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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-01-04 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • • • .1xon ance ac • • ii More Mystery Shrouds ~. -• ,. • ' I • Death al Chief~• Son- • • ~ . .. . . . • • ' • -· . • • • • • • • . .. Crocker; 4· Ballks ' " Cn·t Lending R.ate • ' •• ltigh,.F .. d ,;., ... ~. Wl~-H ·..l·,.:., La ···h. ~~JT:.u.alle. · . · . 8n 1; - '• • ~no~ :·~~~.~ ~• ;~oasi ' • "'• • • • , I I "-"'·-·:-'.'a. . . ,~ .• , So.utli1and • By ARTHUR R. VlllSEL · Of ... DMl'f Plitt ltaff Slashing down out cil IDOUlltaln puses, Icy, Santa Ana winds today. continued. to iaDqblasl .the SO.tbland, h1owlDg away almosl ID)'tblng lhat WllD't ealled down, • lumhl~to house ·!ralltn. ; The biller pie& -IUl'PUSin8 lair, r1cane lorce•ln aome gu!il -are O:· peeled to cooUnue, auhlldlng tooilbt - early Wedoeaday, leaYin( inland, -:ohi~~~~J:i'":~ winds In terma •I aclualdlmapr<t>Qrted by daylight, today. • San Fernando Valley reeldeola ·and ' '!hose JivioB in or passlog, through Riverside and San Bernardino Couollea oull~ ,most with power ·blaci:oula and travelers' warnJngs posted: . • Cl!Uornla HlghWay · Palm! ollicers reporled·fieree-wlnd blula up to'llO mllea per hour blew ·over Une house trailers and a lruck..,od-lrallet"' rig. .,, •. ,.t.;..... Teea.,ell .ltfapr - e· natio11's ~ youngesf mayor. 11'-year old Jody.Smith of Ayr- ibfre, Iowa, was sworn into of· lice Monday alld'received both telegram an\! phone call· 'from President . !'llxt>n. The telegram was displayed at Smith's lnauJ!UI'I) ball attend- ed by friena., relatives and dignitaries. Group Attacks Nixon?s -Stance • On PO · l~µe •. I • I F...in wu. s....- ~ASll!NGTON -.A prjeooer ol Wll" "81lly group and I conamsman w1io' Met privately with Commun.i1t 1>tgottators today virtually 3jXUSed ·e•ldent Mxon , ly1ng about u. • !raijoa's ejloHrrD litt !be Pl'Jtl1. • dlr<clly c11,i1enged lllxoe'• .... ~ •lihl as.tklon Ilia! !be No<dl Viet· ,...... re1u...i to t~Alnlrlca POWt 19( I' U.S. trooe ..itlldrlwll -.iune, "'lbil It ~ ......... told a tetneot llluod by lamllln !or 1111- IMdJate reftaser._ ' ' ..,.l. r" , • DAILOfLOT ,,.......,,~,.,... I ---~ Camper ownen -mplaling highway travel on major n:iutes from the Paclfic Coasl Inland were also warned <to stay 'Thec.J>resldent bad-barely arrived ·-•t El:;'l'oi<>" -boun-ot-new-employlnent for:lbe -West-Cdas~ Th Marine Corps Air Sta ti-On Monday night -when he President paused briefly _to gte,t' wellwisbera :e : put. was off again. He flew to San Diego this mol'l!h!'.i Et:foro,.including:Wfycnntg iMD;'liefore"teaV!ili -, to 8DllOWlCe ;the, award ·Of miunnioth 'new' SbiJ>' ' to si:knd1 the,nlibt.a~bls San Clemente"home. . , Tumbleweeds bonrvt.ing like banshees across blihways up aod clilwn the Or1DB• -Olast overolghl poled •• annoytog buildjlfg'~coft!l'aCls ·~~to mean. 7,500 m~n-. _ · • · ' r , · ·~· .. · ·""' · ·· ' huanl lo llllDY molorilla. Orange Counly Harbor Palm! ollic<n reminded hoatero lhat gale. warnings ore bolsted bu! said Iba winds ·offshore were dfinll down. A Fullenon police sergeanl had to hltoh • ' Nixon Chalked .Up :.Miles · =to£ ~~.~ .. ~~p: · Du~ing .lst r:rJiree ·Years , He said he dido'! wll)I to bt ~Ulied .. ,_ , " . • 1 , • f ' . Tasty Fudge Biggest 'Loss?· • LltUe damage was reported 1ln West · ' · j . Or.._. County bul the chllb' Sao!a'Aoas WASHINC.TON'(AP) -Pmldent·N1t-ships and tried out.the,'new Peru>Cenlral kept many persons awake and cut · (See WINDS Pqe I) . . M ha~ spept more .1!'1'< away from the Melmllntr train on·a.2'1Q.mile found ttlp ,....;~_.._._ ___ ...:,'------'-·-'-: ..., Wliite Howe !Han 'In It durihi the nrat from Wasblnll<>n 'lo Plillldelphia. Bui ltbree•,..,.,bfmti•Pl'fflileo<.'Y· vfrl\lally _all of .bis aoi,\)Oo·mitee lhrough l!e, chll~,up;~'tban ,I00,000 mile• Dec. SI, 1971. have ~ accimWated by of lraYel. to "!!rl 50 •atalta, Ibo Virgin ah'. . . lalal$, G111111,...,<1'11•.Y and 19 counltlea. Recoros &how Nlton was ·away from ..;11• .,0W'havtllollbnosl double tb,j! to+IUJ'P<'.J• I.fndon 'll ·J~'• Iota! Washlnglon for Ill orpart of 561 days and )K'eilcltntil! mjlea1e, fill! a v • 11 a b 1 e lo lhe nallon'• oapita1'!or all or port of l\lemben of an El Toro lamib' Mnfs•sbow Nixon ta alrudy 1 ...,.. SI( days llu!inl'hil fin! lhree years.' -homt WU burgJariud l\(on-traveled pruideo! lhao ollber John f , lfe has 'aver&ged a-25 Weetends per ~ m.: ~ ~ °':. ~U~ ' 11;: ~~~~'/.:";irew.u lf\d-year at !be presldentlal retreat lo !he ,._. •-· -~• 'dlle hahoaledbtliMllJ\ led1S5llOO Cltoctin-'aint'alOlmp'Davld.Md., ~~-ho .:....:'.~ ••• ~ ·' · qin:·~ .ir+'nJ!ll by rall .a".!t 17,ooO by lar• more than any .-It presklenl. '"'"'"'"' w en...-•~. t'ele ' llllP· . , .. . Thougll....t•alwa)'l at tbe retreat, N~on Saliyler home, 23442 ~bin! '""'°""""-•00 recordl on Prtlideot WU aW&j' !Jom W.iiqlqn !or aU llu! Sit Dtjve, Jw>ored camena, watcllea, 1 Ellenhower's.mlleqe, bu! train M(f -weetendl Jn Im. - Mystery Dea_fb . Of Fire Chief's . Son, 29, i>roi§ed . t ' ~ ' Inveltlga!loo lnlo lba·myaterioul.deatb of the , G'orden Grove fire dilers aon, whose body wu fouIK11 In a· car ln :Uun- tinglon Beach Sonday, took a new twist today wltb tbe revelalion .lbat !be man had died hro or thr.e days earlier . Sam c. Spart. Jr., 211, was dlaco.e.eil dead in his car al a Huotin&tc>o Bad! Jn • terseel'9n· at 1'30-J>.Bl.1 SUoday. Thia morning Delectlve Strgeaot M o o t 1 McKtbnon sild • that 'pOlice •believed Spar~ had dled "!n:ieill/i!fe etae and then bteo dilven fo tbt lntersectioQ. , The, ·~-ol deal!> ·ii, tllll btlncr Jn. vuUpted. !lo marta Wll'l>found DD tbJ body, -.din( to police. ' • i ;,A la¢asUc ,...orsal o( !be ll\ltb;" 4eclored l!ol>· -"' uwtt .(!>-• Caltt.). . ~ and caah !hat were !here toirees vlrtuall7 dlaappeared durln( hta lllxoh has amaged two '!;reign.trips a • !tr UJO taking and concentraled U.. yean Jn offl<t.. 1ffr tfnce Jiit llld'.W. ldlldule' for 1'12 tltacl on wi.t offlcets lilted 11 ":I> John F. Kennedy traveled about 21S,OOO lndlcaltt he will at le11t 111p tbat. lie hat .. There still ii no evidence .. of ~ a homlclc!f,• aald McKennon, wft\ di""*4 tba\ medical reJ>Olll abo111'ed ~t Sparb had .been dead from between 12 lo 41 houn l>olora hil body waa d!J<:overed. , D\lrinf I It-=~ SUndllY l ._ CBS ...,... Dool lla!ber ~ OD bthall ol I POW -U the lllllltd State1 efer asked Ibo otlltr side wbethet II "!IUld r<l\lrn Jhe pr'-t&.a'l'f uoraolte !he aalely al wltlldl'll"inl ( .. POW, P•Jl ~ of fudile and -ed mllei dw1n1 lilt 1horl<oed term, Vf1tY ilteadl> ·aollOllllCOd fPPI to Coalmwlllt cookie.." r.-by boa~ of rail. Johnson ~Id a.i.. ..s tho Sovlot UllloL Sherill'• Inv•• ti g •tor a ore m,ooo mU.. between November 1912 and lllron'a phJliciao haa complained the aalW!ed today lbat nothing ol January 1•, according to records at tbe President II DOI (elling lllOlllh eW'clle'. volue wu taken II)' !be unknown U.. LBJ J.lbrley In Austin, Tu. Vlrtuallr all jndoed, while al Camp David or !be Sin lnidtn. . tbe mlltqe WU by air. Clmoalti e.ni .• or J(ey Blicayne, Whit• Niloa bu taken.a kw~ on~ 1 1See-TllA~ P• S) .. Sj>orkl, who l(ved al COO Edfngor Ava, Apt. IOS, WU found !yin( oh bit .id< neal' Iba stoerln( wheel In • car ....,. lit~ and Pe~.llm\l Ip tt.&allifllAllabll ca.tifct. f' • ' ' 5 Percent Lowest , ince~6 · " By '!"8 ~.._. ""' Four malor-NOJV Yorio Ilda ~ ti Callloroia bant reduced lheli' prlme len- ding to 5 perCelit today,Jiom 5\1• pert.o1, puabing thlt ~ Interest charge to 1 .. foweat level 1n nearly &even yew. Chase Manhattan Bank, Bankers Trust Co., ManUfacturers Hano.v.er Tr:u4t Co., and Chemical Bank aaJd lo New Vork they were cutu.ng the minimum interest they charge ~Ir most credll·worlhy cor- l'O(ll!e cuatomm to 5 percent tffecllve lmmedlate)y. ' They followed the lead ol New York's Irving TnJsl Co., which allllOUllCed a almlJar.cut oq ~ay, effecllve Monday. Crocker Baillr ol Calllomla today joined !he major New York banb Jn lower~ lta prhhe COflllllerclal loao ·rate to 5 -cent. I ..- The "8nt aald'the'riew-rate' ta elfeetl'9 hnmedla!et· • I 1 • I • The lasl tm., Iba prime rate slood 'al the 5 percent level was In March 11118. , The reduc!Jooa reflec\ed a •har\> drop · lo money marlo!I Interest rates In ffCtl1t weeb, whlth reduced Iba haob' c:oet ol olitajnlng lenilable !\Inds. Siuggllh lluslnesa loan demand wit rJso a 18dt£, -.Vert said. Moet olber large banks acroa Ibo country malnlllned iV.. percent primo rate. -' • 1 F'lrsl Ila-aty-ol New Y~. however, ,..,..uJ !rimmed lls o~" l.ondiu rite. lo 51>' percent. · "Lib' c;Jty.)aot: Baoten 'nus! anil'Jri. Ing Trust both have Ot11ble prin'io rates, ')'hlcih ore idjUJl.ed per)()dical!y lo RlleCt oilier money market coodlllons. Oralife c.a.t, • · · Weadie .. , · n-wiclred ~ will 1111>- akle loal&ht, but II a 10ing lo be ~ cold as I'll<, dfpp~ dcnm to afrlgldZ~a-arw. 1be peak will noge fl'om 51 6' 12 Wedoeodiy, INSIDE TODAY l < ,l __ o_•1_l_•_•_1l_o_r ___ s _____ lursd111 Ja11uarr 4, 1972 Policy Plan All·ing_ Set In Newport fly CANDACE PEARSON Of fttt O.ll'Y "fl•• lfttl' An about-face on the tourism issue and Insertion ol strong anti-freeway and antl- alrport positions highlight revisions Jn the proposed policy plan released today by the Newport Beach community de~p­ JJ'lent staff. The policy plan, intended to guide preparation of a new master plan of deveJopment, will be the JUbject or • planning commission study s e • s ion Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. in City Hall. Planning commissioners have asked th1t any public' input on the revised plan be presented Jn wrUten form before the meeting. No verbal testimony wUI be taken at thla meeting. Public hearings will ta~e ploce Jan. JS and 20. Besldea !ht policies against th< three c:antroverslaj Juuts. other change1/.'n the plao, compiled aft,r ,a joint counci -com- mlslton meeting tut monlh, Include: -A clarlOcation of three brold policies regarding high-rise and other large-scale building. -An addition lo the natural resources element which says the city wlll work to red~ varioue pollutanti into bay, harbor and ocean waters. Muskie's Next -Another special addiUon to the rt30Urcu aectlon which st•tel the city will Ulist "proper excav,uon and recordation of historic and cultural in· fOJ'U'laUon" from 1Jte1 of known or poten· tial irchaeologiCal val"e. -A guarantee of 0 open housing" op. portunJtiea by the city and a relerence to city a98isllnce in solving regional hous- ing problems. Sen. E~m'und Muskie ID·Main e) rubS his hands together waiting for the ~ping crew to .ready the TV equipment so he could announce his candidacy for President today. The address. made in the living room of his sumd'Jer home, will be aired nationally tonight · -A separate section for an en- vironmental quality element, which had been listed in a number of different sec- tions previously. Senior Plan Administrator C a r I Neuhausen aaid basically the staff had 1lmpllfied the' length but had made each section more expUclt. A 51-page Policy Plan inventory has betn separated from the policy document Itself, although its many references to previous studies will still be used as a guideline, Neuhausen said. Neuhausen .said that in respo.nse to some eouncilmen'1 "fears ," the land use element wa1 reworded to "delete the thought of providing a major regional tourists recreational center, and to pro- tect the present residential character." A much more specifically-worded viewpoJnt is shown in the transportatioo element. "Consistent with the objective and policies to preserve the environmental quality of tht community, the city will continue to oppose· deVtlopment of the Pacific Coast Freeway within lhe coastal corridor,•· one new section rtt.d11. A reference lo airport exptnslon in the 111me elemerit malntaiM in pert that, "The present location ol the Orange County Airport is y.naceeptable M a site Cor a regional airport facility." Under the community design section, high rise development is discus&ed In regard to Its possible harm to "existing character," "major natural features:' and a "quality, low-density residential community." Tht new additions to the natural resour~s section include the city's con· cems about sedimentation and discharges In the water and preservation of possible archaeological antiquitie11. The latter was urged by commissioner Jackie . He at her, who wanted archaeological associations to be in· formed before major development prrt- jects are allowed to begin. A new :eference to open housing cam~ from some officials' concern about the fedehl government's push for low-cost housing. Neuh.lu:sen said the city's insuring open opportunities would be more fitting for a community with the Income level of Newport Beach . OIAN61 COAST DAILY PILOT OllAltGI COA!T l"UILISHING C~l"AHY •••••+ N. Wtod ''"-! ..... l"\101111.., J 1cl ~. Cvrl•v Yu l"r.,.'""'• -"'-•I ,......,.. Tlt•rn•1 k'•1vil lf119f 111 ..... , >.. Mv~~•~• Mlft" ... llll- C~1rJ1t H. L •• , ltic.~•·' '· ~.n AM1t!W>/ M~ if•Jot• °""" '""' .llltl•~ • .,.. .. , ~ • .,. str ... t ,._, ... .,,., un N...._r '"':"''"' ........ t..ci.~ m ~-I A- MUl'll'"'"" IN<ll: T1t 1S t..oi .... ~•NI ..,. (Wl!Mtt: JU fHftll aJ '""lllt R...i CMl\.'I' 1rurr • ..,.. •1ctt i.. ~ h ,,_,.,_. It •""-"' 4•iolr ,.,..,. "-*" " _.. ........... ,.,. '""""'"' '"°'' •-1 ....-.. C.• W..., """"'1'M ._,., ~ v11w1. ..., C._../ c:a.i.-... , ..... ,,,, ...... --,.......... ......... "'1Nlf&• ...... i... ..... If a ,..., ..., 111'~ C.11 M""- T t •• , s C714) Ml..fl21 Cl...,... Aill••"•Jee Ml•N71 le Clo ft ·• A• l .. ••••••ll , ........ 4'2 ... 4Jt ~ "'"· °" ..... CMtt ~ ~ .... -............ ~-.............. ., ...... __.._ .. .. _, -........................ , .. . ....... """""' ..... . ................. ., ............ .,. c.i. ~. Qllfil!'M. IJt U"'* .,. _..., • • -.i,11 w -" .. ,. ,,......,, _,.,., ..,,........, .... _ . ..,. Mesa Rede,ielopment U11it Not Opposed at Hearing By TERRY COVILLE 01 ff!t 01Uy r1 .. 1 Sl1fl Coata Mesa activated tt communit.Y redevelopment agency Monday night with no opposition from the public. Councilmen unanimously approved the agency after Mayor Robert Wilson closed a public hearing in which M speakers ap- proached the, council. ne hearing ' had been extended two week! because there Were few speakers at the previous session. w&Ue JIO specific area was designat~ fot redevelopment, the pfoceedings have been directed toward refurbishing of the city's downtown. After creating'the redevelopment agen- cy, the council named itself the agency's board of directors. with Mayor Wilson and Vice Mayor Willard Jordan '.serving as chairman and vice chairman. One citizen, Ted C. Bologh, objected to J"rom Page 1 POW : .. troops If the adminlstr.11tion set a final date for total withdrawal. Nixon ltnplied that the question was raised with the North Vietnamese but said they rejected any such deal. "This ls not true,'' insisted families for Immediate release. ''He has not asked this question. You can search the transcripts of the Paris talks from beginning to end 1ind the only mention of this trade is made by the North Vietnamese and the National Liberflhon Front (Viet Cong1." Leggett contradicted Nixon 's con· lentions that the Communists turned down the proposed exchange. ''Far rrom rejecting this trade, the other side explicitly offered to do it." Leggett said. "They offered it to me in private on May JI of last yea r, and again at the orficial negoliating table on Jul y I. They repealed the offer at the table more times than I can count. There's been some ambiguity regarding the con- tinuation of aid to South Vietnam . But there has never been any question abou t their willingne ss to return the POWs if we set a date. we·ve never even bothered to respond to their offer." The congressman challenged Nixon to ~ettle the controversy by directly pro· posing kl the Communists that "we'll get out if we can get the POIA's back.'' Frotn Page l TRAVEL •.. Housf's . Nixon very rarely likes time out to exercise. His apparent form of relaxal\on comes In e1cursions on a houseboat owned by his Florida neighbor and fr itn<I. C. G. "Bebe" Rebor.o. AMther fr i e n d . millionaire Robert Abplanalp, has 8 vac1tion residence on the 81h1tma Island of Grand Cay. only 100 mllt.1 away from Key Bl.Jcayne. His yacht is at the Presidtnt'1 dispo11al. NLt.on is the flrs t prtsldtnt to set up 1ecood1ry retidencts on both coasts. He haA 1Ptf1l SS •eeetuds In florid• and CaHfomla. Hixon vl111ed Key Bixaynt e!IJ!ol u .... In 1• and IO t9Ch in 1170 aild 1171. He made two trips to San Clementt in l•. three in 1170 and 111 in 1170. All in all, more lhan ZI0,000 ol his l00,000 prHid<nllal miles hove been tog· &td IA the United Slaltl. Councilmen Alvin Pinkley and William St. Clair being men1bers of the .redevelopment agenCy because they own downtown property. •·People are going to think and say things," Bologh said. "They should stay off the agency." City Attorney Roy June said the com· munity redevelopment law does not co n· sider any conflict ol. interest situations, and doesn't prohibit them from bfing agency members. The councilmen made no preply to Bologh's suggestion. Several additional steps and public hearings will be necessary before any type of redevelopment becomes a reality, June explained. Three major steps are still to be com-· pleted : :....eouncllmen must define an area for redevelopment and officially set its boun- daries. -After the boundaries are set, they have to adopt a detailed plan of develop- ment, outlining the procedure step by step end year by year. · -The most difficult task comes third -establishing the method, or methods, of financing a redevelopment project. No specific dates have been set for con- sideration of each step. June said be would be reporting back to the council with additional ordinances and resolu- tions at each meeting. Costa Mesa already has a detailed downtown redeveJopment plan in its possession. It was written by the Los Angeles consulting firm of Wilsey and Ham. The Wilsey-Ham plan outlines a lG- yea r, $8 million redeveropme11t project for 19~ downtown acres. Most of the pro- posal conce rns the reconstruction of ma· jor and minor streets. The biggest single project recom- mended by Wilsey and Ham is the realignment or Harbor Boulevard to con- nect with 17th Street after the Ne\\·port Freeway is finished . The y estimate the cnst of realigning Harbor Boulevard at S.1 million. Councilmen do not have to adopt the \Vilsey and Ham plan. Acting as the redevelopment agency they can authorize an entirely new study or pick parts of the consultants' report. No mention was made of the Wilsey and Ham report at Monday's hearing. Even if the city does adopt it in total, there must be considerable study on methods of financing ii. \Vilsey and Ham outlined a detailed plan regarding costs, but left the method or financi ng wide open . The co nsultants suggest several alternate methods such as federal fund s. state help, private enterprise, local property ta.xes or freez· · tng the assessed valuation of the redevelopment area. Bue11a Park Bank Hit for $640 "Give me the cash, t need money for the kid~." re.11d a nott handed a woman tr.lier Monday at tht Security Pacific N3tiMa1 Bank branch, 80&1 Stanton Ave. in Buena Park. A frightentd bot CJilm ttllt.r handed lht man 1bolJt '640. He fled on foot. She ducribed him as malt, white, about 30 years old • The holdup man made no threat& and did not display or simulale poqession of ' weapon, police reported. • ' Space Raise Cut Due Busii:iess, Public Fight Labor on Pay Board ' I WASlllNGTQN tAP) -The P1y Board dderl'td raiae• IA conlt1cil altt,tdy whelher to cut It llul by how much," 0.f was erpected lo order its flrsf wase agrud' upon. · aakl Monday. rollback today, cutttng 1 IJ.perce11t raiM List Dec. 21 the board debated far lhto Day, wbo expressed his vlew1 In an Ub- for aerospace worktn, probably to I per· the "nlghti without rta~Jna: a decision on published essay and In a te.lepbone lrto cent or leu. contr1cll coVerlng units ot the United ~ tervlew, said all rive buelneas membtr• But it appe.ared lO be an open quelitlOI\ Auto WorkeJ]I And the AFVCIO Jn"rna~ wanted to cut the tt-percent raisu bacf whether the board would honor ill own tiOOll AsaoclaUon of Maohln11tt at 111 at leut t.o the 8-percent level in th• new rule limiting all pay rai.sea In new aerO..pa~ firms. • . United contract. . ! contracts to no more than 7 percent, even All ercept one follow the pattern aet ln But Day aleo said at least one butinea Jn special circumstances. the tJAW pact with North Amer\can member wantl to cut all lht way baci to Va.rlous sources aald all 10 busines.s and Rockwell Corp., which conlllins a ffrat~ 7 per'Cent. An0t~er board lnform11it 11kl pub!1c members were determined to vote year raise of 51 cents in the $4.32 hourly aome of the publlc mf:mber1, posalbly all against the~flve labor members and order average, an 11.8 percent increase. five, wanted 7 percent. • cut of some amount NoL all of them, The exception is the JAM pact with The public members have consistently however, we~e reported ready lo roll the Unittd Aircraft Corp. in ConnectiCµt, taken a hard line. Businesa members aerospace raise back to .7 percent. where the union got only an &-percent have iided rirst with the public members A P~y 'Board. 1pokesman a~ld the ~nel raise in the first year. · in laying down tough rules, then with tba went. into session this morning, but lm-"The Pay Board 's impasst.~ over the labor members in applying the rule! mediately broke up into separate aerospace settlement does not involve loosely meet ings of labor, business and public ' \, members. The noon hour (ESTl passed withoot the board 1oing again into full session. On another matter, the board'• five business members were reported ready ·to press for a legally binding regulation that would automatically cut -0ff future pa y raises in old contracts exceeding 7 percent a year. Prof Faces Top Court? Appeals Court W on~t Rule Business member Virgil Day, a General Electric Co. vice president said the business members would pr~pose such a regulation during meetings this week . OnFiriI1gOverOhscenity Last month the business members ls~ued a blanket challenge of all deferred raises over 7 percent, but under this pro- cedure the board would have to order any rollbarks on a cad·by-case basis that could swamp the panel with thousantis of reviews. Thi ·J:>oard's guidelintJ say raises in new c;:ontracls can't go over 5.5 percent except In special cases that might war· rant raises UP, to 7 percent. Day said the rule lo be proposed by busineu members would put the same 7 percent lid on From Page 1 WINDS ... \'i~ibillty along Pacific Coast Highway 'A'tth a constant cloud of blowing dust and sand. Rain.soaked billboard signs were also ripped away in many spots, littering the landscape like confetti. A decorative awning at Look Realty in Sunset Beach was shredded by the hl.jh winds and its aluminum frame bent bad· Jy. Power lines were downed in scattered spots throughoDt the Orange Coast and the wind.! triggered. dozens of jangling burglar alarms. Broken branches, palm fronds, and other wlrMHk>wned items kept city work crews busy in most communitiel but there was no mt.jor dama1e reported. Electricity to five cu.stoiners wal cut off for two bours"after a San Diego Gaa and Electric Company powtrllnt wai downed in the canyon behind San Clemente's Avenida Junlpero. . "With our fingers crossed, that's in that's happened IO far," said a company spokesman. . One freak mlihap occurred at Costa Mesa's South Coast Pina, where wind- whlpped brush kept whacking an elec· trical sign until it finally ahorted out In a shower of sparks and amoke. Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron Coleman said the fii'e flickered out quick· ly, causing Jess than $50 damagt: Temperatures along the Orange C.O..st are e.xpected to range between the mid· 50s and up to SI in the daytime. Lows arouDd fr~ng and down to 11 tittle as 15 degree.a In' the high duert areaa are pr*cted by the U.S. Weather Service for ~nfand regions. Tony . Bin.nett Weds LONDON (UPI ) -Tony Bennett secretly married former dence.! Sr.ndie Grant in New York last Wednesday, a spokesman for ·the singer said tMlay. LOS ANGELES {UPI ) -Three ap- peals court judges were unable to decide the ease of a junior college teacher ruspended for reading her class an allegedly. obscene poem and givln1 the~ a broc~rt with photos of a nude couple. The lhret-fudge panel said Monday the case should be passed on lo the California Supreme Court. Mrs. Deena Metzger, 34, an English teacher at Valley Colleie in Van Nuys, was suspended in 1969 by the Board of Trustees of Los Angeles Community Colleges after she read her class a ·poem she had written entitled "Jehovah·s Chlld" during a session on pornography and censorship. Earl Spangler, Industriallist, Dies in Hawaii E1:1rl G. Spangler,.'65. widely known Newport Beach metallurgist and in- dustrialist, died Sunday following a sail with his family off the island of Oahu, Hawaii. Mr. Spangler was stricken following a nap on board the yacht Guinivere. owned by Fred B. Smales, former Newport Beach industrialist and yachtsman. Mr. Spangler and. hi.s wife, Lorraine, were visiting the srhales family for the holidays. Mrs. Smales is a daughter of Mrs . Spangler. Mr. Spangler died at a hospital in Kanoohe , apparently from a second heart attack. His body was cremated and the ashes scattered at sea from the decks of the Guinivert' on Monday. Mr. Spangler was president o f Duramics Corporation of Costa Mesa, a firm that specialized in making aircraft components trom a ceramic discovered and produced by Mr. Spangler. Besides his widow. he leaves a daughter, Mrs. Lorelei Frey of Costa Mesa, and a stepson, Tom Constable. Mr. Spangler was an active yachtsman and i longtime member of Balboa Yacht Club. In his younger days he was active in the National Star Class both as a skip- per and crew. For a number of years he was an active member ol the crew abovl°d Escapade, formerly owned by Smales. Smales ls a former commodore of eve. Memorial services In Newport Beach will be held Friday at 2 p.m. at the St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. I She also used in class, the board said. a brochure entitled "You Can Become a Sexual Superman," cont a In in g photographs of a nude couple in position.! suggesting sexua l intercourse. She was suspended on grounds of ''Immoral con- duct'' and "evident unfitness." A lower court judge ruled that Mrt. Metzger should be relnatated, and that although she may have used poor Judi· ment there were no grounds for charges on whi ch she was suspended. The trustees appealed. Justice William C. Clark. writing for the Second District Court of Appeal in an opinion made public Monday. said that he and Presiding Justice Parker Wood were in favor of ruling on the side of the trustees, and Justice Robert S. Thompson on Mr1. Metzger's. They could not find ''sufficient corl- currence" for a ruling, he said. Justice Thompson criticized the opi- nions of the other two justices as "ui:I· formate examples of appellate activism and disregard for the rule of Jaw.'' He noted that Mrs. Metzger, before exposittg her class to the material, had first check· ed to determine that Jlone of the students were less than 18 years old. and had warned the students the auignment might be offenstve to some persons and offered to o:empt them. The trusteea said they regarded the decision as a victory. Mrs. Metzger's at; torney said he would appeal to the stal.t supreme court. The trustees noted they have so faj spent $22,715 on legal feu io· pteven Mra. Metzger from geutng her t.1chln1 job back, but Yid that wu what the public wanted. College for POW Kids Gets Study SACRAMENTO <UPI) -Sen. Clair Burgener (R·San Diego ), has introduced a measure designed to allow children of prisoners ot war to attend ttie Univtratty of California or the state colleges with- out paying tuition. . The bill bars the stalt colleges from collecting tuition if the student's parent ii a prl$0ner of war or is miasina: In action. The measure would ·take effect in the University only If the UC Board Ot Regents agreed, Burgener uid Monday the 1tate coj. 11tltutlon gives the Regents authority t;o govern the University, and that °" legistatiCln would, in effect, ask them .~ waive the tuition. · ''The Dating Game'' . -· • ' When • customer chooses • doto for inst•ll•tion of his ctrpoling, he wonts to bo ouured th•t the cerp1tin9 will be installed on schedule. We ore 1ble to provide f.,t, efficient l1ervice1 due to th1 f•ct .that w1 maintttin •II of our own cr1wS. If n1c1ss•ry, -b1caus1 o,. construction delays, w1 c1n •cljuil !ht schedulecl dtlt for our customers conveni1nc1. Alter in, c1rp1tin9 c1n b1 purch1"d m•ny places, ind the on1 thing wo con provide th1t olll1rt c1n't, is tho IEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I • ALDEN'S CARPETS' e DRAPES 1663 Plac•nti• • Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4131 ' HOURS: Mon. thru Thun., f to S:JO -fri., 9 t. 9 -Sal., f:30 to S .. -•• ,,, ,_ !, I ... to aid aU ntly rs " tho ules e d, a e a In I tons Wll con- •• that ud1· rges fo r •• th• ere the ... . con- opl· 'uii• ism He sing eek· I • • s __ DAILY. I'll.ff ·«Jountv Rerrts ' 4 $6,000 Aid ForUCIBus Marriages Dr9p ' Line 01\.'d .After: 197-0 :Peak Armed with a new ruliJll by Deputy County c.un..i Clayton Parm, ChnC• County Transit Dlatrlct dlnctors Mondoy voted a 11,000 sublldy to aid the propoted UO Irvtne student bus aervlce. Parm had P<•vlolllly lllated that the district could not partlclp&te In a project which wu not deatgnOa fer the uae of the 1eneral public, In con!rut to ll Umlted groop. The UC! tree bus line will aerve atudenta, faculty , llalf and visitors. University offlclala 11\d Ult alx-month experiment wlll 1tart Monday. Total coat of the project ta ullmated at $12,000 with otudent and unlverolty lundJ being uaed for ilO percent. · Fifth Dt..trlcl SUpervloor Ronald W. C&apera of Newporl Beach balled the board'~ aublldy move. Ill exchange for the 16,000 grant, UC! has promised to provide Information on the pilot program, to Include the number and frequency of lerea and the polntl from which the serlice is usi!d. UC! Dean ol Student& James PhWlpa told dt&trlcl directors that -Ifie route• had not been adopted yet but original pJ1n1 called for lll'Vlce in Coata Mesa and NeW]lorl BeaclJ. The project will uae a 1153 model 00. leased from Mike Kadletz ol BueM Park's Pink Bus Line. He said that despite Ito age, the bU> has pasaed a Calllornla Highway Patrol safety test. PhllUpe said acbedu1es would be on an hourly but> from 7 a.m. to I p.m., Mon- day throu&h Friday. He elllmated that the service would aid about 2ilO atudent.. dally who live within wslklna dlllance of the unnamed 00. aloPL * * * Official Raises Hopes for Bus Jjnks to Coast Murray Storm, ualalant county 10ad commw!oner, cul a ray of hope on the Or•!lle Coul bus service picture Mon- day. Storm told Orange County 'l'ronalt District dtrectors that two !Irma were ready to step In If South Cout Tranlll Corp. drops its routes from Santa Ana, to Balboa, Newport ~ Colla Mea and Laguna Beach. • DAil 'f PILOT Ptltto 1W J~ V•lttl?- Gusty Presidential Arrival •' Coast Guard persoMe! and their families were bulleted about at the Loran Coast Guard at San Clemente Monday night when they braved nippy weather to watch •the Presidential arrival. What appears to be an extreme wind condition was ac-- tually the propwash from the Presidential helicop- ter. Mr. Nixon is here to conduct a summit meeting with Prime Mini.rter Eisaku Sato of Japan. Tax Bite to Get Sharper Bigger Slice to Be Withheld From Pay Checks WASHINGTON (AP) -In spile of the tax relief voted by C.Ongress last month, milllons of Americans will find their take- home pay reduced after Jan. 16 by a big· ger income tu bite out of their checks. Congress has increased sharply the wlUlholding rate, to make the iunount of tax withheld by employers come closer to matching the employe's actual tax liabfil.. ty for the year. Thal will correct the undtrwltbboldlng which, for many taxpayers, has been a nuisance· for years. For 1972 and thereafter, fewer middle-and upper·in- come tupayers will have to mail quarterly esUmated tax payments or make 1arge lump-swn payments when they rue their income tu returns. . 'lb1s was a perticular problem in lrtl for married couples in which both bu1:- band and wile wort. The old withholding tatil,s were geared to give thef11 one too many low-lnCome a1lowances: many wll1 have to pay several hundred dollars on April II to get right with the Internal Revenue service. another large group by c a u s in g overwithholding . Mllllone ol taxpayers -putlcularly middle-income couples in vt'hich only the husband worb, and lbo6e clolmlng lar~e amountl of iteml2ed deductions -will find the new w!tliloldlng tables take too deep a bite. The withhofdlng Increase Is so large, in fact, that in many cues it will more than offael the paycheck benefit.. t h a t Congress enacted last month in the form of higher personal exemptions and an in- creased llandard deduction. Taxpayers at the locome level of $20,000 to f2S,OOO who clalm itemized deductlona of 14,000 to $5,000 -lalrly ordinary ~t lbat Income levd -may find themaefvet paying the government upwards of $ilO a mooth more than they ow,. • l'or the "reliet of sucb lupa)'ll'S the IRS has prepared a new form to be distributed by employers, c a l l e d "Emp!oye's Wilhholding Exemption Cer: uncate." By filling It out and returning It to hi.s employer, he can adjust his yeer--Jong witbholding to an BIDOWlt roogbly equivalent to his actual \BX liability. The new form carries a table showing how many "allowances" the taxpayer 1hould claim -at $750 each, the new amount of the personal exemption -to insure that be is meeting his tax obliga- tions throughout the year but not overpaying along the way . He can base hla allowances for 1972 on the amount of deductions he claimed in 1971 or on a reasonable estimate. U his salary or . deductible expenaea change during the year, he Cl!' file a new certificate 1ncre .. 1ng or decreasing the omount withheld. Mmlaae, Orange county atyle, wun't ·quite u popular In 191).. •. i....t.....·• "-~ Slltl3tl<s rdeued ~ ·~ ......,. WIWMt E. St John'• ofllcoi IM!r..Li:lhll Cupid'• a1m wasn't all tha1 hot tut year. The marrlh• licenaea division fa]Jea, ~ the lint lime since It atarted k~ ncords, to rack up a new hl&h In UCfl* Issued. · , "'"" •!l')>e 1971 toqll of )2,1!0.1$1¥ ~;the 19\1) tall1 m: 12,llO> wblch esta.bllsbid • oeir record for lhe d~L A new monthly record •el In December -• mammoth 31-day .tally o1 .1.1ot ~rtllM to pu\ the yearly lilly over the lllO !eval. No ~aUCh d'ecllne was rej>orted · m \be passpot1 al\P,licaUon dlvilion, a function handled by the marriage license office, Camp Pendleton Race Bias Probe Will End Today . Two Investigators were upect.ect -to conclude their probe of racial dlscr1mlna· Uon at Camp Pendleton today a1 part of a month-long look at racial relations within the Corps. The two men, Superior C.ourt Judge Richard L. Vaughn of San Diego and Hobart Taylor, Jr., a WB!hington D.C. a\. torney, opened their lnvestigatton Mon- day at Camp Pendleton. Vaughn told a pres! conference the in- quiry was "not going to be a whltewuh." Both are members of the C.Ommandlnt ol tlie Merine Corps' Advl>ory Committee for Minority Affairs and they denied reports their vis it was prompted by 1tatements from a black COngrtmnan that 0 raclsm permeates C a m p Pendleton." A member of the congressional black caucus, Rep. Augustus Hawkins ([). Calif.), had called for an lnve1t1a:at1on after talking with minority marines. But Vaughn and Taylor, chairman of the Volunteer Citizens C.Onunlttee, uid their visit was planned weeks before Hawkln! met with Camp Pendleton servicemen. The charges made by the Los Ana:elu Congressman "have no bearing on our visit," Taylor said. His committee la ext peeled Jan. S at the M~ Alr Illa~ ChelTy Point, N.C.; J ... LI and II al C&mp Lejeune. N.C.; Jan. 20 at Iha Marine Alr Station, Beaufort, S.C., and later at selected overseas baa:es. ' •. oeru Issued ll,7t4 puapom lat yur f<>r a rocord total that ecllpaod bJ 113 Iha 1970 total of H,7$1. Former llilw helped oet up • DOW Oranae County reaird with 113 lorolgn. born relld<r1ta laldnJ the .. di « au.. glance In lour _.,te eeremonl"' dw1aC 1970. The flgure waa II more than the old record of 557 set in 1970. Superior Courl civil flli!llS cllmbed to a new record with H,3$7 lawsulta being handled by the county clerk'• offlce. 1l1o total was 740 more than the 13,917 actlOM filed In 1970. 0-lmloal acUonx med In 1970 alao ael up a new hl&h with 1,240 suit& naming more than 5,000 defendanl5. The total was up by 551 on Iha 1970 tally ol 2,117. While ma!Tlagea slumped, couplea seeking to end their unions In the form ol dissoluUons, annulmenb or separation sent that flgwe cllmbJng to 1 new record. Dlasolutlons totalled 10,177 In 1971, Ill more than the 10,S88 recorded In 1'70. The total wu a new record for tblt aec-- tJon of the county clerk'• dlvialon. .i St John's morr11p llcense dl'flllon be11an the New Yw Monday with new hours for the 1D11Tl11e and )lUIPOrl department -7 a.m. to 5 p.m. ldonday thro111h Friday. The department It the first dlmlon of the county clerk's oftlce to adopt a four· day, 40-hour weak. This Performer Real, IJig Shot LEICES'l'ER, EniJand (AP) - Steve Smllh llll!da hl1 first and IUt ntght as a human cannonball M.,.. day. He wu too blr for thO CIMOll. Showman ioe Weston had htt.d the II~, 11-yeaMld . - man to be sbol lrom bl1 new !&-fool cannon. Welrinc gonler and hllmet, Sml~ ~bed Into Iha ""' for o tryout In a.r.vet plL A .... pound clJar&a <I l.u,nHI WOI Mt off. . . Smllh toot ofl ind .. did hall Ilia canooo barrel. Both landed 10 fael away In • pool of woter. The olber hall ol lhe 8llll bac:l<llnd. wnqlnc 1 lhe truck lbal was Ila lalpl<Jlilll pad. "Never qaln," nl4 llmllb. . wading aahore. 0 1\'a 'the lut t.tmll travel thal way.• , ·. "He'1 f4o biia'd.~ aald. Wilib, "lie l1IOllld ha .. llol!a .. fael." It'il going to COii him ... to npalr t1lo cannon. ... The road en&lneor uld :Bbtllhml California Rapid Tranall ~ <RTDl and MIU Kadlelz, qwner of.Iba Pink Bua Line of Buena Park had Indicated Jn. ter..,t In provldlnl the service. "llTD ta preparm, ~ -~" pn>-bable llJba1dy chill~ JI -1d" want to aervlce-lhe San14 APA to Laguna and Newport IOU!ea," l!f.*m .esplalne4. "Bui -ot TDR'1 .lirJi labor coatl'lhe bUl probably -1d 1>0 more thlil the $1.IOO a month Sou1h QDaot Tranalt want...to con- tinue· 1ts roui&" '\'Ii" change In the withholding lablea wu des1ped to correct that sltuaUoo for the new, tu year -and to give the Treuury the CWTent use of an estimated fl bllUon which formerly has been un· derwlthbel4 tn the course of each year .. ow. •• BIG PRICE REDUCTION! On the olher band, X.dleli, Who WU Fa•I ~t Mom.y•1 tranall dlslrlcl • Aid Illa Pink JIWI Line co posalbly JIYvlde ..,..1 .. at a Daure ' l ar than the lllbaidJI aought by Soulh Cout. Kadltls""" opar&tea'butea between Lo Habra 'ind Runllnlton Besch. ·• D!llrfd dlreclora have demonllrated a strong dellra to maintain aervice to the beach clllea until completion ol the cur- rent Special BUI Needl atudy In March. YTN ol Ora!lle CouiitJ and Allen M. Voorhl,. of McLean, Va., an tlolnt the bus study under a IC,500 contract. ll<cently, Georae Cordier, manager of Sobth Coul Tranalt, told dlllrlct offldala hit nrm loll ,LI0,000 In the pul three ye9ra and II showing • cumnt deficit of n, 400 to '3,ooo a month. . ' :SHOP DICK GETS :coons BACK I 1 EL CENTRO (AP) -A )'OUlll 1 male sboplllter sprinted four blocU 1 before he ripped oft his otolen 1blrl ~ and dropped It Mond•Y. His ; pursuer: JWllta Newmon, a 53- yelMld otore dei.ctlve. • 'l1le youth got aw11. but Mra. •Newmon IOI tlie 1blrl. ' But In correcting the underwithboldlng of one large group of laxpayen, Congress has compllcated the finarx:lol problems of Snake Dancer Set to Appear Before Judge Soake dancer C&rol Cybul8kl has been ordered to appear 1'1unday in Santa Ana municipal courl to explaln her failure to 1erve the sentence bnposed on ber two years ago following her conviction on clJarg .. of lewd conduct and Indecent ex· poaure. Mw Cyhllflkl1 II, WU relumed to !)ranae Collllly from OUland lul week to lace the judge who handed h~ the I~ day Jill teim and $5,000 fine -santa Ana . Municipal Courl Judge Paul Mall Judge Mast freed the former Ari Colony enterlalner oo her promise to ap- pear Thunday for action on charges revived when her admlsaion to an Oakt..nd hospital drew ·the attenUon of Orange County lawmen. Mw Cybulski has now fully recovered from the analte bite that led to her being ruoheQ from an Oakland iavem to the · hoepltal. She wu hotpltalhed for two mootha lollowlni the bite of the diamond hack ratUnnake ahe .... In her nude performance. . Playboy. •sunk' I· ' I Coast Guard Bans Mag on Base , I t ~ ' ' 'NORll'OLK, V1. (AP) -'l1le com." i>rJale4 f>vernment fund.I should be llftd ntander of the Jth Coast Guan! Dlltrlct. to pu.,. Playboy. I don't think lhay dtarilnl that recent tsauea ol 'PlaYlloJ llhoiild be uaed for that pu.._ ... iri'A'lne have "~ btymd tbe boimdi Ninttl·fivo sublcrlptlOllf. to the ma1a. ol 'fllal may tit Cona1dtfld pnpor • Ila&.. i1ne, lii<ludlnlf ~ IOinc to lhil'I &1lCI cinceled oU ... i.. 'boata la the Ith District. ·wm be halted oerlpllot11 lo the at dla!rlct by 8"111111'1 dedlloo. Eedl 111mlpt1111 w\tta1 the Norfolk Vlr •Pllol rtportad COllla •10 a yw. lllonaa7. Maaulnel io be diacotmteit were paid "lt·ll a publlelUon thal ls !ilahle !Or for throufh entertalmneol and recreation any individual who want> to h at the flmdl. ' nawaatand," the paper quotod er Adm. A dlttr1ct spotesmsn told Iha paper -'P. llUllalll u UJ!nr. . llU!laril'• aotf111 1011 talea becluae ol '"Ille queatJoa II not wliatlier the Coell what he called moral CODl!deratloot. But Gualll la ...-tnr readllll mater111 ol dld not detail bls ol>Jections. Ila men." Iha si:,.ar .. ld -Playboy olll<iall lo Ollc&JO ~ not tol4 tha paper, addlnr. • !mmOdla~ available lot ... nment. but ' Ollly queatloo Is whether ~ doubtlw wUI. . • • • • , • Import ''Car of the Year'' CAPRI • •• • NO MORE EXCISE TAX! •• NO MORE SURCHARGE TAX! A FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY TO SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS! e WIDE SELECTION e IMMEDIATE DELIVERY "Orange Count11'1 FamJlt1 of Fine Cari ... ohnson&son .. Llf'~flllf\ I (,(JlJ(,,\I, I , , f' I I 2828 HARBOR BLVD .. COSTA MESA • 540a30 { " llAA. y l'tlOT News .. Chips lly 1110MAS ·MURPIDNE or .. Htr #IW ,,.., AllRIVW DEPT. -OUr Cblel is back with us at the ·western While House In Son Cltmellle and Mr. NlsDn may "8J"el leaving bfa bat and ov""'°'t In ~ . \)De:~ rm pd I wasn't last nlg~t wu . i!ie ·ht)Jcopter. pi\« who ntw the PreSldenl to Son Clemente through our little COUW "'-which .,. acfDIJJy being deocrlbed today u gaJe.f.,.. wtods touching UJ>!l'arda Qf 70 mllet per hour. l ~n. IX.w would yoo like to be al the -with the IDOi! Important man iii the I/lilied Slates u J'OIU" pusengtt and lhe on)y lblng 'tbat'a holdlog you up hl·all that'bteeu 11 an egbe'ater? Anywq, ·.,etJbody lhQulll be . happy that Mr. NlsDn ·landed at Son Clemente and. qot· Sin ,Clemonte bland. nESj>f.n: THE ch111 winds, guile a few folb 'tU/ned out at the Western W)llte Home. I~ nial>t 19 -t the PrWdent u~n blsrarrtvil at jbe.Lor~ StatlOn next door: Qw: operaUve nqltd that diddles wm hanghig onto tlddles wltb Ught srfps. same of the imallerone.s appea..d •,bout ... dy lo .becom< -· In the =tloa ~tural wind and helicopter Mr.'Wlxon did UWe inott than give the crowi:Me~•v• befon be--bopped in the llmoUslne fflr a short lhuttle lo Caao • .. ' . ~ • j P¥lfl~1 , • • • . , Well',' be ·was pn>bably half·lfozen already. The Presi<!tnt had . chatted .with folks1 out-on • ti» .nmway for ,about 10 minilte.' allor' hll arrlVal at El Toro at I : 15 p1m. IQ Ajr Force One. He wu liaije.,:anil.COjltk; thOn, too, wbele the Marlite, Conii l>J'ee'u.watchers .. tlmiled tbe1blow\aftO triols. .!. • I l f, • • . • ! ! TgD~ Y :'J,'11!! PRESIDENT w a s ~-IO. travel downcoast lo San ~whire,be ·wu~ to,twr a ~arif. 'l'be . w..iem While H"1se l'1DJlllt .JJllJJ . bu. •!rel\ .. 'beeil 8J"lndlng wtlh.,the '.uaestlon •thil MT. Nllon is llttlt'lo' ht~e alew ~lo 1e,y down on the 'bbnla' city where lie 1188 a convention apgo'plmenl-of ~ Importance later Clfl., • n htt been no1ed that a certain Sen&tor Moakle'wW be taking to the airwaves back.r~st later with an announcement ~ come as'llttle .surprise. 'l'llul II Mr. Nllon doeJ rully sound off c1o;n ' Son Diego way today, you may witness one of the first times in a putldenti... campaign when the in- cumbent •rtbuUaJ WU fired, in advance Of the cJiall~.er~• blast,, *' Tutsday, Janwy 4, lm Wleks I B,loody Bombing 111: Ireland Said Pat1,ern Change DELP AST, Northern Ireland (UPI) .:. Northmt Ireland police said today Ute bombtog of a brewery lnlck was a d>a1111e in paita'n from previous ei:plO!lions in the city al!d ·wu aimed at "kllUng lnno-cent<peopte." ,;ni. 10-poud gelignite bomb planted on a stolen truck apioded in a narrow <lhoppin• ltreet jammed with women do-. tbet1 rnark.etlng. ~ aaJcf 83 persona were jnjured, 5S of them women and girls. A dozet: ol the injured were detained In holpltal • today. Most Of them •uf· ftted ~ mr, 11,ying glaM. A pp_Jice..spotesman said, "This was a 'cold blooded murderous attempt at kill· in& !Mocent people." He said.. tbe pattern Of the bombing WAI different· in that no waning wa.s li'fen and the bomb was placed at noon in a smalf street occupied mainly by womeo and Office girls. The bomb did not appear to be aimed at destroyiag a building like many of the bOmbs placed In the province in the past, an anny :.,P,kesman said. Penalty Called In Home Game CINCINNATI (UP)) -Mrs. Eulalia Fucllil, 44, pleaded guilty to lln!t .degree rnaMlaUllhter In the felal llhoi>tlng of·her -dur· ing an argument over his watching a Utevised football game. Mrs. Fuchs ,.id she shot her hus· band, Robert, 40, Sept. 19 when they fought over whether to watch footboll or listen lo music. Leahg Pachqge• AEC Discounts Radiation Peril1 . . JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) -A leaky package ol radioactive medkal isotopes conlamlnaltd ·a Delta Air Lines jetliner which tben sp<ead tbe radioactivity to airports In five stales. Atomic Energy CommiJ1ion olflclals say there Is no ap- parent health huard. uwe•re 1ystematically going ~ vng what we think i1 the -that no one was hurt by it" G. H. Giboney, scienlilt in C'• savannah RJver operation ct in Aiken, S.C . .._ ... Delta olllcials In Ailanta reporltd M..,. day Utal the leakage occurred Friday In a shipmtnt ol IO curies ol mo\ybdenum being flown fn>m Kennedy Alzport )t> New Yort to Houston, Tei.. A curie is a measure of. radioactive matter. '!'be same plane, a ~ssengu Con- vair 880, then made eight more passenger flights with stops In five states be!.,. the cootamlnation was detected and the plane was withdrawn from service for decontamination. Florida DlvWon of llealtb -cJ\Oek· ed alrporla In Miami, Well Pallll Buch and Tampa lo mcuure levtll of.lll!iatloa and found -coocenlrltlonl. Giboney said """' -._ .. tllJ fllihl canjlng the radiolctl .. ~· ..... '1ound ....... of ~ -tamlnation." r-. Giboney said it.wu 0 stlll an open.quea.. . lloo"wbelhorluuag•wbidlwucarried ih the <oolaminaltd plane 'llOU!d'bave lo be calle.d In for ndioloiical testing. Bui be Aid be would discourage II based on the lest· .. sulta. ll'be level ol conlamlna!lon measured In the luggage compertment wu not much more !ban would be found In a pbfo1- cian'1 X-ray room, Giboney said. George Slltdd, an uslslanl -presl· dent for Delta In Atlanta, said the leakage was reporf.ed by Blo Laba, Inc. of Houston after it received the iao;<>pes - packed In two lead·lined containers weighing a total ol 860 pounds -fn>m Union Carbide ol Tuztdo, N.Y. Libya to Aid Malta In British Di.spate? , Graham: Dances ·. , , ' Cha -Cha·_ at Ball • OJ'Liherian Head Another 'U.S. Plane Lost .• Over. Laos SAIGON (AP) ~ 'An Air Force· 1"4 Phantom· ngbter·bomber was , !Oii over northUn Laos Frldaf and the \ two crewmen.,. mls>lng,. the U.S. Command . uld loc!•Y. '. · 'lbe supenonic jet ;went do.wn one d-.V after Ute United stale& ended live day0 or heavy air raids . over North Vietnam ·between flee. 2' and Dec. 30 . It ral5ed to •lt the number · ol U.S. planet Joat overLaoa m 'Nortb V~tnam In UtetllUl·tbr<e"!eeks cif'llecember with 15 crewmen mlalng aJ1i!1 ail: rescued, the heaviest American. air )Of¥! aince the bombing lialt mo.. than lhree Y.eah ago. The U.S. command sald Ute cause of MONROVIA, Liberia ·("-!') -'BWy 'the Joos was not known Graham borrowed a decora&lt and wltlte . The heavy· rakll . over the north were vest to.wear and danctd die cha cha. orden!d by l',uideol Nixqn· partly lo Pre!ldtnt :William Tolbert cama lale•ai!tt -· th thr t I N th VW.tpameae llayed lele •. And Pat N~ got Llbfldll's =•ce • e •a 0 O{UI-., lo .. _. ~---J.ti; anUaircraft defe.nies ahd . ?tf!G ln-hlg.,.., ......-atlon at TO bert.'a •-:Jn. ·terceplor. · attacklhg U.S .. 'plane 1 augural ball Monday·nlg ' operating along the Laos-N~h!Vietnam There WH•I gJ"and march; With all the bolder. Nlx&n has described Ute'ralds ., dl..st1nguiahed•f1uMts prom~d.inl. Then "very, very effective." dancing until;lfter midnight lo the'1!11fic . A· •JlOl<esman for the commaqd,, Capt. ~~i.i.t=-:=r.;r. rrun ~ri:,~~"~"';t;i.:1~~ The fe1tivitte~rcapped Tolbert's colorful termination of a aearch and rescue Inauguration.day. mlsaion. '111ere·.waa one sad·note,.however.'The D'Entmnont is.wed a statement presldent didn't dance because one,.of hi! •saying: · elght1clinc!ren died' three weeks ago. "An Ft ..., reported mlsalng -and Mn. Nixon· didn't-dance eitl}er. presumed crashed Dec. 31 in the upper Tolbert honored Iha American , First panhandle of Laoo. The · ca..., is Lady with tbe'Gi-and Cordon of.the Most unknown. Two crewmen are missing:" Venerable Order of Knighthood of the The Command give no other detallil. Pioneers of the Republic ol Lij>eria. D'En-said be did not·lmow tho In an elaborate citation to Thelma F4.'s specific mission. LONDON (AP) -Libya and not the There has been widespm.d speculation Catherine Patricia Nixon, be said that by Tbe<tpper panhandle' of !.!IOI would put soviet Union appears to be Maltese in NATO capitals that the SovJet Union triumphing over adversity in her early Jt aomewhere between tht! demilitarized Premier Dom Mlntorf's choice to replace might try to move in when the British life, she "became a llVing symbol of what zone and the ltth parallel. ' th B 't' h h' l'ttl Med'I a ean leave, but Mm· toll •·s •··· making Ute American dream can.be.''-·· . A plane operatiog In that area could be e n is tafs is 1 . e 1 err n iu:i ~ He called her a woman of "courage, attacktog North Vietnamese forcu on the island's bes oreign friend. overtures to the oil-rich Libyans instead. strength of character and fortitude of Plain -:-of Jars or conducting• bombing The British Defense Ministry said Moll-So far he appears to have 1otten spbit" whO ha'd exc~llid in everything raids against the Ho Chi Minh Tra11'111P" day night that Libya, with whom Mlntoff nothing but promlaes. 1he set her hand to. . ply network. has been in close contact in recent 1-----------------------------'-------------months, ordered the :'7-man British naval mission in Tripoli out by mid-January. Mintoff set Jan. lS as the deadline for the pullout of 3,500 British military personnel from his island, and informed sources said the Libyan action was ob- viously a byproduct. The BriUsh Foreign Office confirmed that it heard report! Mlntolf told his parliament he was prepared to call on foreign troops if British forces failed to leave the island by Jan. 15. It was widely assumed in LondoD today that the troops would be !Jbyan. Britain and its allies of the North Allantic Treaty Organiultion have said they would pay no more than $24. 7 million a year for use ol the naval base and landing fields on Malta, but Mintoff bu been holding out'fol"$f6.l.mllllon. ' . TAKE A MEMO ' ' . ·oo'ai:& AlllQYW:lbclu&d ihe M""' day tilowup of the Ca1lfomia Leglilllature in s.nmento for the tm electtm~year sesskil. Gee, I thought thooe guys had jult loft • ,, . ~didn't...., allow timelor the 1971 odorl lo clear. 'Ibipp didn't start off up there with all the mua1 N.., y.., good die..-and bud· dy-buddy .stuff. It started with a veto seuion. There wu great bellowing about all of the neat and wonderful bills that fell under GOvemor Ronald's ax. To the aurprtae ol nobody, however, In the end illere';were no overrides of the governor's vetoes. Bengalis JoYful on News Bhutto to Free Mujihur FR·o · -.. . US! Tbae were ,even some hints of unhap- pineaa with Reagan's veto ocliool wlthilll the Republicae ranks. ~ MURPHY, Jr., the GOP """1bly whip from Santa Cnl%, com. plaided from tbe floor that the veto of one ·o1. hla very own bllll "makes you want to throw up.,. So there. Yau can see things are off to the normal start !0< the Legislature. OUr winds may die down her< along the ~ 'lbey'll be replaced by a lot of hot air .,,,,,in& from Sacramento. DACCA (UPI) -It was the blggeot celebration in this city of MID,000 since Bangladesh won Its Independence Dec. 16. Cars honktd, people shouted, fire bells clanged, rlflea and automatic weapons ,.... fired Into the air and tbousands or Bengal1s pou..d Into the streeta. Tbt reason for the celebration was the announcement that the father of the new country, Sheikh Muc:-Rahman, was '!)Oil to·be released house amst In West Pakistan, 1,000 miles away. Although no date was set for his rel...., Pakistan Pr<sldent Zulflkar All Bhutto said Mujlb, aa: he is conunonly called, would be set free as soon as the two finish a series of talks. Mujib, head of the powerful Awami League political party, hu been held on treason charges since civil war broke out in East Pakistan last March. East Pakistan is now Bangladesh (Bengal Land) and its 7S million residents art free from the .rule o! West Pakistan. Its freedom was won by Indian troops and Mukti Bahini rebels in a 14- day war with_ Pakistan which ended Dec. 17. One of the major concerns of the new country's people bas been the release of Muj!b. When Bbutto told a crt>wd In Karachi, West Pakistan, llfonday he would let Mu· jib return home a spontaneous celebra· tion erupted in this capital city. Men, women.and children crowded into the streets s119!111ng "joi Bangla" (victory to Bengal) arid "Sheith~Mujib zindabad" {l..<lng Jiye Sheikh Mujib). Thousands of celebrant.! carried huge posters of their . leader. Cold Storm Smacks Nation Blizzard Warnings Effected for Panhandles IPl WllTM(l mocane v .s. .s ........... ,,. blut..,., ....,.,. ...,1". ,..01,... -· _,., ~ w .. ..,. ,..,,... "'""'" 111om1 ........ n-tlM f!Wft l.ewtr MltltlMft to .... #b"-,,,,. mtrllll'IL • • .. IU•l'4 "'91'111"9t ....,. lit .t*t fol',.....,,_., Ok"""'"9 WW.. T ..... ""' Oki~ ""'~ ...wr .,... ..... ~ ............ 194': Mlir.lmo '"""' HM MtJtb •1111 WtllM 91 MM Tt111l. frtYWt tM Mt...,. •twlnf """'-.,. .., tffK1 ""' ""'°' 9( "'-"'1tr1I a.ditn ..,.,.. ... Cllt" tf~ IN ~ l"a.lna fl; tfll> IMftoo ... _ (GW...,._.........,. ........ Nit ..... cw-. _,,......, T•.li ... =· ic-11'11 .11 ...... " s-.•-.r111u ,,,_, ....,, -...... •• 1:11 '""" ... , W8•00otT ,lnth5"' .............. 12.:asa.m. u """ -. . .. . . .. .. . ... .. .. ,,.... u ltclllW"""" ............ llJ~ ....... .... ...... ... ............ 4lt.1•.M• M • Remember to think of Keystone when you want the highest interest rates allowed by law for your savings! 5%~·· s!s=r..· '5~·· =~ .. =.:-4 '·· '' -... --- ffflj&. And if you want personalir.ed.service ~·your convenience, think qfKeystxm~SCtVfugsapin ... we think of you too, not ~yuur,~!. ..... ., .. ,, ... ~,- ......,,.," ·--....... to .. fnitn "' .&.it ..-JIWll,fftl. ""'r•••· ---=-=----===---------------------------------ir-MMl'I aJMl f i ll •A ... f 1»•A .. I s. .. day yao! letnam G Jn. an es ietnam aids as ,; Capt. enl g rescue ment -- Muskie to Make ' , , . Announcenie~t ·· 87 Ualltd Pfe11 1-11 .. al Sen. £dmund '· Mualde, who h., t traveled to aa ltat1111 •ipct September to ,huJJd eupport tor a bid tor the Jr reckage of 2 :Light Plqnes ·Found in Utah , . By '1111: ABS°'1.\TeJI P~ , k!lel ol a Salt Lake man and hit . ,i.up14r and, a s..,..., Utah, 0011ple llOve beeo found lri the WT«ka(e of two IJ&bt J>ilJltl Jn Utah, but a llllnl plane la 1Ull mlsainf in tho 1tata. · .--1lle vlollm1 wen E11&eoe LeRoy Luc.,, ·•$, of Salt Like Clb •!Id hit dau~r, Debbie, H, And Robert A. Andenoii, 31, ol SllNel and hla wU~ lalloona 31. Anderl0!1, the pralil<nt of Deve\_.nt · Corp. of America, and hit wile were nv- Jryg lrom Loe .Allfelea ~ Ogden, Utah, wheJi their plane cmhed Into ll,llOMoot LewlJtQo Peat QJ•r Cedar Jl'ort. · ' 'Ille -~•Je of the twin-engine ee ... .pa lit n1 •llhted In deep anow al the t ,:io0-1""1 JevefMooday by Civil Air Pa· tn>l pilot, WollganJ Ling an4 ob.server .. Pr. Vern Kilbourn . ' ' -.. Democratic no~tldn for· "P,raldent. IO'! on national t.levlalon lonlght to make Ills cand.Jdacy official. The Maine senator, whq wu the Denoci:ats' candide.te for Vice Prt&klent · In 1911il, , wtU air lib elgb~!1'1o•la an- nouncement at 5: 20 p.m. PST over CBS. He alreadY. la considered the lront·runner in the raci. - Muskie wilt become the seyenth an- llOllnced Dtmocratlc candidtla, joining Sena. Georre McGovern of Soulll Dakota, , Hanry M. llcbon of, Washington, and Vance lllrlke of lljC!iana, former Sen. EU&ene McCarthy of -la. and Mayon 8am Yorty of Loa Angelea and Jobn. ~ ol New York. The 1161 nomiuee, Sen, Hubert H. ijumphrey, plans to Jnfke hia announc~ent next M-y • Preslderit Nlxon came a step closer to dedariJ1I 1>lt Cllldidacy for t h e llepul>llcan nomination Monday when nominating, petllloJll .were IUed on bl1 bellall fer . ?{.., Hampshire'' Mardi 7 primary, the fin! of ll1' preald~tlal pr1nwy """"'"· . •. ' TIN Republican C911iriismen wlll qp- -NIJon m·New ~inpellire. They llT• Rep. John Ashbrook of Ohio, who baa crlilclaed NIJon for laUlng to keep . his prom1Ma to.~ativa, and Rep. Paul McCioskeY of California, who has at· tacl;ed lilxon lot falling to and American parttch>atlon in the IndOchtna war: ' ... I • Welfare Abuses · -Charged FDA to Study Drugs ' ur1 T~~ HE'S CONFIDENT-Now· . S.n •. H1rfk1 11>-lndJ NY Hotel Heist May Have Netted Gang $5 Millioll WASHINGTON (UPI! - CIUng a llUdy that found only WASHINGTON (UP!) -In ono-fourth of ilonprucriptlon one sta!>, the day·to-dor dl'll&I to tie effective. the '1'!1{""' lorlOS ara kept In bt<r I0"1J'nment today announced ~. The dlotricl 1ttorney • loftlJ-deltJ"d Pro Ir 1 m dee!gnoct to curb t h e in anqlher state refu5ea to 10. marieUoc of some home cept '!"lf•ra tr1Ud cua. In remedlff and the uagcer1ted New York, 'l'MI ewnuaa aak clalma of otjltn. wellara applicants hundreda of Contrary to the pubUc Im· queatlonl to determine 11 they 'preulon that th< government are elJ&lble tor benefttl. checks all medicines for sale- The , Health, llducaUon and ty and elfectlvenesa, Com· Welfare Deparlment Monday m-Charles G. Edwards described theae al1fj other o1 the Food and D r u g aspect.a of the nation'• hodge--Adm1n1Jtr1tton acknowledged ~a:e state and f e d e r a t thlt m o 1 t nonprescription welfare program -and saJd dnlg~ are not only unregulated one result is that a hall-billion by bis agency but unknown to ~nan is mlnpent each y..., IL by the 1,152 state and local of· "The FDA Is concerned that. fices invol~ in lM $9.& many present formulatlonl do bllllon program. · not have the claimed effect, It also &aid that nearly 29 have Inadequate lnstructJons percent of all welfare families f0t efte<:tlve use by the eon- are either inellglble for ~ny sumei:, or are promoted in aid, or are getting too much or dectptive and indeft.nslble too liWe in benefits. \\rays," Edwarda said. A preliminary survey baaed ~ FDA cited as "cause for on welfm cues in 4.1 stat¥, concern" 1 study of 420 oon- and repreaentlng haJS the na-prescription drugs by the Na· fion's 14.4 mUlion perso111 on UonaJ Academy of Sciences- wellare, ahowed th• t-in· Na.UOnal Research Council. eU&!l>Jlity was more than dou· The NAS-NRC concluded NEW YORK (AP ) -Police say the bJe • anything reported in that only approximately 25 loot from the smoqthly pro{es.sional New previous surveys. percent of the drugs reviewed Year's weekend he!st at the Hotel Pierre "The problems are deep, "had an indication that was Severe and worse t h a n already totals well over $1 million and represented here." said HEW cluslfiable as efiective," the unol{icial estimates ol the br.'JI were run-FDA said. . ~ r· t' th f" deputy U ndersecretary Edwards said t'--FDA was n1ng as muw1 as 1ve 1mes at 1gure. Richard P. Nathan Mond8y. . 111: ''How mucb did they get?, Jt'a like the Nathan declined to name tM oow divld~ng {he thousands of ' nual sales of nonpr-=rtptloo drugs are eatlmated at 'l.'1 ' billion. • ~ "~ ~ ~ lmDil how many <IVfl'o tht ·~tef dru&• are m1rke\td toif17. ~ estimates range from 100,000 to I00,000 --iloma," Edward& Hid. _,...·-- ' • •• ~ le" of t-drop have been •P' proved thnJ<ii)l lbe FDA's - d.rug procedures_ .. 'Ille JJ'DA ui<! tt -1d be 1'orirwhelmed .. K It tried to check each product' in- dlvidu¥qo, A111111lfttHrt Specl.t -011f Jt\ tit Y ..... W. ..... T"! Ml.tw.k ISn. tN• T•11n.f hfa. J tti,..p~ JI, 1t7t I I I I I I I 1ELLUSWHATYOUWANT.TOPAY: I •J!!. •a· !~.•IO~.!t .... ~ : . .. HU.. a )fWll a ,,O,L& Dehan l ...,,ee .. .,.._..I•'-Ill.ff ht I, J, er 4. on Fri., s.1." Holidays, ~;•2.00. I I ' The slngl~ne Mooney owned by Lucas crashed in a pasture one mile · 11orth ot-8cipio about 7 p.m. Sundav while "'~n route from I>ouclas, Ariz., to Bounti-;ful, Utah. Area realdents raported seeln,1t the pline durln& a severe bllzzard and bear- Mccloskey and UJe. Democratic Na- tional Commltlee Monday asked CBS to grant tliem fQual time to respond to Nix· On11 bou.r-long teteviaion interview on the network Sunday ftlghl. Joseph A. Califano, lawyer for the Democratic commtttee, said in 1 letter to CBS lllal ~ a)l Jiut aonounced his In- tention to l!eek l'Hlectloo and "used lhe -to-trumpet tho porfonnance·of · hit administration of the Issues that will be paramount during the presidential campaign Ulla year." market -, flexible," said John Keeney, stale> he cited as examples of nonprescriptlob medicines Into •RINQTHI$ COUPON. OJa"NT DISX ~Oil CllfCI( IN the ho~l's securi~, chief. "At the mo-having i n 8 de q u 8 t e ad-26, ca.tegor1ea. Separate scien--~ ' , I ment it• going up, ' ' minlstraUon • tif1c panels will slUdy each SUPER, i;UN PACKAGE I· ' Gabrielle Llgerwall, the socialite wife But Ii< ~d that suspected category and Issue aalety aQd -•,:": "'.-..w,. 1;,Q;~\;;.;,;;;.; '°" J ol a SWlSS odman, was apparently . f.raud remains at less than e!fecUveneSI standards for .it, ~...,':':;:h-':"~;~~~ , ·I among the biggest losers when the gana: four-tenths of 1 per c e 0 1 he J,aid. ~,.--,'1',.,.. . ran!acked 47 safe deposit boxe1 ~rlj Nathan blamed -of the 1n: To remain on th< market 1 rraa TY; 11 Paell, 14-llr. RultillHf, 1~ Iii' cut, l•drlts-I ;,.• h mah. .. It was found Monday by rancher Jay H. Memmott when he went to investigate where hil cattle c1ustered. The Utah CAP said search would re- twne In the li-formon Men area when wuther permits for a plane flown by Robert H. Montana. a Scottadale, Ariz., auto dealer. . ~ plane c1rryln1 M9ntana, bil wife, two IOlll and a friend of• a son bar been mlslin& 1ince ~··If., · An aide to McCloskey 1ald the .eoneraaman would carry his case to the Jl'edetal Communlcatlona Commislion U McCiqskey Is turned down by CBS. .Sunday .morning. Police .uid .be Jost eligibility on • • h 0 n e 1 t each drug would have to con-ti lll!lr-. lllUMlll~. II*-CUip,~ IJt!W,. '500,000 m 1ewlery, partly msured . _ mistakes" either by agencies form both its formula and ~re~ of .detectives press~ an In-or recipients and said "roore claims .to the standard, or p~ vest1gat1on into what Pohce Corn-than haU w~e agency er-vide independent scientific mi.l&ioner Patrick V. Murphy called "one rors." proof of every claim. of the biggest robberies in the city's This l n c I u de 1 mi.tun-Edwards estimated the pro-h~tol')'/' but there was no reported pro-deratandlng of the welfare ie:ct would ~·· 1t.,le1at three gre1s. • , rules, changea in f a m i I y ye"1•· The New York Daily News said ~Y circuJ111tance1 that are not 'Mli! prosram coven all that investigators believe the sang may reported quickly enough to af· druga aold. "over the ·counter," bt the ali:ne one that hlt Uie Karbor feet ·payments or agency or wit.bout pre:acriptlon, ·rrom Island Spa , a Mlam! Beach reaort hotel, miscalculation of family Uvlng antacids and antipenpirants The ll'OUP h~ no,.p I(O!I) P"""1~ to Lia Vegaa and 11ai·e~.r~ to Parlt.Cliy, Utah, for a aldlll1 v1c1Uoit. 1or P milliolt in cash and jewelry oc expensea, outside income or to -laxativu.,-contracepilv.e _ '--------'-----,,,,,-.,,--ljiiiiiiiiiiiii'M'iardiiij~i3iit, !911il. payment levels, HEW said. producta and toolbpallesi.iAin-iiiiiiiiiiijijijijijijiji;ii,ijiiiiii"iii Mu.kl< and l.lcCartby llled petitions at Sprlllgfleld, Ill., Monday to ]>lai;e their ·-on the lo!arch 21 Illinois pr .. i<!en-ollil 9rJmary baUol. McCarthy refused to $1(11 • loyally oath regulred . by Ullnoill 'itaWJaw. Ex-GE 1.President ·." .. 7 ... :i-•. -··· 1 ~ •. Wil~:4~f ~ ~. ·ttmbs • \ ' / _,..,._, if . ',, I I "1 1 t . • • . t" .. ., ' . ·-... ~. _,.• .BllO~/N..Y. 1AP) Wllaoll was ·oflen referred to ::;1.'!Jhiii• Eitw.ril WU1'11>"· u "'Engillt ·Charlie," GE's blljeved~ JiOel peopli,.#· Wllian llOcame known 11 (10.•fo ., •hlll'-!tiOY •Willt -·f E!ecVic :Cfl'rtio. •: "doii' k'i.,# ~ to · Ao iiead of G.nenH!;Iec\cic, ~Q tho~~a>Jl!!t~ WillOil """ maldnMlff1tot'-l · '*'-"°" ·~ ·1¥.t ., Y•ir ~ P<ml'eiil ~ wl!l"iile · IJiert. · · • D. "°'*'elf call.Cl' on blm 'l!l Wilm· ~ '·Wet'bd ' to fMl lo takJ ,Iii •t+Y."!i pi..i """"' i ... ~. alid'. bla lebora u YiCe ""'1rman '9' Ille w tooi •liln\ . ' oloCJ 1>Q1 lo J>roclilctioo iloatd. ' ' ,. ~'-. oel""1 lpl.... in 1wo =y.U, or1 thi· IJOit4, MARTIN.'$. FURN·ITURE . ,. . ' -~ HERE IS A LISTING OF ·ONLY A FEW OF OUR ·oUTSTAND· :'!MG , IUYS~, YOU'l,L Fl('ID HQ~ DRED.S MORE.. E9UAU Y WELL ; .. l<;ED • . . . $Ll•P SHOP SPICIALS .,~· . ' ' ' ., . . ". ' . LIVING ROOM ~-,.F..-1~ Sl-1' sN~ ',SHly Q1"1t 5uprtmo ... Pc. IJ /J ~r 4/6i $ 4f.'5 SHly Quilt Supromo. Ouion Sot ..... ~ .......... SU,.SO l I • ... Suly Quilt Suprom• King Sot ····-··-········.$17'.SD ' ' . .. lrle·O..·• le ~ .. poii .. u . he waa able lo' ~·tilt the. &O)'~m s )nduatrial productioD of milJ,W1"11raalt motil1IUr • Wodd war n to ·~ 93~ 1n 19\t~ an4 Jhe K . cidll<t· . real Ja)!r lllai year> alljm 7 ;awti di Monday m a sert.a:&·~ illth.'<ltber Suly Goldin Guard u , Pc. IJ/l or 4/61 $ 5~.fS 7 Pc. Co..-plete Living Room Group ,., . I ,_ ' e .Sofo' 9" & !4"· . ~ '!.'..lfolPltal at a~e 15, pn>ducli90 lii>!id ~I • ~e· Id 6iillorary l!egreei-ltom . I · 21 colleg~ and WU.veralties His perform~ ··~~IO l'n:'" de$plle tlie facf that he lefl praS31ve. thal l'Rii~.Harey •• ~.1 f the ·•·h" .•. s Truman named bJm cllred<!I'. ~~ 1· ter ._..,. gr~ of lhe Olliqe 9~ Dd. to tate that nnt aff!u boY • Moblltsatlon · during t h·e JO~uaon·i apeclal (aHl lay in Korean conftlct with .11111 hl• ablDtr J!! fO!ve compla In-1 u t ho r 11.f 1 n d tu 11 dullrial ~ to ayn-reaponalblllty u W 11 1 o n thaalle , ........ , of wlllited. ' . , · ' ~~-the Pftsident EiJenhoww ·Pk:l!r ~:\ri\:.~b ckly' ~ •• • ',.i, 1fl~ ln.IllM to bf pres> at a declalotl • " • · deiltl of jhe People to People lie wu.~ Ip~ wi)lt • rtwidatll>•>wblch promoted Oiat)eo J!:i,rln "Wlllion of I It~ Wldern,ndlll~ <'q-,a1:~QIQ(a. ,;~~~· ·d~. tll, COid war. • . • u ~ «'-~~ ~ , !JI 1'•ar•, W}llo!I Uvt,d p re1·fd;o nt .~ D." In le, N.Y. Hli Ylle; Eilenho'Wer. ' Jk¢ap». GM'i ·.. lb1 _died a year 110.-!:. •, . P~pp~Clfr)e l;l~fomtl?j~~: i;. · ·OWsl COUNTY RESIDoo· cootR · • ) .... . . . I:' ' . " . . . , • Cofr, fl~. HIGll SC!'09L REGISTD NOW THROUGH :.JAN. J 4th FOR MNING CLASSES IN: luiln•ll• S.cl•l,.y', P1y~ology,. . hlih 1.4, •• , • .; ... t. . . ' EVENING GRADUATE CLASS~ - IEGI~ FEB. 7 . ' E~ .. tl•11-,. , AU COURSIS MAY II Af'PUID TO' DIGUD. Loclll•: I .,u, south el tho Son 01190 Fuew•r etl • .., Ftlrvltw • • lllFO•MATION: 17141 5~6-J,ll orPoulluclday, 171 41 7lJ-'IHI . F\lliy Accrodltod by tho WOJl1tn Auociotlon ti Scho~ll ind Coll19n _ \ ' • ' •' t.iili°hillv ~ ..... ~t _ _ _ R,9. ,,1 • 1 §U.QO_ ,JCu11dm Quilh~I00 7."NyTon . ' Swivel Rocker or Club Ch• ir e Coll11 T oblo e Corner T .ble ' •'Hex Table • T.oblo Limp . ' . SALE 1195.00 SAVE 228.50 LIVING ilOOM . 100" LooH P;Jlow Bock Soi.. GrHn l Gold Horculon .... IClooo °"'I $1t9.IO f · I ft.Medit1rr111~•n ~Gold Velvet, Cu1tom Quiltec:J ' , 90Rf-t~::;.if 1!!..'i;:~kS.~ v~i;;;;·oj 1;;·5j;·i·;~·.-· r·,-.... ·····•·· .s.r. $1tS.oo R19. Prico $179.50 ········-··-··························-········· .... ,.,-.•. s.11 $3J9.IO HURRY I. 60"·M1tching lont Soot ....................... ~··-··············•·····-'····· ...... Salt ••'·'° loO" Solo. Cu1ton1 Qul~od ISoutorno VolvelJ. Rog. $llf.50 _..Joie .$2ff,IO 60" M1tchin9 LoYO 5"t .................. ·····················-·····-·•-.··'····· .. Q4t,SO 9 Pt. ,StfL Tit·Dy• Velvet. Choice of color' & f•bric.s. T~x•cl• We ..Qn,or . 1l''. ~Stet to M!"dt ----········'·---~-·-·-······················-·············c--,$21t.OD 14" s.t., Roy1! Coach. I.DO ~,Gold Nylon Volvot. R19. $695.00 Solt $,4J.O.QD I I /·Z ft. EfrfY.A'!'•ricon "(ing-lola. Nylon Fobric. Rog. t299.so SOit $24t.so CHAiRs, RoCKIRS & RECLINERS · 'l.o ... lfy •"!!!•en 1t Big S~vln91. " Every lt .. ~·loy In store Cli,c.ou"ted Jrom ···-···-··----·-~··-··-·····-·$30.00 Mp te $75.00 FOR BEST BUYS • 1 M1pl1 Sw1vo) Rlc,k .... ,Kttdtt*'!<itd ........... -..... ,,$5t.95·ft. ••• Z hr •lJD.00 . ~=~:~.~C:::'tt.;;,;;:·ii;y;j·C;,-;~h°'i·i!~;~-~j·~~·jij;j;j'j ..................... $ n.H SOMI R19. il6s.oo ......................... ·-··-···-········-··········--·-··-····'···.2 ,.. un.so 111Ms Oee. CWt I Rod Pl1idl Reg. $ li9.50 -···-···-··-··--····· .. ····c::i.a. tut SI lt.00 LIMl1ID .sJ!._ni~h Swi¥tl lock~•tk oek ~inlsh. , ~ Many fobrld I c.llo" '··'-···"'·-·'·--········· .. lltfNductory SP"lil j ,t.ff' C)l'IN H(9h~1ck Cid Chlro ·Milo~ Volvo! -··-········ ... ·•· ............... -... ·-··· n.IO Hlgn lock'Wl19 Cllelr-Royol Cooch .,. , DAll.Y •C..w!ry,En9lidt-Sprin9 Down Cu•hlon. R19, $25'.SD .......... Clou OUI $17t,fO. ',. ' 1130 '' -I ' DINING ROOM 4 '" Tll•111•1vill1~t-Qiino1 ~" ....,...,....., 1.11" li111, .f••r sldo culn ···-··-.. ·--··-··-..... :_. ___ ··-······---'-······•CIOl1 Otlt fJH,00 I'"° ltah11'1 ~rovinciel-Chin.-OMI T•I• ~ 1icl1 ch1ir1. • I°''" e h1in. R19. $609.00 ··--··············-······-<·········Ci.. Oolt 1 Pc, Mttflttrr•nttn, Tnttle TIMI 4 1id1 ch1ir1- . ,1 """ ~,,,, !···---.. ------····--········-......... ct.. °"' pn.so I Pc. ... t:dlterttl'!tl1t St._llu :11 .. ,,~ , ..... wii '2" ltef, Mn.IO. PllDAY ' .. ' 4 sldo cholrt ~•9· ~199.50 -·-·-········-·•··-·---------..W. •Ut.10 "1....i. T•l~~onol Typ-With 6 Lnv .. -Pocon. .,,.. fl4'.5o ... ,,~-·-··········-·····-·····-··· .. ··············•············· .. --Salt $27'.IO •---'' • 1165 HARBOR BLVD. • DOWNTOWN COSTA M!SA • ----- j/ , _}Hjy Goldin Guord Quton Sol --···"··'··,Jl7f,H ---. ..... - SHly lioldon 6uor4 King Sot .~.·-·-·-······$24;,IO Simmon• Goldin Volu......,Ouilted • ll/J or 4/61 , .. _ .. , .•............. , .. -... ·--·····.$ 55;00' Slmm•n• 6'old1n Voluo Ouiltod'Quto•. S·ot $Uf.IO Simmons lioldon V1luo Quiltod Kln9 Sol •.• .$32'.IO · Slmmon1 houty,R .. t, ... Pc. iJ/J O! 4/•I $ lf:fl 'SimmOns l••uty.Rest Qu••n Stt .~--.: ..... : .. _.$249.95 Simmon• IHuly·RISt Kin9 Sot ................. J$Ut.SO Ortlto Col"f~ ltod-Mod. Firm, Twin ,Sot •;···-·····----····-·· . . .., -. ~ . . ( . .. Ortho Con1fort-quilt1cl-Mod. Firm Fvli Sl10 4(6 Set __ ::: •• ..-:-.•• Ortho Comlor1:-0ullt1c1-M1<1. Arm, QuHn Sot···-····-··-····· .. ·········•• Ortho Comlort-Quilt1cl-Mod. Rrn1. King Sot ....... _ ................. -···-$1H.IO .... t. ' ~ -~ . llD ROOM ComP.l•j• lof Room,Group .Spoci!'frM•~iffrron11~. DrolHr, Mi"°'' • •: Kin9 s1 .. HHdboord, 2. Night St••J•.-Kin.11 $; .. S11ly M11tra11 Sot, ~ fr•me, 2 .. t.r:p•. 2 ICht9 Silt Pillow~, Sh~••f•: ·'lllaW C.'"• lle"ket. .. , .. elc. Cofl\Pfoto-19 Pc. Rog. fl91.l0 ···-~·'-·····-'"'' '6tl.OO .... $ff%!lt . 5 Pc. !t11i1n.Provhici1I Ohomt-Dru1or. Mirror;' r.t•••·· ' • Kin9 l;tt1d)oord. Ro9, 'HJ.ID ~·······-., ............ , ..... -.•.• ~ci.. Oot $199:11 , I ' ' ' ,,,,,._ • Pc. Mtdlttrr•n••n Sti-Drester1 2 Mirrors, i St1nd1, ·~ " . .. Kt~g f111db11rd. R•9· •nt.10 .... .:..: •....... _ ....... :..-, .... Ci... o.t ....,." . ' S Pio Th~ •• ~;11~ Metllterra~u S1t..:....i2" Door Drt••tr-Mlrror, • 2 Comnio4.1, Kin9 Hoodboord; Vory Spociol• -·---.. -... ~ .. -···.'8U,tf U.rgo Armolro le Milch Abevo ··-··-·--··--~---·-·· .. ·-$1n:11 s....i ...,.....,. _,. ,., . ..,. .i. Glrla et ,., ..... sm .... ~ etli• 1'11••••· lreyloll; l•l•ll Ill c.i.111opo'111 Hot• Dlscnus;, '' PKO.NE 548·5131 • •:· .. • •• o'vE it. 17 YEARS OF sOVlCI • • ... DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Illegal, Silly, Etcete.ra , Orange County Sen . James E. Whetmore (R·La lfabra) suggested last week that the state ought to Ii· cense newsmen and establish educational atandards for the editorial employes of the media. The proposal revealed that even attorneys and leg· lslators would benefit from occasional refresher courses In the basics of the American system of law and gov· enunent. Senator Whelmore's proposal must he faU!led on at least three point!: · -It is illegal. -It is unnecessary. -It Is silly. As numerous courts repeatedly have ruled during the past 190-plus years of the republic, any form of licensing of the press by government could only inhibit the free flow of Information, Ideas and opinions -and e$~1ally criticism of government -which is a con· stitutinnal foundation stone of our democratic processes. ' . · ~· for higher education standards for reporters and .editors, Whetmore is simply out of touch. College . degrees may have been the exception in newsrooms a hall-century ago. Today, college degrees are the rule, and advanced degrees are common. ,- hi! first concern migbt he to llcense and set educational standards for those who run for pollUcal office. But that would be equally foolish, for our hlltory shows clearly that not all wisdom Of statesmanship or left.