li\('1011~ 1~1rnrr ~ b h -t ru un • ~ ·l, ~ l. I d •-< <~,..,..,~ I 42;1 t-1 r rrimiu• Way nr" ·' r r~n1· twu~,. 79&-1912. ,,,,.._ -~,. ,~..,. "'"· 3 RR Tov.'nhrou~e • L.~e-fl G r r. I·: X , 1 -2 h r I I ,, I I I I d I f'os1 a Mf'.~11 'I'~ 1a.~r t'flll + 11. LOV ELY 4 Br, f11.m rm. Fl nn~. rrpr/ rps, f1•p e. ·~""'--~~~ 'h1:~~·~rk~117,~· ~~;,..h~rh;: an1!"r11hrs for c omp I e Ir I Hous•s Furnish•d 300 Sl~~tle~. :if'Rp~· rmpl!ly focrl. c:rpt~. drp~. Dl tn~. Grl Arla m~ NR : Brnokhurs1. ......... • a • • • I .. pli>~surr. Whi1~ fro"" pic· i ------------• Zt.•/<•98 _4 __ .,, lo oc"an. !(}(', Sl:f.i. 546-00l'l. %2-~7'.f.i S6 nite up $27,5() v.·k up 1 nr~r goll n1ur~f'. Own('r l lurr hook ~rlling . Must sar l ~G~on~e!r~a~l'--------lim>·'~~:-<l~B ____ :-.-rU IJIO & I BR Ap1~ 4~2-.i~21 -$~,()() 11011 n l(l fflliahlr $27;. • J BR. 2 RA, furn I • Cl)lor TV, phonP SPI'\", pool DIAL dirl.'ri 642-56711. Cha rge I bu.1PI', SZ!l.~.'ifl hill pl'irf' Ir Av11.i1 ·1115, :t BR, 2 Lido I1lr hon1e. 6 rrios rt:n· Fountain Valley Oupl•x•• Unfurn. JSO • Linen~. maid ~rrv 11vflil. your ad. tllen ~it bar.k and !SOid 1hi~ \\·rrk. :i.1&-1266, ba. lr.ast. S2'2.i mo. taJ. Ca.lJ 673-:172!'1 $ZKI ; :.i BR/lt,;. Ra "''"" &.itiel cl11tiroom.bllli11:rd.~. l'lr. IJl~i'~"~n~to~lh~•~pho~o~•~n~"'~'~=~6~fl2~-~1'~5~7========.!=====·~•;;.~16~22~~·====1~~::.~~~:.==~~ I rrpi~. rl/w, -rtrP•. 2 , Costa Mesa Liv,. \Vhere the fun ls • HouMS Unfurn. 305 r a r / t n c I £11.r. 20x21 ! 2 BOR'l ""'"' ~ 1 . 2J76 NPwport Bl vd. !'l'fS.915~ B , B , '-----------"-1 l 'bn 1 ''d •, " "n 1.111pex. • • •••••••'I Business u11ness us1n•11 r •u:c: rm, " vt "'1 1 "' 1 Crpt~/drp~ & h!1in~ 778 w - , -~o2p2po:'..'.r~tu~n~i~ty,_ __ ~2~oo:::__O""'p~po:::.''~"""'-';~ty'---~2=00,_~0~ppo""'~'ct=u~n~;t~y---~200::.._1 .Go __ ne_•_•_1_______ Pl"t• OK? 53l-40:lfl. I 1llth ~i. CM £4~972 · '" • • '" * I· -BEAUT. B~u:h & l Br. apt~. $©\\J}N\-""B~S" The Puzzle wilh the Bui/f./n Chuckle 0 ~tc:rrrong• letters ol Ill• fc:rvr scrombl&d words be· low 10 form lo1Jr simple word1 l1 iE1?f•1(1 * $ 150 * E.ft't 81Uff 12 BDRM t•nlurn Du ple;>(. SJ:'! wkly &. up. furl' incl NE\VLY n,,coratrrl '2 BR Crpt.s/rlrp~ & bltin~. 778 w. u1 il. ~1onlhly 1crm~ Av11il. Cottnize. Sl(lV". rf'irig, Gar. O\\•rl('r'll bomt 11.pt, .l Br, 3 1111h ST, CM 646-tl972 998 F:I Camino. ~&-04.'il sgl'. Tt'lt~ & Pf'' ok. Ba. den. Lrpl. "ncl dhl i;'.ar * 1B R--:--Furr1.-SISS. BLUE BEACON 2500 sq. rt. S450/mo. 67[)-.503.1 Dan• Point POOL. Bltn11, crpts, drp~, llll * 645 0111 * rhllrlr~n no pet~ 325-,T I::. " Huntington Beach ATIRACTJV~ 3 Dr rlup!Px, 17th Pl, CM. ;14g . .'7131t 1-----$,~=---52"',() mo. Ch1lrlri>.1 ok. 33002 ' ------* 145 * IMMAC. Ex, lrg l Br, 2 Alcazar or 117()....(M24· CLEAN. 1 BR; 2 BR, 1 1 ~ SEPARATE 2 Br. Hou~l' Ba , duple.:t. Crpt, ilrp11, bll· ========== BA. Crpt~. drp~. lrg clt111e ta. Hu,ir~ le.need yarrl for kids ins, Ira: lovely priv. y1111'1'1 . Apt1. Furn. 3'0 Pool. AdltA, no pr.ta. Utll It Jlf'I-", Sinizlr" ok. Gar. + hu,ICP.: prk'K· $195. ~:.;,;.;_;_c_.c ____ _:.:; I-""":::.· c"c·c"'=:''l6=-. _____ _ BLUE BEACON Rr11pon . married ad I t 1 . General ACAPULCO Ap1~ artraclivr., 5 01 * 1...:842.c:.--"327_c6_______ Pool, Util paid, G11rden i ~*~=6_4~·~_1_1 __ 4 BR, ' BA pool horn<, ooly alNTING fUaNITUH 11, 1.,.. Adoll>, no pet•., BR J BUl!M. + family nn., tun 2 yn "'"· Crp~. drpt, COSTS LESS sm -1 Bil $l<S. 1'00 Souih Bay C!\Jb L~ A \l'hOIP IJPW wa.y of life dP.<ign.-d ju~l for ~1ngl(' prop!P. It's ft1n J·v1 nc "'ilh "'arm, dy· nam1c neig/'lbor.~. 11'~ a hr11.l1h ,.]11h, .. 11una.~. Awin1. 1ning po<il parry roon1 hil . Jiarfl~. irn10l'lr jtl"llf dr;vin~ ON TEN At'RES ! I: l BR. Furn &: U~ Fi~pl111«1 I priv. patlol I Pools. Tennl1 • C.Ontnrl Bid.st. 900 S..a Lane, CdM '4+2b11 !MacArthur n~ Cw!t H'fV}') rang{". 1ennl11 1·ou1·1.~. pro * COROLIDO APTS * ~hop 11nd rl"s1rl,.11T trnni~ pro, l Bit Studio. Unfurn. All Singlr. 1 &. 2 Brrl1'00m 1:1'\· .-1.-•i , tl.~hwhr, rlbl carport t. ury 11pa rtmpnt~ •.vllh 11!! rh,. lrg nool . $190 It up, fi7.1.:l.1711 mnrlrr~ r'fl.nvPnirn""-~ a1·11iJ. 2 RR. Frplr:. Stove/Rttrig. ~hlP. f urn1shed 111 ncl unfui·n· Nl'w ~h.i: 1·rpt, encl .l(llr, !Shf'rl. I Sl!l.'i/mn. No Jll"1~. 67:1-1109. MOT1ELS ()p~~N l)AlLY NEARLY New 2 br, 1 ba, ·10 AM 8 p t-l I ~hai: crpt, bltn~ k drpll ' · ' ' w/lrplf', S200 nio. fi75-S724. RENTS FROM $ISO NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th I 7141 '4S-OlSO SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS • • • l iv• where the fun 11 I ----.1 BR, 2 bH, IJl"\\'ly dtror. $.100 n 10_ fll9 Poin1Mttia, Cd.\.1. ~1~1;,.i LI. uoiquf' hra" -<1-,--,,..-.-,~b-r-, I 211 ha , bm teil, lrpl Ill! hltn~. be~t 11 re11. 67~004 .1 RR, 2 811, cptl!, drp,, att'IVf , refri11. dwhr, gflrb di11pl. I 12ri01n10. 67~2'698 1 BR. 111pt. unfurn. ror adull. $];:.() !TIO. inclu(fe.t Util, C.lJ R37-2!J..17 f'VI',, .-~-~-1 • 2 BR apt w/gsraae. Pvl f'ntrance S200 mo. 7 0 (} Narcissu1. 675-11!74 WTR. 2 BR, Ul:ll pakf. Nr. Co1te Mesa bch It a1or.,.s. $1~3. 300 34th ;==;;;;;;;=;;;;;;==;J St. N.8. St:-e Be.11 Mttrim1.n dininJ nn., buill-lrui., brk. bltn.l. J l:'~r Jt:Ar. Call Mr. Wallace Avt., C.M, S.190 11. month. NO FEE. l!Ot!,Rtt Soul.h c0a.&t Rltr1. Nl'wporl, 5-ID-1720. 545-8424. I IA(i•T1 or '"J. (1173-7721) IS.~!3461 DELUXE Cnmpl~te l BR, 1-~urn, Beaut/Furn Bach Apt all 6, "xctpt on Wtd & TOWNHOUSES "!;low All S22 Jlf'r mt1, W111lk 11.JI 1hop~/the1tters l ~S~"="~===~~-~~ ON NEWPORT BACK BAY t· I I SUPOI I J J J J~ • Moglc:lon't problern1 "My . _ _ . . wife is olso o moglcion. Sht ,---:--:-:---. mokes money -." I B E B L A D I 1-1 h7..-'icj 'r,J.;.._;Jr--.,.J -.J'rl 0 "-'"' lh• ,h,.;1e ""°'"' . by ftllln; In th. Jlti9'ing word . . you develop from sl•P No, J ti.low. ... PRINT NUM&flfO I' W LETlflS 1'1'1'1'1'1'1'1'1 1 · I I I I I I I I 3 BDRM ., Famlly rm., p11:rk IDEAL for the 1maller f11mi· l!kf'I yerd. Co~ta M"s&. J<id~ ly -3 hr + dt-n, eonOO OK, brk., $200 a month. NO w/hltns. Walk lo !Pll'lop',r It F'EE. 540-1720. a r.hoola, $2 10 mt1 . R"lerence!I. 962-ltl.ll roo r. PUR CHASE $1 10 Util. pd. 5-1Fl-I09!1 OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 BA, O PTION LRG 1 Br. Adult1 only. SJSO. crpts, drpa, dlx. Winier. 3 &. ~ BR ·l Ba. },rplc, tam Ind. il~m 11.,.lf'Clit'ln Nr, OCC k UCI. S.'lOO. Adult11 only, No ~ls. room. double prage. Be•ut. 24 hr. dl'lv. Mon1h 10 Mo, Call 642-25.i0.6 .~7;,.....~~· ==-,-.,...--,-~I Joung,, Pool. Bii iiards. ;:; Adult 4 Chjkl.rens area CUSTOM 1 BR. New. 8'au1 . turn. OCEANFRONT wlnlf!r nnral $250/mo. 642-0300. 540-51.fT F.tr11ltur• IHtel No m() lo mo. Adult& onl y. • 2 Br uppt'r Including BALBOA Cnvt~ witerfront. I =L=•~•=""c:::ec-=B=e=•=c~h'----1 :-117 W, 19Th, C.M. M3-M81 2220 Elden. 646-92'18 eve&. 1e1.raa:e & 11111. Nt'l chlldren, 1 ~,~.~.~-~l~B~A~.~c"."...,!"',•0!\f!l,1~.,•.1 ~rorated 3 BR. 2 BAIM. NEW ~ BR, 2 BA, ocean Anahtim 774·2800 QUIET, &tutlioll Sll~, I BR.'1 1 ="°=~pe7t='·~"""°"·~"-2-;=3<~2'::..,-7 I Shea: crpt11, drpll, dllhwhr. Balboa Cave1 Month lo month. S.l.'JO. vi,w. S295. L.11.Habra G.!W.3708 SIT.l. No chldm or -peill. OCEANFRONT l Br. ldt!AI pa.tio, beam CfoillnA:8, flitlc, Bill Gnincly Rltr. 642.4620 ** 494-lllill7 • • CHATEAU LAPOINTE-21li Eld('n Avt, CM. Se" lnc11t.lon -painted. carpeted. a:ar. 2G."i0 Elden, :,.'17--0062 att Thank YOU tor rt111dln11: our · · W Ii IT E ELEPl{ANTS" OF.LUXE furn 2 Br. 11p1 . M2r Apt 6. S\30. fl"l('I, utll pd, Y"arly 7 pm & Sun. $16.1/ITl<I, c::l.&1s,ified 11d,, hoJ>I'! we h111ve 011errunning your hou.~? Pool. Cl(l~ to thOP~. Sl50. 1 BR. f'urn . Adults, Pool or 11eaM>oal !213) 693-3671. 1 011"00~-~,-B=R-. cGo,-"'-.. -. =s"w-,,.-l SCRAM.LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 be.lpM you or can do llO tn "Cuh" .. sell 11'1em thru Adult~. no Pt't~. C11 rl)(lr!. ~ W. H11mUton Tir..ED of that old tumilutt? Rtlr\g. Couplf or elduly -'---------------------------'-°"-fut\lft. Daily PUot Clauif!M 1941 Pomon• Ave, C.M. CM . ~160 M' M5-<l780. lt'a ,_.b' fttM tM.t bml penon. t ctifftf•Olr, ~1231 • . . . . ~ . ~ . . Looking For Someone To Take An Order? We're Ciood At It • We'll even pay the postage to get you to give us an order. Get ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put a hard-working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you~ USE THIS ORDER FORM 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES l " 7 12 TIMIS TIMIS TIMIS TIM IS $4.SO $6.10 $10.65 $15.90 $5.10 $1.21 $13.10 $20.1 0 1 ~~-1-~-1-~~1 ~~1 ~~1~~-~-1-~-1-~- $6.00 $9.76 $15.SS $24.30 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 P11bti1h f•r. ,, ••••• , .d1y1, b•1Ji11n i119 ••• , , , , ••• , , •• , ,, .•••• • •• , .• , .•• Cl1u ific1ti•11 •••••••• , ••• , ••• • ••• • • • •• • •. ·, • · • •• •• • • • · • • •• • • • • • • • N•"'• • '• •' •• • • •' • •., • • • .. • •. •• • •. • • • •' • • •, • • • • •',' • • • • • •',, • '• • Addr111 ••• , •• , ••• , •••••• • • • • • • • • • • · • • • •• • • • • • • • •, • • • • • •• • •,. ••. Ci"V , , •••• , , ••• , •••• , • • • • • • • • • • • '~•"• •••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • TO F16 Ull COST '"' •nly en• werd 111 ••th 'P''' 1bev1, Include Y""' 1ddr1u •• phone nuf!lb••· Th1 co1t •f you• 1d h 1t th• end of th1 lint en which th1 11ot wfl•d of your 1d 11 writ. t•"· Add $2.00 ••frt if yo• d11ir1 "'' •I DAILY PILOT !ex 11rvio1 with '"1i!1d f l • ~-·. ····-----CUT Hill -PASTI ON YOUR INVILOPI --- BU SIN ESS REPLY MAI L 'i"t Clno ,.,..,11 Ne II, Co1h M ... , C•llfo,~;• Oro ngt Coast DA ILY PILOT P, O. lox 1560 Costa Meso, Colif. 92626 Cleuified Dept. Or Give Us an Order by Plione • At 642-5678, The Direct Line to • DAILY PILOT Classlfled Want Acl RESULTS o.iLv PILOT ..__ .... ____ _ [--.. -lttJ 1 1-· .. -lltJ 1----ittJ J 1--.. -lltJI .............. lltJ 1-·-·•'w•~ lttJI ............. ~. lltJ L--1 _ ... _ ... _l~.,~I _·~_., .. _!~ ! ' ·-----··-· ..... . ·-------------------·--. --·----·· -----------------------------• 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 IApt. Unfurn. 365 Apt1., Off ic• Rental 440 P•raonalt -~~-"-'--~~-~-1 -'-•-•t_e~M_e_•_e~~~~~ 1 =H=un==t=i"=P~'=°"===B=e=•="'=======H=un==t=i=n~9='°"===B=e=e=ch:::=:=: l ~S;•;n~t•;;A~n;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l~:F:u~·:n:.:•:r:U-::n:lu:'~":·:=3:7:0 s --u-.-.~-r.-.0-'-E-L_u_x_E~Q-u_A_L_IT~,.1-~~-f~R~E~E~~~-, l·2·l roo1n, up 10 3,000 sq FAIRWAY $175 BRAND NEW oft Q. _jJ. Huntington s •• c:n fl, ollil·~ SUlf(ll _ tmmf'ri. Or· Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 1~------- Costa Mesa Costa Mesa • CORSICAN Nt>"'· llu·i.:e, cltluxt 1-2·3 BR'J, 2 br, crpls, drps, it.!lrage • [ CAN'J 8£ BEA J cupancy. Or&.nge County. BaJtn: Boating Courllf" oH- f't1!'<1 10 the publ1r hy th• Bttlboit Powe1• Squadron. Pr!va!t' patio lhl11g, only 3 VILLA APTS 3.\1.C \\'rlflld!and Place a Uttl a ermo~a /.1r por! lrvh1P Commer(' -·,,·•-,, lo ,_ .. , bl" 61""1l" "' 64 .. ._~~ C l H SINl.l.E STORY ON BEACH' C'on1plf'x, sdj. A1rporter • ..-"'"' _,..,u ug. • ..... .. ~--"""" asua estate living. Enter La Quinta er-·1 It a pow .. r Bl' d h I d .. S<111th ~8 A1mosphf'rt • llotf'I !.-Re1111.uran1, bllnks, SRI as Wf' ll · n11, v.· r, orN' air uf'11!, I Br. upper apt. Cp11/drp~. mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree-2 RR. -2 BATl-1 S11n n1 .. 20 & N'pt Fwy~. hnaring t11ui;:hr . Sta1·11n1 shag crpllJ, drp11, li•plc In 3 2 & 3 BR'1 blHia, w/n!ght-ll~t view. li ed lk t t • Bacllf'lor Apl!. rror11 Stl~ UNCl!OWDF.D PAR"'ING 7 0111 f\.1o n. Jan. J.11. Every . ' Br, gar . ~ ~' mi. E. Qf Sou1h Prtv111e plltln, pool . indf\'. Gar. No -ii. 646-68.U 11.lt n wa ways O your ap ' C1uw1~ & drps e 2 RR 11r1f, ~~nim Stl:1 " coiu;t P!A~.a; iurn off Sun-, laund1-y fac. .,... All UTILITIES INCLUDED Air Conditioned l.O\Vi::ST RATF:S ~1ondll} nili> lnr 1~ wf'rk~. '· I 8" U f $150 F $110 p,,· .. ,1, p,,,,, e 2 RR ~·uni. ~·rorn S2S5 Ow11er 1ngr. :!172 OuPor11 Dr. At Ne wfM'Jr! llarhnr ''11cht • no\.\''"'" R11s,.1 Nro1ir Orang•. Co. •·-~ & .... n . -urn. v .., r·-,.1~,, ,1.,_, ,,,1 .. ,.1,. " ..... .....,,, NE\VLY Decontll'd 2 .B R l 9a ···u f $175 f Jl10 J·i•.·A·rc'D~l. '-"" . ',.,...,,, · 1"' ,, .r R111. 8, f"Pwpor! 81•11ch Club, 720 \\!.Rily AvP., FHOM ,,,,, UC!. Adlllf• o•"·.' -' .,._ n . -urn. r ~ • vv ,,.,,.,, ~1 .,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,, " ,......, downsl•ln cpts <lrp11 h l' rr 11 ' ' inn•··' ·• 833-3.2'1.1 C11urtPsy 10 Broker.~ Nr1vpor1 8r-11ch, BrinJi? 54()...J.!173 or ;,.1~2.121 20122 &!..r\la Alia Ave. blln•. ,·,1;. onto.' 1140 mo'. 3 Spac. fir. plans, deco:-. fu rnls ings; 1ve er11y o awn tl·c r1Ni1n-uccan vir.w~ i\1 il-1 J hi .,.. " ·1h· 1· ll' /! C11rpor1 It s1or11g• * DE-;:--UXE _*__ no•l"book It pen1·il fir1t 1 A'r'fRACTIVJ.: J An, 11~ gr_ rs, oac m., Apt l·A f4!)-.l62'7 . WI tn roman JC se 1ng w un or p nvary. lllDr>EN VlLI.AGE palin.~-an1plt parking . ~ · nil,.. l'•ny quPllfions call BA. spl it lrvel. lnimHr. 546-621) SHARP Lg, 1 br, c.rpt/tirpR, Terraced pool , pri. sunke n gas BBQ's w/ GAnDEN APTS. ~rl·uri!y J.:Uli.rd~ Oth.ce space 1t\la1Jabl". T\\·o 67.~.iit:i'i Nf'w r 111s/drp\ bllnll, Nr. e MARTINl9 UE e bltinft. Qu if'l hlti'i;:: Jnfan! se.culded seating comp!. w/Ramada & Foun-2,1'\0 Souih Sal!a HUNTIN,GTON f'}.:l'.'Culive suit.es t770 ~q It --·-------1 shop'Jl: & 1<chh. Sl3/f. 11111: I . OK $130 540-6722 or tain . SanJa Ana Q 5-16-1;'>25 11.nd 708 sq fl) 't~ch wilh 3 WILL PAY 2>!6H J.t1Salle, Apt l, ~~Jj24 P~rk-Lllce Surround1ng1 1 5-ti-2682. · * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect li ghf ing. PACIFIC orl icf's. La r¥e. rt"eepi~n Nl'P(i ndf' dAlly ro & from 1: or 540-6338 I DELUX'E 1-2 & 3 BR APTS.1-* D•lux• r•ng• & ova ns * Pluih 1h•9 crp+g. 711 oc .. ;AN ,\\'t:. II n. rooms, Gwtik . !llDt'ag1'' Al•,-\\'nrk Ll\p in Lamina • work : AISQ J."URN BACHELOR AVAIL FPb. 1-1.rg l Ar * B I ti; C __. 