HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-02-02 - Orange Coast Pilot,
ew or 'OU e
Seal B:ea~h Zones
Offshore w .aters
In Anti-oil Move
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DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * *
TUESDAY Al'JERNOON, FEaRUARY 2, 197 1
¥0L, M. N0..1111 I llCTIOfrfl. 16 r&•U
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Dawn Spear, a model. frolics in the surf al Miami Beach. What else is
there to say? Maybe you could invite Dawn to frolic on your beach.
lfith l'ietttattiese Forces
Soviet Newspaper Oaims
Americans 'Invade' Laos
By United Press International
The Soviet government neYtspaper
Izvestia said tonight a major force of
South Vietnamese troops "und er the
direct command of American officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news'
agency Kyodo said 4,000 to 5,000 South
Vietnamese were in volved.
Pentagon spokesman J. W. Frledheim
Beach Council
Hi ts SCE Hike r
The city of Huntington Beach is trying
to short-circuit Soulhern C a 11 for n i a
Edison Company's bid for a 16.2 percent
rate hike.
The City Coundl p11issed a resolution
fi.1onday night urging the California
Public UUUlies Commissio"n to refuse
the Increase.
The council was lold the hike would
cost I o c 1 I tatpayen an .additional
tl,424 ,194 to maintain city services. This
would represent • burden of 41.9 CMts
on the clty'a S1.4S tax rate, the resolution
said.
I
/
would not comment on the ti:vestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
statement! by Secretary of Stale William
P. Rogers and defense secretary ~1elvin
R. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey Congressional strictures against
entering Laos ·or Cambodia.
An officjal statement by the Viet Cong
foreign ministry. broadcast by Radio
Hanoi tonight, said South Vietnamese
and Thai mercenary units were carrying
out raids in Southern Loos. that
thousands more Vietnameae troops were
massed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed into
the Tonkin Gulf near North Vietnam.
U.S. officials in Washington
acknowledged that something was under
way in northw!stern South Vietnam but
maintained silence on the reports of
a strike against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos. Sovlet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "outrageous
invasion'' of Laos. .
Sen. George Alken (R-Vt.), 11aid Mon·
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
frontier.
TM: Kyodo news report. quo ling
(Ste ATTACK, P•I• 21
'
("
Seal Beach
Zones Water
A!!ainst Oil
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 IM D1l1Y 1'1191 ltl ff
With swift passage of an unprecedented
emergency law, the Seal Beach City
Council P.ionday night delcared three
miles of its offshore waters .. s an open·
space recreation zone and enacted
punishment for "pollution-prone"
businesses which may violate it.
The far-reaching actions, approved
unanimously by the four-member cou ncil,
followed on the heels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Company to drill an
()ffshore well in the city's coastal waters.
Basis for the "open-space water
recreation land use zone" were the 1915
incorpora tion laws of the city of Seal
Beach wh ich in clude three miles or the
offshore waters with in its city limits,
according to City Attorney Jim Bentson ,
who drafted the law.
Effective today, onl y water sports or
water--0riented sports such as swimming,
sailing, surfing and boating will be allow·
cd within the three-mile limit.
Commercial enterprises, such as oil
companies. oil tankers and pipeline coin·
pt.nies, may only operate in these waters
if they have first qualified for a "Pollu-
tion Prevention Certificate ," to be issued
by the city.
Violations of the law are declared
misdemeanors i11 the wording of the
ordinance and are punishable by a $500
fine, or six months in jail for each
day of violation.
City aides said this means any oil
company would have to appear in a
public hearing before the c It y 's
Environmental Quality Control Board
with C<1nvinci ng scientiric evidence that
its operation would not endanger lhe
environmental quality of the restricted
waters.
Any discharge of pollut1nls -including
oil products and other wastes -are
prohi::ii~ed under the new law.
The ordinance, according to city of·
ficials , was drafted to protect the public
interest. It cites the need to aneviate r current t<open space and recreal:c.nal
land 'Cl'iiis'ai before it Ls eiploited for
commercial purposes.
Euet.t.y,what lmpact t~ rouncil action
will have on State Lands C-Ommlssion-
approved Standard Oil well Is still a
mystery.
The commission granted the drilling
permit last Thursday and described It
11s a "fail-safe project." It was the
first offshore drilling pefmit to be
granted since the Santa Barbara well
ru~··:re two years ago.
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Soviet Newspaper
Says U.S. Troops,
•invading~ Laos
Rebels Split Up
Panthers, Potheads Severing Ties
From Wire Services
BERKELEY -Here iL is folks. a real
case of the pot calling the kettle black.
Onl y il's the Black Panthers calling the
pot proponents a gang of mindless fools
and vowing to go the ir separate rev-0tu.
tionary ways.
A tape recording
purportedly I r o m
fugitive Black Pan.
I.her leader Eldridge
Cleaver in Algiers
v.•as broadcast by
the Pacifica Founda-
tion's radio station
KPFA-F~1 in Ber·
keley Monday night.
LE.t.1tY Cleaver declared
Dr. Timothy Leary and his wife Rose·
1nary, convicted in Orange County Super·
Jor Cou rt a year ago on Laguna Beactl
drug charges, have blown their minds.
"LSD has destroyed their ability to
make judgments,''
says the recording,
add in g that the
Learys are now un-
der house arrest in
their Algiers villa.
Dr. Leary reached
the ~1oroccan nat:on
last year with Wea-
. therman aid after es-
CLl!AVf ll caping fr om Los
Padres Men's Colony at San Luis Obispo.
Hi s dispatches, statements ;ind com-
muniques since have been increasingly
(Set PANTHERS, Page %1
Higl1 Court Could Decide
Freeway Vote Legality
By L. PETER KR IEG
01 tM 0.111' ,.119! Sll ff
The California Supreme Court ma y
be asked to rule on the legality of
the Newport Beach freeway election.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti-freeway measures should
be put to a vote -even though the
City Council may not be beholden to
the resuHs of one of them.
However, Angelo Pal mieri. attorney
for the three former city officials who
sought the writ of mandate to halt
the election. said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palm ieri said , "It is too late to make
a formal appeal of the decision, but
my clients feel the issue is significant ·
enough· tb seek a writ from the Supreme
Court,!'~ •
Palmieri polnU!d out the court could
refuse to" hear the case.
. He said a decision will.be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said, "We have to consider
Is this the kind of thing the SUpre:tne r.ourt
would be interested in considering lheir
calendar and the other things they race."
He said, however. at the moment,
his clients "are leaning toward" pressing
the Issue.
Judge Robert L. Corfman, after a five.
hour hea ring, rejeqed the petition for
the Super!OT Court writ sought on the
grounds the people have no right to
decide these "non.municipal issues."
The ballot propositions are an Initiative
asking the city coouncll to cancel lln
exlstilig agr't!ement with the state on
(
the route o[ the coastal freeway through
Corona del f\.1ar and a charter amend·
menl requiring f u t u re referendums
before any new route agreements can
be signed.
In their court complaint, the plaintiffs
-former mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and forme r vice
mayor Jfans J. Lorenz -claimed the
resu lts of both propositions would be
fllegal and loca l referendums may be
applied to municipal issues only.
Jn announcing his dec ision, Judge
Corfman said the two propositions, "in
and of themselves . • • do not appear
to be illegal to me on the face ol
it."
Corfman earlier, in a key debate over
whethe r the act1ons would be legislative
or administrative , left the door open
for ad~tlonal litigation after the election,
if the council does adopt the iniliatlve
measure.
Palmieri had C<lnlended the action was
administrative and therefore unsuitable
for a public vote.
Corfman replied, "As.,,uming it is an
administrative act, where is the law
that says you can't have an e.lectlon
even though the result is nll.'1
1 He said. In effect, the adm1nistratlvt
versus legislative point, 1s wtll as all
other points, could be more ful ly explored
-in court proceedings after the election.
The charter amendment, even II
adopted, slill must be ratified by the
state le1isl1ture.
Corfm11n let It be known 1lmost from
(See FREEWAY, Pa1e %1
Supemsor.
Fails to Get .
Three Votes
By JAC K BROBACK
01 tM !Mitt 1'1 .. t Slllf
Supervisor Robert Battin 0£ Santa Ana
today tried to fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vote of 2 yes, 1 no, 1
abstention and 1 absent.
Battin needed three votes oc his motion
lo oust the county's kip administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana'a First
District vowed arter the defeat to try
again to fire Thomas when the full
board is present. .
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucia l vote came.
He was off lo Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a lgng list of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. Battin
then offered Ule motion that Thomas
be given the required 30-day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R o n a 1 d
Caspers of Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote. Battin and Caspers
balloled yes and Supervisor WUl!am
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not think the board
should act on a subject of such Im·
portance "until all five board memben
(See BA'ITIN, Page Z)
Orange Coat
Weather
Those low clouds might leak a
little on Wednesday, but things
should clear up by midaftemoon
when temperature! will inch up to
65 along the coast and 68 .Inland.
INSWE TODAY
La! Vegas casi110s havt Dwight
D. Eisenhower on their mind;
ihdt's beclJ.U!• his liklntss will
appear on a ne...w "silvtr" dollar
to be iutd i1' aOmbling. Page 3.
• .,... ' Mr<l5" "' C1tlNnllt 1 MlllMI ,._,. II
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BATIIN ...
art puscnt".
Phillips criUeir.ed Battin for releasing
deL~lls of his intentions to the press
.bef:rt bringing them to the board.
J-'e c:illed for "dignity in such actions
and not ~·illful moves off the top of
our h~ad!."
Phillips 53id howevtr. that he had
opi)C~ed the original ordinance creating
lbe of!.ce of administrative officer and
th· usht "we were putting too much
po:· .:!r in the hands of one man ."
Ph'.l!ips called statement by Battin
th::t lhe CAO was attempting to ta.ke
ov· • c~unty government untrue.
I-hlltips also read a note from Baker
a::;· ·s !hat action be deferred until he
co··ld be presenl
Th:imas gave no indiaUon of his feel·
ln3s during the debate: and did not sj>eak.
Previously he had sa1d be was shocked
at pu~llshed reports in Santa Ana of
.BA!tin's intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy captain, has
held his pre.sent post since October,
19 67. He has a staff of 20 and. is
paid lhe county's highest salary, $41,748
a year.
ln his list of charges Battin accused
IJ'homas of 1'asswning d I c t a to r l 1 1
pov:ers'' not intended by the ordinance
Crl!nting the )ob.
P.e said Thomas placed the board
tn a bad po.sition wilh the public by
his recent forecast of 1 possible 3kent
•tax increase oat year. He said the
CAO was "inaccessible to department
heads and even board members at
times."
Fro• Pqe I
PANTHERS. • •
\liolent, complex and confusing in their
call to armed revplution in America.
Cleaver -also a fugitive from
criminal prosecution -Indicated ln the
ta.pe played Monday night that the Black
Panther movement Is severing relations
With the drug culture.
· "We're fin1shed with their madness,"
the exiled Panther minister of in-
formation declared.
"Tl'ils applies to Jerry Rubin, Stew
Alt:ert, Abbie Hoffman and the whole
!iill.v psychedelic movement which we've
!iUJ:.,:irtcd in the past," he continued.
"These drugs are harmful to our cause,
cor ··ier·revolutionary. If you think by
tun'ng in, turning on, and dropping out
th-:t you're improving society you're
wrrng. •
"You're destroying your own brain
,and strengthening the enemy," Cleaver
..a.dc'ed. ''They want robots. ~ "\re want the people Che Guevara
.ask':!d for: cool, calculating killing
machines . , • v"lth confirmed ideological
-fuundaUons . • • motiYaled by reYolu·
tionary love."
Leary, the one-time Ha r v a r d
psychology professor, was described as
a menace to society by Superior Court
Judge Byron K. McMillan Jut spring
when ~teoced ~ ~ ptlaon. -... · ~
Dr. I.eaty, ~bis second· -wife,' and 'ioi
John, now 20, were arrested in Laguna
Dec. 29, 1968 and charged with possessing
rnl'~ijuana and dangerous drugs.
fie was sentenced to 1 to 10 years
In !"1 ate prison, while facing an additional
suc.h term In a Texas federal prison,
but Mrs. Leary was finally given three
:years' probation.
~he joined him in Algiers after the
sensationally simple jailbreak at San
Luis Obispo. while Jahn Leary -also
on probation -is now living in San
Frr.,cisco.
';'\Ve're finished with relating to their
madness,'' Cleaver concluded in the
rec:lrding made at his own Alg iers
r"~·1ence, referring to the Lear:ys and
the psychedel ic cult.
i-·e i;aid Leary was placed under
re~···lutionr ry arrest from Jan. 9 to 13
an" iii now in what was termed protective
CU£":xly.
E:ist Bank Cuts Rate
PHILADELPHIA CAP) -The First
Pen1sylvania Co., the largest bank In
Philadelphia. has reduced Its interest
rat~s for savings accowits, citing "recent
widespread reduction in prime taterest
rates, mortgage rates and some rates
in c·msumer borrowing."
DAILY ·PILOT
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Springs Leak
Austere Budget Bared
Reagan Asks :Cuts in Welfare, Medi-Cal
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Cov. Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
$5.73 billion austerity budget delicately
b1lanced with sharp welfare cuts and
"1verage citizen" A1edi-Cal services.
The governor, vowing to spare Califor·
nlans from another ;'ruinous" tax in-
crease, proposed only a 2 percent boost
In state spending for 1he flscal year
beginning July I.
Even so, slate govemmen for the
nnt time since the gre1t epression
would run out of cash t fall and
be forced to borrow fro private lending
institutions to pay il:I bills .
Reagan warned the Democrat-con·
trolled Legislature "something must be
done and done immediately" about the
Welfare and Medi·Ca l "mess."
He also proposed:
-Increasing teaching loads f or
un!Yersity and college professors without
raising their salaries.
-No increased funds for the University
of California and only a small boost
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any slate
employes, although civil servants would
receive such new benefits as unemploy-
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
-Hold·the-line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family," Reagan said,
''there are years In which it is simply
not possible to do all that might be
desired.
$2.3 billion annu11.lly.
1 ··we are not endeavoring to deprive
the truly needy of the shelter, food
and clothing necessary to sustain them
through their temporary hardship,"
Reagan said.
"But we are firm In our resolve to
strike from 1 •·e welfare rolls lhosCin-
dividuals and \ milies who are employed,
who are paid a living wage, and ,who
find their ways to ta1paye r generosity
only because of the m1nner In which
some or the laws are written .. , .we
must rewrite our Jaws to eliminate those
who are less than nee<iy."
For A1edi·Cal, Reagan proposed a ne\f
"average citizen '' plan whereby reci·
pients -exctpt those In nursing home!
-would be entilled to benefit!!: more
in line with what self-supporting Califor·
nlans receive from private insurance
health plans.
Makitag lfp Lost Tinae
Apollo Grenilins Eat Dust
As Craft Speeds to Moon
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI} -
Apolfo' 14's astronaut., their spacecraft
docking problem mysteriously behind
them, hurtled through space today mak·
ing up time lost at launch for America's
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookle
filers Edgar D. Mitchell and Stuart
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program.
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they "could play a lot
of tic-tac·loe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The 83tronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it was
"perfectly normal."
before the sixth docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a second
and final time Saturday to retrieve
Shepard, 47, and Mitchell, 40, after
they return from their 33 1h hours on
the moon. If their lunar module ca.nnot
link up with the command ship piloted
by Roosa, 37, the two astronauts may
have to walk through space to reach
the safety of the mother ship in orbit
80 miles above the moon.
From Page I
••• Another Standard Oil tanker sprung a leak 11onday, spilling an esti·
mated 500 gallons of diesel oil into the Willamette River near Port-
land, Ore. The Idaho Standard was preparing to discharge her cargo
of 130,000 barrels of diesel fuel and gasoline 'vhen the leak was dis-
covered. Two S(andard Oil tankers, the Arizona Standard and the
Oregon Standard, collided under the Golden Gate Bridge last month,
resulting in a large oil spill in San Francisco Bay.
"With unemployment much higher than
we would like and thousands of Califor-
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work at any
job at any living wage -our state
revenues are down."
Inevitably, the budget was a record.
It totaled $6.738 billion -roughtly $129
million more than the $6.6 billion now
being spent and '258 million above what
Reagan originally proposed to the
Ugislature last year.
A 10-second rocket burst Monday night
gave th e moonship an extra two mile
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minutes lost before
launch, so Shepard and f\Utchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the Hight
started.
ATTACK
•·reliable sources" in Saigon, said the
South Vietnamese para troopers v.•ere
flown in by helicopter and that U.S.
planes: supported them. It said no U.S.
ground forces were involved in the ope ra-
tion.
•
Postal Service Raising
Reagan's key lo balancing the new
budget waa a package of welfare and
Medi.Cal reforms he promised to
"shortly" outline to the Legislature.
He submitted a welfare appropriation
totaling $65 million less than current
spending. It also was $217 million less
than what Reagan's fiscal experts figured
the state would spend without "reforms."
Unlike this year, state welfare spend-
ing would be "closed ended" and coold
Gerald D. Gri ffin, one of the mission's
three flight directors, told newsmen that
all three astronauts had dozed during
their scheduled waiting hours.
All Mail Rates in May
"I think that's perfectly normal." Grif-
fin said. "l guess all of us do that
in our business ev"ery once in a while
~·hen ·we don't hve much to do. That's
~·hy they ""·ere so quiet, I'm sure . It's
been a couple of long days so far and
Lhey're just resting." WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Postal Service announced today plans
to raise virtually all classes of postage,
including two cents for first-class mail
and one cent for airmail.
The new rates would be effective,
on a temporary ba sis, the second week
t. ~ ..
Chrysler Strike
Ends Three Hours
After Starting
DETROIT {UPI) -One of the shortest
national auto strikes on record began
and ended today within three hours when
Olrysler Corp. and the United Auto
Workers ref(:hed an agreement in prirr
ciple covering 10,00o salaried workers.
A strike called at 10 a.m. was called
off after the company agreed to the
principle of a 13 percent wage increase
and retroacth•ity' of the ~·age increase
above a cost of living raise to last
Nov. 2. The cost of Jiving sec lion was
automatically retroactive to last Sept.
15.
UAW President Leonard \Voodcock said
all of the salaried workers would return
to their jobs Wednesday morning.
in May.
Newspaper and magazine rates would
be doubled and those for bulk malling
by one-third.
The increased rates, subject to
permanent approval by an independent
five-member pOstal rate corruniallion,
would bring in addition~! revenues of
, 11.45 billion during the y.., ·~ng
July 1.
The proposed new rates would put
the postal service on "a sound financial
basis'' for the first time in decades,~
Asst. Postmaster Gen. James W. 1
Hargrove said.
not grow beyond appropriations. •
In all, Reagan's budget called for cul·
ting federal, state and local welfare
spending in Calilomia by $606 million.
It now is proliferating at tbe rate of
Grove Offi~r
Shoots Suspect
In A.uto Theft
Garden Grove Police Officer Jerry Flrst·class stamps would go from six Gray shot and ser iously wounded a 15-
to eight cents and airmail stamps from year-old suspected car thief early today
IO lo 11 cents under the proposal. The after a high speed chase through a
postal Board of Governors formally sub-residential district.
milted the proposal to the rate corn-Gray spotted a ear allegedly stolen
mission :f.1onday. about 4 a.m. w h 11 e he was crusing
The landing in the ancient Fra Mauro
lunar valley at 1:17 a.m. PST was recon-
firmed when ground engineers concluded
the mechanism which coup\~ the com·
mand ship and moon lander now was
''working beauU!ully ...
But they sti ll were puzzled over what
went wrong Sunday nigbt when the dock-
ing device fa iled to work the first five
times the two spacecraft bumped
together. Ground experts speculated
some kind of foreign particle may have
jammed the delicate m e c h a n i s rn ,
possibly a slive r of ice which melted
Boy, 7, Unhurt
In Cliff Plunge
The increases in second and third-class in the southeast part of the city. He
rates would be spread over a five-year gave chase and pursued the vehicle at Seven--year'i!ld Karl Kendrick ap-
period. \1lith one·fiflh of the proposed speeds up to 10 miles per hour for parenlly escaped injury after he plunged
increase becoming effective each year. several blocks until It spun out. over a 45-foot cliff in Newport Beach
Under postal reform legislation ap-T"·o youths in the ca r fled on foot Sunday ~fle"rnoon.
proved last year, the postal servi ce may and when they failed to halt on his Police said the boy. the so n of Or.
put at least part of the increases into command. Officer Gray fired t\vo shots. and Mrs. Frank E. Kendrick , 1915 Galaxy
effect within 100 days if the rate com· the second hitting one boy in the left Drive, Newport Beach , was playing in
mission does not act. That would make arm. Galaxy Park when he tumbled over
tiiay 11 the effective date for regular Police later apprehended his 11.year· the cliff which drops an estimated 45
and airmail stamp price increases. The old companion. feet to Upper Newport Bay.
serv ice, however, said :f.fay 15 would OUicers f 0 u n d a loaded .32-<"aliber Re scue \.\'orkers called to the scene
be the effective date -102 days from automatic pistol in the car and are could find no indication of external or
tilonday. investigating the possibility that the. t~·o internal injuries. The boy was he Id
Hargrove, responsible for p o s t a 1 youths ""·ere engaged in several recent Sunday nighl at Haag Metnorial Hospita l
finances, acknowledged at a news con-armed robberies. for observation and released P.tonday.
In Vietiane, the government of Laos
did not confirm reports of any Invasion
but said the United Slates had increased
its heavy bomhing raids into Laos in
the last several days. In Saigon, th e
U.S. command reported another day of
massive B52 and jet fighter·bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs hitting the Ho
Chi .r.linh trail has no\V surpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World War II but supplies were
still getting through to Cambodia and
Southern Vietnam.
The allegation by the of!icial Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
were commanding the purported invasion
force added a new element of gravity
to Kosygin 's earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders.
"Major military detachments of the
SaigOJ1 regime under the direct command
of American officers have invaded
southern regions of Laos, Izvestia said.
"U.S. aviation is making day and night
raids on lower Laos to support the
troops of the invaders ..•
"The Pentagon plans '""'ilh the help
of the Saigon military to strike blows
al the patriotic forces in Laos and to
capture the southern provinces of the
country bordering on the Democratic
Republic of (north) Vietnam."
~ Laotian officials in Vientiane denied
kno"·ledge of any allied incursion but
said they would study Kosygin's remarks
at a cabinet meeting \Vednesday. They
did report North Vietnamese and Com~
munist Thai guerrillas crossing into
Thailand with heavy equipment from
the reported invasion area of southern'
Laos. I
CBS reported today th3t the plan work~
ed out by \Vashington and Saigon in:
volved use of 25,000 South Vietnamese'
and 9,000 U.S. troops, ~·ith the AmericanS"
limited to operations inside South Vlet-1 nam.
He s a i d a final tentative agreement
could not be "'rillen because of the
complications in applying wage increases
granted the production and maintenance
workers on Jan. 19 to the salaried
employes.
ference that the rates might have to rriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ be inc reased further if postal costs,
primarily wages, --increase as a result
of negotiations now under way with
"But "·e now have a satisfactory
formula,'' he said.
The shortest national auto strike ~·as
In 1961 when workers struck for 15
minutes against General Motors over
a dispute involving implernentaLion or
relief time.
It was the second strike by the UAW
against an auto company in the current
rowid of ·negotiations which began la9t
July. General Motors was completely
shut down for 67 days last fall before
seUling ·with the UAW on a pattern-set·
ting agreemenL
postal employes.
Asked whether he foresaw a top price
for the firit-class stamp, Hargrove
replied: ''No more than I can foresee
a top for the price or beef ...
He also admitted that the rate increase
\~·ould bring about no direct improvement
in mail services. He said the increases
were primarily designed. to bring
revenues in line with current expenses.
In addition to the general rate increase,
postcards would be raised from five
cents to ieven cents and airmail
postcards from eight cents to nine cenu.
From Pn11e I
FREEWAY ELECTION •••
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allo\\1lng the election, telling Palmier!
'"The point is \\•he\hcr or not '''e are
premature in trying to evaluate" the
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed out, as did in·
tervening attorneys Roy B. \Voolsey and
Arthur Strock. that additional remedies
are av,'.lilable after the vote .
He said the state ct'rta.lrily could bring
Jegnl proceedings to enforce the contract
and Indicated other liligAlion is QPSsible
to \'Oid nny binding council a('llon.
Noting thal the council could, on Its
own, schedule votes on ci1 her issue, Corf·
man said, "The question here is whether
people ha\•e the right to do "'h31 1he
council.has a rlJ:ht to do."
At the same time, he said. "\\'bet.her.
v.•hat they do Is legill or illegal has
nothing to do v.·ith It ·•
The ~farch 9 election \\'as forced by
pe tltiC1ns circulated by 1he Freel'·ay
Fighters.
•
Corfman potnred out that courts are
traditionally liberal in their thinking
when it comes to revoking a right to
\'Ole.
The judge stressed. lhe issues are not
clear cut and based his decision partially
on that fact.
.. Basically," he said. "this Is a dispute
ss to "'hether the people have the right
lo exercise this vote.
"If the iasues are not open find shut /'
he solid, "they've got that right.''
Ne"•port Beach City Attorney Tully
Seymour, representing City Clerk Laura
I.aglos. the technical defendant in the
case, urged rejection on the wrlt betause
of the iinportance of the issue, ~·hcther
or not policy Is involved.
··"'he n you havt anythins as lmpo.-t.ant
as a fruway . t spcclally In Newport
Btach where It threatens lht char1cter
of the city, It can blight It Ind dtTlde
lt. t~ people have a right to make
poli"y,'' Seymour said.
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HE KNOWS A LOT
AIOUT SHAGS •• ,
HE'S PRETTY
SHAGGY HIMSEl.f!
DO YOU LIKE
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAVE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
ALDEN'S '.
SANTA ANA. ORANGE
TUSTIN C11l •••
ALDIN'S
RED HILL CARPITS
& DRAPERIES
1U74 Irvin•, Twstln, Cal. ........
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Av•.
COSTA MESA
646-4838 .....
HOURS: Mon. Thru Thurs., 9 ta S::J O -Fri .. 9 to 9 Sat .. 9:30 to I
• f
•
'
'I
I' '
17
17
..
•
N.Y. St.oeks
Bun(ington Beae
EOl TION
YOL 64, NO. 28, l SECT IO NS, 36 PAGES ORANGE C$U~. C~LIFORNIA TU ESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1971 TEN CENTS
Huntington Beach Ol(s Orange .Freeway Route
I
By ALAN DffiKIN
01 ltM D1l1Y P'l .. 1 SllH
Huntington Beach city councilmen
Monday night voted to back the slate-
adopled orange route for the Huntington
Beach Freeway (Route 39).
They rejected a plea from Fountain
Valley Councilman George Scott to sup-
port his city In calling for the state
to reopen hearings on the route. 1
"I don't think we really have a prayer
and we might as well proceed with
the thing, .. said Councilman Jack Green
after stating thal the city in the p a s t
had favorl!d the alternate rl!d route,
but was stymied in Sacramento "by
political interests."
The council voted >I on a resolution
ca11ing for the state to set a high priority
on the freeway and speed up con-
struction. Councilman Jerry Matney was
opposed. Councilman Norma Gibbs wa s
absent.
The action was taken after the Urban
Land Institute (ULI) transportation com-
nUtte~ ~ad reported on a study It made
•
o( the alternate routes and recommended
that the city support the adopted orange
alignment.
The orange route generally calls for
the freeway to run down Newland Street
to the Pacific Coast Freeway at Adams
Avenue. The suggested 'change to the
red route \\'OU)d have bad the freeway
crossing over Beach Boulevard and going
down Gothard Street near the railroad
tracks.
Larry Curran, an attorney and head
of the Concerned Citizens .Committee,
"·ho asktd that the red route be looked
at again, tiJld the council later in the
evening that after meeting with the
ULI group he felt supporting the orange
route was in the city's best interests.
The ULt report said that if new hear-
ings were held there would be a 2
to 7 year delay in construction of the
freeway and that the Top of the Pier
development pl.an for downtown Hun·
tington Beach would be set back.
The vote was a blow to the Fountain
Valley council which tonight will consider
•
a resolution on its consent calendar ask.
ing for the state to hold new hearings,
The Fountain Valley countil has been
acting to support the Fountain \ialley
School District trustees · who have
formally asked the state to reopen the
route question.
Jack Mahnken, representing the school
district, said that Fountain Valley would
be boxed in by freeways and that the
residents needed "breathing space."
He said · Fountain Valley would be
encircled by the San Diego, Huntington
Beach, Orange and Coast freeways. •·vou
can imagine the kind of smog conditions
we will face ," he added.
Mahnken charged that the possibility
of a 2 lo ? year delay In construction
if the routes were restudied was ••a
smokescreen by the state."
Several Huntington Beach homeowners
spoke in favor of the adopted route
and told the council that they had bought
property after the route was settled.
a I ll Ire omas
Seal Bea~h Zones o ~ean
i:r i:r i:r
Seal Beach
Faces Fight
In Zoning
Deputy Attorney General Warren Ab-
bott said today the City of Seal Beach
may find rough going with its newly
established "Open Space Water Recrea-
tion Land Use Zone."
"The precise same thing came up
in Huntington Beach a few years ago and
it was taken to the public courts for a
decision. It was held that the city's own·
ership of the water was pre-empled by
the state," said Abbott.
''Just because a city declares its limits
three miles out to sea. that doesn't
mean it has ownership. Only a grant
of the Legislature to the city could
do that. and I'm not sure Seal Beach
has that.··
While Huntington Beach and other
coastal cities have unsuccessfully tried
to exert jurisdiction over the tidelands,
Seal Beach is the first to bring it under
the conrines of its zoning laws.
Commercial operators -including oil
companies -"·ould first have to seek
a variance with the city before using
the waters.
The procedure is the following :
The applicant must appear before the
City's Environmental Quality Control
Board and during a public hearing con-
vince its members that the operation
will no! be hazardous to the environment.
Scientific and ecological data wilt be
required as proof by the panel which
will then make a recommendation to
the city council, attaching "reasonable
condition" and restrictions."
The Ci!y Council then has the option
of either granting or rejecting a "Pollu·
tion Prevention Certificate" for the
operator.
Standard Oil Company, which has jusl
won the State Lands Commission's ap-
proval to drill another well from iU
.,Esther" island in Seal Beach, could
not be contacted for comment.
Store Robber
Gets $300 Loot
f\.1anager Donald Charron of Buffum's
men store in Santa Ana was robbed of
$300 by an armed bandit l\1onday.
Charron told police he had just arrived
•t work and was opening the rear door
of the store at 10th and l\1ain slreets when
accosted by a tall n\8n In work clothes
and wearing sunglasses.
The gunman told Charron lo put the
money bag he was carrying into a brown
t>aper bag and to lock himself inside the
store. The suspect fled on fool
City P ay Raise
Da te Corrected
A story in Monday's edlllon nt the
D a i J y Pilot about Huntlngton Stach
city employes incorrectly stated tha{
firemen and policemen received II per·
t'ent p11y raises this year:
Firemen and policemen reeieved 8.25
percent pay raises. the same as other
city employes. Bo1h public $1fety groups
asked for and are still asking for 11
percent pay Increases, but their rt!qUects
have not ~en granted.
\•
With Vietnamese Forces
Soviet Newspaper Oaims
Americans 'Invade' Laos
By UAited PrlN laterNlloul .
The Soviet government newspaper
lJYeatia said tonight ·1 major ''force of
Sottth Vietna.mese ti'oopi "under the
direct command of American officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news
agency Kyodo said 4,000 to S,000 South
Vietnamese were involved.
Pentagon spokesman J. W. Friedheim
would not comment on the Izvestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
statements by Secretary of State William
P. Rogers and defense secretary Melvin
Governor Sends
Austere Budget
To Legislature
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov . Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
$6.73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with sharp welfare cuts and
"average citizen '' Medi-Ca! services.
The governor, vowing to spare. Califor·
nians from another "ruinous" tax in-
crease, proposed only a 2 percent boost
in state spending for the fiscal year
beginning July 1.
Even so, slate government for the
first time since the great depression
'>''ould run out of cash next fall and
be forced to borrow from private lending
institutions to pay its bills.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con-
trolled Legislature "something must bf!
done and done immediately" about the
Welfare and Medi-cat "mess.''
He also proposed:
-Increasing teaching loads for
university and college professors "·Jlhout
ra-ising their salaries.
ft , !4jr1I llltl u.s ..... b,,-.14
obey CoDll'tS$ional arkturea aaatnst
enlerlllg.j,MJ!<.~a.
An olfiCilJ atatemtnt by the Viet Carll
foreign ministry, broadcast by Radlo
Hanoi tonight. said South Vietnamese
and Thai mercenary unita were carrying
out raids in Southern Laos, that
thousands more Vietnamese troops were
massed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed Into
the Tonkin Gull near North Vietnam.
U.S. ofiicials in Washington
acknowledged that something was under
way in northwe!itern South Vietnam but ·
maintained silence on the reports of
a strike against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "outrageow;
Invasion" of Laos. ·v .
Sen. George Aiken (R-Vt.), said Mon-
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were mas.sing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
frontier.
The Kyodo newli report, quoting
"rel iable sources" in Saigon , said the
South Vietnamese. paratroopers were
flown in by helicopter and that U.S.
planes supported them. It 1aid no U.S.
JZround forces were involved in the opera-
tion.
In Vietiane, the government of Laos
did not confirm reporta of 2ny invasion
but said the Unit.ed States had increased
its heavy bombing raid!i into Laos in
the last several days. In Saigon , the
U.S. command reported another day of
massive BS2 and jet fighter-bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs hitting the Ho
Chi Minh trail has now surpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World War tt but supplies were
cs.< LAOS, Par• ti
By RUD I NIEDZ IELSKI
Cl ft!• D•fly Pitel "•II
With swift passage of an unprecedented
emergency law. the Seal Beach City
Council ~1onday night del cared three
miles of its offshore waters as an ppen-
space recreation zone and enacted
punish men for ''pollution-prone"
businesses whict1 may violate it.
The far.reaching actions, approved
unanimously by the four·mem\.t; council,
followed on the heels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Company to drill an
offshore well in the city's coastal waters.
Basis for the "open-space water
rtt.r~ )and use zone" wer~ 19~
lft'COrj!OriUOi1 laws of the rettJ of Seat
BMeb .which include lhret nilles of the
otfMIGN.~ w1ter1 within its~ilt'· .1lmita1 -~ r.... -... aCeoratng to ("" : Attorney Jtm Bent.son,
who drafted the law
Effedive loday, only water !iports or
water-orienied sports such as swimming,
sailing. surfing and boating will be allow·
rd within the three-mile limit.
Comrr.ercial enterprises, such as oil
companies, oil tankers and pipeline l!Om·
panies may only operate In these waters
if they have firs t qualified for 1 "Prillu·
lion Preverition Certificate," to be" issued
by the city.
Violalions of the la'>'' are declared
misdemeanors in the wording of the
ordinance an d are punishable by a $500
fine, or six months in jail for each
day of violation.
City aides said this means any oil
company would have to appear in a
public hearing before the city' !i
Environmental Quality Control Board
with convincing scientific evidence that
it_, operation would not endanger the
environmental quality of the restricted
waters .
Any discharge of pollutants -including
oil products and other wastes -are
proh!'.:l'~d ur.der the new law.
The ordinance. according to city of-
ficials, was drafted to protect the public
interest. 11 cites the need to alleviate
the current "open space and recreational
land crisis'' before it' is exploited for
commercial purposes.
Exactly what impact the council action
will have on State Lands Commission.
approved Standard Oil Well is still a
mystery.
The commission granted the drilling
permit last Thursday and described It
as a "fail-safe project." It was the
fir5t offshore drilling permit to be
granted since the Santa Barbara well
rupture two years ago. -No increasl!d funds for the University
of California and only a small boost
for the slate colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employes, although civil servant.. would
receive such new benefits as unemploy·
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
Valley Trustees to Ask
-Hold-the-line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family," Reagan said,
"there are years in whlch It is 1imply
not possible to do all that might be
desired.
''Wilh unemployment much higher than
we would like and thousand:s of Callfor·
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work at any
job at any living wage -our state
revenues are down."
Inevitably, the budget was a record.
lt_tot.aled '6.738 billion -roughtly '129
rr1illion more than the M.6 billion now
being spent and $158 million above wt\at
Reagan originally proposed to lhe
Legislature last year.
Reagan's key to balancl na the new
budget •u a package of welfare and
Medi.C1I reforR\3 he promised to
"shortly" outline to the Legislaturt.
He 1ubmitted a weKare appropriation
totaling $M million leas than current
spending. It also Wis $217 million less
than what Reag1n'1 flst1I C!J:ptrtl figured
(Set. BUDGET, P•re 2)
State for Land Monies
Fountain Valley -school authorities are
not ready to abandon plan! for a $1.2
million crippled children's school despite
the lack of state money to build it.
Trustee! of lhe Fbuntain Valley SChool
District have decided to ask the state
for money to buy the !4nd as If It
were going to be 1 regular elementary
school.
"The area qualitn for. a standard
school." Mike Briel<. dlstrlct 111perlr>
teDdent, uplaltttd.' ••rt we get funds
ror the land, we cin at leo,sl hold
the site."
Brick hopes ealrl funds wW ht
avlilahle for. the_O<lhoptdlc achool. but
U they aren't, the dlstric\ would have
to go ahead and build. 1 regular tchool
on the land within two .Yeara.
The oithopedic llOhool 11 in a 1pecl11ly
category with geparate funds from the
regular achoo! oon1t:ruellon. State tdoca·
lion omctw told the district in urly
January that no more special school
money I~ avalla"ble untll there is a new
bond sale.
Fountain Valley's orthopedic school
would S6rve about 90 orthopedically han·
dlcapped students from-its own district
and from the Huntington Beach Union
High SChool, Ocean View. Huntington
Beach Clty, Newport·Me&a Unified. Seal
Beath and Westminster ~hool dutricis.
1'hfl "sthool woufd ·al!O bt Combined
with a standard elementary school to
Implement a district plan tor helping
ortbopedlcally handicapped youngster1
ml1_ with ot.htr studtnts, while rectlvlng
tbe special care they ~.
''By applying tor state aid on the land,
we'll "t least have It when money Is
•v•ilable tor the orthopedic 1chool,"
Brick. said.
5chool officials, however, art still oot lure when auch special funds wUI be
available.
HEAD ON THE BLOCK
Count y Admlnl1tr•tor Thomas
A pollo Hurtles
For Moon; Crew
Taking It Ecu y
SPACE CENT~R. Houston (UPI) ' -
Apollo Ifs astronauts. their spacecraft
docking problem mysteriously behind
lhl!m, hurtled through space today mak-
ing up time lost at laun ch for America's
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
fliers Edgar D. Mitchell and Stuart
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program.
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they ·~could play a Jot
of Uc-tac-toe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
bul ground controllers said it was
"perfectly normal."
A JO-second rocket burst Ptlonday night .
gave the moonship an extra two mile
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minutes Jost before
launch. so Shepa rd and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the flight
started.
Gerald 0 . Griffin, one of the mission's
three flight directors, told newsmen that
all three astronauts had dozed during
their 1chedu\ed waking hours.
"I think that's perfectly normal," Grlf.
fin said. "l guess all of U!I do that
in our Ousinfss every once in a while
when we don't hve much to do. That's
why they were so quiet, I'm sure. It's
been a couple of long days so far a.nd
they're just resting."
The landing in the artcient Fra Mauro
lunar valley at I: 17 a.m. PST was rec:on-
Hrmed when ground engineers concluded
the mechanism which couples the com·
mand ship and moon lander now was
""'\\wklng btautlfully.''
But t~ey 1U\I were puuled over what
went wrong Sunday night when the dock·
ing devlee failed to work. the first five
tlm~s the two spacecraft bu..mped
togetbtr. Ground experts speculatl!d
some kt714 of foreign particle may have
jammed the delicate m e c h a n I s 'm ,
possl~ly a 11lvtr ot fee wh ich mehed
before the sh1.lh docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a SlCOnd
, and (lnal lime Saturday to retrieve
Sh~pard, 47, and Mltcht.11, 40, after
they return from their 33~ houra en
.the moon.
•
Supervisor
Ca11't Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBAC K
Of ltM 01llf P'llet 51111
,
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried to fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vote of 2 yes, 1 no, 1
abstention and I absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
to oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
District vowed after the defeat to try
again to fire Thomas when the full
board Is pre!ent.
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucial vote came.
He was off to Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Bat_tin reading a long list of charges
he had compiled agains t Thomas. Battin
then o£fered the motion that Thomas
be given the required 30-day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R. on a I d
Caspers of Newport Beach said be agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote, Battin and Caspers
balloled yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not think the board
should act on a subjed of such im·
portance . "until all five board members ~are present".
Phillips criticized Ballin for releasing
details of his intentions tp the "\ireas
before bringing them to the board.
He called for "dignity in such acUons
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed the original ordlnance creating
the office of administrative officer and
thought "we were putting too much
power in the hands of one ma11 ."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county govemment untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking that action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no indication of his feel-
ings during the debate and did not speak.
Previously he had said he was shocked
at published reports in Santa Ana of
Battin's intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy aptain, has
held his present post since October.
19 .67. He has a staff of 20 aod is
{See BATflN. Page 2)
• Orange Coan
Weather
ThoSf! low clouds might leak a
Jlttle on Wednesday. but things
should clear up by midaftemoon
when temperatures will Inch up to
65 along the roast and 68 lnland.
INSWE TODA. Y
lM Vega.s cati-no.s haV'e Dwight
D. Ei!tnho~r on their mind;
that'i becQ~e hit llkene1s will
appear on a mw "sitvtr" dollar
to 'be uttd in' gambling. Page 3.
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i& U~IL 1 1 .~t11 H Tutsday, Ftbfuary 2, 1971
Heacl1 Ee:~~i ng
Dump SOOltion·
Huntington
Gives Okay
ForParK
tf anyone knows where you can haul
about one million cubic yards of ftlul·
amtlling mud and oil sludge, please
calJ Huntington Beach City Hall.
The city staff needs ideas on bow
City to Ask
For Federal
Park Money
Huntington Beach ts applying for
another federal grant totaling $145,704
to help develop land for the Central
Park.
n :e city already has received about
tt.5 million in open-space grants from
the Department or Housing and Urban
Development for first phase development
of the park, east of Golden West Street
bell•een Slater and Ellis avenues.
There will be about 200 acres in the
-rirst-stage of the park. Development
is expected to begin in the fall wjth
compleUon about two years later. l
Monday night the council authorized
an application for $145,704 to meet
devtlopment costs for the :second phase of
the park. This land, about 60 acres,
v•ill be west of Golden West Street.
It is estimated that the cost of develop-
ing these parcels will be about $752,472
and the application to HUD is for 121h
perc '"J.t of that, development coordinator
t om Severns said.
Tr.~ city has the rest of the money
than'1s to the voters ' approval last year
()f tie sale of $6 million In bonds for
the development of the central park,
coJT1·-1unlty parks and neighborhood
park-<:.
When completed, the central park will
cover 400 acres, will have two Jakes,
a w;ld.life preserve, campsites and bike
Ir ails.
J,illian Ernst
Services Held
Funeral services were held Friday in
Newport ~ .. !or J-Ulian Ger de 1
Ernst, tbe -mother. of lhid&V•me~
er of Weit"'Orange ~Judicial."~
trict court.
Ml'!. Ernst died Wednesday at the age
of 72. She had lived In C:Orona del Mar
for 20 years.
She was an active member of the
Hoag Memorial Hospital AuxUlary and
the Ne\\'PQrt Harbor Tuesday Club.
She leaves her husband Leo, of the
f£re·ly home at 3720 Ocean Blvd.; her
sc ··· a sister, Pt1rs. Alex Sinclair, of New·
po:. Beach and three grandchildren.
~ervices were held at St. Andrews
P.esbyterlan Church with Dr. Raymond
L Brahams officiating.
From Pagel
BA'ITIN .•.
paid the county's highest salary, $41,748
• year.
In his list of charges BatUn accused
Thomas of "assuming d I ct a tor I a I
po\•Crs" not Intended by the ordinance
cre~ting the job.
He said Thomas placed the board
In a bad position with the public by
his recent forecast of a possible 34-cent
tax increase ne1t year. He said the
CAO was "lnaccessible to department
hen··,. and even board members at
tl"'lt ~.''
.. .
DAILY PllOT
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•
to 11olve the problem of the 40-acr11
rotary mud dump behind I.he Southern
Calilornla Edlson plant that homeowners
dt'.!scribe as a blight on southeast Hun·
Ungton Beach. Shape Vp, Ladies •
Approval has been given to start
building the 5eeond largest park planned
in Huntington Beach -a 4G-acre com.
munlty park facing Edison High School. •
City Administrator Doyle M 111 e r
reP<!rted ·lo councilmen Monday night
that the staff was exploring all
possibilities ()0 eliminating obnoxious
odors coming from the dump at Hamilton
Avenue and Magnolia Street.
Instructor Richard Collato chats with members of garet Cohn. New class begins Feb. 10 and con-
tinues for eight consecutive Wednesdays fiom 7
p.m. to 8 p.m. To register, call the YMCA.
The eity council Monday night authoriz·
ed expe.nditureJ totalling $9l0,00U for the
park, a 10,000 square foot community
center aod a 5.000 square.fool !ire sla·
Uan.
his '1slimnastics" class at Huntington Beach YMCA.
From left are Janet Paulson, Ute Pascoe, Jessi
Drusys, Kathy Schillinger, Frances Bennie and Mar·
Richard Bigler and Associate s, Laguna
Beach, will design the park and landscaP"
ing, while \Vllt13m Blurock . Newport
Beach. will design the two buildings.
He said the owners, Joseph and Carl
Steverson, were cooperating, but no so
tion had been found yet. From Page J
"The solution may be to c e ;:t•;;•--n+tt=\ thing down permanently," er ..... GET
mented. "We have an op tty to • • •
purchase the property but we couldn 't
afford it even if they gave it to us."
Miller explained that the problem is
to find a place where the mud and
oil wastes, reportedly 80 feet thick in
places and dumped there over a period
of 25 years, could be taken.
The solutions the city is exploring
are whether there is a chemical solution
that would stabilize and harden the ooz-
ing mass so it could be hauled away
?r w~ether th~ material could be dumped
in thin layers 1n county disposal stations.
Miller said that the city staff was
cootinuing to take samples from a I l
deposits made at the dump to insure
they were permitted materials.
On Jan. 12 the Steverson brothers
were served with a notice of violation
by the eounty's Air Pollution Control
District charging that smells from the
dump threatened public health. APCD
engineers blamed those nolious fumes
cm wastes from an oil refinery a
material not covered in the license' for
the dump.
The council also was told that the
Western Oil and Gas Association was
also being asked for aid in solving the
problem since "it is an environmental
result of the oil industry."
Homeowners, Jed by Mrs. Jerome p_
Juergens, f j l e d a 408-name petition
charging that the dump was not properly
fenced and was a danger to children
t::d pets. The petitioners urged the coun·
c1l to "remove the blight from the area.''
Public Works Director James Wheeler
said, in answer lo a charge by
homeowners, that It appeared that the
dump did entToach on a public tight of
way on both Magnolia Street and
Hamilton Avenue. He also said that
the materia1 sometimes runs off from
the dump in winter and city crews
either have to clean it off or close
the roads.
A letter from the city's recently formed
E_ovirorilne1tal ..council urged that the
w*on-,reCiaimi:ng the land ind returD-
¢It to public use be done' as soon
as possible and that the city stud y the
possibility ()f chemicals being reclaimed
from the waste to defra; Pie cost.
Miller said that the staff would con·
tinue working on the problem and that
he hoped to have a further report at
-ext cc:-·· ·:1 meeting.
Jaycees Seeking
DSA Candidaw •
The Huntington Beach Jaycees are
searching for a man or woman to receive
their annual Distinguished S e r v i c e
Award.
To qualify, contestants must be
bet"•een 21 and 35 years old, a resident
of Huntlngton Beach for one year, and
have served the community in a signifi-
cant manner. The winner will be honored
at a February banquet.
Past recipients of the award have
come frmm both private and public
life. They include Pat Downey, William
Schweikert, Jerry Matney. Alvin M.
Coen. Monte Nitzkowski and Vincent G.
Moorhouse.
Nomination forms for the award are
available by phoning awards chairman
Jack Anderson, 962..-4195.
Roger Gidney
Services Held
Funeral services were held today for
retired Huntington Beach Police Officer
Roger ~1. Gidney, 66. wt(o died Saturday.
Final rites v.·ere held in Westminster
Memorial Park. Intermen t follO\\'ed
there.
~1r. Gidney, of 923 E. Bay Ave.,
Ne"'port Beach, \\'as a charter member
of the Huntington Beach Moose Lodge
~nd also the Elks.
An eight.year member of the Hun-
tington Beach Police Department. Mr.
Gidn ey leaves his wlft, Reta . and sisters
Emalene Sylvia and Lucy \\'oester.
the state v.·ould spend without "reforms.''
Unlike this year, state wel!are spend-
ing would be "closed ended" and could
not grow beyond appropriations.
In all, Reagan ·s budget called for cut·
ting federal, state and local wellare
spending in California by $606 million.
It now is proliferating at the rate of
$2.3 billion ann ually.
"\V'f are not endeavoring to deprive
the truly needy of the shelter, food
and clothing neces~ary to sustain them
through their temporary hardship,"
Reagan said.
"But we are firm in our resolve to
strike from the welfare rolls those in·
dividuals and lamilies who are employed,
who are paid a living wage, and who
find their ways to taxpayer generosity
only because of the manner in which
some of the laws are written. _ .we
must rewrite our laws to eliminate those
"'ho are less than needy."
For ~fedi-Cal. Reagan proposed a new
"average citizen" plan whereby reel·
pients -except those in nursing homes
-would be entitled to benefits more
in line with what self-supporting C~lifor·
nians receive from private insurance
health plans.
Reagan s uggested increasing state
Medi-Cal expenditures by $105 million
-about $100 million less than would
be required without an •·average citizen"
formula . He pegged total federal, state
and county costs for Medi-Cal al '1.3
billion.
The Republican governor told the
Legislat ure that welfare and Medi.Cal
have "reached the crisis state in
countless counties" and "v.·e can (either)
take the easy path toward ruinous and
confiscalory tax3tion or we can elect
the more difficult alternative of bringing
the programs under control."
In higher education. Reagan budgeted
$337.l million for the University of
California -about the same as it now
receives -an~ $311 million itlr Jthe
state colleges, an increase of $$.4 infllion.
He shrugged off their request.s for
far larger expenditures by observing,
"it is a tribute to our educators that
they express their goals and aspirations
as definite requests. However, in a time
of acute revenue shortage, there is a
great deal which education can do to
economize.·•
He suggested that university professors
return to a teaching load closer to nine
classroom hours per week, and that
state college instructors strive for 12
hours.
Beach Council
Hits SCE Hike
The city of Huntington Beach is trying
to short-circuit Southern C a I i f o r n i a
Edison Company's bid for a 16.2 percent
rate hike.
The City Council passed a resolution
tfonday night urging the Ca!ifornla
Public Utiliti~s Commission to refuse
the increase.
The council V.'as told the hike would
cost Io ca I taxpayers an additional
$1,424,194 to n1aintain city services. This
would represent a burden of 41.9 cenls ·
on th e city's $1.45 tax rate. the resolution
said.
From Page l
LAOS •..
:-otill getting through to Cambodia and
Snuthcrn Vietnam.
The allegation by the official Soviet
go\'ernn1enl newspaper th at U.S. officers
v.•erc commanding the purported invasion
force added a new element of gravity
to Kosyg in 's earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders.
··~1 :ijor military detachments of th e
Saigon regime under the direct command
of Am erican officers have invaded
southern regions of Laos, Izvestia said.
··U,S, nv iation is making day and ni ght
raids on lo"·er Laos to support the
troops of the invaders .•.
lle's No Dummy
Marine's 'Masquerade' Fails
A young ~1arint'.! stood stock-still ~fonday 'v.•hen awroachtd by a con·
Ungent of ~!formed officers, but he rolstrably fallfd th tlr close lnspeetlon.
He tned -they charged -to pretend he v.·as 11. mannequin when they
starehtd a Santa Ana hardware 5tore \\'here ~ burgJ3r had broken a windov.·.
Kenneth R. Gillin. 24, of El Toro ~1C.o\S. "'as token from Clark Dye Hard·
ware , 210 S. i\1ain St., and booked on suspicion of burglary.
Not only poHce of!lctt'!, but S::inta Ana Fil'e Department unit sarrlved at
the store. with red lights and sirens, during the predswn burglary case.
Someone appa rent!)' trying to turn on the lights punched an alarm button
Instead, said ln\•tsllgalors.
-..
,
High Court Could De~ide
Freeway Vote Legality
No e"stimate was given on when the
park will be completed.
The park land includes 12 acres of
solid ground along Magnolia Steef. 20
acres of land that was a former county
dump, and -open space rights to the
Southem California Edison C:Ompany
easement.
By L. PETER KRIEG
01 Ille D1llY Pli.1 1111t
The California Supreme Court may
be asked to rule on the legality of
the Newport Beach freeway election.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti-freeway measul'es should
be put to a vote -even though lhe
City Council may not be beholden to
the results of one of them.
However, Angelo Palmieri, attorney
for the three former city officials who
sought the writ of mandate to halt
the election, said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palmieri said, ''It is too late to make
a formal appeal of the .decision, but
my client! feel the issue is significant
enough to seek a writ from the Supreme
Court."
Palmieri pointed out the court could
refuse to hear the case.
}le said a decision will be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said, "We have to consider
is this the kind of thing lhe Supreme Court
would be interested in considering their
calendar and the other things they face."
He said, however, at the moment,
his clients "are leaning toward'' preuing
the issue.
Judge Robert L. Corfman, afler a five.
hour hearing, rejected the petition for
the Superior CQurt writ sought on the
grounds the people have oo right to
decide these "non-municipal ilsues."
The ballot propositions are an initiative
asking the city coouncil to cancel an
eiisting agreement with the state on
the route of the coastal freeway through
Corona de! Mar and a charter amend-
ment requiring f u t u re referendums
before any new route agreements can
Seven Hearings
Face Huntington
Plan Commission
Huntington Beach p I a n n I n g com-
missioners face a busy session tonight,
having scheduled no fewer than seven
public hearings.
Al their meeting. scheduled [or 7 p.m.
in city council chambers, they will con-
sider these major projects :
-A variance to permit the construction
of a 137-space mobile home park near
Slater Avenue ifnd Gothard Street.
-A ISS.unit planned residential
development earmarked for the vicinity
of Newland Street and Slater Avenue.
-A variance to permU lhe construction
of a I4G-bed rest home near the in -
tersection of Florida Street and Garfield
Avenue.
STOI' IN
AND ASK
FOl
BILL
LAURIE
Hl KNOWS A LOT
AIOUT 5HA55 •••
HI'S PllTTT
SHAG41' HIMSILll
be signed.
In their court complaint , the -plaintiffs
-fonner mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J . Lorenz -claimed the
results of both propositions would be
illegal and loca1 referendums may be
applied to municipal issues only.
In announcing his decision, Judge
Corfman said the two propositions, "in
and of themselves . . . do not appear
to be illegal to me on the face ol
it."
Corfman earlier, in a key debate over
whether the actions would be legislative
or administrative, lert the door open
for additional litigation after the elect ion,
if the council does adopt the initiative
measure.
Palmieri had contended the action was
administrative and therefore unsuitable
for a public vote.
Corfman replied. "Assuming it is an
administrative act, where is the law
that says you can't have an election
even th ough the result is nil."
He said, in effec:t, the adminlstraUve
versus legislative point, as well as all
other points, could be more fully explored
in court proceedings after the election.
The charter amendment, even if
adopted, still must be ratified by the
state legislature .
C:Orfman let it be known almost from
the ouUiet !hat he leaned heavUy toward
allowing the tlection, telling Palmieri
"The point is whether or not we are
premature in trying to evaluate " the
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed out, as did in·
tervening attorneys Roy B. Woolsey and
.Arthur Strock, th~t additional remedies
are available after the vote.
He said the state certainly could bring
legal proceedings to enforce the contract
and indicated other litigation is possible
to void any binding council action.
Noting that the. councll could, on its
own, schedule votes on either Issue, Corf·
man said, "The question here is whet.her
peop le have the right to do what the
council has a right to do."
At the same time. he said, ''Whether
what they do is legal or illegal has
nothing to do with it.''
The 11arch 9 election was forced by
petitions circulated by the Freeway
Fighters.
Corfman pointed out that courts are
traditionally liberal in their thinking
when it comes to revoking a right to
vote.
The judge stressed the issues are not
clear cut and based his dec ision partially
on that fact.
"Basically," he said, "this Is a dispute
as to whether the people have the right
to exercise this vote.
''If the issues are not open and shut,''
he said, "they've got that right."
It will be called Edi son Community
Park. The community center will serve
as a recreational facility , meeting hall
and dance area.
Of the $910,000 estimated cost: $500,000
will go to developing the park; $235,000
to building the community center, and
$175,000 for the fire station.
Half the cost of the community center
might be saved if Blurock can use the
same desigl"l>be just completed for Murdy
Park C:Ommunity Center on Golden West
Street.
The only park planned in Huntington
Beach which is bigger than Edison Park
is the proposed central park which may
cover as much as 400 acres when finish·
ed.
Murdy Park, with 17 acres Is the
biggest existing park in the city.'
Saturday Class
Schedule Slated
For Young sters
Saturday morning is a school day for
more than 60 children in LeBard Elemen·
tary School, Huntington Beach.
But "''hat they do is their choice.
Saturday morning classes are part of
a new enrichment program developed
by Principal Robert Landi. Three choices
are offered on a strictly voluntary basis.
The young students may take art,
drama or Spanish. Each course is one
hour long and will meet for ten weeks
starting this Saturday.
··Jt was opened to anyone on a first·
come, first-serve basis,., Landi explained.
"And there is no pressure on these
classes. They're doing it for fun."
The enrichment program matches Lan·
di's theory of making school exciting
for children.
"We always hope kids will want to
come to school." Landi added.
The enrichment program appears to
have succeeded in that. There were
more children than the three volunteer
teachers could handle.
"We may expand in the future, lf
this works out." the principal said.
A SIO fee. plus the cost of materials,
In charged for each of the classes.
Landi asked parenls to allow children
to help decide what they wanted to
take.
The Saturday session has sparked in·
terest in some LeBard teachers for after
school programs. Three teachers have
already volunteered to teach such things
as knitting, sewing and art after the
normal school day to youngsters who
want to learn.
All enrichment programs will be
repeated, and perhaps expanded. next
year, if successful this year, Landi said.
DO YOU LIKE
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAVE .SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
SANTA ANA. OlllANOI TUSTIN Call •.•
ALDIN'S
A.I D HILL CAlll'ttl
& DllAl'lllllll
1A74 lr'"llne,. Tv'111'\, Cal. ....,>44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l"lacentla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOUH: M-Tin n..r.., ' le l :JD -Pn., ' to ' -Set. ':JD .. S
' ' ..
1
17
Fountain ·Valley Today's Final •
N.Y. Sweks
VOL. 64, NO. 28, 3 SECTIONS, lb PAGES-ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ----.UESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 197 1 TEN CEt-rTS
Huntington Beach OJ(·s Orange Freeway Route
By ALAN DIRKIN
01 tl!t D1lll' l'llol S!11!
Hunfington Beach city councilmen
t.1Qnday night voted to back the state-
adoptcd orange "route for the Huntington
Beach Freeway (Route 39).
They rejected a plea from Fountain
Valley Councilman George Scott to sup-
port hi.! city in calling for the state
to reopen hearings on the route.
"I don't think we really h.ave a prayer
end we might as well proceed with
the thing .'' said Councilman Jack Green
after stating that the city in the p a 1 t
had favored the alternate red route ,
but was stymied in Sacramento "by
political interests."
The council voted S-1 on a resolution
calling for the state to Jet a high priority
on the freeway and speed up con·
struction. Councilman Jerry Matney was
opposed. Councilman Norma Gibb! was
absent.
The action was taken after the Urban
Land Institute JULl) transportation com-
mittee had reported on a study it made
of the alternate route~ and recommended
that the city support the adopted orange
alignment.
The orange route generally calls for
the freeway to run down Newland Street
to the Pacific Coast Freew11y at Adams
Avenue. The suggested change to the
red route would have had the freeway
crossing over Beach Boulevard and going
down Gothard Street near the railroad
tracks.
Larry CUrr.an, an attorney and head
flf the Concerned Citizens Committee,
who asked that the red route be looked
at again. told the council later in Lhe
evening that after meeting with the
ULJ group he felt supporting the orange
route was in the city's best interests.
The UW report said that if new hear-
ings were held there would be a 2
to 7 year delay in construction of the
free.way and that lhe Top of the Pier
development plan for downtown Hun-
tington Beach would be set back.
The vole was a blow to the Fountain
Valley co~cil which tonight will consider
•
a resolution on Its consent calendar ask-
ing for lht: state to hold new hearings.
The Fountaio Valley council has been
acting to support the Fountain Valley
School District trustee:; who. have
formally asked the state to reopen the
route que3tion.
Jack Mahnken , representing lhe school
di.5trict, said that Fountain Valley would
be boxed in by freeways and that the
residents needed "breathing .5pace."
He said Fountiiin Valley would be
encircled by tht San Diego, Huntington
.Beach, Orange and Coast freeways. "Yo11
can imagine the kind of smog conditions
we will fact," he added.
Mahnken charged that the possiblllt:t
of a 2 to 7 year delay in construction
if the routes were restudied was •·a
smoke.screen by the state."
Sev~ral Huntington Beach homeowners
spoke in favor of the adopted route
and told the council that they had bought
property after the route was settled.
attin 0 ire omas
•
Seal Bea~h Zones o~ean
tr tr tr
Seal Beach
Faces Fight
In Zoning
Deputy Attorney General Warren Ab-
bott said today the City or Seal Beach
rnay (ind rough going with its newly
established "Open Space Water Recrea·
lion Land Use Zone."
''The precise same thing came up
in Huntington Beach a few years ago and
it was taken to the public courts for a
decision. It was held that the city'li own-
ership of the water was pre-empted by
the state," said AbOOtt.
"Just because a city declares its limits
three miles out to sea. that doesn·t
mean it has ownership. Only a grant
o( the Legislature to the city could
do that. and rm not sure Seal Beach
has that.''
While Huntington Beach and other
ceastal cities have unsuccessfully tried
to exert jurisdiction over the tidelands,
Seal Beach is the first to bring It under
the confines of its zoning laws.
Commerc ial operators -including oil
companies -would first have to seek
a variance v.·ith the city before using
the waters.
The procedure is the following:
The applicant must appear before the
City·s Environmental Quality Control
Board and during a public hearing con-
vince its members that the operation
Yt'ill not be hazardous to the environment.
Scientific and ecological dala will be
required as proof by the panel which
will then make a recommendation tl'l
the city council, a\laching "reasonable
conditions and rt'!slrictions."
The City Council then has the option
of either granting or rejecting a "Pollu·
lion Prevention Certificate·• for the
operator.
Standard Oil Company, which has just
won the State Lands Commission's ap-
proval to drill another well from It.!
''Esther·• island in Seal Beach, could
nol be contacted for comment.
Store Robber
Gets $300 Loot
Manager Donald Charron of Buffum's
·men ste>re in Santa Ana "'a!I robbed of
$300 by an armed bandit Monday.
Charron told police he had just arrived
at v.·ork and was opening the rear door
of the store at 10th and Main streets when
accosted by a tall TMn in work clothes
and wearing sunglasses.
The gunman told Charron to put !he
money bag he was carrying into a brown
paper bag and to lock himself inside the
store. The suspect fled on foot.
City Pay Raise
Date Corrected
A story in ~fonday't edition of the
O 11 i l y Pilot about Huntington Be'9ch
city employes Incorrectly stated that
firemen and policemen received 11 per•
rent pay raises this yeer.
F'lrtmcn and polictmen reclcved 8.2$
percent pfly r1lse,, the a:ame 11 other
cily employes. Both public safety lfOUPS
asked for and 11re slill asking for 11
ptrc@nt pay lncrcasts, but lhelr requests
have not ~n gran ted.
I , .
With Vietnamese Forces
Soviet Newspaper Claims
Americans 'Invade' Laos
By United Press tnternaUoa1l
The Soviet 1overnment newapaper
Jzveatia said tonight a major force of
Soulh Vietnamese troop& "under the
direct com mand of Ameiican officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news
agency Kyodo said 4,000 to S.000 South
Vietnamese were involved.
Pentagon spokesman J , W, Friedheim
would not comment on tht Izvestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
statements by Secretary of State William
P. Roger.! and defense .!ecretary Melvin
Governor Sends
Austere Budget
To Legislature
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAt.fENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
$6. 73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with sharp welfare cuts and
"average citizen " Medi-Cal services.
1'he governor, vowing to spare Califor-
nians from another ''ruinous" tax in·
crease, proposed only a 2 percent boost
in state spending for the fi scal year
beginning July 1.
Even so, state government for the
first time since the great depression
would run out of cash next fall and
be forced lo borrow Crom private lending
in!:titullons to pay its bill.5.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con·
trolled Legislature "something must be
done and done immediately" about the
Welfare and Medi-Cal "mesa."
He also proposed:
-Increasing teaching load.! lo r
university and college professors without
raising their. salaries.
R. La~d tbal U.S. grOUjl~ lrDOPo would
obey ConlJ'fssloJ'lir.fitttures ! •1•lhlt
entering Laos or C&mbodla.
AirMllaW'tl~. by the Viel ~ng
foreign ministry, broaQcast by Radio
Hanoi tonight, said South Vietnamese
and Thai mercenary unit.! were carrying
out raid.! in Southern Laos, that
thousands more Vietnamese troops were
mas.!ed on the OOrder and that three
U.S. aircraft carrier.! had .5ailed into
the Tonkin Gull 1lear North Vietnam.
U.S. official.! in Wash Ing ton
acknowlectged that something was under
way in northwestern South Vietnam but
maintained silence on the reP9rls of
a stri~e against ~ Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Lllos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "outrageous
invasion" of Lao!.
Sen. George Aiken (R-Vt.), said Mon·
d~y night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
frontier .
The Kyodo news report, quoting
''reliable sources" in Saigon. said the
South Vietnamese. paratroopers were
flown In by helicopter and that U.S.
planes supported them. It Sdid no U.S.
,R:round forces were involved in the opera·
lion.
In Vietiane, the governrnent of Laos
did not confirm reports of any invasion
but said the United Slates had increased
i!.s heavy bombing raids into Laos in
the last several day!. ln S:ligon. the
U.S. command reported another da y of
massive 652 and jet fighter-bomber
strike.! in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs bitting the Ho
Chi Minh trail has now eurpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin ·and Tokyo ·
during World War II but supplies were
(Ste LAOS,, Pace 2)
By RUD I NIEDZIELSKI
01 1M Otll'J 1"11111 ll•H
With swift passage of an unprecedented
emergency law, the Stal Beach City
Council Monday night delcared three:
mile:s of its offshore waters as an open-
space recreation zone and enacted
pun is h men for "pollution-prone"
businesses wh ich may violate it.
The far-reaching actions, approved
unanimously by the four-meml.e;· colUlcil.
followed on tbe heels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Company to drill an
offshore well in the city's coastal waters.
Basis for the •·open-space waler
recreation land use :zone" were the 1915
~~= !.titr:'.~~!'~ri;:' •• ~.:~
ottlhore waters within ttl c·11y 11.rrill.!-:--· aicdttllnr1&:f ; Attorney Jbn BentsOn,
who dr8fted the law.
Effective today, only water sports or
water-oriented sports such as swimming,
sailing, surfing and boating will be allow·
rd within the three-mile limit.
Con:-.ercial enterprises, such as oil
companit'!s, oil tankers and pipeline. <.'Om·
panies miay only operate in these waters
if lhey have first qualified for 1 "P'lllu-
tion Prevention Certificate," to be issued
by the city.
Violations of the law are deC'lared
misdemeanors b1 the wording of the
ordinance and are punishable by a $500
fine , or six months in jail for each
day of violation.
City aides said th is means any oil
company would have lo appear in a
public hearing before the c i t y ' s
Environmental Quality Control Board
with convincing scientific evidence that
its operation would not endanger the
environmental quali1y of the restricted
waters.
Any discharge of pollutants -includ ing
oil products and other wastes -are
proh:'...":j u:-:;er the new law.
The ordinance. according to city of-
ficial s. was drafted to prott'!ct the public
interest. It cites the need to alleviate
the current "open space and recreational
land crisis" before It is exploited for
commercial purposes.
Exactly what impact the council action
will have on State Lands Commission-
approved Standard OU well Is still a
mystery.
The commission granted the drilling
permit last Thursday and described it
a.! a "fail-safe project." It was the
first oflshore drilling permit to be
granted since the Santa Barbara well
rupture two years ago. -No increased fund.! for the University
or California and only a small boost
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any · state
employes. although civil servants would
rece ive such new benefits as unemploy-
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
Valley Trustees to Ask
-Hold·the·line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family," Reagan saJd,
"there are years in whlch it is 1imply
not possible to do all that might be
desired .
"With unemployment mtich hl.gher than
we. would like and thousands of Califor-
nian.! "igorously seeking employment -
many of them anxlowi to work 1t any
job at , any living wage -our &tate
revenues art down ."
Inevitably, the budget was a record.
lt totaled $6.738 billion -roughtly $129
million more than tM $6.6 billion now
being s~nt and $258 million above whpt
Reagan oMglnalJy propo.!ed to the
I.egislatllre last year.
Reagan's key to balancing the new
budget was a. packa&e o( welfare and
Medi-Cal reforms he promi5ed to
"shortly" outline to the Legislature.
He submitted 1 welfare appropriation
totalinr $65 million less than current
JptndJng. n llJO WaJJ P17 mlllion le&S
than what Rtag111'1 fiscal expert• figured
(~et BUDGET, Page I)
State for Land Monies
Fountain Valley schol'll authorltle.! ar11
not ready to 1bandon plans for a $1.2
million crippled children'• school despite
the. lack of st1tt money to build IL
Trustees ol the F0tmtatn Valley School
District have decided to ask the state
for money to buy the land as if it
were golna: to be a l't!JUlar elementary
school.
"The area qualifies ror a 1tandard
ldlool," Mike ·Qrlck. district a&perin·
tend<nl explal!le"d. '"H we gel (und.<
for the Ian~ we can at le.ut hold
the site."
Brick Jtopes utro lllllcb ,.m be
• 1vailab.le.for \ht_ortbopedic xhooL but
lf lbey aren't. tht district would bave
to go ah~ad ind build 11 reaWar &ehool
on !ht land within two yur:a.......
The ortbopodlc school ls In 1 1pecillty
category with separate fwKia from tht
regular achool con1trucU011-State .tucb
tlon officials told the di.strict In t1rly
;
January that no more special school
money is avall1ble until there ts 1 new
bond .!ale.
Fountain Valley's orthopedic school
would serve about 90 orthopedically han-
dicapped students from Its own district
and trom the Huntington Beiich Union
High School. Ocean View, Huntlngtori
Beach City, Newport-Mesa Unlfled, Seal
Beech and Westminster school dlstricU.
Tht school would also be. combined
with . a stal)dard elementary school to
lmplemtnt a district plan for helping
orthopodleally handicapped Y•<Ulisl<r•
mii: with other students, while receiving
the s_peci.1 "'" they noot. "By i pply1ng for state aid on fhe land.
we'll at least have It when money I'
available for the orthopidlc •Choo\."
BMck Hid.
School o!OC11l11 howevtr, are 1tll1· ool
· rure when ·Wch special fund! wUJ be
avallable.
HEAD ON THE BLOCK
County Administrator Thomas
Apollo Hurtles
For Moon; Crew
Taking It Easy
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)
Apollo 14's astronauls, their spacecraft
docking problem myateriously behind
them, hurtled through space today mak-
ing up time lost at launch for America '.!
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
fliers Edgar D. Milcbell and Stuart
A. Roose were the quiettst team so
far in the Apolll1 program.
They had so little lo do that Mitchell
once suggested they "cotlld play a lot
of lie-tac-toe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it was
"perfectly normal."
A IO.second rocket burst Monday night
gave the moonship an extra two mile
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minute.! lost before
launch, so Shepard and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled.
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the flight
started.
Gerald D. Griffin, one of the mission's
three flight directors. told newsmen that
all thrr.e astronauts had dozed during
U:leir scheduled waking hours.
"I think that's perh!ctly normal," Grif.
fin said. "1 guess all of us do lhat
In our business every once In a while
when we don't hve much to do. Thars
why they were so quiet, 1'm sure . It'.!
been a couple of 'long daya 50 far and
thev're just resting.''
The landing in tilt ancient Fra Mauro
lunar valley at I: 17 a.m. PST was recon-
firmed when ground englnetrs t"Oncluded
the mechanism whieh couples the com-
mand ship ' and moon lander now wa.!
"working btautlfully. ''
But they sUll wtff: puzzled over what
went wrotli Sunday night when the dock·
·ing device failed to work the first five
times the" two spacecraft bumped toget~r. Ground exptrls speculated
some kind af foreign particle may hnve
jammed the delicate m e c h a n I 1 m ,
~ibly a 1Uvcr of Ice which melle<f
before the alxlh docking attempt.
Tl'le coupler will ~ used for a second
and nnar time Saturday to retrieve
·Shepard, 47, and !>lltchell, 411. after
they rehun from their 33 ~ hour.!I on
the moon.
f
Supervisor
Can't Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBACK
Ot tM 0.llJ l"lltt St•H
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried to fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
, ·in a board vote of 2 yes, 1 no, 1
abstention and l absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
lo oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
Dis~ict vowed after the defeat to try
apln to fire Thomas when the full
board i! pre.sent
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucial vote came.
He was off to Washington, O.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a long H.!t of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. BatUn
then offered the motion that Thomas
be given the required 30-day notice for
removal and that all his administrativ•
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R on a I d
Caspers of Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote, Battin and Caspers
balloted yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
ab.!ta ined.
Clark said he did not think the board
-should act on a subject of such Im-
portance "until all live board members
are present°'.
Phillips criticized Battin for releasing
details of his intentions to the press
before bringing them to the boa.rd.
He called for "dignity in such act\on3
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed the original ordinance creating
the office of adminislralive officer and
thought "we were putting too much
power in th!'! hands of one man ."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county government untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking that action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no indication of hi.! feel-
ings during the debate and did not speak.
Previously he had said he was shocked
at published reports in Santa Ana Of
Battin's intentiorui.
Thomas. a retired Navy captain, has
held his present post since October,
19 67. He has a staff of 20 and is
(See BAITIN, Page !)
Orange
11'eat.bJ!r
~ Cout
11\0se. low clouds mJght le~k I
liltle on Wednesday, but th.ings
should clear up by midaftemoon
when temperatures will inch up to
6S along the coast and 68 inland.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Las Vegas ca.sinos hove Dwight
0. Eitenl1ower on their mind;
that's becoll3e• hi$ likene.!s will
appear on a new "silVf:r" dollar
to be used in gambling. Page 3,
tllitl'• •
(tliferlll• ' (llol(tl/llf u, , ('"\ff'" -,,.,,.. c-k• II
(t'Mt...... I I
Dfi111 fl•!ll:H t OI~•• t ••ttwttl ,.... ' llllltrt•l-t ,.
l'IMttn 1 .. n
M-.COH It .t.11n Uf\Mn u
M..,,.... Lie"'"" t
..
/
¥ 0.llLY t-1l01 H T uftd.,-, F ebtu1t)' 2, .li11
u ~~~li Seeking
.
Dump Solution
lf an)'One knows where you can haul
about one mllll<ln cubic yards ()r foul·
smelling mud and oil sludge, please
call Huntington Beach City Hall.
The city staff needs ideas on how
to solve the problem of tbe 40-acre
rotary mud dump behind the Soulhem
California Edison plant that homeowners
dt5t'ribe as a blight on southeast Hun·
Ungton Stach. Shape Vp, Ladies •
Huntington
Give s Okay
For Park
Approval has bttn given to start
building the second largest park planned
in Huntingtoa Beach -a 41).acre Cilm·
munity park facing Edison High School.
City to Ask
For Federal
City Administrator Doyle M 111 er
reported to councilmen 1'1onday ulgbt
tbat the atafr was e1plorlng all
possibilities on eliminating obnoxious
odors coming from the dump at Hamilton
Avenue and Magnolia Street .
Instructor Richard Collato chats with members of
his ;<slim nastics" class at Huntington Beach YMCA.
From left are Janet Paulson, Ute Pa scoe, Jessi
Drusys, Kathy Schillinger, Frances Bennie and A1ar·
garet Cohn. New class begins Feb. 10 and con·
Unues for eight consecutive Wednesdays from 7
p.m. to 8 p.m. To register, call the YMCA.
The city cow1cll Monday night authoriz•
ed expenditures totalling $910,00ll for the
park, a 10,000 square foot community
center and a 5,500 square-foot fire sta·
tion.
Park Money
He said the ownen:, Joseph and Carl
Steverson, were cooperating, but oo solu·
tion had been found yet.
"The solution may be ·to close the
thing down permanently," ~iiller com.
meated. "We have. an opportunity to
purchase the property but we couldn't
afford' it even if they gave it to us."
From Pagel
BUDGET ... High Court Could Decide
Ri chard Bigler and Associates, Laguna
Beach, "''ill design the park and Jandscap·
ing, while William Blurock, Ney:port
Beach, will design the two buildings.
No estimate was given on when the
park will be con1pleted.
Huntington Beach is applying for
another te<i'eral grant totaling $145,704
to help develop land fo r the Central
Park.
Miller explained that the problem I11
lo find a place where the mud and
oil wastes, reportedly 80 feet thick in
places and dumped there over a period
of 25 years, could be taken.
the state would spend without "reforms. 11
Unlike this year, state welfare spend.
ing would be "closed ended" Md could
not grow beyond appropriations.
Freeway Vote Legality
The park land includes 12 acres of
solid ground along Magnolia Sleet, 20
acres of land that was a fonner county
dump, aad open space rights to the
Southern California Edi.son Company
easement.
'n1e city already has received a~ut
$1.5 million Jn open-apace grants · fro m
the Department of Housing and Urban
Development for first phase deveiopmeni
of the park, cast of Golden \\'est Street
between Slater and Ellls avenues.
There wUl be 11ibout 200 acres in the
first stage of the pi.rk. Development • is expected to begin iri the fall wHh
completion about two years later.
Monday nlght the council authorized
an application for $145,704 to meet
development costs for ,the second phase of
the park. This land, about 60 acres,
\\·ill be west of Golden West Street.
It is estimated that the cost of develo~
ing these parcels will be about $752,472
and the application to HUD is for 12lf.i
perc:-1t of that, development coordinator
Tom Severns said.
The city has the rest or the money
than ks to the voters' appreval last year
of the sale of $6 million in bonds for
the development of the central park,
cc!T'.,wtity parks and nel11hborhood
parks.
\rhen complcled, the central park ·will
cover 400 acres, will have two lakes,
a v•;ldlile preserve, campsites and bike
trails.
Lillian Ernst
Services Held
The solutions the city is exploring
are whether there is a cheroical solution
that would stabilize and harden the ooz·
ing mass so it could be hauled away
~r w~ether th~ material could be dumped
1n ~1n layers 1n county d,isposal stations.
Miller said that the city staff was
continuing to take .samples fr om a 11
deposits made at the dump to insure
tbey were permitted materials.
On Jan. 12 the Steverson brother.!
were served with a notice of violation
by the county's Air Pollution Control
District charging th~t smells from the
dump threatened public health. APCD
engineers blamed those noxious fumes
on wastes from an oil refinery a
material not covered in the license' for
tbe dump.
The council also was told that the
Western Oil and Gas Association was
also being asked for aid in solving the
problem since "it is an environmental
result of the oil Industry."
Homeowners, led by Mrs. Jerome P.
J"uergens, f i I e d a 408-name petition
charging that the dump was not properly
fenced and was a danger to children
r-:d pets. The petitioners urged the coun·
ell to "remove the blight from the area."
Public Works Director James Wheeler
said, in answer to a charge by
homeowners, that lt appeared that the
dump did encroach on a public right of
way on both Magnolia Street and
Hamilton Avenue. He also said that
the material sometimes runs off from
the dump in winter and city crews
either have to clean it off or close
Funeral services were held Friday in the road.!.
Nev.•port Beach tor Lillian Ge r des A letter from the city's recently fonned
Ernst, tAe aiotber4f ~e Jame.-,.~ En.vlro~!f:.! Council ur~ that the
er of w..i Qrjge ~tY ~udlcle!'J>li. ,. wl>~ !!" i'ecll1mlng the land and return·
trict tourt. · ' · · _ mg •to to public use be done as soon
Mrs. Ernst died Wednesday at the age as po~sible and that the city study the
of 72. She had Jived in Corona de! Mar possibility of chemicals being reclaimed
for 20 years. fro~ the waste to defra; ti.e cost.
She was an active member of the , Miller s~id that the staff would con·
Hoag Memorial Hospital Auxiliary and tinue working on the problem and t h a t
the Ney,•port Harbor Tuesday Club. ~e hoped to ~ave a . further report at
She leaves her husband Leo, or the .. ,,xt cc ··-·:1 meehng.
family home at 3720 Ocean Blvd.; her
son: a sister, Mrs. Ale1 Sinclair, of New-
port Beach and three grandchildren.
Services were held at St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church with Dr. Raymond
L Brahams officiating.
From Pagel
BATIIN ...
paid the county's highest salary, $41 ,748
a year.
In his list of charges BatUn accused
Thomas of "assuming d I c t a to r l a l
powers" not intended by the ordinance
cre::lin11 the Job.
He said Thomas placed the board
I~ a bad position with the public by
his recent forecast of a possible 3kent
tax increase ne1t year. He said the
CAO was "inaccessible to department
hrn .. '" and even board members at
ti~r · ··
DAILY PILOT ..
t -IAl'IG!: C0"5T l'UIL,l~ING COMl'A.MY
RoD•rt N. W•ei
l'rnld"'11 ,,. h9111htf
J•tlc R. C11rlt y
\'kt l"mld11<1I •r.d °"4"1 ~tr
Thom•• Kt••ll
EdllOr
Thom•• A. M11rphi11•
MIMtln9 llfh ...
Al•~ Dhki11
Wnl Orenee C"'"IJ ldller
Albtrt W. tilt t
A11od 1lt 1Elfl1"'
H•11tf11tlo• a..• Office
17&7S l 11ch lo11l1¥1r4
M1ll!11t Adir'''' P.O, l tlf 7tO, 91641
OtW Offkt1
L•OllJlf '"•ell: m l'otttt ••-Co••• M1•1! DI Wn t l 1y S!rMI
JtiWMt1 BtK/11 nn w .. 1 ••lbio• tovlt'Ylf'd s111 C1tmm11: as Hortfl El Ctmlrlt lltal
Jaycees Se eking
DSA Candidate
The Huntington Beach Jaycees ere
searching for a man or woman to receive
their annual Distinguished S e r v i c e
Award.
To qualify, contestants must be
bet\veen 21 and 35 years old, a resident
of Huntington Beach for one year, and
have served the community ln a signifi·
cant manner. The winner will be honored
at a February banquet.
Past recipients of the award have
come frmm both private and public
life. They include Pat Downey, William
Schweikert. Jerry Matney. Alvin M.
Coen, Monte Nitzkowski and Vincent G.
Moorhouse.
Nomination forms for the award are
available by phoning awards chairman
Jack Anderson, 962-4195.
Roger Gidney
Services Held
Funeral services were held today for
retired Hun tington Beach Police Officer
Roger M. Gidney, 66, ~'ho died Saturday.
Fln11t rites were held in Westminster
Memorial Park. Interment followed
there.
Mr. Gidney, of 92.l E. Bay Ave ..
Ne\vport Be11ch. was a charter member
of the Huntington Beach Moose Lodge
and also the Elk!.
An eight-year member of the Hun·
lington Beach Police Department, tilr.
Gidney leaves his wife. Reta, 11nd sisters
Emalene Sylvia and Lucy Woester.
In all, Reagan's budget called for cut·
ting federal, state and local welfare
spending in California by $606 million .
It now is proliferating at the rate of
$2.3 billion annually.
"We are not endeavoring to deprive
the truly needy of the shelter, food
and clothing necessary to sustain them
thr ough their temporary hardship,"
Reagan said.
'By L. PETER KRIEG
OI 1111 D•llY ,.l .. t S11!1
The Calirornia Supreme Court may
be asked to rule on the legallty of
the Newport Beach freeway election.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti·lreeway measures should
be put to a vote -even though the
City Council may not be beholden to
the results of one of them.
However, Angelo Palmieri, attorney
for the three foper city officials who
~ught tke writ of mandate to halt
he election, said this morning he may
take a siJnilar 11equest to the higher
court.
"But we are firm in our resolve to
strike from the welfare rolls those in-
dividuals and families who are eJTlployed,
who are paid a living wage, and who
find their ways to taxpayer generosity
only because of the manner in which
some of the laws are written ... we
must rewrite our laws to eliminate those \l.'ho are Jess than needy." Palmieri said, "Jt is too lat~ ~o make
For Medi-Cal, Reagan proposed a new a fo"'!lal appeal of the ~ec~10~, but
"average citizen" plan whereby reci· ., my chents feet the . Issue ts s1gruficant
pients -except those in nursing homes · enough, to seek a writ from tbe Supreme
-would be entitled to benefits more Court.'
in line with what self-supporting Califor· Palmieri pointed out the court could
nians receive from private insurance refuse to hear the case.
he.alt)!. plans. He said a decision will be made "within
Reagan s u g g est e d increasing state a day or two ,"
Medi-Cal expenditures by $!05 millton Palmieri said, "We have to consider
-about $100 million less than would is thi s the kind of thing the Su preme Court
be required without an "average citizen" would be interested in considering their
formula. He pegged total federal , state calendar and the other things they face ."
and county costs for Medl.Cal at $1.3 He said, however, at the moment,
billion. his clients "are leaning toward" pressing
The Republican governor told the the lssue.
Legislature that welfare and Medi-Cal Judge Robert L. Corfmaa, after a fi ve-
have "'reached the crisis state in hour hearing, rejected the petition for
counUess counties" and ''we can (either) the Superior Court writ sought on the
take the easy path toward ruinous and grourids the people have no right to
confiscatory taxation or we can elect decide these "non-municipal issues.''
the more diffi cult alternative of bringin11 The ballot propositions are an initiative
the programs under control." asklng the city coouncil to cancel an
In higher education, Reagan bud11eted existing agreement with the state on
$337.I million for the Uni\'ersity of the route of the coastal freew1y1hrough
California -about the same as it noW Corona del Mar and a charter amend·
receives -and $316 million lor the ment requiring f u tu re referendums
state COllege.s, an increase· <lf f,5 .4· iD.lllion. bek>re any ne.w route agreements can
He shrugged off their requests for
far larger expenditures by observing,
"it is a tribute to our educators that
they express their goals and aspirations
as definite requests. However, in a time
of acute revenue shortage, there is a
great deal which education can do to
economize."
He suggested that university professors
return to a teaching load closer to nine
classroom hours per week, and that
state('"college instructors strive for U
hours.
Beach Cotmcil
Hits SCE Hike
The city of Huntington Beach Is trying
to short-clreuit Southern C a 1 i f o r n i a
Edison Company's bid for a 16.2 percent
rate hike.
The City Council passed a resolution
Monday night urging the California
Public Utilities Commission to refuse
the increase.
The couri cil was told the hike would
cost l o c a 1 taxpayers an additional
$1,424,194 to maintain city services. This
would represent a burden of 41.9 cents
on the city's $1.45 tax rate, the resolution
said.
From Pagel
LAOS ...
still getting through to Cambodia and
Southern Vietnam .
The allegation by the official Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
1,1.·ere commanding the purported invasion
force added a new clement of gravity
to Kosygin's earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders. •
"i'i1ajo r military detachments of the
Saigon regime under the direct command
of American offietrs have invaded
southern regions of Laos, livestia said.
..U.S. aviaUon is making day and night
raids on lower Laos to support the
troops of the inv11ders .••
Seven Hearings
Face Huntington
Plan~ommission
Huntington Beach p J a n n l n g com-
missioners face a busy session tonight,
haviag scheduled no fewer than seven
public hearings.
At their meeting, scheduled for 7 p.m.
in city council chambers, they will con·
sider these major projects:
-A variance to permit the construction
of a 137-space mobile home park near
Staler Avenue and Gothard Street.
-A 168-unit planned resident i a I
devel opment earmarked for the vicinity
of Newland Street and Slater Avenue.
-A varianct to permit the construction
of a 140-bed rest home near the in·
tersection of Fl<lrida Street and Garfield
Avenue.
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
OAIL,'I' •IU>T, with '°""" Iii .to..w-lt.t H-"-~• II ~1>~!111'fd Nllf' ~--J-••Y Ill MP.•rt!• t.i11'M fW .......... 9Mc"-
Be's No DuIDIDY
Hl KNOWS A LOT
AIOUT SHAGS • , •
HFS Pllm
SHAGGY HIMSIU'I
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, .. _l rol1•JeM, 0rfll'IH C.HI M lkhiftt
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T-'•~lrloM m 41 642 ... JJ.1
ffe11 w .. t111JMm eel M0·1lZI
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C11PY11iih1, 1t7\. Or,.. Ct1d .....,ltfttot
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rl• -.111 !Nnll' W ..,......,i.-.. .........
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m HIM .t '"°''llM -·
Marin e's 'Ma squerade' 'fails
A young Marine stood stock·sUll ~tonday when approached by 1 con-
tingent of unHormed offtcers, but he miserably failed their close inspecUon.
He tried -they charged -to pretend he was a mannequin when they
searched a Santa Ana hardware store v.•ltere a burglar had broken a window.
Kenneth R. CJIUn, 24 , of El Toro 1'.1CAS, was tllJ<cn from Clirk Dye Hard·
wart, 210 S. Alain St, and booked on suspicion of burglary.
Not only police officers. but San ta Ana Fire Ocpartmenl unit sarrlvtd at
the st ore, with red llshts and sirens. during the preda.,.,11 burglary case.
be slgned.
In thelr court complain t, the plaintiffs
-former mayors Charles E. Hart and
.fan1es B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenz -claimed the
results of both propositions would be
illegal and Jocal referendums may be
applied to municipal issues only.
In announcing his decision, Judge
Corfman said the two propos!Uons, "in
and of themselves . . . do not appear
to be illegal to me on the face ol
ii."
Corfman eariier, in a key debate over
whether the actions would be legislative
or administrative, left the door open
for additional litigation after the election,
if the council does adopt the initiative
measure.
Palmieri had contended the action was
administrative and therefore unsuitable
for a public vote.
Corfman replied, "Assuming it is an
administrative act, where is the la1v
that says you can't have an election
even though the result is nil."
He said, In effect, the administr11tive
versus legislative point, as well a! all
other points, could be more fully explored
in court proceedings after the election.
The charter amendment, even If
adopted. still must be ratified by the
state legislature.
Corfman let it be known almO!l from
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allowing the election. telling Palmieri
"The point is whether or not we are
premature in trying to evaluate" the
issues in1•olved.
He rePJ:atedly pointed out, as did in-
tervening 'attorneys Roy B. Woolsey and
Arthur Strock, that additional remedies
are available after the vote.
He said the state certainly could bring
IMal proceedings to enforce the rontract
and indicated other litigation ls possible
to void any binding council action.
Noting that the council could. on its
own, schedule votes on either issue. Corf·
man said, "The question here is whether
people have the right to do what the
council has a right to do."
At the same time, he said, "Whether
what they do Is legal or illegal has
nothing to do with it."
The ~tarch 9 election was forced by
petitions circulated by the Freeway
Fighters.
Corfman pointed out that courts are
traditionally liberal in their thinking
when it comes to revoking a right to
vote.
The judge stressed the issues are not
clear cut 11nd based his decision partially
on that fact.
"Basically," he said, "this is a dispute
as to whether the people have the right
to exercise this vole.
"If the issues are not open and shut,"
he said, "they've got that right."
It will be called Edison Community
Park. The community center will serve
as a recreational facility, meeting hall
and dance area.
Of the $910,000 estimated cost : $500,000
will go to devel optng the park: $215,000
to building the community cente r, and
$175,000 for the fire station.
Half the cost of the community center
might 1>e saved if Blurock can use the
same design he just completed for Murdy
Park Community Center on Golden West
Street.
The only p~rk _planned in Huntington
Beach which 1S bigger than Edison Park
is the proposed central park which may
cover as much as 400 acres when finish·
ed.
Murdy Park, with 17 acres l! the
biggest existing park .in the city.'
Saturday Class
Schedule Slated
For Youngsters
Saturday morning Is a school day for
more than 60 children in LeBard Elemen·
Lary School, Huntington Beach.
But what they do is their choice.
Saturday morning classes are part of
a nei,y ~nrichment program developed
by Pr1nc1pal Robert Landi. Three choices
are offered on a strictly voluntary basis.
The young studenLs may take art,
drama or Spanish. Each course is one
hour long and will meet for ten weeb
starting this Saturday.
"It was opened to anyone on a first.
come, first-serve basis.'' Landi explained.
"And there is ' no pressure on these
classes. They're doing it for fun ."
The enrichment program matches Lan·
di"s theory of making school exciting
for children.
"We always hope kids will want to
come to school," Landi added.
The enrichment program appears to
have succeeded in that. There were
more children than the three volunteer
teachers could handle.
"We may expand in the future, lf
this works out," the principal said.
A $10 fee, plus the cost of materials,
In charged for each of the classes.
Landi asked parents to allow children
to help decide what they wanted to
take.
The Saturday session has sparked In-
terest in some LeBard teachers for after
school programs. Three teachers have
already volunteered to teach such things
as knitting, sewing and art after lhe
normal school day to youngsters who
want to learn.
All enrichment programs will be
repeated. and perhaps expanded. ne1t
yea r, if successful this year. Landi said.
DO YOU LIKE
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAYE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
IANTA ANA. OllANGt TU5TIN C.11 , • ,
AL.DI N'S RID HILL CAllPnl
& OttAPl.ltl U
11374 lrrlne. Tv1tln, C•I. ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
IK..., <llU !*If .. p111f 11 N ........ IMdl •~o co.11 ,..., eeui-1a, ,_,_,..,. .... tv
t•rri.r loil'J -1111y1 i.y1111HUJJ1Mnthty1
"""'""' 1n!Jnaol...._ 12.tl -lflly,
Someone apparenl\y trying to tum on the lighl.'5 punched an alarm button
lnst~ad, said Investigators.
HOUIS: M°"' T1w1o Tllur>., 9 h 5:3 0 -frl., 9 "' ' -Sot., •:30 h 5
( -1 ---• I ------------~ ... -· -r ;.·· -
7
-
7
Newport Be~.~~
EJ~ITIO N
->
'
Todayfs FJ!l'il t
N.Y. StOekS
VOL. b4, NO. 28, 3 SECTIONS, 3b PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY Z, 1971 TEN CENTS
'
\ .
Freeway Election Ca·se May Go to High Court
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tllt D.lllY 1'1111 S!ttt
The California Supreme ~Court may be asked to rule on the egallty of
the Newport Beach freeway el ction.
A Superior Court judge Mo ay ruled
the two anti-freeway measures should
be put to a vole -even though the
City Council may not be beholden to
the results of one of them.
However. Angelo Palmieri. attorney
for the three former city officials v.•ho
sought the writ of mandate to halt
the election, said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palmieri said, ••it is too ·late to make
a formal appeal of I.he deeision, but
my clients feel the issue is significant
e.aough to seek a writ from the Supreme
lllurt."
Palmieri pointed out the court could
refuse to hear the case .
He said a decision will be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said. "We have to cOnsider
is this the kind of thing the Supreme Court
would ht!: interested In c0nsiderlng their
calendar and the other things they fact.''
He said, however; at the moment,
his clienUI "are leaning toward" pressing
the issue.
Judge Robert L. Corfman, alter a five..
hour hearing, rejected the petition for
the Superior Court writ sought on the
grounds the people have no right to
dec ide these "non-municipal issues."
The ballot propositions are an initiative
asking the city coouncil to cancel an
exiSting agreement with the state on
the. route of the coastal freeway through
Corona del ti.tar and a cllarter amend-
ment requiring f u t u re referendums
before any new route agreements can
be signed . 1
Jn their court complaint, the plaintiffs
-former mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenl -claimed lhe
resulls of both propositions would be
illegal and local referendums may be
applied to municipal issues only.
In announcing his decision , Jud~e
Corfman said the two propositions, "111
and of themselves . . . do not appear
to be illegal to me on the face ot
it."
Corfman earlier. Jn a key debate over
whether lhe actions would be legislative
or administrative, left the door open
for additional litigation after the eltctlon,
if the council does adopt the initiaUve
measure.
Palmieri had contended the action waa
administrative and therefore llll!uit.able
for a public vote.
Corfman replied, "Assuming it It an
administrative act, where is the law
that says you can't have an election
even though the result is nil."
He said, in effect, the administrative
(See FREEWAY, Pa10 I)
Battin
,'-
Tries, Fails to Fire Official
YOUNG ARTIST LANI THURSTON p1SPLAYS HER PAINTINGS
In • Sickbed, 10-year-old DiKOvers World of Col.or
Inward Artist
Youngster is Lani in Wonderland
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 lk O•ll~ ,llot l!IU
Locked in a qui et. conva lesct'nt world,
Lani looked inside hersel f -like Alice
in Wonderland -and found a new world,
li vely and vivid.
The eyes she shut so tightly in the
hospital are open now.
"I don ·l want to sec all the blood,''
i;he told a nurse. recalling the crimson
nightmare burned into her final moments
of consciousness when stricken by a
type of cerebral hemorrhage.
Today, Lanice r-.1a rie Thurston sees
another kind of red, plus spla~hy yellows
and bubb ling b!ues. in the inward, visual
poetry of the dedicated artist.
She lets you see them too.
Lani Thurston, 10. never sensed that
she had a reservoir of talent in draw ing
and oil pa inting until !he long, tiresome
days of rest and recupe1)--ation follo\\'ing
her near-fa'.al artack .
One of those days. !he dam broke.
She was appa rently inspired by the
wqrk of her grandmo ther. Mrs. Jack
Curnow, of 963 Coronado Drive, Costa
li-1esa , so .!ihc tried too.
Bo y, 7, Un hurt
. In Cliff Plunge
Seven-year.aid Karl Kendrick ap-
parenlly escaped injury after he plunged
over a '45-foot cll ff in Newport Beach
Sunday afternoon. •
Police said the boy, lhe SOil or Dr.
and Mn1. Frank E. Kendrick. 1915 Ga laxy
Drivl'. Newport !each. was playing In
Galaxy Park 'A'hen he tumbled over
the cliff which drop!! an estimated 45
feet to Upper Newport Bty.
Re~ue workers called to the scene..,
could find no indication of external or
tnte rnal Injuries. The boy wa& he Id
SundllY ni~ht at Hoag Memorial Hospit11I
for observation and released ~tonday.
•
"I didn't paint them. not before J
1A·as sick," says Lani, whose schedule
is still considerabty slower - in terms
of vigorous play -then those of her
friends and schoolmates.
Critics will te\\ you, however, I hat
she has more skill and sophistication
in her brush-wielding fingers and artistic
vision than persons live limes her age.
''Mostly nowers," she says "'hen asked
about subject matter.
"I pa int at least once a week , usua lly
three hours," adds Miss Thurston. a
Tujunga resident who studies art In
the Harbor Area while staying with her
crandapr::-:'..;.
She will exhibit her work Sunday,
Feb. 14 from I to 6 p.m. at The Bluffs
Center on Vista det Oro in Newport
Beach.
1 ;1;e an y artist, shC' specializes.
"I've been doi ng •':isies late ly.''
Like an}' art:~·. she can be crafty.
''\\Thal kind of prices? I don't know.''
says the sparkly young lady who only
recc::lly sold her second painting.
Unknowingly, Lani 's youthful career
as an artist was launched Aug. 21.
1968. when she sat up in bed suffering
a nosebleed and a knife-like pain in
U:e head .
''Nana ," she declared with the solem-
nity of a sick child.
"I ha ve a tumor on the brain."
Her diagnosis Was. wrong, but doctors
-already poised when the gravely ill
child arrived unconsc ious at Hoag
1'1emorial Hospital -found it was a
subarochnoid hemorrh11ge.
Distir_zuished from the commonly
known stroke by the ract It Is In !be
skull lining, not the brain tissue, the
11 rniclion is rare in chlldrCfi .
for Jnyone, however, It Is lerrlb1y
costly.
J1er mother Janiet. about to r•"marry,
had let her i n su ran c e lapse -it
had a JO.day grace period and Lan i
wat stricken on the 31st -Jeadlna
jSee ARTIST, rage 21
"
V .S. in Laos?
Red Newspaper
Claims Invasion
By United Pre11 l.nternatlonal
The Soviet government newspaper
Izvestia said tonight a major force of
South Vietnamese troops "under the
direct command of American officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news
agency Kyodo said 4.lXXl to S,000 South
Vietnamese were involved.
Pentagon spokesman J. W. Friedheim
would not comment on.the Izvestia repo rt
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
statements by Se~l4fylQ{ State WUU4rn
P. Rogers and def~nse ·Secretary Mi!lv in
Governor Sends
Austere Budget
To Legislature
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACR.V.fENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
$fi. 73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with sharp welfare cuUI and
''average Citizen" Medi-Cal services.
The governor. vowing to spare Califor-
nians from another "ruinous" tax in-
crease, proposed only a 2 percent boost
in slate spending for the fiscal year
beginning July l.
Even so, state gov<'rnment for the
first time since the great depressio n
would run out of cash next fall and
be forced lo borrow from private lending
institutions lo pay its bills.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con-
trolled Legislature ''something mu st be
done and done immediatel y .. about the
Welfare and r-.tedi-Cal "mess.''
He also proposed :
-Increasing teaching loads f or
university and college professo r& without
rais ing their salaries,
-No increased funds for the University
of California and only a small boost
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employes, although civil servants would
receive such new benefits as unemploy-
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
-Hold-the -line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family," Reagan said,
''there are years in which it is simply
!See BUQGET, Pa1e.Z)
R. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey Congressional strictures against
entering Laos or Cambodia.
An official statement by the Viet Cong
foreign ministry, broadcast by Radio
llan.oi tonight, said South Vietnamese
and Thai mercenary units were carrying
out raids Jn Southern Laos. that
thousands more Vietnamese troops were
~se~ on ~ • .39rder a.tid tb
1
at lhr«
U.S. aircrart carrfers h1il aailed' bllo
the Tonk.In Gulf near North Vietnam.
U.S. officials in w a s'b in gt on
11cknowledged that sornething was under
way in northwestern South Vietnam but
maiiitained silence on the reports o{
a strike aga inst the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kos ygin spoke Monday of an "outrageous
invasion" of Laos.
Sen . George Aiken (R-Vt .). said Mon-
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
fronlicr .
The Kyodo news report, quoting
"reliable sot.1rces" in Saigtin. said the
South Vietnamese paratroopers were
flo'A'n in by helicop ter and that U.S.
planes supported them . It said no U.S.
ground forces were involved in the.opera·
ti on.
In Vietiane, the government of Laos
did nol conf irm reports of any in\'asion
but said the United States had increased
its heavy bombing raids into Laos in
the last several days. Jn Saigon, the
U.S. command reported another da y of
ma ssive 852 and jct fighter·bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonna ge of bombs hilling the Ho
Chi Minh trail has now surpassed the
tonnage that. fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World War II but supplies were
!".till getting through to Cambodia and
Southern Vietnam .
The alleganon by the official Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
were commanding the purported invasion
force added a new element of gravity
to Kosygin's earlier statemenb the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders.
"Major military detachment~ of the
Saigon re gime under 1he direct command
of American officers have invaded
iSee LAOS, Page Z)
Apollo Hurtles
For Moon; Crew
Taking It Eas y
SPACE CENTE R. Houston (UPJl -
Apo llo 14'8 astronaul.l!i, their spacecraft
docking problem mysteriously behind
them. hurtled through space today mak-
ing up time lost at laun ch for America's
th ird moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
niers Edgar D. Mitchell and Stuart
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program .
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they "could play a lot
of tic-tac-toe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The astronauUI dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it was
''perfectly normal."
A IO-second rocket burst Monday night
gave the moonship an extra two mile
a~ hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 4tl minutes lost before
launch , so Shepard and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the flight
started.
GeraJd D. G~ilfin, one of the mission's
three flight directors, told newsmen that
all three astronauts had dozed during
their scheduled waking hours.
Teach~rs Set Pay Demands
Proposal to Be Submitted to Trustees Tonight
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI "'-0•11'1 ,lilt Sttff
A teachers' contract proposal, which
features a $900 raise for starting tea chers
and a possible $8,300 salary increase
for teachers with top experienct, will
be presented to the Newport-Mesa Board
of EducaUon tonight.
The proposal was ratified Monday night
by the 70-member Representative Council
of the Newport.Meta Edocation Assocla·
lion.
N-MEA President Brad Thurman, a
Corona del Mar HIKh School science
teacher, said he will l>ring the 12--artlcle
master contr11ct lo the board so that
negotiations can begin In pre:paratlon
for the aMOC:ialloo's April 12 deadline
for acceptance or rejection.
The board w1n mtel at ,. p.m. at
the CClsta Mesa High School lyceum. . --
••
Prime feature of the contract proposal
is the salary schedule. Currently teachers
with no experience, a Bachelor's degree
and 11 teaching certificate tire paid $7,181
for the 10.monlh school year.
The N-MEA proposal seeks a starting
salary o( $8.000.
Under the exisling contract. the salary
scale is based on continuing teacher
education and number of years ex·
perience. The current maximum salary
level is $14 ,S75 for a teacher with a
bacheklr'a: degree and certificate, w 1th
60 additional units and 12 years ex·
perlence.
In negotlatli'Jg the cxtstlng contract,
N-li-1EA repre&ent.alives 1trongly IUP-
ported extending the scale or some form
of P•Y recognition to teachers who have
more than 12 yrara experltnce and 60
units .
ln their new proposal. the teachers'
organization asks that teachers who fall
into this category be paid $1,000 ra ises
al the ISlh, 18lh, 21st, 24th, 27th and
30th years.
This means that a teacher could earn
a maximum of $22,800 with all of the
$1 .000 raise,, on the increased salary
schedule proposed by N-MEA.
Another feature of the proposal Is
that experienced teachers hired by the
district be given credit for up to 10
years prior experience out.side the
district. Current contracts set a five-year
maximum on credit given ~xperlenced
teachers.
Teachers 11lso are asking the district
to bear the cost of a comprehensive
bllsic 11nd major medical plan, dtnlill
insurance, vl~ion lnsurnnce, prepaid
(See TEACHERS, Pa;o II
·-
Supervisor
Can't Get
Three Votes
By J ACK BROBACK
01 1111 o.ur ,lift 1111t
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried to fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vote of 2 yes, 1 no, 1
abstention and I absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
to _oust the county 's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
District vowed after the defeat to try
again .to fire Thomas when the full
board ii present.
Supervisor David Baker wu the
absentee when the crucial vote cJme.
He was off to Washington, D.C. oa
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a long list of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. Batt.in
then offered the motion that Thoma.s
be given the required 30-day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor I\ o n a I d
Caspers or Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote, Battin and Casper&
balloted yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervi.sor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not think the board
should act on a subject of such lm-
portance "until all five board members
are present".
Phillips criticized Battin for releaslng
details of his intentions to the press
before bringing them to the board.
He called for "dignity in such sctions
end not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed the original ordinance creating
the office of administrative officer and
thought "we were puttlng too much
power in the hands or one ma11."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county government untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking that aclion be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no Indication of his feel-
lngs during the debate and did not spea k.
Previously he had said he was shocked
at published reports in Santa Ana of
Battin's intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy captain, bas
held his present post since October,
19 .67. He has a staff of 20 and ill
!Ste BA1TIN, Page %)
Weather
Those low clouds might leak a
llt!le on Wednesday, but things
should clear up by midafternoon
when temperatures will Inch up to
65 along the coast and 68 inland.