- latlve excellence derives from formal education. On h& contrary, some of our greatest men and women ~ave lacked extensive forinal eOucation. · Perhap& the genUest •uggestion to Whetmore from those who abhor the dead hand of fovernment would he that he re-read the Constitution o . the l,ln!ted States that he swore to uphold when he bec1,me a lawyer. Its First Amendment reads In patt: "Cong;r~ shall make no laws . , . abridging Ille freedom of , , • the press." It means precisely what it says, ; News, Good ancl Bad FinanciaIJy speaking, for the average Californian • there's both good and bad news this week. Paychecks will shrink under the impact of state income tax withholding and, in most cases, resumption of federal deductions. On the good news side, Verne Orr, state finance director, said last week that -despite a $7 billion-plus budget -he sees no tax increase in 1972. Orr attributes this to tbe revenue generated by a stronger economy, plus a fiscal cushion created by a $501 million payroll withholding tax package. foT . , Whetmore also proposed "seU-policing" by the media, both print and electronic. Here he is on the right track, but again he should have looked before he lip~ed. He would have learned that few AD'ierican institutions of aoy kind •pend more time and effort, individually and through their organizations, on self-aoalysis and re· seatch aimed at seU·lmprovement. An overall rejoinder to Whetmore would he that To his list of New Year's resolutions the hard· pressed taxpayer should add a prayer -that Orr is right. · .... ~~~ t1Hf ~lffrnfK(f SHWfEN UI, SONJ IS TllAT JM TOXIC, A~KTIVE1 AND LE6AI! The OM and Young Need Each Other Businessmen Ta·king It on the Chin Dear Gloomy Gus Cloudy View From Executive Suite _, ' I , I've been readJng, and enjoying, a new biography-of Martin Buber, one of my great guides through the wlldernesa <i thought. The book jacket bears a p}\qtograph of Buber which I would like to ha\rt for my own. fJere is a face of a man in his 80s, and Instead ol adding one more siUy prellx (Ml.), why don't these lib- . erated womea; -and newspaper society pages -simply drop all designations and refer to a woman by her given name, thereby achiev-ing true equality. -. -G.W.T WASIUNGTON -The Amer I can busin~an is taking it on the Chin hard the1e day11. How leaders among them react makes an interesting study. The retiring chainnan of GeneraJ Motors responds in defiance of detractors. The sun chairman of the Chase Manhat- tan Bank caUs for change. Both mmhall • good deal of sense on their side and BUT GROWING OLDER does , have, their views are a aod abould have,· a beauty of U. awn, i( pleasant relief from the ijlirit r'einalot vibrant and tl!e. tntod t!Je pleasan!ries of . ~nl!, ~ ~. ~1clerle,. iolf-pralae from the features ol ~il"'f-l!ave • blai,t¢ d.(1.1 • mi... a<lfulnlma- besuUful -beautJ. ful with character, with spirit, w It b humor, with under.. Blanding and COD>- ""'5ion. And wit~ a l<lnd of "youthful· ness" one rarely , aees in the lacea· of young people today. ~enl •tlrallllvenm or theli ~bill l!Oo, In the closing Clays ol 1971. That , no ~ does the weatherechface • . ~~ complat;ency >I• only. matcl)<d by the -!"11eti.Jl w JeawdJrom exper1en6.. opUmllJll <i economlats }"I><!, from Tok· • . "101 mcirtl'y'~ l,he ca~ve o( i!v yo, Loiidpn and WublJliloli, .are fore· . ~ · · . Older pecij>le ~d try ID k~,")'O~ cuUng llM\\ 1972'.will !'"'a .,..11 year. While I was read.-Ing the book, Picasso eelebrated his 90th birthday, while Pablo Cauls COil· dueled an orchestra at the U.N. in hlf 95iji year. Their faces, too, while not as n.1iant aa Ule aalntly Buber, were likewise alive with vilallty and strength and aensltivlty, · ·{Jn a bute aenae' -I~ the eense lhil · Al'·the top of the American corporate Buber wis stil1 sub~lmely childlike when ·heap It may be acknowl~ed that profits be· dted ....!. b.ut not in a cosmetic sense; and growth will be BOll'lt better but that ,not ,in ricing frantically to keep up wJth wop,'t mab all the problems go away. ~the 'wbJrlig.lg.. of fashion, or, dtnyb:lg the The view from the eiecu·uve-suite.ls sun encroacbrilenti of •ge with 8rtlfkei and cloudy. · ~ · . devices that dives! them of innClr dignity. . : : . .f. ' • MANY, IF NOT MOST, older peoJlle may have forfeited the right ID-reaP¢ from youth, but this does not mean tl\8.t · age itself, and the aging.process, lito'tie demeaned or despised. The ·loveliest ttee ST AR11NG FIRST with JamM M. Roche, retiring chairman· of General Motors, Ute problem ls seen as a drastic loas of publiC confidence in American in- sUtuUons, especially among the yoW1g. The objective is mt to improve those insUtutions, including business, but to destroy them and start over again. In spite of producing a quality of life still envied the world over, the American young are turned off° on bwliness. Roche's view through the glass grows darker. The clamor of criticism and snarls of distrust reflect an alteration in the American character. Opporlunity labs &econd place to security and more lei!ure, Worl! I& shun· ned aa men! drudil.-Y. Productivity Im· prove.ment la spumed u a speed-up to produce more prolll! from enslaved labor, • ROCHE RETURNS again and again to the urgency of wotit and striving ID Icy to maintain an American i n d u 1 tr i a I leadership.which Is so often denigrated as too great in social costs to be worthwhile. Work, work and more work is Roche1s message to generations which have begun to doubt the old copybook maxims and 1neer at the "puritan work ethic." Roche's analysis of the problem is not bad, but he has no anrwe.rs except driv- ing home to every'¥1-e the idea that on our property is an ancient. gnarled 1 "business is all o( us" aJ¥.i businessmen must not permit this great institution to be pushed into disrepute. "We must look more at all that is right with America, concentrating on the many blessings we enjoy" and make a "conscious effort at unity." A somewhat more sophist ica led analysis is made by David Rockefeller, chairman of the board of the Chase Manhattan Ban.It. He acknowledges that American business is facing its most severe pubUc disfavor sinte the 1930's, but with a difference. The old popu]Js~ new deal Ntack focused on size and monopoly. Today's criticism focuses on perfonnance. Corporations are making commtutlties dirtier, they are too heavily preoccupied with proHta at the expen.t of sociaJ purpose, · minorities ·d-o n • t participate fully, waste goes uncheCked, output is unfit for or unworthy of human use .. IT IS AU.. VERY .well, accotd.41g to Rockefeller, ID answer in kiDd e1'clla"iin« invective for invective but· thJs \fill get nowhere. Business. must examine itseH and r~pond to ,valjd criticism. Greed·iS not sufficient mo~vaUoo . Rockefeller proposes great social in· volvement _while ,IX\lking a profit. Uke the great banking inatituUon ov~r lfhich he presides, his Ideas are very large. He sees consortiums of business providing capital, iMOvation, analysis, and technical competence for the solving of great problems. His own favorite project is the development of the hundreds of new towns, satellite cities and new com .. munities within existing cities to ac· cornmodate 75,~1'boo more Americans who will be here oy the year 2000. Beyond such practical m a t t er s , Rockefeller introduces new social con· cepts. For example, in addition 10 an an· nual financial statement corporations may be required to submit a social audit of aecountability for their contribution to the common welfare beyond making a profit. BE ANTICIPATES riew laws forcing corporations to consider the "Quality of life dimension" sO that the more IOCially responsive flrma Will not auUer a com· petitive disadvantage in relation to othel"I making no social'contribution • An even •more revoluUonary concept 1calls for .,government directed investment of capita) erppnslon in which projects not high enough bO the "social agenda'' would have to takt..'i009nd place. Rocke(eUer Is talklng'1ltolll ' ne)I' J<in4 of capitalism. Roche is talking abOut the older kind of capitalism and how to ap. preciate and defend it. BoUt are talking about how to make capitallam work and are giving it more constructive thought than some of the peers in government. WHAT I RESENT most about the "young" movement today -while s)lar- lng mosl of It& crllicism of the elder generation -ts it.! eqUation of temgoral ypµth with spiritual youth. Plus tbe, lm· jlu(:aUon that nobody except the young. ls reall)i allradlve, or worth looking at. · Th!&~lmpllclt (and often explicit) ·am. tempt !or qe u .uch is ah ugly bart,iarism as untrue as ft. ls insensitive. Its prevalence and Intensity , tiu made older people understand something about the force of discrimination (and thls is all to the good), but ii hu alao put a false premium on YQUthtuJ looks aa a virtue·in o"'1t whose splendoris unrivaled by any of · thestraigbtyollllgbifche.s•lill·,untou~. U d t d. Ch.Id' p . t f v· ~~:d:~~r;!~~t-~= .· . n · ·ers an 1n.g 1 s 01n o 1ew ll!ell. • it is as ab!urd and self-defeating an ,at .. tltude as repression of the fUtUre. Tl)e old and young need each other As much , is any· p·o 1 a r j t y needs tKith opPoeltet to maintain a fruitful tensi9p. When we eeaae to.see tbe beauty that Is po11Ible In age, we wither the very roots of OW' Own etistence. • Events ar we know them take place in the nervoua systems of human beings. No e\lent iii an objective fact Independent of all evaluator. So· taught .,Ufred Korzybski (18711-1950)1 the f OU n de~· of general 18mantica. This principle Is worlh remembering in our dealings with •· Kites and Power Lines diUdten. No Otrut- mas present, no gOodnlght hug, rio cross word, no book tells the lollowbtg experience about the evaluative process:: .. One ·day I wasn't functioning very well as a pareni In fad, I was being lousy. I was getting dinner in a hurry. Alan wu lnlerferlng with what J•·had to do and pestering hl• younger brother, wbo__•began· ID cry; and I 'WU getting shorter and ahorler tempered. And 1 thought, 'This Is loo much, He really must learn that people have other things to do.' "Kite weatber" sent eigJlt..year-old Jimmy into an open field to try his luck. Using a thin copper wire for a string, he soon had his box kite scudding into the sky. Then, tragedy. Jimmy's kite crossed a high-tension power line and deadly voltage crackled downward, killing him instantly. · C.ou1d tbe power company be held legally liable by the boy's family? In a court hearing, they blzmed his death on the fact that the high.tension 1ine had not been Insulated. However. the court held the company not responsible. The judge saJd Jimmy's use·of copper ,wire instead of an ordinary ' atriilg WU too UDU!U&I to have been !oreaeen and CJl!'d!d, against. ' CoURTS GENERALIN agree ·that polf« companies cannot be expected to take ptecautionr 'Ip Inst freak accldients. Nevertheless,. attic» •ledrlclty Is· such a dangerous producl, they do carry a tilgher·t~••·•v•rage burden of ... pomlbiltty. In .IDOtbei' CIM, a boy's kite snagged On •'power ~ When he climbed the · Quotes •;;,, read aloud, exists !or the participants without an evalua- . · tion being Involved IS 118 most import.- Jiit ingredienl In . every situation be- pole to retrieve his kite, be touched "1l, , 1)feen parent and uninsulated line and suffered a bad bunr.r'tj; dlild, evaluaUons are. involved, and This time, three factors I weighed • . tbe$e interact on each other. My wife agaIMt the company: , i ,' 1' ' I) that the pole was rigbl next to • 1 playground: 2.) that it had low steps,. easy for · l children Jo climb: "1d , 3) that no DANGER signs had been . pos~d. · · First Class • ·f- "MY TENSION must have com- muolcated tl!elf tO him, beeau,. he got more uncontrolled 1UJd ftsenUul. And because I wu feeling tired 1 was choos- ing ID run -.IJ>ID what I evaluated as deliberately annoying behavior on the part. of Alap. ~ J utd, this was one ol the days '1111~11 j(Ull'l at my be.I. · A court dul,y awanled damages ID the Injured boy, saymg thit tbe oompany ciluld l&lrly bave foreseeo this kind of an ac'cident. "Well, thlnp 'kepi on In this state ol unplea~ unU~Alan eame over and put' h1a hel\l •oQ' rtii lap, and I felt his head, "and ·I · Jultilied up and got the thermometer and.~vered he had a Dwl&JI~ m., Siar ... Jlenl4:. "ijke . te;ni>ersture of 'IQ!.-So Immediately I . . began ID · evaluate. his behavior di!· AND TREE CLIMBING ,ls even more .pnost "l1 nowspapert, this Jllll<l' II ferenUy. What-WU.Jntolerable lnnoyance loreseeabl~ th~.!'<>~• cllm'bJrii. lbw: melled' under a _.i.cJiw·, postal became simply ,11)'!11p1Dm of bit mn .... A boy cot•"""" frOft\ ID1Wllnsullted P.nniL out In' Red i'..odge; Montana, . "'Now, ·Wbei>•'..Y Of the children'• wb Ire ~t f ~ 1 ~ f~-,"'!!!! JlubU.her Wall;' Oldi didn't Uk• the sound behavlcr ....,,. lo.I.me unheu,1bly ••· ranc.~ o ·a tree· D "vn O f1lJ" ·~ of 'aecond class' applied to his Mw1paper 1 ~ i -1 Sued later tor damagea, theJIOWer com-In • w ......_ form andor · ..._ • , , t ' P.t/l)'polnJedout'tbottlteraow~noth=, µ1tt'!'t.?'ibal•"" · '1n.if.Jl'u;; · Sf-,fie01'9e ---. thi --.... = kl~ no ..,,. • of •• ,,~ Jt •· ..:.., · -· -· •'· • -.......... -'1"' ' ....... • 'OJ1"9~ ..ca .. !.,""" Mt ente1w , > ,n...~ "~·". kitte11, .!l" 1einp fnllH* wotlld at the poet oaq,•!dr ·Oldu1dded·"'tbls """'· ~"F ' Jusufy t110 \,Oy, vent'l\'O 111._ -~!lll-11 • RIMl'·:l!LA5'iMIJCATlofl en-. · ·'"1-•"'l·lo·• l!illnlat rio •mu.ed ' · But lhe eourt held the cam,any lilhle tereci' aa·~11>11lt«'laldiw'Mtof ,,,.. b •tolJliiit• amrsl thlnP anyl!ow,ll>nllisju<lglacllw!l.,'Jl.l\!lre. ~· etc. etc• Son\e~ n" ~.haft~ ID ma ID the ·-n. i-1a1 liilii4 ot..,.... "°" • round It ..t. rooa ~ Ille) tOlil • 1 ' ,... wi.t. lo llila w.. _, ID clbnb Ires, uld the 01111i!. 1'1s • "'•b o "•t lfl\i ..!.:., .. lilt -· eal.ltdt ... bablt wldcb '°'11oraliefts ~ ~ • • "'-• · ""' ~...,... . f , " BAFFLED Wires over IJ\Cb !rm m..I tw DO!Jce Iha\ wornlng, he wbuld havo, lilt l"'1 !Int-Dur l!olfled: or " cla11 postage for malling hla paper. And It 11 c,alled "ForteUlng the Put." · Mr. Qld.! II.Id ID chant• U.. "°rdiW to It •·-•-M~ ~---••y It An A....m.n Bor Anodoti<m l'Mi>-conform mono llllcUy lo the Wretocralio allo 'batn;:... '";;; .. ;..;;;Ji? ' II<: ........ /oat~ro b~ Will Bernard. d!Qlalel. Bui "'-1he ht made !Iii polpt. • I noying I say to myseU, 'Suppose you discover he has a temperature of fOt? In that case there would be no question of bearable or unbearable.' So when I get into a situation like this, I am bei11g a naive parent, the kind that operates with little conscfousness of the part his own evaluations play in aeating the situation in front of him." THINK OF THE evaluations with which we browbeat our children! "Eat your custard', Jt•s· delicious." "That old wheel is dirty; put It down." "Come, here and say thank you. Your Aunt Be.ssll: won't bring you any more .Presints ~ss you say thank you." "That's just at,.. tenllon-getthig heliavkir'. Ignore It." "'Stop that crying. 'lbere~ nothing to cry about." These are mHd examples. We needn't descend ID !be shocldng level.I ol rudeness, strident commands, a n d physical violence which you can see any day ih a :rupennarket or playground. These represent the politer sins of forcing one'• awn evaluaUou oo the child -or trying to. "'I11l11custard Is delicious." ''That is at. tentio.n-gfi:tting behavior." "There ls no ttaaon ID ery." Is. Is. ls. 'l'!\i. objkllve fact IUJ>l'Ol1ed bi' the sire and power of the parent. And no awarenesa thlt...ucb of tb.,e statements contains a n evaluative factor. No uylng, 'iThlt Is how I evaluate it, Does the chUd evaluate It that way?" IB A PRESENT ljeslrable because ti cost a lot of mooey! 11 the dlrllntu the important ..thing about the old wheel? What abqul the child'• rlibt ID expl~ tM world! bn't the child'• freedom ID , feel and uporlence the '""!cl Important , ID hlr\>fl,in•t It• 'tfY Important quutlon w~ ~ cua1lrd Is clellclo11> ID him!, And polU-. Roi! can. you teach polt1-, in this case saylnJ "thank ~~" wti'!n al tlilt 'Wry mom.nl you are be 'lmpollte ID the child, 1howtng him up ftont ol Aunt Beaste ! And whal'a ,,,..,,, with al~UoJ>.geC.. ting behYiort Ja't.iltenllon • lecltfmate deni.tnd? DO 1 want my •U..tion-ietting behavlor Ignored! G<ld fl'rbid! And whal good is it to say, "There's nothing to cry about"? There obviously is1 or he wouldn't be crying. A GENERALIZED consciousness of the fact that one always seesihing1 irr terms of his own evaluations, and that the child is doing the same, makes fof a more flexible and more effe(tlve·1approach to the problems that parents are constanU1 having to aoJve. This conaciousneu of evaluation need not be a matter of in- security or indefiniteness of opinion. When you are dtivlng-a car, there is the white line that tells you that you are on die right side! ol the road. You don't hav.e to worry· about it evety second. It's there, at the edge of your. co..ctousness. In the ·same way certain rules ...Of general sentanti.ca -which is the science of adequate thinking -act like that white line. You don't have ID worry •bo\lt It all the time. It's just there and wbep you wander over it Yet.I pull yourr:eJt iOgether and say, "What am I dolJjg h 1.. , ere ., . 1111 By S.I. Hayaqp . ' Pre•!~ Saa Fruclseo · St.te Colle" OllANOIJ CO~T • • DAILY PILOT " . . ~ J. ,· .. nd of ject of om· ac· In• on• udit n to g • • .. •' ~sd';• J111"'? C, 1~ DAJLY ~· Tee s~· Responsibilities Gro · N.ew Law-"Bestows Adulthoo,d, March ·'.· Pr~posals to · Mark~~~~~~- • Ballot on June 13 · SACR.\MENTO (AP)·-Ill paued, by tljt 1971 ltplatU1e J't.tltmlntrY ~ fnlm ' By C!IABU:s Mcl'Al!Dl!N That ~position will only be SACIWllEN'IO (AP) _ put to v rs in San Francisco, When Y'l\l step Into \!Ill lltUe Alam , Contra C o s t a , canvu bootb In Iha June IJ Marin, San Mateo and Santa JUSI three moilths, me to tab el!e<t Mai.cJI 4•allows Stt111 WelflrO' D1rec111r ~ catifoi'llla.let1111"8 could find. U-•led 18 to U to-In legal CArleoM 117tllte tlala <ioolld ~u deciding whetber a · theory at leisHlo jils\ about """ up to $IO million anntiall1 regl&ttred votera to gtl thtlr '."; II> II' mu.rdertr lhould die In Ille anytblng!hatanyadultcando be<a~ofiheoewlaw. 1 ' ballots OD the June ballot. ,Jatta, '" p I e • ( r 0'0 n \ 18' legl\Jly, if Ibey J!leel the o)ber . Cirl!IOll flgureS •l!qui It,. lma Clara cqunties. pr ry. you'll be deciding a These are the nrnposlUona lot more than ·which can-... -dJdatff will be elected. that haYe qualified 1 ao far. Backen pf other measures are Yciur ballot wlll contain a circulatitlg inltlatlve petitions serle1 of proposiUons, among to get their propm1itions on the them meuura to fix up ballot, toO. school.a, liberallze vat 1 n g Chief a~ them are two regulations, batue pQ:llution, propoged limitations on the lend mon money to veterans property•ta:x and a rollback of and -in some areas -aalarles for public officials. whether you want to build a Howard Jarvis, a retired bridge.· head spear Ing 1 drive lo limit Hundreds of millions af market value. dollm bang In the balance. Jarvis' amendment would The major confrontation is ,.iso limit the rate at which expectecrto come over the so-county assessors can. raise called Clean Environment Act. assessments. Backers say the Thal inlUaUve propociUoo !JI. revenue lou would be ofiaet by eludes a halt on new olfsbore eliminating tax enmptlomi <1ll drilling, a fl v e ·y e a r -n.oW ~ed to mOlt .. foun.. ~oratorlum on construction of datiom · charitable trusts. new power plants and a ban on Los elea County asaesaor use of DDT and o t b e r Philip WatMln la making agricultural poisons. another ,lrf to (et a Jll'O)lerlY "Galllornla has become the taJ; pmllatjon plan approved. environmental battleground of It woll!d clamp a limit on Iha the world,'' says Fortney pro~ tax of fl per $100 of "Pete" Stark, a San Francisco as~ value -which la 2$ Bay Area banker who favors pe~nt pf market val\u~. the initiative. "The world is ~ The Jl'OPOSltiori woqtd al.!o watching to see who will win.'' have. the! sttte tU:e over fJ.65 Other propositions on the billion •th public-sdlool costs June ballot would: and $681 million in welfa~ -ProvJde $350 million build costs now picked up by local new schools, buy school sites governments. and equipment and repair To boost state revenues by earthquake damage. the amount needed, Watson's -Make $250 in bond money plan Would -among other available for state veteran things -boost the aales tax farm and home loans . by two cents on 'the dollar, in- -Eliminate the provision of crease liquor taxes from $2 the State Constitution re-per gallon to $2.50, double the qui.ring a new citizen to be ciJarette tax to 20 cents.J a naturalized for 90 days to be pack and raise the ,corporation eligible to vote. tax from 1 percent to 11 per· -Decide whether there will cent. be a new bddge -called the A sim.Uar meuure backed Southern Crossing -wlll be by Watson was rejected by built aCT'OSS San Francisco voters in 1963. Bay, linking Alameda with San Jarvis and Watson each Francisco at Hunters Point. need aignatures from 520,80& School Financing: Top Issu(i in Legislature Jarvis' backers ·mu.st ' cet ''' ' t? ~ ' ~uirements such · as edoca· young pmom wUI bi. knOctld their •lgnotU1es by Jan. 13 and J.l' • Tlie·~b of 1lttlng·onljuries, hon. off the '.(Id ·to Famjlles wi'lb Watson's by Feb. 17. even In c•~ltal c11es, Is part But the new la,., doesn' Dep.nd~t Cblldren proli'aiii. The salary r o 11 back ~ o~a I0111 IJ&t of new rights and change the Ca I II or n I a II you're an adult, you're·nol~ sponoored by Ammbfyman res~nslbWU.S· cool.,,ed on ConsUtullon'a prohibition of chlld· and themore con'I Floyd Wakefield ( R ·Soutb more tban·one milllon Calilor-al~l coDS\lmption for those qualify, Carleson 11ys. Gala), would cut legislators' nlans aged •ll to %1 under a lflllfer 18. Another effect• It· wW be annual $19,200 pay to $800 a new law making them full Lawmakers rejected a try pouible lor 1a-year-o1dl , lo year. fiedged·adults.. at getting that section repeal· establtsh a legal residence in Wakefield's supporters have For tbe fflrst time, an · IS. ed th.ls year, so you still have the · college town. That me&M until Jan. 20 to get t.beir year--0ld could write you a to be 21. student politieal clout in locil signatum. traffic tick;ft,. obtain credit, But you can become a game politics. Besides sluhing his salary, sign • contract or rue for warden, make contracts-such Let's say 5,0X> young people Wakefield's proposal would bankruptcy. as the one to buy a new vote for a particular council reduce the salaries of the /" It's not likely, but California car-and even be sued if candidate .in a city of 30,009. lieutenant governor, St ate eQ. ...... .,.._,._ 1,,1. could have an ta-year-old you're in an auto accident. Unless there's a determined Controller, St ate Superin-l:!~~~~; 1 •.w'""""--'"" governor after 19'14 and you But ooe break remains counter-campa ign. any can- lendnd ent of Public Instruction ,,. 1 , could be reading about available to tS..to-21-year-olds. dldate with· that bl.oc of votes a state Treasurer from ... ~ve -~l~JOU~pl1an1ni9nmak.ingfhisa maneuvers of·· teenage At their option, judges can in his pxket will probably '35,000 to '30.000 a year. li.g . .aiaar,, • . ~ _ lawmakers lo Lhe state sentence those under 21 lo the win. The governor's pay wollld be---~ .. ~,----------------1egislattire. · Calilomla Youth Authority Out-or ... tate students can chopped from the current You soon can legally bu.)I in-rather than state prison, even move to Oalifomia, establish '49,100 to $46,600 annually, aurance from an l•year-old though they are tried as legal m\dence and avoid "Elected officials should .. t 'Tax Brea·'~s' For.es· een agent. • adult•. p•ying out-of-•l•t• f•es •t th.• an example," Wakefield says. ~ Your 18-yeaMld offspring Males under 21 can get mar· University ot California and His propasal has not en-could go to court and change ried without approval from the state co)leges. deared him to hl3 colleagues. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -An itlative clam-Ping ·limits on his Mme without your mom and dad . Girls ha ve Some lawmakers say its on- The A s s e m b I y reap. Assembly commlttee report property taxation is-suc· permissk>n. always been able to take the Jy a quest1on of time before portionment bill sent to Gov. predicts "big tu breab",(or cessful. You won't be spilling your plunge without parental con-those between 18 and 21 gel Ronald Re a g an ' s desk bu.s~81 and large _ ri!venue . T}\e initiative is propose4 by troi.Jbles to an 18-year-old sent when they turned 18, and the right to drink, if not from eliminates his diltri.ct. " delicd.s for state and local · Loa Angeles r.ourity assessor bartender, though. the new law confers the right the leglslature, from the Moat of the be'.avy campaign government !f the Wataon iD-PWlip E. Watson. The new age-of-majority laW" on males. courts. expenditures are expected 1n1~--~--~~~-~-:......--::..:::...__~ __ .:;:::..::.:......:::::_::..::::'.:::.:.:::..::.::..._:..::.:..::::::=:..._ ______ .=::..:::..._ _____ ~ the battle over the Clean Air Act. Opponents say It would mean a losa of thousands of jobs by dislocatloll of lndtlstry. They argue the act would hurt the 1mall businessman more than the big industriallst because the bigger companies would have more money to ac- commodate themselves to tougher regulation. Stark says corporations who · don't" like tighter pollutiori laws ar,e gathering a $& million war chest to shoot down the proposal . But the president o f Whitaker &: Baxter, the San ..... Francisco p u b J i c relations finn hired to mastermind the batUe against the proposition, says the preliminary budget is $600.000. The spending pro- gram on newspapers, radio and television could range from $750,000 to $3 million and will be set sometime in February, Clem Whitaker Jr. SACRAMENTO (UPI) -"If we remove schools from dds School finances, coupled with property taxes, where do we a Ed Koupal, whose People's the perepnial problem of pro-find $3 billion ... l can't con-Lobby Jed the drive to get the perty tax: relief, will be the ceive of it coming from any proposal on the ballot, says he No. 1 ismie before the 1972 one aource," Greene said, ad· hasn't figured expenditures legislature, both parties agree, ,1 ding there would be "great closely because his campaign What it may mean ta resistance"' in the legislature will be based on contributiom Californians is another overall to any tax increase in "1972. from individuals. boost 1n state taxes, according ;::===================:::! to Sen. George Ma.scone of San Francisco, Democratic Ooor leader .. Despite a reluctance among legislators to d\111 taxpayers during an election y e a r , 1 Mosrone sald the problem of school financing "callJ for a . general gtate tax increase." \ "The end result ought to be that local property taxpayers 1 pay a lesser amount," he ad-l ded . . I New3·Way · Time Savings Passbook Major property tax relief bu . been promised b y legislators and Gov. Ronald Reagan for years but bas never been enacted. [ Last session, efforts to pro-. vide relief failed w h e n' negotiations between t h e governor and lawmakers broke down. j Another major issue ex- pected to be before legillators again this year b protection of the atate 'a 1,072-mlle coasUine1 f 'r o m o v e r d evelopment. Several measures were killed la.st year by a Senate conr mlttee. l'ay bikes for the !tat•'• 180,000 employe.s, consumer! protection and no-fault auto h\surance are alao Uke:ly to 1 share the attention o f Jawmakers. But most other issues will ht overshadowed by the fiscal dilemma of public schoola. The schools are ln a bind because of the state Supreme Court's dec!Jlon In August d e c J arln& unconstitutional .Calllomla'a ayltem o( finan- cing schools. The court held that the system relies too heavily on local property tax-a: un!alrly penall7.lng children in poorer dlslrlcta. ~bly GOP caucus chairman John stull o I t.eucadla, Dentoerall!: Smale leader J.,..1 MlllJ of $iiii Jllego •nd Auembli F.duQ. jlon Gommillet C b a I r m a n l.miy Greene (!).Sacramento) ...,,,.,. that achoo! llnlnclng will be Iha b!IJlll '-before the 1•g1slaturt. • Reagan's top llnanclal ad· 1•lsar, Verne Orr, 1gree1 with •that 1ppre!MI blrt 'pftdlcll • tthere wll( lie no 1 .. Increase. For Individuals and Businesses *5%3 on your "long-tenn" nest egg savings on deposit for 2 yean INTEMl'T PER AHNVM · 5"3 on the savings you want to leave for 1 year IHTERf:ST P£A ANNU"' 53 on savings you want to leave for 90 days IMTEAEST PEfl MtMUM Arry combination of above Now-with one passbook-you can choose these interest rates on your savings. This convenient new service is available right now at Centinela Bank with a "Three-Way Passbook Savings Plan.'' Here's how It works: You make deposits in this passbook, with your choice al maturiti89 from 90 days to !WO years. The Interest rale depends on the maturitieS you choose that best fit your flnancill planning:. $&OC! "ts JOU atarted-dlvt<*I ~ JOll Ill< .. Thep JOU ... llllk• lldcllllonel depollla ..., tllne ol $50 or more lo •nJ .. ._,,In your ,,_-. If JOU Uke, .. 11 111110 •UIOlll8tlo lr•nafetl from JOUI' checking .ccounL OU.rtel!J In-11 lldded lo your ..- ond c:ompojlndejl-or will.,. malled lo JOU without mrge -.-q1*t. Get sta~ed today wi\h'your own '1hree·Way Savings Plan.'' Call OI' stop In any Cenlinela Bankoffice 10< complele information.You'll get out full inlerest. lnQio-/ 524 f:. Null!<)Od I 674·4660 South i1y / 1103 Avlalion, Hermosa Bea eh I 372·21 OZ l'lara Doi ROJ / 8t17W. Msnchealer / 823,9281 ljoWpoll hocll / 3333 W. Goast Hwy./ 646-7121 11-..nla.IMIHed by F.O.t.C. ! G"""' aald, however, "l ... no way of mffllll& the Conotltutionll nqlllnmOllla school (lnaJ1Clng wlthoul piua!v• te(!ipnllallon of the taX stnac!tQ:re." -Ht noted lhal local prvperty •111g11er -poltl"" Cetf/11Ul«t "'°""""' ~ nlM M1rlJ fl bllllon 11111111ll1 to p11 lor schoola. f. I - \ • I DAii. Y Pll.O r Tuosdlr, J.,,..,, 4, 1972 · Office1· Robs Bar, Kills Sell CUDAHY, CAUi. (UPI ) - 51t. Leonrrd Francis Hayes wa1 a model cop. Hil carter wn advancln&:, he wa1 in- telllgen~ rtable and secure. l!ryea, 31, hsd been on lht Vernon police force aeven ;;;;;;;,;;;n;;; yura. Bel""' thst he'd been with the Fort Worth Tez.1 •'"" ...,, .. pollce for lwo !DOD~ and bad eerved IJ ~ura In the air force. One ol his auperion called ffayes "extremely bright, Vttry efficient, • model olticer." Hayu WU off duty wben be walked toJo !be Habit Bar ear· zy Monday and cir~ down three ooctlalls In 40 mlnUtd, ·~ ·to the woman bartender. A clOH friond on the forte recalled later that "be wun'l w temperance type, but tti -didai drink U• ' , •. "f 1 U'I T...,.._ .. c011lvely either." ASSEMl!~Y SPEAKl'R. 'IOI MORETTI TAKES OATH Suddenly, t be bartfnder He C.lebral"· ~Y Glylnj 'Ladr·lucive a Kl11 uld, "'1es )lltllod out his .31- caliber servlc. r e v o I v e r , ordered her and four patrons to aland against !be wall, took $1f0 from the cash reelster and fled In his car. She called police. New Coast Measure ' Launched Reagan to Give Address To Legislature Thursday SACRAMENTO (AP) -Tilt C.llCornla Senoia ldckod oil Ill 1172 lfJlion witb l>llll to ""'° tect the .envlrorunent, allo" off-track belitnl and thU&• napportlonment procedur~. No bllla were lnlrocluctd Monday In !be Allembiy. • A Clll/ornla Coa1tal ll<oourcaa Coaln>ll Autllorlt1 would be c:noatad to ·-state •tandar\!I fQr coulal development under a meuur. by Sal. James Q. Weclw«tll (D-Hawtbomt). The measure also """'4 IOI up five c:outaJ area bNrdl to over1ee 11etlon1 ot California's l,210·mli• coastline. Con1ervationl5tl aay Wedworth'a ablence from a key committee l1at year killed a slrong coastltne-pr«ectton· measure. A a e c o n d envlrpomental measure 1ponaored by Sen. Jobn Nejedly (R-Walnat Cretk) would create a 1tate solid waste man 11 e.me n t boenl. SACRAMENTO (AP> - Gov. lief•"' put tltt ftlliahlng touchea on his slalh State of the State ad'dr ... today whlle member• of lht Le(Watu .. pcmdertd wayJ to make their work leu pondetOUI. The RePUbliean cl)lel ex- ecutive will dwell heavily on tu reform, and IJ*lfieally lht problem of lfC!iool finance, In his addresl to a joint ....ion of lho Democrat-eon- liollod Loflalalun 'l'bureday. "Obvloual1 Iha! II one of the llauee thal everyone ii Jn. terested iJ1." uld an aide who reported ll<agrn bad CO!Jl- pleted wrlling his baaJe speech and was working on last- mlnute details. ll<qan will deliver the ad· cJma at II a.m. In the century -old Asoelnb chamber and It will be broad· ~ast throughout tht state on radio and television. . Reagan ' an d DemocraUo lead1r1 of the Legislature tried to hammer out a com- promise $t bllllon-plus tax reform provrm lert year that Would hsve ealOd ihe l!J')perty HOW, .. ..,_ o..-r~ ~ 'fW• I•....,.. · · BOllGBOllG OJSTOM TAILOU 6 IKllTMAktll lif otANGI COUNn' . PllMANIN1' IHOWIOOM tu burden on the average CAllCornla bomeowner. But the negotlallolls broke clown Md the Leglalature w11 fon:ed i~ rtud to pus a ~1 mUlion "mini" tax package to see the 1lalt Ulrough r bud1et ai!ls. Also In 1171, the ~tornia ~te &lpnme Court said tbe heavy reliance on local pro- perty tueo !qr financing the state's '5 blllion-1-year achool 1yrtem II UllCODltltutlonal. The Leflalature II ozpocted to study a number of propoaals th1s electk>n year r 0 r overbaullni tbe syatam. MeanwhJlt, the lawmakers were beglnnlnc to lake a look at their o'wn operatsou, which came wx1,.. llu\iy erlliclam .dur\Jlg 117\ becaUH th e SOUTH COAST PLAZA ONLY COSTA MESA· SAN DIEGO FRWY. ANO BRISTOL ST. TURNOFF . ' PoUce sighted Hayes not far from the bar and gave chase at speeds up to 70 miles per hour. . One el the pursuJni officers, Midlael Walker, oaJd he oaw Haya ralae his rilht band to bla head, "then I herrd a abot" and Hayes• car veered Into a power w!e. Moretti Sworn In, Caps It With Kiss SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - Democrat Bob ¥or<ttt of Van Nuya ..... JV(Ol'll In to a second term ... ..,..u. ol tbe Amm- bly Monday and caJllled the ceremony by ldaalnJ the judge who adn\lnlrtered the otth. ' sembly Republican Caucus Ololrman John Stull of Leu- C9dla; Assembly GOP Whip Frrnk M~ Jr .•. ol Sante Cruz;Senr.to·~J­ er Fred Marler Jr., ol R~ dJni, and llalete GOP caucus a.ilrman John L. Hann,.. ol Glendale. lltff.t1UW c.t...... NEW YEAR1S SALE 2 111m s1I0 J111. '"'"'Jin. HI I• ... p.m.) DOUIU .. IT IAYI UP TO 10,-. ==----· lntlAl Ptl<I 1.,. llOW •INN T1n-4 C...IM ~ DOUlll Q/lf •• ,,, .... S.fls,.,.,...... ............ MU: MOHAil •• u • •WI WI ANT 1111 WHMIU ,,., fl ff •ANT ITYU CON9 IHAIUllM •••, U e2 • • llA AllllAllONI SIU! WOOL •••• II •t - IKlllfl ""''"' If " • • IAIY IAY.nt WE'LL STAY CLOSED WEDNESDAY, JANU· ARY $th, TO PREPARf FOR OUR GIGANTIC . REMODELING SALE ••• BEGINNING THURS· ·PAY, JANUARY 6th. His frlell!ll and flW'lllerl found him deod on the front .... ~ a bullel tbrouib his head, wllh his plalol. his pollco Iden- tification and the 1140 loot from his myrterloul fling at crime bealde btm. The 34-year.dd Moretti took the otth from a longtime friend -Loe Angel .. Munlci- pel Judge J o a n Dempoey Klein-a.! one of the 1172 Legjs· lature's tint orders of bUli· ..... . ,,.... .. •sa NM '*"' .... YU ~"r WHUWl....,1om M ,H N 11111. , ..... laWHI W 1J"'2N 2112 MICHIUON-IUm 1-IWPOIT llACK, ro,,,:,. °"""'Ct. ....... ....~ ,_ ............ ...., 10 A.M. SHARP! ·PUC Raked • Hu colleegues were unable to qllUllor! his w I d o w , Palricla1 311. She went Into -wnen told of bll death and hsd to be put under a 4":- tor't ~. Hay• hsd a 15- year-<>ld dall(bior, and another born jurt a week ago. He mede 11,IM a montb, and hsd been promoted to IOfgeant jurt last J1111e. Pharmacies . -· "How many iudg .. have you Over Coa J., • kiaoed lately?" M-tl mu~ ~~· lngly uked hill coilell)IOI alter he kissed the jud~rn SAN Fll,\NCISCO '(AP) -'A altrt.ctlve tlrawt.T1 , •· · _,,,,,,. l'GUP ,,.,. aclllMd MoreW, a lll'l1l~r et!• ~ Calllomia Public UllliU.. ' 'f..: ..., Jy t~ r~· of ha~ I a.. '¥• ,fin. J111!1t "Mllc-"'4arnlted ~t," """'"""''~.,_ .. a i t '°'"· Ill U. flf,• lllilllen !aellic -~-iii ':i..V.i 'r fi,1111~1 <:t-· Hit fMrll~' =~mi:~=. ~~·1loli,r~ ;· Ptdrt). ~... t'fiijMI ... !II --Rap Drug AlllMll!IJ ilf~, t ~Iii. ~·-· . moml=-:.11~, lllfla ..... ~"' I·, :r........ • ........ ~ ...... ,..N!IJ!I. . ' •• ,.!111111 111 l":f ...... 1"" lw 1!111141ni•C • Price List '"'!1"1lt• ~-had• ·~,Ip .:.= . · llold .. hllrlnp --=~ LOS ANGELES (AP) flt Prt ;:: ~ I , _,. oquld meka tllee''~ , ~=ace4~:' :.=.: . ~wn)l ..... ; ' (II.' ~ without ~~ ~ , I , fall to • include top.eolllllf ' d'91ia14 It ' repr -. prucrlptlon c1ru,. d •• p 11. s: 11 • Po'·' ..,..... 1or ao1 J1011111111 , federal Phue J requirements ....., A ~ by !!"'"' ·ln r, • that they murt do IO, I ' ~~4"1'..l.?i ' pflannaceutlcal official 1111. ,1 ff.,.,,.J.-..1 ~uoll iN IM lltld ' •· The California Pha.. .l'.la.MM.ln;eu. ~ lhl l)larttiP IO iaaclJ ~ maceullcaJ A"°'laUon, ' !hal ltl owa. ~all~ In lnalnJctlng its membe171t B Bl-'11._ Jl'll.IO Ul!IOjo--~11)1, comply wHh the iaonomlc 'V ~ •. · M 'iOIJ!lple 11'4,t.t1"P••r'• stablllulion Progta111 ....,, ,; ~· y ..; ~ _ which went 'Into elfe<I ,,.. IAH ~(.QI)_ •i.c& ., 1 ' •. 1 ,.. • llonwlde S u n d a y , llYI ... ..._., Ind. ...... I a phannacllla need comply with i;""" ,..,;"1t1rt, llava 4., ! -g~ llid It oruy to ... lllltnl ol lirtlnf ~ 11 "f llltlf-1!11 ~ prlcu 0 J. ' ....... "'* et nollril'• • JroPeHd lludenl . . . ' • • . item•. -....,. ~-dltllPltl lo P•o· ._ ... _.:i -Robert J.-. _.lioll ~ 1'ttClll aw~. _ a. K>DWU vice prealdenl, oaN N!IJdl1 A •lllftllll INU04 .~ -• his group and U. A•..., :T = .._.. alld teaollflt' ' IAN rllANCllQQ <Al'l :.. ~=t .... ~~.,~ =::..mfl( "!.it growxl (Mi ,, •• 1 ... , ........ ~ ...,, ""'"' .=.:. -.. ,,_ prucrlptlo!J .... ~ P'. "ailolbet wa1 o I _.,,1," JJllle ti =~-.., Jiiiy~ 3'f""~ .• ~~ =-:-~ ::.-1J'r"DJN ~~ cJane' .... Ile ....,.ialetl'. m black, •l are four of 110 A~ /Jlr Thi P!IUe I order l"Qulra IJJCUl!f '""1"bers.' black milUal& ti pbyalclaJll and C#ialJI tther · Tiit IQ Corioe Community nap, muiW Ill. heoltll care serVi<eo la Jl'OVlde CounolJ uJd Ila poll aimed at the 1170 M tu D IT pricing infonnalioJI .. ... "helping aJI of U1 underrtand courtboUll I ftleil quert, without hsVin( lo port II better what kinds ol problems, a habeaa ...,.. In aa publicly. If any, we hsve on campua." attempt to free • lllU. MINI HI-Fl TO THI HARD . OF HEARING ONLY ~ . ' . • ' ' • • ., • • , , ' . ' "'-\ I . '~ati J'Ourna1neP"· ' ' ' . ~~-· ••• r----------·-----------------~, I ; I I _. I I~~ I I I I I I Qty ilal" Zi• I L-------------------- You're a penon,hot &Jl'lllll '. . " at the Bi.JM, Mum.I Sa We want to meet y ' . , c in to t4e nwest Mut.Jal' Simgs office, . ' us your nanie and addrUI and we will ' ' ' return ad~ess Jabeli for you FREE. (adults o -" m on stationery; envelopes, boob, checks,.ph9D,Ogr ' . records, WhCUY(t ypu want your Jlall!t ~d.addr I •.i Savi.o,p is maliiDg this unUs1W Ir~ offer' to dramaµze '.IQOSt penonal ~ of any savings a11d loan associa • . ' . ..{t M11tual }'Oil~ always.• W'C}llt not iust a nwn • • . Open Saturday, Jan. 8, 9 •.m. to I p.in. • ssa.3m 1411 S. VILLAO& WAY . • SANTA ANA. CA.Lii'. Co:rona de1 Mar: "''1 Eut Coaat Jllah-y/'7J•J'10 , Otllcrolllc:a la CoTina,West ~cl;,, Pm~Clll, Clcnd.tlc nd Clnoia Park·Chttaworth I I 1 • ' I I ) 1 I ' , ( I l ' I ~ • L. 1'1. B8fld Cemetery Goes Tutsdly, J111ull'f 4, 1'72 DAILY l'ILG1 9 Sotj.ef High .Jumper Leaps Eight Inches MOSCOW (UPI) -J. cllaln-Rustam Akbmetov told the ~ his limbs b y lie .i.o mode !!Cl iO 'ioo ldded-this tralnlng he grew U tn- plon Soviet bJcb 1-&rel' new5P1per he hid_ been In-J>O!lonnl"I cross Gliti ind )lqnpo evrr day and PloYed "lie never amoked and cbea, the next year bt grew e~t inclltS lo lhree yean by l«..ted lo 11181> jlonplog alnce aldesplltr and • doinl many · bukttboll on.. nevtr drank alcoho!ic drinks another U lnchta and the domg special entcl ... , • the .,. ot i;. bul 1lia1 be wljll yoga and SUlptllJlon ex~•· ' .. Up in B;razil log ~ shoe4 and !Dllln-dew'esled by tile fict be wp \ "Ile walked bartlool 11 lot," "lie toot cad 1lv<r oil three • • • Ill tllii combined with third year he srt!Y U locbes. ~ a ~I diet 'Ulat In-relatively -· He oold tbt QeWSpaper said, "and . Umeo . a day be!°"' meiJJ, flll'cbologlcal porposelulness Now at the ageol 20, be b S. c¥dect cod liver oil --at ~be :wu ~ foet, 3 1J1. w.... loose ~ to make bis drank two quarts of milk a eoallltd Allllmetov to achieve foot·!, Soviet Sport said, 'an . tlin., dally, the DOWi!popel' cbes tall. · led grow lo provide better. day, "I 11ul ot cllTOI juice bis pl." optimum height for a blgh .Soviet Sport said. t The a\hlete said he started stability." . opd.~.PO Juice," So .. t Spo<t II sild Jn the first year of jumper." f • Byl.M. BOYi> ' ·• • "!leer lre Ml as 'bu1 u we llllllk they are -they ~ cu1t bp;a a, llower." AbeMartla True, the foregoing observatton by Mr. MarUn dou not pretend to be oo profound. Slill, It doea chanicletlze I cerlaJn oort ol cltlzen. Tbls comes lo mind because . II band is a lettu lrom a lady wbo d ... cdbet her husband u ,a perpetual motion macblne who never gets any. tblngi done. Wtltes ahe: "He'• an ~ cumulator wbo lhtnb be'• a collector. Hb llnal d<cialon b never -U, the same one be makes later. And In lluth, tt tbtre were betUng windows I at bullfight rings, he'd bet on the bull." 1bat's harsh. ' SPEAKING OF BETS: The only meani of transpor- taUon capJble of taking ..Vera! thousand -le for a rtdt at the same Ume la lbe race bone. ·Read u.a~.....,,taa, too. ' ' ' ' .. ' QUEJUF.S -Q. "How mariy dllilples on a golf ball? And why? • • A. Just 336. Am told a bsckspim dimpled ball will stay airborne just about ty.rice as f~ a.a a amootb ball. , Q. 1118 THERE any 'specles'Ih the animal world, be- sides man, that engages in full·Jeale war?" A. Only the ant. Incidentally, besides man, only the rat and the crow regularJy murder members of tbe1r own species, Jt'a said. ..... YEARS AGO Philip Morris Spoo!Ored "! Love Lucy." The tobaca> firm 's board cbalrlDlln was Allred Lyons .. Ona evenln& he fulled Lucy and lleJi, then mamed. And Lu<? lnadvertan~y offered Mr. Lyons a Cbemrlield. Oh, ob, oh. It'& ~ported Mll,o Lucille Ball, that sensitive lady, still things aboUt II occaslonolly and closes her eyes and shud- ders. "' MARRIAGE -U 1 single woman goes with an eligible man for three months, chancea !he'll marry him run..' about two out of five. • RECORDS at llarvard show lbe prep school youtba there are more apt to drop out than the public school boys. · -ALL IN -AU.,-lt'< lmown, the proleas\Onal painters do not buy as much paint nationwide 11 the weekend dlubera. :VNDERST AND .aome money men in Rio de Janiero are' getting ready lo pot up a 39-story cemetery. 1!'1 not the lint skyscraper mauoolewn, but It's the highell, ao lar. That's the trend now, am told, among the graveyard en- trepreneurs. WHAT. YOU say your fireplace wood is too dry? Bums too fast? AH right to 1low down the burning, just 1prink1e a UWe plain ba1<in& soda over the coab. Not too mucb. That will dou,. it. • . ~~~1 Club Lauds Champion ;1'~Ji ~=~=~~(~:.~~~!. '~t~1f. _ n>e story about a Green Heat and cold bad a part lo t-1v : '. vi Bay Packer footblll player other stories which w~ !' •· ~# wbo "ran back punts so fut selected for special menUon. ~, ~ , he often drew raagbing the "11 is so bol in New Mexico f, kicker penaltla" won a that when you ma~e potato t · WllCOlllln . ""'n the 1 17 1 salad you have a bowl of hash [,., ••worJd. Champion L i a r ' ' brown potatoes before you can ~ • ard get It In· the relrlgen"1or," ; 8~o~ Woolley of Racine was ::.~.Russell Gouge of Ro9well, ~"' · chosen for the honor by the "Last winter I caught som• f , Burlington Liars Club,. wblch fish wbicb were contaminated r , aMullly attempts to llnd the with mercury " '8ld Jack [ ' ' globe'• greatest Tarnsplnber. J!oeltcber of BotUneaU:-J'<l.D. · : · ~·' 111 have used hllecticldet on "To•cerred this, I hunc·tbe · my farm ao long that I have up by their tlll's wbeni It wu developed a strain of wire 40 below. When the 'mercury worms so strong that I use went down, I cut tbelr: adl them for splicing barbwire off," feooe," said C 1 a r e n c e And a liar's lie aboUt Breitenfedlt of M a r a t h o n , another Uar aiao wu liven Wll., for one of the club'1 run-recognition. neMIP honors. 0 My grandpa, Will Hannon. Women's liberation w 11 wu a terrrble liar. One day reported by Kavin Morris of last June he started to 1wm LeveDanol. Ta., to have "Summertime." Ten ..w.ne. reached such a peak In farm later every robin willlln fin collntry lbat the chickens are mlles wu headed aoulb" said mikini the rooaters Jay eggs. llarrT G~ o1 Brewster, Hil tale al.lo won him an N.Y. --NEW UQUOR DEPARTME e BEER e WINE e FINE.GROCERIES BUTCHER SHOP MANNJNel NIF I , Cll•Sc• a ,..._ •'','::'"--C.:: "' ...... .,..,...., ' Listens to Landers . Nearly Everyone ~-........ . . .,,"\··-~--:.{"." . ~ . ! • • .. - i I ., ' i ,. .. '. •' !. I ' ' .. • " •• ' • ~-= I ' ' \ I I l \ I , • l • DAILY PILOT For The Record Marriage Licenses LAS VEGAS, N,. -M•rrl•M "' 111"9CI ht•• nc:lude: S LAW·HAA:AlS -Nqv. 2'I M•rtln H i'iii•nd J1<4U9!"!'n Arin, 'ii. bolh of 11111 IOI! lluch ~ N~I -DK. 2. Goroon. J5. of fWPOrl t..:tl, Ind Coll-.n ~ry, II :KIE·SHAVElt -2. Tl1'rtrw;I of Mll!l 11'191111'1 8~ ·J2w°' MW:'' tv. •net Jo-n MOORE-011A.:i1$" ~ittr . 2. :w. Hl.ll'llll\tlon ~ecr.c trid "trb.irt "i! Of 8rM k NllUSH·800TH -Dec. ), ii!JM' 24, •no' Sl'l.tron K&y, 21, 8l :6t:"a'NIJ:A1tH_:t!OK, l, JlDY 61.!"! -51. v'rlrn-htffl. L.; .43; Oolh Gf Firn<~A'?eel~H -OK. 4, Vin N., ~• 1nd r,..,,, (S.mfl ,., both °' Olll ,..,,.. G VIN·TAAUll -()«:. 4, Tlrnelhy, :H1 Foun1i1n V1tley, end N8flCll, "· Of P ~rJrv-G{~'eV -OK. 4, Wltlltl'll ntwr, «!, of Hunt1n1tcM1 11 .. ch, •nd ~~ 2'I ~I S...11 ArM SP -A::.4.CZEK -~. 4I 01lt, J1, ot I fMM, Incl a.rriao NI M., l2, LJ: ~NM -o.c. 4. Guinn, 421 ~rrled lobbl1 Lu, 40, DO!h or ~1_mln~t1r SA~ll'·SUMMEA:VILLE -09(, 4, WI i.m .... Jr .. "· Ind JO"!' J11n, 21, "°' Huntlneton 8••t h w·~~!-C:OX -Dec. 5, D1n1, 20, •nd iii'.llfislc'V.\'f~o'fi w-"1~.''r 11•1 h dWlrd;.23, Ind J~llf.....,~•lricl•, r1, th OI Hllnllntlotl Id! A Ll.AP'':::S-JOHNSO -Dec. ,, AINI , 33, I ll•lbo., •nd K•lhlHn k•r. of L~1 Anl~ft E~IN-PULVINO -Dec. 6, Glrdllr blr/et, 5_1, of w.,tmlnattr. "1d rE'~1z.t1n of HuntJnslOfl se1ch U~Ou:·MRSHM\ -D«. 1. Allr:i .;iii)··=· ~rd Anll. JO, both J N· IVINGSTON -DK. t. r .Un Hwo, ~1, of N""""'°" B"ch, Dorb Emei_, 41, of COlll • !l:l(OltA -O.C. f, M.IMkllMI, Wts1mlt>1ltr ... ,... INrllft L.,..., of G1rdtn 11orcrv• • MANH·Mcl(EE" -Otc. 10 J1ck ctw1rd, ~nd /Mrr Jotn. U. both Gl'.tif*-.t.LVITltE -O«. 10, J•met M., 2.t, of H011o011,1l1,1( H•Wlll 1.-Lrn /' ·n, ·u'yot Hun'!"' on llMdl ' K:IJlNE -GOLO N -DK. JO, JOhn tit• "I •nd Rvlh .V .• 6'. IW)fh of "''"" "~" ' CA llllLL RA.HAM -OK. ID. _.,.,, Jr., "31 _!If F11111t1ln -Glor9l1 I.ft, JO. of LI JA N·LEGGETTE -DK. I'· L_~ ,~;· J*H~~f;;t':, '\~~· '!"' L n-ll IDE"ltSON·"NOEllSON -• II, l..ewt'eflcl Bromll'Y, :n, of Int IWoocl, 11.:~e'''" Brown, 11. ""li-e~ RR!f -OK. 1 I r to, r.1 • ol' Sant• AM, 1iwf ••tr " 12' f , of Cosl1 ~ JOHI'(· UO N -Die. 11,_ G«l•1• H_.l l'ICI •rolyn C., 2.!, bo h OT H of~J\INTCHEN -O«. 11, 1f: 2lritnd LunN Jftfl, 20, bolt! Gl'11.cf.r!~'t,.i; .!~ 11. Pllll, Jr .. u. 01 · H)"lll:m~ iffdi'. Ind Anti It L.,, wl&-B1,..5c?fJ'N+"#ATE -Ole"' 11, 8r,lfford E., 3oC. of Nt'WPOl'1 11Ndl. and OtOr1 J .. 2', of S.11 81ldl Death Notices " CAMPl•LL M.lr'Mr.r C.~I. 2$1$1 0.-$,11!1 St., LIOU,,. Hll11. 0.t• ol clffftl, J•nutol'Y ,, 1m. Suo"vlv.cr l)y dllUlllt•r-ln-llw, e .... 1v" C11nl!Otll; or.ncld9111h1'", Jove• Fl!t· -•Id l'llCI LYr>n C~h 1'•1-enonO- cllulM.-., Ellltfl #Mrt. Ind LM Ao\11 C1m••ll, I ll If l.HUN Hlllt. ltMUlftn IMS. wlll bl Cll-•ltd W«i!'lftd9Y, Jenillrv S, 10 1.m., SI. Nk:hoit• C.ltlollc Oturdl, (ffVN Hiii•. Prlv•ftl lnll'm'l•nl .... NtiW Yori(. F•mlly _.b "-wl•ll- lnt te "*'' mlfT!Ofitl C«1trfbutlorll, pl-COl'lrlDlll• lo s.(ldlllbKk Com- fnU'lllly HOl-9! .. I. ltleff1tr LltuM 8Hd!. Mor1Uill'Y1 OirK!on. MUTCHINIOfrt 911111 e. HuldllntOll. ~ Flan s1.-..t, Lloun.1 e..cti. Def• ol "'9th, J1nu1ry 1, 1tn. """"IY«I "' dilU111t11r, Mn. JKk 111..,..rt, LHune 8t1cn; or1nd_,, Il l~ •rd N. sr ...... rt. Oline Pol"'; orn•· 9rsndtotl, JGl'lnnr st-•rt. o.,. Polnl. -S«vlc. wtu o. Mid Thi.ndly, J1MH1rr '· 11 1.m.. 111 51. Mll'Y'• !:pllc:sel Church, L""'"9 8Nch, wllll Dr. ll:obtrl <:orntl)IOll offlclltlno. F1mllY IUOlftlt tl'lol• wlshlno to m1k• met'YIOl'lll contri- bution., pl-• contribute to Soult! Coe•I commi.ntty H-11'1 F11ncl. Prlv1t• In· t...,,,.,.,, lhlffllf LllUlll 89Kll·Mo1"h ... rr, .,.,_.. l.AltKIN .._""""' Ur1 LarlOI\. 6-C Vii C11tlll•, L111,1n1 Hlll1. 0.1• of cr .. lh, J•nu•,..,. 1, 1,7:. Sunlv.cr bY w1tt. Sltrl(l. Slr"YICH. w.cr~. 10 1.m .. P1tltlc VI-Clllffl. lnlen'Atnl, P..::lllc VllW M-1•1 P•rk, p1e111c-~ MorttNoi::v. Director•. . LISTlll C.rl H. L1111r. 2111 Eldltfl Av• .• cosi. MtM. 0.11 of llNftl, Janu..., ~. 1tn. $...Vlcel 911"(11"' •f W•tdltf Ch1"'1 Mor- ti.JIN, .......... MACMOMICK T~soa1, J111111ar7 '4, 19 7;: Clark Backs Move Service Station Limit·s Pondered SANTA ANA -County Supervisor Ralph Clark's con- tention that the number of service stations i fl unin- corporated areu of Orange County should be llrnlted by law is being mulled over by county planning com- missioners. Western Gu and Oil Aa:aocl• lion, Joseph Strlnlky, voiced strong oppoaltlon to both pro- po.uls. He IJld •lnlllnc oul HrVlce stations .amounted to discrimination and would deny oil companies due proceu of la"(. Commissioners set March 7 as the date for a hearing on the controversial subject. O>mmissioner Howard K. Smith of Huntington Be1ch 8greed and said be would volt against either proposal unleas they were broadened to apply to other businesses with high vacancy factor1. Clark, who OWJlS a n Anaheim service at at Ion, argues that proliferation of stations makes il impossible for operator1 to earn a living and leads tG unsightly aban- doned facillties. Planners heard a stflf report last week which slated that a conditional uae permit approach to the problem ii not legal The report suggested that the establl!hment of service nation 1.0nea mlgbl be allowed. A represntat.ive of t b e Rapist Back In Prison Aft.er Trial SANTA ANA ...: William K. C. ~erguaon has been returned to the state prison from which he was recenUy freed after aerving three years of kid· naping and rape sentences f!Jat added up to a total ol 145 years. Judge J.E. T ... Ned" Rutter 1 ended the respite gained when tM Santa Ana man was granted a new trial by the C&UfOrnia Supreme Court by Ubtenclng Ferguson, 36, to the term prescribed by law. ma new sentence is con- siderably lighter than his last. He will serve a term of up to 10 years and be will be given credit for the three yelrs he has already put in behind bars: Judge Rutter handled the 1enteoclng in the absence of Judie Claude Owens. the jurist who presided over Ferguson's aecond t r I a 1 • Ferguson was convicted. by a jury in tfiat trial of charges of aodom,y and sex perversion. Ferguaon got the"" second trial when his lawyers suc· cosslully·•ppealed to the !late Supreme C.ourt that Judge Robert Gardner jmproperly barred evidence relating to the menta.h and criminal nicord of the victim's husband. It was testified jn the second trial that the husband of the ..a.year-old woman sexually molested by Ferguson after he picked up the couple near the Santa Ana bus depot bad been classified as a se.z: degenerate and psychotic. The husband old the jury In both trials that Fergu!On raped his wife, forced him to s~rually molest her and then dumped the husband out of ·the auto before going on to resume his attacks on th e woman. . County Unit Names Chief The restrictions w e re favored by Robert Baker of the Nationel Chevron Dealers Association. He cited an 1n- 1tance of aeven 1ervlce sta- tions within one block of each other, two now closed. He did not reveal the location. The planning Ital! report recommended utablllblng the •pec\al zonlnJ cluslllcation for 1erllce ataUo111 as a restrictive measure. T b e report explained that whereas a use permit would require three of four weeks to process a poutble woe change would take three to four months. During the dlJcuuion county PlannJng Director F o r e s t Dickason suggested t h e possibility of utending the reatricUons to other types of buslnelsu 1uch aa driven-in food eallblllbmel!b. Medicare Cost Rise .Seen in '72 SANTA ANA -Orange Coast resident.I who; 'lu 1 e Medicare bolpii.I bililliince will be paying more for tbeir medical care "in' 1'72, , .. ac- cording to Wallace Ford, social security d I 1 tr i c t manager in Santa Ana. As of Jan. l , Medicare pl· tient.. admitted ur •bospitiJi will be paying the llnt 181 of their hospitalization, Th l 1 repreaenta an $8 incrilH in the pre,v!Oµs deductible lee <ii $80, he ·l!I~, . ' ,. Ford !OJd·lJ!e lncreue b the result. ol • revl~ of jibapitaJ • r cosls In 1'70. i ~:;-, -"Becll111t of the lkcfea"'1n I ho1pltat COIJI, 11 Ford Aid, "three 1other increast.1 In ·the amount patlenti pay under the Medicare bolplial ·lnlurance program ai;,·requlred.'.'·, For bospllll 1lly1 of more than 60 day1, the Medicare pa- tient will pay $17 a day, ~ stead of $15, for . the llat through the 90th day. For a hospital stay of more than 20 day1 in an extended care laclllty,. the patient wt)l pay 11.50 a day Instead of 17.IO for the 2111 through lbe Iooth day. · For the lifeUme resave days -60 additional days of hospitalb:atlon available after the 90tb day -the patient will pay 134· l111tead ol !30 !or each day 118ed. Ford said the 1971 ratu witl remain Jn .iffect for people who began ualng· the insurance before the end of 1971. For further information on the new rates, call the Santa Ana social 1ecurity office, 836-2221. "°'' ~ ,.,..cnomkll. 01lt ol ~th. Dt<.mbef' XI. 1911. Mottler ol OOr-o!llY s.t.r, a11 L..-Hiii•. o ... iw:1rnoth1r of ROMl'Nl'Y A<WI Sttt•'. all Solilh P1Md-. servlcet, Wld!>ttdeY, J1n111rr J, 11 1.m,, St. Gtorff'I E1tl1COP9I Chum"I, L1oune '"4111t. ,-.rnur "'""" "'°" w1st11119 ta n'llk• meinorl•I con!rlllu1~1. 1>1fH1 con- !rlbut. to the C•nctr Fund. Tumtr ind St..--CG.. P1taNne. Olrttton. MOYI &YfOll ,., MoYI. ,., York,_n L1~. Cmtl MR•. o.t• all dtlllth, J1nu1rv l, 1m . $tNIC• pendlno ti 8tll 8rcMdw,IY Mor· '"""· ORANGE -The Orange County Chapter of the Retired Officers Association has an-- nounced the election of Maj. Eugene· M. Spencer, USA, ol. Orange to head the local organization in 1972. March of Dimes Honors County SANTA ANA -The Orange ARBUCKLE I< SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th St., Com• Men 14M881 • • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 67J...9450 Costa Mesa M~UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa Mesa u 1-:Kll • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1711 Lapu ~ Rd. .-a • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemeiery . Mor1Ur1 Cliapel JSGO Paclllo View Drh'e Newport ~ Ollllonilo ~. • PEEi FAMILY COLONIAL rvNERAL .,. · 'l!RllohaA ... We.•1•1 der • sm The chapter also elected l Lt. William E. Bbck, USMC of Orange as first vice pres!· denl ; CWO Robert F . Mllchell. USN, or Anaheim, second vice pN!sident: Maj. Matthew R. .Kenney, AUS, of Corona del Mar, secretary and Maj. Marie L. Edson, USA, of Costa Mesa, tf'e8Bllrer. The association rn e e t s monthly at the El Toro MCAS Officers Club. Spencer will be installed during the meeting of Jan. 15. County Chapter of the Na- tional Foundation-March of Dimes ba1 received the 1971 March of Dimes Chapter Award for outstanding achievement in the prevention of birth delecls. The local cbapter support.I a Birth Defect Center, a Genetlcl Couruietlng Clinic and 1 prenatal clinic, in addition to offering health 1ervlce1 to o· ) pectaot motbur and carrying out a public and proleaslonal educational program • N~Iy Everyone Listens to Land,ers LINGERIE BABY DOLLS .. Prlcu...,ithroSun.Jan.9 CLEARANCE OF DRESSES from r•gul1r 1toelr. A.it. f1brie1, pri11t1 •nd 1oliJ1. Value. t• 11.17 Now LADl.ES MATCHING SKIRTS AND TOPS 111 dinky 1e1t1t• •nd 11ylo11 f,.11'1 011r Jr. Shop. We l .t7 N•w FASHIONABLE SKfNNY RIBS Pol'Hl•ro11 tie front la TOO% 11Yl1111. w •• J.t7 Now Now OPACj)UE 2'° 300 & GOWNS PANTY HOSE 100% 11ylo11. Umit•cl Qu1nti tiit i11 1om• 1tyl11. .... J.'7 50 lritk, navy, lirew11,, l.l1~k, e..J l:.11rg11ncfy. · RLS GIRL'S BONDEO DRESSES '"'"V 11.elorr encl 1tyl11. l ... J.'7 Now Not •rtry 1iJ1 111 •1ch 1tyle ,111rl eol· "· GIRL'S BULKY .... .,, CARDIGANS 'l • .. ~k •t 197 . • &\l1TllS' -TllAll'I\ C7Mala8L Raa.p.Beld ~-COSTA MESA • f CE ENS .WEAR MEN'S PRE-SPRING JACKET CLEARANCE L i 1J h t • w1ighb, 'cord1, ~11;11h j1elr•t1 •tc. Som• Wi11t1r w.ights. hf. t• t .tJ N•• MEN'S ASSORTED KNIT SHIRTS A11orf•d • t y I • 1 from W1ll•e1 l•r· ry'1 to 1111 lo111, A11t. Si1••· a.,.. to J.t7 Now MEN'S ASSORTED DRESS .SHIRTS Attort.cf 1trip11, 101iJ1 •M Dol:.bit1 -A11ort1J li111. .... te 4,97 N•w 2/3 00 MEN'S ASSORTED CASUAL PANTS ., ... ,,. Choose from flares and straight legs. Ass o • t e d stripes. so~ds, cartoon, l0oks etc. Ret. to 7.97-NOW ASSORTED HANGING FASHION SHIRTS Wit lool1, hith f11hleft 1tyl1• to "''tch ·o,.i· .. ht· h 7.t7 Now ASSOR1ED 1BOYS (ASUAL PANTS . $ 300 I • • ! ---MM.ltnhf. 3038 BRISTOL SJ. S.. Dl190 "-pr at lrlstal 1 ..I 1 CMlftlf•••ou• llOffnllr•t~ ........ ,,.., ............. - 1 • Countian Wins Suit In Mishap SANT"'" ANA - A FuJlertoa gkl who blamed mechanics! deliclencles in her Volkaw1gen for Injuries aht suUered in a fruway •ccident bu been awarded $75,000 in damages against the West German firm. The Orange County Superior Court jury's award to Mary Catherine Culpepper, 21, end· ed a month-long trlal that In- cluded the jury'! viewing of movies taken by an American racing driver and hearing the counter testimony of 1 West German en&lneer. Misa Qllptpper sued for $750,000 for the Inj uries she received when Mr auto went oot of control last year on the Ri verside Freeway in Anaheim. La11'1lords ' Can Utilize · Bcue Office EL TORO -Property owners who wish to make their homes or apartments available to Marints atationed 1t El TQl'.'O MCAS can do to at the Housing Rt.lerral Office at the base. TueJday, Jan111ry 4, 1m OAllV PILOT J County Unit Seeks Fonding From OEO ' SANTA ANA -More than has bttn 11ubmltled to lbe p.id. 13611,IOO in fundl from the OEO wllil aclion expt<ted Tease h18 htld the post of federal Office of Economic before the cyrrent operating acUnJ executive director since Opportunity ii be.in& aooaht by year ends Jan. 31. Carlos Ramos re.signed last the Orange County Com-Last January the eounty September. The counly group mu~Jty Action Council for CAC rece!Ved 1boul '3081000 l$ aeeklng a permanent direc· Jtn-73, according lo acting lrom the !edetal poverly• tor !or the 11~260 to 117,500 a uecutJvt director F r a n k flihtlng agency and hid a yew job. A and man1glng a program or •'elfare activlUe.s, with at least one year deaU,.g wllb the problems or tbt poor. The couocll's I O\I r ·y e a r car~r in the county has bttn m•rked by many clashes among members and 1 series Among the p.rograma; ed· mlni11tered are manpower, housing, alcohollml, famil y plaMing, youlh de velopment and 1eoerat trnlninc. coming ye at, largely in con· trlbutJons of facilities and service~. Tease. carryover from the prevtou.\ Applicants lltlUst have five Tease aa..ld 10 application year of IJbout 524 ,000, Tease years exptrlence in directing1---------------------------;=:.===========================.i The organlullon •lfo ... ministers Ule Head Start and Neighborhood Youlil C.rpa but the!fl pf01nms art funded by other Ceder1J agencies. of directors. Tht CAC ahould receive about $111,000 from non- lederaJ sourcu during the I For Top Sports Coverage Read the DAILY PILOT GERHARD LANG'S SAUSAGE HAUS NOW , , , lltflllt inaM, lilldl•ry •IMllM ~ ... " ..i.1t1t111 .,..,, fffttt 19"t •ftf ....... NUI ... ..,.. lllff l'ltr lttHill, O!lly IM 1-..1 Mltl'tlfl ..... llMI llMt t•I .. Ollll wtrill & Mii'-'*"• ..... "'' ~ ~ 0..'911,. L1111 hi GIM .. ....... wtl'fll'I' el tfQlfl"' _, .. I Mlf(t1ll9 14M9" Nl!llf H1 ... OW itrl- •1¥1 Mltdi.., l11e!W• fllnf ... ti' ftr"''"· ,ltltll,, IN1'41PI & s,_11IM fflott,!I, Ill '4<11/llffl H.,,1~ •1kHI MllM MW f11t1r1 (9fjl Cllfl MM1 lllncll-rnffll ,,.. <llllllllt •II ~r l1Mrll.,, 11'911'1 lt'le kllch.,.1 11 O.,..._ L1111. -HAM- -~_,;l::;IT'°"AIL STOllS l7ot r. c .. r Hlttiwoy 1122 I . lrffklnlnt, AMhelri1 PHARMAC.Y WE QUOTE PRICES ON THE PHO NE 2700 E. Coast Highway, at F ernleaf, Corona del Mar • a AMPLI PAlllN6 IN kl.A.I MMrs _: t :JO • 6:00 D•ily Cloaed S111tcloys ond HtlldG)'S 644-7575 Miss Culpepper, who suf· fered a fractured akull. broken leg, two broken ribs and Ct» cussion in the accident, argued that negligence In the design of the car led to il.s rolling over and her ejection as she tried to avoid 1 ccllilion. Her lawyers argued that the (ilms and teatlmony proved the au~to be unsafe and unstable, defects enhanced by engine features tha t are not present in c o·m pa r ab I e American 1uto11. The office functions u a go between for Marines Jnd landlords by keeping retords;J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ::;;::;::;::;::;::;::;:::;;;;:;::;:::;;;;:~~~~;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;rn;::;m;ir.:ri~irnfl of all kinds of housing that Is available for rent or. for Coro11• 4el Mor -67J.tOOO 6J5·2~61 WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS Lawyer11 for both sides com- mented after the trial that the jury's verdict might , if It survives an appeal, open the door for a rash of comparable lawsuit.a by other Volk!wagen owner11. ;;~1~~7~1!·::~~~·:~ WAREHOUSE PRICES PLUS 1 O°lo Marine tenants can then use flll!l -------------------------------------~-------------- Jhe listings "' locale hooslng BON.·E IN FULL CUT for themselves or the Jr families. BONE IN Marine Gets Court Date In Slaying SANTA ANA -An Et Toro Marine accused of killing a divorcee whoH mutilated body was found in a pool or blood in her Anaheim apartment has been ordered to face trial Feb. 2 In Orange County Superlor Court. Judge William Murray set Jan. ti IS tht date on which he will bear a 11eries of pretrial motions 11ubmitted by defense attorney Robert Law. Molina Is being held without bail. The tall, 238-pound Navy corpsman was arrested at the El Toro tw.w Nov . 2 sllortly after the murder of Barbara Loul.se Smith, 27. Mrs. Smith's body was found by neighbors In her bedroom. Her two children, ages four and two, were playing in a nearby room. Two paychiatrilb who ex- amined MoUna have certified that the defendant i! sane and able to face trial on chargM of first degree murder. The pro- secution will .seek the death penalty for the V I e t n a m veteran. The Housing Referral Office also mediates d i s put e 1 between landlords and their Marine tennants. A spokeaOlan .... for the offla said the most frequently encountered p~ blem is that lenanl.! are olte·n forced to leave an apartment before they can give 30 days notice to landlords. The spokesman said this kind of dispute is often worked out in advance so that if a Marine is given orders to another base, the landlord won't be caught by surprise. The office can be contacted at 832·2264. EL TORO -CIMSes for be- ginning and experienced aurf. ers are being ollered f6r Marinea stationed at El ~ MCAS tt.artin1 In Februaly. David Nuuhiva of Hun- tington Beach, the 1971 Men 's World Champion Surfer fleJd1 the team of Instructo rs' wfilch includes fi ve timei world champion Corley Curoll cl Dana Point. Marines who a r t fl- perience8 surfers are being sought to act u assistant tn- structors for the classes which will feature class room lec- tures and surfing at Orange County beache.!I. For f u rt her information pholfe 332--3512. SEMI-ANNUAL SALE START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT AT JACK llDW£LL'S WINTER SALE. SUITS .• , DRESS SHIRTS ... DRESS SLACKS • , , SP6R.T SHIRTS , , , GREAT SAV 0 IN6S ON THESE ANO ' MANY OTHER' ITEMSI , 3467 Vlo Lido, Newport kach-67M510 U.S. GOVT. INSPECTED 25~ FRESH LEAN ROUND STEAK GROUND 55c PORK. BEEF lb CHOPS WASHINGTON lB. FARMER JOHN'S CENTER CUT LOIN tB. U.S. NO. 1 10 LB. CELLO BAG RUMP ROAST RA-CORN BACON c lb RAT·H'S SLICED CENTRAL AMERICAN DELICIOUS APPLES RUSS!T POJATOES · BANANAS Now you too can become a professional shopper and save hundreds of dollars per year on your 9rocery bill. No need to rvn all over town huntin9 for bar9ains .•• You can b.e assured that when you shop at Top Yalu, you are buyln9 at the low· est prices In town. Naturally, we carry oll of the famous brands •.• Top Cj)uolity Meah and GGrden Fresh l'roduc:e • WHICH 15 MORE IMPORTANT ·TO , YOU? BEST SERVICE ·OR· LOWEST PRICES • NO ..• MARKET CAN GIVE YOU BOTH :. WI GIVE PRICE · STORE HOURS 10 AM TO 7 PM 5 DAYS A WEEK .. . . SHOP IN A WAREHOUSE QF FINE 9UlLITY FOODS AT SJS. W. lflh ST. AT HARIOR , COSTA MESA. IT JDOES- N'T TAKE A LOT OF NERVE TO Bl THE 6NLY STORE IN TOWN THAT DIS· COUNTS THI DIS OUNTIRS. WHAT IT· 'tAKES IS , TMOlt•ANDS OF LOWER PRICES! we welcome I FOOD STAMP SHOPPEIS • EVERYTHING IS MARKED Warehouse Price$ Thu the Checker Adds Just 10•1 •• T• Arrive at what y .. pay. Sa II Y"" wolllld up with $10.00 Worth, y .. 'd simply ,,., that, plus 10% or $11.00. THIS GOii POl l'fllnHIN• ucm THI PlW !TIMS LlQoALLY CONTIOLLID LllCl MU.I AND Ll9VOI, We Make Discounters Loek lxpenslve 131 W. 19th IT. AT KARIOR, COSTA MESA WE CHALLENGE ANY MARKIT TO MATCH THE TOTAL SAVINGSI STORE HOURS: 10 AM TO 7 PM 5 DAYS A WEIK ' Closed SunclOys and Wednesdays WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS WE DISCOUNT THE DISCOUNTERS WE DISCOUN'l I I . ' \ ... ". • ., ' r • 12 OAJLY PILor· Twrsdiy,,Jinuary 4, 1972 Ol y pics:·r -·'. ~ »~~h. , FlQating Bedrooms, a Subway By ALBERT E. IMP SAPpqRO, ~apan (ill'!) - Vllitors CJn ride to the 1972 Winter Ol)'mpics 'Ill rubber tire subways and relax in tome of the world'• moet ex· ' , • located off Soviet' Siberia. through the gates by feeding with wlndOw; to keep out the Sapporo, lat.(llt oily ever to ticketJ coated with magnetic alll>Oll claUy 1nowlaUa. host the winter• with a paper 1nto electronic llidts for vtllton who dWlke population of t· n tftned ~'ired to • computer. snow, Hokkaido's 1,200 natural a new eleetrie' ay1~ _Passengers who pay the wrong hot springJ provide the u:cuse in Decembet. . .. fare activate gentle chimes, for a variety of bathing styles .. More than D1 bars and and offlciala from 35 nations ctntral power plant generates cabarets line Sapporo ' a including North Korea and the steam heat and.hot water for Susukioo Street. But men from Mongolian People's Republic. ' the blocks of-a~•· T k ft ~· first 1 lbe A total ol 13,000 people from Slpporo , olfieijls estlmate . o Y.o o en(,...,._,. . or . cook.! to computer eQgineers they can sleep bout 29,700 Light ~~,.,,, w11 h and the ga,te clOIOS untU the In Noborlbel!u ( Muddy orange aeats a 'Jl'ililed right change ii.produced. Stream), lbe old Hokkaido qtlc batbl. · paneling run :a, on in-1'1le 15--mlnutt ride from the custom of mixed bathing atilt But hotel space will be so Dated rubber tiJll!!< Japan, a center of Slpporo to the OIJ'll' goes on in huge t 11 e 4- short that some naUons plan nation of su~~ (.wprJd'11 pie Vllla·ge at Makomanai, bathrooms containing dozens to send passengers ships to longest m1'4.·hf,o 'rfdlf 1 where Emperot Hirohito will of rectangular and oval pools northern Japan to .serve as ·"fastestlralft 1tbe~ open the games in the $4 fed by steaming water laced 20 rooms o the C..Ji Turlds~ wiU be working to keep lbe viliton in tlis" city's six ·Bath (wood al!A!r Japan a games going, The Olympic weatern-etyle-hotels, 13 ! f11mous ~llh cenµiry uoveJ ), staff includes 4,800 Jape.nese ryokan.s Japan,ue inns With w~ girl att~~ts coat soldiers deployed to pack snow straw mptted t;ltOrs for beds their _nude bodies m soapy slopes with their feet. and several youth hostels. foam to serve as human A big headache Is the lack of Dally attendancte, )lo~ver. washrags. hotel space. The athletes will is ex~ to rUn as high as noating ~-. subways iii Gitl!l~t!d million speed skating rink. with sulphur. salt, iron, alum The 11th Winter Olympics, penumatic ~ay ia~ t6e eo1ta 60 yea (about 20 cent!) or radium. , 'Japan has ~pent about $41 live in new apartment houses 70,000 people. · .mUUon to btuld and o~rate -19-five-story buildings for Many Japanese will make the 14 ice stadiums, ski and men and two 11-story buildings one-day vi.sits to the winter bobsle~h . courses and other for women -which wUI be games., returning . home at Olympic 11tes. sold to Japanese families by night. Three domestic airlines first ever staged in Asia, will world. r ::~~ " ~. "· on the automated subway. "Ml.:zed bathing has been a be held' Fib. 3-13 oo mour>-SubwQ ~ te , Part of the subway runs way of ille ia Hokbldo for talooul Hoddaido. "J a pa n ' s automat.{CifiJ;. •· ket abo,ve ground t h r o u g b generation!,'• a government DOl'thern frontiu I s I a n d punch~... _ • dur4J.pminlm tunoela 11ud · official Pid. • ~gistered for the Winter the government's housing co,.. operate as many as 30 OJghll- Olympics are l,T19 alhJetes portion after the games. one da~ to' Sapporo from TokyO, tJNl'IT.D STA.TES NATIONAL l\ANI< omcz LOCATIONS •• • I • • ' :..:;·""f'·. ~)J . ' ·~ . h"' .. _;.:Everything ·starts with you at :.·United States National .Bank . I .. I . . ' When it comes to people; banks can be awfully unhuman. Downright .. stuffy. At United States National Bank, we think that's wrong ; , ... So we 're launching a campaign to ·make things right. . · -Por Ip.stance , we 've asked our pe ople to be just that.· Pe.ople . So you~d be comfortable around us .. ' We put soft chairs in our lobb y. So you'd be comfortable, .Petiod. . And :to.make' your life a lit tl e more com- fortable,, we offer a ,.J.bt of services. . L~~e: ;Fr:u&a~ .Check (?o-charge· ~he~~g when a $100 minimum daily balance IS mam- t~ined). :Oiffet~nt savings plans for different kinds · of!:savers. Trust Services. Bonus Balance Check- ing.' The Master <;harge faceCard. * And more. . In addition, some of our 61 branches in Southern California . have . TV Drive-Up Win- dows. And · e~tended bank~~l~ours for people Who work <i;UE.ng.n~rmal b . , 11g hours. , : So yott', see; Uruted Statesi National Bank is ~g-~f you. . . . ,,··We .figure that's ·thy.·~~t way of getting you t0 :·tbink bf Us. " '1 ... .... : ·~ • ·-· .. I • T . t . ' -K (j • ... I ... Member F.D.l.C. • • :(: l , • ' • Where everything starts with you . ' \ • ' ' 1 • ' ' r . . . " "Tfldtm1r1t.Rt11Walfoft l'tndlnc •1172 by Ufltltd Sttltt Nttltfltl 9"tl!I ) • a one-bolir !Ught that cos!• 12,900 yen about f43 one way. There ii al1<> plane, train and bUs service &om olber cities ln this naUon of 104 million population. To beat tl'I& crush and t.'\lt costs (3,500 yen or nearly $~2 a night for a single room 111 Sapporo1s Grand Hotel}, the Soviet Union aod North Korea will sail passenger ships to Otaru port to serve as hotels for their peofle. The larges forelgn delega• lions 'to the Sapporo Olympi cs will be from the United State~ with 123 competitors and the Soviet Union with 107. '";, .. ·, • . , ... • .i :n " . " ! • • • " .. costs way. and cities illion cut y $12 min , the ore a ps 10 hotels elega4 mpic~ States the I i • , .. . . " ,. ' • , • . ~ • ... ' I • • • By All JSON llEl!:RI\ Of .. .,..,, '"" "'" . ' . • . . kl"1• I>eD sjitocer btgao sketchin( clotii' and sewill;g· V-llf .p_,11z. Hor ~ xolded · heo ·for doodllQI lo clw. , · · · She didn't c1rt1111 . then .that her """ tlOns wolll~ 'one .S.y clrtlO )II~ •lobe. ; Marlene:~·creottons bave been' worn ' ' . lo the Oannu film festival,. Quetp Elizabeth'• 1anten partx and tht Academy Awardl• preaentaUon. 1 ; H.,. designs have been ~ by pollU· clans' Wivts and movte.1tan .. She dea1po ed pro!essionally in 11>; msjor u .S: cll!IJ be!°"' movng to Oronge County. Now MN. Kenne\b Mansllt!cl of Hun- tington lleacb, ·sl>O .Ii tnoW.' to' her friends a~ M~, . a Juidhooci n~ I ' ( ' • ~ that stuck,. ' , : • 1 Her current '".cliehtl" are philanthropic erganiz.aUons. • : ; · · 1 • ' "~woutd Jti>t 1•1 ·gJuig.1n!~ll\\llr!" cne clty," she explained, ."ind. we ,d .,,, move.; Finally, .I decided 'lo•. give my talen~ to chaflty 1!or'lc:." , • ., 1 CHAllITIES BENErn ' • She recently designed for u ... C!ill .. '• Benefit League ol'Long Beach: T!\e.,.m. ner received a ch?'ce~of a9;POi;ti',to!em- ble/ d:ess and coot or formal gown. Mrs. Mamlield: desl~ the ~'~·the winne{. J!i>P Trr.cy Clh,lic benel1ttaj lrppt f_unds~.:J. '· .· •. Another design • was · auctiolled r off ito benefit the adlolarahip l llllld ; ef : the Oran&,• County· ~· :.o1: ~¥"' Coll!'K•, (:olunllila,. Mo. Mrs. Manslleld was one of Iii• Youngest grac!Uiiei ~i·uie college's !schoot of,cif&ign. · · . " ; She , majored In d re 11 deoign. and minored in ·fine . arts. WhHe· there, !•he captured the coveted Willlam DaltOn design award; "I do everything mySelf," 'a}le ' sal~, discµsSing how :she ·l\"'S·aJ>out·ereall'!g 'a desiin;. ; 1 1 i • • • ·, • "I• llegin·_by-buyib(' the ·fabric. ·'!11en-I go .fnm· tbeie.: I 'do 'my• oW\!' aketchtnji, pa~'allil ' eic<ute'·lbe· 'ctt•tcn myself. tJ / I ' ' ' EXTENSIVE·CAREER - I • ' Flowing , formal gown, daytime dren. de1igne'.d . ' . 'I • I• f3J1U and formol>gowno'fOr n·a 11 o;n a! • arter her son lold his Scouting buddies his fu~ ccfnWn.s.' 1 " \ I · ' t mom 11cquid do 'anjthin(;?•\s/jie!• '·llio ~ .. cons!~"" rh~ J ... ~ . •fl. ·been a Llltle LelgOe &nc! ~balf.;;!,&;:, ln~Mr w ·wu·wearing fancy pant:a -A favorite activity is watCbiDg bet dll her1 v,er.s~. of J97l's, bot pants. In.1968 , . sur! apd skindive .. 'th moved ,Into ' letU>en : arid'. Ollrjch ' .