11141 ~~Iii l,\S7 qu11te p11r 1ng Ara P ' I SPACIOUS !n"nhoust 1~rido P P•fO"-· c...,111 d,.,.,11 hltn~ e.J1rl i;::ar onui 'or•g• sp•c• OY. c•rpo11 FREE TV · · 1n l'n~ra Mc~11. l ourg 11 to· TV "" * Hid Pools ... • ... . • 'I* s It d bl I '1·1 b th l)h· (IJU'n 10 11111-li pn1 1);1 1Jy lt("l'Oftll frnm th_(' 0l'IU1Jl:P '· c -•1 "2'321, ,,, ~o-.. 2 hr, 111 ba llf'w cri11~. d lt no ! $140. cup ur• m•r • p u m•n 1 • • I ~ "-' ""'.., •• hi • Nr shop'g e Adults only 11 u ~ pe 5. * El t 1. \I'll.I.JAM \l'ALT~:R!\ CO. r ounty Atrpor!. 4.'i40 C!lmpus ._~ 494 •• 739 rlr·pi<, rn~. FA he II r. 1777 San!a Ana Ave. CJl.I I &l&-1762. J e~•n r•cr•• ron room. I ~~~~~~~~~~~ J'lr NPv.port Bth .• Conla('I '"'nlp . ;i ... BN'11k(,<t!'I rntr .. rl1n'a: rm r..12r. Ap1 Jll • S.16-554~ PARTLY furn I Br duplPX URNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY MOVE IN BONUS 1. r11~'f'!<t'11f'f Hn1nr! !(Ir !urth·1, P11t;o .• 1tl\~1t~~· Ov1rr~'._Xlk1 11a: > U 1tp!. Adt1lrs onl\'. Nn P"'~· Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego $115 to $135 N•w port B•acli "r 11110· 546-IUIOL ,,--------,]~ ::: pon t' u Sf'. :i mo. R ~A Tlf'UI, Country Cluh S105/mo. 974-R ·w. 17th St. 1'1 r wy., GoJdenwest Colleize. lrnn1ar F1'f'shly p1t111trrt. !.·• SQ-1_1• . ... ,,.bl< roe Loil snd found Ariult~. ;,.18-6fi07 Villa, CM . 2 Br, 11; ba, 54~954 San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on ('rp1~, drrs. hltns, rr11c-er1 In Westcliff Riviera "' .• u n 'rHF.: GARLE.~ -pvt p!lllO, t'rpis., rlrP~. bltn~. ' • UNUS. UALL\' .~ruo1· 2 1 Beach 3 blks. to Holt; \V. on llolt to . . • pnol 1 nr 2 childrPn ok. 2 RR . lur11 (lr uni, Rlln.~. l'rti.;inerr\ni,: desia:n o!ficf'. L--------' l 'llF'. SEl'll.LF.' f'rt•. S260/1no. C•ll J•oh~ •-· ·pl ·1 ,, ii• 1·11 p " F.q,ip""'d 11 1th rltsks, drar·,1~~~~~~~~~~!!1 . ' "'"' . L Q . t H 714 847 5" I Nn ""''·~· ! no E. Fru1T S! ' tr s, I l"J .• 'I\ ,. "'"· .~ ~~dwat•rl~. 96R-6323 br I ba l11m s11.e ~tud10. a Uln I ermOIO : -'T"t ,,. IS i) NB 1in, bOIH'dS, f'll'. Oownlown 2 Br. 1'~ Ba,"'"/ gar. Arl\ts, No pels. $l'.XI. fl.1~1-5270. S.A. 1(lrt Gra11d Ave. at cor. 'XI \l'l'~t!'li ll .r, · c .... l. Sl;ic). 642--4:.!JO Found (free ads) crpts, drps, .rani':e, lncd yd, C(lZY I br, beamf'd rpi!ini;:, R3:'.-:l:..10 orr l)t P..e11son Bu11'k I. It ii1:.!-il8H * p1i11n. 636-4!:!0 I sl(l1'e & refl'lJ!:, crp1~ drps. _:::::..:::.::: _______ A t U f 365 x:t.}-:,ns DESK SPACE FOUND: Youna: m11 l•. 550 Z.139-G 01·11 11ge i\\'e $17>.'i Pvt yai·rl. Ga rdenf'~ SLl!l • • RIGC;ER than 11 no'!'"· P • n urn, Irvine L aguna B•ach Shrpllrnl niill pup. Very : 2fol!l-!:: Sllnt.a Alli\ Ave SJ.').', 111(), ffifi \V, l~lh SL, 642--4960 J _Br. 2 1 bll I I u d In . H unto'nglon Bee...L Westcliff 222 Forest Avenu~ f1·1f'r1dly. 1111~ Ii(' lag.' -hul ~. -1195/nio Nn -rs 54!>-5210 i;n L 1.:.;co.:;.;c"'-'-------·s·1·111>1ns • 1 R". ''"' r,,,.,, HAR.OR GREENS f'.\I 2:i4 nr 64:.!-9S21. .,~~3,.0· '" · ' '--~~--~--1 NOW EASING! " L B h Ph Nn. unflhll" !n 1·r11d . Can • ~-,, 2 Bd 2 B th $16:> -2 RR. New sh1111:. Bl1ns Q111,,1 , p\r11 <11nt C11 ll l'Olire1 oguno eoc hi• idrnillif'rl 111 1007 E. ; GARD!:N £. SfUDIO APTS * 2 RR , f'lf'c bltns, lork. I NE\V 2 BEDRM S I~ rms, . 3 N'"w, flim ily llnd 11.dultl'I unlt., Hid Pool. Quiet 11dul1s, no Dwyti· 1~1:1 • •1:17-6104 494·!1466 Ralhna nli·rl. Ralhua (Holl-! Bach. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from $110. gar, ;Vlesll .~rrrle 11.rra , Bisi: Shag cp1s, f'nrl 11:ar, bBlc. \.\'llh total ~reatlon club J*!.~. fi42-2;:,1 4 2700 Peterson Way, C.M. closet.~. Sla.J/mo. No pets. ~92 \Voodland Pl, &16-~7fi 2 \VPekl'I 1"REE RE:NT l'!:llrl JH'e·school. 1, 2, & 3 ""==========:~s~o~n~CO.l~e~m~•~n~le!_ ____ l J.116.'J Park Ave C~l. 1,000 dl'!:y ApL~I Ap! Nn. fi ! ;,;-7 11'00 -:: ft . 4 Rnu1. Air..'.rond . Phonro • 546-0370 · l - ., BRAND NEW 3-PLEX SlatJ MONTH -POOL bdrms from $1~. Nr_ 1hop. Apls JAN 1 1 \' 1 1 ]n(·l 1~pt drp<, kid~ OK p\ni::, golf, srhoot~. Jusl ., 2 BR . 2 H1\. hlT1n r1111~f'. 11:1:\.-3921 E"\'t', Ctsy to Akrs. s ·. nuns;: nill " !'A · ! \VIL.o;;QN GARDF.NS APTS LRG l Br. apt, All npw 2 BR . Gl'!:rAs;:e. Exr r11s, __ F_u_r_n_._._,_U_n_f_u_rcnc._c3_70C dshi\~hr l1tumtr y r:u·. Hi:-,·. . --grP,V stnpefl tm ck, hind leg1 • 2 BR Unrurn, Newly dee. tTpti;, drps, tile k p;:iint. 2620 Delaware, H.B. soulh of San Dil'.',go F'wy, on .lOO.fi00.1200 sq, 11. & lron1 lei;:s v.•h1 2251 ! 1 lf'ft. S175. 64.-.. 1-.44 •12 :m1· nlfe•, p "' m1•1G c,,,, .•. o, ,,.,.,". <33 3133 Gener•! rn1 1asrf'f11tli• d1·r·0r111f'1!. 0 C s •= s-1 ~ Nf'w cpts & drp~. Spac Rhns. S14.1/mo. ~&-04jl. . • ' " · · ,,.,.,.' '" ·· ·..-. . • F'fo'I f :., .puv· ""-S ""· Orange Ave, C,\t befr 12 ; 3 • -bd-,12 •-o•w ·-t•/ PARK WEST A1tu11s Only -S:lOO. up "··a .. °'"2I'° '""'Unds. Adult~. nn ""'1s. ~ El Cami/JO, CM. ...,. "" .,.,, .... ,.. . 2 AR s1·-U 3 BR -==~;;:~;'":::°'~':;·=~=~==~==:1_::000~'~' ----,---:-:-cl'! ,. .. " I drP~. No pet~. Ch!drn OK. . J.'.J p, • . APARTMENTS 2 BR. tlnrurn s l 4 0 . 214 Clll!(' ra1ri1.:ia :::; S140 mo. 2283 Fnuntaln Way * TOWNHOUSE * Al'ail now. $165/ffi'l , ;,.i:.-7245 $180 UP. Patio, p oo t, Ov.•ned arwl Managed by Cpts/tlrps, h!1n~. G11r · B\'l. (';i.~ll Conlrnla, 492-22:'19 Bu•t'ness Rentel 445 FOUND • white w/pink ' E. (Harbor, turn W. on 2 A chilrlrt>n ok. J\10RA KAI I 1n I • \\'ilsonl. RR, 11,-1 B . crpls, drps, 2 Br_ Crp!-" drpi:, 161 ~ S1in-Apt.'. l!Wll Mora Kat LanP, 'fhe JrvlM Complln)' Nti pf'ls. 711 lll!llanapoli~. nn.'lf', rna t pup. w ea co·· p11t10. Adul1s. SlfrO. 13~ E. 111 Ana A\:,. Cr>l SllO/nio. llR. AIMl 1 Rr. furn. Arlll1< S1orp !or ll"llle 2000 sq. rt t1ir. Could ~ ll Siimnyl'd. ~ Quiet Adult Living r-,1,,rooy Ln. !l4R-1 76ll I _ · _ 1~ hlk Jo:, 01 BeflCh oH Pool. Carpor1. :i6() \V , I I! &I !•n Nll'pl Bl\'d. 11t Harhnr, Vir : r..1 !s.c:ion Virjn. SPCA ~ t l.t 2 BR. Shag f'pts, bltn.!I',, M2-7279, f'vts 54J-8·172_· _ GarfiPlrl. 962--89!14 New port Beach Han11/lo11, C:\1 . :i.\:...0760. f'enl •I• ,,-c .,\1. LMn \'iherl. Rlt r 4!M-lal2' rloi::s Nn. 19576 ! -·"f lori""pd. SI~ & $170 NE\V Unfurn 1 Br. apt. LRG 2 BR . Crp", d"'~. 1 I BR •· h I 'IH O"'o 61'""4 ' '"'"" .,,_ "" ·.. . near ucac , ne\.\· Y "' ~""'-· P\'l'~:_ ~},}_. __ CAR kf'ys !oull!I on Banning • incl all uul. Adults only no \.\'fbl!n!, 1·rpl1<,. d.rp!, child ok . S1 1'> + dp. 2'11 4 d tel ·/pool $140 per P/l.RK NFWPORT • ('fire C t M • • J>PI.~. I d.~.hwhr, all u!ll 1 n c: l . Collf'~l' Ave No. 2, 646-0627 11~1~r~J:O. "1 br ., · bhns &. I frtf' lh·g ~verlkg !hl' waler: OI • es• I Y ACI IT B1~ker1 ~ e r k s SL h 1 w n Capi11!r11nn & : 241 Avoi ·arlo St. 641>-0!l79 Sl.'IQ/mo. lnq. 3-07 Avoc11do, re!rig, crpts ~ drps. $150 7 pools, 1 tenf\l~ t'IS $750.000 Rooms 400 Newport B<" oc • 1 ion Christinr Sr. 0v.'llf'r may • Apl 9. 645-0984. I East Bluff s Jo, Sl7:l Sl50-VILLA CORDOVA \1/doc:k acCf's•( 213 : pick up at Banning Library ~ LRG. n100rrn 2 Fir. B!tns, Incl uril'!. ·pa. roni · to '. I LC:E lurnh·ht'rl rooin ;11 ll\'t .17!J.-1!715 f'\'r~. /l.nnex. ', t d N KM •t VACANT Rf'dr 1hru-0ut I Tn1.dew1nd~ P.r-111!~·. "-t7·8:'!11 R11('h. I or 2 13r. Also 2 1 r.rpi<, rps, r~r :1' "0 2 B l.B C(' ' 1'wnhou~-2 BR. 21.; RA . sty Townhou.~rs. Elcc. kt. NEW NEW hn1n~·, KITl'hl'.'!I & launrlry ,('0~1_l\1ERCIA L Bld'g lllCld~. FOUND \'i('. Loni Beach ~. & Harhnr Shop Ji:. c OSI' r., II , l'p1s, d rps. Al r' I · I rlhl '' NEW I I r I ., o rr I • gar. + pnrk'I:'. Artulls nnly, rPfrig , ~lrn~. 2 ~'n_g f'hildren 7:~ns, .'Pr \vrnr 67_ 5()l~ · 2 BR unru rn, S140 I mo. pri. pAI or hAI SuhlTn parki:. pnv1 C'K""· ..ti{ Y nn )', "l'~a it·c·~. w 11 re 10 u Sf' "' Na \'lll lluspit11 t, Beaut. mall' 221fl Rulgrrs Dr. 646-69l!l ok. No /lf'!s. Sl40 .. i!ffl .Joann _"_A~~O!I 1iy. ..... . . Crpl~. dr~~. hlln.~. refrii::. opl nu11rl ~rr rpli<. {lrp11 Jusl 1 \'pnJ~ 11rr11 , St>:1 111 n., f1>nc•,.d/rrd. 1n C ..,1, Al'ail G :::;hrphrrd. Sill'rr & bl•r.k, i NF:IV 2 ! r rll'I ~e 1111 NF St. Apl D. Info 642-1167 SPACIOUS 2 Rr. rrpt.~, drps, G11.r11gf' avail. Nn pr-ls. 711 N. or rashion Isl 11t J11n1-lux ury 40 Unit Adult ~,1~11 27 ~~-' _C~l__~'>-a:-iOR an·x1ou~ for ownror. 968-l,79 , • • 1 · u. 1 • 1 ···I I <1whr pa!io k pool S240. Jndian11polis, H,B. 54;,..()760 b0ree & S1in .JoHqllin Hill!! Ap•rttn•nt Complex IJUNTIN(i'l'ON Br11<·h ~tu· E_A~wr 1711.' St. fron!agr, C.M f'OlJNr' lo Co~lll M.,~11. . ·_: CQst;:i i\IPsa . Rui;:i<, drapes. $1 ~:'. -LRG 2 Br. rrp!~. * 644,_5298 · I R(l . &1'1·19()() for lt1u;injl info. SI OH Sf.0 M lh ' 1"'"0 .,, .• ,, ,,,_, d bii 1. rlrn( preff'l'l'f'rl kit(•hcn X,_ • Ot't'· ICI', • on · rt•,i r•mol• °"""• '"'lOU~ : r11niz , r · ·-,., 0 • ,_ rp'· °'• P• "· no ""ls. , rt I · C 61-6100 ' ' " ·" • p11tio. Arlull~. Sn1 pf'I ok. Wkday~afl!i:?.0,$4!!-1Rti7 , , . r. ,r·s;: enry , r r 11.nor np s. " "" ' v ·~-'-'--'--or owoe.r. 54 -or C " 11 OVEL\ 1 B I I SEACLIL''-' M • 1 1 & • BEDROOMS ""lh ,,,,,.,.,.,,., .. $:1."1 • 16'•. "II oi10m1c" orp. :)-1 • 2 7096 • S17~ . .'o.vnll .J~n 151 642-:.R72 1 ---~-------Crpr.~. drps, rlwhr, pool. SlSJ. WALK TO OCEAN & 2 Hr, 1'~ B1i. s14;,.s1so. FURNISHED OR J.'urn, uli\ paid. fi.12-11:,10. STORE IN llnbbil St-.nn§. Art 539-7 181 '· 1------NR new 2 Br 111 Ba, * 644-5'1!!11 1 BR, Crpl~. drps. some w/ S.10 n1nve In 111111\\'ll"C'f' -+ UNFURN. ----('1•n11•r, l.11g11na. /llW Jix-' * SHlO • • ' ' I · $130 11~" SLPING .Hoon1, $ 6 0 I n1 o. t'l U>" ·y rl hi t• ko'l epl/drri~. stv/rl.~hwhr i;::1ir. lrp c & patios. · ,,., per rP.i:. d1st'(J11nl. Crpl~. tlq1s. 1.,1'1\' o•nl,. -. hr1lli, Adilll~ lurP~. 4!J.l-6l96. • ,. gri1y 80 w · - LOV ELY S1ngJP 11p1, hllns, ,\I'] nn\.\'. iG6 \.\' \\rii.'>On. Fount•'on Valley rno. Adutrs. r ! · 1 1 k l"2-!Pn llPa eoll:l.r, Df'r :Ill, Vir rl , r r • d · pA in, l:KMJ • 111 '111 o · '1 '1 '. Sparinui; Aparlnlf'nls '"' 1-1, .. 213, :, Eldrn, Cr>!. f S rp~. crp s, re rig, i1r., :>T . 64~7!1)8 LINDHORG CO. :.:-,li-'.lro'i!l Pl I :i1~~2 " " I d t , I R t I 450 Ralbo11 Bl\'d and t 11nrk'1< Arlulls only 1004 El -ai·f'n 1~-· __ . ____ • Spt>1·111I ('11.binec ~Pll<'I:' Sre i1·hi1· Apl fi. n us ria •n a 61'-'"'.17 · . • Al.I .• NF~\V WALK TO BEACH !! * B YFRONT * ~, .. C;i.mint1. 546-.ii04. A'J1'RAC. 2 Br, 1 1.~ Ba ~tud\o A •Lock 1<arai;:es \.\' !g slor ---, ,. .1 SMALL UNITS VALLEY PARK PVT toOnl & lfl ntl pr"'', N I -• v· NEW To-WNHOUSE 11p!. Crpt~. d•p•, hi Ins, l.OVEL\'-NL\V l & 2 BR'i'I, e Bn1 cei! e Lndiy e Palios . · VIC ation11 Str~t arR• IC· RTMENTS lligh-ri~e 'J: BH'.11 fron1 S'!.=l~i. pool ,,.,,,.,, '•" '' • 13 71 S ii b 2 A" 1,, B·. & 2 BR. ~pig, rerri11:_ Pool. No pets . APA Crpl~. drp~. dishwashers. e J)\\'hr ldi~pl e C11.~ s1ove · , i' 2·1·8·1 " • COST A MESA tur111. · -rna rowr " ,. .,, 3 ~iite tip slips avallabJt _ "Ul"11"r > ,.. I I II 11 • 6-1fi--66\I) rl r 70!! Puln1. lM7-39:'17 e S""t'lal :SOundp,~!in" "' "" · · ·c ____ so.-,,,, Sil',,"''' 1001 ,110-• '"""'-n111f' lOR ea co •1 drps, S('l f i·lranlng ,ga-" 0\1-· -OIJ"'ll.~ nrll' nnr~ nr fi.11-:tlfl2 r ·~' "' -•u ""~" f'n. rncl gAr. Plllios. 548-3605 • NE\V LUXURY 1 &_ 2 Br. , •• YOUNG FAMILIES ATiltAClnr. from Sll!l. DI ... Gold Medallion •Shag c&rpet11, drapcli PltlVATE T'O()lll & h111i1 r•w 11;in1·y. UfAl-77:; s11 11. 6~i:i-:llf1 ~ .iil \I.'. \\'il.i;on. riwhr, shas;: l'rpt, i.:ar11ge~. 2 BR A t $l 60 1 All extras. Pool. Kirls & "' nldrr v.·nrking 11u1n. C11ll *NEW BUILDING* RI.ACK ml'!:le puppy or Pool ,r., Rf'c. Quiet adult -P 1 (J"I~ uk. 17441 i{ef'lson-D. 2 1,, l B!t, 2 Ba: C D, h11n.o:, GAS & WATER: PAID :-.1~~.·J:_.10;._ _______ J2l\IJ stj fl u11i1~: offil'I'.', Tf'sl-Qur .. 11~ l.t111l', Sun. 113/i. BRANO r\E\\' F:aslside 1 & 2 h\'iog M2--44'l'O. l BR. Garden Apt1 $175 1 847-8.t.1:>, 96.~i:i !O pa110, l'rt«I 1t11r $17:1 up. 2323 Eld A ~ SI~ flf 'R k rou1n, -110·220 fit1W£'t, pl<>rH.v Jnqu u·e 1!3il1 Q11eens 1.Atll! RR. l ,t,, 2 bnths. S15;) to 2 BR T Lo s $185 • '>'1!t 37011 * en ve, • · ·, Wt'f' -up 5.10 wk·l '"· iv/kit S~. • ownn u1e I UN t"Ull.N 2 Br. Sludio 11.pt. · -. CM 1\•/kitl'hf'n~. $27.~.0 pl'r o,1•rPk of 11arkil1K. !Rlh & Y.'hl!t1rr Hunt. B1•h. No. I $1 9'1. Crpts. drp~. dsh1\'hr, I c ~ ~ --~~~~ SPlf clean ga~ ovrn, ,.11 l\'lr ,_faid s+'r, linl"ns, TV & 1rlt. en(.'I gar. Adul111 only. I RR lowrr duplP11 Bay A\'f'. -up Aplll. MOTEL. r~tll-!17'..:i Av•·. osla. ,.1t•sa. fEM-/\L~: spayp(l black [At ~a Lark ritotel 2301 Npt Pre .~chool Cf'lllPr. Adull p~I. S l~Jmo. 842-1:149 F1rrophtl'f', pvt . p11 t i o. 646-0032 o r 642-1121 C. Jt 01,,.,rt Nal lrPs~. Rr11l1nr niix . \\'h1!r ~lrrak on chetl & J:As prl . lllri pool. 324 E. Bl\'d, 646--'i·l4:t. ('h1ldrr11's pool, Priv patios. 11!1!1!\f'i'I paid. $175 mo, S220 l !1!!11~11!!1~11J!!lll!llJ!!llJ!!!!iii!.INl-:\\'t,Y !urn i·ooi n, Sl8 p••r C11s111 1\1f'sa frf2.J4lG FotHKI v 11., PAula rino 4 20th Sf. 646--9148. };If'(' kilf'hf'n~ Wall lo wall N~W 2 hr, 2 b11, frplr, shng 1 613-4?"~ 11·c•Pk & up. Pvl 1·n!r ll~'.1<1J.1 ;===:========::1 n "I UXF' l " 2 BP. I I bif• gac N' yt'Ar y, . .-.,. BAY MEADOWS APTS. l'i"••"" '"" n•'t &JtPr. Plcnsr i·all fi.12~211 GOLD MEDALLION *. r. • ' -"'. , •· 1·losrti'I & 1·11~ .... 1.~. 2 play-crp i:, < rp~. ,,s, . " "''".....,., -----·I Rent•ls W•n•-, "' ---- G .• -A I< Bil ' '.. ,.. ht!lll'h. s11.-.. 646--0S~L 3 Rf{'"'· 2 BA, U!l,, Crr1~. -----f9a .,.... FOUND ""I M·-·,, -hlacl ;\)00Prn 2 Br. \11 Ra . {'rpls, !lrur.. P · • -ns, P 1 ~· grounds. Carports .