INSIDE TODA\'
Lo& Vega.t crutn.01 have Dwight
D. Eisen hower on their mind:
that's becau.se his likeness will
appear on a new "silver" dollar
to be 11.sed in gambling. Page 3. ·-. C.lllw!tl• J (lliK-1119 u, ,
ChlllnM ,,.t4
(flllllu u
CrwJ"""" It
Dtltt" ,..,I(" f
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A~lt L"'••n 1• M•ITl•tt Li<t'll•• t
'
-
·• U'-ILY PILI.I• .. •
Rel1ab Hospital Eyed
From Page 1
FREEWAY ..•
1en:us legislative point, as well as •II
other points, Ct>uld be more fuJly explored
in court proceedings after the election.
Newport Plan.ners Study Heights Request The charter amendment, even If
adopted, still must be ratified by the
atate legislature. ~
A pnbllc beating on a request to con-
vert a Newport lielghts convalescent
Jic.me into an alcoholic rehabilitation
center will be conducted by the Newport
Beach Plannlng Commission Thursday
ate p.m.
Raleigh Hills Hospital. lnc., is seekirtg
a use pcnnit lO allow the center in
what now is the lllllhaven Convalescant
Hospital, 1501 E. 16th St, at the in·
tersectlon of Dover Drive.
Richard H. Barnett, vice president of
Rnleigh Hills, said this morning the
cr.nter will house only 35 patients, com·
p:red with the present 44 ln the nursing
heme.
Tre said the staff will total "17 or
lt" and although there will be no resident
physician, "we will almost ln effect
have a full-time physlclan."
He explained that three or lour •
Newport Beach doctors will stall the
CacllUy on 1 part-Ume arrangement.
In :Oddlllon, be said, the ceot.r will
be staHed~ by reglslered and prai:Ucal
nurses and lrained counselors.
In the appli.Catlon for the use permit,
&rnelt told the planning commission
the center "will be a specialized hospital
for treatmeut and rehabilil.allon."
He said medical and counseling
5ervlces will be provided In a "home-like
and lesS clinical atmosphere."
Describing the proposed program,
Barnett said patients would be primarily
"businessmen and professional people''
who, would be admitted for an average
12-day treatment period.
The average fee, he said, would be
$1400, plus the cost of six additional
one-day visits spread throughout a follow·
up period.
The letter stressed the center would
"not be for detoxification" and acute
No Americans in Laos,
Laird Tells Newsmen
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird declared today
that no American troops are being used
in Laos, and that none will be. But
he declined to further discuss allied
military operations in that area.
Questioned by newsmen alter testifying
en Capitol Hill, Laird refused to comment
on widespread news reports that South
Vietnamese forces had moved into Laos,
uuCer command of U.S. offiars, in a
&trike on Communist operations there.
"But Mr. Secretary," one reporter
said, "every news medium in the world
ls reporting that this operation is taking
place, including Izvestia (the Soviet
ne,Yspapcr)."
"The only fa ct ls that Izvestia is
* * * From Page 1
LAOS •..
southern regions or Laos, Izvestia said.
"U.S. aviation is making day and night
r aid! on lower Laos to support the
~ tr~ of the lnvaden ...
not speaking the truth," Lafrd said.
Izvestia said a major force of South
Vietnamese troops "under the direct
command .of American off icers" had
moved into Laos in an action to take
over southern provinces.
"Has this administration opened a
credibility gap?" Laird was asked. He
replied:
"We will not open any credibility gap
••. there will be and there are no
American ground combat t r o o p s
operating in Laos. We are proceeding
fully in acc<>rd with restrictions approved
by Congress. I have no intention of
asking Congress to change these restric·
lions."
"When will we find out what is going
on abou t this operation?" a reporter
&houted as Laird strolled away.
He said the answers would have to
come from Gen. Creighton Abrams, U.S.
commander in Vietnam.
Lillian Ernst
Services Held "The Pentagon plans with the help
of the Saigon military to :strike blows
at the patriotic forces in Laos and to Funeral service!! were held Friday in
cnpture the souther n provinces of the. Newport Beach for Lillian Gerdes
country bordering o~ the .~mocratic Ernst, the mother of Judge James Turn·
Repub!lc of (no.rth) y1elnam.. er of West Orange County Judicial Dis·
Laotian off~als. in Vle.~bane. 4enled tricL C-Oart. kn~~ :of....any,taW.,J 'll_l~ll) •)!ut • .. ·1w'tt'i. Ernsf died Wednl!sda}' at the age
srld \heY.v.'Outll stlliiy-yg1n s #tnar,ks.,. t1f ·72. She had lived in Corona de! ?i.-far a~ a cabinet meetl~g \Vednesdar. Tiiey for 20 years.
d1:I :eport ~orth V1~tnamese a~d C?m· She was an active member of the n;~1st Thai guerrillas <:'"ossing into Hoag Memorial Hospital Aux ili ary and
Tna1land wi~ he~vy equipment from the Newport Harbor Tuesday Club.
the reported mvas1on area ot southern She leaves her husband Leo, or the
L· ~s. . . . family home at 3720 Ocean Blvd.; her
Stewart llensl.ey, UP I .chief d1pl~ma~ic son; a sister, Mrs. Alex Sinclair. of New· c<,'~espondent 1n Was~1ngton, said 10• port Beach and three grandchildren.
te. hgence repo~ts had 1nd lc_ated 8 N~rth Services v.·ere held at St. Andrews
V::!tnamese buildup, In cluding tst.abh sh· Presbyterian Church with Dr. Raymond
r-,,t of a nc~ headquarters, in the l Brahams officiating.
ct::ipong-Savara1ne area of Southern Laos
l' I that it v.•as assumed South \1iet·
namese troops would move into that
area to clear it out.
CBS reported today that the plan work·
td out by Washington and Saigon in·
vl"lved use of 25,000 South Vietnamese
and 9,000 U.S. troop!!. with the Americans
limited lo operatiorui inside South Viet·
n;r n,
The CBS report said President Nixon
ap..,roved the plan last Wednesday.
Vientiane's airport v.·as put on alert
\\'hen officials captured what they called
an "admitted Communist saboteur" in·
side the grounds, and Amer ican charter
a: .. craft were fl own to neighboring
Thailand for safety. Air America, which
flies manv clandestine flights in Laos,
sent its 20 lo 24 planes from the \Vally
Airport to Udom Air Base in Thaila nd.
DAILY ~ILOT
ORANGE C0.1.51 f'UBLISHING COMP.I.NY
Robert N. Weed
Pr11\Mt>1 •flll Publl1Mr
J•ck IL C ur11y
Vk.t Prwtkl.,,r •nd 0..,1rtl M1n1oer
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Mtn&~ll'tV f011'0r
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NIWPOrt ,,,,n 'lly Edllor
Newport IMch Office
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•
Froin Pnge 1
TEACHERS. • •
prescription insurance. life insurance. In·
come protection insurance and vandalism
and theft insurance. The health policies
would be for dependants as v•ell a!i
teachers.
The district currently pays for a healtlt
and major medical insurance for teachers
and all but $100 of the same coverage for
dependants. There is no dental or vision
insurance currently on district contracts
and teachers can purchase life insurance
policies through N-i\-1EA.
The 1,@member N:MEA is asking
for sick leave on the basis of 15 days
per school year. Currently all district
employes are granted sick leave on the
basis of one day for each month of
service. which means teachers get 10
days per school year.
They are also seeking personal necessi·
ty leave of five days per school year.
Under the existing contracts. teachers
are given six days of personal necessity
lea\·e per school year, but it comes
out of sick leave time.
A third major area of the contract
proposal is a nev.• grievance system.
The proposed system is basically idcn·
tical to lhe existing one except !hat
it ·1,1:ould bring in an arbilrator as a
final lJleasure. Currently the last level
is an appeal to lhe board of edycalion.
Bart llake. executive secrerary ol N·
MEA. said the ne"' syste1n is desiitncd
to give Lhe teacher an equitable standing
in the hear.in& of the grievance.
"Since the administration Is really an
outgrowth of the board. being empowered
to act by board policy, "·e feel an
impartial arbitrator Is the best means
of settling disputes," he explained.
From Pnge 1
ARTIST ...
to devl$tating medical bllls.
Friend$ established a fund lo help
defray the thousands of dollars Jn cruls
faced by ht: .not: ~rand stepfRther-to-be.
Lant wlll someday be. able to indulge
in the sports and fun now re5ervcd
for others. bul plans to make the painting
she discovered in convalesctnca a
lifelong cartt>r.
"\\'hen 1ummer comes 1'11 palnl even
r· : , " sh' says.
patients would be treated at regular
hOl~lll~ before adllllttanct.
The commissioners Thursday wW also
conduct hearings on five other use pennit
appllcations.
Roger Cook ls seeking a rehearing
on a previously approved permit asking
for an amendment requesting a five-foot
setback, i1Jstead of an eight-foot setback
at 510 South Bay Front, Balboa Island.
Land Evolution Jnc., of Santa Ana
is seeking a reduction in the number
of off.street parking places at 332 Marioe
Avenue, Balboa Island, and C & F
Enterprises, Inc., of Costa f\fesa is re·
questing permission to initiate a take-out
restaurant at 2307 West Balboa Blvd.
James Wallace of Tustin is seek.ing
a permit for a take-out ice cream parlor
at 21081fz West Ocean Front and Joas
Juska of Gaptain January's, 810 E.
Balboa Boulevard, is seeking a live enter·
tainment permit.
From Page 1
BUDGET ...
not possible lo do all th at might be
desired.
"With unemployment much higher than
we \\'ould like and thousands of Califor·
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work at any
job at any living wage -our state
revenues are down.''
Inevitably, the budget was a record.
It totaled $6.738 billion -roughtly $129
rnillion more than the $6.6 billion now
being spent and $258 million above what
Reagan originally proposed to the
Legislature last year.
Reagan's key to balancing the new
budget was a package of welfare and
Medi-Cal reforms be promised to
"shortly" outline to the Legislature.
He submitied a welfare appropriation
totaling $65 million Jess than current
spending. It also was $217 million less
than what Reagan 's fiscal experts figured
the stale wo uld spend without ''reforms.''
Unlike this year, state welfare spend·
ing would be "closed ended" and could
not grow beyond appropriations.
In all, Reagan's budget called for cul·
ting federal, state and local welfare
spending in California by $606 million.
It now is proliferating at the rate of
$2.3 billion annually.
"We are not endeavoring to depr ive
the truly needy of the shelter, food
and clothing necessary to sustain them
through their temporary bardsh.ip, ·•
Reagan said.
"But we are firm in our resolve to
strike from the welfare rolls those in·
dividuals and t:amil~ who are Jmployed.
'Who are .~ct a liv:ini wate, af\d who
find their t.·ays to taipayer 1enerosity
only because of the manner in which
some of the laws are written ... we
must rewrite our Jaws to eliminate those
who are less than needy."
For Medi-Cal, Reagan proposed a new
"~verage citizen" plan whereby reel·
p1cnls -except those in nursing homes
-would be entitled to benefits more
in line with what sel f.supporting Califor·
nians receive from private insurana
health plans.
Phoenix Grilled
For Second Da y
In Assa.ult Case
UPI Tol.,.._11
A President Prays
President and Mr s. Nixon stand with heads bowed during today's
National Prayer Breakfast sponsored annually by prayer groups in the
House and the Senate. At right is Mrs. Everett Jordan, wife of the
Senator from North Carolina.
Seal Beach Zones Waters
In Urgent Anti-oil Move
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of 1~1 D1!1~ Pllll fttll
With swifl passage of an unprecedented
emergency law, Uie Seal Beach City
Council Monday night delcared three
miles of its offshore water& as an open·
space recreation zone and enacted
pun Is h m en for "pollution-p!'one"
businesses v.•hicl1 may violate it.
The far-reaching actions. approved
unanimously by the four·mem\,t:~· cQuncil.
fo\!owed on the heels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Corh pany to drill an
Roger Gidney
Services Held
offshore ll-'ell In Lhe city's coastal waters.
Basis for the "open-space water
recreation land use ione" were the 1915
incorporation laws of the city or Seal
Beach which include three miles of the
oCfshore .watets within Its city limits,
according to c: ; '-Attorney Jim Bentson,
who drafted the law.
Effective today, only waler sports or
water-oriented sports such as swi mmin g,
sailing, surfing and boating will be allow·
rd within the three-mile limit.
Cor.irr.ercial enterprises, such as oil
companies, oil tankers and pipeline l!Om·
panies may only operate in these waters
if they have first qualified for 1 "Plll\U·
tlon Prevention Certificate,'' to be issued
by the city. ,
Violations of the law are declared
misdemeanors in Ule word ing of the
Funeral services were held toda y for ordinanet? and are punishable by a $500
relired l!untlngton Beach Pol ice Officer fine, or six months in jail for each
Roge r ,_.!, Gidney, 66. v.·ho died Saturday. da y of violation.
Final rites v.·ere held in Westminster City aides said this means any oil
Memorial Park. Interment follov.·ed company would have to appear in a
there. public hearing before the c i t v 's
f\1r. Gidney. of 923 E. Bay Ave.. Environmental Quality Control B0ard
Corfman let it be known almost from
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allowing the election. telling Palmieri
'''rhe point is whether or not we are
premature in trying to evaluate'' th e
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed out. as dld In·
tervening attorneys Roy B. Woolsey afl d
Arthur Strock, that additiona l remedies
are availa ble after the vote.
He said the stale artainly could bring
legal proceedings to enforce the cont ract
and indicated other litigation ls possible
to void any binding council action.
Noting that the council could, on its
own. schedule votes on either issue. Corr.
man said. "The question here is whether
people have the right to do what the
council has a right to do."
At the same time. he said. "Whether
what they do is legal or illega1 ha;;
nothing to do wilt\ it."
The to.larch 9 eiection was forced by
petitions circulated by the Freeway
Fighters.
Corfman polntcd out that courts are
traditionally liberal in their thinking
when it comes to revoking a right to
vote,
The judge stressed the issues are no:
rlear cul and based his decision partially
on that fact.
"Basically," he said, "U1is is a dispute
as to \\1hethe r the people have the right
to exercise this vote.
"If the issues are not open and shut,"
he said, "they·ve got that right."
Woolsey, representing former city
councilma n Al Forgit a~ an intervenor.
cited precedent for allowing public votes
on the opening or clO!ing of public
streets.
The freeway agreement signed ln 1968
Involves no more than agreements on
overpasses and street closings -it has ·
nothing to do with where the freeway
goes.
Judge Cor fman had pointed out the
state could "run the free way right
through the city'' without the consent
of anyone.
Strock. who had intervened to cite
federal law regulating freeways over
navigable waters (Pacific Coast Freeway
would cross Upper Ne1o1'port Bay) con·
tended federal clearances had not been
received.
Judge Corfma n said the argument did
not affect the issues in question.
Judge Corfman . in his ruling, 1Jso
made it clear that the dollar cost ~r
the election did not constitute a gross
waste of taxpayers funds.
''The anwunt of money involved (about
$9,000)," Corfman said, is not that signifi·
cant and he noted that legal costs.
if there were. lo be an appeal , would
likely eXceed that figure.
Froin Pnge 1
BATTIN ...
paid the county's highest salary, $41,748
a year.
In his list of charges Ballin accused
Thomas of "assuming d i c t a to r I a I
powers" not intended by the ordinance
creating the job.
He said Thomas placed the board
In a bad position with the public by
his recent foreca st of a possible 34-cenl
tax increase next year. ~le said the
CAO was "inaccessible to department
heads and even board member1 at
times."
Newport Beach, was a charter member with convincing scientific evidence that 1\Ja yo1· Cuts Sa la1·y
By TO~\ BARLEY of the Huntington Beach f\1oose Lodge its operation \.\·ould not endanger the
01 1111 0111., P11o1 11111 and also the Elks. environmental quality of the restricted HAVERHtLL, Mass. (AP) _ 1.1ayor
A prosecutor's grilling of Gary Harold An eight·}'ea r member of the Hun· \Vaters. .James F. \Valdron has cut his salary
Phoenix went into its second day today tington Beach Police Department. lvlr. Any discharge of pollutants -including from SJS.000 to $4 ,500 as an example
as the tall Costa l\1esan again denied he Gidney leaves his wife, Reta, and sisters oil products and other wastes -are of 1he austerity program he says Ule
was the man v.'ho raped. robbed, kid· Emalene Sylvia and Lucy Woester. prohi!:i~cd under the new law. city government must begin . naped and sexually humiliated nine worn· ----------'--------'-----------------._.-._:cc::::__:::._:::.=:_.::_::'.'.::_ ___ _
en who have testified against him in his
Orange County Superior Court trial.
Deputy District Attorney Michael Ca-
pizzi and the 29·year-old bachelor fre·
quently tangled this morning as the prose-
cutor again went over details of Phoenix'J
arrest last July 25 on charges of rape,
assault with intent to commit rape. kid·
naping. robbery and sex perversion.
lf the jury finds Phoenix guilty, Capiul
\vill ask them to impose the death sen·
tence.
Capizzi's objections to the copious note.
taking of the defendant and the use of
those notes in the witness box were over·
ruled today by Judge William ?i.turray
after a long argument in which the jury
"'as barred from !he courtroom.
Phoenix continued lo use his notes and
add 11 few more to his well·filled note ·
books as the trial went into ils fourth
week.
Phoenix vigorously denied to deputy
publie defender Roderick Riccardi th1:1t
he \\'as the man who attacked nine women
in four Orange County communi ties in a
2.8-day spelt last summer.
Me quickly admitted under Riccardi's
questioning that he \vas convicted 11
years ago in Kansas on charges of rape.
burglary aod assault and substquently
spenl seven years in a reformatory in
1h11t state.
lt 1>!as also stressed by the deftnse
that Phoenix , roncerned by the poMiibility
!hat he w:is suspect in a series or. r11pes .
~·cnt to the Huntington ·Beach police sta·
tinn lt1~I July 25 to discuss the situation
v.·ith Officers.
Photn lx said polict had quesl!Ontd him
11s he left the Huntinaton Beach htahh
sfltl where ht "'l'IS emplo~·td as assistant
mRn:iaer and this lnvt..Sti~allori. plu5 R
1e\er phnnc c1111 ~t his Co~ta ~fess homt'
lrd him to check with Huntington Beach
officers.
Ptrotnli w11s lmmMiately arrested and
,;ubsequcntlv named in a complaint which
listed 33 felony counts.
, ••
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HE KNOWS A LOT
ABOUT SHAGS •••
HE'S PRETTY
SHAGGT HIMSlLF!
DO YOU LIKE
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAVE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
SANTA ANA. ORANGI
ty&TIN C•ll •••
ALDIN'S
RED MILL CAttl'nS
& Dll:Al'll!ltllS
11l74 lrvlM, Tvttln, C1! •
131-334<
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 PIC".;:entla Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Moo. 1'1"11 Tliun., t to S:JO -F<I., t to t -Sot., t :30 h> s
• • -I
7
7
' .. ...
l;osta Mesa
EDITION
Today's Final
N.Y. Steeb
VOL 64, NO. 28, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
I TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1971 TEN CENTS
Board to Hear Teacher Pay Demand·s Tonight
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ot ""' Dllll'I' 1'1191 S11ff
A teachers' contract proposal, which
features a $900 raise for starting teachers
ind a possible $8,300 salary increase
for teachers with top experience, will
be presented to the Newport-Mesa Board
of Education tonight.
The proposal was ratified f.Ionday night
by the ?~member Representative Council
ef the Newport·Mesa Education Associa·
ti on. ·
N-MEA President Brad Thurman. a
Corona del Mar High School science
teacher, said he will bring the 12-article
master contract to the board s~ that
negotiations can begin in preparation
for the association's April 12 deadline
for acceptance or rejection.
The board will meet at 7 p.m. at
lhe Costa Mesa High School Lyceum.
Prime feature of the contract proposal
is the salary schedule. Currently teachers
with no experience, a Bachelor'g degree
a t in --· ..
YOUNG ARTIST LANI THURSTON DISPLAYS HER PAINTINGS
In • Sickbed, 10..ye•i-old Discover.s World of Color
Inward Artist
Youngster is Lani
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 ,~. 01111 1"1111 lit!!
LoCked in a quiet. convalescent world,
Lani looked inside herself -like Alice
in Wonderland -and found a new world,
lively and vivid.
The eyes she shut so tightly in the
hospital are open now.
"I don·t want to see all the blood,"
11he told a nurse. recalling the crimson
nightmare burned into her final moments
of consciousness when slrjcken by a
type of cerebral hemorrhage.
Today, Lani re ~1arie Thurston sees
1nother kind of red, plus splashy yellows
and bubbling blues. in the inward, \•isual
poetry of the dedicated artist.
SRe lets you see them too.
Lani Thurston, 10, never sensed that
ehe had a reservoir of talent in drawing
and oil painting until the long, tiresome
days of resl and recuperation following
her near·f~'.al attack .
One of those days. the dam broke.
She was apparently inspired by the
\\"Ork of her grandmothe r, Mrs. Jack
Curnow. of 963 Coronado Drive, Costa
Mesa. so · tried too.
"l didn't paint them , not before I
was !lick," says Lani, whose schedule
is still considerably slower -in terms
of vigorous · play :... then those of her
fr iends and schoolmates.
Critics will tell you, however. that
she has more skill and sophistication
In her brush.wielding fingers and artistic
vis ... :in persons five times her age .
"Mos:.:y £lower$," she say~ ·vhen asked
about subjecl m11tte~.
"I paint at least once a week:. usually
ttiree Muri." adds Miss Thurston, a
Tujunga resident who studies art In
the Harbor Area while staying with her
r ·1rlar-· ~·
She will exhibit her work Sunday.
Feb. 14 from I I l 8 p.m. at The Bluffs
Cenler on V!11t1 del Oro in Newport
Beach.
•
in Wonderland
r ;i.~ any artist, she specializes.
"I've been doing · · isies lately."
Like any art:~·. she can be crafty.
"What kind of prices? t don't know,"
says the sparkly young lady who only
re c::::ly sold her second painting.
Unknowin gly, Lani's youthful career
as an artist was launched Aug. 21,
1968, when she sat up in bed suffering
a nosebleed and a knife-like pain in
t!-:! head.
"Nana," she declared with the solem·
nity of a sick child.
"I have a tumor on the brain.""
Her diagnosis was wrong, but doctors
-already poised when the gravely ill
child arrived unconscious at Hoag
Memorial Hospital -found it was a
subarochnoid hemorrhage.
Distir.:uished from the conlmonly
known stroke by the fact it is in the
i;kull lining, not the brain tissue, the
a'.::iction is arc in children.
!See ARTIST, Page %)
Freeway Work
Bidding Sought
Bids for a variety or projects are
being sought now by the State Division
<lf Highways, including a Newport
Freeway interchange at the Cost.a. Mesa
city border.
Funds tolaling Sl.439,200 including
124.000 from the city is available for
the job involving a shorl extension or
the eight-lane freeway.·
The lanes will be extended one.fourth
of a mile south lo the busy intersecUon
of Bristol Street and Palisades Road.
Bids ror the Route 55 lmprovement
project will be opentd March 11 at
the State rnvtslon of Highways' District
7 headquarters in Lo! Angele.Ii.
and a teaching certificate are paid $7.181
for the IO.month school year.
The N·MEA proposal seeks a starting
salary of $8,000.
Under the existing contract, the salary
scale is based on continuing teacher
education and number of years ex.
perience. The current maximuln salary
level ls $14 ,575 for a teacher with a
bachelor's degree and certificate, wit h
60 additional units and 12 years ex·
perience.
fn negotiating the existing contract,
N·MEA representatives stror1gly sup-
ported extending the scale or some form
of pay recognition to teachers who have
more than 12 years experience and 60
units.
In their new proposal, the teachers'
organization asks that teachers wbo fall
into this category be paid $1,000 raises
at the 15lb, 18th, 21st, 24th, 27th and
30th years.
This means that a teacher could earn
•
a maximum or $22,800 with aJI of the
$1,000 raises on the increased salary
schedule proposed by N·MEA.
Another feature or the proposal ls
that experienced teachers hired by the
district be given credit for up to 10
years prior experience outside lhe
district. Current contracts set a five-year
maximum on credit given experienced
teachers.
Teachers also are asking the district
to bear the cost of a comprehensive
basic and major medical plan, dental
insurance, vis.ion insurance, prepald
prescription insurance, life insurance, m.
come protection insurance and vandalism
and theft insurance. The health policies
would be for dependants as well a1
teachers.
The district CW'rently pays for a health
and major medical imurance for teacher!
and all but $100 of the same coverage for
,dependants. There Is no dental or vision
(See: TEACHERS, Pace %)
ire omas
lJ .S. in La.os?
Red Newspaper
Claims Invasion
By United Press International
The Soviet government newspaper
Izvestia said tonight a major force of
South Vietnamese troops "under the
direct command of American officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news
Mesa Councilmen
'1.tt;.?' ' ....
Rid the Books
Of 'Busy Work'
A variety or business was cleared
up by the Costa Mesa City Council
In a relatively brief meeting Monday
night but !he bigger issues will come
two weeks hence.
City Manager Fred Sorsabal was
ordered to investigate just who actually
owns a controversial property occupied
by a boatyard and true terminal
threatened with loss of its wne exception
permit.
A hearing on the issue was stymied
recently when applicant Karen Fenn told
officials the land at 2097 and 2099 Placen·
lia Avenue is being sold.
She has appealed a city.imposed ban
on major boat repair at the facility
to the planning commission as the latest
development in a year.Jong hassle.
But if the land -and she was the
owner or record at the time -is indeed
sold. the purchaser must begin the
permit application and proceedings <lll
over again.
A number of other items were passed
on for council consideration by the plan·
ning commission. whose meeting one
week ago was an equally light session.
Councilmen approved a zone exception
permit allowing Oroweat Baking Com·
pany Inc .. to use part of its quarters
at 845 Baker St.. for a relay depot
and retail sales outlet.
They also approved permits for three
billboards to be erected by Orange Coast
Advertising. of Santa Ana, for sales
of a new subdivision in the works.
Approval was given for structures at
767 W. 18th St., 2075 Harbor Blvd ,
and 3101 Harbor Blvd., but a fourth
sought at 571 W. 19th St., was rejected.
agency Kyodo said 4,000 to 5,000 Soulh
Vietnamese were involved:
Pentagon spokesman J. W, Friedheim
would not comment on the Izvestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
statements by Secretary of State William
P. Rogers and defense secretary Melvin
R. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey Congressional strictures agairut
entering Lao.s or Cambodia.
ln ofllclal ttai.m!n1 by -tlll.viereoni
foreign ministry, broadcast by Radio
Hanoi tonight, said South Vletnameee
and Thai mercenary units were carrying
out raids in Southern Laos, that
thousands more Vietnamese troops were
massed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed into
the Tonkin Gulf near North Vietnam .
U.S. officials In Wash in g ton
acknowledged that something was under
way in northwestern South Vietnam but
maintained silence on the reports or
a strike against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
in Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spo~ Monday of an "outrageous
invasion·• or La os.
Sen. George Aiken (R·Vl.), said Mon·
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
fron tier.
The Kyodo news report. quoting
"reliable sources" in Saigon. said the
South Vietnamese paratroopers were
rlnwn in by heilcopter and that U.S.
planes supported them. It said no U.S.
izround forces were involved in the opera·
lion.
In Vietiane, !he government of Laos
did not confirm reports of any invasion
hut said the United States had increased
its heavy bombing raids into Laos in
the la.!it several days. In Saigon. the
U.S. command reported another day of
!See LAOS, Page %)
Council Okays Sale
Of Used Golf Carts
Sale of a fleet or 50 used golf carts
from the municipal golf and cou.itiy
club was approved J\.londay night by
the Costa Mesa City Council .
Canadian Cart Sales. of Orange . offered
$7.025 for purchase of the rental vehicles
and the price was accepted over lower
bids.
HEAD ON THE BLOCK
County Adminlstr•tor Thom••
Apollo Hurtles
For Moon; Crew
Taking It Easy
SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPI)
Apollo Ifs aslronaut.s, their spacecraft
docking problem mysteriously behind
them, hurtled through space today mak·
ing up time lost at launch !or America's
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
niers Edgar D. Mitchell and Stuart
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program .
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they "could play a lot
of tic·tac·toe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it was
"perfectly norma l."
A IO·seconcl rocket burst Monday night
gave the moonship an extra two mlle
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve th~ 40 minutes lost before
launch, so Shepard and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the flight
started.
• Gerald D. Griffin. one of the mission's
three flight directors, told newsmen that
all three astronauts had d6zed during
their scheduled waking hours.
"I think that's perfectly normal ," Gtir.
fin said. ''l guess all of us do that
in our business every once in a while
!See APOLLO, PAGE!)
~hoenix Denies _Sex Raps
Prosecutor Grills Costa Mesan for Second Day
By TOM BARLEY
Of ,... Deify l"lllt ll•lf
A prosecutor's grilling of Gary Harold
Phoenik, went into its second day today
as the tall Costa Mesan again .denied he
was the man who raped, rob~. kid·
naped and sexually humiliated nine wom·
en who have testified agalnst him in his
Orange County Superior Court trial.
Deputy District Attorney Michael Ca.
plnl and the 29-year.old bachelor Ire·
qucntly tangled this morning as the prose-
cutor again went over details of Phoenix's
arrest last July 25 on charges of r11:pe,
assault with intent lo commit rape, kid·
napi"g. robbery and sc:r perversion.
lf the jury finds Phoenix guilty, Capizzi
will ask them to Impose the de11th sen·
tence,
f
·---
Capiu.i's objections lo the copious note·
taking or the defendant and the use of
those notes Jn the witness box were over·
ruled today by Judge William Murray
after a long argument in which the jury
was barred from the courtroom.
Phoeni:s: continued to use hi1 notes .and
add a few more to h.ls well·filled note-
bool<s a1 the trial went into it& fourtb
week.
Phoenix vtgorously denied to deputy
public defender Roderick Riccardi that
he was the man who attacked nine women
In four Orange County communiUCs In a
28-day 1pell last summer.
lie quickly adm itted under Rlccard i's
Questioning that he wa~ convicted 11
years ago in K11nsas on charges of rape,
burglary anrl {'S.Sault and 11ubsequently
:i
spent seven years in a reformatory in
that stale.
lt was also strtued by the defense
that Phoenix, concerned by the possibility
that he was suspect in a series of. rapes,
went to the Huntington Buell police ala·
lion list July 2S 10 discus"S the situaLion
wlth Officers.
Phoenix sa id police had questioned him
as he left the Hunllngton Beach health
spa where he wat employed 1s 1ulstant
manager and !hit Jnvesligation plus a
lattr phone call 1t his Costa Mesa home
led him to check with Huntington Beach
offlcer.s.
Phoe11i' was Immediately arrested and
subsequently named In a compll!ilnt whi ch
listed al felony counts. ·
--
Supervisor
Can't Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBACK
Of IM D1llY" ,1111 llllf
Superv~or Robert Battin of Sant.a. Ana
today tried to fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vole of 2 yes, 1 no, 1
abstention and 1 absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
to oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
District vowtd after the defeat to try
again to fire Thomas when the full
board is present.
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucial vote came.
He was off to Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a Jong list of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. Battin
then offered. the motion that Thomas
be given the required ».day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R o n 11 d
Caspers of Newport Beach said he qreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote, Battin and Caspers
balloted yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not think the board
should act on a subject of such Im·
portance "until all five board members
are present".
Phillips criticized Battin for releasing
details or his inte.ntions to the press
before bringing them to the board.
He called for "dignity in such actions
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed the original ordinance creating
the office of administrative officer and
thought "we were putting too much
power in the hands of one man."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county gove rnment untrue.
Phill ips also read a note from Baker
asking that action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no indication of hi! feet·
lngs during the debate and did not speak.
Previously he had said he was shocked
at published reports in Santa Ana of
Battin's intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy captain. has
held his present post since October,
19 .67. He has a staff of 20 and 1&
(See BATl'IN, Page %)
Orange Coast
Weather
Those tow clouds might leak a
little on Wednesday, but thing1
11hould clear up by: mldafternoon
when temperatures 'Will inch up lo
65 along the cout and 68 in land.
INSIDE TODAY
La.s Vega,, c~ino.s havt Dwight
D. EisenhoWf:r on thtir mind;
that's btcau.st hU likent.ss will
appear on a ntw "R"ilvtr" dollar
to be used in gombUng. Pag11 3,
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I
\
' .
es Wate1~
B1· RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of llilf O.I"' '"" tl•ll \
With swUt passage of an unprecedented
emergency law, the Seal Beach City
Council Monday night delcared three
miles of ita o[fshore we~rs as an open·
space recrentlon Z()(le and enacted
pun Is h men for "pgllutlon·prone"
bu'.':nesses v.·hicl1 may vl.olate it.
The far-reaching actions, approved
unanim~:::ly by the four-memt.t;. council.
fol'"wed on the heels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Company to dri11 an
off~:lOre WC'll in the city's coastal waters.
Basis for the "open-space water
recreation land use ione" were the 1915
incorporation laws of the city of Seal
Bea:'!h which include three miles of the
offshore waters within Us city llmits,
a ~cording to .' Attorney Jim Bentson,
w io drafted the law.
Effective today, only water sports or
water..oriented sports such as swimming,
salling, surfing an d boating will be allolV•
,.d "'ilhin the three.mile limit.
Co:·-·.ercial enterprises, such as oil
cor-'1anies, oil tankers and pipeline .:om·
panies may only operate in these waters
if thi?y have firsl qualified for 1 "P'>llU·
tion Prevention Certificate," to be issued
by !he city.
Vlolations of the law are declared
mir.demeanon: ln the wording of the
ordinance and are punishable by a $500
fine, or six months in jail for each
day of viol · · 1. •
City aides said this means any on
corp-:any would have to appear in a
pub'ic hearing before the c It y' s
E ,,·ironrn ental Quali ty Control Board
vo'iU1 convincing scientific evidence that
its op:-ration wou1d not end.anger the
env·ronmental quality of the restricted
~·aters. : ·r discharge of j ·· ··~T\ts -lncluding
oil products and other wastes -are
p:--· ·-· · r · : the new J3w.
The ordlrulnce, according to city of-
ficf~ls, was drafte<I to protect the public
in': ~st. Jt cites the need to alleviate
the current "open space and recreational
land crisis'' before it ls erploited for
commercial purposes.
E::acUy what Jmpact the council action
Will have on State Lands Commission-
appr.a.ved Standard Oil well is still a
mys!.ery.
The commiSfiion· granted the drilling
permit last Thursday and described it
as a "Cail·safe projeet." It was the
first ()ffshore drilling permit to be
gra~ted since the Santa Barbara wtll
rupture two years ago.
A President Prays
President and Mrs. Nixon stand ~·ith heads bowed during today's
National Prayer Breakfast sponsored annually by prayer groups in the
House and the ·senate. At right is Mrs. Everett Jordan, wife of the
Senator from 'North Carolina.
No Americans in Laos,
Laird Tells Newsmen
WASHINGTON (UPI I -Defense ~Secretary Melvin R. Laird declared today
that no America!\ troops are being used
in Laos, and that none wil l be. But
he declined to further discuss allied
military operations in Ulat area.
10 days. It quoted "reliable sources''
but said official sources v.·ould only call
the report speculative.
From Pq , l _ Ql!estlOned. by ••w•11>•• after wtlly!n1
on eap1t6i HHl , Laird refused to comment
on widespread news reports that South
Vietnamese forces had moved into Laos,
under command of U.S. oflicers, in a
strike oo Communist operations there.
The Bolay.ens Plateau lies almost in
the center of the southern panhandle
of LBOI, contend lftWetn th•. bordera
of South Vietnam and .. Tlia.lland on the
cast and west and just north of Cam·
bod/a. It is believed to be a major
i;anctuary for some of the 70,000 North
Vietnamese troops U.S. sources have
reported in Laos.
BA'ITIN :::
paid the county's highest salary, f4l,748
a ye"r.
In his list of charges Batun accused
Thomas of "assuming dictatorial
powers'' not Intended by the ordinance
crc"!ing the job.
He sa!d Thomas placed the boa.rd
In a bad position with the public by
his recent forecast of a possible 34-cent
tax increase next year. He said the
CAO was "inaccessible to department
head! and even board members at
times."
l\filitary Base Pact
Talks Set in l\fanila
MANILA (AP) -Talks will begin
next \l·eek to lay the groundwork for
rev'"'.on or the U.S.-Philippine military
ba.c~J agreement, the U.S. Embassy an.
ncu ce:i today.
Th'.? embassy said U.S. military legal
()f'. ~ rs will begin meeting Feb. 12 with
Pl' _•irie representatives to "jdentlfy
arc: · of difference and difficul ty " in
th'.? ~'i.year agreement, whlch expires . ,, . '" .
. .
9,AILY PILOT
011.AHOE COAiT P UtLISffntCI COM,AAV
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"But Mr. Secretary," one reporter
said, ';every ne\vs medium in the world
is reporting tha t this operation is taking
place, including Izvestia (the Soviet
newspaper)."
"The only fact is that Izvestia is
not speaking the truth.'' Laird said.
Izvestia said a major force of South
Vietnamese troops "unde r the direct
command of Am erican officers" had
moved into Laos in an action to take
over southern provinces.
"Has this administration opened a
credibilily gap'..'" Laird "''as asked. He
replied :
"We will not open any credibllily gap
••• there will be and t h e r e are no
American ground combat I r o o p s
operating in Laos. We are proceeding
fully Jn aceord with restrictions approved
by Congress. I have no intention of
asking Congress to change these restri c·
lions."
"When will we find out what is going
on about this operation?" a reporter
shouted as Laird strolled away.
He said the answers would have to
come from Gen. Creighton Abrams, U.S.
commander in Vietnam.
The Kyodo News Agency report 3ald
the South Vietnamese troops had landed
in the highland region of the Bolovens
Plateau of Laos, and that the operation
y,·as expected to la.!it between seven and
From Page l
TEACHERS. ••
insurance currently on district contracts
and teachers can purchase life insurance
policies through N-MEA.
The 1,000.membei N-~1EA is asking
for sick leave on the basis of 15 days
per school yea r. Currently all district
employes are granted slck leave on the
basis of one day for each monlh o(
ser\'ice, which means teachers ge t 10
days per school year.
They are also seeking personal necessi·
ty leave of five days per school year.
Under the existing contracts. teachers
are given sii days of personal necessity
leave per school year, but it comes
out of sick leave tlme.
A third major area of the contract
proposal is a new grievance sy5!em.
The proposed system Is basically Iden.
lical to the existing one except that
It would brlng in an arbitrator as 11
fini.l measure, currently the last level
is an appc:il to the board of ~UC31lon.
Bart Hake, executive secretary of N·
h-fEA. s11id the new S}'Sftm I!! de~h?ned
to give the teacher an equitable itandinl
ln rhe ht'nrlng or the gr!cvanct.
"Since the adm.lnlstr3llon Is ttally an
tJutgrowth of the board, bt.lng emJ>l'werttd
to act by bonrd policy, ~·e feel fin
fnipartial arbitralor Is thf bes! means
1 f srttliri; di~pute!I,'' he expl!ined.
I
From Page l
LAOS • • •
massive B52 and jet fighter-bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs hitting the Ho
Chi h-1inh trail has now surpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World War JI but supplies were
still getting through to Cambodia and
Southern Vietnam.
The allegation by the official Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
were commanding the purported invasion
force added a new element of gravity
to Kosygin 's earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders.
"Major military detachments of the
Saigon regime under the direct command
of American officers have invaded
southern regions of Laos, Izvestia said.
"U.S. aviation is making day and night
raids on lower Laos to SU,Pporl the
lroop3 of the invaders .•.
"The Pentagon plans with the help
of the Saigon military to strike blows
at the patriotic forces in Laos and to
capture the southern provinces of the
country bordering on the Democratic
Republic of (north) Vietnam."
Laotian oUicials In Vientiane denied
kno wledge of any allied incursion but
said they v.·ould study Kosygin's remarks
at a cabinet meeting Wednesday. They
did report North Vietnamese and Com.
munist Thal guerrillas crossing into
Thailand with heavy equipment from
the reported invasion area of southern
Laos .
From Page .l
ARTIST ...
For anyone, however, it is terribly
Ct'~'.:y,
ltcr mr ··.er ,JJnice. about to ""·marry,
had lei htr insurance lapse -It
hod a ""·day grace period and Uni
w~s stricken on the 31st -leading
to deva!ltating medical bills.
Fricnrls established a fund to help
defray the thousands of dollars In coats
f:i"ed by h~ o•' -and stepfather.to-be.
Lflnl will someday be ablf!' to lndulge
in the sporls and fun now rtserved
for othtrs, but plans to make the painUng
s' dlscovered in convalescence a
ur11tong caretr.
''When summer comes l'll pa int ev~n
, " ,.L.., SAy!).
I
'
Austere Budget Bared/
• Welfare, Medi-Cal Reagan Asks Cuts in
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov~ Ronald
Reapn today sen\ the Legislature 1
$6.13 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with 11harp welfare cuts and
''average citizen" Medi.Cal services.
The governor, vowing to Hpare Califor-
nians from another "ruinous" tax in·
creue, proposed only a 2 percent boost
in state spending for the fiscal year
beglnnlng July l.
Even so, state government for the
first time since the great depression
would run out of cash next fall and
be forced to borrow from private lending
institutions lo pay Its bills.
Reagan warned tht Democrat-eon-
trolled Leglsla1ure •isometbing mwt be
done and done immediately" about the
Welfare and Medi.Cal "mess."
He also proposed:
-Increasing teaching loads r o r
unlvf:rsity and college professors without
raising their salaries.
-No increastd funds for the University
()f California and only a small boost
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employcs, although civil servants would
receive such new benefits as unemploy-
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
-Hold.the-line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family ," Reagan said.
''there are years in which It is simply
not possible lo do all that might be
desired.
"With unemployment much higher than
we would like and thousands of califor-
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work al any
""fob at any living wage -our state
revenues are down ."
lnevitably,'the budget was a record.
lt toLaled $6.138 billion -roughtly $129
million more than the $6.6 billion now
being spent and $258 million above what
Reagan originally pr.posed to the
Legislature last year.
Reagan 's key to balancing the new
budget was a package of welfare and
Medi-Cal reforms he promised to
''shortly" outlinl to the Legislature.
He submitted a welfare appropriation
totaling '65 million less than current
spending. It also was $211 million Jess
than what Reagan's fiscal experts figured
the state would spend without "reforms .''
Unlike this year. state welfare spend·
ing would be "closed ended" and could
not grow beyond appropriations.
In all, Reagan's budget called for cut·
ting federal, slate and local Wtlfare
spending in California by S60e million.
It now is prollferating at the rste of
From POfle l
APOLLO' •..
when we don't have much to do. That's
why they were 'so quiet, I'm sure. It's
been a couple or long days so far and
they're just resting."
The landing in the a11clent Fra Mauro
lunar valley at 1:17 a.m. PST was recon·
firmed when ground engineers concluded
the mechan ism which couples the com-
mand ship and moon lander now was
"working beautifully."
But th ey still were puzzled over what
v.•ent wrong Sunday night when the dock·
ing device failed to work the first five
time! the two spacecraft bumped
together. Ground e1perts speculated
some kind of foreign particle may have
jammed the delicale me ch a n is m ,
possibly a sliver of ice which melted
before lhe sixth docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a second
and final lime Saturday lo retrieve
Shepard, 47, and MitchelL 40, after
they return from their 33\.1 hours on
the moon.
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HI KNOWS A LOT
AIOUT SHA~S •••
HE'S PRETTY
SHACiCiY HIMSWJ
$2.S billion annually.
"We are no! endeavorlng lo deprive
the truly needy of lhe sheller, food
and clothing necessa{y to sustain them
through their temporary hardship,''
Reagan said.
"But we are firm in our resolve to
strike from the welfare rolls those in·
dividuals and fam ilies who are employed,
who are paid a living w~ge, and who
find their ways to tarpayer gener05ity
Writ Sought
only because of the manne.r in which
some of tht Jay,·s are written ... we
must rewrite our laws to eliminate those
who are Jess than needy.''
For Medi.Cal, Reagan proposed a neYf
"average citizen" plan whereby reci-
pients -except those in nursing homes
-would be entitled to benefits more
in line with what self-supporting Cali for·
nians receive from private insurance
health plans.
State Court May Decide
Newport Freeway Vote
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of "" 0111'1' ,1111 Stoff
The California Supreme Court may
be asked to rule on the legality of
the Ne·wport Beach freeway eleclion.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti.freeway measures should
be put to a vole -even though the
City Council may not be beholden to
the results or one of them.
However. Angelo Palmieri, attorney
for the three rormer city oHicials who
sought the writ of mandate to halt
the election, said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palmieri said, ''It is too late to make
a formal appeal of the decision, but
my clients feel the issue Is significant
enough to seek a writ lrom the Supreme
Court."
Palmieri pointed out the court could
refu.5e to hear the case.
He said a decision will be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said, "We have to consider
is this the kind of thin~ the Supreme Court
would be interested 1n considering thelr
calendar and the other things they fa ce.''
He said, however, at the moment,
his clients "are leaning toward" pressing
the issue.
Judge Robert L. Corfman, after a Uve-
hour hearing, rejected the petition for
the Superior Court writ sought on the
grounds the people have no right to
decide these "non.municipal issues."
The ballot propo.siUP.ns are an initiative
asking the city coouncil to cancel an
exl!Ung agreement with the stale on
the route of the roastal freeway through
Corona del Mar and a charter amend-
ment requiring f u t u re referendums
before any new route agreements can
be signed.
In their court complaint, the plaintiffs
-former mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenz -claimed the
results of both propositions would be
illegal and local referendums msy be
applied to municipal issues only.
ln announcing hi5 decision, Judge
Corfman said the two proposiUon!, "in
Mesa Councilmen
OK Parking Ban
A partial parking ban on Bay Street
between Newport Boulevard and Thurin
Avenue \\'as approved by the Cosla Mesa
City Council Monday night.
Red curb ing will be painted soon a!'
a result of the council's action, based
on a recommendation by the Costa Mesa
Traffic Commission.
The elimination or parking -on the
north side only-will al!ow easier traffic
llov.· on busy Bay Street, plus removing
\'isual obstruction.
and of themselves . • . do not appear
to be illegal to me on the fac1 ol
it." Corfm an earlier, in a key debate over
whether the actions would be legislative
or administrative, left the door open
for additional litigation afte r the election,
if the council does adop t the initiative
measure.
Palmieri had conterided the ac!ion was
administrative and therefore unsuita ble
for a public vote. . . Cor(man replied. "Assuming 1t Is an
administ rative act, where is the law
uiat says you can't have an election
even though the result is nil." . . .
He said, in effect. the adm1n1sl rabve
versus legislative point, as well as all
other points, could be more fully e1plored
in court procttdings after the election.
The charter amendment, even If
adopLed, still must be ratified by the
state legislature.
Corfman let it be knawn almost from
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allowing the election, telling Palmieri
"The point is whether or not we are
premature in trying to evaluate" the
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed out, as did In·
tervening attorneys Roy B. Woolsey and
Arthur Strock, that additional re medies
are available after the vote.
City Attorney
Says All Mesans
Share Vote Cost
No precedent exists for billing voters
who initiate a limited-area election -
sometimes without support for the issue
-at the expense o( the enlire com·
munity.
This was the message City Attorney
Roy June delivered to the Costa Mesa
City Council Monday ·night.
City Col1ncilman Alvin L. Pinkley had
asked for the investigation two weeks
earlier when results of the abortive
Marina View annexation election were
canvassed.
Voters in the pocket of unincorporated
la nd overlook..ing the Santa Ana River
rejected ty,·o separate proposals for
joining the city by roughly a 2 to l
margin.
One was to be anne1ed and the other
was simply to be included in the
municipal park and recreation district.
Citing a similar election failure In
the same area bf'fore and a 5econd
in a different section last yes r, Coun·
cilman Pinkley said the ciliiens in\ol11ed
should bear the whole cost.
June said ~tonday night that research
and consultation with election expert~
shoy,·s no legal precedent has been set
and so all citizens will share the load.
DO YOU LIKE
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE MAYE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
SANTA ANA. OkANGa
TUSTIN C•ll •••
ALDIN'S
RID HILL CA-,ETJ
& DRAPIRlll
1&174 lrvlne.. Twtln. (11.
,,. "44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: M ... 1'1ln Tlion., 9 .. S:JO -Fri., 9 .. 9 ..:. Sert. 9:.JO to 5
17
i 7
Saddlehaek
• EDITIO.N
VOL. 64, NO. 28, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
---..
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNI;>.
-
Today's~
N.Y. Stocks
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1971 TEN CENTS
Groundbreaking Set for Clemente's Hospita)
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 lftl Ot llV ~1191 JltH
Coundbreaking ceremonies will be held
Feb. 10 for the San Clemente area 's
first hospital-a single-level, ti.tediter·
ranean-deslgn acute-care facility to be
built by the Chapman ?i.'lanagement
Corporation .
State, county and local dignitaries are
expected for the 4 p.m. dedication riles,
which will be follo'4-·ed by a champagne
reception.
The 11&-bed acute-care portion or San
Clemente General Hospital wiU be com-
pleted by next winter, spokesmen for
the Chapman group said.
Allied development ready for the same
opening time is a convalescent hospital
and a bOard-and-care facilit y on th!!
same acreage along Camino de los P..1ares
near Camino de la Estrella.
Preliminary grading will begin later
this month, with the start of actual
construction later in the spring after
the complete detailed plans win final
state approval.
The Chapman project, Jed b~ Or. Ralph
Graham who operates. a similar facility
in Orange, was the result of a hird·
fought battle for endorsement rrom the
•
County Comprehensive Health Plan-
ning Association, wh ich since has been
disbanded. ~
The keen competitor for the nod-
which. amounts to -official sanction-was
C. T. Dectnces, who originally held the
~ndorsenient. but had been challenged
by Chapman .
The health planning group withdttw
its blessinis from DeCinces and gave
ii, instecid. to Chapman.
•
But DeCinces later vowed to l,>ulld
his hospital anyway on land already
graded for the project across from San
Clemente Civic Center.
The Chapman project is master-plan·
ned to ultimelely include a helicopter
landing pad for emergeocy service, a
nursing school. a motel-type bustoes,,
to accommodate visitors to long-term
patients. a to9.'er ot medical offices and
perhaps a nursing school
The property, secured last year from
Lincoln Savings and Loan at a price
of $f.2 million, encompasses 44 acres
on ·both sides of Loa Mares and on
either side of a San Diego Gas and
Electric storage comple~
Housing developmen near the pro-
posed hospital location a eady are under
way .
attin a1 s 0 ire .omas
Clubhouse
Bond .Issue
Under Fire
Concerted opposition by s e v e r a I
citizens and ()ne arts and crafts group
to an omnibus parks and recreation
bond issue will confront San Clemente
City Councilmen \Vednesday.
The head of the San Clemente Arla
Rnd Crafts Club has told councilmen
this week !hat the clumping of four
major projects -including a new .c?m·
munity cl ubhouse -into one mi\hon-
dollar package is the "death knoll'' for
the clubhouse project.
Mrs. M. Leo Keenan, president of
the large group. said she and her board
feel that "there is no surer wa y of
killi ng the hope for a new community
clubhouse.''
The council two weeks ago reversed
Its earlier ideas on a separate vote
on the $400.000 clubhouse issue and opted
instead for the omnibus proposition .
v.'hich wlll come up for a vote April
20.
!\lore opposition 10 the omn ibus ap·
f!roach has come to the ci!y in other
letters from private citizens.
Cards of opposition to the over-all
approach have come from L. J. Corr~gan,
Mrs. Charles Evans. Irene Boman,
Eleanor Markham. Ann J. Tennant,
Lilian Alberts and E. F. Brev.·er.
Supporl for the entire package,
liowever, continues from other segments
of the community. including the large
membership of the San Clemente Ad ult
Recreation Associatton.
The council , besides considering the
opposition's letter. is expec~ed to discuss
the formation of a committee to v.·ork
for passage of the bond issue.
The form al ordinance calling for the
bond election on the April 20 date -
to coincide with school district trustee
elections -also v.·ill come up at \Vcd·
nesday nighfs meeting.
Other action scheduled for the 7:30
meeting includes:
-Discussion of the fire department
headquarters fa cility -a . subject
di&cussed in special study session last
Wetk. ·
-Receip t from Fire Chief Mer ton w. Hackett of his annual report lor
fire department activities In 1970.
-Approvttl of the last change order
and acceptance of completio~ of the
$2.&-m illion city v.•ater reclamation plant.
-Consideralion of a joint-powers
agreement with the City of San Juan
Capistrano for street line and marking
servi ces. San Clemente seeks to use
the new striping machine owned by the
neighboring city. . . .
-A resolution estabhsh1ng a confhcl-
of-interesl police involv ing city personnel.
-Considera tion of an amendment to
the city's ordinance regulating times
when public·address systems may be
used. The change would allow the use
of the equipment for Easter sunr ise
service!> -to start earlier lhan the
present time of 8 a.m. The move is
coo1emplated lo accommodate a huge
beach service next Easter Sunday.
-A request rrom the Chamber of
Commerce seeking city persmission tn
hold the Fiesta ta Chrlstianlta at Old
P\a1.11 Park on July 16, 17 and 18,
plus the annual parad.e. ()n July 17. The
request also covers the erection or 10
overhead banners announci11g thf! 18th
11nnual observance here of the ltrst Chris-
tian baptism in California.
_ A request for an amendment of
4he city's lease with 1he <JPCrator of
an auto parts store which now occupies*
the old city hall building. Melvin Harbert
seeks the chance to give 30-day notk~
to tf'rminate !he lea~. The change Is
11011ght because the property has bten
pl11ced on the open market along with
the city yards nearby .
•
•
DAIL T ~ILOT 11111 ~ ... It
Docuttients at W ot•J'
Crown Valley Exchange Club's Freedom Shrine, receriUy installed in
the Soulh..()range County Judicial District Courthouse in Laguna
Niguel attracts the attention of the l\\'O A1arco Forster Junior High
School Students. Using a guidebook to the collection of documents
important to the history of the U.S. are Jeff \Vo od, 13. of Dana Point
and Rebekah Thayer, 13. of Capistrano Beach. Prominently display-
ed in the courthouse lobby, the shrine's plastic laminated plaques
trace American history from the Mayflo,ver Compact lo· the World
War II surrender instrument.
Police H u1it Witnesses
To Sen.seless Shooting
Sheriffs invesligators today appealed
for help from possible witnesses to the
execution-style shooting of 17-year-old
Doug Wheat Jr. last weekend - a
•·senseless" act committed for S90 Jn
robbery loot in ~1ission Viejo.
The boy to d a y hovered in crttica1
condition. Since the sir .. ung sometime
before dawn last Saturday young Wheat,
a Mission Viejo High School junior. and
football letterman. has remained in a
coma and in critica l co!ldition with a
bullet wound in ,1is head. He v.•orked
part-time at the station.
Sheriff 's spokesmen said they appeal
for help from "anyone who may have
seen anything at the Aroo Station at
the San Diego Freeway and La Paz
Road between 3:30 and 4:30 a.m."
Sheriff's Sgt. Ben Oxandaboure said
absolutely no leads have turned up in
the intense invesligalion of the robbery
and shooting.
'A ·
CLINGS TO LIFE
Doug Wheat, Jr.
Governor's
'Austerity'
Budget Sent
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO ( UPJ) -Gov. Ronald
Rea8;an today sent the Legislature a
$6.73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced w.ith sharp welfare cuts and
''average c~tizen'' Medi-Cal services.
The governor, vowing to spare Califor-
nians from another "ruinous" tax in-
cr~ase, proposed only a 2 percent bqost
in state spepding for the fiscal year
begjoui!li ,JuJrl,. ' '
. Evi!n so, state government for the
first time since the great depression
would run ()ul of cash next fall and
be forced to' borrow from private Jelldlng
institutions to pay its bills.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con·
trolled Legislature "something must be
done and done immediately" about the
Welfare and Medi·Cal "meSs."
He also propo~ed :
-Increasing leaching loads f or
university and college professors without
raisillg their salaries.
-No increased· funds for the University
of California and only a small boost
for !he state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employes, although civil servants would
receive such new benefits as unemploy-
ment insurance, overtime pay and salary
dif ferentials.
-Hold·the·line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family," Reagan said,
"there are years in which it is simply
not possible to do all that might be
desired.
"With unemployment much higher than
we would like and thousands of Califor-
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work at any
job at any living wage -our st ate
revenues are down."
Inevitably. the budget was a record .
It totaled $6.738 billion -roughtly Sl29
million more than the $6.6 billion now
being spent and $258 million above what
Reagan originally proposed to the
Legislature last year.
Reagan's key to balancing the new
budget ·was a package ()f welfare and
Medi.Cal reforms he promlsed to
"shortly" outline to the Legislature.
He submitted a welfare appropriation
totaling $65 million less than current
spending. It also was l217 rilillion less
th-:,1 what Reaga n's fi scal experts figured
the state would spend without "reforms."
Unlike this year, state welfare spend-
ing would be "clostd ended" ud could
11ot grow beyond appropriations ..
In all, Reagan 's budget raUe4_{or cul·
ting rederal, state and--tl'.ICaf-welfare
spending in Callfomla by $606 million .
lt now ls proliferating at the rate of
$2.3 billion annually.
The young man . who worked part-time
at the station, was shot ()nee in the
ba ck of the head in an apparent "ex·
ecution·style" assault.
Seal Beach Zones Waters
He was foultd unconscious by a station
pa tron before sunrise.
The brutal incident has 1ent a wave
of shock through the high school campus,
where Wheat was described as popular.
Spokesmen in administrative offices to-
day were shocked and upset over the
incident.
Young Wheat was active in the school's
football program. they said.
The boy's father. Douglas Wheat Sr.,
of 24551 Saturna Drive. Mission Viejo,
Is an employe ()f Tu:as Instruments,
lnc .. 'of Sant.a Ana.
The boy has been unconscious and
under Intensive care At Soul.ti Coast
Community H~pital sinct the shooting.
Aides the~ said his condition has
not altertd since Saturday morning.
Anyone with helpful In formation may
contdct investigators by calling 634-3000.
h1 Urgent Anti-oil Move
\Vith swift passage ot 11n unprecedented /
emergency law, the ' Seal Beach. City
Council Monday nilhl .. «!tared thrtt
mi les of it& oUsOore wiuers as an open·
space recreation lOllC and ' enacted
Pun is ': men t for .. "pollutlon·prone"
bui;ineSse!I which may violate ll
The far·reachina:;-actioos, approved
unanimously by the IOur-mernbei. council,
followed on the heel.I of an arinouncement
by Standard Oil Company to drill an
offshore well in tbe city'1 coastal waters.
Basis for thrii "open-~ce weter
recreation land use rone" were the ltl5
Incorporation law1 of the city of Sell -• 1
Beach ·which Include three miles ()f the
offshore waters within Its cit.y limits,
according to c:·7 Attorney Jim Bentson,
who drafted the law.
Effective today, only water sportl or
water-<>riented sportl cuch as swimminc,
sa:dng, surfing and bolting will be allow·
l'"d wilhln the three-mile limil
Cocir:erci1J enterprlset, such' u oil
companies, oil tankers and pipeline .. -om.
p:.nles, may OrJIY operate ln these waters
H thty hive flrat qualified for .1 "P,,llu·
tion Prevention .. ·'lf\cate," to be issued
by ... cily.
I
DAIL V l'ILOT l!IH l'lltfe
.HIGH FASHION FACE
Gina K1w1n1n1kO.t
Hawaii . Princess
Now Modeling
In Laguna Beach
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Ot !tit O.llY 1'1111 Slllf
At 23, Gina Kawanana koa has the
race and figure of a high-fashion model
and a yearning to study medicine.
She's also a princess of H{Waii's royat
line and, if Hawaii were a monarchy
today, her fathe'r would be king, she
said calmly.
Gina arrived in Laguna this week
to sta y for perhaps a year and pursue
he-r avocation of modeling "for fun ."
The tall. slender dark-ha ired beauty
grew up "half in Ha waii and half in
Carmel" and decided to light in Laguna
for a time because it reminds her a
little of both .
"Growing up in places like that you
get spoiled." she explains.
Dspite her background of wealth and
nobility and her extraordinary beauty,
Gina seems to have escaped the
symptoms of "spoiling."
She sk.ls ("badly because there's not
much chance to practice in . Hawaii"),
likes to swim. but not in the huge
fr ightening surf of Hawaiian movie fame,
and also to sail and ride horseback.
A devotee of "Hawallana,"she said
she is president of the Hale o Hawaii
Club of Honolulu which concerns itself
wllh preservation of the ancient culture
of the islpnds. One of her projects was
helping a royal great-aunt in the task
of turning the Iolani Palace in Honolulu
into a museum.
Gina's royal blood comes from her
fa ther. Edward Kawananakoa. a descen-
dant of King Kalakaua , the "Merry
~1ona.rch'' who ruled Hawaii in the late
1soo·s.
Her father also Is the grandson of
landowner James Campbell and heir to
the vast Campbell estates i n
Hawaii, v•hich Gina describes as "sort
()f like the trvines here."
After spending her early childhood In
the islands. Gina was sent lo her
mother's family in Carmel to go to
sctiool and wes graduated from Carmel
High School.
After five more yea rs Jn Hawaii. she
decided to move her budding
phOtogrephlc modeling career t o
Califoniia. making her home in Lagu!'la
with -&ya Hamlin and bis wife Dr.
Carolyn Nelson, old family friends who
own I.be Art COiony's Alrlcan Art Center.
Her real, ambition. &he malnlains, is
to aUldy medicine and to that end ahe
may detk1e. to continue her education
on the mainland.
In the me1ntime , lhe real life beautHul
princess is add ing a decoraUve note
to lhe Art Colony 1cene.
' I
Supervisor
Fails to Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBACK
01 IM Dell1 Plitt ll•ff
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried to fire !:aunty Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vote of 2 yes, I no, 1
abstention and 1 absent.
Ballin needed three votes on his motion
lo oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
District vowed after the defeat to try
again to lire Thomas when the full
board lll present.
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucial vote came.
He was off to Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a long list of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. Batt.in
then offered the motion that Thomas
be given the required JO.day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d
Caspers of Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote. Battin and Caspers
balloted yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not thlnk the board
should act on a subject of such im·
portance ''until all five board members
are presei'lt''.
Phillips criticized Battin for releasing
details of his intentions to the press
before brin ging them to the board.
He called for '·dignity in such actions
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed the origina l ordinance creating
the office of administrative officer and
thought "we were putting too much
power in the hands of one man .''
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county government untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking tha t action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no Indication of his feel·
lngs during the debate and did not speak.
Previously he had said he was shcicked
at published reports in Santa Ana ot
Battin's intentions.
'nlomas, a retired Navy captain, has
lield his present post since October,
19 67. He has a staff of 20 and is
pa id the county's highest salary, $41,7'8
a year.
Orange Coast
"'eather
Those low clouds might leak a
llttle on Wednesday, but things
ahould clear up by midafternoon
when temperatures will inch up to
6S along the coast and 68 inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Las Yeg(Js casino! have Dwight
D. Eisenhowe r on their mind;
thol 's because his liktness wiU
appear on 11 new "silvtr" dollar
to be u,,td in oam.bling. Page 3, .1,,,.. t
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I
• ;t: CIAJLY flL_0_1 ----''-'-----T";.c..""1;:::.•.;.F.;;<0<:.."::'c:'lc.2::,_l:.;.;.911
Freeway Appeal Eyed
High Court May Decide on Newport Vote
By L. PETER Kl\IEG
Of IM Deity l'Hel 1111!
The CaUlornia Supreme Court may
be asked to rule on the legallty of
the Newport Beach [ree1vay election.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti-freeway measures should
be put to a vote -even though the
City CoW'lcil may not be beholden to
the results of one of them.
However, Angelo Palmieri, attorney
-for the three former city officials who
50ught the writ of mandate to halt
-.the election, said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palmieri said, 1'lt is too late to make
a formal appeal of the declslon, but
my clients feel the Issue ls significant
enough t.o seek a writ from the Supreme
Court.''
Palmieri pointed out the court could
refuse to hear the case.
He said a decision will be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said, "We have to consider
is this the kind of thin~ the Supreme Court
would be interested 1n considering their
calendar and the other things they face.''
He said, however, at the moment,
his clients "are leaning toward" pressing
the issue.
Judge Robert L. Corfman, after a five-
hour hearing, rejected the pet.ition for
With l'ietnaniese Forces
Soviet Newspaper Claims
Americans 'Invade' Laos
By tJnlted Pre11 International
The Soviet government newspaper
Izvestia said tonight a major force of
S~uth Vietnamese troops "under the
direct command of American officers"
had invaded Laos. The Japanese nev"s
ar.ency Kyodo said 4,000 to 5,000 South.
Viet.~amese were involved.
Pc~tagon spokesman J. W. Frjedheim
wculd not comment on the Izvestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
st:'~ments by Secretary of State William
P. Roge'"' and defense secretary Melvin
R. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey C<lngressional strictures against
entering Laos or Cambodia.
An official statement by the Viet Cong
forei!III ministry, broadcast by Radio
Hanoi tonight, said South Vietnamese
and Thal mercenary units were carrying
out raids in Southern Laos, that
th::usands more Vletnamese troops were
massed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed into
the Tonkin Gull near North Vietnam.
~U.S. officials in Washington
'-ckn:iwledged that something \\'as W"Jder
flay in northwestern South Vietnam but
maintained silence on the reports of
Saddleback Gets
M~~µm 3-year
Accreditation
Sa1dleback C<illege has received max·
lmum, three-year accreditation from the
v:e<'~em Association' of Schools and
er11r"es.
H:-fry D. Wiser, executive secretary
of the association's Accrediting Com-
r-·-·-n for Junior C<>Ueges. said today
Sndi"leback has been granted ac·
c·ei4 1lation for the three-year period en-
ding June 30, 1974.
Accreditation follows a review of the
cou~~e's educational program, facilities
P'ld ln.structors' qualifications and means
that sh•dects earning credits at Sad·
d'"IJ.1ck may transfer them to four-year
ccl!c;es or universities.
a strike against the Ho Chi Minh Trail
In Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "outrageous
invasion" of Laos.
Sen. G~rge Aiken (R·Vl.), said Mon-
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were ma ssing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
frontier.
The Kyodo news report, quoting
"reliable sources" in Saigon, said the
South Vietnamese paratroopers were
flown in by helicopter and that U.S.
planes supported them . It said no U.S.
ground forces were involved in the opera-
tion.
In Vietiant, the government of Laos
did not confirm reports of any invasion
but said the United States had increased
its heavy bombing raids into Laos in
the last several days. In Saigon, the
U.S. command reported another day of
massive B52 and jet fighter-bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs hitting the Ho
Chi Minh trail has now surpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World War II but supplies were
~till getting through to Cambodia and
Southern Vietnam.
The allegation by the official Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
were commanding the purported invasion
force added a new ele ment of gravity
to Kosygin's earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders. _
"'Major military delachmentJ of (he
~igon regiine under the direet command
of American of ficers have invaded
sbuthern regions of Laos, Izvestia said.
"U.S. aviation is makins day and night
raids on lower Laos to support the
troops of the invaders. _ •
"The Pentagon plans with the help
of the Saigon military to strike blows
at the patriotic forces In Laos and to
capture the southern provinces of !he
country bordering on the Democratic
Republic or (north) Vietnam."
Laotian officials in Vientiane denied
knowledge of any allied incursion but
said they would study Kosygin's remarks
at a cabinet meeting Wednesday. They
did report North Vietnamese and Com·
munisl Thai guerrillas crossing into
Thailand v.1ith heavy equipment from
the reported invasion area of southern
Laos.
. lhe Superior Co\lrl Writ 10ught on tile
grounds the people have no rlsht to
decide these "non-municipal issues.''
The ballot propositions are an initiative
asking the city coouncil to cancel an
existing agreement with the state on
the route of the coastal freeway through
Corona de! Mar and a charter amend·
ment requiring f u t u re referendums
before any new route agreements can
be signed.
In their court complaint, lhe plaintiffs
-former mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenz -claimed the
results of both propositions would be
illegal and local referendums may be
applied to municipal issues only.
Jn annQJJncing his decision, Judge
Corfman said the two propositions, "in
and of themselves . • . do not appear •
to be illegal to me on the face ot
it."
Corfman earlier, in a key debate over
whether the actions would be legislative
or a\itninistrative, left the door open
for additional litigation after the election,
if the council does adopt the initiative
measure.
Palmieri had contended the action was
administrative and therefore W"Jsuitable
for a public vote.
C<irfman replied, "Assuming it is an
administrative act, where is the law
that says you can 't have an election
even though the result is nil."
lie said, in effect, the administrative
versus legislative point, as well as all
other points, could be more fully explored
in court proceedings after the election.
The charter amendment, even if
adopted, still must be ratified by the
state legislature.
C<lrfman let It be known almost from
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allowing the election, telling Palmieri
"The point is whether or not we are
premature in trying to evaluate" the
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed out, as did in·
tervening attorneys Roy B. Woolsey and
Arthur Strock, that additional remedies
are available after the vote.
He said the state certainly could bring
legal proceedings to enforce the contract
and indicated other litigation is possible
to void any binding coW"Jcil action.
Noting that the council could, on ftt
own, schedule votes on either issue, Corf-
man saicf, "The question here is whether
people have the right to do what the
council has a right to do." .
At the same time, he said, "Whether
what they do is legal or ll!egal has
nothing to do with it."
The March 9 election was forced by
petitions circulated by the Freeway
Fighters.
Corfman pointed out that courts are
tragllionally liberal in their thinking
v;~ it comes to revoking'. a rlght to
vote.
The judge slressed the issues are 't;tlf
clear cut and based his decision partil.U)
on that fact.
"Basically,'' he said, ''this ls a dispute
as to whether the people have the right
to exercise this vote.
"If the issues are not open and shul.''
he said. "they've got that right."
Newport BeaC'h City Attorney Tully
Seymour, representing City Clerk Laura
Lagios, the technical defendant in the
case, urged rejection on the writ because
of the importance of the issue, ~·hether
or not policy is involved ..
"When you have anything as important
as a freeway, especially in Newport
Beach where it threatens the character
of the city, it can blight it and divide
it, the people have a right to make
p'"ollcy," Seymour said.
A r·mmlltee of eight educators serving
on t!J.e accrediting panel visited Sad·
1"-t--ck for three days in November.
They viewed records. talked with staff
n"1 students and evaluated the ln-
structir,nnl program.
"'I11e college was commended for
dcrr.~nslraling remarkable strength and
r '""'e in its servicfs in only two years
rr o ·cratlnn," noted Dr. Fred H. Bremer,
Sa:tdleback superintendent.
Rebels Split Up
In its third year of operalion, Sad-
dler·ck's Initial application could have
res1·1ted in accreditation for a one or
t· -.. period, or no accreditation.
.DAILY PILOT
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Panthers, Potheads Severing Ties
From Wire Services
BERKELEY -Here it is folks , a real
ca~ of the pot calling the kettle black.
Only it's the Black Panthers calling the
pot proponents a gang of mindless fools
and vo\\'ing to go their separate revolu-
tlonary ways. "' .. -.. A tape recording
purportedly f r om
fugitive Black Pan.
lher leader Eldridge
Cleaver in Algiers
y.·as broadcast by
the Pacific.a Founds·
1 lion's radio station
KPFA·Ffl1 in Ber·
keley Monday night.
LtARY Cleaver declared
Dr. Timothy Leary and his wife Rose-
1nary, convicted In Orange County Super·
ior Court a year ago on Laguna Beach
drug charges, have blown the ir minds.
''LSD has destro yed their ability to
.. 1n<ike judgments."
says the recording,
adding that the
, Learys are now un·
der house arrest in
their Algiers villa.
Dr. Leary reachtd
the Moroccan nation
l:ist year with \Vea-
• tht!:rmnn aid after es-
CLEAYl!lt caplng from Los
Padre.s Mt!n's COiony at San Luis Obispo.
His di11patchcs. staten1c.nts and com·
muniques since have been increasingly
v\n!eni. comple1 llnd confusing in their
call to armed revolution In America.
Cleaver -also a fugitive from
criminal prostcutlon -indlcaled In the
tape played Monday ni sht that the Black
Panther mov(!ment Is severing relation.1
wit h the drug culture'.
"\\'e're finished "'Ith their madness, ..
the t.."tiled Panthtr min ister of In-
formation declared.
"This applies to Jerry Rubin, Stew
Albert. Abbie Hoffman and the whole
silly psychedelic movement which we've
supported in the past," he continued.
"These drugs are hannful to our cause,
counter-revolutionary. If you think by
tuning in. turning on. and dropping out
tha{ you're improving society you're
wrong.
"You're destroying your own brain
and strengthening the enemy," Cleaver
added. "They \\'ant robots.
"We want the people Che Guevara
as ked for : cool, calculating killing
machines , •. with confirmed Ideological
~undations .. _ motivated by revolu-
tionary lo\'e."
Leary. the one-time Harv 1 rd
psychology professor, was described RS
A menace to society by Superior Court
Judge Byron K. McMillan last spring
\\'hen he sentenced him to prison •
Dr. Leary. his second wife, and son
John. now 20. were arrested in LagW'Ja
Dec. 29, 1!168 and charged with possess ing
marijuana and dangerous dn1gs.
lie \\'as sentenced to J to 10 years
Jn stale prison. v.·hile facing an additional
such term in a Tt1as federal prl!On,
ltut A1rs. Let1ry "'as finally given three
years' probation.
She joined him In Algiers after the
sensal.lonal\y !iimple jailbreak at San
Luis Obispo, while John Leary -also
on probation --is now living in San
Francisco.
"'\Ve're finishtd with re1'1tlnR to their
madnt'ss." Cleaver concluded In the
rctt')rding m~de at his own Algiers
rr11lrlence. referring to the Learys and
the psychedtllc cult.
Jle said Leary wtis placed under
revolutionary arrest from Jan. 9 to 13
::ind l' now In "''hat was termed protective
t'Ustocly.
DAILY PILOT Hiil l'hClte
Christ111as Revisited
Robert J. Cox and his wife, Genelle, get to have Christmas all over
again as they hold plaque tbey won for decorating Ship Ahoy Restaur-
ant (which they own) as one of best in "Best Commercial Establish·
ment" category o! competition in "40 ~1iles of Christmas Smiles" con-
test. Restaurant won third place in its division in .contest co-spon sor-
ed by the Orange County Coast Association and the DAILY PILOT.
Plaque is reproduC'tion of DAILY PlLO'f picture page in which win-
ners were announced.
Postal Service Raising
Ali Mail Rates in May
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Postal Service. announced today plaru
to raise virtually all classes of postage,
Including two cents for first-class mail
and one cent for airmail.
The new rates would be effective,
March of Dimes
Headed by Chief
Laguna Beach police Chief Kenneth
1-luck has again been named chairman
of the 1971 March of Dimes fund raising
appeal in the Art Colony,
Assisting Huck as volunteer treasurer
of the drive is Mrs. Ruth Schopen of
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan
Association. She is the y.·ife of Capt.
Frank Schopen of the LagW"Ja Beach
Pollce Department.
ln calling attention to the advances
made in the last decade toward the
prevention of birth defects, Huck said
the lo.larch of Dimes invested over
$900,000 in research which led to the
rube lla (German measles) vaccine.
Huck pointed out that the fund cam·
pa ign will not only ra ise money for
more research but Y•ill also bring im-
portant information to the public
regarding the treatment and prevention
of birth defects.
on a temporary basis, the second week
in May.
Newspaper and magazine rates would
be doubled and those for bulk mailing
by one-third.
The increased rates, subject to
permanent approval by an independent
five-member post.al rate commission,
would bring in additional revenues of
$1.45 billion during the year beginning
July 1.
The proposed new rates ~·ould put
the posta l service on "a sound financial
basis'' for the first time in decades,
Asst. Postmaster Gen. James W.
Hargrove sa id.
First-class stamps would go from six
lo eight cents and airmail stamps from
IO to 11 cents under the proposal. The
postal Board ot Governors formally sub-"
milled the proposal to the rate com-
mission Atonday.
The increases in second and third-class
rates \VOuld be spread over a five-yeAr
period, \vith one-fifth of the proposed
increase becoming effective each year.
Under postal reform legislation ap-
proved J:ist year. the postal service may
put al least part of the increases into
effect \\'ithin 100 days if the rate com-
mission does not act. That \\·ould make
A1ay 11 the effective date for regular
and airmail stamp price increases. The
service. however, said Ma y IS would
be the effective date -102 days from
Monday.
Astronauts
Making Up
Lost Time
SPACE CENTErt, Houston {UPI) -
Apollo 14-'s astronauts. their spacecraft
docking Problem mysteriously behind
them. hurtled through space today mak·
Ing up time to.st al lau nch for America's
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
fi iers Edgar O. Mitchell and Stuart
A. Roose \\'ere the quietest team so
far in the Apollo progratn.
They had so little to do that 1'11tchell
(Ince suggested they •·could play a Jot
o( tic·tac-toe" on the pages of the flight
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers satd it vlas
•·perfectly normal."
A 10-second rocket burst Monday night
gave the moonship an extra two mlle
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minutes lost before
launch. so Shepard and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the flight
1tarted .
Gerald D. Griffin, one of the mission's
three flight directors, told newsmen that
all three astronauts had dozed during
their schedaled \\'aking hours.
'"I think that's perfectly normal ." Grif-
fin said. "I guess all of us do that
hi our business every once in a while
when we don't hve much to do. That's
\Vhy they were so quiet , I'm sure. It's
been a couple of long days so far and
they're just resting."
The landing in the a11cient Fra Mauro
luna r valley at 1:17 a.m. PST was recon-
firmed when ground engineers concluded
the mechanism which couples the com-
mand ship and moon lander now was
''working beautifully.''
But they still \\'ere puzzled over what
v.·ent wrong Sunday night when the dock-
ing device failed to work the first five
times the two spacecraft bumped
together. Ground experts speculated
some kind of foreign particle may have
jammed the delicate mechanism ,
possibly a slive r of ice which melted
before the sixth docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a second
and final time Saturday to retr ieve
Shepard. 47, and Mitchell, 40. afte.r
they return from their 33-h hours on
the moon.
Laguna Police
Investigating
3 Burgla1ies
Laguna Beach police are investigating
three weekend burglaries in which seve-
ral it.ems with a total value of $1,200 were
taken.
Investigators said u·hi!e Stephen 11.
Boyd, of 504 Pearl St., ~·as out of town,
burglars entered his home and stole $700
\\'Orth of photography equipment from the
bedroom. The loot included an expensive
camera, several lenses and a carrying
case. 0£ficers said there \\'ere no signs
of forced enlry at the resideoce.
Another burglary occurred Sunday
night, officers said, \\·hen an unknown
suspect smashed a classroom window at
St. Catherine School. 3000 S. Coast High-
\l'ay, and stole a tape recorder from a
desk. School officials said the recorder
\\'as valued at $200.
Police re<:eived a third theft report
from Terry L. Grindle. or 825 Park Ave .•
"·ho said a tool box had been removed
from his carport sometime Sunday night.
'f1le automotive tools were valued at $300,
police said.
DO YOU LIKE
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HE KNOWS A LOT
ABOUT SHAGS •••
HE'S PRETTY
SHAGGY HIMSELl'I
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
•HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAVE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
•
SANTA ANA. ORANOI
TUSTIN C•ll •••
ALDIN'S
RlD HILL CARPlTS
& ORAl'Elllls'
11374 Irvin•, Tustin. Cel . ........
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646·4838
HOURS: MOii. Thnt Thwrs., t to 5:30 -Fri., t to t -Sot., t :lO to 5
•
7
\
Laguna Beaeh Today's Ffnal
N.Y. Stoeks
.VOL. 1>4, NO. 28, 3 SECTIONS , 36 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 197 1 TEN CENTS
Lagunans Hear Many High Rise Cons, Few Pros
High rise. high density deve\opmenl
in Laguna Beach vlould ruin the com-
munity's tranquil, village atmosphere.
increase proble.ms of water and air pollu-
tion, snarl traffic and parking and pro-
bably do little to improve the economic
picture, planning commissioners were
lold Monday night.
Another crowd in excess of 200 packed
the city hall council chamber and its
adjacent porch and walkway as the com-
mission moved into its second public
hearing on the controversial CR (com-
mercial residential ) ordinance.
More than 20 speakers stepped forward
"{:{ * *
to oppose the ordinance on a variety
of grounds 1and 41 letters, only one
in favor of the ordinance were read
into the record.
Alter some two hours or discussion ,
Temple Hills Drive resident Bill Galli
asked the commissioners, "Who wants
this ordinance? At both these hearings
I've heard only two people In favor
of it. It seems obvious you should get
rid of th.is ordinance at once if nobody
in town wants it: Or let the people
know who doea want it.''
Petitions bearing signatures of 300
persons opposing high rise w e r e
presented by Donna Demetriade.!I. One
* * * Sights Lowered
High R ise Con troversy Continued
By BARBARA KR EJBICH
01 IM Dl llY ~llDI Sii i!
Alter listening to three more hours
of protest against high-rise building in
Laguna Beach Monday night, planning
commissioners once more lowered their
sights from a Hhl-foot maximum building
height, coming 10 rest at the SO-foot
level, or below.
The second public hearing on thf CR
(commercial-residential) zone was con·
tinued to the commission's next i-egula r
meeting, Tuesday, Feb. 16, to permit
preparation of a new draft ordinance.
(See map page 3).
Two Cflmmissioners, Carl Johnson and
Robert Hastings, f9vOred an ordinance
that would permit buildings to rise no
higher than 30 feet above the level
of Coast Highway.
Hastings proposed measuring height
from the ocean side but permitting a
70-foot maximum. Jn most areas he
said, such buildings Y:ould rise less than
30 feet above the highway.
Commissioner James Schmitz said he
felt the 50-foot height. now permitted
in the C-2 zone, should be honored.
Schmitz, who had expressed doubt that
the first public hearing, attended by
250 persons, represented a true cross
section of opinion. said that on the ·
basis of the second hearing and the
reading of some 40 anti-high rise letters,
he now felt "it could be possible this
is a c r o s s se ction." Commission
chairman William Lambourne said he,
too, would be willing to proceed on
the basis of a 50-foot maximum height.
liince that is permitted under existing
zoning, but did not fee l Hastings' pro-
posal \vould be equitable.
Johnson suggested establishment of two
CR zones. one with a 50-foot. the other
with a 30.foot maximum might be feasi-
ble.
The commissioners agreed that one
of three areas considered for application
of lhe new zone , from Cliff Drive to
the Recreation Department should be
eliminated. Now under consideration are
the sections between Laguna Avenue
La guna n Douses
His O \vtl Blaze
A Laguna Beach man armed with a
garden hose beat the fire department to
the punch Monday night by knocking out
a fire in his living room before it spread
io the re st of the house.
Leo N. Kay, or 315 Hawthorne Road,
was in another part of the home when he
smelled smoke at about 8:15 p.m. He
rushed to his living room and found a
large pillow near a wall heater in flames .
After telling his wire to call the fire
department Kay fetched a garden hose
from his front dawn and began fighling
the blaze, which had began to spread
across the carpeted floor . \Vhen firemen
an1ved moments later. the fire was out
'l'here was no estimate of damage .
Orange Co a at
"'eatber
Tho~ low clouds might leak a
litt le on Wednesday, but things
should clear up by midaftemoon
\\'hen temperatures will inch up to
65 al ong the coast and 68 Inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Las Ve g0$ casinos havt Dwight
D. £i51i11hower on thti r mind;
that's because his likeness u1iU
appear on a new "silver " dollar
to bt ustd-1n gambling, Page .J,
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W-'I N~ U•H ,,., .... _ t-1
• I
and Cleo Street and between Mountain
Road and Agate Street.
They also agreed that tv.·().thirds of
the required parking spaces, rather than
one-half, should be under cover.
Commissioners ·were advised at the
beginning of the hearing that.an initiative
to limit the height of buildings throughout
Laguna to 38 feet is being launched
by a group calling it.sell Village Laguna.
Attorney Ralph Benson, 435 Jasmine
St. said an ordin ance is being prepared
and petitions will be circulated seeking
signatures of 15 percent of the town's
registered voters. If these are obtained,
the City Council may enact the ofdinance
or place it before the electorate.
"We have been accused of taking a
negative attitude,'' said Benson. "We
want to lake the affirmative. We want
the participation of everyorie in town
in decisions af fecting the shape and
character of Laguna. An initiative will
give us a chance to find out how the
people fee l about high risse."
Benson said !fter the propoged law
wou(d not be a zoning ordinance, which
litate law bars from the initiative pr~
cedure, but a ~nera1 height limitation.
with height in j individual areas lo be
established by aining regulations.
High rise proponents again were con·
spicuous by their absence from the public
hearing. With the exception of hotel
owners Loren Haneline and Harry
Willats, some 2.0 speekers joined in op-
posing high rise and high density. Hane·
line reiterated the danger of "wall" con-
struction under present zoning and cited
economic advantages of hotels while
Willa.ts. also emphasizing the need for
good hotels, sai d they did not have
to be high rise.
Coroner Says
UC Irvine Coed
Suicide Victim
The deat h of a UC Irvine coed whose
body \v:is found in the ocean off Laguna
Beach last v.·eek will be classified as
a suicide, a spokesmait for the Orange
Coi.:::-_ ..... .,roner·s Office said Monday.
Laguna Beach detectives conducted a
full investigation of the death of UCI
senior Carolyn Jones, 21, v.·hen severe
injuries were found on the body during
an autopsy performed by Coroner's Of-
fice pathologists.
These included, in addition to bruises
and abrasions apparenUy caused by
rocks off Crescent Bay Beach, deep
lacerations on both wrists and a skull
fracture.
It was concluded that the lacerations
were .self-inflicted and the fracture pro-
bably resulted in a fall or. leap onto
the i-ocks. according to detective Gene
Brooks.
The young woman. whose parents Jive
in Glendale, had lived alone in an
apartment at 1287 Cliff Drive for the
past 16 months.
She was described by neighbors and
fellow students as leading a quiet life,
usually retiring early and keeping "prel· t: :':".:.zch to herselr."
Minori ty Students
Now Majority in LA
LOS ANGELES (AP) -For the first
lime. mlnority-arnup pupils are a ma-
jority in the natloo's secood largest
school system.
City school official! said P.tonday that
its annual racial and ethnic wrvey show·
ed .a minorlty·grou!J'. enrollment of 50.2
percent of the 642,ooo students. The
minority groups Include Negroes. Orlcin·
lals, Amerk an Tnd1ans. F 111 p I nos,
Polyne!lans, Mel<Cflians and lhose with
Spanish surnames. The previous year's
minority sroup enrollment was 48.4 per·
cent.
I
petition with 100 name's had been
circulated among the crowd outside the
meeting room, she said. The others had
been placed i'n local stores b y
busineS:i:men, "not by the Civic League."
Joy Dickerson, president of the
Citizens' Town Planning Association ur1-
ed a competent economic study to
substantiate the alleged financial benefits
of the proposal, "before we create an
ordinanCe that would make it possible
to transform the village atmosphere we
all wish to retain into another Miami
Beach, Waiki ki or Majorea. '' Such a
study, she said, should look in to the
cost of supporting additional rooms from
the point of view or fire . police and
sewage service .. !he effect on traffic
property values and the tax rate and
the anticipated vacancy rate.
Writer Arnold Hano noted that legi sla.
lion to control building height is not
new, but now is in effect in San Fran-
cisco, Oregon, Santa Barbara. Palo Alto,
Monterey and other areas.
A \'>'om.an speaker pointed out that
La Jolla. arter pe.rmitling tv.·o hlgh·rise
buildings. had set a SO.foot building
heights limit and is considering reducing
this to 30 feet. ~
A form<:r Laguna Beach High School
teacher was among several speakers
pointing out that visitors and residents
come to Laguna seeking tranquility,
clean air and a restful atmosphe re,
"away from the huslle and bustle of
the high rise jungle in which they live
and work."
A high school sludent presented a
petition from the student body as
"residents and future taxpayers" urging
the city not to "destroy such a beautiful
thing as our community."
Bill Leak quoted President Nixon's
recent plea for "government at all levels
\rhich is responsive to the people and
government in whi ch they m a y
participate not only with their votes
but with their ideas." He described
Mayor Goldberg's remarks regarding
probable ta.1 increares without hotel
development as ''more frightening than
factual " and urged a t em po r a r y
moratorium on aU buildings larger than
duplex size until priority problems con-
cerning traffic, parking and sewage can
be solved .
"Mayor Goldberg said we can't have
our cake and e'at it too," said Leak.
"I get the impression there are eome
who think we can spread out the frosting
and then slip a cake under It."
Battin's Effort to Fire
Top County Aide Fails
CLI NGS TO LIFE
Doug Wheat, Jr.
Investi gators
Hunt Witnesses
To Viejo Crim e
Sheriff's investigators today appealed
for help from possible witnesses to the
execution-style shooting of 17-year-old
Doug Wheat Jr. last weekend -a
"senseless" act commilted for $90 In
robbery loot in !>.fission Viejo.
The boy l o d a y hovered in critical
condition. Since the shooting sometime
before dawn last Saturday young Wheat.
a Mission Viejo Hlgh School junior. and
football letterman, has remained In a
coma and in critical condition with a
bullet wound in t1is head. He worked
part-time at the station.
Sheriff's spokesmen said they appeal
for help from "anyone who may have
seen anything at the Arco Station at
the San Diego Freeway and La Paz
Road between 3:30 and 4:30 a.m."
Sheriff's Sgt. Ben Oxandaboure said
absolutely no leads have turned up in
the intense inve.stlgation of the robbery
and shooting.
The Young man, who worked part-time
at the station, was shot once in the
back of the head In an apparent "ex·
ecution·style" assault.
He was fou11d unconscious by a station
patron before sunrise.
The brutal incident has sent 1 wave
of shock through the high school campus,
where Wheat was described as popular.
Spokesmen in administrative offices to-
da y were shocked and upset over the
incident.
CofC to Hear
High Rise Talk
A high rise panel discu~ion Is
on the agenda Wednesday for the
Laguna Beach Chamber of com·
mcrte breakfast, scheduled for 7:45
a.m. at the Hotel Laguna.
The discussion, tilled j, A Ra·
Uonal. Objective Approach to the
Hotel ?.one of Laguna Beacb,'' will
involve four rtsldenls famWar with
thf: high rise cooroversy.
The panel memben a r e
businessman ·Lloyd SeiJsel, hotel
owner teren Haneline, rtaltcr and
plannina: commissioner Bill Lam-
bourne and writer Arnold Hano.
The discussion will be moderated
by attorney James LtddS' tnd ts
a pen to the publlc,
Hawaiia11 Eyeful
' Princess Arr ives
Al 23, Gina Kawananakoa has the
face and figure of a high-fashion model
and a yearning to study medicine.
She's also a princess of Haw aii's royal
line and, if Hawair were a monarchy
lod>y, her father would bt'ld!li, lilt •
said cilmly.
(iln1 •rrlved in Laguna thil week
lo stay for perhaps ~ year and pursue
her avocation of modeling "for fun."
The tall. slender dark-haired beauty
grew up "half in Hawaii and half in
Carmel " and decided to light In Laguna
for a time because It reminds her a
little or both.
"Growing up in places like th at you
get spoiled." she explains.
Dspite her background of wealth and
nobility and her extraordinary beauty.
Gina seems to have escaped the
symptoms of "spoiling."
She skis (''badly because there's not
much chance to practice in Hawaii"),
likes to swim, but not in the huge
frightening surf of Hawaiian movie fame,
and also to sail and ride horseback.
A devolee of "Hawaiiana,"she said
she is president of the Hale o Hawaii
Club of Honolulu which concerns itself
v.•ith preservation of the ancient culture
of the islands. One of her projects was
helping a royal great-aunt in the task
of turning the Iolani Palace in Honolulu
into a museum.
Gina 's royal blood comes from her
father , Edward Kawananakoa, a descen·
dant of King Kalakaua, the "r-.1erry
Monarch" 1•1ho ruled Hawaii in the late
ISOO's.
Her father also is the grandson of
landowner James Campbell and heir to
the vasL Campbell estates I n
Hawaii, v.·hich Gina describes as "sort
of like the lrvines hert."
After 11pending her early childhood In
the islands, Gina wa11 sent to her
mother's family in Carme l to go to
• Ut A.rt Colon y
DAILY' ~!LOT Stilt ~Mtt
HIGH FASH ION FACE
Gin a K•w1n1nako•
school and was graduated from Carmel
High School.
After five more years in Hawaii, she
decided to move her b u d d i n g
photographic modeling career t o
California , making her home ln Laguna
with Boyd Hamlin and his v.·ife Dr.
Carolyn Nelson, old family friends who
own the Art Colony's A,frican Art Center.
Her real ambition, she maintains, is
to study medicine and to that end she
may decide to continue her education
on the mainland .
Jn the meantime. the real life beautiful
princess is adding a decorative note
to the Art Colony scene.
Reagan Austerity Budget
Proposed to Legislature
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI ) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
56. 73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with sharp we lfare cuts and
"average citizen'' Medi·Cal services.
The govtmor, vowing to spare Calif or·
nians from another "ru inous" tax In·
crease, proposed only a 2 pe.rctnt boost
In state spending for the fiSCll year
beginning July 1.
Even so, slate government for the
first time since the great depres.slon
would run out of cash next fall and
bt forced to borrow from private ltnd1ng
lnstltutlOns to pay its bills.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con·
trolled Uglslature "something must be
done and done immediattly" about the
Welfare and Medi.Cal "mess."
He also propooed '
-Increasing teaching loads f o r
university and college profeuon without
raising their 11al1ries.
-No lncrtised funds for the Univenlty
ef Calilomla 'tlnd onb' a , small boost
" ..
-
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employes, although clvll servants would
receive such new benefits as unemploy.
ment Insurance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
-Hold-lht-line spending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family,'' Reagan said.
"there are years in which it is simply
not poMible to do all that might be
desired.
"With unemployment. much higher than
we would like and thousands of Callfor~
nians vigoroully ~king employment -
many of them anxious lo work at any
job at any living wJge -our state
revenues are down."
Inevitably, the budget was a record.
It lolal<d 18.731 billion -rougl!Uy lilt
mllllon more than the M.1 blUion now
being spent and $258 million above what
Reagan oriclnally proposed t.I the
Legillature !Mt year.
~ . .
., -_ .. _
Supervisor
Can't Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBA.CK
Of lh• DlllY •111t lt11f
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried lo fire County Administrative
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
In a board vote of 2 yes, 1 no, l
abstention and I absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
lo oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana's First
District vowed afte r the defeat to try
again to fire -Thomas when the full
board is present.
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee when the crucial vote came.
He was of£ to Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin reading a long list of charges
he had compiled agajnst Thol'Oal. Battin
then offered the motion that Thomas
be given the required JO-day notice for
removal and that all his administrative
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor R o n a I d
Caspers of Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion. •
On the vote. Battin and Caspers
balloted yes and Supervisor William
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained.
Clark said he did not think the board
should . act on a subject of such im·
portance "untH all five board members
are present".
Phillips criticized Battin for releasing
details of his intentions to the press
before bringing them to the board.
He. called for "dignity In such actions
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
cipposed the original ordinance creating
the ofrice of administrative officer and
thought "we were putting' too much
power in the hands of one man."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county government untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking that action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no Indication of his le.el·
lngs during the debate and did not speak.
Previously be bad said ho was shocked
at . published reports in Santa Ana of
BaUin's Intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy capbln, haa
held his present post since October,
19 67. He has a sbff of 20 and i1
paid the county's highest salary, $41,7.Y
a year.
tn his list of ch8rges Battin accused
Thoma• of ''agsuming d ictator la l
po~ers" not intended by tile ordinance
creating the )ob.
He sald Thoma9 placed the board
in a bad position with the publlc by
his recent forecast of a possible 34-a:nt
tax Jn crease next year. lie said the
CAO was "inacctS&ible to department
heads ind even board members at
times. ..
Mayor Cu ts Salary
HAVERll1LL. M•"· ( AP l -Moyor
Jamt1 F. Waldron his cut his ulary
from $1~.000 to $4,500 11 an examP.:lt
or the austerity program he says the
city aovunment must begin.
I
;: q.AILY PILOc_I ___ s_;c:_ ___ _;T.::"'::"'::"::·..;F.::•br::•::"::'..;2::.·..:19:.:..;Tl
Freeway Appeal Eyed Astronauts
I Making Up
Hig h Court May Decide on Newport Vote.
-... -· -tost Time .... Bf L. 'P''1'ER 1tJUEG a formal appeal o( the dtclslon, but the Superior court writ sought .on the
• oi * o.i•~ 111i.1 1M11 my clients feel the Wue Is 1lgnlfle1nt trOUftds the people have no right to
The California Supreme Court may enough to seek a Writ from the Supreme Clecld~ these "noo-mwilclpal luues."
be asked to rule on the legality of Court." The ballot propositions are an initiative
the Newport Beach freeway election. Palmieri pointed out the court could asking the city coouncil to cancel an
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled refuse to hear the case. exi:iUng agreement with the state on
the two antl-freew;iy measures sbould He said a deci.$ion will be made ''within the route of the coastal freeway through
be put to a vote -even though the a day or two." Corona del Mar and a charter amend·
City Council may not be beholden to Palmieri said, "We ha ve lo consider ment requiring fut u r e referendums
the results of one of them. is this the kind of thing the Supreme Court before any new route agreements can
However, Angelo Palmieri, attorney would be interested in considering their be signed.
for the three former city officials who calendar and the other things they face .'' In their court complaint, the plaintiffs
sought the writ of mandate to halt He said, however, at the moment. _ former mayors Charles E. Hart and
the election, said this morning he may his clients "are leaning toward" pre.ssing James B. Stoddard and former vice
take a similar request to the higher the issue. mayor Hans J. Lorenz -claimed the
court. Judge Robert L. <Arfman, after a five-results of both propositions \\'Ould be
Palmieri said, "It is too late to make hour bearing, rejected the petition for illegal and local referendums may be
applied to municipal issu,es only.
With Vietnamese Forces
Soviet Newspaper Claims
Americans 'Invade' Laos
By United Press International
The Soviet government ne,vspape r
Iivestla said tonight a major force of
Sruth Vietnamese troops "under the
direct command or American office rs''
had invaded Laos. The Japanese news
er.ency Kyodo said 4,000 to 5,000 South
Vietr.amese were involved.
Pentagon spokesman J . W. Friedheim
wculd net comment on tlle lzvestia report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
st:··mcnts by Secretary or State William
P. R'.'3ers and defense secretary Melvin
R. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey Congressional strictures against
er:tc··ing Laos or Cambodia.
An c.fiicial statement by the Viet Cong
fore'"'n ministry, broadcast by Radio
Jlanri tonight, said South Vietnamese
. and Tt>ai mercenary units were carrying
out raids in Southern Laos, that
th:iusands more Vietnamese troops were
massed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed into
the Tonkin GuH near North Vietnam.
U.S. officials in Washington
ackn~wledged that something \\'as under
way in northwestern South Vietnam but
maiotalned silence on the repQrt.s of
Saddleback Gets
Maximum 3-year
• Accreditation -. -:::. r
S21dleb2ck College has received max~
lmum, three-year accredita.11on from tbe
\\'es~em Association ol Schools and
Collr .. es.
H:rry D. Wiser, executive sec retary
of t.:1~ association's Accrediting Com·
rr'-n fer Junior Colleges, said today
Snd1'\cbzck has been granted ac·
<'··e·'itat!t n f'.ir the three-year period err
ding Ju1e 30, 1974.
t r~-e::lit:ition follows a review of the
cc~I -·e's e~ucational program, facilities
:--..i in~tructnrs' qualifications and means
lh'?t E!udeots earning credits at Sad·
fl'·i.,ck may b'ansfer them lo four-year
ccl'c;es or universities.
a strike against the Ho Chi Minh Trait
in Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "outrageous
invasion" of Laos.
Sen. George Aiken (R-Vt.), said ~1on·
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but v..·ould not cross the
frontier .
'The Kyodo news report, quoting
"reliable sourcts" in Saigon. said the
South Vietnamese paratroopers were
flown in by helicopter and that U.S.
planes supported them. It said no U.S.
ground for~s were involved in the opera·
tion.
In Vietiane, the government of Laos
did not confirm reports of any invasion
but said the United States had increased
its heavy bombing raids into Laos in
the last several days. In Saigon, the
U.S. command reported another day of
massive B52 and jet fighter·bomber
strikes in Laos.
The tonnage of bombs bitting the Ho
Chi Minh trail has now surpassed the
tonnage that fell in Berlin and Tokyo
during World \Var II but supplies were
still getting through to Cambodia and
Sout.bem Vietnam.
The allegation by the official Soviet
government newspaper that U.S. officers
were commanding the purported invasion
force added a new element of gravity
to KDsygin'a earlier statements the South
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S.
orders. ,
J !Mojcl! nilllllry. clelac~ll!. ol Ille s'~ regime under. the d~ed eonimand
of Ainerican officers have invaded
southern regions of Laos, b:veslia said .
"U.S. aviation is making day and night
raids on lower Laos to support the
troapl of the invaders .••.
"The Pentagon plans with the help
of the Saigon military to strike blows
at the patriotic forces in Laos and to
capture the soulhern provlnces of the
coontry borderiJlg on the Democratic
Republic of (north) Vietnam."
Laotian officials in Vientiane denied
knowledge of any allied incursion but
said they would study Kosygin's remarks
at a cabi~ meeting Wednesday. They
did report North Vietname9e and Com·
munist Thal guerrillas crossing into
Thailand with hea vy equipment from
the reported invasion area of southern
Laos.
In announcing his deci!ion, Judge
Corfman said the two propositions. "in
and of themselves . . . do oot appear
to be illegal to me on the face ol
it."
Corfman earlier, in a key debate over
whether the actions woul d be legislative
or administrative, left the door open
for addi tional litigation after the election,
Jf the council does adopt initiative
measure.
Palmieri had conte
administrativ
for a public vote.
the action was
erefore unsuitable
Corfman replied, "Assuming it is an
administrative act, where is the law
tha t says you can't have an election
even though the result is nil."
He said, in effect, the administrative
versus legislative point, as Well as all
other point s, could be more fully explored
in court proceedings after the election.
The charter amendment, even if
adopted, slill mwt be ratified by the
stale legislature.
Corfman Jet it be known almost from
the outset that he leaned heavily toward
allowing the election, telling Palmieri
''The point ls whether or not Wj!: are
premature in trying to evaluate" the
issues involved.
He repeatedly pointed ou t, as did in-
tervening attorneys Roy B. Woolsey and
Arthur Strock, that additional remedies
are available after the vote.
He said the state certainly could bring
legal proceedings to enforce the contract
and indicated other litigation is possible
to void any binding council action.
Noting that the council could, on lb'
own, schedule votes on either issue, Corf.
man said, "The question here is whether
people have the right to do what the
council has a right to do."
At the same time, he said, ''Whether
what they do is legal or illegal has
nothing to do with it."
The March 9 election was forced by
petitions circulated by the Freeway
Fighters.
Corfman pointed out that courts are
trltditionally liberal ill their \tlinl;'lng
·'-wfie-n •it ~ea to revoking a rtgbt ·to
vote.
The judge stressed the issues are f'll
clear cul and based his decision partil.lly
on that fact.
"Bas ically," he said, ''this ls a dispute
as to whether the people have the right
to exercise this vote.
"If the issues are not open and shut,"
he said, "they've got that right."
Newport Beach City Attorney Tully
Seymour, representing City Clerk Laura
Lagios, the technical defendant in the
case, urged rejection on the writ because
of the importance of the issue, whether
or not policy is involved.
"\Vhen you have anything as important
as a freeway, especially in Newport
Beach where it U1reatens the character
of the city, It can blight it and divide
it, the people have a right t.o make
policy," Seymour said.
A committee of eight educators serving
on the accrediting panel visited Sac(.
r''~b-:ck for three days in November.
They viewed records, talked with staff
and students and evaluated the in-
structional program.
"The college was commended for
demonstrating remarkable strenglh and
r ~-i;.e in Its services in only two years
rf <' ·~ratlrn," n'lted Dr. Fred H. Bremer,
Sa1dleback superintendent.
Rebels Split Up
Jn its third year of operation, Sad·
dleb~ck's initial application could have
r~r1'ed in acrreditation for a one or
t··· ~r peri od, or no accreditation.
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Panthers, Potheads Severing Ties
From Wire Servlce1
BERKELEY -Here it is folks, a real
case of the pot calling the kettle black.
Only it's the Black Panthers calling the
pot proponents a gang of mindless fools
and vov;in g to go their separate revolu-
tionary ~·ays. ..-ii!!" ..._..., A tape recording
' purportedly f r o m
fugitiv~ Black Pan.
ther leader Eldridge
Cleaver in Algiers
was broadcast by
the Pacifica Founda-
tion's radio station
KPF A-FM in Ber·
keley 1'1onday night.
LURY Cleaver decl1red
Dr. Timothy Leary and his wife Rose·
1nary, convicted in Orange County Super·
ior CObrt a year ago on Laguna Beach
drug charges, have blown their minds.
"LSD has destroyed their abillty to
make judgments,''
says the recording,
adding that the
Learys are now un·
der house arrest ln
their Algiers villa.
Dr. Leary reached
the ?.ioroccan nation
la.st year wlth Wea-
• therman aid after es·
cLuv1• caping from L<ls
Padres f..1en 's Colony at ~ Luls Obispo.
His dlspatclle1, 1Ulle)llcnls and C1"m·
mutliques since have: been increasingly
\'iOlent, complex and conCU!lng in their
call to armed revolution In America.
Cleaver -also a fugitive from
criminal prosecution -lndicatrd In the
tape played Monday night that the Black
Panthe r movement Is severing relations
with the drug culture.
"\Ve're finished v,rlth their madness,''
tbe exiled Panther minister of In-
formation declared.
"This applies to Jerry Rubin, Stew
Albert. :A.bbie }ioffman and the whole
silly psychedelic movement which we've
supported in the past," he continued.
''These drugs are harmful to our cause,
counter-revolutionary. If you think by
tuning in, turning on, and dropping out
that you're improving society you 're
\\'rong .
"You're destroy ing your o~-n brain
and strengthening the enemy," Cleaver
added. "They want robots.
"\Ve v.·ant the people Che Guevara
asked for: cool, calculating killing
machines ... '''ith confirmed ideological
foundations . . • motivated by revolu-
tionary love.''
Leary, the one-time Ha r v n rd
psychology professor, was described as
a menace to society by Superior Court
Judge Byron K. McMillan last spring
wllen he sentenced him to prison.
Dr. Leary, his second wife, and son
John . now 20, were arrested In Laguna
Dec. 29, 19P9 and charged with possessing
marijuana and dangerous drugs.
He was sentenced to 1 to 10 years
in state prison, while facing an additional
such term in a Texas federal prison,
but ~lrJ, Leo.ry was finally given lhrce
yea rs' probation.
She joined him in Algiers after the
sensationally simple: jailbre ak at San
Luis Obl5po, \\"hlle John Leary -also
on probation -I.a now living in San
Fr~ncisco.
'''We're finished ••ilh relallng to their
ma dness. ·1 Cleaver concluded In the
recording made at his own ' Algiers
rl'~ldence, referring to the Learys and
the psychcdtllc cult.
He sa.ld Leary was placed under
revolutlon.!lry arrest from Jan. 9 to 13
and i~ now In what was termed protective
custody.
OAILY PILOT Sllff P'lltto
Christ1tias Revisited
Robert J. Cox and his \vile. Genelle, get lo have Christmas all over
again as. they hold plaque they v.1on for decorating Ship Ahoy Restaur·
ant (which they own) as one or best in "Best Commercial Establish·
ment" category of competition in "40 Miles or Christmas Smiles" con·
test. Restaurant Y.'On third place in its division in contest ca.sponsor-
ed by the Orange Co unty Coast Association and the DAILY PILOT.