•LOVES, PEOPLE ~·;$~~~~·.alio~ for \hll ,wlnter. ·, 1 !-n Aquarian,' Molly M~ield ~':es The'. M1Dit!eJds· ~ved . ill , ~:' ~. : ·~Id, wwn colo;s and:peop1e .. mr homo wbfu she •lten!led Wuhinglon l!nl~;n~·, ,.1.1._~ra1e4· in sunny r~,.orang~ ,ad ti .. 1aod:1tn.JI~~~~( B~, ·Ala., gol~ -her fayp~ C:O~~ -1w~r-1sp ~=,Al>l,ell!.';~. FVir~Be .. SWinyyl vale; 1. sbliw up· tn.mosl of hei'·clotfiliig.' Sbel!llces \Ao! 1 t.Wl'IUJA/ a.: ana ver Y Jllbj bl -• 1 I · · · · or.· se!lllhg In' Huirt~h Beach·w\lh • .. •~ ~as. · . tblfr .tW&IQM, Ji and 16. · 1 . , . .She ~wtan wigs occasionally' "be<iause Iler bactgrcund,.lo the field. ia. ex· tensive. After -.t,fllom age llr lhe earned · a local reputation IDd· Jv:.t profelllonal fee ·~·1u•foi:. 'cjeslcnliil ~ng ttie bride's ~ atttndanta•. ,J,,.'_. r . : · . · some dr'e$ses look better on a blonde .. So · ~....,..TES! G!>WNS , .. for ~ ev~nlng, i beconli oiie!' . Her ''retirement;• from designing is an !lir.~~ b gellf{al maiiager of'tbe for.a. weddlag·ln her hometown, Unco!n, Neb. ' • , ·~ designs IOOn .... ,. eicl1ed •up•by . Bulimcl:, appwln_g in cate!Op uillU 'just a.few )'W1 ... J Sl>oi.'!'f"' ~ 1!1-., .. .... ... ~ actl~. one. ' : . CJ.~1>Klng . Division in . Loil( Beacb of Ml!< .. lr<Jm• charity ·work she does &verly. ·llllll-based Oayfin, cOrp. ·Mrs. IO'Wlli .')Ilion· :i..jllest ·for friends alld. ,' MWflell1 la a past ·preskjepl·, and ~'-~;She '-~·~ a:.gown aoJ : membel; at Women.of Day&.m , · j 'W\ full~~. fur eoat ·for ;her son'• girl , Bri!lae.1 goU alld travel •are , other. In· !rlel'4'to;wear't<Ythe prom. · ter&ia the coup(e share. · ' '!;lit"~··'~" Petunia, the Ilea · But Marlene llell ~ M111!i11"14l1 8cbiit\~~ ,1n a~iri!iied .eanvu co+er .rir~ love la~ d~~..;..~~ •. "'·.•·,·'l'{•l, ... ~ ... • .. e1~a ud .ia • 1J MARWI ClllUSTY NEW YORK. Deli-Gecrge Halley -.the flml boJ·b Alllance;Obi9, who """"'1"od. IA.!foblon -bu taken two llaot lleps la Iii life. Finl> He~ &laJDoroUI Claudia l\l«pn, thO SOUthero writer turned Normllli NoNll model. Noroll, who Is Claudia'• "father :substitute," gave her away in marriage. While walking don. the aisle, Norell rewured her that some- day Halley, an unknown, would make It big. ' ' , .• Twelve years later, during the midi crlall, ilallY )>ecame the only major Amerlcall ~ to aay "no" to long hemlines <!!sP!la the preasurea from fuhlon mii~· stores, feUo.w deatpers. llall@)'·Sfubbornly .took a mlcJ. tnee stancJ. ·Backers lamented. that HalleJ wul """"'1Wn& su!Clde f<\r bbn and them. ' Today, when the ·fashion ·-.., la sufferlni a bjCb:_mortallty rate, Halley's votmne bu skyrocketed. Envious com- :peUIOrl are ~tly callJng . bbn "Mr. Cl!/l>L" Backers are ecstatic. Both gambles are related. and paying ·Olf !or lbe bearded deaignet .Ibo looka U :11 be belongs I!'" a sinlth )!rolhers coug!r ,drop bo<: I 'never cleslgn anything Claudia wouldn't 1 wear and Claudia 1IOUldn1 " ... at-flrll mlclll." ' Halley, cmnp!etei\. ' sold on bla wile's tastt, bu created fa new boUllque co~ ltctlon (fl .... ) that cam.. ber nsme. Tiie line, leei-a ilffar old, Is alrudY In 400 top --.it od the money II relllill bi. Halley'• ooly pijiblem la the nervous tension !hit accomp,nles llllCC<SS: "' eat traoqullll%er• Ilk• they """ caody," he says. ()()ZY COVERS ; r r , , Tiie llalleYI bave recently moVe!I into a duplet bnlwnslolle Iha! bdita.gj. Tiie -bodrllom, detjgne4 U a tr1but6 to Ida wife, ha I. D canopied bed Iha! la five loot ' Ille flocr. A -1 belps lo gel \ , But, .... ,elllCODCOd • co'"1 llideJ tile flowered covm,•H'• poulble toeijlJ a map°""l 'riew of the ,..-. Clalld!a ~bu ·• thlnC -faiidtr. 11 msttrlll snag• on Jewelry, Wl'lnklps qulcld1 er scratd!es the oldn -H's a dtflnltt no-no. \O<fay Georp never goes fabric shopping lot bla collection without Claudia la ""'. Claudia _,, llw~ wear Halley dolhol. SomeUmeo H'a N o rt 11 . --Ifs Blm. 8oc1-tt'1 Qalanoa. Ont n1gbt lbeJ -to • ball with Claudia wearfllll a no .. llalle1 lllnl<1 bladl ..... plllCtlllllad wllb pUrll. Slit w• carr)'lnc ona of thole "proper" alllplar 1'len dlt ~ llar!ed I • Claudia annoUnced the clotbes~Ocd her personality: "FOr heavtn11 1ake1, Geof&e, '' she oald. "Why do I have lo sit here and' be BO turlbly dlp!fled. I feel llke Mrs. Loel Gu!Mess. "l!m too -lo be playing the -clreued matron role. I want clothes !hit make me feel Uke I can get up and have fun." Claudia spent. the evening curslni ber Inhibiting clotbes •. NEXT DAY Next day George slatted. designing , a slew of lelY dance dresser. HI.I theory waa that Claodtt, a prol<lfype d. ml~ who warit to be elegant without being slaves to fashlpn, waa expresalng typical discontent. Claudia atlll remalnl the Ilalley fubion consultant. But she bu given up mana&· ing the office and modeling .the cl~. Hilley his recontly moved to Sevenµ. Avenue and bu a <all ol hundreds, Nolle ol the crucial declllons are made 1fltl\ollt Qaudla. But now she'• at home wrttini a boolc about the •Incl• girl frtlm Durbam, N.C.1 who conquera that jungle known u Mannaltan. · Ask George If the boolc 1 s 1utobiogra\iblcal and: "Of c o u r 1 e , Claudia -the 1111 aod outs. And obe his kept a l~ of not.I." Oaudla also bu another book In the worko. 11•1 a Nonnan Norell•blograpily. Norell, la Illa' 'IOI and trusting Claudia completely, has r<port.dly signed i will whlcb give• Claudia perm!s1lon to publloh the boolc after' bla death. Tbe will 1lire11 her acce11 'to all bla papen and memorabilia. Bui .ctaudla't ·1\ronl lnfluence la fashion 1WI pervades. Claudia'• latest coup revolves round ber love ol ponlt. Store buyers bave told Halley !hit ~llulll . are "dead" ll)d. they wolllllli't touch .them with'a 10.foot pole. Claudia to George: "I don't care whet tho llo!u are layinC. I need ln>ulen lo wait Ille clog and 10 to the supmnarket I'm certainly not 19ing to do Ille cboru 1n. couture." ' = dealpd ponllulll •• ,... ~=~--Int. the -·-beUinB fOr pantaulll. ob,-tlley iClibfMlll1*l:lnl'•'lnlllak• I)!' nol lloctlnc panll for the winter col· !Odin. Bui now the cuslol!l'r demiu>d WU grial/lM bifiin in1. llit 1iould lie f ·~.· ~·""" • .I,: .. ) : 'f,l~, put Into lallriedlatt producllon? You guesoed IL ,Georgt ,dug ""· Y>! ,._,.,.. __,-;..-.·~·ii-: . .t....<oµ;... Qllldla etch< lllid ~ lnmlfeh'td t r , tht lrouaen lnlo bla line. Today they're a I l>ol Item. Gecqe'I 111...,ma ltalemeot Oii hlJ \ judge<r!Uc Qaodia: "However blows Qndla-.. -1111 falllloa _ .. • • • r j • l ) :• .... llA ANDlllSON,,I~ ·.i T.....,, .l•Mlln 4r 1'11 P.W -~~-. Ann Landers ........ .... ! .. • • • She Finds~· Losing TOPS ·' . . •' • DEAR ANN LANDERS : I want . 1q; thank you for the wwer you gave llMf man who was so criUcal <l. fat wives. we· hive recognhed alcoholics as people 1"1tl\ an lllnesa and in our hearts feel sorry for them and their families but they u. M more Ill tblD many people W!th· overweight problems. I know! For 17 Ye&rs 1 was fat. I weqi on 111 aorui of f1d diell. I'd lose fi\le poondl end In a month I'd gain IS.•.J hated myseU fer, the way I l<>i>letf. Buying a dreu WU torture. I WU wrO my family didn't love me because I look· ed Uke a baby blppo.· My love for thedi Ot • wanll!ll to~ a decent.~ made no dll~ f......_,, I •,!> !Dce-tlr· Tiie mor-. i,. dfaltl:ed myiell; 'the m<n I ate. N8sly remarks, tbs cbllclren's innocent blrbii and the ~ J9ku made me eat more. .. · • • . ;-.. Then one dly I got .. rve enough lo Joill TOPS. That "P' 1 ... thsn a year ago. Meeting with peol!le who shared my pro- bl<m gave me the •1lrtllglh to ltick to a 1enslble diet Today I am down to the weight set by my doctor and I've bee1 thei'< for sir mol1lhl. I love the way I look. My b!Qesl thrtll .la when my Ill..-' band calll ·mt 11~." '1'hlnk: God ht loved me ~ 14 ~ ""1UlllL. ~ No one wllllfl to bf !all So the '&st time you sea a 1~1 --.I. ~c ! r..,,. ...... , r" this, please. ,a.. com-1oaate.. - FORMER FA'l'I'Y • 0 .. • •• • ' OAILY PILOT T-, .i....,, 4, 1972 Contest Provides Lesson in History Only a few more weeb are Jell to enter the Amer!· can history essay cont.ls! sponsored by the Col. Wil· liam Cobell Chapter of the Daughters of the Amer· lean Revolution for Harbor Area fourth through seventh graders. Helping Lori Lytton with research on the topic How My State Acquired Its Name are Mrs. Kermit Christman Oeft) and Mrs. Richard 0th· berg. Deadline is Jan. 20. . J Clubs Cro~ding C~lendar ,. 'f'. •' Orange ~ clubs have full business sessions to plan the agendu for beglMlng 1972. year's activities. Region, will speak to'merilbers lecling in Mex.ico Thursday, of the NewJ>Ort H a'r bo·r " Jan. & at 7:30 p.m. in Mira Toastmistreu C I u b W~· Linda School, Buena Park, for nesday. Jan. 5, ·11t their 11:30 the Orange County BromeUad a.m. luncheon me:eting Jn'. Society. Jonuary calendor1 are filled with lunch""", -"'1>o!>o and Crafts Claues Peering Around DURING THE HOLIDAYS a -;:,;i;iii'ii.Patrkk'1 Day party Ip the ,. Mua home of Mr. and Mn. Ray Murphy was the OC· CISiOI for Mr. and Mn. Rich· Md Conklin of Shorei:IUfs to celebrate Conklln's birthday., Leathercraft, rt.itchery, wire sculpture, block prints and burlap wor~k will be highlight.s of the winter crafl! classes of. fered by the Santa Ana YWCA. ,. Sewing for fun, gourme\ foods , investment .securities, bas.le home repairs and arts ot r.eateryear inCJudlng tatting, quilting, lacemaklng a n d beading aJso are offered. Registration is open now for classes beginning, Monda y, J !n. 17. • Beginners square dancing classes will start Monday, Jan. 17. at 8 p.m. Square dance caller BUI Hay will in· · ltruct. Cereer Day Odie's restaurant, Costa Mesa. Eartliquakes . Earthquake efigineer Eugene E. Schader ~~ w i 11 discms the FebruarY, 1971, earthquake with Insurance Women of Orange County Wednesday. J an. 5, ,1 g,30 p.m. In the Jolly Roget restaurant In Ana~eim: A business sessioQ: rollow the 7 p.m. dinner. The couples have celebrated st. Patrick's Day with parties at unusual times over the past 30 years, and party 11Jtes have. included Paris, Acapulco and Wofllen College Graduates in Honolulu. the Employment Market To- NB Ebells HOLIDAYS were 1Der¢ at daf will be the topic of Mrs. the Santi Barbara SiJtlhore 1 Mateltllne Mixer, r e g I o n a 1 by M. F. Canfield, 'UCUna · ~. U.S . .Department of Beach and the ~-,00 ~be'°' at a. caretr day for Mmea. John Porter of college wom~n Wednesday, Newport Beach arid' lfllllant J.an .. 5, frOdf .R'~ to 4 p.m, in F. Schwnann of La....., '11111•. MulU-media !loom 200 at Senior Citizens Singer Patrick Sullivan : .. California St.alt College at A senior citizens' luncheon Burke will e11te.rtain Newport T W O Pl\OFEs8iONAiLY Lolllt. Beach. Beach Ebelb durint a lunch-· will be given Thursday, Jan. fl , 'f'h _ _.. J • recognized ~e? Co a•. t A panel of women from at noon in the Fint Methodlrt eon at noon ..... u11tUay, an. v, writ.era are amon& the neweit -the~ professionr, i..1dustry and Church of Cosla Mesa. in tne clubhouse. additions to "Who's Who in · bj.lallea5 will be featured . The entertainer'• Vf'.rsaWe American · Women" for ac-· ~ 1 repertoire enc om p 1 1st s compliahing •om e th Ing ' To&stmistreu Bromeliads musical comedy to IrlsH "noteworthy that distinguish,. • Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hagthrop b<jl•d! to grand opera . Ht will them from the vast majority • Giila · Hargesty, assistant wlU narrate a 111Jde presenta-be introduced ·by program of their contemPorarles.:.' . . sufe!:vlior of _Go_ld_e_n_.De_,_er1 __ 1ionc.' _on:.._cthc.ec__•_dvOll_tc.u_res:.c..:ofc...:c.:.ol_· _· _cha_lrm_•_n_, _Mrs_._P_h_il_Fl_uh_art-"-y-.11 CLAREMONT C o'll • g . t r u 1 t e e Mrs. AndreW' (Constance) Morthland of Laguna Beach is Hated as a recipient of the Sigma Delta Chi national aW'lt'd f or outstanding journalism. con- tributing author to Engliah Emblem Books, edV1.mr for, Junior League a6d a Friend of Radcliffe College. 1 She graduated l\ltnml cum laude from 1 StaJ;ford and helped arrange the Cl1remont· Oxford Unlver.alty Educational C.Onference In 111!6. ' ' PAT KUBIS, Orange Coast l C.Oliege English Instructor, was cited for her novels, ·i under the pen name Casey l Scott, which have won awards from the Nation1I Federation of Press Women 1 n d California Press Women. Presently working on her doctorate at University of California at Ti iver~ide, Mrs. Kubis has been employed 11 a waitreas, riveter, executive aeaetary and bookke.eper. SPECIAL holiday guesb of Mrs. Paul Willi.am Llwrence tl Lido Isle and Bet Air were f'rank E. Duddy..Jr.1 _president of Marietta College, Marietta , Ohio. aod his wife. Duddy followed Ille )ale Or. William Bay Irvtne, a cousin Loi Mrt. La..,....., u J>tt.11- M>t ol lhe coijtgt. KIDS LOVE UNCI.E LEN Seturday1> in . . The DAILY> PILOT • FLAT OR FITTED wtthw M-tchl"t Piiiow C.S..-SJ.97 Whti flHltcM .. c .... et SJ.97 •,.Ir Also -Queen -Full -Twin-S~·eets, on Sal~, BLANKE.TS KING . .,,,, 5111·1 ' FULL SIZE $5. 97 58.91· BED PILL .O:W ;$ s '5h0St1.l1V• ... 97 llD LUIL DACION ·2·• ... --,11,..,v-7 IY 'AMOUS MAUI • • • • Bed 81 Ba~h tashlon ~hnns -olrrl'Gmii'l"r klllillll-.11591 Main St. H1111t1i.t~·1H<h Main at ._h-.{5 Polnls Cent.rl ., Your Horoscope Tomorrow . ~ Capricorn: Trip .on . :Agenaa WEDNESDAY· JANUARY 5 By SYDNEY OMARll Gemini can tantalize ; Llbra can charm; Leo can impress ; Cancer can otlu security ; Capricorn can be patient Md Tallf'UJ can collect. Pisces and Scorpio are tht m o a t "mysterloua" of the zodiac.al algns: naUvea of Virgo can of· fer health tips and Aquariu.s can invent. Aries initial.et proj· ects and SqlttarillS lmOOths over rough tages. ARIES (Mardi :I-April 19): Slick -to 6asic l 1 1 u e 11 • Coordinate 8ctivities. Don't wander too far afield. Do what you feel comes naturally. Leave speculation to others. Get an accounting ; take in- ventory . Correct a a f et y hazard.!. L~ng Life Toasted ...... ' .. .•299 Alie •"•ll•bl• lit H•,..,••t Geld, A¥•t•.,e •rid Cepp•rte"•· COSTA Mlllll-4ll t:S.. .. 1-111 Slrtlf~n,M,itt. M can be completed. lnvolvu funds which be.long to another. Your judgmenl ii put to tut. Succeu 11 indlciled. Kno" thla and ad 1lke you know it. Mean.s be aure, steady •nd confident. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcli lO): Oppasltlon may appear more formidable than it la Jn ao- tuallty. Try new appro1ch ln dealing with mate, )JIJ'tner. Fresh legal opinion can be ol gr""t benefit. TU. steps which free you from red tape. SEMI -ANNUAL 8AL~ SAVE 25-50% AND MORE DRESSES ••• BLOU SES ••• P;1>,NTSUITS SKIRTS ;1>,NO SKIRT SETS P;1>,NTS ••• ANO ACCESSORIES COME £All.LY FOii. BEST SELECTION ~J,,, BIDTIQUE M•1+•r Ch1r9 • 11111.:Americ•"' l ielw•ll Ch••t• 671.~S I 0 Newport B••c.h ----... --onda-·N·SMcb oompen. ---olloll. __ _ •,, .. . ..._,... I IL T~~= Jlllil 'lua ~ll It~ IM, Ill. 1M, • HUNrl ... l'Oll lllACH-lnHhunf & Gorfl.W...o.lly M, S.t. f.6 tft·lllll ltAD/0 DISPATCHED 'ACTOltY "AUTHOlt/ZED rv .& Al'l'L/ANQ SEltV/Q /'HOHi S41·U11. . . ~ I ~ ·' • '• . t . • " ' ' .... • ,. Royal T reafment •• ' Actress Princess lra .Furstenberg is starting the new year off right \Vith a new hairdo by Valentino that seems more do than hair. 8 Years Away Look to Future For Better Life By PA TRICK McCORMACK NEW YORK !UPI) -The next time your phone goes blotto, the car break! down and the electricity in your part of town fails, you may find the f91lowing ha rd to belie\:'e : By 1980, li!e in these United State.! wilt be improved. Greatly. That's what people who gaze into crystal balls say, basing their say-so on a distillation. interpretation and analysis or basic research information. The prognosticators. members of the Management Research" Center at the Unlvenity of Roche!ter. N.Y .• did tbe1r predicting for LincOln First Banlts Inc. According to the sludy : ''By the end of this decade, the life style of the average American will be signlficantly improved in terma of health care availlbility. inereased · leisure time, income, 1 con- Ventence, transportation. hous- ing, and a ·generally better en- vironment." In the area of health the computer will play an in· creasJnaly major role as the 1980! come into view. It will be uaed for diagnostic purpose!. fne1ng physicians for auch thin1s as house cal.ls. The possibility of a national health insurance plan during the decade m·ay go a \ong way toward providing adequate health care to all Americans and helping control lbe BOar- lng costs of medical trtal- ment. U8' By 1980, according to the report, the average work week will shrink to about 36 hours, affording more time r o r reqeation and leisure and ex· panded demand for recrea- tional facilities. ~"'ood prices are expected to stabilize. with a lesser percen- tage of the consumer dollar being spent on foods and beverages. Up lo 70 percent of the daily meals are expected to be con- sumed away from home since people will be on the go a lot. How humans get from here to there will <:ontinue lo be a problem but lhe forecasters feel that urban mass transit will come about through a federal mass transit fund similar to the existing bigh\vay fund which helped to l beef up construction of roads nationwide during the past two decade&. Many cities in the decade ahead ""'Ire likely to bar the 1 auto from downtown areas. This will lez.d to cen~ral I busintss districts converted into pedestrian malls. MASS AUTOS That is not to say the auto is 1'bout to ·go the way of the five cent phone call. The number of autos in the country will in- crease. By 1975, in fact, it is ex- pected that 40 percent of all American families wW own two or more cars. The number of cars on the road is expected to go up 30 percent from ! today's total . It will reach 130 million cars by 1980. If so, today's most maddening trafriC" ·jam vl'ill seem tiny by comparison with tleups of the 1980s. '!be housing crisis is el· peeled to ease by 1980 with governmental support and the use of new materials such as plastics and pre-cast concrete and assembl y line production of houses and mobile homes. Other changes -in t h e American lifestyle, discussed in the report, include : -The further development during much ol the 1170s of several trend.!! which have been apparent during the past few yeara. annual firu1, smoothing bali bra 4.49 5.50 Bal i #2601 "sno-floke ' sofi cu p bon· deou , stretch bock. White only in B C. Sor- ry, no m1il or phone orders. Body Fa shions . little boys' pant, pullover 3.29-4.99 $5 Striped pant from • famous mo k· er, slim and reg. fit . 4-7, 3.2q. $7 Long sleeved ribbed pullover swea t- er, 3-7. 4,qq, ~ittle Boy s' Wear. • 1anuary girls' jeans velour lops 2.99-5.99 6.50-7.50 Cotton velour top . wash; plum, · blu'e, orang'e. scarle t : -i--bx S.2q, 7-I 4 S.9q. $5-$6 jean s in o wide osst. of cotton denims and cordu. roy s. st riped fabrics. 4-6x2,qq, 7-14 ),qq, Girls' Sports weo r. .. Tut$d'•Y Janu•ry 4, 1972 DAILY PILOT IS ---- sales harbizou f eathaire ~ slee pwPar 7.99·10.99 Ju~! on e from our col lection ol loc.e l'l nd embroidery·trimmed nightwear, All in Fea th oirel'I flannel , the worm, wonder f.,Orii of polyester ocrylic / royon nylon. Shown: "Donnie Be~s " $11 long gown, , m I. a_qq , Sleeo•uea r L1riqe1 ie. • • • • • • . . • :· •• . . "• ;;; "• .. • . • • • . , ... . " .. .· " .. • .. Median family Income' is likely to increase 50 percent to more than $10,000 and one family In three may earn at least $15,000 a year, compared to one family jn 13 today. These include con11umeri..sm,J-===================::::::::::::::::::::::::; demand for environmentaI]1 preservation, y o u t h f u I re- jection of certain traditional values, the feminist move- ment. changes in churches, and more generally shared concern about the eradication of poverty and racial barriers. • .. • • El.ectronics and technology will play an imporlant role in making life more pleasant by 19111. Cable lelevisM>n will provide the bui! for in-home shop. piJ\I, the vid~telephone, elec- t ronlcally-delivered newspapers, and a seemingly infinite variety o r en- tertainment and educational programming. Technology in the kitchen may ..und to edible pa<kag· ina: and food.1 prepared enough to reduce meal prtparation to 5el'Ol'lds or minutes. Homes Mode • Safe for All -Imitation foods like meat and vegetables made from such substances as spun pro- tetn from soybeans. -New financing techniques which will put home ownership more easily within the reach oI many newl)'Weds. -A growth of regionalism and • metropolitanization i n local government, as cities have to go beyond their boon· daries for revenue. A1 we move along In the '703, the view or the '80s looks promlslng, of course. Prognosticators st!d1 something Uke that at the A borne safe tor adults is: not start of the eos, as a maUer of necessarlly safe for a baby or f bold~ the arrl al f I prOM:hoolor. act , up v o 1 •i'O 1 1 dart of an I tr you are accustomed to emergent golden era. , (bleaches, lyes, detergentl \ slOriog housohold po ts on • ,-:~~~i~~~=-· polish .. , beneath °" link, ~ -I \ move them to 1 higher she.~ ~ unW UWe guosta have loft. FRANC.JS-Allo. wbon upocting litUo JIUOlla. make "'" medications '\ ORR p ate locked away. \9 e,/ . ~-~~;;;;;;;;;;;-FINE STATIONEllV HALF PRICE SALE I I I \ ci\1~~ SILICTtD nlMl 1111 t(IAIT IUWAf 11•~111t emu tu. •Al·Cff'fllltf .w .. kleinerts rubber pants 2/1.69-2/2.19 "Duro lite" pants feature snug fit , du rable doubl e stitching. $·1 Pull-on style, infan ts' siz•s layette s-m-1-x l, 2/f.6q. Pull-on toddler sizes 0 s-m-1: snap-on infant sizes in layette·s·m-1· xi, reg 1.25 now 2/2.lq, · Infants' Weor . long nylon (ruilL-robe 14.99 Reg. $18 wosheble ro be !or you r leisure ho urs. Nylon tricot qu il ted to polyesta •. nylo n lined. Choose cher- ry. royal , jade in >izes 10·18. Mo;J and phone orders in"i te d. Robes . at the broadway ANAHEIM +44 N. E1ttU4 1714) IJl·tlJ I NEWl'C)ltT 47 F•1hle1t ltl•n4 17141 •••·ltll HUNTINWTON IEACH 1117 E41t191r A•eflu• 171 41 1'2·11JI OlANW£ JJOO Ne. T11tt l" Strt•t 171<11 ,.1.1111 SMO, 10 A.M. TO t :Je •.M. MONDAY THltOU6H FllOAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 '·M SUNDAY I 2 NOON TO I 'M. I Cll~ITOI .liOO lei C•rtlte1 M.11 11111 1&0-04 t I ., . " . ., .. ' • . ·- ' i c I • • • ' ' ' ' • ' , Jf DAILY PILOT take1·s Get Three Sp ot s On All-stars fiEW YORK -Gu1rd1 Jerry Weal and GV:l Goodrich ind center Wiit Ch1m- be:rl1ln of lhe record-breaklna Loa Angelell Lakers were named Monday to the West leam for the Nation1I Basket· bill A1soci1tlon'1 22nd 1Mu1I All·star 11me. Wesl and Goodrich, the. acorin1 heroes ln 'lhe Laker•' fanil1Uc St-11me winning 11reak. will be In tht starting line-up for lhe game Jan. II at Phll1delphl1 whJJe Olambtrlaln will play behind Kareem J1bb1r ol the Milwaukee Bucks. 1'he starting forw1rdl, In voting by 1pbrts wr\ler1 and 1portsca1ler1 In the 17 NBA cities, will be Spencer Haywood of th& Seattle SuperSonics and Bob Love ot the Chicago Bulls. Suard Oscar Roberton of Milwaukee and forward Caule Ruaaell of the Golden Slate Warriors 1lso were Voted to ' the ltam. • • PHOENIX -When tht Phoenix Suns droj:>J)ed a 111-110 decision to the Houston 1\~ets here Dec . 11, Coach C:Otton FiCUimmons solemnly promised his pla)rers they woold be fined the next time the)'. lost to a team under .~. S1,1nday nlj:ht the Suns dropped a 11'- 11 I decision to the: Atlanta Hawks and a short time later, Fltulmmon1 kept his ptll~ige. He fined every Sun who played in the 11tne. ei:cept the: centers. 1100. He fined the center1. Otto Moore and N~ Walk, 1200. • DEDICATED SURFER -!Jcspile temperatures in the mid·50s, an unidentified surfer rides near the U,.I Ttl~ll DAU.AS -Super Bnwl mania became all the more apparent here Monday as 1ev_tral hired stand-ins reported the:y wlJ'! being paid $100 to stand In line and J>litchttse DalleJJ·Miami Super Bowl tick· ets for game faM. curl of a breaker ln lhe Pacific Ocean. The cold-de· fying surfer is clad in an insulated rubber wet suit. ~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--' ''t sold myself too cheap," Winced Chip Crim er, a college student. "Before I knew just what was being p8id, I came h~P!: lo viMt some friends who were in Unt. •A man came up and offered me $75 to :ttand in line f<r him."' Blood rel1tlonships apparently were no barrier to the crass greed being dl4P11yed by slandins. -+nother college student, Larry Wright, said he charged his aunt SIOO to stand in l\M 1nd purchase four tickets. Wright s1Wi the rate was "pretty standard." ()lly season ticket holders have options to ~y the $JS tickets with leftover tickets 1oi111 to the a:eneral public Thursday. ·: . NEW YORK -C.Osta Mes1fs Barry Asher wa1 in lflth place with 1.689 total plril after the eight-game fir1t round Monday in the SI00.000 BPAA U.S. Open Bo•ling Tournament. Dive Soutar of Gilroy, Calif .. held the leat·afttr the first round wit h 1.817 pins. • 'n!'e California Angels have released vef!ran righthander Jim Maloney, whose onr, season with the Amerlc1n Le:arue ou'b proved a disappointme nt. Maloney, acquired from the Cincinnati Rea's last winter, was 0-3 (or the Angels with a s.10 earned-run-avera&e ln 13 arr pearances. He was hampered by Injuries. Maloney. JI , came to the Angeli in 1971 in a trade for Greg Garrett. With Cincinnati, Maloney hurled three no-liit games Md had five one-hlttert to lli the National League c1ree.r mark. • sft>NEV -Tennis riv1l1 EvMne Goiagong ol Australia and Vll'linla Waale of Britain had walkoven into the thitd round of the New Soutb Wiles Open Te"js Champiooship11 today. Itth players' opponenla withdrew bediuse of injury. 1Jis allowed the tennis 1t1n an ad- ditpnal rest following their 1ruellln1 1inf.1!s match Mond1y In Melbourne In wh~h Miss Wade dafe1ted MI 11 GoiJ,agong to take the Austr1llan title. ~liS Goolagon1 failed to find the form whth gained he.r the Wimbledon 1ln1le.1 titt la!t year and tht 20-yeeMld Atiorigine lost to Miu Wade M, M in 64 mi~tes. ·,(was nice to win the liUe , bllt much niCf! to beat Evonne on her home gr~." said the temperamental Mi.58 WNll' after her vict~. "I Clime 12.000 mi~ to prove 1 Point. ' •• :, . •• ~ PAUL-MINNEAPOLJS -Winles~ cztf~08lovaki1 upset the power f u I Ruisi1n world champions 6-1 Mond1y ni~t in the final game of lht fir~! annual WtCup amateur hockey tournament. Russians had outscored ll\e op. po 32-7 in winning their f\rat lhree ga~. includin1 an 8-3 decision over the Cr.91M in the lint round of the double rotind-robin at Cqlorado Springs. Cf.liege Rankings )1" ·~ .\ulN:lttti ,.,.. i aA.Slt'ITl.t.Lt.. "' ....... ,... ,.... .., ... ~ I I.A ... g 11, UK 1-1 111 ·~-~ .. t: l~WrvW\411 , •• 17' I t-C1'1t11M" t.1 • ll. Mtr.tfllll t>1 If' • (ff0!1!141 ·1 +.ii 14. ¥1ti.,.,..... t-1 !JI I 1Mli1111 .... JU ti. SW l.tvtl .. M J.I IOt t ·-1·1 ,., 16. H1w'1H f.f IM 1 LDOllv+!t• .. , 171 17. SI JoN!'slNV'J •t f) I C11 S!trt tlll '" 11' 11. lrlt. 'reunt a.J It 1 v1,,1ni.. M JO it. k~y J.J " ID.°"" lttll 1'1 II' Jt,. l'IW._ Slllt •t # • '!'.: ':. •. , 11! N '" IM 111 ,., ... .... -... " .. " ... " , ..... , ' • UCI Seeking Seventh Win In Succession UC Irvine will be seeking Hs seventh basketball victory In successio n tonight when it entertains Bethany College of Oklahoma City in Crawfnrd Hall with ll1>1>ff at 8 o'clock . • The Anteaters ol coach Tim Tift are currently working on a six-game winning streak and hope to add to the list against Bethany and Olivetl Colle~e of Illinois next Monday to lie the all-time record at UCI. The mark could be broken aga inst Chapman College a week from Friday. All three are UCI home games . The 1969-70 Irvine aggregation posted an eight-game win streak. longest in the six-year history of basketball at UCI. Bethany College played San Fernando Valley State College last night and Jost,· W-&1. bringing the season record to 4-7. The Redskins have three starters back from a year ago for first-y ear mentor Jim Poteet, former Blola College or La Mirada coach. The three include Jeff Jantz (6-6 1 who averaged 17.5 points a game a year ago: Mike Stokes 16-6 1 with a 9.7 average; and Kirk Knight !fi.2) with a 13.9 norm . Poteet took a pair of junior college transfers to Oklahoma City with him. Greg Kyle attended Golden West and Steve Peterson graduated from Fullerton Junior college. Loses II. Starters Third National Crown Possible for Nebraska LINCO!.N, Neb. IAP I Ca" Nebraska's Cornhuskers. having wnn two straight n1tional football championships. make it three in a row ? No team has ever earned the triple crown. but Nebraska will have to be con- sidered a strong contender when anotl1er season opens in September. Eleven of the 2~ .starters on offense and defense, who punished Alabama 38-6 in an · Orange Bowl showdown New Year's night . will be lost by graduation . but a solid nucleus of sophomores and juniors remains. The severest blow, although not an- ticipated, would be some kind of a breakup of the coaching staff. a winning combination headed by Bob Devaney. PrOfessionaJ teamg are known to have eyed Devaney, and the coach is hanging loose. "I wouldn't shut the door on a change.'' he said recently when queried on the sub- ject. "If some pro club came up with a good nffer. and if it had a good chance to win, I'd listen." Insiders believe Devaney w o u Id hesitate, hov.·ever, to break up a t'oaching team which includtt1hr.tt 1ides -Mike Corgan , John Melton and Clrl Selmer -who have been at Devaney'• side for 15 years, and another, Jim Ross, "'ho..~ associ ation with Devaney totals 26 years, includ ing 11 at Alepna, Mich., HJ1h School. .. The undefeated Huskers returned from Miami Monday to be greeted by lJ.. degree temperatures, blow ing snow and about 275 hardy fans . Devaney and several top playe rs were not in the traveling party, having scat- tered lo participate in postsea son all-star sames. Dev2.ney will coach the North team in Saturday's Hula Bowl game in Hawaii , v.•her~ his players will inc I u de quarl.erback Jerry Tagge, back Jeff Kinn ey and offensive guard Dick Rupert. Tagge, Kinney and Rupert, along with All-Amer ican defensive tackle Larry Jacobson. will be among the standouts: lost by graduation. But holdovers include flanker Johnny Rodgers, All-A~erican middle guard Ri ch Glover. and defensive end Willie Harper. all juniors this year. · UCLA Coacl1 Concerned Ten of the 44 players on the two top of. fensive and defensive units are sophomores, 17 are juniors, and 17 are seniors. Waiting in the wings Lo take the place nf departing quarterback Tagge and his backup signal caller, Van Brownson, are a pair of touted rookies, David Humm and Terry Luck. About Upco1ning Journey Humm. of Las Vegas , one of the ardenUy recruited prep araduates in 1970, lived up to his billing as a freshma.c but was withheld from action this season to preserve a year of eligibility. 1 LOS ANGEL~~S -Citing a "diffic ult time'' in the Northwesl last season , UCLA coach John Wooden has voiced some concern over the weekend opening of the Pac-8 basketball stal e. His nationally No. I ranked Brui ns play at Oregon State on f'rlda y night and at Oregon on Saturday. "We hope lo get off to a good start on this first road trip," Wooden told the Southern California Baskelball Writers Monday . He noted that last year the Bruins won one game in the Northwest by one point, two by two poilllS and one by four points. "But we·re a good team and we'll give a good account of ourselves,·· he said. "That doesn 't mean we 'll win, but we 'll be a good team ." Wooden sounded more optimistic when •sked if he thought his undefeareft but young team should be favored for the Pac-8 title. ··rm certatft.1hr.t on the bl.sis of what has happened, lhil"'Wt would be so nam. ed. so J'U uy yes," he 1nswertd. The Bruins, winner1 of lhe na tional col- legiate title the past fivt years, art 8-() on the season. Coach Bob Boyd and' his Uni versity of Soulhern California tell1l Wiil also travel to the northwest. meellng Oregon on Fri- day night and Ore1on State in the Satur day artemoon realonaUy te.leviaed a:am#. Jlofh Boyd and Wooden said they th®1ht Ottaon stale would be the toughe'r of the two Oregon teams. And bolh men 1ald they wondered whttlltt ·0reron would hevt s-1oo1-10 center Al Clrlson eligible for thi lr sames. Me.owhile. • aeokcsman at Oregon ,.Id It wsa expecltd Iha! Clrlaon would 1 i be e_llgible for the st.art of the Pac-8 season. The center, who leltered as a reserve behind Stan Love last season , was scholastically Ineligible dur ing the spring and fall quarters. He did not compete in his team's Oectmber games. "I really don't know whal to expect al Oregon ,'' Wooden said. "I krmw ·coach Dick Harter thought he would have a 1ood team wit h Carlson ." Boyd aaid it will be difficult for him to set up defenses for Oregon unUI it's know n whether Carlson will play. Coach Jerry Tarkanian of Long Beach Stilt brandtd as ridiculous a comment by San Diego State coach Dick D1vi1 th1t' he'd pick the Long Beach team over UCLA. "He 's just 1aying that because we're playing his learn," Tarkanian aald. The 49ers travel to Sin Dieao Thursday nlghl Luck. a 5-foot-3, 208-pounder out of Fayetteville, N.C .. led the freshmen to a 4-0 season last fall as the leading scorer, leading passer and total offense leader. Even given ?.nother outstanding 1972 sea son, the Huskers will be hard put to match the 13 victory 1971 season. Twelve of the triumphs were fashioned with margins ranging from a high ol SS points. a shut.out of Kansas , to a low ol 24 points, 31-7 over Colorado. Only second ranked Oklahoma played the Huskers close, 3S-31 . Nebraska will begin the 1972 season with 11 string of 32 games without defeat, 23 consecutive wins . Devaney has not hid a losing season at Nebraska. His worst were 6-4 season In 1967 and 1968. In five seasons at Wyoming and 10 at Nebraska. Devaney has pos~ a winnin1 percentage of .819, lops among major veteran eo1ches, on 127 victories, 1.8 losse1 and six ties. · · ' Frazier Beats NEW YORK (AP I -Wall Fraiier •• neutral oblener, btlieve1 h MllwlVkee' Bucks, defending champions of the Na- tional Basketball Ass0d1tion, ire better than the Lo& An.ele1 Lakert, tht Je1gut'1 hollest lcam with 31 cons~t1ve v!C. tonu. "I'll takt the 81.itli," said Frazier Monday 'nlght afltl" ht had sparked U. New Yorlt Kni<k1 t<i a JOI-19 comtbac!k victory over Milw1bkee in 1 nationally ldevlffd llmt. "They won the UUe lut 1t1son." con· tinued the veteran a:uan:I. "and ~ 1 Liken have a bad Lraclt record ," a nl......,. t<i l.o8 Anl•lea' playoff perfonnances In recent years. "I don't think they can maintain their ourrenl pace,"~· addeil. "Tlioy've got to 'hit a !lump, eooner or lailer." Frazier 1t.1rltd !lo l,y a g a i n s t Mllw1ukee, hitting only one ot seven field coal ollempt.1 In lhe first hall and col· lectlng only 111 points. It was M <'Olncldonce tllat lhe Knlcks fell behind !.W early In tho ftrll period and traUtd $M6 at halfllme. Then, In tht final period, he 1a>red If LA Ace Ber..t Poverty, Too , LOS ANGELES (AP ) -"I nev~ doubled I'd be rbl• to make ll," A)'I Jim McMillian. "But I didn't think I'd come along this fa st." Even the Los Angeles Lakers, who lho1Jght enough of McM\llian lo take him on the first roond ci the National Basket· ball Association draft two years ago, d1dn 't expect the kind of performance the 23-year-old rorward has turned in this season. Stepping Into lhe startlng spot vacated by Elg in Baylor , considered by many the 1reatest forward in NBA history, McMillian half averaaed nearly 20 points a ·game, exceeded iO twice , and helped spark the Lakers on their record winning streak. In ract, It was the game in which he replaced the retired Baylor in the starting lineup -Nov . 5 -that started the string whicll now has reached 31 games . In a recent game against Seattle, McMllllan , his cheek still sore from a seven-stitch cut opened by the elbow of ~louston's Cliff Meely two games bac k, kept the Lakers in front with 34 points, hitting consistently with his favor ite cor- ner _iump shot and breaking free for drives. wh ile trying lo keep up with the Sonics' Spencer Haywood at the other end. After !he game, coach Bill Sharman praised his solidly built 6-foot-5 forward as "the complele ball player. He does all the intell igent things." But in some ways, 1'1cMillian was an unlikely pro prospect. He is small for a pro forward, and when he was drafted from Columbie.., only two NBA active players -Bill Bradley and Dave Ne\.l.•mark -were former tvy Leaguers. But McMillian doesn't see his si~e or his background as a disadv2.ritage . "A lot of learns are going to smaller, quicker forwards,'' he says. "New York won with Bradley,· Mllwaukee won with Greg Smith, and look at Cazzie Russell wi!h the Warriors. The way Lhe defenses are changing, you'll be seeing more." At Columbia. he says, "I probably got as good coaching as you would at any of the basketball f1ctorles . Our coach, Jack Rohan, tau1ht us the fund1ment1la. which I've found a lot of pro player1 don 't know. "They try to overwhelm you with ahttr talent, but you can only do that for ao Jong. "I find I can play pretty much the same w1 y I did in colle1e -take cood defensive position, keep the man from getting the ball where he wants to. and look for my .shots. The same basic things work in the NBA. Sometimes I fake up like this" -he raises his head and shoulders -•·and the defensive man goes ri~ht up in the air." Born lo a poverty-stricken family in Raeford . N.C., McMlllian wa s sent to live with his uncle In New York 1t around age 12 end went to Columbia -"bec1use t wanted a good school" -on an athlttlc scholarship. Part of his ba ~ketball earn- ings support his mother and sister. A sociology major. he was planning tf) go to law school , but around his junior yea r he noticed that some New York sportswr iters were suggestinit he could make a living with a basketball. "When you read people comparinR you to this or that great player, it sllrts you thinking.'' he says. "Anyway, I just wanted to use law as a stepping stone. Now I can use ba sketball for that." During his rookie season, in which he averaged 8.4 points as a regular season reserve but 15 as a playoff starter, McMillian completed a UCLA course in real estate. During the summer he worked as a production assistant in ABC television in New York. "It 's full of ex-Columbia peo- ple -Roone Arledge, Chet F'orte," he notes. Now he 's taking a correspondence course in photography. But McMlllian says he isn 't thinking very hard about the future. "l'm flex- ible ."' he says with a grin. On a team with superstar& Jerry Wesl and Wilt Chamberlain, he doesn't get many headlines, but he s1ys ht doe1n 't mind , U,I TtllfiN .. MILWAUKEE'S KAlllEEM JABBAR FIRES A HOOK SHOT, point1, includlng lhe Kniaks' last 13 and tht basket that broke a tlf.19 tie with three second• rem1lnln1. The winning flrld goal w11 lhe onl1 time lhe Knicks led and came after New Yprk's Phil Jackson had swilled the bill away from Milwaukee's Oscar Robrrt.lon and Frail.tr had retrieved it. "I lild some doubt.I that tht bail would go ln,'' said a tired Fruler aft.tr pl1ytnr 44 minulA!s. "I thou1ht II mliht bit the rim." Aller it dropped, lhe Bucks had one more chance. Kareem J1bbar, who had gamo-~igh totals 'o1 II pointa and ZZ re- boundo, took a hool< 1hot, but lht ball hit the rim and bounded away 11 lht nnat buzzer sounded. Milwaukee 1hen rushed at tht olficl-.1, Ed Rush tnd Mlke D!Tn masso, cl1imln1 Jabbar "'' fouled. But thl Buck•' pm. tcat1 wett to no avail. "How can be bt In lhe low post fnd wind up !akin& a hook 1hol fn>m the foul lint?" protested an angry Milwaukte coach Larry Costtllo, who !bought Jal> bar was push<d on his final 1hol, " ., , ~ly ~.C?lal Sea Kings Picked In Irvine Leag~ Lal Alamltos WU IUppoa:ed to have captured last aeamn'a Irvine Lupe basket ba 11 crown with f.111 Rick Quinn and mlrrora. , Well, Quinn Is back !or hla Hnlor cam~lgn, and -mlr· r<>rs notwltl\atsndlng -the Grtffina are picked by the DAILY PILOT to pasa their U· Ue Into the hands o1 Corona del Mar's Sea Kings. In Wednelday night openers around the league, Los Al vialta C«ona in an e1rly crucial, Costa Mesa la at Edllon, Fountain .Valley treb to Ealancla and Magnolia Jn. vades Santa Ana Valley. In addiUon to Corona, the most .ariow: threats to the defending champ)9n Grllllna .,. Edison and Magnolla. Here's how the DAILY PILOT seea it: 1. Coreaa del Mar. Coach Tandy Gillis has a sta.....ltud- ded crew which wW trY to re- bound from a 7·7 loop mark of a year ago. AltboUgh leading 1 c ore r Mark Grlgaby and Injury· plagued Don Killian have graduated, there's still plenty of firepower Jn the preaence or 6-211 Junior guard Cuey Jones, 6-6 senior center Mike Sevier, 6-5 senior forward John Sumner and t-2 junior transfer Matt Keough, aon of former Major League baseball star Marty Keough. I. Lot Alamlto1. Although iaat year's Irvine coach of the year -COlta M.,. resldel11- Ezra Van Horn -has cast hla lot with Cyprw College, there's apparently not much of a letup with rookie mentor Wendell Witt at the reins. The aforementioned Quinn ls 1WI around with hla daullng array ()f inside moves while returning atarter Fritz Miller (6-1) combines with quick Glen Myer1 (5-9) ln a potent backcourt duo. s. Edison. tf there's a 1letper In the bunch, It could easily be coach Dave Mobs' Chargers. POIWslng tomethlng which WU la<illng Jut IOUon--<Oll- 1lllency -Edl!on could make a bil run for the money. could well duplleate Jut winter'• effort, when It Ued F011ntaln Valley !or I h • clrcult's NMerUp spot and ad· vaoced into the CIF AM quarterllnll> before b e I n c eliminated. I. Fouatala Valler. Coach Dave Brown's quintet ls a young squad which could ,,...1bly find llaelf - anywhere from llrat lo llxth place by the Ume the acbodula concludea. Tbe Barons chief bope.1 rtly In the play or a trio or juniors -11-111 &:ott Reider, H Sam Sepulveda and 6-1 Cb r It Ada1111 -and a pair or IOlllors -6-5 Bill Bums and 6--0 Steve SUiiivan. I. E.tancla. JI M1gnolla'1 atrong ault la helght, then 11'1 the weakness of the Eagles, who are to be tutored by firat- year mentor Dave Carlisle. Asaumlng the top job from Gary Carr, Carlisle tnherited a starting lineup whose talle.st regular i.! 6-211 .. n1or Jell Ford, a junior v 1 r -"I. t y graduate. And It '1 a drastic drop from there to 6-1 Doug Confer, IHI Bud Confer, 11-10 Scott !Mea and H playmaker Craig Haya. 7. Cost.I Me11. Defense has been 1 thorn in the sides of coach Emil Neeme's Mustangs thw lar and It could likely be their eventual downfall. In the '7()..'71 campaign, Mesa led the league 1n scoring but wu at the bottom of the heap in points given up. Streak·ahootlng 6-1 forward Jack Archer comprises much of the Mesa scoring punch while 6-4 senior operaUve1 Jon Marchlorlatti and S c o t t Endsley have an enormoua re- bounding load lo carry. I. Sula Ana Valley. Finl· yur bead coach R o g e r Jenson, who came to the Falcona from Edgewood Hlgb In West ~vina, hu a gargan- tuan task ahead or blmaell for the 1-7 SA Valley cas:erJ. With W Jim Keyea bavlng With guards Dfrk Zirbel (5- 11) and Greg Parker (M) taken blJ 25 points per game dlttctlng a blazing fasl break, to ~~ Ana Coll,ege, 11 ap- Edlaon wW have lo get con-""Ir' !hit there la oo .relief In llpuOd .Jio¥d c:ootioi.<UI ol..Jlly, .. ~bL , I , , ; front line !rto -or M _-JRVINE LEAGUE D o P I!: Snoo1t, M Mark Hlll'TllOll' and SHEET 6-2 Gary Balcl>ll It la lo annu 1. Corona del Mir the ,looe crown. 2. Loi Alamitos 4. )I-Ila. One big reuon 3. EdilllJll ..tiy ·coach Gene Frohling'• 4. Magnoll1 · Sentlnela are rated In the first 5. Founllln Valley dlvlalon la height. 6. Estancia With the starting five goJni 7. eo..ta Meu M, M , M, M, 6-I, Magnolia I. Santa Ana Valley Citrus Favored In Mission Race ~ Mlsalon Conference basketball r8"" llgurea to be a three-team 1Cra1J1ble wt t h C1tru1, Rlvenlde and Gron- mont involved in the scram- ble. Circuit actlvlty gets un- derway Wednesday with Sad· dleback at Chaffey. Gros,_ moot at Southwestern, Sao Bernardino al P>Iomar and Citrus at Rlvenide. Sa~lebacl< juat does not have the flri!li power to atay with the top Mission con- lan<len. but tho Gauchos (So U) lbould Improve aa the lel!Ob getl older. Tbe DAILY PILOT tabs Citrus to win It all. \ Hm'1 how I 1 ' I hair dlcai>l>Od: I. 'atr.1 -Tbe ow\s (M) ol cooeh Nell · Edwards have played a much t ou g be r achedule than moot or the 'Other )Jlllilon' clubo and thla should help them. CJ!rus does flot have I crtlt deal of ,helgb~ but !;<!wards Jiu tome Rood lbooterY Jn guard Pa~ BenMll (H) and loriard Oilers Offer Seat Ducats Tbl Huilln(lon Beach High Olllfl Boetterl Club la of. lerinC an Interesting ~ ... ung Ucket arrllllement for tho upcoming SUlllOI League lmm1 a:amu of the Oiln' •YVlll>' buketball team. Rtaerved aeat ducat. art av1llabl1 !or all varsity home contasll oa a fl2 per penon bull with the pur<haH price Including a 11 preliminary Jw>Jor nrslty 1•111<•· Inlenilted portlel lbould ...,_ 1ac1 either Mrt. Michael Hop. lay ti -or Ml'I. Tom 'OruM-11 (Ill) 111"111. Larry Mann (6-2). 2. Riverside -Coach BUI Mu.Uigan's club has been run- ning hot and cold and have also played aome· solid teams in the pre-conference achedule. The Tiger• (6-1) are led by center Joe Cott (M). S. Grossmoat -The Grifiins could easily win It all. They've looked oulltandln( at - and very bad In other outinga. Cooalllency la the key !or Groasmont. BUI S.llOder, (6-1), a te- cond team all-circuit choice Jr..t season, la the beot ol the Griffins. l. Cllalfey -The Panthers of coach Barney Newlee are the best ol the alol><ans. Darcey Bailey. a 6-5 front· liner, ii one of the leading player1 In the circuit. But the Olalley Went 1lldes downhW alter thal L San llernlrdlJlo -Coach Ray' Blake'• past two clubs h'ave won championships, lxlt 111?2 does not figure lo be a ti· Ue yeat !or the Indians;- allbouch San S.rdoo alway1 "'ms to tum on JUI! u the clrcult campalgo leta under 1'•Y, I. Soddlellack - T h e Gsucboa o1 coach Le r o y Stevens do not figure lo 10 much hlcher than the No. a spot, The Jack of I IUpenlar hat burl Saddlei>Ock -and the fact that Ibo GolldJoo ..... loot bit Q>IJliatenlly. ' , 7. Palomar -the Cornela loll two all.cJn:ull players lo cradu1tlon (Marty Bojorquez ct! Gene Chaffir() lild ban been lll\lblt to flll lhe """ Sopbomoru Grog Price (M) and' John Dulfy (M) are the beat Of coach Andy Giimour'• aquad. .. 11o11i. ..... 1en -The Apacba could flnllh u bllb u flllh, but doll 'I bet OD It Coach George Milke'• club Just hun'I been able lo put 11 lotlether. u yet. • • TOP CATCH-Mike Bullard, 14, of Newport Beach holds 27'11 pound ling cod be caught recentiy near Catalina Island. Bullard was fishing en the Channel Isle, out of Art's Landing. Landings Operate On Limited Basis Orange Comt aree. fish land· lngs are currently operating on a Jimlted basis with bottom fishing· for rock cod, cow cod, ling cod and chili peppers get.- tine: the bulk of the action. George Newcombe at Art's Landing reports 55 passengers on two boats caugbt a total or 83 cow ·cod, b rock cod and . . two Jing ,cod on Sunday, The biggest r11111 WB1 a 27111JOU!ld ling .cod taken.17 !I-year-old Ml~ Bullard ol Newport Beecll. The cow cod avenged eight lo fo pounds with one going lo 25 and another to 18 . ju;, Shafer. skipper of the Thundert>ird out o( Davey's Locker, likewise rep<rls good filh.ing on the weekend at the 14-mile bank. Surface ftahing is at a standstill but the cod are hitting well on both the half day boats and the all-day outings. one and 1971 was a bad y_ear. The size llmit didn 't help ua on our fish count," a third operator ad&. "We ar~ looking for 1972 to pick up. The bait a n d everything paints to a banner year. But we still had about the be.st bass fishing along the entire coast last year," the other landing reports. Art's Landing is operating five days a week. On Monday and Friday, a boat goes to Catalina Island and leaves ot 5,30, , Wednesday, Saturday and SUnday, it's the U-fathom bank or San Clemente Island with departure at midnight, Call &7S-0550 !or reservations. Davey's Locker sends an all· day boat out every day but Monday with the half-day boat fishing seven days a week. The phone number f o r reservations i! 496-5795. Huntington Beach sends its boat out Saturday and SUnday only at a and returns at ap- prex.imately 3. Reservations may be made at 536-9772. Rustlers J'1>bed For 3rd Ttle Southern CalllomJA Conrerence blsketbaU ecram· ble last aeason was a wide open affair and it doesn't ·~ pear , any different I.hi.I cam- paign. Golden We.st, LA Harbor, Rio Hondo, Loe Angeles City College and East LA all hive the talent to win tht circuit crown. Rio Hondo and Harbor have the edge -primarily betause of uperlence -with Rio Hon-- do's Roadrunners given lhe rod to win It all by the DAILY PILOT. Despite having some injury prOblems Golden West bu jelled• bi i ~ wee:kl and ii considered a dirk horse to Here's bow the DAILY PILOT tabe .the SoCal race 'whlch ~IN Wednetday' L Rio '!loodo -Coach Bob Bland h11 !our 1tarterJ back l'rom last leason's club in front.liner• JfflT)' Periaho (8- •I) and Kurt Krauahaar (6-5) and' guards Stan Jam .. (6-311) and Vince BePn (6-211). BMB and forward Bill Welah (1-5) are the Roadrunners' · top DAILY 'll.DT J,1 Huntington.-'f~Qh~~' 'fo Bag Sunset -Title.' List yur•1 co-champions or lht St.inlet Leque ar• favored to balll• !or th& baaketbaU crown qaln according to DAI· LY PILOT pndlctlon1. Coach, Elmer Oomba' Hun- tlngtoo S.ach Hlah Oilers, beaten only once In Dertmber play. are all&ht choice!' to win Jt all whl11 Marina Is con-- aidered the nmt serious thrtat to HunUn&ton In a four· te1m ran. Other tttonc eontendtrt for the chunplolllhl' l o"t I u d • WestmlnJtv Incl Weatem. It all 1et1 . uhdtr wayi WedMtd~y wl41> Morlna't Itel< to Weatarn ~·key claah. It's at 7 o'clock 111 ire all Sunset Le..,u8 co,nfrontaUons on W-y titghla. 'Ille other aames Include ' Loora at Newport llorllor. Anaheim at Huntington Beach and Sant• Ana at Westminster. 1'be holta •re solid ravorites in the litter three IMUM while the Marine· Weatern crucial is rited 1 tossup. Here's how the DAILY PlLOT lffl the tm: race : I. Haaflacto• Beac~. The Oilers have acewnulated • U). t non -lea.cue mark and their fut break: appeared to be in mid-M!&olOI\ form et the outset. With An.cJF HCOnd team !...ward· ·Steve' Brooks 16-31 and 1-J Jlm Worth y domlnatinJ the' front line. the Ollm pruent a· 10lid att1ck. Combs has fou r players averaging Jn double figur.es. z. Marin. The Vikings ap- Katelta Fa~ored • Crestview Race ~-It's Wide Open peared to l•av, the lnakl~ ln1cl: with l!flhmao Bo~ Losn.;. !11-11 '1l~lna u.., ad' ditional strens:th up front . A pai r of i<Wles In the V~ tura lnvlt1tlonal has apoll~. eo1ch Jim Stephens' qutntet"'•.:.: lnlage somewhat , OOt th~n., still rema ins an lmposlei(~: setup. • ..• : Coupled with Losner, Is '17\_., Dtan Bogdan, along wit~ cl11uy guards Roger Speak, , and All·Sunset ~ague Bru~,. Miller. n• 3. We1tml1st.er. Coac h [)(iQ , Lea vey has a trio or lhre~' year starters in the fold in Terry Meisenheimer, Gordan , Blakeley and Jay Johnson. , I.' The all -veteran starting fiv e · · Js rounded out wit h senim-•· 1 Glenn Lantaff and J r. f l Siemens. The former three wet<e • starters on the l~ions' cham .. · pionshlp qulntel as 11ophomorea. along with D;1q Broderick:: and Steve Mc4n. don. .'· '. 4. Western.. The Plonee'ti ~ feature All-Sunset Le a g u e ~ standoot Mike Dunn in thtii' ·~ attack and the junior 6-5 pivot···. man figures to repeat the honors. And, the Pioneers boas~'·• scores. After one 1ets p1st Katella C. VIiia Part. The Spartan!!. plenty of talent to back ~np·, ": Rio Hondo (ll-3) recently Hight'• KJll&bta 11 the despite heavy gr a du .!I 11 on but Western's recent h1st(R'y nabbed the El Cam~ and San Crutview Lea&ue'1 favorite in lo11es. get the tab for si1th. has proven frustrating r{>r."=' Diego Men tournaments and · tht 1m bukttball race It'• Coach Cary Snyder's crew is Plonefl:r faru, who have sett\_ ha• won seven games In a this loop th1t presents the tough In its own gym and have Western on the wrong ,end of · row. toughest list In Oranae County Dick Arbenz (~2 1 and Dan close verdicts more often than %. LA Barbor -The in terma of predicting. Oltrogee in the fold. Seahawkl have one of the Coach Tom Danley'• defe~ 7. San aemeate. ·Tb 1 ~~-Ne'wport" Barbor. ~ clrcult'• leading guarcb in ding champlona ire tolld picks Trilons have the firepower to Sallon have a gOod front Une'f11 Eric Saulney (6-0) and two top to repeat with their wild fast finish much higher with Mike In Bill McKinney and J~"" rebounders In Ken Bangs (1-7) break. Dowling, Danny Nau and Pat Swick, but whether they ha~:• I and Pal Boyer (1-7). Coach But after that the league Cornforth in the lineup. . 111, d h the n)1npoWer to repl~C •'l Jim Whtte 'S team has com-resembles a l~yard as at Lack of exptrlence Is the graduated stan• John Kazm11/ piled a 9-3 record to date. the CIF finals. biggest handicap "for coach ., J. Golden Welt -Coach · It begins Wednesday even· John Baker's quintet. •nd tara1 Youns: Is q~ 1 • Dick Stricklin baa one of the log with four 7 o'clock en· I. Tu1tln. This ii another tionabJt. ",.,~ top shootera in the confetenoe countua featuring Foothill at team capable of doing much M uauat, Newport figures \o ·11• In Jim Anderson (1-5). If Mission Viejo,· San Clemente better, but the experience fae-make Individual aames cloR.··· Center Jeff St. Clair (1-5) and. at El Modena, Orana:e at •tor places the Tillers last. Already there are four galllf.ll .,; Tu l. nd VIII Par• at In the Sallou' 3..S recerl forwaJ"ff Jack Kelch (M) con--s in a a .. Coach George Trotter's live Unue,l.O Improve, the Rustler• Kitella. lists seven juniors on the decided by two paints or lesri :..a could win it all. . Hert'• how the DAJLY squad. C. Santi Au. The Sairrtl 11'1 Golden West has won 10 of PILOT 1ees It: have 1 aood shot at flnishklg 17 games thus far. 1. Iatelta. Danley bas three CRESTVIEW LEAGUE DOPE as high 11 fourth . Height ll• 4• LACC _ The Cubs are starters 1n the fold with 6-l SHEET avaU1ble In 6-7 Bill Pattee. •1o 11 guard Mark Sl.l•-·yer 8 2 1. Katella . A measuring stick 11 a\moit• · always a contender and tbi! ... ,,,. • · forward Stan Whleldon and 6-3 2. Mis11ion Viejo. unav1ll1bl1 on the Saintl · year Is no e:sct!ptlon. Forwardard forward Jtlf Hutton. 3. Orange. however, a1 they've p11yed a1it ' Paul Caldwell (&-3) and gu It's the tough preu that 4. El Modena. non-county tea.ma after dilpillrt1 Greg Allen (6-1) pace coabuch Katella feattlres, however, 5. Foothill . tn1 of Tult\n and SlddJeb1ck Bill Thayer'• team. LACC that ii the Knlahtl• m1jor I. Villa Park. eirly. captured nine of ll game1. forte. 7, San Clemente. 7. L,o.era. The Saxon1,1re O J 5. Eut LA -Tbe Hualdes z. Ml11loo Viejo. T h e 8. Tuatln. up,alMM!own quintet and ti,•~<f. have been running hot and Diablos barely: edged out ihOwn promlte dupite a Wuv cold of late and that will pro-Orange and El Modena for the recotd. .:1nnt1 bably burl them Jn the rugged runnerup 1lot lo Katella Jn the La Habra Laci: or bellht 11 coach Tclllofl SoCal circuit. Coach Bud voting, mainly. becaute o! Votct'• .m.tjqt problem Wiili! Nulund has two good onea in their last outing-1 loslng e!· mOlt al the Saa:OM In the"*•' forward Ken Gray (M) and fort. R ed N ran1e. guard Ken Tyler (6-1). Eall Coach Pat Roberta' ere" ·at O. } I. A-Im. The Cotonlsll LA ls lo-5 thus far. thawed lta potential In an c. Cypret• _ New coach overtime lou to Servile, are the only wlnleas p~ Ezra Van ·Horn Is one of the perhaps the beat 1n the "--,. ........ 1 , onl baaketball team 1n the COUl'\l.I,., nd but h , .. ~ Angelus League. ~-,.e ~· Y• Y UR• and they'll probebly malntal!I,., better ones arou • es-• The DJ1blo1' attack fe1turea defuled Pree· quintet ii LI the record. .,,,~:1 hah1n't got the'l'he~ent to "(\" Qll)y one Hnlor In the top eight Habra and coach Tex Wal111' .,..., ..... LEAGUE Do p ...1 . I 11 ..... n. Y•ar(ers ~ play-and •t Gil No-·ndle ···-• ~ ced b Fil ..-... .,.. ...... Highlander• have been ac-SHEET '•"•' 8) aro pa Y center P la the central 11~"e. ~-· ... ' Da II (•to) •-COrueu u1e top •pot in 1972'• 1'. ~-ntln"'•n Beach '• ·' me ~ . Re'1 .aver•-'•• 11.7 point. I ltt I 11~• or ••· !fl I I nv •- ' LA Boal ...• ~ The _.,. n a ovng u~ o c I 2, M-~-a ""I . -· -_, game. Or Coun To 0 11 uw . ~ ange ty p 1 po . W I •· "' Cougars are again NMIDC, The only apparent problem La Habra'• tall five, pactd 3. estm ns'-'C;r . / but they Just don~ have the 11 the Jack ol the big man for b f-41 •••I St M k • • 4. Western . ,1 tal l I -•· lay boundln Y •-· or eve an er, ~ •, N1wport Harbor en or erper e .... -.:: i.u 1 re g. Hniol' Bob, Mi"'8r and Santa ~ 1 ,,. with the real of the pack. When your top nbounder Clara tr.ansfer guard Paul 11. Santa' Ana , . .; (Nonnandle with 15 per Hill, edged out HunUnrton 7. Loisra , .. ,11 Son Clemente laland reports good fishing on the rock cod sped al, that leaves daily at 7. "We ba\te light loads and have been getting "'me reel nice rock' iod/' a spokesman for the landihg repom. Gillis is Cringing ' gamt) bi •1 you're tmall. Beach H11h'• 0Uer1 for the:l~lli.Ana~he~lm~·~~~~~ S. or1ace. The P1nther1 No. 1 position. + boast escellent 1lze with a "1e OQers' only: tou Jn 11 front Jine tha& measures M, "' tries Is. •I\ 8240 double 6 ind M a\on1 with 8-7 overtime setback to Lon& The McCullah brothers at Huntington B e a c b are limlUng their fi shlog to Satur· day • and Sunday but report llalita (!( fish. "We have been catching a few cow cod,. some sole and aome chill peppers will! Ille biggest fish SUnday a 12-pound COW cod," Bob McCullah nports. All four landin11 look for an Increase In fishing during 1972. "I'll tell you . It has to be a better year. It can't get any worse," one operator says. "It's too early to tell about 19'12 but It tbould be better," uys another. 1'We are looking for a good year, Generally . you'll find that a good one follows a bad Despite 64-4 7 Win Reuben Helick, a reserve. Beach Wilton. Included in that front line 11 Irvine League f a v o r I t e Brid McPberton, a M junior Corona del ~~::!) 11 third , By PRU. ROSS Of IM Dallr ~1191 llllff Please excuse Corona det Mar High basketball coach Tandy Ollila 11 he cringes a JI~ Ue when thinking a b o u t Wednesday night's Important lrVlne League hoop opener again.rt tough Los Alamltoa: on the Corona court. Because, even though Gillis watched his Sea Kings poet their 11th victory In 12 1tartl in the Jf11·'11 campais:n Mon- day night against Invading Long Beach Jordan'•, Part- thers, that's not the enUre alory. In aplte ol the !act the Sea Klnga will<ed off with a 8M7 triumph, OiWs w11 beard mutterln& afterwards, "we played terr1ble defenae." lhr,ee or fo\U' mloul.ts of -the batUe as , the Corona ad- vantage teetered between two and nine point. up to that juncture. However, 6-21i! Junior guard CAse:y Jonet lit the fl~ undtr the l'l>ron4ns In those Jut lew le~';~ !heir ilze, the :~ d •:...loop ad- Panther1 do much of their ahooting from outside. ORANGE COUNTY TOP It 4. El Moden1. L a r r y Piece Tt1m PolaU Johmon aod Tim Tlven1n are I. La Hallra (164) · st the leading playera In the 1. lfuotJnc!on B11ch (10-1) S7 Vanguard•' attack. Both aro 3. Corooa de,J Mar (t.I) JO conslatenUy In double llgurea. 4. Loo Alamllol (M) ~ moments. S. Foothut. Coach Hank 5. Servlte (J1·3) 24 With the Sea Kine• on top by Hummel'• Knights could be 8. Katella (f.2) 21 SM.I and 3,59 to go In the Katella'a blHOll problem, with 7. Marina (M) JI fourth · quarter, they ran off their combination or good 8. Westmlnater (7-3) t eight 1tralghl points and, height Jn the lonr1rd wall I. Weatern (7-Sl 7 presto-changeo.· were t h e along with guard Rob Tuvell. 10. Miulon Viejo (8-3) C possessors of 1 much 11fer $8-Included Jn thelr 6-3 record Others : Troy (1-3) 4, Edllon 45 edge. are wln1 over &umr HUia and (7-5) and El ·Dorado (7-3) 2 c.,.111 ... AYr c&ii ,i;;T;;ro;iy;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;e;;acb;;;;,;;G;;ard;;;;e;;n;;G;;ro;;v;;e;;(;;M;;);;l;;.mjjl .. " ...... kmMt-• • • 12 K-.h •2JJO '"''-' ,,,, """-' , t 17 i.-.. f t I f Of1 .. ,,,, - -'rtM • I I f ~ 1 ' • ' C•rt-, ,...,, 1 • • 1 Jf It It ft ... w ... ,,.,.. ll ..... 11 II II .-a c.,.. ... Mff-ti .,. .. ,._,., DAVE . ROSS PONTIAC Ltas• or ,Buy All Models ••• Whtie the ICOf"e doean'L es· actly Indicate a 1 u b • p a r dtfenslve 1howlng for Corona , the winnm were nevertbeleq•l-----------11 on shaky ground In the Jordab clash. Tbe Sea Kings I,e d lhroughou~ with Illa µCOIJUqa ol a pair of lead ercbangiij ht the early minutes . But they were never firmly In command IU!lll tile lut l \ !;>AVE RO.SS PONTIAC 14 .. NAhOI II.YD. • PAii Ditti COITA MU,t. ""· 546-8017 ..... r 8'iYI A wtl• t o• AJA. TO tt1• P.M. IUllDAYt 11 AJLl. ,. r PM. • l " .., II ' • I ' jJ I I I I I I I ii ·J :, ;1 :1 ,I .J :I ·Bank Te.lls Stock Bids l\lettllr)' S.vil111• aod Loan Aaocialion has aonounced a • porcent sloct: rishll of· lerlac 1o stocl<holdeis or -Dtcember 24, lf11, lo be e..'erci5ed betwttn January JI, aod f'tbruary 15. 1172. '1lle prift at which UJt: rip,. IDaY bo.....,cJooi! will bo d<lmnined on J>miary 1. 5.09'9 TAX-FREE CURRENT RETURN .$1,500,000 ' STATE OF CALIFORNIA Water Re&ources General Obligation Bond& 5<.;, Due March l, 20ur Offered at 98)( $5,000 Deoomination1 ~11 rated by Moody'• AAA r9J.ad by 9Undard 6 Poot>' a . 8eeur:lty: The boD<!a are pMral obli11Uona of the State o( California, pay1b1' in acoordanoe ..nth the Ca.lifor,nia Water Reeow-cee Devtloptnent Bond Act out o( the Oer>eral Fund o( the Slat.. The full faith and credjt of the State of California ar• pledged for the punctual payment of both principal and intere.t. Callable: The bonda .ara calllble•f.rom any source o( Cunda beeinnin1 March 1, 1983 at 102U and d.clining to par on March 1, 2003.~ Tas Statua: The coupon income i.t free fr.om all preeent Federal and' St:at.e of California lncOme Wff. For fui:tber il)formation: Call your locaJ Dua Witt.e'r & Co. branch o!ice or mail the attach.cl .coupon to: ----------------------------DEAN WITTER ll: C:o. JNCOllPORATS:D 560 Newport Center Dr. e Newport Beach, CA 92660 Atln: Brenton R. Ogden 298· Broadway e Laguna Beach, CA 92652 Attn: A. William McCready, Jr. I am interetited in the :5.093 ta:i.-rree current return. 0 :fleaae m,_il m1 your otrerin1 oircular on the aboye offering at no Obligation to me. D Please maiJ me your circ:ularentitled: Cal.ifornia: The. "Variety Swre" of the Mu1'icipal Maritn. O Pk!ue mail me your booklet entitled: T<Ua erempl Bonda and tM lnvntor. Addrm--------------- •1 CitY---------------- I I I I I I I t I I I I ~~----------------------------J ·-·---- • ' • • • . • • ·. • ,, \' .. Don't seHle for less. Oon 'I settle for e"'f.lhing less than the best interest rate on 90-day Thrift certificates. Invest a minimum·of $1,000.00.in our 90.0ay Thrift certllicates, and you'll earn a solid 6%.per annum . And Avco Thrift pays ii. .ti~ & Thtltl Dlvl&lon hfs been Jn oPttlHon llnce 1tt1, end tl•s never tilled to ~ f\lnda on d1m1nd. AftO Thrfft ti I dlvisio_n ol Avco Corpor1tlon-• 1....-In meny tt•dl In addition to tln1nei.1 1enioe1-A...osl)tff, 8ro9dcltllnf. Menpower De~•~Pf1*rt. Scl..-ic•. M•dk:IM 1nd Space ...... rcn. Avco It more th.In !55,000 peopte wtto 11• ,,.,,. ~to bt.tnd 1 beUtr torncwrow-for you. AVCO. NEWPORT BEACH 620 Newport Center Drive 833-3440 ' f 1 OVER THE COUNTE 11.,.. •a ....... .....i1•-· •s;. '.I• t ..._"'io;i-iii;,;;; ..... ,.,., •,.. ,-.. • wwca • - NASO Lllftnp fw IMMay, Jat1 ,., ~ 1'1'2 .. Steel .Ffun Cuts llaek· MUTUAL • r. ; FUNDS b i~ ' • • • • f~ i.~ :·~ 1~1 + ~ .. ~1~ ~i ~ . _, . ' i·~ lit ' + '\\ ' ' l, I ' •• • • , I ..-----~ ·--..... --- • --..... t----- nday's .crosmt Prices:.complete N w Y~rkr Srock ~eliange List ' I • I, • =." :: I :: :\ -~ -1" -' . -. = ! I -1' · ~niplete Oosing Prlees American Stock Exchange List I -.. ....,."" __ LEGAL NOTICJ! ..... "l<TITlOUI l"'IMltl ....... ITATIMlllT -. ~ ........... ~ It o.11'11 llul !Mll Tun.di!, Jitluu, 4, 1972: LEGAL NOTICE ,.IC1'1"40\IS IUllllllJI HAM• tTATIMl•T ,.._Inf ,...,._ lt '91111 M l- • GMCi~ Egypt's Rouw Remains 'Vp ·in Air' • Import Car Competition By GERARD LOUGHRAN Sadat carTl<d by the stml· BEIRUT <UPI) -It looka olllcllJ Ahr 1 m ntWlpaper as U Egypt'• ••yw of were equally equivocal. decWon•' w1111't • year of "The conclusive d1e1lion DETROIT CAPI A declaloo ofter all. (mtantna lbe YMr ol decision) exttnded the ~dllne .set for Presldtnt Nlxon*1 tho end al 1171. visit to M...,.• Bui they wer< unwilling to analysta aald. role out the chonce ol new Al &111 rete, ~ bu 11~ !ighllnJ. "wt wW decide the l!J!lA! .,.i Gtne?'a1 Moton 1pokemnan Pmldtnt Anwar Sadat of iJ btioa carried out, but the aays the new economic 1gree-Egypt spent much of the 1971 batUe ot llbuation la long and ment which includes devalua-a1ytna that wu lhe year In llarcl," be said. lion of the dollar and the )Vhicb the Lsrael-Arab tril\s "It doea not, however, mean elimlnatlon ot the Import rnuat be rMDlved by peac: or the diacontinuaUon of poUUcal Egypt i1 ,..king ~um pl ion lbe clmlmatonca, • 1ltbough ol the peace ml&!ion of U.N. It doea ,..m to !lave ldl mediator Gunnar V · Jarring Israel out of )Ir calculaUom. aimed at HC:uriog an answer1i;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;-;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ from Israel J I• lbe1. surcharge "will make our cars war. H• •.... ,11,1 Ho11c1 0111 1N11111TtoN To 1N•••• more compeUtlve ln price and •cUon because if we do thla. memorondwn or,.., I. 24 HOUR Falling succeas ~rt, Cairo TE' "PHONE LEGAL NOTICE ta: erpected to takeJ the issue wo back to Ill• Security eouncu. ANSWERING Nof1c1 To c••o11o•s IN '".. s.i.L1 o• AL<OHOL1c k A .. ld h I I do wt would paralyze some of 11\lll:AOIJ Snvu e p S OW WO im· • ,.,ft ~~::•g: c'::..~:Jr1:~ ::: To w11om 11 M•~ c-.. •• r::-""w ,., ••n ports. our energiea. Our stand ml14 PICTITIOUI ll,/llN-.11 THI!: COU#TY 01' OftAHGll .... l>IKI II lUul lll:t ., tl'l<I ll(•n11 ... "It won't htlp •• p 0 rt 9 be 'no war slogans1 but taking "'""'' ITATIMIJllT E111tt or OLGA FAWNE.Mil. o.ca... ''" I ncrt•c1 II r..•.or ........ """' .. ~-cou-ol war ol .,._ t.1t.wl119 _. .... •• ooi111 1><111,..,1 9d ' or. • because of varloll! licens ing u-e" '""" u Iller• ts to be fighting. tt SERVICE may well colnclde w 1 l h aa: Hoi.C9 1, hf-•rDr 11.,.,. to <ttdlt«• or ~nd••tlto\ell 11t~1 · 10 .wit •l<aNl!k liberation and seekln&: I IUSIHl.SS MANAGIMl!HT· IN· "" ·-· ... mw ~I ltlt.1 t.U l>IY••• ..... "'-... "".-. OMU-.. oolt.s. gasollM prlt:!es and STJTUTI!. ,, .. 1 ,,...,..,," •~ 2-11. --hl"I"' c111m1 111111P 11>t Mid lb/~~117 w '"" 51 ,.,., ,,.,.. vehicle slu, which miike Finally, he told troops at the victory for which thert ls no "'"'"11"''°" lkloell. H<iclt.nt ••• ""'uj,.., lo t11e """·~· 'Wllfl ""',.,."' i1 ...u." 1111.,:;;0fl. iine """ locally built car1 altract;ve In Suu. Canal ht had cbolen v»ar. alternative." Who Cares 7 S1rvi11t -Cero111 clef Mir, Coit• M111, N1wp11rt l1ach, •11cl Sonia A111 1 r111. Jllfln '°"''" C1tl1tt. l I '' 1 tllt l'IKHMfY ~oud\er1, l" ""' ofrkl of lll<'i.1'"9d I• "'"'I"' " "'' o-rtm"'1 B t ... _ • lion 11rooktt1Wd, lktt. 2.a. H111111n11"" lhl CIMI. of "" 1Do0.-. '"'111"' <ovr1 • ., :f .t.lc9holk 8,.,.,..., C.-.••ol for 11...,.ne, those forei"n marketa." tbe u u~ equ1voca crept A-fost political 11 n al y It S No other newspaper in the l1Kfl, (afllotnll, lo I>,_! ,,,..,.. ..,1111 !!'le llKIUMY D • pl ed Tllh M l11e1• 1, 1w1,,. cllllklt1tc1 .., '" _,,.,, io ,... ndt• 1vntc1 1 1111 olfl 1~ •JcoMlk 1>1v1r1" •k.,.w rcor ltMq spoJc.e.sman said Sunday . in. concluded that Egypt ann \'10rld cam about your com· OU.N•I COUNTY IADIOTILIPHONI 11 1 1 Ct 1rtml-'' !ollow~· E lia d • nl Uk _......,.., nity 1nc1i~hkMI. °' ~o. ~fMl>hlr• & Ound• .. ~ ~ oH SALi! Gl!NEttAL lleNo Fld• "Just how much ii wiU help gyp n DeWI mt 1 a to conUnue pursuit of a mu ty e your .._ ............ u SIRYICI. INC. Jotifl C11111rt s.rln!I Sf•MI, s11. 1100. LIS """""· ,. .... 1k , 11 p... , h e•plalned ••-t 1 d...,;.,.,,, f ---'ul U hl b '""" n.-pa1pe~ does. Jt'1 ,.111, "''-''""' 111.., ""'~ "" cov111v c1ntorn11 .,, ....,,,"' 1t. "" ..i.e. o1 "" L • ~ w;~ t e American automobile in· " uua .._,.,...,n or pe.,_=. set ement, w c tb;'1oAILY PILOT . 835-3305 .. <""• gl'-~...,.,· _t.n11y '"....._~,· '!._~~ ~"", 1' ~,''".,.•-·,1~ 1n. 1 11 "'"'"' "uD11--0r.·,,.. cw1t 0.11,. 111or. duatry will be influenced by war did not nece.saarily m,ean.11m1.1.n1t1itlh~aid!e!fllse~c~t·l lvle!l~y····iiiiiiii~~!! ..,,.. ,. • .,_, ,,_ • .,, ,.... ·~ ~"' O •Ill I "' fl 'lllCtdeM. Joo ,, • 1112 • n ••· J d •• clerii, w11t1111 11111r morittu ''""' 1111 ""1 llltlllc•i--"'--· ---------'-I the future relationship of the u1ert WO u 1.1e war P~ OT•-eo.11 o..r"' 111o1. 11on o1 "''' 110t1c1. C1ther curr•-'" to t h , immediately. D«.mlMr 14. 21, •· Im •~ J1ny1•r '-01rtc1 ~Wr t , 1t n LEGAL N011CE ~""" '"'· J:itt·n MAlJHOE CLARA lAll:HUM. dollar," he said. And diplomats let it be E•KUJ rl• ot 11'11 wrn o1 w io l"ICTtT1ous a u11N•ss known that Eavnt was still LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE OKl!dent MAM• ITAT•M•H'T LEGAL NOTICE ~· Sllelfl-"1, ~ & D1i1ftN• T111 ~lowlllfl ,..,...,t ,,, d0ln1 interested In pursuing a ---~--,-c,-c:-:,-----l4U S.. l11r111t Strwt, S'9, llW bu 1 '1---.-----------1 IA• ... Lit ......... C•UlwMI MU I s'lf't ·~; l.[AS•NG COMl"AHY "" PUetlc N01'1CE· A SO' rl~•· bOll polillcal settlement while the P:f.!:~°",/.:,u~~H:~• "".,.....,.••"'...,.!•'""'• 5.,," 0,1,.,, c0111 MHa, cillfomlt. 1torec1 1tr c1r1 M1c11111. P.O. to• 22u, chances of one existed. .. f'l•U NtwJ>Qrt 8ffdl, C1. wl!j ht 111dl-on 1119 tolt(loflll119 ,..,_ ''' clolllf Publl"*I Ori,,.. Cot11 0111v Pllol 1tl<h1ro M. Shl.-.11, ltll s""'" 0r1v1. ;:-c•v. J•nui,..,. IOlh "l::IO t..m. '' 10tt Bewildered Arabs said they krJl:~T~:..lll CO~ lH'D W"llrn ~ornbt.r I,, 11, 21, lt71 '"" J1rt1121,..,. 4, CoJll Miii. Cilllornle f'M>6 l1eenfl1 Avt.. CO<llit MKI. Ct. for . A.,.nw, \J~lt Ir ...... nion, c.utornt• 2'4-11 P1u1 G. 1t1'1d1U, 1Jllt e •ock """·· -'°"' 11or111 •~• 101111"' n!s.11 plus hoped that' an important ,., f'~r•,,,.,..nt, Catl'°'"nli tw'Z3 <.oat~ lncurr..:i !h•OUth 11111 11le. Tiii 1u<· t i · C • I st Tu -•- ' 'Chlr,IM J • Wo:id, "2' ll•ftf•"" "''"'· LEGAL NDnCE Th11 bl.lllMH 11 bt'I"' conch1citrd lt'I I l•Ol'I fo b9 htld under Comm1re111 Cod• mee ng 10 a1ro a eiiuciy Mu.ntlrivt.i 111(11, c1111. l"••lnwihlo. No. 1210 and w1rti'rouJ1m111'1 c1vu Coe!• of the EgyptiaR parliament Nt1U1 •• Wood, t.ltt 1r .. 11tld Orlvt, ltlcn1rt1 H. Siii"'!~ SKllon 2091 el II(, k11nll"9tln Ir.ch, C11U. su11a101t COUllT OI" TNI! ••u• c. 11 ,nci.11 Putr111111td or111w '°'" O•llY Piiot and the leadership of the Arab Thi• IMlMH I• btl111 cond\lc:ltrd ,,,. • STATI 01' CAlll'OINIA 1011 1'111• ·····-"' ,,, __ ...... c-··"" J1n111rr 4, nn .. n Soc' 1· u . E t• I P1rtntrltll1. TM• COUH1'Y 01" OllAHO• .. ~ ..... vv.... 1a 1st n1on -gyp 9 on y 11110i.n11 L. woo11. ,.., Atuu Cle<"k " Or•not Counlt• on DK. political pariy -would finally lt.IJ¥111• e. wooa oao1a TO SHOW CAUi! POI JC. 1t11. 11v lltv••lr J. Mld!lo;il. Oeout11 LEGAL NOTICE Tiii• •111tf'!lll'll llllCll wtltl 1111 C111.1nly CHAHOI! 01" HAMI Coun" Cltr~. 1--------------1 product a Clarification O( just (ltrlr. °' OrenM Gov~ty or.: Otc. "· 1f71. In "'' ,,.,,., ... ol 1111 Awll3t1o.i·• /'.oc'/I. '"1*' l"IC1'ITIOUS IUSINISS what Sadat's 1'ntentions w••e. ,, lt'ttl'W J Mallcloa. DiPl.llr c.intl' Dtl• .s1 .... on1 .,.., 0""°'1'f .....,,,.. For P'llbtl!M:ct Or•"" co.u o.u, P'llcrl. NAMI! STATl!MINT .... ci..-i... • Cha"" of H.m•. JirtuitY ~. 11. n, .u. •m J.171-11 Tiit 1011ow1"' ,..,.,_ ''' do!"' They were disappointed. DAVID S. TIH•Lla, 'Tiie t1111Hcal!0<1 of lllCll Diie !l•von1 DU1ln.s1 1,; ATTOIUtlY Al LAW Ind Dtbor9h SllVtm for dl•noe of""'"'· LEGAL NOTICE TAXMAH lTO .. IUIA ~·I C!rcte, In II tortuous semantic • """"' c...... orln. s.111 nt 11av1n1 -.. 1nec1 111 t.aJrt, 1nc1 n '"' ~1 ... '°" •e1c11. Ce1u. exercise, the Egypt.ian leaders ~ IHd!,i CUI,., ... nMf ,..,,Jne from 111d -"Pl"'l'lon 11\M f!1ey PICTl1'10UI IUSIH•IS C1nMn I", Gl.ollo. llf<J 01re $<., T....,._.t '4WOJ hive !UH '" •l>Dlic.tlon ..._.Int 111•1 NAMI STATl!MbT ,_,.1 .. V111ay, C1UI. Jert the issue as cloudy as fl'l ... 11 INlr Mml tit <l'rl"tltcl to ltldi Dalt 1(1r· TIM fol~l11t ,..,._ • 1,. ... ,,. 11*"1 0. CVltll, 1"'2 ftt1>11 r. Hun-ever. """"* "'"'" Gtt..i Ct.Irv PUot, , ... I~ 0ef)orlh k•tref\, IK.tl-Ii! HnelOft llffdr, Cll!t ~""""' jl, n. 1'11 IM J.,.,.,., •• II, ,,._, IMrtlort. 11 I& /It,_, ~r.O Ind WILLIAMS Al .I.RMS, I y s T E .... s. J-II. s111..-. 1111 A 0,..1 Clrcl1. The battle with Israel is ll11t Jl.U.1:1 •rte:Nd. IMI •II ptrtons lnlffnled In Ott.ll9t'Ce111nty o r.,11io.., 1-1 ~"' uvnt1,,.1on ll16Cll, C1111. I • bl h 'd ' ' uld rn1t11r di> ..... , btf«1 Mw court 1n L .... MlisJon Vlelo. t'HTJ. 1ll1' """1"'"1 11 t111ne conllud.o "' 1 nev1ta e, t ey sa1 • but OtNrtrntn1 J °" 111e »fir ct11 or J111. oon11<1 F. ""'''°"" i..,.1 ,,__0 GIMf'•1 ,.,,,.,...s111$>. efforts at political settlement lt12, 11 t :JO e'clodl A.M., o1 11lo Cll'I' "' L"·• Mlu lorr Vlelo C11. '1•7J. Clrme" F. Gullo must conti'nue. -------------1"'-CIUll ..,,,.,., such IPPll<.lllon for °'""' •. C11rk1, , ... , ,,,._,. lfl.. ID01r1 o. Ou1111 .... MM dl1nM "' "'""' llloulct ""' "" or1nlt0. Mh1lon VIiia. C1lit. n•1s. Jim.• 11· !Iller Egypt must seek IU,...IOlt COUil Ofl' TH• II 11 lllrtlrtf' 0•<11r10 11111 t UJl)y ol fhb Thi~ ttuilnt:ll II N ina ,andolcittl ..., t. Tlllt tlll-n! filed with !ht Counr, Ill.Tl o., CALlll'OllHIA POa Ordtr Tt Show c ..... bt pwltllllltd 1~ ll'lt 1nc11v1w111, Clerk ot Or-Countr on: OKtmDtr :io. liberation of occupied Arab TMI COUNTY Ofl' OIANOI OAILY PILOT •• ntwo1oe• If ''"'r11 OOntlct F. Pettriorr lt7l. I v 81vtrl1 J. MIOdOJI, Otpu!Y territory, but it must not raise ' Jft. .a-1tH2 (lrcul1tlon. orltrltd In 11ld coimlY • ., 11111 Tiils 1t1tem1111 fl~ wfl~ ~ C111,1ntv C111.1rrtv Citric. I fllOTICI o; HIAllJrtf ON l"ITITION Ol'l(t ffdl Wffk for four SllCC.IJIVt week• Clotrk o1 Or11111 Coullfl' on: PK. D, lt71. l"IM'6 slogans of war. HOW WILL THE GENERAL PUBLIC KNOW THAT FUNERAL HOMES ARE ADHERING TO THE NEW LAW, SENATE BILL 1268? by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON lite '"•lrt:-91tt •• ,,.. , ...... hll•Wll 1. Te c ... ,1c.euly price H&lll ...... ...i ~1uMI W111tt 2. T• lln. .,.naltle ,., .. 