{. stor· YNC 1~11lege ur 11'11t•kin&: i.:lrl. .,,,. : ' 1"1 u ... GF k 1. 1 I pal10, hr111ed pool lrplc. NF:W 2 Bft. Crp\1, drp~. drp~. blk !n hi•;irh. Yrrl. BRt.ND N~:\V, n11 1·h 1 Alt It BalliliH 1111, 1<1t ,t. 1'V r111. REFINED cll rttr womin poodlf', 111111••. S!ln111 Ani drrs, • • it. ·.nc·. J<(nr . A" 1, 11•• ~·"'·516? age. Y1•arly $'lti0. No p e ! !i . · Ch · II ,._ ?lf;<1n,v luxury cx!ra.~. Nr.. 11 tJ ~. "'" nin ..• ,,,.... "· s101·r, patio, g11 r a x e, 2 Hit unl!s. 1111 1r l beam 11•li' SU.1/mo ,I,, up. 67~3613 wtanlA 1tutlio Rpt. Co. mov-arr·11 . a1n en ur -no -· bu~ s1 ~1:, Adult.~.120£. 20th 2 1~ Bft. l'~ BA . encl patin, 17256 S. Euclid St. Sl6:./n10. Ph. 5.1fi-6027 67:1-llO~~-----~--r'ril1r1J:s. p11nrl111.:, fl\'f Pl· D~:TACll ED Slf'rpi~11 ,; Inf to N.R. Cllll evet. all ~0~11~.;-u·k! ~~111-:\?!!7 · · · pool wsh /dry, sto,·/rrl, <·pts. 1 BR Merln lliM Condo: ,All 2 Bft, i·arf)('tcc!. draped, ne11r tins. !rpl!', 1111 l'<'C hic. 11 /!J;elil No. J .ii~una. $:1.J Spm wkdys. 1'!13) :J89.-l.C7S. FOUND Dog -Frmale Ch! Sl 7fl. 2 BH. hu sTud~o, dl'ps 0 l'rls nk. Sl80. 113G-8AA6. lju.,t S(lHlh nl \l'llrnf'r ln bl11ns. relri11:. enrlf pat io, wb',~_',",., ''r',11~0'1'_·k.,.,',",'1','·. Ad1Jits. 1K• pr1s, Ba1·h'11 from n10. 4~.i-&:l62. LGE 2 BR oou~e w/f•''"· h1111l11rn, Dana Point IU'f:I rprlrr, cpt/drp~. 11rlj ~hop g. · f"oun1a!n Vallryl _, " • s 10 o I R 2 -.1~~8301, 21~/~!12-~227 LHG 3 Br. 2 Ba. Ne'v shag Phone (714 ) 540.-4785 pool, Q11ii;. S l :IO.~'IO.~~ 64 2-3!171! f'Ve~ & 11kr111,. ~H f1·u111 $;f,:;rom $135 e 1•'-1 1'!.l)YfD 1:1dy, 1rv.' bi·~h S.A. Hits or CtlM HI area. 4!'Wj.~1 __ '.1:_'·-------l c=~~~---. --,--2 tTil!s, nr1l'l_v dee. Nr. OCC •Nfo:\V-rleluxe 2 br & df'n. -·----. · 8: rnlr. l\i!l'l1. lll'l\'11. ~df s22:1 rno n1ax. Barbara Grt°AY ll<)fl(lle n111!P, l'!:lmot LRC. 2 RR. l 1i B . 1 Co•po•f, SI'<.->/"•". 5,,7 ,,51 I N 2 HH ~11rden 11.p! cArJ11•l1ng, S'"l~l ri""" I' V I L I • "" · ~ F1rr al'f', 1:11rage, ear I · mo. Qoi'lln ,\f1·~11 . 64~·5llili ..,,.. ~~ ·•:·~ h 1111!. ic o 1n~1 n schaO rhilrl rrn nk nn p e s. --------Huntington Beach c!n1p~·· ~11r:u.:1 · Ne\.\ Port :1!17 \\'. H11\ .~1 I h11111 1 hu h1u: Sl ~/mo '.''.,:_24•6 514:1 -2 BR. Nev.' drp~. crp1s, bf'ach, Call 9611-4:.4·1. ·' , ' · ·~' 111 Cd\1 67;....2:~1.1 ... "'~ " I llKL•. $160. :>'l~!lto:•.• &· Nl•1111u1'1 R!vd, 1,, 1111 ,'\ ___ ----~--.. d ~1nvP. Adul ls, nn per~ Call 2 RR ciuplf'JC ~love 1Pfr1iz, 1 _ -----01 l~lh !'Tt, Rentals to Share 430 ~CftAY Prr~i11n ra1 vj1 2 RR, upst;i.1rs, ~~Is, rps, 642-51\48 . cl~h\\~hr, \\';hr/dryT, c·rpl• '1 Laguna e.ach 2 BH. Ocranrrnl lv.'1' duplrx I' I Emcr11Jd Bay, 494 -1 48 1 hJtn5 r/o ,t,, rf'frig. :-Jo pel~. _ · · · S~l() yrly, ~·rp1~/drp~. Oltns <'all frlli-007.1 Ptr5o"'!' Sl-40 '!lAA-t~:'l.'J or a4&-i729 I DF.LUXF. 2 br. ~rlulli: ovl"r drp~. S160. Arlul!s only. !j{)g OCF:AN VIF.\V _ Lrg 1 .tr 50!Y.llf Sf'R~llnr~ 21 3: 248.1!l21 1 ----~ - - -NEED Girl 10 1b arr '--------494-62011. -•0 ri,.. ''"" ""~ ""~ OliVf'. :iJO-R;:.23 R r c I SHARP.CLEAN 2 nn. be"utitul !~al 1.•le h11usr l'OUNO m•I· s,·,m-·.-----SULTS Deo+ "" yrs o.... ...., ~11 • ..-.. "" 2 8 un urn aprs , rp ~. 2 BR-Sl-rl'• iP-o• C•pl•-C " 11 I ,. I Ill" 1•••••••11•!!1!!1 ,. , "" ... Fo. RE ·you csn l61hPlace,C"'t S!';i\lgr. -BE-AC:HBLUFF Apts r:lrp11, bll-in.~. patio-". \\'alk~ dcp• ·,' •. '1,',",·h,,•1,11"0· ,,.,0·. r·p!s, .. rr.~. Jlns, luin/ 11 same. 1111r siare " Vic »I Ht1ntina:!on Bq, pend on, Cal! !he Super---~ -' ._, unlt1rn "'"~1. s1 :r1-s1:i'1 per mo, C11ll 673-1605 art :.;111 ,. ~ m An O;i.ily Pilot Lnc; 2 Ar. crp!,c, drps, hltni<. Nf'v.' 2 AR, 2 Ba, di.~hw11.~h-inr.: di11rance lo lown. JOO $llli_· 1191 __ 00:~11 or 49~-1911 . Ail+i!I~. 110 pl'I( llri'n.~ rikl 5pm. Per•on•l1 53C .-i.l6--4fl~7--~~~~-~ O •••oro·•rl ,.2_..1,, • plllce 1-2 ,..nildrt'n nk Nr ~chi.~ rr.~. pool, p11110 8231 Ellis. Chi! Or, La1tur111 Beach "O''l'S Al'ilANL'l'•tf'' 1• ~-ou;.;n .~1111111 . hlar k. rl!'ft ...,.,, "" "" ' · · '·, ·· YNC: 1nru1 11 1JJ ~hare bPllll FREE ' 0,1r arl & chargr it! ,~·~· ;~hn~p~·~· ~1~1:io~~96~2~-~JJl'>;:~;==Cc~'~"~·~81~17=o~c~'4C,1~-3~'o0~7~·===ec~'":=:o-"~· ~'='======= IS 1 A o.. SIS 61., '""" rlos:: Vic 1Hth & Bal bal ' an• na .~If' · ··"·1"" l11•11t·h lu1111r 111th s:i r11r -.. -HI. L' R. fi7.'\-2!l06 The Apt.Unfurn. 365Apt.Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 nEr.Hxt: 1 & 2 Br fui-i1 f'i t ""· 1:11r. rf'I .~. ---- 1 VILLA MARSEILLES .t-u11lurn. SL11>-S165.· Pool ~i2 -:?',?0 •·1··~ lhrntlnJ.(!ffn Rr:i.r h rn\\Pr CRAY m1n1AltU1' lrm!lll" poo G•ner.a l G•nerel Generel BRANO NEW li7 F 21n.-I s1, CM. 6424::()4:, ~1 A'l'll l<E-1;11'1 !1 h 2 ~u1itfrnn'11 h11sir hri11r1ni; dlr, V11· \V,.~rrl1lf Pla1.a 1i •:.::,:::c.:.:_ _______ .:.;:;;_:c..::___________________ -s lll'P I I l'OUr11,. for ~JI or power Ci\1 8t NA :i-18--0AA•I HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults OPElllK srt:ctAL-1-IJOll 1145! CASAdelSOL S PACIOUS 2 HI L furn ur untur11:-s1:;a Hi t. 2 l•a ap1. .1r11r Y. • -~-~ I I I I rl 11 'i GROWN cal whl lP wttl & 2 Bdrm. Apts. 1111r $1(,f) ftirn. '.l56I Or1111i::r 11/.-.nn11•, ',a '"· Sil) d I • , . ir --l>iJ-llL\ i 'l!'~/"knd~ Cl11.~~rs ~1 Art · l\lnnrlay, Jen· nr11ni:r. Vlr. ~l11a:ool i11 I A u t Living f\1r. _,,,__iii _ ---1 1111rv 111h EU1~ 1n rv Furn. & Unfurn. ~-1·: \1 1\ I. 1-. H!~•!llllllllr Ill Tin1.:.: 7.00 r ,,\1, Di~hwA~her. color coordln11!- f!d 11ppJianN>J; -plu~h i;hai:t Cllrt>f'! • chnir:e nl 2 rolor ~rhtmf'I • 2 b./llhJ; _ 11Ct111l sh11werJ; • l'lirrn~ed w11rd- robe 1loor1 • lndirP.f't llght- inR In kilchen • bl"'?flkfast bll.r • huge privail'! fenced p1ifio • pl11sh lf1ndM:11 pln1 - brick Bar ·B·Q'1 -Jarye heat- er! pools & lanai. H I, t 8 _a. I ~ I'! 1 1r I Gf:R,\1AN Shl'phrrrt rf'm1l• un 1ng on e•Ul s111.re '"'11 · t Hp " rpc Ar : l f11nt1111:1on Bf'arh M1gli Vu•· rounisin Vall t.y WE'RE FRIENDLY at l•lll\ ;;:unr ()ll~-01~f;. I Sl'honl, Hoorn l2l %H-fi744 t'"r 1nrnrn11111on IPIPphone; -~~~~-Gar.ages for Rent 4JS , a:16_41:ill. FOUND bl11rk & whi!r rlucl vie: f"11irvif'w &. San DI!'!~ s·roNF:J IF-~NG F; Ellf']U.~ll'P 2 Rr, 2 1111, !111·n ,1R:.. ur1r. $1 JJ. C11ll fl<)v.· 1 C,\ft (;AHAt:f•: F O!t j 536-Jl07 RENT, .~1~, \1f) \~:1 F.. B1\Y l & 2 RR'1:, FR0:\1 S1li S'~~,VI :itR-~.~2 1 ---- Ov,.rlnokiTIR hr11ut i:;;irdrn S T 0 It A G t: G 11 r • R l'. p~11n s,. hid pool , .\dul!~ S:ltl/mo. 1~1 & la~I. 191h J03."• 121h Sr , 8CTO~~ from & Po1111in11, Cill. * R97-4Hlla. l.11 kr J'ark. ;,,'16-2692 STORAG-E-G11 rai:t'S, ..--NEW-1-BR. $13;>.Sl50. 52.'i Jll'f n10nll1 , Fnrn/Uolurn. 1 Block to Phone 64~191 unrll 6 pm. ADVENTURE Frwy. a4.>-1777 • SAILI NG CRUl.SE foiJN·D~Frm111-,-,-'"-"""""~~ 1.t() fl. J nia.~1 S1r11111·e H1gger. V11·: Warllf'r & F:dwardl J...("11vi11g 3/1!'1/71 f 0 r 3 ~47-71)4,l H47-5l06 mon1h~. M_tn & won1rn \.\'11111-YOUNG ' hlllck mAle ca f'd w/rlei1ire 10~ ath'rnrure fourvl In north Hlg Sch & !ravel It 11b1hty I() sharf' 8!13-6429 pxpen!ll's, For inlorma1lo11!===========> call Pam Rt-ynolds, ~213J lost 378-~. DAILY1 PILOT ORANGE Heir tll lltlcftes • Private Ttrnee •Rec Boildinr • Saunn 2 Pook • Bilritids •Gym• Pvttinr Cr1H 1nd YolleyblU luilt·in llitcltlflS • Dislrmlttn • Di...,.1$ • C.rptts/D!apa Close to ~1.i.o,,int • Prints P1tli111 and Slot1p Al.SO: 2 ll<droom w/F.,.ha f,... $21!5 lll611nolhoslo llwtiot1"1 --(714) lli!.asl HUNTINGTON BEACH-Adult llld Family Stctiofts 1-r .. sus-2..._2-r .. s155 3101 So. Bristol St. (',it Mi. N. nl Sn, Co11~ Plata) Santa An• PHONE< 557-1200 AEACI! Priv. patio, 202-A 14th llB. :.."!6-&.167 Apt. Unfurn. 365Apt. Unfurn. 16S Fount•ln Valley tiountein Valley. Office Rental DESK SPACE 305 No. El C amino S.:in Cl.mente R••f -~~-'""'="'=-~~­!IQ. r1 ground lloor, prP~fig!" y,rP.~!cliU Or. Pvt erHranre. Util p11 i1!, r1irk- lng, Sii~ mn, 1741 Westclllf Dr, 645-3011. FULLY LICENSED * Rrnownf'd Hindu Splrituali~t Arl vicc on all m11.11rr~. l.o\'P, r.1arriaa:e, Bus1nP~~ Jleadlnp ilWn 7 day1 a week, 10 tm -10 pm, 312 N. El Can1ino Rtal, !'1111 Clf'mPnlc 492-9136, 492-0076 Orir.nt11 L, Swedi!h ( f)-ench $100 REWARD for rf'turn GI info lead in~ In return o \Vh i!e/Apricol Toy PoocUt lcml, lost Chrialm11~ tvf' Y.1i 16th k Ora .. e. CP.t, Owl'IC vPry llieved~ M&.-1516. PARAKEET, lite ti 1111 • ~~i:!~0"~ 0~i~~~i111.lo~•= ~ . • ' COAST'S leading Marketplace HUNTINGTON GRANADA Pri'llt1 Temct • 3 Poofs w/C.bl..as • Built·ln Kltcltlns." -•C.rptts/D!aPtS •Wilk·~ ClolltS • D!IS1in1 Rooms Cloal le Slioppin(, All lleodtes Ind lsiwrt Ann 17111-1111111.H ---(714)147-1055 VlllSoothOIW.,..) • . I - SANTA ANA.-Adull iftifF1mlly'~1 DPEm--1 Ellllll Fllll S1371 PARKPIAZA Privltt l'lllol • ...__._. -• Pool loll• .... *' 1' 111 • Clrplb/Drltll ""' __ ...... l.Aioln-·f- Al». l -/l lllth r .... 1111 T ... -r1111-r .. 1us ---.-.. ,..(714)54SJ214 C% ll!Ooll 91111-• llocMhtr) -Man.,..i lly: IU• MUIAllMllT Cl.,llC. ' 1Alllo4r--!Balbo Adult Llvtn1 hnlohed a IJnlurnltbed ArR Gorwl, crpl.~. lac\nit Beach Blvd, Re11..~. Call 84 2-2~2:. or 011•ne r 213/394--001 5. CORONA DEL MAR 2 Rm aul!e, pv1 00, pv! enrr. Prka, crpt/drp, utll pd_ $1~5/mn, Owner. 673-6757 * XLNT OmCE Space Now Av11ll. LIDO BLDG, 3¥i6. Yi11 Lkto. Nil fT)-t:'lOl_ Nl.~PORT BLVD, NB ON' 'J'RE BAY 17'-2"84 or 541.so.12 MASSAGE 11) A.r.1. to 12 P .M. 1813 Nrwpnn Alv1I, CM 642-0450 "Pooll'llf'." Rew11rrl. 646--0tCJ 1 or :.4S.-a300 I ~MAlJ~ female Bl11ek i hrown lf'rrier dn11:. An~wt1'1 10 Jubl>e, Cftvner grlrovlnc J.n~r v!c of B11kpr In M•• Vrorde . Rfoward. ~!+-1369. i l I D.\fl Y PILOT Tllund.U, Januar1 7 1~11 . . .·" ~~·b'*;;.....-..;.* __ *;,,;__..;.*.;,_ __ * ___ ..,,. • J(t] '--[ _,,....,_,, •.. __.][I] ': " : ' '•. I• . • ' . ' . .. ' • I. .. ·~ :1 ... l .. . ,· . :i •. .. ;j I • ' .. .o I • i L--'""""'-""__,J~ 1---1 ~ 1---1~1 ---l~I ...__ _ ...... _, .... __,j[t] I Ce.,....ter Fe nclnt Rooffnt Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•ntecl, M ... F 710 Help W•nted;-M-£F'710 Trader's Paradise ----------- •rwr 11-dl rradC' zmt Pqu11y 'n 6,;l\I EXC'(-Utl\'I' 3 RH . ".: ~A hon'lt.' in Arcadia f1'>r beach or Orangl' Co. w11r s. j213-3."l5-7JTl col11•l·L HIGH DESEHT !or Heallh \\!ANT Calif . r-:r\'. 2-3 \I elev. HAVt: Cl l'f'r. 90x 117 2 hlrlgs Sf.S.000 rq · $42,CXKJ inc. S41J 1no. O"'·n. er C"I 64&8.ll~. CAPISTRANO C-ZONEI) ·I T Acres. lr'te t., 1·lc111·, · S130,000, 'fRADE FOR Lii· COnlC' Ol' "" '! JU:,\LTOH ~ll-7711 f \\'JN box spring & ni<•!· tress n1erliun1.firm, t1srd rv.·ic~. Trade for ex1ra-finn 1nat!ress st-!, plllg·UI hclll· ·r.. or ??~ ~92-0770 What do you ha\·e 10 rrade? List it here -1n Orange County's la1-gcs! r<'ad trad- in~ post ,64'.l.5678 l ost '"d Found lines times dollars Sc hools & ln 1tructions 575 PIANO Le11»0ns yoor home t'f.rtlfied leachf:!l'S. P,1u.sic Sys1enur. )lf, Hathcock. ..... ,,.. TEACH liquid painting. ~·ree kit. Laura 531-9978. Alice 89"..-5021 N. Loni,: Bea.eh on A1Jantic I ~ A1•f' .. enfe, R.E. ofc .. 2 BR. :5ervicft ~nd Ropmlr1 J Bil. hOOlt, Orange Cnty. 0....'l\Cf' TI4: 496-4593 LE'l' the Swede do It. Repair, REDWOOD FENCES LEE ROOflNG CO; Hoofing BRAKE &: Al lgn m e n t HOUSEKEEPER For M.dlc•I Secret•ry re1nodel & patio£. Patio&-Decking of all types, recover , Mechanic, Top pay. Earn couple. Live in or out . S11'norette. Local. Call Ann, 673-5"417, 494-7853 645-0991 or 673-6809 rt'pairt, root roatlng1. Lie in excea; oi $UlXI mo. ?!lust Waterfront N.B. ~. Ph: &&:>-mo. \Vestcliff Per30n- & bonded aince 1947. Nl\<e tools and bt able to 673-1352. net Agency, 2043 Westcllff C•r pet Service Gard•ning 642-72'l2. :u~ ~~~ 001 Harborl·,~,O~U-S~E'CLEAN=--ER--F-0-,-ho-,.-, l=D='~··~N~·~·~·~=====·I Diamond Carpet Clean1n1: AL'S GARDENING BEFORE ~ou buy, call T. ' . of tee.clrrv. 1:00 to 4:31) JXU NE\V OR E.XPER!E."°CED New Year Special! r Gard . &: J Guy Roofing Co ReoJver CHILD Ca.re w e. C.Orona Mon thru F'ri. 548-2712. SALE.S~tEN. LARW I N Free Minor Repairing or . e~ small and· t p ecial i st. 0 64 5-2780 del P..Ia.r atta. 2 days al-'-"-'-.CC..-'-..:..:='--OOMPANY Resale Division With Cleaning 400' S20. scap1ng services caU St0-5198 548-9590 , weekC67A>41D7RR' ,1· ~ HOUSEKEEPER .C Days. ne4!<.la IM'\'ere..l 2eneral real J<'ree est. 645-.JJl7 Serving Newport, CdM, Co&.l----·-------1 Gd. \\'ages. English Speak-estate agents. New office ============I ta Meta, Dover Shorf!s, Sewlng/AlterationJ ing. Ref. Requlred.675--6291. opening in Hunti n gton \Vcstcllff. c_._;_1_;n~u~·-------1----'-------I• Dressmaking -Al1eration.11 BOYS HSKPRS E1nplyr pays fee, &>ach approx .Feb. ls!. * A-1 CLEANUPS SpeciaJ On Hems George Allen Byland Agen· Lls!ing leads, n1aj o r P AINT Acoow tical CeiJlnp. Storm repair, minor lndscp, Cal Jo * 6f6...644fi WANTED cy 106-8 E. 16th, S.A. medical iru:urance paid by $10 ea or trade. 531~27. la'4'n reoovating. 7 Yrs in Alter•li'ons _ 642 .... S 5fT-039J. compit.ny, incentive eOntests Fully equipped flufl & !old or 636-3UO area 962-4914 .,.. for the liOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I and bonus plr1n. Get in on latlndrJ•. est 12 yrs. vallle l ~==~~~~~==f ;;.f'·~~;;·;;;;;:--~;;;f~N~ea~t'=, a~<e~~~·~"~·~'°~Y~'~""~'-"~P. DAILY PILOT I' lhe-ground floor and grow hou.~e & gttr., !or unih; or I ~;;;;;;~;~ Baby•ittlng $12.000, suit rouple. ,Ex. IN1'.ANT care; 1 nio 10 1 f Cement, Concrete AL'S Landsc:.iprng. Tr e e '4'ilh us. Call Larwin Realty, b I yr. College Park aren. i\la:1'· removal. \'ard remodeling. Tile Dana Point, San JU&n Inc. 96"'..