Plaque is reproduction of DAILY P~LOT picture page in \Vhich win·
ners were announced.
. Postal Service Raising
A 11 )I_,,. ·1 R ,,_ . M to 1r1ati a ies in ·ay
WASHINGTON (AP) - The U.S.
Postal Service announced today plans
to raise virtually all classes of postage,
including two cents for first-class mail
and one cent for airmaiL '
The new rates ~iould be effective,
March of· Di'mes
Headed by Cl1ief
Laguna Beach police Chief Kenne th
Huck has again been named chairman
of the 1971 March of Dimes fund raising
appeal in the Art Colony.
Assisting Huck as volunteer treasurer
of the drive is Mrs. Ruth Schopen of
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan
Associa tion. She Is the wife of Capt.
Frank Schopen of the Laguna Beach
Police Department.
ln calllng attention to the advances
made In the last decade toward the
prevention of birth defects, Huck said
the t1arch of Dimes invested over
$900,000 in research ~·hich led lo the
rubella (German measles) vaccine.
Huck pointed out that the fund cam·
paign will not only raise • mone y for
more research but will also bring im·
portant information to the public
regarding the treatment and prevention
of birth defects.
on a temporary basis, the second week
in Ma y.
Nev•spaper and magazine rates would
be doubled and those for bulk mailing
by one-third.
The increased rates, subject to
permanent approval by an independent
live-member postal rll\e commission,
would bring In ad<litlonil revenues of
$1.45 billion du.ring the year begiMing
July 1.
The proposed new rates would put
the postal service on "a .sound financial
basis" for the first time in decades,
Asst. Postmaster • Gen, James \V.
Hargrove said.
First-class stamps would go from six
to eight cents and airmail stamps from
10 to lt cents under the proposal. The
postal Board of Governors formally sub-
mit ted the proposal lo the rate com-
mi ssion ~1onday.
The Increases in second and third-class
rates ~·ou/d be spread over a five-year
per iod. \\'ilh one-filth of the proposed
increase becoming effective each year.
Under postal reform legislation ap-
proved last year , the postal service may
put at least part of the increases into
effect \\'it hin 100 days if the rate com-
missio n does not act. That would ' make
~l ay 11 the effective date for regular
and airmail stamp price increases. The
service. hO\\'ever, said f..1ay 15 would
be the effective date -102 days fr om
Monday.
SPACE CENTER. Houston (UPI) -
Apollo 14's astronauts. their spaceerart
docking problem mysteriously behind
them. hurtled through space today mak·
ing up lirne lost at launch for America's
third moon landing.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
fiiers Edgar D. Mitchell and Sluart
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program.
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they "could play a lot
of tic-tac-toe" on the pages oI the flight
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it \\"as
•·perfectly normal.''
A HJ-second rocket burst Monday night
gave the moonship an extra two mile
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minutes lost before
launch, so Shepard and 1'1itchelt can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the crew
had taken medication since the fli ght
star~d,
Gerald D. Griffin, one of the mission's
three fli ght directors, told newsmen that
aU three astronauts: had dozed during
their scheduled waking hours .
"I think that's perfectly normal," Grif·
fin said. "1 guess all of us do that
in our business every onCf, in a while
when we don't hve much to do. That's
why they were so quiet , I'm sure. It's
been a couple of long days so far and
they're just resting.''
The landing in the aAcient Fra ~fauro
lunar valley at 1:17 a.m. PST was recon-
firmed when ground engineers concluded
the mechanism which couples the com·
mand ship and moon lander now was
"working beautifully.''
But they still were puzzled over what
''"ent \\Tong Sunday night when the dock-
ing device fail ed to work the first five
times lhe t\\'O spa cecraft bumped
together. Ground exper ts speculated
some kind of fore ign particle may have
jammed the delicate mechanism•
possibly a sliver of ice which melted
before the sixth docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a second
and final time Saturday to retrieve
Shepard. 47, and Mitchell, 40, after
the y return from their 33"h hours on
the moon.
Laguna Police
Investigating
3 Brn·glaries
Laguna Beach police are investigatin&
lhree weekend burglaries in which seve--
ral ilems with a total value of $1,200 were
taken.
Investigators said while Stephen H.
Boyd, of 504 Pearl St., was out of town ,
burglars entered his home and stole $700
worth of photography equipment from the
bedroom. The loot included an expens ive
camera, several lenses and a carrying
case. Officers said there were no signs
of forced entry al the residence .
Anothe r burglary occurred Sunday
night, officer-s said, when an unknown
suspect smashed a classroom window at
St. Catherine School. 3090 S. Coast High •.
way, and stole a lape recorder from a
desk . School offi cials said the recorder·
was valued at $200.
Police reeeived a third theft report.
from Terry L. Grindle, of 82fl Park Ave.,
who Said a tool box had been removed
from his ca rport sometime Sunday night.
'fhe autom otive tools were va lued at $300,
police said.
DO YOU LIKE
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HE KNOWS A LOT
ABOUT SHAGS •••
HE'S PRETTY
SHAGGY HIMSILl'I
•
SHAGS
IF YOU DO -THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S .
WE HAVE SHORT SHAGS-·
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
' SANTA ANA. ORAHOI
TUSTIN Call •••
ALDIN'S
RED HILL CARl'lTS
' & QRAl'lltlES
1U74 lrvlM. Tut tln, C1I.
flt ,)44
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS : Moo. 111N 111ur>., 9 to S:JD -ff!., 9 to 9 -Sot .. 9:30 to 5
\ I I
San Clemente
Capistrano ·
VOL 64, NO. 28, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES
-
EDITI O N
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Today'• Flnal
N.Y. Stoeu
,
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1971 TEN CENr.
Groundbreal{ing Set for Clemente's H
By JOHN VAL TERZA
04 tM o.Hy ,1 .. 1 Siii!
Goundbreakin g ceremonies \\'ill be held
Feb. 10 for the San Clemente area·s
fir.'it hospital-a single-level, Mediter-
ranean-design acule-care facility to be
built by the Chapman Management
Corporation.
State, county and local dignitaries are
expected for the • p.m. dedication rites,
which will be followed by a champagne
rtteption.
The tlfi..bed acute-care portion of San
Clemente General Hospital will be com-
pleted by nett winter, spokesmen for
the Chapman group said.
Allied development ready for the same
opening time is a convalescent hospital
and a board-and.care facility on the
same acreage along Camino de los Mares
•
near Camino de la Estrella. County Comprehensive Health Plan·
Preliminary grading will begin later ning Association, which· since has been
this month, with the start of actual disbanded. The keen e<impetitDr for the nod-construcUon later in the spring after which amounts to official sanction-wu
the complete detailed plans win linal c. T. DeCinces, who originally held the
state approval. • endorsement, but had been challenged
The Chapman prOject, led by Dr. Ralph by Chapman.
Graham who operates a similar facUity The health planning group withdrew
in Orange, was the result of a bard· its blessings from DeCinces and gave
fought battle for endorsement Crom the ~ostead, to Chapman.
•
But DeCinces tater vowed to build
his hospital anyway on land already
graded for the project across from San
Clemente Civic Center.
The Chapman project is master-plan·
ned to ultimately Include a helie<ipter
landing pad for emergency service, a
nursing school. 1 motel-type business
to aceommodate visitors to Jong-term
patients, a tower of medical offices and
perhaps a nursing school.
The property, secured last year from
Lincoln Savings and UJan at a prlc1
of $1.2 million. encompasses 44 acrt1
on both sides of L<is Mares and ou
either side of a San Diego Gas and
Electric storage complex.
Housing developments near the pro
posed hospital location already are undet
way,
a Ill 0 Ire oma·s
Clubhouse
~ond Issue
Inder Fire
·certed flpposition by s e v e r a 1
.is and one arts and crafts group
n omnibus parks and recreation
I issue will confront San Clemente
Councilmen Wednesday.
. he head of the San Clemente Arts
d Crafts Club has told councilmen
.is v.·eek that the clu mping of four
najor projects -including a new com·
mutffty clubhouse -into one million·
dollar package is the "death knoll " for
the clubhouse project.
Mrs. ~l Leo Keenan, president of
the large group, said she and her board
feel that "there is no surer way of
killing the hope for a new community
clubhouse."
The council two \\'eeks ago reversed
Its earlier ideas on a separate vote
on the $400.000 clubhouse issue and opted
instead for the omnibus proposition.
which will come up for a vote April
20. ~tore opposition to the omnibus ap·
proach has come to the city in other
letters from private citizens.
Cards of opposition to the over-all
approach have come from L. J. Corrigan,
Mrs . Charles Evans. Irene Boman,
Eleanor Markham. Ann J. TeMant,
Lilian Alberts and E. f. Brewer.
Support for the entire package,
however, continues from other segment.!
of the community. including the large
membership of the San Clemente Adult
Recreation Association.
The council, besides considering the
opposition's letter. is expected to discuss
the formation of a committee to work
for passage of the bond issue .
The formal ordinance calling for the
bond election on the April 20 date -
to coincide v•ith school district trustee
elections -also will come up al Wed·
nesday night's meeting .
Other action scheduled for the 7:30
meeting includes:
-Discussion of the fire department
headquarters facility -a subject
discussed in special study session last
week.
-Receipt from. Fire Chief Merton
W. Hackett of his annual report for
fire department activities in 1970.
_ Approval of the last change order
end acceptance of completion of the
$2.8-million city Y.'atcr reclamation plant.
-Consideration of a joint-powers
agreement with the C~ty of San J~an
Capistrano for street hne and marking
services. San Clemente seeks to use
the new striping machine ov•ned by the
neighboring city.
-A resolution establishing a conflict·
of·intercst police involving city personnel.
-Consideration of an amendment to
the city's ordinance rcgulaling times
when public-address systems may be
used . The change would allow the uae
of the equipment for Easter sunri!e
services -lo start earlier than the
present lime of 8 a.m. The move is
contemplated to accommodate a huge
beach service next Easter Sunday.
-A request from the Ohamber of
Commerce seeking city persmission lo
hold I.he Fiesta La Christianita at Old
P\ai.a Park on July 16. 17 and 18,
plus !he annual parade on July 17. The
request also e<ivers the erection of 10
overhead banners announcing the 18th
annual observance here of the first Chris-
tian baptism in California.
-A request for an amendment of
the city's lease with · the operator af
30 auto pait.s store which no., ota1pie11
the old city haU building. Melvin Harbert
•eeks the chance lo «ive 3Q.<f111y notice
to terminate the le11se. The ~hange Is
taught because the property b1111 bttn
placed t1n the open market alon1 with
the city yards nearby.
DAIL'I' ,/LOT lltff " .. '°'
Documents at Wo1·k
Crown Valley Exchange Club's Freedom Shrine. recently installed in
the South Orange County Judicial District Courlhouse in Laguna
Niguel attracts the attention of the two Marco Forster Junior High 1 School Students. Using a guidebook to the collection of documents
important to the history of the U.S. are Jeff \\'ood, 13, of Dana Point
and Rebekah Thayer, 13, or Capistrano Beach. Prom inently di splay·
ed in the courthouse lobby, the shrine's plastic laminated plaques
trace American history from the Mayflo\ver Compact to the World
\Var II surrender jnstrument.
Police Hunt Witnesses
To Sen.seless Shooting
Sheriffs investigators today appealed
for help from possible witnesses to the
execution-style shooting of 17-year-0ld
Doug Wheat Jr. last weekend -a
"senseless" act committed for $90 in
robbery loot in J\1issio n Viejo.
The boy today hovered in critical
condition. Since the shooting sometime
before dawn last Saturday young Wheat,
a Mission Viejo High School junior, and
football letterman. has remained in a
coma and in critical condition with a
bullet wound in nis head. He ~·orked
part-lime at the station.
Shi?riff 's spokesmen said they appeal
for help from "'anyone who may have
. seen anything at the Arco Station at
the San Diego freeway and La Paz
Road betreen 3:30 and 4:30 a.m."
Sheriff's Sgt. Ben Oxandaboure said
absolutely no leads have turned up in
lhe intense investigation of the robbery
and shooting .
Gover11or's
'Auste1·ity'
Budget Se11t
By GEORGE SKELTON
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today sent the Legislature a
$6.73 billion austerity budget delicately
balanced with sharp welfare cuts and
"average citizen'' t1edi-Cal services .
The governor. vowing to spare Califor-
nians from another "ruinous" tax in·
crease, proposed only a 2 percent boost
in state spending for the fiscal year
oogl~i~JulyL _ ~'IWI .~ le gov·~ for ttlt
first time 1lnce the great depression
would run out of cash . nut lall 1Dd
be forced to borrow from private lendin1
institutions lo pay its bills.
Reagan warned the Democrat-con·
trolled Legislature ''so mething must be
done and done immediately" ab6ut the
Welfa~ and Medi-Cal "mess."
He also proposed:
-Increasing teaching loads f or
university and college professors "'i!h~t
raising their salaries. •
-No increased funds for the University
of California and only a small boost
for the state colleges.
-No wage hikes for any state
employes. although civil servants would
receive such new benefit.a as unemploy·
ment ln.furance, overtime pay and salary
differentials.
-Hold-the·line 5pending on most other
government services.
"Just as any family." Reagan said.
•·there ari years in which it is simply
not possible ta do all tha t might be
desirfd.
''With unemployment much higher than
we woul d like and thousands of Califor-
nians vigorously seeking employment -
many of them anxious to work at any
job at any living wage -our state
revenues are down."
Inevitably, the budget was a record .
lt totaled $6.738 billion -roughtly $129
million more Utan the $6.6 billion now
being spent and S258 million above what
Reagan originally proposed to the
Legislature last year.
Reagan's key to balancing the new
budget was a package of welfare and
Medi-Cal reforms he pramlsed to
"shortly" outline to the Legislature.
He submitted a welfare appropriation
totaling $65 million Jess than current
spending. Jt also was $217 million less
than what Reagan 's fiscal experts figured
the state ~·ould spend without "reforms."
Unlike this year, slate wellare spend·
Jng would be "closed ended" and could
not grow beyond appropriafions .
In all, Reagan 's budget called for cul·
ting federal. state and local welf are
spending in California by $606 million.
It now is proliferaling at lhe rate of
$2.3 billion ann ually.
The young man. who worked part-time
at the station. was shot ance in the
back of the head in an apparent •·ex·
eculion-style" assault.
Seal Beach Zones Waters·
He was found unconscious by a station
patron before !llnrise.
The brutal incident has sent a wa ve
or shock through the high school campus,
v.·here Wheat was described as popular.
Spokesmen in adminh1trative offices to-
day were shocked and upset over the
incident.
Young \\1heat was active ln the school's
football program, they said.
The boy's father , Douglas Wheat Sr •
of 24551 Saturna Drive, ~iission Viejo,
I~ an employe of Texas Instruments,
Jnc .. af Santa Ana.
The boy has been uncoMCious ind
under Intensive care at South Coast
Community Hospitl!ll since the shooting.
Aid~ thert said his condition has
not. 111\tercd since Saturday morning.
Anyant with helpful Information ml!iy
contact investigators by calling 83+3000.
'
In Ur gent Anti-oil Move
With s~·ift pa~ge of an unprecedented
emer"g:enc)' law, the Seal Beach City
Council ~1onday night dclcared three
miles of Its offshort waters as ail open-
space recreation zone and enacted
p un Is ·_ me h l for "pollution·prone"
businesses which may violate it.
The far-reaching actions, approved
unanimously by the! four-me.mt.t. council,
followed on the htels of an announcement
by Standard Oil Company to dr ill an
offshore wtll In the city's coastaJ waters.
Basis for lht "open-space water
recreallon land use tone" were the 191!
incorporation law1 or the city of Seal
Be1ch which Include three miles of th&
offshore .waters wllhin its city limits,
accordlnl to C J Attorney Jim Bentson,
who drafted the law.
Effective today, only water sports or
water-oriented sports such u swimming,
sailing, 5urfing and boating will be allow ..
rd within th~ three·mlle llmlt.
Cor.u-:·oerciif enterprises, tuch •s oU
companies, oll Unker1 and pipe.lfne +..'Om•
p:.nles, m111y only operate in these waters
If they have first qualifl~ for .1 "P.,llu·
tJon Prevention r.,.tific111te," to be Issued
by the city.
DAILY Pll.OT l)ltf Pl*9 ' .
HIGH FASHION FACE
Gina Kawananakoa
Hawaii Princess
Now Modeling
In Laguna Beach
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 1111 D•fl1 Pllt! Still
At ZJ, Gina Kawananakoa has lhe
face and figure of a high·fashion model
and a yearning to study medicine.
She's also a princess of Hawaii's royal
line and. if Hawaii were a monarchy
today, her father would be king, she
said calmly.
Gina arrived in Laguna thi.s week
lo stay for perhaps a year and pursue
her avocation of modeling ''for fun ."
The lall, slender dark-haired bea ut.y
grew up ;,ha lf in Hawaii and half in
Carmel" and dec ided to light in Laguna
for a time because il reminds her a
little of both.
"Growing up in places like Utat you
get spoiled," she explains.
Dspilt her background of wealth and
nobility and her extraordinary beauty,
Gina seems to have escaped the
symptoms of "spoiling."
She skis (''badly because there's not
much chance to practice in Hawaii"),
likes to swim, but not in the huge
frightening surf of Hawaiian movie fame,
and also to sail and ride horseback.
A devotee of "Hawaiiana,"she aaid
she is president of the J'lale o Hawaii
Club of Honolulu which concenu; itself
with preservation of the ancient culture
of the Islands. One of her projects was
helping a royal great.aunt in the task
of turning the Iolanl Palace in Hooolulu
into a museum.
Gina 's royal blood e<imes from her
father. Edward Kawananakoa , a deSCi!n-
dant of King Kal akaua. the "~{erry
Monarch'' who ruled Hawaii in the late
1800'!,
Her father also Is the grandson of
landowner James Campbell and heir to
the vast Campbell ~ estates i n
Hawaii, which Gina describes as "sort
of like the lrvines here."
After spending her early childhood in
the islands. Gina wli sent to her
mother's family In Ctrmel to go lo
&ehool and was graduated from Carmel
Higll School.
After five more years In J{awail, ahe
decided to move her b u d d I n g
photographic modeling career Lo
Celifomla. maklng her bame. in Laguna
with Boyd Hamlin and his wife Dr.
Carolyn Nelson, old family friends who
own I.be Arl Co1$)rcy'1.Afdc.an ArL..Centtr.
Her real 1mbitlon. she m1lntains, Is to study medicine and to thit trid 1hc
may decide to continue htr education
on the mainland.
Jn the meantime, the rtal ure beautiful
princes!! Is adding • decorative note
to the Art Colony 1ctnt.
Supervisor
Fails to Get
Three Votes
By JACK BROBACK
01 IM t>1llY PINI l l•lf
Supervisor Robert Battin of Santa Ana
today tried lo fire County Administrative·
Officer Robert E. Thomas but failed
in a board vote of 2 yes, l no, 1
abstention and t absent.
Battin needed three votes on his motion
to oust the county's top administrator.
The supervisor from Santa Ana'a First
Di.strict vowed after the defeat to try
a1aln to fire Thomas when the full
board is present.
Supervisor David Baker was the
absentee whtn tht crucial vote eamt.
He was off to Washington, D.C. on
county business.
The defeated ouster effort opened with
Battin readlng a Jong list of charges
he had compiled against Thomas. Battin
then offered the motion that Thomas
be given the required 31).day notice for
removal and that all his administ.rativ4
authority be suspended.
Fifth District Supervisor 1t o n a Id
Caspers of Newport Beach said he agreed
and seconded the motion.
On the vote, Battin and Casper•
balloted yes and Supervisor WU!iam
Phillips voted no. Supervisor Ralph Clark
abstained ..
Clark said he did not think the board
should act on a subject of such im·
portance "until all five board member1
are presen~". ·
Phillips criticized Battin for releasing
details of his Jntentlons to the press
before bringing them to the board.
He called for "dignity in such actions
and not willful moves off the top of
our heads."
Phillips said however, that he had
opposed lhe original ordinance creating
the affice of administrative officer and
thought "we were putting too much
power in the hands of one man."
Phillips called statement by Battin
that the CAO was attempting to take
over county government untrue.
Phillips also read a note from Baker
asking that action be deferred until he
could be present.
Thomas gave no indication of his feet ..
tags during the debate and did not speak.
Previously he had said he was shocked
at published reports in Santa Ana of
Battln's intentions.
Thomas, a retired Navy captain, has
held his present post since October.
19 67. He has a staff of 20 and la
paid the county's highest salary, hl,7'8
a year •
Orange Coast
Weather
Those low clouds might lea.k a
little on Wednesday, but things
should clear up by midaftemoon
when temperaturt1 will Inch up to
6S along the coast 111nd 68 Inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Las Vega1 ca.~inos have Dwight
D, EfsenllOWtr on the ir mind;
that's becau.se hi.t likeness will
apptar on a n.ew "silver" dollar
to be u.sed in gambling. Page 3.
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z: DAILY PI LOl SC TutWay, Ftbruary 2, 1~71
Freeway Appeal Eyed
Iligh Court ~lay Decide on Newport Vote .
the Superior Court writ sought on the '
1TOUndt lht people havt no r!K)lt to
decide these ••non-municipal Issues."
By L. Pl!TER KJ\IEG
01 1111 0..111' l"Mllt tt1n
The California Supreme Court may
be asked to rule on the legality of
the Newport Beach freeway election.
A Superior Court judge Monday ruled
the two anti-freeway measures should
be put to a vote -even though the
City C.Ouncil may not be beholden to
the results of one of them.
llowever, Angelo Palmieri, attorney
for the three fonner city officials who
sought the writ of mandate to halt
the election, said this morning he may
take a similar request to the higher
court.
Palmieri said, "lt Is too late to make
a formal appeal of the declato1;1, but
my clients feel the issue Is 11Jnlncant
enough to seek a writ from the Supreme
Court." Palmieri pointed out the court eould
refuse to bear the case.
lie said a decision will be made "within
a day or two."
Palmieri said, "We have to consider
l! this the kind of thing I.he Supreme Court
would be interested in considering their
calendar Md the other things they face.·•
He said, however, at the moment.
his clients "are leaning toward" pressing
the issue.
Judge &bert L. Corfman, after a five.
hour bearing, rejected the petition for
The ballot prop0slttons are an tnlt\1tlve
asking the city coouncil to can cel an
ex isting agreement with the state on
the route of the coastal freeway through
Corona del Mar and a charter amend·
ment requiring f u tu re referendums
before any new route agreemen lS can
be signed.
In thelr'court complaint, the plaintiffs
-form er mayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard and former vice
mayor Hans J. Lorenz -claimed the
results of both propOsitions \\'OUld be
Illegal and local referendums may be
applied lo munici pal issues onl y.
With Vietnamese Forces
In announcing his decision, Judge
Corfman said the two propositions, "in
and of themselves • . . do not appear
to be illegal to me on the face ot
it. " ~oviet Newspaper Claims Corfman earlier, in a key debate cv"
whether the actions would be legislative
flr administrative, left the door open
for additional liti gation after the eleclion,
if the council does adopt the initiative
measure. A.n1ericans 'Invade' Laos Palmieri had contended the action was
f!dministrative and therefore unsuitable
Ior a public vote. By United Press International
The Soviet government newspaper
Izvestia said tonight a major force of
S' ulh Vietnamese troops "under the
direct command of American officers"
bad invaded Laos. The Japanese news
ar.ency Kyodo said 4,000 to 5,000 South
Viel1nmese were Involved.
Pentagon spokesman J. W. Friedheim
wtu!d not comment on the lzvesUa report
but referred reporters to r e c e n t
~:.:· mcnl8 by Secretary of State William
P. R~'.;ers and defense secretary Melvin
1t. Laird that U.S. ground troops would
obey Congressional strictures against
e:i·.c·ing Laos or Cambodia.
An official statement by the Viet Cong
(cre'111 ministry, broadcast by Radio
Han C'i tonight, sa!d South Vietnamese
and Thal mercena ry units were carrying
Out raids in Southern Laos, that
th~usands mere Vietnamese troops were
mA~sed on the border and that three
U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed into
the Tonkin Gull near North Vietnam.
U.S. orficlals In W ashlng toa
1tknowledged that something was under
way in northwestern South Vietnam but
maintained silence on the reports of
r
Saddlehack Gets
Maximum 3-year
Accreafia\iuii ........ -~ •1 . '
).. ...;µ.., ~ -.......... tmum, three·year accreditation from the
Y.'estem Association of Schools and
CollC'gcs.
H;rry D. Wiser, executive secretary
of the association's Accrediting Com·
rri!" '1n for Junior Colleges, said today
Sndc'leback bas been g r a n t e d ac·
cref.italion for the three.year period en-
ding June 30, 1974.
Accreditation follows a review of the
coll:~e's ed1,1eational program, facilities-
and ln!tructors' qualifications and means
that students earning credits at Sad-
d1"back may transfer them to four-year
colleges or universities.
A committee of eight educators serving
on the accrediting panel visited Sad-
cl1cbnck for three days in Nflvember.
They viewed records, talked with staff
and student.5 and evaluated the in-
structional program.
"The college was CQmmended for
demonstrating remarkable strength and
rnnge in its services in only two years
of 0'1eration," noted Or. Fred H. Bremer,
Saddleback superintendent.
In its third year of operation, Sad-
dle:b1ck's initial application could have
rest•lted In accreditation for a one or
ti .. ~ .... ,r period, or no accreditation.
DAILY PILOT
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7ha'fltl A. Mu•phl~•
M1n11111~ Editor
ltic~••cl P. H1H
klllh OrtruJO Coun1J fdllOf
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.1111Hll1ry G•lllll!IOIU, U.11 IMfll!lly.
a strike aga inst the Ho Chi ~1inh Trail
in Laos. Soviet Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin spoke Monday of an "out.rage<1us
invasion" of Laos.
Sen. George Aiken (R·Vt.), said Mon·
day night the State Department told
him U.S. troops were massing near the
Laotian border but would not cross the
frontier.
Corfman replied, "Assuming it is an
adm inistralive act, where is the law
that says you can·t have an election
even though the result is nil."
I-le said, in effect, the adm inistrative
versus legislative_pciint, as well as all
othe r points, could be more fully explored
in court proceeding s after the election.
The charter amendment, even ii
The Kyodo news report, quoting adopted, still must be ratified by the
"reliable sources" in Saigon, said the state legislature.
South Vietnamese paratroopers were Corfman let it be known almost from
flown in by helicopter and that U.S. the outset that he leaned heavily toward
planes supported them. It said no U.S. allowing the election, telling Palmieri
ground forces were involved ln the opera-"The point is whether or not we are
tion. premature in trying to evaluate" the
In Vietiane, the government of i.,os issues involved.
did not confirm reports of any invasion He repeatedly pointed out. as did in-
but said the United States had Increased tervening attorneys Roy B. \Voolsey and
its heavy bombing raids into Laos in Arthur Strock, that additional remedies
the last several days. In Saigon, the are available after the vote.
U.S. command reported another day of He said the state certainly could bring
massive BS2 and jet fighter-bomber legal proceedings to enforce the contract
strikes ln Laos. and indicated Clther litigation is possible
The toMage, of bombs hittin& the Ho to void any binding council action.
t;Ri, Minh trail has now surpi ssed th~ Noting that the council could. on its
tomttgt that fell in Berlla .. '*" JWJJ , schedule votes on eiLke!' issue, £~.:/·
during World War 11 but supplies were man said, "The questiOK bere i.5 whethll
still getting through to Cambodia and people have the right to do what the council has a right to do."
Southern Vietnam. At the same time, he said, "Whether
The allegaUoo by the Clfflclal Soviet what they do is legal or illegal bas
government newspaper that 11.S. officers nothing to do with it."'
were commanding the purported Invasion The Marth 9 election was forced by
force added a new element of gravity petitions circulated by the Freeway
to Kosygin's earlier statements the South. Fighters.
Vietnamese had invaded Laos on U.S. Corfman pointed out that cou rts are
orders. traditionally liberal in their thinking
_"Major -#illrY detachmet1~ of th~ ~1 when~ it 1CQm.eL to rdl.okiD~ a., ris1*, to
Saa regime uOOU the direct C()J111"1land vote. ·
of -KmeriCan offlcefs have Invaded The judge slressed the issues ar! "riot
iOUthern regions of Laos, Izvestia said. tlMt •Mil based his decision partially
"U.S. aviation is making day and ni~ cin th!tfid.
raids on lower Laos to support the "Basically," he said, "this is a dispute
trOQPJ of ~e invaders. . . as to v•hetb~r the people have the right
"The Pentagon plans with the help to exercise this vote.
of the Saigon military to strike blows "If the issues are not open and shut,"
at the patriotic forces ln Laos and to he said, "they've got that right."
capture the southern provinces of the Newport Beach City Attorney Tully
country bordering on the Democratic Seymour, representing City Clerk Laura
Republic of (north) Vietnam." Lagios, the technical defendant in the
Laotian offic ials In Vientiane denied case, urged rejection on the writ because
knowledge of any allied incursion but of the importance of the issue, whelher
said they would study Kosygin 's remarks or not policy is involved.
at a cabinet meeting Wednesday. They ''When you have anything as important
did report North Vietnamese and Com-as a freeway, especially in Newport
mwtist Thai guerrillas crossing into Beach "'here it threatens the character
Thailand with heavy equipment from of the city. it can blight it and divide
the reported invasion area of southern it, the people have a right to make
Laos. policy," Seymour said.
Rebels Split Up
Panthers, Potheads Severing Ties
From Wire Service~
BERKELEY -Here it is folks, a real
case of the pot calling the kettle black.
Only il's the Black Panthers calling the
pot proponenlS a gang of mindles~ fools
and vowing to go their separate revoJu.
tionary ways. ... A tape recording
purportedly f r o m
fugitive Black Pan-
ther leader Eldridge
Cleaver-in Algiers
was broadcast by
the Pacifica Founda-
tion's radio station
KPFA·Ffl1 In Ber-
l<eley Monday night.
Ls.-,11:v Cleaver declared
Dr. Timothy Leary and his wife Rose-
1nary, convicted iii Orange County Super-
ior Court a year ago on Laguna Beach
drug charges, have blown their minds.
"LSD has destroyed their ability to
make judgments,"
says the recording,
adding that the
• Learys are now un·
der house arrest In
~ their Alglers villa.
Dr. Leary rea ched
the r.loroccan nation
last year with Wea·
. therman aid alter es-
CLt:Avctt. caping fr Cl m Los
Padm Men's Colony lit San Luis Obispo.
J!is d!spatchcs, statrmcnts and crnr-
munlques since have been Increasingly
vlclent, complex and contusing In their
call to mned revolution In Amerlc1.
Cleaver -also a h1gltlve from
crfmlnal prosecution -Indicated In the
tape played Monday night thst tht! Black
Panther movement Is severing relstlons
with the drug culture.
"We're finished wilh thrlr m•dnr:ss."
the txUed P•nlher minister of in-
formation declared.
''This applies to Jerry Rubi n, Stew
Albert, Abbie Hoffman and the whole
silly psychedelic movement which we·ve
supported in the past," he continued.
''These drugs are harmful to our cause,
counter-revolutionary. If you think by
tuning in; turning o,., and dropping out
that you're improving society you're
wrong.
"You're destroying your own brain
and strengthening the enemy,'' Cleaver
added . ''They want robots.
"\Ve want the people Che Guevara
asl<ed for: cool, calculating killing
machines ... with confirmed ideological
foundations . . . motivated by revolu·
tionary love.''
Leary. the one·time Ha r var d
psychology professor, was described as
a menace to society by Superior Court
Judge Byron K. McMill an last spring
v.•hen he sentenced him to prisoh.
Dr. Leary, his second wife, and son
John, now 20, v.·ere arrested in Laguna
Dec. 29, 1968 and charged with possessing
marijuana and dangerous drugs.
He was sentenced lo 1 to JO years
In state pr ison. while facing an additional
such term in a Texas federal prison,
but ~1rs. Leary was finally given three
years' probalion.
She jotned hirfi in Algiers after the
sensationally simple jailbreak at S11n
Luis Obispo. while John Leary -also
on probation -is now living in San
Fral'lcisco.
'"We 're finished v:ith relating to their
ml.'ldntss,!.!. Cleaver ('OOCluded in the
rfi('Ording made at hi.! own Algiers
rl"'sldence. referring t.o the Learys and
the psychtdcllc cult.
lie said Leary \vas placed under
rtvoluUonary arrest from Jan. 9 to 13
and is now in what v.·as termed prottctl\'t
custody.
'·
D.-,11,.Y P'ILOT 51111 P'M!o
Clarist1nas Revisited
Robert J. Cox and his v.•ifc, Genelle, get to have Christmas all over
again as they hold plaque they \Von for decorating Ship Ahoy Restaur-
ant (\vhich they own) as one o( best in "Best Co mmercial Establish-
ment" category of competition in "40 Miles of Christmas Smiles" con-
test. Restaurant won third place in its division in contest co-sponsor-
ed by the Orange County Coast Association and the DAILY PILOT.
Plaque is reproduction or DAILY PILO'f pic ture page in which win-
ners were announced.
Postal Service Raising
All Mail Rates in May
WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S.
Postal Service announced today plans
to raise virtually all classes of ~stage,
Including tv.·o cents for first-class mail
and one cent for airmail.
The new rates would be effective,
Mat~h of Dirites
Headed by Chief
Laguna Beach police Chief Kenneth
Hu'ck has again been named chairman
Clf the 1971 March of Dimes fund raising
appeal in the Art Colony.
Assisting Huck as volunletr treasurer
of the drive is Mrs. Ruth Schopen of
Laguna Federal Savings and Loan
Association. She is the "·ife of Capt.
Frank Schopen of the Laguna Beach
Police Department.
In calling attention to the advances
ma de in the last decade to\vard the
prevention of birlh defects. Huck said
the Pt1arch of Dimes invested over
$900.000 in research which led to the
rubella (German measles) vaccine.
Huck pointed out that the fund can1-
paign v.•il\ not only raise mone y for
more research but \Viii also hring im·
1portant information to the public
regarding the treatmen t and prevention
-0£ birth defects.
on a temporary basis, the second week
in Pi-lay.
Newspaper and magazine rates would
be doubled and those for bulk mailing
by one-third.
The increased rates, subject to
permanent approval by an ind ependent
five·membe.r postal rate commission,
would bring ·m 1dditionlll revenues of
Sl.4~ billion during the year beginning
July 1.
The proposed new rates would put
the posta l service on "a :;ound financial
basis'' for the fir st time in decades.
Asst. Post master Gen. James \V.
Hargrove: sa id.
First-class stamps would go from six
lo eight cents and airmail stamps from
10 to l l cents under the proposal. The
postal Board of Governors formally sub-
mitted the proposal to the rate com·
mi ssion t.1onda y.
The increases in second and third-class
rates \\·ould be spread over a five.year
period. ""ith onC'-fifth of the proposed
incr('ase becoming effective each year.
Under postal reform legislation ap-
proved last year. the postal service may
put at leasl part of the increases into
effect "'ithin 100 da ys if the rate com-
mission d()('S not act. That would make
~lay JI the cffec!i\"e date for regular
and airm;ii\ stamp price increases. The
service. ho\ve vcr. said Mnv 15 would
be lhe effective date -102 days from
t.1onday.
Astronauts
Making Up
Lost Time
SPACE CENTER. Houston (lJPI) -
Apollo 14's astronauts, their spacecraft
docking problem ntysterious\y behind
them, hur1led through space today mak·
In g up lime lost at launch for Am erica's
third moon landi ng.
Space pro Alan B. Shepard and rookie
niers Edgar D. f\-1itchell and Stua rt
A. Roose were the quietest team so
far in the Apollo program.
They had so little to do that Mitchell
once suggested they ·1could play a lot
of tic-tac-toe" on the pages of the fligh t
plan. The astronauts dozed off and on
but ground controllers said it was
"perfectly normal."
A 10-second rocket burst f\-londay night
gave the moonsbip an extra two mile
an hour shove on an accurate course
to retrieve the 40 minutes lost before
launch. so Shepard and Mitchell can
land on the moon as originally scheduled
Friday.
Shepard reported none of the cre1v
had taken medication since the flight
11tarted.
Gerald D. Griffin, one or the mission's
three flight direCtors, lold newsmen that
all three astronauts had dozed during
their scheduled waking hours.
.. I lhink that's perfectly nor mal." Grif-
fln said. '"I guess all of us do that
in our business every once in a whi le
"'hen we don 't hve much to do. That 's
"'hy they "'ere so quiet. I'm sure. It's
been a couple of Jong days so far and
they're just resting.''
The landing in the a1cient Fra Mauro
lunar valley al 1:17 a.m. PST was recon-
firmed when ground engi~eers concluded
the mechanism which ClfPles the com-
mand ship and moon lander now v.·as
•·working beautifully.''
But they still were puzzled over what
"·ent wrong Sunday night "'hen the doc k-
ing device failed to work the first five
times the two spacecraft bumped
together . Groun~ experts speculated
some kind of foreign particle may have
jammed the delicate me ch an ism.
possibly a sliver of ice which melted
before the sixth docking attempt.
The coupler will be used for a second
and final time Saturday to retrieve
Shepard, 47, and ~1itcbell. 40, after
they return from their 331.i, hours Cln
the moon.
Laguna Police
lnvestig.ating
3 Burglaries
Lagu~ Beach police are investigatin&
three weekend burglaries in which seve·
ral items with a total value of $1 ,200 "·ere
taken.
Investigators said while Stephen ll.
Boyd, of 504 Pea rl St., v.•as out of town,
burgla rs entered his home and stole $700
worth of photography equipment from the
bedroom. The loot included an expensive
camera. several lenses and a carrying
case. Officers said there were no signs
of forced entry at the residence.
Another burglary occurred Sunday
night, officers said, when an unknov:n
suspe<;t smash ed a classroom window at
St. Catherine School. 3090 S. Coast High-
to11ay. and stole a tape recorder from a
desk . School officials said the recorder
was valued at $200.
Police received a third the.ft report
from Terry L. Grindle. of 825 Park Ave.,
who said a tool box had been removed
lrom his carport sometime Sunday night.
'fhe automotive tools "·ere valued at $300,
police said.
DO YOU LIKE
STOP IN
AND ASK
FOR
BILL
LAURIE
HE KNOWS A LOT
ABOUT SHAGS , , ,
HE'S PRETTY
SHAGGY Hlt.nELFI
SHAGS
IF YOU DO-THERE'S A LARGE
SELECTION OF SHAG CARPETING
HERE AT ALDEN'S.
WE HAVE SHORT SHAGS-
MEDIUM SHAGS-LONG SHAGS
PLAIN SHAGS-TWEED SHAGS
& MUL Tl-COLORED SHAGS
IANTA ANA. ORANGI
TUSTIN Call • , ,
ALDl!N'S
11:£D HILL CARPETS
& DRAPlRllS
11374 lrvln•, Tutttn, C1l.
Ill .U44
ALDEN'S::
CARPETS e DRAPES · •
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOURS: Moo. Tltru Tlt•"·• t lo 5:30 -ffl .. t to t -Sat., t :lO to 5
I •
OVER THE COUNT~Jt Complete-New York Stock List
State Ma111tfact111·i.t1g Slips
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of .,.11, coll1 I ortN TO THE rUILIC
TELEl"HONI
months of l!l70 saw a substan· 11111 •tlu•l ''~ '" Molobm •1~ ~·· 11 1.0 •~ 11• w11n NA •t• • A.llttn inc l!OI'~ i:r.• ''' <tP l'IOGver •S .U\o'I VtMt St It lt\o W1!11 Mi. 7\\ U1 "I' Proo 70b tla l easing in the rate or des· ~~~,:;•10~~c•• ,'",1'!.~~.~~,11:1 ig . 1Zhv11tro11 Pli 1 w11n Pub 1s ,,,, ArPr" ,.1,1s I PPrOlllnl•ttl'< 3 ~m In ... 1 t Vi Wtd1w p 71l~ 1··~1"· Wk n; S\I ... 1. ltt<j 20t Cent of lr.tnS""rtauon eqwp ., ,., 11 ""'it~ in•••·~• M1 ·!'? 2J~ wi in ec1 n," '•'•' w ~ •.. PL' 21~ "'• AJ 1no11•••l15 ~ >>> , W lltttcl• """" 21~ Jl1 Aluont 11 ~cur rs <llUIO Hud PP l'•'• :.ltl W•r.i.w t'' tlt t11lll W J2 \lo lll,4 ._It G•S 1 10
nlf'tll hlVI liotton ..... HI/II co., u,, ",,, Wtlh NI"< l•T• UV.'f•dnY fi ~ :Ht Aletli.• •f'lf•" <h~e<I (af<fdl nr H11;11 P ,1\ l!t. JiltwttOC J1
)I 19>:. 10''1 IOU ~' Ill •1t fU 10$ 11 ti>'• lfno + l,\Frtnkltr tel
'
St If .... •n~ ... .,., ... \1 h!M I SPP t•• 111 . 11\\ 11" +11. Fr-tlvt ,111
:16 jO °''" .,,,_ -h hi MU SP Fl 20 21'• j ' .. tl Fru•ll! I ID 11 1•1 Id 10 hlPNUT 2 JS 11~. I 0 H ''i l''l Fuo111 In •ll Ju 2~~: 2!(! 2l1~ + ~I Ch ll!P cl UP ,, lO<l 20 a 70''1 + lo
l4 :tt' )II
1 J,, + 1 ~~:~utl Nrf, I.I ~I~ ~~ rg:,; = ~ G._C (p IO
II 11•1 II 11.., -1• ~"'j• C••ll 211 t • ti, "' -'• GAP C&r• IO
.i 1•t• ll'• 1• -'•cn,1 ••••1 1 11 ,, 11 . 11 1, _.,Gg'••'~. ''°,-)6 •2•o 41\l 0 \0 -~' Chro1f"ll ..SO 105 l!> )()1, 71\ -1 ~
" 1"' lll 114 It 3)\\ 2!11 111. -G-
1• 1.Pio tm 1 .. ltl J9\.,. lt1o Ji~ "I
ANSWHINO 1uouu I 50°/o OFF
835°7777 I 1t 1t IE EDll<IGEI SA!'IT.t. A!'IA
,.~ .... •lJ-#M
In the pr oduction of goods ~: .... , '
01 1 "'l~1~:r, ~~::: ~~ n1: 11 :~ l:'\..~ ~i.':,"',",',.-",
d r ~·n~e 1hroo.t11\-Hv~ ..,,h "1
:111 ser\'1ces manu actunng ,,.,, ·~· <'•v ~ tcr• I"''~' ~1 1" 1i. MUTUAL A1c1S1•nc1 »
f lh !IO nG I f,,._1.><ti "° -j11<. 21·~ ;t , Alt1ncl11 lllr
'5 l~t ;~! ~f:=:~c,•,',""',,,,~.· '•,,•:," ',!.,•=1~,G:~~~\a 'l:! r~;: II lt\o -I• Clnn ltll l tO I~ .SO ~:i: ,0 _ it C.t11<1ell " 11 f!~: ltlO ?~t +••clnnGE 15' IS,. 11\1 :II +•)~:~~:"k)O
~ \~1~ "',., • ..: l~ l ~
l~ r.i· ~ ;i,ll ~
t ::U>li J!h >ti~ \11 •• •,J•• •J ""' -·~ 12 .... ltli '"" + .... n 1•, r.. m -1• St 1''• 11n n~ t 1•
'9 01E.-,l l!JI$ WANflfD r
Do1il sel Ile t«.-r less.
Don t settle lor ;iny1h1ng less 1han the besl 1ntere~l
r<1te on 90-day Thnf! certt11cates Invest a m1n1mum
ot ~J 000 00 1n our 90-day ThH ft cert1hcates, and
)OU II earn a solid 7°/o per .annum.
And Avco Thrift pays 11
•
~ beJJ<V< in )"'1·
1,i lUl11e Ol11fC' '11 \\ Dier RoJtl SJnl ~ Anil
Acfounh 11101o>CI• J up In • m•\m1un1 ol \10 000 by lh1111
( uJr1n1y Cnrpo1•hon of C~l1rnrn1• nnlv .. ~ P'nv1drd 1n l hl'
C•hforn1• I 1n1nn•I Cudr A 1 u11y of Ch~pttr 8 IGu~1~nttl'
Thrtrl Acrnunhl uf 01>1•1on inf tht l1l1fn1n11 f1n1nf11I Codi'
mA• bt ohl"ntd upon rr11ur•l
J~I Rln C.UARANlY CORP ORAllON OF CALllORNIA IS NOT
AN INST ll U ... 1CNTAUTI' Of THE SlAT[ Of CALIFORNIA.
A\co ~ lhnfl llivr.onn h•' ho>rn '" opr••l1on t1n cr. 1 ~:?1
ind h•l ntvr' f•1lfll lo p•y fund~ on drm1nd.
NEWPORT BEACH
2101 San Joaquin Hills Rd.
I 714 ) 933.3440
THERE IRE 20 IVCO THRIFT OFFICES IN CALlfllRNIA
VI SIT OR CILL YOUR HEARtST OFFICE.
'' JS one 0 e nine ma]Or in, r11~ '"''~"' lf'lfr•rf J li.< .a.11q c -10.
<tus1nal con1ponents rn the In ~·:.:" "' <om 1~l.~~~ ;:! •;,, !::::t~ !r'1
"l"le bank 5 eco»om>e ser1es ..,..,. Lo<• 1•, i • Int e..-1,~ , , < , "'1'" Pw 1 »
., " "'"'"'"' ~ '''• ,._., 1n1 A\u1•, 11 1•·l FUNDS A1111c1 c~ 1,»
I I I dd-" b .,1 0 • oe I , 'l • lnl s,, ~ JS "''Ill M1!n Cl n concep va ue a 1:u y "'ITS •..c • 1 ,., "' ~( ~1 11 it•, ..,110M1u Jlob
n1anufacturcs is measured by !Sg ~,0 !:) 11i. I~,~. 1~,~ 1;:: :m:s.~11 .~
substract1ng the cost of ~~~ .. 'in 1~ • ·~·· ~~c.k"~ 3••: ~''0 ..., C!J®.~ :m:cic~""t.
I I h ... ~l " I j ( : ... :t• --... HtiQl ... 11! .t0 materia s on arr1va at I e_..~,""'s,~'" .; ~ •• j~'~11 ,,:; ,· NE\Y vo11.K 1..,,.11nv•• aas 11n11 w"''°"'P eem
nl;int for processing from t.helr .,, 1...,,, ', ... ''"'" F ••,,:Mo -int 1011,,..1n1 ou ... n"••lor• C.rouo ~~•' ~, ·-,. ...I~~ .. ? I •• J•m.COv 11 l11'o ltlkwll MJPrllH bY 1 0~ nGI '1J 'u UQ ... \:lluc upon completio n of theAl'>fr'• 1,. 11 Jl1tv Fri• J"• , .. int Nt!IO!'lt .,nae ~ M11t tU ID•t~,"'i, {D10 Al<Qf•C ~,. e.to KPA Nuc • ~ 2\o 111an al Src11rl1111 Pr"' • 11 • '1 ..,111 E• on 60 Tl\allUfaCtUre The bank's Alco -llO J•,t• <tle• ,1 n \,Y.I Oe•ltt1 Inc •rt Sloe" llJ$20..M._,..Htto ii3r
e s l1mate d erive f1om its more !rlro!d811:v" ;,: ; • ~:!~~~ o1 ,;t; ~2~~ m:~•rlce.• ~cu~~ ~r',.v ~~ ;~ ~::,r.~11r,n~
h "P f "'I Ph C~ •' • • , Kii~ Gri1 7 1 J cou cl "'"' bttn ow RHI\ t 45 Sot Am Alrlln • rxtens1~e series l e ac1 1Cl ,m•11< 7,, 2'• oe:•~•m • ~ ,,, •o <blc1l or "",..,, •1t1 20 ~1 20 u All•,•• ~
Co.1st fl.1,irket & Business" !"'E16t;", : ~ 1 ~::~,/ ~\' 1;U 1•skec1> Mor~~ Alli ~v~Hnc:Q(~ 'U :~ ~,:~~!,ii'.lo Am E~or 15''1 i' <ellNd ~loll'\11 ... Dtrdft )~ J:llJOllnlln l'!llllO llAm Ct n 2.20
M anufacturing \\htch sa w \n "'" • ~·~K•ull = ~\) , Adrnlr111y l'urc11 Kt'tst1r11 l'ullcls .., c 1n on.JS .., vr-r ,...,., ,. .<ev1 ,.,~ 111, 11\11 Grwlh ' ot I 1G Apollo ' .. lf.'60 Am Cf<ntnl Its s hare of total output of • Mede<> 1 •11 ·•· c 101,15, 1ncorn 'fl.j •O '"' 81 u 2•l'llorA c~11n1.o
I d I f ... ,,, Tt!v J~<• 20\t K11111 PC f \1 10\~ lftSU( 'II • •s '"'' 81 1' 90 Jl 11 "''•YSuo I .0 J!QOC S an serv1cl'o;: !! lfl rom Anfl9u1 11 1n'• 1 ~I l(ln• 1n1 ) J1• Aa~11r1 < l• s.... ,. ,, 1 SI , 11 "'C~•nlcl 115
23 6 I 1969 I ~ 8 Anktn lh ,1, 9\11 <ln111 El I t\O "'~1n1 Fd t •t 10 ~ (~ kl l 1$ t ~) Am 0111111 I pe:rcen 1n o "'"' "''" IP 6 , J '<!•k c,, 1 , 1 ..,, m•ld J Jl 1 •1 c ~ i<.2 , ,, s..t0 "'01s11e1 '°'
I 197·' h d ..,,.1.,,. M •Ir th <nip • o• 3• ltj1 Atvlrt t t1 I ti c ' '' '' -'' '' A•n Du1IVe1t pcrr.en ln u a an ag· ..,,c11n ~1 31 lt ><11111r l , 0 "''I'"" " 1 11 111 ~· A0uv1 11 1..,
gregate pa} roll or $14 64 ~i~e.~0~ ~:'· n~ L:~· "''~ ~ •• 11~: !/p1~!'':oa lY ~~ ;~ l~ ~~! lf I~ u ·~ u :;;;E~~: 1'.Jl
b'lllon 1,1 1970 Arvd.a IO'o 11 Li iie Wd IOh lO'o ... l'ICI!> Ji} t ff C111 St , .. ''°"'rnE~ •>Al A~CC Bo1 •5 .ii .a•!IOn •~• •h"'m llus J Jt l~I Poi.r JI.I StJ ._GnB'fc1 iao
D bl od I b ..... .1 "'u!Q Sci 5l • 5'1Le.ac1v Ce 11\ 11•i "'m OV ln 106S l •U knlc~~ Jll 112 A Gen1n1 ,so ura e pr uc ion a so rueu s.1.0 At ,,, s" Lth c ... 1 ,, ; 1\9 ..,m ,:;~, s ~1 s s1 Knick Gt t u t t2 .., cnin 111 10 all of manuf aclur1ng s losses. •,•,•, ",,,,, '•'", ',',··. ~~~.u,,• ,•, 10 1 11 1~ Am., ~,,,.., •11 Grill t 1' 10 01 Am Ho11t .o .. ~ft 110.. n C•~lt ~ 11 t If ·~ RIC~ lS •l Ii .. A Homt 1 IO
dec!1n1ng I 8 percent to $15 97 ,skim Rn 2• J'', line M•• tl• 101~ 1nc-n• t ~· 10 )0 Lll>uty • Clll '5' .., Home,, 2 ,1111" P 3'• o 0 Lnbltw 1,_ 11 lnv11I I I t 10 Liit Slk ~JI t 01 Am Ho•P 2i
billion \\hllf' nondurable p ro-Bt.,mrt 11 • ii'1 Lol1 Cd~ 1\.4 2i.' Speci ~•• Liit Inv '• l'J Am ,,..,.1.50 IB•~ltu l'i'o 10•• L Et 11 l 12 I Slo<A • ~l '~~ Liii( Ntl •a JI 11 11 ... Meolt t l 12
ducllon outs1r1pped 1nllallon in ~~117.1• fj~ ~.: ~~·" (" 2s•o '''• ~:!: 1~~ n ~ Sl , ~I t::.,1, siv~•.o A M11C1111 oo
,1dvanc1ng 57 pt>rcent 10 $927f~•lm 1nc1 ''• s·.~:~ ~1~~ 1~, •r1 Am Au1 •111~0~ C•n•d 1111311J~,,.,Mi.c~:·
b illion 8~;1!, '°H~1 ~: !:•M•ll~n a7 ~eJ•;"'m~ GiG 1 _... C1pn 1o t 11ot1..,N11G112 1o
leel• L•b , , •I' .Ito In ,\ 1• • t 1 "'"~.:. re~"\ I I tt MY! It li U I' """ Pl>e10 ti The 1nct.>I comple' « l>><h ah111P1 ,, i 1 • " .~'"'" ,c I • ,,, Grwln 1 uo II al L11•" l cr 12 oi 1l n .., A:ts0¥ ~.
l
'l'cl SO'! I~ ,, "'' 1,11 II ti (, lncmt 1 1'l ·~·M,1fl.a In 111 t60 Am Sttl n
I -·' h I r• "bll ( G 10 10\ 'IO 7J 1nnt11 •fl $l11Am Shi' .... reac k."U a ig l -0 .,11 "" I ion :1~~h1 Hi { ,,;: B.ov.~ n n 1 ~~nr'"~ .b .so .'! !I Mk! Gr111 1 li i it.., Sme 1 1 t0
111 Dece1nber 1969 (measured Bo111,,. 0:1 , .... .,,LP 1•1• 101..,•u•n ••t ,,,1i.11u Fo 11111111 ...,..soAf• 10 11001~. c JI lt l(()uv 11 n ... ~, rlov•l!IC<I MI H '"" u 23 u M ... m 5"1 I ill an annu11! r a lel declined B001 "'H ,. •• 111, l'l'llc H s"t su Fu...:! A ~" •10 111 c.m 11.1111 '1 .., s1c1 Pl47! I So~ (.ap , , •t o!<;! M•I 14 , :I.I', FuM • 1 •I 1 15 Mt ll Tt IJ ti U 11 "'"' S!~U 41 ~ 3 perrt!nl from 1969 to $10 67 B••o~n , • ''• '<'ocll•n lt\o f01\ SIQ(1< j" s •1 M1t11 ' 11 • 11 "'Ta. T w1
bll 1,-o B•1nk• '" •1 ")1"1<1 '" 11,.,20 s<.1 r •• ~ ~"M"""'~ n u 12 u """ T&T t60 I ion lil I B•kl Sea 1''~ 1s~. Mlclld C1 ll... .w Bt Dwn • IS • 1s MldA Mii s 17 i 17 :~•IWk .0 Brwn J.r 1!, 11:\,Mkllt• J' 11 B1vrc~ l lO' IMco<IV Co 1100Ull W SPll7J
Transportation equipment Bru•11 B• 1r'h 11 ~kfw GT 1,,; ,0.) ll~•cori 13 n 1i n MoodV'• u o1 I• n ~~ P•llf 1 2s
od h h ked
llYC~t¥ ,, ' I MPll Gtl 35' u n lltrr. .Cnl I 11 • •l MI F Fcl • ,, • ,. ' •,•,Pl 1 4J Pr Ucllon W IC pea a' .'"" '.
• ~, ' , •rr Glfl t 11 • 1! MI F Gtll S '2 J It m nc • • • Jn VIG 1 1,~ ",,'1·· J.• i U 79'M11US G" 101111u""", ~~ • $:! 76 bi I hon 1n August 1969, ~i'f"'t.",.~ 2~ , '~1~ .·,. rf..'~,h .. ' ""'''~ '12 '111 Mu omG s 11 s 11 "'"'" Mii
I
C I WS ,, ~ ... r.w. 11•eoston <t 1n Ill Mu Omln 10 '11\:it AMF Inc •o p lumme ted 16 percent to $3 06 c• bd N 1 • • " M<>11wk • 11 ~ 2S~ Iott Fein 1 1~ 12 11 Mur s11r1 li 02 1• 02 "'ml..: Ill ,.m I / "1 J\IJ Mont Ccl If• ,v, Booll)ft • I t t l ul Tri! I " J tt AMP llK M
b1llJ01l, further !hough nar·(~~\ ~ ~: ~i m\enm Pk 11,\11\\!rwn ~d JIS J "NEA Mui 10:t110.Sl"""P<O Ott
d I I 'C.an•acl J l Mcor1 P t • t\~ 1111\lock Ct!v n Ht! t"ll untVt\I "'""Hll Coro r o1o1cr ec1nes a 1e 1n sor ec,PMlllt 1,,19,_:Mcor• s 17\lt U aull(~ 1•17 1!~tN•t Sttur sn ..,m11ar1 10
1971 lfto S~w ~• t'o !t! TrA 2Ui 27'0 Cf~d~ l•ll)(ltJ Bt\th lOtl ll l•AITtl1r Pl14S In Cap l~•A ' • S!o M!aTr W! !' • JV. Dlv!d ' ,, I OJ Amtltr 111 61
P d I f I l (~plch ]>' )>;, .... OICh M ,,,., J•, NMW 3 10il01'61 BO!ld SO! sso..,mJ!eG Ito
ro uc1on o eeclrira cirr ~~ i;•,n~,or CIYD 1•111''' NY v~' 1•3j1'" oiv1d 4 Ji 1 1• ... m1e1 n l d I l Cartt I!! 3 1 11 vellet ••• t 'lo !1 i~I cr1 •I l.ll ~:W~~k ; ;~ 1~ ll An•con I tit
C'f]Ulpmen an suppics S ip C••I• Gp '0'~20'·""YIRI Et J:J~;~~ ... ';:!, ~9l :t' ln<OM S 7! s 1o ~~~~~c'1
pcd 4 percenl to $2 86 b 1lhon ~!'1~1 ~:0 1 ~ ~ 1~ , ~tt' 1~: s., 1,. •Pit •~~ l •~ J 7t s1oc• •" •''And c11v 1 )()
CC>>Tim>>">C",\lu>>OQU>p>ttcnl ac.Cente• ,,,,,,,0Nart11 c 16•,111.11 •Pll ~' J ''l~el Grin •C• :•l ApacheCP 25 " " ICen •PS I' it·• NtrC•• R t ~ 10 Crnt .~r n 11 1! I tuw C•I S SI OI APcoO 1 111
I r lh h If Cent l~b \ NC-c 1 ; 1•-. cnann•~~ I vnrll Heuw ~d 10 l• 10 14 ..,p, <•• CflUlllnR Or lllOrC In 8 Cht•~lf (: ;•:'loi"'PE~u:' ,, 2,,, 9113n ll~Jo?•OHtw Wl rl l?t,ll tA._PL Oll So
fl[ !hi' Sector "as d0\\11 14 ChorlC • • ~ .. G .. 0 ll'o ll ~ ... o.,.~I '10 'l61Nrwlon 1liSliOI A1t ... SvclO•
\
Chm tr1 '' 1"'• Nil Lio l J , )I , Grwln ~'I ! SI N;c:h Srr1 UH 1' lt "''''" Olt percent !1orn 196!1 Chel ,,,., , , • ~111 Mtcl 21, 2111. inc•.., 11~ 1 i1 'lo•e1 1 1s t11s '2 Art•l•N 1111 (ll•J. ll 11 11 11 ,1 Pel '' J' s .... c1 ' • 1 ~o :kn,pn 1 o• J Ot "''c" o1n 1 Also 1n the tnt.'tal t.'omplrx c 111 ..,,~, J1\• 11 o •I SKA: 11 ' n·~Cn• • C• 11"' !>meo• 111 t11 ..,,, Psv10t Chrl•I ~ t1 1 N.i s-11' l Ct ol, ''' J')IGO I'll llt!ll?S ._,\t "• OS1t
nl<1lhtncr\ production 11re1o1 3 9
1
,",,•.1:1, hi ll• 11• ,1<1.1 §•I•• s' 1 • ~u .. a ' s .,., 101 Fr1 •J11on A•mc•Su 1 " ..... 1 ' •' ' Frl'I 1':14ttll Wms t•10U1t1 ,, ,, • b I ff ' •NEn GE 11•1t 0 ~"'~rl 11 I ?ll)Nt l !Ls.t11SI me o 1
p<'rc cnl loS.213 1l 1on o 1ce ~;H: ,,11; ;;0 ~·~JhH11~ '11•0 1~. 50...,1 ·~1 •11 01.," 102 i n !'"" ,,.,s
1rn.I comput1nA m a c h 1 n e s , c111: ll e •'• ,i , j~1.'" A 1~:· ~·1 c"'"''' • 1 n 11 1J •• "'llA 10 11 11 11 A;~~·k '.'J ~~ Clt¥1n 11.\1 1111"'1 '' Co.fcnltll :>T CSt< IO OllOUA R 1.0 1o1h1c h .1ccount for a lh1rd o f Cl••~ '' ,, , ,. N,1t 11,,•,, •1'·" 1'•111> or1 ••Ir.•<•,..,,, 11, l .l! ..,'mc 11
h 57 Clll'IMPr l]•,1• 1 • J I Fu"ll 101111! 1~ ttr v l lll fl ro orp 90 1 c componcnl rose per c11~1on 0 , , ••i NC•• NV n .. n • Gr ... 1n '11 1" '"'" S<i 1 13 1 13 Arv1n ind 1
'' ' " ' ~Eur 011 1•1 l'• 1--'111010 "'11111011 120
I d kl ow o •I'• 16 ti ,;,~,-,· •0> 571 P• Mui •t! •'5 ... 11110 Pl1f0 crn an aver11ge "ec Y pay rot<.i, o • • P"' G•• 10 10 , foi crth 111111 ",h,11 1' u 11 se ..,110 Brew
adv 1nccd 6 7 percent Coo•• C• •0 " H'll HttC. '', '''' __ , Orf •" •.:>• 1>11,r1m 's1 10 lt ..... a bG 1 20 • • (olPm Sy ~ • 1'• NW PySv ,.,_ o•, ~-w .. >>o Al ; <O t >>Pint SI 11 U 11 M Asel >1 > -o • Cotl<n• ~ "" 15. Nu<I "•< .,. ' '11 111 "' fo abr1cat1on of metal pro-co 0., ,,, 31 • ",~o" o Ari • .,, with c • 11 1 15 ion "' "'•Ml ••n•o c ' :>hlo VI I ll 'I 1W. Oll'\P "' ')2 ID ' loo! """ n 11 13 ,, Allllone Ind ducts 1o1as up 19 percent to c~\1, ~~.l': st:n u 10 Hh omPt1 ;~'iii''" •nv 1os.s 11.sJ..,tteyE1 1)6 c G 1 11 I II • I corn. lld ltlGl Pt!••lll 1111\JIS ... llCE llSll $\ 65 bi I hon. slructur al met al c:r:: 1:1• ;,'! ,. '!~;~:" 1, 11 \,\ 7i•• C...,P Fo '11 1~"' P•lct ~"""'' ..,11 11.1cll110 ' c 11nn 1 t ':1oJ N" 1' J\.i Com1•1ot ,,, ''' Grwtn l•,.?•41 "'llllch Jtfl~H products oboutath1rd ofthel"~ '•• 1~'>1, :>~~C-.1 13 °1,'concord 11111111 NE•• '"'"':11A1cn 1 r II
'. '~• < \ f '' Of( , > •> ><I Conlll in ""'''II N 11or 7S 11U11 l!R(h 110 component, c ~rcent cma crn s, 1 'p10,1 Jl, 51 : si •: fon11 1.11 111 '11 Pro l'Y"ll 10 Ii 10 '' :;:•• 'cllt'" I
fronl 1969 Cmn Tn11 ~~ • l"•c ..,uto .,,.. S'"' nnt ath t Sl tl!Pro Porn ltl 160 Al~1 1 orP111 Cmo l et l'•P•~ F•E ll lS orp Lrl 1\0716 .. Provclnl llt 521_.. ti<, ...
P I Cornrn ., ' < >lo o<o Cnlv ( 10 11 !011 !1 Prud Sv1 10 !f II It ,•,,•,•.• o '>
11ma1 y metals mos t Ycon OQ<:k •• ;·p:~g, 0 1 2'·E~~ :;g~1 i:: 'l~ .. "ii~~~ Fu~ds•, .)O ... utotntn!n~
blas t fut n ace and basic stel'I ~:~:~~~ ~·· ;',~~~:;~~ 0~ lY!~ l~ • !ltV•h M '' s1 ,. M Geo•• H u u ,.. !~~g c~°'f:i,
1)1oducts, inc hed up I pcrccnt
1
',-,, 's ' ',",,·•,•,,•,",",,'~,,,, I'•,,. 00~,1 • 1"'"811 Grrn t 11101t ..,vco on io C 111 11 e wr ~"•v• tntom 110 I IS "'"'"' Pd 10
to $970 ITlt]hon f ~t';;d Yr :~ "', :,11 Pttd Mf t>.! 10 , o2t~1~0~ 1, \f ~~~J 1 .. vt ll 1 » I Cl A•ri.•t Inc Pttf!~I T ,, 21\~.... I , 11 IJ " Vl11t • n •• , Avhel ~f I •• d ood od I CtD'!I Cc 31 )t F-l'I ,. o'''"',' •• 11 •• 1 t'O VOV•• • 1.1 '16 "'"°" Pd 1 I~ UffiUl•r an \\ pr UCS1 rr~T<n P 1•1 "1 "'" 1,,11,.~;,n,1 'v 11 ~1~1l ll:•vere 10,l1111Al!e(011 1Jt
3dv:inccd G6 1iercenl to $650 CvP•6 c •· 11,P• G .. N 1 , 1~. •••-•'••••< rf.lnrret Hl•UjO • ' I '1>n• t~• 1., 11,Ptnn P,~( ''' ''• •••"•·" ,,,,,,1 11;01ent~ tit IJI II 19-0 I ,, 10.n11 M 11 1 , PeP'• 111 ., •• 1 1, , ITlJ ion 1n 1 as og.,1ng na•• 0,, "• ·~·~.ir~nt •• so·~ G•wth 1101i,u"'"u•1• ~·' '' ~oc~ .... Y
d I II P~R<! I 6l 6t lhtQ'n 6 ,0 ~ 11 Suxtder Fu"lll B•~tOllT Ol saw a(I p an1ng m 1 s \\ere oar~ C.fn 11 • 211 "''' 's " '' '' • ,,.,, 1 ,, • 51 '"' Inv unt¥•11 11111 GE 112 o~ ~In "' ' 1'· Ub ·~ 11, 5'o ' ,, " • .. Si><I J1 " J1 61 Bill DI B• j Q
(lr prHTJ<.lfY !mpOr1anCC &:;1s,:,~ 1i'~•i't r.:'~~r',. 't 10 !bfJ•I 1'~71•~f l!ol J.l fj U fli'""'" Pun!
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Apparel fabncatton rose 31 O!s(C inc t )11 ~ ''""'' J1•. 11•~ Fr,•m B1 1000 oGOSllt m Fd un1v1M 1111n Mlcl
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ling and publis hing advanced ~5"J~ ;:.~~~~·'si:i"' 1!,1 1~:~ ~:!'. l~!J l~::~:~. Fu"ll'1soto •1 l:~i!::"11("~7 t,
7 4 percent to $1 31 b1lhon ~~ ~( ~~.; 1;., :·~ 1pv~ ,~~~ 1:1' ~~::: 11 ~:.1~~~ f.,•,:~, 1~~: ,; U l:~~ L~~ 14
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pc'cenl to $130 mliilOO !'our s~, 1, 'o Rlrldr 'u 1 ~) lncom ! 15 i 41 llF<m GI t IO f 1tl IC6Ptl SOii ~:::==============--===--:::=-========:.--".:'.::".'.".._".'·'..: . El P1~e· lb'. )61' IUlt v SIO 1• JO V•nt • If ,. I• "cl•" I '° ----Eh• Sv•I ~, •,Rc•d E• l1t.1 l•V,F11F \~ ~llllU!t•lt SI Untvt lf i'lcllWIM '°D EIG~r 9• ~lo 1'o llobln M '' 71 Filln oi. 1 '1 I'• )!e•dm•n F11ncl1 1 1 HON flO ( "T Nil• ~, ~ ll1Ktton 1>1 1 F•I 1,G1n 111 t •s Am l"d l6l J tl t ll ln1tc01<
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CONGRATULATIONS TO :
GLENDAI~E FEDE RAL
SAVI NGS & LOAN ASSOCIATIO N
ON THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW OFFICE AT
2300 HARBOR BL VD
COSTA MESA
ANOTHER QUALIT Y BU ILDING BY
MEANS & ULRICH
BUILDING · CONTRACTING . CONSTRUCTION
1629 E. EDINGER AVENUE SA NTA ANA
Phone 543-8413
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Divi de11d
Directors of B c c k m a n
Instrument' Inc dttlared a
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!!hare payable Feb 22 Lo '
shareholders or record Feb 1 •
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For the
Dissoltitiotas
Of ltlarriag~
HATHCOCK
c lollen H1•1!c1>t~ Sr •~e 17, or lllll
c 1ucnou11 Circle, Ctu!a Mt ... De!t ot
""''"· J1nutrv lit, P111 Drt1kl•"' ol 1a10 .. 1n Pffk 1nd Wn! C0\11"' 11to11ry
Chll!; membrr Muntlno•on llearl! l!ol1ry.
Surv•vf<I bv W•!•. Evil !Hin • .l'llt n. 1>11'1'
OI Col!t Me11. 1..-0 1Yor1'"1. J1m11 1n!I
H..,,.,. H1•1K0<k ; 1!11er MFI Jo1nn
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Wtllnt~v, l PM. P1c1l1c Y!t ,. (1'U1el,
!Mtrmtnr. Pacll1c View Memor111 P1rK.
•mil"' Morru1ry, Di•1clor1.
HAWKES
J1m11 S1ymO<<' H1wke1 . .Age Jl, of :>flJ
(tVIOn 0• , (Mlt Mt•I . D~!t o! 01111',
Jt"Ut •Y lll, Survived bY w1t1, ~nl•ll• J
IP!'. Jt•Tlel w. Htw~··· cl (0111 MIHJ
otu•M~r. M rs. Cll~lll~t l!o•1nn•, $1nl1
.&.n1. bfotner, Wultv t<tw~11, Sun Cl1Yl
1!11er, Ctrol Mani ,, Co111 Mt11; 1WI
•••nt1rnlldren, Servku. Wt<1n.-d1" I PM. Brit Bro1dwtv Cn•o•I tnTtrmrnt, H•rDOr ltr•t Momcrl1I Pl'k Btll B•o1d·
'WIY Mtrlu1'1, 0"1~10 ... l<l!SSLl!R "';"'' k111ltt. "'9• 11, or 19/J Nowoort Blvd . So. JJ, Co111 MtH Surv•ved ti• IWO d1v1Mtri. Mrt. E11tlY~ Fun• •~d M•s. RiTt (Ort11t+ly, t>elh er New Yc'r~1
two h•ot~rt. Jol>n Btrnt•d, lolcdo, Ohle; (ht•1•• Bernt•d, Ntwoor! ll11c~; Four •rlndcMldrtn. R01trv, 1onl1M. lund1v,
1 ~M ReoulflT' Mnf, Wtdnt1d•Y, lG ,.,1,1. both ,i S! Jot cnln" C1•no1•c Cnurcn.
E~IOmlnl"ent, GO'XI Sht~ntrf!'I Ctmr•er v,
~''""' T"°"''' N•vln otflC•e•lnt F1m ll v wo~f\tt ,,,.Ml wi1nln1 !O mt~t r!ltmorl1I tonf·lb<JToon" oltlU! ronT• D<>lf •o •hr .. mtf!tl• (tnCtf Soc:lt !-f, lltf! B•OldWI ~ f-1.cr1u1ry. Olrtc•~" lt"'N0ol.LL e~u••~ R1~a111 •1• :w. o1 !Mi P1•~11 P•tcr, (O!!I M... Ct•r ol d••'"· JI""
11•"' ll. s~"'lvtd bv nu1D,nd. Rct1tr1: d'lt1•r11, DteM; l"'O \e.'11· DI•~ l"d o-.. ~. ••I c' C.•l'-,...,,, rno•nor •n<f !'t•"•l"tr. II• 1rd Mr• (lo.,n<• Nell. •• PMtlfnd O•e••" ~,r ... ,, •. Wt'<!"Hd•V,
I PM. llf'!l C.o•'t M•u C~ooe• I"'•" "''"'· R "'"''fW ,,..,,i.,,...., O•t1on 111 1•1 Coll• MtH Mor•' ••v, 0 ., ....... ST!WAl:T
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11.,., C"1••1 En•o"'l!,...cn•. P1cdoc v•~.i
l~t,,.O•l•I "Irk P•Clfl< Y>IN ""''TUI'"'
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OT•1c1cn.
ARBUCKLE & so~
\\'e1tcl lff 1\1ortuary
421 E. 11th St., Costa 1\les1
'46-'!83 • BALTZ 1\IORTUARIES
Corona de! 1\lar
Costa !\1es11 •
OR 3-~·l!O
mi l-Z"?4
BELL BROAO\'i'AY
ri10RTUA RV
110 Broad"·11y. Costa ~!efa
LI 8-3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1115 Laguna Cruiyon Rod.
CH-9111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemtttry 1\tortuary
Cb1pel
2500 PK'lflt View Drl\le
Nnporl Btacb. Cal\fomla
"'"mo • PEEK FAMILY
COLOl'iL4L FUNERAL
HOME
t 7801 Bolu A\lt.
Wntmln1ter 19l-3US • SMITHS' MORTUARY
12'1 ~lala St.
Ranlln1lon Bt1cll
13&-asat
. .
Briggs Makes Bid
. ...... . -
BATTIN SETS
FUND RAISER Record
t111w: F~~~n.MK~h~~· •"" WtM•I F 01· Cooperation nu~~!e~:n-d:si~h~: a~~
"·'·~ onct. s~ron Let •NI Go•w i._,. raise money for First Districl ,Jti;m'~~~. 't!.~.·~,:~1"::".:: wirMr Supef'\lisor Robert \V. Battin ;~,~~:""'Ill' 11 . .,.., Eowiro J SANT A AN A As-latives has appeared before will be held Tuesday, Feb. 0~~'1,t;'r,1c111~:~1'Z't."•A~t1~1 .• Irene semblyman John v Brigg!! this group. I welcome this 9, at lhe Villa Fontana, ::~r':~i.'~:l~'i!:!i:f~1~~~'~ 1R·fullerlonl. ~·ho has op. new relationship." Batlin's annual cocktai l
w 11 .... on, Rlt"-•• ~, .. 1, '"" e111 ou~ parties (it oosU $100 a person int N"leed the board of supervisors Fro,hllcll. ltrvl It. Ind Mot~ttl T, yv~ 10 $125 II COUpJe IQ gel in)
C.••l>fy, P11y1111 •no M•rou•• M0"111111 on P s 5 • are unique among county of· G111n00, Je"n le '"" ,.,,mcnoo a t 1' sues i's currcnlly F • B d Ewl~:ne Jettlll ~!t"ton tna Ailffll calling for C)Oser COOpcratJon air oar fiCe holders. WwlllcM, 011ln1 JOln ffl<j •~Drtv ' I 111c11tt, 111rb1•• "'n" •no 11rrn1rG between the Legislature and County stat po Ii t l c a
J .. tP~ A h Mowr t•. Ml"' ... Ind J•m•• ... the Orange County board. ccepts observers say no 0 t er llrtll/ltn. Jtco~·e •nd llon11<1 I h d h cr1r.im1n , '"'"'' M. 1..0 N•ll(Y J. 8 · ·d th h b superv sor as use sue a ~t."u'ci'no:"t .. ~~i:1.~P~ Jem•• riggs saJ ere as een method to raise campaign ex-H•••~~~~· i!~~,;:•t •::oL~.~-~~;·. an ··unfortunate lack o I State Offer pe.nse1.
Geolk, ,.,yn1n R '"" &onnl!r• ;, cooperation In the past.'' The affair. from S to 8 p.m .. E~l .. t<I Jtl'MllrY lf ,,,..,11 ••. ituY A. 11\d J•mt• F. "Orange County this year IP> slaged by a special group W•lll•. Donni 1t.1y • ..., fi:](~l•d Uovd A second appraisal or land called Friends of Robtrl Bat· Ol>f'" N•"" •nd R-r has a greater potential for h M""'"· 1"1r;" .o .• ,., C•roir F. that cosl $900 has landed t e tin. ~c~i7~.dc .":l!J.C::r !·~"t.?:1•c1.,.~11 exerling influenct in the 32nd o is tr jct Agricultural
G't::11c11~1"'""" Gfnt '"" MUtotl Jeg1slatur,," the assemblyman Association a $34,0l)J increase ~~· a·•:::i"'"'-""
ll•yi., C.uv P. 4nd Mer~ l . ' lat Offe to buy land t;•1Ul11'1d. arn., F. 11111 M,rk fl -stated. 1n a s e r .o!~i.~."l.~:11"':1v!",,,,'R'~~;"-J'i JUr He noted that Assemblyman needed for the New po r l
¥~1i1~V"1~~n~."t~~mC~1~1n tit Ken n el h Cory I 0.. Freeway.
s11 .... Mer•OI' 8"" v .. 11~11 c.. Anaheim) is Dem 0 c r 3 t i c The Fair Board has ac-c1~,',',·, J•., M1lorie Lau '"" 1r1 cepted the 1~4."' p"""!V!.•al " caucus chairman: that he '' .ruo • .,,,_... ~:~i:.!~·L'::::: ~ie11":t~8:~~-11.1v (Briggs) is chairman of lhe for S.7 acres along existing Fr:~~:· c1ro1 E11111e\1nd Llw1n111.., agricullure committee and Newport Boulevard with a
~fw';~~'lei:.:'~'t'.~it:'H~~:t,""E);;11 that Robert Badham (R·· Feb. 16 deadline for receiving =~~":;,.Mif.":l~~ l:'.6:n~ieS..:::{0P. Let Newport Beach ) ls chairman it. veE~; sntr°" Ann '"" L••"'en'• of the joint committee on State Division of Highwavs 1111roe~. An"1 M••le •nd lli<~••d Anto" Atomi·c Development 8 n d appraisers set value of the \llrtmcnlU, Mtrtt•!I Ind Jtvle• >!. d Ot\() b O'N1111. Bar~·" ,., 1nd J••-L. Space, formerly headed by Ian al $44, pe r acre, ut
Fc .. nter. J~~~~ t~~·~V'Joe Edwar~ Briggs. a Fair Board.hired appraiser 11111~:~r"• Yvonn• u11oinr 1nd uov He also polnted out that raised it to $48,000 in value.
ll•id•~1w, C~•l•!ltnne c. •~d Rcb1rr Money acquired by the M~':~'~'· K•n• Ann •nd R1cntro Assemblyman Robert Burke board in lhls manner must
''A'..i.:;;:'n/'"1c11 v1v11n •"d R1ch1ro (R·Hunlington Beach) is a bt used for C<'lpital im· Ff.ric~. Peorr N•J•n ,no S•re J1nt member of the pov;erful provement of the 160-plus acre
Ro•unno. LC::.\~~. :;::1JJ.~11t11ri1 assembly rules committee. Costa Mesa fa i r gr o u n d s )"U"· llct>trtl llilev 1no Jimt~ Eiion Br1'ggs sa1·d "I feet w1'th P•c~er. Y•oll M . tnd Groroe w. ' facility. ~~;~~;~.h~t.'o,Li.:.~1:':r•~~~~.Ji:11nor 1970 past and with the seating Top priority is dtmolilion ~:lio;;d~1h~:"S: ~'..:'1 .. ~:'.U. H. of two new board members, of three old buildings. ac-
""""'"'eu, •""1•~ 1ncr J1n111 •· 1971 offers us a whole new d. t G I M F•eem•"· v11m1 Lov•w •no P1u1 cor 1ng o enera an11ger F.:.t·~~~~i;•kc .ind G1•v Df1n year to approach wilh a James Porterfield.
5munn, llern111 i:. 1na w.1111m c. posili\'t outlook." M•J.Or el-tr•'cal repa1·rs. 1·m· llrewer. Lcr11>n1 L. •nd Jommv C.. "''-!,,~:;"· Ju .. 1nrw c. 1na M1cn111 He said of current board provements to one fairground
F,Y. Lorr••n• 11111t '"" Gienn M•rr 11 members. Supervisors David horse arena, construction of Lldd. ~v11n M . •nd llol>frr E.
Hearing Set
For Suspect
SANTA ANA -A Lakewood
man accused of the murder
of a widow whose nude body
was found Jan. 16 in a remote
sector of Modjeska Canyon
has been ordered to face a
preliminary hearing Wednes-
day, in Santa Ana municipal
court.
date for Glen Dale Ferguson.
36. He ordered Ferguson held
in Orange County Jail without
bail.
Ferguson was arrested in
Artesia just six days after
a group of hikers found the
nude bQdy of Zelma Rachel
Witgenstein. 46. of Nor'.\.·alk,
partially covered by dense
brush at lht bottom of a Mod-
jeska ravine. ~:~.':"•;0a:rr1~c,~'n' :.:il>O!J~.~1 Let, L. Baker and William Phillips cattle enclO!ure, a Jjv~tock ''•~':.,',":~'.',i, ,~rr'kt k•." •no Geora1 had worked in cooperation office, restroom facilities and;::==~==========,!
J-i."p,1,1,11 ,., •nd Joi.n with legislators but that others a J:>,000-s'quare-foot rabbit and Who Cares?
• . .
l ufsda y, Ftbruary 2, 1q71 OAILV PJLDT l)
" Arraignment Set
Grand Theft Trial Slated
SANTA ANA -Newport
Beach businessman Ralph K.
Benware and attorney Richard
lt1urphy have been ordered to
return to Orange County
Superior Court Feb. 19 for
arraignmenl on charges stem·
ming from the 11llf>""d ,.,..,.
bezzlement of $160,000 from
the California Caduceus Coin·
pany and a subsidiary group.
Judge Byron K. McMillan
postponed until that date
further court action on
charges of grand theft , con·
spiracy and violation of state
corporation codes -all con-
lained in an Orange County
County Gets
U.S. Funds
Grind Jury lndlctmenL Murphy also races criminal
Benware, '31, of 411 15th charges filed agaicst him
St., and Murphy, 41. Orange, following the distract al·
are free on lheir own t.orney·s investlgallon of h Is
recognizance.
Botlt men v.·ere indicted role in a chikf talent agency which allegedly bilked many afler a six-n1onth investigation Orange County parents seek·
of the tangled affairs of the ing theatrical or m 0 v t e
Caduceus group and i l s stardom for, charges.
subsidiary, the C a s u a l t y ------.,--====;
Insurance Company, by dis-1
trict attorney's in ves tigators
and agents of the Calitornia 1 Deparlmenl of Corporations.
Pion To Att~n
"Minutes To Midnight"
Startling Addr~il
by
BILL
HOFFMAN
Lenware serv~ as president
of Caduceus and Murphy v.•as
chairman of the b o a r d •
Murphy v.·as president of the
smaller casually group "'ith
Benware under him as vice •
president. I TheCasualtv insurance Sat., Feb. 6-7:30 p.m.
group speci31ized in the· 271 AVOCADO
w r it i n g of n1alpractice in·! COSTA MESA
A ~UILIC INYITEO
surance for physicians. '':::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:;:~ series of civil suits \Vere laun·1,:
SANTA ANA -The release ched aaginst both insurance
of $225,917 in federal funds companies in the months prior
by the Office of Economic to the Grand Jury's in-I
Tho DAILY PILOT-
The One That Cores
Opportunity to the Orange -~d~lc~tm~en~t~. iiiiiiiiiijjjjjiiiiiiiimili~~;;~~~~~-.:~ County Communlly A c t i o n I
Council has been announced by H. Rodge r Bells, director DANISH FUINITUllll 5WIDl5H CIYSTAL
of the federal agency . lllDAL R!GISTIY CHINA' STiil.
Executive Director Carlo~ ~ Jii1L
Ramos of the aCtion council
says these funds are part of 1.&11u1"
the local agencies financing
for the year to accomplish
goals in five fields.
··\\'e ha\·e five task force
teams:' said Ramos, "ltian·
po\\'er, Day Care. Communit y
Organ izations, Health and
dant•h coffee _ gavden
_,, ZGqo E.Collll ~~ .. Corono Joi Mor
1>0;1~ g,30.., So Jo Toi' 644·7340
~•ndoy• 11 +.S &oFA -Mos~erCh•'!I•
Housing~·; ..... llllril-iiiiiii~iiiiiiii~iiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=
HUNTINGTON IEACH ART LEAGUE
ART EXHIBIT n .... , .. ~1. Ylrooni1 ""'''" 1nd Jo1>n had not. poultry buildin g art also on •1atn 8 k 1 d d 8 · , No other newspaper In the FEBRUARY 4-6, from 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. 01 "'0•1nn1, c.11n1rlne L. 1nd An1~1 a er app au e r1ggs ap-lhe list.
, T sd bef h world carts about your com-s th Ci sf 'Pl r .. ~:~. ~l!~e~·N~~n!n~~~:nM!c~••I peboarnlanc~ Th~e .ay lh ore t de Inslallation of a public ad· munity like your community OU oa a.za 1<1·m•n.0oon1 M•• 1nd 1::1ro L"''' a . ' ts IS t secon dress and sound system is d .1 d 1 • w~~.\~.~·'"Muv Lovl11 kn•>i •no P•11•1--t~i~m~e~in~e~i~~h~t~y~e~a~r~s~t~h~a~!~o~n~e:_i'~ls~o~i~n~c~lu~d~e~d~ln~~th:e:_l~i•:t_:o~f!,'.~a~i=y~n~e~w~s~p~a~p~e~r~=oe=s=.==t=sl __ _:~~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~~ll':--s• · , · v tt.e DAILY PILOT. c:r','t>1. r!:~~ie ;l.n~n~hZ~; :: or our Sacramento represen· improvements. Nallon, Donni G. 1nd lt0t11ld Y, Socc111r1, Judv Ann 111<1 otnn;, L•r~ ~oenccr. (ntrltl Lr11ie lf'd L na1 M1,lt V1,tez, PnYllJ1 U1 1nd (ru1 JQt Hnrl ...,tn. M'ltn IC. Ind LlfVtd II. l.>d rr,:.1. """""" 06,.•·0 •··~ (...,m1no1 Aone1 • LJ,,.,~.,. l 'M! L. 1nd Rltn••! c. 1/llT fi:L CUTOltY ti&; REI.I E"rtrtJ J1nu1•v )1 Lonl1. t.u,11 Ann 1no Ar!tn ROI 1i.,,, ,,.,.,1e l ntreu 1na lluao.o~ P1 :1on. Frances Eltlr•• tna Jonn II . At1tOQe. RODetl Emory 1nd Juay M1rlo Albl. kl•t M. Ind A•mandO Ll.IOO ""'""· ll•cntrd l , Ind Lorone "'· Ccwtn, Eli110.rn C.. ind W1lll1m w. bu>n1 .. ~. l trol Lvnn 1na Wl11l1m L1wrenc:1 McL .ure, Kllhlttn M, Ind Mlrlll' '~ Po.ro1ino, l•HY l. Ind 11.irlotl M. Lc•nd. llobb e L 1ncr \.I \I.Ir M. L•.>anof. 1111,.1n JI"" tnd S1eo1>en Jtt!trv Ho.,.1rd. Irvin L. '"" C.onni• El1.nt 1>••~1>11. )Ulln Y. •no Lt•"t "'~'"' Klem"'•• IC1ln1rint E. Ind St1nle¥ l>ru<t Quor.Q!Ofl, H•lcle ltrtSI Ind (1rl'lflO '''""· Mtlf~ Lull 1nd llern1rd EOw1n t.1.11n, bt1ott K. 1no Ni,. L1.,on. (trol\ne 5. "'" llQ!otrl L. lo"mo•t. onom•• II.. Ind Ln1nwn Otw11ro, P1111e110 1nd Otnltl J1cob M~oe~rc, 1 ... an.1 Lucillt Ind ll0t1elO
O•M i""-"· M1rcl1 C. ind Geo•M b=~.'sc1;~~11:~~.1n1~noJ~'..°"c.1.•d Co.n•o•. Micn1el P, 1nO K1r11 L. i-1,rou. ~tftll>fn J. and llr11v "'· ~oo<~er, Otw" Jt1 ne11e l rl<I Ger1rd
./ll>CI We .. tv. Lindi K1v Ind Jt<k EOwt•~ )mun, IMDl•I )v r Ind G~rv l ff Edfn. lietmtn "'· Ind Elke b••oerr1m1. 51~011 L. 1110 l<>Vll " Sundflrom. 01nnl' L'" 1na Tln1 Lr1 M•t•1. Ann E •"d OVtWOOd 8, MolQtr, 5!••tn J1~e end Dtflll••n '"" P.t•<n. $1n<1•1 E1l1.1btrl! 1nd Mi<h1el t..Hhur A(•trmtn. Lvlt \lt•lln Ind Do•O!hY Mvr!lf f.\cnhO•n, ,.,ndrol Lte •nd 11.obfrl ' ""'~'"°"' \l•c•• l •nd Ftln(fl P, kctnt1m1n. llerr.trd J, 1nd J1n1 ' EmDrf V. 5u11n •nn atHI J1mt1 OVtne p\'cOo .... t!I, LICI J Ind l nom11 D. ... ,~•f, Ruin\.. Ind 111rc1a "'· Cn1u , ~ntrrv L•e tnd Frrl Gordon ,-tNAL OEC.fi:E S Enlfrt' J1n~1" 21 McEvov. ,..,,,,.,e ~. 8n<I John D Wt•rft, IC1'nl•n O. •nd JAmtl ,.,, \,. •O·'· "'t•tn M1rie tno Ktnn11~ ~tu! ( 1'.1v1. K\, L11n" GtY~ lnll Wil!ltm LOIJol '1•c .. en, Mtri.nr Pt '«t •I 1nd Dtnl.i Frtnc'I I \'••I•'"'°"· lov " Ind ll•<itf M C,rotoo, Ahto H~ltn 1nd JOI Btn•lt J~""'""· M1ro11 t1 ,. 1n11 btn•1,.,ln 0
0(. Ollfd••"· Gt'! Joan,... 1nd Albtrl O:ncrtn Ro·mt•. LI O P , 1na Sut E Ac1m1. Jfrf()IO L Ind C•rO't L. 1 .u . "'•r nn to, •no b1c01r1 L, W1"rtn1n, '"''"' (, '"° Gt11.n A. ll ... c11" L~C~••t b . 1no Will,.,., Jo•eon G•~·••· SN•l'v 11.nn ~"" He r~or! 01vlO -'llhDv. L,na• Let 1na (lonton Htnrv
1 M<Lr1n. L•n!le .Ann en<! llo!>frl Alln R81110n. Mt•b• J 1nd Glfn G. ~¥11W•Orth, w.1,,1m E. 8nd 118•~· ..
,...,..,,..,,. l1 ure Joan 1nd J1c• j<, '· I MlL••n. ~0~71,1: J~~z1Gro;J' •· E•:no•. Jcaon L tnd 1..:nto L. w.ia. O:tren M 1nd lh(lm11 C.. I Lt or. C;oo111.a Pt•tl '"" r.1ncw olnn >Jullfr. Sl'l"lt Y Jo1 ...... ne an<l Wllllt"' .. Mtn•v Mllltr, Jr,. lmolrd "'""• 1nd Altiet! ~n1•I~ O.notl. P1rr!tl1 Ann 1no WllO(ln LtO .... 1nniu1n, MHV f.. """ Etrl c. ltomer. V1t>ttnl J, Incl Ptvtt K, ~~!tt:1(~~1t~": iO:,""~\:m~T:'~~ Lr1. Au1lo1> L.,, J• 1nO CYMnlt L, C.o!lt~. ,.,,.,.. ., t nd 11.coer! \"nn.m1n, f.raoc:t.1 Y~OM>t t n d W1U1ce Hl'bfrl 11 ...... M•••ne Ind NtWltl Mtltlcn Too.lil. Fttl'l(tl L. 1n11 Chlrtt.1 W. f'tltrs. w1 .. en Jtmtt 1....:1 T•rrv Jt1nnt Ptul. Etrl II.iv trod Linda Otn!•e "o.j';;'~:;• Ctrol A~n tnd Wlllllm
011oe, M•rvi n,; J:~.~:'~:'1"" M.
~~~!~.11C~~of-~.n~,.1a"~~11 w. ~u!llvenr, Don L ind llrtna1 W8>hborn J•, Bftlv L. 1no (~1rlt• E. 5cho 1, Sutlltn ltt 1nd Wllll tm Arllwr RQOf'OUtl. C.e•ol Jt•n Ind NfrCh.O Sftnutl fi:Vlft . JOllCh 01~111 Ind M~tlhl '-\, Y.'O<>«. Br•nd• Ind ll ic~••d Mo•lon, ~•l"Cf> M. •nd M1•v•n "'· LUftaoo1n. A•llf EIOift .ind Jc"tl Arlhu• ~~;.t"Jc~~";:~.~· ~i: ~o;,-.,io.~,; C•oogu, ~!rVt" Lou1~ a~d 1cvcf LIO nl ,lttd Jtnutn 1 H1w1<ln5, Kennt1n A lftO N&ncv LOii Nol-fl, llC!le•I L tnn Din11n L. Ab•tie•. N1•~1lle II. ind Ollmlr C. Ceo' Wllllt Lv and ldt P11rl LIM~ In, NOlll >!~VI •nO Wlllltm Gordon 1'1n11tllt. Ell11bf!n J. tnd 11.tlP~ M, H•ll, 0.1n~1 l 8nd J~m•' M. W1onel. Jw.tllh Lt• tnd Dtnnl1 Ltlth Good-r.' n, Otnnl1 Lfe Ind Dtll>Qr1n
DfntH (~. Mire•"'' """ 1no Rtvmot'141 '" 0,1rnond, Jot n Ind Ttrtfn(f Wol•1n1. (tt""rlne ,., Ind l!obfrt W
C.1JliJ." -/:{',~' Lev1r"' 0.r!fr t....:I r:n:mou. lllv1h ]· 1nd Rober! J, 1~. Lindi Petr 11\d Rotitrt Mltl'llfl tolnJ, C~tdto L. Ind Hirt~! (. o~-lnt, >1ow1rd (Ullo•o Ind i.i.Hdl'M ll•rtMlfl 1tot1b. Dtrten1 J 1...i Wtnon O.!t
"""~.,.\I Jtt\ lton•ld •M C.1rol T~tolon Fllftl JllWIN H M•l"l•O'I', Nt<lndt Ind w11111m L. L'ii~:~ll Lortlil Leo!IM Ind Dt'lkl
~<E l<G'f', WIU!tm 1:-, tr.cl Nf(lndl , •• 1.., FI011d ,,,..,..,I""' Ltftt M•• tf~I. t""T "'ftfl .... Id \.ff k~ tOl~r V]l'if lt>ll 1....:1 ~rll'llr JCltC ~ C•r , C1r()I Ind Jo:o.tpfl Anl-Y l1111i•t. Jtntl lj, 1nd IO<lllrG C OOllft, Dtl'd L•t •:::l1rbt•• J0tnn1 t<0,,.,e, Oftnt Ind Iii Ltlll', Iv....,., 6••¥ 0. I Oltn , I(•.,.•••, L11t•el lllH 11\4 Mltr..itl Jo111111 ll:~n.,.lf?', StllY C. INI Jor•v l,,
If a child knows his phone 'num1:g; hl
tell someone the number to call.
And if he knows how to dial "Operator"·
not around. . "' We're here to help.
•
n~ver really lost. Because he can always
emergency, he can get help if you're
@Pacific Telephone
~1no•. Kt1•• o I"" the<ol•1 L ~mrneno. Wi/Ut . '"" L•vr•! ~ '""' Mt Ot' • LNllt ·~~ Jin ~u,....,
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Tutsday February 2 1971 SC
Tuesday 's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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Money Pours Into
Stoel{ Market
NEW \ OHK !UPI) -Monev poured mto !he
stock 1narket 1n record proportions fuesday as
volurne boomed past the previous high of 21 680
000 shares t1aded on Jan 22
Short!) before the c ose advances "ere lead
lng declines by about 50 issues Standard & Poor s
500 stock index \Vas up fre ct1or1ally bur-the Dow
Jones Industrial Ave rage of 30 selected blue ch1ps
"as off about 3 points at 874 59
Analysis noted that ''bile the 1narket was
''elghed do .... n early 1n the session by some un
settling 1nternat1onal ne\\S its late snap contJnued
to reflect President Nixon s determ1nat1on to pull
the economy out of its slun1p
('losing prices Included Af\l T&T 531A off 1'
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12 DAILY PILOT
All Gyp sy'sl
lte111 s Go
At Auction
BEVEllLY fllLLS (AP) -
Th e v.'e l 1-pro portioned
dressmaker's dummy that
Gypsy Hose Lee used in 1n<1.k·
Ing many of her O'l\'n clothes
is up for auction, an artificial
red rose at its hip.
Offered too art> her SIB.000
Rolls Royce with lea service
built Into a door and cut-glass
·rose \•ase on the dash: her
black-lacq11ered V i c t or i a
fu rniture: and her ornately
decorated metal and wood
toilet cOVer, n1onogrammed
"CRL" on the lid.
The famed stripper, bur-
lesque queen, author, actress
and television personatily died
of cancer last April at 56.
Eric Kirkland. the only child
cf her three marr iages. said
recently Miss Lee klved auc-
tlons and so he hn<I decided
or. an auction to sha re with
her pubHc nearly all of tier
possessions.
They'll be sold f\larch 9·10
al the galleries or Sotheby,
Parke·Bernet Los Ange les but
al present a re still in the
home she bought -at auction
-10 years ago.
The three.-story home is on
a secluclcd hillside, amid lush
lav.•ns. pin~s. eucalyptus trees
a nd the 15 rose bushes ~tiss
Lee helped plant.
Sotheby's v i e e president
J ohn Stair. leading a pr~auc·
tion tour or the furnishings,
6aid he thought ~tiss Lee's
possessions should b r I n g
$M.000-$80,000. They include:
A harp, made abocl 1800,
which she took as part pay-
ment for work in a roadshow
that went broke.
A \91h-century clock w i I h
8 human face v.•hose ryes
blink -v.•hen the pendulum
sv.•ings.
Lamps v.'ilh fancy shades
made by Gypsy.·
Gypsy·s lace-canopied hcd.
Paintinp;s and sketches of
Gypsy • ...including a nude
sketch from the rear.
A pink-tasseled bedroom
chair originally u~d in his
boat bv some !Bth-ccnlury gondoli~r.
Born Rose Louise 1-fovick
In Seattle. \Yash .. the older
sister of actress June Havoc.
Gypsy rose lo fame ihrough
\·aurlevi!lc. ?-.1 ins k y ' s bur-
lcs111~e, the Ziegfeld Foll ies and
movies.
In her sta1?e :ict ~he peeled
but never enlirclv. "Bare flesh
bores men," she ·once said.
New Class
At Ct>llege
In Printing
N• olhM n•w1p•p•r 111 the
world c•ttl abovl your tomm11·
nlty Ii•• your con1m1111ity d•ilv
ntw1p•P•t clot t. 11'1 lht DAILY
PILOT.
LET'S BE FRIENDl Y
lf you h•\'1! nr\\' ncl~hbon
or know or an)•one moving
lo our e.rra, 11l<'&i;c t<'ll U$
so that ~ .. m•Y l:'Xll.'nd •
friendly Wl'lcome and hrlp
the1n tn l~on1c •cqu11intt'd
In their nrw gurro\lndlnp.
SD. Coast Visitor
494-051' 04-t3'1
Harbor Visitor
646-0174
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Ma y Co and Mademoiselle present
wedding
celebrations
our annual bridal fashion show with
the fi rst, fre sh bridal looks for spring
It's your day. A happy day. A time to
celebrate. You 'll want something old.
Something new. Everything reflecting
what you are. Your dress may be all
country innocence, sprinkled with color
or a tr aditiona l wisp of organza and
lace ... all inspired by the January
issue of Mademoiselle.
C)o come and see the go wn and trous·
eau collections th at reflect the new in-
dividu ali ty of today's weddings. Learn
abo ut that perfe ct cup or coffee, how to
make your home homey, and more that
every bride should know.
see our fashion shows at:
Oo\vntown L.A. Monday, Jan. 25, 7:00 p.m.
Buena Park, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 7:00 p.m.
lake\.1tood, Wednesday, Ja n. 27, 7:00 p.m.
South Bay, Th ursday, Jan. 28. 7:00 r.m.
Wilshire, Fridity, /an. 29, 7:00 p.m.
l aurel Plaza, Salurday, Jan. 30, 4 :00 p.m.
Whittier, Monday, Feb. 1, 7:00 p.m.
San Bernardino, Tuesday, Feb. 2, 7:00 p.m.
So. Coast Plaza, Wednesday, Feb. 3, 7:00 p.m.
May Co has everythin g for th e
bride and her wedding celebration
Bridesmaids gowns in the.new country
miss innocence. Pretty traditio nal looks
too.
A Bridal Gift Regi stry where you note
you r choice of china, silver, crystaf.
All 18 stores will record your fa vorites.
For honeymoon plans, let our May Co
trAve l experts hel p you. And , yo u can
use Ma y-Time and charge it.
Personaliz ed invitations, announce~
ments, perfec t tha nk-you notes too .
Pretty lingerie, delica te litt le undies,
beautifu l sleepwear.
Homemakin g helps ••• like appliances,
kitchen gadgetry, ~ts and pans.
China, sterling, sparkling crystal. Tra-
ditional and mod~rn favorites from the
finest makers.
Champagne, liquo rs, wines fo r your
reception . And our pastry shop at Wil -
shi re and Downtown L.A. can bake a
prettil y tie red cake.
Informati on .•• ju st ask! We're here
lo hel p make your wedd ing the happiest
celebration ever.
Win a PrWlcess Cruise to Mexico
An 11 -<iay honeymoon cruise aboard
the luxu ry liner, Princess Ita li a. You'll
sail to Aca pulco, Puerto Valla rta and
Mazat lan. You could win your wedd ing
.gown, and there's lots more too'
MAY CO
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m1y co south coast p\111, 11 n diego fwy 11 bristol, co1-t1 me11. 546-9321
1hop mond1y thru 11turd1y 10 1m to 9:30 pm, 1und1y noon 'tll S pm
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Lagu11a Shoreli11e Fut11re?
s DAILY PILOf 3
Viejo Man
In Special
Study Post
A ~1i.ssion Viejo man with a p&Mlon
for ~rt.! cars is continuing a l~year
career in special education as coordinator
of 'S-pecial programs for the handicapped
wilh the county schools office.
DAILY PILOT map of an area of Laguna Beach coast sho\vs
in dark, rectangular areas the sections initially considered
for controversial high-rise development. Laguna Beach
planning commissio¥rs now have agreed to eliminate from
consideration the area shown at left from Cliff Drive to
recreation department building. The coni\nercial·residential
zone, if adopted. no\v would probably be in the two south-
erly zones sho wn. One is from Laguna Avernue lo Cleo
Street. The other is bet,veen A1ountain Road and Agate
After 11 years in Sacramento '1where
all the paperwork comes from'' Don
McNeff is on the receiving end of the
state education departmtnt paper flow
as bead of the special a:chools operated
by the Orange County Department o(
Education.
P.fcNeff believes special education is
"an area of need that both educators
and the general public respond to in
a positive manner."
Reagan Rejects Pay Raise
Fo1· University Professors
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald
R :::..:~.:i's proposed new sta~e budget asks
college and university professors to work
harder at !he same pay so California
can meet its higher education demands.
Reagan also provided newly elected
Slate Superintendent of Public Instruc-
tion Wilson Riles with more flexibility
in running the Department of Education.
The governor proposed 394 "unspecified
positions" cos l ing $9 million which
Riles could use as he deenis best in
administering the agency that guides
!he educational destinies or California 's
4.3 million elementary and high school
: .· '''·
''It is important that the slate
superintendent of publ ic instruction be
held accountable for his programs, not
for the programs of the past," Reagan
11aid.
Jn higher education, the Republican
governor closed the purse strings on
the University of California and gave
a r.::idest increase to the state colleges.
The uni versity requested $375.1 million
In state funds for operation of its nine
cnmpuses expected to enroll 110.586
students next fall , an increase of four
p:!rc 11 above the current enrollment.
Reagan pared the request down to
$337 million, just aboct the same amount
budgeted for this year.
The 19-campus state college syslem
asked $369 million to enroll an expected
221,020 students next fall , a nine percent
enrollment increase.
The governor authorized the colltges
$316 million, a $5 million increase over
their present operating budget.
And in his budget message, Reagan
told faculty members that for the serond
straight year they could oot expect a
pay hike, but \\'Ould be (:Xpected to
reach more in the classroom.
The governor noted that ii has been
"considered customary'' that college
faculty members leach 12 classroom
hours a week and university professors
nine per \.reek. He said many have
fallen below this set standard.
The Slate Department of Finance said
the average college instructor spends
10 hours a week in the classroom and
the typical university facully member
about seven.
"The budget will require an increased
teaching load on the part or the faculty
in both segments, but It still will not
bring the average teaching load above
those standards which have been con-
side:ed the norm ," he said.
THE EXPENDITURE DOLLAR 1971·72
CALIFORNIA STATE BUDGET
TOTAL
11.1
1.3
29.0
1.8
24.8
12.0
10A
5.0
4.6
100%
BU
GENERAL FUND
.,
tGHER EDUCAT; ·' , ' · · ~ r· . 'i"'"·~ ' '"'"
..
HARED ,REVENUE ,.
'
...
.3
1.1
37.8
1.7
31.0
16.0
6.6
5.5
100%
THIS IS WAY GOVERNOR PLANS TO SPEND TAX DOLLAR
Budget Briefs
SACRA~fENTO (UPI I -l{ighlights of Gov. Ronald Reagan's proposed
state budget for the 1971-72 fiscal year beginning July I:
Sptnding -A record $6.73 billion, compared v.·ith $6.60 blllion currently.
t C11sh Flo"' -F'or the first lime since the Great Depression, the state
\1•111 need lo rely on regi stered warrants thii; fall if the legislature does not en·
, 11ct income tax \\'ilhholding or permit It to use tax anticipation notes to pay
bills during a dry revenue period.
"'elfare -A cut of $606 million in federal. state and loca l funds belo'v
lhe current ltvel of $2.8 billion. In state money this is $65 milUon less than
present spending.
~ J\1tdl-tal -An increast of only SIOS million to a total of Si.3 billion.
' Strvices Y!'ould be reduced to more closely approxlmale what the "average·•
' tnpaying cllitcn spends 011. medkal tare for himself.
J Education -$6'16.l~illion for higher education and $1.629 million for ~ public ~hools. University and state college professors are asked to work hard--er for the same pa y.
t State Emplo}'e1 -No across-the-board pay lncreasei; for state employes. ~ bul une1nploy1nenl inwrance benents are granted for the first lime along with
overtime pay and a differential for \.l'orking nights. 1 J\1ent"I llcallh -Increased by $Iii million to $312 mtlllon, Including $187
mHlion for local mtrrtal health programs. A reduction from S13J million to $125
~ mUIJon for hospital! btcausc of declining patient populations.
Taxes -No Increases.
Laguna's Lax
Dress Code
Up for Action
Laguna Beach High School's •·no-code''
dress code will be continued for the
balance of the school year if trustees
accept the recommendation of Dr.
Willia m Ullom. district superintendent,
at their meeting tonigbL
The code, initiated experimentally last
spring and continued when school re-
opened in fall, leaves the matter of
dress up to student and' parent, providing
only for referral of students who go
lo extremes in their school garb.
To dale, says Ullom. there have been
few referrals and the dt>-it-yoursel f dress
code seems to be "'orking v.•ell. "It
gives us more time to concentrate on
education," Ul lom added.
Also on the agenda is a preliminary
report by Dr. Robert Reeves on reading,
language and math test scores and by
Dr. Ullom on his trip to Sacra mento
to seek funds for the writing of computer
programs jn connection with a proposed
joint project with the Capistrano Unified
School District.