1. _, c..._ ... ..,...... st•*'•'"' price J . ,,,., .. ""'""' 1 ..... , .. ,......,, ,. ,,.. ... tk C••••IMf wlUI tftt foll•M"t· .. writh19: •• 1\cl ,,tc.• "'• ... u ........ efhft4 hf .... It. A• ... ,...,~ .. ef rti. ,...,., MtYicel ~ elld tll. tet., ctltirl)ff tMfHf c ......... , ........ ..,. etfMr .............. l•••h-H a. ..... Hn'kl belitt ...... ltlr ri.. , .. .,._ cl. A• ltMlfntfM eff '9'91 ef .-y c .. aft ...... '9 lte ..... u you 111v1 1 q11n11on 1-.i1 l'llnlf1I S.-k•, plMll wrllt o• ~111. Whtnl""' 0011lltle, 111t1tiw. wll bt IM_,.., In l!llJ Hlllmn. .. ,. ....... , Balt%•Bergeron Funeral Dottie COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA d1I MAR '46-2424 '7l·t450 fl"Oft P'IOIAT• .,. WILL AND f'Oft pt>lor lg ..... d•v of ••Id h11rln1. llV ltvtr!v J. MlddOJI OepvlY ,_,, •11t>ll!IJ'led Or1nff Cotll 01lly Piiot, Excerpts from • •-h by LITT1a1 o P ADMllOS1'aA'TIOtt o.1ec1 flr l1 o.e. 1,, 1tn. ct1n:. 1,'~·;~~·;;~;;':,";;':,· ;;":,· ~";· ii"~ni.;;;;;;;;;;"';;;•;;'i;' .,.;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;r;;;;-·;;;;;;;;ii:;i:;iiii:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;i:;i:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;i:;i:;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j ;WITH·TH•WILl AHNIXID HARMON G. SCOVILL!!' l't ..... E,11tt of CLAllENC£ I l I 0 NG JuOff ol \flO SU1>1rlor Courl Publllt>td Or1~01 CN•1 Otlly Pllol. I Wll(IAMS. .... CLARENCE S . Dtffrll •nd,.kk Sl1"111'1t 09C9fr!bfr »• 1t71 111d Jinuiry ,, 11: 30, WILLIAM.$, °"''''"· 1•11 MIU.rttwr IP'Wtl., A"'· Nt. n itn !3f7 11 NOTICf IS ' Hli:Rl!'I Y CIVE~ 11111 11111• Anl, C1/ll. . VtRGIHIA M. WILLIA.Ml 1111 llltd l'lertln Ttlt: JJ7.f'.14J LEGAL NOTICE ' 1 ptlft!Oft for P!rolMtio" ot Wiii ind !or flt PtWl"ll • .,...... IMl>IMI "' Ltftt l'S "' Allmlnhlr1tlon "llfltlllH!d 0••"" COISI oauv Piiot, l"tCTlllOl,/S •uS1N••i j Wl~Wnt A~,..xtct'-11 P1tll'-r, O.etmbtt ll, Jt, lt71 1nct J1"u1ry ~. 11, HAM• ITATIMINT 1 rlfwtnr.a· to whkll I• mtOe for l11rtl>tr 1'11 ll-11·7! Tr.. 10Uowl11t ptrlon 11 dolnl ltu'3nnt Ml1\clltar1. tnd !hat ""' 11"'10 •!Id •I•<• II: -' '-''"" ftr1 """ 1111"'"111 for LEGAL NOTICE METC ALF tllOAOaENT J_a..,. II. 1tn. 11 t:JIO 1.111.,. 111 .... AS$0CIA1'E5, 17Stt W1vne ........ P.O. ' -..rtrotm of OIParlnwl"I No. 3 If 11ld Boo llJJ~. S11111 An1, C1llfgr"l1 '1705 -rt. II 1'00 Cl.,lc Center Orl'lt Wttl. In HOTIC• TO CB«OtTOftS Wiiiiam I", llrotctl>tni, 11m Wt.vne If'! CllY If S1nl1 Anl. C1ll1Drnl1. IU,.••10• COUftT 01" 1'HI! Avenur. S111l1 An1, C1Utot"l1 '2705 Dilld Dtc:lll'ltirr n, lf11 ST.I.Tl O~ CALllO•NIA P:Oft 'TlllJ butlr..t1 11 btl111 con•hKlld bY In " W: .1,. SI JOHN. THa COUNTY Dr OltANOf lllOlvlCh,oll. COl.lnty Cl•r11 HI .. A·1'Jl7 W1lll1m I". Broldbtnl INOW•ll, ••tlN & S'l'l.VIA Eflllr of ALLENE ESTELLE YOUHG. Thl1 lllltmtnl lllff whh flrt C111.111ty • 1.-1 Cf'l.tlollln A.,_ OtcNi..i. C11t11 ol Oran111 Covnt~ on: Ole. lJ, lt71, ~·~.::.. NOTICE IS HEIEIY GIVEN tg Ille !h Arfh11r E. 1(111tr. °'outv CIUn!Y """"'*'' fwi Petft"-crldl!CH'I of lhl 1t>o.,t n11mld dectdtnl Cieri! • ·;-ublhhtd Orl'IOI Cotti 0.llT ,.llol "'" an Pi!r\Onl n1v1.,, cl1l1T1t q1l,.,.1 !ht P1Ul1 l)tctrnbtr 21 2t 1f71 Ind Ji nyiry 4' llld dtcl6tnl I" r1Q11frtd lo ffl1 ttr.n, "uDllll'llCI Or11111 CNst 01111' l llot, 1m • • UM-ri wtlfr ""' nlCIHlrt' VCIUCl'lerl. In ""office OKtmbt!' 11 •• lt71 '"" J11"1Ulrt' 4, II, -------------1 o1 ll'le cl1r-If tne 1ttov1 1ntllltc1 court, or ltT? Uotf·71 LEGAL NOTICE to PftJtnl 11\im, wllll !M ,,_.nilrr V'OU(htr• lo 1111 undersltn.td 11 lilt otllc• LEGAL NOTICE °' lll1!r AllorNY. CoioMI )Ill')-~ s.41m1----=c===-o-==~--·ll • Mii Fr1nklln, 107 I!••' lllh $1rHI. Cotll l"ICTITIOUI •usu .. •ss HOTICI TO CllDITOfll Meu. C1Hlom!1 P1'17 Ot dlrKI lo tkll #AM• SlAT•Ml!NT su,.1111oa coun Of' TH• Co-E•ec111or1, R11\'Tt!Of'ld G. l•owntrlll. 1411 ,.,., I01loWln11 "'"°" 11 dOlnt ~alnua ST.STI or C-'!LIP'O•.M•A "oa K111t• 11!0.0, ~.wpwl .... Ch. C1Ufotnl1, I I: • THI (OIJNTY OP OUMGI or H1rold Dlll:tU, 1"'5 W'ood1 Drl~•· LM THE GUIDE. 1111 Cr~ll~l!'OI Dr\vt, · 1ff. A·1'UI .-.r11e/11. C11!'4rrll1 .. wtllth Is ttie o!•« of l11vn1 811ch, C•llf.19'651 f1l11t. Of HAllftY l(ALU>t. OKt.1..cl. bullMlt ol' !lw u""•r1l1M<:1 In tll "1>11ttr1 L•trr Wetntr, 1ill Crel1v1tw Drive. NOTICI 1• HlftEly GIYIH lo tM ,.erl1lnl~ lo fl!e e11111 ol 111d llK.O.nt, l1tun1 B11cll. C1llf. ,ertdltor1 1' ll'lf Novt nemtrd dK!lde'nl wllld" 1-moii1111 '"'' th• llrtt lllJbllca· T~!I t1u1l"fl1 11 1>11119 cenctuuH "" t.n ttitl 111 "110f11 tttvll'lt clalmf IHl""t I/It lion o1 !Jrll notlct. lndlvlduil, ftld ffUillfl'I tr'f '""''""d to tlt. lfltm, Ollttl 01e1rnber 711. 1t n Lar..,. w11111r wtllt''llll <tt'GMll rY YOl.ld!er1. ·111 lh• 0111<r ltt.Ymoncl G. &row11111n • ltll ci.rt: of ,.... .oow lnlltlt.d <OWi, or ~E Hti:old..O.lz•!I Tllll 111l1mrn1 fltlll 1 11\11111 ttwi Courit'I ,. pr_,p 'lbtm\. Wlltr tllt _...... .m 11«.UIWI ot "" CltJi. or O•l flff Cov,,.., .. : DK. ». 1171 -~.u tllt ~.,..~ M w.. eHlct -· ---. fflt ttv l•111•1r J. MIOdOll Oeoutv COlltllV et llef t.ttof'MY .. MILlllOMI AMO AX· lbovi f\Ml\ld ct«<!dt11! Cltrk. EL. 1'05 iullltl lkllltV1rd. LDt .,,... ... , COLON•L NltalNO ULIM PtAHKLIN ,,.,.,., Callfornl1 ..... WP!ldt il 1M "'''' of 111 Cast ltl~ ltrttt ~ultll!IJ'led Cltlnlf Cfllsf 0.11• Piiot lllvJlnttl ti ll'le llftiltr1ltMd In 1U m1tt1r1 ~.'•c~:i~~~~ tU21 O.Cembtr 7t, 1t71 '"" J 1nu1rr A. 11, II, wr11n1na 1o l!lt tstal• 11 1111 dtc~. · 1t1' "'1·n LEGAL NOTICE wllfrln Ion ""°"""• ttt•r ,.,, 11111 11111111u-Artwaw Nor c .. 1!11;.arlWI tl9rr ti tttl1 nOllu . l ultUlhl(f Ort.riff CGIJI Dilly I Uol. Dtt.d C:,0.,.ber 13. lfll. Otet.mbtr fl, 21. IJ71 Ind J1ny1ry •· 11, LILLIAN !CALIN Im l1U.71l---~==---~----I( El\9(lilr• .. 1111 w in f'IClll'IOUS •UllNfSI 0 of !ht t.&ove nll'*' dtc:lllln!. . LEGAL NOTJCE HAMI STAT•M•N'T MtLLITONI ANO A'XI'-1'111 tollowll\ll i>erson Jo doll\ll bu&Jn!!tl .,.. kflMI ......... ,.. ' Jll1 II: l• ..,........ Ctllftnllt ..... HOTICI TO Ctl011'011S WONOEltFLMlf: LCIGS. I' 111 Ttll 11111 l f .. tm IUl"•ftlO• COUllT OF TH• Mo111cl1lr lint, Huntl11tl0<1 l11cl'I, ,. ..... .,,. ...... hK.itl• ITATI 01" CALl~OllHIA C1lltornl1 f16.l7. Jlllblllil«! Ora"" COl11 Ol!IV P'llot, "O• THI COUN1'Y OP OllAHGI !'TONE AftTS, INC,, 11n1 MorrJCl1lr O.imOW IS, n. 2', lt11 •f'ld J1rtulrY 4, N1. A·71flf Lint, Hunll~Oft 9tKn, C1llfoml1 1'71 ' DOl-71 o!:!!:o." HEHllY BENTON JAMES. ~~7•1111,1,,.._ It co,..,ucted bv 1 (ot· LEGAL NOTICE Ntl1'1Cf: 15 HE11£1Y G1VEH 11 !ht POO'lllon. crldltors 1• 1111 1Do0ve n1mit0 deceo•.,1 Oon•ld l . Mtnrv. ------~------1 ftrat t.11 Olf'IOlll. h1vtne el1lma 1gal111t 11>1 ,.,..ildonl .a.I.It .Mn urd C1Ktde111 irt reciulted 10 Ill• !lltm, This 111!«mt11I w1J !lied .. 1~ fir• COii"· JtOllC• TO CltDl1'01S wllll tire ..,.C"llrt' vouc/'let1, 111 lilt olllct IY Clerk o1 Or1nff Count' ort Oectmber SUlll-.JOll ICouaT 01" Tiii of !ti• <lri of 1111 •t>ove 1n1111M1 court. or '3. lt11. ST.I.Tl 01" CALIFOftHIA fl'Olt t. pres.nl lhtm, wltlr l~t nlCllUt'Y CAMll & IOSS, Alh'I •. 1'H• CO"HtY .,. Oii.i.Mii voudltrJ, lo IM 1>ndtr1ltnt'd ii th• ortlc9 "*Orr 11111 Ot.Y ltN'll N1. A•11JW of her attor....,a, GRAHAM & JAMES, 4" l•nl1 l't Sprlft11. C1Ulwlll1 t6'7t t!t1Alt ot ftVISELl JOSl!.P'H LO Wnt Ocetn t ovl1v1rCI, S1>ll1 7111, l-tttJ«, , ... , tMICIO, Dr(tlttd, 8•1d!, Cl1lftrnl1 tOll(I,, Wiik~ Is 1111 pl1c1 • ff,OTICf: II HEJIEIY GIVEN lo !!'le of llullnftt of lflt uncttnlgned In •II mi !· lub11tll~ Or~not Co1•! Ot!!Y Piiot c•lilllor1 e! 1111 tl>oW n1me<1 6tc:IClll"' It ri ,..,fllnlnt 10 !ht •tll•lt 01 •~Id dlCt• O...:t"lbtr JI, 1"1 Intl Ja11111rr ~. 11, 11, illlll 111 __,.,lllYll'l:I {film. tllln1t 1tl1 ctenl, wllllln four mo~!l\J Iller !he llrtl 1171 33'4.11 tllct Cltctd1trl 1rt r~ulrl'CI lo lilt ll!trl\, pUltllcillon of tttli r.ar!tt. "11fr fhl llK"NrY YOUchtr1, 111 ~I otflu Olftd OK""W 2J 19]1 .LEGAL NOTICE 'II ftrt cler'I. ol lM Wou1 11\1\lllCll court.°' Merr Ellen J~mt1 • M' prfllnl fhtm, wJlll liw llKtlll•'I 6111.tlltrhl of lht Wiii o1 NOTIC& TO CltlDITOftS "'Ol/Ch1r1. le !tie wndtrsltMd ti Ii.. 0Hlc1 111t ibcrW ~ dtc:tdt"I tUl"ll;IOa (OUllT 01" THS If Mr llttornn'I: fl!l!OY & SCHl!lt, INC. Oii.i.HAM & JAMf'S STAT• 01" CALll"OftN1A POii: lly: ALAH M. RE£0YI. •10 HtWPOrl IW: T1ltnlt.1 A. Vyat I T Ne Cl1lltr Orlwt. SUlle SJD, N.woorl Bud\, .... W11t Ocain 11i¥tl .. S111t-7'7 TM CO~~. :.~~llA a C1llfornl1 '16'0, Miid! 11 lhr Pl•ce of l'"' kHll, Cell .. 1'11111 '°"' E•t~t• ot JAMES 0 0 NA l 0 business or ttr.t IH'd9rtlttlld It\ i M ITllfllri Ttl• UIJI CJ..MU llll#IOESON. 1111 known 11 JAMES O. PflrttlP>lnt lo tilt r1lllt o1 u lct dectdenl, Anf,"""' Hor lrtHlrtr lllAOE!ON, Oac••Wd. :"i!I;, '::~ =1 -'111 1111 llr1i PUl>llea· o:.:utilllhtd Or1nM CDlll 01llV Pllo! NOTICE U HERl!llY GIVEH le tt .. 0 ltO o.amb9r n 1,11 .. ,be<' JI, 1'71 Ind J1nu1ry 4, 11, 11. crtdl"'" OI' Ille 1bo¥1 nt.mtd dKl'Clt111 • MAO EllNE. URsvl.1. LO CASCIO 1m »M·11 11111 111 pe•IOl'lt 111v1,.. c111,.,, .,,1n1t 1111 EirKUrrl• ol llW w1u 01 uld 'llectcl~nl 1rf <WQU!rtd to tll• rn.m, "'' 9ben 111'"-ti lllKtdent LEGAL NOTICE w11ti lh• n1e1u.,,. 'l!llldltt'a. 111 t11e et11<1 ftllOY a SCH•ll. IHC. ol tnt c11rk ot Ille lboY• tnlllled cuir1. or a y, ALAlll M. •llDY NDTICE Ofl' Tltl,/STl!l'S SALi lo l rewnt IMm, wlltl lhl MCl:IU" ••NI""'' Cfftlw Or., Suill SJt T.S. r.i.. I" )Off vouCl\lrs, lo !tit wndl!f1ttne4 at tlr• olflct NW,.., 1 -11, C1llt. t1t6f 0.. J~nu8rv II, nn, 11 t ·OO A.M .• CAl ol JAMES L· •. RUaEL. JJI .. Attorney 11 Tth M4-4'.. FEO ENTERPlllSES, 1 C1llforn11 tor· L1w. 3m Vol 0-kr. Htw-1 lr1dl, An_.,1 Nor a..anl~ 110r1tlon 11 clutY aoooln!e<! Trusltt uncttr C1IJIO('nl•• t1'44, wlllcl't Is 111t 1l1ct o1 P11ttllMto Orat"tff Cot1I D1llY Piiot and PtJru11111 lg o.ect o1 7ru•I l'..I!<~'°"' bu1tnua Of 1h• under1l1"'11 In tll m11!tr1 Otc.eml>H 71, 1'11 '"" J1nu1rv ~. n, 11, Stt-!Pmbe• 11, 1'61, •• ln•t No. 10651, In P4"111nlnt to Ille ttt•te of 111d cl•ctdlrtt. ltn J:ll5·11 llook !UD, Hiit 553, ol 0111cr11 Recordt !n wllllln lour months 1118" 1No !frat 111tbl~· l!'r• otfl<t el h county lltcgrdf'r o1 Hon or 11'1!1 111111<•. LEGAL NOTICE 0''"'' Covn!y, Sl•lf ot C1lilornl1 WILL 10 GLOlttA EOITM llllAO!SON 5Ell AT PUllLIC AU CT ION E•Kulrl11ofthleu111of -------------1 TO HIGHES'T l!IOOElt l"Oll CASM tt1e ft~ """Pd llKfftnl "ICTITIOUS aUStH•ll /paytblt 11 tlmt ol Ille In ltw"·I m-·· JAMii L. ftl,/llL. '"· NAM5 STAT•MINT "' ... ~ Allttllll' 11 Llw Tiie toUowlne Ptrtorti 1,1 ctoh\I el ll>t U"l1"' Sl&le~l 11 lllt Sou11> ttront) )qf VI 0 _.. lllltlnt" 11 . f"lr111Ct to In@ otct Countv COllrll\ouSI, In N _: .,."' Cl ,,... II .. M ' cou1.1.NY JnJ w.,. Cotll ""CllY of S111!1 """· CtlllOf'1'1t. t.!I 111111. ·-" -,,,;, ·-·•n ••• • tl!Jt '"" ln1trtJt (Gnv~ to 1fld llllW .... i ,...., HJOllWIY Ng, CJ. Hewoort •••ctt. C•l!I. lll ld bv II \lndM V•ld Oet'd of Trvn ....... AttenMr ,.,. l•.c:wlrb J1c'/I. H. Bf"M'll, 7101 Ar•llt Str..i, 0,._rt.,. 111.,11td 1111 ••let Counlv and Stilt fl'ub111M11 Oranoe Co11t Dilly P'llel. "'""'POI'' lllUI. C1llfornl1 clelcrfbed 11. Dtc1mbtr 2', lt7l •ncJ J1nu1r, 4. 11, 11, l uElle Mt.¥ &tn""'"· '1101 Ar•tl• lAf I(. ,.·r1ct ,m. In lllt City of Cotti lt11 uu.r1 Slrttt, Hewporl I!~, C1JH. M ..... U per mu or<lfld 1 lloclk lft 1--------------11 w1111Am J. M1r11"1. •411 L•n•t crrc.19, "'"" ,. i. n 1n<r1e1 M·" 11 • LEGAL NCYI'ICE H\111!l111fon lltlOI C.!Jf V'I YI, lief lnrou1 111;1 bvllntsJ 11 b.1.., .Corducttd ~ I M11t1. Ill !ht offke of tlll t;ovntvl------------- -r1 .. rr!IJ'll1 IKOt'dlr ti 111d CounlY. NDTIC• 1'0 CJl.Df'TOllJ J.ck H llMell Tiit Ut•I tctdre11 •net c!llH CDPPlmotl SUll!lll(ll COUIT OP TM• . dttl ...... Hon. II l nY. of th@ <ell IH'--1¥ Sl.t.ll o~ CALl•OltNIA '°" T'llll 1111.,..,.,,t flllllf wll!'I 1111 C111,1n1Y dttct!Md tlloW 11 PUf'IOP"l9d lo I»: '57 TN• COUNTY OP OltANOI ci.n ot Ortr\ff (ewl'lfl' .. ; OK. :P. !tll. ll'ftJ.dlo °''"'· Coal• Mtt1, C1t11orni.. Nt.. A·TIUI .......... riv J ,.,....... DIMrlY COllflfY Tiit Vl'ldfflltMd TnJJfff 'llfac l1fm1 artv Ellftll of , .. ALOtHQ 9Al(l!.lt l!.Att· Clln . M1bl!fty for I'll' ~lltU ol ll'le 1frtel MAH, 11!1 SIAlC>I HGI I , EASTMAN, df. . f'·lftn ldctrtu 1!111 other CGrNnOrl dltltllalloft. 11 ,.,Itel, P«tllfhtel O•t-CMt1 Oalty f'Otl any. ~ lltf'tlll. HOTICI If Hl!llllY GIVEN ,. tit• o.e,,...,. "'' lt11 tncl JlllV6n' 4 I\, 11, l•ld Mlt wlH 1tt m.,.. ltul wllfrorll crtdllotl of lllt lboY4I """tel dtclldtM 1t7f, DfS.1! CirY9111nl or Wtr111~1V. •J!PA'U Ot lmllfltd, IPl1t 111 "'tctnl ht'flllt cl•"'"• IH1nll tllt --------,.,-,,,,---l'"''"'lftt 111111. JIO!JM'Mlon, cw """' ••lei 6tcldtnl -rMv1rtc1 10 fllt """'• LEGAL N-cE tvfl'lltrll'letl. ,, ,..., ""' 'tf'!l•ln1 ... ~1 ... w1th ,,. lllCWDlfY -.c11en, '" "" omc• V&I CINI Wit\ II( !M Miit M01tt4 In' Miid "4 ~I d ltli of"" t.boYt tnUlltd CCNI!,., ---=c::cc="'°-0-:'°"'".0C"°--IOtM II ln/9J, lo-wll! 11 .. 11111.M, Wlll'I I~ to llflUnf 1fltm, wtlll 11w ntetlMN l"ICTlf lOUI IUllNIU 1w111 1111,..., 11 ll!'ovWlcl In 1tld nolt. VOV<M••· ffl 111t ..... tltllld 11 1111 off1«1 NAM• tfA~•filf llhlllC ... If l!W, IHldft' tt... ltffl'lt ot 1tlcl ef UNIOH IU.NI(, .. IO W 111 h I r1 'nit '°lltwlf\' """" Jt ..,_ lktsl!Mll Ottd of Trvtt, fffl, Oll '"t Ind _,.,.. l111,11tY1r'll, l.°" .A.1191\lt, Ct.llforl!lt 90012. 1•: of ""' nv11 .. •nd o1 1111 1rvm o"* w111c~ " ""' ff•(• .i butll'lllM ., ._ DAHlL I N 0 U t T ft I t: I 01" ltY Miii 0-.<I ol Tr1111. unct.r1l1nt4 '" 1n m1tt1r1 ""1tlnl111 It CAlll"OIUOA, IA t. MllNtl JWM, Th. ~In' urrcler N141 DIM fl tt11 tllllt of ffld HcfdHll, wlltlln Nvr N-1 INCll. C.llfW'n11 T"'ll llitrt161or't .. kllW 9NI ~1¥tftct r ·~~"'' 1ttw 1111 flr•t ""'tilkt!IM • lhll ...... °"""""""' i C1Hfw1'!t at' fli lllt lll'llltf•ltr.M I wt'ltM ~1lltn notltt . ,...~Iott. au..-. Mffwl DtlW. N-..o(I., Dert\Jlt ... Otmlllli~fl:ir s.i .. .,., • Ull;ci DI(.,...,., ,,, ltn JC ""'""-C•tlfl:Jnfjl WrtftM Htilkt Ill o.twft ftl I~°" to UNION I.A.MK Tilk Dutlf'lillll fl '-Int ~ bf a a.Y. 'Oltr~ltMd dWiW Nkl Hotict IY: JOMH I. MttL•O'I' Cnw.llon. 9' Olfwtt Mid lllretloit f9 1'1111 .. 111 TNll ~ lb:ltltrt I. °"'.,.. ~ Ill IM· ftlilntr ·"""11 fll4' ,..., llllCutor ot l!tt WlH "'"*"' ~ " -., Of !tit I aww na"""' dldOtnl 1"" ~ fllMI •1111 tl'tt c.-.ty Dtlt. Dtc.tmbir '" lm, f NAJIWOOO. IOl'•N a ADKIHION ti.* if Or.-CIUfllY tfl: Die. n. 1'71. CAL fl'l!O lllT'lltPIUSIS Mf ,. ....... e.tr lrtwi ..,........., '\t ......_ .,..... CM!rW » ,, .. ._,,..... "9t OH1a ~ 19'1 CWL Ir P •... ~["""" .......,. , .... CA t1M1 "'"' ~ ....,. M+l>lJ ,_..... Ort• OM• Daltr ,...,, l"UIMI.... er.,. C1a11 o.llr pt19t, AfW-r1 ... 1.....-.: :I WfOTE A ~It TO 111! !OlfOR J.801/f 1f4E. WAY 1Jfl4l~~PER 5 Al.l.Ot/J 1ltE '°'1flf1'.lt.tEtl1' 11> COWllO!. AAD 5U- Pl1ESS lllE-f)(l/IEO Woito- _1; Tau> 1'><fM1 ti.I A)() UIJGelZfAfN TElfM6, 1l-14f 11-IE-'AV'-«J."i;. ;JOE' ~AS NO VOi~ /.NP 1\1"1' F«ifEPo,.. OF 1\lf Pfle:cs ~ A 81'1 JOI<£ ! _so, MJHAI"' MAPfUIE.D .. :fl-IEY PRINTfD IT/ ' • ~-~­-· .. ·- Freedom Of The Press Is No Joke At The Daily Pilot Yes, the DAILY PILOT prints nearly all the letters it receives (up to 100 o week). Freedom of the • 0 voice. . IS extended to our editorial the page readers. of the hove You do DAILY PILOT. If you It's feel press there on strongly about on . issue, write to Mailbox. • Our Policy Letters should normally convey their messogo in 300 word• or lou . The right to condense letters to fit space is reserved. Each lotter must include signature end mailing oddron, but n1me moy be withheld on request if sufficient ro11on is eppo~ont (emberroumont or horasSlllont ot tho writer, for eumpleJ. Poetry, lotteri in poor taste end libelous or unsigned lot. tors, of coune, will not be pubrtshod. .. MAILBOX Oro.,. Co .. t DAILY PILOT P.O. Box JUG CNlo MoH, Co. ''2626 l DN¥1• a. 1m n hMlll'Y 4o 11. ti, ~ ti. • ltn .,. ,.,._,.., " P'Wllthtl Or•f'IM ee.tt Dtl~ ..nei '"' llJIWI 1#1 ... ...,. JSMJWY 4, "' u.-u, ,,,, ~"·------------~-------.;. ...... -------------------------------------.1! T l l I • ' I • l I I ) . • TUMBLEWEEDS , . • ?0111 . ti. ~y• ~~~itisAro, ~.£' i---0-l'_eA_ll_! 1-M-LJ-ST_H_A-Yt:_s<Xl_N_D-ED_, l'ECOMt: eHGAeEP 10 HER! , AWFULLY FORWARV!I ctmlNLY DIDN'T Mt:AN m 1).KE 1llE 1Nl1IATWE1 i;\'.llj . ' ,, ~ErME PU1J11HIS WAY!: .•. IF~UA'.lf' 1HE QUE:SllON, l'LL t'lD I SAY 1'HA1?! FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE t> ' J! 'I ,, 'I I DAILY CROSSWORD •. ~. 6y R. A. POWER I ACROSS 42 Dogma 43 Orrnc:h l M!dltalrd 44 ltilln dttply 45 Was assutrd 6 Nail ustd by 47 Entict 111lntrs Sl Wom1n 10 Ptatotk 52 Those In 1 tenus pt'OCtSSlon 14 Honor 54 Gunpowdtr 15 Br1st of lngrtdltnls b\Jrdtn 58 Formrr lb In 1 ntw form Japanese coin 17 Observes 59 Fodder carefully contalntt 114n 2 18 Musical sign 61 IC tnd of sandal 10 lnvtntoi's 39 Encloses: 19 Stt of three 62 Was convryrd grant 2 words 20 Caplts by a horse 11 Concrm lrig 40 Pfrta inln; 22 f'ittt !If bl Picture U PMtry to money m11Ct4>t litvt 64 l"tgularly 13 Ack now ltdgtd 42 Frog's 24 Sunktr In notched 21 Postd !or a relative 9blf &5 Kicks photographtr 43 Died 211 Stained tht &Ii S1 l1mander 23 Fastentd with 44 Wad ing birds ""'" !i7 Powtt: a §'\ring 4b Tut lace: Sllf'IJ 27 Put Into a Prefi x 25 Cleatly 47 Marlntr's dlfftrent evtdent dlrtcUO!l conta lntr DOWN 27 Pro-: h1 48 Prohiblllon 31 Lunar Ntw proportion 49 -wind: Year ol As ia 1 Breatht In 28 Havinq an Feature of 32 Affirms with short psps tQUal score the lrOlllCS confidence 2 Eslttm 21 Twisttd out 50 Shirl period 33 Made secure 3 Sacred Roman or shapt of lime 35 Showed tht -: Tribunal 30 Fell into evil Sl Not mov ing .. , of prelates ways QtJlckly 31 Cardinal 4 8ul1dtrs l4 Distributed by SS Blick: Poet. numbers S Abandons measure 5& Sfnqer Julius 39 Dlsrnlsstd: Ii Small 35 Clamorous. L1- Informal cap\ta!s: >at. Ind Ins istent 57 TruAk' . 40 MassJ~e se• 7 wood product 36 In addition bO Canlldl•n wall I Watchful 37 Documeni of province: 41 Pismire 1 ConqUffttf conveyanr;e Abb<. . ,, fl(JY1HE RIN&! By Al Smith MUT1; YOU SHOUl.D 1!E ASHAMED! T~ERE 'YOU SIT REL.AXED AND ENJOYING Yo!JRSEl.F \'MILE "THE GOOtl l.ORtl IS OUT °™EREi WAsHING YOUR CAR! By Dale Hale By Frank Baginski PEANUTS WELL, Wh'I NOT? 6NE ME 50ME REA~Oll§- JUDGE PARKER WE MAVEW'T CAN'T I l'UST RUN UP TO J'EE.P'S TIME! voa ROOM A.Wt> SAY GOOoave TO CAN CALL MER MER, ~R. APPLETON? 51-!E DtPN'T FA:OM TME kWOW WE WERE LEAVING FOR -.1RPORT! NEW '!ORK THIS A.FTERNOON ! MISS PEACH JM-, IFANYfMIN' &AP IV51t MAPl'tNS TO ,,,,, I WOCJl..O ~OU CA-l~ PERKINS WOuLP l c.AU? °" C~SI l'P .GAJll! - U'~ '.AINER GORDO MOON MULLINS = • ANIMAL CRACKERS AAeeq, 'l .€J<JrTA ~AAll> IT 10 UA ~ l,\'.XJ'ilE all L 1" I .CU: H!CK Of A ~ HE/if . • • Bv Charles M. Schulz ...-~~~~~~~- I DON'T LIKE '<'00, IUll'RE CRASB'( Au 1HE TIME AAD 'IOU'RE 100 ll0%'1' ! By Harald Le Doux I • ' COME, NOW •• OONT LOOK 50 61..UM, ERIC! I MAVli SOME 600<> NEWS s:oR ·vou! " By Men . . By John Miles OA!lY l'!lOT ~J By Al Capp -' I I ti'?- // I\' B!I Ferd Jahnson l/MoOEEI IN W!A'NI~ ·• -~~~,.N ' ,ABOUT 8US,IN6 •• • /--:;;;iill . --~ f , . • • By Rager Ballen r-----"'"""',... THE GIRL$ ~ .... MAtA', \lll(q lXc.llr qoo UU.HIM ."™111" 'IOO -I " .. •• ... : .. -if· •• "Wben you hear Ille 1Uly Ne"" Year re10luUon J madt. 1 J>ef yoa a lar1e tlp you're 1olD1 1.o t.eU me '° brtak b." DENNIS ·THE MENACE \ . ' .,. .· ... ••• ' . ' .. • + •• ... ~:= '· .. · F.: I " ·~ ••• =·= •• • ..... ' ' ' .. •• ~· . : .. .. ; .. ·. •. .. : . : :·. ' D.111.Y l'llAT Tlltldq, ,,.,,..,,. 4, 1972 ·TV DA ILY l OG . Tuesday Evening lrt!O fJ Mevle: (C) •Jiftr111 (1dventur1) '54-Fern1ndo La11111, 81l1n Keitll, llflonde Flemlns. CllOOlll~••ws 'Fun City' Play Too Familiar By WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -Comic J911n Riven ol TV and nlpt club! woru wildly but not ...U In "Fun City," 1 bopla1 folly inflicted on Sunday ni&ht firsi- nlgbters at Broadw1 y'1 Morosco Theater. - ur1T......., Thll iJ another or thooo fabtos about tho allegedly hllarious horrors of llfe in fl.1anhatlep , a Iheme profitably mined by Nell Simon. But Still Stunning Miss Rivers, her husband Edgar Rosenburg and ooe of A Quarter century after she resigned as one of the their video cronies,_ Lester world's most beautiful women Oeft), actr~.ss Ingrid Colodny, have ro-autbored Bergman presents a stunning profile (ri,bt) as abe mere apprentice absurdity. arrives in New York for the recent mamage of her Aa heroine Jill, a iU!tar daughter, Pia Lindstrom. sling ing activist, Miss Rivers ---------------------gets to snap, crackle and pop a lot <l gags anent current causes. And to be fair about it, so do such other familiar players as Gabriel Dell, Paul Ford and Rose Marie, the Jong-ago child star. ;. If one-liners are to sustain a whole show, however, ~y better maintain a darn ~ average, which is &he f1rst serious flaw In "Fun City.~ Some of the humor i s downright forced, dubioqa and, a couple of times, delperate. The 0411er bg lapse ts in what, for politeness, can be labeled the story line. It is the old boy-girl potboiler· wherein lovers .must furiously .quarrel before reunion, accomplished here w!th 90me 'of the most bt"nal dia1ogue since "East Lynne." The big switch, see; is that it is the man who wants to regularize seven years of' impromptu togetherness with a wedding. Jerry Adler, also a recruit from 'JV, has directed t'he frantl.c·tempe charade with more adrenalin than artistry. The par\ltloos in R a I p h A1swang's dilapidated apart· meat s e t t i n g occasionally seemed about to collapse under the inept f a r c i a I onslaught. As the first Broadway ar- rival of the new year, "Fun City" inspires only hope that things will get better and bet .. ter. Tom Kubis to Head Jazz B~sh at OCC • A special post·holiday con- cert featuring two original compositions by Tom Kubis will be presented at Orange Coaa~ College Sunday. · Tbe concert, featuring the OCC Jazz Emeqlble, the Concert Band and Brass Ensemble, will be held at 2 p.m. in the OCC Auditorium. There is no admission charge. . SUophonist Kubis w i 11 ~ pre,ent bis 11 A Little Md'' and "Heetle Flat" with the Jazz Ensemble. Kubis is a student at occ. 1be Ensemble-will also present "Rainy Day" and "Refiectlons" by Schamber ; ••zig Zag" by Baker; •1Qde to an East Boston Ferry'' and "Blues for a Graying Walrus" by Clausen; "Acid We«t" by Strugess and "Love for Sale" by Rich. The COOCilrt band w i 11 present numbers by Hanssen, Frescobald, Rimsky Ko~akov, Giovanftlni, Bennet and Ken- ny. The Brass Ensemble will presen!" works by Buxtehude, Pezel, Bounamente and Bach. All of the groups art con· ducted by Dr. Charles Rutherford of the OCC Music Department. Chorale Starts Tonight Rehearsals begin this even~ lng at 7 o'clock for the Orange Cout Community Chorale's coming season. Openings are still available Jn the organization a n d Chorale director R i c h a r d Raub indicated that interested singers may audition tonight in Studio 1 of the Orange Coast College Music Building. The chorale will offer its first concert on March 19, presenting Beethoven's "Mass in C" and "Naenie" by JoJlan. nes Brahms. Both works will be sung with an orehestr:a. The closing program of the season will be held on June 4. Bruckner's "Te Deum" will be prese nted with the Orange Coast C o I I e g e Community Symphony Orchestra. 'Sanford and Son' CBS Hatching New 'Family' By'RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Tho producers of CBS-TV'1 hit comedy about a blgo~ "All jn the Family," will offer y'et a n o t b e r provocative, con- temporary weekJy series of hwnar this month -this one about a Negro junk dealer and his son. The half·hour series will be called '1Sanford & Son." lt stars the superb ({}median Redd Foxx as the aging Los Angeles junk dealer and De- mond Wilson as his son and partner in a business that is not yery thriving. And it bows in on NBC TV Friday, Jan. 14, at a p.m. • • I • was me.de when the network rescue team is described as officially confirmed t h e "A special unit of tbe LA can~e.llation of five of its new County Fire Department and aeries - a quintet of shows the first unit ·so stalled .and 1hat contrtbuted· to the ,equipped in the 'u.s. -trained rilediocre raUngs ot the Na· . to offer medica1 uslstance. at ttonal Broadca'sting Company the scene of fires and other this season. emergencies." As it happens, the hottest Also in the NBC-TV an· show on NBC·TV, and pro-nouncement was the fact that bably in all video, is also its two-hour "world premiere" headed by a black star, Flip movies -rhms made strictly Wilson. for television -will no tonger Victims Irate Record Pirat,es May Walk Plank By LINDA DEUTSCH wt loll ... llod to ael L, .. HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -They 11Yf ~.'"By Fe~ don't wear eye patches ot ·they could t1p us off for mllllons " -1 brandish swords, but the U·'...: lo I ""'" prev us laws, f,Y a pirates who stea songs are as musical wmpoa:itlon d .be threatening to recording cO 1 b ... ..,. co artists as the real thing was to pyr I ' ~ ... swlpbia w11 . a civil vlolatloo!, Doi criminal. seagoing traders. . Undtr the MW' •latute, an en· Blg record C{Jmpan1es have Ure r e co i: d can be filed suits and requested tatd> copyright, and plioting iJ a on bootleg record plants. A re-tnJScteme_apor punishable by cent raid by U.S. marshals up to one year in prls>O. and up closed down the h u g e to' fl,000 in fines. Hollywood operation of ~ chap I. fPOkesman at c a p It o I who gleefully called himself Becoi'ds says Jts legal depart- "The Rubber Dubber." n1ent has sued IDIQy pirates Record C{Jmpanies say they and will aue more atier the lose about $150 million ab-new law ta• e IJ.e ct. nually to pirates. These are Favorites ,of the pirates, he record producers who copy said are old Beatles albums major hits -by stealing a recorded by c a p I to I • s master copy or tapin'g them subsidl&rf Apple. from radio broadc8.!lts -and Corb Donahue, a~ ABC sell the ~rds at cut rates. Dunhlll Records, ~admits tht "The C{Jnsumer finds out new 1 aw won• t end later that It doesn't sound pirating-mainly because he right," says Isaac Hayes, feels the public does9't ~ke whose record album 0 Shaft•• the booUeg threat ser~y. ls a top seller. "1Some will go "Most people see the rock out and buy another record, music bu.slnesa u iyi aber- but many of them can't afford raUnn on the face .,'of the that." "' American music lnl:tustry," Hayes. 28, gels t r i P 1 e says Donahue. ••No of}e takes royalties BS composer·musl-it serio\llly when th.la 6appens, ciao-singer of "Shaft." He except · the· people '+'ho are says he's lost about $5 million making a living at it. to pirates, and he has taken Young r 0 c k ita a-most the most drastic action of any popular with pirates ~ -lose recording artist. He's hired ex· most, says Donahue. Bootleg. FBI agents to fight the gers don't pay royalties, and pirates. a younaster with a first hit The gents sealed off a Mem· may need the money. phis, Tenn., sound studio Perhaps because ,r coun- where Hayes' new a1bum, terattacks by artists such as "Black Moses," was bemg' Hayes, pirates lately have recorded. They put an armed turned to counttrfei~ing the guard on the master copy k f d d rf around the clock, and the pro-wor 0 ea pe onqtrs. duction point was kept secret. "People like Janis Joplin ''I don't even know where i$ and Jimi Hendrix have been was pressed," says Hayes. heavily bootlegged since their deaths," says one spdke.sman. Since the pirate's success. "1'helr records have become counts on gettin~ a copy out collectors' items. And the before the original hits the lxlotleggers know there will be stores, the gents rode shotgun 00 more of their music to with delivery trucks to the retall outlets. Two million pirate ever again." copies we~ ·shipped before pirates could attack. "'Now the bootleggers are getting the crumbs from the table," says Hayes, noting that counterfeits are being distributed belatedly. It's difficu1t for a consumer to spot the fake before be gets it borne "unless be knOws what he's looking for .... says one spokesman. A copy won't bear.-the· company trademark In most cases. The customer has ' to know which company produced the record. ·'Only G~me' Tryouts Set The Buena Park Players ~ve_anoounced: open auditions for 'their nm ~uctton, Frank D. Gilroy•! fcorpedy- clrama "The· Only · GJll'Qe in Town." A cost o1 ·1wo menl 111\1 one woman is required for the .show. Roles in futu~ Buena Park productions -'! B o r n Yesterday," "The Ha .nting of Hill House,'' "The iary of Anne Frank" · -al!o wtll be considered at the tryoots. Under an amendment to the federal copyright Jaws, com- panies will be able to take stronger legal action against pirates starting Feb. IS. "But Readlnp will be tield at the C.ntralla School auditorium, Hope Tourney 3301 w. Lincoln ,Ave., Anaheim, at 7:80 p.m. Jan. -'• 6, 10, 11 and 13. Int«mation HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The Is available by calling \llrecior 1972 Bob Hope Desert Classic J w-~ t llt8-0331 goli tournty will be covered by _""'l __ .... __ •--_,.·-- NBC-TV with 90·mlnute telecasta of the action on both Feb. 12 and Feb. 13. Like "All in the Family," which fini.!1hed second among all programs in the latest na- tional rating; "Sanford & Son" is adapted from a auc- cessful {kitish series. "All Jn the Family" was adapted from England's "Till Death Do Ua Part," and "Sanford & Son" ii taken from the Brltl!b show "Steptoe & Son." At any rate, NBC midseason be shown just on Fridays. cancellati~ were "Sarge," They have been soft in the about a Policeman-turned· ratings as a, steady Friday en- priest; "The D.A,," about a try. Starting Friday, movies district attorney's office; "The made for theatrical release Funny Side," a comedy-varie-will be substituted on that ty show hosted by Geri~ Kelly: night as a general rule, and "Tile Good Lile," which con· the "wor ld premieres" will be cerns a well-to-do young cou· dropped in o c c a s i o n a 11 y pie who hired out as butler throughout NBC Monday, Fri- and maid to a rich family to day and Siturday night motion l-p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. avoid the rat race: and "The pictures -as they werein the DM'IMF' MnvtfS ;!; t:Ol"'"Cllr'W' (dramt) ·~Doroft!J •!· '"""'•ltt. R~'*f Tatrn~. =· l:Jt8(C).....,.,. """'' '54 Qut Gablt. Lana T11f1ltr. lHO(J)"Ctonp """"" (tdwrrt\lrt) fM-.Ctom N1der. Vfmnla Mno. 1:.011 "'TM fltttt I•" (comedy) '42 Dorothy Ltmour, Willllm Holden. 1J "llttlla• T111111" (d11rnt) '40 -f:rront Power, Lindt 0.1111IL f" "'Stlft DMI"' (CO~ '37- ltlt.!itrfM Hepburn, Cllnl!r Rogers. 2.1XI IF' "'Im ff la Kllltd"' {mysteiy) '50 -lm1nct Tltmer. Geor1• Coul· """ t.<O(Jl .. _ t.ndlldt" C..lu· lion (comedy) '$2 ..... Kim N0111k. Jat1i Ummon. @) .. 1ndo11 Htimt" (dr1m1) '43 -Gm1 6'1$011, lon1ld Co!m111. 4:!0"" "'Afr. Btllllfln11 l~lldl Hb Dn1111 tko1se• (comedy) '48-tery Cr1nt, Mme Loy. (J)Sa•alOIM ..... .· :: Nearly Evel')'One ,. • Listens to Landers NJ!C.TV's announoonent ol the black situation comedy l, Owtln HotflM" 1~ "JTUW DOGJ" fill "''~"""· Partners," a comedy about a past. couple of bumbling detectives, In addition, !tarting this one white (Don Adams ), the montb, 1\lesdays from 7:30 to other blac;t (Rupert Crosse). 9:30 p.m. will be "multi~ NBC went overboard trying iar• nights on NBC, meaning to sell "The Funny Side" to anything might be dropped In. the public, but £ailed. "The Those tw~ hours will be filled, Partners" seemed to have 1----------1 potentlaJ but was up against ~~ .. All in the Family" head-on; In additinn there was a • ' 1 reported dilference in ouUOOt -1 between Crosse and Ad&m. Also of interest is that in a - year when the networks flOO<I· . CLllT IASTWOOD 'Id the airwaves with law M- forcement shows, three of the five cancellation.I have law· and-order themes. NBC. TV confirmed t h a t another new se ries, ''Emergency," a weekly hour based on the operations of the Los Angeles County paramedical rescue team, will arrive Jan. 22. It wlll have a two-hour preview Jan. 1$. The WA LTER MATTHAU "KOTCH" __ ... _.,.._l!Y!I ---Ai.,-.,·_ 191 --1 "SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL GU,.FIGHTERw ,.,.. ... Matl- Wedneodoy, I P."" flll llfllSH M 11111 ADULTI ,t,ff ' • II MISTY lroll Ml• ...... ~--·~· ETfiDD101! 1 •twP'Oltf •rACH ~ Ol.W»b 10111 Smash Week! ALSO '1he Savage Wild" l.rM ..... • Dec.2'thruJ1n.C "PLAY MISTY FOR ME" _,,..., ....... ''HI RED HAND''~ '°" C.lof -..... ....... htl ' I\ A HOWARD W.KOCN~ ITU&tJ.,.~ ~!!"'Yllln:an TonyA Odd Susman .. Eizabeth 2ND FIATUll SffHCONNl~Y ' ''THI RED 11NT1' DIUii.OTDI A 11•Dftiit '10•eddn1 --~-'."1 • ( r ' Here'• here's h1r1'1 OHARUE BROWN ••• and LUCY. ,.t nd LINUS ••• and VIOLET ••• and h•rt'• SCHROEDER,., an'd • lut bUt not llPt, here'• SNOOPY Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Deputment) to ha"\!e the whole Peanuts ·g•g :come and v isit y ou daily • • I ·-- Ii DAILY PILOT • • Everyone Hai Something That Sotneone Elie Wint. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED I ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, T rode H With a Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dia' 642-5678 for Fast Results ~( -~ ...... ~,~~!~-~ ... ~ .. ~,~~I -"'.. I~ I -"'.. l~I -"'-I~ I ~f·~ l~I -f.... l~ I ._ft<.. l~ I -··· l~ General Gener.i iiiiiiiiiil'Ge~"-'-'"-1~-~~~·iiGi1i0i1irai1iiiiiiiiiii0i1naiiri•1iiiiiiiii>iiii, ';G;'•"=~'•'•':;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;G•o•n;'•'•~l;;:;:;:;;;;;;;::;;;;:;;;;,i°'~-"-'-'-"'~~~~~ 1·0-'-"-'-''~'~""=~~~ TOO BIG POP ON OVER TO POPPY In Corona def M•r UPPER FRQNT LEVEL UNIT, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, fonnal dining room fireplace, built. Ins. LOWER UNIT, private entrance, fire- place, BACH UNIT one bedroom aeluxe apartment. Adorable at ............ $61,500. INSTANTLY APPEALING you11 have to agrM SPANISH style S bedroom, 2 baths, dining ~m, fireplace, extra large bulltin modern kitchen, carpets & drapes, two LEVEL PATIO. See thla extra sharp one year old beauty. .. ....... : .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. $49,500. SEA YOU AT THE BAY Balboa l1land CUTE beach cottage. 2 bedroom, 1 bath, · FIREPLACE, front paUo, one block to South Bay. Only .......................... $32,500. WHAT A TRADE! M PluH ... all Jn a row. All units have i.a bedroom, 2 bath, 1-2 bedroom 1-1 bedroom. SPACIOUS and close to shopping, In SUPER RENTAL AREA. ~acb .. .. .. . .. ............. $65,500. REALTORS '' 644-7270 21U IAST COAST .HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. ---------General "PENNY PINCHER" AS LITTLE AS $140 MO. A penny •ved. ta a penny earned, but -,... Jt cwJd be many m, Just take OY!'l" ptyn'ie'nll • in- d-taXa. NO QUALIFY- ?NG. 3 queen Cle bedroom&. S'"P sawr k!tcl>en. Maey ..... lndudlnc -clOM .. «:Moll and thoppln&, Seema bnpouft>le lor Ol>!y $23,500. -call todey. 645-4303 I Olll\I l Ol \O\ ,,, r ,. / o "' , DRAMATICALLY SITUATED This unique 3 BR • 2 baltl home in chotce 91oredil& !ocadon ii a mlll't see. Ov· erlook1n1 wooded area + ocean view Spedou, liv· inc room • fir]>lc • New tdch plle w/w caii:ieb + custom drapes. Separate -room, .... bar-Mu. NT BR. wS'lh own bath Vacmt. $93,500 • meJ 'O THE REAL 1"\. ESTATERS ' .· General DISCREET P£RFECTION A home cared tor In ewry W&y, With &~ly every Mture to offer. L u 1 h arounda with -. galore. Auto electric aptlnklen, low -...... e -llihtlnr. earpebed throtlahout (even batho). A home -!or executive attention, and oft. emf 1 o r )'OUr l.n9pection • Priced 1.t $45,995. C 1. J I J546.2IIJ, 10 THE REAL '''-ESTATERS ' . . •' 10°/o DOWN COUNTY CORRIDOR (Owner Tr•n•hlrred) cu.tom b.zllt 4 BR, 3 BA ~: Huee livinc room with vll!W p(IM'. large laml1 rm. over'looking Jt.l'p f<enc. ed yard w/heated pool. Won- dertul for entatainina. OnJy $6,500. Lachenmyer Rt"'ltor 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. Call &46-3928 Ever. 675-1871 $19,950 IS THE PRICE !or ""' """ lovely ' bed· · 1 0 UNITS room, 2 beth home. The Joan ii high rnou&:h that you can E'Mt:lide Costa Mesa, great uswne wtlh ~ents of rental area. Seven 3-bed· $11!0 per month, which In· roorXll and three Z.bedrooma:. eludes an. Modern buUt· AU separate unltJ with Jota ins, deep pfte carpets, also of spa~ .. Showa a fantutic matchlna' drape Double return Wlth Income of $1,400 carare to ~! ~ - per mo. SubmJJ oo -. or w lk & L trade .. • a er ee Walker & Lee Real•"" Re&lton 2700 Harbor Blvd, at AdamJ :mo Harbor Blvd. at Adami 5<5-949! Open 'ttl 9 PM 5'S-Ol6S Open ·w 9 PM S BR. + DININ!i RM HARD TO PLEASE Executive ~3!!!° 11omet '400 lt ... t!rls cfw1nl..r home b ••. ft., ft...,_, lormal <f1n. for )'OU. Value ii; written Jng room, 2 pllllb btth anu 111 over ka face. When we and "Sunshine Brlabl" kltch- •Y it's • bup.in, ma.k-e w: en wtlh bul.lt..fn RIO plu. JWYe it. 5 Bdrm plaa lM"1 tfuhwuherl Elcoelltnt home more utru. ln'«PlO ln excellent aru doe. to '&1THEREAL ' ESTATERS 11·i • • EVERrnl!NGr NI price Sll.!'llXI -&abmJt all offers! c.u 84'1-1221 SEYMOUR REALTY, ln41 Beach mYd., Hunt. Bch. MINI RANCH "FORECLOSER MAXI FUN THREA r• .:.i..nni,. -i.om., 2 1-IOle of ltlla • bod- bedn>om, ... J bath " ....... liq "'""'1 dllllnC eully -ble. s "'"" ::::: =--tar-:.... w.: .u.liaand--tadt .._. mon.;. w..•t lul. ...... Brfnc .. die °"'" -.,.,., Gteot cloM.tn Joe. catl •ll51 (()pots ~) f4Wi •·1 Oil llil ._.. $tD ldJ• tlltml nawt llWS'lllfowl io ·THLREAL "-T:STATi'RS ' MONEY SAVING RECIPE Take one 4 bedroom, 2 bath home In Costa MK&. add u n arudoua seller, reduce the price below market value, •Flnkle wJth the beet possible term1 ($150 down + clOllnl COlltl), place In eacrow for 30 days and you have the best buy in town at $23,900! Hurry -it won't Lut. 546-8640. 1rs THE TALK OF THE TOWN Thia beautiful home lo- cated in Meaa Verde ii a spaclom 4 bedroom, with family, 2 baths, electric bullt-ln kltchtn, co:ey brick fireplace, prestige area, gorgeous yards and priced to sell taat It $32,950. Owner must sell Make offer. 546-8640. BEST BUY IN MESA VERDE $27,900 Needl paint and clean- up but what a value. 4 big bedroom•, 2 fUll b&thl, bullt-ln kitchen. double prage, belt Colta Mesa area. No UNIQUE HAS GREAT LISTINGS ••.•... IN THE BEST AREAS U~l()Uf: tl()Mf:S OF NEWPORT BEACH THREE BEDROOM A FRAME THAT IS solid, clean and cozy! Deee shag carpets, large eating area off the kitchen and dra· matic indoor.outdoor gardens that glow with subtle lightscaping. Beach co™l'unity pro- vides tennis, swimming and family activi- ties. Offered at $39,000. PLEASE PHONE 67rHJOOO TO SEE THE STRONGS' HOME. 4 Bedroom, •xcluaive Baycrest residence with carpeted family room, s~ ~uded master suite and heated and filtered pool with one meter board. Quality home de- signed for active family living. Offered a t $77,900. PLEASE PHONE 67~ TO VIEW THE DURKIN RESIDENCE. BAYCREST POOL HOME WITH 4 BED- rooms and a floor plan designed for family Jiving and casual cntt:·~:'!ning. Outstanding pool area with cool decking and low rilain· tenance yet graceful surroundings. Large formal dining and some bay view from the promenade de ck. PLEASE CALL 675-6000 TO SEE THE PHELPS RESIDENCE. Gener•I TAX PROBLEMS? EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Built by Dick Sewell. Excellent rental area. Owner'• 3 bdrm. unit, 2 baths; dbl. garage, carpets, drapes, bit-In gas kitchen, walk-in closet in mstr. bdrm. Plus, 2-1 bdrm. units, carpets1 drapes, 1 bath, bit-in gas kitchen: each W1th fenced patio; sgl. garages plus 1 space. This trielex affords xint tax shelter plus the beautiful owner's unit. Priced at $69,000. CHIL T ROBINETT down to veta, mtnlmum REAL TOR 644-7958 down FHA. s~ tbll tor ll~G~t-n•"r'"ai,..;....:-'------G-0-0-.,-1-1 --===:.... 1ure. 546-8640. 11·-=--------1 NEW! NEW! NEW! *Mrs. Robo~t G•uglt,* RAMBLING CHALET NEWPORT HEIGHTS 24596 Arttml• Minion Viejo You are the winner of 2 tickets to the Sports, Vec1tion & Recr•etional Vthlclo Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER * 1971 * "A VERY GOOD YEAR" ..• Over $10,000,000 In local gross transac- tions. Some o( the reasons could be - Many loyal repeat clients Prominent office location Ample parking space . Active in local multiple Ji.sting service Members of National Multi-List Service With affiliations in 300 cities & 450 offices In all modesty-we're large enough to t1erv• you-small enough to know you and we've been here since 1949. CALL 675-3000 ~NYTIME ****** TAYLOR CO. LINDA ISLE· $143,SOO EACH HERE is your chance! Owners of 3 NEW waterfront homes will consider in exchange : smaller home, land, apartment bldg or trust deeds. \Vill consider lease/option. Each bas 4 BR, FR, DR & study. Really spectacular. See today & submit your exchange. "Our 26th Y 11r'1 WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 General General DOVER SHORES Fabulous Galaxy Drive view home . 2 doors from Galaxy Park. Large indoor entertain- ing area with pool, jacuzzi, wet bar, fire- place, plus formal livrng room. $122,000 with land lease. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suitt l, N.B. 675-6161 General CONNECTICUT FARM HOUSE 2 STORY-NEWER. JUST USTED! Gorgeous "New England" charm. Towering stai.rca.se to unique toft style balcony. Cathedral beam ceilings. Crackellng fireplace. Pub tavern kltrl1· en. "Bonus" family I u n room. Huge master strite overlooking extra large prl.. vare back yard. Won'I last at only $34,500. See today. General -·------Builder's Close-out 4 bdrm Spanish style homes with 2 bath&. No down GI buyl'T5 and min. down FHA. Priced from $30,trio, Price includes landscape, sprink- lers and buyer chooses col· or on carr>elt. Clase to So. Co as I Plaza and new sehools. Models open. C.a.U. li you used your GI bene- fits before, call anyway - )00 might be etlifble for another one. Walker & Lee brand new big canyon home ••• five bedrooms, 3 baths, flmlly room, 3 car 91rage, boautlful corner lot 26 hermltap lane at royal st. george road, nE"Wport beach. this home ii beln1 finished now and should be available in mid·februacy. drive by and see It, then call owner at ••• 644-1140 MUST SELL 6 BDRM·l IA Just Hared.I 3 siant bdrm'• &: musi~e den .with 2!id fireptaoe. Gracious fOrmAl dining rm. 3 deluxe bathl. Gou.rinet kil'l"hen, blt-il'll. t.tiib-cf.11)tts l dre.pel:. S:iuring staircase to 11\/\na elegance. Roma.ntic muller suite. Priced thotlu.ndl be· low mkt. for tut Nie. Ste """"· Call 645-0303 IO Kl\I I. Ol\O\ N " • . ''' vm s1.oo TOTAL DOWN Owner bot11bt new home-wW pay all your coels. Tenific location in pluth a:reen residential area. 3 Bedroom, 2 Baths, f&nta•tic J)&Del~ game room, all buD.tl.nl and 1parlding cood.llion. Govern· merit appralse d at UP FOR ADOPTION c:-:· ~ic:!'evesl An ideal 1tarter home for a young couple. NO DOWN VETS OR L 0 W FHA TERMS. nu.. bdrm. and den home with hantwood ftOOl'!. Good Eastside Cmta \out h {-Odst -- M~ location. Large yard ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!"'!!!!I!!' tor the kids -near schools I~ In and ohopplng. Priced to ..u Corona del Mar at only f,13,<m. 'lr.'I' ~ULWt;Ll PROPERTIE S. INC. Form('rl.., !a8or0<· RE 220 E. 11th St., C.M . Call 646-0555 Evenilvs Can 644-7003 NEWPORT HEIGHTS WE ED IT AND REAP $J1,9SD Impoaslble?? No! Cute home nesUed Jn harbor ol trees. 3 bedrooms. Year around patio with built in barbeque. El ........... and palnj and a little gardening ii aU that is needed. NO DOWN t.o vei.. Call .tbday. 645-4303 I OHL\ I I. Ol\O\ <i>;At'"fJ~\ EASTSIDE COSTA ,MESA Granny can hop, skip le jump to Westclltt lhoppinf; Jr. walks to schoot; recreation at home, 17'04 htd. &: lilt'd. pool; 2 lxl.rm. le den plus guest bollle; Jn imm&c. cond. Won 't last long al $31,500. You can usume large FHA loan! CORBIN- MAR·TIN Duplex on corner Socatlon. 2 bedrooms ead\. Uve ln one, rent the olhe'r. Cosy ft:tt.. place and prlvat• patio er yard tor each. Excellent oterms. What ~ can you e.sk? Only $'1i,!f:i0 -Cd for appo\nbnent to aee. 6'13-& 1-0 THE REAL I~ ESTATCRS VA REPO 3 Bedroom n ... ._, bar· ..,iii. Excellent Nm'th Clotbo. M ... -· ""1 poice $23.500. -..,, buy wilh paymt'f1tl lell' thaa ... Pll. I"' montt> ~ -'It U.. Hurry • 'Vacant • Won'~ lut long. Cali J546.5'!8J (()peo .... .r ,.......,,,~,,....,,,..,,,,-... _--.AGlll ' "Family Center" This beautiM three bedtoou1 with tarae family room Ax' family entertainment. Op. portun!ty -again. Join the tmatt aet and move into a Ufet1me of c:omtunalie flvlng ••• wall< .. -and -.. Call so.ms ,o THE REAL "\. ESTATI:RS. Expansive trt-level fea- tures lavish guest quar- ten with 1eparate kit· chen, bath and fireplace, 2 additional btdrooms, kitchen and fireplace, fruit trees eVerywhere, + as a bonlll you get a view ot Newport Bay - at $46,500 -It's a must See ! 546-8640. BANK SAYS SELL FOR ONLY $27,650 Nevtt again at this pri~! QlJALIT'l roNSl'ROCI'lON rs CtiVlOUS. Lath & plaa- ter. Cast iron sings & tubs. Ceramk: til~. Top brand ap. pHancee & fixtures. Thlly ..,,,.. ... Fully Jandocaped, spnnklen. C~te drlve- way. LEASE OPJ'ION -OK! Bank a8YS MAKE OFFER • We're ready to deal. Be !lrst Catt 645-0303 Now 1hn1 January 16th Please call 635678, ext 314 between 9 and 5 pm to claim your ticket.s. (North County toll-free numbtt b 540-1220) 645-0303 Real ton 2'l90 Hatbor Blvd ... Adams 'iRiiEiiAiiLiiTiiOiiRiis .... _.644-.... 7 .. 66 ... 2 "'>-0!!1> Open 'tit 9 PM BEACH RETREAT Own your own deluxe t»Ut- ment in l.quna, Pool. pri. vate beach. Many extru - indudlna ""'le water rirw. $45,500 * * * roR~.\l E m.so\ ... c. CUT~ CLEAN roll!. \l [ OlSO~ '" Rl Al TONS Eye Ball The Future , _______ _ REALTOR S Comfortable home with II;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; many custom touches, 3 bedroom Eastslde, cor- ner lot, boat or trailer space, $24,950. 546-8640. Smart investment in this 3 VJE\.V Lot •••••••••••• $27,000 BR -charming home pha 3 BR., family rm ••.• $32 j"j) 1ncome produdng rear unit. 2 BR., den, 21Ai ba •• $45'.SOO Complete privacy· 2 baths. HOME on A-1 lol •••• $49,950 Bll in kitchen with dishWasb-6 ACRE Ranch , .•• $91,IXXl 3000 SQUARE FEET Looking far 5 bedroom• ln Newport Heights! 3 baths! Large living room 1 Sundeck 1 G"at kitchen 1 See thll one! lt'1 vacant. $46,9~0 . ~ FOR THE DISCRIMINATING er -lmmaculale thruout -CALL: ~7:225 Thlt Mg, new, CU~M HOME Is Just the ticket for the famlly M>o wants the finest tn qoality and loca· tion. Just been cornpll'.'!ed and read,y row on r:be finest cu.I-de-sac ltreet in Mt91. Rustic design -~ake root • Your own prtvate patio. Cut this out and phone right now. 673-alio. 163,500. \-O'THEREAL 'C'. ESTATERS ' .. Verde. The 4 bedl'OO!Tls, --"=""."~~~== -and formal d;nrng LIVE IN Home & Investment Realty 3425 E. C>M Hwy., CdM room eneump.,. 3,000"' n. CORONA DEL MAR Ftm prtce $1S,9'j0. Ca.II lo Cozy, warm, friendly, Three arn.nge in inspection, bdrm. twO beth home. S>lfl'll OF IOOHWAY -jwltl--------CO~ TS a few d"'1 bloc!<o from the a °"""· WalldJw di.tance to Macnab-Irvine EASl'SIDE • NEED LARGE LOT? We have 2 to choose from 2 BR. with 54'xl78' corner 101 . -$19.250. 3 BR with firepl. on 60'x139' w/alley access. -$24,950. N'AME YOUR TERMS! Newport at Fairview INVESTMENT PLUM! • WALLACE -and olooppina. Oob' · REAL TOR$ $39,!f;O. 1/3 ACRE _,,.5 • ...,.,.,.,_ (Open Evtnln91) f.PLEX. • .Top ... nta1 .... ..... to boedl and 1hoppiJC. ~:oit'"vWw f79.j:>ErE BARRETT HOMES NEWPDRT'HEIGHlS 11------ Zoned for Untta. '34.950. 2 bedroom houu, mu- 1lve comer nrepla~. open and airy remodeled ldtchen.M6-86Co. • "Just Ridiculous" FHA-VA I, Sol••" ,,,..,. plan 1rom tbe1e REAL TY a..Uable 24-4 BR. model, • 641-5200 641-4353 l\tQNACO, CARMEL, PAL-1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!0!!!!..,.!!1!!!!!!! ERMO, Ma<TEGO. AH ttady to move in A bctttr --t-/· Macnab-Irvine associated BR0 ~£ijS -REALTORS 101<; W Oalboo 67J.)66J e HALF ACRE -with 2 bed-' room -. ...... 1'5.000. e 3 BEDROOM -home, 1% bath ............ 123,500. e 4 BEDROOM. & HUGE DEN, Back Bay •• $36,750. --Coldwall,Bankar .......... , 833-0700 644-2'4$0 9 HOME (2 bedroom, Cl1'bo, !!!!!~'!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!1 I :;rp~~~·~;.-::;: THIS HEADLINER I """'t tut tong, Dreamy I al. mmed, poss. $31,950. bedroom beauty. Qu1tt ,fum- Roy McC•rdle Re•ltor bo111:r.ed corner lot, ba&t pte l810 Newport Bl.Id., C.M. ~ P&rldn1 tlob, ._lltl*d S48-n29 landacap!rc. No _,, 1 :::::==:::::=::=::::=::::=::::=::::~-m·,, ""' -. rnA. run BUILDER'S REPOSSESSION One man's lou can be )'OU? gain. Priced to sell al $32,500, with FHA or VA term1. Huge 2 story, • bed- l'OOlll, family I: bonUI. Grell Colt& Mesa location near achool, mw ftcant -1 • • ......... Bulldtr""'"" fut tale! Call ~= (Open Ev .. ) ' l~=I Tor that ttem under try the Foney Plr,cher pr1cem.9!IO. Walker & Lee , I -· .. l~ r __ .. :J~ I -.... I~ .;I ;;-;;-;;'"';;''~lhi::;l ;;;~~1 "~:1·'~l ~I~~~~ Huntl.,.ien ~ 1 ~l":!'!"m~•~P~r~"'~'°;:;rtv~~';!:"~';;-;;;;P:;r:;°"~'°~rty=~::'":li-~;;;;;:;;'iui:m;:;;l-;;"'°"';--*-·-Houtu Unfllrn. -·-I~ I ---I~ I -"'-I~ >OS HauM1 Unfurn. '°5 Townhau10 Unllini. US Costa #MM SPANISH ADOBE Sharp, °'d'"-" J B@drm i,tvnt doe. 10 town &: 1hoppJn&. Own.r movtnc out or are1. Submit offPr • Alklna Outstandin9 • And The Price Is Miid -T-H-IN_K_S,_P_ll_IN""G-1 _I• 9 GARDEN mE BUNGALOW APTS. !ffw-••ch c ...... dol Mir I c .. ,. Ma.. MHI v ...... Ler. think-al the hM summn 38;'. 2 k beau.t., Bay1hart1 ----------H-OM_E_·_•.....,B""ll.-2-111.-.-2-c_ar_ ~s"'RAN-0,,.--,,...-..,2'"""B"1t"',-eplt,-I; da)'l IO come. Remember 4 separa te buildings, Shake rooll. Private Hom•. comp I. !Urn. LANDLORDS! ,.,..., tenet<! yard . drt>t. patio. bltoa. Peol A $24,950 PEl!.RON REALTY 642-lm EnJoy The Security ol thlt a ttnct1ve hothf, In a ITIOll desirable atta, In Hunl. Beach. We daul()I lhla propen,y as real aharp. Priced •t m .300. S.f:T-6010 for ttl'-i lantutk' 4 btdroom, 1 bath ~ with tlautd A lt-t'ffned patio A bulH in BBQ In back y&rd. All rtiJa and tutetuny dttortled with wallpaper, new lite A drape1, for only $36,930. F« tnformarton ct.ll 6'8-7ln 10 Tl IC REAL ·"'\,, J;STATl:l<S .. how 1.rt•t a C<OOl pl.urwe patios . No stairs. A1l 1 story bungalowa. 1 & ~bl~': ~1;t':' ~ Villa OUr R~ntal Strvk:t 1, P1tEl: ~am. J'llt tac. •1• or l33-2904 : fee!A: when the '°" la boll· 3 bedrooms. Some have fireplec:es. The lype · · · 30S 10 You. ft)I Nu-View. we Huntlntton a.ach att l. an : : 1111? ~ert '• lhe lfMWtr: A of buUdln1s that attract and hold good ten~ Hou ... Unfurn~ advel'ti .. 4 ICfttn, Duplex•• uftfurn. R9 •• ~~t.m~ly ~~":lna 1;:,~ ants. Income •161740 yr. '145,000. Eicellent G•neral NU-VllW RINTALS :i~ :~w, •t!.i;::~e~~~: Coiti Me•• 'au ~ bullth'll ind a. BJG financin1. .. rr,.40SQ Of' ..,._1>41 !h•t ~•n be ""'vf<t tntn --, _____ .,,. "Our 26th Yoor'' FRrE I I l BDRM • -~ OOUGHBOY POOL! No • almost 1mmediat~ly on our ' ·• l&ral • 1ant• -· .. VA 1trm•. pno. WESLiY N.' TAYLOR CO., Realtors Lill;lord..OWnora Coato Moaa R••t·Oplion plan. Ariul". Pnl" <OUplt. IU!. per mo. PAI. Call ncrw for ~t11 Sin Joaquin Hiiis Road \Ve wUI rtff'r tenantt kt )'fill SH!:RWOOO RE A LT Y., ~ lwkdayt attu S). aw1. Thlt it too load to N!WPORT CENTI R ..._.910 F'R.EE ot chll't• · · · Many * • • I $404$5.S DUPLEX 2 br, 1ar11i1I', qWtt dttlrfl.'1le tt.n&ntt on o u r Dave 'rice la.I. Lots for Salo 170 wailtlnit 11.i. l lll Port Barmouth . TOWNHOUSt 2 en. 111 BA . no ®a•. rats or moroteycl .. THI: RLAJ, 'I{ r:sTATl:Rs $1 DOWN TO VETS Bia: J BR, home on quiet ••reet La. tam. rm., J'.4 ba. Hua:t pa.tlo. Approx. stl,"i mo. ind PIT!. 1~ lnl. E·'Si~. $11,/;iO. l•rwln r••lty, Inc. A AR 1 3,._ c ptJ , drJ s, relric , ~t.-rrxi . 21!C2. Bronlctium. Hn1rn Bch FOR •• 1e. Tri••tx lt>t l-San L _ !ni!~!-•1_!1>_ TIN Newpo rt lo a ch fU.5411 utfl!'• .... P' ~· r vO;l~1.-LU You.,.. the wlnM.t ot "lhr/d(Yf, d1hwhr. bHn.~. Dana Poltrt an,,. C\timontt. Octan •·HUltlde • COZY ~l + 0e,._ 1 2 tickf'lti to th-' patio, pool, clubhour.1'. $11J. OLDER SPANISH Uni11, In Eatls!M lrlplex. Xlnf. locarion n.ar 1hop- plna. Hith inct'lm~ • Lnw malnh!ne.nce. Pr1ct only $38.~. Call - IUY OF THE WEEK \tjtwJ, $12.500 842-7216. pe:ri~ tor lovinc cpl, $98. srrt1, Vacation pPI' mn., ltagt. An1 ~\'S $1:0Bi 'DROOM ··~w on • trem4ndoua Calif. clu. _____ ,.,_,...,---I Mountain, blMrt, ALA Rtnta1a • 64'5-3900 Rocro1tlon ol "'1--3240. 1 Su Ihle ti 3 BR. ~ 33962 Slive r Lanter" ; ~A. ':'buioo. ~~ VA.I Resort 174 •SEA Shar>ty-l Br. Sftpi to V•hlcl• SMw l Bdrm. 2 Sith, fam rm. '42_.905 FHA M What have you J.rnmM:Ul&te 2-sty. 3 bdm\, bfaeh, dltkl NL $1~ a t ttw. t'flll, drp1, d1h~·hr. Gtt111 FOR* J~!L.· ~;·.;s,1 $2!:900. ~e. ~~n~ ~~1=h 1~ ** BIG BEAR LAKE AU. Rentals • 6'>3900 ct::::i~N I :e!~~~:·u ~:. ti.n~1J:11~ I ·N-•w_Po_rt_h_•_m ___ _ &d1ooilbd , ptu1 C*Cioo1 J 1 A~o~~t~~ ~~~N! • BEACHLivhlf~: Br1~!_ Ba, CINTElt 2 Bfl CoM<i. rp111, d~. trpl. 1 ~~.~~yo: ::~k2 ;;:Y?uS:,~ --GEM- 1610 W. Cot.et Hwy., N.B. REALroRS ~ .>46-Sll80 (Open E~1.l [~.a:I RESOLVE tn own your own home In 1972. S@e th\1 almoal ~w two story 3 bdrm homf' wllh 1unny kUchett and lara:e fen- Co1ta Mose ctd patio. family room-.1 ce.r aaraa:e, near Nt!wporl U9 CONGRESS. No down to H@i1h11. Only SJ7.~. Voa:el Veit. Jmmed. nccup. Drive Co. No. 10 2052 Newport put. Call Prict' Real\)', Bl d ••• _,. v ' '1'00"".,...,~· =~--B~~-~m~WN~·~E~R-. -.,.-1-,.~,.,--, 1 DUPLEX :alth 3 ''· ' b•. 1,. '"' S24, 750. w/btaut. trtta, lrplc, hwd Convm thi$ 4 bdrm home to nn. 135.500. Mi-7892. dupl!!x, with authorhie1 ap. The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S leading Marketplace I ----··----·-- ( X':=nglNDEX J I -· .. -l~ Cla11 ific•tion I 00· 149 R11I £11111, ~ ...... 1 ~~ Clt ssificatien 1 50-1 1~ 1~-'-""_"'~_1 ~ll •l Cl111 iflc1t ton 200-260 _,.,_ I~ Cl111ificetien 100-165 [ ApannMmol•-J ~ Cl111ificati•n 360-170 , ._,,,._,".,...'""...,.I· _,.,,II,.. l Cl111iflc1tien 400-465 _ .. I~ l111ific1ti•n 500-610 Ptrtontls C l•11ific1tion 525·536 [ , loOINf-. ]~ Cl111ificetion &&0-555 I l1tttruc lion ( J•} prowl • Lure R2 lot . cl~ to Jt()lf course . alwnltt owner • 10% down -Hul'T')'. 846-nn \0 THE REA!, •"'\.. I :STA1'ER:3 IMMED. Posseu. $24 ,600. Hrdwd firs., trplc, 2 BA, bltn11. ·3057 Loren, Baker Ir f'alrvie"'· Ownr. FOR aale by owner: :\ Br, 2 BA . Nr. \Vo!slclllf Cntr. New paint , 11hake roof. $34.~. 548-2925. Eut Bluff * THE BLUl'FS * $43,500 J Bdnn., 2\i ba., fonnal rlln. nn., family atte.. 9 MO';. yoonr. Grfftlbtlt v 1 e w. Owner 1nn1. Ir holdin1 plane ticket Call: EASTBLUFF REAL TY 1 644-1133 Anytime Fountain Valley A "MUST S!E"lll EVER.YnlING UPGRADED~ 3 S·ATifROOMS'. 4 BEDROOMS! Loveoly comer? 2 Patlof! &st are•! HAFFDAL REAL TY 842.-440;) E'(tS: 557-!lm Huntington l••ch S26,900 4 BEDROOMS e 2 BATH llOOr to ~Uinc stone nre- place, xlnt crptw /,, rlrps, large CO\lered patX>. A111Umt \oan, pymta Sl)t, monthly. Call l42-44Eil5 Icadership U REAl CSTAT[ -$137-Mo Pay1 All I I/ you auume exia;tina: $41. % r .H.A. IOl.n on thi1 sharp Hunting1on ConUnental h:J'NnhOust, or buy on FHA/ VA ~mu. Vacant &: n-ldy. 1'\lll prlct •lS.!:00. FULLER REALTY ~4 A.rl,ytlme SELLING YOUR HOMI? F'rPe appraisal, , .We buy equltJts. Peraorial attention. ~ yl"I. ~per. 962-~ COLLINS & WATTS -REALTY- C. & W. ll.E. SALES l'M LOOKING FOR PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN BE YOUR OWN BOSS CAU.. E'D 147·9604 KASABIAN REAL ESTATE HE'R..E rr J'S! Sharp pool, niet deck, All uprtad@a 4 bednn. home', Lets ftlap Jor What )'(l\l hl't, L __ Rf.JAL UfATE by McVAY 893-1533 111•if ica tion g7s.s10 YOUR J'AMtLY I WILL n..TP! [ lfz:l ... o~ tttit 3 BR, 2 BA ~-...... ~ Seabury home wnrr patio, c1.1sific•tion 600-699 ln lovely lttl, $.ll,900. Rn.I Elta.te by [ ;· .,,,..., .. ,. ][IJ J Mcv;;OO. Do:;sa Cla11ification 700°710 ANYONE QUA.untS l[f.!l!r.. J to take cwr the low 1n- ' Me1'cN1 ••• V 1eT'fft nt1 loan on th\1 . lovely, near new 3 ltd· lasslflca tion 100-t l • room l'lomt. ~ SHtRw••D REAL TY rm. •Pl. over aarqe, 1~ ol tncl a:ar, SJ1CI• ""'' J.Q\1, Now rhn1 JanUlt)' 16th peflt1, dhl rar. r-:r. ~a('h. Rl'tllor, &42-2222 . l'ICM' rented !or S19l a month. 0 1" -~PP1"''.h •1 • ·~h • Al.A Renta.la • g.e.3900 P!N.ae <al/ 642-5871 rxt 314 Pool privl. $200. 64~1 ~7. toS1.t11s "1.tJto 1 ·i · bf! 'I a1oU n re pne1 -•1 • · · \__ -._ ..... (, Th A wi 1 giveh~n" m:~~ 1akl! VIPW. Orrty "'.950. E·Z -UNFVRtftSIED -bf!iween t and~ prn to claim Huntington f1•rbour ~ home plus P K w tcrma. e SPACt'OVS 2 Br 2 B11., I )")ur llcke11. 'North County ------------ I ... ., ............... J [t] FHA·22J D·2 3 BR.2 BA. •Z!.000 1'""P, crp11, drpt, wa.tw>r, dryer, retrlg Incl. FA hi, paitlo, bltins, R/0, super elean. SH Don. l' 962-4471 I :::: ) 1146-11 OJ 4 ldrm., l lath Spaciou• 2 story, overaired bdnn1, walk·ln cioutJi, J M1 baths. Walk to bell.ch & Ectiton Hirti School. GI or convenliol\AI terms. VA ap- prabaJ $41,'SOO. can 968-44-41 CREST REALTY Irvine ____ ,,_._ PRICE REDUCED On thi1 brigtit and ch~rful almoir1 ntw 3 bdrm, 2 ba, home. Btsutlfut iihar car- peting and <.'f'ramic tile nooni. Ovmer transferred and IOt'ry to IMVI! thl1 home of oririnal Ideas. Now priced ar onty $49,9.JO. hit today! ired hill REALTY Univ. Par!< Center, Irvine Call. Aft)'ttmt, 833.om L•gun• hacn OCEANSIDE Entertain your rrieoda it tht bea ch in this l~rr\fir ocean11ide value. OU-sttttt p&rking for ~veral cars Ir privalt beach acee•• put~ the water only 1tepe awty. J BR floor plan with fireplace in mailer BR I: llvlnz mom lendw ltAeU lo coey lamily living. B ea uti f ully decora ted. Try )'Ollr GI •t only in.ooo. ....JO/an REAL ESTATE 1190 Glernneyn St. .&94--9413 549--0.116 • SEU. OR LEASE • 2:Dl Sq. Ft. 3 BR, 2~ BA. LR;. fem . nn., din. rm, frpl. Cpt &: drape1, blth11. wet bar, tic. Immac. So(T,930. Full prlct. M'mION REAL TY .f9'..U131 NEW 3 SR, 2 BA hilltop ocean view home. Frpl, beam cell., wet bar, bl1-ln1 c p t s. df"PA, le-need $39,950. <l!M-~XIO. M&-1562. Jla)'frnnt lot $150,(0) TED HUBERT .4: ASSOC. 3471 Via Lido 8Tr..t.r;ocJ Lido lalo Lawson Alwayl!I a 1ood 1election ol fine Lido Isl• ~met. Cur· rent lltflnt' trom • $41,000 howallll low.on J., acolC• 3416 V\1 Lido 4 Bit. 3 ba. 60>0!0 ITT,!00 ! Bl\. 2 ba. '2x!I 179,!00 4 Bil 3 b•o. 70x!R 112!.llllll LIDO REAL TY INC. your ~)'Tnt1. May we tho OR OYIN YOUR OWN ept/d....... nr .chli Kids toll-frff number 11 540-l:ntH you thtt1 • .,... . ' * .. • L.~ Hunt, H11rh<111r 1ntf- w11.1rr1 ('h1trmln1t J Rr, 2 811.. lam rm, lmml"d. occup. R<l6-1~2 MORGAN REAL TY . MINI FORES'!' $!:!;. 613 ... 641 6?>•781 Btaut1tu1 wooded lot for onlr Al.A Renlala e &IS-J900 N•wport H•ights 6 IEDROOM FIXER UPPER With 80mt: repairs " paint· ing, you can have a big va).. u1bl~ Jamily home. Charm· init 2-slory early Arne.rican only 10 yr• aid, 21,i ba.thl, trp(c. Shakt rool. Asking $3t,OOO or off~r. CALL ® •••·l414 91"M"" • EA.l TY Near Nt •pert '''' orrlt• S•n Clemente $21~. Ttrm11. These wnn I last _ Cali u~ !mmedla~ly! • 1-IARD to Btat·l Br, ept/ Call Rl>5ll jn<tl M&-173A or drp11, fncd yrd, Pnct ll'Rt . write: Spencer Rea\ EA111e, kids. $1.(~. P.O. Box 28211, S lit Rf'11.r ALA Rt-n!a.ls e 645-3900 Lai.kc, California. • NEED more room? J Br, SNOW, SKIING, FUN. Big f/yrd, encl pr, kids ok. Bear 3 BR mnln, home . fl:'O. Rent day or wetk. Sip• l-t. ALA ~nfalt • 645-3900 673-<iT'>I!. ~~~-~~-~=1 • WE LIKE Dor•! Rural 2 Roal Estate Wanted 114 Br. t/yrd, doc ru118, e~I gar, Sl70, Harbor View Homes ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Youna: doctot wants to buy, 1648 Newport Blvd CM u11ing V.A. ent\t1t.ment. Must ' inctude land. For tull dt· tails, call Mrs. Hot:t. CORBIN·MARTIN RENTAL FINDERS Realtors 644-7662 ,,, w. lttll. COITA. WIA BR.A.ND ntw, OCf!'an view. 3 Hou,os * Apts. Br., 1 Bs., tam. rm., frpl. ,------~ * 64$-0111 * All blt·ln~. Wall lo wall 11 f lni nclal ]i-l•lj j,,,..i.,..,..Fref! tn ~d.lortll crpt11 thru-oul. $'.-12,500. By I _ . ~ Ov..,Jer. 17l<t) 675-3593. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii -F'U'RNTSJfEO - San Juan Capistrano Bu1lnas1 $ro-STUDENT Flflf. Pr I v BETTER 'TIIAN RENT Cot.y litllt 2 bdrm. home wilh family room. 1Jx23 liv· Ing room with new •hi!.&: carpet; room on tht R·2 Jot 10 add unit. Someone who la plannirw for the future will get a bargain for ONLY $19,COO CAPISTRANO VALLEY REALTY 493--1124 Sonia An• Holghls FOR Sale or Trsdl!, ~t Acre w/3 ho\JM:t, 1, 2 Ir: '.'. BR. corrai1 for hones, $48,950. By owner, 545-7645. Opportunity 200 room & be.th, Kitch. privil. Nr, OCC. ENERGETIC auto me.chanic $100.SI"EPS ~ach . .,"'urn with vaJld Cl~ .A licensl'. &C'hetor w/ ki~. AM util \Ve ha\•e lacdlly, you Id Toti 1 ok lurni1h know·ho~'. 1 p I I t pa · pc • labor &: part1. Huntinglon _ UNn;;;J~ED _ Bt.ach I o c a t i o n • CaU $95-PRIV t BR. + SlttpJn& 526-7343 after 7 pm. porch, Stnve, rthit, rpt, N•w li1tlng drp, nr town. Typewr11er SI.lea Ir ~f"\1. Holland Bui. Sele1 ~LOE 2 BR, encl car. "The Rrok•r with Empathy" Child & pet ok. 1716 Orange Ave., C.M. 64:>4170 $41).~ ('Vfl9 $145-COZY Cottaae 1 BR. w/ Liquor license tor sale gar. Stove, rtfris;. Bohy ok. * On Ila.le pre.-Ul61 • . Call Dick al 67:\..n22 $!95-SPACIOUS 5 BR. 2 ~a. 115 children, ptt or 'fl"l'let wef. GIFT Shop -Bath -Bo!\que come. AvaU now. -1MM-E'"'o-IA'"""TE="'occ_u_p-. -::F::-lnl=ily on Rslboa 111. Sm. invellt. BEACON * '4S.0111 Mobile Hom•• For S•le P k H 8 3 B ' ......... 61'5-l<tlR or 8J3.8834, ar . . r.. XP'l•""' $140. 2 BR, fen~ /er kld1 & $4.,000. Mi-6.11& ~ft 5 &: COIN Op. Laundry, Cn11t1 J>tts, C.M. wknd1. Meu .na. Mu11t lf:11 due to $145. 2 BR pvt home w/ HALF.CRESl' XIX5', 2 BR. 2 job tran~/er. 545-0S71. l"Vt"rYfhlnt. C.M. WANTED Ol'lf' f8mUy l'hal would fin.Joy this lov•Jy 4 BR, 2 B,\ home V.'I ft'plc It Pool. Gr,.At lor. ClO!le to ma,lor snoppin.:. t.125./mo. Cali ~.>84'.U (O~n t\'tl I 360 Ir vine Gonor1I -·-. 4 Rt1 rm~ .• :112 h11., la.nilly rm., pArtly furn ...... S3ol0 .l BR. 2 bll, 111rium .... S~ J BR, '21., Ni , l11m ..•. $.'\2!> 3 BR. 21t h11r, f11m ...... $3&1 '4 BR. 21, ha , fam .... $350 ' WE HAVE OTHERS FURNITURE RENTAL 3-ledrm.- Eanside !SINGLES WELCOME ) ' J blk. to Newpt. Builrln kttrh· I "SINCE 1946" en, . small enelOled yard, lat Weit~ Bank Bids. garap. $~. mo. I Unlwralty Park, Irvine Ed Rlddle Rl1<. 6'M8ll D•ys 133-0101 Night& COSTA MESA 111 w. 19th. CM 541.:wn ""STSIDE 21i.6 N. Malnl §A !MT.QSH -4 BR., 2• .. b"h• ...... l~\O liii•••·•-••••I 3 bdrm with 2 l>lllha, dbl a:11r-1 ·1 BR., 2, hA. homf' · "· S300 Balboa II fend a,ct, fenced yard. New Vf'l'n l BR., l it ba. '''' $3'25/$3.'iO •hAa:earpeling, Mwly 1M1in•-1 i d h•11 AT'TRAC. UpPf'r, cptd • ed. For nmt or lea .. " 1205 • . · •. re I "···· patio. Dbl. , ....... pf!r mo, Can WALKF.ll & Util. Quler adul1. No pet1. LEE, Realtora, M5.9491. ''early, $1~/mo. 11S 1t 2 Br. newly painted in & out REALTY Agatt. ntw root, erpt1, drps, 1tovP, Univ. Pa.rk C~ntl'r, Irvine Balboa "•nln1ula dl1PoMJ, gar, /nrd yrd, I C•ll Anyr!me, 833-arJrl 111.wn. lot1 or breathing ""~~~!!!"!!'!!""'!''!'!~ j • 125 WK & Up-On Octat1 • spa~ Sll.S mo l'O mo. $175 UNfVERSITY Park 3 BR. 2 Uively Bach-I Br-Rooms hit. 646-1146, ~961 after 1 BA. l f\Mr lrvf'I, 1•11.~ or l\.tald 1trvtC'f'-Pocll-U rU pd 5 p.m. renl. S:l911 nm. D•Y ~0--7226, • C.11 8Ts-87«1 e VERY CLE.AN :\ !R homt Evts. 774-3442. 2 SOR. modern ipaclous w/bulltthl •nd fe~ y11.rrl t19un1 801ch dtlux apt. Ntar be.)', Dtc. for a famUy'1 plea1Urt!: .... ..-kit. SIM· m-t417. ONLY $250 per mo. Call Corona d•I Mar .,., .. 1MMI41. LANDLORDS! =,,,.-==...,...,.._,...,..= Elogont 1 Ir. houM l EASY Llvlngl 3 B~. 2\t BA Our Ronttl ~Ice la !'REE compl fllrn Incl utjls f Twnhlf!. Pnol, rec. cl'hter, to You. Try N,u-V~. We & t•r4ener. •:zoo/me I m1lnten. fr&. Gt'Hf tchool 8dvtrtl1t "° .ert"en. • t di 1 NB 128!1 NU .VIEW RENTAlS lo110.R11p1dultor1ly. 64~~. . ' al'fa. , 6134030 or 49'·3':4i JU..1346 · ~ l Bl\. Fu...Ultod H&lie jn . · CdM. $170/mo \'tat 1..UH. Call 714, 67!-J!JS. * NEW 2 BJt. l Ba Townhle w/pool. Mt 11 Verde. Bltns, cp11. drp1. pAUo, ru. S200-lo $2ri. Nr. tchl•. ~T-MM. • OCEAN VIEW • 3 BR, 2 BA, ft'f>lc , bltin kit., crptt & drp1. Lease. Call aft 6 pm. 5*-JTg,J. Caste Maia -'BA, Lovely site, Irvine lnvottment $135. P\'t hnrnt, ct11t1, a:ar. !4ndt. Pvt pt)-, TI4M+Ot57 • Opportunity 220 feneed, H.B. LRO. 2 Bn noiJllJ A 1ar. Sl~. Util't pd. mobile home, Fenced yrl . Will consider 2 --------NEW 3 Bit. 2 ha. MmP Cuptta .l drapes. S.100 Mn. Place Realty 494-97()4 *PO WK . & UI' * e Studio &: 1 BR. Apia ---------1 1ln(ie OK, N.B. -'"lld-• ptt 2029 YOUfo!G Corp deallnc In fl!E. 3 B'R w/car, f•netd !or u • ,.,n • · Mtd1cat/Sur(icaJ product11, lddi, C.M. Wlllacf'. $180 l'M. 615-Mb. all products res.dy !or 776-73'6 .Agent ~ BR., 3 ba.; Mtu de! Mar marketina:, is utk!ng finan--------~-1 l'lnmt. srio Mo., 6 mos. Jae. ~-"_t'_!_~_!~_"_~) hi Condominiums cial ti.Ip. Contact Boh Kenl er $3.10 Mo. yrty i. . for ulo 160 of K"''° Sur<ical, ,.....,., LANDLORDS! "4Ml<O. ---...,..-.,:-:--\-----Seriou11 lnquitie11 only. Our Rental Strv\ct ii nt£E ''2""'e1t~Ea,.-,m"lde""."'s"'t•_J>do_,_wn-"'ttv HELi'! Money to Loan 240 10 You. Try Nu.View. We nn. conver•tton clrclf!, Owntt can't handle hnmfls. 3 BR, 214 roomy baths. wet bar, bf&' Mtin It. dbl. gar 1n be-aut!Nl Villa Pacific. Name your cwn L 0 W -· ~ ---.. advrrtlst &-~n, sharp kltch., lovely yard. S.ttlor Mtg. Co. NU·VIEW RENTAlS 12201..,. .... ,.. -"9.\. 336 El, 1m1 STR'EE"I' 6'T3..ot030 or *3348 C h F T 09 J.BOR.M. rear mttare. urt-8S or $ EASTSIOE 4 Br .. 2 Ila.. "'"'· Stnve l nlrlf .. c1<p. It. dnpes. S90 M o n t h DOWN, Take over e:clll't\111 F irst &. Second F1tA 10&n. 1Jndttpticerl a1 -TD Loans - $2'1.~. Can oow, tomorrow Low.et R.atet Oranre Co. cp111, drpa, d1w1hr, COY. p a l I n, q\llet 1tr, Sl!P.I. 548--1862. w\11 be too latt! i('l-1171 S4S..0611 3 BR., 1 BA, eptt. drpa, larwln realty, 1nc. Serving Hartior &rta 21 yri. d1hwthr. Quiet cul-dhsac n3'2 Brookhuut, Hnttn Bch Mon•y WantM 250 11trttt. S22S/mn. 6154110. ~5411 1nytlmo I--=-,.=----Bick lty "'-9727 3 BR. Mu&e, m pe11. SlS,,Jfno. S15 cl~anlna tee. JMO PM!tln& Avt. Nr IChll a mrllt. 4 BR. /am nn., llv rm w/frplr, kwtly home, Income Pr..,.rty IU WANTED. $400> for OM ynr :--,~-,.,,..-,,..--0--­~ured. Will J>lY ten per-J BR. 2~ &.. fam. rm., t.vaUable. l..OK. M7·Tl~. cenl. Wrile Clasaifltd Ad Newly eptd &: dttor. U25 cozY 1 St. CMti.tt • Gar. No. 274, Dally P\lot, P .O. mo. Bryant Wiest, 6'f5..21aa. v1f stovt, rtfrlc, cpta, drp1. EAST SIDE Box \MO, Colla Mesa, Caltf. B•lboe lilen4 Sl•~. W/•ldt!'. 642-6583. 928"1. --· -------NEW rluplex 3 bdrm .. 2 BA. [. bHn ranp I dlhwthr, cp11, -..,_ J[ II! I ~rr.254.$3.IO. ,,1, 111. Coron• dol Mar Houta1 Furnished 3 BR. houll!I In court SIM/mo. Oan,tt. Fenced. 2 ktda ok. E/1ldt. ~. 2989 S. Ct!. Hwy, Laguna i' CUTE 1 SR, fr~lc, TA ~at. <t96 Graceland Drivr. Pet 6: child OK. •94-7754. La1U11• Nlguol LUXURY home' 2200 ti. :\ BR, 3 llA, ~an A: hill vl•w, $3.'i(l. Mo. I.. I e . •116-l70'l •ft 4. Newport IHch LANDLOllDSI Clue R.fnW Servtc:e le m-a to You. Try N'U·V\tw. We adVertlH .\ .et'ffn, NU·VllW ltENTALS 673-IOJO .. 494.~ NEAR btacb • Beav1. 3 Sn, crpts, drpa, Jllt\o, aundtck. $350. Ph. coll«:t 213432--t052 or A.U-US2 2 br, trplc, ocean view 'ii blk to Mach, S275. )'rly. lnH Adi.Ito. 557-317'. e Room 115 WK • Up. • TV It Maki Service Ava.l! e P!1ono S.rvJ<L. UJll .PL _ • AH maJor M'tdl! cards 2378 Newport Blvd. M3·97M Tht• Ad Worth ~ nn Rant Children &:. P11t Section 1 BR f'Urn. St55 lncl utif. Newly' dee. Ri>A uf, a:ardtn, pooJ, rte. A.dulll, no pf:Ui, 1969 Maplf" Av~ .. CM. Mar. Onullev1~ly hau!IJUI VAL 0' JS!:J\E Garden Apt.. : : AdUlt1 • no pet.. 1'2oWtrt evtfyNhere. Strf.•m 4 Wattr:lall, •s• pool R~. Rm. S•Una, Srl1 1·2 Bdrm, Furn. Unfuno . fr,,m '11•. SEE rr, XIOO Panon11, &f2·Mi'O, LOVELY Lp l Bit. aoto. Shq rup, elec atnve, su heal. Furn. Util pd , Carpor1, lndry rm. Nr •hop'f · Ill() • II.I.I. 911 !;I CtmlM Dr No. I. CM. -L BACHELOR Apt., $75 tn. cludlnc uttl. Men onl)'. No Plfl. !32-Ctnter SI., C.M. 64&-'192f. I 8R. nzrn, TraU@r. $75, tJtU pa.Id. M•tur. adult only. No pela, "5-0aTI. J3n VlA LJOO REAL'roR.$ ')).7JOO Sl'Ntt 19'4 NtCEl.Y tum l Br., r ar. $1.f&/mo. Quiet &l'fllo N6 chUdrin Qr "ts. 837-1511. WELL .turn 1 Br in tripln . Adulte, no peU. Sl~. 'JN Seolt PL CM. 646-2123. N•wp0rt ... ch 673-4400 11~aUSED AIODE l -•!!B!!S'!!!PE!!"!C!!'!'IA~L!9"!'•"" Paoered PRINCIPALS ONLY Painted $41,000 Pam,eMI • $M.IXXI VaJue 3 Houtes on larse lot Try $2!\,MO. 1\.1ti Dkn, ec.ta M~ Sound but ml1tn:attd New-Notr lack Bey port beach homl' on 1/3 Ole, 647-U21 ·Evts 646-.5302 acr. halt o« !ht S.ck Bay, Umba• up'"'" paint bMh lndlllfrltl Property 1'1 and call M-TIT't . O Tl I f Rr .l\L "I.,_ I .'d"1 l'Lh'S • • c. J. s1roched• FUJlN 2 ik. ChUdnn OK. Ne pet.. Htat1d pool. Lndn · • rm. 111 Monifl Vltta CM. ONE Bldnn. Adults. no Jets. Pool A: UtUIHt1 lnc:ludl1f U<H\!O. --· •$139 DELUXE J Br .• pool, cpu, df"PI , bltM, lU !:. 11th St., Apl. 10. &45-&419. NEWLY Jtedec. i BR-U,,..., • • adulls only. $1Ji0 ind, utU 'a. ; : 64&-2\13>. I • [~J iw Brookhuttt, F.V. I'-,_.-,.---""' SHARP l BR. lS/4 BA, din ~.0~1iflc•ti•" 150.t51 rm. J>lllna, dthW'lhr, tpl, 71 Emorold l1y Lagun• Beach You are the Vtinner of 2 ddl~ to the' • Avl niow I • 2 Br lu.tn, I : peol , rte ""· ad )oc. No ~ chlldrtn 11r l'flt-641-XM. 1 ~ crptt I dtpl. V•c•nt. Mu•t [ i.. ~,.. 1 ·~ 1tUI Xlnt tnnt. $24,00(). ·-.. 1, .... 1'. -• • 83$-1422 •• Cloulficotlon •OO •tl l FOUi!. srAR.-JIUl.TY I -lllao ll•l TMFLA~ i:ICE!T ' Call .. and -wtuit bt.!'JOO. C101tifle11tl.. ti l •f.4t will buy. x .. ..,..,,.~ -1 a1 REAL llll'ATE by l: ·:--.. It:;: I ~c~~y2 •• ~ Cltulllcoffan HO-"""'*-lbll1 <•tld, -• -ki t al.900. ., - ' NEW US NG And HkfJ MW, WI rm A rich l'lorrtrt. 4 8drm1., f11"lll1 rm., 2~ bt.lht. Everythlnc for rraetou, Uvin1 lndudinf I •P1rk1lnt: pool. Prime Har. bor HlfNand1 a.rta. f.U,<t.IO. CALL E> t•f·.J •t• "1·~ .. l &A.LTY ..... , ,..,.,,.,. P••I Otrlr• HOOSE h11nd .. f W•ldr' Ult dPEN HOUSI: ......._ 'r"'· v ... ,1 .. Jt1cro•tlonal Vohlclo Show at t~ ANAH&IM CONVINTION Cf.NTIR Lido lalo COZY ! Br. 2 Q1, trp/. dbl 11r, Appl. Winter: or yriy lse. 5t't 11 211 Via Dijon. NB. Hewpert ... ch Now thru January t8ih ""Ull «11 6C2-5fi'JI, f'Xt 314 bltwten t al'ld $ prn to cl1\m •Wt~R R•" ta I )'Ollr l'tdlttl. rNorth QM.Inly ~· > BR.. Jan thn1 IOU~ oum..., i. M0-1mi Ju.... sui.rmo. 1 211 1 SCRAM·LETS ANSWUS IN CWSIFICA TION 100 • • !+~214~-6134~~·-----~:1~------------------~-~------ , Shorp a .. utl I 2 It Pnol. AdUll>. No Tl'IL ll lelft ())(). 1180. '4J.ti!l0 • Bll5t~i1m .apt l!O wltll • ; . ' utUll~s extnt., 131 S&nlll , l le&bel, Coata Meta. 1.1 SM. F\Jrn. opt. UtU • .,_14, l ·r &dult oo1y. o..mrw dopoott M:et&I. MM162. l'l"S -di -...... ... I mt ltloctbl ...-1 .., t>t •• DAJLY PtLOT d •utW -- I d DA1LY PILOT T~. Jll'nl"f 41, 197:! 1 ._1-_-_ ... _-l~f!l, ... ._,.-lltJ ~, Aoort~-~ .. ,,. .... ~l~ftl l t-... -J[t] 1 1 ;;;l '"';;;""'"";;;'··~ ... I~~ f ... .-., ... ~ l ~[ ~ ;;;;-~l~~,,.:'i:.1 IMt ..... ;;.;;-;;;l~[Sl!-... -1151 l·Ap-"-·-'-"-'-"'----J6D Apt. Unlvm. 365 Apt. Unlvrn. 365 Apt. Unfvm. US Apt. Unlvrn. 365 Apto., Stor090 4" Found If-•di) SSD S.by1lttlnt Newport Beich Furn. er Unfurn. lJO STORAGE SPACE FOUND. Male Irl.!b Scttt.r, BABYsrmNG, nu IW>mt, :)( C.1t• Mn• Bolboo lsl1od *SUPER J BR. Uf\'TIIRi~. down•latr1 . l.oYely tumltun.. f'ri&1dalre Carpt1ed. S BR, 1 BA. Sou•h •Pill'' hole -ftt<e tttric, Bay Fron!. $(.10. pr mo, By queen u ~. cp1 l drp. owntr. 644-2922. AdUJll. 2'2al fl<kon. 646-&'71 B•lboa Penlntul• 1 BR $130 lar~. Ideal for ---------bachelor, 1v.·ln1 Jl(D. adlta 3 BR, 2 Ba., 2 decks, dswihr, o n 1 y, 1'3.l Church St., rtov~. retrlg,1 <.'ptll, d~, !4--9633. pl'lv. gar. 1, blk Octtt.n & llurn. &•ch. & t 8r'i . Bay. $300ftno, Ue. t\o pt1'. 67~. £1peclelly n ice, $130 I~---,--,--~--- up. 2110 Nowport Blvd. Coron• dol Mer CM. * \\'f?l.'TEn RATES * Attrac tum Studlog $115, J Srt SlZ>. Adult$, no pet!!. I '135 :E:'lcltn. :'lf&r-Apt 6. I BOR.\I., comp!. furn. Ne"' shac cpl.I, l1t:'W drps, blttl'I. No chtl4rf!n, no p e I 1 . i1..01mo. 545-1881. .~ ,..a;. ... ON TEN ACRES l ~ 2 BR. 1''urn, A Unturn. fueplacn I prlv, patlol. Pools Tennis Conrnn Btfl1. 900 S<a Lane. CdM "4-2611 fMa.cArthur nr Cout HwyJ Newpor t Beach ni. mo. e &CS-JS.l9 &bl. 50 Lb11. in t/W! 11 ... •w t how-a. \\'eek dal·• I.: DE LUXE e NOW OPEN e R t I W titd 460 area. m-a.;.t8. Ytcekcnda. llol 1netJ1 1.: APARTME NTS ON BEACH' ! BRA~D Nl.1\' J • 2Br.rron1 V ISTA DEL MESA I en• 1 an i'OUNO: Blk. female kllten, I '·nack.a. 2032 \Vallitet St., Air Cond • rrp1e·, -3 s .. ·un-• I fl 18. PMv pa!k:>. b1U1a~ Ap•rtment1 I PROJo'ESSJO~AI.. n1•n. tam. S-10 \\iul old. Vk. B~runc I.: ~-~I. nr Pomona Sehl. mtnc Pools • Health Sp.a • Z BR Unfurn Fr. $230/mo. rm. heak'd J)oc>I W/ Jd.Ctw:J, t .\ 2 BR. f'\ml_ le Unt. Olsb· of l adulll need f\lrn. Sul>-Macnolla, tl.8'. 962-1550. ~ Tennis Crtil • Ga~ & Bil-Furntt\att A\•allabk hu;_f' ck>l!f'I~, tlttp pUe c;i.r-\vallber -Stove l. Refr1; -I let apt. or hOOse in N.B. , -CI C'D~C~H~l~LD CARE - llard Room. + Carpttt.drape11-diahwuher pet1ru::, IU5h lan<Jscaping. Sh.iii: c;1·pf1:·L.re Rec cf'nlt'r, I Prtfer Y...-Bluff, \Ve.\tclill 01· FNO •• 51:moy~ dog. Pl~ase· If ilo 1 Bak . c ~J i l BEDROO~t heated pool-isaunu-.tennis AdUIL!:. You \lu11t See Th~ P~ENT Startt SJ.);) Barsbot .. l. Ph: 644-2:1t0. t·all to iden11Iy. 897-1811. l'1 rR I •t~1-in.I~ .. • )N Ro ._~ Ortf'' '.X>102 Bi rch St Nt\I•-T · & M 0 • L f'Xp . es. " ->--•'· 1' :'ll $).,., rec roon1.ocean vte\\·1 • -__ 7 ,,16·1 u1t1n e sa rive 11BR. House or Apt \\'faar 01t 555 C 1 S ,, MEDITE RRANEAN patloo-ample J>llrltin, po" Btaeh. '" •1• · * S4S-41SS * . · · --orpo .,fl .. Security firWU'd.s, S t AM ---I N.B. 6'1';)-8677 before JO or l.OSI' Chrlic,una.11 nlgJ11 Bal __ ._.,,,._,..,...._, VILLAG E HUNTINGTON •• • OAKWOOD GARDE N ' aJtor 5. boa Bay Cluh, P~t>d&n; JOHN'S Cal'l>'I k Upl1obt01~ :ltOO ffarbor Blvd., C.)I. FAMILIES Ap artmefft1 • 1 t;a.rtlng, circlet oI arnalt Cle-11.nens. Extr11. Dri-sham- (11·11 ~7-S<m PACIFIC {P.esort I..iving for S1nile I.: [ ll ii14] <TY•tab eoctrcl«l with ""° '"" &<>tel"'"""' (So• l\1arried Adu.II.Si black ena L Re vd r Jtr'toirdanls), Dee:reuen I RENTAL OFJolCl: 7U OCEAN AV£., 11.8. N o-_,_ Announcerntnla I ..,, ._._ml e " o . all rotor br;rh<totr1 • '10 OPEN JO A,\t TO 6 P\l 1n~1 ~·l-187 ev.'J)Ort D'l:ao;u c1~-.,._..,, im(lrtlal valut" to • -----101 JO .. O WELCOME I !6th at Irvine 1 ov.•ner. 837-8619-m1nulf' bleitch lor ~Ile VILLA CORDOVA ~\~t~L~\J ,:~LTt~ ~.Y . ~~ BR.-~~1_8::-8':! I Let•I Noticei s1o LADIES bro11·n ha n db a g ~011.~iniSa~eeo Y=~·a m;;:. ~·/goid mesh chain sht>ulcit!r WUI clean llvl.n~ rn1., dinin• Super-Quiet-Safe * FRESH AIR SINGLE ~'TOR\'. Ocean. '{early. SUJfmo. NOTICE strap. Please return 1~ 1·n1 .l. hall$!;,. Any I'm $7.50, I BR. Sl40 \. 