-6988 or S'l7-2221. change mo 1 f:! or motor unuin 3 bubies. \\'elJ.qual1f1. '----------1~, 0 n' I " "1"5640 "tORE Concrt'le patio for 'f'rash hauling, lot cleanup.t" C&pistrano and confiderice kt>pl. "'1'1e r s ' lO ~-J-"' '"' ono•t-r. '.;7 ~"'i3 * V 1'h ·~ .,.., ....,. les• money. Artistic M?tttng. Repair sprinklen 673-1166. erne. e Tile ~tan ft Ca pistrano Beach. HAVE: 120A. on trout B/\BYSil'TING £ . .,--,,-,-~." Lie., call Max 81 644-0687 EUROPEAN Cust. \!.'Ork. Install & repairs. Contact Mr. Seay nt NURSE s!r~a111, nt'~r L .. ls_olx>lla. v.·knds. "ty home. ij75-l283 LANDSCAPER No job too sml. Plaater DAILY PILOT Rctirl.'d. Unusual position. fllADE $35.000 e11u1ty !or t duys, Eves. 5-1S-0.ll7. rH.EE ~sL Sa\ving, break· Clean up • Tree Surgery parching, Leaking shower Call Ann, 6'15.2770. \\'est· .;ou1hern Calif. 1ncon1r . 1 -ing, hauling & skiploadlng. Reru;onable. Eves, 496-33.~3 repair. 847-1957/846-0206. San Clemente ottlce l.'liff Personnel Agency, 21).13 ii~Jkl'r Englund 673 .. 1v,1.1 \VILL Giv(' loving cal'r 10 Service & quality. 54S-8668. * Res'd f a.I A 305 N El Ca,mino Real \\'est"lHI Do·., N.B. :.:...cc--=----~>-r your child Jn n1y home, frnc-' 1 en 1 -: p!s * CERAMIC Tile v.·ork. F'ree · 4924421J ... • • • • ed yd.,,.,. ";1-,1. CEJ\1ENT \\'ORK, no JO. b too * CommercJal * N · b ~==~~.:..::::.,.~-_ Rece plo'ono·•I .,...,....,, Complete Catt 64&-9S5:> est. o JO too small.C ::ASH! 0 ~-f OPERS-SINGLE NEEDLE ~ 1 ""una Bellrh view lo1s. ~c'--','~---~~ s1naJI, reasonable. l" r ec 5.36-2426 .ER~r Wash. ull Attract. '4'Cll <nVV>med. Per-.,_; E.XPER. Child care, :-;ln't E · II St n· k ••• -15 GEN I 1· & t 1· C ti ,,._ Spec, niach. Exp'd onlY, Trade for ?? .slim. . . u 1c , J-U>-OU • • C eanup, tree & ~prnklr 1me par 1me. a • feet hostrss req'd Jor lop rer's n1y hon1e. Any age. I Ro ti! H * 644-4430 * spcirts\\·ear, gd . pay. N.B . Call J\·lr. J~oegf't' Call fi73-~. Cd:\1 area. •• CONCRETE f'looa sel'\I, to -andyman, Tree Service co. in area. Ability to learn 642-3472. ~8.J'.!4 par ios. Any size job. Reas: odd jobs. Reas. 6-16-58-l8 . CATAWGUER/TNDEXER &. above 8\'g poise req'd. I =~=oo-~~~-~~c l BABYSITIER, all ages :M Call Don G42-85l4. EXPER. l{awatian Garde ner THEES, !ledges, Top, Tnni. For technical reports & PAINTJ-:R, Foll tin1e. Exp'd . CHOI Ct: lur),Je l~pr<ived hours. \\'arm n1eals, , big 1,0========= Com r let e Ga r dening cut, remo~ed. hauled. Ins. engl~ring drawings. Will Cler ical spray ,I} bn1sh req'd. custon1 lo,1. Salton City. \\ant latl' biit·k )ant. 6-12-1:'>9:!, C"t. Servo·,,. K,~~10 .,;. "" '"lG. 642-4030 Big John BUSHIPS The lo inlerior furnishings, t71·1) Ti1lvl'I Tt'a1ler pick -up j ,----. . Child Care ~;'::;':ic:i:="<i:-~-:;:-~~o:'::'i-'°1:===='======: Ult' . saurus . r &>ginning position 1v/oppor. S40-2860. iru<:k or lrade on J\fobllt• ~.,DUNG M~ther w1!1 babysit Comp1 te y d C I desc:iptors. Salary pills In· Jor groivt.h. Beautiful Neiv. I --.e7~~~--c---· I I .. 2 """"' _.J yr old 1n my hon1e. Cjtll TENDER Lo ving Cart' for • ar are Tutor ing cenllve. Send re.11ume to Dox port ores. Challeng;,g fu. Private Secretary iorne. ""'""' ·~1'!-~ .. 117. Id R ~J~";'======~>l~IJ.4~83~1 /TjC,:N;:G',;:-;;;-;:;;;;;-;; '"0 0 ·1 p·1 l 330 W .., y-.~ your 3 yr o & up. eas. ,.,.... at Y ! o , · ture. Great people. To President N r Sehl 64"lJ27 TEENAGE tu t or i ng & Ba c ta M r · omona , v-• G Y. OS esa . Ve"'' wnfidcntial. t-.1ust be "1eral Services co u nseHng. Experi enced, 'J Bu1iness Service DAYCARE: 7 Day week. I!ot ----------1 credent i a 1 e d teactier. COASTAL AGENCY inlt>lligent. young, auractive PVT Sec'y v.·ill do your mf'als and play area. Jn RAIN Guuers I nsta ll ed. !>12-.l!:lll. Call betwn 6:30 A membf:!r or JR.VINE PERSONNEL V."Oman able to travel. Fu- secretari;l \\'Ork. in her of-, _c~·-"-·-64<-64 __ ·_1_1_____ Quulity \l,'Ork. Reasonable. & 7:30 Snelling & Snelling Inc. SER.VJCES~AGENCY lure unlinii!ed for right per- lnslruclion ficc. ~lUfi9 for info. 1· }'ree est. 968-2208. The World's Largest son. Former secretary pro- I ~!!!!!!i!!i!!i!!!!!!l!!i!!!!! 1 Child Care My Home Profeisional 488 E. 17th {at Irvine) C.l\1. n1otf:!d to executl\'e position. I-Carpenter Day/nil<' 548-2454 Hauling J[t] Employment Service 642-1470 \\'rittcn resume & any help- 1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Schools & :.O;.!:.:.C.C.::C.------Emplo)'Tf*lt i J 27!lu Harbor BJ 0 1 !'J4(1.li0551 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I ful screening informalion to P . t ' SJS CARPENTRY 1 .C.:..:.on~t_•_•_c_I_•_• ______ TRASH & Garage clean.up, 1 ~------J Harbor Blvd: at Adams Industrial EnginHr A.T.f., P.O. Box 1865, Costa Lost SSS I instruc ions I MINOR REPAlRS. No J ob days. $10 a load. Free est FEE PAID Local De "lcsa ca 92626 l\1Y \Vay. quality home Anytime, 548-5031. C0:'\1PAN ION to do lite • · gree ' · · ·roy Poodle bla•·kish ,,.,.. lrS YOUR MOVE Too Small, Cabinrt in gar-repair. \Vall!>. ceiling, floor s house-work & .....,pare meals Req uired. No Electronics or PT. tin)e liquor clerk. Cash ' h. YARD, Garage cleanu~, Job Wanted, Male 700 ,,..-A Pt t ' -d · -1 \\'hi on ches! Vic': l\'iilc age!'! & o ther ca 1ncls. etc. No job too smaJJ. ror elderly \\'Oman. Li\'I' in erospace. an .i..aYO~t an regtster exp. Age ~" over. ... , .. ~ .... ~ HO ;,1".r''""•"'' r~ .. , .... loader,backhoe.962-ll745. VA R I EOS ale s.-Sal's ' J\l C-'A 54 ·277 1·tt '"7Ec'"1• Cd'f Tlll"lf' "Geyrme.'' 1139-3346 1ns1; at 646-2372 . . 1,00,1 Add ·i· 1 T 1 1 Co Brookhursl & Adams, H.B. wl nn. ;Jo 0, Westc 1 ...,,, . oest -.\\'Y, " .. , 1 ions. .. . mg .-personne exp. liege p Sq"''-P·k. A~~·,.e--.·· to f INOUSTRY CAREERS 5~?>-8175 if no answer leave 0 1'1'"' 00 hr • o• , ...... , lrees dirt ivy removal, skip 0-0,0• $"' ••·k. v o·e·. methods. !Also fee JObsl. Apply in ""!'SOil. 1(1.12 AM · -j Anderson Construction. Single s1ory or H I · grad 111arried cl ·re CW\2-9943 aH 6. ersonnel A ge n C' Y, 2043 PART Or lull time ambitious R~~R~o~~~:ien~:1~;t~'. AIRLINE & TRAVEL RE~IOl)ELfNG & Repair 2. F.stim., plans & Ja~llt. -0-"-'~•c_;•_•~n~on~g"-----1 \\'fchauenge & es~P~~~: COOK V.'esJcJi rt' Dr., N.B. people. Let us! Show you ser 1'o. 03178. 673--7l~2 1 S1>eci11.l1st. Co1nm'I, residen-IW7-151L •IOUSE OF CLEAN Resume on reg. p h: P refer Ho!el or Hospital exp, r NT ELL I GE NT-Attrac., how ~ n1ake mo n e Y C OPERATIONS AGENT 11;11. Paneling, cab 1 nets, IL-IC-.D--C-0-,-.,-.-R-,-m-od-el-.,-,.-., 1 C.Omplete House Cleaning 002-1453. Local. Call Ann, oo.mo. well-groometl yng \\·oman _2_1_31_5_92_-_so_J9_. ____ ~-l LOST Blk & v.'hl male ca! I • TICKET SALES mnrl1te. formica.. 644-7598. add-ons, roofing, painting & I -~~~;64~2~·"'='~----' AP'T-~lOTEL MGRS, '4'ell Westclill Personnel Agency , lo serve as rental agent PBX Operator. ans"·ering \'ie· Bushard & Garfield. e RESERVATIONS Mt1itwns * Remodeling repairs. 540-M>ll, 540.7664, Mesa O _eaning Servi('(' qunlf. No child/pets. Ekin-2CM3 \\'e11tcliff Dr. N.B. & social d irector at lux. serv. e.\'.p. pref'd. i\lidnlght Re\\·ard• !lfiS-91)(} I • AIR FREIGHT "ARGO c· k • so-t ,·,. C•"-'" wo·do"• F1 • .. , bl • • . apt romplex SaJ~rv + apt. shift. Sleady v.'ork. 536-8881. · ...._ ol'r.l'll' 01 "• " ·, R.cniocleling * Addilions <-,..-<-3, " ..... OIJ•S"' c da e. r..1aturc. Avail. Mii', * O?OK-Graveyard shift, \\'ri•e Dall Pi'-t-Bo'x M-l< BLACK Labratlor Re tr ,, • COMl\!UNICATIONS 673..{;0 !I • !'H9-1 70 KARLE. KENDALL Res & Commc'I. ;'4s-41 11 Prefer beach art'a. Please f'xpenenced only Apply: y "' 'PER~!. Part lime l~f-\V·F), fen1a.le . Plcasl' call •TRAVE L AGENT ANY Day 1:; 1he BEST day to 1 Licensed-Bonded 548-1537 Expf'r. lady O\\'n tran~'P· By can M/t-.1 714: 273-1373. 562 \Y . 19th SL, C.~l. 330 \V. Bay St. Costa 1\fesa. acc. lyping w/figure ahil, 1~~~~"~'·-2800~· ~-oo-c~ I Ao'rl;ne Schools Pacific run an ad'. D on• t GEN'L CONTRACTOR duy or hrl y. GEN. r..taint. Ship, Jl.eceive. CO.ORDINATING Secretary LEGAL 1,','1,~10• ~~c.t BomvacMh:20Ex88 ~~ RE\\IARD Losl Fem Golden tlcl11 y .. 1·r1ll today, 6-12-5678 5-IS-7801 G f · b k xl ·~ ,..~,, " '"" 610 E . 17th, Santa Ana iterns With euse, use Daily Remodeling-Room AddiHons ~~-_:c:::..:=:_ ___ I Mail Clerk. 11 yr w/same eneral o lice ac grour In House Counsellor LLB + Da ily Pilot , 330 w, Bay, :.;~~~-v~;~: Bristol & S43-6S96 P ilo! Clussificd. 642-5678 Lic'd/in~ &1:l-0991, 673-6809 · By Day. 011•n Transportation fi rm. E.'t. Refs 642-2066. required: ~u.st type fi0/65 2-'5 yrs exper R.E.,.Jand de-Cosla Mesa. 386-0648 '4'p111 (statJsllcail, 10 key velopmcnt or related field. p=u~B~L~IC~R~E~LA~TI=o~N~S~-~M. Job Wanted, Female 702 adding machine by touch, $20,000 vr. 25 10 35 \\'ilh minimum of Ironing SECRETARY-m1n1n1um of 2 yrs. exp. -Newport 2 years professional exp . l roningo $1.50 ""'r hr. BOOKKEEPER ~ potential '4'i~h gr?w-Personnel Agency in PR or on a newspaper .... 1ng firm Cail for interview Bring OWn Hanger! Full or part time. Highly 4gi.1153 ·l\trs Gonzalez 833 Dover Dr., N.B. or magazine editorial slaJf. Call 54· 30!!2 ' · · 642·3870 :i.1ay start on part-time .__'~""""_"0_•· _,j [i]L_[ _'"_""M_"0_;.,.. -'Ji] ._I _1"_"""_'"_'"" _,Ifill._ _'"-"""'_'"_''"~l[i] > ======~=====i·~'~k;~1t~od~._830'.:'.'.l-~l~ot~77~.~·~9~i-~5G~l~9~· -!COUPLE to manage l()...un1l basis. 838-9360 Landsca p ;ng STEPli ENS grad seeking apt. house for Jree ap1. . REAL ESTATE SALES ----'--'-----< f,,'0Vernesi1 ,losilion -beach !\.·Just be able to do garden· LOOKINC: fo~ more than JUSf . . • • . ROTOTTLLING, soil cond. area. \I/ill Jive-in. E.'tp. ing & minor repairs. Write anolht•r JOb · Join the "Ne1v Join a going orgaruiau~n & sprnklrs, sod & seed lawl"lli. Refs. &12-6938 exJ)(.'r. lo Box !\.t-2087 Th<' Benuti lul fd('as" Div. of ii!art the new year r igh t! 990 Autoi''i;iui'iiediiiiiiiiiiii990iiiAii;iiui;itoii'ii' ~U~·~·~diiiiiiiiiiiiiii~990~-~ F · · Daily PLlot 330 \V. Bay GENERAL FOODS. Help Bori us con1mission p I a n . ~.e 8011 analysis & est. A.IDES-For convalescence, Costa :r.tesa: ' othen to t"nhancc the1r Only 2 openings. Call lor in-l:JC d Contr. House of Hun-elderly ca.re or family care. I be ·1 · B d Co b' P ul tington. 8J3.2654 Ho-make-. 547 =•]. CUSTODIAN Days f 0 r ?"~na a.uty wh.i ". en. terv1~w, u r rn -a l ======:::::::::='I~~"~~~~·~·~~-~~= .}O}'lng a prot1table business. Manin . .11erv\ce contractor. Counties ST;,.$150 v.•k up. No exp nee, CORBIN·MARTIN M•iQlenance Help Wanted, M & F 710 finest bldg., gen'I cleaning, No door lo door. 842-26&1 REAL TORS 644-7662 JANUARY 2 BEAUTIFUL WAYS TO SAVE ON A BEAUTlfUL CAR ANOTHER WHITE SALE SPECIAL! EXPLORER SPECIAL PICK-UP Low pricH an 4 different equipment packages fBE S Al.E THAT'S REALLY A SALE BECAUSE IT COMES FRO/tf ••• 1 --~:;.c:;.c:.:_ _____ l:.:.::!:..:.:.:::.;:=c.:;.:.::..:_.:.;:: I ex per. only. South co , l---------'---5-16-5322. •!l.IAID \\.ANTED 20!10 1 'R~E=NT=AL---... -,-,~-M~,-,-~&~t HUSBAND Busy! Ca 11 ARTWORK, Designers \\'ant- i l\lOOSf" Re!>"1ir-Build-:itla inr. ed for freelanct-products & i\1ost Anything 545--0820 eves new Idea!'! of professional qualily; suilable for Greet- 1 Masonry ing Card: Ccr.imic .i Gifr. ARICK & BLOCK \VORK \varr O:pts: !o be m_anu ftH" J\1ASONRY OF ALL TYPES tuttd in Japan, \Vil! pur-. . chase oulr1ght or roya lly For rst1ma!e, 531-28J2 basis. 495-1881 or Daily Pilol Box J\1 -50. Moving Assembly Trainee Girls "FR.EE HELP'' planning Ages 111-26 needed for im· "~10VING". Cut movinR n1erl iete loca1 opening. cosl.11. 1'~or inlormalion. John ORANGE COASf or Dorothy Fuller 492.7751, E:l.1PLOYl\1ENT AGE!l;CT 114 Broad.,vay 645-311 1 , Painting & Paperhanging AIJTO POL l SH TNG & DF.TA!I~ position~. J::xp'1l . . engine cleaning & paint-buf-P~ROF'ESSIONAL Pa1ntinp:. ting. Sa!Rry open. Grov.'th Exler. l _story, low· as $200 co. 1\1ErRO CAR WASH \V/gd paint. Avg rn1. Sll!, 29'.lll Harhor Blvd C '' A('COUS. ceilings !ip~yed ;t. · · · .. · ,,.ars Sl5, Roy, 841· l3.'>11 B AB y s TTIER-House k~P· er 11•1 lransportation or DTST'RJBUTORS. part/full Nr\\·port Blvd, C.\1. Ph: \Vo men . 1\l us t b f' time, single or cpls. Nr 642-2611. personable. S al a r y + hmne. Jnte~·s JOam &. 2pml-,~!A=N-=U=F"=A~CTU-.-R-IN-G.,---E-,1P-.-11• L'<lmm. 545-3214. C ar m e n 1 ta -A Io n d r a ecr or Technician lo de-ROUTE Sales-Sl30 wk lo st. lndus1rial Park. ~1 1·~ velop jigs. fixtures, assem-Take ov cstab Foller Brush Alondra. Santa Fe Springs. bly procedures. "1acGregor r1c in Laguna. Xlnt pt lime Or send letter At In: Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, I ~•7•k7al~'°~'~"~;7l ~'="~·775_73_·~-I E.G.\V. Costai'l1ei;a. SALESWOr.1EN, Ex- DJL\PERY workroon1 • feml, i'lt ARJNE Engine Installer perienced, retail food storr. expd power mach. Oprtrs wanted Expe r ienced Al90 need \\'Oman cook, ex- & train. Beach Drapery, 900 onlylaPplv LUHR'S BOAT perienced, for preparation \V. 17th St. CM. CO. 1781 -Placentia, C.i\1. or foods & COttnler \\'Ork. Give details &. background. DR IV ER -KENNELMAN 'lATURE E · 1 I T · p . · Good ty ' xp l \\'Oman or ransporatJon ncressary. ern;.. po.~ition. opp · rull tim~ "'·ork in health C.J\1. area. \Vrife Bo" ?11-25. ~or righgoodt m•,tu~. man. M~! foods store in Costa \o.Iesa. Da ily Pilot, 330 \V, Bay, ave . nving rero . • uo 9537 e c ;1 Apply a l 20612 Lagllll&. C&n-1 ---.:...~c..:.~ __ ::._ __ • I --·-'~·~~~~~==- yon Rd. LagunR. MECHANIC, F\1\l time. Xlnt * SALES CLERKS DOOR!'l-!AN for Irg 11.pt, com-\\'ages & . bent'[its for r ight pie.\'.. :P..tust hitve. 0 w n ~Rn. lt1chltcld, l91h. & uniform ,r,, rriendly d1spo11l-Ne\\·porl, C.i'l·l. FuU and rart tim~ -APPLY- The Tobacconist Inc. I Jon. 5-l>-3214 :it!EDICAL Of11('e n re ds F.LDER LY w'1man needed as \\'1lman for back 0H1,:f:!. llunt1ng1on Cl'nle1·, 11.B. No \Vasting * WALLPAPER * \Vhen )"OU ca.1J ":f.lac" hab)'Str r..1ostly dy<. ...