Ullom will report that $20.000 "'ill
be available for "'riting a pilot program.
Some Students
May Get Free
School Lunches
Some students In the Laguna Beach
Unified School District may be eligible
for free or reduced-price school lunches,
~frs. Marian Garrett, food service
supervisor, reminded parent.! this week.
Under federal legislation enpcted in
1970, students from families whose only
source of income is Aid for Dependent
Children, Public Assistance or who are
eligible for food stamps, a r e
automatically eligible for free lunches,
1'-frs. Garrett said.
Other students in special circumstances
may establish eligibility for free or
reduced-price lunches by furnishing in-
formation regarding family income on
an application which may be obtained
from the school principal.
Karnes of students receiving or ap-
plying for such lunches v.·ill not be posted
or made public in any form, the
supervisor added.
Arrest of Girl
Leads to Suit
On Laguna Police
A Santa Ana attorney who claims
his daughter was arrested and jailed
by Laguna Beach police under !he pro-
visions of what he says is an un-
constitutional city ordinance has sued
the city and three of its policemen
for $640.000.
1i1arlin E. Gerry names the city and
Patrolma n Carroll Bush, Sgt. David A.
Avers and Capt. David L. Brown as
defendants In an Orange County Superior
Court suit sparked by the arrest last
April 12 of 14-year-old Lynn Ninon Gerry.
The complaint states Miss Gerry was
arrested by police v.·ho found her sitting
on the edge of th.tlicurb at Cleo Street
and Pacific Coast lfighway -an ap-
parent violalion of a city code sectio n.
Charges filed against 1t1iss Gerry have
since been dismissed by the probation
deparlment, the lawsuit state!!', Gerry's
earlier claim for damages against the ·
cily council was denied by that body
las• June B.
LAGUN A SC OUTS
SET CAR WASH
Laguna Beach automobiles encrusted
with winter dirt are Invited to 1 car
wash Saturday at St. Mary's Episcopal
Church from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Each csir will be given a thorough
cleaning by an E11:plorer Scout from
Post 717. The scouts art ask ing only
1 $1 donation from each car ti.•hich
will be used to purchase equipment and
uniforms.
Cartwheels Ba~k
Casinos Wait for N e-w Ike Dollar
LAS VEGAS, Nev. IAP) -Nevada
casinos are dusting off the dollar slot
machines and waiting for the boom ex-
pected when !he U.S. Minl begins releas-
ing the nation's new St coin this summer.
Casinos throughout the state converted
Trial Postponed
In Stockbroker
Swindling Case
A seven-week dela y \.\'as ordered l\fon-
day in the Orange County Superior Court
tria l of a South Laguna stock broker
accused of defrauding five elderly women
clients of more than $180,000.
Presiding Judge William c. Speirs set
~1arch 22 as the new dale on 11'hich
he will allocate a courtroom for the
trial of Erhan Gedik, 31, of 31619 Jev.·el
Ave.
Gedik was charged with grand theft
and violations of the state's COl'pOrate
securities code July 25 after investigators
accused him of "churning " stock -
a practice whereby a broker ad\'ises
holders of solid securities to sell so
that he u·ill receive commissions on
the unnecessary transaction.
their big slots to accept iron tokens
that substituted for silver dollars when
the price of sliver drove the old
cartwheel~ into hiding, but the public
never really accepted the fancy tokens
and most or !he dolla r machines were
put in back roon1s. ·
The mint last week struck the first
or the new Eisenhov.·er dollars, a
silverless descendent or the old Liberty
dollar, with a likeness of the late Presi·
dent Dwight D. Eisenhower on one side.
A design honoring the Apollo 11
astronauts is on the other side. About
200 million of the silver dollar-sized coins
"'ill be distribul ed beginning in July.
"They better n1inl about 40 million
t)f lhern."' said Herbert Marmon, a pit
hos~ at lhe Strip's Thunderbird hotel.
"People like to play with them. They
are really going to move around here."
The gaming industry will have very
little trouble converting its 548 dollar
slots to accept the Eisenhower dollars,
said Ed Bowers, executive secretary of
the state Gaming Commission. Pl'ople
here believe the effect of the new dollars
~ill go far beyond those relatively few
slots.
"II will m<ike a significant difference
in all Las Vegas business," said Art
Grant. 1nanager of a slo1 machine club
that flourishe s in lhe shadow of the
Strip's pleasure palaces. "We"ll all make
more money."
"I have seen it grow from the early
1950s to what ~·e have t.oday; a vast
and complex array of programs that
attempt to meet the needs of all
children,'' he said.
McNeff's background in special educa·
tion includes experience as an elemen·
tary teacher, teache r of educable men-
tally retarded at both elementary and
secondary levels and regular high school
and college classes in civics, economics,
sociology, psychology and history.
He has a bachelor's degree in history
from San Jose State and a master's
degree in the exceptional child from
San Francisco Stale.
McNeff's wife -a former teacher
of gifted students -his two-year-old
daughter and their cocker-poodle are
enjoying their new home, P.tcNeff said.
"'OUr fa vorite pastime is travel -
Europe four limes and most all of Nortt1
and Central America. We also share
a great interest in archaeology and
particularly pre-Columbian art.
"\Ve spent a recent summer on a
'dig' in the J\.faya n-Yucatan area of ~1eJ.·
ico."
Besides interests in bridge, tennis,
swimming and coaching, he says, "my
one passionate lunacy involves my' Jove
of Porsches.
"I've owned several, or pe rhaps
they've owned me,'' he notes.
Flood Waters Drop
LOURENCO MARQUES, f\.!otambique
CUPI) -Flood waters have subsided
slightly in Portuguese: East Africa whera
thousands have been marooned since
last Friday, a J\.tozamblque official gaMf
today.
,,. ...... .,._ ....... -,.......-..,...-·---------:--.. ~--------.,----t-: •. "_,_' F. ' : Bdildingt~rd .. jb~ g004 ·i··
'
The Union Federal wa~
2·'"' Ctttifiott •tu111tr witll 1ninirnm $5,00D Bal· ••<•. ln•111I rield 1.11 %
J.Monlh Ce r_li!ical• l e·
counts with m1n1m11m $500
lalanct. l nn111I tit Id 5.J9 %
\Vhalever your long-range goals-a new car. college
for the kids, an addition to your house, or that long-
descrved European tour-you'll rM.ch them faster at
Union Federal Savings.
To meet the special need!! of your family, we offer a
wide variety of S.'lvings plans, And we always pay Lhe
highe1t interest J')OS8ibft, plus every savings benefit,
including insurance of acoounta to $20,000. Our cur-
~ ' . ' .. ! '
A I -
rent "nnual rate on Pa88book acoounts is 53, com-
poundf'd daily with interest paid day in to day out.
Annual yield 5.133.
So if your present savings aren't 1t.acking up with
your dreams for the future. now's the time to set
smart-and start building the Union Federal way.
No mattrr where you are now~r how high you wiah
to go-you'll 1et the 1ood life faster at Union Federal
Sa"·inga.
UNION FEDERAL SAVINGS \9 1t
ANO LOAN A5SOCIAT10~
Ora.ngeCounly Rl"&:lonal Olllces: Founl.ain Valley O Seal 8a4lh
Fountain Valley, 17400 Brookhunt Street, Phone (714) 962-1378
St1l Beach, Rossmoor Shoppin( Center, 1250t S.1l Beach Boultvard, PhonP 4J l·352S
Rf'gfon1I OffiCl"A: Lcf\3: Beach-Bixby Knoll• O Gardena 0 Malibu
~lain Oftlce: 426 South Sprinr Street, Lot Angelee
' ..
" .. '
• • •
. ,
' '
I
,
J
I
.. -
llAllV PILOT
•
. I
...t..; ~Yli.~•
Making Their Point
Cambodian soldiers roll large barbed \Yire barri·
cades onto a barge for placement around a bridge
crossing the 1i1ekong River near Phnom Penh. \Vire
traps such as these along the river bank are used to
guard the bridges from sabotage.
Volunteer Army-by '73
Tough, Possible-Laird
WASHINGTON IUPI) Defense
Secretary J\.felvin R. Laird said today
President Nixon's objective of an all·
volunteer army can be achieved by mid·
1973 if the pay of recruits is increased
by 50 percent and olher inequities are
eliminated.
"The task is indeed a most difficult
one, but I believe we can meet th.at
Congress Urged
To Loosen Up
U.S. Aid La,vs
WASHINGTON (AP) -The admin·
tstration urged Congress today to modify
provisions of welfare law that have "been
shown to be too limited and rigid" in fed·
era\ attempts to gain compliance by the
&tales.
In testimony for a closed.door heariftg
of the House Ways and Means Committee,
Secretary Elliott L. Ricll<lrdson of Health ,
Education and WeUare said that. in ca ses
where states do not comply \\.'ith U.S.
requirements. "our cnly remedy is to
deny or terminate paymen t of federal
funds after giving the state reasonable
ftOtice and an opportunity (or a hearing."'
He said since cutoff of money "is pros-
pective only, we cannot requi re a non·
complying state to give re troactive re·
lief to those who have suffered loss of
assistanC'e because of the state's failu re
to comply with federal requirements."
Richardson proposed an amendment 11'.1
permit continued payments to a state in
certain situations ""here, after a hearing,
it is found that there is substantial fail·
ure on the part of the state to comply
v.·ith the federal plan requirements.
Dick Weit is ill. His l ighter Side
Column will resume when h• r•·
covera.
goal if we in the Defense Department
vigorously pursue the program we have
formulated to reduce draft calls to
zero/' Laird said.
Testifying at a Senate hearing. Laird
sa id the program calls for spending
roughly Sl billion a year "to increase
the pa~· of military personnel. including
a 50 percent increase in basic pay at
the entry level."
"Even with the recent (military) pay
ra ise." he said, "the monetary value
of basic pay and allowances. as well
as the tax advantage of a recruit at
the time of completion of basic training,
ia approximately $2,700 a year."
Laird added: "Compare th.is with the
entering pay ol $9,500 a year received
by a policeman in New York City. com-
pare it even with the federally establish-
ed minimum wage which. amounts to
$3,300 at an annual rate. It becomes
clear that we are grossly underpaying
our entering servicemen."
He said that achieving all -volunteer
forces would require congressional sup-
port and "a positive attitude toward
military service" on the part of the
public .''
Laid, Draft Director Curtis \V. Tarr.
and As sistant Secretary for Manpower
Roger T. Kelley were called before the
Senale Armed Services Committee today
to defend a $1.5 billion package of pay
ra ises and other benefits designed to
produce an all·volunteer military force
by 1973.
Nixon announced the plan last week,
simultaneously asking Congress for con·
tinued draft authority for t"'o more years
until the volunteer Army proposal can
take effect He contended draft calls
a:iuld be reduced to zero by •·making
military service more attractive to
present and potential members."
The proposal, however, has already
run into stiff opposition. Critics, led
by Sen . John Stennis (0.Miss.). chairman
of the Armed Services Panel, contend
that no amount of pay will convince
a sufficient number of men to slog
lb.rough the mud as ordinary foot
soldiers.
Pregnant Women
Advised Against
Consuming Fish
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -Pregnant
women have been advised by the New
York State Health Department not to
eat tuna and swordfish because of pllllsi·
ble harmful effects on unborn children.
"Evidence indicates that met h y I
mercury -which can cause some form
of brain damage when concentrated in
su fficiently large levels -tends to
become e<1nct:ntrated in a fetus," Dr.
Hollis S. Ingraham, health commissioner,
said Monday.
'"The ingestion ol an amount of methyl
mercury which ma y be perfectly
harmless to adults and children. might.
because of tbis tendency to concentrate,
pose a threat to an unborn fetus."
Ingraham said the warning war being
made cut of aft ''abundance of caution"
and was subject to revision pending
health department research.
Methyl mercury. the type found in
recent testing of both varieties of fish,
is a highly toxic form of organic
mercury, he noted .
"Ingestion of normal quantities of tuna
and swordfish pose no direct health
hazard to the general pu blic, de.spite
the fact that recently, a number of
samples of these seafoods have been
found to contain relatively high levels
of mercury." Ingraham said .
In recent weeks, the State Departments
cf Agriculture and Environmental
Conservation. with the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration, have stopped sales ·
in New York State of any fish known
to exceed a mercury content of .5 parts
per million.
All tuna fish now cm sale in New
York is below this level. and, therefore,
pre.senls no apparent hazard to the health
of normal human beings. Ingraham said.
3,500 Birds Dead
SAN FRANCISCO iUPll -Nearly
3,500 oil-soaked birds have dled in the
two weeks since two St1ndard Oil Co.
tankers collided in the Gclden Gate and
dumped 840.000 gallons of crude oil
into San Francisco Bay.
Winter Extends Icy Grip
South • Ul East Freezes Whil.e Mercury Plummets
Temperatures
Connally Sails Ahead
Senate Unit Gives O·kay After Quiz on Fee
WASHINGTON !UPI) -The Senate
Finance Committee approved t h e
nomination of John 8. Connally to be
treasury secretary toda y alter quizzing
him about his acceptance of 5750,000
in executor fees from the estate of
a Te;ias oil millionaire.
Connally testified during an hour and
a ha lf open session that he was paid
the $750,000 over an 11-year period with.
$225,000 coming during the time he was
governor of Texas.
He said that he actually could have
claimed payment of Sl.2 million but
actepled between $400,000 or $.500,000
Jess in order to stretch out the payments
-for "ob·1ious tax reasons."
The committee. after hearing his ex-
planation, went into closed session lo
vote his recommended confirmation. The
vote was 11 to 0, with two abstentions.
Connally said he received the last
payment from the estate of the late
Sid W. Richardson in January, 1969.
"{l's fully paid now," he said.
At the close of the hearings, comtnittee
chairman, Russell B. Long (0.La.),
referred to the payments as "warmed
over biscuits."
"I personally see no reason why the
man sho uld not be CQnfirmed, ·• he told
reporters. "I find no CQnflict of in-
terests."
The nomination of Connally now eoes
tll the full Senate.
Connally said he made the stretched·
out payment arrangement so that he
could become Navy secretary 10 yea.rs
ago without any outside income.
He testified that "I gave up $400,000
to $500.000 in certain fees. . . in order
to accept the position of stcretary of
the Navy" when it was offered to him
by President John F. Kennedy in 1961.
"I Piever said this before." Connally
continued. "I don't deserve plaudits for
iL I don't regret it. But 1 don't think
I deserve to be pillo ried for it."
Connally said the $225,000 in fets
received between 19&6 and 1969 when
he was serving as Texas govunor
represented only partial deferred pay-
ment of the fee due him .
He said he agreed tll take a total
fee of $750,000 rather than everything
that would be due him because the
payment would be spread out over a
number of years "obviously for tax
purposes .''
Sen. \Vallace F. Bennett of Utah. senior
Republi can on the Finance Committee,
said he was convinced that CoMally
had done no wrong.
"About the only sin Governor Connally
appears to have committ!d was the
sin of being branded an oil man ," Ben-
nett said. He said /nally "went
Allies Cancel Meet
Over Berlin Traffic
BERLIN (UPI) -The western allies
today canceled a meeting with the
Soviets on the Berlin situation in retalia·
tion for East German harassment flf
Berlin highway traffic.
An American spokesman said a four-
power meeting of experts scheduled for
today in the former allied control
authority building i..rJ tbe American sector
did not take place.
through the same attempts lo discredit
him in J96t."
"He ·was merely receiving p1yment
on a debt due him." Bennett said of
!he money Connally received while
Governor. "It is perfectly natural to
me that if you have money due you,
you should be able to collect it at
any time."
Bennett said lhat · Connally had ·not
violated the Texas constitution which
prohibits a governor rrom receiving com·
penaation for services "rendered or
performed during the time he Is
governor.'' BeMetl pointed out that Con-
nally's services as a co-executor were
performed before he became governor.
The Utah senator said a New York
Times story Monday disclosing that Con·
nally had received the fe es while
governor carried "vague, unwarranted
char a es and innuendos."
E1ad of Truce Nears
St1ez Defenses Bristling
With New Troops, Guns
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Israeli and Egyptian defenses along
the Suez Canal v.·ere reported bristling
with reinforcements in preparation for
the expiration of the six-month-old cea.se·
fire at midnight Friday.
lsraeli observers said Egypt has moved
up troop ninforcements, thousands of
mortars and heavy artillery piects, hun-
dreds of tanks, antiaircraft batteries and
other advanced equipment.
The Egyptians also have built what
appear lo be ramps leading into the
canal, presumably for use by amphibious
forees attempting to cros.s the canal
by boat or pontoon bridge, Israeli
newspapers report.
The Israelis are less specific about
their own preparations. but they say
their fortifications can withstand attack
from any weapon in the Egyptian
armory.
Egypt has said repeatedly it will not
agree to another extension of the cease-
fire unless U.N. envoy Gunnar V. Jarring:
reports proaress in the peace talks which
he has been holding with representatives
of Egypt. Israel and Jordan at U.N.
headquarters in New York. Jarrin11 has
made no such repcrt. and the talks.
while continuing, appear to be in the
exploratory stage.
Despite Egypt's insistence that it won 't
extend the cease-fire under present con·
ditions. observers in Beirut e:icpecteQ the
truct: to continue on a de facto basis.
fsrael has already said tha t it will not
fire first.
However, the Egyptian government has
undertaken a campai(ll to convince the
world and it.s people that hostilities may
resume a!Ong the canal after six months
of silent guns.
Egypt's Higher Defense Council met to-
day in Cairo to evaluate the military ait-
uation.
Air raid ~irens screamed and blackouts
Prince Takes Tour
LONDON (AP) -Prince Philip left
tod11y for a 24.000-mile tour of Com·
monwealth islands in the Pacific. The
queen's husband will attend 50th birthday
celebra tions of the Royal Australian air
force before returning home in April.
were ordered In the. capital during the
weekend. Leaders scheduled a .series
of meetings building up to a speech
by President An\\.·ar Sadat Thursday
night at a special session of the National
Assembly .
The Israeli-Egyptian.Jordanian cease-
fire that began last August ends at
midnight Friday.
The aim could be either to prod the
Big Four -the United States. the Soviet
Union, Britain and France -into putting
more pressure for concessions on Israel
er genuinely to prepare the population
for renewed lighting.
Youths Attack ~
Newark Teachers
In Sch,ool Strike
NE\VARK, N.J. (AP) -Fifteen strik·
ing teachers were attacked and beaten
with sticks by abcut 20 youths today
as a walkout moved through its second
day.
Nine of the teachers were treated
at a hospital. but their conditions were
not immediately knov.·n. authorities said.
A spokesman for the Neva1rk Teachers
Union said the attack came as the 15
left a union headquarters. A fi re ex·
linguisher also was used in the attack,
police said.
Schools were kept open for the second
day despite the strike, but the Board
of Education said it would not know
until later exactly how many teachers
and pupils reported.
No new bargaining sessions were
scheduled in the negotiations for a new
contract.
The Board of Education repcrted that
2,516 of the city's 4,405 teachers report ed
for work Monday, but il had no figure s
on hov• many teachers. if any, left
their posts after the strike began.
The board said 38,321 of 78,742 enrolled
pupils were absent from the city 's 84
schools. which remained open .
At issue is the question of whether
the teachers· contract can and should
cover matters of policy such as cur·
riculu m. class size and general school
mana11ement.
'Tried to Forget' Nigeria Food Strike
Ends in Two Deaths Trooper Patton Slapped
Dies in Obscurity at 55
MISHAWAKA, Ind. (AP ) -Charles
lt Kuhl. tbe soldier Gen. George S.
Patton Jr. slapped in a Sicilian hospital
during World War 11. ha!! died in the
()bscurity he sought for 27 years.
Kuhl. a sweeper in a Mishawaka fac-
tory, died Sunday of an apparent heart
.attack but his death was made public
only today. He was 5:1.
"I tried to forget it," Kuhl sa id in
an interview last ri.farch after the movie,
"Patton," had spotli ghted him again.
ternoon In the mortuary in Mishawaka,
twin city to South Bend. Kuhl is &urvived
by his vddow. Garnet, whom he married
13 years after the slapping incident.
LAGOS, Nigeria t AP) -Nigerian
troops called in by CJutma nned police
fired into about 3,000 students protesUng
poor food at Ibadan University l\1onday
night . Two youths were reported killed
and 20 seriously wounded . 1
Some of the student s had been on
a four-day hunger strike demanding thaf
the woman manage r of a canteen ht
dismissed and that eggs be added to
the menu.
California I Y UNITI D l"ltl SS INTlltNATtONAI.
Titmpe••!v•t' •fld "9rt<l'l"oon ltr
fllt l .. nour iarlOd ....,lnQ 11 ' 1 "'·
The colorful Patton lost command of
the U.S. 7th Army as a result of the
slapping incident . He spent six months
1n England, then became commander
of the 3rd Anny and again made
headlines in an armored dash across
Europe that helped crush the German
entmy.
!~' wt••t11> I •e 11 k""h In 1tll•f'OOl't
lodl• '"" W~Ml!MY. tltf~ l«ll Y •n
OPN r ~t.
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Patton was killed in an auto accident
in December 1945 after the war had
tnded .
"I lhink he was a great general,''
Kuhl said in f,he interview. "I think
he wenl a little bit over his needs,
personally. 1 mean he was a glory hunter.
t think at the time it happened , I
th ink he was pretty ll.'C!I worn oul -
pretty \\•ell .shol himself . I think he
\\'as suUer1ng a little battle fatigue
himself."
Kuhl said 1s he remembered the in·
cidcnt, Patton can1e to his hospital btd
in Palermo In late \Ml and told him,
"I don't know how a mother could raise
such a sissy or coward."
Kuni, who had serv~ In the. North
African · tnv1sion and later was a part
of the Normandy invasion. said Patton
slapped him with a pair of rldln11 1lovts
and "kicked me in tbt..fanny."
The veteran aa\d It was discovered
later ihat he was sufferinA from m1larl1 .
He sl'lid Patton t1polo11itcd to him
personnlly and said he hadn't known
hov,• sick Kuhl \\'I S.
Ser\llces will bt held \Vedntsday 1!· .,,
UPI T11i1M"
Ship Agrou11d
Dani~h passenger liner Princess ~1argrethe r-an aground on S\\·edish
Coast near Kullen. None of 453 pas~enge.rs "'ere in jured and shortly
afterwards v.·l.re transferred lo ferryboat alongside.
DAILY PILOT 5
De1nocrats Critical Curse in Hallway
Nixon's Economy
Report Assailed
Teacher Disciplined Pupil,
Slain Wliile Leaving School
'
UP'I TtlepMr.
WASHINGTO N (AP)
President Nixon's economic
message has dra"·n a
Democratic c h 0 r u s or
criticism y,·it h one party
leader calling it a "fantasy
world of Alice in Won-
derland.''
Zeroing In on the report
sent to Congress ~1onday. the
Democrats said Nixon did not
show a willingness to use the
full breadth of White House
powers lo drive dov.·n inflation
and unemployment.
The report. third of the
President's major messages lo
• the new Congress, outlined
goals for an orderly expansion
of the economy this year lo
cap in mid-1972 with
ti unemployment doy,·n fro01 the
current 6 percent to 4 'h per-
cent and inflation decli ning
to 3 per~nt. Inflation rose
5.3 percent in 1970.
House Democratic Leader
l lale Boggs of Louisiana. who
made the Alice In Wonderland
comparison. said 1here is
not hing in the President's own
Nixon Back
At Office Cool ll'itatet• Styles I
Fron1 Trip _1
1
\Vhelher or not a lady '\'cars a maxi or mini dosen't
seem to be deternlined by the temperatures \Vhich
reached zero in Columbus, Ohio. The tl'ro contrast-
ing styles are displayed by !lfyra Zaenglein (1) in her
ma.li and her friend Sandra Dalgarn whose chose
the mini.
Findings 'Frag11ientary'
Report Fails to Linl\:
Marijuana to Defects
\VASHINGTON (UPl) -
The Health, Education and
Welfare Department says
there is no evidence to link
marijuana use with cancer or
birth defects, nor is there a
basis for believing the use
of marijuana leads to the use
of "hard drugs" such as
heroin.
But the department, \•:hich
U.S. Lasl1ed
By Ecuador
\VASlll NGTON <AP) -The
United States milita ry missio n
in Ecuador has been ordered
out of the country, signa ling
a new level of bitterness
betv.•een the two nati ons in
the dispute over fishing right s.
The order we s announced
~fonday night by Ecuadorian
foreign minister Jose Mer i<:.
Ponce Yepes. who chose lo
ignore an Organ ization of
American States resolution
passed the day be!ore urging
!he two sides not to aggravate
the dispute.
"'as required to make the
report under a 1970 amend-
ment to the Hill-Burton Ac t,
described its findings as
"fragmentary and clearly in-
complete" and said the report
should not be considered a
clear bill of health for the
drug.
The report, compiled by
HEW 's National Institute of
J\1ental Health, said most of
the im portant question s
regarding th e long-term use
of marijuana "will ~ requi re
significant periods of time to
answer."
The report did say. howeve r,
there was ''increasing
evidence that frequent. hea vy
marijuana use is correlated
·with a loss of interest in con-
ventional goals and the
development of a kind of
lethargy."
\Vhile cautioning "y,•e cannot
declare marijuana lo be
devoid of significant heaHh
haza rds." the department said
"there is no presen t evidence
lo suggest that 1narijuana is
cancer-producing." and "little
basis for suspecting'' ll is
associated with birth defeets.
FORAN
AUTO LOAN
WASHINGTON IAPl
Back from a Virgin Islands!
holiday , President Nixon set•
up virtually a dawn to dark
schedule today to launch a
work y,·eek i11 which he is
sending Congress three special
messages.
The President and Mrs. Nix-
on returned to the capital
Monday night afte r spend ing
three days at the Caneel Bay
Plantation resort on the island
of St. John.
By all accounts, Nixon en-
joyrd himsel r so thoroughly
!hat no one would be surprised
if he made similar visits oc-
casionally in the fut ure.
The first item on the chief
executive's schedule for today
was an appearance at the an-
Jiu al congressional prayer
breakfast at the \Vashington
Hilton Hotel .
A larger chunk of the morn-
ing was re.served for meetings
with members of the cabinet
and subcabinet. lo discuss the
a ·d m In I st rat ion 's 1971
legislative blueprint.
Mu ski e Leads
Lates t Survey
NEW YORK (AP) -A Har-
ris survey says Sen. Edmund
S. Muskie (D-Maine). leads
Presidenl Nixon 43 percent to
40 as the choice for president
if the 1972 election y,·ere being
held now.
Gov. George C. Wallace of
Alabama polled II percent as
a third party candidate and
6 percent were undec ided, the
survey reported Monday. The
poll of 1.341 likely voters v.·as
laken Jan. 1&-20. before the
President's televised State of
the Union message.
Come to the bank that's made lots of both
... to many
You'll probably save a big part of your first payment.
IUJ!I' omCI: II tlt P'llll ii dl!llllllm Oit1111
lbltat OHICU:
•
OWi": titt1;., 'Ct!!h!t, au,11tn • P'laptd
COPA llllSA: MN Vtl'• & Mfiq ,
!NOA W: 111~ & Tnl 8
TlmlM: ~'d llin & W1llllll vuu nu: s.~11110 'w1111dl
statistics lo support his op-
timistic predictions.
He &aid eight more cities
have been added to the list
of areas sufferi ng heavy
unemployment, making a total
of 40, while the cost of living
index in December :ose 10
an annual rate of 6 percent.
In a broader attack on Nix·
on·s economic philosophies.
Waller Heller. who advised
President John F. Kennedy
and Lyndon B. Johnson. said
there is a lack of accounting
for the future in Nixon's
predictions.
"\Vhat was strongiy lacking
v.·as any evidence that we are
taking out tbe necessary in-
surance to keep the in·
nationary chickens, or rather
vultures, from coming home
to roost ln 1972-73," he said.
Instead of passing out "rosy
forecasts that have very little
prospect of fulfillment ,"
Heller told the Senate-House
Economic Committee. Nixon
should tell Americans the true
economy-whether or not it's
defined' as a recession .
After that. he said, Nixon
should aim for a "full-employ·
ment deficit to get full im-
petus out of the budget."
Lockheed
To Accept
Fixed Loss
PHaADELPHIA (UPI) -a "tireless" worker in the Matthews 1aJd. 1'We don't
Sam.son L. Freedman, 56, a cause of racial unt1er1tanding, know how he got them ID ~ his possession." ceramics teacher, heard Kevin aceontlng to vice principa11piii;~~~~liiiliii~~:'t
Simmons, 14, curse i11 a Robert Caplan. \
hallway Friday, suspended "He was a teacher In the
him, and told him to bring true sense," another faculty.
his mother to school Monday. member said, "he Uv¢ hls j
Kevin, an eighth·grader, beliefs." I
returned with a gun. Police Capt. Arthur Mat·
Freedman, chalrman of a thews said lhe black student
district Human R e 1 at I 0 n s faced an additional suspension \ Monday when Freedman Commissio11, was shot to death caught him with pt,. k
DIAM ONDS
AN D
EST A TE JEWELRY
PURCHASED Monday as he left Leeds dlsclplinary slips in a manila
Junior High School in the in-envelope from the vice-prin-1
BURBANK (AP) _ Saying tegrated middle class t11ount cipal's office. South Ceoit Plot•
l·t ca·-t afford •• fi'ghl the Airy section. Police accused "When they were recovered, 1 1 , s 0 ~ ··-w K . ( th . ri1to ot t • '" ltt• ... .,. g 0 v e r n m en t in court, ev1n o e c.rune. all were recovered except the I· Coit• Mo•• 140•9066
Lockheed Aircraft C.Orp. has ,._!::'Th~e0'w~h~it~e ~t~e~oc~her~·~·~nith~e~~pi~n~k ~·~l~ip~m~a~d~e~o~u~t~b~y~M~rj. IL;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ announced it will take a $200 Leeds staff for 14 years. was Freedman (Friday) on him,"
million fixed Jos.. on its CSA
jet transport contract with the
Pentagon.
The company said Monday
that the Defense Department
had threatened to cut ofr
money for the world's largest
airplane if Lockheed carried
out a plan announ~d last
month to sue the government
The nation's largest defense
contractor also announced it
had tentatively s e t t I e d
disputes involvina: Navy ship-
building costs.
USHER'S GREEN
STRIPE SCOTCH
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
~ WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS
You're in a mood to demand more for your money. Good.,
... .
Power front disc brakes are now standard equipment on everyJmpalct
For years. pow" disc brakes have been a
much-wanted extra-cost item. On many cars they
still are extra cost. But not on Impa la. They're built in. You get
power front disc brakes when you buy .the car. .
Discs give excellent stra1ght-hne stopping.
They also gi ve improved wet-weather performance .
Something else included with each and every
Impala: power ventil•tion. You )et a _continuOUI
change ol air inside without opemng a window, and
without moving the car.
You get all this and more. Built in. ~cauae
that's the way we're doing things these days:
We're building more car into every car.
Make your own comparisons. Make it to your
Chevrolet dealer's. And have a Value Showdown.
-, More car for' lnu-r l"f'.. mope, ,--
GM
' ...
~A~ shmVdawn
·' prcWe ~
•
..
t
. . .. ~
• DAILY PROT EDITORIAL P AGE
Change Jury System?
The jury ptl!sinf} on lhc prlso11er's life,
J\faV, i" the 1wor14 twelve ha ve t'I thief or two
C1ultier than him lhey iry.
\ViUiam Shake,ptart
Meancre for Measure, Act C
1'hjs dra,vs the rejoinder from-some la\Yr.crs and
judges that jurors' fees are an almo§t neglig1ble part
of the total cost of the county court system. And either
a prosecutor or a ,defense ta,vyer may take as long or
longe r to accept six jurors as 12.
Trial by jury evolved over the centuries In the
English-speaking world. The custom preceded Shake·
speare by some 500 years, although not in the form or
for the purpose It is now known. . .
Today, to Americans as to Englishmen, the English
common·law system of trial by jury is a cherished pro·
tection against the possibility of judicial and adminis·
trative tyranny.
1\ judge on the Orange Coast said, "If you were a
d efendant. knov.'ing 12 jurors would have to agree .on
your guilt, \\•ould yo u reduce you r odds , by accepting
six~" He y,•as referring to the existing rule of unanimity
among 12. not to the situation if the Legislature were
to .adopt the British system of 10 to 2 verdicts in crimi-
nal cases.
The Sixth and Seventh Amendments to the Con·
stilution provided for jury trial in criminal cases and in
civil suits at common law where the damages sought
exceed $20.
A few courts in the county have been using six·man
juries since the U. S. Supr~me Court ruled that juries
\Vith fewer than 12 members are constitutional. But these
have been 1nainly in traffic cases, and \Yith agreement
of lawyers on both sides and the judge.
The stales, not bound by these constitulional pro·
visions, nevertheless preserve the jury system, but \1J1th
variations.
No magic attaches to the number 12 for juries. but
as the Shakespeare quotation makes clear, that number
is rooted in centuries-old tradition. But it is not rooted
in law and may be changed.
The Legislature has promised a long look at the
whole fiel4 of judicial reform. Juries of six members
or fewer \vould be a logical part of such a study-and
a difficult one in vie\v of the \\•ide disparity of opinion
among lawyer.s .and judges.
One 'vay to streamli(le the present system ls more
use of the six-man jury. especially in misdemeanor
cases at lower court levels.
F,rom Senators to Lords
The British have eliminated juries entirely in civil
trials and accepted 10 to 2 verdicts in criminal ca.c;es.
Convert the U. S. Senate into a I-louse of Lords
peopled by 100 candidates for President?
Here in California, state Attorney General Evelle
J. Younger is leading a move to Cut jury verdicts fron1
unanimity to 9 to 3 in civil cases. And he is urging the
Legislature to consider eliminating juries in many
a ctions involving lesser offenses.
Rep. Clarence Bro\vn (R·Ohio). looking over the
array of presidential hopefuls sprouting on the Demo.
cratic side of the Senate aisle , puckishly circulated a
constitutional a1nendment to "fit the form to the pres·
ent substance."
Orange County District Attorney Cecil Hicks agrees
with Youngcr's recommendations. He speaks of the
cost-cutting potentials in terms of j~rors' fees and th e
t ime required to seat a 12·member Jury as opposed to
a six·juror panel.·
11is House or Lord s \Vouldn't pass la\VS, They would
just si t ·around and view \1Jlth alarm and point ""'ilh
pri de. Or as a Texan \\'as heard to grumble back in the
Roosevelt era. "I just \Vant someone to help me sit
around and hate that man~''
• To Save Their Enapires • • •
Bureaucrats Lobbying Hard
WASHI N GTON -Frenzie d
bureauc:i-ats, whose power is threatened
by President Nixon's reorganization plan,
have never worked for the public so
hard as they are now lobbying to save
their empires.
'In the backrooms o( go1Jernment, peo-
p\e v.·ho are paid to ser1Je the public
are vigorously resisting reforms that
w'ould save the public
bblions by eliminat. Uig duplication, re-
4'cing waste and in·
creasing efficiency.
Th e presidential
t,sk force responsi·
hie for the reorgani-
i.ation has encounter·
ed. the most <>pposi·
lion from the en·
trenched agencies that administer our
natural resources. Their functions would
be consolidated in a new Department of
Natural Resources, therebv reducing the
stature of the encrusted ·Corps cf En·
gineers, Bureau of Reclamation and Soil
Conservation Service.
THE AR.i\fY ENGINEERS. for ex-
ample, \\•ou1d lose their policymaking
power over the pork barrel projects
that are so dear to !he hearts of
Congressmen. Th is has been a source
(Jf great political power lo the Corp.11
of Engineers. which has been able to
v.·rite its own ticket en Capitol Hill.
To topple the C-Orps from th is J)O\Ver
base v.•ill take all the Presidenrs horses
and all the President's me n.
As far back as ~fay 12, 1970. ttte
task force forecast the opposition in
, ....
' a memo to President Nixon. The memo
is st a m p e d "Administratively Con-
fiden tial." But like al\ private com·
municalions to the President, it is treated
as top secret.
"MANY OF THE changes suggested
In our memorandum." warned the task
force, "seem certain to incur heeYy
political opposition and are , not likely
to generate offsetting support. It is ·no1
our role lo advise' you in this regard ,
but our discussions wilh the members
of the cabinet and others have impressed
us v.•ilh the intensity of their objections
to some of the reC<1mmended cha nges."
The !ask force, headed by Litton
Industries' Roy Ash, warned that we
are rapidly using up our natural abun-
dance. "Exclusive of air and water,
\•;e now use 25 lons per person of ba sic
materials each year, and this usage
is growing al the rate of almost a
ton a year," reported the memo. "If
present trends continue. energy use \!Jill
double in 10 yea rs; \\'ater in l8 ; and
metals in 22 years.
"JN THE RE'.\1AJNING years o( this
centur~·. the United Slates will use more
energy and more key resources lhan
it has consumed since the founding of
our nation. Even H our population \\"ere
static. v.·e would consume fa:' more
water, limber, and mine rals than our
predecessors, yet \\'e will demand the
preservation or forests, lakes. beaches,
and the like for increased recrealional
use."
The Ash Council pointed out that
"federal waler resou rces de1Jelopment
programs arc localed in three different
departments: Agriculture. Interior, and
Army. . Interagency rivalry.
duplicative planning, and conflicting
policies per sist ••.
1'JN KANSAS, proposed \Yatershed
developments (Agriculture) threaten to
underotine the rationale for a reclam.8.-
~ 'lion pioject tinterior) downstream.
"In ~fontana, the Corps <>f Engineers
and !Re Bureau of Reclamation are stu-
dying "'separate projects for the same
site. Who, if anyone. should build which
ptojec.t awaits an uncertain resolution.
''In Cali(ornia. de\·e\opmcnt of a ski
<1nd summer mountain resorl on Forest
Servi ce lands (Agriculture) in the
Mineral King basin was stymie d by
refusal to grant public access across
National Park land by Interior .••
"IN THI:: SOUTHEASTERN states,
\\'idespread stream channel straightrning
and deepening: (Agriculture) has been
protest~ vigorously by !he Department
of Inter ior, supported by conser1Jation
interests.
'"The process of bal3nci11g fish and
\\"ildlife and scenic values againsl.
economic dc1Jclopment needs is un.
necessarily lrustrfl\ed by fragn1ented
pl<inn ing and evalu;ition responsi bility
• , . Jn short. .1 coordiflated naiura l
resource n1anagemcnl policy has been
virtually impossible to achie\"e."
·Life Under Red Bunglers
LONDON -The new year holds few
promises for the \l.'orker, the housewife,
or the consumer living under com·
muni sm. The restive population is no
longer listening to pledges of a better
tomorrow. Nor are the people receptive
to the optimistic flow cf statlslics. As
<>ne Cuch writer said last summ er:
"\\le cannot eat steel output.''
The Czec~, the Poles, the Bulgarians,
and a great many Russia"ns as "'·ell,
believe th at those in power in their
respective cowil ries are simply bungling
the economy. 'T'hey see attempts to
adhere to ?-.larxist strictures masking
Inepti tude. The riots in Pol and
demonstrated that Red bureaucrats have
,.yet to learn how to deal with real
people. Wladyslaw Gomulka's lack of
sophistication In imposing a 20 pcrtt!nl
price tncrtfi~ on basic foodstuffs a few
days before Christmas w a s ex-
--liilijl(·ll
Tuesday, February 2. 1971
The 1ditorial f'OOI of the Daily
Pilo t 1eelu to i nform end arim-
ulat1 readers b~ prt.scnUng lh ii
ntW.fPOPfr'• opi nians and Com·
mcntary on topiu of l~t~rest
ond signl/icance, bu providing a
forum Jor th1 npre1tion. of
our read.e~ opiniona, and. b11
preuntlr.f '''' diverse view-pai11t1 o fn/Of""JMd Ob.1'"1t'1"1
and apokeam.en on toplct of th1
do~.
Robert N. Weed, Publ.lsher
"
-
Editor ial
Resear ch
traordinarily callous. But il v.·as far
from unusual
\\'HEN f\'1.KOLAI BA I 8 AK 0 \',
chairman of lhc USSR State Planning
Committee. presented the Soviel plan
For 1971, he reelPd off target goals of
little significance to the ordln3ry
house wife. There "'as no appeal for
higher qunlity of goods or proper servic-
ing. There v.·as even no mention of
incenlives. This sho"·ed the divorce from
reality betv.·een the state pl;inlli!rs and
the pe<>ple.
ln America. the '~age earne r can
alway11 hope for a change in economic
policy v.·ilh lhe nex t :idmini!!lration. In
Eastern Europe the avenuci; for change
are blocked. Strikt!i are not tolcratf>d.
AnY public protest. In fact. is considered
"anti·slate'' acli\'ity punishable by de;ilh.
And if ihal is no~ i;i.Jfflci('nliy dissuasi\'t.
the bogey (If Hussitin inter,·ention 1.s
held 01Jer !he head~ of the citizens.
The argument is: Even If you dle for
your ca use, you may do your country
harm by bringing In Russian troops.
So\•lct forcts already sre stationed
In Poland. lJunga ry, Czeelloslovak\a, and
East Germany. Thty are not likely lo
be "''ithdr'&\l.'TI. This does oot prevent
the po531blllty of rC1JOlts at illny tJme.
WHEN TROUDLI:: occurs. r I tu al
scapegoats are found. Th e discrediltd
Gcmulka was rt'placed on De<'. 20 by
Edv.·ard Clerek, a prngmatlst technocrat
'1·ho promi~ to ro11cenlr11tc on im·
riro,•ing the economy. But Poland ~
econo1nic crisis. conceived under com·
monism. is so deep.seated that Gicrek
\Viii fi!ld no easy solutions.
Jn Hunga ry. Czechoslo\•akia, Poland,
Romania and Bulgaria people must v.·ait
at least tv.'o years If they want to
purchase a car. Then they must gi'"e
an immediate and full downpaymcnt.
Al present 100,000 Hungarians are
\l·aiting on such lists. Jn Russia the
situation is much \~orse. Last summer
In ttlosco1v, Editorial Rc~earch Heports
\1·itnessed screa1ning mothers and slug·
glng fat hers being cl ubbed by police
because !heir patien~ had run out aloni::
v.·ith the supply of U::iby carriages in
the Childrcn·s \\1orld ~tore.
If protesting consu1ners can ovcrlhro1v
on(' rcg in1e, as in Poland. there is 110
loi;ical re ason to presu1ne v.·hy they
\\Ill not trv cJ~e"·hcrc. Old Communists
should bl.'· on notice not to repeat the
s::11ne mistakes lime and again. As
v.·orkl.'rs endure ano!h('r long, dreary \1•in·
lt•r. I.he ~torm \\"arrUngs arc flying 1n
El'stc rn Europe.
Dear
Gloornv <
Gu :
So lhr: Edison Company has '"'on
a prlle for rontr1bullng 10 en,•ir·
onmental quallly, \\'ho 1ra5 run-
nerup. Standard Oil ?
-A.R \'
fJli• /fflW,_ ftflHI\ rtllHI' fltWl, Ml
lltttHt Hlt" IM.. 11 l~t ft_ .. , . .,, Stn4
¥111f" •tf Pff•t e. Oltt'"' Of .. O•llJ Ptlt!.
Faculties
Seek Security
~
Via Contracts
Gu est Editorial
-·
It is clear from the increasing number
of news stories crossing the: editor's desk
that negoliated contracts are fast becom-
ing the frontrunning issue for higher
education faculties. A growing number of
facult ies in California co mmunity col-
leges are looking out-of·slale at the ac-
tions or the ir colleagues and are mov ing
to follow their lead into contract" ne gotia-
tions.
The genesis of ll1is contract trend is the
insecurity resulting from the present
system in California.
A community college teacher, tenured
or not , is uncertain v.·hat the district's
obligations are to him. He is fairly tt!r-
ta in of his obligations to the district : he is
committed to teach for a year if he does
not notify the district before May 15. The
condit ions under which he teaches are
vague. Some are mandated by state la'"
-but most faculty aren 't certain \!.·hat
those mandates are.
SALARIES ARE consistently set by the
district after the ?-.1ay 15 faculty deadline.
They can be altered up to the first day or
teaching. Class loads and assignments,
hours, office and room assignments, etc .•
all arc subject to change throughout the
year.
Bo::ird p<>licies are not binding on the
board but may be changed with alac rity
and ease. A faculty member's pro-
fessional life may be altered signifi cantly
after he has been locked in to another
)'Car or teaching.
These are some of the reasons why
negotiated contracts, binding the board
for at least a year, are increasingly at·
tracth·e. Faculties are cognizant of the
increased pressure on higher education.
\Vlll a board cave-in under financia l and/
<>r comm unity pressure?
A contract establishes minimum con·
rli tions which can't change under
pressure.
This association is movi ng rapidly into
contract negotiat ions because our
members are demanding service. They
need training and advice and they are
gl'lling it.
\YE SH . .\LL ~0'\' makl! 1 predict ion or
two.
I. \Ve predict several community col·
IC'ge faculties \vlll prepare contracts for
net:.oli11tions this year.
2. \Vt: predicl serious negotiations will
!earl lo several conlracl6 In community
c.•ollcg<'s.
3. \\'e predict many boards of truslet's
\\'Ill resist strenuou~ly the ir faculty's
dcsire."fo1· contracts. They will rloak lheir
opposition in a cloud of lega l arguments
11rnirling the issue. They wi ll neglect
C'On1p!ttcly 1hc basic faculty concerns
cn11nriatcd 11bove. They v.·ill continue to
view 1he faculty as irresponsible, in1·
pc'rtlnenl and ungrateful In see.king con·
tr::ictural guarantees.
This attitude \!.'ill further convince the
faculty that C(lntrac~ with boards are as
necessary (prob11-bly more so) for faculty
as they are for bulldlng contractors and
bu!4inesscs lieallng "'Ith the board.
Polarlzatlon on th is issue can be avoid·
td only U boards of trustees In C.difomla
1..'0mmunity colleges rrrognlze the
C'~scnce of lhe faculty concern and res·
pond to the need In a constructive v.·•y.
The C;ilifornia Profes.10r will continue to
"'a!ch closely how faculty in California
r:irc in carrying out thtlr part Jn this na-
lfoni.I nlO\'emenl in hlghl.'r tducalio11.
The California Proles11>r
"MOVE ALQNcjJ PLEA>E ,",
Time Proceeds at
An Uneven Pace
Tt seems absolutely impo6sible that J
began writing thiS column 27 years ago
this v.·eek. It seems im possible th at the
year 1944 was 27 yea rs ago.
Looking up my drama revie"'S of that
period, it is hard lo believe that such
plays as "I Remember Mama," "The
Glass Menagerie," "'Harvey," Anna
Lucasta," "A Bell for Adano,11 and
"Dear Ru th" opened more than a
quarter.century ago.
(Or 1he O.Day in1Ja.
sion ot France by the
Allies.)
The years of our
childhood seem to
drag so, while we are
v.·aiting to gel older;
from Wednesday to
Sunday seems a
year, ¥.'hen ""e are a
child anticipating some treat, or an
adole scent watching for the day wMn we
can finally get the car keys.
THEN, BETWEEN the , ages of 25
and 50. a year seems to go as fast
as Wednesday to' Sunday. Time has a
"telescopic" quality to it -it does
not proceed at an equal pace throughout
life, but accelerates its tempo v.·ith age.
This is something young poople cannot
be expected to understand.
The people v.'ho live by the creed
that "Time is money ' ha\'e got hold
of lhe stic k by the v.Tong end . The
exact opposite is true: money is time.
That Is.' the best purpose of money
is to buy time to live in.
ONE OF THE TRAGEDIES of life
is that most people ha1Je to spend their .
time accumulating money so that they
can "retire" at 65 or so with some
measure or dignity and grace. But by
th en it is generally too late for anything
but the most marginal of "living" -
fishing, quiet traveling, a little golf,
or gently marking time until death ar-
rives.
In a well-structured society, everybody
woula gel a "sabbatical." a year ofr
every seve n years, to do what he would
like to do. go where he would like
to go. "'hilc he is still young enough
to make it count. ~1oney woul d not
ha ve to be piled up for a problemal ical
aging future. but could be utilized to
make the most of present time. , to
discover oneself. lo de1Jelop resources ,
perhaps e1Jen to change one's whole
course.
'T'HJS IS NOT possible today for the
average person in any society, capitalist
or Communist. They are captives of
the 14·ork-ethos, from the day they leave
school to the day they retire, wilh only
a Few wee ks off each yea r to regenerat•
the battery. For the happy fe\v who
delight in their work, this is no hardship;
for the many v.•ho v.·ork only because
they must. this leads to dull resignation
or resentment.
Freud said that •'Jove anrl \\'Ork" were
all a person needed for happiness. He
neglected to add that you must lo\'e
your work, and V.'Ork at your love. Bul
only a handful of mankind are this
lucky or Lh is wise.
Law Favors Matrimony
Janet and Ed knew that his mother was
none too bappy about their marriage. "\'et
they v.·ere both dismayed to learn, after
her death, that she bad left money to Ed
strictl y on condition that he get .a
divorce.
Jn short order lhty challenged the
validily oft.bis clause in co1.:rt There. the
executor of the estate argued:
"It \\'BS the mother 's money, lo do with
as she pleased. If Ed doesn't want to
accept it on ber terms, he is free. to
refuse lt -and stay married to Janet."
HOWEVER, THE court ruled that Ed
could collect his bequest without getting a
divorce. The judge said that. as a matter
of public poUcy. the. law frov.'Jls on any
de1Jice that is so clearly "hostile to the
marriage relation.''
ft Is a general role lbal the law is
bia~ed in favor or matrimony. This kind
of effort to break up a marriage, by using
1. bequest as "divorce ba.it,'' is usually
held null and void.
Nevertheless. an antl·marriage clause
might be upheld l!, under the par ticular
circumstances. Its impact is relatively
slight. For ~xample::
A mother lefl money to her dRughter.
payable only if she got a dl•orce. But it
aJS<> 1ppe:affil thet the daughter was
already separated from her hu!band, and
that a divorce suit was pending.
-llt'IWLDIKG THE lerms of tbc
bequest. the court polnttd out that Jn this
situation there v.•as not much marriage
left to preserve.
Whal it the bait has the opposite
purpose; lo ketp lbe child mart1ed,
rather lhan lo get him divor<.'f'd?
In one c&st . (or Instance, the "'111 gave
a son his bequtst only if he wnaincd
La w in Acti on
'
married ror a certain period. lie sued ta
knock out this requirement, compl aining
that it would force him to stay married
no malter how much his v.·Jfe might
misbeha\'e.
But the court held that the son would
indeed have to gi\!e up his right tn
divorce. at least for the specified lime, if
he '''anted to collect the bequest.
The judge felt that society ha s les:<1
reason lo protect the instit ution of
divorce than to protect the institution ef
marriage.
An American Bar A~sociation pub-
lic servic« featurcr b~ Will Ber11ard.
~--By Ge orge ---,
Dear Ceorge:
I mailed you four letters, In
each one I encloi;ed a stamp. t
have httn reading your column
faithfully, but my problem -after
looking for an answer -is th:it
I can't remember what my pro-
blem was. Can you help me? What
is my problem?
ABSENT-'.\llNOED
Dear A. ~1.:
\'our problem is : · '1~1e a
lot of sl3mps.
(Send )'our problen1::. tu the nn·
tkln'1 ml)Sl.Confu~ advite l;QJ.
um!'llst. Rood old -er , •• ,1
"'hat's·flis·name.)
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
11Gosh, I thought this was going to be a
routjne audit."
CHECKING
•UP•
W 011de1·iI1g Wl1at
A Wuzze1· Does?
By L. l\I. BOYD pornography investigators say
Texas merits that interesting
distinction .... Q. "lf white
is first, what is secon d amoni;
the most popular h o u s e
paints?" A. Gray •... Q.
''ls cofftt a sex -stimul ant?"
A. In rats it is. that's definite.
As fat as human J:O. the
researchers arc still checking
it out \Vith the help of
numerous volunteers.
Attalyst's _Office R eport
Medi.;Cal Deficit Ove1·stated?
SACRAMENTO (AP)
Gov. Reagan's Medi.Cal direc.
tor cut back on health serv ices
3~ times more than 1i1•as
necessary last December, the
prestigious legis lat ive
analyst's office has reported.
Principal Analyst To m
Dooley told the Assembly
A1edi.Cal Committee Monday
that State Health Care Serv·
ices ~ector Earl W. Brian
Agitators
Get Blanie
\ In Rioti11g
overstated the potential defici!
in the Medi.cal budget by
nearly $100 million when he
ordered a $140 milUon cut to
balance his budget.
And almost half of the
remaining deficit is the fault
or foot-dragging b y ad-
ministrators responsible for
putting cost-cutting programs
into operation, not big in-
creases in v•elfare r o 11 s ,
Dooley added.
The deficit caused by In-
creased welfare rolls v.·ould
have been $4.1 million by the
end of fiscal 1970-71. Dooley
sa id . not the $98.9 million cited
by Dr. Brian in ordering 10
percent across-the-board cuts
in Medi.Cal spending t-0 head
oft the anticipated deficit.
deficit if cuts had not been
made In the $1.06 billion·a·
year program.
Brian said he would
reinstate all cut programs If
the IO\\'er figures were true,
but questioned outside the
hearing after D o o I e y • s
testimony, Brian said testil~.
'"Mr. Dool~y needs to chec~
his numbers again." 1
The cuts ordered last Dec}
15 -a 10 percent across-the·
board reduction in all Medi·
~al payments plus a fr eeze
On "nonessential" services -
have been the center of con·
trove rsy involving Reagan, the
legislature. welfare recipients
and health care providers.
particularly nursing homes
that rely on Medi.Cal for 80
percent or their patients. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
U.S. Attorney Robert L .
Meyer said Monday that ''a
small group or, persons" pr1>-
voked the riot in the East
Brian, grilled for nea rly four
hours by the commit t e·e earlier in the day, stuck by ----------,,-,,-1
his earlier $140 m i I Ii on
estimate of the potential
Los Angeles barrio which left I\1ai·ines Lose one person dead, SO persons
;,i,red aod oo ...,..,,.d. Poli ce Jobs _
Chicano leaders asserted,
hO\\"ever, that s heriff 's SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Fifteen
deputies were trying "to sel reserve office rs are leaving 1
us up" so they could carry the San Oieg() police force
out "their self-fulfilling pro-because they're Marines. hit
phecy of death" during the by a new nioonlightlng order
disturbances Sunday. announced In Washington ,
··Represen tatives of t he -~D=.C~·==========~===~======~I Department of .Justlti! and at-Ill
torneys from my office have
closely monitored the Chicano
r.1oratorium t>.1arch and rally
... " said r.-teyer.
"Preliminary reports show
1hal the performance of local
law officers was both pr1>-
fessional and restrained.
"Unfortunately, a small
grou p of persons did a great
disservice to the r..1ex:ican·
American community by pro-
voking the violence whlch
erupted after the rally,"
l\1ever said.
A rttEDICAL l\IAN "'ho
specializes in bringing-babies
into the world says more
mothers arc breast-feeding
their infants today than ever
before. Largely, he . benevcs,
because breast-feeding is such
a dandy lobor·saving techoi·
quc .. ., .THE LOV E AND
\VAR POLLSTERS now ton·
tend that year a lad is apt
to fall most deeply in love
is age 15. and so it is a
rare husband who marries his
first greatest romantic in·
tere st ..•. "SN 0 RING
RESULTS \vhen the tissues
hecome flabby," claims an
eye, ear. nose and throat doc-
!or. "and I can usually .lcll
"'hether a woma n snores jus~
by looking al her figure ."
However, Rosalia !\1unoz,
head of th e Chicano
l\toralorium Committee which
organized the rall y, said
deputies "took the law into
!heir own hands." During a
14-minute ne\\·s conference, ~11GHTILY SURPRISED to l\1unoz asserted that marchers
hear there are more pro-to the rally "''ere searched
fessiona l musicians in this for arms "and we found some
country than lawyers. doctors . qn police informants."
dentists and ministers com· The rampage of WIJ'!dow·
bined. But such is the smashing and arson erupted
remarkable claim or ' the after the end of the peaceful
statisticians :·; •• W fl AT .rally altend~d by about 4,000
SINGLE CHAflA~ERISTIC persQns:
does a man need most to The dead man . Gustave
b:c a good fa rmcr-7 TAat's ?-.1ontag Jr .. 24, Los Angeles,
"·hat the University scholars \l'as shot in the chest when
in Kansas wanted lQ kno\1'. a crowd or about 600 advancedl
Their lengthy lests repeatedly on six deput ies. hurling rocks
pointed up the one necessary at them. The depu ties fired
1 trail to be mechanical ap-warni ng shotgun blasts into .
litude . the air and ground as the
Al'I ASKE D If the Soviet group moved in. Montag was
Union levies an inheritance killed by a shotgun pellet
tax. Not al last report. And : wh ich ricocheted "off a hard
it is the contention of an ex-surface" according to the
" The Omega Speedmaster Chronograph
atoinless steel witH metal brai:elet.
Keeps as perfect time o• earth
as it did on the moon . $195.
(111•99 Ac.....,.11 t11wil ...
A-rl<•ll E•P<••• t•n~"""••M:1r• ,,,. Mtl1tr Cll1r91, '"·
SLAVICK'S
Jl'\\·elers Since 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH-6~~-13 80
Op•n Mon. and Fri. 'tll t :JO p.m.
OPEN QUESTION -ln
1heir list of occupations. the
British census takers record
lhe existence of citizens "'ho
\l.'ork as \vuzzcrs. ptonklng
m a ch in is t s , u m brclla
lranslaters and g e I t er · s
hC?lpers. If you know what
any of these folks do for a
living, please advice. \\'ould
appreciate it.
IT IS ILL EGAL to ~have
\1hile driving in ~1ass
achuseU~. t a k e a horned
toad out of New :\1exico
\vithout the governor's okay.
and \l.'histlc at a girl wa!kini;
by a fire house in Huntington,
\V. Va. Remc1nbcr that.
pert on money matters. in· ~·;h~"~;~rr~·s~d~e~p~a~rtm~e~"~'~· ===~===========::==========~! cidenlally, that any socialislic1r--
CUSTO~IER SERV ICE -Q.
"In lvhat stale are th!! most
dirty movies sho .... ·n?" A. The
nation without such a tax in·
cvitably "'ill turn capitalistic.
Interesting theory .
Your questions and com·
nicnts are 1velcomed and
u:ill be used tn CllECKING I
UP wlierever possible.
Please add,·ess your letter$ I
to L. ltJ. Boyd. P.O. Bax
1 1875, Newport Beach, Calif.
Minority Student Band I
Occupies College Unit
OAKLAN D (UPI) -Some In respon se lo a demand
two dozen students occupied from Douglas J\..-liranda, a BSU
administrative oHices at J\.1cr· leader, the board passed a res. rill College today, protesting plans lo move some of its facil· o!ution asking no police action
Hies away from its location in on the campus. But the board
8 preOOminantely black neigh-war ned students : "This does
borhood. not give you blanket approval
HAPPIER CHllDREN
who learn morel
HAPPIER TEACHERS
with enough supplies!
Daes this sound like an impossible dream?
the
NEWPORT -MESA EDUCATION ASS'N.
doesn't think so
N-MEA 1ubmitted • mester con·
tr•cf to the Newpcrt-Mes• Un i-
fied Scheel District Boerd cf
Educeticn tcd•y tc brin9 this
abcuf.
N-MEA'S
Ycu'll be heer in9 mere abcut
m•1ter ccnlr•cts end N-MEA'•
prc9r•m fer e "P•rtnership fer
Better Educ•ficn."
PARTNERSHIP FOR BETTER EDUCATION
"We're going to hold this of. withoot running the risk ofliriiiiiiii=~=~:==~~===~~~:;::~~=iiii~==~~ fice until the Peralta School having the police come on
Board agrees to our demands campus."
'Or until the pigs come in." Other demands from Miran· ,r-:r,-,
said .James Evans. \\'ho heads da were for "community con-j
the school's Black S!udents fro!'' of the school and the re ..
Union. taining of its present students 11
Dt>1nons1rating, picketing and facilities.
8nd the office takeove r started No violence was reported at
!11onday. organized by sludents the school. few police were in
from the BSU, !he Chicano evidence and picketers admon.
Student Union, the Black Vet· ishrd each other lo .. keep ii
erans Organization and The ·cool."
Revolutionary Studrnts. ';On strike -keep it open,"
The Peralta Junior College was the chant from the side--
Dist rict has no plan to shut walks.
do\vn l\·lerritt. bnt lt did hope Leaflets demanded that !Iler.
to mnvr some or its lacililirs ritt be kept "open and in full
and perhaps half or 11"' 6.~ oprration " until a "commun-1
~rudcni s to a ne111 cnm pu5 in ity college" is established h1
the Ea~! Oak land Hills. the viclnily.
~---------11
Now ..• Plastic Cream
invention For Artificial Teeth
Artlflcial Teeth Nov er Felt So NaluTll Belon
For lht first tirnt. tdrnce otrtr' F1 xour.1''Tbold1 dmturt:1fumcr
• rl35tlt crtam th.It Mid~ den· ...... d,,.orttm11/mlt1IJJ1. )"oumay lur~ as Lht•·\·t ntvrr bttn lttld b1!t ~rdtr, chev. betttr. t<tt mot't
btuirr.-form~ an r l:utic mtm· n.<1tur111ly.
tir.lnt that 11'1/" 1.,,1.d )'tlltt dnr· F1XOO'll.1''T lut1 ror houB. Rc-
1•irrs to//,, 111h11al tuiw' of ym11 11sU mot~turt. Dr.ntur" 1hal f1l
1nou1ll. are t-.ent1al to htalth, Ste. roor I t"~ a rtvoluuonarr d1oeovtf)' dentist Tl'iUlarly. C'.!l t••Y·ln-
ul!HI F1xone:-.1 ' for daily homt uSt F1xoorNt Dtnlun Adhesiw
, -e. (t:.S. Patrnt fJ,000."181 Crt.arn 1t all 6nit tountm.
WURLITZER
ORGANS & PIANOS
Save $50 to $500
HAMMOND ORGANS
Save $50 to $1000
REBUILT GRANDS
AT LESS THAN
V1 OF NEW PRICES
TlltH Gr•IMI PltMt .,. r1t1rlll
•r evr .-•-,..• ,.,.,11 -(tHt l"l'llfthllM 11111 MW. "• 1tnmtl ,.._ 1tammtr!lfftl1t MIW
dllllflff ltllll Ml~J er. ,.,1,,,_..1
C1mt 111 MW lflt .,..,u 11t •
'"-•lllirl l!ltl"'IMflt ti I HK• .,.. ..... ., hll•'IW ........ ,
PIANOS
SAVE $70 To $200
.., .... ' .... '*""'
W1•r1 tltlt•llllrtttl ti
clt•r """' Ml•rt 111·
¥t11ttrr-C•-NI l ilt
lfW I .... 1141111
SOUTH COAST Pl..(ZA
Cost• Me11 Phone S40-ll6S
I
Dt )'llr ......... ,.. .,
Or,1~ lfto!'1Ktltrll
''" vtl
DAILY PILOT 1
Onty
Amenca's
Largest
Over
$3Y,
Billion
STRONG
Over
82
Years
SAFE
•.. gives~
-·this protection
Condensed Statemen~ of Cond ition as of December 31, 1970
RESOURCES
C11sh, Due from Banks. U.S. Go~ernment, Agency
and Municip•I Bonds ...... , . , .. , ... , . , , , .....•. , .. , ..... S 254.831.1 63.18
27,854,000.00 Federel Home loan Bank Stock , , , ........ , •.... , . , . , • , , ... , .
Government Insured •nd Guarantttd , , , ...... , , , , , ..... , , 432,488,. 769.06
2,634,098,582.77
28,703:736.30
9,431 ,999.13
Conventlcnal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............. , .. .
Contracts and Loans to Facihta\e Salt cf Real Estate ...........•
Leans for Silt of Real Estate Held fer Investment Purposes ...... , •
Leans Secured by Savings Accounts • • .... , , .......... , •.• 997,845.05
3,556,907.1 5
35,673,938.01
38.4 23,437 .83
3 1,020,331:96
32,819A27.62
Real Estate owned Acquired in Seltlen1tnt of Loans , , , .... , , , , , , •
Reel Estate owned for Investment Purposes .. , .. , . , , .. , ... , , , ..
A'sociaticn Premises. Furniture and Equ1pn1ent . , , , , ... , , , . , ..•.
Deferred Charves ••....•.•••••......• , ••••.... , .•..•••..•
Other Astets ...• , .. , . , .• , . , , , ......•.. , ......... , . , , , .. .
$3,529,900,138.06
UAllUTIU AND CAPITAL
l.vintS Accounts • , ..•...•.. , • , , •.....••....• , . , .•..••.•. $2,771.~.2,0.782.53
UndlsbutMd loan Funds •••..•. , ........ , , , , , , , , .•• , , , , •• , • 69,835,822.78
Mv•nces from Federal Home Lean Bank &
Other Borrowings ........ , .••.••... , • , , • , ...• , . , • , . . • • . J&4,587 ,250.00
ReHrve for Interest en Savin&s •.......... , , .•...•. , • , • , . • • . . ·c·
Other Liabilities ..........• , ......... , ••••. , ..•....••.. , . . 21,207,621.50
Re&erve for Federal & State Income Tax ..• , .• , ...... , .. , . , , . • . 10,017,572.45
Deferred Credits •nd Reserves ........................ , .. , , . 12,526,879.SO
Specific less Reserves ............• , . , ......... , . , , , , . • . • • ·o·
Ctpital Stock, Generel Re sel"\les and Undivided Profits .. , , , . , . . . . . 260,304,209.20
••• plus
top interest a
$3,529,900,138.06.
EARN 53 AND 63
SPECIAL BENEFITS WITH BOTH ACCOUNTS.
5% Regular Passbook and special.purpose "Pay Yourself First''
Accounts. Add or withdraw any amount, any time, and you earn full
interest day·in to day.out. This current annual rate, compounded
daily, gives an annual yield of 5.13%
6 % for sav~ngs of $5,000 ... or more ... Home recommends the 2·
year Minimum Term Accoun t which guarantees 6%. compounded
da ily, for an annual yield of 6.18%.
Shouldn't you be at
Home!
lot ANGlLD (MAIN Of"rltn '761 I . •roedwey •I Ith• to014
f21,3) '27·7Ht
ALHAMe"" 401 [. Velltl ltvd. ti l ien • \lttt.I 91101•121 ) 219.0211
ANAHllM
101 S. H•rbor 91vd, •I LJncoln 92IOS • (11"4) 53S·2813
AilllCAOlA
60 Ent HunlinatDri Orlv• II ,Int• 91006
f213) 44,·1121
•A"ITOW 1232 [. M•ln St. In lht Sup"' S Shooolns C1nt1r • 92311 f7 1,f2Sf..2131
eD'Ul 'r HILLS 9241 Wll1hlr1 91¥'11.
•I ..._.Ofd Oriv1 • t02l0 (213) 213·6666
•UDtA JIAJtK 1010 81Kh 81vd. •I Le P•1mt • 90620
(714) 121-4664
SUklANK 1-40 N. Si n
'•rri1ndo Blvd. •I l urb1nk l lvd. • t l~t 1213) 845-7211
COMil'TON 1801 N. LOfll ll•1t.h Blvd. 11 Golden
90221•(213)6J•·t7JS
lNCINO
11101 V•nlur1 11"'1,
•l Amt•loY • •1915 12 1lJ7U-0630
GA"DlM ClltOV[ 11922 Broolthu,.t St.
•I Ch1pm1n • 12640 (714) SJO..S6•0
CILENOAU: IN N. S r•nd llvd.
11 trlt V1"11.1•1 f'trf. • •IZOJ (.2lJ) 241-4102.
HIGHLAND PAltK
5700 N. ,;1111ro1 SI.
'"t Avt . 57 L.A. 90042 (211)254·.Sll"
HOLL'rWOOO
ISOO N. Vine 11 S1.1ri1•t 90021 . (213) 456-1 121
HUNTINGTON PARK 714 t P'1eil1c 8!vd. 1t
'lottm:• • 9025~
(21'.IJ 581-1177
LAKEWOOO 4909 Llktwood B!vcl, et Dtl Amo• 90712
(213) 634.4909
LA MIRADA 15128 E. l'I011tr1n1 A.,.,
[tst of LI Mlr•d• 81\'d, 90631 . (714) 521·1310
llVEftM01'l 27.S &. "K" St. 11 lrd St.
945Ml • (4 I.SJ "47-4660
LONG SEACH :>OJ E•st flrsl St. 1! Lot.Ut t 90I02 . (213) 436-1231
MOHTEIELLO 1429 W. 81vtrll llvd.
•I M111lt • (213 128·03\7
OAK LANO
:>50 C11t lllh SI.
"•"' loulh •1d Olsttift 94606 • (4 l~J 465·3400
Pi\SAOENA 1160 £1n Color•tlo l!vd.
11 Ll kl • 911 01 1213! 7H·.Sl 74
PICO ll:lV(JIA 912S [. Whlttlt r Blvd. t11t
of Rottm.•d • !X>MO (21J) 6'9-1071
~MONA 100 Pomor11 Miii W•st 91719. (714) 62l·249l
"'"lTO 101 L foothill Blw6. It "'Vt .. idt
12376. (71 4) a7 .. 1010
SAN Sl:ltHA"DlHO.
301 W. Hilhl•rtd A¥•. •I AttoWh11t1 • 92406
! 114) 812·3321
SAN ,JIAHCISCO 2SOO Mlts!on St. ti :>lt l $1.
94110 • (415) 64141900
SAN JOI[
·l221 Lincoln Av1. w.n-Gltn OIU•ICI 95125 . (408) 217.(11 07
SANTA ANA 1 lOO North M•ln It,
•t W11hl1111on Av1. 92701 • (7 4) 547·ffll
SANTA MONICA 2600 Wll1hlre 91vd. •t 2Jlh 90403•(213)12MMI
STUOtO C1fY
12051V1nh1r111¥d. •t L111r1I Cenyori • 11604
(213) 7Sl·1J4l
TO"lllANCE 1511 Cr1"'9<!S Av•.
11 El "•dt • to!IOI (2131 J21·9244
YICTOftVILL( 14909 7ltl St. ., •• r 1h1 Victor V•U1y
Sho11p!nl C1n11r • f 2l92 (714) 24 .,327
WESTCOYIHA 100 \Plnc•nl "v•.
11 lh• Si n l••n••dino fwy, 91790. 121l) 966-1511
Wt-41m1n1 15&25 E•sl Whlltl.,. Bl,d.
11 S1n11 G1nrud11
90601 • (2lJ) ''1"7'1
WILSHI"[ ClNTtlt
1750 Wll1hlrt 9tvd. 11 OxfeN
90010 • C21SJ Jl'4t73
Account• l11.i1red lo ,?0,000 br lht rtD[ltAL S•vl1111 1n4I Lt•n l"'ott•llU Corpor111oft.
.. M11lt!pl1 •cC011M1 n'll)' b9 ln1Y1•d It $20,000 11t.h. M•mb1r· f'tftE""l Hon'!• loen 91ttll Srttl rn.
I •
•
•
n tlA\l Y PILOT lutsda.y rtbru''' 2 1971
LEGAL NOTICE f',\lllLV CIRCUS by Bil Ken11e .---,._
P.""1 f'IC:TITIOUI IUJINIJtf NOTtCI TO Cll01TOlt$
LEG~L NOTICE LEGAL NOTICJI: LEGAL NOTICE
~ C:lltTl,ICATIJ 0, •UllMlll (Ill IM ,. 11"' ·-· SlAnMIJNT ·~·••o• COUIT OP ,. ••
<••Tll'ICATIJ 01' 1\JtlNIJll r1CTITl0Vt NAMI c:~,';ii~"J,' ,~:..:11~~·· w'r· lollowl1111 PttHM ,,, clolM ITATIJ Of' CALl,OINIA , •• ~ w..:i'~~~o~: ~.~,~ ""' ,,. c.:-~~::.,,..e:-., ~7~,.,.w .... ,,:~ .,,. :tm I :::~.:o-CON$Tl.Ut110H co *' TNI co:..TY...:~ .. GIAN••
C.-u<llM I Ot.oallltU ,, 1ui 0-1 SI '°''' -... C1!1•11l1 ll'ldltf ..... '"' '"'""'""' 00 l>trtb'tl (l f'llfV l.ift-Of" .. C.011 ....... C.UI 1At1i. ol U.IUt't AU.YN Hl.A.Dllt
tlrlyt Sill" "' "~ lt.U. '"'"*'-""" ,,,_ "' CUSTOM ffltl llw~ .,, (-u<tt... • bu1lMll l.ltn' Cii-Wi t .. -• !D09 Umnot Do«ttff Ctll10'1li. utiMr Hj. fl(lllltul fl"" 11111•,. SEllVICI! AND •l l>Allt •nd 11\al Mid ltl (•l'•l1111fll t i )OM Enttr••IM Or Co1t1 Mnt C.UI NOTICE IS Mt!ltl!tY CIVlM .. tM
•I rtANClfO VI.IA Git.ANDI! ...... !Ml nnn 11 """ll'OMll., fM followl ... •t•lll>ft l!rffl (ISll MtU C1llf111'11i. llnM• JllM> H ..... ,._ Dl•ltn $2tl Ttlflltlo t rfdJl ... I o1 1M t bovt !lllMHI dfleldtfll
alld 11"" k c0Mi1111IHI ol ,... ... 1-11'1 wt>ote n•llW l'I fllll Inf lla<o ti toilO.°"f lll<t llcllt\oul 1 '"' ni me ol SAMMAll.t. Avt G .. ·111n GrO'ff C•lll lll•t •II !llrtOlll M vl,.. cltlml -lnll
.. ,.,," wtlol" n•ron Ill tull ''"' •I•<•• 11 •• lo!!-. DEVELOPMENT co •lld llltl utd I'"' Tlll1 b<.11l11tu 11 ~1 ... (-11(\ff er 11\t ••Id d"""'"' '" '"~·· ... I• Ill•
1111 •••I-Ct •••• toJIOw1 wrni. ... Crt !t W1'COH 7lf w Wl!tOll 11 '°"'"°'"' ot '"' tgl 0"' ... HrlOlll I 1>1rlntf~I• tl"9m Wllll ''-M«tllry ..._,..,, ... I l(~nM!ll OOClf'mtl\ IJU] Ht Htlll No D1 Cttlt Mut Ctr!! tH1I Wl'l<llt 11111111 111 full t llll Pll tfl Ill J tl"H H Didion tr,. olll« el !flt tlortl ol Ille tllo ....
JIOH Lt._" IH· C:tll!llrnlt llO~r'f w Qeltd Jt lll.lt n> 11 lt1! r11lcle11c1 t r •• lo110wt to-"'lt PUblllllff O••llt• Cotti Otllr l>Hot 1111111111 cour'f ..,. to ••tttnl ltitfft wltll
J11ucll. jjJO 1,1rl~1111 ltol l"f H !It W!itltm Ctt ll Wvcoll HiXIMl11 II Stl!t11 ll II SOM••lfl J•nut y 26 tnd Ftltr\llry 1 t 16 ,... n•t tUll• voudltfl I• fM v.-.
E1tot.i C•ll!o<n JOl>f'I Wlc•n1m )I Sltlt 111 Ct ll!Ol'nl• 0 11.,.. Covntv Lt11• Nrwl'Oll 8t•<ft (t i I IU<l\t•d 1t71 111 11 Clt•tl•nt<I 11 !he ofl!ct et fotr t 119rn..,1
Chuckw•tOll Ro• lte!lln• H 111 • On Jt ll\lt,., 11 Ull t>tfetr "1• 1 E McAOlfT' »'I 0 !!!Wood lfo.d GOTTLIEll • l0CICE tttt Sunotl
C•lllo nit Ro111I C Wint., JU lJ NOlln> Publ~ 111 •1111 tor 1tld Sttlt <oront ft l M• Cl l Alt •trl<lt• 5 LEGAL NOTI E lloultv• Cl Loi Allt tlt• Ct lll6t11l1 wlllUI loll"'•~ (fH~ JI d l>t1~ Vtrd•t N flOl\l fh' •t-•tcl Wll!11m (rt1t Wytlltt ltt(IQI 111 We1l Mt1tlt Avtl'\Ut 11 Th• dlt CI o! llullMll ti tt\t un l>ffllnl~lo C•tltor l•t J LtW,....Ct kf'IOWn It mo to " , ... ••nlM WhOll Monrt vb Ctl W•I I' Jlado1 111 •.t.ll 1tll a.,1111fll In t ll ,,1111.,.. 1'1tllllllfl9 t• SfOllt 41~1 cemm f'IWttllh Avt Lt IMllW 11 w lntrt-11 tN ,.1,,.111 111 Weil Mt1tlt Av•nv• Mon•ovlt Ct l tl\<t t•ltlt ol ••Id clectOtnl wlllllll
Ctnfft C1!lor1111 nm•lllt H l>1 ul11 1trumt nl t llll t (knOwlt ffH ho t••Cut..:I Slt1thtll Ro®' II) Wnl Mt P1• .tvt~Ut HOTl(I OF OIFAUl.T .t.NO lour MOll!lll tlttr !ht fl•ll •ubl ctllOfl
l11 So. C11n1Hn ~ 8tv•rly H!lll !ht u mt Me11ovl1 Col l l.ICTION TO •IL 01 1n11 ncllte ~!~::;,"~1. ~·~ /1gt Du1C:'":!~ llEALIM•f'I' 11111 M1t•loro 01ttc1u~~:;':' s':,,iiit UNOlll:T~·~: ~~I Tit :' Ttt! 0 11td J1~~~~".., .. 1:,H11di.r
E El""°'n .... , lmt (•fllof111t / Not1ry itubllc C1!1!ornl1 ll:lch•rd E McAdln! NOTICE IS HERl!:BV GIY Ad..,llll1lltlrlt .,i lftt ellllt N J 1-<k 1"31 M '""" It.OH Sen f'rlnci1tt l Ollk:I In .. l••tnder S lltdOI SECURIT 'f TITLE IN SURAN E CO~ 9f tne tbevc lltmtcl Hclldt nl
1>_.iro. Ct111ornlt ~Oii S Corn1tonv Ortl'Oft COlllltv WI 1or JltdOt PANV I (O•oo•ell911 11 T•~I • Undt• GOnl.lll I LOClll
• 1Wrt1 ~r111orllll1 ~v O...ltl 1.9111 Mv ,01,,.,.IHIOll EJ1tlrt l ~1ton111 R1do1 • ll•ed ot lrull d11t<I ltPlt tlft 11 tttt •~flMI 1..,lovtl~
1 11,.,..t lllllltr •m Ct mlut Drive AorU t 1.,1 STAlE OF Ct.t.IFQRNll. 1tff Vlttult<I bt Cnt fltl Wiii m SI I ~ AnM ..... CtllMFRlt
N_,-f llttcfl (t ill t21Mit "" llrtd l>ublltnl(I 01111vt Cot 1I DtllV ,. ot COUNTY OF LOS .. NGEL ES u 8tln Mlll•r St ll hu1b1llll Incl .. 1t1 Tiii n1111r•nn
Mlh• • ·-••I !llr'f,... •7" Ct mPlll Jtnut rv IJ If lt t fld Ftbr11t<¥ I On O.c-bfr U 100 btle<t m1 Qfd1111 Mt lloOn t l>d Oelortt Mt boll AlltrMYI Hor "'""llllttrtllll Ott... N-wlOl"I ftetcll C•llf tHoWI lt n ,. 11 1 Nol11v Pubtll Ill •tld tor ••t11 Co""tv Hu•~nd t"" wilt tnd '"nltv D tit• l>ultll-Ottllft (NII Dtllr Pllot
Nld'IOIH & O O-tl 1 ltflfl'tl 1nf Slllt 1ttr10011!v t l>Pfl t<1 Hud!.1111 t llll Doro!IW II'. D!lltr nu1Und t J'olll Ftbrut rv ! t Ii. U 1'1I l4l 7l
••r1Mn.ll.ll By JllM O O't:lo!Wwll LEGAL NOT!-8 Sltf•! tnd Rlch• d E M<t. ... m ""Ut T u1h~• to MCI/It .. 111111911• l"'l'~"""-~O,;.::.;:c,.,=~=--'"""I • -" •wtllitr• 1'°6 C'>lltn 0• vi:. k-10 mt lo be' '"-""°"'' wtioM ltvof of W E Whllltkt r • •l"flto l..EGAL NCYnCE; Ntw..n llttcn Ci l t '26al bv lllfT'tt t e 1ub1<rtbd lo "'' wllllln m111 1s to 1n undlvkl..:I no;. l11ttrt11':J----=:::::~,;;;:::..:::L---J
MICl>HI A Nlthala" 11ll Atlfll\ll MOTl(I INV ITIMI l lOt lnolrumt nt t 'ld ttl ,...,.lf'C!9t<I le fftt Letlll M (ht n Mr t fftt frltll m•n • J'tf NtwDOr'f lltttn (t lllornlt t16'0. N(l'llc<1 la llfrtbY t lYt ll 11111 lftl lo.rd lfttl I~• t •fc111t<I !ht''"'' ti lo 111 "'"d vldtll )1~ lnt1r111 Ind Pl(TITtO\n I U 11 MI I I
Oiied Ji nulfY 1 1fll of T•~tlff• el 1111 Cotti (omll\llftltv W!lnt u m• fllncl ""'•HI .trlhUf C 11'.C n t m1rr1..i ,,...n It lo •T.t.TIMIMT
MAMI
1---.r-',. '%'
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llt"ICHO VllTA GRANDE (611ttt Dl1trlcl °' O•llllf COUlllY tOFFIC!.lil SE.t.ll .,, u""lvld111 ll'%. llllf 111 81Mlicl1r1 Thi loll°'"I"' lttr-it dol,.. llu1int11
II¥ Nltt>Dltl a 0 Oon11tll Ctlllorn 1 win tKt l•t Mtl..i blao 111> SJ> rlr y Y Corn~n rKo•dld Octobtr • IHI •• ~11m111l 111 G•nertl 1>ir!M1t lo II flO t m W..:1"1141~ Fttlllll"I l~ No or1 Public Ctl lotnlt no llU 111 OOOll 114' •••t II ol a l!ACH OllAlll!lt'f 'lit.VICE tOO "I h• d h ? " JOl'ln O 0 Ooflnt I 1t11 II !ht l'11rU\ltl ... Oepl ol tlld Ortftllt (ounly 0111(111 RttOfd• 11 lftt ollltl Of ln1 Wtll 11th Sl•t1f COlll M tit S t I' Qnl lnOUg to eat
Mlcht t l S Nl<lloll 1c'-1 <ll1!rlC1 lol;t tlMI t i 1110 Adt fftl My Comml"len l!:~Pl•tt AKo•dtr OI Ottr>;I County C1ll•ornlt C1llletnl1 '2i11 '·---------------J,--"-------------
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..,......... (otl• Mou c 111wn11 •I wn!cll April !I 1111 deocrlblM 11no '"'''111 11 DDl'lllt 11'.tl\l\tlll 11'.ltllMv t l I 11 !.1t Tl OF CA •FOltNIA fltrlf oolcl bldl wilt bl IHJblltl• OPt"'°d 5t.tf£ QF C"LtFORN I,. Tnt Wt ll 1 .. ~tel el 11\f Etfl G•"nwlcll Dr.. Hu11!111tl<111 8ttdo LEGAL NOTICE
COUNTY OF Oll:ANGl!:l SS 1tld tttd tot itRINTINO OF ORANGE (QIJNTY 01' LO!. ANGELES J 11 :)06 Fttl ol th• Et1! ntll ol Ille Ct lllor'fll• .,... 1----------'------I
011 Jt nllln> I lt11 btkl•t llW ""COA'T (OLLEGE CATAl.OG FOii lt11 On th!J 14111 ,,.~ .,i DKtmtitr 1f1' Stulh ont-Nll of t11t SwlllWf!tl -Tlllt bll1l11111 rt lltl,.. cllldutl,_ lh' P ... Ml
.,,,..,, O""' • Not•rv Publlt In '"' Ill!' n bllort mt 1 NOllt1 Public: In t lld •ufl'ltt of !M Sol.llnWflt on-ut rlo• Ill l""lvlctvt l C:llTll'IC.t.TI 01' SUSIN•ll
t tld !ll•t l>t<loOl'l•ll• l l'Ot••l'I Jol!ll 0 Alt blclt t it lo i.. tn ICtt•llt ll(t for 11111 (OlllllY t nd 3!1!1 PtrlOnt llv ol kcflon !I T°"'n1nlo I s oulh ...... 0 I( Kt NllV ••CTITIOUI MAM• 0 0-11 tn4 Mkht f! t Nk:M!I! k-n •Ill\ fflt l"llr1Kll0111 t nd Conf l!IOllO 11111 tPPttr_.i ... ltA&lllltr $ RlllOI kllOWll 10 WP! $ II I • M Ltl !hi f'ubtl1h..i Ot•"'e CNll 0111~ l>llOI Tr. llfld*tlll l\td dt t t rll"' l!'lt 'f t fl
It 1'1'11 to be bolh ol tht •MTN•1 ti IM S.tclflci lloro1 wlllCh •rt new Oii 1111 lo mt to bf !he ..e ion w11e11t 111mt (ltv ol Gordin Gro•• J111111rJ lt 21 1111'111 F1,r1141ry 1 t clllducll111 1 W1l111u 1tl P 0 lltw JU
lt'1111•111lt> lhfl ••tCUltcl !ht wlt111rt tnd m•Y ~ llCUt..i In Tiit gl!lct 11 1<1bKrlbfd le Int wllnln lrulrumt nl E)ICEPTING 11\ti'tl'lllft lht Wtll '' lt1t Uj.1t Wttlml'llltr (t llrotnll Ullllt r lllt I c
!n1ttumo11t 111!1 1c•now ,,,. .. i. mt of !tit f'urt1o111,.. A1enl 11 u ld school i nd tck"°'"l-"•tll lht l n, o•tC~l111 tn1 Ut! el """ Seutll , .. let! lfMt111tlnw LEGAL NOTICE 111111\11 flrfft ,..ml el Nl!Wl>QRT JllVlt:ltA Int ! 1ucn •ttlflt rthlt t MKWltcl lilt .. IM d1rtr1d ""'' llitftfrom tie'110f'I IM1ud111 In Trtcl CO 111<1 11111 t•ld llrm 11 cornpo1111 WITNt:I~,,,.., lltntl I nd offltl•I Ht l Et ch blddt r mu11 1utm!I will\ hlt IOFFIClit.L SEAL) )'11 tt ld obllt•lkUll l~lvdl111 -no1• • '" ol 1111 ltllow1111 ''"""" ·-· "tfftll IOfflC!t L SE I ll bid • (llhltr'I d .. ck Ctr!fl1td c~tclt O OE .. l P FE•ll. lor !ho IUITI ol '1' JOOOO itlCTITIOUI • HAM( Ill full t nd it1t tfl of r11 t11nc1 t rt
DON"l.I RIEllEll' er blfdt• I bollf "'"' PfVtbll lo ,,,, 0 0••1 p "•~r Tl\11 11'1<1 blntfl,Jtl 11111..ul ulld•r IUCll u I',. I I I ., lo!IOwt No11r~ P11bl c CtlUo<nlt orft r of tht Cotti C°"'munllv Colltlf Nolt"I P ubllt C11 !0ff'llt dttd tlld !nit obllttll<1111 H(urt d IMttbV IT.t.Tl/llllNT Frtn~ M Dov It Jd(I Gt11 OtH ll
0 •na' count\" D!lllld 111•11• of Tru1le1• In 111 •mounl loo t.nwe •I couMY 1rt ownl'd llY Ille ul\Cltflll nfll 11Ttot lollowlni "'"°"' 11 dolnt builntu Otlve fl L1\lferd1l• florldt
MY Corn1T'IJ1 on E•tlftl flol ltu 1n1n llvt Ptrt111t U'l>I ol My Comm HIOl'O E•Pl e• l l\11 I bttt~ll el •1111 dtltu!I 111 EJC ECUT IVI! LANO llNI!: JOO If H G tnn llu1bv 11!1 Ltktt ,.11 Cr
M•v 21 1f17 IM 1ufft b!d tt • 111trt111H lhtt IN! Fttl 21 1'1~ tllr obll11tlOl\1 lor whk~ 1uc11 dHd Eflnter Suht 21t S.Mt Stnl• Ant C• ltornl• P'~b lV.r<I O••n~• (~11! 0tll¥ P itt bldel .. will t nl .. lnlo '"' PrOPOSH ST .t.TE OF C"LlfOlil NI" 11 IKUtllV n11 otcurrtd In lhtf OIVffttnl C•l!lotnlt Ant l!:dwttd D Lovt ll 1~1 1 1111 SI
J 111u1ry U It 1• tn• l'tbr111nr 1 Conlrttl II !hi tfMI 11 t WI dtd to COUNTY QF LOS ANGELES ., llt l not been m•dt or Tlltt II'. • mo II•! 0 Q I S.nll Ant Ctlllornll 1t11 61 ll him 111 1111 t Vt lll ol t11turt lo 111!1r On thll !O!h d•Y of Dt<•mbtr !tlO The 111111Um1nl ol orJ11dP1I tnd 1n H~nlln~tOll 8Hc::' Ctllfornl~r~~I r •t 0.1111 FtbfutrW 1 U'1
Into IUt~ a>nlrt d lllt 11oc: .. d• ol bflO , mf t Not1•v l'ijbllc ln t nd ttrell wnkn INC:lllW dlit '"° 1>•¥tblt Tnli b\itfntll 11 D<tllll lOl\(f ct d lw Fri nk M Dovie LEGAL !'\OTICE , ... doK~ wm bt IOrftl!IMI or In tt\t tor tt la couniv I ncl ~1111 PtfiOlllllV June I !'10 •nll 1u111Mut nl 11111111 t n lndlvlfutl u ' H Gltnn lluob•
-----------------1'''' pf • bOlld ,,,. lull 1um ttlt rool IPottrtil Wtlltr R•dot known lo llW """IJ ot ~Inc otl t nd lnltt11!1 01v,,_I Th I( SI Edw1rd D Levt ll Nt p lln' wl I bl fo1ftl!ed lo 11lf othOOI II !Irle! !O bf tne l'trl<ln ,.~It ntmt , tu~1cdb-ol ,._H lh•I mtv lie dflln<11itlll Of l••IJ Publltht:' Ort n;:"C"'' Ot!l't l>llOI Sf.tTE OF Cit.LIFOll.Nllll
1
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No blllcltt mt v wlllld•tw 1111 bid •or t d 10 tt.r within jn1trumtnl 11111 11111 mtv 0K0"1t d<W •nd PIYtlllt Our~• Jt nut,., lt 1, ntl F ill' ' 1 QJt.tHGE CDUNl V
ClltTl,!CATI! OF Oll(ONTINUANCI t Pt Od ol lotlV five !'51 dt•f acknowlfdgtd 111it l\e t•tcultd 11\t llfT't tt>t 1>1rlod ol 1111• dtltull .t.d•IMll mtcl1 1'1! • f lll lY llt 1\ 011 Jt n :tf 1911 llefOrt fftt I Ne!t no eF Uil! AND/Cit "l.t.NOONMINT l.omtl ""' :!01 otter Ille dtle ~ IOI" (0FFICl .. L SE •LI OI" to bt ,,...,,. ourJUtnl to tllt 1tfll'll ol l>ubllt In t lld lor 11ld $!11r 1>t•1<1n1!1y
01' P:.tCTITIOU$ Nil! !!W Ol>enl.,.. '"'"°' Q OE.IL P FEAll. 1111 dMd of lruOI LEGAL NOTICE IPfltrtd F•tn~ M Oo,lt H G11nn "'THE UNOEll:SIG"IEO II b r1!#y Tiit l ot•d ot TrutlH• lflt>Vf S Int Nolt v Puolk Ct lllotnlt Tlltl bY rta~ 11\trtof tnt uncl1rolt nl1I 8u1bV Edwt rd 0 LovtU kllDWll lo V tt prlvl ltft ol rt Klint t nv 11\d I I bldt Lo• .. n<0e •\ CGU~t• ,.,.,,.nt etr..tk!.,v Uf'dtr ludl ONG ClltTll'ICit.TI 0" •UllN•SI "" ff bt !flt l t '10lllo •l'Hltt nt mtl
11111 tl!1ttllvt J11111t ,.., • ti
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ht c•:
1
1t11 or to w•lve 1nv 1rre1ul•rlll11 t r 111 Mv c .... mln lon E•P •I htl 1oeculff incl d1llvtr..i 16 u ld •1CTITIOUS H,.MI i re sub1crlblCI It th~ wllhln lnllrum•nl ~~.!: b~iln~l'M~'"::';.. "DEv'::~1Dr.~E;j,. IG•..,.llllt• In t flV bid Ill' Ill 11\t b!dGlns Ftb 11 1914 Tru•let • wrl!ltn Ortlt ••llOll ol Df11un Tht ulldtrtltntd Got1 ctrtlfY ttt It 11111 1duwwltd1tcl ""' ••tcuttd tllt
CO If :IDDl Enteror le $Ired Ctl!t OPtl'I Ftbrut "110 lf1111 00 am STATE OF C.llll'ORNlit. end Ot mt nd let St ll tnd ~I• dtllOl!IMI tOt>clllCllnt • bll1l11t u ti 1111 Htrtiar H fftl
Mtlt Ct llfornlt wt.kh bu•IM• Wl l Sgnlll COUNTY OF LOS .tNGELES J IS •ltti 1t!d TtUlltt lut h dttd t ncl Ill Co1!t Mtll Ct lllorl\Jt unffr -rlc \Otllclt l $t1ll of I I wn NOltM .. l'I E WAl3QH On tllll ;oin di~ of Of bfr ltnt oou;mt nll e•Klllll:l"f llbl 11ll1ftl IK"'td llllou1 firm lllfT't ol CHAMPION Httold IE G\I H ~="::. •u'1~· .~iow ~~t··;r.'111<11:: s.ttv 8otr0 or f ru1 ••• bfle<t mt • Hfl!lrv p~:I~ 111 t llll '"'''b' "'"' 1111 (IKltrtd t lld dotl MOTOll:CYCLl!:S '"" 11111 tl ld 11 .... h Nol1ry l>ubllc C•llfo•n I
1 Publt1ntCI Ort ntt Co.ti Dtllv l llol tor 1t!d Cwntv '"" St II Ptf06t>tllv n1rtl!Y dtcl1rt t ll 1um1 llc~r111 IMreby tornPolltl of 11\t lelle•lnt Hflll>ft wl\Off l'rl111:lp1I Olllct In
,,, :~11°'"] l~wll lOO' IEllltftrlM J OllUt rv ,. t lld FlbrUl l"I' 2 11'1 1!'0-71 tPPftrtd St1Phtll ltfd'" • known IO mt lm..,.,.,1.tt lv OUI 11111 o•••blt t lld 1111 nt mt 1 .. IUll I nd Pl•~ al 111ldtn<t Ort"f• Counly S C r•t M tu~tr
1 11 ~ ll'lt """" whoM nt mt 1, t ubtc:flb-t ledtil 11111 00t1 llertbV t lt d le t tVlt It 11 lollowt Mv CommluJon r:,elru u~:~, ,~~,! i~="~7,•,j:;.,~ ~m';"1':!: LEG~L NOTICE ::kn~!1td~':., u .. ~:·~1: ,.~~\~";::',,~n<1 :; ~~~~1io'..°:~~~';1~' ~~~ to i1t111v ~1!~,~:~H'°~1~:::h ~~111io;";J&Ml1t• F:n~~~~~ J,~:~; ':{~11 0•1t1 2~~'
t!lldtvll t i o blkl!IOll thereof l ff on I'-· !Ol'FICl •l SEALI 1 ,tnU•'"" 111<1 t ... v1ry I lfll
f !t Ill lfte olll'• ti lh• Ceunt\I Cltrk ClltTIPIC.t.TI OP IUllNISS 0 OEALP Fl!:t.11: W C Whllltklf T H Orl111C1t LEGAL NOTICE
of Ort lllt (Oll~tv ul\ftf , ... 11evl1I011t 'k111i..t• itll'lll H•-NO!tr• Public: Ct lltcrnl9 let<11 M ClltlJh\I STATE OF CALl,OllNIA,
el St tllon J.ut of lhe (1!11or11l1 ClvU Tl'li Undltll1tied c1o t!t•t bt ctrl!lv LOI Allttlll Cou•ty Arlhur C ICorn OllAHGE COUNl Y '"'' lhll wt 1,1 Cl)N:IUcfll\f 1 $Pt(ft !t\I Mr Cofftmlu lon E••l c• 1~t orltln•I f¥f 11'1t torttolnt CPPV °' On F1bru1ry I lfll btlort mt 1 I> ..-1
Ot 1111 lhl1 !ti~ dlV o1 Ot (tmbt• tllfl lW!IAtH ti (o.ltrlMfl t i 1'00 l'lll 7? ltll NtllCt '"'' rKo<dtd On Jl nu l "I U Noll"1 l>Ullllc In ""' for ltld STOit CllTl•ICf.TE OF •UllNllS tt1' t.llt Vll!t Ntw!Klrl lttCh I> O llOJt llOIEtTSON NOWSlll 1'71 II doc:umtnt no llG11 In lllt olllca Hr-tllV 10,ttrtd Tl\omu H Orl111Gt l'ICTITtOUS NAMI
RoD<t•I J Mt uier .,.11 Ctlllo•nl• un<I•• '"" llC!lllovi firm & GARLAND o1 !he Countv lttcfl•d•r .i •• d countw ~-n hr me to bt ll'lt ''""" •ho•t Tiii uncltrili n111 c1o ctdll~ 1n1v '"
STA Ti OF Ctt H'OANI") ntmt el MAit.CD NEWPOJIT tlld Intl 041 (Ul\MI Orlve Tii t Order No )IJ70t 1 S No f'Jl l. lllfT't II IUbtCr1Nd lo 1111 wllllln i11 cOlllluctlnt t bl.l1ln1H t i 11 11 !Itek
COUNTY OF LOI .tNGELES) SS
11
d ll<m It tomr>OSl:d ol tht lollowlnt NtWYl!T lttC~ Cilitlrllll SECURITY llTLI! INIVltil.NCli iltumtnl llld ltkncwl1111..:I llt IXtCUl111 8tv Qrlw N1wpor1 8ttt h (elllornlt
On Qecemblr It 1910 btlort ''" ptn(lllt whoit 11t mt1 111 lull tncl l'l•ct T•I .Mt.t-1111 COMl>ANY 1~' t l mt under tM l!c!ll!ou1 1irm nt fftt 01 AN
tnt vndtflltlltd t No!tfY P11bl!c In o1 r111dtnc1 t rt 11 loUowJ IO.Wll Publl1ntd Qrtntt Co"'t Ot IV I> 16' 11 Truote<o \Olllclt l Sll ll CMOJI MAR INI!: Jll!:l' .. IJI •nd 11\tl l tld •"" tar u!a counlv 111d $ttte Pt 1oOn1llv Pt ul Mtri.ev ?.00 .tit• Vlllt N.wPorl J111u1ry U U 11 •1111 ftl>r'lltrY 2 C"' • LOlll<ll M•nr ••tll Mort&11 l!•m !1 comr>01111 of the follow!n1 P4'flOn1 IDPH rtd Rt~ 1 J Mt urtr -nown to Bttcn Ctl lornlt 1tll ._,.n l'orKl01ur1 Ot!Otrf,,...nt Hott•Y l'ubtlc Ct lftrnlt wl'liou ntmeo in lull t n<l ~11,11 ol
"" lo be lllt PlrlOll Wl'l<ll• nl n'll Pll~ll I Hll!tV '1tOO Al 1 V!•U Publ!tlltd Ortn~t Cotll OtllY P llol Prlricl•tl OHlc t Ill ttlldo"lt t rt t t loll!IWI
'
• 1•·• > lt~I I 1 t I Fttl u1rv 1 f Ii 2J 1'11 2•11 OrtMt Co11"!v Cltrtlltt 11 Sn•nllt~ U Jl Port
t •~Mttr ...... lo hi w " I'll rumon Ne,.oort 1111(1\ Ct lllor" t LEGAL NOTICE Mv Comml11!c11 E•Pl•n K•-•·••• '' •--•"'''" ''"' •"-' 1ck11owlld1fd Hiii Ill execu•H Ille Dtll(I Jtn n 1•11 LEGAL NOTICE II t '""" ·~-••mt Piul M,,,., Alll' 1tll Eu;tnt C Jtrrv 1121 W Gltnwwd
WIT SS lld orll I I HOTICI 01' Tll.Ulfll 5 IAl.11 1tubl!1lll(I Ortnot Co11I OtllV l>llol $tn!t Ant (till IOFF ~~ ... L ~e:I.! I ncl c 1 •ti ST TE ~~'~!ti~r3;vNl .t. NO UFJ CllTlll'l(ATI OF IUJ1'4llJ FtbtUl fV 1 t U ll ll1I 20 ·71 D1t1• Jl~Ut"I lS 1'11 .1 O" F1b it 1111 11 11 o clr;o(k 1 "' c •"n(t 8 snann••
rt.t.V MOND w M\J OSQtl COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES n 11 1111 NOf lll tionl 1~1 t nc t 10 !I'll! l'ICTITIOUi NAMI LEGAL NOTICE ' c
NoltrY l>uOllC Ct ll!Olll l On J iii 11 1111 bf!Ore mt I Nol•Nlortn;~ c"""'y Cou•ltlOIJI' lott!M ., Tkt Un.It 1ltncd 00 Cetllfy ""' •r• -ST.tTE OF c~~t1":a11 N'1':"
Principe! Olfltt I" Pub ic ln 11111 lot 1110 County t nd 1110 Cl•lc Ctnltr Orlvt WHI !For ..... flY c.,.,,uC!lng I ouolnt" l l 1114 Ntt;enel CtllTIPtCATI O• SUJINllSI ORANGE COUNTY
Cevl\IV ol LOI .Intel•, SltlO 11ui.o111llv llDOI rd Ptul 0 I ' (OSI• Mitt Ct lllorn\1 """"' IM lie ,,,,,. • Mt Cornmln liM E~lltts Mt•HV t llf l>~~ll • L H .. iev kncwn We•I I th t t•ll 11 lht CllY of S111t1 llll6UJ llom 1111..., or POWl!:lt $OFT • IOUI H.IM 011 Jtnut "I ?I !111 befor1 mt I
Novtmbtr '° 1tn
10
m~ le bl ll'll Ptt1cm wllotf nt ..,OI t.nt Ct lllclf11l1 SECUlt!TY it.LLI EQ t<.LEEN SEltVICE •lld tl\t l lt ld llrm Tiit U""trilonrd Gott t "!Uv lie It HD!tf'I' Publlt In 11\d for 11id '11lc
ll:OIEJITSON lolOWSlll' I OAlt\. .. NO t r• t uboc•lbfd to IM wlll'lln "'"u"'tf'lt $Ell.VIC ES ti lruilt t ~ndtr 11\t Dlt<I Jt c-.d ol the lollowlnt PlllO!\O tOflduU,.. t bu1ln1H t i ~I W Ifill H ti.ont llW 1Plotr111 Ml Euttnf C J t rrv A"9r.tVI o·• ,,.~1 • ...,_~ lo tnO rhal In•< or l rutt mtdt O'r OR J.tClt: T MONltOE llll'IO.a 11tmtl In lllll t llll i it cll ti tttl St Co1t1 MtU Ct lllor11l1 ulllltf 11\t kncwn lo me to be' 11\t Oi!rlOl'O '"hOll
Q4I Clmollt Dft¥t ,;•,,,, •• :;:c,· ,-,-,"" '"" GLORIA 0 MOHltOE hVlb•"" tlld df"'t 111 11 lollowt fld!tlOlll fi rm nt mt ol ACAOEMV ~llflt It 1ub1<r bfd 10 Ille wltnln In ·--,_,, <••It "'"" ••••• -,.·:, ,,",..' ••• •••I "'"' t lld Wm ... llARTHOLOMAE Jll Steve Edttf 01111lw "'' '•Citic TELEVISION SEJIVICI!: t lld lhll .. 10 llf\lffttlll '"" l t1111DWl111tH "' t JKl/ftd .,, -"' .... 1 1l111lt m111 11 Tru11o< 1nd •«e<O..:I lltm 11 c°"''°'"' ol tllf toUowlnt 11non lllt u"" Ttl lll4J S.Mft !OFFICl .. I. SEAL 1 lprll It 1111 n aoo-Im Pitt 775 No II Costt Mcu Ct! I whut l\lfftf I" lull •ncl p!t (I ti ftl1dtl'l(I (Otfld t l Sttl!