6'i~llt.5, 646--2696 eves, papers k driven lit. No 1 BR. $170 \ialk 3 blk~ to Beach: SOUUJ Sea Alm~phtrr Se-cunt)' Pacifie Nation.al ,,,,..stions as'·--', l'•wa·". couch $10. ch11i1· Sj, JS yrs., I-Urn or Unf\Urt 1 4i:e J BR Apt, ne"·\y decor. '.! BDRl\1-:! BATI-1 Bank Brnnc'h application ....... A.CU ~ '" c~p 11 \Vhat 1..'0Unts, 001 Cas .l "'ater Paid Dbl attaehed gar. h11Jc, 11• (;at"pt>ts and Drapes l filed DeocembPr L>lh. 19n to J(XXJ atariners Dr · Do~·<._,. method. \ do \\'Ork n1yaeU. 2323 ELDEN AVE, CM Ba: bl?1ll· exC'l'pt relrtg. Air Coodn.ioned I Rentall ~ocate the bank's approv-Shore.!!, N.B. 645-l.}j(). __ I Gooc! rel. 531-0Hll. C 11 ~32 S2'1.J. ~o ..,ngls, no ~ti.. Private Patio~ f'd, but ~ branch SIA..'tESE male c~lll , g 1no11, Genera l Huntlncton llooch Coit• Mes• LARGE ne"iy dttor. 1 br. New cri>t/drp1 I panelinr. All bltnJ; ., nra&e &. patio. $150. ..,_ml. • ~ 536-.lTI.l. lll::ATED POOL Roomi 400 from 00\vn Valle-y Park\l'ay \rearing blut collar, sonit' NEW BAY MEADOW APTS. • atOVE JN TODAY e Cari>ort &. Storagf" J.. Interstalf! S lo LaPa.t Rhinestone nli.s.1'g . Vic "A" ·T_ll_JN.,'G.,.,S,-...-b-,--,.-,,.-.,-. '""L-LI .. Beam celli•"•.!I, --r : Kids & ""lJI "·elcome. '' Bn. 1 · Nr. So. <:oa:ost Pill.a • • • P.oad & Chrisanta Drivt', It "B .. 5t'!. E. "·"·-Bl·~. 1 t 1 -' ~ !il Huntington U.1ch ---EXECUTIVE SUITES MOTEL APTS. n1 Yorktown Blvd. 191n BE.\C!I BLVD., AT YORK'ro\VN S»-0411 STUDIOS FROM $35 !''BEDROOMS AVArLABLE • Fllll ki'll.'hen e Heat@d ~ • laundry tacllitles e Fneo utiliftea • Pree linenl e T.V. A maid llt!l'V. avail. • Bar.:8-Que ·-- 2BR.,.t.beths; upctaln1.Car-.... .....--rn • ... ~ "' HIDDEN VILLAGE v·. 0 ,.._,, DiUl-"'ll "" eec .. punrv. ,,.nee, e, veted 1; dn.ped. Enrl. g&r-rn;i.v patios, recreation fa. S139 &: fl59. AU extra.11. Poor, Wm, J . McCord ?iii.man teJO, rangt' ......,..n. Re~-ard. Day~ l:all roll. tnsUns , <:arpentry, painl etc. .... Comp, bltn•. Pn'val• d.1t1!'tl. All adults, no petii. gar, patio .. Furniture avail. 1 2j()() South ~alla 1849 Seodr ilt Dr., fy, Ca1i1onii». 1'13:79.>--0661, Sun, tii3-9209. 545-M20. ,., I Santa Ana • ;)'t0-152.i patio. '705% Orthid. $2:i0 Per , e 2 BR's FRO:\I AS LO\V 17.,.,..-A Kttlson l.n fl.B. Corona del Mar 3 1\fO. Old Au s s r a I 1 an C'ARPENTRY~painlin(, c~ mbnth, yearly. >.; i1591mo. 968--7510 or 8·12-623.i Lai 3 cile:i:= ~Is BBQ )'ou a~ tilt' v.inner t4 'ii [ ~ Sht'pherd temalt', bluf" ll. n1ent. t'L<:. SmJ. jobs 0 .K. ' 387 w. Bay St., c.:i.r. BEACHWOOD APTS. 11:e u se e c. 2 ticket!! to U1e-Personal• I brown rye, Corona de/ i\lar Bob 646-6446. ;: 1754050 0 Cllll 646-0073 Child Care Cen1tt S V ;:;;; • Brand ne\V J-Z-3 BR. 1.:. b.tk Great new 1 :i & 3 Bdrms port1, •cation Beach. AnsY.'el's to "Cleo." Cemenr, Coner•~• ... I''! D a..a • BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS . to BEAOt! Cpt~. drps, bltnJS, From $149 &. Recr••tion•I Re'l\'a1·d. (il4\ 68:!-316·; t.'01· ..... 4 ----1 LUXURIOUS Frenc)) Regen- cy, 3 bedroom, 2~~ bath, Fireplace, DiJlin& Room, laundry. uxi. Azl 6rH930. Adults only. OCEAJ<J vie"·· elegant 3 bedroom, 2 baths, fireplace, dlnina: room. Adults only. S!iOO per mo. ~-61>-4930. SPANISH DECOR frplc. 12.J 16111 SI., HB. SOUTH COAST Vehicle Show 1 Persoftel1 530 lect. cJ:;:\tENT \YORK. no job too Airfcond. Gas, wtr. J>d. 847-3~7 VILLAS at tile LOST: Cu!'ly long han7ed-;-;d !lntall. t<!aS<lnab\e. Free Garage, Pool, Rrc. rm., 12 &. J BR, $140 UP. Pool. UfD. !\lacAr1hur Blvd. ANAHEIM & "·hile (peaches & creanif Esti~1:.2!:_ Stutl ii.:k, 543-8615. laundry. l BR $1-IO. l BR ?ltORA KAI Apt11., 18881 j 546-88.."3 CONVENTION 01ihuahua. Vlc. Bakrr & \\111'\'TER Rate~! ~te , $160-$175. Mora Kai Ln., 1: blk E. of I · CENTER LIGHT SCI.ENTIST Jo'a1Nie\\' about 3 v.kll ago. noo1·.!I. patios, d riv f!s , Hacil'DdU a de ?itesa. Apta Beach. 962..m.i. ApFt~.. U I JIO Now thru January 16th rev~s thru ASI'ROLOGY !Costa l\lesal a.'>7-68-17. i.1de1\·alk11. Don, ~2--85l•- 160 \V. \V son,See ~llf. No. l 2 BR, 2 Blks from bch. \\'/\V urn. o r n um. Ple-ase can Gtl-$78, ei..r Jl4 your biom~tic color I ~·-9 r1-·thni. Lecture. Thuts. LOST MIN. Schnauzer, -4 )'I'S. Contr•ctor 3 Bdrm* 2 Bath shag, bltin s _love, Co1taMe1a .....,,..,·een andSpmtoclain1 "-" . 730 ?-.I An al old. Ans\lo·e~ lo name--------- Llvi room with cathedral "1t'8.Sh/dryt, gar. Util. Pd. 1 .)'OOr ticket!. (North County Jan. tith, : P . "'6t' "Salty .. C lo • • * cei::!_ 6' frplc. Separat• 1 St75. 53&-9.:l91 art 2 pm. ' TI-IE EXCITING '•oil-fr~ numbe*r is ~1720*) ~r-""'0o"'na"'u: 830$1\VOO·-19th SL, per. Llc. N!. :J4~~ i!,\.:, I Alex P•tterton 1 BR. F u rn fl~ I mo. 2 BR bltna Wilk be h ,_.'6 "" · on . · Call 673--5582. 17315 Ash St., ~.~~-•--1 ........ ., • to ac . laundry area. Encl patio. $1j(} NU 2 Br., cpts, drp.!l., I PALM MESA APTS. ROO~tS-SU .,,,_ Up ,,.,.,.,, II vv-cT~i' .._u · ,.,.. ... en $190. Orange C.0..St Real Swimmln& poo,1 ~children's patio, rec. rm .. 17542 J~1-AflNl!rES TO N\VPT. BCll. ..... LOST male l'llriped red ton1 Fountain V• •Y paUo It: pool. Adul!5. No Estate. Call: &l-l-4MS. J>layground $200 fer1on Lant, 1'--URN. OR UNFURN. :J'1 ""k Up Aptii. 1376 rUU..Y LICENSED cat \\•eek berore Christma.'I, You a~ the winntt 01 ~ l°: ~k. ~~" 2 BR Deluxe, walk 10 beach. HARB0°R G_JiE:E.~s S-t1-M47f842-2834. Unbt-Jievably 1.a.rgc apts, h~ge 54~~~l B 1 v d · • C:'II. RenouncN Hindu Spiritualist. \"ic. Victo1i11. b t' 1 \\' e e n 2 tickets to tbo Adu.ltA-546-4431 f!v t' s. MS-43:53 NEWLY decorataj 1 BR apt. pool. Jacuzzi, elect bl\Jn:i, Spiritual reading given Harbor & N:e-wp:ll'l, c.~l. I Sporti, V•c•tion 2 BL.KS beach, H~ Hvln& 833-1471 da,YJI Park-Like Surroundint II 7902 Ronald Road, 11 B. Apt shag crpts, drps. sauna, 1''URN roorn lf.B. A:. C.:'11. ddily 10 am-lo pm. Advice Re11·ard. 646-3.l7:;. ' & Recre1tlonal rm, 2 BR. 4 twin bed!!, ----"-----I QUTE1' DELUX A. No pets. 968-2837 etc. Adult_,, no pels. UtiL Ideal for ~tudent. I on all mall.er'!! of lift". 312 N. ,\1ALE Irish Setter }()lo!! Vehicle Show ooropl turn. Util incl. $W. Cotta Meta 1_2 , 3·BR A~ j 2 lsINGLES --··--.Froin $13.) Adult. $6a/mo. & $75/mo. El Camino Rea.I , San Cle-, at tht-5.16--9638 .,. ,,_, BR, 11ii Ba studio. Encl 1 BEDR.i.\f -·--·· fi'Om tl40 ti42--S:i20. 1 ~9'2-9'1J6 492_9034 12/31. no tags, choker <.'<ll-ANAHEIM Prv patios: * Htd Pool.!I gar., fried 1.-rd. $WO/mo. 2 BEDRi\J L"i-m $160 -~=~----~~ mtn e. "' -ar · Jar. 645-31;}9 01· 540--0460, Bfl.CHELOR apt. 1 ml trom E/Slde 2 BR. Duplex. J...ge Nr tbop'g * Adult.t; only Lndry taciL 842-4;-,.t9. y , 1• h;-··j · ~ v nd ROO!iI fo1· r~1t, e1nployea PROBLEM Pregnancy 4Con-C.i\f. CONVENTION ¥&ch g&a & water pd. $90. pr iv ya rd. Gar. Martinique Apts. 0~ re n~ • t ll"Y re u er-man only. $50fmo. 1789 fidential, sympe.thelic preg-LO-sT·---.--11--~--CENTER 213-592-2917 S I {ti Irvine pnced~ 1361 ?-.1e11a Dt. ere.an t PL CM 548-8U9 nancy <.'OUnsding. Abortion man.!I ~-o ege r1ng.1 1'01\ thru JAnuaiy 16th tove re g, cptii, dinl"tte. 17TI Santa Ana Avf'., Ot (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) on ' · ·' &. Adoption rercrral. AP-blut-stone'. :south Coast Please call &12-5618, ex1 314 P'URN. 1 ·BR. APT. '•!;5'7~·orl~~"y2ardl71. ma.int. ,•_M~gr_._A~p~t_t_ll ___ .,_6-_5&1_, I .~-9860 ROO:'lt in private home CARE. 6"2-4436. Plau ,m•_n' re_ st roon1 . bet'''ttn 9 and 5 pm to claim SUO/mo. · Cati 646-2687 ,..,.. -.. uu--PARK WEST Sl:i.fSZ>. per \\'ef!k. All R ~ "" "" ENCOUNTER GROUP ev•a1u. ~-your ticke1s. fNorth Coonty BAOIELOR Apt., turn. $'10. $90--1 BR Duplt'X. 1 adult, New •dult gerden Apts. APARTMENTS privileges. :>16-7285. A pl•"· lo '·<t•r know yoUJ'-LITTI..E_ bo_ y'a dog_ • black, r,oJ.1-lret-numbe,r is 540-123:1*> per month, utll. pa.Id. Pref.er non smoker. No pet 1 , 1180 2 BR 1,, BA 1 Bdrm. From $160 BRAND NEW BALBOA Isle, \\·omen\\ t'f!S-'"""' uc _,, De ·1 R f' ""~ . , .... l Bd 2 B seU and form rea.I relation-m~ulllm me. v.·hiteo zpot on retired. Call: 536-9656 eves. posi · e s. or.n \V. 17th. ST.». 2 BR, de.n, 2 BA rm., 1• From $14.'i. Di!!ih\\·azher, llhag v.'1.nter~. mo: up. TV ahipS 546-762'1 chest. "Ace." High Scbool l\IY \\'a), quall!y home Ligune 8-ch MS-3787. 151 E . 211t. 6'6-.8666 3883 From $19S carpetins;, Yt'aJk-in closets. _room, ltilchen. tiTa--3613 u:;o. C area. 494--0532. r·emod. \\'alls, cellinr , NEAR OCC. Spacious J BR, We1tb1y 21 A.,.rtment1 ' Parkview Lane Fo?Ud air heal, C:\"tra large \\IORKING man, middle ag-Al'honH•oi;.,, ~-TAn<>orny~us,,. LOST ""''l Siamese \\'ilh 1 1 ,."""--<Xl36ni. etc 2 .,Nho job too small, LEASE to rerpomible adults, 2~i BA. r .. _,.,rt, Jau....i.... 1 1rv1ne. (Just off rooms. Bcautitul game roon1, -•, No dn"nke-. l SO 2 '""'"'"'' ..... ..--~ ,_, 'Sa o · =· C\J '" P.O. Box·~. Costa 1\1~. rnotUe apoUi:, Santa Ana 1' ' • r vis. serv. a mockm very dean, all fa.cil. $DJ. No pets. --""T"'HE=-c=A~B=LE=s=·~· --· n 1~" •"Y at Cul\·er Rd) heated pool. BBQ's. encl06-Orange-Ave ., C.:'11. ~ . electric, xery IAfie studio ~. 1 ed garagez, quiet surro\lfJd-S&.nta Isabel, C.~I. 646-0066 Additions • Remodelinc apt .,-/~an view. See aH Lge. 2 Br \\'/pri gar, A.cl.It~. Laguna Be•cl'I t ing.!I & clase 10 llhoppine. Gue1t Home 415 1 R£'1.\'ard~ Gen\·ick I Son, Lie. day Thurs. or phone BESf Atta. L&e. 2 Br., 80\lndproofed. Fnal. yrd. I Adult Jil·ing no oer~. V t ' R I I 4lS lost Ind found Jlnl LOST: Doberman/Shepherci.16il-ti041 • 549-2170 C9J...1039 tor appt. bltns, refri&., cpt.s, drpll, w IP at i 0 · \Vt r Pd - 1 BR. Ocean vie\\-, Frpl., 2 EL CORDOVA APTS. •ca ion en • 1 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~Li.J;:~j Black &: 1an. Vic. 15.10 &i. Electrical ROOM, kitchenette, tile be.th, patio. No pets. Pre-schooler Gardner/maint. Call bt"lt·n 1 blk~-to beach. Ref-Stove. j 2077 Charle :;1. 642-4470 i\tODERN dese1t 1 bdrm Coast ll~'Y· Phone 5.57--684i. --------- ok. $150/mo. 548-27 6 5, &: 5, 636.-4120. G3r. :\Iatu~ cple, ~n-Near lf:irbor k lfimilton SL honit nr Death Valley. 24 . ELECTRICAL. Residential, builtt.1111, pe.tio, ocean view, 642--0261. 2437 Orange A\'c. "G'" $1" smokers, Ref. req. $W0.1 hi-. Jree mineral baths. Found (frM adt' 550 L?ST: \oung b.lk I.: tan comm'!, indu11t1·ia.I. Small quiet. Modern utilJHei. $13S $170-2 at 2 Ba Studio, adj. NEWLY DECORATED 548-6232 Elt'c. ~tovl", refrig., panel ~e~\ llusk')' mL~ .. ,f~~all e. job!! OK. Lic"d & in.•. Rt'a.s. Call~, ot 494-9652. ho · t/drp . I •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I * _Vie 'fesa Verde. ~ -price!!. Fret' est. 546--0211. s Pll. cp , patiO, gar. Charmin& 1 BR duplex, new Lagun• Niguel heat, air t.'Ond., piano. $285. * * $115/mo, S40 wk up. Bach, 548-8301 aft S; 21J..$.5227 carp, drapes & paint. Love· per mo. $&:>. per v.·k. (213) I Dennis Berg BRO\VN & _,rhite. female Electronic1 clr TV uUI Pd-Cretctnt Bay col. ly garden .surroundings. LAGUNA NIGUEL HACIENDA 691-~:>. 129 Governor St., Cocker Spaniel, vie. C.~1. Bch 1435 N. Coaat 4~2508. SPAC. 2 It 3 Br. Apt. $l40 up Mature adults only. $12:>. APARTMENTS HARBOR Rent•ls to Sh•r• 4lO I Coit• Me'• ~·ard. 548-5755 or ~~-PR ~"'i°'Nn:=-:-D-,-.,reu-,-, -boar<!--•. 1 BR F\lm. $U5 nt0 util. in-Pool, cpt/dtp., bltnl!:, Kids ok _54_U9ro_~· ~==---1 BR, l BA * 2 BR, 2 BA '.Hl AVOCADO STREET You are~ winncl' or 51fALL v."hlte dog lost near design&. tabricatlOill, thort eluded. Oce'an vie \V _ 23)6 College No. 5 st2--7035 * LOWER * fully carpt>!ed & draped 1 Adult living -No pets SHARE 3 Br. home, z •tickru to 1~ Talbl"rt & 11 a a:no11 a. run specialists 1 or 100, 49f.-96U. 199' ~laple No. 3 642-3813 All Electric _ 2 BR Cpts, From $175 11 Deluxf! ~ & 2 BR. ~001 . \\'/\\"Orking gQJ or i;i\;dcnt. Sports, V•cation Re\\•aI'd. 9fi8--002]. Keene Enterpri~~. 961-17:}9 Lido Iii• drpg tio N b i: incl gas, TV cable, 1\aler, Gara~. DLS'h~·shr. Paid ulil. 11.B. All priviL Pr! ok. & Recr••tion•I ATI'RACTJVE 1 Br, bltn thf!afe~~·AC:t_,:: ~ ~u~ all kit bltns, lndry areas, 1'"'RO~! n50• 646-L?04 $.SO/mo. 18291 Pamnly Ln.. Vohiclo Show Gardening coppertone stove &: tttrig. .-~ J ~ I BR. rum. Util pa.Id. Util furn, No children or _,l°'l5';=·~1_m7oc,, _.,_,._3S7'1.o'~· ~-~ htd sv.·Jm pool, BBQ·s, priv H.B. S17-9.J88. at th,.. tnstructlon rm Genp. l Bachelor, no pets. $165 64-2167 NEW dt'luxe townhouse, 2 paUos &: balconies. Open * 2 BEDROOM * GIRL \\'llllted ID i;hart fw11 21 ANAHEIM ,.......-PROFESSIONAL Gardener, $1S5/mo. 673-483? eves. pets. · :>-' Br. 1 Ba., bltns, distlwshr, JO A.'f to 9 P~f * .494-4272 l!a Ba TO\\'llhouse concept. BR. Kids & pets O.K. $so CONVENTION I lree \1-ork. pruninc. New:port Butch $140 2 BR, CloSt to carp, drapes; garage, patio, 499-2277 * 29().ll Aloma Bean1 ceilings, ~xtra lrg: Unlurn, S88 furn. 968-7:110 or CENTER 5-•-11 I. ! sprinklerli, de"dn-up jobs, everything, 1 child OK. Key pool. Mesa Verde schools, ott Cnm·n Valley Prirn'Y ~ITTl.!I, encl J.1tio. f'f!C.IQ· S42-6235 Hntg. Bch. Now thru January ltilh ,...,_ I ands l' a p ' n g. Georre, 25 YARDS from QCftn. 4 BR, Apt "A", 2860 Hickory, k Ml • V" • t1on rm, sauna balhs, etc. Pl al "'"S6"< 314 instructions 575 ~3893. 5*-7917 par · ISIGn ie10 Adults. Our Sunday alter-~CTIVE, il'Kl.e~t female ea.~ c· I "'" ' · ext . ~,,-""'-'°'·-'""~""-2% b&., h~ llv nn., $195 Month ~1Gti8 noon B-B-Q's & Free Art 2a-30 to sha.tt z Br. apt. bef\\e-e.n 9 and 5 pm to claim TIIE Educational Read:intS!! AL'• La.nd11capi111:. Tree ~~!~, ~:'.a,edcr:;:; comod. NIC/E 2 BRst upstairs lriga~t-REDEC. 2 BR. I BA, •BRAND Ne1v 2 BR, <·ptd , Lessons starting soon. Balboa t&le. \\'inter or year-)'00.r t1cketJi. (No~. County Cent~ is no\\• accepting removal. \"ard remodeling . ...,.c n, .,...~ n; mp, w praxe. ove & re . up.!ltai.rs, N1'. Estancia High. drps, covered patio, pool. HARBOR GREENS ly, 67~. l*oU-1ree numbe*t l.!1 a40-1220*) ~gistration for an afternoon Trai;h hauling, lot clunup. turn. $295 incl util. until Ju-Water-gu-elec. furn. Adults Bltru, erpls, drps, garage. $Xl0/mo. ~5891. 51&502;; teaching session from 1·3:4;1 ; Repair sprinkltt'l!. ~1166. ly. Will alllo lae. 67>1642 only. $14;J. mo. ~. tJ60. Adlts, no pet 11 • ----------* ~lale. Brand new priv. BR FOUND: L"urly Eng Ii~ h for Prf'--.!IChool children agt's I TP..EE Trimming. ~ Agt Newport Beech 'A.:\1AZING Adu It Living, nr OCC -SD Frvoy. $26-$32 -i~1 · LARGE 2 Br, 1~1 Ba Studkl 549-1693. I She$ dog, v ie. Sprin5 ....... e 2~t-6. Ph. 64&--C34. Oean -up, Spec, Pnlnina: 3 BOID.I., 2 BA, bltns, ocean Apt No pets. $145. 726 ::.:.::...:::.:::---~-------------Beaut. 1 &: 2 BR furn or unf wk. 01· by mo. 557-8400· &. Edinger, llun1. Beach, PIANO LESSONS fruit tree'. Reasonable. \ie~·." shag cpt1., beam Jo.annSt e 846-1S84. E•tt Bluff PARK NEWPORT 1 Apts. Self clean. o\·ens, YOUNG \VOrlring ga.I wants Sa t. Call & identify. Beginner.!! to leam lheot'Y 548-8318. clng!, ~-bJk to beach, 1 -~=-""'="""~~--,... NEWPORT BEACH APARTMENTS D/\V (in 2 ~r) di~Pl!, shag same to share lovely 2 BR 89:)-2867 .7.ec:-~----~---mln. Yt'alk to 2 mkts, drug LRG 3 BR. 2 BA, no pets. Bachelor 1 or 2 Bedroom.!! '-'Pts, drps, J&ca~:n & sauna apt "''pool ~J. · technique. Sightreading. etc. Jo:XP Japanese Gardener. Children OK. Nr !.Chis le: VIiia Gran1d1 Apts. '. • baths. lluge pool. FOUND: Near Hamilton I:. Mesa Verda -Costa Alesa I Know hou·, up-keep, plant, l'lort' & Jaupdry. $275 per Shpg. $170. mo. $1;,..gggl Four bedrooms ,viUi ba.lcon.. and :o-.1 nhouses. Spa, pools, Merrimac Woods FE:\IALE to share 2 BR apl. Brookhurst. H.B. i\tale • Call Bruce S46-tt78 ~t, lrimmJne. clean-up. mo. \\'inter. Call 673-6370. SHARP! 1 Br, lge closets, ies above & belo\V, Gracious 1t~nrus. From $170, Acl'04!.!I 425 Menimac \\'ay. c.;-.,f. l)(ol Mar St., Costa Mesa. ~Iala.mute or l[u:;ky. about 968--3486 after 2P:\T. OCEANFRONT t BR, Comp! living & qulet surrounding from Fashion Island at Jani. &16-6010. 50 lbs. on Jan, 1. Collar but [ . ]~ pool, Nt. shops. Adults. 1884 f f .1 'th child boree &: San Joaquin Ifill~ TOM'a Gardening. Exp. fum, Frplc. f.m I mo. 'td J\.fonrovia. 548-0336. or anu Y wi ' ren. Roads. f7141 644-1900. * BRAND NEW * Office Rental '40 tag. 96'l-&18· __ Servicel and ftf:palfs .1apa.nese Lawn Ma.i.1,. JUM. No petr.. Z.IOS Ocean-Near Corona del 1.Iar High Poodl front 67:,...2962 UNfURN 2 Br apt, no dais, Schoot Fil'l'place, \\"et bar & L1 Cott• Apts. 1'"0UND: whl tihQ.ggy e tenant.-e & CI tan· u p . SW. mo. 557-niO built-in kitchen appli~. * NEWPORT * 1 J k 2 BR, bltn!. s\~iniming • AVAIL -UOO BLDG. type dog, male, blu.e collar.I•••••••••• 531~. Sl9-~J alt .4. STEPS lo Beach, mod. 2 Br, * * DELUXE 2 Br, 2 Ba. 835 A:\IlGOS \VA y &14-2991 SHORES pool, lanai, bar-b-Que l gar-I ofiice on grnd. floor Vic: Golt Course, ~lis!ion Babysitting GARDE."NING SERVICE upper, beam ceilings, Jrp!c. Cold~ll, Banker ll Co. 3 Bd 2 B a~. All uUJ pd. tl50 to SJ70. ~ suiteo &. 1 ofc. 2nd fir. Viejo. 831-1014. CU:AN-UP. TRI~t Adults. $J7j '"'int e r · l'\"r, S.~~ Plaza. ?>,lanaging Agent ~· del~~:re:;~~g ~~~ Adull.11, no pets. Ofc or &trite on lnl fir. SILVER cttY poodle, fema~e. WILL Babysit 1 chi 1 d I • 64&-5-469 • 642-3490. e NEW DELUXE e ca~ting. Oiildren 0.K. 3.>I A\1ocado, C;\1. 6-12-9708 Jonell Realty Service fon has hed recen! llllP~. Vic. \\'ttkda.ys. l\ly home. * S49·20lS 3 '"r'Y Jrg bdnns 1 blk to ;,BR & d.E"l'l. ~ba~hs 3 BR, 2 BA Apt Im-least. $23:i. month. premiza) 3355 Via Lido, Npt. mvd., C.?.1 -Ca I I * * 642-1711 * * 21 )TS exp. _ i-"rtt eat. heh, ne1v crp\s o~red. Yr-me patios. or r-~ · d" CALL 54'0370 SlOO -MOVE IN Allo\vance N.B. 615-Jm. ~548-004<~~~·<=:-:::::-.;::;;:;::;[·iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiii.i[ II •. • l''"" e:•" "'... '"''d spac. muter suite, in ~ t> •''1j. mo. 1m. "·inter ., <>< .._,.,_ .,...,..,Jo.>• Pre-Sehl childttn \\·eJcome · -rm & dbl garage: auto door , BRO\VN & tan ,,m haif't."d * f7t4l 6-12-1403. LRG. 2 Br .. crpts, drps., ......,.ner a.VB.it, Pool&. Recre-·,J--B~R-A_N_O_N_E_W ___ I NASSAU PAL\fS i'leYt' \Vatert'ront OUicts .!!ml male dog. V i c * * * * -----------I bltnll, 1-2 children ok. Nr. -.-r Y"' I Ii7 !::. 22nd St. &12--J&t> fo"'rom S360 lllonth l-BLK. to beach: comp. Schl.!1 & shpg. $140. 962-lMi ation a.n':ft. 21}132 Santa Ana Ave (ACTO.!IS NASSAU PAL...,1S Prime Location Brookhurst and AUanta, turn. Oean 1-Br .. gar. $1~ e $275 e from_ S.A. Country Oub\ 1 Furn.&: Un(urn. l ' 341. Bayside Or., N'pt. Beach H.B. 968-2019. 1,------------------,1 ?.1o . ., • ., """ o• .,,_.....,..,, 3 BR, 2 BA, drp!, dshwhr, 865 Amigos: \'1ay, 1'B Spacious l &: 2 BR from 2 BR'a from Sl35 UP Bill Grundy Rltr GT'.J-6J6l FND. Male Afghan !-found . ............,,, • ,,J,,,, dbl earagr, patio. Harbor i\fanaged By $150 & Sls:i. F1REPLACES. . Red \\'ilh black mask ap. 2 TRAlLERS for Rtnt: 1 at :l-tg°"l"s'°A°'pt-00',-·-"_,,·1~--"'-°"-·-~ '\1LL1At.\f \VALTERS CO. Prlv patios, lood111 of closetll. Dana Paint DESK' space available $50 prox. 1 yr, old. Vic. $85 I mo; l at S\10 I mo. 3 BR. 21, Ba.. spacious VIEW Jieated Pool. Adults. i\tan-BEAUTlf"UL l &: 2 BR, mo. WW provide fl.lmitlltt Ne\\'JX>T1 Beach, &42--3348. Avail 00\\'. 673-57-19. lltudio. Shag, \Va.sher/dryr 2 Bdrm~ .• 2 bath5. Up.!ltah-s ~ 979--1268· heated pool. &-e 10 ap. at $5 mo. Answerirl&: Rrvice LARGE black " white c."lt. $l7~Furn. 1 Br. \\'att'l.1ront, on premi~~. $200. ~1496. view apt. Carpeted, dra.Pf!d, SEA(.'L[f"f" >\lANOR apht-:l prttlalt' at U3U Santa available. 17815 Beach BJvd. Ve.ry friendly, No re.,,,M'd 2 BR, 1,~ BA, sharp ctpl.!I, bltin•. 2 covered parking Br. $160 unf, $175 furn. Cpr11, Clara, Dana Pt.. any day Huntington Beach. &42-4Ul aaked. Found 011 Jrvil'll! small dock, &!Indeck, yearly 67;...6461. I..UXURY 3 BR., 2 Ba., ocean VIV, \\IJnttr. $2&> mo. 673-&iO. q>lCt-ll. $250 ~lontb yearly. drps, bltns, g8.l'b dipl. 1525 t Th ho bl drpl. ll>O ~q ft. $16a mo. 973 Pt t.x~p \JI'!-or P ne DESK ~ avalla e S.'iO .A::"',:::"_:&l:;:ll-!~728=;·,-~-oo,.--ll · 0 acentia Ave. Ask about ~9""39 Ul · _ VaJenc!11. 537-7768. ;; '7S..&050 ., .....,... · mo. W provide furniture ,~uND ;0 Harbor Vie\\' ;;;; our discount. 6-12-8340 or $5 Ans\verlng ervi ·v l BR Apt $125fmo. Drapes. -·•·•-CL... 54&-2682. Huntington B•1ch 0•!_,,_mo.bl• 222 ~.! ,..r;! Homes, Broy.in male dog, 'o ,.,. ... No .. ts. cau ·-· v.,.. • ~-· ~... ...... tall 1· • • hol Trader's Paradise lines times dollars &llH631 or '4""333. EA'TRA lge. 2 BR. 2 Ba., La Qu'1nta Hermosa Laguna Beath.·~ ='· ~·I. .. ' n 2 BR.,~' blk. 10 beach, 1 blk, Huntington Be1ch walk-in m.!ltr. closet: nc'fl.· PRIVATE oft 't bl &i ~I~~~~~~!~ l~y ~\~~. ~; B• G~~~. 1----------carp. k drapes. Raised din-sPANJSH COUNTRY ES-small . ina·;~,. ~ !r e R-E~ G!~~~. ='1n.pk~:::l'------------------""1 ,.. ~,. • .,g SUPER Deluxe J Br, 2 b1, ing area. J'°IJ'pt. Shore.!! TATE r I l: . operation. -:i-v,,., !A N""J>Oft Beach Rh.)'. 675-1M2 encl. patio. $140. ~2-Qll. near llunt. JI a r b 0 u r . 968-1029 iv ng -spacl0ll11 -Costa 1\1esa.. 543-9443 all 2 l VE: Sha.rp '67 Intern'! ~ BR .. 3 bl. .• form. cHn. t.+ I h r-t/d -t d bl · aptz. Ten-aced pool. Sunken lndustri•I Rent•I 450 pm. · MO!kl 800 4 1.')-l So:iut ""'1<4 ram. nn .• z..ity. la» -r. Newport H• SI ti l BDR:\f, all bltna, shag cptg, ..... Y rps, .. ., c, .\\'., d * •(21 2 BR StudKis, Jt, BA, gu BBQ, y 0 u n 1 ma I e G 0 1 den whl drivt. + compd. CaAh fl. Tradf! ~ity for .mail CLEAN 1 or 2 BR AdltJ, no ~~. ~~! =1'= prl. 1 ~""=·~'-""---· _S46-_!12S6-____ dfwthr, garb. d i .!IP I• Unbritevable li"ing for ONLY MZ 1300 sq n .,,/ otti~ Retrieve.r. has flea collar I.: val $.l*X>. Or, \Va~t rd .ea-lnCOfl'll" ~M}'. pe:ta, 1&" k1t. Jm.$150. 2Ul ~-~-------QUIET area, triplex, lrg \\'Shr/dt'}"er hookup + pr. 1 Bdrm. Unfurn $1SO, bath $150 mo. 2lDJ tel: ft w/ red r\bbon. Jo'ound Vic. Heil ilOrntd 7Zlli T.O. or . 53&-0406 546-1713 E. l&th St.. NB. 6*-1!01. SENIOR Citizens Delight 4t deluxe l br apt, all eolec., SlSS &: $190. ~. I F'um $175. office 2 Baths. 1_ ttar •. "£0.io~.-1. H.B .• ...._ _.,~9• lferd of Olinetilllu, i;:•-"· 3IDl,""I~ ba . -In l ik:~ nc"' l Br unf U.fO; rum blt.nr., drps It. fully crptd, Bo·'-2 Bd turn $1.... ' .~ .,. .r.u'\".,.,_, ~ ... l .BDR..\t'. unturn. Good loca-t * '* """ Bay Atta • 2 rm un -1"· door, $m mo. lJ40 Lopn !'O'"',.... ,._.1_ ...L.J•-•• .-Lor food i. containe:ni. alr cood, Hunt. Beach; Aaw peyinfa. $160, Sm1 dog ok. 66-MlO-aund. facll. MG-~. Bedroom ti d Furn $210 ,.... n.,_. _.,..,._ ur.tt u.1,.., .10•-..-1o111e iurrc -.. .. 1 ... t Tr·•-tor ~·-Uon. $1'5. mo .• Ind utll. • Jag, r & Pf' 1, · SI ...... f . ..,3 • _ __...,, eve.!I witb rwede.r ......... ~ e. ......:' care or • llllUf' r.qult.y at srQ) for lil&-1764. AVAIL now, 11-tah!y palnt<d BEACHBLUFF APTS •tow, Nnny patio. Adu!IS. Al.L UT!LmES INCLUDED 646-0;81. ~J· Imo~ .. ~_: .,..,...,., 2"d TD, c1ea, land. boo!"' 2 BR. Bltrw. d.!lhWl'.r, end Spec 2 Br, 1 Bl. Pool, Patio. no pels. $147. 642-2267-ADULTS NO PETS l VINE IN US TR l L v~. eron -. .111JWUU Call :ii7·7397 '! Owner/1f1.. ..... ~· Unfum. 3'S garage, No pet1. 548-60& D/\V_ 8231 Ellis 842-76'4. YEARLY NR o CE AN, VISIT OUR i\10DELS R D A_ V1e)o. 830-3627. Multtpl 1o"-~ ... -.. ~,-.-,------2 BR.. '8ltn5, drpl. lat patk). 2 BR, c,its. drpg, ra.nse. No 1pacloo1 upr. l Br, 2 Ba. l5211(7lp~) ·~.«E<J LN. ~ru::~. ~.'"= ~ Fl~ FNO.: Blk &; \\"ht, ~l~~ \,V,anlunil!_to ... brttdN4 but-tu d f ~~ ~ fU. Sml k -4 R •-! t hlld OK. $125 trpt •-R J A--u , O'!l 1 .,.. •·-"''WY· Vic. .t..111ol • r <11, ft e a r ewPQM rt eve. AIUM BIDROOl1. 2 bath. Or. ~9~9 -or~;:"'"~"' pe.. c mo. m..~a'" ea. v,.,. 00\\', ~ BlkJ. So. of Sa.n Dlt&o rn:anutacturinc. Con I a c I J;;°w,"""scs-nn. ne.::ti. Have 6 tmalt unltA. ~~~ ':· ~~ ~ta. drape1 1 built·llls. S<i2-«M6. .t'r.y. on Beach, 1 bl'Jc \V. on Rich&~ Forney. Broke.r mnl StR Ana.heirn. etc. Ca.It: 644-6tU t bolDt ....._..1N t llh llo DELUXl: 3pt: Cpts, bJUns, 2 BR, lae. Jr{v. patio, Bltm, 2 BLOCKS from ocean, new Holt to Pa.tkldde. &~. FND. Sm. 1ft e ' Me91!, Tht 1No1n Co Rfttt.on e. or 1'0'1. fft.al .......... _.....,.. ap ·• v.• pa · .~ d I ,. 2 8 l\' bo d , -nt, vtc: Eutbh1tt "' oo~~ 9EQ.6m .~ 1 pm. drps, dsh\\'lhr. mod pauu, cpt, 'ltl· lH/iTIO. No pets, r., 1 up1u. TURN or Unfum Apt$. 1 or 2 RENT M·l J.U3 sq ti $135 mo y·~..... vur. Ccnntf, &'Rt, $J5,;. 6'MHl735 or &IH700. 1503 Al•boma. ~ W-71156. BR + 2 BA !"'m llJS. llS.I 1.opn, C.M. , ~236. What do,.... hav. to ......,, Pl'I, l>/B, Landau IOp,_,,,... lelboa J1le..r 2 BOJt..\f., l'..S Ba., praat. * % Wks Free Rent! 2 BR. DELUXE 2 BR, 1 doon _, monlbly. Adult11 only. Nr. GT.,.SJ16 mt>. Poodle. i\1esa Vtrde Ust,:, bett -in 0rante f'O tlJ't'. Trade for lat mo.. $liO Ynttr. 3S'I E. 8'>1"111t. $1'1;. Pt'r M!>· Cpe., ~. bttn&. $13il/mo. OcKn. N"'1y .-altd bo.oll. Call Mn. Donner "Mak< Room for .Dod· • r• 1. Call otter l :lO. °"' • w...< rtod ll'Od· cl<!='"".,.~~- I BR., J bl .. clbL pr. 97t-1590 or ~ Call S4'1R1* or 8M--21S1 --nas/mo. Y..rl,y. 6'8-1631. !36-0l92. at 23) 12th SI., apl d y · •• , c I ea n out th! M>-'\n&. inc pM. &U-3671. _.,,,,.i Whlloll l!nl Dia'" l1Wl1I DUPLEX l BR. Quiet. No BAOIEWR Apt.. 2 8iiQ w Es Tc L rl' r ,.,... 2 12. .. call Ml.. Bux"'n. ..,... •.• )'OW' tt'Uh I• CASI! rnll: r....i. Dl<Nhund. * * * 9tU tbl WJ ilUif I dop. call or motoreycln. bch, .,..,.,, 1hq, Utll pd. Bedlwm, 2 balh, Adult. oo-$36--1344 at 219 llth St., apt witb a DAIL\" PlLO'r Owner to ~nt!ty •ti.le Am. a., Ila --~. $!10. -] alt t pm. ly. 117!. ""--. 1. Clultitd od. 1)1 to claim dos· -------- • , * * t ' . FREE PASSES . You Could le One of Today'• WlnMn • 10 Pain of $1.95 Tldtets Given Dally FOA THE YEAR'S llGGEsT 'RECREATIQN' SHOW YOU wpply the paint . 'Rooms painted S10 M. Aleo extmor. Call 543--7046. Plumbing $& llR. l'lumbln( • E!eotrtcal Repolr. !<2-m6 "' 642-1403 PLUMBING IIUAJR No job 1IOd amall Expn,, not ·Under 21. NO e 6U-3m e PHONE C!.U..U, apply In per.:n 9Jrf • Sirloin, 5830 COLE PLUMBINO w. Q>ost H"J' .. N.B. )I hr. -· 645-llfll ARrnITECrURAL po&l-Remod1( &. R.,alr open for. Planner, dellrner. •••i I All Ion Sr. dr&ltt:man, & Inter. ~tOhf. er•t 1 ~. Salary open. New con1tructb1. Con~. 9C-'l&l6 . .Ubs ........ Bloek. ..... 1-.~V~T~O~--~·--hri-tnl> "'7-21>1 ..., • Roofing SALs .. MAN New BMW dta)mhfp nttd1 e T. Guy Rooflnc. Dftl alHmen With expedentt j..ll!tect. I do my own wt<k. p.efm<d. Good P.roonollty. US..27IO, SQ-9580, Many bH>efibt includiJW REPAm. .reeowr llft)' root Group lnl Demo P1an, al· problem1. w..--· ary pluo ""'"'"'Plo•· Apply nee eat. NS--1691: In penon. Ste Bob O'evier Sow1ng/Altor11i.n.. -Alterotlon1 -'42-5145 Neat, ·~· 20 )'Pan ex)). T1lwt11eft R-fr * ELAINE'S TV * ServlcllW All Brant!a Aut!lo<lud>lqna"" tor hont•ly 540-431l D~ll Y 1'1(f1' u me ' ~ -~ If your "",... 11 111"41 In 1_1pecl1l 141-. It eoulcl ,,,..,.under MY- elualflcotlon, M look ol them oll ~ ,.,_ 6'2-5471, E1i.n1ioit"JI') i. • -'1.m. 1n41 p.m. lo mokoorr,..,..monto topic!( up y.<if 2JrM ahn tJekot11t 0ny -..nlonl DAIL V PILOT offleo. . Be The Guest Qf . the DAILY PILOT. I ' ' • • • • . ' : r~0rw-. ~ 0....,. . : .· &St Cyclff, BU..., Aulol Wonhd "' Autos, 1....-970 Autoo, '"""°""' 970 Autos, u...i "' CADILLAC Autoo, u... "' : °*liLE $AU * Oorinon Shophoi'cl S-.rs 925 Wlu. Buy,.... Cll' ,.11 lot JA(iUAR · POllSCHE AMERICAN ·" _,...19-JO __ R,_.H...,IW,_OO_D_ I A--., ""'.ll:""'d;,_P•--..i - ; l'IANOS ** ORGANS • Pvps ltS4 TAMK.HA II> Ct. Ex· "' not. Call Ra!~ Goraon 1------------....-----------1 : Kawai, 6jt!ni. "°""" ~: 1 wkt old '*· l'U'llc>ll Chamber, b Ir b 673-<!900 • 51&-303l, lJ70 BAUER BUICK '5!I l'OlilalE w/S 90 ..,., * A bauaClor * 1 • ' ..,. --.I~ ' wftl -· "°" : Allt )!aid~~~ . . -"' ' -be•d. Good Harbor Blvd., °"'" M-. '"""' ..... wdl. Very m BROUGHAM <lrea. "..,.i-. .\ ~. i PIJ\J. JlENrALS "9r.:.' NOY)CE. ~'eta'~ ~t!Oa. $1Z. Finn. Cail Autos, lmportM 970 ~1~ cl•,., Oller. 21H!H911. * GreMUn * 10,GllO MILES XIDl-1111 ll!S : 11on' l'rl"°" · ·~ ... 3rd. 1'30 """ -· • ALFA ROMEO J~GuAR DEALER '18 ~ su.L 5 tpd.. * HOniet * 11111 -'· tld<ry a1r. tilt LiNcdiH· 204 'Sun· 12~ Mar\lncrut K<lllllli, ll'IUUMPH '69 BonnevW. Alw.,.. bu an uooU..1 ... AM/i11, -. pvt. pty. * AMY * -.AM·nl.......,radlo, f'l&l.D'S· l'IANO CO. -· • P><coU..,t --°'"""' ALPHA leetlon o! botb N•• A U...S l39oo. M&-lbi: "'4 ~ .__ ._, __ l_S_T_A_T_l_°t,_A_L_l-'AI .1 UIS Newport Bbd. AN \)bedle#t do( tor 3iue ~ End. Custom Palnt Gull!•tta'~,':';• 5'.:4 .:: J...,...... TOYOTA ;ft Janfln * Wljil IOp, 1-1..,. owner '12 ~ O>nt, 4..lla'..lfd., '"~ 1ifoa 11~ ctllp stam.,. a-.s-.. Joi>. l900. Call att.r &. rhead ..,;, F.ft II -* Mata' dor . * ~-°2:14 •, llOl'Vlced lby UL dlJ'k .,....,. fllll --~.,, USED SPECIA~S J ... 4th <1"'30 am. M'!'ll<> -. ~": ... 19¥Jc.., ·btat nfln. 1971 JAG.UAR VIZ 'JZ TOYOTA ·~ tt>an :II» nil. Mln bld0'11oo. ;,,,· bf,,;.;, .. .,... plono ·wn.u. ..... K•nnels. _,, " '10 YAMAHA 250 MX. mini 494-Mtl<. Air coodltionlnr, aulO .... ttc, ' ' LARGE sn r"TION ~~!l!.c It ln ...... tecl -... doll --, -•-LlQ)f7j; SHEtTtt pffi!s (small <Ofld, K + N modtt. <l<iyl,OOOmU ... <9280¥NJ ~ ~--.. .........,~ 'Pttriel&"*.~.N.11., •• • •jl,ammcndM-i •• y .. 0.W..).O>, .-."1111. W/ST•1Ttetap.U..tott... BMW fl295 wrgoS.~lon For 2111J~BL., P.O. Box .. .W.W,.t '·' -~1R~•Klmbal! Cal. alDw qua!Jty, ·xlnt -· lf7 GUAR 2 • Immediate . Finest of ' OO!ll'A lllESA Bead>, -.'11141ll ....:: ' S'*'-re MANY-· M• .. ~ -~~-~----.,·"'-J.utomoU.. Exoellnce 0 JA +• - """' um~= ··~ram•nt. -' M..hw Homet -De!lvervl Guara---d 5!08100 ·~ Sllixla1 .::.-::·'--~==~-• Opon Ev•s .l &at, 1·5 -~ •-~ uo~ . , ' & Aulomatle, !ao...,, air con. • 1 "'.,. •a ~· MQCUlY ' "' l£WMOlilD O!\CAN · •••vu-·~~. ·~-dllJon!Oo. (:161BQJ>) Blg,S.vli\as On UsA~ Con -~. C0'1•· Ste. XIDL . <.-. -m.rmos $ll POlldl(. alVtt, AKc,~-1«1 1or '51S5 Re1m1Jnlng .u meeh. cond. tlew'trs, b&tt. <;'OBDHA: DE!. MAR pick, Gt lit!er. Call otler 4 "Spedallzlng In Quallty"' '71' TOYOTAS "HOME OF TUDe up, Lo ml'~~. 1967 MERCURY ''··1' ~'°'":.:,."",. = v".:'.t~ °",~':;..., ROY CARVER, Inc. Buick~~~~guor ~ L••-=• C.,~~~;N~~.! CH.EYEW • .· ! Y...ua Plano• 0raano: a °"·~ )>UJll!1'1. .Real = -mvd. 231 E i1lb sL yo"""111 1970 rnEVELLE MALIBU WAGON -, si.-y ""-· Best "-tiny. J.13 B~-. c.M. eo.ta M... MM444 ea.ta M ... · S.S.ms TA CALL FOR FREE Air Conditioned, All power ' '" -" u...i. Sdunldt w-im, -. · · · CAPRI l!l'i't ~AGUAR •. 2 XKE cp. CREDIT CHECK •.• 495-04111 ** ' _,..,. ·~ -. · M~:OJ,...Est. 1S1\ 190'1 N. APRirot:.. '?'.0¥ fOOD:LE 13631 Harbor, Garden Grow White w/blk l~ther lnt 6tfl.9303 J"uli power, f.actOQ' Arr, lift · I M$;Stnt.a~ 6 .....U .old. iio. 111 lIDk.So.GtG.O.Frwy. •n2100CC,xlntoond,atick Chrom• wire whls. 19'6 Horbor,0..1aM.,. ServlceDept.OpenMonday CHEVROLET -· J.M.N.-,JUr •:I WA,N'J'!;D: .. Q'-r upr l,1ht B*<tway, C.1.1. 6Q...411.8, 636-2333 1hlft, decor rroup, YMICWIAM radio, air, lo S NT 7130a.m.'till 9 p.m. ~rtek.l.ocalcine OWba' ·;!i •la/"~.·-oond. Ml-3883. ' . . *Marvin Pearce* yill>w/gold. $2495. MS.nl6. mil••. Ma;ntaln•d A _A ANA '6.1 OIEVY WAGON, Au .... ;)-lowmll~.<VVC ;: From .• .,....,,!5'1. 912-f121 SILICY ·Terrlft' ·Pn·p-pJe s , CO,RTINA wll•odor, lov!nr car.. TOYOTA ~,.poweuteerlng. (OKL-$l 299 I .. L 233 ~ "' 5.36.• aft N<J:. i ...i. ..iu1~ ll<u. Motor Homes . 6#-1801. s.m .. dept. .... 7,30 .,. $39 I s. Terin>,. u'~· 531.J51!S. '68 CORTINA c .T. 2 nr. ' JENSEN ·w 9 pm Mo..., ttru Fri-DAVE Ross5PONTIAC Nabers Codlnac .... Sp,orti"' G-l30 FEMALZ~ .. ~·yrt. Sa'-· • Rentals -1~) m' rad!':.~·10''" ("~-dayp. HONE ... 2512 'BU1li-'K 218o-Blvd.atFalrDr. AUTiroruZED Ili1Au:R .~·1 SKI '-· !lnoSt :N~ old. "°· .~ .., puppiu, -" u• $7" ,..,.. -· JENSEN ·~ "' eo.1a Meaa 516-8017 :mo ~BL., -·• ,;;. ,a.n; Coot "$150.•Llb $1D.--i-·Call 6l6403!.. 558-3222 DAVE ROSS PONTIAC :~=CE =!o;~~:r;;;·,,;:::.:::=.:,:La..:;:"::;:::;~~>:=r~,l'A* ____ * ____ * * '71 CHEVY'1 * 5'1J.9IOO~A ~ l ntw.$95:/Garmtsclti ; ladles HorMt . 15' lUJ.-8. Villaie Way, S.A. 2480HarborBlvd.,tFafrDr. .G CyL S.verly PurHll IMPALAS e · CHEVELLES leafhtr 11.u 8-§25: ·~. H0°=s ~-~.. •J" ...... Tr•ller1, Travel f45 Costa Mesa 5f&a117 "••1419 CANARO'S "9 MERC.'Marq!M 4 ~RT, ~·~i 11E4D ·-standard' u;.;. .':;';;;";', H.r;;. . DATSUN -3801 P•tv~:w Av•.. HERi% CORP. ,.,.. ...,.., taot. air, <YON , ~lai>Or. btndWp & Poit.. ·1ra1n..,. x...-Eng)lah & '70 APACHE "Sol1 Id '8tal•",--=-,,,.......---TRIUMPH You.,.. the winner a( 221 w. Ka!ella, Allabe!m 51'6) Blue ·~Qlllll : ' UQ. &I\ l;IQ; · western. Parker'•. Rldlng M ... Ill camp ng trail,.,,. (714) 17M050 --S'"'.R~w, _ C1ub.;iiS'l:ojl ·or'645onn. Supercond. sm. 968""64s. '71 Datsun 3100 w. eo.st H..,., s:0~~~':'"1on ~~':!i.~~ , . lor ' IH BEXUT.Qtt Bai mari.I yn, Auto S.nrlco, Ports 949 4 Door N-Beocll & RKro•tlonol ~~ ~· 0=. Ooola M-· 5IS-I017 * Vtry .. 11\le. ~ Abo tad< '!!(>.'Sf Chevy Body wortc & Sedan. Demo. Air cond., LOTUS Vohlclo Show FUw """"""eood. 1995. <56 lf71 folERCURY C S·*1 * ll'IS. 675;.4ij1' . ' ~, -~· __ -~a1~ • vi""1 ""'· 5,700 mi., rsdlo, at the Oak 5-~ ·Laiiina Beach. STATION WA;:r. ,., • "'""' ·· ~ ~-~ ~· ~ ~ 4~ C#231128l ANAHEIM 494-6848 'io ·1:im 'Monroe (t. .. cu.tom palnttng. small ·~·tu, • ·~· LOTUS · HERTZ -.Oil • G, .... Grovo I .. ...... ,,.,~ 1 ·block part!, old & new. Barwick Imports AUTHORIZED CONVENTION '5T CHEVY ' Dr. Rebuilt :m w. Ka!ella. A- YoU aN the ,winner ot llldMflr.llpment ~~ Matar workstlck conversion. 998 s. ODest Hwy.. SALES I: SERVICE CENTER •" ~~.: '=., ""'or'' oU~:. (7)4) 77MQ50 2~1 to the _ -. 1 • Ph. 633-3195. 511 N. ~ Beach Now thru JanuaJ)' .mtb "'"flll ... _.., ~ Spo'rts, V•f•tlon Cypma, Orang.. M6-4051/494-977I Pl,... coll 642-5018, ex1 314 614-47'9. '67 M>?RCIJll Cobt1 & ll~ro•floftel GonofOI : :·. '°'FOR we,,,. .. Coodyoar '71 DATSUN SEDAN l-:==-:'·-;-;·;o· ::-·'>· ...,-l ~~:iJ.::.'°c!~~ •CHEVY Impala 1169. PIS, ~.;.. atr...:"d'u.~~: ·: ··Vohlclo ·~ · • M : c· ul Ft!().14'tlresmountedon14x7 '69 Trlumph·GT.6+ -"~-num~ 11 ~·-1 P/B, alr, 2 dr. HBDTP. -r ~~· • . '-at U::°'"·' . tirlne:. °"1 tint Amen Sprlnt lI Magi. 557-· · $1895. ** ~131J lUU~qj UCI-.,..,.u.w Call 4~9532. ~"" • .,,...._.... · · ANAHE'u . INil!:l'ENI>!:NT . . ·-Llke now, 4 Dr. 4 spd. Dir. ;npo W. 'Cout H"Y; ' * * * *CHEV Im•••• '~ PIS MUSTANG I 'I · '· · ""' · • Porcho1l"9+ -~" 3.183 aciUa! mil.,, radio, Newport &ach. ' ·VOLKSWAGEN. 1970 RIVIERA ~ ~ ' ' · • I .. to!SIVP,ITION '" ~.•.., '~ healer, vinyl'°"· still undor MERCEDES BENZ ~· ,,:-Sss:. Dr, SEDAN. '1il Mtisi-:00.' j;,_,lfl. ~ ! -'CENTl'R .-l<oatl,I< equlpm•nt:" 1 I~ !act. W""""!ty, (350 DLF) ' .... ~ b' · ~. thtu .laniwy .16th • MOrlM Sunioyor AvtWllr-~ Will take trad• or finance '81"11 Yate·s Full pow,,,., !aclOry air, vinyl '70 CHEVY Nova 3 tpd. stick ~) • ' Pleue da!t '5f2..SS71, e;rt 314 . '46-.tm ·· . . . pvt. pty. Can 546-8736 or top, vi1t)1. interior, atrato llhilt. Disc braka, map, Mtf ~ ~9 and 5 pm to clalm " · · ~ alt 11 am. ,..,., lllt wheel, ..W.r door 642-6847• · DAVE ROSS 'PONTIAC: t ,_.. 11oloeto. (North Olun(Y .looll; Molnt./ D B lo 956 NEW "12 PICKUP locka, sport chrome ..-, '67 OIEVY I tru k . . IOU* -fine D\Dllber* .. MO-ml*) S.rvlc, tQ2 LIM U9I I ~ --1, dlr, ~-Bum-. Ra· ® JJM-Hd n.dJo. Law l!IB@1. pane c . 24M ffarb:or9Jvd. at F&fr Dr ' ,. ...,... ......._ ,...... (ZWA880) Wood panellirw I: crpt. Belt Costa Meta ~? i' 1=.,....,~~=~--'· BOAT bdttoms' cleantd ·:15c '11 ·DUNEBUGGY new turbo llJo. M!min, PL'l21120. Take N be C dill ·otter. 673-.1975 aft 5 pm. lf7I MUSTANAS · , TV. Rodlo, HIFI, per Ft.' o! ~ at .,;a1er . ~· '°"""'ir. Leu than sma11-. or trade. 494-6811 a n a ac ,70 CHEVY -SIL 1% , '" r's::m.. ~ 'i H~ .:;.~ •• · " '°' T~~~ Xlnt L'Ond. ~2 ;tr7'.10'10~ COM, !ully . . ·~ ~~~~... -~= ... =cond=":""':,;-.:::::;::.wlbl.:::1115-:::. .. .::1"11:::1nt..:..· -·I :~~ Katello~~ . : $500 .. ar beit otter. Can tee ' ·loadt!d, air, mags, must '69 MERCEDES 220 Diesel. .r..r ..,....., .. ...-.....-., -1910 O!EVY p (714)· J7l.40SI aft· 5 9rn _, l:.inden P1i 37' , OUU:Sr Craft.~ : SOper •• sell! 642-6772, 646-3631. Xlnt cond. l owner, $3XKI. Authoriud Sales & Stzvicoe '67 BUICK Spkial 4-Dr., °tra1res, air cond. r.tk>= '66 MUSTANG, lVJ:L V ,Qi.&& Mot. .: df~ xtras, ow.ers,,·.tWtn HI. l9TI zm. G~n. Air, map, cn4l 499-301! 32852"Valle Rd., sedan, P/S, P /B. A/C. Call SS?-Ma. clean. Xlnt mileage, _'\'!',"11!1 eng. SU.SOO.' • P.vt.-ply. pemct; llM $4600. MG San Juan Capistrano Very good <Ofld. 675-1149. · -rtadoo. -14 . . . ~= T<d.. ·. . -: -tlonOl -~ 831400/~4,,,.2261 CADIUAC * '56 Chevy, •. cyl. "' 5,30 ..... . • \ ' . , ,_,. v.. · 11 J ~.:,Ront(C!!!~' ~ . UCl!EA'.1'10N CENTEII · FERRARI MG ·~~ &o':..rru~~ d ~ S250 ** &11>5181 ·fri MU""1'1'NG. ~ .. · I , , . -" ~:'('~l;INA'27' S.JloOP ROY CARVER. Inc. FERRARI ~o=CE VVf Sqback w/auto • 1968 CADILLAC CH~YSLER ~ ~ ;:.'.,,.;t -'" 3,U.,-JT1~·"4-0ll ~-boa-CJ.wt'~ . ms ~.Jll..S. .... l1!ul orange • l'OOIJ'Y -1968 CHRYSLER 300 1966 MUST''.,;, • ...:.... oiieep. .._~DJ'• Cont M... · 5<6-4444 A!JTl!PIUZED iJ.is & ~~ •- ,ci.-s..;._, puflfl· IM' :·. JO.r·tFfr7 ' , ~ · ' '51, ~.£amino 316. ~. · FSo SALES Ir SERVICE . snow aun! No anti-Cmvertible Full p:M't'r tac-New .trlnii.1 aQod: tittl' jj -~.--~ ·-·-PB AC. --~~ f1'ee"'noedod.Only6000ml. -·'· ·J .. lher ~ ~~-.~-~Full -•·• M ··" ..._ • I rn!lE.·.Callaft 7 .... , O!ieY. lff'.i.odrtoat, ,tun • ' .A•-• -n cond. $2749 Hurry• l92U Biddle ,_, -· ' ~·m---·~ ,......, ust -.,..,.-73111), • · ' · • A1e!f <•n••idi•tr'.I ~ sin lmJned. Best· Clf. . ' ' • tilt steering wlie<I, AM.FM power,· facby air oond>-DESP:EJj}.TEl, u..r t n · ....,.,~ .,.., fir ·m:oa Dr .. lrvino!. 833-l053. """°'"""' ...... <VZD300> .-.., till -1• buck.t · OLDSMO . LE .· old -,male cat ....... f,!1~ "~.,, ... "! ~· . JlOO ·W. Coo.at HW)'. '61 CAMPEii. Excell cond. $2222 eeala. AM·FM rOdlo, -~·-~·-~· -· ••· ·~--. '°' ""0 '51'1XlDGE P .O. Runs No-~ Beach Extras AM=• st 1969 Ol0$ ORTA ,~;;,;;-~~.,_, ~1:/"t ''3?· tot s."~111· J100w.o.1t H..,.. ~MGB :.!·.new,;:;;,~-~ ~~ 'Hab:s,..,c:fih~ · --l>u:!lns. . . . . '68 DODGE V.an Camper, V· -Beach 2'(., )Wl90R BL., A~ I>EALER Hardtop o..p.: hCttrj Mo .... 1162-6793· *'' . . "'*' ... * I, Aulo, Pop-.... ACDC H. ONDA '69 MGB Roa..... new '69 SQUAREBACK wgn., rosrA MESA . :mo llAlleoR BL., --r1nc. -POOQLE ~·,mo.. . Austin G•t• · radials, flawless 1.b A out new eng., tlrd, t.uto. msI'A MESA ea. radio, beater;~· B1a<k 1 m>l• l 1tmaJt '3fl',McCluro Avonuo ~!rig. Mak• oUu. &46-299(1. M'"'t sell lmmod. 833-1.22) Sacrlllco $1SOO. Oonslder 5'0-9100 DP.en SOn4ay 540-9100 o,e;, SUndAy wall -· ftl'.. (xmaiQ -is. ' ' W..tminstor1 Collf. lill8 CHEV . .Van V-1, auto. 1911 HONDA Car, I ow d'Y or eve. trade. 616-26911. LARGEST =;:·::;..~-=~== $211 I ~ .. -!or. -.i. 1oy You a't'#.le .~r al x-P560. miieag•. $165 •Tak• over MGB'65 black Mecbanically ""VWSquareback, alrcond. SELECTION OF CO~NENJAL N 'IMIJI (:cilll l ,t;ckelz ....... CAIL 673-7826 paymonls. 543--0988. toUnd 1351:31'11rm. auto tram. radial -tittt. CADILLACS IN 1971 MARK. Ill a -.. 531.-,~ •. y ... 11 ... :. Auto Looslno 964 Im HONDA cu. Lo mil•" ** 616-WI ** LlKE NEW' COND. 646-2566 ORANGE COUNTY .. ~~ SMALL ' OOG. !rloa ~ly &;Roc-llonol-LEASING? A-1 ,cond. Newly """' PORSCHE '69 vw Camper, Westphalia. SALES.LEASING 1'nll power, !actory air, mt COOl'A Mils.\ spa, Y<d. l yr old;·,_,,,_.. b Vohlcilo ·S"°'" -our 1,.,. ·--!or too Slm. T.0 .P. ,.,..._, · $2500. Xlnl cond. 67>-.1881, A~OVIIUZEDCE ~---·~. ·~.FM -Open aaoootbome. s.um"" Ak~~iM '&°v1np -s.os1a"ct;~~ s.r. JAGUAR OYER 25 51s-7888 N.n eodntac ;;;;;,;;' ra.i:.~ ~·door 11 OI.Ds art1aa. Full p,.. ; healil\y, lovable "'"' CONVE.NTION WEvi<e. · Cleon, floconClltlonod, '69 VW. XIDL cond. 1i300 or -HJ.RBOlt n• 1ocQ,..,.... cmtrol, •1'ctrtc u , '!act. air, low ,,,.... pie<I. Save Us !rom th< .. CENTER LEASE.AIL POPULAR I G _, ·best offer. -...., sun root, all -IU ex· CTYE910) Blue Book 1"l -.I! '43-9451. ~.""'I''~ 1g!h • ~ "';l'~~T COMPETI-1970 JAGUAR XKE PORSCHES '63 ::-:._. 54J),!IJOO ~}.::: Sund01 ...... (5'XICVIJ $l!il0, AOO!l.\BtE !•male puppy; ~Pt--call~ ...... 314 ·c.u· Malootm Rold for ~-pe • ~ ----~--911'1 ' 912's. 9.14's -"·nt co-•ioon 1971 EL DORADO NA.~~. c~~~ DAVE Ro'1s4s"p-'""IA part .s., arie: pick of llttrr; and ot pm 1o claim further detal1~. ....uu • • s~ u .......... ~1• ex .. ~ •1t.1 U"JnuttlZJ!D .... ~ un t "~~ 67' -~.. ~-~-•ty D factory air, wire wheel•, 1957 .to ·l~I $115ll.' .oo · 531-1294 -,,.-.., BL. 248011a<!>or.BJvd.atFalrDr w,a-,,wm•. ~ • .,,. ,._ · """w ~ . ·THEO ORE AM ' · -="'-==,......==--""""'=·.,..._.. eo. ·.. · ·"-BABY Burutiea, fret to iood tall¥~ num~ .iS 5«>-lZkl> ROBINS FORD 'lor--~~~~~Il;a~:i:: '69 VW Bus·$2500 Grenoble attver with vlnyt <X>STA MESA .. ta ~n•&a ~ homo. * * * 2000 tt....;.. Blvd. ('133BLQ) -s48<17'l0, 548-0m IOp and 1 .. the\" lnlerlor. NI 540Wll . Open 9Jnday '70 'l'OROJ'!~ o.tom. 'Full . 64<N573 17"VENTURE .w/plley. 1rlr 0..la M.,.. 642·0010 $4555 ,Y~~V""' .....,., ladary air, power CORVAIR power, !act. alr, ,(lit " -"~ Gd cond. ~~ . ,., ~ ~-till ~-~ ' ........ vinyl ''"" .... (001 ~*~~Ab";:.~"::,: ~~g, ·-· Autos Wantod 968 Naben Cadillac ;;;;.,, 'AM"'.°FM st,,;;-;;;:". '62 eor..ir being told •or APYJ BIU.=,i!w~ C.lf'S!6-7486. Boob, ~llps/Dock1 •910 Atm!ORIZE!l I>ElALE'R ~.:;.,.. °",;!,1:.,""· '72 VOLVO :'::~~\""Local port., From lc-$25. See at DAVE ROSS PONTIAC WANTED ~ HAMOR BL., 642·9405 . , Naben Cadillac ~ .... l!ooh .. ier SL, eo.ia ~~ Bl>d. at, ~-alr 0r 1 . --~ . r , . 1~ CENTER 'allp $tZ'> n .. cx:om. -~~ -~ tof!/Sall•or powett.{Front) , ~ 'It No. C, NB. Cifl 152 F.OR ~'l!":if .i;p, dol.e ,. "ANTED· Ont amall blaclc: tbe•Jfi\y_ ., ' ' ' male kltl>n !oe >ng. girl to 673,1259 · .... alotot ,,,,. tol 6'5-2166 ·SCIP'10R RENT-N .B. -Dogs IS4 · 962-1'67 late ewnlnts Clol n Usod Cars -r=TA MESAOpen 1910 . roi\Sci!E 911, whlie Lirg•-S.IKlllm ',flor Atm!ORIZID I>EALER .. _ SUnday w/blk lnL AM/FM atereo. Immediate '8l roRVAIR "" h '61 '66 OLDS Luxur; ,. SEE US FTRSr '53 JAG. :K 120 American mag a. ap. , DeJlvw 200ll ~m., ~.;,. ~ ~"r' 46,000 mil ... "rop CLAS IC .pearance .,..p, other xtru. --1 540-!IJOO Open Sunday • -. • • lhape. Good ttrft. '!,.;~ ~r:£°J,1.:."'Z -~· 81\:.i,~11'i.'1~10n '70 <DURE I>e. Ville. Full ..... ~<?~!!!!! ~,;::-, c.M. , ally perfect ... ~~·L H<Od PORSCHE !lllrS Targa,_ blk, '71 ·-·vos ,.,...., ..... air, vinyl""" •• l=""'"'=::;;:;~~:::.:;;'--J llghls .i-~~over like new, l ·trl<, lot< lampa. ·~ C:l82APV) Blu, ,,_ pr1ce CORVF:ITE "IQ, LT • l; '18 OLDS 442, B1k .fu;i lop,'· 893-2514 daYt. eves 531-5033. '66 PORSeHE 911, 5 •pd, red tw1111 · ' $4599 TS. $!800. air, Gny. blk Inter., $300 to replace. Phone Murt: sell. 5«8-9736. ~· ,I ....:'1 ~ . c~ ricHo, tape-detl; PB, B-track •U!reo, auto' ~ • CREVIER MOTORS 3.8 MARK n '82. unusual .w/blk Inter. Coool 'l<ln<I. · • YOl.JO' · DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 5-540-1'670 """"'· GllOd COOcl.·!ll lll03. German, .o~ .. rd Pu-1 · ; " . ' " 11•1 lCl8 w. lst·Sl.. Sanla ·-o ... 1c car.' Witt w..e!a; Priced .... u. -1136. 2'llO~Blvd. at Fair Dr. COUGAR PQUll.AC . l.ri. b;;j~ fi wttic;-~1•1 •wt1tton .· -135--3171 ...... I nd 4 dri COit& Mesa·' ~7 "'~ s.35 ** SM-ll'.n · ---:\i~FAtfOi~-1~;~;:~1~a1~e:.~r"~1500~. 6'~,,,,"'~1000~'°~· •:::"'J· ~HOP~o~~~~H~H~~k~""~~~%.n_~·~tclt!;:::;U..d.::1946~~·-~· "'"~· g;9303~eo.~,~~~--~·==d·'trt SEDAN ~ v~, Full cOucAR ;a, A.as'"~ .• ' vh '81 ~: ~ · (.)@. ST J. NI> A RD SduleuMn, . • " . WE P,A y TOP . ~r; ~. ii.,. ZJVD. top, ~--'*1;. °"'"'· ~_h !"'"'" « cood. cl1o'lJ · AKC Compet1,,S.l•/Rol)t'20 CASH ,588) Bluo,l!Ooli~,$2570. OOl ,"'*'':rllm" <VU<BH) • • ' ~~•-....... · .... ·11 OMC " ... oMU .. w . s TAR, GAZER~~ ii,A~ll ·R~r~orrt1Ac D6DGE DAVE ,R~ ~T.~c J ' 9 WEE!<•OLD PUPS .,. hlO:h,oll•xlrff·,./ :rill !!J CI.\Yll. . il80llartoor Blvd;at'FalrDr. FOR SALE C15 DQjge Dvt -~BlvCaU'ojfl>r, 'P8rt Sj>eltie, •D>tll brftd $10, Kentkl! ~ tralltt lll!llS. ... -can . tru<ka;Juot "" Y-l>al1yAdl"'1 c.i.lo M Coola M... . . _, GT Y'fr ••u!O .. !loor. ~ me11, i c .. 5f.!017 ' :~g,--t<~•·S3196.Ro-COllG.ROnaJff.lorlno fftlmalOL ..,.. Att0rill•1tatloeSl•1 .. V' '64Cad2dJ;.D,V.Eve/ya· Bucbt ... i... 4 ·""-Cl6LEJIUNS.lpl!l1r. , , .lKC Malaniqte pupplu, ~ormid•!ormotor CHEVROLET . 'To """'k>p-fotWodnncloy, Jt;~ tra. a.an. See, to ap. w ... i.. µ;o. Flnn,sST-t.105. «nt ere ........ J - llSO.'Ma'<• •!•main. home, "nll<.tbrtl or d<!UX• ffi~!lf l<Ol-ca1-dl~toia.mbers' preclale. Lowl<li>kM!-2925. 'FO' RD 6~7-Xlnt. """· IH!< ' 968-1170 van.·-OWi. ' J.111: ... SaJ.,, Manq<r d!TAUIUS GfiwrZodlocblrtll!lgn. , __ , . GllEATd>•ne J 1<' up p i .. . CA.WtR -'w'e. t .. a y a 1JZll Beocll Blvd. I~~: JAC Il = ~j;...., 1971 Sedan De rlllt ..... '71 f'a'R'Dt' * ' '88 PQ~ GTO.·-· ' l:haniplon Sired, ""'"" ,. Delux•: l~'.cs1!-r W/tll H11Dttartoo Beach • ,,"""' Q A ' GAU'.xJ.Es • llUSl'ANGS -· •....UV. 1IAH. """ . Gof c.u &»-ali51 xtru. ~ 1'lU ''f/boat. NI.eon KI t-ml ~~r' ~~'°"" ::=.. Nl P"M'. lu'ln7 air, vinyl TOi-.INos . file~ ~. One OlmU' : T ~ .. d, rn Springer Wlll«ll.•t mu:;.Bt .pilce. DIPOjiri WANTED '=· f,~ :;~ ::·=~=:;::;: iHEllZ 'CORP.' Wiil help -... ,., ~~ AKC J'C. S..aL lllal.c.Jl'l!lL. . Oraore Olunt!os a~ »-.. ._ .--. V-tlfto. Lo. !Ill w,){.t.d., Ana1tolm '61.o..ndl'rl<clllllllSollolr, • •U-·" wh11e."~ CyclOl,.I,~. · • TOP I BUXER l~A *-~=...... ~~ CO! ont.-.car. (lClllJ!IJ (7!4) 77MOSf Pia, 11/b,• p1,.,: S1J10 '!Q'GllAN-"Da-~·· ns BILL lllJ.XEYTOYarA 11• ... lr ··-ri °' .$5777 bettokl!Hlal, : 'Tiii!<", 1 11' ol!i.. A)! ahotl. '71 TJtl(IMPH l00'$100I. H. a::.1 ~~.,8555 ' ot"" ~t'_, ,,[:. 1~ ~· '!'.f, 1 '88 l<E iw..·i Dr'. to m!'a. ~ lU5. 83Wf11 ,.~..... ·-~ C .., ',L"'·-· ~o=:'~ ~=di= ~.. " I Na~ Cadllac ...-~ Xlnt «ft!. Aft"' '-"di:! '. ....... .... c ... ,_ ··~· WE 11•y TOP DOIL\11 ~ -•• -., ............... I)~·~-~~. CO¥Dtr7. $1115: u • -. " MlnlaNn Sohna""1 ol 0.kwOod ~/AO J'Oll fup USED CAllS ·-~ 76T_,.... ~ ~u•~~~u -.,-~w - j wf.,'Jt,ouonabie, 1 ... 1.. Avo. ··c• u,.,,. .... Is oxtri-.. ue:-i~· ~~~· . _s.~~ aooa:,~--· FORD '64 Galalde Md&nwlth 1"4 P ... 11 .. Ca Ls • "1• f pm N.B; or IHv• mesi<tpe. ..., .... flrtt. ..,T, ..,......., soy., ·~· MO-WlO 0pon ~ Sears alt 'Comd. $!lllO. "'1:$3Cf;;D;;O''""""""~--' : ;iiPPl<s.lmaJe, 'fl&aul:l!foc.,new; .... ln BAUERBUJ(l( M!l~'!'"'~e ... j, .. ·a:::_ ~=JAJI,.......... n' .E FO near."" at sp; 1!'$27 00 .Pt»jTIAC ~ .. ; i, ·1;m11,1o,,..., T -i... -·~,.. F.a!Jvq »! E..l~th St. .Bo.•utl. ~.,_ ,.... ;ii/::""'"° .a;., M wu.on, co.i. Mesa. . 'lC1nt ....r; i -.1~ :1il'l"""iiiiiijj ...-[ji=-j~~l~P~.lll. 'Dr, c.M. · Coll& lllou Nl-77$5 .,...., .,..,....,.. """' •· a.1 QUICK CASH '6.1 LTD f Dr HT, xlnt cond 1:::,~::=~=,_-.:......~I ii A ......_-'711 lliiLtAal M•tador, WANTIJ> auto, damaa<d or =·1l!:f!:.!:l °'"""' ~-16-THROUGH A thn>obt, mt tires /llrllt, PONTIACWLe...,,..'7& ---............ ..;.___ ..&. o1.a.... Viloo 71.,"'"= ·!i'-.• 17~.!_ ft/ o...--.,.._ _,.,_ _,_ ~-. Xlru, $6Sl. noedq '"'•-. -ok. • -·• ~~·-air.,..., -.. Rill. Aaio. Pvt. per. .... ** 1117-3111 • * CUb. 5#-1694. _ .. i.. :Xt:'"' ~ii!..::' DAILY .fllLOT 55'1.llQ ,,M~IJ..~-,,,.:,,·~----1 ,,_.... f >O'I, 'TD IDIDA S,17$ licnml> PORSeHE wanted '81 tt>rU Goo& @.Mi-f)ii:!.r WANT AD · 'fl l!'AllU.ANE lCIO. nu '6.1 TD!PESr il&t1oa ._.., ...... J::."t ~ t lor. ~ "'"6. -t or 'U. Prl•'l10 por11. fl).7113 ~ •• 5678 ,.,_., Air Oond., New Low ~. -~ . -4llMfl4 ol1 L tid-11!1/. ~-er·-• -... Bnba. -... L • 8IWU't - ' • - I 'i,,, ,-~tv, t;.;.·· - ·~· -<' "'l.'I ---. .... f , ,., . ' · l I -, i . I -I .i"·I -. ') ~ I ' -I ~: ' .. I ;,.. I .... , I -. ,,, • j ' ' ' . -· ' : -' " ' '1 I I ~ I 1' ' " 7 • . . ~an f;Jemente • ·Ca N.Y.-St.eeks ' Ve!:. 65, NO. 3, ~ S6CTJONS, '40 PAGES OAANGE COUNTY, CALIFORt~IA JUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1972 JEN CENTS ~lemen~e Firm Facing Air Pollution Ruling ' Ail Orange-C.unly SUperior Court judge w• asked today to, find a San Clemente rod! erusbing !inn ln conlempl of court lot ~eg'4 J"1eated violatioos of Orange Coq)Jty'I ·clean air laws . o,puty County Coonse! Ralph - Judi~ Robert Kneeland to cite ilto'Jnc. lof wbat'hl! uld was prool ~~·.by the county's 'Alr Pollution l.l>s\rict •<ii ·at Jeast•two~ a ' ,court,, tnjDl\dlon . was issued the jinn last July 29. ·• -The APCD brought Crtllllte to court at ' lbat tltne in the first sucb. clean air ac-- tion on record In this county when It was alleged that the San Clemenle ·company was violating slandards UmtOng Jts out- put ot dust aod fumes to 4o pow>at per hour. It w.; a1.0 alleged tllat the compiny was e11'f!fding limits let for tb6 emilaion of' rock particles from lts stacks. The APCD limit ts set at 0.3 crains per cubic fool l -lXOil . ' ' Wimls Hit · Hurricane Velocity By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ' Of .... ~Hr Plitt Steff Slashing down ciut of moontain posaes, ley Santa Ana winds today continued to l&llllbl'!'t the Southland, biowma u111. alniool anything that wasri~.nsifeif ~ •. f!oill. IUJ!l~'!eeds Jo hou~ ttlijffri, ¥r-. 1 I ~',!Jill*' plet ·-' lilrpiM!I~ .!<..:•-f -.bi = r"'91W: wa IOP1e -are • ...... ~... t*illl!ond Wit -.n,.dlf, .... lnlml;. lhlYf!rlb( Ill 1111>!ftezlnf temperatures. Oraoee County escaped the womof tbli •lnl!s Ill tetms ol aclual d!ID880 reported by d111ligbt today. San Fernando Valley residents and -living ln or pauing throucJi I!iverside and San Bernardino Coontiea Nflertd most wlth power blackouts and" traveaera' wamings posted~ , • ~tLY•P8.0T'1,JdM., . Clllfomia Hlgbway Patrol offlcen report'!I fierce wind blatl up lo 80 mil .. per bow> blew CW« three -tralien and a truck-and-trailer rig. llefense atlomey Don JN!an concede\! todaY llbat emlssi<Jns of dust and tumes bad ~ u high as 98.8 pounds per hour and the_particle count had been recorded it 0.51 crains per cubic foot iut·Oct. 14. ' But he lll'Jed Judge Kneeland to reeognl!e tliat the firm closed down ii> Operation ln Dettmber and immediately orderad,a -"crash program" . .!<> 1....-. that . its· future activities comp!y with APCD regulattoos. Jordan aaid expet"t:!I will testify today in what ii expected to be a day-long hearing that the new program devised by them for CrestUte will ensure fun compliance with Orange county's clean air regula- tions. er..tllte manufaclureo a ;elietizad material that is widely used in freeway and hi&hw'3 construction. '!be product.ls currently ~ng used in the building Of the new Coronado Bridge In San DIA>go. • Re.stdents in the area have repeatedly complained about the dust and fumes flull(f Into the a~ fl'Olll the San Clemente plant. A Laguna Hills lawyer was in the courtroom today to report the out(ome of Ibo he¢ng to what he said_ might become an a.ssoci1Uon of local rtSldents. Attorney Tom Keenan said he int.ends to rtport the outcome of today's debate to area residents whose strong im>tests JDAY have been the deciding !"'¥r in a ·n . ' ! .• ' -' ... , ~ ,'>I.. "'i .... 9AllL'r'J'1111":~ ,.,.. . Ii!', WAS vJ!~Y\BOT Tl'l.E GREE'l'.INGS \YERE. WARM AS ~E P~ESiDIMT 'ARRIVED' '.Af' 1' , ~O M~ •• Nix~ is-t the -Night at Hla S.n .• C"'-te VIila and Was off -to Sari> 1>'"9o this Momlllf · ~-· ) bringing Crestlite to court on the coo- tempt citation. · Benson said APCD officials blamed the violation on the firm's failure to use a wet scrubber at all times in conjunction with the rotary kiln that crushes the shale. Jordan testified today that the finn's problems stemmed from the destruction or Its wooden wet scrubber in Decembtf . 1970 and the lµbtequent failure _of its replacement. Major Ship , ' Contracts- Announced By JOHN V ALTE!IZ.A Of 1111 Dall'f' ttllet llltt SAN DIEGO -Presideol Nixon new to San Diego from San Clemente this morn- ing to announce U>e award of more theri $100 mfllim In contract. to build Amerj· can !lhipa hon, ht San Pedro and elot- wbere. The federal pvernment WW pay 0 percent of lhl'"* -a lllbaldy aimed al ofloettfng io.. prlcal dlar1id' by ahlJ>- l>ullderl J.lilall itJI I - ~~ .... ,.. •• ..,., 7 1 llti .-.Jo lo--1'ra DMw •. __ ot,.,.hpim ...... . plaoled the U.S. u lbe llllJo( -Ider around the tUn ot.lbi'J>lli:liJe ~ 7 ·, #n"' ........ The President .,...... tbe awltd or a 154.f millloa CODlnd to llolloDals The -k will be lhrM bull< l carriers (tankers) lot the U.S. Merdlanl Marine. The 311,-(deachtelahl) lanktrs will be bull! a IWgate Shipping C.., an affiliate of ~yatone Shippini C.. of Philadelphla. • , HE ·APEX Of MY LIFE' NOw Board Chairman Ca-• <;omper owners contemplating highway travel on major routes from the Pacifle Cout inland were also 'l'lmed to stay They will be operated Wider a long .... c· " imn._. charier to lhJI lnlemational N. -· ' • G,,__ 7 • ~ ' iJI Pltroleum Co. of Loodon. primarllr to ' J ' ' I , r;~r~. -~at.ed , I put ' Tumbleweeds bounding like banJheel ~ l!fahwaya up and d°'\ft the Orange Co*si ovemigbl posed an annoyinJ hat.NI to maoy molOriats. . iXOD: ID . . ear~: Sato, w· ve =u~~'lbethe~..J'n!: .. ·. , . ,' •· ' · . An . .W .:.1i. . ...,,;;J 'A·y·· .' · u.rJi:.i: ~1c1en1 new'--. --- N etv-Chaitman ""..:. -. ,•J.•0 1 , / 1 •. • ,, J..;f ~~~ UC&-..:C Uf9 V~i :1J~g,·Jo1Js ;for ·sk!e1workefs · · ~ ~~~cood?~'::~ • I ,,-f '• , Orange County llarbo< Patrol officers mninded boaters that gale warnings .,. bolsted but said the winds o!Wiore were dying down. · . .. . ~ 1 -F,o),': CQast. 'l~, ~_!~~-Z5.aoo-1on SAN DIEGO -Surrounded -by a ... a ot winds tlial·inet•biiil'ai he emerged li:om .,._. By, ~U:~~iso~s his Sa Cl te'"" San 'D1 of ' TO '· FourwlllbeballlllllMTodd~ hal'<lbats President Nixon today told n·. •men .,.me, J:IO 7 ., KYO .(UPI\ -Prime J.llnia!o in·San Pedro. !Ian p..,._ baa a l.l percerit RlO"':f,th~ l,000 .. steelworkers that. ~eyi ~e:::ze~ mbch .-warhter and mOfe gentle. Eisaku sato'Jeav~ for Newport:Beach unemployment r1&e. Flve ·of tha veaeJa "sy joANNKREYNOLDS ' ' ' Of .. DIW"'Pfllt.Jltff • I .A Fullerton police sergeant had to bitch a ride to work with a colleague this m=lng, after a large tree toppled, (See WINDS, Pqe Z) would be ·building nearly $60 million . After·the shi>rt message,-the President aQd San .Ck!meQte> Wedneadar for two wlU be built U. the Bath JiOnworu, BatK, worth of unique l<!nke<-vessels for the made the rounds of 1 con!lruction tot: dayi of talU with l'Mldent Nlion. Maine, -Ronald W. Caspers, the flrot ferro supervl# from Newpoi't Beach, today waa efkl<i! <Jbilnnan of the Orange <;aunty Board of Stlpervi09rs b Y U.S. Merchant Marine, shook bands wlth• douns of. eJUberant For Sato, who had bopod to retire this With today'1 llgnlng'-of tile contract Jn an appearance which smacked of the worken .and 'scribbled' his autograph. on ~· tho lmi>a!ll ~ with Ni..., with Natlonal Steel, the madllme ads NewYork Banks Cut Loan Rate political-c•nnp•i(n to cune, l\lr. Nixon . several ~ ~!mets. . ".'"'provide an oppor~ty lo ~ the mlnlalratlon !Ju/2. ~ll' $2flO million dellv-~ a-short lnforntal address to the As· he ·iiopped Into · his·llmolWn•, one rlmlllcations of Nillon:1 Ylltl to Pekblg worth of contrlGfi with West C.Ut shiJ>-ll!!f.umeus \'ol• or his cOlleagues.. • -'1"6....,.._ ~ next month. " • o. · ialldel'I in tbe last 11 months cheeringworkmenbeneathahaU-bulltoli membefof!helhrongaaic!:-"Comeback., Sato hurt U"·-" l I White~ aldM 'aald ~ controcto The ~ 46-year-old futancier, W h·O l'Jpres~ts the Fifth Sup e rv i so r i a 1 ~ct, immediately announced he tanker. Instead or the cold, gale-force We need $2QO mlllion more." '.I.!" .po ~Y as -summer lllll mean aome 7 ICM. _ .... '""'·-Qf • ..new wl)tn NlxQn ,allnOUneed his C111na-trip ...,. ...._. ·· ,ant& ill couhly"'"~··t beads In atz 2 M . s·..: 11 -L 5 ,.i:,: ..:m:!l:~:rti. ~ .Jo Five Percent . ~rm es lllll at arge --i caspita, ·who. took o!llco ·a year ago, lly-'llle ·Auoctalod Press !. . . . waa nolh~ted for-the cbalrmanship % .Four major New Yori< banks and a Af · · E F ' ' ' · B 1 'e-'· ~~~~.:~::~led~~ =~~\.~.~~1. i:,1r5~~ -ter · scape. i, _ ·~_m.~.__ .. ", ... 'O' · :· dlolrman. pushing th11 key intertlt charge to its -".".'..,, As chalrmao, his first olllclai act was lowest level In nearly seven yUi-1. .. , · • , ·lb' aign five appllcaUom to the federal Cbase Maobattan Bank, Bankers Ttvsl A pair ·of young Marlnel remailled at Geheral Services Administration for ac· C:O., Manufacturers Hanover Tnllt CO., large today afte.: icalJng a fence Mon- qulsltw. of 507 acres of MUe Square Park and Chemklal Bank said in Neil, York ped f the C E~n'l.in Valley. The county currently they were cutting the minimum iM.erest day evenl.Rg and esc~ rom amp d acreaie in a !JO.;year lease from thtY charge their most credit-worthy cor-Pendleton cori'ectlonal 'f!dlity, the fl rat Navy. porate customers to 5 percent effective such escape from the recently-built brig. .In acetplill( Iba po$1, Caspers said, immediately. A·llPOlte!man at the base said the two "This 1'tlle ape• of rop,)jfe, 11!'11 WU an They followed the lesd of New York's m<n were laking par\ ln a regularly active )l .. r thanka " lO ,our dlaltman Irving Trust Co., which announCed a scheduled recreational period at I p.m. \Robert,Bat!ln ol Santa Ana). Tbei:t baa afmllar cut on Friday, effective Monday. when the escape i!ccumit . Four men 11ever bien 1 dull moment. It wao acllye Q;ocker Bank of California today joined ell ' t ulJuou " , ... M -·t.<. N y • b • •-lo -tt.... fied the mab11 group ol prlsogers follow-., .,, •• Ill'\ s. --.. ..,..r ." or. an •• m w~ ... .... ' otleybail m the k He Wal ftferring to eeveral cou. Its prime oammercial loan rate to 5 ptto ·~ 1 ,v 11 e, spo esman trovenitl generated in the county aeal cont • • said, and lea)>!d. a fence .. nil 1lf1 Aller takJni of°"8 ialt · • • · 'l'wo of 'the pnsonera were recaptured ~he 1iiid Bi!Uil lotmelll ~~-, ~~banltlate'·lllid the new ralt Is cfectlv --.Jlteri>.Y._1 IO-minuJ'"• toter by mem- ,.,... called • .. ~ .,. hers of the base secuilty force. The two ,Jflth ':lf.t~• ~di -Ibey a ' -Tbe ill! lime the prime rato st40d 11 •!C'Jpeel ~l at la!g• were klentilled aa ' martial on charges of· unauth<rized al> sence. The spokesman declined to identlfy the two recapturtd Mari .... ite said; the escapeq were wearing regular Marine faligueo and noted that this would enable tlf<m to bleod in with other perllOflllef at the sprawling base. He added that an, investla:ation had been launched into the incldenl Casanova Movie . ' .... . Peps 'J'hl{m Vp )i;llder•••· .._ l ; f. t1lo 5 perunt level wja ln Marth 1116. Pfc. Da'l'ld Ra Waters 23 and Pfc "1n Ja~ 11111 ~ 90ted to place an -· -'-•uct1on1 ~~~ a ...... ·-c. y ' ' •• _ • ...: • DUJUIAM . E!ia!aail (UPI)' Doctor• county lkpartmenl beadl'"' one--11 "~,.. ==-te..,.,ln, -·•1 CliriJ J\amirei, IO, ~o bOme adw-Ibo ~-·H ttal _.,.;,.. Ibey notice, an actlcln lllal wu -rnded In lo -market interest ra s , recen were releued b~ be1e' \i!li<iats. '!,'he ; at -•-• ·~ .,.... Y A gust • ~kl, whlcb reduced the. babU e6&t ,o! IJllO(I-aald the 1'111> men were con-~ noticed a marked iinprovemenl In 'j. 1.;.u,., 1llOYt, •hicll -holly cons obtain~ lendabie lljndl. ~ fined to.the facility wl>ljo.awaltlng court ~~~ho u:"~:!l; !fated by minority boanl members SlllQIJh buslneu foln d '11'a8 '' ' Broadcutfng torp. ._ bqlln televis!ni , William Phillipa and David Bator, allo • factor , oboerven •id. Edi Di 62 u.......,, 1 ea -r Cas-•a IOllgbl the ou,iter of county ad-Moll otber,l~'lt banks ICl'Oal the 'tor eS at ----1 O l&AOVI, , ' , , '1111n'ii1rauva officer J10bet1 ftomaa. Tile countty malnlained ,5Y• percent prime IJ'1Je •lalbed -·of; 1lle famous ..... was deltalod """' Clark wted rate-MANCHESTER. N.H. (UPI ) -Hl!lh IOVer'I Hie bu cauaed controversy In Brls •' BaUr First Nlllortal.Clty Bank of New Yott, R. O'Neil, editor of the ManchtJter UnJoo lain bee.-of the ~-el naMd ;:,,..PliDlpa and to main l!cnmer, ~Uy trimmed its flalble Leader, died Monday al a local nri1s _,.,, Ibo,... · One of tM bolt.est 1r1u .. In whlcb llie lendinl rote to $19 percent. home following a Jena11IY Ulneu. Jlo .,., "Obviously thla procram -penuade !Jmbman IQpel'Ylaor bocama lnwlved Like City Bank, Banitu Trull aod lrfs U. ' , , -pollarta lo lalte !be ...,.....Y alePI .11u a battle with the counlJ".Le-of Ina .'l'Nst·bolh llrio llesfble Pl'ln>t ,.tel, ,O'Neil Jolne<I tM Union ~~. ll '"""'* *O"'' fr batl4r !ban any Cn!et vm membenhi of the Local * wlilCb ate adjusted perlodIWll' to rellect January, 1930, u • rt~ and r, .. a ~ JPlll,", ~ o Ip H a I "°"' I ..... -~ -~--· llllllberal lllliepapo!r. . iooc*t.AlmWllaooluld.• · f . 4 ,J ., without notlfying Japan In advance. The abipyal'<I employmtnl on the West Cout. fi>aa 0!1foee on Sato'• part -the·....,. !!or every ahlpyal'<I Job created, JI was off the ~year-old FllnO. ~'i eotimated tl>lt ooe additional Job will be largely oucceaafuJ efforta ~ nqotflte lhO created Ill ~ary, 111pportlng ift. reveraion .ol Otlniwa •to J-...,, dultp'. _ trol· no" ""'lleduled ,..,. ·~ n a -· lo CcNrtsa oo Oct 23, be~een April alicl.Jl111, • , ' , , 1 f!'• the Prefdeat Called for Ibo 's.to.~to ... ~'Tll•ilil!' i'lbulldlni ol ~~Deel to maka lo pa,yfa 91ait. to' 11W _....., M.,...C. It "'°"' _c;oontJ<l!Uve aiid ..,...._ a aamc! of Ja...-,. '*"-ftonl ' llnrmaritlmO~for.lhtllltlon,,lni -of 'lhO'~~ a<>--idud!nc,,.....lhlp_~ , before taking Important !rips, Be - ed to Tokyo Tuuday nlg~ f'<it faol minute COIUIUltaUoos before·~ far San-Cltmenle. ' Emergency Ruled In Santa Barbara Signal Oil to Moye HOU!ffllll (Af') -Em.=11 of Slpol Oil fc Gaa <». bave-ltd the com- PlllY plans lb· ..,._ tit headquarten to -from Loi Anitiel. , ~· ' . " -I L M. lto'H t Cllnlfltlli t>» CMG -ft Ci•••"' n --" ......,,_ ' ..... , ........ tt -.... ...... Pl"fl .. -...-. t• --.. ) • -.. --. --.. or...c....r ,. ..,. "'I' ............... -.. -.. • ...., .4 ........ """ t>lt --... • "' OAll.¥ ~ll01 .. '' -· • . Grand Jury Continues Attacks By JACK BllOBACll past ;.. year1 I am moved lo nprua perm 11>1n1ra.-s _,...,.., .. 1 to the c•P1hl• llld dedicated peno111 oervtns tht people of Oran~e County 111 all level• of its government, ' said Mrs. Marshall, former Newport Beach mayor in one of the rare moments of prai.!lf! during the past year. Dole, ). Jm, Iba Cllftmt. ,lllrJ; Wblcll Will hi d~ Thunday, hold fl mee11J1&1, ~P n percent: heard iei .,,.., up 49 percent and Indicted 3aa persoru1 alllO up 4!) percent. Boar~, Pl!zf!ning Vnit Crit.ici~d, ~n Final. IJepoJ;t . _ 1 ~ o.aJtp County Medlcll Clnltr, mentll l\illth 1ctlvilje1 •nd somt of the county'1 llrfer departmenll. 01 "'-0.11• l'lltl ···" The Jt?l Orange County Grand Jury in it.I fin&] report for the ytar continued to abarply .crltJclze the Bo1rd ot Supervlsor.s and mrmbers of the county Planning Commission. Hitting repeatedly at the planning com· missioners and their activities, the jury report called for an end to "the di~rup­ tlve Interference into the professional workings of the county plaMi.ng depart· ment by an apparent alliance by some county planning commissioners." Rep<>rting on her sttward.ship, foreman Doreen Marshall of Newport Beach today alao urged lhe paneling of two grand juries each year. one for iovemme~t.tl review and the olhtr to handle crl~mlJ lndlctment.s. She noted that the 1969 JUfY toot tht same position. Supporting the need for two juries a compari!on of thf 1171 aroup'1 criminal session aod incllctmtnU with those of the 19'10 jury 1ho"1 the followlng large in- crease5 : The 1970 jury met 33 times. heard 129 cases and indicted %61 peraoru. Through Included In the final report were studits not previously released on the county administrative office, planning "A! the resuJI of my auociation th i1 * * * Jury Report On Clemente Amplified C"lemente Deadlock Doreen Marshall, former Newport Beach mayor and foreman of the 1971 Grand Jury ha1 1moothed the wattrl wWJ Sin Clemente over the jw-y'1 recent inclusion of the city sewer plant In a critlqut of South Coast waste treatment. Council Expects to End GoHCluhhouse Wrangle San Clemente city council men Wed- nesday finally expect to wrap up a month1-old tangle over tht award of a five-year lease for the operation of the golf course clubhouse -a solution stalled by a deadlock last week . and scheduled for Jan. 19. The change is from general-commercial to multiple-- res idential. -A recommendation by parks and recreation commissioners that Bonita Canyon Park be the choice for installa- ljon of two new tennis courts to replace a pair that will be turned into parking lots at the new community clubhouse. The idea, however, is expected to b re- jected by the council becauH of poor stability of the soil in the rugged canyon aret;, C.ouncilmen. have agreed to find an alternative lite· for the courU. In a combmation clarification aod Christmas greeting to Mayor Walter Evan&, first congratullted the city for _its recent opening of the water reclamation plant then explained why the complex was lnchxled in.a critical jury report that termed local waste trutment agencies "outmoded and frtgmented. '' At a special meeting last Wednesday councilmen split 2-2 on a motion to award lht lease to the W. P. Stewart Company o1 Fuliertoo. Although the lea.se expired New Year'•. Eve, the council aireed to keep present conce1llonain Peter bera:er ln control unlll thla Wedneldl1'1 formal 'm .. ting . The fntlusion of San Clemente's new, $2.3 -million waste facility ired Mayor Walter Evan1, who tenned the jury report 11 "just another mialnfonned verdict" Dunn, the week Berger presumably hu discu1&ed buy-<>Ut provi1lon1 relatinc to 1tnct !Wureo ind the lrnporllnt II· quor ueinse transfer with hls competitor for the new lease. - A f'flQUe1t by county supervisors for city endorsement and participation ln the newly f9rmed Orange County Housing Authority. The new concept. fo.stered by flrit District Supervisor Robert Battin, has met with -skepticism by the San Clemente council thus far. In her letter to the mayor Mrs. Marshall did not recant fo r the jury, but explained Ib1t the panel believes that 111 1arU1aUon district• should have the capabllJty of linking with a central ocean outfall in case emergency dictates that treated waste caMot be settled into undergrowid bi1il>J. Details ol the agreement will be 1iven to ' councilmen. O:iuncilmen agreed to advertise for bld1' several monlh1 ago after wresUing with the problem of lagging revenue1 at the clUbhouse. which ha1 not yielded an adequate a hare ol revenue to the city. -Consideration of a resolution which wou1d launch City participation in the slate·administertd Public E m p I o y e s Retirement System, an action which was part of the package offered last year to police, fire and lifeguard personnel. The participation bad been held in limbo unlil state studier on costs and other factor• were completed. San Clemente has lt1 old ocean outfall 'Which aWI cu be pressed into service in emeraenciea. For the most part, however. the well treated w11te water from the new plant is sold for irrigation or settled into underlf'OW'd water bulns to ward off Nit tntrusloa from undtrground brine. "'l'bt Grind' Jury compllmeols San Clemente for completion of this modem facility. It ta hoped thlt UU1 plant cu IOOJ'\ be connected to the proposed master South Cout pipeline to which Ill trul· ment plants in that area would be con- nected," 1be aaid. Mrs. Marshall added that construction of the master pipe to dump waste into offshore waters "ls essential to meet the • needs of e1ploslve population grow~ along the south coast or Orange COunty. Wbttber San Clemente would link up to the maslu ouU&ll remains to be aeen. however. I OfficiaJs are investigating the chances for a 1erie1 of recreational lakes which wouJd be used to accept surplw water. At present settling basins ezlst in the Camp Pendleton uplands where much of the reclaimed •aste w1ter is discharged. Elsewhere in the South Coast emphasis on water reclamatkm has prompted pilot project& In the Saddleback Valley to purify treated effulent even more. Sale of the water for irrigation, some recrea· tional uses and settling underground is a top.priority idea at present. Voters Register STANFORD (AP) -The Student Com. mlttee for Involvement in Politics says 1 one-day voter registration drive it sponsored Monday at Stanford University attracted 74$ new voters, and 71 percent of lhem registered as Dtmocral!. DAILY PILOT 'OIMICOI toAS1' PUi l llHIHQ CCMl"AJCY ••Mrt N. WeM ~•iMnr 11111 f'ubll.w Jtc\: It. c.,1.., YI!» ,,_INT Ml 0--61 .... 11iH1•• Ktt..U """ n~"''' A. #il 1tr,~ift• Mf!llrtlllll ,Etlf)llf" QatfH H. Loot IUclri1"' P. N1D AMlllllJ ... lft;o .Etllfal1 .......... °"". 211 ,.,.st A Yt R\lf M1ili1t tililrtts: P.O. l o-c 666, f26Sl s.a..... Offlct JOii Nttfli lJ C1•i111 lt•~ t2671 --c.'111 ,..,. ... ""'' • .., "'-.,_, lffdl:.., ~ ~ ~ .................. ..... Berger, who haa operated the con· cesaion for five years, insists that revenuet would increase lf the kitchen were remodeled and enlarged and a sign were inltalled to lure patroos. Hit offer lo lhe city is the lower of the two. 'lbt Stewart firm , an or1anlzation which ope.rates 1011 course facllltlts throughout the state, )las offered the city a -Jfgh1:11""'ftllfler}Jercentage ot iross reCflil!I ~t•1e1 ~ It were tq oper1te the fai:liity. other items on the council's agenda for tbe 1:30 p.m. meeting include: -Setting of a public hearing on a zone change approved over resident&' o~ jectlons by the planning commission rtcenUy. Jt allows the construction of 175 garden 1partment1 on lan4 ne•r San C1emente General Ho1plta1. A council bearin1 11 upected to be 1et Wednesday -Discussloil of rental rates for use of the new community clubhouse with a possible emphasis on raising the fees somewhat to help orfset the city'• $230,000 expense to build the new _struc- ture. The clubhouse will be dedicated Feb. %1 With a Saddleback College band. cooetrl. -A request from the San Juan Capistrano City Council for San C1emenle to send delegates to a meeting to discus1 plans for a special taxing district to pay for new high school swimming pools. -Initiating the procedures for the city'• election next April 11 when two council aeats those of. Mayor Watter Evans and Councilman Stan Northrup are at stake. Trustees 0 J( Students' Plans for Campus Park Students at San Clemente High School were given the areen light Monday on a S>«>ject which ma y transform a senior quadrangle into a campus park. Tru1tee1 of the Clpistrano Unified From PGfe 1 WINDS ... crushing both of his can:. He II.id he didn't want to be identified. Little damage was reported in West Orange County but the chilly Santa Anu kept many persons awake and cut visibility ak>ng Pacific Coast Highway w:lth a constant clood of blowing dust and sand. Rain-soaked billboard signs were also ripped awa y in many apot.s, littering lht Iand.!cape like confetti. A decorative awning at Look Realty in Sunset Beach was shredded by the high winds and its aluminum frame bent bad· Jy. Power lines were downed in scattered spots throughout the Orange Coast and the winds triggertd dozens of jangling burglar alarms. Broken branches, palm rrond1, and other wind"(jowned items kept city work crews buty in most communities but there was no major damage reported. Electricity to rive customers was cul ort for two hour! after I San Diego Gar and Electric Company powerline w11 downed In the canyon behind S.n Clemente'• Avenlda Junipero. "With oor fin1en ero.ued, that'• all that'• happened ao far," said 1 comp1ny tpokesman. One freak mishap occurred 11 Costa Mesa·• South <:oast Plaui, where wind-- whipped bru•h kept wh.octln1 an elec- trical 1ign unlll It finally shorted out In a 1hower ol sparks and smoke. Fire Department Battalion Clllef Ron Coleman said the fire Olclcered out quick· Jy, causing tcsa than lllO dam11e, ~-~ Temperoturu 1Jon1 the Or~111e ""'Jt ire expected to ""'' belwem tba mid· !Os and up lo II In the d1yllmt. School District approved preliminary plans presented by student chairmen Mike Dunham and Mike Chemotti who head a 20-man committee. The students assured the board the senior class wanted to give up the privilege of sole use of the area which had been set aside for them in the school's original construction. "The senior class voted to give it up and open it to all,'' said Chemotti. "If it will imp rove the area at no cost to the district I'm in favor of it," said Trustee Dr. Robert Beasley. Trustee Robert Dahlberg. who praised the students for the project, asked to have cost estimates presented to the board at their Feb. 7 meeting. Superintendent Truman Benedict said the area has bee.n subject to vandalism and has been difficult to 1upervlse. The students noted there had been some cam- pus friction because it was impossible to enforce the "seniors only" rule. Th preliminary plans call for planting new grass, new shrubbery and enouj!'h trees to make it look like a real park. Construction plan1 include repourlng a cracked walkway, rePour ing an area in- side the quad: tearing down and rebullding one wall, the po 11 lb I e reconstruction ol the top covering of the quad. Concerned over financing, the board was: told Ule ltudents hope to finance the major portion ol the work from student body and class funds. Costs will be cut by using student labor wherever possible and by 1t1Ucitin& dona- tions of pl.anti and materials from the public. Fund ralslot activltits 1ucb 11 campus dance1 also wlll product revenue for the project. The student• hope lo begin coostructlnn March 1 lll4 begin lllldacaptn1 April U. TV Performer Dies Low• 1"""1d lnufn1 and down lo H UW. u II detrea la tbt hJib daert ...... m prodtNd llJ tho u.a. w .. U>u Service lw loland """""' RICHMOND, V-. (API -Arthur Lee "Red" Smiley Jr., 47, SW of ono of the lon1tst-runntna CCl.mtry mlllk lhow1 In l<levialon, died Sunclg, ~ oaatm1d for IOmt JI 1""' with Don llono and the T-Qllupo band la ~ OD WDBJ-TV'1 '"!'op of tho MorolDc" -· t ' Regarding the administrative offlcf:, the l"'1 11ld aaaln that the 1uperv1Jor1 have a:reat need of good admlnlslraUva assistance. "A move by some members of the Board of Supervisors to fire County Administrative Of.fleer Robert Thomas last Fet>ruary dama1ed rapport and coordination between department heads and the CAO," the rt port stated. "Planning commiS!ioners were accused of poor rtlationshlps with the planning department staff charging that com· missioners chose to jgnore recom· mendatioru of staff members." The report continued, "Too many ti~. the prolf.SSional, unbiased in· formation pravided by the staff went unheeded. Without offering reasons for its action, pl~nning commission made many decision! contrary to staff recom· rnendations ." Oriental Ancestors? The above comment obviously referred to frequent 3 to 2 votes wJth the majority of commissioner Chairman Wood.row W. Butterfield and co mmissioners Fred Jef· ferson and Arnold Forde lined up against commissioners Howard SmiLh and Dan Foley. An unknown Japanese artist nearly 200 years ago carved this small ivory net•uke (hanging object) now included In a di!play of the mini· ature sculptures at the Center of Asian Art and Culture in San Fran• clsco. The resemblance to President Richard M. Nixon is remarkable -and crystal clear .. In addition to recommendations on the CAO's office and plaMing departnient, the jury also called for: -A central county morgue and the reestablishment of a separale coroner's office which was consolidated with the sheriff's office early last year. -Expansion of municipal cour t facilities in the main county courthouse. -Increased use of the county's emergency services office to handle all types and sizes of disasters. S1nooth College Relations Vowed by Capo Trustees ~Immediate completion of the fourth floor or the main jail to "Telleve overcrowding-. (Supervisor• moved in 1170 to complete the loortli floor ol the jail but later rescinded their action beca111e of the tight money situation.) -An expanded venereal di!ease educa· tion program combined with a request for appropriate 1tate legislation. -An increase in county health depart· ment out clinics including family plan- ning. -Establishment of a new animal shelter In the southeast Orange County area. -Hiring of additional bilinlUal peraon- nel for the medlcal center'•· out patient clinic and emergency romm.. The 1171 jury will be dlJclwoied at 1:30 p.m. Thursday and the new~ sworn in ahorUy thereafter. Park ,Meetjng Date Corrected A story rppeartng In the DAILY PILOT late l11t week deta iling a public meetin( at Pine s Park in the Clpistrano Beach Palisades Incorrectly gave Jan. 12 as the date for the special function . The meeting, however, will take place Saturday, Jan. 8, and is OP,ien Wall area citizens interested in prov i d·i n g suggestions for improvement of the scenic, rugged park along Camino Capislrano. The Capistrano Bay Pay Parks and Recreation District Board has called the special ''open-house'' function. Saturday's meeting will be followed by another later this month at Serra SChool auditorium for further discussion on the future of ~e parkslte which recently was affirmed 1 public facility in a series of court cases. Tony Bennett Weds LONDON (UPI) -Tony Bennett secretly married former dancer SMdie Grant In New York last Wednesday, a spokesman for the singer said today. By PAMELA HALLAN Of Ill• o.n, 1'111! Sl•ff Truslets of the Capist rano Unified School District -perplexed by their cool treatment at .a recent meeting of the Sad· dleback College board -vowed Monday to do everything possible to improve com· murtication between the two boards. SelecUng Fred Newhart Jr. and Dr. Robe rt Beasley to be the district's represe ntatives on the college board's ad- visory committee to study number and methods of electing trustees, the board discussed their recent confrontation with the Saddleback representatives . Trustee Robert Dahlberg charged that hostile members of the aud ience had been "plants" -people asked to be there. ''There were a number of people in the audience who were planted .'' said Datllberg. "One said words to the effect 'are you going to let a committee ttll you what to do'." Dahlberg said he was appalled that anyone wooJd 'll!ggest that a school board should not listen to lt.s citizen advisors. He said an <iecled body .hu th• re1wnsibllity to li1ten to the peo~e it represents. "If we get noth ing more than better communication between the board and the people throughout th~ colleg~ dist~ict and some involvemient tn whats being done at the school, then that is a worthy goal." he added . , . Dahlberg said the Capistrano U~1fied School District has a right to make sug· giestions about the method of electing trustees and the 1ize of the board. Dahlberg added that advice from the component school districts of the Sad· dleback College District should be ex- panded to fnclude suggestions In the educational area and other areas . "The Saddleback Board has the responsibility to listen," he sa.id. Olairman Bob Hurst sr.id he l'OOldn 't understand why the Saddle.back boerd was so defensive. "Our board made a con· s:tructive suggestion. Yet it was met with a great deal of negativism ." . The new committee members who will meet with representatives of the other school districts -Tustin and Laguna Beach Jn addi tion to the Saddieback a~ polntees -also vowed to open the meetings to the public. The board also asked the ad· ministration to obtain an opinion from the County Counsel on whether or not two opposing methods of electing trustees could be placed on a ballot, giving the voter a choice. Capistrano's board has long pushed for election by trustee area lnstetd of at~ large and expansion of the college board to seven members. The new Saddleba ck committee will et· plore this and other Ideas on how the board should be elected and Its •lle, From Page 1 CASPERS ... ency Formation Commission. 