-~ i\lu~t bl' abll' to IY"" a nd '' \V HIT F. ELEPllANTS" \1n!klng distancC' of ~i n .....-~ ,... & Santa ll'Rbel. Afternoons nite~ Cd:itl area 67~ hll\'l' general kno1\·Jed g!' ol overrunnmg your house? s.1g.144.c s-1&-1 m 2 to £ & some ev,s. One EXPERIENCED Den 19 I olliet: procedures. P. 0 . Box "Cash" .• 5<'11 them thru 7-yr-old. Refs exchanaed. cha1rside 11.!l1istant, Southl,598==!.o="'="":=,;8~"~'~·"='~"~'~2:· =J..,="'°=·~,Jy~Ptl~ot:,C:<~::,:•~;ed::;,== j 011 ~Qn. with ihi• ,•p•l•r •fllulp_.it INT/Exter painting. Free 5-l&-47:i7. Laguna OtliCt". Mon. Fri. Vinyl roof ••• accent stripe f>~t Local re.f'l'I Lic'd & ins. ----------x~rr.iy~. Send resume to Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 POWER STEERING FREE d {\c~ustical ce1ling1, Call BAHYSl'ITER Needed ft !or 32341 Coast Hwy, So. , , • front /rea r bumper guar s Chui:k, 645-0809, hoy, 6. ~~I days :. to Laguna . • • , wheel covers , •• whit• • 1.;;::;;'.'.:C::'.;'.:'.:;::'.....~---l 6 pm. VI<' Newport Elf:!m. 1-~--------- sidewall tires ,,. special LTD ,PR?-PAINTlNG. Accoostic School. call eves 675-6149. Exper Medical Recept . I I I ce1hn~ $10 comple!e. Also, 1----------fo r busy G.P.'s office, good seat trim , •• 1pec a co or. i.n!er or exters $!</ + "'"'· B A B \' s r T T E R /Hskpr. typisr. 64&-J903 2 POWER STEERING ANO POWER DISC BRAKES FREE •11 ,." ..... tltk ,.,.,. •41•,,_, All the ebove, plus-Select· Aire ~itloning ••• tinted g'l•11 , •• v i1lbllity grOup ••• •utamatlc Jeetbedc rile•H· 531-6927 or 63&-3110 2-children 5.7. Live in. Eng I -''-'--"'-'-'-"~----- Ex;peri'nced Hotf'I Maid 6 day.11 a week CALL 494-1196 YOU SUPPLY TifE PAJNT speak. Ref's. 893-7892. SIO per rm. painted. Yrs Ba.nking f':ocp. Frtt est. 557-3638, *COMMERCIAL ~io-704£. TELLER PAJNTTNG: Comm'I & rt>sid. t '.xp'd. Apply 1n penion Apts our specialty. l day Newport N•tional l!tf'Vitt. l"N'f! ~-Refa. Bank 968--13..'\0 or 645-1845 Sllpcrior & PlacenUa, N.B. P AINTING : Honest, guaran. BEAUTY Ad v isor to lf'ed \\'Ork. Lic'd. J.DC&I ref's. demonstrate exciting llf'w Call 615-5740 Aft 5. products. No door to door. PAINTING/papering. l~ )T!I Seiling required. new com- in 1111.l'hor area. Lie & pany-let.s grow together. bonded. Rel's furn. &U-1156. Call 847-6321. PATNTLNG-Ext-Int. 18 )Tl'!. BEAUTICIAN.. 'o\ith Cl r l.'XJXT. In~. Uc. F~ e~t. w/out tollo\v1ng. Apply tn Aceoust Cei ling8 968·9126. peMJOn, 334.1 Ne11."POrt, N.8 . . . 673-5911 INTIExter Painting. Free f'~t Ref's. l mmed. Service. 8 E A u T I F 1 c A T I 0 N 646-0210 642-3014. mo.vemenl needs people who • w\11 work for d nt pay. I NTERJExtf'T. Specia.l ista 53&-40S4. Llc'd, bonded Ins. Won'tl=~='--~.,.,---­be underbid! ~1674. FtJ1.:L c~ bookkeeper. ex- lc:===========I perience 1n payroll repon1, acct reconciliation, journals r uu.. Or pt-time, no exp. neet:ssary, \Ve train, great o p po rtun i l )'. Kosco! Tnerpl11nitary Inc. a48-9840; 646-2919 .. GENERAL OFFICE-R.E. & BookPlt @xp ntt, Downtown H.B. 536-2579. Gen'I Ofc/Bkkpng Hunt, Beach, 1 girl olc. Es- crow or R.E. neceu. SH, typing, To T.B. MISS EXEC AGENCY 410 W. COflSt Hwy, NB ....,... HAIRSTYLIST With follow- ing. Perfttt Newport loca- tion. M-1-0T!IO • Re1taurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exciting CocoJ ANO W• will •ecept •pplicettons for - • WAITRESSES • BUS BOYS • DISHWASHERS • HOSTESSES •COOKS ·• BARTENDERS • COCKTAIL WAITRESSES • South Coast Pl•Jfer, P•tch, Rep.-ir le eic. Ask for Mrs. Brant, • PA'l'Qf PLASTERING All types. f"ree eatimates C&ll 54l).68'lS Johnson & Son Lincoln Mer. cury, 2626 1-111.rlxir Blvd., Cos•• r..1e111 .. 540.5630. BKKPR, i\1edicll.I o If I c:·e, Plumbing Laguna erea.. Must be ac-1 .;_:.:;;;;;:;;;;~------I curate. some ~pt . wC1rk. HAVE tmrnediate openiJwl for J men to J'IWl9,le Billiard Puior. 1 day llblft I: l night abift • I d&ya per Wtt.lc. Mud ·be neat In aPPf'~. mature .l able 10 au ume resJ>()JlSibili· ty. ?\-Ilnlmum •gt • 25 yn . Only tho!Je tHkil'i long time employment~ apply, Fof J.itef'\'h!W 646-7481 Stertlng 0-ber 2' t :OM:OCI D•lty 24001 Apply Jn Person Avenhl• de I• C•rlota L•gun•.Hllls Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to El Toro Rd. -Comer of El Toro Rd. and A venlda de la Carlota. FORD-MERCURY 303 Broadway, Laguna Beach 549-3851 PWMBING REPAIR State 11ge & quaL Box No job too a:ma.11 M-1097, Daily P Wt. LB. , _ _,__•;:._:64=:1-3:....c1'3=.c.• ___ ,eooKKEEPER lhru TB . "\VEF.D It &. ttap" •. clt>an nttdcd immed. Typing out the. tre~a .t: trash -req'd. Penn. 5 day 'o\·k. turn into cath thru a D11ily llil\lary open. Elfp. nee. J)\lot Cla•Uled ad. &U-5678 642-34.12 N .B. HOUSEO.EANING, T h u r a only, Q\\•n trans, Reliable, Under <kl, Ref ptt.f. 646-9844 PLANNING to mow! You'D flr.d an amaztnrnrrmbl!r. o1 ~t In today'a Ouslfied ·Owned by Far West Services, Inc . Operators of Snack Shops, Coco's Reuben's, Reuben E. Lee, The Whaler, Isadore'J I [ ' " 2 • ' I. ' I lhur~•Y, Jinu1ry 7, 1971 DAILY PILOT ~-~_ .... _,_ .... _._J[IJJI .. _ ... _._ .. ____ ,,~, ._[ _ ... _,._ .. ____ J[~JI .. _____ ,,~,12 :.R !~ •. :~ ~?,u_1 .. c:::: ... T~Lo~~.~ •. [ ~.,.;, ... l~I .__ _.~ .. _"'"1·-"--. l§J._I· _'"'°'_"' .. _1§1 1 !11•••••11!1!!!!!!!!!!!, to kind ownf'r. Must nut j )'OUnit pc'.)(Klle & wire halted I be aepanted. m-u 8 to ''rtler mix . G"-Y 1t 1U~r. Help W•nted, M & F 71D 1 .a.-... llen••• 802 ] M lsc ellaneou1 Ill Mu1lcal ln1trument1122 ~Judy 1111 j Older chlldnen pr et ' d • Gtn•r•I 90C) Trucks 962 Trucks "2 '"'"' FREE Puppies to rood Houaebroken, 539-8466 tJt' 1;:.::;;,:::;_ _____ :.:;:i cc..:=.:... _____ _;.:_.....;=.:...------'-' * SEAMSTRE'Ss * --------STOP & SWAP C-CJ..<:LA~C GIBSON home. Plea.st. do not call 539-7181 1/7 FREE ------------.. -·· ------·-··-····· --· . ·~-·- run tlnl'e or J>t,rt tjmf', GIJ(Jd SEARS Self--dttro«t nm1, 3 548-6101 GUITAR W/CASE $15 u )'t'IU chaln or eage LONESOME Gto0rae la my pa)'. Call CLOWN CLEAN· yr, o!d J7S !"'As $2301 201'3 Newport Blvd., C.M. e 673-217~ e a.nlmala. -494-1673 1/7 1 rui.me & tindh'IJ a lovlnc S"· •-• ... 9 h • Basi<: &ahni Course otf. ERS. 644-6113 af!er 2 PM , ,...,wn .3d! .,..n, t rnext to Tony'• Bld1 ~lat.) LOVING wh!lt &. orana:e o"·ner la my aame. How Secrt t•r v·Bookkee ptir 10th. 1()..4. 308 Cypreu Or I Uaed turn: smvea; Refria;'s; Office Furn iture/ male cat, 3 yn old. Shau, ii•boii"i'iyioiu•i. •"i~iiiiiiiiillill ~~t! t:~~~b~u:~~~1~ Apt. E Laiu~ Beach. &:. Misc. __ E_q~u_l~p_. ____ _;1~2~4 ·•te·-•, •-···b-keo. Ne•d• Good skillii , Fee Pald . 1AJso .. ~ ,........., •v Sail 11 weJ] as pov.·er fee jobai. Cl.II l..or1'ine, REFRIGERATORS WfLG 1 "U we don't have what yoCl Rnin'd 34x60 wood desks, rood hom e i mm e d · boating tauihl. Start!nt 645-1'170, Weatc.litt Person. FREEZERS. '35-$4~$55. i WatJl , we'U l['f!t 11 for you " $69.50 e Refin'd wOO(! arm 644-{'~"9 l/9 < __ ""' __ ""' ______ If °LJ J T pm !\ton. Jan. 18. Every nel Agency, 2043 \\'e.alcliU 1 •• ~6-1820 •• :0.fOVrNG • Must Mcrifi~ rota.ry chaln, $29.50 e We YOUNG Adul! kitten 5 mo _ . ~ ~1ond1y nl!e for 13 weioks. Or., N.B. C•m•r•• & ~'; ::=°~~TV~~r::i; have the lartttt selection to 1 yur .ome spayed and !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!I At Newport Harbor Yaeht Ol uft'd office furn l.n this .ome aren't tome will bt Club, 72() \V. Bay Ave .. SEC RET ARY-Exrel!ent Equipm ent IOI S45.1deak$20.Ml51:ltemi. d•l i viored.548-0813:' Ne14·por1 ~at:h. Brine aldll1, IBM Ex ecut i ve I 646-9725, 571JO&fln SL, Apt a.re.a.Me Mahl.n Dealt 836-+493 1/8 Dogs U4 notebook&:: peocil f.in;t typewriter Ji. 1horth11nd 'REGfNNERS Dk. Rm : I, CM nhf', Any questio ns call Gmwing t1UiCf' nt>M~ gond ' Enlarger, e~l. c ut 1 er , .62 CHEVY JI Wgn S200 l800 N= Blvd. BEAUTIFUL Gray Ptn:!an ----------1 67J..ISJJ. phone J)f'rsonal1!)', rleP;"n· tank , tra~~. 1afr!1te etc like Tf'nl·tTailrr ramJ"r Sl50.. ntutered mall!'. J years. EVER \\'anted a.n OLD·l---'-"'------- rlablf! m11.n11.g¥n1e11 1 11.tnltty. new 644-5942 ev,~. K , h $75 $250 ONE Yr old . Xint ct>nd. Pric· "Archit " lov~ & loving ENGLISH SHE,EP DOG. FR EE G.M.C. TRUCK CENTER ' ''THEY'RE HERE" '71 GMC CAMPER SPE CIAL Power br•kes. H.O. springs, 8 $3295 ply tire s, ready for big camper. (110lS71 (Stk. # 10051 C ALL 5 4 6 ·6750 24 hr. Phon• SALES e SERVICE UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 H1rbor Blvd ., Ccstt Mesa Wn1r Box P-2fi Daily Pllot, I ~nmore .... as er · ed fllf below ~tall. Prin. 111.dly lakrn !(I SPC A bur. didn't want to spend 330 W Ba. CM 'Pentax Spotmslir Caml!'ra Diamond mr $100. . 1 nl 1993 S R>'t•"·y , -~··• , ____ 1_, 118 $500 z. up,,_ Father wag 11 ' y, .. ' \\'ith B'""k Bod}' .. 546.-9787 • Clpa s 0 )', . ...... ......~" .....,,J_" b I H , •• "'" St Santa Al'll !g, Siberi.111 Husky mother Huntington Bf'ach Power Cyclet, Bik•s, Mo I • om11 ~ SERVICE CENTER IS140 Phon"' .13647N \VROUGHT Jron It wood " · 12·3 YR ... old insle Basenji. a champion Old 'English. Squadron·s Wic boating Scooters 92S j -;:;:;;;;:;;:;:::~;:;;;;:;1 E mployment Agency I dinette !lf't Sl OO. Sct\1ck .floor I p· /O I Good with children & ca~. 10 BiE:, beautiful. furry course for &a.U or po1>.·er. 1---------'.ir: [±llllfVA.]tJlll,ll..J, F u rnitu re 810 model hairdryer S75, 2 Jge ianoa rg•ns 126 Needs love. 673-1009 pups, 11 wll! old S90. ----!'.!---!?.... - - . r-J *s ' L I .,75 I mllk c11'! SlO ea. Some an. B , 0 Cl evea. 119 642-5.n:?. a,,,., •t••t· Mo·doy J•· ec y ega ..• , .,.. . . & 11 b 1 •91nn1r1 rg•n ass 1 1 .. "' · " · '" Surrounded by some eXper prohll!e & trial ' DESPl'.:RATE. ~tu~! sl"ll lO j ll~ues29 ro ecta es . ENROLL NOW FREE to iood hornr. 'Vire AFGHANS AKC, Femall'! & uary Jl U1 Irvine Ora~t!~ id typla! lite SH helpful roon1~ of hM.ul. i\1f'di!PrT. 64 -99 all 4· 1 C1.us starting Tues., Jan. hair fox Territr, 20 mo. ma.[,., \\'hi w/blk mask, Top Time : 1:f?O P ,t.f. Real rura] llvlni yet close but not e~seni"ial • ful'n incl ll' blk naug 11(\la MOVING-Maytag wa sher & 12, 1 p.m. 6 we,ks course old, 'IO.'tll trained. Unhappy hlor><I line, Champ stOC'k. A!: Huntington Beach HiEh 10 ocean, shoppinJ 6' *Sec'y/,.en'I ~fc S450 8'. lov1> ata1, nel'er usf'rl dry, r, x I n I con d ; sti HAMMOND ORGAN i" Apt., 96&-8817 Jill Good \\"/children Hsbrkn. School. Room lZl . recrea.tion • $150 J..;imp~. Hide·a·h<'rL ti' Sm i I h -Cor on 1 po r I M6-7658. ' For information ttlephone: Pllush ofc. greb•I' "°",·lookioi;td coflef' tbl, 2 end ro1nmodes,l typewriter \\'/cast; 1\f~Ped ~'!:ylD,IOCS~ro~• d~·l C~ast P•AboR·:tsl"ys:t~~andoldpl l~a-~'I•. :;.~1~. nr persona " ga wig rorn111.I din·~ rm S1'1, f'r· nmtnr bike; dinette Rt. ar, " ... '",.,...., ADORABLE. Gentle, Shihd----'------- head, . rasiooa.1 C'h11.irs, Bunk hf'r\, 1141i-6~l!I. 644·11930. good with ch 1 l d r e: n · Tzu P.upa, ~ brindle, 2 black SCRAM LETS *Ste~o/typ1sf $450 Spanish King·sz Bdrm sel. GOLD Wool rug, l2xtg' 1200 FINAL 892-1372 119 & whltt. sire double: cham· • I! you re a gr! typist & !Jke 2131925.3622 Sel K ocff d YEAR END APT al1.e iU refria:, l'f'rfect pion. Dam of champion ANSWERS il·this is A carP.er spot for , mer trumpei·, . ·m 1 It · stock AKC reg 847 1631 /xl -1 "-1-)6 DRAV.ER "·alnu1 dressers. 248 $150. We1 su11. 1."J() lh~. CLEAR OUT rond. YOU·HAUL. 32122 So. ., -• you n ut:ne 11s. S25 5 ... 4.. 120 1'1 s· f p · & 0 C~t H\\-y. So . Lag . REG. English Poin!er a t , . *Bkkper/F .C, $5SO chest!~·S22 e~ra .... ·er \\·alnut j ~1.1.-0140 . etronome :>. o ianos rg•n• 4~2;)16 119 Stud . Sheriff Prin('e & PtriQd -Altar -Pious - I Girt ofcl abili"' to clos, & Th U d F . , . J\.lany Al whole511.!e prices Smoke ru··· p · B• t Dabbl .. -DISAPPEAR •.> t se urru ttire F8 ctory PIANO Kimball Consolf't!e WARD 'S BALDWIN STUDIO LOVELY Golden Cocker " rince. s '" putl a ~1a!emen1 accur. tyP.. I 1885 Harbor Bl vd. Costa Mesa walnul finish. Xlnt cond.11819 Newport BlvcJ., 642-8484 Spaniel Good with children. Bloodlint;e ava.il. 642-2066 t.lagici11.n's problem: "l\1y isl. I "" \Vife is also a magici11n. She. .,..8.9457 S4.'i0, Lg Dux_ ~hr & ottoma_n Hammond, Ste In way' Do1; houae: Inc 1 u de d . GREAT Dane puppil!'S AKC. makes money DISAPPEAR." j()() Newport Center Dr. NB Custom Draperies ~:<'· 1_'eak din,.! ""51= t?,l,,!35· Yamaha. New&; used pianos 894-4393 111 12 weeks old 1 fawn l S .. ,.,. 53·, '64'-'9'! I ......, swing R t ...,, ,,.....,,.,, ••. L · o h d Do •'t br\ndlt both 'fema.le. Eve. 14 FT Crackerbox, h!· " " ., ·• ~ ~ 1 o~ mo!l m ..... es. Best buya in ·"· rp ane , " . ~.,.~~~"'!~~~.... cora or drapery 1<.'0rkroom 1 CHELSEA 8-day US Navy So. c-"". ot •·hm>'dt M .. ,,·. "para!t brother &, si.5ttr. only 546-3708 after 6:00 pm. "°"'ered, limall block, Chev · · clo•in ->=n d I llJu ""'" .. .. _:::C'.....:.::C'-.:.:.C:O:::....:C.::O.= V • · boa~ 1-'I •-• SERVICE ST.AT ION , g J.>U! . ··"~' yi1r 5 0 deck clocks, $45 ea. Min-Co 1907 j Sa Grey & wht. 5 mo. very .., in '11 "" ... ai er. """e general help. Exp'd. Appl,v ddraper~ fab r,• 1 r an~ tnadt.'up ney'a, 2537 w. Colli! HIO.'Y, An·~. N, Man, nta gt>n Ue & pretty. 5ol&-04S3 118 SILKY Ttrr\e.rs, AKC. Shotli, at 32852 Calle San Marcos. . 1 BOYD'S rapl'rie~., 111er111ls !tom NB o ••• 192 papers, Champ sto r.k, SanJu11.nCapistranoor C'all in person on Y · 7· · · ' ..,,,...., · FREE C k d ho odorles~. non-shtd, Sl50. 49' '716 49"1'"''2' ARC0 490E,.17thSt.C.M. ,l!"11_y.,_rrl 11.nddraper1t>s FORSAE KlMBAU.. .. ConsoJt;tte: ocapooto a:. me .,..... or .,....QD,,..,J . 