l>!/01!.,... O•t nl t Co•ll Otllv Piiot Mt ,. K l><•nrY ot OH clel ll•torrtl ol O Intl Co;.on!Y l<lbfr'f ll111111V l !I• Nlll011tl Pl 11 e1 lolitrWI Jo-Ann D Co• J•""'"' n It J6 •n4 l't brw1rv 1 Nolt•v l>ubllt (11110111 • Ct lllornl• al•tn lo IKUft 111 ,,.. Co!lt Mtu C•lll Arlll<lr W Gtcmen 11o1 l'teMllll Nt11rv l>uPllc Ct !lorn t
lf71 to II l'•lnt/pl! Oll!ce In dtOledntll In ""°"" ti ltlCHAllO G D•t..:I Ft bru• Y I lf'1 l 111t CMtl Mtu CtHP Or1111t (ountv Ot1n11 Countv <NILS.OH 1nd IQA WIUON huobtoM SI••• E O•noll~ D1t"" Ftb•11• y I 1111 My Ctmmlulon l!a1lrP
MY (OMffth•lon E~•l••t "'" wit• •• Joint ltnanll II .. • 11:-tf Lr1111... ... w 0Kfftlll July JO 1"• LEGAL NOTICE Mer t• Ul1 116 l111orn1 MILTON L!NOl!:t_ 1nd ST .. T£ OF CtllFOltNl.I STATE OF C .. Ll~OltNl.t l>ubllsl'ltd Or.nit (O.ll 01\ly l>Uet
l>ullll$l'ot<I Or•ntt Coa1t D• IV PHol GEttAL01NE I LINOt:Jt h~•bt.1141 •lld Qlit.NGE COUNTY Oll:ANGE COUNTY Fl't>rtlMV, ' II 1J 1'11 1:16-11 p tttO lt nUtfY It 16 tl'ld Fttrr111rv 1 t "'ltt '' Join! !•n111t1 ti to t 111 On l'tbru••v l U n bf.for• "'• t On Ft,rutrv I 1'71 llfot or• mp 1,1.c:__:.:__;_cc._;_;:c_.:.:. _______ Ci
CIJITIFIC ... TI OP •U'llNlfll 1'11 1»11 111trt•I Ind NORMONQ LINDER t nd Nolt•v Public In t llll for 1tkl Sttlt Not1ry llublk tn t .... tor H id Sltll LEGAL NOTICE
FICTITIOUI H .. MI JO,.NN LINOEA ~u1b1llll t nd wilt •t Otr-~llv tOP•ttf'd Strv• E"1tr O•nobV Hrttnallv IOPlllfd Atlhur W G•cmt n
Tn1 ulldtrtltntil do '"llfv 11\rY t rt I EGAL NOTICE 10IM 1111n1nh 11 to • J/l lnlftll t lld •-rt L tldl•Y -nown la mt It kncwn It "" lo bl !ht "'""" wl\ou:I----------------'
t.-IKll"9 1 butffltU tt 1 II Ouoont bv ••IUn of !~e brtt ch tf crrtt !n bt lh• ort1e<1• wlloo~ 111m•s ••• 1ubu rl.,. "'"'' 11 1ub1c•lb.a To Ille wllhln ,.. ,....,,. Dr!v' Sullt 216 Ntwll(lrl 8ttch T 671n oblltl!lon1 •1ttu•..:I thtrtbv not ct er td !o lh• w lh 11 ln•lo mtnt t fld tlr11m1nt t"" tt~now t d'ta ht f.Af,ufel ClltTl•l(.t.TIE OP SUSINISJ
Ct lllomll lll'ldtr tnt llcllt1ou1 I tm ntmt NOTICf TO CJtl!OITQIS "'Mth b etch wt1 tKt•dt<I Qclollfr » •cknow!dt"<I ltl!V ·~ecutOl:l Int ''"'' 1ne ll "'t FICTITIOUS NAMI ol SAOE ll:AN(K INVESTMENT 11111 jU,ll!lttOJt (OUll:T 0 , THIE 1110 In 8ook t09 p1~0 Mot ol Olllc1t 1 (0/lltl•! Se• 1 ICll <ti Sttll Tiit Ulllltr1ltM~ do cer!l!Y tht V It •
lhtt itld !lrm 11 compolld ot f~t STATI OP CALIFOINI" ltOlt tttcordl w I 11 ! t i pub c auction "l'I" ll•th J Aorton Mt •v 11•1~ Morion conluCHl>t I bu1lno11 t t 1'611 Occl01nt•I
tollowl111 ptrloOlll who1• n•m•t In tut! THI COUNTY OP: Olf.NGI to !ht hli htJI bldd•r tor ctill pAvtblt N~ A v P ~ t C~lllo ~lt HO!•rv l>ubl c C ~llfo 11 1 l.n f-lu11fln1ton llttth tlUt C1Hlor"lt
t lld 1tltct1 ot •t •ldenc.t art 11 lollow1 N& ,. .. ml n l1w1u1 mont• ol th• Unll.O SltltJ Pr ~t/p11 011 re 111 P1!11c Pt l Qfl c• 11 unoer Ille lld!I GV• l(rm nt mt ol T
JIM W 11111 MD J60 Olt•lldor E'!ite of OtWl"'TT CLINTON u lh1 !lmt ol 11 t wl!houl w i rt nb 0 er-o~ CoontY Ortn~t (fluntv a S llUILO!NG M .. INTENAN CE t n<I Otlve Loi AllltlU C t 11 I er 11 t tl• lo ! T, J o M• Co"'m slon E•PI U M• Co J I ' 11111 Hld llrm i1 COMPCltf ol lht PRESCOTT 1 ,o ~nown ., O CLINTON 1011011 on or rnc m ancto mm " on •• '"' 10, ••'"• oir1~o whol• n•m•~ 111 lull
OtWtYnll E Otl!o M 0 1:11l1 Savin PR ESCOTT Oeci tttil !ht lntr 11! (on•tvtil lo A ~ " htlO Ile 0 lf71 Apr II t 1111 ~· AlltnUc t lvd Apl No lJ' Monltr•• NOTICE IS Kl!:REllY GIVEN 10 !tie by •• d Truoi.~ unat n~ed ol Publ <h•d 0 1n1• COJll DtHV P let llijbll1h1d Ort111• CoAll Ot Iv Piiot I nd Pllctl ol rtildtllCt tit
11
lollo'lln
Ptr-Ct Ill NltholtJ & 0 Donntll crefllo•t 01 1111 tb<wr ntmtd d..ctat n! T '"''' In 1111 0,...,.,h , •~~ o l lllt F1bru• v 2 • 1• !J 1ti1 117 I! ftbrut rv 1 • 11 13 1"1 1~, n Ln'"~~nt ':i!. n~•;1,11 1 t~~i1t Ot cfdt n!tl
I t!'lltrt l Dtrfntr1hl• bY Mlch11t lhtl t it oerions htVIM clt lms •••ln'I Countv C1llto1nl1 clucrl""' ~' Anlhotw Tulltlmondo 176~ MlttY
A Nlchol11 o•ntrtl •11lne 1136 fllc it ld <ltt..:lt nl 1r1 •Mulrf'd to 1 r Tn1t "°" 011 of Loh 4 •nd S ot I EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Antlt UI N1wr>0r1 llttth C11!0111 1 tntm w\11\ lllt ntttturt llOuth• 1 111 T1t ct No 1111 In th• d i• ot tHWPOrf ln Hu~t1111!on llt1cn (t llf
.1tn11 D 0 Oonnt ll '""'"' p1rt111r !he (!fl\ct ol lht ,i.,~ °' lht t bov• BtHh countv of Ortntt italt ot 1>...eUJ p 4tHt D•tt<I J t nut •V )Cl 1'?1
lt06 Gtlt•v Dr Ntwl'orf lttth (t i I •nll!IH court or 11 Pflftlll lll•m with Ct lllo ~11 t• Pt• mtp rtcord..:I In CIJITlf'lrt.Tlf OF I Ul1Nlll ClltTIPICATt: OP:. SU!.INllS !1!1~~~YOl~~~~~~ndo Cllltd J1n111rv 1 1171 !ht nKtHITV vetrthttl to lht un book li P'IVt d ol M .cellentlllJI J'ICTITIOUS NAMI! PICITtOUI N .. MI STAT( OF (ALIFORNIA
SAGE ltt.NCH dtfl fntd 11 fh1 ofllct of lltt t llil n•Y' MtPI In th-ollk t ol I~! COi/ii,., Tht undorsli~ f OOI t trl IY Iii t, Th-und• 11011111 doe• ct 111• lif It ORANGE COUNTY
INVE•TMl!NT MclCl!:MNA a FITTING ,JIOO El Toro rtcorf tr ol 'aid countv '°''tlltr wltll c~ntludlnd 1 1"'•1"'°'' 11 , o l o• <lllMlu<llnt • bu•ln••• at 1n ,. Ctbrlllo On J111u1ry 30 1'11 bl!o•t mt • !" N~n;111 &, ti OOMlll lto.td Sulit A LlfVl\t Hllll (t llfor"lt 1 I ';°~!Ion ,.i Int l9 llO tool •llt¥ US. t<v n• Ct l IONI a n<I•• Ill• rlc !It Cot!f Mtlt C1lllornl1 t2617 u116fr NClt rY P .... 11C I~ •1111 for $•\d Sit t
v t nt1• '""'I t1'D wll!dl It ltlt 111c1 ol bu1lnt1s ·~ 0 n .... II d lell ' •1111 $II tl>lnclon..i I llou• llrm n•-ol MEMOlllY ME1H !! ~ toell!I011 'rm ....... ot M & R PtflOnt llv IPPltrt<I S!tvt Notlt11'ft r '""
rST.tl" 0, CALtFQllNl.t.I of ,,,. undt rilt""' tn 111 mt lltrl Pt• lw rtiolutlon ol l~t Cl!v COi.iii!: I OOS """ lhil .,. d nrm It <omPO•od ot INDU!.fll.ll!:S t lld 11111 itld firm h AnlhOl'OY TvttelmonlM kncwn to "'" !I !COUNTY OF Cit.NOEi S!. 111111111 lo tht 11lite ol 11ld ooctd•n! of NtWPO•I lttcll C11 l'tb•u•rv • In• loll-n~ "''"°" -.. nemt 111 comoo11d of !ht lallo.,lnt H •lon wnMe tit 1111 Ptr1on1 wnolf n1mt1 ••t 1ut>tcrl.,. On J1nu1rv 1 1111 b'!forr "'' t "'llhln tovr montho '"'' l~t tln l •ubllt• 1"1 • c• 1 I .., COl>V el •t d <t11>lu!I011 lull • ..., nltr• OI ,., d•"t• • • .,, i.-w1 "t mr 111 lul l •nd Pitt• or rulll•n°' td to tht wl!nln ln•l•umtnl t nl flolt rv l>ub!lr In •nd far llld t!tl• 1 011 at lftll nollct bf "9 rtcordt<I M•n:h 11 lt•I In Ja•eoh ( RUOnlc• >tOO Ptrlc•l.w lo ti tollew1 tc~ncwltdtffl lllt• ••KUl tf 1ne st mt
otr1011tllt IDPl't 111 Jolln D 0 o.n.ntll Oiled J1nv1nr l 1111 boot 1100 OI Q• 18' Off C ti Rtcord1 Lin• !"'Inf C•I JluD<tn E Hunltr J'1 .. Ct bt llo (Q!llc t i $t•ll
•nd Mltnttl .t Nlct>olt t '"''"'" 10 Irene PreiCGll Otoc•lbtcl '' tollows a~trtl Jinua • ?I 1•71 S• Co111 Me11 Ct 110fnlt I (••• E WlllOll ""' lo ht br>tn int Mrl11t11 or Extcutrl• of !M \Vrn ol ll•1lnn\"' 11 Int lnt••••C!lon of IM J~••P~ c It ..in t~ Otto11 Ftl>ruerv 1 1111 Not•nr l'ubl!c Ctl •0•1111
1111 OI T~••"lp ln•t IMKlltt<l lhf •ltnln "'' •bo•• ntn>ed 11•1 .. 1t 11t tPn!e ln1 ol !ilO :tOOO tool t!lt Y STt.fC:OFC•ll~ORNI • Rullfn E Hu1111r O•tntt Ctunlr
!111trvm•nt i nf 1ckncw!t<1gfd to "'' MtK!'NN.t. & Fln1NG w!lh 1~• •1•1• 1• P olo"'fMlon cl 1111 Oi i.NC:!;. (QUNlV s II• ol C•IUo•n 1 O••~tt Clll!nl• Mv Commlu lon E"ol1u
lh•t 1ucn Pt rt"'°r11\10 t•t<Ultd Tiit 1111'11 It ONllll w Mct1r1tlt •out~• • 1111• o! '' d 101 S 1nt11c• On Jin•~ .. 'S ltJI ht!or• fl'• t On l'fbru~•v 1 1t11 btlOrt .,., 11 Nev 1' Ull W!TNE~S mv nt llll •fld art Clt l •Ill Hl• 1 1 T~•• ltoaf Swltf I ~ou! " 15 lC W•1t lloroG 1tld NOi••• P~b { !n 111~ tnr •llfl \ ol• Nplt v Pub le In tlld tor u d Siil• I Publl•l'led Ort n&t Co11I 01 11 Pilot
IOFFICIA.L !ft.Ll L11u11t lolHI• C•IN1tnlt m 11 prolonqt s Oii ~ncl •• d •oull\t y I!"' 1t#<i.o111I v •Po••·'~ J~ooh c " ~•1-'• POflOll l I• •110•••111 t ubtn E H~n t r ""°"'' y 1 • 11 11 1111 ?•1 J
OON'lt ~IEI E• Ttl (11 41 l•l'411 o !lot • 11 """'° Ill 10&.C IH I knll""" IO "'~ 111 bl !ht etrtn• ... no•t ~newn •o 111' !O ~ tht Ptrsen whn••~l ---'--C
No!Orv Public Ct1 lorn o Alltr .. 11 ..,. l!letWlrl• lo ~· bt<0lnn 111 of t 1n&en• curve """'' h •Ubttr b,a 111 th• ... 11~111 In nt mt 11 111b1c• ~d lo Int ,.,.11nl11 n-LEGAL NOTICE
O t n•t CounlV Publl•htd Ottn•• Co1•t a,1, PllM con0t•~• 1
11or,!'.,••:1•;I• ~"" htv nv, 1 11,umtnl """ t clonowlO'Clo•d Iii t~tcu!ed !l•umonl t nl •t kncw1taotd lie D't<ultd"-------~-cc--'-----
Mv CommlH on Eitt rts Janut rv It 1• •nd Ftbrut v ' I •t u<. • ...,.. ff !lltnc• wu trlv ll\I '""'" 1111 ia"'t -1 Oil.II' ,.1, MIV Jl lfl! 1'11 iu 71 •lld ncrtl\6'IY 1161\ti 11lf cu•v• lh•ouoll <OUlc II StA 1 M• y ~•II\ Morton •uh •nt<I Ortntt Cot 1 Ct Iv PllOI • c•nt t i tMlt or tO • dltlt lll:• I"'• V B• ~ ~r o• N•!ttv p~~llc Ct l lo•n t MOflCf TD (JllDITOlll
Jinut rv n 11 11 •<Ill F•brut rv 7 LEGAL NOTICE 11t 15 II l•fl 1111nc1 !ln;tnt 10 9'111 No!lrv l>ullll< Co 10..,11 l'rlnclitl Oii ct In SUPEllDll COUIT OF THE 1111 63"11 cu•vt "lo•lh o& •• lO' Wt•I • -0 ST4TI OP '"1.IPOltNIA POii ll\t wu!trly lint ol 11 d 1111 S l llG PllnCIPI ft c• ln O•t nt t Countv Tltl COUNTY OF OltANGI
TtflU 11, nort~t Iv Prolontt!Oll n •il IHI O•t noe Coun!Y Mv Commlulon l!~•lreo Nt A .. IU
LEGAL NOTICE HOTICI TO CltlOITOltS lo !ht wtilll!Y tOfnfr ct » d IG! M• COfftfftllllOn E•ol •I .. orll • IOI E1 11~ ti LOLA Mt E 9•RNE $ JUl'llllO• COUltT Oii: 1 11 d c btl g rn !ht Ao I I 1•11 Pub 111\tG OttnQI Co11I Oo y P ~I Dece•trd
T .. 7M1 Tl4f lTATI OP (it.l.l•OllNl" 1 I :;nt;h n rt " •~u '1' 1'u01 <ht<:I Orano' Cou! Dtllv P OI Ftb Vl "I 1 t U ll lt ll ?lJ.11 NOTICE 13 HEREllY GtU EN to t~•
SVPIJllOll COUllT 0, Tl!! POJt TNI! COUNT'I' 01' OltAN•I ~ m nut 11 (, 1 n courst 11 Jonut V 1~ t fld F•D•u••r ' t I cr .. llo" o1 !ht t be•t n1mod drct dent 1111 w111111v 11111 01 111d 101 • h1vl111 1111 1u.11 LEGAL NOTICE Ill.TE O• (l.LIFOINIA •Ot Nt l."*I t !>rt lnq t!>d O ittnCt at No"h 0" l~•I •II Dtrto111 h&vl"I cl1lm1 no1ln11
TH( COUNTY OP 011.tNGI. E1ta!t ol ME"IRY 1' HESSl.fllt l lO u .)0 Wt<I 14t l~ l•tt l~tnct Norlh ~ ltld dtt1dt"! t t rtoulrtd lo It Nt ,.6'117 -nown 11 MENll.Y t'AUL HElSLElt 11 u )0 Wtll 110111 •t d wtlft!•lv LEGAL NOTICE HOTICITOCltlDITOllJ llltm •llh lht nt ttllf V VOi/th•• I
llOT ICE 01 Nll .. lllNG 0, llTITION O•t tllH lint 11•1 IHI thtnct Norlh 6? )(I IUPllllOlt COUltT 0' TNIE lht of!CI Of !ht Cit' of the eoov~
FOlt 'lt01ATI. OF Will .t.Ne l'Oll NOT IC E IS HEllEIY GIVEN lo lht 00 Et!I 11»11 IHI to 11'1• t•tttrlY POCMI IT ... TICIPCt.llFOll'Nlit.,011' t n!lt"6 COlltl "'lo prHtlll lllt m w lh
LITTllll TllTl.MEHff,11.Y cr~tto • Of lht t bovt ,....,..o dt<tdtnl 11"t ol 1tlf lo! ,1 11\tnct toulll (ftTl ~t(ATE Q~ I VSlNll!t' fHI COUNTY 01 0 111.NOI 1!>t ntct .,•rr voutht O lo lh! 11n
£1tU• of GAYL0110 E 1.EWIS 1111 t ll Pl'Klnt n1vl11t Cit\..,, t Qtln•t 27" :JO Ettl t i-st \d t ••I• I• llll• l'!(TITIOUJ '!"ME NI .. d lb O• •ltnfl! U C e ~ont d H P f""I Ot<1~••d ll•t •t ld dfcldtnl tff rt•111 H lo f lt ti lot I o dlll•nct ti 161100 ltt1 "'T~t undt t\lq"'°d dOtl t •lllv hi I! ~•It!• of EL•INI!: P.tt M E ll'.tllerntY lll.~w llJ Wt 11Thltf 51rotl
NOTICE !5 HEllEllY ()IY(N 1!>11 lhtfft wll~ !ht llt (tl'tt1 voucht•I I" to fl>• •tl"•l~ co<n., 01 14td L"' cond <!no • bol•I~" ti n; Yor~town Et Sll.<il." OfCttlf~ St nr• •nt Clllfornlt '1701 which •
A!>lll L•w • 1111 I ltG "" t " • eoi 1 Oii l~t olUct ol 11\t clor• et '"' t bcwf 11 >htn(t oou1n 6?" lC Wtil 1 ono lt>I Hunllnqron eti<:~ Ct l tornlt Ulldtt lh• NOTICE IS HEREllV GIV EN le !!>• ln1 Plt tt al bll1l11t11 ol tr.t u•11l•rt Onfd
le< P ob1te of "'!! and tcr l11u1n.c:• ~lllltd cou'1 t r lO ••11111! thf"' wnn 1011tll t t l !t•I¥ ll"f ot i.tld Loi lk tl tUI llrm """" ol 1>•ELTON AUTO' •dl!Pn 01 h• t llllv• ntm111 Ott.td•n! !n •II mt!"" •••1tlnlno lo lhf ••t•t
1t Lotlt 1 11'1•mtnl•t' lo !flt Hllllont • IM ne«illry vcvclltti It "" un 1 •n4 !he ,ou!ll""'1 t 1~ OfOIO<\ttllOI\ I OOV .,,d 11111 -.sld !Inn II COl!lllOI"' 1h1t 1 1 p1roon1 h1v 111 clt lmo •tttfn11le! lt d dt(flltll! wlt~ln lour monlf11
11rl!tUll" •"" "''! 1111 "'"• •~d Dlt ct OQNt.LO N llE LVl!AI. UH T°''""' lht cinttr llr>t ol st lf XI 00 fllOI !fl I 11 11>11 I' Kt t! rt1ld1nc1 !1 t i '""" with the n.Kl lltfY uoucllel'1 In Doted J111111rv 1' 1'11
t•lt1et1c~ lo wnlcn It ,...d• tor luHft•f atr1!9* et Nie oltkt ol Ill• 1110'1\•V tnt Ml 1 altlt"l• pl \00 00 !•it 10 ot t~• lollowt111 torten ,.,no.,. nt mt TIW 111d dK"iltnl 1 • tHu rtd 111 Ol•1•lft• 11\f II ti •ublkllkln ol flol'I no•!ct
o1 ft•• In• tilt '""'I h•• lltt" 1fl C111v011 lloult•t•d S~ltt lllll WOOll!t"" •ll•v th•"'• J.auin ,,. lO E•" 11-ltll0W1 m. mlk t ot 111t cltr• of tllf t bov• El••nor ll1 r11"
Ill" f'tDIUl fV 11 1'11 II t J) I "' Kllh Ct lllcrnlt t1M6. whldl 11 Ill« itlf <1n1ff llM lo t n t ll<I t ll(llnl Geor•• E Mt11$n 1JJ.11 Otkc!IO •"'111"°' tour'! or 1t1 ~ttllnl tntr1> w th E•tc11lllX ol !tit Wiil el
In Ill• cour'fr_., of O•P•t1m911I No PllC• '°' bu1!ne11 ol "'t V .. flltntd ft>ulc:t '°""' I 44 JO' li•il tlent W•itmil'!llfl "'' hfftU•ty voucht/1 lo 111• vn l 11\t 1'6\'I n1mtc1 ltcHllll J of 141111 cou r'f •I l'Oll Civic Centtr In '" m111t•1 l t,,•lh11\1 f1 !ht •'tllt 1,10 centu 1111 •l 11 ttll lo '"' o111t1J1n I 1111 fertltnlll tt !ht elllctt ti HAlt\lrOOO IONA\.O H l'lllNNll
Ori.,... WP!! In t~o C!l1 ol 511111 .t.111 ot 09ld dtcHt~I wlll'llll 1'U" m011lh1 Mint t! bot nnlnt Gtora• MtllOll S.OOl!:N & AOlllNION U11 N ..... oort •1t1tMY t i Uw
(tlllorn t 1!!fr 1\1• I •II PUbllcellon al tnl1 ,..11c1 f llt ittff! •11<1 t n ot wnich h lUJ Stttt at Ct lfornl• O •"'f (aunt• Ct nltr Od vt Suitt 4$.1 N~-rf 111eh 111 WP! T .. lrt Str"I
Otltcl J1111J••¥ '1 1•11 Dllt<I Jl llUl'Y '' !111 v 1 Udt N'woort l•tcn Ct !lto nit On J•nu• v I lt71 Mltrt "'' t Ct1lfornlf '16'! wnld• 11 tllt olt tt ltldl AIM (tllltr11!1 0111
W E 5t JO~N ll1Hv Mt rlt M•1tlt l lcr ltll I VrllOW o1 lttY "f ebllt t lloflt NollrT ,ub It In tllll tor 1• G S••lt of lll11lnt 11 el tht undt,.,ltned !11 1 ! Ttl"'MM 11H 1 .Ml.-111
Coun!y Clt •k E•ttu!rl• ol 1111 Wiit .i •KUrta bv 11 o O.td 01 Trull ~c udlnt H •1<1111Uv tPPtt•f'd Gf()ft• W Mtlron "'Ill•' 1>11tll\nlne lo t1>0 t1l1lt of """"'"'' ''" l•HUlrlr
WO\,POltO JONN!.ON Int 1DOv• "'""" fKfdtllt lH! en• t tl .... ••1>1n•u of Tiit Trullll kflOWI\ To mt n:i \If tho Mrttn w"°" 11!f OtC...,.! wllh1n four "'°"''~' t l!tr l>v~l tnt<I Ort ntt Cetol Dt!1Y 1'1101 Pll(I & W•LSON OON .. 1.0 N llLYl!t.L t llll o1 Ill• ~Im• 11 \UlllC•lb«:I le l~t wltnl" !"' 'lflt l\nl itllllllct llOll of thl1 nt!lct F1lllu1n' ; t I• lJ 1"1 l'l 11
:MJ1 wn1111v A•tftvt IJU Toe1,..1 Ctn•lfl ''"" 011111 Jt~u•rv 10 1111 '"""''"' 11111 •c .. newttft..i M ''teutt(J Ottlt J1nu1 v Tl lffl
•1 Mtoilt C:t•lllll'fllt 'Uto l ullt '" SECU lt!TT ALL EQ 5Et_ulCl!S Ille ••mt 5etld nt I 1!:11tm111 LEGAL NOTICE
Ttl ll U I o•i.trt .. 6111 Wtolllll'Wf HlllJ CIUWllll t\Jot4 '' l ruottt tOFFIC t.L IE .. 1.1 EKtCUhrl ol lllt w II of •lfW11t1Y• ltr l>tllll-t Ttl UIJI ,......., Ch•ll lhtOCIMotl J•tn l J~I lht t bov• nt mlMI dfftoitM IAll H 71
l>ub IJhH O••~tt CNtf f.rt !!v P ol .ll1or111• ler fucutrla •11l11tn! Sffflll,.,. f.'o!lr'I Pu~I c (111!ernh llAIWOOD SOOIM & t.011'.INION NOTlC( TO (111Dlf01 $
J•llirt fY U 11 11111 ~1tru1t\I' 2 1111 Ill ti P~~ ill•O Otl ftfl (NII Dt llv I> et 1'719 Prl11clD1! QH ct Ill Pttl Ollkt 111 l"f SUPll!lltOI (0UtT OP TH~
',,•;,u•fY 11 11 " Int fib Ul nl 2 Publlll'ltd Ntw1>111! M•rbot New1 PfOI O•t ll•t C•untr Nt,.,.._,.I ltet~ Ct t2UI Sf .. TI Ojll CALIFOltNll. •Oil LEGA L NOTJ,C~E"._ ___ J '-'---;-;;;~:-;-;:;;;;;;;;;;;:--'":...11 1 comb ntct •Ith D•ll'f Piie N•wPor'f M• commlulo" f•,!••• Ttl 1n u Ut un .. ,, <•"HOY o• o• H , -----_ lt~cn Ct torn • J1nu1rv 71 t tld Mi rth ' 1t1' Pub l1fll(I Ort ntt (otft btnv l>lltl ' 'tit ,1, U Ut A O
LIOA\. NOTICI LEGAL N011CE F•b •• 1 • ltll 11• 71 l>u~I 1htd o··~· Cotlt OtllY .. to! Jtl\ut rT ,. 11111 ,.bl'llill'T : t 1• l l!tl, of ltAYMONO J ... ME s
NOtlCI 1NVITINO 11DI LEGAL NOTICE J•~u•r• n n 1• •l'ld Frilruiri ' ttn u• 11 t ouci.i .. 11.0 •-• Rt.YMOND J 11ou
HOT ICE cs Hl!lll!l!'f GIVIN 11111 T1T"' • ·-lt rl 6111 LEGAL NOTICE ~~.·.· ••• tkt RAYMC"IQ I OUCl-!t,RO
Tfl9 9°'1d of Tru1!t11 or 111• OCHn NOfl(I TO CltlDtTOlJ ..,.,, ....,. vi.-!.tl\OCll Dltlrkl ftf Or•"'• Ct1tr1tv UH'fl1tl•1 COUJIT 0, Tlill (lll'TIPICl.TI OF I USl N!'SS LEGAL NOTICE NOTICf IS HEltEIY tl lVEN 10 th• H~llllllllOll 811cn C1lllOfn~ .... 111 •Kil•• $flTI! OP CA\.!,Dll"41 .. 1'01 FICTITIOUI Nit.Ml! .... ,,,. t l'ld lttl ol ,~. 1blwo n1m111 d•tO'Cl•nl
lllfl lo ou1ell11t s~·· ,, .,.. l!aulltl!Wlll TMI COUNTY 0, OltANll lM ullllef11 ""' d 'I I I''°', IUl'l!lt1Dlt COUltT OF TMJ 'h" I ll ''"°"' hl vl"f t lllmt IGI 1111 l ldt w!ll lie 1tort!Vfd "' lt 1 00 • m Nt A~UI nd ! 01>!.t I • (fl • "'' ••• (lillTlll:ICATI 0, I Ul\NIJt •Tit.Tl 01' c.w.1•0111111 "" Mid dtttdflll I • IMUl•IMI lo I •
flltllut v 11. 1•11 ti tM Adml11IOr11lof'I 1!11t1• o• WEILt:Y H Ml!:Yi ttS ••• ~~v•"" (!11: M1,::" c'~1 1~~~ • "'';,::1 flCTITIOUI N,.11111 POii: T"I COUNTY Of llWm .,. Ill lllr nt<t llt f'I' voucn•" n
Olt!t t of ..-14 StlloOI Olttrlcl nu W•""' WESlf v HENRY MEYl!llS 01tttl "' ·~ I cm •u• 11•"1 ~•m1 ot "'"lCVQN 'fl\• Ufldt 1!t llffl !Jet• (Ortltv h~ II Oll•NOI! 1111 oll!(f ot ll'lt ,1,"' .. "'' t l!!lvt
Av-MU"tlntlOll l•t(ll Ct lltolf'llt NOTICE 1$ Hl!:ltESV OIVllN •o h• 1111Tl!JIN l.ll0Nt.L i ne tl\at ••!II 11.,,. C~d r!M t t...11,,.<t 11 JJt W 1t ~ NI .t.---41ttl "'lltl lMI cwrl Ot to ••Uni lh•m •l!h 1~ wt.1(11 tlmt u !d \r ldt wlll be _ .... (ll'Cllltrl OI th! fbov• "'"'"' fK""tn• 1, cpmll(lltd at Th• lol ~w ... porioroo 15! C~•I• t •fl C•t 1om\1 """" I~• NOTICI DI' Nl~JllMO OP Plt lTIOlt ,... lltctUt fY YIUCl>I ' lo lflt vn
•fld •t~G for !fie ..... ,n.u ,, l\llO!ltl !hit •11 •• •on• llt v\fll (lt("'1 11t1 .. ,1 ... ne11 nt m,. 111 IV! ""' PltCf l DI fie 'A. ' ,.. ~ ..... ~· l>!Tf' s r.f 'Olt PllOllTI OF WILL it.Ne •o• ..... 1111td ti ( 0 I ON•lO H PllENNElt
t lld Eaulomlfll I~ l lttrd•M• Wiii\ ,,.. •• d a.(..,••• ••• •H Ul•H ·~ ' 1• rn lo•no;f ..... It ~ 'IV .. e s•EEO CF NTE II •1111 tho! \1111 LIT•t1t• Tl.ST.t. • NTAltT Jll Wt•! Thl rcll llttt l S1••1 .... toMclfltt llo"t nt• Oii tilt In IM ollk t lh..., will! 1111 l>ICt lll '' Ytu<ht•I • E1rt C1•b1lt l J10 Wooctll "ll No l!rm 11 c°"'r>tlff ol Hit ftllftW 111 '''"°" E11tl• ot ltOllERT Jit.Ml!S l!ltYE C:t lllorfll • n1t11 Wllllh II lllf 1l1t•
ol M kl O!tlrkt ll'lt o!•lc• al lh-cllr\ el 1111 t bOv• II Ce1•t M•u Ct II "'1'01• ., • .,.,In tun •"" •lt ct of •••ld•~c• 1111 t ncwn •• 10 11!.ltT J F•Y£ fl ~lllllO fl !tit 11nl t 'llM11 111 f ll
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M ltllllM '"" """' S1'41tr ''''" lo d••lll ..... t i ..... otr1ct "' 1111 l t!Cll nr•• Of1td J1nuery 11 1'11 'U "'WI• Ot•nt• (.ill NANCY JEAN ll'lt Y~ ~ •• llltll N r11n tht fin! ""'Ml(t!l .... ,I tr.11 llttltt
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1on lll"'I '"'"llllt th•-11 tr.11 11i1 nlll wlllft'I It l~t l lt (t o! bu•l""u Ott.tNG£ COUNTY OltNG'E COUNTY mt dt "'' "'""'' ••t11cultll '"' lhtl Ill Hit t-• ,,.,.,.d oltctdenl Ult ll UO'l'lflY •1111 Ck>'tl'-1 C ... ol 1.,. Vfld•fll1n1t1 In •11 m1!1t t1 .. On Jt ,...l tV 11 1111 llfto o fT't 1 0.. J111u1.-Y 11 1111 blf"I "'' 1 ll'lo t!m1 tM 1t1c1 ti lltt rllll ll'lt llONit.LO N l>JtlMNllt ~1 ..,..Xl<I ttlfllntl re tllt 111111 " 11!1 Mf.l(lt-"' No 11v P~blit In tlld •tr ••, 11111 Net1n> lluellc 1., t lld l~ 1114 ''''' '""t n11 bttn 11t !er P:t•ivt "' If ~""'""11 1 •~I...,••
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THE BEST
Pianist
Celebrates
Birthday
NEW YORK (AP) -Pianist
Artur Rub1n.ste1n celebrating
his 84th birthday, said 'As
long as we have what we
have 1ns1de the capacity of
love to feel music to see
.a flower, lo look at the world
as 1t 1s nolh1ng can stop us
from being happy •
But " he said ' one thing
)OU must take ser1ouslv You
must get rid of the ifs of
life 1'.1ost people would tell
)OU I would be happy
1f I had a certain JOb or
tf I v. ere good looking or
tf a certain person v;ould mar
ry me • There isn t such a
thing You must beha ve un
condiltonalty without the ifs '
Rub1nste1n was given his
birthday lunch at his fa vorite
New York restaurant La Cote
Basque by RCA Records fo r
v.hom he has betn making
sides since 1940 with mor"
than seven m11l1o n records
sold Seventy persons at
tended 1nclud1ng r-.1rs Rubin
stein and lheir tv.o daughter~
Their two sons were not
present
Responding to a birthday
toast 1n a caracter1stic p1x1e
mood, Rubin.stem twinkled hrs
blue eyes and said that he
was only a near suceess but
he did stay ahead or <>!her
pianists by slaying <>Ider than
them So l stick to my age
with pride and pleasure" he
i;a1d and pretendtd to u.eep
Later, lighting a cigar he
sa1d I beheve in toda' W-hat
happens next will be in
te resting but unaccountable
Life is too fantastic I ve.
always hked to 1mprov1se
more than lo make plans '
About his dally routine he
said ' I don t take siestas.
I don l go lo bed 1n the
daytime In the last few
months I p1cked up again ex
erc1ses 1n the morning which
al'f: a little bit difficult I
he flat on lhe floor and do
this 1m1tat1ng sll ups 1 am
atlou.ed to do 10 but I make
15
I can go out on the streel
and go lo l\\o different mo\ 1e~
and then eat wafflPs and then
go out for a big dinner I
sleep hke an angel eight or
nine hours -1f the) let me
Rubinstein currently IS on
a US tour until carlv Apr1I
doing 46 or the 100 concerts
he performs e.ach \"ar
&m 1n Lodz Pola nd he
made h1~ first Amer1ca11 tour
1n 1906 became an American
c1 t12.cn 1n 1946 and n O\\ tlve~
much of the year 1n Pans
I IO\E' lra;e.hng he said
' It s my onl} rest because
) ou kll()\\ nn the plane th"\
don t v.orry me The minute
T come ci<>wn on lhe earth
they are afl er me like mad
Young fans and young
pianists and }oung composers
v.an t to talk and help and
introductions I don t like to
refu se I have a S)mpathy
with young people Thev seem
to feel that They follo"" rn•
very much Thev are beha\ 1ng
J1ke my children There is
romcthing f1h11l about it
.1;ometh1ng touching T h e y
need me In a wav I try
tfl respond to 1ha t J1 1 ~s a \'(Irv
great th1ng 1n my life il
mcan!I fl lol to me
Rub1ns t e1n i i11d
auiob1ography y,ould
publlshed lhts year
h><
be
And RCA Reco rds d1 M:USS•
ed my nexl contract I said
nothing under 1$ ~ears '
Beach Youth
Studies Abroad
Patrick Bent ley son of ~Ir
nnd Mrs John J Bentle\
17361 La Mesa 1.tinr, Hun
llnri:ton Beach Is ont of JI
Pom<>n• ColltRe "'ludtnts Y.ho
v.111 spend the spnna semester
11tud)'lna abroad
Meniory
Transfer
Possible?
.~
HOUSTON Tex IAP ) -A
soc1ent1st at Baylo r College
of 1'.1ed1c1ne 'a)s a molecule
capable oft rans re r r in~
memory fro1n one rat to
another has been synthesized
Dr (,eorges Ungar said
artiflc1a l reproduction of the
memorx. molecule opens the
door to unlocking the complei
cbem1csl language<>! learning
He sa1p that although he
ha s used the. memory transfer
me thod on ly 1n rats he 1s
fairly certain' the same
principle. \o\Jll v.ork 1n man
He said how soon the techn1
que nnght be applied to
humans \\ 111 depend largEl y
on how rapid ly his research
1ean1 gets bad ly needed
funds
Ungar 64 a native or
Hungary and professor of
pharmacology 1n the
anesthesiology departmen t al
Ba yl<>r has been \VOrking on
the memory molecule project
almost three years
He said the ar tific ial
substance is 1denllca\ to a
naturally occurring m<>lecule
responsible for memory
transfer from one an imal to
another He said 1l is less
expensive and easier to make
than lo extract the natural
molecu le
In his expenment.s Ungar
trau1ed rats and mice to fear.
darkne."'s alt hough I h e v
norma lly seek dark places aod
are active at night
This was accomplished by
adm1n1sler1ng an e I e ct r 1 c
shock eac h time the animals
entered a darkened box After
a week of such shocks, Ungar
extracted the brains of the
animals and isolat ed the
molecule associated with the
induced response
The substance injected In
io the bo<hes or mice which
had ne v"r been subjected to
such electric shoc ks caused
them to manifest the same
fear of darkness ' he said
The next step was to pro-
duce the substa nce artifLc1ally
He was asstsled in this phase
by Dr D !\1 Les1der10 assis-
ta nt professor of chemistry
at Baylor and Dr \VoUgang
Parr assistant professor of
chem1Stry at the Un1vers1ty
<>f Houston Parr accomplished
the first art1f1c1al producl1on
of an 1denl!cal substance. last
week
We hope. this di sco\ery v.111
g1•e us insight into the w11y
the brain works and processe!'I
all 1nf<>rmat1on " Ungar said
\Vhen '>'C learn 1he rules or
the brains learning code 1
lhink 11e can apply this
kno..,. Jedge to humans "
Boy Scouts
In D1ive
For Funds
The Orange Empire Council
Bo) Scouts of America is
conducting tls annual fund
ra1s1ng campaig n through \Y.O
drives
Orange County residents in
terestcd In su pporting the
stnut 1ng program can con
tribute $100 <>r more to
hecon1c members of the Cen
tury Club
Jn !he Del ~lar Di~lr1rt
a Su~1111 n1ng MPmbe rsh1p
drive. 1s also being conducted
to raise money for the
scou ring prngram Off1cu1l'I
es11m111c thal 11 cns1'1 $25 per
c;coul for the Orange Empire
Councils pro~r:im
Richard Sf(\Cn \ rha1rman
of lhe Dtl i\f;ir 01~tr1ct and
htad or the rentur\ fluh drl~""
s a id the 1971 budj!el for !hi"
Council is S568 000 14h1ch v.111
be used Jn tra1n1n~ for
camps1te'I and for lhl' :-le~ prirt
Beach ScA Srout P,ai."
Part of our fun d'I rnm,.
from the U n1 1~d f' und w ..
use this money to ~upptirt hti)~
'vhnse parent~ rt1 n t aff ord to
pay th eir wa} he !~Id
Our rund r111 s1n.1: dr1 ve'I arr.
our second snurcr. of Jncomr
All the money i~ ui;erl tn hu1ld
and devel op nu 1s t and ) n t:t
rillzens of lhc future 1h rough
Scou ting Ste\tns said
Se r' it c Pl,111 ~
G111d cd 'fou1 ~
ANAHEl:\1 -Prospective
studtn1s of Ser\ 11c lligh School
And lhclr p11rrnl1 wlll be
ai~en guided tours or the
Cl!Uiollr bovs prep ~rho11?
from 2 to !'i p in Su nd.11.v
fch 7 at the !rhool 111~2 \\'1
Ln Pnlma A'e Anaheim
F.ntranc' r'am1nal111ns rrom
!;c>ptemhrr t'nrollmenl "ill he
givrn at ~ 11 111 Feb 20 anl'f
a1a1n on ~l/lrch 6
•
For the
Dissol1itio1is
Of Marriage
INTf.lllLOCUTOllY OliCJll!S5 linltrtd J1nu1rv ll
Brown, c11ltt M '"I P1u1 II 1-"lrtV, Sr.Dl\finot -• 1n<1 A!lrtd (MIY Tnomoson. E"v•IY" R, 1M !}Iv"' Orvlllt
Ev1r.;· t,.11!~ C. 11\0 J'nn E. ~~!..:~7.15~on1~~Y &1!:_!\ ~1n':."1~olln Du-· curv Jr e~~~f~: fuC:tr,.in•~onvO 1£°:u1Kiron •nn
A~~n~r:.Ji,Mt.'~~TH~~gl/~,\:i.,C.111
S.aunbl!m. SlllY 1nd Loon1rG Jt cob S11rt1. 1jdll E. Incl Pt1rl<I• J, Lo!.'" h1r1s1 M1rlt 1nd JludOI!
bui••· agt..r1 F ind Jf'." L. 1
c~~~~~ s~;;:f": ... :1Ro: .. JE'dson .....
Al~~rl Ml rrlltl Mtlilllll I nd Mt rc
Cron, Mlttord I. I nd llubv E.
Htn1on. (lltrvl Lvnn t nd Jail/I 01vld r,~;i!«o, I(•"''"" Ml rlt 1nd Mark (llltDtd
Frtrv. J1ne L. 1f\d "ndr•w F ~~~~ .• ,8~~~:. Jtit:..:":JU~ll~:n "};~o
Cn101>tll, Jlne I nd OOu1111 M.
car...,., Rouolle J 11\d Ct.1•:•~ 11 f=.': .t\~1~111 "!;,3n~.~~11t..i:1i1. rtl~!':it: '111~:;J"'i: '~aj""G.~1eve • McGlnnh, Wllll lm E. I nd Edie ltt
' lleoe. l 11ttord A. •11<1 Sn1ron D.
~=i~r,E;:•U.1 .~'WT111~'" 0 ·
ti.iTl!ltLOCUTDRY DIE.CREES Enl•fd J1nuary U C,rutel. P1trlc!1 Ann '"° F•~derlck P',
' M••1lner, Ruben Ed.,..,.d 11'1i M1nn1
' JohnMlfl Le~!lt Ann l r'ICI D1•id L" Miiier, ~••• Elltn 1nd (k1rlt1 llltn1rd Ski&•. Leonard M. 1nd LI Ve•nt Huber. 51ndr• It. 1nd M1enee1 J. Or1'11.1tl1 Yol1nd1 ~nd Al1l1n4•0 Swln~, Jr.) Cerol and Lt1llt P,,,,eld Oumati!. An!llonY P. Ind S~lrltY M
51ov1, Meva,...ne A. tnd Curt11 E.
811111. P11r1t•1 Erin 1nd G.-o•••
llon11d Roden, Robyn L. 11'1d Ou1no L. c;orh1m, Lindi J, 1nd LtffY M. 0 , Puerry, Sr., Viol& M. tnd Alber! .. Mdlrlde, Cheri Sue Ind llobtrl ElrtV
BIH, LtHle Ann 11\d lfwln Mlddlt1on, f ddvt L. I nd Sim A.
Lind•, LOrtU1 I nd Rlchtrd $.
,ld1M1. Jtln Merit •rwl Oon1kl Grort•
Carlt, Carol S tnd Daut l11 J. MtRobcrh, llfl1V V tnd Jlt• D. S1r1en!. NorM• M. i ncl Jon" E D•!lnt . R1IP11 Hl'nrv t r<! Jovt' Ann Oot1e1I. Lin.:i. D •rd Jt rnes D C1ll11\1n, M1r11•rll Jt nl •"" Patrick
Jos•ol> Be11<1n. Glori• i nd Ronftld Jonts. EU• Av• .,,d Jame• W.
Al11•1•n, Ger1lcll11e. force ana Runell
MOH U!'>derwoad, G•lllt Ann 11\d St1ntey lllcl,.r!I L• c1Ulf. Nicol• ,..., Ger•r!I Burlie, Ev1lee Ind Wllli•m Hen•v
P1rm1ntff", "'""• M 8nd Gec•te F. Ot•l1, Jr .. M1rl1n IC 1n11 Cherin
JtckM1n , lltlV• II. 11\d F, M Enltrld J1nu1ry 11 Good. Ltslev Ft•t Ind Ce Lvnn >•r,•b!om, Dill Evt ""' llltl\trd
'''°" M~rwlO!t, MtrnJtl Rostl Ind Jut nltl S1lc.-:lll PINr. Phvll l1 Ann 1nd Dontld Wall McCtt!•rty, Rotlerl C1lvin 11111 Hiide "'H" Klnntv, (tilt Mtrle 1nd Frank L. Siemer, l.ebel Lunt 1nd Lovl1 C. Ar i\, L1wr'"ce Y, ~nd AVC'rev
lltvlnG!on. Ellutle1h L. and Rltnffd II.
P1r1on1, Clara M. 1nd R1vmortd II..
llYIHJI, Jr., Palrlcl• And Tncm11 O.
l••tv. ll••b••• Ann trid Jtck W1rrtn Murpnv. Lun and N10,.,1 L
Death l\'otiees
HATHCOCK c .6,llen H11ncock ~· Ag' 61, o! JDll
C;iubn11111t Clrclt . Co1•1 Mt•• Dale cf
<1e1!h. J1nu1rv JC. P1•t ~·e1!dtol o!
!Uldwln Ptrk i nd We!! Covina lt11!ry
Club; Mfmtler Hun•!n1ton lle1cll ll11t1rv.
~11•vlve!I llv w\tt, E•li 1e~. Allin, llo'h
11! Cost1 Mesi; !'HO ll•otn .. ,, J1rne1 1nd
lien•v H11ncot~; 1111.r. M•1. Join~
Wni!e; 11\•ff qran<:1c~lld•tl'>. Service,,
Wednudav, l l>M, PtcH<e V1t w (heoel,
tnt•rment, r>1c!l•c View Mf'M•l1! Pt•-·
$mllhs Morru1rv. Dlrt<!Ot l
HAWKl!S
Jem•• StVMOU• H1wlte' .. ,. S1. o! ?tll
CtVICI" Dr , (011• Mew. Da!f o! nea!I\,
J 1nu1rv JO. Sur .. 1v...i oy wUt, $1\l•l1v1
•en. J1me' w. H1·,.kt,, ol Colli Me11;
d1u9M1r. M•I. CA•lltr•~ llloxtnnt , Sen!•
Ano; llrothtt, WelltY H1w~e1, Su" Cit•:
1l1ler. C1rcl Mt"tr, Cc1l1 Mt11 ; two
,,1n6Cnildren. Services, Wt:<1ne.d1v, 1
PM, Bell llrOldWIV (l\l~el lnitrmen!,
H•rt>or Rett Memorlt l Ptr~ Btll Brot d•
w1y Mor!u1rv. Dl•erto"
Kt:SSLEJI:
A~nt1 Ktultr. A9e II. ol 191l Newo11rl
Bl•d., So. 38. Co1!1 Mfl8. Survived DY
IWa dau1M•"· Mr1. E•elyn Fun! 1n!I
M'I. Rile Connelly, b-o11\ o• Ntw Yor~;
1·NO b•clhfrl, Jonn lltrntrd, Toledo. Ohle:
Che•1tr Bern1rd. Newport 8e1c"' !our
orannchlld""· Ro11rv. 10,,•gM, lu••~Av,
7 PM Rtouiem MIU, Wedne.d1v. 10 AM.
bot" 11 ST Jo1cl\lm\ Ca!l\cllt Cl\urcl!.
En•omD"'""'· Go'lll sn.~l\erd Cemt1er~. Fetner TllCMll Nevin olfk11Hnt. l'amll v
1uooe111 tnost w•s11lng 10 melu memorr11
cont<ibutlon<, clea•e contdllutt 10 the
Amtt•cl n Cancer Sacl"Y· Bell ll•o1<1w1v
l.'O•!utry. DlrtCIO" JtANDALL
ccueen l'IA!\11111 A9e J&. ol 17116 "••"tit
l>lace. Coll• Me'• Oa•e o• dtlfll. J1n-
111rv JI. Su•vlvrd bv l!u<o•no. ll:llbt":
d1u9Mf r, !)ebb<'. !WO 1on1, Dt •n •nd
Dorn. 11! of Cc•I• N !SI, rT'Olnor •"of
11cnt•the•. M• ~"d M" CIB•tnce Nelf,
cl Po•Tl•~d, Or'g~n Servlct•· Wedne•d••·
I PM, llelTI CCI'• Me~• (hoce• I•!••·
men!, lllwt••'e"' Cemtlt•v. Qreoon. llalt1
Co,11 Mell Mor111A•¥. Dl•tt10rl
STEWART
lsaoell• B. Slew1t! 13'4 Sun t• Li nt .
Now""" Beach D11t cl d~•'"· J•nu1rv ?~ ~yrvl•td !IV 11•011\tr. t;r1v ll:Yn t ll l
•Iller. Jeon Cambelle, oo•n o• Vlctorl•,
11.c. S•-Vlte1, Thuno1v. 11 .IM. Pac!l!c v;ew c1111ocl. En1cmh'Tlent. Ptclllc Vl1>·..,
Morncrl11 P•rk. Petl!lt VleN Mor tu1tv.
Dlrec1ot1. STEWAltT
WllllJm Marlon ~1•w1rt 134• Su11e~
L8 nr. New1>11•T ll•ICh, Datt 11! Otlt~.
J•nu•rv 29 Survived !IV 1wo b•Other1. ""·
lllotd s11w1•t, cl Sct!lle; Jerrv Slew••'·
OlvmD11, We•hi•~!c.n; l•lht" H•rr~
St1w1r1 ,of 1t:chl•nd. W81h1n~!on Se••·
le11. Thursd•Y· 11 •11-. Pacnlt View
(n1nel. Enlomb"1•nl, P•tltlc Vlt N M!•
"'c•lll Park, P1cl!•C View Mc•1uo•v,
D;•ectC<t
ARBUCKLE & SON
Wtstcliff l\fortuary
(!7 E. 17th St.. Costa l\ftsa
646-'888 • BALTZ l\fORTUARIES
Corona dtl l\far OR 3-!450
Costa l\Jesa . ml 6-2U4 • BELL BROADWAY
~10RTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa !\tcsa
LI A-3433 • McCORl\11CK LAGUNA
BEACH l\10RTUARY
1795 Lagun11 Canyon Rod.
494-9-415 • P AC1F1C VIE'IV
~1DtORIAL PARK
Cemetery JHortuary
Cha pt I
3500 Pacific Vltw Drl\'I!
Newport Btach. California
64f.Z700 • PEEK FMllLV
~OLONIAL FUNERAL
HOl\tE
7Ml 8ol11 Avt.
Wf1tmlnsttr !93-3$25
•• • SMITHS' MORTUARY
527 ~lain SI.
..
Huntington Beacb
l16-613t
'
DAILY PILOT f)
BATTIN SETS Arralgnme11t Set
Record
Briggs Makes Bid
Grand Theft Trial Slated FUND RAISE R
Fol• Coope1·at1"on SANTA ANA-A third an· l';'"';: ~N'or~:n·~~"~;.". •NI w1n,11 nu1l reception designed ta.I $ut SA1''TA ANA -Newport Grand Jury Indictment. Murphy also races criminal ~~r.:"c!:-t'A":".~"R1y~.~~,~ L" rsalst m1oneyRlober Fir~, D8istri~t Beach bus inessman Ralph K. Benware, 31, of 411 15th charges filed agairut him w1111~nu. Nor"'• Jt•n '"" w''"'' uperv sor o rt "· attin Benware and attorney Richard St d M < 41 O ang 5~1~".'.\ r>ny1111 •· •"" Eow1r<1 J. SA NT A AN A As· tatlve.s bas appeared bt..iore will be held Tuesday, Feb. Murphy have been ordered lo ar·~ a~ret u~:1y, lh tir row en fol\011.·lng the distract at-~':'A~,1<11t~~~~.;1•:11• ir.,,, semblyman John v. Briggs this group. I welcome this 9, at lbe Villa Fonta na. return to Orange County recognizance. torney's invt!ltlgation ot' h I• ~.~;::i.c~;;:•,!· :;;: €~~i~1h ! R-Fullerton l. who has op.. ntw relationstup.'' Bat tin's annual cock t a i I Superior Court Feb. 19 for Both men ~·ere ll\dlcted role in a child talent agency
w11,,,ot1. 11:1ch••d L1w11 1nd e 111 ou~ partleg (it costs SI OO a person · t h 1 m which all egedly bilked many ,..;r~t11o11. r.,v1 ,._ ""' Mrc11111 T. posed the board or supervisors arra1gnn1cn on c argPs s c • aflcr a six-month in~estigalion Orange County partnt3 setk-
c111nc1c. Jenni•'"" Armond<> 1 . . \J B d lo $1?5 a couple to get in) ming from the ;illl'A"d rn1-of the tangled affairs of the
(11,,..V, P'h•!lli '"" Mlrfluli Mon!vlll on pas lSSUeS, IS curren y Fa' oar art unique among county of· bezzlen1ent of $160,000 from ' ing theatrical or m 0 v I e E•:1~:;,1 Jer1 oi siin1"" 11111 ... 11'"' calling for closer cooperalion ir 11·cr holder•. cad~~u! group and 1 ts stardom for char"es.
Wulhonn Ovlnt Joon •"II A Dr1v ~ the California Caduceus Cunl· subsidiary, the c a s u a I t y -----c·_..:;·=====
i;i1cn,,, '111•tuo•• Ann ,..:; 11trn1rd between the Legislature and County seat no Ii tic .11 l pany and a subsidiary group. -JllltP~ r4 1• Insurance Compa.ny, by dis-1 Pl<ln To Att'!nd ~~~~~~-'f:f:ui~·.~""R!~'!'~' H. the Orange County board. ccepts observers hsay nod 0 l hhe r Judge Byron K. McMillan tnct attorney's lnvesticalors
ct111m1n, c~1rle• M. 1nc1 N1nc:v J. Briggs said there has been supervisor as use sue a postponed · until that dale and agentg of the CaHlornia ~ov. Cati~• L. 1nc1 w1111•m A. method lo raise campaign ex rurther court action on r Co r ~~~~~~~"!~~"~·~:.~~~.~~~:;., an "unfortunate lack 0 r State Off er penses. -charges of grand theH. con-D~:~~~~ts:rvedr:rp~~~rJent
Geo111., Avi;:,.'!-..''1.~;~,~~J. cooperation in the past." The affair, from 5 lo 8 p.m., spiracy and violation of state of C.:aduceus and f>.1urphy was
Mille•, B•t•v A. •nd Mme• F. ''Orange Counly this year Is staged by a special group corPoration codes -all con· chairman of ·the board ,
w1111s, Oatin• 1(1v 1nc1 11:1c.11.ud Llol'CI A second appraisal of land called Frirnds of Robert~at: ,.;ned 1·n an Ocange Count)' d J h Dvev. N111tv 1N1 llobett has a greater potential for d h wu Murphy was presi enl o t e i':~~~·d.88~~1~c1•J1 .~·~:.~· that cost S900 hu lande t e· tin. smaller casualty group with
scv11in, c. Mici.111 ,,,., ,,.,1 vi.oin,1 exerting inlluenct in the 32nd D i s t r j·c t Agricultural . G G Benware wider him as vice
't::ildinecraon Geroe ""' Muri•! legislatu re," the a:ssemblyman Association a $34,000 increase ~ .. ,.. --c G president. r1~~·i.c;,::~ ~t~i~F~:~ ~lrii; II. &taled. in 3 State Offer !O buy )and ou11ty ets •., ' ''"' " ed N t H • s TheCasualtyinsurancc1 >1:~1iev."t~c111 ~'.v,"...,'':f0~~jc~."•1 He noted that Assemblyman need fur tht e w i'. u r eanng Ct group S•""'ialired in l h e1 Vtnc:t . o;.,,.,. 1n<1 Tommw (). Freewav. ,.~~
"Minutes To Midnight"
St<1rtl109 Addrr11
by
BILL
HOFFMAN
Sat., Feb. 6-7:30 p.m.
271 ~VOCADO
COST!I MESA
l>UIL l(j INV1TSD Tnom11, v .. ,.nr1 M •nc1 c.1.1 .. ••• Kt n n e I h Cory t · LJ s F d "'' r i l i n g of ma lpra ctice in· stu rr, Motrc.n •1><1 v .. ,1 .. 11 c . A h · ) · D I · The Fair Board has ac· Ult S h · · A ci:;-1~~~ Jr., Milo•I• Leu 11111 1,1 na eim is I! m o c r a I c cepted the $Z74.368 propMal F S l 1 • surance for p ys1c1ans .
Mtrrell. Rvllv K •nd Wide o. caucus chairman ; that ht I '7 I . t• g or uspec series of civ il suits were laun-1'.=======o:-=-=:o-=-=-=-=--~
G••1er. Lind• sue""' Gerald 11:1¥ !Briggs) is chairm an of the or ~-acres a ong t11s in SANTA ANA -The release ched aaginsl both insurance :·::~· caroi E•1•11• '"" Llv1"111"" agricultUre comminee and Newport Boulevard with . 8 SANTA ANA _ A Lakewood of $225,917 in federal funds companies in I.he mont hs prior Tht DAILY PILOT-o~:~f.:~·i:;,;h.ncJ~.·.~;,,!,noH~:,""E~il that Robert Badham (R· Ftb. 16 deadline for recei\•U\g mao accu•ed or the murder by the Office of Economic to the Grand Jury's in· The One That Ceres
Polit, Mic1111I LIOi •l'><I ~hlr"" Ltl ii ~ I
Brown. c i.rice e. •"II Jime' P. Newport Beach I is chairman · of a wi·dow whose nude body Opportunity to the Orange -~d:ic~t~m~e~n~ti. iiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~=~:===~-~:;
I h was found Jan. 16 in a remote oun Y onimuni Y ","~,,,· Sh1•on ol nn 1nd L•wrcnc• ol lhe 1.0,.nt commi•ttee on State Divi!ion of Highwa ys C 1 C ·1 Ac t 1· 0 "\
e 11r1ch. Anne Mar l• •rid R1ch1rd ""'on Atomic Development and appraisers set va ue of t t Council has been announced v 1r1,,,on1e,, M1rc1111 1011 J1vlt r H. laod 81 1·<4,000 per ocre. bul sector ol Mod1·e·ka Canyon u NI URI O'Neil!. 111rh••• "· ano J1ck L. Space former ly headed by • by H. Rodger Bell~. director DANISH F It T
Fo"'""· J~~~~ l~~~1'.",,.l'Jc. Ed.,.•rd Brigg~. a Fair Board-hired appraiser has bten ordered to fa ce a of the federal agency. lllDAL tlGISTltY
SWEDISH ClYSTAL
CHINA l STEIL
B~~~f"· Yvonne Gtrtldlne •nd uo~d H 1 d 1 h 1 raised it to $48.000 in valu e. preliminary hearing \Vednes-Execulil'e Drector Carlos 1f\ ~
11•3_01111w, cn•l11111m• c. 1nd RGbtrt A e balso polnRot•be ou B t ka Money acquired by tht day, in Santa Ana municipal Rantos of the action council A "j. M~':~"'· K1r11 An" 1no A1c111rd ssem yman rl ur e board in this maMe r must court. L\JWA'\ ''~'.:Wi:nv"•'•lc•• v1v11~ i nd Rlch•rd tR·Huntlngton Beach) is a bt used for capital im· date for Glen Dale Ferguson. says these funds are part of U.JLflll
" 1 P 1 N member of the powerful 1 f lh 1,. 1 36. He ordered Fergu<on held the local agencies financing ""ck. •:r1,..,1~~w",O'! •,1r1 J1n1 provemen o e _.pus ac~ -Jo th t It.sh
llotu111w:o. Lov11 J. •r1<1 jNn M••l• assembly rules committee, Cosla Mrsa fa ., r gr o u n d' in Orange County Jail withoul r e year o accomp
i.nu11. 1<10~•11 ~11ov ,...., J1me1 Eston 8 · ·d "I f I ·lh goals in five rit>lds. r>1cktt, v 1011 M. 1nd G!'Ot"<M w. nggs sai • te WI facility. · ball
cu 1 • rnomo, L "" M J 1970 I d ·1h lh t" · "We have five task force ~.;u~;oa. HKtor '-:" ino1~1~71 E:uiwr pas an WI e aea ing Top priority is demolition Ferguson was arrestedr io Jeams.·• sa1·d Ramo.. "MRn· •rttc~. J''" ,, • ...,, 11 •Ml Btll• H. of two new board members, f lh Id b ·1d· •·tesia 1'url !ix days a ter Wolto•d. J11m"s 11:. 1nd j""e M. o ree o Ill 1ngs. ac-,,_. ~ n c c •t Mc0c>we11. ~n .. 1ev ino •me1 "'· 1971 offers us a ~'hole new d. I G I M • group of hiker:s found the po1ver. ay are. ommun1 Y Frt•m•n. Vtlml Lculw Incl P1vl co r tng 0 enera ansger 0 . t• H Ith d .,;~·~~~°t~;••~c """ <>••v De1n year to approach \vith a James Porterfield. nudt body of Zelma Rachel rganiza ions, ea a n 1';1.'~".',.~·L~~~:!~~ [: :~ !f::!~~c'· positive outlook .'' Major electrical repairs, irr:· Witgenstei n. 46. of Nor~·a!k.1_.:H~ou~>i~o:g~:;·;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiii~~iii~~;~iii~-~~~~i-~~~-~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~=: ur.,:;n, JUl<lnroe c. '"" M1ch111 Ht said of current board provemen\J to one fairground partially covered by dense
Fe.. Lorr•lne 11e11o """ Gienn H•rrl• members. Supervisors David horse arena, constructior-of brush at lht bottom of a Mod· h~: ~u1,."Q"..r':i l'."'.~00i:"~7; L. L. Baker and \Villiam Phillip• J I I k J'tska ravine. Pu~e•. Jov c1'"o11e11 1,.., J'n• Lee. call e enc osure. a ivestoc B•~~n/''ie~~r~ce K•v i nc1 GiHi•o• had worked in cooperation office, rl!3troom facilitits and;::;======"-======,[ ART EXHIBIT
HUNTINGTON IEACH ART LEAGUE
&:t,•;,•t;:~J,1,11 ... ,.,., Jo"n \l.'ith legislators but that olhtrs a 15.000-square-foot rabbit and
"l?~~n,, v1ro1n11 M•n• •nd Jonn had ooL poultry building art al.so on No other new!paper In the FEBRUARY c-6, from 10 1.m. to t :lO p.m.
O• u1ov1nn1, c11~e•iroe L. 11111 An!llOn f Baker applauded Brigg:s' ap-the list. world cart! about your com· M~r11 ... Alice Jo and Anttw:onv M\Uo ttl pcaranct Tuesday berore tht Installation of a public 1d-South Cioast ?lua
Who Cares?
s-non, J1mt• N. 1nd Ro•l~n boa~ • 1 . h d munlty likt your community A•lm1n.0oon1 M•e '"" c1r1 L••ttr ru. 'Th 5 IS t e &econ dress and M>und system is dally newspaper does. It's w~11r.~·m M1rv L<111ioe ""
1
" •"II l'•ul1 _;11~m~e~i~n~e~;g~h~t~~e~a~r~s~l~h~a~t~o~o~e:_J'~l~!O~ln~c~lu~d~ed~~l:n_:lh:e:_l:i!:t_:o:f_i,;~~~~~~~;,,,===,J'.--_:~~~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~~~'.::--" , , , v Ibo DAILY PILOT. c:t.~11. l:'n~1e -,..,•.n:n~"J:.,1:; :: of our Sacramento represen· improvements.
N1tlon. Donni G. Ind Ron1l!I v. Soool•tr1, J\td• Ann 1nd oennl~ Ltrov ~O<"nctr, Chtrlei. Leslie 1nd Llr>dl Morie V1 lnt1, Pnvlll> LIL Ind Ctu1 Joi H1r1m1n, Heltn '\; •na Olv•d R. O••nei<, W1il••m 011110 •na (,rmlnd1
Aant1 IJnticn, Lindi L. 1nd Ritn1td L. INTERLOCUTORY OEC•Et:l Enltrld J1nu1rr J1 Loll•!, LUtlt Ann 1)'1(1 Arlen l!Ot ll•t l . Mttll l 'lr•t>i Ind R~OlllOh Pl!to~. f [I P'lef l 111ine """Jahn I . Juoeoae. ROiier! '"orv t oll Jud• M1rl1 Alfll. KIVI M. Ind Arma11i:1o Ll.IOG Wuev. ll•cn1ro T. tnd Lo•t"' A. ~e~~1~Ni~"1t~~~ \.v~'i." ~~·~1•mw~f1m Ltwr~nce Mt LIUtt, Kttn!otn M. ono Ml rroev
"' Po<tOllne, lt'fV L '"" ll•t!"" M. L11vr>CI. llQ!lflit l. t nd Lt Vlr M. L11>11not, Mer11n JI"" •no Stlfllll n Jfiferv How1rd, Irvin L. t nd Conn11 El1lnt
Gt•dner, Su""n Y. """ Le•dt ue1n Klemme, Ke1herint1 E. 1nd Sttnley Btuct ii:..:~..:01e11n11i~1Je;~•11:~,~:'l:~?R
"'"en. l:lettie K. t nd NII• Lan...,, Clro!int S-tNI ROiier! L. U"more. lnom1• II. •nd C/lltlvn Otwtlrd, P1Vlt1!f tnd Olnlel JI Ccb HuDl>l•O. D11n1 L11C11I• I nd RMtld ··~ G•eoev. M1•Ci• C. 1"11 Ge-orae ll.Oda.,1, E101a~f11\ ind LH>nl rd Bauer. Cl1udl• I. ano Jenn C. Conrl>'I'. Mkha•I r>, and Kerl• L. J-errcn. ~1tthen J, ano lltr!v A. 5olcher. Otwn Jt1nene 1no Gertrcl
J~le• Wnlev, Lindt K1v 1nd J1clc Edw1t• Sn'hlh, B1ro1ra ~ut i nd C.1rv Lee Eden. Hermen A. end Elke b11aerram1. S•nc•a L. •nd LOI/II '· Sund1!rcrn. Denni> Let t nd Tin• Lt• M;11,, Aonn E". end Ourwoocr II. Molaer. Stev•n J;Ue 1nd Oebllt11'1
'"" RtlCll. Send•• E1T11belll i nd MICllltl Artnur A<Korml'>< L>ll Ver lin end Oorotllv Mvr!le l.IC"''O•h, Andre• Lee and ~olll!rl '· Andt "on, Vlt kl L 1nd fr•nC1$ P. KO"ritll'!'lt n. Be•nud J. 1no J1n1 • EmDrtv. Sunn Ann 1na Jim•• Ollt roe 11.cOow•ll. LICI J , 1nd lnoml• D. >-or01e, Rum l 1no H1•ola A.
Cl'lase. 511e)!"rNlt" t'E"c~'E1s<>oroo~
Entert~ J1nwlrY Jl MCEVOY. Wind• L. ano John D. W1•ott. K•lhlcn 0. t M Jamn '-· \'""""' Heitn Mtrle •na Kenntlll P'aul Wovrn1ck, L•M• Gevle 1nd Woll!IM t-1 .~:f~~. M1rlt nt P11tic;1 end O.nlt ll
F•~lll'I• w.·~'"""'" Lou•st i nd Bruce M, Gr1eoo. Al•C! t-<eltn ann JOI lltnnlt Jonn,on, Mt•11••tt A. ar>d lltn .. mln o. Oo·••llfO•an. G11I Joan"" •nil A.Iller! Khoren Rt"""'' Leo P l rwl Sue E. Anam1. Jerrolfl L. Ind Cerolt L. T"er, .Itron E. 1no B1rb1r1 L. '{;'.~':;~~."· t~t~~.c . 4'.'0 ~~~110J.'1h11n , Jcsecn ~;~b~~· L~~~~"le~n~n~nf 11~f~~~l,,e~vld
M<Ltl n. Lindi Ann •"II ll:owr! Alt n Ral•!cn. Mell!• J . 1nd Gle• G. !lllulhwo•tn. Vlllil1m E. 1n11 Blrblrl L w 11111m1. Leu•• Jtln tnd J•ck H.I ' Mel••"· Rolfi.': J:~z,GeoI~" A.
E111\er, Jo•tOh L •nd 'ilacr.el L. Wiid. K1rtn M. 1na Ttw:om11 <>. I L••••• 1;ton1IO Pere1 ond t.1ncv Ann Hube•. ~hi•lt• Jcuan,,,. 1nd Wlllltm
Henr• Miiie•. Jr,, ltnolrd Anne t nd Alblr! (n1r1e1 e,•;;,i~~J:~.''~':.v •~n :~: ~~io~~ L~o
Kam1r, Vlnct nl J •"II Ptull K. Hunt. M1rvt1 and E!!Wlfll c;_.a• M0ttau. Clt t•nct tnd Olvmol1 N . e:i;,:,u~1~~,LC,.J~n~"fto1:.~\n•• L. w'""'"'"'· Fr1nct> Yvon,,. • n d Wtl!•<~ k e•lltrl ll••HY. Mt d ne •rid N•M•I Mt ldcn Tiocii•. Frances L. 1nc1 cn1r\f\ w. r>ttttl. Werrtn Jtme• IA<I ftf•Y
Je1nnt
P1ul, Ee•I Iii¥ 1"11 Lindt D•n• ..
Polmentetr. Ct rol Ann Ind Wlllll m 1 h-.ciott
011on. M•r•;n;·J~~.~'~J""' M.
rt~~-•2~~01' ,:~~"~"~om., w. !ulllven!, Don L Ind l •1n!l1 WAShtlCl•n Jt., lltt!V L. I nd (h.,ltl E. Scholl. Suelltn Lee lf!!I Wl!ll1m .l•lli<lr ROdriout!, Carol Jttn I NI N•rtl'o StMUtl Rv1,,, Jo.eel\ Dt nle\ 1nd M1rth1 M . Wooer. llrendl Ind Rlcn1rO Morion. Frl"CfJ M. I nd M1r•ln A. Lundloan. Ar1it Ektl't Ind Jol\n A•lhur Htwkln1, Oolo•et E. 1nd Ron1l!I E. C,uest, John F•tnklin Ind M•rv Ann CroQOer, i1""''1 L0011 and JOV<t LIO"I Flltd J•nu.,, U ~::t:~.s.R~~/11~. !;Jn81n';t"t~ Lou Abi~1r. t-11!1\t lle R. •~d Qe1m1r C. (1>11~. Wlllll L" •"II Iola P'f"' L1m~ln, ~otl Hovi •nd Wit It,., Gor don Fanasel!t. Elll•lltlll J. and R110~ M.
Hiii, 0(1nn1 L l !IO! Jl ml'' M .
Wta"•[· Judi!~ Lei '"" De"nli Leith GOOdw n, Oenn11 Lee •nd C.llO•t h
OiftlH Cool<, M1•<11•t1 Ann ~nd Ravmond
"' fl ltrncM. Jotn 1rod Terf..-Ce Wolflflll, '"~"'Int A. 11\d ll~t>t'·I w. C•Jl.'tt'n f:.~l~e L1~1rne 01rtfr i nd
~~r.'f\~1R~~~r1 ·,~ R=i'Joc,,atl
Ztolnz, Cl\l>lt~ L. Ind lilrtlet (, HO<>i<ln1. How••d (ll Ht•O •"11 MlldtMI l.l~•t K11!1b, Otrlent J. •NI Wtrr•n Ollf Mllff'elt. J1tt 11:on-1<1 .no C••al Tl\eolln f'llH Jamo.t•Y U
MeEl•o¥. NIC1ndl Ind WIHI•'" L. L'if~~fll Lllrtttt LOVl11 trod 0.•IO
~cE ltav. Wll!ltm L. 1no Nt<IMI w~rtMI' FID¥d s .. nlt ¥ I M L'"' """ 1rt<1. •Mr .t,nn •NI ltd Lt1 aci.. 00ro111v V<ra1n11 ,,,., "'''* tJ~~ C1~ f ncl Jo~ll oln"""" l111tln. ,.,." t , 11>!1 RTc"•l'll c oi111".· 0.vl!I Lie on(! lltrller• Jetftllf HOltf"l'ID, ltonn• t fld l llJ Ltlltv ko•v-!I. G•rv 0. tNI Ol1n1 L. K~,..~·~ l1urt1 Rte •1'14 Mlt~•el Joseoh lta\tn1>1lf!I, ~t*v C 1M"I Jfrrv L. Pallan, Kt !•• I nd Tkom•I I, .. 1m1¥00nc!. Wiii t It. llWI L11;rt1 E kArt•I. Mt lDr lt LOUllt l n!I J•n J•f!....,
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If a child knows his phone num~
tell someone the number to call.
And if he knows how to dial "Operator"
not around.
We're here to help.
···-;-
er.
•
emergency, he can get help if you' re
@Pacific Telephon~
W~!..,.., L~tv~W. tnd G11t1tet1 !, · -----~~--~-~--~~~---~~~~~~~----~~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~-------~~~~~~~~~-------~~-------~-C.rf~, Hltrv JtmtJ tn<! O•IH A. -
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0 DAIL V PILOT 5 1111~1111 Ftbru11r1 2 Jr-11
l' eoretad Report OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
••r-.l'ft I ... l11t1r __ ._. .r N ... lfMtoltr t ltJll. '-ll&tD.
,, .... "' ........ '91111 ...... .,..,.,, .......... w _......_
NASO ll1tlng1 for Mond1y, F1bru1ry 1, lt7t State Ma11uf actu1~ing Slips _, _ __, .......................................... ,. .... ,, ... ~, .... ,.
Si\N f ltANCISCO
(n/lforn1o's rnllnuroct u1e1s ac
c1unulaterl $~ 24 bllhon 111
1!170 a !iihm rtSt' of 8 pc1rent
from J9!i9 11.h1ch masks a
l~rgt'r deC'hne "lien the effects
of lnf1011on 11re taken into ac·
count
'
.. ,-,-.· .. -.·,·.-.·.·.-.·.,·.·.-.·.·.·.·.·,·.· ...... J
Stnlce, Te• or• ••' t.ttl11t Dll
The IG pcrcenl decline 1n
tr.11ispor1atlon equ1pmenl pre>
of y1•t coll•
TllfPHONI!
ANSWEllNG IUlliU
835-7777
1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTINGS
WHOLESALE WAllHOUSE
Ol'l!N TO THI PUILIC
50°/o OFF
Ull L IEOINOIEll SA.Ml & ... ,,. ...
~-· "'"''°'
f !
~ --OIEAl.EllJ WANTED V.,.,.. \
D«)n'i seiile for less.
Don t scu!e lor anything less than 1he best 1nlcre~t
1J te on 90 d.iy Thrift cerUl1cates Invest a m1n1mum
01 ~) 000 00 1n our 90-day Thrift cerlt11ca1es, and
)ou II earn ;i solid 7°~ per .:innunl
And Avco l hnlt pays 1t
~\I,~ Ul )<l\!-
~11 \V Oyer l:oJd S<r nl:i An.i
AtlUYnl'i p101e1 It ti up In ;ii mJ.\lmYm oj S 10 000 l.iy ll1f1ll
t u•r;.nl\I Corpor.1.111111 of L.1.hlu1n1• only ~~ pJ0\11dtd rn lhR
Cthforn1., hn<11nt'1.1.I C.i>dfl A topy nl Ch•pl'r 8 !Cu.ir.i.nltf
Th11fl Atn>unl~l of 01\l'oton 7 ol tht C.1.l1i11rn1<11 I 1n.1.nr<1I Codt
r•H•Y bt obt.1.1ned upvn •'<IUf•l
lliRlfTCUA.RANTY CORPOR.\TION Of CAUFOllNIA IS NOT
AN INSTRUMENT AUTV Of Ttlf Sl AT£ OF CAllfORNll\
A~t6s Thrill Dtv~KJn h .. 1 h-rrn1n oprr•llon tincit 1lli1
1t1d ft.It nn<tr f,11ltd lo P"> fund~ on d~1n•nd.
NEWPORT BEACH
2101 San Hills
833·3440
Jo~qu1n
( 714)
Rd.
THERE ARE 20 IVCO THRIFT OfflCES IN Cll!FORNll .
VISIT OR CALL YOUR HEIREST OFFICE.
'
Prlt' ,.,..,. ~!l!LrJ~~
ducllon accounted for most .,., ,,_., •i. ,.. ,.... •N :::, eo
of 1nanufacturlng·5 dtcreasc NEw vo11:oc ,...,,.1 ..,1, 1111 j • ' us 111.l'IOt ' "• wa~ -.f. 11 1m "'"''b '.J: -f lit loHow!n• bl yr0d11 7~t US En•tl i114 )J ~II Tr t 9\.'J MMllllt (N
n "Ulpul and lh"• It I If .,,,, •• ~.., ""°'' n111111 111 6 • 11, us $V11•" .U\.\ ., ...,,1111 111 1• l•:W. "•"••'Mr,,', lo
J u ...... IS i gn I !Ion• , .. oP•ltd bv '"'" " "'•• ~.-•• "', ',",'-'• • •• ~ , .. , ....... ','!,"M ,•,•,.· ••' A9tntLlt l.MI "oont lur 1911 tl1ot th• latter ~"'•-N''•on•~--~~,, .. ', Hr;11 '•'• " "' .... " .._ " 011.._.. _.._ ... Hol!(IO( ,lu ,J" '"" si..1 R io 11~NtllF •1 "~' 11 :,·~?:,~' (! J months of 1970 Sil\\! a substan ,,:,·1e~1,,,~i'"i, •• ~· liO= '"" ~uni ltld Ji\lo " 11<•1 " .,,~ •11 A 1..., '"' ,,...,, l>v! ••• PU>· HOO••• 4! .01, \ltl 1,0 '" "" "'" "'"' •to m Air Prod JOll
I I SU1g Jn th t ( d rtftnlttlve inltr H0<'1 lie OO<o "" ,•,M0,0
1 a SI It I~ 1111 Ml'I 1\\ .~· A.lrl'.., f'f•,11 IR ea e r a e 0 es· 111111r oti.:iu •~ 0, ttO-.:.re1 GI , t i'> ••••" , 2>.1 1,, w11n Pu• IS ..,. Air"" '°"
t I I t lllP•o•lmllfl• l Howm 111 n .. )J\ 7'\~ "'" ln11 Wll ll't Sol~ •J 11\d'utlrl .. t'Cll ll ranspor ation eq\lln. "111 ai ,..11,cn 1111~, Huc:k ,,.,1 1 ,111 10 nvt \J\ iK l"I. 111') 11i~ Akton1 11 r 1ec11rl!le~ <OUld Hull ,.,. J~ -!~) "-••elf , )\ W•dlw IE H\ 2\1 All G• I 11 mrnt ht•t bll'n w• Hu1 G•• i1 tr w1 ... tiw JI~ ,,_. w11t111 w >1Yt lll4 ! tk ~ 1 c;ll•.-0 (11.0:W\ f)I Hlolr'lt ,. 6~. 1'Mo Wall'! NG lilt 11 'l'rdn• IE l )$i ... ,:..roe";;• In Ille producllon of goods )O.fll ••1c11 1n••• Hytu c.. u~ 2w. AIMrt.,,. .u ~tiff ,,..,~,11 Hrttt 1111 11-. 13 Al<•n Alum 1
:.nd services. manufacturing ~r"r:f -'·· "'~0~:: .. r.:::e~ ·r ;u -1.. MUTUAL !~..:.-.~ ~ 1s one of the nine maior tn· oo 1 no• \f'tludt ind ..iU(T ''\~ ~•'It A•IH c . '°'"
ell I mar~up lnlrt•CI •'•• ,!" ,','"'.,,'.~ ~· •, dustr1al C'Om'"'flents in the tri-maro:oown or cam I"' con1 ..... yu mlu•on nl•l!'I in 2J} J•O "llff Pw :n state bank's econo1n1c series "~l~.C°'• ••1 s;. I"' sw.~ -"' t\• Amt11 c~ 110
A. t :s. l''1 '6ft nl A~ulllt ~ ~~ FUNDS :\=..mrin 11': In concept value added by !i'-P$1~ ! : ~,: 1~: l:~c, 11 1,~. •ir1" ,; "
manuractures 1s measured by ... sG 4NI o" •'-tnttirt •l'l' "'· A1H"'I'' 1 ,, ASG OI ~\1 11 10<\k• I'\ ll\• "llltd Ir •I '
sullstracttng the cost 0 f AvM ca 1~\. 1ou it .»urn 31 • v. All!fll JuMr -·• ~-·· • -a• n1atcr1als on arrival at the "<mt E1 n , r•. Jto11111 c •~ •1~ AU•ltl""' .o "" S!~ ~·· •h JIM .... ~, JV, • NEW VOllK (APJ lnveJ k• u 2) ll-'7 "IPh• p Ctm plant for processing from their "• lodu~ 3 . •. J1mn F ~'"'• 11'i -lh• 1o1-1~, "u"' 111v1110t1 Gr-Afcq 1 '° Albee 1-i ):'. •:i.i•msbv 11 ln1 1.r1oo, •1111r11" 1r1 tos l!Cll 1 21 1.sA1r1&1sr, ·~ value upon completion of th e "ll•t•ts 1-01, 11 ""'l Fa~ JI~ •\• tht Nt!lont • Ao«J· Mut t n 10 u AMR• 511
f T A.l<ol..; S11 l\'t p N\I( 'Ai 2'-'i •llon ... SKUrlUtl Plot 'II ',, llmtr ' ' 2(t tnanuacture he bank sAllco ~""' 11 13 ie111er ,t ,n ,30 o.11trs inc: ,,, $tO(k 111110»•mlE• 1rJ60
I d I All11 erw 3 , • <•1•51 Df ltloO 10~ Ille 11rlc" 11 Wf'llCll :s..ieci t u t t1 Arn Heu :lelr est1ma e er1vt' rom its more ... 1u" e" ''• ti.. Ktl111r 111~ ··~~ 111,.. 1Kur11111 var Py 1 06 1" '°'MM .,J 511
t th , p f "1~11 Gf'O 11 .. '~' i<alt Grn '"' l twla 111vt lle<!11 nw lltlll -..s S.ot AAJrF!nr IO rx ens1ve !iier1es e act IC Amt ac n , 2~. l(•Y•m 11._ 1"41 r.111 tlrltl) or bll~..,1 11114 20 21 20.u A/Tl AJrlln IO Const Markel & Business" :m_,1111"',~ .1,, • .1i ir.,.,'~',,,r 2"> '·'" 11kt11I MOnll•Y wv tu 1 11 A.••k•r tJll
.. J • ~ A;. ew Atk J Hncock 1 u 1 2t • l•IWI• 2.10 'J f t h h •m E~or •Sh t~ l(f0Ma 31.ll\iiAPJ.i!...,fl 11:.t t,.JOhtllln 7011Ml1Arnldcll 1 20 "anu ac ur1ng \V IC saw 1 n ,,,~ 1 ··~ Keu11 "' •"1 , Aomlr•llV ""'~d1 K•••I-Funcll Am C1n 1 111 it~ Share Of total OUtpUl Of : .S.~~:g ~ ' fj ~ -<:~: ~.·~ l~~~ 1:1: f11~~ : ~ ! ~ ""°c llo t II It IG :.,,c•t,~~n~S -·"'' d I I A.m Tel• »11201,ir.evsl PC ,.,._10'• IMU< 1 11 tfS 111 Bl lt2,700IA ~•1~160 guvus an service~ s 1p rom An11eu1 B W• u •. Kin• 1n1 3 i,.Advlsro .,. , .. cu1 ez 1t t01111 !\CtvS.U. 1 ca
., 6 per"ent on 1960 I" 22 8 •,•,,•,m ,,'" •,~l ','· <r,M,,' ,',' ' '~) ""n• F• 'u ID 5, Cui B• 1..s1 '11 ACtY5 l"-" w .._ ... .. < J . ')~. Alflll~ta Ill 1fl '"' Kl J IS I.fl ACwanl , 25
Pl'rrenl 1n 197tl had an ag A•d•~ wi '" "• <n•11 ~ct J' a\\., A1u1•t • 11 •A c11s 1(2 '-'' J 111""' 0111111 1 Aratn ol Jl :it 1Cr11•lr 1\'t ilt jt,11 ... .., F I 15 (111 !ii llOl ltlJ AOlllTtl ~
greuate payroll of $14 54 Atk MoP 1~. u 1. L111C1 '" :n n~. A.llsl•t• 10 10 •111 c11s s2 10 J2 1116 ""' ou11v~11 !> A.rrow H JI 311~ Lind II.ti ,i;, I'~ Alol\a O:d 11 'l 1115 (111 Sl l,lt I Jt AOUVt pl If• b1lhon 1n 1970 "•vld1 10•0 11 l.•rit wo lDl'i lO!i "mt.01> f 15 112 Cus 54 • 11 'i'CI "mEIPw 1 10 A1CC Bol •~ la L1rson .flo 11o A.m ll~s ~ 3• 3.fll Poltr l SI l ll Am Ex1> Ind Durable produclion absorbed A,"'," sci 51, si . L••a• c.. 11~ 11'• Am Dv111 lo u 11 6l l(nltkt1 111 111 ""'"u• 01 "' I •Cl A.I I'• J\\ L"' Cul 311 l;i\ Am "~'~ ~ 01 ~ U nick GI t Oil t 12 AGnlFd 7'9 nil of manufacturings losses ~!~e~,, , ,,,,~ ~ .... ~ L11111• G 111\4 1n• A,,,., E>tpn••• •• Gnh '1610 01 A Gtnrna so " 1 t tWll IF 11"4 U C1pll I 41 t 1' L11 lllK~ IS II 16 H " Gnln r"-" dCt'hn1ng 1 8 percent Ill $15 97 , ... ,. •,11 :• 74 'Linc Mii ~ 101\ lllC'Tlf ':a lOJO IOll'IV '00 13' Alf> Holl •O 11 " 3 ' •~Ii DOI w 11; 7,11 lnvHI I ~I t ,10 Ut Ilk I.SI t 0<C " Hom1 I 70 b1lllon while nondurable pro-,",,-,,,", >,,",,· l!.'h Lon'c..., 1~ 2111 Spec! 1.t• " 111 1,.,. 1.n 111 A Hom1J111
d t •v L El ll'~l> Stock tC:Z t Linc Ntt lOUll?IAll'lliot.1> JI
uc ion outstripped 1nflahon tn •0tte:llm 2t•,1i :iou L~h tn "" , ""' vr1~ •JI 111 Lln1 -.~ Am tn1111 so •!It l~lr H I. U>,O ''"' ,. \...,,, Inv s SS 'SS Looml• l.eYlt lt ... Mldlctl lt advancing 5 7 percent to $9 27 1r1m 1n11 •\• s, ::::•d/ ~1~1 1,, 11111 Am Mvt t u 10.01 cin.d 11 1) 31 u A M1ICIJ! 1 olO
b,11,"n ,',',"•' M••" ,',' ,','~• :lkrt" ... ,!,!~!""'"' GtGh 111 '" (11>11 1ot11ot1Am Motor1 u '''" ..,.,, ftCtlOr rD'JP Miii 1• 11 1116 AN1fGtt 1 tO
B•ll Lall .. ~ .,.. "'" M , ... '"' C1pll I 11 • et l.lollh '"' n.cs 1111 ""'Pholl II The metal complex "hich 1 mup1 N 11\)11 ,•norMc 7h "-Grwt11 110011osMJ,11• 1., ,,. t.o•t11t1ov 0 ...
h h l
'l'd Son ·~ •1 ""' II 11 U V. lncme I M t W 11111,n , n J 31 Am ~•I 11 reac ed a 1gh of $11 55 btlhon 1 rlchr 11~ ~ '""' G• 10 1ov. Fd Inf ~to • 11 "'' G••> , ,, , ,, ...,,, SM" I!"' lltac• HI ;1 , ~ ... ..., ltowr n lJ Vtnl •~!O ••JI As 11 1 in December 1969 (measured Botu• i::1 ,, • '"'' L~ 11;, 1,,,. ""'°" , n • 11 11111 Fa 11111111 ""'!':%' 10 at aO annual rate). declined l:~"·A~ 1!1, n~ ',\:,~~ H 2~\t 2f,... ""f11~111Jlhl~~61 1 10 ~::: ~~ lf :r lf ~ :;:: ~:dr :n,10
.t :t percent from 1969 lo $10 67 '1:'ld:=..•P :,, !~' ~:~1.~'' ~.! ~~~ ~'~ 1 ~" ! !t ::i:~s ' 1!~~ ·~ 1~ :,,,"~1::t1 '~ b1llton In 19"10 lllrlnk! In •7 '1 i!Merld 111 191.. :Ot. Stl C• • ;a ''!"""'"''" Ul•lll•AT .. T w1 llrkt s,. 70',1S'•~ldld Ci 1\, tl,lltb'°" •1S tl M!dA Mii JJJ 111.-.m T&T J60
T llrw11 A.r 11 ~ 11>, MlcUt• J't. J'I ll•Vt(:~ I 0 • ll ,,.,_y Cll 11 00 IJ ti "W•IWI< II) ransportatlon equipment ••u•" 111 11 \ 11 .., .. GT 1,1, '°'"•••con 1J » 1J 1l Moodr's tJ 011 t 12 A.WW 5ot1.JJ'
Product On h h k d lluc~•• 11 ' I IAP!I c;15 35\l 3'~ Btrl 1(11! t 13 I 'l~I F Fd I '' t lt "W Drtl 1 ?J I \\IC pea e al,Bunn c . '• Jl1Ml11 VIG 11'~ 17~·e.,~ GI~ fll 6 1JIMIF' (;I/I 5 11 St6 ... W •lpl l•l
$:t 76 billion 1n August 1969, 2rC"'t° •• ~ 2~, ''¥! .... d "l'h l~. 21: =~~1~ •• ~0 t tt ~~ M~v~,:G 1~ :~ 1~ ~: :~.;~c ,0
Plummeted 16 percent to 13 001'•1 w s~ •i • "91• M~wk co" ,:~!· ,i~ Beston ~, • U 1 !7 Mu 0111rn 10 d 11 :11 Am~l•k 6Gt Cmba1 N ,,, 1'h Mon/ Col t~ tv. lctT Fd11 11 ,, li '1 111 Sllr! U 01 U Ol AM F Inc to b1lhon further !hough nar 1::.-:.1 ~,' '•'• •"• Monm Pk 1l'Ai l2,,.0ostoni:, ',!~ ,o)Mvt Tr11 '" ltt ~J:'c1 .10,.
r d'cl'n's t •• ,.. , ''" -• , ,.. ,, rwn tf "'"" M11t 1e J2 10..ss /IC ... o"er a s 0 .. .... "' :ii Bullock C1!Y111 N 1 1 , 11 Amoco .09'a re Jn re C•• Mton 1• '• lt1' ...,., s n•;, 13 aunck u lJ \J •• t 11 uni v• Amoe• Cora
'n 1911 C1• .sow • , ,,,. 11• Tr A m . 11\\ C•Nln i • 1110 tl N•! 1fc:ltf' Ser A1111!9r l 10 C•P Int A \ , 5111 !I Tr wt J14 J'll Dlll!d •.SJ I 03 llilan 10 IJ 11 M A.mo tr ol2 •J
Pod t ( I I C•PTth ,~. J>tMDld> M '~" 1'4 Nol\\ISlOllOPll Bond so:i l.5llAnut1r o1 .. r UC ion 0 e Ct'lr1ca Carr °"'" l?l'o 11.... 01 Cl11b ,.,. IJloli NV V~I I~ :h 16 It Dlvla 'u '1• Am1tltCI ''°
equipmenl and supplies shp· ~:~:~ 81 ~'I: ~t: M:::'~f' E• ~}! ;tt 2G'~d .. d : 'l ~ i~ ~,...~~II; ~ t~ 1~U !:i:i!..11,.,
Ped 4 percent to $2 86 bolloon c11c N~ 12,. n •• Mlt r LE 291, tt:u. c1,..mr 1 '' 1 v lncom JI ll J IO •11cor1 Svc 1 • C11ll (po ,,, ~t.\N C 11\d Jh S'iC1Plt ln'I JU lit Sloe~ Ill lt•Al'ldCI,,.., 120 commun1callon equopment ac-cen1e~ ~·;• '''• N•r••• c 11lli Ul.6 c1111 s.~r ~ 11 'fl Ntl Gr!h '06 'u A.P•cheCa 25
1•n llPS. lf ··~\ Ni!Ctr II. t V. 10 Ctnf '111• IJ '' ll ll Nevw (ti !..!I 'OI •peoO 11'1 counting for more than half'"' Lftb 1~1 ••1HCm11 CP ,,~ ,,,Ch•nnln• ,.,.l!CI• Ne\lw Fd ioJ•1031"PL c11r~
I I l\1r11r1 ' • : " NII Ea111 11 """ ••l•n II 'l 12 ilO New wtd 11" ,. It APL Pl Cl °' o 11e sector 11as dov.11 14 111•1 o ... 1 .. -.i.1 G&O 13, 1,i;a com~, 110 •MNitW1011 i•u11n1A11At11c 106
f 96 ,,.,, Let n l">, >111 I.lb 11>J llV. Grwth ! 07 Is• Nkll s.1r1 11 :it 11 lt A•c1t1 ne JJCrcent rom J 9 C~tl Ina ~~ 6 Ni ll MeCI 2f' 11~ lncam 116 11Nortl51 15.'11J•J •rc111N Pl1 c~~ Ullt 1S II NII P'1 2': )I\ Spec1 II• l~O Oc119ph lot 709Arch Dtlll
Als
1
o in the metal comple~ ~~~11i'\1 :~-·~:...,~:: ~~ 1 11~12v.c'C".':1,"' 11,.oi, 1 !1 ?aOi.~ 11J~.;~!~~n:so~,~
m<JC 1u1ery production gre\v 3 9 Chrlu ~' u • u Nii S!tvf 11~ HO ~und l Cl t t1 101 Fd t Js 10 21 "rm cos 1 60 Clladel 1 1 • NEn GE 1i1~ itv. F'r~I It Mt~ !I One Y/mS u 10 U 70 Armc Pl 2 10 percent to $213 b1lhon off1cecu11 ""'• 11•,1J , J NatG • Sn•hd 11 11IU0Ne1 11$11151"'"'' •••n
d Cltlr U " 11') " NI h " ~ 'lOU S~c• '01 '1J OPPtnh •OJ t 11 •rmol c• to .in comput1ngmac.h1nes .(11lr t a 1•,,1l1 i!,so,.. 11 nv. tie"'' l'/JJ lllJ P AIM 1011 11 11A•m 11u1•0
\vhich acC<lunt for a third of'!l~~t"!t,1 ~r:~111 1e1: a 2:!t C<>J:J:.! 1 r1 '-•s'.lT C* 1001 u 11 :~:1n''r.:.'f'
h 11111 M~r 13\o 11 A Atle 1'• 31\ Fund 10 U !1 IS Pice FM J U t H A$1ll0 0 11 I 70 I f' component rnse 5 7 per n1o~ 0 • , .,. Near NG 111'1 1m Grw•h , u 1 '' P1111 Rew 11' 1 t1 "'Mo pf2 'II
I d kt Clow (P '' , n ~ Eur 011 7~\ JI\ 1ncorn t U 10 10 P,""M "', : ~ ! ~~ Atsd l rtw cl'n an :iveragc 1vre y pay CM11r 0 '"• ,,.,. NPA Gt• i1 11 ..,,,,, •!' 111 a u At•d oo 1:ro
"d"•nced 6 7 per I COlll• c~ '° 61 NW NtlG ID ·~·Col Grth " '11j5 Ph.. ,, ,. lJ.511 ... ,a Sp I 2Db • Cl.'n Colom Sv 1 • 7•1 NW P\IS>' 1l" lJi\~....,S BG • U ! 6 PUgr!m •SI 10 :it .l.Jsd lrtn~p
f• b f Collln1 c J4l 1 1J\'o NIKI lllOC l~t lhCw!lh AB 1 ~ j52Pln1 St 11U11U ... tMo"' Ind a rica1100 ll metal pro-co1011 .,,, 1,,, "' 11111 "'" e ~ w11t1 c t 11 l 15 ion en1 111 111 At1cvi:1 1 :u duel~ was up 19 percent to~:::;ce(,, .l :sl:.l~l's'f.-:. 11:!?:~' :;:~1Ai !5'~~!'1:. ~~: ltlllf.H :~ ~1~~·~1~
$1 « b Ji I Com Ga 11 ~ l?"• ::i 1 11, 1 •!om~ 11"1 t 1t 10 10 llt rlh "'' U IJ ""11<11 11'11 10 .,., 1 ion structura metal co"' ltts ,, , ,,.~ ;~ T,. ,,,,. 2n, omP Fd • 1J 11 " ,.,1,. FllNll• An•s ct.em 1
Products 'bout th d ( th Corn Hit~ t • t v~r NA n ti' om1!k • 1• • 13 Gtwll'l 16 ~ 21 U A.tit• Coro • a Ir 0 erom "'" u .14 •vC•• 11 1 14 ' cn,ord 1111111' N Er1 tu tHATOI"' 01•
Co'npon'nt I'll 3 . perc nt Comp A. \' !' ,., ' ' ,, .. ''' (111\SOI 111 U~IVtll N Hor '' ,, 15 n A1tor1 PtOCI ' e (mp Crn S ; 6 ' P:-1»1 ~t ll 1 531; Conti 'Al 1 81 111 llro F11nd 10 1' 10 l' A\f!om 01t• from 1969 Cm• 1n.1 ,~ 5 Ptc Avio •'IJ s~~Conl G!h t •J •np,,, Port! ''' ''°"11!orn,111 11'14 (l'l'lp Tee • J•1pK FtE !J S (orp Ld 1S01tlllProvd11! •1f SlJA.vco O•P
Primary n1etals mos 11 y l:;·:~k ~,'• 51~ P•~co co J''o
3
1<• l~~ .f~1~ 1~ r, 11~;~.~"1,~_!,1:11 12 :~: co'h ~~
blast furnttct and basic steel ',~',',','• •, • •,\";:~~~Dr 1~ 1~ Crn 10.1 'u '51 1:01111 1.s• 1 30 ~v••J ," • ~' 1 dtVt h M fl SI' SI Geore 1' 15 U 4' ""flt "'
Products, inched up I percent c-, 's I '•' • 11,> ,',•,•,•,•, ", 11 • u o..c11 • n~111u Grth , "10 ,, AYr>O-t "'1
Cor • • , , 10 •~• I'll OelWr u~1111l! 1 m 1 to 1 ts """" Pd 1 lo to $970 m1lhon co1m Yr 10 ~ 11 IYt t 11"1 1J Dell• ur•v• I ,~:.1 1 Jt 1 OI "•tee 011 111
(,wlrd l•~• lS' I P~tl Mf ''' 10 ~ Oddi Cal( 1' 1f I' If VI•!• t 11 I ff
Lu be d """ od I Cron Co 3l :w Pttrle• T 11 11\'I Oro•el i ~' 1l i i V•••• 6 64 1 26 m ran \Vuvu pr UC Scru!c~ s:t I'> 11,P11 Entin 30 l l•Orn-1fd11U 1l lle lfbdW ~o advanced 6 6 percent to •t.1:11 cvarei c • , 1,1 P,• ••,w '''• '''• O••vf Lv 11 J• u.11 A111ere 10 1111 l: B•~·our 1s ~ Oan~ Lb< l'h 111 en11 •C 1 , 210 Ei!0111.How~•1 Atnlrer IS?• 15 B111 GE 117
II 1910 1 '
r M o PeP11 w 1 r..i. 7h Bait~ '15 10 11 Aostnt~ I It I 11 &111 pf•• 50 m1 1on in a~ ogg1ng o!r,voti 1~1. ',~P.iroHt " 501~ Grwtt> 1 1 ~1111 schu''' 1•'416tl ••"to• l>unt
sa1v and planing m ills were 0111 G~n r.1. '3 1 PhA1 a! Pl ,", •,,'., ,'~""', ,• ,• s'o' sc~Ot1~ ... FundJn•v• t R:;:,. ..i;1,t 011.rn P 7' > l'· Ph I ~ult •• 1,1 siO.\ 11 ,1 , 6, 5,.ci nu J1 u !It c1C.i" t 36 of primary I mp or I an c e Otv!1 Fd s>o 5\, Pholon ,, _ .,,,,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,,1 15 u u" B•nt o1 NY l
EI DllYM!r16;17'••!n~rt/I 'v" • '''''' mp oy1nenl 1n the sec tor has Deter '" , , 6') Porir HI( 20 ., 11 , !:9r•1 11 • 1• '' Com s• t tJ t l •n ' 1
d h h --.1 Do•lb A,q 31'o J.,Pro Gel! J l, • Em•• ~c ~ii 6 •1~tcurlly t'undl 8t•b0 JJI• r~ma1ne 1g Fuuu pro-oe1n1 In• 101.11 proeAn• 3 J1<=11orgv u...in ~! Eciuh JltJ61 81'dCs:t 15a
Cc' I d 2 3 I Oe u1 c~ 6''• I}'• •ud tAl1I ''• 3 Enlor., f J: 6 11 lllvt•I 1 U t 6t :••k lnr 10
s ng increase percen Ot1 c1nT i , it•\ Pubs NJA ,,,. 111~ ~ouiiv • « 't<-unr• • 11 1" 11!1:: J,)1~1 1 t $3 55 bill Ciel LB r ,, •• ll " ub s NC .,,. 11'1 eciul Giii • t1 • II Sf lK ... rn • u 10" Bllh 1"" O!• 0 ion glPW•• f:' l '• 1·~ ublSl'>r I '• ··~E•lll ,., .. ~"' f ll ~I SptCS 15101/U 8t tMn PIJSO • I J b 11m C• 'I J• u••P• • , ,F•lrtd 101' 11 1151nll Giii 1 17 f Q.11 BivschLb 1~ nppare a ncat1on rose 31 0 1" Inc 5 5~. Btno.i i r-. ·11'>"''r"' Br 10 011 1000 1m Fd un•~•ll Bi.!L•b ll
$0•0 II 01111• C•A ~·~ • p rltv st l• 1• Fld Ot51 llS s1111r A• li t.OJI 16 Bivt Clo !O percent to '" m1 ion pnn E:fin•1 10 , 11 P~tJG CP 5,, 51, F1oe111v «•11 " s~ o e1n "" u u 11t1rlno• 1
I ga d bl h d d nllltf1 L 11. '"''"''CM ,, ,,., C1P1T 11tj1!6'01de '"'1011 8tl! Fd1l 1n n pu IS 1ng a vance w Jon 31,)111 11T $v,i 6•11 1,, F•••• 11• 1•t1s11m• fyndJ BtitFo1 D!t
14 percent to $! 31 boll1on Dov~ 0,~ .1, •, ',',, "'"' ovn 1 ,,., Evr5t lJ LI"'' c~,.u 11' • n B1c~rn•11 "' 8:.. • ,.,,' ,,·,, •. Fidel un~J•l1 lnYtSI l l ftll!IBtdD!ck JD
h I d tied od "
M•O or I• lnl .. Pvr!n 1Dl611J'l > o i•• c e1111cas an a I pr uctsourlron 1,\:1,,,1t1n1i, El 'S'~'' ~'° 1 •us• l1 OvoBHcll Afr 1s
Cl'mbed 96 percent 10 11 37 F!Z P•l'T 11,,111,11,,",'•"<'•" e1 IJ l~~ .... l31f 1S~ mill\ 11 '" f4'11tltoPtt §01> EtelC Hf ~ , 6 If'• If , Flr~n(ltl ~rd'I ~w11 tnv 'OI t 11 lltldtn I to billion and petroleum rose 4 3 ~~·' ~~ 11 1·1., ,"',~,,•,,o im 11'• DY""' • 11 , SJ sw11111 G• • 11 111 1etd11eH I.Ob i;con L•b lll , 1J•~ t • .,,, Jll>.) lndu!I 1 tfl • l6 S<wtr •nY Un U" l tlt Hew 'o :==============================~..!!"':r~c~e=n~l:_'l~-!1~J~Q'-'m~l~I~~~:_ __ i:llllC ~11 , >1 Jlkldr Pu 1111111 lncom 5 IS 6 •1 Sotclrl 6ff 1 JJ 1111 1111rcon El Pt• 1 16\~ l•Vt 'llllW Sro 26 :JO V•n! • n 'It SrFrm GI I 10 '70 Bttnl$ Co fO
ilbt SY\I I'• ~.11<>11a El( ,,~ll\~F!IF \t JO U l1 1tSltll SI un•~•ll lllndlX \'~ tdn Bo a~t 1 1 A,ot1l11 M 2:1 lf l'tl\11 Q, '~! I 'I Stetan·11n Fund! !fnd1~ pf l
: "'",~:· START THE NEW VEAR OFF
WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS .,,._-~
'~-= ..... ~
'/,gal.now ... $11"
I NII• s I I . A1>1tlon ' ' 1 F!I lnGlfl • fl t •s ""' Ind l '3 l H 811'\•llCP I·~ El NuC I 1 '"• llOY (t~ ?'• 2''o Fii l"S'~ t 11 10 ~I Ano F l ,2 ) •5 B•nltll 11r• ~0 EITr""' ••• J. Aus St<W 311• n FJI Mulll 11• I.ff F'1a11< '" 1 •1 B1ri1!t .,. JD El ( SYl I) ,,~ lllYlrl HIJ 5!1 ~ 54 Fsl Nt! ' 11".'M Stein ll:M Fds Benn jpf 1 so El Oata J~? IS 1 5tdl1et l~ .. I F1I Sit ra &.! SO., If l•I 1' ti It 61 lltnouet IEI Modul J 0 ' ktntfl f •'I 1'' Flel r~p 6 OI CtP OP I 10 1 10 8fl11'utl In FmoS ') J 11 , II\~ ~c!\01! 111 ~. ' Fl'' F'l'HI S..IJ Stock lJ !I U 5' 8er~eY P~o EneroY C :ll'l fl Stl Cptr 1~ .. 7;1 FI !0111 ! 11 6 JI SuN rv11d tnw llt!h Sii I )0 £nt•Q A.t IJ ''S<l Ind •• ,~.Fnd Giii ,,. t 1S Grl~ '°' 11f !ltT~··~ •o ji111w111 5\• • • ~,01 son' ''I.': 71 Found•rt Grlllll> Sumi! JO!f 11 JJ Bltct Ot I! on C'll• 1f l>~crlnoi I• ''•7H• Grwjh 1•Jj1S'1 ltc/I IJt I OJ B!3lrJohn •I ECl\111 'II 11 1 ~11~.,rlptc A , ' tnCC)l'fl 1l~t ,'"•"llC' Gt ,n1001 8HH L•11tl l'rle T•< ii •~ ~ttrle pf ,.;2,.l Multi l .ff 1'.3'l TMR; A.p l!tllJ0,810.:~Hll JI FB Ce<t ~ ••\ei rmo ,, 1 SDKI 1•001',1',re1t11ri un1111ll Bl11Be1l l:'G
"•11 l •k 7 • '1 rif~tlrn ' J FlllJO.. ... TtcM\.CI ] .. •0' ftobYle er111 ~r~1;: f • ? ~ \Y< G•o ·~: Jh Fr8•ri..Jt." Gr~ f :I& Ttmp GI 1• 111611 !ID•lnt Co IO
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• '''' '''" ''' ~ 0 G lwnC Inc •OO • n orm1111 l'<I WFn 1 t l t w "' 'F11nv /IC rp V 11 Miil 1'1101• 1101 Edi' 271 F!lc~no It u 1 tw El•vc 11 • 11'.l Cm>< Ul\~Ytl! nlf 0 1110 " lie• Eo E' M ~-FP \'• • 0 \otc••¥ •'~ • • lml>I' u111111ll n d ao.ir~• nc Fon ! 011 ,, u·~ \tll'!o(tVn ,,., 'J • 111(1 lr• l/11111111 Unllll\ !IYC Grp g•tnf A . so Form11 • 4''1 ra s:t...,I, JI 7u, Piiot Ufll!lll l •c1d lJUlftJ rlttSt Tltlt l~--------------------------------------------... 1 Foll G1nt '.IO'\.", .... HPd ,.,, 11 ,.u.,., ""' 1 1\ 9" Nt t 111¥ 'u I u Brl1t M¥ I :Ill Fo•am ~·· HO ~ttrl• "' ,, 1.f.ll Gllew'f -'5 '~s VII c .. 's• 10" Br!slMY pf ' Fr11~1 Co 1 • •''I \!raw r:1 11 'I "''" G<'n sec t M • JUi Whllfl 11 .. , U '5 llrll "'' (]~
CONGRATULATIONS TO · .. GLENDALE F'EDERAL
SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION
ON THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW OFFICE AT
2300 HARBOR BL VD
./
COSTA M,ESA
ANOTHER QUALITY BUILDING BY
MEANS & ULRICH
BUILDING. CONTRACTING. CONSTRUCTION
1629 E. EDINGER AV ENU E SAN TA ANA
Phone 543-8413
'°•n•(I~ ~ JO', jjl, ~ub~c Tw • , Q.I G!t,.1111' 1 ).t 161 Unlltd F11r>1ll Id"'"' H1l• l F"Clut 7J~1 ' • Oi \11t1dol F "' o•\ Crouo Stt A~cm u111vl ll dWYHll el T FPUI l{JW ~1, 6 '••bo 1'1 1 , J._. A~• F l tl 111 ll'ICl!n'! 11n1v1l1 !lr-wv GI ~0 IGJll Cma 1'~ ?t'< TO .. Ind a11 ~10 ll•I Fd Ill IM SC!tn untYl l ~~lynU(.; 112 f •rflll:I 15 • , ... r 0,..e, 71• !" (om 'SI lit\ U 11 Vi nt unavall Rr,,...,, Co G11 •vc UJo 1 1,
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GOI Etl l'i ''·~~·•m A '" '" t11'1 •'" Ol S•! Sii J:il JtO i'tl!OCI Ce ' • •" ~ 1i.. '"•" ro 1"• 1• i ~ G~-! ~f ·, ~j llnce' <Pl 1 11 t n 8\ldpl' pl 60 Gtellrll ll ll TlflnY In ' ~.... ~'""' • IV111d bl 6 tO 7 !• 111,ld<oet llld iG t~1n W ') o ]l\, ""'• l~d o i o t1••1Wll 11.., I' •ll\/tnlll 1 •6 '11 Bufl,-ero I 10 ~~~~ ~~l 1J I I~ : Tl!&~ r.o , 5'~ ~~b ~ l~ ~; j ;; V•r lndP •I~ J 71 llul~Y•W iO
I
GocG L$ \fl , 1l ~ T'rer Cc• • • ~l\ '""" 1~ 'I It ~ \/I-Int 6 11 6 11 l unkr lfl"10 ""''c" "· 1 .Tmc11• r. 1•1.7" Ii 11 'J!I ,1v.us1 In 11e1nn e11n~• 1>11•0 Godw• c 1 , 111 'r"'nl o ••, 1 , ~tr M'•~~ 1• ,1 1~ "' wish Mu 1? 11 lf DO :u•\,/r>ll t3jo
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1-· ·-t , " 1,,11•"' • 1• '-'' ln'll>llL-•S l"ITG'I •'ll'll •!oo<l'd '°"11ltt"'o:S..l lO
"~l'Ond t''' ~ i.,•~ ,...., I'd ! t 5 <A IH•hn M~•
Give s
' v ,... ,, •• 1 ••• .,,...., 1,.. ',.. ;:~~"::'.~ l"'
lnr r.u d , !6 I •t tl9!rr '•1 10" ed,. P•c '.~ Firn1
Dividend
01rectorio of B e c km 1 n
ln~trument.11 Inc dec\artd a
dl\•tde)(f or 121: ce111 s per
share payablt feb 22 lo
sharehnldl'r9 of record ftb I 1
B t ck 1n a n m~nuf:icturesj
pr cl~1on :i n 11 I y I 1c11 I fn·1
~1 ruo1,.nl~ anrl t:ler1ron1C'.' com·
ponents for !IC tntlflc medicaJ
:ind 1ndu,.trl11I Ui\t Tht' com·
P8'l.\ h11d J 521 381 share8
outslan<11n~ on Orr 31
i'o~•T!I I '" • C•c C Bdcle C.~rhrv11 I 50
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In full DIV IDENDS i re 1n11U1I r1l1 lt•G -""
"""'" oll\ttwltt lderltlflt<I !ti ,1ut il'IW'l .4!11 t•1r11 It) dte!••l'd or ••Ill M flt ttitl ::!~'?,-1 fob
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ftnl It! lhlclt •l id Il l# Y••fl fll M• lli MU'O 1 II
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d 1rrlD11llOflr (•1 r~-<1l111dtl\Cl/ fwll ,.,M,.w 11'0
wll•fl l\WM !WI! Wttrtnlt CtnlSWrt J ~llllCTION' !'1 lf!dl<•ltl fl!llowl'!I Ct"~ kYl 1
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•
•
F'tbruary 1971
Monday's Closing Prices-tomplete New · Y:ork Stock Exchange List
..... l'ht , _____________ _
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Stocl\:s Sl1ow High
In Heavy Trading
NE\V YORK fU PI) -'l"he stock market boon1
ed ahead 111 heavy tunrover 11onda) reflecting
widespread belief the economy "°'ill re cover and
(avo1 ablc reaction to President Nixon s econonuc
message
A volume or more than 20 000 000 :;hares \Vas
about 1n line \vllh Friday s
Closing prices included A~I T&T 53~ up 1Ai
Beth St 22 up ~ Chrysler 26711 DuPont 142% up
2'/.a Ford 561A Gen El 10434 up 51h Gen Motors
BI '> or! II and IBM 327V, up 11.