'Ille fi4ht had moved into court In a series of 1u1ts and counter suits when Clark again ended the controversy by voting with the LeaP. of Cities. Since the LAFC niatter was closed In September, most of the action from the board of supervi.sors has been less co~ troversiaJ. Caspers today promised to emulate ' well known car rental flrm and "try harder.'' He Promised to deVot.t full time. to the job, noting that It ts the onJv organization that he has beaded In whlcli he did not own 51 percent. "I rea lize I only have a 20 percent In· terest here and I'll try to remember that," he concluded. Caspers is president of Keystone Sav· ings and Loan Association of Anaheim" and Westminster and has served as director of two other Westminster banb. He Is also a member of the bo1rd1 of Anaheim Stadium, the Orange County Big Brothers, the Tournament of Roses and the Presldtnt'1 Council of Chapman College. A JO.year resident of Lido Isle, he ls married. and the father of five children. Body Stuffer Jailed LAS VEGAS (AP) -A California man was sentenced to one year in the county jail after he pleaded guilty to stuffing the body o( a Las Vegas camera girl into an icelx>x. Jimmie Wayne Crabt'fee, 33, of Long Beach, was se:ntenced Monday on a charge of "destroying evidence" in con· necUon with the drug overdose death of • Diane Hamby, 19, whose body was found April 20 in an unused icebox in thedeaert. ''The Dating Game'' When • customer chooses • il1te for in1t1ll1tion of his c1rptlin9, he w1nl1 to be assured that the c1rpetin9 will b1 lnst1ll1d on schedule. Wt 1r1 1bl1 to provide f11t, 1flicl1nt ••rvict, duo to tho fact th1t w1 m1int1ln •II of our own crews. ALDEN'S .· If necH,.ry, bec1u•e of construction il1l1ys, w1 con 1djud tht scheduled d1t1 for our customen convenience, Aftor ad, carpeting con lie purch1 .. d many pl1cas, and th~ one thing we con provide thet others can't, I. the BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plactntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOU~S: M.11. thrv Thurs., 9 to S::IO -'''• 9 ,. 9 -Sit, 9'311 to 5 • • • ' ' Early Cr1ielal Sea Kings Picked In Irvine League ).os Alamitos wH supposed could wtll duplicate Jut to have c1ptured Jut 1U10J1'1 winter'&: effort, when It t1ed IrvloeLeaguobaakelball Fountain Valley for tbe Cl'OWll with &-Ill Rlclt QulnD and mlrron. cltcult'1 run.nerup apot and ad- Well, Qulon i.. back for hi> . v an e • d into ttie C!F AAA 1entor campaign, and -mJr. qllOrlerflnals before b e l n g rors notwithstanding -lhe ellmlnated. Grll!W II'< pioked by lhe I. Fowdala Valley. Coach DAILY PILOT to pau their U· Dave Brown's quintet II a tie Into lhe handa of Corona Ciel Mar's Sea Kings. young aquad which <OU!d ' In Wednesday nlghl openers pDISlbly find ltael! almost around lhe league, Los Al anywhere from first to •lnh visits Corona in an early place by the Ume the schedule crucial, Costa Mesa 11 at concluder. Edt..on. FOUJ1tain Valley treks The Barons chief hopell rely lo Estancia and Magnolia ID-.. des Santa Ana Valley. In the play of a trio of juntors In addition to Corona, lhe -Hll Scott Reider, M Sam ' moot aertou.s threall to lhe Sepulveda and &-1 C b r II clelendlng cbampion Grllllna Adama -and a pelr of tenlors are !ldt..on and Magnolla. -&-5 Bill Burns and 6-0 steve Here's how lhe DAILY Sullivan. PILOT sees It: I. Educla. If Mqnolla'a I. Corona d<I Mar. Coach h then It' Tandy GlllJs has a atar.,tud· strong suit is heig t, 1 ded crew which wllJ try to re-tJJe weakness of the Eagles, bound from a 7-7 loop mark of who are to be tutored by flrit.- • year ago . year mentor Dave Carlisle. Allbough leading • c o r e r Assumln& the top job from Mark Grigsby and injury-Gary Carr, Carlisle lnbertted a plagued Ooa Killian have &tarting lineup whose tallest graduated, there 's still plenty regular is 6-21A senior Jeff Of firepower in the presence Ford, a jlHlior v a r s I t y of 6-21!1 junior guard Casey graduate. Rustlers Tabbed ' For 3rd Tbe SOUtltem Callfornil> Conference buketball scram· blt last aeuon was 1 wide open alfalr ll!d It doesn't ap- pear any dUf.erent thi1 cam- paign. Golden West, LA Harbor, Rio Hondo, Loa Angeles City Oollege and Eut LA all have the talent to win the circuit crown. Rio Hondo and Harbor have the edge -prfmarlly be<ause of experience -with Rio Hon- do's Roadrunners given the nod to win it all by the DAILY PILOT. Desplle having """"' Injury problema1 Goblen West haa jelled Ill ..,..i weeks and ls considered ft dark horse to Here'• how ' the DAIL v PILOT taltl the SoCal race which beidns Wednesday: I. Rio 'Rondo -Coach Bob Bland has four starters back frorn last aeason's club in front·flnera Jerry Perllbo (&- Sl and Kurt Kraushaar ("5) and guards stan James (&-311) and Vince S-(1-211 I, Bell\ and lorward:Bm Welsh (1-5) are the Roadrunners' top Tutsd17, ~IW'7 4, 1972 DAILY r1LOT Jl Huntington Tabheq . To Bag Sunset .T:itle" Last year'• CO<hampk>ftl of lbt Sunaet Lea1u1 IH favored to balUe for the basketball crown agaln according to DAI· LY PILOT predlcUons. Coach Elmer combs' Hun- tJnalon Beach . Hl&h Oilers, beaten only once in December pl1y , are tUaht cho\cts to win Jt 1U whllt Mafi111 Is con- sidered the mosl serious threat to Hlllllln&toO In 1 four- te.am race. Othef atrong contenders for the championsh.lp l n c I u d • Westminster aoCI Western. It all pl5• under way Wtdneaday with M1rina 11 trek to Weslern the key clallh. It's at 7 o'clock u are all Sunaet Lea~ confrontaUons on Wedrieadly ·nl&ht.. Tbe othtt 11\DOI Include Loora et Newport Hari>or, Anaheim at HunUD&lon Beach and Santa Ana al Westminster. The hosll are solid favorites in the litter three issuee while the Marint- Westttn cruclal ls rated • tossup. •rere'1 how the DA.lLV PILOT sees the 1972 ract: 1. Hulllqloa Beaeb. Th< Oilers hav~ accumulated a IO- I non·league mari: and the ir fast breek appeared to bf' in mid-tti690n fOM'I\ at the ootset "1th AJl.ClF second t••m forward Sieve Brooks 18-3) and &-2 Jim Worth y dominating the front line, the Oile.r$ present a solid attack . Combs bu four players averaging in double figures. !. Marina. The Vikings 1p. Kat.ell• Favored Crestview Race --It's Wide Open peared to have th<> .1na..:L . track wllh freshman • S:.1 Loaner (S.5) giving them 1d4 dlllonal strength up rront. A pair of losses in the v~ tura Invitational bat apolJ«f.-J coach Jim stephens' quintet'~ Image somewhat, but thN" atlll remains an lmposlnf:l11 setup. J.O Coupltd with Losner Is s-1'•1 Dean Bogda.n, along wldt classy gu11.r<U Roger Speaki: rJ and All-Sunset League Bru~1' ., .. Miller. .· 3. We1tmlasttt. Coach OOrf' ,1 Leavey has a trio of thret.'· ~ year starters in the fold Ira Terry Melsenhein1er, Gordo~'-1'" Blakeley and Jay Johnson. ., The all-veteran starling riv11 ... is rounded out with senior-. G l•nn 14ntaff and J e f l . SlemenJ. . •. The former three wer; ·~ atarters on the Lions' chem· pionthlp quintet as sophomortS, along with D&tl Broderick and Steve McI..efl'i~t don, • ioi' .C. Western. The Pioneers: i rtalure All-Sunset L e a g u '9 .f, standoot Mike Dunn In theltr.,-! attack and the junior 6-5 pivot-' man figures to repeal the 1 r honors. ~1Jfl.< And, the Pioneers boMxt scores. ' After one get. past Katella t. VW1 Park. The Spartans. plenty or Lllenl to back DumJ Jones, 6-5 senior center Mike And It's a drastic drop from Sevier, 6-5 senior forward there to 6-1 Doug Corder, 6.Q John Sumner and &-2 junior Bud Confer, HO Scolt Innes tranller Matt Keot!gh, son of and u playmaker Cralg former Major League baseball un K ugh. ~ys. star Marty eo 1. Costa Mesa. Defense baa TOP CATCH-Mike Bullard, 14, of Newport Beach holds 271> pound ling cod he caught recently )lear Calalina Island. Bullard was fJBhing on the Channel Isle, out of Art's Landing. Rio Hondo (12-3) recently Hight'• KaJfhts as the de1plle heavy grad u a t I 0 n but Western's recent blstotr~ nabbed the El Camino and San Crestview Le1gue'1 favorite in Jostes, get the tab for sixth. has proven frustrauni nil Diego Mesa tournament. and the-1m bu.Jtttball race it's ~Gary Snyder'• crew Is Ploneer fans, who have aeeif'<' has won seven games in a this loop that presents the tough in ita own gym and have Western on li\e wrong end. of row. toughest list in Orange County Dick Arbeni (6-2) and Dan close verdlCts more olten tbu :1. LA Barbor -The In terms of pndlc:ttng. Oltrogee In the fold. z. Loa Alamllot. Although been a thorn In tho aides of Jut year's Irvine coach of the eoacl> Emil Neeme'a Muatangs year -QiMa M.,. -t· thus far and It could Ubly be Ezra Van Hom -has cut I do 1 ll h~ lot with Cyp...., College, their eventua . wn a . In the 7t>-'71 campaign. there's appsrenUy not much of Mesa led the league in scoring • letup with rookJe mentor but was at the bottom of the Wendell WHI al tbe reins. Landings Operate Seahawl<J bav• one of the Coach Tom Danley'• defen-?. Saa Clunenle. 0 T he "'t Newport Barbor. ,i;., circuit's · leading guardl lo . ding championJ are 10lld picks Tritons have the firepower to Sailors have a good ff'W'lt ltnev Eric Saulney (6-0) and two top to repeat with their wild rast finish much higher with Mike in BlU McKlMey and Jlnr ~1 rebounder• la Ken Bangs (6-7) break. Dowling. Danny Nau and Pat and Pat Boyer (6-7). Coach But after that the league Cornforth in the lineup. Swick, but whether thf!y havtr>'• d d b the manpower to repl.C.." Jim White's team has ·com-resembles a 100-yar as at Lack of experience ls the The aroremenlioned Quinn 1.1 heap ln poinls given up. Streak-shooting 6-1 forward 1t1ll around with his dazzling Jack Archer comprises much array of inside movea while of the Mesa scoring punch returning st.art.er Frill Miller On Limited Basis Plied a 9-S record to date. the CIF finals. biggest handicap for coach graduated stars John Kazmer and Taru Young ls qud. 1-- 1 s. Golden ~ett -Coach It begina Wednesd1y even-John Baker's quintet. tionable'. • 1rl)I Dick Stricklin has one of the lng with four 7 o'ck>ck en-I. Tuatin. Thia is another ~.,. •· f t tn F thlll t As usual, Newport flgures , , (&-ll combines with quick while 6-0 senior operatives Jon M---"-rlattl and S ~o t I Orange O>ast ar<e fish land· Glen Myers (5-9) ill a polenl ~ backcourt duo. Endsley have an enormo re-lngs are currently operating l: EdlJOa. If there's 1 bounding load to carry. on a limited buis with bottom sleeper ill lhe bwlch, ll could 1· Saala Ana Valley. Firsl· fishing for rock cod, cow cod, -·~•·.be coach Dave Mohl' year head coadl Roger ood and chili' J. ....., Jenaon, who came to the ling l"'l'I"'"' s~ Qi.!pilftert·1 ,.,_ ~•·• Fal<;o111 from Edgewood lflgh ting !lie btilk o1 the action. OlleS!JJI tome ....... , "'i.urn Co · •--G N •· • Art' 1'&1 llici:iag Jut tea~ iD West vi.If, U4ll a 11r1an-eorge ewcom~ a~ a ~~ ~~ ,luan ~ ~HJllP.l"ll for .!P.!l!!a ~ 55 passe~ers 'l:wT~lllO~·.: . With ~ Jim Keyes bavtng.,. on lio'1.oats c,aui!ht a tc:w of II) ~ n;:..:1'"1s':i taken hi> 25 points per gime 13 cow ood, Im rock cod and cllrecting a blazing IHI bmk, to Santa Ana College, It ap-two flng cod 9n Sunday. The Elli.son will have to get con-pears that tbere Ii no relief ill bigg,est fish -a 2711-poond llbUed board QOlllrOI out ol lta •igbl ling .cod taken by ll-year-0ld front line trio of M Rod mVINE LEAGUE D 0 p E Mike Builanl ol Newport smot, M Marl< H,armon and SHEET Beech. M Gary Ba1cl> llll IJ to annu I. Corooa de!Mar The cow cod aveM1ged eigbl ~ loop -:. Los "1amllb• -·""" 'th . .. Magmlla. One big l'<UOn 3. EdlJon to 10 !"""-. WI one gomg w!iy coaclJ, Gene Frohling'• 4, Magnolia to 25 and aoother to 18. Senlinels m rated In tho first 5. J'ountaln Vlllley Jim Shafer, skipper of lhe dlviJlon II btlght. 8. Estancla n.mde<blrd out ol Davey's Will> lhe atarlioi five going 7. Costa Mesa Loclrtt likewise rf!'C'ls good M, 6-(, M, 11-4,. 6-1, Magnolia a. Santa Ana V}ll•y li!hini~ 00 the w<ek<nd et Citrus Favored In Mission Race 'The Mlsslon Cori......., Leny Mann (&-2). basutball race rigures to be 1 z. lllvenlde -Coach Bill tbfee..team scramble w 1 t b Mulllg1n11 club bis been 1'W1'" Clirm, Rlvenide and G""" Ding bot and cold .and bave molll Involved In lhe scram-also played some aolld teams ble. In the pre-conference Ci1<Dlt acUvlty gets un-schedule. The Tigers (&-9) are dorway Wednesday with Sad· led by center Joe Colt (M). dleback at Chaffey, Gross-3. Gro11mo8$ -The Griffins mont at southwestern, San could eaally win It· all. They've Bernardino at Palcmar and lool<ed oul5taDdin8 ot times Citrus at Riverside. and very bad In other outings. . Saddlebeck just doer not Consistency lJ the key for llave the firing power to stay Grossmont. 'fi1h the top Mtssion con-Bill Belander, (6-2), a se--.rs, bot the Gauchol (J. cond team all-drcult choice U) ahoukl improve aa lhe IP.rt .....,n, lJ the bast ol lbe .ta.,n. gets older. Griffins. The DAILY PILOT tabs 4. Cbalfey -The Panthers CllrUI to win It all. \ of coach Barney Newlee II'< Hore•s hoW I I ' I ban-the belt ol lhe all<><ano. dioal\Ped t Darcey Balley, a &-5 lront- L atna -The OWis (M) lloer, ts one of the leading of ooach Nell Ech•arda have playera tn the circull But lhe played a much to u g b • r Chaffey talent slides downhill lclledul• than· most of lhe a11er t1ta1. other Mlaalon clubs and• thla I. Sa• Benardlno -Coacb ahould help them. Cllt\11 doel Ray Blake's past two clubs .not have a great deal Of have won championsblpa, but height, bul Eclwards baa some · 1972 does not figure to be a U· aood ahoolers tn 111aid Pit tie year !or the Indiana .-flenneU (H) and lontard allhough San Berdoo always ...,.,. to tum on Jllll u the Oilers Off er Seat Ducats The HunU,.ion Beoodt llllh Oiler1 Booot<n Club tJ of. tertna an 1nier..ttng rewv..i IOltlD( ticket 1rranaemeot for lhe upeomlna SUnaet League boml games of the Oilers' varsity basketball tum. !Werved Mjlt d!tcata aro available for all vorslly borne eonlelta on a fl2 per peraon besta with Ute pUrChall price lncludlng a I I prtllmlDllJ junior varsity gall!OI. fnlm!llOlf partiOI ahoUld ..... tact either Mn. Michael HOP' ~ II -or Mn. Tom °'11* • (JU) .i1-4ID. clrcuit compalsp aets under way. I. Saddleback - T h e Gauchoo of coach Leroy stevena do not fipre to go much higher than the No. i IQ)OL 'l'bO lack ol a superstar bu b&ltl Slddleback -llQll the fact that Ibo~ .... Dot hll con111ttntl1.:. :. 7. Paiol!lar -lhe Comets loll two all..U.Ult players to gndualloa (Marty Bo)on!Uea and Gone a.atrm) and have been unable to fill lhe gaps. Sophomores GI'<( Price 6-0) and John Duffy (Ml are the beat cl COICb Andy Gllmour'a oquad. L~-The Apachea <OUld finlall u hllll u !Jltb, but don' bot oo TL Cooch Georp . Mllko'• club , .. -·1 '6een able to pa II topther, u yot. I, the lf-mile bank. Surface fishing is at a standstill but the cod are bitting well on i,oth lhe hall day boar. and the all-day outings. San Clem<!llle Island reports good ruhiog on the rock cod apecla1 that leaves daily at 7. "We have light loads and have been getting some real niee · roclt cod," a spokesman for the landing reports. The McCulta~ brothers at Hunt\ngton B e a c h are limiting their fishing to Satur- day and Sunday but report ]imll5 ol fish. . "We have been catching a few cow cod, some sole and aome chili peppers with the biggest fish Sunday a 12-J>Ound cow cod," Bob McCullah reports . All four landings look for an Increase in fishing during 1m. 0 I'll tell you. It has to be a better year. lt can't get any worse/' one operator says. "lt'• too tarb to tell aboUt 1972 but It should be better," says another. "We •re Jooklng ror a good year. GmeraJly you11 find that 1 good' one follows 1 bad top shooters in the conference coun~rs ea ur g oo a team capable of doing much ll in Jim Anderson (&-5). If Mission Viejo, San Clemente better, but the experience fac· make Individual game_s cl~o. one and 1971 was a bad year. The size limit didn't help us on our fish count," a third operator adds. center Jell St. Clair (6-5) and at El Modena, OraD1e at tor place! the Tillers last. Already there are four I~~ ~--1· d Vlll P k t 1n the Sail03!1' 3-6 r ' .. forward Jack kelch (a-4) con-~IQ in an a •r ' Coach George Trotter'• five ~ tizlue to tmpro~. the Rustlers Katella. lists seven juniors on the dtcldtd by two polnt! or le~~;iJ., "We are looking for 1972 to pick up. The bait a n d everything points to a banner year. ~t· "' still had ail9,ut the best basa fjshlng aloq the entire coast last year," the olher landing reports. could win it all. Here'1 how the DAil..Y squad. C. Santa A.nli.' The Sall\C' Golden West has won 10 of PILOT aees it: have a good shot at flnlshl'll .. ; 17 games tbUJ far. 1. KateDL Danley bu three CRESTVIEW LEAGUE DOPE as high as fourth. Height ll,1 ... 4. LACC _ The Cubs are starten l.n the told with 1-1 SHEET 1vallable in 6-7 Bill Pattee . .,,., nd th' guard Mark Slelnmeyer, 1-2 I. Katella. A measuring 1Uck II alm!llt- always a contender 8 is forwatd Stan Whieldon and 6-3 2. Mission Viejo. unavaJlablt on tbe 1Slln'-.l'1 year )I no exce~19~. ndForw~~, ,fo<war;d Jeff Hutton. 3. Oranse. howevtt; a1 lhe1...,played ""'°' Paul Caldwell ("3) a I"~ It'• lhe tou&h press that 4. El Modena. non-county teams alter d'-· Gr.g Allen (6-1) pace ~ Katella features, however, 5. Foothill. tng of TuaUD and Saddltback Art's Landing lJ operating five days a week. On Monday and Friday, a boat goes to Catalina Island and leaves et 5,30, Wednesday, Saturday and Sunday, It's lhe fl.fathom bank or San Clemente Island with departure at midnight. Call 67$-0550 for reservations. Bill Thayer's team. LACC that la lhe Knights' major 8. Villa Park. early. • i'' caotured nine of 11 garnet. forte. 7. San Clemente. 7. Lura. The Saxons U'I ,~· 5. East LA -The Huskies :. Mluloa Viejo. T h e 1. Tustin. up.and-down quintet allj! ha have been running hot and Dlablos barely edged out shown 1 promise deaplte a cold of late and that will pro-Orange and El 14odena for !he record. "'di bably hurt them in the rugged nmnerup slot 1o x.i.111 1n the La Habra Lack ol lleJchl,11 coach )' SoCal circuit. Coach Bud voting, matnly be<aUH of Na~und bu lwo good ones ill their Jut outing -a losln& el· ~·~ U:jo&.:,.obl~U,ew ot forward Ken Gray (U) and fort. Davey's Locker sends an.all~ day boat out every day oot Monday with lhe hall-day boat fishing seven days a week. The phoae nuinber f o r reservations Is 496-5795. guard Ken Tyler (&-1). East Coach Pat Roberti' crew Rated No. I r~ae.luMtm. The C.lonls\l, LA is 1().5 thus far. showed Jta polet!Ual In an are tbe only wtnleu a· t. Cypress -New coach overtime Jon to Servile, btsketball team in the coo .~" Eu. Van Hom •-one of lhe perhaps the be.st in the n-u ...._ ... h.i. -1 ~ ~ An _,,,_ t -·--"'"""~ ....,.,,tl._,,.y un-and-they'll probably Main ·fl be .. _ -around, but he juJ s~ --. .,. .. ~· ..... " Th DI bl • tta • f t defeetod -p quintet i1 La the record. '" ·• hasn't got the talent to win e 1 os 1 C11. ea ures ..... ,'11. this season. 11le Chargers (4-only one senior In the top eight Habra and coach Tu Wallis' 8UNS£1' LEAGUE D 0 P<'Bli! ced b ,_ Fl' players 1nd 1-1 Gil Nonnandle Highlanders have been ac-cu•-·::••• 8) are pa y cenKr 1p iJ the central fl1r11.... rd he ~~· Darnell (•101 ·-" co ed t top spot in 19'12'• I. Huntln"'•o Beach ···~ ~ · He'• averaging IU polnll Jnllial "-'! f th ffid I •-., ' L• Soalbw~ The ~ ng 0 e 0 a 2. "-~na ojl · ~ ••• -per g1111e. O Co t T 10 II -· Huntington Beach sends its boat out Saturday and Sunday only at 8 and return!! at ap- proximately 3. Reservations may be made at ~9712. Coo I nnl range un Y op po · •. Weetml••'-r ·" gars are aga D ru ng, The only aM'l11rent problem La H b • tall u eel • •~K but the j ~ d •th th ,._ a ra•. ve, pac J . w~ern ' .. -1 Y Ua• on ave e Is the lick of the bll mao ror b 7 •jun! st "'•·-" .. ir , .::111• ... ru tal t eaperl to _.ft y .. or eve-er,..... •. New ...... H-~r ·+ •i en or ence ... y tebounding. ..1 ... Bob Manker ..... Santa v A'¥I • IU"uu with the real of the pack.• When your to~ rebounder ae.,.. · "'~ I. Santa Arili ,..,, Clara tranaftt guard Paul f. (Normandle wt 15 p e r Hill, edged Olli Huntington 7. Loara ~ .. Gillis is Cringing Despite 64-4 7 Win .!:d Or~~ent'l'he Panlhersth No. l ~Uon. 11me) 11 &-I you're small. Beach High'• OUers for lhei;~81.1Ana~betm~5~~~ij ~• U•= alu WI I ..., OiJ • I to.. In 11 front lloe thai l!le-.S U, II; ~e "'":11 00Jli; dcllblt 5 and M aloni with &-1 overtime setback to Lona Reuben Melick, •reserve. Beach Wilson. Included In that front line 11 Irvine League fa v o r I t e By PHIL ROSS Of t1tt Dtb l'llet Sl•ff Brad McPherson, • M junior Corona del Mar (S.1) Is third, letterman. • ' ...... •"-d of I d-three or four minutes of· the Deaplte the{r size,. t h 1 a ftPM;m ~ oop a battle as the Corona ad-Panthers do much of their vuury Loi Alamitos. Please excuse Corona del vantage teetered between two a.hooting from oulllde. ORANGE COUNTY TOP tt Mar High basketball coach and nine poln15 up to that c. El Modena. L a rr y Pl... Teom PolJta Tandy Gillis if he cringes a lit-juncture. Johnson and Tim Tivenan art J, W Habra (10-0) S9 tie when thinking about However, &-211 junior guard the leading playera in the 2. Huntington Beach (IJ>.I) S7 Wedneaday night's Important Casey Jonea Ill the fl•• under Vanguarda' attack. Both are S. Co<ona del !far (,.1) SO Irvine League hoop opener the Coronans In those last few conalllently In double figurer. 4. Loo Alamitos (M) 21 against 'tough Los Alamitos on momenr.. I. Foolblll. Coach Hank S. Servile (114) 24 the Corona court. With the Sea Kings nn top by Hummel's Knights could be 8. Kalella (11-Z) 21 Because, even though Gillis 52-0 and 3:59 to go in the Katelll'a biggeat ~roblem, wllh 7. Marina (5-C) IS wal<bed his Sea Kings po<t fourth quarter, they ran oU their combination of good 8. Westmlnaler (74) I their 11th victory In 12 atarll tlgbt rtralgbt potnta and, height tn the forward wall 9. W•stem (7·S) 1 In the 19'11-72 campaign Mon-Pr<SIC>changeo, were th• along wllh guard Rob Tuvell. 10. Mlaalon Viejo ("3) I day night against tnvadtng posaeaaora ol a much laler 5a. Included In their &-3 l'<COrd Othert: Troy ($-1) 4, Edison Long Beach Jordan'• Pan-46 edge. are wins over Sunny Hills and (?-5) and El Dorado (74) Z thers, that's not the entire c ... ,.. Mir ,.,, ,;;;T;;ro;;y;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ea;;cb;;,;;G;;;anl;;;;;e;;;n;;G;;ro;;v;;e;;(M;;;;;l;;t""il ••-ry .. " ,, .. W • ""7lnfr " I I It In spite of the !act the Se.a 1(_.,. , ' , 11 Kings walked ofr with a Q-(7 = : ; ~ ,; trjumph, GUils was heard '"-'" • • 1 o ~-a/ ds " Grlflbl' I It I 2 mutte(u1B terwar • we WMor'!Ot\ , 1 1 • played terrible defe~ '' ~cllet 1 t • ' (1rl'°" 1 I t f While UW! score doesn't II· T•• 'f II It '2 actly indicate a s u b -p a r 1.• JorWn kfln w ~t "-" defensive showing for Corona.1_..:"'c:....,.:;;•:..::.,:.c""='.c'c.'-";....;."-"'''.;";_ll the wlnnen were nevertheleu1~ on shaky ground ID the Jordan clash. The Su Ki"'8 led lhrougbout, wll\> lhe eiceplloo of a pair of lead e1cl!angea In the early minutes. But they wera never llnnly la eoromand until the Jut Soncy stand-by Hctetary to MF\' Y" DAVE ROSS P9NTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ... DAVE ROSS PONTIAC IAM HAUOI Aft.• "''I DllQ COSTA llnA Ph. 546-8017 .... f Oli'rl A W111t •1• U , TII 1'"9 ,.._ IVllOAY1 11 AM. TO' l'JA. .... --,. ........ -~ --_..,.,_ M7·• ---.-. .. ,.. a ·-"'' • • ~ ' ..... • ,.1 •• ' 18 DAILY P!LOT SC Tlifldu, J.lnUMJ 4, 1~72 • . ' ' t f 1 ' f I. l :I, 5'.0 Due March I, 2015 " Offered at 98){ $5,000 Denomination• Aa, rated b·y Moody's AAA rated by Standard I! Poor'a SecuHty: The bonda are gen.rel obll1ation1 of the State of California, payable in accordance with the CaliJornia Water Resources D•velopment Bond Act out of the General Fund of the State. The full faith and credit o( the State of California are pledged for the punctual payment of both principal and intereat. Callable: The bon<U are callable from a.ny aourot of funds beginning March 1. 1983 at t02 ii and declining to par on March I, 2003. Tax Statu1: The coupon income i. £ree from all pret1ent Federal and State of California income taxea. For further lnCormation: Call your local Dean Witter & Co. branch office or mail tbe attached coupon to: --------------~-~-----~---DEAN WITTER ac CD. INCORPORATZD 550 Newport Center Dr. e Newport Beach, CA 92660 Attn: Brenton R. Ogden 298 Broadway • Laguna Beach, CA 926S2 Attn : A. William McCready. Jr. I am interested in the 6.093 ta1:-free current return. 0 Please mail me your offering circular on the above otfer.ing at no obligation to me. C Please mail ine your circular entitled: California: The "Variety Store" of the M unicipai Morltet. 0 Pleue mait me your booklet entitled : Ta:r.· exempt Bonda and tM [nuutor. Nam"'-~--------------~ { , Addm"'------------- 1 Ci'Y•--------------r----------------------------' .-- ' " • . ·' .. . .. • • l ! . • ' ' .. ". ' ' • ' .. . - Don't settle for less. Don't settle for anything less lhan the best interest rale on 90-day Thrift certificates. Invest a minimum of $1,000.00 in our 90-dayihrift certificate•. and you'll earn a solid 6% per annum. And Avco Thrift pays it. A•oo·a Thrift Dl•ilk>n his been In oper1tlon 1lnoe 1921. •nd htl n•v.r ftll8d lo PIY funds on dem.nd. Avoo Thrift 11 • dlwlslon ol Avco Corpotallon-1 ludtir In m1ny fl .. dt In addition to ftn1m::l1I servlc"-Aero1paCit, 8ro1dc11llng, ManpQwer O.velopment. Scfence, Medicine tnd SPK• Research. Avco II more than 55,000 J*>ple Who ire twlp- lng lo bulkl a bttl•r IOfJ'Ol'toW-fot )'OU. AVCO. NEWPORT BEACH 620 Newport Center Drjve • 833~3440 . .. . • ... * : ·' '' 1,0 · 1) AVCO 1HRllT OJ '!Cl I 1~ LA: l<ORNIA , . 'i«~ilt lOUi'JfAPfll9f'I" • ' • ," Steel Firm • • • • • • ' • ' i \ i • • • i , ... -· . .. I • -.. I'uesday's Closing Pri~mplete New .'York . Stock Exchdnge List =-..... a.= • . . -... _,.,. ... _____________________ at , l';"' l!H ·=~ ·stock~ Tuni Up, ft ~t.;;: -'-" . . -Show Small Gain ~. • .NEW YORK (UPO -The stoc:k market, pres· .. ~ • 111{14 by profit ~ Uuoo1b middo,y, turned high· i ~ er later todiy to fbij,jll 'Wfth a small 1aln. TUrnover f wu moderately acti¥•· . · + The profit taklri( dried lip at about lhe time "!)Vefal maior banks allDOunced a aew round of HduCtlons in thelr prime or cumont lending rstes . Bankers Trust Co. kicked off Tuesday's action by trimming Ito "current lellcllng rate" to five pen:ent from 514 percent. The wt lime th• prime rate, that charged most credltwortby customers. stoosl at five percent was early 1966. " 1 , v , • 11 • • -· ~a 1 ,1 r _, l ' .. +· rr :.:~ • IWl.Y Pll.01' •• \ JI ·Finance Briefs ll'IN Bl£FS • • • • Cllt'tl'-e Vtdt • • • CWC-'GO-Pro~ r tly dlvlsloa of Lill® ~ii. Inc., Tbunday announced ~a ..,. mobllt e1rdlac dll(nolde una tor ln·boopltel ..... n comblnM an X·R.a.)' tube, 'a television monllqr and a 11uoi-an 1o bo broual>t to the bo&ide of llMl'ltn<Y patienls. •Air c.,... QilC-'GO -Brlnt'1, !Jx., lw obte.lnOll • OlllllnlCt trcm Air Cargo, Inc, wlllch 'la ~ntly owoed by It •lrllntt, I• u1 ...... o1 .. ~ n!Ut to ud mm Uports JR 11 c1u... . \ • • c ... ,.ur SAN FRANCISCO llcl Corp. hu arranaed • '3 mill.loll un. of mdll -,. banb for !Ina..,.. ._Of computer~ eqldp. .......... ··~ lklll -... ,, ••••• Mllilllo7. 1111 inllt 1'11111 ... the 1W1 at Ill pe«<tac-polol ,,.. tl>e prime ... ) ' ., • 20 OAILY PILOT T.....toy, .i.n..,, 4, 1972 GM Cites Egypt's Route Remains 'Up in Air' LE0.u. NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE !,_ fl 1tnf ,ICTITIOUS •Ulllll•tS '1a11eous •usu1•u HAM« i1A1uaNT J C NAMI tTAT8MllfT Tiw followlo>e --I• .. ,.. .,.._ '"" mport ar Tilit fool-IN Plf"tM 11 ..... M ll'lttl •1: I l l ••= NATIOH.t.t. . .sEW1NG Cf.HTE• °" He••TACil! l'UILisH1No co~ 111 w. By GERARD LOUGHRAN Sadat carried by the atml· Oll!l"fl ltOCK WATElt CO~ .1, H. COITA M.E$A, 1150 S\1114' 11, H1rtiw Ca.ii HWll Ntw-1 .. acll. C1IH. I •• ffl ·11 Ah CA C•llhll""ll C.-..M!.-11, 11• N. Sallft c .. 1, Mfilt, c.111. ,._ t111, M l-11 btlfll ~tel W M ul<nded Ibo deodllne .. 1 for the end or. um. Prt1ldtnt NlmD '1 viii! to Ill..,,,. analysta oald . . ' • I ._.. ,,., ,,...., ~ c111w"1•. ll'td., cot11 -.... c11u. ~ ·~ t. 1vr...,, 11, w. c~•' HW'I' Co , • BElR\fI' (UPI) -It oou o Cl r a m new1paper ... ,, , ..... Artttl111 ''"' ...... ,,,, Int. MM"'°"'.," WttMt. tJIDt ....... &fl'!. N...._, ... di. Ct lll mpetition RI Ir Egypt's .. year of were equally equlvoct.l. t ,:.,, ...,.,, A-. c111Mn1.. Tiii• bl>•·-h bllM cWuctN "' ... 1...,,1v10v11 decla:kl,n" wasn't a ytar of "The conclualve decl!lon I T1111 "'"""' l• btl"if <OllllYctH "' • in1111v1c1r.ia1. itkll•r• L ,,.,... declalon af'•r all. (mean••• t•-year of d·-•·1onr c.r-.t• MGll~wy Wtleet 11111 t11lemMI !!IN wltll !tit C-IY DETROIT <AP ) A "°" "'6 ue: l;\;llJ But they wm unwilliDI to rule out tbl cbance ol. nt:w fighting. Al an1 ral<, Egypt Jiu oald 11""'1, 1"9w Thi• '11lfl'l'lfnl fU.o wllf'I 1111 CO..f'lly Cl•fl• at°""" .. Co.iMy -~ OK. x, ltJl General Motors spokesman Prttldenl Anwar Sad.at of IJ being carried out, but the f•ttllMrl• c""'.., Or•-t1iu111' .... Otc ,., 1 • 11 '' •n-tttv J. MliCldcl.I ~1' '""'"'' th •-ttle o111•·ratlon la Jong and :thl• ,,,,_, 111• w111 tt1e c""""' •r 11-• J, ~ o-.1v cw111v c1t1t says the new ecooomlc agree-Egypt apent much of e 1971 u.. ui:: ;.."1.!t:T ~=. °"o::; 1~~::~ Ofll. -• 1.... l"!ltlll..,.., O••"" com 011" ·~= ~t which lncludea devalu•~ 11ylng that wu the year io hard," he sald. ~CM"'-~ O•-Gatti 0111v l'Llal. J'""'" •· 11. 1L 1:St 1t11 U»--11 tion of the dollar and the which the Israel-Arab cri.sll "It does not , however, mean lluell9'Mf Ortl!H Catll D.tlV 11'1~, J.,..,., 4 11, II. tJ, 1'71 3-(U .. n '---~t . .....a b l o.--w 14 11. n. 1•11 •M Jenu•ry •. LEGAL NOTICE elimlnatlon of the import mll.'lt ue: rmut,i;u Y pe$Ce or the dl.scontlnuatlon of political ttn uoo-11 LEGAL NOTICE 8urch1rge "wlli make our cars w1r. action because U we do this, LEGAL OTICE Nt. A-111SI NOTtCI Oft tJrntllTIOM TO INOAOI more competitive in price and I N NoTrc• ,0 <•••••••• 1N THI SALi ol' AL.COffOL)( ho Id •• 1 1 d , we would paralyze some o -"-----------1 llVllAOIS ti u UC: p 8 OW own lffi· ' Ou l nd us! su1"111101 cou1T o,. "'"' DKtmW :io, itn rt.s our energies. r s a m PICT1n:~"':,.,Nlll ITATI' 0• CALll'"OINIA ftOlll Tow~ II Mir CO<IClrll; po . be 'no war slogans' but taking THI! COUNTY Oft OIANOI $11bltcl I• l1111anct Of ltir ~''"'' •P• "Jt won't help t x I) 0 rt 8 of n. ~AM,,•-tTAT~~::!. b\lllf'lt E1lel1 of OLGA FAHHEMEL, 0.UI .. plleO lor, nalk.e II ntrtt>Y alw•n lllel ttw '-·-a«•• Of VOfl.O"• Jo'ce••o·ng the course of wat .. •. '' 1c1. . unc1ert1•ned l>f"DPGHt 1o ..ti 11cono11, ~ ""'"" \Q ,... J'be ti'o and seeking a Egypt is seeking rtsumptlon oJ the paact mlulon of \J.N. mediator 0Wlll6r V. Jarrine alined al aecur~ an anawu from Israel to the memorandum or Feb. a. Falling suceess here, Cal.ro Is expected to lak• the wue back to the Security Council. U there ii to be fJihtllli, It may well coincide w t t h au~·Hes1 .. 11NAOEMEHT-Hat>« 11 hl'f"rby •1-10 u1c1i1or, of btvl•1•fl 11 11W Pl"Mf'llM,, MW'•bld •' coats. gasoline prices and 1 ra n '"' .... IN· ""' •ocvi 111m1c1 11tcto11tn• 11111 •11 PDlklwt· h Finally, he tokt lroon<t at the victory for which then Ls no "!TITUJl. 21 .. 1 11..-11ur11 •1dl. ,..., "'-. r.1w1,.. cte1rr11 •111 ... 1 it>e wld 11w12 w. lttt. si , c.1, "'"'" ve !cit size. which make ,... h C 1 H~ht•left a..c:11. dKedt"I .,. rMultld lo the "'""'" wtltl Purw•"' la lu<ll j"'"'"'•OI', ltif un-locally built cars attractive in Suez Canal ht bad cho&en war. alternative." w 0 ares Jllflf'I Cllttlel C•Utt\. , I.' I ll>e ntCt'l$afY \IOUCl'le•I, i .. '"' offkt " _11,...., 11 IPPIYI"" lo '"' De11111rnent But then equ'vocato'on crept M t lit' I I y s t ' 9feakl\lir1t, •1111. l·U. Hun1h11ton ll'le Cll'f"l< a1 11>e 1bov1 1m111111 court, ., ar Alconcllc ll•v••-con1,01 t0t lu u•11e1 those foreign markets," the 1 os po 1ca an a No other ~paper In the ~~~~!:'"~~ti...._ Of'ldu<ltd 11, '" 10 .,,."'';! ,::;""..., w11,' ,.'"' :'::".',',.,"' c4 '" •t-k ri.ver•M uc"'" tor '"'"' s pokesman said Sunday. in. concluded that Egypt planned \vorld cares about your com· ~ .. c vG\ICl'Mri u ''111"., •r prtmltH ,, 1ouaw1 Egy t . d · 1· It f munlty like your community tf'ldtvkluel. of WPM•d. Snf'Pllt•d " Dufl!M1. tjl so. ~ SALE GfHEitAL c•an• F1<11 "Just how much it will help p ian newf' me I a to con inue pursu o a This :t:::~111~1td wur. ,,... CG\/"'' i:n:. .. ~1·;:·11 5~;c!,1~; ~,: ;;::"!; PuD11cL E•ll~"t:.:~ the American automobile in· explained that a decision for peaceful settlement, which ~Y0:U.ey'::fibr.don. It's Clerk ot Orlltff" County "" OK u, 1•11 11u11 ... ,, ar 1F11u.-ri1lfftt'd 1" •II m111tr1 Publl1N<1-or,.,.. Cot•t D•nw ,.1101• dus lry will be influenced by war did not nectssarlly mean 1 ~m~e~a~n~t~i~t~h~a~d'..,'.'e~f'...'..f~e·~c:_ol~l-•:.'.e~l'.!:y..!.:============== bY •tv•r"" J. MeclekNr °""''' COii"" Pt'fltlfll"' ta the ttt1ie al ••kl 11ec-..1, Jinui rw ., itn J.n '--there w o u Id ' he war Clttk. wut,1n '°"' mortth1 ''"' 1111 11r11 1>110Jlt•·1c:::.:.:.cc..:c..:c..:_ _______ ...:._ 1 lue future relationship of the l"ubll1hecl o •• .,.. Catst 0111y Piiot. ''°" oi 11111 none•. other currencies to the immediately. Dtcttnbt• u. 11, JI, 1rn •M J1N11rr '· o"" 0tctmtie• t, 1t11 LEGAL NOTICE 1tn lm-n M"'L1HOE CLAitA 111.1tNuM.. 1---;;;c;m;o;~;;;;;;;;;;;:----ll-d~o~l~la~r~,~"~h~e~s~a~id~.:_ ____ J And diplomats let it be E•ecvt•I• of .... W•U al llkl .. ICTl1"1DUS IUSINESS known that Egypt was still LEGAL NOT!CE deceOent NAM• ITAT•MtNT LEGAL NOTICE ;~• c7:!~!:!.,~. ~~ It does ...-i to htve lell Israel out of lta calailitlons. : 24 "fOU TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE S1r•l"'t -Co/0111 d11 M•r, Cotti M111, N1wport l11t.lt, end Senft ARt 1r11i, OU.N151 COUNn l.ADIOTILIPHONI SllYICI. INC. 835-3305 •--------------I sh .. lttnl, ........ .,.. 'DllM•• lilt 1a11ow1,.. "'"o'" 1r1 "'"'l--------------·I interested in pursuing a tSI "· SHlllW ttNet, st.. 11• 1111tlt1t» ti: •uo•oc "°''' 1·1· I It! h 'J th .... .... LIS AllHIM,, C1/ll«nl1 •u s & It LEASING COMl"ANY 1'11 .. E: " 50' riv•• boll po J JCa se ement w I e e l'"ICTITI04.ll IUllNlll AltWMYI W IJ1IA1flll Swi" Ori-• COltt Mtle Cllll0tnlt 5!arld bv Ct .. Mlcll1ll, l".D. llOll 72U, chances Of one existed. Nl\Ml ITAqM1Nf ""...,."' m.,. ' . N-POrl INCll. Cl. wUI Ill tlldl~ .... ._~Ill followl!'lll --.on. Ml clo!f'll ~ullU"*:f Dflllfll Cotll Dilly PllO!, Alchtrd H. Molw11v, 1911 1Wtll Drlvr, Mandiy, Jlf'llllr'I" IOth tt l :M t.m . .ti Jot'f Bewildered Arabs Said they r-so"",,"!'.,,., co., mn w'''''" °",,_.,..r 1~. 21, 21. 1•11 encl J ... u,•.z,.,', Cotl•,.,,.. C•llla•n11 ,,,,. 1"1t«tt111 AY• .• co.11 M111, C•. tor hoped that an· un· portant ..., " " n Ptul G. '1ttlldcll, 1111' lract AYI,, O'lltrdllt 11111"111 f-lallllnt 11JJ.1~ lllYI l\Vlf'llll, Unit 11, Mtfll.,,,, C1H,.tn!1 P•rimo1H1!, Ctllflll""I• tom f:Oih lt1C:11rrld lllroueti 11111 ltl•. Thi tlle· 1. · C · J l Tuesd °"''" L waoc1. an lr•ltlld or1~. LEGAL NOTICE Tiii• 111111""1 11 ttel"• canduc:tld bY • ''°" ta 111 111kl Yridtr Commtrc111 Cade mee mg 1n a1ro as ay HOW WILL THE GENERAL PUBLIC KNOW l'HAT FUNERAL HOMES ARE ADHERING TO THE NEW LAW, SENATE BILL 12687 HYafltWfon teldl, (:1111. '---------------I "•''"'rihlP. Na. 1210 •1111 Wt•fhouHmtn'• civu Cad• of the Egyptian parliament Ntlllt I . WOOCI, 6lt2 lr1ll11'1d Orl\<1, r ltldlud H. $h!vtly Se.:t!Ofl ?Oii ti Ne. the HuMlriiiton lNd!. C.111 S\ll"EllCll CCIUIT 0' TH• Ptul G. R1rio111 l"ublllllld Or1t11N Caett Dilly l"llat and the leadership of Arab P '~::..,.'::t.!.,,." 11 ... ,... clftduc11d ~ • •::~·c~~HCf'YL'&:"o':.':N~°e" Thlt ""''"""1 111111 .. n~ 1t11 cou11fY J • ....,.,.,. ~. itn •-12 Socialist.Union-Egypt's only " "i' • iJO.. "" L Wood. "' An11c C1••• ot Dr•"" Co.iiHv <II"! o.c. political party -would finally t 191,._:1• 8 w...., o•oE• TO iHow CAUSE ,0 " :io, ttn. •v ••Ytrlv J. MWdok, DePVtv LEGAL NOTICE Tiii• Utfttt11nt flied wtth 1111 caunry CHANG• o• HAME Ca11"" C~k. produce a clarification of just e....._., °"*"'' county «1· o.c. 11, ""· '" 1n. Mlti.r al 1111 ANUullon ot 1t lc~ "'sou "ICT1T1ous eus1N1s1 what Sadat's intentions were. IY • ..,.,.,., .I. Meddoll, DIJ!uty Cou"ty 01le SttWlf'lt 1M Otllwlfl llf\ltfb For Pvbll!Md Orl"9e COlost 01Jty Piie!, NAMI STATEMENT Cll'f"k. Cllt"" el Ntml. JUIUlfY ~. U, II, ZS. lt72 l'71·1i Thf followlf>ll Pr•ION t•t dol"' They were disappointed. DAVID s. TINOL••· Tile •PPllUllon •' •lcll Olli SMW!lt 1111'1"'1" "" In a tortuous semanto'c ATTOIN•Y AT LAW ll'ld °""'""' 511wt"' IW Cl'll"te al neme, LEGAL NOTICE TAXMAH LTD., 1131 1. OPll Clrcle, l ,.. N.....-t c.,.1 ... 1>rfw, s.111 m h•wl"" Dtt" 111ec1 1" cour1, 1nc1 11 •1>-l---------------1 MY"'1"'1on ••Kl'I, <•111· exercise, the Egyptian leaders ,...._. ..a;, Cellfer ... ,,... pnrln• from tl ld -..11c.tn011 lflll ri,.y ,ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS C1rmtfl II'. GUiio. lttO D1le SI.. lef( the l.SSUe as CIOUdy T ........... ~ lllwt 1111<1 Ill IPPlluri.t. -In• lf'ltl HAM• JTAT•M•NT f"ouflll lf'I V1ll1v, c1111. • f'l4UI lt!tlr ,,..,,, be ch•"'ld to Rid!. 0.11 I(.,.. T~, 1a11ow1n1 Pl•MJM ••• 0oi11t Robttt O. Ov1111, iMn A1nter, Hy11-ever. 1"1191llhld or.._ C-1 DlllW l'llo1, rrn lrld Deborlh 1(1rr.n. bllilf'llU ••: ll~lm 81ectt, Ctlll. t Dk'tmllotr II. n. 1'71 eflCl J~ I, 11 , HCllll'. 11Wrtlar1. II ,, llttfby fll"lltrld 1"41 WILl.IAMS Al l.IMS, sys T EM', JMIH It. Sltltr. 1111 A DP.II Clrclt , The battle with Israel is '"" • • · »4.S-n 1'1~114. ttiet •II "'$On' 111,.r1111c1 1., o • ..,.. CG11ntv oi..111a11, :t.t111 MoMuera HY"'1"''"" ••ecll, ciiu. inevitable, they said, bu! .;:..c_.;._ ___ ;_ ____ ~:.::.:.:j!Y~~ld tl'lltl•r .. -· ...,,, 1111 COi.Wi 1.. L"·· Mlu!.-1 Vlt lo. rn1s. Tlll1 bu1lt1tu 11 1111111 (GriduCIH by • LEG •• N ,... -vrmlf'lf J "" '""' 21111 111v of Jin, 0ori1111 "· Pet..,.IG!l. 2 .... 1 ~ro Gtt11r•I P•rtlMl!'thlp. efforts at political settlement 11--M OTl"n 1•72, 11 t :)I) G'clotll AM., ot ttld d1y le Lt1., Minion VIiia C1I. ,2,1!. Cirmen F. Gullo must continue. ---------------1"'-CtllW WllY II/di •Hllcl llan far Devld 1.. Clirke, 1 .... 1 MGl'IUlrG L,,., ltoblrf 0. Dute" IAti MM °''"" of 111tM1 1hou1c1 t101 111 '''"''°· Mluloit v11ta. c 1111. m1s. Jim0t 111• S111•• Egypt must seek IU•UIO• COU•T 0,. TMI If i1 !Yrlhff ord•rtd 11\11 • tGPY al lhl1 Thl1 bullMli 11 bel"' cllflduc:led 0y 1 Tllli ll•l!ffll"I fltlld w!th tl'll Co.inly J he . f ed A b THI COUNTT 01'" D•ANGI DAILY PILOT •• -... llU af -·· Oatltld F Pflef"IOfl lt7I. ·-llVl'f"I~ J. Mldda•, 01t1~fy territory, but it must not raise -, , ..._ ""'NI clreultllon.. 111"lt1ll'd I" 111d COllf11y. 1l lu11 T!lli 1111.m"' lllfd w!ll\ lh• Caulll\' Coullfl Cit'rk. flfOTICI 01'" MIAllNO ON Pll"TITION one• .ac,. ~for tour.wccen!v• Wttkl Cltrk at 0••"111 cou .. 1¥ er.: o.c. ll, ltll. ..,.... slogans of war. by EUGENE 0. BERGERON TH re1111w1 ... "'"" ef HMi lsw .,. • t.ll•wt: 1, '• ceapk•••tlf prlcee.c• c-.. -4 .. 11rlol wo11lt 2. Te ...... •W•llsbl1 fer Hie •"Y c..a.t MffffhH el • tteted price J. Prier to Hffri11t l•I• •Y .. l'WIMflt. " pnwlde tM ente!Mf wltli th1 fell•wl1t9, II writlnt: •· The prlc• reftfe of ell c•Rffl offeNd for Hie ... A• .. 11_,ett .. •f ,... f11Htol Mn"kel •tt.rff •-4 tk totol clrl•rtn tMNcir c. A.111 tte111Jut1 .. of •llJ sttt.r hel .. d c~ htw•tfttl la tH Mn'lce ~ .. •'-'" by tlNi CllltO-r d. Aa ltoftlbello• 011d tote! •f •"Y clld Hw~ to M IR ... ti \'GU lllYt I QUftllan tDavT F-•l S«vk1, PIMU ... ,11. Ill" (Ill, WlleMVlr poulbll, ...,..110r11 .,. Ill ,,..._.., In ttol1 column ....• Balt%·Bergeron Funeral Home COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA ~el MAR 646-2424 673·9450 r STATa 0" C4L0tOINIA l'Olt Or$1' To $Jiow c-~ INbllllild In fl'9 lndtvl0u1t1. Clerk of Otlf'ltl COll"fY .... : D~mber Jn, i rat10n 0 occupi ra f'O• PID9ATI 0' WILL ANO ,Olt IN'llll" la tllt dtY of ••Id ll11rJ119. Iv •t~lllr J. MlddoK 0ePUfy (Gllfl'IY 1"11bl1$11ed o ...... Ca1tl Dlily PllOt, Excerpts from I s~• by t. LITT'Sltl 0 f' jlCMINllTl.ATIOft Oiied tt.!1 DK. 1(, 1t71. Cl•rll. 1.J~·:;~;:;":;';;';·;;';;'·;;':;'~' ;i"i;;i'i;on:i;;mmm~~·~·';' .... ;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.;.;""'";;:;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;; .... ;;;;;;~ "flTlt>TMl·Wll,L AJrfN•X1D HAltMOH G. SCOVILL• 1'14911 ~lllt OI CLAltEHCE ST It 0 NG J udte OI lllll Syperlar Courl PuDlllll1d Or1"'' Cot st DellY Piia!, \11/tLIAMS. U1 CL.Altf.HCE S , D.Wtll •<Ml lllldl Slev1n1 Oectmbtr Jn, lt11 1N1 J1n11lfY ,, 13, 11!, I ' WILLIA.MS, Olc:1elfd. 1111 MflCAl'l!lut ,lvll,, A-1. N1. n 1t77 ptl 71 HOTICE l"I Hll!lll1!8V GIVliH 111.tf Stnl1 Ane, Ctllf. . I \'llllGINIA H. WILLIA.MS 111• ltlld l'llr•I" Till: »7...n•s • f'lf/llorl for Pr11b111 fJf WIH tf'ld far In ~rw•I• ,..,_, LEGAL NOTICE If lsw1nu of L•t11rt " Allmlnlltr1llon PYbll&hed Ot•-(Ollt 01lty Pllo1, ,._ Wlfll·ll'll-WUI AMlllfd Ill ~Mlllof'ltr, Oectmbtr 21, 21, 1f71 lf'ld Jenu11v I , 11. I r"9r...c. lo Wfllch It med• for fvrtllt• Jtl1 lJ.d..71 lM I peH1culera. •"41 ltllll !tit 11,,,. tf'ld •l•c• of .,._....,. Ille ..,,.. M1 Ileen Ml tor ftlCfJTICIUS IUSINisl NAMI' ITATIMINT lolill¥llftil Pt!•..,,, It OOlnt llusln.,1 LEGAL NOTICE • .I•*''"' n , 1rn. 11 t :>o 1.M., '" 1t1t ' Qlurtrewn ot Diii'•"""'"' No. 3 of llld'l---------------1 ~ 6art, ltt 700 Clulc Cltfll•r Drf¥I Wt11, lft 1 ... CllY ol S1n11 A .... Ctllfar"ll, , •Detld DK-bfr 11, Hn ' ~ · W. L St JOttN, I Cou"" Clert: IMOWIN. •••IN & IVLYIA Ml .. nl'.~AY- 0.-."9*. C.nflnll• ""' T.....,_1 frKI U>UM NOTICll TO CllDTTDtt'.1 SU l"SllllOI COUlllT OJI 1"Hif ITATI: or: CALll'D•NIA ftOI THE C(IUHTY 0,. OlllANOI! ..... ~-1'SS1 Etlllt' at ALLEHE £STELLE YOUNG . .......... ""'""" ..... "tttl'"-' •. P\lbOillltl °'*'* COlll DillY l"llol, "'1' tll Pll'IOnl h1vl~ cl1tm1 1e1lml the 0.C ..... 21,. !f, )f11 tnlll J lfl\llr'f 4, Wld declclolf'll ert r1<Wlrld IO 1111 ll\lm, ltn J•l·1J wlltl Ille lll(tuen 11Wd!tr1, 111 1t11 oftlte !~:::.----------'-'=.:: of Ille Clll1t al the e"bcw1 1n1i11ec1 c-1. or •· ~, 1 ..,,,_.l'WI la ,oret111I !flam .. • Wlltl lllr l\KttHr\< NOTICE 1$ HElt!llY GIVEN la 1111 crldllor1 of 11\e 1bov1 f'lll'neG decllltril M!TCALF BltOADIENT ASSOCIATES. 17"2 WIY"' Ave., l".O. !lax U.J:h , 51,.11 An•, C11nor .. 1e mo:s WUU1m F. lratOlllnl, 11532 WIYM A"'""''· "'"'' An1, c1111<w .. 1e '270$ 71'olt 111111 ... 11 11 bt!t'lfl cClflduclld by 111 h..:lfvfllull. Wllll1m F. ll•Gldtllllf Thl1 1t11 ..... n1 flied with the Cou..ty Cltrk of 0rlf>ll Cou"IY Of'I: Die. 15, it11, By Arlf'lur E. l(rreer, Oftivl"f' Ceittntv c1 .. 11., '"14'11 J111blllolltd Or1M11 Cots! D1llJ" Pilot, 0«tm11er 11, x. 1m •I'd J1r.111,.,. ,, 11, 1tn JMt-11 DrJVlU.I ''"' • ·~u _,.. 1a .,,.. urio.rn, .. .o ,, 1111 ott1t1 LEGAb'"NOTICE· •---------------lof their l.ttorf'lt"I', Coic.,.el Ht'rrlng Jlllf'l'l•l·--------------11 )ttl Fr1nlclln, 107 E1ll 1111'1 S!tee!, Casl1 l'ICTtT\OUS llJSIN'ISS NOTICI "TO CllDITOIS ~ .... C1lllor"t1 '2427 or dlfttl ta 11dl NAMI! STATEMENT IUP•ltlDlll COU•T 01' TH• Co-E~tcutars, lt~YIY\Ql\ll G. lllow""Jll, 1111 The fl)llowlt1!1 per'°" 11 001n1 llYilMll STi.TI O• CALIJID•MIA ,.Dtl l(lfti11 !toad, Hr.wp0,-t fle1ch. C1lllGl"t1f1, It: THll COUNTY Cl' 01.ANO'I or H•ralll 0111111, l .. l Wocd1 Orlvt. LOI THE GUtOE, 7111 Cr~slvll'W Ni. A·JHU Anttlts, C1lllarnl1 .• wtl ld'I 11 Ille Plier al l1a11n1 811ch. Ctlll. nMI Orlve, 1!:1!111 of M~RRY l(ALIN, 0«1e1H. lly1lnt1s al !tie 11111kr1lgfl1ll 1,, 111 m1lltr1 Ltrrr we:iM•. 2111 Creslwltw NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN to Ille P1rl1!nl"I la Iii• nt1te al 111d lll'l:lde11I, Liauni a .. th, Cl /If. • Orlvf, c:f"lclltor1 of 1~1 1bow r11mld Ut"eOl!lt wl!l'tl" tau• morilhs 1fl1r ftli 11r11 wb!lc1· TMt 111111ne1• 11 beln1 car>d\l<.ted ltllt 111 "rlOfl& llevl"" t.11/mt et1t11sl lhr tloit OI 11111 riollc.r. lrwJlvldw11t. uld ~ ert requlrtd to ti!• 1111m. P1lld Oettmlltr 20, lt71 L'''' Wtaner 11'111'1 ltlt ,,__,.., \00\ltllll""' In 1111 ottlce lilrt'll'IOf'ld G. llrownh1U fil thl cllrk .. 1111 Hvvt tntltlN court, or •lld Herald D1l1tll .. pr.-nt tlllm, wllll 1t!f ..-:tt .. ry Co-Ea1tu!Of1 of tfl~ ~ .. II 1111 u...-.... ,, .... offkt lltll ol !tit ........ '"'"'"''· MlUSToN1 ANP AX· ·~ llltl'ltd dteed•nl •l, 7105 '41Mtl ll°"leoierd, lot """llS, CO!..OJtlU .. H,l.ttlG SELIM r:1tANKLIH Ctllforfllt ..._ 'lltlfdl II ttw !lleu of Mf lliol ll!ti lfl'Mt twtlne.11 flf h yfldtrsllfllf1j 111 111 mttl•t Cftll ,...._. CA!lforlll1 '2621 Hrfllf'llrMI II !tit ISltll of .. Id dlic.ldfrll, °".•: 1114) l*nll w1tt11 .. Nur ftMlftlf'I• '""'!tit 1'1'11 llllbll~ .. __ , ,., C•E•KVltr• Th11 tlll•mtnt tit911 wllll the COIJf'llY Cltrlt 01 Or1nt1 Coll..,, ~· Die. it. lf11 tiv lle¥rrlr J. Mlddol Dtwtr Colm!Y Cl••k. ,..1 .. 3 P11bHiht11 Df"1nee Cotfl Deity Pllol Dtctmbtr 21, ltn 11\d J1,.uery ~. 11, 11, itn »r.1·11 tlGll of 1111i .nt1lkt. Pirllllllled Ortl'lff CG111t 01il¥ Piiot. LEGAL NOTICE Dtltcl ~ 11, H71. Ot<tmtier 21, 2t. 1911 1'111 J1nu•rv 4, 11 ,, ---------------II 1.ILLIAN KALIN lt72 l»S-111 · E~tcvtil1 ol Ille Will of 1111 ~ named dladlflf. MILLITotli: AND AJCIL 1MI lilllltll lllUllY•"' Liiii AJlll4lt. Ctll+.r'llft 9'Mf Tll: {!lJI '16-n:ll AftWlllY• fw l•Kl"lrtl LEGAL NOTICE '" r:tCTITIDUS IUSIN•SI NAME ITATEM•NT lo!iawlf>ll PfflGn 11 do!IMI nn ••: NOTIU TO CIEOITDltS WONOEltFLAME LOGS, IUl"EllOlt COUltT or: THE Mof'lldtlr lint.. Huntl119!on 11\1111\HI I I 7 1 1 llMCll, P1111ttlllld Ortrlft Cotti Otlly" ~!lot, Otcwnlllf' lS. 72, 2'11, lt11 tlld Jtl'llltn ~. 1'12 :fJOl,7J tTATI or: CALll'"OIHIA Ctllfornl1 tf6,j1. ftOI THE COUNTY OF DltANG• SlONE ARTS. tNC., 11771 MolllC11I, Nt. A·nOlt L•""· H11nllntran Sract1, C1lllornl1 LEGAL NOTICE o!.:~!:ci.af HENRY llENTON JI.MES, ~~7-b\lllntn II conOucted llY t c0t· /'OTICE IS HEll:E9Y GIVEN la thl PClfl °" C"l"ldlton ol the ebove n•m!'!I llPCedtn! Ocr.1!d L. Henrv, ---------------111111 ell ptrlOM htvln1 clalrna 11111,,,1 lht l"r11ldrnt . •A• M7J u ld llKedtnt ere •r<iu!red le fllf 111.,,., Thl1 llaltrrifnl w11 lllfd w!ltl ''" Cavn- NOTICE TO Cl•DITOlllS wi"' 1111 flltHltl"'I' voudlerl, 1,. 1111 alfici ',', ',',','ok ol 0!'1ntt County .,,, Otce-mlllr SUl'l-1011 CDUIT 0, THE of k of th bo STATa 0, CA' "O•NIA P:DI !tie cie-r e • ve e"lltled eovrt, ar c.i.M!L & llOIS '"'' " !a ar11tnl !hem, with th• "!<elle•w ' · Tift COUNTY or: DlllANOlf vauCMrs, 10 tt.r 1tndertl"'ed •I 111, atlle' ttfO Or•'"" Orr llle1d Joi .. A·11H1 al htf tll0f"t11VI, GltAMAM &. JI.MES. ~4~ Stflll "' SPrl~11, C1IU1ttnl1 M611 l!ll1!t of RUSSELL JOSEPH LO WMI Oceen 8GY1evard, Su!tr 701, Lan, ttol.oc, l<o•< CASCIO .. 0.C:HMd. 811ch, C1n10r~l1 ft801, whkl\ fl Ille pJ1c~ " N071CE IS H!REllY GIVEN ta !ht al bllil.,.u OI ~ ynllt'5l9nt'tl !" 111 mlll· ll11bH•h"<I 0•~"9P (o~1 01l1Y Pl'ol e1Jdl!ors af 1111 ebov1 111me-<1 dtefdent Itri 11erltlt1l"t 1a Ill• f~llle 01 P ld llKt· Ott.,,..l>e• 21. ltll uld Jtnut ry l , 11, 11. tP\11 Ill ilWtelnl lltvlt'lfl elelm1 ee1lnst !tit dlf'll, w\lllln 1011, ml)fllhl tlltr 1111 llrit •~71 l lt .. 11 1eld Or'eflnl ••t req11lr1d ta Ill• tr.rm, PllCllcitlM "' fllb notkt . Wll'll llW lllC•twry YOUdl1•t, 1 .. !ht Giilet O•led OtctmlM!r 2l 1111 LEGAL N011CE OI 11\f tltrk ol 11'11 ebcYt tt1tllltd eou•t, ar Mef't Ellfl"I J~mes • te ..-1Nt1t ll'lfrl'\. w1111 IN 11«11"'!1Y lill'~rh1 o1 IN Wiii af NOTICI TO CltEDITOltS ~rt, II .Ille ""'81rtl1neO II 1111 oft.Ce !ht tbo\11 named ct.cldl"I SUl"!ltlClll COUlllT Oft THE °' twf" etttr'ntY1: ltl!!l!!OY & SCMElt, INC. OIAHAM a JAMES ITATI!" Of" CALlr:OINIA ,.DI !SY: ALAN M. ltl!!l!OY). 41'0 N......,.,..t ay: Thome1 A. VWM THI COUNTY D .. 01.AMOI (9fllff OrlVI, lull• uo. N"-Gfl ... di .... Wttl Cketn •tv11 .• Sllllt 7'1 No. A-n• C1llloml1 '2"41, wlllci'< II lflr t lect OI Ltnf hk!i, Ctllt.lntle flllll E1la1,. al JAME'S DO NA LO bulWu ol 1111 u..itr1ltnld In I M milll'f"t Ttl: {fUI ClJ.14U BltADESON. 1l1e 11...-,. 11 JAMES D. ll'lrl•lnl1>11 la tllt nlet1 of 11Td dtcedlnl, Allonrtyt fer &•tatl~I• llRA.OESON. Oftottled. wH!lln lour m..ll't1 •lllr ll>e llrtl llUblke· Publf• ......... Ortnt1 Cotti 0111\' PllOI HOTIC E $ "'"IY G<"•N I -· 11en of 11111 nollc1. ...... "~,. 1,71 1 • 0 "-Delld Ot<lft'l.lll ll itn ....... tmDlt" , 11111 J1n11ery ~. 11. lt. credlla•t ot ll>e 1-. nemtll dK~..,, MAOILIH~ u'1t1ULA LO Cl.KIO lt)1 3316-11 1'1111 Ill Ptrlon1 111~1"1 tl1lm1 t1eln1t 1t1e E1tclltrlx a1 ltlt Wiii af 111!11 dtctct.eltl 1r1 r1<1ulrH ta Ille !him, 11'11 1bav1 ~ cM<tdtltl LEGAL NOTICE wllll 1111 lllt;9Jllrl' vaucntr1. 111 !I'll otfl'I QIDY & KN••· INC. ol"" d•rtc" Ille above""'"'" courl. or 9y\ I.LAN M. lllllDY NOTICE OJI TlllUSTEE'I SALi fl' •r•Mflt ll)tm, With 1111 MCIDer\< U1 N,,.......rl C1M1r Dr., Suitt' SJI T.S. N1. F JOll )IOllchfor1, la lhl u~llilltld 11 IM allkt p.[ew::>l'f"I ltt(tl, C1NI, '26H On J1nu1ry 14, lt71, 11 t ·oo A.M .• Cl.l Of JAMES L. ltUBEl. Jiii ., Allorf'll'Y ti Tt11 IM-IUI FEO ENTEltPR!SES, t Cillfarnli cor· Lew, U» \1!1 Ooorlo, Nflfl'oa.,-1 811Ch, At1orntr1 !or ••tculrl• PO•lllOfl IS duly lpoolnled l fl,tl!tt 11ndlr Ctlll6r,,11, ''"°· ..wlllcn It llW Plltl OI Puttl\tl'ltd O!'t"lle Cotti P1llr Piiot ~no p•1rwant lo ONd ol Trust reca,dtd l>usl ... 11 Of flle Yf'llletl!l!le'CI In en mettws Cr~tml>fr H, 191! trtd J1,,ui rv 1. 11. lt, StPIPml>er 1t, 1161, ~· 1n1t. Ha. 1114!7 .. 111 Pl"i.lrilnl to !hi r1ltlr OI 11ld dt(ldltlt, 191! .llU-11 lt:>OI< ~. P•te 5.U, cl Ofl!(lal Attordi 1" wftflln IDll• me~lft1 1nv 11'1• llrsl PVll tl'-1• ..:_.:.; __________ .=::cc 11111 Olflc1 DI the CCKJl!tY ltttcrotr of I!.,,, of fl'll1 not r~. LEGAL NOTICE Or·~"at Cc~nh. ~•~t~ of Cell•ar,,11 WILL Ol GLORIA EDITH lllAOESON •--------'-------ISELL AT PUBLIC A U C T 1 o H EllKYlrhl al"'' litlllt al TO HIGHEST 9100ER FOR CASH lllt 1bclwt n1rni.d dt<:ldtnl l'ICTITIOUS IUllNISS {pay8bie ,1 1;,.,, o! 1111 In liwflll montv JAMB"I L. ltUllL, Jlt, MAM& ITATEMINT ot the U"l!t'!;I Starei) •! the SOll!ft (lronll At11rntY al Lew Thi' tOl l°"'l11a P>trlGl\5 1r1 Oal"t ~"!rlflCt 10 tr.. old Counh CO\lrtllciuM l~ '4n Vil DWtt llllll;e~ :: COMPANY llll WI" C I Ille (Uy DI Sent~ A111, C1IJ!or,.l1 ell r~t, ,'':"-"°'' ~N<>',';,','n.."m _,. ' OIS tlllf B..0 J"lt~lt COflYtyeO 11 t .... 110W I -· • HIO\IWIY No.-.., Newport l~1ct1, (1111. llfll! bV II uf'IOrr l•ld O&trl al Trost Ill !hi Aflor,..y IOI" Ex-rll ~ I J1ck H. '"""'"· 21Cl Artlll Slrffl, pr-r!r lltui\ff I" itld Caunlv IWI Stile PuDlltl'lld Or1f>11 Ca11t Dtll'I l"!lol, Ntwparl le1Cl'I. C11Uorfl!t dHUlhed . 1 Df'ttm._ )I, 1'11 Ind J1nu1rr •. 11, 11, LY£11e MIY llf'lrllll, '1CI Ar1ll1 l• U ·~~•<I OU I IM' Cll o< ( ! 1'1l ll&l-11 41r.-1, NtWporl llucll, Cell!. ' ' " y G5 11--------------- WINlem J MlrtlW. ••72 l 1nl{ Clrclt, Mti.t." "' rn•P 't<.'.G!"dfd 1" book 1"' LEGAL NOTICE Mu,,U"91on 91K11. Cel1t el'Mll 2' t<:i 'I lnclullv1, Mlt<:ttl•-• 1"t1'1 b\11lnt11 It 1111"1 (Ollducfed " MIPS, if! "'' affi'e •I 1'111 Countvl---------------1 1 J 1 rH#'ftt of !Aki Cou11fv NOTICI TO Cl•DITOltl ~•rtntr~lpH Thi 1trMf tOd...,.1 1'111. o!"er carnl'l'IOn SU,fltlOI COUlT Oft Tttl Jee 9"'"ett OrlJ1MlllC111. 11 1nr, cf Ille rttl PlOHrlY STATa 01' CAL.l,CllNIA ,Ol I TJWs 11111,,,..nt fnld w1111 Ille Counl"f' *"''1~ l'bovt Is -Mnld to De· 957 THI COUNTY Or: OllAN91 Cllnl ot Or'"" Cou,.ty .,,, Dec U H1I P .. sldl(I l>r!VI. Co.le MfSI, C1llfor11lt. Ne. A·11UI e .._I~ J M~ o.out). '°"'"' Tllt u11CHr11tr.td Tr11•l" dfK111'M 1nv E"111 o1 SPALOING BAl((lt EAST· er..... ' y N1lllllfV tar 1ny lncorTld-s _. !ht tlrrrl MAN, Ml 51"ALD1NO I , •ASTMAN, ... 1 f ·lff'2 '°"'ttl 1"41 oiMr" (GtJI-dt•IG111llm, II C .. ll'd. I ~1eMl(I Ort"" (11111 Dtlly 1"IJ1I 111'1", 11\oiwll herilll HOT1Cl II HE.ltt:IY GIVl}f to !tit 1Mat ..... JI. lt'1 tlld J1N11n 4 H 11 S.ld ult Wiii !It mklt, llut Wlll'IOut crfdllart 01 IN 1bo119 t11mt11 dKldltlll' Ifft 1 • ;nf,.,j CIV-f!I or wtrr•lllJ', lll:11"t fll" lmtlllld, the! tll fllf .... lltlftffl cletm1 Htlltll IJlf 11 """'"''"' t!tlt. l'Ollftllof'I, I' ltfl• Mid 6fc~ tfl ..-lfltl to lfto tjWftl, J \ ,s ;;;; Ar N~CE «ll'l~•nct1. 10 P•r "" ,.,,.,11111,.. ,,111. with lhl _ .. ,... \OOLldllri, lft .._ tMa I ,_., ___ ....... ______ v_"-----lcfMI alftl .. Ille f'latl ltairld by 1eid of IM t l.,-11Of1M ...... ll'lllllld cevrt, « f <! 0.-. ..t Tn.flf, to.wit: 11(.l:llO N , wl"" 1 ... to ll'l'tttftt l'IMIM, wttll Illa "'"*" ,fCTm0\11 IVllNaU ,..,.._. llllrlofl, If "'0YIOl<I In ••kl 1111111, 'IOllC'hcn. to 1111 ulldrr•ltlMld ti fl'lt offf(a ' ~ lilAM• ffA"T•MllfT ffYlllCtt. II .,..,, lllldf.r lllt '"'"'' of ••kl of UNION ~~J(, XIO W 111111 r I I TM ""'.....,., ..... II *1111 aiu111111t Otld of T!\lt!, j"" ch••tttt •ncl llllt!llft 8outn1rd, l.OI Ahetltt. Ctlll~ ••t. •r of lllt TrullM Ind llf lllf 11'\1\lt crullll Wlllc:ll h !ht fllfec. el Ml,,... tf 1111 t OAHLL \I H 0 U t T l I I I 0' llY Hid Ofed at TrYll. ufldersltf'lld 1R ttl ll'ltltfl'' NtTtl11ln1 11 t c.\Ltl'Ol.Nt"'' au :teri Mltvlt Ort<wt, Tiit Nnllk!t,..,. ul"ldlf" Mil ~ el 1f1t t1!tft ot ••d ffc:.otnt. wtl'lll1t '°"" HtwWt .._. (:.allfOfnlt 1rvtf "''''°'°" •~Kiiied •11111 dt!lwrtd , • ~111, •lltr lt11 ffrn llUlll!c.tllOll ot 11'111 WMIM COfRi'•U.. . I Ctllillnllt C:Of· 11 1111 Ulldtr1lttntd e Wtl~ Otderlllotl notlct, I ,...11011, ~""' "'"""' Prlw, N""""'1 of Otf1u1t 111d 'Dtl'lthd fOI" t.i., ind • 1.1111ct O<ICttl'lbtf 19, 1tn a..cl'I, C•ll"""' wrlflen Noll(t o1 ~It •nd flect11n le UNION IAJIK , -~ ....,,. .... WM ceMlklld '" • Sou, Tiii 11110trll1ned aUMd Mkl N.tlc:• 9Yl JOHN •• MclLll,OY ' ~-el Dtl1ult end EtktlM la Sell tt bt Trvtt Of11m • II_. t. Owtne. r9Corde.I flt ""' counl\' Whir• tllt ,..1 l•KllfW ff fM Wiii f ........ ·-rt .. llalfod. of "" ·-~ ...,..., 1Nt ... IMlll. ,.,... ....... CClllnl"f Ottt: DK.m• ll. Jtn MAlllWOOO; IOOtlM • AOIUNIOft CM. 0,...., c~ •: OM. ti. ltn, CAL. fllD IN111111"lllSEI DI"""'""~ om. If .......,, Ai -...._ o..tY ~ tt tM1 Trvfl'll. "-1 0Hlf:1 ._ ltt1 con. ,, '' "· ... ,.,,"""" ...._. ... tdrrr u. 9'Na -Alllllotfttd lfwl..Wt ' .... 1)1J ANIMAL CAA.CXEll• I I weorE" W'1Yl!rt -ro 'Tl<f Eo1ro111osour IJff: WAY A)e:wt1PAPEQ 5 AcLOW 11!10 '°"ERrllr<lEH'f 1b COITTllO!. AND 50- PiiES.; lllE. l'tltlll;O WOllt>- ' _ l. TO~D ,-~f)ol, IN AlO UIJcel?fAIN TfR.146 1 'f)<Af 1\lE. 'AVUA&E. 'JOE.' ~AS HO VOIG'£, Ar.le> ,-~AT f~tEDON Q~ 1\U! Pllt~S JS A BIG JOl<E ! '·" ................ ,... ... !HEY P~INT~D 1// 1 • • " ----· .. ·- Freedom Of The Press Is No Joke At The Daily Pilot Yes, (up PILOT the DAILY 100 a to week). prints nearly • receives letters all the it Freedom of the press there on strongly IS extended to our readers. You do have a • voice. It's If you. feel the editorial of the DAILY about an . page write issue, to Mailbox. Our Policy 300 Letters should normally convey their mossogo in words or loss. The right to condense letters to fit spec• is reserved. Each lotter must include signature and mailing address, but name may be withhold on request if sufficient reason is apparent (embarrassment or harassment ot tho writer, for example). Poetry, letters in poor ta.to and libelous or unsigntcl let- ters, of cOUl'H, will not ,be published. MAILBOX Ora"ll• c .. st DAILY PILOT P.O. Box 1540 Cotto MoNt, Co. '2626 PILOT. _,..,..., ~ C:.... WY •Jllll, ~ Ot.,.. c.t Dtllr '1fll, ... ..,,.,...... lw ....... -h·~~-,~~~-·-~-~"·--~ ---t-------------~------~~-··-----------------·--·--------~~----~----~ ' DW1 J"7 ma.n JMW.,., a.11."' 1m 10W1,. ,, l 1. • 7 I • . Lagu••a Beae~ ' EDITION • . -Tod~'s Fl.II .. < ~ N.Y. Stoeks . . . ' .Vat 45; tfO. 3;, 3 SOOTIONS, 40 . PAGES TEN CENTS TUESDAY, JANUARY ~. '1972 • . . • • ' ' . . . l .. Grand Jury Attacks Supervisors-to the End By JACl BROBACK • Of .. .,..., ,. ..... .,, TliO 117~ ~.,;fe County Grllld J~ in Ila ftnal roporl ~ the,year contlnUed'to sljafpfy '1rlllc!R ll1e Board of SUpetvlfon aijd )llem~ ~ .the COW!ly Pla\!Di!ll a ~ ... · . on her s~lp, foreman een M~all ~f Newport Ilea~ !oct,l' aJio Wll!I the .~ling of two. 1ranll juries ·~eh yyr, one fer governmtnj;I re\ile...-.bf.thO-otber .to handle crlniliiaf , ·-" li>dlclmenla. She noted thal the 1969 jury took the oame position. 0 "Aa the rel\lll of my assoclallon this past year. I am moved to express Pl'nonl ljlanb en<\ encouragement to fl>e cilpabl' and dedicated penons ,.rvlng. the people of Orange County at all leveil of· Iii government," sa1a ¥r'· Marshall.· former Nawport Beach mayor in one of the rare, moments· of praiJe•dllring the past year. • Supportipg the need for two. juries a ' •, .1x0n , .. ':: ., I DA!'-V ,..-rf~ "tffE APEX of' MY 'UFE' New SO.rd Cholrmm CHpors ' . . .. Cas~r~·JY.~wcJ, . ' ,, ~· ' . ' • I ·New ·. Chairman Winds Hit Hurricane Velocity By ARmuJI R. VINSEL Of tM DlllY Plliit Staff 1 ~hlng down out of mountain passes,' I~ Sonia>, Ana winds today conUnued lo smdblMI. the Southland, bl°"lng OWaf. airftost 1ti)1Jllng that waan't nailed. down; .1ron1 ,tumbtew~ lo ildule)raijers. , . -~ :1:~-~lif. c::'/4':=.int..i::r..:: sblverJni Ill ... .,,,,.....,. "'"~1- 0i'ange County iscaped the worat'or the winds In krms of octua1 · damqe reported by· dayligbl todoy. San Fernando Valley ....tdenll and those living in or puslng throu&Jt Rlveralde ond San Bernardino Counties suffered most with power blackouts ond trav~rs' wambiga posted. ·caJllOmlr llisl"'•Y Patrol ollicm ~ fierce wtrid blH!s up lo llO mile! pef ho\lr blelr ..... three ·-tnilm and a 'truclt-end-tnller rig, . Camper ownera contemplating highway travel on rnjjor routes from the Pacific eo..t inlond ,...,.. also warned to stay put. , 'A!mbleweeds boun~ ·like banshees ~ hilbW~YI up ond dow1I tho Of&lllt Coest overnight posed. an •ll!l!>YlnB hazard lo many motorists. :~rison ot the lt71 group's criminal n and indictment! with thole of tbe 1970 jury shows the follow!ng large in- creases: The 1970 jury met 33 limea, beard Ut c .... and Indicted 281 penons. Through Dec. 8, !fl!, the current jury, which wUI be dlacbarged Thursdoy, held U l!leeting!, up 1'1 percent; heard !IS cases, up .49 percent and indicted 388 persons,, aliO up • J)Ucent, . )lltllng repeatedly at the planning com- missioners and their activities, the jury report called for an end to "the disrup- tive interference into the professional workJD81 ol the county planning depart.. ment by an apparent alliance by aome county plinnlng commissioners." Included •in the final report were atudlea not previously rel<Ued. on the county odmlnbtrative ol!lCe, planning departtneiif, Orange t»untY M'edical- Ceoter, mental health activitlel and IQRlt of t~ county's larger departments. -- Regarding lbe odmlnlatroUve offie<. the jury sold ·qaln that tho supuvl.!ors hove great need of good 1dmlnlitratlve ... iltance. "A. movt_ by some members of the Boord -of 'Supervllors to lire County Admlnlllrotive OOlc:er Robert 'lbomas last februuy damoged rapport and _.iuiiuoo between departmont beadJ ~tho CAO," the report ataled. · _ .. Plannlng commlukmen were accused or.I\""' relationships with the pllllnlng • • . OAK.Y PILOT ,_tr '* ,.,.. IT WAS WINDY,BUT THE; GREETINGS \WE~. WARM AS TtCE PRESIDENT· ARRIVED AT EL.TORO Mr. Nixon ~porit ti.. Nlghj •I ~la \Son , Cl.,nento VIII&( atid· Wos off to Son Diego this Mornl•t , · ) '..i ' ( ' .... -:... . -,. -. . ~ ~aguna Official: Quitting· s~~o wm; ~~~ · · ·o · w-..l...:.~~.:r--. . . , f . . . -. n .~~ . • ·~ • • .. . ,,; : .... __ • ~ • \ 4 • •' ~ department staff charging that com- missioners chose to ignore reeom- rnendationa of staff members." The report continued, "Too many limOI, the prol-.al, Ullbiased in- formation provided by the at1ff went unheeded . Without offering reasons for its action, planning commission made many decisions contrary to staff recom· mendatlons ." The above comment obviously referred (See JURY, Pip JJ Major Ship Contracts Announced By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ml DIHY Plltr lt•ff SAN DIEGO -Preeldent Nixon Qew lo San Diego from San Clemente thia morn- ing to•announce the award oC more thl.n 1100 million in contract. to build Am<rJ.. ~an ships here, In San Pedro ond e1,.. where. 'l1u! federal gov.rnment ·Will pay 4S percent of ~ coat -a aublldy aimed at offt,ttlng lower Jll't.. char1od by ship- builders In Japan end Europe. -butin;m;~.\:~c;:'~,. 8tt Nbloil ~ to -w11b Primo illn1stet Eisatu &llo If J1p111.=a 11u ... planled tho U.S. u the ablpiialldtr around the rtm 0( tho p Oceln. The P-1 anmmcec1 the alfll'lf of a l5U mlUlon coalncl to Notlodal. Tile work wlll be U-bulk c.lTfers (tankers) for Ibo U.S. Merllbant Marine. The 38,ltlo.!4n (deodwelght) tanl:era wlll be bullt for Margale Shipping Co., 111 affUlate of keyatone Sblpp!ng Oo. o! Phlladelphla. They will be operated under ~ term charter to Shell Intenll lonal Petroleum O>. of-l'xmdon; ptfmari1y to carry oil fri>ln the Caribbean to · the Atlantic Coast. The vwell wlll coot more than Ill mllllon eoch. ' . ' . 'By Su'rrvisors Orange Cowity H1rbor Patrol OUicers reminded boate" that 1ale warnin8J are hoisted but said the Winds(oflshore were dying down. PosilitJ1'-. ·lir:Job 1n Mesa '. For:Coast TaJJm . . • " t • ' Juat ""'"!:f,tbe ~dent new here, the ~auon announced D e f e n 1 1 Department approval of conditional con- tracts for ~ of nine 15,QOO.ton ' lilnken to coot '81 mllllon. . . ' ' . _, ... BJ joANNE l!EYNOLDS . Of .... D.ltr "'9t ,,.,, ' ·Ronald W. Ca!pm. the ·11n1 term 111pervilor 'from . Newpor;t Beach, today. tras elecled dWrmaa ol the Orange Cfom!Y""Board of Supervilon b x ~mous vote of hi.I colleague.. iThe ~year<ild fmancler, w h o rfpreseiit,. tbe· Filth S u p e r v J 1 o r l a 1 DJ>trict, immediatelJo announced he · W..ts all ·counl1 i!e2artmen1 beads In at· tindance at nm ,_;.Tuesda1'• 'board , .meeting when he will clllcuaa )Iii· plans ~1m. •,. Caspers, who .took o!Qce a..ye&r .llfO, · nomlnated for the chalrmaosbli> ti)' .,_,\her l!l'st term supervisor, Ralph ~k of Anaheim. qark was elecled vice an. AJ l:bainnan, lils first offlclal act was · ,.. sign five oppli<atlons to lbe federal General Strvicea 1Adminlstratlon for ac- ~tlon of 507 acres of Mlle Square Park ~ .~ountaln V1Uey. Tiie county currently ~Ids the acreage in • 30-year lease from ~Navy. In accepting ,the poe~ C..WS said, ~is is the apa ol *'1 life. 197f wu an ~ve yur. tbanlis . to ou" ~~an !llobert Bat11n o1 Saata Anll. nm bu i!l'ltr been a dull momftll n we octlve p well 11,tufuillbaouf'' Ha wu rtle!rlni lo lt""al COt>o troveralts generated oln the oounty 1eat , 4blrlnc 1911. Alter tallng olllct 1u1 •• ~~ he and Ba!Un formed a coaltlJon ftth Cllrk '!\lid! tlle7 ca1Jed a .. -Je1dei'atdp.'; ' In JlllU&'1 Ille -•oltd "' place all county deportmtnl beods on .... lllOblll nollca, an IOtloo tbot WU -od ,Ill Aupi!. In anotber "'°"· wblch ""3 ¥11' cct>-1ated by lillni!rlty -,,,......,.. WUJlam Phllllps and David Jl•ker, • Cupen llOUtlbl tho ooui.. ol county od- inlnl.stnllve offiett ~ 'l1lomu: 'Ille iooff WU defaated ..,,.. Clpk yqted 'with Phllllpo and 1lallet lo nl.i. 'l'bomu. One of Ibo hotteol iuun In which ~sbman supe"lw became Involved -a battle wttll lbt c:ounlf Llague of Cilia ovtr mtmber~lp ol tbe LoeOI Af-t ... CAIPIU, Pop•> l • .A Fullerton police sergeant bad to hitch o; .,ride to work with • colleque thil morning, alter a large tree toppled, cruahlng both of his cm. He aaid be didn't want to be idenUfied. £,lttle d1mage was reported in West l)range .County but the chilly Santa Anu tepl many persona eWil(e 111d cut visibWty along Pacific Coot !Ilghway with a constant cloud of blowing duat and sand. Rain-soaked billboard 1lgns were al.!o ripped away in many •Po!J, Utlering the ·laodscape Iite confetU. ' A decor&Uve awning at Look Realty in Sunset -.... shredded by .the high winds ond ltr aluminum frame bent bad· ly. Power lines were downed ln scattered spots throughout the Orange CoaJt and tSee WINDS, Po1e i) A. second key mell\ber of · the ~ Beach city staff will be leaving at. the end of the month, . city manager LaWi"ence Rose announced today. AJ Autry, admlnistraUve assistant for programs, bas 9Ubmltled his resignation effecllve Feb. 1, to accept "an offer oi considerable promise and high salary wllh thtttty of Costa Mesa," Roee said, The resignation of public works direc- tor Joseph Sweany, effective on tbe same date, was announced lut month. 0 It LS fery trying to Joae two such ex- ~llept people a1 Al and Joe In such a short ,.,an, bUt I'm glad their worth is recoPtzed and-both may capture chances lo expand their carJOrl," Rose aaid In bis anncM\cement. .. Al bU done an 111!UJUally fine job of developing programs lor federal grants lo the cJty<whlcb may fn Ume produce as , much u a million iklllars in a.ssistara . TOKYO (UPI) -Prime Mlhlsler ror v~r~us projects we .mlght ,,..no!. ~ Eiaaku sato leavesi. felr Nf'IJ*t Beach othenme hove been able lo flll3nce, ht a~ San Cletnente W-.iaY f11t t11o added. daya.ol talks with Prtaldeot Nllon. · Autry, 32, came to Laguna Beach as an FOr Sato.-who had hoped to reUre thJa: associate J1luner In 1966. A graduate of year, file aummlt coolerence with Nillon Cal Stole Fullerlon in urban ge0grapljy, wlll')lrOY!de an oPllOltunity to dilcuso the he previolllly liad woll(od'for l!!'i CouOty 'ramlflciltfons-of'NJi"on's Visit to Peking of Venlura'and the city of w'atTrunsier. next month. He will go to work as a dJvislon head In Sato was hurt politically last summer tbe planning deparlment of. the. city of when Nixon .allllOllJlCO\I )1is China trip Coila Meso at a salary of 112,00, an in. without notifying Japori In advance. 'l'be cr~,~er bis annual pay u progri1J1 Joa of face on Sato'1 part toot !be ihfue aduw••nrator in Laguna, lte Uld. · of! the 10.yelll'<lld prime , m~•j Tony Bennett· Weds -' -••' t ' ' . LONDON (UPI) -TOii\' t 'Bennetl oecrettv ,married former danCer &ndJe ~rant• lri Naw Y'"'k laat Wedneodsy, a ·spoi<esman 'Of the singer said today. largely·IUCCOll!ul ~f!OIU to .nqotlate.the revenlqn of O~wa. to :(•-• "°"'. 1ro1, 'Dow / ochl!duled • for .-ettine beM.,.n.•-and JIJl1. • 2 Ask $1~9,000 in Laguna . ~~ti> con\ri}.) . r.-y to JlllY'a v)ik to tbe.l'ae·~=~­.¥ed .. of -J·~-"'.lhrlnea, wbn leade'r of. tho .COW1try, cuitomarlly ,p be!Ore taking lmpo~ lrtp,. JI• ~. ed to Tokyo 'J'Ueadsy nllh! for • i.at minute consultaUons before deparUna for San Clemente. • Emergency Ruled In Santl;l Barbara Residents Say Poli,ce Hel.d Them at Gunpoint A llJ0,000 coim qablst the Cify ol Cliief, of Police JOaeph KeUy said, .. I Laguna Beach will be pmented to the ci· would prefer not to comment on the case. 11 courx:ll Wednesday nJibt from two Joco1 -who allege police oUlcm We were 111ticipallng tbla suit and we ta -ber held them ot gunpoint far hove Initiated a !Ull rtpol't on ll!f ma~ _,, than 41 mlnatel wlthol\t ....... !«." 'Ibo dalm 1tatet Illa! Larry llonla. "° " Kelly, however, said that Ranta had • ltllbJ a., WU beld al tho aide of South "lhilinf membiance" lo tho felon ~ Hl&hway near Forelt Avenue oo Polict were seeking. tho -be .. ~od a -he and IOog Rania's uncle, Slanlt,Y Hietala. iltso of _)\air wblc:h allegedly mode him ""'""'ble the· Ruby Streel-liome, wu following hl1 oo acaped leloa." • nephew when the latter wu pUlled over Tiie lntlclen~ Tustin attorney F. Gordon by police. Hietala ltopped and tried to of· Cbytra"' allqea, began around 10:30 fer lnlorm•tlon but pollce told him to p.m. Nov. II when police stopped Ranta. "abut up ar la<e a1Teot," Olytra111 Ranta pt out of bis cor and walked cbargea. fo1oord tbo police Vellkle When the ofncer Qne patrolmon allegedly IJ'lbbed jumped out ol his car wttb his gun drswn, Hietala ond starled lo drog him to a u ii alleced. • police car. Hietala stumbled over • low Tho offlcw made Ranta put his band on wall before the olf}cer could put him Into tho root ot bis car and llJ'fad eqle his a police car. lep, Nici Cbytr-. "Dwin( the enttt. lllclden~ llotlt clalman1a made no move to etcape or read vlolenUy to this unlawful deter> lion," 1talel Cl\ylfOUI In tho allega\lona . \ . "After aPPNxlmately 41 minutes, .10me of the .... pollco olfloan noticed that (Rania's) thumb hod rec:Ottlly•been am· puted al the Joint which 1pparenll,y c1111- ed them to and tbil outrageous detention and aearcb of said clalmont," tho clolm atalea. · Tbe' oUlctra ,;!Urtl1er staled that the .... ped felon hod hl1 hair ,ncenUy cut In prison and th1t be had no oinputatlon of hi• left thumb" and Ranta .... relused, aald Cb)'lr1111: Both Ranta and Hietala are clol!nlng 16$,000 Heh u a result of tho lnclde!ll. Qty Manqer Lany Rose bu reann· mended oouilclboen refer the metltt to the city ioouranco carrier ond dero' the clolm. •• SACRAMENTO (AP) -A atila ol emergency la Santa Bartwa c.unty u • result ol Qoods, mudalldes and heavy wtnda that atarled Dec. f1 WU lleclared Monday by GoY. Ruge. • .. Demage c.uted tif benJ wlndo, rains, l1oodtng ond tho nlllOll ot Jmld ...S. sUt bu been utlmaled '•t 11.t mllllOll .by counfy authorities," Ibo governor aald. "Thi proclamaUqaL,requ.e.ted bY the Santa Barbara eom,, ~ ot Super- vlaora, "Ill allow the <ounty to *<1t fed· eral .S.lllance for disaster Vl~ and damagu to publlc p-"f, • ,aid llA!• gan. ,. Signal Oil to More HOUSTON (AP) -Employes IJf ~ Oil & Oas Co. bave been notified the ....,. pony plans to move lit hfadquarten to Houston from LOI Angelea. ' I ' . ,four.will~ btilllln the Todd Shipyards In San Pediq,Sall. PeCfro·w a't.rpercen~ uqemploymlrrt rile. l'lre o( tho V-U • will be built 'al tbe Bath !nmworU, Bath, Maine. With lodoy's llilnlnl of the con!rael with NatJonal steel, the marltlmo od· mlnlltrattoa. bu lei neorly $200 million worlh of contracts with Waat Coalt sliip- buUd«a la .the lul 18 molllhl. White Houoe aides said the contract.. wlll meon oome 1 ,500 manhoun of new sblpyanl <1!1Plo7m!l!I on the. West C...t. II'>• every sblpfard job crttted, It waa eillimoted tbol OGO addlUonol job will bt enated In ......,.ry, . supporting iJ>. 