1 • from S=> pair. 38;}3 Birch St. L I Walnut f inish. Xlnt Cond. fi mo ?Id . Blk & love.able 543-8136. ,67 BOSTON WHALER: lJ', {cross rofld lrvinf' Newporl BeaC'h ~lfi-14:11 11.dj Ustd d('luble tier lockers. F11.ir $450. * * 67!"r4.j95 847-282J. 117 1 MUST SAC. A11s1 Shep P"P'· I d"li M La D ii S.65 Johnson 40 hp, elec SERVICE STATION AT-tn Orang" Councy A1rpol'!. e~n 1 on. r. ney, 11. Y FREE Cocktr S p 11 n le I Reg. Blue l\lerlf's. shots. t lr full $1000 TENDANT 11.U ihlftJ> open, CO~fPLETE l(J pr "'11.lnut P1lo1. ) Sewing M•chlnes 128 purebred, gold t t m a I e , ComP. see & make olr. ~~~;46{ , Eve~. eqpb a y s ; Apply in person, 4678 Cam· bd 1 SB" W 1 & FOR sale: Used 4' tluores·' 847-8497 1/7 &!2-&100, 1.fi pm. 644-SlGO 557~191 All ELECTRIC Choose from 105 floor plans, you name it! Adults-Pets O.K. Priv•t• Club-$300,000 Recre•tion Center 14 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISHED MODELS IDlt. TRl93) 14851 Jeffrey Rd. In Irvine pus Dr .. Newpt Sch. whTi: 8!,· bl :>. h ~~trd cent fixtures, $5 each, a.s is. 1970 Singer Zia:-Zag Auto, r.tJNI s c H N A u z ER s l.:'.'.::c'.'.:'.:'------- SERVICE Estab'd. fu!ltr $3 50 u t ta .!., Cont&.ct J\.1r. Laney or Mrs. ~•utiful w11.lnut console. PUPPIES -6 wks Hal! Champion sired, A KC, 1.\'ANTED : tlas~ riinghy, !========== 5 mi. South ol Tultin, and Brush rlf', $12'>-$175 wk . to · ea . Greenman. Daily Pilot, 330 Ma.kts buttonholes. Samoyed -Hall Shepherd ..,.•m•I••· u·oe b••d. Car.top size 11 . S IS , __ ~ •• , Thi' Userl Furn itu~ f'ac1ory, b I · d 646-5220 1/8 ,. ' Call: 968-6767 WA NT E D '~ rn.1. · 0 ant.a ............ • -r st ,, also pt. time :i.tS-5745. I°"° H "-Bl d C ,1 Weat Bay, Coll.ta Mes;i; overca8ts ~e11.ms, In -··~~":'~6~7-------1==========1 ·1., mt·. N. of San Dt·e-~ .... >. <>OJ ar.,.,r v . osta" l!'sa C ht>mJ> designs etc. Gu11.r. -" •-"' "';;f. SHAMPOO GIRL ~8.9457 ARPET Layers have _,hag S"' 44. h ·" •• DOXfE-Cock-11.-Poo puppies. SJ\.tALL Bl k t poodl Any ye11.r 250 or 30.'i Honrla I & 'I 1 ' , ~-1 ..... cas , or sm ..... pym..,. 5 wks. Cs.II btwn .µ; PM ac oy "' Botifs/Merlne Scramblt>r, not running. Part time, Mu~t be JlC'l'nse d . comm wel' crp s . ......,, 54:-r8238 puppil'~, 1 mall", I !emalP Equip 904 optrator" 67.1.6890 8' GOLD sofa _& rha1r .'l~t. dirtcl. Exp("r installrr. can · ' 496-t117 1/7 646--0l<l:l or 54g..1022 333 E. • S.19·1690 832-8585 SINC~LE nel'dlt powt:r mach. npe,rators-in better rlr,sst5. Piece work. 11182 \lihitti'r Ave. Uni! X. C.M. Spanisn 5fll!Bking OK. *°5TENO·W RffER ~%l. 5 pc. Spant.'lh ~ood dln· 1 !inance. 53~327, 827-8740 1 * REPAIRS * FREE puppie! to ttsponsiblf' 17th SL CM. BOAT Batn 20·, floatini. 7 WANTED ;:jt ~oo: ;et, ~!15. f · 1 MUST Sell 11il!: Furn. app's,' Clean, oil&: ·adjust your ma. party 1969 Pomona CM . 4 Silky puppies, 1 ltmalt l\!n's old. Below ',) priet;. Parti; fnr Honda 2!)(1.3(l0.305 ~ H!.rbor ~~~~~:s~c~e~~ t'i_randma clock, col TV, ~h inr. in ynur home, Spec. ~997 l/!1 l\1al1tst, 11 mof;. Gorgeous $100. 1146-9518 Scramblt>r. Gas tank, rear fl48.91.i7 piano. toys. 962-2719. Htl $3.95, 11,ll \\'Ork a:u11ran. 70 LbR nf love need~ la: yard. 1 &16-0142 or 548-1022 333 E. B R /Ch I' 908 tender, carburetors, chain TV ur · w : stand S~j l'vlisc. teed, 54a.S23.li. Blk lab mix has shots. 17th St., c .r.f. oats, ent •r r guard, aeat, ..._1rtna:. etc. GE'ORGETO\VN G 11. 11 t r i e j 1umber S8 Single bed 64.2-S772 118 1 PUG PUPPIES ANNOUNCING Cap'n Eds 961-7689 Tripi• Wid• Cornell 1 Continental e Paramount Barrington • Universal Flamingo • General E.roadmoor • Star HUJcrest • Cambtidp Yilld mahogany rl ining room ..._,/hdbd $11. 645-0391 . Sporting Goods Ill\ FLUFFY . whi!e fem 1 7 \\'ks old, Al\C registered. Sailin,1: Club. 29' Diese111~9~70,.-,H~O~N~D"°'A-,S~"=~·e ~ .. """Xlo-cot ~~!. Tab!!!, 2 l"'RS S: pads, NEW >t . d. _., . Cockapoo 51,1, m<i .!. Nttds C'! Lo C-' 2S ~ Publishing firm nPed~ Girl 4 chair.'! & huffe! $165. misc. ' arqu1s iamouu ring SURFBOARDS . Champion backil'Qund. By ·~•OOP . w ratts. IU cond Dunlop K70 til't's Friday type w\lh I flare !or ~~5972, 1979 Orange Ave ., & ivedding band, Must Sac· 6'10" "Greek" ]ow railer, gd. homt. 837-2742 118 I appt, 494-79TI . & SS ·JO ' also avail, 64~22~4. chro~e rack, ~V1xom lug: CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 1206 N. Harbor, S.A. • TI4/5.11-8105 * promotional dirf'ct mail wr11-Ci\l. 17 Price. 54·'>-3689• 544-938~· clean 11hape, $60. 7'0" LOVABLE 2 mo. male. mi~ed SILKY Terrier a vailable for Evell 96HS4D. gage hox, $695. r.tust Sell~ ' "'· m;:irket 1.,.i;,11rch. Can ASH Blondt', natural hair "Grt>ek" pint11iil S25. 644-1742 breed puppy, 292 Villa i;tud Xln! ba•k.....,..urni p ..... LOCAL S t l'·h'• 416 642-0558 Nova C~i . 5'\f>..6797 1 /:! . · . •· -· • .... por "' ng · douhll! 1n bras.~ 11.~ secrelary 5 PC. dl11ette M>t~. only ~. wig. S20. ' I pirs avail soon. 646-733J. pass. cha.rttr boat5 winter1'179~70-y7,-m-,~.-,-Y~S-C~-73-200= l to bnJ11;. Mu~• r,.. wl"J I organ· $29 a se1 . 2 pr . malching Call 645-095.i TV, Radio , HIFI, 6' FREE couch iMrl !ramt • DALMATIANS rates 646-900(1 CC itttet Scrambl er. 1200 Tra ll1r1, Tr•vel '4Sj iiert. sel/.star!tr aflrl po!eS5 sn!a. bed & chair sets, S48 e BUNK OR T\\'11'\ BEDS Stereo 136 n t e d 5 u Pho I 5 t t' r Y AKC e I XI ----------ii t Ad '"5324 119 a .. 11, Sall 909 mi es. nt cond, $4'i;). 16' IDEAL. Oven, "'"'• good M"Crtit11rial ski Is , · "8 • ~:CHEST e .....,.. * * fi42·1937 * * &42-7967. ver1ising or relllted tikirrnd. The U!lt'd Furn11ure factory, * 54:HJ346 • LARGE ponable "Silvertone" GOOD Walth dog 1'2 sbep.1 COLU!\ffilA 28, )969 $lO 750 toilet. Can 5leep 4, Inter~ desired, ror an interview. 1885 Hamor Blvd. Co8t& Mesa I 1tereo record player. 4 speer! "' nld Eng. 1 yr mllll", • BOXER PUPS AKC e · · · · '69 Yamaha MX. ~r· tl'Ont in xlnt cond. $600. SH ;i c all M•rv !>fCff!rran 548·9457 17· Brunsll•lck pnol ta.bit, plus turnlabl,, remote. 8peakl!'r5. 54~5175 l/ll ' 6 \VI<! old Pvt Pt:y: Maderl Incl: PWS. whttl. 30mm ca.rb & Bolsa Chtca. nr. Heil, R.B ~ J ba.lls & C'Ue!. 175. JUlll reconditioned, ideal 1142-4212 or 962-2331 IO.' I 8 h o w e r , D Y R : Cornutta, ?-.1oto-Cros5 tt&dy, Call 846-5787. 546-4.170. 8' QUILTED sofa & m111 . 1 * 54!}-38Slt * fRE.E Box springr and Vfnf'· 1 . 213/6 3 6-0 7 5 7 Eve Ii : Call alter 5 pm., 962-1760. 1---------- TTRE M"" & T r a \ n t t ch.ini:: lnv,..sl'A I.: f," r I Y .i:-itl , S40.00 or best of!tr, Al. tiao blinds different ii~s. "I ORKIE female AKC., 10 714/646-j724. l~~=~,..-0~'--'----'c.,,.. I ROZl-!ER 14'. 1971 Nfiiitra• ,.. A . 1 & 1 hi FOR Sale illuminated plate so 11 Munti 4 track stel'ttl wlu shl'.lt!' ttnn~ 1..:.:cc:.c:.c:.c:cc _____ 1+ HELP·~! Getting drafted. tio t-.' tire Cl $450.! managen openings. Earn in mrr1ra11 a1nps a r : glAs!' display cases, 5x2x2, l ~ 1)46..ijJ76 119 1 , , , L 20 I I -• 197 • •-S"~ S • n, t\V s. ean.· , J exeess ol $1500 mo. plus. " s ~ ri r 1 e d kn i c k·knacks. tape Payer. se\11 outpur 1---------~· -Ci•dl 892-1539 CA , mmacu ale ro11u. . D nonu.11 .....:N. tree.t See at i40 \V . Wilson, C.M. c.~" ~;50 $50 ta. Call 962-5551. terminals including 1!ereu fREE To rood hom' 4 ..mo / OCKAPDC !or Loaded w/extras, RDF "'!'fulppt>d, knohbtes included. Mtlst be e:-:p'd &-ht llbll'!. .:>.><>-('I.,. OFFSPRING LTD. Closing phone jack • includes as· oJd mt.le doa:. Pt Sh8illie 2 Cl $ h . Puppies ~pi n, xtra saUs, etc: 84&-5932. to Rll. Opening~ in L.A, TRADITTONAl. Fumitur.-, and pt Cocker, 642-7728 118 sa e 5. eac · '~~""'""'.,.,-""'""°'~~,-., out~ Childrens Q.]6! Up to sorted tapes. S30. Phone c.•~ 64-1--0963. 1~70 YA'IAHA T il M. Trail•r•, Utility 947 Orangt County areas, Ap. copie1 of the old d11.y1, SPAYED 1 ,_ old '''· ~ * ..,;i-2TI6 * " ra aster. 14' T d Tr il •" •-I' BJ d 7:1"4' off! 174 Drl Mar. SC. 642·7497 betwl!l';o II am 111.nd J• uooo DI 1 & treet Cl an em a er,..., •1.ee ~ ply : JOOl Harhor v , hi11wlcral1t'd in pine. Rn!! :i w tehildren, box tra~ • SHERRY'S POODLES + 13' SPRIT E Sailboat w/jib r 5 pars. tan. welded construction. ~·, Fullerton. j rnps. hutches, dry 11fnkll, · pm . "'~" r;r,~1; IJ9 Yr end puppy ult. groom· & main 1alls • $350. $300. 962·9960 Deck plating, 545-4361 or 111hlP.,, etr. Pif'Ces m~m> ro M iscell•neoua 120 TV REPAIR SERVICE .,...,....,,.,. ' ing. Free pk-up, 545-2.!·18. 673-0947 alt 6 pm •71) YAMAHA ,,1~5 ?.JX. &12-5845. Will trade on Pick d 64o958~ W•nted 6 Weeks old mi.x~ brtt.d -"~;;c~~~c.;c;;;~::-1========== p t & VIETNAM Sheet Mettl Worker Electriclen Diesel Mech•nic AUSTRAILIA Cr ane OJM r•tor M ason Mill Wrights Pipe F itte rs $125 Tott l Fe• UNIVERSAL 714 /956-2251 OPf"n, 7 day~ a wtl!k or f'r , , · · RCA, Zenith. Motorola, Ad. malt P"PPY ~9. l/ll AKC BLK r.1JNI ATURE roven ast relia ble, Ex· Up, ME~TTERRANEAN "°.fa & f WA·NTEO miral a~ialigts 21 " cnlor POODLES. 3 !\tO'S OLD Bo•ts, Sllps/Oocka 910 trA8, $400 or oUer. 67~3008 ========== chair, 1 yr old . Also dinettt Part.s for Honda 2.5(1.JOO.~ pi1·ture tub!! $79.9:; i.1staUer.:. PURE Bre.-d Chihuahua Ire,. S7;. ' • 673-0l.;r.J DOCK tie·up pnvilea:e. 570 NORTON '70, 150 Roadster General ·tSO: t8 ble I.: 4 C'hain, Priv11.te "-..,. ... bl•r. G•• t•·'·, -~~ ,\ntenn&s ins1aJltd. Radio ti) good home 63&-4239 118 1 1 6.000 r<Iiles -Clean. =·~·· ""' ,'O,.. IRISH SEITER puppif'li. m!n. Sai boat pN'. party. 67~2276. lender, ca.rhurerora, chain Dispatcheri trucks. 1 hour CUTE B!Jick & brown pup-AKC reg. Champion blood \.\'tr/tlec , 303 E. iw7-2029. CUSTOM curvtd ~ct!onal, gua.rd. aeat, "·ir ing, etc. iervice. Call 636.431:. pie!. R wk!, 545-1567 l/7 line!. Call 846-3994, Edgewaftr, Balboa, (TI~) '70 Am. Earle 250 11.qu11.. 11', S85. Wa lnut !11.mp 9fi2.761\fl TV 11" blk/wht portable on REFRIGERATOR And · 11 ST BERNARD Puppies, AKC _8~7~1-~286ti:::::c__ ______ 1 30 hp. Fast? Like new '67 CHEVROLET Sportsvan 8 pas, 6 cyl, auto trana. r/h'I 1 O\\'tl!'. priv pty, $1450. ~92.7465 IAhl,. "'/ rir11.wer, SlJ. LUGGAGE \\'antl!'d by pvt whte!~ """'rlu rood $45. works 549-1314 118 Reg. SJ:iO. YACHT Broker aeeka•[--~$600~.,i6~7~~6~99~!;..2"~1~5:___ 646-727;, party. Jn RtJOd cond . 675-1932 BEAUT. Silky halrerl Calico. * Call : 962·7537 '* Ne~rl BciJ lt>e.11. t !oh , l.!1,70 HOTNDA ~B Antiqu•s/Clat alcs :953 , 64&-l286 21" COLO". TV I'~" Lnve& to talk. 546-730'1 111 AK"C DOBER..\tAN. l Yr. W/dnck a cC::e.ss , , XLN ~ONO,•,, 1----------' I LOVELY SofA. ne\•er U!~rl , ,., ..., S500 96 8 96 . qu'.Jteri flor&, liCOtchguarded For an a(I to RU around 17" Portable TV $25. YOUNG Kitten, golrl & fe m. S1re.Qirdobe~ d, Hur. 213/37S-SnS. · •' · 1939 PACKARD 4-<lr ae0.11.n~ Sll:'I. r.fii.tchlnr lovesrat $75. 1 UI . dock, dial 64.2-5678. * • ~8-6529 * * -"='="'=''=·=''=m='=l'='='6--0=4=7=6=11=7"-=r=•=h=· =Lo="='='='=.'='="="'""'·'="='=·= l;'.3Q' •Ii , '"'" lor Pol~·er ·58. Suzuki 300 cc 5 ~pd, ::isoo Re bit eniine; almo•t lully1 7 " P . · ml, very quick. $4 75 or best restored. &15-1245. ; :'l:l!l-83.\ . • boats. Bayside Vi!laie. 300 {)fftr 494.7420 I *RE~~::i.~M s.;m;;:rr;i:'! USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY THE POSTAGE! s~IPc;·~v:;z;,;~~ 23 "'70 T~IUMPH fr. Illtlc ""'" 1_T_,u_c_k• ____ 96_2i 4000· Coll 5'8-3<'1 -5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES 1'_'·-~~~·-=l~~;:,~;n~r:;:;'; .... ,':;1500~,38~4;;;;m"il•"'•·::-1::;1000:;;;-l '66 Ford 1'2 ·Ton P.U.11 DROP-Le.al maple table. 1_ 673·6606 Beals six. Sl;i J • 7 12 4.\~'AY I.le U·&!1p, 15'8"X32', ·7o HONDA SLlOO. Like new, VS, 3 speed. radio, he1t~r,, Ca!! 645-{19;i5 TU~IS TIMU TIMIS TIMlS Balboa Pen1nr.ul11 , Bay Isle ~:55:400 or make Ql!er, ea.~y·lil! ts''11 '3'9''9· (~) kl'f!a. SlOO mo. Rltr. 673-6&80 G.'.•o Sele 112 S t 1970 350 HONDA i\1otor • 40' BAY LIP BARWICK . ' 673.1570 Sport.1400 miles. Xlnl cond. V.1AITRESS-Exp'd. f<ir rtm. rier~. Over 21. parl time CORNER Gr'OUP bf'ds. rah1e, eve!. CostumP f.Uppl ierl. Ap. hol1ttr!. t1>.1n berls ~rt "'1th ply in Pf'rl'on, RF:RLJNER m11rchin12: nitt stand, chest RE s TA u RANT. 1&582 or rlrAwtr!. J/32" 11101 car Bt>ach B!vrl .. Hun1 Bi-h. ~t 120' w/5 cars. near nr11' • WAI TRESSES , ex· Childer11ff 962-4744 . pf'ri,nct-rl. Apply in person. GARAGE SALE: good .furnf· 1:;1'\-3:'.IO, 2633 w. Coast lurt. M11.ny p!ecea & odds & H1<.·y, N.B.. end~. Sun. 11·5, 3009 Cleve. $4.SO $6.10 $10.65 ---1---1---·1---1---1---1---=- $5.10 $1.28 $1 3.10 $15.90 $20.10 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 $6.00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30 TO P1•u11 con Pul •"IV .•"• 1r .. d r~ ••<" 1p•t • .ii ..... 1 ~clud1 v•ur 1ddrelf 91' t~•~• Ru11'1b11, Tl'l1 ced ef vtiwr 1d 11 •*!he e"J •f fl'l1 II"' •" wl'lr,t. lhe le1t w1'4 ..t ye'ur eel 11 writ· t•"· >.JJ t2.oo ,;.+... If v•• tl11lr1 ••• tif DAILY ,!LOT 1 011 11rvl11 with 1111 (l1d , .. S62j. 642·5751 IrvrPORTS INC. DATSUN Tr1111por111!011 Campers, S•le /Rent 92C Mobil• Hom•• 935 \VAJTRESS, exp'rl Apply =1'~""='ccc,,.7MC'. ,,.......,-=-.....,= JJS2 Newporl, C.M, Brunch GOOD Sale 1tem1! Sm. furn, Hou~'". bed~. v1riou1 loo la &. Misc Odda It Ends. 646-312!'). WOMAN !or p&.rt·timt> help =-=-""'~,,:.;--'--<=~~~ at Lt'linn Cle11.nrrs, 320 Lt· GARAGE Sale: 236 Agat~. gion. Laguna Be11.ch. Ba.Ibo. l1!1nd. Nt>w &:: old. turn. app'l & clolhe1. ~--------- l.____-_I~ --··---------- Antiques IOO 'Jl% off entll"f!. atock '1urlng JAN . Glaaa, c h i na, depreuion 1laa1. furniture. Bric-A-Brae Shoppe, &Sol w. 19th. C.M. Jf\VELRY, rator, lamp, mlr· ror, !um,, va&e, etc. AlllO ••ood furn re.tinit1hln1 Fri,• sun .. s.c. '.tn-8048. App Ilene•• RCA Whirlpool dl1hw11her. Llltt MW/lllhltr pnrtthle. SlOO nt bes!. fi45--07&S AM}.NA uptizht r rt 1 t • r . Cletn. $175. 