An1ong the day s most acttve issues were Telex
Corp Federal National P.Iortgage Texaco Sperry
Rand Transcontinental lnvestlng and Ford Motor
The automotive group traded narro\\ ly Chrysler
and General Motors reported increased automobile
production 1n January
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Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
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Z DAILY PILOT TutsdCJ, ftbfu111 1.. lt7l
All Gy11sy'sl
lte1ns Go
At At1ction
Bf.\'f.llL\' lllLLS tAP) -
T he wf' l l-pro portioned
d f<'"-~makcr's du1nmy that
(i \"psy Rose l.ce usl•d ln mak·
lns many of ~r 0'.1'11 clothes
Is up for allCtion.' an artificial
red rose nl its hlf).
Offered 100 nrr ht'r 118,000
Rolls H0yrc wi1h tea service
built into a door and l'Ul·glass
rose ,-:i~c on the dash; her
hlack·!a!'qurrcd V 1 ct or i a
fum!Ture : sind her ornately
lle<:ornted 111ctal and v.·ood
toil-ct c:cncr. monogrammed
"GRL" on the hd.
The frtnicd stripper , bur·
le~que queen, author. actre.'is
and tele\·is1on personality died
of t·anecr last April at 56.
Eric Kirkland, the only child
of her 1hree marriages. said
rcc<!ntlv ~1iss Lee loved auc·
11nns a·nd -"O he h<11t decided
or an Autlion 10 share Y.'ith
her public nearly ;ill of her
possessions.
'fh('v'll be w!d ~1arch 9·10
at thC galleries of Sothcby,
Parke-Bernet Los Angeles but
al pre.'icnt ar<! still in I he
home she bought -at auction
-10 )•ears ago.
The three~tory home is on
a sccludl'd hillside. amid lush\
Jav:ns. pines. eucalyptu s trees
and lhe 15 rose bushes i'tliss
Lee helped plant.
So!hcby's v ice president 1
Jnhn S!a1r. lea11ing a pre-auc· ll
lion tour of lhe furnishings.
said he thoui:ht ~1iss Lee's
pos~ssion" !>hnuld b r i n g
$60.000-$80.000. They include:
1\ harp, n1<1de abnl!t 1800.
~1 hich she look ;is part pay-
ment ror v.·ork in ~ roadshow
that v .. enl broke.
A 19lh·cenlurv clock wi th
a human fa ce v.·hosc eyes
blink y,·hen. the pendulum
swing-".
L:in1rs \\•ith fancy shades
made by c:yps~·
G~·p"~ 's lacc·canoplcfl hrd.-.
Paintings and sketches or
Gvpsy. inchuling a nu d e
sketch from lhc rear.
A pink--tasseled bedroom
rha1r originally used in his
boat by some 18lh-cenlury
gondoli('r.
Born Bose Louise llovick
fn Seat!le. \Vash., the older
sister of actress .June 1-lavoc,
Gypsy rose to ranie through
\·aud~\·illc . 1\1 ins k y '.'i bur.
le.'it"li~r . the Ziegfeld Fo!h es and
mn\'IPS.
Tn her .'itn~r :!('! shr pecle1I
but never rnllrel,v. "R:i.re flesh
bores men," she once said.
New Class
At College
In Printing
Small printers \\'ho \\'ant to
lmpro,·e their of"l{'r;ition bul
<"an't spend too 111uch time
av.·,.v from the shop v.•111 find
a ncv.• onte-a-week class in
printing production planning
helpful.
The class is one of tv.·o
FIC\\" additions lo the evening
curriculum in (.:r<lphic arls at
Golden \Ve st College. It begins
Frh. 1.
The COUTS!' \\'i\1 be taught
frn1n 7 p n1. to JO p.m. e<1ch
!'.1onday by Pelcr f:roet sch,
an experienced srnall t1JlCrator
and s~l-::sm1.1n of lithographic
prOOucls.
Groctsch's <"lass will include
cost estirnalin~. JOb prici ng ,
5Chedul\ng and selling.
The secon1t TIC\\' course is
graphic fundamentals. to be
taughl \\'cffnesday s from 7
p tn . to JO p 111. hy Charles
Freeman or lhe (;olden \V{'SI
staff. II \Vi\1 rover theory anrl
mod('rn day practice in the
gr;iphir urls industry. alon,g
\\'ilh lahoratory <'Xl)f'rienc~ 1n
{'flfT)'in,g basic <tr1 through lo
th e finished produt'l.
fl£'gistration inf0r1nation is
. ..;~ aviiilal>re. at 892-7il 1
Who Car .. ?
N• olh•r "'w1p1p1r 111 th•
world c•r11 <1bo11t your GOll'lll'IU•
11!ty li k• your comll'lu111ty d•il y
11•w1p1p•t do••·· lt'1 d11 DAILY
Pl LOT.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
If )'OU h•\'C flf'\\' 11rli:hbor'l
or know of 11nyon<' moving
lo our 1t1Tt1, t•l£>11.~ 1cll us
w 1h11t \\(' rNI)' (')(l•·Tld ll
frfendly \\f'lcom(" 11nd lll'lp
tht:m tn brrnm,. 1u·(1uain11'd
ln their n1·w 11:urrnund1np.
So. Coast Visitor
4M-OS7' 494-9341
Harbor Visitor
646-0174
..
May Co and Mademoiselle pttsenl
wedding
celebrations
our annual bridal fashion show with
the first, fresh bridal looks for spring .. : .... · ....... · .. ......... . .. .··. -·~ ... -~:·.···.·:· ..... ...
..... , .\ ········· .. ~; ..... ,. . ..................... . •.'·•••.'.;,.'·:~··: .. ·.···• '' .•.•,!.-,i.· I .···•i•.;. ,., : :., .. ' ···•· , ............ ~ .. , ... ,, .. ~ ,.,,, ............ _., ...... .
It's your day. A happy day. A time 10
celebrate. You'll want somet hing old.
Something new. Everything reflecting
what yo u are. Your dre ss may be al l
country innocen ce, sprinkled .with color
or a traditional wi sp of organza and
la ce •.• all inspired by the January
issue of Mademoiselle.
Do come and see the gown and trous-
eau collection~ that reflect the new in-
div iduality of today's wedd ings. Learn
about that perfect cup of coffee, how to.
make your home homey, and more that
every bride should know.
.. ... .... : ••. ,_ ·"1,: •. •' ·?·· .· ~ ... '6 -~ ·i•. : /-·· :: •. -, ... .
.•·• .: ~ ••.• _., .... \:·::-. ·.• ••• , : ..... • : : . 1(. .... ~~·: .• : , ....... ~ : ···u·· .. . • ~. ,. ····::>;,:·""..:~:·:·:.=~· ,_.·. -: ,.,-,_ .. ,.:)···. : •. •·• ... ··:.:.'···:·; • ...... •. •;.• ... ,... •"\•.' ... , •• 'I':•'' ........ ~-=.
,· .. ~. ... ~\~~··.'".•::·-t ..... : :•\'; :· •: ~.:;,• . ... . . . . . .. , ····~ ........ \.···· ~ · .. ·' . .. . . "·:· '._\\::;::· ;.::·;:~;:,:::·.~. ·:: ....
·.' .'.\::·:·;· ·. ,'·
• • 1 •
see our fashion shows at:
Oo\vnlown L.A. Monday, Jan. 25, 7:00 p.m.
Buena Park, Tuesday, Jan. 26, 7:00 p.m.
Lake-.vood, Wednesday, Jan. 27, 7:00 p.m.
Sou1h Bay, Thursday, Jan. 28, 7:00 p.m.
Wilshitc, Friday, Jan. 29, 7:00 p.m.
Laurel Plaza , Sa1urd.:1y, Jan. 30, 4:00 p.m.
\"v'hittier, Monday. Feb. 1, 7:UO p.m.
Sa n Bernardino, TtJesday, Feb. 2, 7:00 p.m.
So. Coa st Plaza, \<\lednesday, Feb. 3, 7:00 p.m.
May Co has everything for the
bride and her wedding celebration
Bridesmaids gowns in the new rountry
miss innocence. Pretty trad itional looks
too.
A Bridal Gilt Registry where you note
\1ou r choice of china, silver, crystaf.
All 18 stores will record you r favor ites.
-;._ .
" . '
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'··
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r
j
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for honeymoon plans, let our May Co
travel experts help you . And, you can
use May-Time and charge it.
Personalized invitations, announce-
ments, perfect thank-you notes too.
Pre!ly lingerie, delicate little und ies,
beautifu l sleepwear.
'~
1 Homemak ing helps ••• like applia nces,
ki1chen gadgetry, pots and pans .
China, sterling, sparkling crystal. Tra-
ditional and modern favorites fro m the
finest make rs.
·champagne, liquors, wines for your
reception . And our pastry shop at WU-
shire and Downtown L.A. can bake a
prettily tiered cake.
Information • _ . just ask! We're here
to help make you r wedding the happiest
celebration eve r.
Win a Pr)ncess Cruise to Mexico
An 11 -day honeymoon cruise aboard
the luxury liner, Princess Itali a. You 'll
sail to Acapu lco, Puerto Vallarta and
Mazatlan. You could win your wedding
gown, and there's lots more too'
•
•
•
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'1~ ..• '• ... I "
m1y co 1outh t011t pl111, "" dlego f'wy at briatol, e:osta me&a, 54~9321
1hop monday thru a1turd1y 10 1m to 9:30 pm, 1vnd1y noon 'Ill s pm
MAVCO .
BASIC BLACK'S BACK
Fashions . Reflect Dark Mood
By l\.tARIA.N CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Harva rd-educated Jer-
ry Silverman -One 9f the fashion
world·s thinking de.signers -is deeply
concerned aboul Ifie unca!m-tense mood
-. hanging over ~e United Stales like an
ominous black cloud.
\Yhat really bugs him is the frightening
lack of security Americans feel because
•·the Administration is' ilubbing the
crucial issues of racism, law and order
and slopping the war."'
Sil\'erman. Har\'ard Law, Class of '33,
is not a prophet of doom . He, like
all other" con~ned American designers.
is simply trying to equate the effect
of contemporary Washington to the fu-
ture of fashion.
OPINIONATED
And this is what he thinks :
"The credibility gap belween the
Administration and the people is huge
and constantly widening. The basic i.n·
security Americans feel is destroying
the country's crealive forces. People are
becoming squirrels.
''They hoard their money. They scurry
through life riddled with wor ries about
losing their jobs. Their home life is
swept away because every block has
suffered a robbery -and they could
be the next in line. The recession is
going full blast. There·s the possibility
<lf more war. There's polluted Bir and
" i:ierve-wracking traffic jams .. .''
Silverman µ:,:s t9e sum total of these
risks and pressures is causing fashion
lo become a discretionary expenditure.
The designer hobnobs with famous
show business personalities and has duly
noted that even they are bypassi ng
couture to invest in such basic necessities
as a foo lproof burglar alarm system.
In }iollywood people like Mrs. Louis
Jordan and Mrs. Kirk Douglas have
hired armed guards to watch over their
homes 24 hours a day -and lights
are always on,
FROSTING OUT
Americans who have no sense o(
-reliability in the (uture of America are
eliminating fashion extravagancts that
are unnecessary frostings be ca use
they're more concerned with survival.
... Even Dinah Shore isn't buying James
Galanos these days and Lauren Bacall
isn't such a Norman Norell enlhusiast,"
says Silverman. "They, like millions of
Americans, are disinterested in frip-
peries.''
Silverman and his associate, Shannon
Rogers, now are in the throes of planning
their fall-winter, 1971, collection, and
il has never been more basic or more
sober. Everything is colored neutrally,
silhouetted simply and geared to be
''background'' for scarfs, jewelry and
the wearer's personality.
TONED OOWN
"Understatement is the key to tomor-
row·~ fashion ," says Silverman.
"Classics, basics -these are what
e\egantes want. Clothes have to go many
places. do many things. The fashion
v.·orld is returning to the days of Balen-
ciaga when the essence of couture was
simplicity of cut."
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
.... u
~Th.is idea was hammered home
recently when Silverman and Rogers
went on a whirlwind tour of 25 United
States cities in one month. At the San
Francisco opera opening, a traditionally
super.chic event, most ladies turned up
in basic black.
Ellen Magnin, Cyril Magnin's daughter
(I, t.1agnin stores), has the pick of
haute couture at her moneyed fingertips
but she chose a simple black wool jersey
by Adele Simpson. Silverman is of the ,
opinion that "people don't want to be
classified as Moroccan slaves or Persian
princesses any more. They wanl clothes
w•th integrity. Fashion has become •·
psychic sign of the wearer's lnne rmosi
desires."
BASIC DESIGN
He came back aware that women
wanted clothes as basic as a Christmas
lree, clothes they could decorate with
their own stamp of individuality.
Silverman is watching dozens of his
colleagues on Seventh Avenue fall by
the wayside as a feeling of antifashion
and anlimaterialism sweeps the country.
But he believes il's the time for the
•·pros" to come forward -the designer.II
who are maslers of cut and masters
of the social revolution.
"Fashion designers must re-examine
the .way life is going in this country.
Women aren 't interested in buying rags
for a party and throwing the dress
out. Thty want understated, stable
clothes that go on and on.''
A classic shirtdress
with swingy skirt
will be featured
in designer Jerry
Silverman 's fall
collection.
High Fashion Takes Flight
l
\
Senoritas Salute Days of Dons
•
'
I
.. . A sparkling white cape of a new
synthetic leather fobric tops
1 Spanish style cutaway
'Jacquard jacket and princess
line dress, the new Air
C.lilorni• look.
Air California stewardesses will salute
the new year 1971 when they don their
new Spanish inspired. California gold
and orange uniforms.
The new uniforms consist of a princess
line dress. a dimensional Jacquard
jacket, white cape with colorful orange
lining and Spanish coachman·s hat .
An orange scarf. gold neck chain aad
white stretch gloves complete lhe fashion
picture.
In announcing the new uniforms,
Dudley F, Miller, vice president of
marketing for the airline, said, "Our
Air California stewardesses are very
fashion-conscious girls and want to wear
what is righ!. They want to look feminine
and pretty. Every effort has been made
to design a uniform that is at once
beautiful to look at. comfo rtable to wear
and dramatic enough lo creatl!! Instant
recognition for an Air C a I i f o r n i a
stewardess.''
For those who want to know more
about the new Air Cal fashion look,
the body skimming, princess line dress
is in a feminine , crepe doubleknlt. The
welt seaming detail, slit jewel neckline,
and contrasting Jacquard belt with two
Ji:old buttons representative of the Air
California logo, add lo the look of ele·
gance.
The dimensional Jacquard jacket
reflects the Spanish motif with its styliz-
ed fan design in sunlit colors of orange
and gold. The longer cutaway style with
princess seaming following the figure,
is flattering to all figures.
· The dashing white cape is made of
Laron . a lightweight luxurious new fabric
that look.! and feels like leather. The
orange stitching, gold logo buttons and
colorful orange lining create an eye-
catching look.
The crushable, tri-corncred Jacquard
hat is rCminiscent of the Spanish
coachman·s hat and the orange scarf,
gold neck chain and glistening white
strelch gloves complete the fashion pie·
lure.
Whether in the air or on the ground,
the new jel-set uniforms will be easy
care wear for the 1tewardeues, who
1erve flights out of San Franciaco, San
Jose, Oakland, Ontario, Orange County,
Palm Springs and San Diego.
The new uniforms salute the Newport
Beach-based airline 's fourth annlver1ary
of scheduled California intra-state opera-
tions which have included more than two
million passengers to date.
Designer of tne Air Cal fa shion lint
is Koret ol Calllornla .
Stunning fashions for
every se ason include
a crisp cape !above)
with gold buttons.
Al right, Air
California's colors
of oronge, gold ond
whitt create the
Jocquord design
for tho Sponi1h
jocket ond° hot.
lillJ
I
I
J f DAILY PILOT Tue$da.y, February 2. 1971
State Oflicials Wined, Dined
.._ State board of directors of the Exchange Cl ub will
1.· be honored at a Valentine dinner dance, to take t place at 6:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 5. in the Newporter
Inn . Host group is the Exchangettes of Newport Har·
Horoscope
bor. and mem bers displaying decor to be used at the g~la are (left to right) the Mmes. Coy Watts, D\vight
Gick and Donal Ziemer.
Libra: Look to Future
WEDNESDAY,
FEBRUARY 3
By SYDNEY 0!\1ARR
Astrology is a scientific art
thal treats of the syncbronicity
I bet,,.·een planetary positions
1 and mundane t\'ents. Thal is
1 my definition. !\Io s t dic-
ti o n a r I es agree. but
editorialize that astrology Is
a "pseudo science.'' It is my
·opinion t b a t diet~naries
•Jibould define, not edUoriallie. .,..
m. ARIF.8 CMarch.21-April 19):
•Visill from ttlalive1·may be
• eattaed. .D i n e ou~reak
routine. Stre s 1 ·~ity,
entertalnment. Leave details
to others. J.fake loved one hap-
py.
1'AURUS (April 20..May 20):
Be cautious in financial deal-
ings. Take stock of valuables.
Refuse to fall for schemes.
Be practical. See situation in
realistic light. Time is on your
side. Be patient.
GEfl1JNI (lo.lay 21-June 20 ):
Cycle high; circumstances
turn in your favor. Take in-
itiative. Stress appearance.
Highlight personallty. Be in·
dependent without being ar·
rogant. Emphasize orlglnality.
c.&NQER (June,Z~i"!Y 22):
Di>n'~ rpye"1, ~ ~ flow·
Keep' IOlll.e .tbtzt1,1fitfeierv~.
"
Club Sponsors Campaign
City Forces Joined
Fountains for Youth will
shov.·er benefits when Foun-
' lain Valley \\'oman's Club con-
! eludes its fifth year of support
1 for the community 's March
of Dimes campaign with a
ball Saturday. Feb. Z'l.
The city is the only one
in Orange County w h i c h
sponsors a ball v.•ith all pro-
ceeds contributed to the pro-
ject.
The club mobilized total
community support under the
direction of Mrs. Robert Moss,
general ch a.i rm an, who
coordinated her activities with
lt1rs. Dorothy Sutherland, ex-
ecutive director, March of
Dimes for Orange Cowi.ty.
On the community level, the
club has directed the place-
ment and collection of coin
boxes under the chalnnanship
of Mrs. Bob Weaver.
They p r o v i d e d voluntee r
assistan~ in area rubella
clinics and serving a s
chairman of this project was
Mrs. Wallace Short.
Supervising more than laQ
volunteers during the f\1others'
March through the entire area
\\'as Mrs. Ronald Murphy, and
club members also cooperated
in the mailing ar.d distribution
of lt1arch of Dimes pamphlets
throughout the city.
Be quiet within. Visit In-
dividual who may be tern.
porarily handicapped. Make
concession to family member.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ):
Sho\~ special friend you do
appreciate unusual efforts.
Express yourself. Romance is
on agenda. Give full play to
creative processes. Young
person deserves s p e c i a I
recc ·'.:on.
VIRGO {Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22 ):
Special civic project could de.
mand attention .Fuliill obliga-
tions. Putting things off now
means lime and money at
later date. 'tie .up loose ends.
Follow f.hrougb on buncb.
LIBRA (Sept. ~ •• 22):
Good lunar aspect Coincides
with time "'hen thoughts are
on faraway places, persons.
The immediate is postponed
for the potential. Look beyond
the superficial. Aim for poten-
tial.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21):
You can break through barrier
which has been tempting you.
Be sure you really want to
penetrate myrtcry. Means
don't ask fo r more than you
can handle.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): You receive news
which helps clarify legal situa.
lion-includes ma r r i a g e ,
partnership, co-operative er.
fort. You gain now through
display of patience. Accent
public relations.
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22.Jan.
19): Avoid being upset by
claims, demands of family
member. Accent diplomacy.
The more willing you are to,
be receptive, the helter for
all. Stress b u d g e t re·
J~fl~ Phor.
CHERYL BOURGET
March Bride
Bourgets
Tell News
March 13 rites in St. John
the Baptist Catholic Church,
Costa Mesa arc being planned
by Cheryl Bourget a n d
Edward L. Castillion .
Their betrothal has been an.
nounced by ltfr. and Atrs.
Henri J. Bourgel of San!;i
Ana. forme r Costa t-.1esa
residents.
Both ~l iss Bourget and her
fian ce, son of t-.fr. and t-.1rs.
Augustine A. Castillion of
Garden Grove, are graduates
or Mater Dci High School.
He attends Fullerton Jun ior
College.
Alumnae
All Heart
...
Masterwork Comedy of Errors
DEAR ANN I.ANDERS : Your letter
against pot la st "'eek was a joke. If
you dried-up creeps want kids to believe
you. why don 't you tell the truth? .J
have yet to see a single letter in your
column tell ing the GOOD things about
pot. Why is that? I 'll tell you why.
Because you are a bunch of fuddy-dud·
dies who are trying to scare us kids
to deatl.. Well, ii won 't work. P.1ost
of us know more about pot than our
parents rnd teachers put together.
I'm a 16-year-old girl who lives in
a medium-size Midwestern town. I have
been smoking pot at leasl once a day
for nearl y two years. It hasn't hurt
me at all. Jn fa ct, it has dcne me
a Jot of good. Not only is pot smoking
a -pleasurable experience, but it has
expanded my consciousness and opened
my eyes to the beauties of the world.
Grass has NOT dulled my mind. It
has sharpened it. My thinking is clearer
now than it eve r "'as. I am more
aware of things around me -things
I never noticed berore. Objects that
used to look sma!J now look large.
\Yhen I smoke, I see mental images
in color instead of black and white.
I used to be too shy to speak up
in a crowd. Now I am a br illiant con-
versationalist. J can talk on any subject.
People listen spellbound. At th is very
moment I am stoned yet I am JOO
percent lucid. I am expressing my inner-
_ most feelings brilliantly. \.Vhen I
finish thta letter it will be a masterpiece.
If you fail to print it, 1 will know
I
ANN LANDERS
you are a Communist. In Russia, they
present only one side of a story. The
side they want people to believe. I'll
be watching and waiting. -THE TRUTlt
WILL \VIN
DEAR T.W.W.: Here Is your letter
-but I bad to make some corrections
111 order to pul ii in the paptr. Your
"masterpiece" contained 17 misspelled
words, four non sequilurs and lbrtt un-
flnlshed seotenc~s. Thanks (or proving
once again that a person who Is 1toned
ls no judge of his lucidity, bis brilliance
or the caJibre of his performance.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Was it a
Freudian slip or did the typesetters make
a mistake? ln the Sacramento Union
the other day. the line read : "There
is no substitute for love. It's not what
comes GJF'f.\YARPED, but how we
feel about people and how we treat
them that counts.11
That error should go down in history
as a classic. The person who sends
gifts because he cannot express love
any other way is truly warped. And
the child \\'ho is deluged with gifts will
be warped, too, if he receives no better
evidence that he is loved.
lily parents and I both came lrom
wealthy families but we were not "gift·
warped." They let us make our own
way. When we were first married they
did not rush out and buy us a home
and expensive furniture. We had a small
apartment which we furnished ln second·
hand Early Junk. We had great times
in that little apartment. It was our
castle.
Now our children are married and
we are letting them make their own
way. I can't tell you how difficult it
is for us NOT to rus.h in and nlake
life easier for them. But we know the
tru e joys in life are the things we
accomplish on our own. our parents
did not deny US that joy and we shall
not deny it to our children. -YOUR
FANS IN SACRAMENTO
DEA R FANS: 1( I could give a prize
(or 1be best letter of the year yours
would surely be a candidate. Thanks
for writing.
When romantic glances turn to warm
embra~s is il love or chemistry? Send
for the booklet "Love or Sex and How
to Tell the Difference." Send 35 cents
in coin and a long, self-addressed,
stamped envelope with your request in
care of the DAILY PILOT.
•
Officer
Outlines
San Diego New Home
For Newlywed Couple
Art Works
Galleried
\Vatercolor and acrylic pain·
Services Sal!y Armstrong became the tings by Mrs. E 11 z abet h
Community service projects
undertaken by the more than
35 federated women's clubs
of Orange County will be
discussed by Mrs. Wallace
Bagley or Buena Park for
members of !he Laguna Beach
club.
Mrs. Bagley, president 0£
the Orange District California
Federation uf Women's Clubs,
v.•ill address the gtoup during
a luncheon meeting at 12:30
p.m. on Friday. Feb. 5. in
the clubhouse.
Reserva tions at $2 per
person may ~ made with
t<.1rs. Lucien f.Ieans or Mrs.
KJmm Ellis.
Ne\V members will be guests
at the luncheon. Mrs. Thrift
Hanks , membership chairman,
will arrange a special table
for the group.
Lunch: hosts include Miss
Nell Moorman, Mrs. Dorothy
Hobson and Mrs. Eric Wild.
Greeting members at the door
will be the Mmes. Edgar Ax-
tell, Joseph Simmons. Joseph
Brown and RosS t-.1eunier.
Valentine
Theme Set
bride or Richard Henderson Longridge will be on display
during an evening ceremony in the Corona de! Mar Library
conducted in St. George's during the month of February Episcopal Church, Laguna Hills. under sponsorship of the
The bride. daughter Of Mr. Newport Beach City Arts
and lt1rs. Jack Armstrong of Committee.
Irvine, \Vas escorted to the ,_,A A graduate of In dian a
altar by her father for the Univ ersity in Pennsylvania,
double ring riles conducted the artist began her studies
by the Rev. Fredrick ~lam· with artists in the Pittsburgh
mond. area and at the University
Serving as matron of honor of Pittsburgh.
v.•as t-.1rs. William Baker, ; After coming to California
while other attendants includ-she stud ied with Ejnar Hansen
cd Mrs. ROO Stier. lt1iss Shari r., ( ·t and al the Olis Ari Institute.
Hu ff man and Mrs. Pat rick 'f ,. She ha s been a resident or
1\loore. :i:: i st er of the Ne\vport Beach ror 12 year!
bri degroom. 'l ... , , and has done work at the
The benedict, so n of t-.1r. \ f .a.~ Rex Brandt summer school.
and Mrs. Carl Henderson of C•m" H1uie Pl!Ot. Featured in lhe exhibition
Garden Gro\•e, asked Tom are area scenes and paintings MRS. HENDERSON done on two recent visits to Kaa to serve as best man
while ushers were Lynn Ree ff,,, 'iO;;;;;;;;;;E;;;v;;;e;;;n;;;in;;;g;;;;;R;;;i l;;;e;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J;;;a;;;m;;;a;;;ic;;;a;;;;;an;;;d;;;t;;;h;;;e;;;C;;;a;;;ri;;;bb;;;e;;;a;;;n."i
Scott Arm strong and Chucklr
Snodgrass.
Following their reception in
the Airporter Inn and a Wed·
ding trip to San Francisco.
the newlyweds will make their
home in San Diego.
The ne•,11 Mrs. Henderson is
a graduate of Qosta Mesa High
School and Orange Coast
College. She Is attending San
Diego Slate College where she
is majoring in special educa·
lion.
Her husband, a graduate ol
ORIGINAL OIL PAINTINGS
Thou1ands of
original oil
I 1lntln9s 50% off
Oea l•r Showroom Warehouse cpen to public.
B"r. at dealer'1 prices. Custom Frames 1v1i/.
ab e. Lay-aw•y on Master Cha~ge or BankAmeri·
card.
RENT -LEASE -SALE
Hoiars -9 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday thru Saturday
ORIGINAL OILS, LTD.
Hunter Chapter of the Aux· La Quinta High School, Golden
iliary of Hoag t-.·lemorial West College and SOSC, ob-
Hospital. Presbyterian will tained his BA degree in
sponsor a benefit bridge physical education. He I!! a 1619 E. Edin~er, Santa Ana Phone 835--4608
luncheon with a Valentine member of Alpha Tau Omega DEALERS WANTED
theme Friday, Feb. 5. r_'f:'._ra~t:'.:ern~it~y •. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~==~"""'~ The 12:30 p.m. event wil l
tak e place in the hospital con·
ference center, according to
f\trs. Charles Holli s ter ,
chapter chairman.
Tickets are $2.50 or $10 per
tab!e.
Th e DAILY PILOT-
HUNTINGTON BEACH ART LEAGUE
ART EXHIBIT
FEBRUARY 4-6, from 10 •.m. h t :3D p.m.
Juniors' Choice
Artist Spotlighted
quirements.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 21)..Feb.
18): Stop brooding and put
creative processes to work.
Use imagination i n con-
st ructive maMer. Don 't reject
opportunity for 1ncaningful
changes. One ~·ou care for
Bridge and brunch are card·l~~T=o~p:s~i~n,,:L:o~c•:l~S~p~o~rl~•~~-~===================~~~~~~~~:__-ed by Alpha Phi Alumnae of
Southe rn Orange County v.·hcn
South Coast ?Iua
they host a benefit event in thc lr---------1
Balboa Bay Club Tuesday , FIRST TIME IN NEWPORT BEACH -4 DAYS ONLY!
A collection ef oils and
pastels by ltlrs. Robert J .
Norton, who paints under the
famil y name of d'A\k, will
be displayed in ltlariners
Tips Learned
About Trips
Library, Newport Beach dur· returns compliment.
Jng the month of February. PISCES (Feb. IS.~1arch 20):
Named arti.st~f-the·month Property, home possessions of
by the Junior Ebell Club ef solid. or lasting nature are
Ntwporl Beach. Jitrs. Norton h' ht· h ed R tt will include still life, clowns. Lg ig 1 · eca promises made to older individual. seascapes and landscapes in Keep your v.·oqt By doing
her elhibit. The artist atttnded Art so. you do much to insure fulure success. Center School. Los Angeles IF TO ind has studied with Leon DAY IS YOUR
Franks. Earl Daniels and BIRTHDA"i' you arc versatile, \Yilh Iii fine' sense of comedy.
Mr. and Mrs. Pete Fulmer Sergie Bongart.. lfer fat~r. You can under go periods of
Feb. 9.
The 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.Tn.
event is being staged to raise,
funds for the Orange County
Heart As sociation and
Children·s ilospital of Orange
County.
Themed Hearts Are 'Thrumn.
the brunch \viii feature table
dec0rations of the h e a r t
lollipops nov.· on sale by Alpha 1
Phi to benefit HEART.
lt1rs. Arthur Aune of
Newport Beach.c h a j rm a n1
may be contacted for reserva·
lions. an accomplishtd artist, also d \\;II p~nt a slide and lecture pressure an emerge vic-bas shaped ber talent. · y I d l'fir;Qi;c=ii:i:o;.;:c;"i';::;;;::;:'ii program entitled Potpourri of She has exhibittd in the 1or1ous. ou exce uring 11 a:: .:
Travel for members of the times of crisi!. You are due 1,000•1 o, OIL PAINTINGS Festival of Arts, Laguna f r bl h Three Arch Bay Women's now or avora e c anges . WHOLESAU WARIHOUSE
Association Kalfee Kla ich . Beach, the Newportcr Inn and travel and romance. OPEN TO THI ,UILIC
f l h Ojai Golf and Country Club. T• llftll ""' ,...... •*'' Y1111.-ll
Refreshments. or to e and her work is Jncluded in ;.":.;:'~'i.1.,.f~,'~0,.~111 °"A~ 50°/o OFF
The Fashion
Pattern Cutti~g Show
Starts Tuesday, February 2
Exclusive teach ing method ... three demonstrations
every day.,. up· to· the-minute fashions and patterns.
IN 90 MINUTES LEARN HOW TO:
• M•ke )'OUr own paittem1
• Correct faulty patterns
• Custom fit your clothes in 20 minutes.
• S•ve on e1 pensive altera!lon1
~~
meeting begiruw\g at a.m. ""tl-t~ns m" ,, .• sla'·s, Mex-,,,,,....,. •. ,;;;,, li1t1~"''' •t>~ SI Cf"h 1•1• tl. EOINOl!lt, SANTA ANA •• 1 b"····· ·rt be ed ... v .... •v ... u: ,, nm." '""''-'· ,,,, 01\IL'r' PILor. p~ .... •n·-
ln u1e c u 1~ wt serv .i~i~co~·~ca~n~ad~a~an~d~J~a~p~a~n.::,;==~'~"~'~ '"'~··~·~·~·""~'~'"~"~"='~"~'"";;;· ~·"~~~g~~'..:'.:;:~~~ ,II by Mrs. Richard o 1s 0 n Ytrt.. M.Y. 111111. 0EALE1ts w ANrEo ~-
assisted by the Mm es. Jtobert
Coulter, Roy Thoroughman
aod James Ward.
• AYOid bu)'inc e1ce11 material • Copy leading 1t)'le1
• finish evel')'thinc )'OU start
S•t. F•b. 6 -7:)0 p.m.
271 AVOCADO
COSTA MESA
l"U•LI( INVlf&O
HAMS
" . . . So Good It Will
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
OUr "'"" '"-ll'le !l"""'' (C1•Ml'lt low1 Dtlf~fn -Our ~tow clrw C\ll'lnt mel!\Ocl, , .. , Wltcorl'I~ 11\(utry ~ria ll'!lllWOO<I ,!tOll •nv <"Ml
31).llovr oven Da•lri;i hol\c~ '" '"ice ~!•ze ••• ~n.a11t '" ell "'' WOtld S6" dtlk~ &M 81)(lt!!ITl"O "" lfrit WOUldn'I know llow !6
l"1Pl'fl"f "'" 1>0lel1KI W<!'Vt bftn .,.....11>!1 !Or ~· Vf"'I S6or~I >lf<:«I
100, '"°"' !Oil t6 bO!!Om •O !~•1 t•<~ !It•~(!~~:, V"•IOrm •liCt c~n
bf-rtmo~l'd r1<01tln11r Com1111!t1Y D~~l'd ~~d ,,...,r 10 Sf"''· o•
"' 1'911' Hon<1y ••~fG 111"' IOll1r, -1\ ~dve1•v1t '" 111..,..lovmtol !"N'!I M v•r l<l•Uet
RETAIL. STORES
1700 E. Coa•t Highwa,, Corona d•I M•r--673-tOoo
1222 S. lrookhur1t, An1h1lm 635-2461
They are hert. The staff of the world·famous ln1titute of Pattern Design.
Ready to teach you how to cor rect fa ul ly patterni; dr•w. cu{ and fit new
patterns; and take only two measuremenls for perfect "Tailor Made ''
patterns and fittings.
3 DEMONSTRATIONS DAILY
PROMPTLY AT 10:00 A.M. 1:00 P.M.
DEMONSTRATION FEE $°LOO
(HUSBANDS ADMITIED FREE!)
free parking on premises/No phone ca ll • please
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OATES
ADDRESS
ALL EQUIPMENT
AVAILABLE
AT Cl.ASS
TUESDAY, WEDNESl;>AY, THURSDAY,
FRIDAY-Ftbru•ry 2, 3, 4, 5
Newpcrttr Inn
Jamboree Road (Off Coast Hig hway)
Newport Beach
@Institute of Pattern Design, N.'i'.C.
TUMBLEWEEDS
'HUSfANP HUNTE~S'HANP900K
Remember, Future.»ride, looks
are not everything. MTifr{T men want a mate who~ IN GBNTl
Perhaps YOURS i• one of them!'
~
MUTI AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
CA.N YOU MAKE TT APPEA~ ™A.T
ELMO'S &EING SROUUHT l lJTO
'YOUR OFRCE RJR OU ESTl~1 NG
gy YOU, LIEUTENANT? I WANT
.TQ TA.LIC WITH HIM!
PLAIN JANE
2-2
-~ERES ot-IE··
"l-\ELP WANTED-MAN
oO WAsH DISHES _AND
"TWO WAITRESSES.-
APPLY JOES RESTA!JRANT"
By_ Tom K. Ryon
JN A RIGK'ffRIANGLE
THE SQUARE OF TH E'
~VPOTENUSE E(XJALS lllE
5lM OF THE SQUARES OF
-rnE OlllER 11\0 SIPES .
By Al Smith
WHERE ARE-mE
WAITRESSES?
By Horold Le Doux
'r1 WCE IS (l-/E(t:1N6 Off~TM-,-T -,.-,-0~ ..... ~TI-°"~ ~-TE-ll-·TH E SECU RITY MEN DOWN·.........;:
YOU WANT, Ml. T! HE DOESN 'T !CHOW J~ Sf.\IRS TI-IA.T DR IVEi!!! Will &E COMINC.
PRIVE~ WAS INVOLVED IM EUIO'S ... R'R'EST TO SEE ME "IW A. FEW MINUTES •• TO
•• &UT ME POES KNOW TMAT ELM0'5 lEf MIM. COME UP~ •• f!!'.'.r: ;o ~
!EEN S<KEAMIN6' 10 5EE Pfl1VER: MA.li::E 511Rf; HE'S ~~
By Frank Bo9inski
PA'TENT
• ! .
l
" ' -
'
o~
~
[DAIL y CROSSWORD ••• by ' A. POWER I
/\CROSS
l Vrry
told
Ii Amphibian
10 Prais t
14 Comp osi1ion
15 Opposed
'" policy
lb Oise,1s~
17 Manufacl"C'f'
18 New York
1eam
19 Help
20 Cutt ing
tool
2Z lorl' to pieces .
7. words
24 Prevaticalor
2& Slu<!e11l
groups
21 Devote d
'" habit
31 Crafl
32: Sl!'arch for .. ea pons
33 Ari instant
35 Mrat
38 Slatione1 '~
' quant1ly
l<i ll•ll ~o Pa·! ,.,
a play
41 Bird
45 tilnd of
"' 47 Sole111n
~flair
51 Parasitic
111sr tls
SZ S!il!
5ealecl up
54 Flow~r brd
con\f'nls
58 Aracliri;d
59 ·--th~
Terrible
bl Smtll
&2 To he: fr
b3 Glacial
snow
61 British ~-·
bS View\
bb S(YOUt~d
&1 Meth od
to a1l~i11
an end
DOWN
l D1amo11ds,
l'lC.
Z Es~1mo
stt!lemenl
3 Pa11!'~
r;ompa111on
• Purs uit
ot uohlr
l)Oal
5 Cr;ine
ti I( ind o!
YesterdJy's Puzzle Solved:
I l l { N
' L 0 Y
'1 S uppla11I
10 Mosl recenl
11 Chem\tal
compou11tls
12 £xce~s1vc
13 Abysses
21 Calendar
abb1cv1aliot1
23 Trim
25 Backward.
Comb. !o ron
27 Conl1ncn1 ·
Conib . fo1m
23 Ske\Cllrri
29 l11st111<t1cnl
parl
31 Sk,.tcli
)4 Stanl'lard or
2/Z/71
42 Stab
43 Makc
a f!jn..a !
speCtl!
44 Native
abodes
40 Undressed
hide
47 Is very
ang1y
~8 8 11119
logetlitr
49 Our : Fr .
50 Bar
lo apply
prtss1ue
~3 11.r. Garro,.,.,,,
55 V, Loot ~'
thel"t
'""
PERKINS
MISS PEACH
ARTHUR', t'M AFRAID YOUR
GRADE~ ARE VERY L.OW .'
··~·----..
STEVE ROPER
eov!
I~ HE
OUM6!
0
Ll'L AB tJER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
OllLV ON/! 711/,\JG M-IDOEl'l'A/ "'wer Hl!N· .. ).No 111Ar•s .A •VET ROO$T/!/fl.,__1 --, .r HATS -
/f!-.AllJ r NOT A 5 f"""--:·, _ _( MUC# AS Mt=!
Tutsday, February 2. 1971
_Ff} .. ..
es:::!r=====:::--@-:-:;---r t>ot.L..Af.l"S •o
DoUGHNUTS? NO BET, '
EMM,A .. l DoN'T Lli<E' Jj I 'LL Ber You Doi.LARS -ro DoUGHNUTS YoUR
PARTNER TEDDY
WILL SKIN YOU CXiT
OF YOUF' HALF Of
THE TAVERN·
ANIMAL CRACKERS
'THE ODDS... !t J,
s! •
By John Miles HU 'TIANGf WOllD
••
ARTHUR ,
00 you WANT
TO ee
5TLlPID
AU.. YOUR' L.IF~?
OF
COUR5E.
By Mell
THl5 WAY
IT WON'T
SNEAK UP
ONME
WHEN I
GR.OW UP. .•
MR.MUM
DAILY PILOT f$
By Al Capp
By Charies Barsotti
By Gus Arriola ---WHAT o'VA .SPOSE "'THE. 'I 112.f C).12~1/.J' O/J
,J.t50UTf
By Ferd Johnson
WH.AT
ODDS
?
DENNIS THE MENACE
-42. Composer
Ferde -··-
43 Formal
entrance lo
society
"' 7 U1111sual
l"lCf'ill'J"tCt
35 lt1ntranl
30 /\StrllHJ'!O\
17 1.l!'a sur e
Sb US Govt.
tmployees: ...... .,.-:;;;:;a;;;;;'lNcwm<TI AlllJ A 17'N/5H:MIE#T~
' I
•
44 E~cessive ly
' 1 ' •
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THERE'S MORE,
PEANUTS
DIWPIN QF TEN.Pio!ISS: llfVE~E/
'!OU DO ,.10filE FOR THIS HOUSE
By Charles M. Schulz ~-------'-
.,
:1
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I
Ii, -1~• I
r' . .
' i ..... "·· \~ ' 'UH ·UH! ~E llXlKS 616.AN'StOW,&lTT WHEN He GETS
MA1' HE CAN RUN Lli<E /I 0£&12 .' •
i
JI DAILY PILOT
Trojans Emotionally
Lai Al\'GEL.ES (AP) -Soulhern
Clllfetrnla hasketball coach Bob Boyd
1nd rival coach John Woodtn of UCL.A
are tryirui: to play down the importance
of Saturday's P11iciflc-8 game between
lhelr schools. even though it's the biggest
game of the current collegiate season.
Both coaches uStd almost identical
v.·ords. saying, "It's only the fifth game
in a 14-game conference seuon. '' Borh
teams are W in the Pac-8.
I •
I
I
But the intensity of Saturday night's
•
, I l I
I • i
'
.. .c _ _.._
game can't be den ied. M both coaches
confronted Southern California basketball
v.Titers Monday, each was hesitant -
about talking strategy, who would guard
whom. or v.•hether their players would
be •·up" for the gamt betv.·ttn the
nalion's second and third ranked teams.
But it's a big game : Channel 11 and
three radio stations will broadcast it.
It's already a 15,000 sellout al the Los
Angeles Sporls Arena.
.. I could have sold betv.·een S0,000 and
-
J00,000 tickets for this one,'' s•ld use
Athletic Director Jess Hill.
E\•en Woode n. the placid . bespectacled
former English teacher, admitted the
pre~sure is getting to hlm :
"Il would be very nice this week lf tick-
et~ were available .so I could buy one and
just sit up in the stands. Then I think J' d
tit: a lillle more comfortable than I
normally am down there on the bench.
That's the worst seat in the place ."
Bo}·d and Wooden ducked newsmen 's
queslions deftly .
I
NEW TENN IS BLOOD -Corona del Mar's Jl,od
.: Laver (left) the top tennis pro in the world, p resents
1• Dick Miller of Newport Beach v.•ith the annual ''Rod
111 Laver Youth Tennis Achievement Award" at New-
..... port Beach Tennis Club Sunday. Laver will be in
.iction Wednesday night at the Forum 'vith a match
against Roger Taylor of England for $10,000. Lai,.er
played exhibition v..·ith NB1'C pro Jimmy Shepard,
A-filler and ~teve f.1 allott before a full house Sunday.
,, .,
·Rocket of Rackets
' Laver's Winning It All,
Yet Ma y Even Do Better
Rodnev. the Corona <le! \lar rocket ,
La\·er hits already "·nn Si0.()00 for 11·1n-
ning seven conseruti1·e matches 1n the
f ZI0.000 Tennis Classic seric".
He ·s admitted ly off to the best start
in his flossy carttr
And in doing so he's defea1rd thf'
v.·orld"s finest professional pl<1yers -
guys like Arthur Ashe 11111ce 1. J11hn
i"e"·combe. Tony Roche. Roy Emerson.
e!c.
He admits to this column that he·s
been p\11y1ng well . and that sort or
L11ver modesty can be taken lo mean
------WH ITE
WA SH ---
GLl.Hlf W"ITI
. "s sharper than a pygmy's sp'e;ir.
Yet Laver fee ls he m;iy play
Her before the ~ear is o\'er.
Play heller ?
That's what the man sa~·s.
"I ha.d a grea\ .lanu11r~ -i1's aln11l~!
('redible. And 11 takes mo~! of 1he
:-essure orr lo ha1·e a start hke !hi~ ...
. .z explains.
"\\'ho kno'>''!I. ma ybr J"ll r1•en play
better."
in the classic Wednesday night \\'hen
he 1a<'k!e.'I England"s Roger Taylor at
the Forum in ln~lewood. A bus from
\'e'>'·port Beach Tennis Club, which Rod
represents ai'tra\"clin~ pro, will be on
hand for !ht 7:30 match.
Taylor upended l..:i1·rr la st summer
at !he prestigious \\'1mb!edon C'lassic but
!he Rocket put TRylo r in his pocket
1n !wo subsequent battles.
And it would seen1 \ikelv he'll take
care of Taylor \\'Ith typical Laver
deraslation Wednesday night.
LookiRg back on the loss to Taylor
at \\'imbledon. Lal'er sav.'I: •·11 "'as a
combination or him ph1).ing well and
1he crowd being nn his side. I felt
flat that day -couldn't build my game
to n1erin anythio~. [ couldn't get any
con('rntrated effort.
'·Rngcr dof.>s thini;:s pretty v..·ell . Hr
co1 rrs lhe courL scr\·rs 111el! and has
a ,l!ood all-round ,l!ame. If you're playing
bac\ly you get in !roublr ."'
The Rnckrt sa~·s his best tenni~ n£
lair w;is probabl y pla yed in a match
1\·1th (lkker. Do1.1"n two i;ets. Rod came
ba<'k f()r the victory. bre11king Okker"s
ser\1ice t"·ict in eti rh of !he lasl three
se\11.
1\nd he '>'"AS prr!\.1' smashin11 in 1he
olhrr si-: triumphs or the rich Sl'rits.
He took Emerson 11nd Ashe in .'l\ra11!'.hl
sc1s. then later dropptd a set to Ashe
in a rematch.
Ill' toppled Ne"combe . Roche aod Ok-
ker in five sets.
Lal'er says he i.'ln't 01·er the ~ii! by
any mean s.
UCI Cagers
Seek Revenge,
Host Matadors
Irs back to hon1e cooking for the
L'C Irvine ba~ketball team tonight 1,1•hen
lhe San Fernando \'alley State College
Matadors 1•isit Crawford Hall '>''ith t:poff
at 8 o'clock .
In an earlier n1e~ling bclv.·een the
two teams in Northridge, lhe Ma lad ors
<'oppcd a 9J-7S decision. one or the '>''idcst
margins of defeat th is season for the
Anteaters.
San F'ernando ha.'1 an exceptior.al st111arl
with outstanding guard Emerson Carr
the leading scorer wit h a 20.2 a1·era1-:r
per game . Bob Burge. a 6~ forward
is next \1·ith fl 14.9 at·cr;ige and bo1h
are ('01nplemenled by Ed Shaw, a recent
addilion lo the team.
S11n f crnanrlo is currently in a tie
for the CCAA coorerence basketball !rad
11·i1h a 3-1 record after rlefeating Ca!
Stale (F'ullertonl Salurda.v night.
In the first n1eeting of the. two squad~.
San Fernando 11·on u·ith suptrior re-
bounding . I! 11·as also 1he lowest point
scoring game of the season for t.;Cf"s
Phil Rh.voe '>''ho is a1·erag ing J~.~ per
~ame. He hit only fil"e points in the
ftr.'11 SF\"SC contc:-;t.
lJCI coach Tim T i ft says h' \\' i l l
go y,·ith 1he san1c. lineup I.hat opened
in New Orleans and F'lorida on the
rf'rl'nt road !rip.
This '>''OUld n1enn that Rhvnc and BiU
ti.toore ( 16.21 '>''ill start at ihe for'>''arcls
with Richard Clark at center.
"Clark has played two ou\StRnding
gan1es for us." Tifl says.
"I-le not onh• scored well bu! ht was
our leading rebounder In both genies
In the South. He is coming along \'try
\\"tll and gil'es us 11 gtronr front ·
Ready
FlnaUy, Woodt.n confided. "USC his
had a tendency to foul on the front
hne and that's where we're. the. strongest.
•·However, l'm not approaching this
game as I would if It were the ottly
one against USC. We ha\•e lo pl1:1y them
again fl,farch 13 in our last game and
I feel that game. may be more important
lhan lhis one."
Boyd said his le.am was "very l'm<r
tionally ready to play" bul he seemed
unroncerned about the ranking of his
to Play--Boyd
team I ! No. t. "Jf we win 1nd &eme.
other It.ams lost, the r.anklnt I.a In-
evitable."
Wooden said he didn't know whirh
of his starting guards he'd use to team
with Henry Bibby, Terry Schofield or
Kenny Booker.
"They've both played well: I guess
I'll have to wait unlil after our practices
this V..'eek.''
Wooden said he was encouraged b.v
the shoohng last Saturday of for...,•ard
Curtis Rowe in a 74-61 victory over
VC-Santa .Barbara. Rowe hll 11 of 17
and had 28 pointii.
Both coaches finally agreed, though,
lhe winner of this one game dotsn't
automatically "'II\ the tough Pac-8 ~"'"
ferencc.
"We 're both going into Oregon country
next week. Perhaps the '>''inner of our
game will get a lift and the loser will
be down a illlle," Wooden said, "but
If either team has what it takes, a
lo!! shouldn't have that much elfect.':
Pro Draft Ignores Dummit
-~Will He Try With Rams?
LOS ANGELES r APl -Dennis Du11 -
n1it, UCLA's all-time leading paSSCtr, ia
sill! recovering from the shock o! nnt
be\ng dra!ted by a pro football team.
but he is aware of free agents '>''ho
have made it -like JohnDy Unitas
aod Joe Kapp.
.. l was stunned that no one drafted
me." said the 6--0 175-pound passer. "but
I guess it's the same old story. People
l1ave. always thought J 1vas too small.
Now I've got to prove tbty're wrong
again."
Dummil's coach at UCLA. Tommy
Proth ro, is now head man of the Leis
·\ngeles Rams. Will Dennis go to the
~am camp neict season?
"I'm not sure how to look at the
·~a m situalion. One way is that their
coa('hes were my coaches al UCLA and
I know I'd gel a fair look. But ·if
I do go and try out, it wouldn't be
fair to Prothro. He might feel lhat
if he keeps me it might be taken as
if it '>'"ere only because I played for
him in college. J \\'Ouldn·t "'ant to put
him in that situation."
A good student in political science,
Dummit says he has no vocational plans.
"I 1,1·as always a quarterback. I know
' can stand up to the rigors of pro
f")(Jtball. That's the life I want."
fn t\\'O seasons at UCLA. afl{'r two
al Long Bea('h City College. Oummil
surpa ssed Bob \Vaterficld and others
by completing 289 passes in 552 atlempt:;
for 4.3)6 yards and 29 touchdll'>''ns.
Last season, he passed for 2J93 yards.
connected on 5t percent of his passes
and even ripped apart the Texas defense
for 340 yards through the air.
Te.tas had been rated No. 1 at the
lime and the Bruins. 1,1·ho led unlil there
"·ere 12 seconds left. finall y Jost I.he
game 21>-17.
"I know I can thro'>'' lhe ball." sairl
Dunirntt, who recently turnC'd do1vn a
Rhodes scholarship in anticipation of
playing pro ball.
'"\Vhen I graduated high
said I was too small and
out or junior college they
too small.
school they
1vhen I got
said l '>''as
"But I have never been hurt in my
life and I've taken some good shots.
t\o leg injuries like mos! quarterbacks.
no injuries of any kind. Oh , onct a
USC lineman hit me on the head and
I \1·ent out of the game for one play
to catch mv breath but I \1ent back
in and I had ·m.v best day passing.
"Football has been my entire life for
the last se1·en years I've looked for11·ard
to doing nothing <'lse but playing pro
footb;:il\. Now. I'm not so sure of 11·hat
10 do. I GUtss I could go the free
agrol route but free agents aren·! usually
given too ~ood a look.
''And }'el. each da y I think more
anc\ more about iL I'm hoping some
pro tea1n 11·ill contn<'t me but if that
doesn"t happen. l ~uess ru sil d 0 w n
1\'1th tean1 ro~ters and see '>''hich !cam
needs a good quarterback. And then
maybe try oul as a Free agent. Others
! _ rnad~ it that w;:iy .....
IXspite a rash of in1uric<> th is past
sea~on to almost e1·cry Bruin pass
rc <'c11er. J)urnmit adjus1ccl !n new pcorle
1,1·erk after week and pas.'lcd th. Rru1ns
!o 1riumphs. Almo."t e\'<'r~· tune. L'CL,\
ralliPd from behind wi!h an aerial
ass.aull.
L:CLA !raile d Oregon Stair, Pittsbuq;h
Co llege Ca ge P oll
TNl'I w·I P'h. T••m w I Pt1.
1 1.'••Q'"flll! l~·O AIO II lr1>nr'!r• ll J llJ ' use II l•-0 ~1· ll No''' o .. .,. IQ ~ Ill
J U(l'" Ill l! I 1:•1 !J U10~ S!~lr l~l !OJ
• P•nn\vl•~"'" 1~ 0 •}I 1' D1m11t1"r 1J l 11
j 1( • ., •• , 14 r nJ IS llh"~" • l IS
~ J~1 ~1onvollt I• l l)l 1~ N (lfahn• IJ l 68
7 S C•,01.n1 11 J 110 "·VII!•""•" I)• }6
I l(e1>•u<-v ll-l 1" 11 Hll\i1•r1 1 ~1 JI
t W ICtntuc•v l•·J ljJ 1t Mu"•Y S!1!f h -l 11 10, L•Stll1 1• 1 1Jl 10 M«h•gon 10-• )•
Olht • 1rt m1 rrf~••1r1<1 •Qlrt, 1i11td In t lfll'ol ·
Mll<•I O•dr• O•~>r, FO•l~t,,,, Gtofgo~ te.:~.
Mow1ll, l""l•~f LC!flo &~•th S••lt . l.,.,,..,,lt .
Mo1m1 L0~'91, Nr~ttJ~t. H•"' Nor.,co, Olo•O Un•·
•tnl•v. O•l90'\. Pu•Ovt. SI, 8on•v.,,h1•t , U11~.
Vlrtlfli1,
'
and Northwestern al hatlllme in its fir st
three games but '>''on all three. Against
North1vesternt Dummifs fourth-down , 53-
yard scorind ·pass v.·ith 2·39 le£l won
the gamr.
Then came Dummit's 111-:or-211
performance in losing to Texas and the
next \veek UCLA Jost 41 -40 lo Oregon 's
Dut.:ks, 1vho !Cored 20 points in the
last 41~ r»nu!es.
The !~?owing week, Duminit comp!e!ed
2j of SI passes and scored lhe winnina
touchdo'>'·n on the ground with lour
Sports i11 Brief
seconds left as lhe Bruins dumped
Californ ia 24-2\.
Dummit was even in pas!ing w.ith
Stanford's Heisman Trophy 1,1·1nnlng
quarterback Jim Plunkett. Dennis was
!/klf-35 for 244 yards and Plunkett !8-for-
37 for 262. The Indians won 9-7 on three
lit' · i;oals,
A stunning 4;).-20 rout of Southern Cal
capped UCLA 's season and. even though
the Bruins were only 6-S, Dummit 11aid,
"I thought I proven myself. I thou1ht
after the season was over I had !hown
I could do the job .''
Se1·ies Ace Cop s A ward;
Lion s Moving to Pontiac
ROCHESTER . N. Y. -"This tops it
all off,'' said Brook.11 Robinson . "It'•
got to be the most gratifying moment
of my career ."
The Baltimore Orioles· mat<.<hless third
baseman, honored throughout the winier
for his ball ing and fielding heroics in
!he 1970 \lforld Series, received the
trown ing ackno\\•!edgemcnt fl,1onday night
-the 2lsL annual Hickok Profe ssio nal
Alhle!e of the )'ear A1,1•ard.
"I ne1·er !hought J'd 1vin it,'' said
!he 33-year-o!d Golden Glover. '"ft's all
kind of unreal. I've been up to the
Hic kok dinner 1n Rochester as a c<rhost
three or four tin1es and always dreamed
of '>''inning.
Robino;oo, "ho batted .423 in the Series
and deslro\'ed the Cincinnati Reds 11•!th
half a dozf.n spectacular fielding plays,
beat out George Blanda. Oakland's 43-
year-Old football marvel. and Bobby Orr;
23-year-old hockey superstar of the
Dosi.On Bruins, by a V!'ide margin in
the ballot of sportswriters and
sportscasters. •. ,., •
DETROIT -\\l i\ham Clay Ford. O'>''ner
or the Oetroi t Lions of the National
Football League. has authorized the city
of Pf)ntiac to begin construction of a
sladiurn facil1ty to be leased by the
club.
The a!J\hori ·1.ation came in a letter lo
the chairman of the city of Pontiac
Sladium Building Authority. Pontiac is
!oca!fd 20 1n1les north or Detroit.
The lefter \"irtual!y eliminated any
!"'Ssib11i1y or the Lions moving to a
stadiu m being planned for th~ Detroit
riverfront. •
OAKL . .\:\10 -\Varrrn y; e 11 s. wide
re ceivt r of the Oakland Raiders. has
a date in Cf)Urt l\·londav because of
iwo drunk dri1·1ng arre-slS over the
11·cekend.
The first came L'tirly Stinday morning
wl'ien High" ay Patrolman ~! a u rice
1-.lacCnll said \\'ells. 28. '>''as driving er-
ratically and \oO last on the Bay Bridge.
He \\'as out on ba1I '>''hen he 11·as
.~topped <'arl~· 1-.·londay ntorn ing on
1'1at·Arthur Frer1vay here by hi~hway
patrolman Rober! Kre hbiel who s:i1d he
<'ha11ecl Wells for six miles at speeds
up !<190 mph . •
Ol\J.AH0~1A CITY -r-.1r~. Billie Jean
King held a pa1r of championships and
top niont~ toda~· after a pair of come
from behind \'ictorics Monday night in
!he <'11max of the Vir1iinia Slims Invita-
tional tennis tournamcnl here.
l\1rs. King capt ured the singles title
and the $2,:.00 first prize '>''Llh a I~.
7-6, 6-4 l'ictory 01.·er Rosemary Casals.
Then ~he teamed up with l\l iss Casals
•
BROOKS ROBINSON
to win the doubles match, downing flo1ary
Ann Curtis and Valene Ziegenfuss, 6-7.
6-0. 7-5. •
MELBOURNE, Australia -Evonne
Goolagong. Australia's new 19-year-old
tenni s sensation, ended Margaret Smith
Court's se1·cn-year reign l\lnnday when
she upset the 11·orld "s top \\'Oman player
in lhe f i n a l of the Victorian cham-
pionships. 7-6, 7-6.
Both sets were decided by the tie
break .
Spectators were stunned.
Miss Goo!agong fir.~t \1·on a rain-in·
terruplcd semifinal match Ol'e r Winnie
Shaw of Britain and lhcn outpl ayed the
veteran l\1r~. Court 1,1·1th a display of
poised. steady tennis.
Se.ver::il t1n1cs Mrs. <..:our\. a three-t ime
\\'imbledon champion and '>''1nncr of ten-
nis' Grand Slam la~1 year. '>''as caugh l
flat -Fooled by l\liss Goolagong's gharp
placements .
Mrs. Court showed aono,va nce .
•
CLEVELA/\'D -\\"lien a team ha~
won just 10 games 1n its first Nalional
Basketball Associ11t1on !'Cason. you hardly
expccl the team 's mosl experienced
ballplayer and lead ing rebounder to be
traded for a raw. untc~ted rookie.
Yi;t. 1ha\'11 what the Cleve 1 and
Cal'ahers drd l\·fonday "'hen they traded
sevrn-year \·eleran l\lcCov l\JcU!more
lo lht Mi\\\•auker Bucks lor-li-foot-9 Gary
F'reeman . the Bucks" ~econd pick in
the upcoming college plaler draft and
an undisclosed amou nt of cash.
Laver'!i success ma y in part he due
IQ his control of pa<'e late :.i~t year
when he pulled out nf a Sto<'kholm
tourney lo get two we('ks rJ( re~t bf'f<1rf'
zipping off to Tokyo for Occcmher com-
pelllion.
"That kept me 11harp," he !la1·~
'·One thing that mRy ha\·e hurt mf'
last sumrne.r wa!I plRyin~ 100 mu('h 1t'nn1~
And lhe record sure!y seems to support
that
* * * l:CLA i~ 1;ellln~ 'eal'nn track •nd lifld
tl<'lcf'l1 "'Uh SI I huyinit fa115 I gHmpMi
n( Url't-rate lrl<'k and 11\•lna: lhe Joni
1'1'1tlls In tli"ost llnel' at lht •tadlum.
Lost Sight of Lin1itations·-Sea"Ver
rrlnr t.o the U.S. Opt-n Rt Forest Hills.
won si:a: of eisht tournam<'n lS btfore
Forut Hills." But he fell in the U.S.
()p<n.
"Playing the right tennis al the righ1
time ls what counts," he say~.
Laver was l1trgely referring to th,.
belle.f 1170 WR!I a slump st:ason for
ttie Corona de! flolar redhead.
Bot he is swift to rebuke $uch idea.
"Everyone remembers t't'·o malchts l
10lt (\\'lmbledon 11nd Fore~t Hill~ 1. Bui
yoa can't hive evcrythina."
Laver must ha\•e donr something r1,:iht
In 170. Jlt: w-0n $201.000 -more Uu1n
aJ'l.Y other m11n In 1ennis ht.story.
He mey run his 1171 e11rn1ng, tn sso.oon
Included nn lhf bon1e aa:enda arr
Kansa8 . Oregon. USC. Stanford. Arii:on1
Slate. Tf'n'l'lf'IU!et. S"n 'lllef4 Slale. And,
a doublt header Is in the b1trg11ln hetausr
SC duels Cal ti UCLA lht 51mt day
lht ho111 1111clcle S111n lord.
Rhode l~l<'l.Pd C,ol\t~f'. ooct h11mili11ltd
on the basketball c:ourts by UC trvint.
<':1n1e b11 ck to CalifnrniR Tuesd11y. Thi.5
time It :\ported• t4-0 record .
Rut Rhode Island again look ii on
\ht chirf from 11 Southland te1m fa lling:
~r \fhf!tirr. 94.8(!
GREENYt'ICH . Conn. IAP) -New
\"nrk ~lets p1!che.r Tom Seavtr says
he can pinpoint the momenl 1n the
IP7ll pennant raCt! that the roof st11rted
ra1·lng in
11 taught him 11 lesson he 11 ill ne1·er
forget .
"I made a mistake from v.·hich I
never bounced bt1c:k." he said, "I lritd
10 do too much . I IDlll sigh! of my
11mltRlions."
Sc.11•er said .:t personal error in judR·
nient -tn pitch with 1nsufficlrnt rtJt
-1r1ggerrd hi~ cnl111p~f' at lhr tnd
or last sea~on :ind probably rloomcd
1hf' f<.1tls' dr1\·t for 1 se<'ond 'tra1Ji:hl
pennant
Now preparing lo le11re in mid-
F'e.bru1ry for spring training 1n f"lorida.
Seaver ulktd at hii-Greenwich home
about !he lesson he learned in 1970.
Sc11 l'er gors to Nr11· l'ork lod.iy and
his 1971 conlract signing 1s expected
to bf' announced from Shf'a Stadium .
He. lg expeclf'd lo get 185 .000.
•·rou should11 'I f'icpec! too much from
yours('Jf You should remember at all
11mrs tha! .1flu'rf' ll human be ing 11·11h
C'f'rt11ln hm1t.:1t1on.~.
"lf ~·ou·re J{oins 1n bf f'lfrrt11c . you
1'111n·1 ru:-;h thinii;~. You can·1 bf' J,!recd~·
Vou can't go oul .!Ind bf!at e\f!r ybod.;.
in !he l\'Orld pitch ing every other da y,
"'\\'h('n things are going grea1, 1,1·hen
you·r, "'inning big. JUSt remrmber that
y(lu hR\·r to res! and take things one
step al a time ju51 like everyb-Ody elst .
Thf' rules don '! chani;::e for you."
Seaver said !ht big n1islakt came
1n rnid·August last year when. because
nf tht p:a1nt schf'dule, ~letg m1tnager
li1l Hodges told SrAvtr J1e could pitch
t11·n lime~ In a ro" 11·\th three davs
r('ct or w11h fl1e d a~~ rest -
~f'd1rr. \1hn norinally p1tthe~ \\ith four
tla~ !> rr~t. ">ts humn1ing at•1n11: \\•ith
a 17-7 recnrrl. ~cem1nglv he1tdtd fnr
h1i; be!I season. 50 hf' d1sreg11:rdrd pit-
chl ng coa('h Rub e Walker 's advice that
ht takt !he extra rest
"I felt strong. and everylhin1 v.·:is
going great ,'' !aid Sea\·er. ''but I gol
shelled by Houston and Cincinnati. and
I nevrr again pitched as l did at the
brg1nn1ng of the year."
Sea1·er·s losses s\Rrled a lailspin by
the star J ight-hander and the entire
team.
Srl'lvrr rlronped five of hrs lR~t t.:ix
decision~ to finish 18 12, and !ht l\let~.
in sec nd rl;u>t just 212 i;tamt:s behinrl
f"'it tsburgh on Aua. 19. tn11l a \fl 23 record
in the: e!!'l •ng six 11Ptks to l1n1sh io
llurd plitce. 1iic ~11mes behind tht
d111~ion-"' inning Ptrfl!f't.:
Start
Your
E11gines!
by Deke Hou/gale
'~'"'''"'"'n::nn"""""~"""....,...,,._.,.,,"'"' ..
In lhe driver's seal of a drag racing nlachine "you're just a
in.onkey ~oing so~ething you have adapted to." according to
Bill Jenkins, \\'ho 1.s resarded us anything but a monkey by his
peers.
Jenkins. ~ thoughtful 40-year-old. is the defending champion
pro st~k driver of !he NHRA \Vinternationals. which y,•ill be
h,eld thzs weeken.d at Pomona. He is going into the race he con·
s1d~rs the most. important of the year without any iUusions that
he is a•hero driver. Here is Jenkins' view of his own rol!':
"Driv.ing iiivcs me some satisfaction. but if someone else
could do it as well and I could sit back and \Vatch J y,·ouJdn 't be
disappointed. '
··suddenly. after alt these years. I'm a driver. rve got a
1i;ood name. \.\'h1ch. has a psychological value \rilh the compcti-
l1on. Actually l'm JUst an average driver. ri.1y car's performance
makes up for any driving problems I might have or imagine
lhat I ha1•c.
''Do n't get me Y."rong. l'\'e won plenty of races where I oul-
drove the other i:uy."
. Jenkins clain1s th at drag racing technique is a learned re-
action. somettung that can be tnught the same wa.v that Pavlov's
\1•ere schooled to ring !heir O\\'n dinner bells. The conditioned
reflex proble m. he said. 1s more serious in the lower stock
classes, 1\·hcre the multi-Hght Christmas tree starting device
is used. ,
. With this device. a series of yellow li ghts flash on , starting
al the top of the tree and marching down towa rd the green go
light.
Rocir1g-C'o11ditif.tt1ed Reoctior1
"Under the old lree, racing ~·as a condit ioned re:u~tlon ,"
Jenkins said. "The lights came on, bloom. bloom, bloo m. Every·
lhing you did was automatic. So automatic that if anything v;ent
wrong you bad lo go back and sta rt ove r.·•
O.llLY PILOT P11911 '' lllc~1rd Kffllltr
Otte Will Wita It
•
HB Holds
6th Place
In Ratings
llunllngton Beacn moved In·
to undisputed leadership or the
Sunset League but failed to
gain in the CIF AAAA basket-
ball poll conducted this week.
Coach Elmer Combs' crew
defeated Newport Harbor to
reign supreme over the sunset
circuit but didn 't galn ground
on the five squads in front
of it in the top 10 rankings.
fl.later Dei. the only other
Orange Coast area tean1 in
the top 20 last week, dropped
rrom it& perch and isn"t listed
in the ratings.
Some outstanding games are
on tap in most circuits this
\\'eek a I though Huntington
should have little trouble
maintaining an undefeated
record in Sunset play against
Loa ra ( 1-6) and Westminster
l3-4) in the league.
Verbum Dci t3--0) in lhc
Santa Fe League, tangles with
St. John Bosco. also 3-0 in
league actlon. on the la tter's
hon1e court today .
Foothill leader Crescenta
\.'alley plays ~1uir !4-2) to.
day and Glendale 12-4) Satur-
day cit Glendale College.
f\1onrovia, kingpin in the
Pacific League, will face Mark
Keppe l High Friday in a battle
for the top spot in that circuit.
DAILY PILOT J7
Talent Aplenty
Rustler Spikers
Seek Nifty, Year
Consider the situatlon er
Golden West College 's track ,
and lield coac h Tom Noon:
He has some talented let·
termen returning for the 1971
campaign plus an innux ef
very fine freshmen.
Such prospects would make
most coaches jump for joy.
And admittedly Noon fee ls
that he Y.'lll have a strong
te11m.
"But." says the Rustler
coach. "we are in the samf!
conference with LACC which
sho uld y,·in the state cham·
p io ns hi p going away.
Othervt'ise it should bf! a
balanced conference.
"Despile the stren11:th of th!'
conference y,•e really think
y,·e·11 bf! tough," adds Noon.
Except for one event-the
shot put-Golden West should
show st r e ngth in all
categories.
The lone weightman at
Golden West is Dennis Engle,
an Arm y veteran who he s
already tos~ed the discus 147
feet in pract ice this season.
Engle will concentrate on
lhe discus and also will com·
pete in the shot put. "If Den·
nis doesn't put, we will be
shut out in that event,'' says
Noon.
Ltttermen Met Hobbs and
Dave Ntlson, aloni with
freshman Steve Las1ecatd
(Westminster) are the top
half· milers.
The Rustlers also wlll be
vastly Improved In the sprints
with the addition of Esta""
cia's Dave Johnson who ran
second in the CJF 220 lut
year. Johnaon has beats of
9.8 in the 100 and 21.1 ii
the furlong.
ln the quarter-mile, let-
terman Dennls Maas and
freshmen Walt Anker man
!Westminster) and Ron
Dickson (f\later Dei) are three
very fine performers.
!\1aas. the team captain.
placed third in last year's con-
ferenc~ meet .
Craig Dunlap (Westminster)
is the top Golden West hurdler
with Ankerman and Bryan
Stroua h (Huntington Beach)
running the intermediates.
Noon figurts he will alto
he very stron g in the polr
vault with letterman Benny
Av alos.
Freshmen Ron Bwh (Long
Beach Poly) and Dennis
Zervas (Fountain Valley) 1 re-
the top long and triple
jumpers.
~Iri;. Leonard Hines (left) of Lemon Heights and ~lrs. freeman Ki nsey of East
Jenkin s' pro stock class. a cah~gory or racing he campalgned Bluff eye the Santa Ana Country Club President's Cup trophy \vhlc h \\'ill go long and bard lo gel eslabll shed. does not use the marehlng yel·
Citrus Bel t leader Ramona
faces Chaffey and Riverside
Poly. IY.'O of its ncart!I com·
petitors. today and Friday.
Despite the fact that the
Rustlers are sli m in the
y,·eight events. they are strong
everywhere else. Oilers Still low light startin.it system. but merely a warning yellow llght to __ 10_1_h_e_,_v_in_n_e_r_o_f_t_o_d_a~y-'s_f1_·n_a_ls_. ____ · ----------------\\'esl Covina ( 19-0) 1 ea d s
the AAA, Ontario (20-1) is
the AA leader and Brethren
j 19-1 l the A pacesetter.
indicate both cars are in position to start the race and a gree n
to tell !hem \\.'bt n lo go.
'·!'liowadays in heads up racing." be said. "pure reaction time
<.'O mes inlo it. It lakes c'ncentralion. Concentration In the start
can gain you the ad vanla.;e in the l3sl three.quarters of a second.
"ll I don 't get il in that span of time, I blow it rlgbt now."
Of cou rse, there is more lo drag racing than the stl1rt. But
the start is all-Important. The rest is smooth. accurate 1blftlng
and keeping the car pointed straight to prevent lo5s of straight
line time. But those factors, as well, are conditioned reneses,
according to Jenkins.
Jenkins doe~ not go along \\.'ilh the popular notion that race
drivers are lhe most safely conscious group of people around.
"Race drivers don't live in fea r of accidents," the man they
ca ll Grumpy said. "\fben told they ha\'e lo do sometblng for
safety reasons they do a lot of grumbling about it.
"People gel in a race car more scared of not winning than
anything else."
Speed D1·opped f'rom 1~0111e
\Ve chatted vdth the Camaro pro stock driver from ri.1al·
vern. Pa., during an interlude al the racing industry's most
important trade show. the Specialty Equipment f\1anufactu rers
Assn. annual product di splay at An aheim.
The S in SE!\1A used to stand for Speed. but was changed
awhile back. indicating one or the threats most feared by the
Industry today-that government action· and misguided public
11pinion will do in the hot rod parts business.
Opponents of high performance parts are getting stronger
under the banners or safety and ecology. Both are worthwhile,
timely issues. problems of our moto rized society which cry out
for pron1pl action. From the SEii.1A side of the fence many of
the go1'ernment nostru ms are not in th e public interest.
1~fJ IJ 111·eoso1111ble f_,ir1e
Douglas Toms. bead of lhc 1''ational Highway Safety Bureau.
gpoke to SEi\1A last \\'eek. assu ring the hot rod parts makers that
\Vashington would not take :in unreasonable line again sl high
performanl!e equipment on cars.
But, acco rding lo many knoy,·lcdgeable people, tbat is not
tbe case. One indu stry figu re de scribed Toms as a man 1\'bo Is
trying to do a conscientious job but said his NHSB is dominated
by people who know nothing about the automobile.
A lypical example of a go\'crnment approach to bigbway
safety is Docket 1·19 Rule 3. curren tly before Congress. It calls
fnr speed go,·ernors on all cars :ii 85 rn.p.h. and a safely de\•lee
that ~·ould actuate the horn. turn signal s and taillights at any·
tb ln,e: over 80 miles an hour.
On the surface this see ms a sensible measure aimed al
ellmln11tin~ lhe idiot "·ho turn s himself into a potentially lethal
\\.'he!'led miss ile by tra\·eling faster tban anybody needs to on
a public highway.
l111e1•csli1rg Objec1.io11s
Roi'ld & Track. the dislingutshed auton1olive enthusiast jour-
nal. orfers some interesting objeclions lo this plan in its ti1arch
Issue.
First. R&T clain1s ii has rlocumented statistics to prove lhat
only 4 percent of all ratti! :ind serious injury accidents have in·
volved a vehicle tra\'clin~ in r:.:C'css of 80 m.p.h. In other 1vords.
R&T denies !he logic Jn the slogan. Speed kills.
"Sflfet.v on !he hi ghway cannot be purchased \vith Radgels
designed to protect incn1npetcnt nnd irresponsible from the con-
sequences of their action s." the mai;azine editorialiies. "Ha ven 't
"'e demonstrflted this \\•ilh scat belts?"
Arguments against ultimflte speed limils are thfll {I) saltly
research effort s l\'Ould be channeled into developing 1hese dr·
\'ices. ralh er than !he more important problems of driver. car and
highway improvement: Cl) inhibiting automobile-and ultimal·
ely transportalion-<level opment by di.scou raiting more efficiency.
and (3) surrendering yeL anoth('r personal liberty to government
control in lhe 50-eallcd public interest.
Olher ri.:i1mples of mii;guidcd. government highway sa fety
theory cited by 1nduslr~: r1 I The inflatable air bag 1hat is a
hazard all its (J11·n: 4~l outla1\'in~ all but original equipment parts.
despite evidence that most replacement parts are superior to
1vhat Detroit supp lies in ne\\· cars. and f3l designing "safety
ears'' so protcc1ively armored they would be a hazard to any·
thing else on the road.
Only recently has the government begun digging into \\'hal
!he hot rod industry considers is the real safety problem, drive r
con1petence. ,.,
The automobile can and should be made f<4ster. SEi\tA
A~rcc~. but !he biggest job today is upgrading 1\•hat sits behind
the wheel. Elim inate the drunk. the incompetent and the infirm
from our hig h\\·a_l's, and death rates y,·111 take a nosedive, say
the hot f!Odders.
I
Laguna Hosts Wildcats
Lag11ni'I Be:ich lfiith's baskel·
hall team rc1ums lo action
1onight \\'ith an Orange League
tussle against lnvadJng Brea.
The varsity tilt Is scheduled
for 7 fnllo\v1ng 1he junior
\'lrsily tHf.
CoBch Jerry FB ir·s Art1st.1,
will be trying to snap a si x·
gt1me lo!i1nF? ~1rc,1,11k in circuit
jilay 11ftcr posling a creditable
8-8 pre1eague 1nBrk.
Bren's \\'Udc11t~ n l c ti d
Laguna Bf:ach in l1r~l·round
action. i6~3.
Vince \Vh1tnah and Bart
Tabor lead the Artrlil!' scoring
punch whh 12.6 and -11.3
al'eragcs 1n le.agut play.
Ort t'ltt TM 11 't•••r l OtW•Ht El Do•lflO
1 JOM<. l '"I
) '-''Yt't. S-r1
• M '••ror. kner• s E<<l>r>t rr!A, Veil!'<·• e riow~11, ••~•
1, Llf1~I. i1ddlt~1t•
I, P t1,1or, $10dlt~f(~
' M•nnciltJo. V•ltn<lt In (;t •tl1, Vt l•"tfl
I ti' l •t ~ ,,. n'
• lu n l 11)0'1•
~ ffl60
• '' II ~ I tl !I I
I 18 l l 6
6 t• ti.I • to u J
I II 11
Top Vets Return
For Pirate Nine
Orange Coast College's
baseball team figures to score
a lol or runs in the coming
season-more out of necessity
than anything else.
Coach Barry V-.'allate's
Pirates have some talented
players hack from last )'ear·s
7-20 club-but they are hurling
in the pitching area.
"Defensively we're slrong
and offensively we'll hold our
own, but we have lo win y,·ith
a lol or runs. \\'e're really
shy in the pi t ching
department." says \Va llacc.
The Sues' pitchi ng chores
will depend primarily on lei·
lr rmcn Steve Schoe tller a n d
~1arty Quisen berry fl n d
freshman Bob Bailey (LoaraJ.
Elsewhere OCC ls loaded.
In the infield three regulars
re turn, They include second
baseman Danny C I a r k ,
shortstop Bob Leavy and third
baseman Billy Powell.
Powell , an AU-South t:oasl
Conference selection 111. s t
Diab lo
Swin1mers
Defeated
The l\1ission Viejo Diablos
opened lhc 1971 prep swim·
ming season by dropping a
52-27 decision to the host La
Quinl.a Aztecs ~1onday.
Cooch Doug Burrs Diablos
had only t..,,·o individual va rsity
\\'Inners in Mike f\.1cDougal
1100 butte.rOy. 1:03.S) and
Bruce Leogue (200 indo, 2:18).
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Mlnltft Vllll HI Cl\ Lt Qu!n!f l ~trll'IO
season. hlt al .426 c.ip In
the circuit and finished y,·itll
an ay,·esomc .407 for the
season.
Leavy batted .lll and Clark
had a .297 season mark.
Jimmy Jla\\·se, who sat out
last year, will hold down the
starting firs( base position.
Hay,·se, a graduate of Granada
Hills in Los Angeles is a 6-0 .·
180-pounder wflo figures to be
one of lhe Pirates' top hitters.
The catching chores wil be
handled by a pair 0 f
freshmen-Don Snyder
(Corona dcl Mar ) and Greg
Powers 1Estancia).
In the oullield J o u r
sophomores arc bidding for
starting roles. They include
Steve King. Pete Pljl. DoA
McNealy and Joe Ramirez.
King. Pi jl and f\-1cNealy a re
lettermen while Ramirez sat
out the '70 campaign.
Orange Coast lost 16 games
in a row last .season and
v-.rall ace readily admits that
thr freshmen-dominated club
Y.'as very emba,rrassed by the
si tuation.
;,\\'e got some bad bre:i kli
last year. but we think \\'C
can really come bac~ with
a much more represcnt:ith·e
team this season. The kids
have worked real hard over
the summer and winter
months," says Wallace.
ace launches the season
Tuesday, Feb. 9 hosting Hio
Hondo.
1"1 Ort nlt Co11t S(hldwl•
Tur;, f'.•b t -lllo HQfl't(I l"n"'•'
St!. FtD n -Go1<1en wur !™1..,..,l,
~· Wod, Ftb. 11-al CyafU\
F•I, Sol,. F'tb, ll·Xl-t! Ml Sin
An!onlo lourntv l uu ., l'eb. ll-1! Stddlt~•t~
S11 .. Ftb. 11· .llu..,n! (nomo). fl00'1 Thurt .• M1ren 4-11 Ml Stn Antonio'
F rl, M t <eh l-•I Ctrrlro1•
l wtt., Morch ,_,., S1n11 ""•" Tll\lft., Moren 11-l'ullt r!an• (/\omtl
Tutt .. Mlfeh ll-C1fl'llo.· rnomtl Sil., M1r<h :IO-ll Stn Olivo• 1n, noon fufl,, M.,<h 13-tt Mt. Sin An1onlo'
Thtor• . Morel\ 1'-S•'I OIH O' lhl'Jmt)
Tuo• • Mtr<n }1)-Jullt rt""" IMm•I
,1,p,.1 l·l-Or•IK!• Cown!y l<lllPf\l'Tl•nl
11 L• P1lmt P~r~
.lorll l·lt>-CaHw \l•ntrl tourntmtnl
I I Gal<lt n Wt1I
Tu-u .• A1>tll ll-•I Son OIHC M•~~·
lhU" • .larol IS--Mt. ~In Antor•o'
!"""''1 Fri., ~aril l&-~fnlf .In•· !homot
fnutt .• Aorn l l-Stnl• An1· IP\Cm•I
F•i.. Aorll 7)-tt Fu'itrto~·
1"''·· "ar11 21-1! c errl•o1• S...! • MA¥ I -St n Oita~ ,_..,~·
tnomel. ll ), ""°" • tte!ll>te1 South C011! Conte•en(I
·~"''
Trojans See k
Ei!!hlh Victory
~\VER -Uni\'l.'rlii·
t~ 1 .. gh's lnttla l brisketb;ill
season 1s rnpir11y coming to
a close with only one game
1cmaining after tonlgh1·s con·
ltontation '-''Ith host Be\lf\owtr
High.
The game ~'as sY.·itched
from the original silt <it
~lission Viejo High because
of confllctlng lichedults. TJpof(
is slated for 7,
C03ch John Dr l !I co 11 ' ~
srnior-le~s Trojans h A ,, e
ch~lked up a re~pectablc i-14
mark and th(! Bucrant'ers or
!hr San C:abrirl VAllc~ Leajiuc
~re the 22nd dlffertnl fol' for
the Trojans.
JV,Soph
Basketball
S11m1naries
Jijnlor V1r111y
Lo' Al1mlt01 fJll ltll l't. V1ll1y
ll•ln;11one llQI I' f'\ s"'~"•on
B•IO!t 11)1 I' Ul ~~l!i•ln
Unqorm•n llOI C (9' llurn~
.l•(/\l~1ld ltl G (10! S Aobu<'
Mv•" UI G 1!'1 Holf••l<I
Scoring Wbl' LOI Alt,.,1!01-1(1: .... n.
1kl l : l'oun1•in Vlllty-J ~obu<~ I.
Mall!lmt. Fl>l/nl11n Vllltv IS. ~"'I
Al1ml!g1 10
Mlltr Oti !Ill C'6) St. AMnony
11ergld 1101 r Ill JtlA,i,_
Murohv l 11) F IS! Miii••
Clcul•< !•1 C ti) W1lkt•
Adtml UI G /!St Mlvlc1n
IC!lty tll G !11) O'Brlt n
Scorln, IUOI ' Mlltt Dli-R1l11 ,, SI.
Antl>onv-H1n1an S
ll1ll!lme: Mtltr Otl 11, $1. Antnonv
" Munl;fttHft (J1) UJJ 11!110111rt
Wnlle I l'l F Ol !kt"'""""
Gnrl~nd Ol) ~ P'l Ja/\ruon
C.lt r•lli (ii (" !101 5Prlen
A~tllon nn G !lJI L•"""
Or••ll•• !i f G Ill Tuc~t~
HA \Ub Ntl!! !)I NtNDQ•I oull P•l-
tin~·ll J!I
tt~Ullm• >1unl1nqlon ?•·?'
Mtrlftl !U I -(!61 W1l1mln1tt•
Bl\\ !O\ I' (Ill W"ll~
ford Ill r. Ill H~"''
Sw••1on !~l It) So..rlh,..!ck
Ad""'' 1711 G fi ll C~••
Ao111r1 1111 G 101 W1hll
Storino sub•· M1tln1 _ 111nnen 4,
W1~lt0"'' S. W111m ln!!tr -"lbt'1 1. frullllo I.
Hllf•lme· W1.1T..,inS1t • 71.a
l'11Unttln V1ll11 UH (.0) ll:t!loon
llu•n< (I i i F' 00\ W1v
~ ... 1n1~n 1111 ~ !'I Collln11
S ,onuo (II f ltl Ttv>m~
SulUw~n li! C. (II W!!lle"'~
tt•llltld U! •• !Ill 81ltn
5co•,no •·•Ir'. L~1<Q" -11un1tr 2.
Pa•~~· 1 ~oun111~ \/ellr• -none.
H•lfto ..... e F"""'~'" Va•I•• 11·1•
C!!ol• Mtto llH 1111 M1tnofl•
Archt• ;"\ F •II L•lttr!V
End1I•~ 1\91 F I\~) Borrtll
fllN•llt !~I f ns1 MUHi•
Oem1e1 0 1 G UJ llatltuno-
M••• Ill r. Ad•m.011
S<O••~O •Ubl to1u M••• -ll•o .. n·
lnq U , "or\I 11. !Cini 1. K•l1m1 1.
llold•" '
M•llllmt : COSI• Me11 l l·l!.
so~htmort
MUnhntlon {14) lOi An1loflm
Tftl IM F Pl I'~""'"
>!Incur I'! F II! Cunnln,nam
onrtns 1161 r 1'1 Bredy
t ••llon flf) G !16) Anton
Me~•· ll l c. Ill Loo..-.~
HB Jub•' El~~V !t i, 01Ma"' fl),
tn111~, Ii i, Will.•'"• Ill. Crll!on (ll.
H>llh"'• "8 l~ 11
Hunhntton IUl l•rl 1111 !
1,.nour '11 1 t ~n't"I ! 11 c
Cod•"" j I(\ C.
Of•'"'•"' 1 ll ('.
IOI ,... ......
01 F'&ntl 111 l'l<IC
01 G••""'I 0~1 Milin 116) Wll<O(I
M•"n• •ub MO"•!On '" 11All!lm• IHI )S-11
Huntlnt!t n (Jl l
H•P'OUr ~19) r Allreno UI
(IOI• "ti t1•lton !171
D•nh•"' (fl Hollllmt
' ' G
G
Ht ll·)\,
COi WtUtrt!
!11 t1ul~.,.
Ill ) sm!tn
Ill Gu!l>ottt
Ill ! .II•••
fSl Trlttltn
l"llet Ttl'" Pt<inl'
I, Vtr~u"' Ot l 01·11 116
? cnm11!an rm) IJ'
l. Crt1ctnt1 V1lltv 111~1 l\t
l. Mornlng1lt!• !ll·l) 170
' P•u atnt CU·i ) IQJ
•. Hunllflgl"" lltlC~ Ill-JI BJ
1. fllolr1 Otmt (11·ll J4 I_ M""rovl1 I '1·•> jJ
t. Rim""• Ol ·JI l! 10. Wlrttn fll~I ?i
O!l•trt: L• H•bt• (11-11 IS, Torr1nce
II~•! I~. 11nr1 81rD1r1 !1)·51 6, LOYO!I (!l..!) J, 111,hop Am•f (11·71
1n<1 ttom+nt~! IU·1l I 11ch, Servi!'
llJ·l\. LlktwGOd 11'.4), $tnl• MD!llt•
(IJ·6l. Plonetr CJWl.1 1Kh. ...
I WUI Cowl~• ! If-I)) 111
1. Lot "'1101 01·1) 1:;1
l Do• Put~ICt 0 1·11 T•I
• Uol1n<I !1'·ll IU
S San ll~mordll>O (1'·•1 .,,
~ No•rnwlow ta .JI 11
1 """ii 11<1·11 Ii I P•cllle• (U·O ~
• S1nl1 M1rl1 ti•·•\ ••
10. lhllltoWtr Ol·J I I orn1": Cornn• !!1>-SI """ Worli.mo-.
!ll·•l ! t l<h: LO• Altmlro' (U·)l
'"" Klllllt ltS·!l, ) Olthi RIN:l'IO .lltmllot OMI. L1 Ml'ldl !l?·S) 111d
Lt 1uen 111-t). I ttcn; Apple Vtlley
'1).1) 1.
Leading a list or six return·
ing leue.rmen is Ter ry
f\1cKcon. the Southern
California Conference crOS!I
country champion who figures
to be the class or the circuit
in the two-mile and three·mile
events.
McKeon captured the two-
mile and placed second in
the mile in last year's con·
ference finals.
Backing him up will be three
freshmen-Richard Pr ies t
(Costa Mesa), Dave Hen·
dcrson l r..tarina) and Steve
Varga ~Westminslerl .
The best mile r figures In
be Jack ~1cQuown. a former
Hun!ington Beech product.
Ken Hurst (Westminster) and
Tim Funk (fountain Valleyl
wilt give the Rustlers plenty
of depth in the four lap event.
No.I Tean1
In Countv
" Huntington Beach High rt·
mains the leader in the orfici1l
listing of top to prep basket·
ball teams in Orange County
as selected by the DAJLY
PIUYI' following the Oilers'
resounding 83-50 win over
Ne wport Harbor Friday nigh!.
f\1a ter Dei moved up tn
fou rth place while Marina edg-
ed back into the rankin&~
folloy,·ing a pair of Sunse t
Uague wins.
Mesa, Newport Fives
111 Youtli Tourney
Crucials involvin g ranked
qu intets this week are Troy
and host La H11bra tonight (A1
tn the Freeway Lf'l\IUt, and
the crestview League bigg11.'
between invading K1tella and
Tustin (7 p.m.).
Wedne sday's action will bt
hig hlighted by the Irvine
Leagu!' confrontation betwee n
leader Los Alamitos (7-t ) and
hosl Santa Ana Valley (In a
four-way tie at 4-4 ). Costa 1\1esa a n d Newport
Beach will be repre.~cnted 111
an invitational basketball
tournament for junior high
boys Wednesday t h r o u g h
Saturday on the Tart a n
surface floor of the Tustin
Boys' Club.
Three teams fron1 Costa
f\1esa and one from Newporl
\VIII form half the entries in
the event with Kaiser of Mesa
facing Utt of Tustin 1n the
opener at 3:45 Wednesday.
Also \Vednesday, Ensign or
/'\ewport and Col. of Tustin
meet at S: IS and Rea No.
I of ·Costa ~1esa faces Tustin
al 6:30 Rea No. 2 playing Cerro
Villa or Orange In a Thu rsday
encounter at S:SS.
Semifinal g a m e s arc
scheduled Friday wi!h the
championshi[l e n co u n t er
Saturday morning al JO.
According to ll~rh \Valson.
executive direclor of the Boys
Club. th e Tustin i;iymnasiurn
I~ one of the fey,· such Tartan
Jiurface floors in the area .
"Everyone lh:it has played
on the floor iJ high in praise
of the surface. USC coach
Bob Boyd's tw.o boys were
both rne1nbers of our clull
when they li ved here and bo!h
used !he floor for practice
·a large pa rt o! the lime.
"~fission Viejo coach Pat
Roberts' boy also plays here
frequently lhe is a member
of lhe Mater Dei High Schoo l
team) . and we have had
several Pacific-8 coaches and
officials te ll us it is one of
lhc best playing surfaces in
the area." Watson .says.
The Tartan surface is :1~.
inch thick over a cement base
and is laid in strips and mold-
ed together.
The latter nipped Los Al
in three overtimes in first
round action.
TOP 10
Pia~ Team Polnt i;
I. Huntington Beach {15-3) 50
2. La Habra (16-2) 42
3. Katella (l~S) 41
4. Mater Dei t 14-S J 3.'.i
5. Pacifica 114-4) 3Z
6. Troy (14·4) 28
7. Rancho Alamitos (13.e) t3
8. ~1arina (I~) IA
9. Lo~ Alamitos (14-S) 12
10. Tustin (11·7) 3
Mater Dei,
St. Paul Vie
"The big thing about it i~
the cut in maintenance costs.
\Ve figure we save 80 percent
over a hardwood floor. All
we have to do is use a treated
dusl mop daily and then once
a n1onth we use a mild
detergent and water to clean SANTA f'.~ SPRINGS -
It." »Tater Df:i Hlgh's quest for
111c surfect is similar to an Angelus League title con·
indoor surfaces al the Air tinues here t.onight when coach
Force Academy in Colorado, Jerry Tardle's !\1onarchs meet
\Vashington Unive rsity and the St. Paul. It begJns at 7.
University of Tennessee field Victory a g a In 11 l the
houses. Swordsmen will insure no
There Is no shag on top y,·orse than a tie for firs t
like the outoor football fields. with Bishop Amal, which is
It is similar to lhe track pla ying host to Pius X ln
surface at UC Irvine and tonight's final games of tht:
MV Duels El Modena;
Tritons Face Orange
UCLA. fi rst round .
And \Vatson is high in his !\-1ater Dei and Amat sport
prflise of the surface as a 3-1 marks.
multiple purpose flooring. St. Paul, however, Is vastly
"V<.'e can clean it off in Im proved over la.!il year and
a hurry and use it for almost it' mo.!lt rr:ctnt conquest of
any type of event without note was an overtime decision
.\1 lssion Viejo and San racehorse decision to Orange damaging the floor, it is that over Servltt.
Clemente, the Orange Coast (80-?9) at the latter's gym. versatile." Tardie's qu intet relies on
aren's representa tives in the San Clemente's Steve Kalota overall balance and the rt--
tough Crest~'lew Lea gue worked ove r lhe Orange in-bounding of Rick Kniffin and
buske.tball race, resume action terior for 26 point'!: In that CaleIJdar Steve Kemper. h 1 ronight with 7 0 • c 1 0 c k Kniffin lends t e team n
engagenien!s. one. c.,,,viiw T•" ,. scoring with a 13.0 average
l'11y1r , •• ••• '""' while guard Dave Kiley ha-'
Coach Pet Rnbert s' l\tission ;: l~'::~~\-t°Tt~!:~~ : ::t rrr E!e.·J,~~~· ;; ~~~1:.: i..mv~· Br~·;o~ a 10.S average and Steve Fritz
Viejo five plays host to F.1 t. Le"•· Et Motlton• 1 1:it "~ !~uu~!" ,, c;.,,e;?',"'*1...1 Ll~\vtr-','." ,.~I Is hitting 7.7 ""'r tr11. '1 I h.I S Cl I t, M(lnlllY, VIII• Puk I l U 11.1 I ~ ve ~1 • r-/ "°' en:i w i e ·an emen e, l. Todd. v111. "'•'~ 1 ,,, 16.1 ~~11J~ ~I tfc'.' l~t'i~:"4ii.v~i."Y v~\~! Kiley 's average too med
under the ~uidance of John ~· ~~~~:,"·,~::i::-• : :~ :::: ii~~.:;ri~ •:_ u~1~"'(~~::, (~;t.1t°' after a 21-polnt outburst
Bakl'r, enterta ins 0 tang e 1. Hu11on, oc1tt111 • 1Ho u ., "'T~,~.1r1. _ "'-·-·n•• ,, d''-' buried St. Anthon" Fridav.
111811'$ ~od p ••o t K1I011, Sl n(lfmt nl t I IU l)l nq vvw ~· l s,~ Y an-... rs. 10. M1111rW111, Mlu lon v111e ' 1:io u 1 f.1 .... ~1~ 1\11• w"""1rti.1•• '1 •rcte11 nlght.
Other Crest1•1ew gamts areJ ------------....:;=-"-=---------''----------
Vllla Park at Foothill and
Kate.Ila at Tustin. The latter
issue in\'ol11eli first place '-''ith
leading Katella boasting a
7-1 mark and Tustin spart lng
a 6-2 rrrord.
RobertJ' Diablos pasted El
1\1orlenji, 60-~t In fir~t round
actlcn, bthlnd !he balanetd
~cnrlnfl of Jeff ~lastrr~on (\~).
rrnig Cit ro (121 and !\cvin
Shunnon r l t 1.
Skn Clemente didn·t fare as
\If.JI, losing" one-point-
USHER'S GREEN
STRIPE SCOTCH
START THE NEW YEAR OFF
WITH BIG $2.00 SAVINGS
'I• gal.now ... $11 11
•
JI D~ILV PILOT
1fa1·niing llp
Gene Applegelt and Jan \Ventz play a romantic
scene from the comedy "EYerybody's Girl." closing
a three ,,·eek run Thursday through Saturday at the
San Clen1ente ConlDlunity Theater.
.. ' -TV .. :nAILJ .~.loC
l r • • • • .. .
lJCI Pl'ogratti
Ba1·enhoim Gives
Spirited Concerto
By T0~1 BARLEY talents to the keyboard.
o• ,... o.11J "11o1 51•11 You can not do both, lt1r.
lt ·\\·as good lo sec Daniel Barenboirn. And the <..'On.
Bareubolm Corsake the podium sidered opinion of many wh o
of ·which he has become se have seen you do both is that
fond Saturday night and apply your work with the baton,
his fiery young genius to what while skilled and imaginative,
many men ()f music feel is can not compare with your
his true and distinguished virtuosity at the piano.
forte -the piano ktyboard. Tbe gloriously scored rondo
It v.•ould be hard to find and allegro mon troppa that
an argument to the contrary comprise the third movtment
in the light of his spirited are, of course, the attention
and remarkable 8 rah ms getters in the Brahms work
Concerto in D P..Unor and if but this was not, in this
you did it would be surprising critic's opinion, where we
to find it coming from any found the best of Barenboin
membe r of the UC Jrvine au· Saturday night.
dience which rose as one man His genius was most evi·
to this tremendously gifted dent . we thought, in the
young Israeli. maestoso that opens the work.
Zubin Mehta 11n the podiu1n His fingerlng in some of the
and Barenboim at the piano: most delicate work scored by
it was. on paper, a com-Brahms was nawless and it
bination to set the music was in the rich, fluently phras·
lover 's blood on fire and that ed final third of th& movement
\Va!I exactly ho\Y it turned that he laid the sure foun-·
out in thi s memorable Orange dation fo r his p ers o n a I
County Philharmonic Society triumph.
concert. Rapporl was the order Barenboim dominates a con-
j includ• Bob New~1rt, Mary Cosl• of the evening and Barenboim cert to the point that he
i nd th• Olll&rds. would readily admit that the drives all the concertgoer has TUESDAY 0 Vfrli•~ '"u"' (C) 1601 dynamic Mehta and a faultless heard prior to his appearance m T• Tiii ttN Trrtli IC) (3CI) Los A n g e I es Philharmonic to the inner recesses of the
FEBRUARY 2 En ! IBClij I W'lttre tat l 11d;
51.,1 (C) Tht •illds of help av.ii· Orchestra deserve a major mind. And that seemed a pity
i bl• kl druc u:1tri and ttie need share of the credit. Saturday night steeped as we
I V F N ' ·~ ! , 101 coordin•lint 1111 different •P· We had a misunderstanding ~·ere in the orchestra'J splen·
l:OO 11 111 ,. (C) (60) Jt 0 h proadlts uMd wm b1 aplosed •ilh or two, to be sure, and l\1ehta did delivery of Mendelssohn"s
· "" . "'f unp 1· Dr. Carlo Wtblr 11 llost. and Barenboim felt impelled Third (Scottish) Symphony.
B •NIC Nttntrm:• (C) 1601 Tomi mi FrM Co.,.t hliH9NM11 (C) to discuss tempo (soUo voce. Scots \Vho hear the "'ork
Snrdtr. a> SHriM1 IC) (JO) of course) between the second f" d l"t I lo " d th O T~t Allin Slltw (CJ (90) Gutsts l:OS G) Lilia! Lu• 1551 111 very 1 t e rem1n em
1ent1Uvtly 1chedul1d: Lou R1w1s,1 1;30 6 9 (I) Ht i Ht• (C) (601 Lor· and lhird moveme11ts. of their O"'" lovely homeland
Ann Elder. All:le<t Broo~s. Dr. New· ,111 Lynn •nd Bill Al!dtrson iuest. But v.·hatever it v.«:1s thev in its unabashed romanticism
ton K. Wtsley. No1111 C1oshy ls S R " 1 f , , disagreed about it made nO and it might have been a
ut to llo I l usan iye is•'° ea ure . d"ff h 1· I r I .
0
111 Six: O·CJ~d: Mowie: (CJ ~iuii~o., m D•~~ r11st s11 .. (CJ (90) 1 erence to l e qua 1ty o 1tt e more imaginative of the
(drimi) 'M-Hirry Guardino, st\Of·j Guests. Or~! Ratierts. 8r1nd1 Vac-this magnificent concert. ll composer to, say, name this
1 E f R •• , C 1 A 1 . r 1 c1ro. Patnck Murphy. T~• N1111 v.·as a triumph for the . thorough ly German \!!"Ork after
e1 . 1 on, o..... u ~-ioooais · Gritty Dirt Bind. fla shing. fiery Bareoboim and his birthplace. But this has
hop1n1 to e1plur1 wll1\1 rhinoceros R'I '"'" ""' IC) (30) · d le " h" l d "th h 1· d k 1.111" it \vas a equate sllmony to not 1ng o o wt t e qua 1ty ~0 sen . 1° C•mt pr93ervu. un i»w· m Tll• World If tilt AnM1JC111 support the arguments or of a work that very rarely 1naJ~. hn-:S 1 hunttr·tarnrd·poaclle1 Cratt.u (C) (30) (R) •s his auid~. &ID ratt.,11 ,,, Urine (JG) those who urge this young gets the treatment and sym·
O DI~ Vin OJ•• (30) a> La Crildl litfr Cri•dl (CJ 130) genius lo forget the baton and pathetic analysis accorded to
m nit Flf11btone1 (C) (30) devote his time and abundant il by l\1ehta and his orchestra.
m \1.ti@ Sttr Tilt (C) (601 !:OOO @Cil ID Ar~ TllUd1~ (Cl],====================
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ED Art studio: "Kinetic Sculpture." (2 hr) Tom Petit ho5ts. North!!
fl}. (j)Jlltwi/Wtltllu/Sptrts tC) Vietn1m Revuited" and '1he H11rt
mi ris11t1 funily (JOJ I Cult-J111is .1?phn Mr11iqur." [L-,~~===::;=~~~=:--;;;~~~;:~~:--..JI £E1 Notid111 34 (C) (60) 0 The Furi!Ne (60J j V th ' . il:l''""'' • u. 5,. t<I (lOl I 0 PLIMPTON! MAN on the Jason r-.Q an n
GE U HM1 F1mililf CM ConMltlol *FLYING TRAPEZE! R b d R
Cl) Nm ''~·•~" tc1 tlOJ I Se< thrill;ng circus show Q Q[ S QSS
1:15 €D Cli1rlil'• rM (C) (R) from David l. Wolper o @m m !SBC1ALI '"'I'
1:30 0 C.lldi4 C.. .. r1 (30) l"li•ptoit-4itu 1t11 TU n,i11 T,.._ m TM f1Ji111 11111 (C) (JOJ .,, It) (60) The rtsults 11t lhown
~ CiJ NIC ,... (C) (30) el tMs limed ;6111nalist'1 foray be·
W ltldct"41• i..dtt (C) (JOj huid the sunes ol t/lc Clydl l eatty·
iS (j) CIS Mt• (C) (Jll) l:ole fkos. Circus. m Stltdtd fil111/Jilusiul1 (C) ID I Slil(p!l I Wipe.Out (CJ (60) lD TIM Dlwrt Report (C) {30) lht lhrill1 and spills of 5~1fin1.
ail \.Is Ohidtdos (lO) til I IPl(ilL I NoH,....off T1ln lslo•
a) ABC New• {CJ (JO) The1tr1 (C) (21/1 h1) (R) '1h1
J;OO S CIS Eveni11f N•n (C) {30) -'ndersonYillo Tri1I." lhis pl1y by
CJ a;) NIC Ni1htlJ Mt•s (C) (30) S1ul Levitt is bwd 011 1 lr11I lh1I O Wh1t'1 Mr Lint? (C) {30) 1clu1ll)' took plan 1t lhe lflll o1 m (ill CJ) I I.Mi Lucy (JO) !ht Civil War.