4"atry. f In' a --to Cooir ... Oil Oct. 2S, BM, the ~ · called for tho 1"flulldlng o.t the llltl'tbanl Oeel to mako II more compellllye and OMOW1C<d a 11ew marltlroo Jm>Cr ... W.. the nation, It> eluding -llllp. COllllnlctlon. er .. ,.. I DAILY PILOT LB Stud·v Due • Of Plastic Bag Holders Laguna Btacli city councilmen will ponder guideline!i for the city's new WJflt management proVam Wednesday nlaht, with probable emphasis (In City Managitr Lawrence RoJ:e's support of the mandatory use of plastic bags instead of metal or rigid plastic trash containers. ln an II-page outline of the new pro- gram, including suggested specifications upon which bids for the trash contract will be called, Rost notes. "Every in- dication predicts that cost and other fac· ton are going to compel the common use of bags for refuse within the nett few years. Jl would be a mark of our pro- greulveneas if, for once, we anticipated lht future, instead of having to catch up with It." Advantage o( plastic bags, he notes, are reduction of noise, elimination of unsighUy empty containers resting on the streets, reduction of injuries to the col· lectors and increased speed of collectJon, reiultlng in lower cosl!:. However, say1 Roat, the bags must be of the proper quality and re.adily available and, to achieve these ends, it would be necessary for the city to supply them, free of charge, to householders, buying them in bulk on a bid basis. But, recognizing the difficulty of chan&· fng old habits, he proposes that the ban on metal containers not be imposed until Jan. 1. 1973, and in the interim, householders be encouraged to use the bags provided by the city on an ex· perimental basis, either as liners for their rliid containers. or in a wall-mount holder, to be Included. The manager notes, "l have personally experimented with the use of bags for two inonths. I am convinced I will use them ' jft prtference to c,ns. irrespective of whether their use Is required or not." Under the new program, trash col· lection will be mandatory, and paid for by a new base fee and surcharge t.5 authorized by the city council. CoJJection of aolid waste materials will be unlimited, wJth two exceptions : a service charge of $3 will be made for unu1ually large or heavy items, such 11 couchea, refrigerators, water be1ters, rugs and the like and no user may re- quest such services mo·re than once a week. ailcarded items of the weight or bulk •M I amall automobll! whlclr-cd!not be moved with regular manpower and equipment, will not be coruldered refuse under th~ contract. Thi cl>ntractor will not be nqu\r.ed to remove waste bulldlng·materia!J or other coNJtruction debris, except when it is contained in approved debris bo:1e1 leas· ed from the contractor~ or to remove ob- jects such as dead animals. The contract on which bids will be call· ed will run for five years, from April 1, tm and no adjustment in charges m1 y be made within 12 months, or within lZ. month periods thereafter. The contractor will be required to maintain a local office to handle com· plaintl and a full time supervisor for the dJ1trict His employes will be required to wear uniforms, to replace all containers in an upright_ po_aition, with lids in place, If any, 1nd to avoid throwing contalhers from truck to sidewalk or banging them to remove the contents. No collections will be in residential neighborhood! prior to 7 a.m. or after 6 p.m., or in commercial areas before 8 a.m. l'llffdq, "'"""'4, 1972 r I I . --0"1 Tllfftllol'I Teenaged Mayor Th& nation's youngest mayor, 19-year old Jody Smilh of Ayr- shire, Jo,va, was sworn tnto of· fice Monday and received both a telegram and phone call from President Nixon . The telegram was displayed at Smith's inaugural bail-attend- ed by friends, relatives and dignitaries. Laguna Property Rezone Request Taken Off Docket . A r~uest to rezone commercial pro- perty at 430-480 Broadway to high density R-3 (muJUple residential) Wl.!I withdrawn Monday night after the owner. of the pro- perty .saw that Laguna Beach planning cornnu.saioners wouldn't approve the .wne change. · lruitead •. said Peter. Ostrander. agent for Francts Cabang, bu cllent will come back to the commis.!lion with a con- ditional use permit application requesting residential use of the commercially zoned propen,,. Oltrahiter noted that Cabang wished to devtlop a lG-unit apartment on the pro- pertf-· C<i~oner1 unanimously agreed in aifJhtormal poil that they would not Want R.:a ' development in an area which is J>l"(lomlnantly zoned R-2 (duplex,.). -I~ructed Wayne Moody, director of p1,_nrung and development, to obtain a copy of a City of Irvine ordinance pro- hibiting cutting of trees on both public and private Jands. Chairman Carl Johnson said he would like to study the ordinance at & future study session and see if it could be a,r plied in Laguna. ~~arned that the Laguna Beach Unified School District wished to withdraw a request for a conditional use permit for the use of shop facilities in a continuation school building at -i')3~ St. Ann'.!I Drive. Dr. Charles Hess, business manager of the-district, said a change in program eliminated the need for the !!hop and that the building would be used as a regular classroom, as it was last year. • • Nixon ID Gear? • Vows Big Jobs for-Steelworkers , r ~DIEGO -sumwxted by a -or hlnlluts. l'rt>lldtnl Nfloo today wld mott thlll 1,000 --lllat the1 would be ~ 1'WIY $80 million ....rtb ol unlque tank ... v..ia for !he U.S. Metthant Mllrine. Jn an appearance which smacked of the political campaign to come , Nixon . delivered a short, tniormal addre11.!I to the cheering workmen ben,ath a half·built oil tanku. instead of the cold, gale-force windl thal mot lliln u be crnuem h!J San Clemente home, San of, lend a l11llCb watmer and more , .. u. ........ Aller the lhort menage, !he President made the rounds of a construction lot, 1hook haods with douns or eJU.bqant workers abd scribbled hla autograph on uveral metal helmet.II , AJ he hopped into his limousine, one member of the throng said : ''Come back. We need ~ million more." Concept of Greenbelt Recognized by Board ' The Orange Counly Board or Supervisors voted unanimously today to recognize the concept of the Laguna Greenbelt and adopt an Interim policy that would. preserve the proposed greenbelt until sµch time as the county 's Open Space Program is completed and adopted. The supervisors approved a recom- mendation of the county planning staff to recognize the 10,000 acres greenbelt en· circling Laguna, to notify all county department heads of the action and direct them to be guided by this in their daily operations. Supervisor Ronald Caspers called the Laguna Plnnners Grant Tentative OK to Rezoning Laguna Beach planning commisstoner1 Monday night moved to second hearing a rezonj.ng program for a 6.7 acre parcel of LaguJta Canyon land to be annexed to the city later this year. The request is to rezone the land to M· lA (light. industrial) from its present county zone of A·l (agricultural). Several1 property owners have initiated the zone change as a step toward annexation by the city and future developmen~ ~·of the highwayfrontage, located just beyond the Big Bend curve. During discussion of the aMexation, Wayne Moody, director of planning and development, noted that the county is currently studying a flood plain zone for county land in Laguna Canyon. Such a zo~e, explf-ined Stuart Baller, assistant ctiuntY planner this n1ornliig, would require developers to "flood-proof" new constructions. The flat portions of Laguna Canyon not In the city limit would come under the zone, Bailey said. In addition to the flood-proofing re- quirement, landowners in such a zone would qualify for both flood plain in· surance and federal disaster money in the eevnt of .a flood. Bailey denied rumors that the zone would preclude development, noting, "They'll still be able to build on their land, it'll just be more cosl\y." Moody commented during the meeting that portions of Laguna Canyon located in tl'ie -cify sliould probably be in a flood plain zone, as well. Commissioner Roger l.Mphear sug- gested the zone be discussed during con· sideration of the conservation element ot the General Plan. Moody said iuch a move would be appropriate. move a "land bank" to preserve futurt: •ssets. William Cunningham of the coun- ly plsnnlng stall aald the planning department regards the greenbelt pro- ject as essential to flood control as ouU_ln. ed in a report of ~e C.Orps of Engineers. The report he said stated that nood dangers in Laguna Canyon would drastically increase with development. From Page 1 JURY •.• to frequent 3 to 2 votes with the majority of commissioner Chairman Woodrow W. Butterfield and commissioners Fred Jef· ferson .and Arnold Forde lined up against commiSsioners HQward Smith and Dan Foley. Jn .addition to 1Jcommendation1 on the CAO'• office and plaMing department, the jury also called for: -A central county morgue and the reestab!Wunent of a separate coroner'• office which was coll.!IOlldated with the aheriff's office early last year. _, -Expansion of municipal c o u r t facilitie.!I in the main county courthouse. -Incr,ased use of the county'• emergency service.!! office to handle all tyjjes and sizes of disasters. -Immediate completion of the fourth floor of the main jail to relieve overcrowding. (Supervisors moved in 1970 to complete the fourth Ooor ol the jail but later rescinded their action because of the tight money situation.) -An expanded venereal disease educ;a· tion program combined with 1 request for appr9priate state legislation. -An increase in county health depart- ment out clinics ln<luding f~y ~tan- ning. \ "- -Establishment of a new animal s)>fjler In the , 10utheasl Oran1e Cio"l'tl'l area. -Hiring of additional blllnguel•perlon- nel for the . medical center's out ll'tfent clinic an~ emergency romm. The 1971 jliry wlll be dtscharged at i ,30 . p.m. Thursday and the new jury awom in !hortly thereafter. From Page 1 WINDS ..• One freak mishap occurred at Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza, where wind- whipped brush kept whacking an elec- trical sign until it finally shorted out in a shower of sparks and smoke. the winds triggered dozens of jangling burglar <ilarms. Broken branches, palm ·fronds, and other wind-downed items kept city work crews busy in most commun\Ues but there was no major damage reported. • Crocker, Four Banks Cut Rates By The A1110dated Pr<11 Four major New York banks and 1 CaHfornia bank reduced their prime Jen· ding to S percent today, from 5"'4 pertent, pushing thls key interest cbai'ge to its lowest level in nearly seven years. Chase Manhattan Bank, Ba~kers Tru5t Co., Manufacturers Hanover Trus.t Co., and Chemical Bank said in Ntw York they were cutting the ' minimwn interest they charge their most credit·worthy ctif- porate customers to ! percent eUe<:tive immediately. They followed the lead or New York's Irving 'J'rwt Co., which aMOUDCed a simllar cut on Friday, effective Monday. Ctocker Banlt or Calilornia today joined the major New York banks in lowering its prime commercial Joan rate to 5 per· cent. The bank said the new rate· ls effective lmmediittely. The last time the prime rate stood at the S perceni level was in March 11966. The reductions reflected a sharp drop in money market interest rates in recent weeks, which reduced the banks' cost of obtaining lendable funds . Sluggish business loan demand was also a factor, observers said, Most other large banks across the country maintained sv, percent prime rate. First National City Bank of New York , however. re<:ently trimmed its flexible lending rate to 5~ percent. Like City Bank, Bankers Trust and Irv· lng Trust both have flexible prime rates, which are adjusted periodically to reflect other money market conditions. Mrs. Hutchinson Services Slated Dr. Robert Cornelison will officiate at 11 a.m. services Thursday in St. Mary's Episcopal Church, Laguna Beach, for Beth B. Hutchinson, s« Flora St .. who died Monday at South Coast Community Hospital. She was 89. Mr.!1. Hutchinson is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Jack Stewart of Laguna Beach; grandson, Richard N. Stewart of Dana Point; and a great-grand.son, John- ny Stewlrt ol ·Dana · Polnl. A native of Iowa, she had tived In Or•llfl• County lor,th•:Jll'!t l' years. The family wuW ithat friends wishing to ma)e memorial donationa con- tribute to the South Coast Community Hospital fund. Private burial will follow the Thursday service. Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary Is directing. Lawrence Larson Rites Wednesday Services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Pacific View Chapel for Lawrence Lars Larson, 6.C Via Castilla, Laguna Hills, who died Sunday at South Coast Community Hospital. He was 75. Tasty Fudge Biggest ¥ss? Membm of an El Toro 1.,.u1 l!hoM hoCM WU~ Ill°"' hy nigh! art glad Iha! rnothtt'1 lud1e Is jusl abGut the lllU .. t thlni around . Jntruders who entered the Peter Schyler home, 23H2 Devonshire Drive, ignored cameras, watches jewelry and cuh that were ther~ for the taking and concentrated in· stead on what olflcers lisltd as -"to pi~ °'-fudge and assorted cookles.'1 • Sheriff's investigators are sattsfied today that nothing or value wu taken by the unknown in· truders. Laguna Niguel Woman Fined In Bar Brawl A Laguna Niguel woman, involved In the Sept. 5 Laguna, Beach "drinker'• walk" was found guilty of disturbing the peace and fine:d $35 last week in South County Municipal Court \ The c·onviction of Mrs. Patricia O'Brien, 30262 Benecia Ave., was follow· ed by dismissal of felony charges of assault and battery on a police officer. Mrs. O'Brien's conviction on the- disturbing the peace count became the fifth conviction of the 15 persons arrested following the disturbance at the door of the Orphanage Bar, 696 S. Coast Highway. Six per!OnJ have also been acquitted ol charge.s stemming rrom the lncld~l . 'Ibe nezt case tet for hearing Friday involv~ Billy Tanner. 1975 Laguna can .. yon Road, who i& charged with felooy assault on a police officer. From Page 1 CASPERS ••• ency Formation Commission. The flaht had moved into court in a series ol au11' and counter suits when Clark again ende4 the controversy by voting with tbe Le!gu1 of Cities. . Since the LAFC matter was closed ;n September, most of the action from the board of supervisors has been leas con- troversial. Caspf:rs today promised to emu1ate i well known car rental firm and "try lla1'der." H~·promised to\Cle'iott full ·lhht to the job, noting that it is tbl only organization that he bas headed in whtcti he did not own 51 percent. "I realize I only have a 20 percent in· terest here and I'll try to remember that," be concluded. Caspers is president of Keystone Sav-, lngs and Loan Association of Anahtlm and Westminster and has served u director of two other Westminster banll;I'. He is also a member of the board! of Anaheim Stadium, the Orange County Big Brother.!!, the Tournament of Rose, and the President's Council ol Ch1pm1n College. A IO.year resident of Lido Isle, he it married and the father of five children. Body Stuffer Jailed C.Ontainers plated for collection by householders may not weigh more than liO pounds, loaded, or have r. capacity of more than 40 gallons . The contract provides that the city will pay a bonus of $200 each month, payable to the contractor and hi! employes, if no veri(ia-ble complaint.!! are reteived ngardlng missed collections, containers not returned or Jids replaced, noise, im· politeneSI or spillage. POW Group, Rep. Leggett Criticize Nixon Remark Electricity to five customers was cut off for two hours after a San Diego Gas and Electric Company powerline was downed in the canyon behind San Clemente's Avenida Junipero. "With our fingers crossed, that's all that's happened so far," said a company spokesman. Mr. Larson, who is survived by hi.!I widow, Sigrid, was a native of Sweden who had lived In California for the past 48 years. He wa.!I employed as an air con· ditloning engineer for 20th Century-Fox Studio before retiring to Laguna Hills four years ago. The Rev. Arthur C. Knudten of the Lutheran Church of the Cross, Laguna Hill.!!, will officiate at the Wednesday service, with burial following at Pacific View Memorial Park. LAS VEGAS (AP) -A California man ~~s sentenced to one year in the county Jail after he pleaded guilty to stuffing the body of a Las Vegu camera girl into an icebox. Jimmie Wayne Crabtree, 33, of Long Beach, was senttnced tdonday on a · charge of "destroying evJdence" in con- nection with the drug overdose death of Diane Hamby, 19, whose body was found · April 20 in an unused icebox in the desert.. I Owtel CO.UT DAILY PILOT CIMllll COAi? PU•LllHING COM1WJf't tl•1*i H. WM ............. NlfllW JM\ ti. Cwtlrr -. ............ ~ ....... 11Mililn K••tll Ef!tK n0'1111t A. Mllff)\111• """"-1111 Edi"" CktJN H. lo" Ri,h•rl it. N1Q Al1i1Wlj: ..... lrlfll E•UIOrJ , ........ Offk. 22% ft>r•1t A'r•11v• Maili119 N4r••u •.o. I•• 666, t2lS1 S..C ....... OHIM IOI Hwt• II CMlia• l'••I. t2672 .,,.. ...... • ~ ,,.,_. -w .. , • .,. '"'" .......,.. a..dl• Jan "....,,.; 9ovlfVt"' th.rd~ ltoW 1111• ... ~ J From Wire Suvice1 WASHINGTON -A prisoner of war family group and a congressman who met privately with C o m m u n 11 t negotiators today virtually acrused President Nixon of lying about the ad· ministration's efforts to free the POWs. They directly challenged Nixon's Sun- day n1ght assertion that the North Viet· namese refused to trade American POW!! for a U.S. troop withdrawal deadline. "This is completely untrue," said a statement Issued by families for im· mediate release. · "A fantastic reversal of the truth," declared Rep. Robert L. Leggett (D- Calif.). During a television interview Sunday night, CBS correspondent Dan Rather asked on behalf of a POW mother if the United 1 States ever asked the other side whether It would return the prisoners and guarantee the safely of withdrawing troops if the administration set a final date for total withdrawal. Nlton Implied that the que1Uon was raised with the North Vietnamese but said they reje<:ted any such deal .. "This is not true," insisted families for Immediate ''lease. "He hu not RSked this question. You tan search the transcrlpta of the Paris talks from beginning to end and the only menUon of Utls: trade ia made by the North Vietnamese and the Nallonal Libera lion Front (Viet Cong)." Leggett contradicted Nixon's con· tenUons th>t the Commun!N turned down the pr<ipo&ed exchange. "Far from rejecllng thlJ trade. the other side explk:lllY olfered to do I~" Legretl uld. "They offered il to me In private on May 31 of lut yeu, and apln at the omclal .. ,otlaUna table on July 1. ""•Y repnted the oUer 1t the table moro limes than l can count. There'• bet• some ambiguity regarding the con- tinuation of aid to South Vietnam. But there has never been any question about their willingness to return the POWs If we set a date. We've never even bothered to respond to their offer." The congressman challenged Nixon to settle the controversy by directly pro- posing to the Communists that "we'll get out if we can get the POWs back." Famille.!1 for immediate releas~ claima about 250 POW family supporters for its efforts to force the administration to set a deadline in exchange for the POWs and an accounting of Americans missing in action. Of the more than 1,600 U.S. servicemen Imprisoned or missing in Indochina, about 360 are believ1.-'d held by the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong. Leggett frequently worked with the group in its drive to win congressional enactment of a pullout resolution . Sen. George McGovern ([).S.D.), also says Prtsident Nixon L'i trying to deceive the American people on the prisoner-of· war Issue. McGovern, who is seeking the Democratic presidential nomlnation, told a news conference Monday that North Vjetnam would release Am'rlcan POW1 in exchange for a deadlined U.S. •lthdrawal fl'om South Vietnam. McGovern aald when he RSked the Communist negotiators about lbe ei· chana:e lhey s.aid1 '•That'• precisely what we have in mind." The South Dakota sena~r also accused Nixon of poliUcal moUvaUon in timing administration decisions on the war, gearto1 his plans "to bl.! election tlmet.able." "All the 'President aald Sunday night about Vlelnam aupporis !hit charge," McGovern 11ld. "It f.s no accident that he used the •lectlon as the thlt1 !rime for h~ plan to end the war. 0 ' • ''The Dating Game''- . When • customer chooses • ilate for installation of his carpeting, he wants to be assured th1t tho cupetin9 will be instilled on s~hedule. ~ We are able lo provide fast, efficient service, due to th1 f1ct that we maintain 111 of our owo crews. If nece111ry, l;ecaure of construction del1ys, we c•n 1djust the scheduled date for our customers .Onvenlence. A~•r •II, c1rpetln9 c•n lie purch1sed many pl1ces, ind the on• thing we can provide th1t others c1n't, is the BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'loc•ntl• Ave. COSTA 11\ISA• 646-4838 HOUIU: Moft. lhru T!iura., t to S::IO -Pr!., f to 9 -S.t. t:30 to I .• .,( • ,. . • .' ' I I 1 • ' ' '• J b ~ • • • • • • Ted'ay's Flaal • 10L. 65, NO. l , 3 SECTIONS, 40 ~G.ES' ' r ORANGE cOONTY, C~tlfQRNIA ' Tt!ESDA>'l'.•:JANUARY' .f, 1972 • TEN.CENTS-' .. • • • • • .. ;-r • • is·xort . -.. Revet.ls -... . .--.c ... $190 <O Million Ship Contracts . ·' ... •• . I,, ' J:, '-. -' • ,f" • DAH..YP,Un'""ft'W.U.P~" J:f WAs WINDY But THE GREETi NGS1WERE WARt,1 .AS. THE PRESIDENT ARRIVED ·AT EL!TORO' Mi. Nixon' Spent' the Night •t His $On ,' Clo1Mnto Viii• •nd WH off . to San Diego thiO"Mornlng· • ' ... ' ' , . . . . . ' . ~ . Ja:pt;1nese Leader Due .iii ·Clemente ' ' r ' for:N~Q~ 'l;'alk wkvo 'cwn ::.. Pi'ime., 'ld(~ter l!iaaltu >s,~.l~ivea l9r !l:fewpQr¢.'~ Ood .. ll;:"i· .ll'tdzl<\•daY.'JQr A"° fY• If' "li!tll.'P-r~ Nixonl . , : Fer·Sa!O.i'll!o·hacfhopecl:)9 retire·tlpl fear .-•:...,.runlt conlerenc;e with Ni•on Will~vide All opportunity lo discuss the i:ciili!Catlons1 ol NU.on '• vi.alt to Peking oeit mclo!Jr ' , · . . . ~· , . . . • Sato rwa1 11¢ poilUcally ·last 'fU'Ml"!' ~-N~·_.._.i hls ·Oiina trip wi~t na.lJfylna Japan Jn advance. The Jou -of face on. Sato'• parl took the shine <J1f t!le '70;Y...,,.1d prime minister's "-'1"1Y iR!CJCMSfµl ef!orts lo. neg~ tbe • ~eraion ~of O):l.n.aJVa to Japanete con-• q.o1, • now-IChe<fUled ,fer .toJiie\ime between AJ>rll aad J$.-· , Solo tiaveied to cen~.Japan Tllfaday tO piy,·i visit ·to the 'lat-5brine,,tbe'most l&Cted-o<· Japaneae ohrines, whf>re · · leaders of the country custornacity go blefore taking Important trips. He return- ~ to To't)\o 'tUOaciay' night' for Jaal rmnute•CQMUltaUona tiefore departing for ~,Oemen\e. · . .. Mesa ·WelComes . . .. ' .. City o Qne or c.oata Mesa's first New Year ....,iutlom lolonday wu to e.tead an ol· nclal welcome to the new city of Irvine. ~men ~iruously approv~ a retolutlon o{ greetJng to Irvine and of. feting the advice and aervlcea of. Ceola• M".• uupon request." • • Dil.ISlY ,.~LOT Sl•ff ...... • 'lHE, Al"EX OF lfoY LIFE' .:Hew fo![d .Chairman. C.spio{s _ -. ( £4We've beeo a ci}y for ta years," cotn- tritnt.d COuncilmlln Alvin Pinkley. "! tblnk ·Ws irtat." ~ Irvine reaotutk>n was offered by J'daSW . Rolieit Wllaon. I • . ..... •. I POW Grf!_~p. C~ll~nges Nixon :~n ·Hanoi ·,'Dea;l' , \l .., ' ' I , rrG,m Wire 'SrivtCe., , • · · "Thls ·is ilof...true/' Iii.silted families for lfe.-.. fll'' • t • 'flASH'iNGTON -A prlao"'l' .o~ war munediate release. Those wUSlll -..W.J will "!>-• faD'.ily ~p and a cong\-esaman \t)lo ' "H~ has' not aslred this question. Y® side tlllliih), but,Jt' ...... lng to be_ mot' .PrtvilWx with Commun i st can ·-c!I! the"tral1SCrlpis •o[ the Paris u 'col~•aa ever,dli>PihilclQllll io· --Uajora !Oday virtually acatsed talb from beginning-to end and the only 1 a lrfgld 21 ~ J11 iOilie areas. '~.~~-el'·~·lyto"1 ·~!~ ~-.. menmn . of this trade is made by the 1l __ ~" ll'o •• -"™~··-• ·~~ .ree ""'"'"'· North ·VlebWneae ilncj .the National ·-1"'alt WW ranee m ~to~ l'hey directly challenged Nixori'a Sun-Llberatlon1Fron1 tVlel, Coiii >." 'lfmaday. -( • ,c\aY•rqlll assertion that the North Viet-.14geU . cootradlc.;.i Nixon's ..,.. ; JlYSIJtE>ft})A l' · -refused to trade Amerlcan}'OWa ttntlons -that the Coinmunlsta turned ,l , foraU.8:troopwithdra, wal,doadline., do=tbe~-... ,e·""·---. l>Uitorr Jo" ~Jiii ~ ~l<r .•'Ifill ,is compl<ttfy uotrlle. sald ra. • qi'ar ~"';",..w;g""il: trade, Ille 1 =~; ~".;~ ~,::: ::.::u:"' Issued by f~m,. ,lot ,;m-other side explicllly .olltt!!l -to ® II;" • t / ·~ release. . • . ' ~ , Le!!ietl said. ".They of/~ It to mo In U1t -· -f!Mr ~,lo "A lanlaJtlc reversal of U..' IHlth!" pri•lte on May II dflail yU.., ancl ~In •t !~~P'J!':,Jl ao•ieoftt;~ • -~Rep. Rober! L. ~1 ·co.., •ll!itol~nqo~tirJCtabieonJuly t. ,. ,,, ~a"-.: .. 7 ,<;aJll.f. TbeYrepealed\lie ottlielabltmore ,...,or'" 1 m 0 ~ tio•M> miuu c televlslOn lntenle.w Sunday times than I can count. There's been 1 ~p!ill. S•< •lortl f'«,o• 12. , , ~ , corrapondent .Dtn J\alher aom• ambiguity ngarclln1 the ccln-~ ee-_ I -' • • a eel on behalf ol a POW mather lf"tho tl~uation ,of aid to South· \lietnam, l!u! 1 c;.;;.;:;' .,.,. :".r;':, -. ~ 1 llnitod St.ales ever luked the other aide th<re bu never been any queatlOn abciut -" --•• ~ -wbelhet It """Id relum tho priaone11 "'1CI their wlllingnesa to .rttum the POWa If 11 ~....... C :=-,...... JtJ~ guarantee the aa{ely of. wJthdrawlng we let a date. )Vf've ne~u even botbtred -•• • r,_-"., troops if the Oclmlniltratlon ae1 1 final to respond tO !heir orrer.• ••s:l•t• II ..i...t. I l ""'"'· al · 'fllo.A ..LAlf_,8 .....11 1 ... -to -,.." •-• ~ ortota •··~••. ..~~ ............ ·ft- 1:''1' I j • -1: :er.!:."'" ".!i 'NWil !lb_plled tllat the question WU solUe• °"' tiNlllVt<l'l' by dlr.dJy PIO- ·-·-._.,. flbocl rib !he llcirtll Vltlnameae but poafng lo llJe °'1Umuli!lll lbal "we'.11 ,U aid tlley .reJ«l«l a~ illtll ~l. out If... bid<.~ , I By JOHN VALTERZA Of tM Dllty •Utt Stiff SAN DIEGO -Pr"ident Nixon llew to San Diego from San Oemente tlUa morn- ing to artDCIUDCt the awaM of more than SIOO mlUklo In contracts to build Am«l- can sb.ip!I here, in San Pedro and else· where. The federal government· will pay 4.1 'percent of.the coot -a subsidy aimed.at offaettq lower pricta·charaed by ship- builders in Japan aad Europe. The visit to National Steel and Ship- buildine Co. came two days before Mr. Nixon ls to meet with Prime Mini3ter EJu.\U Sato of Japiln. Japan bas aup- Jilanted the U.S. as the majQr ahii*Ulder around the rim of the Pacific Ocean. The President armo~ the award of a $54.& tnillion contract to NaUonal. The l{Ort will · be three bulk carriers (t&Qkers) for the U.S. Merchant Marine. TtSe 31,300-tcn (deadweightj tankers wllfbe built for f\.fargate Shipping Co., an affiliate of Keystone Shipping Co. or Philadelphia. They will be operated under a long term charter to Shell International Pet roleum Co. of London, primarily to carry oil from the Caribbean to the Atlantic Coast. The YHllels will cost more than $18 million each. Just befor e the President flew here, the administrat ion announced D e f e n s e Department approval of condltlonaJ con· !See NIXON, Page I I Consultant Hired • lrvine ·Council Selects 'Manager ' ' By PAMELA llAIJAN Of .. c.llY ,.. ... ,,.,, TrilJtees ol tlle Coplitrano IJnifttd School' il!JtriCt r.: ~iicfby; ~I tre'otmenl al a rOc.nt m'teiinc ol'ufe M diel>eck College board -vowed Monday to do everythltlc pooatble tn:ilnpr\we com- munication tbetween the lwO boards. . sdfCtllit Fred 'Newhart' Jt, ilid'Dr. Roberl Beailey ·to bi! · lhO 'dllllrJCt'i r~ptaUv.eron the ®liegel~;l·.W. ...,r; ...... 1..,ue.·tti stud ......... .,, .... :.elh!ldlOt1Ilect1ng trlla~i;'"lW'~ dlaeuatcttbeir'-.1 coi\lioO\'atkin wllb the Sa~b&C~ itp11!sentati+es. - 'l'rustee Robert Dahlberg cllkaed !Mt t.>1tlle members ol the a\Jili_.. bail betli "plants" -people iued Ill be thel1!. • 1"l'bere were a number-of pe()ple lD the aud~ who ~ plan.ted.'" ia!ll Dahlberg. "One said words to l!>e'efftl;t 'ar. you go~ to Ier'o ~ttee .tell yo\J what to do' .. " •• -lllh!berg-uld be ls apPiiUOif"~~llii=f~ a~"loulcl ---that. achool boorll should not listen to lta cllben a<lviJon. He. ~Id • in elecfed ' !!ocfy• bu Ole -ilblllty 'JO llartn IO .lile '.P,OCJPle II f't~JC:n~. I J • "If we get •DOthinC mon 'tbal>' IM~ commuolclllotl ' bi!tween lhe boircl aJlll the -le throqbout'lhe college ~t aad IOJllCI lnvolveineni lo whal'.l ~ dooe at U.. ~I, then 1hal ls a.worthy goal," he' added. 1 Dahlllerg s,ld the CoplstrariO 0ntiaci Stjlool District ba• a rl8ht iq make auc· ges11ons about lbe m.thod ol eJect1or trustees and the sl:a of the board. Dahlber1 added tbat moo from the com"°""" IChool c11ttr1cta· of the Si>d- dld>act Colltge DIJlrtct ~d ~ • tli-' . panded to Include ouu..uons Jn tht educational..,.. aod olher artas. I "The Saddlfbock, Board bas tht .._.lblllty to llatl!ft," be laid. CJlalrman Ml Hcnt ,..w llO couldn't Ul1ci,ntaad wbyc the Saddl<Oack board wauo dottlllivt. ''Our bootciJ)lade a coo- structive 1ugestlon. Yet Jt was met with l great deal or ~auvfsm. ,, "I . The new ,cOmmJttee mfm~rs who will llleel' with npr:eaentaUves of tho olhet icbool c1J.1tr1cta .,. Tlli!in and JAguna Beach In addition to the Saddlebilct •\>' pointeea -allO . vowed' to open Uie meetings to the public. ' 1 The board· also uted the a«· (Ste.SADDLEBACI, Pare I) Tasty Fµdge Biggest Loss? Members o1-an El TO!O limlly •"-home -burglarlmd M .... da.Y nlgbt are glad that mother's fudp ii Just abc>cl the -thlni! arounci> -' lntrllderl wlio entered the Peter , Schyler borne, -Dev~ •. Drtve, ~ '*1lel'U, walche!. jewelry and_ cuh thal ,..,. tbeH for the laking and concentrated Jn. stead on wbal t£~ ~lfed •• "JO ptecu of fUC!p and. asaorted cook.I•'' Shtrlffo 1 n v • 1 ti f a t o rs are 11Uallod today tllat nolhlllfl 0( .. Jue WU takeo by the unknown ln- lnldota, - I DAI L y PI LOT SI T.....,, .i-, ~. 19/2 Columnist Scores U.S. Grand Jury Continues Attacks On Security Board; Planning Unit Criticized _in Final Report WASHJNGTON (AP ) -Column ist Jack Anderson aald today he hopes hl11 publish- ed reports of secret minutes of White Hou.st 1trategy 1e1.slon11 on India- Pakistan result In 1 real 1ecurlty aystem. B1 JACll: BROBAC!t Of -~ ,,. .. lltff 1'hfl It'll Orange County Grand Jury l.n its final report for the year coollnued to sharpl y crltlclu the Boatd of Supervisors and members of the county Planning Commission. Reporlin& on her stewJirdshi p. foreman Doreen M1rshall of Newport Beach today al!IO ur1ed the panellng of two grand juries each year, one for governmental Irvine Marathon -. ' ' ,.•l•w aod !be olhtr lo handlt· criminal SUpportln& !ht need for two juoo • lndlctmenta. She noted thal tile 11111 jury comparison of the 1'71 group's criminal ' took the aame poaltJon. se1slon and Indictments with tbolf: of tht "As the result of my a.!lsociation thi• 197U jury 1bow1 the following larae i& past year, I am moved to express creases : per90'!J thanb tlld encoura1ement to,the The 1970 jury met 33 Ume.s, heard 129 ca pable and dedicated persons serving ca.!les and indicted 261 persona. Through lhe people of Orange County at all le1•t.l.!1 Dec. 8, 1971, the current jury, whJch will of lls government ," said Mrs. Marshall, be discharged Thursday. held 4 2 former Newport Beach mayor In one of meetings, up 27 percent: heard tu cases, the rare momenta of praise durini the up 49 percent and Indicted 388 persons, paat year. also up 49 percent. Banks Set "I think ~ atcurlty system ln fact b a cenW'!hip system used to hide all ac- tivities in diplomacy in general," Ander10n said In a telephone Interview. •·ey oper1ting In the dark they (the ad· ministr1tion > can commJt blunders in the ...._ dark." For aome three week.I Anderson's col- umna, syndicated to 700 new1paptr1, have quoted from what he 11id were rnlnute1 of a Whlt.e House crisis team known 111 the Washington Special Action Group (SAGI. Monday's column uid Henry Kissinger, the Pre.sident'a 153i#tant for security af- fairs, lied when he told reporters that the administration wasn 't anti-India . First Council Meeting S-pans ThreeLongDays 5 Percent Prime Rate By The Anoelated Prt.11 "I am getting hell every haK hour from the President thlt we are not bel:nc IOOgh enoogh M India," Anderson quited Kissinger as 51.ying in one SAG meeting. The co\.. umnl!t said that N•H•Y ic1s11Ho•• three days later Ki.s· linger ''directed that henceforth we mow Mow a certain coolness to the lndiaru:. The ambassador to India ia not to ht treated at too high a leveL" Government officials said Friday a securltv invutigation Wl\1 under wiy to find mit who "leaked" the information to Anderson . "I know that people In the State and Defense Departmenta and in the National Security Council have been questioned," Anderson said. "There are 50me security matters and those J don't wie," the columnist said. "But I have found none in theae papers.'' He aaid administration officials are more interested in protecting themselves than the national lf:Ctlrily, and claMily everything. "They've been so promiscuous, they've debased the aecret 1tamp," Anderson 1aid. "Nlntty.five percent of information la classified to keep It from the American public. "Kissinger \a treat- ed like a secret we.a. Irvine City Council Monday night may have set 11ome kind of a record for meeting length. With adjournml!!nt of the third session at 11 :45 p.m. Monday, Mayor WiUlam From Page .l MANAGER ... in University Park Elementary School. Morgan 1aid that while employed by the Griffenhagen-Kroeger flnn for one year, he prepsred the Incorporation study for the city of Carson and assisted that city through the flrlf 1lx montha follow· ing incorporation. He worked for the city or Cerrito1 a.!I assistant city manager and director of Jand use planning at the time when the city phased out agricultural land for residential, rommercial and industrial uses, ht aaid. While at the G-K con.!lulting firm, Morgan aaJd he staffed the incorporation work done by the firm for Gale.ta and Carpinteria u well 11 recruiting services provided to the cities of San Fernando and Westminster. For the past year, Morgan has aperated his own consuJting firm 1t 17291 Irvine Blvd ., Tustin. He has 1 bachelor'• degree in public 1dmini1tr1tian from San Jose State College and has done graduate work at San Fernando Valley State, USC and the Southwestern University College of 1..1.,.. · everythina be doet ls clM1lt\ . Nobody knowa what ht'• doing, e v • n ConllJ""'. The Sl1le Department doeonl't know anything and they are charged 1:-~ "''" •!Oii .• \ •• ..e. Moraan outlined for the council 1. with foreign policy. JACIC AHDlllOtt Yet thla man operatt.e like some IOf1 of loreiln pallcy RMpulin ." An<ler10n uki ht believes he ha.!1 the complete set or paper• from the White House meetings and that he ha.!1 about ex· bauated the 1Ubjed in print. "I believe I made the esuntial points," he aaid. Frotn PIJfle l SADDLEBACK • • ministration to obtain an opinion from the County Counsel on whether or oot two apposing me.lhods of electins trustees could be placed on a ballot, givlne the voter a choice. Caplstrana's board has long pushed ror election by trustee area instead of at· large and expansion of the college board to seven members. Jenathy list of duties he believed a city administrative consultant should IC· compll1h, based on hi1 e1perlences with other cities. ' He indicated he would assume full responsibOJty for duties ranging from design of city forms to beginning recruiting efforts for a permanent city manager, plaMing director and others. Morgan said an urban redevelopment project he Is presently working on for the city of Spokane, Wash . would not in- terfere with his availability to the new ci· ty of Irvine. "I wai impressed by Morgan," Coun- cilman H. Quigley aaid, "both for his price and his experience. "l don't see that either the G-K or VTN firms will offer us more than Morgan will. Eric (ol G-K) hasn't done this kind of work before and in the specific· of work before and in the specific Irr stances when the G·K firm did help newly incorporated cities, it appears Stan Mort1an was the man who did it," Quigley concluded. Councilmen voted 5 to 0 In favor of the resolution naming Morgan Irvine's tem· porary administrative consultant. Fischbach noted "we ha ve co me to the end of a very long first meeting of the council.'' ln all the three-part organi zational meeting involved ll 1h: hours of public session. The meeting began at 6:45 p.m. last Tuesday, following Incorporatio n, and ran until 9:15 p.m. that night. The meeting resu med Thursday al 7:30 p.m. and ended al 12:15 a.m. Frida y. 1'1on· day's session also began at 7:30. The only major action taken by the council Monday was the selectio n of Stanley Morgan to serve as a temporary city administrati ve consultant. The DAILY PTLOT has following each of the previous portions of the first coun· cil meeting published summaries of all ordinances resolutions and minute orders. The. foll owing is a similar recap of Mon· day's council actions. ORDINANCES None. RESOLUTIONS 72· l, names Stanley Morgan Associates as the new city's temporary city manage- ment consultant. (Moved by H. Quigley, unanimous ). MJNtrrE ORDERS Consultant contract: authorizes city al· torne y to prepare a contract for approval at Wednesday's council meeting pro-- viding compensation to Morgan as cit y administrative consultant based on amounts offered in his remarks; to the council, $20 per hour up to a maximum $200 daily, plus expenses. Contract issuance subject to verification of Morgan's resume and presentation to the council. Building freeze exception : allows James Lee Huggins of Irvine to be issued • loulldln& JMP111 lor a -~ patio coVer at bls home. The first regularly scheduled meeting or the city council will be held 1t 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the multipurpose room of University Park Elementary School , 4572 SaOOburg Way, Irvine. Mayor Fischbach noted that that meeting will include formation of a city planning commission and discussion of other commissions. Holdover items on the agenda will in- clude setting a planning agency meeting time and place; appointment 'Of tem· porary city employes including a depllty clerk. treasurer. city engineer, and authoriiation to purchase office supplies. Body Stuffer Jailed LAS VEGAS (AP ) - A California man was sentenced to one year in the county jail after he pleaded guilty to stuffing the body of a Las Vegas camera girl into an icebox. Jimmie Wayne Crabtree, 33, of Long Beach, was sentenced Monday on a charge or "destroying evidence" in con· nection with the drug overd ose death of Diane Hamby, 19. whose body was found April 20 in an unused icebox in the desert. The new Saddleb1ck committee will el· plore this and other Ideas on how the board should be elected and its size. V io"lent Winds Assail OIAN611 COAST Four major New York banks and a California bank reduced their prime len- ding to 5 percent today, from sv, percent, pushing• this key Interest charge to ill lowest level in nearly seven years. Chase Manhattan Bank, Bankers Trust Co., Manufacturers Hanover Trust Co., and Chemical Bank said in New York they were cutting the minimum interest thty ch1rge their most credit-worth)' cor· porate customer.I to 5 pereent effective immediately. They followed the lead of New York's Irving Trust Co., which announced a similar cut on Friday , effective Monday. Crocker Bank of California today joined the major New York banks In loWerlng its prime commercial loan rate to 5 per· cent. The bank said the new rate is effective Immediately. The last time the prime rate stood at the 5 percent level wu in March 1966. The reductions renected a sharp drop In money market interest rates in recent weeks, which reduced the banks' cost of ob ta in Ing lendable fu·nds. Sluggish business loan demand was also a factor, observers said. Most other large banks across the country maintained 5V. percent prime rate. First National City Bank of New York, however. recently trimmed its fle.1ible lending rate to 51n percent . Like City Bank , Banke.rs Trust and Irv· in,: Trust both have flexible prime rates, wbich are adjwted. periodically to reflect other montJ mG'kel con0ition1. Laguna Studies Ban by Irvine On Tree Cutting Laguna Beach may be. ri1ht behind the new city of Irvine in adopting an or· dinance prohibiti11g the cutting ol tree1. Planning commissiooen: in Laguna Monday night requested the city start to obtain a copy of the Irvine ordi11ance, passed by the fledgling city council Thursday night, as an urgency measure. The Irvine ordinance prohibits cutting dov;n trees more tha11 three and a hall inches in diameter. Permits, however, can be granted by the city council for removal of trees J( necessitated by de- velopment al a piece of property. Irvine became the th ird California city to adopt such •n ordina11ce. Both C1rmel and Sacramento have 1imilar 1tatute1. Hillin& repuledly al lhl plannllli com· missioners and their actlvitlea, the jury report called for an end to 1'lhe dlarup. tlve Interference lnto the profwlonal worldngs of the county planning depart· ment by an apparent alllance by aome county pl anning rommlssioners." 1ncluded In the final rtport were studies not prev iously released on the C-Ot1nty admin.lltrative office, planning department, Orange County Medical Center, mental health actlVltie.t and some of the county 's larger department.I. Regard ing the adminlstratlve office, the jury !ald aga in that the su pervisors have great need of good administrative assistance. "A move by aome members of the Board of Supervisors to fire County Admlnlstralive Officer Robert Tbomu last February damaged rapport and coordlnation between depar1ment heads and the CAO,'' the rt!port 1tated. "Planning commissioners were accuied of poor relationships with the planning department .staff charging that com· mla.!lionera chose to ignore recom• mendatlons of staff members." The report continued, "Too many times, the professional, unbiased in· formation provided by the ata(f went unheeded. Without offering reasons for its action, planning commission made many decisions contrary to staff re.com· mendatlon.s." The above comment obviously referred to frequent 3 to 1 votes with the m.lljority of commi!llloner Chairman Woodrow W. Butterfield and commissioners Fred Jef· lerson and Arnold Forde lined up against commissionera Howard Smith and Dan Foley. In addition to recommendatio ns on the CAO's office and planning department, the jury also called for : -A central county morgue and the reestablishment of a separate coroner's office which was consolidated with the sheriff's office early last ye.ar. -Expan,ion of municipal co u rt facilities in the main county courthouse. -Increased use of the county 's emergency serv ices office to handle all types and slies of disasters, -Immediate completion ot the fourth floor of the main jail to relieve overcrowding. (Supervisors moved in 1970 to complete the fourth noor of the jail but later resci nded their action because of the light money situation.) -An expanded venereal dlsea!e educ.a· lion program combined with a request for appropriate stale legislation. -An increase in county health depart· ment out clinics including family plan- ning. _ -Establishment of a new animal shelter in the southeast Orange County area. HllrlnJ ol.~tlonal ·bllln&ual perao .. nel for the rnedlc1I center'• out pstlait clinic ind emer1eccy romm . The 1971 jury wilrbe discharged at 1:30 p.m. Thursday and the new jury sworn in ahortly thereafter. From PIJfle .l NIXON ... tractl for construction of nine 2.S,~ton tankers to cost $66 million. Four will be built in the Todd Shipyards In San Pedro. San Pedro has a 6.1 percent unemployment ratt. Five of the vessels will be built at the Bath Ironworks, Bath·, Maine. With today's signing of the contract with National Steel, the maritime ad· mlnh1lration has Je.t nearly $2(IO million wt1rth of contracl!J with West Coast ship- builders in the last 18 months. Whitt House aides said the contracts will mean &0me 7 ,500 manhours of ne.w shipyard employment on the West Coast. For every shipyard job created, it was estimated that one additional job will be created in secondary, supporting in- dustry. 1V,ITt ....... TeenlJfled Mayor The nation's youngest mayor, IS.year old Jody Smilh of Ayr. shire, Iowa, was sworn lnto of· fice Monday and received both a telegram and phone call from President Nixon. The telegram was displayed at Smith's inaugural ball attend· ed by friends, relatives and dignitaries. From Pagel CASPERS ..• notice, an action that wu rescinded ln August. In another move, which was hotly con- tested by minority board membert William Phillips and David Ba~er, Caspers sought the. ouster of county ad· ministrative officer Robert Thomas. The move was defeated when Clark voted with Phillips and Baker to retain Thomas. One of the hottest issues In which the freshman supervisor became involved was a battle with the county Lea~ of Cities over membership of the Local Ag· ency Formation Commission . The figb t had moved inti> court in a series of auits and counter suill when Clark again ended . the C'Ontroversy by voting with the League ef Cities. Since the LAFC matter was clased Jn September, most of the action from the board o( supervisors has been less con· troversiaJ. Caspen today promlsed to emulate a well known car rental firm ' ind "fry harder." He promised to devote full time to the job, noting that it is the onl.v organization that he has headed in whlcli he did not own 51 percent. "I realize I only have a 20 percent In· lerest here and I'll try to remember that," he concluded. Caspers is president of Keystone Sav· ings and Lean Association of Anaheim and Westminster and has served as director of two other Westminster banu:· He is also a member or the boards of· Anaheim Stadium , the Orange County · Big Brothers. the Tournament of Rose.! and the President's Council of Chapman College. A JG-year resident or Lido Isle, be ia married and the father o( rive children. Voters Register STANFORD (AP ) -The Slud•nt Com. mittee for Involvement in Politics says .1 one.-day voter registration drive It sponsored Monday at Stanford University attracted 745 new voters. and 71 percent of them registered as Democrats. DAILY PILOT --" .............. -·-SooC1-oto Southland, Chill Air ''The Dating Game'' • -, -----OA.Aff(;f: 'OAST ,Ul\l!H!MG COM,.AHV ••~•rl N. w.,J ,, •• loll, ... 1"11111 ...... J1c• R. Curl •v Va ,,..i.w .... c;-.i ~ l1i•1J11t K,,.,;a ••1tw· 1~•'"'' A. M~'•J.i~• MtMtlftt l!d•llH' C~ttltt H. l••t Riclo.1•J ,, NtU AUllltMI /IOl~lnt f.•lf0<"1 °""" c.tit """9: ,. w"~ ll•v $'""9 H..-n 1 .. e11: .mi .,._,, '""'""'"* L~ 1..-clOl m Fa•"' ..,...,,.,. J.Wilt ..... INCi>• 11'111 lloK~ hv~vtl"ll ._ ~; as ~ £1 i:.mw. A.-1 • M By ARTIWR R. VINSEL OI Mtt CMlllY Pli.t lltff Slashing down out of mountain pas.ses. Icy Santa Anl winds today continued to aandblast the Southland, blowing away almost anythJng that wasn't nailed down, from tumbleweeds to house trallers. The bitter gales -surpassing hur· rlcane force In aome gusts -are ex- pected to continue, subsiding tonight and early Wednesday, leaving inland areas ahlvering In sub-freezing temperatures. Orange County escaped the worst of the winds in terms of actual damage reported by d1yll1ht loday. San Fernando Valley residents: and those living in or passing through Ril'erside and Sin Bernardino CoW'.IUes suffered most with power blackouts ind tr1velers' warnings poated. Callfomia Highway Patrol orficu s reported f1erte wind blasts up to ao mile.a: per hour bJew over three house trailers and a truclt·•nd·lrailer rig. Camper ownen contemplating highway tr1vel on major routes from lht Pacific Coast Inland were 1!10 warned to ally put. Tumbleweeds bounding like banshees across hia:hway1 up ind down the Or1n1e C-Oast ovemlgnt poaed "' tJU10Yfn& huard lo many molorilto. Orange Counl)' Harbor P1lrol otflctrs reminded boaltn lhal 11Je womlnp tns hoiated but aaid lht wlndl oUlhort were dyln1 down. A Fulleri<lll police W&tllll hid lo hitch • ride In """ with • ..Ueque lhiJ morning, after a large tree toppled, crushing both of his cars. He said hi!! didn 't want to ht identified . Little damage was reported in West Orange County but lhe chilly Santa Anas kept many persons awake ind cut visibility along Pacific Coast Highway with a constant cloud ol blowing dust and sand. Rain-soaked billboard signs were also ' ripped away In many spots, littering the landscape like confetti. A decorative awning at Look Realty in Sunset Beach wa.!I sihrtdded by the high winds and ill aluminum frame bent bad- ly. Pawer lines were downed In scattered spots throughout the Oran1e COlst and One freak mishap octurred at Costa Mtsa's South <Aast Pl1u, whert wind· whipped brmh kept whacking an el~ trical algn until it finally 1horted out In a shower at sparks and smoke. the winds lriggered dowls of l•llillni burgh1r ailarms. Broken branches, palm fronds, and other wind-downed ltertls kept city work crews busy In moat communitlu but there was no major damage reported. Electriclty to nve customers was cut off for two houn after 1 San Diego Gas ind Electric Company powerllne was downed In . the , canyon beblnd S.n Clemente's Avtnida Junipero. "Wllh our finger• cr.....i, lhoi'• all 11111·1 h1ppened 10 lor," llid •company IJIOktaman. Whon • customer chooses o O•I• for inst•ll•tion of his corpoting, ho w•nh to bo 1uurod that tho corpoting will bo instollod on schodulo. Wo oro able to provide fast, efficionl service, duo to tho fact th1t wo m•inl•in •II of our own crows. If nocoss1ry, boc1uso of construction doloys, wo con 1djurt tho 1ehedul1d dtlo for our cu1tom1rs convenience. A#er .n, c1rpotin9 con ~. purchtsod m1ny pl1cos, •nd tho ono thing wo con provide th•t others con'!, It tho BEST SERVICE JN ORANGE COUNTY I ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 1663 Ploctntlf Av•. COSTA HtlSA 646-4838 HOUIJ1 Molt. thru Tllun., t le 5:30 -Prl., 9 lo t -S.t., 911() lo S )'. " ' \ \ •' • ·' I J - Huntington Beat!h • ·Fountain Valley ''.~~~~I~~· Today's nn.J N.Y. Stoe1u • • -• • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, jANUARY 4, 1972 TEN CENTS -• View -.. .... , •. • Trustees ·.........Wdinc" unless the -nilinc be reversed. · Bui the boanl wu not bopelvl that ii! actlon, taken Monday night at its recuJar monthly meelh>C. ·wooJd be ef!ecli"' in time to prevent overcrowding. , 'AJ'll be ve,Y SUrpl'ised if We aft abJe to ·bring to bear enough•P...Sll\ft to tha~e 1hls rulini: within the foreseeable1uture, • a.aid trustee"'R. James Sbaffer:"lt'1 very 'diirlCfilt" to undo these decisions once they a"re made." = -· .. Win·ds Smash . Southland; County Es~pes Damage • . across.highways up and down the Oranae Coast ... emight posed an •11n1>ying hazard to many motorist!. · Orange · County Harbor Patrol officers reminded boaters that gale wanlings are . hoisted but said the winds ollshore were eying down, "Fqt!Orliit.poliCe"!i2r1"9t hlil'b>tilll:h a ride to• work wilh a· cOtleague• tltis morning,, ·after a large tree ·topl!le<!, · crilshing ooth of his cars. · He said he didn't want to be Identified. Little dJm,age was ·reported In West Orange c6unfy but the chilly Santa Anas kept mauy persons awake aud cut visibility along l'aciOc Coast Highway wlth a constant cloud of blowing dust and &and. ~soaked billboard sl.gns were also ripped away tn many spots, littering the iandacape like confetti. A decorative awliing at Look Realty in Sunset lleacll was shredded by the high wlnda and ti! aluminum frame bent bad· ly. Power lines were downed ln scalte~ spots throughout the Orange Coast and the winds ttil!iered dozens of jangling burglar ,alarms. -.. • He .Won't Take ' It With Him ·,. ' GAtm:sVILtE, Fla. (AP) -A . ~ddtn ,mlllii>naire ~ who says "yo~ ~an·t ,take it with you" has "dnnated'$100,0llO for an agtlcullural Center. 'Htnry. H: W , 69, bas given away P00,000,Jately: · "Some pl lnY friends thought lbeJ coatd tile It wtth4hem," Aki the ~ Victim. "I know ., d!fl~y. I 1D8do mon<J from ptpple, so whJ not give It back?" Beet, -who 1 accamul•ted hl• ronune through rtal estate. 11 I lover of "fast hoi;set, pretty women • IJld 1$ fNf old houriicio!' Most ol Beck'• gilts have been tel homes for homeless or sick children, but today he donated '200,000 to Alacbua C o u n t y ~•.-­ government for coostruc!lion of ·~ aa:rlcultural center and• fairgrounds. Beck's phllosoptiy ~r atWn« rich: ''You can't &el bi& bf -Inc llU!t." , • ' Shaffer then asked Dr. Hall to begin exploring alternatives the district will race li the state ruling cannot be readily chsnged. "Id like lo know through wbat bureaucralk mumbo jumbo the people or OCean View have been kicked in the neck," Dr. Bauer said. Dr. Bailer charged that the slate in· tended the new ruling as a gimmick to reduce their support to local school districts. "ll no one is allowed to build,,..' Nixon State Ruling . he said, "then the state doesn't have to pay to help them build." Since the Octan Vitw school district has a relatively weak tax base, a signifi- cant . proportion or Its building must always be !inancft through the state Of- fice of Local Assistance. Superintendent Hall agreed with Dr. Bauer's analysis. "There is less money than there is need at the state level," he said, "and so the state has imposed all kinds of restrictions to make it more dif- ficult to get at what little money there is." Hall joined wilh.lbe boanl in attackin& the new ruling, however. He said that the school district bad always purchased lots. and bullf tcbools at the same time that new homts were being built. "If the new .ruling had been In effect earlier," Dr. Han told the board. 110cean (See CROWDED, Page %) Bares Jobs $100 Million Ship Contract,s Told By JOHN VALTERZA Of IM et.NJ' P'l'91 Sttff SAN DIEGO -President Nixon flew to San Diego from San Clemente this morn- ing to anoounce the award of more than $100 million in contracts to build Ameri- can ships here, in San Pedro and ef.se- where. The federal government will pay 43 percent of the cost - a subsidy aimed at offsetting lower prices charged by ship· builders in Japan and Europe. New Angle In Mystery D~& .. t:Y.e . , . . ·-kmltlPll6nJnlo the ~.-u.. or 111e Gon1m1 ~ nr. ebier• -wlllle ~ fOund ID a cat Jn)!Un: 1iJ!11on Beach &mday, took 1 new twist toci.y with" the revelation that the man had died two or three days earlier. Sam C. Sparks Jr., 29, was. discovered dead In hb car al a Huntington Beach in· teraectlon at 1:30 p.m. Sunday. This 111Q1"11ing Detective Sergeant M o n I y McKennon said that police believed Sparks had died sqmewbere else and then ~ driven to ~ intersectfun. The cauae of death is still being In- vestigated. No marks were found on the body, according to police . "There still iJ no evidence of a horilicide, • said Mc Kennon, -disclO&ed that medical reporti sbowolc! that Sparks had been dead from between 32 to 48 hours be(ore his body was discovered. Sparks, wbo lived al 6200 Edinger Ave., Apt. S«i, wu found lying on his side near the steering wheel in a car near Blanton and Pearee streets in the Sunset Heights district. - Public Funds Urged To Protect Wildlife SACRAMENTO (UPI) -cali!omlans were warned Monday that they must share in the cost of insuring the turvival of the state's 43 endangered and rare species of flab and wildlife. State Fish and Game Department Dlttctor Ray Amell ttcommencled that public funds be provided "to place under public stewardship Ulole habitat areas crlUcal to these animals and to support the necessary programs of protection and management." He lnalle his remarks ID a report to Gov. lloilald Reagan and the Slate Legislature • The visit to National steel and Ship. building Co. came two days before Mr. Nixon ts lo meet with Prime MlDlster Elsatcu Sato of Japan. Japan hal !Ill>" planted the U.S. as the major sblpbulldtr around the rim of the Pacific Ocean. The President announced the award of a $54.6 million contract to National. The work will be three bulk carriers (tankers) for the U.S. l\-1erchant Marine. The 38,300-ton (deadweight) tankers will be built for Margate Shipping Co., an affiliate or Keyatone Sllipping· Co. of Philadelphia. '!'hey will be operated under a~ term charter ID Shell Interna Petroleum ·Co. of London, prlmarlly carry oil from tlie C.rlbbean to 11\t Atlantic Coast. The vessels will ~ more than $18 million each . Just before the President Dew here, the administration announced D e f e n a e Department approval of conditional con· !See NIXON, Page %) New Administrator Huntington Mayor Says .. Council Knew of Storm llJ ALA!t-~i;.. • Of ... Dllr ..... HunUngton Beach Mayor> Ge or I • McCracken today al!lnl)ed th•I the city council was fully aware or the pollUcal turmoil that had embroiled the city's new adminiJtrator in a prev,ioua position. The new admlnlllrator, David D. Rowlands, 56, wbo spenl Mbnday and to- day ID the city looking for a bome,\<)_reo_t before starting the job ID mid F.....wy, JDade a brief appearance bel«'e the city councli Moilday night and chatled with the pr,ess this morning. · Rowlands was city maDl(er of Tacoma, Waah., for 1J' yo;an, before reelgnini In 1919 am1cl • ~that alao saw· a mayor ousted and five of nine <'OllllCilmen later recalleCl Rowlands then "took hta 'prttenl fob as executive vice president of the l!eattie University District Develo~.,,t Council, a move which be deactlbejl IOdo1 • ·• ''twO-f,ear sabblllcal lo gel.~' 11ow1anas pointed out that he hlMI been a city manage< for Zl Y""'·and tl11fl>e was aDJious to return to a poidUon. fn city hall. "It's in my blood," he said. Mayor McCracken aald that Rowlands had disclosed In de~t the cirCWD1tances or his departure from the city manaaer'• spot in Tacoma. ThiJ -piorntng an · executivo city employe ln Tacoma, who inferred to re- main anonymous. aplalned n .. t Rowlands becariie involved In • dlapute with the directly elected mayor, A. L. Rasmussen, In 11169. . - "It WIS • pel"IOnallty clasb, M the source uJd. •un,e mayor wanted to take over. Rowlands had a strong penonallty, loo, knew that be had doi)e • aood job and wouldn't buckle under." • Rasmuasen lhad lieeo a .tale .eoator for 20 years belort runntne for the . DAU.Y PK.OT t!Mt"'9t lllVIW:S STORMY PAST -No'#<Clly-Alde Rowlandt mayor'• poll;: • -: "I'll glv~ oa-ldilMll bolr tough ii was to gel ~ wllli 1ilm," the cfty employ• uld. 'l'he le ' i I i a t u c. ~ llim, rlitlt out or his -~ 'l'hOn at hil;llrst coUllciI meeting he as~· ed tar ~ reslgnlttoo." The conlllet ended In late 1189 wiltn Rumuslm was c1eresled In bl1 .l'HI,.,. (Seo ljOWJANDI; l'qe I) 1 Huntington Councilman Scores Planned . Unit,s · W~dler '11-w!Cbd wiDds w111 aub-f • aide 1miec,.1>Ut ii'• l!Dlnl.1o bt · Wblt b the Intent of Huntington BiJllch'a planned raideoUal development ordinance! It dependt on wbom you ut. city c<ilm- cli walcllen diecovered Mooday nlgbl ~-nlaUves ol McKenn Construc-"tlOll Company thoucbt lt meant their 17&. unit foul'pler development with two owtmmina poOb, rour tot Iola and 1 re::reaUon area. Councilman Jmy Matney, who peraonally appealed the company's use perm!~ thought It meant only one pool but with the addition or a basl<etball and volleyball court and a clubhollae. "'lbb RfOjecl bu nothlni," cllarged Matney \\'ho rapped the builders for their aU.gtd failure to Include m or e 11 lrnenlt.Ja." A former copdOrninlum o....,. hlmlell, ll1t toiudimau 1Jl'll!d the companJ" to lorCtl the. two poola and inltead ..... centrate on the clubhouH end recruUon areas. Planninc Commlaioner EdWlld klna felt the McKeon Pl"Jecl near Bell Amrue and Alconquln Street WU an ailmpt to "subvert" the ordlnaDce lo llln ,hl&her denalty. The planned ... ~la! de~I (PRD) ord!naoco allan I denollJ of II unila per aero. Apartment builders, oo the other hand, aro allonl onl1 H unit! per acre. Tho key dllfertnces between the two .types of project are open xpace and rtertallonal areo~ roqulrod by the PRO ordinance. Darrell Boyer, I ~Uvt of the Newport ~-llase!I firm; llid he had no lnlalt of ctn:umventlna Iha ordlneoCt. "Wt11 put ill I r-tlOn 1!Ui14iqi and I batketllail court !( that b What ihe councU wan!I," .aid, addllll that a (Set TJIACI', Pap I) u cold • -dipp1iig ·-to I Jtlg!d --""'""'·"' -ateas. '!'ht peat wtll .,.,.. 1rom u to a • Wednesday, INSIDE TODAY Vilitora to U.. 1912 Wlnfot> Ol!l!ftplct m Japan to II I llavt 'mbr1 ID do t/lan jloll otflDlng t/lf QOlll<I -~ am rid# lo :bi:r!:m°'in =.":~1 ~Ai '"loor!<i'I 10 0 I I 1%0lic 1111z<d bat~•, s,. rt°'1/ />age 12. (...,.,.,. . " . L. M..... t ._. ... -·=.. ll --.. ........ ,.~ . htwl •RIM P -.. " '"' :c•• 14 ... .._ II. ~ ....... ,. ) • E'= =---...... .... ------- I DAil ~ Pl 1 r I " Columnist Scores U.S. Mercy Copters Armed • Ambulance Craft 'Carry Machineguns' country today., • • • HYntington Bids Near On Security WASHINGTON (AP) -Columnist Jack Anduton 11ld today he hopes his publis)).. fd rtp0rt1 or sec.rel ntinutts <>f White H<>use strategy sessions on lndla- Pakiatin result In a real security system . SAIGON (UP[) -The U.S. commJnd today dl&do&ed lhat American ambul1nce hellcoptm eany machlnegwis along with thtlr Red Cross marking s and have done so for 10 years. Thlrtun covernmeot aoldler1 were ""ounded and the tracked carriers were heavily damaged, the sources said. p.1tlent1 Involved," the-1r>l~eiman 11Jd, "Thll 1.-the aame 11 a medic carrytn1 weapons In the fleld." ''The helicopters that rre armed art part of ta ctical combat units." · For Center •1 think the security system tn fact is a censorah1p ayatem used to hide all ac- tivities Jn diplomacy in general," Andenon said In a telephone interview. 1oBy operaUng In the dark they (the ad- miniatratl<>nJ can comm.it blunders In the dark." Military a pokes men made t he disclosure when asked for detail s of ~he Monday ambush of an American patrol 40 miles northeast or Saigon . One GI was killed and 14 woundr.d . It was the heaviest U.S. casualty count in a single action since last May I wh{'n five men were killed and 10 woundf'd near the A Shau Valley, although there have since been heavie r casuallies in shelhngs and air crashes. Military sources said the C',ommunists also bltw up two South Vietnamtse armored personnel carriers with mines along Highway 7 about fiv e miles south of Snool in the Cambodian rubber plantation Four helieopters -one 0}16 obse rva· lion craft and three UHi lluey Medevac heliccpters were shot down by the Viet Cong as they arrived to help the U.S. troo ps under attack. At least two or the choppers had to be airlifted out by other helicopters because they were put out of action. ~l1l1tary spokesmen, in reply ln ne"·smen·s questions, said ~160 machineguns re-mounte<i on the medical evacuation helicopters although in this case, the guns were not fired. "The military command ree ls this does not viol ate the Geneva Convenlion, in !he sense that they are armed for the purpose of defending the crews and the • For some three weeks Anderson's coJ.. wrw, 1yndlcated to 700 newspapers, have quoted from what he said were minutes of a White House crisls team known 11 the Washington Special Act.ion Group (SAG). Monday'• column said Henry Kissinger, the PreJident's assistant for seeurity af· lain, lied when he told reporters that the administration wasn't anti-India. ••r am getting hell every half hour from the President that we are not being tough enough on India ," Anderson quited Kismnger as eying in one SAG meeting . The col- umnist said that Building Permits Climb In Huntingto11, Valley NIN"T klUINOIR three days later Ki.s- linger "directed that heneeforth we show Ow a certain coolness to the Indian.!. The ambassador to lndla is not to be treated at too hlgh a level." Government officials said Friday a aecu.rity Investigation WM under way to find out who "leaked" the Information to Anderson. "! know that people In lhe State 1nd Defense Departments and In the National Security C.Ounell have been questioned," Anderson said. "There are some security matters and those I don't we," the columnist said. "But I have found none in these papers." He said administration officials are more intereJted in protecting themselves than the naUonal security, and classify everytlllni. "They've been so promiscuous, they've debued the secret stamp," Anderson aaid. "Ninety-five percent of information iJ. claasifled to ietp it from the American public. ' • .. Kissiliger i& treat- ed like a secret wea- pon; 1vtl'Y)hln1 ho doel II cl..,lfied.' . Nobody llnow1 wh1l bt'1 doing, e v e n eon,-. The State Department d ... nl 't know anything and they are charged with forelp policy. 'ACIC ANOIRIOfll Yet thi1 man operates like some tort of forelgn pulley Rt,,,putin." AOOenon said he belleveJ he bas the complete aet or paper• from the White Houae meetings and that he has about ex· baustecl the subject in print. "I believe I 1111de the essential paints," he said. Ktsam,er Ls quoted as saying In a Dec. 4 meeting that "on AID matters, the President wants to proceed agaln.1t India only." Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley issued 50 percent more building permits in 1971 lhan they did the previous year. Nearly all of the new permits were for residential dwellings. Planners estimated that when all of the authorired buildings are occupied , it will raise the population of Huntington Beach by 11,200 residents and the population of Fountain Valley by 6,240. Fountain Valley Issued 2,732 individual permits in 1971 , most of them for single family homes in large housing tracl.!. The co11t of the authorized buildings was set at $52.9 million. The previous record was '39.9 million. set in 1969. f'ro1n Page I ROWLANDS. • • tion attempt for another two-year term as mayor. But in that election a slate of candidates who were opposed to the city manager also was elected. At that Rowlands resigned. "They bad used the big lie technique." Rowlands recalled thi s morning. "But 10 months after I resigned the public got the message, and five of the nine councilmen were. recalled overwhelmingly. It was ao overwhelming affirmation of the council· manager form of government." Rowlands said that the majority or five on the Council had wanted. the strong mayor-council form of government. "They replaced me with a political ap- pointee , but Jn 10 months the public realized the mess that had been created," he added. The Huntington Beach council also Is planning to ask the voters to establish a directly elected mayo r, but a recen t citizens study committee recommended that the mayor's powers be limited if the issue is submitted to voters. The present mayor of Tacoma, Gordon Johnston , who defeated Rasmussen in 1969 and was re-elected to a two-year term in 1971, this morning de scribed Rowlands as "a fine man." "It was one of those weird things, Rasmussen being defeated as mayor and yet a slate of candidates opposed to Rowlands being elected as councilmen. He resigned in what he thought '""as the city's best interest. The community had reached the point where the turmoil couldn 't be tolerated any longer.'' Huntington Beach, too, was headed toward a record equaling year, according to 1'.1arilyn Guy, principal clerk in the ci- ty building office, before a moratorium on new apartment building was imposed in northern Huntington Beach by the city couneil. Huntington Beach ended the year with $74.3 million worth of new permits, com- pared with J46 million in 190 and $200 million in 1969. "Without the moratorium we probably would have equalled or surpassed the 1969 record," said Mrs. Guy. The city s(apped a 90-day freeze on apartments in north liuntington Beach beginning Oct. 4 so th'at zoning could be revised to limit high density housing. Mrs. Guy said that "the biggest part" of permits iss ued before October were for apartment complexes in the northern part of the city. Less than 10 percent of the building permits were for commercial units, Mrs. Guy said. Frotn Page I CROWDED • • • View school district would not have qualilied for the College View addition, Golden View, and part of Vista View," In other action, the boa"1 agreed unanimously to allow individual schools within the district to begin drawing plans for pilot programs in year-round educa- tion. "I think there will be more schools in- terested in trying out this plan than we are capable of aceommodating," Dr. Hall said. The implementation of the "45-15" plan on a trial basis was recommended to the board by a special task force of educators. Under it children would be divided into four staggered groups, with each at- tending school in sessions of nine weeks followed by three week vacation periods. If implemented on a district-wide scale, the plan would reduce summer "learning loss" and allow more efficient use o( school facilities, the task force reported. Dr. Hall stressed that no school would try a year-round schedule unless the staff and the local community agreed. to it. However, he said that future trends in- dicate that many state schools will be financially forced into ye a r . r o u n d schedules within the next 10 years, possibly including some Oc,ean View "Our helos get shot up all the lime and when they are protecting patients they have a right to shoot back,'' satd a spokesman for the U.S. Army Medical Command . He said the policy had been in e!fect for 10 years. Nevertheless. the combat units are tak· fng the guns off their choppers and paint- ing them white under a new program that seerAs to be cutting Medevac losses, a spokesman said. Until last fall, am· bulance helicopters were painted olive drab like other choppers and carried dim Red Cross signs that were difncult to see from the ground . As a result, they were !tequently shot at. From 1966 through Oct. l, 1971, a tot'al of 141 Medevac helicopters were shot down, and 114 crewmen were killed and 26 wounded. The three ambulance choppers shot down Monday were olive drab and mark- ed with red crosses. The U.S. command also announced belatedly that a U.S. Air Force F4 Phan- tom jet was lost over the Laotian upper panhandle last Friday and both crewmen were missing. From Page I TRACT ••. di5CUSSion <i. the ordinance's true i!Mnt never arose during discul!ion.s with the plaMing staff. Boyer said further h.is company would be unwilling to comply with FHA s~ dards for condominium developments which require two enclosed garage &paces and one open garage &pace. "These units are like a smaJI eeonomy car. They were intended to sell at $18,000 but If we complied with the FHA stan· dards we would place ourselves: right out or a market," he commented. Council members at first appeared bent on shufnlng the project back to the planning commission for redesign of the complex to Include the "amenities.'' City Attorney Don P. Bonfa however advised the council th~ It had no legal grounds for denial of the company's use permit and the attachment of planning commission requirement!. The council then asked the company to return lo the council Jan. 17 with a new plot plan including the club~ and the basketball and volleyball courts . At the same time the council asked ror a planning commi:uion review of the PRO ordinance with respect lo its intent. From Page I NIXON .•. tracts for construction of nine 15,000-ton tankers to cost '66 million . Four will be built in the Todd Shipyards in San Pedro. San Pedro has a 6.1 percent unemployment rate. Five or the vessels will be built at the Bath fronwork!, Bath, Maine. With today's signirig of the contract with National Steel, the maritime ad - ministration has let nearly $200 million worth or contracts with West Coast shi~ builders in the last 18 months. \Vhite House aides said the contracts will mean some 7 ,500 manhours of new shipyard employment on the West Coast. For every shipyard job created, it was estimated that one additional job will be created In secondary, supporting in· dustry. In a message to Congress on Oct. 23. 1969, lhe President called for the rebuilding or the merchant fleet to make it more competitive and announced a new maritime program for the nation, in- D.lll. Y ,ILOf Siii! Pftol1 ' 'THE APEX OF MY LIFE' New Board Chairman C1 sper1o Caspers Voted New Chairman By Supervisors By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1tte n.11r P'lllt '"" • Ronald w. Caspers, the rust term 1upervi110r from Newport Beach, todfy was elected chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors b y unanimous vote of his colleagues. The 40-year-old financier, who represents the Fifth Supervisor i al District, immediate~y announcep he wants all county department heads in at. tendance at next Tuesday's board meeting when he will discuss his plans for 1972. Caspers, who took office a year ago, was nominated for the chairmanship by another !lrst term supervisor, Ralph Cl1rk of Anaheim. Clark was elected vlce chairman. As chairman, bis first official act Was to sign five applications to the federal General Services Administr11tion for ac- quis!Uon of 507 acres of Mile Square Park in Fountain Valley. The county currently holds the a·ettage in a SO-year lease from the Navy. In accepting the past, Caspers aaid, "This ia tl)e apex of my life. 1971 was an active ,year lhanks to our chairman (Robert Battin of Santa Ana ). There has never b-"P a dull moment. It was active as well 'ii tumultuous." He was referring to several con· trovers1es generated in the county seat during 1971. After taking <>ffice la st January he and Battin formed a coalition with Clark which they called a "new leadership," In January the three voted to place all county department heads on one-month notice, an action that was rescinded in August. In another move, which was hotly con- tested by minority board members William Phillips and David Baker, Caspers sought the ouster <>f county ad- ministrative officer Robert Thomas. The move was defeated when Clark voted with Phillips and Baker to retain Thomas. A repre1eot1tlve from the Public Facilities Corporation will present tht bond bids for the new Huntington Beach civic center at 7:30 p.m: Monday night. It appears unll.kely lhat the lowest bld will bt accepted at the appointed llme since at lea.st four councilmen have pro- mised not to be there. The problem stem& from a vexing C<Jn- flict of interest ~nee tbru councilmen are legally bound, and the fourth morally bound, to be someplace el.se. Councilmen Jack Green Ind Donald Shipley, along wilh Mator Georp McCracken, are also memb@ra of Orange County Sanitation· District 11 and are ex• pected to attend a meeting of that body. al so scheduled for 7:3Q p.m. Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs, a teaeher at Cal State Long Beach, indicated she will not be able to come until she is finished with a teaching commitment. All or the couocilmen Involved said Monday night ,they would try to make it lo the council chambe11 by 8:30 p.m. after having finished their other business. Gr~, Shipley and McCracken ire each paid $2S to attend the aanitaUon district meeting. Auction License Fee Retained After Protests Huntington B<ach councilmen tried their hands at an auction Monda).' nilht but.. the hlghe1t bid went lo Police Chjef Earle Robitaille. After hagg:Ling for nearly an hour, council members decided to keep the con· troversial $37 .50 per day auction buslne&i licenJe fee at least for now. The fee wu attacked as e1orbilant · recently by Ray Hasley, owner of the We Shop on 217 Main St. who ii inttrested in operating a dally auction a an annex to his anti~ue shop. Robitaille, however, felt that a lowering or the fee could cause unscrupulou1 persons tO aet up outlets lor stolen merchandise in the city. A study has me11nwblle been ordered to detennine the feaJibiUty of req111r1n& an annual llcense fee of about .f500; 11:11 $37.50 per day fee, calculated on an an- nual basis, is now 1n excess of $3,.000. While Robitaille said he had no argu.. ment with an annual license fee, he asked that the police be given additional control over items wilh serial numbers such at televi!ion set!, radios and stereos. 'D)e council agreed. County Economy Study Approved A study of Orange County's economy was tentatively approved today by th& Board of Supervisors and the planning department ordered to collect m.. formation as a part of that department'! population growth policy and develop. ment strategy program. Supervisors also authorized County Administrative Officer Robert Thoma1 to· Jdd two "'1ditional federally funded Pub-" lie Employment Program positions to the: planning department when funds become available. Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Ander110n quoted from Dec. 8 mJnutes: ••0r. Ki!singer emphasized that the President has made it clear that no further foreign exchange surplus com- modJUe.s or development Joana could be asai,ned to India without approval of the WhJte House • . . Dr. Kissinger stated that current orders are not to put anything In the budget for India. It was also oot to be leaked that AID had put money in the budget for India only to have the 'wicked' White "House take it out." In a brief la!k to councilmen Monday night, Rowlands said that he liked Hun- tington Beach and was ,;proud to be part of a progressive and growing com- munity." schools. I . Doyle Mil~er Rejected For Irvine City Post ' eluding new ship construction. One of the hottest Issues in which the freshman supervisor became involved was a battle with the county League of Cities over membership of the Local Ag- ency Formatlon Commission. The fight had moved into court in a series of suits and counter suits when Clark again ended the cont roversy by voting with the League of Cities. . ~ t Caspers of Newport Beach new chairman <>f the board voted in favor or the move reluctantly, I OIAN•I COAST DAILY PILOT CliltGft COArr PUlllSHINO ~M'r a ...... N. w.,. ,, ... , ..... l'llMW!lr J1clc •· C11rl1v Ykt ~t W '"-111 M...._. n.,..., l(,.,u ~Ol!Ot no""'' A. M11rpl.i110 M1M1ill9 EflfOt Al11t Dirliit W"t Of ..... County E'1tw H• ........... Offtce 17175 lo1c~ l ovl1.,1nil Min;., AJirt11: r.o. lox 7t0, 92641 ...... -.. l ..... "-di1 2n "''"' ...... c-Miu: nl W.t •• , • .,.. """'"" •Mdl~ »» ,,._. ~ .... ,., ... c---= ....... " c...lilt Ill .. By GEORGE LEIDAL The new faces before the council Mon- 01 t1t1 0tnr '"'' 11111 d · J d-• Do J M'JJ f The Irvine City Council Monday night ay inc u cu: Ye 1 er, ormer city selected a temporary administrative con· manager for Huntington Beach; Harry sultant to act as 8 city manager for as Bergh of 18182 Mayapple Way, University Jong as 90 days. Park, former Orange County planning Stanley Morgan, 30, principal in the director; and David Snow, principal of an Tustin consulting firm of Stan Morgan Anaheim organizational consulting firm. Associates, was selected from a field of Councilman Henry Quigley urged the seven appl icants for the interim post whn counci l to hire Morgan after summing appeared before the council in public the estimated costs each of the various sess ion. consulling and administrative services The session, the third part of the Irvine the applicants presented . Council's organizational meeting, was None of the applicants Indicated they held in Sc:ience Lecture Hall at UC could serve the new city without either the assistance of a consultant or ad· Irvine. . I Councilmen interviewed candidates one min strative aide and elerical help. at a time, asking applicants to wait Quigley's totals of the monthly cost.s of out.side for ca11. Mayor w 11 l I 1 m each applicant's proposal include the e1- Fi.schbach said the wall was to prevent lra help each would require. The follow· dupLicate presentations. lng ls a listing of the interim city .a -di f I so management proposal coats: nu au ence o near y persons VTN: $5,000 a month for a team In-shared the Interview proc"' with the ncll cludig consulting 1ervic11 ol Dlrrell ~ cou · 1 t be 1 1 ed sex, city manager of Cypress, and Mrs. Morgan was ast o nterv ew . · Dorothy Jones, 3 city record& apeclallat, Preceding him were prestntatlons by two firms and one indlvidusl whn also •p-plus the run time services or Mr1. peared before the council lest Thur'lday, Barbara Putnam as an 1dmlnlstrative when ft began deliberations over lhe ttrn· assist.ant. Clerical and typing services porary c:lty manager. They were VTN plus addltlonal consulting would be of· ComPIJl)I o1 Irvine, a planning conoullanl fered by VTN. Both women have worked firm thl("offer«t 1 "team" packaa:e or with Essex in Cypress. Ila pllt'Uj GrHfenba.gen-Kroeger Inc. of GrlffenhagelHCroe&er: '3,800 a month San Francisco, a city mlJ\lgemenl con-for Ute services of stnlor COMUltant Eric aulting firm, ,.cl J1md Moter, 49, of Voon1ng<t, plus txpense•. City manager 180'/l Butltr St., Unl .. rally Park, on recniiUng tervlct.> woald be utra ft aerosp.oct managem1nt uecuUve ~th !rem 14,000 lo f.7,000 from !ht Sin tran- North Amer!con Rockw<U. clsco firm. '-' ' '1 I ''The Dating Game'' • Whtn t customer chooses • date for installation of his ctrpeling, ht wants lo be assured that the carpeting will bt lnsttllo d on schedule. We aro able to provide fast, tfficitnt service, dut lo the f1ct that we maintain all of our own crews. If n•c•s .. ry, b.ctust of construction delays, wt can adjust !ht scheduled date for our customer. conven ience. A ~tr an, carpeting can be purchased many pl1c11, tnd tho ono thing we can provide that others can't, ls the BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac1ntla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thuro., ' to 5:30 -Fri,, 9 to 9 -Sat., 9tl0 to S I • '• .. " r ,, • Today's Fbud N.Y. Stoelu VOL 65 .. ~O. 3, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1972 N TEN CENTS •• ' • . . • Rf}ii; C :, " pany' s ' Former:Execs Fa,cing. 4 rrest ~ELPBIA {APJ -The district attorney's off.Ice said today w4rrant.s w°' .. btJni ·drawn !or the arr .. \ 'Of the foni>er r111ance .cl1alrman of the bankrupt P""" · Central Tranaporlalioo Co. and two ~tes on charges of consplr- ln& lo defraud 'the railroad of millions of ·dollars.- The wan:aitt.s were being draWP:"· ~or Do~d t , ~.van,, fired fn>l!t:hl•'f111Z,11116- a.):ear~llio.C. poot 'orr·Julie 'B, 1970, and fqti C~irJ!s .i;. •Hoclg~: •• , \\'.all St ..... t ~er,r~nd 9. F. La~liir;8 ,rttired Aif Foree general and !oond'er a/id !or!ner held of EXecuti~ Jet.Aviatiori, Inc., ac- cording to PttlladeiPhia'sFlnt Ai!lstant ~-Alty. Richard. A. Sl>raJl\le. The cliarges against ffie three stem trpi;n 'l>eon Centrel's $21 million invest. meDt in &TA; a charter airline !>ased in OOumbu!, Ohio, and their coon~ wlth Penpbfi, a priyote !Ovesbnent club th!it mad .. 11.7 nillli<>n In profits that the railrod bad lntemls'in. ' .. Jn lill yeal'I, the P..,.,Centtal, .which filed !or 'feorganlution under the led· " eta! ban&uptey acl, ·on June 21, 111'10, loll aiq1ool'. $Zl"mlllloo in ·EJA. -,. ~JS beina cOl\lidered whereby tae PenD C'tatral would rteeive less than $( milli«) tor tu holdings1n'the company. '<Gai t • -A ~tee of "open houMnc" op- porlunitiea by the city and • merence to city assiJtance in solving rqional hou>- lng problema. .. -A separate section for an en- vironmental quality element, which had been listed in a number of different sec- tlona previously. 1 Senior Plan Administrator C a r 1 . Neutiauaen said haslcally the sl•.11 had simplified the length but bad made each section more explicit. Nixon A 51-page policy plan inventory has been separaled from the policy document itself, although ib many n ferencts to previous studies will still be used as a gu ideline, Neuhause n nid. Neuhauseo said that in response to some COWlC.ilmen's "fears," the land use element was reworded. to "delete lhe thought of providing a major regional tourists recreational center; and to pro· tect the present resi dential characte r." A much mort specifically-worded viewpoint is shown In the transportation element. "Consistent _.Ith the objective and policies to pr&rve the en\'ironmental quality of the community, the c.:it~· •Nill continue to oppose development of the Pacific Coast F'reeway within the coaslal corridor," one new tection rum. A reference to airport expansion in the same element maintains in part that, .. The present loo&tion of the Orange County Ai rport is Unacceptable es a site for a regional airport facllity." Bares Jobs $100 Million S hip Contr acts Told ... By .JOHN VALTERZA Of rM DlilY P15-I St.ti ' SAN DIEGO -President Nixon flew to San Diego from San .Clemente this morn· Jng to announce the award ci more than •too million in contracts to build Amert~ can shlpt here, in San Pedro and else- where. The Cederal government will pay 43 perctot of the cost -a subsidy aimed at offsetting lower prices charged by ship- builders in Japan and Europe. The visit to NaUonal SteeJ and Ship- building Co. came two days before Mr. Nixon is to meet with, Prime · MlnJ.sttr ..Eisaku Sato of Japan. Japan has .Up. planted lhe U.S. as the major lhlpbullder around the rim of the Pacific Ocean. Th.e President annQunced the award of a $54.15 million contract to National. The work will be three buJk carriers (tankers) for the U.S. Merchant· Marine. The 38,300-ton (deadweight) tanker! will be built for Margate Shlpplng Co., an Unanimous Vote affiliate of Keystone Shipping Co. of Philadelphia. They will bt operated under a long term charter to SbelJ lnlernatlonal Pettofeum Co. of London, primarily to carry oil from the Caribbean to the Atlantic Coast. The vessels will cost more than lt8 ml!llon each. Just before the President new here, the adminilltration anoounced D e f e n a • Department approval of conditional con· (See NIXON, Page !I Winds Ravage Southland; Caspers New Chairman ~""""·~· ~-.(J f C~y Supervisors u ',.;;;"~(~;~· II. VINUL · ;t~hk~I~dBaysid~'Village ' Trailer Par){ Ar ea Sold ' . ' Baycide Village, the ltailer park· tnaflna whose Owners hive loftg baUled the proPoSed Racific C.oasl Freeway beeause ·their P4fk is Vi the freeway right-of-way, has 'be.n ·!Old. prominent · Newport Beach -eivic leader and Freeway Fighter Marshall Duffield and lour other parlnen have !Old the park to De'Anza·N:ewport·,.iohilehome Eatates, ,Jnc: .... a. 1.$8fi t.Diego ~~~ ~t; ·owns E>;'Aiu.a Tnli~er Har~r ne•r ·.·Mission Bay; . . Terms ot,lhe sale we~ not, made puOlic. Du!!leld. together with. J, OC'lleolley, Gle\111 Billlngsley, aod 'R L. and R. G. Lohman, all of N,ewport Beach,' built the pai'k, loc'llted at 300 E. C.oast Hi£hway, beginning irJ 19ii9. It was opened in 1961. The group owned the park under the corpo,ration, Back Bay Park, Inc .. which is oow being dissolved. Ba)"ide Village hB! 291 mobile homes, 300 boat slips and a boat-launcblni'rinip open to the 'J'llblic. ' \ · The new owners have no specific plins for the •part. according 1.o manager William T. Sprague, who aild he and bis empl9yes 'lrlfi remain to opera4 i~ .... t -' ·"the ol)).y changes wilL be Im· provement.s, ... Sprague said. · He disclooed thal De' Anza·Newport Jn. tends -to buy or build a series of water· oriented trailtr parks along t h e califor:Dia C()4St. Duffield, the most prominent oI the fort1ler .owner.s, was.unavaill~~fqr com· nient' on. lite .sale' today. AApciat.. said 'he.&wilJ:•rtw rdevote! His intei'e.stsi to his otHer businesses in the .Harbot · Area and HaWaii. -~~y!ide , Village was gr an~ a use ·permit to o_perate in the rlght.Ot-way as a "Holding action" for 'the la'nd pending col'lstruction of the freeway, Dulfield and Hensley sUDsequenUy became active in opposing the freeway and, through organizations known as the · Harbor Area Freeway Fighten and the Citizens Coordinating Committee, forced an iniUative to cancel a contract with the 1late for'the right-of-way. That· vote is now being challenged ln .court by a Newport Beach man who con· tends the ·voters of a municipality have no authority to act In the matter of freeway rootlngs. N ewpqJ:t : ~~g.h~ Review ' Bay C,lu~.S~le .Papers -::· . ' llewpoi't Btsch Ci!Y ~\tofney Dennll . Str,ena may he ~11/>L ' O'.?feil'.sll'.id Monday he has aske<l'Balboa HOWj?Ver, when there is a transf~r or . · too • peteenl" of the !loelt, this Is tan-BIY. Club offlctals for copies -Q( tht tamount to assignment of the lea~." ht ..a'*s·slined for the Ille o!.the·rM> ,to ... aald.• ·. ~ irthe ttanlaclloil 11 Jigal; • O'Nefi · la!d he ~ to reach tome tihila-tenns ol the dlit>:o 't;eaae r,t -the ocmcllnjon be!°"' the counoU meets Mon· 25 """' of city land it "'' on, a11Y day -'-1tof the leall mlllt.rec<ive city M'eanwhile, Jaok o. Wrather and~ ·<•Jlliel!-1. minority shareholders have 90Jd all the llowev<!r', Bay Club olflelals are ·con-~ 110ct of Balboa Bay Bay Club, fltidliis llwi aate -W!llch toot place last fnc0 to lnfernatiojlal Bay Clubo, Inc .. wtek lo a Newport l!Ucil> !lnancler '-whlchtl dwned almost wholly by WUllam doel not need COWICI\ IUthortzatlon stnce D. flay o1 Newliort Jltach. ' ~II a ~ or •tock. nol the least. Ray has saicf tbal the top manapmem '1 bavt aslted Dick Stevens (BBC, Joe. tum of the club wlll not"be duln,.d, nor pr'Uldetil) for copies of the Instruments," will the mvices it oilers to 1112900 nltln· · 9 'Nell aaid, "and I won't be ab~ to make bera. ~ 0etenn1nal1on until I see them." ... ......,.... ~ ,.,._ ...... out of moui!Wrl passes, fey "-· wili<ts tollat Coolhlu!d to 11andblaat the SoutbJand, blowing away almMt anything that wasn't nailed down, from tumbleweeds to house trailers. 1be bitter gales -surpailatng hur· rlcane fare, in some ~ -an ex- pected to continue, subsiding tonight and early WednfS<lay, l"'!ving ~ areas 11hlverlng in suMreeting temperatures. <Jraqge·County eacaped pie worSI of the wind! in tenns of actual ·damage reported by daylight today. Sin Fernando Valley residenta· and thole ·living In or passing tJ\'iough Riverside and San Bernardino Counli., 1uffered moat with power blackouts and travelers' warnings posted. Callfom1a Highway Pitrol officert reported fierce wind blasta up to 80 miles per hour blew over three house trailers and a truck-and-trailer rig. Camper ownen contemplating highway travel on major routea from the Pacific Coast inland were also .warned to stay put. Tumbleweeds bounding like banshees across highways up and down the Orange Coast overnight posed an annoying hazard to many motorists. Orange C.ounty Harbor Patrol' officeri reminded boaters that gale warninp are hoiSted but aald the --e were dying down. A Fullerton police sergeant had to hitcll: a ride lo wort with a colleague this mornln&. alter a large tne toppled, cnishlna both of hfa cm. He said he di<ln'l want to be identified. LitUe ·damage wu reported in Wett Orange County ·but the chilly Sanla Anas kepi many perlOlll awake and cut visibility along Pacific Coaal Highway with a constant cloud of blowing dual and sand. RairHOaked billboard sign• were also ripped away In many spots, littering the landacape like confetti. A decorative 1wning at Look Realty in Sunset Beach was shredded by the high winds and Its aluminum frame bent btd· Jy. Power lines were downed in tcattered spots throuahoUt the Orania Coaat and the wlnda triggered do2ens of jangling burglar alarm• • ' .Ckus Catalog Appears Toda y Tb.e Dolly Pilot appmnUy was a lllUe ~l•"fet back to tebool alter the holi4(11. Thor Utalotr liltlllc an •Pr111c aemeater ellllll Ind e:rplalnlng ntw teClsttaUon procedures lot 0rance Coa1t· arid Golden West collece• Is in today's edllilllll. O'Ntil said he has reviewed the lease. ltsel!, Uv~ the document aUpulat ... "Tire Club ""11 not 11111111 this le ... , ..- any JntmJt lboretn, wltbout the wpt~ ......,t ol the city ••. " Edito r Dies at 62 ~ •:,ec:~.b~d =-:-:.;: 1:; MANCHESTER. N.li (UPI) -Huiti promloed by a short article 1'11Jch ap- O'Nel!, pho last w.U hid 111d he ts •.,.etty ,.... .. the club lcled w!tblh Ille law, 11ld Monday, "TeehnlclJly, Mr •• ' R. O'Neil, editor or the Manchester Union paar~ In Monday edilloos. 'l1>o error Ltsder, died Monday al a local nurslnc Prmi4 one thlna: college aludants can borne lollow!O( a lellglby Utness. lie waa ,... .. .and dial the pboae, ioo: JUlt w 11. t ~JJllol,l'tritcbbomt operofors. ' Dllt\.Y Pn..OT hlff"""' 'THE APEX OF MY LIPl'~ Now IOI rd 'ci.,1-. c..ipod' I " ly JOANNIJ: RICYNOLDI . °' .. ....,,........ . ... Ronald W, Caspers, the first term supervisor from Newport Beacb, today was elected chairman of the Ori.nee County Board of Superv!aora by unanimous vote of his colleagues. The ~year~ld financier, w b o repre.sents the Fifth Super v i 1.0 r J a I District, Immediately announced he wants all county department heads lh al· teodance at nelt Tuesday'• board meeting when he will .discusl his' plans !or 1972. Caspers, who took office a year ago. was nominated for the chlirmanahip by another first tenn !Uperv!Jor, Ralph Clark o! Analleim. Clark w11 eleded vl<o chairman. AJ chairman, Ills' lint official act was , to sign five appl lcatlona to the federal General Sm>fces Admlniatr•tlon !or ac· quilltlon of lltl acres of Mila Square Parle In Foontaln Valley. The county currently holds the acreage In a 81).year leaie from the Navy. In accepting the post, Ca11per1 aald, 1-nits iJ the apex ot my life. 1171 was an active year thanks to our chairman (Robert Battin of Santa Ana l. There bas never been a dull moment. ~t was active as well as tumultuous." , H•-wU-llferrina-to aeveraL con-. ttoveroles generated Jn the county seat during 1971. Alter taldntl office last January he and11•1tln formed a coalition with Clark wblclr they <11led a "new leadenhip.,, In JllllW')' the three TOied to place aD COWlty de)llrlment heada on tne-month (See CASPERS, Page II Bikllig ·~t}!usiasts Seek , , I ' $45,00() Trail Fund Boost Whether comhig· tiy loot, w, or their own favorite tw .. .,.heeled' ttansportatt9n, bicyclllta are plannlng to turn out In lor<:e at the Newport BOach Parlos, Beachu and R«reatlolll eonuntaalon meeting tonJil)t at 7:.30 ~;cloCt-In d,ty ball. The Jnlpnna! -ol bieydl8ls will be led by-the U.meriibor Bicycle Traila Conllntttee In Jta req-for a 141,000 II> crea,. In !undl to be budceiejl r..-traf1~ ~pen al~ bavi aet ul\lt '311,tJOO In the capital lmpro-1 ~ Jedi !uhd ' for trilil< but tilt comniltlff has dectdt:d at leall 171,oqo 'la needed, Calvin Stewart,.PBR department dlr'eclaf aald toclaf. ' Stewart aald he llll'l aure bow - bicycle ... thualasta ....W 1 abow Ill' toftllh~ liUt addtd thet the coullDlltH waa canlpalaiiiDI. early 14*11Y !or ID- temled cl~ to atielll Ule ~-~ llUI decide """"t wllll ' pro)ecta to lllclllda on the 1m.11 ln> provementa llll; Stewart aald. The IJat nlllll be aullmltled to the clty'a Publlc w..-u Deparlmr.ol by Friday, an.< which the en; councll wlll makt the final decl.alon on which projects hive priority, he added. The trau. commtttee Is seekJna the ..,. Ira funds !or worl: In two specific araaa and other u yel undtai&Mlad lllortet •cmeata of trans. ' Tbe two areas n baa plnpotnt!d !er tralli are Jambone .Road bo"" ~ !toad to B1y1lde Drive ard part "'" Baatblul! Drive. • · The commlltae'o ncommendaliona .J acbeduled to bt comoleted by Juno, after which toma or all ol tta ldeaa wUI bt ii\> corpora1ad Into the parka and recrutklll element of the clty'1 mastA!r plan. Stewari aatd the commltt16 eolhnatao .Jt ml)' lllQesl up to lO tnl1et ol lrllla !or the c!'1. ' DAIL'!' 'ILOT si.u '"°'' DIES IN HAWAII Y1cht1m1n Earl Spengler Earl Spangler Of Newport Dies In Hawaii Sail lrVine Taps Acting City Manager By GEORGE LEIDAL <{ Of flM oau, , • ._, lllH J \ The Irvine City Council Monday n1$1ht · selected a temporary administrative con- sultant to aet as a city manager for as long as 90 days. StMley Morgan, 30, principal in the Tusll~ consulting firm of Stan Morgan Associates, was selected from a field of seven applicants £or the interim post who ap~ared before the council in public aess1on. The session, the third part of the Irvine Council's organizational meeting, was held In Science Lecture Hall at UC Irvine. Councilmen Interviewed candidatu one at a time, asking applicant! to wait oul!ide for call. Mayor W i 11 i a m Fischbach said the wait was lo prevent duplicate presentations. An sud.Jenee of nearly SO persons shared the interview process with lhe council. Morgan was last to be interviewed. $6,000 Aid Fol~ UCI Bus LmeOK'd ' Armed with 1 new ruling by 0.puty County Counsel Clayton Parker, Orana:e County Transit Di!trict directors Mond1y voted a $6,000 sublidy to aid the propoaed UC Irvine student bus service. Parker had previously stated that the district could not participate In a project which was not designed for the use of the general public. in contrast to a limited group. The UCI free bus line will serve students, faculty, staff and visitors. University offlciall said the sil-month experiment will start Monday. Total cost of the project Is estim1ted 1t $12,000 with student and unlveralty fundl being used for 50 percent. Fifth District Supervisor Ron,,lrt W. Ca spers of Newport Beach hailed the board's subsidy move . Jn exchange for the $8,000 grant, UC[ has promised to provide JnformaUon oa the pilot program, to include the number and frequency of fares and the points from which the service Is used. E..rl G. Spangler, 65, widely known Newport Beach metallurgist and in- dustrialist, died Sunday following a sail with his family off the island of Oahu Hawaii. ' Preceding him were presentation,, by two firms and one individual who also ap- peared before the council last Thursday, when it began deliberations over the tem- porary city manager. They were VTN Company of Irvine, a planning consultant firm lhat offered a ''learn" package or its parls; Gri!fenhagen-Kroeger Inc. of !an Francisco, a city management con- sulting firm, and James Moser, 49, of 18072 Butler St., University Park. an aerospace management executive with North American Rockwell. DAIL'!' ,ILOT ,Mf9 llY Pllrldl O'D011n1tl THIS IS THE VIEW FROM THE VISTA DEL LIDO TOWARD ST. JAMES CHURCH !LEFT CENTER) Bells of St. Jame1 Irritate 1t Le11t One ReslcMnt of Po1h High Rl11 Ap1rtment Building UC! Dean of Studenls Jamea Phillipe told district directors that specific routes had not been ~pied yet but original plans called for service In Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Mr. Spangler was stricken following a nap on board lhe yacht Gulnivere, owned by Fred B. Smales, former Newport Beach indwlrialist and yacht.sJTian. Mr. Spanjler and hia wife, Lorraine, we.re vi.siting the Smalu family for the holidays. Mrs. Smales is a daughter of Mr1. Spangler. Mr. Spangler died at a hospital in Kaneohe, apparently from a second heart attack. Hl.s body Wu cremated and the uhu scattered at sea from the decks of the Gulnlvere on Monday. Mr. Spangler was president of Duramics Corporation of Costa Me!la, a firm that specialized In making aircraft components from a ceramic discovered and produced by Mr. Spangler. Bes:Jdu his widow, he leaves a daughter, Mrs. Lorelei Frey of Costa Meaa; and a stepson, Tom Constable. Mr. Spangler was an active yachtsman and a longtime member of Balboa Yacht Club. In hi! younger days he was active in the National Star Class both as a skip- per and crew. For a number of years he wu an active member of the crew aboacd Escapade, formerly, owned by Smalu. SmaJes Is a former commodore of BYC. Memor~I services in Newport Bea,ch will be held Friday at I p.m. at the St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. From Page 1 NIXON ... ti-1cts for construcUon. of nine 25,000..ton tankers to cost $66 mJllion. Four will be built In the Todd Shipyard• in San Pedro. San Pedro has a 8.1 percent unemployment rate. Five of the vessels will be built at the Bath Ironworks, Bath, Maine. With today's signing of the contract with National Steel. the maritime ad· ministration has let nearly $200 million worth of contracts with West Coast ship- builders in the last 18 months. White House aides said the contract.!11 will mean some 7 ,500 manhours of new 1hipyard employment on the West Coast. For every shipyard job created, It was estimJtc-d that one additional job will be creat~ in secondary, supporting in- dustry. In a message to Congress on Oct. 23. 1969, the President called for the rebuilding of the merchant fleet to make It more competitive and announced a new maritime program for the nation, in- cluding new ship construction. DAILY PILOT D~I a».11' "11UJHntC1 cri.P.utr l•Mtf H. W•M Pte1'""1 W PljOlllhlf' J•t~ I , C11rl1T \'kl l'nlkMnt .... ~., ~ n •••• r .. .,a .... T1!0tR11 A. M11rp1'T11• ..._,.,Ill £dltlr L P1t1, JC'ri•t ......,. '""' City ldltw ,...,..._. ...... llll N1•port l o11l1v1r4 M1m11 A&U1•••: ,.o. lex 1111, t2aaa --C.'9 MIM1 :Ill w.t ..., ....... L"fl#ll -..ct\: m '-t A.._ .... 1' ..... 1 94iidl: 111171 ~ l1iu1r•,. ... Cl d I al ..... .i '-lit I.a The new faces before the council Mon- day included: Doyle MUler, former city manager for Huntington Beach; Harry Bergh of 18182 Mayapple Way, University Park, former Orange County planniilg director; and David Snow, principal of an Anaheim organizational consulting firm. Councilman Henry Quigley urged the council to hire Morgan after summing the estimated costs each of the various consulting and administrative services the applicants presented. None of the applicants Indicated they could serve the new city without either the a!!istance of a consultant or ad· ministrative aide and clerical help. Quigley'• totals of lhe monthly costs of each applicant's proposal include the ex- tra help each would require. The follow- ing is a listing of the Interim cily management proposal costs: VTN: $5,000 a month for a team in· cludig consulting services of Darrell Es· sex, city manager of Cypre91, and Mrs. Dorothy Jones, a city records specialist, plus the full lime services of Mrs. Barbara Putnam as an administrative assistant. Clerical and typing services plus additional consulting would be of- fered. by V'I'N. Both women have worked witll Essex in Cypress. Griffenllq:eD-Kroeger: $3,800 a month for the services of stnior consultant Eric Voorsanger, plus expenses. City manager recruiting services would be extra at from M.000 to $7,000 from the San Fran- cisco firm. Newport Beach Democrats F orin Organization A group ol Newport Beach Democrats, moatly from the Corona del Mar area. has announced the formation of a new Democratic Club. The new organiuriion, the Newport Democratic Club, will conduct an organizational meeting Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Park Newport Apartments recreation center. Richard 0 ' N e i 11 , chairman of the Orange C o u n t y Democratic Central Committee, will be the guest speaker. Officials of the club said by-laws will be discussed and a nominating Committee selected. The new club will not be associated directly with the Harbor A re a Democratic Club. which will conduct its own annual dinner next week. Organizers of the new Newport Democratic Club said it is being fl)rmed ~ause "we want a club that will be ac- tive." Fred Cunard, who with Mrs. Maurice Sherman fou nded the new group. said he found many persons in the Harbor View Hills area who want to become aclive Democrats. "I am amazed at the .amount of In· terest," Cunard said. Officials of the Harbor A re ;i Democratic Club. which serves bolh Newport Beach and Costa Mesa, were not aware the new club was being formed. Ben Paul, outgoing president of the older group, pointed out that hi.s club has been chartered by the state Democratic party but, he said, he welcomes the new club. ,;The more the merrier," Paul said. Stereo, Records, Top Hat Stolen A hungry burglar with 1 taste for hard rock and high hals crept through tha unlock~ window of a Newport Beach it&lesmao's home and etole nearly tl,700 In v1lu1bles, tht victim said Mond•Y· Council Hopef ul's Sl1Qp Fire Still Mystery in Mesa Nothing significant has been discovered in a followup investigation of a $4,500 arsonist-set fire at Costa Mesa Cily Coon· cil candidate Dominic Raciti's downtown jewelry and loan firm. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman said a lire department crew returned to the scene of the predawn fire later Monday, to clear away standing puddles "'ith water vacuum cleaners. IRvestigators discounted any political motivation in the 5:30 a.m. blaze at Cosla Mesa Jewelry & Loan, 1838 Newport Boul· evard. citing an almost-identical one nearby about the same lime. A link between the trash dumpster blaze at Raciti's firm and a fire set in a pile Of combustible materials at Coastline Health Foods, 270 E. 17th St., 20 minutes earlier is strongly suspected. _. Raciti formally announced his April council candidacy last week. although it has been generally .known he would run for ma11y months. From Page 1 CASPERS. •• notice, an action that was rescinded ln August. In another move, which was hotly con- tested by minority board members \Viltiam Phillips and David Baker, Caspers sought the ouster of county ad· ministrative officer Robert Thomas. The move was defeated when Clark voted with Phillips and Baker to retain Thomas. One of the hottest Issues in which the freshman supervisor became involved wa.s a battle with the county League of Cities over membership of the Local Ag. ency Formation Commission. The fight had moved into court in a series of suits and counter suits when Clark again ended the controversy by voting with the League of Cities. Since the LAFC matter was closed in September, most of the action from the board of supervisors has been less con- troversial. Caspers today promised to emulate a well known car rental firm and "try harder." He promised to devote full time to the job, noling that it is the onlv organization lhat he has headed in which he did not own 51 percent. "I realite I only have a 20 percent in· terest here and l'U try to remember that," he concluded. Caspers is president of Keystone Sav- ings and Loan Association of Anaheim and Westminster and has served. a!I director of two other Westminster banks:. Mesa Council Okays Downtown Probation Unit There will be a probation office in downtown Costa Mesa. While councilmen fought a bitter battle ~1ooday night with the county over a pro- posed welfare of£ice in Mesa de.I Mar, they easily approved a probation office at 1895 Newport Blvd. It was the probation office that created the original storm of protest from Mesa de! Mar homeowners. It had been selected for placement in the reildential neighborhood . Heavy public protest convinced county olflclals to swll<h plana and they dacldcd to use the second floor ot the old Mariners Savings and Loan building for probation work. No one orpo!ed that because It Is In I commercia area. Grrgory Gild, of 1125 w. B111 Ave., told Officer Douglu Nicholson the lou tn· eluded 40 slmo albums and IOUnd oquip- ment to play them. A clauy top bat wu alio llkec, he uid In 1ddition to food from thr rtfrlgerator. Councilmen e.ven agreed, un1nlmously, to free the properly owner of hla r .. qulremenl to dedlcolo land to the cl!y rnr 1tr .. t wld<nlng. Thia allowed the COW1ty to get a one-year lease from the owner. ' Bugged.· hy Bells Church Chimes Chafi1ig to Citizen By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tt11 Dilly Pit.I ll•ff - To Edward Harkness, the view out the window of his sixth-floor apartment at lhe Vista del Lido is a lot more tranquil than the sound coming in. "I moved out of the city to get away from th.is," Harkness complained Mon· day. ' For sure il's not the bay or its boats or the scenic bluffs that bother him. He even says he's grown accustomed to the construction noise from another high rise apartment building next door. Jt's the bells of St. James that have made him furi ous. "Hell, I can't be 400 feet from that tower," he said. "I've got a sizeable in- vestment and we 're the most affected." St. James Episcopal Church on Via Lido installed. the bells -'more properly called Westminster Chimes -last October and they've been ringing the hour, from IO a.m. to a p.m., each da y since. At five minute.spas! noon and 5:05 p.m. they also play a hymn ot the season. Newport Vessel Moves Into Lead HOBART, Tasmania (AP) -The 73- !oot Newport Beach yawl, Kialoa II, which was first home in the Sydney-hr ~lobart race last week, was leading lhe field of 15 Tuesday night in the 1,200-mile Hobart to Auckland race. The fleet is the largest since the race was inaugurated by the Royal Akaroa Yacht Club. K.ialoa II , skippered by Jim Kilroy of the Los Angeles Yacht Club, was about 30 miles northeast of Tasman Island, with lhe SS.foot sloop, American Eagle several miles astern, second. American Eagle is 11kippered by Ted Turner of Atlanta. Ondine II, the other member of the American team in the Southern Cross Cup series, already has left for home and was not taking part. "I can't even take a nap," fumes Harkness. HThat sound is a constant source of irritation. "1 don 't care if they play them on Sun- days or for meetings," he said, "but they don't ha ve to be going on all day long." While others have said ·1hey liked the added charm to the Lido area when the bells were donated to SI. James, Harkness claims the chorus of approval didn 't come from his building. "Tempers are rising here," he warned. Harkness, personally, has gone so far as to hire 2.n attorney who has written the city council to protest. "They (the council) are suppOsed to be concerned about ecology and noise abate- ment," he said. "I came here for my retirement and I get bells. Harkness said he 's talked the matter over with Dr. John Ashey, pastor of St. James, who agreed lo tum the volume down. "But that didn't help," he said. Harkness1 ignored an implied threat in his attorney's letter that he might_ sue the church if the city doesn't do anything. "I have a number of options," he said. "I could sell out and go someplace where it's quiet." He said he's going lo wait to see if the new building going up next door blocks .some of the sour.d. His lawyer, Gilbert F. Nelson of Laguna Hills, wrote to Newport Beach· councilmen : "The new policy of that church to ring their bells for five minutes every hour throughout the day has became a nui- sance greater th2.n my clients Mr. and Mr.s. Harkness can tolerate," Nelson said. "Mr. Harkness does not wish to bring a court action to restrain this private nuisance. Instead he is mindful of your interest in noise abatement for the com· munity as a whole and this amount of bell ringing Is certainly unreasonable," he said. CQuncilmen will fonnally receive the letter at their meeting next Monday night. It could be referred to Councilman Milan Dostal's Envlronmenlal Quality committee. The project will use a 1953 model bua leased. fl"'Of'.O Mike Kad1etz of Buena Park's Pink Bus Line. He said th1t despite its age, the bus has passed 1 California Highway Patrol safety test. Phillips said schedules would be on an hourly basis from 7 a.m. to g p.m., Mon-- day through Friday. He estimated that the service would 1ld about 250 students daily who live withln walking distance of the unnamed bus stops. * * * Official Raises Hopes for Bus IJnks to Coast Murray Slorm, assistant county ro.d commissioner, cast a ray of hope on the Orange Coast bus service picture Mon· day. , Storm told• Orahge County Tnll!ll District directors that two firms •\rere ready to step in if South Coas~ Transit Corp. drops its routes rrom Saflt'I ~na, to Balboa, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa and Laguna Beach. The road engineer said Southern California Rapid Transit District <RTD ) and Mike Kadletz, owner of the Pink Bus Line of Buena Park had indicated in- terest in providing the service. "RTD is preparing an estimate or pro- bable subsidy charges it would want to service the Santa Ana to Laguna and Newport routes," Storm explained. "But ~ause of TDR's high labor costs the bill probably would be more than the $2,800 1. month South Coast Transit want. to con- tinue its routes." On the other hand, Kadlelz, who w1s present at Monday's transit district board meeting, said his Pink Bus Line could possibly provide service at a figure lower than the subsidy sought by South Coast. Kadletz now operates buses between LI , Habra and Huntington Beach. District directors have demonstrated 1 strong desire to maintain service to the · beach cities until co mpletion or the cur~ rent Special Bus Needs study Jn March, VTN of Orange County and Allen M. Voorhies of McLean, Va., are doing the bus study under .11 $42,500 contract. ''The Dating Game'' When • cu1lomer choo1e1 a C!ato for installation of his carpeting, he w•nts lo ,bo assured that the c'rpeting wil~ be installed on schedule. " We are able to provide fast, efficient 1ervico, duo to. tho foci that wo maintain all of our own crews. ALDEN'S If necessary, because of construction dolay1, we can odjusl the 1chodul1d dale for our customers convenience. After oR, corp1lin9 con be purchasod many ploce1, ond tho ono thing we con prov ide th•I others can't, ls the BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 fllactntla A••· COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sot. 9:30 to S • I • • VoL 6,5, 'No. 3, <I SECTIONS, 52 PAGES c TUESDAY, JANUARY~. 1972 TEN CENT$ ORANGE. COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -\ • !> • • • t ' ' Costa ;Mesia Activates Redevelopment Agency . " IM.IL~~,,_.Wli89 ..... c • • ARM" AS THE PRESIDENT> ARR!VeD AT EL TORO lo' VIiia and Was Off to Sa"' Dioto·.Thl's Morni ng ' . Call DIJpatcher G~u ffl lp . E qst ~ ' . , . ·of.ti' · als .Back· Residents < ·fig,~. st Welfare Office In :Bu~glary Cme ' . ' r A.curibua '1'.ellow 'cab .<!lapjtcher con· Coata•Mcia ~-WlilarddJo1rdM~ tea"Evpo,er/Ot. Thine.,~~rty· •,.. ~tcolnm~ .~ · aboUt suspfc!Ous llO!sea radloed Monday c u~ Mesa e ar. ··~ ~~ for'help' ear~·'""""', br'""'"g cops and protest as "a pest .In a tea pot." then • mercially. I ·don'l'f .. I there wlU be .any " """" ·~'" •· :.~,with, · ers am'WaJ In a 4-J ) ~·~,traffic ..r;blem wtth ,the ft!fare ~~fS_.converK!nl ,<ln '1ef .C<tO .. ;. " :~~ amst a·~couofy ·uso . ..-• » · '•,f <.:· qua~rs. .< ·' ~' • .... • ! ; ~we~a~o~ · ' . t • • • ! 'l'be . county . hbped to open tap ·. 1dult ='•comblnect-.-.;team .captured a ; CWncihii. Wffiiam St. Clair, who 'services branch of tfle welfare oJfJCe to 1 ty' suil!O<!l in th .. «idJai<n~ Earl ~ .fl!ough\ he d ·an ally after .Jordan"s serve the blind, peed and totally disapled. ·Sch ·-'-i.lt .nil """·· shop <touching I short>spe 11 the lone dissenter. . There were tb be about 20 wo.rl<ers I~ the JJtl~· ·"'ii"-t"""".7 ' •• Mesa del ar residents once again office. ·unttt & freshJy s~lytd car. ' ',.packed ... qo.ia Mesa clW · co u n cl 1 ' "I'm on the horns of 'dilemma. t ques- : tW#}1uD"1"'9,.·~lJY,,z .. of Albj.lquerciue, t chambers~ey were jubllant about their tion whether a medical center wouldn't N.~, and .tempo.arJly staying al 252•E. 'victory<> the COUllty.which first tried be worse. l'm not sure· l'm going to fStb st., ila tempotitl!1 ·~ .. t cl-ti open a oJNitlon office. then a welfare ; vote;:: Jordan sild. " . . ffl!e·a! El cam!no Drive. st CI 1 · 1t1 reed Ith J rd ~· ~ii. • • The cif closed the issue -for its part · a r Q?,lC Y ag w • 0 ~n, ' .• ftj war boolt'!I on burglary charges • iii nlgbt b deoflng a zone ex-then added: We have made qwte a to 'lnd'<Iefedlvis pla!llled to question '.him ·~pf k ~the Count from us-· do' .about home rule. then wen,! way out nrinr to SeekJng complaint fiom ' tile , • iu.!:' upts-:.cii<al office Y _ In left field to foree thU zone eicepllon." r~~ ow\ty-Jll....,~~' Office m 1 ' . "'lbere Is a IOCi81,~ation we have to 9i; • Co\!nll' , .,.., l'\'<X ·1 · .'!id battles, however,..may ,still l>e < fiQt up to.. rd rather tt weren't there but .. ,v low C~b drive; , ti!:· · n. Co<m of!lclaJs 'coot.nd ·t . ,, _ _. ,,,_,, ·d ' bl a j2ll ·~ i: a.iii. ;'his $it need 1o obey cll1lf00lng law•. ·, 1 M'". '"""'-~~1.'81wu· had to all 1 e dispatcher .,:sayteg h . heard ~ard a~Sllll84 for the' ayor· ·Robert son c or -·In !lie drlffl'• room:She ssk;d ,1 Real P,""*rtY Services Depart-1 Ol:de.f as a few homeowners shouted fdr:iJeQt..,. .. ~ ~ .. Said the next mov.e ls up to the rephes to St. C}atr. . Beeir..lfh' Jlded, for..Jje~ers. at. y Board ol Supervisors. J Then Councilqoan Afvm PI 11.k I e y . ltth.Sl., t.llfi>g pollce Ile 1potted a fore cuting.his vole , Jordan c'rillcll-; snapped back at his leUow counclln\sn: ~Ide the.adjacent paint and 'bodY. .the. whO~ prottst ' · ~ "'I think we _have, fli\'i our obligation · front1114 on CJ!1I Newport Boulevard. _,.; .A. • .A. ·with tile entire fourth floor of city hall." '· · • ' .~ H: ' ;< •• 'f The fourth floor of city hall curiently is . . ' C • i} ~1 used by the county: Welfare Department. . ; ~ru, ~ -6ta1& CS8 OtlUC · Pinkley, Wilson and JaCk Hammett all • ~' !-went against•' the · coupty pri111arily (I ' • '• : • because ol their "'home rule" philosophy. ' ka ~s Downtn·u1n ] They!" .... upset b)',thj! county'& claim It 1"" ' .; · V "' A d(dn'l·have to'follow city 1.0ning. • • , ' . • · ' ' ' Wilson al~ sai4 ~e~y,have misled n " .. .. , ... ,, ,..,, . , .. Probation Umt county officials beCau .. he originally thought the welfare olfice might work out, where the probation facility would ..: ... .... lbeN '""1ll be a Jribation office In , "°""'°""' Closta Mesa. r While councilmen fought a biller bitlll M"""'1 ftight with !lie county over a pro. 1"'o.l w.tlare olfice In Mesa del ·Mar -y approved a probation office ;.( ll'"'POR Blvd. ' ' -the probation office that cnatel tho ~ storm of pa'Otell from Mdl • dol • Mar homeowners. It had ~ ~&<tment m the reslcf:en~ ' , Been-pubtlc prolell convinced cou,.y offk:lalll to awltcb piano al>! they dllClded • to ... the aeeond noor or tile old !dar.lnerl Savings and Loan bulldlng lot probaUoo work. ~that becau,. It~ In a Coundlmta .... agn.o<t. unanimously, lo r,..,. tbe property owner of hJ! re- qulltment to dedlealt labd to Ille ~ lot -wld«llnc-'lbll allowed the COWllJ' to 1et a_,... leue lrom the owner. not. . . ' ,. l<Howf:ver, the whole Idea In Mes. del Mar.,... to prov1ae. you with • oervic:e center, not a regloDa1 welfare office,'' the mayor said. Residents, led by ,Burch Pickett pres~ dent of the nowlY formed Meaa de! Mar Homeownert" • As!IOclatlon, urged the eot1ncll lo be prwared even for a court batUe, If the county trle• to open lta welfare braocb. • SUpport ror their J>!'ltat waa also g!V<n by a spokesman for the Mesa ·Verde Homeowners' Association. ""Mle crux of the matter Is home rule," aa:reed Hammett. Htet'a make our fight rtght here in Mtsa del Mar." "n admlnlst"'IW. aide to SUpervllor Ronald caopen wu also p-.iL When asked .-Jo IPt'l!. he tDld the oounc!l : "~ tlie keiln& II more thin l lll" tlclpated. You <an !lo sin ~ cas • II IUteahlc.w -Alter the boundaries are set, they have to adopt a detailed plan of ikvelop- ment, ouUlning the procedure step by step and year by year. -The most difficult task comes third -establ11bjng the method, or methods. of llnanclng a r<development project. No speclflc dates have been set for con- • slderation of e'ach step. ~une said he would be reporting back to tile council with addltk>nal 'ordinances and resolu· lions at each meeting. Costa Mesa already has a detailed downtown redevelopment plan in Its possession. It was written by· the Los Nixon Angeles consulting firm of Wilsey and Ham. The Wilsey.Ham plan ouUines a 11). year. '8 milUon redevelopment project for 195 downtown acres. Most of the pro- posal cooctn:ia the re<:Qnstruction of ma- jor and minor streets. The biggest single project re.com- mended by Wilsey and Ham is the reaUgnment of Harbor Boulevard to con- nect with 17th Street after the Ne\vport Freeway is finished. 1'hey estimate the cost of realigning Harbor &ulevard at $3 million. Councllmen do not have to adopt the Wilsey and Ham plan. Acting as the redevelopment agehcy they can authorize an entirely new •tlk'.b' or pick parts'. of the coo.sultants' report. No mention wu made of the Wilsey and Ham report at Monday 's hearin&. Even If the city dot! adopt it in total, there must be comkferable study Oil methods of finaoclng It. Wilsey and Ham outlined a detailed plan regarding coats, but left the method of financing wide qpen. The conrultants suggest several alternate methods such as federal funds, stale help, private enterprise, local property taxes or freez· ing the assessed valuation o[ the redevelopment area. Bares Jobs $100 Millio·n Ship Contracts Told By JOHN V ALTERZA Of tnt ~IY PIMt Sffff SAN DIEGO -President Nixon flew to San Diego from San Clemente this morn- ing to announce the award of more than $100 million in contracts to build Ameii· can ships here, in San Pedro and else- where. The federal government will pay 43 percent of the cost -a subsidy aimed at offsetting lower prices charged by ship- builden in Japan and Europe. The visit to NaUonal steel and Sfllp- buildfng Co( came two days before Mr. Nixon is to meet with Prime Minister Eisaku Sato or Japan. Japan has sup- planted the U.S. as the major shipbuilder around the rim of the Pacific Ocean. The President announced the award of a $54.6 million contract to National. The work will be three bulk carriers (tankers) for the U.S. A-1erchant Marine. ·The 38,300-ton (deadweight) tankers will be built for Margate Shipping Co .. an alflllate of Keystone Shippln& Co. of Pblladelphia. They will be , operated under 1 long term charter to Shell International Petroleum Co. of London, primarily to carry oil from the Caribbean to lht Atlantic Coast. The vessels will coat more than $18 million each. Just before the Pre!ldent Dew hert, lhe administration announced D e f e n s e Department approval of conditional con,· (See NIXON, Pase II . '.Apex of My ' Life' Muskie Joins Cr9wd~d Race . • ... • . , --, ... t ... ~pr. 01fitte~' . : ·~~R~~, .' :~ew Chairman ' . WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Edmund S. Muskie declared his candidacy for tile Democratic presidential n o m f n a t 1 o n tonight. from the rugged coast of bis native Maine and prom!sed "a new begin· ntng" to free America of its ills at home and abroad. In a lo.minute statement prepared for nationwide radio and televilion.addreas, Muskie ac~ President Nixon Qt lack- ing truthfulness and leadership and of failure to make. good ori promlies to end the Vietnam War, halt inflation and restore domestic peace. (Earlier story, page .SI, "'An administration tbat hu so failed us in the past cannot like US• to the fu~re," Muskie declared in prtpared remarks. "I am seeking lhe presidency, not merelt ' to change Presidents but to change the country," he said. 1 Muskie, lhe vice presidential candidate on the Ut\4UtceSSful 1968 Democratic ticket. became the eighth Democrat to seek to lead the ticket ligainst Nixon this year. M11>kie taped the announcement, at an estimated cost of $3!,000 lllcluding j>rime lime on the CBS television network. Mon- day night In 1 green armchair In the liv· Ing room of hls lw .. story, yellow·sblngled rummer cottage at Kennebunk Beach. Maine. three blocks from the Atlantic Ocean. He and hjs family ftew back to Wuhington Tueaday to watch tll• broad· cast at their home. In his speech. Muskie said It would be foolish to blame all the nation's problems on the present adnUhiStration. "But government can lead. Jt can be truthful ." he said. "And if our present leadership had been candid with the country , if they had been straightforward, we could have done far more than we have," , · He charged : "We were promised price itab!llty ansl prosperity. We have been given a 6 perce•t inflation, 6 ~cent unemployment, the first trade deficit slnce 1893, an astronomical balance or payments deficit, a W.rld monetary crisis and forced devaluation of the dollar. ' Class Catalog . Appears Toda y ,The Dally PUot appartl!Uy was a UUle too eager to get baclc to school alter the Jiollday1. The-catalog Usting an spring .. meater cillse1 and nplalnlng new reclstratlon prpceclures for Orange eoas1 anc1 Golden Weit collega ls lo today'• eoltlon1. .'111e apecial tabloid aectlon waa oot In· mted tn copics o! Monday's paper ., promised by • abort article which ap- peared In Monda; edttlqnl. The error proWld one tbJllt: co11.,. shldents can ·reaa -and dial !lie poooe. loo. Jutt.ask Doll}' Pilot slritcbboltd operatora. 01 ~.'IL ; MfLY fttLeT ...., ...... 'THE APEX OF MY (Fl' New Boar~ Chai~ . -. Superv~ors · By JOANNE 1\l!:YNOU>S Of .. °""' """ .. ,, Ronald W. ·Caspers, the flr1t term supervlso~ from Newport Beach, !*1 was elected • cllalnnan of the ofanie County Board of &lpefvlson by unantmou1 90te of his colleagu.._ The 41).yqM>ld financier, who represent! th6FUth Sup el'! l 10 r la L District, inunedfat.ly announced be wants all cou\d)' department heads In at· lindance at not Tuesday'• board • lllttling when he will dllCllSI his plans for 1m. ca.pen, 'who loot olfice a yur ago, ,was nominated for tile cbalrmanohlp by another llHI lenn supervllor, Ralph Clark of Anaheim. Clark w11 elected vice chairman. As chairman, hJa first official act waa to sign. five appllcatloiio to lhe ltdenl Genera1 5ervJces Admlntstr .. Uon tor ac· qulsltlon of 507 acres of Mlle Square Park In Fountsln·Valley. The county currently holdJ the acrd1e In a 30-yoar le8'e from lhe Navy. ln.acceplln( tile post, Caapers aald. ''This is the app of my life. 1971 was an 1ct1ve ym-thankl to our chairman (mbert S.tl!ll of Santi Ana ). Tbere has never been a dull moment. ~t was 1ctlv1 11 well as "tumiiltuous.11 He wu Nlerrlng 1o .. veral con- • tiOverslM ~led In the county 1eat during lt/l. Mier taking Olia last ' JallllltY lie ml llattln formed a coalition 'With Clalt )rilicb, they called a "'new Jeadenhip." .. ~ In January the three YO!Od to place all doonty departrnont heads on -month (See·cASPERS, Pa1• 1r ' . Council Studies· 300-acre • . . Parcel for Puhlie .P11rk . Costa Meaa'• CilY o.Ji.u bu olflcially r wDl be dedand IUllJI•, but they aet no cleclared Ill lnlerat In ~re abOui -elite for lt:.8111e-pori< authorities aid 300 acres of &late land near FlirvieW they could not ... it lot a atate -park. • Slat. Hospltal'lbr ,a lpobUc: .,.rt. lhougb It YoUkl ba a IOOci r<C!onal port Councilmen w~ ananlmout ' Monday site. night IP au1hofh!ac """'"' Ra1ior1 Wllaoll · & far, lhe ~ bu "11 a II mlllJon to -acqaltltlon of the pert land · . Jlrico tac oit the leod r11ai 11ta om to lhe with other city, couoty and atate olllclail. Sailta ~ lllver. Coata M ... olfic!als II was the flrlt olllcial acllon on the aay fbat • over tllelr bead. -"" Falrvkw Park tak"I allilsllY· ·WU.On, Monda)', urged the city to try ~~ • • Clbtaln the land "al·no COii. UUle coot f.VUUCJJ, Of by trade " "We must <14 tomethinc u qulck .. ''lt'I ~ we'v• 1f01 to 1111 mov- poalble," WU.On aaid todQ. "The elate tnc on "111d Councilman Alvin Pinkley.· ci>\Jld c1o· a lot of th!~ with that land. ' Everyone bu beelt laUdnc abOut tt. but our councll had c1ono notblna." Editor Dies a l 62 Wlbon plans tO talk with councilmen rrom Newport Beach, RWJtincton._Beach, MA!ICHtSTER. N,H. (UPI) -!Mh Fountain Vallerand oilier uua ,. .... 11 R. O"Nell, edltoo: of the Manchelt4r Union ~ . ~lid lr> the ~ • a IMder, died l&oncia1 al a local nura1n, J11!k. home [j)J\Olllllp leD&lltJ Ui-. He Wll te o!Oclalt bav1 ln4lcat«I 1111 land II. Z OAJ~ Y ~JI OT Howling Winds ' ~uff et CoUnty He Won't Take . It With Him $6,000 Aid F o:i· UCI Bus • Gp,les Expected to Subsid,e, .but· Chill to Conti~tw ' . By AJl111UR R. VINSEL r1Mne !orce .In 10me IUJU -are ••· tboli livin& ln or pusln1 throup travel Oii m.-lor toulel !tom tilt P.-Uic Of ... D•llY '11" •••tf peeled to continue, aubsldlog tonight and Riv~ and 8an 8tmardlno eounu.. Coatt Inland ..... ,alJo warned tb Illy. Sl.aJhln& down out of mountain pa.Hts, early Wednesday leaving inland areas i uffered moat !Ith power blackouta and put. tty 51 ta Ana · d tod in d . . ' . travelers' warnmgs posted. Tumbleweeds 'boundlnf like anthees " wtn s ay cont ue to siuver1ng in sub-freevng temperatures. California tllghwa y Patrol officers acron highways up and down the Oranae 11ndbl11t the Southland, blowing eway Orange County escaped the worsfof the reported fierce wind blasts up to 80 miles Coast 'Ovemlgbt pot:ed an annoyln.a almost anyWng that wasn't nailed down, "'inds In tl!rms of actual damage per hour blew over three house trailers hazard to many motorists. from tumbleweeds to house trailer•. reported by daylight today. and a truck·and·lraller rig. Orange County Harbor Patrol oUicers The bitter gale1 -surpassing bur· San Fernando Vall ey residents and Camper owners contemplating highway reminded boaters th•t gale warnJng.s are hoisted but said the winds offshore were dytng down. GAINESVILLE, II'!>. (AP) -A btdr)dd"' mUlioo.lln who 11)'1 "you can't tile Jt ,,itb you" hla donated $200,0oo for on lfl'lcuilunl center. Henry If. Beck, 19t has &iven away $900,000 lately. "Some of my rrlends thought they could tfke it with them ." uid the emphy~mA victim. ''I know differently. I made money from people. so why not give It back?" Line @K'd ArrMd wilh a ne.w ruling by Deputy County Counstl Clayton Parker, Or&r\18 County Transit District directors Monday voted a $&,000 subsidy to aid the proposed UC Irvine student bus service. Laguna Aide Leaves Post For Mesa Job Board Action Awaited A Fullerton police ser&~nt had to hitch a ride to work "ith a colleague thl1 morning, after a large tree toppled, crushlng both of his cars. Beck, who accumulated his fortune throu_e;h real eslatt, Is a lover of "fast horses, prftty women and 15 year old bourbon," ~ Most of Beck's gifts have been to homes for homeless or sick chUdren, but today tte donated $200,000 to Alachua Co u n t y ' s 1overnmt11t for oon.1tru~tion of an 11ricultural cehter and fairgrounds. Parker had previously stated that the district could not parllclp~te in a project whic h wa1 not dcslgne(i for the use of the general public. Jn contrast to a limited group. The UCI free bus line will serv1 students, faculty. staff and visitors. On Aerospace Contract He uld he didn't want to be identified. Little dam•ae was reported in West Orange County but the chilly Santa Anas · kept many persons awake and cut vi~ibility along Paclfj,:. Coast Hi&hway University officials said the aix·montb experiment will start Monday. Total cost of the project is estimated at 112,lllJIJ wilh student and university tunds being used for 50 percent. A second key mr:mbfr of the Laguna Beach city staff will be leaving at the end of the month, city manager Lawrence Rose announced today. Al Autry, administrative assistant for program1, has submitted his re1ignation . effective Feb. 1, to accept "an offer of considerable promise and high salary with the city of Costa Mesa," Rose said. The r~ignation o! public works direc· tor Joseph Sweany, effective on the same date, waa announced last month. "Jt i• very trying to lose two such ex· etllent people 11 Al and Joe in such a abort apan, but I'ni glad their worth is recognlud and both may capture chances to expand their careers," Rose said in his announcement. "Al baa 1dont an unusually fine job of devtlOplng programs for federal grants ta the city which may in time produce a! much u a million dollars in assistance for vafious project• we might not othtrwiae have been able to finance," he added. Autry, 32, came to Laguna Beach as an wociate planner Jn 11166. A Jraduate of Cat State-Fullerton In urban geography, he previously had worked for the County of Vent~ra and the city of Westminster. He will go to work as a division head in the plaMJng department of the city of Costa Men at a 1alary of f12,0U. an in· crease over his 111nual pay as program ad.minJstrator in Laguna, he said. First Lady Sees Topless Africans , Perform Dances MONROVIA, Liberia (UPIJ -Mrs. ~ichatd M. N)xon watched toplesii young ii.I'll perform I SinUOUS snake dance to- day then clad in • Door-length African dress she tried a few dance steps herselt. ne First Lady smiled and nodded as lb-e watched the performance of the Llberian cultural troupe at the official residence of President William R. Tolbert, inaugurated Monday as t~e West African republic's 19th president. (Earlier 1tory, Page 11 . Mrs. Nilon !ed the official U.S. delega- tion which included evangelist Billy Graham and the Grambling Collt!ge band, to the Inauguration as part of a seven-day tour of Liberia, Ghana and the Ivory Coast. At the cloae of the dance troupe's show, a member of the group approacq~ Mr1. Nixon. wrapped her in a noor·length blue African dress and slipped a matching top over her shoulders. She then wound three-yards of cloth around Mrs. Nixon 's head. The First Lady appeared surprised but willing to cooperate. Led by the troupe leader, she tried a few ol the African step! around ~!Joor of President Tolbert's home. OIAllH COAST DAILY PILOT OIMOI CQAlf PUtLtlHINO CCMPAXY l•li•rl N. w •• , ,,.....,. aM Pi.flll\IW Ja,k t . Cllt'I•• ""9: ~ Md 0..•I MlllfO• n~·· i.: •• va Editor 1"Mt1 A. Mn11ill~• /MnllllW !Edi• C\arftt H. loot a11t-1r• r. H10 ,_.11tltnl M•MV"'9 E~IJwJ C .... MeM Offke lJO Wait l1y Str1.t Mam., ""-P.O. la I UO, '2111 --.....,, a.tfi1 m> N ....... ._....,. .......,.. a..c:ti1 m ...,.... •-1:.*'C: a.di: 111111,..........,. --· •• -.... &I c.1111 ... WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pay Board wa1 expected to order its first wage rollback today , cutting a 12-percent raise for aerospace workers, probably to 8 per· cent or less. But it appeared to be an open question whether the board would honor its 01\'n new rule limiting all pay raises in ne1v contracts to no more than 7 percent, even In special circumstances. Variou s sources said all 10 business and public members were determined to vote against the five labor members and order a cut of some amount. Not all of them, however, were reported ready to roll the aerospace raise back to 7 percent. A Pay Board spokesman said the panel went into session this morning, but im· mediately broke up into separate meetings of labor, business and public members. The noon hour '(EST ) passed without the board going again into full aession. On another matter, the board's five business members were reported ready to press !or a legally binding regulation that would automat\cally cut off future pay raises in old contracts exceeding 7 percent a year. Frorn Page 1 CASPERS ... notice, an action that was rescinded in August. Jn another move, which was hotly con· tested by minor ity board members Wiltiam Phillips and David. Baker, Caspers sought the ouster of county ad· ministrative officer Robert Thomas . The move. was defeated when Clark voted with Philllps and Baker to retain Thomas. One of the hottest Issues in Which the freshma n supervisor became involved w.as a batUe with Yie ~ounty League of C1tie1 over membership of the Local Ag· ency Formation Commission. The light had moved into court in a series of suits and counter suits when Clark again ended the controversy by voting with the League of Citiea. Since the UFC matter was closed in September, most of lhe action from the board of 1upervlsor1 has been less con· trover1lal. Caspers today promised to emulate a weU known car rental firm and "try harder." He promised to devote full time to the job, noting that it is the onlv organilltion that he has headed in which he did not own 51 percent. "I realize I only have a 20 percent in· tereat here and I'll try to remember that," he concluded. 1 Cuper1 11 president or Keystone Sav· lngs and Loan Association of An4}lelm and Westminster and has served as director of two other Westminster banks. From Pagel NIXON ... tracts for construction of nine 251000-ton tankers to cost $68 mlllion . Four will be built in the Todd Shipyard! In San Pedro. San Pedro has a &.1 peretnt unemployment rate. Five of the vessels will be built at the Bitb Ironworks, Bath Maine. ' With today's signing of the contract with National Steel, the maritime ad- mlnlsttatlon has Jet nearly $200 mltlion worth of contracts with West Coast ahip- builders in the last 18 months. White House aides said the contracts will mean some 7,500 manhours of new shipyard employment on the West Coast. Fo~ every shipyard job created, it was esti mated that one additional job will be created in secondary, supporting in- du stry. In a message to C-Ongress on Oct. 23, 1969. the President called for the rebuilding of the merchant, fleet to make it more competitive and announced a 11ew maritime program for the naUon, in- cluding new ship construction. Mesa OKs Work On Oil Station Standard OJI Company w" given the go-ahead Monday night for 1 $150.000 remodeling job of Its service station at Harbor Boulevard and Victoria Street in Cost• Mesa . City C.Ouncilmen were unanimous ln their praise of the 1tationJs plan to upgrade ill Image. "We hope your competition Is list<nlng "° they know what people can do," Mayor Robert Wilson llid, referring to dif. ficulties two weekJ ago with Shell OJI Co. Tht 1Utlon wUI bo enlarfed, laklog over the propeliy of Ult rattan furniture shop nut door. ind the satlon wnl'lhare two drlv•"ll'' wllh Ila olllet neighbor, a mot.ti. Q 1 ' Busines1 member Virgil Day, a General Electric Co. vice president, said the business members would propose such a regulation during meetings this week. Last month the business members issued a blanket challenge of all deferred raises over 7 percent, but under this pro· cedure the beard would have to order any rollbacks on a case·by·case basjs that could swamp the panel with thousands of reviews. The board's guidelines say raises in new contracts can't go over 5.5 percent except in special cases that might war- rant ra ises up to 7 percent. Day said the rule to be proposed by business members would put the same 7 percent lid on deferred raises in contracts already agreed upon. Last Dec . 21 the board debated far into the night without reachlng a decision on contract!: covering units of the United Auto Workers and tbe AFlrCIO Interna· tional Association of Machinists at six aerospace firms. All except one follow the pattern set in the UAW pact with North American Rockwell Corp., which contains a !irst- year raise of 51 cents in the $4.32 hourly average, an 11.8 percent increase. The exception is the JAM pa ct with United Aircraft Corp. in Connecticut, where the un ion got only an &--percent raise in the first year. "The Pay Board's impasse over the aerospace settlement does not involve whether to cut it but by how much," Day said Monday. Day, who expressed his views in an un- published essay and in a telephone in~ terview, said all fi ve business members wanted to cut the U-percent raises bacr at least to the 8--percent level in the United contract. But Day also said at least one business member wantl to cut all the way back to 7 percent. Another board Informant said some of the public members, possibly all fi ve, wanted 7 percent. The public members have consistently taken a hard line. Business members have sided first with the public members in laying down tough rules, then with the labor members in applying the rules loosely. · · · a constant cloud of blowing du1t 111d sand. n·soaked billboard 1igns were also ripped away in many 1pots, littering the landscape like confetU. A decorative awning at Look Realty In Sunset Beach was shredded by the hl&:h winds and its aluminum .frame btnt bad· ly. Power lines were downed in scattered spots throughout the Orange Coast and the winds triggered dozens of jangling burglar l:llarms. One freak mishap occurred at Costa Mesa'!! South Coast Plaza, where wind· whipped brush kept whacking an el~ trical sign until it finally shorted out in a showei:. of sparks 111d smoke. Broken branches, palm fro.ndl, and other wind-downed Items kept ~ty work crews buay in most communlUea but there was no niajor damage reported. Electricity to five cwitomera wu cut off lor two hours after a San Diego Gas and Electric <!ompany powerline was downed in the canyon behind San Clemente'a Avenida Junipero. "Wbh our fingers crossed, that's all that's happened so far,'' said I· company sr""~srn"n. Fire Department Battalion Chief Ron. Coien1an said the fire flickered out .quick· 1y, cauaing less than $50 damage. Temperatures along the Orange Coast are expected to range between the mid- SOs aod up1o 8S in the daytime . Lows around freezing and down to as litUe as 15 degrees in the high desert areas are predicted by the U.S. Weather Service for inland ngions. Mother Injured In 3-car Wreck At Mesa Center Beck'• pbltbsophy for getting rich : "You can'l ret b)C by think· ing little." · Council Hopef ul's Shop Fi1·e Still Mystery in Mesa Nothing significaJ\t has been discovered In a followqp inveatigation of a $4,500 arsoniat·set fire at Costa Mesa City Couo· cil candidate Dominic Raciti'1 downtown jewflry and Joa• firm. Battalion Chief ·Ron Coleman said a fire department crew returned to the acene of the predawn fire later Monday. to clear away standing puddles wJth water vacuWn cleaners. Investigators di1counted any political motivation. in the 5:30 a.m, blazt at Costa Meaa Jewelry & Loan, 1838 Newport BouJ. evard, citing an almost·identical one nearby about the same time. ·. A link between the trash dumpster blaze at Raclti's finn and a fire .set in a pile of combustible materials at Coastllne Health Foods, 270 E. 17th St., 20 mlnutea earlier is stronilY suspected. Raciti forrnal1f announced his April council candidacy last weelt, although it ha1 been generally known be would run for m••Y months. · Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W, Caspers of Newport Beach bailed the board's subsidy move. Iri exchange for the $6,000 grant, UCI 1 has promised to pro vide information on the pilot program, to include the number and frequency of fares and the points from which the service is used. UC! Dean o( Students James Phillips told district directors that specific rou.tes had not been adopted yet but original plans called for service in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Tbe project will use a 1953 mode1 bus teased from Mike Kadlell Of Buena Park's Pink BU! Line. He ,.,d that despite Its age, the bus has passed a C.IUornla Highway Patrol safely tea~ Phllflps said schedules would be on· an hourly basis from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m., Moa. day through Friday. He estimated that the service would aid about 2SO atudenta: daily who Jive within walking distance of the uMamed bus stops. * * * Official Raises Hopes for Bus I.inks to Coast Co ty E Murray Storm, uslstant county road un ~onomy.. commiasloner. cut a ray of bop< on the Orange Coast b\11 service picllll'I lloo· Study App' i;~ved dafurm told Orange Coun11 Tranalt District dlrectora thol two flnDI :11t1t A study of Orange 'County's economy reo.dy to step ln II Soulh, Cout Trlllllll wu \tnlaUvely approve<( today by the C.,P. drops ill routes' lrom liallla>Anl, to. Bolrd. of 'Supervlsors"an_d 'the pl&Mtng _ Balboa, Newport Beach, Co!iA'Miu and' A ybung Costa Mesa mother was department ordered to collect ,.,. Laguna Beach. • seriously injured Monday in a broad.side formation as a part of that department's The road engineer said Southern collision at a busy, 1ignal-controlled en· population growth policy and develop-California Rapid Transit District (RTD) trance to the Harbor Shopping Center. ment strategy program. and Mike Kadletz, owner of the Pink Bus Her infant daughter and a 77-year-old Supervisors also authorized C-Ounty Line of Buena Park had indicated in- motorist also involved in the three-car Administrative Officer Robert Thomas to terest in providing the service. N B h pileup escaped with only iCrapes. add tWo Mditional fed!rally funded Pub-"RTD is preparing an estimate of pro-ewporl eaC Rebecca A. Polndextu, 22, of 1005 lie Employment Program positions to the bable subsidy charges it would want to Valencia Drive, wa1 listed in fair to good planning department when fund1 become service the Santa Ana to Laguna and D coddition today at Costa Mesa Memorial available. Newport routes," Storm explained. '1But emocrats Form Hoepital with internal injuries. Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. beca ... o!TDR'shighllborcoclltheblll Investigalora 1akl her foreign station Caspers of Newport Beach new chairman probably would be more lhan the $2,800 a wagon was hit broadside on the driver'• of the board voted In favor of the move month South Coast Transit wanl! to cooJ Orgam'zafi'on door by a sedan driven by Sidney A. reluctantly. tinue its routes." Young, 77, of 142 Virginia Place. On the other hand, Kldlelz, who was m!tf;0~r0~ ~h~~~o~:a~I ~~roe::;:: al~0~:e~'!: ~ee~Jt~l~::tt~~e 1~1Z~~; Body Stuffer Jailed ~=~ntm!~~o~:ij'~s ~~~i1Bu~i·~~! has announced the formation of 8 new motorist declined treatment, police said. could possibly provide service at a figure Democratic Club. The third driver identified in the crash LAS VEGAS (AP) _ A California man lower than the 1ubsidy aought by Sou.th The new organization, the Newport at the Shopping center entrahce was was sentenced to one year In the county Coast. Democratic Club, will conduct an Franklin P. Kendig, 19, Long Beach. He jail after he pleaded guilty to stuffing the Kadletz now operates buses between La organiU1tiOnal meeting Wednesday at 8 was not' hurt. according to police reports. body of a Las Vegas camera girl into an Habra and Huntington Beach. p.m. in the Park Newport Apartments A Laguna Beach woman out Christmas icebox. District directors have demonstrated a recreation center. Richard o •Ne i 11, shOppin,I[ was fatally injured in a similar Jimmie Wayne Crabtree, 3.1, of Long strong desire to maintain service to th1 chairman of the Orange c 0 u 0• t y collision at the same location during the Beach, was sentenced Monday on a beach cities until completion of the cur· Democratic Central C-Ommlttee, will be busy holiday season. charge of "destroying evidence" in con-rent Special Bus Needs study in March. the guest speaker. Factors that caused the latest crash nectlon with the drug overdose death of VTN ol Orange C.Ounty and Allen M. Officials of the club said by-laws will be are still under investigation by the police Diane Hamby, 19. whose body was found Voorhies of McLean, Va., are doina th• discussed and a nominating committee 1'f'diieiipa;;rt;;m;;e;;n;;t';;s;;T;;ra;;f;;fi;;c ;;;B;;;ur;;;e;;;a;;u.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;A;i;p;;;rt;;;J 20;;;;;;ln;;;;;;an;;;u;;;n;;;u;;;sed;;;;;;l;;;ct;;;bo.;;;;;;;;;ln;;;t;;;He;;;d;;;ese;;;;;;r;;t.;;;;;;bu;;;s;;;s;;;tud;;;;i;y;;;u;;;n;;;de;;;r;;;a;;;ll;;;2;;;.500;;;;;;;;;co;;n;;tr;;a;;cl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, selected. 11 The new club will not be associated directly with the Harbor A r e a Democratic Club, which will conduct its own annual dinner next week. Organizers or the new Newport Democratic Club said it is being formed because "we want a club that will be ac- tive." Fred Cunard, who with Mrs. Maurice Sherman founded the new group, said he found many persons in the Harbor View Hills area who want to become active Democrats. "I am amazed at the amounl or In· terest," Cunard said. Officials of the llarbor Are a Democratic Club. which serves both Newport Beach and C.Osta Mesa. were not aw are the new club was being formed. Ben Paul, outgoing president of the older group, pointed out that hia club has been chartertd by the al.ate Democratic party but1 he said, be welcomes the new club. "The more the merrier," Paul 1ald . Newport Vessel Moves lnw Lead HOBART. Tsmanla (AP) -The 73- foot Newport Beach yawl, Klaloa ti , which was first home in the Sydney-ti>- Hobart race Ian wHk, w11 leading the fleld of 15 Tuesdl)' night· In tbe I,2(JO.mtle Hobart to Auckland race. The fleet is the largest tlnet Uie race was inaufurated by t~e Royal Akaroa Yacht Club. Klaloa n , aklppered by Jjm Knror ol the Loi .1.n'!Plts Yacht Clu~. was aboiJt 311 miles mrt6ealt of Tasman !Jland, l'ilh tlie 63-foot sloop, Alnerlcan !:•JI• ,...,a.I miles' utern, 1toond. American ltqte Ir aklpptrtd by Ted Tllrner of Atiaata. ''The Dating Game'' When • customer choo1es a date for inst•llation of his corptti 79, he wants to be assured that the corpt!ing will bt installed on schedule. W a •rt •bit to provide fest, efficient 1trvict, dut to !ht· f•ct thet wt m•intain 1U of our own crews. If nect11try, bec1use of constNclion ·delays, wt ctn adjust tho ·scht<lultd de!• for our customers conv1ni1nc1. A#or all, ctrptling can be purch11td m1ny places, end the on• thing wt ctn provida th1t others c.1n't, is the BEST SERVICE IN ORANGE COUNTY I ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentla Ave. COSTA MISA 646-4838 HOUllS: Men. thru n,.,,..., t to S:~ -Fri. 9 It 9 -Sit. t:~ to 5 • i ' 7 I w n no fi t m le lat • m In • l5C lb ,. An ho m wt m m