962-9960 VACANCIEb C.0.1 morieyl ltent Your hollte, apt .. ttorw bld1 .• etc. thru a Daily PUrrt CiaastfJ&d ad. M iacellaneou1 111 * AUCTION * FRIDAY 7:00 P .M . JANUARY Ith Auction frDm 2 Estates Somt antlque1, f'urn & house· hold hioms, Bdrm aels, Din's wt.I. China cabine.t11. bunk be-dr. ·Mal'tftlltl, D!Vlltll, Sewing m11.chfne11. I>elkl, Brt1.kfron1 desk, Old pfctur· ea. Lamps, mirrors. diahe1, Pott k. pan,, Colnrrd TV'• &: 11e~11. Re.tria's, wuh. era & much more! Lott ot ,oodle•! WINDY'S AUCTION COME 8R.OWSE AROUND %175\1 Ne:wport Blvd. Behind Tony'• 8ld1 Mat'll Cotta M•N • 646-3686 OPEN CAIL Y 9 to 4 LG. BRAmr:o 'NOOI ti.II fclNJled), S80. Vanity htnch •/pad "·"°· &CJ.«168. ,11 .. l11h ft1t. ••,, ••,, ·'•v•, ... ,1ft~l"t , ,, • , ••• , •••••• • • •• ,, •• •• •• · •. • • c1 ... 1fia1ti•• ••••••••••••••••• •• • ••••• •• •• •••• •• •• •• •• •• • • •• •• • • • N1m1 ••• •••• • • • • •• • • •• •• •• •• •• • • •• • • •• •• •• •• '' '' '' •' •• •• ••" ' - ... ,,,,., ....................................................... . ,11.... j City • ·• •• , ••• •• •• •••• •• •• •• ,, • '• p~..,., • •• '' •• •· ·•·•• •• , ... '• ,. • CllT HIU -PAITI ON TOUI INYILOPI ---------- IUSINESS RE,LY MAIL O"'•I• C:..ot DAILY PILOT P.O. lox 15'0 c:.te M1ae, C.llf, 9262' '64 Ford Camper Yan 1----- Tr1p1• Wide Cornell Hillcrest • Flaminio Paramount • Unfvtrsal Barrlnrton • Broadlnoor Contbiental • Star General • H.ille:mil 750 TILT • cab ford, Z. apd. axle, llflr1te, 16' hed, Vt Ed. ~11. run1 &: looks ex cepl ,1:d. 346-0296 Completely f!CIUlpped with pop top, Ice bcix, 1tovt, dlr. Radial ti.n!'1. 1 owner. (UED- 104) Y.'UI take car In trade or finan~. 546-8736 or 494-68U. '65 CHEVY Yi TON 1955 fORO ,St@pslde. Boyd xln~. runs ioo<t. $275 or will trade 11tr Pd """pori... lion car. 847-1863 CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 12331 Beach Blvd. C .G. '58 lt TON Chev P ick Up. *" 714.'530-2930' *" '60 Oodre Waa:on . call after Picku p. Autom11.tle, radio, 1---;;;c-'::,;i=,:;:=C,:--6, 842-3635 heater. (f'98646t Want To Live In 1-----------I COSTA MESA '65 CHEVY P.U. \; T. P.;ced $895 Local apacea available now! for quick ulio , ... """' ·.a 1!1ft41-J....-. ... J.f yoo are sertoua about buy. * 96UO&I * ,n,441Me '~ Ing a motJUe hon\e .• ,NQw11 I==========:! ZlOO Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 the dme to seio Auto Servic e, P 1rt1' t66 ::,:;.64=f:;.OR~D~CA~M=P=E""R~1 M'l;'a1L~AHRgMoRES ANSON magi w/Sem,.n tires for VW, Xlnt cond. M IO'l'U _) Will 142S Baker St, (at Harbor) wui let '° for ~ with ust .ell. 11•• Costa Mesa. 5'0-9470 take trade dlr, WiU tinan~I'-'.;.;_='=='=-==:;:;:,.;_;_; 1='=""'="=536-<=='="=====I private p~. 546·8736 or COSTA MESA 49U811 Cu!AJ 1t1obtle Estate Llv'c ~tot W•ntecf , • Nu.·;12. fO de 24 Wide Models l\v 6f DODGE A·lOO Van, 6 Now on dlept.v tn s· Star , E PAY TOP DOlJ..AR. cyl 1tici, AM-l'M. Good OR~E LIAP PARK • FOR TOP USED CARS ;~ • ..i $995 .. 41K-t731 or 1w.. ~ .~,, .-.. If )'()Ur car ii extra eiean, 4M-3JTT, . ._ t ""~au..~ -U! ftnt. Cyclu, 8lke1, Scooters '.57 PllJ'lmount ·1x31 w/swn. BAUER BUICK & turn. Good park, ~ blk 234 E. 17th St. 915 to •tore•. $1900. 548-4437, Coata Men. ~TNIS ANGELUS 10x50: Expflndo IMPORTS WANTEQI '70 YAMAHA-LO Ml 1!v'1 rm. 2 Br, 2 pon:he1. Oranr, Counuea ,. $400, • 548-9884 * .. $CS..~7 ... • TOP s BiUYER • '47 HARLEY OAVIOSON r-J ICE 8x42 No!'St tn.U~r. In BILL MAXEY tQYOTA l<NUCKLEHEAD. Xl nt arlult1.park, no pt.II. µJOO. I! .• l8'8Jch. 8-a~J.l~l ~ -----------------------------------' 'COrid. n~. 497·19"? &tt'I. 2191 Harbor. CM Nd. 19. DWI ~ ... w- t • ' • • -1 DAILV PILOT * Thilr$dofJ, JA11Ulr} 7, 1971 ·I'----_ .. _ .. __,§] I ......... l§ll ......... l§ll ......... l§l I· -... -l§ll ·-.... l§l I ......... 1§1 I 1§1 Autos Wanted 968 Auto•, Imported 970 Autos. Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, i-~~~~~~~11 -~'---'-~~~-1·~'--'-~"-~~~-1-~-'--~~~~~ Imported VOLVO 970 Autos, U1ed CHEVROLET 9llO Autos, U,.d 9llO Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used WE PAY TOP FIAT PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN DODGE MERCURY PLYMOUTH CASH - - - - -• '58 SP EEDSTER • '66 VW Sunroof • - - - -I ' 912 PO\\IEJt . U'VUVU '66 IMPALA '38 DODGE PICKUP 1969 Mtircury M•rquls 2 Dr. H.T. '65 PL YlllUT1I for used e&n • trucks Just call Us Jor tree ~timate. "THINK'• Gr:>-3l3l 673_2637 1m~culare con_d!tiOn. Ye~ow r---------·I \Ylth pln 11trlppuig, new tin'! ·10 r orsehc 911 ·r. pt"rf t.-ond. & engine guaranteed tar 00 t:1igron 3,000 1nl's. $TJOO or bsl ort. d<l)'f, Llc. YPr905. ~ THINI ~ 'YO!!O' Vlt, automatic, po'>1.'er s!ee r. 1 owntr oollecto1"1 Item, L..ARCE le LUXURlOlJS ConvertJbJe. Aul.Omalk, "-dlo. Ing, radio. r:m~J (pl( 181'.!J dtr "'ID take tradl'! Thi8 beautltlJJ WP olthe 1>ftr. (6998S0) $ J 299 or finance private party. cury Ii~. rtllectJ: good can $599 GROlH CHEVROLET -~ WU &1<-11"3. $Im NEW 124 CPE DEMO ·57 9U, 5 . •r>d, Woh<~. nu CHICK IVERSON "FRIEDLANDER" 546-3136 or 4!H..G811. thtOIJ.ghout and lA equ.lpp@d BILL YA TES 1 --------1 with &!J rh< Jwrury 1'"""''· BILL YA TES Ask f.oT Sala h1ana.ger 18211 Beach Blvd. Huntlnaton Beach $279S ' rlre s, <IS.ODO mi's, $3950. YW s.. 5-JJ...8105 days, ask tor Greg. '69 ~. S/bef-, • •pd, Automatic transmis!'lion, AM· '"" '"'"' •HWY.•> VOU<SWAGEN pwr •lb, 3B3 nm "''· FM '""° nd~. b<at.,, YOU<SWAGEN 893-1566 • 537.fllnf ...... , v T.0.P. or 11960. Under Wart'. rl ·-· 841-608'l KI 9-3331 "FRIEDLANDER" TOYOTA Ol"-3031 Ext ... , 67 1970 ! ... ARBOR BLVD. NEW·US!D-SERV. ,u.o;, alle Road power 1tec ne, powe.r ,..,.. 32852 Valle Ro.d ~an Juan Capistrano 968-tll)t es, powet 1,1rlndows, 6 wa;y San Juan C.pl8frano ~ 837-4800/493-4511/499-2'161 l ---~F~AL~C~O~N~---I power seat, !ac!ory aJr con· 837-4800/493-4511/499.2261 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CON NEU CHMOLET 2B28 Harixr Blvd. Costa ~iesa 54r .. 12)() Autos, Imported 970 ALFA ROMEO 11750 lfACH ll,-D. IH.,.,. J91 893-7'566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SE RV. lhe COSTA MESA -=,-,==-c--ccc--1 dltionlng, cruiae control., Ult 1 --~p=o=N=T~IA~C~--'1 '67 LAND CRUISER '68 CHEVY YAN '64 Falcon Flltura Convt, .,.,.heel pl.Ua l\lichelin X ra,.1 _________ 1 ·1 11•hefl dl'ive, po we.r 11111ch, l'll pay top dolla-far your Autos, Used 990 Sharp, lo mi's, $450, 20031 dial tires & slYle alee! '68 6 T 0 roU bars. (UZH4&1J VOLKSWAGEN today. Call 6 cyl•'nd•,, •l•nd·~ -na. Colgate Circle, ll . B . wheels. See & drive today. , , , $2299 WANTED: glass dinghy. ~, " .... .., ..... s.11()...6~ """"' WANTED and ask for Ron Pinchot. Car-top sizl:' dlr. Must sacrifice. #88859A ' XTP478. Johnson & Son,~..., BILL YATES 549-3031 Exl 66-6':, 673-0900. ____ c,al;;l',;968-<;;,.;.;.cc".:.' ___ 1 \YiU take car in trade or FORD Harbor, C.M. 540-5630. VS, 4 J1peed, po1,·er stH"ring, '61 VW BUG finance private party. Call MUSTANG AJ(Z.,GE~""nd)" ma.a: wheel11. VOLKSWAGEN BUICK 54<>'736" 4!11.6811 . 1967 Musl•ng Coupe ~· San J uan Capistran!) S'.17 . .J!!OQ/493~1Jl J /499-2261 JUSi ARRIVED! ALL XlrH. corn!, Good t.ransporta. '62 BUICK Skyla1·k, V-S, auto '66 CHEVY 396. Stick Hurst SPORTY ECONO~IY '65 MUSTANG $1799 uon. trans .• good concl., $300 or 4-spd, slicks, tlolly 4-barTel Beautiful hi·lOne blue metal-BILL YATES $499 best Offer, Phone 675-llS2 carburetor, ajr lifts. $1000. lie exterior ,-vith two tone Conve.rlible, VS, automatic, CHICK IYERSON after 5 pm, weekdays or Pvt ply. s.15--0340 11 am matching interior, au t 0 VOLKSWAGEN Vw anytime ~·eekends. to 6 pni only. lrlln!I., radio, heater. power ~;p:iti·· power sleerinr. 32852 Valle Road =o=:-:cc-,------1--..C......:..:.. _____ I steering, air cond., t.'Onso!e, ALF A Romeo '62 Spyrler Convert. Good body. $1.!l(). Ph: 675-2959. NOW ON DISPLAY auto sport ltd 1971 TOYOTAS Corollas -Coronas M ark 11 -Pickups :l'\!J.3031 Ell;!. fi6 or 61 BUICK '68 Riviera. New '60 2 DR, Chevy for sale, new tires. Economical 10 $699 San Juan CapilltraM 1970 llARBOR BLVD. Year buy. J\tust sell. Full $150. purchase, economical to 837-4S00/493.45U/of9!1.226\ COSTA MESA po .... ·er + exlrrui. $2475. Pvt Call 646--971'.15 dMve, XFJL 316. Sl450. John· BILL YA TES r-~,6~2~v=w~s=ED~A~N--r •• ,. &12-16'1°'611-til!Ml '62 GREENBRIER ........ "'" & Son. '626 """"'· VOLKSWAGEN '7D GTO AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Service, PartJ lmm~iate Dellvery All Models J?rwµorr · 31111po·1·1s Aufhorizl'd SALt:S e SERVICE e PARTS 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. 537.7777 Call Coller.I 1r '69 1-'IAT SPYDER, good cond. $300 S. Take over Land Cruisers Ready F or Delivery ~ean Lewi! .IMPORTS Radio & healer. tZX\V267) $699 Harbour V.W. pymnt.s, (all 847·1358 I~ Jfarbor, C.f\1. &l&.9303 18711 BEACH BL. 8<12-4435 ___ H_O_N_D_A ___ , BILL MAXEY HUNTI NGTON BEACH ** Uonda SS conveMib!e, 'TO Strt \\'gn, like ne w cond, O can, New paint & tires, C.fo.f. ~$10. l28:il Valle Road 4;)5 cu. in. Ram Air, air cond, plb. Pl•, 1297;. $700 * 642-3273 clcse ratio 4-speed, • '67 FORD PICKUP San Juan C11pistrano hood ta h Rid & H ndl' 833-3535, 644--0637 eves. '51 CU.EvY. Xlnt transporta. 831.'1800/49345111499-2281 c ' e a i ~~ -----~~~ -;;;;:-;::;;;;::::-;::::;-::::-·l~"~ ... ~n~9!':·______ Camper shell. IU;fil!'l()) '65 MUSTANG \V·~~e:~~~. ~.~1;&~ .. 1966 Cadillac S•dan 1966 Chevelle SS 396. $1399 Make otter or trade: tor Deville Fully equipped, $825. Automatic, radio, heater, new late model Ford truck. \\'ORTif \VAJTING FOR Call 8.f7-8I61 BILL YA TES paint, IOVG4!H1 &16.4Ei65 l1 Y0" """'' "'"''°'any. '60 CHEVY G d VOLKSWAGEN $1095 thing but lhe cleanest this . • 00 1965 p I C II ~,,,,1 1 . 1 • L'k transportation. Rurui good. 32852 Valle Road ont •c •t1 n• ...., u u c'.11' is or yau, 1 e $lfl0. 5'1~66S ~ --·~.. ,,.,,,,_,,.__ ~ 4 Door s-..1. 31JO W. Coal!! Hwy .. N.B. 1966. Xlnt cond. Lo mi. $750. b-12-94ai 541'J.I7&4 536-9718. 1960 VW BUG fT lOIYIOITlAI Rod. whh m•g "'"'C'''· wldo llC'W Ermine \l'hitr. linishr--~====---San Juan Capistrano ,~ 'llAl'foP'N - \1·ith Immaculate leather in. CHRYSLER 8.174800/4934511/499-2261 FAM.ILY CAR • 2100 Harbor Blvd, 645-0466 TRANSPORTATION PRICE BMW JAGUAR 1----~'----1 --~---~-1 •·""'"'""'·"'""~'"'""'""""·I oval l!res, ne\Y engine guar. 18881 BEACH BLVD. Rlltee<l Io,. 90 days, IFTI74 rerior, I u x u r Y equipped 1966 Chrysler Newport '62 FORD PICKUP This solid, good runnin• "'' throughout automatic trans. '65 Mustang convt. Auto., VS. • 2 Door HT has auto trans, rad~, Mal. '65 B:\1\V 1800 Tl. New engine, clutch, brakes, ex. haus1, etc. $1400. 548-6763. CITROEN '60 CITRON Yellow & .,.,.hile Sedan. 1 own. l'r. dl r. M.000 miles. ~QEX. 6631 Will take Ira.de or fin. WK'e private par1y, CaU 546.8736 or .is.t.6811 . DATSUN '66 DATSUN WAGDN ~ Door. Radio, heater. Clean! Ne11• pain!. ISIU969) $999 ~~ 2100 tfarbor Blvd. ' .. '68 DATSUN PICKUP Radio, heater, r.ilr., 4 gpeed, (WPP 762) Will lake car in trade or finan('e private par. t:Y. 546-8136 or 4!W.fillll. JAGUAR Hunt. B .. ch 147-8555 $799 I mt N. ot c-t Hwy."' Belo CHICK IVERSON HEADQUARTERS '69 TOYOTA vw Thr only authorized JAGUAR Corolla Station Wagon dea!Pr 111 the entire Jiarbor \Vhitc w/black interior. Like Area. ue1v. Lie. X\VZ928 549-3031 Ext. 66 or fil 1910 liAH.BOR BLVD. COST'\ MESA mission, Ai\f.FM radio, heaf. · Good rond. ri.roving. S700 or er, power s~eering, power BARGAIN OF THE \VEEK Loni: Bed, 3 speed, (Ll7651) oUer . S42-4!l93. ~:t.actory air cond, Pov.·er brakes, po.,.,· er windows, 6 The very . popular . Newport $899 1----------~:Cring, po .... ·er brakes, .,.,•ay po'*·er .seal, tac!o..., air Cpe. cqu1.pped \~·1th auto '65 Mustang, runs gd. Needs ·., eek this hxlay. 679 AFU. ., Iran d h ~ br"". Sm••h•d -°". Gd 0~ Joh••o" • Son -~ conditioning, tele-lilt wheel, s .• 111. 10, eater, )'.IO\\'er 4" . .-.. _ ., ........ ......,, "" ,.. , '"°"" elc Ask for demonstration steering, J)Ol'.'er brakes, new '~ 1-,tra.,,.n•~p-car...,.. _Sl50.,..._4_94-_J_l23_._ l_H_a_c_b_°'~·-C_._M_. _540_.'63<J_cc·--I in· 1his outstanding car. car 1rade in MJns beautiful. 2100 J-larbor Blvd, 645-0-166 MUSTANG '66, 289 V-8, aulo, '67 TEMPEST, 2-dr hrdip, 1968 V\V Bug. Radio, rear ROR.557, Johnson & Son ly. T::-.."1'060. $1000, Johnson _____ _.;. ____ I a.ir, pis, rlh. Sharp $1000. R/tl, stereo, air cond. nu scat speakers. $ll75. pri. ply. 2626 Harbor. C.M. 5-1().56.11).' & Son, 2626 llarbor, C.l\f. '65 RANCHERQ _.,... __ 25.c._L _______ 1 tires, xlnt cond, $13r:i. Alt Comp!eb. $1299 SALES CHICK IVERSON SERVICE VW PARTS BAUER !''49·3031 Ex!. G6 or 67 --"".,~oofiAD<i~"-l~ ... ~·~56311~.,.,.~-..,.,,,_~ 6: 53&-0030 l-""'-·=687~a!"ICT="S~"'pm~. =--I . 1969 EL DORADO ,70 Chryslf'r Nl'\\'pon Custom '65 J\t USTANG Cp. 6 Cyl. ----,-,,----·I '66 YW SEDAN "'.iny! top. full lc>a1her Jnter· 4 dr. Real Sharp! Only 6 cylinder, standard trans. slick, lo mi's, gd cond. Low * * $100 * * BUICK 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA l\fESA IN i-7,679~c'=""o~R""'o'-N'-A--1 na•;, • $'"1·'1''2'·smuF"''' COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Stn!el Hardtop. Vinyl roof, 1· Speei:, S48-i16.5 immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac. -,""=.,.=~=oo--1 rifice. \\'ill take lradc or KARMANN GHIA finance pvt. rtY. C:1ll Sir!. Harbour V.W. -19_5_8_K_A_R_MA __ N_N_G_H_IA-r dlr. :J.l().:1100 or '191·1;;.oo aft. l8i11 BEACH BL. 842-4435 11'.1 a.m. XTS J.1:1. HUf\'TINGTON BEACll ;.'