ID Dr11ntt (C) (JO) €Ii) Chell••~ (C! (30)
Ii) (j) Tuesd'J Movie: "M1d1m1 ID LI Constitll<Mn (JO)
I." L1n1 Turner, »tin f'Onylh1. I ail Jllobchl (60)
E!) DEIUT The T11tMtl 0. Crisis 9:30 6 S (j) All ift tht F1ail)' !Cl
(C) (60) .. k1ust Th.i's My W1y.' (JO} Carroll O"Connor. J1111 Sl1plt·
Thi lir~I ol ei1ht pro1r1m$ aimed Ion. Rob Reiner. Archie Bunker ind
11 losttunr information ind undtr· ht1 son.in·l1w Mike u.ch1n1e •t·
sund1na of drua 1bus.1 i nd 1tt1nd cu111ions 1bout tne m1scutinily of
int iuut~. sPICilic hicnd1 or u ch of ltlem.
29'"([.1 Tni\11 t r toa~lltflc.tl (CJ Q Clndid CalNfl (30)
€;) O rist tlM LMn1 Wlf4 (C) (30) @I!) Mu5iellt/hst1r'1 DIP (30)
W Rowrit (30) fE Ca11citrto de A!l'l•S (30)
c.?i)Slmpltm1nh M1ril (SS) ID:OO EJ ~([}iO M1nutu (C) 1601
CD Mcw!t Ci1t11 (C) (301 "E.rly Spiro Atne-•."
7;30 tit. ..., (j) k ¥till Hillbillies (CJ 0 lie S """ (C) (60) Kevin
-'.:!'., ., S1ndeu. Barney Morris. {JO) \lill1lt Gr1nn1 and [lly ,.ay O @CIJ !l) lllirc:os WtlbJ, M.D.
puri.:ue tht to~rM or 'IWOIMft I !lb (C) (60) "A Woman"s Placi." Or.
uahon, B11uai, lh• k•fit• chimp.I Victofi1 Thorsen, t n tlc:oholiG. se1ks
moves the women o! h11 .riousthold 11 1 lro Or. We!b Richel Roberti 11110 the Cl1mpett m1n,111n ID do 1 P1 m y.
1ht thorts.. I &~ts 1' Q m luh1 IC! 130) "Cou rtina 0 lultf W1r4 Ntn (C) {60)
lnnt." Juli• is cousin Sara'1 'll11t·1 m "!" (C) (60) Gto11• Putnim, . H1I Ft5hman. ness m .. 1 tt1Urt J~1l Whtlt boJfritnd m Quid. for Ad¥tnlllll {C) (JO)
Steve unJtt ls !ht laywer for lhtl £E1 Do·R•Mi (JO)
opposit111n. t.T:\ F •" I M " t'" IJ JllYP1) (C) (Jll) ~ ~ !VI llKIM vv)
0 RCA h t N.I , lD:l D m Boll Joll111 Ntw1 (C) (30) as pu • $S~n s I Qi) 111u rtidu111b!1 (JC) * son&S from Th~ Point 11:00 6 3 (!) m Km (Cl
on a record with a B ~ @ m New• (CJ
sJ).eCial comic book O en '"' T•111\il? (C)
O @@a)AIC Mnie of lht UalNtn ~ . WH~: (C) "Tll• hinr (mulit.1l·1 0 lltwil: "Mllcf Itek .. Ni111t"
hnt1sy) '71-0ustin Kollman fllf·j (dr11111) '5&-.lohn Ptynt.
11tes animated ll'lUsittt hblt ol I m MIN: "nil ,, ... Min' (aim·
youn1 bo1 •lie le11n1 !hit thin1s1 tdY) '57-.liU Ad1m1. T1rrt·Tllom1L
de Ml hwt lo ff point1d II hive @ MoYit: "Hia"nJ Drl(lltt" (Id·
a pDiOI. ventu1e) '54-Richll~ Conlt, .ioan
O Milliln $ M1'1it: '1111 s.0111 Benntll
Aflli(' lcomtdY) '57-SuSln Hay· @CIJP11ry MUN
wud. Mir~ Dou1t1s. Jim Blc~11s 11:30 EJ la Cl) Mtn 'rith~ IC) V1~kl
51.lbjtd to Stna\t IPPfO'l'll, I IOillhl C•rr 1uests.
Mijor Gentrll is "'"'" for afl im I 0 @ (jJ m Joll11ny Cara11 (C)
port1nt d1plom1tic post but 11<1! ii GUtsts: ;ohnny l ro'llll, Ctro! Ch•n·
a flarnorous publithtr c1n htlP lt I nine. M11ityft Ho111t.
I) Tllltlt ., Co111141u011<1t {C) (30) 0 Mowit: "ll ug1ts If lled C1p" ID H T1k11 1 TWtf (C) (60) (comody) 'SJ -Ch11lu L1u1hton.
(S Cl11t1111 l D CC) (lOI 0 at Did CMtt (C) N1ney Rei·
ELI D11on1 (30) 11n ind Sh1lle1 Ouv1! fUt!t.
7:!5 l!i> Cutstion • S•JWlldot 12:00 @ (})Oki C.vett (C)
1:00 I)~ (J) 'r"n Au11 (Cl (lO) lZ:lO m All·Mictit Show: "fou1 Min 1ad
Lis• Ooua:l1s p1rlays h•r unc.11·1 • ,,.,.,, .. "AttlJI Al• V111plr1" 1nd
ctbba1• soup lnlo 1 mfratlt tl11n· , (Cl "nil lwory Huntar."
I'll lluid ind put1 111 htr frl&nds 1:00 8 Mffio: "hw111, My L•••IJ"
on the spot. (wspensc) '52-ld• lupino.
0 ID 09ll ltnotb (C) (60) Gu1sls CJ 0 NtWI (~
WE DN ESDAY
t:SO D '1\t filhlill lNl1tm11•
(•ntern) '49-John Wl}'flt. 0 "S'"1 If AH•Mtkf Cr1h1•
h lf" (dr11M) 'Jf-Oo11 MiKllt.
DAYTIME MOVIES m "'"'lddt11" (d11m1J ·47 -
. Do11rtau MonJ:OIMty, Hatll Court.
7:JO O "'fr1ncis in tllt H••fl't.M M11111"1 l :DD OJ "Dlllfl'• lllttM" (dram•) 'JS
fc:omffy} '56-Mlck.., llOOMr. -SPIM•f Tfl(f, Cl•ln lrwo1
1:00 O "f••dil, r1•lll, llclltln" (com .too 0 IC) "O.nttttn Dl)'I el l in•
441) '4f-OoM1d O'C.nno1. Miii· )oltu"' {dr1m1) '65--f!obert Horton.
•lit M1i11. "Jollt111J Mtl!d1(' (dtt · 4:JO G (C) '1llunlfttll1M" (d11m1) 'IS
int) ·•1-w1m1m lt11d11. j -Roddt M1ellowaH.
lhe1J
touched
each
other
Ol1d
• let go
of the I r.::! I . 1iw-~l§ "-"-'""'e.
world ,GP:l!W ~..:!)!==' "'°'G-19.1™
EXCLUSIVE tNGAGEMEHT ALSO-Jnnw11i1-rt
NOW PLAYING He"ry Fo1ulo
WEEKDAYS 6:45
SAT. J:lO & SUN.12:]0
A1Fii-:-t+Q1 11
... UllC&ml .........
AlllllW ltqllllMWt
-llMU'I' llUll UftS 'Ml l(fUll llUllll IT»UT•
IUIT Ill.I.Ill lLIYI lllUll
..... 111111 ........ l.W.l
A.lll"OIT
''CHEYENNE
SOCIAL CLUI"
l"I
,.J 'U/111"(
jack Lemmon
Sandy Dennis
"THE
OUT-OF-
TOWNERS"
_,.,,..t_!" -ox·•-''' \<1\IOllll •-• ID, O'"li:fO'l!l!i IJ.JO
EXCLUSIVE ORA NGE COUNTY
ROAD SHOW ENGAGEM ENT
STARTS WEDNESDAY, FE BRUARY J RD AT
CINEMALAND THEATRE-ANAHEIM
ALL SEATS RESERV ED
llf."fllf. Cl
·. 101:5
... Toral I -".;"·· .. :.~ ..•• ·-··-
TOr.aJ
·~i. ..... ---'"i."'• ........ ~·~· .._ ..... lot_,., .. _,..~
............... -...... llll"'tJ •• ~.,.-........ .,_ .... ""-.ol
....,, 11.-...i• .•:.1t-.. "'1•'•• •7-••..-:'-•1'~"c" IA'N (gjc:D ~~:· ..... ":i:i~.¢;;·,.;:;;:.:~r.: ..
t-.. ,., • ..,'l".'i' .e-ur..• ...,..,,..,.. -.. ~ .. ----~, ...... ·~· -~,.... --c-~· .A'.
Drama Cast
Announced
In Fullerton
Cast members have _been
selected for Reginald Rose 's
drama "Tiie Death and Life
of Larry Benson," t~ be
presented later this month by
the Fullerton Footlighlers.
Donald Carr will portray the
homeet1ming soldier, with
Bobbi Micek and Bill Feeney
t.aklng lhe roles of the parents
and Randy Woehrmann casl
as the you nger sister.
Others in the Fullerton cast
are ·Katherine Tuckett, Karen
George, Euge ne Wendell, Judi
Fitzgerald, Ronald Shapiro,
Joany Fairbairn, Cheryl Wol·
lltz and Tom DePalma.
Jay Conklin is directing the
drama, which opens a three-
\\'eekend run Feb. 19 at the
f\.luckenthaler Center. I 1 9
Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton.
TV Review
'Sa1n Hill' Slow Western
By CYNTHIA LOWRY CBS says no decision has not expected to e<>mplete Its
NEW YORK (AP) -NBC been made but speculation 1971-72 sch"ule before mid·
Pulled out another two-hour Id ~iarch. Usually all three ""rsisU that Oie 23·year-o f ld pilot film -"Sam Hill, \\'ho "'" networks aim or a m • Killed the f\.1ysterious f\.1r. "Ed Sullivan Show" may be rebruary deadline for the
Foster?" _ for a trial run in its rlnal $t'ason on the benefit of their sales staffs.
as ·one of its ··\Vo r Id nct1\"ork. 'I'he report sta rted On NBC, the weakest pro--
Premiere" broadcasts t.tonday when. on the heels of disap-gram appears to be .. The Don
night. pointing ratings. it becan1e Knotts Show," Y:hich never
Since \Vesterns have been known that the warm weather got off I.he ground.
out of television style for the months ""ould be filled "'ilh ABC sloughed off it~rsl
past couple of seasons, it is Sulli van show reruns. In re-liabilities at midseason. It !s
th ·11 cent seasons, that time has still too early to gauge bhc
logical to assume ey w1 been filled with a mixture reaction to such replacements
be making a comeback. soon. of new shows and repeats. as '·The Smith Family," "The The feature was an effort in Pearl Balley Show'' 1 n d that direction but it seemed CBS, w i t h some h e a v Y
to waver betv.·een standard repair work to be done. is •·Alias Smith and Jones."
Western actlon and one or1-'2 =jiiiii;i;;;i;;;;;ii-'"':iir.iii
those rowdy, roistering shows
\vlth emphasis on comedy, As
a· result it fell \•;ith a dull
lhud between the two.
Ernest Borgnine played the
tiUe role, a slow-moving but
canny deputy sheriff. He was
running for election as sheriff
-with a confidence man who
had a hidden hoard of $10,000.
While Borgnlne and com-
pany were meandering
through the plot, C a r o I
Burnett on CBS has having
trouble fin ding something to
do with Rita Hayworth in the
actress' first variety show ap-
pearance.
The first effort was a sketch
with Carol and V i ck i
Lawrence playing a couple of
brash autog raph hoWlds an· '""~'·•·
SHOWING
NOW!
noyillg superstar Rita in o 1'':.z"'.';!~1
Hollywood restaurant. Miss i ==~!!!!!:=:::~··~,...~~H=•~u~c~•:;·~ot.;::Ml~N~"~=; Hayv•o rth had little to do ex· I;
cept sit vt'hile the action sv.•irt-
ed around her. She came off
a little better in a later
. .\dva nce reservation!!
being taken al 527·4415.
are number \\'ith Carol in v"hich
FOR EVERYONE
TO SEE!
Daug hle1· Born
she imitated r<.!iss Burnett 's
charY•oman character.
It \\'as, all around. an off
night for the variety hour
v.·hich usually has pretty high
standards. To Souus trcs~ " ,C(l~Wll ,ACIPIC COAtT MIG.NW.I.'!.;:" n ,
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -~/)/) C1/31;.
Crace \Ying Slick, songstress•~ J\11!
'''ith the Jefferson Airplane.I_....!_...:.._.•---
has gi'fn birth lo a 611-pound JOHN WAYNE
daughlcr. I . Prod " The father is Paul Kantner . A HO'Nard Hawks ~
lhc rock group's rhythm! "RIO LOBO" guitarist. a spokesman for the
grou p said. ~ !Gld&
r<.1rs. Slick. 31. is getting! LEE
a dh•orce from her husband KARVIX
of 10 )·ears, filmmaker Jerry
Slick. "JIOll'TE 'W.U.SB"
BALBO~
673-4048 :
Open •
6:45 '"r. 1.11 ... l1lke hfllnnl1
e ENDS TONIGHT e
"3 in the Cellar"
"3 in the Attic"'
• Starts Wednesday e
BURT LANCASTER
DEAN MARTIN
JEAN SEBERG
_ JACQUELINE BISSET
lit:JnctlNLCOLOR i!lo
ENOS TONIGHT
ALAN ARKIN
'"
AAeelW..W._
~ CM.w. CfHIU ll.'6 rttst'-'INO'l
~\WN'...4 1/(HNl(()t()I•
.I. ~llONAI GlN!W PICllll{St!IOOl il91e
••• • •• !
• CO ... T !tWT ... -..C:MI-.... • ' ·-•llCll• .. •·O,_
CALL 644-0760
LAST WEIK
Phone 673-6260
SEAN
CONNERY '
'isJAMES
BOND
T"
"LOVERS AND OTHER
5TRANGERS" CllC GI(; YOUNG
ClOFllS Lf.lC"O••"-N COLOR
®0>
•
"CATCH
2 2 I 7 !il21iiNDi;IC~O~MllfEDi;IYliHillT __________ .. lilHililEiiTliWiiEiL ViiEi1CiitHiiiAiiilRiiiSio"oliGi14 ·,
ALSO
ALI MAC GRAW
RICHARD BENJAMIN
'" "Goodby Columbus"
St1rt1 Wedne1d1y
"THE ARISTOCATS"
•nd
"KING OF THE
GRIZZLIES"
BARGAIN MATINEE
EVERY WED.
AT 1 P.M.
IN MISSION Vie.J o
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
S~N DIEGO ntY, AT LA l'AZ T\l"No~r
I JO·IHO
ALSO . Jack Lemmo11
In "The Out Of Tow,.er1 "
Al»-Ali Mocgrow
THE •1 "DVEL Of THE YEAR -"ow. MDTIO" PICTURE!
.~H1J1111•-·-AIAPOAT
IURT LANCASTER . DWI •am•
AU!llfUW.,ltM( jg!C})
'
ACADEMY AWARD CONTENDER
-MELVYN DOUGLAS
"I NEVER SANG FOR
In "GOODBYE. COLUMBUS" (R) MY FATHER" •
DAILY PILOT J9
Everyone Has
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
Housn for S•I• 1~-1 -. ........ I~ I -"'"''1
'
General Gener' al General General
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO. oflnda Jj/e
EASTBLUFF SPECIAL PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
lfurry for this one! Ca n't last! /\great fami·
ly home \Vith 4 bedrms. fam rm & dining
rrn. Lovely pool surrounded by cool decking
& lge patio area. $59,900
Sl Linda Isle Dr ive
Cust 6 BR .. study, 5 bath home w/4 rrplcs.,
circular stair\vay, decorator selected carp.
EXCLUSIVE BAYCREST & drapes. ShO\\'n by appt. ........ 5215,000
Really exotic~ See this rare l1awaiian style
4 & den home today. Rooms all surround
lge INDOOR pool. View too~ $78,500
For Complete information on all homes &
lots, please call:
"Our 26th Year"
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8. 642-4620
WESLEY N. TAYLOR C 0., Realtors I '!'""~"""'"""'"""'"""''!"""~"""'"""'"""'""
2111 San Joaquin H ills Road General I General
NEWPORT C ENT E R 644-491 O F 1 XE R U pp E R ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; * * * * * * RANCHO SANTA ANA---0"· ''G~e~n~,-,-.~,-~--~--'--;-,~Gc-'--'-~--"--'----'...'-ly $26,:ic>o. B ig~; Acre \\'ilh
1----------'-;;';";';';a;I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;[ good 1\\·o 1X'droon1 honic
DOVER SHORES • find Double garage. Zonrrl
CUSTO;\l BLT, NE\V ENG. TWINS for horsrs or do1: keru1els.
LA:'llD near NE\VPORT \\"e have just A real buy in Santa Ana
BAY. Elegant enll'y , large been presented 11•1th Hcigh1s. E.'\CELLENT FJ.
living Rm., with marble fire. 2 condominium units NANCJNG~
place, form.al Din Rm., all in con\·enient Park Lido
elrctrlc Kit. including l'lec-2 Bedrooms, 2 baths each
Ironic ovtn and bi"f'akfast Priv. rommunily pools
room. Fam. Rni , wi!h usrrl and landscaped park
brick fireplace, large scr. Under the market
\'ice porch and threr car I at 126.950 each
00 Good financing i:arage. rlVE BEDR ;\JS.
311 BATIIS plus laq:c 800 I
Sq. Ft. all rn111>ose run1 pus
roon1. The pcrfrct a 11s11cr in
a pl'rfect setring for a la~e
ram.Uy. Pricer! below market
at only $79,500 -Shown by
appointnH•nt. SINCE 19-15
673-4400
THE TIME TO BUY
IS NOW!
This seller·~ vacant hotnr Is
going begging! He's in a
niood 10 talk p1•!ce. He's
":~~~~~~~~~[ asking $67,500 for J:,00 f1., ii 4 BR., formal din. rm.., den
El'enings Can &JJ.7003
ANXIOUS OWNER
VA NO DOWN
Eastsidr, 4 Bcdrucnns, 2
ba!hs, la1·ge fenced back.
yard. dble garage. O"•ner
leaving for Arizon11 ; Submit
all o ffrrs . only $2:1.:iOO.
6 UNITS
Macnab-Irvine
Realty Company
ONE OF A KIND
Step do\\11 li\'1ng room. \!auJ r.
rd ceilings -corner lire.
plal·r -floor tocrlling book.
caS!'s -ocean vic11· -sep.
& pool, Let's make him an
off Pr!
aratr dining roon1 -den -833-0700 644-2430
gourmet kitchen -4 berl-1,.,--------!!! rooms, 3 baths. Fi-c Land. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath
Kear Lillie Corona &ach. F ixer Upper 16ii.OOO. $22,SOO
Macnab-Irvine
642-8235 675-3210
All it need& is SOm.t' pain!, •
httle f'lbo\v grea~ and !!0111.e
tende1· lo\'!ng care, it has
$15,000 good spendable [ ~=::=::=::=::=:;:::=:::;[ elli'rything you need, a good
E.xclusi\"I' wilh us . Eas!sidr! ! P rice Reduction neighborhood, covl'red patio,
2 BR, l B,\ Pach. Bllns. ( $'3 ~ s·g 900 lor large buiJ!.in BBQ, double r · crpt lrp frncC'd rorn ··AN to ·1· • garagt' and a pricl' tag that ~/~~;;plete gPri~'.1<~ srp;1r. l quick sale. Striking. large tells )'OU it's a steal: So
at pallos 2 Block·s· 10 Jilh Spanish ho1nc, near. nrw, get wi1h and )o;<!Ve $$ on
e . · . 2800 sq ft. Owner transrer. ~A" or.An St. shopping. Present income . E · . lJ this one. ""'"'otMV S8."lO pC'r nlo. bu! should be ~ng ast. a nxious, 111.ust se ,
· d Good 1 :> Bedrn1. fam & din rm11. raise . e1·n18. ,1 1 1 J 1.
La h RI 1• ay case or ease op ion. c enmyer ty
Call 616·3928, Evrs: 6-16·2200 LEASE 4 BR flfesa Verde $26.5 P.caltor . . 2629 Harbor C.:O.t.
Owner Soys Sell
Reduced $2000
!i4l·Sll9 '
(nearcinemalh•~ -~-Ol.LEGE REALTY .
J500Adaml1tK1rbor,c.tl ....... This home is in Costa l\lesai; W l"ff bt'~t art'a. it's a 4 sPdroom 2 estc I
ba1h rcsklcnc(' 111rh a fa1n. j MESA DEL MAR Perfection
i'.y room and sparkling "A must ~ell" 011ner has Truly the nio.~t hcautiful \\'I'll
s1rimming pool · R;;nch srylr bought in Florida. One ~I kept honl<' you 11•iJI e\'t"I" sc•·.
complete w!!h rustic wood largest orl{' story homes 111 3 bcdiuon1, family room,
e:io:cerior. · It's 8 yrs )·oung the area \\i th 2ooo sq. ft. 4 large living room \\'ilh lire.
and bf'au!ifully <'ar('{l for. -hl'di:oom.s, 2 bath~, large placP. Charming t"Cl\'C:red pa.
01\"ner a~king 129,950. i°l'Iake famlly room. Beautiful. car. tio \\1th !>1n1c noorin.i:. illan.
offer. }16-8640 pets. 1-fome freshly painted icurcd yard. Priced right at
U"11CIUI'. tlCIMl'.S
Rei l E11•1•. 61(>.6000
THE BIBLE HOME
Thl' Bibl<'s love to ;-:oH -
their home is on ;\ICC's J.ll h
fo'a11·1\'ay. It's solid. quahty
custon1 {"Qnstruct1on 11 ith
counllrss lca!Urt's and beau.
tilul appointments. There
is ma.-:imum privat·y and
m i 111 mum. mauitcnaner.
Pcrfl'Ct !or that re!iI't'd
Exec 1\·tm loves to go!! -
and goof! Askini; $66,9J<I,
\Vith excellent terms.
* Sales Opening *
U"11CIUI'. tl{)-'tl'.S
Real E~l•1•, 157$-5000
1Ul E. Clli•I Hwy.
Co1ona 0.1 Mir, C1~t
ASSUME VA LOAN
Hf're's your thane~ 10 i::el a
£3i r~ Annual .Percentage
Ratt' Loan and .f b:f.aul1ful
and 1 ~1~1ACUL.ATE 1 bed·
room h0n1,, 10 boot. TPrrific
rear yard 11·ith ~prinklers,
block \\"cill. firing with Java
rock i:as BBQ. Kids play
area & alu111inum covered
palio. Only 21 ~ years NE\V,
r u I J y in1provcd, J UST
.\IOVJ:; TN. Initial lnvcst-
1nent or onJ y $38.'JO. 1\·ilJ do
it. Priet'd 10 sell quick at
$2!1,950. cot Ts
WALLACE
REALTORS
--54'-4141-
(0ptn Evenings)
TRl-PLEX
$39,500
(3) 2 Bedrm. units, separate
one for owner. Live in and
try IGOo down FHA,
General General
COUNTRY CLUB UVING ABANDONED-BEACH
$1500 Below Markel DIRT CHEAP /$19,950
Act Fast! Prlva!r, can:!free Thnt'-1r ris:ht! ~·ou can't bu,y
community li\"1ng 1i n\Ue the dirt for this prirr. Spark·
frOln blue Pa1·irlc. S\\•lm.· hng n1odt>rn 3 bedroon1. 2
nllni.:, 1cnn1s, J'tcrc~tion ;4rca lull baths. !luge country
at ~our 1/001"-strp. l cha1·m-slyll'd kllchrn \\"ilh latesl
ini:; bcdrooin suitrs. Color bu11t-1r1s. Landsc.11ping to
roorchn:itrd all cite. kitchen. prrfrction TrN's and llo\\'trs.
Formal dtnin;: area. Lush Trl)ru·al ~'f't'nhouse. Bri('k
dC<'p pile carpcllni;. l..ltrgr 1i.1110 & plat1tl'rs. Tiki lights.
cnclos1'<1 atrium patio. 2-f·;i .. Low, low do\1·n & m.o,·c r~ght
',;aragr. LQ\V LO\V 00\\ . ...: u1, A mus! to ~e! ! Call
or assuinc existing FllA (7141 ~2·:..i80l
1"" A "~' """ Call FOREST E. OLSON 1714) !16t-55.S5.
FOREST E. OLSON
Jnr. Realtol's
J~1::i Hrookh1n·st A\"(',
Jluntlngton BPa(·h
Inc. Realt01·s
19131 Brookhurst Ave.
B/B
22 Yrars of
r:cal E:slatc &-rv1ce Cozy fireplace ln Thr Harbor Area
Gorg{"Qus custom. bttilt pro. Storybook Cottage
\'1ncial . 3 bedroomR, l1uge AH r. 2 BR. htl1nr So. of Hwy.
Jh·\ng room l\'lrh glus.dOors lld\\"d. llrs .. ll:'e. tiv. rm. v.•I
to the patio. Sunny kitchen C'OZy brick frp!c. Bl'aut. yard
with \\"OOd cabinets and eat. & lndscl)J::. Zoned R·2 !or eX·
ing area. Close to Nt1vport tra unit. Prtct only SJi,2!1().
1-larbor Jligh School <'Ind 675-3000
shopping area, All tJ11s !or
only_ , .$35,j()(), 10~;, do\\·n.
Phone £HG. 7171.
e BALBOA ISLAND e --~C=R=l~S=l~S-----1 sest buy . 1>r~1. 1ocauon
Charn1. hon1e. Rm.. lo bid.
RrduCl'd 10 $44.9j()
Q\vtl!'r out of woi·k, hon1e ISLAND REAL TY
n1u st br sold im.m.cdiately. 673·12()() 67:).5408 Eve~.
4 Beriroon1s. lamilv rn1. hrr.·1 -~=~=~ ==~~
place.'.! sto1)' on hugr. huge * BEACH HOUSE *
lot. Asking $37,500. Submit 2 BR. -+. 2 Blocks from
any t'easonablt oflc.r (pend· ocean In l"'p1. Beach, You
in...-: r 0 re c lo s t1 re) • Call own the land! .s2.~.950.
:;.1.;.312t • Georg• Williamson
R ealto r
673-43SO 645-1564 Eves
CUSTOM FOURPLEX-
Cho1ce Ne\\'p()l'I Area. 17-1.000
• Owl)('r 2\l/981·701fl.
Costa Mesa
N:ESA VERDI-;
Lo\·ely 4 BR, 2 BA -+ tam.
rm. home , N r ~hool, lib.
& shop'g cntr on quiet st.
Elec bl!ns, like nt'w lu~h
shag crpt thru oul
\\•/Spani~h tile l'n1ry. Bllin
bookcases in paJH'l'd liv. rm
\\/usrd brick frplr. By
O\\'ner, $31,950. ~i-68::7
GOOD :. BR, hse on Ulrr
donhf'rry in Jlio. C . i\I .
Assume-existing fHA loi\n
of approx. 125,i:iO \\"/Ln!e~st
at only 6~. $2500 dO\\"n
paymnl. Cha,;. C. i\1artln
Rltr. S.lS-\\!)5.
EASfSIDE -.>14~;, I011n
available, Chol~ l bedrn1,
2 bn01 home In absolutely
imn1aculate eond11ion. All
bltni;, h11rd\1·oor! fl oor!!.
r.rptg, !il'f'plare k t;uirt
residential locatio11. A 1nust
10 srP at $33,000. Call
!J.l:'t-841·1, !bu!h Coast
RPaltort;.
$23.:o:I
QUICI~ po.~sessron, no quali-
lying. . . take over l'1·1A
loan. 3 Bedroom. big fenced
backyard. rrrshly painted,
nrw \1·atrr heater,
a1most-llf'1v roof, carpr!ln1t
6t kilrhen floors. Ag t.
6i~S!l89.
~I 0 V Jf\:G-TRA!'iSFERRED-
Tlttd o! fightini;: 1v Ith
tenants~ Call the problC'm
soll·en -South Coast Real
Estale. Property P.Ianage·
ment Division.
54j...ll·12·1
$23.j()(). NO qualifying. Take
over },Ill loan. 3 BR ·
movr-in concl. Agt fi7!1-8989
Dana Point -----4 BR \l'/atrlum, $29,;ioD.
~'2'\1 1011.n. Beauti!ut view.
2529" Yach! Dr. 4:14-:i430.
Dover Shores * PRIME VIEW * ElCC'C. &clurlrd Con1emp.
Ideal !or entcrlaining. Old TWO HOMES 11·orld t:harrn! H1 ct"thngs,
Balboa Island lead<'d "·indo1vs. brick Ii ONE LOT \\·rou ..... ht iron. 5.000 •• ft. 5 JBR'lla+<"h", Look _ 2 -2 Bedroom homes pat, 'co~·d. lncd, nr \tiat, ba'r, 4 c11r gar. $178,000.
on one lot • What a buy · lrPI, $IO l\l dn. Eld. Oivn. Fum. opr, 548-i2·19.
Built It! owners need.~ · Bu.I car tat. 67~ East Bluff perfect as a borne + income.1"'7.=~;-..:=;:c----1.::;::;:c._:::.;;::.;.. ____ _
or ar an inve~tn1c nt. r.Ji:cel. College Park Leavinq State
lent access to shopping a_nd COLLEGE Park. hy 011•11f'r Our transfC'rred O\\'nrr i\I UST
schO?l s · }iurT?' • Come in-. 3 br. 2 ba, family rn1. M'li his sharp 4 bedroorn
vest!ga1e and invPsl. fin-pla1>(' li:e ll'nred y<1rd . honie \i·ith large family roonl
DIAL &l5·030J ;,~,~-:, 1-'l~A . paymf'nl~ $165 in Eas!blutr. ltedecoratcd in FOREST E. OLSON nio. S26.!IOO. 5'10-9356 1970 \1'1lh ]u:io:urious 1'.hag c11r.
REALTORS Corona del Mar pct. h11nclsome "OOd panel-
229!1 Harbor, C.fll. Ing ar1d decora!or \\'all ('t.l\._
MOST RARE DUPLEX erings. An exl'cllent family
SOUTH OF HIGHWAY home \1;i1h an oversized i:ar.
Once in 11 lifetime-'''e romr ·., • ·,. · ''' to~ Dad'~. w"rkshop. . . Tuo 2 ~uroom uni .. ~ 1n onP , .,
upon_ such a \•alu<' 111 !hi! nl Corona drl i\lar'.!1 most Call u.~ quick rf'i:an1ini: this
spacious ~Ir~ Vt'rcl; ~nie. rk>sirt1ble locr.Honir:. \\'alk lo lop ,·alue at only S44.750. ~r.!;g~~~~0~151~,1 ,h ~1~1 o
1
1ina c
1
ov:· sh~~:_p1ingr, ,~;hi Call li73·85.·i0 . .,
00 18 000 5~ , . ,, rmen ar~ g-,.,,.,. ..... Oprn $at & Sun,
lor a at. S · · ., ~ •11s-p;iint. new carf)<'t and low l tn j
sun1ahll' lo'ln. Onl y S:'!tJ •• )()tJ. k th !)lltl)·s 2~4ft Carrl Call ~~l6-2Zl:": pncc ma c is ' •
Near Si>. Coast Plaza
best buy.
Only $-l:i.9~!0
A Real Esl:Uen: E:io:ctusi\"e
Call 673-8.'UI
.f Bedrooms. '.:' haths, fir<'• GREAT VIEW!
Fountain Valley
OPEN HOUSE
inside and out. Close to St. S46.7j(). This won"I last long~
Johns and all schools plus Call 67.H930
shopping, Ca!! no\\' ;)46-2313. '
•COLE~&CO..
placE', blln range ~ O\'rn . or ha rbor & ocean. A!!r. split
C:irpcls, dr11prs, patio, dblc lr\·el home on n.3 5100 sq.
Newport i::aragr . S27.7j(). 11 lot. ldC'al for <I apt. uni1s.
Roy Mc Cardle R ealtor $200.000, 27ill Ocean Blvd.,
Sun, Jan :llst. 12.11 pnl
9599 Puffin l ane
Im.n1acula1r 3 hr, fumily
r<JOm. fornu1I <linln~ roon1,
ru~1n1rt <l rn pl!~ f.· rarpe1~.
$32.500. rl!A. V1\ or COJl\'(!n.
li()nfll l1n11nc!n11:. C.J. R11Pvcs
& As~nc .. 'i?.6·llllll7
~r""'r KAal Pt. .. 111·41ll 1810 Nr11fl(lr! Ah cl .. C.:-01. Cd!l1 . By app't. only.
F•irview 548-7729 Bill Grundy, Realtor
Eight Bedrooms 646.8811 -c""' '""''"'
LIDO WATERFRONT FR + DR + POOL · ) BEACHES . BOATS * 421 ORi:-HT°* (1nytim1 Bay~hnres hv lhp brach. 4
•• Re11ltor
Z62!l Harbor. C.;\I.
5%% VA LOAN lovely Pool Home !
Hun1fngtot1 Beach
STILL OLD & DIRTY
Vacant pile of 2':4 and .stucco.
Nothing good exetPf. the Jo.
cation and 5* ~~ Joan. }o)'ont
yard loo~ like Ult'! Alamo
aod ~ back yard looks Jtke
the African jungle. 11'1 Ha..
w3iian, Japane~. Indian
ancl Colonlal ex1erior archi·
1er rure. Neighborhood excel·
l!:'nt.
l' 1llage Real Estate
9U-447 I ( ~:: l 546-1103
ASSUME
4°/o loan
3 & t'amily, I ~• ba.. like new
crpts. tll1's, 3 yt'a~ ne1v -
llt't!Pr than modl'I! CloSe to
schools, shoppg & frre\\ay,
KRA.f"1' REALTY. 842-1~18.
6'/o VA
Dutch !111\'cn !\farina f'xi11ting
SZl .500 loan payable $J9j per
monlh P.I.T.J. 4 Bedroo1n
2 hi11h, rlrc bltn range &
oven, dish1vasher, lirf'place,
family rm., carpels, drapes,
pallo, dble garage, sprlnk·
leni, landsC'apl'd.
Laguna Beach
3 UNITS
Thrtt blocks to beaeh. 2 • 1
Bedroom,. l stlidlo. Spanlall
archltttture. Excellent con.
dition. ;.t.~ Gros1 income.
131,950. ean •
.A-Olan
REAL ESTATE
llOO Glenneyre St.
4~·9473 54s.o316
RENTAi..
Charn\ing older 1-bdrm. un.
!Umished unit, l&"e. fam. rm.,
n1assive Jiv, rm. w/wood
paneling, old brick tiftplact.
Ocean view, just •ct'Oll"I
f!'Om the beach. Truly an
outs111.ridini; ttntal at
$250 mo. yr. leas.-
1\llSSJON REAL TY
985 So. Coast llv.)'., l.aflln•
PHONE 494-0731
100• VIEW of oce an ~
Ca l allna. Small but
buildable lot in Lquna.
$5.950 full prkfo. Low dn
& O.\\'.C. wl low monthly
payments. Bkr. 493-11.53 or
49-1-6632 eves.
1llage Real Estate ll Lido Isle
962-4471 I ::::J 546-1103 -------·I
WOW! $23,5001 ON STRATA CENTRO
GI /NO DOWN! 4 B~~~+l+t.o~ths
F11A/11300 dov•n'. Approx. Street le> Strata
$210 tohtl per month! l BR, $72,500
2 BA, cfJ.ltd, frncl'd~ \\lon 't LIDO REALTY INC.
la~1! 3377 Via Lido 673-7300
HAFFDAL REAL TY
812-4l0;i Eves: M1·2446
4 • PLEX
\Valk to Broadway !hoppg.
111 3 BR, 2 BA; fl\ 2 BR.
No vacancy. Price reduced.
Ou! o! to\\'n Ownl'r.
KRAFT REAL TY
842·1418
4 Br. hplit level. Sol Vista
fRlif model, boat & trlr
H1'l'R, :io:tra lrg lot, top cond.
Call 842-4169.
$18,250
VA no dO\\'n or rnA S50 do\\11,
2 Bedroom, Z bath Condo-
m lnium, tari::.e living rn1.,
niodern kilchcn \\·1lh e!c-:
b.ltn range ·• oven, garb&gl'
t!lsposa.I; plenty of C'Upboards
&. storage spi1.ce. 11eP living
rq:>n1. crpts & drps lnclUd·
fit, FA heat. patio, pa)ments
lrss than rent.
l' 1llage Real Estate
,62-4471 ( ::::.} 54~·110]:
NICE 3 Br, ·wlfam rm. Nr:
Fiv-)' & new elemrn!ary
s1•hl. \\'ant to scU fast!
Principals Only! 8!»-4016
SACRIF'!CE: l br, 2 ha, ram
rm w I frplc. 121 .000.
Assumable 1~~':"<. 962-IS&l.
I Huntington Harbour
S1\CRlrJCF. $89,000 -
;\lagnilicent ~ br, 4 ba,
\1·a1errro11! t"ome in Hun·
11ngton ilarhoul'. I 0 l '
\Htle1·rron!. 57' dock. Call
592.1601 for appt, Principals
onl)'.
Irvine
* • 40' }ot • Clean 3 br, 2
ha. Ne\\·ly redecorated.
Large patio. $11,500.
Kt 5·2512 after 6 pm * OPEN DAILY 1-4 *
218 Via Quite. 4 BR. 3 Ba..
$65,000. Broker 675.5.200.
Mesa Verde
SUPE!l locatlon-1516
!l!yr1le1\'00d. 3 BR, lam,
frplc. rHA-VA ~nding.
$27,500. Owner 499.1901 or tlJ
49&-39-19 •
Newport Beach
HONEYMOON
COTTAGE I
$17,900 PRICE ·
Pleas<', ne\\·tyweds fir 5tt0nd
honeymooner.i only. Older 2
bedroom home, but cute •a
a bug's ear! Large SO x 150
Jot for future exparui!on.
t'hoice Ea11tside Cm!a Me1a.
Submit your tenns. Don't
miss 1hls one?
Walker & Lee
~al tors
2790 Harbor Blvd. 111 Adami
5-tS.9491 Oprn °lil 9 P?>f
NEEDS TEENAGERS
Small comm.unity pool, dub.
house & putting green wilh
this immac. adult occupied
3 BR .. family rm, hom.e.
Lge. bdrms. k huge encl. pa..
lio makros !his a great home
!or a family \\i th teenagen;.
$59,500.
Delancy Real Estate
2828 E, Coast Hwy,, CdM
644-7270
BALBOA COVES
WATERFRONT
Prime loc. 3 BR. 2 ba. alnrle
FOR EVER & EVER s1ocy. Newly decor. Fenced
Unobstruc1ed ,.IC\Y. Tolescop. yd. lO It. boat all?. $79,500
k· horizon virw. Your own Bill Grundy, Realtor
i;kylint obsrrvHtory. 4 B<l· 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 642-4620
rms., 2 haths; offered in thi~ 1\!Usr SELL BY OWNER
f)f'rfcclly dPsi~ncrl family Brand new, fee simple, t
homf'. Qualily thruout. Don't hlk beach, 3 br, 2 ha, 2
111 1s~ ii! SW.000. lrplc, beam «illngs, wfw
Sharp 2 slor.i• h<1m('. 1 1~ mile.~• APTS.-32~ LI ~O ~,ORD TI~ars r 11l'hl • R _lull hdrms: ................. ___ ,.,. sP.. ~ ba. Top toe. HPd. 10 Our of 1he brttrr buy~ In
10 ocean. Lar~r f!tmlly rooni $11 0.000 P11cl' \1·1111 1 • lsl f ormal DR . f R • n1odcrn $1•!,oo:l. 1011 n. 2 BR. hon1r ori R-2
1111h f\rrplacr, lush sha~ T.D, 6 Bt'aut. furn. u1111s: kitrh • breakru~r ai·ta . 4 1 • $3000 .TOTAL , Home Show Realtors lfl1, Carp.&: flrps .• lt'P!. Pa·
"••p-I.<, •••"en kitchen, 6 cllr gar11gcs & ulit. roon1. baihs ·• JarF:P LR _ wh110 to a ssume. this Jow go. v I loan "A h . 11 1 1 n<>'' t1() nl<'P yard for !h(' child.
16 X 31 11trarrrl & t"iltc1'ed)
Lo1•ely )flr!I \1•/hnat galr' 4
LI:' !,edroon1~~ Cl'pls, rlrp5,
C'Xtra.~: Lo1v ln!rrr.~1 Lo11n!
HAFFDAL REALTY
tj1 d h•11 carpet, huge dbl ra r . • re I -"'-""-==eLuF=-Fs -I
Popula r E. Plsn. Ju8h cm·
brl!. zi;, ba. 3 BR & den. By
ov.·ner, '46.600. 644-2290.
' ' o I p d I h 3 bed rmc air ouS£' iun i .. • 0 11 I I $32 -~ park.like b;1rk vard CO\"<'I · SO FL on s\\in11nin:; beach. brlrk .P. ool hcatt'd &.· 1111 nlO\'C in o t. is . 3.135 E. Coair:t H\\'y., Cdi\i reM"·oRG"A"N 'R' EA .. L~T.Y
t'd paflo. S2lJ ·Per· nionlh \\'ill consider tJ·ad" for boa! tillt'r. Badmin1on court • room pr.lace. Tinck, thigh· 675-7225
·s all. $35,950. or n1a:io:in1um JSj.000 lgc. 4 a\"111ry . n1uch mort, you high shag. custom v.•allpa. 673-6642 675-6459
p.l) BR. house. \\On'! h<'lie\'e the reasonable per. and drapes wilh dream $26,500 HOME SUITE HOME
COATS Bill Grundy Rltr. price. Hurry, Dial &IS.OW.1. kitchen, FIREPLACE, and 3 BR. + Family Rm. l Swttt sui!eir; in this attr.
& S3l Do\"cr Dr .• K.B. &12.-1620 FOREST E. OLSON lui_s of GOODIES, $2.'i,j()() Elrg11 nt rireplacC'. Huge lfln1. home. Bolh roomy&. home.
WALLACE R"-,\LTORS pr1cct1 for quick sale. P kl k 1 k n-1 1 11 I BR ,_ & L ily rm, :l Bt'dl'm. ar 1 e 1 I!, '""" mrn lt' · •
REAL TORS EMERGENCY SALE 229') ll~rbor, Cosla )tel& Wa Iker ee yard • :shad,, +· ln1lt treeJ. apt. pl\ys lhr bills. r$.i2.fi00), e 962-'44S4 e Bring )'OUr offer on this primc Prune lCk;ation. So down UNIVERSITY REALTY
Open Evenings Jr\". Te rr. 3 BR. home \\-/ NEW LISTINGS Rcsl!oN. 1rrn1!l. 54fl.172n ::001 E. Cst. li\\'y, 6il.65l0
1..,,-... ~~!'::~--"" pool & many rxtras for . i~2 f.din.C:<'r TARBELL 29SS Harbor CHllR~lTNG 2 br wfmassive 1~ 0 ('hoice ll\'ing. Asking 159.:::«J F1r~1 1.lnlP ()f!C're<l. drl\'P. by 1n •1 s•2-11.·,.-, or~·'""''' ' * $30 00 * !93.'"~ N h l.n 11 B ~ ~ .,.,,, ... , S SS O S ullf:d brick frpl<', open ' by a n)(iOus o\\'nrr. · J• P\I" ai·en ne, · · RE_POS E I N be11m~ thn1out. Incd ycl, cor-
Clmmercial Sleeper CORBIN a rare finrl 3 hedrm \'1ew lo!. BEACH UNITS Spnrkhng .clean hOmes, some nf'r lol . i:~.50Ct. llT."-r2409.
t C·2 • 6.'IOI Lo~ Aniigos Circlr. ftB. ne\\'ly p111ntcd & carpeled. 2,1~==~=~~--=
N'r\. Br:ich. :l snuin unt!s a 4 81.'droom pr\z<' "fo'rands-3, 4 & 5 bdrms, Some-wf!h 1Nf'0:\1E Cd~t. 2 houst's. 9'hi
I · ·· MARTIN · • I 11 rental uni!i;, Nr\\""'rt 1 Cl 1 lhl Ca!: 673·3003 518·0•\j L Vf'S, ! r;in f oun!funs' rcsa r. '"' poo ls FllA-VA conv 1erms re urn. ose o every ng.
I JSS8~ Santa i\lariann. f .V. , Shore!, clo~c to beach. 14 tr .$l7 OOO 10 110 o00 ' $38,500. Phone 4~3622
B bed 2 1 i::11rages. only 8 Yt"s old, no I om . · · · associated :
9 ~0KER5--REALTORS
2125 W lolboo 61.J..J66l
' I $28,750
1•'4 Bdr. + Oen
' Family Rm.
l?uii. ovl'r5i1.ed rooms. hu1lt0
1~1-boclkshf"h't'~, C'OlY den,
nnliNll brick tlreplact, No
dotn CI or nlA tcm11.
5-ld. li3:1 T~BELL 29SS Har bor
crEAR-AS-A BE CL"
REAL TORS 644-7662 r a uiiluJ
4
rni,
11 ><i. vacancle.s. E.xccllc111 '"'I'"" CoAd",'"m' ."A~·~.'. Its 1~~·~-,23 Costa Mesa
I "STARDUST" J1in11:to s1ory. I 8>·~·.,,t~~·.;:.·~·~,;!'-~~·[g:1;;;:~~;;;:;;~~:;;;;;; I NEW MODELS \\'e ha\r lhr kry. cal\ 10 sec. 11.roJnrl income of $160() mo. ~ ·
U"d"· '°"'"'""''" . ""·'"' Larw;n RHlty, 1,c, I !J3'.000, . . FANTASTIC 4 BR I 101~:i.1 D I t:All I'!\ •4ti ·l 41 .. ~ TRA~SFF.:R p ll!lS at .•. llf\IX'I~ rl\'t, 962·6988 anytimt . . \!I" YOUR PROBLE:-01
O!)\'f'r Shnrt's. 4 &. j Retlcm~. ,.,._,,..._,......,..,...,.,._ ~~ ~ •~ ""41#C, to SPECIALISTS As:s11me: fl!,\ loon 1vith $4200
4 & J brohs. &ele<'I your ov.·n En9li1h Waterfronf I REAL TV Property Management down payment. Large ram.
colors & cusl?m d~talls. All Quaint, peeked root. •hini:;lr Nt 1r "''"'POrl Po1 l Oftl~ '-.. Rea l Estat1 Hy llome, V.'l'll llrnlM-aped ln
\l'ith ou1stand1n1: Vic w11. R~y ~ldc~. 1va111\ 1voo:I int., mall'· NO DOWN SYEPHENS & KAYE A·l rondition, rrady for
J . \\'ard. R.Ur. &IS.l550, nirit'f'nt IN't't. :i2' Prln1e ! 645-0122 ANYTl~iE movr 1n. Co\'trcd palln, hll·
Open Dally, fronlagt'. Picr11difl. 1179,9."IO. Nn dov.·n paymtnt lo quali-ly rrpld & drpd. Near A.II
EASTSIDE TRIPLEX PETE BARRETT ALTY !lNf V""'"'· Low. low * NEW LISTING * """°I" ,.,. ""'" <1e1a;1,
Sharp unit, \l'l1h rz1 2 Bl!drm • do\\·n lo non.\lrts. l laNiE' iStep!l 10 OCf';in. :l BR, i •~ ha. r3J1 :ilO·ll:il. Hrri!agc Rea.I.
I.: bat'ht'IOr unit on large tot, 642 _5200 bt-drc')Oms, hkE' new carpeling 1 Blln~. 2 Cnr i:::nra1:l'. Good tors. tOpcn Eves.I
Obie df'lachtd gar~<'. Try q.nci drapes. Qu&l1ry . built ('(lndl\l(ln S26.000.
OWNER ANXIOUS 10'· do11·n. ()nl~· • • JUST LIKE N ~ home on" qui\"t eul de .~c. CAYWOOD REAL TY 6.~At' .... t by l..akr 111:.llhe"-~· $32,950 l Bed z h th C 1 l 121.~iCIO. Call 6-16-?lil 1fld11y. 6.106 \V C'nll~I ll"Y·, ND
Oi-.l)er 1r11n<~ t.i liqu1,/tl", PERRON 642·1771 rm. a orKom ~ Price rP<IU~t! l" ~11 l'lO\\"
l.ral'1ni: nrr11. ~ Br:. 2 ~tory.
Con1r lo 2~ !'hr rwood St, C.\I Cllf.'\pl',<"t a\·iul In At,,a. r or [ · ,---. _ Ju1n, 1·1)1npl r tr!y mice. 1n. 548-1290
('itfU&i "'·ori1do. Xlnl t111urr e Golfer s ~ttenllon • rh1tl1n::: 111'1\' 1·11rpr hr;. Im· + '11 .·1 off llPl'X 1;, min l Br.. 2 Bil. Xlnl L'Ornr r lot. 1nrd, ocrupr1n1'y. flrlctd be.
1 Un ~:r ' \ralk 10 coun!ry cl uh. !01v markrt 111
DUPLEX $36,:1·11
23rd &· Orsnitr. (' \t.
Builder 612400~1
CDLLf.GE Pork. Hy !JIVIWI'.
$24,500. 2302 Oilumhla Or.
• 645-0!!17 .. J1~. s'MITH1 RL TR. F'ORTl:'l CO. &-12.j()l)J $20,500 Dally Pilot \Vant Ads ha\'e
~00 t.: Iitli St,, C)I 6-16-32.'IJ \\'e-"U hl'lp )'OU &ell! 64.2-5678 PERRON 6'4Z-l771 ! .:•::•:!rge:al:::"'::.!'::''::'"'::;;;.· ____ 1 _________ i;o_,1m;_•·_,•,;:·L_,;,,._&1_2-;.....00_T8;_ __ '
REALTY
Uni\•. Park Center, Irvine
Ctill Anytime 833.()820
BY Q\\•ner l " BR. den, 2~i
S42-440j Eveir;: 5-tl-2446
BY O\\'N ER, $2.),400, 4 BR.
2 ba. bl!n~. frplc, eovcrC'd
patio. fncd, nr achools.
&12-2264
The · "VellO\Y Pages ..
classilied ..• 64l-:'J678
or BA, Pool $.38,000. 1936
Teresita. Ln, N.B. 642-2378.
$@~~~-.lt"BtfS"
The Puzzle wilh the· Built-In Chuckle
HABEON
I FODIR
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Oid you heQr about the pilot
who joined a nudist colony?
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I I I ft COlllplete ·fhe diudilt qllOtfd ' I ' 1 I V by 11/lin; 1n The rnhaing word . • • • • • • YClll develop from at~ No. 3 b.low.
A. P!l:INI NUM8[R£0 lfTTfllS
.., IN TH(5£ ~O ARES
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900
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•
Tut~J. ftbruar'1 2, lftll ' JO DAIL V PILOT
( tbwforW. l~,11'-_·~_'"l'"__,I ~ I I ~ I _, ..... J~1 l -., ..... J~l -"'-lf!l I Ao .. -.,,, ... I[!] 1 :..~~~11 ;;; =~~~I~;;;~;;;----
Newport Beach Condominiums I ;Mono:;:;Y;;•o:;;;L;; .. ;":;=;2;;;;40 Hau'" Unfum. 305 tfouse1 Unfurn. 305 Aptt. Furn. 360 Apts. Furn. 360 1----------1 for s•I• 160 -*223 OCEANVTEW Ave for Coron• del Mer Huntington Beach Costa Mes• Ntwf)!rt 8eo1ch We by owner. Y\ew ot 8a,y EXCEPTIONAL Entn.nce Cash Fast I .:..:c.;;.;;,;,c.:;.:..;:.:..:;:;; ___ 1~=~;;.:.:::.:. _____ 1 :.::::.::..i::::.:...!::=~---
.. """'-OIS-1983. t<> ""• V•nle Co"""> Cub. • "' J Bit°" dooblt :Oc Crpi., ** 3 Bdrms, 2 Botlu, clott CASA de ORO BACHELOR In qul•L pv!
N
owpo't Hoi•hts 2 BR Condo. Spanilh style. 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds drapes, dbl 1araiie. to Mann.a HJ.ah. $240/mo. CASUAL Callf t h.i-in N.8. bomt>. $140. Sln&(e 1;;.="".:..:=,.•='----I Xlnt rlna.n. by 0 w n er , $275/mo. G. H. Robertson Call &46.-1224. · ...... ,... a l'mploy~ man. MS-36M. FREE APPRAISALS Realtor, 67$-2440 warm ?.fedlte.rn.ntll'l atmo .. I-~~-------
LOVELY qUality 3 BR hOme 546-8790. No chlldml under Cost• Mesa Investment For l"ue 4 BR, Dutch Haven Phtre. Spacloua color CO-2 BR. ti Rouses to bch, no
\n Nt>wport Hela:hta. 2 blka 12. 54&-77l l a nytlm• 7 BR. Adults. No pets. Patk>. on cul-de-sac, 1% ba, bltna, ordinated ~ • dulped I: pets, water l'd 'tl.l July lit.
from Harbor Hiah. Cornl"r 2 BR. 2~~ ba. Pool, sauna . ...,,,.....,...,...,.;.,.....,~ Yearly leAse . 520 ~~ tr't'i~ paint thruout. ~58 tumisbed for it)'Je It com-i,cl~l1=0~. 64=-"'N83'1,;:;:_ ___ _
lot. $39.~ Principals only. Low dn. Q\\•ner wtllna.nce Money Want.cf 250 Avocado. 83T-T86S C/r Huntington Harbour fort e Heated poot e Kitch. BACHELOR apt, furn, swim
548--0769 ""l"S Fortin Co, 642-5000 ~9485 eves. I '-'===;;.;.===--I en w/ lndlttct lighting e pool, iiar, 1 blk ocean. 210
S•n Ju.n Capistreno Income P roaerty _166 A V'ERY wtll establ!thed BAY & Ocean w, prv rd. HUNT. Harbour waterfront Deluxe RfO • .AdultJonl.y. No Cedar. \V. Npt. 548-1131
;,J;, businf'ss in reglonal Orange Steps heh. Immac, 2 Br. • 3 hr, 2 ba, frplc, deck pet& $2j() ~fO, 7 BR lower, Year--
l BR. 2~i BA Spanish 0 Th B h County shOpping c en le r $295. 613-6904, 67~TI9 & dock. LMl or lse/option. · 1 BR.-$17~ tum. ly, Util paid. 3704 Seu.hare
to"'nhouH', bl llns, cpt1 , n e eGC needs expanslon capital of Sa50. 6114-22ii0 By owner. UJ1LITIES INCLUDED
drps, pool, elec gara~. 6 units on ti~ cxeantronl. In· $30,000 to S5D,OOO. Exct>Uent LOVELY 3 Br. 1 blk beach, Dr, 67l-65i8
many other "xttu. $30.500. come $9,tiOO/yr. Would make 0 P p ort u n 1 ty, \V r i te in best art,_, S300/mo. No Newport Buch 365 W. \Vilson 642·19n SINGLE furnished. Util paid
644-2260 day, 673-1028 ew-. good summer/winter rent. Classiiled ad No. 41, Daily pets or children. StiZ-6653 3 BR, 3 Ba: ia.r&'e home ~1!t u~. • •n~r!'. : $28.85 wt>ek. 224 Newprorl
Silverado als. $85,000. Call 646-TITI, Pibt, P .O. Box 1560, Costa 3_ BLKS to ocean or bay, On channt>l.v.·ith pier & float, STUDIO & l BR Apls Blvd, N.B.
~tesa, Calif. 92626 3 BR. 3 ba, den, din'& nn. !arze pauo, $450~ ~r .mo, e Color rv, pho~ serv, pool 2 BR uppt"r • WaJk lo beach.
3 BR homt> w/den, living Mortgages, bllns, Lease. 673-3477 637~ or 675-3435 • Linens, maid serv avail. $250 Incl util. Yt>uly. Avail
room "'/frplc. Fixe upper. Trust DeHs 260 FRONT ~. 2 bdrms. 2 4 Bdrm. on channel $350 Olp Ad •• Good FOR $5. 3/1. 213 I 447-944.l .
. Ferad yd, patio. $12,500. ba., carp., drapes. ;225 3 BR. dplx. ptly furn. S250 Charge ~ds Acc. ~lust 9ell. &t~2206. 10 Units-East.side Costa $35.COO 1st TD on 3 aCTe )1onth. Aiient 675-7101 CaY"o"OOd Realty 548-1290 2376 Ne"'port Blvd. 54.8-9755 cA;,p_t._U-'--n-fu:.'.:.nc:. ___ 3:.65::
:'ltesa. Arcltlttct deiign, no estate parcel v.·/ magnlti· _C:::o:::s:::to:::..:M::;o~s:::•:...:::::'.:::'.'.--l :::CN"W"PT="BCH""':C.:;,C:mm=•c:,'i3C;B;;;R"'°. • • • • • • • • Gent:ral
I [.itJ] vacancies, lov.· main. cent view. 9% int, 5 yr den dining. 2',ii BA: trorn QUIET, studm SUS, 1 BR'a ---------Rt~~~t... tenanct, good return. By due date, 12<;"a diSC"Ount. Drive By 's385. Delta !HG-4414 $125. No chldm or pets.
~·"'· -""· 570 Victoria St. M., Apt•· LUCKY "11" 5 duplexes + RENTAL FINDERS 1:;;~;~;~~;1j~~;--~·="~"i. "~~~~~;'I ~B~iu'~-~49~~~U-\3~-~~o;r ~494"'632~; I Newpo•t He•'ghts 2135 Elden Aw., C.'¥1. See.
Acreage for sale • 150 hse. Ea. "'·/fenced yd, Fix-Costa Mesa l·BR., sharp, good area. 4 BEAlIT. Bach & 1 Br. apts. Free To Londlo•ds
0 ~ Rms or duplex, cpts/drps, S35 wkly & up. Furn incl
IDEAL FOR DESERT access. lS% dn suo:,1 Aft HOUliesfor Rent TEJ gar, l'r coupe, nope 8· util. r.1onthly terms avail. 645.0111 up & inen'a.se rents. vs! I ..... 3 Bedroom, unfurnished Old I t
SPA DEVELOPMENT 675-8989 l i~mmmmm;;-~.;1 house-, carpets, o~n hl"arn St30 mo. Bkr. 646-2414· 998 El Camino. 546--0451 4JJW.1•t111,CMtti w ...
App-". ·I.COO 11.cn's of 1 .... ,1..:::.:..:=------cei!Ing, Huge rear yard, A U . lty p k
.,.th·-1, .. of wat•r'. Sl!Xt,ooo' real nice house, Children & 1;;;;";;";;";';';;;:;a;;r;;;;;;;;;;;ll BR. & 2 BR, llii BA. • 23nl • ~--c >I Houses Furnished 300 "'"'" ok $175 mo '""-·~"·or Cpts, drps; nr shops; pool. Just for Single Adults :OOO'n. Ei</D Int. only for 2 II< vnu•&~· '' · ... ~ .. . . . .,...,.J..;l<J'\I Util pd 1884 M . SOUTH BAY CLUB DUPLEX $36,9j() 673-0900 Kent Allen. CALL US · onl'OVla .
yrs •. then ammorllze In 15 Builder G42-40C>a ~G~•:!!"!"~'°!!'-------1 -s.;o;;;-si;-;;;;-&;cr.;;;;-l ror 2·3 & 4 BR. rentals in 548-0336 APARTMENTS yrs. For more info. \\Till": Super Sharp & Clean University Park l,1~14.>:;.C:::l"=B~R-. "'1°'375=--. "'2~B=R. Newport Beo1ch
Philip \Vhi~ & Co. PROPERTY MANAGERS Spacious 3 BR, lam & dining and Turtle Rock Util pd. Pool. Gard~n Liv· 880 Irvine Avt>.
&1: Bank of America Bid&. Lots for Sale 170 \Ve will refer tenants t" you rm. 2 Bath, dble gar., Jg \VE HAVE TIIE!l;J! ing. Ad.Its, no pets. 740 w. (Irvine and 16th)
625 B'way, San Diego 9n0l OCEAN front to Coast Hwy !:~rao~lec~~~i.s · ~n ~f:~ ~~: :=~tir:u~~~ne~ i,.=":.:'h""Sl;::".,cCM=·--~--~=--C.-(7_1_4.:,)_64:,-'-S-0..::5:.50:....,_
8+ ACRES lW property, approx. 12,000 'vaiting list. street. $250 l\fonth. Now va. SPACIOUS newly decorated $180. New 2 BR apt, bllns,
sq. ft. Xlnt business or ALA Rentals. * 64.>3900 cant. Call Heritage Real £s. l BR apt in. qui.l"t £.side shag crpts, drps, patio.
Nt>w on market, C-1 7.0ne. home poss 1bi1 i I Y · So. CUTE Conv.-Priv 1 tate, 54{1.1151, (cpen eves.) 4-plex, gar&ge, $ l 3 O • gar, 356 E. 20th, 0 1"
Price and terms to sell. J\.la.. Laiuna, $ll0,(l(X), ( 213) pergon"s domain. All • $90 1.ARGE i\-1ESA DEL MAR 584-1511 642-4905.
jor corner on Brookuhrstl..::,'"-:.:.;U::;9:.:1~----~ incl util. ho wt h 4 bed f il "SINCE 1M6" 1 BR. $120 • $125. Spacious.
A"• '"••-•-·to•. · LOTS -~rse coun-. -N. ALA •-nta! ~ &1~3900 me 1 mis, am Y Ad""' Pool Ideal f-• " " ,., .... ..,. '"' · n · "" All no: ...-..,. rn1 and large fenced yard, 1st Westt>rn Bank Bldg .... ..,.. · · v•
Larwin Realty Inc.' Tusl in·hl &-VJews. $9.i. Cozy Laguna cottagt>:. Quiet. inside slreet . University Park ~~~~~orr;. 548-963J. 1993
EXCLUSIVE AGENTS utilities. ~· Uss for Private garden, Ul il pd, Families only at $ZiS per Days 833-0101 N i9hts 1"'~w=-v~·=~~-~~
Balboa Pentnsul•
Bdm.
Includ.s
962-6911 o1nytime cash. S32"'540. Blue Beacon* 64S.0111 l ~m~o~-~A~"~"~'~.,...~~l4~l:-;;c;::::;f :ll=::ll=:i=:=:==:zfNICE 1 BR. Dplx. QuieL
21: ACRES high dtl!itrt in Mobil~ Home/ HIDE-A·\\IAY Cozy t br [SHARP 3 BR, 3 BA tri-levt>I Sep. by iiaragtt.. Adults * 4)7'J • .fr.24 * J$hua Tete. $2450. Ca.JJ Trailer Parks 172 home. You"ll love it. Sl30. home. 3 car rar. all b\tns, 3 BR. 2 ba. home •••• $325 over 30. No pe ts. ~1071 ----'-'-'----
OCEANFRONT: 1
YEARLY $150/mo, uw.
after 6. ~9.m ALA Rentals * 6-1.).390() owner want! action now! 3 BR. 2 ba. fam . rm. ·· $340 NICE 1 & 2 BR. Trailers DELUXE 3 hr, 2 ba, Yt>ar\y, * WATERFRONT Oflly $290 ~r mo. Call Mr. Turtle Rock 4 BR, Vu • $475 sso & up \Vater view~~ blk to beach.
Cemetery Choice loc. Villa 38, Bayside $110 • Util pd. 1 BR, l blk 10 Hoegee, South C 0 a 5 t 2 Elegant 3 bdrm. 2\2 bath 133 E. 16th st. No. -42, CM $300 mo, 675-3126 aft 7 pm.
Lots/Crypts 156 ~~~~:t~a:a~:~ut~~:: BJ~:na;';.i~~:*o~.S.Olll Realtors, 5t5-8424. (itownhousesec1······ hSJTS.$41
2
1
5 1 BR. furn. $150 incl util. LSE 2 Br, 2 Ba. unf. Stove
l·,-CE-ME'I'--E-R-Y--lo-"--$-250-Club~~ & 61:~i3°at slip $125 ·beaut Dix 1 BR. bltns, c;;:i~f!d~r~t1:~s.2 s~5 r •• ~~itz~~~'ts~~~~a l . :fft~K~:.rp~~S-!w~e&t
•• •h. P•clf•'c VI•"' •'l•mon·.i opt. of""""""' • t>ves. pt/d-d hr FA ht gar ... "' c .... ·W • • -on Isl" . .545-4529 or 673-1434. FURN Bachelor & I Br,· C d I M
Park. n 4 . 745-6741. Sa.le or trade: 1970.24'x60' mo. Blue Beacon* 645-0111 408 B"·k-11 n, fiiiioiironiiiiaiiiiii"iiiiiioiiriiiiiiiiiii f ..... ,.... n.u. REALTY Exceptionally nlcol
2 GRAVE Jo .... ,.. __ _. location bill" by ~,.tr, trade or B Ibo C ,,. vuuu ho 5J6....., a a ovas SHARP 3 BR, 2 BA. quiet Univ. Park Center. Irvine 2110 Newport Blvd., CM
in Pacific View r.1emorial me 11::,;:A=T:.:E:.:RFRc..;:O::N:.:'T::_:..O._oo-,-3-B-r. .slrl!t>t. Now vacant $230 ~r Call Anytime 8l3-0820 -
Pk, lnquiIT 646-6168, eves Real Estate Wo1nted 184 mo, Call LARRY,'Heritage l """""""""""""""~~l$70 UP. 1 Bdrm Bachelor ~ 2 Ba. r.10. lo '.\lo. $350. Real Estate 540-1151 Duplexes Unfurn. 350 units. 132 \V. \Vilson, C'.\1. ~
Comm.rc'·at Bill Grundy R!tr. 642-4620 1 ;:-:r:.:::::7:::;~::.:..-:.:..: l.~!l~~.,~·':'~--'.',1'.,,._~~--Apt , Units In good location 3 BR l" BA Cp d ~~
P ty 158 ' " • ts. rp~. L B h roper \\'a!lled by pvt buyer. Cond Balboa Island \\·asher !urn. S210. ~2 aguna eac LRG clean l Br, Adults over ON TEN AO\.ES
1501 not important. 6i;l-3511 . ::::::.:::::'...:.:.:.:::.:::____ Governor. Call 532-6738 or BR '" / 35. Util pd, $120. Call 1 I: 2 BR. Furn 6 Untunt EARN 10 2 , stove. reu .g, w w 54g....2407 .,. __ ,. I
LEASE on house fany con<ll 3 BR. OOme, So. Bayfront, 637-0040 drps. S250 util paid. Oceani,.c--=~-----~ 1:.u"1:.-ce1 I prlv. patios
SlOO,CXXJ Cash DoY.'n \11/tot suitable for bldg 4~' dock privil. Sl50 )to. to June SPARKLING "'' nu paint view. Adults. no pets. Pt>rm, BACH, rl"decor . relurn, hi Pools. TtmllJ • Oa.ntnnmmt.. $17~.~AAA~T"EN' aANt 7TS<;0-8% l~~bo~a~t.~(~2~13~1 ~'8~1~-258~-~l~~~\ 13. Island PJty 6i3-1200 & cpts. 2 Br, gar, tam Hy~-2815 or 713/HO 5 -6781. beam ceil. Downtown, t125. 900 Sta Lane, CdM Mf.M.I Corona del Mar \\"tic Sl.W --El Patio, 1JG..A Broadway. (W'.ac:Arthur rt:'. CoNt H:y>
lJ.tu sq It . OC Airport ALA p, al l · d I I !!:!
W.R. DUBOIS INC. Fi··-•·! 11 • l * OCEAN VIEW * 'Cnt 1 * 545-3900 1 0 s • 11 •1
2 !_R, Avail,.~' 1htd * COROLIDO APTS * * 545-7166 * ·-·-2 BR hse in Court. Crpt.s poo , nee rm, vuvu oc, l:}h;fi)i!~~"!"J~;-:-_l;;mmmmmm~m~l 3 Bdrm.,., 2 baths. \Valk to & d...,., 1145 mo. No -u. WATERFRONT, lge. J BR, No children or pet.s. G46-S824 2 Br. studios & atrett levtls,
Sh · C I S't beach Partlall fum Avail .,.~ Y--2 BA d" ~1.1m Sl85 & up. Penthouses $220. opp1ng en er I • • Y • · l or 2 small children. :1177 • sep, tn. rm . ....,., LRG l BR. w/w crptg, Dsh hr bl
10 AC. C-2 downtown San • no1v. S550 mo., yearly lsc. \\'allace. Apt 6. 646-m9 mo, lease. 673-8886 bltns, 1 Adult, bO pets. $131 Poolw.,.;., !?.!• d carport.
Juan Cap istrano. or can be Bu11nes1 • Call: 673-366."f 642-2253 eves Yearly. 642-8520 I ~="'""-"'c,;;~:.•;:_• ___ _
&Plit for de\·e]opment. Bkr. Opeortunrty 200 3 BR, fenetd yard, garden ,1~.;=::7"""-"-'.===-12 BL.KS Irom ocean, 2 Br.
493.1153 or 49l-1TD6 eves. DJSTRIBlITORS NEEDED & patios $200 month •-·rt-· I Ront li'W'] BACHELOR APT $125 2 Ba, frpl, hltns, upts, &i.i--0391 ,..... ., .. ., ... Ot . 646-3589 675-3767 drps. $235 & $250. 328 ~-----;;~~1$115. 1 BR. furn. Util's pd. r.ta.rgUeri!t>. 675-4873, 548-7983
• Nr stort>s. Also 1 Br, $130. BRAND new 2 & 3 Br apls. HUNT'S . WESSON • NeY.' 2 BR. garg, Patio. Crpts,
C1assified INDEX multi-million do 11 a r ad-drp15, stove, Teftig. Quiet
Advertising vertised snack pack pro-Co$ta Mesa tropical gettinii for adults Apts. Furn. 360 1985 Pomona, C'.\f. 548.0728 So o! hwy. 322 Mar&Uerite.
644-1342 or 673-222'2. l~======;-;:::=~I ducts. NEED N0\\1! Rell-;::;_;c.::.;:.:::::__ ____ I only. 1 blk tO shops. General I ~ able men or "·omen in your SPOTLESS 3 bedroom, 2 $169/mo. 646-4430. =;;~;;';;;-;;;;;~~;;·l ~D!!a~n:!aJP~o~i!!!n~t ___ _ ·~-"""'-"_'"_'"_' _ _, e area to service fast-moving bath, bor1us room, buillins.1•4-B-R-1.,-,-..,--w-/b-,-,k-y-,-rd ... RENTING FURNITURE
1 coin operated products in fireplace. carpets & drapes, Vic Paularino & Bristol CQSJS LESS
2 BR, 1 ba, frplc, sm patio,
pvt gar. NO PETS. lnlant SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ok. OK. {213) 431-1195
$25 & up v.·kly. DANA 1..:=..:.:=.::::c.::=----~tarina Inn 34111 Coast Costa Mesa C le 51ific;afion 1 OO. I '49 company secured Jocations, large screened patio, $230 1:.07 •101 •• 1,_ 5 '"THE REAL ESTATERS'' "" ..., &.I ' commerc.lal or factory. Part R•.11 Eitite, ,a or full time. 6 to 12 hours ~7171 546-2313 EXECUTIVE 3BR, 2 BA. Complete 1 BR. Furn. '---°'-"tt_•_1 __ .m per week. no selling. CAS!-1 $?25 mo. lease Lovely fenced yrd. Grdnr as low as $22 pe r mo. _ , _ •-loo! 1265 642--0506, S.2-2755. I 00 •\ PURCHASE Claisific;a tion 150-1 8'4 REQUIRED $600 to Sl.497. L..f;e :: br, 2 ba furn uume 1• \Vrite for mote information: &l;l-1622 2 BR ne\\·ly dee. Adlts 2 O PTION
Hwy.
Fount•in Vallay
LGE bach apt, pvt t>ntranct>,
Util paid. Furn. Pool. ;125.
549-3997. 642-8171. I ~ Instant Food Supply, P.O. B h children OK No pets. 2178 Ind. item selection • · 1 • Newport eac ·~--'"'_"'_" __ _, Box 3155, Torrance, Calif. '-":.::.!:.::.:....::.:.:::::c___ Placentia. 646.5637 2·1 hr. delv. ~tonth to ~lo.
1· ~.Jncludephonenumber. DOCK 50' & house. 3 br, $17.i 3 BR. Children OK. CUSTOM Huntington Beach
C la1sific;•tion 200-200 1.F::R::I::G:.;!D:::A::l::.R::E'-'. "'-_ -". :::..:== 2 ha. Yr!yf Summer lse. Fncd. yd. 21:»4 President pi, Furniture Rental BEAUTIFUL FURN APTS I I ~ I Lg• >hopping Ctr. s.,\. S2j()() 33(17 Finley. Appl. 17141 &-16-114.i 646-62j5 517 \\' .. 19th, C.:\I. 5-18-3481 $1<0-$165 Qui•! pti~ pado. ~---f R 833-W-I Anah••m 774-2800 • • ' • • ,_.or ent ,,......,ss e Alpha Beta's l """=~------2 BR C d ' 2 -~ ~ •-1 ,_ ,..v . rpts, rps, 1 child , Ru•b•a 694-3708 ""<Uuf'OU"CS, .. t' c, uitPi&lng 1~------Center, \l.'estminster S3000 :-.tOBILE home · Lido area. OK. Eastside C.\f, $175/mo. l ::~::::::::•:__ ___ _::_:..:..c=i mi, locked sep. gar. Pool.
Cla11ific;ati on 300·355 do""Jl e Anaheim rene\\·ed 2 br, klng bed, crpts, patio. Call 5-iS-3348. HOLIDAY PLAZA Sauna. Rec rm.
laundry, cash oot •Garden Pool. 12 blk bay. Adults, ----------'DELUXE Spacious 1 BR 17301 Keelson Ln. {l blk \V,
1--------FAIRWAY
VILLA APTS.
2 & 3 BR's
Privatt> patio, pool • indiv,
laundry lac.
Near Orange Co. Airport &
UCt. Adults only.
20122 Santa Ana Ave.
J\[gr, t.lnr. Joachi m, Apt l ·A
S46-6Zl5
• CORSICAN [ Apartments tor Rent ]\Cf J,,_G,::..m-=··:,.· .::''::c':.'_"_"_·_'~'-'h_o_ut no pets. S200 mo. 613-3409 ~;r>+ ~ B:0!or ~-;~.for furn apt $135. Heated pool. o1 Beach Blvd, on SlaleT).
• •
1
_ fl) 5~7833 Ft:R:\. Knotty Pine guest ALA Rentals * 6-1:>.J9CXl Ample parking. No children * 842-7848.
Cl
.1. 1-3bO 370 YOUNG \\'omens Boutiqu• ho"«, .. ,,, ~,·d. l l"'I"""'. -no pets. 1965 Pomona.,l'L~R~G"'-'B"'oo"h~•~lo~,-w"/"l"rg~kl~tc~h. New, large, de luxe 1.2.3 BR'1. e111 1ca ion · . "~ " .--~ .,,_ '66 PONTIAC U i\tans 0 .H.C. CM Xlnt S. Orange Co Loe, est. Suitable tor Bache Io r . • · Adult over 3:">. $97.50 util Private patio Hvin1, on1y 3
II &j 5 yrs. Reasonably priced. PO 642-5770. 6· Runs gOOd $500. CHATEAU LAPOINTE pd. Refs req"d. Oose: to neighbor• in your bldg,
Renl1l1 . ,. Box 2703 Capistrano Beach, ~H;:o:.u::.sec:s:::_,.U"'n'l-u·,-.-.-~= * Call 5-l~l26 * DELUXE furn 2 Br. apt. 3 I. 713/~·17-94-13 Bltns, dwhr, forced air heat, 1 ~-------' calil. 3o5 I 3 BR. l !ii b11. $250 mo, $50 Pool. Close to !hops. $150. $lfi5 • NE\V 2 Br. Crpts shag crpti;, drps, irplc In 3 C la1~Hic;at ion '400-405 HELP retired too early! General cleaning d6e.~.,~~-, Adults. no ~ts. & drps, i;tove, b\tm, g11.r, Br, gill'. (l,ii ml, E. ol South
r l ~ Rt>stless. need intete;!:t1ni: ~ 1941 Pomona Ave, C.t.f. balcony pat. 309 Lincoln, Coa5t PJB.za; turn off Sun·
Announcements Ti1 \\Ork. :'>lld·Filties. \,·~at ~l"c~:~;Ere~t~~T k. ~~"'~~ Dover Shores Balboa Peninsula 536-1824 fiO\\'er ~!R~\~s·l130 • _ have you to offer? &w.-0-1 16 . ..,. 1 BR. furn apt. Blln!, garage
Cla51 ificefion 500·5 I 0 Jnvest.,.ent va cancies, 2 BR. kid~/pets 4 BR, fam rm, den, bltn • $2:> \\'K-OC:EANFRONT a\'ail, $125/mo. 7ll In· I ;;;..,"'..,~;;;19;;;7;;;3 ;;;0;;;' ii"'•'•"'..,1..,0 I~ Op. portunity 220 ok. stv/n'f. Unobstructed vie"'. Lovely Bachelors, 1 -BR. dianapolis 545-0760
p I $950/ 646 2l ~la.Id H"rvice, Pool. Util. Ptnonals Atflhate 11~ Acre horse nnch. k:ds. oo. mo. · 30 e 67s..8740 e $125-Sl.35. LGE, modtm l br TOWNHOUSES
If pets. hor!oes Oh:. $120. Founto1ln Vo1lley nr bch; crpts, drps, etc. ON NEWPORT BACK BAY
Cla1sific•fion 525.535 4111 OJ Util1tit>~ paid. ~C:,:o:;.r;:on::a::.;d::•::l.:.M;;::•:_r ___ l~<09~;:C&l~il:..· 53&-<261~~~.,_:84~1-~51~69'.'. I
[ Jal /2 /0 per mo SfAR * LET 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts. drps, LRG priv Bachelor. Room DELUXE Bachelor Units • 3 & 4 BR-3 Ba. Frplc, ram
, Last and fOt#ld 'ii6-i3'.:0 bltns, lrplc, Dtw. fncd k bith. No cook'g. Pvt entr. Walk to Ocean. Util pd. room, double gan.fll", Beaut . . RETURN $11);1. 3 BR. l 't BA. RIO. yard. $235 mo. Tradt1vinds S9:linclutil.6fa--1~7 LINDBORGCO. 536-257"9 lounge.Pool.BUllanh.
Cpts, drps, patio, yd . Child. _R_•_'1_ty'-oOl~l~~""-~"=~--bl · Adult & Ch'"-ns •••• 2 BR, l ba, crpt. pool. So. 1 BR Condo. all t-1ns. re-uui~ ...
r ~ ok. FOR LEASE 01 hl''Y· ariul!s, no pet.s, frig., encl patio, some furn., l50 Riviera Dr. 642-0300 . I rm (\\'e can prove In Blue Beacon* 64.S.0111 I J'~B~R~+~bo;"~"'!m~,~2~B,~\_l ~~~~~~~~-\~~~~~~~~~;l i''MiA'inftlii'C)iiiE"'i I l"itruchon ,.......-on an investmt>nt of S2500 to H·'fd 1 R '1ty 824 ••= S\65 lease. 673-8213. pool. quiet. S130. 675-5034
_ . 3 BDR>!.. 1-.mily ,m., puk ~ ' ' ~ • MARTINl"'UE • $25.000 If u 11 y geeutt'dl Costa Mesa S:0.1ALL 1 BR. apt. Close T
C l1111sification 575-580 sounds \nten'stlng, v•e ,,;ould I
0
1ke ya.rd. Costa l\Iesa. Kids I _!!H~u~n!!li_!'.!•J!gf~on~_!!B:!•!act.~--1 .:::::.~:;::::;:;;::;;-;-:;---I to pier, l adull only. ''f'arly. Park.Like Surroundings
[ I~ llke to tAfk to )"OU, Our in· K, brk •• $200 a mon1h. NO RE~1ARKABLY Si:>/mo. Util pd . 642-8520 DELUXE 12 3 BR APTS.
Servltn and Rep1ir1 duslry has grown over HK>% I ,'F,;E::E;,:·.;5«>-:::.::112.:::.ll·-:-:---,,= HC~~;r~~ pa.~~36 panlp ~:~~ UNBELIEVABLY Also nffiN.&BAOIELOR
_ _ o\·er the past 6 year5• Lead· LONG hair ok • 2 Br. RIO. kit. Bu!ltin rangt. Att 2 EXTRAORDINARILY 1 Bell.room, Sl3:"> -~~month, Ptv patios * Htd Pool•
Cla,5ifjcetion 000.699 jn" economists s~" It will rehig. All important-Gar. car gar. \\"/laundrv & ,vtr BEAU11fUL d '"'1
1","""n "ti11 ilies.7 "'ll Nr shop'g e Adults o"'" '06 ....,. $150 . ., VI D'' G d Apts Tra e11.·n s t>aty 84 -oJ •-v
I l[Il] surpass this growth over the · aoflnr. 4 BR, llm U. Ne11.• • 1sere ar en Im Santa Ana Ave, O f
... __ ._...., __ """' __ _, i I next fe "' yeat5. For APPt & ALA Rentals * s.i:~:iooo \1•/w. 2\' yr Ise. S29S. Ac'lults, no pe1s Lo1pun1 Beach f\lgr. Apt 113 • 64&.."1542
. . f fact• call i\fr. Grtgory at $17S. 3 Br, 2 Ba, RIO. Cpts, "'~'4-&'="'='l'--------Putting grel"'n 11.·at~rfal\ & WK U Cles~ific at ion 700-710 5JO.i060, Mon thro Sat. drps, pool. Xlnt for ch!ld. 3 BR To"nhOuse, crpVdrps, ~trcam, f!o,1·c~!l ,very.\"hf're, $30 L XURY THE GABL.ES· ~SEASONED notes balance Blue: Beo1con * 64.S.0111 pa tio, carport. t\o rard 4;)" pool, rec. roon\, bllllorris. & up. Bachelors, singles, 1 TllE SEVILLE [ I ~ d k 1 90 BBQ's. Sa11n11, fum .. unll1rn, Bdm1, step~ to bch, 1111 util, 2 Br. l's Ba, "'/ga.r. AdH.-. Mett.l'llndiie · $2:1,000 &: $50,000 e.xecute 3 BUR.\f. + flunily rm., full \\'Or . l . To !el" ltavt d f d d • ~inglcs. \ BR, J BR + d1 n, hid pool, Jintns. rte mi, crpts, rps., raniie, nc y , by multi-billion S mfg. 10 ·~ dintne: rm ., built-In!!., brk. memgt>, 962-99ll. \\'t>"ll · 631H120
Cl ••• ·,1,·,,1·,,n 800-836 '.'lt>lrl. Call 0\\'1let 675·6259 $390 a month. ~O FEE. ('all )"OU back. 2 BH. From $1.:,j, Sf'e 11! rtitaur-.nt. ~ktaili;, danc· Jlfl\10. 200(l Par!IOn~ Rd .. 642..AGto Ing, 2431·0 Or1ng-e A\•e. S15.> I
r l!'L, l 61;.30l8. N•wf>Ort, '4o-li20. 3 BR, 1% BA. Cl'pt., d'PS. B<>lw"n "'"'°' & N"l"". Vtll• .. IM Hold Apu 1619-L Saolo Ano A"• 11'1
ht' Ind ~ii• ~ MOMy to Loan 240 ON BEACH Yr-rnd Vaca tion Childn'n ok. No ~ts. ~t. 2 Blk N, 19th. 4~·9436 REGENCY I
• . A~ ;~~t!~~O lnc:I ~li~.).3900 last & security deposit. Sm e $30 WEEK & UP Newport Beach I & 2 BR. Crpt1/drp~ .wlf
C le1sificetion 850.858 1st TD Loan ;-""~· _"16-0_~"'--~--1 BR. or STUDIOS rum w/ cleanln:& gas 0\'en, enci a•r.
[ II• *j 1130-Roomy 2 B,. w/ gong• 2 BR, lli BA. O>ndo, all romp!. kite"'" f'1l •lo<.). OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 Bo, p";," >IS-300;, 377 w. wu . .....::-'~ 1'.-"rn';f U-..IERESI' &: yard. Kids ""'lt:'Ome. bltns, a\'ail now at $175 Free linf'"-1 heated pool. air. crpts, drps, dlJc. ,winler. -'°~",c·~~==~==-. . 2nd TD Loan Blu. Beacon* 64.S.0111 mo. Call lolr. Ho eree, cond, 1V '1: m11d service F · Adulb only. No ptll. VILLA MESA APTS.
01111sificat ion 900-911. SPAC 2 Br fncd yd, chlldrtn , _,...... __ 2_4_. _A_,._•_'-___ flVAIJ , 73-30SS, 2 BR, Prlv patkl. l ltd paol.
[ ' 11•1 Tmr" buod.., """tty. k "'" wrk. lllll. l2W I.SE., new 3 bdtm::-2 D&i4'" Moothly ntos I BR. Iw-n •pt. 112;/mo 2 cu ood'd *"· ChUd"n
TranspertttkMt 642·2171 .545-0611 ALA Rentals • 6"1!>-l!IOO bll ., frpl ., rlrps., crpt~, 20SO Nf'1''J>Ort Bh·ri . at 2tsi I AduH. II block lo plt r. "·t>loomt>, nn pelt plt>ase!
. · SeMng Harbor arta 21 yrs, $115. NIC~ EASTiilDE 2 BR ~!~11t·!~2s • .:: 82m1i. !~5m beach, e &12.2611 e Ph. 6il-&m N.8. S165 mo. 719 \V. \\'ii.on. I
Clessifjcation '15.947 Sattler Mortgage Co. \\'/YARD. ~ ,),> '" """'" 8 /Americard • !lll0111rge 2 BR furnished, aero" slrfft 646-1251
I '§]
336 E . 17th SUttt Blue Beacon * 6'4.S.0111 3 Br, 2 ha hse, pantled ftlRN. 1 SR APL $13.l. A\·ail from beach, S22:i~mo. 1 --M~E~S~A-V_E_R_D_E ___ I
. Aulal:torW. ~ nlE "Ydlow Pagu" of "\\'EEO JI & reap" .. cltan f11m nn, trplc, bltns, c.rpt f l'.'h 1. 19'2·8 \\'sl1111•f'. C111\ 642"4 13 2 BR, <'P'"'· drp,, bl!ns, \\''-sh/
DELUXE
Cles5ific;e tion 550.555
Buy a
Bargain
Border
to
Border
Every classified want ad in tho DAILY
PILOT appears in every edition e very
day. That means your ad will be seen
in popers delivered to homes •nd sold
from newsr1cks from border to border
all along the Orange .Coast , •• all the
way from
Seal Beach
to
San Clemente
You
Get
It
All •••
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
Costa Mesa
Newport Beach
Laguna Beach
Saddleback
San Clemente
Capistrano
(Plus the daily
newsrac:k edition)
For One Price
With A
DAILY PILOT
Classified Ad
Phone 642-5678
!'-----~.-..,.,..!· tlassltled.,. Daily P!l ol cmt 1hr ll'f'aJtu"'s & rra~h _ It drps. S250 lf'a~. 96S-S363. Adults . r\o n1c11. ~Q Jl()IS YRL\": 2 BR nvr g11ragP, 1
1
dry 11.ttAch. Locktd 111r l:
Cl11sific.atron 950.990 Se.rvice Dlrtttor)'. Check It t1.1m Into Cfl~h thnl 11 Dally ror that it•m under s.;o, ll"lf(). 1..~-00.~ Davi~ blk oet'lln, '14:1 mo. l\tarrit"d ,.,ror. Lra rlotrts. Nr. ihp'£.
1 !!!!!l!!!•!!!!!l!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ILlw~thO!!!_!""":!:!!'~ct!_)OtJ~CC'~""'~·-Pilol Clu~!fl'd 11(t 612...5678 _lfY-'--_th>_Po_M)'~Pl-nc_ht_, __ For btst rtSUlt$! 6~2*j6ij tpl. Rtf 675--4958 Sl50, Own•r ~. 5-18-3209 ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
~,...;;; ..... ";;; ......... ~['1 [ ..... _ .... '". )[t], ..... _ ... ,, ..... Jl!J 1-....... 1[t], ....,_ ....... ,ltl [ ---l[t][ _ ...... ,[t] r
.;_•_t._U_n_f_u _rn_. ___ 365_ Apt. Unfurn. 365 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. US _Af>_F_~_·;._. _•_r..;U.;.nc..fu;..rn..;;.. _31_o_Ap..;;_~:;·;.;;".;..· .:;•;..r .:;U.;_n.;_fu:;r.;_n.;_ • ...;:.37;,;cO, DON'T p IN c
01t11 Me111 E11t Bluff Huntington Beech Irvine NewPort S.ech
1,11---*-F_R_E_E __ =""-="-----ULTR.A pri'~" delux Z BR. BACHELOR apt Sl95. Vtew1~H=u=n=tl="!fon==Ba=•d!===H=un=tlnf=l=on=Ba=•do===i
NEWPORT BEACH 2 bit: 1ingle story. pvt palio, j NOW LEASING! I P11.rk Newport. Avail now.I-
.. RENTAL SERVICE Villll Gr1in•d• Apts. encl g11.r, SIT~. ~17 Gene va IN . •·-.1 d 11 .1 Rec Cntr ID'JTI sauna pools ofa Q •·•ta '"" e """''·.~,, St ~~ o""" elA. u..1111 y and a u 1 uni a .,.,.,.. .JJ. """ ,,., Four bedrooms with bl.Icon-·· ~ v.•nh total recreation club 87l-~ ext 2370 da.ys • f
i)tach e Noy.•port Beach !es above & below. Gracioui NEW 2 BR from SUS. Cpts, t11nd pre-acOOol 1 2 &: 3 644-0039 eves Sat Son Uln a 'l!rmo~a ~k II~~~ ~~r ~~UNT : living & quitU-5WTOundin&: drp11, bllnl, patio, lam M!'C· bclrma trom s15o. 'Nr.' &hop. 2 BR, nr Hoa& Hosp. Crpll/ Casual esb.te living. Enter La Quinta Her-
tf'LAN. Call 636-0220. !or family '-\'ith children. i:·12f~IY ~a. No pets. ping, golf. schools. Just drps, bltns, washr / dryr mosa's lush green atmosphere & 1troll tre& ·~
lfl EASTSIDE ___ Near Corona de! ht&r High CHEZ ORO ,\PTS 90uth of San Diego rv.y. on space. gar, patio. 64s.&l25. tined walk ways to your ~L
School. Fireplace wet bar & Culver Dr .. Trvi nto. All.3733. 4217 Dana Rd, N.B. ALL UTILITIES I CLUDED
9r11nd ne1v 2 BR, l BA. $175. built.in kitchen 11°ppli11nces. 8234 AUant11. 1·2 BR, pool. PARK WEST t BR. Yearly. Sl~. G11s &
't.rpts. drps, dv.·hr, sell clean. SJ;; AMIGOS WAY 644-29!)1 private i;:ara~e. \VA sher&, APARTMENTS Wiiler included. Nr. Bay 1.:. 1 BR. Unf. $150 -Furn. $110
,ng gas ovton, all 1vrr & gas Cold\lo'ell, Banker It Co. drye~. ~38: 536-m7 Owned and r.tanaged by Be11.ch. Garg, p 11 t1 0 . 2 BR. Unf. $110 -Furn. $110
1><1. lltd pool. 324 E. 201.h Managing Agent 541-5221 MODERN 2 br duplex.rrplc The Irvine C.Ompany 6U.2950. 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live
'st. 64&9148. Fount1iin Valley bltns, crpts. drps. \~·eu NE\V 2 BR. Retrlc. iar~. within romantic setting w/fun or privacy.
frLSON GARDEN AP'I'S. maintained. 2 children ok. L1ipun• Be•ch Adu!ts. s1s.; ye.&rly, dock Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/
BR Unlurn. Newly dtt. ALL NE\V $135 mo. 842-5817 avaii * 67~1340. seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun·
e1\' cpl!/drps, Sp 11 c VALLEY PARK Sl 55-2 BR. l BA. CfT\lS, drps, 2 BR, 2 BA. new dnpes &: 2 Bednn 1% ha c:rpt1 drps tain. ~rounds. Adi ts, no pe ts. APARTMENTS bltnz, 11 1 r-con d , gar. carpeting. Util, pd. Ga.raae. bltns. ~. Hoai Hos;. s11ci * Color c:o-ord. kit w/ inclir•ct lighting, ~-10/mo. 2283 1'"ounta i n , .. opens new doors Jor Children ok, No p ets . l\Iature adul t!, 110 pets, 320 mo. 642-4381, 642-lTil. * D•lux• r•ng• & ovens * Plu1h sh•g c:rpt9.
, 'ay E. (Harbor, tum W .• , .YOUNG FAMILIES 8.J0-1548. t.tyrtle. S225. LIDO ISLE Ba helo onl * Bonus stor1g• 1pac• * Cov. c•rport
(n \Vilson). 2 BR. Apts $160 BEACH BLUFF Apts I OCEAN froat 1pec1acular Lir 1 BR ~pt, ~ u~~. J. * Scul ptur•d mar~I• pullM•n & t il• b•ths . LA COSTA 2 BR. Garden Apts $175 NEW 2 BR 2 Ba dish\i'ash· villa. Huie nns. 3 trplca. Sl60 mo 67:,.1892 * El•9ant r•cr•afion rocm.
E\r 1 & 2 br. Bltns, iwim. 2 BR. Townhou1•1 $115 l'r.\, pool , 'patio.' 1231 Ellis. 4B,,e,a ~!~~ irnds S600 l\I 0 · . . FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY I A42-84TI or 847.39~7. .,.....,......, Sant• An• Blk Crom Huntington Center, San 01·e•o ,ming pool & garage. All g· •
.ll ti!ities paid. S150 10 SliO Pre.school center. Ad ult pool. ADULTS:2 br STUDIO LGEI l _BRI • quitol 11.ttll ,dlll a. Frwy .. Goldenwest Collee:e. P,o . Adults, no pets, l>l Children's pool. Priv patios. l·'~ ba, patio, balcony. gar· ut i · inc·· matute a u l!, VILLA MARSEILLES San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd ., So. on
A\·ocado SI .. Cl'I. 642.970R E!ec kitchens. \Val! to wall a.t:P. 2 blks from oce11n. Sl50. f"o i>et,i;. call eves 499-l.571. BRAND NEW Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to ..•
MARBOR GREENS
closets & carpels. 2 play. 1·101 Olive, H.B. Mesa V11rde SPACIOUS LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441
grounds. Carports & stor. I & 2 Bdrm. Apt1.
GARDEN & STUDIO APTS
SEch. 1, 2, 3 BR's. from SIIO.
.i,100 Peterson Way, C.:\I. IM0-037o
age. 1 BR w/stove It: retrlg, crpts ,/ 2 BR upsta.iM;. Gar. Newly
& drps. Nr beach S125 mo. deror. Child ok. No pets. Adult Living Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt1 ..
SEACLlFF ?11anor Apts. 1
17256 S. Euclid St.
(just Miulh o~ner in
Fountain V ley)
Phone 1714) 785
I: 2 Br. 11~ Ba. SI45-Sl60. Huntington Beach
S30 move in allowance +
"''' dl•count. Ccpts, dcp•; 2 BR 2 BA $150 patio. pool, infant ok . 152;i ' •
Tradewinds Realty, 847.8511. S150/mo. 557-8400. Furn. & Unfurn.
LRG 2 Br. Redec. Bltns & Di.«.hwuher. oolor coordlnat. Sant11 Ana
refrig. Garg Avail. Sl.40. 711 Newport Beach eel appliances • plush 1ha,gl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Huntington 'Be11ch
Indianapolis, H.B. 54.>-0760 I carpet . choice or 2 color CAN'T BE BEAT ;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
UN FURN f 0 w n h 0 u 5 e • PARK. NE\\'PORT -care schemet • 2 bll.ths • stall
B kh t • Ad
'
h free H\'g over!kg the water. shvwers • Mll'To':"l'd ward. ·ON BEACHI, roo urs ams. · r. l I 7 · $7~ 000 be ~ ,_ .. i.., t 11 ht SINGLE STORY }t,1 ba . $200 mo. Av11.il 2/20. poo s. tennis cts ""• ro ,...,.,rs • u11.1 ... -c g . £45--0565 Spa. f''rom SI 7 3 to Ing in kitchen • breakfast South Sea Atmo~phere . I S<l:'i0-811.ch. 1 or 2 Br. Also bar -huge private fe~ 2 BR. • 2 BATH 1 BR . 'A'/patio, to ne! ~arg. 2 sty To1vnhouses. Elec. kt., patio • plush l&ndscaplnz • Carpets & drps
370 Furn. or Unfurn.
e 811.che lor Apts. From $215
• 2 BR unf. From $225
$115/mo. water J'l(i. Adults. ri pat or bal Subrrn parkg brick Bar-B.Q's • larte he11.t-Air c.onditioned
3 Br., 111 Ba. patio bJl .Jns. Ava il Feb. l!l S42-lf>.19. !pt. mall •~r cpts, drps. ~pools & lln11.I. Private Patios
crpts drps. Ask about our Pnnl. cpls /drps, kids OK J us t N. ol Fashion Isl at 3101 So. Bristol St. HEATED POOL
Pl"'"h• :i~:" I 3 BR, 3 BA $175 • 2 BR Furn. t'rom $285
Carpet.s-drapes.d i!hwasher
heated pooJ .11.unas-teMi1
d iscoUnt plan. 880 Center 2620 Dt>lai\·are, H.B. NOW1S THE Jamboree & San Joaquin <'>ii Mi N. or So. Coas Plaza) Plenty of la\\11
St ., &12-ICIO. )642-2221 , a.her 3 p.m. 5.'lfi.1816 Hills Rd. 644-1900 fur leas-Sante An1 Carport&. Stora~
rec room«ean views
patios-ample parkln1
Securiry 1u11rds. TIME FOR HIDDEN VILLAGE SHARP 3 BR. 21, BA, 1600 2 BR, bltns, refri,x, drps. ing info. PHONE: 557-1200 GARDEN APTS.
i.q. It. S1ud10 apl, crp1~. I shag crptg .thruout. Upstairs QUICK CASH 2.'m South Salta HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC drps, nr So. Cst P laza. $200 v.•/ocean ,·1e11·. At~ l BR. A New W11y To Live 2 BR. E ncl 1arg. Smllll Santa Ana U 546-15.lS
mo. Dn\'r bv 973 Val encia. lc!?~s, drps, ~efrl1g, b:lnls. THROUGH A OAinKWNeOOwpoDrGI ABeRaDchEN chlldre n ok. 3513-C \V. Pine. 711 OCEAN AVE., H.B.
Call 54j...-071R • '.\1gr. w.. mo.. inc u 1 • $130 mo. Call /11ppl. 839-2-t.'l!!. (714 ) 536-1487
Tra<le ll'in ds P.ealry , DAILY PILOT APARTMENTS Ofc open 10 Am~ pm D11ily
Quiet Adult Living !-'~"-·'-'-"-·~-~---On 16th Street b111•n SELLl!l.'G Your boat~ ''List" _W_e_•_tco..l_if_f ______ \Vll.LIAf.f \VALTERS CO.
Z BR. Shag cprs, bllns, beaut. WALK TO BEACH I! WANT AD I1vine and Dover Dr. voith us .. sell it f11st . D11 ily 2 BR, 2 bi, c/d. trplc, pa ho. ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""""'
lndscpd. $170. incJ all util. LOVELY NE\\1 1 &. 2 BR. (714) 642·8170 Pilot Classified. 642-5678 Adult. Sl75-$185. 1601 Bed-
Newport B•ach Adl!s only. no pc1s. Crpt.s, drps, Dishwasher~. A t A t ford. Nt'w garden 2 br. 2
241 Avocado Sr. * 646-0979 709 Palm * 847·3957 ' PF'" U f Apts.. P '·• b /d ir I nd. rf
$140 urn. or n urn. 370 Fur n . or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 1
' c · P c. s P · * BAYFRONT * BEA UT. Country Club Vil la. -----------------------------1 iicro~!; from Coco Coco's.
2 BR , 1¥.! BA. pvt patios, ASK about our discount pl~n ! General G•neral General l665 Irvlne. 642--0239· Hiah·rlse, beaut. 2 BR. tufn
crp!. drps, hit-ins. S260 mo. 2 BR, c1'Pts, drps, bltins. car-1,::_::.::::_:::__ _____ ..=::::;,:::.._ ______ ,::_:::;:::_::~------1-:-----------or unrurn. From $293. 3121
For further info <'all Jeanne port. $25 Move-In Allo111. Apts., \V. Co11st ~{v.•y, Npt Bch. Erhl"11rd~ 96R-6.123. ance. 725 Utica : 536-2462. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 S•n Clemente 1--------BEAUT. 3 Br, z1 ;, B~ studio * FRESH AIR apl. Rltns. nl'''-' crpt~, drps
/,, p11.inr A\'l r eti. No pets. \\'alk 3 b!ks 10 Be1tch~
SHl.J. ~~8 El C 11 mi n o . Beaut. big 3 BR apL 11· 1w
S.16-D1.il crpts, drps, bl1ns excrpl
ATTRAC. Like nf'\I. l BR. refri g. $225. i\o pets. 536-1711
D~hwhr, crpts. drps, b!1ns. WALK TO OCEAN
Hid pool. All util pd. Only l BR. CrPts. drps, some \lo'/
Slj(l. lnqu irr: 307 A1•ocado, lrplc & patios. Sl20·S150/pt'r
Apr 9. 645--0984 mo. Adults.
LRG. 2 & 3 Br. CrplS, drps, LINDBORG CO. e ~S.2.5i9
freshly patnlrd ,f,, clean. Turn tho!ie While Elephan!s
Kid~ ok. 646-0627 o r into cash thru a Daill' Pilot
6'2-fil44. Dime-a-line 1d! l * DELU.~X~.E~~l -.~~,~B~R. p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i l
Garden Ap1s. Bii-ins, priv.
pa !ia, hta1rd pool, frptc.
Adults. S14J mo. S.1&-5163.
NEW DUPLEXES
1-2·3 BR. Washer/dryer hook-
up, encl i::-<1r, pA!ia, frcd air.
Mcsa Vertie arc11 . 546-1034
RR. $1 2.i/mo. 2 BR.
S150/n10. Pool. C on v.
~hop"g. No C"h1ldrl'n. 313 E.
17th Pl 5'!8-6."131.
DU PLEX, 3 BR, 2 BA, 2
garages, m·can \'lf'11•. lari;:I', I
~~, lrai;r, CH. \r !LL SELL
$73,000. 4:14-2.\19
~~---:-.'ICE crpts &. rlrps, stove
& rl.'fn~ 2 BP.. Close to
17th Shop~.
I :1-l:\-ll::)i2, 61fl..67!)1 l·•+-cN~'E=\~V~L~C~X~UR"°"Y,_.,1-.,-&--.,2 ' ifr. rl>.1hr. shaJ::" crp!,
~r11ges. Pool & Rrc. Quiet
apu11 hv1n.:: 642-4470. I
SljARP Jrz. I k 2 Br.
?flS/rirps, h\tns, quiel blr1g.
~ pf't.~. lnl11nt nk. S130
~ s1;i0. a.10-9122. ;;.11-2682
l itBR. & 2 BR, 11., BA .
Opts, drps; nr shops: pool.
1.,fj 1l pd. 188·1 '.'llonrov1a.
51!'-1lll6 s.-. \\'~k-"1-,,..-,-. -w.,,lk";t:--;$~.\'i.
Maid ~f'r, !incn~. TV & ti.>le.
S.aLark ;\Intel 2301 Npl
Bl\·rl . 6'16-i·lti.
*'~ 2 BR. elPc bltn~. lock.
dr. l\tesa Vcrrle 11rea. Bi~
cii~r!~. Sli'.>/mo. t-O"o pe ts.
Sir...,.,.
Litt 1 Br. arit. All n!W ~ts, drp~. t:~e k paint. Bitn~. S14.i/mo. >16--0-ljl.
gig El Camino, C'.\1.
,\C. Studio a.pr, 2 BR.
BA . Crpts, drps, bltns,
r it:. pooJ . No pets .
10
R, 11i Ba ~rudio. St7j.
·1 incl. Pa1io. 339 Cabnllo.
or IMS-3&1g.
*'fl * QUll:.I 2 Bii. llllr
.Ii.: pool. Cpls/dfTI~· Ad1dt1
ollly. nn ))('t-". fi.12-11>42
+ "i BR, $14.i Pr1v )'TII
elijn r11nJ:"r. cpl,;, rlrp~. no
"''-"· 673-717!1 Sl~ .' 2 BR. rrfr lg, ~h•. i;,,. r.ouple , 1 chllri or eld'"r-1
t)1;pt>rson. 548-7237 I
SIW • 2 BR. 111 BA. Cpt~.1 d~• stv-d\11hr. gar No
J)lf.-766 \\'. \\'ilson. &12-79~
A Tfl(A.c lg 1 Br. cpU. dflK.
bltnh p!l tiO, 11:~r. 11dlts. no
""· lll '""''
D&X 2 Br. 111 Ba Studl(l.
1Utn~. Cpls/dfTIS. No riell.
CLASSIFIED
HOURS
!tOO a.m. 1n 5 p.m.
'.r>!onday thru Friday
9 10 noon Saturday Advcrti.~er~ may plact
their ads by lel~phone
COSTA 111ESA 0Ff1CE
J30 W. Bay
642·5678
NE\Vf'ORT BEACH
2211 \V, Ba lboa Blvd.
642-5678
HUNTJ!\GTO~ BEACH
17875 Beach Bl\'d.
540-1220
LAGUXA BEAcl'0
2"22 Forest Ave.
494-94&6
SAN' CLl:::'.\1 E~'Tf:
305 N. El camino Real
492-4420 .
N ORTH COUNTY
dia11ree 540-122()
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
Oc11d!ine for copy & kills
is 5:30 p.m. t he day be-
fore public;ilion, C'XC!'[ll
f o r !>!onday Edition
\\then deadline fs: Satur-
day, 12 noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Ad\'ertisers
~hould chttk their-ads
d111ly & r l'[}Qrt <'rrors
Immediately. TH E
DAILY PILOT R~s:uml's
hability for-thr fi rst in·
co1Tcct insertion only,
CANCELLATIO~S:
\Vhl'n killing an 11.d he
surr 10 m11 ke R record
of the KILL NUl\IBl:::R
!;:1\·rn you by ynur ad
11\k!'r 11s receipt of you r
eancr \lation. This kill
n11n1ber must h<' pre·
senttd by the Rdvcrtiser
in case of a dispute.
CANCELLATJON 0 R
CORRECTIO'.'l' or NF:\V
AD BEf'"ORE RUN:\li'·,"C;:
E\ery effort is niade> to
kill or correct a nr11• arl
lhllt. h11s b('en ord"rcrl.
but \\t" cannot i;:ul!ran-
te~ to do so until the Rd
has a ppeared in the pa..
pee.
Dl ~IE·A·Llr-;E ADS:
These ads art' strlctlv
cash ln advance by mail
or at any one of our oJ.
fices. NO phone orders.
THE DAil.Y PILOT tt•
sen.•n; t ht rli:ht to cit s•
sify, ~ii, censor or rt•
fuse •rt¥ 11dverlisement.
and to chana:e Its r11 tes
& reJ;ulaUona without prior nollct.
A.t feb. 1. 5lti0. 5-16--0-l:it CLASSIFIED
. iiir:i:: Room r Or-·oi(i: MAILING ADDRESS d ~" •, .. cl e 11 n C"ul 1llf'
1•1gl" .. ~nur 1ni~h IJ< CASH P. 0. Box 1560,
\.tlll 11 D11 \I)' Pilot CJ&jJ!f1e-d ' Coit/I Mt.sa I 92626 ""' ........................ .
Your next move
should be to
HUNTINGTON BEACH -Adults
Look Into ...
IUX':'ry
living!
OPEN INC SPECIAL-I BEDROOM FROM l llS!
CASA del SOL
Nea r all b•athes •Private TtHace •Rec Buildin& • Slun1~
2 Pools • Billiards • Gym • Puttin& Gr!tn 111d Vol!eyb1tl
Built· in ~itchens •Dishwashers " Disposals• Cl1pets/Dr1pts
Close to all shoppin& • Priv1te Parking and Stora(e
ALSO: 2 Bedroom w/Fireplace From $205
21661 B•ookhunt, Hunlin(lon lm!-(711) 962-665!
HU NTINGTON BEACH -Adult and Famlly Sections
The possible dream ...
1 Bedroom From $135-2 led room, 2 81th1 from $155
HUNTINGTON GRANADA
Privil ! Te11ace • 3 Pools w/Cab1n1s • Built·in Kitchens
Di~hwashe rs • Cartiets/Orapes • W1lk·in Closets • Oressin1 Rooms
Close !o Shoppinc, All Beaches and leisure Artas
17111 Golden Wnt SI, Huotincron Buch (114) M7-!0SS
(Just South Of W1rner)
SANTA ANA-Adult and F1mi1y Sections
Break the monotony ...
DPENING SP!Ctll-I IEDRODM FROM $1371
PARK PLAZA
Private Patios • Rec Bui\d1n1•5'un1s • J1cuni •Pool
Bu111.1n Kitcheni •Dishwashers • Clrpets/Dr1~es
Near South Coast P1111 •Leisure Artas • Frttw1ys
ALSO: 2 Bedroom/2 B1th From S167
Town House w/1 * Baths From $17S
1900 So~h now,., SlnlJ l n1 -(714) 51~1211
(2 blocks tast ol Bristol 1nd MacArthur)
Managed By:
HARBOR MANA&EMENT CD ,.INC.
J
Cost11 M•11
vittA coAooVi
NEW NEW NEW
Luxury 40 Unit Adult
Apartment Complex
I & 2 BEDROOMS
FURNISHED OR
UNFURN.
• Spacious Ap&rtments e Special cabiriet !iipace
• Lock garages w/ lg ~rnr e Bm cell e Lndry e Patio!
• Dwhr/displ e Gas stove e Special soundproofing
• Shag carpets, drapes
2 BR .. 2 Ba ., hlfin rinse.
dsh11·shr. laundry lac. Rec.
r m. Tastrfu!ly dt"('(lrt\ted.
Adu!!!; Only -$180.
214 C11.Hr Pa1nc1a.
C~sa Contenta, 492-225.1.
Rtnt1b I~
Rooms 400
SLEEPING r m, $60 per :rno.
Priv entr &. hA. Arlultl, no
pets. 2135 Elden, Ci\f. See
i\lgr. No 6.
COSTA :i\tesa, closl! lo OCC.
$5.1 & 56!l util pd. FemUe
only. Ideal for studtnt.
642-8520
GAS" WATER PAID YNG college or working air! Blllboa. 151. Kit & TV rm
.. ~-~~23 ECldMen Ave, ~ tcle. Sli,j/mo & up. 675-3&13
FURN room in prlv. home,
Costa J\Te5a. Klich privU +. 64&-0032 or 642· 1121 Q Nr. OCC. >J!)...1061
l .,.--=~~-~--1
BAY MEADOWS APTS. * S15 PER \11eek • up w/kltchens. $27.:50 per wee}'
-up Apta. ~fOTEL. 54&-9755
NEWLY furn roo m. $18 per
\\·eek &. up. Pvt entt avail.
Phone 546-0451
BRAND NE\V UNITS all with
beam ceill nis, paneling, pvt
patios, frplc. 11.Jl rec facil-
ltie1. Adulls, no pets.
• Bachelor e e 1 BR from Sl40 e e 2 BR from Sl65 e
LADY only. Heated pool.
K1tc~n privil. Nr. 11th &
l11lrbor, CM. 646--06&9.
R00:"-1 w/kilchen, pvt en·
~7 \V. Bay St ( bhl.·n Harb:Jr trance & bath.
& Newport Blvd, 1A mi N. 54S-2720
of Ul.h Sil. 1 ~-~-~-~-~~ CALL 646.0073 V•cation Rent11l1 425
FROLIC in tht! snow-moun.
Beautiful l & 2 :BR turn l1u n c11bln, sips 6. S!KJ/wk.
or 11nfurn ap1s. OFFERING Abo v.'kndS. 557~27.
srlt clran. ovens. D/\V fin I ·R~en-1~•"11-to~S~h-•_r_•--4~3~0
2 BrJ, dis pls. shag crpts
drps. Jacuzzi&. Sauna bath: ELDERLY lady would hke
I-luge Pool, f"OR ADULTS 1>11.me. to share her CdM
only. home. Tlahan descent prtf.
MERRIMAC WOODS 673-707:> or 675-2612.
425 J\1e1Timac W•y SHARE my waterfront home
CMt11 Mesa w/dock. M11n, 30-60 yun.
l.RG 1 &. 2 BR. apt.s, 10 $150/mo. 67~131.
min lrom colle,e, oce11.n & '"LA7G~U~N~Ac-'°b<-,-,h,-!to,-o-t-.,.,.,,
c:ould walk lo shop'g. Has furn. Will ~hAre w/atudent
laundry f11c., carport&. pool. or '°mrild adult. 4!M-4658.
Rent from S130-$155. Ask \\'ANTJ:;D. the right \\'Oman
about our dil1count. 1846 10 sh NB Blufls hm. Pvt
Placentia l\lcr. Apt H. ha, 11.ll priv. $80. 644--0369
646-.1564 Garages for Rent 435 1 BR. turn. Sl30. 2 SR furn
St55. 2 BR unlum. Sl.55.
?ool. Bltns, crpt.~. drp~. m
children. no pet~. 325-J E.
17th Pl. C~1. M&-27M
e DELUXE 1 '-2 BR'~.
Furn or unfurn. $14:> It. UP.
Pool. Gardens. 177 E. 22nd
SI., Cf.I. 642-3645.
2 BR. Crpt5, drps, $150 uni.
S160 fum. ~ Oran1e Ave,
C.:'11. 5'S.-I657."
Huntington 8e11ch
* GARAGE *
STORAGE ONLY
tll.ll 897-48&5 * STORAGE GARAGES,
S25 per ino.
Phone. 642-6391 until 6 pm.
Offic• R•ntal '40
SU PER-OELUXE QUALITY
J-2·3 room, up to 3.000 Mf.
fl. orJice suitca. lmm ,.d. oc-
cupancy. Orance Coun ty.
/.l rport lrv\lle Commerc·
2 BR. 51~ Up. • 3 !R Complex, adj. Airporttr
S180 UP. P•tlo, pool , Hotel & Rl'.~tllur11nr, bankl,
ehildren ok. MOflA KAl Sl!n Diegn.. &: N'pt Fwys,
Apia. 18881 l\1ora K11\ [Ane, UNCROWDED PARKING
1-w hlk E. of Beach oU l LOWEST RATtS
Garlle.lrl. 9€H99t I Vwner/mgr. 2172 DuPonl Or.
1 BR. Un f. ,.x1ro11 ~!ostts.
biln~. crr1s, drp~. 51~. l
BR. Furn, Sl45 G11s J')rl
Poc:I Pa1.l0. Adltt., 11(1 pets
536-6717
Rm. 8, Newport Beach
133-3223 Courtesy to Broken
DESK SPACE
222 Forest Avenu•
Lfi:C 2 BPl unf, !'Mei·, hltn~ Laguna Beech
& ~lr1i Gar 11vl Sl40. I 4'4-MM
BR furn Sl2~. 711 In-I:; NEW &fllces, 17177 Bi!Aeh
dlanapo!la, HB. + M.'>-OTtiO Bl. Lov•~~r nl'lts 842-2525
For btr.I rerultl' &42-S673 ~r 213: 3'.l-1-001!1.
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But Yo1,1 Can
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
Classified Ad
3 LINES
2 TIMES
Any Item Priced
$50. or Less
(If lfter• thin on• Item, the combfnecf totel
cannot •xceed $50.)
642-5678
I
(
I
f DAILY PILOT TvtJCtiy, F•bru111 2, 1971 ..
liiAnnou~~n~•;•;m~on~l~1iiiiii5CIG~~Annou~i;;ijnci;;i;1t~mjj"'~"jjh~iiiii.!O(.ii;;i; Pera.anal•
JI , , $\\'EDISH 1.tASSAGE and
530 When You
Wont it done
right ••• WANTED
OVERWEIGHT /LADIES
SAUNA •• fulned Tech.
for relaxation. P r I v a t e
room:ic.
• OPEN 24 HOURS e
2626 Newport Blvd.
Co5ta fo.tr-sa &IS-0860 . Coll one of
the experts
listed below!!
For \veii:ht reducing prog ram lo establish
statistics !or rapid permanent weight lo ss,
conducted by qualified phys ical culturists.
1'.lu !'t be a minimum of 20 pounds over-
\vcight. have transportation and not current-
ly under doc tor's care. 1~1 inquiries con1-
pletely confidential.
YOU CAN 00 YOGA-
Free Demonstration Tues. al
8pm_ For Vitality &: Poise, Classes Start Wed. 'i.'oca1i~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ Center, 445 E. 17th St, C.!\t.
• 16-<isi. I I SI~;;,~~~~~~~~? ( Strv~ a~RepaWi I~ I ~at •R•~lrs I~ ~1 -..,,,.--"-..,.-.... -.-.,-,f:Cl
For a seU explanatory mes--l~mmmmmmm::;~ -~ ASK FOR MISS POWELL-537-5410 sage 24 hrs a day call /
Ran11Js
496-4801 or 5-11-9991 Bi1by1itting Furniture
TR IM-A-WAY AT HOME COSTA MESA FURNITURE Strippint. .......
Ironing
JRONJNG my home Sl.25 per
hr. Bring own hangers .
M5-"l641 Ir .a:t.J Enjoyed by mo\'it, 1V stars, PRE-SCHOOL AJS>, boat parlli. Wood &
,.,,,. ~_beauty SPIU. yery quick. 18&. & ;\lonrovia, ~~ day + metal. In our llJ' val. I ~-------~767 or 540-~. fuU day sessfons. Planned ,61:c::.'·=>~H=5~· -------·-,-,.-,-1-,,.-,-1-1-.>l-p<-,-h-r.-·11
program, hot lunches. Ages Gardening Bring 011·n Hangen
Office Rental 440 Indust rial Rental • 450
1
; _
1
~ ·-~ 1~ Z-6, hrs 6:30 A.;\J.6:00 P~I. ----'-----i -~-"Cal:0:,-1 =6'=5-="°"=--...-..,.. ~ $18 ~·k-COMPARE~ 6424050 AL'S GARDENING
DESK SPACE SMALL UNITS I ~----~ ,•_,_838_-5_237_. _____ lo' •""'"'"" & •mall 1_L•_n_d_•<_•-'p-ln-"g ___ _
COSTA MESA ,_ landscaping services, call LANDSCAPING: lncludin&
JOS No. El C.minc Re•I
S.Jn C leme te ..,...,,
CORONA OEL MAR
~ Rr,-. W::'.t jrl' ~ ;>\1 C.tr
Prk;=. <=;': ~ :: '.1! pj
Sl~ :n3 l:,.-;r: f'.7...::7:
I
U'ILL bab)'Sll 111 my lge ~D-5198. Serving Newport,
Sil. k $10.. Per i\lonth Found (free ads) 550 home in C.~t. 11·/fenced Cd~I. Costa 1l•fes;a, Dover patios, deckint:: &:. fencing.
Immediate Occupancy ~·ard .t playrm. Hot lunches. Shores, \Vestclift. !leas. 837-9:i:Jl • s_-i.100 sq. fL urut, JSth & FOU~D black & tan pn>g· Refs. Reliable. Re as. ---'-------I COi\lPLETE Prof. S er v.
Ult.ittier. UO-n:> po11f'r, nant !t>male cat v~. Vic-6-12-9689. P R·O .f ES S ION AL nioln· State lic'd contractor. Call
pler.ty ol. ~· 1or1a . & Valley Road, \\'ILL bab)s1r your child in tenance, pruning, tree i1'0rk, ·967'-&-_1~928~. ------·II Stt·c"°"',", ~attre . PJtr. &\2-76:'>3 1ny IJc<'nsed home, age5 l !:~k~~;Yl1:C~~~n ~~se;~~'. Masonry
OSta • esa &t2-l~S.5 BRO\\'\' & \1'hi1e ~potted thru .). i\lon thru Fri. G •-
:\H...t...=:E a..:-.~<";"''.: G~.~. :"D\. 6:ltJ sq !t ~t-1 spa~ female pupriy fnund \'ic Oak 549-l_o_::s_. ___ . ___ _
,-...--"/O!!X'e"s & drh't'-in doors. St., C.'.\1. 5-18-5258 CHILD care. i\ly home .
Terms. eorge, &16-""~3.
AL'S Landscaping. Tree
ren1oval. Yard l'emodeling.
Trash t>auling, lot Cll'!anup.
Repair sprinklers. 673-1166.
BRICK, block, concre t e ,
carpentry, house leveling,
all types remodeling. No
job 100 small. Lie. Contr.
962-6945.
._..... • .\-..... Y.'" L"!'l. .t . k &.-.!
y:-,;_"'( _-,.-~ By (V"T.of'r. 6-1&-5C'J3 days; ORTitODOl\'IC r <'ta in er Large play area. Hot
r:-' ~~ s_-.:-:~": ~~ t"·H. found at Lindburg School. lunches, C.\I 64.">-3298 1~= .. 'ill=~.-=~~----,-,-. ,~ -I I ~;i~;;..~-~~~--~~-ICi'i'iii'-i:;;;:,M,;;;-t;;;;;-r;:;: ="-r.•:=::7 ~~-c;it! •. ~· g, ,...,.""""'sq. t.1. CHILD Care ;\Ion thru Fri. 10 Yrs exp in Harbor area. Painting &
c:::";l!, ::eui \Y.t1, !Tc-::: $1.i.i :"r Btl"t.r & Fain:ie\\', l .\lALE G. Shl'phcrd ·about Vic. \ViJSQn & Pomona Avg l wn $10-$12 per mo. p h ~ ~~ Cl':'.!:' .A..": f ;>.::ii >T Lc;e_ SUlli'-an. 5W-H29. 1 )T old. \111.· Spri~dalc Sch!s. 642-5-126. I c &: r-.1 Gardening Serv, aper anging
f'.:~ Storage 4SS & Hl'il. H.B. M&-l9l8 BABYSIT, l\fy home, Day 00!&-~-'-"='=· ~----~ * EXTERIOR-INTERIOR *
.. ~7 BEJ.Oi c,-..: FOU~D rabbit, New Po r l or ntte, Any age, Hot meals JAPANES&Amt'rican Gar· \Yon't be underbid Cus!Dm '
~. l:(I ft 10 :..:ro r-.. L.~GE:. !rock • up. $10!'age \\'~st area, Jl.B. & fenced )'ard. 6-16-3738 dener. Exp. Complete Gar. \.\'Ork, finest paint!'!. Free
A..~ .l ~'~ 6':".>l~l i-;>IC't' ~~4.ila_bl:._ 96::>-5().16 BABYSITTING Eves & dening & Landscaping. est/color con.o;u\ting. Rf'fs, ~ ;:.6-9,9il GEP.,\lA.\' ShE'p. Ahout l yr. "·knds. i\Jy home. 67~1283 _89_J_.o_ISO_. -------I lh., bonded. Full financing
Rentals Wanted 460 old. Vic. Bradberry & Heil. days, Eves. 548-G-117. NE\V La\.\7lS, tt-$'.!ed, Comp! avail. 492-5338, 543-50&5
H B 8~6-1938 BABYSITTh~G rl nites la\\'n care. Clean up by joh LESCO Painting Contractor -: C . .\R Garage in Co~ta · · · . · · r ays, or mo. }'ree est. ror info Inlet & EA1er. :? Story :'5-:"J S."'-'IA . .\S.l. .A\"£. C'\t '.\!~. To be UM'd for f"OUKD large rabbit on 1128 or \1·knds.~ Re 1able lady. I S . )' Al
.a ro~"D .. OCE...\.'\ \'1D'
&S9:lr.t'd ~. ~ C't:J:.T<'r s.a..a 0mier·r m-:9:1
F'roo ::.ro !iq. !:. i,X-~ t· i;~o,.,.oe. Call Tf''T'·. The Ellesmere Ave ., r.t es a Call 616-2038. 897.U17 or &16-0932, pcc1a 1st. so, accousl -~ •• ''"'·"'~.,:,,.· • ...,,. ··~ · g + o.,,·d••u'al A, + spraying, Lie & ins. c.Jo .t6-0 or ..-u .NJ P,.eaJ Lltalers ~2313 Verde orea. 5-16-051 . • , nc: " -P s
_,....._ XL\\l'OP.T BL\~ ··s .:.:=...:::=::.:..:.::...:;:::: __ 1;5~,,~A~LL-;-b;:;lc::-:;k-:--:;d::--=:~1::-::;.:;-I Bus1nes• Service * Commercial * c6~1=;..~"=99:::;,· ~~-----11 ,,,..., --· · v, " . ac og, ma e v1c. r~ I I Ca <•<gg·-No \Vas:in~
• O~ TI!!: BAY • Misc. Rental1 46SI S49 \V, lSlh C.~1. 'call *' BURGLAR ALAR~iS * ....,mp e e re tl'lo-J.J 652.J5.I ot a.;1.5032 1 EXPER. Ha~·a.iian Gardener * WALLPAPER * a.iG-17..\S. Shop, home. boat & car. \\11en you call "?.lac" Fenced ,;torage spa~ Complete Ga rd ening S..\tAU. otfice. pm·ate en-FOU;\O S-side c .i\1. female Local .~ Silent. 646-1116 Se K al · 646-4676 548-1444 646-lm
trance, $30. ~ u·. 19th St. for ca~~2~~5• etc. hlk .& wht shn~'Y dog. ,.Pt)' ·(:0:;i~.:~a~~· Carel · PROFESSIONAL Painting.
C.'.'I. friendly. 6>16-1475 aft 5 pm Carpenter JI:-.t M0-.4s.-;7 Exler. 1 .story, low as $2001
Cd:'>! Office suifr5 Jj()() sq. ~ 5 mo. old female tortise shell CARPENTRY \l/gd pa.mt. Avg rm. $18.
cat. 49.1-I[JSG. l\flNOR REPAIRS. No Job General Services , ccous. ce1 tngs spraye Ir fr. or i<'ss. \\'lll rl'<lcc & I \ I d '
crpt. PMv. prki;:. 6i3-il20. Person.als """I~ ~i· Roy 0•7 I''° Lost SSS Too Small. Cabil'W!t in gar-I ~""'" ., J, ' O'I -.......,
:i NE\V offices, li877 Beach ';;;;;;;;;;;~~~ age!'! & 0 1 her cabinets. llusband Busy! Call '.\loose rAINTING· llonesl. guaran.
BJ. l..o~·est rf'nts S42-2:i25 I SlO LOST • \\'1.'d, ll2'i'li1. gold 5".)..8l75 u no an~'t'r leave s.!:>-0820 aflcr 6-Repair 1eed "·ork. L1c'd. Local reI's.
or 213: 39-l-001;-i Personals braCf'le!, ~ewport or msg at 646-2372. It O. Bulld.Serv !\lost Things Call 57.;;..5740 aft J.
Business Rental 44S I ADVENTURE Laguna. Ke<'IJ!;ake 41 )T~. Anderson RAU< Cutters Ins la 11 ed. I PAJNTING/paperlllg. 18 yrs 1----------SAILING CRUISE P.<'11a1d. 644-1 lJO or Quali1y 1rork. Reasonable. in Harbor area. Lie & LEASE Harbor Bl~·d siore s.i2....g235 RE:O.lODELING & flt<pair F t -o 2208
or oflice. 1380 sq 11. Xlnt l j() ft, 3 mast Square Rigger . ---. . Specialist, Comm'l, residen-l'tt es· :mo-bonded. Ref's furn. 642-2356.
location & parkini;. Air Leaving 311.l/'il for 3ST. BERNARD Lie l'\o. 47 tial. Paneling. cabinets, Hauling FIRST aass Painting &:
cond. Carpeting. ~32:) mo months. !\ten & women ~·ant. Oakland 11 "'ks old. Nr marlite. lormic:a. &»-7598. paper -hanging, Free es1.
Call &12-S060; eves, LJS-2698 ed V>'/desir for adventure t\e\.\·port Bl\'d, C:'lt R.e\\·ard HAULING Call ~59.
sroru:; or Shop av a i I. & tra,·c1 & e ability to share 642-2611 ':eilings Light &: Heavy INTER10R &: exterior pain-
d o~·ntO\.\'n San J uan I expenses. For inlormationLOsr in ;-.teY. de! l'>lar, Jan PAINT A ti al C ii. Anytime. Call Chuck ting. AveraRe 2 BR apt S85
Capistrano fnr !'ma I J calJ Pan1 Rcynold:S, 1, ;\fa/e Gemian Shepherd, coous c e ings, 5t().3379 or <194-4438 labor & material. 548--1546 •,,,,·,.e<. -~ 11 ... offo·-. •o'/•"O. tZ13) 378-2605 hlack and tan. long hair. $1D ea or trade. Sll-692?, MOVJXG, Gara-clt'an-up I ==:::..:::..:=E::.::c=:..o.::..=::..11 " ' "'" ...,,, " W:>-IZ26 11 ~P\I or 636--3UO .. -INT & xtcr. Painting . .;9J,..ll:i3, 49:;..Ji06 t'VCS FULLY LICE.\'.SED 1' · • a ·• · · & lite hauling. Rea!IOnable. Lic'd, ins. Frtt est. 30 yrs
STOP.E 11·/"orkshop in Rcno11·ned J-hnrlu Sp1ritualis1 LOST ·''.~n.i; ~1.1.1en .. gray Cement, Concrete Free estimate~. 645-1602 cxper. Chuck. 6-1.)..-08()9.
back, TV ITpa1r or ap-Advice nn all matters. 3triped, Bobbit · Vic: 637 --YARD .. G'.l:rage clC'anups, PAINTING professional. All
pliance rt>pair. sm part Lo1·e, '.\Jan·iage, Bu:<inC'~S Shalimar. C.:'lf. &12-6=..;Q •• CONCRETE. Beat The trees dirt l\'Y removal. !i_klp , work g0 u a r n . Co Jo r
house. 4..\3 \\'.Bay St., C:'lt Rrading!' ~11•en i days a* * GER:'llA:O:, :<hort hair, Bad \Veather! Floors, loader, backhoe. 962-874;>. specialist. 646-7081: 547-1441
HCl'OSS fron1 Theo. Robins \\'Cl'k, 10 am · 10 pn1 . po1nll'r pup. RE\\' ARD . pa!ios. Reas. Call Don TRASH &: Garage clean-up, PAINTING-Ext-Int. 18 yrs.
Ford &16-2971. 312 :0:. El Camlno RC'al, 5-18-2SS1 &12-8jlt days. SIC a load. F ree est. l Ll F San Clemente cxper. ns. c. rre est. Store-826 \V. 19th St. C'.\I 492.9136. 492-0076 LOST niall' Slame~e cat. CE:-OfENT \\'ORK, ro job too Anytime, !>iS-5031. Accoust. Ceilings. 968-9126.
$115/mo. * 646-7414 \\'arl1C'r/'.\lagnolia, F. V · 1mall, reasonable. Free Housecleaning A E AN
DESKS , • N' I NE\\'PORT J:O.'TEP.IORS Re\.\·ard. g.;2-4Qj5 Estim. H. Stufiick, 548-8615 * p p RH GING
pace ...... guna igue A'.'\;>;OU~CES . SUN Brite !\laint Carpets, & PAINTING. * 96.S-2425
industrlal area Sec'y scrv. f Tom \\'i!hams t n I e r Io T !RISH Setter, male, 8 mos, Child Care fioo"" •••. ,·.~owa •I<. Resid'l Pleste•, Petch, Repe'•r 831-14~ days. . . \tic Vktoria Bch Jan 2'5th. "' ... uu • Designer .• has J01ned their SlOO re"·ard 213: 9..\3-8636. CHILD cart, my home any &: comm'I. Free est . ___ .:_ __ .;...:.;.;:...:c.c..1•
BEAUTY Salon for Lease, studio. 675-6420. 3326 East houn Hot lunch fenced I c"3c::._1--56'1.::::::.· ------* PATO! PLASTERING
fully equipped, ln :<hopping Coast .High'l\·ay, Corona. del yard. 's.is-3834. ' HOUSE OF CLEAN I All ty~IF~mates
center, San Clem. 4!lZ-29i9 :'llar (1n B of A bldg) I II J•) Complete llousi> Cleaning
400' STORE, i;hop, office. ALCOHOLICS AMnymous. lnitruction Contractor 6~2-682·1 Plumbing
S95. 2340 Ke"'port Blvd, Phone 542-7217 or wrlte to ADDITION. utility . :storage_ l --,-1-,,.-~c~i,=.~,~.,~.~S.~rv-,~.,-,-l ----'------·II
C.'.\f. 6--16-ZJ.44, 548-8333 P. 0. Box 1223 Co!;ta :-Otesa. . Or gar. bldg's. (new con. Ca-I•. Windo"·s. }"lonrs rtr PLU;-.tBING REPAffi
0 S h I & .,,.. No job too small JT'.S A bree: ... ~ll your ~ ii> -\'ER BAL E.'\-c 00 l sir.) $3.38 sq, ft. at 400 Res,~ Commc'I. 5--18-4111 • 6-12_3128 •
i!err.s 11ith ease. UY' Daily ' COt::O.'TER SES S I O :.J instructions S75 s<fs or btr to either in. l ~'-"-CC,..=-~~-~~ ~~--c':...:-""""'-''-=--~
P•'' • r1~rr1f,,.-l t;t2~i6iS 67l-T:»:; di\·iduals or bldr's, 642-5997 Day "·ork. General Plumbing • Elect · Repair
11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiililliirlllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil IT'S YOUR MOVE 14 P~I. _::"::•"'.::!:"°::."::•::tio::."c..::":.:11..:·9:::330::_ $7.50 per hr i' Bay & Beach Janitorial 6..\2-27:>.> &12-{ljQG
GEN'L CONTRACTOR Crpts, windo"·s, floors le R of'
x ,.--*--*--*--*--..* INDUSTRY CAREERS Remodeling.Room Additions Res. & Comm'!. 64&-140 ° ing C
Lic'd/inl! 645-0991, 673.6809 'l..:n~,=o~m~o:..::,T:.:e=x"'-'-'"----'-.0,. :EfYi?OOFING CO: Roofing
Additions * Remodelina: ol all types, recover,
Ge t'lvick & Son, Lie. HO:\IE TAX SERVICE repairs, root coatings. L!c
673...fiO.ll * 543-2170 Fed. & State 2Q'I. below las! & bonded since 1947.
AIRLINE & TRAVEL Trader's Paradise
Catamaran. damaged, \"ft)'
fast protOf}'pt', 20 ft "'/CUS·
!<mi trailer. \\'ill trade "' 1<
for kite r.a.tlboaL 6l4·19l.~
11fter 3'.30.
F"or JiEALTII I ,'\ELD Jfl.
Desert • CcJ--0utofsta1e.Jla1,.
:Z bldg Cl corn C:'lt. Inc $4~5
1-·p $68;\l eq S~2~t ALS0-3 ac
Palmdale Eq S22~1. 6.J6.8:.).'i
100 hp Johnl!On 0 .B. cng. 6
gal fuel tank. ba.lt<"l'Y cab[Pl!
&: box & ef'ntral cahle. SiOO
value. Trade for mo!orc~c)e
of equal va!ut>. 5-18-6J7g
i'l,1nt 3 yr. old o,-rldlng 11·t
saddlr. brldlr, r!r. Tr11dc
for molar b1k", ofr. ('Qllip.,
s.porlln~ f'QU ljl. \'al. $~i00.
5411-7823,
'69 4 dr, Cn>"· ril h 14 DOO!;c
P.U. All ll\')' d1) 11 :ur coni1
Also 22· Atr :0-:tn'rlln lrlr
Trd for Dorl~<' or Co1 IC'Z
motor hm. a.;S.ll:.O..
H1\1' 2 br Seal\llvrn homf'.
S7.500 rqU il}. \\1.:in1 o.ld~r
do'>''nto'A'l'I Hta Bch 3 br or
2 br w/de.n. Oayj;: ~163.5;
Eves: satne or 96z.<lJj.C.
Trade equity In besu11!utty
earl!d-for '70 lAndct1u Mo.
k>r home-, 23', ,l~P5 6, for
IA~ mod,.I Sis, \VAR· JJIMf.
cd w/xtr~ !lfi.i 1891, ~~!.~
* * *
f OPERATIONS AGEro;'T e TICKET SALF..S e RESERV,\T!ONS e AIR f'RE IGllT·CARGO
.. CO;\t;lfUNICATIO:-;"S
• TR.AVEL AGE:'\T
Lic'd Conlr. Remodeling yrs r<'lurn. Appl. a\·1111. _li4_2·_7_m_. ------· 11 Additions, Plans, Layout Ii>.'TAX rt'P. Day 675-1283 EASTERN Quality-\Vesll'rn
Kari E. Kendall 548-1537 Evf' 5-IS.0.117 P1·iccs• All types Roofing.
\VALKING DECK INCOME TAX SERV Lyle, 673-i980 .
COATINGS $4 & up. !l am·!l pm \1•kdys. Sewing/Alteration•
lines
times
dollars
Of all type~. Lee Roofing 01>('n eves/wknds. Appts
Airline Schools Pacific co., C;\f. SiZ-7222 for tree avall. ~IS·O:i8S. 1842 Neii-port, l'ITIING Problen1:' Don't
610 E. 17th, Santa Ana est. C.l\1. fret! Joann SJ)l'cializes in -~--54=3--6-59_6~---llR~OO;;;:~,.,.-,A~d~d;;lu;;· 0=,,.=-.-1..,.-•T'. 1..::=:________ custom filling. Play elolhes -io party dresses. 897-MSl. PIANO LESSONS Constntction. Single story or NOW'S THE
2 E \' lans •-I t • Dressmliking -Alterations Jx '" rnob1J, ~--. t·-••h. Beginners, lntermediales. · s 1m., P <>< a.you · ..., '~'"""' ..... .., 847 1·11 0 Special On Hems ed. lge rm att.at:htd, On The Learn lheory, l!lght reading, __ ._,_. ------1 TIME F R Cal Jo * 646-#16
bParh. ~t pii+. In Baia. etc. Call Bruce fU.C.T. mus-l\IY \Vay, quality home Trad~ ,,,r ~Jl'y lll houM-.
1
ie bkgrndJ :;16-41'iS, ~fesa repair. \\'alls, ceiling, Doors QUICK CA~H EUROPEAN dressmaking a.11
ll((() ''h l('. !i'. .... 1..,)) Verde. etc. fl;o job too ~mall. custom fittrd. Very reasun. ~7-0036, 2.t hr llllS. serv. THROUGH A ablf'. 673-1849 t ad)a.rent La~na :\i:;wol I
\lew Jots, i'2xii8, S!0.000
-qwty. Trade fr,r unimprov-1
~d acrt';i;:,. or ?
.:.J6-J374 or ~116.()'):l() The
"r.IAKE Roon1 For Dad-Alterations -64l-S84S
d y'', .clean 011t the DAILY PILOT Nent,accurate,20yearsexp,
garage .. yoor trash is CASI£ Tile
"'ith a Daily Pilot Classl!ied
HAVE ; $60,000 2nd TD, $350
month. 7'}. For: f~e I.:
clear Or-.inge Cnly, units,
home. land or lol!i. DAILY
ad. WANT AD * V!'rne, The Tile r.tan + 1..;=========..!.=========-: I Cust. \l'Ork. lMtall & repairs.
,<;cf'nic Proper!!es 67;).5726
Ha\·c Ile\\' 2 BR. 2 bath
houSf' in Newport Beflch ,
clC'ar. \Vant local ,·acnn1
lot~ or Joi. BalhOa B11y Prop.
crll~·• 673-1-120.
Choice Del!ert, near J011huJ
Tree. 2 BR home & 6 11cre11.
\'alu(' $30.000. \\'ant: Local
pt'Opl'rl)' " tnid<'.
.;9-1.4746, 499-1331
Have tll'ar '70 Shasla A.C.
n1otor home. Loaded, \\'an!
!l"ll.<i(Jllf'd 2nd T.D. llS Fl~
'1'00) wllatr dlst(llllll, Boh
Lockhart, 569 \V l!l!h, C:'-1
1-16-2301.
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
leading H&\'e (al 3 BR, furn. Big
Bear, $~ equ1ty.,fh} 2 RR,
Of'lll'h h~ Venrura, $7000
. ,,,,,r w,~.,. '~""· "'m' Marketplace ' .,~ ' "'":'·J.<7>; *I I
Small classified ads
doa
big
selling
job.
Try one!
642-5678
No job too gml. Plaster
patching. Leaking llho\\tt
repair. 847-1957/846-0206.
CE.1lA.\11C tile new &
ren1odel. Free e~t. Small
joPs \1·clcome. 5 3 6-2 4 :! 6,
531'-~i
Tree S1rv ice
TREES, Hedges, Top Trim.I I ("U!, removed. hauled. Ins.
642-4030 Big John
Tutoring
I rULL Y creden(Wcd (')cm.
1c1.chcr avail. to tutor in
your homt. any subject
646-i874.
Upholster~
Lrc lipholsrel'er -Quahl.)·
\\'Ork AnthOn)'·~ Up h.
$(>t'\l<.'t', 612-5817 N.B.
f"11llt rellu!ts are ju!t a phollt'
I call a\1'&)' -6'12-$78
--------------
JOIN THE •
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
/
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE •
FOR
~
~
C!!!f!!!'J
~
~
If you sell a service and don't advertise in the
DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing
business the hard way. The Service Directory
(classifications 600-699 in the ciassified ad
section daily) gives you a n advantage you gel
through no other advertising me d ium . It reach-
es customers who are ready lo buy. Be there
when your prospects come into the market
looking for the services you ha ve to sell. If
your service isn't listed , we'll start a category
just for you.
Pick up the phone right now and reserve your
space in the "Sellers Circle" ...
'
Your Direc.t Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
•
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
• •
"
,
DAJLY PILOT 23
( -J[IJ]I .__ _-_ .. ··•__,l[Il][ '--_[ ............ ___,J [IJ] I JltJ I lf§J [ -~I .............. I~ ~I ~·-to~Y .. ~l[l!s l ;;1 -~~~;i-~J~~tC
lob W•nted, Male 700 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Furniture 110 Ml1cell1neou1
••COOK Sarah Qwenuy Inc. twJ -;r OlNINC SET-Genuine Bltth ,
111 S.Wl":I Machines m Lovable I cuddJy black fem . Bo.ts, Malnt./
kitten, 6 mo'1 white trim le Service ':[;~~ ... ~":::!. ':1.:.::~ ••DISHWASHERS 1 INSPECTORS pt·""" help needod .... .,,. Provincial. ,ad,,.,.,..... uAidut 1oct10A
y,t>rlc. Mld-f.Utln.• \\'hat Exp'd, Must be cll!'&n, neat & ASSEMBLERS vestznent. Will train, min. chair, Catelr: table w1lh
lhave )QI to oUer! &H-4476. and OV'tf 21, Apply in prrson lmmed. oprninp for girts w/ age ~. SS7-6i83Js.M>--06l4 extra leaf and pads.
Job Wanted, F1mal1701 onJ.y, &Jrt & Sirloin, 59X1 I v:per. Also, tra.lntt open-*Sec'y $450 * * '* * ANTIQUES..IMPORTS
W. Coast Hwy., N.8. inas. Call oow. 9 am-9 pm. Challenging job In advertl~ S01'·A -'.Pra\•mclal Cuttom UNREDEEMED
TRAVEL Ir. live tn o:im.
pan.ion reHMd lady. No
drlnk/tmokr. Ref. position
w/aa.me NB only. \Yrlte
classified Ad No. 42 0$Uy
PUot P. 0. Box 1500 Costa
~tesa Ca.lif 9ai26.
COOK-houek:ee~r for ORANGE COAST Ing dept for .tw-p &al Who ?.fade 8 ft. in e.x~nt con. PLEDGES
eJdery couple. C.M. 5 day EMPLOYMENT Mi good ikUl.s & can think dltlon.
;';.k. Ll\•e In or ou t. AGENCY Oil her Jeet. Capistrano area. ~L \V:S.1u* l'XJ8 COAST PAWN &
0041. l:U Broad\\"Oy, c.t.f. fi45.3111 Service Center Emp Agency So. Ross St., Santa Ana AUCTION HOUSE Cv1tomer Service $500. 500 Newpon Center Dr, N.B. 5-12--"7987 Int. ~. bckgrd. plus con. LADY -For Restaurant Sulte 535/6444981 "-"'---'"---------!
1truction, able !o .,.,'Ork week. work. Exper. de1'd, Call SECRETARY-SACRlFICE -10 "'Tl8 near F b 3 d 7 30 ne1v liledlt. furn inc. s· • . r ' : p.m. £ X PERJENCED Telet,ype ends. Cali Loraine, West. 5-l>l6B6 RECEPI'IONIST black naugahydc sofa & 642-8400
O .......... tor desire full-time cliU ~l'!OllneJ Agency, 21'»3 K-.. 1...i~e of -ruitruetion J t d 1150 2426 Newport Blvd CM ... ~•• Westcllrt Dr., N.B. 6115-2770 Legal Sac'y to $650 . .., .. ""'6 ...., eve.sea ' never use ' . ., 'employment in Costa Mesa desired; escrow &: purchas-Bunk beds, 5' eoH~ I.shit". . -
area. Call Toni at 642-3643, CHICKS-to sell water beds. Xln't &kills, min Syn Calif. ing helpful. Shorthand 80-90 2 end ('On1!11odea, * AUCTION *
eves. Rtlaxed atmosphe r e . la1w. kk ir,50 wpm. Must be sharp . hld!Hl-bed, Span1sl\ K1ng FiM Furnllure
N1tuno Rest, 2119 Harbor, F C 8 par to.,.. Interviews by appt only. bdrm , very rsnbl . & A Uan
SECRETARY· EXECUTIVE Of aft noon. Ability to .gupervi5e small ole. Call -·ce at °'" •M•, 2!31925--3622 PP cc~
All ofl.icc Mills inc l. Book·I ~-==--=--,-...===~ NEWPORT l~~~--;:,;·~~-~~""""I C~~~~·°lirane:rl;·esl Auctions Friday, 7:1)) p.m.
1..::.'"':;.;,P',c"":-'n--"""'_,.·...,,.==· I *~;:Je~ So-:I~~ r: Personnel Agency SEC'Y LEGAL Custom Draperies Windy's Auction Barn
AIDES-For convaleacence, Fringe benefits. Some Sat-833 Dovar Dr., N.B. At least 5 yn Calif. Jaw. Top Derorator drapery .,.,·orkroom 2015~~ Newport, 0 -! 646.8686
eldtt!y care or family eau. unia.,ys. Huntington Beach 642-3870 kills. SA <'Losing out T;iOO yards of Behind Tony's B?dg, J\lat'J.
Homemakers, 547~1. Call 8 9 ..,,,..,..,..,..,..,..,....,. ' ' • AGENCY drapery fabric and made-up>1--~-==--~~~-!:;~·=·o. am. pm, LlvE-IN mat'"'""" bolm!keen.. MISS EXEC drape.rles Materials from FOUND NlJDE Jobt Want.O, M & F 704 .._...,,.,., ~..-... tlO \Y, COOllt Hwy., NB Ix 8 . ..:_. and dra""rles A leaking .roof in Dover pE'r. Must drlve. Can! tor 2 64&-3939 ,a..... ,..... Sho J f d l T G
hr DENTAL Assistant. <'hair. children, 5 & 7. Prepare i -"'""'""'l~"'""'"'""'""'""~: from S5 pair. 3853 Blrch St., res. t>:e t. · uy Howiedeantna: $3 . side. Exp'd Expanded duties som~ meals. TV room & Newpon Beach 546-1431 adj Roofing Co, 645-2180 •
and Plumb!ng Repair 1-funt. Beh. 968-5782 PM/ Secretary to Orange Cou~ty Airport. 5-1S-9590
• S«S.2929 • 8~7.1549 AM board, friendly atmosphere. Financial se<'f'etarial skills, • BICYCLES e
-• M & F 710 Salary open. 836-3872. top job, able to relocate, FdURNI ITUREd' ~1u1~cdl hofrom All tvnes. Gd Cond Nicely HelpWant.u, DENTAL ASSISTANT. LOCATION l\1EN-call Loraine \Vestctiff Per. 1spaystu 10s, m...,e m. ·"'~,.. R '.,2 ,.;.,., ' d t ceJlall painr.,.... eas."" ·u•-' Exp'd., full time. Recep-EXPERIENCED ONLY sonnel Agency 2043 \Vest-es, erora ors can on. r~-~~~~~~=-
Admin Assist fo Pres
Must ba\le degree or eQUiv.
business eXp. Starting salary
$550 mo. Call 7141673..ffil,
l toSpm.
APT. MGR. for 12 2 BR.
turn. adult units. for partial
rent. 6-12-9520 aft 5 pm.
ARE YOU THIS
WOMAN?
tio nist -Assistant. Over 25. Vending Routes. Call cliff Dr. N.B. '645.mo. All Brand Ne"' HATCHBOARDS
PH: &1&-3535 Collect, (JU) 642-3757 -Mr. -' R D FURNITURE 5-lS-4192
DENTAL Assistant, chair Logan Suite :n -wanted: 1-40 hrs, 1-32 hrs. Mon Thur & Fri 'Ti! 9 W 1 d 21 JOHN 2 SERVICE Station Salesmen/ 1844 Newport Bl., C.M, Miscellaneous
side, "per\e"""d only, age HANCOCK CENTER • M b 'd N " · an e '" 6061! ust e ex-p , o one \\'ed . Sat. & Sun 'Til 6 820
35 or under. Chicago, Illinois . d 18 d l •
495-4990 or 837~3792 LOOKING for more than just un er nee a p P Y. ENTIRE conten!J or 1 BR CASH for tum. appliances,
Chevron Sia. 3190 Hlll'bor apartment· Contemporary tools, &: misc items. DISH\VASHER evening shift another job? Join the "New Bll·d., C.J\f. furniture la mos old. Pain-&12-7015 or Aft 5, MS-4m. Apply in person, Odie's 1400 Beautlfu1 Jdeas·· Div. ot .
CO!Ult Hwy, N.B. GENERAL FOODS. Help SERVICE STA ATI. all tings, draperies. lamps, etc. "69 V\V dr!u>:e C8..!nper van,
others to enhance their shllts open, Apply in penon, Call Ken, 64&.-0921 or gle<'ps S, sink, icebox, radio
personal beauty v.·hlle en-Mae Arthur 8' 4618 Campus 557-3807. & hl'arer. Immaculate. $2395. DONtrr girl "A'anted, 2545,
night shift. No exp nee.
MR DONtrr 135 E 17th
C.l\t.
EMPLOYMENT
COUNSELOR
joying a profitable business, Dr., N.B. BAYFRONT custom furn, 495--5906, 837-3306 after 6. sz.nso wk up. No exp nee. SERVICE Estab'd. Fuller uphols chr v.· f ottoman, .
No door to door. Exec. posl. Brush rte, $12>$17S wk. tD carved, antiqued . chr, kng Musical Instruments 822
tions avail. 842-2664 st., also pt time 546-57-15. ~~~· match. n1te stands. LUD\VIG 4 pc Drum set \V.
* l\IAIDS. EXPER. * * SHAMPOO GIRL * . Zildjian Cymbals Inc. All Over 21. Apply: VALUABLE orig oil pain-A · S350 54~9634 Ben Brown's ~[otor Ho\l'l Assislants, Beauticiarui, Hair. tings Imported mar b I c ecessor1es . ,
31106 S. Coast, S. Laguna dressers, Hair Stylists, Halr din'~ table J\loved must ** DRillt SET $200 **
* REPAIRS * Wldarcoal. S.m! . 1ong lur. Clean, oil A adJust )'OUr ma. Nttda id home 836-4493 or
chine 1n your home. Spee. 897..MSO 213
la! $3.9.S, all work tuara.a·
teed. 545-82311.
J970 stnger Zig-~ Auto,
bo.:autltul \\'a.lnut col\IOle.
t.fake1 buttouhole1,
overcasts HamJ, b 1 l n d
henis, destvis etc. Cuar.
S44.44. cub., or small p;ymts.
545-8238.
2 .Beautiful brown tabby cal.I, BO<"tts/Marlne
1 &hort ha.Ired wht C&I. All
males young trlendly and 1 __ E_,qu_i.:.p_. -----~-
fun &t.f..7-i9'J 2n YAMAHA oulboard, 8.5 borat
BEAUTIFUL malteie, 1 foot power $100. FIRM
hl&:h, 2 root long, 7 year 5.cs..sTM
old white male. 962-ll32. iO'itt, Power 906 Ne~ good home. 2i'3 -
Sporting Goods 830 OOBERMAN AKC 6 )T old CJIR!S Craft 32' tw1n Cll')'5
male. Good temperament 210 moton. Loaded for SURFBOARD~l 6' 6" single-but no children. 673-(1174: cruialng or filhlng. AD In·
fin down rail. 1 6 O" twin 896-5165 214 top cond, ready to ao. $8500 •
fin & wet suit. On:et.1 ~~~-~~~~--,.,c I 646-46.16 675-5633. GD home fncd yd. Lovable c.c_ ______ _
rnl:<ed bred ma!e dog. "217Starttatt alum c:rul!er ,
\vht/blk DOie. & eyea 8 mo. 120 hp. Cabin, plley, etc.
548-0813; 836-449l 2/4 Cover, trailer. Top a>nd.
TV, Radio, HIFI,
Sterao 836
f'.'EW Panasonic ate re 0 6 Week old German short
A;\t / FM tuner w I 2 haired Pointer and ? • Good
speakers. OUUets tor tape, health. 557-6896. 2/4
turntable & earphones, only 6 Mo. male Shtpberd.G.rey.
$75. 67~2259 or 497-1906. hound. Has all abols Ir II·
1969. !<300. ,..__ I
ZODIAC 13' ln1lata~. Also,
---Sa"'1loe. 968-8813 I
Boats, Rant/Chert'r 908
BOGEN 85 watt amp. 2-15" cense. !li7•7640 214 32· Twinscrew Chris, fully
lpeaktrs ln cabinets. 2 equlp'd Fllhinr or Qu!a..'
,..alioti< mk• and •W>ds. l ~l----J~l1....iliij' _• ·:;_""='···c.:c_· __ ' J\fake Offe.r 645-3447. Pe11 Ind 5upp11u ~ ~·· ~~.
~IUNTZ 4 & 8 track home . Botti, Sall 909 unit + approx. 70 tapes. ""'" ________ _
$10:> OR BESf OFFER. Dogs IS4 ·~Hobie Cat w/trlr never
J\1ust aell, 548-5613, u:k Jor I--"'"'--------used, in water only 8 times,,
Andy. DOBERMAN pupplea, AKC stored In garage. Nice as
BRANO new 18" GE color reg!s,, Championship stock, new. Seil Sll95. SJ.500 in·
TV in closed style cabinet !deaJ pet, Assured 1ecur:lty.1 _•~··~"~"~-~·~7~3-8204~:.:;.· __ ~-I
\\'/sturdy "A°OOd stand. Only I ,071~<~1;:;;894..f~37~4~-=-,-="""'.'.'.= * BALBOA 20 . Many extras
$350, 673-2259 or 497-1906. GERMAN short hair pups, wlrraUer. Asking $2750 or
'70 ZENITH color TV AKC, OFA ctrt. Top reas offer . 615--0012
w/AFC, must gacrlflce flt'ldfshow. 528-3887 aft
$200. Call Btwn 6 le 9, I ~5p'Cm"'.===-;;--::=-::-645-4l57 DACHSHUND pups,
GARRARD record-changer. miniature, AKC, Black &
player, Diamond stylus, reg. tan &: mahogany r ed .
$39.50, special S27. Ne:w Al· n4t&Jl..4018.
!antic J\1usic 44.5 E. 17th. e DALMATIANS
STEREO, Gattard turntable, AKC e
Sansuki amp $175 ** 642-1937 ** :.c-,,-,,~771-,.,-3838,___,..,,,,....,"""11 'TEA""'~cu"°"'P~To""'y~Pood!::-;;~,~p=u=-,,..
16" Emerson portable 1V, Tiny 2 lb Pcoiles, Yorlties
xlnt rond, new picture tube, or Maltese at stud. 5-15-:noo.
* 28' COLUMBIA 1961
08.)-'1 213/636-0737
Eves 7J<l /64&-5Tl4
CAPE COD CAT BOAT
18', fbrblt, (21.3) 8M-3883.
Boet1, Sllp1/Dock1 910
SUPS AVAILABLE, 25' 10,
40'. ai02 Newport Blvd.
1
\Ve need you It you have a
good knowledge of sewing.
You may no\v be employed
but want lo Improve your
present position. Employ.
ment will be in your area,
with a good 1tarting salary,
supervised training & many
company benefits.
If you v.·ant a re"A.·arding &:
challenging career please
o:intact us regarding join-
ing this organization as an
employmtn! counselor in
this ofiice. Cail Zena, (714)
956-1000.
!'t!Ah"E Jull time \\'ages, part
tin1e, be a distributor of
puno organic cleaners, food
supplements & cosn1etics.
637-46061673-2064'
l\todels & Girl Friends. call: sell this w~k. &4&--0T32 or _ LIKE NE\\'
Roy Alvarado, HAIR HUNT-l5-l~S-~22ll~.'2·~S~2<'__~~~l-:-:='-l~_,~l=<S-"<V~•'-0''-w~k-'<>d__ DALMATIAN puppiet, AKC, ERS SALON 544.2151 day or ,,.., ex adorable, reason ab I e ,
t"VE'. SPAN. coffee & end Ibis, Office Furnitura/
1
II I 494-7270 or 497-152tl.
$25. 5-16-0TI4.
BOAT Slip~'. Skit ~
for 1ail boat up to 26'.I
~8-lliO!I, 673-8800. '
ARE YOU THIS
WOMAN?
Interviews and appl!catioru;
will be taken in pert0n al
The Singer ComP,any, So,
Coast Plaza, 3333 Brlslol,
Costa ~fesa, on Thursday,
Feb. 4th. trom 10:30 A.!tt. to
4:00 P.~1.
NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE
ASSEMBLY
TRAINEES
S t mmed. openings for girls
w/gd eyesight & linger de.x.
terity. Call now. 9 A!\f.9 Pflf.
ORANGE COAST
EMPLOYMENT
AGENCY
124 Broadway, C.l\1. 645-Jl..ll
Cal-Fair
Employment Agency
625 So. Euclid, Su.ite 4
Anaheim
EXPERIENCED COtJp!e want·
ed to manage 20 unit motel.
Free apt + percentage.
642-4422 or 646-1730.
$50. Che!T}'\\'OOd b e. d · Equip. 824 f v I I~ SALES compl , $20, Swivel rocker•--~ -------ree lo ,ou J\flniature Schnauzers-Transportation fthi
STOP!!! & foot stool, S2D. Easy chr, AB Dick mimeograph ~~~-~~~~;1 A~K~C~.~~M~u~•t~R~ll~lmn=~-ed~, Lmmmmm;;;:; .. :;1 Make $3.50 per Hour & ACT $5. 642-3701 machine, all attachments; ~ Terms avail. ~1667 1 on the phone. Easy \\'Ork, LOOKING TURQUOISE slant a.rm i;ofa Pos!agc nieter, All $150. SIAMESE, altered male, *SHERRY'S POODLES* C S I /R t20
pl time. For appt 642.4431. Sales minded person, see tor $3S ~latchl;g chair SlO. Both r-"'-'"-'-'-"-·-------lo\'CS kids. Well mannered Yr end puppy sale, groom· •mpars, a e ant I
MALE with lumber buying youn;e~f, a real career o~ in very &ood condition. DESl\S, <'let. typewriter, 10 good home. 492--022S 214 Ing, Free pk·up. 546-2843. FALL l'AMPER
& selling experience for Jl'.'rtun1ty. Xlnt future for S42-3S43. f il es, photOCQpy-Divorec FREE puppies. Lovabl e, e AFGHAN PUPS. AKC. llft
retail yat'd. J\1ust be nght man. Earnings com. ~ . Se.IC'. 96S-J.IZ2. mongrel, shOrt haired, med. Pick o! Utter! Black mask·
pleasant, good with prople, mence lmmediatel;y should ·' SOFA, never used, quilter! • ----8~2~6 sized 846-4;)31 214 ed Sliver. 962-6956 aft 5.
FURNITURE nice ap~arance. Good pay. be iti. excess of $250. per "A'k. floral, icotchguarded SS~~5· Pranos/Orgons TEENAGE kitties, s•-m=o~nt~h;, I ~:::..:::::.:::..:::::..::::-='-"-
-SALES_ For appt call Jim Gorman Nf• canvassing or soliciting. =~&' loveseat · CLEARANCE & up. Long &: short hair. Hors11 156 Over a dozen brand new 8
CLEARANCE
For local dept store TIH93-510:J. Intervie\\'S by appolntment1.::"-'=~~==---I S 541j...7JM & 543--0813. 2/,4 ft. to ll ft. campers b:IW
CO '
'USS!ON only 9-3 "Attkdays. 835-mt AS NE\V! ! ALE WESTERN saddle $90 good • TOP r. " 1 r.·JARINE carpenter, expel.'. N 117 ~" * Sleeping sofa ST:i * ("\,_,, PRETTY little spayed calico rondltion 644-l400 after 6 aluhed to e CO. BENEFITS Also. J\larlne painter, ex(X'r. SUPERVISOR LV • :.,., 642~560 eves: 6-l5-2000 Over 100 Pianos &: "''&""fl.6 cat n~ll I o o d home. PM only $ 9 OYH
Quality line to sell Apply In person, Basin a.m. rel. sh., wk ends. • Reduced for immC'd. sale, l~<~Ol-~1~586~;;;;;:<;;;,-p;;pp~'':/2~ I ~~~~~~~~~~~ 4 ACTUAL Apply in person l\farine, Inc., 829 Bayside Park Lido Convalescent * CUSTO:\t FURNITURE Buy Now & Save! PACTOlY
RENTAL "-d 1 -.,,, SIX S.week old puppies • l ~ ice to Mrs. 1bompson Dr, N.B, or call 673--0360. Center 642-8044 • .xe a c as.s '"" O""n Daily 10 tll 9 .. _ ... --~ I tC INVO
Co G ral C I o.•o 3481 r-dachshund • poodle m Ix. --~!..~-W. T. GRANT • MATURE lady or man/part ** \VAITRESS • Ex· ene • a I.....,. · Sat 11).6 * Sun U.5 494-54.0J 212 -------·--"-Po!ftively no added deale:r
Personnel Ottice or 1J time. Retail Wes, perlenced, apply ln person, ENTIRE mntents ol 2 br COAST MUSIC chlrges! Every unit ready!
9811 Adams Ave., Grant Plaza liq-deli. 642-<1342. ODIE'S, 212 E. 17th C.?-.f. apt, good contemp turn. + NEWPORT & HARBOR FREE puppies, II wka. Part --------~ for im:.meidlate lndJtDaHon on '
Brookhurst & Adams, cM:;OT='a="'7,WO:,OS""--"Pt;:-;ti;;me:: \VAJTRESS, Exp'd, in food cpr frig, 646-1323. 2 D:isra 1i1esa * 6112-2851 :,C::Z~~ 2Cl7Sl ~lvln. R2~i Genaral 900 your tntck or a new l!ml
Htg. Beach wk-days & wk <'nds. Please & cocktails, Age 23-35. App Garage Sale 81 STEil\'"\VAY Grand, Artist THEODORE
An ~~P=;111"1ty call 494-7SS7 Lag Sch. in per, 630 lido Park Dr, ~II.SC boat" It s Com· model, Gennan scale • l10~~n :il~n Oo1~~ male SCRAM-LETS ROBINS FORD ~!OTEL MAID, part time. NB. no•~ oo:nng em,,.. & lots $169S. Steinway Gr 8 n d, So2 · 2060 HARBOR 81,VD.
A ly l ""rson U ... ~-s. s, pum model L in ~bony S2895. Greenville, S.A. 13 l'OSTA MF.SA 642.00101 Full t!Tne or part time con· Exp. nee. PP n ··-'VO~IEN -Fantas C op-more. Inflatable boat. Elec. T\imball Grand s4ss ANSWERS
AUTO BODY MAN cession help. Orange County -"'='~-~H='='"°~'~B=l=''~·"c".'~· 1_._ portunity to earn over trim tabs. Fishing gelll'. \VA RD'S BALD\VTN Snmto 2f;~~r: ~~~~~Y' ~naJ ~v~ryt 10\J' Troplcana ea bove r
Raceway. 1.1r. Redd ing NEED LOT BOY SlOO/day. Learn revolu· Shot shell reloader. Elcc. 1819 Nell'""rt Blvd. 642.8484 camper-jackA mooo-matk rtnmed. openings for exper. 838-llS6. Blue Chip Auto Sales tlonary new beauty tech· "'"~ S 111 .,.. blk/.,.,'ht males. 644-7492 2/2 Bemoan -Fiord -Afoot -toilet, 50 pi wate:r w/50'
metal v.·orker w/local finn. [ ~G=,=,,.~,=al"'-~M~am~-~"-,-,-,-ce--.,,-,d 2145 Jiarbor Blvd., c.M. nique. Guaranteed place· 8~10""'"' ov~n. . a n g 1-fammond, Ste In"' a Y, QUIET 1 yr old female wtrlte Turkey -TAKE OFF lb pressure pump, ga. or
'Exceptional deal on salary. Custodial, Pvt. Day School. '"!1ent &: clintc!(' at our loca· ~7rJ H~ntin1 knives. Sac, Yamaha. New & used pianos cat. Ideal for older couple. Did you hear about the elcc retrlg, sho"'e:r. LI
Call Now! 9 am 'Iii 9 pm. Requires general e.xp. in OVERSEAS bons or yoor home. S67·22ll of most mai<es. Best buys In 6'75..S9<1l 212 pilot who joined a nudist col. R .... 36211. ORANGE COAST carpentry, plumbing, elee. l\tiss Lyons. 14' boat & lrailer SISO 16' &>. Callr. at Schmidt Music ony? Now he can't TAKE -...;;:::::. ______ _
1 EMPLOYMENT tr!caJ, Ref's. w r 1 te, YOUNG v.uman wanted outboard &: trailer $350 Co., 1907 N. !itain, Santa FREE Horse Fertilizer 20311 OFF any more. (.:~~l:t.~:ke1,
AGENCY Classified ad No. 65, Daily betwn hrs 11:30 & 3:30. Ai>' Hand tooled iadd
25
le $~1_An_a_._______ = St., S.A. H~ 10' Fiberglasa over plywood
124 Broadway, C.l\.f. 645-3111 Pilot, P. 0. Box 1560, Costa Jo·as • ply Arpy's Coltee Shop, 3021 Couch & chair $ eac · liA:\fl\1"0ND organ B·3 ' boat, 3'Ai hp, J\.tontgomery '67 Jlonda 450, modilied &
Jl,fesa, Calif. 92626. 8 B Harbor, C.M. Misc. household l t ems · w/space e.'<pander &. Leslie NEED good home ro r Ward outboard molor $35 extra clean, SS50 or otter.
A RESUi\-IE puts your a~ GIRL or "A'Oman to do house-, I ~~~~~~~~~~'.1~55~-1~-~9359~-~·;:s;;;:;;-:-Tomii:ail speaker. No dealen. \Vi!l miniature dog, female, good each or both Jor $60. 962-3190.
pl ication on TOP \Ve-com· cleaning afternoons 1:30 + I 'I [§]GARAGE Sale • Admiral delivl'r local. Sl895. 646-4656 5-l~l300. 214 531-7294 . '68 TRJUMPH 500
pose & print lOO copiC'S -babysit 9 yr old girl. l\1ay Merchandise I I'\.. frost-free: relr!g, $75; Gas LOWRY Holiday :spinet MALE Basenji , good LATE '68 Searay 18' trl·hull Best otler Must Sell!
ONLY S18·50· Call 646-0854 live-in If desire. Sal.ary $135 ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~· ;V~~I stove $10: \\'asher SSO. r.l!sc organ, mahog f\nil\h, $350 \v/childron 548-6301. 2/4 160 l\terc. lnloutbrd, xln't e 54~7890 e-ve, e
f9r appointment . open. 54.8-9658 Tolal fH 1 items. Cheap. 306 E, 20th, cash. !162-4387. 1 l\!ALE & 1 female rat. -'°=""=-~1~2000c~~·~"'-ii:~5666Ci".---I LIKE To trade? Our
DABYSIT'I'ER, occassional I oH"'"'=o~u~s=E=KE=E~P~ER"'°.-0l'°i,=•-'i""o. 800 C.!\1. YA:\1A71l-A~-,p-i-,,,-,-p~I a-n-o-, 1 blk k "A.·ht. 545-5707. 2/2 WANTED I Tn.Cer'1 Paradise -•umn L~ evening~. in my home, -.. _ ..........i "th AV MORE? Antiques """"' Cd!\!. !\lust "" 6""'"' v.•i WHY P BEGtNS Wed. 9A!\1~PM maple. Xlnt cond. $400, Pvt 3 Piece sectional, ll69 Dorset 23 rr. tralltr for boat. for you! 5 Lints, 5 Dp.ys fOl' ~,·:r::J.boa Blvd, N • 8 ' children. Ne e:d ed im· OfERRYWD bullet 0 l d 18944 Santa Madrlna Circle, plY, 546-8204 or 541-7291. Lane. Costa Mesa. 2/2 • 837.0:nl • SS. cru: tod1ty .•. 642-5678.
ml'diately. $180 mo to start. UNIVERSAL European style ma st er FV, nr Garfield & !\tagnolta !i:~""':::O;;;;;::::,=:::::;::;;;;:;_::;;O::::;:;;::=:=::;:z:,::::;;:::;::;:;::.;:;;;;;:;;::::;::;:;::;;;;;::::;;:::::;.o;;;o;:::O-:::;.:'=::::;:==;::;:;:;:~= I
BARMAID-E•p'd. Apply In 67~'1"1. pl•<e, 95" long 62" hi. 962-1161. 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
,mon. 8 to. pm, 686 w.1-H::S:.KP::R=,'-,h~ild_rare_.~W~o-rlri~ng-714/956-2251 633-7151 '·s"'H""A.::KccLc.E_E~P~R~O=o~u=c=T=s'1----..---~---~---~--~~---.----r----r---
l9th, C.M. parents. 6:30 am 'ti! approx Open 7 days a "A'eek Appliances 802 Naturally Organic: for beau-2 4 7 12
BA&\1AIRDS 21-30, Exp. 3:30 pm, 5 day 'A.'k. l dlikirn ty health cleaning. S48-8·l18, TIMES TIMl!S TIMES T1MIS nbt needed. Escapade Room, 2 sllry hse. Own t:ransp, PART Time babysitting & KENMORE auto "'asher, £46.5101 i am-lO pm. 1-----1-----1-----1-----1-----1-:.::=-1-...c==--1·-='-'=-l--"""'--I
O>sla i\lesa 548-9069. re!'s req'd. 54~9390. aft 6. hsekp'g, for 2 schl chldrn, late mOOei coppertone .ST:i.1-'~=:...:..=:..::C-"..-~= I _ --_
B£ELJNE "FASHIONS oUer HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. at,;es 7 &: 9. }{rs 2-5 pm Kenmore gas d~r. wa~hl~M~is~c~e:l:l•:n:e~o~u~1 __ _:8~l;B l-----1-----1----1-----1------1-----l----l-----l·----1
xira incoml"!, xll'a clothes, George Allen Byland Agney ~i~in HB. Call aft 5:30: I ·~ 1wearnd cycle, $~. :01~ IRVINE Coast Country Club $4.50 $6.80 $10.65 $15.90
fqr family. Need a joh~ 106-B E, 16th, S.A. 547--0395. · x n. co ' guaran ee family niembershi;i !or sale l-----l-----1----1-----l·-----I----------
Work rrom home. For appt HOUSEKEEPER PART-time. :25 hours each clehv. 54&-S672· 847-8tl5. from membrr. For in-$5.1 0 $8.28 $13.10 $20.10 ~]141 830-1853 or 622-1766 Live-in. C.P..t. 5"5.7q63 "·eek. Se.les\V(lmnn for art KE~'MORE aulo v.·asher, formation call 673-9131, ?-.tr.1-----1-----1----l-----l-----I---__ _ --1-----1-----
--gallery in Ne\~:port area. I coppcrtone. Late mode l, Smith 00 $9.76 $15.55 $24.30
*BOOKKEEPER* start .$2 hr. 644-614_~·--xln't cond. $65. DeHv. & CARPET Layers hav@ i;hag
1
____ _L ____ L ___ i_ ___ _!._ ___ -'c__;$_6_· --'-----.!.-"---'-"---I
'}RE YOU TiiAT GIRL~ RECEPTIONIST guaranteed. 546-8672 or & comm'! h~:eE.'d crpts, Deal
Young, fasr gro\ving Co., de. GENERAL OFFICE 847-8ll5, direct. Exper lni;taller. Can 11h-s sharp, enthusastlc Full Charge Bkkpr. to assume re::_ To S500. Ne.,,.·port Beach Co. KENMO~E gas dryer, xln't finance . 5.l9-8327, 827-8740
kb role in Accounting Dept. ~ • -" moving to lovely new Ir· rond $50., Also, G~ elec. BUILDING Supplies, left.
Outstanding opportunity for ~ vine offices. Exceptional op. dcyer, xln t cond. S35. Dellv. overs, tools, misc. Sunday
Che right person. Send re· por. Top benefit!. Call t.l!ss A-. guaranteed. 546-8672 or on. zr.:>S BrlstOl, C ~t
liime to ODETI~ INC. 1845 • Connie, 557-6122, Abigail Ab. M7-8tt5. 557-7&86.
S! l\1anchester, Anaheim. bot Personnel Agency, 230 ,Y. e RF.PAIR man has clean l\fAC-15 chain uw with ex·
di.Ii!. 92802. IJlYlNE PERSONNEL \Varner, Suite 211, S.A. late model "'uhers & tra ne\v cl\aln and clutch.
I'* BLUE DOLPHIN * SERYICESf'AGENCY REAL ESTATE dryen, Rsnbl, gulll'. Master Used twice. cost $167, wUI
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
P11bli1h fot •••••••••• cl•v•. b•glnnin9 , •• ,, , • •• •• •• ,. •• •• ••,, •• ,, ,
TO PIGUll COST
;:l,uific1tio11 , • , •• , •• , ,, ,, ••• • •• •• •• •• ••, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• •• • • • ••
N•m• •• • • , , • '• ' ' ••• , • ••• ' ••••••••• , • •••••• • •• •. , • • • • •' •. •. • • • • •
l\VlITRESS-Experiel)Ct"d and * MANAGER * Chg OJ<. 53l-8637 sell for SlOO. 8•12-1128.
aver 25. Apply in person, Call for !ntervle\•1 !\lOVING-Must sell new PO'M'ERS wheel S 1 00 l o• 1•t•1c•
Put Oftly on• woNI lft ••t h
•p~c• 1bov•. lnclvd • you r
1dJt•1• or phon• num b•r.
Th, co1t of your 1d 1t •t th•
•nd of th• lin• on which th•
1,,1 •ord of your •d It wri t•
t•n. ll.dd $2.00 •J.tr• if VO"
de1 ir• 111• of DAILY PILOT Addr111 •••••••••••i •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·•··•••
:q55 Via Lido, N.B. . Exe<:. !e!~~~:r~ub needs 846-1690 Ken~~ gas d~ll4fi Portable G.E. TV 17" $20. Citv , , , • , •• ,, •••• , ••• , , ••• , , •• , ••• Phon • , •• , , , •••. , , ••••• , • ,, •• • • pli•1. ~::i:.N~~·b~te& ~w!: ;~.r; ~~:~ 8~~:" type Rpe~~~~I~~l:r~~~me:i JS.KELV. ~e:~. ~erf~f.l;W,iTA7\~b~i',i:'-';'::,.::•::iln"-'l~::.~··.'_;""'330"<~;;;,~,,~;:1~------------CUT Hlllt -PASTI ON YOUR INYILOPI -------------·I
In Leisure World. A&e SO hosp, N.B. 833--0361 betwn. Ex<'. c:ond. Cos~ · U opefl('d :'le) 'yr guarlLllttt.
cl' under (Feb. l~lh) Ca.II NCR 395 Opr 9:3(}.noon only. S200. Eves 642--8 ?-.lust sCu $45. 54&-4;JJ2
~767 aftr 6 PJ\t. Min. 1 yr exper. 395 pref'd, RESUMES !hat wurk by REffiIGERA'l'QR.C: ~/LG CONN orgnn, artist model; c r;SULTANT. Gen 'I foods Will consider 3100 or 3300. fonner personnel director. F'R~Z.~.; :;;~5;.S5S. P.B. console TV; stenocype
• _, Vivi Sensible prices. Eves & ,, mach. 557-7641. n ICGS 7 wom'"n for ane
v oodard Co1metic1. We General Offica wknds, too. 557-i625. Auction 804 * GIRLS Schwinn S11ngray
!fPtn. Exec pos'1 avail, sm Hand Pa.yron + gen'I ofc ROUTE Sales-Sl30 wk to ii. -'-"---'-------1 130.
tnv. 544-1464 du ties. Rapidly gTO\\i ng Jo-Take ov cit.ab Fuller BNsh PUBLIC AUCMON Call 548-2381
NOW'S THE ·
, · ME FOR
" Cj)'ICK CASH
.:T~ROUGH A
"DllL Y PILOT
'WANT AD
642-5678
cal firm. rte in Laguna, Xlnt pt time
wk also &\'all 542-7573.
Medlc1I At1istant
~fedlcal usfstant schooling
req'd, \VW tr&tn.
488 E. 17th (at lrv1nt) C.M.
642-1470
Sales * PROFESSlONAL * · * SALES CAREER * Starting sa1&1')' plus comm.
Flrzt year ieamln;1 nt
$12,000 • plus possible 2 yr
training program. by century
Ll\iMEOtATE opcnirws at old natlon11l co. Buslnes1 or
Carpeterll for exp'd carpet u.lt.s background helpful.
ta.legmen. Apply in pcniorr No travtl/Mi;mt, opportun-
only. Ste Ed Lukstfln, 1n4 !ties.
Ne\\:port Bh;i~ C.,'1". RONALD A. S~tmt
'''VHITE ELEPHANTS'' Su1!e-815
ovt'rrunnlng your hou3C ? !00 Newport Cenler Dr.
February 11, 8: 30 Ar.f WE l.oan-Buy..Se:U anything
NOVELTY \VATCHES Coast Pawn &: Auction. 2426
16l5 t.1onrovia, Costa Mesa. Newport Blvd. &tz.8.400.
06 AIR conditionlna unit. Fedeo,
Building Materials 8 lits any car. $50 FIR~f
~i84
PA.NELING NE\\'PORT Beach Tennis
C\ostout Sheets v.croove Club ramily memben;hip.
Sl.99 Up, ht Cradt, IC::962-<:...::992:;::. _____ _
11).S delly, ll-4 Sun, New shnll" rug~. blue green
MILLER-DRAKE 9• x 12· Sacrifice. S65
2406 So. ~lain SL, S.A. 33.1·2'119
(~ext to Standard Brandt) l='"'-===~---o-;;:c ro RESULTS YoU can De-S46-lOl2 pend on, call tht Super.
Postage
Will ee· Paid
by
Addressee
BUSINESS REPLY MAIL
Orange Coos! DAILY PIL{»
P. O. Box 1 SEO
Cl111ified Dtpt.
• •
•• Plllta(t SlamJ
"'''""' lt Mailed. Ill tbt
Unllcd Slate•
LS .. I
1 "Ca.sh" .. sell them lhN Newport Bch. 6-14-2190
' Dally PUot Claulfled Equal Oppty Employer -~~~~~.:::::c.:..:;::.=-----·-
Sa J f!I man . .D&lly Pilot
Daily Pilot Want Ad• have C\ustfied 64.:l-5678 ~ place
barplna galore. I )Wt 1d Ii cll&J'l'll II! 1--------------------------------------t .::::!e:::::..!::::c::_~--'-'--'-'--'-~~-
• • (
I
I
Z'<I DAILY PILOT Tutt<UJ, Ftbnlary 2, 1971
T""''''""'" l[iJ I _,_ lliJ I Aui .. ~u. 1§1 I Autoo~.-. 1§1 [ •ui.."'u::=J§J : I ._.... I§] I ._,.,.. I§] I --... l§J I .. ,,.,., ..
'
970 Autos, UNd 990 Autos, UMCI Cycles, Blke1, Mobile Hornes 935 Autos W•nt.d 961 Auto.1, Imported
_Sc_oo_,,_,_, ___ m_:·-T-r1-p1'-,-W1-IM-C-orn-,1-1-i--w-E--P,...AY_T_o_p _ KARMANN GHIA TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN CORVETTE
970 Autoa, lmpon.cl 970 Auta1, Imported 990 Autos, Uaed
BUICK MERCURY :=n~ ~~ CASH . '60 Ghia, '62 eng, bii hore, '69 CORONA '68 YW e ·66 RIVlERA. Full pwt, 1967 Corvttte 427 fast-1969 MARQUIS
&rrtngtoo • BroadmOOl' 5troker crank, new clutch, H rd! VlnyJ 1 4 • ~dio, rte. Xlnt cond., $1950. back. Xlnt cond. S ilver Brougham 4 Or. H. T~
Continental " Star $550. 540-3118. a op. too· 1~· ---=*"""8'"1"-,,.536'1~,.*=--I w /blk Interior 4-spd I EXCELLENCE Geoeral e Hillcnost lot uted can .l trocks just I ,,6;,9C.C,KAc'=R0-MC,AN"""N~G~ru-·,-. -.-1,-. I lmmaculale, Sky Blue. Sac. $ 1299 . ' ' PERSONirIED 4
CHAPMAN call 1.11 for tree estimate, low mileage. rilice. Will take trade (!!' CHIC CADILLAC AM/FM radio •. n • w This beautiful top Cit th
MOBILE HOMES GROTH CHEVROLET $18.\Q/oftu 644-1641 ~""'"' •"· pl>, C.U Sid. K IVERSON '67 El Oo"d<>-AMl•'M tl•es, elec wtndow•, "'""" ,;,,. hu ihe pop•t· •
n.n.n.IV1
llllNI
HONDA ...
"FRIEDLANDER" 12331 Beach Blvd., G.G. '64 Gold Ghie-$875 ~~r~.:~ri ~3~9'1-7506 aft. VW are~n radio, Every COi\-factory magt, Call aft Jar dnrk l\'y lfttn metallic • 1"• IUCM (MW'I'. •l • 71-&'530-2930 * Ask for Sales Ma.na1er 5'19-3031 Ext. (,jj or 67 ceivable extra. Black v.•/blk 5, 646-llll. rlnl~h "'·iih ma1chl 1g lnier 5.'7-682-I e 893-1'"..i66 ALWAYS ll UNITED 18211 Beaeh Blvd ~>19-IS57 * * C.l\f. '6S CORONA, vinyl top, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. vin"I lop. Xlnt cond, 3.'i,000 '67 VEnE il'lr and black land11u roof, P'
NEW USED SERV I ca · MERCEDES BENZ buck. seats, 4 on Or, lo co ' ' • • • be-fore you buy, sell, List or lfWltington Beacb . STA MESA mi. $2900, Call Mr. \\/ebb "'a•t•·ok ,.4~.. .."""""" Equipped w!1h all the lux - - - - -••1•-Kt••••t 1ni'1.$llOllC1r$lOO&T.O.P.I -----,~=~---c "" "' "I"'-"""' A • • -....... I tradf'. factC1ry Direct. ''ln O'I """'°' ~ '66 VW !>44-7564 Cir 675-2658. AM/!'?..1' ~dio. New poly: ury features. uto trans .. "' i.
Park" se1 ups. TOP DOLLAR ---~~'~~~~--The Little Love Bug 1970 Cadillac Brougham glass tire1 .• Excellent con· ~lo, hea1c.or, power sleer1ng, I
U'ni ted Mobil• Homes TRIUMPH 4 Speed. radio, heater. REF-Fleetv.iood v.• /Mic h·e 11 n dition Driven eaiY power brakes, power win
6'5-3140 63.1-7961 for 994. S690. tires, less than 14,000 mi. ' $2850 ' do"'&, flO.wer sd~~t ~ v.·~. :
COSTA MESA CLEAN USE D CARS '71 SPITFIRES Harbor American Purchased tron1 & serviced Ask for Mr. Grannl9 546-8640 factory air <.'Cln i1.on1ng, R Ill 1969 HARBOR 646-0261 by McLean Cadillac ol S.A. , of excl'llent premium Vogu Casual Mobile Estate Llv'g See Andy Brown NOW ON DISPLAY Call aft 4:30 pm. 532-2000. SE~ Cir trac!e 69 Corvette tires. Ask !or demonatratiort •
Ne 12, 20 .& 24 \Vide Models THEODORE Come in for a test drive! WANTED =~~~~~~~. ~~1 Stingray, Will take $1100. in this outstanding car. Lie f
Now on display in 5 Star ROBINS fORD FRITZ WARREN'S 1968 Sedan de V1lle-All or gd transp car as trade Y\\'¥1&3. John.'IOn & So:i.: ~
GREENLEAF PARK . SPORT CAR CENTER I'll pay top dollar tor ~ur deluxe extna incl crul5! In&, take ove r pymts. $221Xl 2626 J-ta bo c M 540-56.1'.I • f,
1750 \I/hillier Avenue 642-1350 20f(I Harbor Blvd. MG 710 E. 1st St., S.A. 547-0764 VOLKSWAGEN today. Cati control Ir. elec eye, $3595. oy,·ed. ~5 r r, . • r
10:<55 DETROITER, rum. 2 Costa Meaa 1----------Open daily 9-9: closed Sunday =~9•303.11sk .... ~or Ron Pinchot, &12-..'i5.21. 1970 CORVETI'E Conv, 454 MUSTANG ~
BR, 1 ba. Has ocean v1ew.1 _~~~64~'~·00_1..c'==--'" -1 ""'t. 66"67· 6n-0900. '66 El Dorado Convt., W':' cu in, 390 HP. l ---------~'I f
S58 space rent incl, utililll.'s. WE PAY CASH ............... '64 TR-4. Good running, VW camper, 1969, Custom helow wholeu.le at $1350. * 645-4638 eves * VS AV. lill
C.M. Park. (GB 64121 . & THINK clean, blue "'/black top. Venture inll'ri<>r, raised Good 1hl\Pll! In & out. DODGE ·~ 1rus~~P~nd~~ ~::t I
Amrrican )lobilr Homes ''~G'' Wire wheels, tonneau ~vt'r, fibergla~'I roof. Best C1fter ·Pvt party 645-2317 u Y ~-. .,..-.... -"'~ • * 5-1~41 * fQR YOUR CAR rad io, rrbuilt clutch. Good 2611 Del ComerciCI, San *'&3 CADilJ..AC info call 49;,...sg'l9. ft
huy al $800. Finn. 546-2050. Clemente, 49'1-M32. Beautiful CClndition MUST sell! Urgent! Best of-'65 l\1ustang CCIOVI, Aulo., Va., Ii '70 Budd,Y. 20 x-M, awnings, f r tak 1 '69 D rt S t Good cond. Movln<. $700 nr • skirting, landscaped. Adult CONNELL \ LATE '69 GT 6 Plus, New 1965 VW Orig. Cl~·ner. Xlnl $795 ** + 546-9983 e es. a por ~ 'FRIEDLANDER" p · 11· nl · nd N I b k . · . Special. Slick, 6 cyl, '7l Clffer. 642-4993. ' Pk. Pf'!s OK. 1750 \\'hittier, ire I!! ove rive, extra co . ew I res, ra es, 1964 C~1llae, new tireg, l lie. Body &. me<:hanics xlnt.
Sp 17. Ct\1 54S--0768. CHEVROLET 111M IEACN INWY, 110 cleiin, $2195. 644-5.)52. ere_ 54.000 miles. '71 Lie. 0.,~ .. ner, $995 cash. call Aft 5 pm S4T--Olll! '67 Mustang fas! hack V •
e '66 MOBILE Home 10X50, 2828 Harbor Blvd. 893.7566 e 537~ '57 nt.3; Red, gd cond. New Pd. Must Jell! ss;,o. 54.1--29~ • auto. Run!! good. $1125. Pvt ..
Good ,._ta Me,. "'0 '~ NEW USEftSERV h k h 1315 ,..._,, 962-9921. '63 c ,·C· n.v·11 lull 067 DODGE CHARGER: For pty 962-5988. • I~=~~~~~-~-I a· e.xpando, rond, .......,. on<>-uuu -..,... • ra es, as top. • ......,; =~~~~-~~~·I ~ p. '-"" I e, 1 pwr Sale Cir Trade; for gd van. • '61 MUSfANG. STICK, -HONDA 1968-305 Scrambler $4500. 646-5410 --:IM=PO=R°"TS=-:W::AN=TE=o""°-1 -------------=. 64&-5M7 or 64&-1367 '69 VW. Xlnt rond. New & air, good cond. S 50 or Good cond, v.•/ne\v tires. ~
for sale or trade. We want -'M""o"t"o-,~H~o-m-1'-0---9,,-40~ Orange Countiei ~ ---------tires, brakes, tune-up. '71 bs! ofr. 557-9'123 an 6. S200 Body damage. Best of-SS95 PVT PTY. n41645--0190 *
h\'O }fonda CL IOO's or .,,·Ill VOLKSWAGEN lie. R/H. T/W. $1595 or 1,,., <"'Jtll'Vl . AFTER 6 PM. '-TOP S BUYER 1951 ~1GTO-New IClp. brakes, hes ... 5<1" 7281 .FOR Sale: '6.~ White Cad '1't-"J<J ,. lake hf>st nffer over $300. 'iOUR "second home'' Cln BILL MAXEY TOYOTA v-con\',, full pw•. gd cond.1---~~=---* * '67 MUSTANG-Runs 50
x. corK . u n<:1:1.1s cu c "'he e Is. Com PI et e J Y 18881 Beach Blvd. 642-9TI3 Large Selection ,~-. . mi, ............. $595. 646-4214 alt 4 pm. good. Call Don, 642-9770 ;, E I b I -·-• t t h I etc .• Xlnt C'Clnd. e '66 VI" 'I 000 . "--• FORD
and shiltin11; adj. 962-7689. 5 e Jf-eonta lncd beautifully H Beach Ph 847_855.'> cond. Best Clffer, Must setJ.1---..,"'"'"""'""'"="=---I·---------days bet~·een 9AM &: SPM. \,
DAWES IO-•J>d '°"""' "'"· "'"' '"' ·10 Laixl•u Moto• · · · · MGB Of VW Campen, ,_6.,7_J..,trnw-. o:---;::===-l---C.::.:A,;.M:.:.;;A,;.R:.:..:0:.___1 1969 L TO 2 D• HT OLDSMOBILE • .• ~Jondia 10-spd tourlng bikes, II om e. Do d ge-poWt>red Autot, Imported 970 1----------Vans, Kombi's, 1 '66 V\V Sq. back-Sunroof, DRIVEN ONLY 21,000 Ml.
extrernC"ly li!e "''eiihl. 420 11utomallc 23-footer, sll'"eps '69 MGB new tires &: exhaust. Pvt '69 CAM~RO Z-28 4 speed, Exceptionally clean through----------<I
E. 17th St. &l~i706 6. /Rf'lrig. runs on gas or ,DATSUN Buses, New & Us-...a party, 642-1020. 23,000 m1, IOllded w/extraa. C1Ut beautiful medium blue '64 F85 Stn wagon, powr
t · Rdsrr. BeaulifuJ canary yel-SU Sacrifice $187" 494-3034 ' b k " & · \\'A.i\ITF.:D t>lec., range &: au omatic1----------I d' I D II .69 V\V BUG-XIOI -IXI. '!u•< ;i metallic exterior. Dark blue stP.f'r., ra es, sea w1n-f reed . f '67 DATSUN Io"· v.•ith rich. contrasting mme la • • very '"" " CAMARO '70 Rall Spa dows, a ne1v tires k shocks. 305 Cir 2;,()cc Honda Scram. I ol \·rn, hoo Id' air, ku"",C:· black interior. Chrome wire CHICK IVERSON ,;ell. $1499. ·c . Y. rL landau roof, 5atin black in-Xl•J ,--•. ~1 !-···-A"•··
bl · -arge ing an . ig . C 11 .,.7161 A/ , mis!. grn. v1n, top. teriClr_ Au to trans, radio, " .vrlU £.,.. • ~ .... ~ f'r. Running or not. 549-lv"" ... ,1,. la-k, 0 .. ,,, ,. , , Rd. str. Red with black lnte.r. "'heels ~·ith radial tires, a ......-c ,1 .. • " ~ VW 7,600 mi. 644-5286. healer, pov.·er lilttring, pow-_._. ~· --~-~-~ '66 lionda 90. $150. 415 gasoline tank. Ready tC1 roll. 1or, run!'> like new. Needs A~f/f!'.f radio, immaculare V\V Bus '66. New radial -;-:64 OLDS. 8 ,,1 olfo•. All
d U ZKll"'" K u bl "'"30JI Ex -CHEVROLET er brake5, factory air. See , :-.;f'"·pnrt Rl\'d., Apt 23.1 Extras include racb and eta . """'· e .Y ue condition. ZQF380. Kelly .,,._,,.. t. uu or fi1 tires, radio. $1200. , ----------I anG: ask to drive this at-P"·r. llir.cnnd, R&:H, Jlvi Ne"'port Beach. I ramp !or hauling two Hon-book 1ay11 this car ahould Bl~ Book rerail $2310. Our 1970 ltARBOR BLVD. Pvt ply. 54-0--0254 1 • ply 962 •=,,· ~7.0~.,C,.-,.-c-,-,-.,-·I ,70 NOYA rractive car today. ZNV540. -,,,,.~ YA:'llAHA · 250 Enduro. Ex-da.!5 on ttar. See the 5ell 11 for. Sl38S.f Chick says price -~~C~O_ST=A~•~!ES~A=~-1 ·65 VW S tr al g hf back. Johnson & Son, 2626 Harbor, '64 "88." Xlnt cond, factory
tras. $495. b~~kagde ~o apprf'Cia~I it. "se thl.S s""'99'9r s 1799 '61 vw BUS sunroof, low mileage. $&Xl C.!'.1. 540-5630. air, New tirl's & paint, trans * 546-9453• tre Y owner ow CHICK IYERSON firm. Call 644-1370 2 Door Coupe. VS, automatic, I--~=~~-~-overhauled. $695. 54&--0800.
'6S !IC1nda lfiO Scrambler, retail. $10,500: 19TI lie. fee CHICK IYERSON J$A5C919R.l • 196.3 VW PICKUP • po\\'rr stfi'!ring. dlr. Must 1959 Ford '"'" OLDS Real clean, runs Just tunt>rl & carbs rehlt, already paid. PhClne VW Rll, "'iii take trade. {ZVE-Galaxi~. 4 door. V8,,P/S, .........
$250. 4.19-26.U 968-lS9l nr S4l-9251l. \flN 1970 HARBOR BLVD. CHICK IVERSON 61:~i7~~·4:.~;,i~ent condi-366) Call 494-774". P/B, Air cond, Radia, 11,eat-good, good ~~ii S525.
e KAWASAKI 500 .-Trailers, Trav•I 945 54!}-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 C051A l\fESA '"u t·,-.,-V\V--8 ,-,-.-N-,-w-,,-.,-1-,-,,-. '63 NOVA II pr. Excelleru traMportation =~~~~---~·I
$R50 B~t Ofr: 573.5747 1970 HARBOR BLVD. w n A I ti d' h t car. S300 or make otfer. '70 Olds 98 Convt., lo mi's, COSTA MESA OPEL Trans need.~ WClrk. $750 Cir u orna c, ra io, ea er. 549-0214 Sharp. Must ie!! 1o ap-
'70 Jlonda SL 100 '69 KAWA. 21'.l' Self contained, neverl--====-=-===-;---549-3031 Ext. 66 Cir 67 be!!l oUer. 673-4945 (Fnt 4901 $390. I===·,-,~=~~~ preciah·. All xtras, 846-0903
250CC. bol.h-rlect.Jowmi., used. Sacrili~ by C1wner DOT DATSUN 1---------1!170 HARBOR BLVD, HARBOR' AMERICAN SHELBY '69 GT 350, 351 ,-Ph: 714-531-7800. 1969 OPEL GT COSfA MESA '68 VW trans: 11hortcned floor 1~ H•~-, 646.~l Hp, Hpd, CIGSe ratio, A.C., make otter. 492-i014. OPEN DAILY $2600 XI 1 ·• h tro' •-""" ,-uu "'" . n conu. pan, l' rome as s "" , . AM/F?..1 slerM, c Jean, PLYMOUTH
• * ·-;o BULTACO ~tatador. Trailers, Utility 947 AND Call Judy, &12-5771 Looking for a co1r? parts. Call 673-9352 fill Mahbu 2 dr Hdtp V8. ?..fechanic's l": u 11 ran 1 e e
2j() rr . XlnL rond. Bst Ofr. •----------1 SUNDAYS EASY VOLu.-... Tapr. vibrasonic, tach l.t $3000. £73-22~19 or 497-1906. ' 1969 PLYMOUTI{ Fury 3• -'H)~ I " PORSCHE Call Au!o Referral tree of V t-'" . h k N r 2 dr HT, PS/PB, air, 1ilver fi( 139. 14' Tandem Trailer 18835 Bea(;h Blvd. i--------------------! gaugl's, iur 5 oc .~. u n'f!s. '70 COUNTRY Sedan; air. "'/b!k int. Pvt pty, ln 4i
• '68 YA-i\1_A_H_A_E_o_d_'_"_o_, \\'ilh 4 wheels. AU sleel weld. Hunti~on Brach chargf". \Ve have sellers • VOLVO Mus! Sell. !'.111k~ G f fer r d' I 1· I b Xl I
Very izood rond, must sell, ttt comlrUction 14.·· Steel, __ ..,_'_-m-=l"o"''"'"'=-·~---'65 !orsche ~::i1'1!!ng._~11 rypel .!I~ prices. 645-3296. --~~~ 6 u:;s, P~;39~. ·~t ~6~75-4=;~'"'_,'o--c--""'"--,,"
$.li:,, &14--W77. deck plating. '54;).4361 Clr1-FIAT 356 s~ Sunroof =era iu.SO V.'E'('()me. All 71 '• Ar• Het"e '64 NOYA l op~"'~· '~'"'"-c-'"'=~-~-64 PLY. Sports Fury, like
e 2::(1 YA~1AHA Big bear, :2-~\Vill sell. Or trade1---------British racing green, Aulo R~:~~IServiCf' 142 .144. 145 -164 • 2 Door Hardtop. Automaric, MUSf liE'll '68 Ford, Custom ~~~fiit-~r{ot.383~~ &$~'.
comple rbH. S250 ~·~·~~·~· ~~~~~~1 -- - - -Lie YCC 525 ,70 YW CAMPER 1800 E 6 cylinder. dlr. (OSE 573) ~ 2 dr, V8, std rrans, 633-5576 * 54&-3120 * ; -=----------__ I $2899 4 Speed& & Automatics Must sell! Will finance. CaJI S850 (!!'best olr. 968-8146. ---------1~M7o~b~;l-e ~Hc-om-.,--~9"°'35 1~ . "THINK" -CHICK IVERSON ~:':. ~~.~:·~.i:.:tic 4941144. JEEP PONTIAC Autol~W. l!!J VW Fully equipped, pop-top. load-$309.C '66 CHEV, Jmpa.la 2 dr ,;ed,
:11:l?111[:1f:l•J1}fl;j '-;-----~~~I IBJll[A IJ ed. dlr. f062BSWl Only 9,000 Overseas Del. Sptt. auto ITana, air, fl pwr. 377 TOYOTA Land Cruiser. pert. 1961 Pontiac LeMan1 !· ----------- - -_ • 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 miles. Mu11t sen. Will fin-V-3, lo ml'a, 1 ownr. St550. rond. USt"d on city streets. dr. HT. Dark gr .. n w/
Surrounded by _G_•_n_•_,._, ______ 950_ s.. 1970 c6~~~~;_-vo. iince. Call 494-7744. "'ellJt [ewtA• 536-6325. 4L~~'-.917••0•,"'!,. ".'21w0 .. $1695. matching interior. :350
I · ,.._ , e \VANTED, pvt party. VV/ '7'I"'"<> .,......., ' 250 hp Con•ole rvme v111.nges. • '63 GRAND PRIX e '68 ''fRIClll 'HOER" '70 PORSCHE 91 1T '65 Chevelle Malibu Su~r ·-cu tn, ' Real rural living yet close: KA\VASAKJ. MAKE OFTER. urLR bug, '£7 Cir later, Clean & Sprt hrdtp. .'.!l!,700 mi'i. 56 Jeep 1ta wag 4 whl dr. automatic w / bucket
to ocean, shopping M 13750 llACH ILYD. Low milea.ee, execul1\'e car! reasonable. 548-42Z2. VOLVO llUfo R/H w/s/w 675-4819 V-11 283 Chev. Cleu. $825. seats. Air cond. Call
recreation .157-4552• IHwy. ltl r..tany ex!ras. 1969 V\V BUG-Auto, super ,j;g Ch~vy Bisc~yne 968-3474. aft S, 646-8318.
ALL ELECTRIC
Choose from
105 floor plans,
you name It!
Adults-Pets O.K.
Antique1/Clas1ics 953 893-7566 • 5.17~4 clean. Pvt ply. Ca!! Nick 1966 Harbor, c.~1. 646·9303 2 d 6 I 3 I'd LINCOlN NEW·USED-SERV. days 646--0261/eve ~7-393.'i 1----------r cy .!lpt' · '68 Pontiac Execulive wgn . 1!129 Model A
Reslore(j -Orig eni.
RUNS!
545-2416
\.1"1.1'1.1"1 $895 Cir offer. 675-1045 Air, all power, adjustable ~ '59 VW Van, '64 eng, recent "·m""'E°"l-,.C'"•m.._;,.,-3=oo"°,-o4-,-pd"'",I 1969 4 dr .Continental Gr!!en, \Vheel, FM radio, rack. Like
18711 BEACH BL. &42_4435 wnrk done on trans. New ~ THINI 13000 mile!!. $2700. w/wht vinyl top. All Xtras ne\\'. Blue Book. Pvt pty,.
'68 FIAT 850 1.J:UNTTNGTON BEACH brake system, camper unit 'VOLVO' * * 494-71S5 Xlnt Conri~ $3.800. Dys 644-4648 or 673-7830. I ~---~-----1 Inside. New clutch, GOOD -· 833-l640: Eve! 67f>-7979 I ~~~~~--~-~!
STOCK '46 Ford BU.!I~!.~ SPYDER CLASSIC '57 speedster new COND. Best nffer. 540-31111. '68 Chevy Biscayne 2 dr 6 '55 Pont iac 4-spd
coupe, Ne.w chrome. ......, black lacquer. concoUTM" cyl, 3 speed $895 675.1045. MA YERICK hydra-maHc. Needs mil"IGr'
Bill Georgt, 6/>-421S RDSTR. Red with black in. mndition. ~tust &ee to '66 VW, Ne~'ly rebl! engine, ''FRIEDLANDER" =-;o=,.-;;;-=-=-=·1----------1 repair. All or parts. ~faklt
96
., teriC1r. Like new. YQY834 he:lie.,·e 673-4078. Xlnt cone!, $750. &12-1573 '69 Olt"vy Il 350, _3-speed, '70 ~tAVERlCK. Must sell! ofr, 546-0580.
Private Club-$300,000
Recreation Canter
Trucks .. $89' I-'-="-'--"''-"=----I any time btwn 12 pm k 1J7M IE.t.Ctt fHWY. WJ Cragar mqs. $1950. 17381 Radio & Healer l -~,6~2~p=o=N"T"l°'A°'C'"-S~l"7~5-1
l--.-65-C_H_EV'<_'_V_AJ_N __ I CHICK IVERSON TOYOTA ~lO-'-pm_·~~=~-= I N:~~:e-'r~. Qu.,ru;, Apl. J, !Hg Sch *Coll 64'>-0Jl7 * CATALINA 2 "· Hd loOJ
\\'inflow Van . 230 enfil'.., auto.. VW ~·lu~1 sell '68 VW Bu1t. Gd . ·~ Ch~~-e:: ~~~~~-MERCURY Clean! 5'16-414:> Cir 838-1157
14 BEAUTIFULLY
FURNI SHED
MODELS
~&Hr.tr~s~ ~~! w!~:~s. :;~ 549-30.'n Ext. li6 or 67 1971 TOYOTAS ~~~!. $99.'i. 61
;i.68<M
1111 ~ ~:~J 64~~2. . n )I .
197
E CURY
1
'6.'l PONT Lr~1ans 2-dr hd~.
1970 HARBOR BLVD, ARE HERE! I '68 VOLVO '65 El CamMx> Xlnt corxl O M R ~ arquis 4-spd, Al\l/F'~I. Orig owne.-, sharp, $1245. 830-3618 '6:i V\V bus, Of'IV tire~. • ' Bro .. ~•m 2 D• H•dtp ,,., s= o• •·•I offo• 96" -OOsrA •MESA Th A N 1600 CC 4-<pd, mag•. tonneau cover. "6" ' . """ ...... · ~~'"' e II e~· shocks ,'<: Iran~. ~lust sell Local C1wner, Jow mileage, $l2.JO 5o1-7098 wht landau top. Auto win.
(Dir. TR193)
14851 Jeffrey Rd.
In Irvine
./ '6.i El Camino $850.
./ '69 fuinchero S185o.
Both w/au1om, radio, htr.
0'°'71er 494-72fi2, 494·2126,
'6:1 FIAT, 12-1 Sport Coupe.
19.000 mile~. 26 MPG, 96
HP. 5 spd. A~1-F~1. SID-0024
65 Fon! " too "'"' bod . JAGUAR V-8, auto, radio & keater.1---------
New ~int k rubher $89~. JAGUAR 54;...11a.i.
S mL South of T"'""· •IXI
1
• l9"8 INTERNATIONAL % HEAD9UARTERS
1i' m~. S; ol Santa .Ana F'rwy. ton stiike truck. r.tust sell. The Clnly authorized JAGUAR
(2 ml. N. of San Diego Fr1o1"Y) 842-3183 dealer in the entire Harbor
832-8585
THE BEST OF
BOTH WORLDS
For a beautiful home, k>w
fHEV P.U. v.'ith camper AreL
shell. L:its ol xtras. Must
Sell, make offer 54;MJ172
1958 Chev. P.U. % ton. 8
ft bed, g<pd rondition $450
FIR.\i 54~5784
Comp let...
SALES
SERVICE
PARTS
BAUER
BUICK
Coro as, now. $950. 642-.'J.59.1. automatic transmisaicin, ra. · .>-· do"·s & elec st'al adjmnt
4 SpeC'ds & AutClmatics -VW-SQUAREBACK LT. dio, hea!er. white gjde wall '63 CHEVY IMPALA Very IC1w mileage. 642-6959
The All New Corona HT Cpe BLUE '68. '71 TAGS. tires, etc, Chick's ~peciaJ at S350. 548-8809 alter 6 LEAVING for active duty.
• s""s 'A' V&EAuotomNatics XLNT COND. 642--0:i:JG 110NTIO CHRYSLER Must Sacrifice '62 Mercury ~.66~5"'-.o-.~,~,.-,-,~,,-. -,7hro_m_e I $ 1999 Best C1ffer 546-4232.
1970 DEMOS Porsche rims, Xln! cond, CHICK IVERSON 1966 CHRYSLER 9 -pa1s '69 9-pass Jl..farquis. station
'61 LARK-VS, , nt cond .
Goon w/w lirl's, r&h, air.
Ong nwnrr. $325. 673-B73l
T·BIRD l Orii:: ownC"r, $1025. 830--0676 Town &: Country 11:!11. ""'J{n. v.·gn, 11.500 mi 's, $3400. Pvt
"'
n1111l e.wi4 '69 V\V Bui; v.•/rad io, l YW lmmft<'. New radial Ure~. pty, 67H756. WI 11660 "'9 ••lt E 66 67 644-2104 1~~-------'64 T-Bird, Good conct, TOYOTA O\\'Ol!r. ca11 '830--4113 i910..xJHA~6R ervo. CONTINENTAL Daily Pilot \Vant Ada have Take over paymenta
196(; Harhor, C.i\T , fi46-9.l()3
BILL MAXEY
!T@YIQIT!Al
COSTA MESA bargaina galore. After 3:30, 547-3716 e '69 V\V BUG e ---c= 1 -o--~-.
CLEAN * $1500 '61 VOLVO '63. ENGINE .\ lnteriorljAjiiiutiioii•~· iiUii&ediiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii990iiiiiiAiiiiutiioiis~, iiUiisiieiidiiiiiiiiiiiiii990iiii • 613-8101• 2 Dr. Sedan. Good economl-good . Body rear ended. $200 . ., V\V 8"• po•ol••• •lh or hc'~t offer. Call 675-277S •N u. • " " • • cl'll transportation. Special
nrw molnr. Gd condition. this "''eek only. Lie. KJB226, '69 Continental Mark 111.
Call 646-47!'i0. WILL FINANCE Full pwer/air. O r iginal main!enance <md architecur.1 ·A-ut~o--L-.. -,~;-n_g ___ 9~64-1
all,Y lmpressive design, See 1 -----~----
the e:.:citing new "Villa,i;:e LEASE
·10 V\V Squareback-taKe over $299 owner. Call G-W-21CM.
IN 18181 BEACH BLVD. !st>. Lge eqty. Au10. air,
COSTA MESA Hunt. Btach 147-1555 AM/FM. lo mn" 646-3103. CHICK IVERSON
"TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS"
S SAVE S
lfoo.se" by LPvitt MobL!e A NEW 1971
Sy.11ems on display now at ' PINTO
BAY HARBOR $50 00 MOBILE HOMES • mo.
1425 Baker St.. Co5ta lo1esa 1 Just S, of S.D. Fwy at HarbClr
714 /540-!M70
NOW OPEN
CONTEMPO.
LAGUNA HILLS
23.101 RIDGE ROUTE DR,
(Corner of l\loulton Pkv.')'l
LAGUNA llJU.S
Prestli::e artul! community ad·
jacent to Lrlaure \\'orlrl.
Beautiful surroundini;s, all
luX\lt')' llflJ>Qln1ml'nfs, puf·
tlng grttn. hobby sho p,
much.· more.
CALI. AJ0-3900
1 ~~~,...,, Tripi• Wide Cornell
ContlnentaJ • Parnmount
&rrinl[fon • Unk~rsal
Fiamlngo e General
broadmoor • Star
HillCft'sl • Cambrfd1e
CHAPMAN
MOBILE HOMES
lal6 N. HetbOr. S.A.
• 7141531-8105 *
(36 mo.l
C1pen end
RENT
A NE\V 1971
PINTO
$4 DAY
ANO
4¢ MILE
PUT A urn.e:
KICK IN YOUR
LfFE!
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
Z060 HARBOR BLVD.,
COSTA ~1ESA
642-0010
Auto Service, Parts 966
CORVETTE Avante & Dune
huggy auto body repair,
Rca10nable, Alt S: 646-9146
2 F70 \\o' /1. UniroyaJ tin-•.
2 t00-1 5 W/L UrliroyaJ 1ire1
"1 n1ags w / !up, $150.
642-0918.
Autas Wanted
~Mobile Homt>-CArport. I \\"F.: PAY TOP DOLLAR
•1\'nlngs A sklrtlnit ll'l('hxlt•l'i. FOR TOP USED CARS
NCIW p.rlef'd at $12.750. lncJ Jf )"'OUr ca.r ts otra dtan,
Ml!lfll't Av11, CM 642-1350. se. 115 ftnl.
The lut,.~r dr~w In lht We.st BAUER J3tnCK
, • a Dally Pilot Clu11Ullf'd 1.W E. 17th St.
Ad. 642--6673 CbslA Me-u 548-7765
CORVAIR
234 E. 17th Street I ml N. ttf O'ls.st Hwy. en Bdi 1965 VW Camper, Sundial. VW 1----------'
548-7765 DO'"T JUST WISH for 4!i.'.Wl ml Vf't')' J:1"IOCi cond. '60 CORVAIR, red. Good l--~.~.G<~X~K=F.~.---1 lumishings for your home, I Bt"ii;:e $1400. !'J44-49!i~. 549-3031 E-'Ct. 66 or 67 robber_ Good 2rxl car $275. 1970 11ARBOR BLVD. ~7817 a!ter 6 pm. Xlnt cond, $1500. find gre11t buya in !May's I Daily Pilol \V11n; Ads have OOSTA \IESA
546-9j!)l John Chu Cla.s.sified Ads. bargains galore . --~==·==----·1 1961 CORVAIR ?..1onza. auto. 1-.....::::::::::::.~::::::~:_-=======~======= VOLVO '°"" '"""· •i.ooo m;, sm
----
GIMIMI
C7.?. M_.,l' 21 f'~(JUliflO
.s.11.2,S.32 ,_....,
AtrntORJZED or bf'11t nller. 540--0709
SALES e SERVTCE
FRITZ WARREN'S CORVETIE
SPORT CAR CENTER !--------~
710 E. Ist St., S.A. 547-0764 '66 CorvPtte Conv., 325 eng.
Open daily 9-S: closed Sunday Rral clean. Air, nl'w r,.int,
Jnw mil. 4!M-6600 days,
Auto1, Usad 990 i ,.;';:"-'::;;';:7:i;;';;'::";:·~----=dl
'57 VETTE, Good corxl. $450
or bl'st offer. USED CARS
Afl 6: 546-2531
ALL ,... 1966 FASTBACK-Orig * Dependable* 1 O\\'f1'r, 34 .000 ml, 11lr, aulo.
Mechanically OK * Priced Right *
Financing Available
ONE or r.tA.N\'
'65 OLDS 4 DOOR
full po1\·er. Air cond.
lPCS !H9)
$495
Marcus Motors
Sl~~. 642-7622.
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
I DAIL y PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
2100 HARBOR I
:~ \lf'm1 ':,~A ~If.SA I
caJI 642-56711 Now: --------
NO DOWN O.A.C.
Wt cerry our own contracts -
lnst•nt credit from our credit counselors
1959 BUICK 1964 DODGE
Full po"·er, air 2-0r Hardtop
FULL $99 PRICE :~1~'. $299
1960 CHRYSLER 1964 OLDS
4-dr. Hardtop 2-Dr. J.la.rdton
:~.~ .. $175 :~1~'. $350
195290~L2:~~!IL, _j :~~N R~!8,L~~ •. .'
R11(t!{l, J-lcalrr.
;~,~.. $17 5 :~1~'i $199
1961 OLDS F85 1966 PONTIAC .. ·
nadin. lfc-ater
:~1~'i: $199
Air, Radio. lltater,
AUt(I
FULL $799 ltR ICl
BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES
2145 Harbor Blvd .-Co•t• Mtll
642·9700 *** 540-4391