>;() *•* 008-1189 MERCEDES BENZ Or<incie County's l ,, t g<>sl Selection NPY.' & u~ed /.',,.rrf'd<>s B('n? Jim Sl emons Imps. W.trn"' & MJ1n St. S.1n1.1 A11 <1 546-4 114 '71 COROLLA Radio, heater, di.sc brakes, factory air, low, low ntiJ('s! Take older car or limall do1\'tl. Under tact, warranty. Call 1i1aury dlr. aft Ia a m S4().3100 or 4!H-7:io6, O:i7327. '71 TOYOTA PICKUP '65 YW Bug AM!FM, 4 speed, (NNK090l Full price $799 BARWICK J!\lPORTS INC. DATSUN ~ S. Cs !. Jf.,.,•y, LB 494·!1771 1or, stereo AM-FM radlo, l J,OOO m i. Still on 5150 war. ?~r ~:e~;u~v~! t.ap~v:~~ price. 712 Larkspur, CdM '58 PONTIAC \VAGON ~ower door locks, tilt lltcer. ranty, A/T • A!C • PI S • party. Call 546-8TJ6 or OLDSMOBILE l'r RUNS! 646·9!t20 Ing, full po~·cr eq~1~pn~ent PIB • \V.\V • 383 eng, Re. 494-6Bll. ,62 OLDS WAGON '68 Pontiac GTO, xln't cond. ' pl11s factory air rondll1on1ng, U-ase at Sl05 ~r mo. Call .!\lust seU, make of r. tX\YBSOO J Jack Eastland 54a...3672 1966 Country Sed W-von 838-3471. S.\9'9 r~-~-~-----1 MUSI' SELL VS, auton1atic, power steer· ----------I e NABERS e '6S CHRYSLER Town & 9 pai;senger with roof rack. • 1968 l..e;\1ANS 2-dr Landau Col~ J , · ing & br1.1ke11. I BDS1021 t A' -s•= lirm "J· s a 10n wagon; atr , VS, auto tran5 radio heat. op. ir, ex ..... s . ...,.,., , CADILLAC t>tC. 'fake over pyts, $111 er, po.,.,·er st~ring, · po.,.,·rr $299 557-3825 Fact. Authorizf'd Cadillac Dlr i\-lo. &15-1792. --~RAM~=B~LE=R~--· I brakes, priced tor quick BILL YATES 2600 HARBOR BL., CO MET •al•. $175. Joh"'°" & Son. COSTA MESA VOLKSWAGEN 2626 Harbor, Costa fo.fesa., 5'10·~100 Oprn Sund11y 1962 Comet-Black. Re b It .,.,, """"'". · Red b k h ..rtll""""" 32852 vane Road 1969 SEDAN DE VILLE eni:tne. uc ets, r& . '10 TORL'iO 2 door. formal San Juan Capistrano Radio, heater. ITGX842) V. 1 1 h & 1 .__ . 1 owner. $~ or offer. 111~ to p, cot catrr • .-r in. 673-802.l hard top w/vinyl roar. Auto 837.4800/493-4511/4~2261 $499 ten or. full po.,.,·cr and fac-1--,=====cc---trans, factory air, PIS, PI --;*c-;1~964,.,--.0.,L-.D"'S.-,.--· I tory air conditioning, s1ereo CONT lNENTAL disk brake.o;, R&H, WSll', T -* BILL YATES CLTrLASS, Bucket &eats new AM.Fl\! radio, lilt steer ing '66 LANDAU COUPE 581\l gl!Wl, 16,000 mi. Prl. party. palnl, good tires. MUet,&lJ! VOLKSWAGEN \l"het>I,. power. _door l~ks, LEATlfER, AIR pQWE'R: ~"~8-4~7t~l~-~~~~-r S585, Pvt. Pty. 548-8778 auro. pilot. twilight senllnel, STEREO TAPE ·s1495 21.3: 1966 Fairlane 500 Station ==,..-~~~-~~-r 32832 Val~ RoU po11-cr fl'Unk opener, indi· S9'2-Ut8 ' · \Vag, air. low mil. $ll60. '62 Oldsmobile Super 88 +.<Ir San Juan Ca.piat!a.nn '64 RAMBLER WAGON . Wit~ deluxr 30" camper, Full '6-1 V\V Bug, Good rond, Automatlc, dU , Radio, hea!.1 -----,-,-G----I prie r $.."251. Ti!ke small dependable, e co 110 m f c al e.r, special wheels. (VOE. r!o11·n or 1radc. cllr, 494-7!JOJ. tran~M."llion. Pvt ply ask· '67 DATSUN WAGON vidual duar power !rontr~=====~~~~ Call orig. owner. 64Z-#11 HT. Full pwr, extren1f'ly 83T-4800/49J...(;,"11./4~2261 scats. t06JAGCi '66 CONTINENTAL ·l r!r, lull about niany extras! clean, $79:>. 494-7744 days, l ----------1 $4441 P'"'· "' """"· SJ 5 75 . ......308 '" 6· '67 AMERICAN e NABERS e &12-m 9 aft 6 pm. '63 Sta-.,.,·gn near new motor 951) Will trade or tine.net Sale.'f, Service, P11.rts 5-10-3100. #03·148. ing $695. 546-0191 Inunediate Delivery, CADJLLAC CORVAJR & Trans. Good rubber & brakes. Mu.st 5ell 1299 cash. '64 OLDS COUPE private party. Full price All fi.1odeb '69 CORONA, rl.11.rk blur, '1 '66 VW Sf;DAN, Reblt Eng, $1099. dr, 4 sprl. ;>.11nt cond. 4 Quick Snlc $81~. Fact. Aulhorizet.: Cadillac Dir '64 CORYAIR "'.-"=""'70·,...,.""'=--,=--· I Radio, heater, automatic, '67 F'ord C.S. Stallon \Vagoo, power &leering, IOML023) BARWICK 11r11> \l'hllcw;i ll 1ires. 2•1 · * 21'.1/592-5(139 * 2600 HARBOR BL., 1n1. rer ,Rfll. A good buy , COSTA MESA Auto 1ran.<i, full J>Ol'.'er, Nldio $599 Il\-JPOH.TS INC. at $l250. Fum 673-3388 * ~968 VW . Camper-Ne1v 540-91 00 Open Sunday Radio heater 4 speed, Nice DATSUN ' ' eni;;1ne, lie\\' tu'es. car• 'IPDX3T.ll Sl,100. 3197 Cape Verde, CM. M>-05"3. BILL YATES '70 COUNTRY Squire-429. VOU<SWAGEN W.dod. ai•, all '""· $.3865 1966 TOYOTA Corona: '1 dr, S199:.. 830-2.)70 1968 SEO, DJ:: VI LLE $495 998 So. Cs1. H11.y, LB <J!J4.9nl r!'.'~, r/h, 0\'1'rs1zed lirt's. • .68 V\\' NJua i'l'back, Needs Complete ne.\v guaranleed f'n· 3100 W, Coast Hwy., N.B. $6!1.i. *** 64 2--0558 frnnt ('nd B.,, "·indshieJif, gine. Factory air cond., full """'--·-·· """'-""--· '68 1600 ROADSTER Ready io go! dlr. (WEZ TIOl Will take jradc or finance private party, 5-16-8736 or 49.J..f.811. '68 1600 Roadster ExteJlent condH !on. Low mileage. l\VEZ7 10) $.lOO un. del' Blue Book. New-$4300 Now. 532-2548, 32&52 Valle Road 544-1393. San Jua.n Capistrano S37 ·48001493-4511/ 499-7261 'G4 FORD Country sedan .... -11.gun. Immac. & good '66 Olds-Luxury Sedan . cond. SS7J. 613-3958. Fa.bulnus cond, new tires. JEEPS brakes, sOOcks, paint. ~fust Fastback _ "427", .J.sJ'IC'{"d, 1----'-="-''----se ll 847-J.144. _ CAJ?lLLi\C . AJll/Fl\1 radin. Ne\Y poly-]!)58 Jnt erllff.lional Tra\'elaJ/. • '62 OLDS Station \Vagort Fact Authorized Cu(!illac Dir uJass lire~ .• U cellent ooo. 4 hi d · J • Gd. Tran•. Pvt. Pty. I~'. 2li00 H \RBOR BL ~ ~ -w rive, o m J. .."" ' ·• dition Drh·cn easy , Dama;::ed. Sri! nr Trade. 549-3807 Art 3:30 • COSTA t.IF:SA . $2850 &st o!irr. &15-200.'i. '63 OLDS 88, 4 door, auto -"',.',·91~00~iliu0ru"":"i"'m'"l""r'.'1 iiA•~k~f~oc~M'.'.,'~· c~··~··~n~oi::.',;"'~"~864~o; I . _ _IM~E~R~C~Ul!.!'R~Y~--1 1rans, air. ps/b. A buy for '64 SEDAN OE VILLE CLASSIC .v ou-·;,. 1'""10"' ''°"· >tl>-!'86 all 6'30 pm. rooo. sl1C'k shill, n1a~. 19&8 Mercury Monte90 PLYMOUTH SEI TR J ':J9. Verv 1;oo<l con· SR9"" ''FRIEDlAHDER'' clil.lr"Jn. Hard!~p & <'On· P..ad10 & Healer. fZ ,,.,, "-'!'r!Jblc. $515 or bes! oH~r. $1595 l nso IEACH !HWY, 2') ;,,]l\-{il)~,.1. 8fl3-756G e 5.17--0-~2-I 1,,,~.,~1°'·R~~,.~.~~T~,-'U-,-n-r7h-.1 NEW-USEO-SERV. ra'f'!"'r!ri\·c. ;'l !u~t ~cu. ·r.o.P. 642-9405 54(}.17&1 TRlUMPll dri vr~ fine, $600. 646-7335. power, 1\!t & telcscoplc steer. '"'4!U:ll4 '~ ing, auloma!Jc pilo!, !lignal 2100 Harhor Blvrl. 645-0466 srekini;;, rndio. Truly 11 n out· CORVETTE standing vah\f'. t\\'10733~ S.1777 • NABERS • '67 VETIE Harbour V.W. of door, VS, automatic, air rond., power 1teerlng, (# 9-135). $1295 ~1K-. 2100 Harbor mvd. T-BIRD '67 IHUNOERBIRD 4 Door Landau. Fun po\~r. a ir corvl. (WCC591) $1399 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Vlll!e Rond San Juan Capistrano 831,480()/493451 1) 499-2261 $1395 BARWICK lfo.IPORTS lf"C. ~ .. ~IN3.~art 3 pm. -..~lo;c.-=c--',.--,,,..,,cl lSlll AEACli BL. 84244.la l ---~==~---11962 TRI, i;o<1d rondi11on. HUNTINGTON BEACll * :\JG~TD * N<"w 1lr1·~. harrl & snit tops.r--=~=~=~-- hearleM, 1aJV, tach, ne.11• MX 2 Door HT ni0tor & pain!, 2 lops. :'-lust ettractiv• & low pric•d F ull pow<'r + air. (10U9J01 '69 ROADRUNNER T Bird 2 Door HT CLEAR.ANO: PRICE DATSUN 998 S, CsL Hwy, LB oJ.!M.!J771 DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 1&35 Cca1..h Blvd. Huntington Beal".h 842.7781 or :'i,.14W42 \\"il l sell all or par1 s, SSOO. '1!14-2115 an. 7 Pi\1. '69 VW BUG .).lfi..51137 or !l6fl.,.;i{i!<2 VOLKSWAGEN '&; '.lo'IG ~fidgrl 8,[lO(I ac!uul Rndio, heat er, (TURl2-1) dlr, '""'· like ~w. $l1". Call '66 VW M"" .,,., \Viii "k• oldcc C'V!'.'<; 5'18-6011 Green "·Ith contrasting Inter. C'IU' or finance 540-8736 or OPEL ior, tuned exhaust, run5 like 49.1-6811. ' $899 BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN 32852 Valle Hoarl sell 8-i7-344~. BeautHu/ Lime frost finish COUGAR .,.,•ith black interior and Lan· 383 VS, aulomafic, power dau roof, equipped with auto steering, dlr. F.xcellent con. 1968 Cougar XR7 trans, radio. hearer. pa11·er di!ion. Low miles. (UED143l OIECI< Tiils stefring, pov•er brakes, fac. WUI take car in trade or S I ,.._ , OUTSTANDING Vi\LUE •o-•l '' o •. ' d · • nn , 11an '-""p1s1rall<l . ., re . .,..,,_.."" riv.,. ro. financt-priv8te party, Full 837.41!1))/493·4511/499-2251 Popular Lin1e lrost finish day. \\'XE 092 Sla.50. Johnson price $1.89!J. 1964 V\V Bug. A1nt corxl. r----------1 \vith black genuine leather & Son, 2626 Jla..rbor Blvd., BARWICK Oversized lires & t lU'Ome LATE '10 Coupe DeVill€', on· bucket sea t5 and Landau C.M. 5't0.56JO. --~-----~I new. STL-184 * 1968 Opel Rally * $999 102 H.P. engi"'· 22,500 mil". CHICK IVERSON reverse rirns, Radio. $895. ly 2600 m i's, golrl v.·lwht auto l.J'ans., radio, heater: 1,,,,,-=----=--,,-~ IMPORTS INC. Jl;lany r xlras. '71 ta1;s. Lo\v YW 1967 DATSUN 1600 Roads1rr. Blue Book. Sl il5Q, Must See Very good <.'Ond, Gd mi. lo Apprt>ciale, Private PM1,y 549.3001 Ext. 66 or 67 1!170 HARBOR BLVD. C JI ·'( 6 67"'•4· • __ , Jlh I p t ty 1953 Mercury Conv. Good a ..... pm, .~ :i. ...,.,"'au, r f' c. 11 par · power s!P!'.'ring, factory air, DATSUN l--,=c7.=-..=--I 1·••50 1· 5"1719 trans.......+ation, $1.50 or Best 1962 vw·-$300 ;:l;,r. irm .. m-console. See and drive this ,,.. •• CAD '68 ,. , , , 1w 0 0 , ,_ · p · d -•~"~'~'·-"-'~·9006~-·----998 S. Cst. tlwy., LB 49-1.9m Needs work. 8J0..68jl " atu act1ve car. nee to = Wkdys 714: 633-9333 ext 165; G4l.f.&.13 c :e Brougha111. Xlot cond. Air. seU 1oday. XE:U JM. IT'S Beacll ~tune. Big. Llh'E To trade? Our laRJ• Selection etc. 673-5'ial: Eves : Johnson &. Son, 2626 Harbor, gest selection ever! See the Tradtr's Paradise column iR wkoch; & eves TI4: 6~1811. PORSCHE No cash do.,.,'TI, take over --------- COSTA MESA '63 YW CAMPER pymnts. '66 PORSCHE Of VW Campen, 673--0728. c .\\1. 540·5630. DAJLY PILOT ~Wed for )'OU! s Lines, 5 Days for "61 DATSUN HiOO Spor1 , Ne11.• top & l'll'w in\er., Eng Xlnl Coupe 912. 5 speed, brown co~1250. 67J..57fll . .,.,,ith pblack interior, Brand ne\v crrelli llre1. X'iJ47~ FERRARI $3299 tQ~1X082l $799 V K • SHARP! 1967 Coupe De. 1969 COUGAR XR7 section now! S5. Cail today .•• 6'42-5618. QftS, Omb1S, V iUe. All Xtras! $2895. Will STYLE A\VARD nrtNNER BUMS.. New & Used Trarle 49&-1345 Outstanding British green me. Jmrnedlat. Deliv•ry '6.S Cp DeVille, xln 't eond. talic finish. ~1alchlng genu. CHICK IVERSON 5.'1,000 n1i's. fo.lust sell, make ine leather inlerior. Aulo. FERRARI Newpcrt lmporta Ltd. Qr. ll1W9 Counb"'a only author· tlptlll dealer. SALES-SERVICE-PARTS :noo w. Coat:t Hwy. Newport Beach 6G-9«l5 S«>-1764 Autborlied 1'ernrl Dealer FIAT . '61 FIAT BSO _ SPYDER RDSTR., ~ with black tn. ....... 1Jke ..... ~Qn.14 -"" CHICK MRSON YW s.30ll Ext. 88 or 61 1970 HARBOR BLVD. o:m'A MESA "MAK!. Room For Dad- '7' ' .. clean out thr ~ .)'IJW' truh ls CASH wtth a Dllb' Pilot Oaulfied Od. • CHICK IVERSON BILL YATES VOLKSWAGEN YW 32852 Valle Road ofr, 113&-3471. matic transmission, radio, VW '63 Cad Cpe, 32,000 mi's, heat('r. po.,.,·er !!leering, pow. 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 6: &in Juan C8pistnno 1910 lL\FlBOR. Bl.VD. R374800/4!13-4511/499·226l COSTA MESA VW LEASING '57 PORSCHE c I a I !'I\ c • Tax &: Lie, Down Speed1ter. Strong 1800ce 912 • $50.87 per month engine. Set up for raeing. • 36 month open end leut. $2500 or trade? 4~7865, 1971 VW Bug 494-9314 AT 1oos """"' m . lri•h ,.,..n. CHICK IVERSON AM/FM. 39,000 ml l ownf'r. VW $3965. Pv1 ply."~" ""~\ 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 637....0029 OJ' ~&<1 COSTA M&SA 5-'9-3031 Ext. 68 or 67 l.97D ltARBOR BLVD. COSTA MES.A VOLVO • VOLVO AP 71 's Ar• H•• Savtnga Up To $466 on N'Jnainlng 70'1 (118782) Over Sens Del. Spec. ' '64 POnRSCflE SUnrfrl ,· •!-'.!:· '69 vw Fae. air, n.1 & fl"•M [••..!• !er. una pe ec • ...,._,. tape sterto, car cover. 1.tugt t.Uf\ UllMI 842.-D3. ACJI, A.m. preJd ca I I TIME FOR 64;.U18. IMPORTS 9 UICK CASH 1"'6 VW SQUAREBACK l966 lfocb<". C.M. &IS.9303 Vrry i;lelln, good tn!?Chl c.~~-·=~~--- THROUGH A cond . f lJ51l 673-2410 aft 6, 66 Volvo PllkJO, Very clean l-==,....,.c---oc'70=--I \vhfte 1v/blk Inter, ..fi 8pd, '69 VW Camper Ai\t.rM Do d' °'1 '4'8 DAILY PILOT ... " ••. ~ ~ .. Ne'I-' Ad\'t'nfun-Cnmper. • , W 111T1-; ELEPHANTS" unit $2900. £.l>.1006. WA NT AD overrunnl ni,: ,your hou&ll ? '6f VW BUG "Ca11h" •. M.11 them thru 642-5678 Xtn.11/xlnt cond 673-8310 Daily Plklt Cluslfied • Air, p/b, pl~. p/11·irirlow.s, er brakes, console & safety Clean, Orig onr. 54~7!t panel. Beautiful throughout. L DO DO I ~ 1 YPU20t Clenrnnce priced '68 E RA • J. ,vuu m . ...,....,. All equipment. Like tl(!W. Johnson & Son, - Phone 551~9349 J-larbor, C.M. 54{).5630, CAl\tARO '68 Cougar, auto, pis, pfb, ---------1 vinyl lOp, low mileage, Im- 1910 CAi'1AR0f RS. v~. pf5, mac! * Call 49-1-2072. disc brskes, air concl. Like DODGE new. Grey w/blk inlf':rlor.1--'---"-'"'-=---- .$3195. Pvt ply. &16-4085 alt 1968 MONACO S1'N WGN 5 pm Air, ne:w w/w, ps/pb, r/h. CHEVROLET !>-paas. 642-31"9. '67 Dodge Corol'l('t 500. • Looking fo,. • car? Air cood. Xlnt buy. EASY llOO. 8JO.<M3 Cali Auto Rcfl.".IT&I free-of TIRED ot lhat old l'\lmUure! chanre. \\1~ have sellers It'1 really not that bard W&ltlng. All type1 & prlee., to replace. Ju.st watch tht Sellcl'!J ali;o \velf'Omc, rurntture I& mlte11llaneoui1 &12.4431 column. In tht Clulltled Auto Re.ferral Service Sectkm. NO marier what It Ill, )'OU "WEED It & reap" .. clean can sell It with a DAILY oul !he trea11ures &: trash - DAlLY PillYt' WANT AD. turn into r11.sh lhru a Dally Crlll 642-5678 & charie It. Pilot Ouslfled ad. 64._5618 J\feditun Blue me1alic finish with matching in1erlor, ra· dlo, heater. po1ver steering, po\\·er brakes, Auto tra.n&, etc:. Runs good. NBF' 514. $700. J ohnson &: Son, ~ lfarbor, C.l\f. 54().5630. VALIANT '66 2-DR Plymouth Vlliiant, Good cond, $700, 495-5800 or aft 6: 673-0992 ' 'W H IT E ELEPHANTS'' ovem.inning your hou~ "Cash" .. sell them ttni Dally Pilot Oassified "